HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-30 - Orange Coast PilotI
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fHlJ H ~llAY JlJI '( \fl l'tH1 OliANGf COUN TY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Bradley sees OC freeway woes up close
87 GLENN 8COTT ..................
A polltician on an early cam-
pal1n tour of a place like Oran1e
County can learn of It.a problems
in two waya -othen can tell
him or be can find out himself.
Tom Bradley used both
methods Wednesday.
The Los Angeles mayor, con-
sidered a strong candidate for a
Democ ratic gubernatorial
nomination, was guest of honor
Wednesday or the County Club, a
new nonpartisan 1roup or local
political donon. The eroup la
headed by Richard O'Neill, a
wealthy south county rancher
and Democratic leader.
Durin& a prees conference and
later durin& a brief speech,
Bradley expressed sympathy
wit.b some or the county's prob-
le m s. especially congested
freeways.
U be hadn't before, Bradley
allo &ot a first-band leaaon in the
state of the freeway system. He
was about 25 minutes late for the
1atherln1 because his car wu
cau1bt lo traffic on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
Bradley noted that Oran1e
County's freeway problems
were caused because tbe de·
mands of the county's "tremen-
dous growth•• outpaced the
state's abilities to keep up.
"This is just another problem
FOREST OF MASTS -A confusion or ships'
masts is the order of the day at Dana Point
·Harbor. The Orange County Sheriff's Harbor
Patrol says there are 2,500 boats in the water
....., ........... ~ .....
at the county-owned marina and another 350
in dry dock. A harbor patrol spokesman said
there are two-year waiting lists for both
areas.
G~mman goes
wild, kills
Detroit girl
DETROIT <AP> -A gunman
s pra7ed a crowded west aide
Detroit street with rtfle buJJeta,
killln1 an 8-year-old girl u she
stood in front of a candy store,
police said.
No one had been taken into
custody today in connection with
the lnddent, autborttla said.
"I NW two men putt up acrou
the street ln a Upt bh1e car and
one tot out carrytn1 what looted lite a carbine," 11ld Leroy
Fuller, • wttneu. "He besan fir.
ln1 In all d1rec&lona -MO
dear... -at peopl•, bouaea,
store wlndcnn, paaua1 can
an1tbia1 and everytblq. I'd
•tim• ... pt on 20 "'°""""· ..
Tbl .-man and one or two
eompuion1 fled la .. parate
care after the uacldtat ~~ ....... , ........ ..... .
Wlta._ toW :paefc. .. of UM
mea wu • _,..bortiood Ne.I·
deal.
••Jt ...... uaat ... .........
bad traallll la tae an. ......... ID
tM -~~:· ... ~=~ ... .... Oll'9rt ..... un ..
... ""22 ........... ., ...
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...... on ..... L~"~ .. , ............... = -==., ... .,.., •• •
Air controllers
talks to resume
WASH1NGTON (AP) -Amid
new warnlnga about the
ramifications of a strike, air
traffic controUen and govem-
ment negotiators are preparins
to return to Ule bar1alnin1 table
followin1 Uie union'• re}eeUon
by better Ulan a 20-1 marlin ol a
Newport pair
aid UC Irvine
Mr. and Mrt . Rlchard P.
ff au1man of Newport Beach have
given '250,000 to et\abU1b a cbalr
or aphthalmoton at the UC trvtne
CaUfornla t0Ue1• of Medicine.
Thia ii the trnt endo•ed chair to bil .. tabllthed on I.be campua.
Haueman, who bu Mrved oa
lhe board 9f trustees of the
Colle,. ot Medicine since lf!~
.. Id be hopee the endowment ww
eacouraae othel'I to add to tldl
support to auitaln tit• conUmaal
advancement Of •Y• dlHue rt·
... reb.
Tbe Marilyn ud Rielaard P • H1u1man Cllalr of
Oplitbal1DOliii1 II INNnl mda 181
la .. of Dr. ltml H. L ICifCM '1 I 11., prol1 E Ill and cMli'_ GI :ru~otop1ttJaa1---.,-
tentative contract.
Tranaportatloo Secretary
Drew Lewis, informed ot the
vote, ureed union leaden Wed-
nesday to belln new taUm •ith
n e10Uatora for tbe Federal
AvlaUoo Admlnlatrallon.
No new bar1alnln1 waa
acbeduJed.
The raUfle1Uoa vote wu a
aolld rebuff of tbe tedtatlve
a1reement reacbed only boun
before a at.rite deadU.ne June 22.
Tbe Prof e11loaal A.Ir Trame
Controllera Or1anl11Uon an-
nounced 85.• percent ot ltl mem-
ben ~ lbe accord wtltl Lbe otf1dtaH1 1bowln1 11,01
•••lnltandetefor.
...... --......... t Robert Poll lllfarme4 C..n ol lbe me. ti•• truaportatlon Hcretary
aa&d bl WM ~t.ed" lbe
CODtrollln a eoetract be eo111ldered "a fair and ..... Wile.::::······ Mellr'd· ... IO M .. Llwt8. ~. OaAoa l11d1n lane laid UM
.. miWm ~--Ud '-'fttl patll• teliUtfftil; .,..... to
lw .• II w1i11=• to melt .............. .......
LrittJllil •Mi ... .._tztr\ra· UGllWll 'llltll ___ _ ........ ===-..... Wt .,.. Mlilt.;-If r t fll. ......... , ..... _°' ... ..... ....•. -~~ ........ ~
'
when you grow so fast," he ob·
served.
But the mayor, on one of his
first tripe to visit Oran&e Coun·
ty's leaders, was careful not to
sound criUcaJ of bow the county
bu evolved.
Cbooeing his words carefully,
be sald tbb county's concerns
about a lack or state represenla·
Uon are appropriate, comparing
tbe situation to Los Angeles
where he said some com-
munilies we re tre ate d like
"stepchildren" when he first
look office in 1974.
Bradley agreed more slate aid
to improve both freeways and
mass transit services ls needed
in Orange County. and wW con·
tinue to be needed .
··1 th i nk g r o wth is a
phenomenen that is not going to
be stopped," he told reporters.
"Instead or standing back and
resisting, we ought to plan for It
and guide il.' ·
Requirements for land de-
velopers to share in the fln.anc-
i n g of new free ways were
pr aised a s innov ative by
Br adley, who added that be sup-
po r l s a bill in the state
Legislature to raise gasollne tax
by two cents· per-gallon.
The mayo r . who bas not
formally announced a campaign
<See BRADLEY, Page AZ>
Reagan 'jubilant'
Budget, tax cuts spell economic victory
WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi·
dent Rea~an, trumpeting his
twin victories on budget and tax
c u ts , predicted a brighter
economic future today and
declared, "America is better otr
today than she was yesterday."
Basking in congressiona! ap-
proval or the key ingredients of
hy economic package, the presi-
dent was flying to Atlanta today
to talk about the impact or his
program and outJine a blueprint
ATnerican
business
declines
WASHINGTON CAP >
American business productivity
fell al an annual rate of 0.9 per·
cent lo the second quarter, a
s harp r eversal of the strong
showing earlier in fbe year. the
Labor Department reported to-
day.
The decline, following a 4.3
percent gain lo the first quart.er.
was yet another indication of a
slowdown in the U.S. economy.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics attributed the
drop lo productivity to a 3.5 per-
cent decline In output that was
accompanied by a 2.6 percent
decrease in hours worked from
April through June.
Productivity, which measures
how many goods and services
the private economy produces in
each hour of paid working time,
declined at an annual rate of 0.4
percent in the fourth quarter or
1980, then advanced al an annual
rate ol -4.3 percent from January
through March.
In the quarter ending June JO,
the Labor Department s aid, pro·
ductlvity in all private business.
including £arming, increased at
a 1.1 percent annual rate. The
agency said farm productivity
gains con tributed to the in·
crease, although the Bureau or
Labor Statistics doesn't provide
separate figures for rarm pro-
ductivity.
The seeond quarter decline in
the non-farm business sector oc·
curred despite a strong showing
in manufacturing , which reg·
istered a 4.2 percent gain oo an
annualized basis.
The agency said the decline in
non-farm private business out·
put was the first since the 12.1
percent drop during the second
quarter or 1980, and the reduc·
tion in hours worked was the
firs t since the 0. 7 percent decline
in the third quarter of last year.
During the first quarter, non·
farm productivity increased at a
-4 .3 percent annual rate as output
went up 7.9 percent and hours In·
creased 3.5 percent.
All or the figures are seasonal·
ly adjusted and stated in the
form or annual rates or in-
creases or declines.
Compared with the second
quarter of last year, producUvl·
ty increased at an annual rate of
1.5 percent as output rose 3.2
percent and hours went up 1.7
percent.
for gi ving more power to the
slates
"America JS more confident
today than s he was a day ago,''
a jubilant Reagan said. "And
economic possibilities for all
Ame ricans are gre ater than
they were 24 hours ago. America
now has an economic plan for
her future "
The president ora g1nally con-
sidered the speech lo the annual
meeting or the Nation al Con·
* * *
ference of State Legislatures u
another forum to put more heat
on Congress to pass his tax-cut
plan.
Instead. it was more a victory
celebralton.
Reagan's budget and tax cull
both the biggest in history -
passed decisive tests Wednesday
j n Congress. The Democrat·
dominated House and the
Republican·run Senate approved
I Stt REAGAN, Page AZ)
* * *
Here's how you'll
fare with tax cuts
WASHINGTON CAPJ -Here.
for some typical taxpayers, JS
the tax cul which would result
fro m e n actm e nt of major
(ea lures of the le gislalJon
backed by President Reagan
and approved by the House and
Senate.
It will be up to a Senate-House
conference to work out a con-
gressionaJ compromise version
or various other details.
Beca use e a c h t axpayer 's
financiaJ situation 1s different,
the site of acluaJ tax cuts will
vary according to details of each
taxpayer's case.
However . to illus trate the
generaJ distribution or the tax
cuts among taxpayers al various
income levels. the fi gures shown
here, provided by congressional
Lax specialisL'i, have been com
puled to cover hypothetical tax
s1Luataons of :
TYPICAL TWO·EARNER
FAMILY OF FOUR : A typical
two·earner, family of four with
deducUble expenses equal to 23
percent or thei r basic income
from wages or salary, with
figures covering tax rate cull
a nd reductions in the tax law's-
m a r riage penalty affecting
many working couples
TYPICAL ONE·EARNER
COU PLE. A typical one-earner
couple with deductible expenses
equal lo 23 percent or t heir basic
in come from wages or salary,
with Cagures cover ing tax rate
cuts
The figures are for 1982, 1983
IStt TARLE, Page AZ>
Israelis co01b hills
for Palestinians
TEL AVIV, Is rael <AP)
P olice and kibbutz m e mbe rs
combed the rugged Jerusalem
hill s toda y for a squad or
Palestinian guerrillas who am·
bus he d an Is rae li bus and
wounded four people. Is rael said
it viewed the attack as a serious
cease·fire violation.
One or the casualties, a 23
year-old pregnant woman was
shot in the stomach and the
bullet killed her 7-month-old un·
born baby, doctors reported to·
day.
The ambush Wednesday ni~ht
followed a dogfight betwee n
Is raeli and Syrian je ts over
Lebanon. E ach side claimed a
kill, but only the downing or t.he
S yrian plane could be con ·
firmed.
It was the most serious out·
break of violence since lsrael
and the Palestinians agreed to
the cease·rire last Friday.
Is r ae l Television said two
guerrillas raked the bus with
automatic weapons fire Wednes·
day night as it approached
Maaleh Hahamisb. a kibbutz, or
collective farm , eight miles
northwest or Jerusalem. The
raiders fled into the surroundina
hills, police said.
Near the bus, police said they
found a Palestinian flat and a
wooden cr05s on which was writ-
ten. "ln Memory or Victims of
the Be irut Bombing." a ref-
erence lo Is rael's July 17 bomb-
i ng of Pales tinian guerrilla
headquarters in Beirut in which
Leba non reported 300 Palesti-
nians and Lebanese killed.
Three of the injured in the bus
a tta c k w e re treated at a
J e rusale m hospital and re·
leased, police said. The preg·
na nt woman, Deborah Arnet, re-
m a ined in intensive care.
The Palestinian Liberation
Organization in Beirut claimed
responsibility for the atlack, un-
derlining the PLO's vow to con-
ll n ue attac ks ins ide Israel
despite the cease·fire that ended
15 days of intense Palestinian
and Israeli shelling across the
Is raeli-Lebanese frontier and
Israeli air and commando at-
tacks on Palestinian positions ln
Le banon.
It was the first PLO strike in-
side Israel since the truce.
.ORANGI COAST WflTHfR
Night and morning low
c lo udiness . Otherwise
ha zy s unshine through
Friday. Highs in low 70s at
the beaches lo low 80s in·
lund. Lows tonight 60 to 65.
l~SIDI TODAY
Gun, knife used
in Mesa robberies
Now tlwre'• a reUremnt
home for cot• in Long BfGCh1 in caie ~ pet b aWng Giid
u<>u can't l>Nr to M'9d ldm to
that big cot bo.r fn tlW •kJ.
Page A6 .
Anailantl used a 1un and •
tnlf e ln aeparai. Costa Meaa
robberies Wedlietday, pollee re-
ported.
Klt first, at 10 a . m ., was
Vau1bn'1 Liquor at llU
Monrovia Ave. wllere • man
wearlaa dari trouHr•. hom-
rlmmed 1la11 .. and a dlrt7,
wblt• T-ablr t tbrtaten•d •
woman clerk with a lar11 bunt·
Ins knlf• .
Forced loto the back room, Lbe
clerk ran lnto a restroom and
~•an screamin1. police 1aJd.
The robber scooped $300 from
lbt cub ... altter and drove ott
in a creea Pt.nto.
A sunman conlroni.d clerkl
at Van's Tennls SboH, U8I
Harbor Blvd. 1t e:11 p.m .• poUc.
said. The robber neaped with a
atlll undettrmlned amount ol
cath.
INDEX
...
A.a • • • • • • Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Thurwday, July 30, 1911
Factory
shooting
claims 2
EV A.NSVILLI!:, lnd. (AP> -A
former factory worker wboee
firin1 wu upheld reeenUy by an
arbitration panel opened fire Lo
lbe plant with a 1bot1un, klWna
two ol the panel memben ana
woundin1 three other people,
police safd.
The eunman, Daryl
McReyoolda, 31,, of EvanavUJe,
was seriowdy wounded dwiq a
1unbatUe with poUce, in which
he was bit with 12 abola,
authorities said. Becauae be wu
hospitalized, be was not charted
immediately in the sboolinp.
.. I saw him ho&dln1 lhe 1un at
bis side," said Maureen Fischer,
who was workin1 as a tem·
porary employee at Crescent
Plastics Inc. when the 1u.nman
walked in Wednesday alter·
noon. "But the man acrou tbe
aisle smiled al bim and said
·Hi.' so I didn't think an)'t.hiq
about it."
The gunman went into the
back of lbe plant "and then I
heard gunfire and I got under
the desk," she said.
Mc Reynolds killed Crescent
Vice President Bernard Peak
Jr., 43, and shop foreman Glenn
Stahl, 53, wilb a double-barreled
shotgun and then "cut loose and
started firing al anybody," said
police U . Frank Gulledge.
Two other workers were
wounded. . .........
·~ransport woes cit~d
Bergeson predicts bankrupt state program by 1982
BJ JBaBY CLAUSEN
Of .. ...., .........
Tran.aportaUon, or lack of it, ls
the m01t critical l11ue f aclna
Oranae County In the near
future , a c cording to As ·
semb l ywoma n Mar ia n
Beraeaon. R·Newport Beach.
Mrs. Ber1eson, speaking to
Coata Mesa Rotarians Wednes-
day noon, predicted a bankrupt
state transportation program
when and if Gov. Edmund
Brown turns hls job over to a
new man in 1982.
From Page A1
BRADLEY .. • for governor, was clearly tryine
to keep his options open and
nurture an attitude that he
doesn't belong in any poliUcai
camp. "I reject any notion of
party labels," he said.
However, be said he thJnk.a a
Democrat can win ln Orange
County and he said polla taten lo
April s h owed that h e waa
favored, with strong name Iden· WlcaUon.
"One or the reasons I'm here
today -and I'll be back again
-is to develop personal rela·
tionships so they will know me
as an individual and' I won't
have to rely on paid adve'rtise-
menta or even television apota,"
he said.
"An adequate transportatloo
system," s he warned "la
absolutely euentlal to our
economic stablllty, to ecooomlc
growth and also for our
necessJtles of life."
She said she has no Idea what
the Legislature will do with the
transportation problems in the
upcoming quarterly session.
"We were woefully inadequate
in the first session as far as com·
ing to grips with dealing with
this very difficult problem main·
ly because of the difference~
between the Democrat• a oo
Republicans on how beat to
flnance it.··
She bu found, 1be aald, ''that
projecta already approved. such
as Hl&hway 55 <the Costa Mesa
Freeway) and the Corona deJ
Mar Freeway. no tonier have
a ny funds."
She reminded Rotarians that
the Orange County delegation to
Sacr amento had been successful
winning legislation forming a
new Transportation District
separate from Los Angeles and
Ventura counties.
"There is one problem," she
said. "There ls no money to go
into that special transportation
district."
She said legislation that would
allocate gasoline lax funds for
highway funding was strongly
opposed by the Legislature's
Democratic leadership a nd Gov·
ernor Brown
The assemblywoman said the
slate not only has failed to keep
up with growing transportation
needs, but has fallen behind in
maintenance efforts.
Administration policies de·
signed to move the traveler out
of his car and into some sort of
alternative transportation have
eroded funding once available
for completion of authorized
freeways, she charged.
••For example, the Corona del
Mar Freeway, which was a $4.6
million project, is no"'. more
than a $10 million project."
An eyewitness said that when
the gunman started to leave the
building onto a loading dock, be
ran into Vanderburgh County
deputy Robert Beckham. 40,
who was the first officer to
answer a police radio call about
the shooting.
Hou1e Speaker Tho~ P. O'Neill hangs up the telephone after a
conversation with Pre3ident ~ folUnuing the HOU!e's ap-
proval of Reagan's tax cut package. O'Neill had strongly opposed
the measure.
After his press conference,
Bradley met privately with
O'NellJ and a fe w other club of·
ficials. Then he circulated
am ong the two dozen other
County Club members meeting
at the Santa Ana Country Club
before giving his speech.
omey .............
VIEWS COUNTY PROBLEMS
LA Mayor Bradley
She noted, "The transporta·
lion progr am has Litera lly come
to a s tandsli II in Orange
County."
From Page A1
Ralph Parker. who works al a
bottling plant across an alley
from the rear of the Crescent of·
fices, said the gunman shot and
wounded Beckham, who then
stumbled behind a car and re·
turned fire.
REAGAN DELIGHTED
pact of his economic programs Nancy moved • • •
'Last minute'
federal
She s aid Orange County is
looking for alternative forms or
income for highways but that
without state runding the local
freeway system is in .. a very
serious if not critical situation ...
··About then, a couple of other
officers showed up and they
opened up on the gunman,"
Parker said. "As soon as he hit
the ground, they had him."
McReynolds was taken to lbe
intensive care unit at Oeaco·
ness Hospital where he was Hat·
ed in serious condition with
gunshot wounds in lbe abdomen,
shoulder and arm, authorities
said. His wife and two child.ten
were with him. Their names
were not available.
McReynolds was described by
friends as a quiet, easy-goine
man who was somewhat
depressed about losin1 his job.
"Daryl was the last guy in t.be
world you'd figure would do
something Like that,'' said Susan
Walther, a neighbor.
Five feared
dead in MSI
plant blast
GRANTSVILLE, Utah CAP> -
A series of three blasts rocked an
explosives plant today, de-
molishing most of the buildini
and engulling it in flames, of-
ficials said. Five workers were
thought to be in the plant at the
time, authorities said.
The Mining Services Intern•·
tional plant, 20 miles west of Salt
Lake City, was "blown away,"
according to Tooele County
SberiflWaltSbubert.
The sheriff flew over the build·
1ng this morning and said the
walls bad disintegrated. He said
he saw no signs of life.
Families of plant employees
waited al lbe Grantsville fire sta-
Uoolor word or their relatives.
The first blast was felt at least
15 miles away in Tooele, home of
the Tooele Army Depot, where
ner ve gas and other chemical
warfare agents are stored. There
was no threat to the depot, of·
ficialssaid.
"Moetofu.s heard the exploelon,
but we couldn't tell what It was. It
put my son right out of bed," said
Edwina Mohler, a GrantsviUe
resident.
"We're used to explosions
because Tooele Army Depot
bJutl ali t.be tlme,'' M ra. Mohler
said, "but not at night. So we lmew
sometbin1 mi1ht be wron1."
The lniUal blul occurred at
4: 30 a. m . Aa fire apread to
bunkers and tanks contaiAlnt
solid and pluUc explosives, a
second explOllon rocked lhe plant
about 6:30 a.m. A lhird eaploaion
occurred at about 7:201.m.
ORA QICOAaT
similar versions of a 33-month,
25 percent tax reduction and
House-senate negotiators settled
final terms on $35 billion in
spending cuta.
In AUanta, Reagan faced an
audience or 2,400 legislators and
others concerned about tbe 1m·
Senate panel
backs Casey,
pushes probe .
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
William Casey is direcUn1 the
CIA today with a new but limit·
ed endorsement from a Senate
committee that nevertheless is
going ahead with ita inveati1a-
tion of him.
Two days after the Senate In·
telligence Committee hired a
special counsel to run its Casey
inquiry, lbe panel unanimously
pronounced him not "unfit to
serve" based on what is oow
known.
President Reagan said that
s hould end the matter, but the
CASEY PROBE
I MONTHS LATE -A7
Senate panel also unan1mously
agreed Wednesday to continue
investigating the 68-year-old CIA
director, whose past business
praclices and management of
the spy age.ncy have been ques-
tioned.
The committee vote c ame
after five hours of teslimooey by
Casey behind closed doors. One
source called the declaion "ob-
viously a compromise between
two sharply divided factJons .
The beauty of this statement is
in the eye of the beholder."
Chairman Barry Goldwater,
R·Ariz~\ who Jess than a week ago caued on Casey to reaip,
delivered the panel's decialon to
a crowded news conference in
the Capitol Crypt. He said:
"Based upon the staff review
to date, and Mr. Cuey's lerfllby
testimony today, it ls the un-
animous judgment of the com-
mittee that no basls bas been
found for concluding Lbat Mr.
Casey is unfit to serve as direc-
tor of central intelligence.
"The staff will follow up on
pointa that need clarilicatlon."
Moments later, Goldwater
strode oil, saying: 'Tm 1o1.n1
home." left at the mlcropbonel,
the commlttee's rank.inc
Democrat, Sen. Daniel
Moynlban of New York, an·
nounced that lbe minority panel
memberl would hire their own
special counlel and Cuey mlibt
be recalled to t.esWy.
Dilly Piiat c1 .. 11fted ed¥~ .. "9 1t4/142·N11
All other claparttNnt8 M2-4321
Thomu P. Haley
,_ -CNool bec:utwe O!lic-
RO~r1 N, WH<I ,,_
Mlch•I P Harvey ~0.-111'
L. Kay 6c)hu1t1 °"-'"~ Ktniwtt! H. Goddard Jr ~0.-
ThOr!IM A. Murphlne .....
Bemttd k hulmen ~
0-.H.Loo. ............ ._
C.OI A. Moora .,,.., .....
MAIN Mftel
QO W11t .. ,, Sf , c.te Mffa, CA
M•ll eclf,.H .. , IMO, C•t• MfM, CA .,.,.
, ... ,.tftl ,,., 0r ..... , .... "'*'tlllllf c-v ... ""*' 1io. .. ,, Ulv~••tllOflt, ... 110"•' m<Mt.• ., td wefllH-11h ~till May -. rtJr6dvte4 wltllowt "9t lat,..,,..,,,.~ (Ojlytlflll ••~·
on their states. b L d "Today the federal govern-Y 0 R 0 R
menl takes too much taxes from WASHING TON (AP> -The
the people, two much authority reception Community Services Ad·
from the states and too much ministration approved millions
grants probed
liberty with the Constilutioo," LONDON CAP ) _ First lady of dollars in federal granta ju.st
Reagan said in excerpts of hls Nancy Reagan, who said she before Ronald Reagan's In·
speech, whlch were released in cried al Britain's royal wedding, auguration as president, an in·
advance. ended a hectic week of socializ-ternal government audit says.
"My administration," he said, ing today and the longest Government investigators are
"is committed heart and soul to separation from her husband in questioning a host of grants ap-
the broad pr in cl p I e s of their 29-year marriage . proved in lbe last three days of
federalism" -or restoring Mrs . Reagan left for lbe Carter administration. Act·
power to lbe states. Washington at noon _ 4 a.m. ing agency inspector general
' ' The go v e r n m e n t in PDT -aboard a u .S. jet that Eileen Siedman sent a copy ol
W ashlngton has finally beard occasJooally serves 81 Air Force the report to Seo. Orrin Hat.ch,
what t.be people have been say-One. Before her departere, Mrs. R-Utah, chairman of the Senate
ing for years -we need relief Reagan stopped briefly at the Labor and Human Resources
In national standings, she
said, California is now la.st in
s pending for new highway con·
struction and in maintenance
construction.
She urged Rotarians to begin
writing letters to legislators and
other state officials to find
m ethods to fund vitally needed
tr ansportation.
Eventually , s he warned .
Orange County will Jose its busi·
nesses and industries to other
s ta\es or counties with less
critical highway congestion and
repair problems.
from the oppression of big gov-U.S. Embassy to meet wives of Committee, which is investigat-
ernment." Americ an diplo mats and ing spending by government S hJ In opening the conference servicemen. ' agencies. tar at ete
Tuesday, Florida Rep. Richard As she left the building, ' The Community Services Ad·
Hodes, the group's president, dressed in a red suit, she spotted minlstration, which replaced the mveS ki•dney
said states do not have enough people waving and applauding Office of Economic Opportunity e-
money or flexibility to maintain her from the windows of a four· as the nation's leading anti-h•
services at current levels in the story town house acroaa the poverty agency during the Nixon tO JS SiS ter
face or federal spending cuta. street. The first lady stopped administration, is marked for
He said states will wind up and waved back, visibly moved extinction. NEW YORK CAP> -A star
with less money than expected by the warm reception. athlete has risked a promlsing
from the federal government "They've a ll been so won· Russ say Br1·1.·sh college football career in giving and will not be spared enough derful to me," she said, her eyes up one of hls kidneys to his ail·
from Washington's rule. misting. mask cn·ses ing 14-year-o ld sister in a
A young man called from one transplant operation doctors
in a victory statement to re· of the windows, "Did you enjoy said appeared to have suc· porters Wednesday, Reagan pro-your trip to London?" MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet ceeded.
claimed "the beginning of a new Mrs. Reagan c uppe d he r news agency Tass accused the "In terms of the immediate
renaissance in America" and hands and shouted back, "It's British press today of trying to aspects of the operation, it is as
said improvements in the been delightful. I've enjoyed djstracl attention from Brita.In's completely successful as we
economy should be obvious by everything so much." economic and poUlicaJ crises by would have liked it to be,"
year's end. giving extensjve coverage of the Dr. Stanley o. Kogan said Wed-
8 h Noke fuel topic royal wedding. nesday. ut e cautioned that his pro-In a report on Wedneaday's He said the kidney taken from gram wu a three-year plan and NEW DELHJ, lndia (AP> wedding of Prince Charles and 7 Id G c bell thaf "we wouldn't be reachin° Lady D1'ana Spencer, Tass said, 1 -year-o regory amp
a1s f e The United Statea and India began funcUonlng five minutes our go or three years." opened secret taiks today lbat "The carnival in the streetl of alter It was implanted in bis liB·
Reagan received a telephone could end America's 18-year London was staged while fires ter. Celeste. The seven-hour
ca 11 from hi s d e feat e d monopoly on nuclear fuel sales are still burning in Liverpool operation began at 9 a .m . at
Democratic rivals in the House: for a U.S.-bullt atomic power and Irish hunger-strikers die the Albert Einstein Division or
Speaker Thomas O'NelU Jr., plant near Bombay. behin~. the barbed wire of Long Montefiore Hospital. Ways and Means Committee ______________ __.. ....... ..._ _____________________ _
Chairman Dan Rostenkowslrl of
Ullnols, Majority Leader Jim
Wright of Texas and Majority
Whip Thomas Foley of
Washington. "I 'm a little
stunned myself," the president
told O'Neill. "You 're no
pushover either." ·
* * * From Page A1
TABLE • • •
and 11184, the final year of a
phased-in tax cut.
TY,.ICAL ~···· .. AMIL.Y Of' NV• I•-TuClll TUC.C TaCll .... ... ..... :: .... ....
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U.S., Canada
end 'tuna war'
OTTAWA <AP> -The United
Stata and Cao.Ida have formal·
ly alped a tnat.y lbat ended a
, two·)'Hr dl1pute over tua-
fublna rl1bt1 In th• Paclflc Ocean .
Under the trut.J, Ca111dJan
ud U.S. lblPI caa nill bi I.be otber eo\aatr1'1 territoa;Jal "aten., Md MU tbeU' ealebit ill
eJUter Canadian or Amertun
porta.
1'
I
A~WI .....
Mt/es W Lord, center. chief 1ucfge of tht' l ' S District Court at Mmneapolts . was named 011/stand·
mg federal trial 1udge this Wet'k by tile Assoc1atw11 of Trial Lawyers of America m San Francisco
The group also honored Superwr 'court .Judge Reginald .\1 Watt Butte County . Calif . right . and
:vew York State Court of Appeal~ A.((Sociate .Judge ./arnt> D 1"uchsberg. Albany left
Michelle Man,in
fined for theft
Micht>lle Triola Marvin.
th<' Jllll'd lover who sued at•
tor L ee Mar vin for
"palimony," has bet>n fined
$:!50 <tnd placed o n six
months informal probation
aftt•r pleading no contest to a
pl.'tl) lhdl charge
MuniC'ipal Court Judge Jill
J akes imposed the sentence
1n Bc\crlv Hills after M!>
Manin l'n.tered a plea or no
t•ontcst to the misdemeanor
charg<•
Mi. Marvin. 48, was arrc!>l
ed last September by pri\ alt•
Sl'l'Urll\ officers a t a Bt.'\'{'rl\
111 lls dt·partment store anrJ
arcu!->ed of tr) mg to shoplift
three s~l'alers and t~o bras
,·alut'd at S208
The \\lfc or si nger ,
song" ntcr and <iclor Paul
William<; has gl\'t•n birth to
the roupll''.., first child. a l>o).
a s pokesman for Williams
bas :.aid in Los Angt>les
Katie Williams, 30. gavl'
birth to 6·µuund , 5 pounce
C'hristo1>her Cole Williams al
('(•d ars Sinai Medical Center
on Tul'sda~ aflt•rnoon. l>aid
<>pokesman Sand' Friedman
The tO·n·ar old <hear and
(;ramm\ ·,,·inner author of
... ul'h ... ongs as You und Me
\ga1nst the \\orld and
Wl"' e Onl~ Ju ... t Rl•gun'
and his \\lft• have bt•t·n mar
ried for '>£'\ t•n years
Forml•r l ' S /\gr 1cultun'
St•t• rdar~ Earl I.. Butz sa) s
ht"ll tr) lo '>l:t} out of the
h nu•hght no" that hl"::, bet•n
rt• I t• as t' d r r om ,, Ceder a I
prison after st•n mg 25 days
for int•ome tax e\ as1on
Bull 72 \\h o \\a s
Bob Keeshan, known to
m1lhon:. of children across
:'>forth America a:. Captain
I\ a ngaroo. 1s progressing
fo \'Orably 1n his reCO\•er y r r o m a h l' a r l a l l a c k . a
hospital spokesm an Miid
However, th(' s pokesman
at El ob It' o k l' (i C' n er a I
llospilal 1n Toronto s aid
Keeshan sttll 1!-> not allowed
an\ ,·1s1tor<., othc•r than his
1m.mt'd1alt· fam1h
K <'eshan. S..I. ... urfored the
attack a~ hl' arrived at
Toronto International Airport
t'arlier this·month
<1gr irulture Sl'cretary under
former Presidents Nixon a nd
Ford. su1d 1n a lt'l<'phone 10
tervit'\\ from Indianapolis,
said ht• w..i.., ·gelling a little
rest· at his W('sl Lafayette
home·
Weather stays steady
Little change in temperatures seen for Southland
Coastal fortJcasl
• L19P'lf ••r••blf' •tnO\ oec.omu"IQ
we't to iouth .. ,t 10 to l 1 eu'°'' with '1
10 J toot wind w•11e s •ftt>rnoort end
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Mot.UV M.#W'l't' .,., trw •tt.r-noon
Calif or11ia
Thttt wlll ~ n1Qht and mornlnQ
low <loud\ ••ong the to•st, but
Ollltrwl .. lhe S.OUIN-0 Wiii W laor
lhrouoh Friday, with 11111• ttm
peulurt t Nnot
Oran09 C-ly hi911• ••II t>e on IN
1-10\ •I the lie.Che•. low 110s In
tano L-. 1n lhe Mil
lnl•nd ¥•11.-Y highs .will be '" the
IOI •nO 'O\ 10..,, 1n tne •ow 60s
Mount.in' ••II tvvt rugll'\ tn the
llOs Lo• .. 0 to Sl Nort-n _,, h>Qll> 'It lo IOI
I-• U to 1S Soutnern O.'W!rl hlQh>
105 to 115, IOW\ I Ho IS
Nor-thern •nd C•ntr•I C•lltorn1a
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642•6086
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Th ursday. July 30, 1981 5
Art's 'rear guard'
Sawdust exhibitor sculpts metal, works with acrylic
By STEVE MITCHELL oi .. OMty ...... l18H
"I 'm an atavistic folk
artist a throwback, · i.ays Dion
<pronounced Dye-on> Wright as
he applies u blowtorch to a steel
gill on a s uspended fish
sculplW'e
Wright's "\'ogi Motel"
<,cul pture features the s teel
lru mework of u motel room with
u stnglE' p1e('e or furniture a
bed of sculpted natls
Wright is at the booth daily,
demonstrating his artistic 1kl111
with a blowtorch, aa well u his
girt for intelligent gab.
· · 1 was an introvert the first 30
years of my lire. but now you
can't get me to shut up," he
laughs, turning down the volume
on his portable radio, tuned to a "I'm like the rear guard in
stead of the avanH~arde," he
sa ys. though much of his work
exhibite d al the Sawdus t
Festival in Laguna Beach is
hardly conventional.
• 1 h<l:,e are fun." he :,u1d of his
mun~ w h 1m:.1cal creations.
"Some people like them better
than the serious s tuff and I don't
mind A laugh 's be lle r than
nothing."
jazz s tation. '
Take hrs "Fully -harnessed
Bamboozler ." for example A
gnome like creature fas hioned
fro m a piece or driftwood he
fou nd on the beach
The clawllke arms. madt>
from bamboo roots. hang use·
lessly to its chunky s1dt>s as tht>
creature sits sus1.>l'ndt•d from a
leather harness
H 1s .. Boncmob1le l" 1s Just
what the title 1mpltes bleached
bones hanging by s lrrng.
But 010n Wright's "seriou:i
bluff" isn't so bad by 1belf
Hts steel M'ulptures include a
lar~c hermit c r a b emerging
from its ·see through" shell,
a nd his giant · Stag Beetle"
looks real enough to ('rawl off its
stand
M l'I al sculpture 1:. not the only
nwc11um in which thl.' 43 year·old
a rl1"t works His acrvlic works,
1'1>1 lagt•s. mobiles. ca.rtoons and
pt•n and 111k draw111gs are dis
pla) l'd at both t>nds of his open·
air booth near the water wheel
<it the Sawdust F(•st1\'al
Oallyt"IMCSIAotf.._.
num ~\ '1!/h/ !l.'i('.\ h/1111 '/ttn 11 111 '"" 11111~1111111 l111wlt1•, ,,,, ·'' 11/pl1ir1· "'
a / 1sll
"
He's been an artist for more
than 3> years. Wright says. after
a tte nding school al UC Santa
Barbara.
·'Got a degree and every·
thing," he chuckles, pulling ~
insect-like goggles back on hi$
forehead. "But I don't think you
need a degree. In ract. I had to
unlearn a lot or things It took
m e 15 years berore I felt I really
knew what an artist is."
He says art has been his "only
visible means of support" for
the past five or six years. adding
l'Very artist must go through an
a pprentice period.
.. And that's either with a
master artist as your teacher , or
at the company store "
Wright took t he "company
s tore" ro ute. working as a
printer. garbage collector. book
s alesman. fishe rman. plumber
and a half dozen othe r trades to
support his artistic pursuits.
The veteran artist, who has
exhibited his works since the
Sawdust ope n e d in the
mid 1970s. says there is no
formula to become a successful
a rtist
·You have lo hnd your own
way through the m aze ... he says.
firing up the blowtorch for
another go at the steel fish.
Health
cutbacks
begin
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 -The
firs t effects of the austere Los
Angeles County budget were felt
as the Departme nt of Health
Ser vices closed eight communi·
ty heaJlh centers. eLi minat~ all
but preventive medicine in 32
more and ended surgery and
medical services al Long Beach
Gene ral Hospital
The cuts were announced last
month, as part of the depart·
ment 's compliance with orders
from the Board or Supervisors
trying to balance the 1981·82
budget with less money than it's
had in years
But health ('enter clos ures and
changeovers went into effect
three days earlter than planned
Wednesday
Drexel
Sofa and
Chair
ISALEI
Save up to 50°/o on floor sample
· Sofas and Chairs
Finer Fabrics! Superior upholstery!
Lower prices!
H.J.GA.RRETT fURNIJURE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
HOU"li Mon. thtu T'tturw. 10 a.m. toe p.m. 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
Fri. 10 a.m. 10 9 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to l::IO p.m. COSTA MESA 148-0275
!
. • . .. •
s Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 30, 1981
Game
'fixing'
charged
NEW YORK (AP) -Five
men, loclu~ a former reserve
1uard oo the Boston Colle1e basketball team, have been ac·
cused of flxinl the outcome of
some al the school's 1978 and
1979 games, lncludJn1 one with
UCLA.
The indictment banded up by
a federaJ 1rand jury In U.S. Dia·
t.rict Court, in Brooklyn Tues·
day, saJd the men conspired to
fix the polnt spread on games
and reap profits through well·
fed well-placed·bets.
Accused in the scheme were
James Burke, of Queens. who
has often been named as the
suspected mastermind of the
multi-million dolla r heist of
money from a Luftha nsa
Airlines terminal; Ric hard
Kuhn, the former player ;
Anthony and Rocco Perla. of
Pittsburgh, and Paul Mazzei, a
convicted drug dealer.
The indictment provided no
further background on the men.
The FBI wa s expected to
elaborate at a news conference
late thia morning.
All the men were in custody
and were sche duled to be
arraigned on the charges today.
The lndJctment was brought
here because most of the key
m eetings occurred in Queens,
which is under the jurisdiction of
the Eastern District federal
court located in Brooklyn.
The three-count ind ictment
said the five men, along with an
unindict ed co-conspirator
named Henry Hill, illegally used
i nterstate commer ce ''to
influence by means of bribery
the outcome of basketball games
involving the Boston College
varsity bas ketball team and to
profit therefrom by wagering on
those games.··
The indictment alleged Kuhn
was paid S2,000 a game for his
participation in the scheme.
Games cited in lhe indictment
i ncluded t he 1978 meetings
between Boston Coll ege and
Providence College on Dec. 6;
Boston College and Harvard on
Dec. 16 and Boston College and
UCLA on Dec. 23.
.~ .........
SPACE TEST Columbia space shuttle astronauts Dick
Truly cleft 1 and Joe Engle view instruments during a test at
the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The tests are part or
the schedule for the second lirtoff of the shuttle . scheduled
for Sept. 30.
Lebanon gas crisis
cau·ses violence
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> -
The fuel shortage caused by
Is r aeli attacks on a major
Lebanese refinery has led to
price-gouging, electricity ration-
ing, hijacking of nine tanker
"trucks and at least five deaths in
fights at gasoline stations ,
Beirut newspapers have re-
ported.
The Israelis hit the refinery at
Za hrani on the southern
Mediterranean coast during 15
days of attacks on Palestinian
guerrilJa targets that ended in a
cease-fire last Friday. Refinery
officials estimated damage in
the millions of dollars and said
repairs would take weeks.
The northern refinery at the
port of Tripoli has been reac-
tivated to handle the country's
fu e l needs, but nine tanker
trucks were confiscated by the
Giants, a Christian militia, the
Rape fought
independent newspaper An-
Nahar said.
It said the hijacking forced the
government-owned electricity
company to impose rationing
because the trucks w~re carry-
ing fuel oil for the company's
generators.
Factories and businesses have
been crippled by the s hortage,
and some workers ar e unable to
get to their jobs because many
gas stations have closed their
doors.
Other stations held on to their
reserves, and the black market
price for a gallon or gasoline,
which usually costs $1.25, has
soared to between $3.20 and $6.
Police sources said five people
were kmed and eight wounded
as angry dri'vers lining up at
gasoline stations pulled guns. In
other cases, shootouts resulted
when a driver attempted to
jump a line. In some Instances,
local militias have been called
SANTA CRUZ <AP) -A peti· in to restore order.
lion signed by 01ore than 15 per-The ministry announced late
cent of the city's eligible voters Tuesday that Syria had pledged
Health co~romise OK'd
Family planning isolated; teen 'restraint' urged
WASJIINGTON (AP> -House
and Senate conferees have
1t.rucllt a coinpromt.se on health
that leave1 f amlly plannln1 out·
aide the block·lfant structure and lets up a demonatratlon pro-
ject de1i1J1ed to promote aexual
ae1f·dl1clpline amon1 teen-
a1er1.
·'I knew this would be the
touehest budeet reconclUaUon
i111ue we would have," aaJd Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R·Utah, aa he and
Rep. Henry Waxman, D·Callf.,
announced the agreement. .
Hatch said he had just re-
MGM Grand
• opens again
after blaze
LAS VEGAS (AP> -Quietly,
with none or the fanfare that
marked its gala opening in 1973,
the MGM Grand Hotel has re-
opened eight months after 84
people d ied in the nation's
second worst hotel fire.
The reopening Wednesday, a
day ahead or schedule, was kept
low key in marked contrut to
the Hollywood premier e setting
that marked the December 1973
debut of the massive Strip re-
sort.
"We are unofficially open,"
sa id hotel spokesman Don
Usherson. "They wanted to let
the place be slowly broken in.
There was no official time for
opening the doors or whatever."
The hotel underwent a $50
million remodeling in the wake
of the Nov . 21, 1980 blaze that
also left 700 persons injured. A
significant addition is a com-
puterized $5 milUon life safely
system that hotel officials claim
has made the MGM Grand one
of the safest hotels in the world.
The hotel, whi<:_h ·~VI have
2,851 guest rooms when a 762·
room addition is completed this
fall , "is sold out for the entire
weekend," Ushersoo said.
Actor Cary Grant, who will in·
troduce singer Dean Martin
when the hotel's s howroom
opens tonight, was the first
guest to check in Wednesday
morning, Usherson said.
ceived a letter from President
Reaaan "sayin1 that all Ullni•
con sidered, they prefer we 10
ahead with our compromise"
even thouab the administration
did not like the fact that family
planning was not put into a block
grant.
The compromise sets up three
block grants -for preventive
health, health services and
primary care -to cover dozena
of programs previously financed
Individually.
F amily planning would re-
main outside the block-grant
structure for three years under
the agreement, which requires
that a study of the program be
conducted under the auspices of
the secretary of health and \
human services.
Migrant health centers and
im munizalion programs for
children also would remain In-
dependent.
Tuesday's agreement a lso
walva the a1e limit of M for the
post of surgeon general. Reaaan
Is plannln1 to nominate C.
Everett Koop, a Philadelphia
sur1eon and outspoken opponent
of abortion, to that post Koop ls
several mont.ha over 84.
Tne major stumbUn1 block to
a settlement or the health Issues
had been a struggle between an-
ti-abortion forces and t hose
favoring freedom or choice ln
the matter of abortion.
The agreement includes $30
million for a demonstration pro·
ject fashioned mainly by Sen.
. Jeremiah Denton, R·Ala .. pro·
vldlng $10 million for research
on teen-age chastity and up to
$6.15 million for counselin1 oo
the prevention of promiscuity.
The agreement specified that no
abortion counseling was to be of·
fered, but said if a teen-ager and
parent or guardian both request-
ed it, they could be referred to
an abortion-counseling facility.
Study sees decline
in anti-Semitism
NEW YORK (AP) -Bias
against J ews in America is
declining "as an older. mor~ an-
ti-Semitic gener ation" gives
way to a younger, less pre-
judiced one, according to a
pu bile opinion poll.
The national survey, com·
missioned by the American
Jewish Committee, found that,
for the most part, "positive im-
ages of Jews are more pervasive
tha n negative ones ...
Ruth Clark, vice president of
Yankelovich, Skelly and White,
which did the survey, said this
week 45 percent of the 1,041 non-
J ews inter viewed were "rel·
atively free of anti-Semitic
beliefs," compared with 34 per-
cent in a similar' study conduct-
ed in 1964.
margin of error, according to its
authors.
Although American J ewish
Committee officials greeted the
study as good news, Mrs Clark
said a sizable segment of the
public remained anti-Semitic.
Daniel Yankelovich told re-
porters that the decline in anti·
Semitic bias was attributable
not to individuals changing their
attitudes but to the fact that the
younger generation was less
biased.
"People don't change, society
changes," said Mrs. Clark.
Yankelov1ch said increased
toleration of Jews has gone
along with a general rise in
American social tolerance dur·
ing the last two decades.
He conceded that vandalism of
Jewish homes. businesses and
synagogues seemed to be in-
creasing but said violence and
crime were rising throughout
society.
T he survey also indicated that
Americans are more worried
than they were 17 years ago
about the power Jews wield m
business and about strong loyal-
ty to Israel.
has prompted the Santa Cruz ci· to deliver 1.5 million gallons of
Games cited in 1979 included ty council to establish a com-fuel oil to the electricity com-
those with Fordham on Feb. 3; mission to develop programs to pany to help ease the increasing
Few special events were
planned to mark the reopening,
although hundreds of invited
guests reportedly were "comp-
ed ," or stayed free of charge.
The first performance of the
new "Jubilee" show -a fund-
r aising benefit -was staged for
invited guests Tuesday night.
Twenty-three percent were
found to be prejudiced against
Jews and 32 percent had no
strong feeling about them one
way or the other. The neutral
group included "people who live
in areas wh er e there aren't
many Jews and who don't have
much contact with them,·· said
Gregory M artire , a
Y ankelovich, Skelly vice presi-
dent.
The survey, whi c h used
personal interviews conducted
earlier this year, has a 3 percent
"As prejudice toward Jews
has gone down, there's been an
increase in American reserva-
tions about Israel," Yankelovich
said.
St. John's on Feb. 6 and Holy reduce r a pe and assault on number of brownouts and power
Cross on Feb. 10. women. cuts.
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council , planning commission,
school and college districts and county
' gov~rnment than the ~ l'llf
At 11a.m. Lila Smith_ gave us her film,
At 11 noon she showed
the prints to her bridge game.
Now you con hove your 110. 126. or 135 color prints in LESS THAN 60 MINUTES with Individual
quality control given to every shot. You con also get superfost service on all of your other photofinishing
needs.
Even better. just bring in your roll of 110, 126. or 135 print film with our speclol coupon to any IN & OUT
PHOTO STORE and you will get t l .00 OFF THE DEVELOPING CHARGE.
NEWPORT BEACH
Bayside Center
1048 Bayside Drive
(714) 759-8056
IR'V1NE
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l4252 CIAver Drive
(714) 857-0161
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(213)~3.'°4
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FOR INFORM~ TION CALL 213-73~2396.
t
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. ' I
Medfly battle may
be boon for pests
I
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
California's battle against the
Mediterranean fruit Cly could
leave the state vulnerable to
other pests, state agriculture of-
ricials said.
State experts have been
moved from other insect control
projects and have spent an
estimated $50 million in the ef·
fort to wipe out the medlly.
T hat e ffort, said James
Koehler, chief of control and
eradication for the Stale Depart-
ment of Food and Agriculture,
weakens programs to control the
pink bollworm, which attacks
cotton, and curly topped vtrus,
which can ruin a wlde range of
crops. ·
Also, the state is cutting or
holding back efforts to limit
Dutch elm disease, tree-
ravaging gypsy moths and
brown garden snails.
''We're coping, but just bare-
ly," Koehler said. "We really
have a skeleton cr ew."
California produces about half
t h e nation 's fruits and
vegetables.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 s
In the fight against the medfly
on Wednesday, four helicopters
completed the second of at lea.st
six aerial pesticide a pplications
over a 267-square-mile infesta-
tion zone south of San Francisco.
No more spraying was planned
until Monday.
Officials say they won't be
able to judge the effectiveness or
the spraying for several weeks.
Navy honor guard escorts body of Lt. Stephen
Musselman at San Diego after flier's body was re-
.............
turned from Vietnam Former wzfe .'Vorma walks
along.
Medfly project spokesmen
also said they would start refer-
ring to the police names of peo-
ple who have ignored warnings
to str ip garden fruits and
vegetables. Nearly 50 two-day
warnings were issued Monday
and Tuesday, saying if trees are
not stripped after that period,
residents could be fined $500 and
sentenced to six months in jail.
Nader raps service at phone hearing
HITS RULING -Attorney
General George Deukmejian
has c riticized the state
Supreme Court for r eversing
the death sentence of David
Murtishaw. convict ed of
murdering three USC stu-
dents in 1978.
The stale has fought pink
bollworm for several years,
Koehler said. "We're trying to
keep it out of the San Joaquin
Valley and it keeps moving in.
Last year it established itself in
several spots ...
At 's Garage and Sea Bags
Heavy duty Canvas Bags in shapes and sizes 10 111 any occasion
Seams are double s111ched 10 provide a
hfer1me of durab4hty All Sea Bags are water repellent
and feature a shoulder strap for easy carrying
SANTA MONI CA <AP) -
Consumer advoca~e Ralph
Nader has told the Assembly
Utilities and Energy Committe~
-studying complaints about
General Telephone -that a
cilizens' watchdog committee
would have kept things from get-
ting so bad.
Nader said that if such a com-
mittee had been formed years
ago to oversee public utilities,
••the situation may never have
reached the level of utter dis-
ALS GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644 7030
SHUTIERS CUSTOM QUAUn SHUTIERS
Designed,
Finished
Installed
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABlE
ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY ·
DIRECT PRICl!SI C•ll (714) 548-8841 or 548-1717
19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA '¥J.6'Zl
gui delines for the commission. satisfaction wi th service that
you have today."
The Assembly Utilities and
Energy Committee. headed by
Assemblyman Mel Levine, D-
West Los Angeles, is studying
General Telephone Co mpany's
proposed $381 million rate in-
crease $291 million in 1982, $90
million for 1983. <General
Telephone serves portions of the
Orange Coast area. l
increases, which must be ap-
proved by the Public Utthlies
Com mission , it does have
legislati ve authority over the
PUC and could take information
from the hearing into account in
establishing future legislative
David E Anderson, president
of GTE of California. a lso •
testified Tuesday. saying a pro-•
gram b under way lo improve
ser vice on Los Angeles' west
side and in other areas.
Direct ar collect.
642-4321 to subscribe to your
hometown paper. the Daily Pilat While the committee has no
direct authority over such rate
SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE
k I 11 SHOP MOSKATEL S FOA ALL VOUR
1 a c 1 -:: .. ~;:.·G PARTY CRAFT AND FLORAL
HOME DECORATING
WICKER
WALL SHELVES
Perfect fOf any room S8.88
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
PARTY TIME SAVINGS
SELECT GROUP
PARTY
GOODS
SELECT GROUP
ASSORTED
RIBBON
50% OFF 1.88-3.88
FOUNT AINW ARE
by Anchor Hocking
A. SUNDAE 66•
8 . SODA as•
CERAMIC ~'JQ t p
f:IGURINES .,.c_. ------------
C. BANANA SPLIT 66•
Asaorted Stytes
•2.88
A. FOLDING CHAIR
White bllk9d eNmel with oolor9<t 1388 ooahlon (r9d, yellow o.-grffn)
8 . FOLDING TABLE
white beked enlfMI 2488 with white pedded top
CRAFTY SPECIALS
18 YDS. LARGE
BUMP
CHENILLE
0......wtthC'*llh
~~
~~ 2.44
POMPOMS
V.toue~ ..
PLASTER
MINI-PINS
Ptlint them youf'Mff
end wew them
With ptlde
8~.99 3/'1 00
COTTON 44
ACAYUC .H
BLOOMING
SILVER OR GOLD
METALLIC
SILK FLOWERS
reg 99·2.39
50% OFF
ASSORTED CLOTH
BUYS
SELECT GROUP
PLASTIC
FLOWERS
5/*1.00
CLOTH
LILY-OF· THE
DRIED PALACE VALLEY
FLOWERS
40% OFF
ROSE reg. 59 bn
s1•1 .oo 3/'1.00
..
A. 22" BUBBLE WREATH
*4.88 reg
7.99 •
24" BUBBLE WREATH
;799 *7.88
8. t • BUBBLE GARLAND
reg.
9 99 •s.aa
BE SURE TO SEE OUR MANAGER'S SPECIAL
Sate enda Sun., Auguet 2
...,..,_TCMll llACH CIMeTOS l ~AUNA TOMAMC::a
(lt l)IJH'41 ,,,.,Ml,.... canut ... u a 1•n>11M111
LAlll'AOA MNOllOO LA •IA
•• ,......... ,, ... "'··· (Jt4)4'>UfJ . llCOMMOO
Crt., P4Mlt t
.
l
I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur1day, July 30, 1911
LENA HORNE
Beauties listed
Some not household names
NEW YORK lAP> Whal do Victoria Principal, Jaclyn
Smith, Jacqueline Bisset, Susan Sarandon, Dayle Haddon,
Lois Chiles. Brooke Shields, Cristina Ferrare. Deborah
Harry and Lena Horne have in common?
All might not be household names. but they lead a
Harper's Bazaar study of the most beautiful women in
America, according to the Daily News.
And all. including Miss Ferrare. a model. and Miss
Harry. a rock star. sa~· they don't consider them selves
beauties.
"It's not me. it's the makeup and hair people." s a1ct the
61 ·year-old Miss Horne.
"To me. it ·s not such a big deal. .. said the 16·year -old
Miss Shields. "The one thing I might like to ha ve in stantly
is perfect posture ...
Said Miss Harr~ .. "I've always loved turning myself in-
to someone else." JACQUELINE BISSET
Social security for cats
L ong Beach center will take care of unwanted pet
LONG BEACH <AP > Can't
keep your cat anymore but you
don't want to send him lo the big
sand box in the sky? The Cat
Retirement Center in Long
Beach will take care of your cat
for the rest of its life.
The retirement center, af.
filiated with The National Cat
Protection Society. is a non ·
profit organization. The center
charges $100 lo take in your re·
tiring feline and guarantees that
the cat will not be put to sleep.
An additional S3S is charged if
the cat does not have up-to-dale
blood tests for leukemia and
other fatal cat diseases.
Debby Gravely, a kennel
worker and technician at the
center, said: "We encourage the
owners to come down and see
the cats, give them treats, pet
them, love them."
-But sometimes the cats pine
away. not able to adjust to the
new setting. "It's too often that
people bring their cats down and
forget about them." she added.
Ms. Gravely said there are
many reasons why owners
choose to leave a pet with the
center. The most common one is
moving and not being able to
take the animal with them.
Cats can die of a broken heart,
Ms. Gravely added, saying that
usually takes about a month
alter they are brought Into the
center. "If the owners would
just come down and spend 20 to
30 minutes a day. two or three
times a week," it sometimes
helps the cats adjust.
"But, if the cat is quite old or
obese, then they don't have
much of a chance lo survive,"
she said. ..The stress of being
brought in here tends to shorten
the life span of cats that are old
or overweight."
Most of the cats brought into
the center are available for
adoption. People wishing to take
in one of the furry creatures are
No n-profit agency
boards felines
fo r modest f ee
thoroughly checked to insure the
cat will receive a good home,
Ms. Gravely said. "We just real·
ly go to a lot of great pains to
make sure," she added.
··For a small donation per
month we will keep the cat and
put him under the heading or not
adoptable.''
But. she added, "We feel
personaUy that the cats should
be put up for adoption." Ms.
Gravely said that no matter how
much care the cats get at the center it cannot equal the atten-
tion the animals used t-0 receive
from their owners.
·'The only thing they lack here
is the amount of attention that they were getting: i~ they could
get that it would be like home,"
she said.
But some cats survive a long
time in the retirement home.
Tiger Junior has been with the
center since it was founded 13
years ago by C. Richard Calore.
Tiger Is almost 20 years old,
said Ms. Gravely, adding that
the usual lifespan for a cat is
about. 18 years.
About 500 cats are at
the protection society building,
which includes a clinic, place·
ment center. the retirement
center and section of exotic cats.
The placement center accepts
any healthy, neutered cat which
is more than 6 months old, she
said. Now, the youngest kitten is
8 and a half or 9 months old.
··During the winter months
and early spring, we place more
cats than we take in," Ms .
Gravely said. "Throughout the
year , most of them get adopted
out.''
Signups set ·
for disabled
Officials at Orange Coast
College have set aside Aug. 14 as
a special registration day for
physically disabled students who
may be attending the college
this fall.
The fall semester begins Sept.
8.
The special Aug. 14 registra·
lion will be conducted from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. in Room 105 of the
counseling a nd admissions
building on the Costa Mesa cam-
pus .
Rehabilitation and guidance
counselof's will be available to
assiat students in planning their
schedules.
Here11 Good New1l NO MORE FLEASll On Your Pet or In Your Homel
UlAt,.m., ..... , ,,., O•I a1HL1 ... CMAA .... ., ..... ,.,, ce• .... n T .... pest preW.. • • •
1:.T'~~ .................. .
AGAINST: • unit work1on1ofe. 1llen1. ultro1onic woves
• sofe lo humon1 & pe11
• u ... onty, watt• power Nows 5 9so
• no speclol ln11ollo1ion
• peala elimlnoled In 2 10 6 weeks
(714) 661-9191 (714) 966-2999 p;;flYRol Sales
...... --------~---.._---------~
.
starts Friday, 9:30 a.m.
many llmlted quantities ... not all s izes may be available
In each grouplng ... colors and styles limited to stock
on hand, so shop early for best s election!·
• 1n our
Huntington Beach
store
women 's sportswear
26 JUNIOR SKIRTS .
92 JUNIOR TANK TOPS
., JUNIOR TANK TOPS
41 fllSSES'PANTTOPS
41JUNIOR PANT TOPS
21 lllSSU' SHORT SLEEVE TOPS
121 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS .
43 JUNIOR CAfllSOlE TOPS
51111SSES'VESTS .
~JUNIOR SHIRTS .
29 MISSES' POLYESTER PANTS
29 LARGE SIZE PANT TOPS
2'7 JUNIOR PANTS
17 LAROE SIZE SWEATERS
13 JUNIOR JEANS ..
11 LAROE SIZE PANTS
31 fllSSES' BLOUSES
42SKIATS ......... .
25TOPS...... . . . . . • .
30PANTS . . .
31 WHrTE BLAZERS
dresses and coats
• 15 HALF-SIZE DRESSES ANO PANTSUrTS
t HALF·llZE DRESSES .
ff7 JUNIOR AHO MISSES' DRESSES
7 HALF·SIZE DRESSES
71 JUNIOR AHO MISSES' DRESSES
15 •SES' DRESSES
33 JUNIOR LONG DRESSES
maternity wear
NOW
3.98
3.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
5.98
5.98
6.98
6.98
6.98
6.98
6.98
11 .98
11.98
13.98
14.98
..14 .•
14.98
39.98
NOW
5.98
. 9.98
9.98
14.98
14.98
19.98
19.98
NOW
17MATEAHITYTOPS. . 4.98
I MATlRNrTY DRESSES . 9.98
lingerie, loungewear
NOW
15 HALF SUPS 2.98
17PAJAMAS ........ . 3.98
11GOWNS .... . . . . .. 5.98
25SLEEPTEESHtRTS 5.98
21 LOUNGEWEAA . . . 5.98
23SOFTOUPllAAS . . . . 7.98
22 CONTOUR BRAS 5.98
33 SOFTCUPBRAS 9.98
women's accessories
NOW
51 BEL TS . 98o-
43 TUBE TOPS (ACCEqOAIES OEPT.) 1.48
130LASSCANOLEHOl.DERS 2.48
•DAHBK•LEOTARDI . . 2.98
171TATIOHIRYINAT1N .................. 3.98
41 TU8"lRTS(ACCUS.DEPT) . . . . .. 3.98
47 DEAAfOAP SHOES (ACCESS. DEPT.) . 4.98
21 CA.SOLE sm . • 8.48
33 UPADAtu.ES (ACCESS. DEPT.) 8.98
21UNLINEDJACKm . . 7.98
31DAN&KlfPLEOTAAOS ............ . . 9.98
28L!An4ERHAND8AGS . 11.98
infants and toddlers
NOW
42 CAl8 8"Em. . . . • . • . • . • . . . . . . . .. . . . 9lc
11 •ANTS' QIFTIETS . . . . . . . • . .. . 1.98
17 .. ANTl'IW!ATEAI ....... •... . ... 1.98
21TOOOLIERIOYl'TANKTOP8 ......... 1.98
••ANTl'IHORTllTI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.98
2'7TOOOLIR IOYI' IHORTRTI ........ 2.98 a TOOOLIJll QR.I' IHORTKTI ........ 2.98
• TOOOLP QR.I' 1W11W1M ......... 2.•
11TOOOLIJIQR.l'TOPI ............... 3 ••
•TOOOLP....,..,_IM .......... •.'8
17TOODLP IOYWWTAUI ........ •.48
GlOOOLIRGILl'IUNDftlllll ...... 4.41
buys for girls NOW
~-GIU'IOml-HMIHIOCKI ....... ~lie
•um.IGILl'CM>PTOPI ........... 1.41
Uum.IGILl'IHOftTI ............... 1.•
10IM-..WTI ................. a.•
••GIRLl'TOPl ...................... 2.•
t1 M.._.TMKTON ............... 2,.
•UTTU ..... IHOWrllTI .....•.... a.•
11 um.I ..... ....,,,. ............•••
.17UTTLIGILl'IHOftTI: ..............•••
buys for girls
NOW
4e PAJAMAS 4-14 4.48
42 LITTLE GIRLS' HEAL THTEX1"' TOPS 4.48
42 LITTLE GIRLS' SHORT SETS 4.98
91 BIO GIRLS' SHORTS . 4.98
e2 BIG GIRLS' SWIMSUITS 4.98
34 BIG GIRLS' TANK TOPS 4.98 *> LirrLE GIRLS' TOPS 4.98
31 BIG GIRLS' JEANS 4.98
~BIO GIRLS' SHORT SETS 4.98
15 BIO GIRLS' TOPS 5.98
43 BIO GIRLS' SHORT SETS 6.48
58 PAE· TEEN SWIMSUITS 6.48
buys for boys
NOW
29 CREW SOCKS 58c
25 LITTLE BOYS' SHORTS 2.48
~FAMOUS MAKER BEL TS 3.98
21BASEBALL JACKETS 8.98
'7 S.SLY. COLLARED SHIRTS 10.98
'Z'TLSLY. WESTERN SHIRTS 5.98
13 S. SLY. COLLARED SHIRTS 5.98
7 BEL TEO DRESS SLACKS 7.98
7 S. SLY. SHIRTS 7.98
buys for men
NOW
29 L SLY. POL VESTER SHIRTS 2.98
17S.SLY. SHIRTS 3.98
14 S. SLY. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 3.98
21 L SLY.SPORTSHIRTS 4.98
'Z7 S. SLY. SOLID COLOR SHIRTS 5.98
t BACKGAMMON GAMES 5.98
41 S. SLY. COT /POLY SHIRTS 6.98
'Z7 S. SLY. TROPICAL SHIRTS 6.98
11 S.SLY. PLAJDSHIRTS 7.98
13 LSLY. WESTERN SHIRTS 7.98
39 L SLY. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 9.98
11 S. SLY. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 11 .98
15LSLY. PLAID SHIRTS 9.98
31JEANS ..... 13.98
I SPORT COATS 18.98
shoes for the family NOW
111 WOMEN'S SANDALS 4.98
12 CHILDAEN'S CASUAL SHOES 4.98
205 WOMEN'S SPORT SHOES 5.98
73 CHILOAEH'S CASUAL SHOES 5.98
57 WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES 5.91
19 BOYS' SUEDE JOGGING ~OES 5.91
26 MEN'S SOEOE JOGGING SHOES .. 1.98
28MIN'SCASUALSHOES .. .. . ... 9.98
•WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES .. 10.98
32 WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES 14.98
12 MEN'S NYLON JOGOfNO SHOES .. 15.98
1tWOMEN'Slk>OTs.: ... ..11.98
34 MEN'S CASUAL SHOES . .. . . .19.98
YMEN'SDRESSSHOES ... .... ' .. . .... 2 •. 98
28 WOMEN'S WOOO HEEL SHOES. .. 24.91
12MEN'SCASUALSHOES .... . .. 19.98
yardage and notions
NOW
7t CERAMIC PtH CUSHIONS • . . . . . . .ec
17WOOOFRAMES ...... , , •.. , ............•.•. lie
21 LATCHHOOKAUGCAHVASU ...•.. 1.48
17NWINOMACHINECOVEAS .................. 1 .•
29A!ELSELAITIC10YOS . . . . . . . . ...•.. 3 .•
MtYOI. POL Y/COTION 8ROAOCLO'n4 .•.•...... 1.•
• YOI. COTTON IHUTMJ . . . . . . . .. . ..•...... 1 ••
17 YDI. TROPtCAL PAINTS ..... .'.. . . . . . . . . . . 1 •• 17~10f6 fllAMIC KITS ........ . .. . ....... 2.41
71 YDI. 'mOPtCAl PRtNT8 . . . . . . . . . . . • . 2.•
for your home
r NOW • 71WAIHCLOTHI ....•............•.••.•........ 1.21
17 WAIHC&.OTMI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1.41
•HANDTOWILI .............................. I.II
t1 HANDTOWILI .............................. 2.11
?llATHTOWIU ............................... 1.21 I
111ATHTOWILi ...................... ·'·.... . 3.• .
~Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave .
at Brookhurst St. • 963-973\
act U '4 ... 'fW OF w .... ~ ... ---. ... -·---• .. ,.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30. 1981
Senate inquiry into CIA chief six months· late
WASHINGTON <AP> -CIA
Director William J. Casey is not
the first ofliclal tbe Senate has
confirmed /n haste and 1econd-
gue11ed at eisure.
And he won't be the last.
The Senate lntellleence Com·
mittee is conducting ln July the
inquiry it didn't bother to un-
dertake in January. It bas hired
a special counael, Fred
Thompson, a veteran or the
Watergate bearings. to oversee
the Investigation of Casey's busi·
ness past and hls management
or the inteJligence agency now.
·•I expect it to be a thorough
inquiry, but I hope it will be re-
solved in the near future."
Thompson said.
Ironically, most of it could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Instead. the
same committee spent 2th hours
chatting with Casey about World
War 11 espionage and the need to
strengthen the CIA. Then It re·
commended Casey's conf'lrma-
tion to a Senate which approved
him, with little discussion, and
no opposition. The vote was 95·0.
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings, although
there was plenty on the record.
some explored in earlier Senate
hearings when Casey came up
for conf'lrmation a decade ago as
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, later as
undersecretary of stat e for
economic affairs.
Transactions that suddenly
U.'VDER A CLOUD
Wilham J Casey
are dee med worthy of close
Senate scrutiny simpJy were ig·
nored in the CIA confirmation
proceedings. Casey. and Presi·
dent Reagan as his sponsor.
would have been better served if
the whole business had been ex-
plored then.
He almost would surely have
been confirmed anyway. The
Senate is not in the habit of re-
jecting the nominees of presi-
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CARACAS, Venezuela <AP> -Venezuela's
plans to become Latin America's first nation to
buy the sophisticated U S.-made F·l6 jet fighters
are stirring some controversy here and in
neighboring countries.
Guyana, Venezuela's small English·speaking
neighbor i n the northeastern tip of South
America, has formally asked the U S. State
Department to block the sale of the planes to
Venezuela. Colombia , another Venezuelan
neighbor, has expressed "concern" about the risk
of an arms race in the area.
Venezuela has border or territorial disputes
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
although so far it has been low-keyed. Left.wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
summon a special Chamber of Deputies session to
express his opposition to the planned purchase. He
did not give the reasons for his opposition but
another member of his party mentioned the high
cost of the planes -$13.5 million each.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez, a
leading figure in the opposition Accion
Democratica Party. told reporters that the an-
nouncement by the government that it plans to buy
the planes "has caused me some concern · · But he
refused to elaborate.
The government says the controversy is at
least premature and by all means unwarranted.
"We are not embarked in an arms r ace." said
President Luis Herrera. who is a member of the
Social Christian Party. He added that Venezuela
has "no aggressive plans" against any nation.
"What we are doing is merely to renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed forces to bring it
in line with the country's needs." he said
At present, the Venezuelan air force's most ad·
vanced jet fighter aircraft is the French-made
Mirage·5 .
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• We are establishing a pool of small mone~ len-• e ders to assist us in the final stage or completion or e
• our chilling feature film '"The Hunting Season'" •
With already 4200 PAY /CABLE-T.V. stations
• begging for rilms along with Network Local T . V. •
• gobbling up movies so rast it has caused an •
almost franl1c demand for pictures
• So gel on the bandwagon with a young and am~ • e bilious movie studio here m 0 C and enJOY some e
handsome profits for yourself both now and m the •
• future .
• • • • • • 714 / 957-4086 •••••••
CONVENIENT. DISPOSABLE
COLOPl.AST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We r<JW carry tl'le complete COLOPLAS T i.ne-the
iarges1 setting <!•!>()()')able 0$lomy appltances on lhe
world E11e<yth1ng '°' colostomates 11ecstomates and
unnafy ostomates-atl ....,1h convenient COlOPlAS T
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MOUL TON 'LAZA '"AR MACY
23115 Moulton Parttwey, Legune Hiiia
(NHt to El Renc:tto Mtlfketl
A ~HOM[ HEALTH CAR[ CENTER
1 )f'I .'\: \1< >'\. I· HI ~· ,.\ \1 1; I'M
s :\ I l . I { I > ..\ 'r I < > 1\ \ 1 I I ' 1\.1
_____ ......
I
dents, partic:.uJarly newly elect-
ed ones like fteagan
Jimmy Carter ran into heavy
Senate opposition when he tried
to install Theodore C. Sorensen
as head of the CIA. but It never
went to a vote Sorensen
withdrew.
The Senate never has reJected
the nominee of a new president
NEWS ANALYSIS
aao. "Mr. Casey has cut corners
when he considered it to be
necessar y to business profit,"
Seo. William Proxmire. 0 -Wis ..
$aid then. "He has wheeled and
delAled bis way into a personal
Panel should have checked Casey's
record at confirmation time
to the first Cabinet of his ad·
ministration. The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member. but the
job ranks at that level.
And if the committee really
had gone into Casey's business
record at confirmation time.
much of the controversy that
surrounds the CIA director now
would be old stuff, with little im·
pact.
It was old stuff when Casey
was confirmed. The lawsuits in-
vol vlng him as a director of a
failed New Orleans farming cor·
porallon were filed rn 1973 and
came up briefly before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee approved his nomination
lo the State Department post.
Other items of contention in
his business background were on
the record when he was con-
rirmed for the SEC JOb a decade
fortune, sometimes at the ex·
pense of his clients."
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resigna-
tion of Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations the
agency's top spy When Sen.
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz .. the
Int e lli gence Committee
chairman. said he thinks Casey
should quit or be fired, he said it
was because Casey "appointed
an inexperienced man" to that
sensitive position.
It was not inexperience that
did m Hugel; 1t was the dis-
closure that two former as·
sociates had accused him of im·
proper business dealings. But
for that. Hugel presumably still
would be at the CIA , as inex-
perienced as ever.
Reagan repeated this week his
ex press ion of confidence in
Case)'. hi s Whit e House
spokesman calling the CIA chief
a distinguished public servant.
There's something familiar m
that, and in the whole episode.
Fuur years ago, Carter budget
director Bert Lance came under
Senate criticism, then Senate in·
vcsligation of his practices as a
banker He had been confirmed
after a cursory Senate inquiry.
which didn't see or even seek the
FBI report on his nomination, or
the findines of federal bank tx·
a miners.
A look at the record could
have foretold the controversy
that event.ually cost wnce hia
job. At the time. two of the
senators who didn't look pro-
posed that the Senate create a
new system for non-partisan In-
vestigation or nominees to major
positions. It was supposed to
provide detaHed investi1attve
reports prior to confirmation
votes •
The two senators aren't there
any more The new system isn't
there yet
Pollution
rules
blocked
RICHMOND CAPI -A federal
appeals cour t has blocked a
series of proposed federal reg-
ulations governing Industrial
water pollution for railing to
weigh costs against benefits. .
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court ol
Appeals said the Environmental
Protection Agency had ignored
the intent of Congress in draw·
ing up the regulations.
Neither EPA nor industry of·
ficials were immediately availa-
ble for comment.
1
& •Oram Cout DAIL v Pl';O!/Thurtday. July 30, 1881
Parking restriction
may curb accidents
The Huntington Beach City
Council acted with understand·
able impatience last week when it
approved a parking ban on the in·
l a nd side of Pacific Coast
Hi ghway between B eac h
Boulevard and ihe Santa Ana
River. This is the so-called
"Blood Alley" stretch where
many injury accidents have oc ·
curred.
City officials were prepared
to enforce this parking ban even
though the required approval or
Caltrans had not yet been ob-
tained.
It is questionable whether
a ny citations written without
Caltrans' approval would stand
up in court.
But the council's unilateral
action undoubtedly prodded
Caltrans on the urgent need to
e liminate some or the traCCic
hazards along "Blood Alley."
During a meeting last Friday
with city officials. Caltrans of-
ficials concurred that the inland
parking ban is justified. The ban
is expected to eliminate problems
caused by beachgoers darting
across the highway between their
cars and the sand.
Also, the hazards posed by
vehicles that pull abruptly onto
the highway from inland side
parking spots should be reduced.
To further cut traffic prob-
lems posed by roadside parking
on this busy stretch. Caltrans
agreed to a beachside parking
ban between 8 p.m . and 5 a.m.
daily, hours of poor visibility.
These actions won't erase all
problems along this stretch of
highway. It remains to be seen
whether the new parking ban can
be enforced with citations alone
or whether more costly towing
wi ll be required.
Also. the elimination o f
roadside parking may require
some beachgoers to park farther
from the sand or to pass up the
beach a ltogether. Additional
parking lots should be developed.
· In the meantime, the addi·
tional inconvenience seems a
modest price to pay when the
possible lives saved and the in -
juries prevented by the new
parking ban are considered.
Fireworks dilemma
Probably the least productive
topic discussed by the Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa City Coun-
ci ls in their annual joint session
was that of Fourth of July
fireworks .
Newport council members
petitioned t heir Mesa coun-
terparts to ban the sale or "safe
a nd sane " pyrotechnics , a
measure the Newporters ap-
proved several years ago.
How, argued the Newporters.
can the supply of "destructive
devices" be kept from residents
of the oceanside community
when civic organizations in
neighboring Costa Mesa sell
them ror export.
Costa Mesa ofricials shied
away from that one.
True, Costa Mesa was
plagued by an inordinate number
of fireworks blazes this season.
But council members note those
fires were c aused by bottle
rockets. long outlawed in Mesa.
Nor can Mesans sell or use
firecrackers. cherr y bombs.
torpedoes or other explos ive
rireworks.
Legal are s moke bombs.
some Roman candies. sparklers
and a variety of showering foun-
tain s considered safe when
handled by most.
Irvine. Huntington Beach
and the county also allow the sale
of the safer pyrotechnics.
So if Newport officials feel
the need for more effective con -
trol of fireworks. it will have to
come from within. The options
appear to include stronger and
presumably more expensive en-
rorcement, re-examination of the
ordinance and possibly a strong
program of education and control
through the community associa-
tions.
Festivals boost Laguna
There's probably not an
Orange Coast resident who isn't
aware three artfestivals are under
way on Laguna Canyon Road.
The blue a nd white Laguna
municipal trollies are packed with
tourists and festival-goers. the
restaura nts are full , as are
downtown shops .
The main attraction is the art
exhibits at the Festival of Arts,
Sawdust and Art-a-Fair. entering
their third of seven weekends.
And while local residents put
up with additional traffic conaes-
tion and parking woes, no one can
deny the festivals pring needed
revenues and a r eputation to
what has long been touted as an
Art Colony.
Last year a lone gate receipts
from the Festival of Arts meant a
half million dollars to the city's
budget. The city owns the land up·
on which the festival is located,
•
and therefore takes a cut of the
gate entry fee.
The city also derives benefit
from sales tax revenues generated
by individual artists at the three
festivals.
And spinolf income from vis·
itors staying overnight after the
Pageant of the Masters at hotels
means additional bed tax -more
income that goes into the city
treasury.
An early check with officials
at the three festivals shows atten-
dance -and sales are up this year
over last.
So while Lagunans must put
'\.IP with substantial inconvenience
during the festival summer
. season, the benefits help saJve the
pain.
And come September. the
town once again is turned over to
t he folks who live there.
Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Ptlot. Otner views ex pressed oo tnis paqe are those of their autnors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv•I·
ed. Address The Qa11y Pilot. Po. Box 1560, Cost& Mesa, CA 92626 Phone 17141
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd I Thief trap
An Englishman named John W.
Fisher has come up with what loob
as tbou1h it ml1bt be the ideaJ
money baa f« a bank 1neuenie.r.
ll'a riUed to do these tbblp lf a
thief snatches it: Grab tbe CUI,rtt•a
hand IDd bold on. Blow a poUce whll·
tie. 1'1re • blank cartrldae. And ex·
tend tbne steel arms eacb etcbt feet
loq IO at can't be carried throullb a
doorway or thrown out a window.
Q. WMt atate b.Q tbe mo.t eolJe1•
1rad..._ per capita?
A. Oolarlldo baa tbat d1ltiac:tioD -
wltb 11.• pereent. Unleu Y°'l •ant tit
coaet U. Dlatriel of Columbia M'
at.at. -a.1 percent. Over.U, tM 50' at.ala npart H percent.
IA "-t"'*1 la a town called ''1t.'•
TbeH'I • "Nlaet1 Sl•" lD loutb
Carolflia, .., ...... IA Petlftl,tYIUlla, a
"S6" in Arkansas. a "17" in Ohio and
a "30" in Iowa.
Another of those uncommon words
for common lhings ls kerf. It'• the
cut made by a knife or saw or torch.
Q. What movie has been rerun the
moat times on k>cal TV stations?
A. "Casablanca."
Australia la the nation Where the·
mott people per caplta -75 percent
-own thelr own homes.
That baseball auperatar Henry
Aaron u a lad wu not permitted to
play b11eball on Sundays. Hla
mother, Estella, 1&id no.
Tile hottest game today ln tbe
People'• a.p.ibUc of China la Frt1bee
throwjq,
I e $ 4 0 Ii
MANY SUOTS WERE EXC®(,[D
&rM Tll. CRIMINALS WED£
APPRE~tNltD IN A ~IC#SPEED
CHA~E m~ DOHNTONN
MIAMI.
er
-rnaE RMIVES WERE:
M>UNDED AND fOOJ2
U~WAV PA1f2<l. ~
W£QE ~USM£D OORIN6
---T~E~OC
CAPrURE.
RX.KE SAV ll4EY
~flSCATED MOQE ™AN
30 LBS. OF CALIFORNIA
ORA~~~
Corporations hear watching
NEW YORK -It seems like a very
long lime ago that a few people not
very many -got upset when Ronald
Reagan said he really couldn't see
anything wrong with American com-
panies bribing foreign officials a nd
othe rs to win export contracu.
It was actually ooly 18 months ago,
during a debate of Republican presiden-
tial candidates in Manchester , N.H.
"1'his so-called bribery abroad . . . "
Reagan said smilingly, making it clear
that he thought a buck was a buck and
we s hould get 'em anyway we could. He
was -as he is in most things -as good
as his word, and the White House's
special trade representative. William
Brock. is now pushing for a very ai1nifi·
cant weakening or the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 19'77.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for granted in 1981 The
Reagan adm inistr ation obviously
believes that the buainess of America is
business.
They also believe business. The gov-
ernment is now operating on the as·
sumption that corporations operate in
the public interest -it is impolite these
days to suggest that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
The new attitude is: If American
companies say they must pay bribes to
oper ate overseas, then it must be true
a nd the laws should be changed; if
American companies say they would be
hurt by voluntary codes warning
against the misuse of baby formula,
then the government must support them
as a matter of free-trade principle; if
American agricultural corporations say
they must sell grain to the Soviet Union,
then embargos !>hould be lifted, nc1 mat·
ler what the Russians do an Afghantstan
or any place else; 1f American 011 com-
panies say that they must have higher
and higher revenues to support new
domestic exploration, then the govern·
~ ------------. , ' RICHARD RIEVES _, '".
ment should cheer them on. even 1f 1t
happens to notice that those revenues
are being used lo buy up old companies
rather tban lo find new oil
HISTORY, HOWEVER, as not on
Reagan's side this tame lltstory docs
indicate that healthy. profitable cor
porations arC' tn the public interest But
that doei-n<tt mean t'orporat1ons
necessarily act in the pubh<' interest
Often they do. but when that happens.
it's a happ) coincidence of their own
private interest and the needs and de
sires of th{· general public.
If you follow the public-interest
rhetoric heard around Washington these
days to its logi<'al conclus1on, you would
believe that Mobil Oil 1s an the business
of presenting uplifting public television
and thoughtful. dismterested public
serv ice m essages o n newspaper
editorial pages
Profit making corporations are. an
fact. the ~~t mechan1<.;m people have
yet devised for the production of goods
and serv1cei. Rut they exist to serve
them selves. lo produce profit for their
owners, few or many Their owners or
m anagers may be moral or immoral.
The <'orporat1ons are a moral, which is
one of th«.> reasons that governments
have always felt compelled to watch
them. IL could very well be in a corpora-
tion· s interest, for 1 nstance, to use 12·
}<'ar·olds m coal mines Gove rnments
have tended to decide that sort of thing
1s not ncl'essarily in the public interest.
That's the point: Business has to be
"'atched Every minute. President
Heagan and has people are undoubtedly
right an encouraging corporations and
arc probably right in their feeling that
re~ulallon of commerce has gone too
far But to let business and businessmen
do whatever 1s in the corporate interest
could lead the country and the com-
panies into a trap.
The current merger mania is an ex·
ample of that trap. GJVen the apparent
rreedom of the moment. rich companies
Mobil and the other oil producers
a mong them are rushing ahead to
buy an) vulnerable smaller companies
they can spot
WHAT ff THE mergers succeed and
tht• marua continues if the govern-
ment just sals back and lets it happen.
One possible and frightening result is
lhE' creation of economic units so big
and powerful that it will almost always
be in the public interest to protect and
pre:;erve them What government -
tonservative or liberal could allow a
c·om bina\lon. say. or Exxon and Du
Pont to go out of business. no matter
how badly managed it might be?
Reagan's ideas of separating govern-
ment and business could actually bind
the m to~ether forever
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor:
This is in response to the editorial in
the July 22 edition of the Daily Pilot re·
garding moped registration. and also to
present m y views on mopeds vs.
automobiles.
I agree that it's fair for mopeds to be
licensed. and I welcome it. Maybe
m oped registration will decrease the
MAILBOX
underage riders who have little or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike.
I realize that mopeds have not been
around long, and many motorists have
reservations about sharing the road
with mopeds. A program is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders as to the rules, limita-
tions. and restrictions of mopeds. A vis-
ible and informative way of informing
people il mopeds are soon to be more
common on frequently trafficked public
roads.
RIGHT NOW, the moped is my main
mode of transport a tion. I am very
familiar with unnerved motorists
changing lanes quickly when they sltht
me, or giving me dirty loob when I
must change lanes. Some even try to
1et their frustrations out on me. either
by honking wildly as they pass me or
keeping close on my tail. I am well
aware of many motorists' lack of
ramUlarity with mopeds, and I certain·
ly drive defensively. l have no choke -
my moped is hardly a match for big
Cadillacs or turbo Porachet. If moped!s are to be regiatered with
the DMV and thus share the roads with
cara, vana. and truckl, it's time the
aforementioned vehicles are very
aware ol UI and are prepared fo drive ·
ln t.be preMOCe of moped.I.
LOJU ENGLlSR
'Creati"e land rue '
To the Editor:
Some 1UA91tiona for deereumc t.be
den1ll)' cm Uae Beeco-Banoinl pro~ct ln
Newport Beaab ml1ht lltclude "creative
Land UM." P'or l.natanc.: •
-A C'tmllery for all the ~n
loldMn wM ao bravel1 defended tbtir
nel1hb0rboodl from the deHloper'1
ambuilb.
-Bib patM, lbtebCNard s-a. ,PlaJ· around 941alpment aad mu1u;aH
headstones attractively designed for the
walking dead or wounded
-PERHAPS A CHURCH s ate for the
developer to commune with God so he is
certain to carr y out His will.
Japanese gardens to offer tran-
quility between oil wells. compressor
s tations, industrial complexes and park
ang structures.
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
to aid the ailing species in the bay and
in the ajr, who will need to adapt to less
restrictive standards or che mical runoff
and air pollution for survival.
A necessary escdpe r oute A sub
marine base would do, as land traffic
would surely be so impacted that such
a n "unsightJy' · alternative is logical.
How about a bulb farm or a holly
farm? When food becomes our only
priority, we could eat daffodils and hol·
ly. carefully leaving the bulbs and ber·
ries, however
Arid for a last resort. an airport Art.er
all, when all else is impacted, what di!
ference would 1l make if we were deaf?
BARBARA CO PE
Fair proble 1ns
To the Editor:
I'd like to ask why there wasn't more
negative publicity given to the Orange
County Fair this year I reel the lack of
sheriffs patrolling the fair caused a lot
or the serious incidents that oceurred In
the fair. Some of them were reported. I
didn't feel there was enough editorial
space given lo the particular problem
so that maybe next year there won't be
such a cause for problems there.
SHERYL NICHOLS
Puzzled
To the Ed!tor: ·
I hear the City of Newport Beach and
the Irvine Company teU us about de-
taUed tramc surveys and EIR.s a nd lben
the county aupervisora and Murry Cable
talk about decibels and I r ad about
nitrous oxid~ figures.
• /,C'll<'TS from reader~ art ~lcomt Thl'
right f() rc>ndt"nse lct1er1 to /at space or
1'hm1nalt hhc•I I~ ,.,~l'rlll'd lAll#S of ·'°'-'
uV>rds or lf"sa unll bf 1111.1ctn prt/t1'crt<'f.' All
ll'ttt1' mu.ti ancludt •lgnl'lturt and ma1l&ng
oddrttt but nomts moy bf WtlNwtd on rt·•
qut'tt 1/ su/f1rarnf rta1on 11 appartnt
P<Ht'll wlll Ml bf ptJbhahtd Lttfer.f ma,~ ~
telephoned to 6.f2..fiVB6 Nom" and phonf
number of thl contntJutnr mu1t bf' oivtn for
~rl/tcalaon J*rJ>OHI
I read about all t he mitigating
rneasw:es lhal are being done and have
been done to make things 0 . K. These
are ver) complicated and impossible to
understand They seem to say every-
thing is being done and everything is
fine .
Wh at I can understand is what l\ap-
pens when I drive Coast Highway, when
I'm trymg to talk when a plane goes
over or when I try to see or breathe the
air on so many days of the year. Can
the newspapers help us lo know what to
do ahout all th as ?
MRS HAROLD DAWES
We niusl be rich
r o thl' Editor
I was simply bug.eyed when the Koll
Company and lhe Irvine Company told
the city how much money they would
get from each hotel and office building
t bey allowed them to build.
I can hardJy contain myself as I drive
past KoJJ Center and Newport Center
and count all the lar ge commercial
buildings We must have a very rich
c ity -more money than we can
possibly ever use!
Can you imagine how rich New York
and San Francisco must be?
KEITH LATCH
Round Robin
To the Editor:
It seems t.o me that Irvine's proposed
expansion for Newport Center, and its
compromise promise of improvements
to the city's general traffic problems.
are just exactly the problems its ex-
pansion program will generate. A
"Round Robin" situation!
WUI the quality of life i.n Newl)Ort
Buch really ~ Improved?
FRANC~ GANNON
Mucb applause ror tbiff who cleaned
up the bl)' and harbOr atta over the
weekend: and many bool ror thole wbo
left the tons oft.rub. J .V.
.
I
Or•nge CoHt OAILY PILOT/Thurad1y. July 30, 1981 ".
R11]ings endanger basic American freedoms
Whatever your politlca, It la hard to
accept PhJllp Agee aa an aareeable
fellow. For 11 years up to 1968 he was a
CIA apy and for the next L2 years to
date he's been an anti·CIA fink who
makes his living and spends his Ume
publishing the names of CIA undercover ,.,.,.\ , ~ .. r' ,-•• -.-.,-, ... --~z,
operaUves in foreign lands. A mall who
has spent his adult life first as a sneak
and a snitch and then as a turncoat is a
person it's not easy to stick up for.
the Unlted States." They're tellin1 ua
that we have a con1tituUonal ri•ht to
get ln the jalopy and drive from Clncln·
natl to Houston but that when we decide
to vacation In Acapulco or Madrid we
do so only by s ulferance of the State
Department.
LIKE fttJSSIAN CITIZENS It appears
only those or us who will behave as the
government waot.s may be given the
privilege of going to foreign climes.
Since most of ue do what we're told.
that's no problem, but liberty isn't
somethine that conventional, conform·
ing people need.
The people who need It are like Jane
Franklin, a free lance writer from New
Jersey who has subscribed to a
newspaper published by the Cuban
Communist Party for the put 15 yeara.
She's been doing it as part or a research
program. not that it's anybody'• buti·
neu why anybody reada anythlne.
However. a new order, just Issued by
the Treasury Department, requires that
Ms. Franklin 1et a license from the gov.
ernment in order to receive her
newspaper
Apparently this can be done under the
provisions or a law passed in 1917 under
Woodrow Wilson. the 20th century presi-
dent with the worst civil liberties rec·
ord. Even this law cannot be invoked
unless a national emergency has been
declared, something that was done in
the case of Cuba way back in 1962. One
helluva Iona emergency. We can sup
pose thut, using the same loatc
employed In the Aeee case. the
Supreme Court will rule that there Is a
difference between the "right of a free
press'' and the fretdom to read
material printed abroad that h11s not
been approved by one of Mr. Reagan's
subalterrus.
THE ACTION AGAINST Agee and
the licensing of readers of Cuban
periodicals has no visible connection
with defense. As the Supreme Court
said in il.15 decision. you don't have to be
engaged in Injuring American interests
as they may be construed by the less
than infallible State Department; it
need only be decided that you "are like·
ly to cause ~erlous damaae to
foreign policy,'' to be punished
The underlying view here 1s of the
American citizen as an lnst.rument of
the governme nt. a person who may
legitimately be punished by a
Withdrawal O( privileges If he doesn't go
along. Lose your pasaport or risk os·
traclsm and disapproval by having to
register if you insist on reading
periodicals some Reaganaut decides it
isn 't in the national interest for you to
read.
T his is the administration that never
stopR talking about gelling the govern
ment off our backs, that is forever
preaching about "r~gulatory relief.··
Whose backs? What kind of relief?
Few outside the American Civil
Liberties Union were moved to protest
when the Supreme Court recenUy up-
held the Carter-Reagan adminJstration
efforts to lift the unloved Mr. A1ee's
passport and squeeze him back from
West Germany where he has been liv-
ing s ince he got booted out of the UnJted
Kingdom as a persona very non grata.
Morning TV must juggk • news, entertainment
MR. AG EE LOST his passport
because he was adjudged to be the kind
of people who "are causing or are likely
to cause damage to the national securi·
ty or foreign policy of the United
States." That was e nough for the
Supreme Court and doubtless it wiU be
enough for most Americans. A recent
Gallup Poll finds. that almost three
quarters of us favor universal "national
service," that is forced donation of
young people's time and labor in either
the Army or hospital work or caring for
old people. A popuJace that will assent
to the taking away of a year's freedom
from an innocent 19-year-old isn't going
to gel riled up over taking away the
passport of a chap who would like to
disrupt the glamorous if somewhat un·
ethical slinky tricks division of the CIA
Nevertheless, this court decision will
make a few hearts sink. To begin with,
it makes a distinction between "the
freedom lo travel outside the United
States" and "the right lo trave l within
Whenever people start talklng about
the ''Today" show or "Good Morning
America." they usually e nd up squab-
bling about whether they can stand the
women on the show or not.
Barbara Walters was the prototype
Viewers either loved her or hated her.
and the ones who hated her loved to
watch the whole two hours of the show
just to enjoy the intensity of that
emotion. That's what's known as "star
quality."
I ONLY WATCH the morning
television shows when I'm on vacation
or in a hotel room somewhere, but I like
them and I find no conflict whatsoever
between them and my morning
newspaper. f:ach makes the other more
interesting. l see people I've read about
and vice versa. Most of the stuff on the
shows isn't very heavy. but who wants
anything heavy for breakfast? If you
listen to or watch them regularly, a lot
of avenues of interest are opened that
might otherwise be closed lo you. It
seems siUy to say, in view of how fluffy
much of their content is, but America is
a vastly better informed nation than it
was before we had those shows.
THE MALE MAN
~"""4 T""4 Slatt\ '' V°'if DOOi tC•H Stot• NNtnt v°""' ~'••I
C09TA-841•1219 , ... ..._ .....
••• .-YtaJ04t5-0401
-c.-~-c ...................... ....,,
TIM _,,, H••ntl"910ft llNch
Commvnlty HllFW<Y Sc'-4 ff.
mlU st.-0 of...., rect. c-.
netlonel .,,,, etlllk orltln to en
ti. rl9'1U, ptlvllegK, 11'"09'-
•nd ecllvlllH .. ,,.relly •c·
CCN'-mr -... elleOlt 10 11..-nu et IN ""'*· II <IM• not dlKrlmlnete on ti.
1>a1l1 of rece, col«, netloftal ot
ethnic ortoln In edmlnlstratlon of lh tcl11u1tlon.I POll<l9s, tcl· mlulon1 POlkltl, schoi.rllllp
~ 10.n ,,_....., -tllllttk
-ot-K,_ -..h•lsttrtcl
11<09••""-
846-2713
cars"bikes·
*skateboards*
trucks*baby
carriages*tea
carts*trikes
rol lerskates •
walkers•toys
Model A's••••
•typingtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
vehicles"golf
carts*model
trains*bikes
"pianos*cars
refrigerators •skates••••••
tf It's got
wheels,
Y.Ou'll move
1t faster In a
Dally Pilot
classified
ad.Cell
M2·S678 and • friendly a~
VIYrWUI
help you
tum your
wheels Into
cast\.
an unuaual dl9COunt atore
SAVE
40°/o
50°/o
On
Name
Brand
Men's
·Fashions
365 Days
A Year
In The Harbor
SPORT
COATS
S4CJ99
Name Brand
100% Poltester
Summer oats
Limited
To Stock
On Hand
Shopping Center ,.
2300 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. CA
(714) 540-8818
Mon -Thurs. 1~7
Friday Til 9 Saturday 1o-6
Sunday 11·5
* Howes
Summer Garden
* Lettuce
Let us serve you with the same quality
that we have done for over a century.
Let us show you the beautiful things we
have collected from the master craftsmen
all over the world.
Let us be your family jeweler.
Turnips
Turn up in the latest fashion jewelry .
Turn up in the best Swiss-made watches.
Turn up with the finest in crystal,
china and silver .
earro($
Carats we have ... in diamonds, emeralds,
sapphires and rubies.
Karats in gold , too.
'"Beets
Howes beats them an when it comes to
quality and service ... it 'sour
personal touch that means so much.
B.U HOWES and SON
FlNE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS
It's too bad people get so emotional
over the hosts and hostesses because
the programs themselves have a life of
their own which exceeds the importance
of the hosts a nd hostesses who come
-AN-DY-RO-ON-IY---i
and go. The "Today'' show is thriving,
but who knows where Dave Carroway
is?
I hear people now saying they like or
dislike Jane PauJey. How could anyone
not like Jane Pauley? I think she's just
fine . She does her job like a little man
She's a bright, attractive young woman
who denies herself the temptation of
trying to look like Miss Universe every
morning. She goes about presenting or
trying to elicit information in an unaf·
reeled straightforward manner. If she
has a shortcoming, it is that she gives
the impression that there are more Im·
portant things in her life than the "To-
day" s how and that she wouldn't want
lo be Barbara Walters if she could.
One problem for the networks has
always been for them to decide whether
their morning shows are news or
entertainment. No one in a network
news division does commercials. Tom .
Brokaw and Jane Pauley don't, but on
the same show Gene Shalit does.
THERE ARE about five ways to at
tract an audience to read or watch
anything. You can offer them advice on
how to improve their health: you can
advise them on how to make money;
you can teach them how to do practical
things: you can divert them with pure
entertainment like comedy or drama;
you can titillate them with material
that arouses them sexually, or you can
inform them about what's going on in
their world. (I know, that's six So sue
me.J
The most admirable way to try to get
an audience is by informing them, but
people in the news business recognize
t hat you often have to borrow some of
the attractive aspects of those other
aud ience-grabbers. Even hon est
news men have an obligation to attract
readers and viewers, but one of the
good things about the newspaper or a
television news business is that the
product is rated by other professionals
by how much it resists the attention-
getters that don't have much to do with
information
"GOOD MORNING AMERICA" and
the "Today" show have been battling
for the lead in the morning ratings race
with CBS's "Morning" show far behind.
The difference between NBC and ABC
s hows on one hand and the CBS
show on the other is that the first two
are trying to attract an audience by giv·
ing the audience what it wants. "Morn-
ing with Charles Kuralt" is .devoted to
te lling people what it thinks they ought to
know. Unless CBS News weakens its
admirable resolve to present the news
without much feature material in it, it
is unlikely to overtake the other two
even when it goes to an hour and a half
in the faJI and adds the knockout blonde
Diane Sawyer to the show.
I hope CBS doesn't weaken, even
though I often switch to one of the
others when the hard news doesn't grab
me And f hate Rona Barrett so much
that I never miss her if I can help it.
HANDCARVED LIGHT WITH COPPER FROM OUR
OR DARK "VICTORIAN" "PILLAR"
SHESHAM WOOD CANDLE·
PICTURE FRAMES HOLDER
From India From lndla
Elegantly elaborate To hold a big
frames are aur· diameter
prlslngly delight· candle.
ful with tOday'a OVAL TRAYS color photos. 1v.· deep 2V1' X4'.lt'
IMAGE SIZE 5• tong ROUND
3.11 TRAYS e· long 1 'It· deep
4.68 4 •1a ·die. 2.33 3' dla. 2· tall 7' long 5' dla. 3.51 2.99 6.81 5Y1 • dla. 4.67
STONEWARE FLORAL TEAPOT l
TEACUP From China
110 CLEAR GLASS
JARS From Italy
Perk up a
garden
party or
Interior
decor.
~-...;;::i,.... Off-white pots
and cups come
with assorted
handbrushed
designs.
POT 5•;,· tall
28 oz. 5 .49
CUP
Jera with rubber
rings and snap-wire
lids to keep the
pasta or coffee.
SPAGHETII OR
PASTA
13" tall 5 .99
COFFEE
1v,· tall 4.79
Floral INLAID OR OPEN·
~----~~--~,-...r-~WORKSOAPSTONE ~~912 15" dla. IOXES From India 5.99 CLEAR GLASS Marbleized, sandy
each HURRICANE earthtone bOxes to store
BOTIOM &
BRASS
CHAINS
13· to 26•
total length
4 V• • dla.
4.78
5'1• • dla.
7.17
ev. • dta.
9.58
------t CHIMNEYS loose diamonds, emeralds
COST Classic colonial or pearls.
PLUS' contours for
OWN tamp or candle DESIGN treatment.
WRAPPING 4 V.. dla. PAPER
Inspired 11 VJ• tall OVAL OA
by the 3.99 OBLONG
world With brass
around u•I ) Inlay. GAGGLE 1 ~·~~~~~....::.:~~-::':~--l~,~~~·~r~~i~~··~~;~·~_2_·_x_3._.'..1~.9~9=..=.e~ac~h~ OF r-GEESE NATURAL HANDBRUSHED TERRA ATURAL PALM LEAF GRASS con A PLANTERS SHOPPERS
BROOM From Mexico From Mexico
From Thick, unglazed earthtone Easy toting
China ptantera hav1 bOld, hand· lor beach,
brusned designs. picnic or
4 SIZES 1v,· to
13• dla. e· to 10• deep
1 .79
marllet·
place.
3 SIZES
2• to 4'
gusset
APP~OX.
to 14· )( 19" 17• )( 22·
4.39 3.99 4.99
Superbly comfortable, beautlfully con·
atructed, lacquered lounge chair haa
four adJuatable back poal11ons and
NATURAL OR
WALNUT f'1NllH
HARDWOOD DINING
attached allde-<>ut front •ectlon. Llll•ts=lt The dfflgn 11 broad and roomy, CHAIR
From
Romania
Sturdy
and
good·
took·
Ing.
~·---~ and mea•urea 49• from
front to back. The •••t ta 20• wide.
HANDCAAV!D RUDDY IROWN
SHEIHAM WOOD From lndla
Intricate woodwork• to hold
phone or plan I, or to
make a •crMn or
room divider.
END TABLES
12• to 22· tall
12• dla.
15" dla.
18• CllL
21· dla..
CLOTHING
SECTION
COTION KAFT ANS
From Pakistan
Gracefully
roomy, long
kaftans In
sprlghtly
batik prints
or slim,
woven-In
stripes.
Both in
assorted
Ruddy brown shesham
wood helps around
the house.
WALL BRACKETS
3 • deep shelf
5'/t. )( 10· 2.99
PALM STAND
32• tall
12· dla.
21.74
LEAF
PANEL
carving
on one
aldt.
M"tall
20' wide
29.19
TRIVETS
9" tong
1.18
IR•CTL¥ A ROIS PROM
SOUTH COAST P.LAZA
IUltm.Y WllT OF IAlmL AT 1313 IU .. f\.DWB
{TAU HllTOL on Off .. FREEWAY)
OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK
MDI. TO FRI. 11 A.M.-1 P.M.
Y!IA • MAita CMa. • NI TalPMOtCll llAIL .... I • MIN '1lll ,..._. ...
IAT. 11 A.M.-7 P .M.
IUlt 11 A.M.-1 '.M.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
QUEENIE
~\·~\
''"" ~ Consumer
\
aides sought
DEAR READERS: The Federal Reserve
Board wouJd Uke to receive names by Aug. 17
of qualified persons to fill nine upcoming
vauncies on lts Consumer Advisory Couneil
(CAC>. The CAC, established by Congress in
1976, advises the board on consumer·relaled
matters. . Biographical information on persons re·
commended far the CAC should include
name, address, telephone number, present
and past positions and speciaJ qualifications
and interests relating to consumer affairs.
The CAC usually meets four times a year
for a day and a half in Washington, D.C.
Members who are not full·tlme federal
employees will be compensated for their
services and travel expenses.
Send any suggestions to Dolores S.
Smith, Division of Consumer and Community
Arfairs, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Washington, D.C. 20551. For
more information, wrile or phone Ann Bray
at the above address (phone: <202) 452·3378).
Do11r 't fall for trick
DEAR PAT DUNN : Does having oil on a
car generator mean that the generator is
shot? A gas station attendant pointed out this
condition to me the other day and recom·
mended that I have a new generator installed
before my car quits running.
G.J .. Fountain Valley
Squirting oil on a starter or generator,
and claiming the need for immediate
replacement, Is an old trick of unethical
mechanics and service stations. The Bureau
of Automotive Repair says that neither a
starter nor a generator are lubricated with
enough oil to cause leaking. Unless a starter
fails to tum over the engine or the generator
doesn't charge (the red Ught on the dash
stays on), ignore this scare tactic until a re-
liable mechanic checks your car.
IRA tax postponed
DEAR PAT DUNN : Are Individual
Retirement Accounts (IRAs l tax free?
There's a lot of disagreement about this
whenever I hear it discussed by my older
friends. AJso. are I RA accounts government-
sponsored?
A.N., Huntington Beach
IRA accounts are not tax.free, but the
tax is postponed until a person retires and
starts to use the money. At that time, the tax
bracket will probably be lower than when a
person is working and putting money into the
account. If any money is withdrawn from an
IRA account before the bolder is 591h , tax
must be paid on It at orcllnary income.tax
rates, and a 10 percent penalty must be paid
on the amount withdrawn. This is in addition
to any fees the savings Institution itself may
impose for early withdrawal.
IRA accounts are not government-
sponsored, nor are they approved or sub·
sid1zed by the federal government. JRAs in
banks, savings and loan associations, or
credit unions which belong to the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., the Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance Corp.. or federally in·
sured credU unions are insured up to $lot,OOO.
The Internal Revenue Service only checks to
see whether the IRA investments meet
federaJ tax requirements, but It does not re-
view tbe suitabUity of the Investment Itself.
• "Got a pro8lem? Then write to Pat ""'l Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting
"' the an3Wers and action you need to
•
solve irn!quilie• an government and
busineBB. Mail your questions to Pat
Dunn, Al Your Service. Orange Coost
I
Daily Pilot, P.O. Box IS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Aa
many letter• G.I possible will be an&wered. but phoned
inquhiea or letters not includitlg the reader's full
Mme, addre.u and business hours· phone number
cannot be conlfMred. Thu column appears daily ex·
cept SundQila."
•Vegas visitors
increase slightly
LAS VEGAS lAP> -The number of vtsitoMJ to
the Las Ve1as area Increased slightly ln 11hy and
June over the previous year'a totals, but total
.volume for the first six moalba of the year is still
down.
Figures released thl1 week by the Laa Vegas
Convention and Vlsltort Authority ahowed an in· crease of 3.6 percent ln May over the previous
year and an in'crease of 3 percent in June.
Visitor \lolume lJ etiU down t .• ~rcent for the
)'ear to date, a •ltuat.iqft toumm otnc_lals blame on
hither aJr tares .
•
NO DEALER SALES
AP STAITS THURS.
TATUNG 9" AC/DC~--
BLACK & WHITE
T.V. 7777
Speaking of selling. If we sold to the big
conglomerate (and you didn't think I
could spell that), it's no more funnies, less
bargains, a lotta stiff stuff.
CLEANWELD TURNER
SOLIDOX
TORCH KIT
I 8~~000
You can solder, weld and braze. with this
k it. It's the hotter than hot. Compact and
portable.
BUDGE
SEAT COVERS
TEXAS TWEED
Blue or Beige. 2 Door
Split Back or 4 Door
Solid Back.
YOUR
CHOICE
777
BIG "B"
Grey or Brown.
COMPACT TRUCK 1199
STANDARD TRUCK 12 99
SHELL FIRE & ICE
ALL SEASON
MOTOR OIL 10W/40WT.
79:T.
Did I tell you I was c harged over $2 a quart
for this when I had to buy one? 's Truth.
believe me.
RAC
FOOT PUMP
6!!
Wow, does this pump things up fast. Beats
the old hand pump hollow. Tires, toys.
inflatables,· boats.
MURRAY BICYCLES
MEN'S Z6"
BALBOA
CRUISER
#5022X42
For weeks we have spelled out the features
and customers tell us that's nice but they
still have to see for themselves. So, .... we
aren't worried.
GENIE ELECTRIC GARAGE
QOO~
It •tuna tne
to thil\k how
many of
these we have
sold. More
than a ton of stores.
DOOR OPENERS
Why? Hah, hah, hah. We .. n cheap, aimple.
y, HP CHAIN DRIVE
113 HP DELUXE
SCREW DRIVE
••~:200 129!~. 5500 NORMAL INSTALLATION
OF OUR UNrr
,, HOLIDAY
FOGG ER
69(( ))
6 oz.
44
14 oz.
Sounds like something to fog up your
holiday, but it is something to weed out
your guest lis t . You never asked all those
bugs in, did you? (Oh you did. Gee, I'm
sorry we knocked them all off.)
1:1 \ ) I Ii',
FLEXALUM
DECORATOR
ALUMINUM
MINI BLINDS
500/o OFF
MANUFACTURER'S
LIST PRICE
EXAMPLE:
23"x42" BLIND ONLY 26.94
These come in lots of colors and are s pecial
order. Valance included.
GLIDDEN
SPRED SATIN
8?!
Best interior paint we
know of, thousand.a of
colors to choose from.
(Hey, it's good working
here. A nice wage and all
the lumber you can eat.)
I .
3/s" SANDED
SHOP PLYWOOD
6!?
~ -
BLACK & DECKER ,
133~~ ~~-.
This has to be a lifetime tool.
(For that price I am not asking anyone to
pay it twic.. ) Come in and look one over.
DOUGLAS
HOSE REELS
WALL
MOUNT
CART
TYPE
1588
1988
Hose ia all hooked up and
ready to go. When you're
fini•hed you just roll it up
and out of the way. Nice
things.
SCOTTS TURF
BUILDER PLUS Z
6 ·97
2000 so. rr.
W..d.s and fH<is.
47fbt'\P
"'' ·' ''~L// '"' ,~~¥'~"',~?~·
ACADEMY TUB ENCLOSURES
ALUMINUM FRAME
44~!
GOLD -nNISH FRAME
59~s!
Retirement, now you're talking. But who
will give you the weirdness you have come
to bear so valiantly. These have anodized
frames and obscure glass.
The first thing to do is to plan how you're
going to repaint it , wild, traditional.
funny. Put your personality into it.
~Ji°~· "-"· 5" CUSTOM .~~ INSTALLED
"·,.' .. " ~~ SEAMLESS .... RAIN
GUTTER
We roll up to the curb and make the stuff
right there. In white or brown enameled
aluminum. Hey. prices are for normal
installation on residential property.
h owever. Special order.
l or 2 STORY
100 FT. MINIMUM
LESS THAN l 00 IT.
50 FT. MINIMUM
10'x6'
10'x9'
8797
12797
13797
SPECIAL ORDER
10'xl7'
19797
25797
REDWOOD .
LATTICE.
2s8 1lf •• • ........... , .,
' I
' 9~
4z8 ·
17~
''"' .....
Babinda. a female. looks out at the strange California tourists.
Coral. right. seems a bit smug about her surroundings while lop
right. Addie goes out 011 a limb to reach for photographer 's
camera All of th1.s gwes Coughdrop. the lone male . lots to
bellow about
Dilly Piiat
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981
COMICS
FEATURES
84
BS
Koalas get TLC
San Diego zoo loves its .bears
from land of eucalyptus
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A dozen
of Am erica 's best -loved
Aus tralian immigrants, the
koalas, are alive and well in the
U.S.A. all at the San Diego
Zoo.
In March, the Australian
parliament voted to send six
females and a male to the 100 to
join the single female and four
male survivors or the 1976 gilt or
six for the U.S. Bicentennial.
Two of those arrived sick and
died later with a baby which had
crawled into its mother's pouch. •
As a result. great care is taken
of the 12 living koalas. the only
ones outside Australia.
Not only are they vegetarians,
but they eat only one type of
pla nt the eucalyptus. And
they a r e fed 150 species of
eucalyptus leaves in their big
stalls .
The marsupials also get plenty
of loving attention from the 100
attendants who keep them from
exploring too much and from all
the peple who travel thousands
'>f miles to see them.
Of the new arrivals, Euc ,
named for his diet, is the most
curious.
Euc's female friends are
called Mareeba, Laura, Annie,
Addie, Coral and Babinda.
Keeping a closet
for all
seasons ... B5
D
a
. .............
'Steam Man' finds good life atop desert well
STEAM WELL CAP> It's
lonely out here in the Mojave
Desert, a half-do1en miles from
t he nearest paved road and even
farther from a phone or human
being. And it's hot. So hot even
the rattlesnakes hide under the
spar se shade. of the juniper
trees.
No place for man and hardly a
place for beast. but home for
Virgil "Steam Man" Ramey. A
retirement home atop a high-
pressure natural steam well.
1 1 "I couldn 't afford Palm
Springs. And I can't afford no
$275 -a-month place in town,
either," he says, brushing his
long silver beard with a grimy
hand. "Social Security wouldn't
buy my gr oceries in town ... or
even a beer now and then."
Don't get the idea that Steam
Man worries about money. No
sirr ee.
He just loves the desert. Sit·
ting in his wheelchair, wearing a
pair of cut-off shorts and a hard
hat, Steam Man takes a sip of
beer and grins like a •9er with a
gold nugget in his hand.
"It's just paradise out here,"
he says.
Oh, Steam Man has bad his
problems. His hip was injured
a nd his left leg severed in a
truck accident 21 year s ago.
Navigating the hallway in his
tiny shack can be a burden. And
his hard hat carries a hearing
aid amplifier. Al age 67, he con-
cedes, "I can't do a lot of things
I used to.''
The doctor suggested he move
to town where the living is
easier, help just a phone call
away and an air conditioner
hums in every window.
Steam Man won't have any of
it. After all, his CB radJo keeps
hlm company. He uses a
kerosene lamp for light. And he
takes bis dusty Falcon to town
for suppUes every week or 10.
"I'm not one lo sit in lhe dog-
10 n e rest home and just
vegetate. 8ut l wouldn't trade
two shovels ol my aoll for Loa
Ancelet. There are a few el&
menta to put up with out here,
but I couldn't at.and to live In tbe
a1pbalt Juns&e."
1'lte teJ Io Steam Man'1 1ur·
vi val -aDd lbe IOUl'e9 ot bll
moniker -ii the natural steam
well that blUet and bubbl• ln·
Virgil 'Steam Man' Ramey checks valve on steam well below his home in Mojave Desert
side his home. He's got a steel
vent on it, and controls the out-
put by opening a valve. The
well'• been here S,000 years,
give or take a few hundred.
Steam Man's only been here 10.
and he's still figuring out new
way1 to use the 240·de1ree
steam.
• '1 can percola~ coffee ln just
a few momenta, boll •II• and
cook corn on the cob In a
hurry," be 1ays. ' He lets tbe steam eondlDH ln
a box oa top ol bit house, then
funnell the water into a tank
where It remalnt until it'• cool.
He'1 fixinl up a 1hower, but
needs to ftcure a way to .reroute
some of the cool water back into
the house.
And be basn 't yet found a way
lo purge his house of the pungent
odor of sulphur that accom-
panies the well.
"You get used to it after a
while," he 1ays.
Rabbits, quail, dove, bobcata
and other wildlife make •hJ ap-
pear an c e 1 around hi•
homestead, sippln1 cool waa.r
from tbe trougba StHm Man.
keeps filled. The wattr helped
produce two buabel1 ol tometoel
last year In hla makeablft
areenhouae and it 1ustalu the
cottonwood, poplar, palm and
bamboo trees he'1 planted.
-,
Sunflowers , 10 inches In
diameter, thrive here. They
wouldn't live a week without
Steam Man's water.
"I got that atea(ll working for
me," be say1 prou9.ly.
He lives t.our1 of the 1team
well for the Bureau of Land
Management, which owns the
land and the well. Visilon are
u1bered throu1h a front door
with "K.G.R.A." posted ln let·
tera Steam Man cut from poeter
board. They 1tand for Known
Geothermal Resources Area.
A narrow hallway rum from
the front to th• back or hla white
frame cabin, wtth a kitchen on
one aide and the atea~ room on
the other. The square steam
room is 1S feet across. with the
well sitting against one wall.
Steam Man uncorks the steam
for a few momenta and explains
the history of the well.
He 1ets an average of one or
two visit.on a week, but he'll 10
weeks without a knock on bil
door. They repter in a du.sty
gueatbook; some proffer lbelr
bualneu cards for bls bulletin
boards. Then he hands out
brochures on desert lore from an
old plullc shoe ba1. End ol tour.
"It &eta a little lonely out here
... a man needs people. I •et
plenty ot vllltora, but a little
aoUtude doeen't hurt either. n
gives a man time to think."
Steam Man's business card of-
fers a map of the winding, rutted
roads that run the eight miles
from Johannesburg to his house,
the place he calls Steam Well,
north or Red Mountain on a
plateau jutting out from a small
hill. It's not on a ny conventional
map.
"Some people get a little
lost," he explains.
Some folks come for more
than a look ; Steam Man lets
the m strip down and let their
pores open up in the steam
room. A few of them, who swear
by the healing effects of the
steam, stay for a week or two,
moving into a natural cave
across from his house.
Steam Man charges nothing
for the steam baths.
"We all-you and I and every-
one who comes to visit -own
this well," he says.
Steam Man is his own best
customer. When he moved here
10 y ears ago , be had e m-
physema "so bad I could hardly
breathe." But "I haven't had
any problem since and f'm still
s moking these:· he adds, wav-
ing one or his ever ·present cigarettes.
He sleeps on a lumpy couch in
the steam room during the cool
desert nights. But during the
day. "it gets too bot and I have
to spend a lot of time outside" in
the 100.<fegree plus weather.
One wonders when tbe hlgh-
pressure steam well will loosen
its steel vent and blow Steam
Man, wheelchair and all, to
kingdom come. Steam Man
doesn't worry,
"You might see me sltlinl on
• a geyser one day, spinntna the
wheels of my wheelchair and
roasting like a lobet.er," be says
with a hoarse laugh. "I'm sure
not going to run from it."
Wherever you're lucky enouch
to find water in the Mojave,
you'll find people like Steam
Mao, people who love the
solitary Ure ol the desert.
••People all the Ume ask me
what I'm doiq out in Ulla God·
fonaken land. Well, it isn't God
foraaken. It's always fuclnal·
ln1. There's M>melhlna dlfferent
every day."
I .
'
.. Orange Co11t DAIL y PILOT/Thur1d1y. July 30, 1981
~\ '
-'-' E-rat-ication pondered
CR EEPV CRAWLERS DEPT.
Think about th~ worst kind of pest you
might have around ~·our houise. including
the neighbors' kid. and you probably
can't top the story being tol~these days
by Carol Carroll 1yes. tha~ her real
name> of Huntington Beuch
You ha ve s ticky doors? House
creaks in the middle of the night? Roof
leaks like a showerheud in the winter
season?
Carol Carroll can top your misery
Her Huntington Beach abode has
~
TOM MURPHINI -~r,
become a favorite stopping-over place
for great. hairy. beady-eyed rats.
.. Just the other night I was relaxing
in the den. watching television ... she re·
called. "and this big hairy rat just went
wandering right by.
"HE OR SHE THEN drifted right on
into the closet. We had the beas t
trapped. But then we couldn't find he or
she. So we slammed the door to keep the
rat in the closet overnight."
And how did this tactic turn out?
.. Next mornin g. we opened the
closet door to continue the search. But
the rat was gone. He had eaten the
closet rug. I think he was trying to make
a nest..
"I think maybe he was a she:·
It was about this time that Carol
Carroll figured she needed some help in
the effort to rid her happy home of the
rat invasion.
So what did she do? She did the
same thing any other good Huntington
Beach citizen would do who needs help
She called down to city hall for one Bill
Reed. the noted publi°c information of·
ficer for municipal gove rnment. re
nowned as a sol\'er of problems
TO MAK E A LONG story at leas t
so mewhat s horte r . a las Bill Reed
couldn't solve this one at least not
right away.
The city. he noted. has no budget for
chasing down invading rats. Reed did
note to Carol Carroll that this vear in
June alone. Huntington Beach has suf·
f ered a greater volume of rat invaders
than it did during the entire epidemic of
the Great Rat Invasion of 1978-79
Recd even h as rats in his own
neighborhood. So you know if he could
figure a way for the eradication. he
would.
"My 13-year·old son has been telling
me for weeks that big rats have been
coming into our area and are spotted
tightrope.walking down the telephone
wires," Carol Carroll said. "But 1 didn't
believe him until we had our closet guest
the other night · ·
VOU CAN UNDERSTAND why s he
might have been just a touch skeptical
of a rat tale carried by a 13-year-old lad.
Thirteen·vear-olds' stories have been
known to· escalate enormously between
the corner market with the video games
and the front door of the house.
Anyway. the youngster was ap·
parently right on target this lime. The
.. Yikes' I got treated better than this m La HotJro
rats that invaded Huntington Beach
from inland places like Brea and La
Habra a couple of years ago also made
the trip down telephone and utilit~·
wires.
EXPERTS ON RATS s uggested at
the time that thb means the high wire
rats are of a higher intelligence than
low·level rats that scurry along gutters
and across floors.
Anvwav. Carol Carroll even contact-
ed Sui:)ervfsor Harriett Wi Pder·s office
and couldn •t get anything going on an
a nti·rat program.
WITH NO H ELP from government .
maybe we can pin the rap on the utility
companies who own all the poles and
wires.
Something like a charge of inter·city
transportation of bad guys.
Bike trails planned in Mesa
System would link east side with golf course and park
Work is expected to begin in
late August on the rirst leg or a
bicycle trail system that even
tually would link east Costa
Mesa with the city-owned golr
cour s(• and County Regional
Park in the western portion or
th~ c:1ty
Laguna budgets
extra state funds
The Laguna Beach City Coun ·
cil has decided to s pend part or
an unexpected $197 .000 provided
Police to hold
auction in Irvine
The Irvine Police Department
will auction 60 bicycles, mo·
peds, auto parts, jewelry. sports
equipment , stereos,
lawnmowers, office equipment
and other unclaimed property
Saturday.
The auction in the parking lot
of Irvine City Hall. 17200 Jam·
boree Road, Irvine, will begin at
10 a .m. The property will be
available for inspection at 9:30
a.m .
s
A w
D u s
T
by the state and save the rest
pending studies ror ruture city
needs.
Earlier this month the city re·
ceived word it would have to re·
pay $197,000 less than expected
in slate bailout funds .
Council members voted to
spend $21 ,000 or the money to
settle a 1977 laws uit over utility
undergrounding in the vicinity of
Victoria Beach
Laguna Beach was sued by the
project contractor for additional
payment for unexpected prob·
le m s that allegedly arose dur·
ing the job. The city originally
denied any extra payment was
due, but city officials say a deal
has now been s truck that Is ac·
ccptable to both sides.
Construction or the first sec·
lion. about 1.300 reel or asphalt
a long the west side of Newport
Boulevard between Arlington
Ave nue and Mesa Drive. was ap·
proved last week by the Orange
County Fair board.
The trail IS to be rinished In
.ibout two weeks arter construc-
lion starts by a private firm con·
tr acting with the city at a cost or
$13.000, said Rock Miller. city
transportation manager.
Mill er said the first·stage link
1s important to bicyclists who
travel between east Costa Mesa
and TeWinkle Park north or the
ra1rgrounds.
Those bikers, he s aid. now
must ride as far north as Bristol
Street and double back to the
park becaus e of Newport
Boulevard's one-way traffic
lanes systems .
Funds for construction have
been allocated through a special
state bike trails fund. Miller
said. The city has about $100,000
accumulated in the fund.
Long-ra nge bike trail plans
c all for an as phalt riding path
along Newport Boulevard
between Arlington and Fair
Drive and along Fair between
Newport and Fairview Road.
Miller sald.
. ,
Whiting
• project
backed
The Orange County
Planning Commission
Included li1tht reslrlc·
lions when it endorsed a
plan to build about 4,400
home s o n the un -
developed Whiting
Ranch east or El Toro.
The 2,743·acre propt>r
t y on the western slope
or the Santa Ana Moun·
tams has worried south
county residents and
tounty planners who
have eyed possible prob·
lems associated with
tra ffic. fire and sewer
ser vices at the property,
Thu11. the planning
commissioners decided
Tuesday that the county
~hould continue close
monitorini< while de ·
velopmt•nt begins to
~n s ure that ser vices
don •t bc•eome out o r
balance
Under conditions s ug·
gested h y the com·
mi ss io n . the co unty
could call a halt lo the
devel o pment .r 1t
becomel> apparent that
1t would put a strain on
local services
The commissioners
.ilso recommended that
developers. a Warm ·
ington-Carma Joint Ven·
,,~ ..
------
UJ.:.W ' I '
Unl-Ve9a • Puch • Kawahara • DG
~ Featuring
"' VoMn91 Sales of the best • t ·--E ·-a
1
~ •
l
A.
blcyde1 from around the world
at real down to earth prices!
I 0 SPEEDS * 3 SPEEDS *
CRUISERS * KIDS BIKES
RENTALS
at low at $2.50 hr.
or
SI 0.00 per 24 hr. day
21 16 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, CA
673-5051
....
•GT
" !. I. 'I-• n -c n -,. .,. .,
0
•
lure. should participate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in whatever means is
r1n al l y chose n ro r
r1na ncing a freeway
through the Foothill Cor·
rid or. which might pass
through the property
Also to case possible
tramc problems. com-
m 1ss1oner s s uggested
that vehH·le trips be
k<'pt at a minimum from
the d~vclopmcnt .
poss1bl} through car
pooling, USl' or transit or
by <'ncouraging a cer ·
lain number or residents
lo work at commercial
and indus trial centers
planned for the prop·
erty.
The Board of
Supervisors is scheduled
to consider the issue on
Aug . 26.
College
• s1gnups
readied
GRAND OPENING!
Emer/!,ency Survival Products
HOW FAMILIES CAN PREPARE
......... f .......... ~ • ...,"-"" -·..-.t.-. ...... --.. ..._ ----·~ --· .-...rP....,..._,,~,
Earthquakes
food storage and
total preparedness
Poly Bucktls for bulk food storage
c..'i>' ..,<fr -~ .. ~
~~ ..... X' ~ .:< < ·---==========-~~~~-~ .. .:
GRAINS In Poly Buckets ~.:><'The!MARATHONLJNl·MIU
Early registration for
s tudents planning to at·
tend Saddleback College
in Mission Viejo this fall
will be held Aug. 3 from .... ,............ []~ _.-
9 11 . b ,_,..,.-r ""~ llO 9\ '-' '"'r•••• .,.,,. ... .," ~ a m to a.m 1n t e -----·--• 9 '· .. :.:~,;;·,:.:::...4.:.:·,. --~
campus library. ; =:..~' "fk """'"" ~ H d. d l dents • ...,._,....,.,, · =-----. • • J an 1cappe s u , •ur""" / : _ _... n 10 T •
ma y register from 9 -,-SP-EJ.-.;-,.~-S-E-~L-S-.f-)-,-;....'~ The!KENWOODMIXER
a .m to 9 30 a .m Stu· • _ ,,
dents whose las t names a:~ .._y. --· A • , -
begin with A through M 15209 Springdale St. Huntington Beach, Ca . 92649
s hould sign up from 9 30 Hour" 01wn
a .m . to 10:15 am . (8••--••a-A M«-f'•flb,.> f711}89.J-119.; l0-6~on .-Sat.
Registration for s tu ·1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dents with last names 1-'
beginning with N
through Z will be con··
ducted from 10: 15 a .m .
to 11 a.m
Returning s tudents
who are currently not
attending classes. but
have been enrolled in
the p ast , mus t file
another application for
admission.
New s tudents must
also rill out an applica·
lion, available in the Ad·
missions Office on the
first floor of the library.
IFYOU
have a service to offer or
goods to selJ, place an ad
in the Daily Pilot
Clas11fied Sect.Ion
Phone 642-~.
. s ~ t-~~~$111,9"~ · 1 ~E~ :..,,, i ~ ~s A RT ,u.... ~~EW • ~~\,.~ AUCTION I ·~;· ·: "'"" I
PUBLIC INVITED ]
TWO DAYS!
: SAT., & SUN., AUGUST 1 l 211
FiNt l lddin9 I Starts
Pr-omptly .At
1:0 0 P.M.
Iott. Days
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and college districts and county
government than the lally Piiat
N¥'s 'master
builder' dies
WES1' ISLIP, N.Y. <APJ -Robert MOHi waa
a Powerful and lnnovative bulldtr who con.structed
Lincoln Center, t.be U.N. complex and hu.n4r'edl of
mlles ot New York hlahwaya.
The "master bullder" wu once described aa
the 20th century'a ireateat infi•ence on American
cities.
"He will always be remem-
bered as the master builder,"
said Mayor Edward I. Koch,
who has ordered city flags to be
flown at half-staff through Fri-
day. Moses, 92, died or heart
Cal.lure on Wednesday.
Flags at the seven bridges
and two tunnel s of Moses'
Triborough Bridge aod Tunnel
Authority will remain at balf-
staff through Sunday. MOUs
Moses' reputation as a man wbo could "get
things done" and his ability to marshal public
opinion gave him an air or invincibility that sur-
vived for almost SO years.
In the 1940s and 1950s, be held up to 12 offices
simultaneously . And by 1960, be oversaw 103,071
acres and controlled agencies with budgets total-
ing almost $250 million a year.
As head of several independent authorities, he
wrote laws concerning New York'~ parks and
highway construction, giving himself awesome
powers of condemnation and appropriation. With
t h e money -making Triborough Authority as the
cornerstone of his empire, Moses put Its toUs to
work funding politicians' pet projects and provid·
ing jobs.
The powerfully built 6-foot-talJ Moses and his
parks were popular, and legislators often had no
choice but to appropriate the money he sought for
his projects.
At his peak. Moses successfully defied a presi·
dent.
The sources of his power were the subject of a
Pulitzer Pri!e-winning biography, "The Power
Broker," by Robert Caro.
Among Moses' projects were 416 miles of
roads, including the Long I sland Expressway. He
built the Triborough Bridge; the Verrazano-
Narrows Bridge: Shea Stadium: the St. Lawrence
and Niagara power projects; housing projects.
and 650 playgrounds.
"In the 20th century. the influence of Robert
Moses on the c ities of America was greater than
that of any other person ." said architecture critic
L ew is Mumford.
But M oses said in 1975, "I'm just a senior
ditch-digger."
At his death, Moses wa& a $35,000-a-year con·
sultant for the M e tropolitan Transportation
Authority, which swallowed the Trlborough
authority 13 years ago. He also lobbied 1n recent
years for his one great unrealized proje<:t -a
bridge across Long Island Sound.
Born in New Haven. Conn., in 1888, Moses was
eloquent, magnetic and bullying. He held degrees
from Yale, Oxford and Columbia.
In 1923, Moses persuaded Gov. Al Smith to
back a bond issue and a bill to create a state Coun-
cil of Parks. Moses was appointed head of that
council, and of the Long Island Parks Commis~ion.
And from there his career took off.
Moses never became rich from his empire. Of
all his jobs, only two were salaried -city parks
commissioner . $25,000 a year, and state Power
Authority chairman, $10,000.
When President Franklin Roosevelt
threatened to hold up $4-4 million to finish the
Tri borough Bridge unless Moses left the authority,
Moses took his case to the newspapers and won.
Judges battle
divorce backlog.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A plan to cut delays in
handling divorce cases -by as much as SO per-
cent -has been announced by two Los Angeles
Supericr Court judges.
The new plan, presented at a press conference
by ju~es David N, Eagleson and Billy G. Mills,
will use some 100 experienced, volunteer attorneys
to try to obtain pre-court settlements between
couples so that delays ln 'reaching court can be cut
from about 60 days at present to about 30 days.
In addition, the program starting next Monday
will give priority in scheduling to uncontested
cases that can be settled in about 10 minutes. It
will extend divorce court hours so that they begin
at 8:10 a.m . instead of 8:30 a .m . as al present, in·
sist that divor cing couples and their attorneys con·
fer before the trial and strongly discourage con·
tinuances.
"We judges are extremely conscious that un·
due delay in justice can deny justice, particularly
in these sensitive cases, and are delermined to war
on trial delay until the war is won," Eagleson said.
IAL Tl H•GHOH
SMfTH & TUTHILL
WISfCUff CHAPEL
1127 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
PIUCI llOTHHS
SMfTHS' MOITUAAY
627 Main St
Huntmaton Buch
S36-&39
PAC9"C YllW
MINOllA1. PAI•
Cenwtery Monuarv
Chapel-Oematorv 3500 Pac1llc View Drive
Newport Beach
64'·2700
MllCOb9Ca MOITUAl•I
t.11quna Beach
,94-9415
l11Qun1 Hill•·
768-ot33
Sen Juan Capistrano
•95·!776
H•llOlt LAWM-MT. ouvt
MO!'tueiv • Ct m1 t•rv
Cr•mmtorv
1125 G11t1r Alie ,
CottaMlta ~~
DEATH NOTICES
STARICK
DORA ANTOI NETTE
STA RICK . resident of
Newport Beach. Ca. Passed
away on JuJy 28, 1981 where
she was residlnf> She was
born In Cincinnati, Ohio.
She Is survived by her
daughter Margaret E. Zim·
merman of Newporl Beach.
Ca., son Milton R. Starick or Yucaipa, Ca., brother
Frank Kab.sar of Cincin·
naU. OMo. 2 grandchildren
and 4 (reat-grandchildre.n.
funeral services will be
held on Friday. July 31.
1981 al Pacific Vie w
Chapel, Newport Beach,
Ca. Private Interment at
Pocific View Memorial
Part. Paciftc View ,
VANDYKE
R. GLENN VAN DYKE.
resident oC Corona del Mar,
Ca. PUied away on Jilly
27, 1981. 8ol'n March 25,
1962 ln N.wport Beach, Ca. Suvlved by his mother Patricia Van Dyke, father
Richard lt. V•n Dyke,
brother. Paul and Scott
Van [)yh, 1randmothera
8ern1ce ltraua of
FaUbroot. Ca. ... Nflda
lAtnOIUI di~ Ca.
hnet"al ..mm ·.ui bt
held Oil,....,....)', Jal1 •.
ltll at JiMP• at the Patine VJew Mortuary
Cbaplil wtllt Put.or Marl Prul., olndallftl, titer
mtnt et Paclfle View
Memorial P•'*• Nnport 8•1eb, Ca Padflc vaew
Mort&&a1"14Wdon.
PUBLIC NOTICE 1, ________ _
ir1CT1n.n auMNau
lllAM9 ITATa.•T .............. ..-1 ............. _ .. :
I 0 M INTa"l'RllU, '" ~le ·-· C.te Mete, CA
DONALD O. M<L&OD, tU ~I· .... -. CoM•• ,... .... , ..
Tlllt ...,_II(~.., ... .._.
lllv'*"'· DaMM 0. Mcl.llM
Tllll .....,,_. -"'-wltto tllO Quftty OWi!" 0r.,.. c-oc., 111 July 7, 1 .. 1. ........ Pffll...,. Or-c:e.st Dallr 1'11194, J11l1 ... n. .. Al4-•• , .. I 11 .... 1
PlJBLIC NOTICE ,--------
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlftout 84.IMNaU ...... STATIIMSMT Tiie '91towlftl 11Wta111 er• ll.C111 IMnl-•= OPI tENTtERl'RIMS, J1I le ,._, .. l'teu, C.... Me9' CA mJ7. RoMrt 0 . HeKell, 111 Le Perle Pl•u, C•t.e Mele, CA "'17. Kelliryft L HMMll, Vt Le Perle l'lece, C• .. Mell, CA "'27. lerti.ra C. HMllell, S2t Vie llolo
kW. N-' a.ecto, CA ntea. Tlllt l>utitlffl It '°"""<ltd 111 • .. ".,·'~ R-.wtG.H..utl Tlllt .......,_. w• lllecl •ltll U. C-'Y Clerll ot 0r....-CNltY Oii Jiiiy •• 1tl1.
PUBLIC NOTICE .---------l'ICTI nous •USIN•U NAMIE ITATaMl!NT Tiie f0Uowl119 119no111 ere ctolnt ..... , ....... PllOMOTIVA TORS, llOltl" $11y Pertl Clrcte, lrvl .... CA '2714 PRO.PLAYERS ~EST INC., •
CelllOrftl• CWPOt•tlOft, ''°"" S111 Pertl Clrcle, lrvltoe, CA '2714. Tiiis ~ It cOlllNctecl 1>1 e CW · _ ......
Plto.PUIYERS •EST I NC. 01"_,,_, .... , ............. Tlll.1 II.II-.... lllect wllll 11W COVftlY Clertl Of Or•llOI c-•Y Oft
JlllM2', ltl1. .. , .....
PuDll-Or-C:.0.11 Oell1 Piiot, J111M H, n , JI>, ..... 6, ltll Jl7HI
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTtC• INVITING a1D1 Notlu 11 11ere1>y vi••" tftal 111e
Boent of Trus .... of llW Coett" Com-m11ft lly Coll.,. Dlllrlct of Or.,... CO....ty, Callfonll•. •Ill~, ..........
lllcls..., .. 11:• e.m., •rldey, AlllUll 1, ltll, et IN P\orctlatl .. Dapet'llMM of Mid COi .... clllrlct loc.wlff et 1*10 Adema Ave1111•. Cott• Me1e. C.-1~ et wMcft II-Mid DICll will
.. Pl*lklJ ........... ,... '°"' TYPEMTTINO t. l'RINTING 01" NEWSPAHR "IRANDIHG IRON'" FOR 1tl1-e2 SCHOOL YEAR AT GOLDEN WEST OOl.lEOE Alf Didi we to• In eccordafoc• wllll , ... aHt ........ l"'*""<t!Ollll .... C-..1·
, ......... s..<Jncetlllnl """" .... -•fMo ... tnerWMCwMllltM~
...... l"'wd\esl ... "9tftC °' ... d , ......
dlllltkt. Eectl .,_, ....,., ....,,,,., wllll Iola
~ • ,..,...... dla<ll, <ertlllod "*"· • ...,..-, ._.. ..... IMYMI• to ..
., ... , "' !Pe Coell c-lty Col .... District eoerct or Tr1111"1 111 e11
·-· -less ...... ,.,,. ~· .. llW....., 9lct • ..--llWI llW 1116-IMr wlll....., lflto propoMd Conlrect II 1M serne Is -erdad .. him. 1,. ,,_
-•of, .. ...,.. to_, lflto well <on-trect, Ille Pf'OCeedS Of tlle <Mell wlll tie forfOlled, w In IN c... of e llond, Ille fllll 111m thffllOf wlll De for'felled to Miii COi .... ctltlrkl. No DleldW rney wltlldr-1111 Diet lor • period of fwty.flwe (4JI cte'fl alt••
llW ct•t• ... fOf' Ille -111"1 llWrltOf.
TM Boerd of Trust ... r_r.,.t llW prlvll999 of r•Jecll119 .,.y end ell l>lcls cw to w•lw .,, 1.....,1.,11 ... or lfi. lorrnelltlft 111 ...,, llld or In 1IMI Dlddl,.. NorMM E WetlOll
Secr.Wy &oerd ol
T r.nt ... Caetl Cemrnllnlty Col .... Ol1t. Pul>ll-Or....-C.0.11 Oelly Piiot, Jiiiy u . JO,'"' ,., .. ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
'
PVBUC NOTICE
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thul'lday, July 30, 1gs1
P\JBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
........ l'ICT1ft4*t ........
llAMa ITATCMaMT Tiie lell.wtfle l'ffMlll .,. ... .,,
PlJBLIC NOTIC£
l'terlft°" ..,.. .. . .......... , ... '" TM , .. lewlflt ,., .... ,. ...... ...,_ .. ,
T •AOI tlONA~ OISION, NaWltORT BIACH, IHI l'ert Weywi-.. l'leu. N ... ...,, a..ec11,
c;.llter•"*9 J ..... Sewyer. "" ... ,. -~ • ....,., ....... c.tlfWlll# W-T ... ...,.,...-, 1'7t l'WI w.,..., .... ~ .. ettl, <:Miter ... .... Tlolt llWllW .. It Cand\IC1ed 117 • lefler•IP* ..... ~~-Tiii• ....,_,. •M llted wltll ,.. C-tr o-'11 el Or-..~ Oft Jill'I'
14, 1"1
PUBLIC NOTICE
11ue1-. .. , T t. T AUOCIATRS, ta6tt c:Mfyl l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNIEU
Wer. 1!1 T-Ce! ....... •.... NAMe STAT•MRNT PtJBLIC NOTICE
T-MJ Mllllfl ......... 111111 QWryl Tiie I04lowl119 1MrM11t are clolnt
NS-7M61 -·~· ., Ten, CellftoM!e,..... 11w1 ........ ,
NOTICE OF DEATH OF J•11I'• Twl """..., tMll c11erv1 s1r.'.~ ~.=1:!!~. ~1~~= 8 a R a a R & a W•r,tEIT-.Cel ............ ""' ""' ""' ' Tllll Ml-II <Mllot<IH •Y e .,, ... HENDERSON AND OF _r.,,.,......,, •• ,...,. L --. '°' A1-.o p E T I T I OH TO A D . T_., Mllllfl ...._. St,.et, NOWPOrt BH<ft, Celllor•I•
MINISTER ESTATE NO. Tiii• ~.:'Ti .. _.191 .,. n~. e---· '°' e1~ A·10"90. C-'tOWttelOr.,..c-,.,Ju1r Street, NewPOtt BH<ft. Celllo•11le
T o a I I h e I r s , 1. 011: .. ,... m.o
beneficiaries, creditors "'*'.,,.. 0r.,.. cee.t Deity 11'1iee. .. !:!!1=::,..~ c-c•..i D; •
and contingent creditors of Jw1yt, ,.,n.•, "'1 ..,..1 ..,_• L HoltlNll
Barbara 8 . Henderson and Tftlt .... ~ •• ,.,. wilt\ IN
persons who may be PUBLIC NOTICE c_,1,a-o10r-c.ount1°"'J"'' otherwi~ Interested In the -14
'
1"1 .. , ... ,»
wlll and/or estate: "==::::::' P111111111ed0renoe cout oeuv PllOt,
A petition has been filed Tll• 1e11-1nt .--• .,. u .. , J"1' "· u. »~ ~ _ 11•M1
PUBLIC NOTICE
by Deborah A. Anthony in -:i=:~IOH INVESTMIENT AS..
the Superior Court of sociens.SAHJOUIHvuTMl!NT
Orange County requesting Auoc1eTu 1v, SAN Jon that Deborah A. Anthony INVUTNNT ASSOCIATES v. SAN
1'1 .... be appointed as personal JOSI! INVESTMENT AS50CIATU PulMI .... Or .... C:-14 o.lly 11'11et, representative to ad-VI, SAN JOSI! INVl!STMUH A$· IUN•tOll COU•T J I t 16 ... 1111 JOft.., S 0 C I AT tE S VI I , SAN J 0 Se Of'CAUl'CMINIA llY . ·-• minister the estate of INVESTMENT AUOCIATES VIII,
COUNTYOf'OUM• Barbara 8 . Henderson, SAN JOSE INVESTMl!NT AS·
111Ch'tcc:.Mw0r. PUBLIC NOTICE SOCIATIES IX. '41.$ Jetllllw .. Roef, .......... ea.t1111 Irvine, California (under s.itt• uo. N....-t eMdl, ee111on11e l'lAINTll',: LOREN MARIE the Independent Ad · 92660 •
KtN.,t> IT'"T•M• ... o• ........ ..._ •• .,. ministration of Estates Lor•" c.rpor.u ... • Cetlfomi• cw· u°Nc~~=r'H_M~~.~~'E~~ .. .. ' ;,. .. -........ ' Act>. The petition Is set for r,::~~ ~~ .. ~:...°:"~ ..
llWWllll ICIC, Inc......... us• OP PICTITIOUI 8UllN•H hearing In Dept. No. 3 at Tftl• Didi ....... COftct11Cled Dy • SUUot:~ llAMa c.e•._. T11e ,..1_.. ,.._ 119,,. .._. 700 Civic Center Drive llmltectpert_...
NOT1ce1 y.., ...,,. ....,. --. TM deMct ,,. ... .c .,. l'lcll"-•~· w e s t , s a n t a A n a , ~~Fr:.i:w•11°"
c-i mer 9cH9 ... .,,.. ,... .,.....,. _. N-: Cal If om la 92701 on August l're9ldlMI
y-Mlftt....,. ....... ,........ COAST CUSTODIAN StERVICI!, 19, 1981 at 9:30 a.m . Tiii• llet-4 .... Ill .. wlltl IN
;:::::. • ...,.. RMd .. ""'°""9tJM ~~:~:.:.i.iSt.l..,..P>.c. IF YOU OBJECT•to the c ..... ,,o.no10r_c_y ... Jllly
11 y ........ •..-IN ..,1w.,.,. T11e ir1ct1._ ....._ N-,... granting of the petition, '· '"1· ,.1._.
e11w11ey"'.,.. ,_..,,,... .....w • rWTed '° --,. ... '" °'Miit you Should either appear P111>11-Or-c:.o.st Delly .-J1ot,
" pr•MPllr '° '"-' reur •'111"' c-1y "'M9r'dl s. 1• at the .. -arlnn and state Jv11 '· "· u. •. 1"' JOOM• re-v.11.,.,meylleillM..,tl-. R-ld M. 8lwftol, Ml W. Ml-St. ''"' • ..,, ev1so1 ut&M.,. .................... CAl>t. '>.c.&e-.c.uau1 your objections or file PUBLIC NOTICE et ,,.._. _... 11Dc..W CMtr8 u.. ir..,1 J-LM*lwll, * w. w11-written objections with the .,.,~ .. ·--uct.r-s1.c._.,.,,c:.u-.CAnw. court before the hearlnn. ~ ':.'".,::.~ ,..L LM 1e lftfwme· ..!:~~1:'..:' coMo«IM •• • Your appearance may .be "CTl"=~111,au
SI u-.... Mlklter ., ,_ .. • "-"" M. a.-In person or by your at-MAMll ITATRM&NT
"" .....-"' .... --.. ~ Tiii• --.... mw """' .,. t ftecerto 1mme•1er-t•. de ute c-1, Oen el 0r.,.. c-.tr Oft Jiiiy Orney • Tiie ~ ~ It eol119 Du•I·
m•-• • ., ,........... ncrei., II heJ •·•Mt. t I F Y 0 U A R E A -c~~T TOWING SERVICE. IJZ •1~0~~~=T~1~.;. "' REOITOR o.r a cont-111ctu1r1e1 Wey, cut• Meu, ,__. .. ._ ...... ....,...., ._ 111ei.. PlllMI..., 0r.,.. c.... o.111 ... ..._ lngent creditor of the de-ce11tOt111enn1
UH ........ ,..... 11,.... .. "' • ......... J111' '· ''· u. JD,,.., ,....., ceased, you must file your G & w T_,.. troc •• c..i11on11e.
1111• 1•'""'L v ... ,,._ """*' • .. .,. PUBLIC NOTICE claim with the court or ~2':""' "'•Y. C.0.1A1 Mesa, eeurort11• •rte• ltll• -It *"" Olll row. t It t th I me .. 1111 .. c-i • ..nn.n ,_. 1----------presen o e persona T111s -11 condll<ted DY • cw·
t• Ille ~·· UllMU,....... ... NOTIC.CWHUSTIEIE'SIALIE representative appointed poretlon. ~ Y..,, •r...,, w111 •........,. .. • T.L...__ by the court within four G&W •0 •1nv 1"'·· G .i1ce111wuttht,..iM1H,M1t11111~1 NOTICE 1s Hl!RHY GIVl!N, ttwt months from the date of w;~i;:':'~~;. .. lllect •11,, 1119
PUBLIC NOTICE
ITATaMaNT 01' WITMottA•AL PROM irA•T11t•111M1ir Of'SU nN• UNDCR l'ICTITIOUS llVl!NaaMAMa Tiie lotlowl119 Pof'Mll ft .. wlllldrewt1
u • t•n•••I P•rlfttr from tlle P«lllerthltl -•11"1 ..-IN rlc-11110111 1>111lne11 n•m• ol w•r Pertnwt, •71D '-~Ive, •JDO. N•wperC BMcll, Celllomle t2MO. Tll• llctllt.. ....i11e11 ....,. -.. ma11t fw .,. partnertNp -lllM Gfl
J\llM '· 1'711 .. ""' C:-.ly., 0r-.. Tiie r11t1 -end rasldDllCt of .. P•rtoft wltlldrawlftl H • part11er WILBOURN A. WISER. ffOO Wlll!Nre toulew.,d, Los e,...1n, Cellror11I• 900». Tlllt se.i-1 •• 111111 wllll Ille c ..... ,, 0-.. Or .... '-'''°" July
'·'"' .. 11 ........... 1'111>11.-Or1t19t eo.M Oell1 PlloC. JWIJ 9, "• U, JD, 1tl1 --..1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI 84.IMNl!U ........ STAT .... NT Tiie 1041owlft9 PO<IOft.I ere dolnt .......... ~ ... JtESUS INTERNATIONAL, 101
Hero" Cr., Hu"ll"tlo" Beecft, Cellhlrlllen... J•llft Sl11Clelr, 1001 Sleter A¥9 . l'..,ntelft Yellt'Y, Calllorlli• W• l"re11cl1 0 . Sinclair, 104ll Sl•l•r ••• .. Fou,.l•ln V•ll•1. Celll•r,.I•
t270I. Tftll Duslnns h tOftd11cltct D1 •
.. n•r•l ~lp .
JofWI Slnclelr Tlllt 1 .. t_I w .. 111..S •1111 ...
Cou,.11 Cieri! 01 Or-Cou"'' on July '· '"'·
:!',.!;:: ~ :'::.=.~ ~=~:. =~~· 1~~!;_·~: first Issuance of letters as county Ctel1l a10rwioe c:...n1, °"July wlll<ll <euld ,..,., "'.,.,.,...,_..,., I REAL l!STATE SECUlllTleS provided In Section 700 of U , IMI .. , .. ,. :.~C:'·,':i:',C:,:~-; .. ~_:. SERVICE. 1out•ct •t 2020 Nort11 the Probate Code of Pu1>u_0r_eo.J1oell,Pllot, p111>1i.-0r-.eoe.ioe11~1~
p1e1111. •."':°.::YC..::::: ~· ~::i.'';C:,!9:; Ca I lfornla. The time for J111y "· u. JD. A111. •. '"' ,..,.., J111y '· "· n. JD. '"' >04M1 D•-= J-yJt, 1• e11rorn11, THE OEORGtETOWN filing claims will not ex------
L•A.•,.nci.,c•-llECONVEYANCE CORP .•• plre prior to four months
•YMe111-:;:y ca111orlll• c•w•t10111, • ct111Y -from the date of the hear-
nted Tr .. ,_ ........... ---·'° ":."t8J·7!'.f:' ...,_.,_.~1111,.,cer. Ing noticed above. .,.._ea.... "OMd °'Tr'*_.,..., trw LH YOU MAY EXAMINE "'*'-0r .... c.... Detty l"lleC. IMMONS, • "'""• men, ,_...,. the file kept by the court. Jiiiy •. • .. u.•, 1t11 a.J41. ...,., 21• ,., In.._ 11711 °'Of. If "OU are lnter-ted in t .. e k lel R-* el uld C--,, M .... r "°"' II
N7, RK..,..,., 1,.~ ... estate, you may flle a re·
PUBLIC NOTICE s • .., ,_., • w-oi., -'•" quest with the court to re-
" .,.Y_ .. ,.., ... .._., .. • ceive special notice of the 1,.1._ me..,..,~. I• ...... Nonca TOClOllTHcTO.s .,., .,_.•Mt ...... 1c .. t WN01 Inventory of estate assets CAU.J ... l'CMt BIDS f f 1<-1 D1•1ct1 OGl!AH v1Ew . ..,. ,.._.,.... """1 ,._ "''· 191 ._. and o the petlt ons ac-
o....1111e: t:• e'decll -· °' .. '"' 140" fll °"" ... ....,.. 111 Mic! c--c o u n ts a n d rep o r ts .,, ....... 1w. ~·· 1--uy ....... " ,.., ...... ., ........ "' .. WILL Hll AT irvaLIC described In Section 1200 R-lpt: .....,_, Offk.e Ck-View UCTIOH TO THE HIOHHT 810. of the Callfornla Probate ScMot Dl*lct, 1...0 8 S4n«. HIN· DER ~ ~ • ._,. _, ef u. :=,~.'!'.~.':':':!': u111tM*-'. .. , .,.. .... ec.,. ._ Code.
............... ,..,.,. et VIII ... View .... , ... rlllll UUe-1111 ..... -
ScllOel, ~ View Sc'-1 Dlllrlct, lie"'.., I\, .. T...-., l9 ............ ,.._
H1111tlfttl .. 8Mcll, CllllfoNIL Piece el pr..-t'f llllMilo lfl uld C»wlly -Pl.,.• ere Clll Ille: CkNll View Sci.ot Stltlt, -..Cr1• • lol'-: District, 8111IM11 OUiu, t•t40 8 l.ot II. Btocll 8, Trect He. Vl, City of NewPOr1 8Mcll, c-.ty Of OrMtlt, s1 .... t. H;,ntl,,..... a..c11. c::.i1'°"111• S••• ., catlfOrlll•. • ..,. ~ ,. .,.,.1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN cwded Ill ............ 17 -, .. !Ml Ille Moua.,.,..... Sdlool Dlttrk1 Mlscell-~ lfl .... eltle» Of Ille °' Or•ll98 eo..nty. Cell-•, ect"'8 c-ty~ClfMM!c_,ty.
.., •nd lfwouvll lb Goftml"9 Boer~ The lbwl eddr-or 01Mr ~II ,.,..,,..lter, ....,., ... 10 • "Otstrlct", •t11Ntlon. ".,.y,., .. ,.., ..,_,. wlll racel,.. uP to. but 110t i.t.r ltlen ty llerelllM!Dw dDICn ... 11 ~ ttw ellowe lleled u .... _,.., Dlds for le lie: •U l'l:lppy A-. eor-ctal
Wllll•m R. Froeberg,
Attorney at Law, 3553 Camino Mira Cost•, S.n
C temente, Call torn la
92672. (714) 4 .... 11 ••
Publlshed Orange Coast
Dally Piiot, July 29, 30,
Aug. 5, 1981 3372-81
PUBLIC NOTICE llW ew-ol • <.,lrect ror Ille abOwe Mer Cellrornle prOJKL Bica tNll lie received In,,_ The ~ ller91>'( ctlsclelmt ------plec• ,.,.tlllect ........ •<Id .......... lleDillty '°' ... y lllCorl"Kt-,,. NOTICll °" T•un••S' IALI! ....... -...... kly rNd ·-•I Ille Wld ,,, ... ....,... or ou.r ,_ °"A ... 10, 1'111.,•I 11:00 ··"'· N-· ....... _ ... time end p!«e. Bid d9· dDll .... 1'°"-CJ E. Sfwe, .. s.-1111119d T ...... , Of
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
CALll'ORNIA COMMUNITY COLLaou ANNUAL PINAMCIAL AND BUMaT RairottT CB\ldtet fOr voe Fltcel YMr 9eo!Ml119 Jiiiy 1, 1tl1 -Eftctl"9 J ..,. JD, 1"21 NOT1c• Of' ADOP'TIC* AND T•ANSMJn AL To ttle'--"' _,,........,. oi t<-1
TENTATIVE ANNUAL l"INANCIAL ANO 8UOG£T ftl!PORT. Tlllt ~
11 "9<9try flied by U. _....,.._dot IN C-1 C-lty Coll-Ol .. rkL
Oet. of -Int J-14. 1•1 Sloned Nornwo E. W-ISKret..-, l"U8l.ICATION ANNUAL "NANCIA~D BUDGET REPORT. TM.,..,.
.......... ~. llev"'9 ....... Jlll'I' Zl. 1"1 -..... lsiofts .......... -
d\entft a 11 -flee._.... .......... PIAl!l<allM, ,....k -1111 -llNI .,...u..,, ..,..., mums u. ._rt.
TM Plilfllk -r"'9 °" INt r-1 wlll .. lleld et Dlltrkl Admlftlllrel ... Of· llc•s.1J7t_,,.A.,.., CAMIAI Mft.e. CA OlllA ...... S, ltll etl:llOo'CIOCll l'.M.,
si.,,..,,.......... E. Wab0ft/$acnlary SUMMAaY ~ CURRIENT DISTRICT TAX Raoul•l!MaNTI flOa 1tl1-G _.,
TOTAL NET ADJUSTED BEGINNING BALANCE INCOME 1100.MOO -•I Income .
MOO Stele Inc-....
1700 C-ty Int-..
llOO LOCAll Ille-. . . . . ... "°° lllComl"I Trensfert ... . TOTAL INCOME .. , .............. .
TOTAL, NliT Bl!GINNING BALANCE ANO INCOME EXPENDITVllES ANO OTHER OUTGO 1000 Certllketed S.IWl•t ..
1000 Cleullled Selatlel ..
3000E~8etwlK• .. .OOOB-.~IM,-E,11lllf'Mll4 lleplec:-
SOOO Goftlrectect ServkM &
OllMr ~e11na e.,... ...
.000 Stiff,, e..tlctl,.. lloc*• &
,._
R ...... •• U,Oll,100 , ....
ACTUAL
....... 1
S0,719,624 ,., ..
11,...JCI'
40,000
71,711,.U
7U27.»t
>2,tV.570 u ....... 10,1 .. ,7,.
1,911, ...
.... ..,
IUDGaT
•.flJ.111
J,761,700 St,049,402
2',000
"""·'°° J0,000 ,., .. ,>en
u,n•,o7J
17,IS1'°'8
10,SG_.,.
11,295,217
edllM/ mey lie eirtenoect et Otttr1ct•1 Seid Mle wlll 118 -wl"-1 •«· thtl <Htltlll 0-.. Of T,,_. •19C"'9ct t>y
.i•t11. E«ll l>ld -'°"'°"" -tie renty, • ...,_ w 1,,,_.1ect, .....,dint Wllll•m C. .,_ .. ...,....,, Ill, ...S , .. ra1l'OMllll• to llW COlltrect doall'llellb. lllle, -*'· or encllmWenc:•, to ,,...,.... Oct..., a. 1'71 • l...u-1
ll!AKli llld tlWll tie «<Om!IMled 11¥ llW Mtllfy .,. prl11eltlel .. ._ llf IN Ne. ua. !ft ...., ,..._ p ... 1251, et
11t<11rlly ,..,.,.,.. 10 '" IN cMtrect How w ..,_ otill1111tlon a«wM 11¥ Ofllcl•I R«w• el 0r..,.. °""""·
dlK""'ellU.,.. llY llW 1111 o1 pr_.i Mid Deed ., Tnat wit!\ 1111.,.. Md Cetltenole, .,. --t to lloM Uir· '"kOfltrec:lon. Tiie DISTRICT , .. .,.,.., -.. ,.,..;Idled 11Wf91ft· ...... telll Nlltice el Dllf..it ... l!lectlOft ..
.,..... , .. rlGlllt to r•l«t .. , « •II ...... M"· " ... , . ..,..... tN terMI Sell ~ ,_..... .-i1 t. 1"1,
l>ldl or to welwe .,.Y 1r,....1.n11et w ttlerwof.,. 1111.....a., MIC1i ..,MC• • 1111erw..ot Ne. IUS..., a.. ..... NOTICa o• TRUITaa•a uLa lftformellll• In .,.y Dlda W 111 .. llld· _., pllll ,_., ctwr ... ...S ·-.f ..... IG7, el OHklel Re<Wa .. uld T.S. .... _,.. 111119. lloe Tr..._ ... of IN trw• Cl'M-c:-tr, .. I ......, ..... _._,.. 19
Madie, New Eqllll'fl'*'I • •
1100.7.00 Ottwf' °"''° . . . . . 7t00 ~ ...... '°' Conl1n'9ncle1. . . T.D. SERVICE COMPANY .. clw!y 'l'lle Dl.ltr1c1 loet -.i""9 r,_.. llW l>J H id ~ el Tr.,11. Tiie totel Miii 0.W el Trwl _.I • ..... k MIC· ..,...,..., T~ lllldDr tN '°''-"" Dlrutw of IN o..,.rtment of lft· -c ., Mlct ollllelitkN\ l11el..O"" •ari fw c-., ..,.._.. _,., .._ Ulllt·
O.scrl--of ttual WILL Sl!lL 4llilllrlel Rot•IGM tM 91Mrel ..... vall· re11011el>ly ettlmet.M ,_ --H St.-ftl ,.,_le .. et Seultl efl· AT PU9l1C AUCTION TO THE 1"1 rala of IM•"'-ween In Ille -• ..,.._.of tM Trvttff, •1 IN tre11ce, Ore111• C•ullly Her•or HIGHEST BIDOIER FOR CASH 1••llly 1" wNOo Uol1 •-I• lo .. tl1t1• of lnlllet ,..i.11ut1e11 or tlllt M1111lcl•el c ... rt, Ott JeM .. rH l ••Y•DI• •• 11,... °' Mle 1,. lewM pencwmad fOr •edo uelt or i:,... ot Nollc.,llfla.""'45. ••,.l•••rll, N••••rl aaecll, mOfttY or Ill• UftltUI •II '''"'· worllmWI ........., to •i.<llt• ... COii· D•tatl: Jlltr 23,"" c..11'-le, ell ... r11M. tlll• ... 111-
tllle end 1'*"'91'-yM1IO end -trect. n4EGEOROtETO'#N •n& -•I•.,. -Mid 11¥ II
TOTAL EXPENDITURES, OTHER OUTGO & APPROPRIATION FOii CONTINGENCIES TOTAL NET ENDING IALANCE . TOTAL. EXPIENDITVRES, OTHER OUTGO& APPROPRIATION FOR CONTINGENCIES PLUS NET ENDING BALANCE .... SftaCIAL RaHRVa l'UltO
Mid Dy It ..... Mid Dead of TNlt fft A c.op, ol .. ..,.. ... 111119 r•tn II "' RECONVEYAH<:E CORP ..,., ..... .,... ., Trwl ....... ,,.,...,. tM ..,_f'ly lle1'81nefW dH<rl ... : Ill• .... Dlllrlet Adrnlnl1tretlon Of. • Celllomle corporation .• ,., •I~ ........ c.w.ty ..... ,.... ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING BALANCE TllUSTOR: DEBBIE GROSS, e flee for C..lrectors revtow •I'll '"" •TNllll• • dDM:rl-. .. : Al ......... ftliltelllMd INCOME married women .. her sole •net formell.,. BJ: REAL EITATI! le: 11.....00 Focttrel l11Come
.. ... ••••-11 "'•" • m.ldetwy llPOfl.,,. Con· s~cuR1T1es s•Rv1c11 """Cat: IAI 1' ftl Trect N•. t.zao • ...,.,, S1ev 111e-,.._. •• I I t II Ille I I I "' "' ' ' -'. • ' • • • " •· ' •••••••• ' IENEFICIARY. EVA M. aAKER, rec ::.S, o w om <on rec I e CelHonllecorporetlClll, M "'-lft e ..... ,_...._ Ill a.. -Locel Ille-............................... . •widow •••r ---Sllll<Cllltredllrt ltaA9enl HS, ..... 11 t•11. ltielldlw ol Mii· "°° 111eorto1119Tr.man ....•................•. Rec..-A ... "· tm .. 111.ir. -•lolft\lojMyftOtlolt-llWwld ayD.J.--..r, cell-..... -·., Or ..... TOTALINCOME ······· ................. .
7>.614.171
4,tlJ,1 ..
,....,
ACTUAL .... , ... ...... .. 1• ... IU ,ltl •1un No. 2S*lfll>OGll 1n72 p ... .,. O(()f. 1peclll•d retn lo •II worllm•" .............. c-tr.Celltw'IM; TOTAl,NETBl!OIHNING llcl•I Record• '" Ille oflk • of ... empCoyed.., ~ Ill,,,. •M<iltl.. .. ISUU l'ARCIL 2: "" ....,,,_1 -· BALANCE ANO INCOME . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . S,N ,sn
ltKOrcter of Or ... c-otr; .Mid....., Ille contrec1. alO N. ar ..... eJ s..lte • H Chftlft ~ lw ~ Md EXPENDITURES
01 '"t" •Hcrlt>u Ill• lollewl111 No ~-:;: •11t11ctr-1 1111 bk! rw Se"'8 ,,,,,., CA.,;.. ' ••• t~ Let a ot Trect t.UO, 2000 ci..1111.0 Selatles .........•.••. , ••• . • .. PrtPe(ty: • par of r 1,,. 14S cleys er..-Tel.,._: 1n41 m._. • .,._ • •,.... ,_,,,.,. 111 a.. .ooo c.pite10oit1.., ............................... .
All llndlvldld ~ ln'9ral1 lfl end to: Ille det .. etlor "*'""of 1>1•. f'llllllSllH Ho'frll0'1 He ...... N"" IU, , .... It t. ti, IMl .... ft of Mir.· TOT AL l!XPENOITVAl!S.. .. ................... . lot 200, Trect 1m, et per m.., ,.._ A payment l>Ond Md • ptrlwmenc:. Pt'9U CGmlllMd wltll tM Or ..... CNst <el'-..... -· .. Or..... NET ENDING BALANCE .. . . . . ". ",.,, ... ..
f,171 >.•.011 ,..,,7 ...
1.206.7" corded In_.._ Sl, pegia& 41 lllr11 4t lft• DOo>d wlll toe ._iracl ..,1_. to -.c ... DellJ l'lklt, JIMy •, ~ 6, I~ C::-ly, Clll""""'e. ......... wltl\-· TOTAL, l!ICPl!NOITURES PLUS cl11tlve al Mltctll•-fl'IOC", In .. llOll Of llle wntfect. '1le P41tfMlllt llelWI 1 .. 1 111HI -II ,., .._.,, ..... ltttl-9111 NET ENDtltO •ALAN Cl ....................... , . S,N ,STJ oflk• ., the cowoty ,_,.., of ..... NII toe In ttw lwm Ml forth Ill u. -....,. ..... PwcM 1 ....... IAI ll .. CHILD DIEVIELOPMINT l'UMD
'°""'Y· tontreclllDc..,,....s. .. , C OTJCO MN Tred.., .._.._ wMll -· 2120 R..,.etk Awe., c.t.e MIM, CA BtD StECUIUTY, tEecll l>ld..,,... • rvBU N r. "'-'* lw .._ w .........._-.
'2627 eccempe11led BJ • cettlll.,. •• .. ,. •-era te111tr..cled lft ec-
"1 If• Ww4 .._., _ .... tlMIW'I <Mdl P41'1'*• te IN Ota-,.,,,_, wttll ..... lc.Rle .-!Ci,el
'-'etlon 11 -....... "' _,..,!'( lrf<l. or e Nt-.ctery tH .... 111 PICT1TIOUI 8UtUtlll • ott Iii"' .................... ._.. 11 gl._. .... Mt coi••MI-et cor-r-of ... Ol~RICT _.., i.,.. ....... STA.,....N'T tt(l .... ft lttlilt • '-N Mdlillee ra<.IMUl." ..... , .. ~ _, e Mlltllt._., TllO .......... ,.,._It...... .. ..... .wuea
Tiie lleNfklefy lllldDr MN 0-.. ftl 111relt Ulftl'ellY H "'rely, Ill Ill -•: ,,_. ........... ...__ TNtl. i.y ,_ .. e ~flf'"'91111 -t lilt llM ._. It .. re ... ef.. LODOa ILaCTRIC. ttlt S-... ............ _...,....,.,it .. V•
111 ~ Mllaet""' sec,,,_...,...,, ~•Im""'~ of the..., Tllo AM"-· C..-.., CelMlrllle .. Ot-. ....... 911M:!\.~. ,_......_ --.,.. ....._....it ~11 w.,.. _, _,. • .,_ • • taU1 . Tllo,,,..,,,. .... Ml*"' •I tllo .. --· ........ wt'lltitll 0....... ........... ~ IMll ... Meryl .. ~ ......... JIJt ......... ...,, ...... ,...... .. .... °' Oofa.M -D9mlM"' ..... ..... «Ill•"" .. ,.. ., ". _..... .. AM. "-· c.a--. ~ ................ DewM "· ..... . """* ~-.,_.. ........... ... "' (..,.,,,.., ...... <"*llCI ..,, cl• 0.....-I(. ........ -c....... .. _,.. ....................... _ .................. _ ,,..,......_.~.,, .... Oft• ........ ...-.~
""""""''9 -.ry ..... 1•M11 t a. l't .... et .... • ........ ....,,. S ........... OIHCW te ........ """""
.... .....,,_ -........... c..-..,. --,...lulCtllt ftl "" --.. ..,.,.... ~........ _, -_..._" ,.. 111111 -...... flltla., ..,_,,.............. • .. <Mrai .......... ..._ • .., .... ~ ~-~ n:: ......... ---••fldlil• .... ... "•.,._. Mlrdl .. "" a lltlllr. oty w11 • ............... Dll'f'ltlCT _., ----• .lflllr ti ........ -.... _.....tltilll w ...... ,. ....... -... 111rn _... .....,. .. ~.-... .. c... tl,1"1 ... ..._. •
;. .... --..... ·,;;.. tNct ,, _.. ...... ·--.. ..... ...... .,. .......... -..... __.,,..,.. ................ _ ...... ~ ........ ~-:AO: .. ei.i. Ollly ........... --..--...... ,...... ... ,,......,f/f'_ ........ ~...,_ .. _,,, '-'"'rP, ......... l~ltll ~· .............. I S •Ill .,_.., .......... ~....... ............ .. ..................... . ,._., -" .. ,...,., -ww "' ..,...._ ...... , PVal.IC N011ci .. -• .... _..." ...._"' MWO... .. T,_........ ... .,..... .... : .. ~ .... .. ......... ~ ....._.., "tlft. ......1 ... o-.... CM.-~....... ... .................. ....... ~---..... 0... .. ,,.., J .. ,._..... .....,, """'1'Mllll-• ................... ...... ..... ,._.. ............. ., ... --"·~ ..._... .............. : ,,.... ....... ~ ~ "' PlJllLIC NOTICE • TM ......... ,__ .... ... ,,...... ............. ......
.... O...ftlnw.lllNIMllwlfl• ---~ afl•H• .... tt,t ..
fllM"' "'*¥1-.... M. ttlt eit.t:• ;! mLDOUDO INYftT~ In Wl .M,t, •
AOJUSTU>Nl!T 8EGINNIHG 8ALANCtE ....... .
.... , .... 1-............................. .. .-l-•-................................ . TOTAl IH(:OjlAE ................................. . TOTAL.. Ne'T NOIHNIHO MLAHCE
A .. 0 INCIDMa , • , ., ,. ............ , • , ••••••..•••••• llC~tEMDITVHS
.. C'"'"'9fS..lertK .......................... .. .............................. ··•··········· ........ ~--£~,.....,,... ......................... .
-Col!V•tedleMcot .... o-r °'9nUftl ...................... , ............ . ... -c.i ... Olletll'I' ............................... . TOTAL l!lCNNDITV._.. ,..,., ................. . Nl!T INOINO IAl.AHCa ........................ . TOT Al. llCHNDl'NlfU PUiS Nl!f tENDINO tM.ANCa .......... , .............•.
M~•IU•ANCI l'VttO
8tEOINNIHCl9AVIHClLJULY ................... .
INCOlll\I • ,., •••• ,, ••••• ,.., ..... ,, ••• ,,, •• ,, ••••••• TOTAL. NllT ... IHNIMO
aALAfilCa AHO IMClOM& .................. , .••.•••
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INOINO 9M,A'9Ca , • ..•• ,. • • • ·• ••• • · • .... •· .. • .. TOTAL.. alCNNOITV"•I. OTMHI OUTOO l'\.UI NST llHMNO lll'AANCI.,. ........... , ... ..
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Wwt _. ....................... -.,, ~;.,1• ......,_ C..-,.... ........ ~.,.--... .. ................ -CMWI ............. , .................. ,..... nt,Ut .... ...,.... ",.,,. ... ,. .... ~'!!:........ ...... • ......,. -..c11, ..._,. .. ._. .... ....., ... • a. ............. ,.. _c.......,....................................... "''" ....,.. .......................... ---...... .. ....................... _ ...................................... :....... .... """
tNltlP..... ,...................... .-T.81 -........................................... " .. I•....... "'" "-~!~, .. -,.,...... .,........,_ ...... _ ............ -~ ..... -~ ............ _........ ..... -.....
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0 0 $$0550 Pl SS .,..... . ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thur1day. July 30, 1981
THE
Fi\MILl'
CIBCt8
BIG GEORGE
~
6 t
1
·°' r
~
by Virg il Partch (VIP)
(""'
"You just wait till the designated hitter gets
home." "Ainge 20e yerd1, George."
~.\R'9ADl.Kt: by Brad Anderson DE:\~IS THt: MENACE Hank Ketchum
11
~
"Well, you 've got hairy legs
too, you know!" "My dad doesn't care WHAT I do ... as long
as he doesn't find out about it."
l~Y A~AIN, KAYO·· ONLY
FIRSTret.L HIMWUAT A
WoNt>ERFUl ,GENEROUS
BROTHE"R H~ IS ...
/,.,
by Harold le Doux
~ l ~l.O HA\lf TOL.0
MM lT WAO JAOON WHO UA.Vf. ME THE AMPMETAMINEflANOOOT NIE ll4E EXTAA 6t.EEPIN6 GAP· ~~ ! OUT JA!IOH WAb OOIN6
fT Ab A fAVOf{ fO ME!
/I
zec ;;a ; . . " .... , . It I I -·------------~------· ........ ----
Pt'ANl:T8
TUMBLE• EED8
SHOE
ror.eer 11, Pf.AR ••
H~ ISN'IWOR'TH
THE: POWPE:R 10
fJL.OW HIM
UPWrTH.
by Tom K. Ryan
OH VEAHl? WHllrS 1H!
PRICE? OV POWVE!A ?!!
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushm1ller
I DIDN'T 1 DON'T THINK IT DOES
ANYTHING FOR HIM ---LEMON IS VERY KNOW THAT
GOOD WITM FISH
GORDO
L.OOt< I I 'U.. & 1ME Fl~T 10
ADMIT 1MA'f WE AAINC~
DO liAVE OUR VIOLE.ITT~!
by Gus Arriola
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
Sumirier song
Boswells host party
By MARV JAN£ AllCEUO
Of .... CNitt, ...... --
W hen the las t notes of Mozart's Sinfonia
Concer tante died away and tbe ap·
· ~lause ended at the first concert of the
Laguna Beach Summer Music Festival,
everyone wanted to relax.
So JoAnn and R. Thornton BosweU hosted a
reception afterward for musicians, board mem·
bers and friends al their home in lower T hree
Arch Bay.
Mrs Boswell. "'resident ot the festival,
welcomed a happy group of RUesta, because the
HAPPENINGS
concert was enthusiastically received by an
almost·capacity crowd.
An antique dlnlna table was filled with such
delicacies as fresh fruits. cheeses, puff pastries
and fried won ton, with more goodies set up on
the patio bes ide a pool and waterfall.
Concert soloists Y~o Kamel and Milton
Thom as, who are married to each other , at·
tended with their small daughter , and conductor
M asatoshi Mitsumoto arrived with his teen-age
daughter Nina.
Othe rs enjoyin& the party were Dr. and
Mrs. Ste phen Pauley, Dr. and Mrs. Richard
Minkin, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fong, Frieda
Belinfante, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lang and Al vin
Wiehle.
More guests were Mrs. ·Martin Snyder, Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Wi lson, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Spangenberg, Barbara Metzer, Doris Shields,
Arnold Bur chess and Ar lene Thistlewaite.
P rince Charles and his bride weren't the
onl y couple receiving attention this
week.
Ron Soder ling and Kar en Krielow.
bo th of Newport Beach, announced t heir
eneagement fl a black·Ue buffet dinner party
attended by ~ guests.
The partj w~ held at Soderling 's bayfront
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 30, 1981 ••
.Wilton Thomas and wife. Yukiko Kame1 'frorn left , .l11Ann Rosu•ell l111st('s~ unrl \la'>ntnsh1
.\-1itsumoto. conductor
home on Lido Is le and hosted by Robert Geor ge
a nd J a n Benlein. who also planned the
festivities.
Hundreds of long stemmed white roses,
glowing candles and violins playing in the
background added lo the romantic atmos phere
as the sun set over the ocean.
Doves were released and the happy couple
were toasted with Corbell Hrut champagne
while guests enjoyed hors d·oeuvres of escargol
in m ushroom caps, apple crepes, caviar a nd
cream cheese crepes and a rtichokes with
cheese.
Dinner was lobster and abalone Newburg,
cur ried rice wi th vegetables, hearts of palm,
cold shrimp and crab followed by strawberries
ror dessert
The bride-lo be , a former Miss USA fro m
Ohio. was surprist•d by her mother Helen
Kriclow. who fi e" out to ht'lp celebrate
Members of her fii.mce's fam ily who al·
tended included his fa ther. Er nest Soderling.
brother and wife, Mr. a nd Mrs Rudy Soderli ng
as well as his sister a nd her husband , Mr . a nd
Mrs Rober t Chase.
Other "ell wishers at the party included J o
Ann and Gene Mix. Stuart Woodard with Gloria
Rothchild, Pat Allen . Dr . and Mrs Norm
Adams and Jack Crawford with Helga Mctuska.
T ht' Woman·::. C lub of Sa n Juan
Capistrano wi ll have a racing start on
1ls 1981 82 "ays and means projects by
sponsoring u day at the r aces at 11. 30
am Monda}
Members <1nd guests will meet al the
clubhouse and lt•ave by bus ror Del Mar Cost
for rt'served M'al!-and lhe bus trip is $9 50. with
a S2 lax collected at the gate
Proceeds from the club's proJects go to
communit) philanthropies such as scholarships,
Interfaith St•n ·u:cmen's Center and American
Field Ser\'ln'
L ong l1ml' Corona del Mar reside nts
M aroltl and !\fade line Zeiger cele bra ted
their Hi s t Wl•dd1n g _anni ver s a r~
w1lh an op(.·n house 1n the Shorecliffs
horn l' cle!>1gm•d b~· Mrs Zl•1gler
He 1s a graduate of the Umversity of
M1thigan and a World War II veteran in the
Naval Air Serv1t<'
She graduated from th{' ~ew York School of
Fin1.• Ar ts and USC" 1th a degree 1n math.
He maintains his closet for all sellSons
Jf there 1s anything more frustrating to a
woman than being married to a man who main·
La ins his closet for all seasons. I don 't know what it
is
For centuries, wom en .. ave gone through a
ritual every spring and falt called "The Changing
of the Closets .·· u ·s a s t r a dition a l as pum pk in pie a t
Thanksgiving . It has the pomp of the changing of
the guards at the tom b of the unknown soldier. It's
as predicta ble as the buznrds' return every
s pring lo Hinckley.Ohio.
In t he fall, I cetemonioosly remove all the sun·
back dresses, s borts. see-through blouses a nd
Aquarius: Be
analytical
FRIDAY, J ULY 31
By S YDNEY OMARR
ARIES I March 21-April 191 Focus on revision,
review. the testing ot lnslruments a nd the presen·
talion or ideas. Young persons urge a "dis man·
Lling" of cur r ent process.. Become thoroughly
familiar wit h basic issues. Learn rules before
breaking them.
TAURUS !Apr11 00-May 201: Discussion with
Aries reveals similar needs, bas ic concerns a nd
HOROSCOPE
require ments for impor tant changes. A clan -
destine meeting coincides with creative en-
deavors. specia l relationship a nd romance. Dream
could be prophetic.
GEMINI (May 21-June 201: Communications oc-
cur between relatives in transit and close family
members Highlight hum or , versatility and will·
ingness to make intelligent concessions . Focus on
r.hort trips, messages a nd diplomatic approach lo
fina ncia l question.
CANCER <June 21-JulY 221. Focus on locating
what you need. improving iMome potential. defin·
mg terms and seeing people in a more realistic
li g ht. Long-dis tance calls. com munica t ions
domina te scenario. Em phasis also on s piritual
values, publishing and higher education.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Emphasis on winning,
proving major points, accepting responsibility for
inte nsified relations hip. Lunar cycle coincides
w ith initiative, originality, independence a nd
showmanship. You'll be at right place at crucial
mom ent.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept.· 2%).: Look behind scenes
for ans wers. Aura of gla~and deception could
dom inate scenark>. Don't tiang on to past -it is
time to break shackles. to iasist on recognition.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 22): People compliment
you on appearance, objectives and enthusiasm.
Charisma is highli&hted , and you can make wishes
come true . Foeus on fresh concepts, new contact
and affair of heart. Aries, Leo, Sagittarius persons
play significant roles .
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Teach, learn, follow
through on hunch, accept intuJUve intellect as re·
liable guide. Focus on business decision, getting
a long with a uthor ities and straightening out
money dilemma . Cancer, Capricorn. Aquarius
perso~ figure prominently.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 >: Nat ural
tale nts, positive qualltle1 surge to forefront.
Popularity increases, 1otlal activity accelerates.
Display flexibility. ealart• penonal and business
hor lzons. Emphaail .n eclllcaUon, travel and re·
v1slon or basic v1en.
CAPR1CO&N (he. 22.J"1. lt): Financial ar-
rangement.I can N made II YoU are aware of de· . ' •
Rar11 recital ••dulea
Harp rec1t•t•, fulurtn1 lb• 1tudenta of
vlrtuoeo Susan Mel>oelAd, wtU be held at I p.m. Aue. SJ and 14 ln UC Irvine'• UUJe Theatre.
MtDonaJd, who hu been roaducUn, a barp
worksbop at UC lnlne few 40 mUllclan1 from the
U.S , 1Cona, Japaa and Swtt.rland, la chairman
or the harp Mpartmeata at UM Jullllard School In
N w York and lndlena Uni"9'11ty. -
open-toed sandals from my closet and store them
in boxes in my hus band's closet. I replace them
with winter dresses. coats. sweaters. long-s leeved
blouses and boots.
In the s pring, I remove all the winter dresses,
coats, sweaters, long-sleeved blouses and boots
from my closet. store them in boxes in mv
husband's closet and replace the m with sunback
~v ASHLEIGH
_!BRILLIANT
\F MY L IFE
HAD BEEN
EASIER T O L..IVE1
I MIG MT ALRE A DY
HAVE F IN1St-4ED'
" \ .
LIV ING IT.
tails, interest rates. security and necessit y for col-
late ral. Emphasis on solution of mystery, coming
lo t erms with recalcitrant associate, partner or
mate.
AQUARIUS cJan 20-Feb. 181 Take ti me to be
analytica l. Focus on legalities, partnerships,
s pecial rights and permissions Gemini, Virgo,
Sagittarius persons play key roles Apparent set·
back will eventually boomerang in your favor Be
patient '
P ISCES I Feb. 19-March 201 Obtain hint from
Gemini message Highlight diplomacy especially
where fa mily members are concerned. Accent on
work, recreation, general health and a bility to
complete basic chores A .. confused" relative or
neij?hbor confides problem
Wedding g ains
Di eight titles
LONDON <AP) -In a single day, Lad y Diana
Spencer was tr a nsform ed into Pr incess ot Wales.
Duchess of Cornwall , Marchioness of Chester.
Duchess of Rothesay, Marchloness of Carrick.
Ba roness of Renfrew.
She also s ha res Prince Char les' positions as
Lord of the Isles and Great Steward or Scotland.
Officially, she is the Princess of Wales. If and
when Princes Charles a scends the throne, he will
be the reigning monarch, and she wlU be his con·
sort, although ca Ued quee n. She wUI not be able to
reign in her own right.
The Royal Navy was to restore for one day to-
d ay t.be rum "tot" r ation for petty officers and
enlisted men lo toast Prlnce Charles and bis bride.
The Defense Mln\stry sent an order to all
ships : ''Splice ttle mainbrace on July 30." .
The d ally one-eighth-pint rum ration was
abolished in 1970 to save $180,000 annually. and
beC&l.f e some naval commanders \housht lt oJd·
fashloned ln a mode rn force. Tbe. l11t lime It was
restored was for the um Silver Jubilee of Queen
EUiabeth 11.
Spllcln1 the brace , or ro~1 to the yafd of the
main sail waa a risky operauon on wooden-hull
sallln1 shlpe. Rallngs, the loweat-rankina seamen,
aot a tot ol rum afterward as a reward.
With nne attention to the needs of rorelan
crowned heads al the weddina . 1 double·slse cbair
was ~ovided in St. Paul's Cathedral tor Kint
Tarft abau Tupov IV of Tonaa.
The 350-pound ldnj returned lhe compliment
by 1 lvtna the royal couple two clot.bet atandl -"one torblm and one f« ber '1 thal be bad·made
hlmaell.
..
I
dresses. s horts see through blouses and open-toed
sanda ls.
The rite has not changed in 30 years.
Somehow, I have never sold my husband on
the advantages of playing musical closets
I do not understand his logic al all. He says
.. If you don·l wear something you should
throw it away "
.. The world will nol come to a n end if vou wear
a short-sleeved s hirt in November " ·
"You should never own more than one suit at a
time unless you s weat a lot or you !.'al sloppy.··
·'The re is never a time to wear while shoes.
It ·s either too early or too late."
.. Closets and lwmorrho1ds should never be dis-
cussed in a publlt forum ·
"You should dress lo be rnmfortable. ··
Now, ho" in th1.· v.orld am I s upposed to make
a fashion plate out of :.i man like Lhal.,
The other night lhl'r<' was a lull in an ar gu·
menl and I s;.rnl. ·And I !-Uppose you'r e not going
to change your rlosi.'t on·r again for wi nter ··
"I ccrta1nl~ am ... ht• said "I'm s toring some
waders, a fat1gut· Jacket. three pink Mexican
s hirts, four golf s w(.•att·rs. a beach robe and fi ve
pairs of shews that I m supposed to keep on with
my big toe 1·n· stnrNI lh1.'m m your closet ..
Sometiml''> I rlun ·t know when to shut up
'Me and You ' a bit aw k w ard
DEAR ANN LANDERS . I am a lover of good
grammar . Improper usage grates on my ne rves. I
grew up in l111no1s. a nd one of the firs t things I
learned was to sa~ "You and I -not ME a nd
YO U." Our English tea cher pul it this way,
"Remember to put yourself last ··
My husband insists 1t is perfectly proper to sa y
··m e and you .. How about it? STRAINING AT
GNAT S AN D S WALLOWI NG CAM ELS I N
ALABAMA
Dear Camels in Alabama?: "1'fe and you" is
awkward bul not incorrect when used In. a sen·
teoce such as: "This a pplies to me and you." It IS
improper, however, to say, "Me and you were in-
vited." It s hould b<• "You and I." Get it?
In my opinion lhe most outrageous assault on
the eardrum Is J>('rpetrated by people who say
"be tween you and I." This display of ignorance
makes my skin c rawl, and I'm amazed at the well·
educated fol ks who are guilty of it.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am going with a
wonderful guy who has been divorced twice. Larry
says both marriages were mistakes and he never
knew tht' "real thin~ .. until I came along He
wants me lo mar ry him l!OOn
Larry is the most m ar velous man in the world
when he 1s sober L'nfortunal1.·I~, his sober
evenings art.> becoming less frequent
1 havl' tried to g<'I him to go for counselir,g but
he refuses savs after we arc married he will
have no reason to drink because he will be so ha p-
py <This convers<1tion has been going on for over a
year I
Larry hal> so many wonderful qualities, but
I'm afraid of the future. I need guidance. -TORN
IN T UPELO
Dear Torn: Unless Larry agrees to join AA or
~et counseling and stays sober for at least one
ye ar -don 't marry him. Even the risk or
RUFFELL'S
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charge It by phone
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backsliding I\ t>vt'r -pre!>ent.
J just read a trrr ifi c book chat s hould be Jn the
ha nd of eH'r.) per son "ho has a drinking
problem. It's not pre ach.) or depressing -just a
slartlingJy frank !and sometimes funny) auto·
biogr aphy of a ~irted writer who ble" it all and
ANN LANDfRS
rinally ~ot on to hims1•1f after too ma ny wasted,
booze-soaked )'ears. Title : "Where Did Everybody
Go?" by Paul Mallo). (Publisher , Doubleday.
Price SI 1.95> This could be the most important
$11.95 you ever spent in your life.
DEA R ANN LANDE RS: May I sa y a word to
parents and others who put their children in the
middle of their disputes divorced or not.
Kids can be mighty powerful weapons against
a spouse. and perhaps you think you can "win"
with such help But do you realize what a big part
of their world you are especially when the
children are small'' It 1s terrifying enough for a
child to witness a nasty argument, but to be placed
in the middle and made to choose between the two
most im portant people in their lives can be ex·
trem ely painful
Such confli cts o fte n leave scars and
nightmares long after the children have forgotten
what the fight was all a bout. Nobody wins.
No body . BEEN THERE
Dear l,\een There : Thank you for a superb let·
ter. I couldn't have done bette r (or as well>
myself.
SICK
AND TIRED?
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too)
Because of
ALCOHOLISM
or other che mical dependency
Learn how you can help now ! Yes, the re Is
so m ething you can do -even If the victim
wo n't seek help.
Attend Our Free
Communit y Education Alcoholism
Intervention Prdgram. Every
Saturday Morni ng, toam til Noon
AlcohOll\m Rtcovery Services
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Costa f'Nsa, CA '2627 !7U ) ~2-273-4 Ex. 129
Approved tor Mt<Slcart
., r
I I
!£ 22 s a o a o •-•++ -.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurad,y, July 30, 1981
othing. but best medically for Scouts
. J()RT A.P. HILL, Va. CAP> -
Dr'. David Carmichael U1ually
worla In the rarefied at·
m9411bere of cardiac care units.
bu\ f0r the time being the retired
Nny rear admiral Is treaUn1
Boy Scouts.
·~cm having a great time,"
Pariblcbael, of La Jolla, aai~
W~J?esday.
"(" usually do tertiary care
car4iology. Right now, I'm in
leFllraJ practice."
Ba,ck home, Carmichael
dlasnoses heart disease.
Cannon fire and fireworks
s hattered the peace as
CarJnichael took a 11cout'11 Lem·
perature aa the openlna
c'ereniony of'the National Jam-
boree unfolded across the road
from the medical tent.
His only complaint is that he's
been so busy since he arnved
Saturday that he hasn't had time
to tour the Jamboree.
Carmichael, three other doc·
tors, two nurses, three medical
technicians and a scout aide
starr one of the most visible
medical tents here.
The other doctt>rs are Bill
Youngblood, a Midland. Texas.
psychiatrist; Stan Wallach, a
Veterans Administration doctor
from AJbany, N. Y., and John G.
I
Bernard, a 1coutmaater and
family physician from
Lafayette, La.
So tar, Carmichael estimated,
his staff has seen some 400 peo.
ple. They treated a convul1lon, a
diabetic, several people 1utfer·
ing hypertension, heat exhaus-
tlon and Uck bites.
'• lf we had an epidemic of
hepatltJ1, 1trep lhroal or the
diarrheal dl1t11 1, that's what
we'd be worried about," he uld.
Anyone who 1how1 •rmptonu
of a communlcablt I lneu Is
l11ol1led for the ufely or others
Clerk held in embeszling
MOJAVE CAP) An account
clerk for Mojave UnJrted School
District has pleaded Innocent to
embezzling $135,829, most of it In
checks stamped "for depo1ll
only."
A prellmlnary hearln1 tor
Jranlll Valpcy , 29 , was
1chaduJud Au11 . 14 In EHt Kern
Munlrlpal Court
M 1 V1alpey wu arrested
tollowlns an lnvti11U1atlon.
SUED Dan Rather, CBS
news anchorman, is being
~ued for $2.5 million by Carl
Kornbluth, a process server ,
who claims he was ··un·
lawfully detained " al the
ne twork's New York studios
a fte r he handed Ra ther a
subpoena.
~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
·NOT POLITICAL'
Jay Rockefeller
Wealthy
f8.!llily not
political?
CHARLESTON .
W.Va .°(AP l -The
Rockefeller family
whose members have
held the post of vice
preside nt and gov -
e rn ors h 1 p sin
Arkansas. New York
and West Virginia is
not at all political.
claims West Virginia
Gov. Jay Rockefeller
''The bas ic thi ng
about my family is that
it 's not political ,"
Rockefeller told an in ·
terviewer for W. a
fashion magazine based
in New York City. "But
I certainly am. There's
no doubt about that. ..
Rockefeller, 44 . re-
fused to commit himself
to any national political
aspirations, although he
also declined to ruJe out
a P$)SSible presidential
bid an 1984.
A 01 ong the· ··non
political" Rockefellers
a re three uncles : the
late-'Nelson, past gov.
ernor of New York and
vice preside nt of the
United States; the late
Winthrop, former gov-
erQor of Arkansas; and
David, former chairman
o r Chase Manhattan
Bank and founder of the
'l'rU{l.teral Commission.
'rll,e West Virginia
governor, a Democrat
unlike his uncles. spent
a record $9.5 mill ion
s eeking hi s second
terms, $9.3 million of
whlcb came from his
personal fortune. He
agreed it helps to be
wealthy to succeed in
politics. It also can help
in defeat, he said.
·;.n 's not so much a
q11eltion of money,·'
said Rockefeller. .. but
that. you should be able
to leave po l itics
graiefuJly. You don 't de·
velop an unhealthy de·
pendency on it for your
entire life or ego.··
FQ! THE RECORD
I , ~
GOOD NEWS FOR CAR BUYERS
This will result in an average
saving of $8 25 in.California:
Here's the best news you 've seen in months. GMAC and your participating
GM dealer are now offering GMAC car financing at only 13.8%.
That's right! You can finance any new General Motors car delivered
in August at just 13.8%. And this means big savings to you.
Your participating GM dealer is ready now to offer you this new
13.8% financing rate on all new GM cars, including the new J-Cars.
So see your GM dealer today and pick out that new Chevy, Pontiac,
Oldsmobile, Buick or Cadillac that you 've been waiting to buy.
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
.. I
..
'
,.
•
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
BUSINESS
cs
C7 ca MAJOR LEAGUE BAS EBAL L
Davey Lopes reverses
his ·field as baseball
strike continues. C2.
Magee's 31 points -give U.S. a victory
UC Irvine basketball All-American shines in gold medal win over USSR
BUCHAREST, Romania CAP> -All
American Kevin Magee led the United
States basketball team to a 93-87 gold
medal victory over the Soviet Union and
swimmer Jill Sterkel won her fifth gold
medal as the World University Games
came to an end.
The Games officially closed today
with a ceremony, but no events were
scheduled.
The Soviets finished the lO·day games
with 38 gold medals. Romania downed
Cuba 3-2 in men's volleyball Wednes-
day, increasing its gold medal total to
30. The United States finished with 29
gold medals.
Magee, a 6-8 forward from UC Irvine.
scored 31 points to pace the American
basketball victory . Working inside
against 7-4 Vladimir Tkachenko and 7-
foot Alexandr Belositeni, Magee fouled
out with 3:59 remaining in the game
and the Americans holding a seven-
point lead.
The Soviets pulled to within one point
a minute later before guards John
Bagley of Boston College and Sidney
Lowe of North Carolina State took over.
Steals and driving layups put the game
out of reach of the frustrated Soviets,
who had played the Americans close all
night.
Nikolai Deriughin led the Soviets with
21 points. Tkachenko added 16, most on
them on fl atfooted short shots.
''Magee was playing against two of
the finer big men in the world," said
U.S. Coach Tom Davis of Boston
College. "It's very tough to play against
men of that caliber."
Magee, who had aver aged less than 20
points a game throughout the tourna-
ment, said: "I didn't do anything dif-
fere nt. The coach told us to come out
and hustle and play defense. That's
what we did."
Howard Carter of Louisiana State
scored 17 points for the Americans.
Nadia Comaneci's feat of wiMing five
gold medals.
Sterkel gave the U.S. women's 400·
meter medley team a clear-cut lead by
turnfog in a stunning performance in
the butterlfy leg. The United States won
the gold in a record-setting 4 minutes
18.85 seconds.
Kim Linehan, a lso of the University
of Texas, captured the women's 400-
meter freestyle in a record 4 : 15.27.
Linehan, who also won the 300-meter
freestyle on Monday. was followed by
the Soviet union's Irina Laritsch ava in
4 : 15.50 and Hanna Sherri of Stanford
University in 4:21.01.
The Soviet Union took the men's
400-meter medley relay in a Games re-
cord 3:48.75. The United States was
second in 3:49.55 and Brazil third in
3:55.10.
The United States dominated events
throughout the week-long swimming
com petition at the outdoor August 23
swimming pool , winning 16 gold medals
to the Soviet Union's 10
"It's been a good week the whole
team's done really well," said head
Coach Nort Thorton of the University of
California. "But wail until you see some
of their times next month "
Orin Segarceanu of Romania won his
third tennis gold of the games by defeat-
ing top-seeded Vadim Borisov of the
Soviet Union 6-7. 7-6. 6 4, 6-2 in the
men's singles.
Segarceanu. a Davis Cup star. earlier
won both the mixed doubles. with
Virginia Ru zici, and the mens's
doubles. with Andrei Dirzu.
Romania look the gold medal in the
lea m epee final al the fencing hall.
downing Switzerland 9-5.
The U.S Nationals will be held in Sterkel, a University of Texas stu-
d e nt, matched Romanian gymnast
Daniel Machek won the men's 400-
meter freestyle ia a r ecord-selling
3:58.08, collecting Czechoslovakia's first
gold medal of the Games. M llwaukee in August. l\et·tn ~lagee
A .. Wl ........
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Saul playing on borrowed time
Hampered by injuries, Rams center says this may be his last hurrah
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of -DellJ " ... 1-.ff In 11 NFL seasons, Rich Saul
has played 160 games. starting
89 or the last 90.
During that time the Rams'
center bas incurred breaks.
s prains, dislocations. fractures
and pinched nerves. At age 33,
Saul admits he's on borrowed
time.
Saul is attempting to play the
1981 seuon as a favor to Coach
Ray Malavasi, who talked the
All-pro center out of retirement
during the off-season. How long
Saul remains at the Rams' Ca!
State Fullerton training camp is
another matter. though.
·'The key is if I can s till help
out and do my share," said SauJ,
as he tried to adjust his banged-
up body into a comfortable posi-
Uon. "I'll ha ve to see how it
goes. I'll have to see how I feel."
Lll(E MOST athletes, Saul bas
a tremendous amount of pride.
And, after playing football for 24
of bls 33 years, the Newport
Beach resident claims be wants
to leave the game wblle be'a allll
on lop -and still in one piece.
"One thing you can't do in life
is fool yourself, especially in this
game," Saul explained. "I have
a lot of injuries and if I told you
I didn't after playing 12 years
I'd be lying.
"I don't think God constructed
t he body to take that kind of
punishment.
"I don't want to go out being
so-so. I 've seen too many
players just hang on. And, I'll be
quite honest with you ... it's
not a happy sight."
SAUL, BY TODAY'S NFL
standards, is a small man play-
ing in a big man's game.
Rich Saul
·'During drills I look around
and say. 'I could get killed out
here.' I have to use everything I
have to do what I can do."
Although the Rams' offensive
line is one or the best in the
NFL. Saul is generally con-
sider ed the glue that holds it
together Coaches rave about his
ability while teammates praise
his accomplishments.
"I RESPECT the coaching
staff and they respect my feel-
ings," explained Saul. "Ray and
I have an understanding. He told
me to come out a nd play it by
ear.
•·1·11 know more after a couple
of preseason games but I'll be
honest with myself. I'm not get-
ting paid to try to make blocks .
I'm getting paid to make blocks.
"This is a very physical, very
intense. very e motional. pull-no·
punches game. It's very de-
manding."
"N1nely·f1 ve percent of this
game is mental. It's so emo-
tional The physical isn't as tax-
ing as the emotional ..
In Saul '!> case. however . he'd
have a good argument ror both.
Des pite his aching muscles.
Sa ul is a lso hampered by a
pinched nerve in his neck. The
injury caused him lo miss more
than a few plays last year arter
gelling hit the wrong way
"I've had knives and needles
jammed in me and t here's
nothing worse than the pain
from a pinched nerve. It's so ex-
cruciating I literally go bli nd for
a fe w seconds whe n it's ag-
gravated.
"You feel them (the injuries>.
They're there. But then every·
things has a price."
And. the price the Rams
may have to pay is Saul's retire-
ment.
"If I can help out it will be
great for both pa rties ... Saul
!>aid .. A good deal is when both
µarties can profit
·Tm JUSt playing 1l week-by-
week, day-by·day. I'm not doing
1t for Ray or the fans. God gave
me the ability to play, and when
He feels I'm not doing that we'll
come to an understanding."
Which 1s what he's already
done with his daughter Jaime
1 who 1s four years old).
"She told me. 'Daddy, I don't
want you lo play football Ttus is
your last year ... said Saul with a
s mile
"I told her that's good enough
ror me ··
Sinith, D a ws o n f e ud
INGLEWOO D Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Reg-
gie Smith and ABC television sportscaster Ted Dawson
almost came to blows here Wednesday after the Players
Association meeting at the Airport Marriott Hotel.
Smith approached Dawson over a broadcast in which
Dawson allegedly inferred that the outfielder s hould have
been playing despite the shoulder injury that kept him out
o( right field during the strike-interrupted regular season.
LEAPING FORWARD '.°'JC'w York Cosm os Rick Davis takes
a first half leap O\'C r Portland's Chris He llenka mp in '.'JASL
action Wednesda ,.
'Tm playing at 243 pounds
and we have hacks on this team
bigger than I am," he said. "I
see those guys around me like
Kent Hill, Jackie Slater , Doug
France. Dennis Harrah, Doug
Smith and Irv Pankey -those
guys are amazing. I'm in awe of
these people.
And, it's the m ental strain
that's taking its toll on Saul as
much as the physical.
''The key is getting mental-
ly up every game," he said
Surf's Moyers ret11rns a hero
He's back after missing three games to score two in win over Calgary
By ED ZINTEL Of the Dally Pilot Staff
Somehow. someway, Steve Moyers was
going to make sure he was noticed Wed-
nesday night.
He didn't figure to steal the show. Heck,
he wasn't even sure whether he'd get a
chance to get into the act at all.
But somehow, the dynamic Moyers was
going to stand up and be counted.
Actually, it wasn't too long ago that
Moyen was unable to stand up -period.
His right foot had become so tender after
the California Surf's game against Tampa
Bay, July 15, that the 24-year-old forward
&ad to Ump back and forth from the field to
the lockeroom. The. pro1nosls was a foot
contuaaon and meant tbe Surf'• 1eadtn1
1corer would have to sit out at least a
week.
Moyers wound up alttlng out exacUy two
weekl, missing three games in the pro·
ceu.
But Wednesday nl1ht at Anaheim
Stadium, before 5,631 fans, Steve Moyers
returned,
Moywa broucht wilb him 1 rou1in1
round ot applaU.e as he entered the 1ame
for the injured Otsama KhalU with Juat un·
der elpt minutes cone in the aecond half.
About thlrly·teven minute• later,
Moyer• pranced otr the field among
dleen, once a1.tn th• local daruna.
Moyen acored two 1oall and nearly
pulled off the hat trick on at least two oc-
casions in leading the Surf to an important
and emotional 4-2 win over the Calgary
Boomers.
The win gave California eight points and
a hefty boost at its goal of gaining an
NASL wild card playoff berth.
Moyers' first goal at 61 :05 came from
·I love to score goals. And
I like to let the crowd know
it..
-ete¥e Moyere
about 12 yards out and ju•t did skip under
the top of the goal poat. 1t broke a 1-1 tie
and the Surf never looked back.
Jan van der Veen followed with hlJ thlrd
• goal of the season aeven minutea later
before Moyera scored bis 10th goat of the
year at 80:35 to 1Ive the Surf a comforta·
ble •-1 lead.
All this aaainst a team which had won 14
of its lut 17 1ames and waa conslct.red by
many, includin1 Surf coacb Laur It
Calloway, second only to the Colmot in
talent lo the NASL.
"The import.ant lhinl WU that •• wdn,"
Moyen aald after the 1ame, refutlnl to
&lorlfy hll performance. "I expected to
come in at aome polnt of u,. 1ame. l Jut
wanted to contribut.."
Thal he did -a nd how. And. in the
Moyers fashion, he let the crowd know how
he felt after both goals by rushing over to
the side railing and raising bis arms in
triumph.
"I love to score goals," he said. "And I
Uke to let the crowd know it. 1 say let the
fans enjoy it too. It ·brings happiness to
them and they can relate to me when I do
that."
Calgary, 14·13 and still in second place
in the Northwest Division behind Van-
couver, got on the board first with 20:35 re·
malning In the first ha'lf on a shot by Franz
Gerber.
But beyond that, the SlU"f was able to put
the pressure on the Boomers through'1Ut .
Graham Oates finally knotted the score
wltb lea than five minutes left in the half
on a nicely-placed head shot from 10 yards
out. ·
Receiving a long pass from Paulo Cesar.
Oates beaded the ball while tumine 180
de1rees in the air.
''I thou1bt Calgary was lulllne us in the
first half," Calloway said afterward. "We
eot ca~bl up in their 1ame and they
plar,ed us up lo our box.
'ln the aecond half, we applied more
pre11ure and played very attractively. I
thou1ht we could have acond more, but · w• achJeved OW' obJectJn."
That obJectlve, accordinl to Ca~owa1
w11 two fold: 1ain p0inu toward a playoff
Mrtb and beat a hl,:hly·rat.ed ttam.
u....-
OOLD MEDAL PLAY The South' George Singleton fri1ht1
pushes off of West's Mark Acres at the National Sports
. Festival. The West won the gold m dal with a 109·97 viclo"l
I ~ 1•-_....~~ ........ --~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~-'
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July SO, 1981
..-------------------------....
· Argyroe wHI sign Lachemann
The owner ol the Suttle
Mariners says he plans to 1l1n a ...
Laelaemann, the c lub'• lnterlm
Non-sports fan jury
gets Raider case
manase.r. to a permanent contract for the 1912
season. ~It Arnroe of Newport Beach, who
was in New York tor a mM ttns of major leasue
owners Wedneaday, 111ld that wh11e Lacbemann
had not been officially rehired, he dld not ex-
pect problems ne1ot1atln1 a contract . . . All-
time home run klni HaaJl Aaron and two-time
Most Valuable Player Frau Roblnt0a head a
llst or 23 former players under consideration for
the 1982 HaU of Fame Ballot ... The New York
Yankees baseball club, whose suit ln the death
of catcher Thurman Mun1011 was rejected In
federal court, refiled the case In Summit County
Common Pleas Court In Akron, Ohio .
LOS ANGELES A jury of From AP d11patcbe1 m
seven women and five men -with •II•
not a sports fan among them -bas Gray's surge leads West to victory
begun deliberations in the landmark antitrust
trial of the Oakland Raiders vs. the National
Football League, a case crucial to the future of
professional sports.
Stuart Gray scored 14 points In •
the final 12 minutes as the West de·
feated the South, 109-97 to win the
As Judge Harry Pregerson placed the case
in the U.S. District Court jury's hands Wednes-
day he declared, "The wait now begins."
The panelists bad heard 12 weeks of com-
plex and sometimes emotional testimony from
witnesses who included tbe two chief partisans
-Al Davis, managing general partner of the
Raiders who wants to move his team to Los
Angeles and NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle.
who opposed the move and had the backing of 22
of the league's 28 teams.
gold medal in men's basketball at the National
Sports Festival Wednesday ... Jay Wall
lifted a loose puck into the net lo break a 1·1
tie and start a surge to the gold medal as the
Great Lakes team defeated Central, 5·2 in Ice
hockey ... Janke Lawrence, a 6-3 center from
Louisiana Tech, led the South to the gold medal
in women's basketball with 28 points in a 93-84
victory over the East ... Baron Plltenaer,
director of the festival. said that this year's
event was the "most successful tournament to
date" and that it has created a new awareness
of the event. The jury which met for three hours Wednes-
day. before being taken to a hotel for the night.
sequestered ror tbe night, has been asked to de-
cide whether Rozelle and the NFL violated an-
titrust laws by stopping Davis' proposed move.
Quote of the day
At issue is the NFL's RuJe 4.3, which re·
q uires three-fourths or the league's team
owners consent to another team's move to a
new community. Davis contends this is anti ·
com petitive and a violation of the Sherman An-
titrust Act.
BUly Casper, describing his Baffler trou-
ble club, a 5-wood with two metal rails on
the bottom: "I use it from sand traps,
from the rough, oH the tee, in the fairway
and I eat my soup with it.··
Davey Lopes
Rakhshani
cut by Rams
From AP dispatches
The Los Angeles Rams waived
free-agent rookies Dan Kendra
and Vic Rakhshani Wednesday,
reducing lo 77 the number of
players in cam p , a team
spokesman said.
ft was the second year in Na-
tional Football League camp for
Kendra. a quarterback out of
West Virllinia. Rakhshani is a
light end who played at USC last
year and graduated from Edison
Hi(h. _
Linebacker Mel Owens, the
Rams' No. 1 draft pick, went
through drills with Los Angeles
for the first lime Wednesday.
Owens missed the first 10 days
of practice because be had not
reached contract accord with
the Rams. but signed a contract
on Tuesday.
Lopes reverses
outlook on strike
Players back negotiators
~
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
players most distant from the
baseball strike negotiations,
those who play or live on the
West Coast, finally got first-
hand information on the pro-
ceedings -and liked what they
heard.
In the first of what was billed
as a series of regional meetings
with players. Marvin Miller ap-
parently was successful Wednes·
day in mending any cracks in the
players' solid front and heading
off potential new dissension.
"THEY <THE OWNERS> are
trying to break the union. but
we're stronger now than ever,"
said Los Angeles Dodgers' in-
fielder Davey Lopes, who earlier
had been critical of the way the
players association was handl-
ing the negotiations.
''I made a mistake saying
player representatives shouldn't
be part of the negotiations: I see
after listening at this meeting
that they're an integral part of
the negotiations.··
Lopes recently criticized the
"circus" atmosphere of the.
bargaining, mentioning the fact
that players were sitting in. He
spoke of the Baltimore Orioles'
Doug Decinces in particular.
After Wednesday's meeting,
however, Lopes went up to
DeCinces, shook his hand and
apologized. saying, "I know you
guys have been working hard."
"I appreciate that," .said
DeCinces, who had flown out
from the East Coast with Miller.
"Thanks for coming to the meet-
ing."
' He would not say, however,
that things looked any brighter
for ending the strike.
WEDNESDAY'S player meet-
ing at a Los Angeles hotel was
attended mostly by members of
the Los Angeles Dodgers,
California Angels and San Diego
Padres.
The Dodgers' Reggie Smith
said the meeting made him feel
better about the strike, com-
menting, "Not being in com -
munications for a while gives
you a feeling of 'Did I make the
right decision?' This put all
those fears to rest."
Major league club owners met
for two hours Wednesday night
in New York lo frame strategy
for resumed negotiations with
the Major League Players As-
sociation in the baseball strike.
Arter meeting separately in
league sessions, the owners re-
convened and heard a report
from Ray Grebey. director of
the Player Relations Commit·
tee, management's bargaining
arm.
Ed Fitzgerald of the
Milwaukee Brewers, chairman
of the board of the PRC. said
that all 26 member clubs ex-
pressed views and asked ques·
lions in the session.
"No votes were taken, but the
overwhelming consensus was
that the clubs want to bring the
strike t-0 a rapid conclusion and
reopen the season," Fitzgerald
said. "We hope to achieve that
end through th.e process or col-
lective bargaining."
Reaves could give Oiiers_ depth
Veteran reserve quarterback m
Jobn lleave8 has been signed by the •II•
Houston Oilers, but Coach Ed 8Ue1
says time will tell whether Reaves
wlll be the one to provide some depth at that
position ... Coach BUJ Walab says he expect!
Paul Hofer, the starting runnine back injured in
the sixth game of the 1980 season, to be ready to
play in tbi11 year's opener ... Rookie
linebacker E. J. Junior and
veteran wide receiver Mel
Gray ended their two-week
holdout by singing with tbe
St . Loui ~ Cardinals
. . . After 12 seasons with
Atlanta, Jeff Van Note is
beginning to get a few gray
hairs bul he's still ready lo
show the younger players
that his professional football
Reaves career isn't over . . . The
Oakland Raiders rec«!1ve their Super Bowl XV
championstlip rings Sunday, a day off from
training camp ... Frank Kush, former
Arizona Slate University football coach, pre·
dieted that by 1985, the NFL will have a team in
Phoenix. "Without Question, Phoenix has all the
pluses for an NFL team," said Kush. currently
the head coach of the Canadian Football
League's Hamilton Tiger-Cats. "[think it would
be great for the slate -·and for football . too -
lo have a pro team in Arizona."
Pitchers have left their mark
NEW YORK -A few items ii gleaned from Joe Reichler's "The
Great All -time Baseball Record
Book":
Fourteen times in big league history a
pitcher has won 20 games and batted .300 in the
sam e season. Bob Gibson was the latest. The St.
Louis Cardinals hurler did it in 1970.
Bulky Don Newcombe of the Brooklyn
Dodgers was the last pitcher lo steal home. He
did it in 1955.
HOCKEY WINNERS Great Lakes goalie
John VanBies brock from Detroit. holds up
his gold medal after they defeated Central
Baseball today
On th1J date In baseball in 1968:
Washington s hortstop Ron Hanaen
pulled off the eighth and most recent un·
assisted triple play in major lea~e hi•·
tory. but the Senators feU to Cleveland,
10~1. Three days later, Ran.sen was traded
to the Chicago White Sox for infielder Tim
Cullen.
Today's birthdays:
Cleveland outfielder Pat Kelly is 37.
New York Mets oullielder Ellis Valentine
is 27. Kansas City outfielder Clint Hurdle
is 24.
Chui-ho retains WBC flyweight title
South Korea's Kim Cbul·bo re-•
tained his World Boxing Council
super flyweight championship with a
13th-round knockout of American challenger
Willie Jensen Wednesday in South Korea
. . . Car Owner Roger Penake said there were
many flagrant violations by other drivers who
were not penalized during last May's In-
dianapolis 500 and that Bobby Unser was unfair-
ly singled out for punishment by the U.S. Auto
Club ... Seattle SuperSonics guard Vinnie
Johnson, who became a free agent after last
season, signed a three-year contract the NBA
team announced ... Rahway State Prison in-
mate James Scott has signed a contract to fight
Dwight Braxton of Philadelphia Sept. 5 at the
prison ... The FBI says its investigation into
the 1978-79 Boston College basketball scandal
has not ended with the indictments of five men
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Salt Lake City at
Phoenix, 7:30 p.m ., KMPC (710>; Rebroadcast
of 1962 World Series (New York Yankees vs.
San Francisco Giants. game five). immediately
following Gulls' game, KMPC (710).
. ............
hockey team. 5-2. at the National Sports
Festival in Syracuse. '\l"Y
M Iller, the players· c hief
negotiator. said the previous
scattered player complaints
with the strike were to be ex-
pected. Rustlers picked third • Ill f oothall race
The team held its customary
two-a-day drills Wednesday,
with fuJI pads worn during the
~fternoon session. There was no
full contact, a team spokei1man
said.
The Ra ms now have SO
veterans and 27 rookies at their
Cal State Fullerton training
facility.
RE SLAMED part of it on a
news blackout during last
week's negotiations and added,
''Every once in awhile the
papers will print a quote from a
a player wishing he were play-
ing baseball. Every player
wishes he w ere playing
baseball."
Golden West should feel at home again in South ,Coast Con/ erence
·Dreamers play
The California Dreamers
women's soccer team, a 22·
member all-star team
representing 25 Oranee County
women's soccer league teams,
are currrently in Germany
where they will play eight
games before returning to tbe
U.S., Aug.1.
Players selected for the tour
range in age from 16-43 and an
mothers, housewives and work·
int women. They will compete
in Cologne, Wurzburg, Nurem-
berg, Munich and Kempten
before coocludinC their tour tn
Hetdelberfl.
"The players got a report on
tbe negotiations, with particular
emphasis oo the past two
weeks," Miller said ol Wed·
ne~ay's meeting, which drew
some 75 players. "They voted
unanimously to back the players
aasodation and lts negotiators."
Asked if he expected a new of-
fer from the owners during the
negotiating session called by
medial« Kenneth Moffett for to-
day In New York, Miller
replied: "I would certainly hope
ao. Otherwise. why would we be
meeting again?"
By CURT SEED EN
Of .. o.i..,,....-...
Golden West College hasn't even had the
chance to get settled in the South Coast
Conference football race, and the Rustlers
have already garnered one vote of con-
fidence from the conference's sports in-.
formation directors.
The SIDs yearly poll themselves to de-
termine how the South Coast Conference
will shape up. Coach Ray Shackleford's
Rustlers collected one first, one second,
three third and a fourth-place vote and are
pegged for third overall.
Golden West moves back to the South
Coast Conference after a 12-year stint in
the Southern Cal Conference, and just the
thought of not having to take boring bus
trips to East Los Angeles, LA Southwest
and Rio Hondo, among other schools, is
sure to give the RusUers a boost.
A lot of the faith being put into
Ml. SAC's projected high finish is based on
sophomore quarterback Kevin Burke.
Although he served as a backup QB last
year, the Mounties' staff is expecting big
things.
Quarterbacks, in fact, figure to make or
break this year's teams.
Cerritos has landed Cal State Fullerton
COLLEGE REPORT
transfer Mickey Corwin, and Fullerton re-
turning, has Roger Wilson.
Grossmont, which received rive last·
place votes from the SIDs and one sixth-
place ballot, the 1980 bas just one starter
back from team which finished 3·6·1.
* • •
year for the University or Washington.
Koehler played one season for the
Gauchos in 1979-80 and then red·shirted
last sea5on with the Huskies. An All-CIF
pick his senior season at CdM, Koehler
averaged 17.3 points per game for the Sea
Kings.
He saw limited action with Saddleback.
* * * ON THE MOVE -UC Irvine baseball
Breakers face Dolphins
Meanwhile, the SIDs tabbed Coach Hal
Sherbeck's Fullerton Hornets to capture
the SCC crown. The Hornets, tbe defending
' leasue ce>champ,11, return 18 lettermen and
el&hl starters off last year'• team wtucb
compiled a 7-4 record. Fullerton lost to
Santa Monica in tbe Avocado Bowl, H-7
last year. ,
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE track cap·
lain Eric Johnson signed with the Rams as
a free asent. The 28-year-old ran the
100 meters, 400 meters relay and 200
meters for the Gauchos.
coach Mike Gerakoa bolstered bis infield
with the recent signing of three communi-
ty college stars, including Orange Coast's
Mike Balllet. Balliet, a former Huntington
Beach High player, can play either
shortstop or second base. A South Cout
Conrerence adversary -Mike Rapp of
Santa Ana College, is also UCl-bound.
Rupp batted .415 last year. Gerakos also
signed Du Trlnldad, a transfer rrom West
Valley CC in Saratoga . . . Former Sad-
dleback basketball player Kevla 8owlud
has received a scholarship to at~d San
Jose Slate. The 6-5 guard out of Brea Hi&h
averaged 13.9 pointa per game ror the
Gauchos last year and bad a 16.3 average
in M~ioo Conference play.
The Newport Beach Breakers
wlll meet Beach Division cbalft·
pion KuntiDcton Beach DoJpldnl
Friday tn an American
Speedloccer Maociation Mmi·
ftllal pl*YO(f 1am• at tbe Loe
Caballeros Speedaoccer
Stadlum. Game lime ii set for 'I
p.m .
TJiat pme WW be followed bJ Ute Colta lle1a Cowbo11 n .
Anabelm Arrow• Mmt-fluJ
1ameatt:ao.
On Saturday. tM ASA cbam-
ploublp aame will bl beld at L4I Caballero1 at 8 p.m. Tbt Newport Beach Breat.w
lftUed into the playoffa with
1
comvlnctng wln1 laat weekend o .. r t.be Santa Ana Wtndl, J2.5
and the Orange Gwmen, .. ,.
Tbe Empire Dlvt1ioa cbam·
pion Ana.helm M'rowl, who will
meet Co1ta llesa, will be
without IHdiat •~•r G«r)' Kall wbo 11 requtnd to alt out
the same due to an td«tloa in a
s.ame tut "eek a1atat Santa Ana.
Tbe annual 1peed1occer
awardt bencaaet wlU b• beld
Aua. 8 at Loi Ca.ballel'OI at a
p.m. Ttcteta, priced at IT aH
available_,. caJUq 5S7·91112.
Coac:hm and playen from au
the tnm1 will be on hand.·
'
Actually, Mt. San Antonio captured
more llrst·place vote1 (three) than
Fullerton, but in the overall voti.QI, tbe
Hornets collected rour second-place votes
compared to solo votet fOf' leCOnd, thlrd
and lourtb for the Mountlet.
The SIDI say Cerritos will llni1b fourth,
followed by San Diero Mesa, Ora..,.e CoHt
and Groeamont.
OCC, coming oft a mlaerable 1990 cam·
palsn (2.S record), received lour tilth·
place voles and two 1eventb·J>lace proJec· Uont.
Stut, Ooach Diet Tucker hu 11 1W'tert
return1nf from lut year'• 1qu1d.
Under collegiate rules, an athlete can
cornpete as a professional in one sport,
while retaining his amateur status In •
another.
Johnson has five years pro rootball ex-
perience behJnd b1m, locludinc stints 'Wfth
the PbUadeJpb1a Ea11ea and San Fran-
clsco oers.
Tbe 6-0, m.pounder played defen1lve
.back at Washinaton Slate before ernbark·
Int on bis pro football career. • • •
FOaME• coaONA DEL MA• RIGB
and Saddleback Colleae •tandout p.ard
Dave Koehler wm play bulcetball lbla
OCC f ootbaJl coach Dick Tacker has
three quarterback candidates for tbe 1181
season, including his son, Oay, who waa a
standout last year at Corona del Mar Hlah.
Other poqlbilities for the No. l slpal caJl.
lnt duties are last year's quarterback.
Claarlle 8011, and Art Ma7t.reaa, a
freshman from Montebello lnlh. Tucker
hu 24 players back the 1990 1quad ...
Speaklna of returnlnc quarterbacb, Sam
Aiello wUJ be back al Golden West. Aitllo
started the last 1lx aamu for C..da a.1
Macktefad'• auuen . . . t:a.cemtot
runnin& back Grell Cele picked up 287
total yardl lut week in b1a debut witb tbe
San Dleao Shark• ol lhl CalllorDia l'oot·
ball Leasue. Cole ran back ~ openln1
ldckotr • yardl for a touchdown. "
'
a
LOI Al1mlto1
w•DNl$0AY'l llHULn o, ... ,, __ rt•rMnt .... 1(1 .. )
~••IT •Ace. uo ytfCh , yt•r-olG\ llf.O
In Ct lllwnlt. Cle l,,.l"O f~ mtlO.M Purle.
$3,500.
Rtb$ Offlre ICIM9tll 7 00 4 00 120
Slltrp N EtY CHar1l l.00 J to
~nny Ollo I FryOtyl l IO
Alto rtetO Maid for lr-•, frt vt len
Wty, 0... Gem, CICKe N Eesy. TrlCIM
Blel\kClle<k, HH A Sutt Ntll••. Total
Performance
Time II~ u llllACTA c>-•I paid m .a
S•COND llACE 400 ytrat l yHr-41Cb
c1a1m1no Purtt ~IOO
l1,111"1ble-Act I FryOtyl J .0 l .0 J JO
Ht Ctn ~Inca CBltvll'l•I • 00 J '°
Hett Clt HY ICNvtll l .O
Al.Cl rte.. Joe C Quick. Ttu ChlmH,
S..rl Spl..,,, John Miio
Time -Z0.2'
THlllD •ACll. UO yerdi 1 yter olclS
Clelmlng 1...-meloen1 t>rt d In C•ll•ornla
P1,1rtt, $l,j()Q
Supe"I-IArrmltong) 6 IO • 00 J JO
C•H lurt Comfort CCrHQtrl S DO J IO
Nul\vllle Pr1nc:eu CMvlHl S.10
AllO rtctO 1.-r Lover. Bt•OI\ Gltr•.
Mun Biii, Otllenl Kthl, Go Troublt Man.
Step II\ Cht Circlt, lmt OtllOhllul Gtl
T•me -11.23
l'OU llTH llAC•. lSO verch l·yHr-olel:l
Clalmlno Purse, M,.00
O•HI Fortune 1cr .. oer1 14 "° 4.00 ""°
Min Kid Ceww ICl\IVtll IS 00 • "° Mighty POiiey IHarll l IO
Allo raced Hot SIDCk, Bonlley .. CH,
J1,1n911 Pley, Cl\1ct.el•I. Pueblo Tr•cor,
l(lueml•ler
T•mt -1• 11
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Fll'TH llACE. 400 yerds J yur olds
Cltlming P\lrse, U,IOO
Country Pistol ICtrdo••• 11.0 12 .a \.a
0-Ltgal Allt<k I Paultntl 8 00 S 10
Pttn ol Alle<k I Hlrll ) IO
0 -0llqutlilled. p1ac..i wconG
A lso fkl'd llCipty Vlllf' H••• to blf Rt<h,.
Euy L•ICh, E•sa on Too
Tim• 20 S4
SIXTH U CE 400 yerG\ J ytor olO\ tncl
up Clt 1ming Puna, M,SOO
V1vt Vlllt CHtrll I .0 • .0 l 60
FHI Fltmt (....,..rJ 6 40 JOO
Skip Congo ICtrdottl 2 40
AIM> rtctO BtO Win-, Cloucl Chu..-
Sllcky Finger\. On the' Fl•,~·• BrtOel
Time -JOU
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Buu L• Rue IC•t •Qert • 40 J 40 MIU Cl•nyqua I FryOeyl • 10
AllO rtuo. lam EHY, BuQVed Con,_
llon, Too Racer. T•••I Him RIQhl. A Poll<y
Forever.
Tim• 11.99 u EXACTA IS.•l swlG SJl.80
lllOMTH RACE uo yard) 3 yur OIGS
•nO UP Allowenct Pur-w. '9,SOO
Ooll• Ctrvtr (Armstrong! 11 40 S .O 3 IO
American Jtl IC.rdotel l •0 2 60
Euv M....,Y., IH•rll J.O
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w111l 11\r• wlnnl1>9 lk keU 111"8 hOrMll l2
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nlnO tickets (lour l\orso1
NINTH llACE. J50 Yt•d• 1 vur-41GS
CltlmlnQ Purw. M.600
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Lu-• Roehl. Nerio O••u. ICl\•bon s
WonOtr.
Tlmt 18 zo
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WIDNE•DAY'I llUUL TS
(11111 elu.4ty -......--......... , 'lllST llACE. •furlongs J yetr-olOt 1nd
up. Clelml"g priu U0,000-11,000 Puru
112.000.
Time less Avtngtr
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Sltr Clltt 1si-,,,.ur I 6.20 4.00
Yust Ctll• (Wlnltndl •.«>
Also rlCeO Mon11~"'' l.•P'n, 8••11, Sl•bl• Pt l, B1,1bOle Bummo, 1.lmotln
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Alto ract0. Bel9111m Slttl, Jun'• l<Y
Bltil, Mlly Bu:ty, Fort Ttjon, A RounO fulll,
Le Ctportl, c-1ry Walk, Tom Oely
U DAILY OOUILl IS 1) SWIG U0 00
THlllD llACll. OM milt on turl ).yetr·
OIG lllllH Cltlmlng PurM. $11000
Any Time Pel IH .... y) 12 ., 1 60 •IO
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ICKltMIMftl .. Ml»lon Vlt jO, MonOt y ti
s·301
Seniors (1 4·15-y1ar-old1)
UCTIONAL TOUllNAMINT (ti CM ..... P111*1 .. I
So<.llh S.-IW l, Miu Ion Vlelo Sowth o
IMlulon Viejo So.llll •llmlntl•GI
(ti c.en.c-1
Ltkewoocl·Cerrllo• 1 Founltln Velley
Nor111 •
Fndily'1Gamt
Founlt ln .Yt lley NOC'lh vt La MlrtOe Or
Btll Gtr•M
Seniors ( 13-year-oldtl
SECTIONAL TOU llNAMENTS .
lttKt_.l•~I
Fovn1t1n Valley North 11, a.11 Ga•-••
Foun1t1n V•lltY Nortl\ "' -Oecerm1 .. G -nent, Stlu.Gty. I p.m
Big L.. .. gue (16-18-year-old•I
SECTrONAI. TOUllHAMIENT
l •t F-.i11 va11.., llecrtttlMtl c..twl
W~y'Jk-Ltl\no.( 12, Manhttlotn Betel\•
Buena Ptrll •. 1..onQ loecl\ 1
Surf statistics
Sc .... ., .........
Celo••Y 1 1-l
Ct lllornt• I 3 -4
S<orlno -I Ca1911ry, G•rb9r IMollM,
KrhltnStnl, 20 JS, 1 Callforn11. Oetu
fC•~r. Setr90ant1. 40 JO. 3 •1 OS, Moyen lvt n Ger Vffft, Alb9rto) • wt n Otr Vffn
CAll>erlol, 61·2', S Moyon ICU••. C-t>.
80 lS • c.a11111rr. Krt•ltnUn Cpenellv k•Ck)
SllOls -Cal911ry 21. Ct lllorn1t 11 \tvet
Ct l-y (Sl•O 4, Cal1forn1e CMtYtrl S
Fouh -Cal-y ll. Ce111...-n1• 10. Ofk10t1
Ct lQe,., J Ct lllOC'"'' S Corner Ir.Wu
C•lg<1ry J (.alllornlt lJ
Allendanee Sis.JI
NASL
WESTERN OIVISIOH
$an 01090
Los Angeles s..n
W L GF GA al' "ts
" 10 so 40 41 11'1 IS 11 40 41 '16 12•
11 16 Sl S8 d IOI
~n Joso 9 11 JS 6t l3 17
NOllTHWEST DIVISION
Vll\COU•H 11 8 S6 )7 48 14'
Calga,. u 1J •7 u o n•
Sulllt 13 ll S. o 0 110
Porll•nd 12 1S J8 43 U 103
Edmon1on 10 •• S• 6l U 103
E.UTERN DIVISION
C01mos
Montr••I
WHhni119ton
Toronto
,, s 11 • S4 180
IJ 13 SJ 0 411 121
12 IJ •S .a l9 !OS
Sl23l .. l'J'7
SOUTHEllN DIVCSIOfll
Allanl• 16 10 SS ., •1 ,.,
Forl l tuderiUtt IS II •3 36 l3 11S
T1mpa !My ll 16 S1 .0 0 Ill
Je<Uonvlllt IJ 13 31 "° JI 103 CIENTllAL DIVISION
Ch1cego It 1 U JS 4' 161
M1nnnot.1 •S 11 SO u 4l 12'
Tu1.. 13 I) 48 40 43 llt
0 •11•• • 1'l 10 S1 " ., Sut pcHnb •r• •••ro.d tot r99u••tlon OI'
ovtrtlnw ••<torv Four po.nts fM a il'IOotoul
v.c tory One aonvs P01nt IOI' every QOel
Kore-CS wUh • nw•1mum of thrff Ptf ~
No b04\U~ Pl)lnt is •••rditod fOf' ov~t1rne Of
U>OOIOUI 00'1•
W-Y'IS<Wft
S"rl •. Ulgtr'f 1 All ant• J, Toronto O
Covno. 1. Por u.-.d o
Minnesott 4, Fort Lt.-rdalt I
CntctOO l. EOrnonlon 2
Stn 01-J, SHtllt l CSOI
TNOl-1~ V•nc°""er .,, Tu•w
FriNY'lGA,.,.
w11n1fl9l,On al Otll••
Women's Trans National
let W•emlMI.,., Ctle.I
S.CtlWI "-"""'b Anno StnOtr (SHlll•I del ClnOy l(elll'-•
1R 1verton, Wyo I. 1'th hole, M.,I
Mc OouQtll CMIOlotNan. Ill I cltl OtbC>lo
Ht ll IO•lltsl. 2·t nd·I. Penny Hemmel
CO.ul1,1r, Ill I Otf l(.,.ln MunclinQer (Toror>-
tOIJ6·ancl-S, V•ltrle Slrlnner !North Pit t ....
Ntb I Otl LUC iiie Rty CRoc• Hiii, SCI,).
t n6-l, ~ry Zlmnwr,,,.,. IHlllst>oro, 111 I
Gel She.-rl Sltlnheuer (Mlldlson, Wll .),
l ·up, Amy Bonr ICltt,....•ltr, Flt I O.f
S..H n Fromutl\ IChesterlltlO, Mo.I, S-~.
Jull ln41sler 11..os Alt.,., C•lll I def Cvntl\lt
Fi119 IAllS.lln, Tue.i. Wncl·•. LHllt Sfltr>.
non CMlemil clltf. Ell"n Ktlly CLuthervlllt,
Md 1.1 ...
J t nlu lurbt (Tu< .. ) dtl Sl>lrlty Furlong
IStn Anlor\lo, Tutsi, 2·-·•. ROH Jone• CAlbuquerquel dtf Allu Oye ( O.lrey
Betel\, Flt .I, i-•nO·S, T,,.,.. .. Scllrtck
(SpoU nel Otl. PtVOY l(lrl<I\ I 0..111111,
Minn.), 1 .. n0.1; Jody Rostnlhtl (Edina.
Minn.> Ott. Ktryn Colbert CJt<k-1, Mkll ),
... na.J. s....... J-IH•novtt, NH> ..
Pally Coelnty Cf'onct City, O•lt .I. 1 .. no-1.
Kelhy l•ktr !Clover, SCI def Lorelle
AIGerelt CB._. P•rkl, 4·tnc!.J, s.. .. n Yen·
Ill CStn All(°"lo) cltf. Otnt How. IColor-
Sprlng•I, l·wp; Elwlnt l(ennedy IEPPlno.
Australltl clltf S..stn MtrChtst CC>mMle,
Hel> I, s..-..4
International meet
, ............. llalyJ
JCIO-fn nurdl-1. Edwin MMH IU.S I.
U.12; 2 8tr1 Wllll-CU.S I. ll.M. J ..._
Miiburn IU S.), U.M.
100 -I, Emmit K1"9 IU S >. 10.1•. 2.
Olt lte lull«• (Italy). 10 ...
HJ-1. Miiion Coode CU.S 11 1 4 -. 1
MHtlmo OIOlorgj• 111 .. yl, 14.
t'fl'llte -11-1. Mellrllle Oemlll-Ill•
ly), 11 ·5'.St..
1e1.....-.N-..ryl
1,J00-1 a .... °"911 IEnottnllll., )I j,(
DHp ... flahlng
•hrl'Otl't <Art'• ~I -.. .,,...,.., U t lNcwe, N llDl\MO, 11 !NU, P nlllClr.-1, •ire<•, ....................... 1-111 ent19n;
W'O !Mfltlll', ' UM ..... $6 etllto Ma, t
Y•ll..,teO. •reel! <•.1D01M<t.we1.
DANA WMAa, I07 MtltO! ti "--
1,»t Mftltt, ' n.11~1. 2 r.<111. n•to. ,.
rM<ll•rof. oc ..... .,. -U1 ~: .. , ........ It
~ MN, t reek fltll, -<t llU _... l 11t11W1, 1• ~. J1l mec.., ...
IAN 01190 (NIM WMll"lt "•llW• ..... , •• ,,.... '--1 -"' 41f11Mn.. fl1
.._.,., • Mt'r'te ..... tw "°"'"'• •• recll '""· ".....,..., .... .. _. -ttl ......,_, II) iHlt Clll,
l llf ,..., ,._. ~ IJ't '°" reO <•. DI .... -r.J-t•
,.
111110 11110 •AY cv1,..·, L .... 1,..1 21
•llO••n • llfte <ea, 1tt '°'" CM, lot , .. re<li, CM, io , .. 111~' (~ ............... ) ff •"Vi.rt ,., rO(lr. , ... 11 reel rO(lr. <Od.
1' yell-IMO, 1 llng <od
•ANTA •A11•A•A Ill •"91•" 2t1 < .. Ice ~ JO , .. ~r. It llCH\lto, 10
<-<M. • 11"9 CM. t NllllUI. l•t roc;lr. nt11.
,.,,,,.0 .... 1
Y•NTUAA • .nQlen 101 beuoc.-., )
l\allW4, ti MnllO, 17i ...... ~ .. ~ko
ben, 1~ rO(lr. <OCI. • 11"9 <M. It <-<.N.. -_ ..... 1.
O•Nt\110 204 _..,, l,UO rCKll flllll. I
ha1111111. •11 ct li<o o.u. • 1>on110, ••
MtOtrel.
POllT HU•NaMa IA"'trlce•I -H
•nol•" SM <•llC.O N U , ..... 11•11, I -re<uclt, 11 bonllo, SOI rO(k CM , 10 , .... (M ,
MAL.tau ea •noi.". no c•tlu ..... , "-llbvl. SO bonllo. U moo.ere I, 10 rock fl\!\.
•• AL lllACM -111 •ngltrJ 200 roo.
flah, .-be<rt<ucu, 400 bonito, oo m~lr.-1,
) .. nd btSt, .. CellCO btU. 2 llellblll.
Grunion run1
S•hmM'r -ID'47 p.m -12:41 t .m . •
$11ndty -11 : 21 p.m . I. 21 t .m. •
Mo"4•Y 12 11 e.m. •.J· II • m. •
Tuea.4-y -t • m.•·>•.m.•
• wi-Ille time 01 tllt ••PK 1..i '"" h
efltr mlenlOll(, lllt ntQflt lletor• " '"°-·
Thl1 week'• trout plants
LO$ ANOaLllS -Big RDClr. Crttk,
JtOMln ~. PyremlG Lek•, u-r Pll'\I
CrHk ti Frenc:llmen'• Fltl
SAN l•llNAllDINO -Big Betr I.Au,
GrHn ve11.., Uk•. or_.y l.tkt. ~nit
AM •i~r. Stnl• AM River CSoulll F...-lr.)
MAD•llA SM Joaquin Alvtr IMICldle
Fork). Sole.ht• Ltkt. Slark-•lller Ltkt
ALP'IN• Bl1,1e L••• (UPP•• t nCt
1.owerl
llllllN Kern River CO.m«rtl 0.,,, to
KRI P-erllCMltt, lo<tll Po•erl>Ou~ lO
Oemocrt l Otm, l••bell• Oam to Bo<eH
Po•orl\OVH , I( IU P-erl\OVH lo Lake
I IHbelle)
TULAlll Fr .. ,,,.n Cr••ll. Kern Rlwr
I F a irview Dam lo I( RJ PowerhouH.
Jolln_ .. lrlOQe 10 Felrvlew Ot m l, P9p.
permlnl er-. Tuft River (NOrtll tnO SowlJI
Fork• of Main Fork!
INYO Btlltr CrHll, Big Pint Cl-.
Bl"'°ll Cr-11.o ..... MIOOle, Soulh tno In·
ltkt II), Goodelt Crttk, lnGepenGenct
CrHk, l.tk• $tbrlnt . Lone Pine Crttk,
North l.•k•, Oak CrHk (Nortl\ Foril).
SntphHdl Crull, So1,1ll'1 LO I, Syml'nfl
CrHk. Tt bOOH Creek, Tlnemel\a er-.
T1,1tlleC .......
MONO BrlOQel)ort Reservoir , BIKk•Y•
Crt•k. Convl(I Crt•k, Convict Ltkt, 0...0·
man CrHll. Ellery Lakt, George Ltke,
Gleu CrMk, Grenl l.tkt . Grttn Croek, Ollll
l.ekt, Hillan CrMk, June l.t.._, LH Vlnl119
CrHk, ..... VlnlnQ (relk l!ioulh Fork). U I
111 Wei Ir.er l..Ailt, Lltllo Walker R1v1r, Luncly
Lake, Mamie LO•. Memmoll\ Crook,
Mary Leke, MCGH Crttk, Miii Crttll.,
Owens River (Beflton Cro"lnQ tnG Big Sc><·
1"9ll. Rover .. Creek, ROOll\•on er .. 11., Rock
Creek I PertOIH Camp 10 Tom's Pltco,
Tom s Pet co UCMtrHm co Rock Cr•lr. Ltlr.t,
Rock Cretk LAik• lo the Md or tllt rNO).
Rock Crttk Ltkt, R1,1•1\ Cr•k. S.OOltbeQ
Creek, \tGolebeg Ltlr.1, $trGlne CrHI<,
Slltrw1n Cr-. S•l•t r Lake, Swauger Cr-.
Tloot Ltke, Trumbllll Ulke, Twin Lalttt
BrldgtPOn IU--L-trl, Twin LAik" IMtmmotnl. lllrolnlt LtkH CU-r tn0
Low er t Virginia Cree•. W•lker Jtiver
ICnrh Flet Ctm119rouno to t-n of WtlkH.
L .. v111 Me-• Ctmpgrouncl lo Sonor• Brldgtl
International tournament
!ti NertllC-••Y. NHI
Flnlll_M,.lft
Jou ·Lu•• c iorc Otl PH<tl Porces. 1·•·
• 1, Guillermo VIies Otl R•Ck F•gel, S·I, ,_.,
• 4, CnrlSIQIS!w Frty\S del Andres Gomez.
I •. 6 •. Jou Lull Otmlenl Gel FerGI
TtYQtn, 1·6, • 3
Men's tournament
ltl s...tJI 0.--. NJ )
~INC II-51111•• Gregoire RMtllln Otl Frill Bue11n11111, ._.,
• ), Nick \t•I-""' Ven Winltsky, J-6. •·1. 1'
Women •tournament
(tlS-"'-l
---.. Sl•I• Pam SNl¥H •I ..... btrt Ht llQ.,lit, .. 1.
.. I. BtltlM 8-del SltcY -90lln, .. l.
._,, Cendy R..,nol<h oet Julle He rr1"91on.
1·~. 7·•· v-Vt,.,.,...11 Ott Kim ,,_,
•.0 .• '
-(_ > .
Wllllam Jon11 Cup
l•t T.-.i. Ttl••I PhlllPPI~• ... UnlltO SCttet ll IOI)
Misc.
Natlonal Sports Festive!
(ti SyrtclOM, N.Y.I
$~11D SkATING '·-'""'" I Sltvt Mtrrllleld, M1Gwest, C•n-Ptrlt, I .. ... l _,., Pierce. EHi, SI.
Frenclt. Wit . J OtvlG Pt"•t<•C. Sou1'1.
Florlutr1t, Mo , 4 Otn Miiier, South, Perl<
Rlttge, Ill
S,000 metH relt y
I Ml-\1 (Sltw Mtrrll1tld, Jell Fr•'*·
Brlt n Smith. 8ryen FoJtl. I 2S ?•. 2. W"1.
I JO ... J E<HI, I JI 14, 4 South, I 0 ... w-
1.•met.r1
I Glorlt 8C19tckl, e .. 1. P••k AIOgle. 111 ..
I St I>, 1 LyG1t Stepha ns, Wul,
MorChbr-111 , J.00 13, J. lle<ky -...
Ml-st, MilwtllllH , 7,0.S 40, 4 Mtr0trtl
'"""'· WHI, Rlve"lde, 2 11 U >.--... .., I. Et tl COlorle 8oQeclll, Litt P8111tl, IVWl
ICIOOP. &elll -.11), 6 17 Sl. J Ml-; 1
Wttl, • South
HOClllEY
Greet Lelr.tt ), C...lr•I 2 (llrsll
N•w E"Cl4•n0 IO, MIOWtsl 0 I VllrG)
IASklTeALL
Wet! 109, Soulll '1 (flr,:tl
Mldwett '3. test t7 (tl'1lrdl
Wwtl ...
Soulll n , EAlltl .. lnr\11
Mldwffl 17, Wett '2 I cr.lrdl
University Games
lttl«Mrwt.ll-111t>
IASk•TIALL
Unlt.O Stale U. Sovi.1 Union 17 Cllntl
Yugot.11vl• 91, Aomt nlt 91 llhlrd)
SWC-INO .....
400 ""'°'•Y retey 1 So111tt Union, >'•7S.
CGtmH nocorGI,, Unll.O SI.CH, J• .,.S.S. 1
8retll, J SS.10.
•OO treo-1 O t n l e l Mt c lltk
ICLt<lllHll..,tlr.lt l >fl ot IGe mu •«wdl;
2 GerldO MAGr"'Ot (8rull), J;st..S4; J.
Strgel Ktt-lkO¥ !Soviet Union), •:00.tS. .,_
•DO meclltY rtley -1. Ulllltd Sltln, • 11.a . 1 R-1•. •·u.u. i. sovi.t u .. i.. • u ...
..0 lree-1 l(lm I.IN,_ (U.S.), 4.15.V
10•"'" rtcord), 2. lt1N 1.MllKN ... IS...
l•I Unlonl, 4: IS JO, J Henna $11it.-rl IU.S.l,
• 21.0I
W9dneed•y'a tr1na•ctlon1
IASCHIA.U.
.................... let ....
H ATTL.a MJl'EllSONICS -$111fM Vlrt-
nle ,...,,_, ~ IO• 11\rW·yetr Clfllrod.
~LL ............... L...-
ATLAHTA l'ALCONS -(111 MIU
,,_,..._..~.II~ l:rtc ,...._,
CWMrlleellt..
NIW •NOL.ANO l"ATlllOTS -Cwt .ftflll
Oulftfl, ........ JOfln Iii.Ill..-...... ...,...
wl• rtctl,,..,., Colin McCtny Mii T ...
Lftfl, l11<lltn1 lotl ~Ml"tl, ftteMI.,.
•111 .. 111 ..... ~-•te; ""' 11111, <Mltl', °"' l.4e W.4'tf, Nllftlfte MC.It. LOS ANOELll llAMI -'Wel\'H Om\
• ...., .. ~II. 1111141 Vk ........ , .........
tT. LOUI' C.A•OIHAU -..,,.. I.I. J.i.. ,........, ... _...Of_.,...
<Mttet ... ~Carl .. ,....,,....,,
e11w11--..
WA•HINOTON a•011CIN$ -SI_.
Mtkt II• ..... -. .. 0 _,... -ln<t. ~· .. NN• HATa -....,._ OeAMe Ml9r ............. --.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 ca
JIM IEMIEC 1
l
Albacore, tuna plentiful
i..
t\lbaeore and b1g~ye tuna fishmg r~mams con-
sistent off our Southland coast line Action us :still
concentrated off San Oiego for the> longf1ns. but
tuna catches are being made south of the eas t end
of Clemente down to Me xican waters .
Charlie Davis of Huntington lie ach li11hcd last
week off the 43 Spot and ('1Jme back to port with u
bunch of albies and u nice bigeye. Davu> said Uie
best lure was a hexhead in red and yellow t•olors .
Fishing conditions are idea l us cooler water
has moved in a nd foh appear to bt· corning right to
the boat and hitting e very chov1e With tht>se
cooler water an•us, and the fact that there .ire
s chools of five to e1 ~ht pounders m1x1ng with 30
pounders. the sN1son appears to be he aded for the
record book as far as al bacort' .i.rt• con cerned
There are also H ll owta1l a nd dolphin being
taken under kelp putties as 11gs a rt• trolled C'lose to
these holclrng art-as an tht' 'ast ocean
TUE PACI FIC' ANGl.t:RS lnv 1tat ion al
Tournament "a~ held last weekend. and 1t "as
perhaps the best ont> da) albacore tourne) staged
along the coast 1n a numbl:r or years Kath)
Thompson of Corona t.Jt>l \1 ar reported that her
'84 Olympic
yachts shown
By ALMON LOCKABE\'
Dally P'ltec _11,.. Wrllllr
A previt'\\ of thl• 1984 Ol}mp1<· )<ll'hltng .... 111 be
the highlight of s:.ultng al'l1v1t) o.;t<ir ttng Sunday at
Long Beach and <'11n t1 011ini.~ throu~h l-r1da), Aug
7
Labeled the P rc 0 1) m p1c Regalia the week
long e\•ent 1s lhe firo.;t of three su ch r egattas
scheduled for 1982 and 1983 lUlm1natmg \\llh the
Olympic Gam<'s an 1984 ll reph1ct.'~ the tradition al
Ala mitos Bay Yacht Clu b Oh mp1c Class(•s Regal·
la which has bl·1•n a fruturecl t'\t>nt fo1 l1)r<il a nd
L' S sailors Cor J numhl'r of n·.iro.;
The Pre Oly mp1l' Ht gall<t "'" 1.1k1• on an of
f1 c1al status. to sponsun •d by the Olympic Classe~
Regatta Organizing Comm1ttet· tOCROC•. l he City
of Long Beach, Southc·r n Cah fornw 'r'<1<'ht1ng As·
sociatio n. Un1t t>d Stutt'~ Yac·ht Ra<'anJ! L'nitln.
Alamitos Bay Yacht C'luh and I .img llt'<H'h 't'<tchl
Club
~lkt• Sc·hw•ltlt'. ()('HO(' c·h:.i11 man. s:.i1d more
than 150 tKials from abou t IS rounln t•s .1n• cxpe<'l·
BOATI N(;
ed to compete over the ... a m1• 1·ourse:. that will be
used in the 1984 01\ mp1c:-.
Counlrac~ al n•ad~ "'gnf'<I Cor th<• l:'\1·nt include
Great Britain. Bra11l. "l l•w 7.t·aland. Australia ,
Canada. Aq~cntana. Sw~den, Mt•x1<·0 and J a pa n
Six of the se ven Olympic classes will be
represented The board sailing cla!.s "cl" not invit
ed because of the contmuan.-: conflict with th e In
ternallonal Yacht Racing l naon ov<'r which boards
will be used tht• WtndJ!l1'11•r or tht• Windsurfer
The SI'< oth(•r Ol vmp1<' l'IJ ... '>C'S art· Star. Soling.
Fly ing Dutchman 470. Tornado t·atamc1r an and
Finn
On the local yachtin~ front. Lido Isle Yacht
Club will s tage its Augusl Regatta for s mall boats
Saturday and Sunday. South Shore Yacht Club will
send a fleet of Pt>rformanc:t• Ha ndicap a nd occ•an
racing catamarun" around ('atahna !\land in its
annual two man r a<'<' Saturda\ a nd Sunda \
Newport Harbor Yacht Cluh \\111 hold a one·cfesi g~
regatta on out .... dt• <·ours1•.., Sunday. and Dana
Point Yacht Club w1U condul·t its Dana Oavs
Kel'.{atta !)aturclay anll !)UnrHly
* * * Soulhen\ Ctlllornlt V tc hllno A•
MKl•tlon Ctltnclar I.el._... . ...._ ••ecll
AltmltO\ Bev YteM CluD Pre
Olympk Rt9ttt•. •uo 2 1 Sc,_., A•-lellon Anc'"'' MtrlntN rtet, 5-y
H11ntl119ton Harbour Yeclll Club
Bol .. CNce Collo<lio<l IPHRFI
StlurOty, s..no..,
N .... tN llll-
... ,,.,_ Ye<llt (l1,1b Sc:rlppo
Kollen-o So<in No • CStlurOtyl
Stnl• BMbtrt Vat.Ill Club J 1•
~tQtllt, s.turdty, SUllOeY
WnUtM Ytchl CIUll W•illl h
E.cology R99911t, SalurOty, Sunoty
P-Vt lltY s.tlllng AttOCle
tlon -CltM Rtelno. suno.v
* * * S4ft01 ...
Coron.oo C•Y' Vacnr Ctuo ~Ulll 8 ef RPQtlll ~lurelty Sun d•• ~liver G•I• YMl'tt Club Cl1f)t>lr-~,It\ S..turcs.v 10-mll• f rl•nole-
r•o, Sunclay
S•n 0.-Htnc!l<ep Finl Ota
l row Tr°"'1Y •••.Sund.Iv
San Oleo<> YICl\I Club FrAI ..
!i<>rio« tPHRl'I s.,.,o.,
~-n••Y Wtndj..,.,,.-wrs Ytel\I CluD Iron
Men Sebot Rt u Saluro ..
KlnQ H•roor Y.o<l\I (lull M••I<
PRaf\Oft Memorial ,.a<.• S.lurd•Y
~· A•v Vtcl\I Club Sundt y Sklp~rutu Sunoav
~~~~~~~~~~~~-'
hu~l>and Gerry's boat the "Pacific Clipper" wu
wrnner in two cla!16es
Thompson s kippered his four anglers t.o a one·
ctay fish count of 41 albiea, all ta.ken on 20·pound
strinJ( and s ingle hooks . Taking top honors for the
mos t lon~ft.ns caught in the day was Pete Torre of
Ch•1rhe's Chili fame, who boated 15 albies. Mott of
tht> action took place som e 85 miles south of Point
Loma. •
Marlin action is extre m ely slow In local
1
1
water s. and what was expected to be a good and
FISHING II. f
earl"· Sl'ason has not materialized. It was fell that
a ng iers were trying to pus h the season a bit for
h11lf1~h a few weeks back, a nd, most like ly, the
l>est f1shUlg for both marlin and broadbill will
com e dunng August a nd September.
WJUTEY AT ANGLER'S CENTER reported
thrl't' sp1kcb1lls boated this pas t week in the
Kidney Banks a rea of San Diego. but no local
<·atcht>s were made between our jetlys and the
1i,,la nds Only a Cew fish have been spotted by the
Ne .... port fl eet even thoug h the re a re plenty of
m a ckerel in the waler .
F'rank Smith of Newport Beach was one of the
luc ky <inglers to hook a nd land a marlin this past
WE'l'k Smith was fishing aboard the sportfisher
Wandl'rlust" for longfins off San Diego when the
marlin hit an albacor e jig. It took Smith l 'h hours,
to land the billfish, which weighed in at 158
pounds
I ,
I
J
Any angler who catches, tags or releases a
m arlin t his season 1s required by newly-adopted
fish and game rules to report it within 15 days :
.iftt•r lhe catch to their local billfish club or the J
I> Fl; offlt·es loc ated in either Long Beach or San
l>ll'go
The• rt•ason for reporting all catches is to help
the biologist:. in th e determination of future con-
trols on commercial fishing for billfish along our
rnastline .... tlh nets and also to establish a better
1<lea of the m1 grat1on and habits of billfish. Long
lane r eleases are not required to be reported.
:;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~,
r' t\esa \7erde ~ 1~
\J ine and 0iquor
SALE! 4 DAYS OML Y!
MARLBORO
CIGARETTES s5~~T~
Regular King Size. Box and Soft Pack only.
Not Menthol. Light or Light 1oo·s.
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
A pcpular "light brand with no .frills.
King-size. f11ter-t1 P. regulars
RUSSO FF
VODKA
A "light" vodka -70 proof. Enjoy
summer coolers with less alcohol.
Reg S2 49
VALLEY OF THE
MOON CHABLIS 750 ML
A pleasant. dry white wine at a great price.
KING
COLA
Refreshing cola 12 0%. CAMS
ftricu .ffecHn ttw. S-.. Aalg. I st
9 5 MEDAL WINNING WIMES
IN STOCK
549-4044
... BAKER AT HARBOR__,
I,,., \,'.,,, , \1111, I <JI I {
l 'nmisrakablv
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
Lilnihd
Choice Seots
213-463· 1101
(AtJc for S....dayl
714-752-0960
If it's got wheels
you'll move It
faster in a
Dally Pilot
classified
ad. cau
'42·5678 and
a friendly
ad-visor will
help you turn
r.our wheels
nto cash.
Joh11ston
&Murphy
THE WANDERER
A moc toe two eyelet
lie with full leather
linings. Available in
Tan. Bone. White,
or Blue Smooth Glove.
xx x x
xx x x
99 Fashron lsl•nd
Newport BHch
759-9551
r J
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
Boating fee
plan delayed
WASHINGTON I AP> 0.splte early fanfare,
the R eagan admlnlstrallon hu run Into trouble
aellln1 Ila plan to c harge fees to recreational and'
commercial boaters and h as withdrawn the pro·
poul ao it can be reworked.
Administration officials say they intend lo
stand by "th e u ser fee c oncept" but acknowledge
the boaters fee proposal was hastily put to1ether
and Is beJng revised extensively ao It miaht
become more P•latable to Coogre11.
The fees are aupposed to help offset proposed
c uts In the budget o f the U.S. Coast Guard. But
c r ltlc11 0( the pla n quickly accused the admlnlstra·
t\on of not d o ing it8 h omework. The commandant
of the CoNt G uard a c knowledged he had no r ole in
working out details.
Tbe r.ropoae d legis lation, s ubmitted to
Congress ast April, gave n o assurance the money
would 10 to t h e Coast Guard, left final fee
scbedulet lo the Trans portation Departm e n t, was
v ague a! to who w ould pay for what Coatt Guard
benefits and was c haracterized as being inequita·
ble and not well thou ght out.
Hospital cost jump
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Operating costs at
California's acute-care hospitals jumped nearly 18
percent between t h e first quarters of 1981 and 1980,
according to Callfornla Health Facilities Com-
mission .
The commission said the increase exceeded
the voluntary cost-limitation goaJ o f three private
medical groups a n d raised questions about
whether a lternatives to volunta r y e fforts w ere
need e d .
"The major purpose of the quarterly reports is
to m o nito r the e ffectiveness o f the medical care in·
dustry's voluntary cost containment program in
California," said Joe Hafkensc hiel. the com·
missio n 's executive director
PtJBLI NOTICI!
L.W Pitt PIC'flT1GUI IUIUIHI
MMletTATIMINT
TM i.tlewlfte --· •re ffl"f ••-ea: l lU ... 1001 IUllNIN ~AIU(,
Ut N#VI ltlM""-9 A-, a. ..... CA tt7ta; l'Nllll\e ...,_, lt1t !NI
An1111•, lull• *· kn Olt .. , CA ttltll.
SIQUOI A PACll'IC
oev11.0PMINT C:OMPAHY, •
O•l•waro COl' ... u llon, 1010 .. ,9NI
Avtnuo, St.II• 400, S.11 0 1• ... CA
'1101
NO .. WIC:H PROPIRTlll, INC:.,
• C•ll!of'nle tor .... •ton, MJO CemlM 0.1 Ria PMrtl\, lulw JOO, 1M ~.
CA tJIOL llllt ...,.,,,.. ,, <onducl.O .... .,, llft
ll'ICOi',.,etMI ••-lalleft _, IMll a
1Nrtll9fllllp.
IN(.
SIQUOIA PACl"C
Ol!VILOPMIHT GO,
MlchHIJ. Mc'-,
Vko PrKldlnl
HORWICH PROllllHll!I,
Mic-• Norwich,
PrHiellftl
'"'' It-'-• ... , .... •1111 tllt County c;i.n ot Ort"ll' C-tv on Jiiiy
21,IMl
,1667U
"ullll"-0 Or ..... co .. 1 O•llY PllOI. July >O, Auo •• IJ, 10, 1Ml ,,.....,
P\J8UC NOTICE
11onc• TOC .. •O•TOH OP IUUl T•AN_, ...
ANO OP INTaNTION TO
TaAJllPl"A~COMOUC
aavallAOa LICINH 1ttc.'1t1•1t1u.c.c . .., ...,., ... PC-*,
HOllO I• lltroO\f t lvon IMI a Dull
11al\tl•r. lnctu,.119 •" a1co11ollc
bovero91 I~. •• atelll lo lie mode ol 111•1 urtoln rotlaurenl llullMU
~n o w n at THE APAOANA
RESTAURANT and IOUl•d •I tOO
Ht•POrl Center Drive "D", City of
Newport IMacll, County 01 0rtfl91,
St•I• 01 C.lllornta n..o.
H• mo ol T r•n•loror · SI ROUS MOOIAI, MIO Newport Ctnlet Orlv•
"D, H•wpol'I llt<Kh, C•lllornl• tllMO, S.S.S.0·12.etl3,
HotnH, -••• M<Urlly numbof and Dual11011 •CIGreu ol Intended
Tr•n•ftron, IMludlno rip code,"' GAAY GI RAOOSIAN, UIJ W. San
Lor•nio. Santa Ana, C• 0704;
S.S.S.t·n -ws, JOHN c SCOTT, -
H Miiis Cli[•mOl'll, Ca tl711 ;
S.S.~1'1CMAAD 0 BURNS,
USO Port ~n, Ho.._I •11<11, ---------------------------i Ca ; S.S U •·St·1402, SAMU El
_.@ STAR GA'ZER'~il.
t-,;.;..;..;...;..;..:....----a, CU. Y A. POLLAN---...--.,-1-.,.--t
RAMETTA, POiUO Porl Allerclton,
NowPOrt llMcll, Ct S.S.~U4l.
MICHAEL HOGAN, ttJ0 Porl ADtr
d••n. N•wporl •••<II . Ca SS 114 •I 0 44 4 , f'R ANIC MONASTll!R!, ttJ0 Port Abor-.n. NowPOrt llffcll, C.. .• SS S.0~10>4
1't Y-0.7 A...,., C...O. M
Y •u•'''"I te --'• Jt•n Y To d•••lop mt uog• tor Fr•doy
,toeJ WQt6\ CrllfHJ>C"'d•"'9 fO ~''
of "°"' Zod·oc btrtt> "on
,,,,, u --'"'r"l
ocr 11 w l.(; 1• 11 2'-2' ,;'"
)t fe. »t11•r uc-.. o,,.... ..... ....... ,, ...... ........ .,,
... ""'90!A "°' .. ...
•lWtlftl
4l'-'htc:t ... ....,. . ., .... .. °' .,..,__r\al .. o... ....... IOO< "°"-.,~ ..
"°"" .......... "" .. .._
MOM6c.91 .. ., .... ...... .......... fOll•~ff'I
'ID~J•m•
t t (Uon
tilWl4fll ..,°' .. ._ .. .. o. ... ........
)~ i:
ti•-•4GITT4k1UI
M ''1"°~MIO" NO* U 4f, ., ......
,.,.~ ote 11 '
,,,_ 16-22-lt •J :~=·... 14710 • t• LK._ .... ~1K41 ,._
ft Wit,_ n-'' '• .....
IOT-tl0.N'
*'"" IJ lo ......
"°' ·-., ....
M'/61""' .,,.., ..
IOOo ,,,,
~Ncu111'
Total c-ldff•IO!' IO lie ,.Id 10< Ille
"'-"' dncrl-, In -•al, •• en 1loc1' In tr-. 1111\lfO , eq\;1-1 ...0
900cl ""' t-u.r wllll Ille llunM 1• uos.00000 OucrlPllCll\
IColll .... cllOO
2 Domanll notn 10 lie r•Pla<act In cas11
111roU911 '"'ow 1011111"9
I 1,,tlall ... 111not•11'1
Alft-1
I 10,000 oo
I0,000.00
In 100< ol a•lor 21),000.00
K Ind of llctflM to IM tranll•rrod and
numlMr •ro. On ~It G•n.,•I Liquor
llonH No. 41 ~'"
,,.. .... -,,.,.,,., •Ill ... (Oii•
aummat.., at 10 a.m on or •fl., tllt
2•111 day 01 AUQUtl IMI al Iha oacrow
dt0arlm•nl ot Proltulon.1 Ew:row
S•rvlcn ti 1'11 N Tuslln .A.v1nw,
I P.0 Boa 11Sl11 S.nla An• •2701
1'1711), Ctlllornl•
All ollltr Ml"'" ,..,.,., encl ao
dr•H•d .,..., by '"' TrM1•loror within
I/lo PHI lllr" .,..,.. •O If' H h ~nown to Ill• Tr-farff .,, ,,. wm•
Byrne's
rating
PUBUC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS ausu1ass
N-• STATUIUINT Tl•• IOllOWll\9 ,..,...,, ar• GcMl\9
butln•ua
Tiie Ptr11 ..... I/lat I,_ COMIOere
lion 10< Ille lr-l•r ol lllO Dutl""• -Iha Ike.-I• lo lie paid ., .. , lho
Oopart_..I ol Alc-llc IMffr•oe
Control ha\ o-o•ecl Ille P<-d
tr an\ fer
O•l•CI, July tl, IMI PulllllllOcl Oran\111 C.0.11 O•lly PllOI,
luly JO, 1 .. 1 )41041
• rises
C HICAGO <AP l
M ayor Jane M Byrne's
popularit y among
Chicago voters is at 1t.s
h igh est in al most two
year s, according to a
C hicago T ribune poll.
According to the poll,
publis hed r ecently in the
newspaper, 39 per cent o(
those surveyed said the
mayor is d oing an ex·
celle nt or iood job, and
14 percent said s he is d o ·
lng a poor job.
This con trasts s harply
wilb last D ecember's
Tribune poll when only
15 percent considered
her performance e x
cellent o r good and 4:!
percent said she was do·
ln g a poor job.
SIERRA INVESTMENTS, INC.,
14k ~HI Kal .. la Avefl .... °'-· C,a
'1..S
SIER"A REALTY ANO INVESTMENT, IHC , • Callfornla Got
-•lion, 10. EHi K•i.11• Aft<lllO,
Or•noe,CA~
Tllll -'""' h c-lod Dy a «• porallon
SIERRA RE.Al TY ANO
INVESTMENT, INC
O..lel N llalloy,
P.-..1-Tllll •!al .......... 111.., wllll Ille C-ly C~ Of 0r""90 Counly on J<lly
u. ""· LAW 0'~1Cal 0' *Oaa I PAUL., INC.
A P .. OPHllOMAL CO"I'. ....... ~.....,.. ..........
SlaUIP-,W..-
12110-ltrwl
New~ llMdl, CA n.-
Pl...W
P111111•-Or•noio co .. 1 Dally Piiot,
July )0, ~ '· IJ, 20, 1"1 '«>'·"
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aus•N•SS
N-. STATaM•NT
T ... IOllOW4119 per'°" IO OOln9 bu•I
~Ha\
BELL!> 8AltllEOUE. uoa
.-..,,,,uon, Hu"tl"oto" leech, CA ., ...
HENRY HAHALI! aELL JR , 21on Gr-o, H..,..1"9\on ......
CA'1M6
Tllll -JIW .... <-l•d Dy an In·
dlvldual
H9NY Hanei. 11•11 Jr
Tiii• Ut1-I wet lllod wllll tho
c-•v om ot °'"'99 c ... "'Y on J uly ,., I"' P1'71U
Publl~ DrM!ll Co.ttl Oally PllOt,
July >O. Auel.•. 1*, 10, IMI i>•Mt --·-
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO PERSC.NS
INTERESTED IN THE
ESTATE OF JANE NOT~~:.:::.i:,~":,~o"s KAUL, DECEASED.
S<1100101.-m1 COASlCOMMu H1TY To all person s i n ·
coLLEOE01sTR1CT terested whether as
lld Ooacllltw' 2·00 o'CIO<ll p"' ol tho creditors 'h eirs , .... a tees JOllldeyof,._.,, .. l, , • ww •
PUBLIC NOTlCE
P••o of 11e1 """"' Offlct of 111t or d evlsees, In t he estate
Pure/IH I,. AtiOflt. llM Marian "-"'"· Of J AN E V E R 0 N I CA
-,con• '°"'""'n"' '°11 ... 0"''~1• KAUL deceased whose 1170 AclOIM Avo., Cott• MeH, CA I t dd ' 2'89 ,,.,. as a r ess was
~,. Protut 1c1on1111ca t1011 "•"'• Tiebou t Avenue, Bronx,
u . "°· ,.., 1~;~:-S ~':.~~~~~,EGE MOTION Stat e of New York, that
MOT1c• DP T"UtHH' IALI P•M• ~..,,. 11<• on 1110. °''"'of t11t letters testamentary o r of
On ~t 1t, "" ac ,, ... •"' 01recter, """slal Fac11111 .. P1119. Mr. administration have been f'l .. ST AMIR IC:AN TITLI! 1HIU"AllCI COMP.ANY,• Ct111orn1a J°"" Pouer. C:-t Cornmunttv Cot• ... Issued to R 0 BER ·r J . c-etltfl .. T"""9., ""'"-o111r1e1, 1110 Ad•m• An , Co••• KAUL by Surrogate's -... CA '26216 17141 SS.$107 • '"'''""' s..-ttilltltd T""'"· of tllat HOT1CE is HfR&•Y c;1vEN t11a1 Court , County of Bronx a certain Oeed OI Tru•I aHcutacl by DOMINIC J . RACITI ANO TeRl!SA Ill• ........... "'" SclloOI Olitrlcl of c 0 u r t 0 f c 0 mp et en t
M. RACtTl, llllllNM aftll wit• .. corn· Oran9• C:-tv. cen•orn••· •<11119 by jurisdiction of the S tate of ,,_,,,..,_,,•ID .. Uftdlvi.d ~ ~~d, :~~~~ .':' ,C:C:".";~~n: ::-:d; New York. '"*"1 -•otl!,.T R, "AC•T•...., "OIST At CT", w111 "u'•• 1111 io, .w1 T h at t he f o 11 o w I no CAltOLYH L. RACIT I,,.,.._. -•II• .. <ommunlty ,,.,.,.,. .. to "°' 1•1•' ,,,.., .,. •bove-.i.iee1 """· p e rson Is Indebted to or , .. teG blOo 1or tlle ••"cl of • 'ontuc t I ... ""41M-.cl ~Int.,...-, -rK...-0 fO( tM eboff ptojecl. h Ofd no p ersonal property
Mtttll 11, 1'7tt• IMlrUfll9ftl flt, ll04a, lldS Wtl lie received Ill tllo plact Of the Said d ecedent: ~ec':'! ~~S.:C.!,:, ~=~~~ 1c1t111tfl•d ...,., and*"• oeentd No debts or monies are ,,.. ,.,,_,.to .,..,..,.. NoUc." an4 ""Diie•• r..ci •loud 11 t11e .. .,.. o w e d to any person or or·
I •l•led ti-•ftd ptaco. 0•1•1111 •"d 11ec11e11 tt •" ™" """".,. • .o. dePOlll r~1rec1 ~an I z a ti on . H 0 M E llltrtvMtr -'911 MMtll ... 1"1 .. lntlr-i ,,., _,., 111 ..... ,,.,,, fer u cll ••I 01 bid documo11t1 to AV I N GS AN 0 L 0 AN ,
,... .... ., ()Ht(tei ll«tra ...... .,arani ... i11e r.tvrn •n ~ con4tlton G A R D E N G R 0 V E c_..,, wttt ......, -..-. • =~~11 '0 cs.,. •tt., i11e Did ~•no COUNTY OR ORANGE. '
N44 OtM" Tr11•1 _., 11 "*"' ~· 1 •<11 bid ""''' conlerm •nel 11e That the undersl~ned de· llM I• U111, !-'Ill-. .. lflf Unit· .,.~flf-.tu,ac .... IA-''-"''"'10""'""ractCIOC-tJ sires to receive t e said
P t • I Tltl llKll lllcl 111911 be ~n'-....: t re11u " '" ""'" "11 • tM aacwltv ,...,,.., 10 in 111e <lflttac personal property or \.OI· ~11::: ~· .. ~:'t1~ dec11mel'ltl ~.,., t1w 1111.,..,....... lect the-c lalm(s) and to rt·
""'· CetHw•, 111N"""'·1111e _. 14*.,.,,. • .,.. move that collecte d or re-,.,..~ .. ..,,....,..__,." TM D•IT"•CT ,_. ,"' '""' '0 celved from the s tate of __, .... 0.. .. Trwt In ... ,,._,. tei.e1 ,,,.., tr all 9"11 tr It waive 4111J "........,.111 .-. c-,.,. ..._ lfr..-iter11i..•w lflfw"INICUn 111 e11y Callfornla to the said s tate e.ec,.,.. •· Tllt ,. ....... ,1,. r9'-.... .,. ..,.,.~,,.,, w h t r e I t t t e r s ~II ...... "" • "' llMCll "A" TM OltTRIC:T .... _..,_, ,,_. t • I t a men t • r y 0 r 0 f Trecl. .. ,., .._ ,.~ 111t OlnKtot tf IN o..ertmen1 ti ,,,. 1 1 111 ...,. , ,... 11 ti m!Kt4'-WI •11•a111t1«1-tllt ...-•t llf9"•1t-a dmln strat on have been ="~:01••. •' Ore11• c;..,111v '"' r•to " "r d""' "'"" 111 t11e Issued. n. ...... ..._. w...., 1eea111, "' Wflkll IN• -11 1• 11 • A 11 p • r 1 on s ha v Ing
,.....,. ...,.,....... tt ..,_ "-"°'' ...,..,..,.. ,., .. <11 "111 " ,.,.. • c 111 ma aga I n1 t t ht dt • k...,.,... ta ... 1 .. ....,.,.. l l.... ---....-d W OllKlllO lllt CM> c.ea--.c-i-......., ..... .-1rac1. ,.._race. -on t11e et"" cedent or an Interest In .in.,._.. .. ...,. c.-..t .,_ 011"'1CT ""° "'...-.. Offkt" said estate and w ishing to
'""' ...,_ • ...,...._ ••ti .. l'flytlul ~acmu .. Plon111t1t. c:.at o bJect to 1uc:h removal •llllMlleR w _ _.._ .. ...,.,.; C'""rnVllllY c.tl• DIM. c.et "'•'I' U:; ..._ .. .,, .. _., • .... ,,.,°",......_A'°"" of Vltte must give written notlc:t of .... etC:lft4t-. .... OeMt1Tr•• , .... 111111•,.....ot•ioe"•· s u c h obJectlon to tht
wu1 tt,Ms . .a. ••11• tllt t.i1-111a Tiit ':::!: ",_,.. ~.,:~ person °' peraons Indebted . ::c~-:. ':."11~;~:.. ~111:! =·"' ....... ~ ·, ....... "":..' to. or holding p trlonal ...,._ .... ., ..,, ~·., '"'' _, .....,,,_ w.11..,... •-' ..... proptrty of, tht dtc:tdtnt.
.. ,, ... OAT101 ~yn,M1 '""'_,..,..., Suc:h notlc:t must be olvtn
.. t .. TWIUCMfTIT~I Utllelll•-*"1•-•.CON· to tht .... rson holdlnn tht tNIUltANCI ~l'ANY, TltACTOlt .. 1'Mm Ille comrlkt la ,..... "•
"a11111n11u.,_...1e11, ••• ,..., • ..-. any ~rtcteir pt rs on a I pr ope rt y or
•",.... """' """· "..,. • ... ._ 111t avalnst whom lhe c:lalm Is
8f'UC8 ... MAll.IY ... '"'"'" , ...... Ill ---d I ....... dd ,....,..CllftcW ,,... .. ,....,...,. ,,. .,. oet"""'" ma 1 • ... a rtu es m.............. 1111cMtr•t. llsttd above wlthln: 30 ._-.,CA..,.. ,.,..,~""""*-llfUllt.., DAYS afttr fir s t
Tr IN...,, ' """"' " """ <•> ..,.. .,.., v. publication of this not1ce ,,_.... O!'w'll Clllt Dlltf....., ... eet .., .. .,........._ TEO J 25 9t . ,.,, .. .. "" ---.:r::: ........ ..,.,.,.,,._ DA : UM I 1 1
-.:.. -w .,W::.'T .. ~=:= Robert J . K9UI 1v ,. •• ce ,,_, ...., .. ~ .. .._.. "' ... As Admlnlslretor ••rut llnalt.. ........ -. 01 th• E1t1w ot
Service Directory I:..-.*:.."':...... J ane Veronica Kaul,
•... Call Now =r.:uc. Pu ... =:. COHt 642·16 71 ...=, .., ,_ D•ffr flttat, Jutv",;L ~uo.
..... '· ,,, "" :JlS6-l1
__,:,_ __ ~--------·----
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,,..,
~ICTITIOUleUM•IM .._. ITATllllUl•T Tiit ........,.. ,.,_ i. ... ..,... -·· '41.WltT OltOU'· 21Ut c:-IM c .. lttr-. ...... ,. ~ ....... CAmn. "ICHA,.D O. eltOQltt. Uf c;al ..
l'llP'!le, S-~. CA tt101.
Tiiie ~ 11 <.-.CIH "I' on II\· Olw~I.
R~o.e..-,
Tfllt ~ W .. hi .. WIUI ...
c-t• ci.n. t10r.,.. c.wMy e11 Jiiiy
tt, '"'· ,. .....
P11011.,,._ Or-cont Oaltv ,., ... , J11ly ......... ta, JO, , .. , ,.....,
PVBUC NOTICE ----------PICTITIOUI IUltNHI
NAMI ITATalllUINT Tllo IGll-lno ,.,..,., ar• c1o1.,,
11Utl119 .... :
OCPM. MO W 11111 IC,_t, C•ta
~N.Colltornla~ 0 .. AHOI COAtT ~l.AITIC MOLOINO, IHC .. tjO Wffl IMll ICr•, C•t• _.._ Cetlltrllle...,,
Or•lll' CM•I Pl•tlle Maldt119,
Ill< , It .. ol C.lllorllla, at0 Wttl IMtl
SlrMI, Cotta"""· Cetll..-nl• taU1
Tiii• -i-I• c--...., a CW •
Po"•lltll
1119 1 n<
Tiii• •U-•• Ill.., Wltll tllt County Clffll of 0r.,.. C-J ... July
''· 1 .. 1. ,. ....
Publltlltcl Or-C:O.tl 0.llJ Pl ... ,
Jwly 2J, iO, Aufl, t, IJ, 1 .. 1 SJ07 .. t .
PUBUC NOTICE
MN°"lf1t NOTICI TOC•aDITOlt1 o' auUt T•AN"I" 11ecutt1•111u.c.c.1
Hollo It horeby 9lvon to cractlto•• ol
Ille •1111111 n-pel'llot 111•1 a 11<.tlk
,,.,.,,., '' 1111.ndtd to oe maclll on
por•onol properly llere lnallor
<NKrlOOd.
Tho -. Mid DUtlntU acklrn• of
tho lnl•,....lr..,•loror• aro· JOSEPH
OOLOIERG, ISTHER GOLOIERG
a nd llNNITT OOL081 .. 0, SOO :::c~~~ .. ~~:!' Orin, Newport
D01119 llualnou ... "A" PETITE
CAl'E
Tiit ,......, end """""" add<n• of Ill• ln londod 1ra 111fo r••• •r•.
G!,.ALO R VALENZUELA •I\•
OORIS J VALIHZUILA. "" Moll River Clr<lo, Founteln Ve lloy,
Celllornl• m ca
,,,.,the Pf_,,, 1Hl'll11tnt ller•lo .. d .. Crl-In ..... rel aJ Malaflal1,
AUPPllH , merc11ane11 .. , equlpm•nl, lurnll.,,. fhrt.unl, oqu19tnont, lr-
nalftt , gooCIWlll, •-•. IMwllolcl Im· prov•m...U -cov.....,t Ml lo c..,.. ..
pelt -IS lo<•lacl •1 JOO Newport Contu Orlv•. Nt•1>or1 ll•acll, Calllornla
Tlltl Ulcl l>Ulk 1,.,,,., I• lntenClod to
11e c..,..,.._lacl •• '"' olflco of •ini· nau Tlli. C:--•Uon, )"10 WO•lll" a lvd . lot Ange .... Calll '0010, on or
•ll•r AUOUll It, 1"1. Lall oeto tor 1111111 clallft• In lh"
OKI-It"""""' It, 1 .. 1
So l•r aa I• iu.o-to .. Id lnl...ciact
Trenal..-..s Mlcl lnl-Tr..,1feror1
uMCI Iha tofl-1"9 -lllonef butlneu
namn -....,,._ wllllln lllt •-
Y•ot• '"' PO•I are N-Hon•
Dalod Jiiiy n, '"1 0..-• .. A.VtltUtMY,
Oort• J . Val1u11e••· 111011'•' T, ...........
PuDllllleel Or-Coul Dally Piiot
Jul, JO, IM1 MIMI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBIJC NOTICI
PUBLIC NOTICE
••7"71 o•o• .. TO....,. CAu•• PO .. C:M.ANOaOl'NAMI . CAHNUMelltA•lltQt
In llle.Mi91lilr of ... A#llC•llen ff
JANA JAHIAH ICIOTT, e "'''*'. 11¥ SHARON MAltll STATHAM, lier
mother, •"• SAl,.INA JeHI
PHllll"S, ftt <,..,,..of H•me.
JAN.A JAHIAN SCOTT a110
SAIRIHA JIHI PHIPPS ... , lllecl •
.,.1111e11 In !Na (-1 ler en order al·
'""'119 petltl-lo'"""" lhelr ,.._ from JAHA JAHEAN $COTT to JAHA
JANIAN STATHAM encl SAl•INA
Jl!NI! PHIPl'S lo SAaRINA JIJtjl
STATHAM
11 '' ""'""" trdtrecl tt\at all ,.,....,. 11\ttrntoCI 111 .,. matlef ...,. .. Id ..,. .... ..,.,.. ""' ,_. '" ~Ho. J et 1'00 ClYk Co'*' °''"' w .. 1. Sa<ll• A"' c;em-., on 5eptemtaer J,
1te1, •I io: !IO o'Clock • m., •ncl IMll
•"• lll0to lhOW cauM, II eny 11\fY M VO, Wiiy Nici petllltn 100' (~ OI
n•mo lllltukl lltl lie l'ontacl.
11 II lurtllff ordered lllal a c,opy ot 1111• .,_ .. ww ceuw lie pul)lltllfd
Ill Tiie Delly Piiot, e new-per OI ,.,,.,., clrcutttlon, p,Aiil'11td 111 1111•
county at 1•••1 once • WMll for '°"' t onMcutlw ..... , P<IM "' .,,. O.y OI .. ,., "'"'"' O•l•d July JI, ltet ,._ .. H.~'9-JMfo If ... ._.,ltr C-1
fteMaO.L .........
.... V•K-• H""'" 9Mdl, Ca. ft ... llH>JU ....
Pullll-0r.,... C:O.st Dally Piiot, Jiiiy 30, Aul .. IJ, 20, 1 .. 1 MICMl
PUBUC NOTICE
l'U•uc HU .. INO An aptlllc.ttlOI' waa Iii.cl tty ,,,.._,..
011 Co-,, 1112 Kelvin ,._,,.,,.,.,
,,...,,,.., Colllornl• '2111, tor • Coflcll-
llGflal UM fl'wrnll ll<P~ lo ......... , ..... 1.1111111men1 of . llellport 14K•lff
on Iha vac.anl P<-1¥ acljac,ent to •"" Wut of %712 K•l•ln In Ille -k.tm
S.rvlco ,,,.."., Ol111k1 ot "" lrvlllt lndu•lrfal Compln ·WUI PlanneCI
Community S•ld condlllona l
u .. POrmlt wa c..ill-llJ --
tty Ille Plonnf"9 C-tulon on J -
11. IMI. On J-"· 1 .. 1. '"" ._ ..... ,
••• •POO•lecl i.y "" Tlla9aro Oii Com pany •ncl mon1 lie lle.,.d ..,.111 by Ille
CllyC-11
TM C !OA slatlA lor 1111• appllcttlofl
•• '" Kcordonct wllll Mota .,_. CllY OUldollnea. A clrtll ....-uv• doclora·
llon l\at been pr-eCI IW lllt IWO• POMcl P<Ola<I end POtlecl IOI' pul>llC rt
vl•w from Ap.-11 1', IMI to Moy I, '"' A PVl>llc hoartno wlll I» llelCI on 1111• appoal llJ tlw City Council of lllt Clly
of lrvlN• 7.JOp.m., l""411J, Auoutt
11, 1'11, In IN lrvlne City C-11
CMmbtn, Civic Ctnttr, 11200 J•lft· Dor•• Raecl, '"''"'· Ctllfornl•. f'or partlculert. plo•at lel•PllOM 7S4-J7SI or call •• tho office of IM Clly
of lrvlno Community 0.v•l~ont, , , .. ,,,. lnttf'ltn Clvk Center AIWIU,
210 1 McGaw Avonu•. Irvine, C..lllornfa
P\IBUC NMICE
PlJBLIC NOTICE
"""1Ca TOCalOIT'OH #Ml~TaMtll'la
UDOf' llllT••TtOlt TO
T 91M1'1" AL.COttOUC
eava-...•Ltc:•MIC c-.c .. -. .. ,.,u.c.c.
.. ..,., ... PC.-)
... ,~. •• .... ....... 11\al • bulk
PUBIJC NOTICE
"CTITtOllt IVllNIU
M.AMa ITATLWl•T Tllo........,,...,_I, ...... ....,. -... LI N COLN PLAC I A~AltTMINTl, L.TD l'la .. Oflft, k ite , •• ......,, ...... c.lllerftl• .,...
"'"' L.. ........... '°' 1.1 .... ,, ... ..... ,.,, 9-11. c;.11 ........ ....
T"I• l•itlnttt I• <-tact lly • llmllH~P
AIML.MatN Tt>11 1~ ., .. llltG wit/I IM
cauntv Oorll on JI/Aw 11. '"' ,,....,,
fluOlltllM Orllltt Coat! Oall1 Piiot,
Ju•v n. JO. Awe •· 11, 1•1 iaott1
PUBLIC NOTICE
tra111lor lnct11dlnt •II e lcallollc -----
....,., ... lie-, la Nevi ta lilt mMll PICTITIOUI MolttNaU
.. lllat <Matti coOtall ._... Wll.... NAM4l tf.ATl~NT
known 11 TNa tMAM .. O(K Tllo lellawlnt ... ,_, tro doing COCKTAIL LOUHOI, a/Id ltc11H at lllltll\ftt ..
.. , .... N.._.n -.Ulenrd. City of s u .. 'H I N I c; y c L I! Ac
C..1• M9M. c;_,ey ot Or ..... ttelo 11 c;aHO .. tlU. 11114 .. a<ll ltlllev•rd,
Cell tar ma mzJ. H•-ot Tra11•11tr•1 H""llnet.M IMCll c.tltorflla '*' HOLIV A. YOUHO, lo<. lee. Ht. 111...,0ulltt.'Ullten.Mfitlo. MJ,
4lt•ttM77, JOG lemN, Cotta Me .. , Hllftllllfl .. 9-11 ColllornletJM1
Colllerllle '1*17. "-OI Tron1...-.. : Tiii• _.....I~ c.W<lecl •w.,. In
MAU .. llN M. KIMI', S.C. it<. H• .. ••1111•1
, ......... -l!o•t 22"11 54,...1, Cetta . 1!11-0Ull•
-... (Allf, ~ T ... I <-~•llon .. lie H lcl lw 1111 pr-tty *°'r1'9cl,
Ill .. 119tal, • all tlilCIL In ., .. , Ila·
lllrU, oe11t,n10l\I Uld I OOd Wiii
.... IMr wit" t11t '"-11 llO'UOO 00
Dff<rl,cltll A-• I ,.,_ (llt(lt • 1,000.00
J•O.m..W...,...i.be
"Pl..Ollof< ... tllr911t111 nu-Ul,000.00
Tlllt ··-I •• llloCI wllll lllt COUlllY Clel'll ot Or .... c:-fy on Jl/Ay
7,IMI. Pl•MO
Pullll.-Or ...... C.Mll O~ly PllOI,
July t, It, U, iO, 1 .. 1 IOIMI
PUBUC NOTICE
I Hott , SKwltv Att-PICTITIOUS aUSINISS
Trw t Deed and UCC·I IJ0,000 00 HAMS ITATaMtlNT ,_..,
Kint ef 11-to .. tt-lerract •ftd TllO IOllowlno perton It clOlftO °"" num .. r er•. OH·SAll OlHl!RAL nou •• LIQUO .. LIC:INSI! NO •Ull$ f'AHTAl'l'LANO LINOEltllE, Tiit Mii• -,,_,., will 11e econ· 1102 Jor,.I\ A••nuo 111, ~.,,.. •.
wmmellld ef 10.00 •.m. on or aflff Ille cemornla .,,u
2•111 daJ OI "-" '"' •I tllt lbcrow ICa.-.n H Pwull, 11~ J.,oan Oo,.rtmlflt 01 Pnotou .... I aw:row Avonuo, Jiii, lf"YlllO, Calllorn .. t27U
$trYICI •• 1'21 H. TuUlll ........... Tiii• ~~· h concN<loacl •Y an '" C ,.,0. I N 115171. s.n1e Ana, Co. "1701 dlvldual
Ct21111, Colllornle. Karon H Puckett, All otller IWallltM ,,...,.. •ftd ad· d"n•• uMd by 1,. Tr .. •foror wlltlln J711, lr.lne, C•lllornl• t271S Tlllt •tat-I wH 111.., wllh Ille :~:;~::.:-:::1°,.!•~~ llnOwn Coli11ty ci..-ol Or-. COUllly, J.,,..
Tho !>¥11n 90r .. ll\el lllt COMldora· tt, 1 .. 1 ~tt49M lion IOI' tllt .,_,., of t,.. Dutln"' PubHNltcl Or..,. Co.ttl Dally Pllol,
ond IM lie-It to I» .,_Id •htr Ille J"ly 2:1. JO, ""9· •. U. Itel J* ti
O•P••lmenl of Alcollollc 8enrate Con1ro1 Ml aoProvod Illa pr_...i ,,.,, ... r
Dalod Jl/Ay 21•1. Itel
Sa41tyA.Y......,Tr-rw ... ~MIC-. Tr-lotto
Pu•ll-Ora"tl' C:0.11 O•llY Piiot. July..... ,,., .. .,
PUBLIC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUSINaH
MAMalTATUilaNT Tllo lell-ln9 ,.,..,.., aro Golno
1111.1 ........ :
GORDIE'S DELI, 1UC hur
SlfNI, ca .. -. Collloml• HUI T-it.wet, 401·E WOlt AHO!',
Santa Ana, C•lllornlon.2'
Clll._v ~•I, 401·E We" Alton,
lar\t• Ana, c.llfornl• m:i.
Tllh °""""' I• tolldu<leel bp •~ GIVIOUa" I--wll•I
Tomoo IC•w•l, '"'"•'" ltewal
Tiiie .i.--1 ••• 111.., •1111 , .... C..,nly ci-ol Or-C-ly on July
U,IMI
,., .. Ill
Pullll-Oranoe C.0.'1 Dally Pllol,
July 11. 2l, ao, ""°· •. '"' >201 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITtOUt •USINau
NAMa ITATaMaNT
Tht 1•11-•ne ,.rson1 ar• doing
~n ..... ,
MY PLACI!, S.SJ (Mnmotclal ~ .•
'41111111\ ..... lte<ll, CA ftM7.
Cllarln ..... r. 1100t ..,,._, COV·
lne,CAfl721. VIMaflt .....,, 1100t 9-, COV·
PUBLIC NOTIC E
Ml,.. .. ,OA COU"T 0'
CALlll'OllNIA, COUNTY
O~OUNOI o•o•• TO StlOW CAUH ,0. CHAllOa 0~ N-•
CAH "UllMI" A·M'MM In lllO Matltr OI , ... Appllc•llon of In
,. JAHA JANEAN SCOTT, • minor,
Dy SHARON MARIE STATHAM, lltr
motnu, a nd S AaR I NA J IN(
PHIPPS, for 0-.0I Name
J ANA J AN EAN !>COf I e 11d
5'AllAINA JENE PHIPPS flaw llloCI • POllllon In tN1 <eul'I tor en orcltt •I
1-1"111911'-' IOC"""9e llltlr name1
from JANA JANEAN SCOTT 10 JANA
JANEAN STATHAM -SAIRINA JENE PHIPPS lo SA8RINA JENE
STATHAM. II 11 llfrel:IT oroer.., lllOI all ,.,._,. lnt_.acl In lllO lftatt ...
•loro .. ld -b9l0<0 11111 court In
o.,.rlmenl HO. J ot 700 Cl•k Center
Drive Wttl, s-.ta Ma, C..lllornla, on MPltmller 2, 1 .. 1, al IO•JO o'tloO
a.m., -ti--tlltro .-cauw, 11 any tlley heft, wlly told petltlO!' IO<
c"'*""' OI,..... -nol lie 9renlecl
11 I• lurlr.r orelorlld tllOI • C09f ol lllh
M IHr lo -C.WM bo """"""" In Tiit Dally Piiot, • n•••P•PU ol teMral Clr(ul•llon, puOll-In lllh
countJ •I •-• 0110 • wtoll lor four con .. cutlve -"• P<lor toll• clay ol aid 11o.,1no. o.1ee1 July11, '"I
--WH.P-• , ............ ·-•CWtt THOMAS G LUMSOON
.. 10 Von Karman
AMa-41it T.l ,flte,I_, ,.., L. .,......, IM, CA tlJD. ~City Cleft ef, Tllh llulll\ftl It '°"clu~loG Dy •
N•wport llMcll. Ca "1MO
"141 7U-t304 Pullll•lleel Or""90 co .. 1 Dally PllOI,
llOTIC• 0, T .. usrau· SALA Tiit CltY .. ,,,,... ..,,.,., ,.,_..,,..
Put111.-Or ..... C-1 Dally Piiot, a-tea W ........ July JO, Hit M12 .. I Thlt ... ..,._. wa flied •ltll Ille ·1 :-1y Clef1I OI 0r.,.. C-y on J"4y l,IMI ,,._
PUBUC NOTICE l'llOlhNll Or .... '"" o.lly Plle4,
---------_ __ J11t1 •. a ,». ao, n11 lOlt 11
llfTINTIOMI TO tau.
AT PUa uc AUCTIC* PUBLIC NOTICE
July 2', JO, Aug t, 11. 1 .. 1 Ull .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
JUl'a .. tOlt COU•T O~ THI STATI
OP C:ALl~NIA ~0-THI COUNTYO~O .. ANOI
111 Clvk ~ on ... Wnt, a-u
Au.CalltenNtml
Pl•lntlll lOWARO NOllER -EVE
On AUll'l'I 21, 1"1 ti 11:00 a.m
f'IRST AMERI CAN TITLE
INSURANCE COMPANY •• Trvs ...
or Siie~ Trvstee or s..Mlltllla<I
TrvUM, Of -<Mtaln o6ecl OI TNS4 •HClllH lty KATHERIHf OA'l'LE
COCH•AN. Ml ....,_rleO -~ GERALO II RAUCH . .., 11......,rt.o
man, •no rocor-A-I u. 1• " 11111ru_.,. no llMt, II\ llOOll IS102,
-SO),OIOfllclal RKOl'aotOr ..... Ceunly, C..lllornta, ---' to 111•1 <erlall\ Hotlo of O.fa .. 11 MCI
EIKllon Ill Sell 1111<.-r-cled
~II ..... I .. IMl..-1 no. 4'74, In
book 1400I, INOO IM2, ol Offlclal
RKordt Ol ... d C-y, w111 --pursuant 10 ..ici OMd of Tr..at Mii at
public ..ell°" tor <ftll. towNI _..,
of Ille Untied SIM• OI A-rka, at tlle m•ln enlrenc.• lo f'l,.1 A,.,,..kon TIU.
,,,.u,•no c_.,,., loc:•i.d ., 11•
EH i Flflll si....1. In .... City IJf Sotlta
A11e, Celltornla, •II !Mt rleM, tltle encl
lnterut conwyecl ID --held lly It _, .. Id OMCI of Trust Ill tllt ,,....,.
NOTICE IS HERIEllY GIVEN IMI
Ofl , ............. 11111 .., ot Auewl
1 .. 1, •I 10:00 AM.•: Or .... (ellnly
i11•rlll-Coron.,, H.,ll•r Pa trtl
aurHU, 1901 lle"ldt Or'I ... , Hawpor1 81ta<ll, C.. _.,...,.. IO Her110i' encl
N•v1oa11., Com 500-tcM, IN Slltrlff·
-----NOaER
CorOMr OI ... C-y of ()rM19 wlll
Mii ....... k -tlon to .... ~
lllddtr fer <Ml! 111 1ew11;1 -Y IJf tllt
Unllod MMH, Ille lol-1119-t: 11111c1or: 2'' Hortre11 HvAI Numtaer
Ul\llllOWn. Stkllff H~. f'07&S1,
R"lttretlon N....-.,: C,.tmAW
Avellellle for 1-llon 1·00 •·"'" dal•of-.
~ICTlnCNS BUllNIH NAMalTATU .. NT
T111 I011-1111 .,.rtllf\• .,. C1etn1 ...., .......
LA VIOLITTA 01 ~A•MA
"ISlOllAllTE, tdl W•ner A-. ... ,
P_.alnVtlloY,Coll,_.aU70I
Mory l le!M H•pura Mor1. to.
C0111mlllnt A-. ~-lain v.11..,,
Calll-• ArlOl"lt MOrl, fOll CelllmtNM
A¥NI.,., '"""9HI Vallt1, c.llltlflll• '170I Tllh ~ .. It ~l.llO lty on ln-
OeferwlMI PWIUIP DANlflS, LIN
TON H COLLIER, OOROTHV • COLLIER, EARL OARR. JR , OREL
FA R LESS, SECURITY TITLE I HSU RANCE COMPANY, a Colllornla <~•'""'· -all Pt'"_,, unk_,, c1a1m1119 ..,, •1 or tQUll.aOI• rloflt.
1111•, ........ llOfl O< lllltr•tl In Ille Pfl> pertJ clet<•ltllcl 111 lllt c.omplalnl eel
• ., .. lo ptalnUfh' lllle, 0< "'" c-
•n pl•lllllfh' U.Weto, named " OOES
I lllf°"9f' JO, Inc llniw
tUMMOffl C-N....,._U&m
HOTICfl Vo.."'*"' -"'°" The tv 11tuate0 111 .. kl C:-ty e11e1 itaw
d••cr ltllcl •• ·
B"AOOATH,
.,,.,.IH.cor-t
l y: R. T--.. 11. Ser91 .... 1
CllYhl11el l!lelM .. _. ~ 'ourl may dKlclt ... Inst YOU •1"-1
Tiii• at-I •• 111.., wltll ow Jiiii' IMfnO llPa<d uni.n \IOU rnpon0 COllflly Clef11ef0r,,,.. COllllty Oii J"4y wll/lln *° O.y•. Aeact the 1111orm•llon l'ARCILI: Unit ll, conshll119 •I cort•ln
elr•p•ct and •url11<• elemel\lt, •• •flown anG dal(rllNG In 1110 con·
Gomll\l11m plan for Now.-rt Olen
T-n11omae. _.,., Allrt• a, tttt '"
llOOll IJOn.....,.._,lo'7tl11ClwlvelJf
Pulllllfltcl Ortn91 C....I o.lly Piiaf, July JO, 1•1 ~,. .. , ' '"' bol-• ~,.... II you whll lo -k IN edVl'9 ol ... ,.,,_., ..... ar.,.. C.O.ll o.11y flllot, •ttorn•J In I/II• man ... , you lllOvlG oo
JlllY f 1' n iO, 1'e1 *2-fl, tO promptly SO 11\al JOUr wrlll•n PUBUC NOTICE ' • ' ,...,.... ... 11 •ny, may be lllecl on time.
Ofllclal Rac0<da OI 01'-C-ly, NOTICI OP T"Ull'll'S SM.I
Cetllorfll•. T.L Ne.., ..
PA .. CIL l : NOTICI IS HERl!BY OIVl!N, 1N1
An wncllvlcled l/)tfl lntttnt "r ... t11 W•clt1tMI..,, Allfll'.lt it, '"'·at t:OO lllftpla 111-t •• • 1.,..,,. In,_ o'cloO a.m. ot ... ., city, In Ille offlw
'" •lld to •II ., tllt ,.., ~. '"" of .. EAL llSTATf sacu .. IT••S cludlntwllttoulllmflallontllt-11,.VICE, louted •I 2020 Ntrlll
arHI lleflnod In Ille -ler•lon r• aroaclwey, $wile 10t. II\ 91t City ef ..... •• ,, .... ......,,,,LOI I of Trtu IGm, ta A,,., ~ .. °' .... · ~ ot
•• tllown on• map lllM II\ llltell U., Callfornl•, THI 01!0 .. 0ITOWN P9lff 0 ...,.of ml!Qll_,,,.,.. R I CONVIY ANCE COR" , o
In IM efftc:e ot IM Or-C-... Cl lllorltl• CM....-etlon, .. clvly _.
RK...... pefl'llM Tna ... l&'Wer -,,_,_, ..
Eacffl'"9 Iller....,. 11111116 1 ""'Wiii Ille,._, ff Nie <Ol'lfffred '" tllat tat• JtlMhnlw ,att-onllltp&en. t•ln Oood el Tr11U ouc11l•cl ltJ l!aUllClnt tlltfffrotll, Ill l'llllltf'eli, OI OROa L VARRATO AHO ANITA
oll, .... _,.,wm. Mii« IW*teorMfl VARltATO. ,__,. .... wilt at lflnl
w•ta--ell ~ ·~ .....,.,,,., .....,.._ ......,., it, '"'· '" '" ot u-.,, wtlkll rMY le ,,__., eo... 1171' ef Offk lal llocoNI ef told
f,.,,. .-HI let Wllkll "'*""" • ,._ Ceunty, •t .... 104, Rtctrder'a Mr•llol le -SJO feet ..... ltll ,no lntlrvlftOfll He. JIQJ,.., ,_ 01 a
aant •""'ece IJf .... 161 ltr tM,...,...... 11r u c11 er Mfa111t II\ ,.,f'l1e111 or ot ,r0"9('ti119 ltf, lllt O..,ltlell, .. ,.,1.,me11<0 Of lllt elllltatlelU
vtl""1tftl, ~tlell, utnKtlon 9M ttewrecl"""'"" 1nc1.....,. INI llrtKll lallllll of tald mlMral1, oll, tet , Ill' Clefaull, -iu of wtll<ll wn l'Oo
P•troloum, 04Mr llJ4trOCttMft llllt-cwdad .-,n1 e, ttll, '" .... 14111 ot
tltnnl -....., ,,._., '°" let lly Offlcltl ll«ordt OI •aid c.unty, at
lftHnl of .......... 11 •• cltrrlCll• ... .... 1M1, "-tOr-·· IMlt-.... "'· tllltr .... jlf'IWllC ff'tNl'I IW'I-lteo· tt71, WILL HU. /l.T l'YILIC /I.UC.
llllflt 1111 Mftlnlllt tr .....,..,,fl9 ltM TIOH TO THI HIOMllT BIOOC ..
or IYlnt oufeidt OI tlle .... , •IC.l'I... FOR CAIH, tewf\11 -y OI Ult Ul\lt•
lot, 11 Mint ..,,.,....., lllet ..... """' •• Stat ... •II ...., ...... Ult time Of
of 111<11 mllltf'elt, oll, BM, pe4rt4tlilll'I, Nit, all rltM, title eM lllterttt -
otller llydrK•'"" wt>ttancOI •1141 Mid llJ II," TrllMlt, 111 end i.111et ~· ••• .,. "* 19r111 •"""· ......... ,.. "' •• property fltuel• .., tole! c:-.tY .... rltlll tt llMtr WIN" .. ""'Kt •r ellJ Sttlt, -.CtlllM .. ftl .... :
porllo11 , .. ,. .. 111tve .. ., ''•"' lt't llJ ti frect Ne. •tt, Cltv flf paraltol •.,., JtO f9et......., lllt ,,.. Ntw-t 8Ncll, c;e..w.ey ef °'-'"· .. ,,, ......... , ...... let ,., ...., ., ..... CellWMe, ..... ,,.. ,..
PIWINff wfwt-WW,M~ Ill IN ttt ... II\ .... 1• ...... II .. 21 I,,_ de•• from 111\IHIWI rul ••1•t• <1Utl¥o .. Mlec.eli-ws ..... "' ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IUllltaH It...,.. ITATIM&NT
TM 19'19Wt .. --I• dl01"9 bwol· ,.. ... ;
THe ITUFFID POTATO, U700
El Tero M. El Toro, C.lllomle •»»
R°""' 0. ~r. JlllJ Mon· ,.,..,, So.11111.At!#W, C.lllornl• nan
Tllk MllleM 11 cenductecl llY on ln-
dlvldllal
R ... rG.~
Tlllt IC--fllMI wllll 111t
c-t• Ciani °' °'.,..'°""'"'on Jilly u. l"I '1Mlll
P11MI-OrMOO Cotll 0.Hy Piiot
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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Tiit ftl .... lllf ... r-1 are Mint -',.. .. ..
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July 2>, JO, ........ I, ll, Itel U02 .. I
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BUM NIH NAMa
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CONfRACTOllS SPA 6 SAUNA,
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Tiit lotltwlnt Ptt'°" I• '°"'' llu•I· ,,. .....
SWAN K MOOliLS,
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C:•lllornlo ml7 Rtc11er11 Ectwln s..,.a, m w .. 1
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Pulllltlltcl Or-Coo'1 O•lly 'llot, July t. 1'. U. •. 1 .. 1 JOI• ti
P U BLIC NOTICE
llOTIC• 0, T•usr•a·s SALll
T.S..Ne.Jl-A
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, •llat on Wodne..uv. A....,.1 >. ttll, at t Oo
O'CIOU a m of M id CWp, Ill Ille office ol ltEAl ESTATE SECURITIES
SERVICE, IOc •l•d •• 2010 Norin
Broacfw..,, S..llo Jiit, In Ille City of Sar»
I• Ana, C...,,.y of Or-. Stat• of
C a tllor11l a , REAL ESTA TE
SECURITIES SERVICE. a CallfO<nta
corporallon, OI duly aPC>Olntod Tru•-
uno.r -put-I to lllt -•r ol .. ,, conlorract In tllat corta111 Ooecl of Tru'1 oacutlld by LEE SIMMONS, a
••no•• m.n, recorded Hov•moor 11, ltlO, In Book 1"36 ol Offlcl•I RacorG• of ••Id COIM!ly, al Pao-t7', Rocor1Mr'1
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porlormanco 01 Ille 011119at1on•
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or def ... 11. Notice of wlll<ll ••• re
corded Ajlrll •. I"'· 1n -1~10 ol Olllcl•I RocorOI of WIG County, ••
P•Vt 71', Rec,oroer • l11•tru,,,_1 Ho
UO'I, WILL SELL AT PU8LIC AUC-
TION TO THE HIGHEST 810DER
'0R CASH, la ... UI ,,..,,,., of 1M Vnll
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llm• ol lnlll•I puDllc•llon ol '"" Nollco. It '40.lll' OS
Oalod July 10, 1 .. 1
REAL ESTATE
SECU,.I TIES SERVICE.
• CollfO<nl• cor-porallon,
•• Trvll ... (SfALI 0 J -flt'. llsPrHldlnt
.!OJD N Br-ey,
s..ii.:iot. '9nta A,.., CA n 70a
r.1 ""' tU.lttil Pullllllltcl Or-Co.t•I Dally Piiot,
Jul' It, J), •, 1 .. 1 JIM.el
PUBLIC NOTICE
• PICTITICIUS aUSINall
NAMS ITAT9MtlNT
Tllo l•llowlnt ... rHnt •r• 1101n1
1111~--E H Tl!RT.A.I HMfN T
C:O N SVl.TANTS ANO MODELS UHL I M ITEO, IU• H•wpor l
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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Orange Coast DAU.. Y PILOT/Thursday, July 30. 1981 (;I ,
H B players spoof Williams
I ·The most fun
money can buy
8yTOMTITU8
0( .... Delly ...........
If you can imagine Mel Brooks doing Ten·
nessee Willlans. then you've got a pretty aooa
Idea what lo expect when you see "Murder in Uje
MagnoUas" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse.
It's clearly open season on the author con·
sidered by many to be Amertca's •reatest living
playwright, who's lampooned unmercifully ln Tim
Kelly's slapstick satire. The script Includes such
characters as Blanche
Du Bl a nk . Bubba
Kamrowski and Princess INTfRYSSIQN Lotta Kargo -not to lftl
mention an outlandish
caricature of Williams
hlmself, billed as Thornbird Chlckenwlng m .
At Huntington Beach. director John WilUams
t hopefully no relation) has amassed a truly
Brookslan company ·to carry out this most dev-
astating attack on the South since Sherman's
march through Georgia. It's not unlike watching
"High Anxiety" and trying lo spot all the
Hitchcock gags.
Despite the fact that playwright Kelly bas
padded his script with some one.liners that pre·
date vaudeville. "Murder in the Magnolias" is a
great deal of fun to watch as It dissects some of
Tennessee's classic characters. Probably the fun·
niest are Norrnan Cobb's macho sendup of Stanley
Kowals ki from ''A Streetcar Named Desire" and
Marjorie Rockwell's spacy impression of Alexan-
dra del Lago in "Sweet Bird of Youth" with a pair
or eyes that would make Marty Feldman envious.
Ann Leverett excels as a thinly disguised
Amanda Wingfield <her character is called Aman-
da Chic kenwingJ from "The Glass Menagerie,"
dwelling in the long ago and pushing magazine
subscriptions. Elaine Herman, who's played the
real Blanche Ou Bois, lampoons Williams' most
famous heroine beautifully. while young Todd
Marshall is hilarious as a mincin~ representation
BO DEREH · RICHAPD HARRIS
AllAMllM
Anane1m 011~e In
879 9850
COSTA MUI
Soulh Coast
546·271 t
[R '"'
THEAJ'9.:~
MGM G United Artists
NOWPLAYlNG
U TOttO lAGUU IUCM OAUGf ~ltt>ack Soutn Coast C1neciome
581 ·5880 494 15t4 63•·2553
fOUllTAIW HllEY
Fountain Valley ..,._ o.11y !~ -·-~~ 839 1500
AMC OMIMll MAll
Or•noe 637 03•0
fOWUOI IOUT11 COAIT
Cost. MeM ~9-33!12
UAC.UI
Wnlmlnsw 893-0S46 uwun
C*UIACOTU
Cost. Mm 9 79· 4141
ITADM* Dllff·ll
0<•119' 639·8770
•.O•<• MIH-OlllYl·ll ~n J~n ~O«Slt•no
111 •1 •93 ·~s
''l love~rro!''
G••• 611•llt, 1'•tl•¥•11•w, N•C·f'V
'
or the playwright himself in various disguises and
genders.
Probabl)' the runniest physical comic in local
theater ii lbe corpulent Jo Scott, who convulses
her audiences as lbe slovenly maid, a sort of off·
white Butterfly McQueen. Helen Valentine has no
dlaloaue but a lot of goofy business u a demen,ied
''voodoo woman" while Wit Thompson appears
borrowed from another .. Magnolia." Preston
Jones' version, as a crusty old colonel. Martin
Eckmann does everything but drawl "You in a
hel_\p of trouble, boy" in his depiction of the
Can)iUar big, dumb Southern sheriff and Richard
Drake Is a real down home country lawyer.
With all this nonsense floating about, one
might think the straight roles <both of them> would
be a bit thankless, but such is not the case at Hunt·
ington Beach. Peter Stone turns In a solid
performance 8' the show's nominal hero. while
Beverly Turner is particularly impressive as Miss
Rockwell's secretary, conveying volumes with her
reaction to all the craziness around her.
Just for the sheer fun of it, "Murder in the
Magnolias" should be marked down on your
"must" list -but stand warned, you may never
again be able to lake a Tennessee Williams play
seriously. The show runs Fridays and Saturdays at
8: 30 thr90gh Aug. 29 at the playhouse, M aln Street
at Yorktown Avenue, Huntington Beach.
CALLBOARD -The Mission Viejo Playhouse
(formerly the Saddleback Valley Community
Theater> will hold auditions for its first show of
1981·82, Jack Sharkey's "A Turn for the Nurse."
Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the theater,
25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo . . the author is
directing the show, which caUs for a cast or five
men and five women and will open Sept. 18 . . .
Auditions for "The Great Americ.irn Backstage
Musical" will be held T1.iesday and Wednesday at 7
p. m . at the Newport Theater Arts Center , 2501 Cliff
Drive, Newport Beach ... director Eileen Fish·
bach is seeking a cast. or three men and three
11Hurrah and hallelujah!"
-Shella Benson. LOS tt-GLES TM:S
W1l Thompson and Jo Scott are /eatµred 111
·Jturder m the Magnolias .. at the lluntingtrm
Beach Playhouse
women in their 20s who can sing and dance
Equity auditions for the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse's next production, "The Marriage Go
Round," will be held next Thursday from 10 a . m .
to 1 :30 p.m. in the Hollywood Masonic Temple.
6840 Hollywood Blvd .... the show opens in Sep·
tember at the local dinner theatPr
A NOW
IS nlE TIME
FOR
HEROES.
LORJMAR PIU..~ A F1UDOIE FlEl..DS PROOUCTlON A IOtlN tlUSTON FTLM
SYl.VES"Tlll STAUONF. Ml<'JIAtl. CAINE MAX VO'I SYOOW Ptl.t
VICTORY
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•nd Dj()IU)tf MIUU:VIC. IDT MAGUIRE Pr .. Jucod bt nu·JlUll fUl.OS
Olrectl!d b~ IOHN HUSTON • -. ... PARl\'401.INT 1'1C'TIJRt. '.A l
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11115 1:SS4:2S 7: 11 t :IO. 70mm. No,_ Of Economy
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8111 Murray on
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AIRPLANE (PG)
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8roo~:e:••ldt on BllM LOVE (R)
Plutl FOXES lfU
u crn c••MA O.ange 63' 39 ti • r&Ul.&Maf'TU-r•a ._ ... ,
ONE OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED
IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN.
MARK HAMILL · HARRISON FORD · CARRIE FISHER
BILLY DEE WILLIAMS · ANTHONY DANIELS •• "'°"'"'° PAONS£ l!tNNY llMm Pfl(R WI~ fRNfl 01 ,_._IR\/IN KERSHNER -.. GARY KURTZ
--... LEIGH BRACKETI .... LAWRENCE KASDAN -.. GEORGE LUCAS
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 30, 1981
Anger turns to humor in Edwards' 'S.O.B.'
By 808 THOMAS ,._ ..... ~ .......
HOLLYWOOD For a man so rich, suc·
cessful lnd funny, you'd hardly expect Blake
Edwards to be so angry. I
Not only Is he among the moat accoml>Ushed
of Jilm makerA -he directed "Operptlon Pet-
ticoat," "Breakfast at Tiffany's," "Days of Wine
and Roses," "The Great Race," ··The Pink Pan·
ther" series and "10." He is aJso married to Julie
Andrews.
Surely all that would make him a pussycat.
Then why Is he sd upset about the way Plramount
Is releasing "S.O.B. "?
Edwards explained why in the sumptuous Cen·
tury City office he occupies a few weeks or months
of the year; the rest of the titne he is making films
elsewhere or llvlni In Switzerland.
·'When I heard that Paramount was releasing
'S.O.B.,' I felt as If I had been Invited to the Mad
Hatter's Tea Party and I was the guest speaker,"
he remarked. Background : "S.O.B." concerns a film direc-
tor who goes bonkers when a major studio
sabotages hjs failing, big-budget movie. Edwards
admits that he wrote the script out or his own
anguish over the way Paramount handled his 1969
"Darling Lili. .. He made .. S.O.B ... for Lori mar
Productions, originally for United Artists release.
Then Lorimar switched to Paramount.
.. Everything that has happened has been a
validation of my script, .. said Edwards. ·•As J
watched the events unfold, I had two reactions : 1.
ALAN ALDA
*
CAROL BURNETT
*
1 don't want lhet Wn11 to happen; 2. Jr my script
waa valid, they were bound to happen." .
Lorimar and UnJted ArtllU had originally
planned to follow the "10" release pattern of atart
Ing In March and, hopefully, bulldln1 Into the aum·
mer. Paramount opted for a aummer release, fac·
Ing head-00 the seaaon'a blockbusters.
··Friction be1an Immediately." Edwards
dedared. "We had Ideas tbat were indicative of
the film and could be used to seU It. I even did
something I have never done before. I wrote a
trailer (previews ) of comina attracUona.
"Since I was making a picture ·victor, Vic-
toria' In London, I couldn't come here to shoot It.
so I sent them the script," be said. 0'Tbey didn't
use it. They shot their own trailer -and 1ave
away aJI the punchlines."
Edwards obJected to Paramount·s logo for the
movie, a bull sitting In a director's chair.
··1·ve had some experience in logos; sales of
Pink Panther merchandise will amOU(lt to $110
million this year," said Edwards. He added that
he commissioned Panther creator Dick Williams
to create a more appealing bull, but It was not
used
Asked to comment on Edward's charges,
Paramount advertising publicity vice president
Larry Mark said : '"We understood from Blake and
his people that he was happy with the July 4 re-
lease date, the same as for 'Airplane.' Concerning
the selling of ·s 0 . 8 . · we have to do what we think
will work."
brooke shields
martin hewitt
endlesslove
PotyGram Pictures A Univer.>:il Release .•••••.........•..•...... < 1¥•1 '-,. .• ,,,., t •• , \1~ ..... ,,
-Co-Spoasor.d by -
Daily Pilat
AMD OIAMGE COAST COLLEGE
Paramount didn't think a pre11 Junket would
be useful and withdrew from a hoopla weekend In
late June. Edwards picked up the $200,000 tab
himself, addina to his bitterness.
A crucial ~cene In "S,0 .B." comes when the
director, Richard Mulligan, convinces his star·
wife to help save the movie by baring her breasts.
How djd Edward• sell that to the one·llme Mary
Poppins?
"She understood the dramatic, or comedic
point ot the scene, and she was conditioned to~ it
when the lime arrived. Both of us fell that the ~
portant thing was that It be done with humor and
with taste, and J think we succeeded. The reaction
so far has been good. Audiences are lnllially
stunned, then they respond with applause. The key
Is Julie's smile."
Edwards was asked abl>ut the future of the
Pink Panther aeries, In view of Peter Sellers'
death.
.. I've been struggling with that l11ue ever
since Peter's demise. I think the solution Is to get
one made and find out if the Pink Panther is still
viable. I have a script and an actor In mind -not
as Clouseau, but as his successor."
\
Orange Coast College Quad -Fairview Road between ~111 & N«rimac
' Bring-the family and a picnic dinner! , ·
Ice cream & "pcorn vendors will add to thi funl
Featuring thie 60-Dlece prof111ional American Home Sy11iphony
: , ~ 'Dlrectld by Jo19h P.trl~n . .
RRST FOUR SUNDAYS IN AUGUST
Sunday evenings at 7 :30
A~t 2, 9, 16 & 23
Brinll P."' own bla•1t or folding chalrl
------------------------
.......................... 1111 .................... -.., ..................... ~, ~ ........... -.......
\ • t ~ ' ,
,
Blake Edwards and w1/e Julie Andrew., get a mo·
menl"s respite m /1/mmg of ·S 0 B ·
0 HUGELY ENTERTAINING!" ·~~. ···~~2;;;:·retr, ISAAC~TE RN IN C HINA
u.rtMAl1ms a...c.
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Ptrformanc11 before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagements 1nd Holld1y1)
LA MIRADA MAU Motodo ot 10 .. cron1 LA MIRADA WALK·IN 994·2400 .,_._...._
"TARZAN
THE APE MAN" 1111 •~tt .... ~ ........ .
...... ...-..&.. ,.,_LAI ¥M C&.al M
""E8CAP£ FROM NEW VOAK" (A) .... OM.Y tl::JI, t:M. 41110 I M .... vim ....... . 1~. ,.. ................... ...
..,. ~ ....... ,cu""
"ARTHUR".-•t;A.J:'•.ca. ..........
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN ----"SUPERMAN II" -n•. ,.,.., .. L•. et•. tt•
ncM•.ODll'I. ...
"WOLFEN" 1111 .......... ~'-'·"·""·
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK·IN
Focull\I At ~ Amo
213/614·9211
--·UN.•AUa• .. RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" (PO) ...................
LAGUNA
--""'·-----••QA8•• IRl ...... -... . . .... ..... --· ....... -· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" (PG\ ·-.--ttM; ... ----"SUPERMAN II" -ta:9.fra. ......... .
Jocully or Condlewood
213/531·9510
I ...., ...,..,.,. • PllM.M PA9CISn
"THE CANNONBALL RUN" -
...... M.N. Clim&. -.-TT
"TliE FOUR SEASONS" -tt:• .... a:a • .-..1.---·IUMJI-• "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" (PGl ........... ,,~
-...-·· .. STRIPES" fRl
......... 111 ... 't:;ij ....,... ...... ... • •. lrtt. ........ , ...
so. COAST WAlK·IN
South Cooar H1woy
ot l roodwoy
494-1514 ...................... -----·-· "TARZAN "RAIDERS OF THE
THE APE MAN" (R) t:».t'.:41..' u.t:• LOST ARK" fPG) ----"' .. ~ PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES
• • •
.. .,. ._ .. 'I • , ... 1.JO \.111 .... 1: 1S ,,,,.., \1,,. ,, o ...
IMPORTAN 'r'NOTIC(' CHILDREN UNDER 12 fRU! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
M1rDt1 1M W1"M' Mlf' fl'lfflf fh ' JO• S1f Stf• Keli • 00 ,.,
Clift-fl SOUOIO • •OU~ AM CAii MOO 1$ \'OUll ~
·~ NO AM CM MD') W!IM OtmOll &CCfSO"f IOSll'"Ot
-~AM 'OlllAIU 1 •au Cltf.fl -131 lltf All Mall ., ___ _
"TARZAN
THE APE~AN" (R)
ANAH!I~
ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN
,, .... o, tr or lemon sr 0'CAV£MAN°0 (POI
879•915() CINl fl IOUllO --------r--ro~A~;.;.-, --
'"CANNONBALL AUN"' TOl.LLAl.OWl .. OT -""ARTHUR"" (POI
C•M I' \OUllO
8UI NA PARK
BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN
lt•'<O•n A•• w e1t ot Cttot\
121·4070
FOUNTAIN
FOUNTAIN VAllE°l
ORIVE·IN
"EYE OF
THE NEEDLE"
-~ .... .. WoUICUW•
00£SCAP£ FROM Nl!W YORI('" -"'TMI! IEJITE"MINA TOft"' (RI __ ..,__
··SUP£ .. MAN II" (llQ) -so,.. O.e90 FIWY 01 ••ooklWrtl (So)00AHY WHICM WAY YOU CAN'" (llG
962·2411 Clltt "'°""°
... 11• ~:ir~;f ) ll'f\'l-A-"'F01t(;E l'IVI!" ("I -'"FAOI! TO BLACK"' (A)
-f'llA-fA ·--• 0'8LOW~r· (It)
''°"H MO TO KILL" ("I
Cltl( ,, IOUllO
\AU 'fU• A
lA HABRA OlllVr IN ............................. -17Ml62
~••t ,., A l id
LINCOLN DRIVE IN
\il\C.111 A•e W• .. OI Cfto
12HI070 ---
IJAl\111.'
I _.,..,_.,_ .... ,.-TT
··ne CANNONaALL "UN" (llQ) -" AltTifU"'' (PG) c. fl MlUtlO __ _
-·-~ .. ~'"' "TM! IHtNINO" (It)
CM fl IOllllO -----. "'EHOUSl~OVI .. ("I
"NICJHTitAWl(J"' '"' __ . ....,,.._.
"IWD1!1'S M TMa LOft AM"
(POI -"HANOA" 11·· NI
O~ANGE OQIVf IN
SOnto Al\O ,....,
....... c: .....
15'·7022. ..._ __
"1.0,&" , .. ,
"U TTU DMllUNOS" (It)
A llit i. "-• ~ >. •
MISSION {l l.llVt IN . .
--.-·--· ''aOW~T .. f")
"'Oft!IKD TO IUU" CJt
---------------------· --
r---------------------------_:O:.;.r:.:on.:,:g:,:o~C:.:o:.:a::s.:,t .:.:.DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 30. 1981
~ llnoet, Kt)'e Watd,
IUurolfoui..
Cord ~ ""° «>tOlhett
bec:ofne -'* ~ °' M8'1e conftlGw. one
lleaa IO e«:Jly
ltM r~ wflO want. to
011 "'' "Iller brel l\•r '.-...ct from pn.n
1111 l< ... I),,
-EVEN1tG-
e.oo1•• HaWI KUNOll\I
Celnt .. caught In • b4ood
hlucl ~two lllmlflel.
8 G0eNL ACOON>IHO roa
Virginie "-· goec>ll
llngw. Und1 Hopkins,
ltOlldwey ,,., end Alb9f1a
ttadtcwel. atrlng8t Ind
pla111t1, Pr•Mnl mullc
UiPed ti • llMgen Unlver
ally oonoer1 G INIAK PMVIEWI
Aoo-Eben end Gane
lltlc .. hOlt en 1n10rma1tve
look II whll't ,_ 11 INI
moVIM.
(D)wow
"The Oodtathlt, P111 II"
(11174) Al Paclno, Robet'I
Duvall. Mich ... C<>t'leone I
NIUmM hll 1811 tati-'1
tllrone ll1d ~ u he
~lh•-llM<lol 1
the Milla, finding prob-I
lams with rival faction• Ind
Iha l•w throughout hll
r~n.'A'
{%)MOVIE I TIC TAC DOUGH w•A•a•H
A f'UfnOf' th•I IN 4071th 19
going 10 .. b11g•OUI ..
~ grONly •xeoo«· ...i unlll 11 It belle¥9d the!
the enllr• ciw-111my ..
eltact!lng lhe ciamp (Pll'I
1)
EXPLANATIONS Tom Selleck and
Kathryn Leigh Scott star in an episode ul
.. Magnum P r. .. tonight at 9 on Chi:lnnel
2.
"Tile Ultl"lata Thrlll"
(11174) Erle Braeaen. Brlll
Eklenc:I
t--'O G 9 TAXI
For no IPIMlfenl re.uon,
Jim becotnM Ob...ad
with becoming • great cab
dr!Ylf (R)Q
t
' .
t
~ i ;. •
• GOOOTIMU
The becll8f • for J J '• ,_
ctlenl turn out to be IOen
~
•• EUCTNC
<XMPNIV ("')
(I) C81Nr#I 9 A8CNIW8 1:...wa
"M0te American GralflU"
( 111711) Ron Howard, Peul
Le Mel. Atl9f graduellon, e
group of high echool
friend• ex1>9rlence the
chat~ or edullhOod In
the eoclel upheav1l of Ille
19t!Oa. ·po·
OMOVIE
"C1ndlM/loe" ( 11177) Jodie
F0.18'. O.vld Niven A
tomboy from the '""'' of
lo• AngelM Inherit• I
latl9fed Brltlth Nlll8 'G' e:ao I JOQR'I ~
AU IN nte 'AMllY
A IOcal eiectlOn apark1 di•
..,,, In the Buntl., hou-.
hOld when ~•live
Aretlle 11 pitied lglMMI Ill>-
.,., Miiie
• 8ENNYHIU
Ti-e mutt be money In
commetdll1, but not with
Benny In chat;.
9Kcn~T
~ 8TUOl()I&
"UnlcydM" The SI H .. •
en'1 School Unlcyele Oriti
THtn In Newbury, Otuo.
P8fform• gymnulk:t on
unlcre'lel ( R)
(J)QINEW8
9 IAANEY MILLER
lu;.r IUl!erl I poulble
hMrl 1ll1Ck wt.lie 1rgulng
with 1 longlime fugitive
redlcal
(C)MOVIE
"A Force Of One" ( 111711)
Chuck Norri•. Jennifer
O'Neill. A mute< of Iha
m1'1lal 8'11 emb1rkl on 1
r1.,.,...rnollv111<1 March
for ,,.,. klttert df Ille edopl·
Id ton 'PG'
<HJ FllOHT OF THE
WHm STALUONS
Aob9f1 Taylor end UIJI
Palmw 118' in the true 110-
ry of lhe WO<id War It ,.._
cue of Vienna'• prtzed
wt>lle '--(Per1 1)
8:11 I mTOAIAL 7:00 C8I NlW8
D N9CNEWS
• HAPfl'Y DA YI AGAIN
When lhe but1eequl lroop.
Howard hired do11n·1
show. ,,.,. gang pinch 11111
• A8CHEW9
• llUU...IEYE
• M•A•t•H
Hewll1Y9 11 wlHlng 10 wflMI
end dMI with ln)'Onl for 1
needed ,_ pair ot booll
• 8TM£TI Of' 8AH
FMHCt8CO
Stone'• loo;alty to 1 for..-
par1n8t Merly COlll him
hll Ille when hi• friend car.
rlM out I ~1111 tgalnll
the men who klllld til1 ton 9 OV£AEASY
"EC!ucetlon" Gu1111· 1etor
MacDonald C.,eo;. Or
Phlll!i> Ft1ndton (RIO
l'i) MAOEL I LEHRER
AEPOfl'T
CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH ltll MERV GNmN
Guetll Tanye Tucker,
Joty Biahop. Jim e.i1ey.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Houston Oita Dwricll Dolle.
Henk Singer
(11)MOVll
"S~• In Time"
( 1880) Chrlelopfllt Reeve,
J-Seymout. Ob-.ed
with Iha pot1rllt ol e lllth-
oentury actr-. a modem-
day New York pll)'llWlght
-hypnoela 10 ., .....
bectt In llme end meet hat.
'PO'
(%)MOVIE * * * 'i' "Madelelne"
(19&0) Ann Todd, Liiiie
Banks. Med .... ne Smith i.
ICClUMd of poitonlng h9f
lover In 1857.
7~8 20HniETOWN
Ho1t1: Steve Edward•.
Malod'f Aogera. George
Segal, Hal linden, SI .....
Allefl end G1ry BurghOn
"Jam": apend 1 night out
with Ille Calllornl1 Highway
Patrol.
I Qt FAMILY F£UO
SHANA NA
Gueat: 8o Oiddley
• EY£0HLA.
Ho.la: Inez Pedroza Paul
Moyet A IOOlc II Ille "Go;p-
8111" Children whO 11q out
Cllrout "-· en lnterv-
wlth Cheech m81Vln and
Tommy Crw>ng on lhe set
of .. Nice Orewna" 0 FACE THE MU8tC
'8 ALL IN TliE FAMILY
Thi rNllutlon that he 11
loelng his dream 11 • 1:>1111<
pill tor Archie to -•ll-
lP111 1) 9 MACNEIL /LEHRER
AEPORT
Qli) NEWS
()) P.M. MAOAZIHE
(Bl KAMIKAZE: MISSION
Of'OEATli
The tectora ol Japane11
Ille which led nurneroua
pllota to commit a torm of
eulcldl they conalderld
honorable during World
War II are examined.
9:00 8 CJ) TliE WALTOHS
Jeton'• glrtlrlend'1 Jewtlh
rellglon apet111 I contro-
veray In hi• strict 8-11111
home (R) D QI N8C MAGAZJHE
WfTH OAVIO 8AM<LEY
e.tay Aaron .....run. the
IJ S Armo;'• recruiting
metN>c11. Gwnclt u11ey
rtport1 on en lsreell corr.
~· who lllys home end ICOOpl ,,.,. worid,
Oouglu Klk., loolta at Iha
probleml ln)'lnlora hlYI
with 1hl U.S. Patent Office.
Jack Perkins prolllH
JallMI Cegney (R)
• MOVIE * * * .. The Uat Of Adrian
~·· (11163) Geor;.
C Scoll, Dani Wynter An
Englishman believu lhll
he Ind e number of other
people Ire 1arget1 lor mur-
der
8 0 MOAK.AHO
MINDY
Mindy 11 lold to gel en
lnlervlew wllh comedian
Robin Wllllams or lose her
IOC> fR)
0 MOVIE * * * ·~ .. The Pewnbro-
ker .. (11165) Rod St~.
0...1ldlne Fitzgerald A
.i.wtlh pewnbroker, e vie·
llm of Nazi P8fllCU1k>n,
I) t<NX T CBSI LOS Angele~
Q KNBC NBC lo., A nqeh•<.
D KTLA 1lnel 1 LO'> Anqe e " D MBC TV 1ABC1 Los An qe1e.-,
(£ "FMB cCBSt San Diego 0 KHJ TV find 1 los Anqe les
@) KCS T 1ABC1 San Diego
'8 KTTV 1 Ind I LOS Angele'>
Cl) KCOP TV (Ind I Los AngelP<.
fl:) KCE T TV ( PBSI Los Anqt>les m l<OCE TV 1 PBS> Hunt1nqton Beach
By JERRY BUCK
AIT .. ..,.._Wt'tttt
LOS ANGELES -Mlmi Kennedy, wbo as
• television's Nan Gallagher hired her butler
th.rough the want ads, found her real-life husband
through a computer dating matchup.
I Miss Kennedy plays a talk show hostess on
"The Two or Us," a bright new domestic com edy
CBS introduced lo rour esplsodes In the spring. It
returns in the fa ll, along with the other half of lbe
duo, English comedian Peter Cook.
Miss Kennedy is married lo actor Larry Dilg,
• currently starring In "The Rae Show,•· staged ln
Los Angeles by the Free Public Theater Festival.
"When I was a freshman at SmJth I filled out a
computer match male,'' she says, "which waa
matched with those or men students from
Amherst. Everybody did It on a lark -and lied a
lllUe about themselves. I got Larry'1 name back
wlt.b co,mputer printout alarl around It.
••w e didn't meet then. He didn't caU me up
and r didn't c-11 him up. He didn't call me because
he looked up my plclure in the freshman
baadbook. A ltt•·lba.n·tlatterln& picture taken
when l wa• ln a Catholic hlah school. He wanted to
~ aet looee -and I didn't lex* llJce UM kind of lirl to
1et lOOle with."
Aller craduation, ahe headed for New York aa
an upirlna actreu and promptly got a Job -aa '
aecreury at S7Z a WMk. H.la ftnt opportunity came
wllh • part In the touriq tompan, ol "Lall of the
Red RcJt Loven," 1tarrlnl S6cl Caeur.
A number of yea11 had pa1ed 1lnte lbat com· I put.tr match. She aay1, "I · bad two rrtenda, an
'-Ill l•llh In hi• fellow
m1n
'8 P.M. MAGAZINE
A profile of rediO ~
talor Paul H~ IM ....
ld'luaeltl town·, pof)Uler
pig meecot, Chef Tell Pf ..
per11 PMC'I melba, Judi
MlaNll lnttodUCM IU·
llf'CIN , Joo;c. Kulhawlk
h.. the ••••• 1n outdoor
lpor11ngg.w cm MOW * • "SunMt Cova" Jay 8
l.Mson, Karen Frldrllt A
gtoup of young•!.,. lry
deaperalel'f to Nve their
beach from being
d•troy9d by~··
• TJUlC. PM.SIHT8
"H20 The Water Show"
C.,,laln Hydro's 1xpto1t1
.,. examined .. hi b1lllll
the wlclted wller bandit In
e look 11 ,,,. lmpor11/1C1 of
wal., c;onMN11lon with
Ille TWlltlh Night R41perto-
'1_ Compeny
g,;) MAGIC METHOO OF
OIL PAINTIHO
"SunrlM Al Tr.e Shore'
(t:'MOVIE
Swim T11m" Stepnen
Furst A pem.perld group
ol country clubbltl
1equir1 1 gorgeoua ,_
memb•r who ch1tg11
them up for lhl chemplon·
Ship •PQ
(}DMOvtE
"Bronco Billy" ( 1980) Cllnl
E11twood Sondt1 loci<e
A former anoe 11lelm1n
from New J9<N)' reallZN
his drHm ot performing In
I Wiid West llhow 'PG
(S)MOVlE
··T11e Godl11her. Pert II"
(1974) Al PIClno. Rober'!
Duvall Mfch1e4 Corleone
ut<Jmes hie late 111h1<·1
lhrone end power It he
blcom• the new held of
the Melli. finding pro1>-
lem1 with rlv11 f1C1lon1 Ind
the law throughout hll
reign 'R'
l.'tMOVIE * * * "High Pllfn1
Orl1t1<•• ( 19731 Clint E .. t.
wood, Verni Bloom A
nemelMa tlrang« ratllll
the cowardly rNidenll ot •
Weatern lown to ch.ilenOI
the ruthleu gang which
h .. bMrl le<rorl2lng them 9:30 . 9 8080M 8UOOIU
Henry -1111 at>out in.
ICMlnlutll he end Kip
haw heel while dlsQUleed
II lwmalel and IMng In a
women'• rllldence (R)
'8 TOP8TC>fn'
Hoell Jim Thomae. Mary
Ingersoll ID SNEAK PREVIEWS
Roger Eber'! and G-
S11kll holl an tnlormellve
IC)()lc It wt1al'1 new et Iha
movtea
'1i) '3UUA CHILD ANO
COMPAtlY
.. VIP Lunch" (RI
8:46 (0) CAUFOANIA AOTC>f'
9:00 II CJ) MAGNUM, P.I.
A we1llho; wom1n who 11ve1
In 1 NII-creeled, cloal<·
and-dagger l1n111y world
blcomn 1 111get for mur-
de<. (RI
0 Q!MOVIE
"Calllornl1 Gold Rush ..
f Premlefe) Robl<1 Heys,
JOhn Dehne< Baaed on
llor... bo; Bret H1111 An
18pirlng IUlhOt head• -I
In the 1111 1~0. In -ch
ol ldventurN to M ite
at>out
8 dJ IAAHEY MILLEA
Berney Is tell 10 coot hi•
heels In • <*I with 1 neu-
rotic murder 1Uapec1 wt.lie
his lawyer works to gel
contempt of COUd cnargea
dropped (Part 2)(R)O
GI MEW CM'UmN
Gu1111 Teno;• Tucker,
Joey Blllhop. Jim 81lll)',
Hou11on 0111 Derrick Doll•.
GD HIDOEH PV.CES:
WHERE HIS'TOAY LIVES
"'Boom And Bust -The
Mining Town1" Holl Phtllp
Abbott vielts lhrM eurvlv-
"19 mining towna.
10;00 • Cl) KNO'TI LANDING
Abby maneuwr1 Val to lhe
r111euren1 wtiere Gary 11
h•vlng en 1pp1ranlly
rom1nllc mMllng wllh
Judy Trent. (R)
• 0 cm Ci) NEWS G O 20120 tlD U.8. CHAONtCLE
"A Ott!erwtl Kind Of Ule"
ThrM women Who ate
ltadlng ac11v11 llves even
though they h1v1 c1ncer
1r1promec1.
(C)MOVIE
* *'-' "The Drowning
Poot" (11175) Paul New·
men, Jo.nne Woodward A
private lnveellgllor la hired
by • WNlthy Southern oll
heir-to dlte:Over 1he
Identity ol the aulhor ol en
1ncrlm1n111n;i letter
'B.IMOVIE
The Awlkening (19801
Chlflton H111on. SuSM·
neh York An 11e11..oio-
g11t'1 daughter blCOmn
poelllled by lhe malevo-
lent ep!l11 ol an anc;ten1
~t11nq""" ·R'
(:'tMOVIE
Tl1• N-m•n Shame • A
-llho; es-cop end hl1
glrllrlend. while allempllng
to solve • lflend's suicide,
uncover an ••torllon rack·
11 wllh connecuona to
undl<ground pornographk;
mcMls. 'R'
10:30'8 NEWS
ti) INDEPENDENT
NETWOAK NEWS ID MINORITY
EHAOU.MENT
A look 11 the problem• llC·
Ing bllCk end minority etu·
denll WhO enroll In pre-
dominantly white COllegn,
with one atudenJ b4Mng fol·
lowed through regf11r1tlon
Ind trllhm1n ~ 10 ;.t
hat lmptlUIOn of COlllQI
Ille
~ V1KJHG81
"He/fan W11 Hera·· The
controver1o; 11mound1ng
lhe myst1nou1 Rut tribe Is
IXatnined (R) q_
11:00808())98
NeW8 D STAATREK
Kitti. Spodt and McCoy
land on • pl"'4M 10 lnvesh-
g•t• Iha dl~anc9 ot
• Slatshlp io.t 100 lfllt•
prior. 0 NEWLYWED GAME
«D MAHHIX
"To Kiii A BU1cherbltd'
A"I< Iha police rule the
dHlh ot • wom1n 10 be
acclden111. M1nnh1
launches hi• own lnvettl·
gallon, when he leaml tha1
Iha wu Iha lorme< g1ri.
fnend 01 hll tongllme .,_
mo;
II) BENNY HIU
a.nny retur,.. w11h hla own
version of the nurwry
~me "Jack And Jou"
88 DICK CAVETT
G""I Agnes de Miiie (R)
~ TliE TOM COTTLE
SHOW
"Vietnam Nuree" A11 Army
nu<M dlecu-Ille hOt·
rora ol IMng Ind wonting
amldll the wrecitage of the
Vtetnamwer
(%)MOVIE
"The 1111nd" f 11180)
MlchHI C1ln1, David
Warne< While lnveetig•I·
ing a reah ot thlp dlaap.
peetl/lCll In the Bermuda
T rllllgla, a journalilt 1tum-
blll ecroaa .,, llo4ated.
•OO·o;aer-old colony ot
p1tat11. 'R'
t 1:30 8 CJ) THE JEFR!A80NS
LoulN QOM on I WM!<lnd
dig with 1 h1nd1om1
aspiring writer and a rock compo!er. They kept
talking about this actor friend on the West Coast.
Well, it was Larry, my computer mate.
"The day Larry returned from California he
drove straight to a bar where I was waiting The
minute he walked in I knew he was mine."
"The Two or Us," based on an English com -
edy, is about a couple that no computer would ever
bring together. Nan Gallagher is an ea!ygoing
The minute he 100lked in, I
knew he was mine.
lelevlslon personality who llves In a New York
townhouse with her ta.year-old daughter, Gabby.
Robert Brentwood ls a haughty, aelf·aasured
Engli11h butler. Their clashing cultures, as well as
her desire ror a tuual lllestyle and hls drive for
perrecUon1 kMP them at sword's point.
"Nan oear1 no relatloiuhlp to me," saya Mi.u
Kennedy, wearlnc a cool white dress and a attew
bat to protect ber lace rrom Lbe aun. "But you
mJ«ibl HY of ber Ute • 'There but tor the crace of
God · lt l beicomc 1ucce11ruJ. l could be Nan
Gallart>er.1
' Ooa 11he have a butler al home? She dead
paoa. "Only • sUent butler. It wu a ·weddin1
preunl. Pau e "Actually, that's a Joke.''
Cook, a successful writer •~ well aa comedian
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC Gt s·oo ·NBC Magazine with
David Hrtnkll'y Correspondt>nts ex
amirH• arm~ recruiting, un Israeli
ncw~man •rnd palentmg invcnl10ns
KTLA 0 8:00 "The List of Adrian
Messenger " George C Scott and Dan'1
Wynter s tar in this murder mystery
KCET lt 8:00 ··H20 lht> \Vatt:r
Show." Ctlptain Hydro battles for water
ronservat1on.
KHJ fJ 8:00 "The Pi:lwnbroker ··
Rod Steiger and Gl•r;ildrnl' Fitzgerald
star in a movie u bout a concentration
camp survivor who is haunted by
memories
you~ archMOloglll (RJ
O Q!TOHIOHT
Holl Johnny C1r1on
Gue111 Syiv11ter St•llone,
B B King, Seen M0<1y
G O AICNEWS ~UNE 0 LET8 MAKE A Ol!AL
Cl) STAHLEY 81£01!.L f.D ~ CAPTIOH£D A8C
NlW8
WHA ra Uf> AMEAICAI
Allend the eecond annu11
crou-country "Frenellc-
Klnetlc Sculpture R-"
vllll 1 H1ta KrlllhM PallCI
In W11t Virginia. conaull 1
bird p1ychl1tr111 WhO coun-
1111 pet 0Wf\er1 wllh prob-
lem blrda; explore the leg-
end 1round H1tlay-O.vld·
ton. 1nd spe1k with Liiier
G111aner eboul the greal·
"' coltecllon of "kitsch"
en In Amerlc1.
l.'tMOVIE
"The Oodlethet. Part II"
( 1974) Al P1elno. Roberl
Duvall. Mlclllel Corleone
auume1 hit 1111 lalher'I
lhrone and powe< 81 he
become• Iha new t>elld of
the M1f1a. hnd1ng prob·
ltme with rlv1J lectlon1 end
the l1w throughoul hll
reign ·R·
t I :50 CID MOVlE
'Tile Hum1n F1c1or
( 1980) NICOi Wllhamton
Jolln Glelgud An 1gen1 ol
the Bnllah Secret ServlCI
IS coerced onto giving lop·
eecret 1ntorm1llOtl to hit
Ru1111n count8fpar11 1n
theKGB R
-MIDNtGHT-
12:00 II Cl) HEC RAMSEY
A newcomef 10 town IUd·
denlo; dl11 end Hee· 1
lnves11g1llon tlk11s him to
two ev11t0<1 who are seek
Ing lfnenc111 becking for
their uperlmen11 D MOVIE * * ··Rid Llghl" ( 1114111
George Rall. Virginie
M1yo An ex-con lmprl•·
oned wlthou1 guilt finds
love while •••k 1ng
revenge D 9 CHAALIE'S
AHGEL.S
Sabrln• 11111 1n love with 1
young man who may bl
lh• murderer the AnQlll
111 lootolng lor (R) 0 QlJNSMOI(!
Jed Hodletl, • '""*' orders hie lhr11 tonl 10 go
lo l<>WI' and not relurn
WllhOUI pro1p1c11v1
brldel ID MISM>H:
IMPOSSIBLE
The IMF NII up a biurre
mlnd-lr1n1fer experiment
ln e ballle with org1nlzed
crime
• IAAETTA
Tony mull r8IOl1 10 con·
eulllng 1 child paychiC In 1
dlttlcull kldn1p cue
{C)MOV1E
.. Thi Flrat Nudle Mu-.i•
( 197~) Cindy Wlllllml.
Bruce Klmm.t. A down·
and•OUI Bro1dw1o; pro-
ducer plane to ep1rk lnter-
"t In l\la lllNI l)(Oj.cl by
1t1glng II completely In Iha
nude 'R'
12:30 0 Qt TOMORROW
Gueats comedlsn Robet'I
Klein; The Tubes
(D)MOVIE
"Wlqle & Phll.. ( tll80)
MIChael Onlklln, Matgot
Kidder Three paop••
begin a lrlengullf romance
In Greenwich VIiiage thlt
continues 1hrougl'lou1 the
..-curial IOciel mlli.u ot
ll'le '70. 'R'
HOU8TOH BIG LAff
OFF
Billy Crys1at holll this
Sllnd-up comedo; compeli·
I Ion lipid 11 Roell al ell er· 1
In Houlton
1:00 0 PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA
"Etoterle Allrology" Hoel
Demien Slmpaon Guest
lube! Hickey
'8 MOVlE
• *'A "The GrHt Sioux
Muucre" (1965) JoHph
Cotten Philip Carey
Custer' a fut st•nd end the
IVlnll which led 10 It
Involve a band ol reJdlng
Ind lane
II) INOEPEHOEHT
NETWORK NEWS rz:l MOVI~
"Xlnldu" ~ 11180) OIMB
Newton-JOhn. Gene Ketlo;
A o;oung 1r1111 a heavenly
muse and P aenllmenlll
mllltonalre JOln )Oroes 10
09lfl up I huge rOller-
a1sc:o pal-'PG
MOD MOVIE * • • 'Women In Cha1ns"
( 11171) Id• Lupino, LOtl
Nllllllon A re111tcher 11
trapped 1n9'de e pr1aon
when lier only link to the
outside world dMIS
<I.al NEWS
1:30 ll) MOVIE * • Decoy For Terror ..
( 1970) Wiiiiam Kirvin. Jean
Chr111opher A lovely
o;oung women 1C1a es e
potlee decoo; 10 trap an Brl·
111 suspected of murdering
MVer•I of his lorme1 eod·
els
1:40 D NEWS
1;45 D MORECAMBE & WISE
Ernie lrlN to unrevet the
secret ot the lnv1alble man,
Etfc 11 evicted from lhelr
apa11men1 when Ernie gelS
m11rrted
rB)MOVlE
"High Plains Drlller"
(11173) Clint Eutwood,
llerna Bloom. A nlmlills
llranger r•lll•• Iha
cowardly residents ol e w .. 1ern town 10 Cl'lalllngl
Iha rUlhflSI 011\Q wt>ICh
haS beer'I ler ror IZJnO them
'R
2:00 II Qt NEWS
fC)MOVIE
Blume In Love ( 1973)
George Segal Suaen
An~n A divorced men
l>ICOmM • jealous eullor.
1rylng 10 wln hi• ..,fe baclt
'A'
(l)MOVIE
··up Ttie Academy" (1980)
Ron Leibman, Barbara
Bech The wlr-ObSeseed
cornmendenl of We4nberg
Military Acadamy Is no
milch tor the troublesome
bt1l1 enrolled there. 'R'
2:048 NEWS
2:10 8 MOAECAMIE & WISE
Eric •nd Ernie star In
!rnle'1 vertlon ol Ille claa-
lic "Frankenat .. n."
2:35 8 EDITOAIAL
D NEWS
2:40 IJ MOVIE * • • .. The Brolherhoocf·
( lllt81 Kirk Douglaa, Ale11.
• MOYll * * "Dey Ot The WOtYet"
( f-73) AlcflMd Egan. ~
JHOtl All ••·M«llf find•
hlme111 up •g111111 I
ltrengl betld ol bMtOed "*' wtlO plen to laol&t•
and rlnMC!lk • MIAll town
tM(%)MOYll *••IA .. Madelelne'
( 1850) AM f od<I, LMli.
8ank1. Madelelne lmlth II
.CC:Ueed of poitonlng h9f
foV9fln 1857
HOO MOVll * * * .. High Pl1ln1
Dntler" ( 11173) CHnl ENI·
wood, Varna 8loom A
nam ..... etrange< ""'" Iha eowardly realdenll of 1
WNlarn town to challenge
the rulhflal gang which
h .. bMn terrori%1ng t'-n i:001 = * • "Detour" (111•8) Tom Neal, Ann s • .,. A piano
pleye< hlldlhik• 10 the
W•I Coe.II where he gets
Involved wtlh murd« end 1
M<IUCUYI blonde 9'ngar
II) MOVIE * * "C1m<val Of Crime"
( 198~) J11n-P11rr1
Aumont. Toni• Carrero
3:30 CS) THE WACKY WOAL.O
Of' JONA THAN WINTERS
HOii Orson Wellll
4:00 MOVlE
.. Hon1y1uckl1 Ro11"
( 11180) Wiiiie Nelton. Dyen
Cennon While on tour. a
Ta••• country-w1111rn
singer ~m" ln'/Olved
with Ille eeducllve daugh·
ter ol his lldlklc~ even
1hough he 111q love• his
111o;-at-hom1 wife 'PG'
4: 15 (C) MOVIE
"Auault On Precinct 13"
( 1976) Au111n Stoker.
Darwin Joeton Pollclmen
and c;onvk:tl are loroed 10
fOln together to pr-I •
leen-age geng from com-
pletely OCQupylng • polio.
station. 'R'
•:20«D MOVIE *'II Jeguar ( 11155)
MIChMI Connors. Benon
MIC lane
4:308 VOYAOETOTHE
BOTTOM OF TWE SEA
"Th1 lnvld8f1'
Cl) NEWS
7.)MOVIE
The Ulllmlll Thrill
(1974) Erle Breeden. Bnll
El< land
f 'ridoy·•
Doylhn~ Hot·i~•
-MORNNG-
11:00 (Cl ••'" TheWreckOI
The Mary Deare I 19~91
Gery Cooper. Charlton
Heston A Shlp'1 01t1ettr 11
aided b~ the skipper ol a
utvage boel in clearing hos
name ol negligence
charges
(.S) "Mule Feelher1" Rory
Calhoun. voice ol Don
Knolls P1taon Be1ure-
g•rd Shelby 0""11 In
1ncred1ble mule namea
Nelson with whom he 11
able to communocaie
through mental teleoetho;
·PG·
8'.00 'J:J Tua; EVlfllStfng .
Fred Keller Joseph
MecGulre A young girt
meals en 1mm0r111 lemlly
known u Iha Tucks
S) * • • 'Blackboard
Jungle ( t955) Glenn F0<d.
Anna Frencls A dedicated
young 1eac11er a11emp11 to
r11tore ordl< In 1 btg-<lly
1ra1n1ng school where
le«>-· lawlelsr\el5 Ind
vlOience heve 1aken root
f~ Ct) • • ''> .. 0 1 Human
8ond1ge' ( 1964) Kim
Novak, L1ur1nc1 Herv9)'
Based on the novel by W
Somer111 Meugh•m A
o;oung tnedlcel 11uden1
with a Htlou1 dalorm11y
falls 1r1glcelty In love wtth a
promlacuoul wa11res1
~ • • • ,,., "Rio B<•vo ..
( 1959) John Weyna, Dean
Manin ~n old cripple, 1
former deputo;-turnad·
drunk, • young qulckdr1w
gunll1nger and • glrl help a
Shetltt lo out1me11 a pow-
11-00 8••"Pwi.~"
(19&4) ~Boyl, VIOie
Vonn A man It eent to
Pirie to p0ea u 1 ec:Aenllal
111d uncover lho11
e111mpt1no to 111a1 a
MCl'et formula
11111. "H«c:ulel Vt Tt\e
PrlnceM Of Troo;" Gordon
Sc:c>11. Olel\e Myland
-AFTERNOON-
1t:OO '8 * * '-' .. Unci.t The Yum
Yum Tr•" ( 111113) Jac:l<
Lemmon, C1rol Lynll)' To
entur• • h1rmonlou1 mer•
rlage. a couple try IMng
togeth« platonlcelly, ~1
I~ arr•fll19'ner'll bee-.
cOmleal when their lend·
lord ,,,.. Mdu<llng the
young lldo;
41) **'-'"A Dl•tant
Trumpet" (11184) Troy
Donohue, Suzanne
Plllhllt• A cavalry omc:.r
111emp11 to worll ou1 hi•
romantic problem• end
handle Indian UPflling1 II
1heseme11me (~ "Mldlml Rou
( 11178) Simone S<gn0t11.
CllUdl 01uphln A wom-
en e 1>9tl0Nlllly Undeto<*
en extreme 1ran1l0<~llon
wt\11(1 8t)I lnVofVll herlllf
1n a romantic 1ttlir whlCh
f:)rldges two w.dely differ·
tng cullurlll tavel• R
1:30 CS)•*• "Blaclcbo1td
Jungle" (1955) Glenn Ford.
Anne Fr1nc11 A dedicated
young telcher 111emp11 to
reslore order 1n a big-city
1r11nlng •chool where
1ean-eoe llwte .. ness and
violence hive taken root
2:00 (C) ··Our Time" ( 19731
P1me1a Sue M1r11n, Parker
Sle11enaon The ltves ol
1wo o;oung coupl11
enrolled 11 prlvll• echoola
are changed vmln one ot
lhe girlS dllCOV9fl 8t)I fl
pregn1n1 PG'
0 * * * * .. The Godfa-
ther" ( 11172) Marlon Brin·
do. Al Pac1no Directed by
Francia Ford Coppo11
Based on 111e novel by
Maroo Puzo An aging
M1tlol0 -the bart'iara
bet_., h11 Idyllic famtty
Ille and the haran realllJes
ot htl butlnesa bre•k down
11 h11 sons become
•ncteesingly involved In lhe
VIOient workings of org1-
n1zed crime
3:00 ~ * • • The Sound And
The Fury ( 111591 Yul
Bro;nner Joanne Wood·
ward A Southern gotl lrom
• degenerale lem1ly
a11emp11 to make 1 Ill• for
her sell
3:30 0 • * '' 'Gun 01 Zan-
gara" ( t959) Rot>erl Slack.
Rot>erl Middleton In 1933.
Elllol Ness mob1t1zes law-
men 10 preven1 lhe 8Sl8t·
s1na11on ol Pres1aen1 Roo·
aevett
<CJ 'Tuck Everlasting
Fred Kellar Joseph
MacGulre A young g.irl
meell an 1mmon11 family
known as lhe Tucks
( i, "Mule Fea1hers" Rory
Clllhoun V06Ca of Don
Kno111 Parton Beaure-
g.,d Shelby owns 1n
incredible mule named
Nelson Wllh whom he IS
ebla to commun1c11te
lhrough menlel ltttePllhy
PG
5.-00 l.'t • • , Journey Beck
To Oz 11972) Anomateo
l/oooes ol L1:ra Monnelll.
Paul lynae Dorothy
returns IO ll'le Lend of Oz
and encoun1ers Iha &<ater
of Iha WIClled Wilch or the
Wes1
5:30 ( C Targets ( 19681 Boros
Kartott, Tim 0 Kelly An
aging horror-movie star
Irias to reason woth • mur-
derous sniper II a drove-on
movie lhHte1
($1 * • *'"' "Roo Brevo"
( 1959) Joti'l W1yne, Dean
Martin An old cripple, a
lorme1 depu1y-1urn1d-
drunk, a young quockdraw
gunallnge< Ind •girl help a
1horlll 10 outsmart e pow-
erful r1ncher who wanll 10
get hos killer brolher
released lrom proson
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk
THIS 15 MIKE MAJO~-S
Al IHE 0UZZARDS'
'TRAINING CMl\P, WHE~ 'l'M A00VT TO TRY
QUARTERBACKING IH E. 13UZZARD5' OFFENSE!
.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
1'0 MAKE. SURE YO.JVE.
GOI ENOUGH !APE/
and actor, is planning to write several scripts ror
the series. Her writing background : poetry in high
school, the literary magazine. speeches on issues
of the day. She adds, "I wrote a 15-minute film ror
the American Film Festival. Now I'm just keeping
a journaJ, and l write letters -keeping alive a lost
arl. ·· She says, "I love acting so much. That's what
I do. I feel I'm at the top of my creativity through
acting. or course. I 've written com edy
monologues. I did a Rona Barrell takeoff, 84 Mona
Rarebit, on 'The Big Show.' "
The Two o( Us" is her third series. She played
In the movie ''Getting Married." tben returned to
New York ror more Lheater work. Next came her
role as Victoria, the supercilious older sister In the
CBS comedy ''Stockard Chonnlng In Just
f'tlends."
"Victoria apoke In 'Long Island Loclcjaw, "she
says, lmltatlng the accent of lhe Hamptons. ·11
thought older slaters were con.form11U. I thou1hl
she would be a dyed·ln·tb.•·wool, tradlUonal,at,
Junior League, country chlb. I tried that out and
th audience and Stockard cracked \Ip. 1 knew I
had hlt the right note.'•
She and Dilg were in the tourina company or "The National Lampoon Show'' before their mar-
riage. She HYI they bope to do a musical -.,Selhtr
Miss Kennedy HYI l ht lblnkJ ODO Of the
secrets of the aucce11 of "Tht Two of U1" la Cbe
touchy relaUonlhlp bel.,..en berfflf and Cook. She
·~·· '"Tber1•1 ObviOIS11 an attrMUae. But. Yte'd Uk to k p the ••xual tenaicln, bec:...ae tb1t'1 whal mak the aer1ea MlmJ Kt'Rncdy. co itor of "TM Two CJ/ Us "
• ' '·-
11119 ......................................................................... "'9"1 ....... ._._....._. .... ._....._ ....... '""!'"".._. __ ._.., _______ ~ ___ _ . ----· ---·------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
Kelco has bright idea
Chemical firm may solve problems with own ~lectricity
SAN DIEGO <AP> Kelco Inc .• a chemical·
making firm, moved a division lo Oklahoma and
almost shut down its 500-worker San Otego plant
because of a S6 million-a-year electricity and gas
bill.
Instead, officials say Kelco is tiakln& a bole
m ove that will a llow Its division to move back
from Okmulgee, Okla .. and permit the firm to
keep open its San Diego plant with a $10 mUlion
payroll. It will make Its own electricity.
The firm is putting in three natural gas-fired
turbines that are equal in size, eight megawatts
each, to som e of the power plants of San Diego Gas
& Electric Co.
The savings will pay the $25 million cost of the
generators in five years time, Kelco Vice Presi·
dent Lamar Whitney said.
So much power will be produced that Kelco is
actu ally going to sell two-thirds of it to San Diego
Gas & Electric for resale to homeowners in San
Diego.
Ron Watkins. a vice president of the utility.
said it will pay Ke lco "on the order of $10 mi1llon a
year for the electricity they turn out enough
e lectricity to s upply the need s of 20 ,000
customers."
Kelco, under the law. will be able to buy
natural gas to fire the turbines at the same rate as
San Diego Gas.
The utility has agr eed to pay 90 percent of the
Brokerage shut
in trade probe
Joseph Sebag & Co .. a brokerage firm with
about 2,000 clients and four Southern California of-
fi ces, has been closed and ordered liquidated by
court order because of a lleged improprieties.
U.S District Judge Malcolm M . Lucas issued
the order earlier this week after securities reg-
ulators and a federally sponsored insurance pro-
gram charged that an Irvine Sebag broker was in-
volved in improper stock trading, precipitating
m assive losses for the brokerage house.
The broker. Roger Garrity of Investors Finan·
cial Services. was accused by the Securities and
Exchange Commission of making unapproved
stock purchases for custome rs. then transferring
them to his own account when stock prices fell and
the customers refused to put up more money for
security. The decline in the price apparently
caused Sebag to fall below federal requirements
for the amount of capital it must retain.
$50.,000 to $500.,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• Inter••• only P9v-«nl
•IM-
• Weekly co••l..._t•
• Mo ntltly f•n4llt9•
• Co•••rc:UI • Reeldential • 6 -n•h• to S v-n
• So•th•"' Callfonau
( '''ll·)• I taf
loan lnfo ....,tion ••rvice
1 f flUf llrtd '1• trH.~ O ... ,'(f,
(714) 75SM515
AME"ICAN HOME MORTGAGE
230 New(>or1 Cenler Drive
Oe••on Piela
Newpor1 Beact>.
Callfo•n••
92660
CONSTRUCTION
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK
• Raidential
• Commerc:i.a1 Buildinp: Takeout
Commitment required alona with leala.
• Land Laana up to one year 50% ~.
CONTACT: • JeffJohNon-
hvtne Of&e (714)851--4050
THE UNCONVENTIONAL BANK. Herit~e
nk"'
L .M .Boyd informs .... -.11
• in the ~I: rlllll .
cos t of the electricity -but never less
than 6.5 cents a kilowatt hour, ln return for a
guaranteed. around-the-clock supply. In such co-
generation, steam and electricity are produced
simultameously.
A division of Merck & Co .. Kelco m ines the
ocean ocr San Diego for kelp. It.a ships scoop up an
estimated 160,000 tons of kelp annually for process-
ing into "a var iety of refined algin products used
in food processing and industrial and consumer
products."
At present, it buys seven megawatts of elec·
trlcity and 180,000 pounds per hour of steam from
San Diego Gas & Electric.
The new contract. e ffective after Kelco's
turbin~ are installed and in use in 1983. provides
for It to get only 90 percent of the utility's avoided
cost s ror the electricity 1t made. The California
Public Utilities Commission has approved a legal
waiver, and after five years the utility must pay
100 perce nt of the avoided cost for the remaining
life of the LS-year contract.
Firm reports
record sales
Alpha Microsystems, an Irvine-based de·
signer and manufacturer of microcomputers
for business. professional. sc1e ntif1c.
engineering and educational applications. re-
ported sales of S6.2 million in the quarter
ended May 31.
According to Robert B. Hitchcock, presi·
dent and chief financial officer of the firm,
that total is the highest of any quarter s ince
t he company's inception in 1977 ln the like
quarter a year ago, Alpha Microsystems
sales totaled $5.2 million.
Hitchcock reported, however , that due to
costs associated with product development
a nd the introduction of new products. net in-
com e Cor the q uarter was held to $249,036, or
14 cents a share. a decrease from the
$275.385, or 16 cents. earned in the compara-
ble quarter of the previous year
Last month, t he company made an 1mt1a1
public offering of 975,000 shares of common
stock at $15 a share through an underwriting
managed by Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards
Inc., Los Angelei. The firm's stock is cur -
rently traded over the counter.
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare Coln• &. Stamp•
GOLD & Sil VER
7·29-11 0... ci.e.-.. Sltvw Cl ..... ... .... ~'.. ....... '.'~ .. 14.• .... ...... i. ...__. $411.Je Mr!.• 100Go<-......... .
JO PHOI Mte.• ..... . '°" Sllvw 9-...._. -.. 1~---~"'-... 1aA< ..... (714) 556-a50
South Coast Plue Vlll•g• ___ ..
CA<r ___ CMMl'luet
!I .___ .... ._._ ___ ..
HOLLOWAY
A tax c ut i s what
ec:onom.lat.s have already
predic ted, politicians
have already promised,
and your family has
already spent.
•••
All t hose in ravor of
seving gasoline. raise your ngbt root.
•••
The worst thing about
belfli a housewire Is that
there'I no place to stay
home from.
•••
Farmer to tourist "Our
homu have a built-in
ener1y conservation
feature -no heating or
air condJtioning."
•••
What's a fortification?
Two twentifications.
••• .
Here's how we see it·
you'll find the best selec-
t.Ion or quality tires right
here at Tire City, 1950
Newport, Costa Mesa.
PRIME
COST /4. MESA.
Enc..tf•• S..itff
forLeose
7Ht Ftoor
Ocean Vt.w .....
South Coast '9aza
5000 sf desigMd for
exec..tln corporate
lteadq•arhrs or
1anJe law flnn. L~
cOftfet ettee rooM attd
executi•e office with
9 llri•ah offices aff wffh •iews. A Yailabl.
l111111ed l ately
Priftclpals only.
17141667-60 17
WEAAEA
PRESCRIPTION
PHARMACY
By Terry
Grant.
.R. Ph.
r1' --. ~x
When a pharmacist
graduates from his Col·
lege of Pharmacy <now it
takes 5 years or morel,
he musl pass a slate ex·
aminat ion lo prove
his knowledge, so that
he can safely be trusted
lo compound and dis·
pense drugs and pre
scnplions Al tho\ lime
he is an expert on the
storage. uses, sarc dos-
age and th e incom-
patibilitics of every
medicine
The next day, an en-
tirely new drug discovery
may be relcRsed. To keep
up to date w 1lh these Cre·
quent new products we
carefully read our drug
journals, medical pub-
I I c 11 ti o n sa nd
pharmaceutical sup -
plier's literature. Often a
physician wiU phone us
to find out 1r we have a
new product in our pre-
scription laboratory. The
odds are we do. or we
can get it the same day.
,All UDO PMMMACY ..... .......,
Jll ........ ....
... -:;: ..... I . .. ..
WHICH IS WITCH? Why would Juan
Estanoz be m easuring witches' hats at Borg
Wa rner Corp.'s Byron .Jackson Pump
division in Vernon'' Eslenoz. an inspl'l'lor at
the facility, isn't a warlock. lle's final check
in g cadmium -plated carbon steel strainer-;
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
which will be temporarily installed in the suc-
tion pipe of a high-powered boiler feed pump
in f:gypt Purpost• of the strainers 1s to make
~urc no foreign material damages lhe Egyp-
l1 <1n Electra• Aulhoril\ .. s lsmal1a Power
Plant pumps on in1t1al ~tartup
t
1 l
I ~
6 ' • 9 10
11 11
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II ,,
t • " 10 u. 11 '62 n 2.11S 23 3,711 2• •7 2S "I,. ,. loOl.100 11
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R••IRK OlySot • Cml>Mc<
A•rot.n
810.pnr ' 8r•ll tmvtr un
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'
-----------------~-,,.-,..~-~-------------~~-,.--~-----=-~-o-c~--
----------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, JuJy 30, 1981 s C9
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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5••.-N•I SAIK Nol s.1., """' S.lh Nol S.•n Nfl
,.
f> E llch CIOM C:"' P-E no• Clo,. C"9 "·E 11<1• Clo"" C.llO P E l\ch (10'9 CllQ P E nd> C.IOw C.llO ~ .... Eitllil! Lii I 111 J7-l Plllll! 1111 ... . 00 •Ill-.. "'"''" ... I ) JllC.-\lo 9'..,.,+ Ya tlC • .lllU ttt SI ..... li'N!I 111 .. 40 !;!!! .0 + \'t $1M1Sa I.tie .. IS I"' ....
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.._. What Japan
can show us
Conclu8ion o/ o two-part serie1.
No other industrialized naUon's population is ag
Ing as rapid.Jy as Japan's and thus , a glance at how
this economic superpower is meeting the same
challenge developing in the United States might
teach us a lot.
A first step Japan is taking is to push back the
mandatory retirement age at which most workers
must leave their companies from SS to 60 and by
l 9 8 5 , I h e 0 Japanese gov-
ernment wi ll
legally require ~,.
lhe older retire· ...::;
m e nt a ge A It
1 Tb at Japan's -., .. [,-IA_P_D_IT_IR--
retirement ages '
are younger
than ours refl ects practices left over from previous
eras when lire expectancy in this nation was much
shorter than it now is. Now J apan's lire expectancy is
longer than ours.)
A second ste p J apan is taking is to make another
career for a retiree a commonplace development.
This second career usually is a less important. lower·
paying job than the first position. But the fact that
the job chain is extended gives an entirely different
meaning to retirement. a meaning much different
than what leaving a company has in this country
Of course, it's not all that simple for a retiree to
find a second job that will be as emotionally and
financially satisfactory.
It is an accepted aspect of Japanese society that
its citizens behave both within their corporations and
within their economy at large as though they were
operating within a big fa miJy. This personal, in·
slin clive approach differs markedly from the more
impersonal. objective way in which our country
views corporations and the economy in general.
It 1s another accepted aspect that the Japanese
believe people function better both as citizens and as
workers when they feel part of a "family," in which
lifetime employment is taken for granted and
employees are paid salaries on the basis of age and
years of service.
Still. despite reputed special reverence for the
elderly. senior corpor ation executives favor hiring
the young and the over·55 may find it tough to get
that second career. A young worker. for instance.
may be able to choose from two to three job offers.
while an over-55 worker may have to compete with 5
to 10 of his peers for one job
Many compa nies don't want to hire older
workers because t hey believe that they are less pro·
ductive and harder to train Also, under the country's
seniority salary system. employees get an autom atic
raise for every year in service meaning the
younger a company's work force. the lower its labor
costs Unlike the United States. Japan has no law
prohib1ling discrimination on the basis of age
<anyway. we al least have a law 1 .
The real reason some firms let employees who
are "retired" stay on the payrolJ at lower salaries is
to meet their social obligations to older wo rkers
while keeping down payroll costs. "Retired" workers
who move Lo other companies also are likely lo be
paid 30 percent to 50 percent less than in their pre·
vious posts.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORK(API FINI ()ow.Jones .-.vs.
NEW YORI( (API . S.lft, Wed. price
•nd Ml c~ of the llllHn "'°'' ~llV• Hew vor._ Stock E.cc116nge luuH, trading rwioonauy el more 11\an SL
conocolnc 1,21s.-'° Scnlllz erw 457,700 I•'-' -llo . "' " "" -1'4
Am AlrUn 4l3,t00 14'1> Tuaco Inc 405,600 » VAL Inc l7•,200 21V. HO<lstlnCI • lM, 100 20\1) ClllH Svce l32,llOO SSV1 • v. -J +1\'t Bucy Erle J27,ll10 20 Amer T & T JOl,llOO SS~ . -. ,..., ~r~':l1 ~::l: ~ .... + '" -J'!lt T .... 1n1 , 111.too atY> EUOI\ S 211.JOO J411't -•.i; R-an 161,900 II~ -~ duPont 144.600 .. ~ -t
AMERICAN LEADERS
N.,,,. I GOV Inc 2 AmAoro s J ElglnN•ll 4 HLT Corp S Tull 11111 • Al'll .,..,
7 FIMIW Ent I La0 ... 5'<( s
t IU<y Erl• lO HtlenOorl A
t MHA ... rl I 12 Manllall Lio IJ A llrgt At.Ito
14 GeMtco '"' u 0..-ltStCll 16 C..•acC:O .....,.
tMetn0re11 t T•~•lnt • J L~I-CO 4 Fllmwy .topf S Lt..CCWI> t ::u=,
I KrMfller
' A"'WMr_llfA 10 Oftf d UQpl
11 "°'me.JI '!".,.,,,. ~
t '™" hw I J ffOl'\P 4Df 'J S-.CAlrt t
t ''""t Fash I IFll ff
GOLD COINS
Pct. Up :IO.S
VP tJ.7 Up tt.S
Up U Up U
Up 1.7 Up 1.4
VP U Up I.I
Up 7.1 Up 1.1 Up 1.S
uo 1.A
VP 7.J
"" 7,1 UP •.t
let. on u gn i:~
Ofl 1.1 ()fl .. , Ort ..,
Ofl ··' Of! ... gr. t.l °" u Ort 6.1
Oft t'
fi rl
tor Wed., Jul ?t.
STOCKS
JO Ind 20 Ttn IS Ull •S !ilk lndut rran Ullls
6S Stk
OMll Mllll ....... C lfte C"9 t.11.S) 'MT .JO t'll.'° n1 -1.00 401.'1 .o..75 l97..l2 401.04-o.°' IOI 61 109,11 1111.2' IOt U• 0 7S 366.11 J70. 7l JM.34 l66 73-0.04
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jul, H
Today
Adw611Ctd 6'H
Oor.llnt<I 734
uncllen~ 43t
Total It~ 1 .. 1
Haw 1119"5 11
New 1ow\ JO
WHAT AMEi< DID
N EW YUNK IAl'I JUI I~
fo<My Aovanced 2tO Oot11MCI 271
Un<hengad 191
Totel h..S 756 Now lllQlls H
N•w I°'" ..
METALS
2.1 .... 000
• • .i•.400 1,434,JOO
S,ll 1.700
,.,..,
dasL ... .,. ,.,.
lO fl
p,..y,
cs;Is
:rn 20e no • 11
NEW YORK (4PI -Sc>o1 nonferrous
IMltl prlcet ~ldaY c.,,., U'llt·U conu a pound, U.5
Clnlln•tlont.
LH41 •2 Centl a -.nd.
lllK 46'4 ~ • _.i, clellverod .
Tlfl SI .1'40 Melals We<tk composlll '"· Al•fft ....... 76-lllcen" e -..no, N Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS .... , ... ._ .. ___ ,
$ele(led told ptle;ft w......,.v
~:()loMf, ,,_:$4m .... uptt ...
l•rl<ll: '"'' ll•lno M04.00 uo u.oo, M07 .oo Hktd, "•"d' • "•rMaN: only deity quo1• MOl.00, uo '1.$0 • .......,..: onlr dally -te s.oos.oo. uo
P.JO. .,......:uoU-M.
SYMBOLS
:
I
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
APW ........
Prmce Charles· bride D1ana. the new Princess uf
Wales. wore coral silk dress and matchmy hat as
royal couple rode toward Waterloo Stat1011 rn l.on-
don on way to lwneymmm at Broadlands
Royal wedding
cost $2 nrlllion
LONDON <AP> From $40,000 for the cake
and breakfast to $10,000 for the bridesmaids' cos-
tumes, the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer was one of the most expensive in
his tory costing an estimated S2 million, Buck-
ingham Palace officials say
The huge bill. which included everything from
the cost of security and re nting St. Paul's
Cathedral to printing wedding programs for the
congregation. is being s hared by Britis h tax-
payers, Queen Elizabeth fl and Prince Charles.
According to published reports and palace of-
fi cials, these were among the major costs:
$600,000 for security
SI00.000 for decorations. flowers and bar-
rie rs along the wedding procession route from
Buckingham Palace to St Paul's Cathedral.
SI00,000 for a pre-wedding reception Mon-
day
$40,000 for the wedding breakfast and cake.
$300,000 for a two-week honeymoon cruise on
the royal yacht Brittan1a
$60,000 for Diana 's sapphire a nd diamond
engagement r ing.
$10,000 for the fi ve bridesmaids ' and two
pages' costumes.
The costs are not limited to the taxpayer s and
royal fa mily Britain's two major television
networks s pent $1.36 m illion between them on cov-
ering the wedding. They are locked in a battle to
win the nation's T\' ratings
* * * * * *
300 wedding
gifts received
LONDON <AP 1 Prince Charles and the new
Princess of Wales ha\•e received all 300 wedding
gifts from a list she drew up, the bride said in a
BBC television interview.
The former Lady Diana Spencer let it s Hp that
the items came from Thomas Goode in Mayfair
and the General Trading Co an Che lsea. both royal
provisioners by appointment to the queen.
The gifts included Royal Worcester china in
the Evesham pattern, a gourmet barbecue, patio
c hairs and a pair of Crown St affords hire
cocka toos Gifts also poured in from other
quarters
Nancy Reagan brought over an engraved
Steuben glass bowl from the United States.
Part interest in an oil well near Holdenv1lle,
Okla ., came from Oklahoma oil millionaire
Wyman Fraley. who is about to open an office in
Britain for offshore drilling.
Th~ National Association of Goldsmiths sent a
necklace and earrings or sapphire set on yellow
and gold feathers. emble m of the Prince of Wales.
The bride gave he r husband a diamond-
studded gold picture frame to hold his favorite
wedding photo. His girt to her was not known.
For cold nights, the Sedgemoor District Coun-
cil in Somerset gave the couple a ton of locally pro-
duced peat to fuel the fire at the ir new home at
Hi ghgrove in western England
I
1Heat sensors
save boaters
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Three men who
ere lost al sea are safe today thanks lo a new
eat-sensing device that led reacuers through the
og to lhe hull of their slnk.lng boat, orficlals said.
A Coast Guard helicopter with an electronic
amera device attached to jts nose zeroed In on
he stranded trio 16 miles otr the coast ol Santa
arbara about 11:50 p.m . Tuesday, Coast Guard
pokeaman Andy Vllulls saJd.
The Forward Looking Infrared Sensor located
hrlst.ophe r Early, Mike Hoyt and Frank Sager,
II in lheJr late 20s, suffering from aetond stage
ypotbermla with body temperatures below 95
egrees. The men had sent out a dlstresa signal at
10: ~ p.m. advising that their 32-foot fishing
easel, lhe Blind Faith, wu alnldng fast, Vtlutls
aid.
"A combination of mechanical failures occur-
lln1 over a short period ol time resulted in the
j!ngine compartment rloodlna;· reported the
spokesman. 1 rLJR, which works much like miutle
~guidance systems, projects an im11e onto a
monitor placed on the helicopter'• cocltpil, or in
the aft section where a crew member can monitor ht. •'Those men would have been ln the wat er,
fl•btin& rour foot swells, much lonter If we bad
had to use the old way of tryln1 t.o ptnpolnt tbelr
location," aald VUutla.
''The sensor. which It much more powerful
than the human eye, hu two kinds ot vlalon,"
IVllulil t1ld. "It can see In Hfular proportions,
add Mio ca1' m•artllY three um ...
''It wouJd have taken.,much, mucll lon•er t.o
1pot Umn wtlbOut FLf fl. I
'
Diana becomes privileged princess
~
LONDON <AP) When Prince Charles placed
the rin& on Lady Diana Spencer's finger , it gave
her the right to s hare with his titles and rights,
from Prince of Wales to Lord of the Isles, from a
goatskm Uthe paid by Cornish farmers to millions
in real estate income.
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, J a ma ica, the
Ba hamas. Barbados. Fiji, Grenada, Ma uritius,
Papua New Guinea, St Lucia, Sl. Vincent and the
Gr enadines. Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.
sh1pi. <i r ight the duke has had little chance to
exer cise rt.>ccnlly
She will benefit from the Income provided by
the duchy's 128,000 acres. one or Britain's laraest
ea.tales. Prince Charles receives the equivalent of
more than Sl mil hon fro m the estate, hall ol which
he r eturns to lhe treasury in lieu of taxes Diana has become one or the most privileged
women on Earth as Princess of Wales
As queen. Diana would not share her
hus band's powers as king. The royal functions
these days are essentially ceremonial anyway. the
monarch deferring to the government on matters
or state Bul Diana, as ma triarch or a model fami-
ly, could nonetheless have a great impact on
British life.
The duchy's estates. scuttered across
southwest England, include dozens of farms and
homes. Dartmoor Prison, the Scilly Isles, 11,000
acres of riverbeds. 70,000 acres of mineral rights,
London'11 oval cricket ground and a packet or Lon·
don r eal estate valued at more than $200 million
Princess Diana shares the prince's titles and
positions as Duke ol Cornwall, Earl of Chesler ,
Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron of Ren-
frew, Lord of the Isles and Great Steward of
Scotland. She also will share privileges and pre·
rogativcs dating back centuries
Ir and when Charles succeeds his mother,
Queen Elizabeth 11 , Diana will become Queen of
Great Britain a nd Northern Ireland. a nd of
As Duchess of Cornwall, Diana will share in
the dues the tenants have offered the duke for 750
years. including a goatskin, a pair of gilt spurs. a
salmon spear and a pound of pepper. Diana 1s unlikely to share officially in the
management of the duchy's estates. in whJch
ChCJrlcs ,,., very active
3()..gallon wet• h .. t.,
with energy Hvlng
temperature •hut-on.
114''
40 tol. ..... 124.H so,.1 ...... 184.99
tor a gllstenlng finish
Rally cr .. m wax with 1p-
pllcater protects ind shines
your car with a 341 WMlhafproof finish. Reg.
'-39
. t· I \
1pnd .... •ltln
Famoua latex flat wall
paint from Gllddan.
Baeutlful flat flnleh
acrube clHn, 1tay1 8'.! COior lul EMy water
dean-up.
The duchy also is entitled to a ny whales
beached on its shores and cargoes of any wrecked
&-pack Pepsi
12 oz. cans of refreshing
pepsl soft drink.
69
.. dllex" muns .. deluxe"
for your llHchen
Oe<uxe faucet by Delta
with water-saving design.
Gleaming finish. #2102
Reg. 26.95
go the distance, and then some
Gasohol Plu1 gaaonne ad-
dltlva Is gu1rantMd to In-
crease your mlleaga up to
15%. UM o~ bottle par 10 I I c
gallons of guollne. 24 oz.
Reg. 1.29
1pred H on tlll llOllU
Goat on ea111y,drt"
quickly to a cfurabla
n.i nnleh that r..,ea 11 '.! P"llng. Water cleen-
up.
PARKING LOT SALE
DRAWING WINNERS
1st T.E. SNELLEN, COSTA MESA
ENOUGH DUPONT PAINT TO
PAINT THE INSIDE OF YOUR
HOUSE
2nd
3rd
4th
A.G. ARFF, COSTA MESA
TOASTMASTER TOASTER OVEN OR
BLACK & DECKER V .S.R.
C. PAINES, COSTA MESA
S15.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE
J.M . WELLS, COSTA MESA
$10.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE
feast your eyes
on this barbeque
Duel burner propane gas barbeque fea-
turea heavy duty construction and high·
domed lfd Tank In· 2
1
1 Ill eluded #9230.
Reg. 393.70
MMte• MECHANIC ®
a new twist In drtlls
13-plece drlll bit Mt from
M11ter Mechanic High
speed HI sized 1/18 to 'I• In·
che1. #M-13. Reg. 11.99
RAIN~81RD
tor complete covwege
Ral nblrd'• 01clllatlng
1prlnklar •dlu•t• to cover a
a••
1mall or lerw• are1 . 12••' Lightweight end •HY to
move. I0-17. Reg. 111.98
Just breezing around
Galaxy 16" oaclll1tlng fan
keeps cool air clrculatlng
in your home. With heavy 3 1 I I base and safety grill.
#2151. Reg. '9.95.
----'....
a perfectly ·rromo· door
Miii fln<•h 1lumlnum 15'' screen door. 30'', 32" and
36" widths. Reg. 22.,9
mike H pow with '"'°'° Quick acting Vlgoro Sulfate
Is full of element. that In-2 II duce colof and ltrength to
your lawn. Rag. 4.20
sc;ssss UPP a 0 A:SS S I
ClASSIFllD
" .... forWt HoetMt For Wt Hoaft For Wt Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 DI
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
G1 .. N1 I OOJ G ... r<ll 1002 .......... I 002 HowMt Fors. 1
"-'",.,. ~ •••••• ,,~.~.~ .............. ~.~ ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••' • • '" • ............ • ..... • •• • ..... 002 ...,.__ Io• .._... I 044
.... Is ..
THNIMG
TOWNHOMI?
Call the apecialilts at
lbe condornlnlum In ~For Wt ronnatiooctnl.tr
• • •• • • • • • • • • • • ••• ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••....... Touch.done Rta.lty
GtMr... 1002 Gfttf"tll 1002 --...mcm1:1..---1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HillOllMI
Award winning
''JC>cMlle" eatate home.
lat reaale otferln1 on th.IJ exquisitely appoint
ed townhome with
m11slve view of bay, ~an, rouUine Ir nlahl light.a. Now ~uced lo
$739,000.
v .. · I :---1 1 ·) \
l\YLOR CO.
Hh\l.TOt\S "llH I' !~H f; EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,.._.._,, Hotke:
All r eal estate ad
vert ased in this newspaper IS subject Lu
the Federal Fair Hous
ing Act o( l968 which
makes at illegal to ad·
vertise "any preference,
lamatataon , or das
cr1m1nataon based on
race, color. rehg1on,
sex. or national origin.
or an intention Lo make
any such prtrerence, 11m1tat1on, or dt)
cnm inataon "
Ml &MISPJUICTION SUl,000 H~TID klDMEY·SfW'ID POOL
ROOM FOi ,ADDU TIMMIS
Immaculate picturebook 3 bedroom
home nestled in flowers and shrubs.
Large grassy back ya rd for the
children , pets or guest house. B~au.tiful pool with large deck area. ~ wi~e frontage. Zoned for income. A
wtse investment for young or not so
young. We have the key. Call 644-4910 to see.
i!1,1 .. 111 11\'• ,\ 011 '
i.~ t'.t: LI ( ~l
H111·1 i-14t_. '-.•,11(' .1\n,t1nw
l .1· llilull f'• .1 l!l•h,
llDUCID
$100.000
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. WLTOIS 2lllS•J~ .. loed
NEWPORT CENTER. M.1. 644-491 O
OCWROMT
Choice comer duplex 3 bd~1 3 bath up;. 2 bdrm.
2 ba1.11 down. 1..an ron· vert to a larger home
~iLLER WILL HELP
FINANCE AT IJ"'r
S795.000! ThlS newspaper wall not
knowanety accept an>
advertising for real
estate which is in viola· t.!Q.!Lo!..lh~
EllORS: Act.ertiMn
dlMld dltdl .... ods
doily .... = •I' ron 1111• • n.
DAILY Pl.OT os.-.1
labllty for ... first
incorrect iluutlon
ORiy.
REALTORS
675-5511
.... ~,,.
htJhn
•'75-7060•
PURCHASE OPTIOH
New Fant.astic 3 Br. 3
Ba Condo, l2500 moves
you in, SlOOO per month.
<Why pay rent). Next to
all shopping, theaters &
park, jwst minutes to
beaches.
Ward Management Co
-7~
••••••••••••••••••••••• Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HICUTlVE
LOOKING FOR A CAREER IN REAL
EST A TE7 CON Ni .ct clsc.1 yow Mw.
wttll us. W• offer JCMtt good cCMMli11HMt
KhecMH. Prot.ssto.G auistmce. Alw.ys nolable. Neat office!
F111d out about the high· e~ming real eslate sales
career opportunities
with THE REAL
ESTATERS Licensing school fees completely
refundable to school of
your choice Exlenslve
sales traanlll(. For in
formt1~ll1lli 9 $227,000
Almost new 2 stor)
beauty Sun failed
k 1tchen, formal duung
room. wark and cozy
family room too' 2nd
story hosts secluded
ma s ter s uite with
r racklani: brick fireplace 3 more queen
sized bdnns too' Don I
miss out call
COU OF NEWP'OIT REALTOIS
2515 E. Cood HWf .. CClf"CIRO dtf Mer
675-5511
DlllLEX
$94,900
Investors del.aght! Two 2 Bdrm Uruts. Current in
come f740 Mo I year
home prot«tion plan in eluded Call lo see'
646·7171
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714 -63 1-6990
HORSE PIOPEITY
Lots of wood, stained
glass and country
charm describe the at· mosphere or thlS Santa
Ana Hgt.s 3 Bdnn 2 Ba
home The owner will
carry large 2nd and you can assume the Isl Full
prace $163,900.
TRlDI TIO\, \I.
RL\l.TY
631-7370
REDUCED Charming wood
shingled IDwnhome Sun filled kitchen overlooks cozy pal10 3 large
bdrms plus sewing room
too Onl y Sl00.000, call
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7'4-63 1-6990
MO c;>UALIFYIMG
$25,000 down and total monthly payments uf un
ly S9S6 for this lovely 3
bdrm cul·de·sac home
Only $129.500 Call now
979-5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
••• H .. Ortiey
326 Harbor Blvd
C061Ai Mesa
You a re the WUl!ler of
TWO FREE PASSES
($17 value)
RING UNG BROS BARNUM & BAILEY c•cus Anaheim Convention
Center Aug. 6·17
Long Beach Arena
Aug. 19-23 To rlaim passes. call
642·5678. ext Z72 Passes
must be exchanged for
reserved seats at box
o ffi ce prior to performance
***
• REH TORS
CotalMs-wt
EnJOY peaceful views of
Catabna Island in this appealing Cape Cod
famal) home This
spacious 4000+ sq fl
home with its man}
amenities has excellent
f1nanc1ng available
Bea ulaful landsca pang.
rustom oak bookcases. hardwood Ooors. custom
shutters and a separate
maid's qlrs are but a few
of the luxunes availa-
ble 5650,000
D.M. Marshal Rltr
760.0.J15
O"ORTUMITY knocks often when you
use result·gettmg Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach Lhe Orange Coast
market
Phone 642-~8
Class1f1ed Ads
PANORAMIC VU-OWtlR ANAN.
lea.tlhl decor & coordluted lfr~ 10 JM C• ...,,.. riC)llt a.
&.-. r'OOfft lftchtded "' IWt vu i.o...
..... l bed, fam. ""'· din. '19\ + bieliard
rm. teparah MUftO; priYaf9 spo. c*ks &
balcony. OWHER WILL CARIY.
$975,000. 6l 1·I400.
GRAND CANAL ON WATER
l.crp & loYefy 2-t~4 bed, ho.. Oft
qttlet Llttlt 11. b OJ J•• 'roHd ~ Afso I ,..... ..... Tit
for 2 boats. $675,000. '73-6900.
LIDO ISLE BEACH RETRfAT
str..t to ttrfft toe...._ Culo: t•h l
bed. 2 ~ '--..... ~ drullr
...,._ •• Pricect rl9't .t USS.000.
LINDA ISLE CORNEl-!OYB. Y! A ,...,._. of .,., ,.... ,,..._ • ...... -•• u.. ••. ..., ...... ,. •= .,.,. ~ ... ~ & ., c:-:: .. =:,-~.:.= = f ... tel1. for•• ll•flf ,... wtt• ~-~,.... ..... ... ..... ..,. ..,... .. ..... ,.. +
, • .tllfkhte.Lm ....... .... +•5"'•••• ..... ...... ..... ....,_.,.,lirJW...
11.Jt -~ '11·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
ltlAt E!TAT£ s.. ,,., l"t"lltf•¥ ,.............,.
,,,. W CCWl4 H m M.iftf ~vt ~Bt.atll ... Wri 611·•• '7J.ffll
IOO'TOIUCH
3 Bdrm 2 Ba, new paint,
new carpet. fantastic
location. Only S249.500
Good financing.
JACOBS REAL TY
THE REAL ESTATERS
67 70 SELL idle items with a
Find what you want 1n Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Daily Pilot Classifieds. Ad.
CE
110181 ELllKS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
MEW UYFIOMT LISTING
Four Year Old Home On FEE Land . Elegant Decor. Three
Bedrooms, Convertible Den, 3"'2
Baths. Huge Family Room With
Wet Bar. Separate Dming Room.
Breakfast Room . Study. Sauna.
Three-Car Garage Large Deck
Overlooks Water & Dock For Large Boat. Hurry To See! $1 ,600.000
ISLAND LIVING
Mo ve In to Th 1s Bright Four
Bedroom Lido Island Home. With
Only 20'~ Down . Assume The Large
First Trust Deed At 121'; & Owner
Will Ca rry A Second At 12':. A
Fabulous Opportunity To Own
Property In One O( Newport
Bea c h 's Mo s t Pi cture sque
Communities . An Excellent Buy.
$475.000.
759-9100
# 2 c orpcM ... "4no
H~wport CNhr
SllK & RNlf IRl6KT
C G V S t H U A 0 6 K H S L E P A D T
S C E T S S N P N S U 0 I R 0 l 6 G t
N A I W T N A t L L I R 8 U R N E N N
U H M H A G L 0 V I N G I R I M C I W
I N E H R Z L 0 0 V I l P N I A Z A M
W I R G Z G N I T A L L I T N I C S I
N T A A N I B 0 M U T H L D A H L Z A
0 L D S N I S E M M S G E J E I 8 P N
N D I 0 I G L I A P E S U E N D R I E
L E A E L Y H K L M C R R G A M I l K
Y E N N L A 0 E N E I Y I Z C D G L 8
G A T H T I N W N I A N N H G 0 H U L
E V 0 E N D P T H U W T G H G Y T M G
R R D C I A T J W D X T S T U Z L I I
Y G A D E $ E J M ~ T H J C A ~ A N N
_.i, up, io.i 0t dllpelly. F~ llld boll It 1n: .
lnc•.-..1
p ...... ~ ... u Du:dMt 8
Glof6M T ......
™'""' c.~11 £\,, -f)i~s· ::: "Ulll ;)~ J.'<IU ~~ ~
----""'"'..., aAl • rouAM
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COME WITH US ... TO WESTCLIFF.
EXCEPTIONALl.V NEAT .-OUR BEDROOM
HOME. COUNTRY KITCHEN WlTH EATING
AREA .. OAK CAB IN ETS .NEW
APPLIANCES .. NEW CARPETS CUSTOM
DRAPES AND WALLPAPER. PRICE REDUCED TO $285,000 FROM ORIGINAL
PRICE OF $330,000 OWNER Wll.l. llELP
WITH FJNANCING. $2~.000.
1617 WESTCLIFF DI, tU.
LOOKING FOi AH
EXcmHG INVESTMENT
631·7300
We have just listed three buildings in
the Cliff Ha ven area of Newport
Beach. Each has three-two bedroom.
and two-one bedroom a,ts, some with
patios, all with garages, and situated
m a lovely neighborhood. Very good
assumable financing. Each building
offered al $410,000. A sensational
investment.
U~l()Uf ll()Mf~
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 1. .. 1 Co .. 1 Hlghw•y. { oron• dPI Miu
WI HA YI 45 Of THI H ST AGfNTS 1H TOWN
LINDA ISLE
Exciting opportunity ~ Wide channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath, pool home
Slip for 2 large boats. Sl .495 ,000
Summer Occ upant·y .
LIDO ISLE HOMES
f eatured on Homes Tours this lo\ ely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home. newly redecorated Prited to sell qu~ckly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 hath plu::.
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Ueam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
S420,000. Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT BEACHFRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view al
wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur
mg marine room. Sl.385.000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm, den. spacious Plan 8. im -
maculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 8o 1,,c1,. Q,,,,,. "4 B 67) 6161
G............-.. 1002·G1•r• I e .... -• ....-. .......,.,. ·'······················· ............................................. . • • • •' • •" ••' ·"" •' ••• ei USTSIDI Rancho San Ja.qldll VIila
Lovely J BR 2 Ba. ram Portola Modrl. muat HI
NEWPORT DrlN.I rm homt w/fpk. dbl mnyupartda. prinooly °""'" aar. muoo. uu.soo ,or appt
PRIME RESIDOOll INCOME
3 Triplexes tn u row on oceanside of
PCH rn Co rona del Mar.
2 Duplexes + I Triplex in a row ou
Balboa Peninsula 1 lot from sand
and surf Near 19th St.
1 Uuplcx on thl' water wHh dock for
30' boat.
All Large As!>um able Loans at 121,~1/i.
Ownl'r's motivated!
Century 21 /Newpori C.llfer
640-53~7
OWHa SK~DHP
FINANCING With some paint & TLC
MESA VER.DE 4 Br 2
Bt with pool, buutt/ul
ly Jand1t1ped It euy
cart yard. Owner wall
consider V A. Sl!M,900 D Bourke Realtor
MIS~YIUI
HST VALUE
Sharp 2 Story, 4 Br1 3 Ba1 new carpel, renwooo
spa, easy care yard. As·
sume 9~% loan . 10%
down lo quaJ.lfied buyer.
$165 ,000. D Bourke
Re_al~t~9960.
58.ECT
MtSAVIUE Brand new on the
market See lhis 3 Br 2
Ba home you'll be froud to own. Owner wit help
finance. PrH•ed at
$139. 000 751-3.191
4 bdrm home in good th 1 s p en1nsul a Pt
loca tion with a com duplex would be a cute
ple leh re modeled summer residence/Jn kitchen: ne~ pa ant, ne~ come property Ideally VA, NO DOWN
JM, ..... CO.
WeoAI~~ Laitava=.s~s
• 8drcn1 + bOOu., 3 ba
3 car earforlnro caU
~
LEASE/OPnOM s bdrm, 3 6a. Turtlerock
S.S0,000 down. Owner ut. HH125 an. sem.
RELAX IN THE SPA
or enjoy outside Uviog on lbe palJO. Lovely Plan
2 in Turtle Rock Broad·
moor 4 bdrms, 2 ba.1 new carpet, We, high Unted
windows. Hi~ assuma ble loan wath ternftr
financing
carpeting and drapes located and loaded wtlh 4 Br, superbu,y 503666
Owner rmanc111g a\aila potential. Asking onl> Whelan
ble $132.500 Call now $299,500 ~513 C~PU,Dl·fRVlffE
979.mo 1alboa Island 11ty Real Estate A 6734700 LOCJ191G leada IOU LLSTA TE a.o.1~ 1006 -..................... .. • ...................... H•tiro9toa ~ I 040 Ollt of~ REAL TORS OW .,. ••• •• •• • •••00••••••• ••• o~ of --SALE IY H'"" ON EXCLUSfVE HUN . • . --------1327 Coral & 311 TINGTONSEACLIFF'S Prime Dana Point IEST ICB'TSECIET Ametfil'sL673-0188 Go L F co u Rs E • duplex on corn~r Jot IN SO. CALIFOIMIA NO CASH 3bdrm, pool, xlra lrg lot near Dana Marina. 2
Privately uwned land TO OK for down Cute 3 Many xtras. $395,000. bdrm, I ba up, 1 bdrm
w1lhmtheClevelandNa· BR 2 Ba cottage, trade Broker 633 6633. down b~amed clng,
tional Forest 25 males OK. Desperate. s:ES.000. 631·6~. frplc , dlnuig area, encl.
Eas t u r San Juan Q~nr:;WJ.:§§.L~J-bM\ OF patio Sl5~.500.
Capistrano Unique op. C ..1.....1 ~~-1022 "'"" M ISSIOD Realty
t ( r . t OrotlO _.. -THE w .. ow 494-0731 por uni y or crea ave ... •••••••••••••••••••• f 1 Bd .... ., person lo complete a Beaut1 u 4 rm .,...., New M odu I a r T ype
<'us l 0 m de 91 g n e d 434 llGOHIA built home. on quael cul Homes, teased land.
Geodesic Dome Highest Elegant new 4 Br Va<' de sac, an pride of Oceanfront Pk . ~ pvt <tu a I 1 t y male r 1 a Is tor 1 an pa rt• a I "u '. ownership neighborhood bchs. 24 serunty, f15bmg
throughout this 3,000 ownr <'~ntractor Just an lovely Goldenwest pier from S34 .900 i.q fl hume On 2 acres. com...Pl~.Yl~ Estates Large family 499 3816 ____ _
with 'iew & trees Bu.aid IY OWHER room with wetbar and Ne~ wood glass. spa,
>our own est al e Custom 4 yr old home 3 cozy fa replace kSpahrkl solar. 6 dks. 2 frplcs t67S.OOO OWC 'Trade Bdrm . 2 ~ ba Xlnl ang gourmet ate en, 3+ 3+ close unobstruc· Courte~) to brokers financmg. SU0,000 LS'. plush cafl)eU u:u9•950 table pa nor vi Ilg vws
I Jerry, 17141 678 1966 . dn Courtesy lo Brks 1499f1_PtP 494-7631 _ don osen 678 3373 ~-2 BR. 2 ba, R-2 lot. Rm
PENINSULA PT
Sharp 3 Bdrm home
w lots of brick &
stonework . bit 1n
katchden, frplr, dbl
~arage , on qu1el st
Se Iler wall finance at
l2', interest Should go
fa st As king only
SJS0.000
JACOBS REAL TY
67~670
r., .• tton, for 2nd urul. 2 blks lo COM OC1AM VIEW bch S215.000 Assum
Lovely Harbor View Hits 17TH AT PR<liPECT Sl30,000 494-9518. days Halls home w 3Bdrm. TUSTlN, 731 3111 978·8279 ____ _
fam rm, pool-& features New dlx 3 Br townhuuse. North Laguru1 Beach. 180
oak firs, french doors. walk to beach, fully de deg view of water. lJllS Jar, Jfrplcs, + more roraled S2:1l.OOO + mill property wtll be go1ng Lo
Owner wants offer Wall down . 5~ rourt Aug 6, a petition
consider low down or Walk Lo Beach 4 Br. ram for order instructing ex-lease option $485.000 rm, 1 :t, ba s146.900 ecutor to sell real pro-A s k r or Ca r o I e perly has been filed, McMahan 644-9000 or SJ!.i:.?403 Case No A-I~. Ap-
644·8067 1 044 pra 1sed I tZ1181. $340.000. lllll!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!l!I~ lnlne 522 Allv1ew, Laiuna
••••••••••••••••00••••• Beach Required --------1-•502-A.ca•c•ia•. $324 .... ~.ooo~· THIHllMG amount of lst overbid
JUSTUSTID! OPENSAT/SUN TOWHHOME7 S299 . 7SO Contact
Decorator's own home 616 Begorua, SZ49.900 Call the spec1al1Sh at 642 eves
an II arbor View Halls 3 Drive by, then call lhe condom1n1um an Catalana Sunset Lower 3
bdrms · exc1t1ng family SARA MARVTN formation center Arch Bay Pvt area. Grt
rm with hard wood 675·S688or67S-6000 Touchstone Realty ocean vu 4br. beach floor~. French doors, !•••••••-~ _ hse 499·31H., __ _ beam ceilings. and a 024 mag n 1f1cen t bar Costa Mesa I ASSUMAILE VA EMEIAU>IAY
Cu s Lo m spa and ••••••••••••••••••••••• Take over high balance Only availabLe front row ~aterfall E~erythmg I•-------on VA loan on this lol m t~ gated area . tastefully done in finest ASSUMAll E almost new 3 Bdnn 2 Ba Plans and permits for
quality M&.000 FINAMCJHG on large lot Nice up elegant villa. Sl.650,000. USTSIDE grades. central air. lrg CAROL TATUM RLTR 17141 6 73-4400 I Beautiful 4 Bdnn plus covered pauo Call for
12tl1Uf.Zl21 famil y, featuring details
HARBOR enclosed courtyard, en· tertainers backyard
with Koa pond and lovely pallo Very open and lots
or glass Asking $197,500
For an appointment to see. call 54G-1Cil
...;:;... f\Al\JCH ~ Rf AL TY ~ '.J~l 2000
I You fix 1t and save · or we
~111 fax 1l TRY lOC-: down w graduated pay
LOTS of house for these
S U PER TERM S S265,000
\ lh\ i-111n ut
ll.1rho1lrl'l''lm1•n11"11 People who need People GARAGE SALE ads m * * Rmlll'(O I That's what the the Daily Pilot bran1i1 l-111111111!!•!!1!11!!!!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1~ t.UU1' •
DAILYPILOT happy results To place ii!!!!!!!;!;!!!;il 2 Bdrm condo 111 adult
... 'P,. HERITAGE
LCICJllllO VlloQe I.E. 497-17,1 __
LCICJllllO H• I 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SERVICEDIRECTORY your drawing i:ard. 1"!1!!!!!!!!!!!•Mm!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!l!l•j oriented Orangetree
is all about_! __ JIB!>!!..e ~-5678today' I' Super location, air ('On
. • REALTORS h11MC1Cllllllllfe!
Move nght in to this
w sparkling pool and
spa 91/t'7, assumable
By owner S160,SOO
Pnnc only_581·S260=--IOl/•% FIMAMCIHG AVAIL
Assume existing 1st T.D. on this 4
bdrm home in NEWPORT
Riviera payable al $668 per
month !! Featuring French doors.
fireplace, 21.i baths. raised
wooden deck . & new carpel" &
paint. Only $141.900.
$814 PER MONTH ..... .
when you take over ex1stmg low
interest FHA loan! ~ This is a
superb starter home for a young
family. Lots of potential & priced
to sell at $89,500.
NEWPORT IEACH OfffCE
2670 S• MifJUel DriY•
(7141759-1501 17141 752-7l7l
WalkerBlee
Real Estate
AtSIO£Nl1Al AfAl ES fAff SERYlCFS
llACH COTTAM
Neat as a pin & in an outstanding
locatiqn, ~ bloc k to ocean, by the wedge, lhls 2 BR. 2 bath home on the peninsula Is a charmer. Among
the many amenitles ls a screened
outdoor eating area and .a brick
patio. $295,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
FIE:MCH OUARTEI datao.nang & more Flex1 .-n..v.:.11~ 3 BR 21, ba t wnhse ble financing ~ ~-Patio. fplc , double ~r. NowSl63.400
,,..,.,. ~:;,:110.000 e R ~~i]ll\lOObrid9e
UMIVEISITY ,ARK As.._ 81/J% Really LCNJ1MG Hic,.tl I 052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DEAHEHOMI $64000 VA loan 3 BR 2 m 300(1 s:z::m.ooo BA w 'dhl gar. fenced l9?0 Rarnnr • p~'" ''""'' Charmin« and spa<'aous front & rear yds S
3 BR + family room 110.000. Bri<er646-43!0 PERFECT•
home Comer location ~ down. Sll80 mo 3 Bdrm 2 Ba ~omer
arross from park, pool buys 3 BR 2 Bafaxerm loc alaon, !;vane 's and tennis Retmng Costa Mesa Ownr agt College Part Shows bet VIEWS. VIEWS .
owner w1U carry rinanc· ~-1523, 64}7:.;s_ --ter than model. sle1>5 to
ane at reasonable rate school and pool. Owner's
VIEWS' You 'll love the Sad·
dleback moU11ta1n and
valley views from this
beautiful 2 bedroom
palao home localed on an
extra large lot. Assuma· ble financing-hurry. this
one won"t last long I'
fl 42, 900. 495-1720
759-1616 5% DOWN! mot1vated,caUnow
1!1!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!1!1•••!!!11 Roomy 3 bdrm 2 ba -----... --1 home on an R2 lot with 11 70/ plans for 2nd U111t Great , /0 easlside location and
ASSUMABLE f[~~~::;~:: Only
Triplex ooe year new e.tlB Try S40K down Owner
wall help rinance. Call t !::
645·9161 -t
, OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/.
' Top of Spyqlals owcsaso.ooo
Gorgeous custom estate.
ocean & harbor views,
ultimate design & de·
corating 4 Bdnn , 3\.i
Ba . formal dining
Reduced to $1 ,315,000.
UYSHOllS
Slei>• Crom the
private btach Charm· lni J Bdrm home, tdc:al ror rtmodtl. motl de·
1irable location In Ba yahotta. S3'1s.000.
411POOlHOME
Excellent College Park
area. Has tal,000 tst. as·
sume at 143. $146.900.
David, 646-32S5
lll+~+spo Harbor &: Baker area
SU6,900. Owner will
carry at 1ac;. with $40,000
down. David, 646-3255
DESPERATE! Near
roredosute, 3Br, 28a,
$20,000 dwn. $118,500. Aat. LaDods M}9J§l
MWYllDI
Buc cola Home by
ownel', choltt loc. 3Br, ~Bal format dll'llng rm, la am rm, wet b•r.
l>uutlfully lnd1cpd, fruit ttteS. Pr\n only. m:moa
48~.=.e
$140,150
'71-1111
e-qMJC:H
H! ·'<l TY
rl~l 1 2000
••20% DOWN Like new 2 Br rondo an
presllg101a Woodbndge
Close lo park & pool,
great starter home walh
assumable fianancing
$105,000. cau for details
eblQgO
~\dhrldgc
Rcahtj
~5 1 3000
ILDI CLOSEOUT
New 3 br, 4 br & 5 br
homes1 from $169,500.
For into. contact Donna
Phillips 831 ·0541. 1·0607 a .. ___ _
tttt Barranu Pk.,.,, lr~ln1· lnlM 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I HOIOOM OlT ACH9 llYIMI
HOMl Outstanding "West Point"
in University Park. Su~r S BR + Fam. Rm. Owner will help
finance . Call agent for appt .
$249,900. Darl e ne Herman
752·1414. (T·69)
surH DIHflllD TOWMHOMI
Outstanding Plan 1 in great area.
Upgraded tile entry. plantation
shutters, earthtone decor. Low interest assu mable loan. $12S,700.
Jerry Thompson 551·8700. Great ror owner/investor. CT·70l
tOW._,.11111.llMkl••lrO!W•
A
I
I ____ , ---r--L-
~----............. -.... -· ~~ ..
• Ora nge Cout OAILVPILOT/Thuraday July30 1981 ...... u ... hhd ....... u.tw.W.d H.NiU•fwwl•d 4p9twihu.ftn.1··--~ .... ~!~:.~ .... , .. . ....................... .... . .. . .. . ..... ....... . . ..... ... ............. .. .. ... ... ............ ............ ... ,._..... .,, ..._._W. 1.._..,_W. '-Wt ~....... Coet.W... Jll4 ........... JJ41 Mew,...._. l2H~.~~ ... ~~~ ~~~~ ....... ~.~! ... ~ ................. .. •••-•••••••"••••••• •••••••••••••••••••n•• •!!• .. .,•••••••••"•••••• n•••••••M•••••••••••• ••••••••"••ff••u••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••'••••••• .. •••••••• 28 • \;bl 2 frt>lc Sp111llln1 cltan 2 Br H• 8EACH YRLY REN·
....... I HJ IMdi 116' IMdi 1°'9 .__ Pr1i1rtir ZOM MIWPOITH9Hn Btacb "'81&11 from M50 'Br 4 Ba~ 61h.up, ~: deck' att"Jl·no ~· &a 1470.$471 Ftn<'td, TALS 18r 6 blchtlor " ........................ , ........................... -.................. ,., u•n•• 4bd,2ba 2earaar,l&e mo Adltaonl . neat to i beach. ~:ns.oen ' ulllt faid . Rtfn,. Jo""RltL_S'JH210
OPIHHOUSI M.WYltw MIWPOITCllST 1d PetJ;ildt ok Drive suoo Koop 131 Int. - -2 1mal <'luld OK No Blu/fs 2 BR 2"' BA En<' SVN 10.Uvtbyappt Move in condition l 3 Bdrm ccado C1aee to P,..Of by 357 La Perle Lit U tBr..t ZBa, pello..., frplc, .AIL Lawyc.do pell 1HOW1Uue 11 r Poo I Sil 7 5
28r, Zia. dfn, comer bdrm, 2 ba homt' ln pooJ and tmnis. bctl 0 .,.nhh mo 11 la. 64M42hves. T.u.W .. avail Mot 1. Not Shortt. 2 b1U beach, 2 bdrrnt. f bl. pool, 1pa. S40.IHl28CX'SU.4911. li:fO·Sa&,540-T~
lot. mu1,.,,~t!radu Hubor View Hltb U · rlnaocma. Pnctd to NU. 20 Wll&a E.aidl-f:M 7 ·S312cbl . ms mo. Rd. lJl la lut a Bthr 2 BalUt~, beam fplc, we~r. pr, Walk CHOtcl iu~T SIDE ~,IOO F~ve MdJ turnable loans Rl&bly '119SOO Id.' 3Bdrm zBa lovely Mon t ffC.NopcU4HDOl ca ce I'll' uv rm{ to bu ch HOO /mo ~ roa~~ept, C1mar-~Plraded Ulr0u1hout. C/JitMur~C.. ~1~·~~~~~: tlcell~ CONDO. 1ar, 1_u... "Ju r::~/rwm'fl 00-=1~~ 7JZ·ll89or.1~4@88'7l8 ~:!~e~B~~ln ~me;',• 3 bd~!C.~batb , •• 1 ........ Sbow1 lillt model. Mu.st 64'-U57 76N7'7 tel. Hurry! CaJl Kevln ~. --:r-"""' ,_ ~ -Enjoy aummtr bvlni all t b 1 • -·npafttrM._2'mL_ seUfaat Adin11239.500 "' ....................... ur Wa lk to CdM drps , rp c. tu fireplace, bit ms, newly OCIAH llllZI Incl land. Coale for in· OCIAHFIOMT ST75tmo. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, HOME FOR RENT I Br. Penthouse AduJt ~ h 1u 8 f k Ira raoae /oven. dthwahr, returbbhtld. Yrly at 1750 Cl I apecllon Sat Sun 1-4 .... EW IY oMAA-1002 Presidio Dr, Mes• 3 Bdrm t625 Ff.Deed blda No pell, pool & ~c llC . r, .,, • •dltl no pct.t suo mo 0 uo a r, mountain lJIO Port ~k'ror call " '""8' del Mar Rm req'd. No yard and praie Kids' tac lmmed orcuptncy dtclt,. tnd prq. S.7$ ' 381 H~mllton m ~1ewb, treu. 3b,d rm, 3BR•den.•.ooo. pets AvaJI 8/U Agt ~welt"Ome ~2000. WS. Sandy Aleunder Jli>OJU.AY.•i!.J?~
6 ...., a. spa c 1 o u s 1711Seubote u" ·-· 6731749 F ti ' cit 2 Br. w/pr "'O New townhome. $124,000 by VILLA IALIOA Owner wfca!'TY. f'Hlll ....., . .._i, ~ 41 --· antaa c ocean 'I caroet1, water J*ld l56'7 associated
owner. S33-'7700 wkdaya; 1 Br condo. View of MISA VllDIHOME L.e1J11ta NA..I 3152 W•,.,..Ho.tl light view from evtr(i "C"-Orao11r 63G •120 e ds. Catalina. Owner will S. J~ 3 BR 2 BA N G It •••••••~~~r.;~ ......... 2 story cuttom home, • room. I Br. lllOO Mo Ca I Call l·SPM hel finance SUbmitof· Co 1071 r o Forlease,new3br,4br& bdrm,tomialdlnlnaand Anthony day• M257S7,
DAOl<f.llS f4 fALl 0 14S
l CJ', tAI l iiilH><l t..1 Jbt l
Mtw_,,.IMdt 10'9 re/ · ..... ••••••••••••••••• Course. Beaut Park $ b r h o m e a , I break nook 3 car evea " wkndall44111189 S340. 1 Bii, pool. 1 11dul1 . .... r.~-.-............... Ii-a.-H~•••• TRADIOISAU 192.Smo.Aat. *775·$1000/mo. f'or lnfo. gara&e I& ctoict1 J>an I 325 J 17th f'llH•' Cozy 2 br, l ba, beam ceil·
rngs, frpk, gar Nwpt
lights No krds lpels
$500 645-1682.
OWMa Wl.L ~ 267 Acru 3!IOO IQ ft n de l.uxury Newport -~1·0377or97J.1077 contact Donne Phillipa tcy 3flreplactt tlcJtck. Cott• MtM l 24 646 513'11tft llAM ,. &•• Trade L1txury Newport h'ome ba1rn curr'111a hocomm! 0u"n•1t! ~,er: !~!u111ny· 3bdrm, Zba. ear. nr at 83l·054I or 8ll·060'7 BO~t d0tk avau'at u tra to••••••••••••••••••••• Qu 1 1 Br 1 Ru Nl'w ~"""' Y home on "' ac"' tor In· • · ' " •" v ..,.. ..w h .,. ,_ 1 MIWLY DlCOI 1' Lr& 2nd loin Lit loan 5 come UniU or , Equity view of entil1' v11lley, $280, ooo. Ad now t school!, cprt·drps, tncd -c ar1e. or ~uc on Y • ~·rpl) & d ri.111 Goud ~e2~la:~ =~~e;v~ l~~te~o~O·~~· ~::ni ~~1"la~:%-::::r·~f~~· ~'j~~i&. Co Op Ai:enl r:id, ~ail ~~pt. ~:!::'.!~ ..... ??~~ CM.~:ll@:t,";.'u ~/~~.~l~:. ~~,t"~1d~I~~ ~d~lll~l~~lylo~M~~u~~ Adlts, no ptils, 28r. 2Bu
near Hoag ~ mu
&313473,~
Uarhelor. pvl cnt, ba.
patio, <'ook1n g unit.
refrtK. a1•a1I now lltl
Ju ne '82. $275 mo
675 5710
par'lc, vacant-ready, like • _ l7l4l4P}l3'72 RE Sales people to leam SECLUDED 1 Br. very 3 ~~~mE F~ RWnred Mil C....... l276 1\42 W13 IHth St 14, (; M
new,won'llul OCEANFRONT Duplex s-t.AM IOIO investments & ex private, qulet& woodsy. yard & iarage K1d1 & "•R•••••••••••••• .. ••t• 2 Ir. I .. A"" 2 Rr "'Ila Towti home
JohnMar1hall ' Tri·Plu. Xlnt loc ....................... c~anaes Xlnt oppty ror Adults, no pets New ~ti welcome $452000 lPBres~d~~~:rt.'1~ 111~· Ne!wly dn"" er:..·, pd t'nd11d liar 11rv pstio
131-121118 MR. SO CST PlA.?A ri~\ penion:11~ ~m carpets. drapes, range Meal. nllltt, ~~II •I\ GP~ · l'fl<'I 1111r , pool dllhwr Adull11. no l)l't'I $00
l;)uplues, oceanfront.
bea1ttitul ocean view
Perteet location New
c:ondjUon.Agl,67).'1300
$15,000DOWM
Nace 3 Bd 2 Ba end un1l,
near So. Coast Pina, Pld approx IM9. Call
now. J eanne Salter
631-1266
PAITYIN
HAIDVllW Smashing family room
with wet bar. Un ·
believably beautiful en tertainer s patio 5 Bdrm
Sommerset on ftt land Absolultly immaculate
move.in cond1t1on. Creative flnan<'1ng
i ble. . REC CARPET
754·1202. -
1•--111!1~111111!11--•1 3 Bdr 1 ~_!a.,:B8r•~!ord5" ~d!~r1 ;1v•11n~uvi eO:: Uuls paid.1st + secur1· ,,._wDOrt.._.. 32'9 R.......a..-._ l"IO Adult• 642W13 ~ 4li60 I OOo/o ron o -. .,.,., 4 ' a .,., u1on V ty W5 Mo. 642.~ or ••••fie~ ............... _,. ,..,.. • sumable on S7.000 1st '"",..,....._ m<'e 646-6423 ....................... ) I r Tod--. Newport H.MJhh COMMeSSIOM 549-l~alt& . USTSIDE --SANTIAGO DR. fhatorlr 2 Hr v1ctoru1n Nrwly de<'Or 111111 ild 2 bdrm~ 1 ha a.ir S4~ We are olferlnc it all! ONE -Y-EA R NE w 4 units S20 000 dwn NEW 2 Br I Ba. Quiet & Beautltul house avull Ho~ In t't'lllnl 81111111 rnrl 1111r , pui>I. dawhr ),lf'rmo ~~ fJ~fs~~fun~e":l. MtcArtbuc Vlllaee con Owner w1tt' finance' ~':f~its~u'!;~;.e'j~fs r,_w 3ltlB~lell~m~l!~m~ ~t!r·t'/"~t~ru ~,r Adulb ij4Z~m '" Stdl'. 2 br. 1 boi. 1tllr ~nenced agents. Call do T:o ~~~u~\~ ~O 3666 p11d Isl ~ security l.Jv1.111 Rm & Family Vlc~1~ ~3} 1ln, ~ 1241f IMST ANT IM! 11~1 yitrd pool S4SO !"u
ordetalls &1ppt. ~m.:~11;4;,oo1.tennas, Whelan S6SO Mo 642-0835 or Rm. New wallpaper. ::o.do•W.. 7 nr 1•1 811 T111mho11111· pt-tJ 673 0731
'31·2242 spas and lots more. Estate ~·6423 ___ __ ~!~1 k~~~n s~so'"~J hnl1hed HOO Y.nllld• I rh1ld OK D_. roW 3126
t119,500 CaU TARBELL. fteal East.side Condo 2 Br. 11-2 Broker Cooper11Uon •••• .. ••••••0••·~·· .. • Y11rd, lndty nn lil't'ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEALTORS.979·m _ Ba Frpk. gar. S650 Mo .lli·U7L '.>tun View New Condo lor ~~~fo Duplt'.11 2 llr 1 11.1 c ·~1·
VII. W• c:o.do UHrTS Call 548·~1. 2 bdrm. 2i,., bl llouhlt• TSL MGM'f M2 1603 LO ol'l'IHI WI Mo An
3 Bdrm lri·level rondo Any me. 60·30·40·18. ITY LIGHTS/OCEAN h..t.~C-r-f(ar•Jlt' RcfM.)*2.fli>.'l-0 MIWPOIT 6PM wkn<b t.61 G271
OCEAM'WONT Slln< 900dwn moves you m' Callfotset·ups.~3666 VIEW 3 BR 2•1z ba, Bluff r.·~~~~aor~~~~r~ .. i:...;;, APAR1M91TS. HtMtlll9h-IH<h 3140
$450,000 l09. .S.0-36&6 Whela condo Spa, deck . Bdrm . 2..., ba. ~et bar, .. U1t ]425 2 2 nd rm 1 I Bdrm •••••••••••••••••••••••
Th1sofferin&isaoe1tate Whelan n skylight , all in parquet nrs. Stocurity , •••••••••••••••••••••• from S270.mo t utHi THEWHIFR.lTREE
sale. One of Newport Re I Estate earth l on es· S800 ~ated, view. SlZOO/mo \Jew ocean view rondcm 2 No children. no pct,, nn Luxury Adult unttll Jt uf Beach's rinest views 3 Real Estate a ~·3466 e. Call DoMa Sutton bdrm. 2 buth t d1•n walerbeds ford:ilJle Uvrnu t .~ & :1
~Sun ho'' lkalf\ .
YEARLY
1 IH.KTO OCEAN
3 br Iba, $800 mo
2 br, l b.i, ~mo
Own~r, 675 5710
Lovd) l Br 2Vi Ba 10
!'lewport <.:rest ~ Mo
Ii.I & last ~ $100 Sel'Urt
ly E ves & -.k nd s
645 890.\
OCUHVIEW
bdrm home wilb guest ---ownhouse, l yearo~ 54 4'9076 or Henry From ~ 675-9111 or ~50Newportttlvll Hr Wl·ll de"ror:itl.'d
apt or 2 units. ,.,...,._,, R-_. L......_ Loh for S. 2200 Br 2 Ba. skylights. SS2·S895.Bka, 67~ 91J~ C06l:i Ml.'\u Olymp11· ~111· "'"'I. hwt11 2 lir 1 '~ 811 Townhou~e Rr 1"""-1"" .,., .. ,,...""' VfW9 -D-EASTBLUFF VEn's•111 ES >""' I Adu! tLLlalllll~ •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••••n••••••••••••• frpk. m8.'Jter Br. suite, Three Bdnn, 2'~ .ba . end 2 br 2 '"ba'"p'J~ Jo'rglc'. 2 Br 1 Ra 571 w JoAnn t'cl ll'lan1s c~1urt , Jac•u111, ''Y t' l\, no pct;,
I.I( 2Br rum or nol 10
\tl'PS to und Patio
Y tar a a round at S750
mo ht t st~c dep
Ownt>r bkr. 848-4557 dy~
----... ---Mobile Ho.ta MUST SEU.,.5 R 1 lots., commty pool. smG Call unit good cond1t1on and , M 1 l''ld !'I t park Ilk~ land.~t:.11mt ll ~5 548 ~ IAUOA For~-1... O fully Improved Palm 642·2134 loca.tion S900 per mo ref rig Oceirns& duy u c u · 0 IK' > Most h~uutifuJ bldg 111
OCEAHAtOHT ..... ~': ......... !! .. ~ Desert Country Club ' ·D-ELUXE4BDRM -WeekdaYs1}(1-075 view S825 an '/. :;1532 Sierra \1gmt II H ~~~~ ..... ?~!.~
Great vrew at harbor en· ESTATE SALE Part cash, payments. Nr sch ls & shops S800 ~ Br mobile home on 642 §J49 1 1 4 -f rom 1:1}5 MG 061!1
tran1·e.Primelargelot, 1966 MaJ'esticlocatedm trade. exchange 17141 m~ + s'ec No pets water , quiet , n o VILLAIAUOA 2Rr, 28a twnhom ~. 3.700 sq ft . 4 bdrm 3 Laguna Beach Park 568·061!. 675-2345 .lmiALi>etslJ.SO 1!§D-fil§4 2 Bdrm Ocean & flay beautifully lnd~q.1d
bath rust.om home Call Near Ocean. Wttk days MORRO BAY ocean vu ..,.. S ---'lew CondoNwpt Hghts 3 view Comp upgraded frplc. g;ir lnd r) room for private showing 759.4175 loll! from Sl2.~. walk tor. 1de Jllctrm. I Ba. Br 21, Ba t.500 sq ft S800 mo 1 88J.4303 wk etc S490 mo Adlts no
Sl ,38S,OOO beach Tennsava1lable w a 5 her d r Y l' r · Drtve by 292 Palmer ~nd.673 6fi07evn. pets S464016
Redhtl l~ReJlty
I;-;-;) ~:~I If I
&fl-745Z stove •refng, adults on· lllA S800 Mo No peLS CONDOS t'OR Rf.NT, IMMEO •EXCITING• ........ fC ly,J§OO ~548-2733 __ no c hildren Ca li Costa Mesa Brand new occ·-..... cY.'
MARIHstS WALK
2 & J Rr. Townhou,t•
Apls from $4!15 flat11l't
~111g l e & tloul.lll' l'Jr
ga rd~es near Hunt
Harbour ll40-61!C17
2 RR 2 BA CON DO On
gull rour.-.e $500
•l!l'l-6700
AporllMfth FwMlwd
or U.mnlshtd 3900 ....................•..
""'O C*tty 1esa del Mar. mre 3 br. 2 1 lli.-~ S e e W e s t b a y "'""""' Gre .. llf P.,. Propffty 2550 ba. lge yard. 21188 El Rio Waterfront lease. 4 Br 4 Townhom~ ad. st'Cllon 2 Br 1 Ba Apt Be;im THEa&ff hi* S. ....... •••••••••••••••• C 1 r r I e S67 5 /mo Ba. family rm. wp con 3824 ce1hngs, la undr) rm PLAN -X" Bea ut1ful 24x60 Bar Horse property, 3 acres. 7Sl·Z299 545-6872 drtion, dock for 40 boat pool Adult!> onl) no
IMSTAHTIM
3 Br 2 Ba Apt w11h 2
l'Jr dllJl h1•d J(JrJKl'
W D hook up pa1111
frplt Small Jlt'I < hild
ok !"r llwil llartiour
SEAWIMD
VILLAGE
\e1A 1&3 bdrm luxun
.tdult dpl.l. 01 14 pl;,ns I
Rdrm from S<IG.S, 2 bdrm
from $53S Townhou!ie
from S610 + pool~. tt>n
01~ 11t aterlalb pon<b ·
(; "' for \'OOkmg & heal 1n.: paid f rom San
D1l·go f'rv.} dnve Nonh
11n Jl~Jch Lo ~kFadden
lht'n Wt"~l 011 Mc f'adden
tu ~e a wrnd \'tllai:l'
17 1~111'13 51!*1
bd d rington Home, 2Br. 2Ba. 3bdrm house. I ba. " ---$220(1. Bob & Do\ 1e roWRIM>MM pct.s
3 rm . in rm . hv ASSUME LOAN fam rm. DI Cc5ta Mesa's owner w1U carry at l5'i .. row 3226 ~-l:l~A.il U1tfwnllliitd 3525 TSL MG~iT 642 !f.O:J ~~. ·.~~!"ia~e'~r~I!~ Sllt,000 .nicest5st.arpark. Sll9,000 San Bemadmo •••••••••••••••••••••• 'lewport Island llome •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br Garden Apt StoH•& tub w cerarruc trle walls Newport Beach Condo 3 IHt ~it Tow.. a~!·~ pectacular ocean view 4br, 2bal pnvacy. steps 3 bdr. I"' bath townhome rrfrtge Adulls, no 11t·t~
&Ooor 4 roven!dpatro bdrm plus retreat. Wet 24x60·1971 Goldenwest leolhtatt dplx.2varancies.3br.2 to ocn ioay, s1200.mo for re nt Call eves S335~548·1377 Onl} S.S95
areu Price s:!:l1,000, 5'1 bar & m 1 r r ore d 2Br, 2Ba wlfaouly rm & W.ted ba upstairs, S67S 2 br. 2 ~ _ 96J..7177. Z50 down, assume $40,000 lst wardrobes. Has 2 patios. wet bar. in Laguna fulls ba downst.airs. S.'>25 Sun· Newport Sh>res 4 Br 3 trust deed at 71-'!'1 Xlnt Walk lo beach, pool, and nicest 5 st.ar park 21 yrs •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• decks, new de<'Or 3:1111 Ba Canal f'ronl Hu nt 1 n g ton Harbour
land lease SllSJ.00 per tennis. Great terms. + lO qualify. 01.000. RtaJ...., leodl Cole.l!.Q 637~ _ _ _ ~ tlegant 2Bdrm. 212Ha.
year. Can't change until CLASSIC Older Res1dentsal B<'h or Toro l2l2 1 Br 2'? Ba Family rm. r r PI c. d e<' k, g a r .
year 2003. 14'1 ml. only MOIUHOME Waterfront propeny. To •••••••••••••••••••••• pool Harbor High dis S725 /mo Open Sat1Sun 2nd l rust deed due SALES purchase &or jointly de· HOME FOR RENT trrct Sl500 incl water & P M 16&5 Algonquin St
1986-87. Call owner fo r 2706 Harbor,Ste 206·A velop I will provide 3 Bdrm S600. Fenced m a 1 n l , 9 s s. o 8 o 9 ~213)427 2251 f ff.\ 7U~afler s pm. ''========:I 540-5937 lOOo/r financing. Charles yard & garage. Kids & ~M..LAi\.... I• Perry. 956-l281 pets welcome ~5·2000. EXECUTIVE HOME AparhMflts ~ SUM · WAVES · '73 l2x40 Mobile Loe 111 l..tols ~t_.noJ~----DOVER WESTCL!fF ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• 10 St.pa To IHct.
Water view. includes
land. 10'7.-assumable
loan. 4 bd rm. 2 ba, w /p ossible gue s l quarters. Call now £or
details. 752.6499
Plan IVReaH
BEST VALUE IN
ACTION nice park in Palm Spr· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br. 3 Ba Gated front Corotto dtl Mer 3722 On the beach! Beautiful ings Very good rond Ho.ts ,._,.liitd taill V*'t 32)4 court yard & rear patio, ...................... .
duplex on the ocean-Must sell due lo sick· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• dbl f~lc Lease option S285/Wk 2Bdnn, 2Ba on front. has J Bdnns and ness 62:6-5774. 946-5159. ,......_ __ ,.......&....... ......... 3107 HOMFSFORRENT poss1 le $1200 1n cld pool.ocean\tew
fantastic view upstairs, ~ --3 & 4 Bdrms l600-m5 ~~~ner No peti. 6310054. and 2 Bdnns and walled Mobile Home for sale. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F e nced Yards & ---patio below. Custom adult park, tBr, reas ON THE BEACH Xl~t garages. Kids & pets Deluxe3BrJbaduplexm CostoMna 3724
built and c ustom 327W.Wilsonsp73.C.M loc Winter Rent.al Avail welcome S45 ·2000 exclusive Bluffs Beaut ..................... ..
rumlture included ifde-'78 SO MERSET 2 br Sept 12 7 Br 2 Ba A.&,ent nofee. lreenbelt view wlpools CASADEORO
sired $'750,000 +sunporc.h m one o; ~p~s. ~~ro,,'~ci;~; Hwtl.;,to. leodl 3240 5;~1~ to~ .1 >;1niUl~~g ALL UTILJTI£5 PAID
l. 2 B H + Com pa re before you
TSL MGMT b42 160:1
HUR IEACH. 21DRM lfe8ti8.AU t'rpU.. dri>s. bit Ill!> di trhd ga r SS75 5361)921
TOWHHOMES A\'ail no11t 2 Hr 1 lia
CONDOS FOR RENT t'p ~tatr\. ch h w)h
2 Br + Den. 211 Ba 1640 refrige. w d. b.lkon) 1
2 Br. 21
2 Ba SlilO child OK. no pel~ pll'll't' Roonu 4000 !Xlra lrg 1350sq fl I S4!JS MS 2000 Al(t. n•i I Br, xtra lrg ~15 C ••••••••••••••••••••••• 19 BRANO NEW , fu ll ee Pri\'a~e entrantse rn pm
size townhomes. double Deluxe pooli.1de xtra homl.' No )mok111i.: or
garages, pn\'ate yard~. l:irge 2br 2ha. hlln~ dr1n k1n,R Pref m:i lt'
fireplaces No pe ts dswhr I'> mile~ ~al'h S27Hlo ~
Located 2 block~ from Adil~. no pcl~ 5450 mo R e~ po n ~ 1 b I e } o u n g
downtown shopp1n1L S 536 8362 female wanted Allrac
min to beach 2 B t: D R 0 0 ~I II\ e bright, large room
Openda11y l2·6 TOW!';H 0;'11E Poul 11t llh frplc, pvtentranre
Weekendsl0.6 pJ rk near hea r h and wet bar Availun-
666 W. 18th. St . C ~I 963 Sl91 med DX>, lsl & last
64S·l7.~or642-4905 L.Re 2Bdnn. 2Ba l'all_646·J315 1!'~-__ _
Quiet Adults o•tr 35 pre)lfglOl.I!> & qurl'I Hoom near OCC Pool.
EASTl.UFF 3 Bdrm 2 bath, 1m
macuJate' Owner anx
IOUS. $205,000.
642-5200 fOcaearnks1sd. e sSbet3 2le.r5a0d01l t8th Aug 21st or call ....................... ltti·Sl31be(10..P!ll
_1_._.n~8.,..,___ 67S-~-arae r ouse E Blurt CONDO beaut C d -~ __, blocks to beach Obi 3br. 2~ba. pool S835 mo rent ustom esrgn I j PETE
' BARRETT ... REALTY
By Owner brand new 2 ,,._wportlleocl9 3169 garage, lrg yard. S700 I 848.3119siw.&40:&H9 features Pool . BBQ. Br 2 Ba. 24 .11 52. up-••••••••••••••••••••••• 655 rov'rd garage. s ur
Lrg 1 Bdrm Upper 1325 luH'ly paooram1n u non smkr. male $180
mo Btfl landsraprog ~r llwit llarbour _ mo 5o4S-2510 Alt ~ P~t
No pet.s 96(J.4J70 84().49i0 I Ro<•m in ldrge house
loy McCarclt, Hr.
54a.772t
grades, on golf course. HARBOR RJDGE Great Mo 213-'93-l l Newport Heights. old 2 Br rounded wrlh plush
walk to ffuntington view• Prol decor F'um LOVELY HOME 1 Ba house. large dard, landscaping Adult II\ ~di. 1 2-3 Br New Condo 4 BR. 2'h BA. fam nn. 2"" car garage A ults. rng at rts best No pets
LIQUIDATION SALE A~reOCJt for Sdt 1200 Owner673-S31J_ 963frpl~837Sept 1 ms mo ~~~1.:S ~~t Ji I Brfum. from $445
BLUFFS CONDOSmgle
slOry, 3Br. 28a. Linda Plan. New appljas1 tJle.
etc Assumable oan,
owner /a gt S230.000.
IAYJIOHT ••••••••K•AIL••••u•A••.••••••• ltcMIHM~ --------Santa Ana 548·5041 aft 365W W11.son_,642:_197}
Owner/buildec must sell Brand new dehae 2 Br 2 s New decor lbr dplx. sep now Exclusive KONAHAWAll ho me , ful ly urn Ba Condo. 1524 sq ft , Q Peninsula Pomt home, 178 f"ee Simple arres w/grdnr. 5 bdrm. 4 ba. Micro, 2 <':H garage, BIG CANYON 1WNhSE by gar uret empld
brand new 4 BR 4 Ba Resort Area. Central ram1ly room, d1n1ng pool & spa. super loc Golf courw view , 2Br. adult over JS. no pets w /boat dock . Your Location. Fro. ntage on 2 room, (a pool, ta yard 2Ba. pvt gar. pool. ten· p50 548-1021
13
MIWltOIT CUST
Finl timt buyer and re-
tiree. step riabl up and make us an Offer. A two
bedroom condo with Iola
of cheracter. Vaulted
ceWnc• aod wet bar are just some of t h e
amenltlet. Too good to
laat I Sl&S.000.
Cote Realty *"'
& Investment
640-5777
The fastest draw In the
West. . .a Daily Pilot
Classllled Ad.. CaU T~
da 642·
· h h ~ " SllOO. ~.:]552_. ____ nis. tmmar rond Sl.250 terms or cash discowit. ma J ~ ~ I g w a Y s Lse for $2.000 per mo JJln .... n.e1'1C "r •O"I ..... ,,, Dan Bibb, agt. 675-2311; Ma gnifrcentview &4Z-0346aft6PM Lg 2br, l 1'Jba, fam nn. "'-"':lOlM!ls'~ 640-j 66S 121 acres-~.270.750 -------den, lndry, w/d hook-up. On lhe water 2 br. 2 ba,
16.9acres,.S3.533.587.20 HHM1UwfwMtlwd hot tub. gar $750 . frplc. beamed reiling. O..C:elltAUt. 20acres.-S3,6S9,040 ••••••••••••• .... •••••• 536.1~~· gar Dock avail will you rind 61' on main 20acres·S3.136.320 ~ 3202 S82S1mo Avail Aug 22.
tu r ning basin of For more detailed in •••••• .. ••••n••••••••• leaMttful Dy s 962·5533. e v.s Newport Bay with views formation, please call Three bdrm. 2 ba. I _ill-OQ§!!_
from almost ever· (808) 961·21115 Rudy or FOIYOUI s tory condo In the -............... .
ywhere. PLUS 5 Br, 6 1 write to PO Box 225. G a b I es . Lots o r iriXfiM1n l ~w
Ba, pool, spa and room Halo... Hawaii 9§120 LEAS_... M&DS amenities. Gated comm. 4 'rain Z.' 2 ba, l sto1. to dock 4 yachts-our NO DOWN. S1600mo. 8 5 CALL CARLENE 50. 84,,1371 BK!!___ 1r1 . a j]y nn, orm L d I I b t . MORRELL! v--<lUJing. vllib bag yar . in a s e eau >' is acres prime Fallbrook privacy 1mi> pnced at 12,100,000 with Avocado land. Xlnt 67~1771 Hwl'"9'•
. '" lt view $168.000. 91.r; HortaOw 3242 CORN~2.BDRM RCTaylorCo
-\'I ">1)
• RH.lTO RS ,....tkAJ.ellg "'~·· Owner w carry lst TD on this channlrig coun· try trench 3 8drin 3 Ba
home. Amenities include hardwood floora. paned
windows, shutters, 2
fireplaces le beautiful
sunny brlC'k patios. Of.
f ered at s:Mll.500.
D.M.Mlnlilllbr
I PP. 71H94-71 ...................... , ~e~ ~g: -/~"'fol,~ lco-ardal 3br. 2ba. view of harbor. and spa imo lse Property washer dryer hook-up.
u•••••••••••••••••••" frpk. bll·UIS, gar , sec. RARE C+H Newport $1100/mo 84&1358
OCEAN FRO~ 2 d . lots I w and s ~uffir~. Pir.e.J> ace, mature adillts. llJ751mo Beach Property SO' Lrg 2 Br twnhouse, 211
frontage ill prime loca· Ba, waterfront. w 30' WaterfrontHomes. Inc
lion. O~will_fin~nce. Co,..dtlM. 3222 slip, rec facil avail 6Jl·l400 Exclusive. Pnnc1pals ....................... 8/15. 1250/mo.846-0503
only Ask for Irene CAMEO High.lands• br, 32.... ILU~c~oo Loudon. Agt, 631-4247 or tio vt be h l"IM .... rr~ """ 631·7300. sunny pa · P · · ac ....................... 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. exposed
S 1 · 3 5 0 · mo 1 n c I. University Park Condo. beam ceilings. f'l'IC. wet C·2 LOT gardener. Agt, 67J.5354 18226 Mayapple. J Br. 2 bar. new ll50/mo. Sub·
High t rarfic count. CotttMtM 3224 Ba.Zcargarage .. romm-mil on pet.s 760-8041.
62 5X307 lot Exlstine ....................... !lJ pool &M l.eMta. ~· Ownr/Brk£.
hoiueonproPerty.Flex DLX.CON002Br. + trg 641~1n: gmt. 0 · VIUAIAl.IOA
Ible uses. OWner will loft Br. 2~ Ba, frplc, · 2 Bdrm Ocean & Bay
consider carrying 1st gar .. a/c, new. $'775 RENTALS view. Comp. upgraded.
TO. Aaklng$199,~. Call 67S.5565orl83-83'17. 3br, IY.ba S650 S800 mo. t.88J.43()3 wk
540-1151 for more 10!0. Lit ._51 -.~ 4br, 21-;ba llOO Furn:-_end. 673-6al7 evH.
-~ 'foll. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
AUTO SEIYICI CINT8t Buy 6000 sq. ft. of bldg
with 10 baye Ne•port Blvd. Costa Meu . aoo.ooo. owe at m..
Bta!onomiq flHlOO
.,_ _... """" 4br, 2\.iba ll50 Why pay rent??????? 3br.2ba $11'!) New, (antastk. weU loca
led 3 Br .. 3 Ba. new Con·
do. S800 per mo. neict t.o
aU1bo ' .631·~-
•513 CMtPOs Da:IRVM
LIDO ISLE
Charmi ng • cozy 38drm, 281, else to
clubhouse. bay beach, 41 tennis. Agt.. 'virg111la
O'Brien 67H3Z3
Unusual proper ty
Spacious 4 bdrm 2 1"1 baths. 2350 IQ. it. LI
cloaeu, prime location Gd rond water ,
.&1n1eoer inc\. f30:5S76
ltollffMy Dec'd
2 bdrm executive <'Qndo.
ocean view. S1250
631 -67~,,_~6945 -
tud10 Apt Decor furn.
private patio. Waler &
gas paid. S275 mo
646-5310
wportlMdi J769
THE
"GOOD
LIFE"
VEAA-AOONO F\JN
Social Aclmhes 01
1ec10< •free Sunday
Brunch • BBO s •
Parnes • Plus more
GAUT RECREATION:
Tl'!nn.s •Free Lesso~
I pro & pro sl\opl • 2
Heallh Ctubl • S.una
• Hydromasuge •
Sw1mm1ng • Goll
011ving Range
8EAUTIF\Jl APTS·
Singles 1 & 2 Bed
1ooms • Furn11hed
& Uflfllmllhed • Advll
LIYlng • No P•t• •
Model• Open 0111y 9 to 6
01kwood Qardefl ApertrMnll
Newport Beecll H.
880 '"""ft ltt ti•·· (71 4) 645·11()4
Newport lleecfl s.
1100 1&1t1 St 10o ... ft •61~1 11a 1&42·5113 c:::~..f TM Rancho San Joaquin
28drm, + den w/wet
bar, fl'Olftl le"tf OD fOU coune, au applaD<'ft, 3
pat101, view: •25 + accuritx ml4DQ
Blulf'a. 3 BR or 2 + den. I~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 2~ BA, fok, Pl~!°°l. 1175.160~. 67S.~L UDO ISU. Perfect 4 BR, single
story home on 1 ~ lots w/center
co u rtya rd. French doors,
hardwood noors beam ceUiogs &
3-car garaee. $S25,ooo incl land. ·Nancy ·Jm bernlno/Jan Youn g
642·8235. <T·71l
CHAIMI ... CAMIO tMfUMKt
Delightful home featuring 4 BR
w/lg back yard, sparkliqg pool In
private enclosed front yard &
access to pvt beach. $229,000.
Sharon Smith 644•6200. CT·Tl>
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PALMDISllT
Deep CanyOll Tennis
Club. Lovt)y 3br 2be
"A" Piao. Great 0l'ffft·
ti.It Loe. SSOOO down.
owe Sl05 ooo ·at 12%.
LEEWAROSAPTS I & 2 IG-mt \o,ld Mesa Vrr} <'lo~e
2020 f'ullen.on Ave Pool. Adil~. no pet~. S4CXI to S C Plaza All kitchen
Newly decor 2Br w j?ar 15th St 1~1\ el} p\'t room. patio
631-0397 I and up 22012th St & 219 pm S210mo 957·3955
adlls. crpts. dri>s. bit l.ge 1 br fmnt unil Irr refr11(. no kll 1J blk lo
ms Fncd yrd 14 pal to., p l t' x n r Be J 1, h & m·ean $250 mo Sept
water pd 636-4120 call Talben . 5375 tnc:I ga., & IS June IS 675-57!0
1 S 661 Victoria $45() water 891 7400 ev' or nm for rent. nr b<'h, $300
2619 "I" Santa Ana Ave wknd mo ut II incl Ton 1
$455 Nr bea<'h. 3Bdrm, 2Ba. &JI 5314 art 5PM
2 Huge Bedrooms In burlt·tnS, encl .iar. qmall HcM1m :-Jpl Bch Pm Ba super location f'ully c hild OK no peas &cn1ranceSi250mo Ella
carpeted, b'ullt ins. ssso mo 96J.8G2S 754 IS6 167~216S ground noor Over so
Adults only No J)t'ts
S3SO Mo. 568 W Wilson
~£lE.~77.
SPACIOUS 2 BR Adult.
open beamed ceihng,
lots of wood. ser\'lng
bar $410. No pets 2256
Maple S48·73S6 .
673-8803
HARBOR RIDGE Great
view' Prof decor t'um
2·3 Br. New Condo
Owoer67J.5311 _
l BR adult condo. ser
guard. pool. 1a cuu1.
s auna , gym S8 SO
645·0230 __ -
Winter, 1"J blk ocean. 3 br.
2 ba Sept J2.J une S
00/mo. 675-5710 -Bachelor apt. I blk Crom
beach, yrly SZZS.
_631-6223aft 6 _
3 Br, ocean vu. new, 2 <'ar
pkg Avail 911 lo 6115
50. Bkr. 61J.9t!JO.
Large 2 Br blt ·in~.
garage. 1980 D Anaheim
W5 Mo. Adults. no pets
~n 7-S daily. 545-~.
Quiet 2 Br 2 Ba. Condo. 2
car garage Adults. no
pets ~ ~5066 or
84&2501.
lrYint 3144 Prcft'r f'emale 30+ :-Ion
••••••••••••••••••••••• llrrnker I Br share •2 bdrm , I balh rondo buth & kitchen S200 Mo
Adults, on lake tenn1,, 642 4688 aft 7.
j!OOIS SS45. 640-5626 Furn rm. p\1 home. P' l
Woodbrid ge 2 Hr Condo bath. middle-aged work
wa.sher. dryer. refrrge rng man, $185 _541!_·<1113
Will lease al 9i7S per S-.....r Rewtals 4200
mo All amemt1e~. ten ••••••••••••••••••••••• nis. pools. ~pa 1\\ ail LIDO ISLE channmg 3
8 I 975 6833 da~s bdrm.2 balh.playroom
552·8016 e\.es & wknd~ J ust remodeled Mon
L04JWM1 IHcJI 1141 thly rental Bill Grund)
••••••••••••••••••••••• 6756161
lbdrm. new. lrg dt'rk, l\EWPORT OCEAN·
North. end Close to FRONT Lux 2-4 Br Wk-
beach ~ 494 7079 I) 673 SURF ,_673:7§17 _
l'Wwport a.ocJt 3169 :"\ev. port. avail no11t .
••••••••••••••••••••••• \teps to beach, J br. Oceanfront for Wint er new pamt in out 127
Kentals Furnished & 34th_St 8§7·g)67, 67J.54JO
unfu!!!_ Bn;>ke_r 675·4912 s um mer Re n 1 a Is
NO FEE' Apt & Condo S200wk Oc nfrnl s ·
rentals Villa Rentals S300wk Jones Rily
6JS·4fil2 Br9~er I 673·6210 _
• • • 3 Br I ho~ from ocean. Pattyr-... I parkmg Avail August.
67l2Gateh11l 67S·677S. ----
HuntingtonBeech New C us tom Home
Youarethtwinnerot P enin s ula 3Bd rm .
TWO FREE PA$.5P.S 21-, Ba. avail Aug 1st
!S11 value) $700~wk 7~0682
RING UNG BROS I OO' FROM SAMO
BARNUM' BAJLF.Y Newnn""" Beach c•cus ,....,,.,
Amhe1mConventlon IRdrm, S3001Wk 2Bdrm $375 Wk Center Al.II 6 17 Newly deror/sharp
Loni Beach Arena _17!4!99'7-0432 A1.1g. 19-23
To claim passes. c~ll
642·5678, ex.t 272 Passes
must be exchan&ed for
reserved seats •l boic o f~i ce pr ior to
performance. ---·-·-· --PAii tlWPOIT
COUMTIY CLUI
LIVING
Bachtlon, 1"2 bedroom
Oceanfront 2 BR Ilse, xlnt
loc encl iopen glas~
patio. Aue I 10, S600
543-8088 63J.7m5. Nwpt
Bel\
Yecotiott..... 4250
••••••••••••••••••••••• Movin1 • Avoid dfpotlt.s
'Cart Uv• Upalfl1
Profeu1011 ll~ since
1!"1
HOUllMATB
&JM&)I
. ----~---'
C4ii"fttla c...t/C1 '* .... h1 Mw4wiM..... H•1dl•h1 Me"'9 Wiit/~ • ~~.t ............. . •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ... ••••••-••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-• ... •••••••••••••••••••• •M••••• ... •••-•••••• •••••••••••••"••••••••• ••••••••••••••••--•••••• ••••••••• .. ••••••••• • BALBOA 'ROOFINOCO. VOUSWAelM Cutoll·built la U Pool Deeb ud Palkl&. CLEAN·UPS/LAWN HARDWOOOn.-OORS •ROUNtdtanUl1• llov1A1! Tbe 9t!"~I TMIC.l ... OW ni. oaly roo&f ro. for SNaAUST woodu 1htlvt1 for Muoary,SporU1Tennle Ma.lll~Lndup..i Cleued6Wutd Profeu.ion&l-'nlaroqh COU.1•SWdenla•OYwl Rts.JCOMM EXT coast o
Htrb'a Oarau IHI 1lora1e, dlaplay t Cowu. Lie. 3'740fr Bob, _lm . id'.teOi Ail lS.A. Xlotl«aJRef'1 CO. IWIJWn.W~ PROMPI'.IJC'D
Harbormo.tit.aesa arac•. Our 11rJce la ~HIU,ffM!71 Sam Fukumoto YARD......_ Uc.l'flJMJL ~ 714-llJt -. ea ~ •-. Wattbia&rgwl · DRIVtWAYCLEA.NlNO MAJNT. 6 Clffa•Upa. •••••••• ........ ••••••• Mature couple olferhl& ABC MOVING Ell r ,.,...... Ctlm Dreu MaldnC
._. ClbineLt 6 ~ ~· Improve your bome! Tret trimmtna. amaJI Hau.l,tleaswp,ooocrete quaUtr bouaeclean.in1 f lo tel 'J:k ••••••••••••••••••••••• altuatlont/Repair•
.. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~1addltionl7~-~!b Remove IAIJ1 oU le rust la . removal Own lnlCJl. w/pel'IOnll care. Rell•· ~~f!ll.:iv~ ~'c:to Tbe P•Pft' Hanser. Prof. Con1u1tatlon In your wo..... ree •t. ~._.., it.air!. Forest" l!J-49. Mowma SIO-$J.S.'25 d: bit. ref a. !'!!I. M0-4563 ~ -;u· -Install. Decoral.Or qua I. home '76"310
bet7 5'lO m cwwc.. Halllln1/Movill1'25 DUllPJ Ho•..... •4·1 MOYIMG • Freent. e 1 Soler'
CUSTOMCARPENTRY ................... , .. , 7N-llllOt1!15t0111151hd SmalllllovlnlJobl ...... ;. ......... , ... ,. Top quality. Spttlal "We aall should hang ,, ................... ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• Patio c~vera, decks. SJ I fO/WI TlllS CaUICQ(l&te.1311 DON'T BE!MP'l'V, care in~·· 25 yrs toietber'', SlO /roll HOl water+ pool heating
madd.iliona, SZSl Hot lunch C!.M. -Chria· T _,., ved .... Haulln16DwnpJobe. TH.IRSTYORLONELY up. Competitive rates. U ~hol. wa .&1Mr7~ aave rltlngenergyoosts· Au boob. Set·ur· write-up. Ylotncla state·
ments & wee. 498-4St9.
FlNlSHCARPENT Y · · · op~ remo .~an AaUorRa.nd Noovertime. ~1353 ealn tax credits. Fm Rqbby, 842-0838 U.n Preschool. 846-$423 Up!, lawn renov · 151·34'7& Ml-Mrl y. "Stcwlty Ph•" will sit , ..... I'..,., ,._tw /llplir est 548-
9. 24 hr anawt rv. C..treclw ~~RD CLEAN· UPS, tree HAUlJNG-&udent hu your bouae, plant.I II ......... ~··•••••• .. ••• •;.,:•1•t••;.·.~·~·i:;~;;;• ~..::::;~"-"'._::r-----
Cl<om wortc. PaUo COY• ••••• .. •••••••••••••u• worlk, iMrri~ation Ir re-lareetnlct Lowest petJ.U1·7Wl Elltllnt pamtJna, cab. re· ~ p t""~,,~14~9 :r;;;:o;::: ••••••••••••• en, c•bineta, wall units. Cuatom Brick, Block. pa r, J1nttnance. rate romiit. ?:18-19'18 .._...,... fin/stain. Prof. tbnbl. II. , ~ , SPRINKLERS•SOD
....................... Remod . & r epair. Tl~e. Patios, Walka, ~~~nbel~ Land1eape, :rfagY914.Jobp. • ...................... Freeest.Steve$t'7-4281 PLASTERPATCHING Tree Removal. DIG IT ~RWICI & SOM 549-1'701 Dnvea, Covers, Decks, -l02. WE HAUL ANYTIUNG Brothen Constructors Fine painting by Richard Int Int. :Kl m exp Landscape, "6-7070.
BuUderaSince l,.7 · c.p.t SerYa f1a!3orta, ~~~fees J A P A N E S E Yard clean·ups, demoli· UllOSantaA.na Av, CM Sinor. Lie, ins. 13 yrs of Neat work PaulMS-2977 Tiii ~~!~!!:!............ Additions, remodellllg, ....................... · M GARD~t1!., U tion. Have dump truclr. P I a n t 1 , Int I e 1 t . happy N.B. customers. Pits: Ill I 1 ..................... ..
BOOKKEEPING plans. Free est. Reu. Shampoo Ir stum clean. l...e s.dllht F atnte~~. 96).~ Reas. t»g La11dscaJ*l1, tree sur. Thank you. 631-4410 ....................... TILE INSTALLED
For small 'business Uc.310@4! ~2110 Color brlattenen. wht JS.CONsTRUCI'lON ma · • 1ery, aprtnlrlera. Lie. DB'aPAINTING M c c o R M A C K AUK.tnds.Ouarant.eect
Reas. rd1bie.a1=AA83 CONSTRUCTION crpts 10 min. bleach Nobody Does It Better! G1•rll Senktt C.._ U,~ow Act •C27·3S28f1.HS-Q5SS l.nt/ut. Neat, reliable, PLUMB'G Refs. John 893-1
Add/remodel, coocrete Hall, Uv.-din. rms ru: Llc'd/bonded. ~3188 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gara1ea. lite hauling, ~ refs. Dave54.S--0389evs REPAIR Ir REMODEL y,.. ~ ~~.~..... Free est. S81-83llO aft. s avg rm S7.SO; IX>'!ch SlO. Dr•ritt DON HOF!J..01' , ruck.~ 63 1993 ....................... RENT Al.Sour speciality Stoppaees. Reas ratet. .. ................... ..
Ma&neslte, paint, clean, ROOM ADDITIONS le odochr ~C.rptGuar. ~U~~ pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• IJ?.!17•rpen~1 .J· ltont -· l· MORTGAGEMONEY Int/ext. Seaside Punt.' Uc. It 6'7S.ll19ol JAYETIBCAlE
decks, cement, crpts. REMODWNG Quality r repur. wyrs 11>0.,IMJULY ... "93Sor ....... ~ TREE/SHRUBTRJM AVAILABLE ing.Prompt.5.'J&.4806 PoolStnke,..,..,.. Topping. pruning, re
ca,.,...nt...i, weld., plumb conatructloo from de· up. Do wort myaell Draperies by Giovanni Ga race Ir yard clean· $20,000to $350,000 1-~ 0'""'""~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• moval & snM>ying. JO yrs ·~ •1 • l I . Refs.531-0101 Al I . bll d •-u-Freeest !i6'1-8271 ...._, V ID "'7VVV•~• Co I . .,.-F Bra 642, s11n o comp ellon. so m DI n s .. ....................... r · · Mo tlfl'llfs D6DCustomPaintinf mp ele service re up Local refs ree
Family coatractors for We Care Crpt Cleaners levelours. ~221.5. Carpentry. Muoory ~ Up to IS/yn to repay lnt/eat. Guar. 983-32!13 pairs, Ir aolar Inst.all So est Lie. OIB566 640-9:nl Afpl•r:•..,.., 30 yrs. Reu. rates. Fr Steamcleanleup~ls. Dryw.. Roorm&·Plumbing ....... ,................ PRIMEFINANCIAL RALPH'SPAINTlNO Cal. Pool Service TREE DESIGNS •GUAR~UsEO,REF·R~.·· ests. Allen EJohnsoo. f Truckmountunit ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywall ·Stucco -Tile WantaREAUYCLEAN SERVICES Ext/int reas prompt &42·8863 Pruning.Scl.llpturing.
SALES6SERVICE 301007, call M0-5456 or Worlrguar. ~3716 Orywa~iahst &more. J.B.~9990 HOUSE? call Gingham 527•3477 Lie Ffe°eest 964.~ . hfllt&..IJ... Top, Thin, Removals.
Good ___ .. ~n• No~eam~~mpoo Qual." . New & re· Discounts to senior Girl. Preeest.~5123 · · -,......, Clean-up
.. vuu. 642'1754 JB4CO CONST. Stam Specialist. Past mod. lt3891M4. 532-5549 citizens. All types of re-Mae. r AGAPE FORCE ............... ~ .. ~.... 631·2513 ........... dry Free est 838-1582 I F t c II ROBlN'SCLEANlNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAINTING COMPANY J.D. Hom ~rUUllhing ......,...... Addi{RMls ·Remodeling ' · ALLTEX'IVRF.S& pa rs. ree es · a Service--at.boro1.11hly 3Generationsof Antlq~.,Kit.cabinets. W..w~ • Drl~~;;;:~·;:~;~f .. i~: &C1.11tomH0111t'S. Lie. ROB ERT~_EAR p ET Drywall. Clean & depen· : n21 woeo r • d #45 ~· clean bo\ee. 54CHl8S7 BJRo~~.K:e°wRpoK~. sc~:t'~ Painting Excellence Fine amUn . 645--0664 ··········~·······-··· repairs. sealcoa In•. lt2:9937•. 6'75-6044 REPAIR. ~retch. re-dable. Reas. 631·2345 4 ·43 ' or 631"113 · Expertise Houlekeepln1 o"" S8Sl •~-......_• & a.....a. Original Window Wul'ler .. lay.AUrepairs. Afters Dependable,rela. Mesa, Irvine, Refs. _. __, .,.... Avg 3brbome,S35. S&S Asphalt. 631·4199 AYALOM COMSTI.. 8'73-NIO DIYW ALL R•All JACK OF ALL TRADES Supplies furn. 641-4970 675-3115 Quality Ptg. Lowest rates ....................... 631-7698
Lic'd. · BulldingleRemodelin&· ,._11_ •·--"-TheC.f .Group 754.1539 Plumblng,elec,healin" Q 11 n1n BRICK : Walls, Walks, in OC. Neat prompt General Services, no job "LeltheSunshi'n"ln" ASPHALTREPAUUNG 24Yra·lic-lns. 947.7320 -"""',,.~ 0 ua tyl:fouseclea g Pl t p t' Serv 848-5684 636-7149 too small. Free est. ~ Staleoating&Striplng ....................... &chic.e Oddlobs, 631•4068 wilhPel"IOOalTouch. an era, a ios, · • Reas. Call AnswerAd Call Sunshine Window
Comm/resid. Free est. Acoustic Ceilings+ ....................... Ca rpenlry, Masonry• Free eat. Beth$56-0156 V e n e e rs • e t c . Starving H.ol.ISe Palnten #453, 642-UIO,or631 ·1137 Cleaning, Ltd. 548-8853
Lic.#3973152 ~8181 ••••••••••••••••••••••• customhandtellturtng ELECTRICIAN-priced Roofing Cer Tile WANTED! Houseclean· f.loc~r~r~Concrete. OualityWork·Reas. aft s Window Cleaning & All
AJI Typu Rer:nodeling & Uc. 389944 S32·S549 right, free estimate on Drywall ~re 499.4969 ing .ex P 'd, reliable .•c. e s. 1S97 Free est. 548-0230 Doug . . Screens. Reliable. fair. Classified Ads are the Repairs, top quaµty, 11 C....t/c:o.cr.... laraeorsmaUjobl. Ray ' · ho l &38-71.25 ft4PM Frplcs, Patios, Planters. QUALITYPAlNTING looflltg Ca ll Chris or John. answer to a successful Yrs in area. Licensed. Lie. lt396621 · 673-0359 nts · 1 For a job done ri&ht. Slate lie. 334950. l6 yrs •••••••••••••••••••.•••• rd I 1 I · Mr Palombo """'8314 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• 'fl:A.._ F h .. t 546-00SJ 5$7·9688 garage or ya sa e. l s · ,.....-THOMPSON'S RESII>./COMM'L SELL idle items with a Reliable. Great work ! Larry ...,._,,eves. OranceCo.83!H886 or s a..e. comPoS1 K>n ·...=,~• ~"'=~--
a better way to tell more WANT ACTION'! CONCRETEOONSTR. Highly qualified. No job Daily Pilot Classified Steady job. Refs. Call Find what you want in or hot. Call Les Frtt SEA VIEW
le! C!assj(ed Adaff?.5618 Lie. 393383 642· small. 631-2345 Ad. after 4 PM.646-7Zl8 Dai Ix Pilot gasslfaeds. Sell idle items 642-5§'78 est. 1168-QIS Window wash 642· WASH
....... to sa.-. 4300 Offk• 1..W 4400 .__, llMllll 445 §tor.eJt 4550 ._..., I A•o•u=•/ .••••••••••••.••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .•••••••••.••••.••.•••• •••••••••••••••••••.••• o~ soos 1 ,.,.. , .... , Lost&Fo.d SJOO PtnOMh 5350 HetpW..ted 7100 HtlpWOlllitd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Spec.ta cular view. aeeuri· MEWPOIT IEACH Offiu W... SlorocJt G...,n ....................... Lost It,.-.. FOUND: Male Cocker ASSEMBLERS We will Spaniel Tan coloring. DIAL-A-I.IE ADMHSTIATIVE train Apply. 7AM _
Vic. Newport Heights. "WE LlE FOR YOU!.. DIUCTOl . MacGregor Yachts, 1631
646-4966 Convincingly. pro· Jewhh Community Placenlia,C.ost.a Mesa
ty cate, tennis, pool, spa Full service exec. of· Npt Beach C.14. ana ~~8 BIKE RENI'AL BUSI. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Harbor Ridge ~o fices from S3t7. "On Small ex.eculive office. ln Laguna Beach. For A•a•c1 tMi 5100 760-9301. · 1 Call" extt. offices from Int d.a--_.,11.11 ....... Wlllhd 4600 more info, call 41H-DM. • ..................... . x aw~,......, ... o .• ••••••••••••••••••••••.,,_._.. B Male or Female shar~ Sl05 lnclds. secretanal, Terri (714)7£2-1194 Semor Citizen (artist) de-~meu gla.\s sbop. y sc•IU I rft FOUND: Doberman vie. feuionaUv. confldentJal· Rela~ Aeency seek Ass1Slaoce needed Facts
San Juan Capistrano ly or just for fun I ang director for new or lrvme Haircutting, Newport Beach 4 Br phone ans., word pro-sires home pref. with owner. Newpo~ Bch. "'911ihl '96-2012 760-7Ui6. Orange Co. office Salar 714.559"353 Leonard Salary to Ol.000. Send -'-"-'--=-'-'-=1'-==~r e 1 um e lo H 8 Ass 1st manager for
Schechter. Suite 814 . m~n 's sportswear,
6505 Wilshire Blvd Los f1t1m e, wk ends. Bay
Aageles, Calif. 900.s Dept. Store, 303 Main St.
house. w/pools & tennis cesslng. Telex,qwip. IETALSPACE studio. Year lease Lone established ANSIOS
col.lrts, block to beach. THE H EA.DQUARTERS ~ t~f:i:1 ~;r,tsi;~: Beginning Oct 1,673-5223 6'75-5180 Cal 10..SPM. Armour -Teens _ Free to understanding ~~~':f~J~w':,m;~~~~
Call Paul&42·S869. C7~!"!AN11,_ ESl pos u re . $3500 mo. Apt wanted yrly, Sept. CMllkal SerY a. Noisy -Modest -home. 12 wk old kittens. 49 seeks di.screet, fun· R le 2 ~ .,.,..., ......., lst series ol shots. Days oomma · ~room Im med. occupy. Responsible fem with Sw~ Pool SUMMONS 494•9421 loving lady for daytime
condo in Hunt. Beach. MEWPOITCINTB Realonomics 6'75-6700 xlnt references. $350 So. Orance COast Area. Have you rea~e of le weekend dates. Possi· Female non.smoker, mnth 7CJ\1149 N Wlill tr · lhA boo .. -..... >'._ lling Found: Man's watch, •bl• trav"I to A"rlrali'a. S Pre1tJ1ious, full service Newport Modern Store · ol" o exp nee. am. "' ""' """ '"' .. .. -263 per month + EX EC offices. Inc Ids or ofc nr post ofc. $450. Wanted earage to rent In Sl.5,000 cash down. Plus lheae days? I saw one CdM High School. Tony 96&-0419
utilities. Need 911 Call rcpt, sec, xerox. under· 548 s I f. 213/477· 7001 North Laguna. 494·4621 approx S7000 for equip book that was 10 darmg, 6'4-9476 YOUNG LADIES Availa·
964-7167 ground pk'g, telex & an-Jerry or4!18-8747 needed. Call Mon-Fri. the last page was a Lost Desert Tortoise. bleforCuualfun. Dawn
t.J/Christian Wider :Kl to tique decor. conf. nn. 'CoromdllM• ..... H/111•..t/ 9·6 PM-. 4(8..86'1-0lll SUMMONS. Gone since 7°'. Please 761.9031 fnhaaire hol.ISe with same. 644•7189. 4200 sq ft. Ground noor. Fllt.C• lll•ts...., Loat & F'09ld SJOO _c""a""ll_.646"'""'-·9*......._,_. ____ ----ECUTIY-'-""~~--
S22S mo. CM. ~3199 c t H . h 0 a..-11 5015 ~ Lost . M b'" s .. ·p"-rd EX E W E S TC L I F F o a s ' g w a y . ••••• • ••••••••••••••••• ppo1 rm r . •••• ••••••••••••••·•••• · · lA nc ~
CHRISTIAN Roommate Realonomics Corp . ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------•I mix, wht chest. vie. * SllTE * 2br, 34 St., N.B. Penn BLDG 6'75-6700 Oppoe..tlr SOOS 50%JOlNTVENTURE lSlh /lrvine. NB .
$160 673-78S6 Dan eves •. OPPORTUNITY Fo•• us 640-781•. Reward. 24 Hour~ORTS 6-9 NEWPOITIEACH StorfforOfficft ....................... Car waah de-veloper· unu LOST. M Shellie dog, In tSJ..1122 MC/!lla
Owner, has 3Bdnn. 2Ba ComerWestclirfDr. Prime location. CdM * * * operator will provide A1£ FIE( Irvine, reward offered
hme. E. Side C.M. Will 1..500 Sq'1zmore Afive.s . JOH 36 ocr U»40P uJE.MCo~st D .... Lo.,..-land le buildin1. Needs Cal: w -7302, m.3831 shrw/lor2resp&coo· ..... ice wte. wy, a a artm. l8535Vallarta joint venlurep.,tnerCor Found: M Siamese cal.
genial young ladies Ideal location for Al· 644·7383. HuntlnltonBtach front end expenses vie. Slater Ir Edwards.
&42-8558 lomey, Rut Estate or Newport Beach 15 x 50, Youarethewinrltrof 957.1177 642--5671 Hunt. Bch.NJ.-.
Ent rep re n e u r . $S50.1805WestcliffDr. TWO FREE PASSES ----------------Male/Fem to stir 2br hse Beautifully maintained 751 SS25AnYtim ($17 value> ~yto Lo. 5025 YOU ND : Ladles 14KG
CdM. Avail. Aug. lst full service bldg Office ·e RlNGUNG BROS. ....................... Lost: Deaert Tortoise Watch vie. Harbor View
Yurly.613-4911! now avail. Store for rent. 3llO Sq fl. BARNUM & BAILEY WIDOW bas mooey for Family pet over 30 S ho PP In I center.
Fem to shr NB condo C................ Laselle Pwa, CM. CaU C•CUS 2nd T.D.'s Sl0,000 Ir up! E ru n. rd' 64C).8121 . . ' --after I PM. 957-2740. Ask E Z CREDIT' No po.tty years. · '-• nc:wa · fullyfurn.S230+ llt util 645-4101 for an AnahelmCoovent.lon ~l1Aft~S73-1Jll . 642--0llOll Found: Bike. vie. Npt
-'J;..:a=n'-'·Do=n"-,6J="-l..(8.=..;1.5"----CdM Deluxe~. AC, Of S ·1 r Center Aug g.17 Lost: whlte Persian M. Bch. CaU bet. 9-12. John. Rmmte for lge bse in I ..i. uliJ pd flee pace avai or Loni Beach Arena 50o/e 191itYC...... "Sam", Spygla.\s, CdM , 759-1163
C.M. strai&htonJy.musl aml: ,,..g, · 2155 rent le or secretarial Aug.~23 Sl0,000 lo '2 million. reward. 759·0115 , fteno•• be clean S2U/mo + ut1I E. st H · 6$-6900 help. N.B. area 642·2932· To claim passes, call Land devel/light mfg. 975-1909
Brian 64f..3228, 966-0192 Prime office space in new 110.8779eves 642·5678, ext. 272. Passes No electronics, com-
Fem 25 to 35 yn to shr bldg, Dana Pt. Ocean & co-1rdal must be exchanged for puten. Prine. only. SIOO REWARD
2br, lownboule Sl$2S/mo. mln views. Avail. 9181. ltefah 4475 reserved seats at box Crouroads Develop· Yellow /orange tabby,
+utll.·C•ll9-S'7SZ.5599 Pre·completlon leasina •••••••••••••••••••••••o ffi ce prior to mentCo.P.0.Box409. orange eyes.NB. Pat I bonus. 6Gl·3:?>l 950 sq.ft. front w /sink performance. Tustin, 928llO 6'73-6190
M/F lo 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 apl C.M, pool.
End of Aug, $212 + util. ~2890or8'7~ eves.
IAYNOMT OFRCI Estab seconds le anti· * * * Mort Trwt
SS I Q rt. Par~ng , que.E/SldeCM.548-7249 Newgrowlngwomensex· o:r:t"' SOJS
janitorial, etc. 760-!k4o. lndmtrialR..... 4500 ercise le health spa ....................... .
fice, 2 rooms w I wet· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Great potential $250,000. Want Investor for Npt bar, 232 sq ft. CM area. Rent M.G. 600 sq ft. S240 Terma 1'70-0a33Bkr. ba y front home. Give
$200 Mo . Util pd . mo.2914Randolph.C.M. PRIMTSHOP well secured lst or 2nd
Lost Collie female wear
in& red collar. Please
call 831·5478. Vic. Mis·
sion Viejo.
LOST: Sat .. July 25.
Fem. Al.Ill. Shep. mix.
Uc 154C.11S.l.31M 646·1684. 6'7S·Sl16 Thriving busineu, C M" T.D. Agt, 67>6181. * * PHOTO * * 7 ,500 Sea. Ft. low overhead. Call for 1--------Found: F aray le white pt *STUDIOS* Xlnt loc. 6,00o sq rt details. 165.000. Craig. MeedAWl.D.7 Siamese kitten, Shiffer
Avail. toahr2 lgestudios fenced yd space + 631·12M COMPE'11TIVE RATES Park areLl6'7~4
LJBrRAL G R C b I modem air cond offices. Delta Pacific Mortgage Found: amall while, tan
&.. • • • w It I g h ls. etc. J' •• be a~t. 2915 Halla· 1714) ... 1......... 1 •-"'....... F Roommate Contact S8 0,S7S /mo . xlnt -..., .,,,.., •gray "'"'° ..... ua, ,
Service IHPM. facilities & loc. 558-2904 day So. ta Ana. for Licensed R.E. Broker 22nd Ir Oranie· 631-l.232 info 646-1512 548-6800 21316»J:NO •~ 4450 Found: F Shep. puppy, ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1-1!!!!!!!! I -Shop to share with Sign blk Ir M Gold. R "'!!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• p · """ fl . c M WEPAYlHIMOST tan; . et . M/F. 2 bdrm apt in Park For store II office space amter, .....,sq m · · For your T.D.'s Ir Notes M Shep. crou, blk le
Npt. S330 mo. lncl ulil atreasonabJerates. util inc. 165 mo. Call OVERWEJGHT? •t Denison Assoc . tu: M DobieCf'OIS, red;
Call Paul~8937 500 to 4000 Sa Ft. ~2890or67l-6480 UNDERWEIGHT! Shed 6'73-7311 F Shep., beige; M Collie
41st N.B. 3BR rum hie MF.sAVERDEbR Cosa Mesaoffice&work or g1in Iba. quickly, • cross, sable & blk. F
avail Aua 1 $300+ v, utll. PLAZA area totaling 4,225' at» safely, sensibly. lOK, S.ttltr MhJ. Co. Collie crou, blk & wht
Bill lo.6pm. S4:J.l160 afl 1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M. per 141. fl Avail. Oct 1st. guar. 81S· IUI Mary All types ol real estate _.644"'"-'-·3658='------
7pm '7Sl-O'OO 54M 123 642·29288am-4pm 640-7326 investmentuince 1949. Found: woman's pre·
Low cost office space Spec' ... ia scriptioo tinted classes, Prof. wortioa F. non·
smoker. 25·40, to sbr
spac. Irvine home
w /prof. M, pool, teMls,
ullls Incl., no pets. $300.
Mike SSM14t
Offfctl ... 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• um Weatcliff. N.8. Want
financial Inst. '70009.f.
lat. floor. A,cent541·5032.
PLUSH OFFICES.
$00·6000 IQ fl. 1801
Newport Blvd. c . .-. Ph
&ee-N95
CM, 3 beaii. otfic:ee 6
bath, 840 IQ.ft. XJnt loc
Alr,cpts.~. a.;'7t61
IETilSPACI with shop area . Find wh.at you want in WTI>a Brookhunt' PCH .
770 sq. ft. on Harbor Overhead rear door, am· Pally Pilot Classified$. '42·2171 545-0611 -=IJ63."""-'3S34=..._ ___ _
Blvd. in C.M. SllOO. Great pie parking, quiet ln· Ill•••...., .......... .. .......
exposure. dustrial area of Costa It. 5015 o Mtil 50 Is
Realonomks 8'7S.1100 Mesa. m.85Sl. ..~~ ........... ~~~ .... ~~.'.~ .... r!'.~.=•t ........ .
Use """"'M 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 ~rvlce Is oqfy $7.50
week. For more . ir\forma-
tfon Ind to place your ~
call 642·5678.
I
(TAHITI LAND INVESTMENTS)
B.P. 1322 -Papeete • Tahiti
PUMAAUl4 -Thia district is the "Kabala of Tahiti."
Tahitian style home, but construction is cement block
and redwood -four separate buildings make up the home which forms a "U" and races ocean . Tiled
courtyard wtth awtmmin& POOi as center piece. Over
15,000 sq. ft.. landscaped -Mth low maJntenance in mind.
Property filled ta the top of a retainJnt wall, five steps
down to beach at top of beautiful cove. $690,000,
furnished. Fee simple Utle in band. • • • 114U'ftflUI. -over water restaurant for sale; in the million dollar range .
• •
USO •••••••••••••••••••••••
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Petty.,._,.., * 912-1345 * MC oft VISA Accepted
COVER GIRL
• OVTCALL * 953-0778 MC/VISA
l
Repl.Ys confidential. Balboa Mr. Hawthorne 673-SMO. Apply Mon-Fri.
ADVaTISIHG SERVICE Stalaon Allen·
SA115 dant. Exp'd. Days & For rapldty growing pre· eves. PUii & plllme. Ap-
s t I e e m a e a i I n e ~: Shell Station. 17th & Generous· commission. Irvine, N.B.
~:rn!p~:~ 497~ ~r~ AUTOWM~~.-
M·F ~••
• pg
OUl"'11EST ISYOUI
GREAT WESTERN
SAVINGS AND LOAN
bat ID Immediate open.
lnl for a TELLER on a
PART TIME basis
which will lead to a
PULL TIME poeilion at
our COSTA MESA Branch.
Previous financial lft·
1Ututlon or cuh handl·
In& experience is
neceu•ry. Public roft· tact bat kground helpful.
Knowledae ol 10.key and
t11ht typln.1 Is required.
You will flnd we offer a
competitive saJ1ry, ex·
cellent benefits and a
comforUble working at· mosphere
Please call for an ap-
pointment to:
714-759-4963
GW
-.1UTWISTBH
SAYMS
AA /IDE/M/F
Banking
EXIC&ITIYE
SICllTilY
Local Newport Beach
savings & loan is seeking
a self·motivated
Secretary with STRONG
sec retarial ski lls,
thorou1hness & con·
aenial manner to work
for President Salary
commensurate with ea
per. Full insurance
benefits & paid career
apJilrel Please call
Ms. Denny Pansta
714~
HEWrOIT Ul.IOA
SAYINGS & LOAH
llOO lrvine Ave .NB
E.O.E.
BEAlll1CIAN Girl Friday, part time
646-8480. s.&-1145 or 609
West 19th. C.M
IEAUTY SAA.OM Shampoo technician
Busy salon. 645·8915, 1040 Pacific Coast Hwy.
NB
•BIKESTORE•
Ass 't. Mgr. & mechanic
for Schwinn dlr. Sal.
$10,400. Must have pnor
bike mech. exp. in a
store. 544-9835
•ION/TYPIST•
50wpm-also answer
phones . Nr 0 C
AirPort. Small office
641-1130.
IOATS
Gel·coat repair Exp'd
MacGregor Yachts. 1631
Placentia, C.M.
IOOIKBPa/F/C
Newport Beach 'R eal
Estate Investment &
Development Firm.
Must have min. 3 yrs,
exper. Pref real estate related .. lhru financial
statements. Xlnt work·
ing cond. Start ruoo per
mo.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur.day, July 30, 1881 ~!~~ .... .?~!'.,~?~ ..... ?!!! ~~?~m .. ?!!! .... ?~ ..... ?!~r!~.!!!! ~?~ .... ?!!!
1111ie.w_.... 11• ~ 1 i.vru.u:arx P/nNIR&•••s ~.,.~..,!..., ~~ WMY
....................... ,,..,., -.. dri ...... S.J =~-.i.::1A:· c I I ,,,..•::.book"• 1·-.. ,...:::•'::' •• ,;:rt:tUHI •
IATA ~·=-~n· ::i S..:.. Au A'lt~ Adi-==.c::-..:. 1a,,.;..ernilld;i>lit, ::. ........... A9'-== :"~
MAJU(tJ'S
For 2nd Is Srd Sb1ftt
Startin& S4 uptol4.50.
We promcice to muqe-
ment • tuperv\aion from wllhln
WANT ACARE2R!
Coli.Meta m w. wu.onSt.
S31-96C»
Laruna Beach
4!M-9m
Huntlnitoa Beach !IQ.9116
Personnel Dept.
s:ll-4840
W.ftll ' · Suu Aaa K1l1~t1. attractJYe .-W:.utJJ. ••. (1-4fm, Moa.. 11 lo ptrtoo. Jolly oppor~Hlty. MU. SJ .__._.. M~. 56 l •ho tllJo ._.., ~ 11uars.) Ro1er, 2100 Harbor 'lf M1 "1 louctl anDT~-.111 **191WCAI• lllAlNTENANC!MEN 10.U ,,:.. oid 1outN llCWIWWWST ltyd.C.M. ~=i-ort ct.ttr Joe.
l"IH U. • ....._ IOI' .,..._ r..u, bl lllAnJJlE ev11l111 .. tPll. Call lmCl)td. llOlllioa wltb ~ Uoa. Good ealary 6
optQ.laf lar a Dia fa.. s...lt ...... P/f H111t1n1toca Harbour. lrf·• •U·Ull ut. US, NpC. kb. ml 11ta Attt~cat.loftt btHfltt. Call Arltoe,
try ()ptratot to Wort AlhMA,au•won Cooltn1....W1Zhn lhlateauce: ror Apt .,..,,_ ii>11 to SPll, dt••'mt. nnn. Phoae •sm
S.ll:IOPll llilift. M.i Sal..,.,e~ ~k. CalJ Rita CompteilDCoelllall•a. u U orLori. aper.•acan&etypln1 IUllOY l••••••-
bave a*· et 1 yr. a · Ulrurrt arl4MtU Moa as Ill. wa.u. Esper •OOOPllW. tret!Q'd.wt.1'Tl Afllllil../ ll•Pri. ~. ~MY
per. oe CJlT. ~ NX °'**'-'n _lllllil2Pll. nee. Our n.. 11 '..j,ln at'"ieubftll. Lee. J.Si E. 8 .. _ _., aJ_..
I candidatewWbe•Q*' Hn:AIU 1PMSh1lu Ho11seht)el'I wented new""'' -r PCll,NeptBt•dl IUlt'p, _.. oraa -learHt, cletall-on.t.ect '"x''-'"tv 1 mmt. SeatUff Kot.el M•I 11 W. for am bltloua people UCrlilCWST penoa '°nm ..,.u busy
a. b'--~ _..... ,.,..., ' General mHllaoltal who want to tum part SICmAIY aaau olftc:e. IDdMdGaJ • a .. to_... ._ no 48WflT le ltd ri Ume boU11 lltto OOLDI ~ to hallCHt 1 variety o1
•upervltloll. lluat no ~11 . call for appt. Housekeeper/Child Care tn°::Ctrt~ ::~umt°t!; Grouod Rooroppty. Call Fast lrowinc:Jr; Bth. llTM re1ponalbWU.: illtlde
have above averare UMP.If, M·f .NS-TJl5 Prr rood pay. Need Im· helpful. ££'! '-.....,: fordetaU..•l·t l.,. ad •I)'. Neb v. with P1rtUmtderU. ta•~. b1111 •• , loveot.orl keyboard1peecUrbeat-ed " I.A .. , .., top typtn1 1kllh _, -curate.Gd.taluy6fr· m . Surf Is and Hotel, PHONEOPERATOR TelellbOoel pll•avarf.e. STOPM'.0 cont.rol,~.AP/A
in1e benffu paclcap . •&ellALOfRCI !!1:9323 La 18eadl 4'7-4477 For p l umbln1 co. ty ol raponalbWtiea t MAmrS under minimum
For Interview call: Lootinr for • very ln· Ho111ekee~ -anted, for MAMA.. Z:30pm·9:30pm, Mon.· opportunltlea. Call · 4111 c..tHwy., sueervi16oa. f7t.5'U
Sh a r on R 11In1. temtlnr part time job butyexec. inCdlf. Mutt ff all mark Olflt Ir Fl\ No exp. nee. Rell•· Dorotby,844-7944 ... .,....... SICllTMY
714-641-1816.EOEM /F In pluunt office? be ~rondent ln main· Coametlca. Exp pre· ble, noumoker. 14/11r. l!m!!!l••m!••• MDCAL '"!!!!!l!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!m••••I Clerlc1I, for m1lure lain I flnebome. lndry, 'e • ..,. 3 $40-2253 •1C•rL£JLm1ST •11111 ......_ _1 •"' perton.LocaUonP.C.H .. mendinr. etc. 2/3 day• '' ,_,. h ._... ......._~ DBJVBY Npt. Bch. E1per 1 month. Ref1 a mu.at. Mtture Lady wit aide ro..,.W•e>per Wltb tYJ>Mw In 1m1ll of· l.M. Over 30 pref.red. non
o ·river needed Im m111t. Accut1te typior. '7$-85119 up who would llke Experiented lndivtdual flee, OC Airport are.. atoadaya'7·3:30PMot3 amoker. Type IO WPM
mediately. Fulltlme. no 1horthand. 20 hr. Housekeeper, live-in for petm1Delll ldledule of to run power wub com· 558-03$3 '° 4 dayt 3 to 11:30 PM accurately Penn. full
Good drivin& record. weell l.ncludelSaU1Swl. mature couple. Ref's weekend• Sat 9PM· pany, cltan.lnr concttte, •1Cnot1ST Sml prlv conv hmp. Im· Ume. Cali A#ftr ad t CIVL 2431 W. Coast Hwy, CaU:f46.1'Sl please. CaU after uam: SAM /Sun 9AM ·SPM trucks, etc. Julio, IXr'DOPCMel. macu1ate Od Stalfinr m,'4.Z.qJ0,20.n.
-"N""e'""'w"'"po""'rt-.Bea==ch""". ___ 1 4 _ A.a-I..._ 133-2312. $4 .$0/br. Capable of SU.MO?. 203IZ Santa An.a Ave. ·--.. •y INGllB Y -~ ~ HO h1ndll111 collaptlble Pract.lcaJNune For 1rowlnr general Santa Ana Helrhts --·-Lie Civil Enrineer, DB.IV& Throurh trial balance. USEKEEPER. dining wheelchair for alert, for elderly couple, live practice In NewPorl $49-30ll Developer/Investor
Deaisner, Draftsman F/Time for local de· Mature penon.. Tn>lnr rm. at~t ' cool!. elderly lady but not an 1 c le dri 11 h Beach. Xlnt environ· ...:::::~:..:...-----oeedt sec'y 2 monililp up'd ln land dev & liveries. Excell. drivinf 10.key. \lfee:Mtlycb, a.s: N~ed immed. !or sm. lovalid.~311$3 n. oo ' ve, I t menU~daya.131-3'733. s~M_M+Q04 per week. Ty pin&. public wort. rerord ~·d. Phone for SU.lOIO, ~. retirement residence, hlewk, m .11'7S.IS34 ,,. -_.... answer pbont, basic bk· (714)557~1 ap~. 557.SZU, ask for '-OOO--,. Laa. Bc.b. Fltime. rotat· MICHANICI-PIUI Pel"IOll, experience llC9'TIOMST S •win I m •ch I 0 e kP1. Non·smkr pre· ---u E N w r-~ ID& wkncb. •HSI •~ ........... u 1n AB Dick 3'0, for For dr's office. Must be operaton. Will train r•rred. Call Bob~ -------~~ .. r. mmons. ewport wu.--_.-..-n•lllr t.b · ti · ..... u.. ...... .. --· -CllfftRED--Stationen,Inc. _..,_ HOUSEKEEPER FubioelaWldTeuco automated preu u en UIW c. motlva-.. '""-~··"""~'------LA.WI The~rauBaUoooafuU Live.in. English· 6"-71's.84U755 prlm•ryjob,tea>ndary 'type •ell. E1p. SALP.S/ADVER'llSING SICllJAIY OENT A&. llC.-T. aerv1ce rat.aurant open· speaking for couple with Ask tor Omar Bet 9-l job in bindery Ir pa1te helpful, but not nee Grow1D1 O.C. Public•· SmaU, activuales dept ADVEITISlll Office exp. req. Dental Ina soon in La1una l child in Newport Medical Front Office upt, vatation, medical, 642-4532. lion Jookinr for exp'd Informal office. Ex·
I'll rt' 6 P· pref. Wed.S.t. Top Ni1uel is looltlo1 for Beach. s day work week. Urolo1Y /GP, ceneral ofc Lroflt •hare Ill 1 year. RECEPTIONISl'{l'ypilt, prot·top commiuloo perlence neceuary .W.U salary for qualified good people. All potl· Mustbaverefs 7~7 skilll, pegboard, up .art It 115.50 br. Call with dlctaphone ' pald,835-91mSZ.8558 Mature. TYl!e80-70wpm.
The Classified Dept. ot person. 5Q.38SB. Uons •re available in· HSKP · · . 631•5301 979-2382. 1witcbboard exp. pref'd. Salea Shorthand· 90-lOOwpm.
the Daily Pilot has an DEMTALHYGtlMST duding: food serven, R. <f?omestJc) Ex~· n ff• .... 1-"'C... Frootok.. -rue.sat. Pvt. •lllD ... ··"-• Excellent company in _; busen holteues cooks 'Ref req d. Must speak Medical -,... •~ lub ...... u... ->tt\n' beneflt1. C1U .Mi Ille open e on one Ill our Excellent pay, im· salad 'maken barten: E~allsb ' be able to Huntin&too Beach Al· Afternoons 3·8, s coun..,c ,...,..._,. ¥~~ph/o::1::1e!ed!!~sk ~~le opening . ders , co~kta il drive.,Pla.call667~. ler1iltneedabackofflce days/wk N.B. Susan, RECB'TIOMIST Part• full bme, will aft.er &amat~51GO.
shoul ertjoy telephone Den•·J "'··istant. RDA. wa it resses, d is · 9AM ..... 30PM TTecb,ol~anSa. IP/time, fW0.8820 TYPIST train.Pref.exp.loretail Secretariel I
sales, be able to type 45 X-~yttcense. Xlnt hwashen. Please apply Insurance ue1 rnt.l 1 rhy com· Active real esatate of· =•ales.C.:&.1821 (VICKI RESTO~ wpm and have a in peraon at The Brass MIEWPOIT mensura e wt up. IHl ... S.. flee bu opening for a _ •
pleasant personality. benefits. Call Mon·Fri. Balloon 30100 Towne IMSUl.+..HCE CiUS30-FwT., well &roomed penona· i--------
Classi/ied or telephone 633-l3B2 Cente r Dr. Laguna A1ency needs personal MBCHAMDISB rrof Office ble Individual Mmt be SALIS
sales experience would Dltl.LPllSS Niguel. See Steve or lines underwriter. 2 yn Permanent, p/tlme. H you 1,.; 1 prodvcinJ exp. w/typing akUls of COM~l.I.
be helpful. We offer ex· Of18A TOI Paul. 495-3102 minimum exp ~uired Service ere.ling card aaent, you should loot 4S-60wpm. Real estate Tired of selling houses 7
c e 11 en t com Pan Y Set up ' operate drill in 111 phases of personal d e pt In Io c 1 I Into our NEW com· exp. desirable. Call days a week! We need
be n e f Its i 11 c I u dine press. Ability to read GltM•o CHAIUl"S linea accowit servicing. supennarkeu. 1~ IS/hrs mission proeram that is Suian 631..QZl.3 one licensee to le am the
medical, dental, life in· b I u e prints & use New Rest 1 u rant-Salary commensurate during week. Call John: the best In town. 0pr of. skills to manare. broker
•ASSOCIAT~ Specialists in
Temporary Cleric1J
Penomel
540.0400
18004 SkYJ)9lt Bl.
surance, etc. Salary measuring devices. 11 Muicao/Ame rlc1n wit.heap:~ (714)5~ lice is one of the oldest commerriaJ reaJ estate.
commensurate with ex· months experience re· Food icceiitJng applk•· l•--.. 11111111---M.u!.M~..-.... -... eatabliJhed in Newport locome from mrmt l•-------perience PLUS great quired. Apply at: 1020 lions for waitreues. IHYNOIY I nw "' r-v~""'" Beach wllh a very pre-while you learn. Super SICllTAIY
Swte Z3S Irvine
Y~~~~s':i~am~~ W.17t.bSl,C.M. cocktail waitreues, CO.OIDIMATOI I ~abb"ec chaXlnin.,C.!!,." st11ious location. Call beMfit.s.lifemsunmce; toruoestablishedrealty
hostesses Must be 18 na sm o,.... Y Will for an appoint· I•------• health iDsw-a.nce Ir den· firm iD Coron.a del Mar want to be paid for your DIY CLEAHBS 1·d E Corporate bdqtn. fo r Geri64&-4040 t _., llC--... tal plan. Ccnact Keo, Tbil is a one s«ttUrv efforts, ..i-ue call for Counter -rson, will years 0 · xp pre· state wide financial · men .vrr7J)O. ....,._...ST -~ -oo. ,,
..,,. r-!erred-not necessary. · Ii F b' MOO~OITS Re ..... ,..;,,,..;.. 'or•......n... .,,,,..,, office ind there is 111terview. I l r a 1 n Ca 11 after 1erv1ces irm as IOD ~~ywvv.oa• •' ., ... ~~ .. ~!!!!!!!ml!!l!l!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I llOIDeUlin to do P IDe lo 30a .... f La Apply in peraoo. Wed & ls'-d T · to Too il53-9363 ........... Tl Oran1e County in· F 1 waya I ef"50Dne pt : m.,,,_ or ura : Thurs lOlm·nooo; tPM· .. n . Ol'\1110ven ry ~-•-. SALES Musthaveexcellitottyp. &42-4321. Ext. 277 642-~. 6PM. Formrrty Olarlie & mailroom operations. Models needed All SALES surance firm . PBX ex· MO in& skills and ~t ORAHGECOAST Electricalassemb1unr.c1. Don's -~"-"t . ....,..... Shipping, receiving, Types. Meo, Women• nusisour31llhyearsell· per. 10 uset. Pd. ro personality. Startin!' y r-.. ,.......... -'"' I ...L....:... • Child No . beneftls. cau: Pauline, P104r~ • DAILY PILOT lion Some exper. may Cape Dr. Laguna suppy oa-.wg. mven· · rtn. expenence ing fine Southern 963-0Ml .....-5'W19"W salary$1Dpermo.Call
330W Ba St be req'd $400 pr hr Nifuel. tory controb, mail pro-nec•asiry.548-?7&2 Califo rnia homes.""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~PIOO/MO Mary Kay weekdays
C ·MY · HPSSys•.:.__;.,"'""'~" '1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I cessin1 "spedal pro-...... ,._ ..__ Perhaps-· would en· r-We need 6 oew sales 8:30toS.sn.4400 Olt.a esa ™,,__,.. I'!! jects. Eaper. req'd. "" ~--~~ EOE IMF Call: 76G-050l. 9:30 to EXPERIENCED joy /oin111g a flrm active llCB'T /TYPIST rep's yesterday. New ~~ hKllffftSec'!fwy -.u.uos SPM a.u. 11·7. Coov. bospt. In u1ury residential Established export mn1mt. bu created an John Wayne Tennis Full & part time. AU Beach area. Free mjr areas such u Bia Ca· mktg. firm needs in· overflow ol confirmed CLERICAL
Part time. Fine Retail
Store in N. B. needs versatile person who is
detail oriented & can use 10 ltey machine by
touch. Will train to post
s ale s on com · pulen1/olher general of.
fi ce task s Wo rk
srhedul.e flex.ible
AT EASE: FASHION
ISLAND
Call Mr. Cline Mon-Fri.
644-SO'lO
Cocktail 1irl wanted.
evensngs, 14.5 E. 19th St,
Costa Mesa
COC KTAIL
WAITRESS~. No ea· per nee, we tralD, also
for ba rt ending at the
American Bandstand.
open10e soon to live COD·
certs, rock Ii roll & din·
1ng & dancing. Ca ll
953-55119. 2'1'22 No. Ma in
..§.I.SA.
COOK /Housekeeper .
Live in. Can manage Sr
adult home for 6. $.!>SO per mo. with 1 wk. pd.
vacation. 6:9-2100
Club, needed Im· areas. Uniforms rum'd.j!!!!!ll!!!!lll!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ medical, dental & life. nyon, Spyglass Hill, telligeot person to app'ta.
mediately. Must have Ages 21 or over, reli~ 1--------Only positive attitude. Irvine Terrace, Linda answer telephones, & WE 'RESELF.CTTVE experience. ref's. llnt welcome. Noexper. nee. JAMTOI 642.sou Isle, etc. greet visitors. Various EVENING
typing speed, English. Apply : Universal RaleighHJJlsHospitalin If you are pmienlly ac· typing duties, accuracy WORK/WKLY PAY
spelling & grammar. ProtecUon Service, 1226 Newport Beach bas an NURSING live .In reaJ est.ate sales a must. Pleasant sur· i----"~=..;:--=-----CaU Mon-Fri. alt 9AM, w. 5th St .. Santa Ana. immed. opening for a R.N.orLVN,dlrector of do you have immediate roundings. Excell,.._ ______ _
640.8830 for appt. Interview h11: 9-12 & 1·<4, Janitor. Day shill Ex· staff dev~pmentfor 74 Is unlimited access to benefitJ & salary. Gd. ,..
Female live-in compa. -'M""o=n-·F_rt..;:.;·-----cell. fringe benefits bed SNF. Newport Con· the president of your oppty. for advan cement. SA&.a-
nion for 7lyrold lady on ExperiencedHairStyliJt package.Forint.erview, valetcentClr.646-77114 company,orlshehidden IMS Equipment. Inc. OfffCISW'PUIS
a walker. Mustbave own needed for Calta Mesa calJ: J01hua Whiskey, Nursina away 10 an iYOry tower 2805 Barranca Rd .. Newport StaUonen, a
car. S5SO/mo. Eves aaloo. Lease station or 714~5'7QS.EOElll /F ~YMa.r. removedfromt.beacene. Irvine.EOE l~co.seWn1offlce1up-
833-0379 commi.stioo. !!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3-ll fr 11.7 !'def. 6.iv. Our president is avaUa· llC--...ST P 'es to b111iness hu full FISHING TACKLE sales &31·!754 bol wilh U ble. Do you need add1-...-.. _... Ii part Umeopeninp for
& service, f /time. H .. •STYUST • ..._..., put~ioo. ae':cC: ~,:·. tlooal trainin1 to help Narmco Materials Inc .. retasl sales clerks. We K 1 d of -Fulltimeooly. you increase your eam· leading IDlllufacturer. will train Is offer pro-
C ~0:, ~ gfei 5 h i~a~lfi· To 65~ with dientele. ----=545-=....:7c::cU4=---~. mJr~.'T!c~~: inp? bu an immediate opeo· apecta !or advancement.
mecbarucaJ ability nee. Beautiful, fr iend~ ~Seaehiz Flea b 64Z-I064 Esperienced or Inn· inl for a Receptionist. Comprebmsive benefits
X salon F-· .. '--ls'-· n . -n·en"-' """"'may -ell The successful can· packa1e. Personnel Int opp'ty for young · IUWUll ,. • Sm Ne_._.. ach ,... '""' 1~ .. Ne -port Bea "h .. ....,.. _,..._. profs't lrom our color didat.ewiUhavehadex· ,_7-""1:.!.4--"'55:..:.7....::·9212=----man . Beach area. ~ • o ff ice. Civil lit, ~ ..._.... ·-Salary open. Write {714Ff0..ll8l Corporate and Real Ptr temp. Small C.M. videotapelist.in1,sales perience on a Pulse SALESPERSON Full
Classified Ad H28, Daily HAIRSTYLIST /Cutter Est.ate. Call Lisa. (7l•> ollke. lbr. 751-6892 lraininJ procram which Board. typing skills of time. Jewelry, antq. &
p·1 PO Bo d d · d we feel is the fioest 55wpm & enjoy meeting lurnishinp bkrrnd. pre· ,.~_ot.M . . x 1560, llmnee eB 1mmbope . Full -"e~m=6'-------ORDER D~K available. the public. f'd. 642.9918 btwn 10 & 6, """'ta esa,92626. ' e.. usy s · Work LIQUOR CLERK. exper. Exper. belplul Apply in N rm ...uers ""' /k ds Ir ad""-We are not a fraocbise, a .. ro ""' . a wm· Mon.Sat. FRONT OFFICE w 1 ....... 1164-8680 40 hr wk. Mllll be over person only Mon-Fri, branch or subsidiary-petit.sve starung salary 1~:.=.=..="------
DENTA&. OFC Ring Glider Mla. needs 21. Also Stock Clerk. 8 · 4 P M . 3 3 0 4 W . just headquarters. & c 0 mp re hen s iv e Sales , ... -
H you have experience someone with the ability part·time or full time. MacArthur Blvd, Santa We have opea.inis for 8 benell.ts pa~ge. ~•
in insurance . collections to perform multlple jobs 548·2112. 2944 w_ Cst -=An=•.;..·------few highly.motivated l ~or "!!mediate COD· Exp. preferred. Must be
& strong telephone com· fi:om metal ~~P to ship-..:H.:..:•;:...oYe1..a :..:.N,,_.,.B:::.:... ____ PACkA.... persons who have a dt· side~auon please caU: able to work Sat. & Sun.
munications ability we :.~~ece1YV1g. Phone Ll9UOI CLal Sm. electronics firm sire to be more sue· Glorta Caton. 5'48-1144, Other hrs. to be •r·
need you ! 63H~ F . M t 'd overlookin1!)Cean wants cessful. For an in· ext. 342 ranged. Wages based on FULL T' P/t' HARDWARESAL~ /tim.e. a .ure. exp : ..._ terv1·ew •PPointment MAIMCO exper. Af:: in penon: ime, sme. P /ts' me, aeml·retlred or will tram. A. pply . person to""" power sus>-K R H Ans. serv. No exp. nee. type A~y in pe . lOAM.2PM. 896 w. 19th plies. Some lifting is re· w1t.b the sole owner Is M....._ IK. erm 1 ardMware, Call btwn 8 & 4:~PM , · rson St CM SeeN cord keeping involved. founder , caU Wesley N. ASubsidiaryof 2666tlarborB .,C Co-r~E Mon·fri,646-BOOOEOE Crown ware, a1o7 ·• · onn F ......__,., le T I c 1 Co "" . E Cout Hwy CdM Live in hlekeeper non· /time, ~its, c an ay or. e anese rp. S.. a., IOAM·2PM. . School. CHHEIA&.OfflCI .., smkr adult hsebld. environment. $640 per W .. yM. T9WlorCo. 600W. Victoria St Exp in sales. Selling
SECRETARY
Fast paced ad aeency
seeks venatile and or· ganiied sec. for art
director of large art
dept. Must type and file.
Ca llSuuybetween UHi.
55'-0460
SECRETARY /RECEPT
For busy So. Laguna
Coldwell Banker Real
Estate Office. Must be
able to wort indepen·
den Uy. MllSt relate well
w/public & peers. R.£.
license helpful but not
req'd. Call Carman.
495-9444or131-'500.
* •SICaTAltlS•• Sb90/RE/NeatCo$18,000
G. 0 . IT90iSpellS1UOO
Costioaak /F1113,800
Bk Pl /Cit /Corpll.3,200
Exp Comllltant Oun
Liz Reinden Aey, lnc.
4020 Blrd!Est'64EOE
Newport/13MUO/Frtt
SICllTMY me.
Garden Grove. 642·0Ul Person to assist boss in HOSTESS. Min. 3 yn ex· Cle1nina/Lndry 1175-9672 mo. start. ralse 30 dys. KEAJ...Td'Rs Costa Mesa, Ca92627 security products.
CallSharon.7!4-752-9484 CRANEOPERATOR,ex I ff' k perience. Lunch & din· 645-31193 21l1SanJoaquinHUls EOE. ... M/F Guaranteed future. Ho d H d & genera o ice wor . oer sh'"· avail. A'?fily ·-------• N -ee ..... war · ow a r per'd for boat yd Apply 8 30 • 30 Good .,.., p---..... ew.,... • i ... u Reep for HB n.."metrist. Leadin1 Co in Oran•e
Personnel/Advertising
Dept. bu opening per
expansion. Npt. Bcb.
financial services firm.
Gd. typinr. shrt.hd .. exp.
req'd. Non.smkr. Call:
640-0123 btwn. 9" 2.
Barnard : ... : . pay, dilly IOamlilZpm. he LOAN ~ ·-, ...... ,,0 .,...., e In person at ZZ1 20th St. good benefrta. Ught typ-Barn Restaurant • Supplement income, let ~ Pa rt·time, aft.ernoons. County. CoutaJ Safe Co.
..:.N"'-B=-."------ing, answering phones a Saloon 1'""'" R dhill own hours, work from 1--------1----=963-=-=m>=----=*'~7:..:233=------IOOlkm'llF/C p rr for clothing store in
Fashion Island. Exp.
enon in A/P, payroll &
dbl entry journal thru
tria I ba I Call for 1n
tervsew appl a~ IOam
daily. THE LOOK
644-6500
must. Ask for Tom. ' ........ e PROCESSOR b i CUSTOIM.AL B3l·33'1Z. Ave,Tust.il}. ome. Ambit oua· IHlllWtS.. IKfiffStc SALIS..S
Studeot needed for 2 , HOSTESSES, open Ina orttnted Call for app't Opeoinr for one ez. N pt Center I Des ign Loe a I Cosmetic Co.
weeks to till In for vaca· ~?U doo t ~a gun to soon or: Cowity's lf you have eJfperience -'557'=-·;:;.;:5"1'-'-S=------periencechalelpenoo to Plua. Good typist. Unllmi&ed inc oppty
l1onin1 custodian, Aug. draw fast . .-hen y~u newest · spot The in loan proces1ing with Part time Sales ' Mkt· sell preJtiljoul bomet. Cheerful phone voice. 1-=642=-=-633t=•a..=9;..::;to::..;6::....... __ _
17th thru Aue. 27th. place an ad in lbe Dally American Bandstand either• loe institution. inaeam .... mooey We have rreat location, Pleuant surroundings. SAW~
Minimum 11e 11/yn. Pilot Want Ads! Call featurina live concert, escrow company or lsz.3232 professional associates Single girl office. Up to CaU 67~ZIB. now-642-S678. Uve TV shows. rock &c within the construction and over 25 million in SlOOO mo. 75.9036. Ask Yo&. men, stereo
II dinin •clan . industry, we are in· I•-------liJtln11. For confidential for Norman Jacobsoo or speaken, tramporaUon
., ---''"' We offer excellent General office work Corporate PllJI Realty RENTAL AGENT.Busy Sales, •••••• ~ la1·1y· p1•1at row18eOtt~ra' 10.fuJI. ~ ~~ .• ~_;t teruted ID you. Part~ WOii interview call Kevin, Jack Armslnlc!,g. provided Call. 540-7653
• • No. Main, S.A. benefits and a com· available In Cltculallon Teo.9333 property mgmt ofc, '9DIO IOOIOCl9a HOTEL pet.itive salary. Please office. lllowledae of must have real estate Excilinl pn>duct.s with
FULLOIARGE e fteld Sales S · e HOTIL submit 1 resume or ap-typewriter and 10 Key llC.,./TYPIST Ii c . L•e uo a B ch mgmtoPJtylnNB.
Maintain all journals & • UP8rYJSfr • MAMAall plication outlinlna your nece11a ry . speed A DEPENDABLE ' Gt~ 1----"6'0-.--:.5<83=---
eeneral led.ger. Prepare • w led • .,. It experienceto: helpf'UI. mature penon needed Rental omce Person for SICllTMY · ' • L1m11ed openings availabl"' in the Or6"ge an ior..., Im pro-b •-adjust iog entries <.: t f If .. .... ject lo Lliuna Beach. Approximately six for usy air c:ond. • 100 unit 1pts, Costa Excellent oppt'y with
Clnanclal statements. e Oas area. or se ·motivated, career • Also, maoare small PO .... DEROS .& boura perday, Oellible. refrl1eraUoo contract· Mesi. Show fl mt apts, growth orieoted com· Sunervisepayables & re· oriented ind1v1dual who can work with • " A Good pbme peraooality Ing firm. Neat ap· Ji ah t b kk pg s pany for._._.., friendly
c:elvablea. Ftrm In Costa • Fi~ld Sale:' Peosptle .. Train, motivate and • :::~~=~ :::~ HOMES nffessary. pearance ' rd phone days /week. $800 Mo. penon w ~. tome
Mesa-Nonsmoker. Call • ge resu ts. at1on wagon or van 1 I d HumanReeources Excellent company voice lo handle Import. Live off premises. shorthand, previous Carole, 754-UMO • necessary. Ex.ceplional earnings, plus Job • ~p;r e!:::.!~~iuH~n· Department benefits, paid health, cUenta. Varied clerical 1142-4907, wkdys 10-4. up. Good benefits, non·
BOOKKEEPER . related benefits available for the right ve:lU:-ent C.O. tlm Sa~ 2082BuslneaCent.erDr, life and dental In· d utlea, mu1t type llSIDM....._ smolclna otnce. Rusty
Ptrforadagency nrthe • people If you can produce results not • V' n•vd Sult ••w lrvlne,CA9711.5 surance. 50wpm . Non·tmoller. . Pelican Restaurant Airport, Newport Bch .• Just talk about it, c<1ll: ~·0694 for . 1ce11tt1M . e .. .,_ Applylnpencm, Con11der2peoplepltto TbeSanClementelnnts 54119322
Not full c harge . interview.Ask for Mr.Chance • LolAyelaeood AnF.qual()pportllDJty SIOWtlt Bly~.1 equal I f/t po1ltlon. looking for a d~mlcl -=:;...;·='-----
familiar w /pe&brd. • Empio)'V M/f AlkfOC' !Ileen wrute S1l1ry commensurate eapertenced In lvld~• SICllTMY
Service Station Atten·
dant: Full time, 8 days a
week. Start SUO br. Ex·
per. only. Start i.mmed.
Graham'a Unioa 76, :828
E. Coast Hwy, CdM.
67$-2276.
SERVICE SI'ATION At·
tendant. Full time. App.
ly: Chevron. 1251 N. Cat
Hwy, La1 Bch.
Service Station Allen·
dant. experienced,
nlrht1. fulltlme /part·
time. Apply : Mac's Tex·
aro, l850Z Beach Blvd.
H.B. 98Mi06.
SEWING MACHINE
OPERATORS
SaUmakg. 547.1344
SH .... DB'T.
TltANI
Excell. co. btneflls.
Steady wort. She must
be rood with numben .
CM. Dellnlnic, 5U«13
ne&otiable. 951.~ • ~t • .-Production Dr .. H.B. manager poaltion. Call America'• larfeat law Sitter for 5Yr old n.r Spr-Non-smoker. Salary e ~C e ~~2~~~=~l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~f.,q=ua;l~~=~i,y~Em=plf=T~ w/119. Aire Rite. 5331 for tb•lr mldent/nite lacobylrlle,.t1,oneol
-r---.. ......... Pete MltcheU Tues·Sun "-• ... ~-an u ln•d1le, Wettminster, BOOKKEEPER. Coiut. a Hue aomelblnl you --fr POt .ut03 •u11J • -• d:ya call Jacquie
"computer exp. pttf'd. • ~ ay Street ~ want to aeJJ? Clwllled Selllblnp fut wtth Daily R~PONSIBL! Person :,";'::!. ~~ !°:. S58-ll5I
Smith 8ro1. Co .. CM .. Costa Mesa, CA • adtdolt well.M2-5i11'71. W · to clean " maintain pllcanll *Miid po11e11
5541 e Equal Opportunity Employer e ,11.ly Piii home. MUlt have ref's. rd typin1 1111111, or· STAllF
IOW• •••••••••••••••• ........ 1:30am-12:30pm Mon· auutlonal 1111111 Ir Ell!~~ler\ PartUme. for crowin& " fri. Sttrt l/br. _..., ablUty to work under needed for t ~:::.~~o~ 11·1~ Plat • • ":,u;~-rtor~ ~~'!·t ~'o'::.:; journal emy --~ra~·
orJelf •••• ~ •• ... dtt..6M.n l...W •• prep.ta makin&. btneflt1 + salary la ~l::~.N::r:~ :ep:~~ BOS p ERSONS. Ex· •• ., I n ... uw "'ml meat •tidna. catll re· nerotiable. P•ue CID
perinced oely. Lunch 6 • • • lf you baYe at le11t one year'• Pperienc. • litter. 9-4 J(on.·Fri. 1_Si=--lv.;..;:la'""(2=JJ-..--=-=""-' _ -"NOi"'"'-'ll50=.;...· ----
ctinJMr tblftl avail. App-• S.ral Assil Id • • in prlnt.orieet.ed work. have aood inpldc • S./ltr. Alloneedap. M-SICT....,. Med I Dll•Wf ~ 1l '" til 2 pm I• dlltO and apetlal sensitivity iMllllllq 11 M•r 1 • at IUO/br ,_ lacellent comp11y •• 1 .., am · • •••1. e • type1pedn1. 1omt technical drawf.na e • . .., · a.illirtd by ,......tot
8lm Rella=1~ ~ a. • a!llllty1 and uodtt1tand the basics " ,.. • .'!!:at m.tor a1ey •1'orllonte :rrn-·!':' ~~".:
Saloon. 14112 • ~·•J .. • tail .. detlp and art '4,.._IUon f« Q;;;pportuallJ for ='::"In Irvine. vance ""'
AYe.T!lt!a. Stre: • r.ICI~ ftlLA • • ~=tu~.fo=~:;; • Bartender• Hott••· t-i-1, ... ~~pm.a: _..r_.M=·-:_•_&_•1U1_St_ .. Elperanced Hair t e U IUQ UllM e e .1~1 l..j,ln _.._ e pi~----""--'f.; "'·... 1r -~ ........... DMdf!d tor Calta eta I ~/llcal&D, uua I or loa'leGOe wov -.,... ""'• _.. E'· Appllcam should
•alon.!Aut ttatJon or e lmmtdlateopeninf for venatUe •· e KIDS -e iii lkllled la lll~haMt OI prod\lcUoo from e . for Kerb or uon. vutle•Uyn u per -•' .. '-a1 . ..,,. e dMdual. Mlllt be capable of haDdl· e e ~I PT w'° NflSHl. •ndedab6tbutto .. !'"'to •• ...:Ml.:;;:M'l...::.:.l.:.:.l. ___ -i topeaeepoeitka,hllh
w m _ _. 1111 ffft·paced, varle\t and inter.l· -., t 11 ·PIC ' nm dtlrte ol COWD•iU· t....,=i..=.=~::..:...--
Carpe1ter needed. ,.11 e 1nc dutl• 1or ...... .,..,., e~• e su~MER JOIS e "°"' tor, and 11av• an .. ~ .. ,,.,. e -. •w.. ~~
dme for small cllltOm • • penowJ a4mbtittntor. Call: e "' • • :::' ~=·~~°!'~::'= e • o1 ~~~ rr.-~~~=. .u..m,r.at.mtwappt, • •• Wat<'itt)~lfc:.:.aflllllntlDlftt. •• !~~rr 6. Ubtrei co.
a. Call for appt. I Ormjitc..t e Earn 130-'80 per Week. PW "'-flu. Cal t..mi..1~~·==--
·SlS e I TriNR & Prizes. Qil .... e • -w "•.--.. e 11 Ttadltr • ..,......., '"'· hlrPllt ~ -· ay ~ llCll'l'AAY •••htt fell tt .. e CASHlll r ~ • , 330 W ... , Stnol Q &e .... 1"4. • COiia llna, CA • OPPICHNIMID •-1-. -· ~-~ . e Costa Mesa, CA e e f4ual Op~Uftlty ~ I ••. 11 llCSMa.o.a.a n Tr.. Car .... • F.quaJ Opportumty lqlloyet • .1-.................. illililllilllllilllm_ ....... , 'J~~ J" '" "' , .......... llii ::;.. ...... --•
_ .. ~IYH~$ill!ii!Jl&•l,!L~·!·~·~·~·~·~·~~·!·~·~·~·~·~~==::::~~======~~='v~~~~·~·~·~·~·~·~·!•!!•!·~·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!--!!!•~•·~~Plilbl .... ._..,.. .... .. ~ ..... .
\
~w-..... 71• ~ 1010 IOIO Wt IOU Milcel••• IOIO Mltc:.':Ja• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 30, 1981 DI -Ila ••&• w '°'' reo AJl/f'M 8 t.r1rk, tPCdlnlnt rmltt.f100,2 ....................... lotlfa,Me-1.t ~wdll/ Tl'Kb 9160 ~ -• .................. •1• ................... ••••· ••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• I • .......... w-A....I t1to
T·"--lltf rluutor. Worlta SecUon1J 1Gl1 l60, 1w1 u uette, turntable. 10 ~ bllltt, S30 ea Wan•~ .... , ........... -~r cul •••I • •• to~" Sc.-.. t 110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••o••••••*••ff• T"ld KA~-... __.llM'7'5llfterS pm top dinette tztO,Qn rr• 0 ......... ~v-,... • ,.. -. O
1
,,..., .... ,, ... W ~ " r 1ra-. t'r-••· -bdrm -Iola • 'av· 1ollt1 Slll. Frener saoo. ,, j .,...,._ ttr ln Sood wort 'con ....................... ....................... It atsun ~ .. ...,.. Wlu1 An I gir;
tiah, hall Umt tmllktJ· I · neal S1llO. lMMt aoo fool table SIOO. Misc. 3 chain wlottomaJI. OJ dltlon. Thank you! Call YACHT DEALERS l974Y All.AJIAZIOMX camper Ir 111fper lrlt I.Ate model Toyoe.a; Ind
mtnt PO BOX fOllt U t• I t. Upr ahl Mattmaei/bouprinp; eacb. lfa112-1voutereo, ~·-___ Buardloc ladders. Verycoodcond.S400 Snrf, am/!mlrus. CB VoJ voa CalJ us
C . CA licnatu..-frost Free twin $7$1 full 985. ql.lff'O GARAGE 8AUS· Fura, · 61S«10: M4-O L D S T Y L E priced rl&bt S45-0Z22, 911.S-811119 I ~ '7f.4227 T AVll!
-t'rwar. Ub oew llOO. SUSud d11bel, fabrka. lttlcbto. 'S6VW body SZlO. Rffr1&2 TURNTABLE-with Cbp tVHS1_!&.12t YAM VIRAGO 1300 m1ks '7~ CHEVY Sco1bd1le
• ,......_ • MQ(U!1 no.oeo1 tooll. mbc .• most ever-dr f7S. '12 3llO din bike needle to play old 18 re-Sa I I boat ma• t • • Sacrifke my km your D1eael \'»T Ln1 Bed, ~ llARBORAllE.A Lo el Ethan Alleo dln ythln1. Meadow1weet ~· M4.e'1tleJdf ~tvts. 4 "d~"x11 ' · SISO aalo, save hundreds wlc•mPH 11'1t'U Slereo.
Are1outll'«lofWOtla.la1 APPLIANCESERVICE t:b.~. Hiid blrrb: Cul·dt·llC Un1veralty Blll: OIUI couch, $11$ w.ktl -3"X4 "'6"xl4' 175 Call~ saddle tanks. p/i, auto.
fulltlmerorpartttme BUY.S!IJ,REPAJR dropleal, 12131, 2 Ives, P rt trv._rn.sat. Stereo cass .. deck & ......_.. IOll ~~ '79 KAWASAKI 6.50 LTD .•SJ.tb ~ , i•u ....._ .. ,
W..,7 sus, cost MSG. Pr of M111U·family, U7e ShAn· mtll:es, Sll.5 Bike, too .............................. ,0 .... t04 Red, s.ooo ou C1rau Stake bed ror econom> "'u .. ~r:~:-;:0., .. , Wby oot try wort6n1 .,., IOJt cr 11tal 1amps, sso. non Lo, ~ M. (off o Rluon ban set, $100 ...... ~ ................. kept hnmac. M~t 11c pickup, xlot rood. 1275 pan time *>r ball U... -................. Robert Wood eentapt, Colle e bthi.nd Fecko I Las V!s Tak a aco..t.u: &uJtur w '79 35 Vlkln11 SP, Radar. 750. 494-9820 642-47~ ~
mooey.Worta toJ1bnBaMt.r.U..Alpifte11rls 3ad2.llSO. lbr111 Sa S case 65645-4415 Twin Cata Diesels, '76 Honda XL 250. xlnl '73 Chev~ too trurk. J'T' wk ln pQh new ol· I .,. M" wtlfflbut. wall la ue • ~7760 ISTATI WI $1 0003 d~f of t& r· 120 BASS ACCOR DIAN Bn~. P P 675· cond S6SO t•ompl loadf.d. SlSOO or
Ice In t he Sant a aew. .980-63lO RCA color console. House full of lovely $!9'.9S .... u, S:1~ "5. Cabin Crubier. &ood Uve 646-211$2 best offer ~QSS2 tna/C1T~J!U'C!: c.t.no.luperLeMans Motorola alereo, 1275; thin&•. exceptlonal 7~.8Ud inSlee ood 6'2-3379 aboard. Lo~at~d lnSellortrade'79KawaKZ '78Toyo1aPU.longbed.
r., ....
hill ~!r:~llMlllalof• -~·1a•·~e.A·t, nice sofa, &ood cond. valutt.Ooodprtces.Fri, d .!,.FlR!t!per g Ovation acoustic GuJlar Fr1rnce. 26 d1eael. 400 Xlol cond. $900 auto,campertop,rad10,
,k.buo IM~ IJS: Sat, Sun.~ Tuatin c:on ·-M. d b II l15,000.ln9=2.89Q. Helmetinc.84H781 mirrors, bumper !:~:. ·cau =i:. GJR 1iltpc1 IOOd cond. Phone l..e'TMNl Villaae Way , Uoit 86, , m.ax> ;~~,!~t 'coend . r S2~~ '19 24' Wellscraft Airslot •74 S uzuki 250 Dirt /Street _14$00 /b.§.Lolr. ~ 790'l
ForYourCar!
JOHMSOH & SC>t4
Llltc~
2626 Harbor Blvc!. ~· tlO Double Sofa·Sed tn good Tuatln 20 Uprlgbt ~ur $7S, 649-ZlllEvea. _ 110 , 220 lfP, dbl axle M IC. Xlnt Cood. S650 2 9178 GMC J Ton dualb
MATCHED Man's & cond, but needs re· AotlqueCoUectables Piwrbl~erllO, Port· MUST SELL! Spinet trlr & cutty cabin 646-4983 w/he11vy duty rarks 4~
TB.9'tOMI Women'• Raleleh 10 upholstering. ST5. Glus,map,clotl'lt's. a· r -. 760-0538 piano. good condition 1.!-t.~9~_2588 ---'78 HAWK like ne-;, has wdull bfit!ed manual
9>sta Mna 540-
SOUCITOIS 1pds, Game •how prizes 675-4159 301 Villa Daya, C.M DOGHOUSE S3S. lOOOoroffer. 6.'11 6356 13'~' in Ila I able w 19 9 receipt• on 1111 v.·ork ~t'll lmmed. open1n1s to hardly used. $7S /ea. 2 sofas, coffee & end ClusyOarageSale S:S...S1Z7 Evmrude 1700 Asking$11SOS48-8200 C7 14 1B94~
work pleasant ev~ina ~daxs tables, floor & table Antiques, bookcases, Boat&TrailerL5'$100as O*J!!!~""-"&1015 546-sem .79 Kx250 KA.WA.Si\KI ;9 fl50 6 cyl, 25K rn1.
Wt'.!l OVttc
lllltlool
hrs'. 3-9, Mon-Fri. No Fuji Finest (campania Lamps. aJI $500. Solid tv /atereo , ency is.BabyStrollerS40.Car •• ::r:r.:::: ••.•••••••• New 1981 Bayllner xlntshape,extras'S7S0 .:•>Odcon~ . selhnc. Hourly wage. profasioeal)!llbs l700 mapleebeetwithdrop-Americana, c,hlna, Seat $5 Scale SS US""D IBM Ex t' Sacnfl ce!l8tofferbuys. 752-21167 6456261 Callafter1nm·99&-0151 I 1 ·......,. front des .. •-sll\· a•A bed much more. All nice no 631 cv• "" ecu ive, """"""< --
For Your Good
VW, PorscMor AudJ
it:.:." • rep acementva ue. ~ a • ic • junk Sat. 9.4 ii7s 5 ·...-.. elec Gd cond S2SO or -. ....,..,_, '7S Honda C~. clean. Y..s 9570 Telephone Sales 875-2117 $150. 833-0864, ?S9-0l20 Palmento Way Irv ANTQ end tbl S20. Pr ofr 631-5419 26 MARSHALL runs good, S3SO or best ..................... ..
HOMEWOUaS LeclnCc•lw 9'TEAKWallunit -. -• · Danish mdrn: lo}lnge Postal meter for lease Lifeguard rescue boat, offer.673-86115 _ CLASSIC!
114#
~$20 hour Mr Oi&J, 101 l'Sl-911115 s:ns Mtsc, toomodels m(hanadnd ant.i-chrs ~ pr Pine hutch 50% of market Jeanne Two (2) 3l8Cl0 Chrysler 79 y A.MA.HA Yamahop--CHEVY y A)if
971·8302 S.9'90 que yman s $85. Easel ~ Sell or 5*4419 eng 492·Sl0l ex 243 XI t d SJOO N e w Pa I n l Ne w -, .... 9Mll1,..1025 Small antq. secretary gold mine) Sat Aug 1 s.5 trade 642-4~ · 1 s • 2 · -s EA RA y per 0 con TV ICtlileaAM ......... •••••••••••••• $150 Chair 150 Pm. 324 Si I Rd NB --Less lhan l yr old ROY AL 4 Runs good Must see' Goodyear Steel belted
VW ·PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E Coast Hi way
at Bayside Drive
Ne~Beach 67J.aKIO
Exper1ent"ed Good ~y. •wooez X 6'5 · · Rams Season Tickets Selectm sell rorTttting Weekender, 300HP, Ca11 Kurt~78 Radials IAll Weather •
benefits Apply 10 z• to 20· lone Fresh ~ AMTIOUES forsale.2forll00 _!J~wnter.1}50 54&6906 Mere radio. stereo, 300 "73Kawasalti3cylmder 2 Snow chains Great Prem1wn prices
pa id for an} used car
c foreign ordomnlicl
111 good cooditioo .
person· 573 W ~St , ttucll load arriving 7' Country French sora F.Rl-SA.'f-SUN9·5 7S2-0960, (213)463-1100 --hrs Trlr Best offer Call stroke Reblt engine lravehng, fun for trips
<;M. vrtt*ty. S.ft at W /ft. (purchased at Hoosiers, wash stands, LAWN Mower REEL.· llM~Cnll Tom.§428lSJ Newlires.s:B0646·1Z70 ~auti·restbed Loh or P 1 I Bullocks). only SJOO. dressers, desks, chests. self propelled, SI50. ........, 15' Starhte, 40 HP ----room New l'arpet p ta l J m &4S-98SS 7S9·~ tables, rha1ra , Amer EDGER 5548-3297 Wo rd processing Ev1nrude wllh trailer, '74 HoodaMororcyclel9K AM FM Stereo See Us First!
TYPISTS DocJs 1040
RegLSter today for local ••••••••••••••••••••••• tempc>raa assignments. KEESHONo Pups. AKC. 55 MJC Champ slre. M/F. Pel &
""""' a ll o w . P vt ply .
r-1"\. L'n-213,..,. aft6 m. u ,-II -Poodle. 9tudard. AKC llWOllARYl'lllSON"lllSE~ Cream 10 month Male
Houselrakted. S40-9155
AKC Silll:y Ter riers.
Adorable. shedless. shots. M /1225. F /$300. SS .
WAITER/WAJTR~FS Two female DoXle pups 7
Experienced only . weeks. Papers, AKC.
Lunch " dinner shifts Red. 9Q.<M28
avail ApplydaiJ,y ltam p;-;er ed. anr esslve
u t 2 pm The 81 l"ft britdle Pit Bull, l "1 yrs,
Restaurant 6 Sa*"'. dOet not fight wtother
14982 Redhill Ave. dop, oeeds male owner.
Tustin SlOO/OBO. 64-C-3656 or
WA. IT RESS Waiter aft. S, 557·3145.
w/car for wicker basket Miniature Schnauzer. lunch serv. 9:lH .~PM, male. 9 wb, SI.SO.
M·F. Earn SlSO.Sl7S wk· 675-4937
ly . Must· be neat, personable & eneraeUc. Miniature Schnauzer
979-0747 afl 10AM for AKC l\e1. WO
appt. Mi-n!B
WEWAMTYOU .. Ya. 1045 ......................
SECUTARY FREE Male Dachswid 9
MAHOlNG SALIS yrs, Mate Irish Setter
R e q u i r e s e o o d 2"'1 xrs. 891-3118
shorthand and typtRI Free to you. White
skills Ability to si;iell. A ~male cat. Dedawed.
special JOb wit h a Howebrobn.557·SS2B.
special boss Salary vr_, '° Jovine home
open ....,,le I wk old pup-
Vard Mewport pjes.CaU~
3324 W Warner Ave. Free lo good home c B t w n H a r b o r • German Shepherd pup-
F1un-1ew l Santa Ana PY 5 mos gentle female C714 )~0.5621 21193
E 0 E.__ 1-"'d=::::bc:.I ---,-d--A ora e 4"'1 mo o pup-
hWrc"-clM py. female, cood w_
••• •• ••• ••••••••••••••• children. ~5252
btiqws IOOS P!KING~E
••• •• ...... •••••••••••• Bea utiful adult M & F
FOR SALE l930's 1·9527 832-5085
kitchenware Rare Hall 2 Puppies, 7 mo. old, need and Fiesta Over 300 good homes.
pieces. Buy one M" 111 m~
840-4068. --Free m While Kittens * * * also Calico cat blind in I
Pat McCoy '!}'.=e-=960-0078~=-=-----
1633 Corsica Rd. 2 sweet kittens, need lov-
Costa Mesa i D ti II o m e to s t a y
You are the winner of t.oaethtr. M/F. 4 mo old.
TWO FREE PAs.5ES Mo•in1. Must see to ($17 value) love. 968-6400
RlNGUNO BR~. Free m•lti-colortd kil·
BA RN-UM 6 BAJ LEY te111, li1er-striped grey.
CllCUS whlte, onmie & black Aoabelm Convention caU 541-6219 aft. 4pm.
Center Aua. ~17 IOSO
Long Beach Artrui •••••••••••••••••••• •• Aug. lt-23
To c111m pa"". call Danh modmi ~kwood 642·S678, ext. m. Paaes diaal h!Wt wttb 6 new
must be ellchanged for m •f c ' I n I ca o e d
reservedseatutbox cha 1rs·l275:00 B~nt
0 f r 1 c e p r 1 0 r t 0 glau oak china cabinet
performance (an tique re'!rod.uc-* '* '* liDnl-SZIS.00. King-sized -~~---1 maple headboard with ·
Antiques. reg. clocks. mnn tlll'Md spools.
$250. Wash bas1t1 m. Beutytest mattress &
S7S Trunk. $45 Med. gprlngs-$250.00. Ca II
desk, SSS. 631·S979. '71-7352 after 5 p.m.
CASH Rei~ter 1927 * * I BUY * *
S48-3297 Good used Furniture &
EST"'Tl'u• • AppUances--OR I will "' _. MHorSELL forYou
C I h oak pine primitives system, xlnl cond. ~.500 good cond S750 Call miles. Perfecl cond Casset•a. 6 doors Win o m p el e o u se • . BIRO CA.GE JO' Wrought r best of'er Call Kalh" 1000 ••9.3758 "" ·~~ilii~iili• furnishin$S, & hsehld 1827 Pine St · H · B Iron flOO 0 1 ' 497 275S ; · ""'---dow, ~lep van Owned by
items. Livmg rm, dining 960-4607 548-3297 .i.'7l4J 700.otoo , 79 ~ONDA C~. 4 cyl, Christian Sl777 080
rm stereo TV's misc Garage sale 9am _ GOIMGOUT W•ttdll lostoft J7K m1, xlnt·like new. 7~0Z7l m~tsell.7~ . sat /sun . Va~uum , CAR Top Carner extra OFIUSIHESS! Whol.r.131-1196 always gar'd famng 1975Chevyvan,t-xtell
(2) Matching Club Chrs bedsprda. crafts books lrg ZS cu~~· Priv business must sell 18' ba} boat wood hull. helmet, R~548·8569 l'Ondition S3ll001offer
0 rig $950 /ea. now misc. 2829Sha.!itar~GM ~~ Jete Stained Glass Sharp Copier, desk wall bit in 1957 by So Coast. '77 360 Yamaha. 6000 m1, 875-6400 'Hll8 I l.111~11 Hl\d
175/ea. xlnt cond. small Jewelry 1070 Out~t including Cabinet unit. Projectors. draft Nds work. Best offer xlnt cond, crash bars. 1972 VW Van S320llor hei.t t '"1,, \1 .. ,,, .>iu 0:1.'lO
chest 564S-20M ••••••••••••••••••••••• .12@675-3175 ing table, couches. Slip avail Bal Is l lug. rack, S800 Cll lJ orrer.musti.ell WEIUY
King-size box spring & Gorceous 125 ct. carved '77-KIRBY H M i·n rhairs. t ypewriters . 760·8618. p~_er1e.~o:maft_3 67J.42'75 USEDCARS&TRUCKS I d th t pend l 0 I ome a calculators. steel shelv • "'CIFtC" 41 Moto H S•tl mattress, x nl con , ame, J~8688 an . n Y tainance System. ~II at-ing, many others (7141 rA A r OMft, 9 Autos W.t.d 9S90 COMElNOR
00. 64&-4519 J!!QQ.L§ __ . -. tachments : XJnt Cood _496-2008_ 1700 ~a Iser Dr Like New only JO hrs Rettt/Storacp 160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALI. FOR
Oiningroom set and misc Rolex 18K Preside!lt Hid Asking $150. 960-S844 .;--"--IOl7 use SACRIPICE David ••••••••••••••••••••••• WI': l'A y TOP DOLl:AH FREE >.mAfSAL
furniture den clasp. New tn box. . ,...., Ftaser (714lfil~~ WECAHSELL ror top used rar~ Corm1er·OeLlllo
?all642-3468 ~· 63l..aJOOor646-8812 S~~S~Nse!~~~a~ol~~ ;(;;;~;~k;·s;·ni·&•sJ;• Weekend on ~pt Bay 2.8 YOUR R. V. foreign , domestics or CHEYROUT
King m.e bed, Simons Diamond GIA papers. s e 1 e ct i ve game 5 B b • bb" t $5 rt Luhrs Twin screw ny 5$-l~ classics u your car u. 18211 BEACH BLVD.
Hide-a-bed, Wmg chair. VVS2·1.62 round $1800 641-0366 days 759-1592 ~~Ira 1 s, mg bridge spolfisher 16.Sailboal&Trlr80sqrt extra rlean ~ee us HUNTINGTONBEACH
Miscellaneous. 569-7439 Call eves. 548-4356 -eves , • ---, w slip SBSOO 67S 3t61. o r s a 11 Ide a I r or Fl RST ' 847-6087 or
en la luaJU1CJu UJrS • . 1 & r h Spiece Dinelt.e Set Brown rot w cage. S2SO SL" 1 p J ACK 2 4 19 7 3 .JIL ~ 7SJ 4~7 __:~'-·=~--Ori I ___,A __ ..... t 5 A very r,,cial cu.st de· -I Blue front Amawn I llr 67S 1~6 -b· I k ~ 549 3331
dwrs. Sl00/080. Rttord sign go res water Xlnl Cond l!O, n. • • 9
la er o 49Nt64 pearl bracelet Call for 646-266I aft 7PM I 964-5152 flybridge. lWlll Voho s Tra1a.n, Trcrnf 170 k Autos, i.ported
. · appt to inspect 644 0323 -~ . ' LHASA A.PS() 170'i., 2 bait tanks. out· •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dinette Set $50. Chest of eves Terrific Sparush Galleon s months Shots up Lo ngg_eri._Jl(XXJ 548 5357 64 ALJO. 15'. llOO 2nd & Audi 9707
drawers S2S·S35 , --·--08-0 5'Sh1pModel OnlyS800' date Male AKC .111 33 Ftp y l Goldenrod.Cd~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Recliner S40, Uphol Ch Misc1lu10• I 640-8688 paeers. $1.'iO 646-~ dies .. I sport'fuhe~n c~r .67~ • • lft o,_,, co.ty ,8 Audi S<m. Wbte Auto.
836 5977 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bikes S7S & $50 Console " C d I I 13'. 2925 HarbOr Blvd Low miles Crw.se AC Elegant. sofa & lovese;at, REDWOOD 2 X 6'S TV w/stereo SIOO Misr l'icmos & OnJcas 109 $103 ,000 Sale pme. ·1x2lnla~oinnad1· tl1roan1 e~ooo COSTA ~1E:.SA Snrr 63_!-4717 Ev __ _ •••••••••••••••••••••• t'>!) 900 2tJ.562.2859 .. . .., -S800 new, sac. S3SO 6/pc. 2· to 20' long Xlnt deck· clothes & Furn SUIOO '' ' ----646-8737 aft_ i:nm .!_79-250_0 h PIANO low upright G"'l"'"l"'IO"'TS ~ Amtln 9709 bdrmset,Sli:iOnew,sac mg Fres lruckloadar· 646·6738. (Spinet ) w benth A':"~· *A T;i~.Utttty 9180 ~00. European ~.lass rlv:ng wpeepkly S1 ave. at Pool Tab~. 7' Brunswick~ Beaut wood, ivory key~ This •••••••••••••••••••••••
dmette set. S3SO. 19 rol-5:; rt ca 1 J 1 m very good condition. !_700/oHer 67~SS__ WHIHftdOlltv! 4" 6 trailer w 'hitch. like
or portable, SlSS. Xlnt 646·~an me -$1S0.892·:1M9 Low red orfan, new, 3 '81Models21i,, ft Day new $400
cood. Delivery. 549·9252. * * * Metal tool box for rick up loade me rhythm. Cruisers. 260 H.P I tO 640-6310
Boys Fire Engine Bunk lob Ftlows truck 175, whee chair S2200 /0BO cust tand b1mini lop, Auto Se a l'arts--
Beds. Needs work flOO. 9040 Ma.u Cr $75, oak desk 185 --857-8029 ~ft. 5 boat cover & A " •. 9400 Call aft S. 642-1236. Fountain Valley 642-4610 $12,995 CCHIOnff 0-xler Bdrm Set. Anti· Wurlitzer spinet piano, I I 0555 ••••••••••u••••••••••• '"' You are the winner of Newport Beach Athletic xlnt cond. 1750. 714 _f94-SERVICE o~ que White 5 drawer TWO FREE PAs.5F.S Club membership, $100 S48-S313eves loats, Rlflf/ g-'· chest, dressing lib & chr ($17 value> 67J.l282, 6.3l-S06S
9050
Open 6 Days A Week
nit est ands k Ing RINCUNG BR~ Sewinq Moclliws 8092 Chart.r Mon ·Fn 7 »5 :.>
hdboard. & spread. S2SO. BARNUM & BAJLEY PARROT CAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SaturdaysS.00 5:00
64-C-0345 c•cus ~_!.iron 00. 499-!il&4 SING ER F'utura tn solid SHARKS!! Atlas e1rys..r1v.
7ft beige & brown sofa 5 Anaheim Convention WHEELCHAIR. Everest Walnut 3 drawer dtsk 38" Paremaker Yacht. 2929 Harbor Blvd
ft matching loveseat Center Aug. 6·17 Jennings Traveler. like 54&-l•JS sleeps 6. ror Charter' Costa Mesa
$1SO. 644-SS83. Long Beach Arena .M:!Y~J..67:& TY, Radio, Sper1almng 111 shark hs 546-1934
China Cabinet. pale Aug ~23 BIRD CAGE Wrought HiFi, St.no lotl hing orr Calahna Island ake bed ror eeonom}
yellow antique fini!h, To claim passes. call Iron 3' X 11-,• & stand ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213 377-7897~~kdill pickup, xlnl cond, $275
large storage & lighted 642·S678, ext 272 Passes $75/0BO Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr CH"...,_ f!l2·4752,~ gla .. sb-", $175. Swivel must be exchant'1 for 646-9414 wrnly Free deli\'ery -• ~ .,.,. "'-" ... 2• • so p B al Used 900x20 trurk lire bar chail"S, S3S each. reserv~ seats al x John Wa.,.... T-n•• Club ll~ 64&-l~ -,, ower o s Ch d U -h off 1 c e pr 1 or lo u beJ•hi-:,;~ C 11 o-aultful Color TV. 2 yr Trawler Y_!_rjlts_67!4860 $75 Pair of 1.5" .!mple an e ers, .., eac · -rformance ... em rs p •"-"'· a .,., ~ Sal
9060
ment L1res on 10 "''de Room siu red oval rue. ,,.. 851-8300 wroty Free delivery lovn, vw rims pair s40 $25 . 760-lOSS. Eves. * * * f · r -ll48 646-1786 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 3379 . Wk d' Hotpotnl re ng1 ree1er., ----Cat· I a 30 diesel . --n 5-lo••l•aans SlSO Sears washer & 2 portable color TV 's. S7:> a 1 n 7 ba ·
Roll top desk Pine 36" Helium Bouquets de dryer. $100 pr Lge I &: S90. Blk & wht porta refrlg, 11~ geSJJ 500g Autos forSde
Used one month RSO livered Perfecl for wooden desk.~ Brown b~~~l ~17~ e c · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 851-ml. everyocc1.1ion 873-4419 vinyl loveseat. SlOO Aud1ovoll carcass. S10 -IMPORTANT
Almost new. Sx2Va seat Int doors w/hdwe (2) Blue schWUUJ Pixie. S3S Sanyo am 'fm car cass 16 rt catamaran Wooden NOTICE TO wood & tinted glass, cof-80ll28. SIS ea, (2) sOxJO. 920 Notllngham Rd. w auto rev . S75 Art hull w1trlr & sails f600 Ht:ADERSANO
lee table, SlSO. Brau S20 ea Closet doors, c21 ~~t Bch. 642-5498 Audio car spkrs, $75 Needs some work Bet ADVERTISERS 1 Lamp Outed shade, SlOO. 93ll30. (2) 93x36, <21 IBM Selectric 2. Cotton Sharp rompuler cont 9 3 30. ~8684 The price or item~
Glass end table. $100 93xt2, SlO ea Gd cond nbbon Like new. mi stereo w cass der k. SUHFISH · $100 ad,•ertised by veh1rle
644·S983 644·6579 496-3714 dock. extra~. 1300 Xlnl cond 527 J?S8. deale~s In the ve h1<'1e Hard rock man1A dining G-EG· o --..;.,.. Ch...,t C-E--l L~G -F-a-;;-Craig cass player. S6S classified advcrt1i.tn((
""' as ryer _,.,, ~~ • ~l!i 7' Soilboat, columns does not in -set w /custom pads, l300. of drawers S20, Guitar Casabella, forward, re----.,. 'd ~496 304 I d r .. bl Dresser, bean bag, cher· ~· 64S·441.5 verse vanable speed. Pioneer 3 way loud sp .,qut_J! ~.: I c 0 e
1
3. ny appt •ca f t'
rywood colfee table, end light 'incl'd. Was S23!J. IOOW +. Z. JO''. 2.s'' t3" 13' SA NSHEE w lrlr taxes. ,i~ense. r~ns er tables & other all items T...n Cle T k 100 Jud 7""0986 SlOOea 644-6448 Xlnl cond s.535 rees, frnanre charges. • ......,.... l!. e · Y, JOr" -----fees for air pollul1on 1:on·
Sunder S800 754-0790 after L' dboM g Tennisp Club Membership ror lrg. xlnt. 1970 COoodLOR TV plays 968-226.1 lrol device certir1cations
pm. in r ' fully equipped Gym 8 very g ll5, '"' INTER&SrforSale or dealer documentar)
Area Rug, 9Xl2". SlOO, /offer. 8_!!>-6487 mo. .00646-9414 eves S4!J·2429 aft !!!J m 40' Cheoy Lee orrshore preparatioo charges un
club chr. OJ. Oak end Bar. 4 s~. ml Pool JUKE BOX --Quadranex 626 22 walls yawl Moonng al Lido less otherwise speoiried
lbl. S4S. lamps. SlS-~. lab l ~. l 1 g ht , ac · 1956 Seeburg xlnl cond per channel. Bic 980 Pen . N. B No quahry. b_.t_lhe adverllser 644-1096 cessones. llX>. All of· tiD.<.A ' ~1217 turntable w shure 1 n g 0 w n e r . • -
1
--8, f I bk fers considered ~-rt dg •-2u 1 12' 3 17141974-8962 ~s 50 ~· amf!S. cane-ac 964-:1370 Decorator Plant Sale' ca rt e "' ' rn S. :JBOT "ood cond $350 Clouics 9S20 chairs, 01ghl stand. . . · ---19291 Belhel Cir HB way spkers. xlnt rond n .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Arg.us & Bell-Howell Knitting Machme. nev. Sat 9.4 91)8.9805 S400 firm Call SCS-2077 & 5~12'7
projectors. screens Toyota l250. leave message for John MUST SEU.' 17. O'Da} PlETTIEST 848_2896 __ 64S-4519 Masculine canopy kg-sz _Gill '57 T-llRD --bed b k ,.,,r Daysa1ler. fair cond
We'll luy
Or Stll
Your Cll.'an
Import On
Can,i9nmf'nt• 11
Call Our
Uied Car
ManOCJl.'r
TODAY1!!
1&31 ·2040 495.4949
' Soddlebac~ llMW
Miuion Viejo
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED CARS
ALAHMAGMOH
PONTIAC /SUIARU
2480 Harbor Bl\d
COSTA MESA
549-000 549-1457
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportuml)
lo consider the purchas!'
or trade in or ynur clean
Pors('he Che('k with Us
Today'----~~!~1>~1
\ lt) I\•'•'°'"' ltlwlf
4;411 h•f'l (1!11wl• • 136 2:"J
WEIUY
CLEAHCARS
AND TRUCKS
COHMEll
CHEVROLET
,')01 Hdrbor Uh d n ~TA !'tH:.o,; ·\
546-1200 F A N T A S T I C 12 Harness Redwood ' ac gammon w • Sony 19·· Color Remote $2SOOo_ r off__er_6316356 IH TOWN! FURNITURE BUYS Loom w 1ccessories fee table. lraffic tight, Cont rol SSSO John --IEST OFFER!
Solid teak dinmg cable. 6 ~ $2SO ea. 7~3653• 759-61!94 10Mf-l2PM 67~ ~ HOBIE 14• boat & trlr. gd HIGH IUYll
Bruer chairs. antique -67~376! --Los Caballeros . Health RCA XLlOOcolorTV shape $8SO 646-7287, 'l2ff1 (~) Top dollars for Sports
mahogany sideboard. Niagra Thermal Heal Club Membership, S2SO 26"" console. good cond E l&th_.Nf! Cars. Bugs. Campers.
custom-made modern Massage Set Like new or ofter. Call AnswerAd $200rirm l~-~ Class1cwood des1gn 14' 914's.Audi's
sleeper sofa, two oc· 962.31124 !1542,642·UI0,2Ahrs Beautiful sohd wood Sunrish.ll001orr AskforU CMGR
casional ch~irs,colfee Tiffanf Membership, na-Misc••--Baruly stereo cabinet .§L~ VJOIMLtl~tNG~ table, bi:n VUlyl couch tiona cold card Musi W..ttd IOll ~l!!orooml846-<M3 loots, Slp1/ "~'"'A
a!1d recliner. steel desk sell 7S9-••••••••••••••••••••••• K E N W 0 0 0 9 6 0 0 Docks 9070 18711 Beach Blvd
kmg size mattress set. . . WAHTm ••••••••••••••••••••••• .29 Model A Town Sedan. HUNTINGTON BEACH
girl's bike, plus much ~mi~gp~{"~Jmg ~hA~ Biiby Beuioette & Rece1vfci~ ~PC~ NEWPORT Slip Avail. 4 dr. restored. Ideal for _142-2001!
. ................•.••••
Austin-Healey Bugeye
Sprite w hrdtop, gd
cond $2500 /o rfer.
642· 1400 KeUy.
MW .'712 ••••••••••••••••••••••
Sl,000,000
lnventOry
OFHEWIMW'S
Salts and Leasing al ('Ompetlll\e pnces Ex-
('ellent i.ervice and parts
dept
Cood selecUOn or pre-
\ 1oust} owned BMW &.
other hne cars in ex
tellenl cond1t1on
We also have a lease
compan} that leases
other makes or autos,
trurks and vans For ad·
d1llona I mronnat1on on
leasing please call
714 97HZ70 714 li61-961 I
for a good deal and good
o ·•es service see ;
CREVIER
SALE S-SEAVICE-{.EASI NG
208 W UI SANTA ANA
71 4/835-3171
CLOSED SlJNOAY
Th. Most bcifflMJ
Part Of Yow
IMW PwdlaM Or
Leow Collld le
McLaren IMW!!
lmyOrLNM
IJ Owl't.o. "-' 17141 522 .. 53J3
ORAHGE COUNTY'S
OU>£ST
&
Sales·Serv1ce-Leasi.og
Roy C~er,lftc.
Rolls 'ltoyce BMW
154-0Jamboree
Newport Beach 64().6444
1976 2002 4 spd. Sunroof.
AM FM stereo cassette
S6SOOOBO
675-1043 House full of lovely MASTllS AUCTlotif
lh1 n gs. exceptional 64._.6 lll-t62S values. Good priM. Fri. I....!~~~~~:;.!.!=:....
Sat, Sun. WOO Tualift I IU'f PUIMTUll
more. PboneS48-0963 is aa Ysl~ple m~~etr square coffee tbl Call Oo~0~2·8'794 s rs Tom 64:1-0222eves student. $10.500. ALSO TOP DOLLAR
w d ults Justcall642·S678. aftSPM642·92S5 -ANS UI Receiver. S7J._3.129 -'46 Ford Woodie. PAIDFOR
Technis spkrs. Technis .. • 12' beam, 40· Ing sail res l 0 r t'd s 13. s 0 0 GOOD & ct~ "'H
'80 320!, like new. All ex-
tras Blk w icamel int.
Village Way, Unit 86, Les 957-8133
Tustin. l!.l'li5'&D -F £ I I .. _.....,,:,_new,_,ea. i n e n I • " "'&I '75ea G raud father Clock. 9S7· or~J81>° Inlay wood cue. l.50 + yrs. $2SOOOBO. 984-T»S ... .-. trM!Uonal love
. M•tl w,,.. • lamps, S w e d 1 s b. C u P · (!'08 MW!wy'a olc. Cott
boar d /Armoar. aolld 21001·5·1 crlf Ice
oak, Circa ~.Askins e • '7~ 50n~l.25S ·
FIND YOUR NAME
WIN TICKETS WORTH $17
Direct Drive lurntbl. or pwr. 3 blka No. of f'un 67S-6161 ·IOA
Value over Sl.500 Snl" Zone. s7J.l9~1_ '61 Auslin·Healey Sprite USED CARS! '67 BM W20()0.fee. auto.
"" B d d rare cpe. xlnt cond . or trade for Color TV or ugeye goo con mech sound. com pl.
54018ll,,__ ____ _
best ofr. 645-3313 u(l T'9ttp0tlu"°" 1300cc Datsun Roadster • :~~ .. U-L... c;:;;;;:;:;i ........ ::::i':::l·~550 IM .. . ~s.~:~~:,~lflrm
_. .._._ lMt 9120 r•...._._ '75 2002 . sil\'er, air, ..__.~ •••••••••00•••••••••••• I • • • am /fm , 6.3,000 ml, marl ..,...~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •7 JHPW"'"'-"'"'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10~ Camper Four Star 4 A•"'" 21 SO ~ ll•cl. ry1111-must sell SS500 ~..... to I 0 w /refrigerator a. stove. LoADw mileage Codtl U~-645-5700 rmn. 497·SC718
••••••••••••••••••••••• Port ·a ·potty All 55;~ ~----------C_,.,t t71S
Tax Deduction Donation Butane, Queen site bed ----'=-·==----1 WI Mia ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boat&· Cati· Planes Sleeps 6. In excellent '80 Toyota 4X4. xlnt cond. T7 Capri II Gl\ia, anrl.
213 2341 condition. SLZSO Call 1SK ml. never been off· YOUIDOTIC a.m trm stereo, a /c, oew
Avon Red Seal 6 man between lOam Spm road . $8250 /Ofr. & HmSHCAIS ent.Opd$3!1SOM4-91188
cllogby. Xlnl cond. $500 &31-1657 675-S280, 175-6150 ' 0
.7SHIJOLes7@):8638 Motom.d .... 9140 Trwcb tHO ~ ............. ?~" ~VC>t4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• H' Red Rover. Solid PEUGWJ'"l03"" 1971 CHIYIOUT
transom, flrbrda. Otter. MOPED · S300 V4 TOMl'ta .. I
ns.ozss ~3297 Auto. tram .. pwr. steer 3100W. Coast Hwy
1Nh.M•t1 & ml in&. etc Fine work Ntwpon Beach
Senkt fOZO ttuclt! (1K81'T17). 94QS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •---:=.=.:=--==--1
M uiM m.ctriclan ONLY 14995 TOP SDOU.AIS HOW AID Clltnooa.t ror Cle.n U1ed
Dove/Quit SU. Cara• Tn.lcks
NEWPORT BEACH Wt P•1 caah onthupot! __ :::.;U~=SS::..... __ 1 Contett buyer at
ltlOllOIO ._., Pl ff PICIUP
cont rol1. Runs cood. Scat"" tllO Economical S cyl . MT-....................... enehle., t 1Pf('d over
Evtlnade • HP tut.board 1m y AZIO, mo. ll1l I driw trw., air cood. '
motor'300f080 VZlZS ao t.o&h 1ood f • r . ll e • r I n I . ' 1V1'13'7).
OMLYMHI ,_.CLIMAIDA
lllit ffartlor Blvd.
COllAllllA
D c-SANFIS
CHEVROLET
ltlODATSUM zoosx
Hatcbbaclt model ~Ur
automatic t raoa ,
AM 1r M 1tereo. pwr
steerlnc. air cond.,
cNIM conlrol, pwr. rnir•
rora, rear wiper Ir a
Jeytel! 1143\'NR). ONLYS7495
MIUCUMAJDA
2150 Harbor Bl•d •
COSTAM!SA
645-170t
............ I ._. • ..-.. UMd UN4 UM4 Orange Coast DAJL Y PILOT/Thursday July 30 1981 ~ t.,1 ... ...._. e.,auW .......... ,,.. ~ •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• : • • .... • • • .. • •••••••...... •• ••• • • ••• ........... • ..... •• • • • • ............... • • • •"' C 'ff JI ttll
M1et.k,1rW ........ !'rtac' ........... kfl W Por.cM . t1NY•w... '770 ........ t770C1•11 tt11 •• ~ .............. •••••••• .. •••••••••••• ......... . ........................................... . •• .. •••••••• .. •••••••• ••u•••••••••••••n•••• ••••••••• "•••••••••• •u•••••••••-•••••··~ ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. • · MlA.,... 1171 Chrysler Le Baron. 'tOO&.DS t7J ...., t7M ..... '740 Mlrctdtt... t74u is Carma Coupe 1., '71 VW rtd b111, alnt 'UVWDu.!C.bPU CONT P IS. P llS, AIC. cnaa. CUl\ASS •••u••••••••••uu• ....................... •••••••n•••••u•• .... • ....................... roof a te mlG1 eictru. toad. s2100. Day Rebltq.nmareat CAD&LAC? ctrt.nubrb,1bocU, U •ou•HAMC~
a MKll it liter. Vuy •MIWlll Ml%• llTS ~ M8 uou;. ssat'.~!7li7U at ... t . ... We ·~~lnln lelNI JolnU SHOO 080. feyllodtr powt Reu· aood toed ._ 080 2400.__, +SD metallic SJ'11ftl, tu ln· 11 0 'IO DIESEL Rabbtt 4 dr i2 VW Bua looblruna lor tne u1 eu ex ·11 m. 1 • b 11 k1-1111, (m >W·T4T4 HU•IDISCOQMTS tenor. Xlot cood. Bat 'l!a!:.'~ :,J~~ imrf.a /c,loml, pp' · 1reatr Loml. m>ofirm. ttutivel~eu=I '11 Cordoba. ~.ooo !DI· ;~·,,P~:.·~. :=1;.;,;
alt ; Earlelb's fer.fTU&ll 080(714)W.21T!evea. 1 642·2173 ~ c PIS, PIB, air, crwe. stereo. tJl. cn&JM, batf·
CLASSIC '76 XJIC TRANSPORTATION Ml764IOSI. JANACO PORSCHI 't1VWVan.newtn1.wht V.e.e 9772 OfC~ll AM I f' M I t a.!:· vlnyl top Be111tUul
M•Nlll,.W111'1111111 Browa/Blk, vinyl top, lo CONSULTANTS $Zin, brown. Jtopt, new AUDI Freeway doee t.I map, 1ood cond IJ.500, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ btstotr.m-1S33ZUD)
ml,onaown.'80001080 4 Michelin Um 1 owner aUareu Qfrtewiyat #I VOLYODIA.Lll Nowllt-..1 Do4p ttU $8295
f75-51tl 750. 714 .0103 FI rut 0 n e 11 v d . •ea Bug, reblt, am/fm IN ORANGE COUNTY! NASE~~ •••••0 •••••••••••••••• '?!~~~=~=~1 J11uar XJe '71. $4080. SELLING YOUR MB! Save '5000, '81 SL, yellow, Norwalk. A llM selet'· dig. caas; xlnt body, int. , '11 Maxi Van. Queen slu
:: Beautiful condition In· WIP"Y only 900ml. nu Harri.a lion of new and Wied on ea . SALIS. SllYICI ("'"'Oil I bed Conver Michelina. '77 Datawl.Z2+2
Cbampape wit.In Int.
llD•fm Clll, a!r, auto,
alat cood, looka • nms liU rl.lbl olf &bowroom. M st aee to apprec
"1t Oat.swi pick up. Lo mi,
auto. llnt cond 15895.
S45f
•Patsun 8210 4 dr. xlnt e.iid. Ori& owner A/C.
All /FM auto. &d mi 95"4-'lD
m 210Z Fireball red.
Blau 3001 ~ V1son1c
1pkn, Michelin XWX +
_mags, cstm Int. 16666.
'51·0888
'76 Datsun 2!IOZ 2 + 2
Auto, a /c, liOQ0/080
(213)5'2·3966
'1' Datsun 280Z 2 + 2.
_.baentee owner m ust
sell $,W00/080 644-8032
aide and ow. Primrote "' mobile phone. 139.000 sale now Call us for .... AND UASIMG ,,,, .,. ,,,/ , Air uto~ 500 646-1
lealh. t'ft.2112 TOP D0UAa SS 531-0m selection and quotes. Ulenu. TS1.a230 OVE'RSEASJ'>WVERY 1• w tt ... •• w-.' Ford H40
W... 9711 CaU Jack Bacon ,79 2400 4 spd, anr!, Looking 1.o seU ooe! Wt EXPERTS ..... "'"' ..,.10 •1uc 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... JIMSl..oMS stereo cl.SI, lo ml. mint buy and consian. Saad Rail, needs mot.or, ..r..:.. __ '78 Counlt)' Squire Wgn.
IMPOITS cond. Nicest In Orange 11"3M'17S; zu..•3213 Um, $400 or best ofter lAIUIH 80 Eldorado. Birritz xlnt cond' Loaded! On& 1977 MAJ.DA 1970Harbor Blvd. Ct . 7 800/obo84S-7Sl2 '61 Cabrllolet, blk wlblll '117 al& VOLVO Diesel. loadedlxtra fuel ~r 900s.s&-2888 Ll~~!]'P~=ion COSTA M~A MG 9742 lthr int, incl rear hdtop. 1966 HarborBJvd 111nk . s11.ooo Wknds '72 Ford Brou&bam sta·
631-1Z76833-9300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lots of dra1, totally COSTA MESA evs. art ~. 631 ~795. dys, tion waeon. Xfut engine ......._ ______ _
model 5 speed trans ' MUST ~IH •! rutored, xlnt cond 646-fJOl 540.9467 '""·7781 _ Body AC/aito Am/Fm '69 '98 Luxury Sedan AM /FM tape ' factory ~ ... •"" 7'"41.23 -.s781 .,..... *MVI aUoy wheels. <UOUKR > CASH TODAY .,.,....., · is 244DL 44,CXX> miles. ~~ Good rondluon -OMLY $3595 Wt wUlrometoyou ~~Cc~':.1~16 ~Yj ~~~ '66 9l2 Ponclle red xlnt 'IO VW Rabbit, like new. sunroof, new brakes & 79 ~~~~d~;:~· 1969 Ford stauon wan 6T3-94a2 Macau Co cond. $6200/080 Debt bftgeaunrf.153115. clutch l6Jl> firm. Days 37 H3S9 eves wknds Good transportation Plltto 9957 MllACU MADA upe Only bull\ for 1 ( 2 I 3 ) 4 3 0 • 1 6 6 7 494-5264 6421)377. Ev_es ~8100 obo ~. ••• ••••••••u••••• ••••• 21SOHll'bor81vd. WAMTID limited time! ONLY (714)960-~ •79 VW Bua "Converti· --lllJOOO u~ bba It not COSTAMESA Call!orimmediate $2995 ! Call 831·~177 & •72 CA DILLAC f '72 Ranchero 350. auto, ,·11 Pinto ruolc c · 64~5700 appo111tment as!_forPete __ llolaloyce f7H ~l!~',Si~;:'~cass. AMto1,UMd eng mustsell~.,,/~1:5~ AC lorn• lowner new prett,y-runs cood
A.!k for Must sell i4 MG Midget. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · -••••••••••••••••••••••• ( · pa.;.t, ne;.. brlts. ~ech 3 0 M PG S 6 SO p a t lt76MAZDA MarkSachs·Buyer good cond . S2:0>10BO •lDEAURINU.S.J. '73 VW Super Bug all '"-nll 9901 o!_er 968-0079 -xlnt $1900 bst ofr 54a-tm;54'7·313S
COSMO COW'E 831-1740 495-1700 61S-m1'72 IOY orig, cass1sterco, 69K ••••••••••••••••••••••• __., 9917 840·3264 is Pinto. looks new. It
• sp••d trans .• pwr MISSI,..... vi"' 10 JR{ mi rirm 96J..S966 -* * * ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;--70 Galaxy--Good ~nd blu, 54K nu, autD. $2200 " "'"' ""Y ~ MG Midget '74 Xlnt Cond. c•RVEI '81 Camaro Berltnellil steering. air cond . __ !MftOITS SU>OtOBO "' * * * RoyC.tloa full pwr. loaded. 7500011. pis. air S1SO or best of· 833~·~----
AM /FM stereo tape & ,73 280 C, sunroof, stereo 675-11172 ROLLS· ROYCE •79 COHVaTllLI 6149'Morguente like new Under Deuler's fer 963 SJSO __ _ '72 RUNABOUT.towner.
factory alloy wheels cassette. air. many ·se MGA 1.500. eggshell lWtJ•m..,..• Al wWh. Le a Mild. Coronadel Mar invoice Must sell. going '272 Ford LTD XJnt cond 4 spd, R&dt. new bru &
ILCJ277). otherext~·.veryrlean h __. •. ~"1"' YouaretheWlllneror backtos_choo_ 1760-6923 S700 tires. runs we ll. gd OMLY $3595 ..... w tte w •QA top "' Ult · Lo•, 7 6 0 • 1 0 I 4 TW O FREE PASSF.S ~:fil.~-h l ~ 644-4407 cond S9SOO 0 8 0 knock ·oCf wire whls, ClOUOS ..... OAYS ... _ __.. __ ... Sl7 I '72CA~1ARO s ~· -MllACU MAZDA 631-4501, 64il-7287 bl s.x>lbest f _.w,..... • -• I va uel Sl800or best oHer ·72 RANCHERO w1gold '74 Sta. Wgn, 4 spd. a c. . ~ t eng 0 r '741.ta Stiver Shadow, dk * * * RINGLING BR~ 642.61cn ,..~ 96,.,1 h 11 3 s l new tires. good cond . 21SO HarborBlvd '70MB220 4drSedan.4 Lmdabe! 3~,646-7845_ blue. w/be1ge cordovan BARNUM&BAJLEY ""' " rim s. s e . ~4216
COSTA MESA cyl. Auto Air R/H Late ,_..,. 9747 landau, bei&e int. Xlnt '7S RABBJT US , '711 CA M AHO z.2S Rbll. Cle veland, quinched iµoo. 548-~......=.:--64~5700 service records. 548-3036 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 973-1629 Engine & body good CIRCC eng, new brake~. tires. heads. lo ITU. xlnt shape ~ 9960 -.. 9725 r 6 All d Sat -Anaheim onvenuon ~stm int T Top. Sanyo t!>'7S0 675 ~----••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ MeMf'9tf 9739 a ter pm ay 72 Pantera. xlnt l'ond. T -to 9765 CC)nJ!,S2200 646-7228 _ CenterAug 6-17 ' ~ . f'URY W f II ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sun ... 600 Firm t ,....... 0 ,-81 Amp stilreo ••ooo ~-9950 77 agon u '1• s d ---'· •••• • •• •••••••••••••••• .. ..a """"' see 0 ap,.. ~-••• •••••••••••••••••••• '73 VW VAN auto. very Long Beach Arena ~ "" ....... , -J ' .. PY er, ·~ some ORANGE ....,........, 714·~~ --'74 Corolla. reblt trans. aood cond. red while. Aug 1~23 SS6 1737 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pwr & air 6BK mi. clean ~rk 8':::'~ C""-'S l9ll04SO SL. lo mt. Cham· PMCJfft 9741 good t'Ond, xtras S189S en I r b 1 t, n e w To claim passes , call -no.;. 9920 ORANGECOUNTY'S llSOOFtrm.646-~ -
""""'' 1 pagne & Palomino ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bsto!,r_ll46-«lll2...c ___ tire s /clutch. c lean 642-~8.ext.Z72 Passe~••••••••••••••••••••••• FNST '77 FURY. full power.
... 9727 EXCWSIVE leather ~J>OO S59·Sl27 '75·'76 gas sla wgn. std '78 Corona, 5 spd. air $2S09/080~ must be exl·hanged for SEE US FIRST! LINCOLN MERCUHY AIC. etc. Clean. Sl.500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MA SERA Tl '80 300 TD Wgn, Sunrf. trans. lo mi, good rond, Mich rad. fog Its .. am/ '68 VW Baja BUG stock reserved seats al box Wt have a goochelettton DEALERSHJP ..firm. 646-7900 VISIT YOUR or. ... I -sHIP r v 0 r y la n I n t r P6SO 673-4S98evs --rm ('US JIK mi. Xlnt enc. lifted. wtute spoke 0 r r I c e pr I 0 r l t) r N E w ' us ED -0--,,!d.L,. PHffoc 9965 OIAMGI COAST ~...-Showroom new $23,500 Ponclw 9750 S4,6001bst 962·oo.A. 12131 whb. new t1rn, needs performanl'e Chevrolels' ""97' T~• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hl'\ai..ID A. Weh'll deU1ved.r anywhere U4_&42·74Ct7714 561Hi848 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 596-4020 p M some worll 1100 S48-3774 * * * LINCOLN.MERCURY '73 Grand Prix Runs
Vl"lll "' Ill t e wor . '79 ~D snrf. lthr. all ex '61 911 Elec snrf Weber '80 Corolla S-R5 Spt Cpe. Jim aft 4PM -Wck 9910 16·18 Auto Center Dr great, black Sl200 0 80 HEADQUAITEIS IEACH IMPORTS tras, 1mmat' S25,900 , u r bs, blk 1ntr New every option. limited blk '&4 VW Microbus parts S2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SD Fwy·Lk Forest exit Kellh 631 6546 eves, • TODAY!!! 848DoveStrttt ~0:§215_,_9fi6.1779 patnt $6500 offer dys on blk, best o<fer over toS200. '76 Skyhawk. auto. a ir. IRVINE 631·5115<!!Y_s
752-0900 ·79 Mercedes ~D xlnl 213/830·6754, evlwknds ~ 7»~---~1774 fm stereo, ps. must ~ell _ 1)~7~0 n..dertMrd 9970 UMIVEISITY 1969Harbor81vd cond. sell for $28.500 or 631·04~-_ Vollsw09N 9770 '69 Van with 26.CXX> miles ~.!l&Q.613-1367 ,.... .... __ ........ 9955 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SALES,SERVICE 631-71 70 assume lse w small '61911L,5Spd •••••••••••••••••••••••!on rebu1l1 mgme, new Codiloc 991§ '66 Chevy CAP RICE ~~•••••••••••• lf56T.ard
OlDSMOll.f More families are getting d w n Ca II art 6 P ~ Alloys. neweng111e. front '60-'65 VW left & nght I J!.linl. S2500 760-Ul68 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wgn. $400 good rond .79 Culla!.s Supreme. vs Fully eqwp z toll!i. auto HOHDA the camping "bug · this 957J819 ttres $5900 Call Dennis door. '73 left door ~1 '81 VW PU. 5(XXI mi Cost 1980 SeVille Elegante runsKood 661 8547 Auto. air. stereo tape 2 PS, PB 20.000 mt on &MC nuclS year If you have a '79 JOOSE. snrf. aux tank. 8 S. Tues th ru Sat each Western style whl $8787 S7600or T 0 P Ed loaded incl moon roof '65 Che\' Mah bu Wag dr s,w50552.1747 restored eng Sl2.SOO
2850 Harbor Blvd. camper that's not get 26,500 m1, Becker stereo S57 078_! rims for Super Beetll' 646·2276 __ _ _19 m..i..1!6,900 ~-51Z7 ' lhe rd r1 ve. J speed • --P /P 645-3781 _
COSTAMESA ting used, sell 11 now cass. dk red w/bamboo ~Cl!.:~9'744 Find what yoo want m , . Run s g real $3~0 69CllMot1.SSOO ClassifledAdS,yourone·
540.'640 with a Classified Ad. i!l.!J?7,CXX> 67J.9:Q6_ \!l.n1.M_s CaU 642-$678 PailY Pilot Claaif1~ W,.anl AqHelp ~2 5678 979 097~ -Call §73-1:116 stop shoppinl center.
• ATLAS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
29e9 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel 5-46·1934 3 blocks
IGlrth of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd Complete
~Y shop Sales Service Parts Serv•ce Dept. open
'"""day thru Friday 7 30 A M to 5 30 P M and 8 A.M to
•.P.M. on Saturday.
HACH IMPORTS
148 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel. 752·0900. Call us.
11111 re the specialists for Alla Romeo. Peugeot & Saab
• THEODOREROllMSFOltD
Modern sales. service. parts. body. paint & tire depts.
Competitive rates on lease & daily rentals. 2060 Harbor
awd .. Costa Mesa. 642·0010 Of 540-8211.
JOHMSOM & SON UNCOlH MYCURY
:ze28 Harbor Blvd .. Coata Mesa. Tel. ~5630. 57 Years
of'frlendly family service -Orange County's oldest Lin·
coln·Mercury dealership.
SOUTH COAST ~E 2• Herbor Blvd., Coshl M .... Tel. 540-0330 RV service
9'0lel11t1. c uatom van conyerslons.
HIW,Oltr NOUS
Coaat Highway. Newport IHch. Tel.
Ml~IWl~40-, 784. Th• Feu•I HMdquentra
'
MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES
HEW,ORT DATSUN
888 Dove Streel. Newport Beach Tel 833-1300 At the
tnangle o f Jamboree MacArthur & BriStol behind
Victoria S1at1on Sales Service Leasing & Parts Fleet
discounts 10 the publtc
0 MAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel ~9100 Orange
County s Largest Cadillac. dealer Sales Servic. Leas·
1ng.
G)
DAVID J . 'HILLl,S IUICl<..p()H'J'IAC·MA%DA
S ales • Servloe • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills 837-2400
CORMIH-DeLILLO C .. VROLn
18211 Beach Blvd , Huntington Beach. Tel. 847·6087 or
549·3331 Sales. Service Parts. Full LHslng Dept.
Freeway close to all Orange Co.
• ALAH MAGHOH POHTIAC·SUIAlU
2480 Harbor Blvd , Coata Meea. T•I. 549-4300. Salff,.
SeNlce. Leasing. "Mr. GOOdlNfench ..
0
IAIU IKI TOYOf A-VO&.VO
,966 Herbor Blvd , Coata Meta. (71') 84e·9303 or
540-9467 J 1 Volvo dealer In Or ... Co\.lnty and wt'len
,ou ak for a Toyott 11 E1rlt IQ .. you get Ill
,.... -..._,,,,__. I --
IOI LOHG,RE ,ONTIAC
13600 Beac h Blvd Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership S ales.
Service Parts
UNIVERSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Tel. ~9640 I Mtle
South 405 Freeway Sales. serytce. parts & leasing
• SANT A AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana Tel. 558·7811 Your
Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer
• MIRACLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd .. Costa M..._ Tel. 646-5700. #1 dealer
in So. Calif. See the all new 1981 GLC.
ALLIH,-OLDSMOllU-CADIL.LAC
SUIAIU·GMC TaUCICS
San Diego Fwy at Avery Exit on C.mlno Capistrano In
LAguna Niguel Tel 831-<)800~495-0800
• SAM DI SAMnS CHIVIOUT
401 s. El Ctmlno ~.Sen Clemente
Sal ... a.Nice, lMllng And Par11
Orano-County's NEWHT CheYrolet dealer. "Growing
Your Wey " bit Er Camino otkamp
.,, .()51() •12.e&OO
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 54<>-6410 Serving
Orange County for t 6 years 1 Male So 405
SUNSET FOltD, IHC.
(Home or W11lte the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Bl11d ..
Westminster Tel 636·4010.
• FRANK PROTO UNC~CURY
Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a
week 7 30 A.M. to 6.30 P M. 848-7?39
0 COMMaL CHIVIOUT
2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Oller 20 yeara MNlng
Orange County! Sales. leulng, S«Vloe. Call 546·1200,
apec1a1 parts fine; 546·9400: body shop line; 754-0400
• CHICK IVHSOH POltSCHl-AUDl-YW
415 E Coest Hwy .. Newport BHCh. 673-0900 The only
dealership In Orange County wllh these thrM great
rnekn under one roof•
IOY CAIVM IOU.S IOYCl-IMW
1540 JembOrM Road, Newpotl a.on. ~104. Sal-.
S..Vlet. Perts And 1.eulng .
l •
111111 mil
lHU H S OAY-J ULY JO 1981
Solons get Reagan
WASHINGTON (AP) -Al·
torney General William French
Smith, saying "we have lost con-
trol of our borders," asked
Congress today to enact a
Reagan administration package
of immigration-reform pro-
posals. ·
•'Last year. the number of
immigrants legally and illegally
entering the United States
reached a total possibly greater
than any year in our history. in-
eluding the era of unrestricted
immigration," Smith told a joint
House-Senate bearin1 as be pre-
sented the propbeals, which are
based on a Cabinet luk force
study.
There were no surprises in the
measures Smith presented, all
of which had been disclosed dur-
ing the administration's !.nternal
debate on the issue.
But some of the measures are
likely to cause controversy.
They include a pilot "sueat
worker" program, 1an~tlon1
against employers who hire u.
legal allena and a 1e1alluUoo
program for 10me of the We1a1
aliens already ln the United
States.
President Reagan, in a written
statement issued with the pro-
posala, said they are "desiped
to pr.eserve our tradition ol ac-
cepting foreigners to our shores,
but to accept them in a coo-
FOREST OF MASTS -A confusion of ships'
masts is the order of the day at Dana Point
Harbor. The Orange County Sheriff's Harbor
Patrol says there are 2,500 boats in the water
....., ......................
at the county-owned marina and another 350
in dry dock. A harbor patrol spokesman said
there are two-year waiting lists for both
areas.
Airport readies strike plan
John Wayne facility prepares for controller walkout
By F&EDE&JC& SCBOEMEBL °' .. ..., ........
For the 1econd time ln 1ix
weeks, officialJ at John Wayne
Airport are ready to implement
a fllsbt contingency plan that
would go into effect should air
traffic controllen go on strike.
The plan, prepared by the
Federal Aviation Administra-
tion, by which the controllers
* * *
are employed, would severely
curtail service.
AirCal, for example, would
operate only 17 departures per
day compared to the normal 25.
Republic Alr11nes number of
flights would drop from 12 to
four. Frontier Airlines would be
permitted to keep ill two dally
flights from Oran1e County,
while Western, which normally
* * * Air controllers
talks to resume
91 ASHINGTON (AP> -Amid solid rebuff of tbe tentaUn
new warnin11 about the a1reement reached oob boun
ramlftcaUou of a 1trtke, air before a ltrike d .. dllae June 12.
traffic ~en aac1 aovern-Tbe ProleHIOaal Alr Traffic
meat DelCJdaton .,.. prepa.riaC Controllers Ot1anllatlon aa·
to retana to the bar1alnlq tatlt• DOUDced au percent of lta ...,.
followiq tbe ualoa'.• 'reJeeUon bera ~ tM aceord with t11ie bJ better tlaU a »1 marsm at a officla tau, 1bowln1 u.•
teatati" CGllU'.t. a1ataat and au for.
Tran1portat1oa Secretary Wbea &m1cm pneldellt 8otiart
·orew LnU, lDformed of Ute Poll lalanDed lAwil vi tM VOie, YC>M, _,.. ..-Jeaderl .,... tb• trauportatloa Heretar1
nlMQ lo blliD MW taJU wtda 1a1c1 M WU ~ted'' tM aer;\!,:ton for ti•• Federal coatrollen af ~ AY ~-be eo11ldered "a alr ••
Mt ••• bar1•l•ln1 wH equltaflte ..,.......," affOl'd. M~ltaled. I Lill lo .... to Lewtl.
TM rlWlcaUoa Y* .,.. a
operates two fllsbta, would be
forced to t.emporarUy suspend
service.
Departure and arrival times
would be far different than cur·
rent schedules.
More than 95 percent ol the
controUen represented by Ute
Professional Alr Traffic Con-
trollers Or1anlsation have re-
jected a tentat.lve contract otter
that averted a strike June 22.
Leaden of tbe traffic con-
troller group Hy a 1lrike couJd
occur u early u Monday 1bould
80 percent ol the union's mem·
benbip acree to walk eut. Ally
walkout would be iD deftance ol
a federal law problbltlq JOY·
erammt workers from 1trtkiq.
PATCO repretenll about
lS.000 ol tbe 1T ,IOO air tnmc
CODtrollen WM work at tM Da·
Uon11 500 alJ1)orti.
Twenty-one coatroUera are
employed at John Wa1ne Airpart. .
Ra&pb Odmnralcl; dalef ol the or...,. co..tJ ..,..., WCI eodaJ
Uaat u. ,... ...... llbi.k• .. llOt
beiDI o;..11 dllewed br bil
1tatr.
He Mid. bOwH•, Utat m tM
PHt lM loeal PATCO m6oD
............... J ........ tM eoaarou.n .... waa a.
a •
.. • • • • •
YIUI 11111111 DlllY PAPll
O RANGE C OUNT Y . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
• · gration plan
trolled and orderly fashion."
The major proposals, which
would require CQD&res1ionaJ ap-
prov al before taking effect. in·
elude:
-An experimental, two-year
guest worker program for Mex-
ican laborers which would ena-
ble 50,000 of them to enter this
country each year and work for
9-12 months. The program could
be expanded after two years.
-A fme of $500 to Sl,000 for
employers who knowingly hire
illegal aliens, a practice which
does not now conflict with any
federal laws.
Employers could avoid pros-
ecution by requiring job appll·
cants to show them two iden-
tificaUoo cards and to sign a
certification that lhey are in the
country legally.
The president rejected a task
force recommendation that a
new Social Security card, resia-
tant to forgery. be required ol
all job applicants. "The ad·
ministration is explicitly op-
posed to the creation of a na-
tional identity card," Smith said
in his prepared testimony.
The task force had recom-
mended the Identity card u the
best means or enforcing any law
against hiring illegal aliens.
Cuts face barrier
Democrats firm on Social Security stand
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Congressional plans for quick
passage or more than $35 billion
in spending cuts approved by
House and Senate negotiators
faced a new barrier today as
House Democrats threatened to
block approval until the
minimum Social Security
benefit prograrp is restored.
The chairman of the House
Rules (fommillee, Rep. Richard
Bolling, D-Mo., said he is de·
lermined to block final action on
the massive budget-cut package tor next year until a provision
eliminating the $122-a-month
ATnerican
business
declines
minimum retirement benefit is
dropped from a Senate-House
compromise completed on Wed-
nesday.
·'I am totally and completely
against the idea of eliminating
any benefits from people now re-
ceiving them," Bolling told a
news conference.
Congressional leaders had
planned to put the final budget
package to a final vote in both
chambers by this weekend so
that Congress could recess for
the month of August. However.
Bolling said he is "prepared to
* * *
stay for a month" if necessary
to restore the benefit.
Bolling's committee sets the
rules on how the House would
handle the final budget package.
Other Democrats on the com-
mittee who were at the news
conference, mcluding Minority
Leader Jim Wright of Texas,
said they full y supported Boil-
ing.
The committee chairman not-
ed that the president promised
in his nationwide address Mon·
day night to protect the benefits
of those now dependent on Social
(See BUDGET, Page AZ)
* * *
Paychecks 'fatter'
after October 1st?
somebod y making more than
$200,000 a year. to 27. l percent for
an individual with income
between $5,000 and $10,000.
Here are some examples of the
i
WASHINGTON (AP) -
American business productivity
fell al an annual rate of 0.9 per-
cent in the second quarter, a
s harp reversal of the strong
showing earlier in fhe year. the
Labor Department reported to-
day.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Most
Americans will notice a small in-
crease in their paychecks after
Oct. 1 as a result of President
Reagan's tax-cut biU. But the big-
gest share of the individuaJ tax re-
duct ions will be phased in
gradually and wUI be fully effec-
tive by 1984.
tax savings a family with two --
earners, two pre-school children
The decline, following a 4.3
percent gain ln the first quarter,
was yet another indication or a
slowdown in the U.S. economy.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics attributed the
drop in productivity to a 3.5 per-
cent decline in output that was
accompanied by a 2.6 percent
decrease in hours worked from
April through June. '
A typical four-member family
with S20,000 income would take
home an extra $2 a week or so in
the last 13 weeks of 1981. That
would be followed by larger de-
ductions in withholding next July
1 andafinalcutonJuly l, 1983.
Although the president's pro-
gram is referred to as a 25-percent
rate cut, in reality it would total
an average of about 23 percent
when fully effective on Jan. 1,
1984. Actual lax reductions would
range from 20.9 percent, for
* * *
and $30,000 in income might ex-
pect from the legislation.
Such a family now pays $3,917 a
year in federal income taxes, as-
suming it has average deduc-
tions, which are 23 percent of in·
come, or $6,900. The reduced tax
rates and provisions in the bill to
cul the "marriage penalty"
would drop the family 's lax
burden by $1.079 in 1984. Smaller
reductions would result in 1982
and 1983.
Assuming one spouse in the
family earns $10,000 and the other
<See AFFECT, Pa1e AZ>
* * *
Productivity, which measures
how many goods and services
the private economy produces in
each hour of paid working Ume,
declined at an annual rate of 0.4
percent in the fourth quarter of
1980, then advanced at an annual
rate or 4.3 percent from January
through March.·
President basks
• • • In the quarter ending June 30,
the Labor Department said, pro-
ductivity in all private business,
including farming, increased at
a 1.1 percent annual rate. The
agency said farm productivity
gains contributed to the In-
crease, although the Bureau of
Labor Statistics doesn't provide
separate figures for farm pro-
ductivity.
in economic wins
The second quarter decline in
the non-farm business sector oc-
curred despite a strong showing
in manufacturing, which reg-
lstered a 4.2 percent gain oo an
annualized basis".
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Reagan. trumpeting his
twin victories on budget and tax
cuts, predicted a brighter
economic future today and
declared, "America is better off
today than she was yesterday.··
Basking in congressional ap-
proval of the key ingredients of
his economic package, the presi-
dent was flying to Atlanta today
to talk about the impact of his
program and outline a blueprint
Nuclear foes pack
Clemente hearings
87 JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .. ..., .......
Members of the public favor-
ing the licensing of Unlta 2 and 3
at the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station were neither·
seen nor beard Wednesday in
San Clemente at a public bear-
ing conducted by the Atomic
Safety and Ucemln1 Board.
Wednesday's bearln1, held at
San Clemente Hlsb School, wu
attended by a 1tandill1-room-
ooly crowd of about 400 nuclear
power foes.
Speaker after 1peaker •P·
proaehed the podlum to ult that
the tbree·member Ucen1in1
board deQy an operatiq UteDH
for the two new unltt at San
Onofre DOW nearin1 completioo.
The antl·nuclear aenthnent tbat dominated the beartq wu
tbt oPPOllte of the oro-nuclear
oplnlan that held 1wa1 at a July
11 /ubUc appearance , ... IOD
bet Lil the tame locatloa.
At tbat bearlal. t.bole ID fa var
of tbe Ucan11a1 of Uae la.a
ODotre uinlta but °" aa 1Dt1 to
UM mcm. IMet, leHlnl Mtl·
•1 • -
nuclear spokesmen few op-
portunities. to speak before the
hearing adjourned.
At the conclusion of the July 11
bearing, licensing board mem·
bers Jame1 Kelley, Elh:abeth
Johnson and Dr. Cadet Hand Jr.
decided to continue the session
to Wednesday to Jive foes time
to address them.
Brian Moca, a Lake Elsinore
resident, charged that Southern
California ~ Co., majority
owner and operator of San
Onofre, bu lu 1ecurity at the
nuclear facility. .
"San Onofre la eztremely
vulnerable to aabota1e and tel'·
rorlam," Moc a told board mem·
bera.
He laid tbe avera1e penon la
able to obtaln informal.loo about
the plantl throu1b public
1ourc:. thal would allow the
nuclear 1tallon to be damacect
enoup to rilk public bealtb.
Moca takl a scuba diver could
enter the Intake pipe tbrcMaab
whicb oc:eu water II l"UDJ*I to
cool the plant'• reactor and
(lee ONOBS, Pap All
for giving more power to the
stales.
··America is more confident
PRESIDENT FACES
TOUGH ENCORE -A4
today than she was a day ago,"
a jubilant Reagan said. "And
economic possi bililies for all
Americans are greater than
they were 24 hours ago. America
now has an economic plan for
her future."
The president originally con-
sidered the speech to the annual
meeting of the National Con-
ference of State Legislatures aa
another forum to put more beat
on Congress to pass bis tax-cut
plan.
.ORANGI COAST llATHIR
Night and morning low
cloudiness. Otherwise
hazy s uns hine through
Friday. Highs in low 70s at
the beaches to low 80s in-
land. Lows tonight 60 to 65.
INSIOI TODAY
NOVI tMre'• Q ~ti~ent
home for col• ia Long ~h,
fn CCJU llOUf pd i.t ~ and
JIOU caa't bear to Nftd him to
t/M:lt ~ COi bo% fn the •Jcv.
Page M .
llDll
•
• . . .... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 30, 1981
Guerrillas ambush bus
Israel views attack as cease-fire violation
TEL AVIV, Janel (Al» -
Pollce and klbbuta members
combed the ru11ed Jerusalem
bills today for a aquad of
Palestinian auerrillaa wbo &m·
bushed an f srael l bua and
wounded four people. Israel said
It vie'l(ed the attack u a aerioua
cease~fire vlolaUon.
One of the casualUes, a 23-
year-old pre111ant woman was
shot lo the stomaoh and the
bullet killed her 7-month-old UD·
born baby, doctors reported to-
day.
The ambush Wednesday ni&ht
followed a doJli&ht between
Israeli and Syrian jets over
Lebanon. Each side claimed a
kill, but onlf the downing of the
Syrian plane could be con-
firmed.
It wu the moet serloua .out·
break ol violence slnce IJ.rael
and tbe PaJ•tlnlan.a a1reed t.o ~be ceue-ftre last Friday.
Israel Television aald two
1uerrillu raked the bus with
automatic we'apou fire Wedoet·
day nJ1ht as it approached
Maaleb Hahamisb, a Jdbbutl, or
collective farm, el&ht mllea
northwest of Jerusalem. The
raiders fied into the surroundina
bills, police said.
Near the bus, police said they
round a Palestinian nag and a
wooden cross on which wu writ·
ten. "In Memory of Victhm of
the Beirut Bombing," a ref-
erence to Israel's July 17 bomb-
ing of Palestinian ·guerrilla
headquarters in Beirut in which
Iranians surround
emba~sy of French
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -An
estimated 250 demonstrators
surrounded the French Em-
bassy in Tehran today and de-
manded that France extradite
ex-President Abolhassan Bani-
Sadr.
Bani-Sadr escaped to France
Senate panel
backs Casey,
pushes pro~
WASHINGTON <AP > -
William Casey is direcUng the
CIA today with a new but limit·
ed endorsement from a Senate
committee that nevertheless is
going ahead with its investiga-tion of hlm.
Two days after the Senate ln-
telli gence Committee hired a
special counsel to run its Casey
inquiry, the panel unanimously
pronounced him not "unfit to
serve" based on what is now
known.
President Reagan said that
should end the matter, but the
CASEY PROBE
6 MONTHS LATE -A7
Senate panel also unanimously
agreed Wednesday to continue
investigating the 68-year-old CIA
director, whose past business
practices and management or
the spy agency have been ques-
tioned.
The committee vote came
after five hours of testimoney by
Casey behind closed doors. One
source caJled the decision "ob-
viously a compromise between
two sharply divided factions.
The beauty of this statement is
in the eye or the beholder ...
Chairman Barry Goldwater,
R·Ariz., who less than a week
ago called on Casey lo resign,
delivered the panel's decision to
a crowded news conference in
the Capitol Crypt. He said:
Five feared
dead in MSI
plant blas t
GRANTSVILLE, Utah <AP) -
A series of three blasts rocked an
explosives plant today, de·
molishing most of the building
and engulfing it in names, of·
Cicials said. Five workers were
thought to be in the plant at the
time. authorities said.
The Mining Services Interna-
tional plant, 20 miles west or SaJt
Lake City, was "blown away,''
according to Tooele County
Sheriff Walt Shubert.
The sheriff flew over the build·
ing lhia morning and said the
walls had disintegrated. He said
hesawnosigmollile.
Families of plant employees
waited at the GrantsviUe fire sta-
tion for word of their relatives.
Tbe first blut was fell at least
15 miles away ln Tooele, home ol
the Tooele Anny Depot, where
nerve gu and other cbemfoaf
warfare aaents are stored. 'l'bere
was no threat to the depot. ol-
rlciaJasaid.
Wednesday and was granted
asylum. (See related story Page
A4.)
Sources in Tehran telepb,oned
by The Associated Press in
Beirut estimated the number of
demonstrators al 250 and said no
attempt was made to stonQ the embassy during the two-bour
protest.
A spokesman for the Tehran
police said there were thousands
of demonstrators at the embassy
shouting, "Death to Mitter-
rand." Francois Mitterrand is
the president of France.
The spokesman, who declined
to be identified, said, "This is
only the beginning," and pre-
dicted demonstrators would re-
turn t.o the embassy in bigger
numbers Friday.
Nancy moved
by London
• reception
LONDON <AP) -First lady
Nancy Reagan, who said she
cried at Britain's royal wedding,
ended a hectic week of socia.llJ-
i n g today and the longest
separatioo from her husband in
their 29-year marriage.
Mrs . Reagan left for
Washington at noon -4 a.m.
PDT -aboard a U.S. jet that
occasionally serves as Air Force
One. Bdore her departure, Mrs.
Reagan stopped briefly at the
U.S . Embassy to meet wives of
American diplomats and
servicemen. ·
As she left t,be building,
dressed in a red suit, she spotted
people waving and applauding
her from the windows of a four-
slor y town house across the
street. The first lady stopped
and waved back, visibly moved by the warm reception.
"They've all been so won-
derful to me," she said, her eyes
misting.
A young man called from one
of the windows, "Did you enjoy
your trip to London?"
Mrs. Reagan cupped her
hands and shouted back, "It's
been delightful. I've enjoyed
everything so much.•'
Democrats
to bar cuts?
W ASfUNGTON CAP) -In an
attempt to force restoratioo ol
the minimum Social Security
benefit, some House Democrats
are threatening to try to hold up
p·assage of President Reacan's
budget-cutting plan.
Democrats on the Rules Com-
mittee agreed Informally Wed·
nesday to seek a separate vote
on the minimum benefit before
the House considers the budaet
package necotiated by Houae-
Senate conferees.
Notinc that Reaaan promt.sed
to .protect tbe benefits of tboM
now dependent on Social Securi·
ty, Rules Chairman Ricbard
Bollio.I, D-Mo., said, "Tbe only
way to mate an boaest man ol
bl m ia to knock out that ~
vision of the conference report."
·iiijPi1at ClaH!fted ~91ftf 7'41141-M'TI
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VOL 74, NO. 211
\
Lebanon reported 300 PaleeU·
nJana and Lebanese klUed.
Tllhe ol the loJured ln the bus
attack were treated at 1
Jerusalem hospital and re·
leased, police said. The pre1-
naol woman, Deborah Arnet, re-
rn.alned 1n lnten.slve care.
The Palestinian Liberation
Or11nJutJoq ln Beirut claimed
responslbillty for the attack, UO·
derlining the PLO's vow to con-
tl n ue attacks inside Israel
despite the cease-fire that ended
15 days or intense Palestinian
and laraell sheUlng across the
Israell-Lebaneae frontier and
Israeli air and commando at-
tacks on Palestinian positions in
Lebanon.
It was the first PLO strike in·
side lsrael since the truce.
From Page A1
ONOFRE • • •
place a bomb that would cause
sufficient damage to induce the
plant to overheat.
The Lake Elsinore resident
also said the two-mile air space
restriction around San Onofre is
not being enforced, wbicb could
lead to an attack similar to the
Israeli raid on an Iraqi react.or.
However, Edison spokesman
Dave Barron said plant security
is strictly enforced by both
Edison personnel and MPs from
the Camp Pendleton Marine
base. on which the nuclear
facility is located.
·'There are a series of barriers
in the inlate system that strain
out seaweed and other debris,''
Barron said. "~ even if some-
one were to plant a bomb,
which is highly unlikely, we
would simply shut down the
plant before we lost cooJjng
water.
Barron added that San Onofre
has an emergency cooling water
reservoir on the plant site that
could also b e used in an
emergency.
John Erickson . a San
Clemente senior citizen, said
"nuclear power is the most
dangerous and undemocratic
thing the government bas ever
foisted off on the American
public." ·
·'The location of San Onofre is
in complete disregard for the
safety of the people that live in
the area," Erickson said. "The
placement of those plants is
postulated on the theory that a
nuclear accident could never happen."
Val Rodri~uez, who said he
was a Long Beach
longshoreman, asked the licens-
ing panel if the public would be
issued protective suits that
would prole<!t them from radia-
tion, similar to the issuance of
gas masks to England's popuJa-·
lion during World War II.
"Arter all," Rodriguez said,
"if au or us are gone who will
pay for the cleanup?"
Boxing
promoter
indicted
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
32-count felony indictment was
handed down today accusing
boxing promoter Harold
Rossfields Smith and two others
or conspiring to defraud Wells
Fargo Bank out or more than $21
million.
Also named in the indictment
were L. Ben Lewis, an officer of
Wells Fargo Banlt and Sammie
Marshall, a former loan officer
al the bank who later worked
with Smith al Muhammad Ali
Professional Sports Inc.
A second separate indictment
accused Wells Fargo branch
manager Gene Kawakaml of one
count of misapplying $175,000 in
bank funds in April 1979.
The federal grand jury indict·
ment accuses Lewis, Smith and
Marshall of conspiring to "em
benle, abstract, purloin and
wilfully misapply and cause the
embezzlement, abstraction,
purloining and wllfull mlsap·
plication by a bank officer
employee of monies and funds
belonging to and entrusted to the
custody and care ol a bank . . .
The indictment brou1ht in this
mornJna by Auiala.nl U.S. At·
torney Dean Allison aaya
Smltb'a purpoee lo the embeule-
ment was to ''establish himself
and his companies . . . u tbe
dominant boxlnl promottn in '
the United Sta.tee."
Russ say British
mask crises
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
new• aaency Tua accuaed the
Brlllab pre11 t.od~ ot tf')'ine to
dJstract atteoUoe from Britain'•
economic Uld poUUcaJ ctiMI by
sJ•tn1 exwnnv• coveras• of tJM
ro7al 'ftddiDa. ln a report oa WedMlday'a
weddbe of PrUaee Claar ... IUld
Lad1 Dlw ~. T .. Mld1 ''Tb• tamlval in. Ule ltrelll •
Londoe WM •lated wlal.Je n....
ar• •till bw-aJ.DI la Li •erpool and lrt.b ~uq•r·ttri.bn dM
beldnd tM bU'bM wire ot Laq
ICuh.''
...........
House Speaker Thon-uu P. O'Neill hangs up the telephone after a
conversation with President Reagan following the House's ap-
proval of Reagan's tax cut package. O'Neill had strongly opposed
the mea8Ure
From Page A1
BUDGET VICTORY • • •
Security "in the full amount due
you."
Bolling told the news con-
ference, "The onJy way to make
an honest man or hJm is lo knock
out that provision of the con-
ference report."
The spending cuts approved
Wednesday would leave few
areas of American life un-
touched.
Pensioners, students, farmers,
, the unemployed, children.
hospital patients, the poor,
federal workers, veterans, mass
transit users, cities and states,
the arts and sciences -all will
reel the impact of the 1982
budget reductions Congress is
trying to finalize.
The minimum benefit for
Market mixed.
after rally
NEW YORK (AP) -The
stock market was mixed today
after a brief rally following
President Reagan's tax-cut vic-
tory in Congress.
The Dow Jones average of 30
points in early trading, slowed a
2.29 gain lo 939.69 an hour before
closing.
Gainers outnumbered losers
by a 7-6 margin in the 2 p.m.
EDT tally or New York Stock
Exchange-listed issues.
Wall Streeters were generally
enthusiastic about such pro-
visions in the tax proposals u a
cut in the maximum tax on
capital gains Crom 28 to 20 per-
cent.
But the prospective economic
impact or the three-step reduc-
tion in income taxes over the
next two years remained a sub-
ject of controversy.
'
Social Security recipients is
among the programs that would
be eliminated altogether under
the compromise package of cuts
approved by a House-Senate
conference committee. Public
service jobs under the Com-
prehensive Employment and
Training Act also would be
scrapped.
Other programs, such as food
stamps, would face spending re-
ductions as a result of tightened
eligibility standards.
Dozens of specific grant pro-
grams involving education and
health would be lumped together
into broader block grants -an"
approach intended le give stat.es
greater control over bow they
spend federal dollars.
BLOCKS BUDGET CUTS
Rep. Richard Bolling
,~--·-==-
'From Page A 1
AFFECT • • •
$20,000. tbe ramUy could avoid
lauUoo oo an extra $500 1n 1112
and on $1 ,000 ln 1183 and law
years. 1be deducUoo ii for 5 per-
cent ol lhe eamln11 of the lower-
pald spouae next year and for 10
percent lD aublequent yean.
The marrta1e penally lo .cur-
rent law, which requires 17
million workinC couples to pay
more taxes than if they were
single, coett lhll couple $185. 1be
new lelialaUoo would reverse
that and actuaUy 1Jve the couple
an $84 "marriage bonus."
The Senate version of Reagan's
bill -but not the House pJan -
would increase tax benefita for
working couples or single parents
wbo pay for child care services
during working hours.
Current law provides a tax
credit -which is subtracted
direcUy from taxes owed -for 20
percent or the first $2,000 spent
each year for the care of a child,
or $4,000 for the care of two or
more.
For famlUes with incomes UD·
der $30,000, the bill increases the
credit to as much as 30 percent.
The level of expenditures subject
lo the benefit wouJd be ralaed for
all taxpayers to $2,400 for one
child and$4,800forlwoor more.
The $30,000 family could get a
maximum credit of 20 percent ol
$4,800, or $960.
Assuming the family has a
small savings account, it would
lose one benefit that is in cWTent
law. The law allows a coupJe to
avoid taxes on up to $400 a year in
interest. That would be repealed
attheendofl981.
A much touted new savings in·
centive probably would not
benefit the $30,000 family at all,
although it would likely help those
in higher tax brackets. Thia is the
misnamed "all-savers
certificate,'' which is designed to
increase savings and build a pool
or mortgage money.
The interest o n those
certificates wouJd pay 70 percent
of the rate earned on one-year
Treasury certificates, which oow
is in the 15 percent range. That
means a yield of 10.5 percent -
tax free. But to a couple in the
$30,000 income range, that would
be less beneficial than many other
types or taxable investments
already available.
Begin.n.ing in 1984, the couple
could avoid taxes on 15 percent or
the first $3,000 interest earned
each year from any kind of invest-
ment. First, however, interest
paid for any kind of non-business
loan except a home mortgage
would have to be s ubtracted.
• • Hotel open
8 months
after fire
LAS VEGAS CAP) -With all
its 2,081 guest rooms booked for
the weekend, the MGM Grand
hotel has reopened quietly -
eigh t months after 84 people
died there in the nation's second-
worsl hotel fire.
Guests trickled into the lobby
Wednesday, and the sound ol an
occasional slot machine jackpot
rang out in the cavernous.
almost-empty casino.
But unlike the Hollywood-like,
December 1973 opening, the re-
open Ing -a day ahead of
schedule -was subdued with
about 400 invited guests and an
occasional passerby Crom the Strip.
One or the new features is a
computerized, $5 million Ule·
safety system hotel officials
c laim has made the MGM
Grand one or the safest resorts
in the world.
A~~ ~iles W Lord. center. chief Judge of the US Dlstnct Court at Minneapolis . was named ol.(tstand-
mg federal trial Judge this week by the Assoc1at1on of Trial lawyers of America 111 San Francisco
The group also honored Superior Cou rt Judge Reginald M Watt. Butte County. Calif . right. and
New York State Court of Appeals Assonate Judge Jacob D Fuchsberg . Albany le/I
Michelle Marvin
fined for theft
Michelle Triola Marvin,
t hl' jilted love r who sued ac
tor L ee Mar vi n for
"palimony.'' has been fined
$250 and placed o n s ix
months informal probation
after plt•uding no contest to a
petty th('ft charge
M unic1pal Court Judge Jill
Jakes imposed t he :-.entence
in Ben •rly f1 11ls after Ms.
.M arvm t'nlcrl'd a plt•a of no
c·onlest lo thl' m1sdl'ml•anor
c hargl'
M:-. ~I an tn, '8. was arrest
ed last S<>ptem bc.-r b} pn vale
security officers at a Beverly
Hall s department store and
accused of tr~ ing to shoplift
three sweatt•rs and two bras
valu ed al S208
The wife of s inger .
songwriter and actor Paul
Wiiiiams has given birth to
the couple's first child, a boy.
a s pokes man for Williams
has said in Los Angeles.
Katie Williams, 30, gav<'
birth to 6-pound, 5-pounce
('hristopher Cole Wiiiiams at
Cedars Sinai Medical Center
on Tuesday afternoon, said
s pokes man Sandy 1-'ricdman
The 40-ycar old Oscar and
Grammy-winner, author of
such :-.cmgs a:-"You and Mc
Against the Wo rld" and
"We've Onl) Just Begun"
and his wife hm e bN•n mar
nt:d for se\en }cars
F1irmvr l ' S Agriculture
Sl'C'fl'tar} Earl L. Butz Sa}s
he' II try to sta) out of the
limelight no\\ that he's been
released from a fed e ral
prison after serving 25 days
fo r income tax C\ as ion
But z . 72 . \\h o \\a s
Bob Keeshan, known to
millions of children across
North America as Captain
Kangaroo, is progressing
favorably in his recovery
f rom a h eart attack. a
hospital s pokes man said
llowever. the s pokesman
at E t obi coke General
ll o s pltal in Toronto said
Keeshan still is not allowed
any visitors other than his
immcdiall' family
Kecshan, 54, :-.urrered the
attack a s he arrived al
Toronto lnternut1onal Airport
l'arher this month
ugricullun· sccretar} under
forml•r Presidents Nixon and
Ford. said in a telephone in-
tcr v H•\\ from lnd1anapohs,
said he wa'.'> ·~elting a little
rest · ut his West Lafayette
home
Most of nation damp
Scattered thunder showers range from Arizona to Florida
Coastal f orPca.d
Hlgl\I -"*'"'"' 1-c1....ci1,.u. wlUI olllerwlw llaly ...,,,,.,. Friday.
Co .. IAt 1-. '°· tnl-~ COUIAI 11111111a.1n1-a. wa .. r •1
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FrldAly --*'"""" ,_,,, one lo lwo IHI Low c1011dln1u
be<omi"ll _11, ""'ny Friday •l•r -
U.S. summary
T~lorm• rumbled o"9r PAl¥1•
ol Arl1-u rly IOdAly and .,. .. d
trom MonlAIM IO N .... lh o.-ota .,,.,
lrom North CMc>tona acrou Floria.
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A few thundef'tttow.r~ drOIPt)9d fAH'I
°"'r ,,,. _.llwrn RO< ky Mounl••n•.
lt>e u-Mlu•u loc>t RI••• ••llty T
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Sca lle red •ho• .. ,. .,.o lhun 1,
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day over llw SoullleHI, the IOWt• Amarillo 11.5 n SI
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LOS ANGELES IAPI Lo"
cloudlneu 111.,..10 covtr moil ol Sovllltr" Calllornl• In nlollt a nd
morning '*'"· llul "*'Id llu<n oil
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SURf REPORT
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LllU•cllMoe J w
We1Te Listening •••
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\
Oronge Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30. 1981 H /F
Art's 'rear guard'
Sawdust exhibitor sculpts metal, works with acrylic
By STEVE MITCHELL o1 .... Gally" ... ,_
"I'm a n atavis tic folk
artist a throwback," says Dion
(pronounced Dye-on> Wrighl as
he a pplies a blowtorch to a steel
gill on a suspended fish
sculpture
"I'm like the rear guard an
stead or the avant garde," he
says, though much of his work
exh ibit ed a t the Sawdust
Festival in Laguna Beach is
ha r dly conventionul.
T ake his "f'ully har nessed
Bamboozler.'' for example A
gnome-like creature fashioned
from a piece of driftwood ·ht•
found on the beach.
T he e lawllke a rms . made
from bamboo roots. hang use
lcssly to its chunky sades as the
creature sat:. s us 1wnded from d
leather hurn1:ss
Has "Bonemoblll' l" is JUsl
what the title 1m phe!:o bleached
bones hangm~ by slrm~
~11 g ht 's "Yoga Mo t el"
sl'ulpture features the steel
frauH.•\\ork of a motel room with a s ingle piece of furniture a
hcd or sculpted nails
· I' hose are fun." he s aid of his
more wh1m:-.1cal creations.
Some pt'Ople like them better
t h:rn the serious stuff and l don 't
mind A laugh's better than
nothing."
But Oaon Wright's "serious
stuff" isn't so bad by itself.
His s lccl Sl'Ulptures include a
largt· hermit crab eme rging
from its "see·lhrough" shell,
a 11d hi s giant "Stag Beetle"
lCJoks real enough to crawl off its
~land
M(•lal Sl'ulpture is not the onJy
medium in \\hlch the 43-year-old
artist works Has acrylic works,
c·ollagt'~. mobiles, cartoons and
IJl'n and mk drawings are dis·
pla) ed al both ends of has open
air booth near the water wheel
at tht' Sawdust Festa val
n10n Wnyht WW\ lil1111·tnri 11 ,,, rmt //lll'il1mq /1111rlwo: llfl .~( 11lplure "'
a fish
Wright 11 at the booUl daily,
demonstrating hla artlatic aklllt
with a blowtorch, as well u hla
gift ror tnlelHge nt gab.
"I was an introvert the first 30
years or my life, but now you
can't get me to shut up," be
laughs, turning down the volume
on his portable radio, tuned to a
Jazz station.
He's been an artis t for more
than ~ years, Wright s ays, after
a tte nding school at UC Santa
Barbara. "Got a degree and every-
thing," he chuckles, pulling his
msect-like goggles back on his
forehead. "But I don't think you
need a degree. In fact, I bad to
unlearn a lot of things. It took
me 15 years before I felt I really
knew what an artist is."
He says art has been his "only
visible means of s upport" for
the past five or sax years, adding
(•ver y artist must go through an
apprentice period.
.. And that 's e ither with a
master artist as your teacher. or
11t the company store."
Wright took the "company
s tor e " route, working as a
printer, garbage collector , book
salesman. fisherma n, plumber
and a ha lf dozen other trades to •
support his a rtisti c pursuits.
The veteran artist, who has
exhi bited his works since the
Sa wdu s t o p e n e d in the
mid-1970s, says there ls no
formula to become a successful
ar tist.
.. You huve to find your own
way through the maze," he says,
f1 r 1ng up the blowtorch for
another go at the steel fish.
Health
cutbacks
begin
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
first effeNs of the austere Los
Angeles County budget were fell
a~ the Department of Health
Services closed eight communi-
ty health centers, eliminated all
but preventive medicine in 32
more and ended s urgery and
medical services at Long Beach
General Hospital.
The cuts were announced last
month, as part of the depart-
m ent's compli ance with orders
from the Board of Supervisors
try ing lo bal ance the 1981 -82
budget with less money than it's
had in years
But health center closures and
cha ngeovers went into effect
three days earlier than planned
Wednesday.
~~~~~~~~~
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H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
wrnrn arn
Iran quake death
toll seen at 4,000
ANKARA, Turkey CAP ) -
Jran 'l official Pars news aaencv
baa reported 1,000 confirmed
deaths and 854 people injured in
the maHive earthquake that
leveled parts of seven villages ln
southeastern Iran.
Abolhusein Saveh, governor-
g e ner al of quake -ravaged
Kerman province, predicted to·
day the death toll would reach
4,000 and said half the population
in the isolated, mountainous re-
gion had been burled by debris
scattered by Tuesday night's
quake.
2 hunger str ike r s
n e a rer to d e ath
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
CAP) -Irish nationalist Kevin
Lynch lapsed into a coma on the
69th day of his hunger strike in
the Maze Prison today, and
death could be just hours away,
his supporters said.
They s aid jailed guerriUa
Kieran Doherty was stllJ con·
scious but sinking fast on the
70th day of his fast. Both men
are 25. Six hunger strikers have
died at the Maze since March 1.
Ga m bia presid e nt
o ust ed in co u p
DAKAR, Sene1al (AP) -A
military coup in Gambia during
the night ousted civilian Presi·
dent Dawda Jawara, who was in
London for the royal wedding,
Radio Gambia announced today.
Several people were kiJled in
the coup, s aid we ll-informed
sources in neighboring Seneeal.
The coup was carried out by the
country's 500-man police force.
............
President J<.eagan holds up his sketch ezpreiBing hia feelings
regarding the vote on a ta.r cut oill he endorsed. The House voted
238 to 195 in favor of the bill.
Prince and D~iana
'alone ' with 14
ROMSEY, England (AP) -
Prince Charles and his bride
Diana were spending their first
day of married life today in
honeymoon seclusion• with their
host, hostess and 12 servants.
As Britain basked in a glow of
joy, pride and patriotism in·
gardens and the River Test.
But the away-from-it-all peace
·and privacy of Broadlands that
began when the estate's big
black gate shut behind the
prince and princess of Wales at
6: 11 p.m. Wednesday will last
only two days.
.
Reagan faces
-ough encore
~
W ASHJNOTON (AP) -Willa
the moet important part.I ol bl.I NEWS ANALYSIS economic proeram nearly ln
place, what can President
Reaean do tor an encore?
Jn just under twice the 100
days traditionaUy allotted a new
president to show bis stuff, the
40tb president of the United
States is virtually assured the
key elements or an economic
package unequaled in scope
since the New Deal of Franklin
Roosevelt.
He did it by coaxing from the
House, nominally controlled by
the Democrats, a 238-195 vote for
his plan to cut taxes 25 percent
over 33 months, starting Oct. 1.
. Within a matter of hours,
Reagan had won not one but
three important victories on
Capitol Hill.
In addition to the House tax
vote -and a lopsided Senate
vote for a similar measure -
House and Senate conferees
reached final accord on more
than $35 billion in 1982 spending
cuts be demanded, and a Senate
committee unanimously gave a
vote of confidence to CIA Direc-
t!'r William Casey.
Just 24 hours after Reagan's
aides said the outcome of the tax
vote in the House was "loo close
to call," the president emerged
victorious. He did it by diligent·
ly t e lephoning members of
Congress, meeting with others
at the White House and soliciting
thousands of phone calls and
telegrams to the Capitol jrom
voters.
But, Reagan said , he bad
twisted no congressional arms.
"Even those gentlemen that I
called who didn't feel that they
could go with our plan have re·
marked that they'll testify that
there's been no arm-twisting or
anything of that kind," he said.
Now, with his victories behind
him, Reagan must deal not so
much with the Democrats, but
with the right wing of his own
party.
While Reagan focused almost
exclusively on his economic pro·
gram , he tried to divert atten-
tion from such issues as abor-
tion, school prayer and busing to
integrate schools.
And questions about Casey's
past business dealings still re-
main.
As Reagan said, "I don't think
we'll close up the desk and go
fishing." Jetliners passed
200 feet apart?
MARRIAGE BRINGS
LADY D HONORS -C10
duced by Wednesday's glittering
royal wedding, and revelers
cele brated into the early hours.
the couple spent their wedding
night at Broadlands, the country
estate of Charles' second cousin
Lo rd R omsey, 90 m iles
Bani-Sadr critical of Khomeini
ATLANTA CAP> -A jetliner
passed directly over another last
week and the two avoided col-
lision by no more than 200 feet,
closer than previously reported,
the Federal Aviation Administra-
tion says.
FAA spokesman Jack Barker
had reported hours after the inci·
dent JµJy 2Q that the two Atlanta·
bound Delta Air Lines jets carry-
ing a total of 317 people had come
no closer than 700 feet and that the
incident posed "no danger at all."
But Barker said Wednesday the
agency had received new in·
formation indicating the aircraft
came within 100 to 200 feet of each
other.
T e am starts hunt
for Andria Doria
der water photographers set sail
in search of the Andria Dorla,
which sank 25 years ago with a
reported $1 million treasure of
jewelry and cash.
The group left Montauk, N. Y.
Wednesday night for the spot
where the Italian luxury liner
went down in the Atlantic, kill·
ing 51 people.
Buses r o ll again
southwest of London .
Surrounded by 5,000 acres of
fields and woodland near this
small country town of 15,000 peo·
ple in Hampshire County, the
18th century mansion was the
home of the late Earl Mountbat·
ten, Charles' great-uncle and
Romsey's grandfather, who was
assa ssinated b y a n Iris h
R e publican Army bomb in
CHICAGO (AP) -Buaes start Au gust 1979.
rolling again Monday on two The prince's parents, Queen
suburban lines ~osed by the Elizabeth II and Prince Philip,
transit crisis, and a Regional honeymooned there after their
Transportation authority official wedding in November 1947.
says there could be more open-The nearest public road is
ings soon. more than a mile from the 12·
About 8,000 riders who have room Georgian manJ1on, The
gone without service for two main guest bedroom, lbe Portico
months will again be able to Room, with flor al print chintz
Political asylum stirs I r anian threat against F r ench
PARIS <AP) -Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr, the ousted president
of Iran who escaped to France,
today was quoted as saying
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
"bears heavy responsibility for
the appalling disaster that has
befallen the country."
"To a large extent . he has im·
posed this course upon our peo·
ple," Banj.Sadr was quoted as
telling The Times of London in a
telephone interview soon affer
his a rrival in France Wednesday
aboard an Iranian armed forces
jet. He was granted political
asylum by the French govern-
ment.
urgent," Bani-Sadr was quoted
as saying. L.....
One of the Iran~ hardliners,
Hojatoleslam Sadegh Khalkhaii,
told Iran's Parliament today
that unless his government
takes action against the French
Embassy in Tehran "the people
will decid e on their own,"
Tehran radio reported.
There are about 100 French In
Iran, Including a s mall embassy
staff. More than 50 Americans
were taken hostage at the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran in Nov·
ember 1979 when the shah re·
ceived medical treatment in
New York. They were released
444 days later , on Jan. 2Q, 1981,
after a massive financial settle-
ment was worked out.
Sadr, who was granted asylum
on condition he refrain from any
political activity while in
France. Bani-Sadr re mained
secluded at his daughter's home
in a Paris suburb.
The leader of the Ira nian exile
community in Paris, former
Prime Minist er S hahpour
Bakhtiar, has rejec(ed any aJ.
liance with Hant-Sadr, describ·
ing him as "a man who sent
dozens and dozens of persons
before a firing squad."
"The very question astonishes
m e," said Bakhliar , the late
Shah Mohammad R eza
Pahlavi's lasl prime minister.
"How am I supposed to resolve
my differences with him?''
NEW YORK (AP) -A team take the bus when partial c urtains and four-poster bed,
of deep -sea divers and un· serv ic e resumes looks out over landscape d
"We must try to find a quicker
way of overthrowing the absolutists who lust after power
only, and we must stop the
Americans from Installing a
government in Iran. It is
There was no immediate reac·
lion to Khalkhali's threat from
the French government or Bani·
He said Bani-Sadr was the
architect and theoretician of
Khomeini's Islamic revolution
~---~--~~~~~·;.-:-:-·1 ~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurad-y, July 30, 1981 H/F
.
·~umu~· Klan, foreign groups on upswing
Attorney general's report also notes rise in state's youth gangs
Secret selection
of ju·ry affirmed.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The
state Supreme Court baa •&reed
the Jury in a murder trial may
be cboeen in aecret as 1001 IS a
transcript is released when the
trial be1lna. •
It a1lo let stand a lower court
rulln1 excluding the public from
quesUoning of prospective Jurors
about their death penalty views.
Fire contained
RA NCHITA (A P>
Firefighters contained a fire
which burned 1,000 acres of
brush in remote desert terrain
12 miles west of Borrego
Springs.
Plea entered
OROVILLE (AP) -William
Carter Spann, a nephew of
former president Jimmy Carter,
bas pleaded innocent lo a
burglary charge.
Al a preliminary bearing Wed·
nesday in S uperior Court,
Span.n, 34, asked to be released
without bail, aaylnt the Secret
Service 11 in touch with him
from time to Ume.
3 hurt in blaze
SANTA MONICA <AP)
Three residents of a downtown
hotel suffered minor lnjuriea
and Z7 others were evacuated
when a fire raced through the
second floor of the two-story
building early today, flrefi1bters
said.
Pair re1cued
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Two Belmont fishermen were
reported in good condition today
following a helicopter rescue 90
miles out at sea, a Coast Guard
spokesman reported.
J ohn Hurwowitz, 38, and Roy
Territo, 42, were forced to aban·
don their SO-foot wooden boat,
the North Cape, on Wednesday.
Abortion cuts halted
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The
state Supreme Court has tem·
porarUy blocked abortion fund
cuts for thousands of poor women
in California.
Wednesday's order, signed by
five of the seven justices, came
five days before the state Health
Department planned to notify 3.5
million Medi-Cal recipients of the
statt·funding limits set for Aug.
15.
The court said the order would
stay in eff.ect and Medi-Cal
abortions would continue -until
it hears a lawsuit by abortion-
rigbts and civil-liberties groups
seeking to have the limits
declared unconstitutional.
About 105,000 abortions are
budgeted for poor women under
Medi-Ca! at a costof$38 million in
the 1981-82 fiscal year that started
July 1. Officials say about S9
mUHon wouJd be spent during the
year if the restrictions took effect
as scheduled.
Al's Garage and Sea Bags
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SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tbe Ku Klu.x Klan expanded rapidly
lut year and more of the same la
aUU comln&, aaya a report by the
CaWomla attomey 1eneral '• ol· flee.
Tbe annual report on terrorism,
released Wednesday, also said
there WIS a sur1e of terrori•m by
groups identified with fo.relp
political movements -at leut 12
bomb and asaaa1inalion incident.I
were blamed on them durin1 1880
after minimal violence in 1m.
And California's youth 1anp
grew during the year, it said.
But the report, by Attorney
General George Oeukmejlan,
didn't mention the small Marxist
group called the Spartacist
League, which last year's version
of the report called a "dangerous
faction."
The Spartacist League filed suit
last week demanding that a
DEFENDS ACTION
Governor Braum
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retraction be clrculaled u widely
11 the ori11nal report. Oeukme-
Jlan 's office sald the Spartacllta
were left out of the new rePOrt for
lack of activity.
Tbe new report said the Ku Klux
Klan, which re-emerged in 1'78,
now baa an estimated 350 mem·
bera statewide . lD addition to
ebapten in San ote10, Rlveralde,
San Bernardino and Fontana, a
new one waa eetabllahed in the
Richmond area, and activity baa
been observed in Oakland and the
Montere1 area, it said.
The Klan has several
paramilitary tr alning camps in
the southern United States, and
"possibly two lo Northern
California."
Other domestic extremist
groups include the lnternatlooal
Committee Again.st Racism UN·
CAR), a n e l ement of the
Progressive Labor Party. The re-
port said it advocatee violence to
bring about a workers' revolu·
lion, and baa a long-standin1 feud
with the Klan.
INCAR wu involved In antl-
K 1 an demonstrations In
Sacramento, Fontana, Rialto,
Oakland and San Francisco dur·
ing lM>, ther~portsald.
The only other domestic ex·
tremial 1roups mentioned were
the Communist Workers Party, to
which attempted bombinl• are
attributed, and the American
Nuia, which the report said bad
little success in recruiting new
members last year.
The report described these "in-
ternational terrorist groups":
-Taiwanese Extremists, also
called the Taiwan Independence
Movement. They seelt ttie re-
moval of the Nationalist Chinese
government. At least five bomb
incidents in Southern California
are au.spected of betn, lbelr work.
-Phlllpplne ExtremlJll. Ex·
r.losives used In a Manila bomb-
n1 were traced to San Franclleo,
resulting In Pbllipplne cbar1es
a1alnst at least 16 California resi·
dents.
-Croatian Extremisll. They
were blamed for three bomb incl·
dents. Credit for one was claimed
by the "Croatian Liberation
Army,'' wblcb bad previoutly not
takensucbcredit. ,
-Armenian Extremists . .Bom·
bings in Hollywood and New York
were lbeir first known actions.
One Canoga Park resident of
Armenian descent was arrested
in Switzerland o n t errorist
charges resulting from an ac·
cidentaJ detonation of a bomb in a
hotel room.
-Iranian Extremists. They
refl ect the politics in Iran.
Brown denies spraying delay
Democratic assemblymen absent at governor's speech
~ FRESNO (AP) -Gov. Brown
denies that there was any delay
in starting aerial spraying to
combat the Mediterranean fruit
fly in the Santa Clara Valley.
Farmers have criticized the
Democratic governor for refus-
ing to issue an order July 8 to
start aerial malathion spraying.
But Brown said his reversal
under federal pressure two days
later still allowed aerial applica-
tions to begin the order July 8.
"Contrary to the propaganda
and the self-serving political
rhetoric that you hear from one
end of the coast to the other.
aer ial s praying was not de.-
layed," Brown said.
His speech was split between a
defense of bis medlly eradica-
tion program and an attack on
R eaga n administration
economics. It received strong
applause from bis audience of
labor leaders.
But Fresno's two Democratic a ssemblymen, Ri ck Lehman
and Jim Costa, deliberately
missed the luncheon because or
their and agriculture's anger at
the way Brown has handled the
medfly crisis.
"You're not going to win any
popularity contests by appear-
ing on the same platform with
J erry Brown in the Central
Valley today," Costa said.
The governor was asked at a
press conference later about the
absence of Lehman and Costa.
"Medfly politics takes a toll,"
Brown said. "Some of tbe iocal
representatives obviously have
their own agenda."
Threatened with jail or a $500
fin e, residents of the area infest·
ed with Mediterranean fruit flies
seem to be grudgingly surren-
dering their gardens and fruit
trees, offi cials say.
State officials had given
dozens of people in the 267·
square-mile infestation zone 48
hours to strip their produce or
face legal action. The first of
those warnings expired Wednes·
day.
''Virtually everyone had com-
plied," said a medfl y project
spokesman. "They didn 't have
to issue a citation.''
But officials said the com·
pliance program will continue in
efforts to remove all potential
breeding grounds for the prolific
me drties. which threaten an
estimated $4 .7 billion worth of
California crops.
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~· Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, July 30, 1981
LENA HORNE DEBORAH HARRY
Beauties listed
Some not household names
NEW YORK <APJ What do Victoria Principal, Jaclyn
Smith. Jacqueline Bisset. Susan Sarandon. Dayle Haddon.
Lois Chiles, Brooke Shields. Cristina Ferrare. Deborah
Harry and Lena Horne have in common?
All might not be household names. but they lead a
Harper's Bazaar study of the most beautiful women in
America. according to the Daily News.
And all, including Miss Ferrare. a model. and Miss
Harry. a rock star. say they don't consider themselves
beauties.
"It's not me, it's the makeup and hair people." said the
61 -year-old Miss' Horne.
··To me, it's not such a big deal," said the 16-year-old
Miss Shields. "The one thing I might like to have instantly
is perfect posture ...
Said Miss Harry: .. I've always loved turning myself in-
to someone else ... JACQUELINE BISSET
Social security for cats
Long Beach center will take care of unwanted pet
LONG BEACH <AP) -Can't
keep your cat anymore but you
don't want to send him to the big
sand box in the sky? The Cat
Retirement Center in Long
Beach will take care of your cat
for the rest of its life.
The retirement center, af-
fili ated with The National Cat
Protection Society, is a non-
profit organization. The center
charges $100 to take in your re-
tiring feline and guarantees that
the cat will not be put to sleep.
An additional S3S is charged if
the cat does not have up-to-date
blood tests for leukemia and
other fatal cat diseases.
Debby Gravely, a kennel
worker and technician at the
center, said: "We encourage the
owners to come down and see
the cats, give them treats, pet
them, love them."
But sometimes the cats pine
away, not able to adjust to the
new setting ... It's too often that
people bring their cats down and
forget about them," she added.
Ms. Gravely said there are
many reasons why owners
choose to leave a pet with the
center. The most common one is
moving and not being able to
take the animal with them.
Cats can die of a broken heart,
Ms. Gravely added, saying that
usually takes about a month
after they are brought into the
center. "If the owners would
just come down and spend 2A> to
30 minutes a day. two or three
times a week," it sometimes
helps the cats adjust.
"But, if the cat is quite old or
obese, then they don't have
much of a chance to survive,"
she said. "The stress of being
brought in here tends to shorten
the life span of cats that are old
or overweight."
Most of the cats brought into
th e center are available for
adoption. People wishing to take
in one of the furry creatures are
Non-profit agency
boards felines
for modest fee
thoroughly checked to Lnsure the
cat will receive a good home,
Ms. Gravely said. "We just real-
ly go to a lbt of great pains to
make sure," she added.
•'For a s m a ll donation per
month we will keep the cat and
put him under the heading of not
adoptable."
But. she added. "We feel
personally that the cats should
be put up for adoption." Ms.
Gravely said that no matter how
much care the cats get at the center it cannot equal the atten·
lion the animals used to receive
from their owners.
·'The only thing they lack here
is the amount of attention that they were getting ; if they could
get that it would be like home,"
she said.
But some cats survive a long
time in the retirement home.
Tiger Junior has been with the
center since it was founded 13
years ago by C. Richatd Calore.
Tiger is almost 20 years old,
said Ms. Gravely, adding that
the usual lifespan for a cat is
about 18 years.
About 500 cats are at
the protection society building,
which includes a clinic. place-
ment center, the retirement
center and section of exotic cats.
The placement center accepts
any healthy, neutered cat which
is more than 6 months old, she
said. Now, the youngest kitten is
8 and a half or 9 months old.
''During the winter months
and early spring, we place more
ca ts than we · take in," Ms.
Gravely said. "Throughout the
year. most of them get adopted
out."
Signups set
for disabled
Officials at Orange Coast
College have set aside Aug. 14 as
a special registration day for
physicaJly disabled students who
may be attending the college
this fall.
The fall semester begins Sept.
8.
The special Aug. 14 registra-
tion will be conducted from 10
a.m . to 1 p.m. in Boom 105 of the
counselin g and admissions
building on the Costa Mesa cam-
pus.
Rehabilitation and guidance
counselors will be available to
assist students in planning their
schedules.
Her•'• Good Newsl NO MORE FLE~Sll On Your Pet or In Your Homel
~. , .. m "° .... h., O•I ••...u "91CllAA
• .,.==VIN ..,. .... rs y .... pest ........... •••
l"ICTIVI Wltlle ........ k•hl
AGAINST:
• ru.u
• &OACMO • ••n . ""° • run ·~ ·~ • U-lf!U •'"1
• llD. ""'" • CNOm ·-• YATD.Mlel
• unit works on safe, silent. ultrasonic waves
• .safe to humans & pets
• uses only 4 watts power HowS 5 9 SO
• no speclol lnstallatian
• pests ellminoted In 2 to 6 weeks
(714) 661-9191 (714) 966-2999 p;';tlYRol Sales
A,,,, 1ulf R t1tr
Tuday\I Ulll'l't'lt rail'
11u.in1ntet'tl for
the ttrm by
Atrwrit·•n !\lvyilfS
M
cearance
starts Friday, 9:30 a.m.
many limited quantitles ... not all sizes may be available
In each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock
on hand, so shop early for best selection!
• 1n our
Huntington Beach
store
.women's sportswear
24 JUNIOR SKIRTS .
92 JUNIOR TAHK TOPS
f7 JUNtOA TANK TOPS ....... .
41 IUSES' PANTT~PS
41JUNIORPANTTOPS
21 MISSES' SHOAT SLEEVE TOPS
121 JtJNIORTEE SHIRTS
43 JUNIOR CAlllSOLE TOPS
51 lnSES' VESTS .
'ST JUNIOR SHIRTS . . . .
29 •SSES' POLY!STER PANTS
29 LARGE SIZE PANT TOPS
'r1 JUNIOR PANTS .
17 LARGE SIZE SWEATERS
13JUNIORJEANS ....
11 LARGE SIZE PANTS
31 •SSES' BLOUSES
42SKIRT8 .......... ..
25TOPS .............. ..
30PANTS ...... .
31 WHfTE BLAZERS
dresses and coats
NOW
3.98
3.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
5.98
5.98
6.98
6.98
. 6.98
6.98
. 6.98
11 .98
11 .98
'. 13.98
14.98
14.98
. 14.98
39.98
HOW
15HALF·SIZEORESSESANOPANTSUrTS .. 5.M
9HALF·8'ZEORESSES . . 9.98
f7 JUNIOR AHO MISSES' DRESSES • . 9.98
7HALF·SIZEDRESSES . . . . . .... 14.98
71 JUNIOR AHO MISSES' DRESSES ..... 14.98
15MISIES'DRESIES . . . . . . . 19.91
33JUHIOALOHODRESSES .. 19.91
maternity wear MOW
17MATERNfTYTOPS.. . . . . . . . . . . 4.98
9 lllATE.RHfTY DRESSES . . . . . . . . . 9.98
lingerie, lbungewear
I NOW
15HALFSLIPS 2.98
17 PAJAMAS . . . . . . . 3.98
11GOWNS .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . , ... 5.98
25SLEEPTEESHtATS.. . . . . . . . 5.98
21 LOUNOEWEAA . . . .. . . . . . . . .. .. .... 5.98
23SOFTCUPBRAS ....... 7.98
22 CONTOUR BAAS . 5.98
33SOFTCUPBRAS 9.98
women's acqessories
NOW
51 BEL TS . . .. . . 9lc
43 T\JBE TOPS (ACCESSORIES DEPT.) 1.48
13GLASSCAHOL!HOLOEAS . 2.48
llDANIKlf"LEOTAROS ............. 2.98
171TAT10NIRY .. ~T1N ................. 3.98
41TUIHIATS(ACCUS.D£PT). .. .. 3.98
47 DEAAFOAW" SHOES (ACCESS. DEPT.) . 4.98
21 CA'•OLE SETS . . . . . S.48
31 EIPADAIUD(ACCESS. DEPT.) ..... S.98
21 UNUNEOJACK!TS . . . 7.91
31~LEOTAROS ............... 9.98
21LEATHERHAN08AGS ............... 11.98
· infants and toddlers
NOW
42CMIHEm ......................... 98c
11 .. ANTS' Gll'TRTS ............... : . 1.98
17 .. ANTl'IW!ATIRI ................ 1.98
~TOOOLIRIOYl'TANKTOPS ......... 1.98
... ANT'S' IHOATIETI ............... 2.98
'r11'00DlM IOYl'IHORTIETI ........ 2.•
GlOOOLllU•Ll'IHQlfflaT8 ........ 2.•
•TOOOLMGIM.l'IWWUR ......... 2 ••
1tTOOOLIR ..... 10N ............... a.•
• l'OOOLa ............... ' ..... ..
t?TOOOUllllOYl'IHORTAUI , . , •.... 4.4f a1ooou1u•.l'...,..1m1 ...... 4.41
buys for girts NOW
17•Gll.l'IOlll""'°"IOCKI ........ lie
•UTTUGll.l'CROPTON ........... 1.41
41 UTT\.IGll.I' IHOftTI ............... 1 ••
10I ........................ ' .... .
...... 1'°'9,, ..................... 2 ••
tt •GILWTAllllOPI ............... I.• •umaGllU'IHOllT.,.. .......... s.•
11 um.a...-.....urn ............ •.41
.IP LJT'.TLI ...... ,." .................. .
buys for girls
46PAJAMAS4·14
42 LITTLE GIRLS' HEAL THTEX1" TOPS
42 LITTLE GIRLS' SHORT SETS
918IG GIRLS' SHORTS
S2 BIG GIRLS' SWIMSUITS
34 8IG GIRLS' TAHK TOPS
40 LITTLE GIRLS' TOPS
31 8IG GIRLS' JEANS
'ST 8IG GIRLS' SHOAT SETS
15 BIG GIRLS' TOPS
43 8IG GIRLS' SHOAT SETS
51 PRE· TEEN SWIMSUrTS
buys for boys
29 CREW SOCKS
25 UT.Tl.E BOYS' SHOATS
37 FAMOUS MAKER BEL TS
21BASEBALLJACKETS
17 S.SL Y. COLLARED SHIRTS
'r1 L SLY. WESTERN SHIRTS
13 S. SLY. COLLARED SHIRTS
7 BEL TED DRESS SLACKS
7 S. SLY. SHIRTS
buys for men
29 L SLY. POL VESTER SHIRTS
17S.SLY. SHIRTS
14S.SLV. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS
21 LSLV.SPOATSHIATS
'r1 S. SLY. SOLID COLOR SHIRTS
9 BACKGAMMON GAMES
49 S.SLV. COT/POLY SHIRTS
'DS.SLV. TAOPfCALSHIRTS ...
11 S.SLV. PLAIDSHIRTS
13LSLY. WESTERNSHlATS .
39 L SLY. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS
18 S. SLY. FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS
15LSLV. PLAID SHIRTS . .
31 JEANS .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .....
I SPORT COATS
shoes for the family
NOW
4.48
4.48
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
4.98
. 4.98
4.98 s.ie
. 6.48
6.48
NOW
58c
2.48
3.98
8.98
10.98
5.98
5.98
7.98
7.98
NOW
2.98
3.98
3.98
4.98
5.98
5.98
6.98
6.98
7.98
7.98
9.98
11.98
. 9.98
13.98
18.98
NOW
11tWOMEN'SSANDALS 4.98
12 CHILOREN'SCASUAL SHOES 4.98
205 WOMEN'S SPORT SHOES 5.98
73 CHILDREN'S CASUAL SHOES 5.98
57WOMEN'SOAESSSHOES . . 5.98
1980YS'IUEOEJOGOING8HOES .......... 5.98
24 MEN'S SUEDE JOGGING SHOES. . . ........... 8.98
21MEN'SCASUALSHOE8 .. .. . . .......... 1.98
•WOMEN'SCASUALSHOES .. .. .. .. ... 10.98
32 WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES . . . . . . 14.98
1211Etf'SNYLONJOGGINOSHOES .......... 11.98
11WOMEN'8800T8 .......... . . . . . . 18 ••
34MEN'SCASUALSHOES . .. ............. 11.98
SHEN'S DRESS SHOES .. . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . . . 24.98
21 WOMEN'S WOOD HEEL SHOES . . . . . . . . . 24.98
1211£N'SCASUALSHOES ...... .. ........... 19.98
yardage and notions
NOW
1' CERAMIC PIN CUSHIONS . • .. .. .. .. • .. . .. . . 41c
17WOOO fA~S ..........•.. , .........•..... ~· lie
21 LA1CHHOOKRUGCANVAS!S .............. 1.48
17IEWINGMACH1t!COVERS .............•... 1 ••
21REELIELAITIC10YDS .................. 3.a
Ml VDI. POLY/COTTON BAOADCLOTH. . • . . • • . • 1 ••
• YDI. COTTONIHUTINCL. .. ............. 1 ••
17VDI. T'ftOPICAL PflNTI ....................... 1 ••
17"°"1'TOPFAMICKITS ................... 2.41
7l'IDI. nt°'9CAL,....,. . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . . .. . 2.•
for. your home
NOW
11 WAIHCLOTHI. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.21
17WAIHC"°1Hi., ... n ................ ~ ....... 1.41
llMAll)TOW'IL.I .. , •..... , ................ , ... a.a
tt HANDTOWILI . , .....•.................•.... 1.71
?llATHTOWIL.I .........•........••.•......... S.21
11 IATH TOWl&:I ....... , • '. r. .... " . • .. . . . . . . &• .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30. 1981 A 7
Senate inquiry into CIA chief six months late
WASHINGTON (AP> -CIA
Director William J. Casey ls not
the first official the Senate has
confirmed in haste and second·
gueased at leisure.
And he won't be the last.
Tbe Senate Intelligence Com·
mittee is conducting in Ju1y the
inquiry it didn't bother to un-
dertake in January. It bas hired
a s pecial coun s el , Fred
Thompson. a veteran or the
Watergate hearings, to oversee
the ll)vestigatlon or Casey's bUsi·
ness past and his management
or th e intelligence agency now.
··I expect it to be a thorough
inquiry, but I hope it will be re·
solved in the near future,"
Thompson said.
L':VDER A CLOl'O
William .I Casey
Ironically, m ost of it could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Instead, the
same committee s pent 2"'2 hours
chatting with Casey about World
War II espionage and the need to
strengthen the CIA. Then it re·
commended Casey's confirma-
tion lo a Senate which approved
him, with little discussion, and
no opposition. The vote was 95-0.
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings, although
there was plenty on the record.
some explored in earlier Senate
hearings when Casey came up
for confirmation a decade ago as
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Co mmission, later as
under s e('r etary of s t a t e for
economic affairs .
a re d eemed worthy of close
Sena te scrutiny simply were ig·
nored in the CIA confirmation
proceedings. Casey. and Presi·
dent Reagan as his sponsor .
would have been better served 1f
the whole business had been ex·
plor ed then.
Transactions that s uddenly
He almost would surely have
been ('Onfirmed anyway. The
Senate is not in the habit of re·
jecting the nom inees or presi·
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CARACAS, Venezuela <AP> Venezuela's
plans to become Lalin Ameri ca's first nation to
buy the soph isticated U.S -made F-16 jet fighters
are stirring some ('Ontroversy he re and in
neighboring countries.
Guyana. Venezuela's small English-speaking
neighbor in the no rthe a s tern lip of South
America . has form ally asked the U.S. State
Department to block the sale of the planes lo
Ven ezuel() Colombia, another Venezu elan
neighbor. t\as expressed "concern" about the r isk
of an arms race in the area.
Venezuela has bprder or territorial dispute~
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
although so far it has been low-keyed. Left -wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
summon a special Chamber of Deputies session to
express hi s opposition to the planned purchase . He
did not give the reasons for his opposition but
another member of his party mentioned the high
cos t of lhe planes $13.5 million each.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez, a
leading f igure in the oppositio n Acc ion
De mocratica Party. told reporters that the an·
nouncement by tbe government that it plans to buy
the planes "has caused me some concern .. But he
refused to elaborate .
The government says the controversy 1s at
least premature and by all means unwarranted.
"We are not embarked In an arms race." said
President Luis Herrera. who is a member of the
Social Chrislla n Party. He added that Venezuela
has "no aggressive plans" against any nation.
"What we are doing is merely to renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed forces to bring it
in line with the country 's needs ... he said.
At present, the Venezuelan air for ce's most ad
vanced jet fi ghter aircraft is the French-made
Mirage-5 .
•••••••••••••••••••• :e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e ·e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e
'• We are establishing a pool of small mone) len-e :e ders to assist us in the final stage or complelion of e
•
our chilling feature film "The Hunt in~ Season" •
With alreadv 4200 PA Y /CABLE T V. sta tions e begging for fil ms along with Network Local T. V e
,. gobbling up mO\'te!:> so rast 1t has caused an •
almost franllc demand for pictures 1• So gel on the bandwagon with a young and a m· e
• bil ious mo\'le studio here 1n 0 C. and enjoy some •
hand3011'W profits for 'ourselr both no" and in lhe
• future • e e e e e e 714 I 957-4086 e e e e e e e
•
CONVENIENl DISPOSABLE
COLOPlAST• BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We nov. (d"Y me complete COLOPLAST 1tne-lhe
targt>St selling d•soosable ostorny apphanc es 1n lhe
world E ...erythtng '°' cOlo!>tomdt~ •lecsromates ana
v•!Ocl•y osiomates-atl with convenient COlOPLAST
dtsPOsallthty COLOPlAST rehabllt!y-plvs case pac~
economy Be SUte to asll tor your rRH c00y of lf::jS!GHTS-
llle out>l<atl()n that ~ ivst lat yav-alwcl'f\ oncludes
COUPoO~ fOf Ir~ !>lrnoies 7114714
MOULTON 'LAZA '"A"MACY
23815 Moulton Pa,_wey. Lagune Hilla
(Nftt to El Rancho Merll9')
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loon ClUociation
( ll ' .. , :\. M 0 ~ F H I ! ; 1\ M f; I' M
-...;_.\'J l 'Hl>AY 10 1\ ,, I J>.1\1
noe Huntington BMch, CA 92947
&H/tMm C.llfom#• ,...ion.1 Ollk»t.
een E. u Palma Ave., Anehelm, CA 9*7
1155 YalteY View St., luene P•rtt. CA 80820 1961 AIMlll Ad., c.m.r1110, CA t3010
tSOC
--~·---_ ...... ___ _
20715 $.~Yalon 11\0d., Cataon CA 80748 23021 Laite Cent« Dr .. (Lelle ~or"O. El Toro, CA 112Q>
1001 E. lml)ef1el H~.1 LI Habra, CA llOU1 G) 4140 long IMCll 11.a, l.ong htlc!I, CA tol07 •
22'31 Hewt"°',,.11\0d., Ton'~. CA IOIJ08 10W !MM 14¥11., Tvatln, CA t.o
2• N CltNI AVot., WtefCO'llM. CA 1117'3
"lfftalry ~" n.llHle on• fN«'Wd be•I•
(
I
••
dents, particularly newly elect
ed ones like Reagan.
Jimmy Carter ran into heavy
Senate opposition when he tried
to install Theodore C Sorensen
as head of the CIA , but It never
went to a vote S o r e nsen
withdrew.
The Senate never has rejected
the nominee of a new president
NEWS ANALYSIS
ago. "Mr Casey has cut com ers
when he conside red it lo be
necessary to business profit,"
Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis ,
said then. "He has wheeled and
dealed his way into a personal
Panel should have checked Casey's
r ecord at confirmation time
to the first Cabinet of his ad·
ministration. The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member . but the
job ranks at that level.
And if the comm ittee really
had gone into Casey's business
r ecord at confirmation time,
much of the controversy that
surrounds the CIA director now
, would be old s tuff . with httle im·
pact.
ll was old stuff when Casey
was confirmed. The la wsuits in·
volving him as a director of a
fa iled New Orleans farming cor·
por ation were filed in 1973 and
ca m e u p br iefl y before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
miltee approved his nomination
lo the State De partment post.
Other items of contention in
his business background were on
the re('ord when \ he was con·
fi rmed for the SEC job a decade
•
fortune, sometimes at the ex·
pense of his d ients ..
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resigna·
lion of Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations -the
agency's lop s py. When Sen.
Barry Goldwater , R·Ariz., the
Int e ll igen c e Co mm i ttee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
should quit or be fired . he said it
was because Casey "appointed
an inexperienced man " to that
sensitive position.
It was not inexperience that
d id in Hugel. it was the dis·
clos ur e t hat two fo r mer as ·
SOCiates had aC('USed him Of im·
proper business dealings. But
for that. Hugel presumably still
would be al the CIA. as inex
perienced as ever .
Re<1gan repeated this week hi s
ex pressio n of confidence in
Hert Lance
C a s ey. h is Whit e. Ho u se
spokesman ('ailing the CIA chj ef
a di!>ti nguished public ser vant.
T here's something familiar in
that, and in the whole episode.
F our years ago. Carter budget
di rector Berl Lance came under
Senate criticism. then Senate in·
vest igation of his practices as a
banker. He had been confirmed
after a cursory Senate inquiry.
which didn't see or even seek the
FBI report on his nomination, or
tbe findings or federal bank ex·
a miners.
A look a l the record could
have foretoJd the controversy
that eventually cost Lance his
job. Al the lime, two of the
senators who didn't look pro·
posed that the Senate create a
new s ystem for \non-partisan in·
ves tigation of nominees to major
pos itions . It was supposed to
provide detailed investigative
reports prior to confirmation
votes
The two senators aren't there
any more. The new system isn't
ther e yet
Pollution
rules
blocke d
RICHMOND (AP) A federal
appeals court has blocked a
series of proposed federal reg·
ulations governing indus trial
water pollution for fa iling to
we igh costs against benefi ts.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals said the Environmental
Protection Agency had ignored
the intent of Congress in draw-
ing up the regulations.
Neither EPA nor industry of·
fi cials were immediately availa·
ble for comment
I
• l
It •
'· ll
d
\
-• till ••
WF Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, July 30, 1981
Parking restriction
may curb accidents
The Hunllngton Beach City
Council acted with understand
able impatience last week when it
approved a parking ban on lhe in·
land s ide of Pacific Coast
Highway between Bea c h
Boulevard and the Santa Ana
River. This is the so·called
.. Blood Alley .. s tretch where
many injury accidents have oc·
curred.
City officials were prepared
to enforce this parking ban even
though the required approval of
Caltrans had not yet been ob·
tained.
It is questionable whether
any citations written without
Caltrans' approval would stand
up in court.
But the council ·s unilateral
action undoubtedly prodded
Caltrans on the urgent need to
eliminate some of the traffit'
hazards along .. Blood Alley ··
During a meeting last Friday
with citv officials. Caltrans of·
ficials concurred that the inland
parking ban is justiried The ban
is expected to eliminate problems
t·a used by beachgoers darting
across the highway between their
car s and the sand.
Also. the hazurd po ed by
vehicles that pull abruptly onto
the highway Crom Inland sldt>
parking spots should be reduced.
To further cut traffic prob·
te rns p<>sed by roadside parking
on this busy stretch. Caltruns
agreed to a beachside parking
ban between 8 p.m . and 5 a .m
daily. hours of poor visibility.
These actions won't erase all
problems along this stretch of
highway. It remains to be seen
whether the new parking ban can
be enforced with citations alone
or whether more costly towing
will be required.
Also. the e limination of
roadside parking may require
some beachgoers to park farther
f'rom the sand or to pass up the
beach altogether. Additional
parking lots should be developed
In the meantime. the addi·
tional inconvenience seems a
modest price to pay when the
Possible lives saved and the in·
Juries prevented by the new
parking ban are considered
Budget austerity
At the end of June. Fountain
Valley officials still were g rap·
piing WJth an anticipated budget
defi cit of $763.000.
Nearly one month into the
new fiscal year. the City Council
has given its approval to a $10.6
million balanced budget for
1981·82.
The finan c ial plan rn -
cor porates suggestions from
the city staff. the council and a
citizens advisory committee.
On the positive side, the city
has managed to fund street light-
ing and limited median main·
tenance without assessing addi·
lional fees from tax.weary local
property owners.
Also. the city will not be
forced lo draw on its reserve
funds, which under state law can-
not be replaced once spent.
But the austere budget is not
without sacrlfices:
-Eight city jobs were
eliminated.
-Recre ation fees were
raised by an average of 50 per
cent.
Mos t tree trimming was
eliminated.
-Street sweeping and park
maintenance will be less fre·
Quent.
Residential street lights
will be dimmer.
-Curb and gutter repairs
will be limited to emergencies.
Thou g h this budget is
balanced. Fountain Valley's
fin ancial problems are far from
solved. The 1981 ·82 document
contains more than $100,000 in
one·shot income, such as the sale
of surplus land and equipment.
Also. the city this year used
about $350,000 in federal revenue
s haring money it had saved from
previous years. This money won't
be available next year.
As several council members
observed. it ·s not too soon to
begin planning how to cope with
next year's financial problems.
Boosters back library
Whe n a citv is forced to
tighten its purse strings. resi·
de nts traditionally urge that
funds be maintained for basic
services such as police. fire and
street departments.
Sometimes overlooked are
,·aluable local resources like the
public library system.
Since the passage of Proposi·
lion 13. the Huntington Beach
library system has been operat·
ing at .. subsistence level." ac·
cording to Library Director
Walter Johnson.
City officials might have dif-
ficulty justifying a major ex~
pansion of the library system at
this time and certainly would
have trouble explaining a $30,000
allocation just to make the Cen·
t ral Library's fo untains flow
again.
•
Some Huntington Beach resi
dents recently decided that if the
city . can't provide additional
funds to upgrade and beautify the
Central Library, they'd find the
money themselves.
A committee of these library
boosters was formed to develop
private fund-raising ideas and to
propose how such funds should be
s pent:
This is a concept that has
worked well in the financiall y ail·
ing public school system, where
parents and students have raised
their own funds to support after-
school programs that once were
s ubsidized primarily with tax
dollars.
The new committee of
library boosters has picked a
worthy goal and deserves com
munity support.
Opinions expressed 1n the space cJbove are tho~ of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex
pressed on tn1 s page are thpse ot their authors and artists. Reader comment es 1nv1t·
ed. Address The Daily ~ilot, P.O Box 1S60, Costa Me~. CA 92626. Phone (7141
64i·021
L.M. Boyd I Thief trap
An Englishman named John W.
Fisher hu come up with what looks
as though it mlgbt be the ideal
money bag for a bank mUHDcer.
It's riltled to do these thlnp lf a
thief snatches lt: Orab the c~ipnt'a
hand and bold on. Blow a pollc. wbit·
tie. Fire a blank urtridae. Md tX·
tend three st.eel arms each etpt Ifft
lon1 so it can't be carried t.brouCh •
doorway or t.hrowo out a window.
I
ln Kentucky ia a town called ''71."
There's a ''Nloety Six" in South.
Carolina, an "14" in Pamaylftftla~ a
"56" in Ark*DIU1 a "17" ln <Jtdo and
a ''30" bl Iowa.
Q. Wbat state bu the mott COUeie
1radultel &*' captta?
A. Coloi"lldo bu lbat dlltlnclUon -
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
wlth 19.4 percent. Unless you want to
count the District of Columbia u a
atate -22.6 percent. Overall, the 50
states report 14 percent.
Another ol those uncommon word.a
for com01on things ls kerf. It's the
cut made by a knife or saw or torch.
Q. What movie haa been rel'UJ') the
mo1t times on local TV atatJons?
A. "Cuabtanca."
Tbe hottest 1ame today in the
People'1 ~public or China LI Frisbee
throwtna.
Tbat baseball superstar Henry
Aaroo u a lad was not permitted to
play b11eball on Sundays. Hl1
mot.her, ElteUa, said no.
•ff fClC•••wwa:e+ as M J!
MANY 5005 WERE EXCUANGED
&rOJ?E 1lE CRIMINALS W£'2£
APPRE~f.NllD IN A ~K#SPEED
CHASE m~ DONNTONN
MIAMI.
............
AlEQT lM ENfQ<'CEMOO
OFFlOAlS lRf(J([O A DC-3 To A
REMOTE l.ANDlNG STRIP IN lUE
FL~ MR<i.APE5 •
TIJQEE FMVES WEil
\\OONDED AND f<XJR
UKi~WAY PA1QQ CARS
WEQE m.10USH£D OORIN6
----TUE OOAMAOC
CAPTUk>E.
RiKE SAV rnEY
COOFISCATED MORE ™AN
30 LBS. OF CALIFOQN/A
0RAf.ijf5!
Corporations hear watching
NEW YORK -It seems like a very
long lime ago that a few people not
very many got upset when Ronald
R eagan said he really couldn·t see
anything wrong with American com-
panies bribing foreign officials and
others to win export contracts.
It was actually only 18 months ago,
during a debate of Republican presiden·
tial candidates in Manchester, NH.
"This so-called bribery abroad "
Reagan said smilingly, making it clear
that he thought a buck was a buck and
we should get 'em anyway we could He
was -as he is in most things -as good
as his word, and the White House's
special trade representative, William
Brock, is now pushing for a very signifi·
cant weakening pf the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 1977.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for granted in 1981. The
Reagan administration obviously
believes that the business of America is
business.
They also believe business. The gov·
ernment is now operating on the as·
sumplion that corporations operate in
the public interest -it is impolite these
days to sugg.est that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
The new attitude is: If American
companies say they must pay bribes lo
operate overseas, then it must. be true
and the laws should be changed; if
American companies say they would be
burl by voluntary codes warning
against the misuse or baby formula,
lhen the government must support them
as a matter of free· trade principle; if
American agricultural corporations say
they must sell grain to the Soviet Union,
then cmbur~os should be lifted, no mal·
ter what the Hussians do in Afghanistan
or any place cbc. 1f American oil com·
panies ::.a) that they must havl' higher
and higher revenues to support new
domestic exploration, then the govern·
!!!);·
------------•• J
RICHARD REEVES 1i •
ment should cheer thC!m on, evl'n ir 1t
happens to noti ce that those revenues
are being used to buy up old companies
rather than to find new oil
HISTORY, HOWEVER, is nol on
Reagan's side this time Hlstor~ doci.
indicate that healthy, profitable ror
porations are in the public intere::.l But
that docs not mean c•orporul1ons
necessarily act in the publi<.· interest
Often they do. but when that happens,
it·s a happy <.0010c1dt'nC'e of their own
private interest and the needs and de
sires of the general puhhr
If you follow the public rnterC'::.t
rhetoric heard around Washington these
days to its logical conclusion. you would
beli~ve that Mobil Oil 1s in the business
of presenting uplifting public television
and thoughtful, disinterested public
se rv ice messages on news pa flt• r
editorial pali(<.'s
Profit mJk1n.: corpor,111on:. drl', 1n
fact , the h<.•<.;t mcc·hanism people ha\I.'
yet devised ror the production of goods
and services But thl'~ exist lo 'iCrvc
themselves. to produce profit for their
owners. frw or many Their owners or
manager:-. nrn) be moral or immoral
Th<.• t:orporallons are amoral, which 1s
one• of lht· rc<.eson!> tha1 governments
h:.tVl' alway!> felt compelled lo watch
them It tould very well be in a corpora-
tion's anlerc!>l. ((Ir mstance. lo use 12·
~ (•ar olds in coal manes Governments
hav<· tended lo decide that sort of thing
t'\ not nl'tl's!>anly in the public interest
That ·s the point Business has to be
v.<1tched E\ery minute President
Heagan and his people are undoubtedly
right in encouraging corporations and
arc probably right 10 their feeling that
n·gulal10n of commerce has gone too
far Hut to 11.•t husmess and businessmen
do whatever 1s in the corporate interest
could lead the country and the com·
panies into a trap
The curn•nt merger mania 1s an ex-
ample of that trap Given the apparent
freedom of the moment, rich companies
Mobil and the other oil producers
u mong thl•m are rushing ahead lo
buy any vulnctable smaller companies
they can spot
WHAT It' THE mergers succeed and
thl' mania continues if the govern·
ment just sits back and lets it happen
One possible and frightening result is
tht• t•reatwn of economic units so big
und powerful that it will almost always
be• in the public interest lo protect and
pre'it>rvc them What government
t•cin..,ervatn·e or liberal could allow a
rombinat10n, Sa\ of Exxon and Du
Pont to go out ,;r business. no matter
huv. hadh managed it might be?
Ht•agarf:-1rlt·a::. of scparating govern-
nH'nt and business could actualh· bind
lht•m together forever ·
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor:
This is in response to the editorial in
the July 22 edition of the Daily Pilot re·
garding moped registration. and also to
present my views on mopeds vs .
automobiles.
I agree that it's fair for mopeds to be
licensed, and I welcome it. Maybe
moped registration will decrease the
MAILBOX
unde rage riders who have Little or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike.
J realize that mopeds have not been
around long, and many motorists have
reservations about sharing the road
with mopeds. A program is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders as to the rules. limita·
tions, and restrictions of mopeds. A vis·
ible and. informative way of informing
people if mopeds are soon to be more
common on frequently trafficked public
roads.
ground t•qu1pment a nd multi use
hcadstont•s uttractivel~ d<.•signed for the
walking dead or wounded
-PERHAP A CHURCH site for the
developer to commune v.ith God so he is
certain lo carrv out Hts will
.Japanese· gardens lo offer lran·
quility between oil wells. comprt.tssor
stations, industrial complexes and park
ang structures
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
to aid the ailing species in the bay and
1n the air. who will need to adapt lo less
restricl.Jv<• ::.tandards of chemical runoff
and air pollution for sunival.
A necessary escape route. A sub
marin<.• base would do, as land traffic
would surely be so impacted that such
an "unsightly .. alternative is logical
How about a bulb rarm or a holl)
farm., When food becomes our only
priority, we could eat daffodils and hol·
ly. carefully leaving the bulbs and ber
ries, however
And for a la!>l resort. an airport After
all, when all else 1s impacted, what dif·
ference would 11 make 1f we were deaf?
BARBARA COPE
Fiscal responsibility
To the Editor:
Jn April a motion to use LeBard
School as the new site for Huntington
Beach City elementary school district
headquarters was voted down by the
RIGHT NOW, the moped is my main •
mode of transportatlo'n. I am very
familiar with unnerved motorists
changing lanes quickly when they al1ht
me, or giving me dirty looks wben I
must change lanes. Some even try to
get their frustrations out on me, either
by hon.king wUdly as they pass me or
keeping close on my tall. J am well
aware of many motorists' lack of
familiarity with mopeds, and I certain·
ly drive defensively. I have no choice -
my moped Is hardly a mat.ch for big
Cadillacs or turbo Porsche•.
· board or trustees, thanks to David
Sonksen, Norma VanderMolen and
Paula Hultz. The majority ruling was
that LeBard would ~ of better use as
nn income producer, by renting it out.
If mopeds are to be re&lStered with
the DMV and thus sbare the roads with
cars, vans, and trucks, it's Ume .the
arorementloned ,veblclea are v~ry
aware of ua and are prepared to drive
ln the preun~ ol mopeds.
LORI ENGLISH
'Creative land use'
To tbe Edit.or;
Some au11e1Uons tor decreaalng the
denaity on the Beeco·Banning project In
Newport Beam mllht lnclude "creaUve
land WM!." P~ inst.nee:
-A cemetery ror all the unknown
80ldlert who so bravel1 defended ~d~
net•llb0rbood1 from tbe developtr'1
ambuab.
-Bik• ~. lbttbHid parka, play.
But Supt. Kemper came back again,
and once again. Whether to generate in·
come by r l:!nUng out Lc Bard or lo give
dl"tricl administrative employees new
olllce space Is the qtJestlon.
I know the present offices on 14th
Street and I know LeBll'd, and I can
s1mpalhize with Supt. Kemper and all the other administrative empJoyees. If I
had a choice to work In the offices on
14th Stret or t,,cBnrd I'd pr"cr ~Bard
too.
HOWEVER, WE in the Hunti"'ton
Beach city sthool dJstrlct havti All had
to make itacrlflc rl'cently. We parents
of children who attended Peterson,
Klapp and LeBard would have pre·
• ~·'""''_,. ... ,,., ... ,c<-r119,,.,_ .. ,_ .. ,
"" •• ,,, ~· tt ,.,,..,,..,, hn.I •• ,.,.,..._.i ... 11 ..... -
-·· 0. I~ wlll fie 91Wi\ .,..1,,_, I'll lttl~ "'•Ill lft cl .. Cl<I ................ ,.. •• 1 .. ,. ~ .... IWt flotf'N• -'f ,,. "'11~10 ~ rfCll.,.\I If tUOIClt!ll , .. WI\ I\ ~tnl l'otltY liltlll ,... .. ,._.I_ Ulltta !'PIO lit 1 ... .-0 Ct .. l tOi'
.. • ..,. -...-......,_, .. ct.. .,l•HIV .. -..... '" •• , Wftf~tlltf\ """'° .. '
frrred our o:;chools 1o :-lay open, but we
rt•ul1ze the• finances or the d1slr1ct do not
allow for prt>ft'rcnces. but only
nc•ressit \
And we parents have sacrificed even
more The only segment of the district's
student population lo be without bus
tr.insportation next year is our 258
t•hlldren Oh. they can get a bus to and
rrom their home school but not lo where
lhe educal1onal program was designed
for their !>perific needs
It is interesting to note the cost of
mov1n~ d1str1ct offices from 14th Street
to I.<> Ra rd has been set at $50.000. and
the• t'OSI of the bustng program IS
$53,0()0
Ir then• 1s ever an extra $50,000 laying
ahoul. the hus program should be re·
in:-.tated hefore d1stri<.'t offices are
moved
MARY f<:LJ.F.N BARNES
Puzzled
To the Editor
I h<'ar the City of Newport Beach and
lhE' Irvine Company tell us about de·
tailed traffic surveys and EIRs and then
the county supervisors and Murry Cable
talk about decibels and I read about
nitrous oxide figures.
I read about all the mitigating
measures that are being done and have
been done lo make things 0 .K. These
are very complicated and impossible to
understand. They seem to say every.
thing is being done and everytrung is
fine.
What I can understand is what hap·
pens when I drive Coast Highway, when
I'm trying to talk when a plane l{oes
over or when I try to see or breathe the
air on so many days of the year Can
the newspapers help us to know what to
do about all this?
MRS. HAROLD DAWES
lillllY lill
Did you know that th cash reglstt-n ln
the aroc: ry stores have a k~y built ri1ht
in for rood at.amps? K.O.
i lailJ Plllt
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981 0
0 lllTllBTll IEll:ll If llllllfl VllllY COMICS
FEATURES
84 as ·
Keeping a closet
for all
seasons ... B5
Bradley sees OC freeway woes up close
.,..., ...... "-" ......
VIEWS COUNTY PROBLEMS
LA Mayor Bradley
Reagan
lwrne
eyed
A Huntington Beach reaJtor
says he is willing to buy Presi·
dent Reagan's Pacific Palisades
home for its Cull asking price -
$1.9 miUion -and wants to see
it used in a community service-
type function.
John W. Saunders, 39, said he
mailed his formaJ bid Tuesday
night after reading newspaper
accounts teUing lbat the Presi·
dents' home, on the market
since January, still has not been
sold. ·
A spokesman for Coldwell
Banker, which is handling the
home sale, said the firm was
awaiting receipt or Saunders' of-
fer in today's mall.
Saunders said he has not seen
the Reagan home in person,
though be has viewed photo-,
graphs or it.
He said be has assigned
necotiations of the sale to one of
bis associates, claiming he
becomes "too emotionally in-
volved" when a personal home
purchase is involved.
The Reagan home is described
as a 5,000·square-(oot residence
with 11 rooms including three
bedrooms, servants' quarters,
pool, redwood deck and a sweep-
ing view of the coastline.
A Coldwell Banker official
said others have expresssed in-
terest in the property, though no
others have oCfered the fuJI ask-ing price.
Saunders said be bas no plans
to live in the Reagan home
personally, if the sale is com-
pleted. He said be would live to
see the home used in connection
with an unspecified community
service project that would not
disturb the s urrounding residen-
tial neighborhood.
the 'realtor hi ms elf is a
bachelor who resides in Hunt-
ington Harbour.
He was associated with two
other reaJ estate firms before
opening his own business in
Jan~ary.
By GLENN SC01T .......... ....,
A pollUcian on an early cam-
pai&b tour of a place Ute Oranee
County can learn of lta problems
in two ways -others can t.ell
him or be can find out himself.
Tom Bradley used both
methods Wednesday.
The Los Angeles mayor, con-
sidered a strong candidate for a
Democratic gubernatorial
nomination, was guest of honor
· Wednesday of the County Club, a
new nonpartisan group of local
politlcaJ donors. The group ls
headed by Richard O'Neill, a
wealthy south county rancher
and Democratic leader.
During a press conference and
later during a brief speech,
* * *
Bradley expressed sympathy
with some of the county's prob-
1 ems, especiaHy congested
freeways.
If he hadn't before, Bradley
aJso got a fU"St·hand lesson in tbe
atate ol the freeway system. He
was about 25 minutes late for the
1athering becawie his car was
cau1ht in traffic on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
Bradley noted that Orange
County's freeway problems
were caused because the de-'
mands of the county's "tremen-
dous growth" outpaced tbe
state's abilities to keep up.
"This is just another problem
when you grow so fast," he ob-served.
But the mayor, on one of his
* * * Transportation
'critical issue'
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .. Deity ""' MMf Transportation, or lack or it, is
the most critical issue facing
Orange County in the near
future , according to As·
se mblywoman Marian
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach.
Mrs. Bergeson. speaking to
Costa Mesa Rotarians Wednes-
day noon. predicted a bankrupt
state transportation program
when a nd if Gov. Edmund
Brown turns his job over to a
new man in 1982.
.. An adequate transportation
sys tem," s he warned "is
a bsolutely essenti a I to our
economic stability, to economic
growth and a lso for our
necessities or life.'·
She said she has no idea what
the Legislature will do with the
transportation proble ms in the
upcoming quarterly session.
"We were woefully inadeql!a<e
in the first session as far as com·
ing to grips with dealing with
this very difficult problem main-
ly because of the differences
between the Democrats and
Swimmers hit
beach after
sharks seen
Seal Beach lifeguards bad to
clear swimmers and surfers off
the water near Sixth Street Wed-
nesday because a school of
about 75 sand s harks were
spotted within 30 feet of the
shore, police said.
A Huntington Beach helicopter
spotted the sharks and informed
Seal Beach police. The incident
occurred shortly alter noon and
beachgoers were kept out of the
water for about two hours until
the s harks swam away ,
lifeguards reported.
The sand sharks spotted Wed-
nesday were about 3 to 5 feel
long and are not "normally"
harmful to humans, authorities
said.
Oceanography experts said
sharks are attracted to warm
water. Wednesday's water tem-
perature at Seal Beach was 70
degrees. Authorities reported no
injuries.
Republicans on how best to
finance it."
She has found, she said , "that
projects already approved, such
as Highway 55 (the Costa Mesa
Freeway) -and the Corona del
Mar Freeway, no longer have
any funds."
She reminded Rotarians that
the Orange County delegation to
Sacramento had been successful
winning legislation forming a
new Transportation District
separate from Los Angeles and
Ventura counties.
..T~ is one problem, .. she
said. 'There is no money to go
into that special transportation district. ..
She said legislation that wouJd
allocate gasoline tax funds for
highway funding was strongly
opposed by the Legislature's
Democratic leadership and Gov-
ernor Brown.
The assemblywoman said the
slate not only has railed to keep
up with growing transportation
needs, but has fallen behind in
maintenance efforts.
Administration policies de·
signed to move the traveler out
of his car and into some sort oC
alternative transportation have
eroded funding once available
for completion of authorized
freeways, she charged.
·•For example, the Corona del
Mar Freeway, which was a $4.6
million project , is now more
than a $10 million project.··
She noted. "The transporta-
tion program has literally come
t o a s tands till in Orange
County."
She said Orange County is
looking for alternative forms or
income for highways but that
without state funding the local
freeway system is in "a very
s erious if not critical situation.··
In national standings, she
said, California is now last in
spending for new highway con-
struction and in maintenance
construction.
She urged Rotarians to begin
writing letters to legislators and
other state officials to find
·methods to fund vitally needed
transportation.
Eventually, she warned,
Orange County will lose its busi-
nesses and industries to other
s tates or counties with less
critical highway congestion and
repair problems.
first trips to visit Oran1e Court·
ty's leaders, was careful not to
sound critical of how the cowit~
bas evolved.
Choosini h.ia words carefully,
be said this county's concerns
about a lack of state represeota-
lloo are appropriate, compa.rtne
the situation to Loa Angeles
where he said some com-
m unities were treated like
·'stepchildren'' when he first
took office in 1974.
Bradley agreed more state aid
to improve both freeways and
mass transit services is needed
in Orange County, and will con-
tinue to be needed.
"I think growth is a
phenomenen that is not going to
be slopped," be told reporters:
"instead of standln& back anct
resisting, we ought to plan for it
and guide it."
Requirements for land de-
"elopers to share In the financ-
i n 1 of new freeways were
praised as innovative by
Bradley, who added that he sup.
ports a bill in the stale
Legislature to raise gasoline lax
by two cents-per-gaJlon.
The mayor , who has not
formally announced a campai~
for governor, was clearly trying
to keep his options open and
nurture an attitude that be
doesn't belong in any political
camp. "I reject any notion of
party labels," he said.
However, he said he thinks a
Democrat can win in Orange
County and be said polis taken in
April showed that be was
favored, with strong name iden-
tification.
"One oC the reasons I'm here
today -and I'll be back a&ain
-Is to develop personal rela-
tionships so they wlU know me
as an individual and I won't
have to rely on paid advertise-
ments or even television spota."
he said.
After Ms press conference,
Bradley met privately with
O'Neill and a few other club of·
fi c ials. Then be circulated
among the two dozen other
County Club members meeting
al the Santa Ana Country Club
before giving his speech.
Delly~ ..........
New 8ign3 a.Umg Pacific Coa!t Highway in Huntington Beach warn that the days of parking on t~ inland side and runnir19 across the rood to the beach are over.
Burglars hit seven
Valley businesses
Pol ic e believe seven
burglaries this morning in Foun-
tain Valley were the work of
juveniles.
Between midnight and 6 a.m.
seven small businesses in the ci-
ty were broken into by thieves
using a crowbar to gain en-
trance, according to police. In
all, about $400 was taken.
"It doesn't look like it was
done by professionals," said
Detective Bob Mosley. "It toots
like it was done by kids."
Either the front or bac.k doors
were discovered open by the
business owners, according to
OC~'s class
schedule out
Area residents can pick up a
free copy of Orange Coast
College's 104-page fall class
scheduJe in the admissions and re-
cords office on campus, 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The brochures were mailed this
week to UI0,000 homes in the Coast
Community College District. The
schedule contains the schedules
of cluse:s and lecture aeries, and
registration information.
Registration for fall classes
beghu Aug. 17 and runs tbrouah
Sept. 18 in the admissions office.
Fall classes begin Sept. 8. For
more information, caU 556-5772.
pollce reports. In some cases the
burglars went Crom one store to
another by smashing through
flimsy waJls. None of the busi-
nesses have burglar alarms.
The Cirst set of burglaries OC·
c urred at lbe corner of
Brookhurst and Heil avenues
where police found evidence of
break-ins at Cask and Cleaver,
Akoubians and Debois Interna-
tional.
Also hit were four shops at
10585 Slater Avenue, where
break-ins were reported at
Paul 's Meals. Fountain
Restaurant, Rosemar Farms,
and Reba's Gifts.
Police said it was difficult to
determine how much was taken
from each business. Mosley said
both sets or burglaries appear to
be the work of the same group.
\,
Masons to hold
HB picnic Sunday
The annual barbecue sponsored
by the Huntington Beach Masonic
Lodge will be held from noon to
2:30 p.m. Sunday at Lake Park.
lHh Street and Lakf A venue in
Huntington Beach.
Barbecued beef and pork will be
served. Members of the El Bekal,
Shrine Temple will provide
musical entertainment and clown
comedy. Tickets will be priced at
SS for adults, $2.50 (or children.
'Blood Allex'
parking ban
begins in HB
Beacbgoers accustomed to
leaving their cars along the in-
land side of Pacifi c Coast
Highway between Beach
Boulevard and the Santa Ana
River in Huntington Beach will
find new, "No Stopping" signs
today by their formerly free
parking spaces.
Huntington Beach officials say
installation of the new signs
along the inland side of this sec·
Lion has been completed, and
police enforcement of the park-
ing ban will begin immediately.
The new parking ban bu been
imposed by city and Caltrans of-
ficials in an attempt to curb ac·
cidents along this stretch, which
has been dubbed ''Blood Alley."
Police U . Barry Price, the de-
partment's traffic bureau com-
mander, said be anticipates no
difficuJly in enforcing the new
parking ban.
He s aid motorists have
cooperated with a similar no-
parking zone near Bolsa Chica
State Beach.
City officials say that if $25
tickets are not successful in
eliminating parking along the
"Blood Alley" stretch. a tow-
away policy may be initiated.
On the beach side of this
stretch of Pacific Coas t
Hicbway, parking wiJI continue
to be permitted during daylight
hours.
Next week, however, new.
sl1na will be posted banning
beacbslde parkin& there
between 8 p.m . and 5 a .m .
Lifeguards set for Surfside •A Seal Beach Ufeauard will be
1taUoned at Surfalde Colony •Ulrtlnl S.turday, f oUoWina a
four -month ab1ence of
We1ua.rda oo the ~-mile atretcb
from Anderaon Street to Lbe
Anaheim Bay jetUet.
Tbe announcement came Wed· aeadey afternoon from AMlltaDt
City Manqer Dan Joaepb, wbo
said t.be dty decided to place the
Ufe1uard loUowtn• complliaU
from .,... IW!deeta.
Seal Beacll removed w,,...,. from lbe area la A,priJ
becaue of bud1et eutbacka,
Llfe1aard Chief Tina Don•J'
said. ,,._ tn June, Seal BMeb
• 1peat N ,500 to inat1U 1lP1
waraiaf beadatoen tbat no
Uleguarda were on duty, he said'.
By l•w, • 'City muat provide
llf eauud protection only if It
cbuses users f eea lD f orma ol
p•rttna feet. But at Surfaide
Cot001, wbere there 11 limited
pu~ no such fees ue ,lm·
poled, Doney fald.
Alter concern bad be..-r.taed
o•tr Lbt 111..e, Seal Bt•ch ol·
f1clal1 dtclded to contract
llfetuard protection for Swfalde
Colon7 from Huntlqton Beada.
IOMpla aald.
He added, however, by U..
Ume necot.lationa .,.. COIQPW.
tdltaummer teaaon at Ute bueta
wl haft IDded.
Huadnlton Beach otnclall U..:
cllca&.d 0. contr•ct eould nm
about $6,800 a year.
Meanwhile, Doney said it will
coet b1a department about $5,000
to 1uard the rlptlde-plaaued
beach until aareement is
reached with Hm1Un1too Beach.
Huntln1ton Beach Marine
Safety Lt. • Rlchardaon st.id
there ii need for a llfetuard at
Surfside Colony bec:auae awim·
men aod 1Qrf_tf1 lanore the
waralDllllM .. 'MIUluuarda tJHI up retcu1n1 .. e. lfe laid more than TS ......_ baft belD
r•cued by h& w.ru ... lbil
year lD t.ht aru.
BeeaUM ol lbe st.roa• riptldea,
Dority aald, "We hH• bee
really lucky no oae baa died
yet.•·
CREEPY CRAWLERS DEPT.
Think about the worst kind or pest you
might have around your house. including
the neighbors' kld. and you probably
can't top the story being told these days
by Carol Carroll (yes. that's her real
name) of Huntington Beach.
You have s ticky doors? House
creaks in the middle of the night? Roof
leaks like a showerhead in the winter
season?
Carol Carroll can top your misery.
Her Huntington Beach abode has
~ ,,....,
mM MURPHltH ,~It
become a favorite stopping-over place
for great. hairy. beady-eyed rats.
··Just the other night I was relaxing
in the den. watching television, .. she re-
called. "and this big hairy rat just went
wandering rl~ht by.
"HE OR SHE THEN drifted right on
into the closet. We had the beast
trapped. But then we couldn't rind he or
she. So we slammed the door to keep the
rat in the closet overnight. ..
And how did this tactic turn out?
"Next morning. we opened the
closet door to continue the search. But
the rat was gone. He had eaten the
closet rug. I think he was trying to make
a nest.
"I think maybe he was a she ...
It was about this time that Carol
Carroll figured she needed some help in
the effort to rid her happy home of the
rat invasion.
So what did she do? She did the
same thing any other good Huntington
Beach citizen would do who needs help.
She called down to city hall for one Bill
Reed. the noted public information of-
ficer for municipal government. re-
nowned as a solver of problems.
TO MAKE A LPNG story at least
somewhat s horter. a las Bill Reed
couldn't solve this one at least not
right away.
The city, he noted. has no budget for
chasing down invading rats. Reed did
note to Carol Carroll that this year in
June aJone. Huntington Beach has s uf ·
fered a greater volume of rat invaders
than it did during the entire epidemic of
the Great Rat Invasion of 1978-79.
Reed even has rats in his own
neighborhood. So you know ir he could
figure a way for the eradication. he
would.
"My 13-year-old son has been telling
me ror weeks that big rats have been
coming into our area and are spotted
tightrope-walking down the telephone
wires." Carol Carroll said ... But I didn't
believe him until we had our closet guest
the other night."
YOU CAN UNDERSTAND why she
might have been just a touch skeptical
of a rat tale carried by a 13-year-old lad.
Thirteen.year-olds' stories have been
known to escalale e normously between
the corner market with the video games
and the front door of the house.
Anyway. the youngster was ap-
parently right on target this time. The
"Yake&' I got treated belter than tht& m l..a Habra
rats that invaded Huntington Beach
from inland places like Brea and La
Habra a couple of years ago also made
the trip down telephone and utility
wires.
EXPERTS ON RATS suggested al
the time that this means the high-wire
rats are of a hi gher intelligence than
low-level rats that scurry along gutters
and across floors.
Anyway. Carol Carroll even contact-
ed Supervisor Harriett WiPder's office
and couldn't get anything going on an
anti-rat program.
WITH NO HELP from government.
maybe we can pin the rap on the utility
companies who own all the poles a nd
wires.
Something like a charge of inter·city
transportation of bad guys.
Bike trails planned in Mesa
System would link east side with golf course and park
Work is expected to begin in
late A~gu.st on the first leg of a
bicycle trail system that even·
tually would link east Costa
Mesa with the city-owned golf
course and County Regional
Park in the western portion of
the city.
Laguna budgets
extra state funds
The Laguna Beach City Coun-
cil has decided to spend part of
an unexpecte<.! $197 ,000 provided
Police to hold
auction in I rvine
The Irvine Police Department
will auction 60 bicycles, mo·
peds. auto paru, jewelry. sports
equipment, stereos.
lawnmowers, office equipment
and other unclaimed property
Saturday.
The auction in the parking lot
of Irvine City Hall, 17200 Jam·
boree Road, Irvine, will begin al
10 a .m. The property will be
available for inspection at 9:30
a.m.
s
A w
D
tJ s
T
by the state and save the rest
pending studies for future city
needs.
Earlier this month the city re-
ceived word it would have to re-
pay $197.000 less than expected
in state bailout funds.
Council members voted to
spend $21.000 of the money to
settle a 1977 lawsuit over utility
undergrounding in the vicinity or
Victoria Beach.
Laguna Beach was sued by the
project contractor for additional
payment for unexpected prob-
lems that allegedly arose dur·
ing the job. The city originally
denied any extra payment was
due, but city officials say a deal
has now been struck that is ac·
ceptable to both sides.
Construction or the first sec·
lion. about 1,300 feet of asphalt
along the west side of Newport
Boulevard between Arlington
Avenue and Mesa Drive. was ap-
proved last week by the Orange
County Fair board
The trail is lo be finished in
about two weeks arter construc-
tion starts by a private firm con-
tracting with the city at a cost of
$13.000, said Rock Miller. city
transportation manager.
Miller said the firs t-stage link
is important to bicyclists who
travel between east Costa Mesa
and TeWinkle Park north of the
fairgrounds.
Those bikers. he said. now
must r ide as far north as Bristol
Street and double back to the
park becaus e or Newport
Boulevard's one-way traffic
lanes systems
Funds for construction have
been allocated through a special
s tate bike trails fund. Miller
said. The city has about $100.000
accumulated in the fund.
Long.range bike trail plans
call for an asphalt riding path
along Newport Boulevard'
between Arlington and Fair
Drive and along Fair between
Newport and Fairview Road.
Miller said.
,
Whiting
• project
backed
The Orana:e County
Planning Commission
included light restrlc·
lions when it endorsed a
plan to build about 4,400
homes on the un -
developed Whiting
Ranch east of El Toro.
The 2,743-acre proper·
ty on the western slope
of the Santa Ana Moun·
tains has worried south
county residents and
county planners who
have eyed possible prob·
lems associated with
traffic. fire and sewer
services al the property.
Thus. the planning
com missioners decided
Tuesday that the county
s hould continue close
monitoring while de
velopment begins to
e ns ure that services
don 'l become out of
balance
Under conditions sug
ges ted by the com
mission. the county
could call a halt to the
devel o pment if it
becomes apparent that
it would put a strain on
loca I services.
The commiss ioners
also recommended that
dev elopers. a Warm·
ington·Carma Joint Ven-
Uni-Vega• Puch •Kawahara •
: Featu ring "
"' VoUne1 S•s of the best • &. ., ·--E ·-.,
I
•
b icycles from around the world
at ~ down to earth prices!
I 0 SPEEDS * 3 SPEEDS *
CRUISERS * KIDS BIKES
RENTALS
a1 low •• $2.50 hr.
Of'
$I 0.00 per 24 hr. cloy
2 1 16 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, CA
673-5051
• n -< n -• .,.
CJ
•
ture, should participate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in whatever means is
rinall v cho s en ror
financing a freeway
through the Foothill Cor·
ridor. which might pass
through the property.
Also to ease possible
traffic problems. com·
missioners s uggested
that vehic le trips be
kept at a minimum from
the development .
possibly through car
pooling. use or trans it or
by encouragmg a cer·
lain number of residents
to work at commercial
and industrial centers
planned for the prop·
erty.
The Board of
Supervisors is scheduled
Lo consider the issue on
Ausz . 26.
Colle ge
• s1gnups
readie d
Early registration for
students planning to at·
tend Saddleback College
in Mission Viejo this fall
GRAND OPENING!
Emergency Survival Products
HOW FAMILIES CAN PREPARE
....... ,""'-......~ _ ....... ,,_..,,.,...
M9~ ..... ..-.. --,.. __ --..... ........, --· .....,..,~Wil':f'
Earthquakes
food storage and
total preparedness
SamplMPac.h °'"""4"''""~ .. .,.•r.t1t ... .,. •• ,, ,,
._,t'JUNfAl"4 """""'.,(•~I I~ \ ·H'6Jll"~111 QI f'•lt49' ''t tll"
"•Cl"f1JfAO• •"'(.,,.,,."Q\ , I "''•:t-.at•·••'""' \ • "''*
•OQ\ hy.O .,.., ·~•I• \ "'Joi\ JH 1 ' "' '1
~-..... ~.'Qt
Poly Buckets for bulk rood storage
will be held Aug. 3 from H .. 0•10 .. ,,,., • ~
9 a.m. t.o 11 am. in the ":':':.,..,... .,. .. 110 •~ ::~--;
campus library ; -:::._:;;;.-:-1 uo umo -~ j
Handicapped students ; =::::.::-/ _::-~ ....-._,..,..~.....,';1;.•o:_...,,.-~::;;::.,i.::::~-----;~;;;;::;;;;:~;:;-;;;Yi~ ma y r egister from 9 SPECIALS &~L S:.n TheK.ENWOODMIX£R
a.m . to 9:30 am. Stu· ~~-----;>-_ ,,...._, ,.. _..,
dents whose last names ~ ~ -' ·-. .:_, 2~ < .. .:-<. ~..: --'...
begin with A through M 75209 Springdale St. Huntington Bea ch, Ca . 92649
s hould sign up from 9. 30 Hour11 OpPn
a .m . to 10 :15 a .m . (a f'f trf'f'••.,.• .. ltfd '•d.,_J f7-14'/8!J5-~1!15 10-6Mon.·Sat.
Regis tration for s tu-1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dents with last names 1-·
beginning with N
through Z will be con··
dueled from 10: 15 a.m.
to 11 a.m.
Returning s tudents
who are currently not
attending classes. but
have been enrolled in
the pas t . must rile
another application ror
admission.
New students must
also fill out an apphca·
tson. available sn the Ad·
missions omce on the
first floor or the library
IF YOU
have a service lo offer or
goods lo sell, place a n ad
in the Dail)' Pilot
Classtried Section
Phone 642-5678.
~ ~' f.~;.jSn1,ooo... .i ~ .... :..,, I ti-~~ A RTI~·~· ~v.:-~ AUCTION I ·~;· ':"""" I
PUBLIC INVITED ] .. ,
I TWO DAYS!
I SAT., & SUN., AUGUST 1 & 2 \
Ant llddlnq
1 Starts
flrolnptly At
l:Od pt,M.
I ott. Doys
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commissionr
school and college districts and county
government than the llily l'illt
"II
..
NY' s 'maste_.
builder' dies
WE81' lStaP, N.Y . (AP ) -Robert MOMI W&I
a powerfUJ -.nd Innovative builder who constructed
Lincoln Center, the U.N . complex and hundredl ol
miles~ New Vorlt hif.hwa)'I.
The "mfller bwlder" wu once described as
the 20th century's greatest influence on American
cllles. •
"He will alway• be remem·
bered u the maater builder,"
said Mayor Edward l. Koch,
who has ordered city flags to be
nown at half·•lalf th.rough Fri·
day. Moses, 92, died of heart
faUureon Wednesday.
F1"8S 11t the seven bridges
and two tunnels of Moses'
Triborough Bridge and Tunnel
Authority will remain at ball· stair through Sunday. ,,....,
Mosei' reputation as a man wbo could "get
things done" and his ability to marshaJ put>llc
opinion gave him an alt of lnvlnclbillty that sur·
vived lot almost 50 years.
ln the 19'05 and 1950s, he held up to 12 oltices
simultaneously. And by 1960, he oversaw 103,071
acres and controlled agencies with budgets total·
ing alm ost $2.50 million a year.
As bead of several independent authorities. be
wrot9 laws concerning New York's parks and
highway construction, giving himseU awesome
powers of condemnation and appropriation. With
the money.making 'ITiborougb Authority as the
cornerstone of his empire. Moses put its tolls to
work funding politicians' pet projects and provid·
ing jobs.
The powerfully built 6-foot-tall Moses and his
parks were popular. and legislators often had no
ch oice but to appropriate the money he sought for
his projects.
At his peak, Moses successfully defied a presi·
dent.
The sources of his power were the 1ubject or a
Pulitzer Prize·winning biography, "The Power
Broker," by Robert Caro.
Amonc Moses' projects were 416 miles of
roads, including the Lpni Island Expressway. He
built the Triborough Bridge; the Verrazano-
Narrows Bridge; Shea Stadium; the St. Lawr-ence
and Niagara power projects; housing projects,
and 650 playgrounds.
"ln the 20t.h century, the influence or Robert
Moses on the cities ·or America was greater than
that of any other person," said archltecture critic
Le wis Mumford. •
But Moses said in 1975, "I'm just a senior
ditch-digger."
Al his death, Moses was a $35,000-a·year con-
sul tanl for the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority, which swallowed the Triborougb
authority 13 years ago. He also lobbied in recent
years for his one great unrealized project -a
bridge across Long Island Sound.
Born in New Haven, Conn., in 1888, Moses was
eloquent, magnetic and bullying. He held degrees
from Yale, ·oiford and Columbia.
In 1923, Moses persuaded Gov. Al Smith to
back a bond issue and a bill to create a s tate Coun-
cil of Parks. Moses was appointed bead of that
council, and of the Long Island Parks Commission.
And from there his career took off.
M06eS never became rich from his empire. Of
all his jobs, only two were salaried -city parks
com missioner, ~.000 a year, and state Power
Authority chairman, $10,000. _
When President Fran"'klin Roosevelt
threatened to hold up S44 million to finish the
Triborough Bridge unless Moses left the authority,
Moses took his case to the newspapers and won.
J·udges battle
divorce backlog
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A plan to cut dela1$ in
handling divorce cases -by a.s much as SO per·
cent -bas been announced by two Los Angeles
Superior Court judges.
• The new plan, presented at a press conference
by judges David N. Eagleson and Buty G. Mills,
will use some 100 experienced, volunteer attomeys
to try to obtain pre·court settlements between
couples so that delays in reaching court can be cut
from about 60 days at present to about 30 day1.
In addition, the program starting next•Monday
will give priority in scheduling to uncontested
casn that can be settled in about 10 minutes. It
will extend divorce court hours so that they begin
at 8: 10 a .m. instead of 8:30 a.m. as at present, in·
slst that divorcing couples and their attorneys con·
fer before the trial and strongly discourage con·
tlnuances.
:·w e judges are extremely conscious that ~n·
due delay In justice can deny justice, particularly
in these sensitive cases, a nd are determined to war
on trial delay until the war is won," Eaaleaon said.
DEA TH NOTICES.
PUBUC N&l'ICE ,, ________ _
~,, ... _,. ..... MAIM ITAftMl•T
Tiie .......... --II deiftt ....... _ .. :
I a M INflltP,_ISU, , .. ••to"ll A-, CKta MaH, CA ta62'. OONALO O. Mel.COD, tH =nla ,.,,_, Cffla ....._ C.A
Tllh ...._ I• CMtlllle:tN Ir( M ... .........
Denetd Q, .. .... Tlllt _. -ti ... wltll .. c-ty ~ "Ora1191 c:.uMy .. , ... .,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, July 30, 1981 ti I P •1
PVBUC NO'J'ICS PllBUC NOTICE PtJBUC Nonct: PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTIC£
PV=-Uo:IH PIC'Tlft--'tC'hnoutaatta•I• lltCTln_ IMIM ......
NOTICI IS Hl'-llY GIVIN IMI f11e ··==-'--~ Tiie 1=..:T:;=·a~ ...... Ttw ..=~:.... ...... rv~ V~:;~: :,,1~1e.;: -HI Do\TA M•VICU. Ml-tat ....... :
.. llM ......... ..,..., °'* .. , .. !!!...• ....... a,., ..... Me, CA THI IAJIT8111 0"°"'· "" vi. MAUIMOI lllUA, .... 11111 lea fll "'""'...,.,...4 le ..,_ ~rta, lulta-.,........, lff(ll, Ml'Mt,c..aMete.CAftUJ, .. -a, a 11'1* .._,..._ '-IMrt S. "'-et 1• W1rra11 C.llfaf'lllaftMI la.Mml N"C. .. , Hiit! A-. Wiii M ...... ,...... .. ttel, llt J:• Weal • .._,,.., I\ ... AM, CA JatN M. l ..... tt. "11 Celllef HlllltlfltlMllMtl\,CllfMO. p,m. Ill .. l'lnl ,...., Clftf..-a .,.. LeM,WuMll-.~tMI Tll .. ..._.lt~.., ..... .__ t1 ... c11v ...... Oil' "' c:.&a n• ........ It c~.., • •· ,.,,,... J. Oeff ... am Nat111 • ..._.
MeN, 11 l'alt Otlw, C.la Ma... ......... '--11 ~ ..... AN, c:..llfwllla " ' C.1119tllla, at '°"'lcll .... II-11111 ~L n... '2716 ' . . 'flll• ~ -lllet wtlll .. ._. 9f OV.Wt 9f V. c.t.e MIM 'Oltt ..._.. -........ llot Ml"""4 W Mlllff, •1 catti.t C-tr CWt1 af Or ..... c-ity ... JlllY
IMlt_,.. Oitltkt 'Wiii "'"" ..,. • c.-lr Qetti ti 0r.,.. ~""JI/Ir '--· ----· ~ n.e:a n. 1,.1, *"'IM ........ .,. ................ '· Hll. o-,.. ,,_, ... IM ,,..... ,...,.. ,...,.... tw ....,...._,If aflf, .. h --a...... ,._.. tt, C-.-.. Cal ........ tan ..,..., .... Orw1e1 CMA Dally l'ltae, . ,,._ 5 ... .,_.... t• ltWI ~ H9et llL........ Tiii• 11111-. ta c...iuc..-'' a July u , •• All9-.. 1._ Hll ,,., .. 1 ""'911 ..... 0r.,..c:..tDa1tyl'ltae, ~ ........................... y., ..... ,.1,. .... . Jlolly1•,U.•.AM1 ... 1•1 11_..I Nt't wltll .. 19crtUr'Jf/l._OI ......... ._...._.. .... ,U .... --......... '
'· 1"1.
--------ttkt .... ~ f/I ... Ol*kt, "· c.e.~C11191nM--Tll .. "*-'t -,, ........... Petr Orlwe, C-ta Maw. cailf9nlla. ,.,.... Cau11ty °""., 0r-. C-y a11 J"'y PUBUC NOTICE "'"'" ,.,,Df lallacl Or .... C006I oat,, Pl tee, PUBUC NOTICE Juty 1•, n. •·""" •· 1•1 >14.,,, NOTICI II H•111a\' l'UllTHllll ......... or-.. (Malo.fly llttae, *'· ttl1 IP-------------,.-----------...::-OIVIN tfllll Via Mill~ ... flla 111 JIOly •.1 .. u. •. 1... ..... "1*1• ...,.. PtCTtnOUI Hit... Ula offlu tf U. C..ta Ma .. Sallllaf'Y l"w.111..,_, Or .... C...t Dally ,.lot, l'te1'1110UI WMN•U llAMelTATS ... ..., Dltlrlcl. n !'air Dttw, ,,..,, .. Pl-. PUBUC NOTICE July!l,.,,.,.,..,,IJ,Hll nu-ti. llAMelT•T•-•T NtnlO II-•11, may w -.lnttll --Tiit 1 ..... 1 ... perMllt ere t11ol111 lll• feflNI"" ,..._, •r• ...... tlle llOIH't ., 1 e.m . ..,. 1 .. m .. Mofl. PlJBUC NOTIC,... .._,_ •:
PUBUC NOTICE
'"' dart~ l'f'lelly&. tc. T & T AUOCIATU, 1Mt1 O.ryl ...._ •: COSTA 111191A IMITAaY DltUICT lllCTtnout ~-·~ Wer, 11 T-. Cellfenlle ...._
PICTlnout MlllN•U
ll&AMI IT A T••NT aAIUIATT lltVINI, 117U l' ..... T.ltelalla llAMlllTA,_ , T-MrM11•""'-• tMft Qwryl
llll'••rll Clr<le, ... l:.:lt 110, tWIM, a.ti 9f .. D6t1rtct Ti.a talt-1119 --are def... NS-79441 Wey, 11 Tww, c:atlfwM•, .,.._
Tiie loll_I,,. ,..,_,, art dOllll
""~"-·· eatttwllluvw '-i1111.,. Oranet C..Ut o.11, _..IOC. Ml-•: NOTICE 01' DEATH OF Janie., T.,1 ""''""· i*t Clleryl .............. • IM,. JuJyJ) .. I.I ~I. 0 I" M 0 N 0 • T It •• T a .. R ... R .. • • ····••T-,Caflfarllla ....
I II A. AS50CIATES, t06 Al-Slt .. t, Nt--1 BeKll, CalltOf'llle tnu Sii..,_ CW<le, ..... 1 .. 1,.,,.... -• ,.,O,lllTlal, 14'1 Oewe ...... .,.., "' "' "' Tiii• Ml-I• CMdv<ltd •Y • c.i•ter111•.,14·• ~ ~ PUBUC NOTIC• ut,N""'111Nd1.c:.t...,_a...._ HENDE.RSON AND OP .-,.,_._.....,_ ""'° •-a L i10fl"""'· ta. Alepcoo
llM. ICo CAll,INTe• .. AtlOCIATIS, • p ET IT I 0 N T 0 AD -T-,Mll-~ Tlllt ......... It~.-, a <•· 1-----------.--Celllarllle cat,.retle11, 14tl O..,a JllllW Ttf'I ""'-StrHI, N...,P«fi •••ell, c.111or11le ,,...,
-•llM. "tCTlnOUl9411U••» Str .. 1. ML• ut, N•9"ft a..<1t. MINISTER ESTATE NO. Tiit• ......,_. -111.,. wtlfl 1118 .. ,_..,.._,.Cal...,.. lfAMll ITATIIMl•T Cell..,.,..,..._ A· 109'90. c-ty Cltf'll fll Ortflle C8ullly.., Jiiiy C. IE....,,111 Hoff,.,..,,, t06 Al-Slrael, Naw...,t BHcll, C.lltotnl•
o.i • ......., ,.,..._.. Ti.a , .. , .... ,.,_ I• ...... ...-.· nev• M0011• & AUOCIAfH, T 0 a 1 1 h e 1 r s , 2. ""· .,,._ Tlllt lloMalMllt •• flied witll .. -H : INC., a (81.,.,,.. ~. 1411 , .......... Or CM Dall f>llel 92..o -Tiii• -INH I• concluclad llY • (ouMyq..ti•OrMteCewltYMJlltt CONIT'-UCTIOH UllVICH ... 0.w•ser.tM•dO • ....,.,lhael>. beneficiaries creditors ..... II y • *· , .. 1. w. •a1Ma. ....._. 9Mdl. CA,..., eai11.,111e ...... and contingent' creditors of J1o11y •. "· u , », 1•1 .,..1 eaner•l ~P.
,.,.,... J•"'" c. went11, .. w. •••-. see...,.,._.• A1aec1e'" Barbara 8 . Henderson and PUBLIC NOTIC,... ,._,....,Or ..... c..i Otllly l'lti., Ne~ 9eedl, CA ft*. J-S.-.,. tc. J111y •. ,., n. •· 1t11 ,... .. 1. Tiii• ......._ IHOllOIYCtff •Y an In· ,,..._,. p e rs on s who ma y be
---a l.."9tl ...... Tllll Jlal-1 wes lllM wllll tllt ' Cou11ly c.-of Or.,... County on July
PUBUC NOTICE 1111w1111we1. Tiii• ......._. •• 111ee1 "'"' 11w otherwise Interested In the ---------J-c . .,._, C-ty Clerll fll 0r .. ~,.., Jiiiy wl 11 and/or estate : iricnnout .ua.•H• Tlllt ........_ -Ill• wfll\ 1M • '"' ..... ITATeMS•T•
"·1"' ,, .. ,!2 Publllilleel Or ..... Coast ()ally Piiat.
July It. ll. JO, Auo. •. '"' llu-111 c-1., c1et11of0r.,... GouMv ... Jiiiy ..,c.._ & o.tr A petition has been filed Tll• 1011-1111 .--• are 11o1 .. , PtCTmoutMllNHI 1,t,.1. irt....a • ..,_,.,.'--by Deborah A. Anthony In ._. __ :
..WITAH ... •T ......... Or-.. eeeet o.tly ................. ......,,. the Superior Court of HINOEltSON INVESTMENT AS. PUBUC NOTICE
Tiit ,.._ .... ,......,,are da411t Julyt l .. ta,IO 1"1 -..i ..... 0Mcit .. 21tt SOCIATU,SANJOSa lNVISTMINT -----------1111-'-•: • • ............. CalMen!U.... Orange County requesting AUO(:I ATIS Ill, SAN JOSE ITAT ... MTOf'
o" INT1E11,.11su, 111 u,..,... PUBUC NOTICE 0141 _.. that Deborah A. Anthony tNVHTNNT ASSOCIATU v, SAN w1ntCMU1wALl'110M "ec•, ailla ...... CA"'27. be I ted I JOSE INVISTMINT ASSOCIATES , •• ,,.. .... .,ONllATI•• ..... ,. o. H..-..., •11 Le '•rl• 1------------.. ,.... appo n as persona VI, SAN JOH INVISTMINT AS· UIMHllt P~ITtOUI l>leca,eau-...CAtaV. IUNlltOllCOUllT Jlll~·~~-::,ea..tDally,:,i:; representative to ad· SO CIATIS VII , SAN JOSE IWSf .... .... l(aU!tyft I.. ........ ,,, Le '-rle Of'CAU ...... IA • • m I nl st er the estate of INVIESTMINT ASSOCIATIS VIII, Tl•• 1111 ...... ,.,_ -........ Wt\
''•u.c.ta-...CAtlW. cou..nwoa..... Barbara 8 . Henderson, SAN JOSE INVESTMINT AS· •• a t•n.,al ••rln., Ira"' Ill• • .,,..,. c. H ..... t. S1t VI• U4le 1•ewtcC...Dr. PUBUC NOTICE M>CIATIS IX, .CU J...-. .. llNtll, perlMN!llp -••"' _..,. IN II<· kud.N~llaecll.CAn..s. ........ c:a.t1m Irvine, Calltornla (under 51111• 11o, ,._. 9Mcll, cautom1a 11t1eo 11w1111u• 11•m• ot w11 r Tiii• ....., __ •• COllCluClff lly a PLAINTll'P: LOllEN MAllll the Independent Ad· t2MO. • ParlMrl, 411' «:......,. 0t1 .... a:IOO; .....,.,=:.i:...... K•::P:INOANT: MICHILE Ll!A 9TATIM8WT 0' AH•DOWM••T ministration of Estates L.er9fl ~etlon,. Cellloml• tor· N~~=-~(=~=a= ....... !
Tiit. ...._. -..... ..... ... 1.ANCINA. NOtEL H. OOULI!, OOH I 01' Act). The petition Is set for ~.-~:n...,;:s ~~~.!.o:'n.:' ... mMI ,., Ille,...,.....,,., ... ,. ... on c.-r0trti9fOl'.,..e-.tl' ... J111y t11rewt11xx.111Ctu11... us• oir l'ICTITIOUI au11••1& hearlnQ In Dept. No. 3 at Tiii• .....,""• •• con1111c1td 11y a Jw11et,1t111nu.c-cra10r ..... .
'· 1"1· .. ~ ... w·~ ...... 700 Civic Center Drive llmltod~ Tiie , ... , -Md·~· 01 IN l'tU. _ ___ Tiie ,..._.,. --11eW -· Ur CMlletlCI p1raon wlllldr•wl111 H • per1111r
.......... Or .. c:..t o.11, Piiat. NOTICE! """MW ......... '"" ...... .,.. -of ... "kllU-...... w e s t , s a n t a A n a I I. N~I.,_ on WILBOUllN A. WISEii. HOO WHINni Jwl''·''-U.». 1"1 ....., '""",,..., ~ ........ .,... _._ ,,... NOfN: California 92701 on August ,.,..._ 10111 ........ Loa ""9ala , ca111..-nta
y-...... ...,_ • ....._ fW....... COAST CUSTODIAN SEltVICE, 19, 1981at9:3() a .m . Tlllt ttot-t •• 111• wltll IN ~-PUBUC NOTICE
"H:T1T10US aUllNUI NAMa STATIM8NT
T ... loll-Int perMns ara dolllf lllltl-••: PllOMOTIVATl>RS, llOltP: Sil' ,arlr Circle, INIM, CA '271'-'RO-,L.A 'fEltS WIST INC., • C•llfor11la corP«otl91\, 110ttF Slly Parll Clrcle, trvtne, CA m1'-Tlll• llullnau It~ .... lly • Cor·
"°''"°"· Pll().f'\AVl!llS WEST INC. CllHord..Jltllenfll ....
'fi.. = -lli.d wltll IN C-ty CJarll Of Or•1191 Cownty on
J-2t, ltl1. ........ Pullflllled Oronee CoMl Deity PllO(,
J-16, ZJ, JO,""'-6, 1 .. 1 )ll'NI
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTIC• INlllTIMO a1os Notice It llerally otven lllel Illa
Boen! ol T~ ol Ille Coest Com· mwnlly Collt9f Dl1lrlct ol Orone-C-ty, c.lltornla, wlll rout ... '"led
.,.-...., ID 11:•a.m., Fricle'f,A ....... 7,
1 .. 1 ••• ""' ~ o.partlnOflt.,
.... '-"-.....,k1 loc.t.ad .. 1310 Atll•m• Ave11wa, C••la Mas•,
c.11..,.... at -.Ncll u-ullll bl<b wfll ......... kl,_... .......... : TY,ISETTING & PltlNTING OF NIWS,ANll "allANOING lltOH" l'Oa ltll· ... SCHOOL YEAlt AT GOLDIN WOT COLLIGI! ................ --..ca .....
Illa allll "°"" IMlr..cllenl -Calldl•
...... -s...<Jflcatlont wtlkll .... -"" flle.,. ....., lie tac:IH'atll In llle offlc8
Of tllO P'wdlealnt .._.,. 9f Hid coll•
tlll•trkt.
eec11 11•t mw•t Mlbmlt •1111 1111
llld a c:aaNar't CIWCll, ~lflad 'llKll, or lldder'I lland Mada 118Y•lll• lo Illa .,...., of .,_ Cees1 '°"'"""'lty Coll ... Olttrlct aNrd of Trull••• 111 a11 emollilt .... '-INn llW -Can( Of lllt Sii"' 1114 a _.., ... UWI IN bf4-
dar wlll -llllo ,...__. Conttal H
h N-It ewWWd IO 111"'. 111 Ille ,,,.... al flltww to....., Into euch c.,..
tted,.,. ~of Ille dleclr will ...
-ettad • ., Ill .. '-ol • llafld ....
"'" ..... .,,.,... •Ill ... larlelted lo .. Id , ...... dlllrkl Ne llll4dtt' -y WltMr-1111 llld tor
a perlad Ill larty·llw UJI NY' 8"er
Ille .Utt ... ler Ille ......tno UWf'aof.
TM Baaf'd"' TIVllMI ,...,.,.. 1118 prlYll999 ot relecll"' any and •II Didi ..-la ••I,.. ..,Y ,,,......,111 .. or 111-lormalltl" In ...., bid or In Ille lllddlno. Htnnan E. W.ltc111
Secret.ery BoerdOf
T rvs-• Coast CM>mUl'llly COii ... Dist.
Pllttllllacf 0r.,.. c:oa.c o.lly ....... July u . JO,'"' 1317-tt.
PUBUC NOTICE
== ·~ llMtll..., ...,_,., ~~:~:.:.'*'St.l"-'LP:I, IF YOU OBJECT to the ,_,.,oanof0r .. c:ewitvt11Jllly c!",!',~~=~;'!:'J:!::
11 .,.., ..._ • _...,. ...,1ee.,.., TIM l'lc1.._ hllM9 .._ ,... granting of the petition, '· 1"1· "''-•. 1tt1. Plta•a. ......
an...,.."' llll91M11«, reu...,.. • '""" • ..... -111• 111 0r....,. you should either appear Pv111•-0r .. CMs1 o.i1, P11o1, Pu1111.,,.. 0r ..... eee.i o.11y Pnoc.
.. ''0""11' .. ,.,.1 yowr wrnt ... c-1yon"'8rdlt,i• at the hearlnn and state Jwty t,1t,n,10,l"1 ,.._., Jury t,1',1l,J0,1'll --..1. rM'8ftM, W eny, -y M lllad aoi u-. 11-1111 M. 9hMI, Mt W. Wit-St. "1'
•v1so1u .... ""11• _.,,, ... '"'-'· r:1.cataMeN,CA"6V. your objections or file PUBLIC NOTICE 11 tr.._ ,_.. lllKNtt c..v. uc. ..... , J-L.onllfwtll, * w. wu-written objections with the -· PUBLIC N TICE .... • ...._ .. • -.-u .. ,_ si. (Apt."" Cato,.,...., CA nw. t bef e th h I 111e •"'" • • .... LH 1e lftfwMa· T11u ..,,,... -candYclocl 11y a cour or e ear ng.
c1a11 4111u1.... teMt•,,.".,a:11p. Your appearance may ~ "'rnn':i~~s••H• "=:::~::::' st u1tw._. Mlkltar •• c-Je • 11-14 M. ••-In person or by your at-,.,.,_,.. sTA'nMaNT Tll• te11ow1n1 ,.,tofl• are •o•nt 1111 ....... a11 ... oewlt9, lllMatla Tiiis .....,.._ •• llleel .,.Ill IM t llecerlo lm"'atlllatemOfll•, fa etl• C-lw C"'11"' Or-~w Oii Jiiiy Orney. Tiie lollowl"9 per-. It dolnt busl· buslll.U •: • ---• I F y 0 u AR E A MUH' JESUS INTEltNATIONAL, ,.,, m-a • ., .......... atcrll8, sl flay 6• 1"1 CoAsT TOWING SEltVICI!, 112 H•ro11 Cr., Hunllnglo" Buell. a ................... llr-al....... "' CREDITOR or a cont-lntlluslrlal Way, Cot la M•u. Callletftlen.4.
I. TO THI OU'ENOANT: " CMI l"v!Hlllled Ort1119 Ceelt o.tly ,..,.., lngent creditor of the de-Callfoml• t'J627 Joll.11 SlllClalr, 10()1 Sl•let A ... .. ~1:":!.•:.":11~ :W.':. ':9 .!: Jwly '· 1 .. n. •. '"1 ,.....1 ceased, you must flle your 740 ~: T~ ~ 't.::=•· F";;!!~~:-:,...,s,C:,~:':"". ~~ .. 51 ... ,
tlll• i.WllllL Yaw,,...., •lllllol • ._.,. PUBUC NOTICE claim with the courf or -~ ..,, · • after tNa -ts_,.....,.'""· t It t th I ,,.., Ave .. "°""'•'" Volley, Colllornle 111a •1111 .. '--'a'"'""' •"""91 1----------presen o e persona Tllh bullnnt •• conductad llY •co .. "'°'·
•• 11te ~tu-.,..• .. , NOTIQICWTllUIT••'SMLa representative appointed -•tlan. _ T1111 bull-••• cond11c110 1>1 a Y-...,.,,. .. u •.....,....on• T.s....... by the court within four <M.w 'Tawlno 111'·· G ....... ,.,_.,...,.,.,,.. ptlclltlOll 9f IM.........,, Md IN c.w1 Wayne Miiiet, ,.,.. ,,_ SlllClolr • • NOTICE IS.HEllE•Y GIVEN. tllel months from the date of Tl•I• ~..._ .i. lllell •1111 IM Tiii• ... ._ .... Iliad wllll -
:r,:::: :.=9: :i=: ·c=~:. =~~· .~~!;. ·~;: f lrst issuance of letters as County e1a<11 of 0raneia County"" Jiiiy c ..... 1r cien °' 0r_. COOlllty on JIM;
Wlllcll C.ultll '""'' "'IMlll--• of , llEAL ESTATE SECUltlTIES provided in Section 700 of 14• "" ,.1 .. 1IO '· '"1· """" •• .. •.tallltof-yarprl9fft'far SERVICI!. louted•• 2010 Hor111 the Probate Code of Pu1>11-0raneiaeoe•tO.llyP11ot, Put111..,,..0r.,..eee.1oa11yP11o1,, :::.~ •. ••11"' •••-•• '" '"' com· •'°:",::~~2:'· ~::.!'.1';.:'t!9:; California. The time for July"· u, JO. •uo. •. , .. , ,.,,...1 J.,ty •. 1', ll, JO, 1"1 J04Ml1
D•ted: J-1n. "'° .111orn1a, THI GEOllOETOW H flllng clalms wlll not ex------U.A. 9t'MC11"1Wll 1tECONVIYAHCE co11,., • plre prior to four months PUBLIC NOTICE ly ~·""' ~~ •ll lor11la cor-atlon, .. dllly .... from the date of the hear· PUBLIC NOTICE
.._, ll(ed Truelw....iw ___ , ..
"'•11~'·:!1.• _ _. .. 1ecOl'ffttY9Cll111M1cer· Ing noticed above . -:'.!o..ea._.., lnOooadofT,.,.._.,.lrfLH YOU MAY EXAMINE
,_..,.. 0r ... c..tt o.ii., ,...._ SIMMONS, • •lllfl• ,,,..., ,_......, the file kept by the court,
Jlolly '· 1 .. n.•. ,.., ,.,.,., 111wst 21· 19• In ..._. tSJll Of Of· If you are interested in the klel It ..... Mid c.nv ... ....
PUBUO NOTICE
10.1, lie<_,., ,,,.,,_. .... estate, you may file a re~
• lrf ,_ _. • .,_., ..,.," quest with the coort to re· In ,.,_ • ,.....,,..,... _. .. • celve swlal nottce of the .... ,._ -t-..Y. lllC....... ....~ NOTI~ TO CIOlt'TllACTOllS t ..,_,,or •awtt. HoUu., -•c11 Inventory of estate a ssets
CAL.UNO"°" ••DI f h ti I ~i-1 ot•lcl: ocuN vutw. Bid .. ,_... Aprll 14• 1"'· '" Mell and o t e pe tons ac· -1411' ., C)fft(lal ............ 1111 c-. t d t o.ec11111t: 1:00 O'ct«ll p.m. Of 111e 10t11 ..,, •t,... 11._ ~-·· '"'~ c o u n s an rep or s day ., "'°°"''· lttl. ,. •• ., Bid No. 16191, WILL SILL AT fl\llLIC described In Section 1200 ••c•lflC: ........ Office OcNn View AUCTION TO THE HIOHUT 110· of the Callfornla Probate ki-1 Olllrlct, 1...0 I Stnat. H....t. OEll 1'011 CAS ..._.., of 1M r,..... 9Ndl, Callforl!W. ,....fect 1.,.. VllllM ......., =j ;.-;;;.::-~ ti.... Code. llllcotlon Ne,.,.: To ••"'owe end af .. le,•llri1'11,Vtta-li!t-.tt-
CALI "OaNIA CO-UNITY COLLROEI ANNUAL "INANCIAL AND aUDOET all"CMIT (audget fer Ille Fltcal Y•t h91Nti,,. JvAy I, 1 .. 1 and £ftdl"9 J-Ill, 1'921 MOTIC• Of' Aoo..TIC* ANO TllANSMITTAL To -~_,,,........,.at 1ellaol•! TENTATIVE ANNUAL FINANCIAL AHO IUOGET ltll'OllT. Tllh r-1
It lier.., llled W Ow .... mint-" of 1'w Coat Conwflllnlty c.etl ... Olarkt. Oele • IN9tt,. J-U , 1"1 ~ N.,,..... E. WMMll/SKl'.t.,., ,UaLICATION ANNUAL FINANCIAL ANO BUOGET llll'OllT Tiie ..... entlll9 llNnl, 11evine made on July n. 1t11 _,.. revliton•, ... ,._, ...,
tllllfltH • II -nteaUMY. pendlnf pulllfcalloll, .... lie -1"1 -llntl -.,11on, .... ...., r.tlH'llS Ille ,.,,.n. T,,. ..-k llMtlno "" 1111• '-' w111 lie lleld at Olltrkl AA1mt..i1tr-Ot· llces, 1'10 ,....,.,,_Alie., c .. 1. -., CA, on A ..... l S, 1 .. 1al1:00 o'cledl l".M.,
~ ...,,,.,_ E. W•Uon/Secr...,y IUMMAlt'f 0, cu•••NT OllTlllCT TAX lllQUllllMEMn l'Oll 1"141 ._. .. T•-==l=-lllt~:1-:11~:: "9111111oy1t,•T• ....... •n .... 1atMt,.. Wiiiiam R. Froeberg,
H""tlntlon BMcll, CalltotvlL Place •1..,....,,., 11-"' .... c-.ty .... Attorney at Law, 3553 General F""" Plat1s ero on t11e: 0c,..,. v1ew Sc-SI.a•. c1eecr1,... • ,..._., Camino Mira Costa, San
....... ....... 200
Olttrlct, •"'IMO Offk•. 16'40 • l.Ot u. lllocti •• Traci .... •n. City ., ,.......,, 9Mcll. c-., • 0r ...... Clemente, California !;:;'-,.~~ =:a;a'G~: Slete of Cellklrlll8, • _. M9'I r• 92672. (714) 496-4111.
-'°'°"In .... 21• ,.._. 1J Md 11• <> blished 0 C f tllat 1"9 ..... ...,.,.., ~ oi11r1e1 MIK•t1-M11Klll .. t1t1c.ott11o .-u range oas of Ot•,,.. c:-ity, camorn1., actlftl ,_1.,, ___ _...c.M.., Daily Piiot July 29, 30,
lrf -.,,,..... lb Gove,.,,... .... ~ • 98 I lloralnaltw rotitrTad to• "OlttTICI" Tiie •trwt ..... or -~ Aug. 5, 1 1 3372-81 • • cletlOMt ... , H .,,.,, of Illa ,_, -•· wlll recalw ~ •. 1M not llltar ll\8fl 1y llaral,,...... deKr'-d Is __... IN _._. ...... llme, _..., bl<b tor 10 lie: t11 ......, •-. c:or-Ila! PUBLIC NOTICE lllt •ward of • contracl for Ille -... Mat CatHemta -jacL ... INll lie real ..... 111 Ille The ~ lle,.by Oltc;lalms -----
Place ldlmltled -... •• ..,, shell .. •II llebl llty tot ... ., lllCWrtelnta In NOTtCS cw T•un••·· IAL•
....-and pwlllkl., r-•-at 1M Mid slr..t eddr'ffl or altllr c-On "• "·· "'1•. at 11 :llO a,"'· HOfl· "°"' llUted llme Oflcl place. 91d de· datlonalloll cy 1. SMw, u ~1-.1a11 Trwa'", of Miine _, lie esttncltd •I 01.cFkl'• S.ld .... ·91411 lie nWcla 9141,_,1 ..... _, ,.,..... o.. af Tr111t ... cllled 1rf
option. Eecll llld lnldt _,,....,.end lie ,.,...,, • .,,,_ or 1mp11e11, roeartlllllt WllHam c. W•mllltlOfl 111, -t•
....,..... .. , to tM '°""•I dlaHnaflb. 1111• ,..._.ion or e11eumllr011<• • cerdod ~ a, 1m • lll6lrWIMflt
Eech 111111 INll ... llCC.,....lad 11¥ "" Mllity Illa ,.,1.:c .... llaleflc.a of u. Ne. 11a. Ill ..... 1-.. , ... IUI, of teewrlty ,..,.,. to Ill Ille c....... Noto °' dNr ...... , .... t«wad ..., Oftl<l•I ....... ti Or ..... c-.,,
TOTAL NET AO.JUSTED BEGINNING BALANCE . . ... , ... " INCOME .,...., ,,..,.1 111(,0f'M
MOOSlete tncame .. . ............ , .. .
'100 C-ty Inc.am. • . ......... ,. ........... ..
.-0 Loul '"'-. • . .. . . .. . • .. . . . • . . "°° lncoml"' Tr ... it•n.'... .. .. . ............. . TOTAL INCOME ............................ ., .. . TOTAL, NET BEOIHHIHO BALANCE ANO INCOME EXPENDITURES AHO OTHER 011TGO ....... . 1000 Certllkotell S.I•~ . .. . . ............... ..
2000 ci.uHled Seltf'les .. . . .. • . . .. . . .. .. .... ..
JOllO Emola'l'ea ..... ltts .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. . ... .
4000 ·--· s.-i1 ... end EqulpmeflC Repta_. . .. ................. ..
5000 eontr«ted Sllnl<H I. OIMt Opetall,. ~_.,... . ................ .
6000 SI'"· 91111di.,.., ..... a.
,...,
ACTU~
•.Jtt ... 7 50,7",U•
M ...
17 ..... '°' 40,000 72,711,'IJ
7',SJ1,l6'1
n.n1.J10
U,M ,nt 10.2 .. ,m
?,tll, ...
1 ... 42 aUDOET
1,J ... 700
Sl,04t,.a2
2',000
2 ...... ..
J0,000
"·*.202
U,lU,01S 11,Ul,.OM
10.Sl2,6Jt
U3U02
ll.:rtS.217 de<""*1tt Mill lrf t1W "" of .,.-.. 1c1 C>aed of T,..t, •"" tlltWftt ond CellfartU, .,. --1 le lfl8I or-"'"•"lraclon. Tiie 01$TlllCT ... oCtlOt -.. ~ tllerolll· ,... talll NMJQ .. Oef .... I ... l!IKt ...... •rw• 1111 rltflt la relact .,.., or all edvellCH, 11 .,,y, l#ldar .,. ;.,_ 9811 ~ ,_.. Apfit 2, 1"1,
lllda or lo _..,.. .,,., ltr1911letftift or llloreof Md Int.-., lllCll -•. • 111•"--" Nia. _,._ Ill .._ 1*l, MOTIG• 01' TllUSTll'a IALI lntwmalltJ• In .,,., ...... Ill .. 111111· and ptws ._, CNr9" .... OllMIM"' , ... USJ, "' Ofltclel It--ti .... T.L .... ...,.t dlflO,. 1"9 Trlltlee .... of tM trvs• ,,... ... C-1,, wMI wmt lflll tlWWMt ID
Media, H-,......,_ ......................... .. 110.74000tNrOvloo ........................ .. "'°,.,.,_. •• Oil for CanllnoOfleltt .............. . T.O. SERVICE COMPANY a d\lly Tiie Olttrlcl llet oeitaflltcl from e. llt H id Dead of Tr11tt. Tlla totel Nld 0... .. Tnllt _,I .. _.le -· appalll ... T,_ -u. ,......... Dirac tor ol tlle o..ertiMlll of In· _, "' Mid OClll ... lefl, lllClllCllllt ti• ler ,.,., ,a.NI_.,"' ltlt Ullll· datcrllled deed ot tt\lll WILL SELL cllltlrlel llalallorls ltw OllMtll -v•ll· reasonably Htlmettd ttH cllllr9" ff Sle'81 9f Amerk-. al Sautll •·
"T PUBLIC AUCTIO N TO THI! 1,,. ral• • par diam ·-Ill Ille .... HflllMet Of Ille T~ •I -tra11ca , Ora111• Co11111, H•r••r HIGHEST 91001!11 "011 CASH locellly '" wlllcll this worll Is lo .. 11"'• of 111111•1 pwllllUllOfl 'of tills Mw11fclpot Cowtl, 001 Jamllarta (Prf•blt •I 11 .... ot Nie 111 lawfllt parlor"*' tot .. ell ct•ll or type ol NOClce, lat!IO,N.At. aowl•w•r4, Naw,.ort •••ell,
TOTAL EXPENOITUllES, OTHEllOUTOO& APPllOPRIATIOH FOR COHTIHGEHCIES , ...... . TOTAL NIT ENDING BALANCE ................. . TOTAL, EXPEHOITUllES. OTHER OUTGO& Al"PltO,ltlATIOH FOR COHTIHOEHCIES
IJ,tl•, 171 4,tlJ,1 ..
PLUS NET EHOIHG 8A~HCIE ...... -............ 71,527.W M,JtJ.-"'Oll•Y 01 tll• UnllH) •II rto111, .... 11m ... needed la uecut• , .. COfl• Oalad: J\llyU, ltll C.lll•FlllA .... lllal """· Ullt _,Ill· lltla and lflterftll CMWyacl to -,,_ lrecl. THE Gl!OltOl!TOWN lerfft ,_,... lo and ,,.. llolcl 11¥ It 1_.. 1"141 llold lly II~ Mid Dead ot Trull In A copy d "'9 prevalll,,. rel• 11 on Rl!CONVEYAHCE COltP llM!tr laid Oaed Of Tr111l lfl tllo ,,,..,. ACTUAL auDO•T
5'1CIAL lllMEll\IR PUNO
.,,. ,,_'1y ........ f'9f claKrlllad: Ill• al .. Olllrld Adml,..1trelloll Of. • '9111Wftla c.._otlon .. ty alt!IMW Ill .... CtMIMY ... s.... ADJUSTED NET BEGIHHINO BALANCE ...... .. '·"'•'°° '·*·"' TllUSTOll: DEBBIE GllOSS, e fke 1..-CanlnKton rowl-ancl In-•Trllll•, ' detctlMI•: Al•..,,..alltelllond INCOMI married -"'•" u lier tole end ,.,mallon. 11· lll!AL l!STATI! ID: • 11-..-l'adllral •~ . .... . ... ... . .. . .. .. tal•-"t 11111•11 .. -ory -UM eon. SECUltlTIESSEltVICE. '""GEL I: ut7'• Tr«t Na. tom, '....ostota l-............................... . IEHEP:ICIAltY: EVA M. aAKER. lteclor •• wllom Ille conlracl h aCllllfwlNC1at110f•tlM, .. "'-....... ,_..Ill ... -Loe.I Income ................................ . • widow awo-. --.,.,. -*ont!'Ktort ... "9lflt 24$, , .... to •• 1J, lllclllelw Of Ml•· "°°'"'.ml .. Tr_.,.,.,, ....................... .. 11ec...-. "lll"el 16, lf7' • lllltr. llftdlrlllft\I0118Ynallafftllan1111Mld ayO,J.~ , .. '--....,near• M Or ... TOTALINCOMa ............................... ..
140, .. + 109.tn
1'5, .. 7 . ... .,,
No.U.ltl .. 1Jl721' ... fllaf0f· ••t<ltl•d ••IH lo ... worll"'•11 Ill~ . c-ty.Gltlfifr'Ma: TOTAL NIT•EGINNIHG llcl•I llecordl 111 UM eflka of IM emplo,.0 by INm In 1111 -utloll of tHAU 'AllCIL I: All ...-.1'1-1 -IAL.ANC• ANO tH<:OME . .. . . .. • . .. .. . .. .. ... .... S,11'6,SlJ 11--ofOr..,..c-ity;MM._ INCOlllr«t. .. .... ,.....y s111ta• uclwtlwe _..... fw 1111r-Md EXl"EHOITVllES
+ 241,JGO
f71.-0 ...... 1.e11.110
IALnlHGHOH '
SMITH I TUTHILL
WISTClfff CHArll
et trwtt t11Hcr1....-111e 1011 .. 1111 No Ill-fNlf wltlldr-1111111111 tllr leMIAM,CA'21'. • ..... ,....._...utmt1traum. 2'00Cl••flet11S.1erie. .......................... . GARAY .,...rty: • per1• of torty ""' 1.s1 .. .,. atw T.....,_: 111•1 ~2'11 • ""-111 • "'-,_... 111 ...-6000 capitat OU11., .............................. .. VIRGINIA P . GARAY, M...,,,..,\lll1110rfttlllendta: tt1et11at .. •tfar-l"tol.i.. l"wllll•-N....-1 H•i'Mr N-• MS, , ... ttte11.IMlllllwetMI•· TOTALEXNHOITVRIES ........................ ..
•.nt J.-,ou , ... ,,.. 1,,..,,.. 427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtUClllOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Ma1{l SI
""ntinoton Bltacn
536-6539
"PAc.ec: YllW ....,..M.,All
c.n.tery Mor1u1rv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
NewPort Beach
644·2700
McCOIMICS MOllTUAnS
LaQuna Beach
494·9415
LaQun1 Htlll
7&1..()933
San Juan Capistrano
496-1776
a de SS, resident O( Hunt· Lot 2'0, TrKt 1112. ea ..., "'8P ,... A pay....,,. llOr!CI Md• l!Wform-.ce Ptetsc ...... naclwllt. tllif Or ..... CDaSt UI'-,.._, -* 9f ~ NIT ENDING BALANCE ......................... . e cOtOed In llaoll U,,..... 4'tllru '9 In· llofMI •Ill lie .._ilNO prier to eJOKw-Delly l"llOI. J\lly .. Allllltt' 11. C-ly, Cllllfwllla, ...... •1111-· TOTAL, llCl"t!NOITVlllS PLUS in1ton Beach, Ca. Passed ct11t1n "'M1tca11•-m.,.. '" ... uon Of"" COl'llracrl T1la paymat1t 11onc1 1•1 DTWI ' "'"" lor MW«I •11111 Htu-allt NET ENDING aALANCI!.................... .... .. ~.*-m away on July 28, 1981. office Of Illa ~ty ,_., ol ukl lftall ... In ... lorm ... lor111 In ... ...... .... ~I .. ,..,. L.ot... CMILDO•v•LO"*MTl'UNO • counly contrect <IKumOfllt. MN Traci Md ........, wltll. ... 1-., Survived by sons Rlc~ard mo RIPllblk Aw .• c.1.e -... ca •to HCU1t1TY. Sac:11 111c1 IMll i. P\IBUC NOTICE -11 ,., -w _,,_.,....,.. ACTUA" and Renald Garay, sister nu1 octa"111e111tt11 '' • ur11flet11 •• _,_ •-ara -lr11Cltt11 111 ac· AOJUSTIONIT 1eo1NN1No aAL.ANCIE ........ ..., Geraldhte' Arundel! and S "l"•*-'.._.,c...,....-.. ,_....,., 01acJ1 ,.,_..ta tlle DI• ,ICTl,,OUIMSt••• cw--..,. .... ~ Mlllllcl!MI ...,,, ... ,_ ......... 1........................ 114.• d hild 11 1 "9lltiofl ls.....,...,.,.,..,_,....., trlct, •• • ..ctwlectciry 111111 ,.. 111 ~--.e .., n.11 t, --l.Aletl ,._ .... ... .. .. .. •• .. .... .. • . .. .. .. .• . n.tn , gran c ren. ass o 1,11_.. ... 1tu....,....,,...,cer. ,_.,,,.0tST111CTnK11tee1..,11e UMlllTA'NMIWT ._._.._.,. " -11e ._ ...... TOT•~•NeOMe .................................. .,,, .. Chrlathm Burial wUJ be held 'ilN&I:' ....,_, .. ""~.,... • ... ..,."" n. ......,.. --.. ....,. ....... .-...... TOTA'-. NIT 1101NH1~ ••LANCE 00 Tb··-""., luJ .... 1•1 _..___._.~.-~ ... IWt•ly c _ _,, •• SWrtly, 111 tll ...... ! Tila .......... w .... c-ANOINC:IOMS -· .. ... llVa.,, y ""• -__,,.._., _ ----1Mt'-1191tltpart_,.af.. "ODOI IL•CTlllC. ttlt S-.. .......................... VII-EXlllNCMTU"U.................................. -..
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a member of St. John lbt AtlletllMaf•--..... •u••• ,..,o••••· '" N ..... ,. :W°""'--'"°"~ ITATil~CM.llJIOM&A , tNCOMI Divla• ~ Cb11rell ... tltl• ...-.. ""...., ..-. .... (Ht~-~-M•,•, ~ ..,.. 1 l•r-. m COU•no...,..... )• _LaUI.....,. ............ ~.......... ....,,. ..,. -·--• ..-Uta....lillld .... 1111 .. IMCt af lfle ... , .. , ........ ~... ..__._.__.,_II; ~~-...... ,_ .. _ TOfAL,...., .... NNI ... ;.r;.;.,., &'iim al C-.::=:.,-:-~: ...!'~,:-:.::~:-':"· ~....:::-........ .., .. _ iiii&:!.~~~':': ~--~-·~............ ---. ... 10;I0411 • llilrtllll ......... MwMlll It ........ T• .. Dtl1't, ._. .... ""'-" a.ctl, IMa•M... -._a ..... .._ 1..-, .... ·------..• ............................. v ... • --... ,. !!?•~ .......... ~·,. ......... lilnlllM ............... c..11 -........ • .... ,.... .... _..... _ ............ ,...... ................... _ ..
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Oran99 Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 30, 1981
THIE
fAlllLl'
c1acts
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"You just wait till the designated hitter gets
home."
"' -~
6 l
:I
~
~ ,.. .
~ ~
J
7-l•
"Ainge 208 y1rd1. GeofVe."
by Brad Anderson DE~~IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
• .J!,t .
7~
~
' • i
)
~
"Well, you've got hairy legs
too, you know!" "My dad doesn't care WHAT I do ... as long
as he doesn't find out about it. ..
ACROSS '1 CNneet
1 Ray dynatty
II Heldblnd '8 TMlt - -:
e«d Trawl
10 Noun ending 49 CerMort
1' Egyp1lM 50 Crull
town 5' Otggers
15 Blfd 57 EUfoPMn
11 Dldltnl' gif1 lend: Pref.
17 Metal 58 PolyntllMI • mixture god
11 Flnittlet 59 OYti wMll 111
20 Fruit decay eo Pint product
21 eo.I ~ 11 Work unltt
22 Join IOfClllll 12 Mn. TMlc:h-
23 Ollordlr ., • for °"'
16U8kwct 83Work,ll
27 Al9mM brtld dol'9fl i::...s .....
30 '°'11'1Y DOWN
I~ A~AIN, KAYO ·-ONLY
FIRST TEL&. HIM Wf./AT A
WoNt>~RFUL ,(jltfEROUS
BROTH!:R HE IS ...
3 t DWlrt 1 Flegetone 13 FllCIMINt 40 HMOlng
32 CMnC:i9d 2 Ship pen 11 OflMtty '1 Dowel
33 Old time: 3 Splndtt •21TOOI ,3 t.o¥trt; Suft.
Atctl ' IM.... 24 Foloww ... Ftuff JI~ CO¥tr pert: 2& .. ~ 45 HW lwd 370f~ 2WOtdt 21...... 41-ofrOMI
M.loir!C 5 St,. 27..,.,_._ 47 AntlQullled
JtDlned ....... ......... ..~
.eoQulta~ 1w..... a~• 11~ ••All,... ·~ •CIA...., n"""-..... • CtrQllt u v.... u Tit ......... '°....... 34 '1CMf-" .. .,.,...... .. GM,._ It H11-o.1ed· 31 J""' llOift WGfl
.... 2wordl 37btlled .... ,... t2..... • o.w.to• 17,,,,.,
by Harold Le Ooux
~ I ~l.O HA\1£ TOlO
6AM 11 WAfJ JAOON WHO 6AV£
ME THE AMPHETAMI~ AHOOOT
#£ n4E EXTAA 6UEPIN6 GAP· OULe ! CUT Jl60M W/A.fj bOtNC7
IT A6 A FAVOR fO ME !
PMNIJTI
I DIDN'T
FOr.6ei 11, PEAR ••
H~ ISN'IWOFtTH
THE: POWPER 10
fJl.-OWHIM
tJPWrTH.
by Tom K. Ryan
OH VEAHl 'l WHU1'S THE ~ICe UV POWVeA ?!!
by Ernie Bushm1ller
---LEMON IS VERY KNOW THAT
I DON'T THINK IT DOES
ANYTHING FOR HIM
GOOD \N'tTH FISH
GORDO
____ ...............
).~
tJ M'-1 f s~. ,,.
FQ.L.ICU
"" M"i '1.J#iJOAOoC/
1-!P
AND E.VFJl!.i' NOW ANO 1MEN
WE'U. NAIL~ WrTM
lME 000 U6fmJIN6 BOLr !
0 0 • • ...
by Gus Arriola
by Kevin Fagan ............
by George Lemont
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981 H I F
ENTERTAINMENT CS
TELEVISION C7
BUSINESS C8 • MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Davey Lopes reverses
his field as strike
continues. C2 .
It was a tall order, but Magee Dlet it
UC Irvi1!'e All-American shines·(31 points) in gold medal win over USSR --
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP> -All
American Kevin Magee led the United
States basketball team to a 93-87 gold
medal victory over the Soviet Union and
swimmer Jill Sterkel won her filth gold
medal as the World University Games
came lo an end.
The Games officially closed today
with a ceremony. but no events were
scheduled.
The Soviets finished the 10-day games
with 38 gold medals. Romania downed
Cuba 3-2 in men's volleyball Wednes-
day. increasing its gold medal total to
JO. The United States finished with 29
gold meda.ls.
Magee, a 6-8 forward from UC Irvine.
scored 31 points to pace the American
basketball victory. Working inside
against 7-4 Vladimir Tkacben.ko and
7-0 Alexandr Belositeni, Magee fouled
out with 3:59 remaining in the game
and the Americans holding a seven-
point lead.
The Soviets pulled to within one point
a minute later before guards John
Bagley of Boston College and Sidney
Lowe of North Carolin a State took over.
Steals and driving layups put the game
out of reach or the frustrated Sovieta,
who had played the Americans close all
night.
Nikolai Deriughln led the Soviets with
21 points. Tkachenko added 16, most on
them on flatfooted short shots.
"Magee was playing against two of
the finer big men in the world," said
U.S . Coach Tom Davis of Boston
College. "U 's very tough to play against
men of that caliber."
Magee, who had averaged less than 20
points a game throughout the tourna-
ment, said: "I didn't do anything dif·
ferent. The coach told us to come out
and hustle and play defense. That's
what we did."
Howard Carter of Louisiana State
scored 17 points for the Americans.
Nadia Comaneci's feat of wiMina five
gold medals.
Sterkel gave the U.S. women's 400-
meter medley team a clear-cut lead by
turning in a stunning perfolllllance In
the butterlfy leg. The United Stales won
the gold in a record-setting 4 minutes
18.85 seconds.
Kim Linehan, also of the University
of Texas, captured the women's 400-
meter freestyle in a record 4: 15.27.
Linehan, who also won the 300-meter
freestyle on . Monday, was followed by
the Soviet union's Irina Laritsch ava in
4: 15.50 and Hanna Sherri of Stanford
University in 4:21.01.
The Soviet Union took the men's
400 -meter medley relay in a Games re-
cord 3: 48. 75. The United States was
second in 3:49.55 and Brazil third in
3:55.10.
The United States dominated events
throughout the week-long swimming
competition at the outdoor August 23
swimming pool, winning 16 gold medals
to the Soviet Union's 10.
··It's been a good week -the whole
team's done really well," said head
Coach Nort Thorton of the University of
California. "But wail until you see some
of their limes next month."
Orin Segarceanu of Romania won his
third tennis gold of the games by defeat·
ing top-seeded Vadim Borisov of the
Soviet Union 6-7, 7-6, 6-4, 6-2 in the
men's singles.
Segarceanu, a Davis Cup star, earlier
won both the mixed doubles. with
Virginia Ruzici , and the mens's
doubles, with Andrei Dirzu.
Romania took the gold medal in the
team epee final at the fencing hall,
downing Switzerland 9-5.
The U.S. Nationals will be held in Sterkel. a University of Texas stu·
dent, matched Romanian gymnast
Daniel Machek won the men's 400.
meter freestyle ia a record-setting
3: 58.08, collecting Czechoslovakia's first
gold medaJ of the Games. Milwaukee in August. Kevin Magee
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Saul playing on borrowed time
Hampered by injuries, Rams center says this may be his last hurrah
By JOHN SEVANO Of .. Deity,....,_
In 11 NFL seast)nS, Rich Saul
has played 160 games, starting
89 of the last 90.
During that time the Rams'
center has incurred breaks,
sprains, dislocations, fractures
and pinched nerves. At age 33,
Saul admits he's on borrowed
time.
Saul is attempting to play the
1981 season as a favor to Coach
Ray Malavasi, who talked the
All-pro center put of retirement
during the off-season. How long
Saul remains at the Rams' Cal
State Fullerton training camp is
another matter. though.
"The key is if I can still help
out and do my share," said Saul,
as be tried to adjust his banged-
up body into a comfort.able posi-
tion. "I'll have to see bow it
goes. I'll have lo see how I feel."
LUCE MOST athletes, Saul hu
a tremendous amount of pride.
And, after playlng football for 24
of bis 33 years, the Newport
Beach resident claims be wants
to leave the game while he's still
on top -and sUU lo one piece.
"One thing you can't do in life
is fool yourself, especially in this
game," Saul explained. "I have
a lot of injuries and if I told you
I didn't after playing 12 years
I'd be lying.
"I don't think God constructed
the body to lake that kind of
punishment.
"I don't want to go out being
so-so. I 've seen too many
players just hang on. And, I'll be
quite honest With you . . . it's
not a happy sight."
SAVL, BY TODA Y'S NFL
standards, is a small man play-
ing in a big man's game.
Rich Saul
'·During drills I look around
and say, 'I couJd get killed out
here.• I have to use everything I
have to do what I can do."
Although the Rams' offensive
Hne is one of the best in the
NFL, Saul is generally con-
s idered the glue that holds it
together. Coaches rave about his
ability while teammates praise
his accomplishments.
"I R ESPECT the coaching
starr and they respect my feel-
ings," explained Saul. "Ray and
I have an understanding. He told
me to come out and play it by
ear .
"I'll know more after a couple
of preseason games but I'll be
honest with myself. I'm not get-
ting paid to try to make blocks.
I'm getting paid lo make blocks.
''This is a very physical, very
intense, very emotional, pull-oo-
punches game. It's very de·
manding."
"Ninety-five percent of this
game is mental. It's so emo-
tional. The physical isn't as tax·
ing as the emotional."
In Saul's case, however, he'd
have a good argument for both.
Despite his aching muscles,
Saul is also hampered by a
pinched nerve in his neck. The
injury caused him to miss more
than a few plays last year after
getting hit the wrong way.
· · 1 · ve had knives and need.I es
jammed in me a nd there's
nothing worse than the pain
from a pinched nerve. It's so ex-
cruciating I literally go blind for
a rew seconds when it's ag-
gravated.
"You feel them <the injuries).
They're there. But then every.
things has a price."
And, the price the Rams
may have to pay ls Saul's retire- .
ment.
"H I can help out it wilJ be
great for both parties," Saul
said "A good deal is when both
parties can profit.
"I'm just playing it week-by.
week. day-by·day. I'm not doing
it for Ray or the fans. God gave
me the ability to play, and when
He feels I'm not doing that we'll
come to an understanding."
Which 1s what he's already
done with his daughter Jaime
(who is four years old ).
"She told me. 'Daddy, I don't
want you to play football. This is
your last year," said Saul with a
smile
.. I told her that's good enough
for me"
SDiith, Dawson feud
INGLEWOOD -Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Reg-
gie Smith and ABC television sportscaster Ted Dawson·
almost came to blows here Wednesday alter the Players
Association meeting at the Airport Marriott Hotel.
Smith approached Dawson over a broadcast in which
Dawson allegedly inferred that the outfielder should have
been playing despite the shoulder injury that kept him out
of right field during trae strike-interrupted regular season.
"He said he was the only one with the guts to tell ine to
my face to play hurt," said Smith. "So 1 went up and
asked him to tell me that to my face."
Smith asked Dawson if he wouJd like to step outside to
handle the situation. Dawson refused, saying he had never
made such a comment.
Dmlty"",....., a.t.. ~
COOLING IT -Rams tight end Victor Hicks would prefer a
cold shower, but he h as to settle for a cup of cold water to
cool off at the Rams' Cal State Fullerton training camp.
"I'm playing at 243 pounds
and we have backs on this team
bigger than 11 am," he said. "I
see those guys around me llke
Kent HiJJ , Jackie Slater, Doug
France, Dennis Harrah, Doug
Smith and Irv Pankey -those
guys are amazing. I'm in awe of
these people.
And, It's the mental strain
that's taking its toll on Saul as
much as the physical.
''The key is getting mental-
ly up every game," he said.
Surf's Moyers returns a · hero
After missing three games he scores two goals in win over Calgary
By EDZINTEL o1 .. ...., ........
Somehow, some way. Steve Moyers was
going to make sure he was noticed Wed-
nesday night.
He dJdn'l rigW"t to steal the show. Heck,
he wasn't even sure whether he'd get a
chance to get into the act at all.
But somehow, the dynamic Moyers was
going to stand up and be counted.
ActuaUy, ll wasn't loo lon1 ago that
Moyen was unabJe to stand up -period.
His right foot had become so tender after
the Ca.lifornia Surf's game against Tampa
Bay, July 15, that the 24-year-old forward
fiad' to Uinp back and forth from the field to
the lockeroom. The pro1nosl.a was a foot
contua1on and meant tile Surf's 1ead.ln1
scorer would !'lave to sit out at leut a
week.
Moyeni woun<l up sitting out eucUy two
weeks, m1111n1 three games ln the pro-
ceu.
But Wednesday nl1ht at Anaheim
Stadium, before 5,531 fans, Steve Moyers
returned.
Mo1en broutht wltb bJm a rou1ln1
round of applauae as be entered lb• same
for the injured 0.sama KhaJU with juat un-
der elCht minutes gone In the MCOnd hall.
About thirty-seven mlnutea later,
lloyera pranced off tbe field ame>DI cbeen. once 11aln the loc:al darliq.
Moyen 1cored two 1oaJ1 and nearly
pulled off the hat trick on at least two oc-
casions in leading the Surf to an important
and emotional 4·2 wJn over the Cal1ary
Boomers.
The win gave California eight points and
a hefty boost at ita 1oal ol gaining an
NASL wiJd card playoff berth.
Moyers' first goaJ at 61 :05 came from
I love to score goals. And
I like to let the crowd know
it. -1tev•Moren
about 12 yardJ out and juat did skip under
the tqp of the aoal pott. It broke a 1-1 Ue
and the Surf never looked back.
Jan van der Veen followed wttb hll th.lrd
goal of the aeuon seven mlnutee later
before Moyers scored his toth soaJ of the
year al 80:35 to slve the Surf a comlofta·
ble 4·1 lead.
All W. aaain1t a team whleb bad won u
of lta lut 17 1ames and wu eonaidered by
many. lncludlot Suri eoacb Laurie
Calloway, aecond only to Lhe Ooemoe ln
talent In the NASL,
"The Important thins wu lbat we won,"
Moyers said after tbe same, ret\11~ to
tlorUy hil performance. "I ea to
come In at aome polnl of Lhe same. l Juat
wanted to contribute."
That he did -and how. And, in the
Moyers fashion, be let the crowd know how
he fell alter both goals by rushina over to
the side railing and raising his arms in
triumph.
"I love to score goa.ls," be said. "And I
like to let the crowd know it. I say let the
fans enjoy it too. It brings happiness to
them and lbey can relate to me when I do
that." •
Calgary, 14·13 and stiU in second place
in the Northwest Division behind Van-
cou\fer, got on tbe board first with 20:35 re-
malnlng in the (irst half on a shot by Franz
Gerber. .
But beyond that, the Surf was able to put
the preuure on the Boomers tb.rousbout .
Graham Oates fin.Uy knotted the acore
with lesa than five mJnutea left In the balf
on a nicely-placed bead shot from 10 yardJ
out.
Receivin' a lon1 pass from Paulo Cesar,
Oates headed the ball wblle tumlnt 180
desrees ln the alr.
· "I tbou&bt Ca11ary wu lull1D1 ua in the
lint hall,·• Clllow•y said afterward. "We
got cauaht up ln \heir aame and they
pl•f.ed us up to our box.
'ln the second baJf, we applied more
pre11ure and play.cl v'ey attractively. I
tbou1ht we could have scored mor•. bui ·we achieved our objective."
That objective, aeeordin1 to Cal!ow•l
wa1 two fold: lain point.I toward a l)la¥0ff
berth and beat a bltblY·rateCI team.
'
,., .......
HIGH IJTaMN' -Oakland Rahlen quarterback Jtm
Plunkett works out in trainin1 camp in Sula Rau.
Plunkett, •• WU the MVP ln Super BOwl xv IUt .January.·
--~ ...... --------------------------------~----------· -------------
HJ F Orenge Oout DAILY PILOT/Th':'rad•Y. July 30. 1981
--------------------------... · Argyroa wlll algn Lachemann
Tbe owner of the Seattle
MarlDWt aaya be plans to alp a..
Lacllemaa•, the c lub's lnterlm
Non-sports fan jury
gets Raider cue
mana1er. to a permanent contract for the 1112
1t11on. Geor1e Ar1yroe of Newport Beach, who
wu ln New York for a meeUnt ot major leacue
owntn Wtdnetday, aald that wblJe LachemlM
bad not been officially rehJred. be did not ex-
pect problem• neaouauni a cont.tact . . . All·
Ume home run klnl HHk Aa1oe and two·tlme
Most VaJuable Player Fraall AobtmoD head a
list of 23 former players under conslderaUon for
the 1882 Hall of Fame Ballot ... The New York
Vankeea bueball club, whOle suit ln the death
of catcher Tburmao Maneoa was rejected In
federal court, refiled the case ln Summit County
Common Pleas Court in Akron, Ohlo .
LOS ANGELES A Jury of -
From AP dl•patehe• [iJ
seven women and tlvt men wlth •-~
not a sports fan •mon1 them -bu
beeun dellberaUons ln the landmark antitrust
trial of the Oakland Raiden vs. the National
Football Leaeue. a case cNcial to the future of
professional sports.
Quote of the day
As Judge Harry Preierson placed the case
in the U.S. District Court Jury's bands Wednes·
day he declared, "The wall now begins ...
The panelists had beard 12 weeks of com·
plex and sometimes emotional testimony from
witnesses who included the two chief partisans
-Al Davis, managin& general partner of the
Raiders who wants to move bis team to Los
Angeles and NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle.
who opposed the move and had the backing of 22
of the league's 28 teams.
Biiiy Casper, describing his Baffler trou-
ble club, a 5-wood with two metal rails on
the bottom: "I use it from sand traps.
from the rough, off the tee, ln the fairway and I eat my soup with it."
Gray's surge leads West to victory
Stuart Gray scored 14 points in • the final 12 minutes as the West de·
feated the South, 109·97 to win the
The jury which met for three hours Wednes·
day, before being taken lo a hotel for the night.
sequestered for the night, has been asked to de·
ci de whether Rozelle and the NFL violatE'd an·
titrusl laws by stopping Davis' proposed move.
gold medal in men's basketball at the National
Sports Festival Wednesday ... Jay Wall
lifted a loose puck into the net to break a 1·1
Ue and start a surge to the gold medal as the
Great Lakes team defeated Centra l, 5·2 in ice
hockey ... JanJce Lawrence, a 6·3 center from
Louisiana Tech, led the South to the gold medal
in women's basketball with 28 points in a 93-84
victory over the East ... Bar06 Pittenger,
director of the festival. said that this year 's
event was the ''most successful tournament to
date" and that it has created a new awareness
or the event.
At issue Is the NFL's Rule 4.3, which re-
quires three.fourths of the league's team
owners consent to another team's move to a
new community. Davis contends this ts anti ·
competitive and a violation of the Sherman An-
titrust Act.
Lopes reverses
outlook on strike
Davey Lopes
Gow d y o u t
as CBS
announcer
NEW YORK (AP) -CBS-TV
is making wholesale changes in
ils pro lootba IJ announcers
lineup for this fall, with veteran
Curt Gowdy gone Crom the cast
and No. 1 color commentator
Tom Brookshier switching to
play-by-play aMouncing.
Under the revised lineup, Pat
Summerall and Vince Scully will
be the top play-by-play men for
the network. Both will work with
former National Foo tball
League coaches John Madden
and Hank Stram for part of the
season in an effort to see which
announcing teams work best
together.
Players back negotiators
~
LOS ANGELF.S <AP> -The
players most distant from the
baseball strike negotiations.
those who play or live on the
West Coast . finally got first·
hand information on the pro·
ceedings -and liked what they
heard.
In the first of what was billed
as a series of r egional meetings
with players. Marvin Miller ap-
parently was successful Wednes-
day in mending any cracks in the
players' solid front and heading
off potential new dissension.
"THEY (THE OWNERS> are
trying to break the union, but
we're stronger now than .ever ,"
said Los Angeles Dodgers' in·
fielder Davey Lopes, who earlier
had been critical of the way the
players association was handJ·
ing the negotiations .
• • 1 made a mistake saying
player representatives shouldn't
be part of the negotiations; I see
after listening at this meeting
that they're an integral part of
the negotiations."
Lo~ recently criticized the
"cir cus" atmosphere of the
bargaining. mentioning the fact
that players were silting in. He
spoke of the Baltimore Orioles'
Doug Decinces in particular.
After Wednesday 's m eeting.
however , Lopes went up to
DeCinces. shook his hand and
apologized, saying, "I know you
guys have been working hard."
"I appreciate that," said
DeCinces, who had Clown out
from the East Coast with Miller.
"Thanks for coming to the meet-
ing."
He would not say. however,
that things looked any brighter
for ending the strike.
WEDNESDA V'S player meet·
ing at a Los Angeles hotel was
attended mostly by members of
th e Los Angeles Dodgers.
Angels and San Diego Padres.
The Dodgers' Reggie Smith
said the meeting made him feel
better about the strike. com-
menting. "Not being in com-
munications for a while gives
you a feeling of 'Did I make the
rig ht dec ision?' This put aU
those fears to rest.··
Major league club owners met
for two hours Wednesday night
in New York to fra me strategy
for resumed negotiations with
the Major League Players As·
sociation in the baseball strike.
After meeting separately in
league sessions. the owners re-
convened and heard a report
from Ray Grebey. director of
the Player Relations Commit·
tee, management's bargaining
arm.
Ed Fitzgera ld o f th e
Milwaukee Brewers. chairman
of the board of the PRC, said
that all 26 membe r clubs ex-
pressed views and asked ques-
tions in the session.
''No voles were taken. but the
overwhelming consen&us was
that the clubs want to bring the
slrike to a rapid conclusion and
reopen the season,·· Fitzgerald
said "We hope to achieve that
end through the process of col·
lective bargaining ...
Reaves could give Otters depth
Veteran reserve quarterback [!]
Jobn lleavet h11 been 1l1nec:t by the 4. •
Houaton Oilers, but Coach Ed BUH
HY• tlme will tell wh lber Reavea
will be the one to provide aome depth at that
position ... Coach BUI Wat•h aaya he expecll
Paul Hofer, lhts sl1trtln1 ruMlna ba(k lnJured ln
the alxth 1ame of lhl' 1980 season, to be ready to
phy In lhla ycur·a opener .. Rookie
llncbocker E. J . Junior and
veteran wide receiver Met
Gray ended their two·week
holdout by singing with the
St . Loui s Card inals
... Arter 12 seasons with
Atlanta. Jeff Van Note Is
be.ginning lo get a few gray
hairs but he's still ready to
sh ow the youneer players
that his professional football
RcovH career isn't over . . . The
Oakland Raiders rec~lve thelc Super Bowl XV chumpion111llp rings Sunday, a day oU from
lrainin& camp .. Fra9k Kush, forme r
Arizona Stale University football coach, pre-
dicted that by 1985, the NFL will have a team in
Phoenix. "Without Question, Phoenix has all the
pluses for an NFL team, .. said Kush. currently
the head coach of the Canadian Football
League's Hamillon Tiger -Cats. "I think it would
be great for the state and for football. too -
to have a pro team in Arizona."
Pitchers have left their mark
NEW YORK -A few items ii gleaned from J oe Reichler 's "The
Great All-time Baseball Record
Book":
Fourteen ti mes in big league history a
pitcher has won 20 games and batted .300 in the
same season. Bob Gibson was the latest. The St.
Louis Cardinals hurler did it in 1970.
Bulky Don Newcombe of the Brooklyn
Dodgers was the last pitcher to steal home. He
did it in 1955.
I'll TAKE THAT -Steve Carfino, (right), a
gua rd for the midwest team, steals the ball
from Adrian Branch in gam e won by
m idwest, 93-92 in the National Sp orts
Baseball today
On this date in baaeball ln 1988:
•Waahln1ton s ho rtstop Ron Hansen
pulled off the el1bth a nd most recent un-
assisted triple play ln major leasue hl•·
tory. but the Senators fell to Cleveland.
10·1. Three days later, Hansen waa traded
to the Chicago White Sox for infielder Tim
Cullen.
Today's birthdays.
Cleveland outfielder Pat Kelly is 37.
New York Mets outfielder EJHs Valentine
is 27 . Kansas City outfielder Clint ·Hurdle
is 24 .
Chui-ho retains WBC flyweight title
South Korea's Kim ChuJ-bo re-•
tained his World Boxing Council
super flyweight cha mpionship with a
13th-round knockout of American challenger
Wlllle Jensen Wednesday in South Kor ea
. . . Car Owner Roger Penake said there were
many fl agrant violations by other drivers who
were not penalized during last May's In-
dianapolis 500 and that Bobby Unser was unfair·
ly singled out for punishment by the U.S. Auto
Club . Seattle SuperSonics guard Vinnie
Johnson, who became a free agent after last
season. signed a three-year contract the NBA
team announced . . Rahway State Prison in-
mate James Scott has signed a contract to fight
Dwight Braxton of Philadelphia Sept. 5 at the
prison ... The f Bl says its investigation into
the 1978· 79 Boston College basketball scandal
has not ended with the indictments of five men
. . A South African rugby team, the Spr·
ingboks, d efeated Taranaki, 34·9 a t New
Plymouth. New Zealand without incident .
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball Salt Lake City at
Phoenix, 7:~ p.m., KMPC (710 ).
Festival. Carrino, from Bellflower and the
University of Iowa , was the high scorer in the
consolation game with 23 points.
... }" Brook.shier, who bas worked
with Summerall on network
television since 1975, includini
three Super Bowls, probably wiU
be teamed on regional games
with former Chicago Bears
player Johnny Morris.
Mill e r . the players· chief
negotiator. said the previous
scattered player complaints
with the strike were to be ex-
pected. Rustlers pick ed third f oothall race • ID
"This has been called a demo-
tion by al least one writer, but
the opportunity to do play-by-
play is a big opportunity for
Brookshier ," sal d CBS
s pokes man Jay Rosenstein.
·'The most prestigious ex-
athletes in sportscave lost the
mantle of 'ex-Jocks,' are doini
pJay-by-play. Summerall and
Frank Gifford are probably the
only ones.''
Gowdy, who has been at CBS
Cor two years, la not included on
Ha list ol anoouncin1 learnt.
The »·year-old veteran of
broadcuUni, most of them al
NBC, ha worked aa Stram's
play-by-pJay announcer at CBS,
and wbeo the former Ka.mu Ci·
ty and New Orleana coach
moved l.tP iJl the announcers'
hJerarcb,J, ~Y was not pro-
moted with hlm.
BE BLAMED part of It on a
n ews blackout during last
week's negotiations and added,
"Every once in awhile the
papers will print a quote from a
a player wishing he were play-
ing baseball. Every player
wishes h e w ere playi ng
basebaU."
·'The players got a report on
the negotiations, with particular
e mphasis on the past two
weeks,'' Miller said of Wed·
nesday's meeting, which drew
some 75 players. "They voted
unanimously to back the players
association and its ne1otiator1."
Asked lf be expected a new of.
fer from the owners durin1 the
negotialin& session called by
mediator Kenneth Moffett for to-
day to New York, Miller
·replied: "l would certain.ly hope
so. Otherwise, why would we be
meeting agaJn?"
Breakers face Dolphins
The Newport Beacb Breakers
will meet Beach Dirisioa cham-
pion HunUnctoo JJeaeh Dolpblm
Friday tn an American
Speedsoccer A.Nocl1Uoa Hmi·
final playoff 11me et tM Loa
C1 b1Jlero1 Speed1oeeer
Stadium. Game Um• a. Mt for 7 p.m.
Tbat pme wW be toUoWed bJ
the C.u II•• Cowbo,a n .
Anabetm Arrow• 1eml·ftnaJ
1ame1tt:ao. OD laturda1, the ASA cbam· , r:~c.= .:r:u,.~ ...... It
Tiie Ne•'POl't leecb B....u.n 1Mibd bllO UM playolf1 wttb
I
eonvtnctna win• lul wMkead
over tbe Santa Au WIDcla, IJ..5
and the Or1n1e Guu.a, t-J.
The -.,U.e Dtvtaton cham-pion Anabelm Anon, wbo will
meet Co1ta Meu, wlU be
wltlaoat le1d1n1 1eorer Gerry
Hall ..... ncp1lnd to Ill out
Ule ....... to ID ejectimt ID a t:,• a.. weet aaalnst ._.
Tb• annual •P••d•oecer award.a banquet wlll be beld
Aue. • at Loi Caba.JJsol at e
p. m. neketl. prteed a " .. anllable bJ ealllal .,.llft. co ... IDd pla)'en froim au
the teama wiU be on hand . .
Golden West should feel at home again in South Coast Con/ erence
ByCURTSEEDEN
otllleDMIY~...,
Golden West College hasn't even bad the
chance to get setUed in the South Coast
Conference football race. and the RusUers
have already garnered one vo~ of con-
fidence from the conference's sports in·
formation directors.
The SIOs yearly poll themselves to de·
termlne how the South Coast Conference
will shape up. Coach Ray Shackleford's
Rustlers collected one first, one second,
three third and a fourth-place vote and are
pegged for lhlrd overall.
Golden West moves back to the South
Coast Conference after a 12-year stint in
the Southern Cal Conference, and juat the
thought of not havin& to lakt boring bua
trips to East Los ,Anseles, LA Southwest
and Rio Hondo, amon1 other schools, ls
s ure to &lve the RusUers a boost.
Meanwhile, the SIDI tabbed Coach Hal
Sberbeclc's Fullerton Hornet.a lo capture
the SCC crown. The Hornets, the defend1n1
' leaiue co-champs, return 18 lettennen and
el1bt starten off last year'• team which
compiled a 7-4 record. Fullerton lost to
Santa Monica ln the Avocado Bowl, 14·7
last year ..
Actually, Ml. San Antonio captured
more first-place volts tthree) than
Fulltrton, but ln the overall votln1, the
Horneta coUec~ four aecond·place Totes
compared to aolo votea for teeond, third
and lourth for the MounUn.
The SW. HY Cen'ttol will ttnllb fourth,
followed by'San Dle10 Mesa, Orance Cout
and Gro11moot.
OCC, comtnc off a mlHrable i.. cam-
paltD (1-1 Neol'd), rec:eiftd four tixtb-
plact vol.a IDd two Hventb.place projtc·
Uoet.
9Ull, Coeeh Dick Tucker b11 11 ltatten
returntna trotn laat year'11quad.
A lot of the faith being put into
Mt. SAC's projected high finish is based on
sophomor e quarterback Kevin Burke.
Althongh he served as a backup QB last
year, the Mounties' staff is expecting big
things.
Quarterbacks, in fact, figure to make or
break this year's teams.
Cerritos has landed Cal Stale Fullerton
COLLEGE REPORT
.transfer Mickey Corwin, and f'Ullertoo bas
Roter Wilson returning.
Grossmont, which received five lasl·
place votes from the SJDs and one sixth·
place ballot, the 1980 has just one starter
back from a team which finhhed 3-tH.
• •
SADDLEBACK COLLEGE track cap·
tain Eric Johnson si«ned with the Rams as
a Cree aeent. The 28-year-old ran the
100 meters, 400 meters relay and 200
metera for the Oauchoa.
Under collegiate rules, an athlete can
compete as a professional in one sport,
while retaining his amateur atatua In
another.
Johnson has five yeara pro football ex·
perlence behind him, tncludlq aUntl "wfth
the Philadelphia E11le1 and San Fran·
claco '9ert.
The 6-0, 206-pounder played defensive
.back at Waahlnston Slate before embarll·
.J.nt on hit pro football career.
• •
FOUi:• CO&ONA DEL llA& BIGB
and s.ddleback Collete 1tandout patd
Dave Koehler wtll olay bait:etball Wt
f
year for the University of Washington.
Koehler played one season for the
Gauchos in 1979·80 and then red-shirted
last season with the Huskies. An All·CIF
pick hi s senior season at CdM , Koehler
aver aged 17.3 points per game for the Sea
Kings.
He saw limited action with SaddJeback. • • • ON THE MOVE -UC Irvine baseball
coach Mike Gerakoa bolstered his infield
with the recent signing of three communi-
ty college stars. including Oranae Cout's
Mike BaJJJet. Balliet, a former Huntington
Beach High player, Cfn play either
shortstop or second base. A South Coast
Conference adversary -Mike llapp of
Santa Ana College. ts also UCI-bound.
Rupp batted .415 last year. Geraltos also
signed DH TrtaJdad, a transfer from Weal
Valley CC in Saratoga ... Former Sad-
dleback basketball player Kevta llewlud
baa received a scholarship to atleDd San
J ose State. The 8-5 guard out of Brea Hilb
averaged 13.9 points per 1ame for the
Gauchos last year and had a 16.3 average
ln Minion Conference play. ·
OCC football · coach Dick 'heller bas
three quarterback candidates for the 1981 season, Including hla son, Clay, who wu a
standout last year at Corona de1 Mar ff.lah.
Other poesibWUea for the No. 1 alpaJ tall·
lni duUes are last year'• quarterbaeJl,
CbarUe 8011, and Ar& Maya.re .. , a
freahman ffom Montebello ffl&h. Tucker
baa 24 pl~en back from the 'IO 1qud .. .
5"ak!Qs ol returnln& =t.dm· .. . AleU. wl1l be back at Welt. AWlo
•tarted tbe tut abl 1am .. for ~ a., 8'actt•••1 RuttJtn .•. k.c.nttoa
nmalu b9cll Gnt C. /.~up., total , ... fllt ... lD .... wtda tlM Su
Dte10 Sbarb ol tM CaJUonda Football
Leape. COie ru back tbe oPtDlq tieatr
• 1udl for a touchdown.
' 4
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l
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I
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WIOH.IPAY't ltHULTI
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Time -II~
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lilCOND ltACI . tOO Yt•Os J year_.~
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Ht Ct n Rl119 lllle•lnt) • 00 1 60
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Time -11.n .
"OU llTH It.ACE lSO yard\ 1 yoar-old'I.
Clalmlno Pul"M, s4,MIO
GrHt Fot'lune (Cre•gerl "40 e.oo 4.40
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Mighty Poll<v ( Htrtl 1 10
Aho r•ctd· Hot Stock, Bentley Aces,
Junglt Play, ClllCktltl, Pueblo Tratar, l(lsumlstor
Time 11.IJ.
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c1.im11111. Purw, u,11111
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Time lO St
51XTH ltACI . .00 yaros ).yoar-oleli -
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Fait Flame 1-lrl t 40 Joo
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Sllckr F1noers, On lllt Fly, S.va Bracket
Time -10-ll
SJ EXACTA 1._11paid~10
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MlH Arr-Fly CMylUI 11 :IO S 10 4 40
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Miu Cl.ttsyQUI (Fryday) 4 20
AC\O raceo. lam Easy. llUQQtcl Con...:
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Golla C•rvor IArm>lronol ll 40 s to l .IO
American Jet ICarOoHI l 40 1 60
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Al•o raced Roc••ls On. lllklno COl>y
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Del Mer
WIOHHOAY'S ltllSUl.TS 17111 .. .,...., _.,._ ..... ._. .... ,
,.ltST ltACll. • lurl-).yea••lcb allCI up. Clalmlno price U0,000 11.000 Pvne ,,,,000
Tlmeleu A•-•
IM<Ctrronl • '10 l.lO 2 IO
Star Clltt t~ktr) t lO 4 00
YtHI Cake lWlnlandl 4.40
Also ractcl. Monsieur La pin, Bnll, Slao4t
Pel, Bubb4e Bummo, L)motln
Time 1.10 215
SECOND ltACE. I 1114 mllH ).year-oldi
and up. Clalmll>g Purw, n ,000.
Beno In the Rc»O ( Plnceyl I 10 •JO l.40
EaglH -·· CO.lal\oUjJayt) s lO J 40 Cll.tly N' Harri~ IPedrora) 4 IO
Ai.o raced· llelglum SIMI, Ju n·• ltY
BIH i, Mlty lktly, Fort hlon. A Round Tuitt.
L• c-... Country Welk, Tom D•IY n DAILY OOUll.I (S" palo U0.00
TllllltD ltACI. Ont m ile on turf J YH I •
old lllllu Cltlmlng PurM. '11 ,000
Any Time Ptl IH-ley I 11 IO 1 Ml 4 10
Lady Gallritlt (Winland) t tO 4,60
Braml>I• Hiii IOrteoal J IO
AIM> rac.d Sllady Ovcrieu. A Star Allrac
llon, lllckle's Gal, Mir~
Time 1 » llJ
U IXACTA 1111 Ptld~00
,OUaTH ltACE. I I/It mtles Me4den
11111e• end ....,... >-year..,_ eno up. c1a1 ....
lno price, UJ,000.21,500 Pu<'M, H,000
PH CMy SCM CMcCerron) , IO uo uo
Gr .. l Lou la-r-1 11 40 14.IO
llllllt !(""°"" IH-leyl ,.,
Also ractcl CllAW A Mallve, Gall'l Totlln.
Siie's A Giii, L• Verna's Sof\•la, 0......
Rhon•, lie Gw<'dtd, Orlltlno Dune, Prlnlo
Min, Stingy Yery.
Time 1.441/S "'™ ltACa. t 1ur1one•. All-..,ce. FllllH tnd ,,....,, J.y .. «OIO •nd UI), Puna,
,,.,000,
Impatient Leu (llaleruuel•I I 70 S '10 4 40
Oyn•mk Lac1V CH•wleyl I J10 S.IO o ... •n ol ccw-•11 ILIP"'ml 14 20
Alu raced: Eden. College Monty,
For .. tk, "'-lora S.cral, 6r>Qa01nolY.
Mtvan, Ack AO Leu , P•luolla, Aoao lo
Eler11lty.
Time -1.10 '5 IXACTA CMI peld UOS 00.
SIXTH ltACI. 4 lutlOfllJj. Maldtn 1
yH r-old 11111-. ""'"-· si.,ooo
FlturtllNd CDtl-..rtl 4.40 J Ml 2 10
O· Trlbet Rlt• IVeleftruelt ) 4.IO l.40
Touchy I Mt.tel 'A
D-Ol..,.Clll• f""1'I llnt to H<ond.
Al\O t••: Wllllllllfll L-, Aliff 11, Ir.,..
lll«d l.ady, /Ve Star, Saf"9t11l1111 t Ukt,
O.maKadDGft.
Tlma -1. n 111.
t•Yllf'TM llAC9. I Ill•"'"" on tun Al-INAMt. 'Ill'-e!'CI ....,.., ,_,,_...._ -_,. .. _.,....,
RtlMl.tat IVMdlvletol 154 40 St • 22A
Rlllllotlla '"'"'"' S 40 •• Jt1s-C~> ,,_..
Al•• retN · Slllml'lly, Jelle'• H•-·
l!lt ... 11 '91~. Molllll' ,_._.,, PrMlld t,
Mrs. u~cllt ..... .....,,_, 1 "'" '" Lo¥•.'""' ....... . Tlma-UUi.i.
u•llACTA ltN) HIOt M .oe. ta "CIC 14X U ,...,.,.,I) pel<t ..,._.
Wit.fl -.. ..., ... tl<ktb Cll• llill'tHJ, U ~k SI• COl'IMl•tNlll (Mid UIUt wttlt 7J ~
11'"9 llCMW "'"" ...,_,.
.,_,,. ttACI. "Otldl.ltt'-1 tt.lttt." • ._,..,...,,..,_..... ~ .... , ........ ,.,_,,,.,"""' (~) ... ,_.. .. ..
Kllle'C i'IMH IDtl-.......,.1 J .• i.• Ott•lHNrt (........, UI
AIM r .... ; """' P•I .Allltefl, OW , • ..._ Dew, e Rldl 0-.. ...,...,, Le .Miii .,.. .. , ...,. C-0.#.
Tl--t 'l•A
ltt•fM •ACC. OM l'lllle. ~..._ 1M
• " ....... "Ww, ,, ...... OMMt--•U.-} .... t i.• ,.
..... l....,IDIMN • .,..1 .... UI Olelte , .... , ...
AIM,._. ~. ~ Cfttll.r, 'llllr
.. I ........... ~ .. Ti-t_.l/t
••~A cNl.-.w•.• .,......._, ...
~ . . ., .
otl'f•tCT U TOV ltMM••T ....... ••> ........... a. ........ ........... ,....,_..' 17 11111'"98)
CS.tY ... .,,_ lo _1 ..... 1 --IMlll el ROlll--In HMllllll(llOll ...
Tl•H4tyetJ;4S)
DtlTalCT N TOValUUllllMT ,., ...... YMte v..-A...etc •.n> • ......., .• cu ....... --.
INIM NotUI I, MIUIOll \I It JO k\ltll •
llrvlna Morlh edvencet to H Ctlonal
tourna.......i •I Ml11..., Vie jo, Moftday et
S· )(II.
Senior• (14-15-yeu-olda)
SICTIOHAL TOUltlllAMINT lat C:.. M•e .... ,_)
So<lt116wor1ta l. MJulon lll•lo Soutn o (Minion Viejo Soutn ellmlnaltcl)
l•I c..m.c•I
L•k•-·Ctrrltos 7, F-talll Va lley Nori!>• ....... , .• oan..
Fountain \/alley NO<lll •• La Mir~ "' Bell Gar•,,.
Seniors ( 13-year-olda)
H CTIOHAL TOUltNAMENTS , Cat......,_..,..,_,
Fountlll" llllllty Nor111 n. Bell c;.r"'""• •
Founi.lft 11 .. 1.,... North •• .,,,.,.,.,.mined
-nl. 5.oiurdav. 1 p m
Big League (1&-18·year-olda)
St!CTIOHAL TOUltNAMENT
(al ,_.,. Valley lt~, .. u ... 1 Cat1i.1 ...._.,..Sc_
Lennox 12, MtnNllQln Beacll •
8uena P.,.. •. Lone Bta<ll 1
Surf statistics
Scere o.., Per'"1
Ctlgary I 1-J
C.1 llornl• 1 )-4
Scoring -I Cal(ltry, Gerbe< IMollna,
Ktlslen1en1, 10·35, 2. Calllornl•, 0.IH
lC•Hr, Sta•(IHnll, .0 30. ). 41 05, MoY'tt'\
even dtr \/Hft, Albfflo) 4. ,,.., cler "'""
CAll>ertol, 61; 1', S Moytt'\ (Cffar, Coc*Atl,
IO U, •. c.toerr. Krl•tem.en Cpenally lllCk).
Sl'loti -c.1_., n. Ctlll0tnl• u , S.....
-Calgary ISIW•I '· Calilornl• (Mayer) s.
Fouls -CelQtrY U C.h!Ofnoa 10. Ofl\icllH
-Calttrv l. Callloml• s. Corner klCU -Calgary I, Cellkl<nlt 1),
Allt-e -J1S31
NASL
WESTEllN OIVISION
W \. GF GA I~ ....
~ Dttf90 It 10 !O 40 41 12'
LO\ Ar>geln IS II 40 •1 lt 12•
$w1 11 1' SI st 41 IOI
Sen Jo.. 9 11 U 46 l3 17
NOltTHWE$T DIVISION
\lencou•ff 17 8 W 31 41 141
Ct l(ltry t • 1J •7 44 42 114 Saellle 1J 13 S4 '9 4S 120
Porll•r>d 11 IS l8
Eomonton 10 1~ s1
43 lJ 103 u '3 103
EASTEllN 0 11/ISION
Cosmos
Montr••I
WHllnln91on
Toron10
11 s 11 l8
ll 1J Sl 4S
IJ 13 45 46
S21l1 .. SOUTHEllN OIYISIOH
All•nla •• 10 SS 41
Forl l.•uO&•dtle U II •3 lt
T tmpt Bty 12 1' 52 60
Jac•M>nvlll<P 1l 1) 11 .0
CENTltolL DIVISION
St llO .. 121
,, 105
31 .,
47 141
lJ 1U
•S 113
)1 •OJ
Chocaoo 1' 1 U 35 ., 1t 1
M1nnt\Gi. U 11 JO 4' 4S 11'
TulH 1l 1l .. .0 4l '" D•llH 4 lJ 10 S1 It 0
SI• pojnts trt awe<-10< reeulellon or
ov•rOme •t<tory Four poinu for • ""°°40Vl
•le lory. One l>onul pc>tnl lor tvtrY ..,.,
KGrt«I !'rilll t mt•I"""" ol lllrW per ga,...
No OOIKil 1»1nt '-' a<N•relltd for OYetllnw «
•llooloul -J•
W.-....Y'lkert\ Surt • Ctl(ltry J
Atlanta l. ToronloO
CoStnos 2. Por uana o
M111nHOU 4, Fon u.-rd•I• 1
C1>lcaoo l, E..,,.,_on 2
!>•n D•t(ll>l, 5H 11lt 2 1501
Tetllllll'tGamt
V•nc.ouvw at Tul5~
'rld.ty'sG-
Wtifll"9(on at DAllti
Women's Trans Nallonal
(•I Wft-1111.er, c:alt.I
5« ... 11-lttsltlb AM• StnOtr (Sealllel clel Cindy Kellilltf
CAlvertor<, Wyo.I. '"h hole , Marl
McDovgall 1Mlcllo1111an, Ill.I Otf. O.l!Ol•
Hall CDallul, l·and·I, Pt nlly H•mmel
CDectt\W, Ill.) Otf l(erln Mundinger ITO<Oll'
101, "and-S, ll•ltrie SlllMer (Nortll Pl•U•,
Mell.I Otf. t..ucille Ray CRoc• Hiii, SCI, J.
ano-2, Mery Zimmerman IHllllboro, Ill )
def SMrYI Stelnll.tuer (Mtdlton, Wit.I,
I YP. Amy Bent CClearwaltr, Fl• I ""
S<nan Fromutll (Clle\lor11tlG, Mo >. S--..,
Jull lnllsler II.Os Altos. c..111 1 def. Cvnlllle
Fr(IO !Austin. Tta•il. H>ncl 4, I.Hiie si-non IM ..... I ,,.. Eiieen Ktlly CL\llller•ll ...
Ma l,1·•
J anice 8"rbt c Tun.a> Ott 5"1rley Furlof>(I
CS.n Anlanio, Teui). 1..,,,,.1, Rose J-
( All>uquerquel dt l. Allee Dy• I Delray
Beetll, Fl• '· ... no.s. Tllet•H SchfKk CSpou ne> def. Pe119y Klrscll I ~luth,
Minn.), 2 .. nc1.1; JodY RO\tnlhtl (ElllN,
Minn. I def. Karyn Co1Der1 CJkklOll, Ml,11,),
4·alld"3; S.-. J--. lH-er, NH) def
Pally Coatt.y (Ponca City, Okie .I, 1..-.1,
l(elhy Beker ((lov•r. SCI ,,.t, Loren•
AIOer•lt !Buena Parl<I, •-·>; SuMHI y.,..
lls CS.n Antonio> Otl. O.na Howe IColor-
Sor•no•>. '"""· Elwlna l(enne<IY IEPl>lnv. Auslrallal Otf. S-Mtrcllew 10mar...,
Htl>l,J.-..i.
lnternetlonal meet
Cal 'WM!•, IUly)
200-m llurdlK-1. EdWln -IU 5.),
U.12; 2. 8ar1 Wllllems CU SI, 2J.:M; J. Roll
Mllbvrn CU S I, 23 14.
100 -I. E"""ll 1(1119 (U.5). 10.74; J.
Dla llo llube<M Cli.ly), 10.M.
HJ-1. MlllOl'I C-IU.S.l, ,_. "; 2.
MeUl1N OIOlor91e (llalJI, 7·l.
J•mlle -k-1. Mawl1le 09,,.111_ llt. lyl,,, ,,...,.,
( ............ "......,,
l,~I SW..o..tl CEfll!Md), )!JI S4
MO• ao IAY (Vlrt'• ..... , .. , -J1
a114tlfft • llfll c•, llS reO Cad, IOI red l'Kk Ced, II rad........,, ,., ........... )
2' llft(llH't 1.as re<ll ced. t1 rid r•d1 ctd.
It ............ J 11119 <.od
SANT A IAalA•A -llJ •lltlf,..; Jtl
callee IN~ Ju reel WWlfllff, 12 IMWll•, 10
CO'# Cod, • tlfll CN , s llallllwt, 142 rock 'ltll.
lt$meo....i
YINTUltA •-*"' 1~ _,ac...,., S
llalle..I, 1t IMllllD, 1n Miid lleU, '4 c.atlco
N U, ,.2 rtcll <tel. 4 11119 <eel, " <-CM, D ~kt'91 O•NA8D J04 _ ... ,. 1,»G r«I< lltll, 1
llt ll• .. 1. '21 Ca lle• &au , 4 NllllO, "
"'•<lttrtl
"01tT MUlllUlll IAt11•rlcH I -••
•11411.,, JM callee _.., • r•k lltfl. I -· raclHla. i111on1i., SOI roo cod, 10 <• cM.
MA&.llU -IO AllOlert' t20 ctll<e MU, t
llallbul. to llenllil, U Mackerel, 10 rec,i. tlW\.
llA&. lllACM 111 tll9t•n tOO roo. lltll, .. Darracuda, a llonlto. 00 me<~et.
$ wt!\41 btw, 14 ct llco llau, 211a1111u1.
Grunion rune
.. lurdty 10'47p.m .-U.47e .m •
Suttdey-ll:Z7p.m,•l:21 •.m.•
Monday -12: 11 a.m. '·2: II •.m. •
TWJdll' -I •. m ... ~ •• m .•
• -Wlltn lllt time of IN t llPt<llCI rvn ta
altar ml*"ght. IN nl"'I btlore b ~.
Tiii• w .. k'• trou1 pl•nl•
LOS AllOIL•I -8 19 Rock Ctttk,
Jack-. Lake, PyrMl\ld L•ke, U-• Plru
Cr"k •I Frenc:lvnan'• Flat.
.... llltNAltDINO -Bio 8Hr Leu,
Green 11a11.,, Lake, Ort90fy Lek• s.nc.
Ana Rlll9r, Sant• Ana Alll9r CSoulll FO<kl.
MAOlltA San Joaquin Rl119r !Middle
F0tk), Solaoar Lekt,StMk-IMt I.Me. •
AL,.INI lllut La ke IUpper t nO
L-••I
ltlaN Ktrll Al•er COemocrtl Dam lo
ltRI P-••l\ouw, 8ortll PowerbOuM to
Democrat Dam, Isabell• Dam 10 111>'•11
Po••rllOV\t, l(A) Pow trl>OVH 10 Ltk•
lstlltll•I
TULAltl Fr .. rnan cr .. k, l(•m Rl .. r
''•l rvlew Dam lo l(AJ PowtrllouH .
JOllntondela Brkl(lt lo Falrvltw Dam),~
permllll c ...... Tule River IHorlll tnd Soulh
Ferka ol Mein Fork)
INYO 8alitr C,..k, Big Pint er.-.
Bl•llOC> Cr-(l.Ower, Middle, Soulll t nO In•
l•k• 111. Goodale Creek, lndepencten<•
CrHk, Lake Stbrlne, Lone Pine Crttll,
Horth LO •, Oek C•H k (NOrlh For·k).
Sll•lllltrdl CrHk, SoUlll LO•, SymrnH
CrH k, hl>OOtt Creek, Tlntmtlla Cr .... ,
Tulllt CrMI<
MONO Brlcl(le90rl RHff•olr. Buckey•
CrHk. Con•ICI Crttll, Con•ICI U k•, O.ao•
man Crttk. Ellery Lake, Geor11• l.akt,
Gl•u CrMk, Gr..,t Ltkt, Grttn Cr""· Gull
LO•. Hiiton Creek, June Lak•, I.ff 111n1nv
CrH k, l.H lllnlng CA't•k (South Forkl, Lii·
Ill Welker Lekt. Llltlt Walker River, LundV
l.•kt, Mamie La ke, Mammoth Creek,
Mery Lake, McGH Crttk, Miii Crttk,
Owtn> River CS...ton Croulnv •nd 8111 5Pr·
lnotl, Rt •or• Crttll, Robinson Crwk, Rock
Creek l ParadiH Ct mp lo Tom'• Place,
Tom'' Place uPllrHm lo Rock Cr"k L.ekt.
Aoo CrMk Lek• lo Ille end or Ille road),
Rock C'"" L.e'9, Aull! Cr .. k, s.ddlel)ag
Crtek, S.ddlel>tg Lake, S.rdlne Creek.
Slltrwln CrMk, Sll119r Lakt, Swauger Cr-.
Tl09a L.U, Trumbull Lek•, Twin Ltltft 8rldgepor1 CU-ana L-er>. Twin L.ekH
CMtmmolhl, \llrglnl• LakH CU-r -
Lower!, lllrOlllla CrHk, Walker River
""''' Flat Campgrouno 10 1-n Of Wtlkff, LU•ltl MtaOowl CamP(l•OUnO lo S.W-a BrlOgel
lnternatlonal tournament
C•l Nartll C-wey, NH)
irlnl It-si,.1 ..
JoH LUO Clerc Otl Puca• Portft, I•,
• 2, Guillermo llllH ,,. .. RIO Fa119I, S·1, .....
• '. Cnrlllopllt Freyu dtl Andres Gome& .
l·t, l •. Jou Lui• Dt mlanl Oe!. Ferdl
Tay(l•n, 7•, •·l
Men'• tournament
CalSMlllDr .... ,NJI
l'lntlt_Sl,.1"
Grtl>Olre R.i.i11n 0.1 FrllJ B..,11n1no, M ,
•·l , Nlek S.•1-Clef Vt n Wlll1bky, l•, t 1, I t
Women's tournament
(at $all oi..e)
5«--Sl•I• Pam Snrlvff Otl 8arl>4M'a H•llqui51, t ·2,
t I Bettina 8-oer Stacy -0011'1. .,z.
t 2, C.,,.,., ReynotOS Otf Julie H•rrlnGlon,
I S, I t , v-\ltrmatll -l(lm .-.
tO, •I
~ > .
Wiiiiam JonH Cup
Cal T ...... Tai••)
PlllllpplntS ... Unlltcl StalH 15 Cot)
Misc.
National Sports Futlval
(al SyracwM. N. Y .I
5'110 SKATING
1.--n
1 51 .. t MtrrHlllO, Midwest, C•n09t
Ptrk, 1 ...... 2. -·y Pleru. E•M. St.
Frt ncls.. Wls , l David Pe•laclc, Soult\
Florloanl, Mo , • Dan Miiier, Sov111. Pari.
Alote, 111
S,000 meter rela y
I Ml-st (Sle"9 Mtrrll .. lel, Jell F••'*· Brian Smllll, Bryan Foll), I U 24, 1 Wfft,
I )Cl '9, J East, I J U 4. • So<ltll, I •.S .. --1.-~ 1 Glor•• lloQa<kl, Eall, PMk R10(!9, Ill .
1 H ll, 2 Lyellt Sle pll•ns. Wul.
Northllr'...,., Ill, 1 00 13 3 lla<kY "'-·
MIOwesl, MllwaullM, 1:05.40; 4 AMrttret
Burnt, W•I, lll•trllde, 1 II U ,,._..,,....,
1 EHi CGlorla 11o9tckl, List Perllll, Ann
Kl-, llelll N-11. t .17 J1 , 1 Midwest , J
WHI, • SOulll HOC:KI Y
Grett L.eka1 S, Ctnlrel 1 Ult11l
New En(ll-10, MIO-II 0 llhlrOI
IASKETIAl.L
Wul 111', SoUlh •7 lllrsl)
Mill"""' n, f.•,at '1 11111ro1 ........
Soulh '3, f.Hl '4 (llr11)
Mlllw~l 11, WHI 12 (1'11roi
University Gtimea
Cal hcNl'ftt, 11-lal
IASKETIALL
Uftl(ICI SI••• •l Soviet Union II '""'' Yugollavla •1. Rom..,la 12 llhlrol
SWIMMING
Mefl 400 mtclley rttay-1 Soviet Union, l:4L7~
IOamH record), 1 United Sltltt. »ff.SJ; l. llrH ll, , s..s 10.
400 Ir•• I O e 11 1e1 M•c llek IC&K~llovalll•I , SI.GI (OtmH rKord);
.2 Oarldo Maclrup (llru ll), l:Sl.s.1; J.
S.r11el l(at.,,,,lk0¥ CSo•l•I Union), 4:00.ts, ,,_
•oo medley rel•v -1 V"ll•d SlttH,
4 11.IP; 2 Romania, 4 21.14, l. So•IM Union. • u ....
400 fr--I Kim LI,.,_ (U.S.!, 4:U.17 ce>e .... • rteor111. 2 ,,,,.. w ttKlltY• cs...
l•I UfllGll), 4'1UO; J. H.,.,,. Sllt<rl (U.S.),
4.21 01.
WednHd~• trenuctlon• a\'aAU.
................. AIWC .....
H ATTLI 541 ... lttOHIC:S _....,..II~
Ille J~ 81M'll. .. a .,., •• ,,._ (Mlrkt.
POOfllAt.L ......................
AT'-ANTA "Al.(ONt -Cut Mlllt
,,_, ...... !( • .,. SltllM 111< J--,
c~...._
Nl!W IHOl..ANO ... Tluon -Clift ,,..., 0\111111, .-..V. J"'11 l(le"' Mii R'"'9 .._.,
.... ~tl"'11 Ctlt11 Nl<;C#'IJ """ r.-L'f..i, 1.U.I_.; 1119 MIMll'ltf, -'•Ml ... Ma,._,_...,.,.,,_..,. 11otl1t; J ltl\ ltlll,
tllM•, .. ua Wlltl«, NW!lt Mc:k. 1.0I ANGILU RAMS -W.1 .... Deft
1tef'dt1, ·-•••O: _, Vtc ............. . ut111-.
ST. LOUIS CAlllDINAU -....... ll.J .
.Jllftler, I~ ... e ..,.... .. -..ytW
COll\rllCtl. At-''" C.I etrftMe. _..,,
lft• .. ~
1#ASMIMOTON ••DSltl NS -• ._...
Mlllt "-•...,.,._ .. lit• _.,._ -trKI. c:ou.a .. •INN tTA'fC -...,,... CW.U tMMr
.......... mectl
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 H /F
JIM NIEMIEC l
Albacore, tuna plentiful
I
J
Albacore and b1&eye tuna flshln8 remains con
sistent oft our Southland coast tine Action Is still
concentrated oft San Diego for the longfins, but
tuna catches are being made south of the east end
of Clemente down to Mexican waters
CharUe Davis of Huntington Beach fished last
week off the 43 Spot and came back to port with a
bunch of albies and a nice bigeye. Davis isaid the
best lure was a hexhead in red and ytJ llow colors.
Fishing conditions are ideal us cooler waler
has moved in and rish appear to be coming right to
the boat and hitting every chovie. With these
cooler water areas. and the Cact that there are
schools of five· to eight pounders mixing with JO.
pounders, the season appears lo be headed for the
record book as far as albacore are concerned .
T here are a lso yet lowta1J and dolphin being
taken under kelp patties as Jigs are trolled C'lose to
these hold.41g areas in the vast ocean
THE P AC'I Fl(' ANGLERS Invitational
Tournament was held la~t weekend, and it was
perhaps the be~t one da~ albacore tourney staged
along the coast 10 a number of years. Kathy
Thompson of Corona dt•I Mar reported that her
'84 Olympic
yachts shown
By ALMON LOCKABF.\'
O•lly "'Ml a..tl119 Wrl•r
A preview or the 1984 Olympic 'achting will be
the highlight or sailing acl1111ty sta.rtmg Sunday at
Long Beach and continuing through Friday, Aug 7.
Labeled the Pre Olympic Regatta the week·
long event 1s the first of three such regattas
scheduled for 1982 and 191S3. <.•ulminatang with the
Olympic Games in 1984 It repl<ices the trad1t1onal
Alamitos Ba) Yacht Club Olympic Cla~ses Regal
ta which has been a featured event for local and
L'.S sailors for e1 numbt>r of' ears
The PTe-01~ mp1c Rt•galla will takt' on an of·
ficial status. co sponsored b~ the 01) mp1c· Classes
Regatta Organa11n~ Comm1ttet• cOC ROC'>. the City
of Long Beach. Southern Ltltfornaa Yachting As·
sociation. Uni ted States Yacht Racrng Union.
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club and Long Heach Yacht
Club
Mike Schoettle. OCROC chairman, said more
than 150 boats from about 15 countne~ are expect·
BOATING
ed to com pete ovC'r lht• same• t·ours£'s that will be
used in the 1984 01} mp1cs
Countries already s1gm•d fpr the event incl ude
Great Britain. Brazil, New Zeal<&nd, • ..Australia.
Canada, Argentina. Swt'den. Ml'x1co and Japan
Six of the seven Olympic classes will he
represented. The board sailing C'lass was not mvit
ed because of the contanuin~ conflt r l 14tth the In-
ternational Yacht Rae mg l 01on o\ <•r "h1ch boards
will be used UH' Wmdgllder or tht• Windsurfer
The six oth<.>r Olympic classes are Star, Soling,
Flying Dutchman. 470. Tornado catamaran a nd
Finn.
On the local yachting front. Lido Isle Yacht
Club will s tage its August Regatta for small boats
Saturday and Sunda}. South Shore Yacht Club will
send a fl eet or Performance Jland1cap and ocean
racing catamarans around Catahn<.1 r~la nd in its
annual two man ran• Saturday and Sunda):
Newport Harbor Yacht Club wall hold a one·design
r egatta on ouU.1de coursel> Sunday; and Dana
Point Yac ht Club w1U conduct its Dana Davs
Hegatta !)aturaay ano ::,unoay
* * *
SOuu.rn Ctlltorn•• 'l'acn11ng "' •ocl•llon cal-.r
Lee~~·· .... Alamltos 8 ay Ya<nt Clull Pr•
Olympoc Regena, Aug 1·1
Sc,_., Alsoc:l•llon Ancient
Mar Inert race, Sunoay
Hunllnvton Harllouf Y aclll Club
-Boluo CNu CollKllon IPHRFI
S.lurOty, s..noay __ , ... _
A~ Yatlll Cl~ Sct1PC>1>
l(ellen-11 Serles No 4 l~lurCS.yl
Santa BarbMa Y aclll Clul> J 1•
AegalUI, Salurdey, ~-'f
WUllaM Yacht Chlll W"llaU
ecoioev R-11•. Stlurday ~-· p-ll•lltv Salling ... ,-••
lion -ci.. Aaclno. S-.y
BISBEES
, t '1t \ I' 'I I I I • , ''I< ~. j' • 't• ( ll j
* * * s. .. oi_
Co1onaoo Cevs Yec111 c1u1>
!>Guth Bay R-11• SalurOty Sun
day
!>llver Gato Yacl\4 Club Chpper
So•IH S.lurClay JO.mile Trl..,Olt
race, !>undt,
5•" DIPOO HtnOlcap Flotl Ota
Brow Trop.yract. Sunclay
Sen Dl990 Yacht Club Fratee
S.rlH tPHRFI ~y
SMu-aa•y
Wincljam,...rs YtcM Club Iron
Man !>ebol Rtc:e s.1 .. roay
I( lnQ Har1>0r Y atlll Club M•rk
Purson Memorial ra<t, Seluroay
Del Rrr Ya<nl Ch.II> S..nd•y
Sklpl)<lr> race, S-.Y
husband Gerry 's boat the "Pacific Clipper" waa
winner In two c:laues.
Thompson skipper ed his rour an1Jer1 to a one·
day fish count of 41 a l bles, all taken on 20-pound
string and single hooks. Takin1 top booon tor the "
most tongfin.s caught In the day wa. Pete Torre of
Charlie's Chili ram e, who boated 15 aJbies. Mo.l of
the action took place som e 85 miles south of Polnt
Loma.
Marlin action is extre m ely s low in local
waters, and what was expected to be a good and ,
FISHING ·-1 l::m.1
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
early season has not m aterialized. It was felt that
angle rs were tr ying to push the season a bit for
billfish a few weeks back, and. most likely, the
best fishing for both marlin and broadbUI wiU
come during August and September.
WHJTEV AT ANGLER'S CENTER reported
three spike bills boated this past week in tbe
K1dne) Banks area of San Diego, but no local
catches were made between our jettys and the
islands Only a few fish have been s potted by the
Newport fleet even though there a re plenty of
mackerel m the water
Frank Smith of Newport Beach was one of the
luc ky anglers to hook and land a marlin this past
week. Smith was fishing aboard the sportfisber
"Wanderlust'' for longfins ofr San Diego when the
marlin hit an a lbacore jig. It took Smith l 'h hours ,•
to land the billfish, which weighed in at 158
pounds.
/\ny angler who catches, tags or releases a
marlin this season is required by newly-adopted
fish and game rules to r eport it within 15 days
arter the catch to their local billlish c lub or the
DFG offices located in either Long Beach or San
l>H~go
The reason for reporting all catches is to help
the biologists in the determination or future con-
trols on commercial fishing for billlish along our
coastline with nets and also to establish a better
idea of the m1grat1on and ha bits or billfish. Long
line releases are not required to be reported.
f\esa \7erde
\J ine and 19iq,uor
SALE! 4 DAYS ONLY!
MARLBORO
CIGARETTES s5~~T~
Regular King Size. Box and Soft Pack only.
Not Menthol. Light or Light 100's.
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
A popular "light" brand wi th no frills.
King-size. filter-tip regulars.
RUSSO FF
VODKA
A . "light" vodka -70 proof. Enjoy
summer coolers with less alcohol.
Reg S2 49
VALLEY OF THE
MOON CHABLIS 750ML
A pleasant. dry white wi ne at a great price.
KING
COLA
Refreshing cola 12 0%.CANS
Prices •ff•ctfn thnt S-.. Allg. I st
9 5 MEDAL WIMMIMG WIMES
IM STOCK
549-4044
... BAKER AT HARBOR__,,,
/111, \',,.,, \111,, 19<Ji
I:~
406 S. Bay Front
3alboa Is land 675-5180 l 'nmisUtkably
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
Lilnhd
Choice Seat1
213-463-11 01
CAM for Sunday I
714-752-0960
If It's got wheels
you'll move it
faster in a
Dally Piiot
classified ad.Can
642-5678 and
a friendly
ad-visor wltl
help you turn
your wheels
1ntocash.
Johnston
&Murphy
THE WANDERER
A moc toe two eyelet
tie with full leather
linings. Available in
Tan, Bone, Whi te,
or Blue Smooth Glove.
Si zes
7 8 9 101-l1 -12 -13
N )( xx xx x x
w xi)( x ) x )C x x )( x )(
99 Fashion lsl•nd
Newport BNcll
7 51
'
. •.
.... __ .,. .....
H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIThuraday, July 301 1981
Boating fee
plan delayed
WASRlNGTON CAP> -Despite early fanfare,
the Reaau administration baJ run into trouble
1emn1 it.a plan to charge lea to recreaUonal and
commercial boater. and bas withdrawn the pro· posal ao it can be reworked.
P\JlWC N&1'1CE
l•m. PICTtn.t aUIU•UI
lill'MllfAlS•lllT TM ~1111111WM11t are ... llt
'""'""···· ILV .. 1009 •utll'llM f'A .. K,
I» "'"" --·-· Ot .... , CA t11•; CMllll .... _..._, 1ttt 1M
AVtllllt, lo;ltt *• SM\ Oi. .. , ~ fllOO,
taQUOIA f'ACl,IC oavaLOf'MINT COMf'ANY, •
O.lawa,.. c...,.,atlall, 10IO SK_.
Awtnwt, lullt .... htl 0 ..... CA t21tl.
NO..WICH f'_,,.&i.1'1&S. INC,.
• Catllwftla c.,._.lllNft, lat C-IM
Otl ... Nerti\ Sul• -.... Otaet. CAtt1•
Tlllt t\lllNM It CMdllct .. tly M ....
... ....,
•JCTIT10U18UllNHI
NAMll lfAT•MllNT ,,.. ........... --" ...,.,. ""°" _ .. ,
c:ALWUT' O..oYf', VIM (M!llM
C•letr-. w1a "1, w...-a N..,..,
CAtt6'1.
ltlCHAi.O O. lltOOftS. .. CeAle
""""•• .... CfiM'IOll9, CA •1'1. '"" ........... ~ .... -"" ·~ ...... . ltklwdO.~ Tlllt....._._Rlef ... ... c-1, dtwll •Of' .... c:;ew.Ty ... J114.,
l'-""· .......
f'Wll ..... OlrMlll C-St Oelty ,., .... J1111 ......... 11, JG. , .. , ,....1
PVBUC NOTICE ..U.UC NOTICE
lllCmCa TO CHDtTOal
Ofleu&.ICTllMl ... i.
A110011 tlfT•n10. ro T.....,.. AlCOtlOUC
HVlllM• UCINU c"""*••u.c.c. .. ..,.., .. ~,
rvauc NOTICE
,.,...,,
f'llMI,,_ Or ... Coett Oellt l'lltl,
July n. JO, aua. '· 1a. '"' ..,..,,
PUBUC NOTICE
AdminiJt.ration otrlclah Hy they Intend to
stan d by .. the user fee concept" bul acknowledge
the boaters fee proposal was baatUy put to1etber
and is being revlsed extensively 10 It mlght
become more palatable to Congress. '"'"_ .... -lellaft ~ ~. ·------------Notice 11 ..,...., 11-u.ac • '"""' PUBLIC NOTICE
trantfer lncl11dl1>t •n •IUl\tllc ----------
The fees are supposed to help olftel proPQsed
c u ts In the budget of the U.S. Coast Guard. But·
critics of the ~lan quickly accused the admlnistra· tlon of not domg its homework. The commandant
of the Coast Guard acknowledged be bad no role in
working out details.
The proposed legislation. s ubmitted to
Congress last April, gave no assurance lhe money
would go to the Coast Guard, left final fee
sch edules to the Transportation Department, was
vague as to who would pay for what Coast Guard
ben efits and was characterized as being inequila·
ble and not well thought out.
Hospital cost jump
SACRAMENTO (AP> Operating costs al
California's acute-car e hospitals jumped nearly 18
percent between the first quarters of 1981 and 1980,
according to California H ealth Facilities Com·
mission.
The commission said the increase exceeded
the voluntary cost-limitation goaJ of three private
medical groups jlnd raised questions about
whether alternatives to voluntary e fforts were
needed.
•'The m ajor purpose of the quarterly reports is
to monitor the effectiveness of the medical care in·
dustry's voluntary cost containment program in
California," s aid Joe Hafkenscbiel, the com ·
mission's executive director.
ptr1Mrllll,.
INC.
Sl!OVOIA f'ACI f'IC
OIVILOf'MINT CO,
~'-IJ Mc;..._, vie...._...,.
NOi.wtCH f' .. Of'EltTIES,
~Horwl(ll, ll'ftel-• Tlllt Ital_. wM 111.0 wllll Ille
C-IY Cltt1! •Of ... c-t\' Oii Jlll1
22, 1''1 .. ,..,.,
Pvllllallad Or ... Goatl Oell1 Pllol,
Jvl1 JO,"-•. 1). >O, 1'11 UC*41
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC• TOC•1ono•1
Of' IUUt TllJllll.,a• AND 01' IMTINTIOM TO
Tlt.Utll'ai. ALCOMCM.IC
l•VallAOa LICaNH
Ctac..6m .. 1t1u.c.c ....
,.,.7 ... l"CMtl Hollo I• 11er.111y g1....., thtl • llUlk
Ira"•'•'· l11c1vdlno en e lcolloll<
"9vera111 lie-, ........ 10 llM -
01 111e1 certeln r.1la11rtflt IKltlMu
kno w n et THE APADANA
ltESTAUltANT ano ltcaled al tGO
Newport c..nttr Oo'lve "O". City Of
Newpor1 ... ell, Co\>nty of Oran ...
Sltlt Of callfornle '2660.
Heme of Trentftror: SlltOUS
MOOlltl, .00 Newport Ce11ttr Orlw
"0, Newport Btecll, Calllornle t-.0, S.S.)60-72....,_
Nemet, IOClal U<urlly nurnoer eno
bu1lntu tddrtu of Intended
Tra1111erw1, lncludlr19 llp code; are:
GARY GIRAGOSIAN, 2l13 W. S...
Loron10, Sent• An•. C•. t270A;
S.S.SH-n·U1S; J~N C. SCOTT, -N. Mlllt Cleremonl, Co. t Hll; S.S.~. ftlCHAltO O. BUltNS,
USO Port A.llercie.11, He-I lltecll, ---------------------------!Ce , S.S.SU ·U · 1401; SAMU EL
STAR GA'ZEK~l'-.
t-.,;..;...,;..;.'-'--r---Br CLAY~ POUAN---r-----1
N y...,, Dooly Ac1ovlty Goildt ~
V Au:orJ1"' fo '"'• Slot• To d•v•lop meooge for Frodo~
~ WOtO• COf'e>ponO•"Q 10 1'\ombfll
ol ~°"' ZodlOC b1r1h "G"
"''-'"' )1 .... , »C:-• 1"0.-t ... ,; ...
• ''°"" ,, ..... ,......,... . ., ... _ ..... ...
UWOftt
UC:.--1 .......... ~So .. oo •1~J .. °'"' .... ~
!IOI>'
s•Cflo•~ U~AIU
"°"" 9i'A~ll"'f
ML-MON•c.etM ~· ... ,..,.., .. _ .. ..,.. ..
~/\J•crw
Byrne's PUBLIC NOTICE ---------l'ICTITIOUS 8USllHSS
N.udSTATIMaHT • rating
• nses
C HICAGO <AP>
Mayor Jane M . Byrne's
popularity among
Chicago voters is' at its
h igh est in almost two
years, a ccording to a
Chicago Tribune poll.
Tiit lotlowlno perl(lnt are doln11
butlntu•. SIERRA INVESTMENTS, INC.,
14>6 E .. 1 Kotella A,,..,we, Oren111. CA •U•s.
SIERRA REALTY ANO
IHVEUMENT, INC .• t Colllornle <or·
Pof'tllon, 10. e.~1 Kot•ll• Av,....,.,
Orenge, CA '244S.
Tllll -'""' 11 c..OUCIH l>Y • Cor· porellon
$1ERAA REALTY ANO INVESTMENT, IHC
Danial N. 8oli.,,,
PrHl-t
Tiiis Rttemefll WM fll.O wltll Ille
CDUftl)' Clw1l of 0.--Covn1)'0I• Jwh
U , 1911.
LAW Ol'f'IC:.S OI'
McCHI a f'AUL., INC.
A f'•Ol'HMC*AL COit"
MMllfac~...,. ..... Sia•,.._, ....
11110-.
Nt•,.... aeadt, CA n..
RAMETTA, P02250 Por1 Aberdffn,
Newport 9"<11. Ce. S"S.~;
MICHAEL HOGAN, 22JO Port A-·
dttn, Newport Btecll, C e .
S .S .HA ... OHA , FltANI(
MONASTIE•E. 22JO Pon AIOe-,
Newport llNdl, ca .. S.S. ~IOM-
T olal c-.lderMlon 10 llM pold lor Ille
property O..Crlb9cl, In 111neral, •• ell
ttock In ••-· rl•lu,.., tQU!pm9111 and
Oood •Ill togtt~ wllh Ille lie-It
~s.000.00 Description
•·Cu1'1eu ,,.<II
Z·Ot1neno noctt 10 ._
repleod In catll
llltOU9'1HC:r°"'
lotelllr19
1·1ntltll_.,. nolt In
,._,
s 10,000.00
00,000.00
In favor ol Miier JU,000.00
Kind of llcenw to llM trentl•rred -
n<imber .,.. On-Sale Genetti Ll-
LlctnM Ho. '1 S471'
Tt>t wtt -trentf., wlll be con· tummalec:I ot 10 e.m on or tflet' Ille
>•th de, of AVOUtt '"' •I Ille eacr-d•Parlmen1 of Profeulonol Etcrow ServlcH at 1'21 N, T111lln AvtnUlf,
I P O. Boa I ISl7) Sent• Ana '2701
ltt7111, Ct lllornt•
All other t>uslneu nemet and •6-
dr•UO<S "'.,by lht Trentleror wlU.ln
• ... PUI -.,..,, .. ,., ft ,, •nown
10 Ille Tr-lerM ere tr._...
Tt>t -11ft ..,. .. lhat lllt cons..,..•· lion lor the ,,_.., of ,,. t>uslneu
end Ille lleafWO It lo llM paid ., .. , u.
Otpar1-..1 of Ale-lie hwre91 Conlrol ,.., -Ovt<I Ille pr._,._ lrantltr
Oatt<I, Jvly U, 1"1
Publllhecl Or-Coosl Dally Piiot.
IUly )0, 1'111 U20~1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI 8USINISS
NAMa STATIM•NT
Tiit fOllo'#lr19 per-. It dol"11 butl·
noun
BELLS BAABEOUE, HO•
Hemlllon, Hunllneton B .. cl'I, CA ., ...
HENRY HANALE BELL J lt ,
21032 Gr-., H""lllllllon hecll, CAt1"6t
Tiii• l>ullnets h <onduclied 1>y en In· dlvldUt l
"-Y Henele &ell Jr.
Tlllt llal-t wu lllt<I wltll 111t
c-h Cl-flf Or..., County on July
2t, 1"'· '"7UJ PulllltNcl Of'-CooJI Dally Pit~
July 30, ""9-'· U, 20. 1 .. 1 l>'IMI
According to the poll,
publ)shed recently in the
newspaper, 39 percent o r
those surveyed said the
mayor is doing an ex··
cellent or good job, and
14 percent said she is do·
Ing a poor job.
"'"*'. .
This contrasts s harply
with • last December's
Tribune poll when only
15 percent considered
her performance ex-
cellent or good and 43
percent said s he was do-
ing a poor job.
Publl....., Or-Coesl Dally Piiot,
July JO, A\IVIKt l, 12. 20, 1'11 ~7 .. 1
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO PERSONS
INTERESTED IN THE
MOTIC• TO eottTUCTO•S E s T A T E 0 F J A N E
CALUNOf'o•••os KAUL, DECEASED.
Sc11001 0111r1c1 COAST cOMMuN1TY To a 11 persons I n •
COLLEGEDISTRICT terested whether as ••o 0eec111,,. 1.00 o·c1oo p.m. of.,,. c red'tors •h 1 1 t s 20t11 c1ay"' """'"· '"'· 1 , e rs, eQa ee , 1 P•ac• o1 Bid 1tecetp11 Office ot 111e o r devlsees, In the estate
P11rclla1lr19 Aveni, M•. Merion "-rrln. of J AN E V E R 0 N I CA
Cotti Com1n1111lly Colleve Dl1lrkt, KAUL d d h l u10 Ad•m• "•• .• Cott• M• ... cA ecease , w ose nm last address was 2-489 PUBLIC NOTICE
~11 Profe<I •dent111ce11on Neme: Tiebout Avenue Bronx
T.S. N0.1... I GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE MOTION State of N e w York that SENSORS -810•t01t • MOTIC• OI' T•uST1n· SAL• Piece Plan•.,. on 1n.. Office o1 tM letters tes tamentarv or of , ~ t'r~1,,..2~ ~';"~ :1H 11~~ T•i..me 01m1or, l'hy1l<a1 Feclllll• P1111. Mr administration have been
1Hsu .. AMC• COMf'ANY, • c.tlltoml• Jofln Pocw, C...t CGmnwM!lty Cooeve issued to ROBERT J . c..,.,etleft .. T""*" ., ~c-Ol•trlcl. u10 •••ms Ave .. Coit• KAUL b S 0 t , rrvst .. w5ulllt1•-Tn.11 ..... , ..... ,,... ... uma111•1ss..s101. • Y urr ga es
certain Doted o1 Trvtl uecvtad by NOTICE is HE,.EBY GIVEN t11o1 Court, County of Bronx a
DOMINIC J . RACITI ANO n :•ESA 111• •l>Ov ..... -.. Sd•ool Dh1'1cl of c 0 u rt 0, c 0 mp et en t
.. A •c T Oren;• Covntv, ColllClfnl•, ectlne tty j . d ' ti f S f .... '" 1 1• -.,.., Wlftas com-end tnr--n '" Gover nine Board uris IC on 0 the late 0 -lly pr_,., " 10 e11 ....... ..., .,., -.. • N y k ln .. ,...t ..... ROIEltT ... lt.A(ITI ..... llerel ntlltr rtlerred to at ew Or , CA•OLVNt..•ACIT•.~-"OISTRICT",•111 recelve1111to,11u1 That the following
', I
'
not 1•1•1 11-111e •t>ove-s1Al9cl 11-· I I d bted t " • .. commwn ty pr-rtr .. o Mtltd ~for,.,. a•••d o1 • c011trect person s n e o or a11llftflvldtcl 11t lnt-t,...., ~ h I ding so I erl" Merc11 17, m• •• liwVWNflt M. leo.2, 1or 111t •boYt swoJec1. o per na prop ,
111 Mell 11'7S. ,.... 1•. ff Offlclol Bldt Sl\all be recelvec:I tn lhe piece of the said decedent:
.. ecor•atOl'M9tC-y,tef1tom1a, lctenllltto -·and 111o11 11e •"" No debts or monies are afld 11\1,,__ 19 Witt cenatn ~ .,f OM Plll>lkly rttd •'-et ll'IO abo-d Oefawll a nd t!lull•ll ta hll 1tattdllm .. nclplece. OWe to anv pers on Or Or· u.oreWMllr _.,.. ~11 •, 1911 .. ,,..,. w111 toe • • Otootlt recillll"td g a n I z a t I on . H 0 M E
11111,_1 "'· mat. 111 ...,. 1,.,.1 fer H <ll •et of bid docume1111 1 SA V I NG S AN O LO AN
,.... .o., ol OHklal "--* ., .... 911era111 .. lllt re111rn In _.s cOlldltlOft G A R D E N G R 0 V E ' Cw..tr, wtll ......., .,.. ,__. t• llrllllln 10 daYI af1er tlle bid -1111 , .... °'". TNtl •II at ...... k -· dale COUNTY OR ORANGE. 11ar1~c-'l.•awM-ratU'IOUn1t· E•c11 bid""''' '•"form •"' 1>e That the undersigned de·
.. StMM • -tc.a. oie .. IMlll -'"419ft11" 10 "" comreci doc-b. sires to receive the said tr111u I• l'lrtt Alfterlt e11 Tiii• la<h bid -II ._ ecc-ie. I>) inwr-• cam.any ieutH •t 11, u.. N<wntr roltrrtd 10111111e '°"''•' personal property or col·
... , 1'•191""""'111 .... °""., 1Mta ctecu-llb _,...,tr. 1111 °' ~ lect the clalm(s) and to rt·
.,. CeHWNa a111t1et '""" 1111e.,.. w11<ontrectcn. move t .. •t collected or rt 1-..tc_.....laaM-.. ld ... lt Tiie OISTAICT r_...... ~"° rltl!t to ,,. • _.,.,...,°"'et rrw1 111 tl'IO ,,..,..,. r.19'1 anr., au bldl., to •• ,,,. a11r celved from the state of
l't .,__. 111 .-. c:-tt..., Sta• .,,...,1.11a., er 1ntwma1111tt 111 -.,y Callfornla to the said state
ween• •: TM ...,_..,,, •ec· Md•" •11 u. bkldlftil, w h e r e I e t t e r s ...._... II twt at L..c t Ill lltoc:ll "A" Tiie OISTAICT ,._. -..elntd ll'Wll t t t f ., .. ._ Traci. .. ,,_,,...rec..-. t"' 01rac1111r of 111e °"*''~ tf In• e s a m e n a r Y o r o
111 -.... , ,... 21 a1 mltc:el"-wt duw1a111e1M'°"4 ,,,. """'•' invei•· admlnlst rttlon have been "'llr.•• rKarft al Oran .. Ctvllly ,,.. rete of titr diem ..... Ill Wit jSSUtd.
<:al ...... Tiit ............ ., ....., IOC•lllr In Wllkll 1111• _, It .. -A 11 persons hav Inn c-• .,.,...,. ...... .,_,,.,: ,..,...,~..,Mell cran w '"'" tf • ··~••• 1 .. .......,....,.., _,. .... _.,. .. -• .... c• cl aim& against th• de· c. • ...., (.tit....,.....,,,..,_..._ tt•t.,,,... , .... -Ml me .i t11e cedent or 1n Interest In
..... .. ... ..... ~ ·-· 011niCT °"'" ._..., .. .offtCa ., said estate ar\d wlshl .... to ,.ey ..,_., .,,..... •ta u. ll'flftlcal l'acltltlet "'-Ille. CM•t ... r:••••., __._ .• •......,.; ~tr Ctl .... 0toit. c.,ta1 _., obJtct to such removal __...-...c. .......... w i.M4M_.an,......Aftlll'ftt-.. must glvt wrltttn notice of
,.....__...., .. o.M.,Tr.-.• '""Mlllllw.,..... ...... ,..,.. such ot>Jtctlon to tht •II• .,,..,...,. "''" c11a 1a11 .. 1,_. ,. ... _...,.. tt...,.. .. ,., ._ """r•-or,.. .. ._..,,_ ... _.,._ ......... , .................................... _11\e...,ef -.vii -·--·· ...... ..... .... , ...... tlfM ., .,.. 111111 .. attM 1•1 ....._,,.,.,., ...-, to, or holding personal _.'""*'., ........ in.-1a1a: ..., ._.... _. ..... i. • .._ propertv of tn. dectdent. *'•=:'~~0~"'?.~nu ·~·==='i h ,_..._mN· Such notlc.' must bt glv~
INIUIWIC;• COMPANY, UACTINI • .-. -~· ,, to tht persqn holding the A~~ .. 1111, ··~_,_... • ....,.,..,., ptrsonel property or :.:C.--:. .... ,v ::'..,..:::::,.":'!:.=-,.::against Whom lht clalm Is .....,..°"""" .,....'".,...,. 111 ...... ""*" made at the address as 1w._,._..,_ "':.C: ....._ ll&ttd above within: 30 ~~~ • ,.:,,...,::,_,.,.~.:DAYS a ft•r fl r st ........... °""1llt c-e Dllft ,....._ "'..,... .......... publkatlon of thK nollu. _,, .. _..., ,,.._ A...,......-.. ,...,.._" ..-c. OATllD: Junf 25, tM1
MM w111 •,........,. • ~· Robert J kaut
/l'o Place your =~ .:W.U:W::-... -t:" .. ': At Admlftlstrator ••rut R•ult" ,..,.. 111 ot o. Esq• o1
s.ntce Dlrectory :: J.!t.:r.... Jane VetOnica KeuJ,
. Celt Now ~....... ~':...--:....
641·16 71 -=~ 0.. fAlll a.11y""" OaJff,_ Plllt; .ljlly 10~ ~ 61 U, Het t
'
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CT1nou1 IUIOfHI
NMUI ITAHM9NT'
TM 1o11ow1,,. ""on1 ere dol.._
llw•lneu•: OCf'" MOW. lttf> kr-1, Cotto
MaN, cal lfllnllo ""11
O•ANOE COAS T PLASTIC
MOLDING, IHC.,.-wot11•S11W1, c .. 1 ....... CallfWlll•"'" Or•nee Ceo•• f'IHllC Moldl .... Inc;,. St-ti CallfOt Illa, ltO W... 1 ...
Slrttl. Cott. Mtta, callfwnla HW
Tllla ..,..,_ .. It condlKtad -Ya,.,.
PVBUC NOTICE
N .. ,,.n
o•o•• TO MtOW CAUU ·~ CHANCJaO,NAM•.
CAH NUMal•A·"'6M
111 Ille MM1iW Of lfle A#llc.atlotl ol
JANA JAHUN IOOTT, e mlMt, llY
IHA•ON MARIE STATHAM, lier
mttll•r. e nd SAl .. INA JENE
PHI .. ~ ltr C'*'tt Of Name.
JANA JANEAN SCOTT a/Id
1Aa•1HA JENE PtflPf'S .... Iliff e
Ptlllltfl '" 1111• ,_. lor ell ...... . P«•llon Oranet CM•I Plaflk Maid> IOWl119 petll._r lo c1'ange lllelf ,,._
from JANA JANIAH SC:OTT lo JANA
JANEAN STATHAM and 5.AB .. INA
Jl!NE PHIPP$ lo SAIAINA JENE
STATHAM
1119 Inc,
Tiii• 1ta1amen1 ... flled with lt'IO
Cowntv ,..,._of o...,,.. c-•Y °" Jiiiy
"· 1tll1 .. , ...
f'wblltl'IOcl O..enoe Coast OaHy f'ltet.
Jwly 2), JO, ...... •• IJ, lttl Q07 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
II It lier.tty ordered lll•I •II pe,_,,
lnltr"lld Ill lie ,.,,.liar efOf'flald .,..
peer '9ltfWe 1111• c-1 111 ~Ho. J el IClll CMC C.nltr Drive Wttl, Santa Alla, Calllornle, on September 2,
1 .. 1. ti 10 IO o'Clack a.m., -lllen
tlld Iller• al>o• cousa, If •"Y Illar
llavt, wllJ Ukl pttlllon for Cl\eftge of
MN-t"7f neme "*"'/IOI be trented.
NOTICI TOCltlDITO•s II It '"" .. ' W-ec:I 11\at. copy ol
0, 8 ULK TAAN,,llt lhh order ID -~Ila Plll>llllltd CIKL'ttl•lt7U.C.C.I In T ... Dally PllOI, e ,__ of
Nollu la lltrel>¥ glve11 lo crectttort of 9tN1ral circulation, pulbtl-In 11111 Ille within non.a portltt lllot o bulk county el IHtt one• o Wffll IO• low
trantltr It Int-10 lie m-on conte<utlw -•• prior lo 11\e day of Ptrtonel proper ly llertlnelter .. Id lltarlng,
c1tscrl11Mc1, Oal•d Jvly n. , .. ,
Tiit n-• end l>uth'IOH eddr•ll of .... ., H. f'l"tt9«
tllt lnl....0.0 lrtntltrorl .... JOSEPH J..,.. ........... Cew1 GOL08EAG, ISTHER GOLOB ERG' n..-o. LWMfall
end BENNETT GOLDBERG, SOO ..... V•K-
Newporl Ct nltr Orlvt, Newport N..,.,. 8M<•, Ce. '2 ... ltt<h, California C7UI 7U~
O<Mng B131nou .n "A" PETITE Publllhed Or ..... Coul Delly PllOf, CAFE Jwly JO, A111. •. IJ, JO, 1911 MIMI
The ,..,.._and t>usl,,.u eddress ol ---
I ht Intended tre ntftrttl e re: P UBLIC NOTICE
._,,,., ... 1~' la -.wt " w 11\edt ,JCTITtWI 116111 .. IM
of tllal ctf'lelll COClltall -... Mlnatl tUMa ITATUll8111T
k11own •• THI IHAMAOCIC Tiit fallow! ... ,_,..,.1 are dalng
COCKTAIL \.OUHO•, 11M ltu ... ol ~-· ... llU·H ....,..,, a.uievard, Cltr Of • u N s H I N • c v c L • A c . c .... MIN. ~Y •~ .... Mal•~ c•sso••u. 1uu 1N<11 ._. ... ., •• 1------------
ca11for111a fliU7 Hamo at Tr-..,.or · H·-11..-.__ ..... ~,,.,.,... tlW7 PUBLIC NOTICr HOLIY A. YOUNG, tac. So< • ...._, ~a'HMft'N.;:-attSell"""9fl,M$, r.
402·U-tim, INI la-. C:.t. Mau, H1111l ....... laecll.c.tilll ..... e'*1
CellfOtllla fM27. N-ol Tr_.,... Tlllt ....... It candllKt .. •Y 911 In· MAU .. l!IN M. l(bf', Ste:. Sac. Ho.: •II lfuel l~tt. 2e 1-1 ~ Slrwt, ca.to v S-o..11•
MaM, CalH ftUJ. T•al ,_._,atltft Tlllt --•M Ill .. triltl IN .............. , .. ,,..,.y dlecrflef,
In .. ,..,al, -... '""" In ...... Ila· c_,., Gltnt. Of' .... c-.IY an Jiiiy
twret, eq11lf'm•"' end to•d wlll 7• lMI ,.,"'*'
1 ........ '#ftll ... lk-II $1021000,00 P.,..1..., Or .... Gol.e Daflw PllOC, 0.l(rl ... 1111 "-' r
l·P••-' c,.o • 1,ooo.oo Jwly '· "· u. ao. "" >o1w1 2·0tmond Halat to be
replacedl>Y c..., PUBLIC NOTICE
lllrowtft ncr-Ut,000.•
I-Note, ~ltr ·-· f'IC'TITIOUS 8UllNIUI Tr111t Otocl ..... UCC·I U0,000.00 111.UU STATSMS"T ......
IChW •tic-lo llt .,_._,.., -TM followlne __, It dolnt 1>utl-
11""'b0' ere· ON·SALI GENERAL nau et· '
LIOUO .. LICl!NSEH0.4'-nlaS FANTASYLANO LINGERIE, Tiit .. , • ...,. ,,_,., wlll lie < .. • 17UJ Jordan Avt11u. HB. lrvln•.
sum ma led • 10:00 •.m. on or afi.r lllt ca111orn1a tV u
)ACll d•1 ol ........ 1"'1 al lllt Etc,_ ke,.., N l'lcllatt, 17.U Jor,.,.
Otpor""""' ol .............. 1 asc:row Aw ...... 11 •• lrvlne. C•Olorlll• W IS
Service •I 1'21 N. Tvttln AVtflwt, Tlllt .....,,_,la ~led tty en 1,..
Cf'.0. lloa 115111. Settle Mo, ca. tt70I dlvlduel
C'2 711 >. Calllornlo. All ollwr M.,,.tl n-encl .._ Kwan H l'lc•.it.
drtt,., llMd by llw Trenlilwor wlll>lll UB, lrvlM,ColllornletVll
Ille ..... lhtM yeen IO fer as •• known Tiii• ·~· WM 111.0 wltll the
lollla Tr_,_.,.•llw -· County Cfer11 flf 0r.,,.. C-11. JllM
Tiit portln atrM lNI lllt c-....,•· 2', 1"1 ,,_
lion for "" "-'·· OI tllt l>vtlnest Pvblllhecl Orenoe Coall Delly PllOI, -lht 1"-It lo le paid tfler ll'IO JWIJ U, JO, ""8, '· U, 1 .. 1 Jl03.e1
Otpert1Mnl or Alcol'lollc ltwr... ----~':,,':,!~.!>a• •PP'°""' 111e pr--PUBLIC NOTICE
o,ted Jiiiy 1111. 1M1
~A. V ..... Tr_..,.,, ,,..__ M. 1(-. Tr_,_
Pul>llallad Orenoe Coetl Dally Piiot.
Julp >o, ltll l414-tl
IU ... •lo.t COU•T 0,
CAUf'OllNIA, COUNTY
O'DllANOI
o•o••TOIMOWCAUH ,o.
STAT•M•NTO' ATIANOCMIMmNT OI'
Uta DI' "CTITIOUI IUllNlll MAM• '1>e follow4ne ,.,... lie•·-,,,. u .... tl'IO lklllio.. llwt!Mllnemt
CONTltAC'TORS SPA I. $AUNA,
472 Horll'I l!tplenade, Oranee,
Callforlll• '*'
Tiit 11<1111-butlnen neme r•·
larred to ....,,. ... 111.0 In Or...,
County on DK. t , ltllO.
All"" ~I~. •n. Nortll El9l-1
Oftl\il<I, Collfornle t2Mt T 1111 Mll'IOU wet c-uclad by en lndlVldWOI ,., .... ~.
Tlllt ti.._,,. •• 111.0 wltll tl'IO
County C..,.. of 0r.,,.. C-V °" Jwl'r 21, !till. ,. .... ,
Publllhecl Or9111111 C:-01 Dolly PllOt,
Jiii, u. JO,""' •. u. 1911 1261-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IUSINHS
...,,.. STAT•Ma•T
Tll• l<Ml-"9 --la dolllg bVM· ,,.,. ...
SWANK MOOE LS.
SWANK INOUST .. IAL MODELS,
71' Wul ""' Slrttt, CO.le Mt ...
Cellfornl•mZ7 lllcllerd Edwin Sw..,k, 7H W•ll
••111 Strttt, Cell• Mow, Callfornle tttil
Tiiis _.,.., I• (ondwct.«I by ... In·
dlYldutl.
Rlc,,.rd E Sw-GE•ALO It. VALENZUELA end
DORIS J VALENZUELA. t1'3 Moll
Rl¥tr Clrclt , Founte ln Vallo.
C•lllornle t270I
CM.U.Oa Of' NAMI
f'U8LIC HUltlH~ P UBLIC NOTICE c.u• NUMaH .. ...... Tlllt ltot-1 WM llled wllll Illa
COUt11y c~ o1 °"'.,,.. C-.Cy on Jiiiy
Tllal U'IO property pertinent llerll'lo ••
dtlCrlbed In ........ H ; Met.t<l•I>,
l UPPll••· mtr<lltndlH, tQlllPmtnt,
futnllur. llcturtt, equipment, trade
name, ..-.11. IMn, ltoMf!Old Im·
pro•tmtnl• -(OY.,..,,I not to com·
Ptlt ano I• IO<attd •t soo N-rt
Center Orlvt, Newport Beec h,
Celllornl•.
An epplluUon wet !Med by T~ ---In ll'lt Mentr of lllt .... lc.otlon of In
011 C l re J ANA JANEAN SCOTI, • minor, l'HIQI
1 1 o~y,nl 7 ~7~,..~ln A:i· "CTITIOUllUSINaU 1>1 SHARON MARIE STATHAM. lier Pwblllhecl a-.,.. Cooll Oo111 Piiot,
7, '"'
.~n~·u ~-·· •• , .. p·~ a .,· T ,NAM•ITATRMRNT motlltr, e nd SABRINA JENE Jwlyf,1',U,J0,1 .. 1 JOU.at. ona ..,....,..,.,. ..... ..._toperm llt tllowln9 PtrtOl'lt •rt dolnt PHIPPS,for,..._otN-. tllt ntebll.,,,.,_1 of • lltllport louted bo.otlMu u : ~--on lhe veuntpr-11 ac!Jecenltool'IO GORDIE'S DELI, 73SC Behr JANA JANEaN SCOTT and
Wt11 of '712 KtMn In tllt Medium Sl•MI, C.t. Mote, ca11fornle UU6 SA81t1HA JENE PHIPPS MW 11..., e PUBLIC NOTICE
Se"'ice lndutlry Dl.trlct of tllt lrvlne T-Kawai, 401·E w .. 1 Allon, petlUOft In IN• '-' for ., order •I·
lnduttrlel Compln•WUI Plt nntd S...le AN, Callfornla'742' :~~.::i~~:.:~~~~ n:,.rr;:: NOTIU 0, HUSHl'l IALE
Community Seid c ondlllona l cno .. ,. .. l(aw•I, AOl·E Wot Allon, JANEAN STATHAM -SABRINA T.I. No.J1JM.A Tllat aold bulk ,,.,,.,.,It ln1-.i 10
llM consummated •1 Ille office ot Bldl· nen Tiiie Corpor.ilon, Jt20 w 111111re
llM Pf'""'•• c-111-lly _,....... s.t\le AN, Calllornle'262' JENE PHIP!'$ 10 s.Aa .. IHA JENE HOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, lllal by Ill• f'lennlno Commission on J-Tiii• llYllMIS ,, <Oftducled by I~ on Wee:!~,' AVOUtt s. IMI, •I •·oo
Blvd., Loa ......... Calif. toOIO, on or ....... Ort J -2'. 1911, '"'' o_....... Ot••Clu•I• (- -•llel STATHAM. II .. ...,....., ordered tllel O'Clock • m of .. io day, In !lie office
••• •-oledl>ytl'IO T~nSOll Com· Totnoo Kewal, Cllll'leru all per-lnl....i.d 111 Ille matter ol ltEAL ESTATE SECURITIES •fler A .... It, 1 .. 1
LHt dlla lor 1111"9 Clt lmt In lhh
Her-I•,..,,._ It, '"'
•lo.-ewlcl _., ....,_ 1111• (-1 Ill Ptll' and mu.i lie lleerd -In by tlle ICawel Deport-He.) al 700 Civic c.n1er SERVICE, loceltO et JOJO Norlll City COlln(ll Tiii• SIM-1 ••• filed wlU. tr.. Broadwey, s..1i. *·In Ille City of s.n.
So fer .... .._ 10 .. Id ln-
Tren11.,.... told Int-Tr.,ai.r.n
-Illa IOllOWlnt -ltlonol ..... ,_ ..
namft --wlltlln tl'IO tlv• YH•I IMI post ere N-
Tiit CEQA ,.,., .. lor lflll t#llcation County Ci.rt ol Or-c->11 on Jvly Orlw WHI. Senta AM. Calllcwllle, on te Ano C-y o1 0.--Stele Of
•• In eccorMn<• wllll llaW ...., city 14, IMI Septeml>ff 1• 1"1• •t IO JO o'clock c e 111 ~ r n I • RE AL Es TATE
t llldtll,,., A draft-""" declor•· '166117 e.m., -l:lwl-ll'ler•-cavM, II SECU•ITIES SERVICE • ca111ornta
lion II•• -Pf-ect for tlle -Pvbllll'tect Or-Cotti O.lly Piiot, eny ,...,, -· wtrr laid pttlll.., for corporetlon, •• dvly -nted TnalH -d projecl -PMled lor PUl>llc re· July 1'. ll. JO, A111 .•• !tilt J201-11 CIMlr>Oe of_,.. "*'kl no! lie lf'ellled. 11-r ao'll pur-.1 10 the _, ol view from•ll 1', 1 .. 1loMar1, 1'11. ---It I• lurthtt ., _ _,that• c-of Wt .. ,, contet'r9<1 tn lhtt cff'leln ~of
A 1>11llllc llear"'9 wlll llM llelcl on ll'llt PUBlJC NOTICE -· 10 .,_ <-llM pybll-In Trutl •-ut..o by LEE SIMMOfojS • a-·· ....,, ... Clly c..-11 of .... City The Dally Piiot, • lltW•P•P•r of ••"11•• ,._ rec.-HOvtmllMr j7 Daled Jiiiy IS, '"' Garald R. Val~e.
Otrl• J . Val•111wela, l11 te11••d
Tra11•ftrMt
of lrvlne.i l·JOp.m., Tuttday, A\191111 ----91nerel clrc11IMlon, llU6lltllec:I In tllla '"'°·In eooi. 1-of Offlcl•I Recor~
II, 1"1, In U. Irv Int Cll't Covnc:ll f'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•ll counly el I-I -· e ..... for lovr Of Miid C-.ly, at 1>09f ll•. RecorO.r't
Publlllhtd Orange ~ .. " Delly PllOI Cllambe"· Cl•k Canter, 11100 J •m· NAMS STAT••NT conM<llllYe ....,, prior totlle dty of 1n11rv_..1 No 11m by , ...... or •
l>o<'H R-. lrvl,.,., Calllornle. Tiie tollowl119 Pt•tont ere doing .. io llterlng. O.e.oJuly JI,'"' breach or o.'1eu11 '1n pe,m•nl or
for portlculart. bltau telepMna !NallltMH: •-M. ,.,._, performance ol lhe obll9etlon1 1S.·J7S1 or CAii ol tl'IO olflct of tl'IO CllJ MV ~I!. MSl COmmarclal Of., J.,. .. _ U<urt<I U...eo,, ln<llldlnt lllol breecll
J11ly JO, ttlll MU~t.
PUBLIC NOTICE ol lnlne Commwnlly Ontlopm.,,t, H1111t1ntito11a.c1>,CA""7 ~C-or def9ult, -le• ot wlllch wu ••·
I rvlne lnltrlm Civic Ceni.r .......... Gl\at ... .....,, 11009 8-, Cov· THOMAS G. LUMSOOH corde<I ._,II •. '"'· In 8-14010 of
1101 McGew Avenue, Irvine, lowi,CAeln:t .. 10von~ Olllclol Rae-of .. 1c1 C-.ly el C•llrornle VI~ .....,, 17alt 9-, C.V· Newport 8Hcll, Ca 92660 -17'. RK«-'t IMtni-..1' No. ~ 1 ... L. o,.1aMy 1,.., CA '1722. (114) 7S2.fa4 Ult, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUC·
T.S.-1... ~ a.y C: ..... tf, Tllla """61neu It condllcled bf a Publl....., Or ..... CoaS1 O.U1 Piiot, TIOH TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER
NOTIUOl'TAUST•as· SAU! n.a..,tt '"... ttMr•I,.,,_.,.., Jui, 1J,JO ....... •. •>. ••• 331141 FOR CASH, ....... _, ol tlle Unit·
On A-I JI, '"' at ll:OO e.m. Pvblllhecl Or ..... Cefft Ooll1 Piiot, Cllslea W. 8-eel St.in. ell PtY .... ti U. II-of FNISRU!TNCAM.,!~•CA N TITLE JWIJ>o,1t11 )AIJ .. 1. T1'1• ..__ -flied wltll.. PUBLIC NOTICE .. 1 •• •II rlglyt. Utte -•nterftt now I "A E ._..,,..PAHV es Trvs ... , ~-tJ a.tll • 0r ..... c._.y tf1 Jlllt • llelel by II. at T,..,...., In -lo Illa!, .. or Sue~ TNllM or 5"bltl!UIM ), ltll. ,.1.,_ el pniperty a1-. In .. 1c1 c...,,.,, -
Trv•t .. ,.,..,,.. c.ortaln Otocl o1 Trval PUBLIC NOTICE PwiltllNI Of'Mllt cauc Dally l'llot. SUf'a1t10tt COURT o, THI STATS State, 0ncr1-•• lollowt UtCUltd by KATHERINE GAYLE July' ... n.. 1"1 ,.,.., 01' CALIP'OllNIA Loll A, In BIOO •• Trecun. In tlle
COCH.-AH, ... ~,..., -.. • • l'O• TH• CCMHllTY 01' O•••o• City of N-' 9tt<l'I, H per mop re·
GEllALD B. RAUCH, .,, 'unm¥•1M INTINTICMS TO s•LL 7M CIYlr c-"""' ......... CMded In ... JO, -· 17 -"of
man, •nd rcor-,.....,., IA, '"'°., AT f'UIUC AUCTION PUBLIC NOTICE Au, c........ f1111 Ml11<tll-• Mat>t. In 111t office of lnltru-no, t7Mt, In boOll IVllll, NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN tllel f'lalnllff: EDWARD NOtllR -EVE tllt county ,_.,of w ld county.
Pftt 50),0fOfflclel RecorchofOranee on Tuel4oy, ,,. 11111 dar ol A"""'t HOBER Tiit •tr..c -.., "'otl'IOr common
c,llov.,n'c'•' .~~~~~Tc' e "'!! Ot~•ull t~~od '"'· •I 10;00 A.M. at: Or .... c--itr f'ICTIT10UI •u1t••U Otlen~. PttlLLIP DANIELS, LIN· de•ltNllon. If •ny, of IM rN I p._,. -'""' "' -· Sllerlfl·Corontr, Harbor f'atrol NAM9STAT .... NT TON H. COLLIE.It, OO•OTHY E. ly ..... lnobove oetcrl-I\ pvrportec:I
Eltcllon IO Seti ....,.e"'"'*9r rK-811rteu. 1901 Bayllde Ort,.., Hew"°" Tiie lall-lftt l'tflOfU art doing COLLIE,_, EA .. L GA .. R, JA., O•EL 1o be. S.S. Helot Oo'lw, Corone 0.1
Aprll •, ltlll .n 1,,.1,_t no. "7•, In Btecl'I, Ce.~ la Har1lor -llwMneM•: FAALESS, SECU .. ITV TITLE Mer.Ce11'°'114a
book 14009, Pttlt 1 .. 2. of Offlclel Ntvl9allon C:-JOOoicM, .,_ Sl'IOrlff· LA VIOLETTA DI PARMA INSU .. AHCI! COMf'ANY,e calltornle Tiie ~ hertC>y dlsclelmt
Recordlflf taldC-y,Wtllwncleralld cor-r,,, ... '°""'" ol a.-.,.. Wiii •ISTO .. AHTI, ... w_, A,,., ... c,orporallon, .... •II --llnlU•OWTI •II ll•l>INly for any lncorr9Clnns In
l>IKW9M 10 laid Otocl of Trvtl Mii •l 1011 et Pllllllc ewcti... 1o tl'IO llltlll9&1 F-l•lnVallrr,c.llfornletV• <lt lmlr19 -..... or eqiwilab4t rltlflt. .. io 11rw1 -.u or ol..., '°'""'°" Pllbllc ~ lor CHI>, .._.... -y bl-r lar U19'1 In 1-.,1 _., of Ille M.,.y Elelne Htpure Mori, ,_ lltle, attete, llan., IMer.11 In llw pr• 1Mtl9natlon
of tllt United Stalft ol America, et lllO Unl\td sc-t, u.1o1-.,.,.....: Calwmlllfte •-. f-i.111 Valley, perty cleecr1b9cl In Ille ~alnt ..,. Said .... wlll be -wll~ war· meln elltreMt lo Finl A,.,...lc., Tlt1t 8ull_. 76' Hercrefl Hwlt ,._,., Callloml• ,,_ 111 p1tlftlllh' Ulle, or .,,., cio.td rant,, tll;Pf'HS or lmpOeo, •99e•d'"11
lnwr•n<• C_n, lecated •1 11• Unll-. SClc ... r N~: F•nts7. Artemlo Mori, '°"' ColllfftbiM on plalntlff•' --• .....,... M OOl(S tlllt , ~lion. or enc-enc .. , lo
.. ... Fllll\ Sl-l. '" Ille City of Santo RtglUreuon N ........ CFtmAW. Av-. ,~ Vallrr. Call....... '"''°""'" lnclwslYe Mlltly ... prlnclpol IMIM>Gt of the Ana, C•lltornlt, •11 lllal r lQM. 1111• -AvollaCll• lor 1-Uon 1:00 •.m .. .,7• SUMMDMI Note or -01>11 .. tlon M<urec:I 1>y
lnterut con....,,ec:1 to -,_,..Id 1>1 It dtlt of .... Tllli .....,.... 1, CllftdU(ltd _., .., lft• C... N..-r .nu u ld OMO ol TrvJI, •llh lnler .. 1 -
under .. 1c10..0 of TrvJl In U. P,....,. IRAO OATES, dlvldwal NOTICEI You haw _, loUlfd. Tiit otlltr """° n provided lllertln; plu1
IY tltuotad In .. 10 County -Ste• Sl'IOl'lff.C-Elaine N-.w• Mofl C°"r1 mey dee: ..... Intl l'OU wlU.OUI edonct1, II any, under Ille l•rm•
detcrlbN ea: ly: A. TWMt.11. Tiii• --•M llled wltll .,. your IMl"CI l'IOard unlMI yOW rtll*MI tllffeor -lmtrttl on well aclvencn,
f'A•C•L ': 1«9Nft• C-tr Cltrll. Of' ..... County .. J114y wltllln JO cltyt. RNd ... lnfo<m•llon •nd plv• , ••. CN •VH .,,., ........ ,of Unll JI, conahllno of certeln Pul>lltNd Or919 C6M1 Dolly Pllol, 7, IMt llMI-. Ille Trv .... end of Ille trutb Cl'Nled al"P•et end turfece tl•-nt•, as July JO,, .. , QJ.,.I l'l...a II you wltl'I to -II Ille .,..le• of en by .. Id Oetd ol Tr1111. Tll• lol•I
tllown ond docrlbtd In Ill• <Oii· P'*llll'IOd 0r.,,.. Coell Delly Piiat ettorney Ill 11111 metier, you "'°"'d do •mounl of talc! oelloallon, lnclUcll"fl
domlnlwm Pl•n ,., Newport Gltll PUBLIC NOTICE Jwly '· ... n. JO, ltll JOO .. ,: to pfOmpll., .. lllat your •rllltfl rtHOnt llly nllmoltd '"'· cllorget TownllO"'", re<W-""'°" J, 1t7t In rtfCIOftM, If arr,, mey llM lllect on time. and •• ....,... ol ,,. Tni•IH, el , ... l>Ooll1J0tt~~lot7tlnc:Nalw0f -------AVISOI 1>"'4 llt Udo dtrnaftcl1da. lime or lnlllt l publlctllon of tlllt
Olll<lal "eccwds ol Or-C-tv. NOTIU 01' T•UST••·s SAL• PUBLIC NOTICE 1£1 .,,.....,.. .,.... decldlr CMCn Ud. Notto, 11 MO.lO' os
Ctlllornle. T .S. -1114' •In -lancla t ~ -Ud. ,_. Dated July 10, ltlll f'A•C:aL I: NOTICE IS HE .. EIV GIVEN, t"4IC de ,_.,,,,. dlt JO dlos. LH It ,,,,.,,._ •EAL ESTATE
An wndl"I-1/JHl lntor"t .... , .. on Wtdnedly, A ...... ,,.,, •t •:• f'ICTIT10US IUMN•ss don ......... SECV•ITIES SERVICE, almplt ln....,tas a laflonl 111 c-o'(ltcll a.m of ... d city, 111 tl'IO atflce NAMI STATaMaNT SI U1 ... de9Mtolld tart4-)0dlt a Call._ec°"""o11on,
In.,,, lo •II Of -.... ..,,..,...,, In· Of REAL ESTA Tl! SECURITIES Tiie , ......... --•• del"9 ...... wn •bollaa ell .... H4>nlt, -•r• .. Trvst ... ckldl119 wllt1Dll1 llmltetlon-~ SE RVICE, localed ol Jl)O Hor-Ill lltllat. lltcerlo lmmodlela-nta, dt Hit ISIEAU OJ Morllft,
trtat o.flned '" tlle dKlerMlon •• 8roadway, S..ltt 10l, In W'IO Cltr ti S... THE STVF,EO POTATO, U700 manort, ., ,...... ... ncrlt.. 11 llay lb"'"""'"' ,,,,..., to below In Ult 1 of Trect 10303, I• Ano, c-, o1 a.-.,_, Stale of El Toro a.. El Toro, ca111ornle t»JD ••9'11'9. """9 ... ,.....,r ... • llempo. 2020 N. er-.ey,
ti tllOWn on• map rll .. In boOll ...... , Ce lllornla, THE GEORGETOWN •oeitr O. L.a,.._,, J11a Mt#I· OESC•lf"TIOHOF f' .. OPE .. TY Wteio..
pe911A7and4lof"'lscall_.....,.. ltE CONVl!YAN Cl! CORP., e terey,Soutll&....-,C:..llt.,nlatan f'.,.ctl J: Tllet portion of lllt SellloA,..,CAtt~
In 1M office of Ille OrllllOt C-ty cellfornla cOO'porellon, .. dllly ap. Tiii• bullneu 11 Gonducted by.,, In· sowlhw"t qwarttr Of ,,. ('Ortll•••t Ttl. 171'1 tl).nM
Recorder. pofnl•d Tnal .. ..,.,., -..__,IO dtv1 ... 1 QUar1tr ol --lleut ... rt ... of PIAlllllltd Or ..... COatl Delly Piiot,
E•cepClllo llletttrom """' 1 111'°"911 tl'IO power ol Nie <enf•fr911 In tlltt car· ,....r o. L.a,....., Section 22. 1owntNCI • south, ronge 10 July"· J), >o, '"' JtS4-t1
)tl11<l111fYe,au-ant1w1>lan. laln OHd of Trust tHcwltd by Tiii• .tMemelll •• ltlod wllll Ille -11.1n111t•enc:ftoS..JUlfnC•JonOe ------Eauptlllo ~et~. Oii mlllere11, GEORGE t.. VA .. RATO ANO ANITA Coullll' C/ef1t ol Or ..... CowltY on Jiiiy Santa Ano, City Of A,..,.lm, C-.ly ol
tll, etet, Pltrolavm, .elltr llydl'_._, VA .. RATO, lllltOend -Wiit n }cMM 14, '"'· Oren ... SU• f/f c.tllfomle. H IM<'
W ... IAllGH -... ~ •• .., lallenb, recorWd ~· 2'. '"°' '" 1'1M111 m ... r~ In ..... SI -10 of In Of' 11ndltr or-wf\kll mer be IWOdvcad loo41 12111 flf Officio! ,__of MM! f''*llwo ~.,.. eoa11 o.11, Plltl mlaull-,,,..., In -off~ of
fl"Oft'I told ltl wllkll undtnltt a.,._ Ctunly, et pa .. 1454, .-eurder't July"· n, IO, Aull-'-1 .. 1 '1oo.t1. Ille c-., lt«trdtr ol Mid c.tuftty,
,.....11e1 .. -Ull t..c llt19W .. ,,,... lntlnl,....,1 No. J1117, by~ of• detcrlbNatlol....,.:
_, 11111oc:e • ..w tot t« ""_,.... 1trtac11 or c1e1e1111 in ,..ymen• ., PUBUC NOTICE ... , ........ t11t1a ..,.,_.. c-of
of P.._t..,. •· 1l'IO •""4antlefl, • ,.,1.,.manct el Ille 01t11oallon1 lllO 1-tlllt<n-lft W'IO-• David w~ ..,_,..,, tictradlall -1tevrec1 ...,_, lncllldiflt tM1 btta<h -"•9'11 -'#!ft, r«WllMI ""-ell 7,
lalll"t of .. Id Mlner•lt, alt, t•t, or 60f .... l. -Ice of wNc11 •• ,... l'ICTIT10UI ..,....... IHI In ... ttW ,.._ ... otfklal ,... pelrtltwm, ot .. r llY*'KarMll II•• corOH """11 t, 1't1, Ill 9"Ti 14012 Of NAMSITAnMSNT cwtb, In the olflCe ol said ~IY,...
11e11ce1 -•Mor •~ Mid tot br Offlclel .._.,. ot told c:-r. et TM ,.......,. --I• ft111t bwll· ~.,.,.,.said point Mint on"" ....
"'tan• ol lftlMt.. ...... ..,,kk• ....... 1147, ._...., ,,,..,,,,.._. N•. ntNHI 11 .... of Ille *" ...... ..-rter Of Mid
olller fClllllpmeonl tr9m Wf'fac:t lac.a· fl17, WILL SILL AT f'UIUC AUC-INS AHOOVTl. t• HOlldaJ .. d., tectlon,MUlll0"14'W' ... 1 ... Jlf9tt
tlont on ... lolllf ... ar .....,...,..119 lllM TIOH TO THI HIOHllT BIOOU N .. .,.n9-:ll,CA9H60. from Ille Ctflltr tf wk! ttetlon, .. Id or ,.,,Ill o.italdlt ............ ..-.Cr1"9CI FOR CASH, lawl\ll -y f/f tl'IO U11ll> Sa!Mlt• Jaall llmM, ·-Hal!Wr Cellttr ...... "" lllttnec11on of tl'IO
lot, 11 lltlnt l#ldltrSIDOd IM4 1flt --td Sla1H, ell payeDle at tl'IO lllM of ••• , N ....... a-11, CA...... ce11tor 11,.,. of C'MrlllM A-fl'Wll
of •~II ,,,.,,., ... , oll, .... llftro4Nl!I, .. It , all rltflt. 1111• alld 1114tt"l -T•I• ......_. 11 clllfuctH.., all !fl. tllo •••I wllll 1f'IO "°''" a1'd NVtll Ollltr ,...,drO<•fltOll tvhtan<e• .,,, lltld by II. .. Tr\llM, 111 W to tllet ,.. dlltfltlllal. _,.,,., _...,., '""' .... ., tfCtloft;
water, at MC IWtll OllOW, "'911,...,. M el jlf'oCIOf11' al tu.to In Mid c:-ty -...... J . "-lt'IOMa ,.,.,.. W "' W ' ... 1 Me11tt tN
•ltlll to tnler ""°" .. Wf'fac• er any State, -rilled .. tOI-.; Tiii• ........ -tll .. """ --•11 11111 ol IN laftd dncrl'tf In Mlf porlltll ........ •!Ion Hid pl one Lot llS • Tl'act Ho. astt. City .. c-ty °"".Of' ... (-.ty 911 Jiiiy ~ 1o , .. _. ..... ol .... ...,..,...
porelltl ID.,.. SJt teot •-t111t,.,... N••-• 9M<ll, '-"" If 0r111 ... 1, 1,.1, twart•r; --. -o• '" d " -Mnl twfaco at l .. talf lat ,_ ally Slatt of CMlfeNlla, .. ,., ,,,. ,... ..,.._ ...... tald -lllw ta tN *""9alll
,..,,.... __ , •• " ............ '" ll• (WdM Ill --, ........... ti ·~ ....,, .... Or .... C-91 Deity ....... c..-.... -.a .... Ill ......
dHd ''°"' lllHlllt• ,. ••• Hl•I• cllalve "MIJCal'-,,...... In ... Jwtr• .... n. •. 1.. .,, .. , Pllllllp Oeftlt4t -..... r.CaNtd tervln• •• llmlted, a c a111or111a oHIU ., .,. c-tt ,._., of utd J,_ 21, , .. , 1.11 ._ "'1,....-. of..
L'"''.., .....,_,,,.,., ,.--.. •11 Gou111.,.. p•-uc NOTIC.,. tto1•• ~· t11tnea .....," • ..,.. II, ,IM 111 ..... 11S11, ilOtte 16" Of Of· Tiit MAM...,_ er ... -VU D ll'IO ..,.,, llM ti# Mid lelMI .. l'tlllllp
11c1•1 .. --. • •••einatlell, If tlllt'I • ., 1l'IO , ... ...,_,.. 0.11 .. 11 ...... ""' llf'IO: ~ llWtll
f'A•CaLJ: Ir._."*"""' *'Kn• II....,..,,.. 'ICT'IT10UllUMNI.. 0•14' ............. ,.. ..................
IH•1M11h ,., acu ... 1,,.,. .. , " ... , .. ,. °"'....,. ore .... cw-... NAMll ttAT•••T l"erctl t1 n... Nf1ll 11.• fWC at ....
ttreu, -.,._IWNftt, ~ m.i~ Mar. C.llftr"l'lia, TM ... lawlfll IM<'Mllt t'9 ftl"' Mlllll '"'°' , ..... tllt ~llWftC ltMllCt, fl'al,..., -· "'~ ,.. Tiit llMll'tllMll .. ,..., d'-'ltlmt Ml-.: .,_,..,_ .... _...._.~ti 9'IO
Nlrt and eeMr ,_......,, •• tNwll In ••I llHllll't IW .,,., l~IMM In I COHUACTOttS Sf'A • SAUNA, HlltllaHt 4111artu of .. ~tta11 U ,
Ult coMlmlfll-flofM e1M1 -.C,-.. Mlltll *'"" ...,... or ....., c-dlvltlall .. Deifl!Mrl.M.l111t., m ...,..._ •-111111p 4 IWlll. ranee 10 ""'-Ill tf'IO
111 ltM dKlwlltMl\ at~ CMdi• fUI~ .......... °'""'·Call..,.,....... ·~llo $911J-Clljaf>0. loflta Ma,
110111 elld r..,irkn-for N-1«t $e14 .... '#Ill W 11'\Mt ... .._. wtr-1>4111ftW L• IM,. Cal...,.. 411 City at AM!ltllll. CM!lly .. er.,..,
OIM T---.,,..,..... -.nl J. rt11ly, ..,_er ......... ,..._,.,.. Noreltl ..... er ... CA-IWC. al Giii..,.,..., a '9f fMllt,...
lt7t Ill Mell 1Mt. ..... as .. Offklat tltle, ........... ., ~----. "' Tiii• -·-•• caMIK!a41 .., • CtflMd "' hell ,, ..... It .. "' ... ~•er-.~.CaClfWftla. N tltfy .. ,,,.,...~et -c.,......., eel.__--.. Ill"" "'1c9 al 1119 f'AICILt: .._.. ., .._ ........... _..,... ., Olilllllllr CA. IM. t.. w.tt, C-'Y .._...,at MN c--., •
he ....... --_..,,.,_, te Mlf 0... • T,,_, wM ..._._ ... 19'. T,..._ ITAT8*"1 OI' DM•CT ... TM8
,...,ctlt t Md!~,_ -aM ._ 4llOt' -•,,....,. ..,_; .... Tllfl ....._. ... tMM _.. .. ACT ...
Cllf'anCY <ar pall a Hf Hlt'(wa., N\>tlK ... If MY, llflOlef .. ~ c-tey CMt1 fll °'""" ~. ~ ~ te ..... lltlo te .._...,
,..,...... ......... ~--.... ,. ... Mf ....... Ill_. -..CM, 11 ""' ,_.,.., -·-141 .... _.., .... ", ... _._.._,~ ........... ., ' rMMrl TO THI oal'aHDANT: A CIVIi Tlla*"9t...,_er.._~ T~-aiW'IOtnieta"""" ..... l ... Of-..C...Deilty .... c.......,..._ ............... __.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTlT10US IUllNall
NAMI ITATa•n
Tiie 1o11..ir19 PtrtOfll ere dolna
w.illtttM:
aNTE .. TA I NMEHT
CONSULTANTS ANO MODELS UNLIMITl!D, 1114 NtWf'trl
aewlt.,ard, Cotto MH•, Ca llfernl•
,nt7
Merlo Tembolllnl, 21 Sll.iHt, INIM, c;.llfWnle ttJU
f'llJllla OownH, 11 Sllllltal, lrvlnt, call._• fl714
Tlllt Ml-la 'onelv<l•d by e ........ ~
lllWrit T ............
Tlllt --•• Ill .. wlltl u. c-tr Ciani., er.,.. C-T ... J114y 1, 1911 • .. , ...
f'llMI-Or.,.. eo..e Delly f'ttat,
JwlJ t. 16. n. •. 1"1 •n••
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'tenTIOUI 8Ultlllaa
NAMalTAT11•n TIM ......... ,..._ I• ftlllt llwM· ....... ,
JACK P. li'HILLlf'S A•CO, Qt1 ''"
lrlt .. I It.,...._~. CA"*·
Jeck ...... l"NHljll. Utt I,,,.,.,_
..... Or., OMilftelld tar, CA tllt.S. Tilft MIMtl It C~I .. .., WI Ill· ......... , .......... " ...
TMI ......_. -llled _... -~ O!'t • °" ... c..wit,r .. Jwr '·""· .,..._ .......... 0r.,.. CMlt Dall" ....... J""' ..... n. ... ,., ......
PtJ9UC NOTICE .... .,....., .... ,,...,..,._...._,. ,., Hlf OtH af Trwt. Tiie t.tel JlllrU, .. ""4 .. IJ,t•t ....... utf....,..¥Wolrtwwttlll• ...... " .... : ·-.,,,...,..a.-, ... =· fll .... ~ ,Ill(..._. ............. fW"""' ........ -.w•--------·----............ CA..,.. t ~, ""l'l!Mff ..... cllar'" ...., ... _,,..,.... • .,_., •ICT'lntWIUttlll ..
........... , .. ,,.........__., ....... fll,.. T,,..._, at.. P\19UC N&l'ICE n1e•• .. c.-.•""*"'.,.._ ..,.n•n111111wr 11e11t w _,,,,,,.,, ...,_ « ,,,_.._, 11111• af l111tlel ,_.lcelltfl. Of tlllt .... ~ ""'"9 yw • ... Tiit ........... ..,._, .,. dMlll Mt•tltlt,,......._.,~•cec Hetlca,llMt.-.a. W9ltt..,..... wtll •.....,. • • ---•1 laMtltfY-~..._.._an O.la4l1Jl/lylll,I_, ~"OUlllUll.... ..k..._., .. ......,.,., ... cewt IUY'I •IUAUi.A .. T, UU 1"9,..._.,,..__.....,.. ... o.M TNIG~l'TO*M ..... ITA'9MelfY _,....., • .._.. ........ .., ,9" ....... CMM..._CAttttJ .
at TnllA, ta tillt: t1' ... 1t. .,_ tfl9 ttCONY•YAllft•COi.f'., TM ........ _._It .............. ,..._......._.Ill ttlt azol...... .latf A._..,, ftl ~Of,. C ...
i.ll_lflt......_..._..., • ._... ·~~--•1 wNcll_..r_..1119Mllltfl Itel ..... CA-. _,..,.._ ......... et .... Wtlel •rn... HAi.IOlt OltOOMINO, 1 .. 41 .......... fll-.w~• JM W. ~ ... ·-Or~ ~ICetMfl at,W. ....... al la .. r ..,:i.llALjtlTAT8 4110.11111, H111ttl11tC111 IHCll, ~ rtfllf ,....._Ill CM c.-,......_V....,,CAftM. ftl,DU• l&CUttlTlUMfWICa. tell..,...._ ......._ JIM W. U... lln Yllltel\i C....
OATID1.Mrlll,I_, aCIQtilrllla'*M•ICll, Ctlet...,_ MtM ....... 1'1t7 OAT•0..,. .. "9\. ......CA-.
l'l .. T'AMSi.ICANTlft.a ......... IC ..... LM9, 11-• ... H IMdl, L9A.~ ,,__J,U.. ...... ~~
INIU"4NC«Clll#IHllY, ..,! 6.J; ...... ~--' a.-Niii ••-IWI\ CA--.. I •Cdllllr*w;a l ~ ,_,.,....,. TMl...._11..._...,... 8'C.M.----. Tiiie ........ It,..,._..., a AITMllTll CMAI.) ~ .C111119w .._........ :
a..uai. MMllY --.~ ..... -o.rtliMl.W ..... ..,. .. ,,.£.' •11.ua, t;:= ::=.-=..°":.. r.:::.~i:... c.:.==~-== =:,._ ..,.._ c:=i cw.., 0::... -~ ': ~ ....... CA.... ll'Wlf ............ ,_.., ..... C4, "91 ... ....._ .. _ .ltllYl.l•. • ~I <M-.ant ...... ~-•Or-.c-.. ,.._ T-. _..,.,.... .,._ • ,_._. ar-. Cll8lll Olltt ......_ Ot11r f'ltlt,'MY •,......" ,._ ,... ... or.. c-e Oelly _...._ ,...._. °'9"'9 c... Oe11y ,...... ,........ ar-. c... Orllay ....._
, .......... ll1"1 '9t41 l•t *'Ml Myl, ......... ,.. 11 .... t. ,.. ........ '-,..... .... ,.,,,,,,._..... lt1Mt 1
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... , .. . ...................... --------~ 1&4 •• ... p . " .. 4 , ••• * -•• • • • a = 4 ; 2
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/'Thureday, July 30. l981 H /F
NYSE COMPOSITE· TRANSACTION t.•" ~\~ .~ '1 What Japan
can show us
Concluston of c two-pert um1.
No other industrialized nation's population is ae·
Ing as rapidly as Japan's -and thus,~ glance al how
this economic superpower is meeting the same
challenge developing in the United States might
leach us a lot. A first step Japan Is taking i! lo push back the
mandatory retirement age at wtlich most workers
must leave their compa.nies from SS lo 60 -and by
1985 , t h e ~ Japanese gov
ernment will
legally require .... t«
~ee o~d:r ~e~i~e-J¢ k
(Th at Japan's .-,,~[l_.llK-P-8-RT-IR--reliremenl ages
are younger .
than ours reflects practices left over from previous
eras when life expectancy In this nation was much
shorter than it now is. Now J apan's life expectancy is
longer than ours. J
A second step Japan is taking 1s to make another
career for a retiree a commonplace development.
This second career usually 1s a less important, lower·
paying job than the first position. But the fact that
the job chain 1s extended gives an entirely different
meaning lo retirement, a meaning much different
than what leaving a company has in this country.
Of course, it's not all that simple for a retiree to
find a second job that wiU be as emotionally and
financially satisfactory.
It is an accepted aspect of Japanese society that
its citizens behave both within their corporations and
within their economy at large as though they were
oper ating within a big family. This personal. in-
stinctive approach differs markedly from the more
impersonal. objective way in which our country
views corporations and the economy in general.
It is another accepted aspect that the Japanese
believe people function better both as citizens and as
workers when they feel part of a "family." in which
lifetime employment is taken for gr anted and
employees are paid salaries OI\ the basis of age and
years of service
Still, despite reputed special reverence for the
elderly. senior corporation executives favor hiring
the young -and the over-55 may find it tough lo get
that second career. A young worker. for instance,
may be able lo choose from two to three jdb offers,
while an over-55 worker may have to compete with 5
lo 10 of his peers for one JOb
Many companies don't want to hire older
workers because they beUeve that they are less pro·
d uctiv~ and harder to train. Also. under the country's
seniority salary system. employees get an automatic
raise for every year in service meaning the
younger a company's work force. the lower its labor
costs. Unlike the United States. Japan has no law
prohibiting d1scnm1nation on the basis of age
(anyway. we at least have a lawi
The real reason some firms let employees who
are "retired " stay on the payroll at lower salaries is
to meet their social obligations lo older workers
while keeping down payroll costs. "Retired .. workers
who move lo other companjes also are likely to be
paid 30 percent to 50 percent less than in their pre·
VIOUS posts.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORKIAP) FIM I Oow..J-1 *"9t
AMERICAN LEADERS
-\lo • v. ---\lo
-1\0io . "" -1 +l'h . "' + 11'1 • Vo _,...
-llo ---t
Pel Up 10.1 Up IU
UP 11.S Up t.I "" •.. Up u Up I • Up u
UP &.1 Up 1.1 Up 1J
UP 1.S u, 1A Up 7;J
Up 1.1 UD •• t
'""· ()fl ..,
Off t.1 Off u ()It 7 .1 Off u °" •. , °" 6.7 ~ tt ~ s. s.
lor Wed., Jul 1'. STOCKS
JO lftd ~SS :r.JO ~ ~ir---~
JO Tr11 «II.~ -H 197.JJ .ell.CM-0.0. IS Ull IOI 61 IOt II IOI.ti 10t.U + 0 1S u SI~ JM.11 370.n )M.)4 .. n-0 CM
11\din l. 1-.000 Tt•n 1,W,«IO Ulllt 1,Ut.JOO
•S Stk S,111,100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW VORK IAPI Jut ?9 Pr ... TOCS.y ... J. Adv..,cld ...
o.cn....i 134 ...
UllCMnood qt Im T ot•I lsWH 1•1
New lllll"fo 11 10
New tows JO c
WttAT AMU OIO
NEW YUHK IAt'I Jul. n Prev
AdVellCICI TocMI~ ... iL
0.Cllned 271 m
Unc lleft91d 1'1 -Tote11.-1i6 no
New lllgftl u ' Ntw ,...,, ,, 11
METALS
NEW YORK IAPI -Sc>ot rtc1<1ltrr-
-tel orlcff Wedn911do.
C••••• U~·IS cenh • pou11d, U S.
d.Stlf'l•tl-.
LeM •2 U110 • poulld.
&lite .. \lo uni\• """""· O.llverld Tia S7.)WO MeUI• WM1' c~ltt II>
Al...W-1..eG <enll e --'· N. V
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS .,,....._ ...........
~I _,.llt 11Jd1'9 .-.n, e•Jt. ~I ....,_ nirtlle .... IS, •a.n. ....... :..._ ......... Al .......... ,, ........ :......._ ...... ...
Z.rl"•1 IMe t1111,. Pt' .... .n u.•: .......... M•••r a M., ..... , -.itr .. 11, ~· .-us,eHarJ. ......... , _, .... 1, ... ..us. ...
P.1'. ........ : ......... , ..... '*"'-• MIU4,eftll. ..
SYMBOLS
I
I ..
I
I :.;
I
I
(
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.. . ---·------·---......
Ora"ge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurad•Y· July 30. 1981
..............
Prince Charles' bride Diana. the new Prmcess uf
Wales. wore coral silk dress and matchmg hat a.c;
royal couple rode toward Waterloo Stat1011 111 Lon-
don on way to honeymoori at Broadlands
Royal wedding
cost $2 million
LONDON <AP> -From $40,000 for the cake
and breakfast to $10,000 for the brides maids' cos-
tumes. the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer was one of the most expensive in
history costing an estimated S2 million, Buck-
ingham Palace officials say.
The huge bill, which included everything from
the cost of security and renting St. Paul's
Cathedral to printing wedding programs for the
congregation, is being shared by British tax-
payers. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles.
According to published reports and palace of·
fi cials, these were among the major costs:
$600,000 for s ecurity.
$100.000 for decorations. flowers and bar-
riers along the wedding procession route from
Buckingham Palace to St Paul's Cathedral.
$100.000 for a pre-wedding reception Mon-
day
S40,000 for the wedding breakfast and cake.
$300,000 for a two-week honeymoon cruise on
the royal yacht Brittania.
$60.000 for Diana's sapphire and diamond
engagement r ing.
$10.000 fo r the fi ve bridesmaids' and two
pages' costumes .
The costs are not li mited to the taxpayers and
royal fa mily. Britain's two major television
networks s pent $1.36 million between them on cov-
ering the wedding. They are locked in a battle to
win the nation's TV ratings
* * * * * *
300 wedding
gifts received
LONDON <AP> -Prince Charles and the new
Princess of Wales have received a ll JOO wedding
girts from a List she drew up. the bride said in a
BBC television inter view.
The former Lady Diana Spencer let it slip that
the items came from Thomas Goode in Mayfair
and the General Trading Co. in Chelsea. both royal
provisioners by appointment to the queen.
The girts included Royal Worcester china in
the Evesham pattern. a gourmet barbecue. patio
chairs and a pair of Crown Staffords hire
cockatoos . Gifts also poured in Crom other
quarters
Nancy Reagan brought over an engraved
Steuben glass bowl from the United States.
Part interest in an oil well near Holdenville,
Ok la . came from Okla homa oil millionaire
Wyman Fraley. who is about to open an office in
Britain for offshore drilling.
The National Association of Goldsmiths sent a
necklace and earrings of sapphire set on yellow
and gold feathers. emble-m of the Prince of Wales.
The bride gave her husband a diamond-
sludded gold picture frame to hold his fa vorite
wedding photo. His gift to her was not known.
For cold nights. the Sedgemoor District Coun-
cil in Somerset gave the couple a ton of locally pro·
duced peat to fuel the fire at their new home at
Highgrove in western England
1Heat sensors
save boaters
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Three men who
were lost at sea are safe today thanks to a new
tl\eat-senslne device that led rescuers through the
fog to the hull or their sinking boat, otnclals said.
A Coast Guard helicopter with an electronic
camera device attached to its nose zeroed in on
the stranded trio 16 miles off the coast of Santa
'
arbara about 11:50 p.m. Tuesday, Coast Guard
pokesman Andy VUutis said.
The Forward Lookine Infrared Sensor located
hri&J,opher Early, Mike ffoyt and Frank Sager,
II ln their late 2J>s, surrertn1 from second sta1e
ypothermia with body temperatures below 95
degrees. The men bad sent out a distress signal at
10;34 p.m . advisin1 that their 32-foot flahlnc
vessel. the Blind Faith, was slnldnc fast, Vilulls
s aid.
"A comb1nallon of mechanical fatlura occur·
rlne over a short period ot Ume resulted in the
enelne compartment floodln1," reported the
spoktsman.
tLIR. which works much like mluUe
1utd1nce 1y1tema, proJecta an lmaae onto a
monitor placed on the helicopter'• cockpit, or In
th• aft MCUon where a crew member can monitor
It. •
"Thole men would have been ln the water,
flehUna four root swellt, much 1on1tt lf we had
bad lO UH the o&d way of to1n1 lO plnpolnt tbelr
locaUon, •· 1a1d Vilutl1. •'The Mn10r. wh.lch l• much more powmal
tMa. U. buman eye, hu two kinU of vlltoa,"
VUUUi . "It cu '"In,........ pt'OpOltlonl,
... ~ ...... lly tilt• tlmt1.
"l ~would have tak• much, mucb loraaer to
1pot tM8 wttbcrilt JLlR."
Diana becomes privikged princess
~
LONDON <AP> -When Pnnce Charles placed
the rlng on Lady Diana Spencer's ringer , U gave
her the rl1ht to share with hi.a Utlea and rights.
from Prince of Wales to Lord of the Isles. from a
1oatskln lithe paid by Cornish farmers to millions
in r eal estate Income.
Australia, Canada, New Zealand. Jamaica. the
Ba hamas, Barbados, Fiji, Grenada, Mauritius,
Papua New Guinea, St. Lucia, St. Vlncent and the
Grenadines, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.
ships a right the duke has had little chance to
e xercise recently.
She will benefit from the income provided by
the duchy's 128,000 acres. one of Britain's largest
estates. Prince Charles receives the equivalent of
more than Sl million from the estate, half or which
he returns to the treasury in lieu of taxes . Diana has become one or the most privileged
women on Earth as Princess of Wales .
Aa quee n, Dian a would not share her
husband's powers as king. The royal functions
these days are essentially ceremonial anyway, the
monarch deferring to the government on matters
or state. But Diana, as matriarch of a model fami-
ly, could nonetheless have a great impact on
British Ille.
The duchy's estates, scatter ed across
southwest England, Include dozens or farms and
hom es, Dartmoor Prison, the Scilly Isles, 11,000
acres of riverbeds. 70,000 acres or mineral rights,
London's oval cricket ground and a packet of Lon-
don real estate valued at more than $200 million.
Princess Diana shares the prince's titles and
positions as Duke or Cornwall, Earl or Chester.
Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron of Ren-
frew, Lor(! of the Isles and Great Steward of
Scotland. She also will share privileges and pre·
rogatives duting back centuries.
If and when Charles succeeds his mother.
Queen Elizabeth II, Diana will become Queen ol
G reat Britain and Northern Ireland. a nd of
As Duchess of Cornwall, Diana will share in
the dues the tenants hiJve offered the duke for 750
years, including a goatskin, a pair of gilt spurs. a
salmon spear and a pound of pepper.
The duchy a lso is entitled to any whales
beached on its shores and cargoes of any wrecked
Dianti is unlikely to share officially in the
management of the duchy's estates. in which
Charles is very active
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 A1
Senate inquiry into CIA chief six months late
WASlUNGTON (AP> -CIA Director William J . Casey Is not
the first official the Senate has
confirmed in haste and second-
guessed al leisure.
And he won't be the last.
The Senate Intelligence Com-
mittee is conducting in July the
inquiry it didn't bother to un-
dertake in January It has hired
a s pecial coun se l , Fred
Thompson, a veteran of the
Watergate hearings, to oversee
the investigation of Casey's busl·
ness past and his management
of the intelligence agency now.
·'I expect it to be a thorough
inquiry, but I hope it will be re-
solved in the near future.··
Thompson said.
Ironically, most of it could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Instead, the
same committee spent 212 hours
chatting with Casey about World
War II espionage and the need to
strengthen the CIA . Then it re-
commended Casey's confirma-
tion lo a Senate which approved
him, with little discussion, and
no opposition. The vote was 95·0.
L'.VDER A CLOL'D
William J Casey
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings. although
there was plenty on the record.
some explored in earlier Senate
hearings when Casey came up
for confirmation a decade ago as
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission. later as
undersecretary o r s tale for
economic affairs.
are deemed worthy of close
Senate scrutiny simply were ig·
nor ed in the CIA conf1rmat1on
proceedings Casey. and Presi·
dent Reagan as ha s sponsor .
would have been better served 1f
the whole business had been ex·
plored then.
Transactions that suddenly
He almost would surely have
bee n confirmed anyway The
Senate is not in the habit of re·
jecting the nominees of prBii·
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CARACAS. Venezuela (AP I Venezuela's
plans to b<t_('Ome Latin America's first nation to
buy the sophisticated U S.·made F 16 jet fighters
are stirring some controversy her e and in
neighboring countries.
Guyana. Venezue1a·s s mall Englis h-speaking
neighbor in the northeastern tip or South
Am e rica . has formally asked the IJ S State
Department to block the sale of the planes to
Venezuela Colombia, anoth er Venezuelan
neighbor. has expressed .. concern" about the risk
of an arms race in the area
Venezuela has border or lerntonal disputes
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
although so far it has been low.keyed. Left -wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
summon a special Chamber of Deputies session to
express his opposition to the planned purchase. He
did not give the reasons for h1s opposi tion but
another member of his party menlloned the high
cost of the planes Sl3.5 million each
Former President Carlos Andres Perez, a
leading f igu r e in the oppos1t1on Accion
De mocratic a Party, told reporters that the an-
nouncement by the government that it plans to buy
the planes "has caused me some concern.·· But he
refused to elaborate.
The government says the controversy is at
least premature and by all means unwarranted.
··w e are not embarked in an arms race, .. said
Pre~ident Luis Herrer a. who 1s a member of the
Social Christian Party He added that Venezuela
has --no aggressive plans" against any nation
··Whal we are doing 1s merely to renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed for ces to bring it
in line with the country·s needs ... he said
At present. the Venezuelan air force·s most ad
vanced 1et righter aircraft is the French-made
Mirage 5 .
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'
dents, particularly newly elect-
ed ones like Reagan.•
Jimmy Carter ran into heavy
Senate opposition when he tried
to install Theodore C. Sorensen
as head of the CIA, but it never
went to a vote. Soren sen
withdrew.
The Senate never has rejected
the nominee of a new president
NEWS ANALYSIS
ago. "Mr. Casey has cul corners
when he considered it to be
necessary to business prom."
Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis.,
said then ... He has wheeled and
dealed his way into a personal
Panel shou ld have checked Casey's
recor d at confirmation time
to the first Cabinet of his ad
ministration. The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member. but the
job ranks at that level
And if the committee really
had gone into Casey's business
record al confirmation time,
much of the controversy that
surrounds the CIA director now
would be old stuff. with little im·
pact.
It was old stuff when Casey
was confirmed The lawsuits in·
volving him a~ a director of a
failed New Orleans farming cor·
poration were filed in 1973 and
ca me up briefly before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
mittee approved his nomination
to the State Department post.
Other items of contention in
hi s business background were on
the record when he was con·
firmed for the SEC job a decade·
fortune, sometimes al the ex·
pense of his clients.··
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resigna·
lion or Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations -the
a gency's top spy. When Sen
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., the
Intelligence Co mm i ttee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
should quit or be fired, he said it
was because Casey ··appointed
an inexperienced man .. to that
sensitive position
lt was not inexperience that
did in Hugel: 1t was the dis·
c los ure that two former as-
sociates had accused him of im·
proper business dealings But
for that, llugel presumably still
would be at the CIA. as inex·
perienced as ever.
Reagan repeated this week his
ex prcssion of confidence in
Casey. hi s Wh i l e H ou se
s pokesman calling the CIA chief
a distinguis hed public ser vant
There·s something fam1h ar in
that. and in the whole episode
Four years ago, Carter budget
director Bert Lance came under
Senate criticism. then Senate in·
vest1galion of his practices as a
banker. He had been confirmed
after a cursory Senate inquiry.
which didn't see or even seek the
FBI report on h1i. nomination, or
the Cindings or federal bank ex
a miners.
A look at the record could
have foretold the controversy
that eventually cost Lance his
job. At the lime. two of the
senators who didn't look pro-
posed that the Senate create a
new system for non.partisan in·
vesligation of nominees to major
positions . It was supposed to
provide detailed investlaative
reports prior to confirmation
votes.
The two senators aren't there
any more The new system isn't
there yet
Pollution
rules
blocke d
RICHMOND (APJ A federal
appeals court has blocked a
series of proposed federal reg·
ulations governing industrial
water pollution for failing to
weigh costs against benefits.
The 4th U.S Circuit Court of
Appeals said the Environmental
Protection Agency had ignored
the intent of Congress in draw-
ing up the regulations.
Neither EPA nor industry of-
ficials were immediately availa·
ble for comment
"· L Orange COaat DAILY PIL.OT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
Appointment aids
LB council balance
Lagun:.i Beach council mcm ·
bers have selected a man. who b~
a ll a<·cotmts. s hould provide a
voice of reason and moderation
on thl• often volatile p~rnel
W1 Iii am Wi kox<•n. an al·
torne~· who has li vt•d in Laguna
Beach since 1943 and who has his
privatt• practict• 1n the heart of
lht• Art Colon'. was st'le<'led
f'rorn among 20 «·and1datc~ for thl·
:-cal vacated lh1 ~ mo nth b~
former ~1a HH' Wa~·nt• Baglin
Hi s st.•lt.>ction ca me uftt•r
near!~ l wo hour'> or ballot tnJ!.
h1 c kerang a nd ballyhooing b~
countil members seek1n~ their
own favorites ror the fifth seal
Whal finally e m erged when
I he dust settled was the unan
1 mous select ion of i.l candidate
who is r espected o n both sid<'s of
the 1>o litical s pectrum
And. conside r ing llw split
makeup of the remainder of the
council. Wilcoxen will most likely
be c<.1 llcd upon on many ot··
casions in the next eight months
t~ cast the deciding vote on a
variety of issues.
The n ewest member had
bareh· warmed his council seat
Tuesdav when he had to vole on
the selection of a new mavor
The choices were Mayor Pro
Tem Ke lly Boy d , o r Coun
cilwoman Sallv Be llerue and
Wilcoxen selected Mrs. Bellerut>
making his first swing vote on
the panel
How h e fares i n future
months remains to bt> seen. but
the bets stand in favor of the tall.
soft ·spoken former school board
member who said in his applica·
t u>n for the interim post that his
goal is to ··seek consensu::. when
!JO!:>S i ble ...
MAC c an help Niguel
'.\t ort• than t•nou gh ,·al1d
~1gn atures hu\'l' bt•t•n gathered on
organizing petitions b~ propo
nents of a munieipal advisory
rouncil for the Lagun<J ~iguel
.1rea to quali f~· lhc matlt.•r for the
~o,·cm b e r gcnt•ral electio n
lia I lot
If formatwn uf thl' <Jd\'1-;or~
panel is approvto•d by the rnters.
1l will be the third to be formed m
Orange Count~· Thl' two others
a r(• in the :\tis:.1on \"u.·10 anrl
Tustin Hill-. communities
Counc il m embl'rs would
make recomml1ndi.lt1on~ to eoun-
t~ s upernsur.., on mi.ltters <'On
C'e rning planning. dl'\'Clopment.
health. safety and public works
111 their unint·urporalNI com
mun it~"
By forming a mun1t1pa l ad
\ isor~· council. common)~ known
,1s a MAC. thl' 17.000 residents in
1 he area hopl· to ha ,·e more clout
in decis ion making at tht• count~
((•\'Cl.
T h e fivt'-to nine mcmher
council can nnh make recom ·
m e n d a t i o n ~ t o c o u n l ~
... u pe r vi!)ors. trncl 1s not em
powered lo make rulm~~ on anr
matter. howe' l'r
Such r eprt>sen lat ion h as
pro\'ed a boon to res ide nts 1n Mi s
s1on Viejo a nd Tus tin Hills. who
enjoy direct access to county
s upe rvi sor s through their
municipal advisoQ counc ils
The Lag una ~iguel MA C
would include all of Orange Coun
ly Service Area 3. which no" pro
\'1des municipal sen ·1cl's to the
area. T"e rough boundaries of
the area are Oso Parkwa\ on the
north. ~onarch Ba~· s hopping
area o n the ::.o uth . Ca mino
Capistrano on the east and Aliso
Creek on the West.
MAC sponsors a re scheduled
to go through the formality of
asking lhe Orange County Board
of Supen·isors to place the qucs ·
twn of forming the. council on the
'.'Jovember ballot Tuesda \' Area
Supervisor T om Riley ha::.
a lread,· said he is in favor of lhe
MA C : and lh c four other
supervisor s an• expected to lend
their s upport.
While forming a MAC will not
g iq• Laguna :'\i guel residents
direct go,·erning power in their
community. it will provide a
means for com mun it,. concerns
m this rapidly g rowing area to be
more direc tly addressed to
Orange County s u1w n ·1sors
Festiv als boost Laguna
There's probahl~ not an
O range Coast resident who isn't
",,.a rt' thrt-t' a rt f<>sti \'a Is a re under
wa~· on Laguna Can~·o n Hoad
The blue and "hill' l.<.iguna
municipal trollies are packed with
tourists and festi\'al-goers. the
rt•staurants are full . a s are
downtown s hops .
The main attraction is the art
l'X hibits al the F t•sli\'al of Arts.
Sawdust and Art·<.1 Fair. entering
I heir third o f seven weekends.
And while local residents put
up with additional traffic conges
111m and parking woes. no one can
<icn~ the fes tivals bring need ed
rt•venues and a r eputation to
what ha~ long been louted as an
.\rt Colon~·
Last year alone gatt' receipts
from the Festi\'al of Arts meant a
half million dollars to the cit~·._
bud get The tity owns the land up
on which thr ft>st1va l 1~ located.
•
a nd therefore takes _a eut of t ht·
~at e entry fee.
The cit,. also deri \'CS twnef11
from sales t·ax re\'c nues gent'rate d
h\' individual a rtists al the thrN.'
fes tivals.
And s pinoff income from \'IS·
1tors staying overnight after the
Pageant of the Mas ter s at hotels
means additional bed lax mort>
income that goes into thl' city
treasury
An earl\· check with officials
at the lhree.fesli\'als s hows atten
dance and sales are up this year
o\'er last
So while Lagunans must put
up \\'ith s ubstantia l incon\'enience
during the festi\'al summe r
season. the benefits help sal\'e the
µain.
And come Septembe r . the
town once again t!) turned n\'er to
the folks who live the re
Op1 n1ons PxPfl''>'>ed 1n lhe sp.:ice <1b011e dre lhose of the Odlly Pilot. Otner 111ew'> e1C
pres'>ed on th1'> pdgt.' dre thoc;e of their duthors dnd art11>ts Reader comment 1s in111t
e<.J. Address Thr> Oaliv Pilot, P.O. Bo>e 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone 17141
b41 ·43:ll
L.M. Boyd I Thief trap
An Englishman named John W.
Fisher has come up with what looks
as thougl:l il might be the ideal
money bag for a bank messenger.
It's rigged to do these things, Ir a
thief snatches it: Grab the culprit's
hand and bold on. Blow a police whis·
tie. Fire a blank cartridge. And ex·
tend throe steel arms each eight feet
long so It t111't be carried through a
doorway or thrown out a window.
In K~tuclcy Is a town called ''76."
There•s a "Ninety Six" In South
CaroHna, an "84" In Pennsylvania. a
"56" in Arkan111, a "17'' in Ohio and a "30" In Iowa.
Q. Wbat. state has the moat college
gradualtt per capita?
A. Cok>rado has that dlsllnctlon -
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot
with 19.4 percent. Unless you want lo
count the District of Columbia as a
slate -22.6 percent. Overall. the 50
states report 14 percent.
Another of those uncommon words
for common things is kerf. It's the
cul made by a knire or saw or torch.
Q. What movie has been rerun the
most times on local TV stations?
A. "Casablanca."
The hottest game today ln the
People's Republic ot China 11 Fria~e
throwing.
That baseball superstar Henry
Aaron as a lad w111 not permltled to
play baseball on Sunde.ya. Hl•
mother. F..at.ella, uld no.
TMm11P.tNl9y
Publllher
1=-Mu .......
B•.....,.aKrwiltldl
E dltortal P-ot E dttof'
MANY 5~ WERE EXCUANGED
&rORE nl CRIMINAL~ WERE
APPRE~tNIID IN A ~Kit-SPEED
CHASE m~ ~ONN
MIAM I.
ALWLMEN~
OFF1CIA1.S lTOO<Et> A DC-3 b A
REMOTI LOOING STRIP IN TU£
FLawA MR6L.APES •
-..
R:iKE SAVTI.IEY
~rlSCATED MORE rnAN
30 LBS. OF CALIFORNIA
ORA~~!
Corporations hear watching
NEW YORK -It seems like a very
long time ago that a few people -not
ver y many -got upset when Ronald
Reagan said he really couldn't see
anything wrong with American com-
panies bribing foreign orcicials and
others to win export contracts.
It was actually only 18 months ago,
during a debate of Republican presiden-
tial candidates in Manchester, N.H.
"This so-called bribery abroad : .. "
Reagan said smilingly. malting it clear
that he thought a buck was a buck and
we s hould get ·em anyway we could. He
was -as he is in most things -as good
as his word, and the White House's
special trade representative, William
Brock, is now pushing for a very signifi·
cant weakening of the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 1977.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for granted in 1981. The
Reagan administration obviously
believes that the business of America is
business.
They also believe business. The gov·
ernment is now operating on the as-
sumption that corporations operate in
the public interest -it is impolite these
days to sugg.est that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
The new attitude is: If 'American
companies say they must pay bribes to
operate overseas. then lt must be true
and the laws shouJd be changed; if
American companies say they would be
hurt by voluntary codes warning
against the misuse of baby formula.
then the government must support them
as a matter of free-trade principle ; if
American agricuJturaJ corporations say
they must sell grain to the Soviet Union,
then embargos should be lifted. no mat·
ter what the Russia ns do. in Afghanistan
or any place else: if American oil com·
panies say that they must have higher
and higher revenues lo s upport new
domestic exploration. then the govern
~,.
------------'I RICHARD RllVIS ,·; ...
ment should chee.r them on. even 1f 11
happe ns to notice that those revenues
are being used to buy up old companies
rather than to find new oil.
H ISTOR Y, HOWEVER, is not on
Reagan's side this Cime History does
indicate that healthy, profitable cor
porations are in the public interest. But
that does not mean corporations
necessarily act in the public inte rest
Often they do. but when that happens.
it's a happy coincidence of their own
private interest and the needs and de·
sires or the general public
If you follow the public-interest
rhetoric heard around Was hington these
d ays to its logical conclusion, you would
believe that Mobil Oil is in the bllliness
of presenting uplifting public television
and thoughtful. disinterested public
serv ice messages o n newspaper
editorial pages
Profit-making cor porations are. 1n
fact. the beM mechanism people have
yet devised for the production or goods
and services But they exist to serve
themselves. to produce profit for their
owners. few or many Their owner s or
m anagers may be moral or immoral.
The corporations are amoral. which is
one of the reasons that governments
have always felt compell ed to watch
them . It could vt>ry well be in a corpora
lion's interest. for instance. to use 12
year olds 1n coal mines Governments
have tended lo dettdl• that sort of thing
1s not necessartl.>-in the public interest
That's the point Business has to be
watcht>d E11erv m 1nute President
Reagan and his peoplt' are undoubtedly
right 1n l•ncourag1ng corporations and
are probably right in their feeling that
regulation of commerce has gone loo
far But to let business and businessmen
do whatever ts in th<' corporate interest
could lead the country and the com·
panies into a trap
The current merger mania is an ex ·
ample of that trap Given the apparent
freedom of the momt'nl. rich companies
Mobil und the other oil producers
amonit lhl'm are rushing ahead lo
buy any vulnt'rabll-s maller companies
they tan spot
I
WHAT IF THE mer gers succeed and
the m ania continues 1f the govern-
ment JUSl s its back and lets it happen
One poss1bll• and frightening result is
the crl'at1on or economic units so big
and powerful that it will almost always
be in the public interest to protect and
preserve them What government -
conservative or ltbt'ral could allow a
combinat1on. say. of Exxon and Du
Pont lo go out of business. no ma tte r
h!rn bad!~ m anaged it might be?
Rea~an·., ideas of separating govern
mt>nl and bus iness could actually bind
them together forever
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor:
This is in response to the editorial in
the July 22 edition of the Daily Pilot re·
garding moped registration. and also lo
present my views on mopeds vs.
automobiles.
I agree that it's fair for mopeds to be
liceMed, and I welcome It. Maybe
moped registration will decrease the
MAILBOX
underage riders who have little or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike.
l realize that mopeds have not been
around long, and many motorists have
reservations a bout sharing the road
with mopeds. A program is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders as to the rules, limits·
lions. and restrictions of mopeds. A vi11·
ible and Informative way of informing
people if mopeds are soon to be more
common on frequently trafficked public
roads.
RIGHT NOW, the moped is my main
mode of transportation. I am very
familiar with unnerved motorists
changing lanes quickly when they sight
me, OT giving me dirty loob when 1
mu.st change lanes. Some even try to
get their frustrations out on me, either
by honking wildly as they pass me or
keeping close on my tail. I am well
aware of many motorists' lack of
familiarity with mopecb. and I certain·
ly drive defensively. l bave no choke -
my moped ls hardly a mat.ch for big
Cadillacs or turbo Porscbes. '
• If mopeds are to be registered with
the OMV and thus s hare the roads wllh
cars, vans, and trucks, It's dme the
a forementioned vehicles are very
aware of u.s and are pTepared to drlve
ln the presence of m opeds.
LORJ ENGLISH
'Creati11e land me,
To the Ed.ltor:
Some n11estlons for decreasfn1 lbe
density oa &he Beeco-Bannlnt project ln
Newport Beach m11ht tnclude '1crulive
land UH:• For Instance:
-A ce.metery for all the uitknown
llOldMrl who ao bravel' defmckid tMir
net•bborbooda from tbe developer'•
unl»Ulb.
-•• ,...., lbteboerd pal'.b, ~·
ground equipment and multi-use
headstones attractively designed for the
walking dead or wounded.
-PERHAPS A CHURCH site for the
developer lo commune with God so he is
certain to carry out His will
Japanese gardens to offer tran·
quilily between oil wells, compressor
stations. industrial complexes and park
ing structures.
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
to aid the ailing species in the bay and
in the air, who will need to adapt to less
reslrtcltve standards of chemical runoff
a nd air pollution for survival.
A necessary escape route A sub
marine base would do. as land traffic
would surely be so impacted that such
an "unsightly" alternative is logical.
How about a bulb farm or a holly
farm? When food becomes our only
priority. we could eat daffodils and hol·
ly, carefully leaving the buJbs and ber·
ries. however.
And for a last resort. an airport. After
all. when all ~lse is impacted, what dif·
ference would it make if we were deaf?
BARBARA COPE
Black 11if(ht
To the Editor·
The night or July 22, 1981 was a black
night in Laguna Beach councilmanic
history.
Scene, Laguna Beach City Council
chambers . It was the professionals
against the amateurs. Who won? The
amateurs, by brute force. A City
Council majority appr oved a de·
veloper's project and then authorized a
study to see if they were right. lncredi·
ble. you say? Not so. You bad like an
engineering firm building a hotel and
then checking back to see if it were
rt reproof; or a surgeon opening a belly.
sewing It up, and then chec.kina hi"
papers to see II he'd cut the right
patlent; or, say a stockbroker pasting
up a Ust of stocks. sbutUna bis eytt,
slicking In a pin, and selling Utla ttoc.t
to ~ls client, later lnveaUgaUn« tbe
stock'• arowth potential.
What happened wu tht.. A dnelo_per
wanted to bulld some houaea on his }'op or t he World properly. TM plannina stafr said the land couldd't \Me lt. But
th p1ann10$ commlstlonen, none with
professional er denUals, said It could. • l•l_.,,.,...,,, ..... ._, .... ,c.-. TllftttNMUl•M4i.t
,., , •• '" ~· ... ,11,..1N1• 11i..1 h ,_,,.. un .. ,., JOO
.......... ," will .. •"'" ... ltr9f>Ct All '-"'" INl\I Ill ct-''""'"°• .... -•II"' ....... llM _, ,...f ... ............. ,_,,,, wlhd ... , , .. _ ,, ............... ,., ••ti_. ... ,...,.,_. Ltlltr• llMY ... ...,,_. t•~~ ....... -,,...,. _...., .. "" < ............ '""'" ..... ~ '-' -·.,~---·
Then the city's engineer said you had to
run a study to :-.et.· if the project was in·
deed feasible The majority Cit y
Council m embe r s, no ne with pro·
fessional credentials either . said fine.
Let's do run a study But first. let's ap-
prove the project
NOW, WHV? Wh y. s uch an un·
conscionable conclusion" To benefit the
council members' constituents? No.
They testified against the project. To
recogm1e the professionalism or its own
staff"l No. They repudiated 1t To
t>mplo) lt;>~ted research techniques? c" l
want more information before I vote on
this project" council member ma-
JOrity in previous testimony J No Their
vote corrupted their c redibility and
violated their own good Judgment. To
benefit the developer" No He least of
all. Suppose the study says you can't
build? He's out. So. why? Whal then?
The pro1ecl is not our concern here
Whal is our concern and it must be to
all Laguna Beach voters 1s an apparent
prostitution of good judgment lo serve
some far out idea of irrationality.
Perve rsity al Its wors t, it seems to m e:
a willful determination to go counter to
reason .
TOM ALEXANDER
R ound R o b i n
To the Editor:
lt seems to me that Irvine's proposed
expansion for Newport Center . and its
compromise promise of improvements
to the city's general traffic problems.
are just exactly the problems its ex-
pansion program will generate. A
"Round Robin" situation!
Will the quality of life In Newport
Beach really be improVL-d?
FRANCES GANNON
CllllY Ill
Old you know lhat the cub rtalsters In
the grocery stor have a key built right
in fop food stamp.t?
KG.
..._, .. c--. ............ ...,.......,.. .... ...
-~ ""*' , .. ·-........... '"'' .... ,.., ... ,.. ... '9 oa.-y OoR, OeOy ,, ...
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981
COMICS 84
FEATURES BS llllll 1111:1 /llUTH CDllT
Keeping a closet
for all
seasons ... B5
D
a
Bradley gets test of county freeways
Los Angeles m ayor says 'tremendous growth' has outpaced state's abilities to keep up
°"" .............
VIEWS COUNTY PROBLEMS
LA Mayor Tom Bradley
* * *
~
By GLENN SCOTr ..................
A politician on an early cam-
paign tour of a place like Or&n1e
County can learn of its problems
in two ways -others can tell
. him or be can find out himself.
Tom Bradley used both
methods Wednesday.
The Los Angeles mayor, con-
sidered a strong candidate for a
Democratic gubernatorial
nomination, was guest of booor
· Wednesday of the County Club, a
new nonpartisan group of local
politicaJ donors. Tbe group is
beaded by Richard 'O'Neill, a
wealthy south county rancher
and Democratic leader.
During a press conference and
later during a brief speech,
* * *
Transportation
'critical i,ssue'
NIGUEL COMMANDER
• New Captain Ferlauto
Lt. F~rlauto
promote d
• to captaincy
Orange County SberiCr's Ll.
Vito Ferlauto will be promoted
to captain Friday and will as-
sume command of the south
county substation in Laguna
Niguel, Sheriff Brad Gates an-
nounced Wednesday.
Ferlauto, 41 , of Dana Point
has been in the sheriff's depart-
ment for 18 years. He replaces
Capt. Dennis LaDucer, who will
take over command of the north
county patrol d1vislon Friday.
Gates also announced Wednes-
day the promotion of WaJter
Fath from captain lo assistant
sheriff for speciaJ services. A
2S-year veteran of the depart-
ment, Falb, 46, of Santa Ana
was named to replace Robert
Griffeth, who recenUy retired.
In his new role, Fath wUI bead
the department's personnel and
training, records, fiscal and
forensic science d1vislons.
Fath wiU earn from $46,000 lo
SS2,000 annually in his new poel·
lion. Ferlauto wUJ make from
$41,000 lo $47,000 a year.
By J ERRY CLAUSEN
Of .. Deity "9t SUit Transportation, or lack of it, is
the most critical issue facing
Orange County in the near
ruture , according to As·
s emblywoman Marian
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach.
Mrs. Bergeson, speaking to
Costa Mesa Rotarians Wednes-
day noon, predicted a bankrupt
state transportation program
when and if Gov . Edmund
Brown turns his job over to a
new man in 1982.
.. An adequate transportation
s y s tem ," s he warned "is
absolutely essential to our
economic stability, to economic
growth and also for our
necessities of life."
She said she has no idea what
the Legislature wilJ do with the
transportation problems In the
upcoming quarterly session.
"We were woefully inadeqnale
in the first session as far as com-
ing to grips with dealing with
this very difficult problem main-
ly because of the differences
between the Democrats and
Republicans on how best to
finance it."
She has found, she said, "that
projects already approved, such
as Highway 55 (the Costa Mesa
Freeway) -and the Corona del
Mar Freeway, no longer have
any funds."
She reminded Rotarians that
the Orange County delegation to
Sacramento had been successful
winning legislation forming a
new Transpo(tation District
separate from Los Angeles and
Ventura counties.
"There is one problem," she
said. ''There is no money to go
into that special transportation
district."
She said legislation that would
allocate gasoline tax funds for
highway funding was strongly
opposed by the Legislature's
I?emocratic leadership and Gov-
ernor Brown.
The assemblywoman said the
state not only has failed to keep
up with growing transportation
needs, but has fallen behind in
maintenance efforts.
Ad ministration policies de-
signed to move the traveler out
or his car and into some sort of
alternative transportation have
eroded funding once available
for completion or authorized
freeways, she_ charged.
Bradley expressed sympathy
with some of the county's prob-
lems, especially congested
freeways.
If be hadn't before. Bradlev
also got a ftn1t-hand lesson in the
stale of the freeway system. He
was about 25 minutes late for the
eatbering because his car was
caught in traffic on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
Bradley noted that Orange
County's freeway problems
were caused because the de-·
mands or the county's "tremen-
dous growth " outpaced the
state's abilities to keep up.
''This is just another problem
when you grow so fast," be ob-
served.
But the mayor, on one of his
first trips to visit Orange Coun-
ty's leaders, was careful oot to
sound critical of bow the county
has evolved.
Choosing his words carefully,
he said this county's concerns
about a lack of state representa-
tion are appropriate, comparing
the situation to Los Angeles
where be said some com-
m unities were tre ated Uke
·'stepchildren" when he first
took office in 1914.
Bradley agreed more state aid
to improve both freeways and
mass transit services is needed
in Orange County, and will con-
tinue to be needed.
''I think growth is a
phenomenen that is not going to
be stopped," he told reporters.
"Instead of stand1ng back and
resisting, we ought to plan for it
and guide it."
Requirements for land de·
•·elopers to share in the financ-
ing of new freeways were
praised as innovative by
Bradley, who added that he sup-
ports a bill in the state
Legislature to raise gasoline tax
by two cents-per-gallon.
The mayor, who has not
formally announced a campailtJl
for governor, was clearly trying
to keep bis options open and
nurture an attitude that he
doesn't belong in any political
camp. "I reject any notion or
party labels," he said.
However, he said he think.s a
Democrat can win in Orange
VIET VETS "TAKE FIVE" -A group of nine
Vietnam veterans stopped for a rest in a va-
cant lot in South Laguna early this morning
near the end of their two-month, 1,000-rnile
walk from New Mexico to Camp Pendleton.
The vets, who left Sante Fe, N.M. June 1 say
they aren't protesting, just drawing attention
to problems faced by U .S. veterans. "We've
had lots of support and only 19 heckJers,"
said leader Mike Chavez.
Reagan home eyed
by Coast realtor
A Huntington Beach reaJtor
says he is willing to buy Presi·
dent Reagan's Pacific Palisades
home for its ruU asking price -
$1.9 million -and wants to see
it used in a communHy service-
type function.
John W. Saunders, 39, said he
mailed his formal bid Tuesday
night after reading newspaper
accounts telling that the Presi-
dents' home, on the market
since January, still bas not been
sold.
A spokesman for Coldwell
Banker, which is handling the
home sale, said the firm was
awaiting receipt of Saunders' of·
fer in today's mail.
pool, redwood deck and a sweep-
ing view of the coastline.
A Coldwell Banker official
said others have expresssed in·
terest in the property, though no
others have offered the full ask-
ing price.
Saunders said he has no plans
to live in the Reagan home
personally, if the sale is com-
pleted. He s aid he would live to
see the home used in connection
with an unspecified community
service project that would not
disturb the surrounding residen-
tial neighborhood.
The realtor hims elf is a
bachelor who resides in Hunt-
ington Harbour.
Shark ale rt
chases Seal
Beach c rowd
Seal Beach lifeguards had to
clear sWimmers and surfers off
the water near Sixth Street Wed-
nesday because a school of
about 75 sand sharks were
spotted within 30 feet of the
shore, police said.
A Huntington Beach helicopter
spotted the sharks and informed
Seal Beach police. The incident
occurred shortly after noon and
beacbgoers were kept out of the
water for about two hours until
the sharks swam away ,
lifeguards reported.
The sand sharks spotted Wed-
nesday were about 3 to s feet
long and are not "normaUy"
harmful to humans, authorities
said.
County and he said polls taken in
April showed that be was
favored, with strong name Iden-
tification.
"One of the reasons l'm here
today and l'U be back again
is to develop personal rela-
tionships so they wilJ know me
as an individual and 1 won't
have to rely on paid advertise-
ments or even television spots,"
he said.
After his press conference,
Bradley met privately with
O'NeiH and a few other club of.
ficials . Then he circulated
among the two dozen other
County Club members meeting
at the Santa Ana Country Club
before giving his speech.
Coastal
hearing
Monday
A draft of Laguna Beach's
Local CoastaJ Plan will undergo
its first public hearing Mooday
when council members, the plan-
ning commission and members of
the plan task force meet at 7 p.m.
in council chambers.
The draft document, when com-
bined in the Local CoastaJ Pro-
gram and approved by stale
coastal commissioners, is in-
tended to return development
control and permit authority to
Laguna Beach.
Laguna's plan was developed
over a year's period by city and
state planners and an appointed
task force composed of local
citizens.
The inch-thick document cen-
ters on slx principal planning is-
sues within the city, including
recreation, parking, housing, en-
vironmentally sensitive areas,
public access to the beaches and
the future of undeveloped lands.
And while the citizens' commit-
tee touts the document as a com-
promise, there ar~ terms in the
plan that wiU most likely stir con-
troversy.
For instance, the LCP calls for
construction of approximate.ly
200 new dwelling units oo the
city's remaining vacant hilhides.
But city records show more
than 600 vacant parcels in the hills
that qualify as legal building
sites.
Monday's meeting wU1 be the
first or a series of bearings before
the document is forwarded to the
state coastaJ commission for ap-
proval.
Another meeting is scheduled
Wednesday at 7 p.m. in council
chambers when the planning
com mission will consider the
plan. And the city council will
meet Aug. 17 al 7 p.m. lo review
and possibly approve the docu-
ment.
Copies of the Local Coastal Plan
are available for review by the
public at City Hall, 505 Forest
Ave., or at the public library, 363
Glenoeyre St. Saunders said he bas not seen
the Reagan home in person,
though be has viewed photo-
graphs of it.
He said he has assigned
negotiations or the sale to one of
his associates, claiming he
becomes "loo emotionally in-
volved" when a persona! home
purchase is involved.
He was associated with two
other reaJ estate firms before
opening his own business in
Janvary. T een , dad in crash
The Reagan home is described
as a 5,000-square-foot residence
with 11 rooms including three
bedrooms, servants' quarters,
A spokesman for Saunders
said be sold $8 milJion worth of
real estate during the first three
months of 1981 and has received
numerous saJes awards Crom the
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors.
An Irvine teen-ager suffered a
broken leg in a collision between
his mo-ped and an automobile
driven by his father. police said
Wednesday. ·
Richard Crowe of 4961
Barkwood Ave., lrvine, was on
his way home for lunch Tuesday
when the accident involvine bis
17-year-old son, Jeff, occurred al
the intersection of Comet Street.
and Doanoke Avenue, police
said.
New owners eye Fun Zone reDiodeling
By STEVE MARBLE Of ... .....,,... ....
For the third time in 10 years
tbe Balboa Fun Zone ls beint
sold with promises of changes to
come for the one·acre amuse-
ment. and amall shop arcade.
A Claremont firm -J .B.S.
Development Corp. -filed ten-
tative plans today with Newport
Beach city officlal1 for a S20
million remodeling of the tun
~one.
The fun zone, atabllahed m tm by an Encllahman named
Al Anderton , i1 •queued bet ween the entrance to UM
Balboa bland rerry aDd llM
Balboa Parillon on U... barbOi'
1lde of tbe penlneala.
J•U• Edwerd1, m8fketia1
d1t1ietlr far Ille a...... ftrm.
uid plant call for r1t1lnln1
many of tbe aaae1 t.b1t b.avt •
I I
J
Artut's rendition o/ '20 miZliOn remodeling of Balboa Fun Zone between pavilion arif1 Balboa Island Ferry
made the run ~ popular over
tbeye8f'I.
"We're not klcldDI IDJODe
oat," lbe 1aJd.
Tiie "Ylataae 1I05 ferrta wMel,
the carouHf ... llM ••m• room
all flt into the new plau. lb.
Ed ..........
Con~ drawln,. lbow • three:1tory, ~.ooo.19uart·f0ot
1truetun belnf, erecWd • tbe
1lt.• wltb the fenil ........
tlon.d ln front of tbt bul!cbl.
Tbe bUlld1nl would coataia re-
tail and 1peelalt, 1a.Gp1, t.,.-o restaurant.a and ome... TIM· p
carousel would be placed ln a
courtyard 1trtum ln the middle
ol the complex.
A two-Intl UnderlJ'OUDd part.
lDI" Jo& would be CODllruetM beMW &be buUdta1, plw lbow.
Valet Ml'Vice wou.ld be pl'oytded.
The architect 11 Corbin,
#Yamatu1t and Partners. ID
Irvine flrm.
•'Our pe.tUon ls to reaetlvate
tbe tun aooe and make lt ID ap.
peallna area," Ma. Sdwaidi •· p&ataea.
• llld ber ft.rm bu PllDI felt
uptradina the aa .. llp maruaa la
front ol the tun IOllt aad ....-V·
Ing slips for restaurant
customers.
The Claremont. firm, Ma.
Edwards said, is payin1 S2. 75
million for the one·acre fun zone
site and an add1Uona1 ·s1 million
for the marina. F.acrow Js set to
close tn September.
U t.bere are not bitches obtain·
Ins permits from the city and
state coastal comrnl11ioner11 -work could begin in February,
s he aald. The project , it 11 :esum1~1 would take rou1bly
alne morn.ns to c:olllplete.
Tbe fun aone was told to a
Nt1'porl con1~tloa firm ln tm that bad plans ,_ rtppm,
out tM arcade and coutructlq
coaffminiums. Th1t plan •u
shot down by \bl cout.al com·
m1ukln.
Tbe property chuted bandl
... ln 1171 when Ralpb Gray
imd Mveral partAera boqht. the
arcade wltb plans to •pl"UC'e \lP
• tbefun..e.
•
------
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur•day. July 30, 1981
CREEPY CRAWLERS DEPT. -
Think about lhe worst kind of pes t you
might have around your house. including
the neighbors' kid, and you probably
can't top the story being told these days
by Carol Carroll <yes, that's her real
name) of Huntington Beach.
You have s ticky d oors? House
creaks in the middle of the night? Roof
leaks like a showerhead in the winter
season?
Carol Carroll can top your misery.
Her Huntington Beach abode has
(;;,
----------------~ TOM MORPHINE .W it
become a favorite stopping-over place
for great, hairy, beady-eyed rats.
.. Just the other night I was relaxing
in the den. watching television." she re·
called. ··and this big hairy rat just Went
wandering risht by.
"HE OR SHE THEN drifted right on
int o the closet. We had the beast
trapped. But then we couldn't find he or
s he . So we slammed the door to keep the
rat in the closet overnight. ..
And how did this tactic turn out'!
"Next morning, we opened the
closet door to continue the search. But
the rat was gone . He had eaten the
closet rug. I think he was trying to make
a nest.
"I think maybe he was a she ...
It was about this time that Carol
Carroll figured she needed some help in
the effort to rid her happy home of the
rat invasion.
So what did she do? She did the
same thing any other good Huntington
Beach citizen would do who needs help.
She called down to city hall for one Bill
Reed. the noted public information of-
ficer for municipal governme nt. re-
nowned as a solver of problems.
TO MAKE A LONG story at least
somewhat s horte r . a las Bill Ree d
couldn't solve t hi s one at least not
right away.
The city. he noted, has no budget for
chasing down invading rats. Reed did
note to Carol Carroll that this year in
June alone, Huntington Beach has s uf·
fered a greater volume or rat invaders
than it did during the entir e epidemic or
the Great Rat Invasion of 1978-79.
Reed even has rats in his own
neighborhood. So you know if he could
figure a way for the eradication. he
would.
·•My 13-year-old son has been telling
me for weeks that big rats have been
coming into our area and are spotted
tightrope-walking down the telephone
wires." Carol Carroll said . "But I didn't
believe him until we had oui· closet guest
the other night."
YOU CAN UNDERSTAND why she
might have been just a touch skeptical
of a rat tale carried by a 13-year-old lad.
Thirteen-year-olds· stories have been
known to escalate enormously between
the corner market with the video games
and the front door of the ho,se.
Anyway. th e youngs ter was ap-
parently right on target this time The
.. Yikes' I got treated better than this in La HatJra
rats that invaded Huntington Beach
from i nland plac·es hke Brea and La
Habra a couple of years ago also made
the trip down telephone and utility
wires
EXPERTS ON RATS suggested at
the time that this means the high·wire
rats are of a higher intelligence than
low-level rats that scurry along gutters
and across floors .
Anvwav. Carol Carroll even contact·
ed Sui)ervi'sor Ha rrie tt WiP.der's office
a nd couldn't get a nything going on an
anti-rat program.
WITH NO HELP from government.
maybe we can pin the rap on the utility
companies who own a ll the poles and
wires.
Something like a charge of inter -city
transportation of bad guys.
Bike trails planned in Mesa
System would link east side with golf course and park
Work is expected to begin in
late August on the first leg of a
bicycle trail system that even-
tually would link east Costa
Mesa wilh the city-owned golf
course and County Regional
Park in the western portion of
the city.
Laguna budgets
extra stale funds
The La1una Beach City Coun·
cil has decided to spend part of
an unexpected $197 ,000 provided
Police to hold
auction in I rvine
The Irvine PoUce Department
will auction 60 bicycles, mo-
peds, auto parts, jewelry, sports
equipment , ste reo s,
lawnmowers. orfice equipment
and other unclaimed property
Saturday.
The auction in the parking lot
or Irvine City Hall, 17200 Jam-
boree Road, Irvine, wlll begin at
10 a .m. The property will be
avallable for inspection at 9:30
a .m .
s
A w ·o u s
T
by the state and save the rest
pending studies for ruture city
needs.
Earlier this month the city re-
ceived word il would have to re-
pay $197,000 less than expected
in slate bailout funds.
Council members vot ed to
spend $21 ,000 of t he money lo
settle a 1977 lawsuit over utility
undergrounding in the vicinity of
Victoria Beach.
Laguna Beach was sued by the
project contractor for additional
payment for unexpected prob·
lems that allegedly arose dur·
ing the job. The city originally
denied any extra payment was
due. but city ofricials say a deal
has now been struck that is ac·
ceptable to both sides.
Construction of the first sec-
trnn . about 1.300 feet of asphalt
along the west side of Newport
Boulevard betwee n Arlington
Avenue and Mesa Drive, was ap·
proved last week by the Orange
County 1-·air board
The trail is to be finished in
about lwo weeks after construe·
lion starts by a private firm con·
tracling with the city at a cost of
$13,000, said Rock Miller. city
transportation manager.
Miller said the first-stage link
is important to bicyclists who
travel between east Costa Mesa
and TeWinkle Park north of the
fairgrounds.
Those bikers, he said. now
must ride as far north as Bristol
Street and double back to the
park because of Newport
Boulevard's one-way traffic
lanes systems
Funds for construction have
been allocated through a special
state bike trails fund. Miller
said The city has about Sl00.000
accumulated in the fund.
Long-range bike trail plans
call for an as phalt r iding path
along Newport Boulevard
between Arlington a nd Fair
Drive and along Fair between
Newport a nd Fairview Road,
Miller said.
Whiting
• project
backed
T he Orange County
Planning Commission
included tight restric
lions when it endorsed a
plan lo build about 4,400
h o m es on the un -
developed Whl tlna
Ranch ea.st of El Toro.
The 2,743-aere proper·
ty on the western slope
of the Santa Ana Moun-
tains has worried south
county r esidents and
county planners who
have eyed possible prob
terns associated with
traffic, fire and sewer
services al the property.
Thus1 the planning
com missioners decided
Tuesday that the county
should continue close
monitoring while de·
velopment begins to
ensure that services
don 't become out or
balance.
Under condillons sug.
gested by the com
mission. the cou nt y
could call a hall to the
d evelopment if 1t
be<·omes apparent that
it would put a strain on
loca I services.
The commissioners
also recommended that
developers, a Warm
ington·Carma J oint Ven
Uni-Vega• Puch • Kawahara.• DG
~ Featuring
"' Volumes Sales of the best • ~ ., ·--E ·-a
1 .,.
~
•
bicycles from around the world
at real down to earth prices!
10 SPEEDS * 3 SPEEDS *
CRUISERS * KIDS llKES
RENTALS
a1 low a1 S2.50 hr.
or
SI 0.00 per 24 hr. day
21 16 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, CA
673-5051
• n
1 -" ~ 0
•
lure, s hould participate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
in whatever means is GRAND OPENING.' finally c hose n fo r
financing a free way
through the Foothill Cor Emergency Survival Produ cts ridor. which might pass
through the property.
Also to ease possible
traffic problems. com-
mi s sioners suggested
that vehicle trips be
kept at a minimum from
the development ,
poss ibly through car
pooling. use of transit or
by encouraging a cer·
lain number of residents
to work at commercial
and industrial center s
planned for the prop
erty.
Th e Boa r d o f
Supervisors is scheduled
to consider the issue on
Au~. 26.
College
• s1gnups
r e adie d
HOW FAMILIES CAN PREPARE
"'-'""" .... ~ .,,.,.,, ...-.-.,,.......
·~, ............ _..,.,,,.,,. --"' .... , .-.,---... ... ~ ....... ....... ------___ .....,...,
--· ....... ~ ......
Earthquakes
' food storage and
total preparedness
~~
Sampt•rP•clt. th , '"•tt•.0•1·-'1<., .......... 1 ...,,.. IJINf•••• .. "'~" ,. t "'· .. ,v_,.,... • .., rY'I .. @>.-~ ., .. ,. ... ..,, ,. """ ,, 4' f'it.....:• "'' ..... 1 .......... ~, • "'"'' tql~ I '' "I •• '• t ,. .. • ,._.,. ' ' '"fl'"' I .. --,. ,,
Polv Buckets lor bulk food storage
.....
~~l· <" Early registration for ----===========-Lt o,,,:,,. 'ti .-sl students planning to at ' ~ ('
tend Saddlcback College GRAINS In Poly Buckets ~~
;n M;ss;on v;eJO lh>S fall l~llONUNl·MIU ~ will be held Aug 3 from H"11oMro,.,.,., • ___ -
9 a .m . lo 11 a m. l·n the __ ,_, ., ••• 110 9~ .._ '10"-'"""'-""" ~ -............ __ "-"• •• ,._, .... _ ..... _.~ f...T:;l ~
campus library • -· l ho· ...... ,_ .. , ..... • ' • ! :;;:E'~ uo u nu1 -~ _-! Handicapped students , .,,.,,,. / ::-. -n !O ~ ..__...
may register from 9 • -I SPF.;CIAJ..s &M. s.:.n. 3 • 1 ••D Thr KENWOOD HIX£R a.m . to 9.30 a m. Stu ,-,,.-,. ~ ·-----.-,,,..-7 7 dents whose last names ~ ~ · ,,. --.:..:-~ :,r:-..... , , .-... ~ :' '.:: -
begin with A through M 15209 Springdale St. Huntington Beach, Ca. 92649
should sign up from 9:30 HourM Opf'n
a . m . lo I 0 : 15 a . m . ,.,.,.,..,.,..•ea.a• Wrf"add-> f?I~) 895-~195 I 0-6 Mon.-Sat.
Registration for stu-1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dents with last names ~·
beginning wi th N
through Z wi ll be con··
ducted from 10 15 a .m.
to 11 a.m
R eturning s tudents •
who arc currentlv not
attending classes·. but
have been enrolled in
th e pas t. must file
another application for
admission.
New s tudents must
also fill out an applica·
lion. available in the Ad·
missions Office on the
first floor of the li brary.
IFYOU
have a service to offer or
goods lo sell, place an ad
In the Daily Pi lot
Classified Section
Phone 642-5678.
1 TWO DAYS!
I SAT., I SUN., AUGUST 1 l 2 \
First l lddlftCJ I Starts
'9-omptly ••
1:00 P.M.
loth Days
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commission ,
school and college districts and county
government than the llllJ Piii
' \ \
l •
t
~
' r
I
'
I
i1
d
• b
0 t •
• I
i
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
·Senate inquiry into CIA chief six · months late
WASHINGTON (APJ -CJA
Director Willia m J . Casey ls oot
the first om cial the Senate has
confirmed in haste and second-
guessed at leisure.
And he won't be the last.
T he Senate Intelligence Com
mitlee is conducting in July the
inquiry it didn't bother to un-
dertake in January. It has hired
a s p ecia l counsel , Fred
Tho mpson, a veteran or the
Watergate hearings, to oversee
the Investigation of Casey's busi-
ness past and his manac,ement
of the intelligence agency now.
"I expect it to be a thorough
inquiry, but l hope it will be re·
solv ed in the nea r future ,··
Thompson satd.
U.VDER A C/.Ol'f)
'A'11l1am J Cusey
Ironically. most of it0 could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Ins tead, the
same committee spent 21,'2 hours
chatting with Casey about World
War II espionage and the need lo
strengthen t he CIA. Then it re-
com mended Casey's confirma·
lion lo a Senate which a pproved
hJm, with httle dis("ussion, and
no opposition The vote was 95·0.
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings. although
there was plenty on the record.
some explored in earlier Senate
hear ings when Casey came up
for confirmation a decade ago as
chairman of the Securities and
E xchange Commission. later as
undersecreta ry of st a te for
economic affairs
a r e deemed worthy of close
Senate scrutiny simply were ig·
nored in the CIA <:onfi rmalion
proceedings Casey. and Pres1
dent Rea~an as his s ponsor.
would have been better ser ved if
the whole business had been ex ·
plored then.
T r ansactions that suddenly
Ile almost would surely have
been confirmed anyway. The
Senate is not in the habit of re
Jecling the nominee~ of pres1
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CA RACAS. Venezuela (AP l -Venezuela's
plans lo become Latin America's first nation lo
buy the sophis ticated u s .-tnade F'-16 Jet fighters
ar e s t irring some cont rover sy here and 1n
neighboring countries
Guyana. Venezuela 's small English-speaking
neighbor 1n th e northeastern tip of South
America. has formally asked the US State
Department to block the sale of the planes to
Ven ezuela. Colombia, a no ther Venezuelan
neigh bor. has expressed "concern·· about the risk
of a n arms race in the area
Venezuela has border or territorial disputes
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
although so fa r 1t has been low-keyed Left wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
sum mon a special Chamber of Deputies session to
express his opposition to the pl anned purchase. He
did not give• the reasons for his opposition but
anot her member of his party mentioned the high
cost of the planes $13.5 million each.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez, a
l eading figure i n the oppos1l1on Accion
Democrallca Party. told reporters that the an·
nouncement by the government that it plans to buy
the planes ·'has ca\iscd me some concern · · But he
refused to elaborate
The government says the controversy 1s al
least premature and by all means unwarranted
"We arc not embarked in an ar ms race," said
President Luis Herrera. who is a member of the
Social Chr1sl1an Party He added that Venezuela
has "no aggressive plans" against any nation
··what we are doing is merely lo renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed forces lo bring 1t
tn line Wlth the country's needs."" he said
At present. the Venezuelan air force's most ad·
van("ed Jet fighter a ircraft 1s the French-made
Mirage-5
••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e e Wt• Jn' rstabhi.hinl( a J>{)OI of small mone~ len •
• dcrs to J..,s,~L us in the hnal .,tagl' of completion of •
•
our chilhn~ featurt• film · Ttw Hunting St·a~on •
With alrt>ad\' 420<) P AY CABLE-T \' station:-.
• begging ror film!> alon~ with Network Local T \' •
• gobbling up mo\ 1t•" so fast 1t ha.., cau!>ed an •
almo~L /rnn111· dcman<1 for pi ctures
• So J!t•I on the bandwagon with a ~oung and am •
• hitiou!> movie studio here in 0 C and t>njoy some •
handsome profit~ fclr vourstM both now ;ind in the
• future •
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CONVENIEHt DISPOSABLE
COLOPt.AST" BRANO
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now «W 1 the c ompietl' COl OPl AS 1 11ne 1tie
ld•(!f'>I '>" "'R d•!>OO'>dble ~lomy .tpa'oan<e~ '"tile
wOflcl E """Y'h111g !Of Colo'!olOO'ldle<. ol~tomate!> clnd
urin,iry osiomate\ all with co"...,ioent COLOPlAS l
O•'>PO~t>•l•fy COLOPl AST •elldb•t.f\i -plus case Oi!CI\
K on<>my
fie \Ult' to cl\k IQ< VOO' FR[ r copy of 1N5!GHJS-
lhf' oubl1Calon thats 1ust lo• YoV-alway<. includes
coupons tor lttf' ..amotes 7 .. -3114
MOUL TON PLAZA PHARMACY
2*5 Moulton Pa111way. Laguna Hill•
(Next to El Ranc:tto Mark9')
A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan auociatiort
<> 1 'E ~ M 0 ~ . F HI ! J ·\ :\ 1 t ; f ' \ 1
S/\TllHI>AY 10 1\ :\t l f' M
g
Huntington Buch, CA 92847
SouthMn C.lllomi. l#gloll•I Olfloe• •
Mn E. La Palma Ave., Man.Im, CA 92807
8956 Valley View St., Buena Patll..L.CA llOe20 ISM Arnelll Rd., Cama1lllo, CA wu10
-. ..... -·--
207t& s ~••loo Bl\ld., c~ CA 907~ 23021 Lake C.Otat Or., (lake Fc>tMt). El TOJO, CA 02830
t001 E. llTlllJflal Hwy1 La Habra, CA 90931 G) 41401.onO leach "", Lono le~ CA llOI07 22931 tiawthQfne fiYO., T0ttance, CA 80e06 • 1°'6 IMM 111/0., Tuttln CA 92tlO fOUM 2al ,., Ctttvt AY't.. WnfCorina, CA et~ ~f'~".4
~ Roomu enl/eble ~ e ,...,.. Ilea/a
l '
dents, particularly newly elect·
ed ones like Reagan
Jimmy Carter ran into heavy
Senate opposthon when he tried
to install Theodore C. Sorensen
as head of the CIA. hut It never
wen t to a vote Sorensen
withdrew.
The Senate never has rejected
the nominee or a new president
NEWS ANAlYSIS
ago. "Mr. Casey has cut comers
when he consjder ed It to be
necessary to business profit."
Sen Willia m Proxmire, O-W1s.,
said then. "He has wheeled and
dealed his way into a personal
Panel should have checked Casey's
record at confirmation time
to the first Cabinet of hiS' ad
ministration The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member, but the
job ranks at that level.
And if the committee really
had gooe into Casey's business
record at confirmation lime.
muc h of the controversy that
sur rounds the CIA director now
would be old stuff. with lit tle im
pact
ll was old ~luff when Casey
was confirmed. The lawsuits in·
volving him as a director of a
fai led New Orleans farming cor
poralion were filed 1n 1973 and
came up briefly before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
miltee approved his nomination
to the State Department post
Other items of contention in
his business background were on
the record when he was con·
firmed for the SEC JOb a decade
I
fo rtune, sometimes al the ex·
pense of his clients "
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resigns
tion of Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations -the
agency's top spy When Sen
Bar ry Goldwater ; R Ariz., the
Int e l ligence Co mmittee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
sbould quit or be fired, he said it
was because Casey ··appointed
an inexperienced m an" to that
sensitive position.
It was not inexperience that
did In Hugel. 1l was the dis·
closure that two former as·
sociates had accused him of im·
proper business dealings. But
for that. Hugel presumably still
would be at the CIA. as inex
perienced as ever.
Reagan repeated this week his
expression of confidence 1n
Casev . h is Wh i t e House
spokesman calling the CIA chief
a dis tinguished pu blic ser vant
There's somethmg familiar 1n
that , and in t he whole episode.
Four years ago. Carte r budget
director Berl Lance came under
Senate criticism. t hen Senate in
vest1gation or his practices as a
banker. He had been confirmed
after a cursory Senate inquiry,
which didn't see or even seek the
FBI report on his nomination, or
the Cindings of federal bank ex-
a miners.
A look a t the record could
have foretold the controvers y
that eventually cost La nce bis
job Al the time , two oC the
sen ators who didn't look pro·
posed that the Senate create a
ne w system lor non-partisan in-
vestigation of nominees to major
positions. ll was supposed to
provide detailed investigative
reports prior to confirmation
votes
•The two senators aren't there
any more The new system isn't
there yet.
Pollution
rules
blocked
RI CHMOND !APJ A federal
appeals cour t has blocked a
ser ies of proposed federal reg·
ula lions governing industrial
water pollution for failing to
weigh costs against benefi ts.
The 4th U.S. Ci rcuit Court of
Appeals said the Environmental
Protection Agency had ignored
the intent of Congress in draw·
ing up the regulations .
Neither EPA nor industry of·
fi cials were immediately availa-
ble for comment
Measures ask limit
on campaign fundit
Councilmanic campa igns m
Ir vine have gro\Yn from low cost
affa irs t o high-s p e nding e x ·
tra vaganzas.
Wh e reas th t.J hi g h es t ·
spending candidate a fe w years
ago s pent 1!bout $10.000 in a City
Council bid. a council hopeful in
the last campaig n spent a record
$30,000.
There is no Irvine cit y or·
dinance limiting the a mount of
money one may s pend on a City
Council campa ig n However.
there is a municipal ordinance
limiting the am ount one may con·
tribute to a council candidate
This limitation was origina lly
set at $250 for the 1978 campaign.
Howeve r . a d o uble ·b a rre led
escalation clause in the cam·
paign ordinance has inflated this
limit to nearly SSOO. It is e xpected
to reach $600 for the ne xt City
Council campaign in 1982.
By compa rison. the council
cam paign contribution limit is
$200 in Newport Beach and $250
in Huntington Beach.
The exorbita nt a moun t or
lrvine·s contribution has led to
inc r eased campaign s pending
a nd a consequent reduction in the
l'hances of the candidate with
limited financing . The poten~ial
influence of a few la rge. speclal-
i nterest con tr ibutors also has
become emphasized .
Two c a mpa ign financ ing
measures that will appear on the
Nov. 3 ballot in Irvine seek to
r edress these proble ms.
One me a s ure. backed by
Councilman Larry Agran. would
pla ce a SlOO ceiling on the
a mount of money an organization
or individual could contribute to
a couqc il ca ndi date . The
measure call s for adjustment of
this limit annualtv based on in·
c reases in the cost of living. T he
present limit is adj usted a nnually
based on the co t of living and in·
ceases in the numbe r ol reg-
ister ed voters in Irvine .
T he competing me asure to
a ppear on the Nov . 3 ballot is
identical to Agran·s with the ex·
ception that the beginning limit
would be S250 instead of SlOO.
This ba llot m easure was pro·
posed by Councilma n David Sills
Either measure would help to
rectif\' the inflated Irvine l'On·
tribut.ion limit.
We hope that the re will be
some enlig htened public <jebate
on the two measures before the
voters are asked to cast their
ba llots .
While the two measures dif·
fer in degr ee. they a re s imilar in
inte nt and are ste ps in the right
dir ection
Civic center proposal
Also appearing on the Nov. 3
ballot in Irvine will be an ad-
\'lsory question asking the voters
whether the Cit,· of Irvine should
huild a $20 million Ch·ic Center to
replace the one now in use.
This is a nother ma tter on
whi ch enlig htened publi c de bate
would go a long way toward
clarifying the issue in the minds
of local voter s.
The burden of proof in this
d{'bate will be on the propone nts
of the project. the funding for
which has not been clearly iden-
tifie d. Sharing the cost and use of
the facility with the school dis·
trict and'or water district has
been s uggested.
There also a n • some un·
a nswer ed questions about the
-.cope of the pr oject. Is it overly
<.1m bit ious? Could Irvine get by
with less'! Or with design fo r
late r expansion?
There is little doubt Irvine
city government has outgrown its
present hom e in the one.story in -
dustrial-style building the city
owns on Jamboree Road. In fact.
the city has to lease additiona l
fac ilities to house the municipa l
operations.
Citv officials of Irvine. one of
the fastest growing cities of its
size in California . must look to
the future in te rms of municipal
buildings. An arbitrary decision
to continue to pay escalating
lease rates might not in the long·
run be in the best interest of the
city.
However . vote rs probably
won't be easily convinced tha t
the proposed S20 m illion civic
center is needed.
Civic pride is a strong and im·
portant asset in Irvine. But ci vic
pride alone won't sell a major ex·
penditure for a civic center
nor s hould it.
Without some pe r s uash ·e
facts supporting the project. it
takes little imagination to predict
tha t the public may be less than
excited about it
Festiv als boost Laguna
The r e·s probably not a n
Orange Coast reside nt who isn ·t
aware three art fest ivals are under
\\a~· on Laguna Canyon Road .
The blue and white Laguna
municipal trollies are packed with
tourists and festival·goers. the
r estaura nts a r e ful l. as are
downtown shops.
The main attraction is t he art
exhibits a t the Festival or Arts.
Sawdust and Art·a·F air. e ntering
their third of seven weekends.
And while local residents put
up with additional traffic conges·
t ion and pa rking woes. no one can
deny the festivals bring 'needed
r e ve nues and a r e putation to
w hat has long been touted as an
Art Colonr.
Last ~·ear a lone ga te receipts
from the Festival of Arts meant a
half million dollars to the city·s
budget. The city owns the land up·
on which the festival is located.
•
and therefore takes a cut of the
gate entry fee.
The cijy also de rives benefit
fro m sales tax revenues generated
bv individual artists at the three
festivals.
And spinoff income from vis·
itors staying overnight after the
Pageant of the Masters at hotels
means additional bed tax more
income that goes into t he city
treasur~·.
An earlv check with officials
at the three.festivals s hows atten·
dance and sales are up this yeitr
ove r last.
So while LaJunans must put
up with substantial Inconvenience
during the festival summer
season. the benefits ttelp salve the
pain.
And come Se ptember. the
town once again is turned over to
the folks who Ii ve there .
Opinions expressed in the space abOve are those of the Oa11y Pilot Olner views eic·
pressed on ltHs page are I hose of thetr author s and artists. Reader comment 1s inv11
ed. Address Ttie Dally Pilot, P.O. Box I S60, Costa Mesa, CA 9262&. Phone C714)
&•2 4311.
L.M. Boyd I Thief trap
An .En1Ushman named John W.
Fisher bu come up wttb wbat looka
as thouch It might be the Ideal
money bag for a b1nk ma.-aer,
ft'• rtaed to do theae thinp tf a
thief anatchet lt: Orab the culprll'•
hand and bold on. Blow a Pollce wb11·
tJe. P'tre a blank cartridte. And H ·
tend tlu'ee ateel anna tacb eilht ftet
Iona •It HD•t be earned t.hroUCh a
doorway or thrown out a window.
In Kmtd)' II a town called "78."
.
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilat
There'• a "Nlnety Six" ln South
Carolina, an "84" In Peonaylvanla, a
""8" in Arkansas, a "17" ln Ohio and a "30" in Iowa.
The hottest aame today ln the
People's Republic ol China la Fl11bM
throwlnt.
That baaeball 1uperatar Heney
Aaton u a lad was not pe.nnJtted to
play baseball on Sundaya. Kt•
moth•, ltltella, Hid no.
MANY S~ WERE E~~
Ii~ Tll. CRIMINALS WEii
APPRE~tNttD IN A ~SPEED
CHASE~ OOHNTaNN
MIAMI.
TMREE RMlVES WE~
M>lJNDED AND fOJJ2
~~WAY PAl'2<X. ~
W£RE lV'DUS~ OORIN6
---T~E OOAMAOC
CAPTU~E.
Corporations hear watching
' NEW YORK -It seems like a very
long time ago that a few people -not
very many -got upset when Ronald
Reagan said he really couldn't see
anythina wrong with American com-
panies bribing foreign officials and
others to win export contracts.
It was actually only 18 months ago,
during a debate of Republican presiden-
tial candidates in Manchester. N.H.
"This so-called bribery abroad . . . "
Reagan said smilingly, malting it clear
that be thought a buck was a buck and
we should get 'em anyway we could. He
was -as he is in most things -as good
as his word, and the White House's
special trade representative, William
Brock, is now pushing for a very signifi·
cant weakening or the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 1977.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for granted in 1981 . The
Reagan adminis tration obvious ly
believes that the business of America is
business.
They also believe business. The gov-
ernment is now operating on the as-
sumption that corporations operate in
the public interest -it is imPolite these
days to suggest that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
Tbe new attitude is: If American
companies say they muat pay bribes to
operate overseas, then it mu.st be true
and the laws should be changed ; if
American companies say they would be
hurt by voluntary codes warning
against the misuse or baby formula.
then the government must support them
as a matter of free-trade principle; if
American agricultural corporations say
they mu.st sell graln lo the Soviet Union,
then embargos should be lifted. no mat-
ter what the Russians do in Afghanistan
or any place else; if American oil com-
panies say that they must have higher
and lligher revenues to support new
domestic exploration, then the govern·
__ 9
RICHARD REIVES :ii -..
m ent should cheer them on, even 1f it
happens to notice that those revenues
are being used to buy up old companies
rather than to find new oi l
HISTORY, HOWEVER, is not on
Reagan's side this time. History does
indicate that healthy, profitable cor·
porations are in the public interest. But
tha t does n ot mea n corporations
necessarily act in the public interest.
Often they do, but when that happens,
It's a happy coincidence of their own
private interest and the needs and de·
sires of the general publt c
If you fo llo w the public-interest
rhetoric heard around Washington these
days to its logical conclusion, you would
believe that Mobil Oil is in the business
of presenting uplifting public television
a nd thoughtful, disinterested public·
ser v ice m essages o n newsp a per
editorial pa~es.
Profit making corporations are. in
fact, the best mechanism people have
yet devised for the production of goods
and services. But they exist to serve
them selves, to produce profit for their
owners, few or many, Their owners or
managers may be moral or immoral.
The corporations are a moral, which is
one or the reasons that governments
have always felt compelled lo watch
them ll could very well be in a corpora-
tion 's interest. for instance, to use 12·
year-olds in coal mines. Governments
have tended to decide that sort of thing
is not necessaril y in the public interest.
That's the point: Business has to be
watched . Ever y min ute P resident
Reagan and his people are undoubtedly
right in encouraging corporati ons and
are probably right in their reeling that
regulation or commerce has gone too
far. But to let business and businessmen
do whatever is in the corporate interest
could lead the country and the com-
panies into a trap
The current merger manfa 1s an ex-
ample of that trap Given the apparent
freedom of the moment, rich companies
Mobil and the other oil producers
a m ong them are rushing ahead to
buy any vul nerable smaller companies
they can spot.
WHAT IF THE mergers succeed and
the mania continues if the govern-
ment just sits back and lets it happen.
One possible and frightening result 1s
the creation of economic units so big
and powerful that it will almost always
be in the public interest to protect and
preserve them What government
conservative or li beral -couJd allow a
co m bination, say, of Exxon and Du
Pont to go out of business, no matter
how badly managed it might be?
Reagan·s ideas of separating govern·
ment and business could actually bind
the m to~elher for ever .
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor:
This is ln response to the editorial in
the July 22 edlUon of the Daily Pilot re·
garding moped registration, and also to
present my views on mopeds vs.
automobiles.
I agree that it's fair for mopeds lo be
licensed, and I welcome it. Maybe
moped registration will decrease the
MAILBOX
underage riders who have UtUe or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike.
I realize that mopeds have not been
around long, and many molorista have
reservations about sharing the road
with mopeds. A program is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders as to the rules, limita-
tions, and restrictions of mopeds. A vis·
ible and informative way of informing
people if mopeds are soon to be more
common on frequenUy trafficked public
roads;
RIGllT NOW, the moped is my matn
mode of transportation. I am very
familiar with unnerved motorlsts
cbantlnc lanes quickly when they sight
me, or giving me dirty lookl when l
must change lanes. Some even try to
get tbelr frustrations out on me, elt.ber
by honking wildly as they pua me or
keepina close on my tall. I am well
aware of many motorlata' I.ck of
famlUarity with mopecb, and l cwta.ln·
ly drlve defensively. I hive DO choice ~
my moped 11 hardly a mateb lor b11
C•dlllacs or turbo Poracbes. tr moPeds are to be re,S.tered. with
the DMV and thus abare the roads with can, v1n1, and truck•, ll'• ume the
aforementioned vehicle• are very
aware d ua IDd.,. pnpartd to drive
in tbe p eMDct Of IDclipeda.
U>RI ENGLISH
headstones attractively designed for the
walking dead or wounded.
-PERHAPS A CHURCH site for the
de veloper to commune with God so he is
certain to carry out His will.
Japanese gardens to offer tran·
quillty between oiJ wells, compressor
stations. industrial complexes and park·
Ing structures.
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
to aid the ailing species in the bay and
in the air , who will need to adapt to less
restrictive standards of chemical runoff
and air pollution for survival.
-A n~cessary esc.;pe route. A sub·
m a rine base would do, as land traffi c
would surely be so impacted that such
an "unsightly" alternative is logical
How about a bulb farm or a holly
farm ? When food becomes our only
priority, we could eat daffodils and hol-
ly. carefully leaving the bulbs and ber·
ries. ~owever.
And for a last resort, a n airport. After
all , when all else is impacted, what dil·
ference would it m ake if we were deaf?
BARBARA COPE
Fair problems
To the Editor:
I 'd like to ask why there wasn't more
negative publicity given to the Orange
County Fair this year. I feeJ the lack of
sheriffs patrolling the fair caused a lot
of the serious incidents that occurred in
the falr. Some or them were rePorted. I
didn't feeJ there was enough editorial
space given lo the particular problem
so that maybe next year there won't be
such a cause for problems there.
SHERYL NICHOLS
Puzzled
To the Editor:
I bear lbe City of Newport Beach and
the Irvine Company tell us about de·
tailed traffic surveys and El Rs and then
the cowity au,perviaora and Murry Cable
talk about decibels and I read about
nitrous oxide fiaures.
• L11ters /rom rf~'' art welcome Thi
nght to coadtnl' ltlter1 to fit spoct or
t bm11tOJt libf'I 11 rtstrued ~tten o/ 300
1Ll0rds or leu wtU bf' gioen pre/trnice AU
Letter• m&l.tf tnclude lfQMt1'te aNf mmhng
oddrtu bt.11 namea mo11 0. aoUMtld °" re·'
quffl if •uJ/1cttnt rt o•Ofl fl 4Ppclrt•U
Po.I 'II ureU not bf' pubh•la". Lf'f•nt mav bf t11rph0Md lo 642.ft* NoffW 4Dld phone
... ,..t.r oJ llw conlrlhtcw "'~ bf (lfW71 /or
r.'f~~·
I r ead about a ll the mitigating
measures that are being done and have
been done lo make things O.K. These
are very complicated and impossible to
understand. They seem to say every·
thing is being done and everything is
fine .
Whal I can understand is what hap·
pens when l drive Coast Highway, when
I'm trying lo talk when a plane goes
over or when I try to see or breathe the
air on so many days of the year. Can
the newspapers help us to know what lo
do about all this?
MRS. HAROLD DAWES
We must be rich
To the Editor:
I was simply bug-eyed when the Koll
Company and the Irvine Company told
the city how much money they would
get from each hotel and office building
they allowed them to build.
I can hardly contain myself as I drive
past Koll Center and Newport Center
and count all the large commercial
buildings. We must have a very rich
c ity -m or e money than we can
possibly ever use!
Can you imagine how rich New York
and San Francisco must be?
KElTH LATCH
R ound R obin
To the Editor ·
It seems to me that Irvine's proposed
expansion for NewPort Center, and il5
compromise promise of improvementa
to the city's general traffic problems,
are just exactly the problems its ex·
pansion progra m will generate. A
"Round Robin'' situation! Will the quality of life In NewPort
Beach really be Improved~
FRANCES GANNON
Rlllllll
Dtd you know that the cuh resiJten tn
the ll'OC'erY store. have a key built rl&bt
In for food stemps7
lt.O
IRVlll
DlllJPllat
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981
COMICS FEATURES
84
BS
K eef)ing a closet
for all
seasons ... B5
0
D
Irvine a// ordab/,e housing sites sekcted
_ univers•lY 'l'o.wn t:ente::-, 'hrough federal housing sub· were discriminatory toward By RJCHA&D G&EEN °' ................. The City of Irvine and tbe
Irvine Company are well on
their way toward meetlnc the
requirements of the out-of-court
settlement of a lawsuit allegine
city zoning policies were ell·
clusionary toward low-income
people, according to city planner
Debby Linn.
The out-of-court settlement
called for the city and the com-
pany to identify sites for 725 UD·
Dellr PM.es....,....
VIEWS COUNTY P80BLEMS
• LA Mayor Tom Bradley
* * *
1ta of bouallll for Low 10come
ta ml.lies. ·
Sites fbf those unit.a have now
been identified in the following
,>rojects to be built by 1983:
-Woodbridge Villu, wblch ii
to include 120 affordable unit.a,
at Yale Avenue and West Yale
Loop.
-Orchard Park, which ls to
include 60 affordable units at
Irvine Center Dl'ive east of Jef·
frey Road.
...:. Windwood, which ls to in·
elude 120 affordable unita al
Culver Drive and the proposed
extension of Deerlield A venue.
-Woodbridge Oaks. which ls
to include 120 affordable unit.a
near Alt.on Avenue and Jeffrey
Road.
-· Northwood, which ls to ln·
elude 80 affordable unita near
the Santa Ana Freeway and
Trabuco Road.
which ls to lnclude 120 a(forda-sidles. These subsidies allow them.
ble unita at CampWI Drive and low-income persons to pay 25 A triaJ date hasn't yet been aet
California Avenue. percent or their income toward for this suit in Ora.nge County
the rent with the federal govern· Sup_ en_· or Court. -University Town Center menl picking up the balance. Sile 11, which is to include 105 al··
fordable unit.a at CampWI Drive
and Bridge Avenue.
These units are to be made a(.
fordable to low income families,
those earning less than 80 per·
cent of the Orange County me·
dian yearly income of $23,000,
In addition to tbis housing
laws uit flied by the Orange
County Fair Housing Council,
the city still faces a lawsuit filed
by the Legal Aid Society on
behalf of some low-income peo-
ple alleging that city zoning laws
A UUrd hoUBing lawsuit, filed
by Irvine resident Wesley· Marx
who alleged that the environ·
mental impact report oo the
city's eastern industrial com·
plex didn't adequately address
housing issues, was won in court
by the City of Irvine.
Bradley gets test of county freeways
Los Angeles mayor says 'tremendous growth' has outpaced state's abilities to keep up
• By GLENN SCOTI' °' .....................
A politician on an early cam·
paign tour of a place like Orange
County can learn of it.a problems
in two ways -others can tell
him or be can find out himself.
Tom Bradley used both
methods Wednesday.
The Los Angeles mayor, con·
sidered a strong candidate for a
Democratic gubernatorial
nomination, was gue.st of honor
·Wednesday of the County Club, a
new nonpartisan group of locaJ
politicaJ donors. The group is
beaded by Richard O'Neill, a
wealthy south county rancher
and Democratic leader.
During a press conference and
later during a brief speech,
* * *
Bradley expressed sympathy
with some of the county's prob-
le ms . especially congested
freeways.
If he hadn't before. BradJev
also got a first-hand lesson in the
atate of the freeway system. He
was about 2S minutes late for the
gathering because hjs car was
caught in traffic on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
Bradley noted that Orange
County's freeway problems
were caused because the de·
mands or the county's ''tremen·
do us growth" outpaced the
state's abilities to keep up.
"This is Just another problem
when you grow so fast," he ob-
served.
But the mayor, on one of bis
first trips to visit Orange Coun·
ty's leaders, was careful not to
sound critical of bow the county
has evolved.
Choosing his words carefully,
he said this county's concerns
about a lack of slate represent.a·
lion are appropriate, comparing
the situation to Los Angeles
where he s aid some com·
munities were treated like
"stepchildren" when be first
took office in 1974.
Bradley agreed more state aid
to improve both freeways and
mass transit services is needed
in Orange County. and will con·
linue to be needed.
•'I think growth is a
phenomenen that is not going to
be stopped," he told reporters.
·'Instead or standing back and
resisting, we ought to plan for it
and guide it.·'
Requirements for land de·
"elopers to share in the financ·
ing of ne w freeways were
praised as innovative by
Bradley, who added that he sup-
p or t s a bi)J in the stale
Legislature to rai~e gasoline tax
by two cents-per-gallon.
The mayor, who bas not
formally announced a campai.m
for governor, was clearly trying
to keep his options open and
nurture an attitude that he
doesn't belong in any political
camp. "I reject any notion or
party labels," be said.
However. be said he thinks a
Democrat can win in Orange
County and he said polls taken in
April showed that he was
favored, with strong name idea·
tification.
"One of the reasons I'm here
today -and I'll be back again
-is to develop personal rela·
tionsbips so they will know me
aa an individual and I won't
have to rely on paid advertise·
ments or even television spots,"
he said.
After his press conference,
Bradley met privately with
O'Neill and a few other club of·
ficials. Then he circulated
among the two dozen other
County Club members meeting
at the Santa Ana Country Club
before giving his speech.
Trans port program
to go broke by '82?
T-wo issu es d e lay ing
I rvine parkland bid
By JERRY CLAUSEN
01 ... Deity rt.-MM! Transportation. or lack of it. is
the most critical issue facing
Orange County in the near
future. according to As·
se mbl y woman Marian
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach.
Mrs. Bergeson, speaJcing to
Costa Mesa Rotarians Wednes·
day noon, predicted a bankrupt
state transportation program
when and if Gov. Edmund
Brown turns his job over to a
new man in 1982.
"An adequate transportation
system ... s he warned "is
absolutely essential to o~r
economjc stability, to economic
growth and a lso f or o ur
necessities of life."
She said she has no idea what
the Legislature will do with the
transportation problem~ in the
upcoming quarterly session.
"We were woefully inadeqnate
in the first session as far as com·
ing to grips with dealing ~th
this very difficult problem main·
ly because of the differences
between the Democrats and
Republicans on how best to
finance it." She has found. she said, "that
projects already approved. such
as Highway 55 (the Costa Mesa
Freeway! -and the Cor9na del
Mar Freeway. no longer have
any funds." . She reminded Rotarians that
the Orange County delegation to
Sacramento bad been successful
winning legislation forming a
new Transportalion District
separate from Los Angeles and
Ventura counties.
"There is one problem," she
said. "There is no money to go
into that s pecial transportation
district."
She said legislation that would
allocate gasoline tax funds for
hiahway funding was strongly
opposed by the Legislature's
Democratic leadership and Gov·
ernor Brown.
The assemblywoman said the
state not only has failed to keep
Man kille d
in freeway
accide nt
A 35-year-old Enaenada, Mex·
lco, man wu t.Uled Weclntwday
eveniq when be wu alnlct by a
vehicle u be was cbantlnc a
Ure on tbe San Dteco Freeway ln
lnln~.
The Callforala Rlih••Y Patrol ldatUltd ·the vletim u
Horado Pereira.
Otrlcera Hid Pettlra bad
atooPed on lbe aboulder of UM .OUU..bouDd ...... aonb ol ,.,.
frer Roed and •• ebu= a ur1 ...... bit .,, a iaide ,..
bJ Pa.t Jolua Bua1, M, of
AJtidela•
8UQ, tMJ 1ald, • .,.,.......,
fill ......... IOlt e.iiol ol 1111
car. 8MQ wu mot ......... Tbl
'1 p.m. aceident la uad1.r lD-
•MU~ bJ U.. CRP.
f I
up with growing transportation
needs, but has fallen behind in'
maintenance efforts.
Administration policies de·
signed to move the traveler out
of his car and into some sort of
a lternative transportation have
eroded funding once available
for completion of authorized
freeways, she charged.
"For example. tbe Corona del
Mar Freeway, which was a $4.6
million project, is now more
than a $10 million project."
She noted, ·'The transporta·
lion program has literally come
to a s tands till in Orange
County."
She said Orange County is
looking for alternative forms or
Income for highways but that
without state funding the local
freeway system is in "a very
serious if not critical situation."
In national standings , she
s aid, California is now last in
spending for new highway con·
st.ruction and in maintenance
construction.
She urged Rotarians to begin
writing letters to legislators and
other state officia ls to find
methods to fund vitally needed
transportation.
Eventually,· s he warned,
Orange County will lose its busi·
nesses and industries to other
stales or counties with less
critical highway congestion and
repair problems.
' ....., ........... "' .... P9't9
BRIDGE BUILDING TEAMWORK -Two cranes were used to
lower a steel beam into place Wednesday for a 157-foot
bridge that will carry Creek Ro.ad over the San O~ego Cr~k
in the Woodbridge area of Irvine. The bridge will provide
access for a shopping center the Irvine Company plans to
build on the south bank of the creek.
Firms ey e a~rport project
Three com panies recom mended to supervisors
Three firms have been recom·
mended to the Orange County
Board of Supervisors to oversee
the $75 to $100 million redevelop-
ment of John ¥Jayne Airport.
According to a report prepared
for consideration by the board
next Tuesday, ll is estimated con·
structlon management wlll cost
county government about
$500,000 during the first year of
the muJU-year improvement pro-
gram.
It will be up to the board at the
opcomin1 meettna to decide
which ott.he three flrms should re· eel ve the contract.
The three are:
-OaM Hill, lnc.,ofCorvaUia,
Ore. and Colla llna. They IM"O-
pose to' UtOCiale with Airport
FacHlty Conaullanh, of
Ra wt.borne New York.
-Hanaeomb/8"ry, · .a ·joint
venlu.re ot HanlcocDb AModal.el
of AU.ta, Ga., and Newport
ha~b.' uil Heery JaterDaUonal, toe., of Au.nta Ud l:Delao. TIMy
propoee to worll wit.la Jayklm
En1iJMen Inc., ol W•t CcwtDa
and .Prima AaM>Claa. of Salita
Monica.
-Planning Rt?search Corp .• of
Washington, D.C. and Orange, In
conjunction with Geotechnical
Consultants Inc., of Santa Ana,
and Grage and Associates. of
Irvine.
Ne Wport pair
aid UC Irvine
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P.
Hausman of Newport Beach have
given $250,000 to estabU1b a chatr or ophthalmology at the UC Irvine
CaJUornla College of Medicine.
Tbl1 lJ the first endowed cti.lt to
beestabllshedonthecampua.
Hausman, who has served on
the board of tru1lee1 ot th•
Co1le1e of Medicine 1lnce 19'75,
said he hopes the endowment wW
encouraie otben to add to tbla
support to auata.lA lbe eoat.lniaal
advancement of eye dlMIH re-
ae.arcb
The Marilyn ud IUtbard P.
Hausman Cbalr of
Ophlhalmolop ll belq endowed
In honor of Dr. lrYlalJl. lAGIMlld.
roundins pro(euor and ·ehalr, ot
the dep,rtment()f OQhlhaliftoloO
atUCf ..
According to the report to
supervisors, tbe final fee that wiU
be paid the firm selected must
still be negotiated. Funding will
come from the airport "en·
lerprlse fund'' that derives ill
revenue from fees charged air
carriers and businesses thati
serve t;_he aJ.rport.
"It is anUclpated that. Intensive
effort will be required to prepare
and establish the management
plan and moblU&e the pr.oject,"
accordln1 tolhe report. ·
Tbe mulU·m1UJon airPort Im·
r.rovement project. was caUed (Of'
n lbe airport m11ter plan ap-
proved by supervisors ln
Febr uary.
The plan calla for construction
or a tar..,. termlnal, extenlioa of
tbe Jet runway, new roadwaya to
link the airport -1th surrou.ndln1
traDsportaUon f acll\Uea and •
parkinl atrvcture.
Tbe lmprov•ment1 would
permit u.e airport to baodle ....
anaual ,.....,.r load Of e.1
• mllUon pen<lal, compar~ to lbe 1.s llllWan _.. HrVect.
Two issues -one involving a
roadway and the other concern·
ing a drainage channel -must
be resolved before the City of
Irvine can acquire 15 acres of
potential parkland in the pie·
turesque Bommer Canyon area,
according to a city staff
member.
The Irvine Company, which
owns the land. wants the city to
decide when and where Sand
Canyon A venue will be elltended
near the future park, said city
negotiator Ed Moore.
The company aJso wants to re·
lain an easement through the
future park for a drainage chan-
nel, he said.
These issues are important to
the Irvine Company because it
wants to place a residentiaJ de·
velopment near the future park,
Moore said.
Irvine city officials want to
make sure that if the city gives
the company a drainage ease·
ment through the park, the com·
pany will build an aestheticaJly
pleasing storm channel in con·
cert with the land's rural at·
mosphere.
Moore said city Community
Oevelopment officials are trying
to draw up plans for ttie ex·
tension of Sand Canyon Avenue,
which is to eventually extend
from Irvine to the ocean.
There ls ground for negotia·
lion and compromise on the
roadway and drainaye issues,
and these matters wU likely be
resolved later this summer,
Moore theorized.
As currenUy envisioned, the
city would purchase eight acres
south or SWuiyhill and Bonita
Canyon Drive with $268,000 in
Stale Park Bond Act funds and
the company would donate an
additionaJ seven acres the.re to
meet its local park require·
menta.
Tbe city bas been trying to ac·
qUire the acreage in Bommer
Canyon slnce im. The land ls
considered especially attractive
because ol a at.ream, mature . tr,es and an old calUe camp
·located there.
City Community Services of.
flclals say tbe Bommer Canyon
land would serve u a valuable
exten.aloo ot Turtle Rock Com·
munlly Part loe1led to the north
ol the canyoo.
While tbe roadway and
dralna1e lasues may be reeojwd
In Ume for city acqUiaiUoo ol UM.
Irvine teen h urt
in crash with dad
An lrvtne teea·aier aufflNd a
broken lq lD a colllaion betwen h1I ... .,.... and u au.tomobUe ·
d.rh·• ,bJ b1a father. police aald Wecla.idaJ.
Rlcberd Crowe of OU
Barkwood Ave., lrvlae, •• OD tab •Q home fof haacb t'Ul9daJ
wben u. acelclent lDYo&Ybla Ida
lT·JMl'.old toa, Jett, ocCUrred 8l the~ of Comet .....
a nd Doanoke A•enu., poUH
aald.
TURTLE
ROCK COMM. PARK
oeH, ........
POTENTIAL PARKLAND
Oblon9 area shows site
Bommer Canyon acreage later
this year, unrestricted access to
the canyon won't be immediate·
ly provided.
UnW the Irvine Company de-
velops the land surroundinC the
canyon in the 1990s, the remote·
ness of the park and the poten·
tial or trespassing onto nearby
oompany catUe land will force
the city to restrict access into
the canyon, said Assistant City
Manager Paul Brady.
Once the city acquires the
land, permits will be granted to
organized groups wishing lo
e nter the canyon, but the
average biker or picnicker will
be out or luck, Brady said.
HB re altor
would buy
R e agan home
A HunUnatoo Beach realtor
says be ls willlD.C to buy Presi·
dent Reagan's Pacific Pa..Undes
home for ita ru.11 uklna priee -
$1.9 million -and wants to tee
ll used ln a community aervlce·
type f\&nct.lon.
Johll w. Saunden, 31, u.ld be
mailed bis formal bid Tueada.Y
niibt alter readln• newsc accowall te1.U.ai tbal t.be •
dents' home, on the market
al.Dee J anuary, still bu not been
told. A spokesman for Coldwell
Banker, wblcb ls bandllnc the
home aaJe, sa.ld the flrm wu
a"altinl receipt ol Sauoden' ol·
fer ln today's mall.
Saunden a.aid be IW DOl ..-
~-Reeta.a bomt I• 91!9rtOa, lboup be baa vlewl4 pboto-
vapbl of lL
He aald b~• r!llHcl
Delotl.alJcm ol tllt.. .. ol
llal• auoc:latea, claim Ill b1
beeomee "loo emotloeall1 ln· Yolffd' I 'ftben a. penooal bome
~·laYOlftd.
'
I
CREEPY CRAWL Ill D ~PT.
Think about the wor \ klnd or ~ t YOU
might have around )'Our hO\ . lnoludlna
the neiahbors' kid. and )"O\l probably
can't top the story lx'ln told tht' e days
by Carol Curroll \ye . that· h r real
name> of Huntinaton Belch You huve stlrky doors? House
creaks in the mlddlt' of the nll(ht? Roof
leaks like a showerheud in the winter
season.,
Carol Carroll can top your misery.
Her Huntington Beach abode h~ui
~
mM MURPHlll .®;~
become a favorite stopping-over place
for great. hairy, beady.eyed rats.
.. Just the other night I was relaxing
in the den, watching television ... s he re·
called, "and this big hairy rat just went
wandering risht by.
"HE OR SH E THEN drifted right on
into the closet. We had the beast
trapped. But then we couldn't find he or
she. So we slammed the door to keep the
rat in the closet overnight."
And how did this tactic turn out?
··Next morning. we opened the
closet door to continue the search. But
the rat was gone. He had eaten the
closet rug. I think he was trying to make
a nest.
"I think maybe he was a she."
It was about this time that Carol
Carroll figured she needed some help in
the effort to rid her happy home of the
rat invasion.
So what did s he do? She did the
same thing any other good Huntington
Beach citizen would do who needs help.
She called down to city hall for one Bill
Reed. the noted public information of·
ficer for municipal governm ent. re·
nowned as a solver of problems.
TO MAKE A WNG story at least
somewhat s horter. alas Bill Reed
couldn't solve this one at least not
right away.
The city, he noted. has no budget for
chasing down invading rats Reed did
note to Carol Carroll that this year in
June alone. Huntington Beach has s uf·
f ered a greater volume of rat invaders
than it did during the e ntire epidemic of
the Great Rat Invasion of 1978·79
pondered
Recd even has ruts in his own
neighborhood. So you know if he could
figure u wuy for the eradication. he
would.
•·My l3·yeur·old son has been telling
me for weeks lhul big rats have been
coming into our area und are spotted
tightrope.walking down the telephone
wires." Carol Carroll said. "But I didn't
believe him until we hud our closet guest
the other night."
YOU CAN UNDERSTAND why she
might have been just a touch skeptical
o( a rut tale carried by a 13-year ·old lad
Thirteen-year ·olds' stories have been
known to' escalate enormously between
the corner market with the video games
and the front door or the house
Anyway. the youngs ter was a p-
parently right on target this time The
"Yikes' I gol lreated better than this m La Habra
rats that invaded Hunting ton Beach
from inland places like Brea a nd La
Ha bra a couple of year s ago also made
the trip down te lephone and ulilit~
wires.
EXP ERTS ON RATS s uggested at
the time that this means the high·wire
rats are of a higher intelligence than
low-level rats that scurry along gutters
and across floors
Anvwav. Carol Carroll even contaC't ·
ed Sui:)ervfsor Harriett Wit>de r ·s office
and couldn't get anything going on an
anti-rat program.
WITH NO HELP from government.
maybe we can pin the rap on the utihty
companies who own all the poles and
wires.
Something like a charge of inter-city
transportation of bad guys
Bike trails planned in Mesa
System would link east side with golf course and park
Work is expected to begin in l~te August .on the first leg of a
bicycle trail system that even·
tually would link east Costa
Mesa with the city-owned golf
course and County Regional
Park in the western portion of
the city.
Laguna budgets
extra state funds
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
cil has decided to spend part of
an unexpected $197 ,000 provided
Police to hold
auction in Irvine
The Irvine Police Department
will auction 60 bicycles, mo·
peda, auto parts, jewelry, sports
equipment , stereos ,
lawnmowers, office equipment
and other unclaimed property
Saturday.
The auction in the parking lot
of Irvine Clty HaJI, 17200 Jam·
boree Road, Irvine, will begin at
10 a. m. The property will be
a vailable for inspection at 9:30
a.m .
s
A w D u s T
by the state and save the rest
pending studies for future city
needs.
Earlier this month the city re-
ceived word it would have to re·
pay $197,000 less than expected
in state bailout funds.
Council members voted to
s pend $21.000 of the money to
settle a 1977 lawsuit over utility
undergrounding in the vicinity of
Vi ctoria Beach.
Laguna Beach was sued by the
project contractor for additional
payment for unexpected prob·
lems that allegedly arose dut·
ing the job. T he city originally
denied any extra payment was
due, but cily officials say a deal
has now been struck that Is ac-
ceptable to both sides.
Construction of the first sec·
lion. a bout 1,300 feet of asphalt
along the west side of Newport
Boulevard be tween Arlington
Avenue and Mesa Drive. was ap·
proved last week by the Orange
County Fair board.
The trail is to be finished in
about two weeks after· construc·
lion starts by a private firm con-
tracting with the city at a cost of
$13,000, said Rock Miller, city
transportation manager.
Mill er said the first-stage link
is i mportant to bicyclists who
travel between east Costa Mesa
and TeW1nkle Park north of the
fairgrounds.
Those bikers, he said, now
must ride as far north as Bristol
Street and double back to the
park bec ause of Newport
Boulevard's on e-way tramc
lanes systems.
Funds for construction have
been allocated through a special
s tate bike trails fund, Miller
said. The city has about $100.000
accumulated in the fund.
Long.range bike trail plans
call for an asphalt riding path
alo n g Newport Bo ulevard
between Arlington and F$ir
Drive and along Fair between
Newport and Fairview Road,
Mill er said.
Whiting
• pro Jee~
backed
The Oranie County
Planning Commission
Included lil(ht restric·
lions when It e ndorsed a
plan to build about 4.400
hom es o n the un ·
developed Whiting
Runch east or El Toro.
The 2,743·acre proper·
ty on the western slope
of the Santa Ana Moun·
l oins has worried south
county residents and
cou nty planners who
have eyed possible prob·
lems associated with
traffic. fire and sewer
s ervices at the property.
Thus, the planning
com missioners decided
Tuesday that the county
s hould continue dose
m onitor ing while de ·
vel opment begins lo
e ns ure that services
don't beco m e out of
balance
Under conditions sug·
ges led by the com ·
mission . t he county
could call a hall to the
develo pment If 1t
becomes apparent that
it would put a strain on
local s ervices
The comm issioners
also recommended that
developers, a Warm
1ngton-Curma Joint Ven·
Uni-Vega• Puch • Kawahara •
: Featuring
"' Volumes Sales of the best •
•
l A.
bicycles from around the world
at real down to earth prices!
10 SPEEDS* 3 SPEEDS *
CRUISERS* KIDS BIKES
RENTALS
a1 low at SZ.50 hr.
or
SI 0.00 per 24 hr. day
21 16 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, CA
673-5051
.:w
• n
1 -.. , .,
0
•
-
ture. should participate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in whateve r means is II GRAND OPENING! flnallv c h osen for
f inancing a freeway
through the Foothill Cor ·
ridor. which might pass
through t he property
Also to ease possible
traffic problems. com·
mi ssioner s suggest ed
that Vl'htclc tr ips be
kept at a minimum from
the d evelopment .
possibly thr ough car
pooling. use of transit or
by encouraging a cer·
lain number of residents
to work al <:ommerc1al
a nd industrial centers
planned for the prop·
l'rty
The Hoard o f
Supervisors 1s scheduled
lo consider the issue on
Aug 26
College
• s1gnups
readied
Emergen cy Surviva l Products
HOW FAMILIES CAN PREPARE
,......,,,16....,.~ ......,,...--......, ...........
·~-~·-~"' _ ............. ~
...~ ...... .-... -------___ .......,,.
--· ....,.,.....,.....,,.........,.
Earthquakes
food storage and
total preparedness
Poly Buckets for bulk food Slorage
~i. ~~(,~ Early registration for ---==========~...,o~~.~ ... ~ students planning to at-' ~ <'
lend Saddleback College GRAINS In Poly Buckets ~~ TheMARATHONUNl·HILL in Mission Viejo this fall
will be held Aug. 3 from ,,."0 ""'"'"1'' rn ...-=-
9 b ,_,~,._,.,,,,, Otliu tl09$ ~•JOH -•H•,•t..,..."Uft ~ a .m. to 11 a.m. an l e -........... __ ) \ .. ~:i:,:;~i:.;.-::-;:~, .. ~ _, •.
campus library • ,.,,_, fk : ::::..:... llO Ll'11.. /., .4 :: Handicapped students • ~,....~ .. /.: _--n 10
may register from 9 l sPEL aA .. ~ .-~1,, s:.rr 3 , ---1 Th~KENWOODMIXER a m to 9 30 a m St u· · dents whose last names ~-· -;7 -~ ~.A..:,r7 .._ -Z-? ! --, 7
begin with A through M 75209 Springdale St. Hun tington Bea ch, Ca . 92649
should sign up from 9:30 Hour!l OpPn
a m . to 10 15 a m . (8rc .. rr• •• ,.. .. tf~f'•fld#•) /.7 •/,) va 10 6 •t s '· './-, o.73-~195 · ''o n.·. a t.
Registration for stu -1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dents with last names I-'
b eg inning with N
through Z will be con-·
ducted from 10 : 15 a m
to 11 a.m
Returning s tudents
who are currently not
attending classes, but
have been enrolled in
the past . mus t rtle
another application for
admission
New s tudents must
also fill out an applica·
lion. available in the Ad·
missions Office on the
first floor of the Ii brary.
IFYOU
have a service lo orrer or
goods to sell, place an ad
In th e Dally Pilot
Classllied Sect.ion
Phone 642·5678
I SAT., I SUN., AUGUST 1 l 2
Fin• llddiftq I Storts
Promptly At
1:00 P.M.
lot+. Days
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, P-lanning commission,
school and college districts and county
government than the ..., Piii
....
' -Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Thursday, July 30. 1981 A7
Senate ·inqniry into CIA .chief six months late
WASHINGTON CAP> -CIA
Director William J. Casey ls not
the first official the Senate has
confirmed io haste and second-
guessed at leisure.
And he won't be the last.
The Senate Intelligence Com·
mittee Is conducUng in July the
inquiry lt didn't bother to UD·
dertake n January. It has hlred
a specia l counsel , F r ed
Thompson, a veteran of the
Watergate hearings, to oversee
the Investigation of Casey's busi-
ness pasr and his manaJement
of the intelligence agency now.
·'I expect it to be a thorough
inquiry, but I hQPe jt will be re·
solved in the near future."
Thompson said .
Ironically. most of it could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Instead, the
same committee spent 21 :i hours
chatting with Casey about World
War II espionage and the need to
strengthen the CIA. Then it re-
commended Casey's confirma-
tion to a Senate which approved
him, with little discussion. and
no opposition. The vote was 95-0.
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings, although
there was plenty on the record,
some explored in earlier Senate
hearings when Casey came up
for confirmation a decade ago as
chair man of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, leter as
undersecr et a r y of s late for
economic affairs.
Tra osactlons that s uddenly
UNDER A CLOL'D
W11l1am J Casey
a r e deemed worthy of close
Senate scrutiny simply were ig-
nored in the CIA confirmation
proceedings. Casey. and Presi·
de nt Reagan as his sponsor.
would llave been better served if
the wh6le business had been ex-
plored then.
He almost would surely have
been confirmed anyway. The
Senate is not in the habit or re·
jecting the nominees of presi-
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CARA CAS. Venezuela CAP> Venezuela's
plans to become Latin America's first nation to
buy the sophisticated U .$.-made F-16 jet fighters
are stirring some controver sy here and in
neighboring countries.
Guyana, Venezuela's small EngJish-speaking
neighbor in the northeastern tip of South
Ame rica, has formally asked the U.S. State
Department to block the sale of the planes to
Venezuela. Colombia, anothe r Ven ezuelan
neighbor. flas expressed "concern" about the risk
of an arms race in the area.
Venezuela has border or territorial dis putes
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
a lthough so far it has been low-keyed. Left-wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
summon a special Chamber of Deputies session to
express his opposition to the planned purchase. He
did not give the reasons for his opposition but
another member of his pa rty mentioned the high
cost of the planes Sl3.5 million each.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez. a
lead ing figure in the opposition Accion
Democralica P arty. told reporters that the an-
nouncement by the government that it plans to buy
the planes "has caused me some concern." But he
refused to elaborate .
The government says the controversy is at
least premature and by all means unwarranted.
"We are not embarked in an arms r ace." said
President Luis Herrera. who is a member or the
Social Christian Party. He added that Venezuela
has "no aggressive plans" against any nation.
·'What we a re doing is merely to renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed forces to bring it
in line with the country's needs ... he said.
Al present, the Venezuelan air force's most ad-
vanced jet fighter aircraft is the French-made
Mirage·S .
••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e e We are establishing a pool or small mone) len· • e ders to ass1J>t us an Lhe final stage of completion of e
•
our chilling feature f1lm "The Hunting Season" •
With already 4200 PAY CABLE TV stations
• begging for films along with Network Local TV. •
• gobbling up movies so fast it has caused an •
almost frantic demand for pictures
• So get on the bandwagon wilh a young and am • e bilious movie studio here in 0 C and enjoy some e
•
handsome profits for yourself both now and in the •
future
•••••• 714 /157-4088 •••••••
CONVEN1£Nt DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST" BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now c.arry ttie ComQlete COLOPl.ASl tine-the
larg~t sen1og disposable ostom~ apohances in ttie
world E..erytti1ng IOI colostomates. 14ecstomate~ and
unnary ostomates-all "Mtti convenient COLOPL.ASl
doSOOSctboWy COLOPl.AST r~ry-plus case oack
economy
Be SOfe to ask fC>f )'OUr fREE cooy ot INStGHIS -
the putllication thats tv~t IOI )'OU-llway<. ""~
c~loflrff'~ *4794 MOUL TON ,LAZA PMAfHIACY
23815 Moutton PM~. ~une Hiiia
(Hnt to EJ ~o MerMt)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE C£NTOt
· MERCURY SAVINGS
•H'l·'\.\10"\ l·HI ~1,\\.1 1,l'\l
~ .\ I l I ( I l \ Y I t l \ \I l I ' \ 1
dents, partic:ular~y newly elect-
ed ones like Rea-an.
Jimmy Carter ran Into heavy
Senate opposition when he tried
• to install Theodore C. Sorensen
as head o( the CIA , but il never
wt}nt to a vot e . Soren sen
withdrew.
The Senate never has rejected
the nominee of a new president
NEWS ANALYSIS
·ago. "Mr. Casey has cut corners
when he considered it to be
necessary to business profit,"
Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis.,
said then. ''He has wheeled and
dealed his way into a personal
Panel should have checked Casey's
record at confirmation time
lo the first Cabinet of his ad·
ministration. The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member. but the
job ranks at that level.
And if the committee really
had gone into Casey's business
record al confirma tion time,
much of the controversy that
surrounds the CIA director now
would be old sturr. with little im·
pact.
It was old stuff when Casey
was confirmed. The lawsuits in·
volvlng him as a director of a
failed New Orleans farming cor-
poration were fil ed in 1973 -and
cam e up briefly before the
Senate Foreign A.elations Com-
mittee a pproved his nomination
to the St ate Department post.
Other items of contention in
his business background were on
the record when he was con·
firmed for the SEC job a decade
fortune, sometimes at the ex-
pense of rus clients."
The controversy over Casey's
future began with the resigna-
tion of Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations -the
agency's top spy Wh en Sen
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz .. the
Intelli gence Co mmittee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
shouJd quit or be fired, he said it
was because Casey ··appointed
an inexperienced man" to that
sensitive position.
It was not inexperience that
did in Hugel; it was the dis·
closure that two former as·
sociates had accused him of im·
proper business dealings. But
for that, Hugel presum ably still
would be at the CIA, as inex·
perienced as ever .
Reagan repeated this week his
expression of confidence in
Casey, hi s White H ouse
spokesman calling the CIA chief
a distinguished public servant.
There's something familiar in
that. and in the whole episod,e.
Four years ago, Carter budget
director Bert Lance came under
Senate criticism, then Senate ip·
vestigation of his practices as a
banker. He had been confirmed
afte r a cursory Senate inquiry.
' whach d1dn 't 11ee or even s k the
FBI report on h111 nonunation, or
the findings of fodcral bank ex·
a miners
A look at the record could
have foretold th(• controversy
that eventually cost Lance his
job. Al the time, two of the
senators who didn't look pro·
posed that the Senate create a
new system for non·partisan in·
vestigation of nominees to major
positions. It was s upposed to
provide detailed investigative
reports prior to confirmation
votes
The two senators aren't there
. any more. The ne~ !>ystem isn't
there yet
Pollution
rules
block e d
RICHMOND I AP> A federal
appeals court has blocked a
series of proposed fede ral reg-
u la t1ons governing industrial
water pollution for failing to
weigh costs agains t benefits.
The 4th U S Circuit Court of
Appeals said the Environmental
P rotection Agency had ignored
the intent or Congress in draw·
ing up tht' regulations
Neither EPA nor industry of-
fic·ials were immPdtatcly av.aila-
ble for comment
I
I c * Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/ThUr$day, Juty 30. 1981
City leaders' meet
tackle d real • issues
F'or tht· .,l·t·oncl '' r,11ght ~ l'•H'.
t•tt\ l'111 111ttl mt•ntht•l'!'I from '."t•~' purl lkath und ('o ... tu :\ll'!'liJ
gol togt•thl'r fot ''" l'\ t•n111g ol
dining and ...i1c.·1alt1111g
l\11t 'llnll'lt\lnj.! d1ffttrt•nt hJJJ
pl ·nt·d th1!'\ q•;1r l'ht.• c.·1t~ lt.!adt•r'
gnl do\\ n to •wml' !'ll'riou' tu I king
and lht•\ d1M'll">M1cl ... om1· 1mpor
1:1111 ....... Ill .....
1'111 ... ramt• In t•ontta'l to l;...,1
\ 4';11' :-. "'!'\"IOll Ill \\ htl'h ('Ollnl'll
m1·mlwr .... took '' "\1•\\ port llarl)l>I'
<·ru1,1· cl11wd .11 th<.· Halho;1 lhl\
l'luh .ind .... 1;" l'd "" "' from tht•
1":-.1u· .... It '' ,1, <•ll .. , 1•nrng of loh
111 ln,....lin).! .111d '1·n ltttlt· t•akt•
l'tll' \ l'ill 1111' l'OlllH'I( lnl'rl1
ht·r .... 1oud\1•d 011 .John \\';" rw
\1rpw·1. llw ""'"bl., 1•\l<.•n .... 11111 of
l 'nl\t'l .. \lt\ l>nH'. lll't •\\Ol'kS ('(Ill
I rot :rn<I all aut111n.1t1<· a1u paC'I
l>l'I \\l'l'll tht• I \\ll 1.'ltll'' fll'l' ell'
pa l'l llWllh
l'lwn· "l'f'l' :1gr1.•l'ml'nb. di ...
.1i.: rt•t·nwnt..; ;111 d .... 11ml'1 i mt''·
't 11111).! "ord... I 11 ... 11111 I I ht· 11w1·1
lllJ.! "l'('llH'cl t11 ht• ,I .... ll!'l'('''
()f I Ill llH'd I .ti l' I Ill p111'l.llH l'
""' lht• -.llj.!j.!l''-tltlll lh;11 lht·
nt•1ghhorrn.1.: nl 11·:--pu-..h tlw1r
r1 · ... pc·t•l I\ l' fin• d1·1wrlmt·nh to
c.·omplt·ll' an uutomallt rC'sponse
pact
Tht• m•ecl for th1~ wa~ un
<il'r~col'l'CI this 'l'ar when a man
had u hl'art u ttack during u
public.· hl·uring 1n Costa Mt.'sa
rhusc• ut the meeting. recall in g
that a ~ewport fire s t atio n wa!'t
nt!urb~. <:ull ed :-.il'wpo rt
parnm edi<.'!-. for hl'lp T ht.• caller
''us told to tall Costa :\1esa tn
Sll•Ud
l'ht• air port 1~.,Ul'. of <:ourM•.
,.., t'l'lll'i< .. cl in ~(.'\\port. Count ii
m tj m IH• r s fro m bot h C'i t i l'..,
<;t•em<.•cl to rl'al11.t• that it 1s in tht.•
lwst intt•rt.·!-.t of both c 1l1<.'' to Sl'l'k
rn " 1 o r r o a d 1 m p r o ' l' m c· n l ....
ar·uund th<.• tJtrport
l 0111\"l'l'Slt \ 01'1\ l'. \\ hl('h Oil\\
dt.•<Hll'n<b on · l'lllwr sulc• of tht•
L'ppt•r :\t.•\\ port Ai.I~'. 1:--of 1m
port tJnc.·t.• to both dl1t''-It 1s 'ital
that u d<.'<.'l!'ttoll bt.· madt.• l'llht>r lo
kill lhl' lll'llll't't or te1 gc.•I mo\'lrlJ.!
on 1l
T'ht• 101nt ('Ollll{'il "l.'SS IOn
r.11 ... t•cl important 1 .. su1.·s Lh.11
... twuld not ht· droppl'<I "htlt.• '' u1t
lllJ.! I cu t lw n<.' x t .rn n ua I d inm·r
'l'"''on to roll around Some' eon
tinuing . at'lion ont.•ntl•d l1u1son
nrt•t·hani ... m i-; nc.•t•clc•d
Fire works dilemma
Proh:1hl.' tlw ll'ast pnxlul'11q·
111pll' d 1-..n1....,c•d h' I Ill' '\ l'" p<1rt
lkarh .ind C'o:--t.i .\h-'-.t ('11 .' Coun
C'd-.. Ill I ht•lf ;1nr1t1,tl tcllllt ,, • ..,,11111
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I 11\lh
Compromise in order
The Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce board is seeking an
apology from Cou ncilman Ed
McFarland.
The board supported Presi-
dent Kenneth Fowler's demand
that McFarland apologize for
s aying that council members
were being buttonholed by mem-
bers of the chamber at that or-
ganization's fun ctions, and for
suggesting the chamber position
discriminated against smaller
businesses and new businesses.
The incident arose over the
chamber's push to ease or end
the enforcement of the city's con-
troversial sign ordinance that re-
quires removal of business sign-
ing that doesn't conform to the
1974 ordinance. That law gave
sign owners up to a 10-year grace
period, no~ nearing its end.
McFarland, .a red-headed
former Marine, indicated he was
disinclined to apologize.
Frankly. we thjnk 'tis much
ado about nothing.
We take "buttonholing" to in-
clude lobbying, ear-bending and
discussion short of violence. The
chamber does function as a lobby
•
group serving the business com-
munity.
Council mem bers certainl y
are lobbied, or approached, or
buttonholed or counseled -pick
your term -pretty routinely at
local civic and social functions,
including those put on by the
chambe r. And, quite frankly,
they should expect that. No one
should be upset so long as the dis-
cussion remains in bounds.
As for the city's sign or-
dinance, it should be noted that
municipal government leaders
and chamber members and
directors have worked many
years in an effort to upgrade
commercial signs within the
community.
The problem is difficult
because som e upgrading
measures could pena)ize older
businesses while other rules
might seem to put new com-
merce at a disadvantage.
Some compromises are
necessary in the effort to achieve
balance and equity. Acrimony
between the City Council and
Chamber of Commerce won't ac-
complish much toward this end.
L)p11'•01h •·OC:P'""'c'<I in lht' '>Pd<.e clbolll' dre those of lhe (Ja1lv ·P1101 Olner 111ew \ t111
IH•'"''d l'ln 1n1 .. pc1gt• .in• thO'ic> of the" 11ulhor s and art1!>I'>. Reader l ommt'nt ,., 1n1111
PO Addr(''" I hp ::>a11v Plk>t , P 0 . Box H60, Co'>tcJ MeScl, CA 92b2b Phonl' I lt.U
bJ/ J 111
L.M. Boy d I Thief trap
An Eni:ll11hman named John W
Fl!iher t-u com e up-wllh what looks
us though it migh.t be the }dea)
money bag for a bank me&$el\&er.
It's rrgged to do these things, If a
lhacl natches it: Gr1b the culprit'•
hand aJMI tM>ld on. 8Jow a police whl1· lie. •·are a blank cartridge And tx•
tend thrt.~ steel arms each eight feet
Ion a 10 it can't bo carried throueh •
ORAN~E COAST Daily Pilat
doorway or thrown out a window.
Thal baseball supe rs tar He nry ·
Aaron as a lad was not permitted lo
p l ay baaebaH o n Sundays Hts
mother. Estella, said no.
Th~ hOtttst gam e today tn lbe
People's Republic of China ls Friabff
throwini.
Tttoma1P. Haley Publllhet'
'
MANY 5~ WERE EXCUANGED
6£fORE Tll CRIMINALS WE'2E
APPR£~E.N[lD IN A ~K"irSPE£D
~SE m~ DOIOOCNJN
MIAMI.
~18 lM ENra<'C£MOO
~FKIAlS lR~D A D<-3 'b A
REMOTE LANDING ST~IP IN TU~
FL®A MRCJlADES •
™~E Rk'iTIVES WE~
\\OOMDED AND fOJJ2
~KiMWAV PAT'2q. ~
W£J2E m'DUSME.D OORIN6
---T~E OOAMAOC
CAPTUk>E.
1•AND~TUE~IN
THE />a Cf WANSFlmNG T~EIR
CA~ KJ WAITIN6 ~.
RiKE SAV rnEY
(~flSCATED MORE THAN
30 I.BS. OF CALIFORNIA
ORA~~!
Corporations hear w·atching
NEW YORK It seems like a "ery
long t ime ago that a few people not
very many got upset when Ronald
Reagan said he r eally couldn't see
any thing wrong with American com·
panies bribing foreign ofCicials and
others to win export contracts.
It was actually ooly 18 months ago,
during a debate or Republican pres1den
tial candidates in Manchester, N H
"This SO·called bribery abroad "
Re agan said s milingly. making it clear
that he thought a buck was a buck and
we should get ·em a nyway we could. He
was as he is in most things as good
as his word. and the White House's
special trade re presentative, William
Brock. 1s now pushing for a very signifi·
cant weakening of the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 1977.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for g ranted in 1981 The
Re agan administration obviously
believes that the business or America IS
business.
They also believe business. The gov-
ernment 1s now operating on the as·
s umplion that corporations operate in
the public inte rest 1t is impolite these
days to suggest that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
The new attitude 1s : lf American
companies say they mus t pay bribes to
operate overseas, then 1t must be true
and the laws should be changed : if
Am erican companies say they would be
hurt by voluntary codes warnin g
against the misuse of baby formula.
then the government must s upport them
as a matter of free trade principle. rf
American agricultural corporations say
they must sell grain to the Soviet Union.
then cmbargos should be tarted. no mat·
tcr what the Russians do in Afghanistan
or any place else. 1f American 011 com
p<inies sa) that they must have higher
and higher revenues to support ne'4
domestic exploration, then tht• ~overn
---~ RICHARD RllVIS 1 ; •
ment should cheer them on. cHn 1f 1t
happens to notice that those revenues
are being ust.'d to buy up old comp:.m1es
rather than to finci new oil
HISTORY, HOWEVER , 1s not on
Reagan's s ide th1-. time l ltstor~ do<•s
indicate thal heiJllh~. prohtabll' cor
porat1ons are in the uuhhc inlcn·sl Hut
that <lot•s n ot mcan corpor<ilions
ncct•ssanly act in the public inten•st
Often thl'Y do, but wht'n that happens.
it's a happ~ coinc1dencl:' of lhl•1r own
pn' ate interest and the needs and de
sires of the general public
tr you follow the public interest
rhetoric heard around W<ishington these
days to its logical conclusion. you would
believc that Mobil 011 rs m tht' business
of prt'senting uplifting pubhC' telev1s1on
and thou~htrut. d1s1n t erested public
s c.•n 1c1.• message., on nl·'4 s paper
editorial pages
Profit muking <·orporalions a rc. in
faet . • h<· lw~t ml·C'hanism peoplt' have
yt•t dt•v1st.•d for I h<• production of i.:oods
and S{'n1ees But the' exist to sene
themsdH~s. to produrt• pror1t for their
owners. rew or' many Their owners or
managers ma~ bv moral or immoral
Tht• c·orporat1ons are amoral. which 1s
one· of tht' rc•a..cm... that go\ ernments
ha \'l' al\\ a~., ft·ll t ompelled to watch
lht·m It t·oul<J very '4etl be in a corpora
twn ·., mtercH. for instance. to use 12
\l'ar olcb in eoal mines Governments
ha \t' tl'n<led to <ft•('Hfr th al sort or thing
is not nt•ct·so,aril~ 1r1 thl' public interest
That'~ tht· point Business has to be
"'Jl('hl•d Even minute Prt's1dent
lfrag:rn and h1~ Pl'ople are undoubtedly
right in cncoura).(1ng rorporat1ons and
Llrt' probably raght 1n their feeling that
regulation of commt>rce has gone too
far Hut to ll'l husincs:. and businessmen
do whate\'er is rn the· l'Orporate interest
rnuld lead !ht· <·ounlry and the com
pan1es into a trap
Tht• current merger mania is an ex
am pit• of thal trap G1\ en tht• apparent
frl'edom of thl• momt•nl. raC'h eompanies
\1ub1 I and tht• other oil producers
among them an.' rushing ahead lo
hu:.. ;in~ vulm·r;ilill' ~mallf'r 1·11mpan1e!-
l llc•\ 1·:.n o,p11t
W llAT IF Tll t: nit•rgcr:. :.un·t·c·d and
I ht· mama ront1nul':-. 1f the• ~overn
mc·nl JUSt sits bat.•k and lets 1t happen
Ont possible• an<l frightening result 1s
tht' creation of c•conomic units so b1,g
anti pow<.•rful that 11 will almost al'4ays
ht• 1n the pubh(' interest to protert and
pn·o,i·n·e th<'m What gO\ crnmcnt
{'On.,(•rvat1ve or hbt•ral could :.tllO\\ a
t·omh1nat1on . SC:t\. of Exxon and Du
l'nnt to go out <if lwsines~ no mailer
ho\\ badl~ m<ina1.:c•d ti might be"
Ht·agan·, 1dc·a .... of o,('par;iling govern·
mt·nl Jnd hus1n<'.,., <'Ould <1ctualh btnri
lht•m to1wthcr fon•ver
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor ·
This 1s in response to the editorial in
the July 22 edition of the Daily Pilot re
garding moped registration. and also to
present m y views on mopeds vs
automobiles
I agree that it's fair for mopeds Lo be
licensed. a nd I welcome it Maybe
moped registration will decr ease the
MAILBOX
under age r iders who have little or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike
I realize that mopeds have not been
arC\und long, and many motorists have
r eser vations about sharing the road
with mopeds. A program is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders as to t he rules, limita·
tions. and restrictions or mopeds A vis·
ible and m/ormativc way of informing
people if moped s are soon to be more
common on frequently trafficked public
roads .
RIGHT NOW, the moped is my main
mode or transportation. I am ver y
famil iar with unnerved motorists
changing lanes quickly when they sight
me, or giving me dirty looks when 1
must change lanes Some even try to
get their frustrations out on me, either
by honking wildly as they pus me or
keeping close on my tall. I am well
aware o r many motorists' Jack of
familiarity with mopeds, a nd I certain·
ly drive defensively. I have no choice
my moped is hardly a match for big
Cadillacs or turbo Porsches.
If mopeds are to be registered with
the OMV and thus share the road• with
car s. vans, and trucks, tt's tim\! the
aforementioned vebic l~a are very
aware of us and are prepared to drive
ln the presence of mopeds.
LORI ENGLlSH
'Creative la n d use'
To the Editor:
Sornt au11ettJon1 for decreaslng the
density on the Beeco·B•nnlng projecL In
Newport Btach ml1ht Include "crutlve
land use." P'or ln1tance.
-A ttm~ry for all tbe unknown
IOldlll'I ~ho IO bravely defended their
n~l1bborboocl1 rrom lbe developer'•
ambUlb
-Blke palhl. skateboard parb, pla)'•
around equipmnt ••d multl·&aH 1
headstones allrart1vely d esigned for the
walkint( dead or wounded
-Pf:RllAPS A CHURCH site for lht•
developer to commune with God so he is
certain to earn out llrs will
J apanese ji?ardens to offer tran·
quihty bet ween 011 wells. C'Omprcs:.or
stations. industrial l'omplexes and park
ing !\trUC'tUrt'S,
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
lo a 1d the ailing spel.'1es in the bay and
1n the air. who will need to adapt to less
restracllve standards of chemical runoff
and air pollution for survival.
A necessary csc ... pt· route A sub
marine· base would do. as land trafric
would surely be so impacted that such
an "uns1Rhlly .. alternative is logical
110'4 about a bulb farm or a holly
farm ·· When food hecomes our onl~
pr iority. we could l'al daffodils and hol
ly. cart.•fully leaving the bulbs and b<.•r
rics. however
And for a last resort. an airport After
all. when all elst• 1s impacted. '4 hat dif
ference would 1t mak<' 1r we werc deaf"
BARBARA CO PE
Fair probl e 111s
To the Editor
I'd like to ask why there wasn't more
negative publicity g1 ven to the Orange
County Jo'air this year I feel the lack of
sherirfs patrolling the fair caused a lot
of the serious incjdents t hat occurred in
the fair Some or t hem were reported I
didn't reel there was enough editorial '
space given to the particular problem
so that maybe next year there won't be
such a eause for problems there.
Puzzled
To the F.ditor:
S HERYL NICHOLS
I h ear the City of Newport Beach and
the Irvlnt> Company tell ua about de·
tailed traffic survey and t:IRI and then
the county supervisor• 1ncf Murry Cable
talk •bout d ecibels and 1 read about
nitrous oxide figures .
• t.Pttrr~ /mm reodn.~ or1• wtlcomt Tht
r1qh1 tu tmM.if'n.n1 /1•1tfr$ to f ll tptU"f' or
,•/rnurllllt' htw:/ '' tt.>~tru•rl I .l'lln~ n/ 300
11•ord~ or Ir~$ u11t ~ Qllltn prt/f'tf'fl<'t' ~II
lrttrn mu.~t ineludt 11yno1urr and mo1t111g
oddrt.•Jf hut nameir mny 1'e u'tthMld on n•
q1111~t 1/ X1Jff 1C'tl'nl rco.u.>n tlf apparent
1'n.-tr11 1.1.;/l not tX' publlahtd IAtltrt may t>t
trlt•ph"'H:d 111 tJ.fl lj{)/16 \amt and phone
numflt"r 11/ I~ contnbulM musl bf' gtl>t"n /or
a 1r1f1cotmn purp<Jsr~
I read about all the m1t1gating
mea:-.urrs lhat an• tw1ng done' and have
hN•n dom• lo mak<> things 0 K These
an• vc•ry compl1<:at<'d and 1mposs1ble lo
unclt•ro,land Tht•\ '-l't·m to sa) every
thing 1s h<•ing rlom• and <'\erything 1s
f llH'
What I C'an undt>rstand 1s \\hat hap
JH•ns whc•n I drivt• Coast H1 ghw<c1y, when
I m tr~ing lu talk wht'n a plane goes
O\ t•r or "hen I In to see or breathe the
air on o,o man} (:Ja~., of the ~ear C<tn
th«' m•w,parwro, hC'lp us to kno'4 what to
tlo .1hout all lh1~··
M ns II A ROLD DAWES
We 111ust lie ric'1
Tot he Editor
I was s11nply bug eyed when the Koll
Company and lhc Irvine (.;(lmpany told
Ill<' dty how much money they would
get from each hotel and oHice building
thl'V allowed them to build
1 'can hardly contain myself as I drive
past Koll Cent<'r and Newport Center
and count all the lar ge commercial
hulldings. We must have a very r ich
c it v more monev tha n we can
pos.s1bly evl'r use' ·
Can you imagine how rich New York
and San Francisco must be.,
KEITH LATCH
R oun d R obi11
To the Editor·
lt seems to me that Irvine's proposed
expilns ion fOI' Newport Center. and its
compro mise promise of Improvements
to the city's general traffic problems.
ure just exactly the proble ms Its ex
pansion program will generate A
"Round Robin .. situation!
Wiii the quality of lire in Newport
Beach really bo improved?
FRANCF.s GANNON
lllllYIR
Muc h applause ror tho e who cleaned
up thf' bay and harbor area over the
weekend; and many boos for lhost who
lrft th tons or traah J v
OtH•• ._ c--. ~. _._._, ..-n ••• -~.x:.::c·-................. , ...... ~ ... _... ... ... 11,~
t
llllJPllll
• THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1981
111111 ClllT COMICS 84
FEATURES BS
Keeping a closet
for all
seasons ... 85
0
0
Concert coordinators singing blues
By STEVE MARBLE ..................
Cancellation of Newport
Beacb"s second annual Pic·and-
P op co ncert bas left
coordinators of the event point·
log fingers in different direc-
tions on who's to blame for the
show's demise.
The concert, scheduled for
Labor Day weekend at Eutbluff
Park, was to featurf conductor
Henry Brandon and a 47-piece
orchestra.
Last year's show, which abo
featured Brandon, drew several
thousand.
But city art commissioners,
Dell,~ ..........
VIEWS COUNTY PROBLEMS ' LA Mayor Tom Bradley
* * *
who coordinate aud sponsor the
musical event, threw the towel
in on the show earlier lb.la month
when it appeared both time and
money had nm out.
There are several aides to the
snafu.
Commissioner Walter ZigJar
claims the city "goofed up" by
sendinl a $1,000 check to the
wrong person. On top of tllat, be
says, the check was not ad·
dressed properly and arrived
late.
"I'm not sure what to make of
lt," Ziglar says.
As explained by Newport city
officials, the $1,000 check
represented matching funds.
The check, it wu explained, wu
to go to a mualclan.s unloo trust
fund which would equal the
amount after the city's was re·
celved.
The deadline for the matching
money was July 15. Tbe city
mailed the check July 13. It ar·
rived July 17.
Conductor Brandon claims the
city is to blame. He says the
$1,000 check was to be mailed to
him, not to the union. He says be
was going to "handle the cbeek"
to mate sure it got proper atten·
lion.
"The city blew it," Brandon
says. "When the check didn't ar·
rive, the trust fund money wai.
elven to someone else.''
Madeline Rose, chairwoman
of the art commission, says
Brandon and Ziglar are all wet.
Sbe aays the city did everything
properly and in plenty of time.
"I have complete confidence
in the staff and I'm not sure why
some people are trying to make
a flap out of th.ls," she says. "It
just turned out to be a concert
we can't afford to give this
year."
Newport City Manager Robert
Wynn says he's asked for a re·
port on the whole episode.
But, be adds, he believes city
employees mailed the check in
Ume and followed that up with a
phone call to the musicians' un·
ion.
"They (the union ) assured us
there wasn't any problem,"
Wynn explains. "Whatever the
problem was, it was not due to
lateness oo the city's part."
The problem, says Newport
recreation ditector Jeff Kolin, is
simple. He says the union ex·
hausted its trust fund on July 14,
the day before the deadline.
Several city employees sug·
g es led that "personality
clashes" on the art commission
are to blame for the show being
dumped.
"The whole thing's a real
shame," Ziglar offered. "The cl·
ty doesn't do a whole lot for lta
people in terms of culture and
then to see t.bis concert not come
about because the city goofed up
is sad."
Brandon says he's also miffed
by the turn of events.
Mrs. Rose, though, has a dif.
ferent view on bow things now
stand.
"I certainly hope there aren't
any hard feelings," sbe says.
"We ba ve other concerts
planned. I don't think the people
or Newport are being deprived.''
Bradley gets test of county freeways
Los Angeles mayor says 'tr emendous growth' has outpaced state's abilities to keep up
~ J
By GLENN SCOTI' Bradley expressed sympathy first trips to visit Orange Coun·
•• ....,....... with some of lbe county's prob-ty's leaders, was carefuJ not to
A politician on an early cam· lems, especially congested sound criticaJ or how the county
paign tour of a place like Orange freeways . has evolved.
County can learn of its problems If be hadn't before. Bradlev Choosing his words carefully,
lo two ways -others can tell also got a first-hand lesson in the he said th.is county's concerns
him or be can find out himself. state of the freeway system. He about a lack of state represent&·
Tom Bradley used both was about 2S minutes late for lbe lion are appropriate, comparing
methods Wednesday. 1athering because bis car was the situation to Los Angeles
The Los Angeles mayor, con-caught in tralClc on the Santa where he said some com·
sidered a strong candidate for a Ana Freeway. munities were treated like
Democratic gubernatorial Bradley noted that Orange .. stepchildren" when he first
nomination, was guest of honor County's freeway problems took office in 1974.
·Wednesday of the County Club, a were caused because the de-Bradley agreed more state aid
new oonpartisan group of local mands of the county's "tremen· to improve both freeways and
political donors. The group is do us growth ·· outpaced the mass transit services is needed
beaded by Richard O'Neill, a state's abilities to keep up. in Orange County, and will con-
wealthy south county rancher "This is just another problem tinue to be needed.
and Democratic leader. when you grow so fast," he ob-· · I think growth is a
During a press conference and served. phenomenen that is not going to
later during a brief speech, But the mayor, on one of his be stopped," he told reporters.
* * *
"Instead of standing back and
resisting, we ought to plan for it
and guide it."
Requirements for land de·
"elopers to share in the financ·
ing or new freeways were
praised as innovative by
Bradley, who added that he sup·
ports a biJ.J in the state
Legislature to raise gasoline tax
by two cents·per-gallon.
The mayor, wbo has not
formally announced a campai.m
for governor, was clearly trying
to keep his options open and
nurture an attitude that he
doesn't belong in any political
camp. "I reject any notion of
party labels," he said.
However , he said he thinks a
Democrat can win in Orange
County and he said polls taken in
April s howed that he was
favored, with strong name iden-
tification.
"One of the reasons I'm here
today -and I'll be back again
-is to develop personal rela·
tionships so they will know me
as an individual and r won't
have to rely on paid advertise-
ments or even television spots,"
he said.
Arter his press conference,.
Bradley met privately with
O'Neill and a few other club of.
fici als. Then he circulated
among the two dozen other
County Club members meeting
al the Santa Ana Country Club
before giving his speech.
Transport program'
to go brokehy'82?
Pair donate
opthalmology
c hair at U CI
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OI .. ~ly l'IMie IUlfl Transportation. or lack of it, is
the most critical issue facing
Or ange County in the near
future , according to As·
se mbl y woman Marian
Bergeson, R-Newport Beach.
Mrs . Bergeson, s peaking to
Costa Mesa Rotarians Wednes·
day noon. predicted a bankrupt
state transportation program
whe n and if Gov. Edmund
Brown turns his job over to a
new man in 1982.
"An adequate transportation
s ystem." s h e warned "is
absolutely essential to our
economic stability. to economic
growth a nd also for our
necessities of life.··
She said she has no idea what
the Legislature wiU do with the
transportation problems in the
upcoming quarterly session.
"We were woefully inadeqnate
in the first session as far as com·
ing to grips with dealing with
this very difficult problem main·
ly because of the differences
between the Democrats and
Republicans on how best to
finance it."
She has found. s he said, "that
projects already approved, such
as Highway 55 Cthe Costa Mesa
freeway) and the Corona del
Mar Freeway, no longer have
any funds."
She reminded Rotarians that
the Orange County delegation to
Sacramento had been successful
winning legislation forming a
new Transportation District
separate from Los Angeles and
Ventura counties.
"There is one problem," she
said. "There is no money to go
into that special transportation
district."
She said legislation that would
allocate gasoline tax funds for
highway funding was strongly
opposed by the Legislature's
Democratic leadership and Gov·
ernor Brown.
The assemblywoman said the
state not only bas failed to keep
up with growing transport.ation
needs, but has fallen behind in
maintenance efforts.
Administration policies de·
signed to move the traveler out
or his car and into some sort of
alternative transportation have
eroded funding once available
for completion of authorized
freeways, she charged.
"For example. the Corona del
Mar Freeway, which was a $4.6
million project, is now more
than a $10 ~Ilion project."
She noted, ·'The transport.a·
lion program has literally come
to a standstill in Orange
County."
Reagan lwme eyed
by Coast realtor
A Huntington Beach realtor
says be ls willing to buy Preli·
dent Reagan's Pacmc Palisades
home foe its full asking price -
$1.9 million -and wants to see
It uaed in a community service-
type function.
John W. Saunders, 39, said be
mailed hil formal bid Tuesday
nitbt after readina newspaper
accounts tellinl that the Preli·
dent•' home, on tbe market
slnce January. sUll bu not been
sold.
A spokesman for Coldwell
Banker, which it haadlln1 the
home sale, Hid the firm wu
Newport fire men
battle grue blaze
Newport Beaeb ftrtllpten
wen IUIDIDCllDed at DOOll 1Gda7
to batde • .,. .. ftn ..., .....
teneeU• ol lltla StrMt .... MoarOriaA,.._
Aew41&i to ldial ...,.U, DO atrueturw..,. lnvotm lD tbe nr..
I l
awaitinl receipt of Saunders' of-
fer in today's mall.
Saunders sald he bas not seen
the Reagan bome lo penon,
thou1h be bas viewed photo-
1raphl of It.
He said be bas aaalened'
ne10Uatiooa ol lbe saJe t.o one ot
bis auoclates. clalmln1 be
becomes "too emotJonally ID·
volved" when a penooal home
pW'cbue la involved.
Tb• Reapn bom• .. cl•cribed
a1 a 5,000-aquare·foot resldlnN
with 11 rooma lDcludllll line
bedrooma, MrVanta' quanen·, r::I, redwood "-ell and a sweep.
1 view ol the coaaWne.
A Coldwell Banker offlclaJ
said otberl b .. e espreaaMd ID·
tere1t ID the property, t.boulb DO
otben bave olfend UM fuJf Mk·
lnl price.
Sa ....... Mid be bu DO~= to Ii H I.a the llHl•D
penciMl.ly, 1f tM tale '9 ODID•
pl9'4Ml He N6d bit would Mft to ............. ~ •I" uas! comm..atJ ...... taat ..ad -d.llturtt •Ul1'GIUl4lac Nlldea· UaJ~.
1-
SKIMMING ALONG Malt Clark. 19. of
Newport Beach does a little skimboarding al
Delly ............ " Lff ,...,.
the L Street beach in Newport. The weather
has given him plenty or days to practice.
Fi rms view airpo rt project
Three companies recommended to supervisors
Three firms have been recom-
mended to the Orange County
Board or Supervisors to oversee
the $75 to $100 million redevelop-
ment of John Wayne Airport.
According to a report prepared
for consideraUon by the board
next Tuesday, It ls estimated con·
strucUon management will cost
county government about
$500,000 during the first year of
the multi·year improvement pro-
gram.
It will be up to the board at the
upcoming meetln1 to decide
which of the three firms should re·
cei ve the contract.
The three are:
According lo the report to
supervisors, the final fee that wiU
be paid the firm selected must
still be ne1otiated. Funding wUI
come from the airport •·en· terprise fund" that derives its
revenue from fees chareed air
carriers and businesses that
serve f:be airport.
·•It u anticipated that lntenslve
effort will be required to prepare
and establish the management
plan and mobilize the project,··
according to the report.
The multl-mllllon airport im·
provemenl project was called for
in the airport master plan ap-
proved by supervi sors in
February.
The pjan calls for construction
or a Jarger terminal, extension oC
the jet runway, new rolldways to
link the alrport with surrounding
transportation facilities and a
parking structure.
The Improvements would
permit the airport to handle an ·
annual passenger load of 6.1
mllJlon persons, compared to the
2.5 million now served.
Mr. and Mrs . Richard P .
Hausman of Newport Beach have
given $250.000 to establish a chair
of ophthalmology at the UC Irvine
California College of Medicine.
This is the first endowed chair to
be estabUshed on the campus.
Hausman. wh o has served on
the board of trustees or the
College of Medicine since 1975.
said he hopes the endowment will
encourage others lo add to this
support to sustain the continual
advancement of eye disease re-
sear ch.
The Marilyn and Richard P.
Hau s man C hair or
Ophthalmology is being endowed
in honor of Dr. Irving H Leopold,
foundjng professor and chair or
the department of ophthalmology
at UCL
Sills win s mayor
post in Irvine
David Sills has won a year·
long mayoral term in a split
vote of the Irvine City Council.
Larry Agran, who railed in bis
attempt for the post, was the
council's unanimous choice for
mayor pro tem.
Sills' mayoral bid was sup-
ported by councilmen Art An-
thony and BiU Vardoulis. Agran
was supported by Mary Ann
Galdo.
Cou rt to test
county welfare
A controversial Oranee Cou,n.
ty Board of Supervisors' de·
claion calling for a 30·day county
residency from appllcaoll for
general relief welfare will be
tested in cou.rt next month, a
Superior Court Judie says.
The supervlsors lmpoeed the
SO·day requirement in June,
clalmlng welfare applicants
were depletina tbe county's
aeneral relief fund by cnulne
lnto Orange County to receJve
hilber monthly cbecu than they
would in their own cowaUa.
-CH2M HUJ, Inc., of Corvallil,
Ore. and Costa Mesa. They pro-
pose to associate with Airport
Facility Consultanu, of
Hawthorne New York.
Gun, knife used
in Mesa robberies
Niguel com pC)tter
' su es for r o y alties
-Hanacomb/Heery, a Jolot
venture or Hanscomb Aqoeiates
of Atlanta, Ga., and Newport
Beach. and Heery lnternatJonal,
lnc., of Atlanta and Enclno. Tbey
propoee to work wtU. .Ja,ttm
EnslMtn lnc., ot WMt eon..
and Prima Auoclaa. ol lata
Monica.
-PllMlnf Reeearft C.,., ol
WHhiQston;D.C. Mid Or ...... ID
conjunction wlU. Ototeclmlcal
Consultant. Inc., of Suta Aila,
and 0r.,e and Auoclat.-, of
lrvlne...
,
AuaUlbt. uAed a 1un Ud a Poreed lp&o lbe back room, U..
knife lD iaeparate Cotta ... clerk ran mto a restroom and
robberiel Wedll•daJ, poUN.... be1a• ICi'Mm.lDC,. pollee Hid.
ported. TIM ,..._. HooPed taoo from
Bil flnt , 1t 10 a .as., ,.., U.. cNb ,.....,. aad mow. olf
Vauctaa•a Liquor at 110 lD a~ Pinto.
Moaroria Ave. wbere a mu A .-mu controeled c..._ •••rinl dart trouen, born· at Vaa'1 Teanl1 Sboe1, ISll rtmmecl 11 ..... and • dlltJ, Harbor 81..t. at e:u p.m., PGMce
wblt• T·•lllrt tbreatened a 1akt. 'l"bl robber eaeaped WW. a
• womaa cleft .tt.h a l&r1e In.mt· 1tUI Wi'determined amoUDt OI &acrmte. . pub.
A Lafuna Nl1uel compoeer
who W1'0te the words and mUllc
to the hit aoq "Feellop " bu
fUecl a lawsuit ia Otanc• County
Superior Court to collect •.ooo
ID royalu,-rro. • teteYlalon lld·
vertl•ln• campalfn u1iq lbe t-·· Monia ltalHrmaa, al10 . t.no... .. ...... A1be"1 flied
1ult, claimill* Uiil tllll Amerlcao
SocletJ ol COaiPoMn, Autbon Md · hbliaben 1t1U Oftl ldm
ro1altlea from an Amtrlean
Telepbone and Telttrapb ad
campaltn
m a c s a s ca U 0 5 Cij 3#" • 4 0 -• 0 • 0 0 • • • • • • 4i -w • ~ ...... ..........----.··~-,-~~-.......... ---9'·•·-··-' ..... .,,.
I i
CREEPY CRAWLERS DEPT. -
Think about the worst kind of pest you
might have around your house. including
the neighbors' kid. and you probably
can't top the story being told these days
by Carol Carroll c yes. that's her real
name J of Huntington Beach.
You have sticky doors ? House
creaks in the middle of the night? Roof
leaks like a showerhead in the winter
season?
Carol Carroll can top your misery.
Her Huntington Beach abode has
~ ~'\ T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1.~~
become a favorite stopping-over place
for great. hairy. beady-eyed rats.
"Just the other night I was relaxing
in the den, watching television." she re·
called. "and this big hairy rat just went
wandering right by.
"HE OR SHE THEN drifted right on
into the c loset. We had the beast
trapped. But then we couldn't find he or
she. So we slammed the door to keep the
rat in the closet overnight. ..
And how did this t actic turn out?
"Next morning. we opened the
closet door to continue the search. But
the rat was gone. He had eaten the
closet rug. I think he was trying to make
a nest.
.. I think mavbe he was a s he ...
It was about this time that Carol
Carroll figured she needed some help in
the effort to rid her happy home of the
rat invasion.
So what did she do? She did the'
same thing a ny other good Huntington
Beach citizen would do who needs help.
She called down to city hall for one Bill
Reed. the noted public information of·
ficer for municipal government. re-
nowned as a solver of problems.
TO MAKE A LONG story at least
somewhat s horter. alas Bill Reed
couldn't solve this one at least not
right away.
The city. he noted. has no budget for
chasing down invading rats. Reed did
note to Carol Carroll that this year in
June alone. Huntington Beach has suf ·
fered a greater volume of rat invaders
than it <lid during the entire epidemic of
the Great Rat Invasion of 1978· 79.
Reed even h as rats in his own
neighborhood. So you know if be could
figure a way for the eradication. he
would. "My 13·year old son has been telling
me fOI' weeks that big rats have been
coming into our area and are spotted
tightrope-walking down the telephone
wires ... Carol Carroll said. "But I didn't
believe him until we had our closet guest
the other night."
YOU CAN UNDERSTAND why she
might have been just a touch skeptical
of a rat tale carried by a 13-year-old lad.
Thirteen-year -olds' stories have been
known to' escalate enormously between
the corner market with the video games
a nd the front door of the house
Anyway. the youngst er was ap·
parently right on ta rget this time. The
··Yikes! I got treated better than this in L.a HatJra
rats that invaded Huntington Beach
from inland places like Brea a nd La
Habra a couple of years ago also made
the trip down telephone a nd utility
wires.
EXPERTS ON RATS suggested at
the time that this means the high-wire
rats are of a hi gher intelligence than
low-level rats that scurry along gutters
and across floors.
Anyway, Carol Carroll even contact·
ed Supervisor Harriett WiPder's office
and coutctn•t get anything going on an
anti·rat progr am.
WITH NO HELP from government.
maybe we can pin the rap on the .utility
companies who own all the poles and
wires.
Something like a charge of inter-c ity
transportation of bad guys.
Bike trails planned in Mesa
System would link east side with golf course and park
Work is expected to begin in
late August on the first leg or a
bicycle traU system that even·
tually would link east Costa
Mesa with the city-owned golf
cour~e and Coun ty Regional
Park in the wes tern portion of
the city.
Laguna budgets
extra stale funds
The La1una Beach City Coun·
cil has decided to spend part or
an unexpe<:ted $197 ,000 provided
Police to hold
auction in Irvine
The Irvine Police Department
will auction 60 bicycles. mo·
peds, auto parts. jewelry. sports
e qu ipment , stereos .
lawnmowers. office equipment
and other unclaimed property
Saturday.
The auction in lhe parking lot
of Irvine City HaJl, 17200 Jam·
boree Road, Irvine, will begin at
10 a . m. The property will be
available for inspection at 9:30
a .m .
by the state and save the rest
pending studies for future city
needs.
Earlier this month the city re ·
ceived word it would have lo re·
pay $197.000 less than expe<:ted
in s tate bailout funds.
Council me mbers voted to
spend $21,000 of the money to
settle a 1977 lawsuit over utility
undergrounding in the vicinity of
Victoria Beach.
Laguna Beach was s ued by the
project contractor for additionaJ
payment for unexpected prob-
lems that allegedly arose dur·
ing the job. The city originally
denied any extra payment was
due, but city officials say a deal
has now been struck tha t is ac·
ceptable lo both sides.
Construction or the first sec-
tion. about 1,300 feel or asphalt
along the west side or Newport
Boul evard between Arlington
Avenue and Mesa Drive. was ap-
proved last week by the Orange
County Fair board.
The trail is to be finished in
about two weeks after construe·
tion starts by a private firm con·
tracting with the city at a cost of
$13,000, said Rock Miller . city
trans portation manager.
Mi lier said the first-s tage link
1s importa nt lo bicyclists who
travel between east Costa Mesa
and TeWinkle Park north of the
r air grounds.
Those bikers. he said. now
must ride a s far north as Bristol
Street arttl double back to the
p a rk be ca use o r Newpor t
Boul evard's o ne ·way traffic
lanes systems
Funds for cons truction have
been allocated through a special
stale bike trails fund. Miller
said. The city has about $100,000
accumulated in the fund.
Long-range bike trail pl ans
call for an asphalt riding path
a l ong Newport Boulevard
be tween Arlington and Fair
Drive a nd a long Fair between
Newport and Fairview Road,
Miller said.
Whiting
• project
backed
The Orange County
Pla nning Commission
included thChl restric·
tlons when It endorsed a
plan to build about •.400
h omes on t h e uo ·
d evelope d Whiting
Ranch east ol El Toro.
The 2,743·acre proper·
ty on the western s lope
of the Santa Ana Moun·
tains has worried south
county res idents and
county pl ann e rs who
have eyed possible prob·
lems associated with
traffic, fire and sewer
ser vices at the property.
Thus. the p lanning
commissioners decided
Tuesday that the county
s h ould continue close
monitoring while de·
velopment begins to
e n sur e that ser v ices
don' l becom e out or
balance.
Under conditions sug-
gested by th e com ·
mission . the county
could call a ha lt to the
develo p ment ii il
becomes a pparent that
it would put a s train on
local services.
The commissione rs
also recommended that
developers. a Wa rm ·
ington Carma Joint Ven·
Unl-Ve9a • Puch • Kawahara • DG
: Featuring
tit Volumes Sales of the best •
t ·--E ·-a
1 "' ~ •
bicycles from around the world
at real down to earth prices!
I 0 SPEEDS * 3 SPEEDS *
CRUISERS* KIDS BIKES
RENTALS
at low at $2.50 hr.
or
$I 0.00 per 24 hr. day
21 16 Newport BlvcL
Newport Beach, CA
673-5051
,.
D -I. i-• n -< n -.. , .,
0
•
tur e. shoul d participate ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jn whatever means is
finally c h osen fo r
fi na ncing a freeway
through the Foothill Cor·
ridor. which might pass
through the property
Also to ease possible
trarr.c problems. com·
missioners s uggested
that vehicle trips be
kept at a minimum Crom
the deve l o pm ent .
possibl~· through car
pooling. use of transit or
by encouraging a cer·
lain number of residents
to work a t commercia l
and industria l centers
planned for the prop·
er ly .
The Board o f
Supervisors 1s scheduled
to consider the issue on
Au~. 26.
College
• s1gnups
readied
GRAND OPENING!
Em erge ncy Survi va l Products
HOW FAMILIES CAN PREPARE
......... ,......~·~" _ .... ,~ ......... ..."" ..... ....... --_...._.. --___ .........,
--· ._.. .......................
Earthquakes
food storage and
total preparedness
S1mpter Pie" Ct, • • • ., • • .,,,..
_,,,, >-'Atf~~\( to''.,...., __,. -· ,,..._,.
j, Ct c 1 J I' I J'• -.......,. .... •;?· t ,, .. " .... ' ' ....... , •• j " ., ~·
Poly Buckets for bulk food storage
~~ ~~.l· < E arly registration for •---==========-....,o..\~ ~ .. ~ students planning to at -' q ,.
te nd SaddJeback Coll ege GRAINS in Poly Buckets ~~
in Mission Viejo this fall ThrMAR!\THONUNl ·Mlil ;i!~~ ~;1~1 ~u~ 3i~r~~ n:=:.__ H••.:~:.0::·~:·s· rnf>;,:·:::::~:::=: ... ~:':.. ~
campus librar~· • -·-' ~fk· ........... _ .. ,_ .. J • ~ltl#fl"C llD UrlfR r. J Handicapped students : ~" _, -· --,, 10 ..., _.
may register from 9 / •• -I sP&eui.s &M .. s:..!'F. 3 , ~l ThrKENWOODMIXER
a.m . lo 9:30 a.m Stu-~~ ., -;r ~ _ _ ~..., .. -7 dents whose last names ~ -" ·-,_, <'' /' · ~ -! ----
begin with A through M 75209 Springdale St. Huntington Bea ch, Ca. 92649
should sign up from 9:30 Houri, Opt>n
a .m . to 10 :15 a .m . (8fl'fll:'fl'f'Jt8oC.aAMtFadbJt} ftJ1)89S-1/~.:; 10-6Mon .. Sat.
Registration for stu·u~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ dents with last na mes
beg innin g with N
through Z will be con··
ducted from 10: 15 a.m .
to 11 a.m .
Ret urnin g stude nts
who are currently not
attending classes. but
have been enrolled in
Lh e p ast , must fil e
another application for
admission.
New students must
also fill out an applica
lion. available in the Ad·
missions Office on the
first floor of the library
IFYOU
have a service to ofrer or
goods to sell. place an ad
1n t he Daily Pilot
Classified Section
Phone 642-5678.
..
I TWO DAYS!
I SAT., & SUN., AUGUST 1 l 2 \
First llddin9 1 Starts
Promptly At
1:00 P.M.
•oth Days
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and college districts and county
~overnment than the lllllJ l'Rlt
I
•
Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml
I Ill JI l ',I 11\ Y 11 J l 'l l 1 I I '11· 1 O H /\N(,t C (>llN I r C Al lfUHNi/\ :15 CtNf5
Solo~s get Reagan inunigration plan
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -At-
torney General William French
Smllb, saying "we have lost con-
trol of our borders,'' asked
Con1ress today to enact a
Reacan administration package
of immigration-reform pro-
posals. .
"Last year, the number of
lmmlsrants lecaUy and lllegally
entering lhe United Stales
reached a lolaJ poesibly p-eat.er
than any year in our history. in-
eluding the era of unrealricted
immlsraUon," Smith told a jom&
House-Senate bearlnc u be pre-
sented the propoeals, which are
based on a Cabinet tuk force
study. 1
There were no surpriHs 1n the
measures Smith presented, all
of which had been dlsclOled dur·
log the admi:niatralion's !.nternal
debate on the iaaue.
But some of the meuures are
likely lo cause controversy.
They Include a pilot "put
worker" pro1ram, saaeUODt
aulnst employers wbo hln U·
lecal aliens and a lecaHHUon
pro1ram for some of tbe Wep1
alien• already in the United States.
President Reagan, 1n a written
statement issued wltb the pro-
posals, said dley are "~
to preserve our tradition ae:
cepUnt foreipra to our aborea,
but to accept them 1n a coo-
FOREST OF MASTS -A confusion of ships '
masts is the order of the day at Dana Point
Harbor. The Orange County Sheriff's Harbor
Patrol says there are 2,500 boats •n the water
..., .......................
at the county-owned marina and another 350
in dry dock. A harbor patrol spokesman said
there are two-year waiting lists for both
areas.
Airport readies strike plan
John Wayne facility prepares for controller walkout
BJ F&EDEIUCK 8CBOEM.EllL °' .. ......., ....... For the second time in six
weeb, officials at John Wayne
Airport are ready to implement
a flilbl cootin1ency plan that
wouJd go into effect should air
tralllc controllen go on strike.
The plan, prepared by the
Federal A viatlon Administra·
Uon, by which the controllers
* * •·
are employed, would severely
curtail service.
AirCal, for example, would
operate only 17 departures per
day compared to lbe normal 25.
Republic Airlines number of
fli1bta would drop &om 12 to
four. Frontier Airlines would be
permitted to keep lta two dally
fll&hts from Orance County,
while Western, which normally
* * * Air controllers
talks ·to resume
solid rebuff of th• teatatln
aereement reacbed on11 lloun
before a strike deeclllDe JUDe ZI.
The 'rofenloaal A1r Trame
Controllers Or1a•laatlon U ·
nOWleed •• J pereeat ol lta meat•
ben ~UM accord wit.la tile
omelataii1 ebowla1 IJ,tN
a1ailllt and 81' IW. • ...... UDkMl ....... , ROtilft
Poll bllor1Md Lewll ol &M ....
tb• tradlportatloa HefftarJ
aiald be wu ~Wd" tM coatroUen a ~ he eonaldered .. a f alr aad
equltae.&e r: nmlllt,•• aeoarcs;
lDC to an al to Lewfa,
operates two fll&hta, would tJe
forced to temporarily suspend
service.
Departure and arrival times
would be far dlfferent than cur-
rent schedules.
More than 15 percent of the
controllen reprenDted by the
ProfeulonaJ Air Traffic Con·
trollera Or1aniutlon have re·
jecled a t.entaUve contract offer
that averted a alrlke June 22.
Leaden of lbe t.ralf lc COD·
troller aroup ••Y a strike~
occur • eui.J u Monday abDald
80 percent ol the union'• mem-
bership qree to •alt out. AAy
walkout would be lD deflaee of
a federal law problblUnc aov·
ernmmt workers from atrlldna.
PATCO repreHDlt about
15,000 of tbe 11,IOO air tnmc
coatro&Mn wbo won at tbe ...
Uoa'a SDO alq)orta.
T•enty-oae eoat.roJlen are
employed at Jolla Wa1oe
AlrPort.
...... Odeliftld. dW of tbe
Oraa11 ComtJ '°""· .... todaJ tJaat tile potett.a itlill• II Id
Mini openlf dale••• .., ..
ttaft'.
He Mid, boWenr, dial la UM
pa1t lbe loeal PATCO uloa ,..,......u .. -....... tbe CODtrola.n woaJd W~ C118l.
I
trolled and orderly f ublon."
The major propoea.la, which
would require ~eu1ooal ap-
proval before takiq effect, tn:
elude:
-An experimental, two-year
guest worker program for Mex-
ican laborers which would eoa·
ble 50,000 or them to enter thla
country each year and work for
9·12 months. The prolJ'am could
be expanded after two years.
-A ftne of SSOO to Sl,000 for
employers who knowingly hire
illegal aliens, a practice which
doea not now conflict wit.b any
federal laws.
Employers could avold pros·
ecution by requiring job appU-
canta to show them two lden·
tiflcation cards and to sign a
certification that they are in the
country legally.
The president rejected a last
force recommendation that a
new Social Security card, reell-
tant to forgery, be required ol
all ·job applicants. "The ad-
ministration is explicitly op-
posed to the creation of a na-
tional identity card," Smith said
in his prepared testimony.
The task force bad recom-
mended the identity card u the
best means of enforcing any law
against hiring iUegaJ aJien.1.
Cuts face barrier
Democrats firm on Social Security stand
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Congressional plans for quick
passage of more than $85 billion
in spending cuts approved by
House and Senate negotiators
faced a new barrier today as
House Democrats threatened to
block approv al until the
minimum Social Security
~nefll program ls restored.
Tbe chairman of the House
Rules CommiUee, Rep. Richard
BoUing, D-Mo., said he is de-
termined to block final action on
the massive budget-cut package
for next year until a provision
ellminaling the $122-a -month
American
business
declines
WASHINGTON (AP )
American business productivity
feU at an annual rate ol 0.9 per·
cent lo the second quarter, a
sharp reversal of the atrong
showing earlier in fbe year. the
Labor Department reported to-
day. ·
The decline, foUowin1 a 4.3
percent gain 1n the first quarter,
was yet another indication of a
slowdown in the U.S. economy.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics attributed the
drop ln productivity to a 3.5 per-
cent decline 1n output that was
accompanied by a 2.6 percent
decrease lo hours worked from
April through June.
Productivity, which measures
how many goods and services
the private economy t>roduces in
each hour or paid working time,
declined at an annual rate of 0.4
percent in the fourth quarter of
1980. then advanced at an annual
rate of 4.3 percent from January
through March.
In the quarter e.ndlng June 30,
the Labor Department said, pro-
ductivity in all private business,
including farming, increased at
a 1.1 percent annual rate. The
agency said farm productivity
gains contributed to the in-
crease, although the Bureau of
Labor Statistics doesn 't provide
separate figures for farm pro-
ductivity.
The second quarter decline in
the non-farm business sector oc-
curred despite a strong showing
lo manufacturing, wblch reg-
lstered a 4.2 percent gain on an
annualized basis .
I
minimum retirement benefit is
dropped from a Senate-House
compromise completed on Wed-
nesday.
.. I am totally and completely
against the idea of eliminating
any benefits from people now re-
cel vlng them," Bolling told a
news conference.
Congressional leaders had
planned to put the final budget
package to a final vote in both
chambers by this weekend so
that Congress could recess for
the month of August. However,
Bolling said he is "prepared to
* * *
stay for a month" if necessary
to restore the benefit.
Bolling's committee sell the
rules on how the House would
handle the final budget package.
Other Democrats on the com-
mittee who were at the news
conference, including Minority
Leader Jim Wright of Texu,
said they fuily supported Boll-
ing.
The committee chairman not-
ed that the president promised
in hls nationwide address Mon-
day night to protect the benefits
of those now dependent on Social
<See BUDGET, Page AZ>
* * *
Paychecks 'falter'
after October 1st?
WASHINGTON CAP> -Most
Americans will notice a small in·
crease in their paychecks alter
Oct. l as a result of President
Reagan's tax-cut biU. But the big-
gest share of the individual tax re-
ductions will be phased in
gradually and will be fully effec·
tlvebyUIM.
A typical four-member family
with $20,000 income would take
home an extra $2 a week or so in
the last lS weeks of 1981. That
would be followed by larger de-
ductions in withboldin1 next July
land a final cut on July l, 1983.
All.bough the president's pro-
gram is referred to as a 25-percent
rate cut, in reality it would total
an average of about 23 percent
when fully effective on Jan. 1,
1984. Actual tax reductiona would
range rrohl 20.9 percent, for
* * *
somebody making more than
$200,000 a year, to27.l percent for
an individual with income
bet ween $5,000 and $10,000.
Here are some examplet of the
tax savings a family with two ~
earners, two pre-school children
and $30,000 in income might ex·
peel from the legislation.
Such a family now pays $3,917 a
year ln federal income taxes, as-
suming it bas average deduc-
tions, which are 23 percent of in·
come, or $6.900. The reduced lax
r ates and provisions in the bill to
cut the "marriage penally"
would drop the family 's tax
burden by $1,079 in 1984. Smaller
reductions would result in 1982
and 1983.
Assuming one spouse in the
family earns $10,000 and the other
<See AFFECT, Page Al>
* * * President basks
• • • in economic wins
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presl·
dent Reagan, trumpeting his
twin victories on budget and lax
cuts, predicted a brighter
economic future today and
declared, "America ls better off
today than she was yesterday."
Basting 10 congressional ap-
proval of the key ingredients of
bls economic package, the presi-
dent wu flying to Atlanta today
to talk about the impact ol his
pro1ram and outline a blueprint
for giving more power to the
states.
.. America is more confident
PRESIDENT FACES
TOUGH ENCORE -A4
today than she was a day ago,•'
a jubilant Reagan said. "And
economic possibilities for all
Americans are greater than
they were 24 hours ago. America
now bas an economic plan for
her future."
NuClear foes pack
The president oripnally con-
sidered the speech to the annual
meeting or the National Con-
ference of Stale Legislatures u
anolber forum to put more beat
on Congress to pass hla tu-cut
plan. Clemente hearings
By IOBN NBEDRAM ... ..., ........
Members of lbe public favor-
in1 tbe llcenaina ot Units 2 and 3
at the San Onofre Nuclear
GeneraUng Station were neither·
seen nor beard Wednesday 1n
San Clemente at a public bear-
lq conducted by the Atomic
Safety and Ucenainl Board.
Wednesday's be.,m1, held at
San Clemente Hl&h School, wu
attended by a •tandia1-room·
only crowd of about 400 nuclear
power foes.
Speaker alter apealrel' ap-
proatbed tbe podium to uk that
tbe tbree-membar llceaala1
board deny aa oPeratlnl Uttme
for tbe two eew uaJta at S-
Onofn DOW DMlinl eompletloa. Tb• aatt-11ucleir HDtlm•t
that *""'"ted tbe IMartq wu ~ ........ ., ........ ~
...... tUt held ... , at • Ju.ty
ll palllk appearHee 1-..on
beld .. &lie tame IOoltioi ••
At ttaat ~. tboM la fa90I'
of tbe llcea1la1 of tlle SH
Onofre .... beat oPPODeatl to
lbe .. _, ...... le•Yln• anti·
nuclear spokesmen few op-
portunities. to speak before the
bearing adjourned.
At the conclusion of the July 11
bearing, licensing board mem-
bers James Kelley, Ell1abelb
Johnson and Dr. Cadet Hand Jr.
decided to continue t.be seuion
to Wednesday to give foea time
to address them.
Brian Moca, a Lake Ei.i.Dore
resident, charted that Southern
CaJifomla Ed1Joa Co., majority
owner and· operator of San
Onofre, bu lax security at tbe ,
nuclear faclllcy.
•'San Onofre la extremely
vu1nerabAe to aabota1e and ter-
rorism," Moc a told board mem-
bers.
He Mid tbe averace penon it
able to obtain lnformaUon about
tbe plaata throutb public eoure. that would allow UM
auclear ltation to be damQICI
moup to r1lk public beaJtla.
II~• aald a HUbe d.tver could
enter tbe intake pipe tbroqb
wblcb ocean water ta pumped to
. cool the plant• a reactor and <lee OHOns. ra1• Al>
.Dllllil COST 1111111
Night and morning low
cloudiness. Otherwise
hazy s unshine through
Friday. Highs in low 70s at
the beaches to low 80s in·
land. Lows tonight 60 to 65.
111101 TODAY
11111
I
•
Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml
I Ill 1 I l ',I 11\ Y 11 J l 'I l 1 I I '11· 1 OH/\N(.t l (>t lN I ' <.AL If OHNll\ :15 Ct NfS
Solo~s get Reagan immigration plan
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -At-
torney General William French
Smith, saying "we have lost con-
trol of our borders,'' asked
Con1ress today to enact a
Rea1an administration package
of immigration-reform pro-
posals. . "Last year, the number of
lmmlsrants le1ally and illegally
entering lhe United Stales
reached a lolaJ possibly areater
than any year lo our history. in-
cludlng the era of unrestricted
immisraUon," Smith told a Jomt
House-Senate bearinl u be pre-
sented the proposals, which are
baaed on a Cabinet wk force
study. 1
There were no 1urpriH1 1n the
measures Smith presented, all
of which bad been dlsclOled dm-·
log the adminiatration'a internal
debate on the issue.
But some of the meuures are
likely lo cause controversy.
They Include a pilot "peat
worker" pro1ram, 1aaeUOD1 aulnst employers wbo bin U·
le1al aliens and a le1•HHHon
pro1ram for some of the Weca1
aliens already in the United
States.
President Reagan, In a written
statement issued with the pro-
posals, said tbey are "~
to preserve our tradlUon Ii.
cepliq foreipra to our abonl,
but to accept them 1n a COD·
FOREST OF MASTS -A confusion or ships'
masts is the order of the day at Dana Point
Harbor. The Orange County Sheriff's Harbor
Patrol says there are 2,500 boats 'n the water
..., ........................
at the county-owned marina and another 350
in dry dock. A harbor patrol spokesman said
there are two-year waiting lis ts for both
areas.
Airport readies strike plan
John Wayne facility prepares for controller walkout
BJ F&EDUICK 8CBOEM.EllL °' .. ....., .......
For the second time in six
weeks, officials at John Wayne
Airport are ready to implement
a flilbl contingency plan that
wouJd go into effect should air
traffic controllen go on strike.
The plan, prepared by the
Federal A via lion Administra-
tion, by which the controllers
* * •·
are employed, would severely
curlail service.
AirCal, for example, would
operate ooly 17 departures per
day compared to the normal 25.
Republic Airlines number of
fli1hts would drop trom 12 to
four. Frontier Airlines would be
permitted to keep its two daily
fllthls from Orante County,
whlle Western, wblcb normally
* * * Air controllers
talks ·to resume
10Hd rebuff of lb• teotatln
a1reement reacbed oaJy bourl
before a strike deeclllDe IUM 21.
The 'rolenloaal Alr Trame
Controller• Or1aalaatlon U · DOWlced •. J pereeat of its meat•
ben ~UM aceord wit.II tile omctataUy ellowln1 11,tN
a1a1mt and ae tor. ...... UiakMl pneMttiDt Rotilrt
Poll lalor1Md Lewll of &M ....
tb• truaportatloa teeretarJ
said M wu ~ted" IM
coatroUert • ~
he considered ••a f•h: ••• equltar.&e :n••.•• ~
lnl to an al to LeWla.
operates two ru1hta, would be
forced to temporarily suspend
service.
Departure and arrival Umea
would be far different than cur-
rent schedules.
More than 15 percent of the
controllera reprennted by the
Profeulooal Air Traffic Con-
lrollera Or1aniutlon have re-
jected a tentaUve contract offer
that averted a alrike lune 22.
Leaden of the tralf ic COD·
troller aroup 1ay a 1b1ke ~
occur aa earlY u Monday .-ad
80 percent ol the union'• mem-
bership qree to •alt out. AAy
walkout would bl lD deflaDee of
a federal law problblllnl IOV·
ernmmt worten from •lrlldftl.
PATCO reprHeDtt about
15,000 of tbe 11,IOO ur tnmc
coatroUen wbo wort at tbe U ·
Uoa '1 SDO aiJl)orta,
Twenty-one eoatrollen are
employed at Jolla th1ee A1rPoft.
• ..,.. Odmftld. dW of ta..
Oraa11 ComtJ '°""· .... todaJ tllat tlile potpttal ante II mit
Mini openlf dale•ld .., bit
ttarr.
I
trolled and orderly f uhlon."
Tbe major propoeala, which
would requlre cqnareulooal ap-
proval before tatinl effect, lil·
elude:
-An experimental, two-year
aueat worker program for Mex-
ican laborers which would ena·
ble 50,000 of them to enter lb1a
country each year and work for
9-12 moo\hs. Tbe proP"am could
be expanded after two years.
-A ftne of SSOO to Sl,000 for
employers who k:nowtn1ly hire
illeeal allena, a practice which
does not now confiict with any
federal laws.
Employers could avoid pros-
ecuUon by requiring job appli-
cants to show them two Iden-
tification cards and to sign a
certification that they are in the·
country leeaUy.
The president rejected a task
force recommendation that
new Social Security card, Nill
tant to forgery, be required <
all ·job applicants. "The ac
ministration is explicitly 01
posed to the creation of a ru
tional identity card," Smith sal
in his prepared testimony.
The task force had recom
mended the identity card as lb
best means of enforcing any la'
against hiring illegal alien.a.
Cuts face barrier
Democrats firm on Social Security stand
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Congressional plans for quick
passage of more than $35 billion
in spending cuts approved by
House and Senate negotiators
raced a new barrier today as
House Democrats threatened lo
block approval until the
minimum Social Security
~nefll program ls restored.
Tbe chairman of the House
Rules Committee, Rep. Richard
Bolling, D-Mo., said he is de-
termined to block final action on
the massive budget-cut package
for next year until a provision
ellminaling the $122-a -monlh
American
business
declines
WASHINGTON (AP )
American business productivity
fell at an annual rate of 0.9 per·
cent lo the second quarter, a
sharp reversal of the 1tron1
showing earlier in fhe year, the
Labor Department reported to-
day. ·
The decline, foUowin1 a 4.3
percent gain 1n the fint quarter,
was yet another indication of a
slowdown in the U.S. economy.
The department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics attributed the
drop ln productivity to a 3.5 per-
cent decline in output that was
accompanied by a 2.6 percent
decrease ln hours worked rrom
April through June.
Productivity, which measures
bow many goods and servicet
the private economy t>roduces in
each hour of paid working time,
declined al an annual rate of 0.4
percent in the fourth quarter of
1980. then advanced at an annual
rate or 4.3 percent from January
through March.
Jn the quarter ending June 30,
the Labor Department said, pro-
ductivity in all private business,
including farming, increased at
a 1.1 percent annual rate. The
agency said farm productivity
gains contributed to the in-
crease, although the Bureau of
Labor Statistics doesn 't provide
separate figures for farm pro-
ductivity.
The second quarter decline in
the non-farm business sector oc-
curred despite a strong showing
in manufacturing, whlch reg-
lstered a 4.2 percent gain on an
annuailled basis .
'
minimum retirement benefit ls
dropped from a Senate-House
compromise completed on Wed-
nesday.
··1 am totally and completely
against the idea of eliminating
any benefits from people now re-
ceiving them," Bolling told a
news conference.
Congressional leaders had
planned to put the final budget
package to a final vote in both
chambers by this weekend so
that Congress could recess for
the month of August. However,
BolHng said he is "prepared to
* * *
stay for a month" if necessar
to restore the benefit.
Boliing's committee sets U!
rules on how the House wouJ
handle the finaJ budget pacltag•
Other Democrats on the coo
mitlee who were at the ne11
conference, including Minorit
Leader Jim Wright of Texa
said they fully supported Bo/
ing.
The committee chairman no
ed that the president promia4
in hls nationwide address Mo
day night to protect the benefi
of those now dependent on Soci
<See BUDGET, Page AZ>
* * *
Paychecks 'falter'
after October 1st?
WASHINGTON <AP> -Most
Americans will notice a small lo·
crease in their paychecks after
Oct. 1 u a result of President
Reagan's tax-cut biU. But the big-
gestshareoftbe individual tax re-
ductions will be phased in
gradually and will be fully effec-
tive by 198'.
A typical four-member family
with $20,000 income would take
home an extra $2 a week OI' so in
the Jut 13 weeks of 1981. That
would be followed by larger de-
ductions in withholding next July
1 and a flnal cul on JuJy 1, 1983.
Although the president's pro-
gram is referred to as a 25-percent
rate cut, in reality it would total
an average of about 23 percent
when fu1Jy effective on Jan. 1,
1984. Actual tax reductions would
range rrohl 20.9 percent, for
* * *
somebody making more tb1
$200,000 a year, to27.l percent t
an individual with incon
between $5,000 and $10,000.
Here are some examples of l
tax savings a family with h
earners, two pre-school chiJdr
and $30,000 in income might f
peel from the legislation.
Such a family now pays $3,91'
year ln federal income taxes. 1
suming it bas average dech
lions, which are 23 percent of
come, or $6,900. The reduced l
rates and provisions lo the bill
cut the "marriage penalt:
would drop the family's t
burden by $1,079 in 1984. Small
reductions would result in lf
and 1983.
Assuming one spouse in t
ramily earns $10,000 and the ott
<See AFFECT, Page AZ>
* * * President basks
• • • in economic wins
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Reagan, trumpeting his
twin victories on budget and tax
cuts, predicted a brighter
economic future today and
declared, "America I~ better off
today than she was yesterday.'·
Basking in congressional ap-
proval of the key ingredients of
his economic package, the presi-
dent was flying to Atlanta today
to talk about the impact of his
pro1ram and outline a blueprint
for giving more power to 1
states.
··America is more confid4
PRESIDENT FACES
TOUGH ENCORE -M
today than she was a day a~
a jubilant Reagan said. "}
economic possibilities for
Americans are greater tt
they were 24 hours ago. Amer
now bas an economic plan
her future."
NuClear foes pack
The president oripnalJy c
sidered the speech to the ann
meeting or the National C
ference of Stale Leglslalure1
anolher forum to put more h
on Congress to pass hla tu·
plan. Clemente hearings
By IOBN NBEDllAM OI .. ..., .......
Members of the public favor-
ln1 the llcenatn1ofUnits2and3
at the Saa Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station were neither·
seen nor beard Wednesday 1n
San Clemente at a public bear·
lq conducted by the Atomic
Safety and Licemlq Board.
Wednesday's he.,tn1, held at
San Clemente Hieb School, wu
attended by a 1tandln1-room-
only crowd of about 400 nuclear
powerfoea.
Speaker alter apeahl' ap-
proacbed tbe podium to * that
tile tbrH-memb.er llcenalag
board deny .. oPer•tlnl llct111e
for tbe two 8ft ua.ltt at Su
Onofre aow neartn1 eompletloa.
Tb• aatl-11ucleir 1e11tlm•t
that .... Mted tbe IMarlq WU ~ ....... ., ........ mldear
....... llljt Mid away a1 a July
ll pablk a.,,.araaee 1..uon
beld 1a aa. ...... aoo1tM11. •
At .._ ~. tboM l11 fa90r
of lb• llcea1la1 of ,... Sa.a
Onofre \mite beat °"°'*' .. to
tbe .............. le•Ylli• utJ.
nuclear spokesmen few op-
portunities. to speak before the
bearing adjourned.
At the conclusion of the July 11
bearing, licensing board mem-
bers James Kelley, Elllabelb
Johnson and Dr. Cadet Hand Jr.
decided to continue the aeu1on
to Wednesday to give foes time
to address them.
Brian Moca, a Lake Et.lnore
resident, char1ed that Southern
California Edison Co., majority
owner and· operator of Saa
Onofre, bu lax security at tbe
nuclear racillty.
•'San Onofre la e:1tremely
vulnerabAe to aabotage and ter-
rorism," Moc a told board mem·
bera.
He Mid tbe aver.,e penon it
able to obtain lnformaUon about
the plant• tbroutb public
IOUl'eet that would allow tM
nuclear ltatioo to be dam..-cl moalb to r1ak public bealtla. II~• aald 1 seuba diver could
enter tbe Intake pipe tbroqb
wbicb ocean water la pumped to
cool tbe plant'• reactor and
(lee ONOftS, Pa1e Al)
.DllfHil CllST 111111
Night and morning low
cloudiness. Otherwise
hazy s unshine through
Friday. Highs in low 70s at
the beaches to low 80s In-
land. U>ws tonight 60 to 65.
llSIDI TDllY
.
11111
--·-----------------..
• Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/Thuraday, JufY 30, 1981
Israel views attack as cease-fire *zatWri
~ TEL AVIV larae1 (AP) -Jl WM tbe most aeriolil out-lAballOD reDOrMd JOO Pat.lti·
Pollce and klbbuta mtmben break ol noience aillce larMI nluu and Lebanese killed.
combed tbe ruued J.-..Jem I.aid UM Paleltllal-..,._. to Thne ol tbe lldund tD tbe bu1
hill• today for a squad ol tbe ee.e-ftn lat PridaJ. attack w•r• heated at •
Palest.lnlan iuerrUJu wbo am· Jarael TeltvJalon Hid two Jeruulem boapltal and re·
buabed an hraell. bus and 1uerrUJu raked the bu wtt.b leued, police aaid. The pres~
wounded four people. 1ar1el aald automallc weapoaa fire Wedoee-nant woman, Deborah Arnet, re-
ll viewed the attack u a aertoul day ot,;bt aa it approacbed '1laJned 1n lntenalve care. e fire violaUon The Palestinian LlberaUon ceO~~ of the cu~altles, a 2S-MaaJeh abamlab, a kibbutl, or OraanluUoo tn Beirut claimed
Year·old prepant woman wu collective farm, el1ht miles respoMlblUty for l!'e attack, UD•
shot in tbe stomach and the northwest of Jerusalem. Tbe derlinina the PLO s vow to COO·
bullet killed ber 7·month-old un· ralden fled into the surround1n1 tlnue attacks inside Israel
bo b by doctors reported to-hills, police sald. despite lhe ceaae·fire that en~ed
d rn a ' Near the bu.s, police said they 15 days of lntenae Palestinian
afbe ambush Wednesday nllbt found a Palestinian na1 and a and Israeli sbelllns acroea t.be
followed a doJfiCht between wooden cress on which wu writ· Israeli·Lebaneae frontier and
Israeli and Syrian jets over ten. "ln Mernory of VicUma ol Israeli air and comman~ a.t·
Lebanon. Each side claimed a the Beirut Bombios.'' a ref· tacka on Palestinian poaiUona 1D
kill. but only tbe downin& ol the erence to Israel's Ju1Y. 17 bom~ Lebanon.
Syrian plane could be con-ing of Palestinian suerrllla It wu the. first PLO strike in·
firmed. headquarters in Beirut in which side Israel stnce t.be truce.
Iranians surround
embassy of French
BEIRtrr, Lebanon (AP) -An
estimated 250 demonstrators
surrounded the Frencb Em·
bassy in Tehran today and de-
manded that France extradite
ex·President Abolhaasan Bani·
Sadr.
Bani·Sadr escaped to France
Senate panel
backs Casey,
pushes probe
WASHIN GTON (AP ) -
William Casey is directing t.be
CIA today with a new b11t limit·
ed endorsement from a Senate
committee that nevertheless is
going ahead with its investiga-
tion of him.
Two days after the Senate In·
telligence Committee hired a
special counsel to run its Casey
inquiry, the panel unanimously
pronounced him not "unfit to
serve" based on what i.s now
known.
President Reagan said that
should end the matter. but the
CASEY PROBE
8 MONTHS LATE -A7
Senate panel also unanimously
agreed Wednesday lo continue
investigating the 68-year-old CIA
director, whose past business
practices and management of
the spy agency have been ques·
ti on ed.
The committee vot e came
after five hours or tesUmoney by
Casey behind closed doors. One
source called the decision "ob-
viously a compromise between
two sharply divided factions.
The beauty of lbis statement is
in the eye or t.be beholder."
Chairman Barry Goldwater,
R·Ariz., who less than a week ago called on Casey to rest111,
delivered the panel's decision to
a crowded news conference in
the Capitol Crypt. He said:
Five feared
dead in MSI
plant blast
GRANTSVILLE, Utab (AP) -
A series of three bluts rocked an
e xplosives plant today, de·
molisbing most of lbe buildlnl
and engulfing it in flames, of.
ficials said. Five workers were
thought lo be in the plant at tbe
time, aulhoriUes said.
Tbe MininS Services lnterna·
lion al plant, 20 miles west of SaJt
Lake City, was "blown away,"
according to Tooele County
Sheriff Walt Shubert.
The sheriff flew over the build·
ing tbls momln1 and said the
walls bad disintesrated. He said
be saw noalpa of life.
FamWes of plant employees
waited at the Grant.svtlle fire at.a·
Uon few word ofthelr relatives.
The f&rat blul was felt at leut
15 miles away in Tooele, bome ol
the Tooele Army Depot, where
nerve cu and other cbemfcal
warfare asenll are stored. 'lbere
wu no threat to the depot, ol·
ficialuakl.
ORA GI! COAIT Dilly P.llat
Wednesday and was eranted
asylum. (See related story Pase
A4.)
Sources in Tehran telephoned
by The Associated Presa in
Beirut estimated the number of
demonstrators at 2SO and said no
attempt was made to stonQ the
embassy during the two·bour
protest.
A spokesman for the Tehran
police said lhere were thousands
of demonstrators at the embuay
s houting, "Death to Mitter·
rand." Francois Mitterrand is
the president of France.
The spokesman, who declined
to be identified, said, "This la
only t.be beginning," and pre-
dicted demoostrators would re-
turn to the embassy in bigger
numbers Friday.
Nancy moved
by London
reception
LONDON (AP) -First lady
Nancy Reagan, who said she
cried at BritaiD's royal wedding,
ended a hectic week of socialb·
ina today and tbe lon1eat
separation from her husband in
their 29-year marriage.
Mrs . Reagan left for
Washington at noon -4 a .m.
POT -aboard a U.S. jet that
occasionally serves as Air Force
One. Before her departure, Mrs.
Reagan stopped briefly al the
U.S. Embassy to meet wives of
American diplomats and
servicemen. •
A-s she left the building,
dressed in a red suit, ahe spotteo
people waving and applauding
her from the windows of a four·
story town house across the
street. The first lady stopped
and waY'ed back, visibly moved
by the warm reception.
"They've all been so won·
derful to me," she said, her eyes
misting.
A young man called from one
of the wtndows, "Did you enjoy
your trip to London?"
' Mrs. Reagan cupped her
bands and shouted back, "It's
been delightful. I've enjoyed
everything so much."
Democrats
to bar cuts?
WASHING TON (AP> -1n an
attempt to force re1toratioo ol
the mlnlmum Social Se'curity
benefit, some House Democrat.a
are threatening to try to bold up
passase of President Reaaan's
budgetAcuttina plan.
Democrats on the Rules Com·
mtttee agreed lntorma1Jy Wed·
nesday to seek a separate vote
on the minimum benefit bef~
the House con.siden the budlet
pac1ta1e negotiated by Hou.ae-
Senate confereea.
Notina that Rea1an prom.lied
to #protect the beneflta of thoM now dependent on Social Secwi·
l)', Rules Cb.al.rm an Rlcbard
Bolllnc, D·Mo., 1aid, "The onlJ
way to make an boaeat man ol
bJm ll to knodt out that pro-
vlaloo ol t.be coa.ferace report.''
Thomae P. Haley MAINOfflCE ,,_ -°"""•-"""•on-
Ro'*1 N WMd ,,..._.
~ch .. I P, Hervey ----~ l.. Key Schultz o..e.o·~
Kenneth N GoddlfCI Jr. ~ow-
Thoma A Murphlne ....
krwd lch11lmtn c:..-
Ctwtel H. Looe ..............
C.0.A. ...... ......
U0 WHI ... S4 , C-ta Mfta, CA
Mell ... ,_ ... tM. C•ll Mew, CA tN»
C9-Yrlfll' tttl OrMtt c .... l'\lllllt!Wllt C~ Ht MWt , • ..,. llhttl••t-..i11or1a1 ,.. .. ,.. or tO•
w•rllH.,,....t llfftlfl lfll• W r 90f-H Wllll0\11
"'9C lal """"tt!Oll ti Cot!YTWl!ll -t
From Page A1
ONOFRE • • •
place a bomb t.bat would cause
sufficient damage to induce the
plant to overheat.
The Lake Elalnore resident
also said the lwo·mile air space
restriction around San Onofre is
not being enforced, which could
lead to an attack similar to the
Israeli raid on an Iraqi reactor.
However, Edison spokesman
Dave Barron said plant security
ls strictly enforced by both
Edison personnel and M Pa Crom
the Camp Pendleton Marine
base , on which the nuclear
facility is located.
•'There are a series of barriers
in the intake system that strain
out seaweed and other debris,"
Barron said. ••And even if some·
one were to plant a bomb,
which is highly unlikely, we
would simply s hut down the
plant before we lost cooling
water.
Barron added that San Onofre
bas an emergency cooling water
reservoir on the plant site that
c ould also be used in an
emergency.
John Erickson, a San
Clemente senior citizen, said
"nuclear powe r is the most
dangerous and undemocratic
thing the government has ever
foi sted off on the American
public.•·
•'The location of San Onofre is
in complete disregard for the
safety of the people that live in
the area," Erickson said. "The
placement of those plants is
postulated on the theory that a
nuclear accident could never
happen."
Val Rodriguez. who said he wa s a L o ng Beach
longshoreman. asked the liceoa·
ing panel if the public wouJd be
issued protective suits that
would protect them from rad.ia·
lion, similar to the issuance of
gas masks to England's popula··
lion during World War II.
"After all," Rodriguez said,
"if all or us are gone who will
pay for lbe clean"p?"
Boxing
promoter
indicted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
32·counl felony indictment was
banded down today accusing
boxing promoter Harold
Rossfields Smith and two others
of conspiring to defraud Wells
Fargo Bank out of more than $21
million.
Also named in the indictment
were L. Ben Lewia, an officer of
Wells Farao Bank and Sammie
M arahall, a former loan officer
at the bank who later worked
with Smith at Muhammad Ali
Professional Sport.a Inc. A second separate indictment
accused Wella Fargo branch
manaser Gene Kawakami of one
count of misapplying $175,000 in
bank funds ln April 1979.
The federal grand jury indict·
ment accuses Lewis, Smith and
Marshall of conaplrinS to "em
beule, abstract, purloin and
wilfuUy milapply and cause tbe
em benlement, abstraction.
purloinins and wUfull mtsap·
pllcalion by ... a bank officer
employee of monies and funds
belonlW to and enll'Wlted tot.be
cuatoCiy ind care of a bank . . .
The lndlctment brousht ill tbia
mominl by Aulltant U.S. A~
torney Dean Alllaon aaya
Smith'• purpoH in the embeule-
ment wu to "establllb himself
and bit companies . . . u the
dominant boxinl promoters ill •
the United States.''
Rus8 say British
mask crises ·
MOSCOW (AP> -The Soviet
news apncy Tua accused tbe
Brit.lib ,.._. toda)' ol lrYinl to
ctlatract attentloa from Brttaln'a
economic aad political cri.MI by
•ivlDI utentlve coverage fA tM
royal W'iddinl. · JD a nport oa WedlMllday'a
wedctil ol PrlDce Cbarl" ud LU' Olma SDaDnr. Tw Nld. ··n. .,..., .. ·&M ....... fA
Lo6dml ......... wldl9 · &.
are lltil1 ....... la LI ..... ... 1rtM , ...... tttan ...
...... ..... , •• ..,. .. Lclq ..... "
'
.............
Hotue Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill hangs up the telephone after a
conversation with Pre!ident Reagan following the Howe's ap.
proval of Reagan's tax cut package. O'Neill had strongly opposed
the measure.
From Page A1
BUDGET VICTORY • • •
Security "in lhe full amount due
you."
Bolling told the news con·
ference. "The only way to make
an honest man or him is to knock
out that provision of the con·
ference report."
Tbe spending cuts approved
Wednesday would leave few
areas of American life un·
touched.
Pensioners, students, farmers,
the unemployed , c hildre n .
hos pital patients, the poor,
federal workers, veterans, mass
transit users, cities and states,
the arts and sciences -all will
feel the impact or the 1982
budget reductions Congress is
trying to finalize.
The minlmum ben efit for
Tax news
ups market
NEW YORK <AP) -The
stock market closed up today
following President Reagan's
tax.cul victory in Congress.
The Dow Jones average oC 30
industrials closed at 945.01. up
7.70 after fluctuating earlier in
the day.
Social Security recipients is
a mong the programs that would
be eliminated altogether under
the compromise package of cuts
approved by a House -Senate
conference committee. Public
service jobs under the Com·
prehensive Employment and
Training Act also would be
scrapped.
Other programs, such as food
stamps, would face spending re·
ductions as a result of tightened
eligibility standards.
Dozens of specific grant pro··
grams involving education and
health would be lumped together
into broader block grants -an"
approach intended to give states
greater control over how they
spend federal dollars.
From Page A1
AFFECT •••
$20,000, tbe family could avoid
tauUoo on an extra S500 ln 1182
and oo fl,000 ln 1983 and later
years. 1be ~eduction ll for 5 per.
cent of the eamlnss of the lower·
paid spouse next year and for 10
percent in 1ubtequeot )'e&l"I.
The marria1e penalty tn CUT·
rent law, which requires 17
million work:ln1 couplet to P9Y
more laxes than if they were
slnsle, ccell lhia couple SlU. The
new le1i1lallon would reverse
that and actually 1ive lhe couple an $84 • 'IJ)arriage bonus.•·
The Senate version of Reagan's
bill but not lhe Houae plan -
would increase tax benefit.a for
working couples or single parent.a
who pay for child care services
during working hours.
Current law provides a tax
credit -whJ ch is subtracted
direcUy from taxes owed -for 20
percent of the first $2,000 spent
each year for t.be care of a child,
or $4,000 for the care of two or
more.
For families with incomes un·
der $30,000. the bill increases the
cr edit to as much as 30 percent
The leveJ of expenditures subject
to the benefit would be raised for
all taxpayers to $2,400 for one
child and$4,800fortwoor more.
The $30,000 (amUy could get a
maximum credit of 20 percent of
$4 ,800, or $960.
Assuming the family has a
small savings account, it wouJd
lose one benefit that is in current
law. The law aUows a couple to
a void taxes on up to $400 a year in
interest. That would be repealed
atthe end ort981.
A much touted new savings in·
centive probably would not
benefit the $30,000 family at aU,
although it wouJd likely help those
in hjgber tax brackets. This is the
mi s named "all ·s avers
certificate," whJch is designed to
increase savings and build a pool
of mortgage money.
Th e intere s t on thos e
certificates would pay 70 percent
of the rate earned on one.year
Treasury certificates, which now
is in lbe 15 percent range. That
means a yield of 10.5 percent -
tax free. But to a couple in lbe
$30,000 income range, that wouJd
be less beneficial than many ot.ber
types of taxable investments
already available.
Beginning in 1984, the couple
could avoid taxes on 15 percent of
the first $3,000 interest earned
each year from any kind of invest·
ment. First, however, interest
paid for any kind of non·business
loan except a home mortgage
wouldhave tobesubtracted.
Hotel open
8 months
after fire
LAS VEGAS (AP> -Witb aU
its 2,081 guest rooms booked for
the weekend, the MGM Grand
hotel has reopened quietly -
eight months after 84 people
died there in the nation's second·
worst hotel fire.
Guest.a trickled into the lobby
Wednesday. and the sound of an
occasional slot machine jackpot
rang out in the cavernous,
almost-empty casino.
But unillte lbe Hollywood·like,
December 1973 opening, the re·
Wall Streeters were generaUy
enthusiastic about such pro·
visions in the tax proposals as a
cut in the maximum lax on
capital gains from 28 to 20 per·
cent.
But the prospective economic
impact of t.be three·step reduc·
tion in income taxes over the
next two years remained a su~
ject or controversy.
'It opening -a day ahead of
schedule -was .subdued witb
a bout 400 invited guest.a and an
occasional passerby from the Strip.
And analysts said the market
still was restrained by concern
over high interest rates and the
large borrowing plans an·
nounced by the Treasury.
BLOCKS BUDGET CUTS
Rep. Richard Bolling
One of the new features is a
computerized, $5 mUUon life·
safe ty syste m hotel officials
cl a im has made the MGM
Grand one of the safest resorts
in the world.
,_ _____ ...,.. ___ ...,..."O""'."_ ....... ____ ~·--~ ------. --. -_. --. --· -_,,._.. -·-----~-'"-:------..""'!"------------------........... --
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 A7
Senate inquiry into CIA chief six moriths late
W ASKINGTON <AP> -CIA
Director William J . Casey la not
the first official the Senate bas
confirmed in hast e and second-
euessed at leisure.
And he won't be the last.
The Senate Intelli1ence Com-
mittee ls conducting ln July the
inquiry it didn't bother to un-
dertake ln January. It has hired
a special counsel, Fred
Thompson, a veteran of the
Watergate hearings, to oversee
the investigation of Casey's busi-
ness past' and his management
of the intelligence agency now.
''I expect It to be a thorough
inquiry, but I hope it will be re-
solved in the near future,"
Thompson said.
Ironically. most of it could
have been explored and resolved
six months ago. Instead, the
same committee spent 2"'2 hours
chatting with Casey about World
War 11 espionage and the need to
strengthen the CIA. Then 1t re·
commended Casey's confirma-
tion to a Senate which approved
rum, with little discussion, and
no opposition. The vote was 95-0.
Nothing was said then about
the business dealings. although
there was plenty on the record,
some explored in earlier Senate
hearings when Casey came up
for confirmation a decade ago as
chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission. later as
undersecr etary of state for
economic affairs.
T r a nsactions that s uddenly
are deemed worthy of close
Senate scrutiny simply were ig-
nored in the CIA confirmation
proceedings . Casey. and Presi-
dent Reagan as his sponsor .
would have been better served if
the whole business had been ex-
plored then.
He almost would surely have
been confirmed anyway. The
Senate is not in the habit of re-
jecting the nominees of presi-
Neighbors fret
eyeing F-16s
CARACAS. Venezuela <AP> -Venezuela's
plans to become Latin America's first nation lo
buy the sophisticated U.S -made F -16 jet fighters
ar e s tirring some controversy here and in
neighboring countries. Guyana, Venezuela's small English-speaking
neighbor in the northeastern tip or South
America. has formally asked the U.S. State
Department to block the sale of the planes to
Venezue la. Colombia . another Venezuelan
neighbor, has expressed "concern" about the risk
of an arms race in the area.
Venezuela has border or territorial disputes
with both nations.
Some domestic opposition also has been voiced
although so far it has been low-keyed. Left-wing
Congressman Hector Perez announced that he will
s ummon a special Chamber of Deputies session lo
express his opposition to the planned purcha!ie. He
did not give the reasons for rus opposition but
another member of his party mentioned the high
cost of the planes -$13.5 million each.
Former President Carlos Andres Perez. a
leading fi g ure In the opposition Accion
Democratica Party. told reporters that the an-
nouncement by the government that il plans to buy
the planes "has caused me some concern." But he
1 refused to elaborate.
The government says the controversy is at
least premature and by all means unwarranted.
"We are not embarked in an arms race ... said
President Luis Herrera. who is a member of the
Social Christian P arty. He added that Venezuela
has "no aggressive plans" against any nation.
·'Whal we are doing is merely to renew some
obsolete equipment of our armed forces to bring it
in line with the country's needs." he said.
Al present. the Venezuelan air force's most ad-
vanced jet fighter aircraft is the French-made
Mirage-5 .
••••••••••••••••••• e PUT $1000 TO WORK AND EARN e e $2000 IN 6 MONTHS e e We are establlshmg a pool or smalJ money_ len· • e ders to assist us in the rlnal stage of completion or e
•
our chilling feature film "The Hunting Season" •
With already 4200 PAY/CABLE T.V. stations
• beggmg 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· •
• bilious movie studio here in 0 C and enjoy some e
handso~ profits for yourself both now and in the •
• future
•••••• 71 4 / 957-4088 •••••••
CONYENIEN~ DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now catry the complete COlOPl.AST hne-the
lclr&es• se111ng dtsPC>Sablf ostomy appliances in ttte
,.otld E verythong !Of cOIOStomates. •lecSlomates and
unnarv ostomate!>-"41 w.th conven.enl COlOPLAST
d<~•ty COLOPt.AS T rekablhty-plus case pack
economy Be sure to ask tor vc>ur rREE CWf ot lf'iS!GHIS-
tl'e OU()hc;a1oon lh.lt s ivst fOf ,,oo-alwayc, 1nc:lu<leS
covpons f()( fr~ samnies ,...,,..
MOULTON "-AZ.A PMA~llACY
2'165 Mouften Ptlltl~. Lafune HHlt
!*Kt to El Rtindlo Metket)
A ~ HOME HEALTH CARE ClNTtR
1 l I' I· '-\ 1 I l :'\ I I~ I ' ' \ \ 1 I; I \I
'-.\II Hll\'1 Ill\ '.I 11' \1
tJ"Tic --""'-·---_.._._. __
4enta, particularly newly elect·
ed ones like Rea1an.
Jimmy Carter ran lnto heavy
Senate orposltlon when be tried
to instal Theodore C. Sorensen as head of the CIA, but it never
went lo a vote . Sorensen
withdrew.
The Senate never has rejected
the nominee 'of a new president
NEWS ANALYSIS
ago. "Mr. Casey has cul com ers
when he considered it to be
necessary lo business profit,"
Sen. Willlam Proxmire, D-Wis.,
iald then. "He has wheeled and
dealed his way Into a personal
Panel should have checked Casey's
record at confirmation time
to the first Cabinet of his ad·
ministration. The CIA director is
not a Cabinet member. but the
job ranks at that level.
. And' if the committee really
had gone into Casey's business
record at confirmation time,
much of the controversy that
surrounds the CIA director now
would be old stuff. with little im·
pact.
It was old stuff when Casey
was confirmed. The laws uits in-
volving him as a director of a
failed New Orleans farming cor·
poratlon were filed in 1973 -and
came up briefly before the
Senate Foreign Relations Com·
rrilttee approved his nomination
to the State Department post.
Other items or contention in
his business background were on
the record when he was con·
firmed for the SEC job a decade
\
fortune, sometimes at the ex·
pen.se of rus clients ...
The controYersy over Casey's
future began with the resigna-
tion of Max Hugel as deputy
director for operations -the
agency's lop spy. When Sen.
Barry Goldwater. R-Ariz., the
Intelligen ce Committee
chairman, said he thinks Casey
should quit or be fired, he said il
was because Casey "appointed
an inexperienced man'' to that
sensitive position.
It was nol inexperience that
did in Hugel : il was the dis·
closure that two former as-
sociates had accused him of im-
proper business dealings. But
for that. Hugel presumably still
would be al the CIA , as in ex-
perienced as ever.
Reagan repeated this week his
expr ession of confidence in
Casey , hi s White House
spokesman calling the CIA chief
a distinguished public servant.
There's something familiar in
that. and in the whole episode.
Four years ago. Carter budget
director Bert Lance came under
Senate criticism. then Senate in·
vesligalion of his practices as a
banker. He had been confirmed
after a cursor y Senate inquiry.
which didn't see or even seek the
f'Bl report on his nommahon. or
the llndings of federal bank ex-
aminers .
A look al the record could
have foretold the controversy
that eventually cost L1mce his
job. At the time. two of the
senators who didn't look pro·
posed that the Senate create a
new system for non-partisan in·
vestigalion of nominees to major
positions. It was supposed to
provide ·detailed investigative
reports prior to confirmation
votes.
The two senators aren't there
any more The new system isn't
there yet
Pollution
rules
bloc k ed
RICHMOND <AP> A federal
appeals court has blocked a
series or proposed federal reg-
ul a t1ons governing industrial
water pollution for railing to
weigh costs against benefits
The 4th U S. Circuit Court or
Appeals said the Environmental
Protection Agency had ignored
the intent of Congres~ an draw-
ing up the regulations .
Neither EPA nor indus try of·
ficials were immediately ava1la·
ble for comment ·
I a 0 •••••••• ••
I
N Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, ;July 30, 1981
City letulers' meet
tackled real issues
fo'or the second straight year.
dtv council m e mber s from
Newport Beach and Costa Mes a
got together ror an evening of
dining and socializing .
But something differ ent hap·
pened this year The city leaders
got down to some serious talking
und they d iscussed some impor-
tunt issues
This came in contrast to last
,·car 's sess ion in which council
members took a ~t·wport Harbor
cruise. d ined at t he Balboa Bav
Club and staved awav from the
issues It was an evening or lots
of frosting and very li,llle cake.
This vear. the council mem·
her s touched on Jolin Wa y ne
Airport. the possiblt' extension of
L'nivt>rsitv Dn\'l'. fireworks con·
trot and ·an automi1 t1c aid paC't
hetween the t\\o c1ttes· fire de
partments
The re were agreements. dis
a g r ee m e nts and . som etimes.
str ong words. In s hort. the meet
ing Sl'cmed to be a success.
Of 1mmed1<.1te importance
was the suggestion that the
neighboring c 1t1 es push their
n•spect1 ve fire departments to
complete a n automatic response
pact.
The need for this was un-
d erscored this year when a man
h ad a heart attack during a
public hearing in Costa Mesa.
Those al the m eetlng. recalling
that a Newport fire station was
nearby , ca ll ed Newport
paramedics for help. The calle r
was told to call Cost a Mesa in -
stead .
The airport issue. of course.
1s crucial in Ne wport. Council
m e mbe r s fr o m both cities
seem ed to realize that it is in the
best interest of both cities to seek
major road improvements
around the airport.
University Drive. which now
deadends on either s ide of the
L'pper ~ewport Bay. is of im
portance to both citi es. It 1s vita l
t hat a decision be m ade either to
kill the project or to get moving
on it.
The joint c ouncil session
r aised important issues that
s ho uld not be dropped while wait·
m g for the next annual dinner
session to roll a round. Some con-
tinuing. action-oriented liaison
mechanism is needed
Fireworks dilemma
Probabl~ the least prcx:lucti\'e
topic discussed b~· the ~ewport
Bt>ach a nd Costa :\1esa City Coun-
<·tls in their <.1nnual 1oint session
"as that of Fourth of July
firework~. •
'.\iewpo r'\ C'ounc1l members
p <'I 1 t 1 on t' d t h c 1 r :\Jlo s <1 co u n
tl•rparh to ban the s ale of .. safe
and S<1 ne .. p~ rolec hni cs. a
mt•a sun• the :-.;cwporters ap-
Jll"O\'Cd sever<1I yc>ars ago.
How. ar gued the• :\ewporters .
ran lhl' supply of ··ct<'slructin•
cl(•nces .. be kept from reside nts
o l the oceans ide C'ommu nit ~
''hen civic organ1z<.1t1ons in
11 t•1g hbo r in g Costa '.\l e!rn sell
1 hem for export.
Cost a Mesa officials shied
:i" a\' from that onl' 0T rue . Co s l a '.\J es a w a s
plagued hy a n inordin<.1te number
of rireworks blazes this season
But council member~ nolt! thost·
fir es were caused by bottle
rockets. long outlawed in ~csa .
'.'Jor can Mesans sell or use
fir ecracker s. c herrv bombs.
torpe does o r othe r "explos ive
fi reworks .
Legal arC' s m oke bombs.
some Roman candles. sparklers
a nd a variety of s howering foun -
tains cons idered s afe whe n
h andled b~· most
Ir v ine. Huntington Beach
and the count v a lso allow thC' sale
of the s afer p~·rotech nics.
So if Newport officials feel
the need for mor e effective con -
trol of fireworks. 1t will have to
come from within The options
appear to inc lude stronger and
presumabt~· more e xpensive en
forcem ent. re-e xamination of the
ordina nce and pQssibly a s trong
program of education and control
thro ug h I he comm unit~· associa
tions
Garnes f igld unfair
Balboa Is land laundromat
11\~ ner Dante Vesp1gnani is a
I t•l low vou ha Vl' to feel a little btl
-;orn· for.
Like a number of business
o wners in Newport Be ach.
\"t•s pigna ni added to his trade b~·
bringing in SC\'l1r<.t l electronic
-.ki ll g<.1mes.
Aut for reasons that remain
h,1zy. the city opt ed to make
\"rsp1gnani get rid of his elec
trnn1c gam es. The a r gument was
lhat h is ma c hin es were a
ntusance. a police problem and
t·t1 use for late-night noise.
Wh~· his mach ines are worse
than the gam es 1n t he pizza
1oints. the liquor stor~ and the
bars around town was not ex-
plained .
Vespigna ni . following the
I 1rst leg of a court battle. was or-
dered to keep a security guard at
his laundromat during evening
•
hours to insure there wouldn't be
any rowdy behavior He complied
with the or der.
But the city pushed on. final
ly winning a court ord er that the
machines be unplugged .
What raises questions in al~
of this is that one businessman
has been s ingled out.
If ther e is a problem in
Ne wport Beach with the opera-
tion of e lectronic s kill games. the
City Counc il should deal with the
problem. not with a single in-
di \'idual.
City leaders in Hunt ington
Beac h . Fountain ValJev a nd
Laguna Beach have made 'or are
making strides in this direction
rn this case. Newport cam e
down hard on one bus inessman
without giving him a reasonable
opp o rtunity to correct env
pro blems that mig ht have ex-
is ted.
Qpm1ons expressed in the space above are those of 0lhe Daily Pilot Olner views ex
pre\'>ed on this page are those of their author s and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t
ed Addre!ts The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1Sl>O. Costa Mesa, CA 92621>. Phone (714)
b41·4311
L.M. Boyd I Thief trap
An Englishman named John W.
Fisher haa come up with what look•
as though it mlgbt be the ideal
money bag for a bank messenaer.
It's rigCed to do these thinp, if a
thief snatches it: Grab the culprit'•
hand and bold on. Blow a police whlJ-
lle. .Ftre a blank cartridge, And ex·
tend three steel arms each eight feet
lon1 to It can1. be carrieCi \broui.h a
doorway or lbrown out e ~.
In Kentucky ls a \own called "76."
There'• a "Ninety Slx" In South
Carolina, u "M " ln "Pennaylvaftla, a
"56'' ln Artanau, a "17" tn Ob1o and
a "30" in loWa.
Q. What 1\ate b.aa lbe mOlt c:olleC•
gradu.lH per,..raplta?
A ColoradO hu \hat dllllidton -
with 19.4 percent. Unless you want to
count the District or Columbia as a
state -22.6 percent. Overall, the 50
states report 14 percent.
Anot!ier of those uncommon words
ror common things Ls kerf. It's the
cut made by a knife.or saw or torch.
Q. What mov1e bas been rerun the
moat times on local TV stations?
A. "Casablanca."
The hottest game today In the
People's Republic of China 11 Frisbee
t.browlna.
That baseball s uperstar Henry
Aaron u a lad wat nol permltt.d to
play baseball on Sundays. Hit
mother, Estella, uld no.
Tltomn P. Haley
Publllhtr
0 • . ..
MANY 5~ WERE EXCiwKiD
If JalE TlE CRIMINALS WEAE
APPRrnE.NttD IN A ~SPEED
CHASE~ DONNTONN
----· -MIAMI.
....... -· -------·---~~-~.._. ________ __
Corporations hear watching
NEW YORK -It seems like a very
long time ago that a few people -not
very many -got upset when Ronald
Reagan said he really couldn't see
anything wrong with American com-
panies bribing f6reign orridals and
others to win export contracts.
It was actually only 18 months ago,
during a debate of Republican presiden-
tial candidates in Manchester, N.H.
"This so-called bribery abroad . : . "
Reagan said smilingly. making it clear
that he thought a buck was a buck and
we should get 'em anyway we could. He
was -as he Is in most things -as good
as his word, and the White House's
special trade representative, William
Brock, is now pushing for a very signifi·
cant weakening of the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act of 1977.
WHAT SEEMED jarring to some in
1980 is taken for granted in 1981. The
Reagan administration obviously
believes that the business of America is
business.
They also believe business. The gov-
ernment is now operating on the as-
sumption that corporations operate in
the public interest -it is impolite these
days lo suggest that companies shape
and shade information for their own
benefit.
The new attitude is: If American
companies say they must pay bribes to
operate overseas, then it must be true
and the laws should be changed; if
American companies say they would be
hurt by voluntary codes warning
against the misuse of baby formula,
then the government must support them
as a matter of free-trade principle; if
American agricultural corporations say
they must sell grain to the Soviet Union,
then embargos s hould be lifted, no mat-
ter what the Russians do in Afghanistan
or any place else; if American oil com-
panies say that they must have higher
and higher revenues to support new
domestic exploration, then the govern-
--~·
RICHARD RllVIS 1'i -,,
ment should cheer them on. even if it
happens to notice that those revenues
are being used to buy up old companies
rather than to find new oiL
HISTORY, HOWEVER, is not on
Reagan's side this time. History does
indicate that healthy. profitable cor ·
porations are in the public interest. But
t h at does not m ean corporations
necessarily act in the public interest.
Often they do, but when that happens,
it's a happy coincide nce of their own
private inter est and the needs and de-
sires of the general public.
If you follow the public-inter est
rhetoric heard around Washington these
days to its logical conclusion, you would
believe that Mobil Oil is in the business
of presenting uplifting public television
a nd thoughtful. disinter ested public-
s e r vice m essages o n news paper
editorial pages.
P rofit -making corporations are. in
fact. the best mechanis m people have
yet devised for the production of goods
and services. But they exist to serve
themselves, to produce profit for their
owners, few or m any. Their owners or
m a nagers may be moral or immoral.
T he corporations are amoral, which is
one of the reasons that governments
have always felt compelled to watch
them. It could ver y well be in a corpora-
tion 's interest. for instance, lo use 12·
year-olds in coal mines. Governments
have tended to decide that sort of thing
is not necessarily in the public interest.
That's the point. Business has to be
watched. Every minute. President
Reagan and his people are undoubtedly
right in encouraging corporations and
are probably right in their feeling that
regulation of commerce has gone too
far. But to let business and bus inessmen
do whatever is in the corporate interest
could lead the country and the com-
panies into a trap.
The current merger mania is an ex-
am pie of that trap. Given the apparent
freedom of the moment. rich companies
Mobil and the other oil producers
a m ong them are rushing ahead to
buy any vulnerable smaller companies
they can spot.
WHAT IF THE mergers s ucceed and
the mania continues -if the govern-
ment just sits back and lets it happen.
One possible and frightening result is
the creation of economic units so big
and powerful that it will almost always
be in the public interest to protect and
preserve them What government -
conservative or li beral -could allow a
combination, say. of Exxon and Du
Pont to go out of business, no matter
how badly managed it might be?
Reagan's ideas of separating govern-
m ent and business could actually bind
the m together forever .
Drivers must recognize moped rights
To the Editor:
This is in response to the editorial in
the July 22 edition of the Daily Pilot re-
garding moped registration, and also to
pres ent my views on mopeds vs.
automobiles.
I agree that it's fair for mopeds to be
licensed, and I we lcome it. Maybe
moped registration will decrease the
MAILBOX
underage riders who have little or no
knowledge of the rules of the road and
regard the moped as nothing more than
a fast bike.
I realize that mopeds have not been
around long, and many motorists have
reservations about sharing the road
with mopeds. A program Is needed that
would educate both car drivers and
moped riders u to the rules, Umita·
lions, and restrictions or mopeds. A vis-
ible and informative way of informing
people if mopeds are soon to be more
common on frequenUy trafficked public
roads.
RIGIR NOW, the moped is my main
mode or transportation. I am very
familiar with unnerved motorists
changing lanes quickly when they 1l1ht
me, or gtving me dirty looks when I
must chan1e lanes. Some even tty to
·get their frustrations e>ut on me, either
by bonklna wildly as they pua me ar
keeping close on my tail. I am well
aware of many motorlata' lack of
familiarity with mopeds, and I certain·
ly drive defensively. I have no cbotce -
my moped la hardly a tnatdi tor big
Cad1Uacs or turbo Porsche&. It mopeds are lo be reptered with
the OMV and thus •h•re tbe roads with
cars, vans, and trucka1 it'a Ume the
aforementioned vebiclea are very
a•are of us and a_re prepared lo drive
in the presence of mopeds.
LORJ ENGLISH
'Creative land use'
To the Editor:
Some sua-Uons for dec"aalns tM
densltJ ca tM ~81nnine r,roJed tn
Newport Beech mJlbt taclude •creative
tand UH." For lnatance:
-A eemetery for all the unowa
loldlen who IO braHb defended Ulillt
a.lOborbooda from lbe de•elOfer.'• ...... -... ,...., ............... ..,.
1ro•ncl •••lpmMt ••• ••IU·•H
-
headstones attractively designed for the
walking dead or wounded.
-PERHAPS A CH URCH site for the
developer to commune with God so he is
certain to carry out His will.
Japanese gardens to offer tran-
quility between oil wells, compressor
stations. industrial complexes and park·
ing structures.
A fish hatchery or bird sanctuary
to aid the ailing species in the bay and
in the air . who will need to adapt to less
restrictive standards of chemical runoff
and air pollution for survival.
A necessary esc ... pe route. A sub-
marine base would do, as land traffic
would surely be so impacted that such
an "unsightly" alternative is logical.
How a bout a bulb farm or a holly
farm ? When food becomes our only
priority, we could eat daffodils and hol-
ly, carefully leavin g the bulbs and ber·
ries, however.
And for a last resort, an airport. After
all, when all else is impacted, what dif·
ference would it make if we were deaf?
BARBARA COPE
Fair problems
To the Editor:
I'd like to ask why there wasn't more
negative publicity given to the Orange
County Fait this year. I feeJ the lack of
stterlffs patrolHng the ralr caused a lot
or the serious incidents that occurred in
the fair. Some of them were reported. l
d.idn 't feel ther e was enough editorial
apace ctven to the parUcuJar problem
10 that maybe next year there won't be
such a cause ror problems there.
SHERYL NICHOLS
Puz~led
To the EdJtor:
I hear \he City or Newport Beach and
the Irvine Company tell WI about de·
tailed traffic surveys and Ellla and then
the county supervisors and MWT)' Cabl•
talk about cteclbela and I read about
nitroua ox.ide n1ures.
• LtUtrt /rorn rtodtr1 or1 wtfcomt. Tiu nghl to condma,. lcUer1 to /U spact or
ehm1natt llbtl is rtstrvtd lilltrt o/ lOO word• or lt u t.11111 bf gtun prtfnencf All
/tUn1 mu.st 1ncl1'dc liQ?'Oli.re aJld moating
Oddreu belt nam11 mo~ b. tlilhlwld °" ,,.
4uul I/ IUJ/ICltnl rNtOll It oppart"I.
PHl'l/ """' ""' bf ptablilhd IAllefl ~ bf ttl'f1hotttd to ta_.. NorM cMCf plloM
h•bff of dw tOfllrtbtiaor,,.... be Oltlfft /or wn,..._,..~
I r ead about a ll the mitigating
m easures that are being done and have
been done to m ake things 0 . K These
are very complicated and impossible to
understand. They seem to say every-
thing is being done and everything is
fine.
Whal I can understand is what hap-
pens when l drive Coast Highway, when
I'm trying to talk when a plane goes
over or when 1 try to see or breathe the
air on so m any days of the year . Can
the newspapers help us to know what to
do about all lhis?
MRS. HAROLD DAWES
We must be rich
To the Edit.or:
I was simply bug-eyed when the Koll
Company and the Irvine Company told
the city how much money they would
gel from each hotel Jnd office building
they allowed them to build.
I can hard.iy contain myself as I drive
past Koll Center and Newport Center
and count all t he large commercial
buildings. We must have a very rich
city -more money than we can
possibly ever use!
Can you imagine how rich New York
and San Francisco must be?
KEITH LATCH
Round Robin
To the Ed.it.or:
It seems to me that Irvine's proposed
expansion for Newport Center. and its
compromise promise of improvements
t.o the city's aeneral traffic problenu.
are just exactly the problems Its ex-
pa nalon proaram wlll generate. A
"Round Robin" situation!
WUI the quality of llf e in Newport
Beach really be Improved?
FRANCES OANNON
Much ap*>11U1e ror thole who cleaned
up lb• bay and harbor .,... over lbe
weellmd: and man.y boot for tboM who
left t.be toaa oltrub. J .V.
I '
-..,-..---~·-·--·--------· -
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981 N
Dow Jones Final
UP 7.70
CLOSING FIGURE 945.01
~'f." ~ .. ~ ~~ ~ WhatJapan
can show us
Concluswn of a two-part &eru&.
No other industrialized nation's population is ag-
ing as rapidly as Japan's -and thus. a glance at how
this economic superpower is meeting the same
challenge developing in the United States might
leach us a lot.
A first step Japa n is taking is to push back the
ma ndatory retirement age at which most workers
must lea\le their companies from 55 lo 60 and by
1 985, th e ~ Ja panese gov-
e rn menl wi ll
legally require ~ -«
the older retire-~..;
m e n t age . ..~-..-.-•--------~Jt~r~tm~~f!~~~ SYlVll PORTIR
a r e yo ung er
tha n ours reflects practices left over Crom previous
eras when life expectancy in this nation was much
shorter than it now is. Now Japan's life expectancy is
longer than ours I
A second step J apan 1s laking is lo make another
career for a retiree a commonplace development.
This second career usually is a less important, lower-
paying job than the first position. But the fact that
the job chain is extended gives an entirely different
meaning to retirement, a meaning much different
than wha t leaving a company has in,tbis country.
Of course, it's not all that simple for a retiree to find a second job that will be as emotionally and
financially satisfactory.
It is an accepted aspect of Japanese society that
its citizens behave both within their corporations and
within their economy at large as though they were
operating within a big family. This persona l, in·
slinctivc approach differs markedly from the more
impersonal. objective way in which our country
views corporations and the economy in general.
It is another. accepted aspect that the Japanese
be lieve people function better both as citizens and as
workers when they feel part of a "family," in which
li fe time e m ploymen t is taken for g ranted and
em ployees are paid salaries on the basis of age and
years of service.
Still. despite reputed special reverence for the
elder ly, senior corporation executives fa vor hiring
the youn~ and the over-55 may find 1t tough to get
that second career. A young worker, for instance,
may be able lo choose from two to three job offers,
while an over·55 worker may ha ve to compete with 5
to 1 O of his peers for one job.
Many compa nies don't want to hire old er
workers because they believe that they are less pro·
ducti,)le and harder to train. Also, under the country's
seniority salary system. employees gel an automatic
raise for ever y year in ser vice -meaning the
younger a company's work force. the lower its labor
costs. Unlike the United States. Japan bas no Jaw
prohibiting discrimination on the basis of a ge
<anyway. we at least have a law>
The real reason some firms let employees who
are "retired" stay on the payroll at lower salarie; is
to meet their social obli gations to older worl<ers
while keeping down payroll costs.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
UH .... ,... L.-.ore.. t WynMlnt l7!4 2 CwE l.4Pf 17~ + ... a AVX Cp 22¥.t + !¥. 4 K•ll ... Incl 11V. + ... S l urlngt Ind 22\11 • '"' i ~lmor • 21 .. + '"" F~ • • "' 21Yo • '"' 2Yo + "" n ,.r•J •vo • " •V. • "" ~J u:'~ ~. 2"' ,tt ! .. H '"""' ,,. .. 1lfm.:e' It + I ,,....., "'
l
~. Up t .S Up 1 ...
Up a.a Up U Up 7.1 Up •. t Up 6.7 Up 6.6 Up 6.J Up U
VP S.t Up u Up U Up f.4 utl SA Ut U
METALS
Nl[W VORK IAPI -5.-t Mftfltn'-
mel .. prlut t-y. c....,..,..._ c.fU • pownd, U.S. IHllM-
Uert1. i...M a Clfflb • ....._
&Jee •"' Ceftl••,....., ....... ,... Tie U .IMtMMalt W.-c.,...i .. 1-.
Al1 .. 8-l 7MICAIMS •,......, NY *"-" tc1t.•.-r "-· "9.._ .. tO.• ir.., ... , N y
SILVER
I !
-·-----~------~--~-----------------,.-------------------.................................. ..
~·· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 30, 1981
,.,. . .,.,....
Prince Charles· bride Diana. the new Princess of
Wales. t00re coral silk dress and matching hat as
royal couple rode toward Waterloo Station m Um-
don on way to honeymoon at Br()(ldlands
Royal wedding
cost $2 million
LONDON <AP> -From $40,000 for the cake
and breakfast to $10,000 for the bridesmaids' cos·
tumes. the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady
Diana Spencer was one of the most expensive in
history costing an estimated S2 million, Buck-
ingham Palace officials say.
The huge bill, which included everything from
the cost of security and renting St. Paul's
Cathedral to printing wedding programs for the
conf{regation, is being shared by British tax-
payers, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Charles.
According to published reports and palace of-
ficials. these were among the major costs:
-$600,000 for security.
$100,000 for decorations, Clowers and bar·
riers along the wedding procession route from
Buckingham Palace to St. Paul's Cathedral.
-$100.000 for a pre-wedding reception Mon-
day.
-$40,000 for the wedding breakfast and cake.
-$300.000 for a two-week honeymoon cruise on t~e royal yacht Britlania.
-$60,000 for Diana's sapphire and diamond
enga gement ring.
$10,000 for the five bndesmaids' and two
pages' costumes.
The costs are not limited to the taxpayers and
r oyal famil y. Britain's two major television
networks spent $1.36 m illion between them oo cov-
ering the wedding They are locked in a battle lo
win the nation's TV ratings.
* * * * * *
300 wedding
gifts received
LONDON CAP> Prince Charles and the new
Princess of Wales have received all 300 wedding
gifts Crom a list she drew up, the bride said in a
BBC television interview.
The former Lady Diana Spencer let it. slip that
the items came from Thomas Goode In Mayfair
and the General Trading Co. in Chelsea. both royal
provisioriers by appointment to the queen.
The gifts included Royal Worcester china in
the Evesham pattern, a gourmet barbecue. patio
ch a irs and a pair of Crown Staffords hire
cockatoos. Gifts a lso poured in from other
quarters.
Nancy Reagan brought over an engraved
Steuben glass bowl from the United States.
Part interest in an oil well near Holdenville.
Okla .. came from Oklahoma oil millionaire
Wyman Fraley. who is about to open an office in
Britain for offshore drilling.
The NationaJ Association of Goldsmiths sent a
necklace and earrings of sapphire set on yellow
and gold feathers. emble m of the Prince of Wales.
The bride gave her husband a d iamond·
studded gold picture frame to hold his favorite
wedding photo. Hi s gift to her was not known.
For cold nights, the Sedgemoor Distrlct Coun·
cil in Somerset gave the couple a ton or lo<?ally pro-
duced peat lo fuel the fire al their new home at
Highgrove in western England.
I I
!Heat sensors
save boaters
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Three men who
ere lost at -sea are safe today thank• to a new
eat-sensing device that led rescuers through the
og to the hull or their slnldn& boat, officials said.
A Coast Guard helicopter with an electronic
amera device attached to its nose zeroed in on
e stranded trio 16 miles orr the cout or Santa
arbara about 11 :50 p.m. Tuesday, Coast Guard
pokesman Andy Vllutls sald.
The Forward Lookin1 Infrared Sensor located
hristopher Early, Mike Hoyt and Frank Saaer,
11 in their late 2na, suHertnc from second 1ta1e
ypotbermia with body temperatures below 95
egreee. The men bad aent out a diatreas 1l1nal at
0:34 p.m . advising that their 32·foot fl1hin1
e11el, the Blind Faith, was 1lntlng faat, VUutla
aid.
"A combination of mechanlcal failures occur-
in& over a short period ol time resulted ln the
nalne compartment rtoodln1,.. reported the
pok,aman. FLJ R, wblch works much like mluile
1uldance systems, projects an Im•••. onto a moait.or placed on tbe helicopter'• cockpit, or ln
1fhe aft Hdlon where a ere. member CH monitor
lt.
'''l'bole men would have been in U.. water,
iAC four foot IWtllS, much looter U Wt bad
• to..-. the old way of trylq to ptns*nt tbelr
alioft,'' ..Sd VUutla.
"The HDIOI', wblcb .. much more pow..tul
u tM bUiliU eye, baa two lkhidt of vlliall,"
Vl ... Mid. "It c• aee ln rqular prilpcji'tklU,
Mil allo can m.pify three tlmt1.
•'It would bave takea mudi. mucb JGD1er to
..... ~ without l'LIR."
I
Diana becomes privileged princess
~
LONDON <AP> When Prince Charles placed
the rl.n1 on Lady Diana Spencer's finger, It 1ave
her the riaht to s hare with his titles and rights.
Crom Prince Of Wales to Lord or lhe Isles, from a
soatskin tit.be paid by Cornish farmers to millions
In real estate income. Diana has become one of the most pr1vileat:d
women on Earth as Princess of Wales.
Princess Diana shares the prince's titles and
positions as Duke ot Cornwall, Earl of Chester,
Duke of Rothesay, Earl of Carrick, Baron of Ren·
Crew Lord of the Is les and Great Steward of
Scotiand. She aJso will share privileges and pre·
rogalives dating back centuries.
If and when Charles succeeds his mother,
Queen Elizabeth 11, Diana will become Queen or
Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and of
Aus tralia, Canada, New Zealand, Jamaica, the
Bahamas, Barbados. Fiji, Grenada, Mauritius,
Papua New Gulnea, St. Lucia. St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.
As queen , Di a na would not share her
husband's powers as king. The royaJ functions
these days are essentially ceremonial anyway, the
monarch deferring to the government on matters
of state. But Diana, as matriarch of a model fami·
ly. could nonetheless have a great impact on
British life.
As Duchess of Cornwall, Diana will share in
the dues the tenants have offered the duke for 750
years, Including a goatskin, a paJr of gilt s purs, a
salmon spear and a pound of pepper.
The duchy also is entitled to any whales
beached on its shores and cargoes of any wrecked
ships a right the duke has had lillle chance to
exercise recently.
She will benefit from the income provided by
the duchy's 128,000 acres. one of Brlt~ln's lar1est
estates. Prince Charles receives the equivalent of
more than $1 million from the estate, half of which
he returns to the treasury in lieu of laxes.
The duchy's estates, scattered across
southwest England. include dozens or farms and
homes, Dartmoor Prison, the Scilly Isles. 11,000
acres of ri verbeds. 70,000 acres of mineral rights,
London's oval cricket ground and a packet of Lon·
don real estate valued at more than $200 million.
Diana ts unlikely lo share officially in the
management of the duchy's estates. in which
Charles,is very active
PARKING LOT SALE
DRAWING WINNERS
to stay
In hot ....
30-gallon water heater
with energy HYlng
temperature ahut·ott.
11411
40 ,.t ...... 124.ee
so .. 1. ••••. 114.•
for 1 gllltenlng finish
Rally crNm wax wtth eP-
ptlcater protectt and ahln"
your car with a 341 weatherproof finish. Reg.
4.39
..... ........
F.moue IMP fist •II
paint from Glidden.
8Hutlful flet flnlah
acruba olHn, 1tay1 °*' , __ Euy ....
Olean-ut).
I
&-pack Pepsi
12 oz. cans of refreshing
peps! soft drink.
69
.. delex" means .. deluxe"
for your kitchen
Delwce fauce1 by Delta
wtth water-saving dellgn.
Gleaming flnl1h. #2102.
Reg. 2e.95
go the dlstlnce, and then some
Gaeollol Plu• gaaollne ad·
dltlve 11 guaranteed to In·
er .... your mlleege up to
15%. UM one bottle per 10 1 1 A
gallon• or gaaollne. 24 01. ¥
Reg. 1.2G
..... II on tM l91w
Qoee on MaltY.drtee
qu1okly to 1 cfu,.,._
ftat ftnlttl that reeteta 11 '.! peellng. w .. dMn-
up.
1st T.E. SNELLEN, COSTA MESA
ENOUGH DUPONT PAINT TO
PAINT THE INSIDE OF YOUR
HOUSE
2nd
3rd
4th
A.C. ARFF, COSTA MESA
TOASTMASTER TOASTER OVEN OR
BLACK & DECKER V.S.R.
C. PAINES, COSTA MESA
$15.00 GIFT CERTIFICATE
J.M . .i.'!-'ELLS, COSTA MESA
S10.w GIFT CERTIFICATE
feast your eyn
on this barbeque
Dual burner propane g11 barbeque rea-
turea heavy duty construction and high-
domed lld Tank In· 2
1
91• eluded '9230 U
Reg. 393.70
~ M~HANJC ®
a new twist In drills
just breezing around
Galaxy 16" oaclllatlng fan
keeps cool air clrculatlng
In your home With heavy
base and safety grlll
#2151. Reg. 49.95.
I perfectly 'Promo' door 13-plec:e drill bit Mt from
Muter Mechanic. High
•peed Mt alzed 1116 to •;. In-ches. #M-13. Reg. 11.99 8'' Miii flnlah aluminum 15'' screen door. 30", 32" and
36" widths. Reg. 22.49
llAIN~8/llD
for eo111pl1ta co .....
Ralnblrd'a oaollletlng
1prl"klef adJUltt to cover •
amatl or larve area.
Lightweight 1nd .. ,y to
mow. f0-17. Reg. 18.M
I
J.
mlll• " pn wllll v..-..
Quick ecttno Vlgoro Sulfa•
la full of elem.mt that In-2 II duce color and ltrength to
your lawn. Reg. 4.20
' -