HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-29 - Orange Coast Pilotii 4 -•••• .,..
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Victim begged for life
Witness reveals role in Huntington slaying
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL
olt11eDe61y ...........
The final minutes or the life of
a purported Garden Grove drug
d ealer slain In a Huntington
Beach oitfield in July 1980, have
been dramatically revealed to
a n Orange County Superior
Court jury.
One of three Huntington Beach
residents who previous ly has ad-
mitted his role in the slaying of
31-year-old Stephen Ciaconne.
testified Tuesday that Ciaconne
pleaded, "No ... don't do It"
moments before he was shot In
the chest with an arrow fired
from a cross bow.
Witness Brian Miller, 21, told
the hushed audience in Judge
Kenneth Lae's courtroom that
def ~nd ant James Robert
Marvin, 24, ordered him to fire
into Ciaconne's bead.
As ked by Deputy District At·
torney Pat Geary why he shot
Ciaccone in the heart Instead,
Miller responded, "I couldn 't
shoot him the head . . . I felt he
''I 1.00nted to get
it over with'
was going to die no matter what
l did . . . (l wanted> to eet It
over with as soon as possible."
Miller, speaking In a barely
audible voice, testified that
Ma rvin's co-defendant In the
murder trial, Joe Aguirre, 35, of
Huntington Beach, Issued the in-
itial order that he participate in
the Ciaconne slayinl{.
·'The next thing l recall is
someone handing me a knife. He
<Aguirre) told me (Claccone)
already (bad) been hit twice and
1t was my turn."
· It was a few moments later,
after the group almost waa
spotted by a police helicopter
rl ylne in the area, that Mlller
was given the crossbow and told
to rtre, the witness tesUfiea.
"Steve started calling for
help. Joe called for someone to
shut him up. I don't remember if
anyone did or not."
Mill er told the court "I
couldn 'l do lt" after he was
handed the crossbow. "I believe
that was when Steve said
something about calllng a doctor
and ta.king him to a hospital and
that he wouldn't say anyt.hlne
about what had happened out
there."
According to pre vious
testimony, the plot to kill Ciac-
cone was made while he was
slaying at Aguirre's Gothard
Street res idence to elude
narcotics investigators and
<See SLAYING, Pa1e AZ)
. ~ .........
Prince Charles and the new princess of Wales share a kiss on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after
their marriage at St Paul's Cathedral today.
Coupk we d amid spkndor
Nearly one million roar good wishes to Prince, Diana
LONDON CAP> -Prince
Charles and Lady Diana Spencer
were wed this morning in the
music-filled color and splendor of
a 1,000-year-old monarchy, em-
barking on life as man and wife
on waves of love from a devoted
people. · ·o let the nations rejoice and be
glad!" erupted the massed choirs
when the Archbishop of Can-
terbury pronounced the couple
wed under the soaring dome of St.
Paul '1 CatbedraJ.
After the 80-mlnute Church of
England ceremony, the royal cou·
pie rode back to Buckingham
Palacelnanopencarriage, wend-
Ing through a crowd of almost one
million people who roared their
good wishes and waved a sea of
Union Jack flags. Church bells
rang across lhe realm.
At the palace, the prince and his
new princess stepped out on the
scarlet-draped balcony and
waved to the thundering throng.
Three generations of the royal
family joined them there, along
with the fi ve bridesma ids,
garlands in their hair, and the two
pageboys.
At one point the royal couple
kissed and touched off a crescen-
do of cheers from the surging
crowds.
Wedding marred
by Liverpool . riots
LIVERPOOL, CAP) -Fierce
rlotin1 rased here for the third
1tral1ht ntabt aa Britain pre·
pared for lhe royal weddina lo
London today with thouaandl of
police and troops 1uardln1 the
fesUve capital.
In Northern Ireland, army ex·
pet"tl dehlled a 400-pound bomb
ln a mobll• bome and 1ald U..y
believed lrtM NaUonalilta bad
planaed to MU& off u • "wedcllnf
1pectacular."
Two bundnd YoUUit hurUna
IAIOllne bombl, ltonel, brtcb
•nd ~GI Wib11 wa&er bau.led •undndl ol~ lDto tM ... laoQn today dll ecaoontk!all1
.. pr•id lllP.l•m•srant :J'osMda dllCriCt of &Ida ;Grt ctty.
~ .... ~ ............
(
volved In the ri0Un1.
ln London, 18~ miles
southeut, more than 5,000 police
and troops patrolled crowcls ex·
peeled to 1weJI lo oae mllUon
people hoptna to catch 1 &llmpee
of Prince Ch1rlea and Lady
Diana Spencer on their weddlna
day. Scotland Yard called lt tbe
a1ency'1 b&H•t HCW1t1 opera·
Uon ever.
II Ullery IOVCH Hid tbeJ
believed lrtab Republican AnDJ
1uerrW• Plam.d tbe 400-pomld
bomb nMr tbe border wttla UM
lriab ,..ablle ad r=_•tAr ID·
tended to ....... ~ , ....
coatrol to wipe • • MUia army Pan&. A lllDll8rl1 ......
bOIDb ld.U9d ave lrllllla ...... tut MQ.
A
The union of the 32-year-old
Pr ince of Wales and Lady Diana,
the 20-year-old kindergarten
teacher with the captivating
smile, was the first time in three
SOME ROYAL TY
ROMANCES AOCKY-A12
centuries that the heir to the
British throne has married an
English-born woman.
''Thl.s is the stuff o( which fairy
tales are made," observed the
archbishop at the cathedral.
First lady Nancy Reagan wu
the official U.S. representa~e,
sittin1 a mong the forei n
dignitaries In St. Paul's. Desi es
the masses of spectators here, at
least 500 million others were
believed to have watched the
ceremony on televt1lon around
the world.
"I've never seen anythtna like
it,·· one veteran bobby said ol the
crowda. "We've 1ot the whole ol
Britain . . . here." Aut.boriUet
had feared po1stble terrortJt at·
tack1 or other violence durlnc the
1reat event, but no lncldeatl
marred the proceulon or
ceremony.
There wu a remind• over·
nJ1bt ol Brita1n'1 domeauc prob.
lem1, however, wbeft new JUUt.11
rtoUnc .... out la the nortbftlt pan o1 LlYS'DOOI. AtkPa.r1r:·u.....,... heir...... .... pro.
nounre41_~~!,_ Clllarlt1 ,Pblllp
ArUlur uwarp tUe tMe DI.a f'rUMll to ., ....... ..,., ..
have IM to .W hlli Udi dQ rorwn. .. "
Dlw, ..... ~~::' wlltt.,ta11ea11 ...............
(~ .... Al
l
•
• • • • • *
OH ANGf COUNTY C ALIF OH NIA 25 CENTS
...................
· 1 couldn't shoot him in the head,' Brian Miller testifies at murder trial. · r f elt he was gomg to die no
matter what I did.·
Reagan seeks allies
Showdown on tax cuts expected today
WASHJNGTON <AP> -Presi-
dent Reagan worked down to the
wire today to build a new coaJi.
lion with dissident Democrats in
hopes of forging a victory for his
three-year, 25 percent tax cut.
Although an Associated Press
survey showed a crumbling in
the coalition with conservative
De mocrats that Reagan put
together to pass his budget cuts,
the president appeared today to
be p~king up replace ment
backers ror his tax cut plan.
New drop
• in economy
reported
WASHINGTON (AP> -A key
national economic barometer
fell 1.3 percent in June, the
second monthly decline in a row
and an apparent indication that
the economy will continue to
weaken in coming months, the
Commerce Department reported
today.
The government's index of
economic indicators had fallen
1.5 percent In Ma y after rising
for two consecutive months, the
report said .
June's drop in the index, which
Is designed to forecast future
trends In the national economy, Is
in line with most analysts' predic-
tions that there will be little or no
economic growth in the current
July-September quarter .
Nallonal growth, as measured
by the inflation-adjusted gross
national product, fell at an an-
nual rate of 1.9 percent in the
April-June quarter a fter racing
ahead at an 8.6 percent rate in
the fir st three months of the
year .
Oi l fir"'i 's
• earnin gs
jump Bl o/"
SAN FRANCISCO (AP )
Standard Oil Co. or California's
domestic oil earnings Jumped by
81 percent In the last three
monthl compared with the same
period a year a10. the company
has announced.
Domestic S:troleum eaminas
ror the 90-ay period endJn1
June 30 totaled '322 mlllion,
compared with S178 million a
year aao.
A company spokesman 1aid
dere,IUlaUon of oil prices and
production of more hl1ber·
quality natwal 1u were beb1nd
tbelacreue.
Soul earntnp dropped by
more than 7 percent In the
aecODd quart.er ol 1911 but were
1S percent bllber than the 1ame
tbre•·month period a year .,o.
Earnbao for the 80-day period enclln1 ·June ·ao totaled' telt
million. • mlWon a ... than th• preflam daree·month period but
"1 iDlllcla more U..n th• ume
q ....... la19. ••:;.=.c....,. ... sa.• fOr a. Ud ea.11 for tba
111'11 " -.... ,..... wttb ~ ... iir1M dae .... ..,...
'
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said the president was
on the telephone until 7 p.m.
POT Tuesday to undecided con-
gressmen and planned "to reach
maybe two dozen fence-sitters"
during the day. The crucial
House vote is scheduled for late
afternoon.
"We feel we have gotten a
number or people in the last 24
hours," Speakes said. "We reel
the momentum going our way."
Yet he said the outcome was
"too close to call."
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neil l, D-Mass., appeared
pessimistic as he told reporters
De mocrats were losing some·
moderates and li ber als who had
opposed Reagan's budget cuts.
Other Democrats were saying
on a not-for-attribution basis
that Reagan might pull this one
out.
A key Republican leadership
staff member said Republicans
appeared -on a hard count -
lo be l WO Or three votes short Of
victory.
•Tehran
IRAN ( Earthquakel
' •
Andoogherd
SAUDI
ARABIA ,,,,,..._..
This ii the tense of todail'• earthqvaM m Iron thaJ ~ relUlt in a
death toll of more than 4,000 a1 reacue worker• 1earch for bodie1. J
4 ,000 lives lost
in Iran e arthquake?
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP)
Tehran radio reported more than
700 bodies recovered , but the pro·
vlncial government predicted a
toll of more than 4,000 dead in an
earthquake that hit the southeast
Iranian province of Kerman dur-
ing the mght.
It was the second quake dis-
aster in the region in less than two
months and the third In four
years.
•'The number of victims of the
earthquake has surpassed the 700
mark," the Iranian eovernment
radio reported this afternoon.
••Efforts to recover the bodies of
other victims are conUnuina. ••
The aovernor general of the
province, Abdolbosseln Saveb,
said the quake was centered In the
small town of Shahdad, about 500
mllea aoutheast or Tehran and 30
miles northeast of Kerman. the
provincial capital.
He predicted the toll would be
between ,,000 and 5,000 dead,
Par11aid.
Hospltall ln Ketman reponed '° dead and 400 injured ~the pro-vincial capital, Tehran Radio,..
ported earlier.
· Pan Mid the quake meuund
between e.a and ?"on the Ricbw
•eale and nattened IO perc•t of
the bWldlnp In tbe dl1trict.
Army unltl and racue IQuadl
were ·1lryln1 to clear debrl•·
cJM>ke(t rOidl la the remote IDOUD·
lalnou r.,ton u bellcopter1
r u1hed relC\Mtl'I, medical pencm.
nel and 1uppUa to Uie area, Pin
Hid, but the..,.. ... tettaJa ba.m·
per~aUoa.
The area Is less than SO mil
from the village or Goldbag.b,
which was nattened by a June U
quake that the Iranian Red Crea·
cent said killed 1,000 people and
injured 1,500 others. It measured
6.9 on the Richter scale. The same
area also was rocked by a quake'
in 1977 that killed 580 people and
injured more than 1,000.
;1RllCI ClllT 1111111
Night and mornlne low
clouds with sunny arter-
noon Thursday. LltUe Lem·
perature change. Hi1b1 75
to 83. Lows tonight 80 to
66.
lJllDI TlllY
Arton otrackt haw ha·
/lamed Clw 2,700 ~ftdnt• o/
Muncv. 1Po. SH ttorv, pltoto
Pao-Al.
lllEI
I
••
..,__...
Here's how England's morning newspapers heralded tM rolJQl
wedding, with shifting emphaN on variow aspects of tM story.
Pair slip up vows
Diana errs on Prince Charles'name
LONDON {AP) -In the moments before she became
Princess of Wales today, Lady Diana Spencer made her
first slip, speaking her husband's name in the wrong order
before the hushed congregation at St. Paul's Cathedral and
some 500 million television viewers.
But she was not alone. Prince Charles left out a word in
repeating his vows. . .
Diana, in a dress with a 25-foot tram and yards of veil,
gracefully negotiated a difficult exit from her coach at the
foot of St. Paul's steps. She glided down the long. red·
carpeted aisle at her father's side without a false step.
But when the Archbishop of Canterbury. Rt. Rev.
• •• Robert Runde spoke the prince's name for her to repeat:
· ••• • ··Charles Philip Arthur George ," she promised to marry
::::.; .. Philip Charles Arthur George."
·:: The Prince of Wales also made a mistake, after placing
::. • the band of welsh gold on his bride's finger. He offered to ·~ share his ''goods" but dropped the word "wordly ...
But such minor errors did not stop the archbishop from
pronouncing the couple "man and wife together" and
crowds outside. listening to the ceremony on loudspeakers.
broke their silence with loud cheers.
Baby falls 3 floors
into arms of hero
SCHAUMBURG, Jll. <AP> -
Tom Deal says he has pretty
good hands from playing ball,
but sports didn't prepare him for
catching a 10-month-old girl as
she came hurtling from a third·
story balcony.
Deal, a 22 -yea r o ld
warehouseman. saved the tod·
TUCSON. Ariz. CAP) -The
number of people known killed in
a weekend flash flood in a recrea-.~ "tional area here rose to five Tues-
day as searchers recovered the
bodiesoftwopeople.
Meanwhile, heavy rains and
some flooding were reported in
\Oklahoma, northern Indiana and
Missouri on Tuesday.
In Oklahoma City, about 20 peo-
: ~e r eturned lo their homes Tues·
day afber floodwaters forced
them to evacuate Monday night.
There were reports of minor
dama1e. and some streets and
highways were closed for l~s
than a day.
Priest slain
in Gu·atemala
SANTIAGO DE ATITLAN.
Guatemala (AP) -"Father,
you're in extreme danger. You
must get out immediately," a
parishioner warned lbe 46-year-
old priest from Oklahoma 1ix
months ago.
He left, came back three
monlhl later and on Monday niabt
wu UN111nated, presumably by
a rigbt·wtnc de1th squad. The
Rev. stan Rother said he wu
frightened when a member of
hi• Oock told bim on Jan. 10 he
bad been marked for uetuUoo.
dler. who. was not inJured dunng
lbe weekend incident.
"I was just really nervous,
man, when I knew she was going
to fall," Deal said in an in·
terview Tuesday.
Deal and his wife, Lorri, were
awakened early Sunday in this
Chicago suburb by a baby's cry·
ing. They peered out a window
and saw an open lhird·floor
patlo door in an apartment
across the parking lot.
A baby, Jennifer Deul, ap-
parently pried open the screen
door and inched toward the patio
railing. First one, then another
plump leg appeared over the
edge.
No one answered the apart-
ment buzzer when· Deal ran over
and started ringing.
''The next thing I knew, both
legs went over the side, and I
ran there to wait for her lo fall .
And s he did . Bby. was I
nervous," he said. "She bounced
her rear end off the second·fioor
railing bar and did a litUe flop
into my arms. I just guided her
to the ground."
Deal said, "She didn't seem
hurl, but she needed a diaper
cba'nge." ·
He took Jennifer to a hospital
emergency room "to make sure
she was all right." The hospital
notified police, w'ho questioned
the baby's mother. Sabrina
Deul, 20, of Hoffman Estates,
another nearby Chicago suburb.
Schaumburg Police Lt. Robert
Specht said Tuesday the baby
apparently was left Saturday
night with a baby sitter who ex-
~cted Ma. Deul home by mid·
ru1ht.
When the mother had not re·
turned by 3 a.m ., the baby sitter
took the child to the apartment
near the Deals' and put her to
bed on a aola because no crib
was available, be said.
Mt. Deu1 could not be located
for comment.
c1 .. .-.. .._ ........ 114/ta-Mn AU othef .,,.,.,..._ iQ-4111
'Pentative agreement with food council reached three hours before deadline
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
rnldnl1bt walkout by
1uperma.rtlt clerks wu av.ud
wtitn ne1ot11ton for 78, 100
clerk• and 1,211 Southern
Callfornta 1upermarktt1 ten·
tatlvely aireed on 1 new con·
tract after a monLh and a bail of
ha1c1m1.
The bar1atntn1 unit.I from the
Food Emplorers Councll and the
UnUed Food and Commerclal
Union otnclalb reached .,ree·
ment on the pact at about 9:30
p.m . Tuesday, 2~ houra before
the clerks were to 10 on strike
a1alnst stores in 12 counties.
Federal mediator Frank Allen
Dogfight
• strains
cease-fire
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP)
Syrla and Israel each claimed
sbootlni down a Jet fithter in a
dogfllhl over Lebanon today, a
battle that put the most serloua
strain yet on the slx-day-old
cease-fire.
Israel said lts warplanes shot
down a Soviet-made MIG ·2~
Syrian jet, the most advanced In
the Syrlan arsenal, and returned
safely from a "routine recoo-
n a i ssance mission '' over
Lebanon.
Syria said one Israeli Jet was
downed and conceded a Syrian
'plane was "hit'.:' But a com·
munique said "our planes re-
turned safely to base."
Lebanese security forces said
the pilot of the downed Syrian
jet bailed out, was picked up by
a helicopter about 30 miles
northeast of Bei11Ul and later
flown to Damascus, the Syrian
capital.
The Christian Voice of
Lebanon radio said a pilotJess
Is raeli reconnaissance drone
was later shot down by a Syrian
anti-aircraft missle fired from
eastern Le banon 's Bekaa
Valley.
Israeli military sources denied
a drone was downed, but bad no
comment on Lebanese radio and
TV reports of an Israeli armored
buildup in the sout hern
Lebanese border enclave con·
trolled by Israeli-backed Ch.rh-
tian forces.
Syria threatened les1 than 24
hours ago lo shoot down tsrael
jets on reconnaissance flighll as
violators of the cease·fire . Israel
insists that under the terms of
the U .S.·mediated truce it is en-
titled to conduct reconnalasance
flights, and the State Depart-
ment supports this position.
From Page A1
WED •••
Among lhe Americana in the
throng outside St. Paul's was
Rose Skelton, who brought her
two daughters from Ocean
Springs, Miss., and spent the
nhcht on a Fleet Street sidewalk.
''This is something my children
will only experience once in a
lifetime. They can see the
ceremony on television . . . but
they will never, ever be able to see
the coaches, the horses and the
future KJng or England live," she
said.
Earlier. as a glistening sun rose
over the dome of the famous
cathedral, Household Cavalry in
red and blue tunics, silver
breastplates and plumed helmets
rode from their barracks with
royal standards flying and drawn
sabers.
Pipe-and-drum and other
military bands marched more
troops into position along lbe pro·
cession route.
The mass of spectators was
watched over by more than 5,000
police and troops.
Postal pact
rejected
BOSTON CAP) -Leaden of
Boston's postal workers have vot·
ed to reject lut week'• tentative
contract aareement "1Lh the U.S.
Postal Service, and a union chief
says the acUon may spell trouble
foe the proposal.
The executive board of lbe
Boston local of the American
PoetaJ Workers Union •oted 11-5
a11tn1t the contractl Steve
Albaneee, Je.Mral pr81 dent ol
the locaJ, a d'rU81UJ.
AlbaneM said 8olloll'I reJ«·
tlon OI tbe pact may affect other
voten. He Hid that la 1• loeal
execud•• boardl vot.d don a
contract-' and 11neral m•m·
w1blpaJ10rejeeted lt.
•
tald that no d1taU1 could bl re·
lea14td untll after union official•
bad a chance to prt11nt the
packue to th• m1mblrtblp '°"a
vole or raUflcatlon.
However, Jack Lovtall, the
union's vlce preeldent. aald the
tentaUve pact c11l1 for an In·
create In w11ea and frlnse
benefit.I amounUn1 to *3.55 an.
hour over three years.
The compromlu broke a
Tuesday afternoon deadlock
over a H -cenl·t n·hour dif-
ference between what the
marketa offered and what the
union waa demandln1. After he
met ••earateb wllh b9th 1ldn
GAVE THE ORDER?
Defendant Aguirre
From Page A1
and then coaxed them back to
the bar1a1nlnt table Tuesday
nl&bt, A.Hen 1aid, "Both parties
modlfltd their potltlons and
came cloeer to1ether."
Allen said the afreemenl was
different from two previous of·
fers by the Food Employers
Councll, which the union reject·
ed. "It 11 different from any of·
fera which you have heard," he
said.
The Food Employers Council
jllv,e ln earlier on two major ls·
sues, one concernlne benefits
and the other providlne that any
new stores would automatically
come under a union contract.
Del., ......... ,....
TOLD HIM TO FIRE"
Defendant Marvin
SLAYING RECALLED • • •
former custom ers.
The Garden Grove man was
lured into the oil field on th«: pre·
text of going on"a nighttime rab-
bit hunt with his five Huntington
Beach companions, witnesses
testified.
Miller, and two other people
charged in the case, Aguirre's
wife, Laurie. 20, and James
Garwood, 24 , pleaded guilty to
reduced charges of voluntary
manslaughter in exchange for
their testimony.
Judge nixes fa ult
theory on Onofre
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Handing
a blow to opponents of licensing
l wo nuclear reactors at San
Onofre, an administrative judge
bas thrown out testimony attest·
Nuke plant
probe told
MIDDLETOWN, Pa. CAP> -
The Nuclear Regulatory Com·
mission ls investigating an al-
leged cheating scandal involving o~rators at the Three Mile Island
nuclear power plant, a TMI
spokesman confirmed Tuesday.
The alleged cheating involved
written tests given lo operators
who would help run an uo-
d am a1ed reactor at TMI.
spokesman John Fidler said.
That reactor, Unit 1, bas re·
mained idle since the March 28,
1979 accident that damaged the
plant's Unit2reactor.
The tests, given in April, were
to ensure that the operators were
qualified lo run Unit 1 safely. The
design of that reactor is identical
to the unit that was damaged in
the nation's worst commercial
nuclear power accident.
'
.
I
Ing lo recent activity of a nearby
earthquake fault.
Judge James L. Kelley ruled
Tuesday that testimony of re-
search specialist Richard S.
Simons or the UC San Diego
could not be accepted because it
relies upon events occurring
before 1973 when construction
permit hearings were held for
units 2 and 3.
Kelley said it would have been
more appropriate to present the
testimony -contending the
Cri6stianitos fault. localed about a atr mile from the power
plant, has had up to 20 small
earthquakes on it since 1932 -at
hearings held earlier.
Simons , who holds a
bachelor's degree from the
M assachusells Ins titute of
Technology, also did not have
•'the confidence and assurance
we expect from an expert,"
Kelley said.
Witnesses for license appli·
cant Southern California Edison
Co. have said the fault has had
no activity for 125,000 years or
more.
Simons said quakes ranging in
magnitude from 1.5 to 5.5 on the
Richter scale have epicenters
within a range which includes
the fault.
Ideal for home, auto, shop, and boat.
lnoluded is a wall or bench holder.
Put Dustbuster in its holder and it
recharges.
Cleans up spills fast -Ideal for hard
to reach areas.
'2488
Allen said the talka broke
down on the SS.cent-an-hour dlf.
ference, with the com~es ol·
ferln1 a sa.ao an hour t over
three years and the union seek·
Ing a $3.65 percent Increase.
Under the old contract, top.
scale clerks earn $9.10 an hour in w1es and $4.12 an hour in
fringe benefit.a.
The 1,277 supermarkets
stretch from San LuiJ Oblapo
and Mono counties ln the north
to the Mexican border, a reeion
with a population of 13.9 million
persons. The supermarket.a sup-
ply 85 percent of the groceries in
that area.
Controllers
• reject
contract
WASHINGTON <AP > -Air
tr a me cc>nlrollers are setlln1 lbe
lltage for another showdown
with the Reagan admininstra·
lion and raising once a1aln the
threat of a strike with their re·
,Jectlon of,. tentative contract.
The controllera voted Tuesday
to reject the tentative accord
reached juat hours before a
strike deadline laat month, union
orflclal1 taid The vote, expected
to s how an overwhelmlns rejec·
Uon of the pact, was to be re·
leased today
Some union leaders,
meanwhile, said the Reaaan ad·
mlnlatraUon mwit come up with
more money 11 a walkout La lo be
averted, aaylna the aovern-
ment's S40 million package La
not enou1h to meet lbe con·
trollers· demands.
"It won't do ... We've aot to
have more money," said Larry
Phillips, who represents the
Great Lakes region on the µn ·
ion's executive board. Several
other board members expressed
similar beliefs.
The long-awaited ratification
vote was counted Tuesday and
union s pokesma n Marcia
Feldman said it was clear lhe
pact would be rejected over·
whelmingly.
Patient 'stable'
PALO ALTO CAP) -A 28·
year-old Mill Valley woman
has become Stanford University
Medical Center's third heart-
lung transplant recipient.
MAY QUIT -Sen . S.I.
Hayakawa, facing a tough
fight to hold his Senate seat.
s ays he may drop out of the
race if he's not ahead in the
polls by the end or the year.
I I
w . u
A,. • .,..._
The Rev. Daniel Berrigan and h~ tJrother Philip. background.
enter Montgomery County Courthouse m Norristoum. Pa .
where they were sentenced to 3 to 10 years m pnson for their
parts in a break·in at a General Electric plant. The Berrigans
and others were protesting nuclear weapons manufactunng
Iran rescue colonel quits
Col. Charles Beckwith, who
led the ill·rated mission to
rescue the hostages in Iran.
says he plans to retire from
the military and teach anti·
terrotist tactics to corpora·
lions .
The veteran Green Beret
said he will launch his cor-
porate venture when he re·
tires this fall. He said rive as-
sociates with whom he's
worked in anti-terrorist ac·
tivities in the past will join
him. but he declined to name
them during an interview at
Fort Bragg, N.C.
In April 1980. Beckwith led
a team into Iran in an effort
to rescue 53 Americans held
hostage. But the raid was
canceled after three helicop-
ters developed mechanical
trouble.
As the team withdrew, a
helicopter collided with a
C-130 aircr aft and both burst
into flames. Eight crewmen
in the plane were killed.
Beckwith, 52. said his new
firm will advise corpor ate
executives on how to protect
the mselves from attack. It
also will counsel companies
seeking to prevent sabotage
and terrorist attacks
He said his fi rm will be
based in Aus tin , Tex as,
beginning Oct. 1.
Beckwith now works at
Fort Bragg's J oint Special
Operations Command.
Will movie composer lolaa
Wlllla1111 stay for a third
year as director o f the
Boston Pops? The mana1er
or the Boston Symphony ad·
mlts, "ll is a very hot que11-
Uoo."
Wiiliams, who wrote the
music ror ''Star Wars," hu
been leading the Popa for two
years, but he says be hasn't
made up hi11 m ind a bout
keeping the job.
The Pops, which is part of
the Boston Symphony, plays
popular music and familiar
classic;; in the spring and
early summer .
Williams has said be will
make up his mind after lhe
current season, which ended
Tuesday night at Tanglewood
in the Berkshires .
Williams met Monday with
Sy mphony General Manager
Thomas W. Morris. Af-
terward Morris said, "The
answer Is that we just don't
know yet. though you can say
we are negotiating and work·
ing on it."
Na val Reserve Officer
Gary Hart, who is also a U.S.
senator from Colorado, plans
to sail with the Navy in the
Indian Ocean next week, ac·
cording lo an announcement
from his Denver oHice.
Harl will make the five.
day trip as a Cactfinder for
the Senate Armed Services
Committee and as a lieute·
nant j .g . in the Navy
Reserve, Harl aides said.
Harl has said he wants to
learn more about the status
of U.S. naval forces in the ln·
dian Ocean a nd Persian Gulf
regions. He plans to study
how those forces could de·
fend Middle Eastern Oil sup·
ply lines. and how long tours
of duty affect Navy person-
nel. The trip will be financed
by the committee.
H a rt aides said his
senatorial status would allow
him special treatment not
normall y afforded a naval
reserve offi cer . but said the
Democrat pl anned to try to
keep a low profile.
Storms cause floods ,
Families evacuated in Indiana after 3 inches of rain
Coastal forecast
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642•6086
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 29. 1981 s
&udermilk mm cut ~
Judge reduces figure from $225 ,000 to $150 ,000 ~ I
Over a prosecutor's objec-
tions, a judge has ordered lbat
bail be reduced ror a former
Orange County Sberirf's deputy
now free while appealing his
conviction on kldpappine and
false imprisonment charges.
Superior Court Judge James
Turner said $150,000 bail would
be s ufficient for George
Loudermilk, 38, of Costa Mesa,
who faces a one-year jail term
and rive years' probation should
the appeals prove uns uccessful .
LoudermUk's bail had been 1et
at $225,000, secured by $4SO,OOO
In real estate posted by friend.I
and relatives. Under Turner's
ruling Tuesday, only $300,000
will have lo be pledged.
The former sheriff's deputy
was convicted June 5 of three
felony count!, Including kidnap·
ping and faJse Imprisonment, for
detaining three female motorists
he stopped while on patrol.
One witness, a 33-year-old
Mission Viejo woman, claimed
Loudermilk drove her tp a
secluded Irvine -area location
where he IJlid the posalbllit>!1 ex·
isted sbe could be rape"I or
murdered.
Defense allorney~ith
Montoe initially asked T to
reduce ball lo Sl0,000 or $20 .
Monroe s aid there was DO
danger that Loudermilk wtuld
fl ee the juris diction . A!bd .
Mooroe said, one party !ho
pledged property toward the
$225,000 needed the bail lien ~ift·
ed for legal reasons . '
Judge to decide on
Caywood's penalty
Deputy District Attoraey
M ichae l J acob s urged the
$225,000 bail remain in efft!ct.
As for the party that wanted
the baH lien lifted Jrom tlleir
property, J acobs said sharj»Jy,
"If they want out, they can Igel
out and Mr. Loudermilk can
An Orange County Superior
Court judge -not a jury -will
decide if con vic t ed double
murderer William Caywwod
should be sentenced to death or
life imprisonment without
possibility of parole.
Following a hearing Tuesday
with prosecution and defense at·
torneys , Judge Will i am
Thomson ruled that he will de·
cide the issue rather than em-
panel a second jury to make the
penalty determination.
The firs t jury to deliberate the
question deadlocked 10 to 2 in
favor of r ecommending the
death penalty for the 40-year -old
~anta An a man, convicted by a
separate panel of killing two Ira·
nian immigrants who once were
em ployed at his Ontario service
station.
Caywood clajmed during the
tria l that the two m e n had
broken into his house while he
was asleep and that he shot
them after a chase.
Judge Thomson said that he
has scheduled an Aug. 14 hear-
ing to receive fu rther tes timony
on whi ch sentence should be lm-
Brown hits
Reagan
polic ies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
Federal economic policies will
lead to a "weakened America,"
Gov. EdmW'ld G. Brown J r. told
a gathering of the nation's lop
trial lawyers .
·'The e ffort to c ure our
economic llls by running up the
interest rates to the highest in
our history, by bankrupting
more and more s mall busi-
nesses .. .is being promulgated
under the promise that this is
going to stren gthen t h e
Ame rican economy," Brown
told the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America.
"I have lo tell you that nothing
could be further Crom the truth,"
Brown said to profuse applause
as he addressed 1,500 people
beneath a bann er read ing
"Lawyers on the side of people."
Brown, an all-but-declared
Democratic cand idate for the
U.S. Senate, never mentioned
President Reagan or his ad·
ministration by name. But his
target was umistakable.
He said it was wrong to think
"that by spending Sl.5 trillion on
the military budget. that is go-
ing to strengthen us at the same
time we cut back on all our tax-
es across t he board and hope
somehow there's a miracle go-
ing to happen.'·
Gem
Talk
By J.C. H UMPHRIES
Cnt1fied Gtmolo1111t, AGS
THE AMETHYST
and a t<U /rom Bacchua
For centuries, the beautiful,
violet-hued amethys t bas
symbolized peace and
tranquility. But to the ancient
Greeb wbo iave it Ila name,
the amethyst symbolized the
remorae or the god Bacchut,
who in a drunken ra1e, Is said
to have loosed a herd of wild
beasts to destroy a youn1
maiden named Amethyst. The
maiden cried out to the goddes
Diana1 the story 1oe1, and
Diana turned her lnto a marble
statue to save her from the
beasts. BaccbUI, later sober
and remonetul, poured bis lut
1la11 of wine over the 1t.atue,
tuminl it from white to a lovely
violet. Thereafter, the Greeb
believed that he who draAk
from an amethyst cballce woald
not become lntoxlcat.d. ln fac:t,
tbe word ame~y1t ln Greek
meana , literally , "not
drunken." The amethy1t
1em1tone i1 found In many
royal collect10111 of ancient
posed . For the most part,
Thomson said, he will rely on
the previous record in the case
to make his decision.
Thomson said he made it clear
to Caywood that he was not try-
ing "lo save time" by not sub·
milting the penalty issue to a
second jury.
And, he said his decision to
make t he d e t e rm i n ation
"s houldn 't imply anything that I
may do."
Caxwood's victims were Iraq
Bad11an, 39 . of Onta rio, and
RuholJ ab Rolbo ll a n , 35, of
Norwalk. The slayings occurred
last July.
start serving his lime." 1 Judge Turner said a conlin\led
high bail was necessary to: in-
sure the safety of those who
testified against Loud er~ilk
during the highly publiciied
trial. '
Loudermilk, who had been
free during the trial. was taken
in to custod y after the j ury
verdict was deli vered when the
Mission Viejo woman claimed
sh e r eceived a threatening
telephone call. Loudermilk de·
nied making the call.
He was freed from jail after
friends and relatives posted the
$225,000 bail. lowered from an
initial SS00.000. f
AP.WI ........
A F,LAG AND MEMORIES Kay Van Dyke. mother of Air
Force Capt. Ri chard Van Dyke. sobs at he r son's funeral
after being presented with flag that draped his coffin Van
Dyk e 's body and that of two others who had been m issing m
action in Vietna m were returned to the U.S . government 3u·
ly 7. .
THINK TWICE
.
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Only an expert can correctly price • diamond -and even. an exper4
must have the proper lnslrurMOta. Dotln't ll make ttnae, then. ti
buy from a Jeweler you can completely i:eb' upon? vtalt our store and
tel the tact.I behlnd a diamond'• price &enent from our membenh1t
In the Amm~ Otm SocWtr. You'll be inort pleaaed wtth yout
purchue knowins t~at you made a wtM dlamoad ~. ' J. C..JJwppJu.u,6 }.w11f.rd
E1ypt and GrHCt, and •• MEMSEA AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @ promt.lt m the BrtUtb Crown 1823 NEWPORT Bl.VO COSTA MESA
,, ....... A m •ID lllcent 35YEAAS IN THE SAME LOCATION
1pedmen la ln lbt Royal l•nkAtMf1c•rd-M .. tetCn•rv• PHONES.3401
-Sc•ptte. -l!~~!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!! ·,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, July 29. 1981
RBcial violence threatened
Police brutality, not budget cuts, posing greatest risk, expert says
AP..,._.
Scott Dunagan. 9. shows the form that
abled him to win a recent Cub Scout. ping pong ball·
wing contest in his home town of Palm Desert.
rrison director's
esignation asked
-.
C.ARSON CITY <AP> Citing
rtUJ,ealed problems of prison
viO\ence, drug traffic and s ag-
ging employee morale, Attorney
~era! Dick Bryan has called
for the resignation of Nevada
Prison Director Charles Wolff
J
The request has been prompt-
! rejected by Gov. Bob List -
a d was termed a "cheap
litical s hot" by Bill Philllps,
i s l 's executive assistant.
yan's request was m ade in a
l tter to List, who was out of
s ate.
Phillips also said Bryan,
hose office r ecently lost its
t ird court batUe with an inmate
cused of some of the prison
olence. was ··looking for a
apegoat. It would probably
Ip things at the prison 1f be
ryan) coul~ get a conviction."
Phillips said the governor was
are of Bryan's letter and
' oes not have any intention of
placing the director at this e.··
He also said Tuesday the gov·
nor believes Wolff 15 doing a
od job und e r difficult
r cumstances. and was disap-
inted that Bryan was "not
s pportive of the positive efforts
t at are under way out there."
Phillips said Bryan is a
ember of the Prison Board,
d has an avenue for instituting
c a n ges in s tead of being
' ritical in the press." Bryan
aintained that only List, as
chairman of the Prison Board,
could remove a director.
Wolff was not immediately
available for comment.
Bryan said in his three-page
letter that he had .. r eluctantly
concluded that the situation in
t h e Nevada Department or
Prisons will not improve-. until
there is a new director.·'
''Director Wolff no longer has
my confidence, and I believe
that he lacks the confidence of
the Legislature, the prison staff
and the public in general," he
added.
·'In the past eight months
there have been over 40 persons
taken hostage in the prison in six
separate incidents; 12 escapes
-six of them by convicted
murderers, and numerous gang·
inspired assaults," Bryan said.
"In addition, five guns were
found with ammunition and two
were loaded and used by in·
mates in taking prison s taff
members hostage.
·'There is a strong and un-
derstandable feeling on the part
of Che public that no one in the
Car son City area is safe because
or the prison's inability to con·
lain and control inmates," he
s aid.
A "flagrant " example of
failure to implement new policy
surfaced with the discovery oniy
two weeks ago of thousands of
i mproperly stored pills and
other drugs at prison in-
firmaries, Bryan said.
Now you can have lovely
looking leg1 -even on a
budget. Now there's new HANES TOO
WASHINGTON <AP> -A
1rowln• number of police
brutality complalnta, rather
than federal budaet cuta, poeea
the 1reateat rTak of racial
violence in the cities thla •um·
mer, the nation'• chief race rela-
tions troubleshooter says.
"Some of the old mistakes that
were made are being made
aealn," sald Gilbert G. Pompa.
"Police community relations
units have been dlabanded.
Almost across the board, local
admlnlstraUona have been lulled
Into a senae that things are bet·
ter than they are.''
Despite those attitudes and the
largest domestic spending cuts
in history, Pompa said there is
less risk of violence this summer
than last.
The conclusion is based on the
annual survey of racial tensions
In 100 communities around the
nation conducted by the Justice
Department's Community Rela·
lions Service, which Pompa
heads.
Since 1965, between mid-May
and mid-June, the service has
assessed where to send its 11
m ediators and 60 conciliators
during what Pompa calls "the
critical period between July 4
and Labor Day."
In an interview with The As·
sociated Press Pompa said, "We
are not as much at risk as last
year." But he emphasized that
the conclusion is based primari-
ly on the absence of any violent
racial disturbances . so far this
year in the United States. By
this time in 1980, nine of the
year's 10 r ecorded violent racial
confrontations had already oc-
curred .
But Pompa. 49, said he is wor·
ried by growing complaints of
police brutality, or "police use
of excessive for ce" .as it is
known to federal officials.
Poland gets
OK for U .S.
corn purc h ase
WASHIN GTON <AP > -
Poland will get $55 million worth
of U.S. corn under a new Food
for Peace arrangement to help
rescue its poultry industry •. ac-
cording to Agriculture Secretary
John R. Bloclc.
The deal involves a 10-year
credit package under the aid
program, Block said Tuesday. It
supplements earlier short-term
credit guarantees of $670 million
under which Poland has. been
getting U.S. agricultural com·
modi ties.
Earlier, sources indicated an
additional $5.5 million in addi·
tional guarantees also would be
made available, but there was
no m ention of this in Block's an-
nouncement.
Further, a spokesman said the
$55 million would provide
Poland with about 350,000 metric
tons of com , not the 400,000 that
had been requested.
The grain Is to be shipped in
August and September.
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Control Top PantyhoM
Light Support Pantyho1e
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2/$1 .75
Complainu to the service about
police brutality are up 35 per·
cent, and police brutality cues
taken on by the service are up 18
percent over last year, Pompa
said.
''The asseHment this year re·
contirmed that polJce-mlnority
friction la still the No. 1 race re·
latlons problem In the United
States," Pompa said. .
A 13-year veteran -0f the
service, Pompa is not worried
about President R ~aga n 's
budget cuu triggering summer
violence.
"We worry more about the
police-minority friction variable
than we do any problems re-
garding budget cutbacks ...
because it's been our experience
that people in general, and
minorities in particular. have
been able to tolerate bad houa·
in&. have been able to tolerate
disproportionate levels of attain·
ment in education and a hlgh
dropout rate.
•'The one thine that we rind
that Lhey will not readily
tolerate IB the manner in which
they are dealt with by the police
because it strikes at the very
dignity of the person."
Pompa n ot ed that racial
violence did not increase after
share cuts in the war on poverty
in the late 1960s, nor did it rise in
California after passage of the
tax-cutting Proposition 13.
But his evaluators still weigh
a community's racial problems
in employment, education and
housing, because "il the state of
the police-minority relations is
not aood. then all lbe other prob-
le ma that you may have in
those other three variables will
surface as a result ol a conlroo·
talion precipitated by a conflict
between mlnorltles and police,"
Pompa said.
While Pompa detecu a grow-
ing awarenen by police ex·
eculives of the brutality issue,
he worried about the loss of
"many of the local police
personnel that we worked with
in the 1960s, and felt we had
reached some level of un·
derstandlng with in terms of
what to do." Pompa's mediators
and conciliators try to convlnce
communities to set standards
for police use of force. "The ooe
key thing we try to get a police
department to do Is not to over-
react 9Y using too much force."
Striking w orkers t hre ate ned
Officers riding shotgun on garbage trucks
PROVIDENCE, R.I. CAP> -
Mayor Vincent A. Cianci Jr. has
posted shotgun-toting police on
garbage trucks and pledged to
suspend benefits for 1,600 strik-
ing city workers unless they re·
turn to work. ·
Cianci announced the city ac·
lion Tuesday as five strikers
were arrested in separate inci-
dents and picket lines blocked
chemical s from a water
purification plant low on sup·
plies.
Cianci said the clerical and
blue-collar workers, who walked
off the job July 20, would lose
medkal and dental coverage as
well as a legal fund and strikers'
benefits if they don't go back to
their jobs. But he did not set a
deadline for a return to work.
"Come on home, fellows it's
warm in here," Cianci said in a
plea to members or Local 1033 of
the Public Service Employees'
Union .. No talks were scheduled
between the city a nd union
leaders who have refused to
comment on the walkout.
·'The strike could very well
last seven more weeks," Cianci
said in response to a question
about strikers' benefits.
The mayor said 24 dispatchers
were obeying a court back-to·
work order but that 136 other
key workers were not. He re·
pealed his threat to rire striking
workers and said the city would
set up an employmenl agency by
Thursday.
State sheriffs served 75 key
workers -in the sewage, water
and public safety communica-
lions departments -with sum-
mons to appear in court Thurs·
day on contempt charges if they
don't return to work.
The walkout began when
sewage treatment workers
struck to protest a cut in their
work week from 48 to 40 hours.
Fifly-one city sanitation workers
were fired for joining the
walkout, which then spr ead to
a ll members of the union.
Police armed with shotguns
sat next to drivers as a private
garbage company continued
trash pickups.
' Teamsters drove the trucks
past 40 pickets at a city high
s chool after union leaders re-
neged on a promise to allow col·
lection by United Sanitation of
Providence, a private company
hired by the ~ity after Cianci
fired sanitation workers.
Dennis Farias, a heavy eq.uip·
ment oper ator for the city,
was arrested when he allegedly
tried to block a police car carry.
in~ one of the Teamsters to his
truck.
Union members threatened to
snarl rush·hour traffic with in·
formational pickets. but about
100 city and stale police and
several tow trucks cleared ma·
JOr exits
Mail fraud s uspects
s et to plead guilty?
LAWTON, Okla. !AP> -At
least 50 curre nt a nd former
county commissioners have
agreed to plead g uilty lo mail
fraud charges in a federal in·
vestigation of kic kbacks, a
news paper has reported, quoting
unidentified sources.
The rapidly spr eading in·
vesligalion will focus on virtual·
ly ever y county in southwest
Oklahoma in the coming weeks,
the Lawton Morning Press r e-
ported m it's Tuesday editions.
The news paper said its
sources agreed lo speak about
the probe on the condition they
not be named.
Prosecutors wer e expecting to
indict more than a dozen county
officials during grand jury pro·
ceedings next week but the coun·
ty commissioners "are pleading
guilty so quickly now we may
not be able to indict anyone,"
the Lawton paper quoted one
source as saying.
T he newspaper said com·
missioners who agree to plead
guilty to federal charges and
agree to testify against others
involved in the scandal will only
be c harged on one count.
~UillTI~
·State cracks down
on ivaste dumping
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Pro~ecutors wlll have three
years instead of just one to
charge people or firms who ii.
le1ally dump hazardous wastes.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. an-
nounced he has ai1ned SB802 by
Sen. John Garamendi, D-Walnut
Grove, which goes into im-
mediate effect.
''No longer will illegal dum-
pers be able to escape prosecu·
lion simply because they suc-
cessfully hide their criminal
activities for one year," Brown
said in a statement. ·'This bill
. . . brings into full force the
strict penalties for illegal dump-
ing that we fought for last
year."
endaneerlng occupationaJ health
and safety violations.
-Require regulation and in-
spection of hazardous materials
haulers.
-Establish a birth defects
registry, and authorize a new
birth defects study In the Santa
Clara Valley, where maJatbion
is being sprayed to kill the
Mediterranean fruit fly.
-Establish liability for
persons responsible for release.
of toxic substances.
-Set criminal penalties for
high -level corporate officials
who knowingly conceal product
hazards from the public or
workers.
DEAD AT 78-Edwin W.
Pauley , chairman of Pauley
Petroleum in Los Angeles
and adviser to four presi-
dents, died Tuesday in
Beverly Hills.
Brown called on the
Legislature, which returns Aug.
10 from summer recess, to pass
other toxic substance control
bills.
"The fight against toxic sub·
stances abuse and illegal
hazardous chemical disposal re-
mains my highest environmen-
tal priority," Brown said.
Panel splits stand
on Diablo blockade
The remaining bills would :
-Create a fund, from a tax
on waste dumping, to clean up
a bandoned toxic dumps and
spills.
-Develop statewide siting
a nd permit requirements for
hazardous waste facilities.
-Require generat ors of
hazardous wastes to implement
management programs and pro-
vide economic incentives.
Increase nalties for life·
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
IM2•5e18
SAN LUIS OBISPO,-(AP> -
A proposed mass blockade or the
Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power
plant proved too controversial
for San Luis Obispo County
supervisors to take a stand on -
so they took two stands.
Two separate but not quite
conflicting resolutions were
adopted 3·2 Monday in reaction
to plans by the Abalone Alliance,
a coalition of anti-nuclear or-
ganizations, to stage a protest
with thousands of plant oppo·
nents to try to block operation
when the plant is licensed.
Supervisor Jerry Diefenderfer
had asked bis colleagues to go ••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e
• We are eslabhshing a pool of small money len-• e ders to assist us in the rinal stage of completion of e
• our chilling feature film ""The Hunting Season"". •
With already 4200 PAY /CABLE·T.V. stations
• begging for films along with Network/Local T. V, •
• gobbling up movies so fast it has caused an •
almost frantic demand for pictures.
• So get on the bandwagon with a young and am-• e bitio1.1s movie studio here in 0.C and enjoy some e
handiomt profits for yourself both now and in the
• future. • e. e e e e 71 4 I 957-4086 e e •• •. •
~j
D1ilyPilat
Classifieds
"N o response from
the Register -hired
thru the Pilot."
~~~I @ 642-5678
charge it~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
ca II 540-1 220 toll-free.
on record as Oi:>posing the
blockade.
He me~ with opposition from
s up e r visors Jeffrey G .
Jorgensen and Kurt P. Kupper,
who didn't want to formally op·
pose the blockade and didn't like
a clause saying a "hostile con-
frontation" could occur during
the demonstration.
So Jorgensen introduced a mo-
tion to "pledge full support to all
involved law enforcement agen-
cies" and to urge "all parties in·
vol ved to exercise the utmost
restraint to avoid any un-
necessar y confrontation or
violence."
Orange Coaat DAILY PIL.OT/WednHday, July 29, 1981 s
Buono Weedom nixed
Attorney general takes over Hillside Strangler case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
case of Hillside Stran1ler defen-
dant Angelo Buono has been
turned over to the California at·
torney general's for further pro-
secution after the Loa Angeles ·
district attorney was rebuffed in
an effort to dis miss charges
against Buono.
A representative uf Attorney
General George Deukmejian ap-
peared before Superior Court
Judge Ronald George and said
that week.long talks between the
two prosecutorial offices had re-
sulted in the change of com-
mand in the Buono prosecution.
• "We have agreed to accept
responsibility for further han-
dling the matter." said Deputy
Attorney General Sharlene Hon·
naka.
Ms. Honnaka said the decision
had been made only Monday.
and no deputies have been as-
signed to the case yet. She re·
quested and was granted a con-
tinuance until Thursday, when
the new case deputies will ap-
pear before George and give
their estimate on when Buono's
Minnesota jurist
judge of year
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A
Minnesota judge lauded as a
protector of the rights of con-
sumers, workers and the en-
vironment has been named out-
standing federal trial judge of
the year by the Association of
Trial Lawyers of America.
In announcing the award at ats
annual convention, ATLA com·
mended U.S. District Judge
Miles W. Lord for being "in the
forefront of judicial innovation
lo insure that substantive rights
are protected a nd not forfeited
or lost in a procedural morass."
trial could begin.
Asked if the attorney 1eneral
might also decide the case was
unwlnnable, she said it was not
bein1 ruled out.
"Anything is possible," she
said. "It could be a possibility
not to prosecute. That wouJd
have to be recommended by the
deputies assigned to the case.''
Deputy District Attorney
Roger Kelly, turning over the
reins in the case to the attorney
general's office, said he and his
co-prosecutor would be availa-
ble "on a full-time basis" to as-
slat the new proaecuton In •
handllni the complicated cue.
"Everythin1 we have will be
available to the attorney I
general," Kelly said. "An)'thtni
we can do lo expedite we will
do." ;
Buono's attorney, Gerald
Chalert, said be would op~
any further delay in the trial, ,
which ls now scheduled for Sept. l
15. :
Judge Geor1e h¥. ruled U l
should be up to the trial proc .. :
to determine Buono's 1uilt or in-•
nocence, not to the rosecu -
............
SHARK DIES This great white shark. described as t he on-
ly one in captivity. has died at San Diego·s Sea World'
marine park less than three days after being pulled out of
the sea off Ventura. ·
• I~
I ,
I j
'I
...
,, 4
I
...
Leading Di stri butor
of f ine Art
•
•
...... . -........ ~ ..._. .. -.... ... .... '--.-.. -...... ,,,... . -,..~ .,. ' ................. :· f " ~ ...... ... .. '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday. July 29, 1981
............
llRDS IN FORMATION The Snowbirds.
flight demonstration pilots of Canadian
armed forces, fly over Lake Michigan in ar·
row formation Friday. The Snowbirds were
practicing for Chicago's annual Air and
Water Show due Saturday and Sunday
Weapons cuts
eyed by Army
WASHINGTON <AP) -Escalating costs may
force the Army to scale down plans for expanding
Its arsenal with expensive modern equipment suet~
as the M·l tank, the Army's No. 1 general says. •
"There are programs that may have to be
cut," Gen. Edward C. Meyer. Army chief of staff.
said in a recent interview. "The question is
whether the additional expense (for such equip·
ment) is worth the additional capability.
"We'll end up where there will be a mix of
more modern equipment and with equipment not
quite so modern, not quite so capable," Meyer
added.
He singled out the two most expensive new
Army weapons -the $2.S million M·l tank and the
Sl.2 million infantry fighting vehicle, which the
Pentagon described earlier this year as "the lead·
Ing edge of the Army's program for modernizing
Its combat vehicle fleet."
"We'll have to ... determine if we want to go
to 7,100 M·ls or whether there is another number
that, in the total amount of resources that we have.
makes more sense,·• Meyer said.
He also indicated that officials are reviewing a
plan for the ultimate purchase of 6,800 Infantry
lighting vehicles.
Although he specified .no other major pro·
grams, he made it clear that other costly new
equipment is being reviewed. For example, it is
understood that Army officials are won~ering if
saving a few minutes in transmitting messages is
worth the cost of ver'y advanced computer-assisted
communications gear.
Meyer is pushing a new approach to force
structure and equipment planning because he
believes the Army "must take advantage of new
ideas·· to reshape it for the broader global scope of
the Reagan administr a lion strategy. Previous
strategies focused resources on meeting the Rua·
sians in Central Europe and defending South
Korea.
The Army chief says signlflcant numbers of
SS·ton M·l tanks could be replaced by 20·ton tanks
built around an existing chassis. The Army is ask·
Ing Pentagon leaders to speed design and develop·
ment of such a lank, which could be airlift.ed more
easily to spots such as the Persian Gulf.
A basic theory is that the new tank would sur·
vive on the battlefield through greater agility
rather than heavy armor protection.
Meyer also is considering a mix within combat
divisions of the present thin-skinned, unarmed
M·113 troop carriers and the heavier Infantry
fighting vehicles carrying a 25·millimeter an·
Utank gun, machine guns and TOW antitank mis·
a Iles.
A new light division can be used In less·
developed areas as well u Central Europe, ac·
cording to Meyer. It would have many more
antitank guided missiles than present mechanized
and infanty divisions as well as enchanced anti-
aircraft weapons and increased electronic warfare
weapons to knock out enemy communications.
Tighter license
rules souglit
. WASHINGTON (AP) -American medical
schools, areuin1 that physician training overseaa
.. inferior to scboollnt in the tJnlt.ed States, are
seeking tou1her licenstn1 requJrements for
foreign-trained doctors.
Charla Fent.resat public rei.tiona director for
the AaloclaUon of American Medical Colleges,
~aid this week tbe or1an1zatlon la promotln1 more
1trln1ent Ucenaln1 examh1ationa for foreign·
trained medical student.I.
The auoclaUoo la arlUIAI that tbe lncreasln1
number of medical scboolt chartered abroad and
operating partly ln tbe United States ls threatenlnl
IO years of lmprovementa tn U.S. medical care
and education. Fen~ sald the Htoclation la ino.l con· cemf'd about lbe tralalnl li•en American clUJens
al foreign me41cal 1ebool1. Thele atudeatl take an
eaaler e:umlnaUan than do noa-AIDM'iean atuden&I
who want to obtain clinical tralnln1 or practice
ln the United Statea.
Ke said the poeltlon by t.be uaoclatlon's ex·
.euUve C!OUDCU waa not relat.d to predlctJont that
llMr• wW be a 1urpl111 of '10,000 docton by 1990.
Tb• r.port. by the Graduate MedJcal Education NaUoelt AdYllor)' Committee au....wct tbat one
WQ to ftrb tlait 1urph.&1 WU to nCtuce the number of'&:' doctorl allowed &o pract.lce In tbls •
• tllflllmenta are not hMd on numben:· rnc.r.. .-..u. a t.elepboM Interview. ''Our ar1u· mnta .,. ._. on lbe quality o/ PlaY1lcian1
b'atMd abnled." r
Women cadets excluded from cruise
LA VERNE CAP> -It'll be anchora awel1h
Sunday for about a dozen male cadeta from a local
Junior ROTC unit, but not for 10 women collea1ue1
who we:re excluded from a two-week Navy crulae
lo Canada becau1e, the Navy claims, the ship has
no quarters for them.
"We blew It," Navy Capt. Dale Patterson said
of the mtxup that left the female cadet• In
Lutheran Kiah School's JunJor ROTC pro1ram an·
gry and disappointed.
"We were told in the be1lnnln1 that there were
10 berths for men and 10 berthl for women," com·
plained Beverly Newman of Claremont. "I wall
looklna forward to It all summer. The auys are
1Ull going, in racl two more men are 1oln1 now
that the women can't."
Patterson said that when the crulae aboard the
U.S.S. Tripoli was ln the plaMlng staae, a Navy
staffer had led the school to believe women would
be welcome. However when a formal appUcatlon
was submitted by the Tripoli -an amphlblous
hellcopter aaaault ship -to Navy authorities, the
women were denied permlaalon to participate.
"There Is no additional berthing space avalla·
ble for females, so requests for overnight cruises
are routinely denied," 1ald Patterson. He noted that it was only in October uns that Conaress act·
ed to allow assl1nmenl or female officers and
enlisted personnel to non-combat ships. A program
to modlty living quarters appropriately has been
•U n d. e r w a y s I n c e t h e n
"When further accommodations for women
are available. overnight crulse options will be ex·
tended lo female members of youth organlza·
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lions," Patterson said.
The women cadets, however. aald they had
been told they were betn1 len out because of Navy
policy barring women from combat ahtpe 1uch as
the Tripoli, even during peacetime.
School offlciuhs were apparently under the
s ame impression. A school newaleUer malled to
parents last week said: "Seems someone re·
minded someone somewhere up the chain that
Congress enacted into law that women may not be
used in combat, an amphibious helicopter a111ault
ship Is a floating combat base, ergo women may
not travel on this particular ship."
But Patterson said the statement was baaed on
an "incorrect assumption" and added that women
arc routinely allowed on combat ships for day
cr uises
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Study shows
BERKELEY <AP> -Some female employees
or the University or California at Berkeley are
r.ai'd about 70 percent less than men in jobs of
•comparable worth," says a new survey.
The survey was conducted by Local 1685 of the
American Federation or State, County and
Municipal Employees, and several women's
rroups.
It said, as an example, that personnel
supervisors in a nearly all-female classification
make a maximum of $1,442 a month, while
m echanics, almost all or them men, with similar
supervisory duties, make up to $2,243.
T he rrou~ called on the school to make a full·
S&ale study of lbe comparable value of all Jobs "so
that we can begin to pay women workers at UC
Berkeley what they deserve."
Punch
H~' .. r Y
I ... ,_.,..,LM. ~
"Yes, I come /lef'e a tot-you'll find the trout
all know me."
Teen drog use
said declining
WASHINGTON CAP> -Although drug use
I among American teen-agers is still widespread;
I
there has been a significant decline in use of mari·
juana and other drugs in recent years. says the
I head of the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
· Dr. William Pollio, the institute director. h as
told a Senate subcommittee that for the first time
since the agency began surveying high school stu·
dents in 1975 there is evidence that' the popularity
of most drugs among young people is waning.
But Pollin warned that 65 percent of American
high school students still say they have sampled
an illicit drug and use -0f amphetamines and other
stimulants is on the rise.
American teen-agers ''still show the highest level of drug use of young people anywhere in the
industrialized world," Pollin said.
But ''th.ere has been a significant decrease in
drug use among key population groups in the past
several years with associated increases in
negative attitudes about the use or drugs,·' he said.
The signs or decline prove that "increasing
drug use is not inevitable and young people are
responsive to evidence of potential hazards,"
Pollin added.
He also said there has been a "dramatic" drop
in cigarette smoking by young people. Although 21
percent or high school seniors still smoked every
day last year, that figure was 4 percentage points
below 1979.
Pollio told the Senate Labor subcommittee on
alcoholism and drug abuse that daily marijuana
use among high school seniors dropped to 9.1 per·
cent in 1980, down from a peak of 10,.9 percent in
1978.
The proportion of high school seniors who
think their close friends disapprove of marijuana
smoking increased for the first time since 1975,
from 66 percent to 72 percent, he said.
The institute also found that among 16
categories of drugs, use of 14 either stayed the
sao:ie or decreased in 1980.
T he findings were from a survey of 100,000
high school seniors. The institute has been ques-
tioning members of graduating public and private
high school classes since 1975.
Medical data
network due·
CHICAGO <AP> -A nationwide electronic in·
formation system offering the most up-to-date
data for use in treating the sick will be available to
doctors by mid-1982, the American Medical As·
sociation says.
The first national medical-health information
network will be developed and run under a long-
term agreement between the AMA and General
Telephone and Electronics, according t-0 a state·
ment release this week. .
Under the system, "informaUon required for
use in patient treatment will be instantly available
in computer terminals at any location in the coun·
try." Tbomu.. Vanderslice, president and chief
e>peratini officer of GTE, said in the statement.
He said the only equipment needed will be a
basic computer terminal connected to an existing
telephone line.
A physician would dial a local telephone
number, liftking hls terminal with PTE com·
puters. R equested Information would be
transmitted within seconds, according to the 1tate·
meat.
James Sammons, executive vice president ot
tbe AMA, said the A'MA sees the 171tem "ctvlng
ald u the llbftldan Pt about the bu.lines• of col·
leetins Ill available lnformaUon in order to make
tbe belt medical Jud•ment foe each patient."
The. AMA p1am to provide the medical ln·
formation far U. data bale, while GTE Telenet
CommunlcatAona of Vienna, Va., "111 develop
operate aod market the data-bate retrieval t,atem.
Teltlal ol ta.. tint iaUH ot tbe a11tem will
ltelln !P'll na& lU!' at AMA •lldpartst h~.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne&day, July 29, 1981
women paid less than men at Cal .. . ,
But a university administrator said there are
at least two problems: UC's policy of payln•
employees as near as possible to the marketplace
"prevailing wage," and the cost of ralsing low
salaries.
"We do not traditionally make compariaom
between plumbers and secretaries, for example,"
said Walter Stover, UC's statewide uslstant vice
president for staff and management personnel.
"If we determined that a female-dominated
job should be paid more, we'd have to take the
money from somebody.''
The groups found that three-quarters of the 383
non-academic job classifications at Berkeley had
at least 70 percent of the employees frOO\ one sex
-48 percent were male-dominated and 27 percent
were female-dominated.
The average maximum salary of women la 18
percent below that of men -$1,425 to •1,680 a
month -but the 1ap between some Jobi of com·
parable value is much wider, the study nid.
Aa another example, the job description for an
Administrative Assistant II requires supervision of
personnel or independent responsibility for a com·
prehenslve function or unit, and knowled•e or the
basic principles and methods of a technical field.
The job pays up to $1,442 a month, and 210 of the
employees are women.
A Senior Physical Plant Mechanic is required
to supervise work crews, inspect materials.
analyze and resolve work problems, and do some
carpentry. electrical work and painting. The
groups call that a job of comparable value, and
said the maxJmum salary of the 41 men and four :j
women who hold the job is $2,243 a mootb. ::
'• That is a 56 percent wa1e 1ap. Comparin1 four ·
mostly female clerical Jobi and three moaUy :·
male mechanical Jobt of comparable value showed •
an average 69 percent waae 1ap, the study 1a1d. :·
It also compared two jobs that pay the same, ~:
$1,059 to $1,260 a month and concluded tbat U.. :·
mostly female job is underpaid. :~!
The two are Automotive Attendant. who mu•
know bow to give cars oil and lube jobs and put
tires. and needs no prior experience, with a 81
liographer II, who needs two years of library or r
lated experience and has a wide ranee of duties
record-keeping and identifying potential unlverait
donors.
AD PRICES PREVAIL: Wed., July 29th -Sat., Aug., 11t. 111:
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~I Orange Co•t DAILY PIL.OT/Wldntld•y, July at, 1811
AP..._..
BEWILDERED Muncy Mayor Donald Wilt is as baffled as
the rest of the 2,700 citizens in this small Pennsylvania town
over the rash of arson attacks. Fourteen deliberately set
fires have hit the community in one month.
Eagle
probe
nets 22
BELLINGHAM ,
Wash. CAP) -An 18·
month undercover in·
vesti&ation into traffick·
ing in prot.eded birds,
mostly baid eagles, has
resulted in the indict·
ments or 22 people, of·
ficials say.
Federal and s tate
wildlife agents recently
arrested 16 people in a
dawn raid after a secret
grand jury indictment.
The case was believed to
be the largest of its kind
i n the histor y or
Washington, where 2,500
eagles winter annuaJly,
officiaJs said.
At least 100 eagles
have been killed in the
Bellingham and Tacoma
areas in the past year.
said Assistant U.S. Al·
torney Ri c hard
Tallman.
"It's a major issue.
The bald eagle is
threat e ned In
Washington," said Joe
Blum, area manager of
the U .S. Fis h a nd
Wildlife Service. During
the Investigation, more
thsin 65 wildlife agents
posed as purchasers and
traders or eagle parts
and whole birds. said
Tallman.
SAVE •1.10
RC COLA
or DIET llTE
DOVE
DISHWASHING
LIQUID
Leaves hands feeling
sott and smooth
SAVE50e
SEA & SKI
TROPICAL SUN
Arson attacks baffle town .
Enraged citizens volunteer for patrol duty after library torched
~
MUNCY, Pa. <AP> -Dorothy
Myers stood at the curb in her
slippers, watcbin1 u lhe rlre
trucks roared away and wonder·
ln1 ll Muncy waa in the midst ol
the 15th arson fire in a month.
·'I told mysetr I wouldn't come
out and watch, but I couldn't
he lp," Mrs . Myers said.
"Everytlme that whistle blows,
I wonder, 'Why, why why?'"
This Ume lt turned out to be a
false alarm. But between June
18 and July 19, 14 buildings -
mostly sheds and garages -
were purposely set afire ln this
central Pennsylvania communi-
ty east or Williamsport.
The blazes have inflamed the
passions or the 2,700 resldenta.
The town council set an 11 p.m.
curfew. Men threatened to stand
guard on their porches with
s ho tguns . Civilians began
patrolling the alleys.
For a while, it looked like the
flames were over. On July 18, a
former fire chief from a
neighboring county was arrested
and charged with arson.
··Everyone drew a sigh of re·
Iler." said Peny Sava1e. Mun·
cy's postmaster.
But lea than 24 hours later.
the town's 50,000-volume library,
housed ln a 16C>-year-old build·
ing, was burning. Arson case
No. 14.
"We figured someone else was
involved, even after we made
the arson arrest," said state
police Fire Mars hal James
·De Vore. "But lt bafnes us why
the arsonist struck the library."
He declined to comment on
possible leads or suspects.
As workers shoveled ruined
books out of the charred library,
townspeople reacted with anger
and shock. Some 250 showed up
for a town meet.Ing three days
later, and about half volunteered
for unarmed patrols organized
as part or the slate police's
Crimewatch.
People in this mile-wide town
wer e Intensely proud or the
library, which they started from
scratch 12 years ago. And their
pride shows in the tree-lined
r ows of Victorian and brick
Federallst·style homes built in
SAVE29c
16 oz. SIZE
llVLON
fl EX
SHAMPOO er CONDmONU
the last century.
That pride turned to fear lut
year when there was a series or
rapes. but it returned after a
suspect was arrested.
Arter one o u t -o f -town
television reporter described
Muncy as a town with high un-
employment and crime in the
streets, "My brother and some
of the other officials told them to
get the hell out of her e, leave us
alone," said Robert Wilt, editor
or the Lumina ry, the town's
weekly paper.
His brother is Mayor Donald
Wilt, owner of the town's movie
theater -admission $1.50. He
defends the town as being "bet·
ter ore than 90 percent of the
communities."
··Burglaries. things like that,
are almost non-existent,.. said
Police Chier John Oberdorf. "We
just happen to be blessed with
one kind of major crime and. as
a resuit, people think this is a
crime-ridden town."
What people here see is two
rape and arson suspects who are
not Muncy natives. They see
their populace changing, once·
historic buildJn1s beln1 made in·
to apartments, a shoppin1 mall
going up.
"Did you see that giant arch
they built near the mall?" asked
Bob Ashman. "Half the people
here would say they bate it. Why
wreck good cornfields? The
other half probably would say
it's nice having the mall."
Wrote Wilt in an editorial:
''The lifestyle of the entire na·
lion ls changing, and finally our
beautiful small town Is being
caught up in it."
Guitarist to plar
at senior center
Guitarist Gene Watah will en-
tertain at a luncheon in the
Irvine Senior Center, 3 Sandbur@
Way. Irvine, at noon Aug. 8.
For more information about
the S2-per -person luncheon
performance of Walsh, formerly
with the Hal Kemp band, call
754-3889.
BUY 2 •SAVE 39c
NICE'N SOFT
FACIAL TISSUE
~
fz~~*1 BOX Of
150 SHEETS
SAVE •1.10
JERGENS LOTION
Regular or b Ir a Ory
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
Ma\t~r Card
~IAL
A.
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
1501.1 ~g
SIZE .u u.
"JELLY BEAN"
KITCHEN ENSEMBLE
A. KITCHEN
TOWELS ··All agents were
white." Tallman said.
"The sale clearly was
made to people who
were not going to use the
feathers for ceremonial
purposes."
Dark Tanning
LOTION or OIL WEDNESDAY . JULY 29th THRU SATURDAY. AUG. 1st
A federal act permits •
native Americans to
possess eagle parts for
traditional cer emonies.
People who kill and sell
migratory birds, such as
bald eagles, violate the
Migratory Bird Treaty
and the Bald Eagle
Protection Act.
Priceless
psalter·
restored
PORTLAND, Ore.
(AP) -An 800-year-old
Book of Psalms, said to
be the only one of its
kind, got a new lease on
life when it was restored
i n a Portland
laboratory.
Jack Thompson
performed the delicate
operation recently, us-
ing knives, Unen thread
and pigskin.
"It 's comp lex ,"
Thompson said ,
·'because when finished
the outaide should con·
tlnue to look 800 years
old, but the inside must
be atructurall sound."
• oz. 5a.E
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FOOT POWDER
Soothrng cooling
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Beautiful absorbent
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RUGS
Ma<lP or nylon and
clacron skid res1sran1
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+
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday. July 29, 1981
Paper fghts for:. MUs Piggy, Kermit
Philadelphia Bulletin goes,J:o court over new comic strip featuring 'Muppets'
RIVAL ON SCENE?
Miss Piggy
Jack Anderson
reveals in the
DailyPillli
~
PHILAOELPHlA (AP> -
With competition for new1Nper
readen raging fierce. the lUMy
pa1es are no Jauchlnt matter.
Evon a sexy plg can be aerioua
business.
The Bulletin, a Phllade&pfua
daily, went to federal court this
week over a new comic at.rip
featuring Miss Piggy, Kermit
the Frog and the rest of the
"Muppet.s."
The paper won a temporary
restraining order barrin1 King
Features Syndicate from award·
ing a contract on the new strip to
the rival Philadelphia Inquirer.
U.S. District Judge Charles R.
Weiner scheduled a hearing for
Thursday.
The Inquirer. which had an
average daily circulation of
428,862 for the six-month period
ending March 31, according to
an Audit Bureau of Circulations
guide, was not named as a de·
fend ant.
The Bulletin, which had a dal·
ly circulation of 412,268, accord·
ing to the ABC, charged it had
been denied a chance to bid for
the at.rip, which debuts Sept. 21.
It aaLd not 1etuna a chance to
bid for the strip cauaed it to face
"a aerioua potenttaJ loss in pres·
tlge u well as circulation and
advertlaln& revenues."
The paper said it had been
notified by King Features June
22 the new strip would be offered
to the highest bidder in the city,
with a minimum dally price of
$100 and $130 for the Sunday edi·
tlon.
Besides the Bulletin and the
Inquirer, there are two daily
tabloids ln the city -the
Philadelphia Journal, a morning
paper with a circulation of
97 ,000, and the Philadelphia Dai·
ly News, an evening paper with
a 226,000 clrculation.
Bulletin Publisher N.S.
Hayden said he called Richard
Fales, national sales director for
King Features, and asked that
his newspaper have a chance to
negotiate with the SY'1dlcate for
rights to the comic strip rather
than submit a bid, the suit said.
Fales promlaed to contact
Hayden before the biddin1
deadline, but never did, the
ault aaid.
Wl\en the Bulletin contacted
King Features July 3, the bid-
dln1 deadline, the office· was
closed foe the holiday weekend
and The Bulletin was unable to
make an offer, the suit said. The
following Monday , the
newspaper waa told a com·
petitor, the Inquirer, bad been
awarded the contract.
The Bulletin asked in the suit
for a chance to bid or negotiate
for the comic strip and for an
unspecified amount of damages.
"We have for many years had
the best comics in town," said
Hayden. "The Muppets' are
very important to us."
Robert Greenberg, the In-
quirer's assistant managing
editor for features, said comics
rank high in readership surveys.
"Comic strips are a great en·
tree to readers ," Greenberg
said. "Some appeal to younger
readers . Some , like
'Dooneabury,' appeal to
sophisticated readers, and some
appeal to mass audiences. It ls a
serious business."
A funny . pages controversy
also erupted in the nation's
capital two years ago between
The Washington Post and The
Washington Star over the
"Doonesbury" comic strip.
After several years of carry·
ing the strip, the Post had little
choice but to drop it on June 24.
1979, after the Star's Waahlntton
Star Syndicate merged with t.he
Universal Preu Syndicate,
which distribute
"Doonesbury." The Star pick
up the strip.
There was no Indication
whether the Post would again
have "Doonesbury" back ii the
Star shut$ down in abo1i1t a week.
The Star's owners have said ·
financial problems would force
them to stop publishing If a
buyer caMot be found.
An exclusive celebration
SHREVEPORT. La. <AP> -
The president of Centenary
College honored the wedding 1>f
Britain's Prince Charles and
Lady Diana by giving every
British-born employee at the col·
lege an extra half hour for lunch
today.
"This half hour should be
spent in sober and appropriately
Methodist revelry, roistering,
skylarking and ribaldry,"·
Donald Webb said tongue-In·
cheek Tuesday.
He added that Union Jacka
should be worn "whenever feasl·
ble" on the wedding day, and
''the use of the English lan1uage _
should be encouraged among the
natives."
Webb knows a good thing
when he sees it. He is apparently
the only British-born employee
at the college.
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9 fl 9. 9 ....
honors 1
WASHINGTON <AP) II
Four men and one ·n
woman whose names ,
are nearly synonymous
with their craft are the ~~
1981 recipients of the ·
Kennedy Center honors 1
for achievement in 'the 1{
performing arts. ·
For its fourth annual
honors. the Center's "'
board of trustees chose·:;
Co u n t B as i e . C a r y ·1
Grant, Helen Hayes, r
Jerome Robbins and 1 Rudolf Serkin . The '
awards will be present· N
ed at a diMer Dec. 5 and
the honored artists will '
be guests of President ''
and Mrs. Reagan the
following day. :1
A tribute at th~ Ken-· 1
nedy Center for the "
Performing Arts follow-~
ing the White House re·
ception will be taped for 1
l ater television .
broadcast. Coltegues of 1
the artists will perform. ,;
Roger L. Stevens .•
chairman of the Ken· 1
nedy Center. described J
the honorees as "in· 1 dividuals who enrich our 1 lives and our culture by
their life work in the ~
performing arts." ' ·
An artists commillee ,
nominated the five. '
A Ke nnedy Center
news release said Basie,'~
77, band leader, com ·
poser and pianist in his '1
own band, is "among '
the handful of musicians · l
that helped change the 4
path of American music
in the '30s and '40s." ·'
Grant, also 77, "filled.~
the movie screens of the· 1
world with wit, grace.
and gaiety." for 30 :
years. the Center said. ~
Miss Hayes, 81 , "has
been one of the most •1:
lasting and versatile a1• -
tresses on the American~
stage . . . she has re·\
mained a foremost ac-
tress of the HoUywoody
screen as well ." . i
Robbin s, 63, is
described as "now the\
outstanding American
born choreograph er
working in classical J
ballet . . , a prodigioUSfl
creator of musically elo~rf
quent movement." >I
Serkin, 78, is~ pianist11
who began his concert t
career in 19~. making 1
his American debut in
1933.
Boston to get ~
8 new hotels r
BOSTON <AP) -'
Eight new hotels are to' I
Ol>Cn in Boston by UIM, I
increasing the number·>
of hotel rooms by • per·~
cent, bul hotel offi~iala
are worried there won't
be enough guest.a.
Occupancy• in Boston
hotels dropped 7 percent
from 19'79 to 1980, and
another 4.3 percent in
the first fiv& montbl or
1981.
' -'
Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 29, 1981
• • xtra train service
good investment
Adding four new daily com·
muter train runs between Orange
nd Los Angeles counties may not
the best form of mass transit.
ut it might be the most feasible.
Thus. Orange Coast residents
should be excited to learn that the
Caltrans-operated trains could be
running on the Santa Fe Railway
tracks within a year.
At a press conference Friday
at the Santa Ana Amtrak station,
Caltrans Director Adriana Gian-
turco claimed the trains will carry
about 4,000 daily passengers at a
cost about half the normal Amtrak
fare.
There are several other pro-
posals to add mass transit systems
m or through the county. the most
ambitious being a plan to run a
light rail or bus track through the
I central county core. between
Anaheim and the Irvine com-
mercial district. That line would
stop at South Coast Plaza in Costa
~Mesa, the Santa Ana Civic Center
and John Wayne Airport.
The line, if it's ever built.
would do a lot more toward reliev-
ing traffic conl!estion from Orange
County freeways and helping com·
muters reach their destinations.
But it also would cost the county,
state and federal governments
hundreds of millions of dollars .
The addition of the four com·
muter trains will cost the state
about $1.8 million during the first
year and $1.4 million in future
years. according to Ms . Gianturco.
Ultimately. the commuter
trains are planned to be part of a
system in which train st ations in
Fullerton. Ana heim, Santa Ana.
Irvine, Mission Viejo. San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente also
would serve as primary bus stops.
Co mmuter s could theoretically
take buses for shorter distances
and trains for the longer jaunts.
never once using a car.
The plan obviously has its
limits. The Santa Fe tracks, un-
fortunately. don't pass too close
to the coast, and 4,000 daily
riders won't make all that
noticeable a reduction in peak
hour freeway jams.
But any mass transit that can
be added within a year is worth the
effort. Let ·er roll'.
Reluctant regulators
One of the Reagan Ad -provide information for the
ministration's promises was a calendar.
cutback in the flourishing Ceder a l But ind e pende nt co m .
~regulation business that keeps so missions are only asked to con-i~ many bureaucrats occupied and tribute on a voluntary basis. And
loads businesses with unwelcome so far six major independent reg-
' mountains of paperwork. ulatory agencies have declined
~ The regulatory bureaucracy to comply with the request.
Ahas become a virtual fourth They are the Cons ume r ~bran c h of government, but Product Safety Commission. the
j without the checks and balances Federal Communications Com-~ that $tern excesses in the ex-mission, t he F ederal Ene r gy ~ecutive. judicial and legislative Regulatory Commission . the
• b h Federal Trade Commission, the
i ranc es. Inters tate Commerce Com-
1 There's one small ray of hope mission and the Securities and l in the news that the current edi-Exchange Commission.
' lion of the biannual Calendar of That keeps a lot of pending
Federal Regulations is the rules out of the light of public
smallest in its five years of scrutiny.
publication -but it still contains T ti e ind e pendent c 0 m .
reviews of 113 regulations pro-missions still must obtain OMB
posed by 33 regulatory agencies. clearance for new regulations.
The calendar. issued by the but as things stand they can over-
Off ice of Management a nd ride OMO disapproval by a ma-
Budget. is designed to give in· jority vote of their members.
dividuals and firms likely to be This does not bode well for 1 affected by pending regulations a promised regulatory reform. And
1 chance to examine and comment it emphasizes the need for major
'on them before the rules are legislation that would make
cleared by the OMB. participation in regulatory re-
By presidential order. ex. form mandator y for all agencies.
I ~:~nti:: e:::::::sina~h: ~:::::v::,: t~:s:e~::::::l:rp~:~.e~:::e~1ews ex-
pressed on lhis page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invit· ed . Addre ss The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 9'2626. PhOne (7'4)
)>42-4321.
~Nine-digit ZIP pluses
! ;, An editorial from the Sacramento Bee
Quick, now, what's your Social OTHER VIEWS
Security number? If you can't re-
member, you will probably pale at
the idea of having the five-digit ZIP
code become just as long -nine
numbers. The added digits would des-
ignate office buildings, apartment
buildings and city blocks, allowing
greater automation and saving the
post office $600 million a year by
1987. We realize that the prospect of
adding more numbers in an already
complex world ia not pleasipg.
'However; with even another increase
ln the price of stamps looming -
!Postmaster General William F. ;so11er saya be will seek another rate
hike at the end of this year -adding
lour d.iatta to eliminate the necessity
'ol biJ1n1 80,000 postal clerks sounds
:like the sensible thina to do. · Moreover, as Bolger describes it,
the changeover won't impoee any
Durden on the individual letter-
writer. Since 84 percent of all mail
orltinates from business ftrma, the
looser ZIP code would be applied
mainly to business mail. And it
would be voluntary. Bol1er says,
"The fact is that no one -I repeat no
one, no individual and no business -
will be required to use ZIP-plus-4."
Despite its many detractors and its
many problems, there are good
things to be said for the U.S. Postal
Service. Since-the ZIP was in-
troduced in 1963, post office produc-
tivity has increased significantly.
For example, according to the Postal
Service it handles 21 billion more
pieces of mail than it did 10 years
ago, but with 74,000 fewer employees.
A Postal Service study h as de-
termined that output has-increased to
the optimum under the five-digit
system; thus the recommendation to
add four digit.s in an effort to again
boost productivity. ·
We think it's worth a try. All the
numbers assigned to people by the
government, their employers, doc·
tors, schools, baQks and the like
haven't overwhelmed them, so what's
four more?
L.M. Boyd I Table trick
Tuma out there ii lndeed an ex-
planation of why Amertcaoa hold
tJMlr table forks lD the rttht hand
evea ~ tu E\&ropean enc.ton
of mOlt Mad laid forks ID tbe I.rt
llUd. ID eokmlal tllp .. , I'm ~dl. nerrllocb Ul..t tM for~ with the MR
band. Kowenr, r.eYolullonarlH
1wltcbed tbe fork to tile rlpt band,
ftnt u a eeent 1lpal to one another'
or thelr ~llt.ic;_al leanings, eventually as a pubUc proclamation. Thole l01al
to the Kln1 of En1land found
themHlva ln a curtoua 1pot. They
had to switch their fork1 from left to
ri1Cht hand, 11 tbey didn't want to be
identlfted as enemies of the revolu· tton.
The bee baa 12,~ eyet.
---------------·-----
Carpenter for U.S. Sen.ate?
Although some Republicans may
have honest doubts, the fact is that if
the Grand Old Party, including Presi-
dent Reaglµl, gave their solid support to
Sam Hayakawa he would easily win re-
election to the U.S. Senate next year,
regardless of who the Democrats
nominate to run against him.
But the ambitions of several con·
gressmen and possibly the President's
daughter, Maureen, along with the
thirst for power or a few self-appointed
"kingmakers," have been thwarting
Hayakawa's fund raising efforts and
weakening his position. So it may be
that the Senator's pride will influence
him to avoid the risk of defeat by
withdrawing from the race.
IN THAT EVENT, if the party is to
retain the seat, the choice of a can-
didate would seem crystal clear. And it
wouldn't be one or those whose names
have been prominent as contenders
over the past year which includes
Maureen. Rather it wouJd be a formid-
able personality who has hardly been
mentioned so far. That is Dennis
Carpenter, former state senator from
Orange County.
Not to be confused with Democratic
State Senator Paul Carpenter, also from
Orange County, Dennis came to
Sacramento in 1970 just after com_plet-
ing two years as chairman of the
Republican State Central Committee.
An attorney, Carpenter bas had a
varied career working as a laborer,
aircraft worker, railroad fireman,
baseball player and FBI agent before
settling down to a law practice. He
served eight years in the Senate and left
to manage his private affairs. He is COD·
tinuing to keep abreast of government
affairs by including some lobbying ac·
tivities in his law practice.
WHILE HE IS NOT a candidate at the
moment, sources close to him indicate
be could be persuaded to enter the con·
IARl WATIRI
test if Hayakawa withdraws and if the
Republicans will give him united sup-
port.
A handsome, personable man in his
early fifties, Carpenter bas all of the
qualities one could hope for in a U.S.
Senator. He has the education,
knowledge and experience for the job.
Articulate, be projects a good image on
the boob tube. Furthermore, he is a
reasonable, compassionate man with
sound judgment and, above all, one
whose inLegrity is unquestioned. With
Carpenter as their candidate the GOP
would be a cinch to win.
Yet, to get Carpenter the Republicans
will have to throw away the self-
destruct mtthanism under which they
have been laboring since 1958 when they
scutUed incumbent Governor Goodwin
J . Knight in favor of U.S. Senator Bill
Knowland , running Knight for
Knowland's seat in a musical chairs
deal which brought their house down.
Prior to that the GOP bad held a firm
grip on the governor's office since 1900
with but one four-year exception.
Since that time they have been blow·
ing most of their opportunities by pre-
dicating their selections of candidates
on ideology instead of electabiUty. Thus
in 1968 they crushed incumbent U.S.
Senator Thomas Kuchel with right-
winger Max Rafferty thereby handing
the ofClce over to Democrat Alan
Cranston. In 1974 when moderate
Houston Flournoy won the Republican
nomination' for governor, the party big·
wigs took a hike which enabled Jerry
Brown to win by the narrow margin of
100,000 votes. Four years later they as-
sured Brown's re·election, despite his
miserable record as governor, by
nominating the pusillanimous Evelle
Younger.
THEY FOLLOWED THAT sad
performance by yet another. With Ron-
nie Reagan on his way to the White
House and Republicans in other states
swatting down liberal U.S. Senators of
Cranston's ilk like so many flies, the
California kingmakers got cute and put
up the inarticulate, inexperienced Paul
Gann to run against the veteran cam-
paigner Cranston.
The question n ow is will the
Republicans rally behind Hayakawa'?
Failing that, will they assure retaining
the seat by drafting a sure winner in Ute
form of Dennis Carpenter'? From their
past record it seems more likely they
will back the least electable of those
aspiring to run on their old philosophy
of "better dead than red." If they do.
they will likely be handing over the seat
to Jerry Brown who, despite his current
troubles, virtually has the Democratic
nomination in his pocket due to his huge
lead in campaign fund raising.
Superwatt protects our heritage
Is it a bulldozer? Is it a steamroller'!
Is it an earth mover'? No, it's ...
SUPERWATT!
Faster than an environmental impact
report, more powerful than ten
thousand bird-watchers, able to flatten a '(ast forest in a single stewardship,
it's ... SUPERWATT!
As we join Superwalt today, he's seat·
ed behind his desk disguised as the
mild-mannered secretary of the in-
terior. His assistant, Lotus Lane (who
doesn't know bis true identity), enters.
Lotus: Ob, Mr. Secretary, you really
must do something. Thanks to a nine-
year-old presidential order banning off.
road vehicles from federal lands when
they could damage the ecology, our
wilderness areas are going to ruin.
Superwall: Ruin, Lotus?
Lotas: Yes, sir, they're being.
taken over by rodents, rabbits, reptiles,
weeds and even an occasional r ihtld.dn J
en vironrnentalist.
Superwatt: Well, gosh, Lotus, J 1ueu
even a rattlesnake has a rjgbt to some
peace and quiet.
Lotus: Ob, you're auch a softy, sir.
Golly, I wish Superwatt were here!
Superwatt (aftn Lotiu storm1 outJ:
Lotus is right. This sounds like a job for
. .. SUPERWATT!
Stepping into the phone booth nut to hil
de1k, he whips off hia dull gray niit and
emer~a in a hard hat, hobnailed boots and
__ '¥'
AllllPPI ~
overall.a embloz.oMd with o Zar~ S impo1ed
on two oil derrickl :.... the umform of . . .
SUPERWA.TTf
Soaring out the window, he atop1 at the
White Hou.e longt enough to pick up the
1tortled pre1ident, whom he flies over
America'• purple mountoina' mojuty and
fruited pbM to Bud'1 RV Center in Chula
Vflta. The lot b crowded with. dusty,
cobwebbed motorcycle•, dune buggiea,
Jeep• and old SMrman tonk•.
Saperwatt: How's business, Bud?
Bad fditcoMolately): There isn't any,
Superwatt. Who wanu to buy an off.
road vehicle when the interfering
federal government back in Washington
won't let you take it off the road?
The president t agha1tJ: You mean
freedom-loving Americans are being
deprived of their inalienable right and
precious heritage to drive Sherman
tanks through our nation's forests?
Superwatt: And even our deserts, too,
sir.
The president rgrimlyJ: Take me back
to the White House, Superwatt. There's
a presidential order I have to tear up!
Later, Superwatt u seated behind hi.! desk
in his dull gray suit as Lotus enter1 ond
throw1 open a window, admitting a cloud of
blue fumes and a tremendous roar.
Lotus (tears in her eyesJ: Look, Mr.
Secretary! Fifty thousand off-road
vehicles are parading down the former -
ly grassy Mall, through the formerly
Reflecting Pool and up the steps of the
formerly unbl emis hed Lincoln
Memorial, all of which are federal pro-
perty, to thank the president and
especially Superwatt. Ob, why can't you
be more like him?
Supenvatt f1miling): Gee wbillickers,
Lotus. When it comes to preserving our
precious heritage, be doesn't need my
help.
' .School policy diScrhninates against religion
Our nation'• early concem about the
"separaUon of church aftd state" wu
meant to keep relltlon out or tbe
p<>UUcal process; It was not meant to
discriminate a1alnlt relllioul educ•·
Uon, which 11 what b .. bappenecl.
Pareata have the inherent rl,C.ht to
educate their children u they Me fit -
In Britain, tbe rlghta or parents
, over their $:hildren • 1 education are
more respected,, and 10 are tbe
privUeces ol dlaaenUnt denomination.a.
Parenti there are free to chooee any
form of relltlOUI education -or none, of coune -and tbe covetnment active·
ly 1upporta tbeae tebooll by aUowint
them a proportionate 1bare of public
moaq 1plntlor educaUon,
Our na:f:i however. often onlY a aeptlve ol freedom; ~ta an
not forblddeD to MDCI their ddldreD to
parocblal tebooll, but U.. nfflve no
IO"flHDlftl funda or utlstance.
We pracllce a ~ 'of civil dllabWt.Y
-la tllet pare a ti wbo opt for
alt.rnl!UYe lclrm of education mmt pay tem It tlleJ ...... Nltpaua trablla1
la tllllr Hllillll, wldcb II a ..... GD the ~-·~-......... .
TU JUmca IN .. mata.er II Ko ...... bJ ......... U. It ..... of ................... ltlaU..rtjllt al ,.. 't till& .... itM• -Mr ltlM to ..... ,.... .. equal .........
•
>
schools, without being penalized for
picking a religious <or atheistic, for that matt~r) type of institution. .
Britain acknowledges this parental
right, and also recopizes that puplla
placed in alternative schools are reliev-
ing the public school system of a linan·
cial burden. Their 1y1tem ii mo1'aUY
Just and financially equitable; oun,
. profenln1 to be democratic, ta dll·
crlminatory.
I Tbey say we're lleadlq for another lee
A1e. Mu1t be somewhere etae -not we. M.B .
Wedneeday, July 29, 1981
, .. , ~ --•• ,' • ~ 1'
,' "'\,.• •""' I I "'" / , .,. ..... ' \. \ ,' ,,,,•a:_..
•' f ""' .............. ,. , .• -' / .. _ .. :::. --------" I \ \
"Nftw, but ...... tty over a tennis court durinl
won..'• doublel ! ••
DEAR PAT DUN N: Has the government
decided to drop mandatory safety standards
for power lawn mowers ? I read some time
ago that standards were going to be put into
effect, but haven 't seen anything about it
since. I'm inte rested in this because two
years ago a member of my family was
seriously injured in a power mower accident.
L.W., Coeta MeH
lmtead of contiaulng work oa a man-
datory staadard, tbe Consumer Product Safe·
ty Commklloa <CPSC> baa uulmouly vot·
ed to IDCllU&or tbe Oa&door Power Eqllipment
Institute (OPEi) e rrort• to develop aew
voluntary standards reqaJremeata relating to
&brown objects from walk·beblnd po_wer
mowen.
An American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) vohantary standard la
already ln effect, but OPEi la developlng an
improved ataDdard for submissloa to ANSI
&bat la doeer ln i\S teatlng method to tbe one
CPSC was plannlag.
Jellyfish remedies
DEAR PAT DUNN: I a m new to
Southern California and enjoy swimming in
the ocean. I read your recent item about
a voiding jellyfish stings, and I'd like to know
if there are any other stinging fish ln this
area.
L. E., Newport Beach
Be Oii tbe lookoat for atlngraya wblcll
commcmly bary tlaemaelves la tlae saad la
sllallow water. UaaaUy, they aUa& ..iy wllea
stepped OIL u you do step -Gee, It CH .....
oat lta tan. embeddla1 lta •tinier la yov atlD
aad i.Jeetlng a venom. Immediate, lateue
pala becomes more severe over tlae flnt •
min.net pd Uaen aabsldes. Vomltla&, d1ar·
rhea, aweatJas, cramps aad brea&lda& d1f.
Realty cu occa.r.
Wada a 1thlgray lajury Immediately with
seawatet' to remo•e fragmeata of tlae tau atUI
ln &be woaad aad place the wouaded area In
very lliMlt water to inactivate tile venom. Have
a doctor check tile wound s.lte ud •pclate
your tetanu shot. In case of breatbleg diff1cal·
ty or other se~ere 1ymptoma, get Immediate
m~lcal ualstance.
Aaodaer venomous marine creature la
tile acerplon flab, or acalple, wblcll Is
partlnlarty baaardous to d1ven ud ftab·
ermea off the Soutllem California coast.
Venom ls btjected tllroap the clonal aplaea
of tbe flab apon contact. Gloves alaoald
aJwaya be worn wbea hudllllg tlleM n.11,
aad die ft.u aboald be removed ftnt wbee
cleaalq them.
Toacblal tbe venomous aplDe of a acor·
ploa lbll reaalta In eunctatlq pala la ta.e·
· stla& area wblcb caa spread Uaroapaoat tlae
eatlre extremJty wltble It mlalda. Nauea,
vomltta1, weakaeaa, headaclae aad dlarrtaea
alao cu occv. Flrat ald for an.lpla atla11 la
tlae aame u &Jtat for atin1ray llljutes. --• "Got o probltm? Thtn write to Pot "-l Dunn. Pot will cut red ta~. getting
'Ill the OIUUH!rt and action JIOU need to
•
•oltM! inequitie1 in go~ment and
buriMu. Mail JIOUr qw•lioM to Pot
Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Cocut
DailJI Pilot, P.O. Bo:r 1560, Costa Mela, CA 92626 Aa
man11 letters a.t po11ible will be °"'1.Urrtd, but phoned
b1qtdf'W1 or letttt1 not including the reodff'1 full
name, addrtu and bu.nneu hour•' phoM number
cannot M conridtrtd. This column oppt'Orl dailJI e:r·
cept S~."
Official at UC
• set to retire
BERKELEY (AP) -Marjorie Woolman,
aeeretary ol the University ol California reaenta
for 21 yun llftd one of the school's most powerful
otnclala, wW r«tre.
The unlvenlty aMounced th.la week that Ma.
Woolman, 17, who bas worked for: Ule univeralty
sine. t•, will leave her pott by J"'1Y 1, 1112. Ka. Woolman , who makes 9IO,OOO a year, bu
considerable tnnuence over operatlont of the re-
•entl, wbo decide policies of tbe nlne·campua unlv91'1ll~ It• SZ billion budcet.
H• ledl• of proeedunl and pracUett hu led ensaJ , ....... Uoal ol re1enu and ad·
mllalatraton to rely on her. And YlrtuallJ anyone
wbo wull to • adclreu the r•ntl Medi her
clear8Dee .
.... Woolman "kaowi more about tbe bualneu
ol tbe mdyenlty aad lta ldltGl7 Ulan •"1 otJMr
•baale penon, '' UC .,_,dent OPld Suo. said bl
•• i. ......
ID a I.., to UM r..-u July 11, 111. WoGlmu 1.W 1111 ...... to ........ u a pmt.UIM .eo-d· ~·-"""1••·..-.·--mtdet·• ---~Harebforaauee••·
.... • c:·: · .. ·. •• .,,. • ~,.. ' "#' .. -4# " .......... ". •• • -• .. ...... t ""' •• ' .. '.... . .. ··""'···· .
•• ..._ ,. --........ -.., __._... __ .... ~ ........................ ¥5'" ,. ...... , ••• ~· ........ --. .
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The Prince features a 50% Super hlgh-perlormanoe alum-
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Reg. 110.00 __ 10•.••
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Couton ••· Olf'llTut1.. .... ,.
I :
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, July 29, 1981
I •
Royal honeymoon on
Prince, bride find hideaway at country mansion
TALL CAKE The
wedding cake for
Prince Charles and
Lady Diana was five
feet high, weighed
255 pounds. and was
made by the Royal
Navy 's Cookery
School. HMS P em-
broke. at Chatham.
ROMSEY, En1land (AP> -Prince Charla
and his bride are to spend their weddin& ni1ht ln a
maanificeot Georgian manalon filled wlth rare art
works and antiques wlth more than ~.000 acres of
Hampshire countryside to help give them privacy.
It's "Uncle Dickie's house" to the royal bride·
groom and hJa father, Prince Phllip.
The royal honeymoon began at Broadlands,
the country estate of the late Earl Mountbatten,
Charles' 1reat-uncle who was kllled by ao Irish
Republican Army bomb in 1979.
Charles often went there as a boy to visit the
dashing soldier-statesman who became a sur-
rogate grandfather to him. The prince spent hours
fishing for trout and salmon in the river Test, 1 which meanders through a copse of tree. a hun-
dred yards rrom the mansion. It ls said he first
learned to love polo and horseback rldin& on the
estate.
That he and Diana decided to spend their wed·
ding night at Broadlands did not surprise the
estate stalt.
"Tbey were looking for a little privacy, and
here ls the place to get it,·· said one member.
Charles· parents. Queen Eliza beth II
and Prince Philip, also stayed at Broadlands on
their wedding night in 1947 .
Three months before his death, Earl
Mountbatten opened the estate to the public to help
pay the mounting maintenance costs. Charles paid
the first admission.
"It is a treasure trove of beautiful things,"
said Mountbatten. "It is a pity not to let them be
seen ."
Broadlands. now owned by Mountbatten's
grandson Lord Romsey, has become a popular
tourist attraction. When the royal couple an-
nounced their honeymoon plans. the stream or vis-
itors turned into a flood . Many of these pre-nuptial
visitors hurried past the four Van Dyck portraits
ln the dlnlna room and the memorabilia or
Mountbatten's military career and hla tenure aa
India's last viceroy.
They were mostly interested ln the three state
bedrooms -the Portico Room, the Green Room
and what used to be known as the Lord
Palmerston Room before a painting of the 19th·
century prime minister who lived there was
moved downstairs.
Asked which one the royal couple would oc·
cupy, a polite guide said: "Oh, Prince Charles will
flnd a room. He knows this place very well, you
know.''
The village of Romsey is decked out ln buntina
and nags. Middlebridge Street ll awash ln blue
and white, the colors of the Prince of Wales crest.
The Bishop Blaize pub boasts 20-foot-high paint-
ings of Charles and Diana facing a slightly smaller
rendering of St. Paul's Cathedral.
Charles and Diana are to spend three night.a at
Broadlands, then fly to Gibraltar on Saturday and
board the royal yacht Britannia for a Mediterra-
nean cruise.
Co w device approved
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government is go·
ing to let cows "broadcast" when they're in the
mood for a little romance.
Dairy System or Longmont, Colo., received a
Federal Communications Commission waiver for
its tiny "BouMatic" radio transmitters to be in-
s talled on cows' legs and around their necks.
Since cows move about a little more when they
are in heat, the leg transmissions, fed into a
nearby computer. would tell herdsmen which cows
are ready for breeding. FCC approval is required
for any device that broadcasts radio signals.
Some romances were-rocky
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
•~S11«..,C:.n o s 1
LONDON -To tears she was entitled
as her son Charles walked down the
aisle of St. Paul's with the former
Diana Spencer on his arm. but Queen
ttlJWGAN'S STEW
Elizabeth II can consider herself a very
lucky royal Mum.
Marrying off the Prince of Wales to
an acceptable life partner has not
always been the easiest thing under the
sun in the British Empire. Long before
Charles' great uncle, King Edward
VIII , renounced his throne for the
woman he loved. American divorcee
Waflis Simpson. the long walk down the
connubial aisle had turned out more
often than not to be a royal pain rather
than royal occasion.
Queen Victoria's son, the future
Edward VII. was the last Prince of
Wales to get married. That was in 1863.
At the wedding reception his 4-year-old
nephew. the future Kaiser Wilhelm II,
crawled under the table and bit the
Duke of Connaught, who was in kilts, on
the leg.
The Queen definitely was not amused.
She was not even there. Still in ex-
cessive, eccentric mourning for her
Prince Consort. already dead two
years, s he had p:issed up the reception
to find consolation at his mausoleum.
Her son's wedding to the lovely Prin·
cess Alexandra or Schleswig-Holstein
took place in St. George's Chapel al
Windsor, a place for burying kings,
because the Queen in her grief "would
not hear of Westminster Abbey."
Passing up the procession, the queen
watched the ceremony from a gallery
behind the main altar until Jenny Lind
intoned an oratorio composed by her
dear departed Albert, which caused her
to retire in tears.
George Jll, al his wedding, only had
eyes for Lady Sarah Lennox, one of the
bridesmaids, while his bride, Princess
Charlotte of Mecklenburg·Strelilz.
doffed her decolletage and suddenly
went topless as a heavy ermine mantle
dragged the velvet wedding gown from
her shoulders.
"The spectators," observed Horace
Walpole. "knew much of her upper half
as did the king himself."
George III 's oldest son, George
Prince of Wales, was shockin&IY drunk
at his own wedding. Teetering pre·
cariously, the future Prince Regent and
George IV was held upright between
two royal dukes. Eyewltoesses said he
"looked like death."
When the Archbishop of Canterbury
asked ·•if there be any impediment wt.,
ye may not lawfully be joined in Holy
Matrimony," the swaying groom looked
wildly about. Some thought he might
make a run for it down the aisle. The
mad old king, who had just given his
ni ece the bride away. left his seat, laid
a hand on the heir apparent's arm and
whispered "something stern" in his
ear. The ceremony went on. After more
drinking at the reception, the prince on
his wedding night fell into the fireplace.
where bis bride left him until morning.
NOW MONEY MARKET RATES
INSURED
ON YOURACHECKING DOLLARS
COMP ARE WHAT YOU GET:
Interest Earnings tied to
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Check writing ability
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up to Sl00.000
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interest rates for six months
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Your money kept in the V .S.A .
right here i~ California
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Fund
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Coming Soon To
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TODl'S
VODKA
I 75-UTER
659
CASE OP 6-39.54
BACARDI
RUM
LITE OR DARK
17~LITER
960
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CASE OF 6·57.60
KAHLUA
LIQUEUR
750Ml
5oa
CASE OF I 2·96.96
GAETANO
CREME
750ML
711
CASE OF 12-85.25
SEAGRAM'S v.o.
LITER
511
CASE OF I 2·98.04
J &B
SCOTCH
I 75-UTER
1669
CASE OF6·100.14
BOCA CHICO
RUM
1.75-UTER
UTE OR DARK
755
CASE OF 643.30
JIM BEAM
BOURBON
l.7~LJTER 1010
• • • .. •• ... • • • • • fl • •
KEQBEER
"call and reserv~ your own ke •
BUDWEISER
3140
l /2BAAREL
COORS
2920
1/2BAAREL
H. WEJNHARD
3615
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3335
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OLD MILWAUKEE
2Q75
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MILLER
l/2BARREL
OOSEQUIS
I Gttl Vol DARK
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LIGHT Oii Of\1111
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120l 6Ptl 801 Ill. C"5f Of J4 1000
HEINEKEN
UCHTOROAAI\
3sa
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H. WEINHARD
446
I 2-0Z. NBR· 12 PK
BELHAVEN ALE
l l 83
18-0Z. NBR.O.SE
WENTE
WINE
750ML
BLANC DE BLANC
274
CASE OF 12·32.80
GHIRARDELLI
LIQUEUR
750 ML
CHOC STRAW
459
CASE OF I 2·55.08
MARTINI & ROSS
ASTE
SPUMANTE
750ML
750
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CORN CREEK
CHARDONNAY
750ML
400
CASE OF 12-48.00
POPE VALLEY
CHENIN BLANC
750·ML
254
CASE OF I 2·30.50
GALLO WINES
)LITER
CHABLIS BLANC
HE.ARTY &IRGUNDV
RHINE. PINK CHABLIS
401
CASE OF 4· 16.26
SEBASTIANI
CHENIN BLANC
75().ML
260
CASE OF 12·31.20
WEIBEL
WINES
7~
PINOT NOIR. CAB. SA.<.JV.
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PRICES
EFF!CTM
JULY JO THRO AUQCJST t 2. 1 M 1
HOURS
ION\ TO 8 PM MON. THRU SAT. 10 N\ TO 7 PM
SONOAV
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21082 BEACH BLVD.
H<JNTINQ~rt Bf.AC~
1
l
..... -...,......,. __ ... ~__.-..... ----......-..-~·· -----~ ·~ -' . .,, "• .. ' . . . , ....... ·-·· , ..... ..,... .......... ··:· ..... ·~ ...,. "' .... .
''"'"'at WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
84
86
812
' • , • • =-r ' ' ... .. . . . . ...
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... 89
Once-benign Bowery bums t11rning to violence
Alcoholics now being joined
by more dangerous drug addicts
NEW YORK (AP> -A
boulevard for busted hopes and
burned-out minds, a last stop ror
losers, the Bowery has been an
. alcoholic skid row for years. but
it shelters a new breed these
days -younger. more mobile,
more prone to violence.
Many who sit today on the lit·
tered sidewalks or lie in the gut-
ter have histories or mental prob-
lems and drug use as well as
alcoholic problems, according lo
Calvin Reid, director of the
city's only men's shelter.
They panhandle passing
motorists. They prey upon each
other. Often, their object is
'We are dealing
with the bottom
of the social
order ... '
nothing more valuable than a
bottle or cheap wine.
are outnumbered. In a city
where parking is at a premium,
it's easy to find empty spaces on
the Bowery .
The city and slate spef'd about
$11.3 million a year on shelten
for the estimated 36,000 home-
less people scattered around
New York City. More than half
the money goes to the city's 34·
year -old Shelter Care Center for
Men.
Last year, 12,586 different men
passed through its doors, up
from 9,236 in 1979. But thousands
never see the inside of sheltets.
Many Bowery residents spend
their days and nights in the gut-
ters and alleyways. They sleep
with their shoes under their
heads, for fear they'll awaken
with bare feet.
One such resident, who would
identify himself only as Pete,
begs passersby for money and
uses spit and a hankie to clean
windows on cars stopped at the
traffic lights. He showed a re·
porter where he sleeps on a bed
of cardboard.
But three weeks ago, someone
began slashing throats. Two va·
grants died. A 31 -year-old
former mental patient named
Charles Sears was arrested last
week carrying a bloodied
straight razor. The resident of a
Bowery flophouse was charged
with one murder, one attempted
murder and two attempted as-
saults .
Pete says he is a hippie from
the 1960s , uses cocaine and
heroin and claims that former
patients from state mental
hospitals are "messing up the
street." His arms are fuJI of nee-
dle marks. His clothes have a
powerful stench.
Two unidentified men sit outside along the Bowery, part of a homeless legion with nowhere else to go.
The Bowery runs from the
edge of Chinatown up to Cooper
Square. near Fourth Street.
Sprawling up the street are
r estaurant supply houses.
flophouses, lighting fixture
stores, Chinese restaurants and
an Off-Track Betting Office.
Some residents say you can
see a revival if you look hard
enough. But the "good blocks"
In Buy-Rile Liquors . Pete
pays $1.05 for a chilled 12.7·
ounce bottle of Thunderbird
wine. Leaving with the bottle
stuffed in a brown bag, he
declares: "The basic thing is
fear."
Twenty years ago, typical
shelter users were about 55-60
years old, with about 60 percent
white and almost all alcoholic,
Reid says. Statistics on today's
users indicate 47 percent are
black, 33 percent while and 17
percent Hi spanic, with 54 per·
cent under 40 and 80 percent
younger than 50.
Reid said that up to 50 percent
of "the people we service have a
history of hospitalization within
the last five years In the stale
mental health system."
Often when a man leaves the
relatively settled life of a men-
tal facility, "the stability no
longer exists. Arter a while, a
certain amount of deterioration
takes place. He loses his job. he
loses hi s place, he loses his con-
tacts and he descends lo the
Bowery," Reid said.
When a system has to process
more than 12,000 men a year, he
said, "it is fair to assume that
I Sidewalks provide shelter to inhabitants of New York's Bowery, a Skid Row home for alcoholics and drug addicts.
1 Red Ribbon group fights for Viet MIAs
• I
Organization claims 1,000 Americans may still be held captive in Asia
RUTHERFORD, N.J. <AP> -
Josephine McAtarian wants to
see red ribbons replace the
yellow streamers that 1reeted
the 52 Americans who were re-
leased by Iran after 444 days in
captivity.
The nurse-housewife turns
crimson when abe talks about
the indifference 1be baa ex·
perlenced from 1overnment of-
ficials about her role aa lelder
of the New Jersey-New Yort-
Penuylvanla branch of the Red
Badie ot Coura1e·Red Ribbon
campalp.
The IJ'OUP. which baa head·
quartera ln Santa Barbara,
claim• that H many at 1,000
America.at are 1UU belq held
capthe la Vietnam, more than
... JHn after PliloMn °' war were releued from that Allan
oattlelfOUDd. Mn. McAtarlan
and tbouaand• of voluntffr1
acrou the nation are •endine
lettera to the prealdent and
members ot Coqres1, pleadinC
&bat t.blN "*' be r•eaed.
Mra. llcAtarlaa can't UD·
dentaad wlly more people
weren't M outu1ed at 1be waa
when she beard the news report
that Swedes working on a con-
1truction job in Vietnam inad·
vertenUy came across a road
gan1 of about 75 American
slave-laborers. The gaunt
prisoners shouted, "Tell .the
World About Us,'' -a slogan
that has become the battle cry ol
her lfOUp.
''I found it very bard to sleep
nl1hta knowing that no one wa1
doin1 anything for these men. It
waa 1uch a pitiful cry," she said
in an interview.
The mother of five promptly
quJt her lob as a nurse to devote
herself ull time to l._e cam-
pal1n. '
By the Penta1on'1 count, 2,128
Americana are unaccounted for
in Southeaat A1ll. Half are
known to be dead; 1,23'7 more
are Uated u ml11in1 in acUGn,
with all but 12 presumed dead.
President Rea1an declared
July 17 u National POW·MlA
recoplUoa day.
· Tbe Defense IntelW1ence
A1ency aa11 il urefully In·
VHUfatea report• Ith th•
Swedel, but haa failed to find
any American captives.
But the Americans for the
Return of American Servicemen
from Vietnam believes that hun-
dre<la or the m1ssin1 may be im·
prisoned.
"We think they're being held
for retaliation and as a bargain-
ing chip to 1et ald from the Unit·
ed Stales,•• Mra. McAlarian
said. "Most of the men were
pilots and they're being held u
retaliation a1aln1t the bomb-
ings."
The Ber1en County woman,
alon1 with her husband,· Frank,
has been diltrlbulln1 poaten,
bu~per tticken .ad red ribbonl
throuahcMat tbe area. The, have
boxe1 of ~tcard1 to be ad-
drnaed to ...,an Ud otMr ol·
flelaJa to demad aCUoa.
"The aovenunnt Ila tried to
put a Ud on it. We're flllrtiaa GUr
own 1overnment," ahe aald.
"Jt'• not by acclde•t that the
famUl• ~ prilooen of war and
ml11l1t1 In action lft'VlctdMm
haven't bMll told the tnatb.
"We'• W. to '" U.. red rtb-b0n1 do fer ............. thi
yellow rlbboae did for the
hostages," said Mrs. McAlarian.
She has no previous back·
ground in politics and is one of
the least likely people to be
fighting the U.S. government.
"I just reacted the way any
American should. 1 just don't
believe we can't get these men
out," she said. "It ju..t touched
me. Jt could be my sons a couple
of yean from now."
The Red Ribbon campalan hu
spread to 15 stales from its start tut year at the home of Susan
Marino, the· 1i1ter-in-law of a
misalon pilot, who be1an the
campaip after '1rowln1 weary
of ..-alUng for inlormatlon from
tbe 1ovemment.
"We're in bwllnea1 to 10 out~
businen," Mrs. McAtarian 1ald.
"It'• tbe men in chalna in Viet-
nam wbo need th• attention." About i.-people are acUve in
the campailn In New Jene)'.
Gov . ..._.... T. Byrne declared
lle~ortaJ Day aa Red Ribbon·
Red leqe of Coura1e Day tlarouPoul tbe It.ate and .......
eeaunualtlea marked the oc· aaMil by putilnf up red ri.._
at bo~ball1.
some will be prone to violence.
We are dealing with the bottom
of the social order, so to speak."
Pete, 34, his goatee and long
mop of hair prematurely gray,
claims he rarely eats and ad-
mits to a serious drinking prob-
lem. "I wake up shaking. This
is drug addiction," he said,
drinking from a second bottle or
wine. His first, still half.full ,
was stolen by another man who
threatened to knife him for talk-
ing to a reporter instead of shar·
ing his wine.
Any type of liquor will do,
Pete said, bis belly bare to the
breeze inside his open shirt.
"Whatever it takes to stop the
shakes."
On a typicaJ day, about 1.600
men use sleeping quarters pro·
vided by the city through the
shelter. Inside the shelter itself
is a 16-bed dormitory used by
those with ambulatory or senili ·
ty problems . At night. recrea·
lion and sitting rooms are
cleared lo set up beds for an ad-
ditionaJ 73 men.
They are given two sheets, a
pillow, clean underwear and
socks. Admission is on a first.
come, first-served basis. Once
the beds a re filled , homeless
men are sent to nearby single·
occupancy lodging houses. It
was at one of those facilities, the
$3.51 -a-night Delevan H.ouse ,
where Sears Lived.
The Delevan lobby is up a
long. dark stairway and around
to the right. Clerk Donald Pope
stands in a cage with heavy wire
grating and metal bars. A 1979
ca lendar advertisi ng the
Belleville, N .J . Brake and
Clutch Exchange hangs behind
the desk.
There are four fl oors of rooms.
which Pope describes as "cub-
byholes. They're big enough to
move around in. The posted rent
Is 13.25 per night, payable in ad·
vance, plus 26 cents lax.
Pope says lhe lobby can be
used only by "paying guests, not
the overflow from the shelters."
He says the men the city sends
are "troublemakers." Some reg-
ulars have been staying at the
Delevan for five-to-10 years, he
said.
The sign reads: "Salvation
Army Bowery Corps -Dedical·
ed to the Service of God and
Humanity. A.O. 1951." The
Salvation Army has a history ot
h•ing Bowery derelicts.
"ll used to be that the term
'Bowery bum' meant Jiving on
the street. a derelict with Ji.
quor,'' said one Salvation Army
official, who asked that his
name not be used. "The term
has really spread out. Now
you've got mental cases and
drug addicts burnt out from
1960s acid."
In the past. he added, "the
Bowery bum or de relict has
been harmless. Bul that has
become a myth. There are some
r eal dangerous people out there "
~ I
'
-
........... ,,,.,.-,....-...... -. -·-·-j----
ATH 0, DARKNlll -The total solar
clipse expected Friday will darken a path
cross the Sovlel Unlon. Soviet officials are ·
atllng the event a "Soviet eclipse" because.
-/ .,,
CHINA
"' /
/
1
I
I
I
.... ,. . ...., ...
the 5,000·mlle route crosses Ru11ian territory
from the Black Seo to the Kurll Islands In the
Pacific.
ie'nti-sts fear syphili,s
y become drug-immune
WASHINGTON <AP> -Genetic material
aolac.d from the bacterium that cauaes 1ypbllJJ
11 1cleotllta worrltd th.at the daqerout venere1l
J1eaae may be quickly developtn1 an Immunity to
nlclllln and other 1nllblot!c1.
There 11 no evidence that it h11 happened yet,
t1earcher1 11ld Tueaday. But If rnl1tance 1hould
velop, an uncontrollable form of the 1Hually
1n1JDltt.ed dlleue could emer1e. they 11ld.
Ulltreat.ed, tbe dl1eaae can cause nerve, brain
nd heart dama1e, bUndnn1, and birth defect.a In
e bibles of lnf ected mothera.
The raearchen Hid in a report published this
eek In ~lence m11azine that they have found for
be fldt time 1enetlc material In the 1yphill11 or·
ant1m that could po11ibly render anUblotlc1 inef·
ectlve.
T~ dlacovery lend• credibility t.o the warning
hat emer1ence of penlclllin·re1l1tant 1yphll11
'm ay be Imminent," uid Dn. Michael V.
or1a.rd of the Unlvenlly of Texa1 at DalJH and
am• tt Miller of the Unlvenlty of California al
I An1elet.
Miller Hid the po~ntial problem 111 so great
hat aclenU1t1 1hould start lookln1 for other
syphll11 treatment• now In case resi1tance de·
velopt,
".-:a rnult of thl1 1tudy, I have a pro1ram
10IQS ~th tbt Loi An1eles health department In
which we are tryin& to tlnd a case In which 1 pa.
tlent dQes not respond to penlcillln," Hid Miiier, a
profeator ol mlcrobloloty and immunolon
"If we find a cHe, it couJd mean the 1enle la
out oflhe bottle," he added.
Noraard said In an Interview that h~ found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid In tbe 1yphiU1 bac·
terium, known 111 Treponema paJUdum <Tp).
ONA, or deo•yrlbonuclelc add, 11 the b11ic
1ub1tance of heredity. It makes up the aenea that
pasa the trail.I of an or1anl1m from 1eneratlon to
generation.
Nor1ard said plHmlda are DNA not neceaury
for the arowth or survival of an or aanlam, but
which play a major role In traruferrlng charac·
terl1lics to and from an or1aniam.
The plasmid found In the Tp oraanlam does not
uppear to'have a drua·reslatanl gene In It now, but
he said It could be pot.enUally dan1erou1 in two ways.
There could be a precunor, or Immature,
1ene In th.e plasmid that would mutat.e Into dru1 re-
sistance or the plasmid couJd serve 11 the receptor
for picking up a resl1tant gene from another or-
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis, uld
Norgard, is that at la not like other bacterial di•·
euea. The disease can stay in the body for de·
cades and do damaae long alter It la cauaht, and
side ertect.a are ser ious. he noted.
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
KAMCHATKA
VODIU
1 Futt u-..11
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750ML
2611 ............. M•M Drf•••
M leecll-C.tt.MeM
••1•m serious about
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That's why I chose
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............ ............. ,
--------~------------------
Schools get more cash
Huntington District now 'on the legal side of zero'
When Huntln,WO s.aeh Unlon
Hllh School trutLtff alt down
Auft. 4 to dJ1cua1 next year'• Nl ml lon bud1et they wlll have •
new problem how to 1pend
fl.2 miUlon more than wa1 ex·
peeled.
ln a dl1lrict beaet with nnan·
clal woes last year that called
Me1a group
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire 1roup ln Colla
M eaa nu been named a national
winner for It.a proaram to help
handicapped children under the
1981 Help Youn1 America cam·
pal1n.
I The Dandy Liona Blue Blrd
Club ofColta Meu wH one of 29'1
wlnnlnlJ entrlet from youth
1roup1 throuahout the nation
who created project.a to aid the
dlubled ln their communities.
W orkln1 lndl vldually with men·
tally retarded student.a, the 12
club me mben provided youth
actlvltlefl durln1 the first six
monltt1 of lh.111 year.
BUile Dolley, club leader, aald
the youn11ter 1 made 1pecial
craft1 1uch a1 frlend1hlp rinp,
ung 1on11. played 1ame1,
danced and shared frlend1hlps.
"From t.he 1lart," 1he1ald. "we
were received with much love.
Shy children became open, and
the introverted became en·
lhu11luUc.''
tor the reduction of cl111room
Um• for Junior• and 1enlor1, the
layoff of 94 teachera, nearly all
coun1elor1 and 5 .5 Md
mlnlatretora, 1uch probltm1
1hould be welcome news
However, Charle• He11 , a11i1
tant auperlnt~ndent, w11rn1 that
the fl.2 mlJIJon fl1ure 11 In
1t1nltlcant compared to the $2.~
mllllon the dl1trlct had In uv
ln11 last year.
"It'• Just got us In the bhac~/'
uld Heas "It will keep u1 on me
le1al 1lde of zero."
Before the fin11l fl1ure1 were
received in late June, the dla·
trlct wu starlna al a po11ible
fl37 ,000 dc:flclt, aald He88.
Some of the fundlna returned
lo the district from state and
federal sources Include
About S751 ,000 for 11pec111l
education pro1rum1. Earlier
dl1trlct otrlcial1 had proJ•ct.d a
1300,000 deficit.
About S400,000 frum interest
pay men u und 1eneral fund
•ourcea F.urlier thtt dl1trict had
unllclpated a l200.000 deficit.
At• recent work1hop Super1n·
tcndent Fnnk Abbott recom·
mt:nded thut the tru1teea uu
11omP of the $1 .2 mllllon wlndfell
lo lncreu8e the Hludent alloc•·
lion f or t ex tbook• and
trun1porU.Uon from S75 to '85.
Althou"h the rtcommendatJon
wa• ununlmoualy approved,
fleas stud he expe<.U th., rest of
tht> money to remain In the dla·
trlct'• savings account.
If the r ecommendation la
formully 1&dopted at the Aus. 4
meelln1 it will cost 1175,000. llea1111aid
Services held
Funeral servlce11 wc:rc hold In
Pomona Mond ay for Newport
Beach r esident A R Lance
Loud, a former muchlne works J wner and an avid sports fish
.e rman wh o died t'r lday at
Hoa a Memorial Hospalal · lie
wu74.
A native of F:llwanda, Loud
o wnt!d and op<•ruted Loud
Ma c hine Workb in Pomona
where he also wai. a board direc
tor for Pomonu Valley Com
munlty Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elkb Lodge
Loud wus conbtdered th<'
founding membt•r of the novs
Club in Pomona Ile moved t.o
N('w11orl last year und was a
rm·m her of the Lob Pescadores
of Newport Beach and several
11 tht>r fishing and huntin g
gruupb
li e lb burv1ved hy h111 wife
Yvon ne . a d1rnghter . Alice
H1t·hurdMm of Pomonu. and a
hrr>thcr. Ha rry W. Loud of
Hedlandll Ill' ah.o lt•ave11 a
~randduughter. a grundi.on and
four gr('al grand{'hlldn•n
Mt•mor111l contr1but1ons may
hl• mud(' to the lloal( Mt!morial
I h>b pita I Heart 1-'und
THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER
HOURS: Every Day • 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
EVENINGS WEhEHDS HOLIDAYS
FREE! ILOOD rRHSURI
CMfCIC CWITH ADI
•Fully Oual1f1ed Phy111c1an On Duty fOf Trutrnent 01
lllnes .... ln1ur1ee And Aou1ine Che<:k·Ups
•X·Aay & Laboratory F11c1llt1es
•Ae111oneble Mect1cal Of11ce Foos At Large Savtnga Over
Emergency Fees
17672 BEACH Bl.VD., H.B. 848-9600 (htwtn si.ts & Tilllrtl -MOW ••• '-' HUt'.tf~tot\, S&GdV ~C> fOOt\tO.\~ Vo,\\~... \
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Diiiy Piiat
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
84
86
812
~·---·--------·
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... B9
Ollce-henign Bowery bums turning to violence
Alcoholics now being joined
by more dangerous drug addicts
NEW YORK CAP> -A boulevard for busted hopes and
burned-out minds, a last stop for
losers, the Bowery bas been an
. alcoholic skid row ror years, but
it shelters a new breed these
days -younger, more mobile,
more prone to violence.
Many who sit today on the Ill·
tered sidewalks or lie in the gut·
ter have histories of mental prob·
lems and drug use as well as
a lcoholic problems, according to
Calvin Reid, director of the
city's only men's sheller.
They panhandle passing
motorists. They prey upon each
other. Often, their object is
'We are dealing
with the bottom
of the social
order ... '
nothing more valuable than a
bottle of cheap wine.
are outnumbered. In a city
where parking Is at a premium.
it's easy to find empty spaces on
the Bowery .
The city and state spel'd about
$11 .3 million a year on shelters
for the estimated 36,000 home·
less people scatter ed around
New York City. More than half
the money goes to the city's 34·
year-old Shelter Care Center for
Men.
Last year, 12,586 different men
passed through its doors, up
from 9,236 in 1979. But thousands
never see the inside of shelte'rs.
Many Bowery residents spend
their days and nights in the gut-
ters and alleyways. They sleep
with their s hoes under their
heads, for fear they'll awaken
with bare feet.
One such resident, who would
identify himself Qnly as Pete,
begs passersby for money and
uses spit and a hankie to clean
windows on cars stopped al the
traffic lights. He showed a re· porter where he sleeps on a bed
of cardboard.
But three weeks ago, someone
began slashing throats. Two va·
grants died. A 3l·year-old
former mental patient named
Charles Sears was arrested last
week carr ying a bloodied
straight razor. The resident of a
Bowery rtophouse was charged
with one murder. one attempted
murder and two attempted as-
saults.
Pete says he is a hippie from
the 1960s, uses cocaine and
heroin and claims that former
patients fro m stat e m e ntal
hospitals are "messing up the
street." His arms are full of nee-
dle marks. His clothes have a
powerful stench.
Two unidentified men sit outside along the Bowery, part of a homeless legion with nowhere else to go .
The Bowery runs from the
edge of Chinatown up to Cooper
Square , near Fourth Str eet.
Sprawling up the street are
re s taurant supply houses,
rtophouses, lighting fixture
stores, Chinese restaurants and
an Off-Track Betting Office.
Some residents say you can
see a revival if you look hard
enough. But the "good blocks"
In Buy-Rite Liquors, Pete
pays $1.05 for a chilled 12.7·
ounce bottle o f Thunderbird
wine. Leaving with the bottle
stuffed in a brown bag, he
declares: "The basic thing is
fear."
Twenty years ago, typical
shelter users were about SS-60
years old, with about 60 percent
white and almost all alcoholic,
Reid says. Statistics on today's
users indicate 47 percent are
black. 33 percent white and 17
percent Hispanic, with 54 per·
cent under 40 and 80 percent
younger than 50.
Reid said that up to SO percent
or •'the people we service have a
history of hospitalization within
the last five years In the stale
mental health system."
Often when a man leaves the
relatively settled hfe of a men·
tal facility, ··the stability no
longer exists. Alter a while, a
certain amount of deterioration
takes place. He loses his job. he
loses his place, he loses his con·
tacts and he descends to the
Bowery," Reid said.
When a system has to process
more Utan 12,000 men a year, he
said, "it is fair to assume that
Sidetoolks provide shelter to inhabitants of New York's Bowery, a Skid Row home for alcoholics and drug addicts.
Red Ribbon group frghts for Viet MIAs
Organiz'ation cla ims 1,000 Americans may still be held captive in Asia
RUTHERFORD, N.J. <AP> -
Josephine McAtarian wants to
aee red ribbons replace the
yellow streamers that gteeted
the 52 Americana who were re·
leased by Iran alter 444 days ln
captivity.
The nurse-housewife turns
crimson when she talk& about
the lndllf erence ahe baa ex-
perienced Crom 1overnment of·
ficia.IJ about ber role as leader
or the New Jeney-New York·
Pennsylvania branch or the Red
Badie ol Coura1e·Red Ribbon
campalp.
The P'OUP, whJch baa bead·
quarten ln Santa Barbara,
claim• that H many as 1,000
Americana are 1UU beina held
capUve ln Vietnam, more than
1lx y..,.. after prilonen ol wu
were releued from that Allan
oattlecround. lllr1. lllcAtarian
and tbouaands or volunteers
acroee UM oaUon are sencllni
lettera t4 the prealdent ana
membef'I ol Conareu, pleadine
tb8t UMM mm be rucued.
llra. lleAtarlan un•t un·
deratand wily more people
wereo't u outra1ed a1 1be wu
when she beard the news report
that Swedes working on a con·
structlon job in Vietnam lnad·
vertenUy came across a road
gang of about 7S American
slave-laborers. The gaunt
prisoners shouted, "Tell .the
World About Us," -a slogan
that hu become the battle cry or
her group.
"I found it very hard to sleep
ni&hll lmowin1 that no one wu
doin1 anythin1 for these men. It
was such a pitilul cry," she said·
in an interview.
The motber of rive promptly
quit her Job u a nurse to devote
heraelr tuU time to the cam·
pal1n. ·
By the Penta1on'1 count, 2,128
Americans are unaccounted for
in Southeaat Aila. Half are
known to be dead: 1,231 more
are U.ted u mlulna in action,
with all but 12 presumed dead.
Prealdent Rea1an detlared
July 17 u National POW·MIA
recopit.loa d•Y.
· The Defenae lnlelW1ence
A1enc)' aa11 lt c•refully ln·
v11U1at11 report• ltk• the
Swedel, but hN f alled lo find
any American captives.
But the Americans for the
Return of American Servicemen
from Vietnam believes that bun·
dreds. of the missing may be im·
prisoned.
"We think they're being held
ror retaliation and as a bargain·
Ing chip to 1et aid from the Unit·
ed States," Mrs. McAtarian
said. "Most of the men were
pilots and they're being held as
retaliation agalnat the bomb-
ings."
The Ber1en County wotnQ,
alon1 with her husband, Frank,
bas been d11lrlbutin1 po.ten,
bumper sUcken and red ribbonl
throqhout the area. They uve
boxes of po1tcards to be M ·
drnaed to JIMCan and otMI' of.
flclal1 to demand actJon.
"The 1overament hN tried &o
put I Ud on lt. We're n1btlnl our
own 1overnment," the aaJd. ''It'• not by accldeat that the
famlll• of prilODen of war and
mi11ln1 ht action 1enlcemen
haven't hen told the tnath.
"We'd U. to'" the red rtb-
bon1 do fir UllM m• waa.t the
yellow rlbbont did for tb•
hostages," said Mrs. McAlarian.
She has no previous back·
ground ln politics and Is one of
the least likely people to be
fighting the U.S. government.
"I just reacted the way any
American should. I just don't
believe we can't g'-t these men
out," she aatd. "It just touched
me. It could be my sons a couple
or yean trom now."
The Red Ribbon campaign hat
aprea~ to ts states Crom its start
last year at Ute home of Susan
Marino, the· sister-ln·law or a
mission pilot, who began the
campatsn after '1rowlng weary
of waltlna for Information from
tbe aovemment.
"We're ln bUalneas to go out ol
buslneu, '' Mra. McAtarian said.
"lt'1 UM Mt!Jl in chains In Viet·
na111 wbo need the attention." About 1IO people are active ln
the campalp ln New Jeney.
Gov. Brendan T. Byrne declared
Memorial Day N Red Ribbon·
Red Badae of Couraae Day tbrouehout the state and aeveral
ceaununitlea marked th• OC· cHW. by putt.ins up red rtbbona
at borou1h balls.
·---~
some will be prone to violence.
We are dealing with the bottom
of the social order. so to speak."
Pete, 34, his goatee and long
mop of hair prematurely gray.
claims he rarely eats and ad·
mils to a serious drinking prob-
lem. "I wake up shaking. This
is drug addiction," he said,
drinking from a second bottle of
wine. His first. still half.full,
was stolen by another man who
threatened to knife him for talk·
ing to a reporter instead of shar-
ing his wine.
Any type of liquor will do,
Pete said, his belly bare to the
breeze inside his open shirt.
"Whatever it takes to stop the
shakes."
On a typical day. about 1,600
men use sleeping quarters pro·
vided by the city through the
shelter. Inside the shelter itself
is a 16-bed dormitory used by
those with ambulatory or senili·
ty problems. Al night. recrea-
li on and sitting rooms are
cleared to set up beds for an ad·
ditional 73 men.
They are given two sheets, a
pillow. clean underwear and
socks. Admission is on a first·
come, fi rst-served basis. Once
the beds are filled, homeless
men are sent to nearby single-
occu pancy lodging houses. It
was at one of those facilities. the
$3.51 ·a·night Delevan H.ouse,
where Sears lived.
The Delevan lobby is up a
long, dark stairway and around
to the right. Clerk Donald Pope
stands in a cage with heavy wire
grating and metal bars . A 1979
calendar advertisi ng the
Belleville, N .J . Brake and
Clutch Exchange hangs behind
the desk.
There are four floors of rooms.
which Pope describes as "cub·
byholes. They're big enough to
move around in. The posted rent
is $3.25 per night, payable in ad-
vance. plus 26 cents tax.
Pope says the lobby can be
used only by "paying guests, not
the overflow from the shelters."
He says the men the city sends
are "troublemakers." Some reg-
ulars have been staying at the
Delevan for five-to-10 years, he
said.
The sign reads : "Salvation
Army Bowery Corps -Dedicat·
ed to the Service of God and
Humanity. A.O. 1951." The
Salvation Army has a history of
h•ing Bowery derelicts.
"Jt used to be that the term
·Bowery bum' meant living on
the street, a derelict with Ii·
quor,'1 said one Salvation Army
offi cial, who asked that his
name not be used. "The term
has really s pread out. Now
you've got mental cases and
drug addicts burnt out from
1960s acid."
In the past. he added. "the
Bowery bum or derelict has
been harmless. But that has
become a myth. There are some
r ea l dangerous people out
there ...
l
...
...--..... .._.. ....-..-..--.--~·-----· .... ..,..,_._.,..,.._ .. _,..,.,__,_..., ................ =++••= ........ -........ ,.........,., ......... t;J>'.WW .......... r .r"¥•4 WV9
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/Wedn11d1y, July 29. 1981
,.,..,.-~,,.--_..--···-.• -----• ,:
ATH OF DARKNESS -The total solar
clipse expected Friday wiU darken a path
cross the Soviet Union. Soviet officials are ·
. alling the event a "Soviet eclipse" because
/ ,,,.,. ---....
CHINA
/
/
/
I
I
I
I
..............
the 5,000-mile route crosses Russian territory
from the Black Sea to the Kuril Islands in the
Pacific.
ie'nti.sts fear syphili,s
y become drug-immune
WASHINGTON (AP) -Genetic material
solat.d from the bacterium that causes syphilis
as acienUata worried that the dan1erous venereal
seaae may be quickly developing an immunity to
niclllln and other anUbiot.ics.
There ls no evidence that it has happened yet,
esearchers said Tuesday. But if resistance should
evelop, an uncontrollable form of the sexually
ansmitted disease could emerge, they said.
Untreated, the disease can cause nerve, brain
d heart dama1e, blindness, and birth defects in
e babies of lnlected mothers.
The researchers said in a report published this
eek in Science maeazine that they have found for
e firit Ume genetlc material in the syphilis or-
anism that could possibly render antibiotics inef-
ective.
The discovery lends credibility to the warning
hat emergence of penicillin-resistant syphilis
'may be imminent," said Ors. Michael V.
orgar~ of the University of Texas at Dallas and
amea N. Miller of the University of California at
os Angeles.
Miller said the potential problem Is so great
hat 1clentists should start looking for other
syphilis treatments now in case resistance de-
velops.
"Al! a result of this study. I have a program
goina, with the Los Angeles health department in
which we are trying to find a case in which a pa-
tient does not respond to penicillin," said Miller. a
professor of microbiology and immunology.
"U we find a case, it could mean the genie is
out of the botUe," he added.
. Norgard sald in an Interview that h~ found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid in the syphilis bac-
terium, known as Treponema pallidum (Tp).
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the basic
substance of heredity. It makes up the genes that
pass the traits of an organism from generation to
generation.
Norgard said plasmids are ONA not necessary
for the growth or survival of an organism, but
which play a major role in transferrin& charac-
teristics lo and from an organism.
The plasmid found in the Tp organism does not
appear t<r--have a drug-resistant gene in it now, but
he said it could be potentially dangerous in two ways.
There could be a precursor, or immature,
gene in the plas mid that would mutate into drug re-
sistance or the plasmid could serve as the receptor
for picking up a resistant gene from another or·
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis, said
Norgard, is that it is not like other bacterial dis-
eases. The diBease can stay in the body for de-
c:1des and do damage long a!ter it is caught. and
side effects are serious. he noted.
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
'
KAMCHATKA
VODKA
1 Fuli U'"i&!I
s44t
•• 1.30
EARLY
TIMES
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'
Schools get more cash
Huntington District now 'on the legal side of zero' )
When Huntinaton Beach Union
Hlth ScbooJ truatee1 all down
Au1. 4 to dlscu.ss nut year'• $51
mllllon bud1et they wlll have a
new problem -how to 1pend
$1.2 million more than was ex-
pected.
In a district beaet with finan-
cial woes last year that called
Mesa group
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire eroup in Costa
Mesa has been named a national
winner tor its proeram to help
handicapped children under the
1981 Help Young America cam-
paign.
I The Dandy Lions Blue Bird
Club of Costa Mesa was oneof297
winning entries from youth
groups throuehout the nation
who created projects to aid the
disabled in their communities.
Working individually with men-
tally retarded students, the 12
club members provided youth
activities during the first six
months of this year.
Billie Dolley, club leader. said
the youngsters made special
crafts such as friend1hip rings,
sang songs, played games,
danced and shared friendships.
"From the start," she said. "we
were received with much love.
Shy children became open, and
the introverted became en-
thusiastic.''
ror the reduction of claaeroom
time for Junior• and seniors, the
layort ot 94 teachers, nearly all
counselors and 5 .5 ad -
ministrators, such problems
should be welcome news.
However, Charles Hess, assis·
tant superintendent, warns that
the Sl.2 million figure is in·
significant compared to the $2.29
million the district had in sav·
Inga last year.
"It's just got us in the black,"
said Hess. "It witl keep us on the
legal side of zero."
Before the final figures were
received in late June. the dis·
trict was staring al a possible
$137 ,000 deficit, said Hess.
Some of the funding returned
to the district from state and
federal sources include:
-About $751,000 for special
education pro~rama . EarUer
district officials had projected a
$300,000 deficit
About $400,000 from interest
payments and general fund
sources. Earlier the district had
anticipated a $200,000 deficit.
At a recent workshop Superin-
tendent Frank Abbott recom·
me nded that the trustees use
some of the $1 .2 million windfall
to increase the student alloca·
lion f o r textbooks and
transportation from $75 to $85.
Although the recommendation
was unanimously approved,
Hess said he expects the rest of
the money to remain in the dis-
trict's savings account.
If the recommendation is
formally adopted at the Aug. 4
meeting it will cost Sl75,000,
Hess said
Services held
Funeral services were held in
Pomona Mond ay for Newport
Beach resident A. R. Lance
Loud, a former machine works .>wner and an avid sports fish
,erman who died Friday at
Hoag Memorial Hospital ~ He
was 74.
A native or Etiwanda. Loud
owned and oper ated Loud
Ma c hine Work s in Pomona
where he also was a board direc·
tor for Pomona Valley Com
munity Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elks Lodge.
Loud was conside r ed the
founding member of the Bovs
Club in Pomona He moved to
Newport last year and was a
member of the Los Pescadores
of Newport Beach and several
other fi li hing and hunting
groups
Jl c is s urvived by his wife
Yvonne ; a daughter . Alice
Richardson of Pomona, and a
brother. Harry W. Loud of
Redlands ff(• also leaves a
granddaughter, a grandson and
four great grandchildren
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Hoag Memorial
Hospital Heart Fund
THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER
HOURS: Every Day • 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
EVEHIHGS WEhEHDS HOLIDAYS
FREE! I LOOD PRESSURE
C HECK (WITH ADJ
•Fully Oualll1ed Physician On Duty For Treatment 01
Illnesses. ln1uries And Routine Check·Ups
•X-Ray & Laboratory Fac1l111es
•Reasonable Medical Oll1ce Fees At Large Savings Over
Emergency Fees
17672 BEACH BLVD., H.B. 848-9600 (letweeA Slatlf & lat) -tlOW ••• ~ HUM.ti~tot\, B&ndV A.l!P FOOW\tO.\~ Vo,\\~ •..
lfl.~ l'RODUCEl
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2611 '"Ille A•• IAt MeH Drl•el Medteft9Mew '" ........ ,...,.. M IHcll -Cost. Mete
"I'm serious about
getting ahead.
1bat's why I chose
NaUonal University."
Wt'reUMrtoat ..... , your hllue ., .....
C l I ...... -..... ..
lllA/MA
going beck lo ICllool lor ao
advanctd degret, I highly
rtCOIM*ld Nahonal
University. Nallonal
uodefslandS what mature,
caieer-mlndtd people llHd
and want 111 luflhef1og their
tdueatlon." .
Yllll register only Onc:4I tor
I complete degtet progrlm
AtgiAer llfY wonono day of
lfle yw, Ctioote day or
Mnin9 dllMI, wNcheWf
bell fits yow adledule.
Complett one courM uch
month .Tiwe 1t1 over 30
ldmiMlon and cllssroom
centtrs locllecl ttlroughollt san Oleto. Ofange Ind Los
Angell$ Countllt. financial
lid It IYllllllll 10 those who
'Qull!fy.
Our 11111us1neu awo•ch
to ltudy hit tlt-.dY helped
Mf 40.000 ... get lhlld
In -Cll'ln. 1111'1 lhll I
-... tor "" 10 get IUftld? Clll now tor fut ttler
lillofmltion.
\t'Opieo,l Aft¢ ~l'.<>etf\o.lcet's• ~.1..4&1 ~)@.'
MAllGIES .. "'76oo~ PECAN RILLS .. ~-
i'URKIYC 1'h.· a lb o.yt.~fl.LJ
11 \..OVIS. U7 a. M
RICH• "' 8Jlt>."-II HAM........ fb ''VOtWH\l+~
!i*Kav(1'&cs.> 41t n0N ;JALAMI.... . ~a~
~'.if~ '~!! .,, 7"'1· i»HRIMP. .. , &-a
PEOPLE COUN-r ON US EVERY DAY FOR:
EX· le~( Not over 22Xfi ) GRWl:~at 0-..49 ~--1$.
Goupon savings, .Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, ••
and Advettlied velues. • ---., ~DING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the ~J1 .._
.. } \, •
................ ,. .......... ,,,,,. ..... ,. .... , ... ,. .. .... . . .
.p ......
ATTENTION! -Chief Petty Officer Philip Greenaway. left, instructs
sailors during training session at Whale Island, near Portsmouth.
England. The men were part of a contingent set to line the route for
the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer today.
U.S. Navy 'threat' hit
Soviet says American force 'aggressive'
MOSCOW <APl -The commander
of the Soviet navy has claimed the
U.S. Navy poses a growing threat to
other countries while the Soviet fleet
is designed stricUy for defense.
An increasingly "aggressive and
massive presence" of U.S. naval
forces in various oceans for perform-
ing "gendarme functions" charac-
terizes American sea strategy. Ad-
miral Sergei Gorshkov wrote in a
Soviet Navy Day commentary in
Pravda.
He singled out the U.S. naval
buildup in the Indian Ocean and
Persian Gulf and strong presence in
the eastern Mediterranean in May
and June "to support Israel" as
evidence of American pressure on
governments ··unwelcome'· to
Washington.
He did not mention the Soviet
military intervention in Afghanistan
and expanded Soviet naval activity in
the same regions that prompt.ed the
U.S. response.
"Our navy bas been created not for
aggression but for defense of the
security of the motherland and of the
countries of the socialist community.
and for the promotion of the pres-
ervation of peace throughout the
world," he asserted in the Com-
munist Party dally.
Gorshkov described the Soviet
Union as the "largest continental
power" and "a great maritime one"
with s'ea frontiers stretching for
25,000 miles.
"It is natural that we take into con-
sideration a possible threat to our
country (and aJlies) not only from
land but from the oceans as well," he
wrote.
Western military experts have
warned that the Soviet fleet is out-
stripping the United States and other
NATO countries in a ~lenUess drive
to control the world's sea lanes.
"Jane's Fighting Ships," the
authoritative survey of world fleets,
said in the latest edition that the Sov-
iet Union has undertaken one of the
largest naval expansions in history
and is leaving the West far behind in
new warship construction.
~\\"tTERs
..... ~ LADY DIANA ~ CUT:
·,,,,;, c
~
Get your hair styles In the newest c.refree look -the Lady Diana. Call today for an ap-
pointment for this easy cut and blowdry.
PllMS -,,_..., 11e1rc .. 1 ...................................... 'J6" reg. •4500
HAIRCUTS -for M"" ............................ • 11 • reg. •1•00
-For W-. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' 16 • reg. •2()00
SH Ut For .-4us ProclKtt
c• for Afpa•hca.t 963-0051
MATUll CUTTIRS
I 1141 •1 I I II, P-llk: Y.-.Y .... _ ................... c..-.... 1
T--.,.M. t:lO.I, s.t. 9·1
........ IMI
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
Huntington Beach uc" o, TH111 •TIM• w •vu .... ,'°" ML• Al, ADW9'Tlll,D PLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
CUT33°k
HICKSVILLE SMOKER
BARBEClE GRILL
·was 4499
NOW
2999
CUT1300
TRl-CHLOR
JUMBO TABLETS
8 LB. Per Box was 2799
NOW 1999
SAVE 5QOO
HOODED GRILL
CHAR BROILER
was 149"
NOW9999
10 ONLY
SAVE 250
was 84'9
NOW
599
BAMBOO
BIRDCAGE
SELECTED GIFT WRAP .~ l~ ~~ ,, .. ,,,, ~-..:.~/ ·'·r ... ~.~-· ~··~ ... 50°/o OFF WOMEN'S SLEEVELESS
BLOUSES
~'\Q
~
SELECTED SHEETS
AND PILLOWCASES
40°/o OFF
4 DAYS
ONLY
lluntin~ton tt.·al·h
94~15 i\d am'
• \dami. & Magnolia
I 7f.I) 9G:J-2f>fili
• t • ,,,.,.,,.,., W'I ...... ,,
WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.
JULY 29 -AUG. I st
• EUREKA'S MEW
UGHrWllCiHT VACUUM
WEIGHS OML Y I J US.
• •
PEllFECT FOR
qulCI PICK-UPS
EASY TO USE···
EASY TO CARRY
WE SERVICE
WHAT WE
SB.L!
STORE HOURs "· .... "1. .. , ... , • .. , ... , ,., ... ,.
a...111:••:•
was4•
NOW 199
Ai.k about
St•a ri. t•rt•dlt
plans.
139'
EUREKA'S
'-= _ __...____ ----•
MOST POWERFUL
UPRIGHT!
-~ ----'-------
~~
Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/WednMday, July 29, 1981
PU8UC PfOTICIC
"'8HU •1 •I III ~.'!,:j=~ l'tCftW ......... ---~ TM ......... ..,_ ere..... ..._ITA~ TM ~ ~ ere ..... ......... TM ......... ...,_. ere ....._
-IUVt .. oe. 1.:ro., '"' ---...... .. AND OVT ~MOT0.1 .... Ori.. ..... m ,,.._ c.I.._. A•CADIA, LTO. ui:.::: ~!:!JI· .... ..,. ... , ...• ,.. . . . °'1,,., ..... "'· ·~. ~ """ ~ ...... In I .1• '*"" ..... "''!..... ...... ... _--.. •. .. • ~ .......... '"' 0..... --............ """"' .... . • --.......... OriW. .... '"· .,,, .... eel...,... • Clllfwllle ............ ..... .._, ............ ~ ""' Ofln , M• 111, ll'VtM, c.INlw-" , .... .., ........... u .. ,,. "71J "'::.... ............. .,., •• Or•11• OttUI ......... , ... ,.. JeP.Metl• ... ,. ...... ·-~.... (;9......... ~:::...:=·· " .• ,.,. ... o . L'!..-............ "!.':.=:"..!: ~·-llY. , ................. CeMwctM". --......... ....,.... llMl9"~ ...,._... Tllit .....,_. -I.._ w1tt1 ttit ,,._Mwle INrl ...
• ...._.... -lllW wttlt • c.uMr Clertl 1110r-.. ~ ... ,"'., '"'' ... _.. -,.,.,. ••t11 ""
' Cleft Ill Or ... Qlwlty -'"' It ''" c.-. a.rt. I/I OrMlf c-ty Wt,.,,., ••• ~ • • " 10.1•1 ~, ..... er.. c:.•• o.11, ,..,.._ .._...,... °' .... C..M Oellr = Pllllllllllf ar.,.. c-1 o.11~'= tu. aa. "·-. s, ,., a1JM1 Jiii\' u. aa. "·Aue·•· 1•1 ., .. ,. J111y u. a."· Aut. s. ,., ,, ... ,. 'f Pt18UC NOTICE -PtJBUC NOTICI PtJBUC NOTICE
. ll'ICTlTIOUI ._,..... "T'"""I""'
~ICTITI .. Mlt•tM ....... ITATllMIMT ~H:TITIOUI aUllMHI
ITM .::r:=-z. ..... ...!. .... ~ ~ It ...... Ml· Tiie fo~=.!T:.~= .. •~• ... 1,,1 PVBUC NOTICE
•I MOt -CUSTOM WOOOWOlll(I, llutl11e11 M : OllANOa cc.INTV ATNl.•TtC 1 .. 1 W. MlcMtlw. /l,Jlt. IA. 14111'-CONVIENl•NT AUTO STaR•O. · ,te"n.,..,. ..,.. .....
..... ITAftMllllT ua, ,,.,, ,,..... ....._... 1111'9 ..... CA"* 1111eetM.MWINrC:lly,CAftt6S. Tll'ttil\CA..... NO!lMAH HltNAltO MOIE, letl NIC:OU• STINGACIU, U1 W. AtHL.ON COll .. OltATION, • W.~./l,Jlt.M,IMUAM,CA Wll-.C..Mffe,CAtlW. ,,_.... ~--. 1NI 9' .. I"', ft104 HUMICVA ADAMS, mW. Wit..,,
TJle ........ --11 ...... ....,. _.,.,
'-AM. CAtlJll. n.lt ......_.It~.-,.,, !ft. ltf .. I, e.&e Mew, CA t1W. H. H. HAltOINO A AUOCIATlll, llHI l'l,..lrM ....... Hllftll"fl•11 9-11,CA...._ OOUGL.AS INV•ITMINTS, • ... .,..,... Tlllt llutl"9U It 'llftCf\Ktecl lty •
lll•t"I• ,.,.., .. ._, 11'1 tnltl• ...,_a. Mee ...,.,., ~ ...
....,.,., T"1lll9, CA...... Tlllt ~ -tllW wltll ... NlcMM SllfteKlll HCflaattT HAMIL.TON HA,.OINO,ltatt "'""1w~, H-" 1,.._.a..o,CA....._ Tllll ~It C--.C ... lt't • C-tyQertial0r ..... CeuftCYMJ ... y Tlllt ._........WM fli.d Wltfl lflf rel_.,.,._ I), t•t. C-IY a.t11 al Or ..... C-ty Oft J ... y ATHl.OH COltl'OllATI~ 1'1..etJ 20, ttll Tllll ..._II~ lly Mi. .. ,,, ..... Wiii..,,, O. Devit, ,._,.,. 0...., CM.A Delly ....... • 1'1 ..... ..,.._.. J..ty II, II. at, Alie.•• 1"1 )llMI PIHlll'hcl Or ..... C-t 0.lly l'llet, "·"· ........ Tllll .....,_. •• II ... wttlt IN ----J"IY 22, l't, ....... S, 12, ltll '211·'1 Tltlt .,.__ -II ... wlVI .. c-.ly OHll al Or ..... c-y Wt ... ..,,
i lyOefllfllOr.,,..c-'Y.,.J"'y PtJBLIC NOTICE ~ ;.·:~ ... &UDALL ...... ' -----PUBLIC NOTICE IMOTC* l'ICTIT10US llUSIMaU I' ll 0 " • 11 I 0 M A L L. A W MAMa STATaMIMT ---------
1.1•1. ,, ...
,._I...., Or ... CNst Dolly i-ttoe,
J..ty •• u. 22. "· "" .., .. ,
.. .-otlATION TM ... lowlfte .--11 eolnt IMdl· MOTtCI TO COWTllACTOlll -~.-.9NIL ...... 1• ... ue1· CAUJNOI'~ e1os
...,....9Ncll,CAtlMI MOOEL·TIECHNICS, »4l 81rclt ScllOCll Oillt'ICI: NIWl'OllT·MESA PtJBLIC NOTICE
,, .... Slr .. 1, .,...._, 8Mcll, CA '2te0. UNIFIEOSCHOOL. OISTltlCT 11'111141 .... Orenee Coe•I °'"' Pllet, DOUGLAS .... YATES. ,,. Ce<ll ••• OMCl41 .. : 2:00 o'clOcll p.m. of l'ICTtT10UI eus1MaS1 July u .:tt ........ s.12.1tt1 n11 .. 1 l'lece.C.la"""'· CA'2t27. .... ........ of ......... '"' MAMSITATaMaMT Tl'll1 ..i .... , 11 caftduclM oy.,, In· l'lec• el 8kl Aecel,.: 1es1 Plecellll• Tiie totlowlne peraon1 ere 001,.. PtJBLIC NOTICE dlvl..,•I. SI., Cotlt IMM, CA '2'11 bll1IMU •: DIMlglasA. Y•lfl ProJe<I leleftllflcelloft Heme . 0 ANO M CL.E.AN·UP, 6'l1 CA· NlnMJ Tlll1 alel-1 we1 111.0 wltll tM CAllPIT 1..AVING ltEOUIA£MINTS ftYOfl Hiiia lloed, A,_lm, Celllorlll•
l'ICTITIOUS eu11Na1S COUlllY Clef'll "'Or ... C-ly Oft J .. 1, THllOUOHOOT THE. OISTlllCT '*7 NAM• ITAT•M•NT 20. 1tll. Pt•c• ,.._ ..... Oft 111•: 1957 Plec•ft· Oevkl Molll, ... llldMClloel, ..,. Tll I II I d I P16MH ll•SI .• ColleMIM.Cl.'2'27 C•ftYOft Hiii• lloael, Anellelm. 'WSl:,...o .. o:-"' per.on• •r• 0"' Pvl>Ulfleel Orenee C.oHI Delly Piiot, NOTICE. IS HE1tl!8V GIVEN 11\11 C.lll0trll• .. ,
' GALL.e1t1A II ~AIUNIEIU. 3200 J .. ly 22• "· ..... s. 12• 1•1 », ... , Ille ... _,,.. ScMol Olttrkl ., Merrlll .... Molll, .,, il'lellvldllel, •rttlol Stnet. s..11• .... C.-t. ,,,... Or ..... c-.tv. ColllOfrlle, Kllftt lty IOI A_, __ Ori ... PIKefttl•. CMllornl• n.» • PUBLIC NOTICE end lllr....., Ila Governl"f eoerel. Celllorrlle ~ • 0 "'"' w ~ l...S Ye<lll llerel11•fl•r referred 10 •• O.YICIMolll Collftl~ ~ ... cf. ~elll0tftle "OISTlllCT'•, wlll rec:elve I.ti' lo, l>llt 11\Krlll Motil ""° . . ,.CTITIOUS •UMMalS llOt ..... -............. ," time, Tith ··-... IM.O Willi llW T"9fnM L.. SclVI-In Selldee.-MAllUl ITATaMtltT ... ,_, ...._ flW lN -Ofel ol •<..,tree I C-ly C1-tll Or ..... County on J"'l • lor llw .... pnjocl. 10 1tt1 11o, cer-.,.. MM, Colllot"rll• nus TIM ......,.... ...,_ 11 dOlftt lllnl· e1e1s ..,.., 119 received "' ._ 111 • • ,.,..-, JemH AldffMll, .,, wen 21t1 ...... ,. lcleftllllod - -..,.11 1119 :: -· Slrftl, s..t.t1 ..... Colllrwftl• "'°' W i. AOVlltTISING, 115' YllGOfl, -Plllllkly rW. ·-et IN C:-0-Plll>ll .... Or .... C.0.11 o.lty Pllet Wiii .... J l(_,.y, Jr , '1 I A-C.-le MeM, Coll ....... ta» tt.'*I llftw -pleco Jiiiy IS, 22. 2', .... S, 1tll ,, ..... ,.l•u. "-POrt ... , ... Celllorftl• • .._ 0. """'""' )15' Yll<M, Tiier• Wiii .... N/A .... It ..-..wired
ttMl C.0.1• MeM. Collfwlll• ta» lor ••ell sol of l>ICI Cloc"menlt lo JemH o. 0o,,,.,,, 100 Se111t• Tlllt ......... ,, c~ lty ....... IUMMllM !he,._,, ... "'*' <MClll .... PtJBLIC NOTICE
0 ' • " I • G ' o " • Cllv .... I. wltltln NIA _,, eller the Old -fllll9 ._,..,-. P-. Colllorftle tllOS --SdMen Clele l'tCTIT10US IMIM•llSI JKll ......... 222' ""'" c........ Tllb Itel-•• llMd wlVI Ole E.~cll ltlel ....,,, (Oftlorm •nd ... ..,.... ITATll.-.MT
.... _.. llMcll, c.tlllonlle nMO . C-'• Oertl ol pr.,.. Coullty on J"'y ,.._..t*e IO ti. <onlr«l '*'""'*'ti· Tiie lellowlflf --II diDl"I -·· l'etrk*, i. ~. l:D\11 <>Pet, 11, 1•1 Eecll WCI -I lie •<-led .... NU ea: aatboe lll ..... C..Ulorftl•HM2 ..,...... ., (el EMPLOYEE. 81NEFIT Tlll1 'WSlftftt h <Oftdli<leel lty • "'*41 .... Or ..... C-Oolly Piiot, IM -wtty Aferrecl lo 1" ti.. cllftlr«I SYSTEMS OF CALIFORNIA Cit)
..... rel ,..,,,.,....p Jiiiy IS, 22. It,..,._ S, ltll ll2'-ll. :::.men:: by t"9 lltl Clf Pt--M A S T E. II S U II A N C E. ( < ) "-"'-L. SclVI-CALIPOANIA ORGANIZATION OF tllll , .. ...._, w-111-1111 1~ The OISTAft:T ,...,.,., IN r'911t 10 ,.__, C --w ... PtJBUC NOTICE roJect MY or •II Ille or lo welve .,,, ,.U8L.IC EMPLOYEES, 1802 Volley .__..'I' Mt'llofOr.,.c:-wtyMJllly 1.,..1111.,.uos Of lfttormelltlos 1,, .,.y View. S111t• 10, Gerti•" Grove.
IS, ltll Oklaor lfttN~ c.il1Drlllem4'
l'ulttl-Or .... OtHt Oell~I= l'tennOUSMlll•t• The OISTAICT 11M GOlalne<:I trom ~·~.·~,:;..:.~~lrvlew, J11ly 2l, 2', ....... S, IL '"' n~i ..,._ ITATe.MaWT the Olreclor of Ille o.tier"'*'t of lft· Tlll1 .... ,_, It ~ l>y .,. In· Tlw .......... ,__ It ...... ....,. dll•lrlel ltolellont Ille ..,.rel -v•ll· Cllvldloel. ,.. .. .,.. 1,.. ••I• of -diem ..... 1,, Ille Gnl9orY erown ,.ACll'IC GAltOIENING, IOI locellly 1" wNtll INI -" h lo Ill Tlll1 1ut-t -111911 wttl'I IN Yorll.._ ,.._ Hwlll....,. 8eeclt performed 10< ,.ell <relt or type of CO<lnly Cleril of OrMloe c-ty on PtJBLIC NOTICE
CetlferNe,_. ' • -llmon -to ••Cl•I• lhe con-J...,. "· Utl. l'llitt1T1GUSeuS•N•IS It " Id 0 H Ill 101 ll"O<I Tllele retol ., ... Iii•., IM "1MZM NAMA:STATa.-.MT Yorll..:..i·A-...:.::....::·... OISTAICT ofliU louted ., 1117 Pul>ll .... Orellge C.oeat Delly Piiot,
The IOllowlftO --11 •"'9 blli,I.. c.llforllle,... • "· Piec ... ue St.. Golte Meso, CA '1'21 J"IY IS, 22. "· ..... S, ltll ,,...., MU es: Tltlt ~It <.-.ctM lly Wt !ft. Cofllol ...., 1119 oMelNcl on ,._.., A
SIEllllAOIL ,.AATNEltS V , tlllJ CllvlWet. cot'Y •ft-r--· 1119 postlllCI et 8roolll'l"rd, ,....,ftloln Velley, CA • _...0 ".....,. U.lotlllte. PUBLIC NOTICE
'2709. Tlllt ....,_. -..... .... .. Tllo ........... llCllMllte Clf per Cll-F ltANI( It. OAllL.INO, lllU C-ty Oef11 Of OrMtlt c-ty Wt we ... ls-.9-•-1ll"1doYClf 8roollllvrtl, ,_loln Velley, CA ..i-•. t"1. eltltl Ill ._,,._ Tiw , ... lor llOlldey l'ICTITIOUS8UStltalS '21& Pt .. t1'1 Md Oftftlme WW1I tMll lie et toMI MAMaSTATaMaMT
Tltl& -INU 11 <4lft4ill<locl ..... e ~..,_.Or ..... C:-o.tty ~--t ..... 111111-.Nll. TM follow .... --· erw dol"9 llmltecl~,.. J..ty l IS,12.2' ,.,, ...., T!'."'c·"--Y-INCON llutlO~NN•Y.'SVIL.'. ~··I(""", 1 ....... ...... It~ ' • ' ..,. TOA lo -ti. C ... lr«I II ~ .-..,..,. "'• -Tllll ........... -fl.. 1111 IN -•l'OH --...., _ _,_.., Hertler t lYCI., S"lte A, l'Ollnlelft
C°""'yOMietOr.,,..C:--: ... J111y PUBUC NOTICE -11im. IO poy llOt '-IMft Ille Velley,CAfml. 20, 1•1. 1tld 1pec:lllod '*' to ell _..._ 0 AN I IL. GI L. 8 E It T C 0 N ·
,,..... etnfl!Oyee..,. I ...... In the ...cllt .... Clf TltEltAS, "4• Oeltloh, F-telft ""*' ...... ~ ..... CMat Dolly PlleC, l'ICTITIOUS eUl'M•U ti. c.onlrect. Vetley, CA ftl'a Jvtytt,2',""9 S,U,"91 Jin .. t ...... STATaM9MT Ne~.....,wltlldr-llltlllllfor ANOllEA CONTllEAAS, tt'4
TIM .......... ~ It .,..... 0UV. • ,.rled of 1er1y.11,.. IUI cle't'S etter Oelliel1, ,._...,. Vetl..,, CA '210I.
-es: .. Mt• .. for tlW ..,.i,.. of !tin.. T1111 "*-' 11 c~11y M !ft.
HE."'°°'" INOUSTlllES, L. TO~ A peYf'*lt -..... perlerfftllftC• divldloel. "' C..llle SU... Coll• MeM, CA -w111 1119 .._,.,.,.., lo •-uUeft of o...lef Gllmn c.nlrw• PUBUC NOTICE
ttW Ille ,OfttrecL nw ,...,....... Mad ...... T"'' It--w• lllecl wlVI Ille l'ICTIT10US eul'NalS MICHAEL. 81tUCE. E~S. U I 1te lft Ille 1omt 9et 1w11t Ill Ille tontf"IJCI C-ty Ciwtl of Or ... c.unty M JeAy NAMll1~ftMl .. T C.lt<lllo .. ....t.C:.t.MeM,(At2W. ............ 11, 1•1. Tiie IOllllWl!lt ,._ I• doiftt lllltl Tllll .......... It <oncluCW lty eto ,,._ .-..--..... 8oerel l'tMIM ....... , di ~ ~·-... 1'1111411/wd Or It ANO o SVSTRMS , .. w .. 1 w ~~~ a Sy Oerot..., M¥veY Fl-..... CMS! Dolly Piiot, • .....,_, . E,,,,,_ 11wc....i,. 01..-clor July IS, 22. 1', A,._ J, Hit 1'7MI 10llt Mt..C. Sefll•...,,., CA. Tltlt .......,_. _, lllecl wlUI IN Putltl .... Or.,.._ Coetl o.lly PllOI J•Fl"ltllY NEIL ltlCICETTI, IMCI C-lr Cl9f'll of Or ..... c-ity.,. Jiii• Jiiiy tt, It ltll n.wi Welt, • .,._ s.Mo ,.,_,CA tll'lll. », 1tl1. ---·-~------1 PUBLIC NOTICE
TMt..,.._lt~ .. M lft.. ~·-dM -... li'lllllKNll 0r.,.. CMtl o.lly Piiot PUBUC NOTICE
Tlllt =:-4!!."= w1t11.,. J..tytt,1t.""9.s,11,t•1 121Mi ----·--------1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF J . WARREN LENNON f:e:':..o-a10r.._c-y..iJ11ty PtJBLIC NOTICE LUCILLE CYE ANO OF AND OF PETITION TO
PETITION TO Ao .ADMINISTER ESTATE
MINISTER ESTATE NO. NO. A109613. A ·109600 T 0 a I I h e i r s •
T o a 1 1 h e 1 r s beneficiaries, cred itor s
beneficiaries, creditors and conti~nt creditors of
and contingent creditors of J . Warren Lennon and
Lucille Cye and persons persons who may be
who may be otherwise In· otherwise Interested 1n the
terested In the Wiii and/or w ill and/or estate: Estate. A petition has been filed
A petition has been by James Warren Len·
filed by Pear l King non, Jr. In the Superior
In the Superior Court of Court of Orange County
Oranoe county requesting requHtlng that James
thJ>t Pearl King be ap· Warren Lennon, Jr. be ap.
pointe d as personal pointed as per sonal
representative to ad· representative to ad·
minister the estate of minister the estate of J .
Lucille cye (under the In· Warren Lennon (under the
dependent Administrati on Independent Admlnlstra-
of estates Act> The petl· tlon of Estates Act). The
tlon Is set for hearing In petition Is set for hearing
Dept. No. 3 at 100 Clvl~ In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive,. west, In the Center Drive, West, In the
City of Santa AP• City of Santa Ana ,
Callfornla on August 19 California on August 19,
1981 at9·.~ am ' 1981at9:3Q A.M .
IF vo't.J OBJECT to the IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition, granting of the petition,
you should either appear you shOuld either appear
at the hearing and state at the hearing 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 tht de· lngent creditor of tM de-
ceased you must flle your cuMd, you must flle your
ctalm 'with the court or claim wltft the court or
present It to the personal present It to tht perSOMI
representative appointed representative appointed
by tht court within four by tht court within f~r
months from tht date of months from tht date of
first Issuance of letters as first luuanc:e Of lettffS as
provided In section 700 of rrovldtd In Seetlon 700 of
the probate code of ht Probate Code of
Catlfornla. The time fO/f California. Thi Ume '°'
filing dalms w111 not ex· flllng clalmt wlll not ••
plre prior to four months plre prior to four months
from the date of the ht•r· from the dlltt of the hHr·
Ing notlc9d aboYe. Ing noticed aboW.
YOU MAY EXAMINE YOU MAY EXAMIN&
the flit kept by tht court. the flte kept by tM court.
If you al'e lntlf'llttd In tht If you are Interested In tM
11taw, you may fllt a r• 11tat1, you may flte • ,..
quest with the court to r• quest wfth the court to ,...
celve speclet notlc• of the celv1 special notice of the lftft1• r of MtM1 encl of Inventory of •tMI aMeb
tlle pellt1on1, accounts and of the Pttftlana. K· and ,...ns delcrabtd an co u n ts •rt d rep or ti
Sec llon uoo. s of t "' dttcrlbld In SICtlon 1200.J
caHfemf• ,..,_.te Codi. of '"' c.mornl• Probete M~= ".::..-=.'''-~'11wt a Wl*8a. A.
..... DI · IHc-.N "'"*''"Ii At· Mu" ,_..._ca. ~'fr.'e~ 1'rr:et L~i n: ... CMlt•g· CA~; tel.
1)9 JUiy B,'21. 19; ( -~ CW1-., ......_ •• #If .. .._..
.... ----· ... -... 9T-----.,.......,.~_..,._~--.,.
•
'GLAD YOU ASlm THAT'
Burning Dolly's IJra
8)' MA81LYN a•d HY
GA8DN&a
Dolly Parton wa1 fuat Jokina
whto 1bt told a reporter, "l
waa the nr1t wom1n to bW'n my
bra -lt took tht tlre depart·
ment four d1y1 to put lt out!"
(Truth WU lhC WH aUU break·
ln1 ln a tralnln1 bra when the
first bra·bumln1 aymbolllm of
belnt a feminist hit the newt In
the late '809.)
Naacy aea1H'1 favorUe ~ ...
dy II peanat brlUle. Her
ht11baad prefers Jelly MHI
probably because Ille Ult l•
filled wltb 1&kky problems
&heae days and a.J1bta.
Jet magazine concludes It.a
Cinal tribute to the late Joe
Louis by reminding Joe Jr. (a
banker and now v .p. of market·
ing for the nation's filth largest
home builder. Denver's Wood
Bros. Home) that his famous
dad "earned nearly $5 million
and in his pursuit or life. liberty
and happiness ended with only
his name worth its weight In
gold."
When comical Buddy Hackett
introduced his son, Sandy, in his
first appearance on a syndical·
ed TV program, Norm Crosby's
"Comedy Shop," the young
man said, "It was a very emo-
tional moment. You could see
the rear on his race during the
introduction. Then the tears
flowed when l started getting
laughs. Dad (noted for his blue
humor ) once cautioned me.
'You work clean or I'll kill you !
You have to learn before you
have lhal license. I work places
other guys can't, because all
they've got is filth. Ninety per-
cent of my jokes can be told
without dirt, and if you can
replace it, it's not necessary.' ..
Danielle Brlaebols, the II·
~SY ASHLEIGH I
•BRILLIANT
THIER.E ARE
NO
RIEAL.
BARGAINS,..,
-r'ME FULL COST
O~ EVEAVTHIMG
IS ALWAVS PAID av SOMEBODY.
year -old co·atar on ''Archie
Bunker'• Place" la a young
1pace ·a1e buff who found
herself In Seventh Heaven
meeUn1 femme astroaaat Bon-
nie Dunbar at N.Y.'s Hayden
Planetarium during Omni'•
Spece Week.
Would you believe that in
Kampala, five gallons of gas
now costs $700?
Austr alia's population is
booming at the rate or some
110.000 new settlers a year
and all legal. unlike those arriv-
ing by boat. flimsy plane. leaky
rowboat or raft from Haiti or
Cuba to lbe once-luxury vaca·
lion area of South Florida!
Pe rsonal Postcard lo Irma
B., Oxnard. Calif.: Yes. Patty
Hearst Shaw and her husband
(who met her when he was a
San Francisco oolice officer as·
signed to be her bodyguard)
parented an adorable baby girl
H few weeks ago.
And Farrah Fawcett came
right out and told People
magtzlne she wanted to have a
baby , with or without a
husband!
To Eleanor Breadner, Staten
Island. N.Y.: Yes. it's tough
luck s upera ctor Peter
"Masada" O'Toole, who won an
Oscar for ''Lawrence of
Arabia'' in 1962, hasn't won one
since though he's been
nominated five more times.
Send your queatioru to Hy
Gordnn. "Glad You Aaked ThaJ ,"
care of tfna newspaper. P.O. 8oz
19620, lrvrM. Calif. 92714. Marilyn
and Hy Gardner will an&10e1' cu
many qu.eatioru aa they can in t~r
column. but t~ volume of mail
makes personal replies imwuibU.
Gross executives are real
DEAR READERS: Let's call
thla Polecat Day -and If you
are reading me la a mornl•I
paper -at the breakfa1t table I
apolosne.
From time to Ume the read·
en have proved me wrong.
and I bave admlUed It. Now
they have proved that I am "In·
credibly naive" and apparently
I am. Read on:
DEAR ANN LANDERS .
Regarding you r reply to
"Grossed Out a t CG W in New
York": I can't believe lhat a
woman as worldly as you can
be so incredibly naive. What the
writer complained about was an
executive who wore the same
pants for 26 days in a row. You
said you didn't believe it -that
she was probably an "out-0f-
ravor typist with a lively im·
agination."
I worked at a leading bank in
Chicago for two year s. My
supervisor was an executive
who made good money. He
grossed out the whole depart·
ment by wearine the same suit
for 92 days in a row. He smelled
so terrible I used to go to my co·
supervisor in order to avoid the
skunk. He was in lhe elevator
one day and the janitors were
called to spray it with air
freshener when be got off~
Finally I told blm, "1f you
can afford a 1978 Fireblrd, you
can afford to send your suit lo
the cleaners~" Then I quit.
And you don't believe such a
creature exiata? Wake up.
SHOCKED IN CHICAGO
llJI lllllll
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
About that letter from "Grossed
out" -BELIEVE IT!
The general manager of our
company has been wearing the
same clothes for three months.
His ties would make you
scream. They have s amples of
al least a dozen meals. One suit
jacket that turns up periodical·
l y is h eld toget h e r by
ST A PLES. The man stinks -
and he has been told thjs by
several people. including me.
but does nothjng. I can't believe
YOU can't believe such people
exist. -CLOTHESPIN NOSE
IN PETERBOROUGH, ONT.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Re
"Grossed Out": Five years ago
I roarried a professional man
who showed no signs of this prob·
lem when we were going
together. Gradually he got care·
less. Now he wears the same
sm elly, torn clothes day arter
day. My early hints were ig·
nored. Later blunt remarks
created res ponses Uk$. "You
are crazy."
Last year there were three
pairs or socks in the wash. This
year none, as yet. He hides his
underwear at night so I don't
grab it and put it in the wash
machine. He also locks up hls
shirts. He doesn't use a de-
odorant and the smoke alarm
goes off when he walks in lhf'
hallway.
J h ave given up hope that he
will ever change. What I'd like
to know is what makes people
this way. ALSO GRO~ED
OUT I~ SAN DIEG-0
Dear San Diego: Accordla1 &e
psychiatrist Herbert Pardes,
director of the Natloaal
Institute or Mental Health, tlUa
type or behavior may mean
many different things.
Slovenllaess could be typlctl
of that person's u1aal
beba vloral pattern. Or, there
might be a compulsion to bang
on and keep things the same -
or a fffUng that it may ~ "bad
luck" to change. While ex·
cesslve sloppiness may be of.
tensive to family and co·
workers, the only real danger Is
when a person who always baa
been neat suddenly turns lD&o a
slob. Tbls Is a dan1er 1tgntl
that should be lnveatigated by a
physician. It could indicate a
serious neurological or
psychological problem.
It'• not always easy to recogniu
love. HJ)f!cially the /irat time
around. Acqwmt yourself with the
guidelines Read Ann Landen'
booklet. "/..ow or Sez and How to
Tell tM Difference." F'or a COJ1!1,
mail SO cents and a long, ulf·
addreued envelope with your re-
quest to Ann Landen, P.O. &%
11995, Chicago, JU . 60611.
Virgo: Answe rs behin,;L scene
Tbarlday, JDly •
By 8\'DNEY OMA&R
ARIES <March 2l·Aprll 19):
Personal horllons expand;
chan1e of scenery, freab con·
cept.s, new contacta aid ln pro·
vlding addltlooal spice to your
life. Focus on youne persons,
cbaU,na •• creat.lve endeavon
and a.lfairt ol heart. Watch
Gemini I
TAl1aU8 <April 20-May 20):
Prof e11lonal 1uperlor makes
1peclal request. Maintain self·
esteem, aet credit for ide11 and
work. Aquarlao 01\11'91 prom·
laently . Check 1ource
matiltrlal, be ready for rebuild·
ln1 proceet. Home repair could
be'part ol IPftda.
QICIDNI (May Jl.Junt 20):
Chaa(e, tr~vel , variety and
1aln .Ull'OQtb wrlU•n malertal
-these are hl1hll1hled.
Telephone call or written
mt111p concemt member ol
oppoelte .... 8bGrt trip, ln\IOl•·
lol relatl•eo II part. of your
penoul lriMfto,
CANCEa (June 2l·Jul.Y 12>:
Pam~ dl1cuaalon concern• ••d material, lncom• --· UaJ and expenH1. HlahUpt
dlplomaey, know t.hal you can •. , ..... : . .,....-~ ........ Ill'•--· ~art-. Leo, ............ 1 ,.., lley
NIM.-.•~-,,,,
.
HOROSCOPE
LEO <July 23·Aug. 22): Im·
portaut to define terms, to see
situations in reallsUc Ught and
to avoid ..aell·deceptlon. Lunar
empbasi• on personality, cor·
Teci Judgment, increued
,ropuJarlty and heightened
ae91e of timing. Clandestine
mtettns Involves romance,
idee&ism and Ulusloo.
YIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22):
Look b.ehtnd 1cenes for
aaawera. You may .have t.o
relrace eome stel)I. Older ln·
dl•ldual eoatrols pune ltfi"'9.
Caacer, Taurus, ca,rlcora
naUv• ftsure prominently. You
are due to hit jackpot! In 1•m.
of chance, 1t.lck with number I.
LIBaA (Sept. 23-0cl. U);
You set what you want tbtoulb
personal appeal•. soelal coa·
tactl and creaUve way of ex·
Creuive d .. lres. Let 10 of "lot·
,._ propoattlon. •' Move altead,
percllve pottnUal, take CGld
plunse Into future. ArlH, Leo
and another Libra flsure PfOID·
lnenU,.
&COaPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>:
New Job or coacept pro•ldes
1UmuJatJn1 c:baU-.. • ....,._
toM ·~V~9'1 obttaclee. Em II • e.,...,
pnetlae. lD eom--'·
t1 and 1pedal booon. Imprint
style, exercise independence of
thought, action.
SAGFITAllltJS (Nov. 22·Dec.
21 >: Wanderlust '1ur1es to
forefl'Ol)t. You. an lntrlgued by
far-away places, fOftl&n foods
and l1avor of travef. Make
plane, check authoritative
aourc~ achieve harmony on
domeatlc front. Cancer ,
Ctp~lcom llatWet play impor-
tant roles . CAPalCOaN <Dec. 22-Jan.
19): FoUow ·ttarouih on hunch.
dlveralflcaU.-works to yOOr
advantage. H&dden resources
play kty role. You could be un·
der .. umat.hac your own poten-
tlal. Focu1 on borrowln1. lend· ms, credit ratings and special
collections.
AQUA81tJ8 (Jan. 20·Feb.
11): Dll beneath surface -pa-
U~nc. becomes your srud ally.
Focaaa on perslltenc~1 contraeu,
public rtlaUOM, wwtn'1Seu to
review, revise, rebuUd and to
1t.lck wtLb quallty. Panaenhlp
propOul tbould be Viewed with
11lepUdlm.
Pl8C'EI <Feb. 19-Mar. •>:
Maintain mcklefa\e pace; •c•
cent on e1n9loyme11t, proper
nutrlUon, baalc cbore1. Some
a11oclatt1 appear nervou1,
re1Ueu and lkeptlcal. 8'ud
tall for own prl..clpl11, ud
don't ¥Hr from objettlH .
Oemtnl, VlrlO natl"' .., Uy
roles.
• I
•,.t .. ,.,_ ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981 ••
.United Way drive gets off in Mexican styl.e
By MARY JANE SCABCEUA> °'*~ ........... Oranae County's United Way campal1n 1ol
off to a festive start when MaW'y and Carolyn
De Wald opened thelr Newport Beach home for a
Mexican·style buffet.
DeWald, mana1ln1 partner for Peat,
Marwick, Mitchell and Co .• has taken on the job
of 1981 United Way campaign chairman.
Mariachis ereeted guests, who enjoyed
margaritas, cerveza and hot hors d'oeuvres
HAPPENINGS .
while enjoying the sunset over lhe Big Canyon
golf course.
Dinner was served at duak, so candles in
small clay flowerpots lighted the brightly·
colored tables and floral centerpieces.
Portable heaters supplemented the warm
sum mer air ror the outdoor meal of chili
rellenos, beef enchiladas, beans, rice and green
salad.
Before a dessert of peaches and ice cream,
DeWald spoke to the group, which was made up
of his campaign cabinet and the United Way
staff.
''Our campaign goal this year is $12
million," he said, "an increase from last year's
$10 mUHon goal."
Admitting it would be a challenge to meet
the 10&1, be added wlth a artn. "But it's only S2
million a month, because we have until
December to raise lt. ''
(As a co·chairman of South Coast
Repertory's Benefactor's Committee last year,
he was able to meet and surpass the fund·
raising goal).
De Wald noted that Carl Karcher, United
Way chairman for the past two years, had in·
creased his aoaJ from $6 mllllon, "and we hope
to double ours t<>.i$24 miUion. I belleve the poten·
tlal is $100 million In Oringe County."
The gathering previewed two rums showing
the work done by United Way's 85 agencies, in·
eluding the newest work with Asian refugee set·
tlement, which will be shown to Orange County
management and employees.
DeWald also thanked caterer Bob Pen·
nlngton, who provided the meal at cost.
Among the guests were Merritt and Jeanne
Johnson (he's director of United Way in the
county) and their daughter Carolyn, who joined
the DeWaJds' daughter Ann in greeting guests
al the door.
Others were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Karcher,
Daily Pilot publisher Tom Haley, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Villers, Pele and Bonnie Kremer, 5th Dis·
lrict Supervisor Tom Riley and his wife Emma
Jane, Dick Bone, Harry and BerdJe Bubb, Tom
Casey, Frank and Terrie Crinella (he's director
of Fairview Stale Hospital) and Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Jacobs.
At United Way kickoff dinner at the heme of Maury and Carolyn De Wald. t from left 1. Carl Karcher.
Pete Kremer and Tom Riley
A salute to the mother of the bridegroom
Today in St. Paul's Cathedral in London, the
heir to the British throne will take a wife.
Most Americans caught up in lhe pageantry,
the tradition, the romance of a prince marrying
the beautiful girl next door will lose sight of the
real history that is being made.
It will mark the first time a mother or a bride·
groom did not see the wedding from the kitchen.
Have you any idea the virgin trails this woman
has blazed? As a mother of sons, I know what I am
Sister assigned
to leper colony
By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D.
DEAR DR. ROSEN : My older sister is a nun
and they are sending her to a leper colony In
Louisiana. She is supposed to help out the nurses
and doctors. Does that mean she will get leprosy
and we can never see her again? -S.T., HUN·
TINGTON BEACH
ANSWER: A great and tragic injustice has
been the plight or victims of this age old disease.
The Bible tells us this is an-affliction of the
damned.
Leprosy is a disease and like other diseases is
caused by specific jter ms. It is a rare affiiction due
ASK THE DOCTOR
to the fact the vast majority has a natural immuni·
ty lo it. There are relatively few new patients each
year , and no more than S,000 in our country
altogether.
In the last century. a large plantation in
Carville, La., was set aside for the care of leprosy
patients. They were attended by nuns, and were
shut-off from society. For all intents and purposes
they were imprisoned for life. Sixty years ago the
plantation became a United States Public Health
Service hospital. To the nun volunteers were added
doctors and nurses. ·
Until recent years, because of the continued
and unjust hatred and fear or lepers. the patients
assumed aliases and were known by an assigned
number. Their families felt disgraced and these
poor souls were robbed of contact with loved ones.
Modern drugs have to a large extent hailed the
disfiguring effects of the Ulness. Within three
months of treatment a new patient can be ren·
dered non·contaglous and return back lo the com·
munity. Unfortunately these drugs are not availa·
ble in many poor countries. If all victims of
leprosy were to be treated, the disease would be
wiped out forever .
.Because the word "leprosy" and "leper" have
such a tragic historical connotation, I and some of
my colleagues have joined in a movement to
change the name. Henceforth the Illness will be
known as Hansen's disease. named for the scien·
tist who first isolated the bacteria which causes it.
Your sister deserves a lot of praise for the
work she is undertaking, and there is no reason to
fear that she will contract Hansen's disease.
Dr. Joht) D. Roffn, a proctitionn in Newport Beach,
welcomu J.IOUT qwltionl. Mail requeat• to A•k tM Doc·
tor. P.O. Ben 1561J, Costa Mem, 921626. '
ESCAPE ·; ••
To Lavonne
Aerobics
Tired of waiting In line for exen:IM equipment 1t
crowded health cluba.
OofM to LIVonne Aerobics.
Wint the cardlov1acular wo~-out
equlvai.nt to n1nnlng 3 mllea. without the lmoQ or boredom?
Try LaVonne AeroblCS.
t.eeve ~ t~lee behind at
lt'9 end of the da.y with
1 lltmulltlng hour of
MIOOlcl Dance. Call today
for cMClllt.
Umlted
Enrollm9nt onfYI
F,... Of\lld cet9 IVl llll>le
talking about. Her precedents should not go un·
noted.
We all know how the mothers of bridegrooms
have always worn beige and kept their mouths
shut. Prince Charles' mother has decreed she gets
lo choose a color for her dress that will be worn by
ERMA BDMBICll ~ ... -------~.,..._ __
no other person at the wedding. (She's opted lo
wear short, which is wise. She can wear il again
without kaving lo cul it off.)
1031 a:
0 m
And how does the bridegroom's mother usual·
ly gel to lhe church? Crammed in the VW of one of
her son's friends. holding a box of iced lea spoons
and a jar of Sanka for the reception which
someone forgot. Charles' molher has tail.en it upon
herself to not only decide the order of the coach
procession, but she gets pick of the Ii very.
And how many mothers of the bridegroom
have entered church to see 15 gtfests on "his" side
and 3,000 of the bride's dearest fri ends on lhe other
side of the aisle? Charles' mother kept 300 tickets
for her son's friends and gave the bride's parents
only 100.
There is no question. Charles' mother has been
an inspiration to mothers of sons everywhere. Who
among us with a 33-year-old unmarried son who
went to funerals for a living would not have
panicked?
Be honest now. I have known mothers who
have offered unprecedented finder 's fees, and a
few of us have actually followed up leads from the
Welcome Wagon lady.
But Charles' mother. with her stubborn de·
termination to serve tradition, announced, "The
family put pressure on Charles to find a girl with
no past and there aren't too many 20-year-old
virgins available."
I salute Charles' mother for her courage and
her vision. The only thing lhal would make the day
complete would be t o see the royal couple cut the
15 wedding cakes and see the bride's mother,
Frances whal's·her-name. running around with a
bowl or ice water, dipping in the sword after each
piece is cul.
s15tANOF BALLS
CHRISTMAS CARDS
20% OFF
fRANCI&-ORR COSTA MESA
TENNIS CLUB
557-0211 fine stationery corona del mar
FM a:
c( ::c
LA.I ::c t-
""
"Some stains had been on our
carpet a long time. I didn't
0
"' c z
::::>
0
"' 0
LA.I a:
LA.I t-
"'
'"°"' Fa sh ion Island
Newport Beach
think they'd come out but they
dfd ••• and Stanley Steemer did it!'
~9~
18023 Sky Park Circle. lrvlna
.. Our carpeting looked terrible. It was time
to make a decision to keep it or replace 1t
We decided to try Stanley Steemer
because we heard they were the best.
Their crew came out, really studied the
carpeting and in about an hour Wt;. had a
beautifully. clean carpet. We were
amazed."
Here's why the Stanley Steemer
cleaning system is best.
Stanley Steemer combines steam and
extra powerful, safe cleaning agents to
deep clean carpet fibers.
Immediately, this
exclusive cleaning
formula is powerfully
removed leaving no
residue and allowing
,.,. • ,., 1 your carpet to dry
<: l '•II •1 •••• quicker. · •: 11.!~<.c.J~~~{~ Stanley Steemer ._ ____ ._'" _ __......· does not use your
hot water or electricity. Only our cleaning
wand, hose and specially trained crew
enters your home. You 'll be surprised at
how quickly your carpet is cleaned and
sanitized, and ready for you to enjoy.
~---------------~ I CAIPll GllllllG SPECIAL I
I $2tlS Any alze llvlng I I room and h•ll I
I • or famlly room 1· , I and haH 1 ~----------------
.
~
,
#•-
• er-. Collt OM. v PILOT/Wtdneeday. July a . 1111
TU
FA•ILt'
c1act1
by Bil Keane
"Mommy, this button keeps getting out."
by Brad Anderson
"Teti the truth, Blllyf Does Marmaduke
realty eat Chihuahuas for breakfast?"
r -, I
GAKt'l~LD
"1-29 i
1
I
I
I
AC"°88 48 ()pnled TUllDAY'I
1 .. ...,__ 44 T...,., buy NDL1 IOLVID
IN'' "6 Awe budlt ~r 4t<:nillng . ....., ...........
.... 52 Or9ll wort
·~-M0....111 MMll!tpallll 17~_..
11 (11..ftdt.... .. ,.,,.. unit ",,_ --. .......,..,,. ....... -~ ..... 17"" ...... 11 ........
11TlllR .,, ...... "a..,.,. a floulld."'
• OM: flNf, --11,... .............. ...... ...
·~ ..... ..... DOWN
, ... 1 °"""' 21 lwf.... 44 ........... •..,.....: ,..,.... a-..... 41Cllfft
M*. ,..._. MNY81.,... ....... • ,.I...... 4 ...,. 17 Clae 47 Culllo ....
170.a•t f'&f I IJJI •*'Ind ...... ........ -......... ,...,. .... ...,,. ..... , .... ..., ·---..... -_.. • ........... ''* .... .... ,_ 7,....,.. ..... _ ... _ .. ,, ............ ~ .....
..... t'rl JI dfl .... • ........ .... . .. _ .......... .... : ... :1:·=.: ==--::;.;.--
•Ill A •8tJ I .•P11 '1 ....
•IGGEOaGE
-
. . .
0
-
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
..
"Aelu. .... only. game."
i
I
I
PMNIJTI
/MICIE, LOOK! THE
SOTTERR.Y MAS CO/IC
BACK! WMAT DO VOU
SOf'POSE THIS ~S ?
'~ 10¢ -~ AIUUr
I'M GOING
TO PUT THAT
INTHE
GARBAGE
I WONDERED
WHY THAT OLD
BM-WAS HERE
I HEARD
THAT,
YOUNG
LADY-
l GORDO
"I don't i<now why they call these READING glasses ...
I can't understand a THING!"
AllO iclU'llJ ~ _..,_, ~
l:::::iiiiii:::~=i I ~ if;}
DL8MOCI(
WI,-,.. '1M9 ll!P..A.
a..eANIN' ON LJS, we eo·rr.A. c>.w.. J"f' &...1t<• l"r 19, POC.
-'11~1'1 ~, 9•11
WHA.,-YA Ml!IAN.'
by Charltt M. ~hulz
&talt>lME
Ml'OlS,EU?
~ ~
by Jeff MacNelly
I'M NEVER GOING
TO WALK DOWN
THIS STREET
AGAIN
by Gus Arriola
a.liiiiiiil c..~
by Tom Batiuk
lAlfEN WE 11\U< ...
E.F. HUm)N U~'TEN6 !
by Kevin Fagan
.->s"f' 11\A~ t1P f()ft
LA~'f ~ WU I
SKlftEO~.
by George Lemont
-.... . ·-' '~'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
A II ••HUGD.YENTERTAINING!" ct ors reca -o.MSlllM fhelod.y!how NBC TV
director Wyler, . ..,..~!ZART'
HOLLYWOOD <AP) said actor Charlton ISA~TERN I~ CHINA
brooke shields
martin hewitt
endlesslove
-Director WUllam Heaton. referrlnl to ..........__.. ........ -.......
Wyler, who died of a "The 8ta Country'' ud ----~ m111ive heart a\tack his Oecar·winnlng role R after receivinl one taat In "Ben Hur." PolyGtwn Pict~• A ~m-.erJal Release
public tribute to bla ''BQ~ quaU~. ~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~ ____ .,_ .. _._ .. _ .. _._ .. _ .. _._ .. _ .. _._··_··_·_0_~_~_·•-·-~---L-~-~-~-·---~-~
work, wu remembered was one of th~ great film ~
as an actor's director. directors. I guess be was ''llllTah and hallalujah!n He ~led more ac· without serious rival as
tors to Academy Award a director of a ctors,"
wlnnin1 performances Heston said. "He was a than any other fllm· valuable man as well." -9ela Beneon. LOS ~LES TIMES
maker, on his way to Audrey Hepburn, who
winning three Oscars won an Oscar under
himself out of 13 Wyler 's direction for
nominations in a half-.. Roman Holiday'· in
century career. 19~3. and appeared In
Death came Monday two more of his movies,
at the age of 79. "His said:
wife wu with him. He ' ' W i 11 i e to la 11 y
died at home in Beverly changed my life the day
H i 1 l s , ' · W y l e r • s he entered it . . . Apart
d a u g h t e r , J u d i t h from the love I had for
Sheldon, said. "My him, he was the cor·
pare nts bad j us t re-nerstone of my career ."
turned home Sunday
evening from Europe,
where be was honored in
London by tbe British
Film Institute. They
.played all his movies
over two months and
then he appeared and
spoke."
Wyler was also in Lon·
don when he received
his first public tribute.
At the time, he was a
lieutenant colonel in the
Ar m y A i r C o r p·s .
qualified as an aer ial
gunner, but spending his
time shooting documen-
tary fllms. He received
a call from a Stars and
Stripes reporter in 1942,
telling him he'd won his
first Oscar, for "Mrs.
Miniver."
"Of course I was sur-
prised and pleased," he
recalled ... But the thrill
I had looked forward to
for so long just wasn't
there. In the middle of a
war, amidst so much
suffering a nd death.
Hollywood seemed far
off and unimportant at
that moment."
He used his war ex·
periences in directing
his s e c ond Osca r ·
w i nner , "The Bes t
Years of Our Lives," in
1946 .
H e re fused to be
typed, his work ranging
from co medi es , t o
westerns to dramas, and
be even produced an
Oscar-winning wartime
doc ume nta r y , ·'T he
Memphis Belle ." He
photographed some of
the sequences himself
during combat missions.
Supposedly the direc·
tor of intimate rilms ,
Wyler took on the epic
"Ben Hur" in 1959 and
won his third Oscar for
it. He give it a human
quality that Cecil B. de
Mill e c ould n e v e r
manage in his biblical
spectacles. "Ben Hur"
proved to be the biggest
money-maker in film
hisotry to that time a nd
rescued ailing MGM .
"He gave me two of
the best parts I ever
had, and if you can 't
make a career out of
two Wyler films you
might as weU give up,'·
Chapman 6 Santa Ana Fwy.
u.so "Ill , :00 l'M U1llll Hotld
EYEOFTitE NEEDLE IRI At
l :OO 3:20 5:40 8:00 l0:20
TARZMI. TitE AN MAN IRI 1:00 3:20 5:40 8:00 \0:20
....... --~ A'1ll (~) In 70mm 11 :io 2:00 •:io 1:00 1:io. NoEconomy
~
Brooke Shields on
FMMnaLOYE IRI 12:30 2:60 S:lO 7:30 & 9:50
t 1 5 -il'1M1 11:15 1:554:25 7:15 l :SO. 70mm. No ... «~)' S..!i!lf r ; )
Bill Murr•y: on
STR.OIRI 1:00
3:20 5:40 8:00 & 10:\5
Oon•ld Sutti.rland
GAS IRI AIRPLANE IPGI
I lX#£ Rimi ..
VOltl( (RI Plusl The
E1t1erm 1nator (Al
Brooke Shields 1n DIDI HS LOVE IRI Plus! FOXES IRI
Biii Murr•y on
STR.O IRI Wholly Moset (PGI
DRIVE·INS OPEN 7:30
UNDER 12 FREE UNLESs •
Th love a stranger is easy.
To kill a mr is rot IRJo--NOW PlAYINO u.tltillrtlsta
...... COITA MllA .._ WllTM .. ITllt
AnlMll!I DrM·ln CintrN Cent" Ctneoome Cinema West
879-98!50 979-4141 634-2553 89!·3935
1 .. .-. Dooly ...... , ,,...,.. I
I "FORCE: FIVE" (A)
II "FOX AND THE HOUND'' (Q)
"ONCE UPON A TIME"
Ill '1'HE ORIAT MUPPET CAPER"
(Q)
'
fl TOlllO
Saddltblck
~I·~
COITA MUAHarbOr 631 JSOI ORANG( UA Clly Cmema 634 3911
.... -[!! ...... ~,·=-=~
UA c.IUI ITU.UM DltlYl-..
Wn!mlnller 893·~ Oringe 639·8770
IOWAMI t•llACDTIR
COSll MtN 979·4141
ALAN
ALDA
CAROL BURNE TI
*BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All PtrformancH before 5:00 PM
f bcept Special Eng1ge1Mnt1 and Hollday~I
LA M111AOA MAll Mnodo ot l o1ecron1
LA MIRADA WALK·IH 994·2400
----fCM9U\' "ARTHUR"cNI
tl::a,J!•, .......... --I ....
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WA LK·IN ----"SUPERMAN II" IN! •t:a. ar1a. ••· ••. u .--·llO--"WOLFEN" 111 .-.-..... --
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
Foc\llty At o.t /lvno
21l/634·9281 --·----· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" IPG) ·--.-.-'i ...
LAGUNA
----"SUPERMAN II" -•a. . .-.......... ,...
Focutly ot Condlewood
213/531·9580
l
___ .,_J...-n
"THE CANN~BALL RUN"
I •1:•.t•.~-.,.-. .,,1.11:11
t---·-_,.. "THE FOUR SEASONS" -I •t-•~~1 ....... ·~ --·---· "RAIDERS OF THE
~2fl-~~;:.~~
~...-.. ...
"STRIPES" IAI ,.. _ .. _ ...... 'icil -----·--=·'~ .... ,9:19
so. COAST WALK-IN
South Cool! Htwoy
ot koodwoy
494-1514 .,_. __ --·---· "TARZAN "RAIDERS OF THE
THE APE MAN" (A)
l'.a!,elli.F'tl:o ... LO!I~.K:..\_PG)
i .. • 1 JO \11 ..... 1. 15 , ... , \t.,._ ,. h o
IMPORTAIH NOTICl! CHllDRIN UNOIR 12 fRU!
""•" ~•o w., .. , Mo• I~•• ftt 6: JO• S.1 Sw• "'" 6:00 "" CINH l S0UN0 • '11lUA AM CAA AAOIO IS fM SlfMl~
1 If HO lM C.All llAOIO Wl1 H IGHITlON ~SSOllY llOSl!10N
-&MIG AM IOl'lllll I• AU C'M..fl lllW'IMIS '30 Oii AM MOCI .,_. __
ANAH!IM "TARZAN ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN THE APE.._!AN" (A)
"•••OY 9t at LemOf\ SI "CAVEMAN" (PO)
179·9150 ----...--
"CANNONBALL RUN" ......
"ARTHUR" (PG)
.(lfi( 11~0
9UINA PAllK
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
II•'<-A•• W•tl ol ttnon
121-4070
IQllNIAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE·IN
fOlO...l_ ........
T'Ol.UAl..OW191tOT
"EYE OF
THE NEEDLE"
_.~-LD• .. C:UO•
"ESCAPE FROM NEW Y°"K" -"THE EXTERMINATOR" (R)
----"SUP£.RMAN II" (PO) ......
So" D<•oo lrwy or troo-•""' cso >"ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN'. (l"G)
962·2411 Coif! 11 SOUllO BMt:• .. ;;l~;f· J --·-· "FORCE FIVf" (RI "'"' "FADt! TO BLACK" (RI
--··-'•MSn '"n4E CANNONBALL RUN" (PG)
"'"' "ARTHUR" (PG)
---~Cl~Nl~·Nc.;.;.;SOU~NO.;.:;..... ___ +---~C~IN~(~ll~SOUH~~ -·---""'-••• llAlC1' ~. "BLOW OUT" (RI -"DRESSED TO KIU." (RI
Cito( II SOUNO
LA MA911A
LA HABRA DRIVE IN ---·-· ... -.... 171-1162
"''f "°'A PA1ih
LINCOLN DRIVE IN
r 121-4070
""~<,I
"WOLFlN"(R) -"THE SHINING" (RI
C:llll II SOUICO ----..-"EHCM.U~OYE" (R)
"HIOtmtAWKS" (R)
--·----· "RAIOIM Of THI LOST AlltC"
(NI -"HANGM 11" (ll'OI
OR ANGE DRIVE IN
Joftto ""° ffWy •s•o .. c-.e
'65'·7022 --"l .OJ."IRI
"UTI'll DAlllLINOI" (R)
A• \ '• Al ~ '~
MIS SION DRIVf IN . .-
--::"t:' __ .,..
"~ft'I
''AIM.A•" (NI
The lbost fan
inoney can ba_y
__._
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT/Wednelday, July 291 1981_
92 new urban
ueas aetailed
t WASIUNGTON <AP) -The 1rowth of amaller
tow -1 elUea over the Jut decade has Jed to the
d• ol 92 new "urbanlud areu," across the , I.be Ceoaua Bureau bat reported.
be natloo now bu ass reco«intzed urban area• 1_..._. tl.4 percent of the population. That'• up
tr.o 58.• percent ln 215 \lrban area• ln 1970.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
. . ...... > •:--f1 "'""""' ¥ ! . ..... . .. .-. .. . .....
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
,., ....
'16Mft l'\141111Md Or .... CNtll OMl'f "lee.
"''"'.-0r.,. c-1 o.J1., "'tot '"'" •· u . n. tt, 1il1 ao11 .. 1
_ here were two mergers or urban areas,
DJUas and fort Worth ln Texas and Scranton and
WDMl·Barre ln Pennsylvania. ,.1._ J11ty n . "·Alie. s, n. 1 .. 1 nn .. 1 1-------------
..1'be deal1nated urban areaa are uaed by
~xpertl to study and report on population meol and trends. They are composed or an
I rated place and surrwnd.inc areu wlth a
popuJaUon of 50,000 or more alld t.hey do not
n y follow political boundaries.
_ rt la tbe physical extent or a city," explained
d mograpber Diana OeAre.
ewly designated urbanized areas and
piulations are:
: • l a QJrM!lla. 11.m; ~. M.1tt1 ~ 11,9'6; _.,._: ,..,...,, ...................... ,
_.AltllM1Y-.MM1;
-~' ~ 11,9'41 ,..,....,_ 6'M; ........... IMJ.~-· .., •1 .... " m s hliill ......._ ...,.,,: ....... 11.W; llMflA. 11,tar; ~ .... , ., ... Cttt,11,"7; -cmrMtt .... a... 11.J11'1 .... ~ ...... ; .......,, U.ttJ• -c:~,_..., l'tr1 PWU, Jt. .. ; ,_. ..... .._-. -,,tt; ........ .. ., .. a .... ;'-. City, ,.,..L,...,.. Me-. 71.M!; -1 A ........... 1 •-.11-1•-• ......... ..,1 -: ....... ._ ... 1•,111; _,._,........,~··· -1--: ~.Q..Ma; 1:.-•I.All;
::t ........ ...-...... .a.111; aarMl1 ...... ••: ·--· 6t,D4, .. ~1-=•-eit7.ff~
---·'--· t ; -~:"-. ... ; _,....=···~i=· ..,..._., t4W; C_..NM,ft,.»1; M ... -._.._.,,,
Mmvt •: T--. u..aM:
_ ..._, .... MtftW ... ..,.; ,.."-"""': _........,,: .............. Ml;'-····· .... ,_..",,.' _.......,.,.....,111:';.
-MMlillllil: ......... ; -MewM......,..: ,_ .. .., .,_ ••• ...,.., 1tt.m1
-N-Yn: 0 .... , .... , 11,m_LM ............ 111;
-N-....ice: La. C,._, N.tlz; S-"•, 11,•; -,._. c.r.llM: c:-n, 11,tM; ......... PM"; Mic_.,, ...... ;
JM ........ 71.1'1; ------=~·~•1,Ml;~ ..... ia.tMl -~:• .......... ; -°"'9: &.-..1'*: UIJ• ..... t1,1JI; .....--.. ...-:
-°"9rlt: .......... SJ.Mt; _,_.,.._..: ....._1 ..... ; .... ,., ... m; MNC ...... st.-1
·~ .......... ! ........ 11,Jl1• • -S.-~: ....... 11J,4; ,_,M.Mt; aKllHMI. ...... ;
' -S..-DMirU: .... City,.....,; ~-T-1 ....... ,a.t»i_JV ......... l ,,._..Cltf,7',41J; U: T-1 ~ ... ,Ur; T ....... U.ttl; VkttN,11,111; v ..... : .......... n.f»l ,,.w.,.....: c:11t111t•nMM, ,.,aa; ~. 14,111; -'W .......... : ............. 11,llS; ..._., N.tta; L.Mrtlew, ... .,.1 o"....-.-..": ,,~ .._., ....... lt,IM; ... c:wn. 71,ln; '-•"'•· 11,ta; .......,..,....,,: •-.1u .. : _ ..,.,...., C..W. ,._.,; C....,_, st,.419.
DOTH NOTICES:
111' VENRAM Pierce Brothers Smiths'
FRED L . VENHAM, res1-Chapel lntermenl al Par k
den t of Huntington Beach. Lawn Cemetery. Visitation
Ca. Passed away on July 24. will be held on Tuesday. Ju·
1981 at the age of 72. He ly 28, 1981 from 4:00PM lo
worked for the Fish & Game 9:00PM and on Wednesday.
Warden for 23 years. H e 1s July 29, 1981 from 8 OOAM to
survived by his wife Wanda 9.00P.M . Pier ce Brother s
Venham. sons Joe Venham. Smiths' Mortuary directors
Michae l Venham. R on 536·6539.
Burnier. daughter Fran cine OPSOMER
wtltfams. 3 grandchildren. 4 C 0 R A B E L L E
g reat-grandchildren. OPSOM~R. age 78. resident
Prl:vate memorial services of Huntington Beach, Ca
July29. 1981. Passed away on July 26. 1981
1 A DIAL in H untingt on Beach. Ca.
Pvb4IMIM Or ..... C..tt o.lly "i.t.
PUBUC NOTICE J11ly IS, n, 2', ""9· S, 1'11 11 ... 1 .
P\JBUC NOTICE
~ICT1nout .utt••-...... SfATIIMll•T n. ......... ...-.. ~WM-"ICTITIOUI auStNIU
NAMl ITAT8M8MT -·•: HAUi.~ "-ACB, IOU ~
le11l•••r•. • U Coate Meae, CalllerftieftU7
TIM lol-'"9 _._ la Wlfl9 wil· ........
HHel ,.,.... ... Valefltl, •1t.A Jef•
trey Dft .. , C:-la MtM, CallfWlll• .,.,,
Tlllt...._la~•Ytflln· ''"' ...... ·
BERTA V't ART, 4,.1 WlncUOl'IO
A11•1111t, ~ P•I-. Gtll~nl1 t0'21
Roll«11 M. Y-O..u.n, 4711 W lndaone Av•nw•. L• Pelme.
Cal I fornle to.U
Tllll _1,...1 It condU<l.cl b, 1n In
dlvldll1I
Halli Me....ittfl Vallflll R-r1e M. Vancler Oon11n
Tiiie .....,_, -flltd wltll 1M Tllll tlll•rNnl wes 111.0 Wllll Ille Cwnty Cllr11 of 0<--. c.unt,.,., Jiiiy cw11t, c1m Of Or-<:ounty on J11ly
'· , .. ,. io. "" ,.,..... ,., ...
'"'*41tMf Or-. OMrl Delly ,.._ P11bll111Wd OrMCle C-1 D•llY "lot, Jlll'f t, IS, !2. tt, 1•1. -..., J11ly 22, 2', Aue. S, 11, , .. , J241 .. I
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUAi. '9NAMCIAL ANO aUDOIT aaP'O•T 18~ tor IN ,.IK.tl Yeltf_ .... ,.,.,,.. Jiiiy I, 1•1 -Endln9 J-JO, ltl21
" ....... ._. ...... le .... ~"Or .... ~.CMIMtlle NOTIC:8 Of' ADOf"TION AMO Tlt.t.•IMITTM.
1,ll ICllOll ~I .. lllktn Oii ltlla report ..... ,......,., O< evtllof'IHC 1,e<l.i
mHtlnts Of tlW llO\'lf'ftlne llottd.
To Ill• C-IY ~lnltlldelll ol Sclloola:
•. TENTATIVI. ANNUAL •UDOET REPORT Tiii• ••pot1 11 .,.,..., llled ""
I ... eov•rnlllf _.of IN sci.o1 .illrlCL 0.11 °' "'"lillt ,_ n. , .. ,. 5l9M4 ,.,...., J. -vs.c~
~. 'UaLICATIOH ANNUAL IUDOl!T ltEPOaT. Tiie "°"""""" -.,d, 111•1119 mad• .,. J-:n, 1•1 1ucll revi.loM, acldlt'-. -t.......,. 11 II _,...
••ceuary, ...,.,no Pllblltlflon, 1111blk _,,., end llNI adolltlon, .,.reoy re-
turns ti.. repw-1.
Tll• l)llbllc .... ,ll'IO on lhlt ,..,...1 will be lleld .i Edllcalloll C•nllf", IOUI
Vorklown on "-1 ~ ... net, •I 1:00e'cl0ck P.M. SltMd ,.,.,.k J. Altlllo41 Clerll/Secretafl
SUMMA•Y 0, cu•••NT 01n•1c:T TAX ••9'1t•lllHNTI '°R 1.., ...
...... of
Gtner•I Flllld • • • • • • • . • • • • . . ............. , ,
t.nnu•I '-YIMftt on 1tecount of S41t• Sc'-1 l ulldl"9 Fund ~'-"1 . . • ..... .
9ond ln'-1 -Pr1ncl~I P•y-llU .... .
TOTAL NET ADJUSTED
BEGINNING BALANCE Reatrlct..i ...........•..
UnrHtricted INCOME
OINlaAL flVMO
1100-MOO Fedlf"l l lnGome . . • ••.• MOO Stet• Inc..,,. . . . • . . . . , . . . .. • . • . . . •
1100 Counly lrcome ............................. . MOO Loc111nc..,,. . • .. . . . . . . ................. . TOTAL INCOME .............................. ..
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING AA LANCE AHO INCOME .. . ........ ..
EXPENOITVRES ANO OTHER OUTGO
1000 C•rtllleal.cl Stlwtn •....
2000 c11u1t1ec1 "'"'" ..• lOOO Empt-9-llt• • . • . • •• • •
4000 Books, Su;;llH -Eq11lprntnt R91>1eumen1 . . • . . •• • ......... .
5000 Contrec:lld Servlcet &
Olller °"9Htlf'ICI Ea-•... • ,
6000 Sites, 81111Cf1 ..... 9o•1 & M9dl1, N-EQUl_,,I • . ...
7100-1.00 OV.r Oulgo ••...
7900 Approp"letlon for Cont111911ncle1........ .
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO &
APPROPRIATIOH l'OR CONTINGENCIES .
TOTAL NET ENDING BALANCE .. • ....
TOTAL. EXPENOITVRES, OTHER OUTGO & APPROPRIATION FOR COHTINGENCIES
TltrM T1aaaee ......... ~
IS,U6,0ti
, ... w
.01,17>
1-..1
ACTUAL
1 ..... s.1 ...
1 ..... s.1
UG,'1t
O..)tS, 171 ... .,.
1',Sl1,Ml
'° ..... 21'
U,1'2,IJt
1•.1u.su 7,tt),12'
6,Jl1,MI
t,021.t2J
J,0..,1M
1,N .tOO
IJ.OJO,W
.001"4
.OCll04
"".., auDGET
J,)ft,IU
•.111.•71 1S,OOO
It, .. , ••
6U10,061
U.tOO.OSJ
25,SM,IH •.•11..s 6,'17,4'1
2, ... 001
•.m~
l,024,0ll
12 .... 1 ... 1,211,U4
U,11S,OSJ u.ooc
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE.. .. ........ . •.. U,1'2,IJt 6J,t00,0S>
1•1-c
BUDGET
aC>tfD INTIERllT AND RIEDIM"ION ,.UND
OUTSTA.NOING 90HOEO INOE8TEONESS AOJUSTEO NET aEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME ...... '°Slat• ·-. . . . . . . . . . . . '800-8"0 Local l..come • . . . . • . ................... .
TOT Al INCOME . . . . . . • . . . • . • , ......... . TOTAL. NET IEGINNING
aALANCE AND INCOME ..
OTHER OUTGO .......... .
NET ENDING It.LANCE
TOTAL. OTHER OUTGO PLUS ~ET ENDING IALANCE
1,0JUSTEO NET BEGINNING BALANCE .•
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
1 .... 1
ACTUAL
S,71J,000
1,oa,4'3 ,, ... ,
7t0,J14
llt,OU
t,e70,411
1.1s..m
111. .. S
1,t70,4'1
1tl0.a1
ACTUAL s.m
, .. ,..,
aUDGET s.w
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE --.
"CTITIOUI autt MHI MAMS ITATUM•T 'ICTIT10UI 9Ul4Nata Tiie tel_.119 ,_,._, tr• dolne
MAM8 ITATaMeMT Wt!-•·
Tht ~ ,.._, 11 ...... _,. ,.,O,aHIONAI. SERVICIES
....... ••• f OESEltT HOMES 111' M '" UMll RI ... RIM• Drive. IP 4•J, • 1 Lao-Hlli. CA nw.1-Slr .. t, lrvlN, Gtlltomle '2714 JISJI C aUHIH UJOI Rlelle
Plllllp H. Mc Nemn, "" R.vW,Nt.O,Lt91#WH(1i.,CAt2W. llMO.t'"°"-'"'""• Calllornte '2114 Tlll1 ....,.... It~ IW.,. ,,.. T .... lllnl""a la <~lid •Y I dlYldlial
11 ... 1'"-',_.,...· -c ~
llNllC>H McN-Tllla ~ WM llltd wllll -
Tiii• --1 •• flied wltll -. I CellnlY Cler11 of Orenet CMll!t, on Jlli'f C...nt, Clef'll '74 Or-c-tv on Jlllv 1 , .. ,
•• ""· ,.1...,, • • ,, .....
P'11blltflad Or-. Colst Delly Piiot.i Pllbll.,.. OrMllt CMtt o.lty l'llo«,
Jtlfy I , IS, ?1, 2', 1•1 _..,I Jiiiy I . U, J:t. 2'. 1•1 JOJWI ------------PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUAL '9NAMCIAI. ANO aUDOIT al.-ottT ( Budeel lor 1119 l'IKll YM t B .. 1111111111 Jiiiy I, 1•1 and lndl"9 J..,.. JO, 1'12)
,_..Valley ICllteM Ollllriet. Or-.. C-., ~
NOTICIE O' AOCWTION AMO TRA•IMITTM.
All .cllon lllall • t-.... on W t r-1 clWlne "9llltf or -•~ .. '-'•'
.... ....... of -OOV.t'l\lnt -d. To In. County Slljlef'lntenoellt of k llOOtt:
e, Tl!NTATIVI ANNUAL IUD08T REP'OltT. Thlt ret*"t 11 ,..,WY t11• 1W
'"" eov ......... llotfd Of the"-' dlltrkt.
D•I• of -ll'IO J-11, 1 .. 1. Sl9"'CI Jeck llMfw'lllffl/ltcrettr'f II. P'UaLICATIOH ANNUAL auDOET "EPORT. TM~_., ri. •.
lne mtda on Jww it. 1•1 -II r .. i.i-, lldlllU-. -,,..,,... u II MotN
M<HH ry, ~ Pllbllcatlon, pwOllc -r•ne. Olld !Intl aefocltlon, "°'""
r•l11rnt -'--'· Tll• publlc netrlng on lllh report wlll be llel4 et N.,,,..,., ON, LI~
L•n•, P:ounllln V•ll•y, CA on Au9111t '· , .. 1 ... 7;JOO'CIO<k P.M. ~Jeck Mllflftkan/1-<rotery
SUMMARY 0, CURltlENT OllT••CT TAX ••GUIRIMa•n , ......
""*"'4
of TeJI• TH Rite
~'" c°""""" Gen•r•I Flllld Ann.i•I ,_,_ on eccounl of Sl•I• S<Not
8ulldln9 Fund Appor11onmtnl . . . . .
8ond Int.rm tnd Principe! Pey,.,..,,U
OINlaAL fl'UND
TOTAL NET ADJUSTED 8EGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
1100·'400 Fecler•I Income
MOO S11i.1nconw ..
1100 County 1nconw .oo Lo<•I Income
MOO ln<omll'IO Tr011Jflf"1
TOTAL INCOME TOTAL, NET BEGINNING
BALANCE ANO INCOME ..
EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
1000 C•r1111c.i.o StlerlH
2000 CIHJlli.cl 511••191
lOOO EmploY .. 8-1111 .. . .
4000 ·-1. ~In. -EQlll.......-1 R9Plec-• 5000 Contrec::l.cl Sen.ten & Ot,,.r ()jNretJne E•P"'llJ
6000 Sit.$, 8ulldlnQ, eoo.1& Medi•, Hew EQIM-111
1100-7400 Otner Outeo ............. . 7900 ApfltoprlatlOll lor C~tlnoen<IH.. . .
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO &
,, ... ,27'
1"°41
ACTUAL
1,1u.•n
.7,tlO
II, JDO,l.50
14,621
•.1'11,Ttt
J,m .MO
lt.M.0.0
20,SS9,012
10,0.S,8':1
u~.•n
1.111,1•1 1n.n•
1,:134,ftt
US,JU
1,30i,ltt
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES t•,0'9 ....
~8~!t.\E_,lp~':.C/,'1~~::~JIT~EER OUTGo & APPR0~~4:1·~:~N
FOR CONTINGENCIES PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE 20,SSt,012
aOHD INTEREST AND RIEC>e:M"ION ,.UND
1"°41
OUTSTANDING BONDED I NDEBTEDNESS
AOJUSTIOO NET BEGINNING IALANCE •..
INCOME
MOo-.. toSllle Inc-. NOQ.·tltOLocel lnconw
TOTALINGOME TOT Al, NET IEGIHHING
aALAHCE & INCOME
OTHER OUTGO .. NET IONDING aALANCE
TOTAL, QTHElt OUTGO PLUS ~ET ENDING BALANCE .......... .
aUILDING ,.UND
ADJUSTED NIOT BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME ................. -... TOT Al, NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME
EXPENOITURES
SOOO C-ect.0 SorvlCH & Other
Ocleretllla E~ ......
6000 Sltn. 811lldl1111&. a-.
& Mldlt. New EQUl_,.i .
ACTUAL 1.1os,ooo
SIJ,402
l),Jlt
•7'.142 lot, .. ,
1,m.-u
111,16>
j04,•20
l,Z22,16)
1"°41
ACTUAL
11,•"
•••
1"1-CZ
BUDGET
'·*· "'
14,IOI 10.~2'1
10,507
S,l1t,n1
l,451,504
ll,Hs,1•
10,.JIJ,StJ
J.115. 1'7 t,J:lS,231
tll,000
1.s1a,1• '"·'" l,IU,tOI m ,MO
to,OU,J04
110,000
20,IU,»4
l tll.CZ
auDGET
0 m .w
221,W
112.tM 4JO.Jl6
112,JIO
ru,,..
1"1.a2
aUDGET
1,'76,SJJ
0
i ,,,.,m
0
Oen•••• ,....., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... .
A11r11111 ,_.,.....,. on eccount of ""• S<Nol •1111411111 .. llNI ~._...
9"41 l1111fttt lftd Prl11Cl1NI P1y.....,h
TOTAL NET ADJUSTED
eEOINNING BALANCE
INCOME
llOO-MOO"-•llnc-MOO S1 ... 1nc..,.
aoo c-tv '""-.. LOCll lnc..ne
08MlaAL,.UND
MOO 111coml1111 Tr-iert •.........•.....•.......•. TOTAL INCOME . .. .. .. . . .. . . . . . • . . . • .. , •.
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING IA LANCE ANO INCOME .... . . ....... . alllPENOI TURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
IOOOCertlflcetacl 511.,let
1000 Cl1Hffled Selwlet
JD00 E rnpiOyee a.Ml It I
4llOO ·-· s..ctcM••. and EQwl-t Rltplecement
5000 Contrected Servlcn & °'""' ()jNr•ll"llEM'*'tn
6000 SI i.t, 8'14 ldl ne. aooll 1 &
Mlefla,NlwEQWl-1
7100-1400 ()tf'ltr o..tgo • . .•
7900 Appropriation 10' Conllf'l99rl(IH
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO &
ltlMll
ACTUAL
2.11•.47 20,1'1 ...
1~116
u,•,001
M.IOt )6,209,"1
17 ..... 2117
S,lSl.St7
J,IM,731
),Dll,17•
•••
1.as."7
IUll,1'1
112,10
11.-.llt
•• 4'5.flll
l,471,1't
APPROPRIATION l'OR CONTINGIENCIES.. 16 ..... ta • • .U,'37 TOTAL NET ENDING aAUNCIE ..... . ... • ,.._.., 10.000
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES. OTHIElt OUTGO& Al'l'llOl'RIATIOH ~It
CONTINGENCltS PLUS NET IENDI~ &ALANCE 17.ll'..... •,'21,tT.
IC*D IMTlallT A"D ltlOllMP"TIO. """0 1-..i 1..,-ei
ACTUAL auooET
OUTSTANDING 80HOED INOlaTEOfjlEU AOJU$Tl!O NET 61GINNING BALANCE
INCOME ..... '° 51al• '"'-
llOOotltO t..ocll ·-"°°""'° 1nc.om1no T, _.,, TOTAL INCOME
TOTAL, NET aEOINNING 8ALANCE
ANO INCOME
OTHER OUTGO
NET l!NOINO BALANCE
TOT AL, OTHIOR OUTGO PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE .•..
.... ,.....IE>-.ry
••• ooo
J,'1J.O'U
I~, ..
>.t.0.•1
"'* 4,06UIJ
6.tlUJI ,,..,,m
J,01', ......
aOHD INTtRIEtT AND RIED4lMrflON "UMO
IWIMI
OUTSTANDING BONDED INOEaTIOONEU .
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE INCOM E
MOO ... tO Slal• lncOIN . . . .
flOO.tltO Loe.al Inc-
TOTAL INCOME
TOTAL, NET BEGI NN ING at.LANCE ANO INCOME
OTHER OUTGO
NET ENDING BALANCE ....
TOTAL, OTHER OUTGO PLU!.
NET EHOING BALANCE
T ...........
ACTUAL
l ,410,000 .. s.tot
ff,IU
1.21S,t5'
1.215.121
2,IJO,._
1,DO,tS6
1 .... 14
J,120,UO
aOHD lllTERHT AND RIC>e:M"ION ,.UNO
1"°41
OUTSTANDING 80NOl!O INOE8TEONEU
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME ..ao-.. toStM• lnconw .. . . ...
NOQ.tltO Locll Income .
TOTAL INCOME .. .
TOTAL , NET aEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME
OTHEROVTGO . NET ENDING BALANCE .
TOT AL, OTHER OUTGO PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE
au1LDING fl'UllD
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE ...•
INCOME
1100-'400 Fedtr•I Income .................. .. ltOO-tltO Loc•I Income
TOTAL INCOME . ..
TOTAL. NIET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANOINCOME •
EXPENDITURES
1000 Cleullled s,.1.,1n .
JDOO Empt-..... '"' ...... . 5000 Conlrect.o Servlo1 & 0111er
()jNr•fll'IOE._.tn .....
.000 Sltn , Bulldh'Ol, 8001" &
Media, New Eqw'-1 ..
7000 01r.r o..teo
TOTAL EXPENDITURES ANO
ACTUAL s ..... ooo
'11.IJ.5
1,410,725 ....,..
S.1,J76
l,00,72j
1"°41
ACTUAL
S,llO,m
44,111
l,1 .. oF002 1,111,714
•,-MJ,Ml
11,4411
S,OfJ,tll ,.
J,011,4'4
1,t1a.m
J.f71.~
•,101,641 ,.,.
•.S7•M2
7 ..... 2'1 .,,,.,.,
1.-..m
ltll-C
IUOGET , .. ..,, ...
1,J11,MJ 1,121,au
1.110,t)t , .....
802,'21
t.110 • .a.
, .. ,..,
aUOGET ..
7M,St0
1M,St0
•.us,,..
U0,)'1
S1S.W
1,m,,..
1"1.C
8UDGIOT
1,1U,!M
l,llJ,»4
IG ,17S
J0,154
"·™
m .•1
FLOS.SJE E . DlAL. res1 · Survived by her brother Roy
dent o f Newport Beach. Ca C W ilton or H untington Pas~ed away on July 26. Beach. Ca . mece Nota B
1!ii: She is survi ved by s C?oper and several other s~!i~includlnR Jack Dial ofn teces and nephews
COilt¥' Mesa. Ca. 2 daugh ter s Graveside ser vices will be
o f .. ;J 11 in o i s and 1 8 held on Wednesday. July 29,
gnmdchlld ren . Private in-1981 at ll:OOAM at the Good
terment services will be held Shepherd Cem etery, H unt
at the family plot at Spring in~ton Beach. Ca Visitation
Hill Cemeter y, Beecher Ci-will be held on Tuesday, Ju
ly, Illinois. Baltz Bergeron ly 28. 1981 fr~m 4: 00 PM to
S mith & Tuthill W eslcliff 9:00PM. al Pier ce Bro~~ers
Chapel M ortuar y of Costa Smiths M or tuary Pierce
Mesa forwarding directors. Brothers Smiths Mortuar y
646·9371 directors. 536-6539.
ANO INCOME EXPENDITURES ..
TOTAL INCOME . • ....•
s.m .. + 1000 Other OUtgo . . . . . . . • • . . .. ......... •
TOTAL EXPENOITURl!S & OTHIER OUTGO ... .
717,IU
4',174
77>,D7
1.t7',J11
0 1,t7•.m
0
OTHEROUTGO ...•....... s.ttt.•71 1,1U,2M I, 11J,z.4 ..
CROISA.NT HEWITT
L URA C. CROISANT. age . T HO M AS T . HEWITT, r e·
90, resident or Santa Ana. Stdent or Costa M esa. Ca.
Ca Passed away on July 26. Passed a~ay on July_ 24,
1981 in Or ange, Ca She is 1981. Survwed by tus s1Ster
surv i ved by her son Robert Ann Clark. Private funeral
G . H ollen o f Oklahoma. Roy services will be held under
l. Hollen of Marysville. Ca .• t h e direction o f Balli
daughter R ule M. Nielsen of B erger on-Smith & T u thill
LaVerne . Ca .. Rhea M Westclirr Chapel Mortuary
Chesley. of Santa Ana, Ca. or Costa Mesa. 646-9371.
sister May Wright or ffig. NELSON
g I n s • T e x a s . 1 5 ROBERT F. NELSON. r e·
grand childr e n. 37 great · sident of Costa Mesa, Ca.
grand children and 9 great· Passed away on J uly 24.
gr e a t · gran d c h i Id r e n . 1981 H e was a member of
M em orial ser vices will be th e South Coast G un Club.
held on Thursday July 30 and w as a Marshall for the
1981 at lO:OOAM at th~ ~ity o f Costa Mesa. M esa -;::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:;;;:;;;::::;;;;;;;;;~ Verde Go If Course H e is Neptune Society survived by his childnm.
taEMATlON au1ti.t.LAT st• James Robert Nelson and
6 7 3 D ian e Elinore Clark, both of 64 • 4 1 Illinois and D ebo r a h C . v .... M<IM M<IH"ltv .--·.. Le h r v· t c d • ..... 1.i11r....,.._.1tt_,.,.., ac o is a , a . an .. .... .,,._~-..ic... g r a n dchild r en . Private
c,,11 i.r1,..-"-ii. ser v i ces will be held al the
1411,. c ..... ,..,,_ family plot. F orest Homes
~===~~======:!..icemetery. Forest Park. JI.
linois. Services under the
dir ection of BaJtz Bergeron·
Smith & Tuthill Westcliff
IA1T'11B•HOM
SMITH I TUTHILL
WISTCLlff CHA,.L
47:7 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
6 46-9371
NICIMOTHH5
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main 51
Hunltnqton Btlach
536-6539
PAClltC V•w
....,llALPAU
Cenwtety Mor1ultf'1
c~1..crematory
3500 Pacific Vi~ Onve
NewPOrt eeach loM-2700
MsCoawtar MOITUAl .. S
Laciuna Beech
494·9416
Laouna Hiits
7te-0833
Sef'I Juan Cl~.-trano
49S·1ne
Chapel Mortuary forwarding
directors. 646-937\ WARDLE
LUCILLE M. WARDLE.
resident of Newport Beach ,
Ca Passed away on July 2.4.
1981 1n Los Angel es. Ca
Born i n Logan , Utah on
December 5, 1917. She was a
member or the C hurch or
Jesu s C hrist of L atter -day
Saints. Newport Beach 2nd
W ard. She wu owner and
operator of BUIJS Jnterna·
tional of Newport Beach for
17 years. Survived by 3 sona
Gerald A. Wardle of Van
Nuya, Ca., A. David Werdlt
of C arelree, Arizona and A.
Kent Wardle of San Oteao.
Ca., 3 brothers 8. Scott
Miiier of Lon,poc, Ca,, Pap·
PY Miller ot Ven Nuys, Ca.
an d Dav i d M ill e r of
H o lly wood, C e .. l slater
Veda Ball o f Utab , 8
sraodch1ldren and l areal·
1randcbild. Service. will be
held on Tueeday July za.
1181 at U :OOAM al tbe
Church of Jaua Chrltt or
Latter-day Saint.a, Newport
Beach 2Dd Ward, 801 Dover Dr., Newport ~ach, Ca . l.n· terment al 01dtn City
Cemettty, Ofden. Utah. Via· ltat&on WM bdd Oil MCMtday. :J.alJ 17, lNl al Harbor Lawa ·M~nant Ollve
Mortuary. In U.U o1 flowete
th• famll1 reqHata llltt donat'°"9 i. m..S. to the
Amtriun CuNr ~or tb• Kospiu Center of
Oren1• County 14in'"9 ••· der the dlrtd.lon ot Harw
• La•n·Mount OUve ~ ,..., ____ _.....,..,-of Cott.a MtH 540-~
TOTAL. NET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME ••........••......
l!)(PENOITVRU
YOO Sites, klldlf'IQll. haks & M•dle.-E~ ...• NET ENDING aALANCE • •• . .... • .•••••
TOTAL. EXPtNDITURES PLUS
NET ENDING IALANCE ........................ .
SP'ICIAL alESIERVIE 'UND
AOJUSTEO NET aEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME !llOO Loe.al lnG-. . . . . . . . . • • 11tOO lncomll'IO TfOllafen . .. ....................... ,
TOTAL INCOME ........... , ..............•....
TOTAL, NET I EOINNING
9ALANCE AND INCOME ........................ ,
UIPENOITVRl!S
WIOO SllH. klldlf'IQll, eooe.. &
~Cfll,N-~ ...•..
lfET ENDING aALANCE ......... . TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NET ENDING aALANCE ...................... . CA,.IETIRIA ,.UND
ADJUSTED NET 8EOINNINO &Al.ANGE
INCOME 1100.MOO l'edlf"1l I-... • ................. .
MOO St1111..come . . . • . • . • ............... , •• , MOO Local •-.......... . ................... .
TOTAL INCOME ........ · · · · · .•••.•. · ·•·· •· ·· ·· ·· · TOTAL, Nill IEGINNING
aALANCE A1'1D INCOME .. · •• • · · ·· ·• · · · · · .. · ·· · EXPENDITVltlS .•• . ..... . .............. ,.
2000 c111affltcl S.lwles .......................... .
JOOO E~O'f .. lleMlltt . . . . • ................... ..
tOOO e-.. SUpplles, And
Equipment lt11>l1t-t ....•.•.•..•.•.•••.•.••
SOOO Conlrec:tacl Services encl
Ot,,.r Oiitrtl"'9 EIQllMlt. .. .................. .
.000 Sltff, .... lcll,.., 8octU and
Medi•, N-Equlpnant . . ................. .
TOTAL, EXPENOITURl!S .................... ..
NET ENDING aAl.ANCE ....................... .
TOTAL, EXPl!.NOITURES
PLUS NET tNOING IAUNCE ................ , AD411.T IDUCATION 'UND
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING at.LANCE ....... .
INCOME lloo.l400 Frdt<"1l lnco,.,.. •••.••........•.•••.•...•
MOO Stet• Income ...................... ' ....•......
TOTAL INCOMI! ............................... ..
NIET aEOINNING eALANCE ANO INCOME .... • ................. ..
l!l<"IENOITVRIS ANO OTHER OUTGO IM Cwtlfiuted S.1.,let • • . • • • . ................. .
2000 ClaHlll., s.lerlts .. . . . . . . . • ............... .
JOOO .. ....,...,.. ................................... .
4000 ·--· s....i1-. And l4111lpineM ...... -..........•.........•••.•.
MOO c-itrtcttd ~kn elld
OU.r o.rec1111 ~ ••.••...••••.....••..••..•
.eolSl'"-91111d1""'9Mb&
Meefla, lffw E~ ........................... .
N00 A..,...tilllrl ""c.ntlftftll<ltt ..•..•••......•.
TOTAL EX,llNDITVRU,OTHIROUTGO&
A'PRO,atATIOH P:C)a COHTINOINCIH ....... .
NIT ENDING aAUNCI! ......................... .
1'0TAL. 1!)('91NDITURU AND OTHlllt
OUTGO """' NIET ENO I NO eALAHC8 .......... , ••• ,. , ........... ••.
'"IUUlllCl lllVWO
llEOINNINO eA.LANCl, JIJLY .................. ..
INCOMa ....................................... ..
TOTAL. NIT •EOINNINO
s.w
·0-
s.w
141,S..
OJ,ltl
'°'·7$7
19'IMll
ACTUAL
101,•71
111,ta
U.OS7
1,24l,30i
1,411J,J.d
l,5tS.01•
412.216
ID,I01
'2S,3"
1,.Sts,ou
ltlO.al
ACTUAL ..
O·
+
ltlHI
ACTUAL 1.-. .. ,
71t,M
eAL.ANCI AND 1NCOMa ,.,,, ••• , •••.•••• ,....... U•.M
llX,INOITVRlfS, .................. , • ...... ...... U.
INOl•O eALANCI ....... ,.. •• • . • .. • • • .. • •• •• •• • •• 1,tlf, ...
TOTAL E)(,.NDIN1tla.OTMIR OUTOO
"1.UI HIT 8NOINO ~Cl.................... .. ...... M,8.HO MAl•TSNAlllCI "•O
AOJUITID NIT elOINNINO eAUNCI! ..... .. • +
tHCOMI ............. ···············. ················ -~·~ ..................... ,,.,., ...... . .... ~,, ........ , ......................... ,
TOTAL IHCOMa ......... , ....................... , "1,01 :~·:..~~..:'r••••••••••••••••••••••••• I ..... NDn\I ................................... .
-~---'--................ .. ~.-~ ...................... .
YO'l'j ···············~,········· .. .,. -~··················••••i•i•• ::rt~===r.~ .................. . ............ c..a.._ ... ....,,, .. ,.,,
..,,,,. .....
s.w
s.w
.... ,.,
'"·''I ...
'"·"' , .. 1-C
auDGET
~
no.• ».ooe 1,JU,750
1,5'4,1.SO
ua,iso
4'0,• 11S,7SO
tll,000
Sl,000
10.000 u ... 150 .,_..,
1,all,1'0 , .. 1..,
auOGET ..
n,s.u , .......
1,UI, ..
1,.Sl,1"
tlJ,OU
U.,14' ltt,•
114, ..
IJl,sJt
1,6Sl,.M 1.., ..
IUOOU M,., ... --t,JU.M
l,»4,M uo.•
NET ENDING 8ALANCE ....................... ..
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
PLUS NET ENDING 8M.ANCE . . ....... .
5'1ECIAL RIESUIVIE "U"O
t.OJUSTEO NET BEGINNING BALANCE
HCOME
:IOOL0<•llncome
tOO tnc:omlng Tr0111fen .•.. "OTAL INGOME . .. . ........... .
rOTAL. NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO IHCOMIO
'XPENOITURES
000 Other OUteo . . . . . .. . ...................... .. IOTAL EXPENDITURES & OTHER OUTGO ..... .
NET ENDING BALANCE . . .•..•......• TOTAL, EXPENDITURES & OTHER OUTGO
l,'7•.l'J
1,1S0, 17•
'"°"'' ACTUAL
1,4'2.MO
0 soo.ooo
500,000
PLUS NET ENOING BAUNCIO . .... .. • .• 1,tO,.tlO STATIE SCHOOL aUILOINO ,.UNO
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING IALANCE . . . .
INCOME
MOO Sllle Inc-. MOO Locll lncotN . • . • ...... , . •• • .••
MOO lnc:orftl119 TrOllJlen · · · · ·• TOTAL INCOME • . . .... . ......... ..
TOTAL, .~ET 8 EOINHING BALANCE AN01NCOME ............................... ..
EXPE•401TVRES ANO OTHER OUTGO
5000 O.ntract.O SarvltH tnd Otlltr Opeuuno Expanws..... . . . •. . . .. .. .
NET ENO.NO BALANCE ......................... . To• AL, EXPENOI TV RES AND OTHER OUl"GO
f LUS NET ENOIN9 aM.ANCll ................ .
CA,.eTeatA 'UNO.
AOJUSTEO NET aEGINNINO aALANCE • .. ••
INCOME llOO-MOll,,_el Inc-. • . .............. .
MOO St ... Income • . . . . . . . .. ............. , ... .
MOO Local Income . .... . .. ··•····•· ·•·•• TOTAL INCOME .............................. ..
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME ...•.•............•
EXPENOIT\lltES
:t000 ClaaJlfl.0 Stl.,IH .
lOOO I!"""°"" a..-1 It I . . . • • • , •....• , .•......
tOOO .... Sllipplles, &
Eq11lp,,,.,,. R•«-t ........................ .
5000 Contrtcted 5trvkn •nd
Ollltr Oper.clnt E•-' • · · .... • .. · · • · · · • · · · .. " TOTAL EXl'f.NOITUltES, ...................... ..
NET ENDING at.LANCE . . • ............... .
TOTAL. El<NHOITURES PLUS
NET ENOIHO aAUNCE ..................... .
1"°41
ACTUAL
J1..S22 , ....... .... 2
4'.J1•
c11.m1
20,ltO
11
20, ITJ
,,...,
ACTUAL
"·* 104,000 ,.,.
*MO
Sl1,lo00
s•.oa
11.000
10,000 --. ... sot.• IMa
m.• CMll.O oaval.Ot'MaNT ~NO
ADJUSTEONl!T 81!GINNINO BALANCE .......
INCOME
... I.Kai ·-................................ . TOTAL., NET eEOINNING aALAHCE
AND I~ ................................. .
EXPENDIT\IRESANOOTH8ROVTGO
1100-74'0 o.lltf °"'.. . ........................... ..
TOTAL...Jl<l'tlNOITUltES,OntlR,DVTOO .... ..
NET t!NOINO aAL.ANCI ........................ ..
TOTAL. IEJtPIENOfTURIES ANOOTHEltOUTOO
PLUS NE1' eNOINO •AL.AHCll
INIUaAltQI N•O
el!OINNINO aALANCE, JUl.Y, ...... , •••••••••.•.
INCOMl ........................................ .
TOTAL. NET elOINNINO
eAl.ANGE AHO INCOMI ••••••. , ............... .
IX,.ENOITURIES .............................. ..
I EN DINO llALANCB .......................... ..
TOTAL, E>t,ENOITVl"ts. on.•• OUTOO
1 .... 1
ACTUAL
561 ..
0 .. ..
'"·'" -..-i llt.•
• P'LUS Nat ENOINO eAU\NCE.. ... .... ......... • ...... ,
01,aaaeD MAl•TWNAMCI ,U .. D
1-.e1
ADJUStllD NET ICGINNINO eAU.NCll ....... .
INCOMI ......... -............................ . ... ~•-....................... , ...... . ..... ~ ...... ,.. ................................ . ITO"TALI~· ••••• ,~·········· .••••••••••••• 1'0T'I~ Hn •aoi.-NtNO eALANCa AHO IMCOMa. ,. , , ,, ,
I• 'INDtTUlllD ANO O™E• OUTGO ... c:.ier ............. .._ ................. .
.. .................... Meifle....,. ... , l'lllll
'=~= ... ;u~~··°'"···~:·:::: ._ITINOINO~I ........................ . TOT"A~ IDelOl1VflU ANO cmtllll CIUY90
,..._.UINST aNDtNO IA&.AMCI. ••••••••••••••••
ACTVAL ....,. .. ,. .. . .. ,. .,..,
NET ENOING 8ALANCE .............. .
TOTAL, EXPENOITURESANDOTHEAOVTGO
1,t76.l:l7 ,..,..,
auDGET
l ,"42,MO
011er•tl1111 E_.... 11 ...
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE. •.J.0,"41
STATIE SCHOOL aUILOtMG ,.UND
175,000
0
11S,OOO
t,117,MO
2,11',MO
2.117.6IO
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BAUNCE ..•..
INCOME
MOO St1t•l-
.OO Local I-•. "°° 1ncomtne T,.,,.,,
TOTAL INCOME TOTAL, NET al.GINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME ........................ .
EXPENDITURES ANO OT"HER OUTGO _..11ullled Seier In . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1 .... 1
ACTUAL
S,401,103
1,S4.S,056
'412.llS ,.
l, 147..311
l,S41,S10
0
1,111AIC
ltll-C
BUDGET
to, In
JOOO £........,.. ..... ,,.. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .
5000 Contrected Servlu• and Oilier °"retlng Eape,...
.000 SUH , Blllldl,..._ 8ook1 &
1J,tt0 u ,no
J,m
(10,ln)
0
0
110.1n 1
0
0 0
0
M•dle, & -EQlll-1 . . TOTAL EXPENDITURES ANO
OTHER OUTGO. . ... . ....•
NET ENDING 8AUIHCE ................•.....•.
TOTAL. EXPENDITURES ANOOTHEROVTGO PLUS NET ENDING BAUNCE .............•.•..
CA"ITlalA l'V•O
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING aALANCE • , , .
INCOM E
llOO-l400 F.-•1 •ncome . . . . . . . . • .. . . .. .. .
MOO '4•1• lnconw . . , ......................... ..
aDO Loullnconw .
TOTAL INCOME
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME
1 .. 1_,, 8XPENOITURES
aUOOET 2000 Ct•nllled s.1 ... 1 .....
4llOO ·-·· Suppll ... -IUIJ EQUl-t Reflltc-..
I0,000 5000 Contrecl.O Servi~ -1 -OtMr Opwatlno E•-• ... · · i:-: TOTAL EXPENDITURES ..•
,..• SOO NET ENDING BALANCE . .... . .......... .
-. TOTAL EXPl!NOITUltES PLUS
442,112 Nt!T ENDING 8ALAN~:UL:i"i"DUCATiCiM";'uifo
10,400 ....... 16,112
..a,111
!WI.ft
auoou ...
0
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING aALANCIE ....... INCOME
MOO St.Ce Inc-. . . . . .. .. . . . • . • . .......•.....•. MOO Local Income ................................ ..
TOTAi. iNCOME ................................ ..
NET aEOINNINO eALANCI.
ANO INCOME . • . .• .• . . . . • . . . .........•.•• EX,ENOITVRES ANO OTHER OUTGO
IODI c:.rtlfle.et.0 Slltrlel ........................ .. 1000 Cl•Hllleef s.1w1es • . . .. . . . . . . . ......•... , .•. ,
... 8001<1, 5upp11 ... -Etllll-1 R.P«emtnt .......... ., .......... ..
SOCIO Contrec:t.O lervlcat and Otllet
OttretlftO ~.. .... •• • .... · ·· ·•••·• ·••
.. "'"' ..,. .. ,.., .... & .. AMCfle, New Equlprnonl ........... "• ............ .. TOTAL EXPENDITURES ......................... .
Mt NET ENDING aALANCE ......................... .
.... TOTAL. EX PENDi T\lltES PLUS
O Nl!T ENDING aAUNCE ..................... .. IMIUaANC8 l'UND .. ..... .,
eUDO•T 112 ....
11..t,ttt
•EOtNNIHO aAUNCll, JUL y ......•....••.•••••
INCOMa ......................................... .
TOTAL. NIT atOINNING aAL.ANC8
ANDtNCOMll ........ ,. ....................... .
E"'8NOITURllS ................................ ,
8NDINO aAl..ANCE ........................... ..
TOT AL. IX'aNDIT\IRI$, OTHIER OUTGO
l,11'0~
1,MO,IS.5
211.M.5
•.s...no
1-..1
ACTUAL
1•.a1
200.au
... 1 ... 111.,.. 1,0M,llt
l,Olt,W
12,"5
1,9'0,J»
)1,410
1,oe1.w
, .... I
ACTUAL ... ... ... ... ...
·0-...
1"°41
ACTUAL
Its, ... 11.171
-.in
ftS.J" •
'U,t7t
'LVS NET" ENOING eAUNCll... .. ........... ,.,,.,,
H'aaa&OMAIMT'8""*8 PU•O ,..,
AO.JUITID .. l!T alOINllilNO IAl.ANC8 ....... . ,..,_. INCOME
auootT .. StM •f'MCillfN •••. • ......................•.•••. .... ... ~Tr ... trt .......................... . 1'0TAL INCOMI .............................. . 1~ TOTAL. Mtn ll!OINNINO llAU.NCI ,.... 1:~:~=~ .................................. . ...... =c....n ..... .-........................... . ---~..=-:. .......................... .. . ·~--.: ................................. . ...... ===-"":""··················· .... ................ , .. ~ ...................... ..
--TOTAL l ...... OINRll .......... t ............. ..
I N8T INOINO ~I ,. ..................... ··• --,.Ti\~-=~~~~~ .................. .
~I.IA&. ....
u.ss.
1,llJ.JM
1"1.a2
auOGET
211 ... S
.... 417
,,.,.,
auOGET
Jl,410
I 11,6>4
1,1'°
"2,tlt
l,Ol•.41>
-·-
1,090,N
"''42 auoon ...
1Ja.J41 ....
DIJill
DI.Ml
, ... * 11,•1
ttl,MI
1Wlol2
1uoon ,,,,.. ··-Ul,1"
llt,1'9 ...
m .1"
,,.I ... ~ evoon .,,.,.
1•• ~
'""" --tS.a. "-
4"1 ....
............... • .. ._..._._.. ------· '4 -• .. ----..-• -~---.. ..............
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/WednMday, July 29, 1981
·rnrn~~~~~~
Recession growing more likely
Consumers expected to postpone purchase of big ticket items
By JOHN CUNNIFF .,, ........ .....,...
NEW YORK -. From
whatever source your economlc
message comes, it bears rather
poor news for the next few
months. Some bit or diacomtort
seems assured for nearly every-
one, and a recession grows
more likely.
If you r source is anti ·
administration, the grim outlook
is served up like a dish or cold
greasy stew: Inflation could
worsen any day now; interest
rates might remain high; un-
employment is likely to creep
up.
Should your source be more
friendly to the Reagan people,
you will hear •assurances that
the economic menu, though un·
palatable as cod liver oll, is con·
duel ve to the building ot strong
bones ror future growth~
The message conveyed by
each is the same, however. in
that they teU you not to make
big spending plans or take big
risks or dream big dreart18 for
the rest or the year because it's
going to be a tricky time.
The Federal Reserve has re·
iterated its Intention ot keeping
its foot on the monetary brakes.
Now, people who try to forecast
interest rates have just about
written off any sharp drop
before winter.
What that does to public ex·
pectations is hard to measure
Immediately, but It can't be
good. MiUlons or people, for ex·
ample, have for a couple of
years been postponlng
purchases of big ticket items
such as cars and houses. Their
hopes were up for a while ;
they'll be dashed.
That 's bad news tor
carmakers, who already have
experienced one or the worat
Junes in their entire history.
Five· years ago the family that
needed a big sum -perhaps tc
buy a car -might have coo·
sidered taking a loan on the old
homestead. Try getting a second
mortgage loan today that can be
repaid on "easy terms."
As economic activity slows.
and as government support for
job programs shrink1. un·
employment seems hea~ed
higher. But that doesn't mean
you can rely on the classic cor·
ollary or smaller rises ln con·
sumer prices.
No; nor more than decreased
economic activity means in·
terest rates are certain to fall.
The people at the Federal
Reserve who control monetary
poHcy, and the people at the
White House and In Congress
who decide on fiscal policy.
won't come out and say it but
their goals are clear. That ls,
they are consciously. willingly
and even aggressively nirting
with a recession. ...........
Clean Air Act changes eyed
They would agree that it
would be nice to avoid It, but to
not have a recession or
something akin to it is a con·
tradiction or the policies they
pursue. Recession, or a serious
slowdown, is a natural conse-
quence or persistently following
restrictive monetary and fiscal
policies.
LIARS' HOUSE? Mark Gordon shows off his solar hou~
that he's trying to unload to the most outrageous liar.
Unable to make the payments on a $147,000 Joan. he
wants to run a contest for 1.000 people at SlOO people at
$100 per entry. The best 100-word "tall tale" ·gets the
house.
Steelmaker s say law could paralyze industry in 1980s T-bill yield dip
reverses trend
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U.S. steel industry could be
paralyzed in the 1980s if it is
forced to comply with current
environmental Jaws, according
lo a new study steelmakers are
using in an attempt to persuade
Congress to change the Clean
Air Act.
The study, r.sed this week
by Arthur 0 . Little, Inc., is the
industry's primary source of
evidence in the debate over
whether to continue clean air
and water laws when they ex-
pire this fall .
Steel industry spokes men say
they are confident that the pro·
business Reagan administration
and a conservative Congress
will be impressed with the re·
liability of the report. which was
done for the steel industry.
Environmentalists who oppose
any changes in pollution laws
won't comment on the document
until they've studied it in detail.
The report found that under
current law, the steel industry
will have to spend $7. 7 billion
from 1984 to 1989 to remove
virtuaUy all pollutants -even
those that don't threaten public
health -from its smo~estack
emissions.
That expense would be in -
curred at a time when
steelmakers say they will
already be facing a $2.3 billion
annual capital shortfall in an in.
dustry plagued with out-of-date
plants.
"We've already spent $8.5
billion to clean up 95 percent of
the air particulates since 1972,"
said James S. Collins. executive
vice president of the American
Iron and Steel Institute, the in·
dustry's lobbying arm and
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare Colna • St•mpa
GOLD• SILVER 7.2141
OeN C.._.._. Mlww Cl. I&. ....... Krw .. n-Mdl t417M $427 ,._..,....._.. $4U •• IGI.
100 cor-Na71 .,,..7
50 P-ue1.7S "11.7 ~su...,.a.. ~ ~ ,..,., .......... ... _ ... ............
(714)~
South Coalt PtaH Vlllege ......... -.. ~--c;_.~1
sponsor of the report.
"Additional money spent on
secondary cleanup standards is
not going to make that much dif·
ference in air quality, but it will
hurt the American steel in·
dustry," Collins said.
The 132-page report says
future environmental require·
ments could cause the Joss of 2
lo 9 mmion tons of steel ship·
ments per year and eventually
translate into 40,500 job losses.
As man,y as 121,000 jobs in
steel-related Industries could
also be threatened and steel im·
ports might rise from the cur·
rent level of about 14· million
tons a year to 42 million tons a
year, the study found.
Call it bloodletting, but to Paul
Volcker, tighter money is an
absolute necessity after years or
permissiveness, during which
dollars were printed much
faster than the produ.ction or
goods and services rose. WASHINGTON <AP> -Yields
For President, Reagan, a on s hort -term Treasury
tighter budget is an absolute re· sec•Jrities fell about one-half 4u1rt!mem m oraer to get gov-percentage point this week, re-
ernment out or wasteful, un· versing a three-week upward
productive, consu mptive trend, government officials re·
pursuits , and rel urn the ported.
economy to the more productive About $4.3 billion in six-month
private sector . T-bills were sold at an average
Judge OKs Exxon
return because part of the price
is r efunded at the time of
purchase. The actual return, or
investment rate, came to an
average of 16.21 percent on six·
month bills and 15.88 percent on
three-month bills at Monday's
auction.
Beginning Saturday, saver.s
investing in 2VJ-year "small·
saver " certificates can earn
15.15 percent at savings in.slilO·
tions and 14.9 percent at com-
merciaJ banks.
In each inslance, the probable discount rate of 14.79 percent,
net effect is to reduce economic down from the 15.318 percent· of
• ransont to terrorists
NEW YORK <AP> -Officials
of Exxon Corp. acted properly
when they paid $14.2 milijon as
ransom to Argentine terrorists
in 1974, a Mantiattao judge has
ruled.
Ruling on a stockholder's suit
filed against the oil company last
year, Acting Justice Herman
Cahn said Exxon did not exceed
its authority in deciding to pay
the sum to gain the freedom of
refinery manager Victor
Samuelson.
The payment ··cannot be rea·
sonably stated to be against the
corporation's best interests,"
the judge said in a decision
handed down Monday in state
Supreme Court.
Samuelson '"was engaged, in
corporate business at the time
he was kidnapped, and his
ransom affected the morale of
other corporate e mployees.
whose fear for their own safety
would greatly affect the opera·
lion of a corporate enterprise."
Cahn said.
The executive was held for
almost five months by the
activity over the short term, re· one week earlier. officials said
People's Revolutionary Army. a gardless of the more lasting after Monday's auction.
leftist group, and released April benefits that might be expected The governmenl also sold
29, 1974, after the ransom was to follow over the next few about $4.3 billion in three-month
paid. years. bills at an average yield of 15.065
The judge had denied Exxon's These are the transition percenl, down from 15.563 per·
motion to dismiss the suit, say-months, and they are likely to be cent last Monday.
ing the stockholders were en· · rut As of today, banks and savings
titled to question the findings of pam · institutions may pay as much as
a commitlee formed by Exxon As the human damage in· 15.04 percent interest on six·
which determined that prosecu-creases, measured for example mo n.t h money m ark el
lion of the suit would not be in in lost jobs and businesses, there certitioates, down from 15.56&
the company's best interest. will be demands that austerity percent. Interest on the $10,000·
The suit. filed in March 19ll> end. minimum deposits is limited to
by Dr. Gervase Slick or Hawaii As the proponents 'of austerity one -quarter percentage point
and his mother. G.C. Slick, of sense they are nearing their goaJ above six-month T-bills.
Rome. N. Y ., contended Exxon or better economic balance they The average T -bill rates in
Bosse~' writing
hit in survey
JANESVILLE, Wis . (AP)
Doctors aren't the only. ol)es
with illegible handwriting. Busi·
ness executives have problems
with penmansbJp too, according
to a survey taken by the Parker
Pen Co. here. officials who were responsible will plead lhal their mission be Monday's auction were the
for the payment should reim· allowed to continue, rather than lowest since the July 13 levels The survey said more than
burse the corporation. be aborted as so often it has in of 14.23 percent for six-month half of the nearly 500 secretaries
Samuelson , a native of the past. bills and 14.558 percent for surveyed -57 percent of them
Cleveland, was kidnapped Dec. It isn't Likely to be pleasant for three-month bills. said their bosses' handwriting
6. 1973. as he lunched in the din· anyone, including the politi· The discount rate on short· was either difficult or imposai·
ing room or the Exxon refmery cians. term bills understates the actual ble to read. he managed in Campana, about .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
60 miles north of Buenos Aires.
Theodore Teah. Slick's al·
torney, was not available for
comment.
Robert Fiske. attorney for Ex·
xon. declined comment on the
suit.
• annual rate
Call for Terms • $25,000 Minimum Opening Balance* the
no hassle
second
+ FREE CHECKING
. I
i
Why complicate a simple Idea.
At Wormington Financial we
don't . Quick fundJng on the
equity In your home with pay
bock terms to meet your needs.
Cati and ask for the no hassle
second at ...
WARMINGTON
.. FI NANCIAL C6RPORATION
l lt lA AIRPORT LOOP COSTA Mf.SA. CALIFO~IA 9262t
(7 14) 540·263S
"A ~~ f.Qmltv
lielplng ~ Colltom6am"
No Minimum Balance • No Service Charges • Free Checks
*Unlimited Withdrawals• No Penalt ies
$10,000 Minimum Balance Required
Other High Paying Investor Plans Available
Minimum
Term (days) Balance Rate
14 5000 16.00
15 to 30 5000 15.50
31to89 5000 15.00
14 to 89 2500 13.00
Columbia's Investor Plan Is backed by U.S. Government,
U.S. Government Agency, and U.S. Government Guaran·
teed securities: Because the Fund Is n ot a savings
account or a deposit, It Is not Insured by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Rates are eet dally
and fixed for the term of your Plan. At maturity, you can
reinvest at prevalllng rates with Just a phone call .
COLUMBIA SAVINGS
Orange County Offices to Serve You • eo... ..... OOtMf" ..... llMl. •wtteon '"., .... ,,.,
--'
Orange Coast DAJL Y PILOTIWtdn•lday, July 29, 1981
I ,....... 111.• m .1 11.• m .z Ull ·1 UM new... .... 2 ct. YYI· l 2'.111
YYl·I 11.• ¥1·1 •t•
~ It· 3 ct. 711
VVl·I 11.111
¥1· 1 11.711
F 11 ... l11e ..... ·-11.• ··-•••• 11.• ·~= ..... u•
U.111 II.lit n.ne II.Ill
IUIO tUll
1UH .....
I ..... ...
Ull
11 ... ··= ,: ..
n.111
"·= ~t.-
Savings
losses
cliJDb ' WASHINGTON (AP)
-Savings losses at the
nation's savines and
loan assoclations
climbed to a record $5.6
bllllon last month, the
eovernment says.
For an unprecedented
fourth straight month,
America n savers
withdrew more than
they deposited in the ap· ,,. ~ •• .,._, °" corr«* wt1Q111 -otng 10 c.nlf!U•• by ~u•1e Oemoloooc• l •t>ot .. .,.,.. fi r o x i m a t e I y 4 • O 0 O Ille.. °' tM GemoloQjca hllttull of America ,_ -°" 111e ~ ...,_.. ederally insured sa v . ~IAllllANT TAllU "' ~·90 OVEllAU OEl'l H,., 59 .• , Glf!OlE l'WICKNUS·T"IN Mf.OIVM logs and l oans , the
COL.IT. HOHE·MEDIVM FlUOMSCEHCt HOHt-FAIN' l lVf OllA""4HO N•l Federal Home Loan
I ... CliefnOf\cl -,ou -to ... 11 a .,.,..,..,. -°' qooolRy Of no1 MINI ,,_ l*-llft ..... cell IOI t ....
ptlOt .... pey Al -991 °' ~1111c a-u1>a kif _._.,!otl °' ~ ~ •..-.o •"--CllM9 Bank Board reported
.. i. petd ""~ 01M1onc1 ~·'* ,_ ~ '° CNflla. -'° -• ~ this week. t '.,'U 'ERSAL DIAMOND l1~DIJ~TRIES T he bank board re-
liiiiii.,.iii2i.._.iii.......,iii....,.iii"i'i· i"-iiiiii..,ii~i~iiirw.iii-..iii~'i"i-iii-iii,,..ii, i;ti•i,...,.ii •. ini .... iiiiii~ &>Qrted savings losses in
I e
* O/o
$5000 or more • 89-Day Term
GREAT AMERICAN
MONEY FUND '~
B
B
Rate assured to maturity by ·san Diego Federal.
Your investment is backed by U.S. Government
and Federal Agency Securities ... and by more
than $~.6 billion in San Diego Federal resources,
proven safe since 1885 .
For aU cun-ent 'rates, caU your
nearest San Diego Federal office
To open your account, bring $5,000 or more into
any San Diego Federal office ... along with $100
to open your Interest Checking PLUS™ account
,· for automatic; deposit of your interest.
•Current ennuat rete, aim pie lntere at, aubJeot to , o11-... Thi• obllgatlon I~ not • ••vino• eccount or
_depoaH end la not lnau red bi the Federal Snlnt1• end
.., Loen lneura .,c• Corporetlon.
May t.otaJed $70 million,
co mpared with $4 .6
bllllon ln April and $2.1
bUUon in March.
For t h e firs t six
months or lhe year.
withdrawals exceeded
savings by $11 billion,
compared with a gain of
$2.4 billion for the same
period in 1980.
June's losses were off.
set by $6.1 billion in in·
terest that was credited
to savers' accounts.
That meant S&Ls had a
net deposit gain or $476
million last month, the
s mallest for June since
the early 1950s, the bank
board said.
Due to June·s savings
picture, savings and
loans "reduced their
mortgage commitment
and lending activity."
the bank board said.
Moreover, s&Ls "bor·
rowed heavily and re-
duced liquid assets hold·
ings to obtain funds for
mortgage lending," it
said.
The net worth of the
S& Ls dee Ii n ed $304
million in June to $30.7
billion, the bank board
said. Jn May, savings
and loans posted a re-
cord decline in net worth
-assets over liabilities
-of $399 million.
Bank board officials
d eclined immediate
comment on the report.
The savings and loan
i nd ustry , lh ~ main
so ur ce f or home
m ortgage loans, has
been buffeted by infia·
lion and high interest
rates.
Fox plans
move from
LA site
LOS ANGELES <AP)
-The new owner of 20th
Century Fox Film Corp.
is reportedly planning to
m ove th e film and
television studios from
their West Los Angeles
location, possibly to the
Santa Monica Airport
grounds.
The Los Angeles
Times reported that
Marvin Davis said be
would move th e
facilities within two
years because the cur-
rent site on Pico
Boulevard between Cen·
tury City and Rancho
Park "is awfully valua-
ble to have a studio sit·
ting on it." Davis said
Fox has discussed with
Santa Monica officials
the possibility of leasing
airport space.
Davis , a Denver
oilman, also told the
Times that Fox has en·
tered into an agreement
with Home Box Office
cable ne twork to co·
produce 20 movies that
will be shown first on
home pay TV.
Shipyard
e quipment
probe due
W ASHJNGTON (AP)
-A House Armed
Services subcommittee
wlll betln an invesuaa·
Uon next montb 1pto
what one consresamin
aaya la the deterloraUna
concllUoo of equipment
at naval 1hlpy1.rdl.
'' WU.h the srowth of the Navy about to ac·
celerate, coupled wtth
the overhaul probl•IJI•
wblc:b have been H ·
poHd, lt ls my Juds·
mnt Uaat we wOuid do
well to aplore WI mat-
t.r," Rep. G. WlWam
Wb1Mbant. R· Va., rank· lnc MPubllaa aa Ute
ReacUMla S.Mommlt· t••· told lb• , ••••••
ebalrmaa, Rep. Dan
Daatll, O.Va., ln a let·
lei'.
-------·---............. ·~., .........
Nevada gets law school
Lack of a~creditation handicap for students
RENO (AP> -Nevada'• llnt
law 1chool baa been Uceftffd by
the state Commlsalon o n
Postsecondary Education.
The Old CoUcie School of Law
plans to be&in classes Sept. 3 at
a site near downtown Reno.
Provisional llcensinC waa erant·
ed Monday on a 7·1 vote, despite
misgivings by commission
members that the college may
have been iuilty of "false ad·
vertising" ln its cataloeue.
sbould be aware that at tbe
present time graduation from
Old College . . . will not entitle
you to take the Nevada Bar ex·
amlnaUon."
CommiBSion , members said
they wer~ satisfied with the
statement.
proof ol course quality. Accord·
ing to Old Collece President
Jo'\n Leary, New CoJleee School
of Law in San Francisco bu
agreed to honor credit.I received
at the Reno 1chool.
Another problem brought up
by Anderson was the difficulty
of certifying the adequacy of the
school's courses. Anderson said
neither the Nevada Bar Associa·
lion nor the state Attorney
General's office wouJd agree to
evaluating the courses.
Both Old College and New
College were founded by Leary,
although he said they are af·
flliated only "in spirit."
Leary said he expecta .c> stu·
dents in the. Old College law pro· gram it.s first year.
Commission Chl.lrman R.
Thomas Edwards compared the
law school to a car without an
en1lne because of its lack of
American Bar Association ac-
creditation. Without ABA ap·
proval, Old College graduates
won't be eligible to take the
Nevada Bar examination and
become practicing attorneys.
Commissioners finalJy decided
to accept the transferability of
Old College law school credits as
Leary said he expects the
American Bar Association to
evaulate the law school over the
coming year. He said he is hop-
ing for accreditation by the
opening of the 1982 school year.
Old College officials said they
were confident the school would
be accredited alter its first year
of operation. The bar association
will not accredit law schools
before they open.
New York electric
bills highest in U.S.
Commission administrator
Me rlyn Anderson said the
school's catalogue doesn't make
clear that Old College isn't ac·
credited.
WASIU.NGTON <AP ) -Resi·
dents in New York City pay the
highest electric rates while St.
Louis residents enjoy the lowest
bills among the country's 2S big-
gest cities, a regulatory or·
ganization said.
Atlanta was second lowest at
4. 70 cents followed by Oklahoma
City at 4.75 centa.
Licensing by the Postsecon·
dary Education Commission al·
lows the college to conduct
classes and grant Bachelor of
Law and Juris Doctor degrees,
but does not mean the school Is
ABA accredited.
The National Association of
R eg ulatory Utility Co m ·
missioners said this week its
survey found New York City
residents paid an average of
11.67 cents per kilowatt hour
fr om D ecember 1980 to
February 1981, the survey said.
The fourth highest electric
rates were found in Boston, 9.4.5
cents per kilowatt hour, followed
by El Paso, Texas, 8.46 cents;
Philadelphia, 7. 70 cents; Pitts-
burgh, 7.16 cents; Phoenix ,
Artz.. 6.92 cents; Chicago, 6.64
cents, Baltimore, 6.46 cents.
Old College law school Dean
David Hagen, a Reno attorney,
said he thought the catalogue
made the accreditation situation
clear. He added that if a student
couldn't figure it out, "perhaps
that person doesn't belong in a
law school in the first place."
Residents in Honolulu paid the
second highest electric rates in
the country al 10.06 cents per
kilowatt hour followed by San
Diego, Calif., at 9.89 cents.
Other cities with low rates
were Cincinnati, 4.89 ceota; lo·
dianapolis , 4 .93 ce nts ;
Milwaukee, 5.16 cents; Houston,
5.20 cents; Washington, D.C.,
5.26 cents; San Jose. Calif., S.27
cents ; Denver, 5.44 cents.
But the college offered to give
an additional notice to each ap·
plicant, saying, in part: "You
By comparison, residents in
St. Louis were paying 4'.36 cents
per kilowatt hour for electricity.
T he five cities falling in the
middle were Cleveland, 6.43
cents; Kansas City, 6.33 cents;
Detroit, 6.18; Columbus, Ohio.
6.15 cents.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
-.._ Hart"'ll 26V. ,,...., HoEllf'O s ,.,. It ~MOr • »llo -
l"4> • HKllntl t ,._ 1' HwtHOs nv. ""' SvcM•r 19~ ~2'"""v. NASDAQ SUMMARY M 114 HelmlfK M't 4"' HwatPS 14~ U"' Svcmll 1 ..,.. -II,.. J211t HanrdP' 2' .... 27 Noxell V"° 11 Sl>MH _,. ,,..,. HOIOl»m 2\lo ,,.. HIKrp ' 17 111,\ Sllwmvt • , .... u Jt\4 h H-•• 12..., 12-. NvtrSy .,..... 41 Sl•r•lt• a Jtllo 22 1-. 1"' Horl11t1 ~ 4..., ~llvyM Jt\lt 32 Slllcon• 11\1'1 11"-tt..., ,~~~ ~;tl~' ~ H ... o.;~~~ ~ r,: ~~~!' ::~ l~ ,t:!:' ~AK ci:.~> .-J:9 ~=.1w
40l'l 41\lo lnfrtlnd Mio 7\ll Ott•rTP 11 llllo U.nEnr ~ JJllo stocks --•rants tlwlt ha,.. ..-""
14V. 1' Intel JA4 M PCA Int t~ l~ SwEn wl ""' 17 the moll - -IM """' MMd Oii ,. 17V. lntrcEnr 12"' 12"' Pallttl 1111. '"' Standyn ~ 4014 "'cent Of c'-91 reo-rdlns of .,.._ JIV. ,,.,. ntmtGs llA!o ·~ P<G•lt 20 10Ya StdMlcro .... 10 for T-y. 1111. 11v. 111a11w111t 1..-. ui.. p..,1 • .,P 11 11v. Stdlt•, :asv. ,. Ho M<wllln tradlne •-'2 ... 1nc1-,,..., ,,,.. twaSoUt 21V. 21"' PeylsC• 20'o'll .,... SlanH Miil ,. ..... d. Net and percent ... <'*'9n .... , .. IV. w. Jamaoy 2IM 10"' P"rMI u ,. StulSI ~ , ... difference ,.._ U. prevkion cklelne 12 1214 Jerico • 11\1' 27\lo ...,._Ent IJ UV. StrawCt 27\ll 21\.'J bid P"IO -T-y''S lasl bid prtce.
,,... 2CM J::!(,P'f S-1' Ill Pentelr 22 2214 'trtcePd 2' a v. u~ l\~.22W. ~al:t.Mpf · :v. ~ ~~~p ~~ ~ ~~~p;J It .~~ 1J: H.,... IAsl °'I
2''4 2'Yt Kalvar 2 J.1' 2 Pwttlbon Ulll lSV. Ul\Mc:Gll ,.,_. '°"" I Gllm$V ,.... : !v. 11 12 K.,...n s Ullo PlllleNat Jll'J Jl"' US E11r ' t \4 2 Zeni« U V. • Ill J J\lo Ka yum ~ PlercaSS 10\li 10.. US Sur 2Wo 2' J 5'r'f: Jiit 22Vl 14 K•llySv 4S 4S Plnkrtn '° Sl US Trek U .... IMto 4 ~•JYl:r;. 24 + JYI
,. ..., K911ff•f 22\lt U\lo PIOnHll 44 44\lo uvae11t 2f"' >6 ! Amf-1 :~ ! 1"'
lMll 2ll'f KlmNll ~ 21111 PltSllN .\') ~ ~;~:,.,., :~ a"' 7 Bllcom ~ I + 1 :;11. m: ~=81 ~ V\4 :::iJM J3 JM V•llt Mt. 60\lo I OK!d~ ~ + '-
141/t Mflt ...... v Miit 17 PrtSteyn mo. t711t VafHtl • • .. ~ ,•. -" '"' + \'t U 21'4 KrtlOI IJl4 I P 1"' 211'1 VanOus 17V. 11.,., iTS ,,._ + 1'11 u m'> Kvllcu ""', ..=c 1~ 1ti.. V•1Cro II' 1M uv.:; 1 1r:W., = : ~ ::: U.,., t=-i:;. ~ 14llt :::iri~ ~w. ~~ ~= 1~ 1;lll •> vlcc~ 2v. + 1to t'l'I• 22 1.-ca Jt ,,y, QvakrClt 15'111'\lo VeHlsll J014 zov, 14 ff, kMtl 214 + W. '°"' l~ l llnva ~ At .. nPr 1211. 12lll WtltEnr U !JV. l! ~~ n: + I ~ • .,., LtdStor ,.._ 1 ltaycltm SJ W Weldtrn 4 4\lo C: "~ • • "" IJ\lo ,,..,, llftaut JIV. 32 ltaymnd 14\1. 14"' WellGt I 27\'t 11 :~ p~ ,:~ ! l~ ~ m: ~?19r ~ l!~ ==~: :w. ~ :g::~ a = ~ ~ CmtitTrn •Ill + '-u:'1~ =8E1 ::: l! == 4; 4; ==~I T' 4:~ 21 ~-c1:' :~ ! ~
Mio N ""-'Pt ""° • Rouse 22111 22 WmorC 2.-. Ul4 H '"" + '-12'1't IN ~p 4' .... A\ISSIOY Iii'> I WlserO n ~ us Oii 2h + Ill ,_ 14\lt 1 J¥o 1"I Sedll•r Rio 4 WolwAlv ICM. '°"' ~ KearnyH 1' + 114
!"' !~ Mari!:. ~ ~ W' ~~~~ = ~ =~ m: ~ u ~== :~ : ~
IO '°"' AUlllLP JO Jl\ll StPa111 46111 46 WrlefllW ._ .-.. OOWIU 21,_ 22 May pt ~ 32 $(rlppH 11\li 7J 111H11'ta JIY> Jt !Alt Ol8 f i ~~f ~~ti~ UPS AND DOWNS~ ~I'*•· j mf ~-1 ~= ~ ~
'""' ""' M1:1'u w 11 1,,.. E 5 Cl\tnefn 2\lo -v. !!... ~ ,MMdld·~.-" 10'4 It t~ w V'OAK CAPI -Moll tell ... -·· • CornP II s 2111 -Ill --,. I S-16 l'lt ,..,-c:0<inCer 11Dckt ,._i1.c1 llV NASO. 1 AmGalRef M -,..
1W. II .-1dt•1t• JS J3\'t N•m• VOlvme lld Ask.cl Ole. I •IHlftllln 2\'t -Ill 321Ao J3.,., Mllllpr tnll 11.-OvlllOM JIZ,100 II,\ 1111 .. ... t TIMlyLb ,..., -,.,., 1"' 4 MIUVIG 1'V. 17 PltlO · · · »4,000 2 214> .. , . , 10 Std~ 614t ... 10 It Mot•• 1 ~ 4'\ll lnvtns<:p 257,100 114 2 M • ..... 11 Sopan• Jh -lll 10 20\'t MonfCtl Mio 5"' Ofnncre . 21t, IOO 22W. 22-•.••• 12 AMCA 2 -\lo
JJ\lo ~ Monv(.p 21"" 21111 T•leplct • 1t1,100 '"' 714 + \lo tJ Amen 2 -\lo ltW. ltlllt Moore Pd J1 JI,.. AmW•ll • 1~1100 I~ l ,.,. +•1' 14 N11·Md' 2 \lo
24"" 2M Mortltn ~ 4111 Tandm •· IM.200 »Iii Jt\oll -,.. u J aytrll 2"" -14 It It"" Monnin 10 ,.,._ H11<rp s.. IJT #IO 17 17\lo + ,.. Ii Hvlin9Y 4W. -Ill 4,_ S "'-'Cl.. N 2911 SlflPec:l't 1~000 l 1~ I S-1' -1-16 17 Pulh g 2._. \lo 'U! ti Mueller JI M\4 9dfdCP4 · , .. .IOO l \lo Mti ..... II Ancltl't g 2111 -\lo
lM 12"" =~ . ,•:: ~~ AdVtl>C.cl . • . . .. .. .. . . . -;: ~M:" ~ -~ •M Ml4 IU NGas 1W. tM Oecllned • ... .. •. • . .• .. •• • • . .. JI Emflrl -1 ti/It -I
IM Jl NV Alrl 1011i It Unc:llt,,...i · · · · · · · • · · • · ·.... 2. 117 J2 JetSI• 9 ~ --M .-ltlCltOG , 1414 i.-Tout •-• . . . . . .. . .. .. .. . .. . a.m u Tween e ,.,., 14
11 11\lo NICt .. I 1,_ 11.-H-ltfgM · • · · · · ......... · ·.. J3 U Mvte wt ~ V.
S ~ Hltlln A Oii eoll. ,._ ,_ .. · · · · · • • • · • · • • • • • • • • 1' U Peopltl >"---IN lM Nl•llll • 40 40\lo Taul WI• ............ "...... 1'.010,400 2' VerONI • ,.. -
2'11> IO N.C.rGI 1]14 1n.
......
Up D.S Up 21.4 Up 1'.0 Up 17.1
Up 1U Up ls.A Up tU Up 11' Up 1U
Up tLt Up 12..S Up lt.S U. 1U U. lU VP lU u, 11.I
Up lU
Up 11.J
Up 11.1 Up II.I Up IU
Up t.7 Up t.J
U9 l.S Up LJ Up U
l"ct. Off 2IU Off 22.1 Off 20.J Off IL4 Off ILJ Off ll.J Off 17.6 Off 16.7
Off IU Off 12.J Off 11.J Off II.I Oft 11.1 Off 11.1 Off IU Oft 10.S Oft ILS Oft 10.0 Oft ....
Oft 1'.0
Off u Off •• , Oft t.l
Oft Lt
Oft u Oft ...
----------
II
--·-----~
New car saJes in 1980 were the pita -
they're not much better this year. Given l;he coat
( 1 ) buying a new vehicle and (2 ) then feedma, lnt
ing and main-~
tainin1; it, mo.st \?. Americans 1n ~r o
se ar c h of ', ,
wheels end up k ~ ~
with a used car. ~ 't:u r !~~ ~a;~ llllll 111 .. RZ
maintain it, but
your initial cost ls much less.
Used car sales have always outstrippecj new c
sales but the gap today is enormous, as you can s~
by the annual census of used car sales taken
Hertz, the rent-a-car outfit owned by RCA. It's a ,
propriate, I suppose, that Hertz has be~ome t.be
semiofficial source for a lot or information abo""
automobiles, especially how much it costs. t-0 run one;
Hertz is, after all, probably the largest smgle buyett
or new cars -and it has also become the top seller o
used cars off its lots. Hertz retails about 80.000 used
cars and trucks a year. •
Hertz .Cigures that Americans bought 18.6 milllo•
used cars in 1980, spending $70.8 billion for them
Both were records, although the 18.6 million to.tat wa.
up only slightly from the 18.5 million bough~ m 19791
The dollar figure was up 6 percent. The typical use.-
car sold in 1980 was 3.23 years old and had run 32,7~
miles. The average price: $3,794.
What's striking in the Hertz analysis is the com
parison of used car sales with new car sales in 1~
Here's how that looked: ,
New car sales
... ...
Domestic models: 6,202,000
Imported models : 2,469,000
Total: 8,761,000
Used car sales
18,664,000 ::;
ln summary, used car sales last year were mor
than double the sales of new models. And they wer
mor e than triple the sales of U.S.-made automobiles.·
Even more striking is the Hertz breakdown ot
these sales into personal and non-personal use. First;
take used cars. Just about all or them are clearlf.
bought for personal use. The Hertz estimate i~ that $.
percent may have been bought by companies fol
business use. That leaves 17,731,000 used car
purchased in 1980 for personal use. .
ll 's quite a different story when you look at neyt'
car sales. Here Hertz estimates that of the 6,202,000
million U.S.-made cars sold in 1980, an incredibltj
3 892 000 were bought for non-personal use. Included, I ~ th~t total are all the fleet purchases (Hertz itself
buys about 100,000 new cars a year> and all the S8;le•'
to small companies and to individuals who are usm(
their cars for business purposes. . •.
The net is, though, that only 2,400,000 of tb«
Detroit models were bought for personal use. By co~
trast the foreign car makers sell very few of their vehi~les to businesses or rental companies. Herta
estimates that of the 2,469,000 imported cars solf
here last year, 2,056,000 were bought for personal us~
Result: When you look at the 1980 car market l•
terms of personal use -these are autom~bil.'•
bought by individuals and families -you get this pic-
ture :
1980 Sales of New Cars ror Personal Use
U.S.-made cars : 2,400,000
Foreign cars : 2,056,000
ln short when it comes lo new cars bought b
Americans for their personal use. the foreign make
are capturing 45 percent of the total business. That'
what these fi gures from Hertz are telling us. •
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORK (AP) -TM IOllOWll'll Ill! lll>Ow• t11e New YOf'k Stock Each•noe stocu end w1rrants 11\el twtve OOM up
•111 most end -t11e most t>eMd on percent of ci..noe reoerdlftS of volume !Of' TUfteleY. = .. curllleS lredlng. below $2 ••• Incl· Net end percent~ chllnQK ere tM i1nce ~ Ille previous cl~lng prl(e ...., TllHdey't price.
Ul'S ht
'4'2V. .ct;\ Vp iU 1'-+ 1V. Vp 17 J W• + Y, Vp 10.i 1sw. + 1119 Up U 10 + l!'t Up U ~....-+ 2'111 Vp .., ,..,.. + 2'111 Up I.I
12V. + 1 VO 1.7 J\4 + V. Vp l.J
ll'h + 1'111 VP 1,0 12\.\ + 1"-VP 7.t 11-.. + 114 Up 7A 2Sl4 + lllfl VP J.• 2'tll + t~ Up 7.0
..... + ·-l)p t·• t1 + I~ Up ·' oofls + I~ UP •·•
LMt CllQ ~·· WI -~ OH If" 1~ -114 .a l -i ·' ~_... ,4
11 = 2gl'i .:of IOV. -•• lh'f -•. a~-.., 1~ -~ ~.o m:= I.: J:J ,ft = Jv. f:~ .,.. -"' t r M -~ f •• 1~-1 H
GOLD COINS
HIW YOltK (AP) -Prlftt lete I ...
TINl'IMy-' .... ,.._ <......-M •Mii ... ,....,. .. ..,a, =, ... ,_..., ............. , ... ...,,,.,... • ., .... 1.tlA ....... -"""' ... ,,.., ......... "'••141· s-tu: .,...,,,.,..,_
NEW YORKCAPI FIMI OOW.Joflft •• lot' T ... se1ey, J ue. 21.
STOCKI M a.-C-
JO tnd °f:r., :r:s rn.u m . .c>-~ JH' ~~ ~B ~:~f ~:~ a '5 Slit Mt.M 170.56 JM.•1 >66.77-lndli• 1,937 Tren .. • . .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. . 1.019, Vllls • . ....• ... .. 11', '5 Slit .. , .. . . .. . . •,Ill
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( ("Pl Jul 21
TodeJi ~~~ 11'16 vnch•ll99d 0 1 Totel IUuet 117•
N..,, hltM \~ New Iowa ...,
WHAT AMEX OIO
~ NEW VORK CAP! Jul 1t
Adv•nced PeclllleCI Unc~d Tatel ltSuH NeW 11191\S New loWI
Tocius
327 209 no 1
METALS
• 1l u . ,.
NEW VORI( CAPI Spot nonl•rr-melel prlai T-y. c....-~ cent1 • pow1CI, V.S dont ... !Ions.
L.eH O cents• pound.
llM .. Y, CHlls e pound, 0.llvtred.
Tl,. t7.at'S ~It WMll c-ltt 111.
A .. ...._,,7...0cents•i;oound, N.V
SILVER
Bue to late transmlS$fo toda y's listing will no
appear In the Dally P l lot.6
GOLD QUOTATIONS
••• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29. 1981
..,,.. "' ...,.,. "' ~,.,..,......,.
......... 911 ..... ~-. .... 11 ...
1·:w.
• • • • "The GodfllW" (1t7t) ....,. lrwldo, AJ
PIO!no, ~ 111 ,,.,,.
all '°"' ()opcJola. .._. on tM -..I 111 Marlo
Pwo. All -ol"O Melloeo ...... ....,,..,. ~
.. ld)'4llo ltfnl!y .... mid
IM Mr-" ,....._._ of ftll
~ 111..it Clown ..
hie -Moome "*-'"" lt'Ol'1 ~ In "".,..,,,
WOfklngt OI OflJltllHCI
Gfime.
(%)MOYW
I •i. "A Flttful Of Dyna.-
ml It" (1t71) JIM ..
Coburn, Aod •111otr All lftill '9110krtlonery end •
Mui.n tlllllf who teMI up
tor• benka ~
w1nc1 ~ bllltl9 woe. of ""~~.
ROYAL WEDDING -Bar~ra Walters is
joined by Peter Jennings in a final re -
port on England's royal wedding tonight
at 9 on Channel 7.
..... 8 THI MOTi °' UN
Jo ie.1111 ,_ ..... It
ebolll to be ~ "'°"'
..... ~ ... 10 """ lier .. ldlool. (Iii)
"' .... MOlmWI ......
"°"" I*•• "'Thi Young In
' ~.!"!:~ =.~
c1110100 high 1011001
ll"tlk• tNndt WIUI Ille '°'*" OUtAlt end te>g91t!-., tM)' Utntl up to IN etv·
...... ~Nd I*·
~U-bodl. 'PO'
(%)MOVll
"Th• Ulllm•t• Thrlll"
(1974) Eric BtMdln, Brm
&lend.
J:IO . IOHTHSTOWN
Ho1t1: s1..,. ~d•.
Uelody ~ Vllft ~
Nlrd-JOll E.IMlf: •
tlllpplr wtlo moll• .....
t>oatt ,_ I•~ Chet Ttll
prtpar91 Cllldlan klev; Dr . w-on c:Oneetlng )llw
probllrna; Calhle Mann
"'"'' • OlleOrity photo-·~ •• "Jaaal'• Olfta" ( 1175)
• ADAM-11
WOfllen'I Ml> 11111 Ille lo.
Anoelee~-
• THINA'MW.
HWt0RY Of THI WATD
Cl.OMT
Tllll llumorou1 ml.lllc:al
rum doc:ciment1 man'•
lnOlf"oul ·"~· -Ille )'Mtt to dee! ..+!ti
human -le. (R)
.MOVll ~d. A rw'tt-do-well
..., -9 card W111p1 ~·.•;,....._en old ledy Who .,,. .:=,.ttlem. •. , •. ••'A "Black Magic" ~h ... 1 Or90tl Wlllla, Akim
of 1.oa MOMt' grand old I
llotelt; melt ~al ........ •
ll"°"'1doltllno dlllgnera. 18 'AMll. y f'EUO
IHANANA
~: Mickey <Miiey.
• HOU.YWOOO
IQUAAID
Sondr• evm.. Rod Cam-
eron. A young guotllnglng
wornlll rldM lhl range In -en of 111e d11i1en.ooe
Wllo killed ,_ llulband. • "°"" DA YI Of THE MAIN
* * * "High Pl1ln1
Drifter" ( 1113) Clint EM1·
wood, V1tna lloonl, A
nwnalMI ttrenger relllla
Ille COWtrOly reeidlntl ol I
W1111fn lown to chelllnge
Ille NlllllM gene wtllcfl '" ~-The my.terlou•
1 , ~ II prevented
, ,. from t81ng over an
... , ... ~WIU) AU.. THS ,Nl!A.Y
• , JI Wtlfl oeMbrlllng Miki .... CllOrW• lltet wedding
'1 ......... y. Iha StMcs
I'• ltld .. 8unktt• r9Caill tlll ''"-"'-* tJay .._ Miii• ~-llle(ttel\lture...,_. ,. .... , • ..._.HIU
• ...,... _. lhl ltl.lnd of
~ wlltt 111 towty wom-
t • I KCP' NEWUEAT
~I& ··~' SI. Louil llldt
' ..... a pin.a partor; Chi·
....... Girt lcou19 ~ "4th , J • ..,...,.; en .,,._ her·
' ' Wll 11'1 Vermont. CR)
I (I)·--"''•~~ I •• • , ~ 10 anfcwce en
~Ion 0tder lande 8ar-
1 • 1, ,f9t In "" dlpll'ttnenlal ~and Ille men of
l die 12'11 -'-' with "*'lno • 11111-Klle ....,.. , on tt1e run-csown t!Oiel.
·;n~ "°'"""'" ( 1070) Tim Mali-, S-Blakely.
A ~ bowler llM lo
--meny oti.tadll """" Crying lo rMCt1 lor 1111
llflblg "'-"'·'PO'
1*» I a. NlWI ..C:NlWI .
~DAY8AGAIN
• ' RIOllie l>lcolnll romanlf.. ..! _ celly ettrected io en "ok'Hlr
women.''
·I ~ M"A"l "H
Wlllle on lelve In T Gt.yo.
Henry tllCOn19I lnf1tua11d
wftll • _. young thing
.,.,.. trom the Stalll.
• ITNKTI °'&AN .... ~
A hulbend relumlng to
Sen FrW\daco lrom 1111
hOI~ oontemptat11
• murdering hie ,_ wtt..
• OYafMY
"er..IMty" Oueet.e: lyrl·
k " cl8t 8emmy Celln, Qulll·
• , mMlf Or-Ear1. (R) Q
" ., • MACNllL I LIHAEA
• 9 r flmllOlllT'
-Cl) T1C TN:. DOUGH a .mwCllWAN a.-ta: Mel Tlllla. MutY ay
~on. Or90n w ..... CD>MOYE
"My Bodyvil•d" (1979)
Clltla Mellepeeoa, Adem
Beldwln. 'Tiie ,_ kid •I a
CHANNEL LISTINGS
I ,Aee,... MUllC
AU. IH ~ f'Altll/A. y
EOltll eddl a Mnlor-dtiz..
wedding end • -of llooeymoontn to Al'CNl'1
prldou9 llelllng lrlp ~
• MACNlll / Le4MA
~ • R>lM DAYS Of THE
MA8AI
Mainlbln of Ille MUil
tribe are followed for lour
deye .. tM)' 00 ibolll thllr
dally ._ In • tllm lllot In
Ktny9 ~to the Tani.
nlan border. ~~MAGAZN! * * • "Heidi" (1"5) E.,._
Marie Singh-. Ger·
trend Mlltermayr. A llttll
SwlM girt la leken from hit
mountain hOme In Ille Alpe
~ ,_ Mml to Ille City.
CK> H80 SNEAK PMV1EW
Hu.bind-Md-wife comJc:a
J«ry sun... 1n0 Al'lne
Miera lnt1oduoe 1111 mov-
111, apeclale and aporl•
_,. oornlng to Home
8o• OIYtc. In Augutl
t.-00 8 Cl) THE lllOY Al
WEDOINO
Hlglllightl of the ....odlng
of 8rlt•'• Prince Chanel
to L..oy Diena Spencer,
wtlictl IOOll place Mrller
today 11 St. Paul'• Catt•
dral In London. wlll be P'•
Mnted.
D Q!MALPmPLE
Featured: 1 haunted
11c>u11: a wilt muaeum: the
"oMclef" -.ftch ol Salem,
Mua.: en audition tor
clfCUI Clowne (R)
• MOVIE * * * "RNip Thi Wild Wind" ( 19 .. 2) John Wayne,
Su1an Hayward An
octopua er .. 1.. trouble
for reeldenll Ol lhl Florida
Keys In the t 680a. 8 CHARLIE'S AHOE1.8
The Angela go undlrcover
In a IWlnglng ntglllclub to
nau • murderou1 ptyeho-.,_,h pteylng on lingll
women(R)
• MOVllE *•'A "AM The 8rotherl
Were Vell1111" ( 1053) Rob-
1r1 Taylor. Stewart
Granger. Two Hew Eng-
land whellng capteln9. who
are brOI,_., per1 •eve ""'*' they d1Mgr11 OllW
-chlng tor a,,_,.,
• P.M. MAGAZINE
A profile of loe> Hollyvtood
...
I •
8 KNXT 1CBS) Los Angelec, D KNBC1NBC1 Los Anqeles
• KTLA tln<l I LO!> Angeles
..
•
D KABC· TV t ABCI Los Ange1ec;
(I) i<FMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ·TV (ln<l l Los Anqe1ec;
(II) KCST tABCI San Diego
• KTIV ll'1<l 1 Los Angele'>
• KCOP· TV 1 Ind 1 Los AnqelPs
SI KCE f. TV 1 PBS1 Los Angplp<, 81> KOCE TV 1P8S) Huntonq1on Beach
Membtn of Ille MMll
tribe are follow9d lor lour
deyt u 1~ OD about tlleit
. d.ity u-In • fllm lh01 "'
Kenya clolle to lho Tenza..
nlenborcMr.
9 M.mAHDMM
8PIQN..
•• Julie And Dick In c-t
Garden" au..11: OIOlt Ven ®:.=Ae!Nt.
"Midway" ( 1176) ClllllltOn
H .. ton, Henry Fonda. Jep.
lnlM and American mlll-
latY lorCM equere olf ~ o
navel and 8«lel l>ettle can.
t1tld around • PllCl1lc
llland d1Hlng World Wtl IL
'PO'
(J)MOVll
* * * * "Thi Godtalf*"'
( 1972) Marton Btendo. AJ
Paclno Dlr1C11d by Fren-
clt Ford Coppola. 8aMCI
on the n0\191 by Marlo
. Puzo An eotno Mafloao
-lh4lblrrler1~
Ill• ldylllc family lite and
the htrtn r11tltlle of 1111
bullnlll break d-n ..
1111 tone 11.:ome lncr-
lngly lnvo!Yld In lhl vloMnt
wor111ngt ol organized
crime
0 MOVIE
"Thi Newman Sharne" A
WMltlly ••-coc> end Ill•
glf'tft1end, ..mill attempting
to IOlve a ltlend'• 8Ulc:lde.
uncover an u tort ton reek·
eot wttll c:onnecttona lo
Undergfound pornogtaplllc
movtee. 'A'
1:30. T~ STORY
Hoet1: Jim Tllomu, Mary
1:11 ~IN TOUCH ~·(i)MOYll * * • "Champion•· A
love Story" ( 1971) Joy
leOvc:, J•m11 \/lncent
McNlchol Two young peo-
ple combine their 11teting
lelenll and go alter Iha
rnlllonal pen figure ekll·
Ing Championthlp (R) II a! DW'P"AEHT
8TAOKE8
Arnokl Is buMd to a pttllll·
oully all·wtlil• aobur1>111
acllOol. (R) Q
D 9 CHAN..E8 ANO
DIANA: THf lllOY AL
WEDOINO
Peter Jennings end Barbe-
r a WllllNI repot1 on the
....odlng of Brlllln'1 Prince
C1111te1 lo lady Olet11
Spencer, wtllcll IOOll pl-
Mtillr todey at St. Peuf 1
C.thedrll In London.
• MPV GAlff'lN
Gu..t1: Mel Tlllll, Murray
l.Mlgtlon. Orton Wei ....
P9te Barbulll, Wiiiie Tyler
Ind L .. ter, Mlclllli Pan... CD THEHIOOEH
STAUOOL.E
Mentally retarded people
""'' lhllr l11llog1 and
1&ompt1•hmen11 In •
oomlllnetlon of fllrn and
panel dlaculllon, with •
roc:ua on Claueen Houae In
Celifornle and ltt unique
lducatlonll programa ~MOYll
"Sclllzokl" (1880) Klaut
l<l'*tl. Marlena Hiii. A
crazed murderer wflO u-
ICllaor• lo do a wtlll a
llM tie.I terrorizing ''*"· ~D8THIPO'IN..
WIDONa
Higllllgtlll of Ille llOlddlng
of 8rl1••1 Prince Ctl#W
IO Lady Olene Spencer,
wtlldl look ~ _..,
today a1 81. PN'• c.ti.
... In lofldqn ... be ,,,...
teni.d.
Ill: ,The .,,,.., ot llMllolal dlll-
.,., dllrupC8 ~ end
Ktyatle'• globe! l\oney-
moon. (R)
.GMAT
~
"Oueell Of The Nation"
Franll Convaree and
&telle Pareona ttar In tllla
dramellutlon Of Frllnk
O'Connor'• 9hott llory Mt
ltl tr-.no In t921 revolvlng
around a pelr ol lflall ltlaur-
oent• and the two C8P-
turld Brllllll IOldllr9 tlley
ara ordered lo QUlrd. (R)
eru.....-
"Edge Of Thi Cloud'' WW·
llam gel• to ee.t fly Ille llnll
p6arle to F ranee end Cllt'tl-
lln• 11 l)f'omoted to recec>-
llonllt at Ille hotel. (Plf1 IS)
(R)O
10: 11 CID ~ '°" THI PINNAHT
Barry T om9klnl and Tim
ll!lcCatver rec:ep dlvteioMI
baM«llll 1ttndlng1 and
Interview tome of Ille
game'• toe> p11y9ra. llf the
pl•yer•' 1lrtk1 oonll-.
an update on the elluetton
wtM 111o bl Included.!
tG-.*)·~
NITWON<NeWS
~MCMI * • * "Tiie Vc><1ng In
Hearl" ( 1136) Oouglu
Fairbank• Jr , Peulltta
Goddard A ne'1t-do-W9ll
lamlly ol card 111arp1
charm• en Old 1.oy wflO
relorm1 lllem.
11:00BD8C1>9CBJ
HEWS
• lllOY Al WIDOINQ
l«IHUOHTI
Hll f'lallman llolll a wrap.
up ol lhl deys ftWlt• eur-
roundlng Prince ~ar111·
WlddlnQ.
I =..xYWB>cw.
"Kiiijoy" A wealthy bull-
n111m1n m1k11 a n
allempt on Mllnnill'I Ille.
but .w-10 name the
men wtlo forC.O him lo do
It.
., IEHH'VHIU.
Benny Ollebr1111 1111 04111
birthday In • llOIC>ltll tor·
rounded by l>Hulflul nur-.
• OO<CAVETT
au.ta: Trll!Ot H-d,
c.tla Jotlneon. (R> CD WONJ> CHAOHICUI
®MOVIE
"Smokev And Tiie 8andl1
II" ( 1060) Bun Reynoldt,
Jlcltll GIMaon Slle(lff
Eame strikes new co-star
By jERRY BUCK .,., .............
LOS ANGELES -The first time Ted
KeOinley appealed on television he had a non-
spe•king role as Jack Albertson's jontng partner
in "Valentine."
.:, ,The next time, he made a quantutn leap to a
~I role in the ABC comedy series "Happy
De,ftl." McGinley, who's only 23 and a recent
,,..._le ol the University of Southern California, '4 ,uu on Cloud Nine.
. if cGinley. a handsome, blond ath.lete, plays
llluletbaU C9&Cb Roger Phillips, the nephew of
•ar1on Cunrilncham. Essentially, however, he's
'Ute new Richie Cunningham. the clean-cut,
wliloteeome, All-American kid played by Ron
~.ard until be left the 1bow at the end of last
• ~TIYt'• the role," he said. ''but don'\ expect
. ;.:to play It e.xactiy like Ron Howard . My • act.er ii very brlaht but he needs more street
...... JU1t like Riehle. But atlll, f'm not the aame
ad.er Ron WU,"
1 eGlnley wu auppoud to work on the ~r79
• ''VaJentlne" for only two days. "They kept
one mcWe day,'' be nld. "I ended up t*.na
ftfth hlCbett·pald penon ln the rum. I bad
lldt fun ddn• It -t.bat'a when I <*lded to
m ect«.
I Md dloqbt ol 1ctlaC Wbea I wu a cblJd.
a I u.ouOt of beiq • bueball pla,yer. 111
IJ felt lt would be awfull7 bard to 1et Sato the .a.a rou knew 101nebody. eo l put It out
liliad." the meantime, be bad beC!Olne 1 model and ,
bis picture was spotted in a copy of Gentlemen's
Quarterly by casting director Hank McCann.
McGinJey said, "He said if this guy can act as
good as he looks he'll be great. So this huge ham-
mer came down on my head. It was like It wasn't
real to me." ,
So McOinley dutifully enrolled in a.ding class,
s upporting himself by a lucrative modeling career
that took him around the world. He also traveled a
lot in his attempt to gel on the 1984 Olympic waler
polo team.
"l el\joyed water polo," he said. "I loved the
physical contact. It's a rough aport, like playing
hockey in water. My goal w.., the Olympics. I '1'a9
on the U.S. JunJor National Team, wbJch 11 the
feeder team ror tbe U.S. Natlonal Team. Which la
the Olympic team lo Olympic yean.
I waa playin1 all over Europe. When I Sol into
modeling I started endoratnc product.I. So I was
deemed a profeaalonal alhJet. and that waa the
end of my water polo career.''
He found It a little dlfltcult on the 1et at first.
"J waa the new kid on the block," be aald. ''Tbey'd
all been tocether for elaht yean. Every da1 Remy
Winkler took me uide and ..,..ked oa my lln ... He
said Ronny Howard would do lbe Hm• f« b.lm
when the tho. flrtt 1tart.itd.
"l CCIOlldes' myself very aew aad uot rud1 to
be thrown Into~ thlnp Jet. What I'd like ii
tnothef year ol 'Hapn DQt' to k .. p learnln1. I
hope the leamm• ne•er it.ope.•• :
ff• alto struck up a lrtmdlblp with kott Balo. wbo haa now become h1a ....war laudMU com-
panion1 He aaJd, "We dldn•t bft It oil al ftnt l wu new. m_,be lnvadlnt tllt apue. ·•
McClJlley 1NW •P ln N9W1*1 Btacb and ' ~
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS a 8:00 -"The Royal Wed·
dln1. 11 HJjhJJ1ht1 of the ceremonies for
Brllaln'1 Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.
ABC 8 9:00 -"Charles and Diana:
The Royil Wedding." Peter Jennings
and Barbara Walters report on the wed-
dlna.
NBC 8 10:00 -"The Royal Wed-
ding." Hlglill1hts of the British wedding.
KCET QI 10 :00 -"Great
Performances: Guests of the Nation." A
dramaUzaUon of a Frank O'Conner
1tory aet in Ireland and starring Frank
Converse and Estelle Parsons.
lwford T. Jutttoe 0111e In
1111 two ..._,.,, l>rotfw• 10
elotl • r9ltred l>oOt"'VOll'.
th9 len4tt, from Ir~-
~= tlOC>tllnt. 'PO'
"He KnoM You're Atone"
(1NO) Oon Scardino. Celt·
tin O'Heon.y. A peycnotte
murderer ltellt1 1111eottw
young ~lo-bl, llllent-
ly end letllolly ~
their ~ of wedded .,......,..
11:11 .MCMI
"0--Trtcll Pony" (tteo)
PIUI Simon. 8lelr Brown. A
once-90C)Ullr perlormer I•
1)(-rld by l\leryOnl
around him lo drop 1111
ttyte ol muflc end writ•
90f'G8 lhlt Gari bring him
t>ecll lo Ille lop 40. 'R'
11:IO (%) "r' MAOAZIHI Of
THIAIR
11:IO. (J) MCM1 * * * "Four F11tller1" ( f 177) ._, 8tldget.. Rot>-
., Pow.II. A 8r1tJlfl IOldllr
In Ille 1 IOOa It labe6ed a
oowwd 111 Illa ~ao..
and .... '-1. (R)
8 8TONIGHT
Ho .. I: Johnny Carton.
Gue•tt: Rol>ttl Klein, I
JoMny Mlllllt.
e a AllC NIWI
NICIHTUHI
I Llrl t.IAK&A o.AL
8TANUY..all.. ·~AllC NIWI
(%)MCMI
"Xanedu" ( 1980) Ollvla
Newton..Jofln. Gene Kelly
A young artlet. a hwllenly
muee and a Mnllmental
rnlltionelf9 join toroee lo
open up a huge roller·
dlaeo '*-· 'PO'
~MDIOHT-
1~• MOYie * • 'h "Tiie Wedding
Nlghl" (1935) Gary Coo-
per, Anna Sten. A bric»-
lo-bl ~Iona lier love
tor lier ti..-wMfl lhl
,,_., • ,_ men.
•9 LOVl90AT
"Compllerman" Frankie
Avalon, Cerote Ila White:
"Plr'llZ \/OUI" Barbi Ben·
ton. Jamie Farr; "Merno-
rlll Of You" Petty Ouk•
Allln, Rick Nelton. CR)
G CIUNIMOKI
The '"'°"'" of Dodge are 11unnld wtien Matt 11118
hi can no lor'O" kllP lew
and order and lume In hi.
l>ldgl .......
~
Jim PMlpe 1111 lllmeelf Ill
lr8mld for murder in a plOt
lo dlletldlt I acllnllll .
(Part 21
• BAMTTA
A neighborhood kid wll·
-•murder end Tony
rnual find 111m before the
murdet'1tdoll
~MOYie
"Tiie Tenanl" ( 1077)
Aotnan Polll\lkl, IMl>llle
Adjlnl. A men rentt en
~ment wtllre • Pf'evl·
out tenenl commtt1eo ao1-
c:lde and ~ Pit'•·
nold about 1111 nelgllbor1.
'R'
CD>MOVll
"AN Thet Jan" (1179) Aoy
SctlelOer. .i.alce Lange
Tiie tumultuou1 Nie ol a
proflMlonll dancer le IOI·
lowed rrom ~ on lhl
llege to P«tonli er1-
'R'
tt:IO D a! TOMOMOW
Clullll. lllmmaker Roget
Corman; Wlllllnglon Po.I
columnltl M•xlne
CllHl'llre; The Allman
Brother• B•nd.
12:4IS CID MOVte
"The Godlat'-" I 1972)
Marton 8tando, Al Paclno
8uad on Ille novel by 1 Marlo Puzo An aging
MaflOIO -the blrrler1
be(-Ill• ldytllC llmily
1119 and the hlrell , .... , ...
Of 1111 ~ br..it down
H 1111 1on1 become
lncrMllngly Involved In the
Ylolent working• of orge-
nlzed crime 'R'
12'.11 D MOVIE
"Thi Hewm111 Shame" A
-ithy IJl<Op llld hit
glfltrlend, wtllle anempllng
to lolve I lrtend'a IUlclde,
uncover en extortion rack-
•I wllll connectlon1 10
underground pornographic
movlll -~·
1:00D NYCHIC
~
"Simon'• Soul" Holl
Demien Simpton Gueats:
Barry Tall. Pll D. Slanley
Shapiro
ID MOVll! * * ~ "Klu The Glrl1 ,.nd
MM!e Thim Ole" (1067)
MlehMI Conr>0r1. Dorothy
Provine A acllnlltl dleGov·
era a wey 10 m ...... t.,1112•
men and ..... hit Idea to
,,.,.~
• INOEPEHDEHT
HETWOMNEWI
{l)MOVIE
"lune" 11171) JMI Clay.
burgh, Mattll-Barry
Guilt epure 111 Amertcen
DPll'• elnger'a unortllodo•
lllractlon to lier 1-..ege.
heroin addict eon 'R'
1:108 MOVIE
***"Show Boel" (10~t)
Kathryn Grly90n. H-•rd
KMI Slngen and dencetl
enlartaln on • tllOwboel u
It trevel1 up and down Ille
Mlllllalppl ~
9 HEWS
1:11S(}) MOVIE
"Tiie l1l1nd" ( 1980)
MICllHI C•lne . David
Warner. White lnve1tlg1t-
lng a run ol tlllp dl .. P·
pearanCM In the B«mvd•
Trlangle. • Journali1t 1lum-
blel IC1'0U an llOletld.
400-year-old colony of
olr•t• 'R'
1:aoe MOVIE
**•'A "L°"IJ Dey'• Jour-
_., Into Hight'' I 10621
JOHN DARLING
LISTEN , FELLAS! 1
W/16 .JUST J™ING
WHEN 'l SAID ALL OF TH05E NA6iY
THINGS ABOUT 'VOtJ
IN MY SA:)R'T5CA&T5!
WHAT 00 YOU SAY,
GUY51 SHOULD WE
GIVE ~IM A 0REAk f
Ted McGinlt,. new fact on ''HQf1f1SI DoN•"
hope• to ftnd a home at Malibu. "I dotl't want to
leave «he beach," be 11td. "WMn I wu a kkt l had
aueh rifOfOUI workouts from water polo that I
didn't set to surf much. l wu atwaya workln1 out
wbn everyone•• wu aurflnc . Now I can.'·
ic.1N1N ~. JMafl ~ ..... Oft tht •111~0· ..... 1.
llmlly 9llOOl#llll'I WIO!lal
pro1>llm1 wtlh eioollol,
nar001tc:e, lu!Nt~ and
deprlMlon
tl40e H1W1
,,.. • MO-.e> ... ' Wiii
Ullle Ern It teughl IN
t9e11 Of 1111, t!ttc Mooe tor t.-oO.,, 8 HIWI
2:10. MONCAMM a WIN
Tiie f'rtndl f'or.lgn legion
l>ecomet "Legion ol the
La.t" once Enc and Ernie
lnlill.
l:IO!.:..~L
"&dlaokl" ( fleo) l(t.111
KlnMI, M811ena HIM A
era.cl mut<llter whO -ldalort to Oo -ey with 1 -II• ol divorced or
unNlpc>My marrteo women
~· a letter lo en ldvk»
OOiul'Mlet alter MCtl kll-lng .. ,..
2:168 MOVIE * * ~ "Tiie F1m1le
ln1t1nct" ( 11172) Helen
Hayw, P11Ulett1 Goddard.
Allllougll well-maanlng
11\d retourceful, the elder·
ly Snoop Slltera become a
10urce of Irritation and
111noyenoe to lllelr defec-
tive ,._ wn.... lhly
meddle In Ill• CllM
• NEWS
2:40 8 MOVIE * * ''The MMQuerldlr" ( 1933) Ronald Colman.
Ellua Lindi. Tiie jOUrnallet
cou1ln ol a drug·lddlcted
man le ~toldld to m ....
Que<ldl 111111 cou•ln dur-
ing 11141 m1n'1 b<llkdown
2:66 ID MOW!
• •'h "JeCkHI Mall"
(1942) Well-8-y, Mtr-
jotle Main An llClpM
from a lynch mob becomM
• '-o by ptl\l9flhng a
rObb«y
a:00 e NEWS 3:11S8 NEWS
(%)MOVIE
"Tiie Ultlmlle Thrill"
( 1974) Eric Breeden, Brill
Ek lend.
3:30 Cl) MOVIE
"More American Graffiti"
( 1979) Ron H-lld. Paul
le Mat Alter grldueoon. •
group ol high ecllool
friend• Hperlence lhl
chaltengll ol ldulthOOd In
lhl llOdal uphuvel ol the
1IMIO& 'PG
4:00 9 GENE AUTAY
"Thi Black Rider'' ~MOVIE
"1(111 Of Be Kiiied" ( 19801
Joaeph Ryan, Cllarlolle
Mlcll1t11. Two uvege
equad• ol 1411• karate
cll1mplon1 cleell lor revenoe 111<1 torvlval 'PG'
4:30 8 VOYAGE TO THE
BOTTOM CW TH£ SEA
"Mutiny"
4:40ID MOVIE * 'h "Thi Phantom Of
42nd Slreet" ( 19'5) DeYe
O'Btlln, Kay Aldrlcll A
tllNlll' In New York City
t>ecom11 the ecerM ot •
horrible murd«
T hursdat1••
Dat1f i•e ,tfot·ie •
-MORNl«i-
IS;15 (%) * *'h "A Fistful 01
Oyn1mll1" ( 1972) J11n11
Coburn, Rod Steiger A11
lrllh reYOk.ltlonary llld •
Me.lltcan tllllf ""'°team up
to rob bank• tomlhow
wind up blH'Q herOll ol
the M11tc.n revolution
... '
.. ! "C>eidmln'• ,..... •• 'Cl' 1110 ......... f991" ltlllNft
\Wit. A ,.,,._.., ll"owtl
of OOU""Y Ohllll>erl
~. OOtoeow -member wllo ollorg11
"""' I.tel '°' llw c:Mmplor'.-llllt> 'PO' .. ()) • * • "TWO W..U 111
Another To-" ( t"2) Klrtl
Doug!M. E0w1tcf 0 Rob-
in.on A mleguldld IC\Ot
find• llappl-In an
..... ,.,,, producer'• job.
10;00 (J) "MOt'I Amerlc#I Oral·
1111" ( 1171) Aon Howetd,
Paul le Mii, Atter gredlie·
11on, a oroup o1 111g11 ecnoo1
friend• ••~lenoe lhl
Cllllllngll of ldultllOOd In
I the IOOlal ~vel Of Ille
1eeot 'PO'
10-.ao CC> "A Foroe Of OM"
( 1170) ChuCk Nofr... Jen-
nlflt O'Neill A mMlll' of
IN mertlll arte embetka
on • ,._..mottvated
-Oh IOI' Iha k...,.. ol hie
adopted_, 'PO' '1:00. * * "No Hold• B•nld" 11152) 8ow.ry
Boyl, Marjorie R9ynoid•
One ol Ille Boyt dlecoveft
hi 1111 an amllZlng aptf..
tu41 lor bOxlng.
t 1:30 0 * * "e.yo.,o A ..._. aonabll Ooubl" ( 1068)
Dana Andtewa, Joen Fon-
taine A nc>Yllltt and a
n1w1p1per publltller
attamc>t 10 dlaprove lhl
ec:curecy of ctrc:umeleollll
eYldel>ol
-AFTERHOON-
12:00 •• * ... "Coufege o;-
l.aale" ( 1941S) Ellubelll
Taylor, Frank Morgen A
girl'• pll coltll, trained 10
klH In 1111 Army. rnual bl
con\llt1ed back lo Iha
•tfectlon•le pup elle hid
known llld loV.O • * * ,_. "FIYe W11h In
A B .. toon .. ( 1982) Red Bui·
1on1. Ftblen. QI--. Vtcto-
rta cornmllllona • Sco4tllll
l>alloonlet to dlllm Pl'1 ol
Alrla for England by
planting the Brt11eh !leg
there
CC) * * 'h "Thi Or-nlng
Pool" ( 1976) Paul New·
m111. Joanne Woodward. A
prlv•t• in1111ttoetor 11 hired
by a -llllly Southern oil
heir-to dllcover the
ldentlly 01 the eulhor 01 an
lncrtmln.llng letter
1:30 (!) * * * "Two Wlllta In
Another Town" (19821 KJrl<
Oouglu, Edward G Aob-
lneon A ~ ec1or
find• llapplne.t in an
uelllllll produc:9r'. job
2:00 ~"Swim Teem" Slephln
Furat A pampered group
ot country clubbere
acquire 1 gorgeoue ,_
member who cll1rg11
them up tor the cll1mpoon-
lllip 'PG'
0 * • * "1<11 Carton"
( 1940) Jon H•ll, Oarni
Andr-A bold ~
protecll • C•lllornl•·
l>Ound wegon train trom
lndlen ralO...
S:OO QI) * * * ''W'-• Atlgelt
Go. Trouble Follow•"
( 1068) Stella Steven•.
RoMllnd RulMll Trouble
lbounO• wtlen lour nun•
lake• bullold of lludlnl1
Cf Ole-country
3:30D ••"A "Clltno"11013)
Ch.,.._ 8roneon. Vif'IC*'ll
Van Patten A •-·•
boy blfr*'<11. hell-breed
8nd 1191p1 Nm to run hit
hofw rMOll In Hew ..._..
co.
"Oeedmen'• Float" '0 '
4.00 g "WhOlly Moe.I"
I 1080) Dudle y Moore.
Laraine Newman In blbN-
cal Egypt, • lelM prC>Pftlt
named H«Kllel .. .,...
drop• on • divine conver-
.. uon 'lllrftll ..._ anc:t
decidel hi mu•t bl the
one to IMO Ille people out
ol elavery 'PG'
• IS.-00 CID "Bon voyage, er..,....
Brown" ( 1170) Animated
Snoopy and Woodelodt
IOllow exc:llangl lludenl1
Charlie Btown. P191>1'rnlnl
Petty. llnul and Mardi on
en '°"9ntur•Med tour ol
England eno France 'G'
by Armstrong & Batiuk
CBS leads race
NEW YORK IAP> -The 1982-83 prime-lime
season ls months away. but CBS h.as been No. 1 in
the weekly prime-lime ratings competition for 10
weeks in a row and appears to be building a head
of steam.
CBS won the three-way race for the week end·
Ing July 26 with an average rating of 15.9 -the
highest for any network since the seven-day period
ending May 24.
ABC was runner-up at 12.7, a 5.5.
CBS did it with the seven highest-rated shows,
including its broadcast of the Mlss Universe
Pageant in first place, and eight of the Top 10.
ABC's "20·20," ln eighth place, was lbe only
other proiram among the 10 top-rated that bad not
been broadcast before.
In fact, only nine of the 65 ahowa surveyed by
the A.C. Nielsen Co. were first-run p?Olf•m.1. or
lbe ori1inat procrama, ABC's "lt'a a Llvtn1" wu
tied few 21st, and an NBC special. "Greatest
Heroes of the Blble." was No. 40.
The raUn1 IOT CBS' Mtu Unlvene Pace&ftt
pro1ram wu 2$.4. Nielsen aaya that means more
lhan a qusrter of the country'• TV-equipped homes
aaw at ltaat part or the show.
ABC and NBC each had two of the week's ftve
tow•t·rated abowa. "The Waltont" on CBS WH
No. I followed by an "ABC Newa Cloteup" caJled
''Kitty; Return to Au1cbwlt1," ''8.J . and the
Bear•• on NBC. NBC'• ''Gama P.ople Play" and
'"Thoee Amallq Anim.a.la" on ABC.
-"-'
-·· ····~·~····· ······~····
DailjPilat
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
SPECIAL DIETS
USING HERBS
SLIM GOURMET
cs
C9
C11
Homemade Peach and
Plum Jam adds to eating
enjoyment all year
through ... C7
.~
Easy eating with pork and beans
Zesty side dish can be served hot or
cold and doubles as topping for grille
hamburgers and hot dogs.
Looking for nutritious summer
dishes that are easy to prepare?
Canned pork and beans is the
right food for outdoor eating,
whether s ummer activities
center around the backyard
barbecue grill or a picnic
basket.
They're economical, easy to
serve and take just minutes to
prepare.
Here are two dishe~ which can
be served hot or c~ld. to suit
whatever summer a tivities you
plan to purs ue . P p up your
canned pork and , beans with
Easy Barbecue Baked Beans.
Simply add green peppers,
onions. brown sugar and season·
ings to pork and beans. This zes·
ty side dish aJso serves as a top-
ping for grilled hamburgers and
hotdogs.
Or treat yourself to Anytime
Bean Loaf, a dish with round·
the-clock versatility. Combine
ground beef, pork and beans,
stuffing m ix and eggs with
savory herbs. Michigan navy
beans -the beans used in most
canned pork and beans extend
the meat protein in this dish to
make it nutritious yet cost-
saving.
Serve Anytime Bean Loaf with
coles law. another s ummer
favorite whi ch makes a n ex -
cellent side dish.
EASY BARBECUE BAKED
BEANS
4 slices bacon
lf.i cup onion rings
1/4 cup chopped green pepper
1 can· c 16-ounces > pork and
beans in tomato sauce
l 'h teaspoons light brown
sugar
crumble. Pour off all but l
tablespoon fat. Add onion and
g reen pepper. Sau le until
tender, about 5 minutes. Add
pork and beans, sugar, mustard
1tnd bacon. Cook over low heal
until heated through. Makes 4
servings.
ANYTIME BEAN LOAF
1 pound ground beef
2 cans ( 16-ounces each) pork
and beans in tomato sauce
2 cups herb-seasoned stuf·
fing mix
2 eggs, beaten
'h cup chopped onion
112 cu)> chili sauce
1 tablespoon dijon-style
mustard
1h teaspoon thyme
1 2 teaspoon oregano
1 :i teaspoon salt
In a skille t. brown meal;
drain. Combine meat, beans,
stuffing mix, eggs, onion, chili
sauce. mustard, thyme, oregano
and salt; mix well. Pack lightly
into a greased 9 x 5-inch loaf
pan. Bake in a 350-degree oven
for 75 minutes . Let stand 5
minutes before removing from
pan. Serve warm or cold. Makes
8 ser vings.
BEAN SLAW
14 cup sour cream
2 teaspoons grated onion
l tabl espoon red wi ne
vinegar
1 • teaspoon sugar
2 cups shredded cabbage
13 cup shredded carrot
1.~ cup chopped green pepper
I can (16·ounces) pork and
beans in tomato sauce, drained
1 teaspoon yellow mustard
In a medium s killet, cook
bacon until crisp. Drain and
In a large bowl. mix together
sour cream, onion, vinegar and
sugar. Add cabbage, carrot and
green pepper; toss well. Add
beans and toss -lightly. Chill at
least one hour before serving. Pep up pork and beans witn green peppers , onions, brown sugar and seasonings for Easy Barbecue Baked Beans.
Combine eggplant. onion. tomatoes. green pepper.
zucchini. spices and puff pastry to make delicious
Doggies·in-th e-Window.
Hot dogs go with vegetables,' eggs ·-
Nutritious vegetables aod
slices of wholesome bot dogs are
ideal go-tog ethers for f reating the puffed pastry entree, Dog·
gies· in·the-Window.
The National Hot Dog &
Sausage Council in Chicago sug-
gests giving fresh garden or
farmstand veggies a ratatouille
seasoning that's sure to add in·
terest and appetite appeal to this
unique and economical dish.
DOGGIES·IN·THE·WI NDOW
1/4 cup olive or vegetable oil
l smaJl eggplant, cut in 'h·
inch cubes (about 34 pound)
1 medium onioni sli~ed
l (17-ounce) package frozen
puff pastry
2 medium tomatoes.
chopped
1 3mall green pepper, chopped
1 s mall zucchini. sliced
1 teaspoon seasoned salt
'4 teaspoon garlic powder
1 pound wieners. cut
lengthwise into quarters
In large skillet heal oil. Stir in
eggplant and onion. Cook over
medium heat, sllning frequent·
ly, for 15 minutes. Meanwhile
set out pastry lo thaw as direct·
ed on package. Add tomatoes.
green pepper, zucchini ,
seasoned salt and garlic powder
to eggplant mixture; stir to mix
well. Cover; cook 10 minutes,
sti rring occasionally . If
necessary cook and stir over
high heal to reduce any remain·
ing liquid. Vegetable mixture
should be moist but not have
runny liquid.
Unfold pastry. Place each
sheet on lightly greased baking
sheet. Place 2 cul wieners (8
strips) down center of each
sheet. Spoon half (approximate·
ly 1 v. cups) vegetable mixture
over wieners on each sheet.
Do not spread out the vegeta·
ble mixture.
To~ach with half the remain·
·1ng wiener strips. For each sheet
of pastry with filling : brush
edges of pastry with water. CUt
pastry on an angle on each side
of filling into o/.i·inch strips.
Then fold strips over filling,
alternating 1 strip from each
aide. Pinch ends to seaJ'. Bake at
375 degrees far 30 to 40 minutes,
until golden. cut into thick slices
to serve. Makes 8 servings.
NOTE: all zucchini or all
eggplant (about l pound> can be
used in the vegetable mixture.
For Individual Servings: Cut
each pastry sheet into quarters .
Roll out on li ghtly floured sur·
race to increase size by 1 inch in
each direction. Place 2 wiener
strips in center of each pastry
piece . Top with about lh cup
vegetable mixture, then 2 or 3
additional wiener strips. Fold
edges of pas try over filling
(edges may not meet in center).
Pinch ends and corners to seal.
Place on lightly greased baking
sheets. Bake at 375 degrees for
about 20 minutes until golden.
SCRAMBLED DOG
1 hot dog
2eggs
2 tablespoons milk
1 tablespoon shredded Ched·
dar cheese
11. teaspoon saJt
Dash pepper
1 tablespoon butter
Cut. hot dog into slices or little
p ieces Break eggs into a
measuring cup or small bowl
Add milk. cheese, salt and peJJf
per a nd mix with a fork until alt
mixed up. Stir in cut-up hot dog'1
Put an 8 or lO·inch skilJet on the
burner and turn heat to medium.
Put the butter in the 1kinet and
push it around with a pancake
turner as it melts so the bottom
of the skillet gets all covered.
When the butter is bubbly, pour
in the egg mixture. When you
see that the egg at the edge or
the pan Is starting lo set, genUJ
pus h a pancake turner across
the bottom of pan. Let eggs cook
a little more. then push the
turner across the pan again.
This pushes the cooked egg off
the pan and lets the uncooked
egg get to the hot part of the
pan Keep cooking and pushing
until the eggs are thick, but still
shiny-looking. then take skillet
off burner. The eggs will keep on
cooking for a minute or two
after you take them off the heal.
Put eggs on a plate and serve.
Makes 1 or 2 servings.
Ready -to-eat Amer ican hot dog has w orldw ide reputatio n
More than 80 years ago car·
toonlst Tad Dorgan coined the
·word "hot dog." Today, this
American specialty is eaten
around the world and has been
selected as a menu item on
space shutUe flights.
HILO HULA HOT DOGS
1 pound wieners
~ (8-ounce) container ched·
dar cheese spread
4 or 5 slices summer
sausage or soil salami
l (15·to·l 7 ounce) can
pineapple slices
Water
2 teaspoons <dry) lnstant
· minced onion
2 teaspoons prepared
mustard
1 teaspoon horseradish
Slit each wlener lenstliwile.
FUI e.th wtt.h approldmately 1 ~ ,
tablespoons cheese spread. Cut
summer 1auaaae slices in halt.
Place l hall slice at an _,.e .
over cheese in eaeb wiener.
Drain pineapple, re1ervln1
Juice. CUt t'ach pineapple 1Uee
on 1 side. Wrap a pineapple allee
over summer 1auta1e on each
wlenerj aeeare with wooden
plckl. Combine reeerved plneap.
pie Juice with enoun water to
make ~ cup liquid. In small
aaucepa l'OIDbiM meuW'td U·
quid wltb lmtant mJDced aakm,
muatard md boneradilh. Brina
to I boll. a.duff beat; CO¥S
1nd 11mmer 1auee a miau&el.
II eanwbU11 . ~roll or drill
wl1nen 1 lneMI from beat UDUI
cheese begins to bubble, about 5
'llinutes. Drizzle about 1 table·
spoon sauce over each wiener
just before serving. Makes 4 or S
servings.
RIO GRANDE FRANKS
1 medium avocado, diced
2 teupoons lemon juice
1 (8·ounce) can tomato
sauce or puree
1 cup beer or tomato juice
1 medium onion, chopped
1 to l ~ teaspoons chili
powder
l cup shredded hot pepper
cheese (4 ounces>
1 pound wieners, slashed
4 or 5 (8·or-8·inch> flour
tortUlu
Sour cream
In small bowl toss avodado
with lemon juice. Set ulde. In
5·quart pot combine tomato
sauce, beer, onion a.-d chill
powder. Brin1 to boilln1.
Reduce beat and stir la cheele.
Cook and aUr over low heat until
cheese melts. Cover aau~ end keep warm. Broll or 1rlll
wieners $ lncbel from bat for
about 5 minutet or unUl ol de·
•ired doneneu. Place 2 wlenen
on each tortilla. Spoon on aauce,
ualng about YI cup for each Ml"V-
lng. Top with 9°'11' crdm and
IVOCldo. Makel' or 1J ~.
O&IBNT EXP&-FaANU
2 tabl•poona HMm• .....
I t.._puom v•tabM '61
l ~ to I caps edible pod peu•
1 ~ tUNd celery
'
'h cup sliced onion
lf.i cup thinly sliced green
pepper
2 tablespoons brown sugar
2 tablespoons teriyaki sauce
2 tablespoons white vinegar
'h teaspoon garlic sail
1 pound wieners, slashed
diagonally
l cup water
4 teaspoons cornstarch
1 medium tomato, cut intt•
thin wedges
"'11 cup thinly sliced ]iacama
or sunchokes or bamboo shoots
•use 1 (6-0unce) package
frozen snow peas, thawed, or
about 8 ounces fresh snow peas
or sugar peas.
In 10-incb skillet or wok heal
sesame seed and oil. Add pea
POds, celery and onion ; sUr fry
lor 1 minute. Stir in green pep-
per, brown sugar, terlyaki
sauce, vineaar and tarllc salt.
Mix well, push ve1etabln to
aides of skillet. Add wieners and ~ cup of the w1ter. Quickly
brin1 to boUlng. .Stir remainin1
water into corn.starch in small
cup lo make a amooth paate. Stir
taste lnlo skillet. Cook and stir
uat until thickened. Reduce
eat to barely almmertnc. Add
tomalo and jlacama. Co•er.
Cook s mlnutet. Serve over crllp
cbow meln noocUea or curly
Oriental noodles, lf dealred.
Mak• I aervtn11.
P&ANU.IN·'l'llS•&LL a teupoons wt a tabl•pOCmt veptable oU
1 (&-oullce) pack.at• 2·lnch
pasta shells (approximately 30
shells>
l c 32-ounce) jar spaghetti
sauce (approximately 3 cups)
2 C 4-ounce) containers onion·
herb creamy cheese or 1 (8·
ounce> container French onion
dip
3 (4·ounce) packages
cocktail franks or 1 pound
wieners cut in lhlrds
l CS-inch> zucchini, diced
1/4 cup grated Parmesan
cheese
In S·quart kelUe bring 3 quarts
water, saJt and l tablespoon oil
to a boiJ . Add pas la shells. Whe¢
water returns to boliing, coolL 'f
minutes. stirrina occasionally to
prevent slicking. Drain sb~
and rinse quickly in cool runnin~
water. Draln well.
Brusb some or reraatnlna oU
over a piece of aluminum Oill
about 17 x 13 lnchea. Set ui-'
Brush remalnlna oil over bott.Ql!f
or shallow 3 quart cua~
&pre ad about l ~ tabJapooOI
creamy cheese lnalde eacb puii
shell, belna care(uJ not. to ....
the shell. Place 2 cockt~l fr
or 1 piece ol wiener ln each
and preaa lo close. Arra
shells in cauerole. Spr\akle
chlnl over sbella. Pour rem
lna sauce over top, Spnalde
Parmesan. Cover wltla tbe
oiled alde dowa. Bau at
de1re.. for 1$ mln.qtff.
IHCI ,, bubbly and IUCC
tender. Serve wltb addl
Parmesan. tr dfflred. lhll•''
tot aervlnp. •· ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, July 29, 1981
'67egetable patties different
(';he transformation of ~ .aeeds into ve1etables is
~little abort of ~ miraculous. Once you've J harvested your own
crop, it's Ume to work a
few miracles of your
own tn the kitc hen.
Some vegetables -zuc-
chini, for example -
seem to crop up so abun·
antly, it can be a real
allenge to serve them
new and exciting
Garden Vegetable
Cakes ca~ provide
~elcome variety. I ,ways.
limllar to potato pan·
cake• (latkee), these
maln-disb patties can be
ade with carrots,
potatoes or other
~ v'aetables that are firm '·enoulb tt> arat.e.. as well. ~ S e r v e , 1 h • m Io r ~ breaktut, brunch, lunch
.I or· dinner with a ~Uop
of mayonnaise, sour
cre'm or epplesauce.
Crumbled bacon and
Smalt> aUces are also
ce fin11hin1 touches.
ade balf-aise, they're a
unique apPetUer.
GARDEN
VEGETABLE CAKES
IJlfa cup grated
Parmesan ch~se s_ 'Ai cup all-purpose
!'\Our
l Appeli~er
( . ~sauce is
~· . j enappy
'.• ~ '( Summer enterta1mng
~ offers limitless op·
~ portunities for run -
-weekend barbecues,
patio ~uc~s: picnics in the park and beach or
pool parties. · ~ All this activity can
rain the imagination of
any bo,tess.
Here's a recipe that's
a chameleon. changing
with the atmosphere of
the paf!y. Snappy Appetizer
Sauce adds zest to
whatever kind of enter·
taining you want to do. j Because it can be served
'\either bot or cold, and
with a 9.'ide variety of
a-ppetizer s. you won't
run out of ways to ser ve
it. And your guests
won't tire of this zesty
sauce.
Another plus is Snap-
py Appetizer Sauce's
~ easy preparation. You
t ~lir all the ingredients
j tpgether in just a few i minutes. Then chill it. or
~ heat it. Either way, it's
~ a snap lo fix and serve.
, leaving you with more ~ time t.. enjoy the party.
; Serve it hot at a ~ cocktail party with mea-
~ ty appetizers. Skewer
j meatballs, cocktail
~ f·:T a n k f u r t e r s . or ~ s;.usages for guests to
~ dip into this tangy 1 sauce. Or serve it cold
, at a barbecue, or take it
along to a potluck with
raw vegetables and
chunks of cold meat.
'this sauce also is good ~ "9erved with chunks of
~ cheese on the side.
SNAPPY APPETIZE R
SAUCE
% cup (6-ounce
an> tomato paste
.. ·~ gip water 2 tablespoons firmly
packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons pre-
pared horseradish
2 tablespoons chili
sauce
l teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons pre-
pared mustard
Combine a ll itlgre -
d lents; blend well.
Sauce may be served
healed or chilled. Makes
11n cups.
For hot appetizers,
b~at sau ce and serve
w>th meatballs, chicken
drummettes, halved
Vienna sausaees, or
cocktail frankfurters.
For cold appetizers,
chlll sauce and serve
with s hrlmp, cubes of
cheese, roast beef, ham,
z ucc,hin i slices ,
ca u lifloweretles, br
fresh mushrooms.
Ptu•s LOW IN
CALORIES
Fresh plums are 101t'
in calorlea, 13 P..!.r 3· ounce pjum. They n tow
in sodium, too; perfect
tor use in salt-free dleta.
Jn vU'1iDc amounta, de-
pendln1 on variety,
fresh plum• aueply
vitamins A and C, ftber
aad lmportant trace
minerals.
9&1GBTBN UP •U&l'Am ..... frlib plam MC•
I ba IM&tef wttlll a . ., ..........
mn. Dellqou at ··~-....... wttlll er,mbted ~••• •••• • aad toa1J9' , ............ .
'
J
\.-> teaspoon baklna
powder ~ teaspoon dllJ
weed
4eQS
2 tablespoons
minced green onions
with tops
2 teaspoons lemon
juice
1 ~ cups shredded
unpeeled zucchini,
drained and pressed
Dairy sour cream,
optional
Tomato slices, op-
tional
Crumbled crisp·
\
cooked bacon, optional
In medium bowl stir
together cheese, flour,
bakinl powder and dill
weed. Beat ln e1gs,
onions and lemon Julee u· n t i l t h o r o u I h l y
blended. Stir in zucchini.
For each cake, drop ~
cup batter• onto bot,
well.greased piddle or
sklllet (380 dearees for
electric eriddle). COok
until golden brown on
both sides.
Serve hot plain or. if
desired, with dairy sour
cream, tomato-slices
Sow JIOUT 1eeds.
horvelt your
crop. then serve
your vegetables
in Garden Vegetable
Cakes for any meal of
the day.
~~_J
to convince you ol Vons commitment to low prices,
we' re making th ls olfer: If you can find lower prices
overaU this week et eny other supermerket. Vona
win l>dY you double the difference. Jusl shop et
Vons. Buy 25 different Items wonll s20 or more.
Com1>4re prices on the same Items et any other
supermerket. 'If their total is lower. bring your
Itemized Vons receipt and the Olher market's prices
to Vons and we'll pay you double the difference in
cash. Vons-Low prices you can bellew in.
.._ ... -..-....,-~._,..,... +u.1~ fJ/V!Ft.:O""'°'~fi«l-"....:aoucl••
BARSOAP .69
4 BAA PMCAGE-PSI (1'1CLS. 1.00 OFf'J U/'\JT 2 (Purchaae a-t< ltmk-reg p<i« 82)
CONT ADINA 17 '!£~TO SACJCEe
DELICATESSEN
849
169
.85
FROZEN FOODS
~~w:..
• tl~n7e ~~CllUST
~:h,:i Fudee*lu
}09
}19
339
119
SLRVI CI . SI Af·O O O
f'llQH wwot..t °"HAI.I' Aluklln Selmon
t:=Vactnc ()ystAn
=~,:g:.
Ul 269
"' } 69
Ul 239
t H f\l . J If L HI AU IY'
.77
111
197
237
UM1T 6 Purcn.-._,lime-reg. pnc~2l>
MEATS
l::d~T'roi~TOI'~ 209
~Pinc~"ite.~111110£ UI 338
I "111.E 11"!0 llUF-90l'lfl.£55 llOUIC> 2 59 8lrtoln Tip SteeklJ U1 •
~mocrtuka U1 2 59
IAl!l.E l(f'tO ear tlOr'OeLf$$ O<tJOI OIT 2 09
Family Steak U1
l!tlltMDl'tlOll<.l~rl!E""' l 59 Country St)'te Spareribs U1
~ey~ticka U1 .59
~~~eY'flwt Ul 169
-OPOl.SrY EJ1Ct:P'T~269 Hlbhlre Fann Sauaage i..a.
l& 109
fA 109
PRODUCE
COOL~
Crunchy Cucumbers
~~
MW~OllOW"-llOl l'llO F,...., ... , ...
ter.~ ..
"'.59
Ul •• 49
Ul .49
"'·.25
U1 .12
CA •• 99
u.299
LIQUOR
J~ervo~equDa 699
~ 399
~son Rhine Castle 259
Q~~'sOln 999
t UTf.I! C ..... llt.J$Olll!t"'I aylor Calf. Cellen 499
~ka 699
~ci~ 919
VONS BAKERY
v:,;os:--;~'°
~hh ~-"* SPlJT
~Oawl
G:kBlud
IC>OIA'tCE
Pound Cake
.98
.49
J39
135
.98
't tor HAKI HY
·~=~~,=~ '"°"' ~ USlU> AT llOTl'C:. ~ TMS ~
N'ICll*~"'-1..JO J 99 Orw9 BloAorn ~ Ae
~~CMltS 129
~a,. 6.99
l:'t:~~ fA 499
s==?A.. fA .79
GROCERIES GROCERIES
01 101 tri-~OR WtCllL reen lant shrooms .66 ~er JAA-l!U70l!°-=e" teero Boullon ubes .70
16m~ B ked Beans .70 ~llOTTU. Com OD 259
·~JM 121 2•0l CM-CHtnl flll'.i 135 Appletlme Applesauce Nalley Beef Stew n 7-0l llOX-f<Skl\/'O ungiy Jae Potatoes 196 111120? CM -llOtta>
Valley Fresh Chkken 111
21 OONCE. llOX Betty Crocker Brownle /'t\lx 124 uqufd~rOl'fNJI 196
1101 CAN WHO\£ Klrr.£1 .51 ~1'110 125 Oreen Giant Com Food StCJn119e a.p
100 FREE PSA TRIPS
PLUS 100 FREE SHOPPINQ SPREES
,_."9'K'l'M ........ ..._,._ ... •TOMO. t.1 .. l,CMLCJIJl""J .. ,.. t.OCAftOflOf'ffOMNIMllllY 'IOILllOf "LI.~-,_ .. 1'19•...:-TMll'f llCIM.llMW.ftlltf. U>eMCa& 1••· MO a-...-....._.,. W,...,.tt.l.olMlllloalN!DeOO_LM _Ml9" --~ Oii.•. "°" tfOlm OMlt • TOMflClll't t IM'9 II..._
HAW AllAN PUNCH
ORrNK MIX
11!1>.~.WR'I~ rum ""Yll. WLD l"IUT
&QT. ill 2.)9
BOUNlY
PAPERTowa5
WHIT£. DEStON
1000.
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l'!ftlM 100\"'-fM.)jjt lJU<lt. 1.9' AARINA o.i. .... CoollldlWt'l.1.ot"'°-.... . .3.1'
,..._ i-flllMlrr .. """'.o.t · . 2 2' TOILET TISSOE ,._._""""""'-,.. 811"'9 a-1~ "°'
"'-leeT•-.))Of c,,.,. .• Ut ~ASST ,.._..,...,.TwofPIMrt.001.MG... . ...• I? ,.__~,_.t .. 11161.111« "" 2-" . ' KNll\,..._.C-0-tOl...O ... 1.21
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produce meal
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Neon ·· "",...... .. •.•.
,._,_ peaehel '"" 11u 49~. ::L.,.,
59 • ,. ....... ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29. 1981
-tr.a W shark
•. 1re1t ltr ... hrM••
*139 """.,...,. •• *2'19 hallhut
•• *2' ,,.. . .......... ..,..
,. . '
' *1t!:
-,
..,. .... •. ,,.. .. s .. .. w.,... ,,... ....... .., patties ::. :. ':.~ *69~ calamari steaks
1h1He lfylt •• hea111 39:. sl•e ol "8ef tl45 i..
•ltllt •lfftrelt frttz1r p11b fl ••1111 frt•
39:. hlM ••l'lln ti 69 1•.
•ltllt •lfhrelt frH11r p11b fl ••••11 frt•
... ,., 11llhrall
gnwenllaln apples
2St
,.. .....
trout *198
••••
• • v1lam1ns
........
wheat germ t1 •. 64 + 9er11an salami .... ... ,. ........
!~ ,. •• ltrh•n ••rbt hrnd mllral 1111• 111rmer1 aNelf • ..... ,. •• ~ .... ..
•lltlple flll•t1 • frt11• IHf ...... ,.. •
... ••• ,., ,. .... "I· 4.~ $448 ........... ., ,. ... .. .... .. ..
honey grams t6 •. ,
tlO .... "I· Ut 111t $875 hanana ehlpt t• •·
.. .... .... tltl •It *1635
IM11 n11• ,.,.,n •rlllt
polllll11111 eo111plex .. *974 ...... "I· 4.ts
IMll n11•fl,.1n •rbt
llfll9Mln .. $f'5
111•111.H.M
bakery
grocery .................
eollH ,,... ,.. _ ............
nut hrnd ...
peneroelnl
AOOITIONAl.
COSTA MESA
STORE PARKING+N
AVAILABLE
BEHIND
STORE.
ti •.
*224
alllll'lean eheete ""•• 11 •r4er *ri.~
HI ... fret• •1•1
*119 eole .. 981. ........ ...,
*1 24 llaek rihl *298 .
•••
t519 ••
*219
79•
... •1rwlllt11 frH• 11r1 fn• ... lff111 ,. ... ••Hf.-,. ............. ,. ••
1111Mr111llftr1ll. . ........ ~ ... .,,.,. ... . .,
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611-4414
'1 , .. ~ ........
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... lllfll .......• I······ •••• I
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I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
onomy ii a key Sweet and Sour Fruited chicken bouillon (or 1 1reen pepper ln aklllet.
when it comes to Chicken incorp<>rates all chicken bouUlon cube> Cook, atirrin1 co0Jtant-
·phumin1. the rules. ~ teaspoon pepper ly, unUl soft. Return
ually important are ~ cup cider vinesar chicken to skillet. Stir in
of preparation, SWEET AND SOUR 3 tablespoons brown chicken bouillon and
rltion and e ye-FRUITEDCIUCKEN sugar . pepper; cover. Heat to
eal. Successfully 2 tablespoons butter 1 ta b 1 es p o on bolling, reduce to alm·
biniDC tbese criteria or mar1arine WorcestersAire sauce mer. Cook 30 minutes.·
e meals a day , 2 tabl es po o n s 1 can (30 ounces) In small bowl mix
n days a week re· vegetable oll fruit cocktail, drained vinegar, brown au1ar
es smart shoppinl 3 pounds chicken 3 cops hot, cooked and Worcester)hire
an a knowledge of how legs and thlehs rice s a u c e . Pour o v er
lo llJlake ingredients 3 tomatoes, coarsely Heat butter and oil ln c hicken. Stir ln fruit
wo k together. chopped large skillet until hot. cocktail; cover. Simmer
e wlMing idea that 2 onie>nB, chopped Brown chicken on all 20 minutes or until
lnc rporates e a c h of 1 green pe pper , sides. Remove chicken chicken Is tender. Serve
th essentials is Sweet chopped from s killet. Place over hot, cooked rice.
Sweet and Sour Fr uited
Chicken is made from
economical, conve-
nience f oodll such °"
canned fruit cocktail
4l Sour Fruite d 1 teaspoon instant tomatoes , onion a nd Makes 6servings. c cken, a ble nd of .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;_~==============================================::..._~~~~~~~~
c opped fre s h
etables, convenient
t co ckta il , and
en legs and thighs
'mered in a won-
de ly aromatlc sauce.
T s colorful combina-
tlo becomes a complete
l when served with
and a crisp green
,roof that con ve ·
bee foods can be
omical is the choice
ruit cocktail, wh ich
s the "sweet" to this
let dinner . The com·
ation of peaches,
pe rs, seedless grapes,
p p ea ppl e a nd
m f as chino cherries co ained in a single can
- ' ut up and ready to
us -saves both time
a 4 money . Wh e n
sr red into sauces, fruit
co ttail can etrorn essly
tu a variety or main
di es into classic meat-
a •fruit combinations.
lretching the food
l a r is a de finite
lleoge. But it can
be immensely satis-
fy g when you play the
g m e successfu lly.
growing number of
ericans are looking
·quick and easy re-
c that are both de-
li Jous to eat and a ttrac-
tive to serve. One such
recipe is AH Occasion
Punch, a basic not-loo·
fweet punch that can be
tnade by simply m ixing
and stirring.
l e base flavor for All
alon Punch comes
In a five-fl a vored
l beverage that com-
b l n es the juices of
oranges, grapefruits,
tangerines, lemons and
Urnes into a unique taste
ble d . Available in a
on, the five-fruit
rage can be poured
ight from the carton
o the punch bowl.
sbly-brewed orange
spice flavored tea
ea added zest while
onstituted fro zen
eapple juice and
1 rkllng mineral water
nd out the delightful
or of this punch.
hether for the fami-
eal or for entertain-
dinner guests, this
ch adds just the
reahing taste delight
want without fuss or
L-OCCASION
NCH
2 cups boiling water
4 s ingle -se rv e
nge & spice fl a vor
baas
1 cup granulated
ai;
1 carton (64 ounces>
e Alive Beverage
1 ~ cups reconsUtut-
frozen concentrated
eapple juice. chilled
1 bottle (23 ounces)
arkling min e ral
ter, chilled
our boiling water
r tea; cover and let
a and S minute s .
move tea bags; add
ar and stir until sug-
d1'sotves. Stir in the
e Alive and r•neap-juice. Chll until
ving time. To serve,
r over ice ring or
ck of ice in punch
I. Just before serv-
' add the mineral
ter. Makes 30 serv-
1• (about ~ cup
b).
PLUM RULES
or all your plum-
dy recipes tb1I 11um-
r . ncure on 1 pound
plums equaling 6
dlum plums or 2~
1 sliced plums or 2
1 diced or pureed
ms. tek perfect plums by
ln1 thole that are
mp and full-colored
the variety. A frffh
m lt ripe wben the Up
nd ts sli1bt1y soft.
cause pl ums can
om• overn,e ver1
lckly, tM aare to
•••'-rl,pe plume. t way, Uii7'U ttaJ
br bt Md fre1ll for
~ ....... ~,.•to
tajeJ • • ,.,.. ....... ...a .,um. JOU are.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE FRESH AMERICAN rr ~;;;~~----Al& sroRrs -,
(IMll •• ( .. •IS •fSUV(D NO Sl<l( 10 co-t•CIAl DfAlU S O•
N.,01( ~All•S SOMf SOfl OllN~S N()T AVAll>l lf IN VfNIUU C011P>lh
Th" od only tfftctlve ot Hughe1 El Rancho •
ond Hughe• lido.
WI WILCOMI FOOD IT A~ IHOltltlU 5 j_
!~:!I ~ •rT9Cf IOin " 1 od ia
rnay be in ...;,''•rna IUpPI~.
I
LEGO LAMB
U S 0 A Chooce Beef Chuck
7-BONE ROAST
U S 0 A Choice 8"1 Chuck
0 -BONE ROAST
.... La. 1.29
.... la. 1.59
RISH AMfttCAH.Wl'll OlAD TO IOHI & IUTTllRY THIM JOit YOU
us.DA
CHOICE
E It Leon Ground .. Not to Exceed 22% Fot
GROUND BEEF & PATIIES . . 2.19
U S 0 A fr9'h Lomb
SMALL LOIN CHOPS
El Ron<ho U S 0 A Choice Ft1nh lamb
RANCH STYLE BACON LARGE LOIN CHOPS
•
.. La. 3 .99
.... La. 3 .49
US 0 .A. Chooc:e lomb .. 8 01
BONELESS KABOBS .. . ... EA. I • 98
US 0 A Cl.01cll
FRESH GROUND LAMB .La I .•9
U S 0 A Cho•<• Seel Chuck 8oneleu e II Hot & Sw"t
ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD .... ll. 2.49 ITALIAN SAUSAGE
.. ta. 1.29
.la 1.69
U.S 0 A Choo<• Fruh Lomb 8oneleu . Frozen •Delro\ted Grode ·A'
SARATOGA LOIN CHOPS .. La. 3. 99 CHICKEN LIVERS .. La .69
BLADI CUT BllF
CHUCK STEAK
USDA CHOICE
Mint or Reg .... 6.4 0 1.
'8 .• 87
CRIST I 34 IOOTHPASTI •
1119 ., U..te. A/P 6 oa IMI SO. Off 19 IUnlNAY ................... 2.
No""°'· Ory .. O.ly •. 15 O>. I 89 N•TIHAMltOO ...........•
$oW 1119 O< U... •. .2 OJ. ln(I )Oc Off
IUnlOUD ..................... 1.29
li .
Center Cut Alol&on
FRESH HALIBUT STEAKS ................ 2.99
Froien/0.frO\ted .. Alo•ko
lllNG C•AB UGI ts 4.59
Fruh New Englond
CHl •YSIONI CLAMSL& 1.29
Smoked fillet
SWORDFISH
f<P\h Monl,.rl!y
SQUID
l& 2 .99
l& .89
MAIOLAOIL
Mott\ .35 01.
APPLESAUCE
Hunt's Solid Pocti. 14 '"1 0 1
TOMATOES ....
480Z.
MADE FROM
CORN
riiii1 Ll!:-1
I .OS
· ............ •9
Volley freih ... 121; 01.
BONED CHICKEN 1.75
lonQ Groin ... 5 lb
MAHATMA RICE ................• 2 .49
Donald Duck Chllleq ... 64 01
ORANGE JUICE ........................ 1 .59
Purina 100 Ant. Flo\IOr• I
CAT FOOD ....... ·········-····· ........ 3 FOR I \
&oktfY W090n 3 Vori.tiet
MOTHER'S COOKIES ..................... • 99
Reg or 0.et 12 01 CoM
12 PACK PEPSI ..
Ant Flowon .5 "'i & 6 01
BELL BRAND CHIPS .
Golden Grohom, ... 12 01.
CEREAL
Glod lorQ• 15 ct
GARBAGE BAGS
9
3.89
............ 79
1.33
1.45
Ho Ho Aul Flovo" t
RAMEN ······ ··········· ............. 4 FOR I
2 lit•r Plo,tk
R.C. COLA .................. . . ............. 1.09
2 lit•• Plo,tk
DIET RITE COLA ..... .................... 1 .09
ANTALOUPE
VINE
RIPE 9!.
Fresh Foney Northern.
GllUN BIANI ................... La .• 39 BLUl.IRRlll 6SICT .98 w--1001 111 fOOt;S fJfT~ fJA£tvt'
SOUP BASE . . .......... .. ••• IHOUUlflMNOOUCIM"
-T-ISo• c..,. ,_..~
BAMBOO SHOOTS ...... 1.09 CUCUMBIRI
lfC 1 or P\9
DRIED SHRIMP ... 1.99
..,_ So101l11no Sobo 16 o• ""9 •
BUCKWHEAT NOODLES .1.9 5
H•me 0.M!ot<ho 10 01 lo•
TEA ....•...•...•................ '.SS UI •• 49 H1t'M Wo.abAlo l 01 Co,,
HORSHRADISH POWDER ..• 95
lndi>tlduolly Wropp«J 0-..
3LB.HUGHll -:.=~~~ ...•. 98
Un.
AUlll llMIMA 9 =-~~ .... ~~~-· 9 Stoktf.r. ~ Sol ... Oriel'.ltol...16 01.
VlaTA•UI ............................ H 12 01.' V'•no 1Cfl0da\ill\K1t or... ••
ltOUSlllAU9AGl ............. 1.
(r.-Nft, .. fdoin, .. 1201. I 09 lllCll'I ltAITaS .............. •
FRllH GRADI 'A'
CHICKEN LEGS
LB •• 69
&.ir9und1 Vt" -o .. '. Chobl" 3 It• PLAIN LABIL WINI .. 2.69
"°'" lobe' I 7 5 It• SCOTCH ............ 9.99
THIS AO ONlY EFfECllV! AT HUGHES ll "....CHO & UDO.
f
y u
NICft tffKrM ., 04'1'1
IN#intUllt MT~~ W90 AUG t
Urtlll 119htt ,.._,* No '°'" to dtOlen
'
'
.. . .. ········-· ............ ,. .... ,,. ................ . ....... ··-......
Organize to save
By MARTIN SLOANE
Some doubters still find it bard to UD·
deratand bow shoppers can organize their
smart-shopping opportunities to fill their
closets with supermarket products at savings
of 50 percent and more.
Joe Daly of Brooklyn, N.Y., sent me a
long list of his triple-play discounts. Here is
an example or how be does it:
"For the last few months paper towels
have cost me practically nothing," he says.
"To begin with, I invested in nine rolls of ffi.
Ori brand towels. I used three coupons, each
for 50 cents off on three rolls, so those towels
cost me a total of $4. 71.
·'This allowed me to send in nine
Universal Product Code symbols for which
the company sent me 12 coupons, each good
for 25 cents off on a roll of towels.
"During the following months I was able
to find these towels on sale at two for 99 cents
in stores offering double coupons. On each of
these occasions I was able to buy the towels
Just for the sales tax.
"I have sent in three more UPC symbols
for a different Hi -Ori offer that brought me
four additional 25-cent coupons. Since my in-
itial investment I have been able to buy 16
rolls of paper towels for less than $1 worth of
sales tax."
"I've got lots of soup in my kitchen
closet," says Carolyn Kline of Cincinnati. "O
My Goodness noodles had a 'Buy One, Get
One Free' " coupon In the newspaper. and I
managed to get several of them. Even my
husband brought three coupons home from
work.
"For each package that I bought at 33
cents, I got another one free. And a few
weeks later, I found a $2 refund for six proofs
of purchase. Free soup is super."
Anne Lind of Far10, N.O., saves her
Sanka coupons to uae whenever her
supermarket offers double coupons.
"The 4-ounce jar is uaually $2.39.'' she
explains. "When the store doubles my 50·cent
coupon, the cost comes down to $1.39.
"I recently sent in two Sanka prools of
purchase and received two $1-off coupons.
Thla wlU brln& the cost down to oniy 39 cents
a jar. And if I can double these coupons, my
savings will be even greater." ,
You don't need double coupons to make
triple-play discounts. Joyce Baker from
Knoxville, Tenn., has a pantry full of food to
prove it.
"I had four 25-cent coupons good on any
size Hunt's Ketchup, .. she says. "When the
storf: had the small size on sale at lhree bot-
tles for $1, l bought four bottles for only 34
cents ..
"Then I sent in the neck bands and re-
ceived a $1 refund. Counting the postage,
Hunt's paid me 48 cents to use its ketchup."
Doris O'Neill is an experienced refunder
and a supermar ket cashier from Annapolis,
Md. Her most recent home-run discount was
an 18-cent profit on L'Eggs Pantyhose.
··A little planning and organizing of your
discounts can turn the supermarket into a
wonderful world that offers you an enjoyable
experience and saves you hundreds of
dollars," she says. "It pays to be a careful
shopper."
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to the following address to obtain
the form required for this $1 refund offer:
Country Time Refund Offer, General Foods,
P .O. Box 5057, East Court Street, Kankakee,
Ill. 60901. This offer E>xpires Dec. 31 , 1981.
~-------------------------------------~ . CUP 'N' FILE REFUNDS I
~~.Sea!J. plress.cot.JO,ltel. • I ,...,_ ,,.,....., ...._ ••-HEFTY S1 Ref.-Send llle required,_'°'"' I
Cllp ""' .... ,, .. -k-II with slfnlw cw.-oH •nd Pfoof~rc-... ,, ,,_, ... , two PKUVH coupom -.......,..,. m.-offen wltl'I ..,._.., of Hetty._. Eaolres 0<1 ll. Itel I
c-. tor eurnp1e Sler1 collectlno a. -SCOTTowt:LS Ml• •n • Mee....-• Realn • RIA> I proof& of~-...,II• 1-lno to< IN,.....,... ,. bffmald Ml• 'n • MeaW<• s.nd Ille required rflfllNJ
lllnd '°'"" et the -rnar1lal, In ,.~ .., lrom ... ~ .. _,, of Q<Millty"' from ScOIT-1 I ~Hlnn, - -1radlno with frf9ndl. Otten cre9111ar rofll and • cN<k or ..-.., oroer lor lO may not lie evell-In •II •r•s of Ille ~. Al-cfftls. EJQllres OK. ll, Itel I
loW 10-torecalneac:h relllnd. STAPUF Com«>o COllPoft Offer Receive \I In •I Tiie IOllOWlno offen ere WOf'th • total of '11.71 cou-s. Send the , ... 111re0 refund form -o,.. le~~I wMtl'l 111111191 (Ofllaln ll0.41 lft -,_ ot· 1ymllol lrom StaPuf conc ... tr•le or StaPvf SllMIS I OOVE LIQUID FrM Bottle Offer. Recel .... bott.. Ei:f;:~ttv >~ 1~. Recel .... $0< .. 1 refund I
of Don LIQuld I"« • n-nu Oollle, wnd Ille r• send the oeq111red refund lorm •nd Universal I
q11lred retllNJ form -lhrM nel·-19111 •-ti Product Code tymlloh from •ny lhrM !Mrs of
lrom n-e Ooft Lkt111d. FIH • 22-• bottle, Vudley -Expires June JO. 1"2. I Mnd Ille form -lllrM ,.l·-19'11 si.t-tl ,,_, Bonus I ~Offers don' I r9C1ulre forms
l2·oun<e Dow LIQ«ld E•plres Dec. ll, 1•1· DISHWASHER ALL '1 Rel-Ofler. P 0 Bo• I FELICITY Refund Offer. Receln • 7kMt ,. NB -. El P~. Tue' 1t•n Send ,,,. Unl..,...UI I fund s.i.i IN req;ilred refund form. tlle 1-11 ,,_, ._ ·-"''" ti.n of F.tklCy GfycerlM Soap -the ,. Produtt Code 1ymbol1 from Ille llollom' of...,, lhrea 9later receipt with Ille Fellclty 1111rchHft clrcled. 11o .. a of OllllwHller All E•plrH June JO. 1"2. I ExplrHJ""9J0, 1"2. DIXIE Story C.rch Ofler. PO. Box '31. 'l'OllftCI I
GLAD Fr• Flip -SIP T .... rmos. Recalv• a Arnerlc•, MIM. $$199. Receive "'Empl,.. ~rlltft tllermot. Send the required rel\IOWI form, UMverMI 8.ck"' Story C.rds. Send SI• prooh of purclWlw from I
PrOducl Code 11,,_., lrom ...,, tlrM pec:U9ft of •nv Ol•le Cup lloxtt, yOllr name •nd addr-end lO
Glad Sandwich eave -Unlnnal Product Code cenu llH llCl'I'-Mid ll<lndllnQ e.114,.., OK. )I, I l_~:~:m_...~~::::.~~~:--~: ___ :~---------------~
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Wednelday, July 29, 1981
..
ARN AND L A
MSG concerns doctor Fruit cocktail Deliver the Daily Pilat Boys and girls 10 or older -.;:
Call 642-4321 and apply today. Daily Pilal By JUNE ROTH
Often it isn't what you
eat but how much of it you
eat that causes a prob·
tern.
This concept is true
when applied to MSG in-
take by children, accord-
ing to Dr. Madelon T.
Price, research assistant
professor of neurobiology
in p syc hiatr y at
Washington University
in St. Louis, who is con·
cerned about the amount
of MSG ( monosodium
glutamate) that is hidden
in our fabricated food
supply.
Price explains, ··MSG
is glumatic acid. The
circumventricular or·
gans of the brain are most
sensitive to MSG because
they lie outside the blood -
brain-barrier. Children,
in particular. are at risk
when they lake in large
amounts of MSG because
they do not have full y de-
veloped blood -brain·
barriers."
In conducting animal
studies with Or. John
Olney to determine the
effect of MSG upon the
brain, Price revealed the
circumventrlcular or-
gans are accessible lo
circulating exltotoxlns.
MSG i8 such an exitotox-
in, that may form brain
lesions when taken In ex-
cess amounts.
It isn't the one meal or
the one drink that has
MSG that places the child
at risk. It's the possible
overload of glutamate·
laden soup, meats and
vegetables in pre-
fabricated food, as well
amounts of MSG up to
early adulthood.
Price is concerned
about the results of the
animal tests with MSG
and cautions parents to
be aware of how much of
this non-nutritious
SPECIAL DIETS
flavoring substance Is be-
ing added to table food
and to the manufactured
food supply that is fed to
children.
Good cooking doesn't
have t.o contain any kind
of sodium. Here are some
salt-free recipes that
have good flavor without
any kind o f sodium
added.
HERBEDBURGERS
1 pound lean ground
beef
1 tablespoon minced
onion
1 tablespoon chopped
fresh parsley
'A teaspoon pepper
II• teaspoon dried
marjoram
'Ai teaspoon dried
thyme
Combine all ingre·
dients. Shape into pat-
ties. Cook on a grill or
broil, turning once to
cook other side. Makes 4
servings.
SALT·F REE
VEGETABLE SOUP
4 beef marrowbones
2 quarts water
2 onions, sliced
1h cup barley
2 carrots, scraped
and sliced
2 celery stalks, sliced
3 large tomatoes, cut as the free.flowing addi·
tionofMSGinbomecook· up
ing in an attempt to in-
crease flavor sensations.
1 large potato, peeled
and diced
YI pound trimmed MSG ts unreplated but
has been voluntarily re·
moved by manufacturers
of food that la intended for
infant or junior food con·
sumen. 8at MSG baan'l
been declared unsafe for
food• intended for tbe
1eneral public. Many of
these foods are fed to
these same infant. and
chUdren.
Brain dama1e and
obesity have been proven
to be a sUent and de·
1enentlns effect on
animal• lo the Olney
1tudie1, and ln the 1tudiea
o1 otber researehen u
well. It'• oa11 when the
animal approacbu
aduldllood t.bat t.M •P· pear .... or bebavtor ,... •••n la7potl••lamlc
dasoqe that would be tbe
equlYalent ol a human hi·
111Una study and la.rte
f
areen beam, cut up
~pound shelled peas
lbayleal
2wholecloves
1 sprig parsley v. teaspoon dried
\hyme
'A teupooa pepper
Place bdnel in a lar1e
pot and cover with water.
Add onions and barley.
Brln1 to a boil, then turn
down beat and simmer
about 30 minutes, oc·
caslonally sldmmlnc
re1ldue from the top.
Add the reet ol the ln1re·
dienta and cook for 30
minutes over low heat,
or wtUl all vegetables
are tender. Makes 10
Hrvinp.
IAL'r.l'aKE CIDCllSN
AND VEGETABLES
1 chicken, about 3
powtdl
'h teaspoon garlic
powder
1,1, teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon dried
dill weed
1 onion, sliced
4 celery stalks, cut
into chunks
4 carrots, scraped
and cut into chunks
4 potatoes, peeled
and quartered
2 fresh tomatoes,
quartered
11'.i pound trimmed
gr een beans
1 cup water
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
Wash, dry, and place
chieken in a roaster with
a tight lid . Sprinkle
chicken with garlic, pep·
per and dUlweed. Place
remaining ingredients
around the chicken. Cov-
er and bake at 350
degrees for l 'h hours or
until chicken is fork
tender. Makes4servings.
June Roth is tM author of
29 cookbooks, including
"Salt-free Cooking With
Herbs and Spicea " If you
have a $f>ecial diet queation .
you can write to June Roth
cl o tM Daily Pitot, P.O. Bor
1560, Coata Mesa 92626.
Pleau enclo.e a a elf·
addreued atamped en·
velope for a personal reply.
FREEZER TRICKS
Now's the time to buy
a batch of fresh plums to
freeze for the plum-less
months ahead. Simply
halve or quarter fully
ripened, washed plums
and discard pits. For
each quart of fresh
plums, add a mixture of
% cup to 1 cup sugar
and 1/• teaspoon ascorbic
acid mixture. Spoon sug-
ared plums includln1
any syrup tbat forms ln·
to freezer containers,
1eaJ, label and freeze.
VEGETABLE SA.LAD
Grated carrot salad
takH on new Interest
when comblned with
fresh plums. Toss 1ral·
ed carrot wtth coanely
chopped fresh plums.
chopped canned water
chestnuts and a little
sweet red onion. Drtule
with French or ItaUan
dreHlJlt.
DELJC10l18 CON·
DIMENT
Wbm tuny ll on the meau, Mnt lllced ,,_..
P1um1 M one al the COD·
dlmeotl. The tait•IWfft
fruit ll a refrwhln1 foll
ror tM lp6c7 culT)'
I
Colorful fruit cocktail
can be mixed with a little
jam or jelly for a de-
1 i c i ou s topping for
custard, ice cream or
bread pudding.
On . Most Hems In 1he Store
ThUrsclay, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
July 23-26
CAIJFORNIA ..
RANCH MARKET
C••• •MA-AllD IAIRELD
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
eaetable soup is s8lt-free
malD dllill eoup 11 I o w he a t 3 0 to 3 5 Hlted mar1artne ~ cup frozen green
U. -.aest dlDner mlnutel. l cup chopped onion peas
r.,_. When warm Add Unaulne to mix· ~ cup c hopped • Me It u n 1 alt e d
atber· aativiUe1 ture and cook until creenpepper mar1arine In a larse
kon. Aa more and ten de r , about 1 O 3 CUPI water aaucepan over medium
e Americana adhere mlnutet. Combine mUk 3 teaapoona low· beat. Add onion and •
to: aalt rettricted diets, and flour, atir into . 1odium chicken flavor 1reen pepper; saute un·
cook II faced with chowder and continue instant bouillon 1nnules U1 tender. Mix in water,
cballeate of prepar-cookin1, 1tlrring oc· 1 cup thinly 1llced bouillon. carrots, potato,
meal• that will culonally, until aU1bUy carrots bay leaves, dUl, basil
ue each family thickened, about 10 1 c up diced raw and black pepper. Brinl
mber'1 taate . . . minutes. Serve hot. potato mixture to a boll; re·
out ~I twice. M a It ea 6 servings. 2 bay leaves duce heat and aim mer
ally, tbe 1tocka ln Sodium: •90 milligrams t,.; teaspoon dill 30 minutes. Stir in peas
emade eoupe should per servln&. weed. and continue cooking un·
ourown. ltiaagood t,.; teaspoon basil tll vege tables are
a to make enou1h VEGETABLE leaves tender. Serve. Sodium:
k at one time so lt GAaDEN SOUP ~ teaspoon ground 65 mllllrrams per serv·
Vege talU Gorden Soup
uses the best of the
1eason's produce in a
light and ewy recipe.
Made wtth a homemade
salt-free 1tock and un·
salted margonne, it
should be a winner /or
folks on low-sodium
diets.
n be frozen and \4 cup (t,.; stick> un· black pepper lng. Makes 4 servings. Oiled as needed for ,~~~:.::::...;..;..:....:.:.:..:;.:.:_.;.:_~:..:..:...:..:..:...::..:.:::...::...:..:...._~~~~__;:;__~~~~__;:;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;..:.;.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• y preparaUon later °" Thll method avoids ed ltock, generally
b in salt, and insures
t soups will taste
ir best.
' eeetable Garden
p uses the best of the
son 'a produce in a
t and easy recipe.
addition of herbs
ancei the navor so
n one misses the saJt.
key Com Chowder is
beartier appetites
la a Sood way to use
ver turtev and un -
e ked pasta. i• 1KKEYCORN
OWDE•
.. ~ cup unsalted ~rrgarine • 1h cup chopped
otlon
.:.,. t,.; cup diced celery
i,.; diced carrot
5 cups water
2 packages (10
ounces each ) frozen
whole kernel corn
2 cups diced cooked
turkey
' 4 teaspoons low-
sodium chicken flavor
blatant bouillon granuJes
1 bay leaf
Dash ground black
pepper
1 lh cupe broken un-
cooked linguine
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons unsift·
ed flour
M e lt un s alt e d
margarine in a dutch
oven over medium high
beat. Add onion, celery
and carrot, saute until
tender cris p, 3 to 4
minutes, stirring oc-
ca s iona I ly . Mix in
water, corn, turkey ,
bouillon. bay leaf and
pepper. Simmer over
Rump, tip,
top round
economical
Boneless beef rump, tip
and top round roasts are
all excellent choices for
the rotisserie and are
1ood buys for this special
family cele bra tion ,
points out the National
Llve Stock and Meat
Board.
These compact bone-
1 e s s r oas t s are
economical in terms Qf
the number of servings
they provide for their
price per pound.
llEEF ROTISSERIE
ROAST
Combine l cup tomato
juice, ir.i cup lemon juice,
\4 cup oil, l tablespoon
sugar, 1 tablespoon
minced onion, 1 teaspoon
aalt, 1h teaspoon cumin
and 1h teaspoon ground
marjoram . Cook 5
minutes, stirring oc-
casionally; cool. Place 4
to 6-pow1d boneless beef
rump, tip or top round
roast in plastic bag and
add marinade. Sea! bag
aecure l)"; place in
refrigerator overnight.
Turn several times.
Remove meat from
marinade ; r eserv e
marinade . In sert
rotisserie rod through
center of roast; tighten
spit forts so roast turns
only with rod. Insert
roast meat thermometer
11111rallel to rod so tip is
1'9ntered in roast and
does not rest in fat or on
tberod.
Roast at low to
moderate temperature
Mer ash-covered coals to
... ired decree or done·
ae11: 140 decrees for
Jare; 180 decrees for
medium. Allow 2S to 35
•lnutea per pound.
Brush roaat with re·
1erved marinade during
eooklq.
PLVll PJC&LING
. Plac·e 5 pounds
waahed fr'Mb plum• in a
111e-•allon CJ'Oc:k or l:i .. lar•• ... cepan. fDt.U. for 15 _...._ * ... ,. wtdw .u. .. ar, s
•UPI IUIU. 12 wbol• ~lo•••· 1 talalHpoOD
lsed ,.ftllal 1plc•
............... POul'
ilotmblln"91'pl ... : ......... ,.,,_..... ... ~...,.. ..... ,... ....... ~
Double Coupon
Umlt OM Item P« Menufectwen' Coupon
and LAmlt 3 Double Coupona Pet Cuetomer
Coupon En.cttve July IO ttwu Auguet I, '1911
Umlt One lt9m P« Menufecturen• Coupon
and Limit 3 Doubte Coupon. Per Cuetomer
Coupon Ehcttve Juty IO thnl Auguet I, 1111
Limit One Item Per Manufacturer•' Coupon
and Limit 3 Doubte Coupone Per Cuatomer
COUPon l!ffac:tlw• Julr 30 """ Aueu•t I, 1111
Potent la I
Labor · Dispute
The posslblllty exists
of a major work
stoppage In the
Food Industry. ~e
sincerely hope a
peaceful settlement
can be made but In
any event ...
USO olce-Beef Loin
Boneless
Top Sirloin Red or Black
Sweet
Steak Plums
USDA
CHOICE per
'
II.II I\_ I! ,./.~\}{:/\' I·
Monterey Jack or Kraft-Dinner
Ralphs Mild Macaroni
Cheddar &Cheese
71/4 oz. Ralpb..s Wll' ,,
Be Open
to 'ser-ve your
food needs
r:' , .. ·1 ~ 79 lb.
~-• l!lr'.
09 .P~ll·.
• •
$2.50 Consumer Value-Mars,
3 Musketeers, Miiky Way or
DoritosTortill Snickers Ralphs
Chips •Bars Yogurt
packot 7oz.
bag
I .
•
10-.25 8 oz.
~-89 ~up $ I I .. •
_J
Ralphs-Wheat or White
Super
Bread
1112 lb.
loaf
I .
• •
200 years in the makingl
Millions of chances to win!
Prices Effective July 30 thru August 5, 1981
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I .\ollll ; ... , ... ,;: -· -. ·--.. -...... ·----........... .._.._ .. ______ ... __ .,._,. ... .....-............ __ _._-........ ...... -·-·--·-.-.----.. .,...__ ... ..... ~.._...... .. ..... ..._.. .. _.""._ ...... ._~':i:.:.~~---•cop"'°"' 1111 bJ Ratphe Q~ Company.
Al Rlghte Aeeen.a.
....... '" ... ,.. ... to ••• or refuM ..._ ti oommiiilel
d••••ra or wtiol•Hlera.
lawtnee relate to prnlova week'• Ralplw price, or , ... UteprQ' to lnttlal
ptlce reduction e1Cluel" of acNerttMd ot promottonill ·-
Adwef1'Md t...._ lft ltttl ed •• tM ••me price °' lower In ett ''°'"· ''le• oth9r tMft 9CfwMIMd 9"1cee fMf vety ..,......ltl upon IOC•I com,..lttoft, coet tecton • ....,_..
loc9"on. __ ...... , ....
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
Fruit pectin helps jam jell
What happens wnen Your Jam matlnl el·
JOU spread homemade forts warrant tbe be1t
Peach and Plum Jam on fruits you can find.
warm. 1olden brown lelect ftrm plums, ex·
mulflna? eept for a sllpUy soft
1reat taste uperience,
)'OU may bave purist
Jeaniql. IA tbat cue:
rue redpM for cookea
Peach Jam and Plum
Jam. Keep a few extra
packa1ea of powdered
fruit pectin on band lf
you're lnaplJ'ed to pre-
pare the jams.
Automatically they· end that lndica* tlpe-
move into an extra· Mas·. Refritera&e plums
special cateeory for immediately; they will
round-the-clock enjoy. keep weU from a to 5
ment. days. It's difficult to reai1t Choose ripe peaches PEACH AND PLVll
IAll making this tasty jam w l th a creamy or
u these succulent fruill yellowish backeround
arrive ln local markets. and refrieerate. Before
It's all so easy, and startint the jam, pre-
you're assured of a eood pare 1l11sea, usin1
"set" because the recipe directions elven in the
uses a handy package of recipe leaflet tucked in·
powdered fruit pectin. side the package of
5 cups prepared
fruit (about 2 pounds ful-ly ripe peaches and 1 ~
pound fully ripe plum.>
8 cupe (2 pound 10
ounce) sugar
1 box (l~ ounce)
powdered fruit pectin If you're new to Jam powdered fruit pectin.
and jelly making you Prepare the fruit as
may wonder why com-directed, following
mercial fruit pectin la directions accurately.
used. Natural pectin, Keep in mind that the
which makes lbe fruit three essential ingre-
" jell," decreased · as clients -sugar, acid and
fruit ripens. Consequent-pectin -must be pre-
ly, it la often necessary sent in correct propor-
to supplement it with tions so that the fruit
commercial pectin to at-wiU jell.
First pi-epare the
fruit. Peel, pit and fanely
chop or erlnd 2 pounds
peaches. Halve, pit and
cboi> about 1 >At pounds
plums; do not peel.
Combine fruits and
measure S cupe Into 8-or
8-quart saucepot.
Then make the jam.
Measure sugar and set
aside. Mix fruit pectin
into fruit in saucepot.
Place over high beat
and stir unW mixture
comes to a fuJJ boil. Im-
mediately add all sugar
and stir. Bring to a fuJJ
rolling boU and boil bard
1 minute, stirring con-
stantly. Remove from
heal and skim off foam
with metal spoon. Ladle
tain a good "set." Cooking time is re-
This particular jam duced to mere minutes
recipe was developed by adding a controlled
s p e c i f i c a l l y f o r amount of commercial
powdered fruit pectin, fruit pectin. Tbe shorl·
aot liquid fruit pectin, boil method helps retain
~hicb is another com-more of the fresh fruit
ercial variety. Both flavor and color that
e excellent and give might possibly boll
ccessful results, but away during a longer
b e y a r e n o t i n · cooking time.
t erchangeable lo re-While the combination
dpes. of these fruits provides a
Nectarine-Almond Frappe, Nectarine Sangria and Nectarine
Super Smoothie are three cooling summer beverages.
Cool c o n coc tions
For summer refresh-
ments, these concoctions
are super with nec -
tarines.
NECTAlllNE-ALMOND
FRAPPE
2 medium fresh nec-
tarines, cut up
V• cup instant nonfat
dry milk powder
2 tablespoons sugar
l tablespoon
brewer's type yeast
powder (optional)
l>Aa cups low -fat
milk
"'2 teaspoon almond
extract
3 ice cubs. cracked
or crushed
Combine nectarines,
dry milk powder, sugar,
yeast powder, milk and
almond extract in
electric blender. Whirl
unlll smooth. Add ice.
Whirl until amooth.
Makes about 1 quart.
NECTWNE SANGRIA
1 medium fresh nec-
tarine, cul Into small
cubes
1 lemon, cut Into
Y• ·lncb slleet
'i4 cup suaar
1 bottle (Stb or
750ML) dry red wt.De
1 to 2 cups club Makes about 2 cups.
soda, chllJed
C bl · NECTARINE om ne n eclartn~. BRUNCH PUNCH lemon and s ugar 10 large pitcher . Stir in· . 2 or 3 fresh nec-
wine. Cover and chill at tarmes least 1 hour. To serve, 'As cup granulated
add club soda. Pour into sugar
chilled glasses. Spoon 1 can (5~ ounces)
wine-steeped fruit into evapor ated milk
each glass. Makes about '-4 teaspoon salt . l ~ quarts. 'i4 teas poon can -
C ranberry Sangria namon Variation: Omit sugar. . 1 teaspoon lemon
Substitute 3 cups bottled Juice cranberry juice for the 1 egg (optional>
wine. · . 1 bottle (7 ounces) ganger ale
NECTAJUNE SUPEll
SMOOl'lllE
1 large or 2 small
fresh nectarines, cut up
~cup milk
3 tablespoons ~row11
s ugar (packed>
1 table spo on
brewer's type yeast
powder
'i4 t.eupoon vanilla
3 lee cubes, crushed
or cracked
Combine nectarines,
mill , brown sugar,
yeast powder and
vanilla 'n electric
blender. Whirl until
smooth. Add tee and
whirl aaaln until frothy.
Cut up nectarines to
measure I 'Al cups cubed
fruit. Combine fruit with
all other ingredients ex-
cept ginger ale ln elec-
tric blender; whirl until
fluffy and combined.
Chill. Just before serv-
ing stir in ginger ale.
Makes 3 servings.
SMACKEKY DAIQUllll
"'2 fresh nectarine
1/4 cup (2 ounces)
licht nun
2 tablespoons frozen
limeade concentrate,
thawed
1 to 2 CUpl CNSbed
tee
2 nectarine slices
2 mintaprip
Zesty boui llon In blen~e~1 combine
nectarine nan, rum and
limeade: blend amoOth.
U possible do ahead and
auper chill or freeae UD·
tt l mu1b)'. Add lee
sradually and b&eDd Wl·
Ul 1mooth. More lee
may be needed tor
froaen eff~1 but very
lood in llqUICI ltat.e, too.
Pour lDto ebWed aaueer
cbampa1•• 1ta11H.
Oamlllt with neetarlae
1llce .nd mint. llak• I
dalqulrla.
A Dice way to •tart 1
1ummer luncheon l1
wltb Spicy Boullion.
lt'I beef bouillon wWl
I .,.a.I ilet and the
teat. ta provided b)'
Jemoude nnor d.rlak
ml1.
Slmpl)' combine t
acoop of •uaar -
sweetened lemonade
flavor drink mix, 3 cupe
beef bouillon, ~ teH·
pooa Worceatenblre
aauce and ~ teaaPoOn
bot .,...... aauce. Stir to
dlaaolve drink mix, then
serve over cruabed ice
or leeeu•.
TJtla unusual bouillon
beveraae makea eJM)qh
for e Hniftll
quickly into bot Jan. nu.
lnl to wit.bin \4 inch of
top. Cover and process
in ~ water bath for
S minutes. Makes about
I~ cupe or about 10 (I
ftuid OUDC!lm) jan.
PEACH JAM
4 cups prepared
trult (about S poll;gds ful-
ly ripe peaches> · 2 tablespoons
lemon juice
S>Aa cups (2 pound
8 ounce) sugar
1 box (l~ ounce)
powdered fruit pectin
First prepare the
fruit. Peel and pit about
3 pounds peaches. Grind
or chop very fine .
Measure 4 cups into 6-or
8-quart aaucepot. Add
lemon juice.
Then make the jam.
Measure sucar and set
ulde. Mix fruit pectin
into fruit in saucepot.
Place over high beat
and stir until mixture
comes to a fuJJ boil. Im-
mediately add all sugar
and stir. Bring to a full
rolling boU and boil bard
1 minute, stirring con-
stantly. Remove from
beat and skim off foam
with metal spoon. Ladle
quickly into bot jars;
filli.Jlg to within 'i4 inch
of top. Cover and pro-
cess in boiling water
bath for 5 minutes.
Makes about 8~ cups or
about 7 (I Ouid ounce)
Jan.
PLVll l.ut
8 cupa prepared
fruit (about 4 pound fuJ.
ly ripe pluma and ~
cup water) ·
8 cupe (3~ pound)
sugar
1 box (l~ ounce)
powdered fruit pectin
First prepare the
fruit. Pit about 4 pounds
plums; do not peel. Cut
in small pieces and
chop. Place in saucepan
and add ~ cup water.
Bring tD a boil; cover
and simmer 5 minutes.
Measure 8 cupe into 8-or
I-quart aaucepot.
Then make the jam.
Measure sugar and set
uide. Mix fruit pectin
into fruit in aaucepot.
Place over hltb beat
and stir unW mixture
comes tD a fuJJ boil. Im·
mediately add all sugar
and stir. Bring tD a full
rolling boil and boil bard
1 minute, stirring con-
stantly. Remove from
heat and skim off foam
with metal spoon. Ladle
quickly into bot jars, fUJ.
ing tD within v. inch of
top. Cover and process
in bol.llng water bath for
S minutes. Makes about
9~ cups or about 11 (8
fluid owice> jars.
Homemade Peach and Plum Jam adds eating enjoyment to
bread long after peak season ends.
Sate up to $1.30
OD JOur favorite fruit and cereal.
It's Kellogg's Fabulous Festival oJ Fruit! During Kellogg's Fabulous Festival of Fruit, you can
A sununertime cefebration for fruit and cereal saveSl.OOonyourfavoritefreshfruitand/orKelloggs
lovers! It's the peak of the season for luscious fresh cereal. Just send in any 6 proof-of ·purchase
frui~ so what better time to top off your favorite seals from Kellogg! Com flakes, .. Rice Krispies,"
Kellogg's cereal wtth a sliced ripe banana, juicy Kellogg! Sugar Frosted flakes.~ or Special K"
sliced peach, or plwnp, sweet berries! cereals and get a $1.00 savings certificate.
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/W1dne1day. July 29, 1981
---amese dish unique, easy
AllDGll& ...-, COUDll'J .,. teupoon 11ated and llnlerin bowl. Shape
haalOIMldndtfdJUtbat treebilneerroot lato about te equal-Ilse
comW-meata,bl"Mdl. Lettuce, washed, balla. Alternate peach
fnaltl or v..-aba. bl cored and separated into cuHI and beef balla on
neat tnd Udy llttle leavee metal lk.ewera. Grill 4~
bundl•orpacka1et .... c"C r-ah mint to 5 inchet above f\ot
Co _ _. .. _ Sarmale', the 'Tiii .. .... coals for 5 or I minutes na_-leaves, ce ery leaves or
peach, 3 tablespoon.a soy
1auce, 2or 3 ( ~ x 14-inch)
tllcea frtllh linaer root, 1
lar1e clove 1arl1c and l
tablespoon sugar in elec·
trlc blender. Whirl until
smooth. PourintohmaU
bowls. Makes about ~
cup. Romanian venlon of parsley per alde or unUl cooked
stuffed cabbqe, or ~n-~cup cbopl>f!d areen tbrouah. To aerve, wrap
tons, a type ol meat-fllled onJon r--a rilled beef ball• and
CblneseDoodle. 2cupshotcookedrlce peaches ln lettuce. ad· PEACH-HOISINSAVCE
E11 i;oll1, another Peach·Ginger or dina mint, areen ol'lion Oriental apiei:lalty, con· and rice u desired. Roll Combine reserved ~
lain varied aeatood and Peach·HoisinSauce yp. Dip bundle in sauce. peach, v, cup hoiain
veaetable lqredlent.s in Cut 1~ peaches into r.fakes4servtngs. sauce and v, cup water in
d id 11.. d l bel ( Reae ere electric blender. Whirl in lv ua q wrappe argocu · rv · p E • c e . G I NGE R until smooth. Pour into 4 packages, mainlnl lAt peach for de· "
Wrap up the taste of
peach.ea in a unique
aummer barbecue idea .
Vietnameae Lettuce
Peach Wrap.
These Lettuce Peach sired sauce). Combine 8AVCE small bowls. Makes
WrapsinspuedbyaViet· ~be~e~f,~gar~U~c~·~so~y~a~a~uc~e:.__~C~o~m~b~in~e~rea~erv~e~d_::~~a~bo~ut~~~·~cu~p~.~~~~~~~~~~~--======-===:.....::.-=.=============--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
namese recipe combine
ease, economy and good
nutrition all in a bundle.
Not only light on your
budget, they're also easy
on your waistline.
OnJy one pound of lean
ground beef or pork,
savory seasonings, leas
than a pound of juicy
California peaches and
fresh crisp lettuce leaves
roll up easily to serve four
t\ungry appetites. Add
fluffy hot cooked rice and
two spicy sauces for dip-
pin&. The result is a uni·
que and quick summer
barbecue idea.
VIETNAMESE LET·
TUCE P EACH WRAP
2 large fresh peaches
(about~pound)
1 pound lean ground
beef or pork
1 medium to large
clove garlic, pressed or
minced
2 tablespoons soy
sauce
Souffle
• is super
Your reputation as a
cook will soar when you
serve a chilled Red
Raspberry Soulfle. But
it looks a lot harder to
prepare than it really is!
Ser ve your sensational
souffle with a flourish.
Then stand back to re·
ceive the praises that
are your just desserts.
R ED R AS P BE RR Y
SOUFFLE
Butter
Sugar
3 packages ( 10
ounces each) frozen red
raspberries in syrup,
thawed•
1/4 cup waler
6 eggs, separated
•/4 teaspoon salt
2 envelopes un-
flavor~ gelatin
~ teaspoon cream
of tartar
¥.I cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 c up whipping
cream, whipped
Raspberry or mint
leaves, optional
Make 4·inch band of
trip l e -thickness
aluminum foil long
e nough to go around
l 'h·quart souffle dish or
casserole and overlap 2
inches. Lightly butter 1
si d e of band and
sprinkle with s ugar.
Wrap around outside of
dish wilb sugared side
in. Fasten with tape,
paper clip or s tring.
Collar should extend 2
inches above rim of
dish. Set aside.
Reserve 3 berries for
garnish. Press remain·
ing berries through
sieve into medium
saucepan. Pour water
over seeds and press
again. Discard seeds.
Stir egg yolks and salt
into raspberry juice and
pulp. Sprinkle with
gelatin and let stand 1
minute. Cook over
medium he'at, stirring
until gelatin ls dis ·
solved, about 5 minutes.
Chill , s tirring oc ·
casionally, until mixture
mounds sllahtly when
dropped from spoon. In
large mixing bowl, beat
egg whites with cream
of tartar at h11h speed
until foamy. Add suaar,
2 tablespoons at a time,
beating comtanUy until
sugar is dissolved• • and
whites are alossy and
stand ln soft peaka. Beat
In vanilla. Gently. but
thorouchly, fold chllled
gelatin mixture a nd
whipped cream Into
whitea. Carefully pour
into prepa!M d.lab. ChlU
until firm, several bourt
or ovemlJht. Just before
aervlDI, carefully re-
move foll band. Garnl1h
with reaerved berrtea
and rupbetrY leaves, lf
desired. Makes I aerv·
lng1. •vou may use 4 to 5
cup• fNllt r•pberrltt.
Iner•••• 1u1ar to l~
CUPI· .. Rub Juat a bit. of
merin1ue between
lbumlltud...,_erto
f H l lf 1u1ar bat di•·
Mind.
OUI FAMILY IS llOWl•l •••• OW YOU CAN SAYE ON MOIE A•D MORE NO.FRl~LS
FIRST OF SEASON
BARTLETT
PEARS
NORTHWEST 8 I FRESH
BLUEBERRIES 'Ii\~·•
H! M11 Or M'tc h Gree" !ltd Or Slut
ID .59 Large Plum s
ili P•ntan. Canaiy Or
Crenshaw Melons lb .39
m Mll'litl ... ktl Falllly l'lck Mt11!111y ~ 2.19 Jack Cheese
m Maikfl llOfl
Cream Cheese
IO PROOF
S•lllOFF VODKA : 4as
All QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED NO SALE
TO DEALERS OR FOR
RESALE OR
COMMERICIAL USE.
iiiQ'mr· uan -:.u. 6 7
DINNERS ".:: •
ffi 1(,.,.,. Frettn Cut C«n Or . 79 Mixed Vegetables 20·01
Pkt
'ff
Mtu19'" I ClleHt .36 Kraft Dinners 7. t/4·01
Pkl
~ Olwflf ·~:1 2. 27 Fabric Softener
AIW1M Of Olc«llM Falllly Scllt .89 Bathroom Tissue •·rt ,,,
;m 35c OFF LABEL 3 2 3
DETER&EIT '::-
romaro uce . :1
PRICE EFFECTIVE
WED JULY 29 THAU
TUES .. AUG 4. 1981
¥rUl.121
CTI.
AH•nl flAHIS
WESTWOOD
ICE CREAM
'~ Auontd AH Naturtt
Popsicles 12·CI
Pkt 1.09
lli AH Grinds
Yuban Co ffee 11).ll
can 2.29
~ lltlttl.
Corn Flak es ,, . .,
,k, 1.23
Attllllr Fl.n"
Vets Dog Food 15 5·11
CIA
KRAFT . 133 MAYONNAISE ~·
MEAT FAMILY PACKS REDUCED
5c PER LB. OR MOREi
FAMILY PACK l'llk u111
Sirloin Chops
FAMILY PACK lllel!Ntr
Pork Steak
FAMILY PACK'"' ~~ Cube Steak
FAMILY PACK .... ......_, 'ff Chuck Steak
FAMILY PACK
Chicken Legs
FAMILY PACK ....
.Slrloln Tip Steak
"1.63
"1.84
"2. 53
.1.93
-.84
.2.63
\t
LB.
IOOI Offl' Af U .. U WUM lfh f(t MOI fOOIS MU
FRIED NCl
FRESH HOT GOLDEN 15 5 g g
CHICKEN 't:~
8"1 Boneltu 'H Chuck Steak lb 1.98
il~ 9~·~rii1r is ket "1.59
m Osei!' May" ~~ 1.29 Meat Wieners
flltltOI
Fresh Red Snapper "1. 89
KRUSE SHANK PORTION
S•OKED
HAM ,J09
AOYMTIMD rTUI AYMLAIMUTY OUMMTaJ t•C• Of lftfU lll•S IS .. _, ro ............... 1 , .. uu .. '""
"11111 1 .. llll UCl'IU ... C"tC'H '"''U• '"''°'If trrlt-Hflf .. oov11!111t 11f• WI ......... '°" '""' (-1 ••• tt .. H&MI Ill• .... . &¥11(1111 otfllC"llC IOI 11•1 SJfl'ICI .. I IWC:"ICI IOlllt-C •OV tf ""ff"&" flllf AltVfl rtlfl IU• i i T•f <'flUSfl ""' Wlf• ti •o s
Lower Prlo•• Ov•r•ll
Gu•r•ntHdl
•
....... .. ... . . . .. .. . ... . . ~ ......
' Orange Co•at DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, July 29, 1981
Punchy p "a rty i.deas
By MITZIE KELLEa
Are you plannln1 a
party in your 1arden?
Do include some lovely
old·fJshioned punch
made with herbs.
For a lar1e party,
serve a variety. Set ex·
planatory cards by each
so guests can select
refreshments which
seem most Intriguing lo
them.
For a small party.
choose one or two whlch
seem most appropriate.
Serve punch in silver
bowls seml·encased in
chipped ice on trays to
keep drinks chilled
without the dilution or
floating ice.
Here are six recipes
ranging from a delicious
plain "Lemonade or
1800" for children. to a
potent "Bang or 1850"
for serious drinkers.
CHILD&EN'S
LEMONADE -1800
. 4 large ripe lemons
~ pound lump sugar
6 large sprigs mint
16 cups soft water ,
boiling
thin lemon slices
mint leaves
optional: ice
Over a bowl, rub sug -
ar on lemon skin unUI
suear has absorbed all
of the yelJow part of the
rinds. Squeeze . lemon
juice on .the sugar: add
mint sprigs; press mint,
juice, sugar particularly
well together. A great
de al of the richness and
fine flavor depends on
this rubbing and mixing
proces s being
thoroughly performed.
Mix it up well with the
boi'ling water: allow to
USING . HERBS raspberry Juice with Champaene. Float
1 pound sugar e11 whites. Mikes 3
1 pint Jamalcen quarta.
rµm cool. Strain Into bowl. 1 pint brandy BANG -llM
Float lemon sllces, Fresh raspberries Place a "Oan1er"
mint, optional Ice. Mint leaves 1l1n beside any bowls of
Makes 4 quarta. Strain raspberry Juke Bang.
ADULT'S LEMONADE oirer sugar to dissolve It. 4 cups strong elder
_ 1... Stir through rum, bran· 4 cups warm ale
Prepare recipe for dy. Float raspberries, 2 t e a s po on s
Children's Lemonade mint. Pour over lee. molasses or sugar
using only 7 cups or boil· Makes 3 quarts. ~ teaspoon fresh,
l te Str · grated ginger ng wa r. am over: ROMAN PUNCH ,.._ l t d 4 b d .,.... ea11poon gra e cups ran y _ 17,... t
4 cups rum -nu meg
l cup Port wine 8 lemons Thin lemon slices 4 oranges Gin
BADMINTON CUP 4 pounds sugar Wh.IBkey
-1880 12 sprigs mmt Stir together the cider,
When young ladies 2 bottles Cham· m o lasses, nutmeg ,
wore heavily-starched pagne einger, rosemary in a
middles. ground-length 8 egg whites. bowl. Pour warm ale
s kirts and stiff straw whipped over. Float lemon slices.
b r i m m e r b a t s to Grat<: mint. lemon and Put ice cubes in a tall
participate in sports, orangerindsoversugar. gla ss; pour gin or
they drank Badminton Squeeze Juice on top. whis ltey over: ladle
Cups at chic country Cover; refrigerate over· Bang on top. Float a
clubs where badminton night. Pour into bowl lemon slice. wasanacceptablesport. ~:.:=..;.:...:.;_....:....;:...::..:........:..:.;.;..:.......:....:..:..~:..:..:.::.:.::.::..:::..::.:.::.:__ _________ 1-______ ~----~-------------------------=~--~~--------------------------~·
2 fr es h sprigs
borage
V.. pound powdered
sugar
juice l large lemon
1/4 teaspoon ground
nutmeg
1 cucumber, pared
4 cups claret
1 cup curacao
l quart soda water
Optional: ice block
Crush together the
sugar, lemon juice,
nutmeg. borage. Add
c ucurpber cut into
transparent slices. Pour
claret, curacao over;
blend. Add soda: op-
t ional ice. Makes 10
cups.
RASPBERRY SHRUB
-1899
2 quarts fresh
§,.$268 Holl Hom $188
w ....... .... ~~-=·lb. . ._._......,_. __ .. ,..,
W $248
2 ·lb.
lox
II THE EVllT OF A
LAIOI DISPUTE ALL
SAFEWAY STORES
ARE OPEi
CHECK YOUI J.OCAL
STOii FOi STOii HOUIS
Ground turkey is a modern meat. ~ 5 I C 2-i $279 12 ~:.
Unwoa.d s. ... h ... , I I C
Turkey burger
good on grill
Turkey burgers.
wrapped in bacon and
scrumptiously seasoned.
browned succulently on
tbe outdoor c ha r coal
grill.
Thal 's just one or the
exciting new burger. en·
trees you can make m a
minute with ground
turkey lends itself to
almost any seasoning,
so be as creative as you
wish in flavoring meat
patties or meat loaf.
If you've never tried
ground turkey, you're in
Cor a delicious surprise!
It's not only econQmical,
it's one of the lowes t
calorie meat.a you can
serve with approximate·
ly 200 calories per 4·
ounce serving. Ground
turkey also is high in
body-building protein
and low in cholesterol
when compared with
most popular red meats
and poultry.
With your great out·
door turkey burgers.
serve a refreshing
frozen fruit aalad and
fresh strawberries with
sour cream and brown
su1ar. It's a casual
menu, perfect for patio
or poolside, all summer
long.
TUUEY 8UllGE&S
1 pound 1round
turkey
8 aln1le saltine
crackeni (cruabed)
2 tableapoom cat.sup
1 tablespoon lemon
JUiee 1 tablespoon onion n.11 ..
l teaapoon
Worceatenhlre sauce
1 teaapoon botH·
radtab(aptioael>
'.t teMpoan pep"r
NUC. (optional)
4 b9eoa 1Hce1
Combine 1roaad tan~~tlt nm...,
... , ......... Into
pattlH. Wrap wltb
baeoa Iliff around GUter
ed1•. 1ecurln1 with
, 1
toothpick. Broil over
preheated charcoal 3
inches from source of
heat for 5 to 6 minutes
on each side, or until
done. Makes 4 burgers.
FROZEN FRUIT
SALAD
3 ripe bananas
1 cup canned pine·
apple, sliced
1 cup canned pears.
diced
1 dozen maraschino
cherries, thinly sliced
1 cup fruit salad
dressing (recipe below>
l cup heavy cream.
whipped
Mash bananas to a
smooth pulp, then add
pineapple, pears and
cherries. Add fruit s alad
dressing, then cream,
whipped until stiff. Pour
into 8-inch square dish
or desired container. CA
quart milk carton works
very well. Slice through
salad a nd carton .)
Freeze and serve when
needed.
FRVrrSALAD
DRESSING
14 cup sugar
'~ teaspoon saJt
1 ~ teaspoons nour
1 egg
2 tablespoons vln·
e1ar
~ cup pineapple
ju lee
M lx Ingredients ID or·
der stven, stirrinl well
after each addition.
Cook over low beat until
thick and smooth, aUr·
rlng con1t1ntly. Cool
before addinl to salad
mixture.
raENal FLA.JI
Slice fresh ripe
peaebel ID bait, dip into
an lleill1lk add mlx·
tun or.., dtnll juice,
sweet.. to t11t• ud retHpr•. M .......
time, •foon ·P••cfi
balves into IOblN and
pour or-.•ft•vored liq·
ueur °"' tbem.
~70Sq.
-0 Ft. Roll
:rt~4 .c
1-fb.
Corton
(IM*1 .___ ...... ,.I
su....... 291-TopWithC...... '
--..A -· -· lb.
QUALITY MEAT GROCERY LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE!
Beef Brisket ~"" .... "=.°':"'I • l1" -t ...
Beef Fritters ,,;--~ 2 ~ '271
Sliced Beef Liver .:.=. • 98•
Top Sirloin· .. ~~,~-• '2'5
18:'1-~.,.
BeefTri·Tlps;.:.=:, • '211
little Juan Burritos :;; 35•
Smoked Sausage~ • '2"
~ Hi-C Drinks ~75•
::: B&M Baked Beans ·~69•
:z:t Bell Brand Chips ~ 79'
:z=r Minute Maid -~89'· -~Anthony's Macaroni t; 59'
-.t=f Citrus Punch ':.; ::,69'
DAIRY
m:i;. Scotch .,.. .::::-
;J-£>Kavlana Vodka .. '!.
~Stanton Gin • .....
C-{·Paul Masson :;;,
•1l '9" , ..
'1l '679 1e
•1' 1511 l•
J '4" L•
Fresh Avocados
Crisp Cucumbers -,_ ..
Sweet Red Onions :::
:a;. Jacare Wines 2 ~·100
Golden Apples -
Tropical Limes
~Almaden ·--·--GROCERY
..!.'3" Red Radishes 'o='
Red Plums ... =..
'::·11111 Mini-Mixed Bouquets
• 35•
2,., 25•
2-39'
• 59'
Fresh Pork Sausage'Y-~ "11' :z:1' Lucerne Yogurts 3::..'1"° •Clorox ",.:'
Cure 81 Hams = . '2" -e:t Bob's =' ~ '131 ~rlsco ..._
Leg of Lamb '::. 'i . '1" ~Lucerne Buttermilk °""' 46• •Mother's "":' ... °"
Premium Ground Betf'i:i ."111 mt Co~ge Cheese-,.. 85• •Nestle's Quick Ji fs1 J. I• l • i .J •J j ! I La.rge ''AA" Eggs 1_ • =.89• •eatsup '=-
3 ~ •21• HEAL TH & BEAUTY
".::' "1°' •zact Tooth Polish
~ •211 Style Hair Spray -u . 7 4• Golden Tropics ':
Frelh Sfllpper Fillets ,:_ ... "1" We've Given LOW PRICES A New Name •••
Ftesh Dover SOit Fiiiets • '2" ·
Fish Fiiiets £:;i_ \:.• "1"
Turkey Franks : ~ 69'
Sliced Bologna"&: :: 1111
Thin Sff4md Mt* = :: 59'
9·1nch _.... -__.,
Pkg.
of .100
sw .. 1 2 I la ~ ' lb. .
AVl'2 .00 lJll.USIVI ..,.... omlU
MMIC MOUMTAIM TICKETSI . ... .......... ... ~ ~ ~ ,_.!! .. J !::.::~ ... ~-~ I ''8.95 ,w-.....
Oii of Olay
uty Letlen ,.. .......... ._ ....
. . . . .. . . -.. "-' .... t .. • • •
Orange ~ut DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, july 29, 1981
Mix fruit, tuna in salad
I Tarraaon, the herb TARRAGON TUNA
with the delectably SALA(>
anlae-llke flavor , Is a 2 cans· ( 7 ounces
'seaaonln1 that causes eech) tuna, drained and
comment whenever It's naked
used. The French love It i,A.a cup mayonnaise
,.in tlsh and chicken dis· i,A.a teaspoon tarragon
h es and for her bed leav~s, crushed
vine1ars, but, aurpris· 14 teaspoon salt
inlly, It's equally good in Yt teaspoon curry
chilled summer salads powder
,withfreshfruits. 1 teaspoon lemon
A tuna salad (pie· juice
lured) -in a tarragon-2 tablespoons raisins
flavored mayonnaise 1 cup fin ely diced ap·
combine tuna, mayon-
naise, tarra1on, ult,
curry powder, lemon
juice and raisins. Cover
and refrigerate at leaat
one hour. Just before
serving stir in apples and
oranges: mix lightly.
Spoon o nto lettuce
leaves. Garnish with ad-
ditional orange and ap·
pie wedges. if desired.
Yield: 3~ cups; 6 por·
lions.
dressio1 touched with pies TANGY TARRAGON
urry powder and lemon 1 cup diced orange FRUIT SALAD
uice -is in perfect ac· segments l cup orange juice
v. teupoon tarra1on
leavea, cruabed
Ploch around
nutme1
Pinch 1round black pepper
4 cups sliced fresh
fruit C strawberries ,
peaches, cantaloupe,
etc.)
Jn a medium bowl
combine orange juice,
sugar, tarra1on, nutmeg
and black pepper. Add
Cruil and toss lightly.
Cover and refrigerate at
least one hour before
serving. Yield: 4 cups; 8
portions.
. . . . . ... . .. .. . ....
-------
Tarragon, a delightful
companidn with many
fish and chicken dtshes.
is ref resh1ng m a salad
featuring fresh fruit
and tuna chunk&
cord with diced apples, Jn a medium bowl ltablespoonsugar
orange segments and .-----------~---------------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
raisins. Wonderful sum-
mer colors and tastes in
this salad -for lunch
• either at table or under
,_., the trees.
N A thirst-quenching r-fruit salad is next, with
· whatever fruits you have
at hand -strawberries,
cantaloupe, peaches.
blueberries, etc. The un-
""-usual dressing combines
orange juice, tarragon,
nutmeg, black pepper
•. and a bit of sugar. The
~ dressed salad should be
· refrigerated at least an
hour before serving ror
~ the flavors to ~lend. Cari ~• you imagine this wlth
• • cold roast chicken or
~ duck, sliced baked ham ~>( . . . or as a refreshing
:~ first course?
~~ ~Pie is
•
1 possible
~ ~ Take advantage of the
abundance of fresh
• garden vegetables by
finding creative ways to
serve them, like thia de·
licious main-dish idea
tbat combines several
garden favorites in a
cheesy pie.
Because it's an im·
possible pie, there's no
crust to make. That
means less time in a hot ~ • kitchen. Just mix the
: : ') milk, Bisquick· baking
~ mix, eggs and season-
. lngs in a blender (or
, , with a hand beater) and
pour on top of the
vegetables. M it bakes,
the bakln1 mix settles to
the bottom t.o form the
pie cruat. That's why it's
called imPOSsible!
IMP 0,8S IBL E
VEGETABLE PIE
2 cups chopped fresh
broccoli or sliced fresh
caulifiowerets•
~ c up c hopped
onion
~ cup chopped
green pepper
1 c up shredded
Cheddar cheese (about 4
ounces)
l~ cups milk
~ cup baking mix
3eggs
1 teaspoon salt v. teaspoon pepper
Heat oven to 400
degrees. Ughtly grease
pie plate, lOxllh inches.
Heat 1 inch salted water
( ~ teaspoon salt to 1
• cup water> to boiling.
Add broccoli. Cover and
heat t.q bolling. Cook un·
tU almost tender, about
'5 minutes; drain
thoroughly. Mix broc-
coli, onion, green pepper
., and cheese in pie plate.
Beat remaining ingre·
dients until smooth, 15
1 • seconds in blender on
I hilh speed or 1 minute
-. with hand beater. Pour
• into pie plate. Bake until
1olden brown and knife
, inserted halfway
between center and edge
comes out clean, 35 to 40
minutes. Let stand 5
mjnutes before cutting.
Refrigerate any remain-
ing pie. 6 servings.
•1 packa1e (10
• ounces) frozen chopped
• broccoli or caullfiower,
thawed and drained, can
be aabltltuted for the
!resb broccoli or
. cauliflower. Do not
· cook.
PBACB 8ALAlf
MllPLBU
-To11 peeled and
diced tr.It peaches with
shredded eabbaae, diced apples, a handful of
raUlal Md a creamy
1,weeteeld ma1019naiae
dre91m, for a nutrttJoul aad nfreablDa 1ummer
s~
-Add dleed fresh
peaea-to JOW' favorite
eblekn Hlad recipe.
ror extra ele1aae•t
aeoop &bi ebleten .. iaa
llllo pMlid treab peaeb ......
-..,.. llleid ,.... • .................. ole,.._-.... .....
la ftDllr lll1Hlll .... • =...,enamblltra .......... ., lllllt
G1111tt.
HUNDREDS OF KEY BUYS FOR GREATER FOOD SAVINGS.
a ower
f" HUNT'S 89 cl, ~JCHUP 3201 Btt •
FRYING
... 59 CHICKEN
wnoll BOOV. SOUtl'lern
Graclf A
RIB EYE
.. 338 FILET
eonei.ss Soncl@d Beef
Spencer
BLADE CUT 89 ~'lSK STEA~n •
NUCOA SOFT
MARGARINE
160? TOb
.67 ~
!"HARVEST DAY49
A ~2Eeac 16 oz Loaf•
or•v•
f"OATORADE 59 6 E!l!K J2 oz en •
or orange
. f!'LADY LEE 79 c!,,~~ENB!~~
RtQUlar cut. Rozen
FILM DEVELOPING
DEVELOPED ANO PRINTED
12 EXPOSURE 20 EXPOSURE
2.99 4.19
Aoo.t PMft ..-, OIWY CO Htndll't ftlm C ilO Ol'lltftt
weft .. ...., .. cw ... 'OC-.t
Z"°11*1J IOlll p;k:f:&
ln11t1d OI • le11r .wttkly tpttlll\,
tctou•tllf·botlrd low pnt1n1 an tldU« your
ovr,.11 food bill
f" MAZOLA 2 49
c!, CORN OIL 48 01 •rt
CROSS RIB
ROAST
eonetess. 8onOfd BM' cnuct
LARGE END
RIB ROAST
BonOedBfff
QUARTER
PORK LOIN
lncluOeS Blade. ltlb
SlrlOln L LOln Cuts
.. 198
.. 198
.. 110
CHICKEN
FRANKS
lady lte. 12 oz Pleg
.59~.
f" CHICKEN 89
c!, !v~~OON~or ~e •
Single price policy.
ln~tud of confu•ina you with multlpk pric:ln1.
hkt •3 for 89'.· our Sinp Item Pritlna Policy
1imply u1u1u you Ille tame prkt per Item ., the
ihopi>tr ,,.ho bu)s "'°"of that 111M 11tm.
"••"IP man an....,..
lt)' 111)'1 art lttm1 PflCH t\Cft lo.-er than tlicir
rvtr)'Clay discount pncn H • rnult ol
man11faci11rtrs' tcmporety 'promouonal
•llewranc:tt or uccpdoNI purchalft. Yo1o111 Jlnd
hulldrtda of Key luy 11tm1 C\.'Cry tilnf yo111ho11
f"LADY LEE 168 6 !~!~!!t''-!c. Ctn
f" DIET RITE 83 i OR R.C. CC?~"•
WHOLE BEEF
BRISKET
Boneless, IOnOed Bttf. 7·9 lbS "148 I LONDON 1ss ~R.s<?~!~~~na LO
BONELESS 1ss ~U~D STEAK lo
The larger size is
always the better buy.
We guarantee the larger si1e of any
ca nned . bottled o r packaged item to
be the bette r bu). Even when we
lower the price o f a smaller-!.i1cd
item to renect a manufacturer .
allowance. we a utomatically reduce
the larger si1c. too .
WHOLE CRENSHAW
WATERMELON MELONS
l!ed Ripe, !Cut. 12 lb l, lb otsttnct11111v Fllvor«t. lb
.10 ~~ .29 ~1u
CASABA GOLDEN
MELONS NECTARINES
5'llClal Tmte Tmt. lb Sweet & JulCY, lb
• 15 ~ • .39w~ .
~~1 ' 1-' ..
\~,
2 _.....
HONEYDEW
MELONS
wonotrfut Eating lb
.25 ~ ..
FRESH
CANTALOUPES
FY" of RaVor. lb
'
. " .. .. "" ..
BJ BAaa.uA GU.IONS
If YOW' meall bav• to
be lean and low·calorte,
think Lemon Aid.
Lemoa Julee really
turna OG tbe taste of
1klole11 white meat
poultry, and fine· tun"
t h e flavor of fat·
tri~med be;ef. I predict
theae recipes will turn
into family favorite1:
Lemon Chicken
Scallops look and taste
deep fat fried, but
they're bated in a very
bot oven. Slice chicken
c utlets or fillets into
bite-slse cubes.
LEMON CHICKEN
SCALLOPS
2 skin.less, boneless
chicken breasts < ~
pound)
3 to 4 tablespoons
fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons un-
seasoned breadcrumbs
2 tablespoons grated
Parmesan cheese
Pinch of ground
nutmeg
Salt, pepper, to taste
Cut chicken into l·incb
cubh. Combine with
lemon juice in a glass
bowl and stir to coat
well. Let marinate lS to
20 minutes at room tern·
perature.
Meanwhile, preheat
ov~n to 475 degrees.
Spray a shallow non-
stick baking tray with
cooking spray. Com bine
r~maining ingredients ln
a plastic bag and mix
well. Add the moist
chicken cubes, a few at
a time; cJO&e bag tight-
ly. trapping some air to
form a balloon. Shake
up , to coat chicken
cubes.
Arrange chicken
cubes in a single layer
on the baking tray. Bake
uncovered, in the very
bot oven 8 to 9 minutes,
until crisp and oven-
fried. Tum cubes once
during baking. Makes
fo u r servings, 115
calories each.
Serve these Greek
Lemonburgers as a
majo course at dinner,
or make them into
smaller patties, \o broil
and tuck into pita
pockets for lunch.
GR EEK
LEMON-BURGE•S
1 pound fat-trimmed
beef bottom round.
ground
3 tablespoons lemon
juice
'14 cup minced
parsley
Optional: l clove
garlic, minced (or pinch
or lnatant garlic, or use
garlic salt)
Sall, pepper, to taste
"" teaspoon dried
(or 2 teaspoons fresh)
\
Chocolate
shortcake
Ever beard of a
chocolate short cake?
Well, chocolate lovers ,
take heart. T h is
shortcake is better than
just cboeolate. It's dou-
ble chocolate.
First cocoa and
chopped nuts are stirred
into the shortcake dough
made with baking mix.
Then, the dough is
topped with more cocoa,
brown sugar and water
which become a warm
fud1e·like sauce. Top
with ice cream for a
1bortcake reminiscent of
a bot fudte sundae.
And don't worry. This
abortcake is baked ln a
13:19-lncb pan, so there
la enoueh to serve 12.
11(11' nJDGE
SUNDAE SROattA&E
2'AI cupa baking mlx
3 tablespoons
• 1ranulated suaar
Z tablelpC>ons cocoa
3 tablespnooa
maraarine or butter,
m elt4!d
~cup mll.k
1 cup chopped nuta
1 cup packed brown
1u1ar a.4 cup eocoa
l~ ~ hottat tap
water
lceaeam
Heat oveo to UO
de1ree1. lllx balllat
.. mix, O'anulated 1u1ar.
~oa, marsartne, mill
and nutt until IOft dou"9
form1. S'PrHd lo ua·
1 r•a1ed recta•1ular
P••r llxtal IDCbH.
8prtat l• wll la b rown ... ,u ad ceeoe. Pour
W water cw.-doqla.
Ball• umtll wOodlll pick
blHNd ID Nlller to1:Dt1 nt eleao , IO t o H ...................
1pooa lllto dt11ert dWNe
aad top wttb tee tnam.
8pooa HUN tl'OID pu
onto Heb ••rvt.na. 11 .........
f {
' -....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981 C IJ
• •
oretaoo pl ta bread h 10 --------ca~~~~>;,tean cuiline" SLIM GOURMET raw 1plnacb leaves.
Make• ap~mately l
cup dreu1ng, 25 calories
per tablespoon.
MOCK LEMON
HOLIANDAJSE
SAUCE FOR HOT
COOKED
VEGETABLES
salt), pepper smooth. Pour over hot
vegetables. Makea three
s ervings, 90 calories
each with brotcoll.
1 ~poon dried (Or
1 tabl•poon freab) mint
Com ine tnaredlenll
ideaa with lell\oa: · orm=•m
and UahUy. Shape
into patde1. Broll or pan
fry to dtl.lred doneneu,
In a noaltlck skillel with
DO fat lldded. Mak• '
main-course servln11.
160 calories each:. or 6
lunch-alae servlnp, 1~
calories each Ca 1-ounce
LB•ON CAF.SAa
SALAD OaESSING
DaE881NG
~ cup low-ht
mayonnaise
\.-ii cup fresh lemon
Julee
1 teaspoo~
Worcesteratpre sauce
Optional: 1 clove
1artlc, minced {or pinch
of instant aarUc)
2 tablespoons srated
Parmesan cbeeae
V4 cup minced fresh
parsley
Stir or blend lngre·
dient1 together; toss
with romaine lettuce or
For just one salad,
toss washed salad
greens with 1 tablespoon
low-fat mayonnaise, 1
tablespoon lemon julce, a s h a k e o f
Worces.tershlre sauce
and Parmesan cbeese.
Approximate l y 55
calories altogether.
~ pound fresh (or
10-ounce packaee> broc·
coli (or green beans,
etc.)
""cup waler
2 tables poons lemon
juice 1/4 cup low-fat
mayonnaise
Sall (or sea soned
Cook vegetables in un·
seasoned water just un·
tit tender -c risp .
Transfel' lo a bowl and
cover to keep warm.
Tum heat high and slm·
mer cookjng water until
reduced to a few table·
s poons. Combine hot
cooki ng water with
lemon juice, mayon·
naise and seasonings to
ta s t e : fork -blend
Italian Chjckfn Coe·
c1atore. Spanlth Chicken
with Rice, ,.Tench ChU:IMI
in Wine, and more. ~ a
Stam~d. Hlf·addreued
envelope and SO cmt• to
Slim Gourmet Chicken
With a Fordgn Flmr, P.q .
Boz 624, SparCa, N.J. 07111.
'
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I DECORATED OR ASST. COLORS 69C
SCOTT TOWELS ... 1·ROll I CHEESE LOAF SPREAD • •239 . CHEFS DELllHI .... 32·0Z I MINUTE MAID • 179 ORAlllE JUICE .... 84-0Z I AUNT JEMIMA OfUQINAL FROZEN c WAFFLES ................. 1s.oz 99
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51.40
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5318
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station
II
in s pace?
SPACE CENTER,
~ouston CAP> Space
n 't the cheapest place
o build a service sta-
tion, but sci&ntists
believe one orbiting 200
miles above Ear th
would be worth the in-
vestment.
Such a "filling station
in space" would contain
l o o l s Co r s e r v i c i n g
satellites In need of
minor repairs and fuel
for refilling tanks of
cruising space shuttles,
said Clarke Covington,
NASA 's manager for
program development.
Covington said the
space station, called the
space operations center.
has top priority on a list
of new projects in space
now that America has
sent men to the moon
and built a reusable
spaceship, referring to
the space shuttle Colum-
bia.
But with the mood in
Wa shington favoring
spending cuts, he said
the agency will have to
prove the station is a
iOOd investment. The
latest estimates are that
the station would cost
almost $6 billion in 1982
dollars.
As planned now. Cov-
ington said, the space
s tation would contain
living quarters two
four -person modules
that would be supplied
for 90-day periods.
Covington s aid the
operations station could
serve as a "toolshed"
where a s tronaut -
m echanics could get
equipment needed to re-
pair faults on orbiting
satellites . He sa id
several $50 million
satellites orbiting now
are not operating
because of minor flaws.
The refueling point
would save the cost of
launches from Earth's
gravity.
And there will be
room for companies to
buy space to carry out
zero-gravity experi-
ments, Covington said in
an interview.
Becau se o f the
multitude of new experi-
ments that could be car-
ried out in zero-gravity,
the country could de-
velop a technological
edge on the rest of the
world that would take
100 years of working in
normal gravity to make
up, he said.
·'There are some
things you just can't do
on the ground," Cov-
ington said. For in-
stance, he said, scien-
tists can make extreme-
ly pure medicine and
make certain chemicals
crystallze that would not
do so within Earth's gravity.
Despite the high price
tag, Covington said he's
optimistic the National
Aeronautics and Space
Administration can gt?t
a commitment -
perhaps ~ million -
for the project in the
1983 federal budget. He
old top N'.ASA offlclala
support the project.
Egypt
due
A-plants
• CAIRO, E1ypt (AP>
-Weal German and
l&Ypllan officials have ~1ned an aareement to
oooperate ln developln1
;uclear ener1y, pavln1
tbe way for aale of
'uclear reactor• lo
~IY~. the olflclal Mid·
tie East. News A1enc1 ~11 reported.
:. T h e •••acy said ~IYJ>l would buy
juclear pOwer 1tatlont
jrlth 1 capacity of 2
i Jlioa ldlow1ttl. It WU
kaown bow m1ny
aat1 would b•
~.
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MULTI-PURPOSE NYLON
& VINYL SPORT SHOES
YOU'D IU ICT TO 9'' ,AT $$$ MOii! PAii
For aoccer I other field 1portt. Men't I boy's 1lze1.
REGAL MOUNTAIN FINE
QUAlln TABLE WINES
SAU 229
PllCE C:.
Chobll1, Pink Chobll1, lklrgundy or Vin Rose. Sovel
STATIONERY
~ ........ ...:----=--~ SUPER SALEI
Now yov con aove even
more on our prlvole lob.I
loblell ond e nvelopH.
HEAVY Dun TRASH& LAWN
BAGS IN 3 SIZES
REG. 89C 1.29 :s
You con overatuff 'em! Twlal Ilea Included.
DOWNY
FAlllCSOFTlm
SALEI'' Piia
lt'9 6'·01. 1119· Prke In·
eludes* off lobe!.
AIMORALL
SNAY PIOTICTAll' 110.99c · 1.49
Hondy •-01. lfl"IY.
REG. 99' EA.
79!
ANTIFREEZE
AND SUMMER COOLANT
SALE 3'' PRICE
Provide• your cor yeor-round protection. 1 gallon.
SPOITCRAfT STP
SOCCll IAU OIL TIUTMENT
IEG.,99
12.99
In 1l1e1 4 °' 5.
SALE 139 PRICE
Fuel-efficient. IS.OZ.
ClltAMllA
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SNUG TREDS®
TERRY SCUFFS
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to t1><:k tired Ifft lnlo.
Machine~. sir. S.Xl.
REG. 2.99
2~'
FOSTER GRANT FASHION
GRADIENT SUNGLASSES
REG. 1.00 4'' AND 9.00 l:.
Sun-tolionol eyeweor In plottic or rlmleH framet.
SERGEANT'S SENTRY V
FLEA & TICK COLLAR
REG.1'' 3.19 :
Dog. Puppy, lorge 009 or Cot fleo coll or Sove •
I
r----------~---------------------...~-----~·--------------------------------. llily Pilat
No longer
• a pnsoner
Childs hawy to be a Ram
9y JOHN SEVANO
Of ... Delly ...... , ....
As a former inmate of the New Orleans Saints
State Penitentiary. Henry Childs knows about the
trials and tribulations of confinement.
The tiaht end was a marked man in New Orleans as was former inmate Chuck Muncie (now
at San Diego> and present pruoners Wes Chandler
and Tony Galbreath.
"It's a big relief to be in a situation where
there is some stability," said Childs, the Rams'
first legitimate tight end since Bob Klein. "In six
years there I had four or five bead coaches and
just as many general managers.
"THAT TYPE OF SITUATION can hurt you
from reaching your peak."
In 14 seasons as an NFL franchise, the Saints
have never reached their peak. Their best season
was 1979 when they fashioned an 8-8 record and a
second place finish (to the Rams) in the NFC
--~-West. Their lowest ebb
Henry Childs
ment blamed.
was last season when
they were 1-15.
"The overall talent
at New Orleans just
wasn 'l that good," ad-
mitted Childs. "There
was a lot of pressure on
the good players to
overcome the team's
weaknesses.''
Childs. Chandler.
Galbreath, Mun cie,
Archie Manning and
Conrad Dobler were
considered the team's
"good players." And,
when there was a loss.
Childs said, it was these
players that manage-
"It was nerve-wracking to know we had abili·
ty. and then were forced to go through all those
changes," defended Childs. "There was never a
relaxed state."
Childs cam e to the Rams by way ol
Washington where. the Redskins acquired his
rights from the Saints and then traded him away a
week later to the Rams for an undisclosed draft
pick.
IN IDS SEVEN-YEAR career, the 6-2, 220·
pounder . from Kansas State bas caught 207 passes
for 3,220 yards (15.6 average) and 27 TDs.
Last season, although milling three games
and parts of seven others with strained knees,
Childs h~d 34 receptions for 463 yards and six TDs.
By contrast, the Rams' tigbtends combined to catch
31 passes. _
"I didn't dread it there <New Orleans)
because l take a lot of pride in my ability," said
Childs. "But I was glad to get out. Anywhere
would have been better than a team that was
1-15."
Childs admitted he wasn't ignorant of the
Rams· problems. He said he knew of the troubles
the team went through last year and during the
ore-season. But he said, the Rams' woes were
child's play next to the Saints.
·•What the Rams went through were business
problems . . . the same as any other business
would go through. After adjusting to four systems
at New Orleans, this is nothing.
"rM VERY EXCITED because there's a huge
difference between the two teams." added Childs.
"Where the Saints are talented in a few positions
the Rams have a lot of deep talent in every posi-
tion.
"I have a lot of confidence in my ability but
I'm sUU going through the transition of proving
myself here. I'd have to do that regardless of
where I was."
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
~LASSI Fl ED 07 ·
BUD TUCKER
American water polo
came up short Tuesday ,
settling for second
in Bucharest. See D2 .
. Football wagering: It's a bet
If you frequent the taverns and
barber shops and haberdasheries and
similar salons of culture and refine-
ment, you have noticed a trend which
bas endured for several months.
H involves gentlemen -some
ladies, too, for that matter -in
variowi stages or what seems to be a
form of withdrawal. For openers.
they tremble quite uncontrollably.
Their eyes are wide, glassy and
periodically awash with tears. At
which time they sob with some
violence. contributing to the
spasmodic condition mentioned
above. Aside from theil' whimpering,
they are silent.
The ritual is daily but more pro·
nounced on Sunday afternoon. On
Monday evening, to walk into one of
the above mentioned establishments
is to enter a snake pit.
IT IS INDEED a form o f
withdrawal. The creatures you have
noticed are experiencing the tor-
ments of the football off-season. In
short , there are no games on which to
wager. No odds, no point spreads and
no overs and unders. No action
whatsoever.
These sufferers ltO it cold turkey
because there is no choice. The supply
has dried up, so t-0 speak. When the
gun ends the Super Bowl thing in
Janurary, the betting game over. The
abruptness enhances the agony. Hence
the frigid fowl.
Well, there is a measure of relief.
Bob Martin of the Union Plaza ln Las
Football wagering has
become more than a
way of life in these Unit-
ed States. Its rites are
practiced from August to
January.
Vegas, the handicapper who creates
the lines during the season, the other
day threw out the prices on the
various National Football League
teams making it to Super Bowl XVI.
The San Diego Chargers and the
Atlanta Falcons were established as
4·1 favorites to plod all the way from
here to Super Sunday. The defending
champion Oakland Raiders were
hung up at 6-1 as were the Rams and
the Dallas Cowboys.
The publishing of the foregoing
odds will not eliminate the suffering,
but it is something to discuss while
waiting for the games of a new
autumn to get under way.
YOU SEE, FOOTBALL wagering
has become more than a way of life
i11 these United States. It is a re-
ligion. Its rites are practiced from
August to January so you wUJ un-
derstand the traumatic implications
of the abrupt halt.
Naturally, alternatives have been
tried, but most have failed. To fully
understand this you must be aware
that football "players" are not com-
pulsive gamblers in the tacky sense
or the word.
They are addicted, to be sure, but
only to football.
For instance, basketball has been
offer ed as a substitute but its relief is
temporary at best. That is to say. one
soon comes to realize that all basket-
ba 11 games are tied , 101 -101, or
thereabouts. with two minutes to
play.
A dedicated football bettor is used
to closer to three pours of action and
misery. During this time he gets
satisfaction -indeed therapy -
from groveling in front if his TV set,
screaming advice and obscenities at
the side on which he has waeered.
HORSE RACING FALLS into a
similar category of inadequacy. One
accustomed to three hours of agony
can hardly be satisfied with three
minutes or less. It is not possible to
flag down an express train with a
birthday candle.
The story is ancient, but ap-
propriate, about the guy who called
his bookie pleading for action after
blowing 21 straight plays on football .
·'There are no football games to-
day," the book replied. "Only
hockey."
"What the hell do I know about
hockey?" the player demanded.
At any rate, you are now aware of
the reason for the suffering on the
boulevard. You can understand it by
calculating it is a thousand times
worse than quitting smoking or going
on a diet.
The good news is relief is coming.
The bad news is it is a couple of
weeks away.
Some of us will make it.
Emlle Harry (right) hH had
a dl1tlngul1hed c.,eer at
Fountain Valley High, but It
flgurH to be Ju1t •• ro1y at
Stanford. See Roger
Car1on'1 column, pa~ 04.
It's official,
I
Owens a Ram
No . 1 pick come to terms
As reported Tuesday, linebacker Mel Owens.
the Rams' No. 1 draft pick, signed a contract with
the Rams ending his 10-day holdout.
Owens signed three one-year coqtracts. with
an option year added, in General Manager Don
Klosterman's office at Rams Park around 4
o'clock Tuesday afternoon.
He was then schooled in what to say and
whisked off to the Rams' Cal State Fullerton train-
ing complex for a quick conference with the
media.
Dressed in a three-piece green suit. with agent
Phil Closius and Klosterman at his side, Owens
was cautious with his statements.
TUESDAY'S ACTION -Richard Savage
(top left> absorbs a punch and UCLA
junior Mark Caso performs on the rings at
the National Sports Festival. Al San Fran-
. .............
cisco (righll former Ram J ack Reynolds
backpedals on a play during scrimmage al
the 49ers' training camp.
"l'M PRETTY HAPPY," said Owens. "There
was a game in two weeks and I felt I had to prac·
lice to play."
Although terms weren't discussed, Owens re-
portedly received in the neighborhood of $375.000
for three year s plus a $200,000 signing bonus.
One can understand Owens' tentativeness -
and the Rams' too, for that matter.
Yoder wants to get even with UCLA After the Johnnie Johnson fiasco of last
season, when he signed a reported six-year con·
tract worth $1.2 million causing many veterans to
second-guess their worth, management was
careful not to divulge any figures or have anything
said that might trigger another uproar. I And the ex-San Clemente High star will get his chance coaching USC's volleyball team
ByCUllTSEEDEN
Of ...............
Bob Yoder should be very happy the
football rivalry between Ohio State
and USC doesn't carry on to the
volleyball court. He could have a rough
time being accepted.
Yoder can only be described as a
pioneer in the sport of volleyball, at
least in the Southern California area.
As a senior in 1974, Yoder was a
mem her of the first~ver San Clemente
Hi&h volleyball team.
From San Clemente, Yoder went to use. where he spent the first year on a
basketball court rather than the
volleyball court. He wanted to do both,
but studies wouldn't allow it. He Ht·
tied on volleyball only the following
season.
ONCEHEGaADUATEDfrom USC,
Yoder made somewhat of a &ianl leap1 career-wlte. The 23-year-ola
economlca major landed the bead
coachinaJobatObioState.
He dkfD•t have to spike bla ••>'on to
the Buckeyes• 1ood side, ellher. He
simply beard about the openlna and
applied for the Job.
.. TbeJ bad a real 1ood coach -
Su1uru rurtclU -t.be two J)l'•vloua yun. He wu ftnlahinl.hil doctcl'at.
wbi&e be eoaebed. Wbea be wu done,
well, hll vita expired net be bad to ....
tva tolapa, •• YOdei' recalla.
. Tlae ~Ucil ol U.I . Na·
Uoaal t.am eo9cb OoU• Buie dlda't b9rt n.. Yoder •eat for Ual Oh6o
ltatl blMntew. And YOdll' , lli""oMd
... ,, Mil of .... wortb ...... two
............. mldw..t .... bolltid.
•·• reeard and third and fGurtla·plaft
-
I.
finiabel ln the NCAA tournament. ln
both cues, the Buckeye teamt fell to
UCLA.
Perbapt now, Yoder would like to
'" a football rlnlry carry onr to tbe YOlleybUJeampalp. YoderWouldllke
notbtq ....... than a Uttle NV ... I
....... UCLA . And, be'U have 'tile
t!llfMe to 1ata \hat venpaate lbll
1ear u he Httl• lDl.O bla nn Jolt -bead coach at USC.
YODER WAS HIRED at USC in May
after Coach Ernie Hicks resigned to
pursue business interests. And , Yoder
feels his team can go places.
''The only reason volleyball is grow-
ing right now is because of its success
in the west and east. It's really stag-
nant in the mldwest where I was,"
Yoder says.
"l know it's considered a minor
sport and its usually the victim of
budget cuts in the athletic depart·
ments. It's never been a real money
sport."
StiU, Yoder reels volleyball as a
sport as no where to 10 but up, thanks
mainly to the capabUitie1 of the
a th let.ea who now play volleyball.
··I see improvement every year. The
athletes playing the same rilht now
are aetUn1 better and belt«. The level or quality bu really improved," be
says.
TBE aE.UON CAN BE traced back
to tbe hlgh schools. That's one reuoo
Yoder lt spendlna W1 summer belp-
io1 hla for(Der high school coach, Jack
Iverson, conduct clinics at San
Clemente.
Yoder HYI he is allowed to lure rJve
athletet to USC via volleyball
•cbolarebipe, which la an NC!M limit.
That'll not b8d eeulderiq bis team
will probabl1baveJut12memMn.
While &M coUe1e •oUeyball Hatoa
officially kitb off ln January, Yoder
plana tO tut .. Ml team buay ln Hveral
preaMIClll tournament.I be1lnntn1 as
Hrly uOd.ober.
'•1&•1 qui&e • ..._ •••aon bl reality," he noces. ··w• nan in Oetober and
nnt1h u,u.e aecond week of May."
ACTUALLY, MOST college
volleyball teams are through with
their season by April, but Yoder-
coached squads have a tendency to
stretch things out by qualifying for the
NCAA tournaments.
Al the lender age of 25, Yoder has
become accustomed to the pressure of
national championship competition,
and he'll bring that attribute with him
to USC. He also brings a lot of
volleyball sense.
"Volleyball was a lot simpler years
ago. The game is becoming more
sophisticated now," Yoder explains.
''There are more tactlca now.
''Whenlplayed, I was more of an all·
around player. I really dldn 't have any
specialty, I auess. I really wasn't an
outstanding player. I waa Just a good
player. Today, the more versatile of an
athlete you are, the better you'll do.''
South Af ricana eyed
UNITED NATIONS <AP) -A
group of American civil rl1ht1,
political, religious and •PGrtl ll"OUPI
vowed Tuesday to marshal their
forces ln New York, Chlcaso and
Albany in an effort to block a U.S.
tour ol a South African rutbY team.
R lchud Lapchlck, Datlonal
chairman ol the American CQordlnat·
ln1 Committee for lCqu.allty ln Sports
and Society, aald &$ 1roupt had
Joined ln a ~iUon a1alnat the tour.
The South Alticana, now on a con·
trovtnlal tour of New Zealand, are
1chechded to play ln Cblcap Sept. 11,
Albany, N.Y., Sept. 22 and New York
City~. ae.
"MEL SIGNED THREE single-year contracts 1
with an option. Terms will not be discussed," said 1
Klosterman as he opened the press conference. '
"ln negotiations, we all play games,··
Klosterman added later. "It was to Mel's best In·
teresl and the Rams that he is in camp."
Was there a compromise by either party? l
"Obviously we did," answered Klosterman,
"and so did they."
Closlua, a law professor out of the University f
of Toledo, contended throughout bargaining
sessions that his client was worth just as much aa ·
Johnnie Johnson, the Rams' 1980 No. 1 pick, -·if I
not more.
MANAGEMENT'S CONTENTION was that I
while Johnson could come in and start rieht away,
Owens couldn't with players like Jim Youn1blood,
Carl Ekem and Geore Andrews in front of him.
"I know what your guys are after -and that's
atories," saJd Owen.a with a grin, ,intent on not 1iv-
ing the media any.
"I missed some and 1 know 1 have my work
cut out tor me.''
Owena, the ninth player picked ln May's NFL
draft, bu trimmed ts pounds off hls W.pound
'frame durina the holdout.
KL08T£aMAN SAID be eame to a verbal
a1reement with Owens' a1eot Monday. The two
then new into LAX at noon Tuelday.
&tr°'ely, Rama Coach Ray Malavui may
have even fltured ln Owena endi.nt hi.I holdout.
"He called and 1av1 me .Ome advice, which I
appredated," 1ald Owena.
••J Just told him be wu 1.wna beb.lnd," wd 1
Malat'ul. "l had nothinl to do wfth ne1ot11Uou
ti&at I told hlm be wu burt.IDC blmaelf lf be didn't
1et ln here IOOll.
"l 1ave him the Hme advice I'd atn my own
son 11 be w.re ln the same aituaUon. I Just trtecl to
abow tum tbe lmportaaee ol bMI bere, that Utl1
wa1n't co&le1e and It wa1 more eomplea. ·• _.,, ........
•
' .
..
I
'
His toug'hest game
· . -trying to talk
llro•AP..,.klMa
NEWMAN -A minor teacue Ill
aecond baleman wbo nearly Iott bla
life when he wu beaned by a pltcb la
recoverto1 futtr than hla docton predicted.
A f utball hJt t.b• bat Una helmet worn by
former Cal Slate F\illertoD star, Sam Favata,
21, of the Stockton Porta above b1a left ear In a
game qainat the Modesto A'a July s.
"( tried to 1et up th1nkina lt Wal a COD·
cu11loo, but I couldn't even talk," aald Favata1 who continues to slur hla 1'1. "Tbe doctors tola
my wlfe lt didn't look lood when they took me ln
for surgery. I'm lucky to be here today."
The former AU-American wu tw.pltallied
12 days for a fractured 1kuU and four blood clot.I
ln hls brain. His future In bueball ll uncertain
because equlllbrium problems remain and some
numbness continues In his fingertips.
Favata, an AJl·CIF player at Edgewood
High School ln West Covlna, takes three speech
a'1d physical therapy sesalooa each week to im·
prove h1a pronunciation and coordlnaUon.
. Quote of the day
"When the leaaue wu plckina on me, I
tried to think of aometb.lna that wovld aa·
aravate the '111berupi. I wun't havina
much luck unW one day J lit up a ciaar
durlna a aame. Aft.,rwarda I aot a little
DOU sayt.na •It doean 't look aood for you to
be smoldna claan on the bench.• J haven't.
been without one since." -Boetaa Celtics
general mau1er lled A~U, explain·
lag how an NBA tradition wu born.
Kings sign pair to contracts
lNGLEWOOO -Backup ~
goalkeeper Jim Rutherford and '
promlsina left wing John Paul
Kelly have 1Jgned multi-year contracts with the
Los Angeles Kin&•. the National Hockey League
club taid Tuesday.
Rutherford, 32, had a 3-0 record with the
Kings late in the 1980..Sl aeaaon aft.er he wu
------. '
,.,... NYJ he la prepared to quit f • S.11 Dl•10 Claar1n 1• lel· •
footbail if ne•otlat.lou to Nltruetw'•
bla ortstnal Mrlet ol HV• ... ~.ar
contract.I can not be NCu.d ... TIM San Fran·
cl1co -. bave reltued An AMrt ot UCLA
and 0. Drake from Cal Poly-Pomooa . . . TIM
NP'L·R&lden court battle wtot to th• Jury today
, Cblc.,O'I 8 .. n UV• tnct.d ID experiment
to tum tilht end Mike Cobb
into a tackle and returned
him to blJ old poaJtlon ...
8'H 11.lUa ot the New York
Jetl hu taken hia demanda
for a tradt to the pre11, HY·
Ina. "Maybe thJ1 WIY tbey'U
com• aroUl>d or J ·u 1et a fair
1hake tome other place."
. . . New Orleana wide re-
cel ver llld1 MHU broke b.ia
J11/1rlt0ft collarbone Tuelday durtna a
practice drill. He'll be out of action from 8-12
weeks ... Oakland quarterback Daa P11c.rtaJ,
worklnl to rebabUltate an ll\Jured tbrowlns
shoulder, appears to be on 1chedule In hla pro-
iram, altboulh he remains aldellned ... Run·
Dini back Marloa Barber, the New York Jeta'
No. 2 draft lcbolce who suffered a coocuaalon
last Thunday, waa told toatayout of acUon until
the weekend ... Ex-Tennessee defensive end
Cbarlet Morsu made hla secoad awitcb, thla
Ume tranaferrlna to the Univerally of Miami
from Canon-Newman Colleae. He'll be red·
shirted for a year ... Mlulaslppl State Coach
Emory Ballard checked Into a hospital for tests
on a chronic lung ailment. '
Bench enjoying a payday
The CinclnnaU Reds said Tues·
dar that they would pay the salary of
injured catcher-first baseman
Jobnny Benda durln1 the major
league players' slrike, then try to recoup the
money later through arbitration. Bench broke
an ankle sliding into aecond base ln a May 28
1ame with San Franclaco and was on the Reda'
disabled list when the slrike beaan June 12 . . .
Bench
&eule Jackaoe of the New
York Yankees says, "If
we're not on the field by the
first week in August, there
really l.sn't much hope for re·
sumlng the season" . . .
Atlanta Braves left fielder
&aflDO Uaa.ret baa taken a
$3.30 an hour job at a lumber
store in Atlanta suburb
Doraville ... El1bteen hour·
ly paid members of the
• traded to Loe Angeles lut March 10 from the l toronto Maple Leafs, in exchange Jor a flfth
ground crew at Tiger Stadium are threatenlng
to aue the striking Major Learue Players Al·
sociatlbn for 1"lnt.erference of a bu.alne11 rela·
tionshlp" in Detroit ... Two teams of
American and National League 1lu11en will
meet ln a home run hlttlng cont.est at Exhibition
Stadium lo Toronto Friday and Saturday. The
two-day event, which will be televised by NBC
Saturday afternoon, carries a potential payoff
of $14,500 to the Individual winner. The
American Lea1ue players are Eddie Muray,
.Kea Slagle&., Gres Lan.Id and GraJ1 Net·
dee. The NaJ.lonala are Ge.1e FN&er, One
Parker, Mike Selaml .. and Alldre DaWIOa.
r round draft pick. t An 11 year veteran, Rutherford ii a "pro-
I 1 ven" netminder who can step ln and provide ex-
1 collent backup help for Kings goalie Mario t Leasard, said Kings' General Manager George
( Ma1ulre.
• ·'Kelly ls ready to play with the K1n1s
f ~aguire added.
f I following his apprenticeship In the minors,"
!'American polists fall short
H
r I Romania stops U.S., Cuba wins gold at University Games
1 t From AP clapa&dtet
8-UCHAREST, Romania -rCuba swamped the Soviet Union
1 • 11·8 Tuesday night and toolc the
1 gold medal in water polo from
the United States at the World
I University Games.
t T~e United States, which j C needecl only to win its final
• match .against Romania to take
j the gold. wu upset 6·4 by the
t~ hoat n..Uoo and had to settle fO(
lt\e 1Uver.
Romania's victory over lbe
previously unbeaten Americana
earned it the bronze medal
ahead of the Soviets.
i
) "WE JUST DIDN'T play a
good game ," admitted
1 American Coach Dante Det· I I tamant.i. whose team trailed 4·1
1 at balftlme.
, , AJtboqb usually stron1 on of.
t fente, the Americana scored on
' onJ1 two out of six extra man op· porhulltiea and failed lo
I peaeao• the touah Romanian
detenee.
"We had a poor offense," said
Dettamanll, "we didn't read
I
them weU."
The Romanians ralUed around
goalkeeper Doru Stlnu, who
came up with nine aood aaves,
mallln1 him the 1ame's out·
r
atandfJll player.
1'0P SCORE& for Romania w9' Vlad Haglu, who put tbe
' hott nation ln tbe lead early lo
1 j the 1ame and added· two ottia' I leot'M Jater in the contest.
Fonner Newport Harbor ff1lh
t -.r Jamee Ber1eson, with two
ioaJ1, nd hla Sten/ord team·
mate Alan 111.oudaawar led the I U.S. offenae, with Newport.
Herbor Hl1b product John
r
Dtrbrotl of the Ualveralty of
C"Mlrcn&a at Santa Barbara ..s. dl•••~SoaJ. In· limlbtl>aJI, 1 Ured UDlttd
Stat• Mtued met the Soviet
U loa tod'ay for the m111•1
told •edal at tt.. ll'ld U'6venit)' Games. ~Olllll'l'OW ....U bt our lab ""*ftt Ill ff da,.." U.S. Cod Hii DaVl• of Bolton eou.,.
Hid 'h•Q. ·•we are ...., a · h••UQO tn ............... .
~oar.=-'.:
;
111-10'1 .. rouM.f'tllla
*Ill' All ........ ..................... .,
i...aa ............ ...... ..... ..,.., ... ...,
E ----··· .. -·----·dla • .,....... . .... ........ , .•
medal game wilb a tl-75 victory
over Romania. The Soviet Union
eliminated Yugoslavia 92-M.
On Tuesday, Jill Sterkel of the
University of Texas captured
her fourth gold medal of the
Games, while the UnJted Stat.es
failed in gold medal blda In
water polo and women's bukel·
ball.
STERKEL ANCRO&ED the
400·meter freestyle relay team,
which won ln 3:55.05. Also on the
victorious squad, which finlahed
far ahead of the second·place
Soviets, were Ann Lett, Carol
Borgmann and Barbara Major.
The Sovteta defeated the UnJt,
ed States 96-75 in the women's
basketball final.
Galina Krisevlcl paced the
winners with 27 points, and lbe
Americans were never in the
game. Lataunya Pollard of Long
Beach State led the U.S. team
with 13 polnta, while 6·8 cent.er
Anne Donovan of Old Dominion,
playina with a swollen knee,
added 12.
"We Just did not/lay as sharp as we have," aal U.S. Coach
Kay Yow of North Carolina
State. "The Russians stuck to
their 1ame plan and dJd exactly
what they set out to do, much
better than we carried out our
game plan.
"THEY DESERVE credit,
you know. They beat us fair and
square. But I think we had some
extenuatlng circumstances, like
Anne's injury."
Donovan was Injured in a pre·
Uminary game and had to sit out
Monday's victory over
Romania.
In swimming, Kim Linehan
and Kris Kirchner, both also
from the UnJvenlty of Texaa,
won their second gold medals ol
the Games. Linehan woo tbe
women's 200·meter butterfly in a
Games record 2:15.71. Kirchner
was a member of the victorious
men's 400-meter freestyle relay
team.
Surf battles Calgary
Wild card dreams at stake tonight
By EDZINTEL °' .. ..., ........ StW in the bunt for an NA.SL
wild card playoff berth, the
CaU.fomia Surf battles Caltary,
wtnnen 1n 11 of tbeJr tut 14
sames, toni&ht (7 :30) at
Anaheim Stadium.
The Surf (10.18) la four palnta
behlnd f« a wild card bertb wtlb
1lx 1amee remai.nlq, lncludlq
tool1bt.
Calpry hu m pointl aad ii
ln Hcond place b.blad Van·
eou v• "1th 141 polatt lo t.be
Nortbw11t Dlvllloa. Tbe
Boom... Sot otf to a l ·t atart
Ulla M910D, but baYe MID cm a
tear ever tine•. Tbe1're
led bf Frau Ger._., wbo wtu.
11 IMll and ................... .
tti on t.be NAIL~ UM.
·•A Jot of ~opl• HJ tbat c ... .,.,.. talmt .. MCOlld ....
to tile <New Yon) eo.-"· •• td Surf coaelta Learle
CaliowaJ, ''But I lllllne ..,
lla"e WHkr•I•. We WaM tMm tocomedal'•:~a'' .,.... ............ ......... . ....
........ llo,.n; ...... .._ ...... .,..,~11.,...afeill
llllmt E
• •J•H wUI ••It •P for ........ ,_.~ ..... ......... £1 ,... • ,...._ ... .., .. ........ o.a .. Dall ... fl·
feMlve punch. Acquired on June
18, .KhaJU bu 1cored .,lne aoala
and added two aullta In 10
1amea with the Surf, lncluc:Una
two 1oa1t ln last Friday'• 4-1 win
over Fort Lauderdale.
••In meetinl and taUtlni with
playen the l11t couple ot da)'I, I
think they're atarttna to believe
that wt can make the playotft,"
Hid Calloway.
•'In tbe latt month, we've
tlarted to come to.ether. J t.blnt that tbe playen never Hemed
too ewe ot Ute 1lwatlon with me.
\1pheaval and turmoil led to In·
eoulttency.
"I tblnk It'• a fortunate point
tbat ••'rt comJA1 on 1t.ron1
DOW. N4*rtou11J, tbe tHIM tltat
haH ltart.d ltroftl, tJtea Ht
arou.nd dieklq lbetr beell until tbe p&QGftl biYt done poorly In
th• playolft,
• 'Aad tboM uaat have teraped
to 1et Into the pla1ott1 baft
doat...al."
Tiie larf"a ftuJ ftft , ....
after ..._ WW all be IDtra·
di'1.liaa ........ lt'U faee baell
laa Dl .. o . Ud Loe Aq•l• '"'" ........... . Wit ...... u.. larf ..... c ... .,,,N. ••1fe ...... hH WOD tUl
....... Ci11DW8J laid •• .,,.., ..
.. .............. ., tllilttme .......
-~--... , ....
Wild Biii scoided by Judge
BALTIMORE -A diltr1ct court
Judie on Tuaday acoldtd WlWam
Grover Ha1y -known to t.houaand.I
of BalUmore Orlolea baHball fans 11 "WUd
BUI" -for aettln1 •bad eumple.
Han1 '2, waa arrtated earl)' Monday on a
charse or potaea•ton of an open can o/ beer on
the atreet wbUe standln1 ln front of a bar ln Fella Point, police aald.
Han pleaded 1ullty when he appeared In
Southeatern Dlatrlct Court Tuesday, and was
placed on alx montha un1upervlled probation.
"You have become a publJc tlgurt end as a
pubUc fi1ure you mull aet an example," Judae
I. Sewell Lamdln told Han.
"I know I did 1om1thln1 wron1. I'm aorry
and I'll pay for It," Han told the Jud11.
Haay baa 1alned conalderable loeal atten·
lion u an Orioles fan who leada cheers at Memorial Stadium.
Ashes on the waters costly?
MACKINAC ISLAND, MJch. -~
Fulfilling the wlahes of a widow by
spreading her late huaband'1 ashes
on the watera of Lake Huron may cost Georae
Lyon his first victory in the Port Huron-to·
Mackinac Island yacht race.
Lyon and his el1ht·man crew depoaited the
ashes of bis long-time friend, Port Huron resi-
dent James "Blackie" Elliot, on the lake Mon·
day near Spectacle Reef, east of the island.
Tuesday. be learned the ceremony may cost
Tigress, bis boat, the Division I, Class B cham·
pionship.
According to the sponsoring Bayview Yacht
Club's race rules a yacht caMol pickup or drop
anything during the 259-mile race up the length
of Lake Huron without facing possible dis-
qualification. No decision has been made by the
race committee.
16-year-old beats Nasty
Sixteen-year-old Jimmy Arlaa up-•
set seasoned pro Ille NaataaeTuesday,
1·6, 6-3, 7·6 during the first round of It
men's tennis tournament ln South Orange, N .J . in
a match marred by several angry outbursts from
the fiery Romanian. Nastase was asseued a one·
point penalty in the third set after screaming at
linesman Judy PopkJa and spitting in her direc-
tion ... Twenty.five Czechoslovaks at the 14th
World Games for the Deaf in Cologne have asked
for political asylum ... Roa Buckley survived a
split lo the 10th frame of the championship match
lo edge Earl Aatlaony, 213·207, for bis seventh
career Profaaional Bowlers Association victory
in the Greater Burfalo Open ... In the only North
American Soccer Leaaue action of the evening the
Montreal Manic recorded a 3·2 victory over Tam·
pa Bay aa midfielder Toay Towera scored his
third goal of the year with less than six minutes to
playtosnapa 2·2lle.
Television, radio
TV: No event.a scheduled.
RADIO: No events scheduled.
. . ., -. . ... ' ..
Miller tryB,g
to fill the gaps
Basebal~ spinning its wheels
From AP dhpatchea
Marvin MlUer, chief negotiator for atrlldDI
major league players, embarks on a aeries of re·
glonal meet1n1s to repair what he called "a terri·
ble Information gap'' that caused some cracks ln
the union's solid stand against club owners.
The series of meetings began today in Los
Angeles, and Miller apparently will attend other
briefings around the country. '
NegotlaUona broke off last Thursday and no
new bargaining sessions have been set.
MEANWIULE, THE ZI club owners and tbeir
Player Relatlons Committee also scheduled a
meeting for today on the opposite coast in New
York.
Miller, executive director o! the Major League
Players Associa tion, a pparently eased the m ln<ta
or many players during a fi ve-hour meeting ol the
union's 30·member executive board in Chicaao
Monday ni&ht. The briefing for the board aJso al·
lracted some 30 other players anxious to know the
status of the strike after four days or negollaUons
in Washington under a news blackout last week.
"HaJ! ol them didn't have the !acts," Miller
said . "A news blackout 1s a catastrophe for an or·
ganization like ours. There was a terrible informa·
lion gap ror four days Those were important
days."
THE S UPPORT FOR MILLER and his
negotiating team, some or whom had come under
criticism for being Miller's pawns. a ppeared to be
across·lhe·board after the meeting.
"I'm behind the negotiating committee 100 percent," said Bill Buckner of the Chicago Cubs. "l
was reeling uncomfortable about not playlog. Now
I can sit out the season. l still feel badly about not
playing but I'm not info rmed of the negotiations."
"I feel a lot better now that I'm informed "
said Rick Reuschel ol the New York Yankees, who
was traded by the Cubs the day before the strike
began June 12 "No matter how good the media
coverage is, it 1s not as good as attending a meet· ing."
"TIUNGS HAVE CLEARED UP for me now,"
s aid Eric Soderholm of the Yankees. "The unity
was terrific ..
Other players voiced similar opinions and
some or the so·called d1ss1dent players said they
had been quoted out o! context
There were slrll cracks in the union, however.
Pitcher Denn is Eckersley of the Boston Red
Sox told the Boston Herald American th'at he
believed many players would vole to end the strike
with management's latest proposal, which he
called "fairly decent" as a basis.
"I'll bet you 'd be surprised at some or the guys
who 'd say, ·Forget the strike Let's play ball,' "
said Eckersley.
The strike, in its 48th day today with 565 of the
season's 2,106 games deleted, is over the source of
compensation for tea111s losing free agent players.
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~TUHllU WI
P19"7.SR14 $54.H $2.23
P205/7.Slt14 $51.99 $2.3'
P215/751114 ~.99 $2,,9
P21 "751115 W.3.99 S2.62
P22"751115 ~5.99 S2.79
P235/751115 167.99 S2.95
36 MONTH UMmD WARRANTY*
PEP BOYS STILL GIVES A LIMITED ROAD
HAZARD YARRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COST!
M "' tOr1 Of¥U A UMITIO W/llaAHTY Ot4 CCllHIU tmS POI A lnCINO ~ OP .owntS
AOlolNST AU.~ HAIMOl IH NC*Ml ~I CAI Ull. ONMGIO '*I Will M IWUICIO Wl'TM
,_.,.TIO .oNMY AOMT•NT OWIOf IAllO OH lllOUlAI MUJNO NIC't /II TM OP ""9CMAM.
.. ·~l::t:-=:\!J
CMDfl MOUNTING
NOfilADl-INllQUlllD =.=-..:: .. ----.~
•••• LUBRICANT
All> RUST
PIEVENTIVE
Ii' -I t • • •
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, Juty 29, 1981
lS,000 MIE
DUAL 188 FITIR IAOI
REGULAR
HIAYT 133 DUTY
flLTEI IAOI
AUTOC MPASS
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V8Y 7• _I .. ~ I.AG
BICYCLES & ACCESSORIES SPECIALS!
YOUR CHOICE OF Tll-MAG • J-WAY
SPEAKER SYSTEMS
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Tuaaday'• tranucttona
.... MU.
~ ....... SEATTLE MAAINEAS -l"lred Mew S<11tyvw, ..,,.._ •recw .. ,, • .,. •
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Colzie hampered
by death threats
TAMPA (AP) -A series of death thre.ats, ap·
parentJy coonected to the slaytnp of his two step·
sisters in Atlanta. bu given Tampa Bay safety
Neal Colzie an ominous burden in efforts to turn
around h1.a pro football career.
Emile Harry: He's treading on roses
Coble said be bas received "four of five"
threatenine telephone calla, lbe latest last Thurs-
day. Tampa police and NaUonal Football League
security people are inveaticallna, he said.
''The calls have been report.eel to ua and a de·
tectlve bas been aaaigned to inveaticate," Tampa
police spokesman Johnny Barker acknowledged
Tuesday.
PoUce have determined that t.be calls are long ~lstance, but haven't been able to trace them.
"Whoever it is baa gotten me afraid. l have to
try to erue It from my mind. But I am lookine
over my 1houlder," Collie 1a1d.
.1 Col.J.ie •aid he baa UtUe doubt about why be'a
.recelvtna·the calls.
On Jan. 2'1 , be visited bis atep-aistera, Candy
Demetria Lane, 2S, and Jo Carron Lane, 21, in
AUanta. They toJd him there bad been a threat
{they were invol. ved in 1tbinp they weren't aup-
&»aed to be dolnc>," be said. .
The next day, they were found dead on their
titchen noor.
"They shot the whole boUJe up. It was like a
iangland-atyle kill.in&," he aald. "Everytime l
used to talk about it, I would start to cry."
There baa been one arrest made in the case,
&,11te 1a1d. And the seventh-year pro says be has
Offered to testlfy in the case.
He auapecta he's beinc baruaed by people in·
¥Olved in the alayinp. Collie wu alarmed Mon·
day wbeo the St. Peterabur1 Times published the
It.Ory, with the head.line: "Caller to Buct' Collie: I
•m 1ol.nr to kW you."
"Some nut out t.bere mlcbt try," Collie said.
"Thi• thine ii very diatreNlnC. but lt'a even
m•e dlltrealiftC to aee a bead.line Ulte that."
Cobie aaid be lan't takin1 any chances.
.. , don'l So out u much u I Uled to unleaa l 10
9'4t with CeeU," be aald, reterrtn1 to muscular .... ...., Ceetl Job.Mon.
• TM clelltll thrntl came durinc what may be a
cro11l"OIMll iD c.olaie'1 career.
•
€roeby Handicap set
' Tbe •·• Btu Cl"Olby Hodleap ud lbe JJJ,oot .. $' Hiadleap will climax t.be fttlt. full wMli of r iD Uli 1111 Muon tllla ••end "''Del Mar Race au. · Tiie CrcMbJ Hand leap Ba turd.a)', a tpl'int
.......... bcmara tile pklinc fCMMler ol Del II~ Wiii illllure the......, champion, Rtb's
Oak•~ . A._ ._., OGldea Ale'a fteq 1M1 II I 'm
............. iD tbr .. al "" ............ •M"~;..-Dl4ip Baad.lcap'1 .U. ..... :,.ir.ftae ~-at 11 /11 •llH 11
Dd11•l ~--•a two-,_,.W at Del 11• , ........................... to
C......la ... DilM•blldr· .. ~ l'lnt poet ume both~ ... p.m.
Three or the last four Division I Player of the
Year winners have been produced by the Orange
Coast area and once again the Shrine All·star foot·
ball game proved to be a abowcue for the winner
-and a proving point that t.be honors bestowed
were more than justified.
In un7 the No. 1 prep football player in the
CIF Southern Section was Fountain Valley High'•
Willie Gittens and be went on to score three
touchdown.a amidst a record 215 yards rushing for
the victorious South team (29-21).
THE 1171 WINNER was F.diaon High'a Kerwin
Bell, who scored both of the South's touchdowns
the followin& summer while pi.lin1 up 179 yards on
26 carries. Each is currently a star for hit uni·
veralt.y, Gittens a premier back for Ariiona Stale,
Bell an All-Big Eight first team selection as a
freshman at the University ol Kansas.
The latest in the long line of 1old ousgeta from
tbe area is Fountain Valley's Emile Harry, and
the fiuid and \aienled Baron more than Jualified
his selection this past Saturday at the Rote Bowl,
where be became the South's bie offensive weapon
despite the fact be was a wide receiver.
Harry caught three puses, 1ood for 70 yards
(including a 49-yard gem) and rushed for 24 yards
on three carries, in addition to returning punts,
holding for placekicks and even attempting a two,
point pass.
Whil e the South's hJgbly,re1arded offense was
limited to a lot of frustration in a 15·15 tie, Harry
stood out again with bis ability to execute.
It really wasn't a surprise, any more than the
efforts of Gittens and Bell before blm.
THE lt·DA Y TRAINING session at Long
Beach Stat.e in preparation for the Shrine game
wasn't exactly a piece of cake, and Harry is the
firat to back It up.
"At first. we thou~ht. 'no way. we don't want this,· " says Harry. "It waa kind ot bard to iet
motivated. But as it turned out it was worth It. It
was for a good cause (Children's Hospital in Los
Angeles) and we had a pretty eood time.
"It was really a pleaaure to play under Coach
c BUI> Workman (of Edison Hl&h>. He joked a lot
and we had a lot of fun. One day bis daughter
(Jana) came up and we all had lunch. ·
"But It was a trifle bit more than I expected,
to put it mildly."
Workman and Banoint Hilb Coach Vince Fer·
ragamo bad their South team drilling three times
a day for the first six da)'1 and lt wa.a a well-
conditioned squad that operated Saturday.
The ract the heavily favored South was lucky
Galimore finds perfection
• Gy~ast a bright item at National SpQ.rts Fes~ival
SYRACUSE, N.Y . (AP) -
Gymnast Ron Galimore aeekl
perfection. Abel, Tuesday n1.aat..
he reached hit 1oat at. the Na-
llonal Sparta Festival.
Galimore, ~ son of the late
Willie Galimore, a atar ruanlnc
back for the Cb1ca10 Bean uaW
bla death ln an automobile acci·
dent nearly 15 year• •to.
swooped down the &on1 runway
flew off the 1prln1board Ud
soared to a perffft 10.0 ICON lD
th• ftnt of two attemptl lD tlae
finals ol the vault compeUtloll.
''lt, felt sint1.Y food to me." said the JZ.year·old, who will
•raduat.e from Iowa It.ate
UnlYW'lit1 in Auauat. 0 1 Dlw
WhD I lucled that It WU Nall1 tood. You alwa1a try to be perfed. But. nm 11 • ...,....... ,oee-aaetlJ n,llt, )'OU .....
bow " t.be Judtel wW ... " UtalWaJ.''
TIN pirfett 100H laa.DMd • ,_ bla IMp, a Tlubb1ra IQGut
polltion wttb a fuU tWlat, WU
tb• an.nth of hl1 vaultlat
Hrfff. Gallmore LI tlM ciil11
American ever to attain such
perfect.ion in the event.
He added .a 9.9 vault, livinl
him an averaae of 8.5 and the
aotd medal In that Individual
competition.
Oallmore, ont of Lb• many u .s. a&hJettl cboHD for a u.
national team but deprived of u
Olympic appearance by the
American boycott of tile llOMOW Games, wa1 pleased by bJs
1bowtac iD Wa alx-4aJ Festival
of American aporta, notlftl tMt
mott ol tbe other top perfonnen
ln •c:aatlca choae to be .,..... .
"I UdDk lt (tile J'..Uval) II a bl• UU.,," be nplal8ed. "It ,.
iDiDCla me ol ta. 01Jm"4:1. wMJa all t.be odlS lpc1111 beial ...
tetted ~· too.
.. l'ID a lltUe apeet a'°9t tom• al tbe ..... ., ...... DOl
CrUd~. But I waat.ed to M
.... for tbi ........... l'lli
ll•d I came."
• ,
Brtao Meelrer, 11, wbo ._ tbt
to escape with a standoff doesn't bother Harry.
"WE THOUGHT WE sbouJd have won, we
blew so many golden opportunities," says Harry.
"But playing for a cause ... you really dldll't feel
like we were embarrassed. l thought we should
have won, but they <the North> bad just as many
names on their le.am, too."
Harry took a hard shot during the second bait
and bad to be helped from the field, coming back
only once before finding it impossible to continue.
"I got a really hard shot to the back, right on
my kJdney," says Harry. ''There's no problem
now, but it was very difficult at the time, I couldn't
pick up my legs and run.•·
Harry, whose weight has dropped to 161 (he
wants to be ready for Stanford this fall at 175
pounds on his 6·1 frame), says no one has told bim
anything in terms of what's expected of him this
fall.
Btrr RE HAS SET some coals for hlmaell -
(1 ) to play as a rr~bman and <2 > and to start
sometime during bis tirat seuon.
It has been a meteoric rue for Harry, a
sophomore quarterback and pa('t-lime starter at
wide receiver and quarterback as a Junior on lbe
varsity.
From those somewhat bumbfe credenUala be
went on to become the CIF Division I Player ot the
Year as a wide receiver ob Foun\ain Valley's Bil
Five Conference runner-up Barona.
"I never expected a Jot ot tbinp I 1ot. but J
knew lf I worked bard I could be as 1ood u I want·
ed to be. It wu a matter of Ume and effort and I
feel I did it. ll paid off."
AS POR STANFOaD, another ex-Baron, Ken
Margerum, was a bl.I factor in Harry's dect.Jon.
"He told me, 'We have to keep the Fountain Valley
connection colng here,'" says Barry.
With a 3., spa and a major seared toward
psychology, Harry appears to be 'treading oa
roses. And with John E11'l)' at quarterback, wbo
knows. ma,be tbel'e are more fOMI ln store for
Emile Harry.
Fountala Valley, lnctdentally, ,ha&D't MM the
last of the Harrya. Carl Ka"y eaten as a
freshman th1a fall, a wide receiver-tailback UD·
clidale.
Tbe lboel be'U be tr1in1 to ft1J Hrt.llDb' ap.
pear to be ev•Y b\t u Jarce u Dilval .. Bubba,.
LOn's allie UI.
................ """""" ........................ """ .... ~ ......... ..,.~-----~---
PUBUC NOTlC1: PUBUC NOTICE ftJ8U NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
IUNalOll COUll'T
Ol"TN•f>TAT•
CW CAL.I f!O'tllf IA
COUNTY Ofl CNIA ... I
,. Olk c... cw .•.
.... AM,CA.tlnl
PLAIMTll'f'; GENEaAI.. ELEC·
TRIC CREDIT CORPORATION OF
TINHl!$Ha , • T--<°'PO'•·
"°"· DEfll!NOANT: THE PAPER
CHASE, INC.: WADE M. O'HARRA:
8ERYL O'HARRA; a na Otu I u .. ..,.h 10, lnclutlw,
IUMMOMI
OMfllalT
AMaMDID COMl"LAIMT
CAHMms
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICf t Yov heW -...i. Tiie
cour1 may dlKICle agalftst 'rOU wl"'°"1 "°"' '9ino ,....rd ""'-yov rffPO"d wltftlft JO deys. RMd .... lnfom\atlor'I
ANNUAL fl I NANCI Al. AND auoon •• '°.'
C Bu<IOtt for ltle Fhul YMr a.tiftl\lftt Jt/Ay I, 1"1 -E.ftdl"I J.-•• 1"21
CkeN View lcllMI Dltlrflrt. Or .... ~. cailMnlla
below.
II you whl\ tll -II. IM -Ice of an
attomey In 1111• ,,..t•r. yov lNlwld dO
10 promptly •o 111•1 your written
reqion .. , 11 any, may be lllecl on time.
MOTIC• OP ADOrTION AND TllAMIMlnAL All action allall be laMfl on 11111 r..,ort clUtlnt r • .,,., or a..u.or•1"4 apeclal
meetln91 ol IN ec>Wf'nl"9 boerd. AVISO Ute.cl he lldo O.mafldado.
To Ille C-ty S...rlnt-t of 5'-ta: a. TE NTATIVE ANNUAL BUDGET REPORT. Thia r._t It herwy ltled by
Ille 90wnll119 b!Nrd of Uw 1Ch0ol dlatrtct.
El trll>uMI ,..._ dKldlr "'"lra Ud.
Sin alldl-1• • ,,,_ que uo. r._.,.
d• dentro ci. JO di••· La• ta tnlorm•
<Ion quu19119. O.te of l'Netlne J..-U, 1"1 SIOM4 Dale Gooolft/Secretary
b. PUaLtCATION ANNUAL BUDGET REPORT. The .,..,...,,1,.. -rel. ,..vi,.. maO. on July 20, 1''1 1\0dl revltloM, Mdlti.., -c~ lit It ...,., naceawry, pending !Mllk eUon, l!Ublk _.,,,..MCI lh'91 .oo,itlOft, llefWy,...
11.trMIN~
SI U1ted....., •oll<llM •I consejo •
"" ....,.._ an "'• asunto, C1911erl•
llacerto lmmtdl•l•mente, de ula ...-a • ., ,._,la eKrtla, st hey
a1...,.a, ,..-ser re9Jlrad9 • tlampo. The llUClll< hMrlftg Oft tftls re~ wlll be twld al 1•tt0 "I " Street, H..,..
lngton llM<JI, ea .. on AllOUSI i. ""·•I 1 ii o•ctoo P.M. I. TO THE DEFENDANT. A civil
complalnl ,_ -fllecl "" Ille platn-tltt agalMI you. 11 you wlslt m C19Mnd
lhlt ••.null. 'rOU mvst, wltlllft JO c»vs
lllter this twlll'llOM I• Mr"9d on yov. Ill• with ltlll covr1 • wrtn.n r_..
10 Ille ~t. Ullless ..,,.. do SO,
your aelault wlll lie entered on •P.
pl le el Ion of "'9 pllllntlfl, •ftd 11111 court
mey ent•r • ludtlmtnt aoatnll yov lot
Uw relllll dtfnended In IM complelnl,
wlllcll could resvll In gemlsll"""'t of
••oe•. t•lno of mGMy or pr_,iy or
otl'ler rell9f requested 111 Ille com·
ptelnt
Sl9M<I Dale ~/Se<ntarv
f>UMMA•Y °" cu••••T DIST•ICT TU ••OUt•UdMn flOa ,..,~
A......e•
Tea• TH•-
General Fund ......................... .
. ....,..~
S,SU,MI
Annv•I r-ymanl on""°""' or State Sc,_ Bulldtng Fund A4)CIOf'llonment ........ .
Bond tntaresl and Principe! P•Y"*'" ........... ..
TOT AL NET ADJUSTED
IEGINNING BALANCE
Restricted..... .. ..
Unr .. lrtlled
INCOME
Gl.MEaAL flUMD
1,w ... 1
"'·°'' , ... ,
ACTUAL
M2,m
150,000
4'2,'"
1100-MOO F-rel lncOMe .. , •• .. .. .. • 1,041 ,llS
MOO S1e1e tncome . . u .•T7.fl4
UOO C-ly Income . . . . . • . . . .. . • .. • .. • . .. U,Mt
.-0 Louil Income .. • . • • .. .. . .. . . .. IO,U4,11t
9'00 Incoming Tr.Wen . . . . . U JI.•
TOT AL INCOME . • . . . . • • .. .. .. . . .. . . . . . . 11,m,• TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME a, ... ,ll1 EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
1000 Certllblecl S.terltt ..
2000 Cta11lflecl S.lerle1 •
JOOO Empl..,... 8'1nellts .................. .
4000 •-s. ~It" end Equlpm..,t Replacement
JOOO C-reltcl S.rvl<IH I
Olller Op..-atlno Expanr.es. .
tOOO Sites. 8uUdl~, 8oolu I
Madie, N-ECllll-' ................ · · ·
1100.1.00 OINr Out.. .. ........... .
7'00 ~I-Ion IOf' Conli,..oN:IH .. . .. ,
TOT AL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO I
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES TOT.t.L NET ENDING BALANCE
RHtrlcted. Unr'Htrtcted . . . ............... .
TOTAL. EXPENOIT\JRES. OTHER OUTGO&
APPROPRIATIOH FOR CONTINGENCIES
IJ,041,IU •,m ,•2'
a.io • .io.
1,t.S,M7
u .-....27S l,ot2,IU
500.000 u2.1u
PLUS NET ENOING 8.t.LANCE.............. 21.M,Jl7
llOMD lllfTI •HT AND al.09Ml"TION flUllfD lte!MI
OUTSTANDING ~OED INDEBTEONE~
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING IALANCE
IHCOMa
NOO-,M90 Slate tnc:onw.... .. ............ .
ll00-9"0 Loeal '"'-.. .. . .. • .. .. ... . '"°°'"'°Incoming Tr""""'' ................... . TOTAL INCOME ........ . TOTAL, NET 8EGINNING
llAl..ANCE ANO INCOME ........ , ....... ..
OTHEROUTGO ....... .
NET ENDING BALANCE ........... .
TOTAL. OTHER OUTGO PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE . . ......... .
8UILDlltO l<UND
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
TOTAL INCOME . . .......... .
TOT AL, NET BEGINNING B.t.LANCE
ANO INCOME
EXPENDITURES
2000 c1e1111tec1 s.1w1.. . ......... , .............. .. JOOO Conlraclecl Servlett I
Otllar Operatlno E•-'...... ..
.000 Sties, lluildl~. 8ocas I
Media, N-lqul.pmenl ....................... . TOTAL EXPENDITURES ..................... .
NET ENDING 8ALANCE ....................... ..
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PL.US
NET ENDING BALANCE ....................... .
Sl"ICIAL aEHaVI. flUMD
ADJ USTED NET 8EGINNIHG IALANCE
INCOME 9900 In< OfNOIO Tr ans1 .,, . .
TOTAL INCOME ..
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME
EXPENDITURES
JOOO Cl•Hllled S.IWIH ......................... ..
JOOO Employw Benallh ......................... ..
JOOO COftlracted S«vlces A
OU...r C)fleretlno Elll*I•• · ....................... ..
.000 Sti.s, 8Vlldlng1, Boolts &
Medi e, Hew EqlollprMnl . .. . . . • . .. . .. ............ .
1000 01 .... °"'.. . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . ................. .
TOTAL EXPENDITURES ANO
OTHER OUTGO .................. .
NET ENDING 8ALANCE . ......... • . ... . . . . TOTAL. EXPINOITURES&OTHER OUTGO
ACTUAL •• w .ooo
'55,ftl
SJ,4s-
1,ot1,7t1 21,QI
'· 111,512
2,°'7,JOS
1.120,110
'°'·'"
2.027 .J05
lte!Mt
ACTUAL
10,MI
·O.
Ul
, .... ,
ACTUAL 1.uuv
2,t70,04.S
2.•10.ou
)I, ... use
a,ni
1•.110 ~
)12, lff
4,lt4,lU
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE......... ... ..... 4,-..n
ITATI K~ IUILOlltO flUMD ......
AOJUSTIO NET BEGINNING 8ALANCE
INCOME MOO Stal• IMome ............................... , .
*CJ Loe_, IM:orM .... , • , . . • • • • ••.•••• , .••..•.• , • ,
TOTAL INCOME
TOTAL, NE.T BEGINNING BALANCE
ANOINCOMI
EXPENDITURES S.-eoncracled SerYl<es •ftd OtMf~atlftgEa_. ......................... .
TOTAL EXPINOITURU ......................... .
NIT llNDINO l~NC• ......................... .
TOTAL, Ol"ENDITVRES PLUS
NIT ENDING IALANCI ....................... ..
CAflaT•RIA ~MD
AOJUSTEONET 8EGINNING IALANCI ...... ..
INCOME
•100.MOO f'edtretl-......................... . .... St••-................................. . .OLecall11t-................................ .
TOTAL I~ ................................. .
TOTAL. NaT aaOINNING IALANCE AND
IHCOM• ................................... .
ElCl"IHDIT\lltHANDOTHER OUTGO _c._...-... ., .............................. . ............................................ ................... ._.,...... __.._.. ............... ··········· -~~ .. ..... ~~ ................................ .
TOTAL. llCNNOITVRH, OTHO OUTGO&
AltltRQHIATlON '°It eoftTl..OaNCID .... 1. •. MIT •NOeNO aALAlfCa ......................... .
MU IM04NO MLA#Cll ..... " ................ ..
TOTM., IXNNOtTV"U AMO OTH .. OUTGO
ACTUAL
ff,)19
150,IMI
171
l s ..
ff , .... ,
ACTUAL
S1,26S
m ,a ., .. ,.,m "'· ...
'·"'
.. LUJNIT•NDlNO~I.................... , .. ti• Mlll9H•DMAIWftllMIC9 ,,.,_
1-.i
ACTUAL ...
··-...
"''" "'"" .... ,,...,.
.O.ftl .o.su
""-«2 IUOGET
l.022, 112
500,000
S22,112
ltl,Olt
1J,IM,14S
IU04 a.111.•n 2,"1,GS
u .a 1,ns it.m..-1
ll,W ,t1'
4 • .00.D
UlS,714
1,.0.,Sll
1,ll7,:M4
ff,175
t,"9,170
UUH
26,nt.•7
125,000
16,853.111
1•1.c IUOGET
'°'·"s
Oetttd; -y IJ, 1'11
La• A. 8rencll. clerll
By J .. nnlna Oates. o.c>vlY
aoas. O• MOMTI.' MtAME A ,_. ......... ,.,,.,...._
._~IMK.Me.U1
e.-t., MIMa, ea. tUU c 1111 ,,,....,,
P11bll"'" Oranot Coast Delly Piiot, July IS, ZJ, 2', Avg. S, 1''1 l 17M I.
P UBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS IUllMlll
MAM• f>TAT•MIMT The loll-Ing person• are doing
buSIMHff:
THE $WEDLOW GROUP, 12122
Wntem A-. Ger*" Grow , CA
'2MS.
SWEOLOW, INC .. a C.lllo•nla
<orperetlon, 12122 w.stern A..., .. ,
Gero.n Grow, CA~.
Tiiis ~ I• <..-...Cted by • Ger· _., .....
SWEOLOW, INC.
Jack G;llO.
VkePT..i...t
Tiiis --..nt •• fl ... wltft 11W
COUftty Cler1l ol Or .... c-.tY.., Jiiiy
7,ltll.
LAW Ofll'ICSI
GOLD AMDOOLO
, ...... e.-ty °""" .o. ,..,.,,, MIMa, CA tll'll l'IUJO '·"'· ... .O· P11bll11Nd Or .... (OHi Delly Pllol,
1.11•.... J11ty a. u. 22. "· 1•1 JOn .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS IUSINEU
MAMa STATEMl.MT
Tiie toltowlf!O persons ••• doing
buslMHM ,,.,.,
IUOGET • ONE ·OAY AUTOMOTtVE-
CARB, BRAKE .. ELECTRICAL. 17«
WHI K•ttlte Av•-. Unit No t.
.0· Ore119e, Ctllllomla '2M7
Howerd L.euner, 5014 Alder ,
• lrvlne, Ctlllloml• '2715 J emes H. 51\arron, SJI FlretllOrn,
• Br ... c.i1ror111e Wllllwn .-.on, 1'105 EvergrHn
-0. LAM, Cerrito., ea111ornta W10t
Artll1ir l!Htmen. 71l Bolten•
Ortw , uoi-IHcll, Gatllornt• •as1
.0. Tiiis buSIMS• h conducted by • '°' oena rat pertnanntp.
1•1.c
IUOGET
4,lt4,SIJ
""""' Eas-Tllls 11.c..-_, filed wllll Ille
C-tv 0 -ol Or-Covnly on Jiiiy
'·'"'· AMMCM•a1aaOWN Atl-y.CLew ...... .._.A_
.O· Wtellt
.O· Or ..... CtlllfenN,..,
C1141 1»11G 4,1'4,SIJ f'IU.U
.. ubtl-0raft99 C0.'1 O•lly Piiot.
>O,UOO J11ly IS, 22, 2', Aug. S, "" • 3114 .. 1 10,000
1,000,000
l. .... su
150,000
4,1t4,JU •
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI 8UllNllS MAMa ITATIMIMT
Tiie r.11-1,.. pareons ••• dol"I
bull-••:
4,lt4,SU
INTERTRAOE, U4l LHUaton
PIK•, c.o.ta Mn&. Ctlll ...... ef2'•
Hl<ttol• _,..,., Matyas. 1*1 0•~
1"1.C wry Clrc19, Tl.tltln, <:allfornla '26IO
BUDGET Ly,,,,. Mer'le Meeyes, 1*1 Dan-
.. .,.,,., Clrcle, Tlllttn, Cellforflla tMIO
Tiii• l)IAI,,.., 11 concluet.O by .,, Ill·
dlvlduel.
·O.
HlctlOle1 J. Metyas
Thia slel-t was fllecl with Ille
County Cl-ol 0r_,. Covrtly Ofl Jul~
10,1 .. 1. ,.,...,,
P11bll-Or4119 Coast Delly Pl191\
.0. July u. 22. rt, Aug. l. '"' _,... • ~
•
nnc 8UOCIET •.m
200,000 .... --''°·-
PUBLIC NOTICE
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981 ••
PVBUC NOTICE . :--------------
l'ICTlnOUt autUHIM
MAMa ITAT•Mll•T
Tll9 ...... 1 ... --· ." 4191 .. _. __ :
•TCHINOI •TC, Ult A<ecla
Ave1111e, <kraft Of•vt, c.111.,111•
tlMI o. ... o..ie ........... ~ f'9'1M61ftV~. Cal .... ~
Jecll. "· ....., Mat a u1 '"' """'· ........... ~'91• ~o..ie T~ ........... _ ..... •IV! ...
c-ty C*-9' Or-. C1uMY °" JUiy
'· 1t11 .. , ... I '"'*''-0r.,.. c-a 0.lly .... . July t, IJ. 22, 2', lttl JOJMt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
••CT• noua auM••u llMlllTAT .. QNT
Th• tollowl119 pertOll• a r• •ol11t
1111.tJln•M .. :
llUIUTY l'OOL H•V1CB1. IMll
Oetoware 11,...1, H""ll"'ton ... h. "'" ..... MIK• .-001Rs ...... 0.l•w•re
Str .. t, Hlolltll~ .._.,,CA t1MI
ALtCI ROGl!.aS, 1Mt2 Oel-er•
StrHI, Hllnl"'91M '"'"· C.t. ,,.._ Tiii• buSIMSl •• u 111du<t.r by I~
cllvlCluell I..._,., & Wife)
Mllleitoeerl Alk.e~ Tiii• ,.........,, wti 111.0 wltll uw
Count, Cllfli. oi 0te1199 c-•Y on July "· '"' MOalUI .. ASIOCIATH, IMC
Ult CAI ..... Dri,.., Siii• I .. .,.,_,.._.,CA '*f
t1 .. 7N , ...... ,
Pullllltlecl Orenoa Coest Delly Piiot, -=:::::::,:-July ti, 2', Aug. S, 12, 1 .. 1 32'H1
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI 8UllMlll
MA.Ma ITAT•M•MT
Tiit IOllowlng 09f'toft ll Wint bull• ....... :
SLIOIHO OARAGE 000.-1, IMI Mtlclltll. T1111ln, CelllOfflll , ..
SLIDING OARAOI 000111 CO.,
ISO Mlt<Mtl, T"'llft, Calllorlll• "'90
Fr-It Gvy ~Ila Jr. IMI
Mll<llell, T11ttln. Catllerllle tJlllO
1'111• llUM..u •• ~-··by ... '" ""'°"•'
Jr
Tlllt ..... _ wn lllad wllll UM
C-IY Clertt OI OrllllOe C.-ty.., Jiiiy 10. , .. , ,,..o.
P11bltlheo Or4119 Coat! Dally Piiot.
July n. ,..ut s. 12. '"' n..._.1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS •UllNllS
PUBLIC NOTICE
"IC'flTIOUt 141.tt• ... NAMll ITA1'9MIUtt Tiie tellewlftl ,.,_. a re Wl119
lliaal MU •:
WALNUT c.-a1K, L1'0~ lltt °'"" oe11t Drive. S11lle 111, C rvlt1e,
Calltornie fl71S
U•A.-LIHO IMV•STMIMT
C:Oltl"OAATION, e C.Jlfwftla c.,,.,e
u .... nn ~' OfCw, 14111e 111.
l"'llW, CM!Mtfta '11U
Jean°11Mrle 1,.rll11t , U •va
Gren• 01.t(al. Nt•P••I •••<II, CMllorllla.,... Tllh llutlftffJ Ct ,_,_ 11Y •
..,..ral ~
CORP.
S .. AaLIMO INVEITMIENT
,,..,,._, .. '-""' ,.,.,,,,_h•wty,
Via ,.,...,09ftl
'"" ............... lllecl wllll .... e_,., Clerit.,. °' ..... Counly on J uly 10, IMI. .,,...,,
"'1011-or.,,.. CM•I o.lly Piiot,
PVBLIC NOTICE
Tiie f911ewlftt tMf'Nftt .,. ooi,.. .
~ .... PUBLIC NOTICE MAMl ITAT•MIMT
T lie IOlloWlftt perlOf\t are
bUllMHat.
dOlftt Jiiiy U. 22, 2', Avg S, lttl )1 ... 1
TEHO«lt RuaatNG CARE, m
11Mrt"9rlte s.t,_, c:er-.. , Met • Cal ....... .as fllCTITIOUS IUllNEU SllCTEENTH STREET JOINT
VENTURE. 1 ... 1 Al~ln f>trHl.
Suite H, Hwlll"O'fon BHcll, CA.,.... Slleltlly 1......-Wll..,,, Jr .. ttt MAMI STATIMINT llMr....,... ~ c--.. , Mer, The toll-Ing perMn• ••• 001,.g KE LL Y SHOW, IM11 lern•teble
1..ena. H""tlnoton IM<.11, CA~
EARLA SHOW, IM71 1¥nll•bl•
Lene, H-lnoton llff<h, CA "1M'I
M ICH AE L SPIVEY. 1•411
Bern•l•bl• 1..aM, Hunllnoton a .. cll,
CA .,Mt.
c.lllon\loe ftl.2S DuSIMH at
Lleyd Alla11 Wllun, 12t COMP.KEN CO , 1721 Sta rbird
l1Ur....,it9 $treeol, eor-•• Mar, Orlw . Co. .. Mesa, CA nn•
eallfotlll<tf'MJS HER•ERT A G ltlMM, 2125
Thlt...,..... k <-.«M 11y M .,,.. Starblra Drive, Cos••,_....,, CA,.,,,.
lncorper .... •seocletlOft......, t...... !CAY GRIMM. l 7USlarl>l•d Ori••.
,.,,,.....,. Co•t• Mau. CA n•:i. This bll•lneu I• con0ut1eo Dy •
oenerel perlnar!llllp Slwlby I . Wiiton, Jr. Thi• bu•IMU I• con<lu<l•d DY •
Tiits 111e1-1 •• lllecl wttll ltle oen•r•I p.srtneohlp Kelly Stlow
Ca1111ty Oert ol Or.,.. Covnty ""July H•rbet1 .t. Gromm Tllll •l.tltmenl WH llled with llllt
Counlr Clff'll. of Or•noe Cou111y on July
to, 1M1. '· 1'11 K•y Grimm fllNUI Thll >lel.,,,.n1 was Iliad with Ille ,.....,."'*' 0r.,,.. C.O..t o.lly Piiot, County Cten. of Or•noe Covn1y on July """" Publlslled Or-Ce>a>t Oeily Piiot, Julyt , 15.22,!t, 1•1 !t1WI 10. lffl
PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTICI OP IALI Ofl attAL l"ROPlaT"Y
AT l"tlllVAT• U.La f>UNRIOll COUaT
Oflnt•STATI. Ofl CAUf'OaMIA
flott Tiii COUNTY
OflOaAMGI
CASI NO. !J..H.7J
J AMES C. MARTIN and MARY
CRAIG. P11lnlllts, vs EMMETT T.
CONNER, ellO known•• EMETT T,
CONNfR, MAHL~ JOHN SMITH,
e l10 known H MAYLEN JEFF
SMITH, CATHERINE E. KIRCHNER,
OAVIO l(IRCHNER, CHARLES Kl RCHNER, ANO AL.L PERSONS
WH O HAVE OR Cl.A IM ANY INTEREST IN OR LI EN ON THE
PROPERTY HEREIN DESCRIBED,
OelandanlS.
CAHMO.IMH1
DAVID A KIRCHNER, CHARLES
KI RCHNER end CATHERINE E
KIRCHNER, Plelntllft, Yl EMMETT
T. CONNER, MAH LOH JOHN SMITH,
eU MAYLEN JEFF SMITH, JAMES
C. MA RTIN, MARY CRAIG, .t.ND
ALL PERSONS UNKNOWN WHO
HAVE OR CLAIM TO HAVE ANY
INTEREST IN OR LIEN UPON THE
REAi.. PRO P ER TY HERE I N
DESCRIBED, 0.lendllftb.
NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN tlWlt
wblKI to confirmation by tM •-
Superior Court. Ille 11nd.,slgned
RelarM, ._.Y _.ni.ct by llle et»ve-"""'"° c-1 to sell Ille Mr•IMll•r desert-_,,y, will M ii el pr~v ....
sale, on or eller ,.,. 1'111 d.eY of August.
'"'· ...... office of ..... _,.,_.,
R•l.,M, ell the r lgllt, tllle, Interest
end Htal• of -el>OW-namttd par11et
( bolll pl<lt1tt1 anct delandanlSI In and
to tll•I <ar1•1" rHI Pf'-r1Y localed In
the Clly of Huntl"91on Bea<ll, County
ol Or•n99, Slate of Ce lllornta, •nd
m ore P•rtlcul•rly described •• loll-a, lo wit;
Tiie rH I prOl)erly Clft<rllled ••
Loll 21 -22 "' Block ' of .... Red· burn Trect. In Ille Clly of Hunllnglon
B••<h, Counly of Oran99, St•t• ol
Cellfornla, es p..-rMll recorclad 111
B°'* 4, Page I of Mls<ell•-Maps,
tn U... office of IN C-ty Recorder at
U fd COWlty
I. Said Pf'-1Y ll to lie sold e> • un-
it "u I•" for cntl. lewtul "-Y of UM
Unlt.O SC-of Amer1u . •ftd not up.
on <radii. -UW sate Is wlljKI Lo
confirmation bY tlw •-C""'1. 2. Bleb or oft.rs SIWlll lie 111 wrtllng
aMI a ce-led by • car11fled or
<Mhl•r's cheek IOr len percent 110%1
of lM -bid, maoe peyellle to tlle
Referee -SIWlll be 1 .. 1 al IM otttce
of IM Ref-el any llme elter first
I 111) putllbtlon of ll'lll nottc;e. The OI·
flu of IM It .. _ I• toc•tecl •I J371
Via LldO, ~ 8HCll. Gallfornl1
ti.60.
OAT E 0 July 11, 1'11
Gero4 Mulwy, ""'-J311 V la Lido
Newiiort Beecl'I. C.4 .,MO
Tel (7141 •J>.7JOO
Publl-Oraft91t Coest Delly Ptlol,
July :It, 2', 4vg 4, 1•1 ll11-ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
AMa.Jn
T.l.M0.11S17
MOTICR Ofl T•USTIU' IALR
On AllOllll '· Hit et II :00 e.m. First
American Tiiie tnwrance ~Y as Tru11 ... or Su<cu1or Tru•lH or
Subatltuted TrvslM, of llWlt c•rt•ln
Deed ol Truu euculed by Jo.,
OorcllnlM, and rec.orHd June It, "'° ., ,,.,,..,,.,_, no llCU, In -
IJMQ, -1111, of Olflctal AKorcb of
Or a nge Counly, Cellfornla, end
purau•nt lo 111•1 urlaln Nolle• or
0•1•1111 end E le<tlon to Sell
lfwr.....OW 1'9Cor-Aprll I, ltl l .. I~
1trurnent no. 112, In~ 1400t, -42', ol Offlclel Records of Mid C-·
ly, wlll .... r end --t lo .. Id 0..0 of TNll .. 11 el pul)llc llVCllOft lot
cetll, 1ewt11t mOMy ol Ille U"lled SlalM of Amltrk •, et ti. main ..,.
Ir ene• to First Amerl<•n Tiii•
Insurance Company, louitecl al 114
Eut Flltll Sl....t, In Ille Ctly of S.nte
Ana, Cellforftla, all lllel r'911t, Ulla -
lftler,est (OftW.,.., m -,_ Mid by II
vnder Mid 0..0 of Tr111t In Illa PfOP9"
ly •ltvated In .. Id Counly -Slale
wscrl-•: Loi JO of Traci Ho '523, u lllOwn
Oft a ~ reconttd In 8ooti Uf, Peges
41, ... 4t •nd so or MIK•ll•MOUS
M•P•. record• ol Oren .. Cou111y,
eatllorllla.
EXCEPTING THEREFROM ell oO,
oll rlfM\. minarets. mlnarel rlOflb,
ne111ret ges r l1hl1, •"d olller
llydrocerMns bY ....,ISoavar Mme
known, -IMY be wttlll11 or llftder u ld land, l9lttfler with ltw ,_.,..1u.1
rteM of «Hllno. m1,.ing, •l!Plort,..
llfld OllWt ..,....11,,. .......... •ftd llor·
Int In end ,_,OIO II• -trom
utd land or any DIMr •-. tnctvdlno
IN rleN • llorlnO In -r-1111
OW -lr.m Nld IMICI or My~
llltld, lft<!Wlftt .. rt.,.. • wMpttocli.
or dl~y df111 -mlM Ir.,,, lend1 ttMr t1*1 l"-MAI~
Clel<rlMf. .it., ... .,..,.,~• -
tlWltb lfM, ""--" OI ~IM .... _.jK.I .. .... 18ftd, ..... .. llenMI
""" wlll,.le<ll.941 or dtre<ll..,etty
drllle41 ... , .. ._........Md tMftl -
---OI M.,...d tlw eltW4'1w llml .. llW'eof, Md .. '"'"'· ,..._,, _,,, "'91ftta!ft, ,.,... ' ....,, -
°"'rill eny t!Kll Wllll ., mlMI,
WllMlll, '-Wt, .. rltfll to drlll,
mlftt, •t•r•. ,.111or• •114 .,.,.1.
Uwwtll ........ w ... """" -
, .. , •f '"' ~11e<• ...... ·-llff9lnl!Mw Mc ....... ,_.,.. 111
IM ..ecs """"' IN ll'YIM ~y, • W..1 VI,_. <..,.,atltft, ,_...
...,,.,,.., D, ""·"' ........... 111 .. etftclel r..-.. _ ............... MMtklM'y •• ..__,.....Ille N49 lt11191fta <----l a.. ..... °"..,.....,· Ill I , ltl" JtrHI, (Hl• lilUe, CM...,_ "'21.
Dlt9Cl'-..... .....,. ,,...."" -............. ,..,... ... _
Ill .nu.'""' ....... Ider ..... .
, ..... '""' .. tint ~-.. -·---· ............................ tew-_.. -..ev . ._" "'-''"· .......... ,.......... ..... _.
tt M«ltff• ............... ... .................. _,...,~ _, Tf'llll. .. Mtl .,...._., .... IM
... 1 ... 1119 ........, Ulla, ........ ...............................
~l<eli.t ...... Meelce ...... l
tltnM. o... M¥ .. U•I
"DTA#ll.a1CM
TITl.8 IMIUllANCI COM>
,.,...,
PubllSIWCI Orar199 Co.SI Dally Pltol.
Jutr 22. 2'. Avg s. 12. '"' n40-d•
P UBLIC NOTICE
fllCTtTtOUS 8USINEH MAMI. f>TATIMEMT
Tht totlowlnt persons are doing
bu1lneas .. :
1111erCom Onion" ll9 San Mio .. , Dr ive. 5'111• IOS. Newport BHCll. CA
976'0. I ntercommunJc •Uon,, Inc., •
Cellroml• corporetlon, lff !>all Mtouel
Orin , Suite 105, NewPof1 Beac.11. CA
'2MO.
Thll buill>fts I• t-..Clttd br • cor
poretion
1111•rcomntun1<"4lon•. Inc
Norv•llaV-.
Prelldlnt
Tiii> slit-I •• llled •ltll 1M
,_,, Clerll ol 0r•'9 eou111y on JI.ti~
IJ. 1'tl ,,_
Publll/Wd Or.,. co .. 1 oe11r Piiot
Jyly IS, 22. 2', Avg S. t .. 1 Jll0 .. 1
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 8U51NIH
NAMI STATEMENT
Th• loll-Ing P<trlOflS ••• doing
1>u1tne11•.t
TOLEDO ASSOCIATES. HU
Rendolph •••nue Cosle Mu •,
Celllornt• m»
Wallace I.. Loucks, 6JO Mrsllc
View, L-Beecll. Celllornle m 11
Donald St0<-nwn, HIOI Tlr•nte,
llllU lon Viejo, CellfonWe '2 .. 1
Wero Mo«e, ~ R .. Ad•la11. 1..e
Joll•. C~llornle '2031
RlclWlrd A Brown, Jr , U. Vie
LIOO Nord, -port B .. <l'I, C.elllornte
97..0
Jou ph C Abelo, 100 P•r k
Avenue, Ste. 1101, New YO<k, New
Yori. 10011
Gene Eno•. ""' OerUey Circle, Geroen Gr.,,,., Celllornle '2~
Rob•tl L. AO•m" 3354 Leu
A•enve. L.0"9 BMC.I\, Celllornl• 'Olllt
This """""" " conducted by • general pe,,,..,..,,.p
RlcM rdA l r-n, Jr
Tiii\ sl.e'-1 waa llled with 1M County c .. r11 of Orenge Counly on July
10.1 .. 1
l'IUIJJ
NOWSI.•. GE RTNE• & aaOWN •.-n•a•w1c.,.....u... A-vs••La• .,_~Drift
l".O .... Dl7 N-' 8H<lil, C•. '1"-1
PuDll•MCI Or-CO.st O•llY Piiot,
J11lr U. 12. 2', Aug. S, l'ltl Jl.._.1
PUBLIC NOTICE
N$-7ts1t
NOTICE 01' SALi.
Ofl RUI. l"aOflERTY
AT l"RIVATE SALL
Ne ........
·'" l .. ~ C-1 .... su .... Callfer11t., fer Ille C•1111ty el LH
A .......
In Ille Matter ol lht E•l•I• of
DOROT H Y CLI N KABERRY.
D<i<H..0
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhel
t!W undeoloneo wtll r.ell et Prl••t•
Sele. lo t!W hlObl•I end !Ifft bidder,
subj et t lo conllrm •llon o f uld
Superior COUt"I. on or •It.er t!IP 1111 oey
of August. tttl •t tht office of ARTHUR TUVERSON. '1S South
Fl-tr SI., Suitt 1000, Los Angeles, Counly ot L.os Angeles, Slele o l
C•lllorni. 'IOOl7, ell IM rlOfll. title •nd
lnler•SI Of Miid <IK•-11 Ille time of
dHlll and ell IM rlglll, !Ille end Ill·
ltrH t I,,.. Ille Hlale of said dKH.sed
hH •cQUlr.O by -••llor'I of lew or
Olllerwlse, olr.r '""" Of' Ill eclelltlOfl to
tllet of said -· •t tM 11,... of ci.-
"'"· 111 -to ell Ille terlaln rNI pro-P•rt y, sllua led In the Countr ol
Or•nge, Stele of C•llfornl•, partkul•r·
ly dH<rlbecl as lollows. to-wit;
LOI II of Tract t22t .. per m911 r•·
corded In 8ooll. m P-• u lllrollOfl 31
ln<l1.t$lv• of MIKellenaous Maps In the
olttu ol tM County Recorder of seld
County more commonly known as. 170
S.nclOll I• Or , Corone <let ,,,._,, CA
tt•U.
Terms of sale C•lfl '" lawf11t ,_,.
of Ille Unltecl States on conll"""'Uon of
1a t e, or pert ca1h •"d b•lanc•
t•ld•ncao by note ••cur•d by
Morteao-or Trvst 0..0 on IM Pf'~·
ty ... sold T ... 119"9"1 of .......... 1 bld
to IM .,._itee1 with bid
lleb or olfers to be tn Wl'ttlno -wllt be received et Ille etore .. ld otttn
et eny time alter IM ""' pullllcatlon
Mreof -.,...,. 0.1• °' ....
Oeted tftl12211d dey of July, '"'· Ar1llur T uveoon
Eaec:utor of "'9 E1i.te
of laid 0.C.0.nl
AaTHUa TUVl.Rso.t
61SS..tlll'lewerSI.
s1111 ....
LnA ....... C...•11
Publlllled OrMOe Co.tll 0.lly Pltol
July H , 2', Aue. 4, 1•1 ll70-ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
TOTAL NS'T AOJUSHO
J uly U , 2', Aug S. ll, ltll JllM I
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI I UllMIU
NAMI. STATIMIMT
The lot1o•lnt perl<>fls •re doing
buslneues·
ACE SPORTS IOUTllWE, 19'02
Br°'*"""' StrH I, Founlaln Velley, CA tJIOI MACK M. MIYAZAKI, J0'3 c-.
lry Club, Ca.le MfM, CA .,62'. SACHIKO M. MIYAZAK I, JIM)
Country CIUll, Colla MeM, CA '26:i..
Tiits """""' Is c-.Cled by an ln-dlvlduel t-I Wll•I.
s.c111110 M. Mh etat
Tllll st.._t was lltecl wltll Illa
Counly Cle~ of 0r.,. C-ty on Jiily
'· "" ,,_
PubllsMCI Or-Co.SI Delly Pilot.
July a. 15, ZJ, Jt, 1•1 J00? .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
NS-79468
NOTICE OF DEl\TH OF
BARBARA B .
HENDERSON ANO OF
PETITION TO AO ·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A·109690.
T o all h ei r s,
benelici aries. cr editors
and contingent creditors of
Barbara B. Hender son and
p e r sons who m a y be
otherwise interested in the
will and/or estate:
A petition has been tiled
by Deborah A . Anthony in
the Super ior Court of
Orange County requesting
that Deborah A. Anthony
be appointed as personal
r e presentative to a d -
min ist er the estate of
Barbara B . Henderson.
Ir vine, California (under
t he I ndep e ndent Ad -
min i st r ation o f Estates
Act ). The petition Is set fo
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive
W es t , Sa nta Ana,
California 92701 on August
19, 1981 at 9: 30 a.m .
I F YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
y our objec tions or file
written object ions with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
in person or by your at-
torney.
IF Y O U ARE A
C RE DITO R or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
c laim with the court or
present it to the personal
representative appointed
by the court within four
months from the date of
f irst issuance of letters as
provided in Section 700 of
the Proba t e C o d e of
Cal ifornia. The time for
filing claim s w ill not ex·
p i r e prior to four months
from the date of the hear-
ing noticed above.
Y OU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are Interested in the
estate, you may file a re·
quest with the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions ac·
co unt s a nd r e p o rts
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
William R. Froeberg,
Attorney •t Law, 3553
Camino Mira Costa, San
Clemente, California
92672. (714) 496--6118.
Published Orange Coast
Dally Pilot. July 29, 30,
Aug. S, 1981 3372·81
PUBLIC NOTICE
llOIHNINO IM.ANCli ............... , ...... . IHCOM5 -StAM tllCel!W .. .. • • • .. • • • .. • • • • • • .. • • • • • • .. • .. ,.,
-Lacal lfltl!N .............................. .,, , .. . "'° tMllllClllTrlfttfen .................... ,..... r,1 ... •1
TOTAl.fftiCOMI' ••••• ••. , ••••••••••••••••••••• , I ••••
TOTAL, NIT HOIHHIHO IAL.ANCE •
AND INCCIMe U(NNDITURH .,.0 OTHIR OUTOO l.N.tll ,. Cllnlnc..t• s.i.n.. .. • .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. . . . .. • 6&1,171 .. ~ .................................. "" ... _................... ....................... "''·'· ............ "" ... • ...,,,... -...Clflleflt • • .................... ..
.. c..ierldll llf9k.• & =~=~=-· .. ············:·"""' ..... , ......... ""'" .................... , ...... . ..,a •
~.'t..::~=r:--... •••••••oo"""'
A""°""IATIC)lit l'CMI CONTINOIMClU.. •• , ~I
TOTAL N9T 11101'90 UUN(I .. .. .. • • • .. •• .. ... A.• TOTAL. UNNIMNtlll. & APPttC>f'alATIOlt llOlt COWT'l .... lllCID PLU1 ... , '"°' ... MV'*-... .. . .... . .. .. . .. .... . ~.,, NI ..... °' .... c..t Oeltr ~ ... Jw, It; I"'
.... .........
l, ltl,11•
t.1"1'• ..... .....
141,4'1
1n.-.,.,_ .....
""'' ...... , ..
·~------~~-~~
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
AJNftlM. l'lllAlllCIAL AlfO MINCY ...... ,
(Blldeet for.,.""' .. v-~ JtJiy '· et•I -EMlflt J-..... ..----'~ u....... ac-. ~-....c-r.e........ MOTICI OP AOCWJIOM AMO TtlANWlnAL
"'" a<llarl INll be ..._,, tfl ""' r._.n dllrlflt ,...W w ~..._ -laf meettnea of UW _,,.,,.. _ ..
To Ille c-. Swperlnl..,,..,,. of~•:
•· TENTATIVE ANNUAL BUDGET REl'ORT. TNl rePOl1 It .,.,...., fllell 91' llW govern1,. boerd of IM ICNof dtllrkt.
Oat• or rNellflO J urw n. '"' Sl9"ed JllM w. Nk ott/Secntary
b. PUBLICATION ANNUAL I UOGET ltl!l'04'T. Tiie ..-ftlftt ..... d, lleYlllt
med• °" J~y 14, , .. , well reyl.i-, .,....., aM ,.._... • ti ~
... usury, l*ldl"I pu4111ce11on. pullllc ---""91 .....-. _...,,.. turns Ill• r_..
Tll• ....... le ... rl119 tfl tllll re-1 Wiil be Mid at Harpef' ~Cy C.-,
OS E ttlll SI., Co.IA MeM, on 4"91'11 •. 1 .. 1, .C 7:.0o'<IOO l".M. ~ JoM W. Nk9'1/s.<r"4ary
SUMMA av Ofl CUR••MT 0111'•1CT TAX •mou•••llMlfft "°4t 1•• . ._ .. ,_ , ......
Gell•rel Fund .•.
~~
lt,122,•1•
AM uel r--· on e<t-1 04 SI.et• Sc-Blilldl"' Fund ""'*1'->..,1 N•wll0r1 llHcll E let!\. . . • • .. ........ .
Coste Mew E .................................. ..
Bond ,,.,.,...and Principe! Pa,menll
Costa Mew Elam. . . ~ ........... .
Newporl Beed\ Elam ........................... .
Newport HartlOr Hlgll
Newport Mes• Unifi ed
TOT Al.. NET ADJUST EO
BEGINNING BALANCE
RuVlcted.
UnreUrlct.o
INC:OME
1100.'400 Fttdtr•I Income l600 Stele lnc-
1100 County I~
tt00 LOUii Income ........... ..
9'00 Incoming Transien ................ ..
TOT.t.I.. INCOME .. .. ................. ..
TOTAL. NET BEGINNING 8ALANCE ANO
INCOME EXl>ENOITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO·
1000 Cer111tuled S.lerl•• ................... .
2000 CleuHled S.lerl ..
lOOO EmptoyM B-111•
4000 B~. s.-11es, -Equip,,,.,.. Replace"*'t
5000 Conlre<led Servlctt I
Olller Oller•llno E•panMs.
.000 Sites, Bulldl ... 8oot;1 ..
Media, N .. EQUl-1
1100· 1400 Ollwr Oucoo . • . .. . . ...•....
1t00 "--lei Ion tor Cont1n9an<tu
TOT Al.. E :t1;PENOITURES, OTHER OUTGO &
APPROPRIATI~ FOR COHTINGENCIES ..
TOTAL NET ENDING BALANCE .. . .
Rttlrlcted
Unrestrk t.o . . ..
TOTAi.., EXPENDITURES. OTHER OUTGO ..
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES
m,.m ,,, . .-
210.aot "·* ».S,10,
t,0.,11S
.... I
ACTUAL
t,tU....,
U,Ml.'71
SI.MS 1',zn.,,tl
114,1$1
M1.-,111
Sl,t01,7A
u.~.a> l,Ml,Jlt ...... na
UJ,122
S,111,ltl
s1,-,1.o
1.012
1.on
·O.
PLUS NET ENDING IALANCE.... .. .. Sl,601,752
80NO IHTl.aEST AND ltlO«Ml"TION flUMD
OUTSTANDING BONDED INDEBTEDNESS .....
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
MOO-MW Sl•I• Income MOO--LOC•I Income
TOTAL INCOME •
TOT4L, NET BEG INNING BALANCE ANO INCOME
OTHER OUTGO NET ENDING BALANCE
TOTAi.., OTHER OUTGO Pl.US
NET ENDING BALANCE ................ .
Sl"ICIAL RISl.aVI. flUMO
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
HOO 1ncom!119 T,.,,,.,,
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING
BALANCE ANO INCOME
EXPENDITURES 2000 Cleullled S.lerles
lOOO EmOIOVM 8analill •
;ooo Contracted Servlt H I
)Iller Opar.Clno E.11JJMses
.ot'O Sites, W ldl'lf!l. Boolo I
IA•llle, New Eqvl_..t .ooo Ot"'r 0u100 TOTAL EXPENDITURES
AND OTHER OUTGO
NET ENDING B.t.LANCE ... . .. . ...
TOTAL. EXPENDITURES .. OTHE R OUTGO
ltlCM1
ACTUAL
13,160,000
1,WMO
>.ns,:is. u •.:w 1,W,00.
>.1U-*
1-..1
ACTUAL
Ha,JSt
J,OG>,24'
20,!tS s,m
1.14-4.'54
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE..... .. .. .. . l,OCD,2ff
STATI. SCHOOL 8UILOIMG flUMD
ADJUSTED NEl BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
ll600 Stelt •nc-
NOO Local tncome
TOTAL INCOME ................... .. TO TAL. NET BEGINNING BALANCE AND INCOME ex PENDi TV RES
5000 Contracted Services end
OIMr Operettno E-•
NET ENDING BALANCE .
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES Pl.US
NET ENDING BALANCE CAPETi.RiA l'UND
ADJUSTED NET IEGINNING BALANCE ..• . INCOME
1100.'400 "-·· Inc-. ll600 State lnconw . .
MOO Local Income . .. • . . . .. .. • ................. .
TOTAi.. INCOME ................................ .
TOTAL., NET BEGINNING B.t.LANCE
ANO INCOME ............... .
EXPENDITURE$
J000 CleHlfled S.lerltt .. .. .................... .
JOOO E mployH a.n.1111
.000 B°'*t. s.-fles, -EQulp-Rec>lac-1 .
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES
NET ENDING IALANCE
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NET ENDI NG BALANCE
ADULT EDUCATION f'UND
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
MOO Slate Income . • .......................... ..
1900 lncom!no Tran•l•rs ........................... .
TOTAL INCOME ............................. ,
NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME ..... .
EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
tOOO Cer1Ukatecl S.lerles .. .. . .. . ............. . 2000 CleHlfltd Seier Ill • . . . .. . • . .. . .. . . . • . ..... ..
JOOO Employee leMllts ........................... ,
.000 looU, sw.i1 ... -Eq11lllfl'M'll RapleuMMI • • .. • .. • • ............... .
JOOO Contracted Servk n -
OIMr ()per•tlllf E.._., ..................... ·. · .. 7100.7400 Dlrt<I _.., tndl rect SI.wen ............ ..
1'00 ...._..,..,Ian ,_ Cofllifletncles ....•••.••••.•.•
TOTAL ElCl"EHOITURIES, OTHER OUTGO&
APPROl"RIATION f'OR CONTINOfMCIH ....... .
NET f NOIHO IALANCE ......................... .
TOTAL, EXl"INOITURIS ANOOTHl!lt
OU TOO PLUS HliT I NOIHG IALAHCf ......... .
IMIU•AMC• flVlfO
111!.0IHHIHG llALANCE, JULY ................... .
INCOME ....................................... •
TOTAi.. Hill aROINNtNO
,,.., .. ,
ACTUAL ,.
(Ill
I
11•1 2
, .... ,
ACTUAi.. .... , ..
111,no
111.11•
1,nt,1sa
2.071,15"
2,V 4,S40
122..0'IS
U.,WJ
1,0ff,7M
2,11a.m
1u .-
u:H.M
ttaMI
ACTUAL +
+
, ... ,
ACT\IAL ......
1 ....
IALANCe AHO INOOMI:.. .•• ••• • . . . . . . . • . . .. • • . . . "4,.a1
l lCl"INOtTVaEI.. • • • . .. .. • • .. .. . . •. ••. . . . . . . .. la.al
ENDING aALAHCe .. .. • • . . .. • .. .. •. . . . •. . . . • • • IM,W
TOTAL, IXPIENOITUaU., DTHflt OUTGO
PLUS NET IHOOtG aALAHCI...... •• • • • •• • ... .. • tl4,m
DIP••••DMAtlfTWlllNIC• flVtle
AOJUS'TfD NH a lOINNIMO IALANCI .......
INCOM• MIOSlaleln<-................................ .
.. 1.eu11-............................... ..
ltOO IM'"*'I Tr"'"'"·., ........................ . TOfAL INCCMll ........... , ..................... .
TOTAi,. MST 1101 ..... IHG
IALAHCll AND INCIDM& , • • .......... ., ., ... ., ••
UCl"INOIT\IAUAllf001l41A0UTOO teotc .. ,...,..,...... ................. , ........ .. ................ lb ...... .. .............. . .. ---.1111rnwa 1111111,,_,. .... ._.. ......................... .
,.. Cellb'lda. .....,_ ~ ................ .. ... 11 ................ , ............. ....,__ ···-······ .............. . ~~=oi1v•nMl'ci'" ............... .
OTHlaOUTOO .......... , ...................... ..
NIT INOtNW AMC9 .•. , .. , .••• , ......... , ••• ,
TOTAi.. PNN91 l\l_.MIO..,....A OUTOOl"LUINIT~~ ULA.NCI ••• •••• ,,., •• , ..................... .
'~ ACTUAL
+
...,,
. .a . .. ,.,
.01m
1"1.C IUDGn
1,01•
1,011
M
1.m.io
lt.I04.12• so,• 21.-.141 so •.• ...m.11•
41,7U ...
2U10,400 ,, ... ,,..,
r.oe1,10
2,111,ffl
1"'9,IM
*·"' S.2'1.l'I
~.050
41,nJ..IJO
, ... .c
IUOOET
t,U1,00.
• J.OM,%11
2,0M.DI
s.sos.w
t.07S.a> 1.m.u.
l.JolS,JCl
'"'-12 8UOGET ,, •. m
'·*·m
......
JM.If•
'·*·'n
+ 2
2
.O·
1,.,..,
BUOGE1' '" ... m.m "·* l,S17,5Go
1,11'0,IU
l,SM,150
··~ l .. ~
1.1as.-a.11s..• 1•.ua
ua.1•
ltll.C
I UDOE1' .. ..... ....
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••••• w • • • .., •• .., • • ... .. fl "9i•'""' __ .,.._"""' ...... _..._ __ .. ' • • f • • • -.. • . . . ,. .. Oranot Cout DAILY PILOTJWedneaday, July 29, 1981
PlJBUC NOTICE
·~ITiout Mltl••• ..... STATIMellrt
TM hll'-i..t ,_,_ •re Mf"9 ... _ ...
M.L.I . OILIVlll'I' H'-VICI
ltUt ltlt• A•tllllt, U11ll u '. W..IPll'-,CAt:Ne>.
LUTHlll LlllOY MOTT, !-..... A-. """ ............. CA ,,.., •
I ONA Al.ICI MOTT, •-..... A¥tflllt, U11t1 J6, W..tml111ler, CA .....,.
Tllll _,.,....It <~ ty tft M• dl•IWtl.
LiltNr LWt'I Mtft
Tlllt ~ •• 111• wltfl ... c;.u..1, Cttft " Or-. c....., ell Jiiiy .. 1,.1
,1.., ...
~I ..... 0r.,.. CMtl o.tly ,, ....
Ju1, tt, Aue· S, 12, tt, 1'tl .,_.,
PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE
rr1ennoua e u .. ••• •er.aw......_""°" UMa ITATIMSNT W f'MTM .... lf'
Tiie lellewl11t INf'Mflt .,. H I f'UeLIC NOTICI II Hlltl•v "*-•· OIVIN llltt LUCILLI M. O f COIT OllANllV ANO c:Altf'I LUCOM C. IHOAf' eM JAMii J
CLIANllll, INC., 11•1 Utt W 111\A.ILYN ~ITl. ~
AWllW, C..C.. -... c.tllWftle... Mlllt MIMI• ~ t11t ll<tlll-
11 •It C._t, Inc, le c.tlfW '""' -11M ttyle tf ILUlllllO ctfffrttl•I. lt'1 L9"ft Ave1111t CINT"I OAU.l'-Y• LTD., •I .. C-. MIM,(MlfwNe ta.» ,..,.,,A-. City tf ~-..Cit,
Tltlt IMIMll II t..-CtH IW • tet G-1; fl Or .. , ..... f/l C:.11,.,ftle,
-••""· fl4t e11 .,. ,. .,., " Jwy, 1•1. rt It & ll CLIAHllll, INC. M11t11tl (MMftt, .. , .. ,.,, UM ••If
llkl!Wf'#, "-tin. -----... ltnNMC• .... , ,_ ~ , ....... ...,,,.,. tNAlll.
Tllll t~t -llltd wlUI IM kif M11wte Ill 11W lllttHt Wiii .. c-., Cltf11 ti o...,.. C-Cy Of\ Jiii <..WUCIM 11¥ LllCll .. M. Mf a..c-
11, ""· .......... wlll .,,,, Mii ""'*"' ...
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Jlllr tt, Awe. s, 12, "· "" ,.._.1 ""''--~· •• _..., "".., ""' IN wMI ...... •• will "* M ,..,_._,. ---' PUBUC NOTICE .... fr'"' 9'lt My lfl. IW tll\I .,... llM lllturred 11¥ Ult_,_,,. l .... r .. ,.
...., ................
Undo Aahley and Darrt1l H~ dUplay 1am~1 of thdr unuaual wore•.
They're hoping fJOfJ gift wiU catch on like the Pet Rocle.
Dana Point pair say
they're in the chips
By STEVE MITCHELL
OfllleDellY .........
Remember the one about the circus
employee whose job it was to clean up
alter the elephants?
When asked why he dJdn't go lnto a
more rewarding line of work, his
response was. "What , and give up
show business?··
In a way, that's bow Linda Ashley
got her start in a new enterprise that
she and fiance Darryl Howe think will
put them in the, er. chips.
•'I was attending a wild animal train·
lnll school." the 25-year -olo blond
said. "Whenever I was late to class the
instructor would make me shovel up
the elephant droppings."
Now the Dana Pcint couple seU desk
plaques, upon which are affixed heavi·
ly varnished elephant chips.
They've got pen sets, ashtrays and
business card holders, all decorated
with llttJe ceramic elephants and the
not-so-little pachyderm droppings.
Now before you turn your nose up at
thi1 gag gift, consider the fact that the
unpleasant aspects of such a product
have been eliminated.
For one thing, says Linda-who pre·
lers to be called Ashley-97 percent of
the dropping's content Is hay.
··Elephants only get 3 percent
nutrients out of what they eat," she
says.
You have to figure the rest of the hay
is just along for the ride.
Besides that, each softbaU·slze chip
is "solar dried," says Howe, who la a
tour coordinator when he's not making
the unusual gifts.
"Solar dried" means the couple toss
the chips out ln the sun for a week and a
hair, but why getintosem anUcs.
The gifts are organic, too, the pair
will tell you, and nobody is going to
argue about that.
The couple collect their specimens
at a wild anJmal training school, but
they're not about to reveal its location.
No sense in letting someone else come
along and scoop up ~he profits.
Apparently, there's money to be
m ade from the decoupage droppings.
They've sold quite a few at the swap
meet in Costa Mesa, and the plaque1
are available at several pet shops. in·
eluding ones in Laguna Beach and
Fountain VaJley.
But where they figure the big bucks
are going to be made is in sales of the
elephant droppings at a Republican
convention this fall In Palm Springs.
··We're going to put a little American
flag in each one," Howe says.
And with the $10 to $15 price tag for
the novelty items, that ain't hay.
Chicken dinnerEmployers
b hit alie.n may e costly hiring ban
ELIZABETH, N.J . CAP) -A grand jury has
indicted a burglary suspect who allegedly sat
down to a chicken dinner before making his
getaway.
Jeffrey WiUiams, 21, could receive 10 years I
prison if convicted of the burglary and thel
charges against him, according to Union Count•
Assistant Prosecutor Peter McCord. ·
McCord said Timothy Blake r eturned from
jogging on June 15 and found his stereo, television
1et and other valuables s tacked near the back door
of his North Broad Street apartment.
In his kitchen. police said. Blake found a man
1eated at the table eating the chicken he had left
on the stove for dinner.
Blake, described by police as a Conrail
employee who weighs more than 250 pounds,
wrestled the man to the floor and held him until
police arrived.
W ASHJNGTON CAP)
Employers in the
Southwest whp depend
on m igrant worke r s
from Mexico are re ·
portedly angry over the
Reagan admlnlstra·
lion's planned immigra·
lion policy to fine those
who knowingly hire ii·
legal aliens.
T h e administration
has again delayed an·
nouncing its immigra·
lion law proposals amid
complaints that Its guest
worker program, which
would permit 50,000 ml·
grant laborers to enter
the country each year, ls
-loo small.
PUBLIC NOTlCE
PICTITIOUI IUltNIM
MAMll ITATIN•T
,,.. ltlltWll\f ,., ........ '''"' IHltlM .... l
IOL WIST MtlMAL HOSllllTAL,
UO l tlH A••11v•, We11m11111ttr,
Ct lllor,q ftlll J ...... II, ..,. .... o.v.M .. INC .•
• Ct lllWl\lll U<Wtlllll'I, ft~ a.tM Av11111e. Wutml1111er , Celllornlt .,..,,
Tllla ......... h '""°"'" ity e cw· -·"°"· J-.,11 II. l*11•y •
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"'""' Pv .. lllWd OrellOt C-1 0.11'( Piiot,
J Vl\I Jt. A\19. S, 12, It, ltll »tMI
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI Ofl APPLICATION
flCMI IOUTitl•N
CALll'OllNIA IANCO•P
Notice It lier"" ti..., by I .. AllCMI·
c•nl, ~ (6111.,.,,.• •--· JIO lroedw..,, ~ lle«ll. C.Ulorlll• '26SI, llWI II wlll •llPIY !lo IN , .. , ..
lltMrvt llo9rd !HM"-111 to S.CUlll'I lol
1118 •• ,. ......... c;.,.,..,.y ""' ,., • Mllll MIOI .. <...._,.,. Tiit .,_k MI
lllUllCll .. Kqi,lrt >$0,000 """' I 100 P8r<9'111 of L...-NelloMI 8Mll tllCI
Tr11tl c-. 1111 Or,.,..wllonl, JIO
8rMd•8Y. i....-IHcll, C.111•111• '2611. Tiie po;Dll< It l11vlWC1 to wtlmll writ· len c-b on ltllt ...,lcttlon to
1118 fltder•I RHerve loerd et Ille
Fed8rel .......... ·-ol Sell Ftell· <IKO, Poll Olfk 8 lox 1702, 5-11 ,.,.,..
Clt<O, c.111-• Tiit C-P8flod on 11111 epptk •Uon wlll not elld llefOrt
Avgytl JO, 1 .. 1 •• Cell Mr. G•rcllft
S...1111,.....,,... '"" S4t-2m, •I IM '-••I "-... ol s... ,,.,.. <llCO to find out II .,... ,,.... MldlllOMI
time tor "°"'111"9 '°"""'"''' Oii 11\lt -•l<•lloll or II you llMd more lft. lorm•ll•n •!lout tullfnlltl1tt com. mentt. Tiit ,......1 ,._ wlll ,_
alder commen1a, lll(llldlne r...-111 tor • "'*k tNtllllO., lormtl .........
OlllN •l!PlullOll, II !My •re rK81Ved by lite "-•1 ,._ ._ _..,.
tll8<om"*"-lod.
Pvbll•11811 Orenoe '°8•1 O•lly ll'llOI,
Jvlr Jt, A\IOln* s. '"' ,....,
PUBLIC NOTICE
IUll'tlllCMI COU•T
Ol'TMa ITATI!
OP CAU"°"NIA
l'ott THI COUNTY
OflOllANOa
111 1119 m8tw of Ille _,IUtlon ot
SOSAN llAE NAGV, flOR CHANGE
01' NAME.
NO.A1"1't OltDlllTOSMOW
CAUM flOtt CMAMOl!Oll'NAMll
Tiit epollcallon •I SU$AN llAE
NAGV for c ....... of MIN, 118Vll\I
llHll 11 .... lft ~. Md It ..........
lrOM Uld .,..11,•llOll IM I SUSAN llAE NAGY ,._ fl .... M -'k tllen ,,._1,,._ --... c-...i to
SUSAN llAE SEEWA'-D. N-. tl•rtf•t, 1111 llffffy Ofder'td
•lld flrtdtd, "* ell per.-""8rHt·
eel Ill Mid -00 ......... Defore llllt
covrl 11'1 °"*""*'' J Oii .,. 11'1d Uy ol ,. ••.• ltl1, .. IO:JO •.m. of ..... N Y 10 thOw ~ Wfly wcll ..... IUllOft lot
, ....... " ...... "*"cl -..... -...
II It flKtller orcltftd lllet e """ of Ullt 0.0tr IO si-c-... .,...,._
1n tN Orenve c-1 0.11., Piiot, •
n•••P-• of ttNr•I clrcyle!IOll,
printed lft Mid c---.., 81 1te11 -.
HCll -lot,_ wc<."91 .. -· prlCH' lo IM dey of Mid ...........
D•led Ullt Vtll dey Of J"1y, '"' "-Id H ,.,_,,
J...,..Olt118
~lor G-1
PvDll ...... Or_,.. c ... 1 D•ll'I' ll'llot,
Jvly tt, AuQ. S. 12, It, 1•1 un-tl .
PUBUC NOTICE
-•Wllltflt-of IM firm.
"CTITIOUllUllNlll D•lff WI 21111 M y Of Jvly, '"' 111
NAMa ITATIMCNT C.lllotllle.
Tiie llf~ ,.,_ i. ..... Wt!· LMClll• M. $l'8tf
,,.., ti: """'"'" Orlllllt Cottt o.tly Piiot f1Altll15 STA.Mii' COMll'ANY, 1trat Jvl; Jt, 1•1 1»1 ... 1
Pett Cllel-l"tect, ~ Beedl,
CAtH60. TILDIH J. f1Allll15, ltat ,....,
ClltlMt f'tac., New.-n -..Cll, CA
""°· Tiiie --It <Ollelw<ltd bY t11 Ill·
PUBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI •UllNlll
NAMI ITAT .. •e•T dM.._.1. JlldMJ. ,....,.11 TIM , ......... P8fMftt ere dtl"t
Tiii ~ 11•~ -• -lntKtl. 1 wt1 -..,ill 1118 CO DIVa'-S"'leO COM · ~~~Cltf1lof0f_,..C°""'Y011Jvlr MODITll!S INTl!llNATIDNAL; (2)
fl1'1!1t OISTlll lUTION CONSULTANT$
.... IMl•l'eCI 0r""9 CMM Delly ll'lltt INTl!'-NATIONAL; UI M.U.M.I .
July tt ,.,_ s It 1' 1 .. 1 ..,_.,. Al!llO -AUTO CllAFTlllS, 1500 S. • .._. ' ' • .__ L\IOll SI,...., s.nte Alie, CA tt7ti,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI eUllNlll
NAMI ITATIMeNT
TM IOllowlllt 119ftoll 11 dloll\I IHili·
lltH tt THI GOLD EXCHANGE, soo
Al<•'"· lrvlM, C.lltorlll• tt7U
Al.,. 11-rfllll. '°42 Ak«n, lntlM,
C•lllorlll• tt11S
Tllll _.,.. I• conoa.cltd Dy "" I,._
dlvldll•I.
A19nlltrdvll
Tllll , .. ._,.. ... w• llltd wltll 1tM
C-l'f C.lefll Of Or ..... C-V 011 J"1y
:tt, '"'· 1'111171
PvDH"*' Or-Coffl O.lly ll'llot
Jvly 2', Aue. S, It, It, 1"1 ,,,,._.,
PUBLIC NOTlCE
PICTITIOUI MlllNlll
•AMa aTATIMl•T
Tll• lotl9Wl11t ,..,_, •re dolllt IHnl-••: e u51 Nl5S f'llOTICTllll
se•v1cE. 01 ._... .._," s1r .. 1,
Or ...... c.llfomle .... Sylvle so-ltltt". U6 111111\e LAM,
Colt.8 -· (.ilfonH..,. Ltult O. Pe ............ So11t1t
Wttlllllt10ft, f'uller1•"· Ct lll•rftl•
'26n A.,....,. Moline, 442 O..r..cll
Strwl, ll'VIN, c.11 ....... 91714
Tlllt lllWI-• 11 c.....e.KIH by • ...... 1----.
LMIO.P-..e
Tlllt .........,.. •• flltf wltll 1118 C-111'( ,..,,. of o...,.. c-, ...
OAlllD WAYNE MILLl!ll, 11001
Sudllll A-. l'-ln 11 .. lrt. CA ttJOI.
JOHN AllLll UNOI '-, IJ1t
CorlMt Clrclt, llltte, CA ttOIJ.
Tllh -IMH 11 <OIMN<IH tty • ......... ...,_......
Drlld W•yN Miiier
Tiii• lttlelN!lt w .. llltd wltll U.
Cow11ty Clff11 ol 0r.,,.. C-y on Jiiiy
H. '"'· fl111114
Pvttll ...... Or9n09 c .. 11 Delly Pl
Jvly 2', AuQ. s. 12. It. 1 .. 1 W1
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS eU51Nlll
NA.Ml ITATl!MlllltT
TM lolio.l11t ..,_, la 0011\1 llillli· ........
AMCO BUILDERS SUPPLY, 1Sl4
Newport llvd., Colle M8M, c.111or11lt
92621
o-lcl S. W-, 461 Ot Sole Tet·
rtce, Cor-Clel M8r, C.lllornlt t1'U
Tlllt DulllleM It concN<led Dy en In· Cllvldv•I.
Oon8idS W-
Tllla ti.......,,t ••• llltd wllll tM
County CltB "Or-County °" Jvly
24, "" fl1 .....
Pvbll.,_., Or-C.." 0.lly PllOI.
J uly Jt. AuQ. s. n, "· '"' l*..el
PUBLIC NOTICE
IUPllllOlt COU•T
01' c:AUflOtlNIA
COUNTY 01' OllANOI J-t. Itel. 11''619t CAUNUMll•AI .....
f'WlllNd Or ... CMtt o.ll'I' ll'li.t OllOall TO SNOW CAUH Jvly 1, U, tt. Jt, 1"1 ...,..1 • l'Olt CMA•CH 01' NA.Ml! .............. ~.,
P BLJC ---ATANACIO N•ll f'•Tl•tote, I'• U NOTICE c....,.., ._.
fllCTITIOUI eu11Nau
NAMa ITATaMaNT
TM IOll~ ,,.,._,I• dOint l>vtl· ........ :
lllCHARD I U llNLEY HAl ll
DSllGNS, 7'2 CMlt.,. Slrwt. CollAI
M8M.GL'2.t27
lll<llenl e . It-."'" 11.wvle, MIHIOll llltjo, c:Mlloml• n.1s Tlllt 11111-It <~led ity ..i Ill·
dlvld..-1.
ATANACIO PEREZ PETERSON
.,., llled • P81111on 11'1 11111 c-1 ter •n
order ellOWl119 118flll0ner lo C,.."99 lllt
,. ..... lrom ATANACIO PEllEZ
PETERSON lo DONA LD
ATHANASIUS PfTERSON.
11 It_.,., or-td !NI ell P8l"IOllS
l1118rtt1811 Ill .,,. ........ •••-Id -, .. , before tlllt c.-1 111 ~m-t
No. l 8t 700 Cl•k Cent.r Orlv• Wot.
Seftl• AM. c.tllorlll•. on S.pttm08r 2,
1 .. 1, et IO:JO o'clock • m., -tlle11
•llf Iller• .,_ c-. II ..iy !My
llk-d I . 1(-1141ve, wit'( Mid petition for c,._. o1
Tlllt ............ •• 111.i wltll U. n.,..e ll!ould llOl llt ffelltecl.
Col.Inly Cltfll OI Or .. COunl'l'Oft Jiii~ II II I-or-td llltt e <oPY of n. ,,.1. ,.,..,.. u.i. .,., ee .,_ ~ "'111*1.,...
~lllOICI 0r""9 (MM o.11' Piiot. Ill Ille Or .... C-0.llr 1'1104, e
Jlllr u, tt. Jt, ....._ S. 1•1 JllHI. 11ewt11•118• ol .. ,,.,., clrcv••llon,
-----IHMtlltlled In UIO <-Y •I IHllt on<•• PUBUC NOTICE .... tor ·-<-ut• .... _ ... "''°'
18 Ille ... ., .. Mid-·"' ..-tennout MlltQu--Deled J..-y 22. ltl1.
•AM9 ITATaM&WT 7:;,1c1ofHt:-'
Tiit fOllowll'I P8rMl\t er• dol"9 ~lor C-1
IMlll~~~: Ol!lll!LOPMENT COM· !M~ll'~llAW,
PANY, 171•1' '-lffrtld• Avenve , l11'1\lf_A_
Ntw""1 a..tll, CA '*I. P-ule Vllltey CA "1tl
J AIME ALCALDE, ~. JDS Tof: UHi ---~n:...., ._, Sell a-tet, CA Plll>lllNcl 0r""9 '°811 0.lly Pll°'
. JULIO ZAll'ATA. Vice ...... -. Jyl' tt ...... '· n. "· , .. , ,,., ... ,
JDS W . ......., A-. S... G.-rlel,
CA .. 776.
Tlllt """""' 11 <-1.M lly • ..,w< ..... ,, ......
Jllllt~ Tltlt ......,_, w• flltd wllll ...
Co.1ftly °"11f//I0r.,,.. ~.,. Jiiiy
1 •....
PUBLIC NOTICE
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L .
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
INDEX
Te Place Yllf M, Cal
642·5678
llllSlSfOISAU ,_,,
.. 1 ...... 1 .... ... ... ,.,: .. •111titl. r ....... , ..... utJ
l'or-Hl!olo•
lW1Mf'\• lloo. ......
UT ... ~ ..... ~ .. \ .1u.,
ll01111~1l1 ... llr•• ~
lr\W.. to. .... ,.. •••
'""'•wiA•H1U\ .......... , .....
M.,._totuft\Wf'> ~r.:!~.::" ~, ...... ,hlt.ftil
~•A•• .,.., ....... ~
,....~I''""' ••\tff\1fttr.tpf
..... 1 .......... ~
tul £S1Atf Ao,_,, fo, ,,..1,
AP.t1fnf'fth f()I "'41" .,.,..._p,.,1'
llAtN'\' ...,.,,,' '""''"'Leh ~""'4' \om,,-.,,. ••I t'tvtWrh f (JfMliumtftlWfn\ )...t.
l.Nptf>\h\ft•h"• ... ....... '°"''"'-\t,,u4t
• .. itlMr ''"""'" . .... ,,.,.,,.....,.-,., a .. .-.. eur~s..
MOO.WH111w l rH t'tl
\twMn 1i.,t1tt w .. """ :::~~ ~~·~ ... -'"" "'"' ..... , .... H•N""°' •••tti' t.rm1
H .. tl t to.IM;, t "trl•"t' Mf>.J tti.l•l•-•nt"'t
IOITALS
Uuv..,.... ti.ua1J1"1I
ltilN'-''' nf11tttt\t»d
, .. NW' ... ,._ .... '"' .~ ......... ~.,,··~·" I f~dftl~nn I ft'
1.,.MMN.,.... twr•
1U.M-111"""' ,.,
f°'Uplf'\t"l t Wlft ·~'""''"' 4 .... t91•
4.,i '"'' .. '"' Apl• t\ill tlyl I Al k, • .,.,,
H0i>'t1' kt••'" ljii1frh \11A1I
f, ... " ..........
"""""'hrt N•,.•I• ,.,~ .. ~ k.,. •••
Mr-nl•h \1''°""'' '·--'•ii .... , ...... ,.. .., .... " ...... . ..... .-., .. k ...... . .. ""'"'"'"'"' ""'"""' M,.-,._. °"""'..,.' ....... k..,w,.1 ..
lllSlllESS. lllYES T
MlllT. FlllANC£
t'ltt~•ftt••4"'~' "°-'',.... •t1Mul
l"\•Wi"•WI IJt1 .. ll'
'"'-"'• '" "••-'•41 \11 .... , ••••. ,,.11 w •• , ... ,.. •• u
\t•"11t•11-•• 11•
AMMOUlltEMENTS. rmo1ms'
LOST & FOUNO
4Nll•'". ,,,. "4, ,., ...... l,,.., '••ll • 1.~1 4 l •-u"-'I
I'"' "'"•I ...,. • '1 .. 1 ..
l r.ul
S£1YIC£S
llMI 1• IWI ....
"'" 14111
ID 11111
Ill.II ... 11141 .... ..... lltlJ IW.~
llll't '"'" '"" ..... ....
'""' It ..
..... !
1411J ,,, .. ,
ll\lt , ....
t'll>r
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Jta•J
"''" ,.. ... ,..,,
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•'ti~· "'" " ..... ,.., .. , ..... ... ,.
IH
ll f+
M t1 tr;•
........ •••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL H0UStN0
OPPORTUNITY ......,.,tWlc.t:
All rul utate ad·
vertlaed In thi s
newtpaptr la 1vbject to
I.he F edtral Fair Jiolla.
in& Act rl JJl9 which makes It Ulepl to ad· ver11H "any pttference.
li mitation, or dis· crlminallon bued on
race. color. rell&lon.
Ml, or naUooal orl&in.
or an int.entioa to make
any such preference,
limitation, or di1 · cnmlnallon "
This newspaper wlll not
knowinf ly accept any advert a Inc for real
estate which is In viola·
lion of the law. ·
:::; HMMafarWt '"' ...................... . :·.~ Gt•NI I 002 ..... / ...................... . W•• .....
...
•I• ..... ,..
41l•• .. ,
., ..
\I••
·~·· ..... ... ..
UICUTIVE
W7,000
Almost new 2 story
bea uty Sun rilled
kitchen. formal dinine
room. wark and cozy
family room too! 2nd
story hosts serluded
master suite witb
r ra c kl1 ng brick
fireplace. 3 more queen aiud bdnns too' Don't
m1u out call.
@
............. ,.,,,.,, ., .. SE.A COVE PROPERTIES
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AllOS, WSH
71'-631-6990 ---------
WHATS UHl9UE
ilOllT UHlqut
FINAN C IN G ' CRAFTSMANSHIP
New Balboa Peninsula
custom home Three bedroom. ramdy room,
French doon, and un·
believable owner rinanc-
1ng with 20'4 down
5435.000 ree
IF YOU L I KE
PRIVACY This house
has a l'OUrtyard bounded by six root wall. four
bedrooms and buutiful
decor . plus u ctllent owne r r1n1nc1ng
5435,000 ree.
BAVF'RONT AT ITS
BEST Vou can have
th11 terrlfir view. and
tnjoy tht eut of Uvlng
at the IWlurious Cove.
Two bedroom. ckn, wet
bar, aensational m aster
bath. rireplace. 1149.SOO ree.
BRING YOUR &AR·B·
QUE-You won't want
to lean this beautiful
backyard Mtllng Clean
a nd lovely three bedroo m and family
room homt. A super
houae for rm.ooo .
EXCIT IN G
CITlHOME-J BcSnna, «kn, rn beth. look.a out
on quiet areenbelt .
1111,$00.
SECLU DED AND
SCENIC-UDiqt.11 In the H'et1ht1. 4 bedroomt,
den. French door1 ,
leaded ctau. two brk k rlreptacea. TerrHlc
hovte el m.OOO.
TMAnWHAn
UMlfUIAIOUf
lJlllll«Jf ttf)Mfl
Autton, 17Moeo
•
~.~~ ....... ~~.'::.~ ....... . "-"',_Wt ......_._.,. Holtat1forW. He.Mi,_W. Ge .. rtl 1002 Ga .. rll IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···············•••••••• I ••••• G al 100• I ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• •IMF• • -IMN ll01 ..._.. 1002 Ge•rtl 1002 ..•.......• ·····~····· .................................................................... .
OUTSTANDING IUY IH ltG CANYON
Cul de sue location, this light and· airy
Broadmoor bousts beamed ceilin~s.
neutral decor. pool spa and more.
Realistically priced at 1)8.5,000. Owner
will help fin ance.
Cal ............... '75-6000; 644-0452
U~ff)Uf tl()Mfi
REALTORS, 675-6000
HO U.t COMt Hllli•1¥· Cet ... dtl Nw
WI HAYI 45 Of THI HST A~ lt4 TOWN
\,'. i.~~1 l y '\
TAYLOR CO.
Ht:Al.l 01{~ 'olfll I' l~Hh
HAllOI VIEW HOADMOOl-YIEW!
A great va lue in this lovely 4 bdrm
home with wide view of bay, ocean &
bright lights. New prof. landscaping
f~o~t & rear. Lge family rm. formal
dmmg rm & 21 ~ baths. Great location.
Leasehold. Owner anxious! $195,000.
WESUY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
2111 S•Jo .... tllsRood
MEWPORT CEHTER, H.L 644-49 I 0
PURCHASE OPT10H lmB
New Fantastic 3 Br 3 THAM CD'1
Ba. Condo, S2SOO moves Make money before you
you in. SIOOO per month take possession · priced
<Why pay reno Next to below mark~t \•alue. 2 br
all shopping, theaters & condo Wont last at this
i:;rk, just minutes to price 963-5671 w~c~e:tanagement co l 'j'l!1 (:<JZ:, lff)
7141631-SQSS I REAL ESTATE I COOi.POOL - ----
Big 20x40' pool goes with LOW DOWN
Dalebout
Bay &Booch
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
OPEN HOUSES
2116 YIST A EMTIADA -ILUFFS. 3 Bedrooms and den, lovely kitchen,
assumable 1st TD. Owner will carry
2nd TD.
OfllM THURSDAY, JULY 30,
I IAM-JPM $239,000
IUI TRADEWIMDS LAHf-IAYCHST.
3 Bedroom 2 bath home. lmmaculate
condition.
Of'IMTHURSDAY THRU SUNDAY
l·S $325,000 IOU POLARIS DRIVE-DOVER SHOHS,
WATHNOMT. Spectacular 3 Bedroom
home. Pier and slip.
OP8f WEDMHDA Y & nutSDA Y
WPM $1 , 125,000
1617 WESTCUFf DR., M.L 631-7100
REALTORS
675-SSll
llOADMOOR EUGAMCE: GOnJtOlillfy
~orated pc* homt in lroadMoor-Hnor
Yitw Hila. 4 btdr~ faMlly '°°"'• 2
ft.1pl1cts with lua rodt fadncJ. Prictd to
Ml at $370,000.
COLE Of NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy .. Coroftadtf Mar
675-5511
•••
REOUCED
SI00,000
NEWPORT BEACH
PRIME RESIDDflll ltl:OME
3 Triplexes in a row on oceanside of
PCll m Corona del Mar.
2 Duplexes + 1 Triplex ln a row on
Balboa Peninsula l lot from sand
and surf. Near 19th St.
1 Duplex on the water with dork for
30' boat.
All Large Assumable Loans at 1212'/i .
Owner·s motivated!
CHtury 21 /H.wport C.ltfer 640-53~7
HARIOI RIDGE
Award w i nn i n g .. Jodellt .. estatt home
1st resale ofrering on
thlli exqu1S1lely appoint
ed l ownhome with
massivt view of bay,
ocean, coastllne & night
bghts Now reduced to
S739,000
i~i,b I trll.1 ,, :\: I.[: i •
il;t·,d t:n·~,
R1n.1 b40 '>'>6u Any1.me
Lhtbtutt Pr<'! Btrlg
SELL idle items with a
Daily Pilot Classified
Ad. ~2:5678.
REDUCED
C harm1n1t w ood
sh111gled lownhome Sun
filled kitchen ovtrlooks
cot) patio 3 large
bdrm) plus sewmg room
too Only SIOO.<KX>. ('all
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 -6990
People who need People
That·~ what lhe
DAILY PILOT
SERV ICE DIRELIOHY
l§ all '!_bout 1
FENCED SPANISH VILLA
this neat 4 Bdnn home in Versailles 1 bdrm studio
Mesa Verde. Al.so has a penthouse rondo with a
great bonus room Cul· large assumable loan
de·sac locallon Real Only $98,<KX> Call today
va lue al S149 .950. 979·5380
Mn. J. Fc.tes
9421 Portsmouth
Huntington Beach
You arelhe w111neror
TWO FREE PASSE.5
tS17 value>
RINGLING BROS.
OCEAHFROHT l Choice romer duplex 3
bdrm. 3 bath up. 2 bdrm.
2 bath down Can con·
vert lo a larl(er home
SELLER WILi. llt::LP
FINANCE i\T 13 '.
$795,000'
Old Wortd charm on ~L . 'h ac,_
wHh lar«Je pool + Volleyball court.
Ge..ero.is hofM with 5 ~ 12
nmhr wffttl lar«Je liYi11g '°°"" witfl
btC9M & ~ace; fontlClll cln.nt\ Many
C(llldity allltftlli.s iftcludt Fnftclt doon,
tlled 1fttry, HW & peCJCJtd floon, ~
IHdtd glass windows. A ttw ntate with
flood liqhh, larqe deck and rtUCh more.
OWMr will exchan91. ~ offe".
$499,000. 631-1400.
751-3191 ALLSTATE c::. ">E:l ( ( l
~PWlP(H:11 ', REALTORS
CE
llDlll ILlllS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
UURa rOIMT. COSTA MESA
Just Wh at You ·ve Been Looking
For. Three Bedroom. Two Bath
Cohdo. Near South Coast Shopping.
Spacious Feeling With Skylights.
End Unit. Assumable First Trust
Deed. Priced At $134.000. Owner
Will Ac cept A Lease-Option At
$139.000.
MESA VERDE
Beautiful Contemporary Home In Costa Mesa ·s Best Area. Features
Include Five Large Bedrooms. Two
Impressive Fireplaces. Gorgeous
Living Ro om & Family Room.
Skylights, Wall Coverings. Wet Bar
-Fantastic! Price. $229.500.
® ·--,. ,. . .,, .....
759-9100
#2 C«pcuh fltn•
MtwpcWtCtllhr
RESIDENTIAL Rf.Al ESTATE SERVICES
PBHCTIOH OM PIEHIMSUU POtHT
Highly maintained beach home. 3
BR. 2 BA. Wonderful curb a~peal
wtth bav windows. white picket
fence, & hand crafted front door.
Extra large garage. Best of all -
owner will carry the loan. $W9,500.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
CMKTLYEOOJDAROLKVUE
S J U Y S I A K R V 6 L K 0 E R I U
I D II 0 A A D H L II 6 V D l A 0 E M
Y Z C D S A f I J T S I I S I P L M
0 U H Z E J A D A T II I T M N J Y 0
Q L A t R S I S A V L E M I P 0 L V
E A II 0 C I T I A E A U L E £ E I U
II U Q T A T l I D F T T R I R E N N K
S T E S N E I N U A A S £ L I N 0 P 0
A EA Q l At VI C,I SAE S U UR
T P I S I L T l P S T S T 0 H E R T I
S R L l 0 J £ S T U T I N t A A t S II a £ E I M C V E M I T , I Q I l N A l
U,CRTAMANOILELLCCFT
ASTEATltlDCIEIEIIWa
BARNUM & BAILEY c•cus
Anaheim Convention
Center Aug. 6·17 Long Beach Arena
Aug. 19-23
To claim passes. call
lalboa lay Prop.
Rtalton
•675-7060*
642·5678, ext. Z72. Pa:sses lllllllllllllllllll!!!!!l!ll~•lll!!l!I•:
must be exchanged ror F .. uw-•snc reserved seats at ti.x "'" •"' office pr io r t o ASSU~LOAM
performance Assume llS,000 loan al * * * 10': interest Large 4
Find out about the high bdrm home with fam1I) ,1 room and frpl r No earning real estate ~a es quahf)'lllg. Sl&.~.000 Call
career opportunities today m.~o with THE REAL
ESTATERS Licensing ALLS"'"" TE school fees completely I,.
refundable to school of
your cbo~ Extens1\e REAL TORS
sales traimng For in·
formation, call 751-6191 ICMOCIC -ICHOCIC
MenllihW~
3 Bdnn. fantastic ocean
& canyon views, gazebo.
lush landscaping. Anx
iousowner. S299.000.
RCTaylorCo
,,411 'J'11X>
Pridtof
OWMrlhip
20 units. E.side CM 7
yrs old. Overall finanl ..
ing lor;. Owner mot1val·
ed. Hurry! Call Kevin
This IS no )Oke 11 ·s op
portunity knocking Be
sure to see lhas mint con·
d1t1on 2 br beauty. As
sume exasung loans at
less than 13' 1 eff rate
Owner very motivated'
963·5671
IUY THIS IEAUTIM
"ILUFFS" HOUSE MOW!
$249,500
Super 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath home
features Mexican tile entry,
lrg kitchen /family room with
all electric a ppliances and
"island" rangetop & hood.
bit-in bookshelves and brick
fireplace in L .R .,
waJlcoverings of Monk cloth +
flocked & foil wallpaper ..
SUPER TERMS. O{(ered by
seller. Call 855-0233 for all details. Ted Wasserman.
INCOME PIOPll'l'IES
228S & 89 Santa Ana Ave.
l>7 Hamilton
415 Hamilton
1395 & 99 Baker St.
COMMllCIAL
3 Lots · 23rd ·4' Newport
llSIDIMJ'W;
2030 Monrovi~
$265,000
$175,000
$190,000
S375,000
$275,000
S 9S,OOO
THE NEISSEI •ANY HI.
714/641i0763
OCEAN YIEW-llKE NU
..._..fulty remodtled & ~ 2
story just steps to super be«h. Mon In
& tt1joy luxury as well as ccnual llYl11q.
lbd, lba, & family room S.150,000.
631-1400.
LINDA ISLE-IUROPEAN STYLE
Distt.quishtd cust0tn rttHleftct ill the
WATlR with drCIMCltic 2-.tory tnfry. ~ ctllillcp witfl bemm ~
colleclor 1tal11td & ltadtd glou
wlf1dow1 thruout. Seco11d floor
balc°"'f falt*ry OYflioob tt. .... of
geMrous 111ain rooms. FOf"tftClf llYi11q
rooM, step-~w" p•b-bar im111t1tH
fmn.na. ~ di11.rtn. +kr9t ~
patio Cllld koi pottd. Sepa1 alt spociovs
11111ter wffe with WATER VUs + 4
f.-ily btdrOCMM. Dock for l yachh.
$2,600,000. IKludts ICllld. 631-1400.
WATERFRONT HOME .t'I<
Rf Al I "11\fl
''·., H. ' J'• •• ''' " • •
'ltn \A ' • .,, ... ,ti"' . \to'" A\. ~.·~f"°''' r~ lo! I f\t'1'4H l...i.11, 1
631-1400 673-6900
10l/<t% FIMAMCIMG AVAIL
Assume existing 1st T.D. on this 4
bdrm home in NEWPORT
Riviera payable at $668 per
month !! Featuring French doors,
fireplace. 2 1.i baths. raised
wooden deck. & new carpets &
paint. Only Sl.:tl.900
$814 PER MOMTH. . . . . .
when you take O\'er existing low
mterest FHA loan !! This 1s a
superb starter home for a young
family. Lots or potential & priced
to sell at $89.500.
MEWrORT IEACH OfffCE
2670 Son Micjffl Orin
1714175'·1501 (7141 752-7373
Walker&Lee
Real Estate
'::~::.' S@~~-~e~s· ::
-.., OAT I. POUiJI ----
•
t...,,... ...... "!+.. ._ ........... -d> ... ....... _,...,~-·
I l N G E T ,1 I . ' I r I I I _
I it u G 0 R I I I I I' '
I L U G I E , • Things miat bl tough Tiit , Is I I I • ottMtt night• man held mt up . • with lilt flCUM ht~ tht
----"----money 10 kt•P up tllt
I T Al ET T S 1 0•~1t011-· -.
I I I, I e (ll"IOlt ...... cll;,01• -"
• • -• !1Y t.l4 l1111tt ........ -~ ,...,...Jr......, .... ,......,
_,,....,.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
....... ,_Wt 1Hcmtt ,_Wt HcMttat ,_We •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ge .. rtl IOOJ 1002 COtteMeM 10241 ......... ._. IMO . .......................................................................................... .
LINDA ISLE
Exciting opportunity! Wide channel
view from spectacular architectural
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 qu!ckly at $475,000. Must see.
Is Loe "'TI~ ON EXCLUSIVE HUN·
"' "" TJNGTON SEAClJFf'S IMPOIT ANT? G 0 L , c 0 u fl s £ I
Th's nurly ntw So 3bdrm. p(IOI, xtra Ire lot
Coast Plua homt h•I ll Many xtrH SJtS.000.
all Ena Tudorstyleon Broker· 833 UU.
co rner lot. Near 13'7·82158 __ _
ftttwaya, ct'ntr A 1C, 4 New di.I 3 Br townhouse.
Br Zh 81 1214.950 Call walk to bffth. fully de-
now Ownr1A&t Hick corated D ,000 + min.
Keeler 541·6706 or down."6-0.132-=----
tt31·0213 -,,.,.. • 1044
FllNCH OUAITa •• ••••••••••••••••••• .. 3 BR 2\1 ba twnhse THMM
P11tio, fplc, double gar, TOWMtOME?
OWC SllO,OOO. BKR Call the sptdalists at
646·431!Q -thl' condominium In·
A1 ... 11/Jo/o formation center. $64000 VA loan. 3 BH 2 Touchstone Really
BA w tdbl aar. fenced _ ~-_
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room ~2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
S420.000 . .Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home 3700 sq. ft. reatur
mg marine room Sl.385.000.
front &t rear yds. I Rancho San Joaquin Valla llO~OOO. 8rker*4~ Portola Model mU$t &ff
SSOOO down. Sl 180 mo mny uparades. prln only
buys3BR 2 Baf1xertn Sl69.SOO. For Jppt
Cotta Mesa Ownr agt ~1·6890.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den . spacious Plan 8. im-
maculate. Low priced at $215.000.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
341 Bu y,•d• D''"" N B 6 75 616 1
SAMDDOlURS THIHICIMG
This 3 Bdrm 2 Ba duple'< TOWMHOME?
642 1523, 645-7~ ASSUMAILE VA
umtDE Taite over high balance
Lo\ely 3 BR 2 Ba. ram on VA loan on this
rm home w fplc . dbl almost new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
gar $149.500 on largt' lot Nice u~
jlrolter ._646-~-grades. central atr. lrg
OWN a AHAHCED
Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath
home . beautiful
wallpapers thruout Cul
de sac street Owner will
carry AITD for 7 years
al 13 5', lllleretlt. For an appomlmenl lo see, call
540· llSI
"~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
covered patio. CaJI for
details
* * RfllJCED ! 2 Bdrm rondo In adult
pre&cnts a !(rrat 10\'t'l>I Ca II the specialists at
ment opportunity in the condominium in · 1"!'!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!11-• West Newport Thi' loca formation center 1·
oriented Orangelree.
Super location, ~ir COD·
dilloning It more.'FleJti-
ble financina. lion or this propert) I on Toul·hstone Rea It~
ly 2 lots from the o<•ean ~
..ind steps lo tht• bu) I laJboa Island I 006
lb·ou1 pied bwl 11 hr the un ••••••••••••••••••••••• l' 1eva e 1nUnl·1n1: make thb offcnni: re SALE IY OWNBl
uhstll and :;mart Ask 3 2 7 Co ra I & 3 I I
Now $163.400 $35~000 ON ruf \l\lo<lh•fdte Own~~wiJ~!9.!nre. ~ !~~
Assume loan at 1()"; 3 19:?11 lhrrann Pk•". '"lnr ing onl) sai.5.000 Ameth~s! 61_3:0_l88
lalboa lst.d RJty NOCJ\Sll 6 73-1700 TD OK for down Cute 3
BR 2 Ba ('(Jttage. trade
OK Desperate s:llS.000
O~r _!!!,. lji§~~_L
Corofla dtf Mer I 022 .....•.•...............
4341EGOMIA
Bdrm. 2 bath Onl y
$127,900 C..1164.>9161
_ OPEN HOUSE
. . REALTY
ii!' v • Elegant new 4 Br Vic 1--------1 torian partial \U , 41RrOOLHOME REH TORS ownr contractor Just E~cellent ColleS?e Park IA YSHORES comJ>let!J1& JS7~.ooo. _ area Has Sl!0.000 1st. as
FAMILY HOME IY OWHER ~ume al 14•: $146,\IOO
PERRCT!
3 Bdrm 2 Ba, corner
loc ation . ln·ine's
College Partt. Shows bet·
ter than model. steps to
school and pool OwMr·s
mot ivated. call now
Thi~ lr0 4 Bdrm t Ba D d ,,.,, "''u
h .. Custom 4 yr old home 3 avi · '""'"'""' * * 2"°' OQWU omt'l~Ju.'t ~lt:psdwa~ Bdrm. 212 ba Xlnt 31R +~+lpo U/O nn
from 1 he Pr 1,.a 1 t' financing , $410.000. IS', Harbor & Baker area. Like new 2 Br condo in beac·hl·~ ur thtb i:atr dn Co urtesy to Brks Sl46 ,900 Owner ""Ill prest1g10~ Woodbridge.
1i1uardrd community ~~·~-<-a rryat IJ'V wilhS40.000 Close to park & pool.
The II\ 101? room with down David. 646-3255 great starter home wr\h
hl•a1y ""ood hl·;im~.1~::'~~~~=~11.;;.;;.;;~~~.;.;;.;._ assumable Cianancing µaned windows. an<I CDM OCEAN VIEW c U f d ta11I ~hullers ol)('n to lh<' sun Lovely Harbor View Hlls Suptr Fillaftclltq! S!OS.OOO. a or e · n~ bnrk patu> i.:r<'al ror Hills home w 3Bdrm. Highly upgradeo 4br {g entertaminll Owner will fam rm . pool-& features home on lge lot. Cl&c to ~I Wo\ldbrldgt
:1<11s1st with hnunrm.: or oak firs, french doors. everything. must ~ec to Rt II
""ill l'Ons1dcr trudl.'s Jac. Jfrpks, + more appreciate Name your • Y ~9.500 Owner wants offer. Will \erms! A1td '°"" down 551·3000 D.M. Marshall Rltr consider low down or high assumable. call for 1tttlhrrann Pli•~.lnilw 76M8~5 lease option $485,000 appt to see 957 2819
A s It f o r C a r o I e Own!_!' _Ajt JMPetenCO.
McMahan 644 9060 or DESPERATE ' Near
644·8067 foreclosure. 3Br. 2Ba.
l .. !!!!!!!!!!1!1!!1!!11!!!!!11!!!!!!!11!!!!!!11!!!!~1 $20.000 dwn SI 18.SOO
Wooc1tric9~ Last availabe plan S
S28S.OOO
4 Bdrms + bonus. 3 ba
3 car gar for tnfo call
SSl~--
1--------1 Agt La0ons64S-9161 502 Acacia. SUS.500 Dmte1 roW I 026
OP EN SAT SUN •••••• 0 •••••••••••••••• 616 Begonia. S259.SOO Spra"" hng 4 Bdrm. large lfASE/Of'TION 79-1111
Drive by. then ('a ll P' t ya rd ~t 1nutes to 9.965% SARAMAR\'IN '1 .tr1na Owner ""Ill S bdrm. 3 6a. Turderod;
SS0.000 down Owner
agt.._6j4·fil~ aft. &pm. ASSUMAIU LOAM 67S.5688or675-li000 finance al Jtood ratr
t,01ely. pmate 2 BR + -I $165.000
d e n r o n d o w 1 t h Costa Mncs I 024 lalJ'lllO Vlloqe R.E..
l'alhedral ce1hn1ts and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497·17'1 lots of de<·kml? Securit y 1
BIG IS
BEAUTIFUL
.: a t e d A r b o r VA j ~
Lake Woodbr1d1tr rOOl.HOME
Lar11e s pacious 5
bdrm. 3 ba Devonshire
Model in Turtle Rock
Glen Patio Homt'S Fan· tast1c location \'ery close
to pool and tennis. Ex·
l'ellenl terms. S399.500.
Sl75.ooo owe 2nd ·
TD Submit'. Lovely 3 Bdrm home ~~~~~~~~ 759•1616 featuring master bdrm ----1!11111-1111!11-I with open beamed rl'il
DUPLEXES
E·s1dt C.M. dose to
heach 3 & 2 BR Ll(e as·
sum able loan $165.000
Open Sunday I 5
223 22S Knox St
Peninsula 12 block to
bearh 2 BR each unit
Furn f o r s um ·
mer winter rentals
$230,000
mgs and Ben Franklin
fi re place. dl'n . and
library stud y orr
master bdrm Elegant
formal din1n1? room
overlooking pool and
patio 1\ssumable
finanr mg alw a\'a1lable
Asiung $165.000 For an
appointment to see. rail
540-1151
~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
CAPE COOCHARM
This rhurm1ng 2
bedroom. 2 bath Cape
<.:od l'Otlal(e with a den 1s 'l
located 1n pnvote Three "if~~-
Arch Bay and offers 'l~~ 1-;vr
ocean ,·\ews and a '1<.'/-;
ba('kyard with lush
la ndscaptng. Eruoy use 833·8600
of Three Arch Bay 's
private fac1Ulles Seller
~.~1~~~11able lf513CAMPUSDl·IRVll((
•
MORTHWOOO
""°lil!!ii!!l!!iiii~!iiii!!I L" IUUTY Large A F'rame 4 BR & ""!!: -1ngO bachelor w loft Btwn --------a Immaculate 3 Bllrm bay & ocean beaches on MESA YEltDE u7 •.at.i•" home on quiet cul de sac
Peninsula 1310.000 lease For large fam1hes 4 in Northwoods Plush hold Bdrms and huge family ca rpets and custom
room . complete with re· draperies t.hruout Huge finished kitchen N1cel)' t:sl' the Daily Pilot patio with soothmg spa
Col for.._. draped and carpeted "Fa~\ Rt"lult .. ~erv1re Many extras plus. lOw
Excellent neighborhood d1rect orv Your interest as,,umable loan BURR WHITE
REALTOR . INC.
67>4630
location. Easy main-~ervire 15 our $167.000
tenance yard $179.900 ~pe('1alty
Call 642·5678 ext 322 ----~ -don osen MESA DB.MAR r .. alt• r., Assumable Isl. owner -------will carry 2.nd. 3 Bdrms and custom family room Have s~m~hinii to sell? 17TH AT PROSPF.CT
with vaulted celling. Ex · Class1hed ads do 11 well TUSTINL73J-311! _
re!lent condition, very '"'" I 044 Find what you ~ant In
private yard. Sl3S.OOO, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .!?!!!.Y.~lot Cl~il~;-
OCEAH VIEW
Outstanding No . Laguna 4 Bdrm home
w1large lot and as
sumable loan on
oceansldt' of highway
Steps to beach. Large
deck off dining rm.
~.ooo
MESAMOITH
Northgate comfortable 4
Bdrm fa mily home. con·
venient lo schools and
shopping. near Fairview
and Paularino. Stf and
appreciate. Sl27.000
642-i5200
J PETE
BARRETI
.. REALTY
_ _:~!!!!~~-Sell \hin&s fast with Dail)'
Pilot Wan!J\ds .
C..... .. Mir IOU C...-. .. Mir I OU ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
3216 OCEAN BLVD.
FOi SALE IY OWNER:
3bdrmr12bo, 40'x 135' lot1 Coll:
r-ieldsteod & Co.:
TUITLf ROCK PIESIDEHT
Prestigious home w 4 BR. 212
bath. powder r m . family~ rm
w/fpl c. brkfst nook. formal
dining. lg nving rm w /fplc plus
3-car garage. $410.000 Lee Henkel
752·1414 (!65)
DISllilU DUILIM IM UMYllSln
rAIK This lovely 3 BR. 21 a BA
home is In move.In condition.
Freshly paintt:!d. It features new
upgraded carpet & flooring in
kitchen & ntry. S13.S.lm Scott
Al ton 55 t ·8700 <T-66 1 '
.... --. ·-~-...------
~ . . . ........... ' ,. .... . ... "'... .... .... ~ • .. .. ... .. ,,,... ••• ~ ·-•• •• • • .. •l • • # # • -. ..... . . '
• , Or1npe Coast DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday, July 29, 1981 ~.~.~~~~~ .... ~.~:!~.:'.~ ....
Jti'.W. , .._..,_w. 1 ..._..'-"'* ottwra........ c .... M... ll24 '"... J244 ..... u.....,•111 Afi••._.,_ .. ...., "9 ...... .,.... .,.,.,.. ..... ... ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................ ..
..... ! .... ~~.~ ... !~.! ~~r.'!~-!~! =!!!!!!! .. ~~!~ ,,_._.!_*=• w Woodbrid&e, 3 br. ti. bl ~~~~ ••• ??!! ~~~ ... ~?!! ~~~~ ....... ~.~~ ~~~ ... ~~!
..... Dupltua, ~Hf'°°l. • .,_... condo. '600/rno, avail HARBOR RJOGF, 0 ... 11 • 2 Br J 81 ftlr Cit BEACH YRLY K£N· Olt....... bellltlf\11 ~H view llwtf I 1Clr 221 E · St !111'1)td On lhe wattr 2 br, 2 ba. vtew! Pn:I dtcor Pum Plau A Adulll 1tiOO TALS lBr Ir bld >ek>r
P• •• D.ana Point PttftC't IOC'ltlon Ntw Louted In No. San COlta M a LefllMa... l24' lrpl:· ~•med celllnp. 238r NtwCoodo. No.ettt MIJ231 .l°""llltJl7U210
duplu on C"ON\er lot ('l)fldi kif\ ~~:~ gt;W:~•:;.~ fWC:f'R'ri: i!°~~ ••••••••••• .. •••••• .. •• l.;51mo01:aku ~=: ~ QwMr0'1J·ml P•<'lou• 2Br. trptt. pvt Jtlurt•. 2 BR 2•y BA t;n,.
near Dana Muina 2 OCEANfl\ONT Oupltl( blt.Ownerltnanct.full lSl7value) HILLSIOIVllW Oya 9tz.55u •v• 1 BR adult condo. MIC' patio.~:"'~ s~r Pool UH
bdrcn. I be up. l bdrm • Tri·Pltx. Xlnl lot price l\50,<XX>. Alk for RINOU:NO BROS. Spaciou1 4 Br Fam/Oln. 81$ OM9 • 11uard. pool. Jacuul. "' 4 !WI ~·5:96.540-.P
down be.med rln1 . f P rra·Mt_._f! Mike. BARNUM llBAlU:Y Gi:dnr '\lllOmo.._494·~ aa una . om 11160 l.11tlf 1 Br Upper t•------•
(rpk. dlnlna area. enrl lOShf!IT•lteda CllCUS 1 BR cl\a~r. dwntwn ILUFFSCOMOO IM$·oi30 £nclad 111r•Cr un VA.CJ.Kf P~tiq,.SW,SOO Water vitw, lnch1dtt Anahelrn Convtnllon Gar, frpl. adlt.s. no pell 2 Odrm 2 8a txpoeed Wini.tr.' 1 bl) ()('tan, 3 br. Mtaa del Mar •rtll Call 3 bdrm. z bath .
-141.uioo Re1lt~ l1nd 10"'1 1u um1blt Centtr AUi S.17 1125 49H'9U bf am relllnp 't11>lr wet 2 ba Sepe U.Jun11 Ii 751 990$, Jv ffl('llllti flrtplact. bit Ina, newt)
_ 4~L loan, 4 bdrm. 2 b1. '"-Loe..._ Loni Btarh Artna Beach rentala from 54$0 bur. new ~Imo Sub $'700 mo 117~57111 I Bdrm. So C11 Pina. ~rurblahed Yrly at 1750
New Modulu Type w posuble auot Prktle•Hea Aus. lt-23 mo Adlt•only mil on pets 7608041 A.~ pool. air. ~'"• pool mo
Homes. leased land. quarters Call now ror 3 Br. (am.lb' room, t To claim p111t1. u ll 499-:IUIJ Ownr1Rrkr -~ 100 mo 1attd comm
Oreanrront Pk. 3 P\'I de\1ils. '151>~ plan on luah lll'ffDbelt &42·$078, ext 272. Puses <.:all Jo Annr $4$ 010 associated brhs. 24Security.fishlna Btst assumable loana In must be txchanaed for 48'· 28 1• patio, frpl c. VILLA IWOA ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ~ lll 1 p r~~t· fr om 129.900 lheori1ln1181ufla.Sub· reHrvedllt'alaatbox T O.W .. llVllll Sept l 2 Rctrm C>ce1m & l111:r fJtMrtll JIOJ Sparkllngcle1111Z 8r 1•4 fU•11,.-t "'· WI 1"1 '1,"·t
499. 16 mit aJI orre,... Avallable o t f 1 c e pr Io r t 0 182!1 mo Ref ldl & 1811 vlt•w Comp upl(radr •u•••••••••••tt••••••• Ba 1410·141$ '"'nrrd,
New wood glass. SP•· rortease-optlonorleast Pn.of performanre. ec No 4 ·770! $800 mo. fll!U4303 wk •nMTSFC>allHT utll• r•ld Rt(r111
I : ~ • 'I ) I ...
~lar. 6 dk.s. 2 rri>trs IAYlllOMT Rtdu«'d to 1298.<XX> OWMl'lhla * * * end, 673 fm1 eves II n , N 8 , Colla Mtu 2 am al t'hlld OK No Coiy Z br, Iba. bf1m re11
3 + 3 + cloH unob.1trur I ~ AMA.MCIMG D.M. Mwlllll lltr 20 units. E~iidf .tM 7 3 Br 2 ua Colleae Park. IMWl.D IA. Y 81ufrs 3 OR or 2 ~ dM Somethln& for Ev.ryont• Pft& 1900 W•ll•rl' 111ia. frplr. au Nwpt
tab4t panor \'1lli vws Newport's uduslvc-7i~l~ yrs old. Overall financ· bit Ins. 0 1W, frplr 3 bdrm. 2 bllth1. lc1m· 211 BA. rp1r, p11llo, pool IJllch lo• Br Unfum $4011G2Sor&t24~ Hahta No ltub pets
S499__M._P ..f.,_4!M 1831 Ptninsula Pol.nt Newt} S. J... ~i ~Oft. ~f ;Oltal Av1Ll1blt. 1750 Aak for Sl500 mo $87$. 160&38t..07.}59:Kl :rr-er Cc"i!'~no l~~t;,~~ I br bachelor 11pt w J:i00 $4$ 16112
loddtcllt t'OnStrutted 4 Bdrm and Capl1tr.o 107 .urry a ev n Pete 7Sl·llfil FAHTA.STIC VllW LIDO ISU hreplac:t, l1un room. kllr henttlt. $3$0 mo Adil.I, no pet.a. 28r. 2Ba I~ 4bathrl'SldenCf'Wlthp\t ...................... CHARMING C:hu rrn1n 11 & t'oty bt•umrd \'ellin¥•· 1Jt1l~Jn('I ~9096a(t 7 nor lloa1 ~00 mo
Walled and f!llted 0«an BOAT DOCK. Sl.~.000 TlA.DEOISA.LE BdEASTSBIOErHOME ~I~~~'. 3 bath~. lc·u~c 3fidrm. 2Bo . d~e lo 11ar11aea. 1111 bu11l 1nM Small Zroomapt <'iirpc'l. 8313473,645-4360 r r 0 ftt e 5 la l e w 11 h including the land or 2.87 Arres. ~ sq rt 2 rm, l a, enced yrd, t'lubhuual'. buy, twuch, Garden & TownhoU81' p<1nelin11. nart' H1blt' ' Bachelor. pvt enl. ba.
rabulousview.Pvtsteps Sl,295.000 leasehold home. barn. rorruls. 2cargarw/opener.new T.....,.Aasoc. & tennis Alli Vt rl(1n1 11 desil!.'! NO FF:t-: 1•ouchea.rum1,hcd ~ pi1t10 , cooklnl( unit.
10 the sand Call ror Owner Builder Dan view or tnhre valley. cpl/drapes, gardener 494-1177 O'llm•n8731323 TSL~G~J' fl4iJ003 $49 ~ refr1g . avail now ull
brwbure Bibb6l5-23ll manyextras.r1nanl'111C. ~900-6419 llnu~Ulll proptrty S.-IOtll,a....c ... I Br unturn S375 June '82. S27S mo
CAROL TA11..IM. RLTR Private Owner he'd 3 bdrm, College Park, Nr L04J'IM Hiit 325 Spae10U) 4 bdrm. 2 •, l~;;ly 2 lklnn Quiel Barhelor furn or unrum 875-5710
49f.0029 \714)493-1372 srhls. Monthly rental. ...................... buthh , 21'!0 liq rt I.~ cu l de-ur Nirlll ) S32S 111 Mo + secunty YWLY
._. .. UMAHOITH
'IXPAtelD
BEST VALUE IN fr.......l ... I 01 114 7(>() <>333 ~:534 --llOM r. 1-'0R R l::NT l'lo~rt5. pnmr 1<w1111on landar•m· o.iraue "'o $200..tt9.!!J!JSI 548-01~ I• ULKT·oocL· AN _.. "''"' Trade Luxury "'ewport XLNT 3 Bd '"""" .. 1 (' ·' d " " •• • u "'" 1• JoaBearh3br. rm..,., rt•n1•c1 •u \'un. wat l•r . ~l'ls J8•1mo 11•12Br Upsta1rsApt......,,.. 3br,l"",-mo
EASTl.UFF ...................... hom• on 1. a""" ror In· .. d d K .• .. ~ _., "" _... . .. • "~ 2''lba. 2sly lge yard all yar 1111 l(ura~e. lull & aurdencr l/'ICI 63().~76 uma(' Lane. Anaheim Mo N~. tsl & last. 2 b I ba K<A Nl. SO CST,.LA.ZA rome Units or ' Equity ~95'""'AA~ 035 pets wekomr a<>< "'"7 r. ·......,/mo. 3 Bdrm 2 bath. Im· 3 Br 11~ ba "Bradford" S280,000. Act now ! amen ~· ~=.L A&ent_.uort't' SANTIAGO URIV.I':. cuo -..·7858:.... t m ~ ---O~S.J7J!l __
matuJatt' Owner 1nx rondo. 199.500 8 4~~ as-Broker Co.Op Agent CONDOS FOR RENT tcmporllryfomily horm" lalboo, ..... 1107 CHOICEEA.STSIDE Lovely 3 Hr 212 Ba in $Ul.OOO
Former 4 Br, now 3Br +
den + 13x22' added
ramtty rm Ftml d1111n1.
pool st yard. Nearly 1800
1ous S20S.<XX> sumable on Z7.000 lat. 631-4St6. Brand new See Westbay LOCJWtO N'9-I 325 avail Aua I. 4 Bit 3 B<i. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sharp !Br In sm dlx Newport Crest 1195 Mo
.oy Mc,._......, a-. • ... 1636 ... 6 ----Townhomt'S ad. serhon •••••••••••••••••••••• 11(1' pvt yard SZ200 mo Yrly rental. bal·helor. I I c l lst & last + SIOO --'"' ~ an m. RE Salespeoplelolurn 3824 Forluse.new3br,4br& 1nrldsw11ter1itrdnr rompex wpoo ps. securi 5q..77zt ONE YEAR NE W· inestmen ts & ex---------• b r h 0 m c •. I' RI S325mo 11 bllt 0Hbch drps , rrplr. bltns ty Eves & wknd!> .... ~•ORTHGHTS " 0 •Jrrell ~~OOS200 ZOI E Balboa Rl\d range oven. dshwshr. ~-8905
sq ft 1n house for only 11!!11!!!11!!1•••••• SIJl.000.
644-7211
1'Jn NIGEL
CAIL[ Y b.
ASSUUATES
North Lag\lla Beach, 180
deg view ol wa~r. lhlS
pro~rty will be going to
court Au~. 6. a petition
ror order instructinl! ex·
ecutor lo sell real pro-
perty bas been filed.
Cw:,. No. A-1~3. Ap
praise<! I '27181. sa.o.ooo
S22 A llv1ew. Laguna
Be,r h Required
artlbbnt o( 1st overbid
S29'9 .750 Conlart
642· eves.
LCICJwtCI .. ..,.. I 052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
11.-0l CLOSEOUT
New 3 br, 4 br & S br
homes, from $169,SOO
For info, contact Donna
P h illips 8Jl -OS4l .
831-0So'7 agt.
~w~ a.och I 069
Hart.or View
Move 1n condition, 3
bdrm, 2 ba home m
Harbor View. Hleh as·
sumable loan,, H11hly
upgraded throughout
Shows like model Must
sell fast AskU1i '231.500
111cl land Come for an
spection Sat, Sun I 6
1860 Port Wheeler or call
760-9596 Owner I Agt
VILLA. IA.LIOA.
I Br condo. View or
Catalina. Owner will
help ruiance. SubmJt or.
rer.
lroller, 9U-I 112
Trade Luxury Newport
home on '' acre ror In come Units or ~ Equity I
S280 .000. Acl now '
Broker Co·Op Agent
631·4Sl6.
BLUFFS CONDO·Smgle
story. 38r. 2Ba. Linda
Plan New appbas. tile.
etc Assumable loan.
ow ner agt S230.000
855·2013 ....................... ---------OWHERWILL
CARRY Lr~d loan,Lstloanas
sume at same rate. 3
Bdr 2"1 Ba, 1S I C. P,vt
park. varant-ready. Uke
new. won't lasL
· .Jobn Marshall
531-1.266
,15,000 DOWN
Nice 3 8d 2 Ba end umt,
near So. Coast Plaza.
P&I approx IM9. Call
now. Jeanne Salter
'• .......
WMr.l<
Rt ~I TnR<..,
PAITYIN
HARBOR VIEW
Sma!hing family room
witil wet bar Un
believabll beautiful en·
lerUiner spatio. s Bdrm
Sommerset on Ctt land
Ablolutely immaculate
move.10 condit ion.
Creati ve finan cing
av llable.
HEW,ORTCUST
First time bizyer aod re·
hree. slep right up and
make us an of!er A two
bedroom condo with lots
or character Vaulted
ceilings and wet bar are
Just some o r the
amen1t1es. Too good lo
last! $16S.OOO.
*~ Cote Realty
& lnvestmt>nt
640-5777
HA.,,YHOUl
O'IEHHOUSE
ci.~1,..1 Hon~
WtdRe~l-7. 16 ENCORE OURT
NWPTCRE.5T
Ut-6144
SlT!'iCOAST
REAL ESTATE
COltHa COHDO
W ALX TO llACH
2 bdnn, 2a~ bath. rom
pletely refurbished
View or orean from
bakon)'. Sl43.<XX>.
Redhill~ kl',1lty
1;~:j ;;;rn I
MacArthur Village t'Oll· changes. Xlnt oppty for ".::",. S77S SIOOO mo For 1nro. 6iS 9562 75.2 6925 do Two bedrooms. bwlt· ri~ht person 100', com-4 bd, 2 ba, 2 car gar. lge contart Donna Philhps 38' DOCK • _..:. adlls. no pets S4IO mo S. CletMwh 3176
111s. one level. near all. m1ss1on available. Con yd Pets 1dds ok. Drive at 83l·OS4J or 83Hl60'7 3 Ar l' 1 Ha N11·1·I> de Corotto def M« 3122 ~I HamJ.!ton •••••••••••••••••••n•• Community pool. tennis. Hdent1al anter\'1ew by 3S7 La Perle Lil S650 a(.enl cor;itcd Condo S1200 •••••to••••••0 •••••••• 2 Br w,gar S410 New Near new I br apt . built
spas and lots more S46·S880, Vmce mo. as is. 640-6429 eves. • Mo Avail. 8-12. ITTS·G77S 2Br 1•, ba, 2 stry. frplt. rarP,t?lS, water paid 1567 Ins . carpeb drapes.
S99.SOO. Call TARBELL. Lots for~ 2200 M2:!312 dfil. MlstlOft V'-fo 326 Harbor View Homes 4 BH pool. det'k. adult. no pt!t "C Orange 636 4120 carport. lawidr~ ral'ih
REALTORS, 979-2390 ....................... 3Bdrm. 2Ba. lovely Mon-... H.O~tE.FORR•f..;;f 0 2 Bu. new l'~ SI 175 mo loS90~ 673-73 CiaJI l.:~M"' l), public Lennis rouns.
MUST SEU...S HI lols. ticello CON DO. gar. 3 Bdrm S625 Fen<'ed A.&t 673 776L]IJO.l:ll7 LuxwyCORdo H...tiitCJtoftleodt 3140 and gotr course right
<>Ht.rltffl&tat. rully improved Plllm ~I J62S ~;nr7 ___ yard & garage Kids & Blurrs 3 Br. family rm . 2bdrms,2'ba,pool.spa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Abedhlind P1ropert}''
•••••••••••••••••••••• Desert Country Club $775 mo J Bdrm 2 Ba. pets -welrome 545--2000 .. E" pl.in. $1200 mo (pie, welbar. gar. W11lk THE WHIFR.f TIH u ts on Y no pets MobiltHo..s Part cash. payments. 1002 Presidio Dr. Mesa ~ent noree. Also Bluffs 2 Br 2 Ba to bearh SHOO mo LuxuryAdullun1tsatar Avai lable ammedialel>
ForSole 110 trade. exchange (7141 del Mar Relsreq'd No ._._wpo"'_.. __ :L 326 vA1gctw . $900mo 76().96711 75.2·1869orl-498·6716 fordablebvang 12 &3 P15 mo0wner642-0IJ8
•••••••••••••••••••••• 568·0611 pets Avail 8 IS Agt ~ n--.... EnJOY summer bv111~ all Br Well deco ~ated 2 BR 2 BA CONDO On
EST ... ns.o.•ir. --«<>s221c ... ctt ...... c •••••••••••••••••••••• 01 goUrourseS5CX> "' ,_.:: MORRO BAY ocran vu !!.~-•'""""!"" 5..,._.Tl..,GODR 3 Br 2 Ba lloust• with year Walk to d~ ymp1c s1u pool, hRhl· ·
l966 Majestic localed in lots from Sl2.900. walk to MESA VSU>E HOME "'" "' • bw1mm111g pool i 2 ad beach. I & 2 Br. rrplc. lrg ed ten ms rourt. Jacuzzi. 492 6700
Laguna Beach Pa rk beach Terms available. 3 BR 2 BA N r G 01 f Beautiful house avail d1t1on11I ut1bl)' Br . ram derk. encl prkg S475 & park like landsrapmg AporhM..tl FwNshtd Near Ocean Week days 641-7452 now m elegant_ area. 4 rm . rrplc. nicely Mo. Avail.6i5.:..8S89 !\1ost beaut1ru1 blda '" orU11fwwilhed 3900
7S9·417S OtltofC--'w i~~~·A~eaut Parkl Br 3 Ba Danmg Rm, landHaped. SllSO Mo Fantastic O<'ean & cit} H B ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·r 2550 641·03T7or973-1077 LI\ mg Rm & family 640 1327. $59-6188 OHll'l' bght view rrom e\er) From~ 846·061!1 s E A w I LI D
EXCITI 6 Propeny - ----Rm New wallpaper. 7596597 room I Br S600Mo Call M"'Rl...iERSW"'LK ,.... e N ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jbdrm. 2ba. gar. nr1 coz) kllrhen & many "' " "' VILLAGE • Brand new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba school~. crrt drps. rnrd I many xtras $1750 mo 4 Br 4 Ba. dean & ~harp Anthony days 642 s7s7 2 & 3 Br. Townhouse
G .... crf,.orti home with 1932 sq rt on yrd. ava1 about Sept e k , c t next to tennis & beal'h eves& w~§44·8889 Apts from $495 Patios. New 1&2 bdrm luxury
,.. 3.6 acres or usable land ,ls~ .J700 mo l!!l'·~ 75~08~: oopera ion SISOO Koop 631 1266 Co.ta Meta 3124 single & double car adult apls tn 14 plaru. I
Estate Sot. for horses. garden or 1\g_t ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages, near ll unt Bdrm !rom S46S. 2 bdrm Beautirul 24x60 Bar· SECLUDED I Br. very leout. llCJ' Can-Son c•:-_ __._ 3276 Harbour 840-6807. rrom ~35. Townhou.se ringlon Home. 2Br. 2Ba. you ·name·1t $129.500 private. qwet & woods~ Be red r-· ic"""""' NEWLY DlCOl. ---. $600 + pool t
r Cost M . Owner may assist in Adults. no pets New auurully eeorated •••••••••nu•••••o••• I Br gas pd. encl gar lo.JST .. ...,,. I.... rl I'· s.ds~nGms. am rm. l.ll 8 esa 5 hnanring for I .vea r El Dorado model 3 2 BR 2 Ba t"'llhm6 , pool• d washer. pool Adult s " "'"' " wate a .. ~. pon as nicest •starpark carpets. drapes. range Bd " ~ " J Br 2 Ba Apt "Ith 2 r k. •-h u " w good down ., .. 1th W rm . 211 ba. wet bar. Presadenlaal Hg". ttu• a.2.<Nf3 or coo 111g QI ea ng
I t .._ .... T """ Uttls paid 15l + serura-""' ....,., ""' ""' car attach•d 0 araae d F Sa D es _, .. OWft Hess1ck Rltr & As· parquet rtrs Serurll) S52S048aft6PM ~ " ., pai rom n iego 24x60·1971 Goldenwest sociales Ask for Gayle ly ~ !\to &l2·~ or gated. \IE'"" $1200 mo! -2 Ir. I la A.Dt W D hook up, patio, f rwy dm·e :-;orth on 2Br. 2Ba w ram1ly rm & Sharp. 805 466-~ 646·6423 lse Call Donna Suuon Santa Ano 3210 Newl} decor C:as pd frpk Small pet child Bearh to Mt'fadden wetbar.111Laguna H1lls -NEW2Br !Ba Quiet & 544 9076 or Henr)'••••••••••••••••0 ••••• encl gar . pool. dshwr ok Nr Hunt Harbour lhenWestonMi:fadden
nicest 5 star park 21 yrs Real btat. rMI. built ans. refr1ge SS2 S895 Bkrs. lhstorar 2 Br V1rloraan Adults .00·5073 Only S..595 to Sea wind Vil I age
+ toqualiry. s:JJ.000. We11ded 2900 Adults. no pets t.:uls EASTBl -l'fF House an Centrul Santa TSL!1_G_~ 642 l&O;l \714)89J.5t98
CLASSIC ••••••••••••• .... •••••• paid Isl + security ': An a. beaut 1ru11 y 3 Ir TowM!ouse HE ... R 1ir.•cH 21DRM
R l...L.....&:-' h S6SO Mo 642-0835 or Three Bdrm. 2 ~ ba , end re~tored SS50 per mo Newly deror gas pd . "' !!;A ' OOMS 4000 MOIU HOMIE ti -teoc unit good cond111on and \'lck1e 833-7192 639 1248 encl gar . pool. di,whr CrplS. drps. bit tn!>, at· •••••••••••••n••••••u SAW Older Res1denllal Schor 646-6423 location S900 per mo --•-Adulls_&t2·SOIJ lchd.&!L P7S 536·0021 Private entran('(' m pm·
2706 Harbor.Ste 206·A Waterfront property To East.side Condo 2 Br 111 Week da~s 759-4175 C0ttdo..-.....S Av~ now 2 Br 1 8;-home No smoking or 54~5937 purehase&orJOllltl)de· Ba Frplc,gar SGSO~fo 2 Br mob;it-home-on Funtlshed 3400 INSTA.KTIH! t.:fislaars. ds hws h . dra~~ngu,,P,,!"!! male velop. I wall pro' 1de Call 548·3561 2 Br I' Ba Townho"•e d bal ~s Mo ""°""°"' 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111!!!!!!!!11'1'~!11 waler . quiet . n o •••••··~··•••:••••••••• , "" renge,-w . ron) I~------·73 12x40 Mobile Loe m 1oor; hnancma Charles DClltCI ,.olnt 3226 kids pets l>SO 968-6l&4 Ocean \ "" Nl'w Condo Easts1de I child OK child OK. no pets please 2 working adults wanted
. Perr..}'. 956-_1281 _ ••••••••••••ooo••••••• N Co -· 2 bdrm. 212 ba Double Yard. lndry rm Great $495 545·2000 A!(l. no Huge pool home. acros~ oace park in Palm Spr· Spectacular ocean new ew ndo Nwpt Hghts 3 Ka rage Rer req RISO lor SSSOMo ree Santa Ana CC S27S &
mgs Very good cond lt•ntals dpolx.2 varancies.3br.2 Br 21, Ba 1.500 sq rt mo 646·SIKJO 645-2682 TSL~GMT 642·1603 Deluxe poolside xlra $295 mo S45·6891 art Must seU due to sick ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dri\'I! by 292 Palmer --" -p ness 62&5TI4 !M6·SIS9 u _____ F -LL...~ ba upstairs. S67S 2 br. 2 •IA S800 Mo No pets. COftdoMinMM NEWPORT large 2br, 2ba . bltns. ~ ..M _ _ _ 624 · · · ~ ....._.. ba dowMta1rs. ~25 Sun· n 0 c h 1 Id re n ca 11 U11fwnlshed 3425 A.P .o.RTMra..JTS. dswhr 111 males beach Beautirul Npt Bch home . 7069 --••••••••••••••••••••••• decks ne~ d~r ~-11 .. s;n I Adi •• .,,.. l ..... r I Mb.I H r I · w ""'v,,..., 7526499 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• 22Bdrm l·IBdrm ts.nopets......,mo wan s wo1111ng emae o 1 e ome or sa e. lolboo ,....._.. 3107 Colwo 637-4908 Ne" C)('ean \'lew rondos 2 from S270 mo + utils ~8362. adult $?'15 mo646-~ adult park. I Br. reas •••••• •••••••oo••••••u a -T -3232 IA. YCREST bd 2 b th d --------'JZ1W.Wilsonsn7J,C M ON THE BEACH Xlnt u oro I rm. a + en No chtldren.no peb.no 2Br 2Ba C'ondoonthe Res ponsible yo ung c: NH·e house a\a1lable ~'mm S8SO 615-!llll or walerbeds sand, pool, sauna. um. female wanted Attrar-
'78 SO MERSET 2 br. loc Winter Rental Avail 000;{c)~jE.FORRE;;;.••• no". m great area 2000 675·9 132 _ 2450Newpon Bhd hot tub. all serur~ S7SO t1ve. bnght. large room
+sunporc.h m one or Sept. 12 7 Br 2 Ba 3 Bdrm S600 feared I sq rt 3 bdrm. 2 ba . 2 \'ERSAJLLF,S I Cost_a_Mesa Mo 213 333 3846 or with frpk , p\1 entrance
Oceanside s better adll Appl s. S900 mo Inquire yard & garage Kids & I ~71~s Ga1rden~hr ld1ncl 2 br: 2 ba pH Frpk . 2 Br. 1 Ba. 571 W JoAnn 714 960·9193. and wet bar Avail 1m· 7p1~ rJ3k 83295. S 3 2 . 5 0 o 126 E Oceanfront. July pets welrome S4S 2000 I ~ 1" mo s2e 3 C '3 rt•181 r~frq( Ocean & ba~ Max I child. No ""lS 2 0-E 0 R 0 0 ~1 l_!led . $300, Isl & last.
_.:cl__· __ ---~~~h5~ug 21.st or call ~&!.:..o.Jlo ree we l~~~eZ7~~oi: 84 k~7 11cw S825 Sandy, S37S Sierra Mir'Ti1 TOWNHOME Pool. Call6.16·337Se\'es _
A.crea,.forWt 1200 --·-, ,-FowttolnVale 3234 ~am 1 las or 6426149 641132!_._ I park . near beal'h Room near OCC Pool.
•••• ••••••••••••••••••• Winter rental, 3 BR I • Y -j 963 5191 k I Sl80 KAlLUA. ba. lg LR. k"ch. fpk, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waterfront le.i.se 4 Br t 2 BdVIUA. ~~OA. IMMEO L iBd ~on~~ i{jo ~r.: PM
KO!IJAHAWAll patio Located on W 3 ~O:l~~R ~~75 Ba fam1I) rm top l'On rm "",,.an & Ba) OCCUPA.HCY! ge rm.28.i 178 fee Sample acres Bay Dy~. S49 Sill. d1t1on .docl<for40 boat \le" Comp upgraded 2 Br 1 Ba Apt Beam presllg10us&qu1el. Room in large house.
Resort Area. Central Jllles,8lJ_71.61 Fen ced >a r.d r. & $2200 Bob & Do\'ll' $800 mo 1·883-4303 -wk ce1hngs. laundrr, rm. lovel) panoramll'\U Costa ~tesa \'et'~ clo!>e -garages Ktds QI pets 631 1266 A "nd 673 ~ e N r Hunt Harbour to S C Plaza All k1trhen Location. Frontage on 2 NewportlHch 3169 welcome 54S ·2000 . (l. -1 ~ ~ '""!!•e_\_S_ pool. Adults on y, no 960·4370
major h 1 g h wa ys ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Agent,. no ree __ Newport Island Home I CON DOS FOR RENT. pets ---84..0-..4979 ..P!'!'.-~lO mo 9157 39~
Magniftcenl view. HARBOR RIDGE Great 4br. 2ba. pnvacy. steps Costa Mesa Brand new TSL.MGMT _§i2·1~3 l"lne 3144 Lovely pvt room. patio.
121 acres·~.270.750 view ' Prof decor Furn. H.tiftC)toft leoch 3240 to orn bay. $1200 mo S e e W e s t b a y •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• refr1g, no kit 1
' blk to
16.9acres.·S3,533.S8720 2-3Br NewCondo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673333S Townhomei. ad sert1on •2 bdrm. I bath condo ocean S250 mo Sept
20acres,.S3.659,040 Owner67J.~ll Larl'e 2 Br House 4 Newport Shores-4 Br 3 3824 lfe'SliBJIU Adults. on lake. tennis. 15:June IS 675 mo
20 acres·SJ.136.320 - -· -blocks to bt>arh Dbl 8 C 1 F T ho TOW.-tOMES 1!00~~~64().5626 Rm for rent. nr lx'h. S300
f'or more detailed 1n-Ho U.....&.--'-L...~ garage. lrg yard $700 a an~!'!'! oUw1t.._ tl?fL....,. CONDOS fOR RENT Woodbridge 2 Br Condo. mo uttl Int'! Ton~ formation. please rail tlSH ~ ~!Q.213 493-1~ ..,.....~. nlWftlShru 1525 h d r 631 S314 ftSPM
\808) 961-2895 Rudy or :;:•••••
1
••••••••••••••• LOVELY HOME -4 Br 2', & Family rm .••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~ 2~2Denea:21'8a !"~ ;~~ ~~as/>'a~r·,fi5n!;r r.~.:...:r aR~
rt Po Bo -•ro 3202 pool Harbor Hi"h dis .. 3 bdr, I 12 bath lownhome ..,.;v ~ ~ cman 4200 w le lo x 225. 4 BR. 211 BA. fam rm. ,., r C 11 lXtra lrg ll'iClsq rt I mo All amemtieb. ten· ••••••••••••••••••••n• Hilo, Hawaii96720 ....................... frpk . Sept I S725 mo ~i~t 1 ~1~ 1~~15 ~~tro ~ ~{ 71r7~p. a e\ es 1 Br. xtra lrg ~IS ms. pools. spa Avail. LIDO ISLE charming 3
CowrcW FORYOUI 963·1~7 _____ Owner~___ 19 BRAND NEW, rull 8-1. 975·6833 days. bdrm.2balh.pla)'room RED CARPET
7 1202. ,.roperty 1600 LEA.SING MHDS Brand new deluxe 2 Br 2 EXECUTIVE HOME A.portmfflh Fumished me lownhomeii. double ~·8016 eves & wknds. _ J usl remodeled :'t1on· S~ TO •••u•••••••••••••••••• CA~LOCRARRLELEL1NE Ba Condo 1524 sq rt DOVER WESTCLJFf' ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages. private yards. LCICJllllCI leoch 3141 thly rental Bill Grundy.
THI .. •-SAHDYIUCH RARE C·l·H Newport "' Micro. 2 r ar garage. C t M 372 .. f1replares No pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-6161 ftlN.IT Remodeled 2 story on Beach Property 50' 675-1771 I & I 4 Br J Ba Gated front ot o "° .. Located 2 blocks rrom !bdrm. new. lrg deck. NE\\,-PO RT OCEA~·
lge lot. 3 bdrm + den. frontage in prime loca· _;; 544 ~ supe~ or :~~r~~(~d te~s!r :~~~~ ··-c;:sA..o°EoRo··· ~.;nt~~c~hopping. 5 ~orthh .:!d ... c 107os9e to f'RONT Lu.' 2 4 Br Wk·
3 bdi;m· din. r;',p ~i Lge mas~r surte with tion.OwnerwUlrmance Lg 2br, 1•2ba. ram nn. possible s1200 meld ALLVTILITIF.SrAJD Opendaily12·6 ac ·*"W-·4.,.._i IL673-SL'RF~67J.7677 -~!.~l~~ia~~·porc~lai~ rireplace and Roman Exclusive. Principals den. lndry, w d hook-up, gardener No pets. Weekends l<H> Luxury IBr. ocn view. Beach rental Sunset
tub.w/ceramictilewalls tub.S32SK. oLonlyd. AAsgtk t63or14t24re7ne hot tub, ~1., $750 752·2S50 Co mpare before you 66G W 18lhSt C M rrplc.open beams.blkto Beach.2Br.2ba.rum I
li.lloor. 4 covered patio 631u7:; · · or ~J6·l86t._960-..,.,.,.. __ . Deluxe 3 B;:iba duplex an rent. Custom design 645·t726or642'.4!l05 ~oomo. 751-4293 blk to bch. S3SO per wk
areu. Price S230.<XX>. S~ · · l...etful exclusive Blufrs Bel\ul. reatures Pool, BBQ. "'llitt Adlilltt 1-Newport leodt 3169 Call 2!3 S!rl·~l84
down.assume$40,000 1st CoRdoM•l•sfTow• Three bd rm. 2 ba. 1 greenbelt view w pools cov'rd garage. sur ""' 8d o•tr 5 •••••••••••••••••••••••Newport. avail no"".
tn¥i deed al 7Vt"'r Xlnt ho .. s for Miit 1700 FOl YOUI story condo In the Avail ror I yr bfg111n1n1 rounded with plus h Lr& 1 rm. !:Sper ~ Oceanfront for Winter steps to bearh. 3 br. · lan4 lease S8SJ.OO per ••••••••••••••••••••••• G a b 1 es L 0 ts 0 r Se pl I SI 250 mo landsrapmg. Adult b\' mo. BtCI la scapmg Rentals f'um1shed & new paint m out 127
yu.r. Can't change unlit I•••••••• ,. ALM DISStT ~£.tL~~.:~~ amenities Gated comm 644·S 137 bef 10 pm __ mg at its best. No pets No~~W ARDS APTS ~n_f um. Broker .G7S 49!2_ ~.!h_S_t 8S7 0!61, 67J..?4Jll
year 2003.14~ int only HEW,o.TCUST Deep Canyon Tennis MORRELLI 50.846.:.ll!lBKR E Blutr CONDO beaut IBdum . rromS44S 2020Ful.lerton Ave NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Summer Rentals ·
Znd trust deed due 3 Bdrm rondo. Close 10 Club. Lovely 3br. 2ba 67'-1771 Hwltill""'-3br.2a.ba.pool S83S mo. ~_wi!,son._642-1971. 631• rentals. Villa Rentals S200wk Ornfrnls·
1911&..a'T. call owner ror pool and tennis. Excel. "A" Plan. Great Green-H~;;' 1242 848·3ll9SIW,640-8449 Nbew decorQlb~ dplx. seldp Newly decor 2Br w/ger. 675-4912 Broker_ 67S330602w10k Jones Rlty ~=,::~wr 5 pm. flnancing.Prkedtosell, belt Loc. l5000 down. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport HeighlSold2 Br Y gar. uiet emp adlts, rrots, drps. bit· PAR., NEWPORT -·--S189.500. OWC SIOS,000 at l2'iL 3br, 2ba, view of harbor. I Ba house. large yard: adult over ·JS. no pets ins. Fncd yrd w !patio, I\ 3 Br I hou.w rrom ocean,
C/J I ... wport Cllfr. BKR. 953-1231. washer 1d1yer hook·up, 2''1 rar garage. Adults. ~-' S4 ·l~l -waler pd. 636-4120 call COUMnY CLUI parking A\'ail August.
Sell Idle ilm1$ 64£5678 6 0.5357 760.6767 ~ti/ frplc. bit.ins. gar .. sec no pels 1st & last + leo..tfMy Dec'd 1·5. 667 Victoria. S450. LIVING 675·67JS -OM.. S. ltOO 1100 mo.846-1358 S200depostl. S695 Mo 461 2 bdrm execUtlve condo. 2619 "I" Santa Ana Ave Bachelors. L&.2 bedroom New Custom llome
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lrc 2 Br twnhouse. 2"' Santa An• 548-5041 art oceanvlew.Sl250 apts &townhouses Peninsula 3Bdrm.
OM T .. ILUfF -COIOHA oa MAI Ideal location. Views of
Catalina. Newport Harbor and toastllne. Quality & charm
throughout with hardwood noors ,
molding . french doors. and much
more. Seller will assist with
financing $1.500.000 J. Sud'Omel
644-6200 <T-67 )
PIMTHOUSI -HA.1101 -OCMM
¥llWS Top corner 3 BR. SUperbly
upgraded in a guard gateil
community. Clubhouse. pool.
aauna .• spa . good rinancm1
*5().000 Tom Alfinson or Terry
tbnes 642-8235 ~T·68>
Tri-plex, NE Cotta Meaa .......... _ 1_._...-]J'u. Ba. waterfront. w JO' ~ __ 631·§'73S.962=6ff5 _ 2 Huge Bedrooms 1n Prom ~JO 644 1900 2L,Ba. avail Aug Isl
By owner. Prime toe. _. -vv slip. rec. racll avail. , ............. y:i .... _ _. •~-L 3769 super local1on . Fully -f!OO wk '7»0682 (2)2 br unlts, (113 br, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8/15 •1 _,, .,.., NU\'I •r."-rwwpon _.. d b · 1 LIDO VIEW 2 br 2 ba 2 ba houme. $2$0 000. 38drm. 2Ba ramlly home . f _.,/mo .....,.."""" 3 Br. Clen, 2~'1 ba. rplc. ....................... ca rpete . UI t ·ins. t r I . . dt' I 00' FIOM SA.MD
Courtesv to bro' •rs J a" . m I c r o , 11" r , lnMt 3244 ~a, prv bch, 2 car 0 ar. grod u1nd Ooor. Over 50 SelrOOOr .. mrpot'67. ~" .. '!'!· 8 ts Newpopr1 8earh
1 a:.., " .. o pets . .,..,,,.. mo. ao" at A u ts only. No ~ts. ' · -,,-o.»J -IRdrm ...,.,,,Wk Wkd 546-6727 St 150/mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• llM.IVV STUD Oi.741\/ ..,,{6' • eves 87}. Lakes 2br. CONDO. up. •lip avail. 673-6055, WO Mo. 568 W, WI n IO · across rrom 28drm' S31S Wk: ...l:!l:=~-----'c......., Mir'
3222
grade, 1625/mo 875-<1597. Apt E. 646-4477. _ beach· 1345 mo yrly Newly decor sbarp lm•••••••-4••••••••••••••~•••••••• 857-0'lll Pvt J ark. 3 Br 2"1 Ba. SPACIOUS 2 BR. Adult. 2Pool, enc gar. laundry Jll41997-0432 MA.llAHOffll • open beamed celling 10 Cedar. Npt Short~ -· ---· -Owner
11
_ ._., ROLL J lftt. J.... University Park Condo WI , rerri1. S'72Slmo. lots of wood. servlni Adults onll'. 64().5C778_ Voc.tfM..... 4250 ,. J d .. 1• Red 1!226 Mayapple 3 Br 2 KldtOK.nopets. bar .•• 10 No ...... _,, ••••••••••••0 ••••••••• thue two dupltUI . IC, OUun: 11r. ec. B 2 ca oa aa co John Ma-hall .-t--~ * * * 0,. ( onl "' t , .. 1_ ,_1 d d a. r., r e, mm •o M aple . ~48 _7356 . ,ran r .. t11opor Good location. Oood Nr. Hruuo u 1n an ty pool & tennis. t850. " C_.KIH..tftt' Beach. z & 3Ddrms.
fln1ncln1. $325,000 to beach. '750 MO 1213) Sierr• Mgmt, Co. Y!Alt·M>UNOFUN: 3• 8221Penn11111ton auil wrekly Cil ll
$US.GOO, CaJJ 8. GIW. 181;0!!81 Orl2J3l11HU5 6:tM324. Social Aclivllln DI· Huntington Be1:1ch S44·0614 U.3232
Cntury%1,94Mt50. CAMEO Hl&Jtlanda 4 br, HMTALS rectoi •FreeSoodav Vouartlhewinnuor s0."t~ke Tihoe tux~ry
IUM)' pat.lo, pvt beach. 3br, l''ba •e11 !!~11tll • eaoa • TWO FREE PASSES Mtn. Home 5br. 3ba in Sl ,3$0. mo I nd . ,. -..... lltt •Plliamot• tSl7 valuel M I El t 11nkner. Alt, (f}»H 4br, 2'r\bl l800 Fum. BIG CANYON -.n.tuea GltlAT llECMATION RING U NG BROS on gom,.~~ 5 1 ""'· ---· --4br, 2"'b• 950 • ".,iw~ l kee very stc ~ )'~ S mm -r ..... 1 •1.u. Oolf coww view 2Br. IMS• L8llOnl BARNUM 6 BAILEY t.o_us1110 be. h 675-!Mll -"u • WU 2Ba I (PfO .. PIO •ho!>I. 2 c-·~ -• pvt aar. p0o , ltn. ~thClubs•Salml ~-~ o C t AN •·Ro :"4 T . nl1. 1mmtc cond. Sl.250 , Hyorornauage • AnahelmCon~tnUon Newport. l\\all wlll).
m . or497 $w1111rn111o , Goll Center Aug. 6-17 AUii t Stpt ~ 21\47 t
Of1v1r10 Aano• Lon118each Areno 64$-9540
OCEAN Fi 2.Bdrm,lata and 1hutteu., _ _r1r.H ace . malure .... s: rmo.
NAUTIFUl AP'tt1 Aua l9-2l E I I So S111111t1. 1 a. 2 810 To claim passes. c.11 llt' UJ ''e · <.:. shopp ni.:
rooms • Furr111111d &42·5618, ext 2'12 Pas es area. 10 mtn lo heath. 2
& IJll~ • ~ must bt exc:hanaed fo r Br 2 Ba pool Aull l lbru
lmno • No '•t•, rttervtchcat.nt bolt Labor On Rt f''
Modt11 Osi-n Dally Fer M Adil 0 f r I c • p r I 0 r l 0 S4S UlO r1i1ll ~lltl) Ml
11 toe Cal I performwt. 1<0Nt\ H!llll(' on 11<'t"'1
O.kwood • • * FW'ft'd SIPI" 4 W1,•k or °'"""' Apertmenta =lit 3 BR. 2 bl, yrl)' i120 mn "'°"lh ~
..... 1Mot1 "· 'u"!1(. bftna, patio. aar ._.... .. Slliirt uoo 1100 t1111n" 1a1 1~11.. "' DfW. lll a5lh St • t•H • • .............. ..
(7t4)6'S-1'!)+ fj't~ Don'ldiltul1>0<'cupi1nl!I Muvln•" i\\tlld ck'1111111t'I .......,,. .._.. l't&Wlt Qa>1 P1t.~U.»1 9904 • \'ut th1nic , •• ~:
1100 1t111 SJ.•PMl'r'•· "'"'"""'"""'l>'iiithir" (71'1M2-s11 m1 MOUl9iiATll
au~
-..
S.I D C.,.114 Cwit/C_,... Btctncll "-4•ud.._.. Ho1McJM111it ~· NtJ ,...,,,...... /M1 ••• ~ ..................................................................... ······•·····.··········· ........................................................................................... . ~mfllll VOUCSW..-. All ?)pet Rttnodtllnt' Pool Dtekl and Patios. ELECTRICJAN-prictd HARDWOODn.o<>RS •HoUHCleulnl• Movlna? TM Starving THICl.GIOUP Catm Dre11 tifak!•I ~ SPICIALJST Rtpalrt, top q1.111lty, 17 Muoery,SporU1Tennia ri&bt, rnl!f Mtlmate on Cleaned•Wued Prorwloul·'lboroulh Colklt~Movln& RES /COMM. EXT. 1lt.ratlon1/Repair.a.
$1 17 &ii. !IJ Herb ·a Garaae 11115 yn In arH Llttmeei Courts. Uc.1140ST Bob, la.r1eoramalljobs. e UMllll 5.A Xlnt Local Ref'• Co . .tias 1..,...,. lnllred. PROMPI' UC'D Couultataon In your r-. HarborBIC06taMeaa Mr.Palom~MU31_4_ ISl 19M,14'1·70'l'J _ UcJ 87:J. ....... ~--har ' 831.a4 Uc.llTU4-43S 941-&U7 7S ISJt ho~;:..:7.:;fl0.'310~~---
Tll;l'1AU..you Y S..G38 Custom -built hl2 CUARANTEED RESID./COM M'L ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rtllable Great work! Watch-. ! p---a.... --Selar
fora •-.L. ---wooden shelves for Block walls. brickV{Ork. Hl1bly quahrled. No Job Htul cleanup roncrete Steady job. ~rs. Call ABC MOVING. Exper ...,........ ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• 30day ad -s.tor a 11e. dis play ' slabs, driveways. Ref!l. too email. '31·~ removal ouin lNCk after. PM. 146-"122.8 pror, low rates. quick ....................... Hot waler+ pool 11t1tln1 In tht ....................... &ara&e. Our price Is Reas. rates. 1255 ,.._. a... I It · P 638 · carerul rvl M2:_0410 The Paper Hanger, Prof. aaverisln&tna&.Y COii.i· DAILY •DtA.L.MAMD• lowest 646-S830 -• -•-. u c .............. install Decorator qwaJ. aln tax ettdils Free --(7WT»-l34Z Cab' "-DRIVEWAY Cl.i:ANlNq ••••••••••••••••••••••• Haul,cleanup,ooncrete ••••••••••ee• .. •••••••• •A·I MOVING• freersl.St.eveS47·'28l g l5'8-l&a . ,._, ---~~-~~_, --mets & <'Olllter to~. Improve your home. CLEAN·UPS/l..AWN rtmoval Dumplt'lltlt. DON'T BE EMPTY, Top quality Special --~es~=='---=--SllWCI 1 ....... ~ I Room addJUons & fin.sh Remove u&lY oil & rust Mamtena.nce-Lndscp ck serv. 642 7131 THIRSTY OR LON EL V cart ln hllndling. ~ yrs ,._.., /ltftalr SprWdtn .., DlllCIGIY ....................... work. F~eat.75'·4420 slain. Forest. 89'1· . ~est. SU-9907 DUMP JOBS exp. Competitive rates ............................................ ..
DOITNOW! All books. Set:ur· wrlte-bet 7 am 10 !.L THOMPSON'S Sam Fukumoto YARD SmalJMoVingJobs "Security Ph~" will sit Noovert1me.7JH353 Neat patchet•~:xtum SPRINKLERS&SOI) Alllhr~ up. Flnanc1a state· CUSTOMCARPENTRV CONCRETECONSTR. MAINT. & Clean·Ups. CallMfKE646-l:tU your house, plants &r -'-"-'-,.--'-mefft. ").109 Tree Removal. 010 IT
YourD••luP\Jot ments l wes. 498·4S4.9. Patio covers, decks, Lie 393383 &U-84&2 Tree lrlmmln& small --.R!!J.63 • -·-.1• .,........, PLASTER PATCHING Land.sea 7C170~ "--.v 9-noon. room add1 848-5231 -I d ••" ·....,,,, Hauling • Dump Jobs. -••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 "" .xrv1ct otr.ctory ----------1 -'--=-""'-"==::=.:· =-==c=. CMld c.,.. an ac~ . ...,......., Ask for Randy L..chc..... Ext llnt painting. c»b re-nt /exl .,., yrs exp TU.
Repmentauw ...... s.r.k4t FINISH CARPENTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mowan& S~SU..$25 Ml M27 ••••••••••-.•••••••••••• fin /slain Prol Rsnbl. Nut work Paul S4~297! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·5671.elt 122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Robby.~-C136 SJ I 9~ Haulin&/MovingS2S · Brothers Constructors t'reeest.SleveS4H281 ,...., TILE INSTALLED . •••••1111•!!!!!1!11 Books, all taxn & rt· hr nn Hrvi • 754.9904 Mark HAULING-student has 1660Santa Ana Av CM Fl . Un b RI h rd ••••••••••••••••••••••• AU Kinds. Guaranteed. A _........ ports. Set up, write up. Custom wort Patio l'OV· ~ol lunch. .M Chris· TIEIS large truck. Lowest p I a n t.. i n t I ext . ne pa111. ~ y c a M c c 0 R M A c K Refs. John, 89), 1667 .. ~~:;:";::?............ Fin . •~. 9 M·12-.:. ers. cablnet1'. wall units. tia~Presc I. 646·5'23 T d/ ed I rate. prompt. 759·1976 Landscaping. tree sur· Shinor. LN1c,81111. 13 yrs of PLUMB'G T-cr---t--
• ........__ Remod . & r"palr C-....__ctor oppe remov ,cean Tbankyoo,John. gerv. sprinklers. Lie appy .. customers. REP•1R•·REMODEL ...... -"-BOOKKEEPING ~ Sot& 7?0l "' uwrrv ups, lawol'f1IOv, 751-3478 WE HAUL ANYTHING tcn ~ Thank you. 631·4410 n "' ..................... .. ~or s ma~ bus tness ··:.::w··IC···.··:·s·=·· c_._ ff--1...-::--e:·::::~··itri~t~··ai:;;~ YARD CLEAN:UPS. tree Yard clean.ups. demob· Loa.s. DB's PAINTING ~~Pf~~ Reasi;,~~~!M JA YI TUI CAii
eas, rella · 831·65&3 ·~ . • "'" ..,.t .-.-.-Tile Patios Walks wo~k. 1rrigat.ton & re· tton. Have dump truck Int/ext Neat. reliable. • Topping, prunin1. re ........... ~ Bu11dersSincet!M7 ....................... D es Co ,; Decks. pair Maintenance Reu 953-&SS ....................... refs.Dave00-0389evs PoolSen-tce,bpaln moval&spra)'Ult 101" ••••••••u••••••••••••• Additions. remodeling. Shampoo~ steam clean. c~';po~ts v~ Fences: Gree~belt Landscape, . MORTGAGE MONEY RENTALSourspeciahtY, ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp. Local refs. Free
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Magnesite. paint. clean, plans. Free est. Reas. Color bnghteners, wht l. 'd. Dou' 646-07SI 6'2·0102. CINa Up Yow.Act AV All.ABLE inl telll Seaside Paint· Complete serv1 ce re· est Lie. 640-9308
decks, cement, crpls, Llc. 310942. S49·2170 crpts 10 min bleach. ic · -Get.NI StrTlcn Garages, $20,000to S250.000 in& Prom~ '536-4806 pairs, & solar Install. So. Wt-..t-w Cll • 1 _. c
carpentry.weld, plumb. CONSTRUCTION Hall, liv.-din nns SIS. RfMOCW=· Jaht litehaulin&.etc. Mol.._,___.. -· '----Cal. Pool Service -
S7 .,.. h s10· ••••••••••••••••••••••• l. •1-·· 1""' D"'""'.....,. "A" ,.,,,,3 •••••••••••••••••••• -, Brad ·3462 _ Add1remodel,roncrete avg rm ...,,~c · J.S CO UC'TlON DON HOFELDT ltonltuc •.. 631-1.993 Uplol5/yrslorepay D&DC ~P'"'tin <>V'""" "'~ A,shict•~ Freeest.S81·8360art 5 chr ~. Guar ~llm pet NobodyDoes ltBetler! ISbarpesiAlzytbine' TREEISHRUBTRIM PRIMEFlNANCIAL I ti t~ ~~ --------OnginalW~Wmbier •••~••••••::?."::"••••••• ROOM ADDITIONS-& odor. Crpl repair. l5 yrs L1c 'd lbonded,_ 64>3188 957-6936or961).tl9S Garage & yard clean· SERVlCES n ex . ---RefiillsW., Avg3br . . exp. Do work myself. ---p 82'1 527 3477 RALPH'SPAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·78!18 GUSAALRES.U~~SDERRVEFR's REMtOD?-JN~ Qua~ty Refs.531-0lQ! ~--DrtlfwriH H•ity.• u . reeest.S67· _1 _ • Ext/int. reas, prompt J.D .. HomRefinisbing "LettbeSunshiM ln11
"" ICE cons rue ion rom . e· eCareCrptCleaners .............................................. Ho.ec..... Mosollry Lie. Freeest.964·~ Ant1ques.Kit.cabmet.s. Call Sunshine Window
Goodcond. 1142-77$4 !,i«n.lto completion. Steamclean&upbols IJ,OFflHJULY Carpentry-Maso~ry •w••••••R•·;~~~·y••c••L•;A••N• ...... :................ AGAPL'FORC"' Fine~rnt111g. 645-0664 Cleaning Ud 548·~ _. .. ..._.. r am1 y C'Ontractors for . · 0 · b G . Rooring . PlwnbUl~ 1 t .,,,,.,..... .., "' r. ' • --r-• 30 yrs. Reas. rates Fr Truckmowttumt rapenes ,Y iovanni Drywall ·Stucco -T1le H8U~E" C II G ha BR ICK WORK : Small PAINTTNGCOMPANY R..odell..,.. W111dow Cleanmg Ir All ••••••••••••••••••••••• ests Allen E Johnson ~ Wor~ar-'--__ 645-3716 Al I solo m1n1 ·b22hnds & & more J .8.646-9990 . a tng m Jobs Newport . Costa 3Generahonsor ••••••••••··~·••••••••• ~reens. Reliable. f11r. Driveways, parktng lot 301007 Call 840-5656 or No Steam oShampoo e~ urs.~ 15 -D--l----Gtrl. Freeesl.645-5123--Mesa . Irvine, Refs Painting Excellence General Services, no JOb Call Chris or John.
repfirs. sealcoating 840-47i4 Stain Specialist. Fast Drywal iscounts o senior ROBIN'S CLEANING 67~3175 --s:B-5851 too small. Free est 546-0053,557.W >., t~~d.Asphalt. 631 ·4199 JEHCO CONST dry. Free est. lm-1582 ....................... ~i~i~~~s F~et~ o~~j Service-a llk>roughJy BRJCK . Wall s. W~lks , Q~ality Ptg~ Lowest rates Reas. Call Answer Ad SEAVIEW f __.
ddi . Re • RO BERTS CARPET DrywallSpee1ahst Answer ad #453 , cltaJlhouse.~~7 -Plant ers. Patios. in OC. Neat prompt #453,642-4~.or6311137 w· d h642-WA&R 1 AS PHALTREPAlR ING. ~-C t1ons ·H modeling REPAIR.Restretch,re· Qual &prod.New&re· 642-4300, or 631-1137 ExpertiseHousekeepmg Veneer s. e t c Serv.848·5684,_636-7149 l!ft:J._ IJI o.:.:.w"'"'w""as::.;.:..;:::..=-..;..;_o.;~
SeakoatinJ&Striping .,. ustom omes. Lie. lay All repairs mod. 11389944.532·~9 After< Dependable, refs Block work Concrete -·. - -R ,i..,, What a W-"-r(··' World Comm/res1d Freeest. •299374. 67>fl044 67S-849i> EXTURES " Suppliesfum 6414970 L' R r &46.LS97 SlarvingHousePainlers oo • ...., """"' ... Lie. •397362 645-8181 -. ALL T & JACK OF Au. TRADES --· -~· e s. -Oualily Work · Reas ••••••• ••••••• .. ,...... of Shopping, ri&bt II AV ALON COMSTI. C.il*J. A~ Dr~waU. Clean & de pen-Plumbing, eltt. heating Quality HOUS«leaning Frplcs. Patl06. Planters Free est ~Doug For shake, composition your fingertips every-
You don't need a gun to Bu1l~g~Remodehng ....................... da le.Reas.631~-_ __Qddjo~ 6.'11·~ w1thPersonaJTouch. For a job done nght QUALITYPAJNTING or hot, Call Les. Free day! Daily Pilot
"draw rast" when Y,ou 24 rs·ltc-ins. 847·7~ AcousticCeilings ~ DRYWA.U.REPAIR Carpentry, ~asonry, F~~h~Ol56 .1!r.n:!_50-9028eve~-State lk 334950 16 yrs est 968·9~ __ Classified Ads. To place
pl.ace an ad In the Daily Trade your old sturr ror ~U!lom handtextunng The C.F. G~ 7M·l539 Roofing, Cer. Tile, WANTED! Houseclean· SELL idle items with •I Oran_ge Co. 8J9.l886 BALBOA ROOFING CO. your ad, call 642-56'18
Pilot Want Ads! Call new goodies with a Ltc.~-~~j549 · ---Drywall. mortt 499-4969 1ng exp'd, reliable. Daily Pilot Classiried -----The only rooting co for and let a Clusified Ad·
now -642-5678. CIWi!l~~jQi Want Ads Cdl.!1642·5678 WantAa~Z 642.-5§'.~ __B.a ___ hon!!~6.'11·71Z>art4PM_ .. M · Stlll!!l~lfm:i -~ thecoasl 673-6743 Visorhelpyoo.
lttltahtoSMn 000 Offiullllfal 4400141siHlsa...td 4450 RntabWCllftd 4600 IMsiMss 1._...s ytolocM 5025 Morf9c!9ts, Trwt Lost&Fo.d 5300 PH'SOINlll 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• O~ty SOOS, Oppow1-ity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DHc:IS 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CM, 3 beaut. omces 'I CoroMdefMw Senior Citizen cart1st1 de-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••WIDOW has money for ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND · Dobennan \'IC COEDS -would love to
bath, 840 sq.ft Xlnt loc. 4200 sq rt Ground floor sires home prer. with BIKE RENTAL BUSI Stained glass shop. By 2nd T.D 's $10,000 & up' San Juan Ca pistrano partk with you. Call. Sue 1~··.n.:\lt1tc · A1r.cpls,drps, Coast Hig hway studio Year lease In Laguna Beach. For owner Newport Bch. E·ZCREDIT'Nopnlty WEPAYTHEMOST 49&2072 or a thy anytime
:··.: 'V I _667661 _ I Realonomlcs Corp. Be.KJ'!,.nmg_Qstl,67~5223 mor!info,call494·~-Long establis hed GiJl~Etlee_!lj1~]311 f'or yourTD 's&Notes Free lo understanding ~95<:.}""097~1 _____ _ lf1' utflc~ t BOATSLIP 675-~_oo Apt wanted .yrl}. Se~ Newgrowiniwomensex· 675-5780<;11)1(}-5PM __ 500/o ~Capital a t Denison Assoc home l2wkoldkillens KIM'SESCOITS .. Responsible rem with ercis• ._ ea Ith s pa S 0 000 .11 67~7311 _ Isl s1mes o( shots Days 9AM 3AM 638-8$S4 -··---'--..._ ... _ ... •" l:.; .... __ OFFICESPACE xlnt rereren~es $350 ~ "" 1 · o mi ion · .__.. -M d ·15 ' Great potenllal $250.000 MORROIAY, CA Land devel hghl mrl'e 494.9421 E x p e r 1 enc e d Oldest & largest agency whn -ow 0 lo mo, no eposi mnth 75(!-ll'!!l. T_e_r_ms 77(}-063;J_Bkr_. E · I d No electroni cs. rom· Alrtto•crtlfftfh/ Found·. Man's•uatch. Acupressure Massa"e in So. Calif. since 1971 ,-3000-: 000 -qu1pment renla r ar P~notMlll/ w • Cd. ABCNBCCBS delue to 4 IN C L RECEPT . a.i...ssn..vest/ PRIMTSHOP earns SSS ! Anxious puters. Prine. only Lost&Fol.d CdMHighSchool. Therapeutic Relaxation ~~;i>hil.Donahue · Sq. Ft. offkes. Cal CONFER. COFFEE. F+a..fe... Thmingbusmess.C M .. owner leaving stale Crosscoais0D~el~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644~76 _ ~~~~ques Sunny
to all wt7c,~·a place ~EWI9POIT6!~· COPY RM. ETC ••••••••••••••••••••••• :e~a~:e~~~~~a~~r ~.~.-offer Asking T~~~. ~-· __ x . ~:!.~.~ ..... ?!.~~ Lc!~e°s~~~\!0r~f:!:e Pre~enlalive & . Stre's
" vm•~ IDE AL IF RE AL .__., 6Ji·l266 631·2242 Mort--. Tnat call646-%86 Reducing. M M:assage by NewportBeach,64H899 Prestiglous,fwlserv1ce ESTATE RELATED Opporlmity 5005 Deidi-5035 ------Dons. "lnlro"Special!
Serving all lheS Coasl EX EC orrices. lnclds BUSINESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND ADS P'enoHls 5350 $48-2817. 10AM-8PM
rcpt, sec, xerox. under· * * * want investor for Npt •••••••••••••••••••••••1--------
Garden Gn>Ye,8-34S2 ground pk'g, t.elex' an· PRIVATE DESK lwfKl'Glfttf' bayrronl home Give ARE rDC[ FIRST LADY THE tique decor. con( rm AREASORSUITE NOW 52215Brookhunt well secured 1st or 2nd nil. Escort. Models
·7189 AVAIL HunLington eearh ----_io~1tL672'616i. Call 'rn--GirNriends WESTCLIFF GIL7141955-1055 Youarelhe-winneror Sml town restaurant m t ~ ESC-
Spectacular ~. securi· -R_J:s. [I>~ TWO FREE PASSES OVERWEIGHT" Atascadero. Ca Pror1ta· 1--------1 642·5671 * 9 2-1345 * * ''"" ~· tygate.tenrus,pool.spa BLDG. (S17valuel UNDERWEIGHT!Shed ble even with non-NffdAWT.D.7 •tc •·VlSAA ........ H-/Offkit~ Harbor Ridge. ~o StoNsorOffkH RINGLING BROS or gain lbs. quickly, working owner Price COMPETITTVERATES --"-"' ccevu;u * 972-9772 *-
760-9307. HEWPOIT IEACH Prime location. CdM BARNUM & BAILEY safelv. sensiblv. 100'1 negotiable. owe paper Della Pacific Mortgage Lost: Desert Tortoise c OVER GIRL Male/Female Eacorl'. Male or Female share CornerWestcUffDr 3036 or 3040 E. Coast CIRCUS J J Call Edith W Hess1rk (714)8Sl·2040 Family pet over 30 MC -Vt.!\
Newport Beach 4 Br. 1500s!'n~r~~Su1te !:.~~all Paul .,lartm. AnaheimCorwention f::1~G7S·l888 Mary Rltr & Associates (~I LicensedR.E.Broker ~t;~l CM Reward! 953-:n~UTC~~ISA
house. VI pools & teruili Ideal location ror Al· ·-CenLerAug.6-17 466-0500 Ask ror Gayle ----~~~ Fort.ot.alst.rasred~ courts. block ID beach. D-J Es Newport Beach 15 x 50. Long Beach Arena Sha_r11 s_....__ Co LOST. Gold chain. Vic & I lion g CaU Paul. 64£.S8G9. torney · nca tate or s.sso 1805 Westchrr Dr A""· l"2J CL.-1 • .....1 "-.. ..........,-~ • 0 C C.. Manuracturers * FOXY• "'"'Y * re axa rnassa e Eatrepreneur 751 .. .,.Ant·m -.. ~ _ _.... Alltypesorreal estate Bak Bldo or lr'"ne __, by Steve 10-Spm, Roommat.e · 2 bedroom Be••uti·rully ma•ntai·ned --~-11. L e To claim passe:.. call Sw'--'--Pool t.••1"-~ n " "' OUTCALLONLY """·2817 .. _ . u. Be h -< "' 642 .,,.,8 -2 p ~ .. -1nveslmentss111ce1949 Sentimental Value ..=c'"°=-.:='------conuu tn nunt. ac · ruJI service bldg. Ofrice Cowrckll "°' . ext."'' · asses So. Orange COast Area. Oppott.ity SO I 5 s .. a...:..... iR VISA MC Would like t.o meet an Female non.smoker. now avail. R...toh 4475 must be exrhan!led for No exp nee. Will train ••••••••••••••••••••••• ptt';i"~ REW_l\_ltDS52:~~· * f72-1 llt * educated lady between
S263 per month + CalMels ••••••••••••••••••••••• reservedseatsatbox $15,000 cash down Plus w ; JOJNTVENTURF. Lost : while Persian M. 45 & SS. Am a well
utilities Need 9 I Call 645-4IOj 950 sq rt fron t "' stnk o r r 1 c e pr 1 or to approx S7000 for equip I OPl>ORTUNITY 642·2171 5!~611 "Sam". Spyglass. CdM. SlfE educated widower •
964·1167 _ Eslab ~ & aota performaoce. needed Cill Mon-Fri Ca r wash de\l'loper r eward 7 59 O I 1 5 · financially serure. "-'
M Christian under JO to CdM IDekluxeut~I tpdes. !,~~ C1YL-E Side CM S48-7249 * • * 9~ PM 4<8-867.01_11. o1 pedra&torbuwldill prNo~~e C~~~!~e~o ~d~u~~:s:~~ 975 7900 E s C 0 R T s & mcehome&allthat ~ share house with same. amp p1 g, I """"" ..... ...._"-1_. I__._. 4500 ---: . . an i mg n:us $100 REW "'RD MOD"'' '"'G with it PO BOX 1Mi1
· · p · rn . · -....................... eas1erbyuslngtheDaily Daily Pilot Classified rront end expense~ abelterwaylotellmore Yellow orange tabby. 135-9199 CM92627 t =mo CM 546-3199 L_Cst Hwy 67>6900 -JTIUll ..,..... Make your shopping SELL idle 1lems with a Joint venturepart~rfor garageoryardsale' It':. "' I CJ..U, • "::'tll~
CHRISTIAN Roommate blideo 1cew.~mne~ Rent MG 600sq ft S240 Pilot~la$Stfied_J\ds ~cL 957.1771 __ _peo.Jlle' ora nge eyts. N B --~----~~ DIAL-A-llE
2br. 34 St , NB Penn g, Dana · .rean mo 2944Randolpb:c.M 673·67_90 _ -·G---.... •c•0• .. -.--"WELl"f'ORYOU ~"
Sl:O 67J.~ Dan eves ~;~ c~~";iett;ai:~a9s1~1g 67S-51J6 ---••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost Colhe female wear· I ~-::J.;.-Y Con vin~ingly. pro·
6-bonus. 66l-33Sl 6500 sq rt Jfront offices. 2 • • mg red collar Please I ~ ressionallv. <'OOfidenUal· Owner. has 3Bdrm. 2Ba ~ large drive in rear call 831-5471! \'1c Mis . 24 Hrs 641·0180 ly or Just ror run •
hme. E. Side C.M. Will IAYFIOMTOFffCE doors 3phastpower J() • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL • s1on \'i~o Catll/Clltc:b 760-7166 shrw.ior2resp&con· 55 sq ft . Parking. sq rt. 1779 Wh1tt1er St. LOST . Sat. July 25 AMEU/MCJVka Good looking. romantic.
genial young ladies janitorial, etc. 760-~ C.M. Si_O.m._ __ • • • Fem. Aust. Shep mix successful Newport exec u642a,~8558/F•m t.o shr 2br hse ....._,....., 4450 7 ,500 Sea. Ft. • 8 Days • 3 Lines • 8 Dollara • Lis lM~. 675 1304 * * * 49 seeks discreet. fun · "' "" ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt loc 6.00o sq rt Found : F gray & while pt Joe,.. loving lady for daytime
CdM . Avail Aug. Isl For store & office space fenced )'d space + • It's easy to place your 8-Day Week Classified by mall. and 1t • S1ameff kitten. Sh1rrer 7~Crane Dr & weekend dates Poui· Yearly.~ at reasonable rates modern air rood oHices P!r:!t a~ea ~7 ~74 ble travel to Australia
Fem to shr N.B. cond-0. 500to4000SaFt. Can be split 2915 H.aJla. • . COStS just $8 -that's Only a ·dollar a day! To Qualify for this • Found . small white. tan Youare1:he~n~ror Ton~~-__
rullv Cum. S2l) + '3 util. MESAVERDEbR day So Sanw Ana. For • special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering • & gray Cluhuahua. .... TWO FREE PASSES YOUNG LADIES Avalla· Jan· Don. 631·~15 PLAZA info 64~12 Si!l· 22nd ~ QraD1e. 631 _1Zi!2 ( $17value1 ble for Casualfun. D~!"f
Rmmte for lge hse m 1525 Mesa Verde E.C M Shop to share with Sign • merchandise fo r Sale up to $800 per ad, and the price must • F d F She RINGUNG BROS 761·9031 ~ 54rr...a12~ oun . ep. puppy, ----· __
C M.straight only-must -~--Painter,SOOsqftinCM be 1n your ad. The cost s tays the same whether your ad blk&tan:MGold.Ret . HARN UM&BAILEY EXECUTIYE
be clean S2l51mo + util RET ... • SP"'CE util me S8S mo. Call • · · • M Shep cross blk & C•CUS -.i
Brian646-3228,966-0192 770 so.fl. oo""Harbor 646·~or67J:4480 • needs eight days Selling time Or JUSt One. • tan . M Dobie cross. red ; AniheimConvention
Fem 25 to ~ yrs to shr Blvd. in C.M. S500 Grttal Costa Mes~ office~ work F Shep . be1J?e. M Collie Center Aug. 6-17 * SllT£ * 2br.townhou.w~1mo. exposure. areatotahng4!225 at». u d e h bo Abo t 4 0 ds make one • cross. sable & blk . F LongBeachArena 24HourESCORTS +uUI. Call 9-5 752-~99 Realonomics 67~6700 per sq. Ct Avail. Oct 1st Se one WOr In ac X. U W r Collie cl'06s. blk & wht. Aug.19-23 95).lli_2_ MC/Yfst
Pat ----~-642._29_.,.8am-4nm __ -• classified line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print • 641·~ --To claim passes. call RET ... cr••cE ~ ~ .. , Clever young writer Female Non-smoker -....-"" Low cost oHice spart pl I found. woman's pre· 642·5678.ext 'l72 Pasffs seeks work what can I
Ref's. ~mo. + utils ~sq. Ct: on Nwpt Blvd with shop are a • am y. • script1on tinted glasses. must be exchanged for write for you• Call Lln
Kitchen lndry prh'. H1 traffic. Great tx· Overheadreardoor.am· Brookhurst & PCH reservedseatsatbox at 963·2297 Arfonlable
54S-7975al\4.___ posure . $3500 mo pie parking. quiet in· • r------------------------------, • 963.3534 -or r Ice prior Io _rates ------
M1F to shr. oceanrronl lmmed. occupy. dustrial area of Costa • I • FOUND . Male Cocker performance. Oriental Girls to m~et
prof. S375 mo. Must be Realonomics 61>.§!<19 Mesa, m§SJ3. Spaniel Tan roloring * * * sincere. financially sta·
responsible. Avl. now or Newport Modem Store Storc.g. 4550 • I • Vic. Newport Heights. Fi d h t t . ble. marriage minded
will hold UI 911. Call: Ad or ofc ,n,r post ofr S450 •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• • • ~~966 -- . -D~1lvwPikx ~:,-~-'~~-'" m~!!.:l_~lros~~--Sitter. •210. 642-4300. 24 548 s . 2131477·7001 S'""-k 'k-!. ~
hrs Jerry _, ..... -r Cil.-.9fJltl-• • • hl•••t9Htlt lft•est9Htlt .. •Ht9Htlt
. WANTACTION? C.M. area ~J17S $ 8 QO 0 L-1"w 5015 0 L-1t 5015 0 ....._.It 5011 Share 2Br apt C.M. pool. • ppot wwwr; ppor-f ppoawr End or Aug. 1212 + util .....Class1fedAds642·5678 Want.Ads CallH.?-5678 • • .................................................................. ..
646·2890or67M480eves. • 10.60 •
LIBERALG.R.C
Roommate Contact s erv ic~ l1 ·7PM .
213/630-:.MO
M IF. 2 bdrm apt In Park
Npt. S330 l'QO. incl util
CaU Paul fW0.8937
.......................
Cloled ~lnelt iarace. otf aney; c.sta 'Meu. MO ..
7831.
4400 .......................
ltn WntcUff. N.B. Want
naanclal lntt. 7000.J. lft..Roor. Ad5'1:~
MIWPOIT llACH hll service uer. of. lieu from 1.117. "On
Clll" tx« omm from 1115. lncldl. temt.arial ~a•. '90rd ~ ~·J~1;,ERS coilrAHlr.s __ 11 Hllll_
PLUS " OFFICES • ....... o ... fl 1101
Nnpott Blvd. C M Ph ... ---
,A(ttfb.4 'f'J"'off-: 13.20 : iv~~ • 15.80 • M~-tr e e ~vet'n(l. ~t).l( • Add $2.80 tor each add"lonal lln• tor 8 time• •
h0'.468,~. • • jip,..~ ........ --...... r;,{ ,&c.? • •
Use ,,,,.,,,, Ai service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad . we take your messages
2~ hours a day .. ~ you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is only $7 .50
week. For more informa·
tlon and to place ydur Id
Cl 11 "2·5678.
• • • • • • • • • Phone • • • • • • • • • e Exp. e • • • • • • • •
(TAHITI LANO INVESTMENTS)
8.P. 1322 -Papeete -Tahiti
PUMAAUIA -This district is the "Kahala of Tahiti."
Tahitian style home, but construction is cement block
and redwood -four separate buildings make up the
home which forms a "U" and faces ocean. Tiled
courtyard with swimming pool as center piece. Over
15,000 sq . ft. landscaped 'Mth low maintenance in mind . Property filled to the top of a rttalning wall, five steps dow n to beach at top of beautiful cove . $690,000,
furnished . Fee simple title in hand.
* • * llAUTN. -over water restaurant for sale : in
million dollar range.
•••• l"------------.---------..-..1
j
. . . . .
1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wtdnesday. j u1y 29, 1981 ~'f.!!~ ...... ?!.~ ~'f.!!~ ..... ?!~ •
~ ........... u· ........ 11• w .... 1100 w.-.. 11M COOi FtmaltU¥•1Dcompa· ... w-... 7100M.llaW.W 71MW...W .... 7100tw.W ...... 7100 •••••t•••• .. ••••••••••• .~~-r ................... ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• lain to J ,.. llon U.ni ~!r11.l'~~yoa ·••-r ........ ••••••••••• ~;el'•••••••• .. ••••••••• •••-r••••••••••••••••••• •~•r., ................ . 1~11-:;:a~e'r~·;::s'i ""' CASl9S P'ri. AllO llWMn PN~ ear . ta'50/mo. 1:! llOST&SSIS, OPMln• MalAtettoCf: For Apt Proaram Sal•·1lrll ' UCWhONISl
rersn11ntl Walt-5Ac Assa• m lukw riP*= ~t:r~rl. IOOD Or~· County I• Coaplex Jn c.o.&a ...... boys waoied 12 • older With b.Pill In tmall of· ., ~'" Loe Mls.sk>o y1.v.. -ii P' .... H HOT .. -..t ~ •pot Tbe1 • bf. S.115M. Elpu. to Mil. 1oeomt unUmlt· ntt OC A'~ e,.a W11tera. 8utender1t. ._., tO M ACCTSI• lmmfd. f\&llfr per\ lime u It • N CI tau r ng I ACKLE Hie• Amerlren 81nd1taadl td. 01-1431 Aek tor • ,_...,..
1.'CllU••c1tanup. need• Aasetr1ble11 w/2 rrevlousblnklnu•"'· o_penln .. l n our 6 urvlce, I/time. featurln& live t'Oncert 1 M•ti • <u-Paul •-===z-----
Hosp\\illty RH<>urcn yrs. exp Cand1da\ea a.U.W.W Wutmln.ter 6 Santa COOIP/TIMI Knowltdlt of Pacific Uvt TV tJlo t • -· 631·1181Qor~4P m1&1t ~ave Jd manual of~ An~&#~~t.ortt.Exp'd. 10AM·2PM. h\.khool. Cout flahln1 • rolJt dlnln&i:'cta'o\, ~tneral rotcbanical "ITIMITIAC• 1£CnllMHJS 1"•tt · · S4SO ~::~e~1~~a ... ::'i•:!: Ccntad. reqd aU.Penonnel OarMpGnm.tta~ll mtrhanlc~ abWty nec. 110~.tUllorpeirt~ilin:: hl°!~~~~~'t:Xf:t'lnct AHernoona 3·f . 5 . Ul....W ~·•••••••••••••••••••• n.ndable":'Work ii in Ure Ann• Ptavtr,$31·15ll CRANEOP•n TO Xlnt opp l1 fw YOWll we tnln au.we 1'722 helpful Apply t.o Lar ~ days/wk. N 8. Suun. Realtter today tor local
. Gr1nd C¥nyon R»fl Trip! Support m~ical \lite tlO.E. MIFN/11 TH .... ,. ptr'd for ~~d. :~~ :.i:;.y e::~c: Wr~:. . .A ' Surf • Sand Hot7': tempo5"'a5'".l5menu.
iu1y Jl Au& 9 Tr¥napo tronlu. Gd. bcntr1u 21 ~7~100 ID tlOft at m 2ou1 Bt. Clau!li.d Ma. billy HOTEL Laauna Beam._4f!:44n I· ~l t19C>_J'l_rn831·1421 Only reaponalblt BEA\!llClAH JI" -Piiot. P.O. Box 1560. MOTIL Medical Front Offlte ....... s.. en L1in-per1on1 lttklnc ~rm•· Girl Friday. pert time. l fi(m·Fri.Hl OCM MM4.A.. Neurolo1y/GP, 1eneral ,_.,., • _ ·!t~,~~:V~.. ~;.' ~:.f:".T~ 'r...li ~"">,.ti." " .. aA ~t~~& ~: .. ' r•oi~:f~ )::."~ f!.!. ""A'.r,t "'' ''""· "''"°'"'· "• . " , .. ~ ~"f.'::f ,,_., • ._., .~ bl~· leaving 8 111 fot 3 •·3830 II.Aun SAi.OM Llc. ClvO Enylottr, Uoolal& ci. . Aua. U you ll•vt uperlence Al1o,trtm--'n1ace 1md.Jall MHedtca1 I •&tent. youN•~wd l72l~Sfrwt w.-. Needed: attr•<" Shampoo technician. Du~ntr, Ora taman 17th lhru Au1. 27th In IAaurantt, t'Olltrllona comm ".a P'tCe • • unt ngton Beach Al in o our ~ com· Mt ...tlNdi ~uee~~~en~re~~1:;. ASS~ER ~~Yr:ci~cnc!!~·r:~;: ;~C~c~~~~nd dev. ' ~~m~m a1• 1&1yr1. ~~~~~f~=Yco!'~ !~~er~.~~~~:urr:~ ~!~~~r~.baP~t~~~~ ~~:i~~~61::/0}1
•t .o.E.
tosaU Jlm.67~3438. Ullllll. » , !llflM?M\1 nttd xoy: . Send rtlwnet.o: R.H. In· Tutt• fri. Salary com· rice iJ one o1 the oldtat
ELECTRO.MF.cH. --;.... --_ _ DATA94TIY PULL Tlmt. P/tlme. veatmtnt Co. um San menaurate with exp eatabhahed in Newportr-------•
J Eltctron1cs co. 1n •BIKESTORE• -.-...CLAS$1•""i•4'1 CLm Ani.aerv Noexp.nec Vlcente 81vdSuitet638 C•llp!HllO. Beachwithaveryprt· UC9'T10MST .. ~! ~,tn~5~~t1'!r1!1~~ fo':'~c~!'i~~ ~~ch~~it Min. 1/yr. exp f'/Ume Call blwn I' •:30PM , Lo!An&ela90049 MllCHAMDISB 1t11iou1 location. Call Receptionlatfor1rowin1
•• ~~••••••••• soldering & E1M u Sl0,400 Musthavt'{'rior AOVEITISI P/llme.N.B.CallCheryl Al2 · BQ.L HOUS.CWMllS Permanent, p /time. ::~t::;1~. appoint· ~u~!:c~er~.up~~ ~~:
..-..w-.lild 7100 sembly exper Requlreb bikt mech. exp m a fll ft' •IH~OMCI Prefer car or driver's Service 1reetln1 card •••••••••I UMt Pd ~~~T••••••••••••••••••• gd manual dextrrily st r . . -.W Peraon t.o Ul.llt boo ln licenae. 15/hour with ex· d e P t . i n I o c a I C~ena~ cau:· Pa~h:: -------•I Ab1llly to~ basic test lkllprPwtTIMt. The Clualfled Otpt or DATA94TIY ieneral office work. oerlente,llll0:37f0 supennuteu. 10.U/hrs HALISTAn 1163-0IMl
Accountir!I. equipml. such as power ror bookkeepingserv the Dally Pilol h11 an OPtiTOI 8: 30·4: 30. Oood pay. HOUS9'... durlnc week. Call John· SALIS l•••••••-CONTIOUll'j. meters would be a big __ ls.2-754U_ open inc on one or our I• ... SllHt aood btntflll. Usht typ, HOMI MAHA.Gii ~ Thia It our 381.h year sell·
CH .... ,...i ... CC ... plus. telephone sales desks. Health cert ma.mt co ln ln1. anawerlnf phone. a for bu11n-· ramlly In MODIU~OITS In I fl n e South er n llCWf /TYPIST "' ...,"' ' •llCll"ll~ST• T 1 In h I .... t .. k T -California homes Established export For m~ium·slie com· We orrer excell pay & be !erson we seelt rv e 11 an mm~. mua "' or om. Huntlnaton Harbour Top Doi CJm-9363 p h Id kt ri d . G ....... G SOwpm ·a so answer shoul e-L.~ telephone openlna for a Data En· Cookin1-·-tJal ..... hrs Mod•ls n••d•d. All er •Pl you wou en· m J· rm ntt s in· puy in a,...,n ro\•e benefits ~IL'la phones Nr 0 c 1 ... ""'b try 0 l to k ........... ..., " """ "' fnY/oinlndafirmactive tell11ent person to Xl)t benefits Salary 4D ... Y ftaflW · · !P es, ~a etotype45 ~raor wor ~r wk . Call Rita T~~·· M-. Wom•n •-• "' """ HI Airport Small orri"e d h 3 11 ' PM shift Mu t General ~· .. • uxury residential answer telephones. &
O"'"n 3 5 yrs "XP man • w Pm an ave a · · · · 1 ,, ... 3 or ••"0011 Mon C ldr•n. No -~n··nce · v · ,,. · ' " · · Co Is 2 mi rrom Coast iu11.1130 I 11 have a -•-ol l v-.....,. .. " "' areas such as Big Ca greet v1S1tors. anous datory Degrtt des1ra· ""..u==-P eua nt persona ty. uun. yr. ex· thrv t:rl vntll i 0 M nee s ar 548-62. d blie, but noteuenllal Hwy & 8 IJ\J from 4~ & IOATS Cl1111rled or lelephone per. on CRT. Su«aaful T1't H k : ....., nyon, Spy1lus Hall. typin1 IAies, accuracy NO'PHCX'tECALL.S 5 F'rwys sales experienct' would randldate wlUbe a quick ..... ~CW. ouae eepua wanted MUISIS AIDES Irvine Terrace, Linda a must. Pleu1nt sur-
Send reeume lo. Gel·roat repair. Exp'd. be helpful. We orrer ex· learner, detail.oriented h..owlllrtiif: SeacUtrMottl. EXPERIENCED tale.etc. roundings. Excell. Pleasecallror appl. M acGre1or Yachts. 1631 c e I I e n , fc able to work with no ~ " ll ll 7 ,._ ._ __ t Ir you are rmently ac-benerlts & salary Gd. · ~~1!%~· (N~~· Personnel Dept. Placentia~ ~ -be n e ri t ~ i ~ ~ i:1 ~ i supervision. Must also S.cwttvG.nt f /T Housekeeper /Child Care Beach ~rea":"r~":elr: live in rea estate salea oppty ror advancement.
7442 Or!Dgewood A\•. TELON IC BERKELEY IOOICICEB'EI medical. dental, bft ID· have above averaee AM ahll\, must work PIT 1ood pay. Need Im medical, dental & Ii e do you have immediate IMS Equipment. Inc
Garden Grove, CA 92641 714-494·9401 E.O E. M o u I t on p I a z a surance, etc. Salary keyboard speed fl be ac· Saturday evenings med. Only positJve attitude. & unlimited access to 2805 Barranca Rd . Pharmacy Laguna commensurate with ex· curate. Gd. salary & fr. ___ ~-__ 4 the president or your _Irvin . E-,.,,0:..:E,,.__ __ _
'ACCOUNTS
PAY A.al CUIK
Or1anlzed individual
with busy A IP dept· Lue typing. gd benefits.
Ne'8fSOt Bearh area.
§40. ' -
Accountfng
llLLIHG CLEllC
'lrvlne ad agency needs
&d. billln1 clerk M usl have bkpg. background. be versatile. accurate.
llexible fl detail· minded. 10.tey by touch
& 1d. tyeing skills req 'd 'Will tralD on NCR l9S.
E.lcell. bener.t.s Ca II: Mrs. Brecke. 752-6171
ACCOUNfS
llCBYAIU
CLEllC Nnmco M.atertals Lnc .
lead1n1 s tructural
adhesive manufacturer.
·bas. an Immediate open· ing for an Arcounts
Receivable Clerk The
successrul candidate will· have bad 1 year ex-
perience in a manufac·
turin1 environment. ar-eurate typing; 10.key by
touch. &t knowled ge or
jnvoiclng.
Narmco orrera a rom-petitlv~ starting salary
·~-'t. c: o m p re h e n s i ve uenerlti package. For Immediate con·
aMleratlon please ca.II ·
Jackie Bickel. 548· 1144.
ext. 224 . ~AIMCO
M ....... IM.
A SubSidiary or
. · Celanese Corp ,., 600 W. Victx>na St
Costa Mesa, Ca 92627 EOE .... M f __
Aecountlng!Clerlcal
IA.MIC
RECOMCWATIOH
CLBIC Health care mgmt co m Irvine has an immed
.opening for an mdiv
wjlh a min. of 1 yr ac'·
counting .exper using
computenzed sysle:ms.
preferably in bank re·
coocillations. Successrul c~ndldau .will be nexi· ble •able to learn quick· ly. Must also be detail
oriented, use t().key by
touch & have Cd. com· munications sk1tts. Ex·
cell rringe package F'or
interview, c1U· Sharon
Ruins. 714-641 16l6. EO'EM /F
ASSEMBLERS We will train. Apply 7AM
~tacGregor Yachts. 1631
f.la~enti~. C9Sta ~1esa _
Ass1stanre needed Facts
Or Irvine H11ircutttng,
714·559_._~ .... 4'1>nard
Autsl. manager ror
men ·s sportswear.
r time. wkends Bay
Depl Store.~ Main Sl
Balboa. Mr Hawthorne
673·56.SO~\.)· Mon·fn
AUTOMOTIVE
HELP WANTED
MEW CAR DESK
b~Owly
T~oy
Ct..ctz~r
<.:onruer.Oehllo Chevrolet
18211 Bearh Bl\'d
847-07
_549-33.11
Automotive
LotMc. M usl be ma lure 11nd ex
perienced for excellent
working cood1t1ons Ask
for Wolfgang SADDLBACK IMW .
.111_._io40 ! .~9S-4J.n
AUTO MOTIVE
Pt.one Operator/
R.lidCaallitr
Some aut.o. dealership
e11perience heiprul Full
·lime Tues ·Sat. Contact
Elsie Tompkins or Sid
Wiggins al
Earle Ike
TOYOTA-YOL¥0
ltU .H..._lh& c •• 1 .......
l'ti. tO.tJOJ., S40·U'7
labysffttr-
Needed in my Irvine
home 12 days a mo. 4 & iIT old bon 975~L
TELLER
OURIKTEREST
IS YOU!
GREAT WESTER~ SAVINGS ANO LOAN
has an immediate open
mg ror a TELLER on 11
PART TIME basis which wall lead to a
FULL TIME pos1t1on at
our COSTA ~1 ESA Branch.
Hills. Mr. Dre yfos perlence PLUS great inge benefits package Ho111ekeeper wanted. ror NURSJNG compa.ny, or.ls he hidden Reep ror HB Optometrist
768·3784 Also needed rommissionprogram Ir For intervitw call: busyexec:lnCdM .M~t R.N orLVN.dJrect.orof away Ill an ivory tower Part tame.afternoons
Pru Cle.it____ you are ambitious and Sh a r o n Ra at n s. be proficient tn main. starr development for 74 removed rrom lhe scene IOOICICHPB(F~C want to be paid for your 714-141-1616. EOE M/F Pis. call ror appt. taln1n.1 rinehome, lndry. bed SNF. Newport Con· Our pre11dent is ava1la ll
N•wport Beac eal efforts. please rall for 9:30-SPM,M·F.645-1385 mending, etc. 2/3 days valeacentn:-·'""77"• ble. Do you need add1 Nf.l c'ecnpttef5-cr/Des1an "' interview D month. Rers 8 musl -~ ....,. ... tional training to help .. Estate Investment & Personnel Dept EUVaY 11'1~.•uo N 1 you increase your earn· P au Good typist Development F'irm PARTSDRlVER GIHllAl.OfftCI ~ ----urs "I tngs'.' Cheerful phone voice
Must have man. 3 yrs. 016!2j32G1E· Exc•o· Z7IsT Good driving record Looltin& ror a very In· Housekeeper, live·in (or DlMl'ff Experienced or tnex Pleasant surroundings
exper Prer real esiate "'" "' Hoursaam.Spm.548-1133 teresting part time job mature couple Ref's """" peraenced you may well Single 11rl omre. Up to
related .. thru financial DAILYPILOT DEUVERY in pleasant orrice? f!~'..'!·C.allaf\erllam MHlll'fl prom from our rolor SlOOO mo. 759·9036 Ask statements Xlnt work· 330 W.BaySt Clerical, for mature ~ NVMI videotapeli.sting&sales forNormanJacob6on or ing cond Start Sl500 per Costa Mesa Driver needed i m · person Location pc H .. HOUSEKEEPER. dining Thia key positioa:i re· training program which Jack Armstron .
mo EOE/MF mediately. 1-'ulltime Npt. Bcb Exper. 8 rm. attendant & cook quires sales ability, we feel 15 the finest ~~~ Good driving record must. Accurate typmi. Needed unmed ror sm. strength 1n management available. i--------
Call Sharon. 714·7S2·9484 Howard. Howard &
Barnard
IOOKKHPEI F /C P 1' for clothing store In
Fashion Jsland. Exp
trson in A P. payroll &
• dbl entry JOumal thru
1r1al bal Call for in·
lerv1ew appt aft IOam daily.
THE LOOK
644-6.'500
CLERICAL
Part lime. Fine Retail
Store 1n N. B. needs versatile person who as
detail oriented & can use 10 key machine by
tourh Will train to post
sales on rom · rulers other general or.
i ce tasks. Wo rk
srhedule flexible.
AT EASE: FASHION
ISLAND
Call Mr Cline Mon·F'n.
5(11()
Clerica l
GENERAL
CLERK We are a subsidJary or a
nationally recognized
recruitment advert.1Sing
agency in need or a
responsible individual who L1 capable or work·
1ng with min i mal supervision. and who is
detail oriented Your
duties will include filing
and l ight t yping; documentation o
pubhshed material. and
interacting with pubhca· hons
Call (714) 549-1386 for an
1nterv1ew appolnlment
Monda y through Friday.
9AM 5PM
2431 W. Cout Hwy, no shorthand. 20 hr retirement residence and a LVN license or We are not a rranch1se. RegisteredNune
Nfweort Beqcll. week includes Sat & Sun Lac. Beh. F /time. rotat: strong heal~ care ~ack· branch or subsidiary CORRECTIONAL DEUVERY Call. §4§-1431 in& wkn . 494-9'58 Jround This posltaon is JUSl headquarters NURSE
F 1T1me for local dr.1 GOOOPIOPU HOUSEKEEPER m the Orange County We have openings ror a 5*y
liveries Excell. driving I Live·in. English· area rew highly.motivated Sl7t-SIOOS',_.-Mo
record ,._·d. Phone for WAMJID speakin3 ror couple with o persons who have a de· Part time pos1·tlon at Los ·~.. Th B Balloon r u ur corporation is a · t ... _
oN "" ser · •• l leading provider or r 1 F' mos ormry amp :fipt' cc7.""'12. ask ror e rass a u l chil in Newport sire o .,., more sue· p· F C
r Emmoos Newport vice res .. W'an open· Beach. 5 day work week ress u or an in n e a r San J u a n g L private duly, home l · t at1 n.m....!Ds. __ in soon an aguna Must have rers. 7~7 h Ith & hos I er vie w appoin ment Capistrano. Days only.
Dental Assistant. part Niguel 15 looking ror HSKPR. Exp & Ref re· lne; personnel pita nurs with the sole owner & M IW 1F No expenence
lime. morni~. RDA f1:C: ~P~~ai~~~ln~: q'd, Musi speak English founder, call Wesley N required Excellent
Preferred . ew~ort & be able to drive Pis. I( this posit.Ion sounds Taylor benefits cludin°: rood serve~. W···-~ ... T~Co Beach area near oag " c a I I 6 4 5 · 7 3 S 8 . Uke the challenge you've ._ "' T RS · H busers. hostesses. cooks, 9AM 4 30PM ..... I COUNTY OF ORANGE
05 · salad makers. barten· --·----u.:en ookingrorcall. 2lllSanJoaqwn Hills
DENT A.L llCEPT. d e r s . c o c Ii: t a i I lnsurance 7I4-855-G15 1 Newport Beach
Office exp. req. Dental w a i t r es s es . d i s · HEWPOIT 44-49 Io
exp. prer. Wed.Sat. Top hwashers. Please apply llHSUIAHCE Nursing 625 Ross St .. Rm G· 13
Santa Ana. CA 92701 salary for quahfled in ri;rson at The BraS$ Agency needs personal llM-lVHCharat ee!l9o. ~363. Ba loon 30100 Towne lines undenmter. 2 yrs J.ll & 11.7 relier. ~nv
1r:u. Center Dr La guna minimum exp rflju1red hospl. with excel!. re· D""1ALHYGl&UST Niguel. See Steve or in all ph"·-or personal
E 11 t · p 1 """"" putallon Beach area ace en pay. am· 'f!U .49§-310'l linesaccountservmng F
mediate opening· Governess resp. for care Salary commensurate tale',, mdfe m~c~l~I~~~· ~·2000 _ or boy 9, elri 5. infant 7 with exp 7s.2-~ f'I h Dental Autstant. Exper mos. 8·5, M·F Prepare ~·--1'·642·~--
perrerred. Costa Mesa lunch. do lndry, clean IHYIMTOllY OFFICE HB.P
rms. supervise play & CO ..._. ... •tot P ff temp. Small C.M DllllLLPIESS leasure. Must have 3 mos .,_.,,.,_ _Qff1~.J5_L!ll'_!}l~
0,-•TOI exp. Take ad to any Corporate nd9trs for OR DER DESK -Slate Employment Of· state wide f1nan c1al E Set up & ?,Pttate drill flee in Orange Co. DOT: services firm f ashion xper. helpful. Apply in
press. Ability to read 301.677.010. Ad pd for by Island. To nm inventory person ohly Mon·F'rl. blueprint& & use lo & ·1 lion 8 ·4PM 3304 W -"'e~m=·~e~r·:=;:l~mo~. iiiiiiiii maa room opera 5 MaftArthur Blvd. Santa measuring devices 6 • Shipping. receiv1n~. •
months expenenre re· GllHGOCHAIUl'S supply ordering. mven ~n@.. -----
a,u1red. Appl at: 1020 New Restaurant tory controls. mail pro-PACUGIHG
-.17lhSt.:C .. --Mexican/American cessing & spet'ial pro-Sm. electronics rirm
DllY CUAMaS Food accepting appltca-Jee ts Ex per req 'd overlooking ocean wanl'I
Counter person. wall I lions for wa itresses. Call· 760-0501. 9 30 to person to box powersu1>-
l r1 in . Call afte r cocktail waitresses. SPM plies Someltftmg&re-
10: 30am. Ask ror Laura . hostesses. Must be 18 cord keeping involved. 642·~. years old. Ex p pre· i--------• F/tlme. benefits. clean Electrical assembly pos1 ferred -not necessary JAMTOI environment 1640 per
lion Some exper. may Apply Ill person. W~ & Ra leigh Hills Hospital m mo. start. raase JO dys
be req'd. $4.00 pr hr. Thurs lOam·noon : 4PM Newport Beach has an 645-369,1 __
J!PSSystems645-9$S2 _ 6PM . Formerly Charlie immed. opening for a PwtlllM Don's restaurant 2l6022 Janitor Day shift. Ex· s I Cape Dr Lao un a 11 r . upp ement lnrome. set
N I ., ce range benefits own hours. work from igue . package. F'or intervie~·. home Am b 1t1 o us.
call. Joshua Whiskey. oriented Call for app't 714·645·57~. EOE M IF _55]1&1L__ ___ _
KIDS-
SUMMERJOK
Part time. Sales & Mkt· ang earn good money
962-3232
Part time
OFffCE WOllC
General omce work
available in Circulation
oUice. Knowledge or
typewriter and 10 Key
necessary. speed
helpful.
Approximately six
hours per day. nex1ble.
Good phone personality
necessary. Excellent company
benerlts. paid health.
lire and dental in·
surance.
Apply In penon,
330WestBaySt ..
Ask for Eileen While
Equal Oppty Emplyr
.... &Nhs.t 17141834·7441
Opening for one ex· AffirmatJve perienced salesperson to Action Employer
sell prHtig.ious homes We have great location, RENTAL AGENT Busy professional associates properly mgml ore.
and over 25 million 1n must have real estate
listings. For conridential 11 c . L a gun a B c h
interview call Kevm. 494·65494'---
Corporate Plaza Really Rental Office Person for
760-9333 100 unit apts, Costa
Mesa. Show & rest apts. llEC-~PfST I i g h 1 b k Ii p g, 5 u-• days week. S800 Mo. A DEPE DABLE & Livt orr 1irem1ses mature person needed 907 ....... ror busy air cond & 642·4 • "" ys 10.4.
refrigeration contract: RESIDBfT MHGll.
1ng rirm. Neat ap· TbeSan Clemenlelnnis
pearance & gd phone lookin~ for a dynamic.
voice to handle import expenenced 1nd1v1dual
clients. Varied clerical for their resident 1111te
duties. must type manager position. Call
50wpm. Non·smoker. Pete Mitchell Tues·Sun
Consider 2 people P•t to ~· 492-6103
equal 1 ft pos1t1on RESPONS IBLE Pe~
Salary comm~nsurate lo clean & maintain
wlexp. Aire Rite. S331 home Mll'll have ref's
Produrllon Dr . H B 8:30am·l2.30pm Mon· ~~5003 F'n_Start~r_49J.~
llECll'T./fYPIST Restauranl-Need outgo-
Costa Mesa office. Light mg personalily for food
typing. basic bookkeep-prep. sandwich muktng.
ing, some errands. Dale. meat shc111g. cash re·
966·9040 11·4pm. Mon gis ler 8·4 ~ton ·Fri
Thurs.) S4 hr Alsoneedexp As·
llECB'TIOHIST st Mgr. 7-3. at S4 so hr
lmmed. position with 646:.§883
Npt. Bcb real estate Restaurant deve'mt firm . Phone Good opportunity for
exper. & accurate typing Bartender & Hostess
are reg 'd. }CL7971 Please call for appt Ask ~-ror llerb or Jason Rec....,-.. t 963·6711
Westminster Area --REST ..............
Front office F11tng and "'-" • typing reqwred. Exper Immediate openings ror
preferred. but will tram serving persons & cook.
&»90:ll Excellent benefits. Af P. ---"' ---· ly 1n person • Jo ly
RECEPTIONlSTJTypist. Roger. 2300 Harbor with dicta phone & Bl d CM switchboard exp. pref'd _y • - - -
F'ront or c Tues·Sat. Pvt
c.ountrY club. 644-5404
RECEPTIONIST
TYPIST
Active real esatate or.
nee has opening for a
we II groomed pe l"50n I
ble individual Mll1t be
llETAIL
Pa rt tJme clerks
STOPH'GO
MAIUCm
4555 C-.tHwy .. .......... ~
exp. w /typing skills or ll!!l!!!!!!!l•M •••!!!!llll! 45-&0wpm. Real estate
exp. desirable. Call
n631.crll3
The rastest draw m the
West. . .a Daity Pilot
Clurtfled Ad Call To-
da 2·5678
Sales
Marine Hardware Sales
person to 11.'0rk at store
~u. MS-1111 _
SALES
Now arcepliog apphca·
tions for full & p/time
sales staff. Experienced
in micro romputer pro-
gramming or usevery
helprut. SuettJSsCul ap-plirant.s Wlll have back·
ground 1n sales &
pos1l1ve attitude Call
~14)~15:K)
SALES
MO
PROSPECTING
S200C). s:rlOO IM 0
We need 6 new sales
rep's yesterday. New
mngmt. has created an
overnow of confirrned app'ts.
WE'RESELECTIVE
EVENING
WORK/WKLY PAY
S A&.IS-
OfftCl~
Ne wport Stationers. a
lg. co sellinJ offlre sup.
piles to busmess has full
& part time openings for
retail sales rlerks We
will train & o<rer pro-
spects for advancement
Comprehensive benefits
package Personnel
1l4-SS7·92~12~--
SA LES PERSON Full time. Jev.-elry, antq &
furnishings bkgmd. pre·
f'd. 642-9'JOO btwn 10 & 6. Mon.Sat
Sa~
Saleswomen /m.n
Is hiring professional re·
tall salespeople. Cull
Personnel for a ereat op. port unit)' with our grow-
mg rompany
SICllTAIY DIC.
Ptrt0nael/Advertt fttg
Dept. has oprnin& per
u panalon Npt. Bch.
fln•otlal ~ flna.
Gd. t1plnf, 1hlthd., "" req'd. Non·amkr. Call:
••·OlJUtwn.,. 2.
DAY WEEK
8Days
3 Lines
8 Dollars
Special flat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan-
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for 8 days
or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678
1M n.w Dally Piiot 8·Day W.ek It's a Classified PLUS
.. ,,
COHMHL
CHEVROLET
A,_.t!1• 11 I
,.. I ' \' I \
54'>-I 200
M16HIUYB
Top dollara for Sports
Car's. Bu~. Campers.
9H's,Audi s
AatrorU/CMGR
JIMMAllMO
VOLISW4GIM
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
UZ.2000
TOPDOLLAI
PAl>FOI GOODICLIAM
USBCAIS!
mirclCIP.
n1,1zd..i
l ,.. ..
COHHEll
CHEVROLET
ll:,.11.irt.,r tll • .i
'''-'I \ \H -.. \
546-1200
'69 Chevy Biscayne. AIC,
heater. 4 dr. good rond ttJSO. sa1-l91L _ _ _
'66 Chevy CAPRICE
Wgn, $400 good rond,
runs jood. ~l:llM.7 __
·59 F:I Camino: Coller·
tors! New int., paint.
''s~ s9900 EXP s g~ri
NEW 1981
MUSTANGS
AS LOW AS $5898
NEW 1981
FAIRMONTS
AS LOW AS
55949
EPA 23 CITY ll HWY.
Xlnt cond. Must sell! NEW 1981 !2509 549·5!K>4___ AS LOW AS c~~::l~.~~ond COURIERS 55688 jJ~_,_~2-~
Ctiry1a.r 9925 (Stk. #10034)
••••••••••••••••••••••• EPA 26 CITY 36 HWY. (503222) '73 New Yorker clean,•----------------...:.;...;.;;;,;.;;;.:.. __ _.
good lransport.ahon S800
162-1~
1978 Chrysler Le Baron.
P/S. PIB. AIC, crus.
<"trl, nu brks & shocks, U
joints. S3200. 080
8_42·!6_12 3_11.! --
'77 Cordoba. 32,000 mi.
P 1S, P 18, air. rruisc.
AM FM tape .
~lbestofr. 979·8899 ------DodcJt 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Maxi Van. Queen size
bed. Conver. Michelios.
Air~io" f1500:..646-26!L
Ford 9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 T-Bird (ully equip, lo
m1. xlnt L'Ond. must sell
(7141759·0088 _
'78 Country Squire Wgn,
xlnt cond ! Loaded! Orig
~~_1190055§-28811_ -
'72 ford Brou~am sta·
.lion wagon. Xlnl en1:ine.
Body. AC/auto. Am1Fm
!!'!~ ~_!i..:_9!!1}5 - -
1969 Ford station w~n
Good transportation.
_@!9_ ol>Q.. -~~.c_
Mercwy 9950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FNST
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
~~!MU'·•
LINCOLN-MERCURY
16· 18 Auto Center Or.
SO fwy-U Forest exil
IRVINE __ U 0.7000
Olctwoblt 9955 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'IOOU>S
CUTUSS
HOUGHAM COUPE
6 cylinder. power steer·
ing, power brakes,
power seats, AM /FM
slereo. tilt. cruise, half·
vinyl top. Beautlrul
(SJ3ZUDl
$8295
I I
' ~lllCloll ~ 83i•
'6tC ...... SSOO
Call67~1316
s1991 ~Q!~
DELIVERS ANY MEW OR
USED VEHICLE IN STOCK
MEW IM CALIF.?
unUORMO
CREDIT?
• SHORT OH
DOWN PAYMENT?
• MEW Otf YOUR JOI?
• MILITARY?
• SLOW camrr
HISTOlY?
WE CAN HELP!
1975 FORD
GRAHTOllNO
51795
f41wl~l"ll +ndudlt au10"'1I•< ft1n1 pch••r -"'°'-"'-··-..,..,, ... ,_ -6mo<1i ~15!\ P•S•f
1976 FORD
PINTO WAGON
574MONTH
1977 IUICK
REGAi.COUPE
53495
LOlded ..._~ ....,,....<-t!.nt All COMf AM.f'-.. """° pait ~ ttlf ''"'lnV · bt8'n CtwtN CO"lrot.. Vtf\VJ 100 f1H .. ..,.., & l'r'O'I' ''°""I 1$1-,.,..,
1978 FORD s THUHDERllRD
114MONTH
...., I to IO< on!\'• -w1l!t 1191 -n ~ •UA to II• a Ml 00 hcenH down ,.,.
!1'1Cf'""l3IM 00 °'*'""' """' -llO•O •O Ac' A -201 ... (11$111 CS&. P414$
........
Patches' craft toe-tal success
Sawdust Festival exhibitor finds foot jewelry has popular ring
WlyNelllltf .......
Sawdust Festivru craftsman Patches Cunningham keeps on his
toes by decorating those of his customers He's got a toehold on
lhe pedal 1ewelry market
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. INltyPli.elllft
' The sign over bis exhibit at the
Sawdust Festival reads "Toe·
gun," and the paeoda-style
booth features craftsman
Patches Cunningham, dressed in
full Samurai reealla.
Bowing his head nearly to his
knees, the 31-year-old maker of
toe rings introduces himself to
visitors as "Toe-anaga," and
politely asks them to take off
their footwear before entering
the tatami-covered floor.
"Shoes off," be says, smiling
at the young stewardess who is
returning for three more toe
rings after purchasing one the
night before. "You're in the
honorable palace of Toe-anaga
now.''
He leads the giggling stew up
a short flight of stairs to a bench
where she puts her best foot
forward Cthe one with the new
ring on the little toe.)
"They're soooo s~xy," the
Reagan plan gains
President forging coalition for 25 o/c cut?
WASHINGTON t AP> -Prest·
dent Reagan, working down to
the wire, stood on the verge of a
new coalition with dissident
House Democrats today to
guarantee passage of his three·
year. 25 percent tax cut.
Although an Associated Press
survey showed a crumbling in
the coalition with conservative
Democr ats that Reagan had
amassed lo pass h.i s budget cuts,
the president appeared to be
picking up replacement backers
for his tax cut plan.
As the late afternoon House
vote neared. one arter another
pr eviou s l y unc o mmitted
De m ocrat s ided with the
pres ident.
Although at least six of the 29
Democrats who helped Reagan
to victory on the budget cuts
announced t hey would vote with
their party on the tax cut issue,
the president appeared to be
getting help from unexpected
quarters.
One surprise came from
Mario Biaggi, D-N .Y .. who
announced he would support the
president's lax plan because
Reagan had promised to restore
Probe intensified
iii jailhouse death
"Serious inconsistencies" in
state ments purportedly made by
a Laguna Beach police officer
regarding a jailhouse death last
week have resulted in the officer
being placed on administrative
leave.
And Acting Police Chief Neil
Purcell s aid he has asked the
Orange Co unt y District
Attorney's Office to "upgrade
and intensify" its investigation
of events s urrounding the death
a week ago today of Robert
Gary Wardman. 37, of Laguna
Beach.
Officer Chuck Maine, who
joined the Laguna Beach Police
Departl'9enl four months ago,
has been sent home with pay lo
await the outcome of a district
attorney's investigation of the
jailhouse death of Wardman,
who worked at Spectrum Spas
on South Coast Highway prior to
bis death in a jail cell last
Wednesday morning.
Ward man was fou nd lying on
the sidewalk near the Main
Street Bar on Coast Highway al
about 1:20 a.m. Wednesday by
officers who had been called to
the scene by a witness.
Paramedics arrived a short
time later and determined the
m a n was intoxicated, police
said, and he was driven to the
Laguna B eac h Police
Department and placed in a cell.
Officers noted he was having
trouble breathing at about 10:30 .
a .m a nd called paramedics.
Police. firemen and paramedics
administered mouth-to-mouth
re s uscitation and
cardiopulmonar y r esuscitation
whe n the victim stopped
breathing in the cell, and he was
later rus hed to South Coast
Med ical Center where be was
pronounced dead at 12:06 p.m.
An autopsy later in the week
showed the man apparently died
of a s kull fracture and an
investigation was la unched
within the department.
•·our investigation revealed
that apparently while removing
the victim from the rear seat of
the police car. the victim fell or
slipped through the arms of the
officer and down onto the
pavement." Purcell said.
Purcell said that verbal
statements put to the command
officer by the patrol officer and
a written report by the officer
didn't mention the fall.
planned cuts in the minimum
monthly Social Security benefits
for the "truly deserving."
Reagan needed 27 Democratic
votes, assuming all Republicans
toed the line, lo pass his tax bill.
He had pledges from 16 of the 29
who hell>ed on his budget cuts
and had picked up at least five
voles from Democrats who
opposed him on those cuts.
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said the president wu
on the telephone untll 7 p .m.
PDT Tuesday to undecided
congressmen and planned· "to
<See TAX, Pase AZ)
Judge rules
Onofre quake '
'not recent'
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Handing
a blow to opponents of licensing
two nuclear reactors at San
Onofre, an administrative judge
has thrown out testimony attest-
ing to recent activity of a nearby
earthqualc:e fault.
Judge James L. Kelley ruled
Tuesday that testimony or re-
search specialist Richard S.
Simons of the UC San Diego
could not be accepted because it
relies upon events occurring
before 1973 when construction
permit bearings were held for
units 2 and 3.
Kelley said it would have been
more appropriate to present the
testimony -contending the
Cristianitos fault, located about
a half mile from the power
plant, has had up to 20 small
earthquakes on ll since 1932 -at
hearings held earlier. •
Simons , who holds a
bachelor's degree from the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, also dld not have
·'the confidence and assurance
we expect from an expert,"
Kelley said.
Witnesses for license appll·
cant Southern California Edison
Co. have said the fault bas bad
no activity for 125,000 years.
.URANGI COAST WIATHIR Jury critics chuckle
Night and morning low
clouds with sunny after-
noon Thursday. LltUe tem-
perature change. Hi1hs 1s
to 83. Lowa tonight 60 to
66.
INllllTIUY
Arton aUock• have "tn·
floJMd the 2,100 r~"'1nt1 Of
Muncy, Po.~~. photo
Pa~ .U.
11111,
Panelists' report printed upside dowp
More than one Orange County
government official, at one Ume
or another, bas su11ested the
thinking or the county Grand
Jury is upside down and
backward.
So, officials are privately
cbucklln1 over a publlabin1
snafu that cauaed an untnowp
number or coplet or lb• t•
grand jury's final report to be
bound upside down and
backward. ·
·'Thia Wn1'1 lmpoulbJe to
rHd," eompl.an,41 .. olfJdal
wbo. by law, m•t pr:r:;e •
rQPoDM to the jury's u Jiii of
an i11ue to which he ii Ulvol'9CI.
The Jury report WU,.. ...... b;r
county 10¥«a••t'1 ... ....
reproductloa ••d 1rapblca department, exetpt for tit•
mulU.:oolor lnll ecw•. Tbt M'1·,_,. .. ,__., wtdcll
• &Ulen ....................
by the Jury tbrou1boat ltl
one-year term that ended June
30, wu bound at Wallace Trade
Bindery in Santa Ana.
A spokeswoman for the firm
said the bindery was not aware
of a ny problem wttb tbe 500
copies 1at.bered and bound for
the county.
And Richard DeLaura,
mana1er of the county's
reproduction and 1rapblc1
department, allo wu unaware
of tile problem until contacted
bya...,..._..
"fl ma. me IUd," O.Laura
Hld. "I'll uve lD talk to
WaUaee about tt." DeLaura Mid four ftnDI b6d
OD prlaU~ j•rr~1 flaal report • ....,.... from
"'.,. -;,Ill. The__,,,.. ..... .
~ ___ .... _of .......................
I ed to tile.., .• baqet,
•
the thin rings onto her second been waiting longer than your
toe. ear." ·
Turning back t o th e
And it's true . The s hiny stewardess, Patches s miles and
'I have a toe that's been waiting
longer than your ear.'
stewardess breathes as Patches
Cunninjlham fits three more o(. baubles do something for the
common foot.
"l a m the Yves St. Laurent of
toes," Patches boasts. as be
sprays Windex on the woman's
toe to help ease the final ring
over the pad.
An impatient customer comes
up behind the busy craftsman
and asks if her gold ear cuff is
ready yet.
"You'll have to wait," he
says, with just a hint of reproach
in his voice. "l have a toe that's
s ays, "No one leaves here with a
wrong fit. I am making you the
toe-tat woman."
Patches Cunningham has been
selling h is jewelry a t the
Sawdust for seven years. but it
wasn't until he began crafting
toe rings about four years ago
that sales took off.
He says he grabbed a toe-hold
o n the market by creating
something that is nice to look at
and inexpensive.
His gold fill toe rings go for
between $5 and $7.50. The 14
carat rings sell for between
$17 .SO and $35.
Ear c uffs. another Cun·
ningham creation, are flat gold
pieces that fit onto the 1roev~
portion of the outer ear above
the earlobe. They go for between
$9.SO and SJS at the Toe-gun
booth.
"WiU my toes turn green?" the
stewardess asks ·as she write,
out a check for the three new
rings. r
·'The only thing that will turt\
green is your friends -with en,
vy." Patches says, grabbing the
check with a nourish. ,
The long-time Laguna jeweler
says he's developed a philosoph)i
about females and their feet
since embarking on his pedal en-
terprise.
"Most women think they have
ugly feel," he said.
"In the last four years, I've
had only two women tell me
they thought they had good-
looking feet."
And after a s hort pause,
Patches shrugged and said,
"They did, too."
AP.....,...
Prince Charles and the new princess of Wales share a ktss on the balcony o/ Buckingham Palace after t
their marriag~ at St. Paul's Cathedral today
Royal coupk honeymooning
An estimated one million roared their good wishes
ROMSEY, England <AP> -
Prince Charles and bis bride
Diana, the Princess of Wales,
arrived by royal train from Lon·
don today to begin their bon.ey-
moon at Broadlands, former
home of the prince's great-uncle
Earl Mountbatten or Burma.
• •o let the nationa rejoice and
be glad !" erupted the massed
choirs when t.be At-chbtabop of
Canterbury pronounced them
wed under the aoartnc dome of st. Paul's Cathedral.
From Buckinebam Palace to
St. Paul's and back, the
princess, in a cloud of ivory I
taffeta, and the prince, in
br ass -buttoned navy
commander'• uniform, rode in
horse-drawn carrla1ea past
mulUtudea of almost one million
people who roared their tood
wlabe.s and waved a sea or Unioa
JackOa11.
Tbe sunahlne poured down and
church bells ran1 acroas the
realm.
The wedcli.QI, one of the sreat
royal events of recent dee::!;
1ave a lift to a people bur
with heavy eeonomie problemt and worrted by a recent
outbreak ol urban rtotlAI.
Tbt 8rltl1b p eople'• Joy
OYeraow.d wbMi tile DtWI,,...
returMd to 9aeklnPam Palace
1tepped onto the 1car1et-.r...Pid
friet a.ICODJ and wa...t to tbe ti 1 t nbil erowdl.
At •• pOlatt. Cllarl11 and Dlaaa kl8"d, soac:bJn1 ott a
crescendo of cheers from below.
They then retired inside for the
wedding breakfast.
Later they left, again by open
SOME ROYAL TY
ROMANCES ROCKY -A12
LADY DIANA'S DRESS
COST 'SECRET' -A4
c arriage , for Waterloo rail
statlon and their honeymoon,
whic h begins at an £nglislt
country estate and ends with Ill
Mediterranean cruise.
Having changed into gray a
a nd pink dress, they wet'
s prinkled with rose petals
confetti by the palace staff,
Their carriage trailed a bl3
of silver and blue balloons.
a slgn, "Just Married," w
tacked to the back.
The union of the 32-year-ol
(See ROY AL, Pa1e AZ)
Wedding marred
by Liverpool_ riots
LIVERPOOL, <AP) -Fierce
riotin1 raaed here ror the third
straiaht nl1bt as Britain pre·
pared for the royal weddint in
London today with thousands of
police and ll'Oops 1uardJn1 the
festive capital.
Jn Northern Ireland, army ex-
pertl defuled a 400-pound bomb
ln a mobUe home and aald they
bellned 1rilh NaUonallatl had
planned to Ht it off aa a • • weddlnt
1pectacular. •'
Two hundred youtM burlinl
1al0Une bomba, a&oa.-. bricks
and pana ol bolliftl •ater battled
hundreda ol police Into the .,..
hours today in tbe ecoaomlc:ally
depreued and blP·immltrent
Toxteth dlltritt ol tbll port dty.
Both blaca and wblttt were in·
Tentative agreement with food council reached three hours be/ ore deadline
~AVE THE ORDER?
.·.Defendant Aguirre
..... "" ..........
TOLD HIM TO FIRE?
Defendant Marvin
·:Last minutes of life ,., '
BB slaying told
By FREDE•ICK SCROEMEBL ........... ,.... .....
, •. The final minutes of the life or
-. purported Garden Grove dru~
,Pealer, slain in a Huntington
Beach oil field ln July 1980, have
been dramatically revealed to
.~n Orange County Superior
, ,.Court jury.
One of three Huntington Beach
residents who previously bas ad·
rpitted his role in the slaying or
31-year·old Stephen Ciaconne,
testified Tuesday that Ciaconne
pleaded, "No ... don't do it"
moments before he was shot in
'I ivanted to get
it over with'
the chest with an arrow fired
from a cross bow.
. Witness Brian Miller, 21, told
tbe hushed audience in Judge
1Cennetb Lae's courtroom that
: jefendanl J ames Robert ;,::~arvin, ,24, ordered him to fire
•:;.fnto Ciaconne's head. :~-Asked by Deputy Di.stric·t At·
•!"\orney Pal Geary why he shot
Ctaccone in the heart lru1tead,
Miller responded, "I couldn't
shoot him the bead . . . I felt he
· was going to die no matter what
1 did ... (I wanted) to get it
over with as soon as possible."
Miller, speaking in a barely
audible voice, testlfied that
Marvin's co-defendant in the
murder trial, Joe Aeuirre, 35, of
Huntington Beach, issued the in·
lUal order that be participate in
the Ciaconne slaying.
·'The next thing I recall is
someone handing me a knife. He
(Aguirre> told me <Ciaccone)
already (had> been hit twice and
it was my turn."
· It was a few moments later,
after the group almost was
spotted by a police helicopter
fl ying in the area, that Miller
was given the crossbow and told
to fire, the witness testified.
·'Steve started calling for
help. Joe called for someone to
shut him up. i don't remember if
anyone did or not."
M Iller told the court "I
couldn't do it" after be was
handed lhe crossbow. "I believe
that was when Steve said
something about calling a doctor
and taking him to a hospital and
that be wouldn't say anything
about what had happened out
there." ,
Ac cording to previous
testimony, the plot lo kill Ciac·
cone was made while he was
slaying at Aguirre's Gothard
Street residence lo elude
narcotics investigators and
former customers.
The Garden Grove man was
lured into the oil field on the pre·
text of going on a nighttime rab-
bit bunt with his five Huntington
Beach companions, witnesses
testified.
Miller, and two other peop1e
charged in the case, Aguirre's
wife, Laurie, 20, and James
Garwood, 24, pleaded guilty to
reduced charges of voluntary
manslaughter in exchange for
their testimony.
Aerial dogfight
strains cease-/ ire
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -
Syria and Israel each claimed
.abootlng down a jet fighter in a
dogfilJ)rt over Lebanon today, a
battle that put the most serious
Jrain yet on the six-day-old
ase-fire.
Israel said Its warplanes shot
down a Soviet-made MIG-25
Syrian jet, the moat advanced in
Ule Syrian arsenal, and returned
• af ely from a "routine reooo·
'tlalssance mission '• over
Uebanon.
Syria said one Israeli jet was
downed and conceded a Syrian
plane was "hit." But a com·
munique said "our planes re·
turned safely to base."
Lebanon radio said a pilolless
Israeli reconnaissance drone
was later shot down by a Syrian
anti-aircraft mlssle fired from
eastern Lebanon's Bekaa
Valley.
Israeli lJlil1tary sources denied
a drone was downed, but bad no
comment on Lebanese radio and
TV reports ot an Israeli armored
buildup in t.h e southern
Lebanese border enclave con·
trolled by Israeli-backed Chris·
tian forces.
Syria threatened less than 24
hours ago to shoot down Israel
jets on reconnaissance flights as
violators of the cease-fire.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
mldalabt walkout by
1upermarttt clerkl wu averted
when neaotlatora for 71,700
clerltl and 1,277 Soutbern
CalUorn11 supermarket• ten·
taUvely a,reed on a new con·
tract after a month and a half of
ha11lln1.
The bar1ain1n1 unit.a from the
Food Employera Council and the
United Food and Commercial
Union offlcially reached -.ree·
ment on the pact at about t :ao
p.m. Tuesday, 2~ hours before
the clerks were to ao on atrike
aaainst st.ores in 12 counties.
Federal mediator Frank Allen
From Page A1
TAX~ ••
reach maybe two dozen
• fence-sitters" during the day.
'"We feel we have aotten a
number of people in the Jut 24
hours," Speakes said. "We feel
the momentum goin.c our way." Yet he said the outcome was
'"too close to caJl."
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill, D-Mass., appeared
pessimistic as he told reporters
Democrats were losing some
moderates and liberals who bad
opposed Reagan's budget cuts.
Other Democrats were saying
on a not-for-attribution basis
that Reagan might pull this one
out.
One congressman was
summoned to a White House
meeting with the president this
morning. Afterward, Rep. Norm
Dicks, D· Wa s h .. agreed to
support the president's package
•·barring any unforeseen
events," a spokesman for Dicks
said. . • A key Republican leadership
staff member said Republicans
appeared -on a bard count -
to be two or three votes short of victory.
Oilfir~'s
• earnings
jump Blo/t>
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Standard Oil Co. of California's
domestic oU earnings jumped by
81 percent in the last three
months compared with the same
period a year ago, the company
has aMounced.
Domestic petroleum earnings
for the 90-day period ending
June 30 totaled $322 million,
compared with $178 million a
year ago.
A company spokesman said
deregulation of oil prices and
production of more higher·
quality natural gas were behind
the increase.
Socal earnings dropped by
more than 7 percent ln the
second quiater of 19*1 but were
15 percent higher than the aame
three-month period a year ago.
Earnings for the 90-day period
ending June 30 totaled $616
million, $00 million less than the
previous three-month periocfbut
$81 million more than the same
quart.er in 1980.
Earnings per share were $1.80
for the quarter and $3. 75 for the
first half of 1981, compared with
$1 .57 and $3.40 during the same
periods last year.
r:1. Lebanese security forces said
the pilot of the downed Syrian
• jet bailed out, was picked up by
· a helicopter about 30 miles
northeast of Beirut and later
flown to Damascus, the Syrian
4,000 lives lost
capital.
The Christian Voice of in Iran earthquake?
P.riest slain
in Gu·atemala
SANTIAGO DE ATITLAN.
Guatemala (AP) -"Father,
you're in extreme danger. You
must get out immedJately," a
parishioner warned the 46-year·
, old priest from Oklahoma l1x
months ago.
He left, came beck three
monthl later and on Mot1day nllh\
was asuainated, presumably by
a rilht·wia( death squid. The
Rev. Stan Rother said be wu
Jriabt.et:Md when a snember ot.
hls flock told blm OD Jan. 11 be
bad been marked for neeuUoD ••
NICOSIA, Cyprus CAP> -
Tehran radio reported more than
700 bodies recovered, but the~o·
vincial government predict~ a
toll of more than 4,000 dead In an
earthquake that hit the southeast
Iranian province of Kerman dur· inf the night.
l was the second quake diJ.
a•ter in the re1ion 1n leas than two
months and the third in four
year•.
• 'Tbe number of victim• of the eait~ hu 1urpa11ed the 700 merit, • the ll'anlan 1overnment
radto reported 'thil aftemocm.
'"Eftoftl to recover the bodi• ot OCber vtctima are conttn~lna."
a.HMM edwe,....,.. 11.,,142-1111
All othel' ... ,, l'llMfttl 142,.Q11
MAINOWICE Jlt WtM ... II. Cel~ Mew, CA 11114111 ..,_ ... , .. ,( .... ~1 CA ...
The governor pneral of the
province, Abdolhosseln Saveh,
said the quake was centered ln the
small town of Sbahdad, about 500
miles IOUtheut ot Tehran and 30
IRAN'I 8ANl·IADR
FL!EI TO FRANC! -A4
miles norlheHt of Kerman, UM
provincial capital.
He predlcted the toU would'be
between 4,000 and 5,000 dead,
Parasald.
Hospltall lD Kerman reported
'°dead ancl • laJured lD lb. pro.
vlnclal capltal, Tehran Bacik» re·
portedearller.
· Pan laid the quake meuuHd
betWMD 1.5 ad 1 C1G the Aldar
tc•l• and l1au..d to pettml ot th• buildlnp ln tbe dlatrlet.
Army untt. .... relCUe ICIUadl I were tr1ln1 to clear debrta.
choked roedl.llltbe remoc. IDOm·
taiaoua r.ecton u lteUcopten
natbed ftlCWl'I, niedleal ,.._.
Del ud1..,.... to U.ana, hn
Hid, but tr.e·naM telTaJa bun•
,....operalloill .
.............. tbu.mllea trom U. .W.,. of OolAqb.
wb1cla wm llMt•td bJ a lw 11 ........ ta. rn.&mi ... a.. em..WfllW1•,....__. . ........ ........... . .......
....... Rldllerteale.Tlle .... .,.. ..... ,......, .....
.. "" tW ldlltid -people -lajtndmontlaaa 1•.
116c1 tbal DO det.alls could be ,..
leated unW aftet' anion otnriall
bad • chance to preaent the
packa1e to the memberahlp for a
vote ot ratiftcaU-.
However, Jack Loveall. the
union's vice pre1ldent, said the
tentative pact calls tor an in·
crease in wa1ea and fringe
benelita amount!~ to $3.M an.
hour over t.bree years.
The compromise broke a
Tuesday afternoon deadlock
over a 35-cenl·an·hour dlf·
ference between what the
markets offered and what the
union was demanding. After he
met separately with both sides
and then coaxed them back to
tbe bar•alnlrul table Tuesday
nl1ht, Allen aald, "Both parUes
modlfled their poaltions end
came clOMr tocet.ber."
Allen 11Jd the aareement was
different from two previous of·
fers by the Food Employers
Council, whJcb the union reject·
ed. "It la dilrerent from any of·
rer1 which you have heard," he
said.
The Food Employers Council
eave in earlier on two major la·
sues, one concerninc benefits
and the other providing that any
new stores would automatically
come under a union contract.
Pair slip up vows
Diana errs on Charles' name
LONOON CAP) -In the moments before she became
Princess of Wales today, Lady Diana Spencer made her
first slip, speaking her husband's name in the wrong order
before the hushed congregation al St. Paul's Cathedral and
some 500 million television viewers.
But she was· not alone. Prince Charles left out a word in
repeating his vows.
Diana, in a dress ·with a 25-foot train and yards of veil.
gracefully negotiated a difficult exit from her coach al the
'foot of St. Paul's steps. She glided down the long. red·
carpeted aisle at her father's side without a false step.
But when the Archbishop of Canterbury. Rt. Rev.
Robert Runcie spoke the prince's name for her to repeat:
"'Charles Philip Arthur George,"" she promised lo marry
''Philip Charles Arthur George.··
The Prince of Wales also made a mistake. after placing
the band of welsh gold on his bride"s finger. He offered to
s hare his .. goods" but dropped the word '"wordly ...
But such minor e rrors did not stop the archbishop from
pronouncing the couple "man and wife together" and
crowds outside, listening to the ceremony on loudspeakers.
broke their silence with loud cheers.
* * * * * * From Page A1
ROYAL WEDDING • • •
Prince of Wales and Lady
Diana, the 20 -yea r -old
kindergarten teacher with the
captivating smile, was the first
time in three centuries that the
heir to the British throne has
married an English-.born
woman.
·'This is the stuff of which
fairy tales are made," the
archbishop, the Rt. Rev . Robert
Runcie, observed in his sermon
during the musi c-filled ,
80-minute Church of England
ceremony.
First lady Nancy Reagan. the
official U.S. representative, sat
in a sixth-row pew at St. Paul's,
behind crowned royalty. Besides
the masses of spectators here, at
least 500 million others were
believed lo have watched the
ceremony on television around
the world.
Baby falls 3 floors
into arms of hero
SCHAUMBURG. Ill. CAP> -
Tom Deal says he has pretty
good hands from playing ball,
but sports didn't prepare him for
catching a 10-month-old girl as
she came hurtling from a third·
story baJcony.
D ea l , a 22 -year old
warehouseman, saved the tod·
dler, who was not iDJured during
the weekend incident.
••I was just really nervous,
man, when I knew she was going
to fall," Deal said in an in·
terview Tuesday.
Deal and his wife, Lorri, were
awakened early Sund\ay in this
Chicago suburb by a baby's cry.
Ing. They peered out a window
and saw an open third-floor
patio door in an apartment
across the parking lot.
A baby, J ennifer Deul, ap-
parenUy pried open the screen
door and Inched toward the patio
raillng. First one, then another
plump leg appeared over the
edge.
No one aru1wered the apart·
ment buzzer when Deal ran over
and started ringing.
''The next thing I knew. both
legs went over the side, and I
ran there lo wait for her to fa.11 .
And s h e did . Boy, was I
vous," he said. '"She bounced
rear end off the second -floor
ling bar and did a little flop
into my arms. I just guided her
to the ground ."
Deal said, "She didn't seem
hurt, but she needed a diaoer
change."
He took Jennifer to a hospital
emergency room "to make sure
she was all right." The hospital
notified police, who questioned
the baby's mother, Sabrina
Oeul. 20, of Hofrman Estates,
anothe• nearby Chicago suburb.
Schaumburg Police Lt. Robert
Specht said Tuesday the baby
apparently was left Saturday
night with a baby sitter who ex·
peeled Ms.f' Oeul home by mid·
night.
e--·JIJ ...
Allen nid the talk• broke
down on the 35-cent·an·hour dll· ference, with the companles of.
ferinc a $3.ao an hour 6oo9t ""• three ye111 and the Wlloa MM·
int a $3.M percent lncreaee.
Under the old contract, top.
scale clerkJ earn '8.10 an bow'
ln w1es and $U2 an hour in
f rtn1e benefit.a.
The 1,277 supermarket•
stretch from San Lui• OW.po
and Mooo count.lea In the north
lo the Mexican border, a reOc>n
with a population of 13.t million
persons. The supermarket.a 1up-
ply 85 percent of the arocerln in
that area.
Economy
decline
reported
WASHINGTON CAP) -A key
national economic barometer
fell 1.3 percent in June, the
second monthly decline in a row
and an apparent Indication that
the economy will conUnue to
weaken in coming months, the
Commerce Department reported
toda)'.
The government's index of
economic indicators had rallen
1.5 percent in May after rising
for two consecutive months, the
report said.
June's drop in the index, which
is designed to forecast future
trends in the national economy, is
in line with most analysts' predic·
tions that there will be little or no
economic growth in the current
July-September quarter.
Nallonal growth, as measured
by the inflation-adjusted gr06s
national product, fell at an an·
nual rate or 1.9 percent in the
Ap ril -June quarter after racing
ahead at an 8.6 percent rate in
the first three months of the
year.
Controllers
reject
new offer
WASHJNGTON CAP) -Air
traffic controllers rejected a ten·
ta ti ve contract by a better-than
9·1 margin, their union an·
nounced today, •raising once
again the threat of a strike that
could ground half the nation's
commercial flights.
The Professional Air Traffic
Controllers Organization an·
nounced that 95.3 percent of the
voting rank and rue rejected the
tentative accord. reached just
hours before a strike deadline
last month. Union officials said
13,495 of the controllers voled to
turn down the pact, and 616 to
accept it.
Robert E. Poli, president of
the controllers ' union,
telephoned Tra nsportation
Secretary Drew Lewis at mid·
day and informed him that the
pact had been voted down,
Transportation Department of·
riclals said.
A Lewis spokeswoman, Linda
Gosden, confirmed that the
secretary told Poli he was "dis·
appointed and regretted the fact
that the contract had been re·
jected." Lewis suggested the
two sides' negotiating teams 1et ·
together "and work out lhell' <W ·
ferences," she said.
Dustbuster Cordless Vacuum
Ideal for home. auto. shop, and boat.
Included is a wall /bench holder.
Put Duatbuster in its holder and it
recharges.
Cleans up spills fast -Ideal for hard
to reach areas.
I
CR-URIYIARE AL&. ll'Wa_.. 7 DAYI A WIB
Wll1'CUPP OPlll 1MM TL-
Af'W ........
The Rev. Daniel Berrigan and his brother Philip, background.
enter Montgomery County Courthouse in No rnstown, Pa ..
where they were sen tenced to 3 to 10 years m prison for their
parts in a break-in at a General. Electric plant. The Berrigans
and others were protesting nuclear ~apons manu/actunng.
Iran rescue colonel quits
Col. Cbarles Beckwith, who
led the ill .fated mission lo
r escue the hostages in Iran,
says he plans to retire from
the military and teach anti·
lerrotist tactics lo corpora·
'tions.
The veteran Green Beret
said he will launch his cor-
porate venture when he re·
tires this fall. He said rive as·
sociales with whom he 's
worked in anti-terrorist ac-
tivities in the past will join
him. but he declined lo name
them during an inter view at
Fort Bragg, N.C.
In April 1980, Beckwith led
a team into Iran in an effort
to rescue 53 Americans held
hostage. But t he r aid was
canceled after three helicop-
ters developed mechanical
trouble.
As the team withdrew. a
helicopter collided with a
C·l30 alrcraft and both burst
into flames. Eight crewmen
in the plane were killed.
Beckwith, 52, said his new
firm will advise corporate
executives on how to protect
themselves from attack. It
also will counsel companies
seeking lo prevent sabotage
and terrorist attacks.
He said his firm will be
based in Austi n, Texas.
beginning Oct 1.
Beckwith now works at
Fort Bragg's Joint Special
Operations Command.
WllJ movie compo1er Im
Willia•• stay for a third
)'ear H director of tb•
BOaton Pope? The maaaa• of the Bolton Symphony ad·
mJtl, "It ls a very hot quea·
lion.''
Willlanu, who wrote the
music foe "Star Wara," bu
been leadin« the Pope for two
years, but he says be h11n't
made up hia mind about
keeplnc the Job.
The Pope, which la part ol
µie Boetoo Symphony, plays
popular music and familiar
claasics in the spring and
early summer.
WUUams has aald he will
make up hia mind after the
current season, which ended
Tuesday night at Tanglewood
in the Berkshires.
Williams met Monday with
Symphony General Manager
Thomas W. Morrl1. Af·
terward Morris said, "The
answer is that we just don't
know yet, though you can say
we are negotiating and work-ing on it.··
Na val Reser ve Officer
Gary Hart, who is also a U.S.
senator from Colorado, plans
to sail with the Navy in the
lndian Ocean next week, ac-
cording to an announcement
from his Denver office.
Hart will make the five-
day trip as a fact.finder for
the Senate Armed Services
Committee and as a lieute-
nant j .g . in the Navy
Reserve, Harl aides said.
Ha rt has said he wants to
learn more about the status
of U.S. navaJ forces in the In·
dian Ocean and Persian Gulf
regions. He plans to study
how those forces could de·
fend Middle Eastern Oil sup-
ply lines, and how long lours
of duly affect Navy person-
nel. The trip will be financed
by the committee.
H a r t aides said hi s
senatorial status would aJlow
him special treatment not
normally a fforded a naval
reserve officer , but said the
Democrat planned to try to
keep a low profile.
Atlantic coast damp
Scattered showers forecast from Arizona to Texas
Coastal forecast
Nlt lll -rnornlnt I-CIOUCll wll" "'nny •llernoon TllurMl•Y lllll•
t""peretwe m.,.
CoH t•I ·-'°· In•-.. Coest•I lllgll IS, lnl-'3. Weier••· EIHwllere, llt lll verleble wind•
becomlno WHI lo so.itnwttt 10 to u knots wlll\ 2· 10 :I-loot wind weves.
Soutllwes1 •-II• -to two IH1 l -Clouc:tlrwu bKomlnt moslly sunny In
tne elle,,,_,,
U.S. summary
Sllowers e nd tllwnderstorms
r11mbled OVOf' rnud'I of tlw Atl .. tk
COHI -str•"IWCI trom Ar~ to tlle cflltr•I .,...Kiiien Mountains
toNy, • ~n -e Ket·
tend lrom ArllDne end TeUI llllo u. • ...,,._" Roc.11'1' Mountains end
tlle "°,,._.,,. .. ~ Mo!'• ~ -stDrms _,.. ...
,..clod leter In tM N'I' over Ille
..-t1'1m Atl..UC CNSI, est ..... lng to
tlle ~,._, .... _,•lone tM
centrel Atlefttk c-t. end from Ille
sout"9rn Allentlc coeit ec••• Ille
lower Mlnlul1>1>I River valley to
••1tor110ti1-.
Scetter" ~ wore 1orece1t
lrom 1011tllee11 Arlzone Into
'°"t-Teus.
Temperllt\lnt N'IY tooey refl99d
lrom '7 ...,._. In ArUw, C.111 • to
100 cloorws In Bl'(tllo, C.111
California
Needy •II .. Soutllorll C•lllornl•
"-Id lie CIMr Md IUMY Tllvncley,
wltll -low SC.tiered c-111 tho lele 11l1Mefld terly mcwnl119 llour1.
Wosi.t'ly ... ,,..,.. HIMCtH to blow
U to U ~ IGl!ltfll In ltlO SolttNm
CelllofnU ...., eroes Md In t1'1
AnltlepeVelW(-MoJ-Oottft.
llttle~l•'-ut. wltll
1'111KMl(_'-r ..... trtmtstolU l11
tho All .... eflCI "'9 ~ CoterMt
lthl« ve11.,..,.. t1'1 deltns, S7to tO
In lho SM,._,,_., SIWI O.Wlot, SM
8-nllfte, ~ ... ..Oc..UI
valleys eftCI ~ lo IO In lhe _..Ill
trffL I
l°' ...-sllOlllcl hew M"'9 l11 l1'1
1-llOIMlllOW1lnt11emld'°'.HltNln
tho 70I ..... IQw Of'° ere toroc•lt '°'
I.ho S.,,.. ..,_,. llnd Ventur• C-
ly, It.. SIM.t~..., _,Long
ltecll •lld tllt Ore119e Co11nty _,_ltmier-.
Temperature•
Beltlmore .. 71 1.1•
8 1rml11Gfm " 1S 8olM '6 SI eoaton u u .11
•-•v11e •s u .01 CherlltnSC M 10 .02
Cllk-.c> .. Sl .2t
Clnclnnetl 1.5 '° .• Olll·FtWtll t4 73
O.nvtr M 64 O.troll 11 St .n
Felrbtnks n SO .01
Honohttu t7 1s .01
Houstott t2 10 .01 ll\dne911s 7t SS ,IQ
J•<ksnvllO '6 7S
LalV09A 10t 11
Ultto Roell n 11
Lot A119tlft 12 M
Mom,..,11 90 n .02
Mleml IS 19
Nesllvllle tO 70 .17
NtwOrle-U 16
HewYorll 11 13 .OI
Olll•Clly 7S 71
Or1•111do 9S 1S Pllll._.,.. 1' 72 .u
Plletnl• 107 ..
R-.. 41 ltk~ '6 H .10
S.111..u •7 ..
S.11 Oleto 71 10 s.n Fr en 60 S2
Stt.oul1 14 ff
SIP·Tempt " 1• .01
T111N M •7 Wulllft9tn 11 1• .n CALl~IUA
laenllold 1112 75
• tytlle I 12 ..
Ewell• st S2 a:i:... 1: ~
aMrtlWlllO .. 64
Mo.rittroy •s M
O.klMMI •1 n p, .. ,...._ n u
Redllllft 100 ..
RMweodClty 14 St
..--------------------,._ .. u Seer-n IO
lollllllet .. »
SMWI.,,_• .. SI
Tlltmlel 1• n Ulllefl 111 S7
..,...... IW 75
Mtleor 14 41
.... 102 SI
CftlllN U SI
LMI IMC!\ 14 U Mellrevle M ff
MtWll-16 6S H....,,._,. 73 M
.... "' ,..... lot 1• ......... 17 ff ,,......_... 91 S7
Lee .....
H11nl"'91on Blllttl
H11ntln¢on P1w
SMte AN River Jetty
40t11St...._,
ttndSl.N-1
BelbN Woclgt
Ao<kpl le, t..Q&IM Sleepy Hollow
Thell•· Brooks
AlllO Beech Sell Crtell Oollony 8Ndl
PoclM.C.O 8Nc"
f'/'MAM91tlCAN
Ac.epulco t7 n .. ,_ 11 7' .OJ eoeoi. "2 lO .02
Clll'KM tO n
Fr._t .. n
G1111d•l•Jer• 71 .. ...
G11lld9!-n n .02
Hevene tO n
l(l1191ton n 1'
Montoto Bev t2 7J
Muetllln .. 7S
Merlu •• ,, .OJ
Me•lc.oClty n M
Molllerrev n 72
Sun, moon, tide1
TOOAY
Second lllgtl l :Jt p.1'11, "'' TMUltlOAY
First low J:a ........ 1.2
First""" 10: IS e.m. •.• ~condlow J :10p.m. 1.t
Second lllgtl t :D p.m. 6.t
Svn Mts 1;57 p,m. l!Day, rlMI 6:0J
fl.11'1-T--y.
Moon rlttl S:21 e.m. Tlwndey,
Mb 1:10p.m.
SURf RIPDRT
T9*J'1 Ave/Mn.
I I
1
1
1 1
1-2 1-2
M
I
1-2
·-..... ---------paor ---
A ......
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Or~ Cout OAJL Y PILOT/Wedneeday, Juty 29, 1981 H /F
Over a~ecutor'• obJec-Uou, a J e bu ordered that
ball be r uced for a fOl'mer
Ora.nae County Sberlff'a deputY'
now free wbile appeallna hi•
convlcUon on kldnapplna and
false imprilonment eharees.
Superior Court Judae James
Turner said $150,000 ball would
be auUicient for Geoue
Loudermilk. 38, of Cotta Mesa,
who faces a one-year jail term
and five years' probation should
the appeals prove unsuccessful.
Loudermilk'• ball bad been Ht
at $225,000, ~urecl by ta0,000
In real e1tate poated by triendl
and relatlve1. Under Turner'•
rulln1 Tuetday, only $300,000
wW have to be pledaed.
The fOl'mer 1herlff'1 del)Uty
waa convicted June 5 of thr..e
felony counts, lncludln1 kidnap.
pine and false 1mprllonment, for
detalnlne three female motori.lta
he stopped while on patrol.
One wttneaa, a 33-year-old
MIHion VleJe> woman, cJalmed
Loudermilk drov• ber
secluded Jrvine·bH toe
where be said tbe po11lblUt
lated 1be could be ra
murdered.
Defense attorney K
Monroe inlti,ally uked T
reduce ball to $10,000 or -·-· Monroe uid there waa 9'0
danaer that Loudermilk wauld
flee the Jurildictloo. Aod.
Monroe nid, one party wbo
pledaed property toward Ute
$225,000 needed the bail lien Utt-
ed for legal reaeons .
Judge to decide on
Caywood's penalty
Deputy District Allor y
Mic hael Jacobs ureed Ile
$225,000 bail remain in effect.
As for the party that wanted
the ball lien lifted from their
property. J acobe said sharply,
"Ir they want out, they can .,et
out and Mr. Loudermilk e'en
start serving his time."
Ao Orange County Superior
Court judge -not a jury -will
decide if conv icted double
murdere r William Caywwod
should be sentenced to death or ·
life imprisonment without
possibility of parole.
Following a hearing Tuesday
with prosecution and defense at-
torneys , Judge Wi lliam
Thomson ruled that he will de-
cide the issue rather than em-
panel a second jury to make the
penalty determination.
The first jury to deliberate the
question deadlocked 10 to 2 in
favor of r ecomm ending· the
death penalty for the 40-year-old
Santa Ana man, convicted by a
separate panel of killing two Ira-
nian immigrants who .once were
employed at his Ontario service
station.
Caywood claimed during the
trial that t he two men had
broken into his house while he ,
was asleep and that he shot
them after a chase.
Judge Thomson said that he
has scheduled an Aug. 14 hear-
ing to receive further testimony
on which sentence should be im·
Brown hits
Reagan
policies
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
FederaJ economic policies will
lead to a "weakened America,"
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. told
a gathering of the nation's top
trial lawyers.
•'The effort to cure our
economic ills by running up the
interest rates to the highest in
our .history, by bankrupting
more and more small busi-
nesses. . .is being promulgated
under the promise that this is
going to s trengthen the
American economy," Brown
told the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America.
•·I have to tell you that nothing
could be further from the truth,"
Brown said to profuse applause
as he addressed 1,500 people
beneath a banner reading
"Lawyers on the side of people."
Brown, an all-but-declared
Democratic .candidate for the
U.S. Senate, never mentioned
President Reagan or bis ad·
ministration by name. But his
target was umistakable .
He said it was wrong to think
"that by spending $1.5 trillion on
the military budget, that is go-
ing to strengthen us at the same
lime we cut back on all our tax-
es across the board and hope
somehow there's a miracle go-
ing to happen."
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtified Gemo/o6i1t, AGS
TIE AMETHYST
and ca tu from Bcacchtu
For centuries, the beautiful
violet-hued amethyst ba~
sym bolized peacf!t and
tranquillty. But to the indent
Greeks who eave it ill name,
the ametby1t symbolised tbe
remone ol the aod Bacchus,
who in a drunken race. ii said
to bave lOOMd a herd of wUd
beutl to destroy a youn1
maiden named Amethyst. 1be
maiden cried out to the 1oddel
Qlana, the story coes, and
Diana turned her into a marble
statue to Hve ber from tbe
beHta. Baecbua, later sober
and remoneftal, poured bil lalt
llua ~ wiM Oft!' the itatm, tu.nllDC It from white to a ~ YioJet. Tbenafter, tbe Greeb
bellHed Uaat be wbo druk
from mi ametbJSt eballce would
llOt become lntoxleated. lD fut,
tbe word ametb11t in Gl'Mk
means, llterall1, "not
draaken." Tbe amethyst
aematone 11 f ouDd In •A1
ro1al colleeUon1 of anci•t
l:fJPt and GrHct, and it
promlalnt lD tM Blttilll Cl'OWD
Jewel•. A ma1nlflctnt
•••almen 11 &n lb• Ro11l .........
posed. For the m ost part,
Thomson said, he will rely on
the previous record in the case
to make his decision.
Thomson said he made it clear
to Caywood that he was not try-
ing "to save time" by not ·Sub-
mitting the penalty issue to a
second jury.
And, be said his decision to
make the d e t e rmination
"shouldn't imply anything that I
may do."
~aywood's victims were Iraq
Badilan, 39, of Ontario, and
Ruh ollab Rolbollan, 35, of
Norwalk. The slayings occurred
last July.
Judge Turner said a contin~ high bail was necessary to .
sure the safety or those o
testified against Louderm k
during the highly publicivd
trial. fl
Loudermilk, who had ban
free during the trial, was taken
into custody afte r the jGry
verdict was delivered when the
Misaioo Viejo woman claimed
s he received a threatening
telephone call. Loudermilk de-
nied making the call.
He was freed from jail after
friends and relatives posted the
$225,000 bail, lowered from 'an
initial $500.000.
Af'-1 a.
·A FLAG AND MEMORIES -Kay Van Dyke mother of Ajr
Force Capt. Richard Van Dyke, sobs at her son's funeral
after being presented with flag that draped his coffin . Van
Dyke's body and that of two others who had been missing in
action in Vietnam were returned to the U.S. government Ju-
ly 7. .
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bu1 from a Jeweler JOU cue ...,....., l"el1 ~? Vlltt our 1tore and 1et UM facta beblnd • dlammld'a ldee. ~from our membenhl,p
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35 VIMS IN THI SAME LOCATION
.. nllAmerlc:ant-MMter Ctw PHOM!
............
Bani-Sadr safe
France· exile • m
PARIS CAP) -Abolhasaan
Bani-Sadr, Iran's fugitive ex-
preaident, escaped to France to-
day in an Iranian military
plane, accompanied by the head
of Iran's leading lertlst under-
ground organhation.
The French eovernment
granted the 47-year-old Bani-
Sadr political asylum. Several
hours later the Iranian govern-
ment officially demanded his
ext r adition in a request
prese nted to the French
Embassy in Tehran.
Disguised by having shaved
off his customary mustache,
Bani-Sadr landed in an Iranian
Air Force 707 jet at the Evreux
military air base 60 miles west
of Paris at 4:30 a.m . After being
given political asylum, he was
driven to the apartment of a
daughter in a Paris suburb.
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency, c1a1med that the plane
was hijacked, but details of the
escape were not clear.
FLEES TO FRANCE
Iran's Rani-Sadr
Bani-Sadr told reporters out·
s ide his daughter's apartment last week of Mohammad Ali Ra·
house his flight was organized jai lo succeed him as president
by the Majahedeen Khalq, the "show that the people are de·
Islamic Marxist guerrilla group termined lo follow the path of
that has become the only effec· the revolution until the final vie·
live opposition to the fundamen· tory." But the Iranian govern-
talist Moslem cler ics dominat· me nt claimed Rajai got 13
ing Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho· million voles, 2 million more
Ccidy Diana Spencer in her stunning wedding dress on the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral on her way to nuptial ceremony. meini's revolutionary regime. than Bani-Sadr got when he was
Massoud Radjavi, the leader elected president.
.Jt Inst: wedding dress seen
of the Mujahadeen Khlaq, ac· In answer to a question, Bani-
companied Bani-Sadr and said Sadr said he thought he would be
the ex-president had been hiding back in Iran .. soon.··
in his home "in the heart of A French Foreign Ministry
Tehran" since he went under· s pokesman said asylum was
• ground 43 days ago. gr anted Bani-Sadr after he gave ~ana 's choice a 'rom antic fairy-tale gown' in silk taffeta and old lace Bani-Sadr said he did not find a written pledge lo "exercise no
out about the plans for him to political activi ty whatsoever on
25-foot sweeping train of her leave Tehran until 6 p.m. last French soil." I ONOON CAP) -Lady Diana
ncer's wedding dress, prob-
. the most closely guarded
el in fashion history, is a
CQQunlic fairy-tale gown in
lvory sUk taffeta and old lace,
with a fitted, boned bodice and
ed neckline.
It has a full skirt over a multi·
layered tuJle petticoat, intricate·
ly designed bodice panels, and
the entire gown hand-embroided
-with tiny mother-of-peaTl se-
quins and pearls.
The lace-flounced neckline of
·Diana's dress curved in a wide-v
lo a taffeta bow al the center.
The full. three-quarter length
I
sleeves were gathered into taf.
feta frills at the elbow. with
elaborately embroidered lace
flounces underneath.
The skirt was trimmed around
the waist and al the hem with
embroidered. sparkling lace. All
the embroidery was in Ivory.
With the frills, flounces and
th u r b ·d ni g ht and they lert from a A ministry spokesman said gown, e ta • s im n e ob· Tehran militar y base at 10: 30 that by making a strong political served the tradition of wearing something o ld _ la ce . p.m . statement to reporters, Bani·
something new _ silk especially With him was Ira nian air Sadr "has started badly He has
spun al Lullingstone silk farm in force Col. Behzad Moesi, who made an error."
Dorset, something borrowed _ a flew the plane and who Pars The Foreign Ministry said the
tiara from the Spencer family said was the personal pilot of the plane in which he escaped "will
collection, and something blue. late Shah Mohammad Reza be returned to the Iranian gov-P a hlavi. ernmenl." Informed sources
A smaU blue bow was sewn in-Moesi refused to i;?ive details said the four cr e wmen told
IA's Casey at the hat
closed Senate hearing
to the waistband. And a second or the escape "for security French officials they had been
good luck token , a tiny reasons because other (in Iran) forced to fl y to France and want·
horseshoe in 16 carat gold would be i n volved.·· But ed to return to Iran as soon as
studded with white diamonds, although Pars said the plane· possible.
was also sewn into the intricate-was hijacked. it seemed unlikely T ehran Radio relayed the
ly embroidered dress . that Bani-Sadr. Radjavi and news of Bani-Sadr's escape to
The cost of the original by Moesi could have gotten to it and the Iranian republic and said he
London designers David aboard without the cooperation "has joined the united front of
WASHINGTON (AP> -A feis-
C IA Director William J .
asey predicted "it's going to be
cakewalk" as he marched into
closed Senate hearing today to
nswer questions about bis put
uslness dealings and manage-
ent of the spy agency.
Buoyed by new Senate sup.
rt, Casey arrived promptly f«
is appearance before the
nate Intelligence Committee.
e was accompanied by CIA
eneral Counsel Stanley
porkin, friend and former Nix·
n administration official
illiam Simon and aides carry-
g two large black document
ags.
The panel questioned Casey
r more than two and a half
ours this morning and then
broke for lunch, summoning him
to return ror more questions this
afternoon. No one would divulge
what happened d uring the
morning session.
Speaking with reporters on the
Capitol steps, Ca.sey said, "I've
been through this before," refer-
ride to past conf"armation bear-
ings for three top positions in the
Nixon administration as well as
his bearings for bis CIA appoint-
ment last January.
On Tuesday afternoon, the
68-year-old Caaey'4 mood
became more 'confidant as bis
four-day counteroffensive
showed signs of making
headway.
"The bottom of the barrel bas
been reached and there's
Sheer Pantyhoee
nothin& there,'' Casey said. "My Emanuel, 28, and his wife, of other military personnel. the counter-revolution."
We la an open boot... Elizabeth, 2:7, was not revealed. Bani-Sadr said he would be It was a return visit to France
An aide to one Republican on Regular Emanuel wedding s taying in France until the peo· for Bani-Sadr, who spent 14
the committee, Richard G. dresses start around $5,610. pie or Iran "folJow the path of years in exile there during the
Lugar of Indiana, declared flatly democracy." regime of the late Shah Moham·
that the matter ·h'ad been "laid Diana's low-heeled s lippers "I think that events d em· mad Reza Pahlavi, took to were in ivorv silk, top-stitched t t th i l f h p · · d d · 1 · to rest'' and Democra•· Lloyd "'--ons ra e e res s ance o t e a ris1an r ess an soc1a ist .... with pearls and sequins and the 1 " h 'd d I · d · d h Bentsen of Texu and Patrick peop e, e sa1 . an c a1me economics an taug t at the
Leaby of Vermont said they had .-s_u_e_d_~_so_les_ed_g_ed_in_g_o_ld_. ____ t_h_a_t _a_bs_te_n_u_· o_os_i_n_th_e__::.e_:le:..:.c..:..:tl..:..:o:...n __ u_n_i_ve_r.....:s..:..:it..:.y_:o:...f:..:.P:..:.ans=-=· :..:.· ____ _
seen nothing yet to justify
Casey's resignation.
After a t hree-hour closed
session Tuesday to review what
its staff had learned abou t
Casey, the committee sum-
moned blm to testify under oath.
He had asked the panel Sunday
to let him tell bis side of the
story as soon as possible in an
effort to quickly exUnguish the
controversy surrounding his
tenure.
Control Top Parttyhoee
Light Support P1ntyhOM
Knee Hight
$2.25
$2.75
' $3.95
2/$1 .75
--~UffiU~
Medfly helicopters
get security aid
LOS GATOS <AP> -In the
wake or suspected sniper at·
tacks, security aircraft wUI ac·
company helicopters scheduled
to complete today the second
round or aerial pesticide spray·
ing against the Mediterranean
fruit fiy.
A bullet hole from a rifle was
discovered Sunday in the taU
section or a private helicopter
under contract to the state for
the pesticide spraying program.
The incident, reported Tuesday,
caused no injuries or serious
damage to the helicopter.
In a separ ate incident,
helicopter pilots said they SUS·
peeled another sniper attack
had occurred early Monday. No
one was injured.
Medfly eradication project of·
ficlals, apparently undaunted by
the incidents, said helicopter
pilots would spray the pesticide
malathion over urban areas in
daylight hours today. the third
daylight aerial assault since
airbone treatments began July
14.
A third round or chemical
spraying over a 257·square·mile
zone south or San Francisco is
scheduled to start early Mon·
day.
"We take this incident very
seriously," said medfly project
director Jerry Scribner of the at·
lacks. "I'm concerned for both
the pilots and the people Ol'J the
ground.
··Unfortunately. we have
rhetoric in some communities
about the dangers or spraying
that Increases the anxiety Ln
some people . . . "
The spraying ls considered a
iast·ditch effort to atop the
spread of the potentially crop.
destroying fruit fly into the
fertile San Joaquin Valley, about
40 air miles from the infested
zone.
California produces about S4.7
billion annually in produce
vulnerable to the med.fly, lnclud·
ing apricots, peaches and all
citrus fruits.
In the project's second
daylight spraying mission Tues·
day, hundreds of residents wor·
ried or angry about exposure to
the pesticide called police to
complain.
Today's spraying began a few
minutes before midnight when
four choppers doused 20 square
mlles of Milpitas and San Jose
with malathion, said medfly
eradication project spokesman
Froilan Plaza. The aircraft set
down after three hours and were
to resume the spraying when
mornifllt foJl lifted.
Officials said no arrests had
been· made in the sniping inci·
dents. Both air and ground
security was increased.
Police and state Fish and
Game wardens trailed the
helicopters on the ground Tues·
day as a California Highway
Patrol helicopter provided an
aerial escort.
Security has been increased at
the private helicopters' ground
bases at Moffett Field and San
Jose Municipal Airport.
••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e e We are establishing a pool of small money len· • e ders to assist us in the final stage of completion of e
• our chilling feature film "The Hunting Season". •
With already 4200 PAY/CABLE-TV stations
• begging for films along with Network/Local T.V. •
• gobbling up movies so fast it has caused an •
almost frcmJu: demand for pictures.
• So get on the bandwagon with a young and am· e
• bilious movie studio here in 0 C. and en1oy some e
hand10me profits for yourself both now and in the
• future. •
•••••• 714 / 957-.o&8 •••••••
~--.~
Daily Pilat
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charge it~-by phone
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ca II 540-1220 toll·f ree.
•
DEAD AT 78-Edwin W.
Pauley, chairman of Pal.lley
Petroleum in Los Angeles
and adviser to four presi·
dents, died Tues day in
Beverly Hills .
Charges filed
in injured
skater case
LOS CERRITOS, Calif. CAPl
Charges of attempted murder
a nd assault with a deadly
weapon have been filed against
a motorist accused of running
down third-ranked U.S. ice
dancer Barry Hagan, leaving
him with a broken ankle, a
broken leg, a concussion and
multiple cuts and bruises.
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Detective Larry Tomes said the
motorist, Betty MacNeil, 37, of
Long Beach, was scheduled for
arraignment today in municipal
court here.
Hagan, 23, of Bellflower, was
working as a security guard at a
store in a Lakewood shopping
center when the incident oc·
curred July 14.
._.._. _...... ..... -....... '
Orange Coa&t DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
New triitl
prepared
for Buorw
LOS ANGELES (AP> -With
the Angelo Buono cas~ now in
the hands of the state attorney
general, a possible battle was
looming over Buono's right to a
speedy trial ln the controversial
Hillside Strangler prosecution.
Superior Court Judge Ronald
George, who approved transfer
of the case from the Los Angeles
County District Attorney's of·
flee, set a hearing for Thursday
to find out whether new pros·
ec utors will be ready for
Buono's scheduled trial Sept. 15.
Buono's attorney, Gerald
Chaleff, said be will fight any
further postponements.
"I'm not pleased by any de-
lay," Chaleff , told reporters.
"We want lo go to trial. We
think we have a good case. We
don 't think the r e 's e nough
evidence to convict Mr. Buono of
anything."
He said that a delay 10 days ·
beyond Sept. 15 would infringe
on Buono's right to a speedy
trial -possible grounds for dis·
missal.
"It's my belief Angelo Buono
is entiUed to go lo trial by Sept
25," Chaleff said.
District Attorney John Van De
Kamp. who asked the attorney
general to take over the case he
called "a hot potato." said if the
new prosec utors are "quick
studies" they could read the 57
volumes of pre· trial testimony.
evaluate evidence and bo ready
to go in six weeks.
Van De Kamp decided to
bounce the case out of his office
after losing a bid to dismiss
charges because he saw the case
as unwinnable.
In an almost unprecedented
action. the judge refused to dis·
miss saying Buono's fate should
be decided by a jury .
AP •
CONTROVERSIAL TOT Actress Lynn Red~rave holds het.-•
3·week·old daughter Annabel Lucy following a L
Angeles news conference in which she and husband Jobit··
Clark outlined their contract dispute with CBS and
Uni versa! Studios. The problem is that Miss Redgrave
wants to breast feed her chi ld between filming sessions of
the TV series .. House Calls ...
Sailor death trial set
SAN DIEGO (AP > -A sailor
wh o died aboard the USS
Ranger after allegedly being
forced to perform disciplinary
exercises while on a diet of
bread and water has been "vin-
dicated" by the Navy's decision
to discipline the ship's com·
mander and 27 crewmen.
' The Navv said Tuesday that•
Capt. Dan A. Pedersen, skip~
of the aircraft carrier, was ~1
cused of dereliction of duty in
the April 14 death of Airman
Recruit Paul Trerice, 20, ~ ....
Algonac, Mich. The ship W:a.s
stationed at Subic Bay in the'
Philippines at the time.
. '
5~ o.f:a Master ... As Distincti.ve as Wlim it ~ 6e founii
TH~. LeacUng Distributor of fine AJ1 .
\ ---
W"W" ....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981 •
.............
BIROS IN FORMATION The Snowbirds.
flight demonstration pilots or Canadian
armed forces, fl y over Lake Michigan in ar·
row formation Friday. The Snowbirds were
practicing for Chicago's annual Air and
Water Show due Saturday and Sunday.
Weapons cuts
eyed by Army
WASHINGTON <AP> Escalating costs may
force the Army to scale down plans for expanding
its arsenal with expensive modem equipment such
as the M·l tank, the Army's No. 1 general says.
"There are programs that may have to be
cut," Gen. Edward C. Meyer. Army chief of staff.
said in a recent interview. "The question is
whether the additional expense <for such equip-
ment) is worth the additional capability.
"We'll end up where there will be a mix of
more modern equipment and with equipment not
quite so modem, not quite so capable." Meyer
added.
He singled out the two most expensive new
Army weapons -the $2.5 million M·l tank and the
$1.2 million infantry fighting vehicle, which the
Pentagon described earlier this year as "the lead-
ing edge of the Army's program for modernizing
its combat vehicle fleet."
"We'll have to ... determine if we want to go
to 7, 100 M-ls or whether there is another number
that, in the total amount of resources that we have,
makes more sense," Meyer said.
He also indicated that officials are reviewing a
plan for the ultimate purchase of 6,800 infantry
fighting vt!h.icles.
Altbougtf he specified no other m'ajor pro-
grams, he made it clear that other costly new
equipment is being reviewed. For example, it is
understood that Army officials are wondering if
saving a few minutes in transmitting messages is
worth the cost of very advanced computer-assisted
com municaUons gear.
Meyer is pushing a new approach to force
structure and equipment planning because he
believes the Army "must take advantage of new
ideas" to reshape it for the broader global scope or
the Reagan administration strategy. Previous
strategies focused resources on meeting the Rus·
sians in Central Europe and defending South
Korea.
The Army chief says signifi cant numbers of
58-ton M·l tanks could be replaced by 20-ton tanks
built around an existing chassis. The Army is ask·
Ing Pentagon leaders to speed design and develop-
ment of such a tank, which could be airlifted more
easily to spots such as tbe Persian GuJI.
A basic theory is that the new tank would sur-
vive on the battlefield through greater agility
rather than heavy armor protection.
Meyer also is considerint a mix with.In combat
divisions of the present lhin-allinned, unarmed
M-113 troop carriers and the heavier infantry
fi ghting vehicles carryint a 25-mllllmeter an-
titank gun, machine tuna and TOW antitank mis-
siles.
A new light division can be used In le11s·
developed areas aa well u Central Europe, ac-
cording to Meyer. It would have many more
antitank guided missiles than present mechanized
and infanty divisions aa well u enchanced anti-
aircraft weapona and lncreued electronic warfare
weapons to knock out enemy communications.
Tighter license
rules sought
WASHINGTON <AP) -American medical
schools, arguJng that physician training overseas
ia inferior to achoolint In the United States, are
seeking touaber licensinl requirements for
foreign-traJned doctors.
Charles Fentress, public relatJont director for
the AslociatiCJo of American Medical Colleges.
said this week the or1anl1aUon la promoting more
stringent llcen1tn1 examlnaUona for forelgn-
trained medical 1tudeotl.
The auodaUon ii artulnl Ulal the increaslnl
number of medical 1chool1 chartered abroad and
operatmi partly in the United SUta ls th.reatenin&
80 years of lmprovementl In U.S. medical care
and educaUon.
Fentre11 Hid the aasoclaUoa ii most con-
cern~ about the tralnina Siven American cltben.s
at foreign medical 1chool1. TheM studenta take an
easier examinat.lon than do non-Amerkan 1tudent1
who wpt a.o obtain cUnJcal lrain.lnf or practice
in the United Statea. .
He said Uae potltlon by the aNOCiaUon'1 ex-
ecuUve counctl wH not related to Pftdicttons that
there will be a eurplua of 10,000 doctors by 1990.
The ,..port by the Graduate Medical EducalJon
Natloul AdvilOl'Y Committee sua•ted that one
way a.o eurb tbe 1urphq wu a.o reduce t.he number
of fonlp-lnlned dotton allowed to practlce in
t.hi• COWllrJ. ·•Our: .,..umentl are not baled on number1,"
f'enU.. Aid In a telepbooe lntervt.w. "Our ar1u-
1nentl .,.. bueid oa Ute quality of physician.a
U'alned atioed."
Women cadets excluded from cruise
LA VERNE (AP> -It'll be anchors awelah
Sunday for about a doien male cadetl from a local
Junior R<n'C unJt, but not for 10 women cotleagues
who Wft'e excluded from a two-week Navy cruise
to Canada because, the Navy claims. the ahlp haa
no quartera for them.
·•we blew It," Navy Capt. Dale Patterson sald
of the mlxup that left the female cadets In
Lutheran Hlah School's Junior ROTC proanm an-
gry and disappointed.
"We were told ln the betlnnJng that there were
10 berths for men and 10 berths for women," com-
plained Beverly Newman or Claremont. "1 was
lookinll forward to it all summer. The guys are
still going, in fact two more men are going now
that the women can't."
Patterson said that when the cruise aboard the
. .,
: f 1
Taste e
U.S.S. Tripoli waa In the planning stage, a Navy
staffer had led the school to believe women would
be welcome. However when a formal appllcation
was submJtted by the Tripoli an amphibious
helicopter assault ship -to Navy authorities, the
women were deniejl permiulon to participate
"There Is no additional berthing space availa-
ble for females. 10 requeata for overnight cruises
are routinely denled," said Patterson. He noted
that it wa1 only ln October 1978 that Congress act-
ed to allow uaslgnment of female officers and
enlisted personnel to non-combat ships. A program
to modify living quarters appropriately has been
1u n d e r w a y s i n c e l h e n .
"When further a ccommodations for women
are available, overnight cruise options will be ex-
tended lo female members or youth organiza-
.. ,.
.·
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in a flour tortilla then deep fried to
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The California Burrito®. It's an
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f N
lions," Patterson said
The women cadets, however, aald they had
been told they were being left out because of Navy
policy barring women from combat ships aucb a.a
the Tripoli, even during peacetime.
School officials were apparenUy under the
same impression. A school newsletter malled to
parents last week s aid: "Seema someone re-
minded someooe somewhere up the chain that
Congress enacted into law that women may not be
used in combat, an amphibious helicopter assault
s hip Is a floating combat base, ergo women may
not travel on this particular ship."
But Patterson said the statement was based on
an "incorrect assumption" and added that women
are routinely allowed on combat ships for day
cruises.
.:·.·-~-·-·
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l '
Daily Pilat
.. -•
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
• -----·---·---
HUITllGTll lllCH If 1111111 VllllY
FEATURES 84
COMICS 86
TELEVISION 812
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... 89
D
0
Anthony's
problems
haunting
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony's personal problems
would not go a way when he took
his seat Tuesday for the first
time since being sentenced for
assaulting his wife.
Two people addressed the
council calling for Anthony's
r es ignation , a nd four
sign-carrying protesters waved
signs throughout the meeting -
one implying that Anthony
should be jailed because the
assault involved use of a gun.
Anthony's wife Elaine and
another city resident addressed
the council in s upport of
Anthony.
City resident Gene Peters told ·
t he council that Anthony's
conduct was "a desecration of
family life." He said Anthony
should leave public life until he
completes therapy to solve his
problems.
Another city resident who
identified himseU only as Mr.
Lyons s aid Anthony s hould
resign because no one s hould sit
in a "ruling position" who has
been convicted of a crime.
City resident H. Hersch said
Anthony s hould not r esign
because h e h as a r ight to
"liberty and justice for all" as
cited by America's founders. · · i say Art Anthony doesn't
nave to go any pl ace -he
deserves to be treated like a
bu m an being ," Hersch said.
Mrs . Anthony said her
husband deserves praise "for
standing up to this humiliation
with true grit,"
Sh e asked his detra ctors
"Were you in our home that
night (of the assault)? Did you
hear the testimony in court? Did
you consult our physicians?
Were you the victim?"
The protesters: one of whom
said to Mrs. Anthony "show us
the scar " -an apparent
reference to a wound s he
received in the assault as she
made her way to the podium,
carried signs saying "Use a gun
-go lo jail," "Law for all?"
"Stop domestic Vi olence." and
"Keep armed white desperados
out of our neighborhoods.··
Two ot the sign carriers spoke
out without being recognized
throughout the meeting, one
shouting "Seig Heil" on several
occasions.
Anthony was fined SS.000 and
ordered lo serve three years'
probation for the assault.
Members of the public have
asked for Anthony's resignation
during many of the Irvine City
Co uncil m eetings h e has
attended since April 9, the day
on which he is alleged to have
beaten his wife with his fi sts and
inflicted a gr azing g uns hot
wound on her scalp.
Anthony says he is in the
process of contacting citizens to
get a consensus on whether he
sh ould rem ai n on the City
Council for the duration of his
term. which extends through
J une of 1982.
County trash
haulers g e t
rate inc rease
Tr ash collectors who· ser ve
commercial establishments in
unincorporated Orange County
co mmunities h ave b een
awarded a 12 percent rate in·
crease by the county Board of
Supervisors.
The incr e ase was recom -
mended by Ray Rhoads, Interim
manager of the county Waste
Management Program, follow-
ing an analysis or cost increases
raced by the disposal firms.
The amoun(of the increase is
lied lo the escalation or the
Consumer Price Index, accord-
ing to a r e port to county
s upervisors.
Commercial establis hments
have been paying between S30
and $50 per week for trash col-
1 e c ti on, depending o n the
number of times the refuse is
p~cked up.
Library service
offer ed b y phone
R e1ldent1 ln Costa Mesa,
Fountain Valley, Irvine and
La1una Beach, who are confined
lo tbeit homes because of ill·
neas or lnJury, can set llbrary
aervice by telephone.
Under a Pl'Olfam started by
tbt Oranse County Library
ty1tem, resldenta can call for
book•, mafaalnee, record.I and
CH .. ttH, wblcb will be d•·
lhered to their bomel by volunteers.
County mulls
ways to build
own freeways
Cleltr,....
By GLENN SCOTT
Of -Oelt' ...... SUH
While a Caltrans official was
explaining Tuesday that the
state highway system is essen·
tially complete in Orange Coun·
ty, local leaders were tinkering
with ways lo build their own
freeways.
This 1s how the modular home m Fountam Valley·s Coloma Juarez Looked as 11 was being installed three
months ago.
In two separate public hear·
ings , the county Board of
Supervisors reviewed a report
listing 14 ways and methods for
raising money for freeways and
s tate Sen Paul Carpenter held a
legislative bearing to discuss
traffic problems.
R eside n cy
for w e lfare
challe n ged
An Or ange County Superior
Court judge said Tuesday that a
controversial 30 -day county
residency r eq uirement for
general relief welfare applicants
will get its day in court next
month. ·
The residency requirement was
imposed in June by members of
the county Board of Supervisors
who were s uspicious that the
county-paid general relief fund
was being depleted by people
crossing the county line to get
higher monthly checks than
they'd receive 10 their own
counties
The policy was established by
the supervisors despite warnings
that it could be interpreted to be
unconstitutional
On Tuesday, the Orange County
Legal Aid Society filed the first
lawsuit to challenge the residency
requirement. The test case suit
was filed by lawye r Nanc)
Kaufman on behalf of Alenna
Albanese. a former resident who
recently returned from Al a bama
Judge Leonard Goldstein
refused during a hearing Tuesday
to strike down the requirement,
instead setting a hearing on the
matter on Aug 18 in Judge
Edward Wallin's court.
Goldstein also ordered Lhe
county to pay Ms Albanese
welfare payments retroactive to
her first application on July 14.
The legal aid society is a
quasi-public agency which gives
legal services to persons who
otherwise couldn't afford them
Pa rt of its funding comes from the
federal and county governments.
Legal aid lawyers have been
skeptical o f the count y's
residency requirement since the
supervisors began considering it
as a way of reducing the county·s
annual welfare payments
"For a ppa rentl y political
reasons, the county has launched
a blatantly unlawful attempt to
de prive the most helpless and
needy of the necessities of life."
the lawyers said in the s uit.
Valley 25th
fest planned
The Fountain Valley City
Coun c i l has appointe d 10
res iden ts to a com m ittee
assigned lo begin preparations
for the city's 25th birthday
celebration, June 13, 1982.
The committee will meet
Thurs day with Ma yor Ben
Nielsen lo start planning the
event .
Appointed lo the committee
were Hazel Courreges, Ellery
Deaton, Bill OeFraga, Margaret
Krukenberg, Betty Mignanelli,
Robert Mohan, Gary Pulford,
Zita Wessa, Jan Wilhelm and
Woody Young.
The completed . landscaped version of the factory-bu1l1 house has been sold for between $120 ()()() and $140.000 .
Modular home debated
Valley residents focus on Co Zonia Juarez house
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
01 tlle o.llr P'I ... S'-ft
Eleven weeks ago, the two
halves of a modular home, lack·
in~ a finished roof and siding,
were moved onto a vacant lot in
Fountain Vall e y's Colonia
Juarez community:
Some nearby residents, con·
cerned t hat the factor y.built
house would not match the stan·
da rd of other new homes in the
t rans iti onal neighborhood,
quickly gathered more than 100
signatures and protested to city
officials.
Fountain Valley offi cials said
l hey had no authority over
modular homes. which must
meet standards set by the state.
Today, the modular home on
Calle lndependencia is complet·
ed a nd landscaped. It recently
sold in the $120,000 to $140,000
range and will be occupied soon.
But as interest in modular
h o m es grows, t he Colonia
Juarez community continues to
debate whether the new factory·
built residence in their midst
represents a boon or bl ight.
"I see it as being out of
place," said Roy Regalado, who
lives just a few houses away.
"It's not an eyesore, but it's un·
derbullt for this area."
Regalado is a home designer
who currently is vice chairman
of the Co l o n ia Ju a rez
Neighborhood Association. He
owns two adjacent lots on Calle
lndependencia and lives in an
older home on one of them.
He plans to tear down the
older home within three years
and build two $225,000 houses on
his lots.
Colonia Ju~ez is one of the
oldest neighborhoods in Foun-
tain Valley. It Is south of Warner
IT'S OUT OF PLACE'
.'Veighbor Ray Regalado
Avenue and west of Ward Street.
Older homes, large vegetable
gardens and Junk-filled fi elds
dot the area, but t hese ar e
gr adually being replaced by
modern custom -built homes,
some ronstructed by the original
property owners.
Regalado ptedlct s that tne
trans formati on o f Colo nia
Juarez will be completed within
five year s. At that time, he
believes the new modular home
will rank below community stan·
dards. ·
Ellie Watson. a Fountain
Valley rea lto r who was a
partner in four homes recently
built and sold m co1on1a Juarez,
disagrees.
"It can't do anything but up·
grade the neigh bor hood, .. she
said.
Ms. Watson said her four
hom es were on the market for a
full year before they finally
were sold.
··w e practicall y gave them
away," s he said. The realtor
claims the new homes would
have sold for $180,000 anywhere
else in Fountain Valley or Hunt·
ington Beach. She said the
t ra nsitional character of the'
neighborhood scared off some
buyers.
She said her homes ultimately
sold in the $150,000 to $160.000
r ange.
She agreed, however. that the
community is improving and
predicted home prices there will
soar within a few years .
Mayor Ben Nielsen calls the
renewal effort in Colonia Juarez
"the greatest thing happening in
the city."
He said hi s reser vations about
the new modular home s te m
from the city's lack of control
over the building standards of
such units.
T he l,750·square.foot modular
house was constructed by LCS
Homes, Inc., based in Fountain
Va lley.
LCS President Glenn D. Nevitt
said be has encountered similar
com m unity skepticis m some
"3,000 times." He said his com-
m unity has sold factory.built
homes in Orange and San Diego
counties and throughout the
western sta tes.
·'When they see something
come in on wheels. they lb1nk
lt 's a trailer ," Nevill observed.
Ex-FV aide heads Mesa school He claims the state's factory.
built home standards are more
strict than local reguJaUona and
that his homes are bulll of
tougher materials than conven-
tional housing. A former Huntington Beach
scbool administrator was named
principal ol Costa Mesa High
School Tuesday night by the
Newport-Men Unified School
Oistrlc\ board.
He ls OonaldG. Champlln,,7,or
Modesto.
Champlln, who starts his new
duties Monday, wu the principal
of two Modealo bttb schools
durln1 the paalslx years.
He aerved u Fountain Valley
HJ1h School a11bt.&nt principal'
between 1M7 and 1980 and held a
1lmllar poet at £dlson High from
1969 to 1'74 wh n he moved on to.
Mo d esto, a Newport·Meta
district spokeswoman said.
Champlin was a counselor at
Westminster High, another
Huntington Beach UnJon Hiab
School District school, trom 1965
to 1967.
The Modesto man waa oneol 15
applicants aeeklns the Costa
Mesa post vacated by Robert
Packer.
Packer accepted an a11l1tant
superintendent'• poet with 1'Uslin
UnlCied School Dlstrtct earlier
lhlnummtr.
Three tlnaUsu were selected
from amona ~ applicant.a for
Pac ker 's JOb by a screening
committee composed of school
administrators. teachers and a
student.
Superintendent John Nicoll and
hls deputy , Norman Loats,
recommended Champlin for the
princi pa l'• job follo w l na
lnlervtews with the flnaUsta.
Champlin is a former Navy
pilot who began his teaching
careerlnl961.
He earned hls bachelor's
degree at UCLA, and a master's
credentlal at Cal Stale Lona
Beach
He •nd bis wlte have two
dau1hten.
Hutton n e w chief
of city attorneys
Huntln1ton Beach Clty At·
torney Gail Hutton ba1 been
e lected president of the
California Elected City At-
torneys AasoclaUon, a new or·
ganlzatJon for chief le1al of·
ficers o( chartered cities.
The new iroup held tu elee-
tJon reef'l\Uy at a meetlna In
Redondo Beach.
Al issue behind both hearings
1s a county plan to build two new
freeways to handle expected
traffic increases from new de-
velopment in the south county
a nd continued "densification" in
urban areas.
The freeways would run along
the 27 -mile Foothill Corridor,
where a proposed $365 million
road would link the Riverside
Freeway near Santa Ana Can·
yon with San Clemente, and the
14-mile San Joaquin Hills Cor·
rid or. where a $250 million
h ighway would run fro m
Newport Beach to San Juan
Capistrano.
County transportation plan·
ners claim that without the new
freeways and substantial im-
p ro vem en ts to the present
system county commuters
will be mired In traffic in 10 to 15
years.
Tom Jenkins, executive direc·
tor for the Orange County
Trans portation Co mmission ,
told Carpenter Tuesday that
forecasters predict a 51 percent
increase in population, a 100 per·
cent jump in jobs and a 108 per·
cent rise in daily personal trips.
··orange County, as with other
Southern California counties,
will be looking al billion dollar
parking lots. called freeways, in
t he ver y ne ar future unless
something is done today," he
said.
Adding to the local dismay is
the fact that neither of the two
fr eeways is sc he duled by
Caltrans for cons truction, ac·
cording to Heinz Heckeroth, re·
gion a l Caltr an s director .
H eckeroth said m ost o f
Caltrans' future work will be in
"f in e t uning'' its existing
freeways to relieve spot conges·
lion.
Carpenter, D·Cypress. has ad-
vocated charging tolls to pay for
new freeway construction. He
repeated that point Tuesday dur·
ing the hearing in Santa Ana of
the Senate Select Committee on
Southern California Transporta·
tion Problems.
"I don't think we can count on
federal or stale aid to solve all of
our problems," he said. "I think·
we'll have to solve some or our
problems ourselves "
Charging lolls is one of several
methods listed in the new report
to the supervisors on freeway
financing. Others include local
in creases in gasoline or sales
taxes. parking s urcharges,
severance taxes on mining
natural resources, "sin taxes"
on alcohol or tobacco s ales,
e mployer payroll laxes, impact
fees for new developments and
creation or assessment districts.
After reviewing the report. the
board or super visors decided
Tu esday to es t ablis h a
Transportation Funding Ad ·
v1sory Committee t<l supervise
future financial transactions and
investments.
John Gibson. the county's rev·
enue bond adm inistrator, said
he hopes that a finan cing
me thod could be selected so
voters could vo te to approve
bond measures, if necessary.
during t he 1984 general elec-
tions.
He noted that the county is in
a position to be "creative" in
mixing ways of drawing and in·
vesting revenue.
Meanwhile. supervisors Ralph
Cla rk a nd Bruce Nestande
stressed that the county should
adopt a ·•pay-as-you-go" policy
as a top priority. Too much de-
pe nde n ce on bonds , Cl a rk
warned, could cause "financial
havoc" in the county
Dog lice nses
available at
HB libraries
Animal licenses will be avalla·
bl e at Huntlnaton Beach
libraries through 5 p.m. Frid_,.
The do& Ucense fee la $12.50 or
half that for altered animals.
Aller Aug. 1, the licenses will be
available only at Hunllncton
Beach City Hau, a nd a 50·cent
late penalty will be charted.
Se nior clU..n1 are not re-
quired to PIY tor doa Ucensea
tbrouth July ll, but will be
char1ed the lat. f• after that dale.
Dot license Infor mation I•
avaUable by caJUna Huntington
Beac.b animal control oflicu
Glen Davitoa, MO.-a.
L
Orange Coat OAJLY PILOT/Wednnday, July 29, 1981
.Moscow
Ap
PATH OF DARKNESS The total solar
eclipse expected Friday will darken a path
across the Soviet Union. Soviet officials are
calling the event a ""Soviet eclipse" because
CHINA
.............
the 5,000-mile route crosses Russian territory
from the Black Sea to the KuriJ Islands in the
Pacific.
Sci.entists fear syphilis
may become drug-immune
WASHJNGTON <AP) -Genetic material
isolated from the bacterium that causes syphilis
has scientists worried that the dangerous venereal
disease may be quickly developing an immunity to
penicillin and other antibiotics.
There is no evidence that it has happened yet,
researchers said Tuesday. But if resistance should
develop, an uncontrollable form of the sexually
transmitted disease could emerge, they said.
Untreated, the disease can cause nerve, brain
and heart damage, blindness. and birth defects in
the babies of infected mothers.
The researchers said in a report published this
week in Science magazine that they have found for
the first time genetic material in the syphilis or-
ganism that could possibly render antibiotics inef·
fective.
The discovery lends credibility to the warning
that emergence of penicillin-resistant syphilis
"may be imminent," said Ors. Michael V.
Norgard of the University of Texas at Dallas and
James N. Miller of the University of California al
Los Angele.s.
MilJer said the potential problem is so great
that scientists should start looking for other
syphilis treatments now in case resistance de·
velops.
"As a result of this study, I have a program
goini with the Los Angeles health department in
~hich we are trying to find a case in which a pa·
t1ent does not respond to penicillin," said Miller. a
professor of microbiology and immunology
"U we find a case, it could mean the genie is
out of the bottle," he added.
. Norgard said in an interview that h~ found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid in the syphilis bac-
terium, known as Treponema pallidum <Tp).
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the basic
s ubstance of heredity. It makes up the genes that
pass the traits of an organism Crom generation to
generation.
Norgard said plasmids are DNA not necessary
for the growth or survival of an organism,. but wh~c~ play a major role in transferring charac·
teristics to and from an organism.
The plasmid found in the Tp organism does not
appear tc7-have a drug-resistant gene in it now, but
he said it could be potentially dangerous in two
ways.
There could be a precursor, or immature
gene ip the plasmid that would mutate into drug re'.
sistance or the plasmid could serve as the receptor
for picking up a resistant gene from another or-
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis, said
Norgard. is that it is not like other bacterial dis-
eases. The disease can stay in the body for de-
cades and do damage long after it is caught. and
side effects are serious. he noted.
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competitive I'm In bUsmess
Wllert an advanced degree
really helps That's wtly I
decided lo 00 fOf my MSA 111
manaoement IVIO though I
had a lut1-11me job dunno the
day.
National University made
graduiite study as easy as
posslblt by ottering all my
courses at nigll1. one course
per mon111.
The qu1h1Y of tnstructton
Clll't be beat. My inswctors
were rut PfOleUIONls wl\o
had solld tKptritnee kl
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CloetOfll" as well Students
tf~ ill 1111111 groups Wlltl
people wtlo hive ambitions
and goalt elmilar to ltlelr
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MBA. NatJonal Unlftnlty, 1NO
We're u ..no.a
'""' you,..1 ISYM ...
OCMno bade to scllOol lor an
advanced c1tOr1e. I highly
1 tcOIM1efl<I Na Ilona I
UnlverS1ty NaUonal
uodefstancn wtial mature,
ca11er ·mtnded people need
and willt In lur thern111 ttie1r
educaUon .,
You 119lster only once lor
a compttte degree program.
Register any worktng day of
lhl year. Choose day 01
evening classes, Whiellever
best Ills your IChedute
Complete one course eaCll
month. fhlre Ill OVfl 30
admission anCI classroom
C41nlers locat,O lllroughoul
Sin Diego, Of ange and Los
Angeles Counties. Financial
alO Is available to lhGlt wl\o
qulllfy.
Our Ill bullneA IC>Ploadl
to stlldy .. llflldY helped
Mr -40,000 OIWt gtt ahead
In M ~ lln'l ll\IS I
OOod "'°"" tor you to 1111 tWted? Call MW lef Ulher
lntormtt!On
----.. ---
Schools get more cash
Huntington District now 'on the l egal side of zero'
When HunUn1ton Beach Union
Hllh School tru1teea alt down
Aus. 4 to dl1cu11 next year'• ~1
million bud1et they wlll have a
new problem how to 1pend
Sl.2 mllllon more than woe ex·
peeled.
In a dillrlct b ael wlth flnan·
chal woes last year that catlled
Mesa g roup
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire group In Costa
Mesa has been named a national
winner for Its program to help
handicapped children under the
1981 HeJp Young America cam-
paign.
The Dandy Lions Blue Bird
Club of Costa Mesa was one of297
winning entries from youth
groups throughout the nation
who created projects to aid the
disabled in their communities.
Working individuaJly with men-
tally retarded students. the 12
club members provided youth
activities during the first six
months of this vear.
Billie Dolley, club leader, said
the youngsters made special
crafts s uch as friendship rings,
sa ng songs, played ga m es ,
danced and shared friendships.
··From the start.·' she said,·' we
we re received with much love.
Shy children became open, and
the introve rted became en-
th usi as tic.·'
for the reduction of classroom
time for Juniors and seniors, the
layoff of 94 teachers, nearly all
counselors and s .s ad
m fn islralors, such problems
should be welcome news.
However. Charles Hess. ass1s
tant superintendent, warns that
the $1.2 million figure is in
significant compared to the S2 29
million the district had in sa"
in gs last year .
"ll 's Just got us In the black."·
s aid Hess. "It will keep us on the
legal side of zero "
Before the final figures were
received in late June, the dis
trict was staring at a poss1bh.·
$137,000 deficit, said Hess.
Some of the funding returned
to the district from state and
federal sources include :
About S751.000 ror special
educallon programs Earlier
district offlc1als had pro1ected a
$300.000 dcf1c1t
About $400,000 Crom anterest
1rnyments und general fu nd
sources. Earlier the distnt•t had
ant1c1pated a $200.000 deC1clt.
At a recent workshop Supertn·
tendent f'runk Abbott recom·
mendecr that the trustees use
some of tht• SI 2 million windfall
to incr easE:' the student wlloca·
lion f or t(•xthooks a nd
transportation from $75 to $85.
Although th(• recommendation
was ununamous ly approved.
Hess smcl ht> expects the rest of
the mon<.') to remain an the dis·
tract's savings al'Counl.
If the• ret·ommt•ndation is
formully ;,idopted at the Aug 4
mt•t·I 1ng 1 t IA. 111 ('Ost Sl 75.000.
Hes'> s;JHI
Services h e ld
Funeral services were held an
Pomona Monday for Newport
Beach r esident A. R Lance
Loud, a forme r machine works
i>wner and an avid sports hs h
!?rman who died Friday at
Hoag Memorial Hospital · He
was 74
A native of Eta\\anda, Loud
owned and operated Loud
Ma c hine Works in P omona
where he also was a board darec
tor fo r Pomona Vallev Com
munity Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elks Lodge
Loud was considered the
founding member of the Bovs
Club m Pomona ill-moved to
N t'Y. purl last } ear and was a
membt•r of the Lo., Pescadores
of N cwp<1rl Beach and several
''th c r r .... 111 n g :rn d h u n t i n g
groups
tie,.., ... unl\t>d II\ has y,afe
\'\ o nnt' a rlau~hil·r Al ace
H1ehardsun of Pomona. and a
brother, llarf) W Loud of
Hc·dl;ind ~ Ill' also lc•a \'t:'S a
1-{randdaughl(•r. a gr;indwn and
four gn•at grandchildn·n
:\l<'monal c·ontnbul1ons may
IJl' mack lo the· Hoag ~lt·monal
Ho~pital I lt•arl Fund
THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER
HOURS: Every Day • 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.
EVENINGS WEEKENDS HOLIDAYS
FREE! BLOOD PRESSURE
CMECI< IWITM ADI
--BTBIEll al FM
•Fully Oual1f1ed Physician On Duty For Trealmenl Of
Illnesses ln1ur1es And Rou11ne Checi.. Ups
•X·Ray & Laboratory Fac11 1,es
•Reasonable Medical Office Fees At LarQe Savings Over
Emergency Fees
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH 17672 BEACH BLVD., H.B. 848-9600 (Between Slater & Talbert! -tt<>W ••• ~ Hut1.ti"1qtot\I Beo..cltl ~p FOOr\to.·,~ Vo.\\e~... \
#!1-/tUJli 9RODUCE!
46~
B ib
Limit
Cluln ..... A ..... 1.
MIA/llA PEOPLJE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR:
.,.....(114) 117.... It ,...('P'M) MN71'1 Lee ..._...(Ill)~ -...................... _. .. _ ........ -........... ..... ....... ~ ............. -,_...._._ .. _.._... ....... c..,. .• -..-........ c-.
Coupon savings, .Complete Stocks, Local News and Spo rts,
and Advertised values. I ·1 Pil-' READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the II J UI
'
I
It
' •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 29. 1981 •••
NYSE CO MPOSITE T RANSACTION
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Get mare value for your dime
with the famous Otme-A-line
' ods where items worth up to
iso .9111 fastbffijl Saturday in tlle l11Jlfl~...!..
New car sales in 1960 w~re the pits -and
they 're not much better this year Given the cost of
< l > buying a new vehicle and (2) then feedlna. lnsur
Ing and main· ~ lainin~ it, mo.st l ·
Americans 1n ~' o
searc h of r n' w~eels end up ~ ... ~ with a used car i:~=-.. ~~_.. .. ______ _
~:u f :~~ ~u;~ lllTDI IDlllllTZ
maintain it. but
your initial cost is much less.
Used car sales huve always outstripped new car
sales but the gap today is enormous, as you can ae•'
by the annual census of u1Sed car sales taken by
Hertz, the renl·a ·car outfit owned by RCA . It's ap·
propriate. I suppose, that Hertz has become the
semiofficial source for a lot of information about
automobiles, especially how much it costs to run one.
Hertz is. after all, probably the largest single buyer
of new cars -and 1t has also become the top seller of
used cars off its lots Hertz retails about 80,000 used
cars and trucks a year .
Hert.z figures that Americans bought 18.6 million
used cars in 1980. spending $70 8 billion for them.
Both were records. although the 18.6 million lotal·was
up only slightly from the 18.5 million bought in 1979.
The dollar figure was up 6 percent The typical used
car sold in 1980 was 3.23 years old and had run 32,780
miles. The average price: $3,794
What's striking In the Hertz analysis is the com·
parison of used car sales with new car sales in 1980.
II ere 's how that looked.
Ne w car sales
Domestic models · 6,202.000
Imported models: 2.469,000
Total: 8. 761,000
Used car sales
18,664.000
In summary, used car s ales last year were more
than double the sales of new models. And they were
more than triple the sales of U S -made automobiles.
Even more striking is the Hertz breakdown of
these sales into personal and non·personal use. First.
take used cars Just about all of them are clearly
bought for personal use. The Hertz estimate is that 5
percent may have been bought by companies for
business use That leaves 17.731.000 used cars
purchased in 1980 for personal use
It's quite a different story when you look at new
car sales. Here Her tz estimates that of t he 6,202.000
million U.S -made cars sold in 1980, an incredible
3,892.000 were bought for non·personal use. Included
in that total are all the fleet purchases (Hertz itself
buys about 100.000 new cars a year) and all the sales
to small companies and to individuals who are using
their cars for business purposes.
The net is. though, that only 2,400,000 of the
Detroit models were bought for personal use. By coo·
trast. the foreign car makers sell ver y few of their
vehicles to businesses or rental companies. Hertz
estimates that of the 2,469,000 imported cars sold
here last year, 2,056,000 were bought for personal use
Result: When you look at lhe 1980 car market in
terms of personal use these are automobile6
bought by individuals and families -you get this pie·
lure :
1980 Sales of New Cars for Personal Use u.s .. made cars 2,400,000
Foreign cars: 2,056.000
In short. when 1t comes to new cars bought by
Americans for their personal use. the foreign m akes
are capturing 45 percent of the total business. That's
what these figures from Hertz are telling us.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEW V01'(1((,.Pl FINI Oow·JorM$ a vos.. W"oc~t .. a•y, Jul 21 NEW YORK C,.Pl-Selos, fue• price
~':' ""'v~~:ncies~~.,. ~~~~,:,o•\.~.~t
1ra-:/1no nelloMllV at mo•• tll•n s 1 C:0.0<:olnc 1, 109,toO 9011' + 1'111 Schllb Brw SOt,SOO 1'''> Euon • soo,100 JS•,. ~ StofgtTtch 308,toO JO•I) I~ RowM> 3'2,700 18V. , I~ PrlmeCm JS3,600 2S'lo '-i Soll~rn Co :149,700 11"' ''\ Teuainl 1 310.000 41\lo • ~ ~••1011 l02,400 .. ~ • J'» ,.Ills Cllelm ?tJ,200 n-. " Sony Corp 2'1,000 20'-1'\
Wernrc.om 111,400 ""' '"' T.tndy • 211,000 ~ I'"' CltlHSvce 2'1,300 571, .,, 0...Ttl&EI 161,JOO 7''• 1\
AMERICAN LEADERS
GOLD COINS
Pel Up 113 UP 113 Up 10.S
Up H
Up '·' UP I• Up U Up II Up 11
UP tO Up 1' Up II up J.4 Up 1 o Up U
Up •·' Up •••
)Q Ind •o.61 .... IS '3US ., •. ~ • ON11 H19'1 Low C.... n? '° Tm f0).1• 406.21 J91.JS .01.10-.n IS U!I IOl.IM 109.44 lOl.01 IOI.SO-UI •l Slf1 361 ... J70.'6 >M.fl 366.77-t.t3 lndu• ' . 2,'31.-0 Tr en 1,on,000 Ultl1 116,1'00 u Stk •.•n.soo
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW VORIC CAP) Jul 2t
Aavenctc1 Tocles/1
Oe<llnocl ~ uncn~ -· To\el IHUOI 1174 ....... lllllf\t 10
Ntw lowt U
W><Af AMEa OIO
NEW YORK IAPI Jul 11
METALS
Tocley
23S J27 JOI no t 21
Pr9Y-d;J.
HO 411 lf1' II JC
P...,. o;r.
~ m 12
11
NEW YORK C""PJ Spot nonl•"*-
melel p1I~" tod.ly
C•••" IJ'll·IS ct"b • pownd. U.S. Cltllin•llOM.
l ••• O cenll • pound
llfK ""' Cellta t pound, ClellYltl'tcl. Tift $1.)4ol0 ""'91•1t WMk <-ltt lb-
Al•ml11wn I .. ctnl1 e -· H.V.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
8 'r Tiie ~It ... "'"''
S.eltClect gOld P<k•• •-Y ""'"":CloMcl Pr~: MOS.tt.11a•1 ...
"
..
&•rlcll: IMt llalng t.tOf· 00 ... t.UD; ...
Hiiiei.
MHdY & Mer-•t 9111' d•llY e"91t
MOS•.11rtU'°
.............. only delly q-........ -
a.I.SO. ......... : ... ». ..
SYMBOLS
...
~
'
••a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
-EVE:NltG-~ •• Nlwa ~ KUNQ l'U
Caine'• toy In nn.uy 111\dlng
IMI ~I btolhet 11
lflott-hed
I 'nO TAC DOUGH
M "A•a•H
Mrlf• of dl"'°'"4 or WI~ 11'141fnM "'°'*' Mndl • 1etw to en ldvtoe
oolUfl'lnltt •"• Mdt ktllo ~~ * • • e "Tltil Ooclf1thltf''
( tt721 Mltlon .,endO, Al
Plldno Oitte'ed tw hfll\-
Cla F0td ~ 1-s
Ot\ the ftOWlf by Mano
Pwo. An aging .,.lloeo
-the l>efrlef1 bet""""' hit ldyttlc I~ Hr. 8""
the llertll ,....,... of hie
~ brMk down ..
nil '°"' beooml ~
Jngty ln¥0Nld Jn the 'ltOlertt
l#Oflllng• ol 0tgan1Hd
crime
CZ>MOYll
* ·~ "A Flattvl Of Oyne-
mlte" ( 1117a) J1mu
Cot>um, AOO Steiger. An
lritll f'ftOIUtlonwy and I
MelllCMI tlllef who ,_ uo
to rob banll• eomellOW
wind 119 '*"' herOll Of lhe M9*an rtM>lutlon
.. WNfl Henly gel• ,. die-
~. F'renll concerN
MlllMll with t9klng GOm·
"*"'· • GOOO TIMU
Otwidpe !!vane btlngt •
IS*IMf ou-t ol hie own IQ<
TNnkegMno.
ROYAL WEDDING Barbara Walters ts
Joined by Peter Jennings in a final r e·
port on England's royal wedding tonight
at 9 on Channel 7.
•.aoa an.'MTI°' Lft
Jo ie.tna het tathet I•
•bout to be r-...cl "°"' prllOtl and want• to vltlt
her at tcflOOI. (R)
•• &llCTNC
-1cc..== NICNIWS ~ MCMI 1 * • • "The Young In
... 4'11" (1938) OouglH
P Flil'fbentct Jr., P.W.lta
' Goddard. /. oe'er-do-.... 1
ltamlly of card tharp1
, 1 ~ .,.. Old l.cly who
•• I rwbYN tnem. '•lllCNIE ••iot "Black Magic"
(tMll) Onon Wal .... Alllm
I TM\lfolt. The mY9terlout
c.glloatro I• ~anted
1 from taking ovar '"
amplre.
... "'*"'8 WILD ALL .. THE ,AUil. Y
WNle Qalebratlng Miiie
• and Glotla'• llrtt wedd~
~. the Sllvlca
Md the 1un11 ... """ the
tr_,,.tlc day whet\ Mike
tnl met hie fulU1'9 fAlMt•
In-law.
• ....VHIU
8eMy vWta the llland or
l.Uena ..... lta lowly wom-
en. I KCET ~T
STUOIOI&
"~' St Louie llld•
·~a piua parlot: CN-
C:.00. Olr1 Seoul• play wltt•
1 an eanhball: an ~ h•r·
vt9C In y.,.,._,1 CR)
(1)(8NIW8
" 9 liAAHIY MIU.EA • '\ AliluMlg to enforce an
IMctlon order IAl\dl Bit.
r-.y Jn lhl depat1ment11
~and the man ol
the 12th .... ll09d with
INllllng. fvll-acale -"
on the rurwlown hotel
t (P11112)
(J)MOYIE
"DrHmer" ( 1111g) Tim
M1thMon. SUNn 81akely
A young bowt1r hN to
OYerc:ion. many Obt11Clea
wfllll trying to r..c:tt lor hit
llfe6ong dt-.m. 'PO'
7:00 I CM NlW8 .CNIWS
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Richie ~ romantl·
• ulitt •lll'Kled to an "Older --..··
I =·= W•A•a•H
WNll on ... ve Jn Tokyo,
Hefwy becotr.-Jnlatult.O
with I IWMt young thing
lreeh from the Statet
• I TMETI M 8AH ... ~
A husband returning to
San Francifco from hi•
hOlieymoon contemplat•
murdering hit ,_wife
• OYPEASY
"CrMllvlty" Gu.1' lyfi·
c:lat Swnmy Cahn, quilt·
maker Gr-&rl. (R) O
~ G MAaml. I LEHAEA • MPORT
• • (I) TIC TN:. DOU0+4
0 9 MPV ONf'FIH
GuMtt: Mel Tiltit. Murray
Unot\Otl, Onon w .... CD>WOYIE
"My Bocfyguwd" ( t97g)
• Chrla MM9PMC9, AdllTI
Baldwin. The,_ llld It a
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Chicago lllgh tchool
makae """°' with the achoo! outcut and tOQeth-
., they atand up 10 the Ct\1-
• gllflQ wNefl had PAI'·
MCUted them botn. 'PO'
CZ')¥QVt«
"The Ultlmlle Thrill"
( 1974) Eric BtM<len, Brill
Eltland
7:30 9 2 OH THE TOWN
Hoell Stev1 Edwards,
Melody Rogwt Viti! aome
ol Loe ~· grand Old
hotele; mM4 _., well-
known dothlng dellgner•
I (8 'AMllY f'£UO
SHANA NA
Gue.I: Mickey Giiiey 8 HOlLYWOOO 80UAAES
I FACf TffE MU8tC
All IN TffE FAMILY
Edith eddt • _,10r-d1i2en
wedding and I paJr ol
hOneymoan«a to Arcttle'a
predold llahlng trip plan• 9 MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT 6D FOUA DAY8 OF THE
MA8AI
Membwt of the Mual
tribe -fOllOw9cl for lour
days u they 00 about tflejr
daily 11-In a mm that In
Kenya doM to the Tana.
nlan border
(J) P .M. MAGAZINE
(C)MOVIE • * • "Heidi" (1965) EVI·
Marla Slnghamm«. Ger·
trend Mlttermayr. A ltttle
Swiat gll'l It tallen from her
mountain home In the AJpt
by ,,_ IUftl to the city
(BJ H80 8NEAK PAEVEW
Hust>and·and-wlte eorn1c;a
Jerry Stiller end Anne
Mura lntroduc:. the mov-
lea, apeclata and sport•
event• c;omlng 10 Ho,...
Boll Offlu In August
9.-00 IJ (J) THE ROY Al
WEDOIHG
Hlghlig/ltl of the wedding
of 8r1t11n·1 Prtnce Charlet
to Lady 0;,,,. Spencer
Wl\lch toolt plaoe earlier
today at St Paul't Cethe-
• drat In London, -Mii be Pf•·
_,,ed.
0 8 REAL PEOPLE
Featured • haunted
houM. I wax, mu-.m. the
··ot1lcial" witch ol Salem.
Mau.. an eudltl<><l tor
Clreuti ctowna (R) D MOVIE
••• "Reap The Wiid
Wind" ( tg421 Jottn Wayne,
Suun Hayward An
OCIOp;JS C'81tet trouble
for retidentt or the Florida
Keys In the 111801
8 CHARLIE'S ANGELS
The Angal1 oo undercover
1n • swinging nlgtltclub to
nail 1 muroerous psycno.
path preying on single
women (R)
8 MOVIE
**'h "All The Brothers
Were \/allant" pg53) Rob·
ert Taylor, Stewart
Granoer TWO New Eng·
land wtialfng c:.ptalnt. WhO
are brotheta, part weyt
wt>e<'I they dlugree Ovef
MAreh+ng lor 1 tr-re.
GI P.M. MAGAZINE
A profile of top Hollywood
8 KNXT CBS1 Lv'> A.ng"'P'
D KNBC 1NBC1 LO'> AnqetP' D KTLA 1lnO 1 Los A ng .. e-, G KABC TV I ABC! LO'i Anqp11•-.
(I) >1.FMB (CBS) San D iego
Q KHJ· TV (lnO ) LOS AnqPlrc.
~ KCST \ABC1 San D•eqo
Qt KrTV 1tnd 1 Los AngP""' e KCOP TV !Ind 1 Los Ang1''"'
al) KCEf TV1PBS1Loo; 4n11•1·<.,
~ KOCE TV t PBS1 Hunt•n1~ton Be t~h
~lrdr-JON Ebe<, I
11kl1>9er who m-. Mii·
~" r-laatar, Chef Tiii
l><'Pll'M Chidcen lllev, 0r
Waac:o on eotrectlng )aw
prOblem•: Cathie Minn
meet• 1 celeb<lty pnoto-
~pller. llJ MOVIE * • "Jeul'a Glrla" ( 11175)
Sondra Currie, Rod C•m·
eron. A young gunallnglng
-tldee Ille ''"ii' '" March of Ille daper.00.
WhO killed het hutband E FOUR DA 'l'8 OF THE
MA8AI
~bel'a ol the M1aal
tribe are followed tor lour
daya u they go about thelr
deify livee In 1 lllm 11ho1 In
Kenya ctoM to the Tanu -
ntan bofder. 9 JUUE AHOAEW8
8P£CIAl.
"Julie And 04c:ll In C°"'"t
Garden" Guettl: Oldt Van
Qyke, Cart Reiner
(fl)MOVlE
"Midway" (1g761 Charlton
Hetton. Hen()' Fond• Jap.
an-and American mlll-
llfY forces aquar1 olf tor 1
n1v1l 1t1<1 1erlll battle cen-
, .. .o around 1 PacHlc
lallnd during W orld Wit It
'PG'
(SJ MOVIE * * * * "The Godl'1her"
( 1972) Marton Brando, At
Pactno. Olrected by Fran-
cia Ford Coppola Baaed
on the nova! by Marlo
Puzo An 'Olf\g M1ltoao
-the bamert be'->
1111 lcfylllc lllTltly Nie and
the harsh realities ol hll
butl-break down 11
hit sont become lncre••·
lngly Involved In the violent
work ings ol organllld
crime
QMOVIE
"The lllewman Shame·· A
-a11ny ea.cop and hll
glrtlnenc:t. while 11tempung
to tolve a lrler>d's autc1de.
uncover 1n eJCtortlOn rack·
et witn connections 10
underground pomographtc
mo\lle9,'R'
1:30 ID TOP STORY
Hosta Jim Thorn" Mary
lnge<toll
8:31 COJ KEEP IN TOUCH
t:oo IJ CJ) MOVIE * • • ·cnamp1ont A
Love StCI')'" ( 1g7g) Joy
LeOuc. Jam1t Vincent
McNtcllol Two young peo-
ple combine their tkatlng
lllents and go 1tt8f the
n1t1onal paJrt figure skit·
Ing ct\ampl0nsh1p (RJ a a OIFFAEHT
STAOl<£8
Arnold IS buMld 10 a !><evl
ously alt-wt.rte aubu•ban
IChOOI (R)Q D Im CHARLE8 ANO
DIANA: THE ROYAL
WEOOINO
Pater Jennings end Barb•·
ra Watters report on the
wedding ol Brltlln'a Prince
Charlet to La¢i' Diena
SPMC*. whtCtl took place
aarller today at St Paurs
Cath.Orll In London
ID MERV GRIFFlN
Guetta Mel Tlltls, Murray
Langston, Orson Wet•••.
Peta 81rbut11, w 1111e Ty-le<
and Lnter. Michael Park• m THEHlDOEN
8TAUOGL£
Mentally retarded ~
there '"'" feelings and
1ccompllshmenta In 1
combln•tlon ol film Ind
panel dlscuQlon, with 1
locu• on ClauHft HouH In
C111fornla and Ill unique
educational 1><ogr1mt CC)MOVIE
"SchlLOld" ( 1g90) Klau1
Kinakl, Marlana Hiii A
crazed murderer WhO U9U
tcltaor1 to do aw with •
• ADAM-12
Women'1 Ub 11111 the Loa
~pr9Clnct .THINA~
H~t' °'THI WATER
OlOMT
Thi• humorout mualcel
fllm documenll man'•
lngenlou• 111emp11 """'
the y .. ra to deal with
human wute (R)
DMOVIE
8 • * "High Pl1lnt
Orltter" I t973) Clint Euf.
wood. Verna BIOOm. A
name4elt ttranger ralllee
the cowardly nieldenll ol 1
WNtern town 10 challenge
the ruthleea gang wtllch
hu been terrorizing them.
10:00 D QI THI ROYAL
W£DOINQ
Hlghllghtt ol the WIC24lng
ol 8rltaln'11 Prlnol Chartal
to Lady Olan• Sc>enc-.
tlltliC:tl took~ Mrtler
today 11 St Paul't Cathe-
dral In londqn, wlH ~ pre-I
Mnt.0
I •• NIW8 9 D't'NAl'TY
The threat of llnanct.I di.-
uter dllfllpta Blelle end
Kryt lie' a glot»I honey·
moon (R)
• OREAT
P9W'OAMANCEI
"Gu.ti Of The Nttlon"
Frank Convene and
Ealllle ParlOt\111 1tat In thlt
dram1tlzat1on ol Franti
O'Connor'• lhor111ory Ml
It\ lr•nd In 1g2 I revoMng
around a pair of trtsh Jntur·
Qenl II and lhe two cap.
lured 8rtti8fl IOldler1 they
are order.o 10 ouatd. (R)
-Qli)~
"Edge Of The Cloud" Wlf..
ll1m 0911 10 tut lly Ill• flrat
!)lane to Franoe 11\d CMll--
lina I• promotad to raoap.
llOnist •I the hOtel (Part I )
(R)O
10:15 RACE FOR THE
P£NHAHT
Barry Tompl<lns anc:t Tim
McC1rver recap dlvtsional
baaeball atandlnga Ind
lntervi.w aome of the
game'• t09 playera. (II ,,.,.
players· ttrllle c:ontinu..
an update on the lltuatlOn
Will llao be lneluded I
10:30. NEWS ., IHOUEHOENT
NETWON< NEW8
(C)MOVIE
e * * "The You11g In
Heart" (1938) OouglH
F1lrbank1 Jr , Paulette
Goddard A ne'er-do-well
family ol card ah11p1
charm1 an Old lady who
reformt them
11~808 (1)98
NEW8 D ROYALWEDOING
HIOHUGHTI
Hal Flahman hott• a wrap-
up 01 the d•y• eventt sur-
rounding Prince Chartea'
weddlno
a NEWLYWED GAME ID MAHNOC
"KllljOy" A -ithy busl-
neat m1n mike• 1n
attempt on Mannh1'1 Ille.
but refu-to name the
man who forced him to do
It
., BENHYHtU
Benny oelebr•t• his 9~tfl
blrtt>day Jn I t\oel)llal llUr·
rounded by be1utlful
tll DICK CA YETT
Guetl1 Trevor Howard,
c.tl1 JOl\nt0n. (R) m WOAU>
CHAONIClE.8
(H)MOVIE
"Smoltey And The 8-ndft
II ( 1980) Bun Reynolda,
Jedtle Gleuon Sherllf
Fame strikes new co-star
By J ERKY BUCK u, ........ .,...
LOS ANGELES -The first lime Ted
McGlnley appeared on television he had a non-
speaking role as Jack Albertson's jogging partner
in "Valentine.''
Jhe next time, he made a quantum leap to a
oo.,.tarnng role in the ABC comedy series "Happy
Da,y.a." McGinley. who's only 2l and a recent
gra4uate of the University of Southern California,
i• etru on Cloud Nine.
McGinley, a handsome~ blond athlete, plays
baaketball coach Roger Phillips, the nephew of
Marion Cunningham. Essentially, however. he's
tht ·new Richie Cunningham, the clean·cut,
wboiesome, All·American kid played by Ron
H.,.rard until he lert the ahow at the end of last
Hnbn. ·
'That's the role," he said, ''but don•t expect m• to play it exactly like Ron Howard. My "9• acter ii very bti1ht but he needs more street
aente. Just like Richie. But still, I'm not the same
t h•r •ct« Rort was.''
'kcGlnley was auppoaed to work OD the 1979 MV1e "Valentine" for only two day1. "They kept .tws one more day," be said. "l ended up belnc 1"J.he ftft.b bllbett·patd per80ft ln the mm. 1 bad
• ddl ,_ .,.,., St -lb.at'• wben I decided to .. ..,. an Ktor. 1 W Lbou1bt of actln1 wbeo J w11 a child.
:,,_ 11 I t.bGqht ol beln1 a baseball player. My
[h!Jtl1 t• tt ,..,.aid be awfU.Uy bard to 1et lnto the ~1111~11M ... ~•• ..... JOU kMW aomebody1 to 1 put ll O\lt
~ .... ..
"'' die meantime, be bad become a model and
his picture was spotted in a copy of Gentlemen's
Quarterly by casting director Hank Mccann.
McGinJey said, "He said if this guy can act as
good as he looks he'll be great. So this huge ham·
mer came down on my head. It was like it wasn't
real to me."
So McGinley dutifully enrolled In acting class.
supporting h.imsel! by a lucrative modeling career
that took him around the world. He also traveled a
lot in his attempt to get on the 1984 Olympic water
polo team.
"J enjoyed water polo," he said. "I loved the
physical contact. ll 's a rough sport, llke playing
hockey in water. My goal was Lhe Olympics. I was
on the U.S. Junior National Team, which ls the
feeder team for the U.S. National Team. Which is
the Olympic team in Olympic years.
I was playing all over Europe. When I 1ot lnto
modeling J started endorsing product.a. So I was
deemed a professional athlete and that waa the
end or my wa~r polo career ...
He found ll a little difficult on the set at first.
"I was the new kld on the bloc:k," he aald. "They'd
all been together for elaht years. Every day Henry
Winkler took me aside and worked OD my lines. He
said Ronn,y Howard would do the ume ror him
when the show first started.
''I consider myaetl very new and not ready to
be thrown into other thlnp yet. What I'd Uke ll
anothel' year of 'Happy Day•• to keep leamlna. I
bope the learnlna never 1tQP11.11
Ke abo struck up a rrienct.btp wtltl Scott Balo,
who h.u now become hb resutar handball com·
panlon. He said. "We didn't hit It oft at Clnt. I wu
new. maybe invadlnt hl1 rpace."
McGlnley l.l'ew up in Newport Beach and
I TUBE TOPPERS
CBS 9 8:00 -"The Royal Wed·
ding." Hiihllahts or the ceremonies for
Britain's Prin ce Charles and . Lady
01 ana Spencer.
ABC D 9:00 "Charles and Diana:
The Royal Wedding." Peter Jennings
and Barbara Walters report on the wed·
ding.
NBC D 10:00 -"The Royal Wed·
ding." Highlights of the British wedding.
KCET 9 10 :00 -"Great
Performances: Guests of the Nation.'' A
dramatization of a Frank O'Conner
story set in Ireland and starring Frank
Converse and Estelle Parsons.
Buf«d T Ju1tlCI calla In
hll TWo lawman btothett 10
atop • retlf9d boOtlegger,
the Blndlt. from tranapor1·
~=elephant 'PG'
"He Kt\OW8 You're Alone"
(tNO) Don Scwdlno, Celt·
Mn O'Heeney. A paychotle
murOW. at•• allractlve
young bfldea..to-be. tllenl·
ly and lethally tlUhlng
their drMmt of wedded
bll11.'R'
1t:1S0 MOVIE
"0-. Trick Porty" C 1g90)
Paul Simon, Blllr &town A
~pert~•·
ptaaaured by eve<yone
around !>Im to dr09 hit
ttyle of mulllc Ind ""'" aono• that can bring him
beclt to the top 40. 'R'
11:20 CZ') "l" MAQAZJHe OF
Tffl! AIR
11:30 9 (I) MOVIE
• * • "Four FMt'-•"
( tgn1 8-1 8rldges, Rob-
"' Powell A 8ritJal1 IOldler
In lhl 1800t It labeled I
CCNratd by hie comrad .. ano -illMt'I. CAI
O QITONIOHT
Hott: Johnny Cart on
Gueat•: Robert Klein.
Johnny Mathis
8 0 MCNEWS
~
I iir8 MAl<.E A DEAL
IT AHLEY llEOl!L
• 6D CAPTIONED A.BC
NEWS
(%)MOVIE
"Xanadu" ( 1gao) Ollvll
Newton-John, 0-Kelly
A young ertlat, I heeventy
muM and I Mntlmental
mlllk>nllre join forCN 10
open up I huge roller·
dlac:o pal-. 'PG'
-Ml>NIGtfT-
,~-MOVIE • * '"1 "The Wedding
Night" (19Gli) Gary Coo. oar. Anna Sten A brtde-
to-be qUMtiona her IOve
tor het ftance when a/le -"·-'""' D 9 LOVEBOAT
"Comp;.1terman'' Frankie
Avelon. CWOll H1 White;
"Partez Vous" Batbl Ben·
ton, Jlll'lle Farr; "Memo-
"" Of You · Patty Duke
Atttn. Aidt Nelton CR)
0 G\MMOKE
The retldents of Dodge are
stunned ...,.,. Matt 1881•
he can no 10ftQAr kMC> law
ind order and tumt In hll
badge
• Mt88ION:
IMP088l8l.E
Jim Phelpe "11 tllmMlf be
lremed lor murder In a plot
to dlac:tedlt a acientlat
!Part 21
9) BAAETTA
A nelghbomood kid -Mt·
,..._a murder end Tony
must find him betor1 the
murd«er doell.
MOW
"Tiie Tenant" ( 1g111
Roman POlantlll, IUl>elle
AdJanl. A man rent• an
apartment whet• • prev1.
out tenant comm111eo tul·
clde Ind becomn para-
noid about hit neighbors
'R'
(1DMOVI£
"All Tnat Jau:' (1979) Roy
Scheider. J•alca Lange
The tumu1tuou1 Ille ol •
profeuton11 danc;er It fol·
lowed from tuccellt on the
stage to l*IOt\11 crises
'R'
t2:a0 0 8 TOMORROW
G'-11 hlmmllter Roger
Corman. Wuttlngton Post
columnlat Maxine
CnHhlre, Tne Allman
Brother• Band
12:46 (JO MOVIE
"The Goolather" ( 1972)
Marlon Brando, Al Paclno
8...0 on the novel by
Marlo Pu10 An aging
Mafloeo -the b•rr~s
bet-htt IOylltc l•mlly
Ille ano the haratt raattues
ol hit butineu br .. k down
aa hit tont become
increaslngly involved In the
violent working• of orga-
nized crt,... 'R'
12:55 U MOVIE
"The N-man Shame" A
wealthy H -cop ano n11
g1rtlrtend wt.lie attempting
to llolve 1 friend'• tulc:>de,
uncover an extortion rac:k-
et with connec;tlon1 to
undetground pornogral)tltc
movies 'R'
1~0 PSYCHIC
PHEHOMENA
"Simon'• Soul Hoet·
Oamten Slmpeon Guests
Barry Taff. Ph D Stanley
ShlP'fO
ID MOVIE * * '"1 "KIN The Glrl1 And
Mal<e Them Ole" I 1967)
Michael Connors. Oo<othy
Provine A tclenUll dlSCOV·
era 1 wey to mua-aterillze
men and NII• hi• Id .. to
the Chi-
., INOEP£NOENT
NETWORK NEWS
(S)MOVIE
"Lun•" ( 1g7g) Jiii Clay.
burgn, Malthew Barry
Guilt tp;Jrt an Amerle1n
Oj)Afl finger'• unortnoctox
attraction to her ,_..age,
heroin addict eon 'R'
t:tO fJ MOVIE
• • t "Show 8o1t" l1gS1)
Kathryn Grayton, Howard
Keel Sll'IQA'I 1nd dencers
entertaln on 1 attowbOll u
tt travelt up 1111d down the
Mlatlulppl River
(11 NEWS
1· t5 CZ') MOVIE
"The 111and I 1980)
Michail Caine. David
Warnet While 1n.,...1tg1t·
Ing I rUh OI ahip d!Up·
pearllllCet In the Bermuda
Tf'l1ngle, I j0urn1llt1 ttum·
~ ecroaa en llOlated,
400·y•ar-old colony ol
plret .. 'R'
t:30 ., MOVIE
*•*'"'''long Day's JOUr·
nay Into Nlgllt ' r 19621
JOHN DARLING
LISTEN, FELLAS! 1
WNE> JUST J™ING WHEN 1. SAID ALL
01=' IH05E NAS"TY
'THINGS ABOUT '1tXJ
IN M Y 5POITTSCAST5.'
WHAT DO YOU S A.Y,
GUY5? SHOULD WE
Gt'llE 1-llM A 0REAK ~
Ted McGlnlty. new foce on "Happy Days."
hopea to rlnd a home at Malibu. "I don'l want to
leave the beach," be said. "When I waa a kld I had
such ritoroua workou\I from water polo that I
didn't aet to surf much 1 wu alwaya workin1 out
when everyone else WI.I aurnn,. Now 1 can.''
IC1tllar"'-Hepbuf,,, JUCH!
Aoberot, hNd on tlle
play b~ I~ O'NelU A
taM11y .,_,.,. '*_,"
PfOblema with llCOhol,
l\lrc;ollot. tuberCUIQele and
Oee>reaalort
t:40e N1W1
1:48 . ~ ... Wlel
~ lttle Ern It tAUQht the
f11C1t• ol Ille, Erle thope tor
ilOO eb 18 NEWS
2: 10. MOAECAM9E & W18E
The Frenctt Foreign legion
beconlM "l egion Of Iha
LOii'' OftCI Er1c and Ernie
enlltt
a-.*> • EOfTOAW.
(C)MOVIE
"Sc'11told" (1g80) 1Clau1
KJniNcl, Marlana Hiii A
crated murderer wtto u-
1Claaor1 to do IWIY ""''h a
aerie• of divorced or
untlepplly m1trled ""'°"*"
1Wld1 • lellet to an edvlce
columftllt after aacn klll·
Ing 'R'
2:MfJ MOVIE * * '"' ''The Female lnttlnct" I 1972) Helen
H1yea, Paulette Godderd
Allnough well-meaning
ltld •etOUrcefUI, Ille elder·
ly Snoop Slttets become 1
aource ot lm1111on l1'd
annoyance to tl'lelr detec·
live nep/l-when lhey
m.Odle In his caaet 8 NEWS
2:40 8 MOVIE * * "The Muquerader··
( 1933) Ronald Colman
EUaaa Landt The J<>urnah11
couttn of a drug·eddleted
man 11 l*tuaded to mes-
querade N his oouatn du•·
Ing the man's brHkdown
2:56 ID MOVIE
• • '"1 "J1cka11 Mall"
( 1942) Wallace Beef)'. Mar·
Jorie Main An escapee
trom • lyncn mob become•
• hero by Pf8V8"11ng •
robbery
3~· NEWS
3:t5 G HEWS
(Z)MOVIE
"The Ulllma1e Thrill'
( 1974) Eric Breeden. Brill
Ekl1nd
3:30 ( $) MOVIE
Mori Amertcan Grellltl"
11979) Ron Howard Paul
le Mii Alter g•lldUlllOtl. II
group of nigh 1choo1
triends experience lhe
challenges of adullhood 1n
the IOCIBI upheaval of the
t9601 'PG'
4:00 U GENE AUTRY
"The Bleck Rider"
'Cl MOVIE
Kill Or Be Kiiied pg90)
Jo&epl\ Ry-an. Cnar1011e
M ichelle Two savage
tquads of elite k1ir1te
champions c1111h lo•
revenQe end sorVlvat 'PG'
4:30 8 VOYAGE TO THE
BOTTOM Of' THE SEA
Muttnv
4:40 ID MOVIE * '"' "T"6 Phantom 01
42nd Street" (1945) Dave
O'Brien, Kay Aldrtch A
the•ta< tn New York City
becomes the scene of a
horrible murde<
T hur11day•11
D a yf hn .. ffot·if•#
-MORNING -
5:15 %) * e 'l'I "A Fistful Of
Dynamite' ( t972) James
Coburn, Rod Steiger An
Irish revolutionary end •
M••tcan thief who team up
to rob banks aomeflow
-Mnd up being heroes or
1he MHICan revotutton
l:IO (I) ''Oeldfl'lln'• ~· .. 'Cl'
1;IO (C) "lwlnl TMm" I~
,urat A pempered OIOllO
or oountry c tubbert
aoqulre • OO'oeou& ,_
membet wllo ol'l.,g••
"*"UC> lor Ille~· llNP •pa·
1:00 Cl) ***"Two W•h In
Another Town" (1'62) Klf'll .
Oouglaa, Edward Q. Rob-
lnaon A rnlegulcMcl llClor
find• happlMH In '"
aNlatant r><odUC41t'• job
10:00 (l) "More Amer1Cln Graf·
ltll" ( tll7g) Rori Howtlrd.
Paul La Met Attlt gracNa-
llon. 1 group or high td>OOI
lrtet\dt e11pertence the
cnatlengee ol adulthood In
the aocltl UpMaV&I of the
tlleOa 'PO'
10:30 (Cl .. A Force Of One"
( tg1g) Chuck Norr111, Jen.
nller O'Neill A matter ol
the martial art• emt>artt•
on • r~mot1v1t.O
Maren for the k111et1 of hi•
adopted eon ·PG'
11-00 . * * "No Holdt
Barr.O" ( 1952) Bowery
Boyt, Marjorie Reynold•.
One ol the Boy• discover•
he hu an 11nazlng apti-
tude lor bo11lng
t t:IO 0 * * 'Beyond A Rea·
sonable Doubt'' ( 1958)
Dane And•-. Joan Fon-
'""' A novelill and I newtpapar publl1har
attempt to dl•r><ove the
accuracy of clrcum111ntl•l
evidence
-AFTERNOOH-
12:00 m. *'"' "eouraoe Of l._.. ( 1948) EMz11>etn
TeylO<. Frank Morgan A
girl's pet collie, trained to
klll 1n the Army mual be
converted back 10 the
aHecttonate pvp she nld
known and loVfld
Q) **'It "Five WMila In
A Balloon' t 1g62) Red But·
tons, F11>tan Queen Victo-
ria comml11ttont a Scotllllh
t>alloon1s1 to ctllm part or
Alnca lor Engllnd by
planung the 8r1t11h flag
there
(t) • • •,, 'The Drowning
Pool" ( 1975) Paul New-
man, Joenne WOOdwerd A
pr1v11e 1nvettlgator 11 hired
by 1 -aJtny Southem oil
"81r... to dltcover the
Identity of the author ot an
1ncrtm1N1t1ng letter
t·30 <-S-1 * • * Two W""• In
Anotner Town" ( 1962) Kirk
Oougtu, Edward G Rob·
1nson A miagu1ded actor
llnds happlneu 1n 1n
11Slst1n1 r><oducer'a job
2:00 ft) "Swim Team" Stac>Mn
Furst A pampered group
of country clubber1
acquire a ooroeou• new
member who cP1arge1
them up tor the ch1mpk>n·
snip 'PG'
l:'t * * * "Kil Carton"
(1940) Jon Hall. Dena
Andrews A bold p~
protects a C111fornla·
bound wagon train from
Indian raiders
3:00 Q! * • • Where Angels
Go, Trouble Follow •
( t 968) Stell• Stevens.
Roealtnd Ru111e11 Trouble
at>Ounda when tour nun1
take • butioad of studenlt
cross-country
3;30 8 • * '"' "Cntno" ( 1973)
Cnartet Broneon. Vincent
Van Patten A 1een-ege
boy b&l•ten<lt • hall-1><-i
and helps him to run ntS
llorH ranch In New Mell.I·
co
1 "Oelldrnan·• Floer" 'G'
•:OO 0 "Wholly< Motal"
11980) Dudley Moore.
Laraine Newman In btbll·
cal Egypt. a telM prophet
named HltrtChel eaves-
drops on a d1V1t\A Convef·
satlOtl with M09es end
decKl&S l>8 mu1t be the
one to teaq his people out
OIMaY9f}' 'PG -
5:00 (ij) Bon Voyage, Ch.,lie
Brown" (197gl Animated
Snoopy 1nd Woodatoci<
follow exchange 11tu<1ents
Ch8tlil Brown. Peppermint
Pany, Unu1 and Marcie on
an ad--.ture-lllled tour of
England 1no France 'G'
by Armstrong & Batiuk
CBS leads race
NEW YORK <AP> The 1982·83 prime·time
season is months away. but CBS has been No l in
the weekly prime·time ratings competition for 10
weeks in a row and appears to be building a head
of steam.
CBS won the three·way race for the week end·
ing July 26 with an average rating or 15.9 -the
highest for any network since the seven·day period
ending May 24.
ABC was runner·up at 12.7, a 5.5.
CBS did it with the seven highest·raled shows.
including ils broadcast of the Miss Universe
Pageant in first place, and eight of the Top 10.
ABC's "20·20," in eighth place. was the only
other program a,,mong the 10 top-rated that had not
been broadcut Before. 1
Jn fo ct, only nine or the 65 shows surveyed by
the A.C. Nielsen Co. were n.rst·run programs. Of
the original programs, ABC 's "It's a Living" was
lied for 21sL, and an NBC special, "Grea~sl
Heroes of the Bl blc. ·' w a& No. 40.
The rating ror CBS' Miss Unlvuse PaaeaDt
program wa~ 25.4. Nielsen says that means mott
than a quarter of lhe country's TV -equipped homes
saw at least P•rt or lbt show .
ABC and NBC each had two of the week's lave
toweat-rated shows. "The Waitons" on CBS w11
No. 61, followed by an "ABC Newa Closeup" called
"Kitt)': Return to Auac:hwlt.i," "B.J. and the
Bear'' on NBC, NBC'a ''Gam People Play" and
''Tboae Amu.inl Anlmala" on ABC
J
No longer
• a pnsoner
Childs happy to be a Ram
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of tlle OMIY ,.. ... lwt
As a former inmate of the New Orleans Saints
State Penitentiary, Henry Childs knows about the
trials and tribulations of confinement.
The tight end was a marked man in New
Orleans as was former inmate Chuck Muncie <now
at San Diego) and present prisoners Wes Chandler
and Tony Galbreath.
"It's a big relief to be in a situation where
there is some stability," said Childs. the Rams'
first legitimate tight end since Bob Klein. "In six
years there I had four or five head coaches and
just as many general managers.
"THAT TVPE OF SITUATION can hurt you
from reaching your peak."
In 14 seasons as an NFL franchise, the Saints
have never reached their peak. Their best season
was 1979 when they fashioned an 8-8 record and a
second place finish (to the Rams> in the NFC
West. Their lowest ebb
was last season when
they were 1-15.
Henry Childs
ment blamed.
"The overall talent
at New Orleans just
wasn't that good," ad·
mitted Childs. "There
was a lot of pressure on
the good players to
overcome the team's
weaknesses."
Childs. Chandler ,
Ga lb.reath, Muncie,
Archie Manning and
Conrad Dobler we re
considered the team's
"good players." And.
when there was a loss,
Childs said, it was these
players that manage-
"It was nerve-wracking to know we had abili·
ty. and then were forced to go through all those
changes," defended Childs. "There was never a
relaxed state."
Childs came to the Rams by way of
Was hington where the Redskins acquired his
rights from the Saints and then traded him away a
week later to the Rams lor an undisclosed draft
pick.
IN ms SEVEN-YEAR career, the 6-2. 2.20·
pounder from Kansas State bas caught 207 passes
for 3,220 yards (15.6 average) and 'Z7 TDs.
Last season. although missing three games
and parts of seven others with strained knees,
Childs bad 34 receptions for 463 yards and six TDs.
By contrast, the Rams' light ends combined to catch
31 passes.
"I didn't d·read it there (New Orleans>
bee a use I take a lot of pride i.n my ability,'• said
Childs. "But I was glad to get out. Anywhere
would have been better than a team that was
1-15 ...
Childs admitted he wasn't ignorant of the
Rams' problems . He said he knew of the troubles
the team went through last year and during the
off-season. But he said, the Rams· woes were
child's play next to the Saints.
"What the Rams went through were business
problems . . . the same as any other business
would go through. After adjusting to four systems
at New Orleans, this is nothing.
"l 'M VERY EXCITED because therP.'s a huge
difference between the two teams," added Childs.
"Where the Saints are talented in a few positions
the Rams have a lot of deep talent in every posi-
tion.
"I have a lot of confidence in my ability but
I'm still going through the transition of proving
myself here. I'd have to do that regardless of
where I was."
-... ---__. _. --------------.... -, __. ------· ~~~-----..... -----~------------------~ ~-~---------~ __ , ~---
Daily Pilat ..------------·-'-------------~--------------
H /F
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
~LASSI Fl ED 07
BVD TVCKER
American water polo
came up short Tuesday,
settling for second
in Bucharest. See D2.
F oothall wagering: It's a bet
If you frequent the taverns and
barber shops and haberdasheries and
similar salons of culture and refine·
ment, you have noticed a trend which
has endured for several months.
It involves gentlemen -some
ladies, too, for that matter -in
various stages of what seems to be a
form of withdrawal. For openers,
they tremble quite uncontrollably.
Their eyes are wide, glassy and
pe riodically awash with tears . At
which time they sob with some
vio l e nce, contributing to the
s pas modic condition mentioned
above. Aside from their whimpering.
they are silent.
The ritua l is daily but more pro-
nounced on Sunday afternoon. On
Monday evening, to walk into one of
the above mentioned establishments
is to enter a s nake pit.
IT JS INDEED a form of
withdrawal. The c reatures you have
noticed are experiencing the tor-
ments of the football off-season. In
short. ther e are no games on which to
wager . No odds. no point spreads and
no overs and unders . No action
whatsoever .
These s ufferers go it cold turkey
because there is no choice. The supply
has dried up, so to speak. When the
gun ends the Super Bowl thing in
Janurary, the betting game over. The
abruptness enhances the agony. Hence
the frigid fowl .
Well, there is a meas ure of relief.
Bob Martin of the Union Plaza in Las
Football wagering has
become more than a
way of life in these Unit -
ed States. Its rites are
practiced from August to
January.
Vegas, the handicapper who creates
the lines during the season, the other
day threw out the prices on the
various National Football League
teams making it to Super Bowl XVI.
The San Diego Chargers and the
Atlanta Falcons were established as
4-1 favorites to plod all the way from
here to Super Sunday. The defending
champion Oakland Raiders were
hung up at 6-1 as were the Rams and
the Dallas Cowboys.
The publishing of the foregoing
odds will not elimina te the suffering,
but it is something to discuss while
waiting for the games of a new
autumn to get under way.
VOU SEE, FOOTBALL wagering
has become more than a way of life
in these United States. 1t is a re·
ligion. Its rites are practiced from
August to January so you will un-
derstand the traumatic implications
of the abrupt halt.
Naturally, alternatives have been
tried. but most have failed. To fully
understand this you must be aware
that football "players" are not com-
pulsive gamblers in the t acky sense
. or the word.
They are addicted, to be sure, but
only lo football.
For instance, basketball has been
offered as a s ubstitute but its relief is
temporary at best. That is to say, one
soon comes to realize that all basket-
ball games are tied. 101 -101. or
thereabouts, with two minutes to
play.
A dedicated football bettor is used
to doser to three tiours of action a nd
misery. During this time he gets
satisfaction -indeed therapy -
from groveling in front if his TV set,
screaming advice and obscenities at
the side on which he has wagered.
HORSE RACING FALLS into a
similar category of inadequacy. One
accustomed to three hours of agony
cao hardly be satisfied with three
minutes ot less. It is not possible to
flag down an express train with a
birthday candle.
The story is a ncient, but ap-
propriate, about the guy who called
his bookie pleading for action after
blowing 21 straight plays on football.
"There are no football games to·
day." the book replied. "Only
hockey."
··What the hell do I know about
hockey?" the player demanded.
At any rate, you are now aware of
the reason for the suffering on the
boulevard. You can understand it by
calculating it is a thousand times
worse than quitting smoking or going
on a diet.
The good news is relief is coming.
The bad news is it is a couple of
weeks away.
Some of us will make it.
Emile Harry fright J has
had a distinguished career
at Fountain Valley High,
but it figures to be just as
rosy at Stanford. See
Roger Carlson's column,
page D4
It's official,
I
Owens a Ram
No. 1 pick signs pact
As reported Tuesday. linebacker Mel Owens,
the Rams' No. I draft pick, signed a contract with
the Rams ending his 10-day holdout.
Owens signed three one-year contracts. with
an option year added, in General Manager Don
Klosterman's office at Rams Park around 4
o'clock Tues day afternoon.
He was then s~hooled in what to say and
whisked off to the Rams' CaJ State Fullerton train-
ing complex for a quick conference with the
media.
Dressed in a three-piece green suit, with agent
Phil Closius and Klosterman at his side, Owens
was cautious with his statements.
TUESDAY'S ACTION Richard Savage
(top leftl absorbs a punch and UCLA
junior Mark Caso performs on the rings at
the National Sports Fes tival At San Fran-
A,.WI .......
cisco 'right> former Ram J ack Reynolds
backpedals on a play during scrimmage a t
the 49ers· training camp.
"l'M PRETTY HAPPV," said Owens. "There
was a game in two weeks and I felt 1 had to prac-
tice to play."
Although terms weren't discussed. Owens re-
portedly received in the neighborhood of $375.000
for three years plus a $200,000 signing bonus.
One can understand Owens' tentativeness -
and the Rams· too, for that matter.
Yoder wants to get even with UCLA After the Johnnie Johnson fiasco of last
season, when he signed a reported six-year con-
tract worth $1 .2 million causing many veterans to
second-guess their worth, management was
careful not to divulge any figures or Have anything
said that might trigger another uproar. And the ex-San Clemente High star will get his chance coaching USC's volleyball team ''MEL SIGNED THREE single-year contracts
with an option. Terms will not be discussed." said
Klos terman as he opened the press conference. ByCURTSEEDEN
Of tlMI Dalty ...... Slaff
Bob Yoder should be very happy the
football rivalry between Ohio State
and USC doesn't carry on to the
volleyball court. He could have a rough
time being accepted.
Yoder can only be described as a
pioneer in the sport of volleyball, at
least in the Southern California area.
As a senior in 1974, Yoder was a
member of the first-ever San Clemente
High volleyball team.
From San Clemente, Yoder went to use. where he spent the first year on a
basketball court rather than the
volleyball court. He wanted to do both,
but studies wouldn't allow it. He set-
tled on volleyball only the following
season.
ONCE HE GRADUATED from USC,
Yoder made somewhat or a giant leap,
career-wise. T he 23-year·old
economics major landed the head
coaching Job at Ohio State.
He didn't have to spike his way on to
the Buckeyes' good side, either. He
simply heard about the opening and
applied for the job.
"They bad a real cood coach -
Su1uru Furicbi -tht two prevlOUJ
yeut. He was finisbina his doctorate wbUe he coached. When he wu done.
well, his vlaa expired and he had to re·
turntoJapan,'' Yoder recalls.
The recommendation of U.S. Na·
Uonal team coach Dou& Beale didn't
burt when Yoder went for the Ohio
State interview. And Yoder ~
every cent ol bla wortb ln b1a two
HalOOI ln tM mldwett. He boasted a
flO•t record and third and f ourtb·place
finishes Jn t.h.e NCAA tournament. In
both cases, the Bu~keye teams fell to
UCLA.
Perhap1 n«>w, Yoder would like to
see a football rivalry carry over to the
volleyball eampalJn. Yoder wouJd like
nothinc better than a lltUe revence
a1a1nst UCLA. And, he'll have the
chance to 1aJn that ven1e.nee lhlt
year u he eetUea into h.il MW job -
head coach at USC.
1
YODER WAS HIRED at USC in May
after Coach Ernie fficks resigned to
pursue business interests. And. Yoder
feels his team can go places.
·'The only reason volleyball is grow·
ing right now is because of its success
in the west and east. It's really stag-
nant in the midwest where I was,"
Yoder says.
"I know it's considered a minor
sport and its usually the victim of
budget cuts in the athletic depart-
ments. It's never been a real money
sport."
Still, Yoder feels volleyball as a
sport as no where to go but up, thanks
mainly to the capabilities of the
. athleteswhonowplayvolleyball.
''I see improvement every year. The
athletes playing the game right now
are getting better and betlet'. The level
of quality has really improved," be
says.
THE REASON CAN BE traced back
lo the high schools. That's one reason
Yoder is spending tbJs summer help-
ing his former high school coach, Jack
Iverson. conduct clinics at San
Clemente1 ·
Yoder says he is allowed to lure five
athletes to USC via voUeyball
scholarships, which la an NCAA limll.
That's not bad considering bis team
will probablybavejustl2 members.
While the colleae volleyball seuon
orficlaJly klcka ort in January, Yoder
pJana to have h1I team busy in aeveral
~eaeuon tournameats beslMlns as
earlyuOct.ober.
·• 1t·-quite a lona se11on in reality."
he notes ... We atart In October and
ftntshupt.beaeooadwee~orMay."
ACTUALLY, MOST college
volleyball teams are through with
their season by April, but Yoder-
coached squads have a tendency to
stretch things out by qualifying for the
NCAA tournaments.
At the tender age of 25, Yoder has
become accustomed to the pressure of
national championship competition,
and he'll bring that attribute with him
to USC. He also brings a lot of
volleyball sense.
•'Volleyball was a lot simpler years
ago. The game is becoming more
sophisticated now," Yoder explains.
·'There are more tactics now.
''Whenl played, I was more of anall-
around pl.ayer. I really didn't have any
specialty, I guess. I really wasn't an
outstanding player. I was just a good
player. Today, the more versatile of an
athlete you are, the better you'll do."
Rakhshani, Kendra
released by Ram8
"In negotiations, we all play games."
Klosterman added later. "It was to Mel's best in-
terest and the Rams that he is in camp."
Was there a compromise by either party?
"Obviously we did,'' answered Klosterman,
"and so did they."
Closius, a law professor out of the University
of Toledo, contended throughout bargaining
sessions that his client was worth just as much as
Johnnle Johnson, the Rams' 1980 No. 1 pick, -if
not more.
MANAGEMENT•s CONTENTION was that
while Johnson could come in and start right away.
Owens couldn't with players like Jim Youngblood.
Carl Ekem and Geore Andrews in front of him.
"I know what your guys are after -and that's
6lories," said Owens with a grin, intent on not giv·
ing the media any.
"I missed some and 1 know 1 have my work
cut out for me."
Owens, the ninth player picked in May's NFL
draft, has trimmed 13 pounds off his 235-pound
·rrame during the holdout.
KLOSTERMAN SAID .be calM to a verbal
Tight end Vlc Rakbsbanl and agreement with Owens' aaent Monday. The two
quarterback Dan Kendra were then new into LAX at noon Tuelday.
waived today by tbe Rams. Both Strangely, Rama Coach Ray Malavasl may
players were free agent.a. have even ncured ln Oweoa endinC bta boldout1 Rakhahani, an Edison Hilb and "He called and cave me &ome advice, which I
USC pr<>duct, 1lgned wltb the Ram• appr·eciated,'' said Owens.
shortly all.er May's N,FL draft. "I juat told hlm be WU Cellini bthlnd," said
Both players were v1ctlma ol num-Malavul. "l had not.bi.nf to do with neptlaUona
bers as Rakhlhani bad Henry Cb1Jd1, but I told him he w11 hwtlnl btmself lt be didn't
Victor Hlc!Q, Walt Arnold and rookie get ln here soon.
Ron Battle (7th round) Hated In front "l 1ave him the aarftt advice l'd ctve my own
of him at ticht end, while Keodta, • aon lf he were in the aamt altuaUon. I Jut tried to
from Wett Virllnla. wu faced wlth 1how him the lmporta.nee of belq btn, that thla
battlinc Pat Jfaden, Bob Lee, Jeff wasn't collece and It wa1 mon complu.i.
Rutled«• and rookie Jerr Keml). -ByloM8evaM
'
••
H /F Oral\ge Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, July 29. 1981
.---------------------~ ~-------------------------------------------------------------------Jefferson to quit football?
San Dle10 Cbarser Job Jef· [r-1]
fer... HY• he la prepared to qull , -,, football lf oe1ollaUcm to re.tructure
bl• on,loal aeries of 1tvn ooe-year
conlracu can not be H U.led ... Tbe San Fran-
claco 48ert have releued Ari Men of UCLA
'aod 0. Dr*• from Cal Poly· Pomona ... Tbe
NFL·Ralden court battle went to the jury today
. Cblc.,0'1 Bean have ended an experiment
Ex-Celtic, four others
indicted for fixing
to tum U1ht end Mike Cobb
lnlo a Lackie and r eturned
hlm to hls old position . . .
Staa Blinka of the New York
Jets bu taken his demands
for a trade to the press, say·
Ing, "Maybe this way they'll
From AP dbp1tdae1 ·come around or I'U get a fair
sha ke some other place."
. . . New Orleans wide re-
ceiver IUcb Maatl broke his
NEW YORK -Five men, lnclud·
ing a former reserve 1uard oo the
Bos ton College b11ketball te1m,
wer e accused today of fixing the outcome of
some of the Boston CoUef e's c ames lo 1978 and
1979.
Je flvton collarbone Tuesday durln1 a
The indictment, handed up by a federal
grand jury In U.S. District Court ln Brooklyn,
said the men conspired to fix the point ssfread
on games and reap proflta lhrouah weU-placed
bets.
Accused in the scheme were James Burke,
of Queens, N. Y., who has been named as the
suspected mastermind of the multimUlion-
dolla r heist of money from a Lufthansa Airlines
ter m inal here ; Richard Kuhn, a former Boston
College player ; Anthony and Rocco Perla, of
Pittsburgh, and Paul Mazzei, a convicted drug
dealer.
practice drill. He'll be out of action from 8·12
weeks . . . Oakland quarterback Dan PHtortnl,
working to rehabilitate an injured thr owing
shoulder. appears to be on sehedule ln hia pro-
gram, although be remains sidelined ... Run-
ning back Marlon Barber, the New York J et.a'
No. 2 dralt choice who suffered a concussion
last Thursday. was told tostayout of a ction until
the weekend ... Ex-Tennessee deferaive end
Charla Morlan made his second switch , this
time transferring to the University of Miami
from Carson-Newman CoUege . He'll be red·
shirted for a year . . . Mississippi State Coach
Emory Ballard checked into a hospital for tests
on a chronic lung ailment.
The indictment provided no further back·
ground on the men. Bench enjoying a payday
Quote of the day
The Cincinnati Reds said Tues-Ii day that they would pay the salary of
injured catch e r -first base man
Johnny Benell during the major "When the league was picking on me, I
tried to think of something thal would a1·
gravate the hifherups. I wasn't having
much luck unti one day I lit up a cigar
during a game. Afterwards J got a lltUe
note saying 'It doesn't look good for you to
be smoking cigars on the bench.' I haven't
been without one since." -Boston Celtics
general manager Red Aaerbacla, explain·
Ing how an NBA tradition was born.
league players' strike, then try to recoup the
money later through arbitration. Bench broke
an ankle sliding into second base In a May 28
ga me with San Fra ncisco and was on the Reds'
disabled list when the strike began June 12 ...
Kings sign pair to contracts
I NGL E WOOD -B ac kup
goalkeeper Jim Ruthe r ford and
promising left wing J ohn Pa ul
c .
I~
; ·~ " .
. : ·VJ.·· . . ;.\;" '
I
Kelly have signed multi-year contracts with the
Los Angeles Kings, the National Hockey League
club said Tuesday.
Renie Jackson of the New
York Yankees says, "If
we 're not on the (ieJd by the
first week in August, there
really isn't much hope for re-
.sum ing the season" ...
Atlanta Braves left fielder
RuflAo Unarea bas taken a
$3.30 an hour job at a lumber
stor e in Atla nta s uburb
Doraville ... Eighteen hour-
Bench ly paid me mbers of the
Rutherford, 32, had a 3.0 record with the
Kings late in the 1980-81 seuQn alter he was
traded to Los Angeles last March 10 from the
Toronto Maple Leafs, in exchange for a fifth
round draft pick.
ground crew at Tieer Stadium are threatening
to sue the striking Major League Players As·
soclatioo for "interference of a business rela·
lions hip" in Detroit-:-: . Two teams of
American and National League sluggers will
meet in a home run hitting contest at Exhibition
Stadium in Toronto Friday and Saturday. The
two-day event, which will be televised by NBC
Saturday afternoon, carries a potential payoff
of $14,500 to the individual winner. The
American League players are Eddie Marray,
KH Slng.letota, Gre1 Luzlukl and Grall Net·
ties. The Natlooala are Geor1e Foster, Dave
Parker, Mike Sclllmldt and Andre Dawaoe.
An 11 year veteran, Rutherford is a "pro·
ven" netminder who can step in and provide ex·
cellent backup help for Kings goalie Mario
Lessard, said Kings' General Manager George
Maguire.
"Kelly is ready to play with the Kings
following his apprenticesh.ip in the minors."
Maguire added .
Americari poloists fall short
Romania stops U.S.; Cuba wins gold at University Games
From AP dispatches ·
BUCHAR EST, Ro m a nia -
Cuba swamped the Soviet Union
l J :JJ Tuesd ay night and took . the
gold medal in water pofo from
the Uni ted States at the World
University Games.
T he Unit ed Stales, which
need ed only to win its final
match against Romania to lake
the gold , was upset 6-4 by the
host nation and had lo settle for
the silver.
Romania's victor y over the
previously unbeaten Americans
earned it the bronze medal
ahead or the Soviets.
"WE JUST DIDN'T play a
goo d game," a dm i tte d
American Coach Dante Det-
ta manti, whose team tralled 4-1
al halftime.
Although usually strong on of·
fense, the Americans scored on
only two out or six extra man op-
port uniti es a nd fa iled t o
penetrate the tough Romanian
defense.
"We had a poor offense," said
Dettamanli, "we didn't read
them well ."
The Romanians rallied around
goalkeeper Doru Stinu . who
came up with nine good saves,
ma king him the g ame's out-
standing player .
TOP SCORER for Romania
was Vlad Haglu. who put the
host nation in the lead early ln
the game and added two other
scores later In the contest .
Former Newport Harbor HJ.eh
Star James Berge.on. with two
eoals, and bis Stanford team-
mate Alan Mouchawar led the
U.S . offe n s e , with Newport
Harbor High prbducl Jobn
Dobrott or the University of
Callfomla at Santa Barbara ad·
ding the other toal.
In balketball, 1 llred Unlt.ed
States squad met the Soviet
Union tocfay for the men's
basketball told med•l at the
World Unlveraity G1mes.
''Tomorrow wUJ be our lllU.I
ta me In il7 daya," U.S. Coach
Tom D1vl1 of Boaton Cou ...
11ld Tuesday. "We are near ex·
hau1Uon In several potlUona. •·
THE A.M&alCANI .needed a
dout>M-overt.hne to outlut the
Soviet.I 113·107 ln round·roblll
pla1 earUer la UM competWoa.
Rut 1lDce tJMn, Derek Smtt.b ol
LoulnlU• bu bffn aldellned
wU.b a knee 1nJary and 9'dne1
Lowe Ol North Carollna ltaui
tlu bellD ou.t witb a sprained
dkle. Bath ~ mlaa toda1'1
eoatM. Wltb lGlm ...._ .. y of ..._
cou .... ~· Z2 poi•C.. ta. 0 .1: e.Ui ldnnc.d' to UM Pld·
medal game with a 91-75 victory
over Romania. The Soviet Union
eliminated Yugoslavia 92-84.
On Tuesday, Jill Sterkel of the
University of Texas captured
her fourth gold medal of the
Games, while the United States
failed in gold medal bids in
water polo and women's buket·
ball.
STERKEL ANCHORED the
400-meter freestyle relay team,
which woo in 3:55.05. Also on the
victorious squad, which finished
far ahead of the second-place
Soviets, were Ann Lett, Carol
Borgmann and Barbara Major.
The Soviets defeated the Unit-
ed States 96·75 in the women's
basketbaU fin al.
Galina Krisevici paced the
winners with 27 point.a, and the
Americans were never in the
game. Lataunya Pollard of Long
Beach State led the U.S. team
with 13 points, while 6-8 center
Anne Donovan of Old Dominion,
playing with a swollen knee.
added 12.
"We just did not play as s harp
as we have,'' said U.S. Coach
Kay Yow of North Ca rolina
State. "The Russians stuck to
their ga me plan and did exactly
what they set out to do, much
better than we carried out our
game plan.
"THEY DESERVE credit,
you know. They beat us fair and
square. But I think we had some
extenuating circumstances, like
Anne's injury ."
Donovan was injured in a pre-
liminary game a nd had lo sit out
M o n'd a y ' s vic tor y ove r
Romania.
In swimming. Kim Linehan
and Kris Kirchner , both also
from the Uni versity of Texas,
won their second gold medals of
the Games. Lineha n won the
women's 200-meter butterfly in a
Games re<:ord 2:15.71. Kir chner
was a me mber or the victorious
men's 400-meter freestyle relay
team.
Surf battles Calgary
Wild card dreams at stake tonight
By ED ZINTEL
Of .... Dellfr ...........
Still in the hunt for an NASL
wild c ard playoff berth, the
California Surf batUea Catcary,
winners in 11 of their laat 14
games, tonight (7 :30) al
Anaheim Stadium.
The Surf (10-18) la four polnta
behind for a wild cud berth with
six 1ames rematn1n1, lncludint
tonltbL
Calgary bu 122 polnta and ii
ln second place behind Van·
couver wlt.h 141 polnla ln the
N orthweat Divhion. Tbe
Boomen tot off to a J.t •tart
tbb aeuon, but have been on a
tear ever alnct. They're
led by Fram Gerber, wbo wlUI
15 IOa.ll nd MVtll ........ la U ·
th on tbe NASL 1cort111 U1t.
'•A lot of people HJ tllat
Cal•ary'a talent la teeond only
to t.be (New York> Coemoa' ,"
1aJd Surf coacla Laurlt
Calloway. "But I believe t.My
bave WHll:nel••· We waot,tbem to come after ua and pla1 to•.''
Tbe Surf bM DOW Dla1ed tine
1tr1lpt ...... wWaout .......
acortr 9teYe II~. wbo lau
been out tlnee JlllJ lS wtua a foot
coatuaim.
1101eu wlll suit ap for
toallbt'• ..... ~wW not atart, •ceol'dlal to . TUt ...... the ..., ..
loc>klo:C to Oua.ma Da.81,. Of·
'
fenslve punch. Acquired on June
18, Khalil has scored nine goals
and added two assists in 10
games with the Surf, including
two f oals in last Friday's 4·1.wio
over Fort LauderdaJe.
"In meeUn1 and ta1kina with
players the last couple of days, I
think they're start.lng to believe
that we can make the pl1yotts,"
said Calloway.
"In the last month, we've
started to come tofether. I think
t.hat tbe players never seemed
too aure ol the altuaUon with me.
\JpheavaJ and turmoil led to in·
consistency.
"I tb.IJlk it'• a fortunate point
that we're comln1 on 1tron1
now. Notaioully, the teams *Mt
have 1tarted 1tron1, tbea sat
around cllcJdnc thelr beela unUl
the playoffl bave done poorly ln
the playotta.
"And ~ that have 1cr•ped
to tet lnto t.be playoff a have
done ...U."
The !katf'1 ftna.1 five 1ame1
after tonltbt wW all be IDtrt·
dlvblon come.ta. It'll face botb
laD Dt•to and Loa Ante!•• twtee Md San Joee once.
Lall week , UM 8w1 IOlt to
CalaUJ,1-2. "We 1bould bavt won Utal , • ..,.;r Calloway Hid. 11'MJ:'U
b9 la for another war tb!a tia
around.''
Baseball today
On tbla date ln bHebaJl in 1971:
Five day1 after they fired Manaaer BUly
Mar lin and replaced him with Bob Lemon,
the New Yor k Yankees 1tunned ..the
baseball world by announclna that Martin
would return lo the team u mana1er In
1980. (Actually, Martin returned on June
18, 1979).
On tbla date In HMO:
The Rrooklyn Dodgers nipped the Pit·
tsbur1h Pirates 7-6 in a riotous, brawl·
marred ga m e featuring a wild fight
between the Pirates' Ar ky Vaughan and
the Dodgers' Babe Phelps.
Today's birthdays:
San Francisco pitcher Orea Minton is 30.
Cincinnati first baseman Dan Driessen
also is 30.
Wild Bill scolded by judge
BALTIMORE A district court
judge on Tuesday scolded William
Grover Hagy -known to thousands
of Baltimore Orioles baseball fans as ··wild
Bill" -for setting a bad example.
Hagy. 42 , was arrested early Monday on a
ch ar ge of possession of an open can of beer on
the s treet while standing in front of a bar in
Fells Point, police said .
Hagy pleaded guilty when he appeared in
Southeastern District Court Tuesday, and was
placed on six months unsupervised probation.
"You have become a public figure and as a
public figure you must set an example," Judge
I. Sewell Lamdin told Hagy.
Ashes on the waters costly?
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. -
Fulfilling the wishes of a widow by
spreading her late husband's ashes
on the waters of Lake Huron may cost George
Lyon his first victory in the Port Huron·to-
M ackinac Island yacht race.
Lyon and his eight-man crew deposited the
ashes or his long-time friend, Port Huron resi~
dent James "Blackie" Elliot. on the lake Mon-
day near Spectacle Reef. eas t or the island.
Tuesday, he learned the ceremony may cost
Tigress, his boat. the Division I. Class B cham
pionship.
1&year-old topples Nastase
Sixteen-year-old Jimmy Arias up·
set seasoned pro Ille N Htaae Tuesday,
1-6, 6·3, 7-6 during the first round of a
m en's tennistournamentinSouthOrange, N.J . in
a m a tch marred by several angry outbursts from
the fiery Romanian. Nastase was assessed a one·
point penalty in the third set after screaming at
linesman Judy Popkin and spitting in her direc-
tion ... Twenty-fi ve Czechoslovaks at the 14th
World Games for the Deaf in Cologne have asked
for political asylum.
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: No events scheduled.
Miller trying
to fill the gaps
Baseball spinning its whee l s
From AP dispatche11
Murvl n Maller, chief negolaator for striking
ma jor league players, embarks on 11 i;eraes of r e
gional meetings to repair what he called "a terri
ble information gap" that caused some cra cks in
the union's solid stand agains t dub owners
The ser ies of meetlngi. bt•gan today an Los
Angeles, and Maller uppart>ntly will attend other
briefi ngs around lhe country
Negot1at1ons broke olr last fhursday and no
new bargaini ng sessions have been !-el
MEANWHILE. T H E 26 club owners and their
Player Relations Comm it tee also scheduled a
meeting for hxlay 011 t ht• opposite coast an New
York
M1ller, executive din•clor of the MaJor League
Players Association. apparently t'ased the minds
of m any players during a five hour meelang of the
union's 30 member t'Xecutave board an Chicago
Monday night The br1efin1ot for the board also at-
tracted some 30 other playl•rs anxious to know the
sta tus of the strike aftt'r fou r days of negotiations
in Washington under a nl'Wi-blackout lasl week.
"Half of thc·m didn't have lht' facts.'· Miller
said "A news blackCJUl 1i. a catastrophe for an or
ganizalion hkl' ours l'hcn' Y.as a terrible informa ·
t1on gap for four day:. fhose were important
days."
THE SUPPORT f'O R MILL E R an d his
negotiating team , sonH· or whom had come under
criticism for being Mill r r·s puwns. appeared lo be
across·the-hoarcl aftn t he me<•ting
"I'm behind the negotiating committee 100 percent.'" said Hill Butkn<'r of the Chicago Cubs. ·1
was feeli ng uncomforlahlt• about not playing. Now
I can sit out lhl' season 1 !-lall feel badly about not
playing but I'm n<Jt anformed of the negotiations.··
"I feel a lot b<•tlt'I now that I'm informed,··
said Ra ck Reuschel of lhl' New York Yankees, who
was traded by thc Cuhs the day before the strike
began June 12 'No matter how good the media
coverage as al ,., not as ~ood as attending a meet·
mg ..
"TlllNC,S HAVE C'U .ARED l"P for me now,'
said Enc S<xkrholm of the Yankees "The urul\
y,. as terrific " ·
Other play<· rs voat cd sa mal ar opinions and
some of the so callt-d das!-ldl•nl players s aid they
had been quot<"d out of rontc>xt
There were stall t°r:.t(·ki. an the union. however
Patcher · Dennis Eck<"r"ll·V of tht' Boston Red
Sox told the Hoston H1•rald Am<·rat·an that he
behevC'd m:rny playt•rs "ould volC' lo end the striktt
with managcmt·nt·!:> lale!:>l propo!>al. which hl•
called "fairly clc•c·c·nt·· as a has1 '>
'T ll bt·t :1-ou'd Ill' :-.urpra:-.c•d at o.;ome of the guys
who'd !>a), 'For).(<'I lht• '>l r&kl· Ll·t·-. play ball ,' ·
said Eckersl('y
The strike. an its 48th day today walh 565 of the
sea son's 2. 106 gaml'!> dc•leted. as over the source or
compensation for tc•am~ lo~ing free agent players
.
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UMRM Wl:HT 85!.
llGll QIJAIHY AU.-SEASINI UMIT"
MUL 11. G•i&P• FOi
HIGH ,,,.~MANCI 95 MOST GT I lOW-40 C CAIS 20W-SO QT.
•oax UTILITY
VANITY MIRROR •
AUTOC MPASS
accuaA'K II IASY TO llM ''Wf-DOMI''
ueNftO DtAL
• QUICll,... ...... ,t1c1;_,...
e P()ll < .. .,.; ......0 I
VIH 7• USIPUL
11601 mM UOI
BICYCLES & ACCESSORIES SPECIALS!
MOUlllTS888 AWYWMIM
OM DASH 01 CONSOU lA.
HUFFY MAX
"PRO -THUNDIR"'M
• 20" ll 2 ~ &lue St"119"' bladt
11""'" .. tir" : ~~:~::~--1,.,,11 '5
plvt <ootl., bt .. n .
• Clvomo linhh ..;1+1 bll.e El
occ~fl. •
STIMSONITI
REFLECTOR TRIANGLES
e LUY TO USt: • sns "' IN SKOHOS • SAffl ntt.N FLARES
e HANDY STORAOf
CASE
REMANUFACTURED
PART SPECIAL!
WATER
PUMPS
FOi MOST lMllKAI Ol IMPOIT <AIS
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ALL IN ONl
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lnstat.tion Available at low cost (Most Stores)
EASY TO USE
r~ FLAT TIRE
---.. ~·INFLATER
!-.all"l6. SIALIR
......
LUBRICANT
Atl> RUST
PREVENTIVE
Prn•nh rust, lubticote•.
p enetroles, dhplocu
mohtur• Wo"'t horf'f'I
r,:inl, plostic, rubb.r °' :;,~CM 119
.,,. IA.
COfllroh ,...,, tprlno
heigh! lwo woyo, fC>f t>."•' performo"ce. Adjvllablr-rol-Of loweu yOtJr cat.
• KEEP YOUR CAR COOlEll
• l'llEVENT INTUIOR FADING
• ANTI· THEFT
• EASY TO
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_....~ ........ ...... .. _.._. ........ ---.
AYAH.AILI• 1 • 111m
(K",'6" & ""t llf
EASY TO USE
CAR CLEANER and WAX
• 0-Oft '"''· 211 wipet off ""'1
• ContoiM no .._ ... dull
o car'• finlth
SPECl~L VALUES ·FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY sehab1aespano1
COSTA MESA FULLERTON GARDEN GROVE LA MIRADA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 s; HARBOR BLVD. l0912 KATEl.1.A AVE.
KATE'.LLA & EUCLID
PHONE: 638·0863
14207 ROSECRANS Al/£. 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPR ESS 15221 BEACH BLVD.
PHONE; 893·8544 SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
PHONE: 549·1533
PHONE· 870·0700 PHONE: 944·6437 PHONE: 547.7471
' -It
•I
1
IN H,, Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
--------------------------.,. ,,..---------------------------------------------------------------------------------...
~ I I . . I.
NAIL
.. 1Ta•1t DIVlllOM
W Lel'eAeP ...
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l•ClCNtD llAC•. 350 yWCb. ,_,..,-.
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S.rcleflk ta...dl U.O UO UO
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'OU•TN llACI. 170 yercl&. ).yeer-oldl
end Ull. Clelmlfto Plltv IJ,SOO.
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Tiie K"'9t'Mll. l'nNY Jee 0.Cll. Liiiie .....
ZlllOO Cflwvt, Q.erne Sl••teer. '
ROGER CARLSON
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PO•T NUeNUH (AMtrl<Hl -36
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(MT ... ,T ..... ) ...-.-.c..... u ...................... . ''•Ml .. NN ZHi6M ..
5111 Women'• T,.n1 H•donel CAii .... , Jtlf,C.C..I "'"' .... Jwlle lllUw def, Ullde -· t -•;
E•wlne K-.ry ..... ·-· T ...... J •ncl I ; Mery ZI"'"'•'"'•" def. R•re
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Otf. Ann Kelly, S elld •: SNrley FurlcN>g def
Pelrlcle Gofl&el•r, J elld 2; Allct Or• dltf •
Linde HIOflt, 2 -1.
Misc.
Nedonel Soort• FHtlvel •"YTMMI( O'flMAITICS ~ ............. ........
I Ly.,. Cr_,.., EHt ........... llM<ll.
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Rocllffi.r, Mlftt\., 1L1S S w--, Hllll«cl,
$o<illl, Ottroll, 11.150.
H--I. lleNbe, 11.30 1.. Zl-1 .... la.10
J Crebl-. ILOS 4 Hllllerd, 17 .... S. Sette,
17 u
Cl-* -I :l""'"'9. 10.U. t. lllt l CrMlfM,
elld 6off•, 11.ao. •· ~' Ovtnler, Sauifl, Loa Anoeift. 11 .... S. Holly Eli.lfNlll, hta,
T111u , 1tt0.
ltl_, -I CrelltrM, II.to J. Zl-lllQ.
II 10. >. SOii•, 11.00 .•. Selin• Wollery,
Mlcl•HI. Clllwr City, 11.IS. s. e.n.tie, 11.65. OYIMAITICS ...... _ ...
I ltoy Pe4MIOU, Well, Senle Clere, 1t.'5
lol•I polnb; 2. Den"'' H•Jd•n, So11U.,
Tllcton. II.JS: 1 Tom lleecll, Wttt, 11.., Nwo. 11,6$.
"-IH-
1. Brien 8eb<ock, So\1111, Enlcl, Ollle.,
11 t1; J. Tim o.weu. Ee.I, Scwlngflelcl, Men., II.JS; J, Kevin fll'redy, Ml-I,
11roo111v11 P-. MlM., 11.as. Miii .....
1. Merli C.0, EMI, Syrocuw. 11.7S; 1.. lllt l lrlen Meeker, Mlctwtst, ECllNI, M ......
enc1 llncocll ti.SS.
VMlll
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.............
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Unlver•lty Geme1
c.1 ....... \•-i.1
WAH•POLO
Cllbe I I, S.-.let Ulllon t
ltom...C• t, UllllH SI.en•
!Cube w"11 DOid, Unlled SI .... wlll '"-· ltom•nl• wlnt llrOlltll
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lrtHIYI• reley -I. U.S.,.( ..... Left, C....
llOtO"'~· •-r• MefOf, Jiii Slerllell, J:SS.0
IAMCaTIALL
U.S. to,"-'• 71
Soviet Ulllofl '2, V .... evle 14 ..._
llolTlenl• 72, ClllM U (•Olft•flle wlM
1>ronnl
Sovlt l Unlofl ... U.S. 1' (So-llet UnlOfl •IN
eoldl
l'••HTYL•••1nu•o
Unllmllod-1. 9rllU ~-. U.S.; 1)0-2 Mlkt L•lld, U.$ .. 1 .. -2. Dew
Sc.""Hr, U $., 1-J Mileti Hull, U.S.
Tue9dey'1 tranHc:tion1
, ... at.U.
~'"---SEATTLE MAltlNEltS -Fired S-Sc.l!ryver. estlllMI cllreder Of ,..,... e
ve1.-1
•A&C•TIAU ................ ._ .....
NEW 'fDltK KNICKS -Ealeftdecl ..
'onlrect of lttcl HOii"'•"· lle•d ceecll,
llvou111 Ille ltlJ«J --· WA$HINOTOH eULLIETS -$1tf1M ltell O•vla, ....,.., ...,...,cl.
~at.u c--.. ....... u..-
MONTlll!AL ALOUl!TTH -E-
lllt conlrocl of Joe keMell•. lleed <eecfl. llvovtfl ltlt ltlQ .. ._,, ~ Jon $111IOll,
deltn11.,.11ec1<, 10 • 1.....,, trlel. N.....,, ..... IU..-
IAL Tl MORE COL TS -"'-"Ille,...
11remtnl ol ltl<llwd """"'•u, ,ie<ftl<ller.
llAMS -SIONcl Mel 0-.-., II-Iler,
le '"'" -·YH' COlllrocll plut • ., Ol'floft ye•r.
NEW 'fOltK JETS -Cul Sc.oft '-· g~rd, •ftd Todd a..-. llMbe<Mt".
MOCICl'f ........ ....,L.Mtille
LOS ANGELES KINGS -.._. J .... ltwlllerlorcl, ~ • ...., J ..... PWI It*
., ••• ,. •Int. lo""" • .,. .. '°"'"""' eou.ee• MOUNT ST. MAlt'f'S -N•ITIM allt 51\e..._.. __ .,......_ .. ,MCll.
by deat.h threats
TAMPA (AP> -A series of death threats, ap·
parenUy connected lo the slaytngs of his two step·
sisters in AtJanla. has given Tampa Bay safety
Neal Colzie an ominous burden In efforts to turn
around his pro football career.
Emile Harry: He's treading on roses .
Col.tie said he has received "four of five"
threatening telephone calls, the latest last Thurs-
day. Tampa police and National Football League
security people are investigating, he said.
"The calls have been reported to us and a de-
tective has been assigned to investigate," Tampa
police spokesman Johnny Barker acknowledged
Tuesday. .
Police have determined that the calls are long
distance, but haven't been able lo trace them.
"Whoever it Is bas gotten me afraid. I have to
try lo erase it from my mind. But I am looking
over my shoulder." Colzie said.
Colzie sajd he has lltUe doubt about why he's
receiving the calls.
On Jan. 27. he visited his step·sisters, Candy
Demetria Lane. 25, and Jo Carron Lane, 21, in
Atlanta. They told him there had been a threat
(they were involved In things they weren't sup-
posed to be doing).·· he uid.
The next day. they were found dead on their
kitchen floor.
•'They shot the whole house up. It waa like a
1angland-atyle killing," he said. "Everytime I
used to talk about It, I would start to cry ...
There baa been one arrest made ln the case,
Coble said. And the seventh.year pro aays be has
offered to testify to the case.
He suspecta be'a belnc baraaaed by people in-
volved ln the slayJn1a. Collie waa alarmed Mon·
day when the St. Petersburg Times published the
1tory. with the beadJlne: "Caller to Buca' Coltle: J
am 101nl to kiU you."
·'Some nut out there mllht try.'' Collie aaid.
''Thia thln1 la very dlstreaalnc. but ll'I even
more dlltreaaln1 to see a headline like that."
Col%.ie said he lan't takln1 any chancet.
"I don't 10 out u much u luted to unleu J 10
out with c.eetl," he Hid, rtferrtnt to mutcular
llnebadler CeeU Johmon.
The death threata came dw1n1 •llat may be a
cro11roedl in Colde'a career.
Uro&by Handicap set
Tbt •,too Bini Croeby Handicap and the
'75,000 S.. Dt;;Han41cap .W cUmax the ftnt full ... ol ra ID lb• 1111 ..... this Wfflcend
at Det MM' Rae. aek.
Tbe Cro.by RHdteap Saturday, a sprint
• c:lu1Jc: wMcb bonon UN .-una roundel' ot o.i
llarJ wW feature l,.. def..., champion, Rfb'1
GolaenA.le.
AIDOlll Mb'• Golden Alt'• Jike\1 foea II I'm
SmNla. a wbmet ln thrH " b.ll IMt oaUall at HoJlrwood Park. ~~IM ID Dle10 HandlnP,'a tltJI ~
wtll hi......-Ulle prosram. Probabl• ta•orllt al 11 /U mllH 11
DoonllburJ, wbo .. a lwe>oyear-4*1 M Del If at
woa the '8aJboa ILU• and wu f'UIMl'·UP to
Car,.._ In the Del llu ,....t.J,
rtnt poll Ume both dQ'I ll I p.m. •
Three of the last four Division I Player of the
Year wiMers have been produced by the Orange
Coast area and once again the Shrine All-star foot·
ball game proved to be a showcase for the winner
-a nd a proving point that the honors bestowed
were more than justifi ed.
In 1977 the No. 1 prep football player in the
CIF Southern Section was Fountain Valley Higb's
Willie Gittens a nd he went on to score three
touchdowns amid.at a record 215 yards rushing for
the victorious South team (29-21 ).
THE lt7t WINNER was Edison High's Kerwin
Bell, who scored both of the South's touchdowns
the following summer while pill.DR up 179 vards on
26 carries. Each ls currently a star for bis uni·
verslty, Gittens a premier back for Arizona State,
Bell an All-Big Eight first team selection as a
freshman at the University of Kansas.
The latest In the long line of gold nuggets from
the area la Fountain Valley's Emile Harry, and
the fluid and talented Baron more than Justified
his aelecUon this past Saturday al the Rose Bowl,
where be became the South's bi1 offensive weapon
despite the fact he was a wide receiver.
Harry caught three passes, good for 70 yards
(including a 49-yard gem) and rushed for 24 yard.a
on three carries, in addition to returnin1 punts.
holding for placekicks and even attempting a two-
point pass.
While the South's highly·regarded offense was
limited to a lot of frustration in a 15·15 tie. Harry
stood out again with his ability to execute.
It really wasn't a surprise. any more than the
efforu of Gittens apd Bell before him.
THE lt·DA Y TRAINING session al Long
Beach St.ate In preparation for the Shrine game
wasn't exactly a piece of cake, and Harry Is the
first to back it up.
"At first. we thou«ht. ·no wav. we don't want
this,• " says Harry. "It waa klnd of bard to get
motivated. But as it turned out It was worth it. It
was for a good cause (Children's Hospital in Los
Angeles) and we had a pretty good lime.
"It was really a pleasure to play under Coach
<Bill) Workman (of Edlson High). He jolted a lot
and we bad a lot of run. One day his daughter
(Jana) came up and we all had lunch.
"But It was a trifle bit more than I expected.
to put It mildly.''
Workman and Bannin1 High Coach Vince Fer-
ragamo had their South team drilling three times
a day foT the fi rst six days and it was a well-
conditioned squad that operated Saturday.
The fact the heavily favored South was lucky
Galimo.re finds per/ ection .
Gy~nast a bright item at National Sp~rts Festival
to escape with a standoff doesn't bother Harry.
"WE THOUGHT WE should have won, we
blew so many golden opportunities," says Harry.
''But playing for a cause ... you really didn't feeJ
like we were embarrassed. I thought we should
have won, but they <the North> had Just as many
names on their team, too."
Harry took a hard shot during the second half
and had to be helped from the field. coming back
only once before finding Jt impossible to continue.
''I got a really hard shot to the back, right on
my kidney," says Harry. "There's no problem
now, but it was very diWcuJt at the time. I couldn't
pick up my legs and run."
Harry, whose weight has dropped to 161 <be
wants to be ready for Stanford this fall at 175
pounds on his 6·1 frame>. says no one has told him
anything in terms or what's expected or him th.is
fall.
BUT HE HAS SET some goals for himself -
< 1) to play as a freshman and <2> and to atart
sometime during his first season.
It has been a meteoric riae for Harry, a
sophomore quarterback and part·time starter at
wide receiver and quarterback as a junior on the
varsity.
From those somewhat humble credenUala he
went on to become the CIF Division f Player of the
Year as a wtde receiver on Fountain Valley's Bii
Five Conference runner-up Baron1.
•'I never expected a lot of things I 1ot, but I
knew if I worked hard I could be u eood as I want·
ed to be. It was a matter of Ume and effort and J
reel I did it. ll paid off."
SYRACUSE, N.Y . <AP> -
Gymnut Ron Gillmore Heb
perCectioa. And, Tueaday nl&ht,
be reached t\lJ soal at the Na-
Uonal SporU Festival.
American ever to attain such
perfection in the event.
AS FOR STANFO&D, another ex-Baron, Ken
Mar1erum, wu a bll fact« in Harry's declalon.
men's all·around championship "He told me, 'We have to keep the Fountaln Valley
d 1 dln i th connectJon aolna her~.' "aaya Harry.
Galimore the aon of U>e late
Willie Gati'mort, a 1tar runnlna
back for the Chlca10 Bean unW.
bl• death ln an automobile a~l·
dent nearly l5 yeara a10,
1wooped down the ton1 rwiway
flew off tbt aprlnsboard and
soared to a perfect 10.0 1eore In
the ftrat ot two attempt.a bl the
tlnalt ol the vault ~mpetltlon.
"lt feJt pretty 1ood to me,''
Hid UM al-year-old, wbo will
1raduate from Iowa St•t•
Unl•ntJ In Aututt. •11 am..
Wb• I lanclld tbat lt wu reallJ
1ood. You alwa11 try to be
perfect. ...... ll .. .,.......
1oea nac:t.11 = roa Mftr UO.UU.J wm ... tt t.1981 • ., ...
Tb• perfect ~ lumded out
for bla &np, a Tlukahara latout
paelUcm wWl I full twill, WU
tb• HHDtb of bl• ••uJU•1 career. Gtllmon I.I tllt oalr .
He added a 9.9 vault. alvinl
him an averace of 9.5 and the
gold medal tn that Individual
competition.
Galimore, one of the m,ny u .s. at.blet.ea cboten ror • 1180
' national team but deprived ol an
Olympic appearance by the
A mertcan boycott of th• MOICOW
Games, was pleu•d by his
ahowtnc ill thlt slx-day Fatlval
of American sport,, DOtlnl that
motl ol tbe other top perfOl'men
ln 1ymllutlc1 cbou to be
eleewbere.
"I think lt (the F•Uval) ii a
bll tblnl," be uplalned. "It re-
mlnda me ol t.be Otymplca, wttb
all the .... 1porta betac ecm-
teat.ed blre, too. I
...... I llttl• UpHt about
IOlll• al tbe Cl4MI' "'""'"' llOl partt~ ........... to ...
here ror u.. ..,.. •. ud I'm
stMleame.'' BrUlilleilkW,11,wbO.,..tllit
Satur ay, was ea g n e With a 3.4 IP• and a m•'or seared toward vault competJUon, even follow-.., Inc Gallmore's 10.0. But, on h1a psychology, Harry appears to be tread1n1 on
second try, he hit the sprtnc-roses. And with John EJway at quarterback, who
boa rd too far back and knows, maybe then are IDOft fOHI in at.ore Cor
criahed lull force lnto the vault· Emile Harry. with hi.a h t Fountaf.n Valley.. Incidentally, hau'l lffD Lbe ln1 hone c ea · last of the Harrys. Carl Harry enten at a
He wu taken to Crouse-rrvtna rreahman thia fall, a wide reeelvtr·tallback can· Hospital, where be waa kept dldate.
overnipt ror obtervatlon. Dr. The aboea he'll be trytna to ftll certainly •P·
Patrlcla Potter of the U.S. pear to be every blt a1 lar1e aa Duval "Bubbe''
Olympic Committee medic&! Love's alte u..
staff 1ald Meeker, the Bl• Ten,------------..-----.,-----aU·around champion from Min·
neaota, apparenUy did not have
1erlou1 lnJurlH. ... toolr the
1Uver medal in the 1UJI rtnp
befor. lhe mllhap.
I n o t h e·r h 1 a h I t I bu
Tunday, Roy PaJ .. IOU of SUila
Clara, won t.be sold medall ln
llilD'I pmnutlet1 wlftDlnt tbe noor u.-dM ana the parallel
bara, and Richard Sava1e of
Wtlt lloaroe, La., 1al.ned a
clo .. dectUOn In u.. c .. tun bout
la tM =· lakJaC Ult told In tlae 111-clau.
-.
I
I -..
I
I
I
PVBIJC NOTICE PllBUC NOTICE
NOTtca INVITIMO llDI Ptennout •ullMUI
Nolle• It ,._,.~ 1rvtn 11\et ll'W MAMCl ITATllMllNT ... ,. ef l"""'-ti h CM•I c-TM .......... ,.,_, •te tlelttt
m"""" Cell ... Olltrlet of Ore ......... ...,..u .. ~ HO L L a H I I c
C-ty, Cell~. Wiii r-lft ....... IUNNYMIEAO VINTU•I atM .. ~.; bid&,._• 11:• •·"'• l'rk:ltty, Allflll1' • Itel, ettM 11w~O...,tmentef A irway Au1111e. Ce1t• Me ...
.. If ,.,,... cllltrkt 'Toeatec1 et IS10 Callf..W. ....
Adem1 Av1n11t Cotta Mes• Hol~Ot...,....-.ICt.,1111: ..
Calltorllle, at 'lllllcfl 'u-aelcl blch w11i • C•lll....,..• ~..,._•llon, l tM "8"
btlllllllklY.....,enclreodfor· .A lr••l' A••""•· Cute Meu , . c.llfornl• ...
PAINTINO NI WSl"APl!R '"COAST Tl'tlt llu.tl,,.tl ta c-c-.ct by •
•ll'ORT'" net.a SCHOOi. YIAlt, llmlled ~
O•ANOECOAITCOLLl!OI Moltelllloeck 0."91-t
' PUBlJC NOTICE
fftCTtnou• IUllNaU "Mii ITATIMaMT
T"e IOll-lng perlOftt are dolllQ
lllltlllftt .. :
THI PINIS • fl'ULLE RTON
APAltTMl.NT'S. LTD, PO, IOX 9'40,
44'J tlrcll St'991, N.-port .. e<l't,
CalltwlllanMO
PIO, e C.lllorTlle petrtnerel'tllt,
P.O. lox -..0, •4'1 "''" Slr••t. N-•tt 8"cill, c.lltornl• t2'60
Forgt o.w..-1 COf Ptt'•lle11, • Celltor nl• 'orporellon, USO Stele
ltraet, Stit11111ftetd, Mu•echu••ll•
01101
All 1111111.,.. to lie In ec--.Ce wttll Ce,. inc.
IN tkl F9i"m llltlr"llttlOllS -COndl·
lltltt 8lld S,.Clllc•ll•nJ wftk".,. -
811 lllt 9"d !Ny bt _..,..,In Ille off tee
n111 l>lltlneu •• conc:klctec:I by •
Patrltla H. Noyu, SK. llmlt•d flWl-•· 1'90 Treft,
Rttel~ Otllrei Pan,... ol Ille Plof\'twlng """"OI Milli coll ... f latrlct
eecll llldldat 'Nit 1'*'1111 w1t11 1111
bid • '""""' c11e«i, ~ertlflff clt!Kk, or bhklol,., balld inMt ,.,eel• ao IM
oroer of IN CMsl Cofllrltwnll., Col ....
Oltlrlct eoerd •f TrualHt In en •mo""t not lfts UIMI llw percent o1
'"la ·-•• filed '"'''" .. c_,,. C1ett1 •or-. c:...n1, °" Jiiiy
Tlllt s•t-1 we• fll.0 with Ille ,,.-a C-IY c•-of Or•nue C-ty on J,.1y 10, ""
P11bllt!Nd Or.,,._ C.Ut Dell)' 1'11414. 20, 1 .. 1.
July U, 22, Jt, AUf. ), 1•1 J117 .. I fltMMJ
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN t\lm bid M ...,.,.,,, .. tl'ttt IN ...... ~----------
<Mr wlll ent« lnlo ptOpoMd Conlrect If l'ICTIT10US •USINIU
ltw Mme It ewarded to lllm. 111 IN NAMI ITATIMINT
tvent of retture to tflW lnlo Moel'! con-Th• loltowlng per'°"s ert dolnQ
Ir eel, IN proc.Hdl of tN Che<ll Wiii be DUSlll•H •.
forf•ll.ct, or In ll1t Cate of t bOncl, ll'lt BAY H.AR90R MOBILI! MANOR,
lull "'"' tNreot w111 be lorlti!Ald to ,.. 2111 St-t. ce111a Mt$e, C.llfornl•
u ld coll999 dlslrlel. t2•27
No 111~ INiy wltlldraw hi• bid tor Wll!Klr Alll'°n Yo..nQ, ,.,. 2ht
• perlO<I of forty·llwe ('5) deys after StrH t, Colle Mew, Cellfonile t2•21
,,,. dtl• Mt for tM -nlnQ tl'ltreot ,.,,. L. Y-., 296 21•1 Str"t. • Cosl• Mew, Celltornl• '2'21 The 8otnl of Ti'\ISl"s •Herve• thll Tiiis ""''-It condu<tecl by •n In· prlv11•91 of rejecllnQ ..,.,, elld ell blat dlvlduel
or to welw eny lrr9Qlllerllles or Wllb\I< A. YOllllQ
N0tmtt1 E. Welson Tllll ttet-1 was flltld wltl't the
Secretery, Boera County ci.rti of Orenve county on J"IY
of Trutlett C:0.1t U, 1911
Community Coll-Dist. "1MIU
p,.bll•twcl Or-Co.est Delly Piiot, PubllSlltd Orenge ,.,.,, O.lly Piiot
J"IY n, 1', 1"1 l2'CM1. July 22. 29, Aug. s, 12, 1"1 n~;
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUAL ,.NANC:IAL .ANO •uDOaT Rl!POllT
CBudget for"" Flscel y .. , BeQIMlllQ Jiiiy t, 19'1...0 £ncllnG Jllll9 JO, 1'911
CkH• Yi.w Sdl•t Ol*kl, Or .... ~. (;allfenlie
NOTICE C>t' AOOr'TION AND TR.ANWITT.AL
All ectlOll $1\ell be taken on tttls r-rt -.rlnQ reowl• or •-••ed •PK•••
mHlintt ol U. QOVHnlnQ boerd.
To Ille C-y 5'.lperlntendenl of ScllOOla:
e. TENTATIVE ANNUAL BUDGET REPORT. Thia rtpport I• herel>'f tlled by
t~ gov .. nlnQ tio.rd ol Ult KlloOI district.
Dete of .-11\Q June 1$, 1"1 SIQNd Del• Cool)en/$ocretery
b. PUBLICATION ANNUAL euDOET REl'ORT. TN 11111-lltnQ -ca. Mvlng
me<M on July 20. 1"1 tY<ll r evisions, .-iti.., -<IWlllQt• .. II dltm.I
neceuery, pendlnQ publtcellOfl, public -Ing. trld llnel adotllllon, lleretrf re-
turn• Ille reoort.
Tl'tt puCitlc i..rlno on ltlit repot't wlll be held et 1...0 '"B'" Str•I, Hd·
lnQton llHch, Ce .. on A..,.U, 1 .. 1. et 7:l0o'cloek P.M.
SIQMd Dele '-'>!SoKreterv
SUMMARY 0, CUllaENT OISTlllCT TAX lllCIUlalMINTS ,0111"1-G
Mttmt ..
Te... T•~·-
lt ........ ~-Generel F..no . . . ........................ . s,w ... 1
P111>1l""9G Or .... CMst Delly Piiot.
J"IY 22, Jt, ..... S, 11, 1 .. 1. 327M1
PUBLIC NOTICE
WN•1• coun o .. TMlsTATa O,CALll'OllNl.A
COUNTY 0' O•ANOI 7t9C:htc c:.w ~ .•. ........ ce.tt79\
PLAINTll'F: GENERAL ELEC·
TRIC CREDIT CORPORATION OF
TENNESSfE, • T--corpore ..
llOll,
DEFENDANT: TH E PA PER
CHASE. INC.: W.AOE M. O'H.ARR.A;
BERYL O'HARRA; •nd Dou I
llll'OUQl't 10, lnclustw.
Ml~S
ONPIRIT
AMaNOEO COMPLAINT
CASEMJm
NOTICEI You IYw bMn -· TM cowrt mey decide -Inst you wllhoul
your being -rd ""'•" you rupond wltllln lO •YL R-Ille lnlorm•llon "''-· II yo.. wl"' to -k tlw advice ot e n
•ltOf'lley In tttls matter, you •llould dO
ao promptly ao I"•' your written ,.._ .. , 11-. mey be flled 011 time
AVISO Usted M slOO <Mm-.
El lrl-1 _... dKIOlr conlr• Ud.
t111 eudlentl• • ,.,.._ q,.. Ud. •-· de def\lro die lO din .. L .. le Inform•
clon qU<t sl-.
SI u uea-... SGllcttar •I conM)o de "" •bo9900 •n flt• nunto, deberle
lleurlo lmmealetemenle, de HI•
m•n.r•. Ml l'ftPUIN -•lie, SI Ny
•lgUfl•, _.i. Mr rtQlstr-e ti.mpo.
1, TO THE DEFENDANT: A clvll
complelnt tin -Ill.a by tl'lt pleln.
1111 -•ns• "°"' II yow Wi•h lo detwnd lhl• lewt&lll, yOY musl, wlll>ln 30 IMYI
.tt•r tl\ls MnmOnS Is HNeG on you,
Ille wltfl tl1ls court • written r""°"M to Ille complit/111. Unlns you oo to,
Annuel •-Y"-1 on eccount of Sl•lt SchOOI
B"lldlnQ FYM Apportionment . . . . •...............
Bono lnlerHt enG Principe I P•Ylntl\ll ....•........
QENEaAL flUND
t,SS3, .. 7 ., •. o.,
your oer ... 11 wlll be enterea on ....
.0tn1 llllutlon of IN plelntlll, end tllts ~rt
.04355 mey enter • J"°8n'*'t eQtlnsl you for
Ille rellef ~ In II• complelnt,
TOTAL NET ADJUSTED
BEGINNING BALANCE .. .
Re1trlcled ................. .
Unreslr1ctll<I ........... .
INCOME
1-.1
ACTUAL
M2.'9' U0,000 m,m
1100·MOO Ftdlt,.1 Income . . . . • . . . . .• . . . • . 1,.CM7 ,JIS
8600 Stll(e income . .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. • .. . u.•71,t5'
8700 County Income . .. . . • . . . . .• . . .. 24.MI
8'00 Locel lncomtr . , . • .. .. .. .. .. .. 10,Jl',711
noo lncomlnQ Trentlen... . .. . ... .. .. J,2•.•
TOTAL INCOME . .. .. . .. .. ... •• ..... ....... .... . 21,123,•
TOTA':, NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME ll .... ,317 EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
1000 Certlllceled Selerlu ..
2000 Cleullled S.lw les
lOOO ErnplovH Beftellh
4000 Boou, S.-llH end Equipment R911lec-t
SOOO Comreced S.rvlcu a. 0 1/>tr OperetlnQ ExpenSH ...
aooo Slttt, BuUdlnQS. 8o<*s a.
n ,CM1,1U
4,15',t29 J,10,<IOt
1, lt.l .. 7
1,70 ,611
Medle, N-Equl-1 .......... _............... S, Ul
7100·7400 Other Outgo .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 4,'90,441
7.00 A~l.tlon lor Contln99f'1CIH ..........•...
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO&
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES.
TOTAL NET ENOING BALANCE
Rutrlctll<I.. .. .. •. ..... ...... .
Unru lrlCl..:1 .. . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. .. .. . ..
TOTAL, EXPENOITURES, OTHER OUTG06 APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES
11,M4,21S
1.022.112 S00,000
U2,112
PLUS NET EN.DING BALANCE.................... D,eu,a 1
llOftO un•••ST AND lllCHIMr'TI0911 flUNO .• ..,
OUTSTANDING BONDED INDEBTEDNESS . . .
ADJ USTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
MOO-•tO Stet• income .
MOO-lltO Loul lnco<M .
M00-9"0 lncomlnQ Trensteo
TOTAL INCOME ...... TOTAL, NET BEGINNING
BALANCE ANO INCOME
OTHER OUTGO... . .. ............... ..
NET ENDING BALANCE ....................... ..
TOTAL, OTHER OUTGO PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE , .. . .. ... ... . .. ...
aUll.DINO ,UNO
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME TOTAL INCOME ........... .
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME
EXPENOI TURES
2000 Cleulfled Sel•IH .
SOOO Contrecled S.rvlcn I.
01 .... r ()pe(elll)Q EJC"911SH... . ..... , ....... , .......
aooo SllK, BllllOl"IJS, 8o<*s a.
Media, N-Equl-t .. . . .. .. .. . . ............ .
TOTAL EXPENDITURES ...................... .
NET ENDING BALANCE ,.. .. ............. .. TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE ....................... ..
SPECIAL lllSEllYE ,UNO
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE .
INCOME
.,00 ln<ornlnQ Tren•hn . . . . . . ...
TOTAL INCOME .. . . . .
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
AND INCOME
EXPENDITURES
2000 Cleulfltd SelerlH lOOO E mptoy" 8enellh
5000 Contrected S.rvlcu I.
Other Operelll)Q Expentes . . . . •
aooo Sites, BullotnQt, 8o<*s a.
Media. N-EQ<ll-t • .. .. . .. ............. .
7000 Otlwr Outgo ................................. .
TOTAL EXPENDITURES AND
OT HER OUTGO ................................. .
NET ENOING 8ALANCE ....................... ..
TO TAL, EXPENDITURES I. OTHER OUTGO
ACTUAL
6,6",000
ISS,'23
12,454
1,0'97,7'7
11,UI
1,171,SG
2,cm..505
1,110,110 .o..m
2,027,SOS
1'90 .. 1
ACTUAL
10 ....
.o.
10,MI
Ul
221
10 ....
1-.1 ACTUAL
1,S.,627
2,t10,04S
2,'70,CMS
1•.110 ~·
11l,1H
4,1M,S1J
PLUS NET ENOING BALANCE....... . .. . . . . uoun
STATE SCHOO\. 8UIL·04NO flUND
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCO.li\E
MOO Sl•I• Income .............. ..
l900 Locet lncoma •.........
TOT.AL INCOME
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE
ANO INCOME
EXPENOITURES
SOOO Conerecttd S.r•len •llO
Olller ~Mllll EaptntM... . .. •• .. . , ........... -
TOTAL EXPENDITURES ......................... .
NET l!Nl:>INO B.Ai..ANO:
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE ....................... ..
C.Al'llTl•IA 'UNO
AOJunl!D NET BEGINNING 8.ALANCE •.•.•...
INCOME
.,~ F-•l Income ........................ .
ltOOSIMe lllGoma ................................ ..
... Loe.el,_ ......... •" ........ " ........ ".
TOT.AL.INCOME ................................ ..
TOTAL, Nl!T •EGINNING •ALANCE ANO
INCOME ................................. .
EXPENDITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO = Claulfled s.tl.wles ........................... . • ...,..._r ........................... .. ................. _, 14141;;;:;;;l ,...__, ......................... .
soot Ctfltr«l .. lenkH ellO OOler o,w .. 1111 e:,.._.. ......................... .
TOTAi.,, UPSHOITVAU. OltiEll OUTOO& Al' .. "-<)lt•IATIOH FOA C()NTINOINCIH .•... ,,.
HST l"NOIHO 8ALANCI ........................ ..
"ET e:MOIHO aALANC:a ........................ ..
TOT.AL, l!)(ltlNOIT\1111.t ANOOTHa• OUTOO
1-...1
ACTUAL o ,m
U0,1 .. l .,,
4t ,
J
.,
t-..1
ACTUAL J7 ,2tS
1 .....
1 ...... u,ue
7Sl,.N7 •.m ~m
"'-'11 HI T INOING BALANCE.................... 19'h• ot ... lilHO MAHfTa.MNtQ ,.,.0 I..,
AOJUSH O Nat lf:OINNINO IAl.ANCa , •••••.• INCOMI ........ 1-................................. .
""'ll!t.,_ T, .................................. . TOTAL tNC:leiMI ••••••• I ••••• I •••••••••• tt. ,., •••
TOT A~ NT H .. MlltNO ilM.ANC• 'AJIO INCOMa ................................... . DN .... tU .... _ClmllliM..,.,,. ........................... . =~..=o:::.···························· ........ _.. ............................... . .... c.iier .... ~ ... ~ .................. .
...................... & ......... & ..... ........,. ......................... .
TOT4'"-U ..... DfTU,_U ....................... . ... , lllOfNO-.... -...C• ......................... .
TOT.AL. IJC-.NOtT\Ul•t ~ ........ ,,. .. ~ .......................... .
ACTUAL ...
. .... .... ... . .,
llUU ~
~
1"1.C' Wlllcll could rnull Ill Qtml""m..,I ol
8UDGET w•11H. laing ol ..-y or pr_.ty or otll•r r•ll•f ••Guettea In 11\e com· l,OU., 112 plelnt
500,000 Dated: Mey lJ, 1911
S22,1U LH A. Br•ncll. ci.r11.
By JN nnine Getu, 0.llUIY
"'·0" llOS.S. oa MONT• & SHANI!
1J,IM,1U A Pt.-aw-1<-.-etl•
II.ACM ,_ WllMI" ••"'-· Siie. Ul a,ns.•n -....ny Miiis, ce. '9!11
J,"1,131 CllJ) m.6431
U.111.77S Publltlwd Orenge C:O.sl Delly Piiot,
24,153,117 July IS, 22, 29, AYQ. S, 1911 lt7Ml.
11,M ,t" 4,600,JOt ),2SS,7M
1,.a..ltl
St,11S
1,Mt,170
"2,Jn
li,n 1.•1
12S,000
26.&U.•7
u e1.c
BUDGET ......
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUI •USINaU
NAMI STATHdNT
Tiie toll-Ing .,.,....,, ••• dolnQ
IKnln.un:
THE SWEDLOW GROUP. mu
Wttl•r11 A-. Gerden Gro,,., CA t2MS.
SWEOLOW, INC .. e Celllornle
corPor•tlon, nt22 W•1tern Aven,..,
Gero.11 Grow, CA '2MJ.
TMs bull-.. I• c.ondueted by a <or·
poretlOfl.
SWEDLOW, INC.
J«ll Gold,
VkePnll-1
Tl'tlt .-t w• lllecl wltll Ula
COYlll)' Clertl M Or-. County on Jiiiy
7,1 .. 1.
LAWOfffltCll
GOl.OAMOOOLO , .. a... a.-tT Dr1w ...,_fyMllla,CAmll • 1,11 .... , l't6MC7
.O· PublllMd or.,.. c.oet1 0.11, Piiot,
1.116,.., July•. u . 22. it.,,... aon .. t
J,m,tM
1,144,670 ...... PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI •USINIU
NAMa ST.ATl'MaNT
Tiit IOllOWlnQ pert.Ollt •re Going
DUtlnttses. ., .. ..,
BUDGET
.0. ONE·DAY AUTOMOTIVE-
CARB, BRAKE I. ELECTRICAL, 170
Wul K•lall• AvetMie, Unll No t . ~· OrenQe, Cellforl'I• '2647
Howerd Le,.ner, S074 Alder,
• lrvlne, c.lllorlll• mu
Jemft H. sn.<ron. Sll FlrttllOrn,
.0. e ree, Celllornla
Wllll.,,, Jollnlon, 1610l Ev•l'9'"n
.Q. UM, CerrllO\, Cellfornla 90701
ArlllUr EHlm•n. 713 Boisen•
Orlw , ~ 8-e<ll, Celllornl• t:IH I
·O· Tltlt DUslneu Is conducted by •
.Q. Qelle r •I pertN,....lp,
t,.,..,
8UOGET
4,t .. ,SlJ
Arlhur Ee1trnen
Tiii• .iettment wes fll..:I wltl't llw
County Cl-ol Orengo County on July
'· 1 .. 1. ANN CMEal aaowN
.AttlFNY .. UW
•leatlC-•A-.0· S.lte lit
.O· Or ..... cal ..... ,..,
C7t4) S»ltU
•. IM,SlJ l'lHIU
""blltlwd Orenoe Coesl D•lly Piiot,
)Q,OOO July 1s. 22. it, Auo. s. "" s11 ... 1 10,000
1,000.000
l,"4,SlJ
150,000
._lM,SU
.Q.
•,1M,S1l
t .. 1..,
8UDGET ..
c .. , •
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10US •UllN•U
MA.Ma ITATEMaNT
The lollowlnQ penon1 ere dolnQ
Du•lllflltJ:
INTERTR.ADE, 2•'3 Utlleton
Place. C-te Mew. Cellfornl• '2U•
Nlcllol• JolWI Matyes, t4661 D•n-
berry Clrcle, TllSllll, Cellfornl• t26IO
Lynne Merit -yes, 14661 D•n·
-ry Clrci., TllSll11, c:.11""111• '26IO
Tiiis bullness Is conclu<ttd b)' e11 In·
dlvld,.•I. Nlcl'to1M J . Metyas
Thlt SIAllemtnl wn 111.0 wlttt llw
County C:lar"I! of Orenge County°" J Yly
~ 10,1 .. 1. ,,...,,
P"bllllled Orante C.O.st Oelly Pllol. ! J11l y U, 22.1', Auo. S, 1 .. 1 ~l
4-
1'•1.ea
IUOGf!T
4,711
200,000 u.• .. ... "'·-
t74.m . ..... ......
seo,ooo .. ...
61' .... •.m vn
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC:l INVITINO •IDS
Notice la l\ereby gl.,.n tllal Ille
Boerd or edu<ttlOll ol t"• I rvl11e
Unified kllOOI District or Oranee
c-ty, <;.all!Onlle, wlll recelw --llldt 1111 to 2:00 11.4'1. Oii IN Ht day of
A\llVtl, 1"1, et Wflk" time .... bl4b
wlll be llWllcly ~ Md rNd for
C•111tl 11-'olC•"*" & 11-tr. •If c~IU-Md IMtl'IKtltfta -tlld
1wm1 may lie MealNCI et ttie office of
"IK•I ....,_,. letY~" 1941 Al AWll11t, l"'IM, c.11;;n;fa, TM Olt-
lrlct r.--tN rleltt le reject.,,.,.,
•II llllft oir lo Wlllw aft\' lrf'ellllarlt ...
or lntonNlll'" In llflY blft or In ttw lll!Hlflt,
IMlll UllHIM k._. Oltlrkt ......... u ....
........... II I
~11111 ..... CWMI* C-Dally "''°'• Jiiiy n, Jiiiy tt, ,.., tt21M1.
•'4·'" -PUBUC NOTIC~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981 H/F
I
D
PUllUC NOTICE
PIC1'11'10UI •Ull•HI
MAMlllTATDMl•Y TM ...... 11'9 ..,_. ere ... 119
MiMUal
8TCMINOt •TC, a n ·~Kl•
Awe1111e, o.t•11 Grewe, Cellltt11I• .... , o. ... ~ ,.,.. ....... Cew'I.
l'-1.elll Vtl...,, t.4it.mie.,,.
JHll "· '#toMll, '621 e et1 4111 "'"" L-. -..ai. Cel"9mle .,.
Dew~
f"I• ~ -rlled wllll .,,. c-1., Clef1l • ar.,.. ~"' Jllfy 1, Itel.
l't .... t ~·-Or.,.. C'Mtt Dell)' PllOC,
""'' •• u. tt. "· 1 .. 1 J010-tt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUB.UC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUJ •UttNUS
N~ITAH.NNT
Tiie lotlowlnQ per'6ns ••• 001110
lluslneue1. PURITY POOi.. t.ERYICE. IMU
0.lawere St-t, H11rttl"414011 Be<t<ll,
CAt2 ....
MIKI ROOlltS. ''"I O.tewere $1reel, Hunllrlt;llOll Beech, CA t2..e.
ALICE R00ER$, IMlt 0.lewar•
Str"l. H\lftlington .. eth, CA t2MI
l Illa -'rwH I• cona..ct.a by In
alvl,,..els CH.-icl .. Wif•I
Mlll,•R-r\
Allu ROQll"
Tiii• sW.te!Mllt wal 111.0 wllll I~
Cou11ty Otrk t1I Or-(Ow>ty On July 10, 1911
NOlllllSA ASIOCIAT .. , INC. u1• c-onw, .., .. t
New..,.-· CA n.tet ., . .,.,
,,,....,1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI 8UllNH.t
NAMa ITATIM8NT
TM tollowtnQ PtfMln II dlolnt Ml
IMHel
$LIDIN0 GARAGE DOOM$, 1111
Mll<hell, Tustlll, Calllor11I• tiwo
51.IDIHG OAllAGI DOOR CO,
t34 I MllcMll, T11t11n, <;elltornlt tlMO
l'rencl• O\ly Cemoelwllt Jr., 1341
Mltc~11. Tusllrl, c.e111orn1eu .. o
Thh bu\lnMS I\ cond<>Ctecl bY en •n· QivlOUal
Jr
1111• •~••-Ill w•• flied wllfl the
Co.inly c1 ... i. °' Or•noe COYl\h on Jutw 10, , ...
"166411
P11bll\hll<I 0r....,. c.oe" o.auv Piiot,
J11ly 22. 29, Auq S, 12. '"' 3144-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTt~tout 9UM•lll Publllfle4 Or-Goe1I 0.111 PllOI,
•AMa ITATl ... NT July u . 29' Aug. s. n. 1"1 )2/MI PICTITIOU$ •U$1NIU
The foOOWfftt P9f'Mfl\l et• dolntf ' -----NAMl ITAT•M•NT
bull""'•: PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie tot1owlnG per'°"' ••• ooh•o TENDER 11uae1NG CA,_E, 122 llutlneu .. ,
Mtr.lltf'll• Strwl, Cor-W I Mer SIXTEENTH STREET JOINl , Catlfornietaas l'ICTITIOUi 8UStNIH VENTURE, 16f97 Algonquin Strffl,
Shtllll'f E11g1t119 Wiiton, Jr .. tt2 NAME ST.ATIMENT SYlte H, Huntlnglon !Mecfl, CA t2"' Mer....,.lte ~. C.,_ .... Mer, Tiit lollowlnQ pertons e re dolnQ ICELLY SNOW, IM11 Bern•l•blo
C.iltornle t2i.IS b\lllMU e>: Lene, liunllngton S.ecll, CA 92.0
Lle yd A lle n Wllso11, UI COMP.l(EN CO .. 272S SterblrO EARi.A SNOW, lMll B•rMleble
Me,....n• ~ c._ •• Mer. Orlv•, COii• Mew , CA 92•16. L•ne, Huntington a.acfl, CA '2"" C•llfomle'2t.J:J HERBERT .... GRIMM, l7H M I CM.AEL SPIVEY, 16411
Tllla tlualnMa Is CGNllYctea by en un· St.erblrd O<lw , Co.I• -w. CA 9261•. Bun•l•bl• i...n.. HunllnQton Beech,
lncorporMecl •-lellon otN r tlteft • KAY GRIMM, 2ns Sterblrd Orlve. CA UM9.
110r1Mrslllp CoiteMew,CA92U& lnls bu•lneu •• conouctea ov •
SIMlby E. Wiiton, Jr. TMI bua•neu I• condu<l•O by • Qo11<1r•l pertnersfl1p,
Tl\lt -.-1 wa lllecl wllll me 119ner•l pertnershtp IC•lly 5"ow
Cou11ty C1e111o1 0r....,.c-yonJ,.1y H•n>ertA Grimm T1111 1i.1 ..... nt w•> filed with Ille •. n•1 Key Grimm Counly Clerk o1 Or•rtoe Counly on J,.ly
Pltsal This •1•1........,1 w•• tiled wllfl Ille ~. t'tl
J:.::.·:~g-;7' C.O.SI DellyJ1'~i ;:u1~~ Cl•rll ol Or•• Covn1y on July Publllhed l)renQO! COllll 0.11:t~
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ofl SALll
01' lllAL ... O .. allTY
AT l"lllVATI! I.Al.I
IUPIRIOlt COU•T
0' TNE STATE
Ol'CALll'OllNIA
l'Oll TM I C:OU NT Y O,OaANOE
CASE NO. 1$-t$-71 JAMES C. MARTIN end MARY
CRAIG, Plalnllllt, VI EMMETT T
CONNER, •ISO known .. EMETT T.
CONNER, MAHLON JOHN SMITH,
allo k nown u MAYLEN JEFF
SMITH, CATHERINE E. KIRCHNER,
DAVID KIRCHNER, CHAR LES
KIRCHNER, AND ALL P E RSONS
WHO HAVE OR CL.AI M ANY
INTEREST IN OR LIEN ON THE
PROPERTY HEREIN DESCRIBED,
Dtf•nclents.
CASI' NO. &tM1 OAVID A. KIRCHNER, CHARLES
KIRCHNER end CATHERINE E
KIRCHNER, Plalnlill•. VI EMMETT
T. CONNER, MAHLON JOHN SMITH,
elle MAYLEN JEFF SMITH, JAMES
C. MARTIN, MARY CRA IG, ANO
ALL PERSONS UNKNOWN WHO
HAVE OR CLAIM TO HAVE ANY
INTEREST IN OR LIEN UPON THE
REAL PROPERTY HEREIN
DESCRIBED, Detenoenli.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\11
'"bject to conflrmellon by ltw above
5,.perlor Co,.rt, Ille "na•rslgned
ReterH, °"'Y epp>!ntea by tn. ebov•·
n•m•d Coo.r1 to sell IN herelnefter
INscrlbed -rty, wlll .. 11 et privet•
w le, on or •tt•r ll'a 19111 O.y of Auqus~
1911, at lhe olllee of IM "ndertlgned
R•IHM, ell the rlllfll, 1111•. Interest
end Hl•le of IN ebove·ntmed perlle>
(boUI plel11lllf• and defe-sr In encl
to that cen.ln , .. , pr-r1y lou ted In ,,,. City ol HuntJnQton S..Cll, c-ty
ol Oren91, Stele of C•lllornl•. •nd
more perllcuterly aucrib•d •t
foll-t,to wll.
T fie rHI property dHcrlbed •s
Lots 21 -22 In Block 1 of the R..:I·
DUrn Trect, In the City of HunllnQIOft
B••ct-, County ot Oren91, Stele ot
C•lllornle, •• -mep recorded In
B-4, Pi191' I of Mlocellaneous Me!K.
In lhe ofllc• of IN County Recor<M< ol
w ldcounty
I. Se id ~Y 11 to be •old•• • un· II "es ll" tor u.,,, lewful ,.,_y or the
United Stews of Amltrlce, end not I.IC>'
on er.Oii, ..a ltw wte Is s..Clect to
conflrmetlon by the ebow COYrt.
2. Bldt or on.rt $114111 be In writing
•nO ecco.._led by • cortlll•d or
cn"l•r'• er.ck IOf ten percent 110'1 of I,,. •mount bid, mede peyable lo tlw
Referee -.,..II be left et the olllce or the R9f-el eny llMe ett.r llut
(ltt) putlll .. UOll of INS notke. TM of·
rice of llw R-*•'" Is louted et ll77
Vie LldO, NewllOr1 B .. cfl, Cellforni• -· DATED July 17, '"' Carol M41twy,
~
J311 V le Lido
N_,-t S.ecll, CA 926'0
Tel. (1U) 673-7300
P"bllslled Or-Co.est Dally Piiot,
Jl.lly ll, 29, AUQ. 4, 1'11 3.J71.f1
P UBLIC NOTICE
~ ---i:ii.~ -
T.S. N0.1D1
NOTICE 0 .. TaUSTEIEI' SALi
On August•. 1"1 el 11:00 e.m, fll"'I
Amerlcen Tltlt Insur.nee Cornpeny •• Trustee, or Successor Trult•• or
S..bslllutea Trustee. of titer ct rt•ln Dud of Trust euc,.ted by Joy
Oorchest•r, and r.corded June 1',
1"4 H lnstr...,.....I no 21'16, In -
1JMO. -1tll , of Olfklel Records of OrenQ• County, Celllornle, •nd
p"r•,.•nl lo lllet certeln Nolle• ol
De l e ull e nd Elecllon lo Sell
thertundleo' recorded Aprll 1. "'1 •• ,,..
•lr,.ment no. 112, In -1~. Pt9ll 01, ol Offlclel Recor$ ol teld Coun·
I)', wlll l.Wldlef' end pur!M.ltnl to w ld
Dted of Trust Mii et pUbllc eucllOfl tor
cesl't, lewf"I money of ll'lt United
Sl•IH ol ""-le• ....... meln ....
tre11ct to First Amerlcen Tltlt
lnM1rence Corn.,_ny, loceled e t 114
East FllUI 51,...1, If\ u. City or S.nt•
AN, Cellto....le, •11 ll>el r~I. 1111• end lnle,.tt conwywd ID end ,_ held by It
"""" tekl Detd of Trust In tN pr-r· ly tllu•led In Mid COUnty end SI.ti
oesc rt bed as:
Loi so of Trect NO. Ull, •• ...,.,_ °" a Mep reconled In ~ :IS4. P19H O , ••. o end SO ol Mlacelleneous
Mapa, records of Ora11ge County,
Cellloml•.
EXCEPTING THEREFROM ell oll,
oll rlg111-. mln.rela, mlMrel rlOfll•,
nel11rel ges rights, •nd oll'ttr "ydrocerbons by Wll•t....,ver neme
known, tll8C mey be wllltln or under
Mid lellO, loge-with the perptlwel rlQllC ol drllllng, mining, ••plorlnQ,
end 01..., GP9r•tlnQ ther-, ena ttor·
Ing In -,.,._Ing llle seme '"°"' •Id 1...0 or .,Y otlwr lend, lncl...SlnQ
IM rleM to ttorlno In -•-Ing IN stMe from Mid 1...0 « .,., otller
latld, lnchodlng Ille right to wlllpalock
or dlrttU-liy drlll end min. from
l•11d1 oti.r tllall !MM Nrtlnebowe
0.Krlllad, oll CM' Gt• ..... , lurwtell end
""'" lllto, tllrOUCllft or e<""11 Ille ·--rec• tlf Mid 1111\d, •llCI to bottom t11cll whlpstocll.ct or dl••cllonally
drilltcl -IS, IUllMIS alld IMlta --...0 IMftHltl CM' WYllllCI llw .. t.,lor
llmlll lllefwf, end to ,...Ill, ,.,....,.1,
~Ip, IMlfltel11, r•lr, -.11 -
0'9•11• 811)' SIKll ••II• or mlM s,
wll'-t, ~.IM rltM to drill,
m l111, aton, u111ot• e11e1 ~r••• ~ ,. MWfa(e or llw ""* JOO
f"t of the tullwrfec• ot tM laM llereln...,.. Cltterl"9cl, •• ,_.,.., !fl
tllt Med lfel'tl lllt lrwlM (eftltlMy, •
W"I VI,....... ~Mlon, r«Wded
Ne""*9r U, tf11, Ill loell ..... P119t
1t1 .. efflci.t .. .....
Name ........... tlw lllellefkl411'Y
a1 .._ ,...,,... ........ Is i.1111 Clll• -.CIH: 0--... ..._., ~.
111 I . 16t" ttrHI, Catie Mue,
c.41fwllMW2'7.
01~'-•• IN .-.,,,. .,...,.y
~' ....... ,.. .., ....,..Clllg -111 wtlllftt fl'Wll Ille ....,lclMy wllJtill
10 .. " ,_ .. ""' "'*lkatlell .. t1111 MU<;e.
.. ,. .... w411 .. ll'M w1~ -MM ., -anty •• .,,_et 1,.,..1-,
.. te ...... ,......,... flf -llll*'M<" .. NtltfY .. .....,W M4-... .. 1119,... fll' ...... ---11¥ .... 0... af Yl'\ltl, .. -'ft: .,......., ... IM
... ....... eAllMUll , ..... .......
.... ~."" 11""9 .... lflltlel ,WllC .. IOll If tllll N.Clce el kle:
$1117 ....
Dated! Jtlly' ltlt
l'IMT AMl•tCAN
TIT&.• 1 .. $,llllAffC• COM•
"66417 .July 22. 29. Auq. S, 12, 1'91 3215-11
Publl"'9<1 Or-Coe•• D•lly Piiot, July U , 29, Auq. S, 12, 1911 l2..011
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINl[U
NAME STATllMENT
Tit• tollowlnQ .,.raon. ••• oolno
IKlllneun.
1n1 ... eorn DHlun•. u• s... Mlguol
Orl'ft, S..lle 105, Newport BNcfl, Cl>
92'60
lnt1rcommunlc•Uon s, tnt. .• •
C•lllornl• CorpO<•llon, 159 Sen MIQUOI Drive, 51111• I~. ,,...,,port Beech, Cl> ""°-This busineu ll t onO..cled by a tor
poretlon.
lnl•<communlcetlon>. inc
Norve1 i...v-.
Prelidltnl
Tiiis stal-t w•s 111.a wllll th«
Covnty Cl•rk ol 0r•"91 COYnty on J,.1, u. 1911.
Ft ..... Publllhecl Ore"91 Co .. 1 Delly Piiot
July IS, u. 29, Auo s. 1911 J190.fl
P UBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS 8USINl[S5
NAME STATEMENT
Tll• lollowlng pertOtl\ .,. Oolno
IKl•lneues:
TOLEDO 4 SSOCIATES, 1'61
R•ndolpfl Aven"•· Co•I• Mua,
C11ltornle mlll>
Well•<• L Louc~•. UO Mylll<
View, Le_.. 8Ncl" C•lllornt1 ms1
Don•kl Slockm.on, 27901 Tlr•nlo,
Mlu lon Viejo, C..lllornl• 91M1
Werd ,_.t, UU Ruo •art1n, La
Joll•, Cellfornt• 91031
Rlc,..,d A. Brown, Jr .. '36 Vie
L•Oo Nora, ,,._,, BHth, C•lltornoa
t?..O
Jouph C Abeles, 100 Pe rk
Avenue , Stt. 1107, New Y'Of'ti:, frriit•w York 10017
GeM EnQle, 11* o.<11oy Corclo,
Gerden Grove, Celllornt• f2MO
Robert L Ad•rri•. JJH Leu
AvenU<t, L-Be.ch. Celllornla 9080ll
Tiiis b<l•lnen os conducted by •
119ner•l~p
Rlcflerd A. Br-n. Jr
Tflis s~tement wB 111e<1 w1111 IN
Covnty Clen. ol OrtnQe County on July
10. 1911. ,...,..,j
HOWIEll, GEllTNEll I. allOWN A,., ...... _, cw,.er.u ...
A-ysetlaw
U4t ce._s Orlve
P.O ... _. 2217 N_. •M<ll. Ce. '261J
Publlslled Or-Co.est Dally. Piiot,
J"IY IS, 22. 29, Auq. S. 1 .. 1 31-1
PUBLIC NOTICE
NS.Tmt
NOTICE DF SALE
Ofl llEAL flaOPEaTY
AT PRIVATE SALE
Na.f1"51M
111 1 ... 5-ior C-' .t ... State et
Calller11Ja, ler t"e c ... 11ty •I L .. "-·-In the Mellor ot 1110 E•l•lt of
DOROTHY CLI NKABERRY ,
0.<aestd.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111
Ille undersigned wlll w tl •I Prlv•lt
Sal•. to !ht hlQheJI .-><I !IHI blOckr,
lubjecl to conllrmellon ol 1810
SUP9rlor Court, on or efler uw 7th day
ot Aug""· 101 at tht oft1C• ol
ARTHUR TUYERSON. ••S South
Flower St., Sull• 2000, ~°' AnQel .. ,
County or Los Angelt1. Slate of
C•lllornle 'I0017, ell the r19111. tltle ena Interest ol "94d OIKH>ed al the time ol
dHllt and all the rlQht, title end In·
toretl 11\at tllt HlelAI ol Hid decHMd
NS ecqulrll<I Dr -••lion of lew or
ot,,.rwhe, other ll>en or In eddlllon to
tflel Of Wld de<ee..O, el lht titll• Of de·
ell!, In ena to •II tM <erl•ln rHI P<O-
P•<IY. tltuatea In the County of
Orange, Stale ol Cellf0tnle, Nrtkule,.
ly described •s follo.n, to-wit·
Lot '1 ~ Trec1 U:Je n per m•p r•
corded in 8ooll 229 P-• 2S 111rotJQ11 n
l11Cl,.1lve of Mloc•ll•ne0111 Meoo In lhe
office of ,,.. C-.tr Recorder ot seta
County more commoroly ~-es 110
Sendca1t1e Dr .. Corene del Mer. CA
92US.
Terms of Wit""' In •-fut morwy
ol 111• United Steta on confirmation ol 1e t1, or pert cesh and balen<e
evidenced by not• u cured by
MortQ-or T"'st Deed on t11t proper-
ty so told. Ten perc.fflt ol emounl bid
to be deposited wltll bid.
81ds or ollen to be In wrltlllQ -wlll be recelwcs et lhe efortwld olflct
•t eny lime •lier ltw ""' P"bllcetlon htreof elld btfOt• dll(e of sele.
D•led tttls n no aey o1 July, "" Arthu< TWHIOl'I
E•ecutor of tllt EllAll•
ofwldO.Ceaent AaTMUll TUVllllON 61S ..... ,,_, 5l.
Stlte,_
Let A ....... , Ct. "'17
Publltlwd Ortn91 Co.est Delly Pilot
July 21, 1t, AUQ. •. , .. , JUG.fl
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS aUllNEU
NAMa ITATaMINT
Tiit lollowlnQ pertons ere OolnQ
C>usin•·n •s:
ACE SPORTS BOUTIQUE, 19'Cn
Br-11,.rtl Str .. 1, Fountelt1 Velley,
CA tJIOt.
MACK M. MIYAZAKI, JOU Coun-
l<V c1 .. b. Coste Mete, CA '1.,,.,
SACHIKO M MIYAZAKI, 300
COYntry Cl ..... Coll• Mew, CA nu..
Thi• -1...u It conducled by en In·
dlvlduel (Hulbend a. Wiie)
SecfllkoM Mlynekl
This •l•l-1 ••• flied with t,,.
C0<in1y Clerk of Orenoe c-tv on J .. 1y
7, 1'91
l'lus.M
Published Or-co .. 1 Oelly Piiot,
J11ly I, IS, 22, 1', 1 .. 1 )002~1
P UBLIC NOTICE
NS·79468
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
BARBARA B .
HENDERSON AND OF
PETITION TO AD ·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A·109690.
To all heirs,
benef iciaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
Barbara B. Henderson and
persons w ho may be
otherwise interested in the
will and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Deborah A. Anthony in
the Superior Court of
Orange County requesting
that Deborah A. Anthony
be appcinted as personal
representative to ad·
minister t he estate of
Barbara B. Henderson,
Irvine, California (under
the Independent Ad·
ministration of Estates
Act). The petition is set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive
W est, Sa nta Ana,
California 92701 on August
19, 1981at9:30a.m •
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
w ritten objections w ith the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
in person or by your a t·
torney
IF YOU ARE A
C REDITOR or a cont -
ingent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
clai m with the court or
present it to the personal
representative appointed
by the court within four
months from t he dale of
first issuance of letters as
provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing claims will not ex-
pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear -
ing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAM IN E
the file kept by the court.
tr you are interested in the
estate, you may file a re·
quest with the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate asset s
and of the petitions ac-
counts and report s
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
William R. Froeberg,
Attorney at Law, 3SS3
Camino Mira Costa, San
Clemente, California
'2672. (714) 496-6111.
Published Orange Coast
Dally Piiot, July 29, 30,
Aug. S, 1981 3372-81
PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNuAL,1NANC1AL ANOiUDO•T ••..O•T-
cBudQel lor.,. Fiscel y .. , BeQIMlll• July 1, t"1 •nd EndlllO June JO, 1tl21 c-•• ....... , Ckc-u....1 ,.,..,Ml. or...,c:-y, C.M~• NOTICa 0, AOOf'TION ANO TllANIMITTAL
All ocll011 -II bt teQn on thl1 '--' c:klrtng reeu1., or •"'"°'''ed tpeclal mHtlngt of IN oowrnlnQ -rd.
To IN c:->tY 5'1!lertnl-t of SclloOlt: e. TENTATIVE ANNUAL •UDOET REPORT. N 1 n-1 It Mrwby 111..:1 by
Ille OOWflll"9 bo«d of tlw >elloOI dlllrkt.
D•t• Of meeting Merell 12, 1"1 SIQMd Peul E. Sltyoer/Sffret•rv
b. PUILlc;ATION ANNUAL 8UDOET "£PORT, flit govwnlng !INN, IWIVlnQ
l'lltde on J-11. "" tucll ,...,,,....,., Oddlu-. -,._... H It jllaems ,..,etMl'Y, Pfl\f4ng pUblk.etlOll. puOtk l\Mrll'IQ, _, llMI --IOll, Mrtllv ,..
l"'Mlllet...,n. Tlw jMICl!lc llHrlng on I'll• ,.port wlll llt Mid .. UOS Her~ Blvd .. C•tAI
Med on...,._, 6, 1 .. 1, •I,, 1S O'flOO P.M.
llonw Pa111 E. Sn~/$Km•rv
OUllllALl'UNO
TOTAL NET AOJUlTED
l aGll<ININO 941.ANCE ....................... ..
IHCOMI
..OOStatelnc.-.... • .. ................ .
.. LMoll-............................ .. 9"° IMomll'IQ T"Y..,.lleH . .. ......... • ..... ,., ... •
TOTAL INCIOMa ............ , ................ .
TOTAL. NH llOINNINO 8.ALANCI
.ANO INCOM& .......................... , ...... .
aX,.INOIT\J•H .ANDOTI4&A OUTGO , ... c.rllfleeted S.1•1" ••••••....•...••.•.••••••• 2000c ..... 111 .................................. .
-·~--fib ........................... . ........................ lllUlomerc .._.._. ......................... .
.-Centnct• lilNk• & OtMf °'9'Mlnt f;~. ••, • ... • ..... • ...... • .. .... ...... a111.-........ & ... ...... ,...,.,,_ ........................... . "°° .......,...,.,, ,., Ctllllfltanele.s ............... .
TOTAL a)(PINl>ITU .. H, &
""""O""'t.ATI°" ll09' COtlfll<IGl .. CIU ....... . TOTA&. .. IT IHOtMO aALAtfCI ................ ..
\'OfAL.. llXfllbDITUlllU. & Ml'•OP .. IATI°" •b• COWTINOai.eiu1111..ut
HIT a .. l>IMGIAl.ApjC• ......................... . ~,.,_.Or._ c.Mt OlllY l'tllt J~y tt, tt•I
'41..an
'"'"' ,.,,,.
t7.A21 .....
to.• 2,Ml,110 2,111,110
1,tt.S,7•
Wbl ....
'41Afl
nt, ... .,...
'°-• S1)'11
t.t"'1•
PUBlJC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUa •UllM .. 6
.._.l~AT&Ml•T
Tll• 1et1ow1,.. "''°"' ••• .oine -1MUe
WALNUT CAllK. L TO .. 21'2 Ollo
po11t Orlvt , s .. 111 111. Irvine,
Ce111or11I• '21U
SPARLIHO I NVESTME NT
CO• l"OAA TIOH, e Ctllfonlle corpo1e
tlOll, 21'2 o..ont Orlw, S.Ull• 111,
lrvlM, Celllorllla ft11S
Jeen·Mer11 'parlln9, U ""•
Oro 11d o .. cel, N1w1torl 8te cll,
C.lllCM'lll• t'l!MO
t"I• Duslne\\ •• condllcted 11'1 •
e.ner•l 1Mr1Nnfll1t.
CO•P.
IPARLING INVESTM ENT
.ie-Marte SclM'llflO ,.,,. .. ~.,...y,
Vlul"rnld9nt
This alMt,_1 •u lllOll wltll the
County Cltft Ill Or-County on Jiiiy
10,1 .. 1.
PlJBUC NOTICE
'KTIT1GUt IMlll•811 NAMllTAf ... lfT
TM lellWllll .. ,_, e re .. l"f
....i ..... ;
MIYCHeLL t•OS., 701 a.
0r ..... .....,. ·-· ._ ..... k, (elltorrlle~
MITOHll.L I. OUCI, IMC., ~
Callfor11la cer"r•Ue11, 1J7> 1.
0r.11.-. .. A-...... ,.., ••
Cellfornte t0'21
T"lt butl'*t IJ ~ •Y • WF· -•llon. Mllitlltll I. l><K•, IM.
Wllllem MlklWll, ,.,. .....
f"I• ... -i -..... •""' .,. c_,., c1e111 or0r-. Gaw1>1v on Jiii'
10, ltet, MILL., ,_. •••• aua111u. ...., ..... "-.
TMftY· ...... fl9-U..._ ... ...... u.,.....-,c.....,, ,.,...,. ,,....,
P"blltlwd Or-C.0.tl O•lly PllOI. P"lllltlled Or .. C:O.tl 0.Uy PllO\
JUiy IS, 22, 2'1, AYQ. S, 1'11 J1 ... 1 J11ly IS, 22, '9, Al.iO. t, 1'•1 '""*
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ANNUA~ fllNAMCIAI. AMO auaoaT ••"'9T ~
!Budget fO. lhe Fl"el YNr •"9111nlng J""' I, 1"1 Md E.int J-·· Ital ............ u.lllM k .... OW..\,or.o. c:--r. ~
NOTICE Ofl ADOll'TI0911 AMO Ta.ANIMITTAL '
.All ecllon 11\etl lie 1e11.e11 on lhl• r-1 -.rtne ,....., er •""'9rlaf _._.
mn t111gs Of IN goverlllnQ -•·
To tfle C-tv S.C.rlr1l~I ot ~II. I ~· TENTATIVE ANNUAL BUDGET REPORT Tith ra_.i 11 ,,_,...,,tu.ell bY
the governlr19 bofrd of tl'lt Kl\oOI dlalrkl.
Dale ol "'"'(llQ June ll, 1911 st_.i Jolln W. Nk:oll/Se<retery
o. PUBLICATION ANNUAL BUDGET REPORT. Tiie IOVOl'llllll ...,41, lwvlftt
med• on J"'' 14, lt'1 well revltlons, edllllll-Wllll ,....,... .. II ....,,.
neceswry, pel\OlnQ P\lt>llcellOll, l)ullll< -•no._, llMI ..-.ii ... ...,_.,,._
l"'ns Ill•'-'· Tit• public -rlnQ on thll ropOrt wlll ti. held al H_. c...,.,._itv ~.
us E. 11111 St .. Coste Meu, on Auqu•l 4, ""·et 7:«1o'CIO(k P.M. Signed Jolln w Nlcoll/SoKretery
SUMMAaY D" CUlllll'NT DllTatCT TAX "IOUllllMINT$ ..c>a. 1tl1G ~ I
.. T•-TH .... . .....,...~
Gen•••• F-
Ann,.ei r-y..-t on •cc-t ol Stele Sc:-
=~~~~ ::"e11 ~.l~enl
Costa Mew El.,,. ..
Bond lntMMI encl Principe I P•ymenh
Cosl• M.w El.,,.
Newport Beetfl Elem
Newport Hwbor HIQll
Newport Me•• u11111.a
TOTAL NET AOJUSl EO
BEGINNING BAUO\NCE
Rultlcteo ..
unre•trklll<I
INCOME
mg·ri~:;~~ln<om•
1700 County Income
U00 Loe el I ncomtr
t900 lncomtnQ Tr•nltr~ TOTAL INCOME
GENEa.C.L flUND
TOT AL, NET BEGINNING BALANCE AND INCOME .
Et<PENOITURES AND OTHER OUTGO
1000 Cer1111catea S.1er1u
2000 CIH~lll•O S.l.,1u
JOOO Employee Benellls
4000 Boole•, Supplln, end
Equipment Repleume<>t
SOCIO Contr.cltld Service> 6
Other Qper •tonQ Expense• 6000 Sile\, BulldlnQ. Boo«> t.
Mt01•. New Equipment 7100 7'00 OllWr Outgo
1900 Approprl•tlon for Conl1nQen< 111 TOTAL EXPENDITURES. OTHER OUTGO t.
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES
TOTAL NET ENDING BALANCE
Rutrlcteo
Ut1rts1r1c111<1
TOTAL, EX PENDi IURES, OTHER OUTGO t.
APPROPRIAllON FOR CONTINGENCI ES
lt,SD,476
UO.IOt lt,5'0
3'$,207
1,0l6,12S
, ... 1
ACTUAL
13UlS
7J3,62S
~
1,U7M)
u.~·"' Sl,'45 u,m,"' 1H,1S1
)O, .... lll
Sl,601,7'2
lS,S~.W
1,W,31'
6,tat,n1
1.m .•u
J,U2.ll7
S!,.00,7..0
1,012 1,0U
·~
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE Sl,601,ISl
•OffD INTE•En AND 11a01CMf'TION flUND
OUTSTANDING BONDED INDEBTEDNESS
ADJUSTED NET BEGI NN ING BALANCE
INCOM E
9600 ... 90 Stitt lncom<' 8'00·8190 LOOI ln<O,,,.
TOTAL INCOME
TOTAL, NET BEGINNING
BALANCE AHO INCOME.
OTHER OUTGO
NET ENDING BALANCE
TOTAL, OTHER OUTGO PLUS
NET ENDING BALANCE .
SPECIAL aESlllYa flUND
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
8900 lncomlnQ Trensteu.
TOT AL. NET BEGINNING
BALANCE ANO INCOME
EXPENOIT\JRES
1000 c1a.u1f11d S..t•"•i
lOOO Employee BeMllh
tOOO Contrecttld ServlcH A
.)tfltr Oper•llnQ Expenwt
~ Slte1, BulldlnQS, BoolU t.
~··ale, N.w Equipment
.ooo OtlWr Outgo
TOTAL EXPENDITURES
ANO OTHER OUTGO NET ENDING BALANCE .
TOTAL. EXPENDITURES 6 OTHER OUTGO
1990 .. 1
4CTUAL
U,160,000
t,WMQ
n.110 l,9U,S2•
).011 ....
1.ns,ist
l ,Jtl,lSt
t,4J1 ,00.
J,72S,15'
1-...1
4'CTUAL s"·"'
l ,OCIJ,Jft
20,29S s.m
3n,Ol5
1,SU,277
1,..0,971
PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE ),OOl,tft
STATE KNOOL aUILDINO .. UNO 1 ... ,
ACTUAL
ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING 8ALANCE 76
INCOME
1M>O Sl•lt lncom<' 111)
MOO LOOI lncomtr I
lOlAL INCOME . .. ... . .. ... . Cl•I TOTAL NET BEGINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME 2
EXPENOIT\JRES
SOOO ContrKll!d Serv1c•\ •n<J
Other OperallnQ E•pensu
NET ENDING BALANCE
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NET E NDI NG BALANCE
CA"IETEatA t<UND
AOJUSTEO NET BEGINN ING BALANCE
INCOME
8100· ... 00 F•de<al In<.,,.,,. tr.oo Slet• Income
SIOO Local lncom<' .
TOT.AL INCOME
TOTAL. NET BEGINNING BALANCE 4ND INCOME ..
EXPENDITURES
1WO CIH tllltO S.IMIH
lOOO Employ" B-tlls . •OOO Boo1t1, SuppllH, end
Equipment R99IKemenl
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES
NETENOING BALANCE .
TOTAL, EXPENDITURES PLUS
NETENOING BALANCE . .
ADULT EDUCATION flUNO
AOJUSTEO NET BEGINNING BALANCE
INCOME
IMIO St•I• ln<ome . .. ........
1900 lncomlnQ Trensltr\. . .•
TOTAL INCOME ........ .
NET BEGINNING BALANCE .ANO INCOME
EXPENOITURES ANO OTHER OUTGO
1000 Cerllllceted Selerlet ....... .
2000 Cteullled S.lerln ..•.•
lOOO EmplOV" llentlll) • • , • •
4000 Boolcs, ~IH, .id
Equipment Ret)laument ..•..•.•
sooo Contrecled Services end
011>1< Operetlng E•-• •.....•.•.
1100-1400 0 1'9cl end lndlNCI S-1'1 _ .
7f00 A~ttllon tor COllllf\gtnclts ....•...•.......
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO I.
APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES .... • .
NET ENOING 8ALANCE .,,, •• , ................. .
TOTAL, EXPENDITURESANOOTHEll
OUTGO PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE ......... .
INIUllANC:I l'UMO
BEGINNING BALANCE, JULY .. , • , ..... .
INCOME ..... A ............................... .. TOTAL, NET B•GINNINO
BALANCE AN O INCOME ..... , ... .. , .. .,
EXPl!NDITVRES ............................. ..
ENDING BALANCE ............................. . TOTAL, EXPINDITUAES, OTHUt OUTGO
O·
2
t'90 .. 1
AC'TUAL ,,.,1 ..
710,220
lll,1'7'
1,2.19,75'
2,071,154
2,274,:MO
m ,0'9S
,,.,6n
1,0S,,7 ...
l ,111,s»
ns•
l ,11•.:MO
1'90.fl
ACTUAL
4
t"°41
ACTUAL
UQ.ta 1»,tM
PLUS NIT l!NDING •ALANCE.................... "4,IJI
01,1 •lllD MAINTINAlllCI ~•D ,....,
.ADJUSTED NET 8101NNINO 941.ANCE , .......
INCOMll MOO Stalt Inc-........................... . ..00 I.GUI 11\Gomt • .. • .. • . ....................... .
ltOO IMomlnt Trllfllftn .. • ................... . TOTAL 1NCC1Ma ................................. .
TOTAL. NET a ECINNINO
I A LANCE.AHO INC.OMI! ....................... .
8JI "INOI TUAI$ ANO 0T'M811 OUTOO Jnoo e1a, .. , ... ,.,.,... ........................... .
-•nlfllll'/99 lafttfltJ .......................... . .0001-..111:;11eund
l •lllPme!!t ..... ...,..,. • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • · • • MOO ~rac;lt, "9111" ...., " .. _ • •. • • .. • ......... . MOO $11H, .... ._,.... INb &
~di•, & ..... ........_. ......................... . =~t':'•t'l:oil\,i•i'sAMO .................. .
OT't4111t ot.11"QO .............................. ·····••
HIT I N!)IMO 8ALAH<• .......... ., ............ ..
TOTAL, aJtflllMOITV•H ANO Ontl•
OU TOO Pl\.UI NU INOIHO
a"LAMCI • ••••••••··~··••••••••••• ., ... ,., ••••
ACTUAi. ...
,OQIU
.Olllt
1 .. 1.ci
BUOGEl
t,011
l,Oll
M
•.•tt.2'7 1'AllM,ll1
SO,OOCI 21.-.10
S0,000 •.m .111
...n>,ao
2U20 • .clt
1 ........
7,0ll,ld
l,111,5'1
20S,t51
a.i.1,stt
St.OlO
... m.ao
>15.000
... 7U,IJO , .. 1.
8UOGEl
1,0 7.00.
• 2,0..,UI
2,0M.UI
),505,242
t,07UU 1,•Jt.ast
uou.u
1 .. 1.fll
BUDGET
1,.ao.•n
1 • ..0.m
:124,0ttl
IOO,DOO
134,W•
1,460,m .o-
t,460,m
1 .. 1.f2
BUDGET
2
1'"42
BUDGET
u.s.•
s11,m tt,..O
1,$17.-0
2, 170,Ml
ao,ooo HI0,000
t, llS,600
t.11S,600 uo,sso
U2'.UO
1 .. t..,
BUDGET
.Q.
llUM ....
JS7,t31
U7,«JI
~ ,, ..
1.~
1,000
2 • ...S ....
"'·· ..
w.• ,.,..,
8UOOl!T
1)1,ar
100,1'4
""·"' --~t
.,.. ... 1
1'•1• •uooeT
1'1-. .....
).,a.4 ......, ....
..... ,
I -•• ..
·---------·---~¥·-·---·~· ......... ·~·---..-·---·~·~·--P• .... ·~·"""""• .............. , ..... s~="s~= .................. a .... •••• ... a ... u ...... a .. u .. •s•s•& .. •&•& .... J.!IS .. l•I 11!!1211111111511111!11j
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 29, 1981
PUBLIC NOTICE
,1CTmou11u1o•au
"AMI ITATtM9•T TM hllltwlnt ,..._, •re Hlllt ..... _ ..
M.~ $, 011.IVlll'I' HltVtCa.
10100 lttta A v•1111e , Unit U ,
W•ttl'lll,..,, CA twa
, l.UTHlll 1.lltOY MOTT, 1aoo
..... •-. Ufllt M. W...mlMtet, CA fWa. IONA AUCI MOTT, fotOe .....
Avt.lllH, Unll M. Wtttmln1111r, CA ~
Tlllt euolfteM IJ <-.. 'y Ml Ill• dlvt.iv.1
I.lither 1.,way Mott
Tllll f~ -fll .. wltll 1M
Ceun1y C..,_ of 0r..,.. C:WMY Oii Jiiiy tt, ltcl.
----------
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ---------..£----
,ICTlflOUlaUMMHI MOTIC90f' ~Tia.I
llAM8 ITAT•MaMT Of' PA•nte .... IP Tiit , .. ~ 11'9r1M1 ere dOI ,.Ult.IC NOTICI II HeltlaY
llWlllfftaa: OIVIN lllat 1.UCll.1.1 M ..... COIT DAA .. l!llY ANO CAll"I IA.ICC)¥ C. ~,, .... JAMH J.
CLIANllU, INC., Ut7 U ta 81141 AU.1111.'l'N IC .. MITl..........,.
• .,. .. ..,., CllCA-.._ C.alJNttola n.» .. ,,., MIMU ...-r 1111 llCllt-
11 & II c--.... lft( Ce Calllerfli llrm -aM 1tyle .. 1 1.UlllllO
Ut•ote ll9'11, 12'1 .... .., Avenu. CIHT•I OAl.LUtY, LTD , et .. c .. 1. Mew, c;.tllorlola .... '""' •-. CAIY of .....,,.. e..c11, Tlll1 MlMM la condlKtM 'Ye Ger C-ty of Or-., kate o# C.llforftla,
POf•llon, llld M tN JMfl .. _. .. Jwly, 1•1, tty
II & II C:l.IANllU, INC m11t11•I CM.Miii, dlnolve Ill• ••I•
111<.w•w. llwtteY. ,.,~.,.. IMfNMt• -r rel•
Pr"'41itft4 t'-'• •• ~ ll!ffeln Tiii' ,,......,_. wat Uled w11" k lll lluNMM In "'9 '"'"" Wiii lie C.avnty C....,. of Or-c-ty en Jiiiy <_uc..., "' l.M<lll• M. er>CI lat<-
tl, 19$1. IMel, -will pey .,.. dhCW.. ell
Ill! lleOllltlff M9 Mt• of IN """ .... , .. •1t1Mll Publl-Or-GM" o.lty lllf celve all,.,..... peyellle lo Ille"""
""°'1.-0r...., GM•I o.lty ,.,lot, July H, ..... S, U. It, ltll ._.t "IKllWr ..ik• .. ~ """' -I July 2',""" S, II, It, t•t U..1 tht 11ft411t< ....... wlll nol • r.....,..i
-----PUBLIC NOTICE 111•· ''°"" .,,, oay °"• to. .,y .ii ..
PUBLIC NOTIC"" llon Inc-bJ Ille olllttt Ill lllelr owr1
ic. 11amH er In Ille -of lht firm.
Mfy,....Mtff~
Linda Ashley and Darryl Howe di8play samplea of their unu.sual wares.
They're hoping gag gift will catch on like the Pet Rock.
Dana Point pair say
they're in the chips
By STEVE MITCHELL
OfllileOelly~·· Remember the one about the ci rcus
employee whose job it was to clean up
after the elephants?
When asked why he didn't go into a
more rewarding line of work, his
response was, "What, and give up
show business?"
In a way, that's how Linda Ashley
got her start in a new enterprise that
she and fiance Darryl Howe think will
put them in the, er, chips.
'·I was attending a wild animal train·
In~ school," the 25·year-ola blond
said . "Whenever I was late to class the
Instructor would make me shovel up
the elephant droppings."
Now the Dana Pd nt couple sell desk
plaques, upon which are affixed heavi·
ly varnished elephant chips.
They've got pen sets, ashtrays and
business card holders, all decorated
with little ceramic elephants and the
not-so-little pachyderm droppings.
Now before you turn your nose up at
this gag gift, consider the fact that the
unpleasant aspects of such a product
have been eliminated.
For one thing, says Linda-who pre-
fers to be called Ashley-97 percent of
the dropping's content is hay.
··Elephants only get 3 percent
nutrients out of what they eat," she
says.
You have to figure the rest of the hay
isjustaJong forthe ride.
Besides that. each sortball-size chip
is "solar dried," says Howe, who is a
tour coordinator when he's not making
the unusual gifts.
"Solar dried" means the couple toss
the chips out in the s un for a week and a
half, but why get into semantics.
The gifts are organic, too. the pair
will tell you, and nobody is going to
argue about that.
The couple collect their specimens
at a wild ani mal training school, but
they're not about to reveal iu location.
No sense in letting someone else come
along and scoop up the profits.
Apparently. there's money to be
made from the decoupage droppings.
They've sold quite a few at the swap
meet in Costa Mesa, and the plaques
are available at several pet shops. in·
eluding ones in Laguna Beach and
Fountain Valley
Rut where they figure the big bucks
are going to be made is in sales of the
elephant droppings at a Republican
convention this fall in Palm Springs
"We're going to put a little American
flag in each one," Howe says.
And with the SlO lo $15 price tag for
the.novelty items, that a'in 't hay.
C-hicken dinnerEmployers
hit alien may be costly
ELIZABETH, N.J (AP> A grand jury has
indicted a burglary suspect who allegedly sat
down to a chicken dinner before making his
getaway.
Jeffrey Williams. 21, could receive 10 years i
prison if convicted of the burglary and thel
charges against him. according to Union Count:
Assistant Prosecutor Peter McCord.
McCord said Timothy Blake returned from
jogging on June 15 and found his stereo. television
set and other valuables stacked near the back door
of his North Broad Street apartment.
In his kitchen. police said, Blake found a man
seated at the table eating the chicken he had left
on the stove for dinner
hiring ban
WASHINGTON <APJ
Employers in the
Southwest who depend
o n migrant workers
from Mexico are re ·
portedly angry over the
Reagan adminis tr a ·
lion's planned immigra·
lion policy to fine those
who knowingly hire ii
legal aliens.
The administr ation
has again delayed an
nouncing its immigra
tion law proposals amid
complaints that its guest
•ICTITIOU$ IUSINUS
MAMI STATIMINT
Tll• 1011owln9 peraona are dolno
blltlntu •t:
80L WEST ANIMAi. HOSPITAL, UO Bolte A••nue, Wntmlnlttet,
Celllornle 91ta
JOMPf\ V a..nlay, D V.M., INC ,
• C•lllwnl• <Of'llO"•llon. tut lotu Avanue, Weltmln•ter, Ce lllornl• .,,..,
Tiii' ~ h condu(led tty • cer -·•ion ~v. e.,,1.y,
0 V.M., Inc
J-pll V. 8anfay,
PrnlClent
U•Ottlc"of MAltClt. TOW
)41 s y le °""9. Selte ...
1.i.tMMIMYNla9e ,.._...., llMC:ll, CA '16'.S ,.,.,.,.
PubHIMO 0r ... c ... ,, Oallv Pilot,
July 1'. A119 S. 12. It, ltll >Jts-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI 0" Alll,LICATIOM
lllOll IOUTHllltN
C:ALll'OtlMIA aANCOlllll
Nollu ,, """" ..... by IN A .. I cant, Soulllern Celllornl• 8e<Korp, JtO
8 r<>edW•l'. iA9llN hacll, Ollfornl•
'201, , ... , It •Ill epply to Ille Fede••I
RtM,.• lloerd --nt to Section l of
'"' 8•1111 ~,.. '-Y Act for • ban• l>ol(llno C-l' TN A,polk MI
Intend' to acquire lj0,000 .,,., .. C 100
percenll ol ~ Natlonel 8ank encl
Tru.i C~y (In Or9aftltellonl, JtO
Broad••Y. ~ 8•acll, Celllornl•
'201
TM .....,.k I• lftvli.d to MIDnlll writ·
,.., <O,_IS on tf\ls -'k •Uon IAI
tf\t F1dtre1 R .. ar .. 8oerd •I llM
Federal R_,,,. Ben• of $.an Fren-
c lt<O, Pool Offlct Boa 1102, San Fran
<11<0. e-411ornla Tiie commenl period
on 11\11 aciplk allon wlll nol end twf-
Auouu 30. 1tt1, Call Mr Gordon
Smllll, l•llC>ftCWW UUI S44 221', •t llM
Fed•ral AK.,..• Ban• of Sen FrM· clsco to find out II you .... .,. addllloMI
lime for ~ttln9 c-ls on lllls
apptocallon er If ,ou Med mon in
torm•hon •bout '"'omltUnt com m•n~ Tr. '"-•1 ReserYOt wlll con
alder commen"· '"'luclln9 r-.iuesh tor • public ,,..11"9 or torma1 11earln9
onlllt •PC>llcallon, If tlley are rec•l•ed
by Ille '"-•1 R....,.ve 8-""'"'9 Ille <omment period
Publllfted Or-C.0.'1 Dally Pilot,
July n . "'-' s. tttt l.O:Ht
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUl'llllOll C'()UllT
O"THI STATI
O,CALl,.OllMIA
fl'Oll T"I COUNTY
O,OllAMOll
In llM ,..., .. , ol tht -llcetlOl'I ol
SUSAN RAE NAGY, FOR CHANGE OF NAME
NO. A 1-0110111 TO SHOW
CAUH,.011
CHANG I 0" NAMI
Tf\t •PPll<•llon of SUSAN RAE
NAG y for <"""9t of name, l\aVlftll
tlffn llled In Gow1, and II a()llearl1>9
from Hid •111>li<•llon ,,,., SUSAN
RAE NAGY .... llled an -llc.etlon
pr-Intl tr.et ,,.. ne,.. tw <IWl"tltd to
SUSAN RAE SEEWAltO.
N-, IN'9fore, II 1, lle'9by ordered
and directed, the! all ...,.'°"~ lnltr"t· eel In Mold matter oo ._ .. twlore 1111•
court In ~menl Jon tM Jlld day
of Sept 1"1, al 10·30 e m 01 w kl cs.,
to •f\Ow uuw ""Y well ... lcellon tor
<Nino-ol -~d nol be 9rante<1
11 " lurthtr ordend ....... COPY of
11\I> Ordtt lo Sflow C-be P«l>ll'Nd
'" tf\a 0r.,. Cont O.lly Piiot, e new'P•"' of 99nera1 clrculelloft.
printed In Wkl county, el teHt once
H <ll ..... for lour W«ftM•e -s
prior lo tr. day of wld 1Mar"'9
Da ted llll' Utll Clay of J uty, "" Rorwold H P,..nner, J""91 ......
~for Court Pubtl>lttd Or-Coasl Dally Piiot,
J ulJ 2', A119 S, 12, 1', '"' ~I
PUBLIC NOTICE
Blake, descr ibed by police as a Conrail
em ployee who weighs more than 250 pounds,
wrestled the man to t he floor and held him until
police arrived .
worker program, which NOTICE o .. auU< TllAM1,.1• would permit 50,000 mi· c1«u1t1•twu.c .c .1
grant laborers to enter Nollte '' ll•r•bY 9l••n to '"•
the Country each Year, is Creditor' ol RONALD E. PRICE • ...,
MARY ALICE PRICE, dto. Euro· -LOO smaJI. America n Kllcllen and 8atlls -==--====:----====1r:.:::~:::::===----=::--4 Transl•"'"· •lloW -1""' addrns Is I -------1741 Wn1cllfl 0..1 ... N-port hecll, P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Co..nty ol Or-. Sle t• of Olllornla,
"ICTITIOUI IUSINIU
NAMI STATIMllNT
Tiie lollooM"9 pe,_, 11 doln9 bull· ... u.,
INTEll STAMP CO., >67 Gr•-
Lena, Cotta Mew. CA mu.
NANCY GllANT, >67 Grenoble
L-. Co.ta Mew, u. mu.
Tlllt ~fl Conducted Oyen In·
dl•l""•I NafttyGr.,t
Tlll1 , ........... -llled will! tht
Co..nly c.-ol Or-C~ty on July
21. "" "''11n ""bll.-Or-Coa'I o.lly PllOt,
July 2', ""9. S, 12, It, lt'1 ,_..I
PUBLIC NOTICE
tf\et • bulk transl.,. '' at>oMit to be m a de to CRAFT KITC HEN,
Transfer ... W'lloM llodlneu •ddrft' ''
1101 Weslclitt 0r1 ... "'--' hacll, County o1 Oraft99 State of O lllornle
TIM 11<-rty to be transfered h
located et 1741 Wutctlff Ori .. ,
Newport 8••<11 tU60 Co11n1y ot
Or an99, Stet• of Olllornl•
S.ld pr-rty It ci.terlbeel In_,_.
H . All slo<tl on lradt, flwtu'91, ~
rnent and 9000 W'lll of lllat kltcr.n and Batll Products t>utfnau kno•n H Euro·AMERICAN KITCHEN ANO
BATHS -located at 1'41 Wntcllff
Orin. N..,rpon 8Hcll, County ol
0 -. State ol Cellloml• tJIMO.
Tiie bulk Ir-"' wtll be C-·
mated on or •ll•r Ille 12tll d•1 of
Au9u1I, 1'11 at RMl-11•1 Etero•
Corpon llOl'I UOO ~A-. Sult•
107, Cost• Mau •HU Count, ol
Oran ... St.Ill of Olllornla.
So ••• .-"-to nw T,.,,, • ..,..,
all bu,lnne-.... .,_, __._ uMd
by TranfHW lor Ille , .. , .. Y•ar• IHI
114111, II dltte,..nt ln>rn Ille •bov• 9rt ... _
M.Wc ... , .... ,..... ..... .,-.
Tr_...,_
Publllfted Or-CAleJt Delly PllOI
July tt, 1tt1 Mn .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
llllC'TtftOUI aUllMIU
MAMllTATRMmMT
TM lollowlft9 __, It Oo1n11 """ ,...,.,
FARRIS &TAMP COMPANY, ltM
Port c11e1 ... Place, N-port &Mell,
CA'2660. Tit.OEN J FAlllllS, 1.,. l>Or1
CM IMI• Piece, N-per1 9"'11, CA
tJMO.
Tiii' l>UaiMH Is Condll(laG by •11 In
dlvldual.
TlklllnJ. Farrl•
Tllh Jlelam9nl was Iliad wltll Ille
County Clef'k o1 Or-eouncv on J1111
11. ttct
,.,61t1t
Pvbll"-d Or-Coast Delly Piiot,
July n. Auo. s, 12, tt, 1"1 im.tt
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS 8U$1NIEH
NAMI STATIMINT
Tf\t 1o11oW'lno per'°" 11 CIOl"9 bl.Isl .... " .. THE GOLD EXCHANGE, SOO
Alcorn, INlnt, C•lllornl• tJ71S
Alen Verdull. SOO Alcorn, lr•IM,
Calllorlll•mU
Tiiis -lne-. I• 'ondu<led by an In
dl•ldual
At .. verdult
Tiii' lllllement WM fl ied Will\ tf\t
Co..nty Otrtt ol Oranoe Co..nty on July
H, Ifft.
"tt7171 P11blltlled Orenvo coast Dally Pilot
July 2', Auo 5. IJ. It, t .. I Jl»-41
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUS auMNlll
NAM.I ITATRMRMT
Tiie lof-1"9 ,,....-, ••• $0tnt ~MU ...
9 U$1 NESS PllO T ECT IVE
SERVICE, 411 Soulll Mein Slrfft,
or.,,.., CelltorN•.,...
SyMe Sc-'tnr,.,. Allina UN, c-. Mew, Cellfoml• ...
Loul' O PaneQve, .oe Soutll
wu111n9ton, Fullerton, Callfor11la
t2.n
A.,..u,.. Molfne. -o.. ...... StrMt, lrvlne, Cellfornla '7714
Tlllt l>lnlMU '' <-led by a general__...,,,
LcoultO. p.._
Tlll1 ,...,...,._, w• fifed wllll ....
Ce1<1nly Cterk of Or•,,.. C-ty on
J-•.1•1 "'6mt Pubtl"*' Orenvo COffl o.llJ Pllol,
J111y 1, u. n . 2', '"' ~1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS auSINISI
NAME STATIMIENT
Tl•• !oll-1"9 person I• dalft9 l>Utl·
nets ••
RICHARD 8U~NLEY HAIR
DESIGNS, 1'1 Cafll"' S1r .. 1. Coste
Mew, Ce tJt27
lllcf\ard B IC-. U~t Vew•f•.
Minion Viejo, Olllornle n •H
Tiii' bl.II-» I• condueted bY an In·
dl•ldual
D•tad IN1 t1tll day .. July, 1 .. 1 In
Calllofll!..
1.WClll• NI '-f
Put>tl•llecl Or..,.. c .. u Dally Piiot J 11ly ... 1•1 , .....
PUBLIC NOTICE
•tCTITIOUI IUMNIU
NAMl ITATIMRMT
Tll• tottowtno per1on1 ••• dol119 IMalnauas
Ill OIVEllSIFllO COM· MOOITll!S INTERNATIONAL. Cll
DISTRllUTION CONSULTANTS
INTERNATIONAL; CJ) M U.M.S.
AERO -AUTO CRAFTER$, UOO S
Lyon s1 .. 1. Sant• Ana, CA t270S.
DAVID WAYNE Mll.1.l!A. 111111
s..dltll A-. Fountalll Valley, CA
'27111.
JOHN ARLIE UNGl!A, tJI•
Corbie Clrc ... Viste, CA '70N
Tiiis -lnau h conducted by •
99Nral --llllp.
0.•ld Wayne Miiier
Tiii' st.I-I W'n fifed Wiii\ l"9
Co..nly C..,.k ol 0r.,.. County on J11t; ta, 1'91.
"""" Publllhtd Or-. Coe>I Oelly Piiot,
J111y n • ..,. s. 11. "· 1911 w 1•1
P UBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUS aUSINIS.S
NAMI STATIEMINT
TIM lol,_.no perJon Is 001"9 bl.Isl .... " .,
AMCO BUILDERS SUPPLY, U14
Newport ll•d., C:O.t• _,., Cellt0tnla .,,.,,
Ooneld S. ~ •• 4't 0. Sol• h r ·
•ece, Corona dtl Mer, Calllornle t»U
Tiii> i..ninef.l 11 u1nd11<le(I by en In
di.tdual
OoneldS W-
T Ills >lele'""'t wa> llled wl lf\ lM
Counly Clan GI O<-ColinlY on July
14, lttt ,,, .....
Publlilled 0r--. Coa\I Dally Piiot. July Jt. AUIJ. S, 12, 1', 1911 lllt-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUlllllllOll COUllT
Ofll CA.Llfl'OllHIA
G04JMTY 0" OllANOI
CASI NUMalll Al-
Ollot!lt TO INOW CAUSE
"ott CHANGI Ofll MAMI
'" .. f!Mttar of ... A#fle•U.11 .. ATANACIO 11111111. llllETlllSOM, ,., c ......... .__.
ATANACIO PEREZ PETERSON
f\e1 llled • petlllon '" tllls coun for •n order a llowlnt1 petlttontr to cllanee llh
ne m t from ATANACIO PEREZ
PETERSON l o DON A LD
ATHANASIUS PETERSON
11 ls,,....,., ordt<ed tllal ell PtNOM
lnttrttled In Ille melter alcwewkl •I>"
peer before 11111 court In Department
NO. J al 100 Cl•I< Canltr Orlv• WHI.
Sant• AM, Calllornla, on S.pttmber J,
tttt, at 10:30 o'Clock • m • enO '""' e11d tllere "'°w cauw. II any tlley
Alellard 8 K-n N!Ye, wlly Wkl pellllon for <llanOI of
Tlllt u.t..-t was flied wlU. Ille ne mt ....,..,.d nol be 9ranteel
County Cl-al Or-County on Jul111 11 fwrtller or.,.,.., tllal • COPY Of tJ, 1911. ,.,_ 1111, ordtr to -ceuw be publl"'9d
PubllWCI 0r.,. Coast Delly Piiot, In .... Oranoe COHI O.llv Piiot, •
July U, 21, 1', Auel-S. ttct Jt IM I. n•w1peper of 9•nar•I clrculetlon,
--------l>UbllsNd In'"'' c:ounty •• IH>I on« • PUBLIC NOTICE w••" for four c-1111 .. _.,, prto•
"ICTITlOUI aUllNIU NAMl ITATIMRHT
The foll-Intl per.-, •re doln9 _,,.... ..
A LZA DEVELOPMENT COloil·
PANY, 177·F Al•ertld• A .. 11u•,
Ne•PO"I 9-:11, CA'*'-
JAIME ALCALDE, Presldtflt, JOJ
W. NtW'tly A-. San 0..191, CA
'lt71•.
JUl.10 ZAPATA, Vlw Prftleleftt,
JOj w .......,., A-. San ~let,
CA t171t
T~1, bllslnau It conducted by • .......... ~~
JuOo Z.Ot.e
Tiii• _, w• fifed •lltl -
CoulltJ Oen. Oii Or-eou.itv on Jut,
7, 1 .. , ,.,.....,
Publltlled Or-Coett Dally Pilot,
July 1. u , n , 2', ''" ,,....,
PUBLIC NOTICE
HS7tSU
"ICTIT10US aUSINIEH
MAMIE STATIMIHT
Tf\a lolto.tno II"'-' I' dol"IJ bull·
ne1••t
DAVID WA RREN .. A S
SOCIATES, 1911J Me<Arlllur
8oultv.,d, :Wilt Ml, I Nina. Calllor•I
t17U
David Wer....,, 1•m -Arlll•ir
80..lnard, :Wtt• JO. 1 .. 1,.,., c a111orn1e
'211S
10 lf\a Clay of Wld .........
Dated JUiy n, '"' Ronald H. Pre-•
J""91 ol llle
5upt< for Court
SHIElll•HtllO& O.OllAW, ..... c:.r.w ....
11M7W_A_
"•11tal11 Y......,, CA tV•
Tel: 0 141at-1•
PubH"'9cl Or-eoeu Delly Pllol
J uly n . Al'9 s. 12. tt. ltll JJt1-tt
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS IUSIMIEH
MAMI STATllMIENT
T ~ lolfow;"IJ pe,_, Is dolftll bU,1.
MU•S.
SEA GULL COMMUNICATIONS,
17090 Sen Bruno SI., GJ. Founta in
Vellty, Ce '2IOI
SltPhHI Bryan 8rown, 170'!0 s.n
Bruno Sl. G7, Fountain Van..,, 0 t270I
T Ill• -1""1 '' conchleteel by an ln-dlvldual.
Sl~8rOW'ft Tlll.s ,,........,, was flied •1111 IN
Count, cien °' Or-County on on July l . 1911 ........
PublllNd Or-Coe,1 Oelly Piiot
July 7', AUii S, IJ, It, 1'111 Jm.tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiiis IKnlNln I• conc:tucled by an un fl'ICTITIOUS IUSINIEIS
lncorporeted as-1at1on ",.' INln • NAMI ITATIMaNT
1N•tMrllllp T,.. toll°'"'"' pe,_, ts CIOl"IJ bull· O.vldWarrtn Mou:
Tlllt >1111-1 w .. fltlG wllll llM MO 8 I LE M 0 T 0 RC Y C L E
CO!'nly Cltrtl ol Or-. Count1 on July AEPAllt & llENTAI., 110 Skyler•
I, "" L•na, N--1 hedl, C•lllornl• 'M60 fl'llU7U Wiiiiam Jotln Edtl-r Jr., 11.t
Publl-Or-Coe,, 0.11, PllOI, \ltylerk I.MW, C.lllornl• tJIMO
July 11, "· AUO s. 11. lttl m .. 11 Tiii• _,,.... ,, Concl\leleel Oy •n In· ---- -I dMdllet. PUBLIC NOTICE Wl"I..,, Jotln Edtllla-Jr
HS""2 ----I Thi• ........... , WH fllacl wit" llM
SUPERIOR COURT. COUNTY Ofll'County CterttolOr .... C-yonJ11t1
OltANGE 1', 1911 1111'1tU
700 Clvk Ginter Ori .. Wt\I Publllfted Or-C4e" Dally Piiot Santa AN, Celllornl• tt701 • p I. A I N T I F F 0 flt U C IC I R July H . ,t,uo. 5, U, It, Itel »»-ti
CHAllTEAS. INC., • Olllomle <tr· ---
poretloft. PUBLIC NOTICE 01! .. I HDANT · lllCHAllO S. 81t0WHI, IDWAltO KNEELAND,
•llo --.. TEO KNEELAND, flllCTITlOUlaUStHIU
DOES t ::::slfl<lutlvt. NAMll ITATIMaMT
OM flllltlT Tf\t 1011-1n9 person• are doing
._MHD~INT bU'I""••· CAM•UMeaam• THE $1MON·EHAl!N,.El.0
MOTIC91 Y .. -... mM. Tiit GllOU,..,... CAMlltlOGI! ESCllOW, ~ ,,,..., _... ....... ,,_ ....... ttO S. PulllNf\. Santa AN, Callf•lll•
.,.. ~ ............... ,....... •210$
.,.... •-.... ._. ... ............... c embrldt• cepllat Group, •
-..... c;atlfornla corporation, 1t0 $.
11 you """' I• 9"11 t,_ ..... kt of an .-Vtflft81\, 5-lte AM, C:.lllomla tt1M
ell«MY i.. lfllt ~. YW.,_.... T~lt ......... II c--0Y a CW .. •r•,....IY .. 111•1 ,011r wrllttfl poretlOft, ,......,..., If_,,_,, lie llled Oft"""· Camllrldge Capltel Of'oup
AYflOI U..... .. '* ..... Rf t . DeMlt I. Sl"*I. •• .,..... ,.... --~--u.. ~· ,.. ...._.. • -.. u .. ,..... Tiii• ... ~ ... me.i wltfl llMi .. ....,. * • ..._ L.N 11 G..,,.ty Clettl .. OrMOt C:-l'f °" J"'y ,........... "'I"'·
11 UllM_.. Mff(lt« el -•19 • ""'* _,,. ..... Ml .... -to. __,.. Pl*lltlWd 0r.,... CMtt Dally PlloC,
llaetrl• ll!llMllleta-lltt, .. uta J11ly H , ...... S, II, It, '"' ..,....t
-·· ltl ......... aec:tlta, ti My ...-. ....... -...... ~--. ~. TO THI O•l'•NOAHf; A CIYll
c-•l•lnl Ilea Mall 111 .. 'Y tlla
,ialftll" ........ .,.., " .... •11111• ... ................. .,.., f'IMt, Wllllllll . .,. ... , ... _,._... , ... "" ... ""' ~· . -" ,..._. .... ~l.U...
.... .-........ I .. ..... '"4k ..... fll ............... .,,,,"" <-'!NY ...... ~
.,.., fw .................... Ill ""
COfll.lal11t, Wlll<ll C911tll ra•lllt I .. , .. ,.,._. ., ............. . -. ., ....,., "~ ....... ............. ~. OllTeO~•·"'' I.a A. ltMCfl.
CWll ......... _..
L•~ a llMolT'IA A"== I CWpu---, ... ...... ='='CA_,t I
........ 0..,.. CllH DIJI, ......
""' u, ........... "'' ••1Ml
PVBUC NOTICE
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
INDEX
T1 Pbct Y1111 M. CaM
642-5678
ltOllStS fH SALE
"''""'"' k ll!w hl•od ,.. .......... -. t.,._., ........ .. ,., ....... "*•' tw.w,.u u. ...... .. •• r~ ... ..
tOIM'll•lfll \ •ll••t ·~1Yun ..... ~
lht .. LicWft• ... ~ ~ 1 ...... 11111\
t .. t~• '''""' Mt''""'''"~ ~:rc!:,::'4
'-" J\ld t •PhU•ll'"' ~ . .-,,,, .......... , ..
..........,.,. 0 '.Uft•
-.htm1fhl" \ihlbtW Hon ... , ,.1,
UAL man
A',,. .... Iii• '-fk
A,..rtnwM ''" '•If' ~:.:::~~th
t ,..,"',.,' IAA' t n ~'
t omn•rt i•I J.'rotH"lh
• 111fW1Wnt,Y\U''' ~•I• '~' .... '"'' .. '•1· ttii~lu fw \t·•HtJ lhlt~i.Vu~u'
'"""'"··· p,,...,.,h ,,,,.\ h~ ,,.,,
\hibtho llflll!r ltlf 1'1)
"'"'Mn l)t•1 fl M1 •·•I .,,.,.,,.(11 l+f,,. 1..,.,_.,. t,rw#\ •'••1 ,,_,,. ,, '-!:·•· t ,.,
"•"" t\f.\ ••• ,. ...... ..
kr.I t '-l•h t \t h•lj,I k• .1. ,,., .. Ill•"'"'
UNTALS
,.,illil·t" t w•"•·•·••• 0.-.,-I ftl~"' t•d
tJ.411111,.-. t wlft ,.,. t hi
I ,•idi-•non1wn I <111fh
t t..ndorn11111w111· t nl l•1•nhtlt.I~•'"' t '"" ,,,.,.,,, .. , .. _.. l "'
tJiupt.\•• hH~ ,........,,,. I,_
"1'• twrl\
"'-' l l'l!tyl~ °'AA twH1tff I ft• k111on.
Mf;l'f'I! I. h•wM
U.ufrl .. \11•h I
l1W• J ll·oft"
"""" ""' M•"4:• , ...... .._.h .. '•4 "'""'•' ... """'·•· 1,,.,.,., lut kr 111
tlil1,1• H•nt.1 h~ •"' 'kt •••• 1
ll'lidu-~10,1 ... ,. ••
~ ... ,,
ten""' "-•fN••I \t ~ kr-~•I
BUSINESS, INVEST
MCNl. FINANCE
""'"" . ..., ....... . It.."·""' ......... ,
IJ \I '"•I .. ''i•t••I
l"'u I~•"" l\ ,, t,;I '-'•.no ' t•1 I "•A \I•••• 14,.,;tut
\t•of'h••• 11•
AMNOUNCEMENTS.
PUSONllS &
lOST & FOUND
<\l!ltllijl\• " , •• 1,,, .....
14 1 <tl ,, •. I
111'. t ~ t
.............. 1
'" .. it l1o1t~ t, .. \t,
SUVICES
... h I lt•h I•
EMPl.OYMENl &
PREPARATION
'Wl'lil•l4 ''' "·J"''" Jft•'4.t1tl1 I
""''' V. •*"• I \I & t
MUCHANOISE
"llllittW• .\1144,,, ...
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EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY ,.....,.."'"":
All rea l ett1te ad
ve rt laed I n thi s
newspaper is 1ub,ect lo
I.he F l!deral Fa tr Hous·
In& Act ol 1968 which
m1.k1!1 It lllepl lo 1d-
vert11e "any preference,
limitation, or d is·
cnminauon based on
race, color. rell11on,
sex, or national or11in.
or an intttttMXI lo make
any such prl!ference .
lim1t1t100. or dis
cnmutttHJn ··
This newspaper will not
knowin4ly accept any advert1s1ng for rul
estate wtudl is 111 viola-
twn pf t=he~~~w~·~~-
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
EXECUTIVE
S227,000
Almost new 2 story
beauty Sun filled
kitchen, formal dmtng room. wark and cozy
family room too' 2nd
story hosts secluded
ma s tfr s uite with
c rackling bric k
fireplace 3 mort' queen
s1z.ed bdrms too' Don't
mtss out call.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714,631-6990
WHATSUMl'l)Ul
AIOUT UNIQUE
FINAN C I NG &
CRAFTSMANSHIP
New Balboa Peninsula
custom home Three
bedroom. family mom.
Frt'nr h doors. and un
behevable owner rmanc
1ng With 20'1 dO\lon
S43S,OOO fee
If' YOU LIK E
PRIVACY This house
has a cour1yanl bounded
by s ix foot wall. four
bedrooms and beauttful
decor. plus excellent
owner f1nan r1 nii
S43S.OOO ree
BAYFRONT AT ITS
BEST You can have
this ternlic \'te\lo . and
enJOy the ease of IJY1ng
al the luxunous Cove. Two bedroom. den. wet-
bar, sensational master
bath. f1repla~ 1649.SOO
ftt
BRING YOUR BAR,B·
QUE You won't want
to lea ve ttus bf a ut 1.flll
backyard settutg Clean
and lo vely three bedroom and family
room home A super
house ror S27S.~
EXCITING
CITIH OME-3 Bdrms .
den, 21~ bath. looks out
on qutet greenbelt
Sl69.SOO
SECLUDE D AND
SCENIC-Uniqut In t~ Hei1hts. 4 bedrooms,
den . French doors.
ltaded glass. two brick
firepl1ces. Terrlfir
house at m.~.
THAnWHAn
UMIQUI AIOVT
lJ~IOOf t1{)1'tfS
fteah.on. m.G
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Worry rree condo Uvlna
in a I Upeol' lot.at.Ion not far from ...,..., and
tranaportat.lon. AtlrJC.-tlvt and well melo·
taloed 2 bdnm , prlv•te
yard, pool, nicely de·
cora&.ed. P,500. Owner
will t.t•p ftnlnc..
17141 61M4M
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HARIOR
Haft~to..Ut gw llnlL
--...--·-·----.. -.. -----·---· --... ,,. ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 29. 1981
I
~~r;=~~ .. ::.:.:.~:": C.,llflr c....t/Cw""' ........ "-"........... Ho.Mc..... Mc. ... Sii~ ······················· ······················· ······················· ... -................... ······················· ······················· ······················· YOUSWAeilM All Typee Rtmodcllna It Pool Dttkl and P1tk>s. ELECTRICIAN priced HARDWOODFLOORS •floua«learun•• Movlnf' Tbt Starvln& THICl.G«OUP SP£aAl. SPta.AUST Repau1. tOCI quality, 1'1 MasoCU'y,SporUsTtnnll ri&bt. free estimate oo CleanedlWaxed Proft .. 1onulThorouth 1 ColleaeStudtntlMovln& RES.ICOMM EXT
$1 &1,. !IJ He rb's Oaragt l99S Yrt In arta. Ureiue<t. Courts. Lie 374067 Bob. "ra•oramalljobe. An lmt 4881 SA. Xlnt (.o(al Re('a Co hu itrown Insured PROMPT. UC'D ho 1 HarborBIColta Mtu r ~alombo,962·~14_ BSl·I!* ·'1078 U . I e'J}OS58 ...... ---Cbarlie831 Llc. ITl.24-43S '4~-8427 754-15 e -
n.a°l'IW..)'Oll y ~ Cuatom·bulll lx12 GUARANTEED R~ID./OOMM'L •••••••••••u••• .. ••••• Reliable. Great work! _WatchusJrollW_, -,__..._ Soler-fora •-.a.. --woodel\ shelves for Bl~k walls brickwork HJali.b' ualiflfld. No Job HauJ cleanup concrete Steady · ReCa Cl&ll ABC MOV lN(;, fo;xper ...-·-. •••••••••••••••••••••••
301nda)'ad -1tora1e. display & slabs. driveways. Refs I001ma .G· rem'ovaLoWnpt.tuclc after4P .~-q_ prof, low rattt, quick ~·-••P•••• .. Han••••••••P•••,• Hot water• paolhe•lll\J U. ....................... 11raae. Our price as Reas rates 6'1.'l.nt11: Qui k &42-783! careful11erv1ce.~OOO '""' aper aer. ro · saverlilnlenet'IYCOlll DAILY •Dt~• low t 646-~ -· ~--......... -t aen. HMM•tttt.cJ - -Install. Decorator qual alD tu cl't'dl1s frH ,1W738-l!M2 ~._ ---DRJVBWA\'CLEANlNG .--." ............... Haul.cleanup,roncrete ....................... •A·I MOVIMG• FreeHI SUveSC14281 :Stsca lB . Pl.OT ----1. !1..-----Cabinets & coonttr lo~. Improve your home! a::"~ removaLDwnp truck DON'T8EEMPTY. Top quality Special ...._....__,.._.. ·-SllYICI lut•11•lat ' Room additions & Cini.Sh Remove ugl,J oil fl r\l5t M cp ' ck 6'2-1639 TillRST\'ORLONELY rare in bancllina 2S yn ,.._..,....,_,.... s,rfliWtn DllmY ....................... wqrtt frtttsl.154-4420 ala . f rest,.89'7·4111111_ es . 9907 DUMP jo~--exp. Competitive ratta ••••••••:;;•;"''"•• n•••••••••••••••••••••
DOJTNOW! All boo~a. Sd·ur· write· .J..bt>lJ~~a..J!1..Mi.!~R.1!!.l.. THOMPSON'S Sam f'ukomoto YARD Small MovinaJobs "Security Plus" wall sit Noovertime.7»1~ ~~palfl .. ~.-ttum SPRINKLERS•SOD ... ,_S... up F1o anr1a state· CUSTOMCARPENTRY CONCRt'TECONSTR. MAIN'l'. at Cltan·Ups. CallMlKE6*l3lll your house, plants & ~ .. __._ ,,..... • ~-Trtt Removal DIG lT
Yo .... D-"uPalol menll 6 l&JlH ~ Patio covers. decks, Lie 393383 6'2-8482 Tree trimming, small ~.~!:.!~L -·-.1·~-, Pl.ASTER PATCHING ~andsc_1~1010.
... ""OJ 9'-dd -- - --HaullnglcDwnpJobs •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 30 Service Directory ~·---room_a ahons.848.S23L ChHdC... -· l1ndlu@l&.ff$.~ At krorRandy i..-ct.copiltg Ext/int painllif&. cab re-Int /UL yraexp. Tit
Representative ...... Senlce FlNlSH CARPENTRY Mowin1 SlG-SU-125 Ml-8427 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r111 /stain Prof Rsnbl Neat wort Paul 545-2971 ••••••• .. •• .. ••••••-••
642·1671. ed 122 •••••••••••••••,••••••• Robby.&42.11136 ••••-;3•• .. •;•o;:•••••I(...... Haub.QJ/Movinl D:5 RAULINO Student has Brothers Construrwrs Free est, Steve54'7·4281 rttilg TILE INSTALLED ~-•••••••I Books. all tax.ts & re· ~hr ans rin..&§enj • • . 154.!il904 Mark 1660Santa Ana Av~ CM Fine painting by Richard ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• All Kinds. Guarantftd Acco•l"'9 ~rts. Set up, write up Cu!tom wort. Patio cov· llot lunch. .M. Chns· 1'1115 larae truck. lowest PI a n ts , in I I ext s· 1..1 . 13 I M c C 0 R M. A C K Refs. John, 893-1!6'7
••••••••••••••••••••••• -nLSt. 498'4S49. 9AM 12_ era. cabinets. wall units t1an Presc~L.646 M2L Topped /removed den rale~~pt. J:z!1976 ~~~c::r~!k1!': t~~ h~n;;Y N('B ~usto~~ Pl..UMB G TrH s.rnc.
BOOKKEEPING ....,._ Remod le repair CotttractGr ues,lawnrenov.1Sl·3476 llC21·~2M'1646-<MS Thankyou. H410 REPAIR&REMODEL , ..................... .
l"or small business •••••••••••••••••••••• C549 l1<!!~_1__ c·~;;;~"e·r~;k~ .. Bj;;k~ YAllDCLEAN:UPS. ~ ~.~::1~!'n~~~i -=.: __ --DB's PAINTIN~ ~~Pf~;. Reass.r:~~~ JAYITlllCAll Reas.relia.ble.631·~-GEIWICICISOH arptf _...-y._ Tile Patios Walks wotk. ampuon It re· uon. Have dump truck loa:Rs · lntiext Neat. reliable. -----Toppan&. pruning. re
.,...._.,..,..,. · Builders Since 1947 ....................... Draves Cover$ De<'ks' pair. Maintenaere. Reu. 953-8255 ....................... l}!fs. Dave~evs Pool~k.e •• .,... moval &spra)'Ul&.10,yrs
•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Add at ions. remodeling, Shampoo & steam l'le11n. Ca rpo~ts & Fences· Greenbelt Landscape, MORTGAGE MONEY RENTALS our speciality ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• exp. Local refs.. free Magnesite, pamt. clean. p~ans. Free esl. Reas Color bnghtenen, wht Lac'd. Dou.[646-0'761 · 642·0102. Cit• Up Yow Ad AV All.ABLE int ext Seaside Paint.' Col!' plete sert1ce re· est Lac OCm66 64G-9308
decks. cement. crpts, ~1c.31~~2H9 crpls .10 min bleach. -·---.--Ci .. d.r....-t...-Garages, S20.000t.oS250.000 lllg. Prom..Ph~4806 patrs,&solaruutall So wt.....o&-wnn••I
rar"""nlry,weld,plumb CONSTRUCTION Hall. liv-dUI nm SIS. R•MOdtt~iallt ,___...~ Utehauling,elc MololooltP---'-11\1. DISCO_UNT_ Cal. Pool Service "--,... f7 SO h SlO ·-.. •••••• .. •••••••" 1 l k 631 1993 .. ,...... v ' 642 8663 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brad, 642·3462___ Add/remodel, concrete av11 rm . co1:1c . J .S CON UCTION DON HOFELIYr on true . . . . Up lo IS/yrs to repay D&D <.:ust.om Patnting . ---Original WindowWasb&t "
Appl•.c•..,. _[ree_ill_~·8360afl s_ ~~rssCr~~Pa~~~~ ~! L':~·~~=ll ~~;r~ I Sharpen Anything' TREEISHRUBTRIM PRI~~:~~tt;flAL Int ext Guar 983-326} leflllbWRg Avg 3brhome.l.1S
••u•••u•••••••••••••• ROOM ADDITIONS & exp Do work m}f>elf ----_1157-6936or96G-1195_ Garage & yard clean -~27•3_4_77__ RALPH'SPAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·76911
GUSA R USEDREFR's REMODELING( Qualdaty Rela.53l·Ol0l . . Droptries H...,.. u · F'reees_¥7:.fJ?l.l_ Ext/int. reas, prompt JD Hom Refinishing "LellheSunshmeln"
ALES&SERVICE construc11on rom e· e Care Crpt Cleaners -••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hom.c..... Moso.wy Lie Free est 964·SS66 Antiques Kit cab1nets Call Sunsh111e Window
Goodcond. 642-n~ sign lo completion Steamclean&uphoh. ' llJ OFFIHJULY Cerpenlry·Muonry •••••••••n•••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ... •••••••• AGAPEF'ORCE-~ne2a11!_~ 645-0664 Cleanin_g,U.d.SCS-SMl
..,..... ~~~y ~~·~~!!. f~~ Truckmountunat OrapenesbyG1ovunn1 r:~r:~:o~fie Want aREAU.YCLEAN BRICKWORK Small PAINTINGC.OMPANY a....oetel&R.,.W Window Cleaning &c All
••••••••••••• ... •••••••• eats. Allen EJohnson # \York..&@r_ 645·3716 Also m1n1 blinds & &more. J .B 646-9990 H~USE? Call Gingham Jobs. Newport, Costa 3Generationsof ••••••••••••••••••••••• Screens Rellable. falr
Driveways, parking lot 301007, Call 840-5656 or NoSteamlNoShampoo level«!'!!! s.t2 2'.2l~ -D-co-ts ~enaor Gari. F'reeest.64S-5l~-Mesa . Irvine. Refs Painting Excellence General Services. no JOb Call Chris or John. repairs, sealcoattng 840-4724 StainSpecialtst. Fa)t Drywol u un ROBIN'SCLEANING 67$-3115 S~SllSI _ 100 small. Free est S46·00S3,557·96118 __
sacs Asphalt. 631·4199 ---drl' freeest. _8391~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service athoroughly BRICK Walls. Walk~. Quality Ptg.Lowestrates Reas Call AnswerAd SEAVIEW
Lic'd JEHCOCOHST.. ROBERTS CA RPET DrywallSpeciahst cleanhouse.54().0M! P lanters . Patios . in oc Neat prompt 11453.642·0Xl.or6311137 W do ash.6'2-WA.SH ASPHALT REPAIRING Add1tio11s Remodeling REPAIR Restretch. re· Qual & prod New & re· Expert1SeHousekeepmg \'en l' er s. etc Serv 848 S684 636-71•9 !ft . .§ -!!L .:..;w...:.w:..=~=--"-'-'-" .......
Stakoating&Stnping &Custom Homes l..1c lay Allrepa1rs. mod~~ ~5549 Dependable.refs Blockwork. Concrete St· -H-... P l -RoofiftCJ What a Wonderful World
Comm1resid. Free est. 11299314. 67S.~ 673-8490 ALL TEXTURES& Sueplielium·_ &11..:..4970 Lie. Ref's. 646-~7 o~!~i~y :.,~. ~1~a:rs ....................... of Shopping, nebt 11 Llc. •397362 64S.818l AV ALON COHSTR. Celhq, Acomtic Drywall Clean & depen· Quality Housecleaning Frplcs. Patios. Plant.er5 Free e~l Si80230 Do.!!i For shake. composition your fingertips every.
You don't need a gun to Bu1ld1ng&Remodehng ••••••••••••••••••••••• dable;.J_{~as ~1·234S_ witbPersonalTouch For a JOb done ni:ht QUAtlTYPAJNTING or hot. Call Les Frl'(> day ! Daily P ilot
.. draw fast " when you ~rs..:!!c-i.ns _Jli1-7,~ ArousllcCt1ltngs+ DRYWALLREPAIR Cltpentry, ~ll'Sfl~J. Fteeesl. Belh~OlS6 Larr.)'150·~eves. Slate he 3349()0 16 yrs e~L~·9~-___ ClassifiedAds.Toplace
place an ad in the D111ly Trade your old stuff for custom hand texturmg The c.F Grol!P.. 7S4 IS39 Roofinj, cer. Tile. WANTED! Houseclean SELL idle items with al Orangl' ro SJ} 1886 BALBOA ROOFING CO >a'ondur1eat da. Cr1•_~~1.1.f~ied.54A7d9 Pilot Want Ads ! Call ne~ goodies ~·1th a Li~ 389944 -~5S4j - --Drywall. mort. 499-4969 1ng exp'd. reliable, Daily Pilot Classified · · --The only roof111g ro ror ......
now -IJ42.5678. Cla$S1fi.~ d.._642·5678 Want Ad~-Ca!.l641:}§7a Want ;\d Hel.11~ _ 642 567.J f.!a _ _ ho_nest 6:11_71..25.!lfl 4f.!!_ Ad Sell adl.e items 642·~ the coast 67J.6'743__ Visor help you.
R..tefs to~ 4300 Office a.tat 4400 lusiMu Retttal 4450 RHtols Wanted 4600 ._...., 1 .... H MoMy to Loan 5025 Mo~ Trwt Lost & f..-.d S300 P~ 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •· ••• , ....................... Ow..Wtr 50051 Opperiullity 5005 ...................... • Dttds 5035 ..................... " ..................... ..
• -------•CM. 3 beaut. orrices & C dtlM ScniorCitiien<artastlde· ,.HJ":-.~···•••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• WIDOW has mone) for ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND Doberman \'IC OEDS would love to
bath. 840 sq ft Xlnt loc 4200 °TGround "ftoor sires home prpf "1th BIKE RENTAL BUSI. Stained glass shop R} 2nd T D ·~ Sl.0.000 & up' San Juan Capistrano party w1~ you Call. Sue 1~· • Air. cpts.drps, sq w :.I ud 10 't'ear lease Jn Laguna Beach For owner Newport Brh E Z CREDIT' No pnll~ WE 'A YllfE MOST 4~2072 or Ka l Y an Yl 1 me H"tft'l~c -I _ __64.>166L _ ~ ~;l~~o~:~sh r:r~ Hegm.n!n..&.Oct 1, 673·5~ nor.Unfo.._ca1!_!94-~,_ Long established <:all A_&l Ealet>n673 7~1_1 For your TD 's & Notes Free to understanding 9S]:.Q971 ____ _ J.L"'(~ i11Ac~ t BOAT SLIP 61S-6700 Apt wanted yrly. Sept Newi1rowmgwomensex· ~5-~80Call<t5PM 50%EcalHYCapital at -~1~n1 ~on A~soc home 12wkoldk1lll'ns llUM'SESCOITS 1\1' ..t. ,.. ... • Responsible rem \\Ith t-rease & health spa SIO.OOO (o 12 million bll·1 1st series of shots Oa}~ 9A~ JAM_-~
---·----iltcJ.ded•ro-IHw OFflCESPACE :dnt rererl'n('I'~ S350 Greatpotcnllal~.000. MORROIAY,CA Land devel hi:ht mfl( 494-942I - -Experienced
OldtSt &largest agenry wfteft YOll choose our Mo lo mo. no deposit!> mnth 750· 1149 j Tl' rm§ 170-0633 Bkr -Equipment rental yard No elect ronici.. i·om "";:;::::;::f'I Found Man's" atrh. Acupressure Mass ace
mSoCalif.sinret971 delue3000to4000 INCL RECEPT PRINTSHOP earns SSS ' Anxious puters Prine onl> Lost&Fomd CdMHlghSrhool TherapeulicRel.uauon Credits : ABC.NBC.CBS. ~ Ft offkes. Cal ' . 141Si..eu/1in~st/ Th b C M owner leaving state Crossroads De,rlop !!44·9476 Techniques Sunny Cosmo~r~ahue Sal•I•675-1662. E81~J"~::J.8FF'E~: .•• ~.~~~•~••••••••••••• I ri\•inghe~:f5~:11 ·r' Make offer Askin~ ment Co PO Box 40!!, l,;,~t·;.•F:;.d•••••53·00 Lost Desert Tortoi!>e 63 l·s:t77New rt __
to all who need a place -_... .;;;:.;.... -:e~ai~=er ~ oOo Cra1~r t60.000 Tus!m, 9268Q. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gone smce 7-6 Plea.SP Preventative & Stress NEWP""' I Ca-rni;llL I 0 EAL I F' R EA L hsiMH . . n 1·2242 Mort~C)H Tnnt call 646 9586 Reducing Mas.sage by
Newport Bearh. 641 1899 Prest1g10~. full semce ESTATE REL/\ TED Opportwlity 5005 631·1266 D d • 5035 --5350 Doris "Intro" Special' EX EC offices lnclds BUSIN"""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ee 1 '•"'°"°h ••0.2317 10AM·8PM Serving all the S Coast ~ • • •• •• • •••••••• • • • • • • • • f OUNO ADS ....., . rcpt, sec. xerox. under -• * • Want IOH'Slor for Npt ···F··,·R··s·r···L··A···o··v···· . ------
Garden Grove. 895 3482 ground pk'g, telex & an PR I\''' TE D t~ SK lurt Krai.r bayfront homl' GI\ l' ARE fR(£ THE
Uque deror conr rm AREAS OR St.:lTE ~ow S2215 llrookhurst well secured Jst or 2ncl Escort. Models
Spectacular view, serur1·
ty gate. tenrus. pool.spa
Harbor Ridge. SSSOmo
.160-9301 ___ --
Male or Female share
Newport Beach • Br
holl!le. w /pools & tennis
courts. block to beach
Call Paul. &l2·S869.
Roommate 2 bedroom
condo in Hunt. Beach
Female non·smoker.
S263 per month +
ul1Jit1es Nttd 9 l Cnll 964· 71.,..67.:.,_ _ _,_ __
M Chnstian Wider JO to
share house With same
~1'1!0. CM 546-3199
CHRISTIAN Roommate
2br, 34 St. N B Penn
$160 673-7856 Dan e"es
6-9
Owner. has 3Bdrm. 2Ba hme E Side C ~t Wall
shr w I or 2 resp & con
genial young ladies
642·~
.Male/Fem to shr 2br hse
CdM . Avail Aug. 1st Yearly 67J..4988 __
Fem to shr N B. rondo.
fully lum. $2.-.> + '• ulll
J an·Don, 631·~
Rmmte lor lge hse an
C.M straighl only.must
be clean S2151mo + ut1I
Bri.an 646-3228, 966-0192
Fem 2S to JS yrs lO shr
2br. townhouse 5r>25 mo
+util. Call 9·S 7S2·5S99 Pat __
Female Non·smoker
Ref'fi. S250 mo. + ullls.
Kitchen lndry pri\· sc.s. 7975 al\ 4.
M / F' to shr oceanfront
prof. $375 mo Must be
responsible. Avl now or
will hold til 9 l Call Ad
Sitter. •210. 642-4:KIO. 24
hrs.
Share 2Br apt C M. pool
End of Aug. rm + ut1I
646-2890 or 613:4480 eves.
LIBERALG.R.C
Roommate. Contact
service 11 7PM
213/63G-30t0
M/F. 2 bdrm ape In Park
Npt. S330 mo. inti util
Call Paul64G-al37=.:.. __
~-!:.. 4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cloeed ·~ garage. orr ali.y. Coeta Mesa. 140.
Offlal..W 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t617 WestcUtr. N.8. Want
fiaancial Inst. 1000& f. tst. CJoor. A#J!t Hl·5032.
MIWrOIT MACH
FuJI service nee of·
fices from S397. ··on
Call" nee. offi~s from
Sl05. lnclds. HCret.arial.
plloc>t aas.. word pro ~tft~~~RS COMPANI~ -!~J·~l __
PLUSH orrrc ES .
SOO·fOOO ·~ It. 1801 ~cwport Blvd. C.M Ph
-~ -----MIWPOIT
nMMULA SJ1tk>ut tXft11llw or.
litt• 1e,_ from Cil.j
Hell All .enlm avalt.
Mt 'opt ... I'. Fn>m 2ZS
lq.il. 1'p It rtUOUblt
reatal• No ltaM re-
quir:.fSll .. ~dm.
644 71_8L AV1\IL lluntin~on BeaC'h T D~A&t,67Hl61 Call GirHI iends
WESTCLIFF GIL7L495.>IOC>$ Youarelhewinneror Sml town restaurant an t 'ortyo.un.. ESCORTS• RES_67S-~ TWO FREE PASS~ OVERWEIGHT' Atascadero. Ca Pror11a 642·5671 * 912· 1345 * * fr:: BLDG ($17value) U)cD£RWEJGHT?Shed ble evl'n with non MHdA211dT.D.? C VIS ed Ho...e/Offk.e • Stores or Offices RINGLING BROS. or gain lbs. quickly . working owner Pnrl' COMPETITIVE RATES M & ~Mee~ * 972-97 2 * NEWrOIT BEACH Prime location, Cd ~I Rt\RNUM & BAii.EV safely. sensibly 100'; ~got1able owe paper Della Pac1r1c Mortgage l.osl. Desert TorlOISl' c 0 VER GIRL Male/female Escort
ComerWestrtiffDr 3036 or 3040 E Coa!>t CIRCUS guar. 675·1883 Mary Call Edith W llessick 1714ll!SI 2040 ~~aamrsil}E'. Pct.ti OR\eewrardJ~ ... OUTcu• * MC VlSh & Irvine Ave llwy Call Paul Martin. \ h ,. t Rltr & Associates <805J Licensed RE. Broker ,.. " ~ 1~!!!!!1B!!!!!!lm!!ll!!!I•• lSOO Sq F'\ Orti S I 738.~ , na earn vonven ion 640. 7326 642·0808 ~-0778 MCiVlSA I"' . ire u1 e 644· -· -Cenll'rAug.6·17 466.0500 Ask for t;ayle -Fortotalst.ress reductioo Ideal location for At Newport Bearh 15 "< 50. Loni;: Bearh Arena ~ar.1!: LOST Cold dwm. \'1c
tomey, Real Esl<lte or SS.SO 1805\\'estchrfDr •uu 19"" ~.L.....-L..~.._.. S..,.Mh).Co. OCC . Manurarturers •FOXYLADY • &byreSlatxeavtieonlmO.~p~. E n t re p re n e u r " .. "" -_.. \II types of real estalt> B k Bid 1 · 0 · 7Sl·SSZ>A11111me To claim passes. rall S '-'--P·--* llltn1--.. an R or r\'lne OUTCALLON LY <•a 2811 Beautifully matnlained • -W~ -...,... ln\'e.5stm~~~~.1949 Senliml'nlal Value .....,. full service bldg Ort.re CCMMMrdal 642·5678,l'Xl.272 Pai.ses So.. Orange COasl Area . Opport.ity 5015 ~gg..-,lfl REWARD5S2·:Kll9 . VISA MC w;~d hke to meet in
now avail RHtah 4475 mu~• be exchanged for No exp '*'· Wi" train. -··••••••••••••••••••• 2"dTDs * 972·11 lt * educated lady between CalMelisso ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• rest-ned:.eatsatboi. SlS-800 ca.sh down Plus SO"~ JOINTVENTURE I Lost while Persian M. 45 &c 55. Am a well
6.U'.LIOI. 950 sq.fl. rronl w sink urr1cc prior lo approx S70l!6 for equip OPPORnTNITY 642-2171 545-0611 "Sam",Spyj?lass.CdM. SHE educated widower" ~~ ---Estab seconds & ,inti· performance needed. <.:all Mon Fri Car wash ~e' eloper reward 7 59 O 11 S. rmancaaUy secure. tave
I ni. I pd ...... "" ....., " ....,. ........ bu Id N ed ans"er to a successful E S C 0 R T S & nice ome ... a I a goes CdM Deluxe Suites, AC. que E Side'''.! ••" 72•9 * * * 9 6 PM 4""861..()111 I O""rator \\Ill pro' ide Class1f1ed Ad~ are the 97~i909 h •· II h t aEm.ipst"•l~wg. u6171<690()"""" a_..a.._a....:_;R...tal .4500 -· Ian ... "' 1 mi: t' !> "ara"eoryard salc' It's SIOOREWARD MODELING with it PO BOX 10011 C: ~ ,,. inuonrr1V1 M., kc } our shopping SELL idle items walh a Joint venture partner for .. ,. CM 92627 ---fi --· ••••••••••••••••••••••• easier b)~tn the Dail) Daily Pilot Classified rront end ex pt>nses a better way to tell mort> Yello" orange tabby. 13S.9199__ -~ ------Pnmeor acespare 111 new Rent M G 600~fl S240 Ad I """nle' oranjle t>yes . NB Dt•• ••IE bldg, Dana Pl qcean & mo 2944 Randolph.C M P1lotCJa I _,\~ ---'-------957 In( r--.r 673-6790 -"WE UEFORYOU~·· , ~:~ c~~~et~31/~a9s~~IR .,~·51.lr6 J f rr· 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IAJst Codlhe re11malepw1ear Gr9e:;=•Y Convincingly . pro bonus 661·3351 """"sq l n>nl 0 1<·es. • • mi;: re ro ar ease ress1onalh'. conf1dent1al ----large drl\e 1n rear rall 8315478 \'it· ~1s 24 Hrs 641·0180 ly or JUSt for run •
IAYF«OMTOfftC.E doors 3ptwepower 30 • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL • su~nVICJO _ Cosll/Chedls 160-7166 __ _ s~ sq rt Parking. sq rt 1779 Wh1tt1er St • I.OST Sat . Jul} 25 AMf1'/MCJVko Good look1ng. romantic
iamtorial,etc 760-9440 _ C 1\1 549·~ • • Fem Aust Sh<.>p mix successful Newport exec
hsMts R...tal 4450 7 ,500 Sea. Ft. • 8 08yl • 3 Lines • 8 Dollars • Lie 154482 .. 615 1304 .,.. .,.. * 49 seeks discreet. run·
••••••••••••••••••••••• X Int lor 6.00o sq fl Found F gray & white pt Joe'* lovtng lady for daytime
For store & office space fenced yd spa re + • It's easy to place your 8-0ay W eek C lassified by mail. and tt • Siamese kitten. ShiHer 7224Cra~ Dr & weekend dales Poem at reasonable rates modern air rond orfice~ Park area_5S7 5574 lr\'tne ble travel t.o Austral111
500to4000SaFt. Can be spilt 2915 Halla • COStS just $8 -that's only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this • Found small white. tan Youarethewannerof Ton..t966·0419 __ --· •
MESA VERDEbR day So. Santa Ana For s pecial o ffer. you must be a non-commercial user offering & gray Chihuahua. r TWOFREEPASSES YOUNG LADIESAv1111 PLAZA info 64~~12 ~.:.6900 • h • 22n<! & Orange 631 12:!2 1 Sl1 value ) ble for Casualfun Dawn
1525MesaVerdeE.C M Shop 10 share wath SiJ?n • merchandise for s ale up to $800 per ad. and t e price must • Found r Shep /uppy, RINGLING BROS. 161~1 _
54S.4123 _ Painter. soosq rt in r M. be in your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad blk & tan. M Gol Ret . BARNUM & BAILEY EXECUTIVE
RETAIL SPACE 0111 inc 18.5 mo Call • needs eight days selling time or just one. • ~ Shep rross. blk & CIRCUS 110 s rt on Ha rbor fi46 289<1 ~r:.67~4480 • tan . M Dobie cros5, red. Anaheim Convention * SUIT£ * Blvd. ?n C.M S500 Great Costa Mesa office~ work • F' Shep. beige. M Colhe ·Center AUJl 6-17
exposure. 61s-11700 ~~a8~01~~~~.:i~c~\:; • Use one wcrd in each box. About 4 words make one • (;~f; cs~~ ~k ~k~h~· Lon~~ar~t;ena 95~:~n~]ba
Realonomics -642 ~288am 4.P!Jl • class1fted II,.. of type, Minim\lt'ft ad IS 3 lines Please print • 644.3656 To claim passes. call Clever young write r
RETAL SPACE Lo" cost office space plainly. • ·., • Found womnn·~ pre 642·S618. ext 272. Passes seeks work what ran 1 5000 sq. ft on Nwpl Blvd w 1 t h 5 h 0 p 11 re o1 • • scr1pt1on tinted ilasse~. must be exchanged for write for you" Call Lan
Hi traffic Great ex Overheadreardoor.am· Brookhurst & PCH resenedseatsalbox al 9632297 Affordable riosure. S3500 m o pie parkani;:. quiet In • r------------------------------, • ~35.;lC 0 ( f Ice pr I 0 r t 0 rates~
mmed. occupy dustnal area or Costa • I • FOUND · Male Co<•ker performance. Oriental Girls to mect
Realonomics -672-6109.. Mesa. 979-8533. Spaniel Tan colorini;: _ -*-~ * sincere. financially sta :re~r~r.:le::;c~t~ ~--4550 • I • Vic :-lewport lle1ghts Find what you want m ble. marriage minded
548 s I f 213 1417 7001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 64~'4966 -Dit•!Y Pilgt_<.;.1ass1f~s. men lntros95J.~_
I,err,L___ __ Storogt G.aclts • • lft•es...,. lfi•HhMtilt t.•"hMtllt
WANT ACTlON? ~1\1 area __ s48 3178 $ 8 QO Oppotiwllty 5015 Opport.ity 5015 0ppcHtwit, 5015 ~lass!f~ l\~.:.~8-W.ant~ , _Ca~2:.~1l • ' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • ••• •00••••••••••••• ••••••• ...... ••••••••••
• 10.60 •
t~e4°"qoi~off : 13.20 : 1tV~~ • 15.80 • ~~~ . ~vtffi!it ~AA' : Add 12.IO for eadt 8Clcltton•l llne for 8 time a •
h~,!7oi. • • JiD~~.u.-......,. W ,&r>? e Publish my ad for 8 days starting e
0
• Classification •
• Name r•
Use AnsWlf Ad service
when placing your ad ..• a
Da ily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
. we take your messages
24 hours a day .•. you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is on ly $7 .so
week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678.
• 1• • Address 1•
• City Zip Phone 1 e
: Check or M.0 . enclosed (J i:
e Charge my ad to~ '• . '• e GJ # ' Exp. l e
: 0 # Exp. :: eL------------------------------'• M.11'•0 *ilAlt•M1' I • • • I ---JJIW . ..,ll • c r~I C.. ...._CA tZ626 .. . :
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
' '
(TAHITI LANO INVESTMENTS)
B.P. 1322 • Papeete -Tahiti
PUHMUIA -This district IS the "Kahala of Tahiti. ..
Tahitian style home, but construction is cement block
and redwood -rour separate buildings make up the
home which forms a "U" and fa ces ocean. Tiled .
courtyard with swimming pool as center piece . Over
15,000 sq. ft. landscaped with low maintenance in mind.
Property rilled to the top of a retaining wall. five steps
down to beach at top of beautiful cove. $690,000.
furnished . l''ee simple title In hand. • * •
llAUTIFUL -over water restaurant for sate: in million dollar range. * • • tllAtlHI -acreage for sale or lease ; on the ~ach.
* * • rAPIAll 5 acres, waterfront. Choice property. Large
river Is one property line; the other side 1s tree lined. and
a natural spring runs down the middle. 3S minute drive
from Jntematio(ia.I Airport. $00.000. F JS title in hand.
* * * ,,.. .......
,..... '"'· ~ --.. ,,. h ,. • .... Ii ........ ,.. ....
, ... PA!-71t21...
'
............ ., ....
Orange Coa1 DAILY PILOT/Wednnd1y, July 29, 1981 ~~~-.. ?1!! ~~!!!~ ..... ?!~
,.. ................. w.. ,.. w.-. 7111 w ..... 1 7111 COOi r:.:•t.h·~=,.. tw.w.w 7100.W.W..... 71otHelpW..-.. 7'00.W.WlllM4 7100 ....................... ~~•T................... ... •. ................. ... ................... llm lO a .. Jloo ~ ..... ~-ha , • ·~•T ...................... T .......................................... ~••T .................. . p~~tr·f·~&· need . c.-s rrt. Allo'lltdlln prep. ur .••• IO/mo. i:: HOITHSa, OptDID I llalalt H lct: For Apt Proaram s.1 .... lrlt. llC~T
p .... . !. "'w ....... h Part., AH•·---ri~D ~!-.;.Pf'Jrilll, mom IOOD Or= COwaty'1 ComplH ... Coat.a ...... boya •• .., 12 • oldtr Wllb t lo a.mall of.
tl"IOM., lnrtSHt, Loe Iii""•'-VltJo llaJ •"" -.,_lf p nsHIN ...... lpo& Tiie • fat. ...... !x1»r to Mll J.ll(OIDI un!lmlt· ne. art W11&tr1\ 81rtender1. Medi~ ~ MIWACCTS.. lmmtd.fulJ•r:rtUmt 111l 'N Cleaver fr f 0 1T~1..._ Alltrlu1 Budatud . td. 4f7·6'1l Ask for ' 1
cookU cttan up. yn up Candida~.. Pl"I•'°"' bukiqaper ;1.:,~'t!afear ,n s!n~! K..!wfe'd etOt ~ me. ftaturiat Uve eoocert, M•t r _r_a_y_l ------
Holl>ltaUty RNOurtet muit hue Id maniaal ~~'= Ni• Su9fl"ll.olw. Exp'd COOIP~ Co u t 'f11b I n1:1f~ !1.ol! ~i::;':·ct!:t, Ir Gtatral IDHJlnlcal nmMITIACHll t-~~~1!111111~~
,,..,.., 1450 duttrlty, td t)'ttl&bt, Con&ad· ,..q'd.Call :Pmonntl b°:!!~-:0,, . .Ji.~1 ~etbanleaJ t btlily nee. llOK fu.llorpert·~· ~oo=:~~ce Af(erooona 3-S, :I IECEPJlllSTS
t•••••••••••••••••U••• ne:!iinb~~: 31" ADM PNVI)' Qlol.511 CRANE OPERATOR lnt o51'ty for 10UDI wt tralD. um 27zi be~ AODlY [O~rrl days/wk N 8 Su11n, Re1ltifr !Oday for local
GrandC1n10nRaf\Trip1 rup~rt mtdk1l tltt~ E.0.£. V/F/V/H THl ... 'TID per'dforboltyd.A~y r.i:;.1 :;.en• ;,r,ir. No.M11a.s.A. ' Surf. Sand Hotel: tempo5ra5r".iiMSmenlJ
Jul 31·AUl9 Traupo tronka Gd. beMflll. ..our Nln.rnon•t2Z720UISl cta .. llledAd ... ,DaJIY HOTEL. Ll•••lttd!.4fli4T7 I
. .Tir .7422 Only re~.,oiulblt B!AtmCIAN 21).JJl.1100 -·-Pilot, P.O. loll lse6, MOT& Medical J'ront Office I ........ s.. en L1in-
s>ertona Ml&lnC perm•· Girl Friday, part timt. tCiUMortDt.ML CUSTODIAL Cot\tM-tp. MAMA.. Urolol)'/GP, 1ener1l ,_.TOf • _
lAIL TO HAWAII ntnt emr.>'.mt. need •t, e.8-8480, Ml-1145 or fl09 CM Student needed lot 2 PRONT0"1CE Waoted fGr 40 unlt pro-olc 1kllla, pefboard, up 1 Prof.Offla -
J'm Invited Join a cou P1Y1 ·.£.~I • Mn Panl • Wnt l!UI. C.M. n•• 1• wtekt to fill In for va"a o-.u -Jtet In lAlllDa Beach. • If you •~ 1 produc1111 IOMOtAIY '11SONN11 SI.Pl/ICU
pie leaving 8/llll lor 3 51 -llAunSAl.OM Lie Civil h'lneer. Uonlna custodian, A~I: If .,0ub;v':"~nce Al10, manace email Medkal aaent, 'fOU ehould loot J7Ullrdistnet
wh Needed: attrac. Shampoo technician. Dul11ner, Ora hm1n 17th tbru Au&. 27th . lnlnauranee colletttona commtrtdal pllct adJa· HunUn1too Beach Al· lnlo our NEW com· Mtwl!Orlleocti
live, lnteUiaent female. 8 1 up'd In land dtv 4'J Minimum a&e l8/yrs. 'itront teleinooe com cent. Minimum 2 yean ler11at need.a back office minion proaram that 11 t .O.E
All expen.u:s pd Learn ASS..O l~YP:c~:c"CO:~·~~;· public work. Ctl1§73:2B. munlcaUona •bWty w~ eaptrltnct . relulred. Technician. P /lime, the beat In tOwn Our of · ·
tosall. Jim, S'JS.,.38. ELECTRO.uECH. NB ----J1W061.&&:-_.. D•T• -.-y need you! 13Hd0 Send rtawnolo: .ff. In· Tuea' Fri. Salal ry oom· lice bllU oboe o( I.ht olde1t
..,..~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HtlpW..W 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Accounllna
COMTIOU9/
CHAIGE ACC1'T
For mediwn.1lze com pany in Garden Grove
Xlnt benefits Salary open ~s yrs exp man
d&10ry. Degree desara bit, but not essential
NO PHONE CALLS
Send resume to R. L1ghtbume, Pres
DATAAJRE. IN<.:
7442 Oraneewood Av . Garden Grove, CA 92841
ACCOUMTS
PAYAUCUIK
Organized individual with busy A/P dept Lite
typing, gd benefits.
Newport Beach area
640·89§0.
Accounting
llLUHG CLElk lrvtne ad agent'y needs
gd billing clerk Must
have bkpg background.
be versatile, accurate.
lle11 bit & det11 al
minded JO.key by touch
& gd typing skills req'd Will train on NCR llS
Excell benefits Call
Mrs Brecke. 752-6171
ACCOUNTS
I ECBYAIU
CLStK Narmco Matenals Inc . leading s tructural
adhesive manufacturer.
bas an immediate open·
ang for an Accounts Receivable Clerk The
successful candidate
will have had I year ex·
perience 10 a manuCac luring environment, ac-curate typuig, 10.key by
touch, & knowledge of
invoicing
Narmco offers a com
pelitive starting salary
& comprehens ive benefits package
For immedaale con
slderataon please call
Jackie Bickel. S48 1144. eat.224
HARMCO
MatwWa.lltc. A Suti.1diary of
Celanese Cofll
600 W. Victoria St
Costa Mesa. Ca 92627 __ E_Q~. MF
Accounbng/Clencal
IAMIC
IECOMCIUA TIOM
CLIU Health rare mgml. co an
Irvine has an ammed
opening for an 1nd1v
with a mm of I yr ac
counting exper using
computerized systems,
preferably in bank re
concillaUons. Successful ca.ndidale wtll be nexa· ble & able to learn quack·
ly. Must also be detail
oriented, ~ 10.key by
touch & have gd com·
municatlons skills E1·
ceU. Crlnee package For mlervlew. call . Sharon
Rasins , 714·641 1616, EOEM/F
"' ~~-__ "',.._..," rULL Tl Pill veatmtnl Co. um SID men1urate w th op. eata a ed l.n Newpe>rlf• ... 1111!1111-----Eltctronlcs co. In •BIKESTORE• elm Ana mi:c;. me. VlcenteBlvd.Sulte#S36 CalU»MO. Beach with a very pre· llCB'TIOHISf
l..a&una Beach needs an A»'t. M&r.' mechanic c1 INIR£D Mio. I/yr. ex~. Fltime Calf=:· a -"-e~~.;.,pnej. LotAn1tl99004! MBCu.11...-1$11 1li1lous l<>catioo C11ll ReceplionialCorgrowana F./M uaembler with for Srhwlnn dlr. Sal. UY.JI P/ti NB llC .. -I n • •·-"'· H ~ Walt lot an appoint Orang• c l solderln& & E/M u Sl0,400. Must have prior ADVEITISIMI' me. ··a •11ery MOQ·Frl.sttfOOOE()E 0USICLIA)8S Per manent, p/llme. ment 873-'tllO surance~fi~.uPB~ ~~
11cmbly exper Requires bilte mecb. exp In a na 11 8*HOO. fHN~ OfRCI Prettr car or driver'• Service areel1n1 card · ' per. an asset Pd ;0 ad . manual dexterity. ttore. }t4=R SALES Pel'IOft to 8'111l boll l.n UceDH '5/hour wlt.b u d e P t . i n I o c a I •• &L IST•TE benefits CaU Pauline,
AblUty lo LR basle test ~,.....£,,,__ c DATAIMTIY 1eneral offl"e 0 .. ecdtoct.llQ.17M aupermarteu. l~l.S/hrs "~ "' 963-0941 h ...., ·-The laaalfled Dept. ol -·TOI , w r... durtn1 week. Call John· SALIS eqwpmt sU<'d aa power forboo eepinatttv the Dally Pilot hu an Iv..-.... -....... 8:30-4:30. Good pay, Hou-... (714)S»-8!!C!I . Tbla1aour36lhyearse11.I••••••••
meters wou.I be 1 bi& 7S£7~ openln1 oo one of our ..n Joodbenefit.a.Ulhttyp-HOMIMAMA•• ----' In& fine Southern
plus telephone sales desks Health caremamt. ro. ln 1111, 1nawer1n& phone. a for butlneu family in MODB.S/ISCOITS cal llo rnl a horn es E llC.lf'T fTY'IST
We offer exceU pay & •lllPl/TYPIST• The per1on we seek Irvine bas an lmmed. must. A•k for Tom, Huntln1ton Harbour. ToeDol!an9*W Perhaps •Mu would en stablashed export benelits-ph~a . sowpm-1lso answer ahould enjoy telephone openln& for a Data En· 831·33'12. CootinseueotW,25 hn Models needed All ,__ :'!~~¥ger~~mp:::~~ 1:1., 4DAYWOllWIH phones . Nr O C s•lea, beabletotype4S try Operator to work per wk Call Rita Types, Men, Women & to>'rulnlneallrrnact1ve
Co ts 2 nu from Coast Air Port Small oCflce w Pm • n d ha v e a 3· 11. 30PM abllt. Must General 84e-05U or 846-0011 Mon Children. No experience ~nre1~1 :~lb ':s'1~~gnlc: I :~e~e~LS~~~hoJ1::.~i! 64H130. pleaunt peraonahty have a min. al 1 yr. ex· IJmt Fd mW 2PM. oecepary. Stl-'17S2 d Hwy & 8 ml Crom 40iS & IOATS Classified or telephone per. 00 CRT. Successful n. ..... H k d _ _ nyon, Spyglass Hall. lypin& Ulles. accunc~ SFrwy1 aa•--ex-rience would randidatewiUbeaquick lerC... ouae eepera wanle MUISISAIDH Irvine Terrace. Ltnda a must Pleasant sur Gel-coat repaJT Exp'd ~ ,.... I ......... .... 1..._..,.._ SeacllffMotel Isl• etc r o undangs Excel l Please call for appt MacGregor Yacht., 1631 be helpful We offer ex· earner, ""'..W-0rien~ .. _ .. -~ ' EXPERJENCED II ;~u are presently 8(' benefits & salary Gd
PersoonelDept Placentia,C.M. b!!~~~t~ ~~~!daa~~ ~u:~ls~ ~us1~i: S.criw...,.F/T Houaekeepel'/Child Care t!!ch11;1.:e.".°'f.~ ~{ltlr: live 111 real estate sales opply for advancement
TELONICBERKELEY IOOIOCllPll medical, dental, bfe in· have above 1vera1e AMahiA,mustwork Prr lood pay. Need Im· medical. dent.al & Ii e do you have 1mmed1ale IM S Equipment. Int'
714-494-9401 E.O E M o u It 0 n p I a 1 a surance. etc Salary keyboard as-d &r be ac-Saturday evening.a med Only poeiUve allrtude. & unlimited access to 280S Barranca Rd .
ASSEMBLERS We will
train Apply 7A M. MarGregor Yachts. 1631 f 1.!rentia, Costa Mesa
Assistance needed Facts Of Irvine Haircutting, 7lH~·6353, Leonard
Assist manager for men's sportswear,
C /time. wkends . Ba y
Dept Store.~ M1111 St Balboa Mr Hawthorne: ID·S6SO. APQIY Mon·Fn.
AUTOM<mVE HELP WANTS>
HEWCARDESK
b perilRced o.ty
T~CIJ
ci.ctz~
Connaer-Oebllo
Chevrolet
18211 Beach Blvd
847 6ar1
MS-3331 --
Automotive
LotM-. Must be mature and ex·
perienced for excellent
workinf rondrt.aons Ask for Wot ga.n1
SADDLB Ck IMW fl -2040, .495-4949
AUTOM<mvE
'IM>-~/ RtM
Some auto dulersbap
experience helpful. Full
time Tues .. Sat Contact Elsie Tompluns or Sid W1eg111sat
Earle Ike
TOYOTA.VOUO
'"'" ..... '"' c ........ ..
"'-•O·tJOJ w 140.tOJ
laibpfftft'
Needed 1n my Irvine home 12 days a mo 4 & s yr old bors. 97}9492
BANKING
TB.LEI
OUR IKTEIEST
IS YOU!
Pharmacy Laguna commensurate with ex· curate. Gd. salary & Cr· MU323 8'2·80« the president oC your Irvine EOE _
Hills. Mr Dreyfus. perience PLUS great loge benefits paclla,e. Housekeeper wanted, ror NURSING compa.ny,or.LSbehadden RecpforHBOptometrist
788-3784 Also needed rommlssion program. 11 For interview ca I: busy exec. in CdM. Must away ID an ivory tower Part tame. aflemoons Dru& Clerk you are ambitious and Sh a r o n Ras i n s ' be proficient in main-R.N. or LVN, director of removed from the sl'ent! 963-30:.> 1001(.,_~~C want to be pa id for your 714·641·1616, EOE M/F Pia. call for 'f:Pl. talning linehome, lndry, staff development for 74 Our president is avaala - -. --~-re pl II , 9 ""~PM MF dl 2/3 d bed SNF. N'ewport Con· ble. Do )'OU need add•· RtcptjSK Newport Bea,, eal e ort.s, eaae ca ior ;...,.,, . ' .. 645-385 men ng, e«'. aya va'·1centClr." .. "T1".. t' I h I Nfit Cent D ig ' interview. 0 .. -ay month. Rera 1 mual. .., ....,. .,. 10na trau11ng to e p er e~ n Estate Investment & Personnel Dept. •.n BU·M you Increase your earn P aia Good typist Development Firm. 6'2-4J2l Ext.2'77 PAR'r.iDRJVER GINllAl.OfflCE Nursln-H mgs ? t:heerful phone voare Must have min. 3 yrs, OR .a .... ~.i. CO ST Good driving record. Looking for a very in· Housekeeper, Uve·in Cor Experienced or 1nex Pleasant surroundmgs ex per. Pref real estate "'"wlC A Houra 8am-spm. S48-1133 tereating part time job mature couple . Ref's perlenced you may well Single garl orrice Up to
related. t.hru financial DAILY PILOT DEUVEIY in pleasant oflice? ¢eaae. Call after Ham : MlUll'f'8 profit Crom our color SIOOO mo 7S9·9036. Ask
statements. Xlnt work· 330 W Bay St Clerical, for mature ~2382. ,...U video tape hslmg & sale~ for Norman Jacobson or ing cond. Start $1.SOO per Costa Mesa Drldve r 1neeFde1d1 1i m · person. Location P.C.H., HOUSEKEEPER, dinlne Thl1• key PoSilion11 re-training program which Jack AfT!!stronL. __ _
mo. EOE/MF Gme daadte 1Y· u l me. Npt. Bch Esper a rm attendant " cook. qu ru sales aba ly, we reel 1s the fane~l
CaU Sharon, 714-7S2-94M Howard, Howard It
Barnard
IOOICK911F/C
p rr for clothing store Ill
Fashion Island Exp
erson in AIP, payroll &
I dbl entrr jOUl'Tlal lhru trial ba Call for 1n-lerv1ew appt aft lOam
da1Jy.
THELOOIC.
64USOO
~~----~ oo r ving record must Act'Ul'lte typing, Needed immed ror sm •trencth in management available 1 ... -------
CLERIC .11.1 2431 W · Coast Hwy· no shorthand. 20 hr. retirement residence, and a LVN licenae or We are not a franl·hisr, Registered Nurse
"""' Newport Beach. week inrludel S.t &r Sun l..a1. Bcb. F /\ime, rotal· stronc health care back· branch or subs1d1ary CORRECTIONAL
Part lime F'me Retatl DEUVEIY Call: 64§.7tsl in& wkncb .... g firound. This position is just headquarter.; HURSE ~!~:lal~n ;r!. !~d~ F /Time for local de. I GOOD PIOPU HOUSEKEEPER 0 the Orange County We have operungs for a SClllary
deta1lonented"ca.nuse ilvenes. Excell. driving I wu.-Live· in Enelish· area few highly mot1,ated Sl79·$100Sf*'Mo
lo k b. rttord req'd. P .. ___ Cor _.,_ sn.akin~ lorcou..i.. with o · persons who ha ve a de Part time position at Los ey mac 1ne by """"' The B Ballooo f u ~ "~ ur corporation 1s a l be w ~pt SS7·11212. ask for . rus a u I cb1l in Newport sire 0 more sue Plnos Forestry Camp touch Ill tram to post r. ,...mmoos. Newport s.erv1re resta.uranl o-n· Bea"h Sday......... .......... leading provider of cessfu l For an an I a I es 0 n c 0 m . &:. I g L ...-' wvl .. ~........ i::ivate duty, home l t n e. r s an Juan St•tionu1.1nc "· soo.n in a1una M\l!thaverefs. 766-0357. al' ............ nital ours· ervaew appo1n ment Capistrano Days onl~. rulers/other general of ---· -N1&uel 15 looklne for u• "' .......... w1lh' the ~e owner & w ' 1 c e las ks Work D!nlll Ass1s~ot, part good people. All PC>t•· HSKPR. Exp " Rec re-in& personnel founder. caU Weslt) N M F' No expenence schedulertexable tame, morning. RDA Uons are avatlable in q'd. Must speak Engb.ah Taylor required Excellent
AT EASE FASHION preferred Newport cludinr: Cood servers, &r bt able to drive Pls If this posillon sounds WtlltyH. TCIYlorCo. benefits ISLAND Beach area near Hoag busers hoatesses cook• c a I I 6 • s 7 3 s 8 • like the challenge you've RE 'C1RS
Call Mr Cline Mon-Fn HOJp. WI=~. salad 'makers, barten'. 9 M· been looking for call. 2111 San1'-:qu~llllb C OUMTY --~·~~---DIEMT AL IECEPT. d e ~ 1 , c o c k t a 1 I lr'8urance 714-155-0 I 51 Newport Beach Of ORANGE
IOOICllB'B Clerical Office exp. req. Dental w a It res a' s' d Is . MEWPOIT t I 0 62S Ross St . Rm G 13
FULLCHARGE GENERAL exp. prer. Wed-Sat. Top hwashen. Pleue apply IMSUIM4CE Nurslne SantaAna,CA92701 Mamtam aU journals & salary for qualified m fi:rson al The Brass A1ency needs pel"IOOaJ IM-lVHC~ 1 .. 1 ............... 11 .......... _ 1714 18347441 general ledger. Prepare CLERK De[lon. S42-~. Ba loon 30100 Towne lines underwriter. 2 yra •11 •~ 11.7 -lier. v ~ ~ Aff Center Dr LI.Un. inl · " • '" Opena'ng for one ,.. 1nnat1ve adjusting entries & · m mum exp required hospt. with excell. re-~· A E I financial statements DENT Al HYGIENIST Ni cue I. See Steve or in all phases°' personal putation. Beach area perienced salesperson to <'hon mp oyer Su,,..rvisepayables&re· Weareasubudiaryofa Excellent pay, im · Paul.49$·3102 lines account servicing. F . med! 1 d sell prestigl()us home~.
ceivables. Firm in Costa nationally recognized med I 1 le 0 Pen Ing · Governess resp. for care Salary commensurate ~~ mrlfe. Topc~ila~~: We have great locat1on. RENTAL AG ENT Busy
Mesa-Non smoker Call recruitment advertising 879·2000 or boy 9, &lrl S, in/ant 7 with eap. mm Flea. hrs. 642-M>44 prolessaonal associates pro pert Y m gm l oft'.
Carole, 754-1040 aeency in need of 11 Dental Ass11tant Exper mos. 8-S, M-F. Prepare ,._-.... ~---and over 25 million 1n must have real esl<lte BOOKKEEPER responsible individual perferred Colta Mesa lunch. do lndry, clean 1• 1._.Y-OIY OFFfCE Hal listings For l'Ollfidentaal Ii c Lag un a R c• h who is c1pable of work · nns su:i...n... la •. " _..., Prr •· Sm ll C M interview call Kevan. 494-6M94 Pfl'forada1encynrtbe 1ng walb min imal • .. _ P Y • C""ft8AIU•fAa1 ..... m~ a · · Airport, Newport Bch superv1&ion, and who ia DllU NHS leisure. Ult have 3 mos ~ ""' Qffict.15ll!!. 7$1·6892 Corporate Pi11za Really Rent a I Orfat•e Person for
Not full charee detail oriented Your OP-•TOI exp. Take ad to aO/ CorPorate hd9trs for ORDERDESK 760-9333 100 unat apts. Costa F ·1 -St.at• ~m,....yment stale wide f1n1nci1l Mesa Show & ""Sl aplS N~~~~a:ke~'PH~;~Y ~~t~s 1~i~lh~cl~~i~~~ Set up & ~rate drill lice in Or-Co. oor· services firm Fashion ::r.:n ~~ul·M'J>:.'iji, RICEl'TITTI'IST I 1 g ht bk k"p g . ~
ne&otiable.957-3046 documenlat1on or cress Abi ty to read Jll.677.010.Ad~!orby llland.Tonminventory 8 ·4PM . 3304 W A DEPENDABLE & days week S800 Mo ~bllS'hedma•·nal.and lueprinl• & use emplorer.1!11~. &rmailroomoperations. MacArthur Blvd, Santa t ded Live orrlremases lo~-"" measurin1 devices. 6 Sblpnln1. receiving, ma ure person nee ., • ., 4907 k u 10.·• Partlim~~winc teractm& \\1th pubb ca months experience re· CillMGOC.., ... -"f~ aupply orderine. mven-,_AJl,_,a..._.______ for busy aar cond & ,,_. ~ .ti>_~ -
b N lions ~w--.. A~y at· 1020 n-.. ~ to t-•-11 p.11.c11&,..-&U!_ refrigeration contract RESID_,. .... o..J'-R. us1ness ewport ·~ · New Rutaura"t -ry coo'""'· ma pn>-"' -~ ..,..., ~ Beach CaU~0791,Ed Call171•1"-l386Coran .17lhSL~M. Mex1c1n/Amer1"..an cettlnl &r 1pec11I pn>-Sm . electronics firm ing Clrm Neal ap TheSanClementelnnl5 J fr • ~ ' j t E 'd pearance & Jd phone looktng Cor a dynamic, or e interview appo111lment DIY CUAHRS Food acceoptinc appllca· Ceacll I 1~ ';!!lr 9re30q l overloolun1 ocean wants voice to handle am port experlenred md1\'1dual
llE.AIFAST COOi Monday through f'nday, Counter person, will lions for waitresses, · .,.,..,.,., · : 0 pef10fl to box power sup-d1enu Vaned clerical for their resident nlle
Full time permanent 9AM SPM train Call after cocktail waltrnses, SPM pliea.Somelifhng&re· duties , must t ype manager position Call
Must have experience 10:30am Ask ror Laura hostesses Must be 18 cord keeping . mvolved. SOwpm Non smoker p,te Mitchell Tues Sun
Apply in pel"IOD: Jolly Tho .. :: ffZ.$4§6. years old Exp pre· F/lime, benefiu. clean Consider 2 people pt to Co~ o192.6103
Racer. 400S Coaat Hwy, Rta•I Electrical assembly posi· ferred-not nettsnry JAMTOI enviJ"onmenl. S640 per equa I I fit pos1t1on R-ESPO!'\SIBLE Pers7>~
Laguna Beach. Ad•~ i.e. lion Some exper. may *'ply in penon. Wed &r R1lel1b Hills Hoepltal in mo. start, raise 30 dys Salary commensurate to clean & maantaan
BUS p ERSONS Ex be req'd. 14.00 pr hr. urs lOlm-noon ; 4PM· Newport Beach bu an ~a....z:=-----w/exp Alre Rite, S331 home Must have ref's
perienced only Lunch & Equal Oppty Emplyr HPSSxstema~9552 6PM . Formerly CbarUe immed opeoinC for a Production Or ' H B 8 30am -12 30pm Mon
d' hifta II A /f/h Don 's restaurant. 28022 Janitor Day shill. E1· 893-S003. Fra Start «!!J.r_49' "·""-' 100ers ava Pl> m --~-111111 .. --Cape Dr Laguna cell Cringe benefits "'-.,.,,,_, ly daily 10 am lil 2 pm Cock ta al garl wanted, FACTORY Niguel. package. For interview, IECEl'T.fTYPIST Restaurant Need outgo· The Barn Restaurant & evemngs. 145 E. 19th St, WOIJ(laS call : Joshua Whiskey, Costa Mesa office L•J.lhl 1ni personality for food Sa loon, ~4982 Redh1 ll C9sta Mya Ceramic experience pre· 714.&&5·S'I05. EOE M /F typing, basic bookkeep prep. sandwich making.
Ave, T1.11lln. C O C KT A I L lerred, but will tr1lo. GUAJIDS Ing, some errands Dale. meul slicing. rash re Carpenter needed, Cull WAITRESS~ No ex-Packing, glaW!g & cast· Full Ii part lime. All Part lime. Sales & Mkt· 966-9040 IHpm, Mon g1strr 1!·4 ~1on .f°ra GREAT w ESTER N lime for smaU custom per nee we train also ing & klln loading jobs areas. l.Tniforms furn'd. KIN• Hal lne earn &ood
3232
money Thurs. I S4 hr Also need exp As
SAV INGS AND LOAN display co. Exp. In finish for bartendlng a't the available. Day & nlghl Aces 21 or over, retired Fullllmeonly 962-3: IECl!PTIOHIST st Mgr, 7 3. al $4 50 hr
has an immediate open-& cabinet work. Wage American Bandstand. abilta. All Jobi fuUtime welcome. Noexper. nee. 1---.l!:!!!::.L!l~--~-------• Im med position with 646-8883
Ing for a TELLER on a open. Ca ll for appl. opening soon to live con· with benefits. Apply al APP P 1 YU : USen 1ve rSI 1 L~ s.c, -~ Part time Npl. •ch. -al esta•e Restaurant PART Tl ME basis §31-Sll.S. c.rt.a, rock & roll & dl.n· Vohann, 2.63111 Via de rotec on rvi~. 1228 .. 0 ... • G d ( which will lead to a Car Wash/Cashiers. Ftn In& &r dancing Call Ania (nr San Juan W. Sth St .. Sant.a Ana. Smal Newtfrt each OFACEWOllC deve'ml firm. Phone 00 opportunity or :~;L /J~~ f'5~1ESa~ ~~~.85~p~:i~h& 1P:Te ~9153-~SSS89 ......... _· _2772 __ N_o_. _Mam ~e;~81ad exit), S.J.C. ~:7d~ hn ~12& 1·4, ~~~~~~ate ~~~I J!~i ;:,1~rw! ~fgfr~~~~~ e~~r ~d~c~~ typmit ~re~t::i:,~ ft J~~~t~sssk
Branch. ~-44&0 HAllSTY'UST f:£8377te;. Call Lisa. (714) ollice. Knowledge of ltc~• 963ro~6,"11erb or Jason .,. ~·•· ..... th Ii I ~-u typewriter and 10 Key ....,_. CASHIER F /time· fyou've neverplaceda Morefamlliesaregetting •O ...,,., .., c entee. Q 0 d Westminster Area RESTu,;&:,; -ADMIMISTIA TIYf Previous linancaa I in p/tjme, bnght, depend a· Classified ad, you're in the ramping "bug" this 8 ea u t iru I, r rien d I y U R CLERK, ex per, l::i~r~~ SI r Y • s Pee Front omre F'ihng and "' "'~ 1
DllECTOI stitut1on or cub bandl· ble. good with figures the minority! Try it once year If you have a salon. FashlOD la land. r: h~~~ ~~ ~l~;kr, A pproum ate 1 Y 5 IX typine required Exi:>er Immediate opemngs for
J e "is h Commun a ty 1 n g experience 1 s Will train. Car Wash, and see how qwckly you camper I.hat's not get· New P o r l Be• c h boun per day, flexible. preferred. but w1ll lraan servmg persons & rook
Relations Agency seek r:~le~sak~tl er"! !6061 Beach Blvd, H.B. aet results Phone tlntfi uaed, sell it now mmfO:flf). r:a~2t:~~ ;J~ llc:t Good phone personality 8»!!Q:ll f"cellent benefits /ffi ~1:.t:·~~~· if~ ~::.~~~:.~:.·:.:::.:• ~~~~~5:'~~ ....... 8 •.••• -.. Dawi H~yc~pif"!11"'at.. ·~i,:{~~i:S :;,iu~~ ... ~i~~\f'.d"~:erd:~.f·~.~"~ ·:l\;~~~E~~'.f ·ifatc::~;~~· •• : •• ~
~:b~~hTe~. ~~.1~ 8~4. You wall rind we oiler a curate typing req'd., • ., Hang Glider Mia. nttd.a or will train. Apply: aurance. Front oCc.Tues-Sat Pvt 1--------competalive salary, ex-telephone " brokerage • • •nmeon• ....... , .. _ability 10AM·2PM, e W. 19th sountn club 6Y-54Q:! IETAJL 6505 Wilshire Blvd, Los cellent benefits and a exper prefd Hrs 8·30 fi d Sa • """ ..,, .. wiu1u« . M. Apply in person, RECl:a'l'll'\.a.JIST PartUmeclerks
Anaeles, Cali( 90048 comfortable work111g 8l· to s .. Contact· Hel.en •• 1el les Superv1'tnr • tolropem"m'o~lmahoultipptole.jboi~ 330West Bay St., ...... ""'" _.R..,.e,.,p,.ly..._s ""'confi=den=r.!Cl.!c:a,..l __ , mosphere McGlnley for appl '7 ..,... ,. AlkforEileenWhite TYPIST STOPH'GO
Dy_...Slo..J'-64-4 2292 pins fr receivin1. Phone Equal Oppty Emplyr Active real esata~ of MAUETS
A -" ~ Pleue call Cor an ap-· e ~lmited openinss available m the Orange e 1-54:.:..:..7-6366~~·'------µ.JW!.!!!.11..LMlllll:l!!~!U. flee has opening for a 4555 eo.t Hwy.,
SALES pomtmentlo r--•C•ASll ... ~EIS~--e toast area. for sell·mot1vated career e HARDWARESALES LVNJ.U:30PM P/TIMIM•t~S well lroomed person11 H•w.....tlHc• For rapidly arowlnJ pre· oriented mdlv1dual who can w•rk with • P /lime, .seml·relired Sml prlv conv hoep. Im· ble individual. MWlt be ,..... ' 5 t I g e m 1 g111 0 e 7 I .. 759 .. 96J • field Sales People Tram, motivate and t1ipe. A~y In person: m1culate, ad st111in1 CD mu •'-9 exp. w /typina skills of llllllllll!!!l!!!!!!l!l!!~!!!I!!••• Generous commission "'" ... l I rd YOlllll~ •eo R r~ E 11 G\1\1 • ge resu ts. Station wagon or van • roW11 a warez. 3107 203&2 Santa Ana Ave. d 1 4..-wpm. eal estate tr!rn!P~:~1 497.~ ~J 3 U T .. TI Jet • necessary. Exceptional earnings, plus job • E. CoaatHW? .. ,Cdm Santa Ana Heights. A u ta with OIAStanding up. desirable Ca II V , related benefits available Cor lhe rlabt HOSTESS. Min 3 yrs ex· uc~f.;,.iao~-----aUracllve penonalltles, M· • peo 1 If " e 1 .-who enjoy wortin1 with APT MANAGER, mature GHATWISTBH Ji Pe. you can produce results, not per ence. Lunch Ii din· MAINTENANCE MEN 10-15 year old youths ~~p11e.M~~-utAd ... ult.sunnlt0, S.AY'MS For~1r~hlltt e t~::rv~:~. ~:~r~r ~·r.~~~~·0694 for •. d:~1>'•r~'!'m~u~1P:,~ · MAruRE evenlnia 8·9PM. can
\Nati _.. I a Barn Restaurant 'i----.zu_....,._ __ 642-021, ext. 343, pets. Apt +sma.1111 ar AA /F.OE/M/F Start1nl$4uptoS4.50. .__ S I between 2PM to 5PM,
I
•1 ,.,. ;~~~~~~~ : ~ ;....., : ~·~o~o~n:, :14!:;111;;;;2;;;;;;;R;;;;ed;;;;h;;;;11;.1.!.s.;;!Pt;;u k>t;;thln;;w;;:8;;at;;;':.;;;;~;;.;;o;;;;;au,~--"=~ ... rO .... ~ ... Lo~;.=·-wm---••• •.. II J I WANT A CAREER? • 330 w'.'iay Street • Our new Co. la looking
•• ., Costa Meaa • Costa Mesa, CA • for ambllloua people
The faatest draw ID the
West. .I Daily Piiot
Claulfied Ad Call To-day SU·sr78.
R.H.
2 to 3 days 7-3:30 PM or 3
lo 4 days 3 t.o 11 :30 PM
Sml priv conv hosp. Im
maculate Gd Staffing
20362 Santa Ana Ave. Santa Ana Heights
~-3081
SAIUWOHG
Sewina ma chi n e
operators Wiil tr11n 7. • • 517 W. Wibon St. E Op who Wint lo tum pert
631.911(11 e . qua! portWJ.ity Employer e Ume boW'I Into GOLD! • • .. o· • • • Ground noor oppty, Call D11·1, ,,.,. e "'l 1rect• e La&ll\l Beach •••••••••••••• fordet1u..p1.ft9$ ...... ..
• We'n1 a fut-paced dally newtpaptt aeell· • ~ PHONE OPERATOR .,
ln1 an experienced art direct.or wltb ,. •1 p•1at ro r plumbina co • e
•• ::1:~/co~!:e~:t0~:t~ri1a01a.d~T 1::U·~! •. Hun=~•ch •••••• ~ II J I htb'.~.· ~!~." ~f·r·: .• n...a.aat1'an Artist •.
•
famJlfar with pt10l production, direct • " • IC ,..,. ........ .,., .. ,.. rtlUU., m.111. rttall advtrtlalna and procesa color Penonncl Dept. • l*ml e If you havt at least on' year'a exptnenct •
• . • . u well a1 the conception and de • S37-M • l'--t IH'---t • Pewww•n.-• In print<)rlenled work , hive p>d 1r1phlc • ~t of corporalt communicatlonl l~~~~~~~~I RDll • ,........._, • !xperleneed inditiduat • desltn and 1pallal sen11tlv1ty tnduclini • ~liu'tl;' let's talk. But tt:. mutt alao • F e lo nan Ck wuh com· type1pedn1. 1ome terhnk•l drawlnc •
• Ill If m1nace four o • oraanlze • ,...._.. ... llltplle<t • Secr-'-ry t. e "'"n'f, .. __ 1_1,.._.,_.., • abUlty1 and undnstand the basics oC re· • and coordinate multiple projtda to meet dlt "--c.t IMI W .-" ........ .,., ... ,_,. tall ao detl1n and art prepafJUOI\ for
• deadliaH,and communluteeffectively. • °" --e Ex .tau.. Ma-• truch, etc. J ulio, e newsptper reproduction. ltt's talk We'"' •
• Some knowledlt of AV would bt a plua. • DAILY PllDT • ICliiTIJ UllM e MHf97, 1bout ~ layout and production, m Com11tnutlon for thl1 chalifnP\1 poel· PndkalNine e conctPt /dealan. looklna for IOfTieOl'lt who e
:
lion la conal1ttnt with uperienee and at· • CLASSIFllD e lmmedlat. ~for venaUle bl· • KIDS _ tor eldtrb oo..ple, Uve • la skilled In all pham of prodllCtion from •
complishmentt, and lncludH 1n ncellent • a "S • dMdual. Mutt bt upabltl of bandl· e ln. Coo!1 drive, light • CONCEPT to FINISH. and ablt to meet
btnflfill p1clra1e. Rtply lmmedl1ttly • AU • tn1 f11t•paced, varied and Int.em\. • blfD.m.IJJ.P deadlines. We're fast·pac~. but tun to •
" • trith current rnume •howlni 111ary hit· in& dut.let tor newtpaJ»r executive SUMMER JOIS -·-• work for, and have an exetlltnt fliin&e •
• s.ory, With Xero1 of .3dttl&n 11mpies lo: • '"' C.. 111 "· fWI It, • a pertonnel ldmlniltrat.or. Call· e • .-~ benef\ta packa1e with lots ol opponu11lty
\ • Markttl111 Servlctt llfanapr • T,.. It• 0 W-M • MZ-UZl, Ext. m for appt. • 1h q te d P..art ll 111 t . • for the ri&h\ ptraon To appl'f, l'l.ll Larry • ~,,c .. fflf • ( .... 2 • .a.a ] • IUcllella • Cleaners e Hall it 17141142 4321ror1n aPl)Oifllmttnl e
• 330W:ibySlreet ·V:c..11=.'"· •• °';.=' e P:!'r~uperieoee • ~;;..•• • • Costa MeH, CA •• w.----' 11 AJ Dltk MO. for • 330 tlay Street • · •l ar call (714 > 642-4321 J ,.., ...,....... • DO W. Y Strtet • u to••'a, '"" " e Costa Mesa, CA e
• Equal Opp0rtunlty E~r ~· rw ,... w.1•, ~ Costa llt11, CA • =-~'!:.;.~ e Equal Opportunity Employer t
CllllMllll ~1 If Equal ()ppOrtUDJty ~ • ~-..a I JW. ... .\ •
............. .,. ..... -:-.............. , iiit° " IUI air. c.a ••••••••••••••
' '
11111 BllCl /llUIH COAST
Daily Piiat
WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
COMICS 86
ENTERTAINMENT 87
BUSINESS 89
TELEVISION 812
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... B9
D
0
Wilcoxen on council; Bellerue Diayor
J i ng-Ume Laguna Beach at·
lo ey William Wilcoxen has
be n named to rill the unexplred
tei of former mayor Wayne B lln, and Councilwoman Sally
Be erue was selected as mayor in
a ~ o-hour session Tuesday that
ca• best be described as confus·
int.
'Jhe four remaining councll m!}bers faced the task Tuesday
ni t of selecting a fifth member
fr among 20 applicants whose
nap:ies appeared on a mimeo-
gr.phed sheet distributed among
the packed council chamber au-
dien ce.
And, as in most political issues
in t.aguna Beach. arriving at ade-
cis$on did not come easy. Orf ast.
In action that kept t he council
audience alternately scratching th~ir heads and scribbling on
their mimeographed "racing
forms," the four council mem·
bers:
Accepted the nomination of
the 20 names on the list.
Cut that number down to a
dozen candidates in the first
round of balloting.
Each voted for their first pre·
ference from the remaining can
didates. which saw the panel
evenly split between two hopefuls
for the job.
Discussed tossing out those
two candidates and voting again
on the remaining 10 on the hst
-Voted instead to adjourn for a
half hour to discuss solutions to
the split vote among themselves
and with members of the au
dience.
-Reconvened to again try to
select a fifth member. then
became bogged down in pro·
cedur al matters.
Decided each council
member would again scribble
down a top choice.
Came up with a unanimous
vote Cor Wilcoxen.
ln rapid fashion. Wilcoxen was
sworn in for the eight months re·
maining on Baglin's term and
sea led on the council.
Mayor Pro Tern Kelly Boyd im-
mediately asked for nominations
for m ayor ;ind both Boyd and Mrs
Bclleruc were nominated.
All eyes turned to an obviously
uncomfortable Wilcoxen as he
cast the deciding vote for Mrs.
Bellerue. There was applause
from many in lhe council cham·
be rs
Boyd will remain as m ayor pro
tern
Freeways reviewed
d ounty mulls 14 methods for raising funds
t
By~LENN SCOTT Of o.lly ,. ... Sa.ft
hile a Caltrans offlc1a1 was
ex plaining Tuesday that the
stale highway system is essen-
tially complete in Orange Coun·
ty, local leaders were tinkering
wi'1 ways to build their own
freeways. lit two separate public hear-
i n •s, the county Board of
Supervisors r eviewed a report
!isling 14 ways and methods for
ral,sing money for freeways and
state Sen. Paul Carpenter held a
le'{islative hearing to discuss
trific problems. t issue behind both hearings
is county plan to build two new
fr e ways to ha ndle expected
traffic increases fro.m new de·
velopmenl in the south county
and continued "densification'' in
urban areas.
the freeways would run along
lh~ 27 -mile Foothill Corridor.
where a proposed $365 million
road would link the Riverside
Freeway near Santa Ana Can-
yon with San \lemente, and the
lHniJe San Joaquin Hills Cor·
ridor, where a $250 million
highway w ould run from
Newport Beach to San Juan
Capistrano.
County transportation plan-
ners claim that without the new
freeways and substantial 1m
provemenls to the prest'nt
system county com mut<'rs
will be mired in traffic in 10 lo 15
years.
Tom Jenkins. execut1\•e direc-
tor for the Orange County
Transportation Comm1ss1on.
told Carpenter Tuesday that
forecasters predict a 51 percent
increase in population. a 100 per·
cent jump in jobs and a 108 per
cent rise in daily personal trips
"Orange County, as with other
Southern California counties.
will be looking at billion doll ar
parking lots. called freeways, in
the very near future unless
something is done today," he
said .
Adding to the local di smay is
the fact that neither of the lwo
freewa ys 1s scheduled by
Caltrans for construction, sc
cording to Heinz Heckeroth. re
gional Caltrans director
He c keroth said most o r
Caltrans' future work will b<' m
"fine tuning" its e xisting
freeways to relieve s pot con~cs
Lion .
Carpenter. D-Cypress. has ad
vocated charging tolls to pay for
ne w freeway construction He
repeated that point Tuesday dur
ing the hearing in Santa Ana of
the Senate Selec1 Committee nn
Southern California Transporta-
tion Problems
'I don 'l think we call count on
federal or state aid to solve all of
our problems," he said. "I think
"'e' II have to solve some of our
problems ourselves "
Charging tolls is one of several
methods listed in the new report
to lhe sup~rvisors on freeway
financing. Others include local
increases in gasoline or sales
taxes. parking s urcharges.
s everance taxes on mining
natural resources, "sin taxes"
on alcohol or tobacco sales.
employer payroll taxes, impact
fees for new developments and
creation of assessment districts.
After reviewing the report, the
board of supervisors decided
Tuesday to establis h a
Trans portation Funding Ad-
visory Committff to supervise
future financial transactions and
investments
John Gibson. the county's rev·
e nue bond adminis trator. said
he hopes that a financing
m<.'lhod could be selected so
voters could vote to approve
bond measur es. if necessary,
durtnK the 1984 general elec-
tions
Cycle completed; he's lwme
South Laguna biker pedals to Pacific from Maine
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .. Oellyrl ... IUfl
lt was a bicycle trip he had
planned since he was 15, a gruel·
inc lr anscontinental journey
from Maine's rugged Atlantic
coast to the sandy Pacific shore
below hls grandfather's home in
Laguna Beach.
Tues day 24-year·old K im
Lowell of South Laguna ac ·
cornplished his goal -and sym-
bolically dipped the front tire of
hit bicycle in the waters of Cres-
cent Bay.
It took Lowell just six weeks to
pedal the 3,700 miles from Small
Pcpnt, Maine. to the Art Colony. a
trip that took him through the nar-
r ow, shaded l a n es of New
Eqgland and across the blistering
det1erts of Arizona and California.
Lowe ll, a gr aduate of the
Uqlversity of Vermont, where he
eatned bachelor's and master's
deMrees In forestry, s aid the only
ca)ualties on the trip were seven
til'J!S , two wheel spokes and a eon-
Jt lens.
'I couldn't believe how friendly
pie were," he said. "It was Iii l was wearing a sign 'that s d . 'Hey, I'm a really nJce
g ',"
owell sa1d he lived on about $7
a ay during his six-week trip,
m ney he had earned rrom Jobs
glng from a counter clerk at
Donald's toteacbln1.
e said be joined io the Fourth
July celebrations in Spr·
rleJd, llJ., at the request ot peo-
plje be met while riding through
~t clt7. He added that be wu
rr,ut.trtt, invited to pttcb bis tent o people's lawns when they
1 rn~ofhlstrlp,
"I met one woman ln a IJ'C>etry
store ln BlaresvUle, Pa., \hat
••keel nMll l'd llk•to camp on her
lawn tor the n11bt," Lowell aald,
He laid Ille later apparently
had second lbouthta and inquired
to make aure be wasn't a
"psycbo." "1 a11ured her t.hal I
wun 't and ever)'thlns work~ out
otay," LoweU aaAd laUJbln1.
Lowen wu lfffted by hls
panaU, Bob ud Jou, al bit
P'•ndfaUMr'• cun Drive bome.
HJ fat.her, 1 rtur~ Alt Force of.
ficer. and his brother. Wayne.
flew a plane out to greet him when
he reached Needles. Calif.
"It was about 110 degrees on
that road and 1 was really having
a tough day,·· the younger Lowell
said. "Seeing them up there gave
me quite a lift."
He said he camped out every
night on his cross country solo
journey. He said when the
sprinklers came on at a New
York State golf cour se the
temptation was too much and he
took an impromptu shower in
the cool spray. "[ was really
risking the wrath of the
~roundskecper on that one." he
said.
Lowell will be leaving Aug. 31
for Christchurch, New Zealand.
where he will be studying for a
doctorate at the University of
C.interbury
"I couldn't have finished thls
trip without all lhe help I got from
the people on the road," he said
"It's an experience I'll never
fnrgel. ··
..., ..........
Kim LowtU bnngs has titlcC fo a tfop at the cd~ oJ llw Pod/k
Octan a/tn-completing a cro1~-countrt1 trip from Moine
Wilcoxen, 49, has lived In
Laguna Beach since 1943 and has
his private law practice on Forest
Avenue.
The tall, quiet attorney was a
member of the Laguna Beach
school board for seven years. re-
signing in 1971.
He was active in the early 1970s
in the effort to save Sall Creek
from development. and is a lec·
turer on land use regulations al
UC Irvine.
Wilcoxen ser ved as a deputy
district attrorney for several
years in the early 1960s and was a
di rector of the Orange County Bar
Association.
His council term expires next
April when elections will be held
for the seat vacated by Baglin,
and those held by Boyd and Coun·
cilman Howard Dawson
'Feelings'
composer
files suit
A Laguna Niguel composer
who wrote the words and music
for the famous hit song, "Feel
ings, ·· has filed a lawsuit 1n
Orange Collnty Superior Court to
collect $60,000 in royalties from
a television advert1s1ng cam-
paign using the tune
Mo rris Kaise rman . a lso
known as Morris Albert, filed
suit claiming that the American
Society of Composers. Authors
and Publis he rs (ASCAP) still
owes him the royalties from an
American Telephone & Tele·
graph ad campaign from April,
1977 to December. 1978.
Kaiserman's lawyer . William.
Sheffield. said today that he
believes ASCAP accountants
failed lo keep track of the times
the ads using his music were
run.
ASCAP is what Sheffield calls
the composer 's policeman H
monitors the use of copyrighted
material and then collects and
passes along royalties.
Sheffield said a survey by an
advertising agency showed that
AT&T owed Kaiserman more
than $60,000 for 800 television
commercials during the 19·
month period.
"If the y missed 800
performances of ·Feelings· on
network television, they're being
negligent in our opinion,'' said
Sheffield.
"Feelings" is Kaiserman's on ·
ly famous compos ition, and
Sheffield declined to estimate its
total rinancial va lue to the
artist-composer. However. he
noted that the song, written in
1973, has become one of the top
10 on the all-time charts for
record sales.
"And it only took him 35
minutes to write the words and
music," he added
County trash
haulers get
rate increase
Tr ash collector s who serve
commercial establishments in
unincorporated Orange County
communities h a v e b ee n
awarded a 12 percent rate in-
cr ease by the county Board of.
Supervisors.
The increase was recom -
mended by Ray Rhoads. interim
manager of the county Waste
Manarement Program, foUow-
lng an analysis of cost increases
raced by U\e disposal firms.
The amount of the increase is
Ued to the escalelion of the
Consumer Price Index, accord-
ing to a r eport to county
supervisors.
Commer cial establishments
have been paying between $.10
and $50 per week for trash col-
1 e c ti on , depending on the
number oC times the refuse is
picked up.
County man killed
, in tr.af fic erash
A Buena Park man riding on a
mo.peel was killed Tuesday after-
noon ln Garden Grovo when he
was struck by • truck maklna a
ri1bt t..,-n in rronl or hlm.
Cbde Wan Sik, ~. died or multi·
pie bead wounds ata:4'0p.m. en.er
Sle waa n.a.n over by a lruck
driver by Clive Price, ~. of
Anaheim, accordln1 to Garden
Grove poUc~.
D•llY .. I ... SuH ,._
JOINS LAGUNA COUNCIL
W1lltam Wilcoxen
NEW LAGUNA MAYOR
Sally Bellerue
Anthony under fire
at council meeting
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony's personal problems
would not go away when he took
his seat Tuesday for the first
time since being sentenced for
assaulting his wife.
Two people addressed the
council calling for Anthony's
re s i g nation , and four
sign-carrying protesters waved
signs throughout the meeting
on e imply ing that Anthony
should be jailed because the
assault involved use of a gun.
Anthony's wife Elaine and
another city resident addressed
the counci l in s upport of
Anthony.
City resident Gene Peters told
the council that Anthony's
conduct was "a desecration of
family life." He s aid Anthony
should leave public life until he
completes therapy to solve his
problems
Another city resident who
identified himself only as Mr.
Lyons said Anthony s hould
resign because no one s hould sit
in a "ruling position" who has
been convicted of a crime.
City resident H. Hersch said
Anthony should not resign
because he has a r ight to
"liberty and justice for all" as
cited by America's founders.
· 'l say Art Anthony doesn 'l
have to go any place -he
deserves to be treated like a
human being," Hersch said.
Mrs . Anthony sa id her
husband deserves praise "for
standing up to this humiliation
with true grit "
She asked his detractors
"Were rou m our home that
night <o the assaulu? Did you
hear the testimony in court? Did
you cons ult o ur physicians?
Were you the victim?"
The protesters, one of whom
said to Mrs Anthony "show us
the scar " an apparent
r e feren ce to a wound she
received in the assault as she
made her way to the podium.
carried s igns saying "Use a gun
go to jail," "Law for all?"
"Stop domestic Violence," and
"Keep armed white desperados
out of our neighborhoods."
Two ot the sign carriers spoke
out without being recognized
throughout the meeting, one
s houting "Se1g lleil" on several
occasions.
Anthonv was fined $5.000 and
ordered to se rve three years'
probation for the assault.
Members of the public have
asked for Anthony's resignation
during many of the Irvine City
Coun ci l meetings h e has
attended since April 9, the day
on which he 1s alleged to have
beaten his wife• with his fists and
tnfl 1cted a grazing gunshot
wound on her scalp
Anthony says he is in the
process of contac1ing citizens to
get a consensus on whether he
s h ould r e m ain on the City
Council for the duration of his
term, which exte nds through
June of 1982
County residency
for welfare eyed
An Orange County Superior
Court judge said Tuesday that a
controversial 30-day county
residency requirement for
general relief welfare applicants
will get its d ay in court next
month.
The residency requirement was
imposed in June by members of
the county Board of Supervisors
who were suspicious that the
county-paid general relief fund
was being depleted by people
crossing the county line to gel
higher monthly checks than
they'd receive in their own
counties.
The policy was established by
the supervisors despite warnings
that it could be interpreted to be
unconstitutional.
On Tuesday, the Orange County
Legal Aid Society llled the first
lawsuit to challenge the residency
require ment. T he test case suit
was filed by lawyer Nancy
Kaufman on behalf of Alenna
Albanese, a former resident who
recently returned from Alabama.
Judge Leonard Goldstein
refused during a hearing Tuesday
to strike down the requirement,
Instead setUng a hearlng on the matter on Aug. 18 in Judge
Ed~ard Walltn!s court.
Goldstein also ordered tbe
county to pay Ma. AlbaoeH
welfare payment.a retroactive to
her first application on July 1'.
T ho le1at aid aoclety is a
quasl·publlc a1ency wbJcb .Svea
le.al aervlc• to persona who
otherwise cou1dn•t afford them.
Pa.rt of lta fundin1 comn trom lbe
(edual and county governmenll.
Legal aid lawyers have been
s keptical of the co unty 's
residency requirement since the
supervisors began considering it
as a way of reducing the county's
annual welfare payments.
·•For apparently political
reasons. the county has launched
a blatantly unlawful attempt to
deprive the most helpless and
needy of the necessities of life."
the lawyers said in the s uit.
French, Italian
UCI h e ad named
Dr. Franco Tonelli has been
appointed c hairman of the
Department of French and
Italian at UC Irvine. He suc-
ceeds Dr. Renee Hubert. who
will return to rull-time leaching.
Tonelli, of Laguna Beach.
came to UCI in 1966 after receiv-
ing hls doctorate in French from
Louiana State University, Baton
Rouge. His academic interests
include Him theory and contem·
ponry drama.
Trip for seniors
slated in Laguna
A alx-day bus trlp to the Grand
Canyon, Bryce and Zion NatJooal
Parks and Laa Vea as l,1 scheduled
Sept. 2 throusb 7 by the Laguna
8.acb Council on 1.1ln1.
Tickets, at S2al eacl\, Include
rooms. traasportatioa, a boat
cruise. park llClmluioas and a Las
Ve1H fun book. Forreservatiooa,
c.all the senior clllnoa club at
49'7·24U.
. .
-Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wtdnffday, July 2t, 1981
Tote1EcllP9•
OftM ... ., ,...,.~.._....,,_~----·-·-----
--
eMoscow
..,,,.
/
./
/
,;
I
' I
I
I
U.S.S.R. 1 "L
PATH Of 10
AP
(~aspwi f>sea
~
CHINA ---~
PATH OF DARKNESS The total solar
eclipse expected Friday will darken a path
across the Soviet Union. Soviet officials are
calling the event a ··soviet eclipse" because
APl--
lhe 5,000-mile route crosses Russian territory
from the Black Sea to the Kuril Islands in the
Pacific.
Scientists fear syphilis
may become drug-imm'!-ne
WASHINGTON (AP) -Genetic material
Isolated from the bacterium that causes syphilis
has scientists worried that the dangerous venereal
disease may be quickly developing an immunity to
penicillin and o.ther antibiotics.
There is no evidence that it has happened yet,
researchers said Tuesday. But if resistance should
develop, an uncontrollable rorm of the sexually
transmitted disease could emerge, they said.
Untreated, the disease can cause nerve, brain
and heart damage, blindness, and birth defects in
the babies of Infected mothers.
The researchers said in a report published this
week in Science magazine that they have found for
the first time genetic material in the syphilis or-
ganism that could possibly render antibiotics inef-
fective.
The discovery lends credibility to the warning
that emergence of penicillin-resistant syphilis
"may be imminent," said Ors. Michael V.
Norgard of the University of Texas at Dallas and
James N. Miller of the University of California at
Los Angeles.
Miller said the potential problem is so great
that scientists should start looking for other
syphilis treatments now in case resistance de·
velops.
"~ a result of this study, I have a program
goin1 with the Los Angeles health department in
~hich we are trying to find a case in which a pa-
tient does not respond to penicillin," said Miller, a
professor of microbiology and immunology.
"If we find a case, it could mean the genie is
out of the bottle," he added.
Norgard said in an interview that he found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid in the syphilis bac-
terium, known as Treponema pallidum <Tpl.
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid. is the basic
substance or heredity It makes up the genes that
pass the traits of a n organism from generation to
generation.
Norgard said plasmids are DNA not necessary
for the erowth or survival of an organism, but
which play a major role in transferring charac-
teristics to and from an organism.
The plasmid found in the Tp organism does not
appear l<r'have a drug.resistant gene in it now, but
he said it could be potentially dangerous in two
ways.
There could be a precursor. or immature,
gene in the plasmid that would mutate into drug re ·
sistance or the plasmid could serve as the receptor
for picking up a resistant gene from another or·
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis , said
Norgard, is that it is not like other bacterial dis·
eases. The disease can stay in the body for de-
cades and do damage long after it is caught. and
side effects are serious. he noted.
BACK BAY
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S~hools get more cash
Huntington District now 'on the legal side of zero'
When HunUnaton Beach Union
Hl1h School truttees tit down
Au1. 'to diacuH next year's $Sl
million bud.et they will have a
new problem -how to spend
Sl.2 million more than was ex-
pected.
ln a district beset with finan·
cial woes last year that called
Mesa group
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire group In Costa
Mesa has been named a naUonal
winner for its program to help
handicapped children under the
1981 Help Young America cam-
paign.
The Dandy Lions Blue Bird
Club of Costa Mesa was one of 297
winning entries from youth
groups throughout the nation
who created projects to aid the
disabled In their communities.
Working indjvidually with men-
tally retarded students. the 12
club members provided youth
activities during the first six
months or this vear.
Billie Dolley, club leader. said
the youngsters m ade special
crafts such as friendship rings,
sang songs, played games,
danced and shared friendships.
.. From the start," s he said. "we
were received with much love.
Shy children became open, and
the introverted became en-
thus iastic."
for the reduction of classroom
time for juniors and seojors, tbe
layorr of 94 teachers, nearly all
counselors and 5 .5 ad -
ministrators, such problems
should be welcome news
However. Charles Hess, assis·
tant superintendent, warns that
the $1.2 million ligure is ln·
significant compared to the $2.29
million the district had In sav·
in gs last year.
"It's just got us in the black,"
said Hess. "It will keep us on the
legal side of zero."
Before the final figures were
received in late June. the dis-
trict was staring al a possible
$137 ,000 deficit, said Hess.
Some of the funding returned
to the district from state and
federal sources include :
About $751 ,000 for special
education projlrams. Earlier
district officials had projected a
S300,000 deficit
About $400,000 from inter•t
payments and general fund
sources. Earlier the district bad
anticipated a $200,000 deficit.
Al a r ecent workshop Superin·
tendent Frank Abbott recom·
mended that the trustees ute
some of the Sl.2 million windfall
to increase the student all~a·
lion for textbooks and
transportation from $7,5 to SM.
Although the recommendadc>n
was unanimously approved.
Hess said he expects the rest or
the money to remain in the dls·
tnct's savings account.
Ir the r ecommendation is
formally adopted at the Aug, 4
meeting 1t will cost $1 75,000,
Hess said
Services held
Funeral services were held in
Pomona Monday for Newport
Beach resident A.R . Lance
Loud, a former machine works .lwner and an avid s ports f1sh-
~r man who died Friday at
Hoag Me morial Hospital: He
was 74.
A native of Etiwanda. Loud
owned and operated Lo ud
Ma chine Works in Pomona
where he also was a board di rec
tor for Pomona Valley Com
munity Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elks Lodge
Loud was consider ed the
founding member of the Bovs
Club in Pomona He moved to
Ne wport last year a nd wa~ a
me mber of the Los Pescadores
of Newport Heach and several
o the r fi s hing and hunting
gro ups
lie 1s survived by his wire
Yvonne. a daughter. Alice
Richardson of Pomona, and a
brother, llarry W. Loud of
Redlands H e also leaves a
granddaughter. a grandson and
rour grcal·gr andchildren.
M emor1al contributions may
be made to the lloag Memorial
llospllal Heart Fund
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IRVlll
• WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
84
86
81.2
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... 89
0
0
• • • • 1ty issues goIDg to voters ID •
1 T,_.o councilmanic campaJgn
nnancing measures and an ad·
vlsQry question on whether a S20
million civic center should be
built in Irvine will be placed
berore local voters on Nov. 3, the 1 I rvlne City Council decided
Tuesday.
Tbe council members agreed
' unaplmously to place on the
ballot a campaign financing
measure proposed by Coun·
cilman Larry Agran and 6,063
voters who signed pe titions in
favor or placin~ it on the ballot.
The measure would restrict to
Residency
for welfare
challenged
l\Jl Orange County Superior
Court judge said Tuesday that a
controversial 30·day county
re&idency r eq uirement for
general relief welfare a pplicants
wilt get its day in court next
moo th.
The residency requirement was
imPosed in 'June by members of
the county Board of Supervisors
who were suspicious that the
county-paid general relief fund
was being depleted by people
crossing · the county line tt> get
higher monthly checks than
t hey'd r eceive in t heir own
counties
The policy was established by
the supervisors despite warnings
that it could be interpreted lo be
unconstitutional
On Tuesday, the Orange County
Legal Aid Society riled the first
lawsuit to challenge the residency
requirement. The test case suit
was filed by lawyer Nancy
Kaufman on behalf of Alenna
Albanese, a former resident who
recently returned from Alabama.
Judge Leona rd Goldstein
refused during a hearing Tuesday
to s trike down the requirement,
instead setting a hearing on the
matter on Aug. 18 in Judge
Edward Wallin's court.
Goldstein also ordered the
county to pay Ms. Albanese
welfare payments retroactive to
her first application on July 14.
The legal aid society is a
quasi-public agency which gives
legal ser vices to persons who
otherwise couldn't afford them.
Part of its funding comes from the
federal and county governments.
Legal aid lawyers have been
s keptical of th e count y's
residency requirement since the
s upervisors began considering it
as a way of reducing the county's
annual welfare payments.
·'"F or apparently political
reasons, the county has launched
a blatantly unlawful attempt to ·
deprive the most helpless and
needy of the necessities of life,"
the lawyers said in the suit.
Tex Beneke .
concert set
Tex Beneke and his orchestra
will play the big band sounds of
Gl~n Miller Thursday evening at
Nefiport Beach's Fashion Island
In the third in a series of free
concerts.
deneke, who was a member of
the Glen Miller band in the late .
19:JPs and early 1940s, wiU lead
thd performance. which starts at
9p m.
pa y .
$100 the amount an individual or
organization could contribute to
a councUmanic campaien. This
contribution limit would be ad·
justed annually based on in·
creases in the cost or living.
Agran says the measure wouJd
limit the influence or larae.
special-interest contributors to
councilmanic campaigns. He
also said it would allow 8 person
to run for city council without
having to raise an exorbitantly
large campaign war chest.
The Lrvine City Council ma-
jor ily of David Sills. Bill
Vardoulis and Art Anthony vol·
ed Tuesday night to place a
second campaign financing
measure on the ballot.
Thls measure is identical to
Agran's with the exception that
it would limit campaign con-
tributions to $250.
Sills said he w anted the
alternate measure on the ballot
so that voters could decide it. He
accused Agran of underestimat·
ing voters' intelllgence by seek·
ing to leave only his question on
the ballot.
Both Agran and Coun·
DlilfY NII IMll ,_
Kim Lowell tmngs his btke to a stop at the edge of the Paet/ic
Ocean after completmg a cross·country trip from Mame
Teen biker makes it
Laguna youth pedals coast to coast
By JOHN NEEDHAM
OftMDMtyf'l•Sta"
It was a bicycle trip he had
planned since he was 15. a gruel·
ing transcontine nta l journey
from Maine's rugged Atlantic
coast to the sandy Pacifi c shore
below his grandfather's home in
Laguna Beach.
Tuesday 24-year·old Kim
Lowell of South Laguna ac-
complished his goal -and sym-
bolically dipped the front tire of
his bicycle in lhe waters of Cres·
cent Bay.
It took Lowell just six weeks to
pedal the 3,700 miles from Small
Point, Maine, to the Art Colony, a
trip that took rum through the nar·
row, s haded lanes o f New
England and across the blistering
deserts of Arizona and California.
Lowell, a graduate or the
University or Vermont, where he
earned bachelor's and master's
degrees in forestry. said the onl y
casualties on the trip were seven
tires. two wheel spokes and a con-
tact lens.
·'I couldn't believe how friendly
people were," he said. "It was
like I was wearing a sign that
said. 'Hey, I'm a really nice
guy'."
Lowell said he lived on about $7
a day during his six-week trip,
money he had earned Crom Jobs
ranging from a counter clerk at
McDonald'stoteaching.
He sald he joined in the Fourth
or July celebrations in Spr·
lngfleld, Ill .. at the request of peo-
ple he met while riding through
that city. He added that he was
rreq uently invited to pitch his tent
on people's lawns when they
learnedofhistrip.
"I met one woman in a grocery
store in Blaresville, Pa., that
asked me if I'd like to camp on ber
lawn for the night," Lowell said.
He said she later apparently
had second thoughts and inquired
to make sur e h e wasn't a
"psycho." "I assured her that 1
wasn't and everything worked out
okay." Lowell said laughing.
Lowell was greeted by his
parents, Bob and Joan. at his
~randfather's Cliff Drive home.
f1cer, and his brother, Wayne.
new a plane out to greet him when
he reached Needles, Calif.
··It was about 110 degrees on
that road and I was really having
a tough day," the younger Lowell
said. "Seeing them up there gave
me quite a lift."
He said he camped out every
night on his cross-country solo
journey. He said when the
sprinklers came on at a New
York State golf course the
temptation was too much and he
took an impromptu s hower in
the cool spray. "I was really
risking the wr at h or the
groundskeeper on that one,'' he
said .
Lowell will be leaving Aug. J l
for Christchurch. New Zealand.
where he will be studying for a
doctorate al the University of
Canterbury.
"I couldn't have finished this
trip without all the help I got from
the people on the road," he said.
cllwoman Mary Ann Gaido
criticized the other three for
seeking the alternate motion, re·
minding the m that they had re·
jected a motion to limit in·
dividual contributions to $300
three months ago. Gaido called
the alternate motion "the height
of hypocrisy."
Agran said the $100 limit was
proposed to insure that Irvine of-
ficials are not influenced by
s pecial interests and to allow
persons of moderate means to
run for office without being
heavil y outspent by opponents.
Representutlves of two groups
which have circulated the peti·
lion testified in favor of Agran's
motion.
The council voted unanimous·
ly to place another question on
the ballot asking voters if they
want to build a new civic center ,
but not before Agran expressed
doubt that the project would be
wor thwhile financially.
In addition to the campaign
financing measures, the City
Council decided unanimously to
place on the Nov. 3 ballot an ad·
visor y ques tion asking city
e
voters whether the city should
invest in a $20 million new civic
center.
The civic center , which would
be built in Irvine near the in-
tersection of J effrey Road and
Barranca Parkway. would house
the city government, whicb is
becoming too large for the pres·
ent civic center on Jamboree
Road.
Councilman Agran expressed
concern Tuesday with the idea
of building a new civic center.
noting lhe project might fall
prey to cost overruns and large
construction bills.
Sills selected mayor
Irvine City Council conservative wins on split vote
David Sills won a year ·long
mayoral term Tuesday by a split
vote of the Irvine City Council.
Sills' mayor al bid was sup-
ported by councilmen Art An·
thony and Bill Vardoulis. Coun·
cilm an Larry Agran's unsuc·
cessful attempt for the post was
'Fee.lings'
composer
files suit
A Laguna Niguel composer
who wrote the words and music
for the famous hit song. "Feel-
ings," has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court to
collect $60,000 in royalties from
a. television advertising cam-
paign using the tune.
Mo rris Kaiserm a n , also
known as Morris Albert. filed
s uit claiming that the American.
Society of Co mposers, Authors
and Publishers !ASCAP I still
owes him the royalties from an
American Telephone & Tele·
graph ad campaign from April,
1977 to December. 1978.
Kaiserman's lawyer, Willia m
Sheffield, said today that he
believes ASCA P accountants
failed to keep track of the times
the ads using his music were
run.
ASCAP is what Sheffield calls
the composer 's policeman. It
monitors the use of copyrighte<.I
material and then coUects and
passes along royalties.
Sheffield said a survey by an
advertising agency showed that
AT&T owed Kaiserman more
than $60,000 for 800 television
co mme rcials during the 19·
month period.
"If t h ey missed 800
performances of 'F eelings' on
network television. they're being
negligent in our opinion." said
Sheffield.
"Feelings" is Kaiserman's on-
ly fa mous composition , arid
Sheffield declined to estimate its
total financial value lo the
artist-composer. However, he
noted that the song, written in
1973, has become one of the top
10 on the a ll-lime cha rts for
record sales.
··And it only took him 35
minutes to write the words and
music." he added
Boundary signs
placed in Irvine
Two prototype I rvine city
boundary signs have been erect·
ed on Irvine Boulevard at Culver
Drive and on the San Diego
Cr eek Bike Trail n o rth of
MacArthur Boulevard.
Irvine city public works ad-
ministrator Robert Desio said
the city is considering placing
such signs near the major en·
trances to Irvine
backed by his council ally, Mary
Ann Gaido.
The council decided un·
animously lo give Agran a one·
year term as mayor pro tern.
The mayor pro tern takes over
the mayoral duties in the
abst!nce of the mayor
The conser vative council ma
1ority has passed the m ayoral
gavel from one member to
another over the last several
years, thereby denying tn the
liberal minority the name rec-
ognition and added public ex·
posure associated with the post.
Although the mayor has one
vote on the City Council just like
the other council members, the
mayor often has the lead role in
cit y negotiations with other
public and private organiza·
lions .
T here was little discussion
Tuesday night about the
mayoral selection itself, but
Mrs. Gaido look the opportunity
to attack Anthony for what she
called an "insulting public com-
ment" about her qualifications
She said Anthony was quoted
in an Irvine weekly news paper
as saying, in response to a ques-
tion about her possible mayoral
candidacy, lbat she not only was
not qualified for the job but is
not qualified to sit on the coun-
cil.
"My qualifications have been
scrutinized not once, but twice
by the voters who elected me,"
Gaido said. "I will not rest until
Mr. Anthony apologizes."
Dally ~llet Staff ,,_
HE 'S STILL TllE MAYOR
I rvine 's David Sr/ls
Anthony offered no apology
during the course of the evening.
He resigned as lrvtne mayor on
May 19, more than one month
after he was arrested 10 connec-
tion with an assault on his wife.
However. Anthony decided to
continue ser ving as an Irvine ci-
ty councilman
After Anthony's mayoral res·
ignation, Sills was named act-
ing mayor and Agran was·
named mayor pro tern.
Anthony under fire
at council meeting
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony 's personal problems
would not go away when he took
his seal Tuesday for the first
time since being sentenced for
assaulting his wife.
Two people addressed the
council calling for Anthony's
r es i g nat io n , and four
sign-carr ying protesters waved
signs throughout the meeting -
o ne 1 mplying that Anthony
should be jailed because the
assault involved use of a gun.
Anthony's wife Elaine a nd
another city resident addressed
the council in s upport of
Anthon,v.
City resident Gene Peters told
the council that Anthony's
conduct was "a desecration of
family life." He said Anthony
should leave public life until he
completes therapy to solve his
problems.
Another city resid ent who
identified himself only as Mr.
Lyons said Anthony s hould
resign because no one should sit
in a "ruling position" who has
been convicted of a crime.
City resident H. Hersch said
Anthony s hould not resign
because he has a right to
"liberty and justice ror all" as
cited by America's founders.
"I say Art Anth~ny doesn't
have to go any place he
deserves to be lre<1led like a
human being," Hersch said.
Mrs. Anthony s aid her
husband deserves praise "for
standing up to this humiliation
with true grit."
She asked his detractors
"Were you in our home that
night <of the assault>' Did you
hear the testimony in court., Did
you consult our phys1c1ans"
Were you the victim?"
The protesters. one of whom
said to Mrs. Anthony "show us
t he scar" an apparent
reference to a wound s h e
received in the assault -as she
made her way to the podium,
carried signs saying ··use a gun
go to jail," "Law for all'"
"Stop domestic Violence," and
"Keep armed white desperados
out of our neighborhoods "
Two ot the sign carriers spoke
out without being recogni zed
throughout the meeting. one
shouting "Seig Heil" on several
occasions.
Anthony was tined SS.000 and
ordered to serve three years'
probation for the assault.
Members of the public have
asked for Anthony's resignation
during many of the Irvine City
Coun cil meeti n gs he has
attended since April 9.
'ltie concert Is sponsored by
the1 Newport Center Merchants
Asf iation and the Irvine Com·
ounty iveighs awn pla~s for freeways
B GLENN SCOTT
Of ............
bile a CaJtuna olflcJat was
ex l1lnln1 Tuesday tbat the
at bflbway 1,,item is HHn·
U1Jly ~mplete in Orance Coun·
ty. local leaden were linkerlni
with ways to build their own
freewan. IA two ...,_,.i. pubUc hear·
'"•'· the county Board or Superyl.son reviewed a report
It.Ung 14 ways and metbodl tor
ral1ln1 money ror freewaya and
1tate Sen. Paw Catpenttt held a
lttlalat:tYe bearlJla to dl1cua1
tHfftc prelftm.
At lllUe behind bot.b hearinp
11 a county plan lo bulld two new
freeways to handle eicpected
traffic lncrea.aea from new de-
velopment in th• south county
and continued ''denalflcatlon" ln
urbanareu.
The freewa,s would run alqn•
the 27-mile Footblll Corridor,
where a DrODOHd ~ aillllon
road would lhlk the Rlttr1ide Freeway near Santa Ana Can·
yon with San Clement., and the
H·mUe San Joaquln RUlt Cor·
ridor, where a HIO mllllon
b11hway would run from
Newport 8Hch to San· Juan
CaplJtrano.
CoUD\1 tranaportatlon plan· nen claim that without UM new
freeways -and 1ubfianUal tm·
provementa to the pretent
system -county commuter•
wUI be mired In traffic in to to lS
years.
Tom Jenk1na, executive direc·
tor for the Oran'e County TranaportaUon Commiulon,
told Carpenter Tuesday thaL
f orecaster1 pndlct a 51 percent
Increase ln population, a 100 per·
cent Jump ln Jobi and a te• I*·
cent rlse in dallY personal lripa.
"Oranae County. u wttb otblt
Southern Callfornla countlea,
will be lootlnc at bllllon dollar
parklnt tot.a, called frHWaJI, la
Lbt ver7 neu future unleaa
somet.h1n1 ll done today," bt
said.
AddJng to the local dismay ls
the fact that neither of the two
freeways is scheduled by
Callrans for construction, ac·
cordJni to Helnt Heckeroth, re·,
glonal Caltrans director .
Heckeroth aaid most of
Callrana' future work will be In
.. tine tun4n1" lta existing
freeways to relieve spot conges -
tion.
Carpenter. D.Cypress. hu ad·
voeated charstns tollJ to pay for
11ew freeway construction. He repeat~ that point Tueaday dur·
inf lbe Maring ln Santa Ana of
tb• Senate Select Committee on
Southern California Tran•s>c>rU·
lion Problems.
"I don't think we can count on
rederal or state aid to solve au or
our froblems," he said. "f think
we'I have to solve some of our
problems ourselves.·'
Charging tolls is one of several
method$ Usted in the new report
to the supervisors on freeway
financing. Others Include local
Increases in gasoltne or aales
taxea, parktng 1urcbar1H.
severance taxea on mlnln~
natural reaources . "lln tut1'
on alcohol or tobecco 11le1,
employer payroll taxea, impact
f tes fot new developmenw tnd
creation ol uaea1ment dltt.rf ctl.
After reviewing the report. the
board of supervisors decided
Tu esda y to es tablis h a
Trans portation Fundln& Ad·
visory Committee to supervise
future flnanclal transactions a nd
lnvestment.s.
John Gibson, the county's rev·
enue bond administrator, said
he hopu that • rtnanclna
method coutd be aeltcted so
voters could vote to approve
bond measures. if necessary,
during the 1984 1eneral elec·
tlons.
He noted that the county ls In
• poelUon to be "creative" In
mlxlnc ways ol drawlna and In·
vutiq revenue.
Orange Coat DAILY PIL:OT/W9dnHdly, Julv 29, 1981
Total Ecltpee----
Of TM._.
4
'
Ap
PATH OF DARKNESS The total solar
eclipse expected Friday will darken a path
across the Soviet Union. Soviet offi cials are
calling the event a ··Soviet eclipse" because ,
CHINA
.............
the 5.000-mile roule crosses Russian territory
from the Black Sea lo the Kuril Islands in the
Pacific.
Sci.enti.sts fear syphili.s
may become drug-immune
WASHINGTON <AP> -Genetic material
isolated from the bacterium that causes syphilis
has scientists worried that the dangerous venereal
disease may be quickly developing an immunjty to
penicillin and other antibiotics.
There is no evidence that It has happened yet,
researchers said Tuesday. But if resistance should
develop, an uncontrollable form of the sexually
transmitted disease could emerge, they said.
Untreated, the disease can cause nerve. brain
and heart damage, blindness, and birth defects in
the babies of infected mothers.
The researchers said in a report pubHsbed this
week in Science magazine that they have round for
the first time genetic material in the syphilis or-
ganism that could possibly render antibiotics inef·
feclive.
The discovery lends credibility to the warning
that emergence or penicillin-resistant syphilis
"may be imminent." said Ors . Michael V.
Norgard of the Univers ity or Texas at Dallas and
James N. Miller of the University of California at
Los Angeles.
Miller said the potential problem is so great
that scientists s hould start looking for other
syphilis treatments now in case resistance de-
ve lops.
.. ~ a result of this study, I have a progr am
going with the Los Angeles health department in
~hich we are trying to find a case in which a pa·
llent does not respond to peniciJlin," said Miller. a
professor of microbiology and immunology
"If we find a case, it could mean the genie is
out of the bottle," he added.
Norgard said in an interview that he found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid in the syphilis bac·
terium, known as Treponema pallidum <Tpl.
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the basic
substance of heredity. It makes up the genes that
pass the traits of an organism from generation to
generation.
Norgard said plasmids are DNA not necessary
for . the growth or survival of an organism, but
wb!c~ play a major role in transferring charac-
ten st1cs to and from an organism.
The plasmid found in the Tp organjsm does not
appear tO'have a drug.resistant gene in it now, but
he said it could be potentially dangerous in two
ways.
There could be a precursor, or immature
gene in the plasmid that would mutate into drug re'.
sistance or the plas mid could serve as the receptor
for picking up a resistant gene from another or·
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis. said
Norgard, is that it is not like other bacterial dis·
eases. The disease can stay in the body for de·
c~des and do damage long after it is caught, and
side effects are serious. he noted.
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Schools get more cash
Huntington Distr ict now 'on the legal side of zero'
When Huntinaton Beach Union
Hith School tru.lee1 alt down
Aui. 4 to d1acu11 next year's ~1
mllllon bud1et they will have a
new problem -how to spend
$1.2 million more than waa ex·
peeled.
In a district beset wltb Jinan·
cial woes last year th11t called
Mesa group
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire group in Cost.a
Mesa has been na med a national
winner for its program to help
handicapped children under the
1981 Help Young America cam·
paign.
The Dandy Lions Blue Bird
Club of Costa Mesa was one of 297
winning entries fro m youth
groups throughout the nation
who created projects lo aid the
disabled ln their communities.
Working individually with men·
tally retarded students, the 12
club members provided youth
activities during the rirst six
months or this vear.
Billie Dolley, cl ub leader, said
the youngsters made special
crafts such as friendship rings,
s ang songs , played games,
danced and shared friendships.
"From the start," she said, "we
were received with much love.
Shy chiJdren became open. and
the introverted bec ame en·
thusiastic."
for the reduction of classroom
time ror juniors and seniors, the
layort o! 94 teachers, nearly all
co un selors and 5 5 ad ·
m inistrator s, such problems
should be welcome news
However, Charles Hess, assis·
tant superintendent, warns that
the Sl.2 million figure is in·
significant compared to the $2.29
million the district had in sav
ings last year.
''It's just got us in the black,"
said Hess. "It will keep us on the
legal side of zero."
Before the final figures were
received in late June, the dis
trict was staring at a possible
$137 ,000 deficit, said Hess.
Some of the funding returned
to the district from state and
federal sources include:
About $751.000 for special
education programs. Earlier
d11>tncl omcials had projected a
$300,000 deficit
About $400.000 from Interest
payments and general fund
sources. Earlier the district had
anticipated a $200,000 deficit.
At a recent workshop Supertn.
tendent Frank Abbott recom·
mended that the trustees uae
some of the Sl.2 million windfall
to increase the student alloca·
lio n for text bo oks and
transportation from $75 to $85.
Although the recommendaUon
was unanimously approved.
Hess said he expects the rest of
the money lo remain in the dls·
trict's savings account.
If the recom me ndation is
formally adopted at the Aug. 4
meeting at will cost $175.000.
Hess said
Services held
Funeral services were held m
Pomona Monday for Newport
Beach resident A.R Lance
Lo ud, a former machine works .>wner and an avid sports hsh·
!rman who died Friday at
Hoag Memor ial Hospital: He
was 74.
A native of Etiwanda, Loud
owned and o.perated Loud
Machine Works in Pomona
where he also was a board di11ec·
tor fo r Pomona Valley Com·
munity Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elks Lodge.
Loud wa s conside r ed the
founding member of the Bovs
Club in Pomona He moved lo
New1>0rl la~t year and was a
member of the Los Pescadores
or Newport Beach and sever al
other r1 sh 1n g an d hunting
groups
He as !>urvived by his wife
Yvonne . a daughter . Alice
Richardson or Pomona, and a
brother. llarry W. Loud of
Hcdlands. He also leaves a
granddaughter. a grandson and
four great grandchildren.
Memorial contributions may
be made to the Hoag Memorial
llosp1tal Heart F'und.
.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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"Everyone knows tilt
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competitive rm 1n bu$1ness
Where 111 adv a need degree
reilly Mlps That s why I
deelded to go tor my MBA 1n
management even though I
hid a tull·ltml JOb dunno the
clay
NatM>nal Unwer11ty maoe
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poutble by one<1ng all my
courMS 11 rngh1. one course
pet month
The quality ot instrucllon
un't lit bnt. My Instructors w•• real prot1ss1onals Who
hid aotld expttilnce In
buttnm Motl of them h014
dor.1oratn u wtll StUdents
ttudy In tmall o'oups with
l)tOplt WllO l\lve ambitions
1nd Q011t llm1lar to their
own. I ltatnt<I 1 treat ~Al
from IM!l'I •well u 11om
my prOllMOft.
H you'rt In ttle wOlklng
wOlkl Incl are contiC!lflnQ
M IHcll -Coit. Met•
"I'm serious about
getting ahead.
That's why I chose
Nadonal University."
L.erTJ""' AA,~ Cemlno ~ IA. Ce1 &tllte Fullerton
MIA. NatlC>n«ll ~. 1HO
We're u ael1otl1 .•. , .. ,,.. ... . •roa .. .
gouio badl to school tor an
adYance<I degree. I highly
recommend National
Univetsity. National
undelstands what malure,
cartlf ·minded people need
and want In lurtherlnQ their
education "
You reg1s1er only once fOf
a complete degfM prOQfam
Register any WO<lllng day ol
Ult year Choose day Of
evening classes. whlchlver
best lits ytNf Sc:tledtile
~· one course uch month Theft Ill Ovtf 30
admisston and clanroom
c:tnllfS located lhfOughOiil
Sin Diego, Orange and Los
Angeles COlll'ltles. financial
aid IS IYlilable 10 thOSt who
qualify
Out all bullnns lppl'OICh
10 S1udy hM llrtlCfy helped
over 40,000 oehtrt ge\ ~
in lllit Clfllft. lln't thi•.
Good MOtlCtl IOt you 10 gel
51Mted? Clll l\OW fOf fUftNf
lnfOttnltlon.
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1981
DRllll ClllT
COMICS
ENTERTAINMENT
BUSINESS
TELEVISION
!Now helper Deeds help
Volunteers sought to assist in paralyzed Mesan's therapy
By IARIF llAJI
Of ... Dtily ...........
0n a rainy February
aflernoon las t year . J ohn
Beresford was driving to work
on a winding road near Santa
Crilz when his car skidded on the
we~ road and slammed into a
r e 4wood tree, lea ving the
35~fear-old teacher from Costa
M~a paralyzed.
The accident h as left
Beresford without s peech or use
of ~is left side. He can, however,
move his right hand slowly and
doctors believe he has some
sigJlt in one eye.
~ore than 17 months later,
after visiting s everal doctors
and staying in five hospitals. Be~es ford has made little
prqgress on bis own, says bis
doc?tor. J ohn Miller of Newport
Be,ch.
s uccessful for c hildre n with
damaged brains, MiJler says.
But for the therapy to be
successful, the Beresfords say
they need about 70 volunteers
'We are hof)ing
some of his high
school friends 'Will
show up to help'
who can donate about 20 minutes
every other week.
··But even after months of
therapy, there Is no guarantee
that John wilJ be better. In cases
involving brain injury, it is hard
to predict," says Miller.
will s how up to help," hf;
mother says.
Beresford graduated from
Newport.Harbor High School in
1963, from Orange Coast College
in 1965 and received b.is leaching
credentials from San Diego
Slate University in 1969.
The parents say they can
count on three people for the
therapy themselves and a live-in
aide who shares the front unit of
the Beresfords' duplex with
John.
.. If we have 70 volunteers,
then people don't have to put in
that much time," s ays
Beresford's father.
For eight years before the
accident, Beresford taught 18 to
24 -year-olds at a California
Youth Authority Camp. He
helped inmates get high school
diplomas
86 I
87
89
812
The American economy
can expect painful
medicine for many months
to come ... B9
D
0
sb, Beresford's parents, Jack
an• May, want to begin an
inttnsive stimulation program
at heir Costa Mesa home. This
kidd o f therapy h as been •
The therapy , ca lled
patterning, requires five people
and involves forced movement
of limbs that would eventually
teach Beresford to crawl.
"We are hoping that some of
his high school friends from his
water polo and wrestling teams
· · AIJ his life he has helped
someone. now he needs some
help," says his mother.
Jack and May Beresford can
be reached at 631·3404.
o.llf ..... StMI "--
May Beresford works with her paralyzed son John, cntrcally m1ured in an automobtle accident She°.'>
looking for volunteers to help him regain his motor skills
New owners eye Fun Zone re1nodeling
By STEVE MARBLE
01 tte IH'lf ...... Steff ' Por the third time in 10 years
the Balboa Fun Zone is being
solil with promises of changes to
cocne for the one-acre amuse·
m~t and small shop arcade.
A Claremont firm -J.B.S.
Development Corp. -filed ten·
tatlve plans today with Newport
Beach city officials for a $20
miJlion remodeling of the fun
zone.
i n g s l i ps f o r res taura nt
customers.
The Claremont firm , Ms
Edwards said, is paying $2.75
million for the one-acre fun zone
site and an additional Sl million
for the marina. Escrow is set to
close in September
If there are not hitches obtain·
ing per mits from t he city and
state coasta l commissioners,
•work could begin an February,
s he said. The pr oject, 1t is
·estimated, would take roughly
nine months to complete. The fun zone, established in
1923 by an Englishman named
Al Anderson. is s queezed
b~ween the e ntrance to the
B boa Island Ferry a nd the
Ba boa Pavilion on the harbor
sid1! of the peninsula.
Artist's rendition of $20 million remodeling of Balboa-Fun Zone between pavilion and Balboa I sland Ferry The fun zone was sold to a
Newport construction firm an
1972 that had plans for ripping
out the arcade and constructing
condominiums. That plan was
shot down by the coastal com-
mission.
Julie Edwards. marketing
director for the Claremont firm.
said plans call for retaining
ma'ny of the uses that have
made the fun zone popular over
the years.
"We're not kicking anyone
out." she said .
The vintage 1905 ferris wheel,
the carousel and the game room
all fit into the new plans, Ms.
Edwards-said.
Conceptual drawings show a
three-story. 50.000-s9uare-foot
structure being erected on the
site with the ferris wheel posi·
liooed in front of the building.
The building wouJd contain re·
tail and specialty shops, two
restaurants and offices. The
BEACH SHRUNK High tide on Balboa
Island means the beach gets smaller. but the
nuJllber of beachgoers seems to r em ain the
Delly ..... "'9llt.., LM ,...,_
same. It's a good way to get to know your
neighbor.
carousel would be placed in a
courtyard atrium in the middJ~
of the complex.
A two-level underground park·
i ng lot would be constructed
below the building, plans show.
Valet ser vice would be provided.
The architect is Corbin.
Police seize
two s u s p ects
in ban k h eist
Costa Mesa po lice who
searched for a man with a gun
who stole ~ purse on Santa Ana
Avenue inadvertently captured
two men s uspected of a $34,000
bank robbery in New Mexico.
Held today in Costa Mesa Jail
on $25,000 bail each are Gary .
Barker, 34, of Hobbs, N.M., and
Bobby Joe Fruit, 31, of Sapulpa,
Okla.
Officers Bill Redmond and
Bob Fate arrested the pair Tues·
day when a search of the men's
auto turned up all $34.000 taken
July 13 in an Albuquerque bank
holdup.
Police said the money. stashed
in the trunk of a car stopped at
17th Street and Westminster
A venue, was discovered while
searchin.it for the purse robber.
Also found in the trunk. in·
vestigator s said, was a .45
caliber pistol believed used in
holdJng up Albuquerque's BanJc
or the Southwest.
,Yamatugi a nd Partne rs. an
Irvine firm.
"Our position is to reactivate
the fun zone and make it an ap-
pealing area." Ms. Edwards ex-
plained.
She said her firm has plans for
upgrading the 32-slip marina in
front of the fun zone a nd reserv·
The property changed hands
again in 1978 when Ralph Gray
and several partners bought the
ar cade with plans to spruce up
the fun zone.
Costa Mesa Hig h
pri ncipal name d
A former Huntington Beach
school administrator was named
principal or Costa Mesa High
School Tuesday night by the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District board.
He is Donald G. Champlin, 47, of
Modesto.
Champlin. who starts his new
duties Monday, was the principal
of two Modesto high schools
during the past six years .
He ser ved as Fountain Valley
High School assistant principal
between 1967 and 1969 and held a
similar post at Edison High from
1969 to 1974 when he moved on to
Modes to, a Newport· Mesa
distrjct spokeswoman said.
Champlin was a counselor at
Westminster High , another
Huntington Beach Union High
School District school, from 1965
to 1967.
The Modesto man was one of 15
a pplicants seeking the Costa
Mesa post vacated by Robert
Packer.
Packer accepted an assistant
s uperintendent's post with
Tustin Unified School District
earlier this summer.
Three finalists were selected
from among 15 applicants for
Pa cker's job by a scr eening
committee composed of school
administrators. teachers and a
s tudent.
Superintendent John Nicoll and
his de puty. Nor man Loats,
recommended Cha mplin for the
pr i n cipal 's job fo llowing
\nterviews with the finalists.
Champlin is a former Navy
pilot who began his teaching
career in 1961.
H e ear ned his bachelor's
degree at UCLA , and a master's
credential at Cal State Long
Beach.
He and his wife have two
daughters
fount~ iveighs ·own plans for freeways
By1GLENN SCOTT
Of o.11,~s...
bile a Caltrans official was
explaining Tues day that the
'f andals hit
8f!hool in NB·
f and a ls turned Andersen
El mentary School in Corona
de Mar into a littered meas·thls
week leavina broken U1bt1, ob-
scene sralflU and toppled rue
cabinets lb \heir wake.
Pollce Hld the vandals
apra,yed 1wutiku on wlndowa,
broke several world 1lobe1,
1ma1hed e111, dlacbar1ed Ore
e•Unll\lllhen pulled down falH
cellln11 and defecated lo a
hallway.
• The vandalt, police aald, alao
ransacked ftle cabinets and d•u • tuned a radio ln th• prlnetlNll'• ollk .. to a rock lta· tlon and left It blartnr.
state highway system is essen·
tially complete in Orange Coun·
ty, local leaders were Unltering
wjth ways to build their own
freeways.
In two separate public bear·
ings, the county Board of
Supervisors reviewed a report
listing 14 ways and methods for
ralsin1 money for freeways and
state Sen. Paul Carpenter held a
leglalaUve hearing to dlscusa
tramc problem.e.
At lsaue behind both hearinta
ls a county plan to build two new
freeways \o handle expected
traffic lncreues from new de·
velopment ln the south county
and continued "demlllcatlon" tn
urban ueu.
The freeways would run aklDf
the 27·mUe Foothill Corridor,
where a propcMJed '385 mllUon
road would l1nk the Riv~
Freew•y near Santa Ana Can·
yon with San Clemente •. and the
14·mlle San Joaquin Hilla Cor·
ridor, where a $HO million
hiahway would run from
• .
. .. -""'"""",.... •
Newport. Beach to San Juan
Capistrano.
County transportation plan·
ners claim that without the new
freeways -and substantial im•
Tex. Beneke
concert set
Tex Beneke and bis orchestra
will play the big band sounds of
Glen Miller Tbunday eveoinl at
Newport Beach'• Fuhloo Wand In the third ln a aertea of tree ·
concerti.
Beneb, who wu a member of
the Gleo MJJler band la &he lat.
lNOI and early 1--., will lead
the performance, which alarta at
t P·f"·
The concert l• 1pon1ored by
the Newport Center Merchanta
A1socl.U. and ta. Irvine Com·
pany.
••
prove ments to the present
system -county commuters
will be mired in traffic in 10 to 15
tears .
Tom Jenkins, executive direc·
tor for the Orange County
Transport"lion Commission,
told Carpenter Tuesday that
rorecJJters predict a 51 percent
increase ln population, a 100 per·
cent jump in jobs and a 108 per·
cent rise in daily personal trips.
''Orange County. as with other
Southern California counties,
will be lookin1 at blllion doUar
parking Iota, called freeways, In
the very near future unless
aomethJng is done today." he
Hid.
Adelina to the local dismay ls
the fact that neither of the two
freeways is scheduled by
Caltrana for constnlctJon, ac·
cordlnl to Helo Heckeroth, re·
1lonal Caltrans director.
Heckeroth aald moat of
Caltuna• future work will be in "fine .tunlnc" tu exiltin1
freeways to relieve spot conges·
ti on.
Carpenter, D-Cypress, has ad-
vocated charging tolls to pay for
Crash v ic tim
rites set
Funeral services for Glenn
Rlcbard Van Dyke, the Corona
del Mar teen·ager killed Monday
In Irvine when the vehicle he
was ridJng in rolled over, wUJ be
held Thursday at 3:30 p.m. at
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel.
Burial wUJ be at Pacific View
Memorlal Park lo Newport
Beach.
Van Dyke, 19, was a iraduate
ol Corona del Mar High School.
He is survived by h1a parenta,
Richard and Patricia Van Dyke,
and brothers Paul and Scott. He
also leaves ,randmothera
Bernice Kraus of Jl'alJbrook and
Nelda Lemons of Llvin11ton,
Callf.
••
new freeway construction. He
repeated lhat point Tuesday dur·
Ing the hearing in Santa Ana or
the Senate Select Committee on
Southern California Transports·
lion Problems.
"I don't UunJc we can count on
federal or state aid lo solve aJI of
our problems," he said. "I think
we'U have to solve some of our
problems ourselves."
Charging tolls is one of several
methods listed in the new report
to the supervisors on freeway
fln~ncing. Others include local
incl'eases in gasoline or sales
taxes, parkinar surcharges,
severance taxes on minin1
natural resources, '"sin taxes"
on alcohol or tobacco sales.
employer payroll taxes. lmpact
fees for new developments and
creation of assessment districts.
After reviewing the report, the
board of aupervllors decided
Tuuday to eatabllah a
Tran1portaUon Funding Ad·
vl1ory Committee to aupervtse
future financial tnnucUou
'
j
,-
-
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wtdn•day, July 29, 1981
Toa.I Ecllpee---"°'--.,--.,... ,,,,.--· ---· ..
Ofl'IW ... • '
eMoscow
AP
PATH OF DARKNESS The total solar
eclipse expected Friday will darken a path
across the Soviet Union. Soviet officials are
calling the event a .. Soviet eclipse .. because
---...
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/ ,,.
CHINA
/
/
I
I
I
,
' I
A~I .........
the 5,000-mile route crosses Russia n territory
from the Bl ack Sea to the Kuril Islands in the
Pacific.
Scientists fear syphilis
may become drug-immune
WASHINGTON <AP J -Genetic material
isolated from the bacterium that causes syphilis
has scientists worried that the dangerous venereal
disease may be quickly developing an immunity to
pe nicillin and other antibiotics.
There is no evidence that it has happened yet,
researchers said Tuesday. But if resistance s hould
develop, an uncontroll able for m of the sexually
transmitted disease could emerge, they said.
Untreated, the disease can cause nerve, brain
and heart damage, blindness, and birth defects in
the babies of infected mothers.
The researchers said in a report published this
week in Science magazine that they have found for
the first time genetic material in the syphilis or·
ganism that could possibly render antibiotics inef.
fective.
The discovery lends credibility to the warning
that emergence of penicillin-resistant syphilis
"may be imminent." said Ors. Michael V.
Norgard of the University of Texas at Dallas and
James N. Miller or the University of California at
Los Angeles.
Miller said the potential problem is so great
that scientists s hould start looking for other
syphilis treatments now in case resistance de·
velops.
"As a result of this study, I have a program
goin1 with the Los Angeles health department in
~hich we are trying to find a case in which a pa-
tient does not respond to penicillin," said Miller, a
professor of microbiology and immunology
"If we find a case, it could m ean the genie is
out or the bottle." he added .
Norgard said in an interview that he found a
piece of DNA called a plasmid in the syphilis bac·
terium, known a s Treponema pallidum (Tp).
DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the basic
substance of heredity. It makes up the genes that
pass lhe traits of an organism from gener ation to
generation.
Norgard said plasmids are DNA not necessary
for_ the growth or s urvival of an organism. but wh~c~ play a major role in transferring charac-
teristics to and from an organism.
The plasmid found in the Tp organism does not
appear to-have a drug-resistant gene in it now, but
he said it could be potentially dangerous in two
ways.
There could be a precursor, or immature
gene in the plasmid that would mutate into drug re~
sistance or the plas mid could serve as the r eceptor
for picking up a resist~t gene from a nother or-
ganism, he said.
What is so worrisome about syphilis, said
Norgard, is that it is not like other bacterial dis-
eases. The disease can stay in the body for de-
cades and do damage long a fter it 1s caught, and
side effects are ser ious, he noted.
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
KAMCHATKA
VODKA
1 Full liter !I
s449
Son 1.10
EARLY
TIMES
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Schools get cash
Huntington District now 'on the legal side of zero'
When Kuntlnston Beach Union
Hl1h School trustees all down
Aue . 4 to dlacuae next year's '51
mHllon budget they wlll have a
new problem how to spend
$1.2 million more than was u -
pected.
In a district J>eaet with flnan
cial woes last year that called
Mesa group
national
• • prize winner
A Camp Fire group in Costa
Mesa has been named a national
winner for its program to help
handicapped c hildren under the
1981 Help Young America cam-
paign.
T he Dandy Lions Blue Bird
Club of Costa Mesa was one of 297
winning e ntries fro m youth
groups throughout the nation
who created projects Lo aid the
disabledintheircom m unlties.
Working individually with men-
tally retarded students, the 12
club members provided youth
activit ies during the first six
months of this vear
Billie Dolley, club leader, said
the youngs te rs made special
crafts such as friends hip rings.
san g songs, played gam es,
da need and sha red friends hips.
"From the start," she said," we
were received with muc h love
Shy children became open. and
the introverted became e n -
thusiastic."
for the reduction of cla11room
time for juniors and 1eniora. the
hayoff of 94 teachers, nearly all
co unse lor s a nd 5 .5 ad -
ministrators, such problem s
should ~ welcome news
However, Charles Hess, u.uis
tant superinte ndent, warns that
the $1.2 million figure h' In
slgnlricant compared to the S2.2'9
million the district had in sav
ings last year.
"ft 's just got us in the black,"
said Hess. "It will keep us on the
legal side of zero "
Befor e the final figures were
received in late June, the dlS
trict was staring at a possible
$137.000 deficit, said Hess.
Some of the funding returned
to the dis trict from stale and
federal sources include ·
About $751,000 for special
educau on program1 Earlier
dlt1lricl officials had projected a
$300,000 defi cit.
About $400,000 from lnterNt
payments and general fund
sources Earlier the district bad
a nticipated a S200.000 deficit.
Al a recent workshop Superin
tendent Frank Abbott recom
mended that tht.' trustees use
1tome or the Sl .2 million windfall
to increase the student alloca-
tio n for textbooks a nd
transpQrtation from $75 to ~.
Although the recommendation
was unanimously approved.
He!>i. said he expects the rest pf
the money to remain in the dJs·
lrict's savings account.
If the recommendat ion is
formally adopted al the Aug. 4
mN·t1ng it will cost $175.000,
11 <.•s!> said
Services held
Funeral services were held in
Pomona Monday for Newport
Beach resident A R Lance
Loud. a former mac hine works .>wne r and an avid sports f1s h-
e rm a n w ho died Friday a t
Hoag Me morial Hospital· He
was 74
A native of Et1wanda , Loud
owned and o pe r a t ed Loud
Ma chine Works 1n P omona
where he also was a board direc
tor for Pomona Vallev Com·
m unily Hospital and a member
of the Pomona Elk!> Lodge
Loud was cons1dt'red the
founding member of the Bovs
Club in Pomona lk moved to
Newport last yc;ir and waa a
m cm bt-r of the Los Pescadores
of Newport Beat·h and several
other r1 'i hing and hunting
groups
lie I!> survived by his wife
Yvonnl', a daughter . Alice
H1ch4.1rdscm of Pomona . and a
brot her. ll arry W Loud of
Rt.'dl'ands He ;ils<J lt·a ves a
grandduughter. a grandson and
four grC'at grandchildren
M emonal contributions may
bl' madC' to the lloag Memorial
llosp1tal Hearl Fund
THE MEDICAL CARE CENTER
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•Reasonable Medical Office Fees At Large Savings 011er
Emergency Fees.
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642-4774
265 I l"IH A•• (At MeM Dri•el Mellfte111eMew
lni..t.-ctl ,_,.,,.....
'Everyone knows tht
WOl'le1ng world 1s tough and
compe1111ve I m on business
wtlete an adVanted oeoree
really helps That s why I
decided to go lor my MBA en
management even though I
had a lull-11me Job d\Jnng Ille
day
Nauonat U111vers1ty maoe
g11C1Uatt study u easy as
posS1ble by otter mo all my
courMS at night, one course
ptt month.
Tilt quahty ol 1ns1rucuon
can't bl beat. My instructors
were real proltasconals wtlo
had sollcl tkj)tr~ In
bullllefS. Most ol ll'oem hold
dot:IOtllH H wtll ShldenlJ
1tudy In amaH o<ouPt w1111 ~ WtlO 1t1v1 ambitions
Ind gotll eimilar to lhtlr
.,..n I learned • Of•at deal
from tlltnl u well u from
my ptONMoft.
It you're WI !ht w0tk1119
w«14 ltld .,, Contlderino
M ht1eh -Coat. Mesa
"I'm serious about
getting ahead.
That's why I chose
National University."
we•re 11 aertou• ...... ,.., .... , . .. , .... .
a ......... -.-1.
DAl llA
gotng badl lo sehool lor an
adVanCed degree. I highly
recommend Nat1011.1I
Umvets11y Nallonal
under' lands Wlla t mat ur •.
career-minded people need
Ind warn in lurther1n11 the11
educalloo "
You "O•Ster only once tor a compltte degr" program
Reo•ster any WOl'k1ng day ol
the year Choose day or
evening claues. wt11<:hever
best lits your Khedute
Complete one course each
month There are ovet 30
adn111S100 and ctassroom
ctnttfl k>Clted through()ut
San Oltgo, Orange and Los
Angetes COl#llles. Financial
aid II avallablt to thoM WtlO
quatlly.
~ 111 butlnt$1 apprOICtl
to atudy hll alrtldy l'lllpld
Owtf 40.000 otherl Ot( lhtad
tft M earws. ltn't tlli• a
OOOd MOCltll 10' you 10 oe1
11111ed? c..i now 10' luf ttw
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WE 0 NE S 0 A Y JU L V .' <J 1 Y H 1 OHANGE COUNTY C ALIF O HNIA 25CEN TS
Patches' craft toe-tal success
Sawdust Festival exhibitor finds foot jewelry has popular ring
D91ty ................
Sawdust Festival craftsman Patches Cunningham keeps on his
toes by decorating those of f11s customers He's got a toehold on
the pedal jewelry market
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ni. Delly,..._ SUH
' The sign over his exhibit at the
Sawdust Festival reads "Toe·
gun," and the pagoda-style
booth features craftsman
Patches CUnningham, dressed in
full Samurai regalia.
Bowing his head nearly to his
knees, the 3l·year-old maker or
toe rings introduces himself lo
visitors as "Toe·anaga," and
politely asks them lo lake orr
their footwear before entering
the tatami-covered floor.
"Shoes off," he says, smiling
at the young stewardess who is
returning for three more toe
rings after purchasing one the
night before. "You 're in the
honorable palace of Toe-anaga
now.··
He leads the giggling stew up
a short flight of stairs to a bench
where she puts her best foot
forward (the one with the new
ring on the little toe.>
"They're soooo sexy," the
Senate OKs tax cut
O'Neill says Reagan blitz hurts Dems
WASHINGTON <APJ Presi·
dent Reagan's tax bill sailed
through the Senate today, and a
downcast Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill said the president's 11th·
hour lobbying blitz was dev·
aslaling Democratic efforts to
defeat it in the House.
The Senate vote was 89·11 for
the Reagan plan, which would
provide the largest lax cul in
American history.
Sen. Robert Dole. R·Kan ..
chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee. ca lied the vote .. a
demonstration, not JU&l to the
president but to the American
people. that we are changing
direction in this country."
But Sen. Edward M Kennedy,
D ·Mass ., denounced the
measure as "a bill that provides
the juiciest possible plums for
the favored few and the
meagerest pittance for those
who need the help the most."
Approval of Reagan's tax plan
by the GOP-controlled Senate
was expected: the true test lay
ahead, in the Democratic·
controlled House. A victory
there would give the president a
double·barrelled triumph for his
three-year . 25 percent tax·cut
bill
As the House neared a late-
afternoon showdown on the
Reagan plan, it rejected on a
288·122 vote a liberal·led move to
substitute a one· year. 5 percent
tax cul.
The president appeared to be
building a winning coalition for
his proposal, not only with con-
servative Democrats whose sup-
port he already had but with
some moderate Democrats pre·
viously loyal to their party's
leaders.
Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N.Y.,
said he was switching bis vote to
Reagan's side because of a com-
mitment he said he had from the
(Sff TAX, Page AZ>
Probe intensifie d
in jailhouse death
Judge r ules
Onofre quake
'not r ecent'
"Serious inconsistencies" m
statements purportedly made by
a Laguna Beach police officer
regarding a jailhouse death last
week have resulted m the officer
being placed on administrative
leave.
And Aeling Police Chief Neil
Purcell sajd he has asked Vie
Orange County Di s trict
Attorney's Office to "upgrade
and intensify" its investigation
of events surrounding the death
a week ago today of Robert
Gary Wardman, 37, of Laguna
Beach
Officer Chuck Maine, who
joined the Laguna Beach Police
Department four months ago.
has been sent home with pay to
await the outcome of a district
attorney's invesllgation of the
jailhouse death of Wardman,
who worked at Spectrum Spas
on South Coast Highway prior to
his death in a jail cell last
Wednesday morning.
Wardman was found lying on
the sidewalk near the Main
Street Bar on Coast Hi ghway at
about 1:20 a .m. Wednesday by
officers who had been called to
the scene by a witness.
Paramedics arrived a short
time later and determined the
.ORlllil COAST WIATHIR
Night and morning low
clouds with sunny after·
noon Thursday. Llttle lem·
perature change. Highs 15
lo 83. Lowa tonight 60 to
66.
llllDI TOUY
Arion auackt have fn·
/lamtd the 2,100 reriMnt• of
Munc11. PG. See ttort1. photo
Page .U.
11111
•
man was intoxicated, police
said. and he was driven to the
Laguna Beach Poli ce
Department and placed in a cell.
Officers noted he was having
trouble breathing at about 10:30 .
a.m. and called paramedics.
Police, firemen and paramedics
administered mouth-to·mouth
resu s citation and
cardiopulmonary r esuscitation
when the victim s topped
breathing in the cell. and he was
later rus hed to South Coast
Medical Center where he was
pronounced dead at 12:06 p.m.
An autopsy later in the week
showed the man apparently died
o f a skull fra cture and an
inv estigation was launched
within the department.
"Our investigation r evealed
that apparently while removing
the victim from the rear seat of
the police car, the victim fell or
slipped through the arms of the
officer and down onto the
pavement." Purcell said.
Purcell s aid that verbal
statements put to the command
officer by the patrol officer and
a written report by the officer
didn't mention the fall.
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Handing
a blow to opponents of licensing
two nuclear reactors at San
Onofre. an administrative judge
has thrown out testimony attest·
ing lo recent activity of a nearby
earthquake fault.
Judge James L. Kelley ruled
Tuesday that testimony of re·
search sp ecialist Richard S.
Simons of the UC San Diego
could not be accepted because it
r e lies upon events occurring
before 1973 when construction
permit hearings were held for
units 2 and 3.
Kelley said it would have been
more appropriate lo present the
tes timony -contending the
Cristianit.os fault, located about
a half mile from the power
plant. has had up to 20 smaJJ
earthquakes on it since 1932 -at
hearings held earli er.
Simons . wh o hold s a
bac he lor 's degree from the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, also did not have
·'the confidence and assurance
we expect from .an expert."
Kelley said.
Witnesses for license appli·
cant Southern California Edison
Co. have said the fault has had
no activity for 125,000 years.
Jury critics chuckle
Panelists' report printed upside down
More than one Orange County
government official, al one time
or another, has suggested the
thinking of the county Grand
J ui:..y is upside down and
backward.
So, officials are privately
chuckling over a publl1hln1
snafu that caused an unknown
number of copies of the 1880
grand jury's final rep0rt to be
bound upside down and
backward.
•'This thing's lmpo11tble to
read/' complained one otnctal
who. by law, muat prepere a
re~ to the Jur1'• analyalt ot
an aaue lo whJcb be la involved.
e JW'Y report waa prlllled by
county ioverarnent'1 ln·bouH
reproduction and 1rapblu departmt~tl euept for lh•
mulU·color UUt cover.
The 547·PAI• doeumoot, wide'
11then tocetber reporte 1llued
by the Jury tbrou1bout lt1
one·year term that ended June
30, was bound al Wallace Trade
Bindery ln Santa Ana.
A sPOtceswoman for the firm
said the bindery was not aware
of any problem wltb tbe 500
copies gathered and bound for
the county.
And Richard DeLaura,
manaser of the county's
reproduction and erapbics
department, alto waa un1ware
of tbe problem until contacted
by 1 reporter.
''It maku me oiad," DeLaura
uld. "I'll have to t1lk to
Wallace about it."
DeLaura sald four firm• bid
on ptlnttn1 the Jury'• final
report at price1 varyiDC from
*4,732 and '1.m.
Th• county prliat lbop took on
the Job et an •Umated COit ot
S.MO, be MJd. The coe& will be
blfled lo the Jury'a bud1et.
the thin rings onto her second
toe.
And It's true. The shiny
been waiting longer than your
ear."
Turning back t o the
stewardess, Patches s miles and
'I have a toe that's been waiting
longer than your ear.'
stewardess breathes as Patches
Cuno.inRham Cits three more ol baubles do something for the
common Coot.
"I am the Yves St. Laurent of
toes," Patches boasts. as he
sprays Windex on the woman's
toe to help ease the final ring
over the pad.
An impatient customer comes
up behind the busy craftaman
and asks if her gold ear cuff is
r eady yet.
"You'll have to wait," he
says, with just a hint of reproach
in his voice "I have a toe that's
says, "No one leaves here with a
wrong fit. I am making you the
toe·tal woman."
Patches Cunningham has been
selling his jewelry at the
Sawdust for seven years, but it
wasn't until he began crafting
toe rings about four years ago
that -sales took off.
He says he grabbed a toe-hold
on the ma rket by c reating
something that is nice to look at
and inexpensive.
His gold fill toe rings go for
between $5 and $7.50. The 14
A
carat rings sell for between
$17 .SO and $35.
Ear cuffs , another Cun ·
nlngham creation, are flat gold
pieces that fit onto the grooved
portion of the outer ear above
the earlobe. They go for between
$9.50 and $35 at the Toe.gun
booth.
"Will my toes turn green?" the
stewardess asks ·as she wrilea
out a check for the three new
rings.
"The onJy thing that will turn
green is your friends -with en·
vy, · · Patches says. grabbing the
check with a nourish.
The long-Ume Laguna jeweler
says he's developed a philosophy
a bout females and their feet
since embarking on his pedal en-
terprise.
"Most women think they have
ugly feet," he said.
"In the last four years. I've
had only two women teU me
they thought they had good-
lookingfeet.''
And after a s hort pause,
Patches s hrugged and said,
"They did, too ...
.,...,....
Prince Charles and the new princess of Wales share a kiss on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after t
their marriage at St Paul's Cathedral today.
Roy al coupk honeymooning
An estimated one million roared their good wishes
ROMSEY, England (AP) -
Prince Charles and his bride
Diana, the Princess of Wales,
arrived by royal traln from Lon·
don today lo begin their honey·
moon at Broadla"ds, former
home of the prince's great-uncle
Earl Mountbatten of Burma.
'·o let the nations rejoice and
be glad!" erupted the massed
choirs when the Archbishop of
Canterbury pronounced them
wed under the soaring dome of
St. Paul's Cathedral.
From Buckingham Palace lo
St. Paul 'a and back, the
princess. In a cloud or ivory I
taffeta, and the prince, ln
brass -buttoned navy
commander's uniform, rode ln
borae·drawn carria1e1 put
multitudes of almoet ooe mllllon
people wbo roared tbelr 1ood
withes and waved a Ha of Union
Jack flats.
The sunah.i.ne poured down and
church bells ran1 acro11 the
reelm.
The weddina one of the treat
roy1l event.a Qi recent dec.-1 1ave a lift to a people burdenea
with heavy economic problema
and worried by 1 recent outbr~ak ot ..,-ban rlotlq.
Tb• BrlU1h ptopl•'• Jo1
overflowed When tM newlJwedl
returaed to Bueklqham Pal
1
1ld
1teppied Olllo tM tc:Ut« ..
treat ... .., -...... to ... tbuaclertaltNwdl.
At OM poilM Cbatle1 lad
Diane kllMd. loUebhll olf 1
crescendo of cheers from below.
They then retired inside for the
wedding breakfast.
Later they left, again by open
SOME ROYAL TY
ROMANCES ROCKY -A12
LADY DIANA'S DRESS
COST 'SECRET' -A4
carriage, for Waterloo rail
station and their honeymoon.
which begins -at an Englistt
country estate and ends with a
Mediterranean cruise.
Having changed into gray suit
and pink dress. they wer~
sprinkled with rose petals and
confetti by the palace staff,
Their carriage trailed a bloom
of silver and blue balloons. and
a sign , "Ju&t Married," was
tacked to the back.
The union of the 32·year-ol1
<See ROYAL, Pa1e A%)
Wedding marred
by Liverpool riots I
LIVERPOOL. (AP) -Fierce
riotlne raeed here for the third
1tral1bt nitht as Britain pre·
pared f0r the royal weddlnc 1n
London today wlth thounndl of
police and troops 1uardinc the
fes\lve capital.
In Northern Ireland, army ex·
pert.a defused a 400·pOUD.d bomb
In a mobUe home and aald they
believed lriab Natlonalllts b'd
plannedt.o1etltoth1 • "weddiilt
1pectacular."
Two hundred youths hurllq
IHOUM bombl, 1t.onet, brtcb
and pan1 ol boUlnl water baWed
bwldndl ol Police tnlo UM W9I
bourt todaJ in the eeonom~a11.Y
ct.prellid ad Wlb·lmmltr11tt
rroxtetb dlatrld ol um part eky. 8otb bladr.I and wbltll w.,. in·
volved ln the riotine. ~ In London, 180 mile
southeast, more than 5,000 poll
and troopa patrolled crowds e
pected lo swell lo one mlllfot
people bopln1 to c•t~h a 1llrnpli
of Prince Charles and Lad
Diana Spencer on their wedd
day. Scotland Yard called lt
a1ency'1 bl11eet aecurlty oper
tloh ever.
M llltery 1ourcH uid the
believed lrilb a.ubUtan Ar
1uerrillu plUUci tbe .00·
bomb near UM border wltb
Irtah rwpubUc and pa11t111J
tended to ._.te It bJ NllMMm
control to Wiie out a 8rt
army petrol. A 1lmUarly pla
bomb kWed nve Brtt.llh IOldlm
IHt May.
I
• Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/Wednetday. July 29. 1981
Retail clerk walkout averted
Tentative agreement with food council reached three hours before deadline
GAVE THE ORDER?
Defendant Aguirre
0.11, ...... ...,.,_
TOLD HIM TO FIRE?
Defendant Marvm
Last minutes of life
in BB · slaying told
By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL Oftlleo.ltY_....,
The final minutes or the Ure of
a purported Garden Grove drug
dealer, slain in a Huntington
Beach oil field in July 1980, have
been dramatically revealed to
an Orange County Superior
Court jury.
One of three Huntington Beach
residents who previously has ad·
milled ttls role in the slaying of
31 -year-old Stephen Ciaconne,
testified Tuesday that CiacoMe
pleaded, ··No ... don't do it"
moments before he was shot in
'I wanted to get
i t over with'
the chest with an arrow fired
from a cross bow.
Witness Brian Miller, 21, told
the hushed audience in Judge
Kenneth Lae's courtroom that
def endanl Jam es Robert
Marvin, 24, ordered him to fire
•Into Ciaconne's head.
Asked by Deputy District Al·
• torney Pat Geary why he shot
Ciaccone in the heart instead,
Miller responded, "I couldn't
shoot him th' head . . . I felt he
was 101.n& to die no matter ,.._t
I did ... <I wanted) to get It 1 over with as soon as possible."
Miller, speakinc in a barely
audible voice, testified tbat
Marvin'• co-defendant in the
murder trial, Joe Ag\tirre, 35, of
Huntington Beach, idued the tp.
itial order tb•t he panJcipai, in
the Claooone slaying.
·'The next thing I recall is
someone hand1ng me a knife. He
C Aguirre) told me (Ciaccone)
already (had> been hit twice and
it was my turn."
· It was a few moments later.
after the group almost was
spotted by a police helicopter
flying in the area, that Miiler
was given the crossbow and told
to fire, the witness testified.
·'Steve st arted calling for
help. Joe called for someone to
shut him up. J don't remember if
anyone did or not."
Mi lier told the court "I
couldn't do it" after he wa~
banded the crossbow. "J believe
that was when Steve said
something about callin1 a doctor
and taking him to a hospital and
that he wouldn't say anything
about what had happened out
there."
Ac cord ing to previous
testimony, the plot to kill Clac-
cone was made while he was
staying al Aguirre's Gothard
Street residence to elude
narcotics investigftors and
former customers.
The Garden Grove man was
lured into the oU field on the pre-
text of going on a nighttime rab·
bit hunt with his five Huntington
Beach compahions, witnesses
testilied. Miller, and two other peop1e
charged in the case, AguiJTe's
wire. Laurie, 20, and James
Garwood, 24, pleaded guilty to
rtduced charges or voluntary
u\analau&bter in exchange for
. their testlmony
Aerial dOgfight
strains cease-/ ire
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Syria and Israel each claimed
shoolin& down a jet fighter in a
dogrtght over Lebanon today, a
battle that put the most serious
.$train yet on the six·day-old
.ce.ase·fire.
Israel said its warplanes shot
down a Soviet-made MIG-25
Syrian jet, the most advanced in
the Syrian arsenal, and returned
,safely rrom a "routine re<:on·
nai ssance mission '' over
Lebanon.
Syria said one Israeli jet was
downed and conceded a Syrian
plane was "hit." But a com·
munique said "our planes re-
turned safely to base."
Lebanon radio said a piloUess
Israeli reconnaissance drone
was later shot down by a Syrian
anti-alrcrart mlssle fired from
eastern Lebanon 's Bekaa
Valley.
Israeli military sources denied
a drone was downed, but had no
comment on Lebanese rad1o and
TV reports of an luaeU armored
buildup in the southern
Lebanese border enclave con·
trolled by lsraeU-backed Chris·
tian forces.
Syria threatened less than 24
hours ago to shoot down Israel
jets on reconnaissance flights as
violators of the cease-fire.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
mtdoigbt walkout by
supermarket clerks waa averted
when neaotlatora ror 73, 700
c lerks and 1,177 Southern
California supermarkets ten·
tatively agreed on a new con·
tract alter a month and a half of
ha11lln1.
The bar1alnint units from the
Food Employers Councll and the
United Food iand Commercial
Union officially reached uree·
ment on the pact at about 9:!1p
p.m. Tuesday, 21,AJ houn before
the clerks were to go on strike
against stores In 12 counties.
Federal mediator Frank Allen
From Page A1
TAX ••.
president on Social Security
benefits.
Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes saJd the president was
on the telephone until 7 p.m.
PDT Tuesday to undecided
congressmen and planned "lo
reach ma ybe two doien
fence-sitters'' during the day.
"We feel we have gotten a
number of people in the last 24
hours," Speakes said. "We feel
the momentum goinR our way."
One congressman was
summoned lo a White House
meeting with the president tttls
morning. Afterward. Rep. Norm
Dicks, D· Wa sh ., agr eed to
support the president's package
''barring any unforeseen
events." a spokesman for Dicks
said.
Oil /ir""i 's
• e arnings
jump Bl o/o
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Standard Oil Co. of CalUornla's
domestic oil earnings jumped by
81 percent in the laat three
months compared with the same
period a year ago, the company
has announced.
Domestic petroleum earnings
for the 90-day period ending
June 30 totaled $322 mlllion.
compared with $178 million a
year ago.
A company spokesman said
deregulation or oil prices and
production of more higher·
quality natural gas were behind
the increase .
Socal earnings dropped by
more than 7 percent In the
second quarter of 1981 but were
15 percent higher tban the same
three·month period a year ago.
Earnings for the 90-day period
ending June 30 totaled $616
million. $60 million less than the
previous lhree·monlh period but
$81 million more than the same
quarter in 1980.
Earnings per share were $UIO
for the quarter and $.1.75 for the
first half of 1981, compared with
$1.57 and $.1.40 durlng the same
periods last year.
Gold jumps 86
LONDON <AP) -The U.S.
dollar was mixed in early Euro~
pean trading today. curtailed by
the royal wedding in London,
after a strong start in Tokyo.
Gold buJ1ion jumped $6 an ounce
in Zurich
1 ; Lebanese security forces said
the pilot ()( the downed Syrian
jet bailed out, was picked up by
a helicopter about 30 mlles
• northeast or Beirut and later
flown to Damascus. the Syrian
capitaJ .
4,000 lives lost
.
I The Christian Voice of
I' Priest slain
I in ~u·atemala
j SANTIAGO DE ATITLAN.
Guatemala (AP> -. "Father,
you're ln extreme danger. You
must get out immediately," a
parishioner warned the 46-year-
old priest from Oklahoma alx
months ago.
He left, came baclt three
months later and on Monday night
was assaaainated, presumably by
a right·wlng death aq_uad. The
Rev. Stan Bother aald be waa
!rightened when a. member of
hla flock told blm oo Jan. 10 be
had been marked for ttentlon.
Thom• P. Meley ,._....._~C--Olf-
AoOeft N w .. d ,,_
MlehMI P Har11ey
~0.-
L K9)' Schull% Oll-'flO..-
-~ntttl N. OOdderd Jr CW......0-
Thoma A. Mu""'•n• .....
8-Mnt SohulrMn ~
Cher'-H Looe _.._.....,.._...
~A.Woof• .........
in Iran earthquakei
NICOSIA, Cyprus <A P ) -
Tehran radio reported more lhJn
700 bodies recovered, but the plo-
vinciaJ government predicted a
toll of more than 4,000 dead ln an
earthquake ltiat hit the southeast
Iranian province of Kerman dur·
Ing the night.
It was the second quake di.I·
aster In the region In less than two.
months and the third In four
years.
"The number or victims ol the
ear\hquake hat aurpaased the 100
. mark," the Iranian eovernment
radio reported thla •ftemooa.
"Efrort.1 to recover the bck:llea of
other v1ctims are continuln1."
The governor eeneral of the
province, Abdolhosaein Saveh.
said the quak.e was centered In the
small town of Shabdad, about500
mites southeast or Tehran and 30
IAAN'S BANl·SADR
FLEES TO FRANCE -A4
mllea northeaat or kerman. the
provincial capital.
He predicted the toll would be
between 4,000 ind 5,000 dead.
Pars1a1d .
Hotpltala In Kerman reported
40 dead and 400 injured tn the pro-
vindal capttal, Tehran Radio N-
porud earller.
· Pan aaid th• quake m,uu.red
between f .5 and 7 on \be Richter
1cale and nattened IO pucent ot
I the bulldin11 tn the dlttrict.
Army unit.a end rescue aq,uadt J were tryin1 to clear debrl•·
choked roadl in th• remott IDOUD•
taJnoua re11on at hellcopttra
ru1hed rescuers, medical penoo-
nel end 1uppll• to the area, Pan
aaJd, but the ru11ed terraJn ham·
pered 0peratklbl.
The area la Jae than 50 mil•
lrom &.be vtllac• of Ooadbap,
wb lcb wu flattened bJ a Junt ll
quake that the lramaa Red er..
cent laJd killed J,000 ptople and
l.twell l,IOOotblrl. It me...._.
l ,ton lbl Rlcha..IC&le. The tame
area 8llo wu rOeiell b1 a quake
lD Im tUt killed • INIOPlt and lrUv.cl rDOl't than l .. 000.
u1d that no details could be re·
leHed unUl aller union otftctals
bad a chance to present the
packa1e to the membcnhlp for a
vote or raUficaUoo.
However, Jack t,oveall, the
union'• vice president, said the
tentatlve pact calJs for an ln·
crease In wages a nd fringe
benefits amounUn1 to ta.SS an
hour over three years.
The compromise broke a
Tuesday afternoon deadlock
over a 35 -cenl·a n-hour dif-
ference between wh at the
markets offered and what the
union was demanding. After he
met separately with both sides
and then coaxed them back to
the barealnJnc table Tuesday
nlaht, Allen sald, "Both parties
modified their po1IUon1 and
came clo.er together."
Allen aaid the agreement was
different from two previous of·
fers b( the Food Employers
Councl , which the union reject-
ed. ''It ls different from any of·
fers which you have beard," he
said.
The Food Employers CounciJ
gave in earlier on two major ls·
sues, one concerning benefits
and the other provldlne lhat any
new stores would automatically
come under a union contract.
Pair slip up vow s
Diana errs on Charles ' name
LONOON <API In the moments before she became
Princess of Wales today. Lady Diana Spencer made her
first slip, speaking her husband's name in the wrong order
before the hushed congregation at St. Paul's Cathedral and
some 500 million television viewers.
But she was not alone. Prince Charles left out a word in
repeating his vows.
Diana. in a dress ·with a 25-foot train and yard~ of veil.
gracefully negotiated a difficult exit from her coach at the
fool of St. Paul's steps. She glided down the long, red
carpeted aisle at her father's side without a false step.
But when the Archbishop of Canterbury. Rt. Rev
Robert Runcie spoke the prince·~ name for her lo r epeat :
"Charles Philip Arthur George." she promised to marry
"Philip Charles Arthur George."
The Prince of Wales also made a mistake. after placing
the band of welsh gold on his bride's finger. He offen•d to
share his ··goods'' but dropped the word ··worldl~· ··
But such minor error s did not stop the archbis hop from
pronouncing lhe couple "man and wifl• together" and
crowds outside. listening to the ccremon~· on louds pe<1kers.
broke their silence with loud cheers
* * * * * * From Page A1
ROYAL WEDDING • • •
Prince of Wales and Lady
Diana . the 20 -year -old
kindergarten teacher with the
captivating smile, was the first
lime m three centuries that the
heir to the British throne has
married an English-born
woman.
"This is the stuff of which
rairy tales are made,·· the
archbishop, the Rt. Rev. Robert
Runcie, observed in his sermon
during the mu s ic -rilled ,
80-minute Church of England
ceremony.
First lady Nancy Reagan. the
ofCtciaJ U.S. representative. sat
in a sixth-row pew at St. Paul's.
behind crowned royalty. Besides
the masses of spectators here, at
least 500 million others were
believed to have watched the
ceremony on television around
the world.
Baby falls 3 floors
into arms of hero
SCHAUMBURG, Iii. <APl -
Tom Deal say11 he has pretty
good hands from playing ball,
but sports didn't prepare him for
catching a 10-month-old girl as
she came hurtling from a third-
slory balcony.
Deal , a 22 -year old
warehouseman, saved the lod·
dler. who was not in1ured during
the weekend incident.
"l was just really ner vous,
man, when I knew she was going
to fall," Deal said in an in·
lerview Tuesday.
Deal and his wife, Lorri, were
awakened early Sunday in this
Chicago suburb by a baby's cry-
ing. They peered out a window
a nd saw an open third-floor
patio door in a n apartment
across the parking lot.
A baby, Jennifer Deui, ap·
parentJy pried open the screen
door and inched toward the patio
railing. First one, then aoother
plump leg appeared over the
edge.
No one answered the apart·
ment buuer when Deal ran over
and started ringing.
"The next thing I knew. both
legs went over the side, and I
ran there lo wail for her to fall.
And s he d ad Boy , was I
nervous ... he said. "She bounced
her rear end off the second-floor
railing bar and did a little flop
into my arms. 1 just guided her
lo the ground · ·
Deal said, "She didn't seem
hurt, but she needed a diaoer
change."
He took Jennifer to a hospital
emergency room "to make sure
s he was all right." The hos pital
notified police, who questioned
the baby's mother. Sabrina
Deul. 20, of Horfman Estates.
another nearby Chicago suburb.
Schaumburg Police Lt. Robert
Specht said Tuesday the baby
apparently was left Saturday
night with a baby sitter who ex-
pected Ms. Deul home by mid·
night.
Ideal for home. auto, shop. and boat.
Included Is a wall/ bench holder.
Put Dustbuster in its holder and it
recharges.
a eans up spills fast -Ideal for hard
to reach areas.
Allen said the talks broke
down on the M-cent·an·hour d1r
ference. with the companies of·
fering a $.1.30 an hour boost over
three years and the union seek-
ing a $.1 65 percent increase.
Under lhe old contract, top·
scale clerks earn $9.10 an hour 1n wges and $4.12 an hour In
fringe benefit.a.
The 1,277 s upermarkets
stretch from San Luis Obispo
and Mono counties in the nort.h
to the Mexican border. a region
with a population or 13.9 million
persons. The supermarket.a sup-
ply 85 percent of the groceries lo
that area.
E conomy .
decl ine
re ported
WASHINGTON (AP) -A key
national economic barometer
fell 1.3 percent in June, the
second monlhiy decline In a row
and an apparent indication that
the economy will continue to
weaken in coming months, the
Commerce Department reported today.
The government's mdex or
economic indicators had fallen
1 5 percent in May after rising
for two consecutive months, the
report said.
June's drop in the index. which
is designed to forecast future
trends in the national economy. is
in line with most analysts' predic·
lions that there will be little or no
economic growth in the current
July-Septemberquarter
National growth, as measured
by the inflation-adjusted gross
national product, fell at an an·
nual rate of 1.9 percent in the
April June quarter after racing
ahead al an 8.6 percent rate in
the first three months or the
year .
Contro llers
rej ect
I new offe r
WASHINGTON (AP) -Air
traffic controllers rejected a ten-
tative contract by a betler·than
9· 1 margin, their union an-
nounced today, raising once
again lhe threat of a strike that
could ground half the nation's
commercial nights
The Professional Air Traffic
Controllers Organization an·
nounced that 95.3 percent of the
voting rank and file rejected the
tentative accord. reached just
hours before a strike deadline
last month. Union officials said
13,495 of the controllers voted to
turn down the pact, and 616 to
accept it
Robert E. Poli , president of
the controlle r s ' union .
telephoned Transportation
Secretary Drew Lewis al mid -
day and informed him that the
pact had been voted down,
Transportation Department of·
ficials said.
A Lewis spokeswoman, Linda
Gosden. confirmed that the
secretary told Poli he was "dis·
appointed and regretted the fact
that the contract had been re-
jected." Lewis suggested the
two sides' negotiating teams get
together "and work out their au-
ferences." s he said.
~lo IUPPll•• on 1'9nd '2488
PrloM good through Sun., Aug. 2
CIO• HARDWARE
-•
COIOMA•MM 1111 .. c... .....
•1~·c ; ·------
j
AU. "°"'8 ONN 7 OAYa A WIU
WUTCUl'P ONN '*"'8 TL ..
HAUOa YflW CIMra .(1f1i4 .......... .. ~
,
f
•
Or.t'ige Cout DAIL y PIL.OT/Wedneeday, Juty 29, 1881 N •••
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOfAtlO..t ••CLUO• TIAOU 0111 '"' ..... •o•ic. MIOWUT l'A(IPIC. ,. •• I OUON, OITIOIT ... o CINCINIH TI noc•
••c1ea11101 AND ••l'O•Tao '" '"' 11100 ANO lllllllllllf
..
Dow Jones Ft
DOWN -2.00
CLOSING FIGURE 937 .40
New car sales in 1980 were the pits -and .
they're not much better thls year. Given the c~st or
(1) buying a new vehicle and (2) then feeding, maur·
ing and main· ~ tainin~ it, mo.st l'· Americans 10 ':'.' o
sea r c h of 1,· 1
wheels end up 4 '1i._
with a used car. i;:-:=a.-.,,._i-------r:u, !~~ ~a;d llllll lllllWRZ
maintain it, but
your initial cost is much less.
Used car sales have always outstripped new car
sales but the gap today is enormous, as you can see
by the annual census of used car sales taken by
Hertz. the rent·a -car outfit owned by RCA. It's ap·
propriate, I suppose, that Hertz. has become the ..
semiofficial source for a lot of information about
automobiles especially how much it costs to run one.·
Hertz is, after all, probably the largest single buyer
of new cars -and it has also become the top seller of
used cars off its lots. Hertz retails about 80,000 used
cars and trucks a year. . .
Hertz figures that Americans bought 18.6 m11lion
used cars in 1980. spending $70.8 billion for them.
Both were records, although the 18.6 million total was'
up only slightly from the 18.5 million bough~ in 1979.
The (lollar figure was up 6 percenl. The typical used
car sold in 1980 was 3.23 years old and had run 32,780
miles. The average price: $3,794. . .
What's striking in the Hertz analysts 1s t~e com·
parison of used car sales with new car sales m 1980.
Here's how that looked:
New car sales
Domestic models: 6,202,000
Imported models : 2,469,000
Total: 8,761,000
Used car sales
18,664,000
In summary, used car sales last year were more
than double the sales of new models. And they were
more than triple the sales of U.S.·made automobiles.
Even more striking is the Hertz breakdown of
these sales into perso~al and non.personal use. First,·
take used cars. Just about all of' them are clearly
bought for personal use. The Hertz estimate is that 5
percent may have been bought by companies for
business use. That leaves 17,731 ,000 used cars
purchased in 1980 for personal use.
It's quite a different story when you look at new
car sales. Here Hertz estimates that of the 6,202,000
million U.S.·made cars sold in 1980, an incredible
3,892.000 were bought for non·personal use. Incl~ded
in that total are all.the fleet purchases (Hertz 1tsell
buys about 100.000 new cars a year ) and all the s~es
to small companies and to individuals who are usmg
their cars for business purposes.
The net is, though, that only 2,400,000 of the·
Detroit models were bought for personal use. By coo·
trast, the foreign car makers sell very Ce~ of their
vehicles to businesses or rental companies. Hert&
estimates that or the 2.469,000 imported cars sold
here last year, 2,056,000 were bought for personal us~
Result: When you look at the 1980 car market II\
terms of personal use -th~e are autom~bil.e&
bought by individuals and famihes -you get this p1c·
ture:
1980 Sales of New Cars for Personal Use
U.S. ·made cars: 2,400,000
Foreign cars: 2,056,000
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
oo.MI ~' -°lt-,~ -YJi ' -.. U\6 -1 .!n -,. ·r -·~ ..--1" ' -Yt IP -Ml "" -.. .,.._~
1•16 -'"' . -" Jl\t -'"' ~-..
-"' • 1111 • 14 . "' + 1YI . "' •2 • 14
+ "' •'"' _,
Pct,
UP IS.O Up 14.I UP 11.e UP e.4 Up U Up U Up 1A
up '·• up 1.J Utl ...
up '·' UP U Up U u11 M ~: ts
GJlll c• -""'· ... ..., .. ..... , ..... ~ .. -....r•ll"iOt: .,...... ................ ....... ,......,,...., ... ....., ...... ....... ,.... •.• ..., ...... 11..-. .. U.1$. ---'"""' ... ,,.., .... ~ -~-~;0.-.......
NEW YORK (AP)· Sales, J P·"'· .-ta
-Ml <'-o4 IM --.1 edlw Amerl<M Stock E.Jtc....,.. 1~. ll"Mll"9 Mtlonelly ., ..... -••• . GIEapcwt no,100 Wt + YI
W•"9 8 19',lOO •1o1o -_.. OonltPlrl ' 111,lOO 11\oo -~ Ret19trOll 10.,'llO 1114 -14
KltbyEap s f7-'°° >6'°' +No HouOllTt '6,100 24\olo -~ l"IOwG.nl UMO 21'°' -I Tut.....C-1 .. ,100 2' -1111 g~~p .~ ~= ,~:: :.:·"
METALS
HEW YORK IAP) -S9ol nonltf~
-··· price$ todey t"'"r U~·IS unit • pound, U.S. cllltllft•llons .. L..-C2 -.ts• POUnd.
lhK .. 14 c.nls e POUnd, ClellvtrecS.
Ti. i 1.JoMOMttel1 Wttll c.,....itt Ill.
Al-'-1..., cents a'*""'· H. v. ~soo.00 .. ,11 .....
f'le ...... $ol10.001royot.,H Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
8JT11t"-letM,.,....
SalKtoed IOICI prlen ltUJ
~:CIOM4. ,,......,.:MOS.ti. "II .. " llAH'ldl: i.e. llwl,. $ol04.m .. U.•; MllfM
.UHi.
Meelf, a M•r-• 1 91\IY lft llJ ·-MOS.oo. u. SUO .......... , °"'' ..,,, ................ .,.JO.
......... ; .. p.~
•
••• Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Wedn11day, July 29, 1111
-EV!NIG-
.. , •• NIW9
~"' cain.'• Joy In flnllllY finOlnO
1M1 ~t bfothet i.
Wiort..-...cl.
I TIC TAO DOUQH ....... "
..... ., ..... .
~ ....... ---..... ..,,."' .... llMMllllt ..........
(!~
•••• ''nit 01 llUf ..
c 11711 *'*' .,.,., Al ...... .,....... ... ,,_ . ,....~ .... .... -... .. ..... ""-·,,.,. ...... ....... __ .,.,,..,..~
.. ~ ftMlly ... Md .... --,....,_ °' .. --.... ...........
--~-... ~ lnlleMf"' .. ...,....
WOflll"fl .. 41f1Mf'Hf ar-...
....... A ...... Of~
mtt•.. (1t71) JeMH c..m ..... , ..... ,,.,.
... , • ....,,.., Ind •
~"'9f1111MllMI• torte ..... ~
Wiii llP .... '*"' °' -~~-W'*1 l'lenry gel• hi• di.-
~. ''llMI conoetnt
...,,... wlVI llil"'t -
INnd.
• eoooY.-°'_.. IV-l>l'lngt I ...... guR1o41M1 OWi\ lot
ROYAL WEDDING Barbara WaJters is
joined by Peter Jennings in a final re·
port on England's royal wedding tonight
at 9 on Channel 7.
...... THl,AOTICW 1 ....
Jo..,._ ... ._ II
..... .. be ....... ....
!"'-' Md ... to ...
Mr It IClflool, C"l
~
I== NllONIWI
MCWll * * * "The YOUf\9 In HMtt" (11381 Oouglu
,.,rl>lfll(I Jr , P11Jlette I
I QOOd4lrG A M'er-do-well
lllT!lly ol cerd •"-'P'
C'*-.,, old l.oy wN>
ref-them
.MOYll **\lo "91ec:ll Magic"
lctM1 Or90ll w-... Aiilm
t~ Tiie lftytlerloua
Ceigllolrro It «i>r-led
lrom tailing over In ..... •.• I JOQ.WI WIU) AU. .. TNl ,AMII.. y
Whlle ctlebrtlll\g Miiie
Ind G1ot1e·1 llrlt wedding
~. the Stlvk:a
Ind the 1un11 ... recall ,,..
tr-atlc day ""*' Miii•
...... ""' "" lvWr• l•IMr· ..,...,
• 81NNYHIU.
~ wteii. '"' lal*1d of
....... with "' lowly-· "'· I ICCIT NIWHIAT
at\JOtOIU
"~" St Louie kid•
op«Me I Plat l)llflot. Oii·
cago Olrl Scouta play Wlth
.,, Mrthbell. an apple htr·
_, In Vwmont (R) (1)8..,.
9 INllNIY Mll...LD' """"""° to enlotce an evictlOn otder land• B.,.
ney In the departmental
~. and the men of
!tie 12th are laced wtth
,.,,."'O • lull--" ~
on IN run-down t>olel.
(Part 2)
MOYll
"OrNrner· ( 11781 Tim
Met'-",~ BWlll411y
A ~ bowler hN lo
ovettome many obatacMt
wNi. trylnf to raedl tor hi•
llfeiong drlMI 'PO'
.,:00 I C8I NmW9 N9CNmWI
HA'" DAVI AGAIN Richie l>ecomee ,_,._
calty eitracted to.,.. "older -·· I A8CHIWI
~
While on ... 1111 In Tot.yo
Henry i:--Infatuated
#lttl • 9-4 ~ thing
tr_,, trorn the StelM
• ITAUTI OI' 8AH
~
A hutl>tnd returning 10
San l'randKC> from 1119
hOlle'f'l'IOOn oontemot•t"
tnufder1no hit -.....
• OYPIAIY
"CreetMty" cw.ta lyft·
~t Sammy Ceftn. QUHI·
mallerGr-Earl (A)O ID MACHlk. I LIHAP
~
(J) TIC TAC OOUO..
({l~MlmN
au.ta: M4ll Tlltle, Muney
l.AnOllon, Or9M Wellel
(IJ)MO'Vtl
"'My ~arcl" ( 18781
Chfla Melt~. Adam
Baldwin. The ,_ kid et a
CHANNEL LISTINGS
01110100 l'llfll Ull.OI
INIQe ll19ncl9 .. ""'
ecflOOI .,~ Md'°"'"" tr ttw)I etand U010 Ille CN•
.. Cl4lllO wtllcfl llad per.
-ned 1.htn'I both 'PO'
(Z)MOVW
"The UIUmalt Tllrlll"
( 1874) &IC It-*', lfltt
E.ktltld
7:IO . I ON THI TOWN
Mo1t1. SI-Edwttdt.
M.iocry Aoow•· Vlelt -ot Lot ,.,.._, grind Old
hotell: meet eev.rll ......
--dotNne deellgnert 18 ,AMLYNUO
_..NANA
Oueat: Mtolley Ollley.
• HOU.VWOOO
IOUAM.I
I ,Aee nta MUI'()
AU.INTHa,MaY
Edjtll edd•. -"or-cttllafl
wedding and a pllt ol
honeymoon•• to Archie'•
pr.cloua lllHnO trip pjena
• MAOml. I LiHMf'
""'°"" ID H>UR OAYI <W THI
MAIA! ....,,..,.,. of the .......
tribe -folowlld lor f.w
deyt .. ~go lbout Ulelr
dally UV. In I n1m lhot In
Keny1 CloM to ttle Tena•
n1an border
(I) P.M. MAGAZIHI
{C)MOVll
* * * "Heidi" ( IH5) Ev.-
Marlt Slngh11nrner, Ger·
trend Mlltermayr A tittle
sw1 .. girt .. lelten "°"' Mt rnounteln home In the Alpe
by lllr aunt lo the city. C8J H901N1AK l'MVtlW
Hual>Md-llld-wlte comlcl
Jerry Stlllet and Ant1t M-• lntr~ 11'4 mov·
.... ~· and ec>«t• event• corning to HC>l'MI
Box Office In Augull
a:CO 8 (J) THI ..OVAL
WU>OIHQ
Hlg/lllghll ol Ille wedding
of 8rllaln'a Prince ChartM
to LaOy Diani Spencet.
wNcfl tel<* Olloe --todey ll St Paul'• c ......
dfel In London, -be pr .. _,,«!
G 8"1Ai~
F11tured I h1unted "°""· ..... -.-. the ··0111e1e1·· wftcn of Saltrn,
Me" , en 1ud1tlon lor
clrc:ua clownt (R)
9 MOVIE * * * '. Aeec> The Wild Wind"' ( 1~2) John Wayne.
Suu n Heywlrd An
octopua creltM trouble
lor rMldenlt ol 11'4 Florida
Keye In the 1N0a
• Q4AAUl'I AHOB.a
The Angele go ~COV9'
In • twinging nlghtclub to
n111 • murdetoua peych(>-
peth preying on tingle
women (A) 0 MOVW **'A "All The Brothera
Were Vellent" ( 1053) Rob-
.,, T1ylor. 8 tew1rt
Grenoer. Two ~ Eno·
land wtllllng captllne., wN>
are brot""-, pert weye
wtien they dlNClfM over _cn1,.. lor • ,,_._
• P.M.MAOAZINI
A proflle ol top Hollywood
G KNX T , C.BS1 Lo.., Anq1•l1•
8 KNBC 1NBC1 Lo' Anqult•<o 9 KTLAtlnll I LU!> Angt'h'"
G KABC TV 1ABC1 Lo' Anql't•• L .... rMB 1ces1 s.in 01t>Q•'
" KIU TV find I LO'> An•11•h• .. 01 KCST tA8C1 5cJn Q .. •1.1•>
I K TT\1 1 Ind 1 l u'> Ancw1t•
KCOP TV,,,,,, I l t•~ A11t11 I
fD KCE r rv, PB'l1 to' An ,,.,,..,
'1i) 1<.0Cf IV t PB<;1 Hunt '1ql11n kf1o1c r1
hW41t...., JoM De(; • .'"* ""° ,,... .... boell tl09 f.._; CfW Tll
preparN dlilllen Ill-, 0t
Waaco Oii Mfnc11no )9w
ptOOlenll; ~.Mt Mann
"'-" a oe6Mlrlty pllOtoo .,,-. *'* .. ...,., Olfte" (t1781
loftdr• ~. Rod cern-•on A 1°""0 ~
tlOllWI ,... --rwige In
-c11 Of the ~Mot
wtlo kllltO her huabend.
• "'°""DA YI OF THI
MAM!
Memberl °' "'-...... tribe ar• lollOw9d fOf ,_
d!IYJ .. they go IMut tfMlir
dally .._ In a 11111\ "'°' In l<enye e1oM to !tie TINa-
nlln ~-9 JUUi AHCIMbd9
SNOW.
•. Julie Md Otoll In ~
081den" ~ Diet VM
3I)'~ A.Iner
"Midway" ( 1871) °'*ltOll
HMlon. Hanry Fonde. ...
-and Amenc.I fl'\&. tary loroae equare off lor •
navel 11\d aerlel bat*~
lered around • PIClflc
leland dw"'O Wor1d War II
'PO'
MOYll * * * * "The Godltttler" ( 1072) Marlon Brando, Al
Paclno Olrected by Fr.,..
d a Ford Coppol1 8IMd
on tl'4 novel by Marlo
• Puzo Alt 'Ging M8'1oeo
-the blnlerl ~
hit Id~ larnfly life ancf
'"' het9ll rulft... of "" ~ brMll OOWn -hi• aone become tncr'-
1ng1y ln"°"'9d In tl'4 '40iant
working• ol org1nlzed
crime e wov.
"The NewmM "-" A
WMllhy .. -cop and ..
glrlltlend, While 111.,,.,ptlng
to '°'"" 1 lrlend'a IUIClde. unc:over an eJCtortton rlldc·
et .. 111 oonnectlOna to
underground POt'rlOO'~ I
movlea. 'A'
l:.IO • TOI' ITOfllY
Hoell Jlln Thomu , Mary
l:M~ .. TOUCH
t:OO 8 Cl) MOWI • * * "Champion•· A
love Story" I t878) Joy
l eOuc, Jamt1 Vincent
McNlchot Two young peo-
ple combine their 1•1111ng
lelenl• •nd go '"" the n11tona1 pelf• figure 111111·
1"9~(A)
U Q)DIA"MNT
IT..ot<U
Arnold It buMd to • prevt-
oualy 111-wtlltt IUbwMtl
achOol IA)O
• Ill QWllU Nii() OIAHA: THE ~Al
WIDOlNQ
Petet .Jennlngt end e.rbe-
r1 W11ter1 repon on the
wedding ol 8r1leln · • Pf'-
ClllllM 10 lady Olan•
Spencer, wf\leh IOOll place
Nl'ller today •t St Peul't
Cathedral In London • ..av°"""* . CW.II Mel Tllllt, Murray
llngaton. Orton w .....
Pete llafbulll, WIMlt Tyler
and L"ter, Mieflall Pna. ID THtl HeOOt.H
ITI'UOOLI
Mentllty retarded people
Illar• their r..ttnga an4
•ccompllahmenll In a
combination of tllm and
panel dlewtelon, With a
lc>cut on Cl.U_, H-In
Cllllornta •nd 111 untqye
eduelllonat progr-
ct) MOYll
"8ch1t06d·· C 1UOI K'-
Klnelll, Marlene Hilt A
ctued murderer who"'"
~•to do -with •
• AD.Wot•
w....-·a 111 flit• IN I.Of
~..,....
• THINATUML
~O/IMWATUI
Q.OllT
TIMI~-~
'""' clOe~tl ,...,. •• ......,. It---tM ~· 10 Mel wttfl ,_,__,,, .. , eMOVW * * * "Hltfl Pt1ln1
Drlfler'' 11tn1 c.tt EMI·
wOOd. Verna llloolll. A _,.,..... •ano-, .....
"'9~,....,.ota
WwMrft ..... IO.....,..
tM Ntllltel .... ~ ...... t1rror.,. ""-"·
.,. • II TMI "°""" .....
Hlglllfflll of the ~
of 8t1talrl'• ~ CfleflN
to l..-dy Dlltlt lpenolr. '""°" toOll PllCe --todt!r It It. PM'• C.....
dl'll In~ .... tie pr-. --· Ill.: The ttwtiet Of .,.,.. d•
.,., dllrvpll lllalte ~
Kryetit'I gloMI hot'9'f·
moon.f"I
eGMAT , .. c.......,..
"au.ta Of The Helletl"
l'ra nll Conver•• inf
&lelle Peraona _.., 1n thle
drMllllntlon of Franll
O'Connot'1 lhof1 Moty Ml
In Ireland In 192 1 r90IOMnO
eround • ,.., ot k1lfl INW·
gantt Ind Ille two cep.
tur.d •"1111 IOldi«• tn.y
we Or-.d to ouerf (A) •"···· "Edge Of Tiit Cloud'' Wll-
llam get• 10 t• ~ 1!11 t1rat
pt-10 FrMCe and Clwie-
tln1 I• promoted le ,.....
tlonllt 11 11'4 hOCel (Pert II , .. ,Q
tt: .. (({) 9'A()9 "°" '"' ~ a.ry T°"'PlllN _. nm
MeCerwir ,... ~
Nllltlll It~ Md
lnttfV.._ -OI the .-·.top...,.,.,<"""
pieyet•' """' -tlhuet. lft W>dete on IM lltueti.n
wHI llao be lndu6ld I
10'.IOI NIWI IC9WWT
NITWOMNIWa
(t)MOYll *•ft "T"-YOWIO In
Heart" 111311 e>ouota•
Falrben-• Jr , Paulette
Godd81d A ne'er~
lemlty ol cerd atlar.,.
cflarma an Old tact,. MIO
referma t'-1.
11••••(1)98 ....
• ..OVAL WIDDING
HeC»tUGHTI
Hat FletwMn hoate t wr11>-
Ull °' "" "---" -· roundtrlQ Prtnce ~·
wMCl1"Q I :=-...vwm MAM
''ICJllfoY' A ........ ~
neH1111n lftl llll In
llleonpt on M""*'t llflt,
llu1 refulla to ,_ the
men 'lllftlo loroM hllll 11 «>
II
• ..VHtU. ~...,,... ..... "'"' bin~ In e ~tu·
rounded by beeullful
nur.-
• DOCCAWTT
OWetl Tr-H_,.,
;'~'°"·'"> CMOW•• CB)MO*
"lrnolcey And The 8Mdll
11" (tNO) Burt ~.
JIOllle or.-. ''*""
Fame strikes new co-star
81 JERRY BUCK
A T ......... Wfttw
LOS ANGELES The first time Ted
McClnley appeared on television he had 1 non·
spealclna role as Jack Albcruon'a jogglng partner
io "Valentine."
The next tlmc." he made a qu30tum leap to a
co-1tarrtn1 rote tn the ABC comedy seriee "Happy
Oayt." McGlnley, who'a only 23 and 1 recent
graduate of the Unlver1fty of Southern California.
la ellll oa Cloud Nine.
'McOlnley. a handsome. blond athlete, play•
ba1lretbaU coach Ro1er Phillipa, the nephew of
Marton Cunnlnfbam. E1sent11)1y, however. he'1
tht new Rich e Cunnln1ham, the clean-cut, wbol .. om•, All·Amtrlcan kid played by Ron
Ho-.rd until he left the show at the tnd of last seaaon.
"That'• th• rol•," "' Hid, "but don't tXptCl
mt to play It exaclJy llke Ron Howud. My
ch1racts 11 very brlpt but be netds more 1trHt
.... M. Jml like RJcb.te. But 1UU. I'm not tM 11mt
character Ron w11."
McGlnley was 1uppoted to work on the 1171
mo.te "Valentine" for only two da)'I. "TIMy kept aartnc one more day," he 1ald. "I ended up beint
Ulrethe fifth bJtbtlt·Pald penoo ln lM fllm . I had '° •~ run dolnc It -that'• •hen I dffidtd to blc8aw•ador. • ~ •·1 w u.ou~ ot '"u.., •htn 1 wu • dUld.
.1Ult u I ~l OI bttq a buebaU paayer. My
, .... .., ,... It ..ad .,. ••fully bard to ••t lnto th•
bUliM9I lliWla ,eu U.W MnMbody, '° I put It out ot •1 rnlild ...
In U. meantime, be bad bffomt a model and
•
hi~ picture was 1potled In 1 copy of Oentlemen'a
Quarterly by casting dlrector Hank Mcc ann.
McGlnJey said, "He said if this 1uy can act H
aood 1s he look• he'll be areal. So thlJ tu11e hem·
mer came down on my head. It WH llkt It wun't
real to me.''
So McGlnley dutifully enrolled ln ectln1 clu1.
supportina himeelf b1 • lucraUvt modeUn1 career
that took hlm around tJ\e world. fh aleo traveled a
lot In hl1 attempt to C•t on the tlM Olymp6c water
polo team.
"I enjoyed water polo," be Hld. "I lovtd tbe
phyalcal conuict. ll'a a rouah 1port, Uke pl1yll\I
hockey ln water. My 1oel wae the Olympk1. J w11
on the U.S. Junior N1tlonal Team. whJda la the
feeder team for the U.S. N1UOnal THm. Which la
the Olympic team In Olymptc yean.
l wae playlnt all over Europt. When I I« into
modeling I •tarted endortlnt ~~ti. Bo I wu
deemed 1 profeulonal athlM aftd t.Mt wu UM
end of my wat.r polo caNet."
He found It a UW. cWftcult on tlM Mt at ftnt.
"J wae lhe new kLd on the block,'' he 11ld, ''Tbt1'd . au been Wðer for et1ht yean. s ... ,,. cf 11 H""1 Winkler took me 11lde and worked on my Un". Ha
11ld Ronny Howard .ould do UM 11m1 for him
when tM •ho• nnt ltaned. "I comldtr mnell Hl'J new IDd Dot rud1 to
be thrown lnto odter thUaP Jll. W...t I'd llU II
anotbilr 1•ar of 'llaPPJ o.,.· to • .., ......... I hope tM ........... ..., ........
Me alio 1tn1ek •• a fl'tllldlldp WW. leott IAM, who hla now becolftt 1111 renlar baMNU IOID·
panlon .... aaid, "Wt dldl't Iii k otf at ftr'lt. I wu new, ma)'be lmedial lall 1,... '' .
McOtnl., .,.. up tn N..,,.,.-t leacla •M
I TUBE TOPPERS
CBS 8 8:00 -"The Royal Wed·
din1." Hlahll1ht1 of the ceremonies for
Britain's Prince Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer .
ABC • 9:00 -"Charles and Diana:
The &yif Weddlna." Peter Jennings
and Barbara Walter1 report on the wed·
dins.
NBC 8 10:00 -"The Royal Wed·
ding." Hlahllghts of the British wedding.
K CET 0 10 :00 -"Great
Performances: Guests of the Nation." A
dramatization of a Frank O'Conner
1tory set in Ireland and starring Frank
Converse and Estelle Parsons.
9ilfof'd T JwtiM Oe1te In
Ille two lllwmell broUw1 10
tlop I ,...,_ ~.
!fie llMlt, "'°"' lrllMPOft· ~=...,ant 'PO'
"He KMIWt You're None"
( 1NO) Doti lcwdlno, Clll·
111'1 O'HMner. A ~l>otlc mur-.r ttalll• attrlCllw
)'O""V ~·~. lilenl· ly and ,....,., llMfl"'O
!Mir ~ of Mdded ........
11:tl•~
"OM-Tnca Potf(' (UNOI
PN ...,_, IMllr Brown A
onoe-popular perfottner ••
preeaured by everyone
-~ '*" to drop hit ~ "' mutlc Ind """" .... ltlet CM! bflng him
bed! to 1111 top 40. '"' 11:11 Cl) 'T' MAG.Al9HI <W
THIM!
11:.IO. (J) wov.
• • • "Four FM lhetl"
(11771 leau 8rld0ea, Rob·
"1 Powell. A Br'ltllh IOldler
In the 1to0t It labeled •
COWWd ~ hie comradM _, .. ~(">
D9TONIG"' Hoet. Johnriy Ceraon
Guell•. Robert Kltln.
Johnny Mathie
89 MONaWI
NICIHtUNI
I LIT'l tiwcl A De.AL
ITAHLIY lmti. ·~MC ....
CZl MOVW
"~u" C tHOI Oll\lla
Newton-John, 0-Kally.
A pout1Q artltl, 1 heavenly
-and • _,tlmental
mllllontlre join lorcet to °'*' up • "'IO' '°"'. -.00 '*-'PO'
~~-
1a:oo• ~ ••It "The We dding
Nlgltt" ( tt36) Oery Coo-
per, Anna 8i.n. A ~
IO·ba queetlorlt her low
lor lier flal'Cll wlW'I Ille
nltet•a-man.
•• l.OWllOAT
"Oomputwman" Franlcle
Avalon, Carole II• White,
"'Pana V-" Bltbl Ben·
ton, Jamie Fan, .. ..._.
r ... Of You" Petty Ouke
Aalln, Atcll Helton (A)
• CIUNIMOQ
The reeldtntt of OodOt are
.iunned ""'*' MJll f9ela
lie can no tonger keec> I••
and ordet and turna In his
bldOt .........
..Ollllll
Jim Phelpt let• hlmMll be
framed tor tnufder In • plot
to dlecredtt • acientltt
(Plt1 21
• MMTTA
A '*Clfltlorllood k Id wit.
-1 murder end Tony
,,..., find him before the _..,.,doee.
~lllOYll
"Tiie Tenant" ( 11771
Roman POienekt. IMbelle
Adjimnl A man ren11 •n
aoartmtrll Where a prevt·
oua tenant eommltt.O ~._
cide and bacomet Pat•·
nold about hit nelgllbort
'A'
CQJMOVll
"AN That Jazz" I 1078) Aoy
Sc:ihelder, "-ice Lange
Ttle tumultuous NI• ol •
profeetionll dencer le 1o1.
loW9d lrom -on th• •IAOI to pereonll crl ...
'A'
12:t0 D C9 TOMOAAOW
Gu.eta lttmmeket A~
Cormen. Wunlngton Poll
c,olumnlll M1•tne
ChH hlre , Tiie Allman
Brothera 8...c!
11:41 CH) WOVll
"The Oodllthet" I 1872)
M8110n Brando. Al Pectno
8Med on the novel by
Marlo Puzo An aging
M1lloao -the barrier•
bet-hi• ldyttk: family
Ille and the h•rlh re1111-
of Ill• butll,_. btNk d-n
•• 1111 1on1 b ecome
tncrHllngty lnYOlved In Int
vlolent WOrklnga ol org•·
nlLed crime 'R'
11: .. 0 MO'M
"T1'4 Newmen Shame" A
WMllhy ex-cop •nd hll
glrllrlend, white attempting
to aolv. • trlend'• eulelde,
uncover 111 ex tort Ion r ICIC.
et With connec11on1 10
unaworouno pornogreptuc
movlee 'A'
1:00 0 P9YCHIC
PHIHOM£NA
• Simon'• Soul Hoat
Oemlen Simpton G.-11
Barry Tall, Ph 0 , Sllniey
Slleplro
• MOVIE
• • 'J> "Kita The Glrla And
Male• Them Ole·· ( 18e 11
Mtch.., Connor•. Dorothy
Provine A ac:ten1111 dlacov.
.,. a wey to m"'·llttlllre
rner'I and Miii hll ldel 10
the ChlneM
• INOIPIHOIHT
NITWON< HEWS
(l)MOYIE
"Luna" ( tt70) Jiii Clay·
burgh, M1tthew Bury
Gull! apura en A~IC•n
opera 11nger·1 unorthOdor;
1ttractlor'I to lier IMn-AQt.
heroin eddtct aon 'R'
1:100 MOVIE *** "ShowBoar·11os11
Kathryn Greyson. H-ard
K ... Singers and danctf'I
tnler111n on I lllOWbOtl H
It tralltla up and down the
Mltalalll~ Ah1er
(fl NIW9
1:11<.ZJ MOVI€
"'The 1111nd I t1180)
Mtch••I C•ln•. 01vtd w .. ner While lnVMttgll·
Ing • "'" of lhlp dl .. p-pearancee 1n the Bermuda
Trlang141. • lournatlll llum·
bl.. ecro" an laollled.
~00-yHr-old colony 01
pffllM A'
1:30 . MOVIE * • • ~ "Lono Oey·1 Jour-
ney Into Night" I 18621
JOHN DARLING
L.ISTEN, FE.LL.A.S! 1
W>sJ, .JUS'T .JOKIN()
WMEN 1. SAIO ALL. OF "T~E NA&'TY
THINGS A00U1' 'l'OlJ
I MY 5PORTSCAGT5.'
WHAi 00 YOU SAY,
GUYS? 5HOUL.D WE
Gl\/E HIM A 0~EAI<!
ltopn to flnd 1 home at MUlbU. "I don't wan& to
leave tbt 1Nt1e~" ht uld. "Wlwn I wu • kid l had
Heh rl,._ worlkouu from w11« polo that 1
ctlcln't Ill to aui'f much. I •a uwa11 workln1 out •hta eneyone tlM w11 • ...,..... Now I ean."
l<lttMlllne HtpMr\, J~
Aobarda. ._., °" IN
Pf9Y by ..,.,,. O'Neil. A
,_..., enoourl14'1 perlOftll
P!'Oblem1 Wftll t loot!OI,
n1tOCMIA, tubetouloelt Ind
dept--
1:.40. N1W1
t:.e . MOMOMm 4 Wiii
U1tle frn It llUOht the
Itel• ol Ult, Eric 11\0C)e lor
t:OO .,, 8 NIWI
I: IO. MC>llWC• ... 6 Wiii
The Frtftefl Foteign L.eQIOn
~ "Leolon of ,,..
Lott" one. Erle and Ernie
tnlla1
l;JO ! =..OflAl.
"Schlioldl C 10801 Ktaua
KINlkl, Marian,_ Hiii A
Cfllld '"IH'dw .. '""° u-
9Cleeor1 to do ...,.., wllh 1
1erlt1 ol divorced or
unhappily married women
Miida • letter to an l<tv!Qe
columnltl •lier Md\ kill-
ing 'R'
t :N G MOVll
• • 'h "The Fem11e
1n111nct" ( 1072) Heten
HaY91, Peulttte Gocl<lard
Although wtlt·meantng
end rMOurc.IUI, the elder·
ly Snoop Sl11er1 become •
90Urc. of Irritation and
annoyance to their detec-
tive nephew """"' they meddle In hi• CIMa 9 NIWI
2:40. MOVIE * • "The M~ad«"
( 1833) Aonttd Colman.
Ettu1 Landi The journ•llll
eoualn ot t drug-addtcted
men la t>4Wtut0ed to mu.
querade H hi• coualn dur-
ing the m1n·1 braeltdown
2;6S at MOVll * * ·~ "J I CkHI Mell"
( 1~21 Wattece 8-y, Mar.
IOflt Miiin An MCae>ee
trom t lynch mob become.
• hero by preventing •
robbe<y
a.oo~ NEWS :I 18 HeW8
)MOVIE
"Th• Ulllmtte Tl'lrlll"
(18741 Erk: BrN<len Britt
Eltl•nd
3:30 'S) MOVIE
"More Arnerlcen G,.11111"
I 1879) Aon H-ard, PIUI
Le Met Aher gredu111on. •
group ol high IChOOI
lrttnda eaper1tnce lh•
cll&lleng" ol adulthood in
the IOClal upllHVal OI lhl
tll601 ·po
4:00 D GENE AUT1'Y
"Tiie Blee:~ A.Icier
!CJ MOvtE
"Kiit Or Be Kiiied" ( 1980)
JOMP" Ryen, Ctiarlotte
Mlcttelle Two 11v1ge
aqueda of elite kerlte
ch1mplon1 c111h lor
revenqe •nd eurvlvtl ·po·
4:30 U VOVAOE TO THE
BOTTOM OI' THE SEA
··Mullny'
4:40G) MOVIE * •;, "Tiie Phantom Of
•2nd Str•r' 118451 0111t
O'Brien, Xay Aldrlefl A
!heeler In New Yorll City
~the-oft
hOtr1ble murde<
Thur•day••
f)ofJf httP '"ot•lr•
-MORNl«J-
S: 18 fl ) * * 'h A Fttllul 01
Dynamite'" ( 1872) Jamea
Coburn, Rod Steiger An
lrllh revotut1onery •nd •
Me11.lcan thief wN> teem up
10 rob btnka ~
Wind up being ""°" ol
Ille Mt•lc•n revOlullon
.. Cl) "Oeedro1611'• l'lcNlt" '0 '
J:IO (C) "him T-" ._...,.
"-"' A ~eel Ofoup
of 0011fttry ctul>Dere
...... OO'OMlll -m•ml>er wllO cllargH
t'*'1 11P lot Ille chlmplOn-
llNp. 'PO'
t:OO (I) • • • ··Two w ... 111
Another TOWn" (IN21 Klrtl
Douglat. Edward O Aob-
lntOn A fnllOl.llded ICIOt
11~1 heppl-In en
1M11t1n1 ptOO\ICer·a lol>
10:00 Cl) "M0tt Amerleen Otal•
fill" ( 11701 Aon HoWard,
Paul LAI M1t After gtadul·
llon, I O'OllP ol h'Ofl ~
lri.nda ••CMH!enee I he
CfllllenOea °' ldUllflood In the ~II upheevel OI the
IMOI ·po·
10''° (C) "A '«wee Of One"
C 18711 Chudl Norrie, ~
nllw 0'~ A m1tler of
1he marttal ertt embark• on 1 r-..mot1V1ted
-o11 tor the kNlera of hi•
adopted ton 'PO'
'1:00 ••• "Ho Holdl
Barred" ( 1052) Bo-v
8oya, Marjorie Reynoldt.
OM of the Boyt dleoovett
he flu an arnulng epll·
lude lor boxing
11:IO D •• "hyond A AM·
IOnlbl• Doubt" ( 185e)
01r11 Andrtw9, Joan Fon·
lllM A novelltl end I
ne•apaper pu blither
attempt to di9C>rovt the
accuracy ol c1roum111111ill
evlClenc;e
-AFTERNOOH-
12:00. • • 'J> "Co.Hege 01
l....... ( 1841) Ellubeth
Taylor, Frenlc "4organ A
girt'• pel eollle. trlllned to
klll In the Army, mull be
con...rt«I becll 10 the
alfact1on11e pup an. h.0
known and loved • * * 'J> "Flv. WMka In
A Bettoon" ( 1862) Red But·
tone. Fabien 0.-lfleto. r" commlMIOna • Sc:ottleh
b&lioonlll 10 Clllm part ol
Alric• tor EnglMd by
plMtlng the 8rllllh lleg ,,_,
(CJ ••·~ "The Ot-nlng
Pool'' ( 1875) P1ul N-·
man, JOlllne Woodw•rd A
prtvlle 1n ..... 11g11or 11 hired
by • Wfflthy Soutlllrn oil
heir-to di.cov.r the
Identity ol the llJll'lor ol en
Incriminating letter
l:IO (J J * • • "Two W .... 1 In
Another Town' 11062) Kirt!
Oouglu Edwerd G Rob·
lnton A mlagulded ector
llnda happlnHI In an
Hlltt•nt producer'• tob
2-00 CJ"Swtm T...., Stephen
l'urat A pampered g<oup
ol country clubbere
ecqulre 1 gorgeoua ,_
member who Chlrgea ''*" UC> lor the chemplOn·
aNp ·PO'
g • • • ··1<11 Carton"
I 111401 Jon Hatt Oene
Andrews A l>Old PiOnetf
protect• t C1111ornt•·
bound wegon 1r11n lrorn
Indian rt ldtrl
3:CO (B * • * "Wherl Angela
Go. Trouble Followa"
( 11111 S tell• Ste vena,
Aoulln<I Au ..... Trou!Me
•bOundl wtien lour nune
, .... bulfoad of lludtntl
Cr<>N--country
S:JO 0 * • •.t "Chino' I 111731
Cflan. 8roneon. Vlncer'll van .,..,.,. A 1-.aoe
boy befrlenda • half·l><MCI
tnd IMllP11 him to run hit
llOrM r•ncll In N-Mt•I·
co
(JJ "Oeedman •Float" G
4:00 0 "WhOlty M-1"
I 1g901 Oudley Moore,
Lar~ N-m•n In blbll·
ca1 egypi , ,., .. prophet
nlrned Herec:flel ......
dropt on 1 dMt1t con...., •
"tton with Mo-and
decidlt he ~' be the
OM lo lead 1111 people out
of 11e....,., 'PO'
8:00 (fiJ "'Bon VO)'fOe, Chtrlle
Brown" ( 18711) Anlmlled
Snoopy end WoodllOClc
IOllow ••change lludenll
Chartlt 8'own, Peoperrnlnt
Ptlly. Llnu• and M•rclt on
•n edventur•lllled tour ol
Engltnd and France ·o·
by Armstrong & Batiuk
CBS leads race
NEW YORK CAPI The 1982·83 prime-time
season is months away, but CBS has been No. 1 ln
the weekly prime·tlme ratings competition Cor 10
weeks In o row ond appears lo be building a head
of steam
CBS won the lhrce-way race for the week end·
Ina July 26 with an averaae ralln1 of lS.9 -the
highest for any network since the seven day period
ending May ?4.
ABC was runner-up at 12.7, a S.S.
CBS did It with the seven hlgheat-raled shows,
lnc:ludin1 lt.3 broadcHL or the MlH Universe
Polileant In llral place. and el1ht of the Top 10.
ABC's "20·20," In el&hth place, was the only
other program a mona the 10 top·rated that had not
been broadcast before.
In fac:t, only nlne or the 65 ahowa surveyed by
the A.C. Nie.I.sen Co. were nrst·rUn profram1. Of
the orlCinal pro1r1ms. ABC'• "ll'1 I Llvlnt" wu
tied for 211t. and an NBC apecfal. "Gre1tetl
Her~ of the Blblt!,'' was No . .a.
The ratloa for CBS' Mt11 UnlvetH PatHnl
prosram wa1 2:5.4. Nltlaen 11y1 that mean• more
than a quarter of the country'• TV-equipped homo
HW at l•ast part of th• ahow.
ABC and NBC each had two of the wMll'a fin
loweat·ra~ 1how1. "The Waltonl" oa CBS wu
No. 81, foUowed by an "ABC Newt Cloffup" c.aHtd
"Kilb•. ft.turn to Auacbwtts," "8.J . and the
Bear''( on NBC, NBC'a "Gamet People Play'' and
"ThOH Amallna Ant malt" on ABC.
II
• t