HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-08-12 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • • -\ ---•YPllB
WFDNES OAY AUGUS T 12. 1981
Pinocchio writes to doomed b~y, 8
He didn't know It Tuesday, but
Fransie Gerin1er's wish was
coming true.
Fransle is an 8-year-old South
African boy who may be dead by
the time he's 16 from a pre-
mature agine disease. Pinoc-
chio, the puppet who became a
real boy after wishing upon a
star, is Fransie's favorite
storybook character.
Fransie wanted to go to Dis·
neyland to meet PinocchJo, but
Atlantic
flights
• resuming
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
R eaga n administration,
bolstered by the support of
airlines and Canadian air traffic
controllers' resumed handling of
U.S. flights, appears to be
s tre ngthening its band in a
strike by 12,000 U.S. controllers.
Officials sought to restore air
traffic between Europe and the
United States to near-normal
levels today as Canadian con·
trollers ended a two-day boycott
that had cut trans·Allantic
flights to a trickle.
Dick Stafford, a Federal A via·
lion Administration spokesman,
RELATED STORY,
PHOTOS-A3, 8 3
said the key trans-Atlantic con·
trot Ct!nter near Gander, New-
foundland, reopened at 3:30 a.m.
PDT today after being closed
since 1 a.m. Tuesday.
Transport Cabada, the govern·
ment agency that operates
Canadian airports , said con-
trollers throughout Canada
agreed shortly after midnjgh&'to-
--day to resume handling nights
to and from the United States.
• '
••
Airline executives, after meet-
ing Tuesday with Transportation
Secretarv Drew Lewis, said they
staunchly support President
R&agan's handling of the
crisis and bis decision to fire the
striking controllers.
But the executives said the strike, in its 10th day, will have
far-reaching effect.S on their in-
dustry, forcing layoffs, pay cuts
and scrapping of marginal
routes. Some companies may
have to be restructured, they
said.
The end of the Canadian
boycott and of one in New
Zealand leaves only Spanish
controllers refusing to handle
flights to the United States in
s upport of the American
strikers.
But action by controllers in
other foreign countries sym-
pathetic to their American coun-
terparts could still create havoc
for international travelers.
Australian controllers, saying
U.S. skies are not safe because
of the strike, were seeking a
court injunction to stop flights
between Australia and the Unit-
ed States. That same safety
argument was used by the Cana-
dian controllers in their boycott.
Portuguese controllers have
voted a boycott beginning Satur-
day and the interoational
federation of controllers' unions
meets Thursday in Amsterdam
to discuss joint lnternationaJ ac-
tion.
(~ PLANES, Pase AZ>
Grandmother
arre ste d /or
'growing pot'
LA JOLLA (AP> -A 55-year-
old grandmother was arrested
after police discovered she was
allegedly growing marijuana in
the backyard of her home in a
f asblonable neighbol'bood.
Authorities said Tuesday they
up~ 56 mature marijuana
r.lanta, some of them 8 feet bliti.
n what they described as one of
the clty's lartest pot hauJa.
The woman with the gtvn
thumb, Jane Schlmpff, w~s
booked for lnveatl1atlon of
poaeeeloD, culUvatJon and sale
of marijuana.
''I •• Rl1)riMd to learn lt ll a ,.., to l1"0W them -t.beJ ar• bHuUful aJMI lntereatlnt
)HDU," Mn. Sehlmplf 1ald. "I
• r•allY tbou&bt that marijuana woufcl be letalbed and that I ff.~ mate 1ome mOMJ from
It 1be bad realised lb• value ol
ber beckyard crop, "I would
have done a bet*' job ol cover· ' int It up,•• she told reporlen.
..,, .
hia father. Herman Gertn1er.
couldn't afford the trip from
Orkney, South Africa.
So Fra.nsie's gettin1 the next
best thing.
A letter from Pinocchio was
mailed from Disneyland's
Character Department Tuesday.
asking Frarusie to be the ex-
puppet's pen pal.
Pinocchio got Fransie's ad· dress from an Associated Press
story that told about the South.
African boy's dlsease, pro1erta.
The letter s aid : "Dear
Franaie, The Blue Fairy toJd me
that you are one of my bluest
fans. She al.so said that you are a
real boy like me. Jiminy Cricket
(he is my official conscience>
sends his love and wants me to
make sure that you stay out of
trouble. It must be fun to Uve in
South Africa. I wish I could visit
there someday. Maybe we could
be pen pals. Here's my address:
Pinocchio, Character Depart·
ment, Disneyland, 1313 Harbor
Boulevard, Anaheim, Calif.
92803, USA.
"I am sending some pictures
of me and some of my friends.
Your pen pal, Pinocchio."
The letter should take at least
a week to reach Fransle, who
Ii ves at 22 Marlowe W eg, in the
small goldmining town with bis
parents and 10.year-old brother,
about lOS miles southwest of
Johannesburi.
Bald and emaciated, with only
40 pounds on his 3-foot-8·1ncb
frame, he has old-looking but
strong hands. He wears rubber·
soled slippers that provide soft
pad~ for his bent toes.
He has big brown eyes, bulg-
ing over a spindly nose offset by
small elephant ears, and once.
asked his 31-year-old mother
Magda, "Why do I look ao
ugly?"
"What can I say?" she sal•.
"I say, 'No, you're not ugl)'.
You're a very pretty boy'.''
His doctor, Dr. Martlnua v ..
Zyl, says the child will live to bl
16orl7.
"Victims of this disease die ot
coronary heart disease," he
said. "If he gets a coronary,
he'll die, just like that."
<See DISNEY, Pace A.%)
Gas firlllS guilty ii
J
Antitrust laws violated in additives issue
..., ,.. .... .., a-...~
BREEZING ALONG -Jim Fiala of Downey borrowed the
sail design from windsurfers and put it to .work powering his
oversized skateboard. He said he bas hit speeds up to 40
mph along the bike trail in Huntington ~each.
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
nation's four producers of lead-
based "anti-knock" gasoline ad-
ditives violated antitrust laws in
maintaining identical prices for
their products, a Federal Trade
Commission judge ruled today.
The compounds are sold to
gasoline refiners who blend
them with gasoline to increase
octane levels and prevent engine
damage from "knocking.''
Administrative law judge
Art Anthony
UJOn 't resign
lroine pos t
Irvine City Councilman Ar1
Anthony will not resign bis post
as a result of his recent convic-
tion for assaulting his wife.
Anthony issued a written
statement before the start of
Tuesday's council meeting say·
ing that be decided to stay on
after speaking with about 70 peo-
ple and evaluating about a dozen
unsolicited comments he'd re-
ceived.
"Discounting the opinions of
those who are my political ad-
versaries, the thoughts I've
heard and read are almost
unanimous that I should serve
out t.b1s term, which ends ln July
1982," Anthony wrote.
''This p ublic sentiment.
coupled with my own desire to
futnll the obligation I assumed
when elected in 1978, has led to a
decision to complete this term of
office, if at all possible."
Anthony bas said he will not
seek re-election when bis term
runs out next June. He indicated
Tuesday he will not seek any
other elective office either.
"l have other priorities at this
moment, and none or those
priorities include public office."
he said.
We apons b an eyed
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union said Tuesday it will seek
a United Nations ban on all
weapons in outer space.
Teachers go back to school
Instructors aim to strengthen grasp of science basics
By RICHARD GREEN °'*Deify ..........
The latest skirmish in Dr. Mare Taagepera's
batUe against ill-prepared university freshmen is
being waged in a three-week science course being
taught at UC Irvine.
Thirty teachers from the Irvine Unified School
District are attending the sessions to strengthen
their grasp of basic scientific principles to be re·
layed to their elementary pupils.
Dr . Mare
Taagepera, a UCI lec-
turer and critic of an
educational system that
produces freshmen who
can't function in in·
troductory science and
math classes, opened
the course last week.
Her topics for five
d a.y s rel ate d to
chemistry and conduct·
ed simple experimenll
designed to dem ·
onstrate the process
of sclentllic inquiry.
I n this week's
phase, UCI lecturer
Franklin Potter is MARE TAAGEPERA
teacblnC phr•tcs topics
such u motion and lorces, enera,v, beat and Uaht..
ulnlaorby and electrical dnlee1.
UCI MSOeiate prufeaaor Dr. WndeU Slan.l@J
Jr. wW empbulle b6ololY -from rinlMI to
phot.olJftlhetla -in the final wea.
Dr. THgepera expects tbe. elementarr acbooJ
teacKen to aet some aorely needed conftdnce In
presenUns the aclent.lllc bMic. to tbelr 1tudeatl.
Too often they Pr'OINll throuab blah 1ebool
without ever 1etttn1 a flrm srup OD ~· ual,Ucal
prlndples required to 1ueHed aft« sraduaUoD.
Dr. Ta.,.,.ra H)'I abe diaCO\'el'9d t.bll lJal'ft
years aco ln hatroductorJ bloloSY clauea tb•
tau1bt. at UC1.
A survey she conducted involving freshmen
confirmed her suspicions that some didn't have the
educational background to allow them to compete
in collegiate science and math classes.
She visited high schools in Los Angeles and
Orange counties, taking some of her students to
their alma maters to help spread the academic
facts of life to teen-agers.
And last year Dr. Taagepera told the state
Board of Education, in no uncertain terms, that
some drastically unprepared students were run-
ning into problems,at universities and colleees.
"It's just amazing ·some of these kids are
coming to college and sWl having trouble with
percentages," Dr. Taagepera said last week.
She cites such problems as:
-Elementary, junior higb and high school
teacben who don't give enough emphasls to the
scientlflc basics.
-Insufficient counseling services.
-Poor study habill and low motivation.
-Deficient high school curricula or students
avoidina essential colleae--prepara~ry claaaes.
She hu tried to tackle the latter three through
school vislta. The present courae attacks the rtrst
problem.
Sbe ii uncertain whether abe wtu tr1 to offer
an expanded version in future summers. But abe is
sure more counea of tbil type are needed.
aeor,luma Teaford.!. t:!ltb·1rade teacher at
Stonecreelt Elementary :sc lD Irvine, a1reea.
''I'd like to know a kit more about science,"
she uld. ••A refresher course llke tbil ii Just what
I needed.''
"Thia COW'le ii a real J)Ollttlve step," aald
Dorothy Terman, ~oordinator ol Protr•m develop.
ment for tbe achoOI cliltr1d, wbo la allo 1tttln1 ln
OD tbe three-week courH. '"There are to many
problems l•= to under-prepared 1tudent.1.
Some of the ems are ~lated wttb broken
bomea1 . • ·•But aome ttudtntl, if not cbaUeqed ln hllh
1chool, Jun ••t baft the mtatal dladPlln. or the
reaaonlq powel'I Deeded fw ebll .. ~." .
~\
Ernest G. Barnes upheld 1979
FTC charges that Ethyl Corp.,
E .J. du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
PPG Industries Inc., and Nalco
Chemical Co. used unfair "an·
ticompetitive marketing pra .. -
tices" between 1974 and 1979.
Barnes said that of the 24
pric;e increases dur~ng the p e riod , the companies an·
nounced identical prices effec·
live on the same date 20 limes.
In the other four. identical
prices took effect within a day or
two of each other, he said.
No conspiracy between the
companies was alleged, but they
were charged with using prac-
tices that let each other know in
advance about price changes.
Barnes ordered the com•
panies, among other things, not
to announce price changes to the
news media until 30 days after
the changes. They also were
<See KNOCK, Page AZ)
Joh a-ward reversed
in palimony case . 1
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
state Court of Appeal has re-
versed a lower court ruling that
awarded Michelle Triola Marvin
$104,000 for rehabilitative
purposes after the breakup of
her six-year cohabitation with
actor Lee Marvin.
In a 2-1 decision Tuesday with
Justice Joan Dempsey Klein dis-
senting, Justices James A.
Cobey and Rodney Potter ruled
the rehabilitative award was not
proper under California law. But
they did not ov:errule the princi·
pie under which Ms. Marvin
sued the actor in 1972 for the
equivalent of community pro-
perty -$1 .8 million, or half the
assets be ~arned while they
lived together -even though the
couple were never married.
The onetime nightclub singer,
who contended Marvin promised
to care for her for Life. could not
be reached for comment tod~a Her attorney, Hollywood divor
expert Marvin Mitchelson, s ·
he was confident the Californ.i)
Supreme Court would overt~
the 2nd District Court of ~
peals.
However. Lee M arvin'a
lawyer, Dave Kagon, said he
was pleased "because it (the ap.-
peals court ruling) is basically
the position we'd taken. Wt
didn 't feel , under the
circumstances, that the $104,000 was justified.··
"The court said the award was
outside the issues of the case,"
said Kagon. "They said ther~
was no basis f or the re-
habilitative award in equity Ol'
law, that Ms . Marvin sustained
no damages by virtue of her liv-
ing with Lee and that Lee had
not prospered by virtue of her
detriment."
Lennon widow lived
on mushrooms
LONDON (AP) -John Len·
non's widow, Yoko Ono, said in a
British newspaper interview
published today that for three
months after the ex-Bealle's
death, she stayed in bed and ate
only chocolate cake and
mushrooms.
In a copyrighted interview by
the Daily Mirror, the ex-BeaUe's
widow was quoted as saying she
had no hatred for Lennon's con-
fessed murderer, Mark Chap-
man, who awaits sentencing for
the Dec. 8 assassination in New
York.
"It's still hard for me to take
his death in," Yoko was quoted.
••For three months afterwards I
could eat only chocolate cake
and mushrooms. What was there
to stay healthy for anyway?
"I spent nearly all or those
three months in bed."
Interviewer Ray Coleman
quoted Yoko, 48, as saying~
Laguna cops
"I don't particularly hate
person who pulled the trigger.
have strong emotions of so
and hate and resentment -
where do you put them? It's oat
like you can throw it at this ri;
thing who doesn't know what
is doing." .
In the two months after Len!
non's death, said Yoko, who w•
interviewed at the Dakota aparG
ment building outside which Mt
husband was shot, she receivel
200,000 letters of sympathy.
"For 10 years I was the de~ Now suddenly I'm an angel.
the wofld have lo lose John I
people to change their opinion
me? It's unreal. If it brou-
J ohn back, I'd rather rem
hated." she was quoted as sa
ing.
·.l~Allil CIAIT llATMI
Night, morning iow
clouds with mosUy sunny
afternoons. Lows tonitbt
Seek handl•t in 60s. Beach hJg~s Thurs-
day in low 70s, m1d-80s ln-
wi th good tan ll;;i TIDAY ..
A clean·abaven sbirtleu man
with what bis victims de1eribed
as a '· 1ood tan " robbed a
jewelry at.ore lD fAau.na Beach,
eaeapin1 wltb nearly '200 in
cash and watcbel.
Police ae.,-c:hed north Lasuna
Beach near the La1una
· Orilinall lbop at 3IO N. Coatt
aJsbway for nearly an hour
followtnl the Tueeday afternoon
robbery wit.bout spotUn1 the sus-
pect. Tbey did, bowe~ recover a I
mm automatlc b fWl, a blue
thin and scent.I tbe robber ap. panntly dltcbed beblnd tbe bull· n..aeft.-n-...
The l\lftmaa la delcrtbed u
5-f·-·· 180 poundt wttb brown
hair.
~
TIN /omJIJI with lto0 fft.
coma Ital Moe a ~ cu of Anwriomu fftlo .....,. tft.
come bracbl1, cofftpltt•
wfth .tattiC chon,.1 .. fSn
Statua Scorlftg, PO(IC All).
11111
,. .. .......,...
Look. up irt the sky: it's a bird. it's a plane .. .it's SuperSchmitz. That's how State Sen. John Schmitz.
R-Corona del Mar. characterized himself as he announced his candidacy for the U .S. Senate seat now
held by Sen . S.l. Hayakawa.
.. Schmitz' hat • nng • m
.. State senator launches bid for U.S. Senate seat
Claiming his membership in
the John Birch Society proves
h e 's a "real conservative,"
. State Sen. John Schmitz bas
launched a tentative bid to seek
a U.S. Senate seat in 1982.
The Corona del Mar resident,
standing with a caricature of
himself in a Superman costume.
made the announcement Tues·
day in Sacramento.
' Schmitz said if be does run for
the Senate seat now held by
·Republican S.I. Hayakawa, bis
wife, Mary, will seek his state
Senate seat.
His wife could not be reached
for comment.
Schmitz told reporters that he
was attracted to the crowded
Senate race because the large
field of potential candidates like-
ly will split the_Republican vote
into so many pieces that 25 to 35
percent of the primary vote
would win the nomination.
"In a Republican primary,"
the senator said, "probably the
majority aren't ready for me.
Probably one-third of the
Republicans are ready for me."
Other Republicans who've set
sights on the seat include incum·
bent Hayakawa, Reps . Pete
Mccloskey, Barry Goldwater
Jr., San Diego Mayor Pete
Wilson and President Reagan's
daughter Maureen.
On the Democratic side, likely
candidates include Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr. and former As-
sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy.
For Schmitz, this marks his
third bid for the U.S. Senate. He
withdrew from the 1976 race and
in 1980. he finished third in a
field of seven Republican can-
didates with 19 percent of the
vote.
· A spokesman from Schmitz's
Sacramento office said the de-
cision to have his wife seek the
state Senate seat came "so that
the conservative ~ause won 't
lose a seat."
Schmitz. who describes
himself as a "natural Moral Ma·
jority" candidate, said his John
Birch Society membership
should be an asset.
"You have to distinguish who
is the real conservative. So
which one is a member of the
John Birch Society? That's a
pretty good badge to tell which
o ne is the conservative and
which one is the phony,"
Schmitz said.
.SUDDEN STOP -Firemen work to extricate
Jn unwelcome auto from the Din Ho Chinese
·Restaurant in the shopping cent-er at Lake
~forest Drive and Trabuco Road in El Toro.
Dllltr ......... .., Cllert9I ~
Driver Gatno Digiuro, 80, lost control of the
car in the parking lot and crashed into the
building. No one was injured.
it/njunction denied in nudity suit
iproup argues LA County ordinance 'unconstitutional'
: LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
1federal judge bas refund to halt
,)be arrest of nude sunbathers 1 }>ending a decision on whether
'lhe Los Angeles County or·
~inance that prohibits nudity at
ublic beaches ls constitutional.
U.S. District Judge A. Wallace
ashima on Tuesday denied a
,request by the Clothing Optional
Society for a preliminary injunc·
lion blocking the arrests.
But he said be would consider
the society's request that he set
a trial date tor the constitutional
issue next week, said attorney
David Kestenbaum, one of two
American Civil Liberties
ORANGE COAST Daily Piiat
Thomas P. Hatey
~ -CNef Eaecuttvw Olltc.<
Robert N. Weed ,,_,
I Thomas A. Murphine '"; ,_
MiChHI p Harvey I ._......o.-I
L Kay Schultz
ow...-a.--\ ~'\!'c!oddard Jr.
B«natd Schulmen
c...llllr a.tee H. Loos ....,.....,...,_
C.ol A. Moore ............
CIHa"'9d edftf'tlalnt 7141642·5871
All other detNrtlMftta Ml-4321
MAINOf'f'ICE lJO WOI • .., SI., Cos•• Maw, CA
Mell ~0r .. 1 llo• 15'0, COiie Mew, CA •)U•
Copyrloh4 '"' OrM19f Coast Publl1,.l119 C-y No " .. "' •tofln, Utu"ratlQllS, tc11tor1a1 melter or ed
vert•Hmtnls rttrtln m•y o. reproduted wltrtoul l~l•I PffW'IHloll of t09yrltrtt .,,.,,.,
I a wyers representing the
society.
In denying the request for the
injunction. Tashima ruled that
the "abstention doctrine" re·
quires a federal court to
withhold judgment when a state
court is able to rule on tbe same
issue, said Deputy County
Counsel Anthony SerriteUa.
ACLU attorney Stephen
Yagman said the society will ap-
peal Tashima'• decision.
The group argued the or·
dlnance la unconstitutional
because it la too vague and com·
plex and because lt violates
freedom of speech, expression
and association. •'The maln ouroose of the
First Amendment ii to protect
the communication of ldeu,"
YJ1man said. ·•u people are
ae'eldn& to communicate \broUlb
the preHDtatlon of tbemselv•
with no ckJthlnl oo, t.be Cooatltu·
lion says they can."
NB seeks
coastal
plan delay
Newport Beach city official•
have been lnformed that °"'lr
state-mandated local coastal
plan la beaded ror trouble and
could be denied unleaa the city
agr~ lo a dozen separate con·
ditlons.
In reaction, Newport City
Council members have asked
the State Coastal Commission to
postpone this 'month's bearing
on the coastal plan.
The hearing on the plan, wblcb
the city has worked on for three
years, was scheduled in Los
Angeles for Aug. 19. Newport
council members have request·
ed the hearing be delayed until
October.
A draft report, complied by
commission planners, was
circulated in the city last week.
The planners. in the report,
recommended that the city's
coastal plan be denied.
The report cites nine problem
areas in the coastal document
including the proposed align·
ment of University Drive which
now comes to an end on either
side of the Upper Newport Bay.
Earlier this year, against the
advice of the coastal com·
mission, the city included
University Drive in the coastal
plan's circulation maps.
More recently, the council
agreed to go out to bid to find a
firm to complet.e environmental
documents on completing the
road.
Commission planners claim
that the road would have un·
sound environmental effects on
the bay.
Although the commission's
draft report asks denial of
Newport's coastal plan, com·
mission planners note the docu-
ment could be salvaged if the ci-
ty agrees to meet 12 conditions.
The list of conditions include:
-Deleting University Drive
from circulation maps.
-Developing a policy for
locating and constructing more
public restrooms.
-Asking the Orange County
Transit District for summer bus
servic e a lon g the Balboa
Peninsula.
-Developing a recreation·
serving shuttle system to serve
designated areas.
-New policies on encourag.
ing affordable housing.
Co111m1ssion planners further
suggest that the city take
another look at constructing a
pedestrian walkway from the
Balboa Pier to the Wedge.
Plans for such a walkway
were killed earlier this year
when residents complained it
would only bring problems and
more noise.
The planners also propose that
I and at the corner of Pacific
Coast Highway and Jamboree
Road, where the Irvine Com·
pany hopes to construct office
buildings, be reserved for
"recreational and marine com·
mercial use."
,. .. ...._...
Steven Wallaert f rightJ. president of PATCO Local 291 in Norfolk.
Va .. amves shackled at U.S court in Alezandria with unidentified
m'!'rshal. Wallaert made a successful plea to be released from his
1arl term for re/usmg to work dunng the air controllers strike
From Page A1
PLANES AIRBORNE • • •
The Federal Aviation Ad ·
ministration is seeking ways to
ensure service on overseas
flights in the event Portuguese
controllers carry out a threat to
begin blocking a trans-Atlantic
route over the Azores.
The protest by the Canadian
controllers had resulted in
scores of cancellations and de·
lays of eight to 10 hours in those
flights that were able to depart.
Thousands of passengers were
stranded at many European
airports .
Flights normally going over
Gander were rerouted to a new
east-west route just south of
Canadian air space. The new
route. however. could handle on·
ly four planes an hour. a fifth of
the normal traffic load during
peak periods.
There was little activity Tues·
day from the F rofessional Air
Traffic Controllers Organiza·
tion, although the union w® a
victory of sorts in U.S. District
Court in Washington.
Judge Harold Greene reduced
a fine of S4.75 million be had ten·
tatively imposed against tbe un·
ion and said the controller could
not be penalized for refusing to
work after they had been fired.
From Page A1
DISNEY • ••
When Fransie was a year old.
his hair began to fall out and he
failed to develop fatty tissue.
The visits to specialists began.
"My aim is to make him hap·
py and let him enjoy bis life for
as long as he's here for us," said
his father. "That's all I care
about."
The Pinocchio letter was read
to The Associated Press by a
worker in the Character Depart·
ment who wanted to remain un·
identified.
He reduced the fine to $750,000,
the amount originally imposed
for the first two days of the
strike.
A federal judge in New York
City, however, threatened to ar·
rest union president Robert Poli
if he did not appear in bis
courtroom today. Judge Thomas
Platt. who fined t he union
Sl00.000 an hour after the strike
began, wants to know where the
union's money is so it can pay
the fine.
A lawyer for the union said
Poli is expected to appear before
Platt today.
From Page A1
KNOCK • • •
forbidden from using a pricing
formula that systematically
matches a competitor 's price.
Barnes also ordered them not
to use "most-favored nation"
clauses in contracts that prom·
ised c ustomers they will
always pay the lowest price ex-
tended to any other customer.
The FTC had said Ethyl and Du
Pont used these clauses but PPG
and Nalco used them only
minimally.
The judge also ordered the
companies to tell customers
about transportation costs when
they are included in the price.
Under the order. the companies
can allow customers to furnish
transportation for the shipment.
Barnes said the companies'
practice of giving 30 days' ad-
vance notice of price changes
and issuing press releases about
them "gives rivals an op·
portunity to respond in a way
that reduces uncertainty about
industry price levels before the
initiators' new price goes into ef·
fect."
Stay healthy, see Hawaii?
two plus $500 to one employee
and cash awards of SlOO·S600 to
others who used one day or less
leave during a six-month period.
This allowed the companies to
test the waters to see whether a
price change would last and
whether rivals would follow suit,
the judge said. He said the prac-
tice resulted in "cbiUing the
vigor of price competition." OAKLAND (AP> -Free
Hawaiian vacations for two
Alameda County employees who
use little or no sick leave are be·
ing considered by the county
supervisors.
The supervisors voted 3·1 with
one abstention Tuesday to begin
offering a free trip to Hawaii for
Another time period would be
considered for a second draw·
ing.
The board must re-approve
the proposal next week if it is to
teke effect.
The FTC said that in 1977,
domestic sales of the anti-knock
compounds totaled more than
$550 million, and that the pro-
ducts were used-in about two-
thirds of the gasoline produced,
thus contributing to the prices
paid by consumers .
TEAK COASTER SET
6ialdlM*CHltet"I
....... Wder
Ted< Salt &
Pepper Set
56.88 S4.88
Priat.tt.ctlfttln ..... , •• , ••
CRO• HARDWARE
WllTCWF
1124.,.,... Aft. ............
64~11JJ .............
h•tM•I ,_ w..t a.• H...tw ... More
COIOMA DIL MAI
I JI07 I. c..IHwr•
67J.2100 . ...... .,_.,
~All ttoree °'*' 7 dlYI 1 .._ .
Weetctlff Open Thn. Tll 8 P.M.
@D
Yasmaa 1ald that 700 aude
sunbathen have been arnat..s
at county beacbel Ulls aummer. l •
=x--e~
-
l •
. .. --···-·-·· ' . • • • f . . .. -.. .......... ··-· ' ........ .
Oranoe Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, August 12. 1981 8 * ~·
e
• ••
~ ........
Kina Juan Carlo• and hi•
wifo. Qu "' Sona, ended a M~lterrunean cruise aboard
t he royal yacht Fortuna
b tClluSe o( bad weathe r ,
palace sources said.
The king aad queen flew to
a Mediterranean island from
a French alrport at Hyeres.
Their vacation with their
three children waa to con·
tinue there
Juan Carlos and Queen
Soria began the cruise last
week. They s t o pped in
Sardinia two days, then
sailed for the southern cout
of France, but returned to
the Balearic Islands by plane
because or bad weather.
Nukes • nnss
d e adline
WASHINGTON <AP) -More
than a month after a deadline
requiring emergency systems to
warn the public or accidents at
nuclear power pla qts, the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
h as moved to extend the
deadline to some undecided date
in the future.
Actress Jaclyn Smith arnves in London's Heathrow Airport
Wtth her new husband. Bntish film cameraman Tony
Richm(md. The couple. who were married in Cah/om1a last
week. will sperld 10 days m Britain on honeymoon
The Dalal Lami is con-
s idering returning to bis
native Tibet after an exile of
more than 20 years. but says
the people must call him
back
As of the July 1 deadline, only
six of 48 nuclear plant sites
around the country. includlna
San Onofre near San Clemente,
had the required systems fUUy
installed, according to an NRC
staff document discussed by the
commission at a closed meetlng
Tuesday.
Chaplin widow
to remarry?
Sir Charlie Chaplin's
widow, Oona, 54 , will re-
marry sometime this year.
the London Daily Mail re-
ported.
The newspaper said the
groom will be Ame rican
screenwriter Walter Bern-
stein, 59. The couple have
been cruising recently in the
Mediterranean, the paper
said.
Lady Chaplin , who has
eight children a nd 12
grandchildren and lives in
Switzerland, is the daughter
o f th e l ate American
playwright Eugene O'NeUI.
Chaplin died Dec 25. 1977
Rita J enrette, recentl y
divorced from former U.S.
Rep. John W. Jenrette, has
been a newsmaker for some
time. but now she 'll be mak-
ing news another way. she'll
be writing it.
Mrs. Jenrette. who posed
nude for Pl ayboy magazine
this year . will be writing a
weekl y column for the
Philadelphia-based National
News Bureau.
Her first assignment fo r
the feature syndication
service will be covering the
M iss Ameri ca b ea u ty
pageant in Atlantic City,
N .J ., the week of Sept. 6.
After that, Mrs. Jenrette
"will be wri ting about
whatever her little heart de-
s ires,·• a spokesman added.
Ohio Gov . Jam es A.
Rhodes w o rries about
energy. North Carolina Gov
James 8. Hunt Jr. is con-
cerned about federal grants
to states.
But Gov. Peter T . Coleman
frets about Australian beef.
After all, a governor has dif-
ferent priorities in American
Samoa.
"l don't feel left out. T here
are bigger states, and they
have bigger problems. But
our problems are just as big
to us, .. Coleman said at the
National Governors' Associa
lion meeting in Atlantic City,
N.J.
·'What matters are the
feelings of the people inside
the country," the 46 -year-0ld
Buddhist s piritual leader
said 1n Denver . "l am en-
couraged that the Chinese
leaders have publicly ad·
milled their own faults for
past events in Tibet and have
a pol.og i zed T h in gs are
changing for the positive.''
The Dalai Lama went into
exile in 1959, nine years after
a Chinese invasion of his
mountainous country. He has
li ved in Dharamsala , India.
ever since. He is regarded as
the leade r of 6 mil lion
Tibetan Buddhists. and has
followers around the world.
·~-....Actor Hal Linden plays a game of cards with his daughter.
.'Vora. at New York's John F Kennedy Airport as they await de-
parture of their flight to Israel Many flights were delayed due
to impact of air controllers stnke
That document also indicated
33 of the plant sites had no part
of the system installed and 17
sites had not even ordered the
systems by the ongmal dead-
line.
NRC spokesman John Kopeck
said the commission voted 4-1 to
instruct the staff to rewrite a
November 1980 rule that set lhe
July 1 deadline.
The staff was not told to use
any specifi c new deadline in
rewriting the rule, Kopeck said,
adding it would be the staff's
responsibility to com e up with a
suitable date for consideration
by the commission.
As ouWned in the N RC's 1980
year book, the F~nal Rule on
Emergency Planning says "ad·
ministrative and physical means
are to be established by July 1.
1981 , for prompt a lerting and
notification" of the public within
a 10-mile radius of a nuclear
plant site.
Kopeck sa1d s uch systems
would consist of fixed sirens.
radio systems or trucks which
use sirens or broadcast warn·
in gs.
Richard Udell of the Critical
Mass Energy Project. a Ralph
Nader group that wrote the com·
mission on July 2 to complain
about the failure to meet the
deadJine, said one of the major
recommendations to follow the
Three Mile Is land nuclear accl·
dent was for a better system to
warn the public of danger.
"This is really the last str aw,"
Udell said. "Al the very least we
should have a clear indication of
when uWities will be required to
carry out the rule."
Storm 'Dennis' fizzles
Kopeck noted that the meeting
at which action was taken was
closed lo the public under an
NRC rule allowing such meet·
ings in cases in which enforce-
ment actions could lead to civil
penalties .
Commissioner P eter Bradford
favored enforcement action and
Commissioner Victor Gilinsky
was on vacation and not at the
m eeting , N R C s po kesman
Joseph Fouchard said. He said
Commissioners John Aheame.
Thomas Roberts and Nundo
Atlantic storm doumg r aded to tropical depression
Coasta l fore cast
Llgllt variable winds tllrou9ll
tonfgllt. Afle..-n winds west to 'to11t"-t 10 to 11 knots with J to J
foot wind waves. Soutttwest swell to J f•t. Moltl., """'Y In after,_..,
U.S. sum mary
Heevy tllunelerttorm• reatll•d
across p.srts of th• HorlhHll on
Tueldey, Wllll• mo<'e wwen encl lllunders10nns dt .. l_d from the
Great ukH to Ille mkl·All•ntlt
stem, tllnlugll tlle $outt1eas1 •ncl 10 across IN -.-rn Ptelns Into the 90tOO Roell let.. .. ,~
One penon wH killed encl "" to 10 ~ Co14 .. ,. -= were ln.l<Wwd wtwn llgflb\l"I struck • Sh••••• S•e•••~•'• Oufvdut crowdld agrkul1urel fair In Hanor.:t, rmmlJ ---=== N.Y.
Siiias .-. ,._tty wnny from t he
<efttral Plalns and Ml"'u11191 Vall..,
lo -nor1tlern llelf Of -Rockies 1,,. Allluque as 61
to the tar -· TN Paclfk Coall Amertllo 71 " ,,.., l)atcllel Of I-c-•net f09. •nc:-· St 51
Ruldet1t1 In .ovthern Nuada Ashevlll• 13 .,
beoan c-.p d IN muddy ,.,... Alfenta " 71
cauMcl 11'1 ttoocb from torret11f•I rain 41fantt Cty ., 16
MondaynigM. B•ltlmor• fl 71
Storm Dennis, wlllt ll ••• Blrmlngllrn '° n
norttl-1 Of the llland Of Bar-Blwnaro '° S7
e t mldda., a nd mo•ln 9 wnt, Bobe ,. .,
dwlncll«I T .. MI • ., from • lr•k•I BosllOll to .,
slof'm lo a tropical Oept'ntlon. 8rowMVlle " 14
For !Oda.,, tllunde"lorms were Buffalo 76 " lorecas1 from tlle southern th.-Cllarlst/ISC " n
qua~ of the Allantk Coall acrou CllarlstnWV .. ...
Ille soulllenl MIMIHlppl Valle., IMO Che-12 47
-Soulllwest. Mostly t lol.ldy '" .. , Chkago 79 51
wero '-"' from Ille Paclfk Coast Clncl,.,,.tl .. 70
tllrougll the c.ntral and northern Ctev..-79 65
Rock .... ,_,,.,.n MIUIUl9PI Valley Columllus IO ..
Into ti.-tem Groat ukH. D•l·FtW.. .. 71
Temperatu-ln the Sovtllwest's Oen..,. 74 S3
deserts wlll soer •bov• tlle 100· 0.1Mo!Ms ., " dee,... mark. Muell OI Ille rest of the Detroit IO u
nation wlll -llitlflil In ti. IOI and Duluth ,. " tos, wttll -70s from the non,,...,, F alrllenlla 67 51
Great l aku Into northern New H1rt'°'11 to " E "91and and alofog ti. P acnk Coast. H•I-91 ~
HOMIUIU ., 70
California Hwttofl '4 " 1,,.,..,. ,. ...
Jackwwlte ., n
Thero wlll be a few ~UndeOflO-'I J-62 SS
In ._,., cetlfornla tlMI eWnl"9, K•M Clty IO 57 but....,..._ fair --Is HP9Ct· usv...,. ., ..
•f tllrwell Tilvrld1y. Nltfll and lfttle Roell '2 70
,,.,.,..,... c......_._ aloflg coast. L°"'llYllle .. 71
~ .... C--, ........ In I-109 et M ....... ,, 7l
t11a b1aclles, low IO• Inland. Mloml .. 7'
OWmllMJews In ...... Mflw.._ ,. • I-... ...,. Ufl •IQIKt '"9111 111 "'-l•SlP 11 • ...... ..,..,wftlllowtlnllleto.. "•"""lie .. ..
~ Wiii llavt lligM tocs.., IO Newe>r1e-. '3 12
.. ... .. le fl Tilundoy. Lawt SS to U . Norfolll .. 7l
N.,,,.,,. -..rt ...... • .. lt1, Otlla City 77 ..
..... .. ... "" ~ ••rt o ....... .. " MIM tll .. It!. ...... 7S to IS. T-.. ~laMt ., 7S •...---r11w ... ,. ~~ " 7'
N.,._,. and c:a..«ral c.llfwllla .......... " T1
... , ..,.... ~ e""' ... low ~~ IO .,
,...,..., .......... <0Mt w191 1' ...
• ,. .. ti "*'"'"' fr1nle. Partff PIMM,Of'e ,, ...
,....., Wltwnllll -tllt _.,..,,. "..WClty .. S5
16'fTf ............ e ............. R-.. ..
RICIWMW .. n
Te mperalures Slit UM • • Seattle '3 '1 lt'-wl• '2 7S ... , .. stP·T--., " ... "' St ... Mlf'le 11 " . ...., • .. ....... " " Tutta " ,.
-~ ., "' I e ~ ....... ...., WIUllM .. .. I ,,._._.,... ' CA•&o.l ·~ ll~ClonOI~ NI "' •'fl>JI lllP9f b)' 6 l!O D "' c:all ~ ~ .. M D"' lfld-~-llbe~ .......... ., M
"""-.,., lund~llr: OD not ........ 7l ., ,_,,... ~ c:r • II\ Ollt o.e... n ..
""'°'9 1 1 111 -,our COC1Y •I .. ,_...,. ti ,.. .......... , ..... 11 .a ..,_ " ... ...... .. .,
, .... , .........
... ,,~ ....... ,., ... .......
N&ttONAl .,., .... Ht v1ce
NOA& U ' 0.fl flf (.,..., ••
8elnll " 71
B•lgradt " ..
Bertin .. 57
Brvuall n SJ
B'AIFH 70 •S
Cairo ., n
Car...s .. ..
c~n n S7
Dublfn .. JO
Fra,,.....,, •> JO
c;.,,.., • 73 ff
H•lslNll .. S7
Honv Kono to 11
J eru-., .,
Jo'tiurv 10 •1
Kiev 11 " Lima '41 57
Lit-11 ..
Londarl .. " M.Orkl " .,
Mani II '° 11
MoK-., so
New Deihl 91 12
Nicosia " 75
OSio .. lO
Paris ... " Rio 71 SS
A-.. n
S.OP ..... S1 M 51,,._.. " 11
Stockflolm 1S • Sydlwy ., • Taipei u " Tel Aviv '° ..
Toll yo • " Vlefwwl ,, .,
CALll'OaNIA ....... v ... .., • u
9allenfleld t• 12 ........ 100 "
BMumont
Bl9Beer
Bl•'-Blythe
Catallrwi
Eureka
Fresno
Lake Arrow!IM<I
Len<att..-
L0<>98Hch
LOl Angl ...
M•rYs-llle
Monnwi.
MontebetlO
Mo Mere,
Mt.WlllGn
NHdlK
OH i-Ontario
Palm5vlng1
P•-..,
Paso Rotlles
Alvef"llOt
Red BIUll
A-City
Reno
Seer-to
S.llnas
San Barnardlno S.nO-lel
San Olego
San Franc~o
S...Jow SaftllAna
Santall«bar•
Santa Cruz
S.ntaMMla
Santa Mor\lu
Slo<llllOll
Ta'-Vall..,
Thermal
Torrance Yuma
PAN AM
Acapuleo
Barbados
Bermud9
Bogota
Cur.coo
"~ GuedalaJare
GuedelOupe
Hav-
Kl .......
Montagoa..,
Mual..,,
Marlda
MnlcoCfty "'°'*,.,..., Neu.au
S.nJIMll,PA.
St, Kltta
Trlnldild
Vwa cna
..
IO
101
103
71
61
ICM ..
~
IO ..
'41 Palladino, the NRC chairman, ~ voted to extend the deadline.
E e·~::g:~~~ sd:scl~~~n~a~~ ;~~
74 plant sites met the deadline and
: another five had partial systems
.. set up for at least a five-mile ~ radius -in operation by July 1. • '4
to ., " Another four had systems fully ~ installed by Aug. 3. it said.
IO
" 71
• The 10 plant sites listed ·as now !.; having full syste ms we r e
" 105
"' Calvert Cliffs in M aryland,
: Maine Yankee in Maine, Crystal • 17 u River in Florida, McGuire in " 100 ~ North Carolina. Oconee in South
u Carolina, Hatch in Georgia, 11
" 15 : Arkans as N uc l ear One in
,. Arkansas, Cooper in Nebraska, 70 ..
" IO
" Trojan in Oregon and San ~ AOr.n•ofmrmem.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil u
7t .,
7• 65
12 7,
to • 101
11
105
,. -11 • .,
'2 tO • ..
tO
'7
11 .,
"
" n u n .... ... ,.
ti II ,, JI
17 ,.
" n tO 7S
" " ., 7l . "
" 12
7' " 100 n '° n ., n
to n • '° 7l .. n
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Gtmololli•t. AGS
THE ELIODOR?
. . what •• 0'4t?
Southern California aurf rep ort .... ... ... ._.. & ....... ...
z-' a 11 ,........,c.a ' a 12
N--1 2 I 1t
Safi Dt99t C-y • • "
CM ... tow TIMincley: l.lttte ~·
............. ...... -I t 1W
1 t 1W
1 2 SW t a SW
We're Listening •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot?
Whal don't you Ukc? Call the number below and
your' messa1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and
delivered lo the •ppropriate editor.
The same 24·hour answering service may
be used to record letters to the editor on any
topic. Mailbox contributors must include their
name and telephone number ror verifiuUon. No
circulation calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
~ ·~ ............ .... ....... ... • " n • ,.
Just as California wlnes often
win Internation al awards in
"blind" tastings in competition
with better ~nown, more ex-
pensive European wines, some
lesser-known gemstones have
proven to be very popular when
compared lo tbe c lassic
varieties. In a recent test con·
ducted by a maga&ine, people
were s ho wn 18 different
varieties of colored gemstones .
All of the stonea. were present«l
side by sldt! and people were not
told the names of the varieties.
The collection included 1uch
classic beauties as the ruby.
em erald, 11pphlr~ and topu. So
which stone p roved to be the
favorite? Th e, heltodor . . .
\bat's right, the bellodor , a love.-
ly yellow stone that ls not very
well known. Otben that ranked.
,high were t he 1reen llavortte,
the red apln al, and Ult blue
.tanaanite. All or theae were
chosen over the emer a ld•,
rublea and 11pphlres. Why? Tbe
beauttrul colou ap,..aled to
people and. without ll~
t hat they were .. 1nubbla1"
claulc, expen1lv1 ltoDll, tbeJ
simply plcked what t.MJ bed
beat. Colored fem1t0Me are
becomln1 very popular_ia
America.
AP.......,.
WANTS CLEANUP -Tom Hayden , along with other en·
vironmental activists, addressed a "toxic awareness day'!
rally outside the Capitol in Sacramento Tuesday where they
called for cleanup and 'prevention of poisonous wastes in
California .
Seized fireworks
blown up in Azusa
AZUSA (AP) -A fireball of
orange, grey and black s moke
roared hundreds of feet inlo the
sky ~ miles east of Los Angeles
and spread out in an ominous
mushroom·shaped cloud.
But it wasn't a disaster that
threatened life. A lot of precau-
tions were taken before the spfc:-
tacular explosion and blaze,·-
set by firemen -erupted.
T aking into tJM;.r own hpdf a
job that was handt!d by military
Captut eid
shark gets
new tank
SAN DIEGO CAP ) -A great
white shark that has been ln
captivity longer than any of lts
kind has been t aken from a
publi c exhibition tank and
transferred to a smaller tank
because of erratic swimmine.
Sea World officials said.
J ac k ie O 'Co nn o r .
spokeswoman at the marlne
park, said the 5t,;-foot. 100-poond
shark has shown a lack of ap-
petite while swimming in a 15-
foot deep, 14,000-gallon tank
open to public viewing, but that
was not worrying sclentisl$ as
much as the abnormal swim-
ming patterns.
"He slowed hl:1 swimming
speed some Friday, and since
then he's sometimes been a Jlttle
fas ter , sometimes a little
slower," O'Connor said. "Today,
he showed a continual loss of
swimming speed."
O'Conn or rejected the
possibility that people watchine
the s hark caused the trouble.
"We had been very careful.
restricting such things as flash
photography and loud noises,"
s he said. "But we needed him ln
an area where we could worlt
with him closely. In the s maller
holding area we can be in the
w~ter with h\!p_and treat him.::.:_
.-
explosives experts until this
year, the fi remen from several
eastern suburbs of Los Angeles
des troyed about $250,000 in
seized fireworks.
A few dozen spectactors saw
a n impressive s how som e
described as like being up close
at the detonation of an atomic
~b.
El Monte Fire Chief Charles
Masten. president or the Los
Aoseles Cou~ty ch.a pter of ~e
Cafilomia Fire Chiefs Associa-
tion. said, ''I never knew it
would burn that hot and that
fast. It's awesome.''
Masten said city and county
fir e department s wer e left
"holding the bag" following an
accident 13 months ago in San
Diego in which three military
bomb disposal experts were
killed while transferring hun-
dreds of pounds of Mexican·
made fireworks from a storage
bunker to a truck.
"The military had always
taken care of our seized
fireworks, but refused after ~t
incident because they deemed It
was too hazardous ... Masttn
said.
Covina fire officials. who caO)-
paigned against fireworks for
many years. began the dli·
cussions of how to safely destroy
confiscat ed fireworks.
Truckloads of fireworks, mall
of them seized during the F<>W1tl
or July holiday, wer e brought i>
the detonation site . A 5·by~SO
foot trench was dug, filled wiMi
explosives a nd covered wlpi
chicken wire to prevent escajle .
of' large chunks of explodi-
debris. Diesel fuel "'as pourid
on the fireworks, which included
2.5 million firecrackers. 850,°*>
bottle rockets and some gener~-
1 y leg a 1 · · s a f e a n d s a n e. ·
fireworks that a re banned in >
few communities.
The combination was lighwal
by a tlare tossed by Fire Captldn
Bill F ranklin of Azusa.
..
E""""""' Md ••dclng rings of dl•monds and
gold """ Join toOlttW In rastlng bNuty.
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
1823 NEWPORT BLVO COSTA MESA
~5 VIAAl IN THI I AMI LOCATION
' BactkAmtricarct-M•ter PHONE
I
.I
-
l
8 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wtdntsday, Augu1t 12, 1981
· -RJffiU~OO~.
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i
t
economic luck
WASHINGTON <AP ) -When
It comes to the atate of the
economy, President Reaean bas
been pretty lucky.
Inflation ls comlnt down, oil
supplies are plentiful. food
prices have stablllsed, the
economy has not collapsed un·
der the weight of record interest
NEWS ANALYSIS
rates, the dollar is almighty
overseas once again, and -at
least for now -even unemploy·
ment is on the wane.
The new president cannot
claim much credit for these
trends, which began before he
moved into the White House last
January. But he certainly can
take political advantage of
them.
When his presidency began,
Reagan said the economy was in
a mess. Seven months later. he
has noted the improvements.
The economic future already
has he)ped Reatan eeD bis con·
troversial budget and tax cuts to
Congress. The receding inflation
rate made it easier for members
of Congress to vote for a tax cut
that opponents labeled as infla·
tionary. Similarly. it was easier
to vote for cuts in food stamps
and unemployment benefits
when the jobless rate was
declining, rather than rising as
widely predicted.
The lack of an economic crisis
also has spared Reagan a major
distracUon at a time when he
was concentrating on winning
enactment of his economic pro-
posals.
Reagan's string of good luck is
something his predecessor could
have used. Instead, Jimmy
Carter seemed to be a victim of
economic misfortune.
The Iranian revolution lrit·
cered a WOl'ldwide Oil shortaee
in 1979 that sent en~rgy prices
soaring and rekindled double·
digit inllatlon in the United
States. Bad weather contributed
to higher than expected food
prices trom 1978 through 1980.
The U.S. dollar plummeted on
the foreign exchanges, forcing
Carter to rush to its aid.
Some critics suggest many of
Carter's p('Oblems were of his
own makine. His administration
might have prevented the 1879
oil shortage h•d it remained
supJ>()rtive of the late Shah of
Iran. And Carter might have
kept inflation down and the
dollar up had he held a tighter
rein on-federal spending and en·
couraged the Federal Reserve
Board to continue a tight·money
policy. ·
But s urely Carter could not be
blamed for last year's severe
summer drought and other bad
weather responsible for rising
food prices any more than
Reagan can be credited for the
mild winter weather and unex·
peeled surplus of beef cattle that
have held food prices steady
most of this year.
The mos t encouraging
economic development since
Reagan look office has been a
steady decnne in the infl ation
rate to less than 10 percent for
the first time in more than two
years. Economists attribute the
drop, which began last year .
almost exclusively to the
stabilization of energy and food
prices.
The current oil glut is mainly
due to a combination of energy
conservation by the major con·
suming nations and the decision
by Saudi Arabia, the world's
largest oil exporter , to keep pro-
duction up so that prices would
not rise.
FLOOD WARNING Signs cautioning people to seek higher
ground if a flood seems imminent line Highway 34 . which
travels throug h Big Thompson Canyon in Colorado. Five
... ~
Y!?ars ago a flash flood sent a 20-foot·high wall of water rip
pmg through the canyon, killing 139 people
Pact • on crime by Mexican youths sought
WASHINGTON <AP> -Six·
teen congressmen from four
st ates have joined in asking
Secretary of State Alexander
Haig to negotiate an agreement
wi th Mexico concerning hun·
dreds of Mexican juveniles who
cross into the United States and
commit crimes.
In the next 12 months, from
3,000 lo 6,000 juveniles will ii·
legally cross the border from
Mexico and commit numerous
crimes, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D·
Texas. said in a letter sent to
Haig on Tuesday.
In most cases, he added. U.S.
authorities ca11not prosecute the
youthful offenders.
·'In many border com ·
munities, It bas become
necessary to simply return
these juvenile offenders to the
border and release them
because of the absence of a
formal procedure for dealing
with this dilemma," Bentsen
said.
"While the Border Patrol does
handle some juvenile cases •. it is
'not spec ially trained nor
equipped to deal with the
juvenile offender under the
s ubstantive due process
guidelines mandated by the U.S.
Supreme Court.''
Many of the violations involve
states often unable to prosecute
juvenile offenders because of the
absence of documentation, he
added.
"In Texas , for example,
juveniles must be 10 to 17 years
of age to be prosecuted under
stale law. Smee these children
and young adults are illegal and
undocumented, proof of age is
difficult. if not impossible to ob·
lain."
El Paso County officers tried
to cope with the problems by
processing juvenile suspects and
then delivering them to a justice
facility across the border in Mex-
ico. But questions arose about the
legality of sending employees of a
U.S. county into Mexico. and the
pr acticewasordered stopped.
SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE
OPEN FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Frowt 10 to 9
r ..--...-
•I - -I ..... ,,
• I I I I -... , !)
MENS FASHIONS OPEN DAILY
MON. ·THURS. -10 • 6
,FRI .. SAT. -10 • 9
SUN. 11 -5
UDO MAllMA VILLAGE
C714J 675-1717
3439 VIA OPORTO, NEWPORT BEACH
EVERY
THURS.-
9PM
• AUGUST 13
HENRY &RANDON
SYMPHONY
fHturing THE
.YOUNG SINGERS
OF LYRIC OPERA
•AUGUST 20
CONNIE HAINES
with Henry
8r•ndon's
Orchestr•
VALIDATED
PARKING
PEOPLE COUNt ON US EVERY D Y FOR:
N..cl office 1uppll"f All of the 1u,.,t1 ..
from U ttoret plua Cal Stor-·1 co.,.o,...
~uerten evellebl• ot ,-ni.. on the
4oller. ,_..... Fii... Addl"I Medtlne -4
c.eh 1 .. 1 ... r Tope, S-11"1 r.,., Jeffy ..... A.,....._. ...... llonk Soles look•. ll"4en·HvfMll,.. .. oth.r ........ Stwrt Oft
oMc. fer '11.IO IM.._, of 'Ill.IOI
Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports,
and Advertised Values. Will __,
lfEADING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the ... 111 r .. 1
...
........ -. • p ... -...... --... -' . .. .,. ....... .
·~UffiU ~
. ~ . ' ' . • •t : ' ' ~ . . ' -,,. ' • .I ' • .......... . . . ... .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneedey. August 12. 1981
+w .... , + w
Cent11ry ;Freewa·y obstacle gone
LOS ANGELES CAP) -An
a1reement has been reached
between stale and fe deral
h11hway oCf\clals and an at-
torney for plaintiffs in a suit
against lhe proposed Century
Freeway, the Federal Highway
Administratlon announced.
The Was hington agreement
was concluded by federal
' highway administrat or Ray
Barnhart, California Director of
T ransportation Adriana Gian-
lurco, Gray Davis. Gov. Ed-
mund Brown's chief of staff. and
John Phillips, counsel for plain-
tiffs in the Ceder.al lawsuit which
has blocked construction for
years on the 17.2-mlle route.
Barnhart and Ms . Gianturco
were satisfied. but Phillips said
he would have to present the
agreement to his c li ents. A
federal injunction was issued in
1972, halting the freeway after
residents s ued. complain'ing
25,000 of them would be dislocat-
ed by the project.
Federal Highway Administra-
tion spokesman Dick Reilly said
in a telephone interview from
Washington that Tuesday's ten-
tative agreement provides for
construction or 3.700 units or
replacement housing.
"It prov ides ror a six-lane
freeway with two hi g h -
occupancy "diamond" lanes In
the middle exclusively for buses
and carpools, but they wiJJ be
convertible to light rail." Reilly
said "Ten bus stations which
are designed to be convertible to
r ail stations will be constructed
with park and ride lots. The sta-
tions will be at the locations pre-
viously agreed to. There will be
four freeway-to-freeway in
terchanges . . The designs
will provide for a diamond lane
connection lo the Harbor
Freeway ,''
Reilly said that if the state
elects to construct a light rail
f acllity initially, as opposed to
the diamond lane. the Federal
Highway Administration will
pay whatever it would have oon-
tri buted toward the diamond
lane.
If the plaintiffs approve It. the
agreement will be presented to
U.S. Circuit Judge Harry
Pregerson for approval
......
·~~--.. ..,,.. . -. --,.,. . ...... ""\ . -.
~-,
•'
President to sign tax cut legislation
SANTA BARBARA CAP ) -
President Reagan on Thursday
will sign legislation cutting lax
rates 25 percent over three
years and slicing $130.5 billion
from the federal budget over the
same time, his spokes man said
today.
Bul Speakes said a formal
celebration or Reagan's two COO·
gressional victories will not be
held until he ends his vacation at
his ranch near here and returns
to the White House in Sep-
tember.
Monday and Will be nown lo
M assachusells. where House
Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr
1s vacationing. for his signature.
Then it will be returned to the
While House for Vice President
George Bush's signature and
flown to the West Coast for the
president to sign Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said the president will
sign the legislation. which he
proposed and which Congress
passed with few changes. out·
doors before a bout 70 reporters
a nd photographers.
Members of Congress who
helped the president are expect-
ed to attend that event. There
will also be a separate gathering
for businessmen who lobbied for
the legislation.
Speakes said such a procedure
1~ routine.
The tax cut legislation will re-
duce individual and business
tuxes by an esti mated $749
h1 1lion through fiscal 198&. mak-
Speakes said the legislation
was received at the White House
Reputed Mafia man enters plea
LOS ANGELES (AP > -
Reputed Mafia figure Samuel
Orlando Sciortino has pleaded
innocent to a charge that he at-
tempted unsuccessfully to bribe
a federal judge, and his trial has
been set for Sept. 15
Sciortino, 62 , one of three men
with mob ties who were indicted
in the case. entered his plea this
week before U.S. District Judge
Gobert J . Kelleher.
The other defendants, Carlos
Marcello, 71 , alleged Mafia
chieftain of New Orleans, and
Philip Rizzuto, 42, also of New
Or leans, ha ve a hea ring
scheduled in that city Aug. 20.
Kelleher said they are expected
lo be returned to Los Angeles
Aug. 24 for arraignment.
when he was presiding over a
racketeering case involving
Sciortino and four other reputed
members of the Los Angeles
family of La Cosa Nostra.
The FBI reportedly tape-
recorded Sciortino discussing
plans lo give Pregerson an art
object worth $250.000 in an at-
tempt to sway the judge's opi·
nions.
The three were indicted in an
alleged plot to bribe U.S. Dis-
trict Judge Harry Pregerson
HOW FAR
YOU CAN GO FOR
$
OR LESS.
St19 ASAP FAii. THI EAST CDASI
WllHOUI WAITING.
Our new ASAP Fare lets you take off
. from Los Ange lei. International. Burbank or
Ontario to !.even Eastern citiei. ri ght away
fo r only $179 {$159 to Chicago). That·~ each
way when you buy a round trip 11ckct.
There are no other restriction~. No
11AVIL 10AMYOF1HISI ClllES:
Ch1 cagn
Bo,1on
New Y11rl/Nc111.1rl
wa,h1ng111n. I) C
PhtlJdclph111
1-1 Laudi:rJ,1lc
M1Jm1
------
advance purchase. No length of stay
requiremen1s or time deadline~. But eats
are limited and all flights arc via Denver~
And when you tly to any of thc~e seven
Eas1em ci ties, you can return from any one
of the other dties at no extra charge . For
example. you migh1 fly to New York and
ca1ch a return flight from Washington. O .C .
In addition. we'll give you First Class
for the price of Coach. Buy a f u II fare
Coach ticket on Continental or bring us
another aidine's (except World or Capitol
Airways) full fare Coach ticket to these
Eastern cities and we'll tly you First Class.
That's right, First Class. This i~ on a first
come. first served basis, so rei.ervations are
suggested.
Gotta' get back East in a hurry and
want to save money too? You can't do better
than ASAP.
CONTINENTA
EARN AND L A
St19 GI.USS 10 ANYOIHll
MAINLAND U.S. CITY.
Continental's U .S. i'> yours. Pick a city.
Any city. Now through September 15th you
can go anywhere we fl y in the mainland
U.S . for no more than $179 each way wi th a
round trip ticket. And to many ci1ie;, the
fare j, even le''·
11AVIL 10 AMY Of-111ESE ClllES: l
Alhuqucrque lmhanupnlt' Ql,l,1humn C11y I
Au,11n Kan'a' C:11y OmJhJ Ca,~r Lm•·nln Peor1J
Color.id<> Spnng' Lubbod Ph11C."n" J Dcn~cr M11lla ml/Ode"a San Anio11111
l El Pa.\o M1lv.Jul..ee Tht",nn
Gr~nd Junc11on Minn /'i1 PJul Tul'a
Hou~ton Nev. Orl<:an' W1ch11J ---
There arc some re-.tric1i on~. Ju~1 make
reservations and buy your Coach ticket
either 7 or 14 days in advance depending on
your destina1ion . You can return a~ early a'
the first Saturday or \lay as long as i.ixly
days.
And if you 'vc go1 children ages 2-11
you can show 1hem around the coun1ry for
no more than $129 each way with a round
trip ticker when accompanied by an adult.
Seats are limited. So call your travel
agent. company travel department or
Continental. And see how far $179 each
way can take you .
Fares subject 10 change without notice.
I RUNES
Deliver the llllJPllll Boys and girls 10 or older -
Call 642-4321 and apply today. lllilJ Pillt
ing 1t the largest lax t•ut in the
nation's history
The measure includes features
phasing in a permanent reduc-
lion or aboul 25 percent in
personal income tax rates over
three years. with the first step
taking effect Oct. I In addition.
s tarling in 1985. the legislation
would automatically adjust
personal taxes to somewhat off-
set inflation.
• ••
...:a_....~_..-...L._._~~=-----"-------~-·-·!
The budget meas ure will cut
planned federal spending on as-
sorted domestic programs by an
estimated $130.5 bi llion over the
next three years , the biggest
s uch package in US history.
A~Wl,...,_
GOING DRY H eat and reduced "ater h;.n·L· le ft their mark • ·1
on Shasta Lake near Jone!'> Va lit•\ The ''at er leve l ha!'> ,, 1
dropped more th<in tiS feet from tht• clam cre:-.t. leaving the '' .. , courtesy docks at tht· boat ramp high and dr~ and lim1tmg ,.,
ac·ccss to other ramps on the lake Tt·mperatures ha\"L' been 111 hitting record highs in the area· and thcrt· bl.ls ht>t•n lilllt· ac ,,:
ti\ ity at lakes ick l'ampground!-> o' .. .
Marymount graduates 3 . ,..
Three area students have received bachelor
degrees from Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles.
Ann Oetsch of Newport Beach also graduated ,h
s umma cum laude Ms . Detsch received a ,.
bachelor of arts degree in theology
Greg Svalstad of Fountain Valley has gradual-A graduate of Newport Harb<>r High School . .,1 ed summa cum laude with a bachelor of business M~ Del.sch s ays she plan!> to pursue a graduate
''
administration degree dc.•j!ree 1n th<.'Olog) " Svalstad. captain of the university's men's r4
volleyball team for three years. says he will enter James Weiler Jr . of Newport Beach received
Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena to begin a bachelor of natural science degree from the
work on a master of divinity degre:.:e:.:..· ______ ___;u:;..;.n;..;.1_ve..;..r_s_it..::.y _________________ __
SAVE BIG!
MEN'S FAMOUS MAKER
KNIT SHIRTS
Choose from a large selection of solids and
prlnts. Sizes S-M·L-XL.
Rttular
15.00 7.99
LARGE SAVltGS It OUR OTHER DEPTS.
SAVE ON LADIES SPORTSWEAR, JUNIORS,
MISSY, CllLDREN1S, HOUSEWARES &
GIFTS,
SAVE UP TO 9.51
FIRST QUALITY ...
FLORAL PRINT TOWELS
Choose from delicate floral print or bold
tropical floral print. 1n three shades on bone
background
BATH REG. 10.50-11 .00 ............ 2. 99
HAND REG. 6.50-7.00 ................ 1. 99
w ASH REG. 3.00 ........................ 1. 4 9
THICK & THIRSTY
BATH TOWELS Looped or sheared
towels in solid or
velour 1acquards
IF PERFECT 4 9 9 12.50·14.50 •
"STEMWARE BONANZA"
SAVE UP TO 13.96 ON STEMWARE
FROM COLONY AND MIKASA
Blown. etched glass stemware from Colony
Asst. patterns & sizes. Goblets, wines. saucer
and fluted champagnes & cordials.
COMPARE AT
IS.GO TO 1.00
Blown cut crystal stemware from Mikasa.
Asst patterns & sizes. Goblets. wines. and
aaocer champagnes.
~~ARE AT 3,99To5.99
0 MOT ALL ,ATTEJIMI AMO lllll It EACH ITOllf
SALE PRICES 8000 THRU SUN. AUG. 1&, 1911
' I
IRVINE
-
'1::1"'' ........ -..... -..... ---......... -..... --....... .._. .... .-. ...... _ .... ~.,...., .. , ____ ..,, __ " _______ , __________ ---.....--___ _..... -~... ,... .. ------~~
I
"• Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/WednHday, Augu1t 12, 1981
HARD TIMES??? NEED MONEY??
·• 1•, 1 ,. , · ,... '" ... ., •• p1t1ng 1 ,, ·I ,
111 't 11 If I, 11l 11t '\ 1 '.1/t I .ti It 1•
llZlMIR CLARITY COLOR
I F • II
1 ct. Flewl•1 l1l• 11.IOO 11.711 ......
VVl· 1 11.0IO u oo ..... ••• VVS·Z UIO uoo uoo .....
VS·1 UIO uoo U SO ,. ..
Fl1wltu 4UOO 11.000 1UOO 11.• 2 ct. VVS· I 2UOO 13.100 11.000 ··= VVS·Z 11.000 11.000 uoo •• VS·I 1t000 9.000 uoo UOI
Fl1wlm 73.500 33.750 it.HO 2UIO
3 ct. VVS· I U.7IO 2U50 20,ZIO 1UH
VVS·Z 33.750 !USO 1UIO 11.100
VS·I 21.750 17.250 18.600 14.400
All pure™'-11• -on eoo•Kll<I ...-gn1 -O<O"'O 10 t "'11fleat .. Dy S.-t•ltC Gemoooooea1 l •Do<llO<,.•
inc .• Of the ~ l<\ltltul• ot A,,..,IC•
Pric. -on the IOl!Owlng o-11mat11•
ROVHO BAllllANT IABlE •, ~ llO OVEIV<ll ()£PIH '-~9·61 GIROlE THICl\NfSS IHIN "'COIVM
CVl£1 HONE MEOIVM FLUORESCENCE N()NE·F .. INI BlVE ORAl,.ING Mil
"the -..ono you w1.n to Mil It 1 01n .. ent Ill• 0< Cl\l*il; oo "°' *11nt<• t,_ pai"""'t.,s piNM tall,.,. tlle
P<ICI we .. 111 PI Y All C:llllge9 0< S.C:-tlflC Qetn li bs IO< ..-11icalt0fl O' QIJlill; ll'•lyll<I tlljl10'"9 I"" l>UfCll-
wll 11e PllO by v..r-MA ow.mono 1nous1•r. -.,b!K1 to c:t1<1nQe °"" 10 nwwt. .. ~•ion
('\U'ERS.\L DI:\ '10\IJ I \DI .-..TRlt:S
%0'9J ......... nt '4itt,,. 2Ut tfW•h ... IM ftr.,. -.1 ........... h,.."--4 b• \...-..•·~·· I i.h : f' ~~· J •1ttiti
Farmer
detours
manure
WOR CESTE R ,
England <AP> -John
Bennett's farm has a
dlfferenl air about It
.these days.
After compla ints
about the aromatic
qualities of manure
from his 200 cows and
the silage on his 300-acre
dairy farm, Bennett did
something sweet for the
nostrils of Worcester.
He i n sta lled 18
perfume sprays that
give out the delicate fra·
grances of almond
blossoms, wallflowers
and roses.
The sprays are con·
trolled by a
weathervane, and they ~~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1turn on whenever the
4t l.IYllSIDI A9l. sum1
IEWPOIT IUCI
541-llll
COMING FRIDAY TO
SEE BACK PAGE OF WEEKENDER THIS FRIDAY
NEWPORT BEACH
' ~UtO~~:~G
$ot•1 W•l4tf H••l!"4
' ·' ....
, .. , • • ' ....... ~· tll' i' ' •
(I <..,t•h 111. .. _.,,...,, \ii A' I
I Own Your Own\ Bualn••• Show
Are 1Ju llc.,rQ lo a bus ress u•
• uf "'n" ~or Ir al•erc 'tr
ma•1e•orare of
• Fr1ncn1se1 • 01stnbutors.n1ps
• Oea1er1n1os • fn11estments I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES I
COSTA .. u.641 ·1289 • Full ancl Dl•1 lome ODDO•luno11et • 1nvea1men•s from S5010S100 000 t t1t N•..pon l lwd
"'"s'°" vo(.;o495·0401 \ INN,AT T.~~ p~~~~OTEL
)ftn CeMtno C•Pt•••no A J • 3" I cs." ote90 ,,.., ., .... ,., "••• • " " •: l • ·~ ~.t & " b ~~ ---------.J'. \I : ' e A1;V S•!J.."'
HERE'S GOOO MEWS!
NO MORE FLEAS!
OH YOUR PET OR IH YOUR HOME
PROVEN EFFECTIVE AGAINST:
FLIES
wind blows from Ben-
nett 's Manor House
Farm at Lower Wick
toward the center of this
cathedral city two miles
away
The industrial
perfume costs $20 a
gallon, but Bennett
dilutes it with water and
says his scenting system
costs less than 20 cents
an hour to run.
··u ·s my gesture to the
townsfolk," said Ben·
nett, 49 ... After all,
10,000 of them buy my
milk."
Lev rs
FLEAS
ROACHES
RATS
MICE
SPIDERS
MOSQUITOES
CARPENTER ANTS
BEES. WASPS
CRICKETS
MOTHS
WATERBUGS CORDS • BELLS • NUVOS
............
Three generattons of nuclear weapons are displayed outside Panter assembly plant near Amarillo. Tex -
as The plant unll soon begm production of controverstal neutro11 warheads. accordzng to Energy
Department
Neutron bomb plan defended
Weapon could be sent to Europe in 'a few hours'
lional war and thereby helps
preserve the peace
The Soviet Union called the
decision the latest "an the cam·
paign or silence, lies and decep·
tion which had long been used by
the United States to cover up de
velopment work on this most in·
human va ri ety of mas s
destruction weapons ...
The State Department di s
missed Moscow's criticism as
the "expected and standard prop·
aganda line "
Wemberger said the Soviets
are upset because the neutron
weapon "gives us the greatest
deterrent against their kind or
warfare, overwhelming masses
or infantry and tanks ..
lie said. the Soviets have 45,000
tanks compared with the 11.000
NA TO tanks m central Europe
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the United States
wall consult European allies
before sending any of the new
weapons overseas but acknowledged that their opin·
ions were not sought before
Reagan decided to resume pro-
duction.
Speakes would not say
whether the United States plans
to eventually seek permission
from allies to store the weapons
in Europe.
The weapon's ··enhanced
radiation warhead" is intended
to kill the crews of massed tanks
by penetrating their armored
hulls with shafts of intense
nuclear radiation.
The theory is that such
warheads would kill the enemy
an the immediate battlefield
area but spare friendly troops
and innocent civilians. as well
as their s tructures. on the
periphery of the battlefield.
BRUSHED DENIM '888
REG. $19.95
Pl:S l&fl&' MOW 56950
• Econ<>m1cal Maintenance Free Operation
• Proven More Effective Than Poisons
• SADDLEMAN BOOT JEANS
•BIG BELLS
BIG ·BELL
STUDENT s9ee
REG . $1 7.00
• Uses Only 4 Watts of Power
• Pests Eliminated 1n 2 to 6 WeekS
• No Special Installation ReQuired
~ltyYldwS..
M .. Toc
YICTotl SALIS, l4I14 COAST HWY~ DAMA rolMT
...... SW,. Me ........... "'". 1••···· ... ., .. ..ch p1u1 .,.. ..,.._ a ~
NAME .
ADOflESS
CITY ZIP
VIM/-...:.nl No f.o<p
SKINA~E
6:V•'.'x5V• x2V• • 105-120 Volts AC 4 Watts
USA EPA EST. #44862-1&,02
Huntlntaton Beach
Pacific Ca111 Hwy So ol~ilr
N...,OttBach
1400 Padlk Coast Hwy
Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner
15 Convenient Loca1lons
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
in the Daily Pilat
STUDENT 512'8 BRUSHED DENIMS '688
MEN'S PANTS
MOVIN-ON LEVIS • SUNDECI PANTS
• OP • LIGHTNING BOLT • BRln ANIA
• BRONZED AUSSIE • CATCH IT
'1 088
REG. TO $26.00
LEVIS
BUSH PANTS •a••
REG. $26.88
~81~s $
JEANS
SIZES4 TO 14
YOUR
CHOICE
VELOUR SKIRTS REG . $27. 95
VELOUR TOPS REG. $28. 95
conoN DRESSES
., ••
YOUR
CHOICE
REG.~9.95
BLOUSES • KNIT TOPS • SWEATERS
•OVERALLS
88
Orenge Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. August 12, 1981 s
~UffiU~
Cent11tjr ;Freeway obstacle gone
LOS ANGELES (AP> -An
a1r eemenl has been reached
bet ween state a nd federal
hl&hway ofCicials and an al·
torney for plaintiffs In a suit
against the proposed Century
Freeway, the Federal Highway
Administration announced.
T he Washington agreement
was concluded by fede r a l
' highway administrator Ray
Barnhart. California Director of
Transportation Adriana Gian·
tul-co, Gray Davis, Gov. Ed·
mund Brown's chief of staff, and
John Phillips. counsel for plain·
tiffs ln the Ceder.al lawsuit which
has blocked construction for
years on the 17 .2-mlle route.
Barnhart and Ms. Gianturco
were satisfied, but Phillips said
he would have to present the
agreement to his clients. A
federal injunction was issued ln
1972, halting the freeway aft er
residents sued, complaining
25,000 of them would be dislocal·
ed by the project.
Federal Highway Administra-
tion spokesman Dick Reilly said
in a telephone interview from
Washington that Tuesday's ten·
latlve aareement provides for
construction of 3,700 units of
replacement housing.
·'It provides for a six-lane
fr ee way with two high ·
occupancy "diamond" lanes in
the middle exclusively for buses
and carpools, but they will be
convertible to light rail," ReUly
said . "Ten bus stations. which
are designed to be convertible to
rail statfons will be constructed
with park and ride lots. The sta-
tions will be at the locations pre·
viously agreed to. There will be
four freeway-to-freeway in
terchanges . . . The designs
will provide for a diamond lane
connection to the Harbor
Freeway.''
Reilly said that If the state
elects to construct a light rail
facility initially, as opposed to
the diamond lane. the Federal
Highway Administration will
pay whatever it would have oon-
tr i buted toward the diamond
lane
If the plaintiffs approve It, the
agreement will be presented to
U .S. Circuit Judge Harry
Pregerson for approval.
.. ........ -~, ..
... ~
'"":;.,,. -.,.._ . -,
. '·
-.. ~~· . --...:;.. ,
.•
. .
..-" , -.. -_, J
President to sign tax cut legislation
SANTA BARBARA lAP 1
President Reagan on Thursday
will sign legislation cutting lax
rates 25 percent over three
years and slicing $130.5 billion
from the federal budget over the
same time, his spokesman said
today.
But Speakes said a formal
celebration or Reagan's two con·
g ressional victories will not be
held until he ends his vacation at
his ranch near here and returns
to the White House in Sep·
tember
Monday and will be flown to
M as~achusetts. where House
Speaker Thomas P O'Neill Jr.
1s vacationing, for his signature
Then it will be returned to the
While !louse for Vice President
George Bush's signature and
flown to the West Coast for the
president to sign Presidential spokesman Larry
Speakes said the president will
sign the legislation, which he
proposed and which Congress
passed with few changes. out·
doors before about 70 .reporters
and photographers.
Members of Congress who
helped the president are expect·
ed to attend that event. There
will also be a separate gathering
for businessmen who lobbied for
the legislation
Speakes said such a procedure
1s routine.
The tax cut legislation will re-
duce individual and business
taxes by an estimated $749
billion through fiscal 1986, mak·
Speakes said the legislation
was received at the White House
Reputed Mafia man enters plea
LOS ANGELES 1AP J
Reputed Mafia figure Samuel
Orlando Sciortino has pleaded
innocent to a charge that he at·
tempted unsuccessfully to bribe
a federaJ judge, and his triaJ has
been set for Sept. 15.
The other defendants, Carlos
Marcello. 71, alleged Mafia
chieftain of New Orleans, and
Philip Rizzuto. 42, also of New
Orleans. have a hearing
scheduled in that city Aug. 20.
when ht• was presiding over a
racketeering case involving
Scwrtino and four other reputed
members of the Los Angeles
family of La Cosa Nostra.
Sciortino. 62, one of three men
with mob ties who were indicted
in the case, entered his plea this
week before U.S. District Judge
Gobert J Kelleher.
Kelleher said they are expected The FBI reportedly tape·
to be returned to Los Angeles recorded Sciortino discussing
Aug. 24 for arraignment. plans to give Pregerson an art
The three were indicted in an object worth $250,000 in an at-
alleged plot to br ibe US. Dis-tempt to sway the Judge's opi·
trict Judge Harry Pregerson n1ons
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HOW FAR
YOU CAN GO FOR
$
OR LESS.
sm ASAP FAll.1HI IAS'f COAST
WllHOUIWAINIO.
Our new ASAP Fare lets you take off
from Los Angele!> International. Burbank or
Ontario to i.even Eastern citie!> right away
for only $179 ($159 to Chicago). That's each
way when you buy a round trip ticket.
There are no other rc!>triction~. No
TIAVIL 10 ANY Of THESE CITIES:
Chlld)!O
Hm1on
Ph1IJtklph1.1
I 1 L~u<lcrJJI(
Mt JOH I Ne"' Y11rl-/Ncw4r~ \\.J,h1n~tnn, D C
L--------~
advance purchase. No length of !>lay
requirement~ or time deadlinel>. But seat~
are limited and all night!. are via Denver1
And when you fly to any of the'e seven
Eastern citic!.. you can return from any one
of the other cities at no extra charge. For
example. you might fly to New York and
catch a return night from Washington. D.C.
In addition. we'll give you First Class
for the price of Coach. Buy a full fare
Coach ticket on Continental or bring us
another airline's (except Worl d o r Capitol
Airways) full fare Coach ticket to these
Eastern cities and we'll ny you First Clas!..
That\ right, First Class. This is on a first
come, first served basis. !>O reservation~ are
suggested.
Gotta' get back East in a hurry and
want to save money too? You can't do better
than ASAP.
CONTINENTA
Sat GI.LISS 10 ANYOIHll
MAINLAND U.S. CITY.
Continental's U .S . i1i your~. Pick a city.
Any city. Now through September 15th you
can go anywhere we fl y in the mainland
U.S. for no more than $179 each way with a
round trip ticket. And 1t1 many c11ici. the
fare Ill even le!'>!..
TIAYEL 10 ANY Of THESE Cl'llES:
Alhuqucrquc lnJ1anap<•ll\ O~lahnm11 Ci1y
Au'''" Kan'a' ('11~ OmJh.1
Ca,per Lincoln PctmJ
lColorado ~print(' Lubbnc:k Phncn1 ~
Denver M1dlanJ/OJc".1 San An111n111 I
El Pa~o Mil"' JUI.cc Tuc..on
Gr11nd Ju~11on Minn /\1 PJul Tul"1 J
Hou .. 1on New Orlcan\ W_!ch1ld _
There arc some re•·.triction'>. Ju~t make
re!lervations and buy your Coach ticket
either 7 or 14 dayi. in advance depending on
your destination You can return a<, early ai.
the fin.t Saturday or .,tay a\ long a!> sixty
day~.
And if you've got children age' 2-11
you can 'how them around the country for
no more than $129 each way with a round
trip ticket when accompanied by an adult.
Seat~ are limired. So call your travel
agent. company travel department or
Continental. And !\Ce how far $179 each
way can take you.
Fare .. subject to change wirhout notice .
IRUNES
a.. .. A.,•lt• n:uooo 11ot•trt1 1t111 .... c1s ... ~••-"'"'11t1 w.aooo •~.Oltllllolo....,,. • ...v .. 1~• 1m 1 .... ,11, .. ~ \11 441•• o,.. • ..,...,.,.,_.,. w••~• o...,.C' ...... , ,11 •u• 11 ... ,,.. ~s....,....i.flw11i111 .... 111001 n ouo.s .. 1.-.1 V"otk-1 ,..., •110 \ .... ,..,.. • ....,~ .... hll~ -u1\I
EARN AND L ,
Deliver the D'91Plllt Boys and girls 10 or older -
Call 642-4321 and apply today. llily Pilll
ing 1l the largest tax cut m the
nation's history.
• 1.
The measure includes features
phasing in a permanent reduc·
tion or about 25 percent in
personaJ income tax rates over
three years. with the firs t step
taking effect Oct. 1. In addition.
starting in 1985, the legislation
would automatically adjust
personal taxes to somewhat off·
set inflation
....S.Lo"'-...--.~-L_A_:__:~~~~--'--~~~~~~...JI' A,.WI..,.....
The budget measure will cut
planned federal spending on as-
sorted domestic programs by an
estimated $130.5 billion over the
next three years, the biggest
such package in U.S. history.
GOING ORY Heat and reduced water ha ve left their m <Jrk "'''
on Sh<1sta L<ike near Jone!-. Vall<.•\ The water level ha!-t .,i
dropped more than 65 feet from th(· dam cre!-tl. lt•a\ ini:: thl' 'J
C'Ourtesy docks at the boat ramµ high and dr~· and limiting ''~
access to other ramps on th<.• lakl' Tempt•raturt•s havl' heen 11 hitting n•c·ord htgh!-t in Lhe area· and th<.·rc• ha!-t bt·c.·n little at ,1,
livity at lakesidt.• tamµ):!rounds •••
Marymount graduates 3
, ..
w
•l•
'I:
Three area students have received bachelor
degrees from Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles.
Ann Detsch of Newport Beach also graduated h
s umma cum laud c Ms . Detsch received a N
bachelor of arts degree in theology.
Greg Svalslad of Fountain Valley has gradual· A graduate of Newport Harbor Hi gh School, "'
ed summa cum laude with a bachelor of business M~ Detsch says she plans to pursue a graduate.
administration degree. dc~ree an theology . ., Svalstad, captain or the university's men's 1 volleyball team for t hree years. says he wHl enter James Weiler Jr . of Newport Beach received '
Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena to begin a bachelor of natural science degree from the )
work on a master of divinity degree:.,:. _______ u::.;n:.:.:i~v-=e,;.,;rs;_;·i..:.:tY:...· _______________ -.....,-'
SAVE BIG!
MEN'S FAMOUS MAKER
KNIT SHIRTS
Choose from a large selection of solids and
p"nts Sizes S-M·L·XL.
R19ullr
15.00 7.99
LARGE SAVINGS It OUR OTH DEPTS.
SAVE OM LADES SPORTSWEAR, JUNIORS,
"'8SY. Ctll.DREN'S, HOUSEWARES I
6FTS,
SAVE UP TO 9.51
FIRST QUALITY ...
FLORAL PRINT TOWELS
Choose from delicate floral print or bold
tropical floral print. in three shades on bone
background
BATH REG. 10.50-11.00 ............ 2.99
HAND REG. 6.50·7.00 ................ 1. 99
WASH REG. 3.00 ........................ 1.49
THtCK I THIRSTY
BATH TOWELS
Looped or sheared
towels In solid or
velour 1acquards
If PERFECT 4· • 9 9 12.50-14.50
"STEMWARE BONANZA"
SAVE UP TO 13.96 ON STEMWARE
FROM COLONY AND MIKASA
Blown. etched glass stemware lrom Colony
Asst. patterns & sizes Goblets, wines. saucer
and fluted champagnes & cordials
COMPARE AT
5.00 TO 8.00 99eTO 1.99
Blown cut crystal stemware from Mikasa.
Asst. patterns & sizes Goblets. wines, and
saucer champagnes.
~~ARE AT 3.99ro5.99
SALE PRUS 6000 THRU SUN. AUG. 16, 1111
IRVINE
,.
/ I
~ ------~--._... ____ --
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday. Augu1t 12, 1981
HARD TIMES??? NEED MONEY??
' , '" 1'1• I''"'' W• "" ,,,,,.,p.ttlfl!JI•• 1J 1 ·
lfl lt11 1f1dlf .llt·d '.I/I' l.lfl<JI'
llZl Mllf CLARITY COLOR
I F • II
1 ct. FllWl•a S1UOO &1.500 H.711 .....
VVS· 1 11.• 5.700 4.100 ••• YYS·2 1.ZIO uoo uoo u:: YS·l UIO u oo uao
Flawltu 44.000 11.000 IUOO 11.• 2 ct. YVS· I 24.100 13.100 11.000 I.HO
VYS·2 tl.000 11.000 1.100 UCll
YS· 1 lZ.000 9.000 uoo 1.4411
Flawltu 73.500 33.750 !USO 2UIO
3 ct. YYS· I U .750 2U50 2UIO 11.4H
VYS·Z 13.750 20,!50 11.450 11.HO
YS· 1 21.750 17,250 1UOO IUOO
All pU(C-lie -on GOHK 16CI ~nl IMXO<Ol<\il 10 G...,•l~IOS by Sc...,,llhc GemOIOQICAI La-llOI ...
Inc.. °' Ille ~ lnalltu1e ol Am..-1G1
,,,_ beMd on 11'4 104towing P•••melen
ROUflO 8AILLl1'NT TABLE 'to 53·60 OVERAll DEPTH "-59·61 GIRDLE IHICKNESS lrlfN MEOtUM
CULET. tlONE·MEOtUM 'LUORESCENCE NONE rl'INT BLUE Gl1AININ0 Nil
II Ille clltllYloncJ you ... .,, 10 ..., " • dlH .. ttnl .,,. Of quellly ()f not """'" ....... P•• ......... pjMH call 1()( tr.a
P<lee .. w111 pay All cn11~ 01 Sc1en1111< Gem Laos f0t v0t111ca110<> "' qua111, on1lyS1s •9V••O•"Q IM DUrc.naM
wlll be p.o Dy Uni-HI 0t811'(>n(! lndull•le• Prleee ouDIKI lo chanQ19, Clue 10 man.et 11uct ... 110n.
i·.\·H'ER.~1\L 0111.tfO\D l\Dl~TRlf~.~
20'0% .. ~ .... ,.l. ~., .. tot. ............... Kr ..... "2h-'W. .""""••4 b• ,,.,... .... ...,.". '""h 71 t •k·t·1\ttf1
·Farmer
detours
manure
W ORCESTE R ,
England (AP> -John
Bennett's farm has a
different air about it·
the.se days.
Afler complaints
about the aromatic
qualities o f manure
from his 200 cows and
the silage on his 300-acre
dairy farm, Bennett did
something sweet for the
nostrils of Worcester.
H e In s talled 18
perfume s prays that
give out the delicate fra·
gran ces o f a l mond
blossoms , wallflowers
and roses.
The sprays are con·
tro ll e d by a
weathervane , and they __ __:::....._ ________________________ -; turn on whenever the
4t IJYDSIDl AVE.
SUITE A
WEWPOIT IUCI
54&-llll
WORI,D
CIMINI FRIDAY TO
SEE BACK PAGE OF WEEKENDER THIS FRIDAY
NEWNRT BEACH
Oran9e County's Complete Video Store
LOCATION
COSTA M(S~641-1289
1 UI N•wport •two
MISSIOH Yr(J0495-0401
1ttn C•f'NNI C•s>t•tr•"O fl•" 0..90 ,,., •1 ••• ,., "lt•y I
f. Own Your Own\ Bualn••• Show
Ate iou lou11ng In• a buSll•P.l! ot
vour own' Plar IQ a:1-.no 1~~
111a•ke1p1dre o•
I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES I • Franch11e1 • 01s1nbu10,sn1ps
• Oealersl'\1ps • tn"estmef\ts
• Full ano oert ume opoot1un•1tes
• lnvo11mon1~trom$5010 $100000
\
.'.N~~~T~,T~:.:pr:rr.E~y
/ --------.J·~ ~liJ ' , • e &OY )•fa,.
HERE'S GOOO MEWS!
MO MORE FLEAS!
OM YOUR PET OR IM YOUR HOME
PROVEN EFFECTIVE AGAINST:
FLIES
wind blows from Ben·
n ett's Manor House
Farm at Lower Wi ck
toward the center of this
cathedral city two miles
away.
Th e industrial
pe rfume cos ts $20 a
gallon . but Be nne tt
dilutes it with water and
says his scenting system
costs less than 20 cents
an hour to run.
"It's my gesture to the
townsfolk," said Ben-
nett, 49. "After all ,
10,000 of them buy my
milk."
FLEAS
ROACHES
RATS
MICE
SPIDERS
MOSQUITOES
CARPENTER ANTS
BEES. WASPS
CRICKETS
MOTHS
WATERBUGS CORDS • BELLS • NUVOS
,.,. ...........
Three generations o/ 11uclear weapons are displayed outside Pant ex assembly plant near Amanllo . Tex·
as. The plant will soon begm productwn nf controve rsial neutron warheads. according to Energy
Department.
Neutron bomb plan defended
Weapon could be sent to Europe in 'a few hours'
JEANS
~~~~~~~DENIM '888 I
PEST&A&" MOW 56950
• Economical Maintenance Free Operation
• Proven More Effective Than Poisons
• SADDLEMAN BOOT JEANS
•BIG BELLS
BIG ·BELl
STUDENT
REG . $1 7.00
., ..
• Uses Only 4 Watts of Power
• Pests Ehminated in 2 to 6 Weeks
• No Special lnstallatton Required
DhtrtWM by Yktor s..
M .. To:
VICTC>a SALES. J4 t 14 COAST HWY~ DAMA POINT
. ,.._ SW, Me ..•... '"t FT-" a I 1f01 ltl .. 'H•
eacll p1..-'3'" ~ & -no
NA"1E
AOOflESS
CITY v...., _ _,,No
SIGNAT\fflE
ZIP
E•P
6¥•"x5'/•"x2'1• • 105-120 Volts AC 4 Watts
USA EPA EST. #44862-IL.-02
' . .. ~ ;. ~ . . . ,. . . r .
Goulfltd.t4fte ~
Huntlntaton Beach N..,..Oit Beach
PbClfic Coast Hwy. So of~ier 14~ Pacific Coast Hwy
Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner
15 Convenient Locations
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
m the Daily Pilat
STUDENT sip BRUSHED DENIMS '688
MEN'S PANTS
MOYIN-ON LEVIS • SUNDECI PANTS
• OP • LIGHTNING BOLT • BRITI ANIA
• BRONZED AUSSIE • Cl TCH IT
'1 08 8
REG. TO $26.00
LEVIS
BUSH PANTS •a••
REG.$26.88
~81~s $
JEANS
SIZES4 TO 14
YOUR
CHOICE
VELOUR s1uRn REG. s21. 95
VELOUR TOPS REG. $21.95
conoN DRESSES
., ••
YOUR
CHOICE
REG. S,.9.95
BLOUSES • KNIT TOPS • SWEATERS
•OVERALLS
88
•
t
I
.--.-~-~-.-or-.--.....--------,_ ---..........
• ... • • •• I II • • .. • --...... U •
.. 'i I . . , . . . . ....................... ~ .. -.. .. f• , , ., ~ •• • •• .. ...... , ... ,,~ . .. -.. -....... I ,
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Augu1t 12, 1981
,~~\. 'f...._,,~ Rent law hearing set
BEING SUED -Actor
Ryan O'Neal is being
sued for $3 million
for assault on a
sec urity gua rd .
O'Neal, an gry at
photographers for at-
te mpting to photo-
graph him while in
the company or Far-
rah Fawcett, below,
reportedly threw a
bottle s triking the
guard in the face.
DEAR PAT DUNN: What happened to
the proposed legislation that would problblt
discrimination against rentin1 to people with
children? Are any other lrollpl, auch aa
senior citizens or students, Included In the an-
ti-discrimination provision of th1a blll?
. -K.W., Cotta Mesa
Thia bUI, AB ZN, bu pused .. e At·
aembly ud la achedaled &Ill.I week for a bear·
lal In &he Seea&e Loeal Govenmea& Commll·
tee. It would prohibit dlacrtmlaaU.. a1alaat
any penoa la the rental or leue of a 1aouta1
accommodatioa solely because .. at persoa
bas a mlDor child or solely becaue of the ac·
tual or potential tenance ol a mmor clllld.
Senior clthen, retirement ud atudeat llM•·
101, aa well aa pre·eJtlatln1 adalta-oaly
mobUe-bome parka would be eseladed from
the bW'a antl-cbUd dlacrlmlaa&.ao. pro~lllou.
It abo would not limit any local ordinance or
sta&e law relatlag to bealt.b, safety or boulac
occupancy.
Courtchange&eyed
DEAR READERS: Leclslatloo tbat
would enact algnlflcaot chan1ea la Small
Claims Court la acbeduled for a hearto1
Aus. 11 la the state Aaaembly Judiciary Com·
mlttee. SB 180 was recommended to tlae
Legislature as a result ol t.be Small Claims
Court Experimental Project conducted by
the Department of Consumer Affairs and the
Judicial Council. Among t.be provblona of the
blll are:
-1be maximum allowable claim limit
lo Small Claims Court would be rat.eel from
the current $750 to $1,50t.
-Small claims advlaera who would at·
slat UUgaots wltb their cases outside court
would be mandated for au couatle1.
-At least one evenln1 or Saturday
Small Oalma Court session per moot.b would
be required la au Municipal Courts wUh four
or more Judicial officers.
-Law clerks wo1tld be autbortled to H ·
slst judges with the le1aJ and factaal la-
vestlgatloa of small clalma cases.
-The s mall claims fUlng fee of $Z would
be locreued to $1 per case for thoee who rue 12 claims or fewer lo a year and $1Z per case
for tlMlle wbo rue more t.bu lZ cuea.
llealta of tlte Small Oalma Court E•·
pertmeatal Project allowed tllat In ab courts
wlalcb eonclact.ed a year·loe1 espertment wltb
a claJm Umlt of $1,5", ladlvldaal1 ruta1
cases Increased from Zt perceat of au plala·
tllfa la cases up to $75' to 4' percent of all
plalnUffa la ca1e1 above $75e. Tbe default
ra&e for clefeadaata decllned somewhat, and
the Impact on the coarta waa mlnlmal with
ao avera1e 15 percent lacreaae ln rut.n11.
Both plalatlffs aad defendants reported
that more than Sl,5" would laave to be la
cootroveny before they would seek le1al H ·
abtance.
Eveolag and Saturday coutt aeaalona
coacbacted la Sacrameato, Su Fraaclaco aad
Sao Dle10 eajoyed a default ra&e up to 5f per-cent lower t.bao the default rate for re1aJar
daytlme aesaloas. Nearly elpt of lt Ut11anta
auneyed said eveniag and Satu.rday court
sessions are desirable. Law clerks, utW1ed
durlo1 tbe experiment la Sacramento,
proved ao u.aefal that the coart baa conttaaed
to use clerks to research small clalma cases
even after the coachuloo of tbe experlmeat.
Members of the Aaaembly Judiciary
Committee are: Elihu Harrta, cbalrmao;
Charles lmbrecht, vice chairman; Howard
Berman ; Gary Hart; Walter Ingalls;
William Leonard; Alister McAllater; Jean
Moorhead; Richard Robluoa; Dave Stlrlln1;
Larry Stirling; Art Torres; Maxine Waters;
and PblWp Wyman. To expres1 your opinion
about SB 180 , write to: A •·
aemblymao/womao (name>, Sta&e Capltol,
Sacramento 15814, or phone (Ill) '45·7122.
• '"Got a problem" TMTI wnte to Pat \.. l Dunn. Pat will cv1 red t~, gethng
• the an.noers and action you nud to
•
solve iMquities in government and n bu.finess. Mail your questions to Pat
Dunn, At Your Sennce, Orange C003t
Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mel(l, CA 92626 As
many letters as pouibte will be answered, but phoMd
mquams OT letters not including the r~r·a full
name, address and bu.rineu hours' phoM number
cannot be c~red. Thu column appears daily ex-
cept Sunday&."
LADIES' SWIMWEAR DESIGNER JEANS ·oNE PIECE SUITS
···~EG. l.IOIDACHE & SERGIO YALENTE ................................ '26 ..
GlOllA YANDllllLT • CHEMIN DE FER . $22.00
TWO PIECE SUITS llITTANIA • ION JOUI ................................... '1 ...
• 1 o·~EG.$27 .00 SASSOON COIDSs1zEs 1.u ..................... '16 .. REG. $29.95
SIZES 16-20 .................... '1 ... REG . $34.95
All ALL MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
LADIES' GIRLS' • IEllllHIGTOll • O• • LIGMTlllG IOl T
• SPiii • JANTZEN • LEE
SHORTS PANTS LONG SLEEVE Oil SHORT SLEEVE
•10•• •2•• •10•• VELOUR LONG
REG. $12.00 REG. $26 · $29 SHIRTS SLEEVES
., .. ALL MEN'S
SWEAT
SHIRTS
•10•• ·•10••
•12•• REG.
$1 7.~5
All
. .,..,~ TIGER TENNIS
SHOES
'1000
.l1's IT JOHN ••••••••••• MOW
REG. $39.95 ...
. ~!!~~ .... MOW
•15••
REG. $36.00
T0$-40.00
ALL
GIRLS' TOPS
SHORT SLEEVE •4••
LONG SLEEVE •5••
SURFER
T-SHIRTS
•4u •5••
=--·--FAR WEST SAVINGS
and Loan Association
THE 30 MONTH ACCOUNT*
'100 minimum deposit 30 month m1n1mum term
Annualized yield
17.370%
Current Rate
15.800%
THE TREASURY ACCOUNT'•
$10.000 minimum deposit 6 month term
Annualized yield
16.196%
Current Rate
15.372%
'Jft<Se•at 11w 1eiuu1rt1\ • iut.1\l•n11•I
IQff~1tu1e ffJr tt•''V w1thtJta#t'AI G) L--lENOER
•If 01"1noo1J ano tntet"' ...,.,. HJ rem-.n un oeoot•• lo-one v••' 111n11111•
1n1e1 .. t ckMI nCM COl'f\OOUnO Ot't tn1a l~Oie 01 IC.CWt\I
Daily Pilat
Video Cassettes
For Sale or Rent
MO Clubs to Join
MO Membership Fees
* ALL RENTALS LAST FOR 3 DAYS *
SATURDAY UNTIL WEDNESDAY!
Every tiffe in BOTH V.H.S. and
Beta every 6th movie you rent is
•.• FREE!
We have movies from:
• 20th Century Fox
• MGM
• Universal
• Columbia
• Orion
• Warner Brothers
• United Artists
• New World Pictures
• Paramount
• Allied Artists
• A.B.C.
• AVCO Embassy
• Yldeo Gems ·
• V.C.I.
• NOstalgia Merchant
• Metia
• CBS
• Home Theatre
• Cinema 5
• Anll many otflers
-
\
I'
•
b1
~
b
"
c
Q •
~
Orenge Oout DAILY P1LOT/W1dn11d1y, Auguat 12, 1981
Tiii
f4MILt'
CIRC't:
"Mommy soys dinner will be ready in 20
minutes if I help her, 10 minutes if I don't."
~:\RMADl'Kt.: by Brad Anderson
"Forget about guarding the club treasury,
Marmaduke ... nobody paid his dues!"
Jl'DGE PARKt;R
GARl'IELD
1 CAN"T BELIEVE JON'e> NOT TAKIN(?J ME
ON VAC.AT ION
•IGGEOIGE by Vlrg ll Partch (VIP)
"There goes a guy who's REALLY In shape."
DE~~IS THt; MENACE Hank Ketchum
i ' I -~ ~ ,.,. 9 • i:. J t i -!~ r, .1-""'-•v ... l I ~ 'f~ 'l!j :"Ji
~ I ' ..;,.__,.....-+--+-r-..----~ .
"Don't get out of bed. Everything's fine downstairs.
It was all my fault an' I'll clean it up."
by Harold Le Doux
by Jim Davis
ALL iHle> EATING ANC' SLE.E.PINGr CAN
WEAR A vUV l70WN
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
H'OW WAS
l'H'F/SHING
l'RIP, UNCt.c
W11..1..1f:? ':s
MAY~~ You WE T" WE SL~PT, .ATE, S~oULDA TRIED DID.' DRANK ANC> FISHED
FISHIN<O ~--WITH iHEM TH'
WITH FLl~S. WHOLE TIME t
lf~-
ACROSS 51 Lel1overs .ruEIOA Y'I
1 Hot good S3 lnvalldat• P'UZZLI IOl vtD
S Ori bodill 57 HotM 14
10 Lung eound e 1 O..th nottce
14 Noun ~Ing 82 DefenMlnl
1s Sotto voc:e 8" Anger
18 1111 true? es Lut i.tter
17 Hlgllwey 118 Moon ahOt
tneneee' ~
2 word• 87 Urgency
19 YUOollfv 118 Salel pitch
rt¥« et AblnOOn
20 SafMeeplng DOWN 21 -,..... 1 llndlel
23 Li.... 2 "Step -
25 lkllldlng .,.,, -": Huny
2t lntlMllt 3 Nof9t city
29 Put btck • U$ 9f'lln!
3-4 lrtmt 2 wordl
35Actor-80.•0llty 20tadlll 48ullt
COMlfY • W*"' twlO "S#ld '* ..... up
37 ~-· •7 Nmt'IP· 27 Mejofct 41 fUeilldel 38 OM*"'°" • o.11111 tpOt *POf' 41 s...-3t ~ • ...,.,. 28 ... loln ... ptOdUet 4, Comfy to -...,. old 62 Scope
... ._IOI! 30'°°"'*1 UT,._.
42 Muel!Mtord 2..... S1 Of tnldlll 54 "°" lcMr ... t.w.. ft t 1 ~... 12 Wier..., 51 C.0'1 ,,_
llolp. '21 Ulla IJ 8Ut11 51 Coellpool
, U '°' 11 ... .._ M CMlcord M .._. 111M1
....... """ , • ..,,..., .,.,.,.. 51 '91111
.. WtlOomld H w.ddlr'9 • Hird to A tide
IO LMlt -,,..., ~ TtllUOUI 83 Flotll .....elt
PMNl:TI
TtM8LE"EEDH
NANCY---WOULD
YOU LIKE A
B IG FISH TO
HANG ON
YOUR
WALL?
GORDO
1ELLIY'IE.,~.
WHEN~ 5AW K£il.Y
AT 'THE DRIVE-IN ...
DR A BB LI:
A'lf.1 'fME.Rf. '~ lll£M0i !
S44E'~ ~1'ff1t-1£. ~ 1'A8l£~
r----. Al&)A'-1\
DB.SMOCK
WAIT AROOND FM
A WMILE ... \(OU'LL
FINO ovr ...
wow---DID YOU
CATCH ONE,
PEEWEE ?
DID SHE. LOOI< LIKE.
.SHE. lUAo 1J.41NKIN6
ABOOT ~Ai All~
i>Ee:, 'fl4A'f l.t.N S"E' S
w11" 5Wi\5 "fo S£
f:o1'14E'.RIN& ~€.Rt
FO• 8nTIEa ea N• W8 •IE
SO,)O.) f't'Ef"CDNNIE!
-DO you REf\U'ZE
5ME~ LIBERA"TED ?
I
, _____ _
NO---BUT IF
YOU\ .. L PICK
ONE OUT,
I'LL TRY TO
HA1~-~f
Dt~coe,f
OOCTOfl./
HI~
HAI~
let A.
ecx'.)IJ
TO"OE TOV<JIJ~ f:.W~OM'1f
~~
HARD m lt:Ll ..
ME15 P\11'-r1Nl. "IS ARM~
AROu~O HER, At.IQ ~E ·~
Sf Qll(,{, LI Nl:r i> &E 'f AWA -l
H~OM ~llM I!
by Chari•• M. Schu lz
MO °™ERE ISN'T
A YIP LOUNGE !
by Tom K. Ryan
--------
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
SHE WAO 5£VERAL
CAR5 AIJJ/¥..) AND IT
WAS KIND OF ~RK ...
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
.. ... -.......... -. . , ....... . .. . .. , . . . . .... ' ~ ·. ·, . . ... . .. . ... • t • • • • • •. , . "' . . . .. . .. .. -• • ... • • • • • • • • • # •
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdnelday, Auguat 12, 1981 . A9
Moonles ._entitled to civil rights proteCtioii
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Mem·
bera ol the Uolficallon Church are
entitled to the protection cf federal
clvll rishta laws as much as mem·
bers ol raclal mlnorltles, a federal
appeala CO\lrtla)'I.
The ru.lin1 came Tuesday ln the
case of Thomas J . Ward, a 28-year·
old Virginia member of the church,
wlfose me mbers are commonly
called "Moonl es.··
Ward Hid he WU kidnapped by hia
parent.I and others while ea route to
an aJrport for a trtp from Vlrelnla
Beach to New York on Nov. 2&, 1978.
During a subsequent attempt to
"deprogram" him of Jll• reU1iou1
beliefs, Ward said, he wu aaeaed
and beaten and subjected to severe
psychological stress.
U.S. Dletrlcl Judge John A.
MacKenzie or Norfolk d.ltmissed
. PAK OF 6 CANS
Uoz. S~E1. 41~
SAVE 2ae
Ward'• complaint that he wu the ob-
ject ol a consp iracy to deJ>live him of
his civU rtahta.
MacKeMle aaJd the federal law
was not deal1ned to reach private
conspiracies motivated bf. rellllOUI,
rather than racial, animosity.
The diatrkl court judae a1ao said
W ard'1 parent.I were motivated by
concern for hl~ well·belnJC rather
SPECIAL I
than bla1 toward the Unification
church.
But the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals held Tuesday that while civil
riahta laws may be aimed primarily
at instances of racial dlecrtmlnaUon,
reli&lous 1roups are entiUed lo pro-
tection as well.
The case was returned lo
MacKenzie's court for reinstatement
of the complaint.
HONORED
Tocumen In tern a -
tional Airpor t in
Panama City,
Panama has been re·
n amed Gen . Omar
Torrijos lnte rn a ·
tional Airport in
honor of Panamanian
strongman killed in
plane crash July 31
~QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL
70-year • couple
'cool'
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.
<AP> -Floyd and Inez
Hende rson have been
playing it cool as man
and wife 'for more than
70 years, proving the en·
durance o f one of
Floyd's maxims :
"Don't argue. If you
have a little trouble,
never have an argu-
ment. Just cool off."
The Hendersons were
wed April 5, 1911. This
week that longevity won
them an award for "cou-
ple married the longest"
during Golden Age Day
festivities at the lllinois ·
State Fair.
Floyd, 91, is a retired
grain farmer. He and
Inez. 90, still live in their
1840s-er a fa rmhou se
near Sherman. They
h ave three son s, a
d aughter , 11
g r a ndchildren and 11
great.grandchildren.
"We set up a fifty-fifty
propos ition when we
first got married ,"
Floyd said. "I tell her
where to go and what to
do. and she tells me
where to go."
That remark brought
chiding from Inez, who
said he was being silly.
Their w e dding
followed a four.year
courtship that began
when Floyd , then 16 ,
spied Inez on her front
porch.
Did they kiss on ~e
fi rst date?
"We ll , no ," said
Floyd. "You had to be
careful in those days."
Federation
elects 2
Michael J . Pinto of
Lagun a Beach a nd
Harvey Englander or
Irvine have been elected
vice presidents or the
J ewish Federation of
Orange County.
The federation is a
fund·ralsing umbrella
for some 50 local Jewish
organizations.
Meanwhile , newly
elected directors of the
federation include
Seymour Vigman of
Corona del Mar and
Marc Spitz of Irvine.
Valley airman
• • receives wings
Second Lt. Michael P.
Gee, aon of Jamee M.
Gee ol 18325 Santa BeUn·
eda; Fountain Valley, and
Billie H. McCoy of LU·
• tle(on , 'ol o., haa
araduated from Air
Force pUot tralnlna. and
received 1Uver wtn11 at
Seese Air Force Base,
fexaa.
Gee _.111 serve al
• Griuom A ir Force BaH, Ind.
He LI a 1975 fraduate
of tbe Air Force
Academy.
'
For long tasting
engine protechOn
HUYY DUTY
FABRIC
sonENER
SHB•TS
For soft. fresh-smelling
clothes reduces static
IOI OF """1 2 9
40 SHEETS •
SAVEaoc
TOTAL COLOI "AJAX" LAUNDRY Dn•RGmtn
One detergent tor
your enhrt wash
~K-72oz.1.99
SPECIAL!
MILK MATE
INSTANT IUL
CHOCOLATE
FLAVORED SYIUP
2ooz. ggc
SIZE
SPECIAL!
u. .. 1.09
SPECIAL I .
I
AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 12th THRU SATURDAY . AUGUST 15th.
....
"NOltTifHNAlltE"
.
' . ·1 .1, ... , '...... J \ :, i
,_ ......... 1 'r' ........... ,. .. _,.......,_ .......... ,...-. ........ ... -· -. With generic drugs, you can save as much as 50'lto
on your nut prtterlption. Your SIY·on pllarmac11t
also wants you to know that only th• hlQhest
quality mediQllons are available at his pharmacy
14" FAN ="'"" WUWD
.......... Wini CllCUUn.•
Has a 8 pole motor and 1 ::~:~~;:~.:::, 49 .88
18" High Volume Air Circulator
whll 4-f'OSITICMI COICTIIOl 1211.1 5 9.9 5 Lightweight, sale. easy
to move. snap off
guards for creamng
For tusterlitng
and conditioning
all types of hair.
''CAREFREE''
PANTY SHIELDS
... Regular or D Deodorant
JOA 1.69
Tastts II gooCI
111• works!
.. ..... a .. II
·~1.59.
-------ANSEltl
''PETITE''
LOTION SOAP
WITII ,._
BAVE .BOe
1111111
'" BABY LOTION
•PUITIC IOT1ll "°'ecta 1911ntf chlf1nv. d\1119'119 1nd omer akin
lrr1t1110111.
BLUE ICE
SPORTER
CH•ST
IUST mm LIO
"BLUE ICE'.' AU.ptJRPOS£
PU
For medium sire
~:~e~~11onat 1 39 ... .
HAITZ
2 11 PLUS
FOi FlUS
AND TICKS
Count Vasya voou
MfllOOf
1.75 LT. 6.99
Faster Creek
IOUllON 1m.ou
:::.a.99
SCHUTZ
IEElt
12ez..
:: .. 3.49
TAYLOR
SAVE70e
CHlOR· TRl1ETOI AWR8Y T.all
For hay teverJ
allergy
•~mploms
.. ..,_, ........... .....
---OIMJDt.aW .....
• ..-..o,. I ,w.
AUSTRALIAN IEIR.
JI .99 Six Pack . ,,..... .......... .
The famou1 Au1trallan wine town of Adelaide la
alto known for tt1 beers. !f. lc~ la on• or the :ou d expect to pay over M.00-bul It'• only sue at our 1torea.
P1ea" vl1lt our newest Trader Joe'• at the In· tenectioo 'Of 11\h Streetj
Newport Boulevard ana Superior A venue (next to Denny's and Barclay's Barut).
SH US IN COSTA MISA
SAVE34e
AIM
TOOTHPAST•
wttlt FlUOllDE
4,6oz.ggc
TUBE
S~Esoc
ROYAL OU
CHARCOAL BRIQU•TS
The charcoal lhat seals
smokv outdoor flavor onto ever v bite
BUY 2 PAKS1aSAVE sac
SAVE •1.9&
E.P. T. #IHOMEU•tr
HEG#f#CY TEST .::..'9
For Qu•tk accurate
ano easy detec1ton
6.99
SAVE •1.20
2% QT. "WHISTUNG"
TEA KETTLE ~mtltPllH
USY nu. .. USY
POUi SPOUT.
I.II
' I
1
,
I
t
I ' I
I
' I
I
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I
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1
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I i~
-
'·
-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedne1d1y. Augua11a, 1981
South county needs
an animal shelter
Add animal shelters to Lhe
growing list of necessary public
facilities -like airports. dump
sites and bus terminals that
everyone wants. just so long as
they're not located in their back
yards.
For obvious reasons. people
are fearful that a nearby animal
shelter could s poil the air and
create potential safety problems.
Those arguments repeatedly
have dashed past efforts to locate
a new animal shelter in south
Orange County. Most everyone
agrees that a new facility is
needed, primaril y because south
county communities are located
some distance from the county
government's existing shelter in
Orange. .
The problem has distressed
county Supervisor Thomas Riley
for some time. He·s caug ht
between those who complain
about the inconvenience at the
Orange facility and those who
strongly object to having any
new s he lter in or near their
neighborhoods.
Riley has taken a formal s tep
to resolve the issue. He proposed.
and fellow s upervisors approved.
formation of a s ite selection
study committee that will be
made up of representatives of
major developers. the communi-
t y of Laguna Niguel and the
cities of San Clemente and San
Juan Capistrano.
The approach makes sense.
and we hope it will succeed. The
need for a new anim al s helter is
well establis hed , a s are the
negative feelings about such a
facility.
Don·t forget. however. that
the re is a lot of land in south
Orange County land that is not
surrounded. nor ever will be. by
residential development. Given
that factor. the committee s hould
be able to find a n acceptable site.
Watt's retreat timely
When Gov. J erry Brown de·
cided to do battle with Interior
Secretary James Watt on the is -
s ue o( op e ning north er n
California waters to oil explora-
tion he found he had some unex·
pected s upport.
Environmentalist groups. of
course. were ready to join a
lawsuit to block the drilling plan.
but California Republicans. in·
eluding Sen. S.I. Hayakawa .
seemed equally dis mayed by
Watt's proposal.
While they may be genuine ly
concerned about the welfare of
the pic turesque coast . i t s
tourism. wildlife and fis hing in
dustry. they also had reason to
feel that the 1982 elections could
go badly for any Californian who
supported offshore drilling.
In announcing his decision to
postpone oil leas ing in four
basins between Big Sur and Men-
docino Countv until 1983.
Secretarv Watt ·ins is ted it hacl
nothing to do with politics.
U .S. Supreme Court has to sa~·
about the matter.
In fact. the court's a ction
gave Watt a wa~· out of what was
dc·\'eloping into a ver~· sticky is-
sue.
F'ormer Interior Secretar~·
Cecil Andrus decide d last year
that the northe rn California
bas ins were not worth leasing
since earlier tes ts had indicated
they would yield little more than
enough oil lo supply the country
for 11 da~·s hardly enough to
justify the pote ntial damage to
the coast.
But Watt. imm ediate!~· on
ta king office. re\'ersed Andrµs·
decision. appa rently to show that
the new adm inistration is more
serious in its purs uit of new
energy sources.
lie picked a n unfortunate
spot and a bad moment for his
power pla y . a s the:> e n s uing
ruckus proved.
He was concerned. he said.
that a recent federal court ruling
to block leasing in 31 tracts off
Santa Ba rbara would onl~: lead to
further legal problems if the
northern basins wer e opened.
1}. • Watt said he will appeal the rut-
; ~ ing and wants to see what the
Watt still belienc•s he·11 win
the court bat! !e o,·er oil leases.
But at I P.a~t those who would pro·
tect the unique northe rn coast
will have time to round up their
a r g um e nt s a nd 1 982
Republican candidates be will be
spared finding themselves in the
middle of a p articular!~· nasty
campaign issue.
I •
·Good driver 'special'
When the Department of
Motor Vehicles last year initiated
its license renewal .. special" for
good drivers. one would have ex-
pected every driver with a four-
year clean driving record to take
advantage of it.
Oddly enough. although the
OMV estimated 45 percent of the
s tate's licensed drivers would be
eligible for the good-driver. ex·
am-free renewal. only 36 percent
of those seeking renewals in the
past year look advantage or it.
Under a law passed in 1979.
the OMV is permitted to offer
persons under 70 who have had
no traffic tickets or accident in·
volvement for four years. the op-
portunity to renew their licenses
b y mall. without taking the
•
customary written examination.
Only one four-year exte nsion per
person is authorized.
The good drivers are iden-
tified by the OMV computer and
notified of their elig ibility 60 days
before their license expires.
In addition ·to rewarding the
careful drivers . the program
saves the OMV an estimated $3
m il lion annua lly by reducing
paperwork and hence the number
of employees needed to process.
rene wals .
For some reason. many of
those eligible don't seem to be
taking advantage of this reward
for their hig hway safety record.
The OMV would be much obliged
if the good drivers would accept
the offer .
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of toe Daily Pilot. Otner views ex-.
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa1 CA 92626. Phone (714 ) 642·4321.
. ~ L.M. Boyd I Fame U1Jfair
Fame is tnvariably unfair.
Germany's Major Erich Hartmann
during World War II downed 352 Al·
lied aircraft, about 4.4 times as many
as did the much more widely known
Baron Manfred von Richthofen with
his 80 kills during World War 1.
Snoopy picked the wrong man.
Physicians are said lo write 25
million prescriptions a year for sleep-
' int pills. Yet an authority on medical
. schools contends none of same train
·students in sleep diaorden. Could this
be true? NOite?
Just about ·1.000 ik>oka, thars bow
many show up al the Library of
Congress daily.
· rr that fire extinguisher doesn't
douse \be bla•e wilhJn five second&.
drop the thing and get out of there.
Such be the counsel of the experts,
Hardly any~_y realizes that tbe
basketball is only about half the
diameteroflhe basket.
The late opera sta.r Matta Callas wanted more than tAl.WDI else ln the
wodd 81 a child to iro* ~to be a den·
list. '
r •• ... . -. ... -... .. .. ,, ..... 111 .... -., ... . . ' ·-··-·-·
'YOU1R£ CM ~?'
Libya agents seek U.S. arms
W ASlilNGTON -Libya'11 venomous
dictator Moammar Kbadafy is spending
millions of dollars of his oil profits, ac-
cording to secret investigative reporta,
to bankroll a stealthy operation acquir·
ing arms abywhere in the world tor use
by Palestine terrorist forces agaip.st
Israel.
High on his undercover shopping list
are U.S. weapons. Middle East experts
ascribe this to the fact that American-
made arms were use8 successfully by
the Israelis in past conflicts with Arab
enemies. In his fanaticism against the
Jews, Khadafy is convinced the quality
of the U.S. equipment rather than the
caliber of Israeli fighting men was
responsible for their successes.
IN HIS OBSESSION to obtain
Ame rican equipment, the Libyan
strongman is ready to go to any lengths
and resort to any means. Here is a case
history from the secret files of the FBI
detailing the effort of Kbadafy agents to
rope an American businessman into a
deal to buy U.S. military equipment
abandoned in Vietnam.
Reviewed by my associate Dale Van
Atta. the secret records show that New
Yorker Edward Loyd became a furtive
figure in a multimillion-dollar transac-
tion to fwmel n~arly 80,000 M-16 rifles
and 22 million rounds of ammunition to
Libya, where they would be banded
over to the Palestine Liberation
Organization. That number of rifles
would be enough to supply five U.S.
Army divisions.
FBI agents wrio interviewed Loyd in
the middle of the operation learned that
· he was a commodities dealer who had
S<>ld Libya some communications de-
vices. In December 1975, be was invited
to meet at the Libyan Embassy in Lon-
don with Lt. Abdurrazzaq Hanka. a
naval attache who was in reality an em-
G
---J1-c1-1-11-11-10-1 -d
baasy intelligence agent. As a
smokescreen, Hanka "informed Loyd of
Libya's interest in procuring various
commodities, mentioning on an equal
basis such items as foodstuffs, dairy ·
cattle and military arms."
THE FBI FILE also notes :
"However, as the discussion proceeded,
Loyd said it became obvious that Hanka
was primarily interested in procuring
military arms."
The Libyan agent told the New
Yorker that his government wanted to
re-arm ita forces with U.S. equipment
and offered to "purchase outright up to
50,000 M-1&, unlimited ammunition to
incluHe 'five million tracer ·rounds, M-16
part.a and bayonets."
Loyd indicated he bad contacts who
could supply the weapons from the
American arsenal left behind in Viel·
nam. The FBI account alleges that a
deal was struck by which Loyd would
set up two separate shipments of an in·
itial 50,000 M-16s with ammunition and
th~n 30,000 more with 17 million rounds.
"These two shipments are va lued at
$12 million," the fil e commented.
According to the FBI. Loyd traveled
to Bangkok where he met another Li·
byan intelligence operative and two
representatives of the Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine, described
as "a Marxist-Leninist oriented Arab
terrorist group."
Hanka also showed up, and a day
tater Loyd submitted a $10 million letter
of credit to a Bangkok bank.
THE FBI ACCOUNT discloses that
the transaction eventually fell through;
Loyd and Hanka fl ew back to London
"where Hanka expressed his dis ·
pleasure with Loyd over his failure."
According to the American, the Libyan
agent told him "he had at least lO other
people trying lo sell him arms. indicat·
ing he had no further use for Loyd's
services."
The fil e expressed belief that some or
Loyd's American contacts were mem-
bers or "a ring of unscrupulous arms
dealers who ha ve access to a large
quantity or U.S. arms smuggled from
Vietnam. The value of the arms deals is
a minimum or $23 million and may in ·
volve a quantity of 230,000 M-16 rifles
. . . A large part of this supply is
des tined for Libya and eventually toter-
rorist organizations."
Warned or possible violations of
federal laws, Loy d pleaded inex-
perience in the underground world of
gun runners and acknowledged the Li·
by an deal might not be his "cup or tea ...
Has mobility really made us happier?
Do you think God bad a hand in the
air traffic controllers' strike? Is he try-
ing to tell us something? Do you Ulink.
by any chance, tba\ God looked at what
was going on down here and said, "Walt
a minute. Let's knock off all this milling
around. Where on Earth, or off It, do
you lhink you're going? Just settle down
and stay put for a while. There's no
reason you can't do what you want to do
where you are instead of going
someplace else to do it."
Probably God didn't, but it cert.ainly
would strike any neutral observer, look -
ing at our actlvtty, that we all go a lot of
places that aren't really necessary for
us to get to. Motion gives us the feeling
we're getting something done.· _
l'VE ALWAYS been fascinated with
the question of wb~ther people living in
the 20th century are happier than peo·
pie who lived in the past. Has material
progress contributed to our general
welfare? Are we happier than people
who lived in the 18th century or the 5th
century B.C. because we can fly
between Los Angeles and New York?
I~''
-AllY-111-11-Y -.~
Do cars make us happier than horses
used to make people as a mode of
transportation? Are we better off in 1981
than the people who traveled in 1931
because they had to take a boat to
England whereas we can fly there in
threeboun?
I woke up at 2 a .m . last night thinking
what seemed at the time to be big
thouchta about these questions. "What
would bappee/' I asked myself, lying
there staring at the ceiling, "if the
world started to pull back into its shell?
How bad would it be if we had no mis-
siles or aircraft with which to deliver
our nuclear bombs?··
MOST OF US have been to Knott's
Berry Farm, Disney World and South of
the Border by now. and a few of us have
walked on the moon. Would it really be
much of a loss if we lost this ability we
have now to travel great distances
quickly? What if the gypsy moths. the
Mediterranean fruit fly or the Dutch
elm disease started attackii;ig our
wheels and wiped them out? Would we
really be less h'ppy over the whole
period of our lives?
Book banners hit schools
I've enjoyed a lot of travel but I can't
honestly say that my joy increased in
proportion lo the distance or the trip.
I've been to China, but looking back, it
doesn't seem as though I enjoyed that
any more than my first bicycle ride on
a two-wheeler. I made it about 100
yards down Partridge Street that day
and it was as memorable, exciting and
educational as the two weeks I spent in
Cbungking .
The book banners are busy across the
country trying to control what you and
your family thinks.
In the most extensive study of
American school censorship, usocia·
lions of publishers, librarians and
school officials concluded that there is
110111 MAIR
book censorsblp in one out of five
schools.
The aludy indkates school people are
easily intimidated whenever anyone
questions any book. Today•a school
marm obviously would rather cave in
t.ban U.POM atudent.I to a broad rana• or human thouetit.
Thole dol.ng the 1tudy aaree that bo9k
selection ii a le1•Umate concem for paren.ta, but in 19 percent of the cuea,
1cbool peopJe never up&mbld the UM ol
the boob in quatlon or JUltifted l.aiD(
1tudmta read tb.em. In other -... ~.,. •alUQa atw. or ao attempt
t• flP& CftlOrthlp,
Part ol the reUGD for tbil, la my optn.
~t 19 tbat sc.hool1 ha" beeD bata...d
WUD IDterna1 proble1n1 ot 1tudMt cua.
c1pllne. drufl and 1klmpy buql&I. Add
to tbal tu cuta and dropplDC public •QP-
port and you have a bunch of n«v°"8
1e.hooi·room neJU• who don•t want any
l
more problems. Just keep the wagons in
a circle unu1 · retirement lime. thank
you.
The survey isn't clear on it, but I
oaturaJJy assume moat of the
censorship pressure comes from right
wing community elements. Their track
record makes them leading proponents
of book burning and banning.
And, wbat are t~e books being
censored Md banned lest they corrupt
youn1 mirids? The list include• the
American fferila1e Dictionery: MarJt
Twain's "Huckleberry Finn"; William
Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice"·
Will Chamberlain'• autobioiraphy and
George Orwell's ''19'M."
I can see wby some people wouldn't
like boob about blacks who become
millionaires, but why George Orwellts
"191t"?
UnJ.,, of coune, 1IM la already here
and Ua• r&1bt wlna doesn't want
anybody to know.
MY MOTHER USED to send me
around the corner to Evans Grocery
Store. I walked or ran. Now I get into
the car and drive two miles to a shop-
ping center for groceries. I have
another place I get cheese and If I want
really fresh vegetables, J drive three
miles in the other direction to a stand
where the vegetables are better. How
much improved are the meals we fix
from the goods assembled during the
course of this 10-mlle drive than those
my mother made from what I brought
back when I walked to Evans Grocery
Store? Has this ability and urge to
move made the meals any better?
A short air traffic controllen' strike
is a disaster for a lot of people and busi·
nesses. A long a.trike might be just what
we need. We could all make planJ not to
go anywhere. We might even decide
that, instead of traveling·, we'd work .
lllllYlll 1'f.OmU Jeffendn OD tood l°"1'n·
meat: 0 ••• a wlM ud frialal govem·
·ment, wbicb aball rwtralD men from ID· To Pavarotti, the public is "My beloved J .... w _,.._, 9ball l•w tMm boll.'~ Heed, all atrlkers I
otbe,..tH tne to replate tbelr own K.K.B.
pUt"tldtl ol lnclmtry and improvement, · ucl1ball90ttaefromtbemouthotl1bor · ..._, ... .._...._ ~ ",........_. ....
Ute bradltnru." =:-::.·.-:-:: ;:;:;:: .... ,.,.-. ..,..,_,...
• I
• •
... _ .............. ,. ............ ..... .., ........... ,
.. • • • • Ill • .,. -.....---..-.
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.Of/Wedneeday, Augu1t 12, 1981 ~··
Status seoring no longer simple
Symbols encompass everything from daredevil recreation to 'high tech' decor
............
BIG BASKETFUL Kim Simmons has hands full with lion
cubs born at her father's family zoo at Linton. England. Six
of seven cubs born survived. a rarity for lions either in wild
or captivity .
If it floats,
chances are you'll read about it
in the Daily Pilai
642-4321
By TM Aaoela&ed Pr"'
H1a houaehold ltaff at atten·
tion. IB1 Rollt·Royce in proml·
nent view. Hi1 eaatle behind
him.
And John Duke of Bedford,
starina into a televiJlon camen,
confesaea: "I'm a duke, But these day1 people area't aa
lmpresaed 11 they used to be."
What does Impress people, the
duke says, is a certain ireen
charge card.
Status once was 1uch a slmple
matter: You had to have money
-and spend lt so everyone else
knew you had it. Blue blood
helped; the social Re1lster was
a scorecard.
But status seekin1 bu
changed sharply since the day
wben 19th century lnduatriallst
J .P . Morgan launched the
world's toniest yacht -and de·
livered the now classic line: if
you have to ask what lt costs to
operate, you can't afford it.
The traditional status symbols
-suburban homes, yachts, big
cars and expensive dress -now
are within the reach of many. As
a result, the breed of things we
think of as status bas expanded, ,..
encompassing everything from
daredevil forms of recreation -
hangglidlng, skydiving and skin·
diving -to "high tech" home
decoration.
"Years ago, there was a con·
sensus among the ha\>es and the
have-nots -the Ivy League
school, the right family back·
ground and what you owned
clearly delineated and dertned
status," says Barbara Kaplan,
vice president of Yankelovich
Skelly and White Inc., a New
York consulting firm whose
business is to keep up with
trends.
"These things still apply to
certain people. But the definition
of status has been broadened to
include thin s not so ri idly de·
"Our 24th year"
9_.1 Auto & Homeown&rs
,~~· Ouotes By Phone SAL
FMMQSnmuCE .,
54 .. HU or IJS.J437
1914 ..... ·COlt.MH•
Call 642-5171.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
LADES'
FAMOUS MAKER
CANVAS
'") CASUALS
~<*WM~atend
of.tt14t-tfflOl'I pricet. Bone, nevy, red. Not II
alzea end colors In II atytea. Price good while quentlty IMta.
Recent medical research per tiundred, or more. So indicates that Lysine YoU save at least 46% on
may be valuable in sup· our Lysine. And there is presalnl coldsores. We DO starch or ~rvative sell 100 ysine tablets, in in our Lysine. l>lease vls-
500 miUifram strength, it our newest Trader ror only .99, everyday. Joe's at the intersection In healt rood stores, of 17th Street1 Newport tablet.a of only 312 mllli· Boulevard ana Superior gram strenatb are com· Avenue <next to Denny's monly round-at $3.SO and Barclay 's Bank>.
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• EJUllAATION DATE L-------------------------------------·•••••-•-•••••·----••••••••·-----1
''Purveyors of Oldtime Neighborliness"
780-0111
tined. Now lt can take any kind
of direction."
And It doesi. roller skates in
Callfornia, a prominent table at
a club, a sturdy new pickup
truck in the heartland•, a winter
suntan ln the North, a weekend
trlp to Paris, supporting the
Ing man's outfit.
Whlle the ltNHle f OT ltatua
may seem boorish and aelf·
important to some, socloloaista
and psychologists say lt la an
important determinant ol aeU·
esteem ln an identity-conscious
world.
"It's important that people get
feeling good about themselves."
to
local playhouse with checks in
three and four figures . . . the
list runs into the thousands.
Among the rich, irony is
emerging. John Brooks, author
of "Showing Off in America,"
calls it conspicuous display "in
the new mode -THE FLIP
SIDE UP."
Homes once furnished with the
classic touch -marble, teak,
leather and crystal -now are
filled with industrial equipment
in the "high tech" design wave
that turns restaurant booths into
din.lng tables and steel shelves
into bookcases. -
It can be abstract as well.
Consider the telephone.
"It's been around since time
immemorial," says Dr. Robert
Conroy, a Menninger Founda·
lion psychologist. "It's impor·
tant that people get to feeling
good about themselves."
·'One of our needs is not to be
the same as everybody else, yet
still be a productive member of
society," says Mike Marsden,
director of the Center for
Popular Culture at Bowlinlf
Green State University.
"Through various kinds of
status symbols, we get resolu·
lion of that tension."
Sweeping changes In the social
strata are partly responsible for
new definitions of status. It's
become a game most everyone
plays, with hundreds of different
rulebooks.
• '·Everybody marches to the
aame drummer In 1tatua," 1ays
University of Clnclnnati
so.ciologlst Dana Hiller. "It's
just that the 1peclfic way lt gets
played out baa to do witb wbfl is
within the reach of each social
class."
The wealthy once were the
"leisure class." But now some
blue-collar workers with fat un·
ion contracts and abbreviated
work weeks have become a
"leisure class."
There also are a growing
number of families where both
the husband and wife work -
not out of economic necessity
but because they want to. With a
combined income of $40,000,
$50,000 or $60,000 they buy
townhouses, take expensive
v acatlons, hire interior dee·
orators and park their new
foreign automobiles at the curb.
The family with two incomes
has shot a whole class of
Americans into upper-income
brackets -and meant changes
for status, particularly among
women.
.. No.w that women are free to
achieve, their status is not so
fixed," Ms . Hiller says. "Being
attached to the right male is not
the only route to a status. Status
for women is becoming more
achieved than ascribed."
A top executive once gained
status by being out of a phone's
reach. Perhaps be was on his
yacht, at lunch with an impor·
tant client or at the theater. Now
he carries a beeper and inter·
rupts his lunch or leaves during
Act 11 to make an "important"
phone call.
Drunks to get jail ·sentence
Regional vagaries are evident,'
too.
ALBANY, N.Y. CAP> -Con·
victed drunken drivers who in·
sist on driving while their
licenses are suspended or re·
voked face mandatory jail sep·
tences under legislation ap·
proved by Gov. Hugh Carey.
to continue the s tate 's
crackdown on drunken drivers.
The legislation requires a jail
sentence or from seven to 180
days and a fine of between $200
and $500 for those who are
caught drivi ng after losing their
licenses because of an alcohol·
related offense.
The Texas millionaire may
head for bis high-rise office in
cowboy boots, a traditional sym-
bol of the lowly ranch hand, and
the Hollywood entrepreneur
may wear blue jeans, the work-
The legislation was included in
a package of four bills designed
...
\
Unneeded items taking up place in your space? Sell it
all and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot
s\Day, Week . We can put you in touch with more buyers
because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every
week. Get results with the ads that last longer. Get the
8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642-5678 today!
For an EXTRA day, call today
<642·5678111 -.
Open I to 5:30 Monday-Friday, I to noon S.turday.
-
I
•
\
f
I
I I
LANDMARK URGED!
-The Denver
Landmark Preserva-
tion Commission has
passed a resolution
urging that the
form e r home of
Golda Meir be de-
signated a historical
landmark. The late
I s raeli prime
minister lived in the
now -dilapidated
structure from 1913
to Hll5.
Volcanic ULTRA BRITE • • act1 VI t y 4.:~~~~·.~~t~~~~~~~ PllCE
said highl!!..-------,_.(MO'Cl_u·OI. ~ CANDY
SAN FRAN C ISCO
CAP) -Volcanic activi-
ty in California is "sur-
prisingly high," averag-
ing three eruptions a
century since the year
1400, a state geologist
says.
The findin gs b y
Richard T. Kilbourne
list 36 eruptions from 20
separate vents in four
major volcanic regions
in the past 2000 years,
half of them in less than
the last 600.
Kilbourne, of the state
Division of Mines and
Geology, said his review
"should surprise even
the professionals."
"Most geologists may
study just one area, but
nobody looked at the big
picture."
He said he hoped more
attention would be paid
to monitoring the state's
volcanoes. ··we are a lot better at
predicting e ruptions
than we are at predict-
ing earthquakes, if we
have the data." he said .
The volcanoes are a
single vent on Mount
Shasta in Siskiyou Coun-
ty, four cinder cones and
vents in the Medic ine
Lake Highlands about 30
miles east of Mount
Shasta in Siskiyou Coun-
ty, three vents on Mount
Lassen in Shasta County
and 13 vents and cinder
cones in the Mono Lake
and Mono Basin of Mono
County.
The last major erup-
tion was one on Mount
Lassen, which began in
1914 and continued fitful-
ly until 1921.
All but t h e Mono
volcanoes a re
geologically linked to
the Cascade volcanoes,
which stretch north to
British Columbia and in-
clude the active Mount
St . H e len s in
Washington.
Mesan makes
honor roll
Tanya S noddy of
Costa Mesa has been
named to the dean's
honor roll at Abilene
Christian University,
Abilene, Texas.
Students must earn at
least a 3.5 grade point
average out of a possible
4.0.
Ms . Snoddy, a senior,
is a recreation major.
She is a 1976 graduate of
Newport Harbor High
School in Newport
Beach.
Dean honors
Mesa student
Dayna G. Gwinup of
Costa Mesa has been
named to the dean's
honor list of the
University of Arilona
College of Liberal Arta.
Ms. Gwinup w••1 named to the l ist
because she maintained
a 3 ."5 grade point! averqe out of a possible
4.0 ~semester.
:::::::. .. OI PuMU' ~7 SUPEI 5'lCIALS ON 7.111-::0~1.01. FAMOUS IUNDS ::~ CMWS 1'°1· SUPEI PllCE
YOUI $
CHO la
Choose lrom 5 of
your fovorites.
NATUUl SALAD
DIESSING
SUPll $
PllCE
12·01. While Stocks lost!
limit 6 per customer.
VACUUM
CUA•
UGI
!!I
SURE
SCINTIDANTI·
PllSPIUNl
llG, $
2.St ·
6·01. Price Incl-
ude• 50C off lobel.
ALIA·
SELTZER
ANTACID TAILm s3 SALE
NICI
72-Rellef toblet•.
CHICKEN
READY
SANDWICH SPllAD SUPll NICE
3$
FOR
CREAMETIES ~s
nNDEI MACAIONI ..
7-01. While Stocks lost. SUPEI
limit 12 per customer. ,llCI FOR
SIGNAL
MOUlllWASll
ANDGAIGU
SALE$
'llCI
32-01. Price includes
40' off lobel.
DEXATRIM
IXTU STllNGTH
DIR CAPSULES
$
40·pok help1 trim oft
excenpoundt.
SUNSHINE
WHUTWAFllS
SNACI CUCIEIS
SAU PllCl s1
16-01. While Stock1 lo1t1
limll 6 per cu1tomer.
FRISKIES ~s1 IUFFR CAT FOOD ..
6· l 12-oz. A toaty llG.
treot for cot. 39~ IA. fOI
"'ICI• 1n l1a11I
by elglico'
LADIES'
LEATHER
THONGS
Comfortable wedge heel ond
BUFFER IN
ANALGESIC TAILm
I 00 tobleta for
fo1t poln relief. llG. 2.69
..oc,.oott~ .. ~ ,.SUckded.
tJWets
48-toblets.
... ":':-.--.=-~ ....
GLORIETIA
DELICIOUS CANNED
FIUIT SELECTION
SUPUPlla
3$
FOR
8-01. While Stock• Loall
limit 12 ~r customer.
INTER·
MAGNETIG
60-MIN. CASSmlS
3$
PAI
, ______ )i 'ii':
S" • 7" OI
I " I 10"
fUMU
•1
JALTA
SMOOTM
YODIA 1:•3
,_._YALUY ...... , ........ ......,. .,,.. ....... _ MM,...._.
12-01. bog
for croftt.
ClltAMDA
•n1L1Nl -C.. ........... c.... .,......, ...... _
............ c..
_J
~·::-•~.--·::]
I ' • ~--··· . . .-.... ,. ..
PAISONS '3
14 l!~!~uore.
Colorful ploatlc.
... ,_.
•6111Wt I k ............ .
·~-'
}
IOYALOAI
CllAICOAl
llMaUm
•2
I '· '. f
I
"" ....
WEONE$0AY, AUG. 12, 19'1
STOCKS
SPORTS
es
86
. . ...... -.. . , . .. . . "
Airlines appear to be
recovering from air
controllers strike ... B3
Juarez. Mexico, a city of nearly a million people along the United States border, has approximately 200,000 living in shacks such as these.
Juarez: Mexican border city of broken dreams
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico
(AP) -They are squatters -•oo,ooo men, women and
children trapped just a few
miles from their dreams.
They live in shacks and houses
built from whatever ls available
-adobe. cinder blocks. scrap
wood, tin, cardboard.
Many of the shacks have no
electric or natural gas connec-
tions. Streets are rutted, dusty
tracks between the houses.
The border city also is a stag.
ing area for Mexicans attempt·
ing to cross into the United
States, legally and illegally.
Because of the large Mexican-
A merican population in El Paso
65 percent of the residents
have Spanish surnames -ii·
legal aliens have a better chance
of melting into the local popula·
tion.
Pedro Lopez is one of the
newest residents of the colonias.
For many, the only option up-
· on arrival is to move to the col·
onias that have sprung up
around the outskirts of the city.
There, they set up housekeeping
while they search for jobs, im·
migration papers and a better
life.
Despite Juarez's image of op-
portunity, unskilled laborers
often find when they arrive that
Mexicans wh ose relatives
already have green cards re-
cently got their papers after
waiting since 1972. Most of the1
colonos have no such connection
and are put on an "indefinite"
waiting list, McGehee says.
Meanwhile, they wait and con·
tinue their daily struggle to ex-
ist.
Reyes Estrada, ,a genteel ~nan
with the city government.
"Many leaders of the squat·
ters have emerged in the dif·
ferent parts of the city," Reyes
Estrada says. "They naturally
tried to control as many people
as possible. Their main en-
couragement with the people is
that they're going to get them
their land titles at the lowest
price possible."
tee and had gone directly to
Reyes Estrada in their quest for
the land titles. When the titles
were distributed, committee
members met to plan the evic·
lion of the residents who had ac-
cepted them. The shooting start·
ed when the residents arrived at
the meeting. police said.
Their houses are set on land
owned by others. Some pay rent
and some don't.
Water Is scarce. Hundreds of
people often depend on one
faucet or one dripping pipe for
their drinking water. In other
areas, water is trucked into the
squ·atters' village -the colonias
-by city contractors.
He arrived in Juarez with his
family, a few possessions and
high hopes. Less than two weeks
later, he was jobless, hungry
and seeking handouts for
medicine for his children.
Lopez had traveled the dusty
highways from central Mexico
with plans to work in the fields
in the United States, as he did
when he was an illegal alien in
1951. This time, he wanted legal
status to work north of the
border.
"If I don't find work soon , I'll sneak
across the river again. I'm trying to
wait for papers to come over, but I
must work."
In an attempt to keep peace in
the colonies, the city bas been
buying the land from the owners
and selling.it tot.he squatters in
small parcels.
''The city has been issuing
titles at an extremely low
price," Reyes Estrada says.
''When people are so poor that
they cannot pay anything for
their land, their title is issued to
them exempt of payment."
Despite sporadic demonstra-
tions by the committee, Reyes
Estrada has continued to dis-
tribute land titles to the squat-
ters. The city also has launched
a series of programs aimed at
helping the colonos improve
their living conditions.
Meat markets and pharmacies
have opened near the colonias
with the government's en-
couragement. Under a pilot
project, the government is
charging no taxes on items sold
in the stores and wholesalers
have cut prices to retailers.
Many die from dehydration or
heat stroke when the blistering
desert temperature rises above
100 degrees. Others freeze lo
death In winter because they
cannot find enough wood or
kerosene to heat their homes.
"Ever since Juarez has been
Juarez, the problem has exist·
ed," Mayor Jose Reyes Estrada
says. There's such a demo·
• graphic explosion in our coun·
try. people tend to go to the
border."
lndeed, peasants from the in-
terior see Juarez as a city of op-
portunity. Thousands of Juarez
1 residents have jobs in factories
' located in the city by American
companies because of cheap
labor. The city also does a
booming tourist business.
But upon his arrival, the
leathery-faced, 56-year-old farm
worker found long waiting llst.s
for papers to cross the border,
and could not find a job in
Juarez.
"If I don't find work soon, I'll
sneak across the river again,"
he says. "I'm trying to wait for
the papers to come over, but I
must work."
Lopez's story is not uncom-
mon in Juarez, a bustling city of
nearly a million people across
the Rio Grande from El Paso.
Between 80 and 100 people
from the interior pour into
Juarez every day.
there is no work for them. Some
take jobs as street vendors, re·
sellin~ whatever they can find to
Amencan tourists or other col·
onos. Some beg. Some steal.
Others cross the Rio Grande to
work in fields or factories in the
United States.
Gaining legal crossing statua
is difficult and often involves
long delays, says Henry
McGehee, supervisory immigra-
tion inspector in El Paso.
McGehee says the wait for a
"green card," . which designates
the holder as a permanent resi·
dent alien and Bllows him to live
and work in the United states,
varies depending upon the imml·
grant's status.
For example, one erou" or
who runs the city from an ornate
office in City Hall, sees the col·
onias as the biggest problem
facing the city. .
The now of squatters into the
city has been steady since the
mid·l960s, when there was a
near-revolt by lower-class Mex·
leans demanding land. Peasants
throughout Mexico snatched up
farmland, resultlnl in armed
conflict with landowners and the
army. While most of the coo·
mets occurred over ranch and
farm land, squatters also were
making their way to 'border
cities like J uarez.
As the colonlu grew, the col·
ofloe turned to local leaders or
committees to police t h e
neighborhoods and intervene
Sometimes, the land titles
cause violence.
On May 31 , Jose Fernandez
Mejia, 39, was killed and 10 peo-
ple were injured in a shootout
between colonia residents 4Uld
members of the leftist Comite de
Def ens a Popular.
The committee, led by avowed
leftist Pedro Matus, runs the
1,500-person colonia Tierre y
Libertad -Land and Liberty -
one of the more established
squatters' villages. Committee
members and city officials had
in the past established a school
and a medical clinic among the
battered adobe houaes of the col-
onia.
Some Tierre y Libertad resi·
dent.a circumvented the commit· .
Ten free medical clinics have
been opened in the colonias to
provide medical attention to the
squatters and to give them ad·
vice on how to combat dehydra·
lion, dysentery and malnutri·
lion.
"The federal government is
making a big investment -
about $75,000 -to solve the
water and sewer problem,"
Reyes Estrada says.
Although attention has been
given to the problem. there still
is a long way to go, the mayor
says.
''The city is growing so fast
that when one problem is solved,
10 more spring up."
Employees of Chicago's libraries terrorized by crime
CHICAGO CAP) -Employees of Chicago's 88
public libraries are complaining of bomosexuality,
gang activity and even voodoo in their stacks and
are urgine the city to post guards in what uaed to
be basUona of quiet and learning.
But with a tight city bUdget, officials HY,
about all they can hope for is alarm systems.
Those have been lnstalled in 45 libraries
housed in city-owned bulldin1s, said library
security director Patrick Scanlan. But librarians
conakler the butt.om a poor, sometimes useless,
aubetitut. for full-time security guards.
"Some of my librarians tell me the)' could be
dead ~ the Ume they call 9ll, 10 what eood la a
panic tM.ttton connected to someone else wbo calla
911?" said Tamlye Trejo, Northeast library di1·
trict cbJef.
Ubraries lo middle·clu1 neighborhood.I where
security previously was unnece11ary are ex·
periencine vandal.lam, bur&laries and "problem
patrons" who Intimidate other library users.
Similar problems have been reported in aome
New York City libraries.
''I've never seen crime so bad or Ubrartana IO
irigbtened," said Dorothy Nut, branch bead of
Roden Ubrary and a JI.year libr&I')' employee.
•·But when we uk for security parda, Scanlan
tella UIJ hi1 bands are tied."
Larry McFarland, auiltaat securlty director
for Chlca.io'• llbrariet, 1aid Clt;y Hall bu reJeeted
more than :iO requesll for oft-duty police otfteen
for tbe libr aries in the put year.
Ju an '1temative, Scanlan ls offerjn1 an as-
aertiveness-trainiag workshop, includin1 a 15·
minute rum staninl city library employees on
how to handle "problem patrons." A course on
how to deal wilb1 1an1 members in libraries la
planned.
Gall Muirbead resiped u branch bead at a
Southwest Side library after lbe 1aid a 1an1 "bad
taken over the lobby IO petrona were afraid to
come."
"Tbe off-duty pollce officer usually didn't
abqir up for work, ao It wu all on my shoulders,"
she said. "When I told them to leave; they aald,
'We've been here five yean, lady, and we ain't
movin'.'"
She requested a traruJfer when she tried to
have the group arrested and the next day found
chocolate smeared on the library entrance and
several windows smashed.
Jane Reilly, the 61-year-old branch bead ~ Legler Ubrary in gang-ridden West Garfil9ld Par ,
said her car has been vandalized, "unfriendl
gangs" regularly come in and a staff member wa
assaulted badly enoulh to require a doctor's care.
"I've asked to at leut have a pard at closin1
time to escort me to my car, but sometimes I can't
even get th at," salfl Ma. Reilly, who i1 a nun.
Goin1 to a library used to be "juat like 1oin1 t.o
~urch, remember?" said McFarland. "Looks like
thOM days are 1one forever.''
u~s. Army tightens standard8; wanu no mOre women Jor now
WASHINGTON (AP> -Tbe
' Army baa stopped acceplin1
women recrul"' for the time be·
in•. •'We're not ruUn• out aome more dltmen"' ol wom• lhll
"
year, but it appeara tbere WW be
very few," said an Army penoa.
oel aftldal:
Remdtment certainly wlD ,...
1ume when tbe fiscal year
belim Oct. 1, but with a amaller
from field commandera that combet ,....._, la be&nc af·
fected by 1ucb facton 11 •ttri· I:::i. pncaanc1, aole patent· ~and at.amtna .'' BJ law, women may not Ht'Ve
ln 1trtctly combat ualu, 18 11
lntantry batUliGDI, but lbeJ do
serve in combat support unlta
such u •lln•l companJea.
None of the other terw. '8 ~
followlns the Army'• example.
-
. ~
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdnt1day, Augu1t 12, 1981
' OFF & RVNNING DEPT. -Good
heavens, Imagine tM coastal surprise
when it was announced only yester<!ay
that Dapper John is seeking higher o(·
flee again. Dapper John, of course, ls
our v~ry own coastal State Senator John
G. Schmitz.
The surprise, in this case. isp't that
John Schmitz, the noted Republican
trom Newport Beach, seeks higher of·
fke. What the heck. he's done that
before.
As a matte" of fact. at qne point in
his up-lll nd-down political career . he
veered away from the GOP ranks and
ran for President of the United States on
the American Independent Party ticket.
qmcK QVIZ: Who was Schmitz's
ruM1ng mate for vice president on the
AIP ticket? If you answered Tom Anderson. you
must save campaign buttons.
But I digress. As noted, the surprise
isn't that Senator Schmitz is running for
something again.
The eyebrow-raiser is that Dapper
J ohn dusted off his long-standing me m ·
bership in the John Birch Society as one
qualification for offi ce proving that he is
indeed a conser vative.
Now why did John go and do that?
Everybody knows he's a conservative .
He probably holds membership card No .
3 ih toe Birch Society. Why bring it up'?
You were of the opinion / that the
John Birch Society. either as a threat or
a virtue, 'depending on your views. went
out of style back with hippie haircuts
and mini·skirts .
But then. somebody just pointed out
that mini-skirts a re making a comeback.
Well, mini-s kirts are a whole lot
more excit ing than the John Birch Socie-
ty,. And that"s another contradiction in
t he J ohn G . Schmit z image. Most
Birchers talk really dull stuff. They
seem to lack much sense of humor.
JOHN SCHMITZ IS A WITTY fellow.
H~ can even get away with poking josh
at the far right. He particularly likes to
la mpoon the press at the dTop of a
podium.
Further, Schmitz isn't dull. Years
ago, it was once reported that John, in a
s tate ment opposing gun controls.
declared that everyone ought to be able
to own a machine gun if they wanted to.
I think Schmitz late r denied the state·
ment, or moditled it, or declared that it
was taken out or context.
That aside, the words .. Machine Gun
Schmitz" surely did ma ke a li vely
headline.
John Schmitz isn't dull.
BACK IN HIS EARLY political
career, Schmtiz got elected to the state
Senate and then ran and was .elected to
Congress aftef Jimmy Utt died. He then
became anti-Nixon, once declaring that
he didn't mind Nixon going lo China, j ust
so long as he stayed there. Schmitz fell
from favor with the GOP and ran for
president as-an independent.
Then he got beaten out or his con-
gr essional seat by former Orange Coun·
Sam! SomebodJ/'• got an eye on JIOUT aeat
t y assessor Andy Hins haw. who was
later convicted of misusing his pubHc of·
fice while assessor.
Schmitz thus cla ims today that later
events surrounding both Nixon a nd
Hinshaw proved that he·d been the right
man all along.
THAT AS IDE , J ohn G. Schmitz
seems to be back full circle in mounting
another U.S. Senate campaign as he did
tentatively in 1976 a nd 1980.
And just remember . Dapper John
is n·t dull.
If a ny body can arouse Sam
Hayakawa from his slumbers, Schmitz
ought to be able lo do it.
PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR:
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Get your hair ttyln In the n.--..t o.r.frM look -the Ledy Diana. Call today for an ap•
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reg. •1400
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Student awarded
$3.:85 million
COORDINATOR Warren
Wilcox of Costa Mesa has
been named coordinator or
the South County Service
Center for the American
Red Cross. The center. al
27324 Camino Capistrano.
Laguna Niguel, serves
Orange Cou nt y from
·Newport .Beach south.
, A La Mirada college student
won a S3.85 million suit against
her insurance company and her
former lawyers who failed to
nejollate a settlement after she
was In an accident that left a vie·
Um paralyzed.
Under the Orange County
Superior Court ruling Monday,
Deborah Betts, 23. is to receive
the damage payment from All-
state Insurance Co and the
IQwyers who represented her
after s he allegedly ran a red light
In 1975 and s mashed into another
car, parJ}yzlng the driver, a 32.
year -old Seaside woman
ln 1977, the family of that
wornan, Anne Galucci, won a
$450,000 judgment against Ms.
Betts. Allstate paid the $100,000
allowed under her auto insurance
policy to Ms. Galucci. Butthat left
Ms. Betts with a $350,000 debt.
ln her suit, Ms. Betts alleged
that Allstate, which also insured
Saddleb(!ck library
to open weekends
SaddJeback College in Mission
Viejo will operate its library un-
der an experimental Friday and
weekend schedule beginning
Aug. 28 and continuing through
the fall sem ester.
Steve Tash , l ibra r y
coordinator . said the 95,000-
volume collection will be open
until 9:45 p.m . on Fridays and
fro m 8 a .m . to 1 p.m . on
Saturdays. Regular library
hours are 7:30 a.m. to 9:45 pm.
Monday through Thursday.
Under the old schedule, the
librar y closed at 5 p.m . on
Fridays and remained closed on
weekends.
'·Because we are offering
more Friday nighL classes and
because or student interest in
the extended hours. we are im-
plementing the new hours."
Tash said.
"This still 1s an experiment
and its continuation will depend
on funding and student/com·
munily use." Tash said
Non-students who want to use
the Library can obtain a resident
borrower's library card if they
arc at least 18 years old ar\d
have proof of residency within
thae Saddleback Community
Cvllege District boundaries. k--============================--=-=--==-===-·
THE
MEDICAL CARE
CENTER
I HOURS: Monday through S•turd•y 1:30 e.m.·10:00 p.m.
Sund•y 9:00 •.m . ..e:oo p.m.
EVENINGS-WEEK-ENDS-ffOLIDAVS
Ms GaJucc1 , failed to negotiate
the claim .. in good faith" for an
out-of-court settlement as re-
quired by law
The award granted Monday
covers punitive damages, as well
as emotional suffering and dis·
tress, and the $350,000 that Ms.
Betts still owes Ms . Galucci.
Jury foreman L.S. Duckworth
of Fountain Valley said "it
seemed like it was Allstate's
apathy more than anything else"
that led to the large amount of the
damages against the Insurance
company
Enrollment
at OCC hits
record high
Increased area population
coupled with a slate Jaw have
brought a record high 12,178 stu·
dents to the summer session of
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa, officials said
Acco~ding lo Ken Mowrey,
dean of admissions and records,
a state law that allows free now o~ s~udents from other college
dis tracts 1s partly responsible for.
the 700-s turlent increase in sum-
mer from last year
Mowrey said unemployment
als o has generally forced up
<'Ommunil) college enrollment
I lc said people return. to college
to pick up a new skill
lie also cited the influx of
Southeast Asian refugees as
another reason for the increase
Mowrey said during the fall and
s pring semes ters. the refugees
constitutrd about 5 percent of
the college's 33,000 population.
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rnrn~~m~~~
r' ' • .. . . . . . ... . . . .. ,. ... . .. .. . , . '
. . "' ., . .
-··-.. .,._ .. -........ ~
Installment j.
debt climb8
Will YOU
take bait?
WASHINGTON <AP) -American contumen
boueht $1.93 billion more on credlt than they r•id
off in June, even thouab they were paytn• of old
installment debt al a record level, the Federal )
Reserve Board has reported.
8)' JOHN CUNNIFF ......... ...., ..
NEW YORK -Having .won tax and spendJn1
victories that are said by some to be the moet
fundamental economic changes since tht! 19308, the
Reagan forces are now tumin1 much of the battle
over to you.
Henceforth, you are an agent of chanee.
Hereafter, you are to be the catalyst the supply
siders say will shore up production. eliminate
budget deficits, and lower prices, interest rates
and unemployment.
Consumer debt has now expanded for 11
straJ1ht months since laat year'• receaaton. And
the June figure. were seen as an lndicaUon that ll
the nation is ln the midst of a new receaalon -••
some economists believe -it wlll not wonen in10
more than a mlld one.
"The fairly moderate increase in outatandina
con.sumer credit shows that consumers haven't
totally given up and stopped buyin1 1oods
altogether," aald David Ernst, a vice president
with the Washington forecasting firm of Ev&n1
Economics.
"ln terms of the economy, it's a fairly en-
couraging sign," be said. "It's not a recession-type
number." Arthur Laffer, economiat and a member of
the president's economic policy advisory board,
explained the plan al a sym-
posium of supply siders ar-
ranged recently by Morgan
Guaranty Trust Co.
"Supply side economics is
nothine more than classical
economics in modem dress,"
said the professor. "It basically
looks t-0 Incentive. People alter
their behavior when incentives
change."
Ernst said the figures may well conUnue ris-
ing in the next few months for reaaons ranfinl ,
from recently declining unemployment -~n •P·
parent sign of employers' confidence in the
economy -to recently annoupced new rebates to
spur auto sales.
cu ... ,,.,. Laffer, who probably has
done more than anyone to popularize the notion
that you get out of the economy nothing more than
you are willing and able to feed it, continued with
this explanation:
"If you make an activity more attractive, peo·
pie will engHe in more of that activity. If you
make an activity less attractive, people do less of
that activity."
That emphasis on making people the agent of
economic change, such as getting them to save
and invest -was underscored by John Rutledge,
president of Claremont Economics Institute and
another supply sider.
"Supply side economics." he said, "recognizes
that the basic unit under study -the huma.n being
-can thlnlt, calculate, speculate and respond to
market incentives."
There you are. President Reagan bas set out
the incentives. You are baited with lower taxes,
among other things, designed to leave more money
with you, enabling you to make wise spending.
investing decisions.
Will you take the bait? Will you use money
more effectively, that is, In building up savings
and funneling more into investments that should
return more efficiently produced products and
services?
AP~
Air traffic control students walk miniature airplanes around miniature runways m classroom at
Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi. Miss The students follow orders dictated from the · ·control
tower ... which is the glass-enclosed structure m the background
Airlines claim ridership up,
losses from strike down
By The Associated Presa
Am ericans are flying more and worrying
less thls week about the air controllers' strike
and domestic flight schedules have im·
proved, airline officials say.
Several carriers said their ridership bad
increased from last week's low figures and
that revenue losses have narrowed as a re·
suit.
.. People have seen that, other than a few
trouble spots. the airlines are operating pret-
ty much as normal," said Paula Mustro. a
spokeswoman for Eastern Airlines in New
York.
Although most airlines said they were
operating about three-quarters of their
normal domestic nights, Pan American said
it was flying 88 percent of its U.S. nights
while the same figure for some carriers was
as low as 60 percent.
American Airlines, which said it lost "a
lot of revenue" in the initial days of the strike
but would give no specific estimate. said its
revenue losses had decreased in recent days
as ridershjp increased.
The airlines are losing revenue by carry-
ing fewer total passengers, but are saving
fuel and other expenses by operating fewer
and fuller planes. American, for example,
said its planes were fl ying at an average 80
percent of capacity. That compares with an
average 60.3 percent for American during the
first six months or the year.
June's $1.93 billion expansion in inst.ailment
debt was well above May's $1.35 billion, but it was
still below the levels of $2 billion or more recorded
in each of the previous three months.
A total of $29.01 billion in new installment
credit was extended in June by the nation's banks,
finance companies, retailers and other short-and
medjum-term lenders, the Fed report said.
Consumers paid off $27.08 billion in old debt
during the month.
Tiilles Mirror Co.
• revenue rises
Revenues of The Times Mirror Co. in the
second quarter of 1981 increased to $539.5 million
from S517.8 million in the second quarter of 1980.
Net income increased to $38.S million from $35.I
million during the same quarter last year. Earn·
ings per share were $1.13 compared with the $1.05
earned in 1~.
For the first half of 1981, revenues increased to
$1.04 billion compared with $921.1 million in 1!*>.
Net income totaled $64.S million, or $1.89 per,
share for the first half ended J une 28, 1981, versus
net in.come of $60.1 million, or $1.76 per share, in
19~ •
Due to a change in accounting periods, the
second quarter and first half of 1981 were respec·
lively 21 and 16 days shorter than in 1980. Times
Mirror changed from a 13·period accounUng year
to a 12-period year in 1981.
STOCKS? C MMODITIES? or OTC?
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"ICTITIOUI •UllNIU "ICTITIOUI •UllN•U
NAM• STAn M«NT NAM• STAT•M•NT T ... fol-l"9 .,_,.0ns ere clolftt Tiie 1o11-1n9 persons ••• doln9 ...,,._.,.
b<lslneu•: c I I s A M .,, A I( E L E y
THE SI MON·EHRENFELO CONSULTANT· (JI WAICE LEY'S GROUP -CAMBRIDGE ESCROW, • 2'4J S. PllllMen, Sente Ane, Cellfwnle CONSUL TING SERVICE, U27 L.eyole
t270S t'CI., Colla -.., CA nt.M.
Comllrld9e Copllol Group, o So,_t H. Wolle .. y, 1527 Loyoto
Co tlfornle corporollon, 1'0 S. "~..C:":9°~'::·LOyolo Ad
Pullmon, Sonte AM, Celttwnl• ~ Cott MIM CA '263'. ··
nits ~Is condueled by • cw T:is ...,~1,..11 Is condu<l•CI lly POr•llon. ~dllec.ftelGr-~Mll wffot. ~H.W ...... y ~151"-· TMI --fl ... wllft , ..
Tllll slottMlenl •• lli.t wllll IN C.....ty Ci.nt of Or .... County °"
County Clerll OI Or°"91 c-1y on July A.,.. 7, 1'11.
21 "" . "Mlll1 • ""'... PutllllNd cw .... <:Mil Delly Plltlt,
PvlttllNd 0r0fl99 COell Oolty Pllo4, Awe. It. It, 2', Selle. 2. 1111 u.Ml
July 1',-.., s. n. It. 1•1 ,,.._.,
fllCT1T1out 9VllNHS
NAM411TAHNNT
Tiie fol-lftt _..,., oro ...... 111n•-•: Ill NATI O NWIDE
P"O~ESSI ONAL SYSTEMl/UI NAICO, CJI NORTH AMERICAN
SU .. PLY CO. 141 COMMU N ITY •ulLDING MAINTllNANl.ll, P.O.
••• 15MI. Soolto ~. co. mos; ... So. Mein Sl., S-. AM, Co. ft707
Mkt1m1 Vktw L..cloM. 1411 Se.
Lo ...... LOI"""""' C.. •it Tiiis ....,_.11 ~ lty °" ~ .. ........
Mk'-' v. LUcloM
Tiiis ~ -fl ... wflft IN c:-.ty a... f/I Or ... C-y.,, Jiiiy
Jl, ltrl. "'"., ,,__ Or-C.sl Dolly ......
A .... 4. 11. 11. ZS. 1"1 ~
,.ICTITIOUI •usu••• fllCTITIOUS •UllN•u
NAMtl ITATllM•NT NAMtl ITAT•MaMT ,.ICTITIOUS •UllN•U TM IOllowlfte _..... Is -. IMN-
NAM• STAT•M•NT Tiie IOI_.,. --ts do'"9 lluM--•:
T ... foll~wln9 119ftons ere dolnt nettN9.:hONAL PHOTOGltAPHY A$. TONI'S, 71)1 Orcllortl Onw, S-
llUsl-•. O ,.. , •• , -toAIW,CAft1'D7.
C 11 STAR Lt T E TA A ILE A SOCIATION F AM"'"I...,, • 4 _. LINDA MARGARET SKULTIN,
VILLAGE; m STAltLITE VILLAGE, SI., Hul'lt~I ~·Co. '*'10102 ~ 11JI On:llOrcl Ortw. S..-.to Ana, CA 20tO ...._, Slvd., Cotto Meto, CA JGilllPll ... on .......,li!:'y• --'2711. ft•V. Clrcle, Huntl,....,. llffdl, Ce. f:r.16 Tiiis .....,_.II condM<lecl by en .,._
MAS. SALLY J . SCHN•IOER, Tiiis"""""' Is condlKM by.on,.._ ...........
7410 H"""'"9r ~. Son Anlonlo, CllwleluOI. Undo M. s-..111n
Tea• 71MO. _,... •'1°" 0...°"Y Tiiis ...._.. •• fifed wlltl Ille .ott•AT D. LOHGOOH I. MARii! Tiiis llAll-' •• fifed wllft IN Counly Oltr1lof Of'Oft9t C-'yon Jwly L. LONOOOH, *° Newport •h•d., Covnty Clof'k of 0to1199 County °" u, Hit. c ... o Mllo,CAnt77. A....,.7, 1"1.
Tllll bull!IOU II <-<led by o
.... , .. pettnenN •. "...., o. L.onedon
"' .... Pl.-l'\llllltNd °" ..... Coelt 0.Cty PC!tlt, l'ullll ... Or ..... CMll Dolly ,.._ Awe. 12• It, 2', S..C. 2, ,.1 ,., .. ,
Tiiis ~I •• fifed wllll , .. A"I. It, lt,2', ,..,._ 2, 1•1 a5041 ----------
CMMty Clen of Of'o""9 County °"
....... 1. '"'·
.. I .. ----------""*" ... Or01191 C.lt Dolly .....
A .... lt, "· •• '-· 2, 1111 ....,
~E&TERM
ANNlJAl Ylf:L[) •
20.84
20a24
19e65
19a05
18 e47
17.88
ANNUAL RATE %
19.0
18.5
18.0
17.5
17.0
16.5
TERM-14 days to 89 days, You pick It.
REQUI RED BALANCE
50,000 &
HIGHER
40,000 TO
49,999
30,000 TO
39,999
20,000 TO
29,999
10,000 TO
19,999
2,500 TO
9,999
FREE CHECKING INCLUDED-No Service Charges, No Minimum
Balance and Free Checks
COMPARE OUR RATES-to Money Market Rates, to Banks and other
Savings & Loans
RATES AND TERMS GUARANTEED!
r ,
Columbia's Investor Plan Is backed by U.S. Government, U.S. Government Agency, and
U.S. Government Guaranteed securities. Because the Plan Is not a savings account or
a deposit, It Is not Insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
Rates are set dally and fixed for the term of your plan. At maturity, you can reinvest at
prevaHlng rates with just a phone call. •For purp oses of computing the annual yields
shown above, a 1-4 day term was used anticipating reinvestment of bOth principal and
Interest each succeeding 14 day term at the same annual rate.
I ' I
COLUMBIA SAVINGS
Orange County Offices to Serve You
Newport Beach Colla M ...
80 Faet'llon Island . corner of HarbOf Jllvd
corner of Newpon Center Or and Wll1on
and Santa Aola C71•> a.cs.11•1 tn•) 1'0-llS&1
Li Mlreda
15800 E. lm1>«lal Hwy.
corner of lmperiel
and Santa Gertrud ..
(213) .. 3,3797
Lake Foreet
234522 Roekfleld Dr.
comer ol Letce Forett Or.
and Aockflald
(n4J 71'0-90&5
Anaheim
910 8. lr*hut1t
neer lall end lrookhuttt
(71•) 179-7101
I ..
I I
I \
-
'
, .........
ELECTRIFYING Although it may be tt bit
s hocking to local residents of Westlake·
Village and inquiring sheriff's deputies.
Renee Nadel thinks her custom-built Rolls-
Royce golf cah is the next best thing under
the s un. The electric cart,., which carries Ms
Nadel and her dog. Robbie. around town
quite corotortably, meets all the require·
ments for a street·legaJ motor vehicle. It runs
for nearly two hours on a four-hour charge
and has a top speed or 30 mph.
Treasury bill Yields decline
WASHINGTON <AP> -Yields on short-term
Treasury securities fell nearly one-half percen-
tage point but remained above 15 percent for the
second week in a row, government officials have
reported.
at an average discount rate of 15.122 percent, down
from the 1S.571 _percent of the week of Aug. 3, of·
ficials said earlier this week.
About $4.3 billion in six-month bills were sold
The government also sold about $4.3 billion in
lhree·month bills at an averaage yield of 15.235
percent. down from 15 674 percent Gr,. 0..-. We
cAi..IJOIN'l
JUMIO PISTACNOS
$4.4tperPomd
at Trader Joe I Pr'Ollto
You would expect lo pay Trader Joe's at the in·
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pistachios, but we got a Superior Avenue (next to special shipment lo sell Dennr.'s and Barclay's for only ... 49 per pound. Bank . Please v11il our newest
HOW IH COSTA MISA
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HAMS STAT•MaMT
Th• ro11owln9 perton1 are dol119
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COMP·KEN CO., 2725 Starbird
Drive, COllt.e *Ml, CA '162'.
PICTITIOUS 8USIM•U
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.... a...-.a W-CLlt.11 hf ... K"'9HrMdt Mtt.21 ...,,,JS -....L-. ..,.... .... :'~ ..., ....... '°" Sle-.... -:::: .=::: 70% Bank Financing
IRA& Keough
(714) 556-M50
South C.O.tt Pfau Vllt•g• -......... 1---C:-~I
M.IPIRIC>a COU•T
Ol'THa ITAT•
OP CALll"OtlllllA
l'Oll TH a COUNTY Ot<ORAllfOa
In Ille matter of Ille 8CIPll<allon ol SUSAN RAE NAGY, l'OR CHANGE
OF N•ME. HERBERT " GRIMM, l77S
Sllrtilrd O<I"'. Costa MHa. CA '7•K.
K•Y GRIMM, 272S Starbird Drive,
Coll• llMW, CA mi.. lion, *' Walker Av..,.,., Cypreu , NO. At"7"
CallfOmla '°'31>. ORDl:R TO SNOW
T "" 11<111M11 Is collducted lly • general pannenftlp
-rtA Grimm
K1yGrlmm
Tl>11 ,,....,_, •• llfect will\ Ille
County Clark ol Oranot County Oft Jwly
20, "" P1"417
Publlshtd Or8n91 Coa\I Oaily Piiot,
u1y 22. i.. •ue s. u. '"' n.0..1
Tllll --...u II <ond!ucled by • cor-CAUi• f'OR
porallon. C-.AMO• Ofl lllAMll T. K. L., IM. Tiie e119llcat1on ot SUSAN RAE
T. K. Lenclry, Prnldent NAGY for c1W9 of -. l\avlft9
Tlll1 '*"'-' was flied w1111 Ille tie.n llleel In e.oun. and It .....,lflt
County Clertc of Or•nee County on from Hkl •Pt»llcallon tlwll SUSAN
Ayt. l, 1'11. RAE NAGY M llled en aw!k allen !=.:: =----ru~1..~sa":w'm~ c-... ..
A.....,. .. LAW N-. l .. mGt'e, 1111 ... ,...., Ofdtrecl Utt...,._....,,,_., ..... HJ -directed, !Ml all per..-1 lnt"'"1·
C..... ......_ CMlfwll&a ta» eel In Miki lftelter OD -betor. 11111
P1'1MI <-' In o..n-J en .. 2l'G c1ey _ _ __ P......,,.. Or .... Coell O.lly Pltot, of $etll., Itel, al 10 .• a .. m. of u lcl clay
llfOTIC• llllVITllllO 8 1DS Ayt. J, U, It. 2', ltll .UINt to•-uuw ...,y WCll --'katloft ler
PUBLIC NOTICE
RECEIPT OF PROPOSALS: •--~1-------------1<M..-of ___ be_,.,..._
--II 11 Nt1nef ~ .. 1N1t o '°"" tt PfOjM>Ull wlll be rec:.iwct 11¥ IN City ~ 1911( 11111 Order to~ c-lie pWlllMd
of Irvine. Owner of Ille -II. 111 Ille of• In t11e Or .... C-1 Dally PllOt, a
Ito o1 ,,. City Cl•rll. located .. lnol ,..,.,paper of teMr•I clrcwlatlon, Jernl>Ore• Road, trvl,,., C•lltornl• ll'ICTtnous 8UStllfaU printed In Mild ,_,.,, a1 tefft _.
""' """' 2·00 p.m °" WlldMMlay ....... STATIEM•MT H Cll ...... tor lour IWCCHllW -· Auov11 "· '"'· lor tlle construction of Tll• lollowlng _._ 11 doing bull· prior to Ille dly of vkl llearlno.
UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY PARK nns•: ' DatlldtlllS21tllclayofJllly, ltll. SKATEllOARO AEMOV•L n.. 1lte LOU 8AUNO & ASSOCIATES. lllM R-ldH. P.-.-r,
01 Ille worll 11 louted at Unlve"lty Dlomond Ave., B•ll1oa 111111d JudQleof tlle
Drive at llaec:" TrM U119, City of C•lltomll '2662. ' ~ COUf1
Irvine. LOUii ~ Bruno ... R.,.._ Pwbll"'9<1 Or-C..11 O.lly Pllol,
0 E SC RI PT I 0 N 0 F W 0 R I( : Way. C.U. MHa, Cellloml• t2'2'. July H, Aue. s. 12, 1', '"' ,,,,_., O.mollll'I nlltlng 1ka1ttMMlrd leclllly, T"I• ~ 11 Conclllcteel by..,..,,.
modify o lsllne Dtock ••II -!Mt.ell lncorpwatect -,llltlan O(lllfr UIM •
t111d1oplne -lrrleatlon. enei,,..,-1 part_.lhlp.
EsllmateUt,000. 1.0u11 Ir-
OPENING OF PROPOSALS: Tiit Tiiis ... ._, .... lllld wllh IN 111a.n11t
propowl1 wlll be pUbllCly -lld alld County Clerk ol ~•nee County °" I U I' a a I O a c O U R T o p rHd et 2:00 p.m. on Wednndey Aug.J.1'11. CALlf'ORllftA, COUNTY OP
Augull 1', '"'· at tllt ebovt· P161Mt ORANOll mentioned of Ike of Ille Own.,. PulllllMd Or-Coa1t Dally Piiot, 7• CIVIC CaNTUl ORIV• Wall
0 B TA I N I NG C 0 NT RAC T Aue. S, 11, It, 2', ltll USl .. 1 IANTA ANA, CALll'OtllA t11tt
OOCUME!4TS: Tiie ~lllcatlon1 are MAaRtMll 01'
nUlled," Unlvenfly Park Improve· PUIUC •""'£ PaTtTION•a: DOLO••• O. menh CIP UO·Jt". Plan1 a nd lllt LANICl'OllO
apeclllc.all-•"" all Gontrec:t docv· RalPOND•NTt CHaSTaa L•a men ts nflly lie obtained lrom Ille M.INlllGa COUllTOP THa LANICl'OllO
O.parl,,,_. of 1'111111< WcwU, City of ITAT•MCAUf'O•NIA WMMONS C .. AMILYLAWI
Irvine. 11100 Jemlloree ROid, lrvlll9, Paa nta CASS NUMe•R IMIUll
Celltornle " non.relundaDte IM ol COUNTYOPCMlAllfOa llfOTIC•I
UD.00 will lie charged lor eec:ll Mt ol ••tMI.. Y• ll9W .... ..C. T1lo C-' _,
CIO<Ymtftll. Pl--1pec:lllullon1 OLADYS •· OOOOY•AR. "'* ....... "9 ........ ,_ .....
wlll be malled IOf a11 aclclHklNI c ... r .. OK....._ llMN ..... "9 ,...... ..... a of u 00. c:-........ ..,, ...................... .
PROPOSllL GUARANTEE: EM:ll NOTtCaOPSALa II,_ ..... NM Ille -..C. .. ..
PfGPOMI "'911 be ec:com_.1.0 ., 1 OP a•AL "'°"aaTY .__, la ... ""'99r, "9 .._. ..
trllll.Oorcftlller1o•ack or lllCI tionO Notice 11 llereby glwa" tll•t u ~ •...,. .,_ ,._... w 11tllea-ol IO P9rttfttof IN tOlel GEOlllOE D. WARTMAN, H.,.,sonal ............... _, ......... ._.
1>111 price lllYllll• to tlw City of fNlne r eprne11t atlwe ot tll• ntate 01 AVllOI
as • fll.t•-• _, Ille llliOCler, 111111 GLADY$ E. GOODYEAR. cllKa-4, Utl .. llo , ... •e•H••••· al
P<C1P01al l1 ec:c9'14.0, •Ill ~IY H · wlll NII • prlw8'e 1•. to t11e 1119Mll ............ _.., ct*o U'-..
ec:ute IN c:onlrKI, ltCllO IMYmeftt of -llMt bidder. Ynder ti& laf'tnl end ....... o -... U'-,...,.... WMkmM1 '°""*"wtloll 111wrMCe, condltlcftl ~ ~. 9"' ....,.. • • ..._ LM IO ....,_._
a11d lurnllfl • wt11fec:tory t<a ltttf\il 111lllect to co11llrrn1tlon by Ille .........
Pe,.lormanct Clond In Ille amouftt of 100 ~rior c-1, tn ~ 21, 1•1, ot ., .,... .... _..._. .. c-tt •
perctftt Of , ... IOIOI bid price end 0 u P.M., -......... Wltlllft tt& time; -.......... ---. ....,...
Lebor •lld llqlerl•I• 8o11d Ill , ......... ..,'-· .... ""le. .. fr .. N,, llHtrt• ·~•o••-•lt, .. •Mo
amount of 100119rcen1 ol IN IOlal Dtd -· -Y tw u. .-1,... ...--.. •,..,..... • ~.ti price. ~. ot -So. Cont Hwy,I lilff ............ -......... a
WAGE lllATES .. A1 required by So. LAgufta,c.llfomla,elltlwrltiM,11·1 "..._. SKllOn •m of .... Cellfoml• Labor II•, .......... end ., .... Of ,... ... '·TO Tl4E Rl!Sl'OHOINT
Code, Ille OWner "81 determined Ille <•OMCI, end oil IN rttM. tltle, llltarett, ! TIM Pltllloner llel 11184 • pollllOll ttneral -•111119 ratn of ,.._., 111 •net •let• INC IN Es-. of GLADYS <MC'"1int I'-mMrl .... II .,... lall
.... locality In """''di IM-· .. to .. I . GOOOYEAR, •co•MCI, llel K • to Ille ......... wlllllfl. •Y• of .... performed. Coples of Mid .,. ... rate q uired llY operation ol law or dale -IN1 -11 Mf'ved en
•tertnlneti-we ma1111afnect •t 11& ot~. o!Mr ,,,.,. °' 111 eddllkM'I to, you, Y'OWI' default INiy lie eftlered fftll
ofllcn ol tlW Owner Ind «• evallallle IMI °'Ille~. at Ille time of Mr tile t-' may eftler • lwtmont c,en.
UllOll reqwst. T .. Contractor ilwlll dNUI, In ond to •II ll'Lt ca11.tln r•I tolnlnt tn)unCUw w otlwr orlltn c-
AOSI • C..,. of •Id doe-I at Mell pre(lerty, lltlMled In lllO C-11' of <ef'nlnt dlvlalon of praperty, lt*flOf Joll Ille. The Contractor end any ''*" Oran .. , Callfor11la, Clncrlbed u ~ dlll4 cutt...,, tlWlf IAlfllllOt'.
contrec:tOf under him 111e11 poy flot lftl IOll-: •tlllnWI' fws, co.c. OftCI well otfter re·
tllan Ille -llllld prevalllne r .. e1 of No. S, alue L...,ol\ IOc•taCI at W7l1 lief • "'*" le .. ....., by Ille -•·
,. .... to 111 _..,,_ ~ In Ille So. C:..-Hwy, So, LA9UI'£, C.IHornta, TIM ..,,WIMll!lt ol W09", t•lne ..
tncutlOll ol ti& contracl. .....,... .. CllllC!'llled • Trect JJU. "°' m1ney tw ....-ty, •r otN r c-t
PROJECT ADMINISTRATION: All S, UNI S of PAl«I loce ... on AP OUIMrbof lllr'IC ......... mey al• r .. _.,._ rel•ll,.. to Ill• prolec:t prior JJ.4111'42 I09tlfllf wlttt .., lffldllt.., wit
It lllO .,...,.,. of lllct,..llall Ii& directed .to» ~ett In Lot 120. OATIO "-10, ltlt .
to J .... Ot~-. Prolec:t ~ TllltlOlt It llUOJed .......... r...... L.MA..9'tfl<ll.
17U) 7J+JMa. tloN, 9'·~ .. Blw l..afMll CMI-OIR
OWNIR'S RIOHU lllHl!RVIO: mUftfly .,._..!ell. 111<.. CWTeflt It!'· ly ._ 0-f, TN~ r..,..... "'9 rlellt to r•lec:t H , _.., condlll-. r-.• ~" ...., w .. I lllcll, to ...iw any 1,.,om\911. t...,I. rlll'U. tltl!ttol w.,, .--Ma, LAW Ol'l'ICll OP COMON AND
It 1111111~ -to--•cit In tN ............. _""'*'_°''..,.._ eAR ... a lnlM"lolllleO-.. , .. -----"'-.... ,.c.m.y ................ ,. O•te4MYa.1t11 •01 o """'-w.-ces11--. ... ,......,CA..., City of ININ 11&1--............. well, ......... UUll .,,..,.., ~
Nttncy c. ,._..,. to M .cc-.1.-ie to Ille "r""'' ,..,..... ClrMet C.... Oellf ......_
City Clen l''l'f......ilw Mf .. "* ~. T1n A .... t, It, tt, M. 1•1 UI~
I ............ Or .... C...I Delly Pllet. -'9111 .... ~ ....... o«-
A ... 1, I, 12, 1"1 Mll .. 1, ..... , 1119 ..,_, ... U. llOIOIOcO to ..
..... Oft allflt!NtlM ...... "' ..
C-'• T-, """• ._..et1111 Mii mel""'"91U ._.., _, ,,._....,..
Oii IM11l'oftt o •COIUollle lo Ille
I • • • • • • • •
If it's got
handles
you'll grab
a sale
faster in
Daily Pilot
classified ads. ca11
642-5678
N'"542
l'ICTITIOUS 8USlllllSS
lfAM• ITATEMENT
Tiie 1011owl1>9 partons are do•ne
bulf ... Hft:
GALLERIA fl PARTNERS, 3100
8rlstol Str•I. Suite 6'0. COit• /!Mu.
Calllornla 92U6
Danie! W. OoNllue. 1903 Yaclll
Coll11l1, Newport BHch, ~•lllornla
t16'0
Tl'IOmaa L. SClvlbef', tn SMckoa-
lla, cor-•• Mor. Cellloml• t2'2S James Alderton, flt West 2111
Strfft, s.nte Ana, Cefllroml• t1706
Wiiiiam J. Kenney, Jr •• 611 AIONfl
Place, Newport 8eacll, Calllor11lo .,..,
J a mat G. Degnan, 700 Soutll Orange Grove
eo..1 ... -. P .......... Celllornl• ti ICIS
Joell -· 22216 Port Carllll•, _ _. ...,,, CMllOrnt• nwo
Pelrldl. S. ~. tD\11 Opal,
lolllN 111-. C..llornl• 92'62
Tllll M l ... u II <-.Cl.O 11y a ........ ~ n.or.... L Sdirlbef'
Tllll 1-WM filed Wiil\ t11e
County Clertc ol Or.,. C-.ty °"Jul¥
IS, ltll
l'IM.DI
Publl-Or-Coast O.lly Piiot,
Jvty 22, 29, Aug. J, 11, ltlt U7CMI
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTlnOUS 8UllNaU
NAM9 STAT•MtlNT
Tiie fOllOWlft9 pef'!IOIH ore dol119 llU•'-•: ITEVllHS & ASSOCIATES, 1n f<
Rlv8"lelt ~ .• N-oort e.ac11. CA .,..,.
MlcMel 1( .......... s..-1, m .. y v lew Ten-ace, 'C.w Mno. CA. Tiiis .......... It Condudltd by ffl 111-
dM .....
~._
This ~ was lllod wlttl t11e
c-ty c1er11 of ~.,... COUftly on ..... '· "''· .. ,...,
P\11111 ..... Or ..... Coest o.tJy Pli.t,
•ue. 12. ''·».Sept. 2, 1t1t lM?41
PUBUC NOTICE
"tCT1TtOUS 8UllNUI ..._STAT•MalJl'T , ... ~ ~ •• *""' ._.. --1•1 MST END LIMITID; 1111 AN-OIAN ll'Olt'TS. •1 HllO CJr., H-
I""°" DMdl. CA t1IWt. ICeftMtll OW... llU<ll, 4"1 HllO
Cir., Hwo ..... llMCll,CA ......
Tlllt ..._.It COl\dlteted '' °" ~ .. ., .......
l(OMllfo o. Metll
Tllll ........... w•tl• wltfl U.
Count' C1o1'l _, Or..... Coolftlf .,.
A119. 1. ttlt. .. ,..,
........... Or ..... c-OollY ... , ....
Ayt. U, It,», Sept. t. 1•1 &MNI
~ ...... ,,,., ...... ., ..
...,,.. .... f/I CWlrtMtlM ..... --, ... &TATUllellTCW .,..,_, ,,_ • .,.... .... lltto,,.
IY~Dlll'ntl~ITAftMe'"Y•A• .... D99Cll-•ll.,_
A..,11,ll•••TOll ,...,... .. CM,.;•ic.. _,"''I Otte
VIII W PICTITMMM lftlW_. .-CY ..... • 8l IM OI• ............. ,._ .... ~. T ..................... .._ .,..,....,,_.,.._._ ....
....... _ .... lk • .._ ......... ~ ......... ltlWl'ltlftlMf
Nlllf ~y HOUR DIV. Of' Wiii .. ...e..t ot 1119 ~ .. f'M
f'UaL a)llll'AMOIRS. l"C., .. tta a. N. "-• .....,,.., llr 1119 ,.,__,
P ...... CllUMoM.CA...._ ro~lwe, et -le. ~II i.e rl(lltl-WNNH ft-o rt• HWy, ... ""911M, cat ...... ot.,..,
................ Ill CwMy ..... ,,.0 ... '""" ............... .
... ""· .... ice .................... . ..... NILIKPAHOllll,INC.,UIL lll'tf,__. I ........... W _,._Ill! ~City, UlllU4ut. ._ ..., • ........ " .. .. ,,. ......... ~-"' ............................ ... UtMmr,w...._ TM._ Ila r--e .. Nl«t .._.
I :V-L•X~MIMUlt.,INC. ........... .... ....-w 0..:,.....,,,... c.w-.... 0-,. 0..--..... eE" ....... _._ .... ..... ...... .. _ . ~ .. ---j ~;:.... ,_ ....... _ .................. .
CllMl'IOW-,, Otweti Clllllllr • #f ... ~ ......... . ..... -...-.ca..,
ti ..... in...... " ,....,or..,°"'..,...... ........ Or-. c:...e o.tl ....
......... "· c"" .. .., .... "· """"" ...i "'
.. . u,......_ ..... ...._~
t 11 I 1,-... ................................ .' ................................ ..,.,.
C™ ......... -...................................................... .... ................................................................. ,. ~ ............... ...,...~ .............................. ,,,.,...,,
~-~.,,.... ............................................ ,.,.. ~ ............. , .............................................. . ..... ,.._,,,_~........................................ . ....
1t1C..-to.c-1 -~ .......... .......,.,. ............. ,. ..... ,..................................... . .... , ,..,.. .. ~ ...... .,_ ................................................................... ~ ...... ~ ............................................... ". ~ l...,...MIWU.~ ......,....,. ................................................. ....... "'1c ............ .,........_OW'9d:
.~.':':":': ~~"rii·;·; .. ,·-, .. ~,;~, .. r,~;;.·~· •, :4-T': ----.. .. ....... ,., ...... _, ....... "· 1•~•-•-c11111•t11111 .,_ ..... .,~.
............ I ·' ...,,,....,,......, .... .......... "' ............... .......,.,
,_....°'9111 c.-Dtltr ""'-:. ''· tt. ... ,.,, u,... • ....
l
·San/Bar Sets record
lrvlne-bued 8a•/8ar Cerp. hu reported
record aalet and earntn•• for fllcal 1ee1. For
the year ended June ao. total revenuet rote 48
percent to $20.2 million from S13.6 mUU011 in
the prior ft1cal year. Net eaminp advanced
to M88,3l4, or 49 cent.I 1 1bare, Crom 129,204.
'or 2 cft'lts a 1bare a year •10. Per-share
earnln11 were rat.ted to renect the 3·for-2
stock apUt paid on Aug. 5.
San/Bar manufactures and supplies
products aod services for the tele·
communlcatlona industry tbrou1b ltl
ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS
tran.smisslon systems division in trvine and
Its bu.slness telephone systems dJvlJion and
telephone service center, both of wbtch are ln
Garland, Texas.
* Amfac lnc. has terminated negoUaUons
with Westgroup Inc. for a Joint venwre and
management contract for the Newporter lnD
at Newport Beach. Amfac had armounced on
July 1 that It had entered l.nt.o dlscusaions
wltb Weatgroup commen~urate with that
firm's announcement of an agreement with
Del E. Webb Corp. t.o purchase the 300-room
Newporter.
* ITT Grinnell Corp.'• Pipe Hanger
Division hai; opened a new engineering office
in Huntington Beach. The office is expected
to eliminate costly time delays encountered
serving West Coast customers from an East
Coast office.
* Chesapeake lnduatrtee, a holding com·
pany, has moved its Newport Beach offices to
500 Newport Center Drive in the Fashion
Island development. Ex-major leaguer Tom
Murphy of Frost Spence Trinen, Costa Mesa1 represented the company in its lease of
1,070 square feel from the Irvine Company.
* Cushman Electronlcs Inc., Newport
Beach, has reported an 18 percent sales in·
crease for the third quarter ended June 30,
1981. Sales adv.anced to $4.8 million over the
like quarter last year. while net income rose
to $198,000 from $152,000. The board of direc-
tors also declared the company's 8th con-
11~cutlve quarterly cub dividend. The
dividend ot 2Va cents a atian It p91able Oct.
1, 1981 t.o 11hareboldera ot l'ffOrd sept. 15 of
this year. *
A nuor Corp. 1ub1ld.lary will aerve ..
proje(:t manager for a ,u project ~ the
offshore area of lbe ICfDfdOID of a ...
Arabia. The project •• J"~ to ,,.,
Ocean Servi ca by the Anbl• A"*"h"' OU
Co. Value of the prdjfft to rtuetr. bfe~·
quartered ln ltvine. w1, not d lleJottcf
'It
San Dte10 GH & Electrtc Co. has signed
an agreement to study the feaalblllty of build·
Ing a photovoltaic power staUon as part of a
conUnuing effort to develop alternative and
renewable resources. Joining SDG&E ln the
study project are Acurex Solar Corp .• Moun-
tain View, and Arco Solar Inc., Chatsworth.
• lntematloaal BHIDeu Maellbae• Corp.
has leased approximately 60 ,000 square feet
in the recently completed l~st.ory American
City Bank Tower at South Coast Plaza Town
Center. Il~M leased the fourth, fifth, sixth
and a portion of the third floor on a long-term
basis. • Wentex Inte rnational Inc., Garden
Grove, has announced significant improve-
ment in its future net revenues estimated for
its oil and gas leaseholds. New information
based on reports from the company's consult'.
ing geologist on several Important properties
in Ohio, has placed future net revenues at
just over $44.9 million more than 10 times
that first published on April 7 and almost
four times that published In its supplement
on June 1. • Beverly Hllla Savl•P IDd Loan Aaeoela·
lion said it has completed a *22.S million sale
and leaseback of ita new administrative
headquarters In Mission Viejo to the Pruden-
tial Llfe lmurance Co. The association will
use the proceeds from the sale to retire high.
cost, short-term commercial borrowings.
• Prlntronill Inc .. Irvine. has signed a con-
l r~~t w~th the G eneral Services Ad -mm1slration for sales of its Pl50, PJOO and
P600 line per minute printers to aU federal
agencies and their contractors.
OOWNI
I.ell ""' ,..., -.... m ..
Jilt "" J\4 .... J ~ ,.... "" ,..., "" ,_. ""
2 "' 2 \It 2 14 ---' t -1 ..-. -"" , .... -"' 2"" -\lo
2V. -"' IJ\4 -1\11
" -ll't II -I n. \lo IVt -li . ... -"" 4lllo -.. Z2~ _,_
Pel Up -.0
Up JU Up ...
VP au Up 2'..7
Up JU Up JU ~ t.: Up 1L2 Up tU ~ :J Up 16.7 Up ts.I Up IU Up IU
Up u ..
Up u..J Up 14.J
Up lU
Up IU Up IU Up U.S up n.s
Pct. Off 16.7 Off 15.0 Off IU Off IU Ofl ll.O Off 12.S
Off IU Ofl .... Ofl 11.1 Off II. I Off II.I Off 10.7 Off 10.0 Off u Off t.I Ofl t .I Ofl t .I °" ... Off ... Off .., °" u Off I.I °" 1.A °" 1.J Off 7.J
In-71.U 71 • .ri St-Funds: Am Ind :UI NL
"-.... L
~ ..
NL NL m:
L L ~
... •• -
-
. . ..... -............. . ••• . -' . .
E COMPO ITE T RAN ACTION
OUOT U10lil' llllCl.UO& 'eaou 0111 "" .... 'f D•• ......... "· l'AC11'1C, ,.., 90tfON OIT•Olf AllO CllllCllClll-ATI nou S ICleAlllOI\ AN09ll'O•TI 0 tT TM. NASO ANO INUllill'
The news that Holiday Inna plan1 to unload the
Harrah's Car Collection ln Sparks, Nev., la a tood ex·
ample or the corporate mlnd at work.
The Harrah's CollectJon ls one of the ftnett
showpieces of antique automobiles ln the world. On
display arc 1,000 cars, Including early Fords,
Packards, RolJs-Royces and the wonderful Bugattls.
It was a collection lovingly assembled by Blll Harrah
from profits made at casino tables. Harrah's
' operates hotels and culnos ln Reno and South Lake
Tahoe.
Harrah beean collecting the classic cars in 1948.
By 1962 he had enoueh lo turn the collection Into a
museum, open lo the public.
BiU Harrah died In 1978. And in 1980 Memphis·
based Holiday Inns, anxious to get into the gambling
business, bought Harrah's company Along with the
casinos came ~
t h e c a r 1,.
museum . It's a ~r e. trinket that ,, .i,.,%l' Holiday Inns ..-.
reels it has no
use r~. i c h a e I • 111111 111 .. ITZ
Taylor. a San
Francisco Chronicle reporter, reported recently oo
efforts by citizens to save the co llection. There are
various plans afoot. 'One even calls for federal law to
give Holiday Inns a s ubstantial tax break in return
for donating the museum to the government.
Why does Holiday Inns want to get rid of the col-
lection? Taylor cited a memorandum issued internal-
ly by Mead Dixon, Harrah's chairman. It said: "We
can no longer afford to hold assets that do not pro·
duce income."
Here, in that brief sentence. is the ethic Holiday
Inns adheres to. It's not the car collection doesn't
produce any income. There's a $4.95 admission
charge to the museum But it takes money to keep
the cars in the perfect condition they are in -and
Holiday Inns can turn a buck much more easily at
the nearby rou lette tables.
Holiday Inns has come a long way in 30 years.
The chain was started after Kemmons Wilson. a de· vout Baptist. took his family on a trip to Washington.
D.C .. and was appalled at the sleazy, roadside motels
he found along the way. Back in Memphis, he teamed
up with Wallace E. Johnson (both were home
builders) to develop a family oriented lodging chain.
Holiday Inns went on to become the world 's
largest hotelkeeper. But for many yea rs, they re·
tained their Southern Baptist heritage. It was a
wrench in 1960 when they decided to rescind a ban on
the serving of liquor in Holiday Inn restaurants.
It was a,, even bigger wrench when they decided
to get into the gambling business. By that time just
about all the oldtimers had left the board -and so
these matters could be decided in a businesslike
fashion. Alter the decision was made to become a
casino operator, L.M. Clymer, one of the oldlimers.
resigned as president of the company. citing "my
overriding regard and respect for my Lord Jesus
Christ."
Today. in addition to the Reno and Lake Tahoe
properties. Holiday Inns has a new casino-hotel in
Atlantic City and owns 40 percent of a Las Vegas
casino. Revenues from gambling are such that they
may account for nearly 25 percent of the $1.8 billion
Holiday Inns collects this year.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 09E! J9"~~A~I ~.Y!W!t ... ~ ':'Toc~re-y, "°'9• II
AMERICAN LEADERS
PC1. Up 11.6 Up 10.0
Up t .4'
Up t.• Up t.• Up t.1 Up l .S Vp 1.4 Up 7.t
Up 7.1 Up 7.7
Up 7.• \Jtl 7 .• Up 7 1 Up 7,0
Up •·!
10 11'10 ~ :r. ~ £Ir:,. e1 ID Tm 402.G C 7.• M .M 40U2+ I.SJ IJ Utl 112.IJ 114.M 111.'" 11•.1'+ 2.70 "5 SUI 110. II J7S u 167.61 m .7• • J .00 ll'IClll• S,UJ,tOO Tran 1.n•.IOO Utl!J 1.170.lOO u St• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l ,lff ,300
WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORI( CAP) Aug. 11 Pr••
Adwal'l<eO • 1oci:1~ O.J.
0.CllMCI ~ 74' unc11an119C1 a "3 roe..1 , .. .,., , ... ,., ........... • " lffw lows n l3
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METALS ,....., C....,--e jlOWWI, U.S._......
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P ....... P'O.•troyoi.,H.Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
TwtNy
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...... 1 ...._ fl•lllt "'"·"· .. •tOM. , ......... """°· .. U.02. l11rlO: let• fllll"t IJ't.00, v• ... OI; MOl,OOMMll.
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......... Ol'lly clelly ........ 1 ... -n.u. 1...-.:enlYMlly.-1~
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SYMBOLS
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·. .·
-
-Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdnosday, Augu1t 12, 1881
Mauch positive
despite losses
Mariners enjoying second season
By EDZINTEL
O(_Dllly ...........
SEATTLE -There's freaky
things happening In Seattle.
For one thing, it's so hot, It
could make an onion cry.
Tuesday's temperature in
downtown SeatUe at 5 p.m. was
90 degrees.
Now a heat wave here occurs
about as often as the Mariners
baseball team wins two games
in a row. Like once a summer.
Well whaddya know, the
i'fJariners just won their second
in a row Tuesday night.
Well. one thing we know
for sure, this streak, like the
heat spell, won't last.
Neither should the Angels' los·
ing streak although they've
shown little indication yet that
they're ready to come back from
their recent vacation.
The Mariners, meanwhile,
want to think that they can be a
part of an honest-to-goodness
race for a divisional title come
September. The realistic thing
about it is, time is on their side.
And if Seattle continues to
play like it did in Tuesday's 4·1
victory over the Angels, it just
may have some fun here.
The Anicels,. on the other
hand, haven't had much fun -
yet, today, the Angels played the
Mariners in a rare early after·
noon weekday game and If the
Mariners completed the sweep,
you wouldn't want to be sitting
next to Angel manager Gene
Mauch on the ride to Oakland
tonight.
As glum as it all sounds, most of the Angels aren't too con·
cerned that they're two J{ames
off the divisional lead with 48
games remaining in Season II of
Strikeball '81.
••If we had continued the
season as we left off and trailed
Oakland by six at this point, go-
ing to Oakland (for three games
beginning Friday l, then it might
be critical," said Mauch. "As it
is, it's important.
"The thing about it is, I've
never experienced a season like
this before. There's just certain
things I've got to do now like get
the two relievers (Don Aase and
Andy Hassler) ready and the
starters ready."
Tuesday night, the Angels col·
lected just five hits (two each by
Rod Carew and Bobby Grich>
and none of them were extra
base hits.
What might concern
<See ANGELS, Page 88>
Rookie stays calm
Dodger crowd can't rattle Red pitcher
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Scott
Brown. a 6·6 Cajun from
DeQuincy, La., surveyed the
large crowd of 45,817 at Dodger
Stadium and called it "pure ter-
ror."
"I've never seen 45,000 peo-
ple,'' the Cincinnati right-hander
said after making his first major
league appearance a successful
one. He may have been awed.
but the 24 -year-old rookie
stymied Los Angeles in relief as
the Reds edged the Dodgers, 7-6.
Dan Driessen slammed a
three-run homer in the seventh
inning to lift the Reds to the
comeback victory.
Brown, summoned from In·
dianapolis of the International
League only hours after the
baseball strike was settled,
pitched 21f.i innings and gave up
only two hits and no runs to pick
up the victory.
"He was outstanding," said
Cincinnati manager John
McNamara. "We wanted only
one inning out or him but he was
so sharp we stayed with him.
The Dodgers aren't the easiest
lineup to race in your major
league debut."
Reliever Terry Forster. win·
less for two years and 0-1 this
season, appeared in command.
pitching out of a jam, in the fifth
when he took over for
Valenzuela, getting the side in
order in the sixth and retiring
the first two Reds in the seventh.
But he gave up successive
singles to Ken Griffey. Concep-
cion (his l,500th big league hit)
and George Foster. Driessen
followed with his homer down
the right field line.
"I've never seen lightning
strike so fast," said Dodger
Manager Tommy Lasorda.
·'I hit a mean slider.·'
Driessen said. "I was just look·
ing to make contact and when I
hit it, I was hoping it would not
go foul.''
After the Reds took a 2·0 lead
in the top of the first. Dust)'
Baker lied the score with a two:
run homer in the bottom or the
inning, bis fifth. Concepcion
homered off Valenzuela to lead
off the third, his fifth, and
doubles by Guerrero and Bill
Russell tied the game in the
fourth.
Play ball!
Irvine North and Seavtew -
two Little League powerhouses
-put on an tmpressive de·
/enswe battle Tuesday night at
the Mis1Son V1e10 Youth
Athletic Park. Playing m the
Little League dw1swnal tourna·
ment. the two teams have been
inching their way toi.Varcts re-
gional competition which will
be he1d m San Bernardino nert
week. and maybe. even the Lit·
tie League World Senes m
Williamsport. Pa later this
month. In Tuesday·s action.
Irvine North's Gary Renlana
r top left 1 roars bock for a pitch
during the late innings against
Seat.new. Teammate Michael
Balsamo 1 top right J takes a
hard swing and makes contact
Meanwhile. Irvme North'$
Michael Stewart 1 No. 9. bot·
tomJ scores a run and watches
a play at third base along with
Seat.new catcher Kevin O'Con·
nor. To see who won this
dwisumal thriller. see Pa9e BS
Dally Piiot Photo• by CherlH Stan
The big crowd, which matched
the Dodgers' season average,
was a result of Fernando
Valenzuela's bid for a loth vie·
tory. But Valenzuela gave up
two runs in the first inning and
a home run to Dave Concepcion
In the third.
Does Meyer really deserve better? . '
The rookie, who started for the
National League in last SlDlday
night's All -star Game, eventual·
ly was knocked out in the rifth
inning.
·'I threw some good pitches
but they hit them," said the 20·
year-old left-hander. "I had prob-
1 ems with my control (he
walked four) because I didn't
throw much during the strike.
When I pitch regularly again.
I'm sure it will come back."
The Dodgers had broken a 3-3
tie with three runs in the fifth on
a walk, a single by Steve
Garvey, doubles by Ron Cey and
Pedro Guerrero, and a wild
pitch. Danny Meyer
BVD TVCKER
SEATTLE He really deserves better
than this but who ever told Danny Meyer
that baseball is fair? No one, absolutely no
one.
But then, things could be worse. Meyer
co uld be removed from baseball
altogether as he figured he would be when
he graduated from Mater Dei High S-chool
in l!nO.
He might be working for his dad in El
Toro or maybe for himself near his home
in Woodinville. Wash.
Somehow, though, baseball was in the
future for Meyer. He just didn't give
himself enough credit back then. Besides,
.400 hitters, as Meyer was for three
straight years at Mater Del, don't come
along often.
So here he is, 11 years later In the big
leagues. The problem is, he is a member
of a Seattle Mariners franchise that for
five years. since its inception In l!n7. has
battled a war for credibility. And he's bat·
tling his .own war with the Mariners for
respectability.
Meyer should have won the war long
ago. His major league career batting
average is .258; and. he's hit .278 and .275
the past two years. In his first year with
Seattle. Meyer hit .273 with 22 home runs
and 90 RBI. That year. he appeared in 159
games.
It all began in 1972, when, as an infielder
at the University of Arizona, Meyer was
drafted in the fourth round of the summer
draft -much to his own disbelief.
"I just didn't think I was good enough at
the time," he said Tuesday as he and the
Mariners prepared to meet the Angels at
the Kingdome.
But Meyer was good enough, as he
demonstrated by a .396 batting average at
Bristol, Va. That was tops in the AA Ap·
palachian League and earned Meyer the
Louisville Slugger Silver Bat Award and
Player of the Year honors.
In lln4. Meyer batted .304 at Evansville
of the AAA to earn a promotion to Detroit
in September.
In two years at Detroit, Meyer batted
.236 and .235 before being drafted by Seat·
tie in the l!n6 expansion draft.
Although he was originally drafted as a
second baseman. Meyer has played third,
first and outfield since.
In 1980, the Mariners. short on talent in
the outfield, switched Meyer from third to
left field. ~,
He had a hot start at the plate. maintain·
ing a .300 mark through July 26. It was a
good year. 1980, for Meyer as he raised his
totals as a Mariner to the top spot on the
followin~ all-time lists -games (572). at·
<See DANNY, Page 88)
Football in Saskatchewan has to warm one~s cockles
REGINA, Saskatchewan -Having taken the
noon balloon to Saskatoon, one Is obligated to
furniab a report to the curious population of the
real world.
,or openers, tbe Saskatchewan Rougbrtders,
'fhicb ls the local side, created much rejoicing and
chnclng on the boulevard when it defeated Mon·
treal by a largf score during which time much
I &t>uae was applied lo Vince Ferraiamo.
.. Vince came here irom the LO. AnseJea Rama
•d ii a celebrity in Canada because be eanui -at • ''•Jl ta paid -a aalary somewhere in the
· tr1bborJtood of the entire payroll of the
., ukatcbeWan team. Therefore, it ia undentanda-
• • e ~ a celebration would enaue when P'er-
. · .lacamo wu booed by the home client. of Montreal 11.a removed from the 1ame, much to the •nautab •, . .-ibe m.., who writes the checka. ..
: ~ ' You see, \o cbtck out football lD SUllatcbewan to~ one'• eoeklea. It ia tbe Green Bay of UM
· -~ Pootba1I Leque, onlJ m•cb more to.
,.._ 9t8dium lD a.pm bolda fewer tban 80.000 • ..
and people must come from all over the province
to fill it. Revenue comes from sourcea other than
the sort of television package peculiar to the NFL.
The Roughrider oreanizaUon ia operated by
vohmteers from the community and money la
raised' by pancake breakfasts and bake allea and1 once a year, a S200 a plat.e diMer where a rtblla
evening ls spent rafflln1 off two or three
automobiles.
"There ls no doubt it la a different at-
mosphere,•' aaya Ed Ala man. the &Niatant 1enerll
manager of the Rougbrtdera and a former Rama
a11lstant under Chuck Knox. "For oae thln1. you
can lOH a 1ame bere and ll the team loon like lt
waa t.rytn1 lo win, nobody boOI and the coach
doesn't get hun1 In elfin and nobod)' waatt to klU
any8ody. l know that ta hard to believe, but It la
the honelt to God truth."
A player wbo clatma to M comforUib'" lt Ken
Clark, wbo did UM puntiat befor'9 UM a._ ~ de·
dded ,..... Corral couJd do botll kmdl of tlU... ., .
"Nat'1rllly." Clark 1111, •'there la a a.· ,,
ference in the money a gizy can make. Otherwise,
this is a great place to play. Ed (Alsman) ls right.
Yoµ can leave the field here after losin1 a game
and get a standing ovat.ion. I don't know .if this
would be the case anywhere in the States or, for
that matter, anywhere else in Canada.
"They booed Vinnie pretty 1ood. I couldn't tell
for sure, but I don't think be liked it very much.
Has Vinnie ever been booed before?"
Not around here, be wasn't.
Bobby Hosea, a defensive back from UCLA,
aaya be ia dellthted with the 1urroundln1s and
trnlment.
"It is at.Glutei>-ire.at playtn1 here," Hoeea
aaya, ''My one resret la that the people back home
don't hear more about •bat ia 1otns'on up here.
Our sames are on eJble TV DOW, tbou1b. Do you
think that will help 1et Caadtan football a UtUt
more reeocnlUon down thent''
Well, then wu lfHt lntere1t I.ft P'erraaamo
pricw to lut Sunday. ~ that Wilt continue la unC41r'tain.
' .
' -,.,.,,
"I got a cllpplng from back home," Bobby
Hosea says. "The guy who wrote it Is all wrong."
He refers to a story written by a Los Angeles
writer who caught Ferragamo's opening act ln
Vancouver and wrote that facilities In the CFL
were of slum quality.
"It was too bad the writer saw Vancouver's
facility," says Norm Fong. ·~It is the wont in the
league.'' •
Norm Fon1 is the Saskatchewan equipment
man who did the same job for the Loa An1eles
Sharks of the World Hockey Association. He ahowa
a vlaitor around the layout of the Rouchrtders' pre·
miset includlne a bu1e loclter room, wel1Jhl room,
saunas, whirlpool and 10UD1e .
It compares favorably with the multimllllon,
dollar setup at Rama Park ln Anaheim.
"'lbere is not as mucb money bert," Bobby
Hoeea says and Ken Clark nodl a1reement, "but·
neither ls It the end of tbe world.''
Sukatchewe 1ot a lot clOMr to the center of
the universe th4t day it put the bott on Vince Fer·
ra1amo.
.. . . .
Mantle impressed
with Rose's prid e
From AP dlJpatcbea
OMAHA, Neb. -Bbeball HaU iii
of Famer Mickey Mantle says he
believes most of modern-day major
league baseball players lack pride.
But the former New York Yankee great
said he doesn't blame the lack of self esteem on
the players as much as he does the owners.
•·1 think the owners have made it too easy
today, handing out 10-year contracts for
millions or dollars," ManUe
s aid. ··on ce the y (the
players) sign the contract
they figure they don't have to
work as hard anymore.
From th.e minute they sign
they've got it made.
"Nol every player is that
way, but I can think or
several pitchers who have
signed big contracts and
Mantle were never heard from
again.''
Mantle said there is one player who still
plays with the integrity and desire he admires.
That someone is Pete Rose of the Philadelphia
Phillies. While Mantle was in Omaha Monday
on business, Rose became the National
League's all-time hits leader with a single
against St. Louis.
"There's a guy who has a lot of pride,"
Mantle said of Rose. "To me he's an old-time
ball player. He plays every ball like it was the
last play of the World Series ...
· Mantle said if there was one thing he could
do over again in his career. it would be his 16
All-star Game appearances.
"I wished I 'd taken those games a little
more seriouslx," said Mantle, a 12-time World
Series veteran. "I haven't played for 12 years,
but when I was playing, the American League
never took the game seriously." ·
Quote of the day
"If he's happy in his heart, fine. But if
rnoney was the only reason he left, then I
think it was a bit of a mistake. I know
what's he's going through. This year he's
going to be sitting in his Canadian home on
Sunday afternoon and watching the Rams
play on TV and not all the money in the
bank is going to keep bis insides from eat-
ing away at him." -Former CFL and
Washington Redskins quarterback Joe
TbelsmaDD. speaking of former Rams
quarterback Vlaee Fen acamo, who is
playing this year in Canada.
. . , . -. ..
' . .... . . . . . -
Cooper leads ~rewers' sweep
Cecil Cooper homered twlce, Ii doubled three times, and 1ln1led
twice u the Milwaukee Brewers col·
lected 30 hlta In sweepln1 a twl-nt1ht
doubleheader from the Cleveland Indians Tues-
day, 6-5 and 6-1, extendln1 the Indiana' loslna
. streak to seven 1amt1. A crow.a of 7,776
watched the game. The Indiana avtraied 8,401
In two Tuesday nl1ht date. prior to the strike
lo other American
L.ea1ue 1ames, Toronto's
OUo Veles and Buck
Martllla each belted lhree-
run homers ln the Cirst inning
to help the Blue Jays snap a
12-aame loalne streak with a
6-4 victory over. Detroit
. . . RJckey Henderson and
Dwa)'lle Murphy each had
two hlls and scored two runs C~ to ignite Oakland's offense and the A's held on to defeat Minnesota, 6-5.
OakJand jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the first two
lnnlngs . . . Gre1 Lullutd broke a tie with his
third extra base hit of the eame In the seventh
inning as the Chicago White Sox defeated
Boston, 4-2 behind the five-hit pitching of 8 011
Baumgarten, Steve Trout and Ed Farmer
. . . Four Texas plichers, led by starter Rick
Honeycutt, combined on a four hitter as the
Rangers made a first-inning run stand up for a
1-0 victory over the New York Yankees ...
The game between Kansas City and Baltimore
was rained out . . . Boston outfielder Tom Po·
queUe has been acquired on waivers by Texas.
Perry notches win No. 295
Rufino Linares belted a two-run •. · triple to help 42-year-01~ right-hander
Gaylord Perry win the 295th game of
his career as the Atlanta Braves
downed the San Diego Padres, 5·1 Tuesday
night to highlight National Leque baseball ac-
tion. Perry, 6-4. worked the lint ftve innings, al·
lowing rive hits in his first tPJINlance in San
Diego since leaving the Padlw two years ago
. . . Keith Moreland hit a
bases-loaded single off Bruce
Sutter in the bottom of the
10th Inning to give
Philadelphia a 6-5 victory
over St. Louis. Dane lorg's
run-scoring double and a
two.run triple by Ken
Oberkfell had rallied the
Cardinals to a 5-3 lead in the
eighth inning. Consecutive
PerT}I doubles by Larry BolV• and
Bob Boone got the Phillies even in the bottom of
the eighth . . . Hubie Brooks drove in a pair
of runs. including one of two in the eighth in-
ning, that rallied the New York Mets to a 4·2
victory over the Chicago Cubs. It was th-:
second straight triumph for the Mets in the
second half of the season . . . Mike Easler
snapped a 2-2 tie with a single and John Milner
smashed a three-run homer to cap a five-run
rally in the ninth inning that carried the Pit-
tsburgh Pirates to a 5-3 victory over Montreal.
The Pirates entered the ninth, trailing 2-1 ...
Tom Grtm.n pitched a six-hitter for 8"11 innings
and San Francisco bunched eight hits in the
first ijlree innings for a 3-2 victory over
Houston.
(PLUS oEPOSrr <>n ALL t<EOS)
'. -TODl'S
2,\-082 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH
PHQt!JE (714) 960-4347 10 AA TO 8 PM MON. T)iR<J ~ T.
~ ... , 10AAT07PMSON. ~VISA NtD MASTER CHARGE
. .. . . . . . . ......... -. . . . . .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT'/Wednetday, Auguat 12, 1981
Baseball today
On t.h.11 date ln baseball ln 19'7':
California Angela flreballer Nolan Ryan
truck out a 19 Boston batten, tyinc the
nlne·lnninl record, aa the An1e1.J topped
the Red Sox 4·2.
On UU. date ln 1964:
New York Yankees 1lu11er Mickey
Mantle belted a home run from both aldea
of the plate in the same 11me for the 10th time ln hh career . . . a m~or lea1ut,
record.
Players develop meningitis symptoms
• Twelve football players at EE
LoulsvtUe St. Xavier Hl&h School 4 •
have developed symptoms of viral
mentneills and another three were aeot home
Tuesday. Those three caaea were not confirmed
as viral meningitis, Coach Mike S&ewart said.
Trainers at lhe University .of Kentucky and
University of LoW.ville said th'y have no rea-
son to fear meningitis oQtbrea.ka among their
returning players . . . A foot fracture has in-
definitely sidelined Antboay Hancock, Ten-
nessee's leading receiver for the past two years .
Hancock suffered a hairline fracture in his right
foot near the small toe when he tripped near his
home . . . On the pro front, veteran wide re-
ceiver Roger Carr left the Baltimore Colts
training camp Tuesday, five days after be was
to have signed a long-term contract. Carr left
the NFL club after a snag developed in his con·
tract negotiations . . . The New Orleans
Saints cut seven players Tuesday, including
giant defensive lineman Oaad ea PltUyaw and
reserve quarterback Ed Bu.ru. The 6-9, 290·
pound Philyaw played his college ball at
Grambling and moved into the NFL wit h
Oakland . . . U.S. District Court Judge Harry
Pregersoa has questioned a juror in the
' Oakland Raiders-NFL trial about his possible
relationship to a man who once owned a
franchise in the now-defunct World Football
League.
Waltke (ranked 52nd) beats Connqrs
Unheralded Trey W altke stunned •
third-seeded J immy Connors, 6·4, 6-3
Tuesday ni ght in the Canadian Open
tennis championship in Montreal. Waltke is cur·
rently ranked 52nd in the Association of Tennis
Pro[iopals world rankings . . . A group op-
pos · g South Africa's apartheid system said
Tue ay it would try to force cancelalion of
South African Springboks rugby matches in the
United States by pressuring the mayors in cities
where the games will be played . . . Tom
Byers fought off a pair of challengers down the
stretch to win the 1,500-meter race and lead the
United States to eight victories in an invita·
tional track meet in Sweden. Byers was clocked
in 3:37.00. It was less than a second off his
personal best.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Cincinnati at Dodgers.
7:30 p.m ., KABC (790 ).
P195175R14
P205f7PA14
P205l75fU4
P205/75R1S
P215175R15
P225175R1 S
P236f75R 115
15SISR1 2 .......... $30.95'
145/SR13 . . . . . . . . . ·. 30.95
1551SR13 ............ 31.95
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16SISR14 . .. . . . . .. . 35.95
1751SR14 ............ 37.95 185/SR14 ............ 40.95
185/SR15 . . .. . . . . . . . 37.
STEEL BELTED
175/70SA1 2
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Rutledge isn't
hurt that bad
Ram QB out 3-4 weeks
By JOHN SEVANO
oltMDllltr .........
It appears as if the Rams have finally eotten a
break . . . figuratively apealdne, of course.
What wu believed to have been a serious ln-
j u r y Monday night sustained by backu p
q uarterback Jeff Rutledge, turned out to be
nothing more than a partial dislocation.
The Alabama graduate, who Injured his throw·
Ing shoulder when blindslded by New England
Patriot linebacker Don Blackmon, rteures to be
lost to the Rams for no more than a month.
"I'm glad it wasn't any worse than it was,"
said KuUedge from the Rams' Cal State Fullerton
training camp Tuesday night. "I wish it hadn't
happened at all, but I guess this Is the best of what
could have happened."
Rutledge claims he never saw the dogging
linebacker who hit him early in the fourth quarter.
He said he knew upon impact, however, that
something was wrong with his right shoulder.
Team doctors speculated that Rutledge actual·
ly popped the shoulder back in himsell when be
tried cir c ling his arm following the injury.
Preliminary X-rays taken at Anaheim Stadium were inconclusive Monday, so Rutledge spent the
night at Centinela Hospital in Inglewood where be
was X·rayed again Tuesday morning.
A series or 10 photos showed nothing and br.
Clarence Shields, the Rams' associate physician.
cleared Rutledge to go back to training camp.
"It's still really sore,.. admitted Rutledge,
"Hopefully, it can mend quickly." '
The optimistic report on Rutledge saved the
Rams, at least for the moment, from having to
shop around for another throwing arm. That still
may become a possibility, though, if Bob Lee
<sidelined the past 11 days with tendinitis in his
ri~ht elbow) doesn't recover from his setback.
Rutledge hopes to begin throwing lightly by
this weekend although he says it will be three-lo·
four weeks before he does any serious throwing
and is able to participate in contract drills .
"At least it wasn't anything bad," he said.
"We'll just have· to take it slow."
Tiant now a Pirate
PlTTSBURGH (AP > -Luis Tiant. the flam·
boyant right-hander who dazzled American
League hitters for over a decade only to begin this
season in the minors, was purchased by the
Pittsburgh Pirates Tuesday from their Portland
team or the Pacific Coast League.
The 40-year-old Tiant is expected to join the
Pirates in time for their game tooight in
Pittsburgh against the Montreal Expos.
Tiant, who signed with Portland in February
after gaining his free-agency from the New York
Yankees. was 13-7 with a 3.82 earned run average
in 21 starts with Portland. He pitched an early
season no-hitter.
....... $35.95
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S1ZE
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P235175R15
RE Pl.ACES
BR78·13 OR79·14
ER78-1• FR78-14
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PRICE . "42.95 43.95
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SERES WHITEWALL
S2U5 07811' 35.95 2795 H71114 3U5
2U5 G11115 3U5 StZE 155/SR12 ............ ~.95 PR PRIC
700-14 •• • .. . . . 4 .. '41.96
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70 SERIES fWSEO MITE LETTERS
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G70ll14 . 44.95
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HEAVY
DUTY
SHOCKS
s1p
ALIGNMENT
~c.M-liC.._ ..... , ..
CMclase. ..... .... , ...
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• Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/WednHday, Augu1t 12, 1981
From Page 86
ANGELS CALM • • •
Mauch was that the 1uy aetU111 down hla team
wasn't a Goose Oos1111 or even a Floyd Ban·
nlater. It w11 Jim Beattle, Just called up from
Sookane. At the aame Ume, ft mlgbt not concern
?l,uch aeein& aa how BcaUe had all that time dur
Ing the strike to pitch In the minor lea1uea.
"It didn't seem to bother Garvey or Grich or
Oowni111 (who had the other hit>." Mauch said.
Downing didn't come up with an alibi for his
term's lack of punch, eitber.
''We got plenty of hitting in and we know we'll
bust out of it,·· the lettlielder said. ·'The double
play baU killed us the last two nights. We just are
goh\I to have to put something together."
KEN FORSCH (9-4), who had allowed just two
runa in his last 31 innings, pitched prior to the
strike, went six innings, allowing three runs on
eight hits. Reliever Andy Hassler then came in, al·
lowing two hits in two iMings, although one of
those was a booming home run lo designated hitter
Richie Zisk in the eighth. his ninth of the year -
all solo s hots.
Seattle outfielder Tom Paciorek, the former
Dodger, had another big night. Monday night, he
bad three hits and three RBI. Tuesday. he had two
hjts and two RBI.
Carew, who is playing like his usual self
through the first couple of games, said that he's
not overly concerned. but concerned.
"I'm really tired right now," said Carew. who
Oew in Monday morning from Cleveland to join
the team after playing in Sunday's All·slar game.
like Forsch, Burleson and Lynn. ".I could really
feel it yesterday (Monday l After the second in·
ning, I was dead beat. My legs fell like they had
extra pounds on them.'·
' "But nobody's swinging the bat well and we
'have t-0 be aware with this short of a season.
bowning, Baylor, Lynn, Burlie -no one's hitting well."
And Carew. for one, felt that Beattie had a dis·
linct advantage Tuesday night.
"Any club, for one that brings up a pitcher
from the minor leagues will have an advantage."
Seattle was helped by several fine defensive
plays Monday by Danny Meyer of Mater Dei High
School who made a splendid over·lhe-head catch of
a fly ball from the bat of Ed Orr in the second
inning to save at least one run. He received a
standing ovation from 6,808 in attendance in the
Kingdome .
* * AN"llL NOTllS Alter M•rln•r
stcon(I i..Hm•n J•ll• (rH wa•
tl\t-out •n~lno 10 •IHI In t,.
Mvenltl lnnlne ol -..S•V'S 9•me, It
not only DrOll• his wcc.utul Uol9ft
..... ~•I J7 lllel"11 IN A l re < .... Mt IHI .,_., by WMlle Wit.. ol
K•llS.S City). but 1t br<IM Crur' he•rt
.. Well "II WM '"" while ii luted, ..
lie MIO Tutt<tey. "II OIOn'I llave
•n't'I ..... lo 00 wllll the sltlU. I WM
Ill-.,.. I w•s r-y. I llwWCJtll I WM
In 111919 but lie (MCONI i..te umpfre o,... 1(-) 01c1n·1 •nd lll•t .... ,,..,
Of courw, I'm Pl'91..0l<ed •llDvt II."
CndjtAngelsutclwr If Ott wlln tn.
throw to -k Crur' strHk . . TIM
Anoets post~ dreutnv room Is
..... Jtarttno lo look Ilk• • MASl-4
unit."-"' wr_.s In !IOI packs •nd
COIO packs -days .,. ~ ... LyM
llnj...-ed 1e9 Ill the All·si.r vamel,
lftOft Ki.. l•rml, •10 •••-
(kn•l -•t le .. 1 ,..,. ollw" Lynn
From Page 66
* •no aoonv•led llis Injured 199 wllllt
slldlnQ Sunoay In Clewl•n(I Is play
•nv. ••"'°"GI' 114•Ylno w1111 • 1o1 a1
peln ··1 _,ldn't be dol1>11 It II Iller• ••••n 1 Just JO vames left In ,,,.
M•-'·" ,,. wkl T-y nl9fll
•• , •nother entere•lnment ••·
trav_.,. •t llw K"'9dome. <°"'911· menu of o-r a-,. Aryy,., IN
8•.-11 Duke al H«wperl ~II A
touri>lect c...,lry IMt>CI antertained
be~or• tlw o-. tot lowed by •r>0U.r
llrewortts -•ft•rw••d~ L•ft· ll•ncled pjtcr.r 1111 Tr•..,.., on tr.
11-d•Y Olwbieo list slno M•Y • !ten· d0nlll5 In tll5 left W>oulder l, llH bMn
•ulgneo to A•dwood ol lllt
C •lllornl• le•gue . T•m
............. Y. ,,.. Angel5' Ho. ' pick In tne 1'7' wmmer draft, u,_,.w..,t
•ucceulut sur-y 1...-tom llvameM•
In llh left lllumb Mond•Y -•Ill
wt•r •<•st for sl• w .. lls
DANNY MEYER • • •
~bal.8 (2,082), hits (552), home runs (6 1), RBI (291)
and total bases (859).
'Then. three games into the 1961 spring exhibi·
lion season, Meyer pulled his abdominal muscle.
How, he's still not sure.
''All I know is that it kept me out for about
three weeks and it should have been longer
because when I came back, I guess I pushed it too
much and it set me back another three weeks," he
sakl. "When I ca me back from that, I was out of a
job." .
Well, not exactly out of a job but Meyer was no
loncer an everyday starter.
The Mariners made some off-season trader in
whl._h they picked up two veterans -outfielder
Jett Burroughs. designated hitter Richie Zisk and
infielder Len Randle. Suddenly, Meyer was no
longer a star among a mass or mediocrity. And
suddenly. Seattle had some depth.
Before the strike. Meyer was on a mini·tear al
the plate hitting around .400 in his last 14 games.
But things have since changed. Maury Wills is no
longer the manager, Rene Lachemann is. Not that
it matters -much.
"The hiring of Rene was one of the best things
that could have happened lo this club," Meyer
said. "But it has little lo do with· my situation. I'm
platooning and I'm not happy about it.
"I think I should be an everyday player.
especially on this team . But there's nothing I can
do. I can just grin and bear it. ..
At the moment, Meyer is trading off with Len
Rand.le and Rick Auerbach at third base. A left·
handed hitter, Meyer is seeing action against lef.
ties only, for the most part.
"People have it set in their minds that lerties
can only hit lefties: it's a stigma we have to live
with."
Next year, Meyer will become a free agent,
making him eligible lo participate in the newly
created player pool scheme dictated by the strike
settlement.
"Unless the Mariners show a lot of interest,
I'm probably out of here," says Meyer. "I like liv·
in1 here, it's a clean city, but I don't particularly
like the Kingdome" I'd much rather play outdoors;
it's too stale in here."
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
-By Ed Zlatel
ROGER CARLSON
Keller makes a moOn over Hawaii possible
When Dave Thompson appeared al Marina
High ln 1978 it's safe to say the ptcldn1a were allm.
Fourteen losing seasons ln the put 15 made
that a reality, Clearly , Thompson needed some
help to get the Vildn11' ship turned.
It was time to beat the bushea, gel aome peo·
pie exc:it.ed, get them involved ln the football pro·
gram. Promise freshmen a moon over Hawaii aa
seniors, anyt btna for Pete's aake, 1et
something 1oing.
Well, one of Thompson's lieutenants, Andy
Donegan, decided a moon over HawaU wouldn't be
bad, and it obviously helped 1et things rolling.
Since then the Vikings have posted record• of
4·5. 9-2·1 and 6-5, and have been in the CIF playoffs
for the last two years. 'llhe pre-Thompson era
found no Marina team In the eliminations.
BUT THE HAWAU l.SSUE, well, it wasn't a
ploy, but Donegan admits the idea was dying on
the Vine. He had done a lot of preliminary work,
but the response just wasn't there.
Obviously, Marina High football players know
where to go when they really want something
done, so after booster Jim Keller promised he'd
look into the matter if they would let down, he
went lo work.
He has been working ever since, but the payoff
comes when the Vikings set sail for Hawaii to duel
Castle High, scheduled for Aloha Stadium in
Honolulu.
It's no small undertaking and Donegan, now
the athletic director, provides some insight.
"Keller came to us and said, 'these kids think
they're going to Hawaii.'
"We told him it was OK by us, but at that point
the workload was such that we simply could not
become involved. Jl would have lo be bis. He took
It on him.sell and I'll tell you, Edison doesn't know
what it's In for. The work ls unbetlevable to get
this many people <about 200) over t here."
\VIOLE THE VIKINGS are the first Orange
Coast area team to leave the state for a football
game since Mater Dei trekked to Las Vegas 20
years ago, Edison follows In 1982 to the Islands.
So. just who Is thi:; Jim Keller? Well, the
mustachioed 275·pound ex·lineman at South Gate
High, Eul Los Angeles College and Uoiversity of
Maryland, a veteran or service ball and even
eight-man and flag football, isn't hard to pick from
a crowd. He's the one getting something done.
"All I had to do was guarantee to the coaches
we would gel it done," says Keller. With that,
Keller, Chuck Maples and Bob Lee went lo work.
"Conservatively it has been fi ve times more
than l anticipated," says Keller.
"I've fowid out jusl how much room 624 cubic
feel of candy can take oul of your front room. Yes,
I've asked myself a couple or limes, 'what am I do· mg?' ..
The candy netted around $3,000, Al Tobin
donated $5,000, a rock concert earned S2,300, an art
auction netted Sl,200 and a couple of Las Vegas
nights have helped.
AT ANY. RATE, the $40,000 tab for air fare and
accomodations has been realized.
"One thing that has been learned by some or
these kids," says Keller, "is that $500 is a helluva lot of money.
"Many have gone out and got a job who never
would have. A lot of them were unable to get the
fmancaaJ backing from their parents and simply
went out and got the job."
Keller doesn't see the Vlkin~s tailing into the
tourist trap syndrome that someumes burns teams
entering the big city.
"These are beach city kids and 95 percent of
them have cars. Twenty percent ot them have
been to Hawaii with their parents and I don't think
they're going lo be quite that awed," explains
Keller.
Although lhe Vikings' schedule calls for more
hard·nosed practice than some might like, it ap·
pears they will also have ample lime for other
matters.
"This isn't going to be a case or bus·to·field·to·
bus, .. says Keller "We want the kids to see
Oahu."
KELL E R ESTIMATES he has spent two hours
a night working on the project for the past year
and says the last or his doubts subsided around
Christmas.
The Vikings leave Los Angeles InternalionaJ
Airport on the morning of Aug. 30, returning a
week later.
"There's just two things that will make this a
good trip_." says Keller ... First. a win. Seconifly, no one gets m trouble."
The formula for purchasing a bundle of tickets
such as the Vikings did six months ago (at better
prices, of course). was simply to borrow the
money and put the tickets down as collateral.
So, it appears Keller, Maples and Lee have
just about got the job done. The rest is up to
someone else and it began today with pre·season
conditioning. The first of two·a·days with pads
begin Monday
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Irvine
scores
3-1 win
Gary Rentaria, who
last week used his bat to
s park Irvi ne North to a
Li tlle League Majors
sectional play victory,
used his arm Tuesday
night in pitching Irvine
to a 3· l victory over
Seaview in divis ional
playoff action al Mission
Viejo's Youth Athletic
Park.
Re ntaria limited
Seaview to four hits and
was backed up with
some fine defensive pfay
from his infield as
Irvine North advanced
to t o night 's battle
against Inglewood at
5: 30, a lso at Mission
Viejo.
Tuesday, Irvine North
could only muster t wo
hits. but they took adv an·
tage of two first inning
errors and singles by
Mike Balsamo and Mike
Stewart to push over all
three of their runs.
Balsamo was also im·
eressive at shortstop,
s tarling two double
plays for the victorious
Irvine North s qu ad.
Third baseman Keith
Hamilton was also
credited with a few de·
fensive gems al bis cor·
ner.
Irvine North will start
Stewart on the mound
tonight against
Inglewood. He's 3·0 in
tournament play.
Should Irvine North
advance to the
di vlslonal finale on
Thursday and win that
game, the next s tep
woul d be the Little
League regional tourna·
ment in San Bernardino.
S wan hurt
C HICAGO <AP)
The New York Mets
placed pitcher Craig
Swan on the 2l·day dis·
a bled list Tuesday
retroactive to Aug. 8,
the club said.
Replacing Swan on the
roster was pitcher Ed
Lynch, who was recalled
from Tidewater of the
International League.
GOURMET
IT AUAN • AMERICAN
CHEVY EXPANDS ITS OFFBRI
(annual percentage rate)
ON AI,I, NEW CHEVY CARS,AND
NOW. •• LIGHT-DUTY 1'KUCKSI
Now, participating Chevy deale rs
have rolled back the interest rate
on light-duty trucks as well as
cars. That means, if you qualify,
you can save on everything from a
Chevette to a Suburban. Compared
to national average interest rates,
this rollback could mean savings
of hundreds of dollars! Of course,
your savings will vary with the
amount financed, the duration of
the loan, and state law. But hurry!
This offer only applies to new
Chevy cars and light-duty trucks
purchased and delivered through
August 3 1.
COMA\RED TO A YEAR AGO, YOU COULD GET UP
TO HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS MORE FOR YOUR TRADE-IN.
u.lt.ct
Cl9olceSeah' IDellc•teaen • .. k•ry
Accordirtg to July National Automobile Dealer Association Used Car
Price Guides, a lot of cars are actually worth more now than 12
months ago-in fact, many mid-size and larger domestic cars are
worth hundreds of dollars more. That can mean more money for a new
Chevy down payment.
213-463-1101
Ml I ADAMI l•I Megno11e) HUNTINOTOfil HACH
TAKl.oUT la·71M • ........ BVTlllJRRY;INTERESTRATE ~ENDS AIJGlJST 31.
714-752-0960
• Tum your • unusables • Into [!] • UMbte • calh.C.11 • D1llyPUot
I claulfted
641·5'11. \
,,,...-. ..
~ • • • • • •
SECOND HALI' STANDINGS
Amettcan lHgue
WHTOIVISHHI
Clllc ... IHtt ..
•-Oakland ,__,,.,,.....
Tn ..
K-Clty .......
W L Pct Ga
J 0 1.000
2 0 1.000
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1 ,500 I
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Mttwu• 4, c 1ew1enc11 nno vam.1
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Tcwont.o•, Oetrol1 4
OM.-•. MINWIO'le S T .. .,,.o-..
....... (Fro.i "') •I SHiii• (Clo M )
T••H CM•tlec k J.5) et New York (R9'*',.10-0)
Cllke., (8urM ._2) et Boston COJecie Ml,
" 1(-1 City IGuu 4·S erld SpllttorH M l et
l•lllmon IPetmer M •rid McGravor ._2),"
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TOf'llflto IL.HI U I ., 0..roil (Morr••""'·
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WIEST OIVlllON
Atlante .. .,......,
HousllOn
W L "'1 08
2 0 1.000
I I . 500
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Sen Fren<IKO
Clnclnlwlll
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Atleftte S, San Otevo I
Sen Frenclaco 3, Houston 1
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Ntw York !Lynell 1·ll •1 Clllc-(Kr•Y« 0-3)
Ho..slon IRY•n ~JI el Sen Frenc:laco (81 ... ~J)
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elld KeflflellY. W-P«ry CM). L-Mw• (U ).A-5,M. .--a.....,..1
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San Fren<aco 111 • otll-a Ml t
Nlffro, Smllll 111 .,.., Atlllly; Oflff111,
Mlt110n (t) end l'M ... W-Orlfflft IHI. L.-
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..... -.. "" ..... ._ rvM telf'MI 11111
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Mar!Mn4, Aneela 1
CAL.I l'OtlNIA MATTU .. , ... ..,, ..
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Tetm •IS I
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Aandl.• u .. TNll II 4!01 k_..,, .....
Callfomla loo ---t lffme 002 010 t1-
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1S4 II M I It .211
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Totals
.....
ForM:tl F""' Renko
HHll<w
Z•lln J•f~ Witt
Klton
Totel1
J2 , 1 1 1 .nt
28S•04.t14
205 u •• ,, .•
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S41 S41 110 264 >I.JI Ul
..iitlTOAM• ·--···--· Mllwaul<ee IOI "' 100-4 " 0 c le vet...,, lOO 000 O»-S 10 0
C1-11, Ctewlend Ill, £uterty (I) -
-·· Denny, Lacey 161, Splttner 17) -Dl•r. W <Aldwell !Ml. L-0.-y 1a.>1. S-EHltrly UI Hlt-Cle.,.le11d, Oler UI;
Mllweullee, H-11 (4), VOllflt CS).
HCONOOAMa . ....._.,, ..... ,
Mllw.,kM 100 003 Mil_. 1' 1
Clev.....,, 001 000 OC»-1 s 0
Sleton, Cle .. lllld 111, AU911tUM (II end
Vost; Welb, Sl>lllMf' (1), Mofl8I (ti -
Diet, Hauey. W-Sl•t°" ( .... ). L-Wells
CS.SI. s-..t.uou1t111e m . Hll-Mltw .......
C-2 i.1. A-1,n .. .................. ,
Cllk91D 101 000 IOI-12 1 8otton 020 000 Ol»-2 s 2
BwMOlrten. Trout 1•1. Firmer et> -Fltll; Torrez, Slentey (4), Burvmeler 17)
•nd Allent0n W-Trout 1 .. 3). L-Sl.Mlty
l._.1. s-Fermer ltl HR---Olk-. A"'-m. A-17 .... ,._.,,v-•
Teu• 100 000 Ol»-1 7 O
New York 000 000 G00-41 4 O
H-ycutt, Kem i'J, J~ (t), Scllmldt
ltl •rid Slnltler9, Rlvlltttl, f'rerl1r (7) -Cerone. W--ycutt (Ml. L-ltiOllfttl
1).11. S-Scllmldl (I). A-JO, 117. atw JeyU, Titan 4
Tor-.00 000 __. t 0
Detroit JOO 000 IOt-4 t2 I
Mir-II, ._....,.. (2), Jec:llMft (1) -
M•rt1,..,, Sc-. R-111. L-r m
and Parrhll. W-8ere119flr 11·4 ). L-
S<ll•ll-r Ci-S). S-Jeell-Ill. Hlt-
T°"-· Ve••• It>, Mertlner (t); o.vott, P1rrllh (7) A-IO,S2'. , ...... , .....
O•kl-240 010 __. 11 O
Ml-. 001 Ill Mt-i 8 1
Horris, Uftde..-(6), -'-• 111 -
New.._, Wlllle""' H-(2), CerWft Ill
-~ W~hl ( .. It. L-wllllMN I 1·SI. S-Jones U I. HR-'Ml1111not1,
MICl!enln 121. A-..,8:J4.
lllTLE LEAGUE
M•Jort (11·12·YHr~ld•)
DIVISIONAL Pl..AYOfln
let ...... Vle .. Y.-A-....CP-l ,,,, ........ ,.~, Se••-000 01-1 4 2
lrvlMNot111 JOO h~ 2 0
A1191lovk ...,, O'C-; Renteria -
Snoddy, HA-<ok:IOll(lll (S.1vlew).
O...Sc-
1"9-(Ladr..,l 4, North Hoil.,_.O
T-'r'•O-
GrlNCla Hlltavs. E~.S:». ,,.,,.. H01111 n. tll(llewood. s:•
~Y'•O-
Wlnner Gr•-Hlllt·EKOnd'* n. -. ner lrvlne NOf111-lnol•wood, S:IO
Lot Alamho• TUlllOAV'I italULn , ..... ., ............................ ,
"'ltST IUC•. :UO y-.
Roup HuNk-CCre ... r) 20.40 t .» UO
Say Too Tidy 1c.rc1ou1 •·• s.a
Jltll>Y I Frey) ••
Also •«Id: O...Cln J....i, ~ s-.
Doll, MllO F1ye, llootllH Clllcll, Hlftt ef
Mini, Jeb C. ~. R-lcb RoOtt. Time: 11·40
U EUCTA Cs.fl paid $160M.
HCO..O llACa. ayer• .
Asy_,.. (Cntepr) 12.40 1.• "-•
Heu KoJall ITreuurt) 7.» UO
$umpl" 8row11 CCMdou) J.40
Also r«acl: One IC)pty, Bat v-Welle\
Jet Qlnlrol, I-R-lf'd.
Tl-: 20.&
TNtao RACa. JJO yereb..
Gollk ..... IOco• IArmltfOnO) 2UO 11.a SAO
Lady RtcfWtll I Win 1Mltc"910 t.00 S.40'
Cllarl"9Crote CCarcloul uo
Alto reQd: LAOtr• 5'1, Cltr...,•, "I,.
SolutJon, ......... 0y...,,.k 0.1111, Suuwly 0oo.~8olt.
Time: 11: ...
l'OUn'M i.ACa. a yanb ~ '" , ..... , 12.a ....... JtttO~ll(CMOOIAll ._.. U1 Lii Rlll(fl HMd IT,__) Mt
AllO reudi Alafflrm, H•"'P .... Mt.
ICetM, Tumllle-.cl "'"· Or. Go fw 111. Tool Ill H i.111111,
Tlme:•:a.
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Time:•:" U aXACTA CHI PllllMl.a.
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8 IJllACTA C>ll ..... Ill.a
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Al• ,.._: L• e l1llY T,., ......
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UVIACT,. 11-11 ""'917A ""°' ... ,..,.,,...., ,....., .....
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I
I
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21S ........ : ttt 111Ait9, 110 llM ._, 48
cattc. -., ttt roe.ti ftt.11. a ...,IM 1.-_...,..
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OCIMllOtl -111 111910n1 179 ....... . 19' cellce .................. 1 .,.11 ..... 1,. rocll fltfl, DI f'llllC--...
LDM• llACM ( ......... PIW) -..
.... i-: 1' ,.,........., ......... -...
11111. (QooMe'1 wtlel1) -11 111910": I
bllleflft Mii, I y0! ....... I, t ~ J1t
11011t1o. m <e1k• 11M1. it rec1111111.
SAN llMaOM -S4 Mtft": It lllle• 301 rock COd, SI red rod1 ced, • Mii, SS red ...._.
Diving
U.5.~CllMIJI ....
C. ...... Vllt .. ) Mell'• t-, .... ,_ -I. Gntt Llllelllh
CMVHeclldff"l· ffl.U; 1. !tell Marriott
CKlmClell), "1 ... ; S. Oe\lt Sl\ltfo~ (MV
N.-1. m .04; '· Daw l11r91r1nt IMV Nedaoorot>. SSt.U ; s. M•rll lr..Ww
lotllo Slate Olvln9), S4CI. 11; 6. MettMw o.11c11 ,....._,, H«-1. m .tS; 1. ,._..,
A.._( .............. Olv"'9), S14.Jt; 8. S.....
E--IMV...-.r .. 1,4tt.S7.
Women'• tournament
1.cak ....... v •• 1 " ....... _. ....... Reoln• Marslllo"• def. Marjorie
llac:llwood, M , ..._ ... 3; l'Mry LMI P\...a
def. llouty" Fe1rbanll, 7·S, •_.: ~ Reyl\Old9 OH. ~ ...,,.1'1\111, W, M , M ;
S-ry AcW OH. £11• lwwlfl, ... 2, ._I;
Stac:y Margolln Oii. S.... Leo, .. ,_ W ;
Sy""• Henlu *'· Alycia-·-· W, M ; Wendy T'Umo!IYll *'· ktty S-, M , M , ._2; Sue 8erlcar def. Pem T-.we'*"• .. ,,
M .
WHternOpen
(.tt(l9"4eM) .................
Collll Olb6ey dltl. WojtM l'tball, M , H ,
._,; Gofw MeyOr dltl. Mike 8-, W , W ;
SlanSmlltldltl.Mlll•Clllllll, .. 7,M ,•..JO.
C•n•dl•n or•n , .. ........
~ .... ....... Trey w.tu.a Olf. Jimmy c--t. M , W ;
(Vall IAlldl .... Clwb ~'·· .. 2. ,.., .. ,;
Kevin °"'""' Olf. Glollll Mtcllllleta, M. .. a; ~~Olf.T_,L......,,M,S.7,
M ; Jtittl McENot Olf. Por H~. W,
~2.
NASL
WSIHaNOIVllHHI
W LefleAP,_
Sall 1>1..-" 10 " 4 • ,,. l.cK..,..._ 17 12 46 51 41 U1
..... 11 .. S6 67 ~ 111
Sall ,,_ to " ,. 11 ,, f7
NOltTHWHT OIVlllON
v encouver It 11 " • sa "' c atverv 1' IS 5' S2 4lt 14 s..ttie u " 57 n • ,..,
Por1.-IS U 48 41 a t•
EdlftCIMOn 12 II 5' 6' e 1• LUTait .. OIVIMC* 21 tn44•112
14 1S • SI SI IJI
14 U U SJ • tM 1unn:au SOVTM•itN DIVlllON
AtlerM 11 12 '1 SO SJ 1•
"or1 I • tl"llele 11 II SO 42 • IN
JICll-Ule 1' 14 44 .S fl 12S
Ta,,.a 8e'( U I 1 S4 '2 II lt1
CENTllAL. OIVISH*
Clllc• 20 t 6' 41 S4 170
Min-. 1t 11 St 47 SI 15'
TulM IS 14 SJ 44 e 1JI
Oellat J 24 1S .a 2A U SI• polllb ... ewet'decl for • rt9111aUOft or
overtime vklory. Fowr Points for•._..,.
victory. ON llonllt pelnt for • .,.,.., ....
tcored wllll • ""•'"""" f/11 ltlr• Jff ..,.., No ._ llOlllt Ill lwenMO ltr ._...,,,.tr ,_.,..,,:
T .... 'r'•~
Jac"-'"111e 2, f<ort Y-rdele 1 E~l.C.._.,.,1
T-.y't9-lllrt et Sall JGM, n
WetN......,. et C.0..-S. n
Atl..UetT.,,.. .. y,n
MefltrNI .. T°"""", n
Oelles et Cllk.aoo. n s.n Ot..-ec Los .. ......_" StMlltatV~,11
..
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednnd1y. Augu1t 12, 198f
El Niguel hosts toiirnament
Full field entered in Sea Country Classic ·
~-~A!£.r llANDY
Sea Country Clualc lJ the new name for El
Nl1uel Country Club's moet preati•loua tourna·
ment.
The three-day, 54-Jiole competition wlU replace
the member·1ueat and a two-man lnvltational
_.ent ol other yeart accordid1 to John DeOJmon,
tournament chairman.
"In the put, we have had these two tourna·
menta and .ome members were unhappy that we
tled up the coune lor auch a period of time,"
Oenamore saya. "Now we can have one bl& three·
day event ln the summer and concentrate all of
our efforta on makini it a truly outatandin1 af·
lair."
The event will take place Thursday, Friday
J&lld Saturday and lta success was asaured 10 daya
.after the flrat allnouncement.
''THE nELD WAS FIL\.'ED with 64 teams at
that time,." says publicity chairman Jeas Wataon.
"The two-man teams are from all over Southern .
GOLF n
California, Arizona, Nevada and Texas with only
30 to 35 percent from our own clu~. I would say
that no more than 60 of the 128 players are from El
Niguel."
Club pro Paul ScodeUer says the competition
will be on a scramble format the first day; a
partner's better ball competition the second; and
an aggregate score of both players the tin al day.
"This tends to separate the men from the boys
on the tut day of competition," he says.
At $450 per team and with prizes for the 12 low
net .and three low gross teams, the tournament will
have players from 41 different country clubs. • • • TWO MEMBERS OF the Southern California
Golf Association team competing in the Pacific
Coast Golf Association championships at the Los
Angeles Countrv Club this week are from the
Orange Coast area.
Lee Davis. 36, is a resident of Newport Beach
and will be right at home at LACC where he is a
member. Among his accomplishments are: 1975
SCGA amateur champion; finished second in 1977
and third in 1975-76·78 and firth in 1980 in the PCGA
championships.
He is a nine-time Los Angeles CC club cham·
pion; was third in the 1981 SCGA amateur;
quarterfinalist in the 1978 U.S. Amateur ;
semifinalist in 1976 in the California Golf Associa·
lion championship and bas advanced to the 32·
player cut each year since 1975; and was captain
and AH-American on the USC golf team in 1966.
The other member of the team from this area
is Bian Lindley, 24, of Fountain Valley. He is a
member at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa
Mesa and was the runnerup ln the California Golf
Association championships this year. He won the
1980 Costa Mesa city title and was 1975 Los
Angeles city men's champion. He also Is a
graduate of use. ••• THE FIRST LAGUNA BEACH Chamber of
Commerce golf classic will be held Friday, Sept, 4
at Cuta det Sol Country Club in lrlission Viejo.
TODfS
VODKA
l .~TR.
659
The event la Jlm\ted to 1IO playen with A~i. •
as the entry deadllne. Cett of the event, lncl~ihl
dinner and 1oll, iJI $40 wtth additional dipp,r .rueata at $15 each.
A new Datsun 280ZX la being offerod for t~•
flrat golfer wh.o score• a hole·ln-one a chamber Of·
ficial tayl. .
For further Information, contact the Chambet
of Commerce at 494-1018 or t.oumament chairman
Joe Jahraua at 494·M38. •
• * * CIOP SHOTS -Jolla Ari• has been named
general chairman of the 1983 PGA champio(l•hlp
which wUJ be contested Aue. 4.7 at Riviera Coun·
try Club. This will mark the first time the J>GA
tournament has been played in Southern California
since 1929. when it was held al Hillcrest CC
. . . Members at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Cdl.irst,
are excited about the opening of their "neW''
course sometime next month. They are mowtn1
the greens on the new part of the course and !eel
certain it will be open for play shortly. Tb~ bJI
event this month is Saturday's two·man better baU
tournament . . . There are perhaps more protn't'.·
nent names on the list of past winners of the Costa
Mesa Open tournament than for any other similar
event in the area. Chairman Joe Costello has 1di·
nounced the dates for this year's event -Sept. 12
and 13 -with the field limited to the first 350 e"·
tries. The fee ls $40 for the 36-hole compet~tlofl.
More on this later ... Although be has cut down~
his tournament play schedule, Abn Taple
Laguna Nlguel ls still second on the putti k
leaders list for the PGA tour. He is averaging ~.70
putts per round with Tom Waboa the leader with 'A
28.51 average.While he isn't ln the top 10 bir4ie~
any longer, Mark O'Meara is in the top 60 ip
money won and if he remains there, wUI _have a9
exemption for next year.
Surf needs victory
to keep hopes alive
SAN J OSE -The California Surf's chances of
advancing to the North American Soccer Leaaue
playoffs were jdlted Tuesday night when .two
teams the Sui:;! must pass -Jacksonville and. Ed·
monton -scored victories.
The Surf. 11 · 18 with 113 points, finds
themselves in 18th place in the overall NASL rank"
ings. The top 15 clubs qualify for the playoffs. ·
With three games remaining, starting with
tonight's baUle against the San Jose Earthquakes,
the Surf can not afford to lose if they have any
hopes of advancing.
The last time the Surf saw the Earthqua,Jr.es.
San Jose was dealt a 7·0 defeat at Anaheim
Stadium.
Surf Coach I:..aurie CaJloway is expected to
start Mike Mahoney in goat again. Mahoney, play-
ing in only his second game of the year against Los
Angeles Saturday night. gave up four 1oats. but he
really couidn't be faulted on any of them.
The 33-year-old Englishman saw 33 shots from
the Aztecs in the Surf's 4.3 1011-t 11t the Coliseum .
After tonight's contest, the Surf returns home
for an 8 p.m. battle with the Aztecs Friday night at Anaheim Stadium.
CASE OF 6-3Q.54 1.0-UT'ER
Seagrams VO\~.
CASTILLO
RCJM
l.75UR.
UOHT & OAAK
795
CASE 0f~7.70
1140 C'ASEOF12
13680
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HMUNMll J'IMMfSIHNI Ulf EA.
i
~~~~} 78 SERIES
·POLYESTER CORD TIRES
TUIEUSS BLACKWALL
.._. ____________ --~ -----------
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:le I ~ iii! I ffi!
Top of tfte Ii• COllllU "900"
STEEL BELTED RADIALS
·aa· -c-.r tv.it ........
99:.1.~1!:
2 2 l'OlvtJTtl IADIAL
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TUaB.111 WMtiWMU rimii"i1.s.i"iMiiiiiiii"iiwiii1iiiuii11"'imiiinMiiiiumWirim~
I I 10YS comu .._., nns wme IOOORAI AND
UlllOIM-1 ... TM• IBBlL & MICML• FOi TllAD WIAI & MIUMl.111 IOI YVllSIU •••
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WESTMINSTER
15221 BEACH BLVD
PHONE. 893-8544
Dilly Piiat
WEDNESDAY, AU 12.'1911
SPECIAL ~ETS \ .
USING HE BS
SLIMGOU MET
C2
C8
C9
Microwave • • •
Rair frozen foods with a microwave oven for fast meal
Can you imagine making. a
homemade soup and a stuffed
meatloaf in leas than 40
minutes?
It's easy with frozen ingre·
dients and a microwave oven. Jn
fact, with some frozen foods and
a microwave, you can have a
complete meal on the table · in
less than:.> minutes.
There are advantages besides
time-saving to teamifl$ frozen
foods and this type of oven.
Because little or no water is re-
quired, r etention of water-
soluble vitamins , in frozen pro-
ducts is superior. Vegetables re-
tain their bright colors and fresh
flavors. Shorter cooking limes
mean energy savings, too.
FACT (Frozen Food Action
Communications Team) orfers
these suggestions for a family
supper that can be ready in 40
minutes or less and combines
good nutrition, convenience -
and some hearty eating besides.
FAMILY SUPPER FOR FOUlt
Cream of Broccol
Rolled Meatl
Vegetable Stuffing
Com on the Cob
Tossed Green Salad
Strawberry Cheesecake
O&DER OF PREPARATION IN
MICROWAVE OVEN
1 -Assemble tossed salad;
refrigerate.
2 -Defrost cheesecake at
room temperature.
3 -Prepare Cream of BroccoU
Soup; keep warm until ready to
serve.
4 -Prepare meatloaf.
5 -Prepare corn on the cob;
follow Instructions on package
or in microwave cookbook.
CREAM OF BROCCOLI SOUP
1 package ( 10 ounces> frozen
chopped broccoli --v. cup frozen chopped onion
--~ tablespoons butter or
margarine
6 lablespoona Oour
1.4 teaspoon salt
...-teaspoon pepper
Generous dash allspice
Jn 2-quart round alaas
casserole, place broccoli, onion
and butt.er. Cover with glass lid.
Mic rowave on HIGH 8 to 9
m'inutes or until broccoli is
thawed. Stir in flour and seuon-
lngs. Gradually add broth and
creamer, stirring until smooth.
Re -cover . Mic rowave on
MEDIUM 8 to 9 minut~s. stir-
ring occasionally . Let stand,
covered, until serving time.
Makes 4 servings .
CONVENTIONAL COO KING :
Saute onion in butter or
margarine in medium-size
saucepan until soft and tender,
about 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in
flour, salt, pepper and allspice
until smooth and well blended.
Gradually add broth and
cramer, stirring constantly over
medium heat until mixture is
smooth. Add chopped broccoli,
thawed. Cook, over medium
heat until broccoli is tender.
about 15 minutes.
ROLLED MEATLOAF WITH
VEGETABLE STUFFING
14 cup frozen chopped sreen pepper
1i4 cup frozen chopped onion
1 'h pounds ground beef
'h cup fine dry bread
crumbs
densed tomato soup
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
peas aod carrot.a, cooked
1 cup s hredded Cheddar
cheese
1 t easpoon prepared
mustard
In small glass bowl, combine
green pepper and onion.
Microwave on HIGH 1 minute;
drain. Combine with ground
beef, breadcrumbs, egg, season-
. in gs and 'I.a cup soup. Mix
thoroughly. On waxed paper, pat
meat firmly into a 13x9-inch rec-
tangle. Spread pe•s and carrots
to within 1 inch of all edges; pat
into meat. Sprinkle with 'h cup
cheese. With aid or waxed
paper, roll meat tightly jelly-roll
fashion starting at lonJ edge.
Seal seems and ends; use waxed
paper to transfer to 2-quart ob-
long glass baking dish. Cover
with plastic wrap.
Microwave meat.loaf on HIGH
10 to 12 minutes, turning dish oc-
casionally. Let stand, covered, 5
minutes. Spoon off fat. Combine
remaining soup and mustard;
pour over loaf. Re-cover.
Microwave on HIGH 4 to 5
minutes, turning dish once.
Sprinkle with remaining cheese.
Let stand, covered, 5 minutes.
Makes 4 t.o 6 servings.
CONVENTIONAL COOKING :
With. all the summer
Fruits, d~sserts are
e°'8ily made . . . C7
1 Can ( 13o/.a ounces> chicken
broth
1 cup frozen non-dairy
creamer, defrosted
l egg, slightly beaten
'h teaspoon salt
'Ai teaspoon pepper
1 can (10~ ounces > con-
Thaw frozen chopped green
pepper, chopped onion and peas
and carrots. Combine green pep-
per, onion, ground beef, bread
crumbs, egg, salt and pepper
and Y.J cup tomato soup. Mix un-
til thoroughly blended. On a
sheet of waxed paper. pat meat
mixture fu-mly into a 13x9-inch
rectangle. Spread peas and car-
rots to within 1 inch or all edges.
Pat into meat. Sprinkle with 'h
cup shredded cheese. Using the
wax paper, roll meat jelly-roll
fashion starting at the long side.
Seal seams and ends. Using the
wax paper, allde meat roll into a 2-quart shallow baking dish.
Bake in 35() defl'ee-oveo f~ ~
minutes. Remove from ovd.
Com blne remaining aoup and
mustard. Pour over meatloaf.
Sprinkle with remaining cheese.
Return to oven for 5 minutes or
until soup is hot and cheese is
melted.
ttv,~d Meatloaf with Vegetable Stuffing, Cream of Broccoli Soup and corn on the cob
make hearty eating when time is short.
Cook fancy or folksy · favorites
It's easy to cook platters-full of beautiful entrees.ahead of time when you
use frozen vegetables. and your microwave oven.
Something old, something
new , so mething plain ,
something fancy. Now it's easier
than ever U> cook the perfect
dish for any kind of company
meal or family get together.
The best of your party and
ethnic recipes can be adapted
easily for new s uper-swift
microwave cooking.
Entertaining doesn't have to
be expensive. When every penny
counts, it's easy to stretch your
family meals to feed unexpected
1uests if you have frozen
vegetables In your freezer and a
microwave oven on your
counter.
crunchy texture.
For best results, defrost
frozen vegetables prior to cook·
ing. To defrost, put the package
in the microwave oven at SO per-
·c en t power (see recipe for
specified times>. Drain off any
exterior liquid on the vegetable
and remove ice crystals for
faster cooking.
To insure microwave cooking
success with any recipe, choose
your cooking utensils carefully,
being sure to use only round or
oval containers. This will pre-
vent overcooked comers. Metal
reflects microwaves and pre-
vents their penetration into food,
so use only glass or porcelain.
Use the dish you plan to serve in
and you'll have less clean up
later.
By applying these basic prin·
clples on shape, size, denslly,
time, power and food placement
you can adapt any recipe for
microwave cooking. Always re-
member the two most important
rules or thumb:
• Most meats, vegetables and
fruit should be cooked for 6
minutes per pound.
/
Microwave tips
• Dense foods, such as chicken
breasts or hamburger patties,
take longer to cook, so place
them at the edges of the dish for
greater concentration of the
microwaves.
need moist heat to cook, such as.
frozen vegetables, casserple'
and meats. Use plastic wf41p,
paper towels or a dish lld. •
. ._
Discover how easy it is to en-
tertain any day of the week. Do
you have an hour? Try the
gorgeous Turkey Pinwheel
Roast. If you're really busy, you
can prepare a complete Chicken
Barbecue in less than 30
minutes. Start with these d.isbes
and then experiment by deaip-
l n 1 your own ele1ant
veaetable/meat platters. Soon
you'll be creating fancy dlahes
every day or the week.
• Cook 80 percent done in the
oven, and the retained heat will
finish the laat 20 percent out of
the oven. Follow these
guidelines and you'll eliminat.e
unnecessary stirring, rotating or
pans or peeking in the
microwave oven.
• Microwaves release the
natural s ail in frozen
vegetables, so never add salt
when cooking.
• Cut pieces of food in uajf orJll
sizes and densities f~·ven penetration of the micr vea ..
For example, frozen cau wer · ...
..
One or the easiest and mott
economical ways to prepare a
variety of aatistyin1 meals ls to
buy a whole turkey. Even lf
youn is a family of only two or
three, a wbole turkey can be a
bll boon to your buqet.
Ask your butcher to cut up the
turtey. Be sure to ask him to
butterfly t.be turkey breut IO
you can eully make the
1or1eous Turkey Pinwheel. Try
Uae barbecued chicken sauce on
the wn.y UU1ba. Coot the other pane ot the turkey, and use ln
1um111er salads, caueroles and soupe.
Alwa11 uae plain, blanched rroaea veptables for that "JUlt·
pick,.t" flavor at 1table prices
year'round. Because froaen
vecetablea are qulck·froaen
lbortJJ after barvetUJll, )'OU CUl
be 1ure tbat t.be vltamim ud
mlaeral1 are retained.
Mlcrowne eooldDI la a natural
to 1uarantee their trl1py f
To ensure proper cooking of
dishes such as the Chicken
'Barbecue, be sure to follow the
suuestions for placement of the
chicken pieces. Remember that
density of foods is Important. ·
For example, frozen broccoli
spears should be placed with the
stems in a ring near the outside
perimeter of the diah, and the
broccoli norets in the center ol
the dish. Thia way everythlnt is
cooked to tender·crlap perfecUon
at the aame time.
,,, The more food, the lonaer the
cooking Ume. The rule ol thumb
for frozen ve1etablea la 8
minutes per pound. But keeJj ln
mind that poroua foods such u
froaen cauliflower wW tMe lea
tJme to cook than denae foodl
like fl'Olell llma bean•.
Un~vea shapes caUM UDeftD
cooklnc times. For beat retulta
cook uniformly 1haped and .u.d
foods tocetber.
TlmM ........ the dQ', cooldnl limn will vary dlrec:Uy wit.Ii
nuetuatms CW'Tftt. Leu elee·
trleal eneray means lon••r
~me. Leana to acl,Jtllt re-, ;.;;;: sure to allow ftewltna
time after eookln1. P'ro11n
ve1etQle& will be ftf'1 crtap
•ben eookbal Ume la llDllW. and wW beeome ......,. ailp
wbll•lt ...... NevwllddMlt.
( .. FANCY, Pa .. 0)
• The presence or sugar or rat
in foods Increases the
microwave heat, so compensate
by reducing the cooking time
and power level.
• Most microwave failures are
the result of overcookin1.
Remember that foods coot 80
percent In the microwave oven,
and tbe final 20 percent when re-
moved from the oven.
• When cooking meat, it's 1
good idea to use a thermometer
made apeclflcally for a
microwave oven. Remember not
to place the tip againat a bone.
• The amount of power comin1
to your house nuctuatea durinl
peak uae times of ~ day, IO
microwave cooldnl times may
have to be extended durtn1 tbeee
dail1 power drains.
• Tttbtl1 cover all foods which
and broccoli florets cook at the
same time and temperature In a
microwav~ oven.
• Occaalonally syrlrtge off
meat juices from the pan to
shorten the cookinl time.
• Paprika retains natural
moisture, so sprinkle generc>uatt
ov.er such meats as a whole
chicken or turkey to ellmina~
the need for covering.
• Learn to garnish and you'll
never worry about brownln1.
Create eye-pleasin&, moutlt
waterina dishes by lam.ls~
with cut-up fresh fruits and •
sprlnkling of coconut. A few
tablespoons of bottled aal ..
dreaslne. tar.tar sauce or
chutney add navor and color.
• Keep your microwave cleall.
To euUy remove bated-on diK
In your microwave ove •
moisten the apot and turn on
oven for ao aecoadl to soften.
Eree IJoolaet offered
•
OrengeCout OAtLY PILOT/Wedneaday, Auouet 12. 1981
Vitamin A loss
rrnful to eyes
y JUNE aOTH
Tb<»• who l1nore the
erltl of a dally carrot
r dark green or dark
ellow vegetables a nd
ruita, are cuttin1 off
asy access to vitamin A
hat la needed to maln·
aln 1ood vlalon.
U they aleo linore the
talce ol fish rich ln oils,
nd do not take any
PECIAL DIETS
~ltamin supplements. It
s possible that niaht
Jindness will occur.
In a recently
ublished book, "Total
ision" (published by A
W) by Dr. Richard S.
cornea, and can de-
terlorate to a concllUon
of xerophthalmla wblcb
cauaea thickened and
dried out eye US1 ue . lf
untreated, the ailment
can deatroy the cornea
and b11ndne11 can re·
suit.
Just u an apple a day
m ay keep the doctor
away, so a carrot a day
may k eep your e\fea
olta)'. Here are aome
recipes that are hlih In
vitamin A :
8TtJFFED S•EET POTATOES
4 sweet potatoes
'I• cup hot mllk
~ cup orange Julee
2 tablespoons butter
or mar1arine
1 tablespoon grated
orange rind
. Bake potatoes until
fork-tender, about 1
By MAii.TiN SLOANE
Many 1hQpper1 fail to see a money·
savlna opportUnlty that at.ant out at them
from aJmoet eve17 1upermarket tbelt.
I'm talkinl about COQPCIDI on 1pecla11y
marked packaaet. We call t.bem SllPI.
I challen1e you to walk down any
arocery alale in your favorite •Ul*'mU'ket
and not find at leul a doleft produeta wl&.b
specially marked p~t., •.
Manufacturen are puttmc more SllP1
on supermarket shelvN became t.M CCM1POftt
printed on the\ bacru of paekaiet or tucked
lnalde have the blabeal redempdoo rat.et.
With food pricu continually &oln1 up, many
companies see SMP coupon.a u oae of &.be on-
ly practical ways to reduce &.be e<>ttl" of tbelr
product.a without Jowertna quality.
The beat SM Pa are tboM wl&.b coupom
whose totaJ value exceeds Ute price. ol tbe
item on which they are found. Tbe companies
caU them "power packs" because these of-
fers are powerful movers ol merchandise.
A iood example i1 the current SMP from
Lipton Cup-a-Soup. A pactaae of Cup-a-Soup
sells for around 75 cents, while a yellow-and·
blue oval on the front of the box announce•
"Save $1.07 with Coupons Inside."
avner and Lorraine
usky , an e n tire
h apter is devoted to the
ubject of vitamins and
lsion. The authors
tale, "The eyes are
hour. Cut off tops and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~==============================================================================~ scoop out potato from r
ensltive to even slight
eficiencies, and de-
ndinl upon the situa-
ion and the stress in-
olved, the amount of
itamins used up by the
yes can vary widely
rom day to day." They
ontinue, "Driving at
ight, especially when
here are many oncom-
ng head1ightB, also dips
nto lhe body's reserve
f vitamin A."
The eye has the abiUty
o adapt to changes in
ight, but it is dependent
pon a substance called
;,rhodopsln. One of the ~ompo n ents o f
hodopsin is a close rel·
live of vitamin A and
the other is protein.
M'hen the body's r e-
terves of vitamin A are
'deficient, eyesigh t
hanges may be the first
unction that makes the
oss known.
Suspect this as a ~ossibility if you have
~rouble seeing in the
Oac.k, lake a longer time
&o adjust to darkness
od when the eyes are
ot onJy fatigued in the
~ark but also there may
be dark spotB in the field
of vision.
Authors Kavner and
Dusky explain, "Since a
deficiency of vitamin A
;strips all the mucous
membranes of their
'necessary food. these
delicate linings of the
ye, throat, intestine.·
rinary and reproduc-
tive tracts dry out and
are unable to resist the
.normal invasion of bac-
l er i a . . Other
'Symptoms of a vitamin
A deficiency include
dandruff and rashes;
dry flaky skin and hair,
,,and peeling nails.··
If the vitamin A defi·
ciency continues, the
eye condition worsens.
adding burning, itching
and inflamed eyes. and
possibly styes and con-
l unclivilis.
At its extreme ,
• itamin A deficiency
roduces dryness or the
shells and tope. Discard
tops. Beat potatoes with
milk, orange juice, but-
ter and grated orange
rind, until smooth. Stuff
potatoes with this mix·
lure, swirling top with
the tines of a fork.
R e h eat a nd serve.
Makes 4 servings.
CARROT RAISIN &ING
3 cups grated car-
rots
2 eggs, beaten
'h cup milk or
cream
~ teaspoon salt
'111 teaspoon pepper
Y• c up seedless
raisins
1 tablespoon brown
s ugar
Combine carrots with
beaten eggs. Stir in
milk, sa il, pepper,
raisins and brown sug-
ar. Pour into a 1-quart
g r eased ring mold .
Place mold in a pan of
hot water and bake in a
350-degree oven for 45
minutes or until carrotB
a r e tender . Re m ove
Crom ring and serve hot.
Makes 8 servings.
BUTTERNUT BOATS
1 large butternut
squash
2 teaspoons butter
2 teaspoons orange
marmalade
Dash of ginger
Cut squash in half
lengthwise. Scoop out
seeds and discard. Place
1 teaspoon butter in
each cavity of squash;
add 1 tea.spoon orange
marmalade and a duh
or ginger. Place cut side
up in a baking pan. Bake
in a 350-degree oven for
45 minutes or until fork
lender. Remove from
oven . Cut each half
lengthwise. Makes 4
servings.
June Roth .is the author
of 29 cookbook&, including
.. Aerobic Nutrition." If you
have a special diet ques-
Hon, you may write to June
Roth cl o the Daily Pilot.
P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa
92626. Enclo&e a &elf·
addressed stamped en-
velope .
. . Fancy .cooking
,.rom P age Cl
Micro-cooking brings out the natural salt in my
food.
CHICKEN BARBECUE
2-pound chicken wings, disjointed
ir.i cup bottled barbecue sauce
1 package ( 10 ounces) frozen Brussels
s prouts
2 small white onions, quartered
Use 14-inch oval cooking dish. Brush each
piece of chicken well with the barbecue sauce. Ar-
range the chicken in the oval porcelain baking dish
as follows : five drumettes at each end of the ovaJ
dish, five wing sections on each si4e, and the 10
tips tucked into the center. Microwave on 70 per-
cent power for 14 minutes,.
Defrost the Brussels sproutB for 2~ minutes on
50 percent power. Add to the center of the chicken
wings: sprinkle onions over the top of entire dlah.
Cover with plastic wrap and microwave on high
for 4 minutes. Let stand 3 minutes before serving.
Makes five servings.
TURKEY PINWHEEL
~ turkey breast (3·4 lbs.) from a 14 lb.
whole turkey (have butcher butterfly turlrey
breast)
1 package (10 ounces> frozen chopped
spinach
2 tablespoons each chopped parsley.
mushrooms and green onion
2 cups herbed dressin1 cubes, crushed
Pepper
Paprika
Butterfly turkey breut. Defrost splnacJ, ln
microwave oven for 2 minutes on SO ~rcent
power. Squeeze out excess moisture. COmblne
spinach with mushrooms. panley and onion. Cov-
er breast evenly with spina~h stumn1, tucklna ex-
tra amount Into center of breut. Roll up breast to
form an even load. tucking In edles. Tie seeu.rely
wlt.b string.
Place herbed 1tumn1 lD bottom of oval or
round microwavl)-prOOf dilb. Place Wrtey loaf on
top cl atumn1. Sp~lnkle CeneroualY with pepper
ud pillplika. Cover wlUI pllltk wrap. Microwave
oe 90-111 perC*lt power for f.7 mtnua.t per pound,
t-.nla1 •c• mld••Y tbrou1b oookln1 cycl•.
Cheek temperature wltb microwave-proof
lbermiiomet«, maklnc aure not to toueb 1plnaeh. Temper~ 1hould read t•llO de,...... Rea..ove from ov• and place a telllt ol aluminum foil over turk., to retain heal. Let stand 4'"'5 mlnat• Wore
aer~
...
Chvc~
llocle
s.te • ., ..... , ....
.,..... l'tyl"f s.v.!:..~ •• ,. I I C
Chkhn i..t•
lb.
1~1"'9• ~._..0....U-.tf'I
-• I I C ~2-liter 7..=1 Bottle
,..-... u.cerne lt~ilk
Temate
flOYOf
Saf•wo,
SI.cod
''9C••Md th ....
1av1•2.oo UICIU5!V~{:'f Of1DI MMilC AIM mr -···-· -......
~32-01. _...Size 8 I c $119
Half
Gallon
~I-oz.
~Plcg.
99c
~1 ~0.-...... 11 ,.
i: 8 I C
64-01.
Corton
-..a. $289 --· 14-01.
Box
n ..... ,..... 49/a ;t~. y
;i-1 ..---"---
QUALITY MEAT
7 ·Bone Roast ..-.. -.. • '1a -°"""
Chuck Short Ribs ~~ • '1711
Arm Pot Roast ~ • '1"
Boneless Steak "::l,.°':" . ., ..
Cross Rib Roast ~ • '1"
DAIRY
~Cottage Cheese i-.-,.85'
~ Lucerne Buttermilk .:.89•
:=:Lucerne Sour Cream ... 89'
~Lucerne Yogurt 3r!:.'100
3C Whipping Cream._-.. '1"
WholeFilletButts ... ~,=r... .•3s2 2¢ Monterey Jack :=:;:. 1211 ... _ ... ,,.. ....... , ..
Smoked Ham =-..= • '111 a:iJi{ OrangeJulcei-.-12"
LIQUOR BUYS!
~Kavlana Vodka -:!1671
:!'{ EartyTimes'"::.:-' 1: '10"
:-£ Gilbey's Gin .:. '" '9" , ..
::s;,J & B Scotch.:. l~ '16"
: 3,c.K. Mondavl Wine :13 ..
31C· Heineken Beer 6S.'3"
GROCERY
FRESH PRODUCE!
Crispy Celery '--_59'
Russet Potatoes u .... 5:. '1 ''
Barlett Pears ---• 35'
Fresh Broccoli r.., --• 59'
Ripe Avocados
.. _ 4 .. '100 .....
Extra Large Nectarines • 59•
BACK TO SCHOOL
Center Ham Slices.=.= ... •2•• •Kai Kan A":.. •&.•59' :.t-1•flex 3 Note Book 'fr i...!2"
Small s •••
-..a. -~
lb.
Sliced Bacon '::.' i.: '131 ::!1¢-PttJ1ti Meal lhad ..-:.. t: 79' X PurexOetergent"":...•::99' :!'"i Mead Organizer ::. ..!2" ',~~~#;=~~~~~
Turkeylegauarters:i:-:S:. 59• m;,30.s11ce Bread .. i;,. 't.:'59' 3C-snasta Diet Soda 6 l: '139 Aladdin Lunch Box :.. 1a '3"
PremlumGroundBeef E . 1111 ~lnnamon Rolls ...:... :f, '121 XiV-8 Juice Cocktail 6E'114 Pee Chee Folder .... 33'
Safeway Corn Dogs • '149 mt-Hawaiian Bread .. ~1! X Charcoal ._.., ~ Fiiier Paper-:~~... ~ '111
SEAFOOD & DF.ll
Braunschwelg«" == . 99*
Sliced Bologna _,_ ~ .,4,
Chopped Ham ......__ :; '121
Pink Salmon Roast ~ • '1"
ffd1 Pwch Rllets -:::: • '1"
• 10IO • .,... Df ...... '*' ....
We've Given LOW PRICES A New Name •• ~
Milo ................ '"' ......... ~, ................. c-..e ................ ..,
....... c....1 ...... , ........ ._. l •MlllM•dllayflteu,IOYllll~ •l•fllllAneF.....,•y•tLIPu,..._.Vle)e
• ., ... ......_..,...A... ., .. 11c-.or .. .lw•..,..._
It ..
......._,,.. ... _,,_, __ ,..__ .... -
•
•I
I .
I
' I I
i
I . 1
I.
I I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981 CS
· •eal fish
..... , .,., 79£. triangle tip roast $f18 ... *149 ... large 1rt11holcas pa11f11 red 1111pper
.
.... &Jilly 151 ...... stuffed pork ehopt *179 ...
*298 •. •lermelon .......... ,... ·' pe111• *179 111hl llllhl 11•9e .... ,,... •• , •. .•• ..... ,, ... , ... ~,. .....
hm w1dos 4 ,., *100 stuffed ehleken hreast *198 •· haHhut llelb $f'8 ...
11111ta melons 19~. turkey hre111 4-61 ... *149 •.
eall111rl $f18 1•.
11nary melons 29~. . . ' v1la••s
lrwl• ,. ... ,.,.,,. .......
mlller h 100 t.r.-h e•plex
IOflH "I· I.It
.. i. *2''
60 .... "I· 6.19
.. i. *511
90 .... "I· 9.11
.. i.. *7so
tlO flh "I· tl.M
.. i. *1448 ...... ,. ... ,.,..,. ....
1IU of heel
hindquarter
••• . s ""'" pudding & pie mlK
,....... 4 .....
ltarheeue 11111e 14 11•
: Je••• palla 11111e 12 II.
t6 II.
raw ea1haw pleees
hallhMI ealel111111ncl 11119118111111 grocery
t20 .... "I····-
WM ,. •• ,.,..,. _,.., •It . $7i 9 lloned wheat fhilll ...,,., .... , .
1111lllple •min with Iron
to flH "I· t.M 1111 •II •1rl11t ..
.. i. ~181 . artlehoke hnrll
bakery
*2s9 •.
l '
*119,, ... 11.""'
*1'9•. wh• j11111Jo 1rah *289
cleli · ..... ,,,., ·•··• 45• ..... ,,, _ ,,... ..... tftr 59•
*129 . $119 nrrot & rallen 11114 ..... , ....... .......... , *209 1 ............
lrtllllf hMrti *249 .....,. ,.,..
pollh 1c1t•111
*2791• .
*949 ...
*279 •.
. ............ ~ .. ,. "'• ... ,,.. ..
,. ..... ., ................ ,. 11 ................... 98• ......... "' .... ,. ...
-~ ..... ""··Gill.... .....
t111a.,.,. .... • ......
9MS1I
' . .. .... ........ ...... •···
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedne1d1y. Augutt 12, 1981
Tomatoes can be cooked, canned or froZen
BJDOaoTRYWINC& tiow&epeetpeaelitet••· tplath on you. Work stainless steel , or oartJydisolve.Remove proctttllll Uaem I• a tomatoes and tomato tomato probl e m . _c-..._.....,. a.1 tyef 11 &bit a tafe very carefully '° avoid aran!teware kettle (not the sleve or rruJt to the bolll•I wa&er bat b II solidi ln the Julee float· Another method ia to
Tomatoe1, tomato~11 meUaoclT spaUerlna; wear 1toves a I um 1 nu m > . Put 8 a Ink, bein1 sure no ll· mtall&el per qeut eaaet· ed to lhe top because bring the whole, peeled
tomatoee. II 1ou plutea A . Lye pullna la when handUng lhe tolu· tablespoons or concen· quid dripa onto the rtoor ly accordlal lo dlrec· they are lighter lhan the tomatoes to a boil, then
them ln your aardeo, much more haaardout lion; dlspo e or the lye truted lye lnto 2 1allo111 or other surfaces. Rinse tlou. Tbe Jan all sealed watery portion In tbe pack them bot Into the
about now you may have than dipping the fruit In solution at toOD a1 the of cold water. (Lye spat· fruJt tborou1hly under a perfecUy, bat aow Uae bottom . This makes jars. Bolling drives orr
more than you can eat. boWnl water for about 1 peeling la finished. Pour ters when added to hot strong stream of cold tomatoes bave alJ noat· lhem look peculiar but the air and helps release
Wbattodowtlbthem! mlnute and then plun1· the solution down the water>. Stir with a water,waahlnalheakina ed to &be &op o1 the Jar will not affect their eat· th.e juices. It also cuts
They won't keep very Ina into cold water. The sink (not throu1h the wooden spoon. Brlne lo away. Lye peeled fruit and Uaere'• a clear ll· iog quality or safety. down the processing
long lo the refriaerator bolling water melbo(l la garbaee disposer) and a boll. Place a few of the wiU darken lf It ia not q1dd ID Ua• boUom. Are Did you press the lime trom 30 minutes to
once they're ripe, 10 preferred for a I I rinse the sink with lar1e peaches at a Ume In a canned immediately. tbey •ale lo eatT Wbat tomatoes down art er 15 minutes. Be s ure to
they will need to be pre· varieties of peaches ex· umounts of cold water wire basket or sieve (not * • * cauaed Uall? each, two tomatoes were continue adding the 2
served. cept clinptonea. Lye ii or dispose of the solution aluminum> a nd Im· Q . I canned some A. Your tomatoes are added to the jar to re· teaspoons vinegar (or
Canning ia the tradJ· very caustic and can In the toilet and flush merse carefully In boll· toma&oet by pacJd•I Uae safe to eat since you lease juice and air bub· lemon juice) per quart.
llonal method for pre· burn your bands or any several limes. Ing lye soluUon . Let fruit raw toma&det la &be followed recommended bles and to rill alJ the The extra acidity helps
servlna tomatoes, aad part of you, Including To prepare the lye stand 30 to 60 seconds -Jara, addlDg Z &e11pooo1 procedures and have spaces? This might help prevent the growth of
many freeaina cbarta your eyes, s hould ll solution, use an Iron, until skins loosen and v1De1ar per quart, tben well-s ealed jars. The avoid the flo ating mold.
don't include tomatoes .-------.......... ------------------------------------------------------------
., a vegetable that can
be froaen.
But contrary to U111
advice, tomatoes can be
frozen ln either whole,
unpeeled fotm or
peeled, cut up and light·
ty cooked. They take up
leas room In your
freezer if you cook them
before freezing, and also
wlU be handier to use
later.
One woman reported
that she froze her
tomatoes whole, in
plastic bags, then when
she needed some in a
cooked dish, she simply
added them frozen as
the food cooked and
pulled out the s kins
when they came loose.
The important thing to
remetnber about frozen
uncooked tomatoes is
that they will have a
mushy texture when
defrosted because the
ice crystals rupture del·
icate cell walls. Thus.
they wiU be usable only
In cooked foods -not In
salads or other uses re-
quiring raw tomatoes.
You can also prepare
and freeze other lavorite
recipes having tomatoes
aa the main ingredient
such as tomato aauce or
puree, spaghetti sauce,
stewed tomatoes, and
tomato soup base.
Simply cook the ingre·
dient.s together as called
for in your recipe, pour
Into freezer containers,
chill in the refrigerator,
and freeze.
Tomato juice is easy
to make and can be
frozen a s well as
canned. Use only sound,
well ripened tomatoes.
(This is true for any
tomatoes you preserve.
It is especially impor-
tant to never use over·
ripe or moldy tomatoes
when preserving them.)
Wash the tomatoes,
peel, core, c ut into
pieces and cook them as
quickly as possible arter
cutting. The heat inac·
llvates the enzymes
(natural chemicals in
tomatoes) responsible
for changes in consisten·
cy and loss of vitamin C.
Press cooked
tomatoes through a rine
colander or sieve to re-
move seeds and smooth
the texture. Add 1 teas-
poon salt to each quart,
or salt to taste, and also
add 1 tablespoon lemon
juice or vinecar per
quart.
To Cre~ze tomato
juice, chill It first in the
refrigerator, t.beo pour
into freezer containers,
leaving sufficient
headspace for expansion
Cl to 2 inches), and
place in freezer.
To can tomato juice,
bring it to the simmer·
ing point, pour it Into
canning jars, leaving 'Ai
inch head.space. Adjust
Jar lids.
Process in boiling
water bath for 10
minutes. Important: Do
not omit this processing
step as it is necessary to
create a vacuum in the
jar and bring about a
good seal.
A tomato juice
coclrtaiJ can be made by
adding ingredients to
taste such as grated
onion, grated celery.
horseradish,
worcestershlre sauce,
and lemon Juice.
* • *
QUESTIONS WE ARE
ASKED:
Q. We laeve loadl ol
t.e•a&oel lo cu . Wlaat't
a , ... ••1 &.e peel Uaem
eal&lYf A. A quick way to peel
tomatoel Is to dip them
in bolJlnl water lon1
enouib to crack •kin• ...... about l minute. Then dip
la cold water before peellnc. • • • Q. Cu J" &ell ••
PaAm a.otJD8 Pile llOld, ...... ed
f t•tb pueMI into ID·
d h'ld u al merla 1ue
1beU1. Dii1sle with a
favorlt8 llcluear, ii de·
aired. -top with ~ ~., Wlllpped eNllD and ...,,.r of 1Uced ......
TOP SIRLOIN .. 2s8 STEAK
Bontl~S BonCled peet LOIO
CROSS RIB .. 198 ROAST
eonttes, eonoto Bttf cnuck
LARGE END .. 228 RIB STEAK
eone1eo see f
TREE TOP
APPLE JUICE
64 OZ Bt1
149
No Limits
f" TREESWEET 77 i ~~JE.~~r 460z cane
FILM DEVELOPINC
DEVELOPED ANO PRINTED
12 EXPOSURE 20EXPOSURE
2.99 4.19
~ prl(ft......, Oftll ro n.....,. Nm c c Ptotftt
weft • ilodllcOIOt ,,.. ""' ... """""
lfJO'lldillJ '°"' prlca. ln1t11d o( 1 few Mtkly spcclal•.
acrON·tlw.-0.rd fow priclna can rtdU« your
Ovtrlll food bill
,
f"PABST
~~~~~
T·BONE .. 2s8 STEAK
Bonele(I Bttf lOtn
7-B ONE
CHUCK ROAST .. 119
Bon<JeCI Bttl
BONELESS 188 ~~~D STEAK LI>
PORK
& BEANS
van camp·s. '1 oz can
.65 ~ ..
f"PETUNA 21 ~ S~!esFOOD6 oz c~•
f"POPOV
i ~~r;'KA ,,., .... 699
f"HARVEST DAY 69 i ~t!!,~,~D 2•oz Loate
orPotito
/Vo games or gimmicks.
ln,tcud ol i;umc,, '111mp' or g1mm1cl(, to 11ttruc1
cu,tomcr,. 11.c off,·r diwount pncing. a"uring
\OU 11 lov.cr o\crall food b1ll i.nd no CO)ll) frilh.
lf~B"IJ'
me.tn uer. MolnlJ.9.
kty Buyt arc hemt prittd t\cn lower than Owir
«Vtryday ct6tcounl prictt at 1 rtsuh of
menuf1c1urui' temporary ptOmotiOMI
allow111C1H or u~ptional p"rchattt You ii find
h11ndrcds of lcy luy hems nery time yo11 ttlop.
f"LADY LEE 49 ~ ~ARCARl1~o~cm •
WHOLE BEEF
BRISKET '
eonttess BonelfCI Bttl 1 9 LOS
BONELESS
RUMP ROAST
S11101n Cut BonelfCI Bffl l!ounCI
.. 148
.. 198 BONELESS
WHOLE HAM
water AOCltd S·7 ll>S
/Yo limits ·
.. 198
LONDON BROIL 218
STEAK
Boneless eonoeo Beef Top RounCI lb
to extra savings.
1<.11h" lh,1111111111 ·,rn1,o1,·· ·"'" 1111111 \11111
'"'' lllt!"-\.\\. rl.1u: Ho l1n111 ... tUI th .. nuntt'Kr "'
11<:ni-~1•11 ""' hu\ ..,,, 11 hl n ~"u "°' I(,' llll\
11,·111, 11lkrnJ ,11 ~\11.1 '·"Iii!!' '''ll '"'"'"''~up
COLDEN
BANANAS
Economlcal Ripe
" .25 ~ ..
YELLOW
PEACHES
SWeet Ind Ju1cV /
".39 ~ ..
,,
LI>
LD.
BARTLETT
PEARS
~ COWttTy'I Anl!lt
.39 ~ ...
BANANA
SQUASH
o.llCatt Rawor
.14 ~ ...
1·l·~;f, ~:\}." <~, '· .~. , • \ •.,•• , .
I • i: \ . ~· . . . ~~·~,
FRESH
CANTE LOUPE
l'Ult Of Fllvor
lb .19 ~ ..
RUSSET
POTATOES
US NO 1, llldng Siii
lb. .33 ~ ..
'-""" __ ..... _.-.
.. tMU.. oei... ~
•.
1
•
"
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981 ca") -----------------------------------------~---------~~~~~~--~-
Artichokes in peak ·summer season
ArU cbokea ol all alzea seasonto1s. ln.i a fork into stem end. l teaspoon basil mer gen Uy 25 to 40 Peel, seed and coarsely
will be available in pro· Cut cookjng time for Fork should pierce stem 2 s ma 11 gar 11 c minutes untH base can chop tomatoes . Combine
duce departments dur· arllcbokes by uaing the easily. ' cloves. minced be pierced easily. Drain in bowl with a u ingre·
Ing the summer pe ak mi crowave. To cook STUFFED VJ cup botllcd tow upside down. Coot, re-d i e n t s e x c e p t
Production P er Io d four artichokes: Place ARTICHOKES WITH calorie Italian dressing move chokes with teas-artichokes.
between Aug. 15 and artichokes upside down, Fltt:SU TOMATO 2 tab I esp o o n s pooo, c hilJ. Prepare CURRY-MAYONNAISE Sept. 10, according In small casserole, with SALSA vinegar tomato salsa, chill. DJP
to Ed B o ut o nn e t , ~ cup water, 4 lemon 6 m edlum ·siied ~teaspoon each : Before serving, drain FORA.RTJCHOKES
c b airman ° r th e slices, 1 tablespoon arllchokes salt, oregano, coarse salsa, reserve dressing. l cup mayonnaise
Artichoke Advisory salad oil. Cook, covered1 2 tablespoons lemon black pepper FiJl each artichoke wllb 1 teaspoon lemon
Board , Castr o ville, oo high power, for lts juice Trim artichokes and about % cup. Drizzle juice
Calif. minutes.Turnrlghtside 6 medi um ripe stand upright in a dr essi ng over l to l1h teaspoons
Primarily known as a up in liquid, re-cover, let tomatoes saucepan. Add YJt teas-artichokes. It desired, curry powder
•h\J
itU
116
'"' I
•11 ,,,,
,,(\
irH
i , :i
spring harvested crop, stand 5 minutes before 1 c up chopped poon salt and 2 tables· serve with additional Blend Ingredients .
artichokes are now serving. Times can scallions poons lemon juice, place Italian dressin« at 9 Chill; remember that '11
s hipped almost year vary; check artichokes v.. cup chopped in 2 to 3 Inches boiling calories per tablespoon. curry powder intensifies "''-
around from CaslrovHte, for doneness by insert· parsley water. Cover and s1·m· TOMATO SALSA ·. di ''1 "Artichoke Center ot the 1------------------------------------------u_p_o_n_s_ta_n __ n..:g=-·-----------------------__..s•i• World." Improved grow·
Ing practices and closer
attention to timing when
"cutting back" alter
harvest make this re·
gular supply available
except when nature in·
tervenes.
California produces
almost all (98 percent)
of the commercially
grown globe artichokes
in the U.S., with most
production occurring in
centr al coast counties,
where the aJmost daily
combination of early
morning fog, afternoon
heat, and s unshine
m akes espec:i al l y
favorable growing con·
diUons for this thistl e·
like plant.
Sizes available will
range from large, 3~ in-
c hes in diameter or
larger; medium, 3 in·
ches in diameter; and
smaJI, 2 inches or less.
The artichoke is ac-
t u a 11 y an unopened
Clower bud, a distant rel· .
alive of the sunflower :
its Latin name is Cynara
scolymus. The edible
portion consists of the
tender thickened bases
or the leaves (bracts)
and the receptacle or
fleshy base which many
people call the heart,
crown, bottom or fond (French).
H allowed to fl ower
the buds develop into a
beautiful purple·blue
Clower, 6 to 8 inches in
diameter.
H's convenient to have
a few cooked artichokes
"on hand" Cor quick
lunches or first-course
snacking. Cook several
artichokes. store in a
covered container in the
refrigerator. They' II
keep for several days.
Use fr esh lemon
halves to prevent r aw
artichokes from dis·
coloring when cut. Im·
mediately after trim·
ming stem and snipping
off thorn y end s o f
leaves, rub a lemon half
over all exposed edges.
Also, use 1 to 2 tables·
poons or lemon juice in
the cooking water to
help preserve color.
Remember ,
artichokes are excellent
for low sodium, high
potassium diets. They
also contain a good
amount or B vitamins
(thiamine, nia c in ,
riboflavin) and vitamin
C. In addition ... they
can be a dieter's delight.
Each large artichoke
co ntai n s o nl y 58
calor ies. No need for
high calorie sauces or
dips, either. Be creative
and add dill weed,
celery leaves , onion
slices, minced garlic,
cracked red pepper or
rennet seed to the cook·
ing waler for extra
Clavor. Tasty and no ex·
tra calories.
Famed French chef
Jacques Pepin tells his
cooking classes not to
serve artichokes too
co l d . "R e move
artichokes Crom
refrigerator 15 to 30
minutes before serving
as a cold entree or ap-
petizer," is hi s sugges·
lion, s ince ch illing
detracts from the
vegetable's natural, nut-
ty taste.
Marinate fresb·cooked
artichokes 1n a
vinaigrette dressin g
while they are stilt
warm to obtain the most
flavor. Drain before
serving. Artichokes can
marinate tor a day or
two, if desired. ..
VINAIGRETTE
DRESSli-.G
1,-!a teaspoon fine
black pepper
\4 teaspoon earuc
powder
\4 teaspoon mild
mustard
2 tablespoons wine
vine ear
5 tablespoons olive
or salad oil
1 tabletpoona daJry
sour cream
1 tablespoon finely
chopped panJey
1 tea.tpooa ••••Oft.cl saJt
Combine aU tnsre-
dientl ta a bowl; beat
welJ. Ta.tte and adjuat
YORI BBBF LOIN SALE
PLUS 100 FIE TRIPI
TABLE KING BEEF LOIN-WHOL.£ UMrT 2 (Purche5e oYer llmlt-r~. price lb. 2.98) LB.
GROCERIES
~~ 8 Tl -IOl'YI TO Del Monte Catsup
°t9l 81L-1000~ Kraft Dressing
OO<l<Jl'CF., 8011U Welch s Orape Juice
~Z IJfL-...WU,IORANCE Tree Top Juice
l J 'lOlfltlC ASSTOI'\~ Maruchan Instant LUnch
.57
.75
}57
}47
.49
l-Oi ""Ci -ASSTD l'\>IRS -SU-P<t!CE 66 l 00 Oriental Noodles A
lf>Ol JM ClltN<~OllCHUNK~
Vons Peanut Butter }69
~Sugar Frosted Flakes} 77
}04
]36
~~BowlO.. }32
.69
PRODUCE
WllOU.~
WMermdol\
r:;.'r.d~ms
r=°G ~
iat°Canot.
~~8-M
Ul~trlif .....
Ruuet Potttou
LA .12
l.1 .39
Le .49
~ .19
LI .47
LI .39
LIQUOR
}LflU! Gallo Rhine or Red Rose
1)01".UtJIEll
Bolla Soave
I /)UTU17 0QPllOO' PopovVodka
I 7~llT~A Gordon's Qin
1'2._Mt.llfTER-~TUl Jt18 sc:otch
399
399
799
699
369
999
919
DELICATESSEN
o~i;;Y. Beef Franks
J~~m
12 our<e ""c -ear Oii ~ r -5UCl:l> Oscar Mayer Variety Pllc:k
.98'
.89
}89
.69 ~~r~~
~°itO~~AOI 198
~-i'btc::.~ooc1 l 59
!ICC. fllt(UIJI 219-f~~·"'°' 2 24 VonsWlsc.Mld~ L&
FROZEN FOODS
tQNT"'° ~ Froten Yogurt
~~Pitta
109
}99
.47
WE'LL DOCJBLE THE DIFFERENCE
O<JR Ci<JARANTEE OF VONS LOW PRICES
to convince you ol Vons commitment ID low prices,
we're making this offer If you can find lower prices
overall this wed< at any other supermar11et, Vons
will pay you double the difference. Just shop 111
Vons. Buy 25 different Items wOfth $20 or more.
Compare poces on the same items at any other
supermarket.. •If their lot.DI ls lower, bring your
rtemlzed VON receipt and the other marl<et's prices
10 Vons and we'll pay you double the difference in
cMh Vons-Low prices you can believe In
12-0UNCE CANS-REG. OR DIET-ASSTD.
LIMI I 24 (Purchase Oller lim1Heg price <19 eo I
J29
Cl!AIROI: 137 £gNC~-~IJJ~ .!lsro. EA UMtT 2 EA. (~ _, llmlt ~ pric• 2.09)
'HOT' BAKERY
&l'<Cll ~ec; !>AWt<l~
Hawaiian Pudding }49
cr:~~nky t.o.f &'. } 49
6~.99
.69
VONS BAKERY
~ P"t~-SIY.U. '"'"°' llOUS 0A Sour Dough Rolls
.79
129
~~1Fooc1 Cake
.79
169
SERVICE SEAFOOD
... ~Allfll'll:
Fresh Salmon Steeka
~mo Fency SwOldftsh Sleeks
LI } 89
LI 299
1.11 479
l.1 489 ~~Lobster
H LAL TH £, BEAUTY
~~~~v~ }88
2 ,.i)44
}37
MEATS
11\BU: KlNC llet:F-LOf'i CUT Portertiouse Steaks
r"eu l\JtOC-lfJ\l'l ro.ot:• Beef Cube Steaks
ENJOY YOIJR WINNE
WUKft'tOIN
Na11nnJI CA• Af'nlal
28-0UNCECAN-P'EE.l.f:D LIMIT 2 (P\lrct>ue _, ~mrt reg pric• n)
UI 278
19 268
Lii J 59
MEATS
(Allr ('....,_ -Y\C~VCl'IF~I~ Fresh Chicken Legs w,,,. .. r U1 109
}09 ~ 10 )t)~l roan"'
Tyson s Pride Game Hens LB
Pll" llO.DY Fresh Frying Rabbits
MA!tlERN:Q-tt,\l,W:.S Wilson tsoneless Ham
Lii ]69
I& 369
Lii } 99
L8 } 28
t:=."&;.SlOIO-lllM LI ) 98 ~.al:i. .89 ~~~.a lM .87 HOOUz e AM TO JlllDNIGHT AT JIOaT nom
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IV -r 1 DAft i4 -lf
Fountain Y•ll•t ii\
1THO Me9rw»lla & Talbe~,.
Huntl"flOn BHch Huntlftflon BHch
1122 ldl•t A lptfnfd•.. 210l2 IHCtl l1¥d. Hunttntton .. "" lltf Atlanta
lrwtM
•1ao ••nance Ad.
'ount•n V•ll•y 19201 Harbof a fdlnger
t an Juen C9Jilttreno
U011 C.mtn. Caplttrano & O.IO.....,_
Cotta .....
101. 17th lttHt end Or•nt• Av•. lrvtne
4IOO lr~ne •Ivel
. '
L.,une Hlftt
2•"1 AUcla Partlway & Mon ti.
C1pt1treno 8Hch
3G1 Ooh•ny Pe~ Or. t Victoria
-
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• ..
..... '-...
Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. August 12, 1981
Home-canned peaches remain
favorites in looks and taste
Peaches. one of the
I avonle fruits of sum·
mer. are transformed
into palate-pleasing
I reats when canned.
Seein1 a jar or old
fashioned home canned
pea c h es ~voke 5
memories ol 1randma '!
klt.cben -the Un1erinl!
aromas of apicy peach
butter simmering ln lbe
kettle, a batch of but
termilk biscuits jus1
popped into a bot oven ·
and a pot or freshly
brewed coffee that was
always ready for com·
pany.
Recreate that old
fashioned peach good·
ness using new and easy
to follow recipes de·
veloped 1n the test
kitchen at Ball Corpora·
lion. Spiced Peach But·
ter, slowly simmered
with honey and brown
sugar until thick, makes
a marvelous spread on
biscuits , toa s t or
between layers in a
favorite c ake The
mellow flavors of bran·
dy, cinnamon, orange
and lemon make Bran·
died Peach Compote a
taste sensation that i!i
at its finest when just
served alone. Home
canned peaches are
everyone's ravorite -
enjoy them in pies, cob·
biers or spooned over
vanilla pudding.
To help select the best
peaches Cor canning a
few pointers might help:
LOOK -the complex·
ion should be a creamy
yellow without a hint of
green.
SMEIL -the aroma
should be fragrant and
"peachy."
TASTE -the texture
s hould be firm, ripe and
juicy
"PU'ITING UP" your
own fresh peaches is re·
warding and satisfying
It's no wonder grandma
took such pride in her
home canning pantry.
BRANDIED PEACHES
8 pounds fresh
peaches
l 1h cups bro wn
sugar
•/4 cup water
1/4 cup vinegar
·~ cup brandy
1 orange
1 lemon
8 whole cloves
1 table s poon
crystallized ginger
slivers
4 sticks cinnamon
Soaking solution : 8
cups water, 1 tablespon
s ail, l tables poon
vinegar
Prepare home can·
ning jars and lids ac-
cording to manufac-
turer's instructions.
Wash and drain
peaches. Put fruit in
wire basket or
cheesecloth and lower
into boiling water for 'h
to 1 minute to loosen
s kin. Dip into cold water
and drain. Peel. pit, and
s lice peaches. Place
s lices in soaking solu·
ti on.
Combine sug ar .
water, and vinegar in
s aucepot. Bring to a
boil. Add peaches and
cook until they are hot
enough. Make a 2 inch
layer or peaches in bot
tom of hot jar Make a
second layer of orange
and lemon slice halves.
Add one clove, one or
two slivers of ganger,
and half of a cinnamon
s tick. Make itnother
layer of peaches ,
followed again by fruit
and spices. Fall re-
mainder or jar lo ~ inch
of top with peaches.
Repeat process for all
Jars.
Measure I cup or re·
maining syrup. Bring to
a boil in small saucepan.
Remove from heat. Add
brandy. Carefully pour
over fruit, leaving ·~
inch head space
Remove air bubbler
with n on -metallic!
spatula. Adjust caps.
Process 10 minutes in
boiling water bath can-
ner. Yield: four 1 ~ pint
jars.
PEACH HALVES
12 to 12~ pound•
firm, ripe peaches
Soaking solution: 8
cups water. 1 tablespoon
sail, 1 tablespoon
vinegar
Upt 1yrup: 2 CUPI
augar to' cups water
Prepare bome can·
nin1 Jara and lids IC·
cordln1 to manufac·
turer'a lnatructlona.
Wa1b and drain
peaches. P ut fruit In
wire ba1ket or
cbeesedoUI and lower
lato bolllnt water for "41
to I minute to loosen
skin. Dip Into cold water
and drain. Peel, halve
and pit peuches. Pinet'
halves ln soaking solu·
lion. Combine sugar and
water in a saucepan.
Cook until sugar dis·
solves. Bring to a boil,
but do not let syrup boil
down. Rinse and pack,
cut aide down into hot
Jars, leaving ~ inch
head space. Carefully
cover fruit wllb boiling
syrup, leaving ~ Inch
head space. Remove air
bubbles with non ·
metallic spatula. Adjust
caps.
Process 30 minutes in
bollin1 waler bath can·
ncr. Vleld: about five
1 ~ pint Jan.
PEACH 8UTrEll
18 medium or large
peaches
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup honey
<See PEACHES, Pa1e Ct>
rou AlWArs SAVE/ WITH $TATER BRO$.
lOW-lOW PRICE$/
·1 OTTER POPS ...
I iisilA1
x
PINCE$ EFFEC
1-RIU Mrs Alli ,,_,, ,,,, -----.,.,,,,,_
hlA'f PlfC..f Of MfAt •Ill~
<.O~~f,O ftrt•\l ' C.• ,t,PA,.flfO 10 Pt(4 (
t{'.AJ i.>" 'f'()Vt' .. ~. ' .... t'
Rl t ._.(f8JUll' NHV~OfO
18.25-0Z 7 9 C
32·0Z •279
I CHEF BOY AR DEE BEEFARONI OR MINI OR BEEF • 166 RA YIOLI . . . . . . ........... 40·0Z
AMERICAN BEAUTY ELBO RONI OR 9 C I RONI MAC ............... 12-oz 4
I WELCHS STRAWBERRY
JAM ...... ...• , , •...... 32·0Z •179
. .. 4·0Z ' I 8 3
BAR SOAP
IVORY 413.&·0Z ···
, DISH LIQUID ' 1.9 ! PALMOLIVE ......... a2.oz
UARJOI l1lelAU
Hfr"IONl IN
LI • 1
7•
FlllSH SUFOOO AVAILAILl 1 HUASIFIUISAf OHL Y •OUNDaTIAK
Hl'IOHllllS
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Ill' II.ADC CUT LI• 1
1• c•c••TIAK
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HEF IOHILIU
•1•• STIWIUAT LI
HlF CHUCK 110.UT
L.•1 a• ••••••••• IHF Clf\ICll ., .. 7·80Nl•OAaT LI
11:1, AOUHD IONE IH .,.,. •UM••OAaT LI
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1
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PEPSI
COLA AEO DiET ~ LIGHT MOUNTAIN O(W OfU SPfN
AIRWICK STICKUPS • VARIETIES
-flt.UT 11mll01'
v.uTUIH ICll -OYSlm9
lllCHS OllCXIHD
TU•KIY
lllCHI
TU•KIYBAM
JllCHI TUllKt:V
•AaT•AMI
lllCHI I/VAR
TU•KIY••IAST sw1ns Flllt:lllAHO
811faT•IH
PAPER TOWELS N~~11 I •RoLL&&c
WIZARD CM•JICOALL~MlfA I uoz 51.59
CHEESE WHIZ ~~~l I ·~z 52.07
PRETZELS g*~r&ALTY t
L.1•1 39
ui•I"
ui'I"
"''I"
1..oz f I 39
LI •21•
Ll•22 •
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11-01•1 ••
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ALEX 39c ... MACAH••·· LI
AU)( OElltlAN P'OlATO v.t149c aALAD
ILIClO TO OflOU
1'>-LI··· BAM&CBllal
ILIClD 10 OllDU AIUJllCAN
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lii.iiu••&T "'39cl
lllAUll lllOI 11-0Z u f 1 49 LUNCBMIATa
K NOCKWU••T 11-0l • 1
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U·OZ • 1 •• alZZLIAN
CAITALOUPE
LAllQI IWHT YiHI lllPI
2 9 cLI
CHl' IOV All! OU 8U,OAC1>1HH I RAVIOLI
OINNllONI 1110 011 HQ! CHILI W/Bt:ANS
MOUNTAIN DEW CANS ~·2oz 51.95
SCHWEPPES i~~~~ro:;Au I . L 77c
SEVEN UP a:o~itA FREE I ~1~Z 52.09
t \ FROZEN FOOD$ "-~ <:'~"· ;>
t> ..... ~:5
150169•
OtlH Ll~IO DERMA58AQE
•22.oz' 1°7
'*OZ• 1 ••
I LUllOHNIT 2._UA"tlN MARGARINE l ,.oz61•
llMCHITli VOOM .................. I TteL
17 .II
ROlllCO IUll ~6E .~ ............... ',~ •••••
CLUI ii~l.4~~~'; ................ • rt-l 11.18
BEER & WINE SPECIALS ...,, ··-..,,,~-
SCHLITZ
LllHT IEER 8112·0Z CANS
11.89
, •••
t lllEI •·VAR. 1.6-L
PEACHES 0£L MONTE HALVES 0A SLICED
' M·OZggc I 19oz 73c
PINEAPPLE ~g~<ro1~,f"u"~' I 1~ 1$.Qz 57c
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~~~Eawm I ..az 88c
WELCHS GRAPE JUICE ' ~ 51.39
l ::U~ru ·~ $1.94]
TOMATOES ~1;\
SALAD OIL CHI •
I
" GORTON CLAMS :010b111
HALFHILLS TUllA ~*11° I ·~ 7gc
Hmt. SPAM IMO~IO t .12-0l $1.49
~ =.. -~· ~' :me J
CHICIEI lo~li
CAT FOOD =or.Oii .
DOCF••uu
CAT LIT10 IUMO .•
DR£ 18A KASH BRDWMS • »-OZ ggc
POTATO TATtl TOTS Cl'!( •o• »Ol Sl.Ji
CllESTE SAUSACl PIZZA • n.oz s2.99
llH PAllS FllETS Lilt ••n•• I 1..a1'2.49
lllCl'f & EAll. Y ~'mu I I •1.oz5'
s•1sr DIAllGE JUICE 11.oz 99'
....... _ .... ·--·.-M-·~
I tTA1mtAYm9MYIY-Mll&Wt --------·---..------.. ____ ..... ------~-=-
-
1
----'
International desserts made easy
·with abundant summer fruit
With aourmet cookln1
the current vo1ue,
wouldn't you like to
serv e yo ur 1ueata
elegant continental-style
desserts thla summer -
with a minimum or ef·
· fort?
Luckily, it's quite easy
to create international
speclalUes with the wide
variety or colorful, sue·
culent fresh fruits so
readily available.
And this s u.mmer
promises superior quali·
ty and abundance, re·
ports the ·united Fresh
Fruit and Vegetable Aa·
socialion, especially for
peaches. nectatines,
plums and the fresh
limes whose juice and
rind add zest to fruit dis·
hes and iced drinks.
Try sugar .dusted
s li ced p eac he s.
s tr aw b erries a nd
blueberries i n o ur
version of the "Dutch
Baby," traditional to the
Netherlaftds. The only
cooking required is for
the 'delicate shell -a
frill !r batter baked in a
skiUet.
Just heap the luscious
fruit into the shell and
serve wa rm to your
guests' deli ght.
yeHow back1round color
and should yield sUahUy
under gentle pressure.
Plums sbouJd be fuJJ.
colored for the variety
and not bard. Firmer
fruit can be ripened at
ho me at room tem·
perature.
Blueberries, strawber·
ries an(! cherries, on the
otiler hand. are picked
ripe, so good color and
smooth , uns hriveled·
skin should guide your
choice.
Al cherry harves t ia
Fran ce 's Central
PI ate au region, the
heady aroma of Fresh
Fruit Clafouti wafts
from every oven. This
sturdy dessert -a
melange of nectarines,
p e a c h es . plum s,
blueberries and cher-
ries, baked in a pan·
cake-like batter that's
accented with grated
lime rind -adds a
sophisticated touch lo
summertime dining.
Take a tip this season
from the simple ways
Europeans have of
creating elegant dining
with the summer's col·
orful bounty of fresh
fruit.
DUTCH BABY WITH
FRESH SUMMER
1 tableapoon bulter
or margarine
4 medium peaches,
peeled and sliced
2 c up s fresh
strawberries
1 cup fresti blueber·
ries .
Co.nlecUoners' sugar
In smaJI bowl, com·
bine eggs, flour, mllk
and salt; beat until
s mooth with rotary
beater or electric mixer.
Place 10-lnch, oven·
proof s killet• in 450·
degree oven until skillet
is very hot, about 3
minutes. Remove skillet
from oven. place butter
in sltiUet. Allow butler to
melt and immediately
add batter. Bake 12
minutes; reduce beat to
350 degrees, continue
baiting 10 to 15 minutes
longer until batter puffs
and is golden brown.
Place Dutch Baby on
serving plattei:. Fill with
fruit; sprinkle with con·
fectioners' sugar. Serve
immediately. Makes 6 to
8 servings.
•If using a skillet with
handle that is not heat-
proof , wrap handle
c arefully with double
layer of aluminum foil.
<=LAFOUTI
3 ~upe mixed fresh
fruit, unpeeled, cut-up
(nectarines, peaches,
plums, blueberries•.
pitted cherries•)
4 large eggs (about
~cup)
t,.; cup sugar
I;\ teaspoon salt
t,.; cup sifted all-
purpose nour
2 tablespoons butter,
melted
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon freshly
grated lime rind
Generously butter a
10-incb pie plate or
quiche dish. Arrange
fruit in dish. In a
medium bowl. beat eggs
HghUy. Beat in sugar
and salt. BJ end in flour.
When s mooth , beat
melted butter into bat·
ter. Stir in milk and
lime rind. Pour batter
over fruit. Bake In a
375-degree oven 30 to 35
minutes. until batter has
se l. Serve warm ,
sprinkled with confec·
tioners' sugar. Makes 6
servings.
•Blueberries and cher·
ries should not be cut
up.
Nutrient Values : This
recipe contains approx·
imately 255 calories per
9fange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday. Augu1t 12. 1981
/'111s c1111t111e11ta/-s1 yle
dessert of fres h fruit 1s
eosi/lJ nuule looks er·
celle11t 011d 1s very
IClSI I/
The key to success
with these beautirul
desserts is lo use fully
ripe , well ·s h aped,
bruise -fr ee fruit.
Peaches and nectarines
should have a rich
FRUIT
2eggs
~cup flour
1f.z cup milk
Nutrient Values: This
recipe contains approx-
imately 118 calories per
ser ving (based on 8
servings), and 48 per-
cent U.S. RDA vitamin
C.
serving (based on 6 r~======~l~(li;~~~~liiliiii servings). and 25 per· I
cent U.S. RDA vitamin 1~ teaspoon salt FRESH FRUIT A.
Apricots add flavor to pastries
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
..,AST
IESULr•
SHVICE
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
Fr om late May
through early August.
fresh California apricots
can be found in fruit
stands and produce de·
partments ... thus. it's
Ome to use fresh 'cots now! Whirl into milk
shakes, slice into pies,
dice into ice creams or
puddings, o r simply
place some in the picnic
basket for out-of-hand
eating.
B y u sing fre s h
a pri cots, com pany .
pleasing desserts often
seem to happen. For in·
WESSON
COOKING
OIL
lloa.
51.69
GROCERY rJ:roR, .. Ks · •• _ .. s,.,
~ ..... 9 TINDEi CHUHK DIMHHS 2 c = CHEDDAIS 1 -. 99c
rA:11t TOWELS I w67c
L.ewS..., .. • 75 RID HA WAii.AH PUNCH c
PRODUCE
~OCADOS
IBJ.""85 ..,.
IAITUTT PEAIS
lltns ...
PWMS
FROZEN
6/S 100
39c,.._
29c ..
4tc ..
3tc ..
:tu~~lllS 11-4fc.
:-AMIS 11 _95c
v •• ..., 'I" rlUA 5qUAllS 11 ...
s t a nce, these Apricot queur and stir in apricot
Creme Tarts look com-puree, made by whirling
plicated, but the filling fresh api"icots in the
is s tirred up quickly ble nder . The filling 's
from a pudding mix. now ready to spoon into
Use cream instead of tart shells and chill. For
milk for extra creami· a s pecial to uch, de-
ness. Then lace with corate each tart with ad:
some orange.flavored Ii· See Apricots, Page CS.
HUNTS
TOMATO
SAUCE
IOL
5/51.00
VAN KAMPS
PORK
AND BEANS
IS oz.
3/51.00
DELI
........ y ........
SUCED MEATS
642-5671
lat.JU
DIAL
TOILET
SOAP CedltY..,
MOMT'lllREY JACK CHEESE ' -••sm 2/J9c
MEAT
USDAC ........ C ..
CHUCK STUIS
'ioocl-tastllMj ......... ,...c. .......... ..... ,....,. ..............
TUIUY DltUMSTICICS
.....
RU.IT IOCI COD
Only 25' a gallon for 0096-taatlng we• ~ you bring your own
bOttle to the Aqua·Vend mechlne
at ouratore.
MOHy Ordlrs Sold
CMcl&C1 'I I
C_....A•• .. 11
99~
w\\.o\e. 1-!!!t<fCJ I
w"°\e, ~,ess ·n F 1tEr MIGflOll . ., '*· 1ip$111N WiaiERS ... 99~.
Mo c,M,t~ to wt-~.. ~k, E.Jc.tro. l~
~ V'kolc or Mi.If-GROUND ~'f 59 'l'M~·~tl~9 SIR1211f .. :JL8.
)j I. {A1.'..ll"ii. STEWBEEF..I~
Discover secure
beltless i?_rotection
]Tom the
nam.ey<?U
cantruSt.
Kotex•mad
and mini pads
are absorbent enough to protect
you even at ttmes when you can't change your pad.
And they stay securely in place with 3 adhesive strips.
•' .
!
-
-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Auguat 12, 1981
Herbal iiisecticides chase insect s without dangerous poisons
87 MITZIE K£U..£a I Such herb1cide1 can
Dellchtful 1u m · bt partlcularly iiood
mertime 11 the favorite for J)arenta of younir
seaaoo for friends to · chlldi'en. No need to be
meet at aarden partiea, c on c e r n e d If th e
bat.bin& bfauties to col-younastert apray them
lect admlrlna &lances. in their eyes, spill them
campers to lnbaJe fra-on food, or even drink
1rant plne aJr alonaslde them because they are
mountain streams. pie· harmless, as a rule. to
nJcken to play childish humana.
games before enjoying For such parents, lt
feasts. might be worthwhUe
But, summer is also k e e p I n g a o m e I n
the time for uninvited hou.sebOlds not only dur-
guesta -bugs. in& summer but aJI year
C h ase them with lhrou.ah.
herbaJ insecticides. These are natur,al
preparations which peo·
p1e ol ancient aaes used
when there were no
arlltlclal c h emical
sprayt.
TO llBEP OFF ' FLIES
-1511
rrom bay leave1
( Laurus nobllla>. Thi•
recipe by C ulpeper
( 1816·54) can oo used for
1my herbal oils.
·'To keep rtles from
rteah (meats), lay an USING HERBS onion upon il," Or.
Langham advised in •
1579. LAVaEL OIL -ltll
'·Paint walls or ru b 3 cups bay leaves
pictures with laurel oil." 2 cups olive olJ
Rub some over patio Mix 1 cup bay leaves
furniture and charcoal with the olive oil. Cover;
grills. fl aJso Improves place over lowest possi-
t be f I av or o t ham. ble heat or set In hot sun
burgers, steaks and fish. about a fortnight (2
Laurel Oil is made weeks>. laking It in at
n1gbt. Add another cup
of bay leaves, but ~o oil;
repent. Add the third
cup of bay; repeat. Boll
until herbs are c r l1p
Stram into stone or 11ass
vessels. Cover.
MOS QUITOES AND
RAT ~-1800
·'To kee p out mos·
quit.oes and rat!L H a
botUe of the oil of pen·
n yroyal CH edeoma
pulegioides > is lert un-
corked in a room al
night. not a mosquito,
nor any ot her
bloodsucker, will be
round Lht>rl' In tht-morn
Ing." Hugo Ziemann Od·
vised
Prepare Pennyroy•I
Oil in the same mannf'r
as the Laurel 011.
Increase the amounts
in the recipe. Fiii lik1
lights with the oil. Place
the lights in slx·foot h1gh
holders set around the
garden. Flame them for
outdoor dinners, or
luaus.
''A single Clove of
Garl.acke near every tree
wall keep mice or rats
away," Or. Wllhch said
in The Domestic En·
cyclo~'<ila.
TO D EST ROY
C'OCIUlOA('H ES -1888
··spr1nkll· (white >
llt•llcbore <lfclleborus
v1r1de> in trups on the
fl oor al night
Cockroaches eat It and
are poisoned ..
l'OADS -300 B.C.
Most people en/oy
summer sunsets in the
co untr y l a nguidl y
wutching daylight turn
to evenjng while hsten
ang to a chorus of loads
an the distance filling the
balmy air with a sym·
phony of love aon1a. It ia
peueeCul ~tnd relaxing.
And toads destroy slugs
In the aar<fen
But If you prefer
spending your eveninas
alone, "plant a weath of
sage plants nearby."
Theophrastus ( c372·287
B C.O> advised.
MOL~-1800
"Moles to catch? Put
G arlicke, Onyons or
Leeks into the mouthes
of their holes, & they
will come out quickly as
amazed," according lo
Dr Willich.
~~~~~~~~~~-
••• Apric o ts
ditlonaJ fresh 'cots plU$
a dollop of whipped
cream.
All forms of apricots
-canned and dried as
well as fresh -con-
tribute good nutrition
especially Vitamin A, as
well as refreshing, uni-
qlle flavor. For that re·
ason, apricots are ex-
cellent fruits to select
year·round. For in-
stance, try making a
cheesecaJte from canned
apricots. And, since it's
the no-bake variety, it's
especiaJly nice for those
hot summer days.
Try starting these and
other dishe s with
apricots soon!
FRESH APRICOT
CBEAMTARTS
<Makes 8 Tarts)
l 'h p o und s fre s h
Calilomia apricots
1 pint half and half
cream ·
2 p ackages (3 11•
ounces each cooked-type
vanilla pudding mix
2 tablespoons orange-
fla vored liqueur
8 baked pastry tart
shells (each holding 't'l
cup) .
·~ pint heavy cream.
whipped and sweetened
Wash apricots, Halve,
pit and puree enough
apricots in el ectri c
blender or food mill to
get 2 cups puree. Chill
remaining apricots for
garnish. Gradually stir
apricot puree and half
and half into pudding
mix in large saucepan.
Bring mixture to a boil.
stirrin g consta ntly .
Remove from heat; stir
in liqueur. Spoon apricot
filling into tart shells;
chill 3 hours or until
serving time.
Just before serving,
garnish tarts with re-
mai n ing apricots
(halved and pitted) and
a dollop of whipped
cream .
•·RESH
REFRIGERATOR
CHEESECAKE
C Makes H-lncb cake)
l cup graha m
cracker crumbs
2 tablespoons sugar
11.t cup butter or
margarine, melted
1 can (17 ounces)
apricot halves
2 envelopes un -
flavored gelatin
1..Al cup water
3 eggs, separated
2 cups, ( 16 ounces>
creamed cottage cheese
1 can <14 or 15
ounces) sweetenect con-. densed milk '
2 tablespoons lemon
juice
1-'a cup apricot pre-
serves
To prepare crust, mix
cracker crumbs, sugar
and butter together in
bowl. Press on bottom of
a lO·inch s pringform
pan. Bake in 350 degree
F . oven 10 minutes.
Coot.
To prepare filling,
drain a pricots. Puree
apricots i n electr ic
blender or press through
a sieve. SprinkJe gelatin
over water in lop of dou-
b I e boiler ; allow to
stand 5 minutes. Beat
· the egg yolks and blend
into gelatin mixture;
stir over s imme ring
water untiJ mixture is
thickened. Remove from
heat; cool. Place cot·
tage cheese and con-
densed milk ln electric
blender container; cover
and blend until smooth. <If you do not. have a
blender, push cottage
cheete· throu&h a sieve
or food mill.) Combine
pureed apri~, cooled
gelatin mlJCture, cotta1e
cbHM, condenaed milk
and lemon juice in bowl.
Chill until mixture ls
partially thickened; ~old
in Maten eH whh.es.
Pour tato prepared pan.
Ch ill I hours or ove,.
oiibt. · • About ~ hour beJore • aenl8' tlme, prepare
I 11au bJ •1pooala1 • apricot .,...._. top
' ol ~•; chill unW ffrv··
jq time.
'""" t l(;HIS •tstt vto NO SAii 10 COMMllC1A1 Of •11•~ o-
"""°'ts•1u s ~""' SOfJ 1>111Ncs NOi .. v .. ,1 .. 111 '" 't"'tuu cou ....
FOSTER FARMS
CALIFORNIA
T1111 o>d only t ffKJtve ot Hugh" El Rot1<ho
ond Hughe• lodo.
WI WILCOMI FOOD ITAMP IHOPPIRI FRESH FRYERS
WHOLE
BODY
CHICKENS
LIMI T
4 •
L8 1.59 U 5 0 A <hOoCI! beef 1.39 7-!0NE CHUCK ROAST
E R. leon·nol lo eaued 22% fol E R sweet & hol
GROUND BEEF & PATTI ES La 2.19 ITALIAN SAUSAGE
E R. leo~t ground·nol 10 ucted I 5% lot 2 49 CHOPPED BEEF STEAKS LB •
E R Not to e.cettd 15°;, lot
LEANEST GROUND BEEF LB 2 .49
WHOLI
TOP SIRLOIN
IONflfSS llfH IOIN wt'•E GIAO TO SllCf fOll YOU
LB.2.39
Aut Vorl&I••• 6·oz
ROYAL DRAGON ROLLS
Aul Vortelitl 22., 26 o z
SARA LEE CAKES
.1.49
.. 2.59
Jeno't 7 •;-oz. '
SNACK TRAY PIZZA ................. 1.43
WELCH'S
GRAPE JUICE
16 oz. 1.19
l8
1 .59 U S 0 A choice beef
L8. 0 -BONE CHUCK ROAST l8 1.69 E R pork woth \eOW>nong
BRATWURST SAUSAGE ..
U.S 0 A choice beef boneleu rolled
l8 CHU .K SHOULDER CLOD l B 2 .49 E R center cut w /odded
HAM SLICES
Poc1f1c loller I 5 9 FRESH RED SNAPPER ............................. la •
Fro11n/delrosted Alotko cenrer cut
HALIBUT lllAKI ........... Le 3 .89 ldoho Mountoon lloonbow
FRll H TROUT ................... LB 1 .89
Fresh follet
OCIAN PIRCH ................. La. 2 .19 froun/defro"ed 7 99 JUMBO 1111 ICAU.Oltl Ls. •
BOLOGNA
IC1n9'1 16 0 1 Looi
HA WAllAN SWEET BREAD
l(idney & Gorbonto . !5·01
SPRINGFIELD BEANS ......
Senec:o Stemt & Poec:et 8 ., oz
MUSHROOMS
LIMIT 4
MEAT OR
BEEF
8-0Z. 79c
1.19 Sprongltt'ld "6·01 .89 PINEAPPLE JUICE
...• 43 3? 0 1 one 70 olf 1.67 JOY DISH DETERGENT
1.49 40 cl bo• one 75 oll 1.94 BOUNCE FABRIC SOFTENER
2 liter bottle
R.C. COLA or 9 9
DIET RITE ............... • 1.69 Monutto Mood Chilled 6• 0 1
ORANGE
JUICE ................ .
32·oz
HUNT'S KETCHUP
Moruchon Aut Vor 2 '> 01
INSTANT LUNCH
Bell 8rond bog vol11e bog 1 I '?·oz
POT A TO CHIPS ...
.1.09
.....• 49
1 .19
Reg o< doer I 6·01 bollle• No Depo\11
SEVEN UP
Noture Volley .. 10·01 pkg ont. llovon
GRANOLA BARS
2 .19
1.43
Noture Volley 7 25 01 p~g .... ou t •ortelttt I 45 GRANOLA CLUSTERS. . . ... . •
Purtno oll vorietotl. 18 oz Sentry V lor dog• & coh
SERGEANT'S FLEA COLLAR 1. 99 .95 SPECIAL DINNERS ...... .
Y"'A ii 1'i·i/,1i;; If!
Sil.Kli'NC1 139
(1fii$i\'.jif t~~}
=:::.~.~.~~ ...... 995 SHAMPOO ................. .
Reg or Unteenred l.5·01
DRY IDEA ROLL-ON
Reg or lom• 7-oz
RISE SUPER GEL
1.49
1.39
Chm1ton 8rothe11 7 ~O ml
CHA TEAU LA SALLE
Torre 750 ml
ASTI SPUMANTE
2 .49
..... 5 .99
NECTARINES _._... ___
9.~ LARGE
LATE
LE GRANDE
Cmp Sofod thef ... 5-oa. 19 cucu••••• .......... -............. EA.·. 19 c110UTO•• ............................. la .•
v--..,•-.....,.okh• ••lltotbo• f()f)CSfjfTH£fJRl£t'fr Nv ... o•o ~ • .,... 1so,,,1
TEA .......... 69 ,..011•-NOD11<•0t" COOKING SAKE . J .39
Y_.v,~1 1611 iat
SHIRO MISO . • •.. .. ....•. I .09 """~, ... IAKUllA UDOll lo\otwlio• Solod 12 •• llMlle
RICE VINEGAR .. 79
3 i'I , ....... He;_, ,, .. , "'
SESAME COOKIES . . ...... . -i<>ot• 10 J ••• .,.
TOFU .. ... .... . .... II
We accept -LL COUPONS
from other luper-Marlcets
...... .. .._.
u ..... ~ ,,.., ,,__.,.,. .... ~-,
1111e .. 1-, ............. .. Uftt•.,"'" e414 M•i..t..,. ,.,. v ... c ...... ,
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~,. w Celeo ....... uu ........ " o. •••
LID
AND
LB.
f R flo•orful 5 o t tpon rttody)
EA .59
EA .89
l8 1.29
SALISBURY STEAK
Cook1 beef 8 o t
BREAKFAST LINKS
El R<1urho
RAN CH STYLE BACON
BEEF
CHUCK STEAK
llAOE 87 cur LB. • I
DANOLAHAM
1"201 298
PICG
M~ol or Beel I lb
ARMOUR HOT DOGS
Country Chorm 8 01
SLICED LONGHORN
1 .59
1 .39
1 lb
HORMEL WRANGLERS I . 99
MONTEREY
JACK CHEESE
HUGHES
REG CUTS
RANDOM WGT
-•
.... 22a
l'llCU
""CTIYt 7 OAyt
I AM flolUll • 4UO Ii f"*U WIO • 4UO. If, "'' lo"llt rl9h1t ,.,.,~
--u.e. ........... uu v .. 1,. o. ... °" , ... ,.._.. .... 0.-.• °""' !le .. lllvlt Vt .... C.ft•" TH SAD ONlY EHtCTIYI AT HVOHIS ll RA N9 Hli.t IO 9eolt n
.. •
-
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981
Summer excellent time for serving fresh fish r t
By BAABAllA GIBBON
Fish ls a favorite or
calorie watchers any
lime or the year . but
summe rtime Is the
season wh e n It 's
especially appeaJlng.
One reason, perhaps,
Is that really fresh rish
Is more widely available
when the weather is
warm. You may even•
have the good fortune lo
be friendJy with some-
one who fis hes reg-
ularly and can s upply
you with the freah-
caught variety. Or,
perhaps you catch your
own.
In any event, you'll
wa.nt an assortment or
easy ways to prepare
the season's bountiful
harvest. Some ideas to
try:
The first is a simple
way to bake a whole fish
in its own savory, self-
m ak ing sauc e . Any
whole, dressed fish can
be prepared this way;
s imply increas e or
decrease the amount of
each ingred ient in ac-
cordance with the size of
the fish, and lengthen or
shorten the cooking time
accordingly.
Don't be a slave to the
clock when cooking fish;
exact lime depends on
the thickness or the fish
and the density or its
fl esh. Fish is done when
its flesh is opaque and
flakes easily . Any addi-
tional cooking will only
dry it out.
BAKED FISH
PROVENCAL£
3-pound whole fish:
r ed snapper. bluefis h,
etc.
Bay leaves
l lemon
1 smaJI onion,
minced
l cup minced celery
or green pepper <or •2
cup each)
2tablespoons
m inced fresh parsley
2 teaspoons minced
fresh cor ·~ te a s poon
dried > thy me, sage or
sa vory
SaJt Cor garlic salt>.
pepper. to taste
4 vine -rape to m -
a toes. peeled , rin ely
chopped
•,2 cup dry red or
rose wine
Have fis h dressed
whole <cleaned, gutted
and scaled; head and
tail removed). Place a
fe w broken-up bay
lea ves inside the fish
and squirt the inside
with the juice of th e
lemon. Arrange the fish
in a nonstick baking
dish, sprayed with cook·
ing spray. Combine re-
maining ingredients and
pour over the fish.
Bake, uncovered, in a
preheated 350-degree
oven, basting often with
th e sauce, until fis h
flakes easily and flesh is
opaque, about ~ to 30
minutes, depending on
thic kness. IC s auce
becomes too thick, add a
little water (or tomato
juice). Increase ingre-
dients proportionally ror
a larger fish, and extend
baking lime by an addi·
tionaJ 5 minutes or so,
pe r pound. A 3-pound
fi sh prepared this way
will make 6 servings,
approximate ly 170
calories each.
BROILED SEA
ST EAKS
SANGRIA-STYLE
4 cod fillets Cor cod
s teaks), about 1 and one-
quarter pounds.
1 tablespoon melted
butter
1 tablespoon defrost-
e d undiluted · orange
juice concentrate
14 cup sherry
Salt cor seasoned
sail), pepper, to taste
Paprika
Orange s lices or
... Peaches
From Pagel
14 teaspoon each
salt, cloves, 1ln1er, al·
lspice, and nutmeg
Prepare home can-
ning jars and lids ac·
cording to manufac-
turer's instructions.
Pit, peel, and chop
peachee. Cook 1n small
amount of w•ter until•
soft. Preas throu1h sle.e
or food mill, or puree ln
b lende r . Measure 2
quarts (8 CUPI) of pulp. In saucepot, combine
p u 1 p , b '-.Own 1u1 a r.
honey, ull 1ptces. Coot
1lowly ovw low bH t.
Stir f1eqwentJy. Coot UD·
Ul butter ii very lblck.
About 30 mlautH .
C•relW.lY. pour into bot J ara, le avln1 _ \4 lncb
n elld lf9C9. A4JU1t UPI· Proe•• If mlllutes ln bolJinl ... balb CUI•
ner. YleAd j about a plnt
Jan .•. '
parsley. ror samlsh
Ar.ranee cod In a
single layer in a non·
stick brolllng pan. Other
rish steaks or fillets may
be s ubstituted . Blend
butter, orange juice and
wine together and spoon
over fi sh. Place fisb
about 4 inches from heal
sauce . Broll without
turning about 8 minutes,
basting often with juices
that collect in the pan.
Watch carefully and re-
move from broiler the
minute the flesh is opa-
que and flakes easily;
don't overcook. Sprinkle
with seasonln11 (to
taate >. garnlsh and
s erve i m mediately .
Makes 4 servln1s, under
ISO culories each.
SLIM GOURMET dl}?nll, except olive oll,
8'Jt and pepper. Shake
up; then close the ba1
tlshtJy and place ll on a
plate to catch drips,
refri1erat.e 30 minutes to
3 hours.
servln11. 125 calories
each with cod or scrod:
145 calories each. with
polloc~i 175 calories
each witn awordlish. raw onion
MARINATED
f18HKE8A8
1 pound cod, scr()d,
pollock, swordfish, or
other firm fish steaks or
fillet.'
4 or 5 bay leaves
OpUonal: few sprlts ot fresh (or plncb of
dried) mint or mar-
joram
Remove flab cubes
from plastic bas; thread
loosely o n skewers.
Brush Ughtly wltb olive
oil. Broil 3 to 4 Inches
from heat source, turn~
tne to broil evenly, Just
until fish is opaque.
about 6 or 6 minutes.
Don't overcook. Season
to taste. Makes four
BAJ...KAN·STYLE FISH
nLLETS WITH sova C&EAM SAUCE
1 small onion, thlnJy
alJced
5 tablespoons fresh
lemon juice
Optional : minced
clove of earllc <or pinch
of instant 1arllc)
Bay leaf, broken up
1 Vt pounds cod (or
other fish) fillets
.Ral
2 tablespoons waler
or olive liquid (tom a jar
or olives
Few thin sllces of
1 tablespoon olive oil
Salt, pepper. to taste
Cut flab into 1 and one-
h a If Inch cubes and
place in a plastic bag.
Add remaining lngre-
~ cup dry while
wine Dash of Wor -
cestershire sauce
Sall and coarsely
Double Coupon DOuble Coupon
p,e,ent t''"'S """°"" atong .... ,,, •ny one Menufacttr·e,s '•"'~ 011 coupan 1no 9e1 oouOle ,..,. H •·"Qf .. ,..,. you
putt"••e '"• •tem Not to include tei11te1 h M 0t gro~
Cfty llUICl\Ue COUPO"f Of t •CH d ,,,. ••lu• Of .,, .......
Eaciuoes "Quo• 101>ac:co ano Hute milk p•oouclt
Limit OM Item ,., M8ftuteotwen' Coupon
end Limit I Double Coupone Per Cl.letomet.
CO\IPOfl l!ftectl•• Aue. 13 """ Aue. 11, 1H1
Double Coupon
Pre\ent u·u5 c.oupf'm 11on9 *1tn 1nr one Mtnufac1urers
<.e••IS 011 covoon ano get double '"' savings wne11 you
OutC,,a\e '"• item Not 10 1nc1voe 1e1a11er ''" or gro
e1v ourc.hlS~ c.ouPOns °' e~ceed 1ne .value ot inf' ·tem f •c•udes •QUO' 1oo•cco •no flul(' 1ru1" 01~ .... ,\
Limit One Item Per Menufecturen' Coupon
end Limit I Ooubte Coupone Pet CuetCMMf.
Coupon lrt.ctlw• Aue. 13 ttvu Aug. 1t, 1111
Presenl lhtl couPOn &IOfl9 ... 111 any Oii• Menu(ec1u1••• c.n" off coupon allO Gel oo..t>i. the H••no• -yo..
i>u•cl'laH •"• 11em Not 10 '""uO• 1eta•lef ''" 0t g•o-cery PU1'heH coupon• Of .. ,_ .,, ....... OI ,,,. ......
E•c:luou ltQuor 1ooec:co 11\0 "'"" m1Ho p1oouc1•
Umlt One Item Per~· Coupon Md Limit I Double Coupone ,., C.....,._,
C..-lflllOttve Aue. 11 llwu Aue. 11, 1N1
Double Coupon
Pr•$.,nt ""' c:oupan 1tong w11n any one Me,.uf1c1u•ets ce,.1s 011 cwpan ar>O ge1 oou1>1e 111e aav.ngs wnan you
pur,~ase tne 1te"' No1 to include retailer ''" 0t g10~
Cf''Y ourcn•w coupons or e11.c.eeo 1ne ••Ive ol tf'le ·tem
£,clu<Jes ltauo• 1011acco •1'<1 flu•O m11lr 1>'00uc1s
Limit OM Item Per Menutemnn• c~
Md Umlt I Double Coupone Per Cwtomer.
Coupon lftecttft Aue· 11 ttvu Aug. 1t, 1N1
ground pepper
1 cup sour half-and·
half or plain low-fat
yoeurt
1 tablespoon tlour
Parsley and lemon
slices
Combine onion slices
and bay leaf ln the bot·
tom of a large nonstick
s killet o r electric
frypan. Add the cod lo a
single layer. Add wlne,
Worcestershire, salt and
pepper. Cover and slm·
mer about 5 minutes, de-
pending on thickness, or
until fish flakes easlly.
Remove (llh to a beat·
ed platter. Strain liquid
Into a saucepan; aim·
mer unlll reduced bf ,
half. MeanwhJle, blend
sour cream and llour
together untll smooth;
mix lnto simmering
sauce. Cook ·and sUr un-
til sauce Is lhlck and
bubbling. Spoon over
fish lo serve, garnished
with parsley and lemon
slices. Makes 6 servings,
130 calories each with
sour half-and-half; 100
c alories each with
yogurt.
Bonus
Double Coupon
Prttenl 1'\1\ c.ouoo,, along #111'1 an• one Manufach..uer1
t .. nt') Off coupon and O•t OOuOI• the s•vingt •"er ~Ou Pw'Ct\a&e tt'l~ ,,.,,., Not to ·'~ludf" tPla1•e, tree or QlO
cery Ou•cna~ cot.1Pona "' e •tt'l'O tne ,.-aJue o4 1ne •tf'm
E •C.luoes .. quor tobacco 1nd ••u·O ,., ltt. orooucta
Umlt OM Item Per MMufecturen' Coupon Md Umlt I Double Coupone Per C...._.
Coupon 1"9cttwe Aue. 11 ttvu Aue. 1t, 1N1
USDA Choice-Beef Chuck
Blade Cut Lake County Che~dar Longhorn or
Chuck
Steak
USDA Choice
Beef Chuck
Bartlett
Pears
.
Lake to Lake
Monterey
Jack ·
loz.
pkg.
Ralphs-Chilled
Assorted Flavors
7-Bone
Steak
op Fruit
Appia Juice . Drinks ·
Tree
Chunk Light.
lri OU dr Water ... ~, ...
Tuna
.15·:.~
per
lb •
Old Fashioned 111,u
ICI Crll•
1~~
lntnll rel••• priyloUa ...-.. ltalptw prtoi~ or.... ~ID...,...,
pr ... redUdon ..._...of adwertleld or,,............ prt111.
..._. .......... !ft ....... .,. ... ..,.._,IC• or loWet In..,.._ ... ~--....,.
.,._..._. ,,.... ..., wmty de"9Rdl"I upon loc .. competlt6oft, ooet .....,. et ,...,.,._ ......... '
• 1711 SI Clltl IDI . ~--.. _,. .. ••1iiiaui111111 • .. { .. :•-•• ••ii;ifilii.-mu•a .. -,
. (
12 oz. can
Coors
·Beer
8
peck
•
-
..
L
ca• O~ Co .. t DAILY PILOTIW•dne1day, Augu1t 12. 1981
Fresh lake whitefish aa sale in markets now
A pric. r9ductiotl and brolled whiteneh IUleu. ~ teupoon chopped and pour quickly over mhctw-. ol paprlb, 1alt 0 t be r PI en t l tu I Consumers are re-dish needing no further
new av1H1blllty for parsley · the n1h; 1prlnJde wftb aod White Pfpper mJxtft 11•to6d1 available in minded to select preparation, just to be
fresh lake wbltetl1b PAN FRIED FILLETS lleupoonbutttr cbopped par1ley . totute. Plactlnabtat· IOfC•., markets this packaged frozen fish en· oven heated or cooked
plu.a a buae variety of OP Garnl1h wltb lemon ed broiler about 4· to~ m.o n lb l n c I u de : trees for economy and briefly.
freah fltb In abundant LAKE WHITEFISH 1allceslemon •lice. lnchelfromheat,8r4)114 S•ordf11b, now b1ln1 convenience since in·
1uppl)' are Au1u1t AMANDI NE Heat oil In a frytn1 mlnutM on each tide un· cauiht off Southern c reaaln1 numbers of Other frozen seafood
seafood news from the For two aervln11: pan. dip f1Uetl lnto BaOIUD FILL&ft OF ll1 1olden browll. Seryt QalifornJa and Mexican breaded and sauced fish Items popular in hot
CaUfomiaFisheriesAs· Flourwitha&Jt,pep· seuooedflourandplace WHITEFISH AMAN· on heated plates. waters, fresh Northern fillets and individual weather include: Snow
soclatton. per, paprika added to into bot pan. Fry l4) a DINE Sprinkle 1 t•upoon falmon, Northern and naturally shaped fillets. and King Crab claws
Many fiab lovers have taste golden brown on botb Place indlvldual serv· sliced, touted almonds tocal halibut, albacore slicks. and pan.ready and meat, whole D(lnge-
eaten and enjoyed fresh 2 ounces oil or sides, not overs minutes in11 ol whlleftah fillets over each fillet; gaMlab (tuna). Pacific Snapper whole fish are now n ess crabs , cooked
I ake whitefish ln floe clarified butter total time. Remove flab into a small pan or pie wlUl lemon and chopped o r r o c k I ls h . sol e available ln freezer sec· and pee 1 e d 0 r raw
restaurants, where it 1 pound Lake fillets lo heated plate., plate. DMule with a few parsley. (petrale, rex, aaod , lions of markets. Many shrimp In all sizes rrom
has been nown in over· Whitefish fUlet do not wash Pan . drops of oil and lemon Fine rettauranta often Dover all can be Mund ot these, which Include the tiniest (200 or more
1 ht f h h dl d Julee of YI lemon $prinlde each rtllet with Julee, or if desired, Ju1t sprt.nkle a few drop1 of at various times;, Ung popular snapper, cod per pound) to the jumbo ~i~ d~~=t~· ca~: a:d 2 teaspoons sli ced or fresh lemon juice and eprinkle fresh lemon Worcestersblre sauce cod, y~llow tail, local and sole, com e with <under 15 to the pound),
cooked with the respect slivered almonds, almonds. Add butter lo Julee over top of fillet.a. over fillets before cook· seabass , trout, and special s auces that scallops, and Pacific
due a rare 1ourmel food toasted the frying pan, let brown Sprinkle UghUy with a Ing. shark. make a complete main spiny lobster . . . and the price ~as .~..:..::..:~;;.....---~----...;;_...=...;:....-...;._-----=----___;:=--..;.._----.;:;...-------::----------_..;.;~.;;,._;;;;......;;.;;;..;.;.:~:.:;.::_...:.:..:.::.:.:..:~:.!:..:.:..::!.-:.::.:::.:.:.:..._ ___ _
often reflected Uiis
special treatment. To·
day Southern California
cooks can purchase this
same fr eshwater
whitefish for the first
time ln their favorite
supermarkets and at
special , inflation·
fighting prices.
As one ot many efforts
on the part of the fish·
eriea indµstry to brinl'
new seafood items to
this area, many local
producers. shippers and
supermarkets are cur·
renUy joining in thjs air
shipment merchandis·
ing promotion with
Canadian fisheries. The
goal is lo introduce thjs
delicately flavored fish
to more Southern
California consumers.
Whitefish comes from
s everal areas of the
U .s .. the most well·
known being Lake
Superior and also from
Northern Canada ; It is
considered one of the
most well liked and
versatile fish in the
world.
Delicious when baked,
it ls also superb broiled.
fried, smoked, poached,
steamed and sauteed.
Dieters especially llke it
since it can be prepared
without adding any fat,
due to its abundance of
natural fish oil, which
also helps impart its re-
nowned. delicate flavor.
One of the most
popular ways to prepare
it ls with fresh lemon
juice and toasted
slivered almonds or
other favorite nuts. This
can be incorporated Into
recipes for both pan-
fr i e d whitefish or
Handy
home
• tips
Ever arrive home
from a busy work day to-
find dinner's still in the
freezer? Here 'a a
s peedy solution. Pop
frozen hamburger pat·
ties In a skillet, sear on
both sides until nicely
browned, Add a sliced
onion; cover and cook
over low heal until meat
is thawed.
Oriental Skillet Supper
is a busy cook's dream.
ln medium skmet, brown
'h pound lean ground
beef until crumbly ;
drain fat. Add 1 package
( 10 ounces ) froz e n
J aeanese style V«lg·
. etables ; stir fry until
just tender. Add 1 can (8
o unces ) pineapple
chunks, drained, and 1
package brown gravy
mix , prepared ac ·
cording to package
directions. Serve over 1
can (5 ounces) chow
meln noodJea. Serves 4.
Save time with the
13·mlnute baked potato.
Wrap potatoes in foll,
place on rack in a pres·
sure cooker and add water up to the rack.
Cook 10 to 15 minutes de·
pendJ"' upon size.
Tr~ this easy, speedy
Mexican Rice
Cas11oulet. In large
saucepan, comblne 1
packap •exicaa rice seaaonma mix, prepared
accordiq lo directions;
1 pactaae ClO ouacea)
fro1en llma beans.
• cooked accordln1 to
direcUons; 1 cup cubed
bam, 1 can (1 pound)
stewed l4)matoa and 10
plmlenl4) atulfed 1reen
olives, haJved. Cook on
low until thorouf bly
hea ted, about Ive
minutes. Serves e to 8.
Rule of thumb IM the
workina cook: Prepare
1.veraf eat.reel at once,
pack ... In Hl'Villl por· Uolll ... ,......, TbeH
~II proYkle IA abaD •
duee of CIQlck ba11le· me......,.
OUR FAMILY IS IROWINl ••• NOW YOU CAN SAYE ON MORI AND MORE NO.FRILLS . .
-• '--SAVE UP 0 30°/o ON ITEMS YOU BUY MOST!
MAllKET IUKIT HAS SELECTED AN MlllU Df lltE ITEMS YOU BUY MOST ()tj EACH TlllP TO THE SfOllE TO IEAll THE COST CUTlEll
LAIEl COST CUTTEll IS YOUll SYMBOL Of ROCK eonoM l'lllCES EYEllYDAY YOU MU SAYE UI' TO 30•4 OYEll NATIONAL lllANDS
THE llC DIFFERENCE BETWEEN COST CUllEll AND CENEIUC LABEL PflODUCTS IS CONSISTENT QUALITY
l'RODN co•IMA1'10N OR ..... -MllJtll.-ClftONMI
DCllP 101 RUSSET 5
POTATOES ::;
11n er., c.•11111 H! Red Grapes , •• 69
New Cr" , H! Gravenstein Apples ..... 35
New Mnt111 tll fftltl CllllllM !H Light Chablis Wine ~5 3. 59
ff! Aimide~~M"rwiOe ~r5 2.99
MA. P'S ·
PIZZA
,_ICES lFffCTIVl
wtD • AUG 11 THllU
TUO • AUG 11. 1•1
Ml OUMTm lllllHTI
llUlllVlD. NO
SALE TD DlAlllll 011 FOii llUAll Oii
tOMMlllCIAL Ull
au_.
FOLIEl'S
COFFEE 1:1· 219
,,.. .. ,..
Grapefruit Juice .... , .93
lllCWn 2'c Off LIMl .. F*lc ,..,_, Sllttta 1 9 Bounce ':k:' • 4
tu Meikll ... kll -· _,_ '*'' • ,.,.,
r~ Pretzels ~:; .69
Meikll ... ktl !f! Tomato Juice ~ ... ., 75 Qll •
JERSEY MAID
HOIO&EllZED
MILi
~.......,Of Criftkle Cwt ~ Frozen Potatoes
"*""' ffu .. m Orange Juice
OllMlllll ~ Fruit Cocktail
ffi Zest Bath Soap
.99 ,,...,
P-t
.51 Ml
Clll
.62 17.i
Clll
5.1-tl . . 43 ..,
iiUiaiii•s 91 CAKE Ill "Af· •
..... PllCU
HEALTH I aum 11111
~· 1.69
..
BEEF BONE·IH Ulll •UTI UID
RIB STEAK .. J98
Tyw. MIHd ~Fresh Fryer Parts lb .59
lb!Ut luht T~IC• ff! Sliced Bacon IO 1. 39
~ Olcar ••T'f ro-Meat Wieners !~~ 1 . 29
I°'2. F .. t Ot l'Kffic 9 9 ro-Fresh Red Snapper " 1 .
.. -· 11 llCMU WllM lllf ..... , llll lll'I
FIED NCl
FRESH HOT GOLDEN )5 5 g g
CHICKEN ': ='
-
I
J .... -
•
Cooking made
Southern style
By STEVE TaJPOLI ................
Country-style Southern cookln1 as haute
culalne?
A Newport Beach chef t.bink1 ll'a a possibility
\bat he can launch toward reality.
In fact, Alvin Johnson -known lo hia rrtenda
and customers as Chef Alvino -says that raJ1in1
the status or country-style cookln1 la hls new
dream. ·
Alvino has a simple reason for 1eekln1 1reater
recognition for the cooking style that ls hla passion
-be says it's just as 1ood as anyone else's cook·~
in1. "French Provincial is nothin1 but country
cooking, so what's wrong with American country
cooking?" he says.
It's not that the 54-year-old chef can't cook
other things. He has been a chef since the early
'608. Trained at Chicago's Mary Adams School of
Culinary Arts, he was a chef or assistant chef at
some of Chicago's best restaurants before comin1
here in 1978.
But through it all his first Jove has remained
the Southern cooking he grew up with. "I don't
know what it is. but something keeps pulling me
back to that style,'· he said.
Alvino has bis own way of doing things, what
he calls adding "an elegant flair -dramatics" to
basic Southern cooking.
His flair is apparent in the new menu be is
drawing up for Country Bill's Mustang Ranch in
Costa Mesa, where he is now the chef.
Some main course dishes are Dolly Parton's
Delight (twin brellsts of chicken with dumplings,
garni and mixed vegetables), Charlie Pride's
Favorite Coven-fried chicken served with biscuits,
brown rice. honeyed yams and vegetables) and
Kenny Rogers· Ladies' Love (mixed greens
steamed with diced onions, carrots and turnips,
topped with ham served with yams and co~n
dodgers).
Alvino did oot embark on the project until
after his arrival here. He originally came to
California with another dream, to be what he calls
··a top-flight caterer for the elite.·'
That dream dissolved shortly after his arrival,
partly because he lost interest and partly because
of an unenthusiastic reception.
Alvino cooked at Alisio's Restaurant for a
--·--.. -· --.-.. -. ·-.... ,_ ·-_,__ -~ -__ .,. ________ -~-----
CHEF ALVINO ... Serving up country food at its best
while, but decided to work on his own plans
because he wanted to give the project a try and
because, he says, "I'd really rather cook for the
common man."
U anything aside from the taste of his food will
make Chef Alvino's project succeed it is his fialr
for one thing aside from culinary arts -public re-
lations.
His history is rooted in show business, as a
song-and-dance man in the '40s and later a night
club manager and modeling agency owner. In
1958, when money from the entertainment business
was not steady enough, his wile suggested that he
get into cooking.
For a long time cooking and show business
were intertwined for Chef Alvino. He became The
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wednetday, Augu1t 12, 1981 Cll
Singing Gourmet , a name that traveled with him
to California <he still sings ln local clubs for free in
his spare time). and in Chicago be was the "Soul
Gourmet" on local television.
An original creation from Alvino's Chicago
days of which he is still proud is the chitlin' pizza,
the specialty of the house at Amy D's Soul
Gourmet, a restaurant he owned for two years in
the early '70s between stops in the city's
established restaurants.
Chef Alvino's zeal for his new project com·
bined with his cooking skills, ability to attract at·
tention, and a place to s howcase his new creations
may just succeed in getting a whole new group of
people to take country-style cooking more
seriously.
Bound for
glue factory?
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thank you for print·
Ina the letter from "The Old Gray Mare" -the
lJdY who found sex ln her 808 aomethln1 leaa \ban
fun and 1ames.
There must be many more of ua around who fit
Into this cateaory. but M have been ab a med into
silence because the media play up antique aex u
the norm rather than the exception.
Ann, I have wondered bow many old 1oata
have dropped dead from bedroom acrobatics due
to your frequently-repeated concept that aex is
111 Ulllll
wonderful and lt can 10 on and on, regardless of
aae. until the lid of the coffin is closed.
My social acquaintances do not discuss their
sex lives, but a very wise doctor once told me that
all mortals must accept a slowing-down of life's
clock in every area. Common sense bears this out.
But so few of us use what common sense we have
that you would be doing the publlc·at-large a great
favor by calling this to their attention. They need
to know that no human can operate on perpetual
motion.
You might save a few lives if you print this let·
ter, Ann. For sure, you would save Iota of argu·
ments in the bedroom. -ANOTHER ,GRAY
MARE
Dear Mare: Your refereace &o sell arnoa1 peo-
ple la their 60s 88 "antique" made me uudder.
For people who are lo 1oocl pbyalcal coadl&loa, the
Its are the prime of Ufe. Obvtoualy, Dear Old Gray
Mare, you ain't what you uaed &o be -but auely
you aren't ready for the glue fac&ory yet!
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In your Jetter of reply
to "Shafted in St. Petersburg." y~ asked: "What
ever happened to severance pay?" Well , I've
worked for over 25 years, and severance pay (in
this area, at least) went out with the bustle.
Capricorn: Information finally available
J had to sign an agreement on one job that I
would not quit working without giving a full two
weeks' notice. When working conditions became
unbearable, 1 gave the required two-week notice.
My boss phoned me at home very early the next
morning and told me not to bother to come in.
When I asked him about working the required two
weeks' notice, he said, .. I TOLD YOU YOU 'RE
THROUGH," and hung up on me.
I received pay for the few hours due in the
mail the next payday. When I called the state de-
partment of labor and asked about severance pay,
I was told it was not required of an employer
·•because when you give notice of quitting, the
employer knows you do not have his best interests
at heart."
Thursday, Au~ust 13
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES (March 2l·April 191. Doors which had been
previously closed will open be ready for change. op·
portunity. the end or doldrums and a relationship whi ch
lends spice to your m e.
TAURUS !April 20·May 201: SigniCicant gains made
1r you are diplomatic I( you attempt to rorce issues.
you'll meet plenty or opposition
GEMINI (May 21.June 20 1. Look beyond the im·
mediate -you now are able to perceive potential Em
phasis on travel. special studies. sp1r1tual development
and a possible publishing project.
CANCER (June 2l·July 221: Emphasis on added
responsibility. financial obligations. chance to extricate
MARTINI & ROSSI
ASTI SP<JMANTE
750/l\L.
7so
CASE OF 12·90.00
•• ,~
CONN CREEK
CHARDONNAY
750/l\L.
400
CASE OF 12-48.00
LEDOMAINE CHAMPAQNE
7'0t'IL l!'XT1'A ORV OR 8RUT
~
,
HOROSCOPE
yourself from intolerable situation.
LEO \July 23-Aug. 221: What appears TA setback will
boomerang in your favor. Delay or postponement will ac· tually work to your advantage.
VIRGO I Aug. 23·Sept. 221: New approach to basic
tasks brings desired results. Leo aids in obtaining needed
data. Focus on job at hand, diet. renovation oC available
ma ten al.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22 1: Emotions lend lo dominate
logic. Avoid basing actions on impulse. Young person
pays meaningful compliment. ·
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): You have more working
1 .. ,
cW12
. ~50
_·ta-~ ~0Fl2
354~ 42500
. ,•. ,
room Restrictions are removed. Emphasis on nexibility.
humor. entertajnment and ability to communicate in a
more meaningfu l manner
SAGITTARIUS I Nov 22·Dec. 21 1. You're able now to
disseminate views. lo successrully revise material and to
solidify your position. Remain objective
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 191: Analyze data; in·
formation you need ls available. Pleasant surprise due in
connection with money. inrome and investment
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Judgment. timing are
on target. Loved ones lend support. although many pre·
viously opposed plans Circumstances change and ravor
your efforts.
PISCES 1Feb. 19-March 201: Much that occurs is
behind s~nes. Don't jump at rirsl orter Define terms.
realize that additional information will be forthcomina.
J, fUMllUNG Sl'llKULT
2. OIWNS
J. MEAD WHEAT
'. WHL\T l'lANl5
A decent boss is a rare commodity. ·at least in
these parts. -A FAITHFUL READER IN
HONOLULU
DEAR READER: Sorry you bad a bummer.
I hafe visited Honolulu many limes and know'
some very fine people there. Too bad you ran lnto
a banacuda at the state department of labor. I
think the person you should have spoken with was
out to lunch and some flunky took the call.
-
' I
c aa Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday. Augu1t 12, 1981
'Love BQat' helping cru~e business
By MAaD.YN AND HY GA&DNER
Somt readers have wrlUen to admit that
thanks to watcbln1 "Love Boat" on TV, they de·
clded to try 1 vacation crulte tor th• lint time.
Thouih they round their experience ln real Ute to
be unlike the eplaodes on the popular TV show 1 they were pretty much 1n agreement that wltb the
food, the relaxation, the sunshine and the enter·
tainment. they came home feelln1 relaxed,
refreshed and rechar1ed.
WbUe aboard the Costa Llnes• Flavia, we
asked the knowled1eable and pracUcal purser,
Rino Masullo, if be and others credited the "Love
Boat" series for the upsurge in the popularity of
cruises today. "Thou1h most of it Is just make·
believe, it does reach millions or people. And it
doea make them aware that cruises today are not
just for the very rich," said Masullo.
One ot the things that bothers people ln the
cruise business is the emphasis of the show on
romance on the high seas. Tbls could prove disap·
pointing to some first·time passengers who get the
idea that living and loving is part of the ticket. For
guys or gals traveling alone, new friendships are
encouraged, of course. But cruise ships certainly
are not sex supermarkets.
Our ship's captain, Vito Chiarini, is a seafar-
ing veteran -handsome enough to be cast as the
"Love Boat's'' Capt. MerriJI Stubing. But unlike
the "Love Boat" captain, bis mind is strictly on
'GLlD YOU ASKm THAT'
buslneu, the buslne11 ot runntn1 the 1hip. Inclden·
tally, the only experience on 1ea thJt Gavin
MacLeod (the fine actor who plays Capt. St~blnt>
had was doing a hitch on TV'1 "McHale'1 Navy.·•
While we've aeen and enjoyed almost every
big·name 1uest on "Love Boat," the bl11e1t
theatrical name on our short cruise was Alan
King. But he wasn't Alan King, the comedian; he
was Alan King, the crlllae director (who confided
to us that his real name wu Alan Ma1aulky.)
The bluest stars aboard a Coeta cruise craft
are the Italian chefs, cooks and dlnln1 room'
waiters. It's 11.ke saUlng on an Italian restaurant -
where the food is plentiful and delightful. ll you
choose, yo~ can almost keep eating nonstop from
morning tU night. In addition to breakfast, lunch
and dinner, there ls a pre-breakfast breakfast, a
post·breakfast snack on deck, a po1t-lunch servlna
of tea and sandwiches. And a lavish post-dinner
midnight buffet.
Maltre d' Georgio was asked by one passenger
how he kept so slim. 'A 1enlal gentleman with a
sense of humor as delicious as the ship's home-
baked pastries, he smiled and quipped. "By not
eating every meal here. I send out."
Alcohol harmful during pregnancy
By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. 1 DEAR DR. ROSEN : Please give me the facts
on alcohol during pregnancy. How much is too
much? -T.H., HUNTINGTON BEACH
ANSWER: For some reason the same mother
who would never in a million years give a shot or
whiskey to her newborn baby might never think
twice about her own drinking during pregnancy.
The alcohol that the mother ingests goes directly
to the developing baby. The baby gets drunk and
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
has to deal with a poisonous substance. Although
an adult can render this "poison" harmless. the
developing infant cannot.
Depending on the age of the immature infant,
alcohol has two primary effects. The first is to kill
cells which have already developed. In t.he de·
veloping baby. just as in an adult, alcohol is known
to kill brain cells. These cells are not replaced.
The newborn baby who has been exposed to
alcohol while in the uterus has sustained brain
damage. The damage may not be great enough to
make Itself obvious, but think or it this way. The
baby's physical and mental development could
have gone further had it not been exposed to
alcohol.
Aside from killing cells in parts of the body
which have already developed, alcohol interferes
with the cells which are still developing in the
maturing infant. Al early stages of pregnancy,
cells which are ultimately destined to become
parts of the body may be damaged. This damage
may result in deformities. The baby whose mother
inges t s alcohol during pregnancy stands a
statistically higher chance or being deformed. The
incidence or miscarriage is also higher. As far as I
am concerned one drink during pregnancy is one
drink too much!
Although my attitude may be considered un-
necess arily strict I feel strongly that during preg·
nancy alcohol and for that matter all other
chemicals should be avoided whenever possible.
Medications which can be used rputinely by an
adult with no ill effect may well hurt the-develop·
ing child. The casual use of anti-biotics should be
avoided by the expecting mother as well as the
usual array of pills taken ~Y adults to counteract
the variety or symptoms which we find in daily
life.
For all the same reasons, tobacco is also
risky. Obviously many women who do not obey
these strict rules have seemingly perfectly healthy
babies anyway. It is such a tragedy, however.
when the baby is born sick or deformed that I
think it is well worth it for the expecting mother to
make these sacrifices.
Dr. John D. Rosen. a practitioner m Newport Beach,
welcomes your questions. Mail requests to Ask the Doctor.
P.0 .Box1560.CostaMesa.92626.
Brain holds own?
BERKELEY (AP> -The brain does not
necessarily deteriorate with age, a University of
California researcher says new studies show.
Studies that indicate the agtng human brain
loses thousands of cells daily is a myth based on
incomplete data. says Marian C. Diamond. a
neuroanatomist.
In fact, she says, her studies show that the
human brain may have the capacity to sharpen its
functions al any age.
CHICKEN
SPECIAL
only
$2.39
thru Aug. 29
Our Chicken Special makes chicken .
~~cia!! Three Chicken Planks.'
carved from the breast of the chicken.
fresh cole slaw. golden fryes. and
two crunchy hushpuppies! Now the best
place for chicken isn't a chicken place
... it's our place! -
Great with an icy cold Coca-Cola. :=Ii
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.:., • "' • t . . ~.
cf;;iig<john8iJver~9
SEAFO<X> SHOPPES
3095 Harbor ltYd.. Costa Mno
Just South of San Diego Fwy. Across from Fedco
DIUYf. THRU SBYICE AV Ml.ULI
~~ ... , _____ _.·-·-----·-•--•<-"-•
8 TENNIS LESSOMS ,
Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Cool<book Pull-out Section
Good things to eat will be Inside your
Dally Piiot Thursday, Aug. 20. The best
of over 1,000 recipes submitted by our
readers, featuring the winners of the
Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest. Discover
new adventures I n cooking, from
microwave to desserts, soup to nuts.
Don't miss It.
Daily Pilat
For home delivery, call 642-4321
L.M.Boyd in~~r~! Daily Pilat
CHRISTMAS CARDS
20% OFF fRANCI~-ORR
"Some Stains had been on our
carpet ci IOng time. I didn't
fine stationery corona del ma r
HYPNOSIS CONSULTANTS
9550 Warner Ave.
Fountain Valley
FOUNDED 1928 IN ARIZONA
dUDSON F•ll Tetm
8egln• Sept. 14
College_ Preparatory
a d General Courses SCHOOL·
ADMISSIONS
BPR•S•NTATtV•.
Mrs. Ruth Young
Newporter Inn
Aug.12·13
For lnlo
orAppi.
844-1100
think they'd Come ·out but they
did ••• and Stanley Stee111er did it!'
~9~
"Our carpeting looked terrible. It was time
to make a decision to keep 1t or replace 11.
We decided to try Stanley Steemer
because we heard they were the best.
Their crew came out, really studied the
carpeting and 1n about an hour W'e had a
beautifully. clean carpet. We were
amazed."
Here's why the Stanley Steemer
cleaning system is best.
Stanley Steamer combines steam and
extra powerful. safe cleaning agents to
deep clean carpet fibers.
Immediately, this
exclusive cleaning
formula is powerfully
removed leaving no
residue and allowing
I"! • , •, 1 your carpet to dry
''' .,,,. •' ,.·, quicker 1 'iq I ' • .' 1f1,~~W~\\~~i:fl: Stanley Steamer
...._ ____ ._•1_1_....1· does not use your
hot water or electricity. Only our cleaning
wand, hose and specially trained crew
enters your home. You 'll be surprised at
how quickly your carpet is cleaned and
sanitized, and ready for you to enjoy.
~---------------~ I CARPET a 111111 SPEGAL I
I $29JIS Any size living I I room and hall 1 I or family room I
I . end hall 1 ~----------------Irvine Call : 979-8448
STAILEY STEEMERe
The carpet cle•ni111 con1pa11y women recommend.
Est. 1947 z .• 18023 Sky Pack Circle, Irvine
t
-•
-
I
' " ,.
~ ~ 1•
'I ~ 11 ,,
~ ,,
I\
" \1 II ...
~ -EVENltO-= ........ KUNGN
ClllM rell-lhll l«r«·
lilied llout9 following lN
~killing°' hie -••• mutdet•
I TIC TAC DOUGH
M0A•a•H
trOlll Pl*" lo ..... Olll
""' to 11119 !Ml' ..... • 'wtcllOUI .,..__. .......
{9')
• ..v .....
Outett: Teny ~.
...... TMNltl, ~
~ Neill .... Coleilte
~ e wmt NWI 0/11..ow
Thie ~ ""°" lallea•loc*•tflepeople
aNI ~ of WOftd Coft..
tetft / CMTA~ ...
• HfTONCOOK
Cllfl ~ ,....."'* _..,olAlhd~
tl'vougtl ~ ftlm ...
trom -of the or ... Holl)wood dWec10t'• ,,..
l9mOUI molllee lllCI ''°°'" i.c11one by the .. .,. wflO
WOl'ked tor him. (A)
(C)MOV'I
M911 c.ii bting9 • hint 10
Henry that hie wife mey be
1lr1ylng .,.Cl up.elllng
-to F•thllf Mu6cally • GOOD.,._.
cert i.-. J.J , TMimA ...0
Mlc:tlMI tllel he .. going 10
pr~t0Flot1<11 (Plt11)
•• 11..KTNC
NEWL VWEOS Pamela Sue Marlin and
John James aren't as happy as they
s eem on .. Dynasty" tonight al 10 on
Channel 7.
• • • 'FtMtlle AnCI The
...,, .. ( 1974)"""" c..n.
Alerl M in. Two ..............
Ing San F'rllndeco oopa ••
~by~can "'° ........ ledlea In IMlf' c:r~town r-IO protect
Ille IMn ttwy lntlnd to
In.at.
(D)lllOW
"Shoot The Sun Down"
( 1MOI Ctwl8tC>CJMr W8"'.·
en. Margot Kidder. In
1131. lour dllperit• .......
nta .-. an olCI mac> to
-di '°' l>uf1ed gold.
'PO'
liS
"Return From Wiich
Mounllln" (1877) Bene
Davia, Ohtlalopher LM A
~.mac! wla1ocr11 Ind
1111 grM<I)' *""' cohOf1 attempt lo •>cploll the
tuperna1UI'., at>111ti.. or
two dllldren lrom outer
~ I« their own evll
PIM'l>OIM· ·o·
lcao G JOKP'I WILD
• AU IN THE FAMILY
EClllll'• erratic beh•vtor
pwzlN lhe family ...o puta
• damper oo Archie'• Ind
her planned trip 10 • new ,_,
• 81NfYHIU.
Benny do. an lmperaon•·
lion of • popu1., 9'>0'1 •
c:omman111or
• ~NEWMEAT
• aTUOeOMI
""-Cet Famlly .. Stew·
WCI.a Nancy J-tell ..
l'let IWO d1UQ111«1 IO Ille
plla 11 Ille Lagun• SECA
t1c e1r1ck. • m111111
1.unctting In Wlllt1 S1nd1.
M.M. le w11,,...0 (RI
Cl)Q)NEWa
9 ~MIUE1'
An open llouM 81 tlll 12th
IN'lng9 IMdy ctu1recter1
7:0011n10~~=
N8CNEWS
HAPPY DAVI AGAIN
Richie, Pol... Ind Ralph
llnd dllM lfl another p1rt
of !own bul run Into lrOU·
ble wMr1 ''*' d•• .. · boy·
!lrletl=·
M•A•a•H
A1 llOOfl M Frllllk II In
charge, H-kl)'I 1klp1
camp. '""' • blOdlllde to
find Trtpper enc! _...
com. • ,_ IUtgeot\
(P"1 II
• STMET8 Of< SAN
"""NOIOO A vlgllanl1 gang trlet lo
ciMl'I up • nelghbortw>OCI '° tllel tl'lllr c:hil<lfen wtll
hlYI • b911er piece 10 u.,,.
• OY8'EAIY GUMt novellst.p1tywr1g111
Irwin Shew (RIO G MACNEii. I L.BtRER
MPOfl'T
Cl) TIC TAC OOUOH
(fl MERV GIWFIH
Guettt· Terry Gregory.
Mll'garlt Truman. Robert•
Pliers, RICll Hllll
CC}MOVIE
"MIKl•me Ro"" (1878)
Simone 8lgn«•I, Cl1ud1
Dauphin A wom•n'a pet•
aonallly undergoes 1n
e>c1rem1 tr1n1lormallon
when Ille lnvolYla IMH'Mll
In a romenllc attllr wtllctt
tN-lelgee two wl<lely differ.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
@=._,,·'R'
"Mo o.po.jl. No Return"
( 1878) OeYICI M'-l. Dwren
McGavtn. The chll<lren of
negtec:Uve parents Cl.aCle
10 ••• their own lll<INP-l>ino to Oii aoma attention. ·o·
CZ) LA RE8TA DE 8AHTA
IAMARA
7:20 CZ) MOVIE • * * • "Grand Ho111"
( 18321 Greta Gatbo. Jonn
and Llonel Blfrymore. A
Oly In Ille llvM of 1111
lnllablt11111 of Germany'•
Gr1n<1 Hotel l>t\nge llllir
pal II• together.
7:11> 8 2 OH TH£ TOWN
Holla; Steve Ed•arda,
Mele>Cly RogetL A behind·
IM-ecenM look at Out
magazine:• vilit lo Grand·
ma Prisbrey anel lier
endangeted l>c>llle villegl;
• c:IOM-up look at plnbll1
1-tlca. U 8 FAMll Y F£U0 8 IHAHANA
Gu.t· Tnnl Lope
8 HOLL YWOOO
IQUAAIE8
0 FACE THE MUSIC
• AU .. THE FAMILY
Arehle la foroecl 10 lakl a
long and plllnlul took at Ills
future wMri EOltll'a feisty
but IOveble elde(ly 1un1
comM tor a visit, but then
hu no piece to go.
SI MACNE.ll / LS4AEA
REPORT
~ THE 8HAKE.8PEAAE
PlAY8
"M....,re For Meaaure"
Kele Nelligan. Christopher
Strauff, T1m Pigott-Smith
and JOOn McEnery star In
one of Sllak11pear1'1
most controverslel c:om.
Olea. (RI
(() P.M. MA0AZJHE
A man """° builels ll<>u.-
ou1 of lrMl'I: • nal<Kllill
who protect• black bear•
In Pennsylvanla'a p,,,.,..,,,...
MOVIE
"Midway" C 18761 Chatlton
Heaton. Henty Fonda. Jap-
-encl American mill·
1ary fotcee .ciuate on tor •
navlll and _.i.a 1>1111e cen-
terecl atound • PllClflc
lll&and during World Ww II
·PG'
Cl) COOKIE OOE9 TO
THE H08PfT AL
Coolcle nnd• the llOAC>l•lll a
sury piece but Oii• by
with the llAlo nf llN frletlda.
1:00. (I) THE WHrTE
SHADOW
Coech RMVM •.nd one of
his pl•yera learn Ille llatO
way II-e Ill can Oii •
person Into big trouble. (R)
D 8AEAL~
Featured: softball In the
9 KNXJ tCBSI Los Angeles
0 KNBC tNBC> Los Angell'S g KTLA !Ind 1 Los Angeles D KABC TV 1ABC1 L os Angele-.
(() o<FMB tCBSI Sctn Ooego G KHJ TV (Ind 1 Los Annelt:>s
[I KCST (ABC1 San Diego
• KTIV (Ind I LOS AngelP<,
.., KCOP TV jlno I Los Angples
~ KCET TV 1PBS1 Los Anq~les
Cl> KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun11nq1on Beacn
-. undelwater llO«*ey.
male belly dancino, • _.,. wtlo lleepA elllga-
tOH .. pet• (RI
• MOVIE • * "Run To The High
Country" (18741 Erik lat·
1«1. An ecology.minded
young boy dedlcalM Illa
effort• t-ard the Pf-·
vetlon ol mountain wlldllle.
a CMAMJFa AHGaa
A crazed lddMPPet ataalt
a IN'lele, and tlll AflOllt ate
hired to find II«. (RI
0 MOYIE **'A ''To Commit A Mur·
Cl«" ( 18701 Loull JOUfdan,
Serttl Berger. A war 11«0
i• given a llcenM 10 klll
when he la ualgned to
WllCll a tcienllal and Pf•
vent 1111 delec11on
• P.M. MAOAZJHE
A man MIO l>ullda llou9M
out of traah; • n11uralls1
who protac11 l>ladl .,..._
In P1nn1ylv1nle'•
Poconoe. Chef T Ill pr•
parM veal pomleloro, Or.
Wasco on cardiac
ca111111rlH llon. C11111e
Mann 11111111 a echool tor
commerct.I ectora.
I CMllALERT
NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL
"Living TreHurll 0 1
Japan" Nina JapaneM
artlaan• and performing
artlat• who keep Ill•
heartbeat ol an •ncletll
cullura pulling through 1
conternporery aocllly .,,
prollled. (R)
(ll~PAUL
MCCAlfTNEY AHO wtNGI
Paul. Illa wife Unda and
the group ,.... viewers
I lltough the Engll.it coun.
ltyllele with rnulllc anCI
dance.
CS)WOV.
"Tiie Blu11 Brothers"
( 1NOI Jollt\. a.Mhl. Oen
A ytlroyel. TWO l>klM lllng--""* oontand with lhe Chicego police, IM CIA,
neo-NIDI and the U.S
Army 10 pul together •
benefit concert 10 ralN
money lor their p..,,.,, 'R'
OMOVIE
"F1110" (18801 Dom
DeLulM. Anne ear-oft. A
portly compul8lve ..,.,
tlndt 11111 nothing can
dlll'llpel'I Illa Clallrl for IOOd
unlM he I ... In love. 'PO'
l:IO .. TOP STORY
Hoa11: Jim n,om ... Mary
~'°''· t:OO. Cll uov. * * "The Seedlno Of Sat·
•h lkirna" ( 1878) Kay
Lenz. Mar11n Ballam. A
woman aor-to partld-
pate In 1 revoMlonary
human embryo tranllj)lant
operation, unew-of the
lfn9AC1 ..... deel.iotl will
"'"' on lier llfe IRI
DQIDff'N.NT
8TIOCD
A ,_ trlencl ol Arnotd'a, a
Czeclloalovaklan lmml·
grenl. 18 torn .,.,_ 1111
,_ of the police and Ne
dealt• 10 help an unjustly
!ailed friend (RI 0
8 9 veGAt
A murdefoua procurer
tore• t>eeutllut young
_, recently relMMCI
t:" CZ) flolOW
"flme" ( 1980) Edell•
811'111, 1.-Cara.four
talented •tudent• ac>end
an 911Cftlng IOUf ~ at
the High SClloo4 of Pit·
forming Atta. 'R'
t:IO D Qt ntE FAC'Ta OIF
LR
&lalr. too busy willl hit
boyfl1lnd to write a poem
f« • ciMa llAlgnment,
aubmll• one -1nen by •
tamou.poet.(R)
t:410MOYIE
"The Satllllc RltM Of Dr•
cula" (1873) CM1toph«
LM. "-let CUthlng. The
unelnkal>le Tr~anlan
l>loodlldtet attempta 10
oontrof the wono. and klll
~ Jn It. by oon-
-1il'O wono 1eec1erw to 1111
eultol~
'R'
~8Q)OUINCY
Two l>rothllfl organla a
\llgllante commlttM In Ill
effort to stop crime In lhllr
nelgtll>Omood. (RI ......
89 DYNAITY
Midi ... teerne or FellOfl'a
MCr9t <19111 with Colby. Ind
Claudia beglnS to ~
Matthew's Involvement
with Kryalle may be more
than lhe tllO\lgllt. (RI
• MOYIE
• ••.t ''The ~et Agent"
( 1838 ) John Gl•l9ud.
Madeleine Carroll. Two
llj)IM pair off .. man enc!
wtte In oreler to track down
..,., enemy egent.
-~..,.
"Sing No 5-Songs"
CMatlna. Dorothy and ~
llllrn mourn Sandy'• dMttl:
CMatlna encl w-.m 09'
matried. (Part I ) (RI Q
(8)90lCING
A CloNrl Cllfterlllt weight
a--hlgtllohted -24 top oolleglete l>c>Jl.WI
b111tta tor U.S. ---
tltlM In • --of l>oulJ ffomR9no,Naoteda.
10:IO ..... •INDIDllllNBlll.l~1811NTIT
NITWOMNEWI (I)~
"The S.11 Mldllne" ( 1878)
In 2037 A.O., ldanUlta
aolw the -gy problem
by llll'n.alng the poWlt of
the llurNn Nl>ldo. 'R'
1Ct.u CD) THE MAH WHO NAO
llOOK8
u:00 • e 8 Cll 111 a NIWI
• STMTNK
When a n unldantllled
~ fella to lleecl
orden 10 11op. Capt. Kl<k
pull the USS El'lterpr!M In
pur9Ult.
G ..w\.YWID GAME
• MANNIX
''A Ctlllnce At The ,._ ••
Manni• take• on Ille
llmoal "°'*"' ,.. of
prcwtng the ~-of •
man Identified by
eyewlt-.. having
~. ~ dur1no
.,, ~ hOlcklp.
• IBWfHLL.
Benny 00-on aafar1.
Pi,ne likes being boss CHiP
By JERRY BUCK -~ , ....... Wrlter LOS ANGELES -Five years ago Robert Pine
and hi s wife, Gwynne Gilford, each made pilots
and took ofr for Europe to see if lightning would
strike one or both of them.
"We kept waiting for that telegram saying
we're employed for the next year," Pine recalled.
"Then in Milan we came back to the hotel and
there wu a telegram on the bureau. It said. 'Sorry
to say your pilot didn't sell.• I was .ao disappointed
-until I saw that It was for my wife. Even in mar·
riage you're very selfish."
By the Ume Pine eot to Florence, Italy, be bad
a telegram waiting aaylni that NBC was putun1
bit pilot, ''CHiPs," on the schedule. Since then the
sertet, ln which Pine 1tara with Erik Estrada and
Larry Wilcox, hH ranked as one{>( NBC'a hi1belt·
rated shows.
"Gwynne and I sUll lauah about that," be tald.
''We have a lO·month-old aon, Christopher, and
she'• Juat 1ett1n1 back into it. Al a matter of fact,
she plays my wife on 'CHIPI. • ·•They alto have an
etcht•year-oJd dau1hter, KaU..
Pine play1 Sat. Joe Get.raer. boH of the two
motorcycle offlcera played by E.st.rada (Pooch)
and Wilcox (Jon). Getraer ls the one who hu to
lean on et.eh every Ume t.. &eta into trouble,
whJcb 11 twlf or three ttm• an episode. "'"'9 b .. ll of rood drama" conruct. and I'm
the conlUcl That's the f\ln atuff," PlM said.
• ..Wbenner I 10 Into the '4Ud room that' 1 not
ao mucll IWI. I'm U.. m•-In tbe 1llow of 1.uhat
laformatJoa &Croll. Wbm tMr eaD'l llt tbe ID• formaUon aC1'09ll ID 1 ...,.,.,,_. eUM tbe1 eat to
me ad I NY. 'I have u AIB oa a blue 1e>-and·ao
car.' I J..Uit bate lt, but t.Mt't wbat I'm ,.td for. and Mid ,..., well •••
1be breld· and butter ot "CHIPt" art thole
,
(
elaborate chases and crashes. "Nobody ever pulls
over voluntarily on 'CHlPs' '' Pine said.
The CallComia Highway Patrol made Pine an
honorary sergeant and gave him a plaque. That
didn't help him when he was 1topped by a CDP of·
ricer for speeding near Palm Sprin&•· •'Too bad
you can't put that plaque ln your pocket," be
lamented.
Pine wu born ln New York Cily and ralaed in
Westchester County. "I guess we were well·to-do,
but when I was growing up I saw us u ju.at
another family," be sald.
His original amblUon wu to be a doctor, but a
family friend, producer Robert AndertoD, 1ucrest-
ed he try act.in&.
''Robert Anderson cUdn't talk me out of beiDC
a doctor," he said. "I Just wun•i very swift ID
school ... I 1ue11 I really didn't wut to be a doc·
tor. I wanted to be a clodor 11.ke In tbe mcmes.
Wbere you bold eomeone'• hand and people think
you're terrific.''
He 1lped with Universal studios u a contract
player in 1984. He Jater co-1lan'ed in several Dt•·
ney movies and w,a1 ln "Day ol tbe Locuat.11 H•
alto did a lot ol l'Uftt work on ....Wlon Ml'iea.
"Usual~ I'd be tlM P1 DO one would ever
thlnlt WU bad," &aid Pln•. ''TMD J'd turn out to be '
the vWaln.''
Just before "CHlPI" PIM ilia.Jed• :mor in a pllot fGr David GerW ~alW "IM 1111 a Dan Street. •• It WU Ulat ,.,..._. tbat t...S
"CHlPI" creator Riek ROIDer to IM PlM to plaJ
s,t. Gecntl'.
") rad tb• teript -....... tlalal ...... ,
have a 1"'11•· 8Ut my ••Mid .. llj U..11 fQ COod moaeJ. So Mre I .. 9" JMfl 1aW and
very ll'aMl\al. i •
Orange Cont OAILY_PILOT/Wednnd1y, Augu1112. 1981 ••
TUBE TOPPERS
KOCE 8 7 :30 .. Measure for
Measure.'' Kate NelUean, Christopher
· Straull and John McEnery star In a
controversial Shakespeare comedy.
KHJ G 8 : 00 -"To Commit a
Murder." Loui.s Jourdan and Senta
Berge r star In a movle about a
playboy/writer involved in a plot to kid·
nap a French nuclear scientist.
KCET D 8:00 -"National Geo·
graphic Special." Japanese artisans
following the old ways ar~ profiled.
CBS 8 9:00 -"The Seeding or
Sarah Burns." A movie about a sur·
rogate mother who has second thoughts
about giving up her baby.
·WON.D~ ''DlltntluUon Of T~
gr'' GUMta. Al1lfof Abdel-
Meguld, a.ten SU1on
(C)lllOW
••~ "Aden!'• WOINll"
(18721 8eau 8'1Clgaa. John
Mlk. A wr0tr9/ ~
oned MMof attempll 10...,.
hie ...._ by matfYlno an
lnttu.ltllllwornan.
(D)MOYa
"The Blues Brothers"
(18801 Jol\n Beluahl. Dan
A~royel. Two l>lu. lllng-
atl rnuet oontand with the
Chlc:ago polloe, the CIA,
neo-Null Ind the U.8.
Army to put together 1
l>eneftt conoer1 to ,.,..
money for their perllh. 'R'
11:11.MCME
"O....Ttictl Pony'' (1NO)
Paul Simon, 81alt Brown. A
~ perlormet la
pr-ed by .-yon.
arounel him to dfop Illa
•tyle of mualc and ..,.,.
80nQ1 that can l>tlng lllm
l>ec:ll to the top 40 'R'
11:IO 8 Cl) MOYIE ••t.t "F-It The Key"
(1873) Barry M-man,
Suzy Kenelalt TllrM men
lllJ8do • bethylphlre to
-ch kif I 10 mllllon In
booty ffom an alrs>t-
tlle)' lleve 8hOt down IRI
8 Cll TONWIHT '
Hoat; Johnny Ceraon.
89 MCNIWS I~ MAU~'bEA&.
ITANUY 8lmlL
ID CAPTIOHB> A8C
NIW8
CBl MOYIE
"Bronco &Illy" ( 18801 Clint
EutwO<>d. Sot><tra Loek•
A l«met lhoe aalaaman
from ,._ JerNY reeMIM
1111 dream of pertormlng In
a WllCI WMI al\OW. 'PO'
(Z)MCME
"F11ao" ( 1880) Dom
Oel.AllM, Atvte Blln«oft A
portly compulllYe ....
!Inda that nothing can
dampen ....... '°' foocl Utltll he .... In lo\le. 'PO'
-...uKT-
1til0 • flolOW
• • "Run. Payc:ho. Run"
(1Me) Gery Mamll, Elge
~ On Iha annlver·
ury of Illa llrlt ......
deettl. • weelthy 8rltlato
arlelocrat 1MOUnCM hie
Intention. 10 W.O • )'OUnQ
gk1 wN> later CliaccMlf• the
clrcumatanoaa lllKfounel·
Ing h., predeceuor'a
dNlll.
eat LOYE90AT
"Mutleal C1bln1" Paul
Wllllamt, Mlchele LM ,
Didi Gauti., Marcia Wal-
l-, (RI
• ~tor.I
Malt, Doo. FwlVI and NV·
..i 04'* par r r Ill"" -
trl!Pl*I on a trlln by I
bend of Indiana In Iha
anowy Coeorado moun-
talnta. !Pert 11
-~ ..01111 I
The IMF goes to Ille aid of
Y°'lt\O "'** fight-In .,, eftott to obtain 1111111
lntonna110n.
• ROOKlll
Two 1ew •tlldent.a frame
T etry for the rnurdet of •
1tOf9 guar<I to •venue tlle
death of I girl
• Da<CAWTT
0-1: tcreenwrlter Bo
Oolelman. (Al
(I)~
"The Godfather, PW1 II"
( 18741 Al Ptclno. Robert
Duvall. MldlMI Corleonl
aatumaa hie Ill• l•tll«'a
throne encl ~ .. he
~Ille,_ heed ol
the Mafia. f1nCllnO prol>-
llfr'8 with rlvlll f11C1ton. Ind
the lew thtougl'IOUt Illa
reign~ 'R'
1l:IO 8 QI T()M()fW)IW
GUMI: Harrlaon SallM>ur)'.
the Pulllnr Prlzie-wlnnlnO
former MAOClat• editor ol
the Mew Yor11 Timel
12::11•MCMf
"HllCIP)' 81rthelay, Gemini"
(18801 Madaline Kelln. Rita
M«eno. A Harvard 11u-
dent •• birthday party .. Ill•
family'• South Pllllaelelphi•
home l>loOtnM an eye-
opening e>cperllnce lor 1111
visiting~ ... 'R'
1:00 G NYCHIC
~
''Tranamedlumalllp ''
Hoatt: Demien Simpton,
Stacie Hunt. Gue111:
Cheryl Bouml. Anthony
Ruaao.
• MOYIE
*·~"A Guy Hemed Joe"
(19441 Spencer Tracy,
If-Dunne. A WOflel Wat
" pilot .. wwned by Illa
glrtff'land 10 let 00 of his
...... .. "'" the
---• deedly premoni-tion.
• INDIPIUDBrT
HETWOMNIM ,. CZ) "Z'. MAAAZ*E ~
THE~
1:10. MOYIE
..... "High Tlrne" ( 1980)
8lng ~oaby. Fabian. A
~ flla In love with.
Frendl 1-=tllr I ll« lie
retuma to college. 9 ...
1: 11 CC) MCME
"1800" (1877) Robert
OeNlro, Oerlfd Oepardleu.
Seventy yeara of ltallln
aoclal and polltlcal
cllangea --through the eyae ol two unllkely
JOHN DARLING
..... lrtlnde. 'It
CZ) OU.."UI OHMlflUN
TAUCI wmt MOMI
OUICOft
t:IOeMCMI
• • • "The Helled EdO*"
(1H11 Olfy Coopt r,
~ l(frY A loflO-
~ IMIW-IM
r9CJ0911irl0 of a ......,~
otelmurdat-
(8)MCMI
"~ Awektrllne" ( 1880)
Cheltton ""'°"· luMn-neh y Ot1I Al\ lrchMoloo
glel'• daughter ~
POHUHd by the maNIVO.
lent IC*lf of an ancient
Egyptian~ 'R'
1:"1 NIM 1:t0 NEW1
1111 MOMCA ... & Wl9IE
AoMrt Morely guldM Erlo
Ind Emil on an unuauai
and upro«loua -ch tor
Kina Tut'• tomb
2:00!~
"F1me" (18101 Eddie
Barth, Ir-Cara.Four
talented 11udenll "*'°
an 1Xolting lout )'Ml a 11
Ille High Scnool 01 P1t·
forming Atta. 'R'
2:tl I IDfTONAL 2:IO titOVll
• • •.t "My Fetller'a
HouH" ( 18751 Ctllt
Robertaon. Robert PrM-
ton. A busy news magazine
editor tlllnka 01 1111 gentle
days .. • Ctlll<I alter he
.ulfer• • '-'! altaclc e lilOflECAMM a Wl8E
Elton John lind• lllmMll
al>uMCI by Eric and Ernie
1:.ae NEWS
2:S09 MOY1E • * '"' "Tiie Oto Game" ( 1872) St1ph1n Boyd.
Fr1noe Nuy1n. Foreign
governmentt anempt to
obtain e powerful mind·
contrOI device from A"*I·
can acientlata
a;00e NEWS
8:18·= * • "Hideout.. ( 19'8)
Aelrlan 8oolll. LIOyd &rlelg-
11. A meyor., canellelate'a
l>iCI tor office In • amall
town raaull• In 111empted
mureler
a:ao Cl) MOVIE •
"Bon Voy•g•. C11ar11e
Brown" ( 19781 Anlmalecl
Oirectecl by 8111 MelenClez
Snoopy ...0 Wood11ock
IOllow uellengl atudenll
Chwtll Brown. Peppermint
Pally, LJnu9 anCI Merell on
an adventur•llllecl tour of
Englan<I and France. ·o·
4:18 CZ) MOVIE * * * • "Grand Hotel"
( 18321 Greta Glfbo. Jolln
end Lk>nll Barrymore A
day In tlll llVll ol Ille
lnhal>itantt of Germany·a
Grand Hotel bring• their
path• logelllet
4:31. STAR TM)(
Thursday'•
Da11tl•e Movie•
~MORf--
9:00 CC)" Animals Are 8-itfful
People" (1875) Oocumln·
lary CfMllifM of African
wtld'"• -· -In tllelr nalur., llabllat 'G'
7:30 CC) • • • .. Jade TM Giant
Kiiier.. ( 1882) K•n•ln
MaU-, Judi Meredith
Alter r~no 111e king'•
daughter lrom a lluge
monater. • y0ung farm lac!
11 r-arded ror 1111 hero.
Ism.
1:00 Cl) * * * "For bidden
Pl-I" (1856) Walter PICl-
geoo, Anne Fre.ncla 8aMd
on SllakeapMr1'1 "Tiie
Tempest " An outer apace
mi.ion 11 llllllGhed to
...... Pf'~ wflO ,_
~ IMnt -· ,.......,.°' ~on a dlltllfM '*'* ol the Mure.
t:IO CC> * .... ....,, In The
Iron ...._ .. (19M) 1.°"61
~Cl. Joell e.nn.tt.
9Med on a llO¥ll by AMII·
ender 011rftH The
lnl1mo11• Comptt de
Aoc:Mfort pleoee lOUll
XIV'a 1W1t1 l>rottler on the
French throne and lmpn-
1
~ tht ,._. kl"O In IM ........
10lOO .... "Atf991'• NW('
( 19481 LAC> Ooroey, Hunu
Hall. The s-y ...
expoee a rac:lcet-wtlo
-YOUllil l>O)'I In • ctr llleft ring.
Cl) "Running" ( 1978)
Mich... Oougl•, S-
Anlpech. Having felled at
neetly *"lfYllllng In Ill• lite.
• 34·yMl-old dlvoroeel
men Clecl<IM to try out .. •
merelhoner I« the U.S
Olympic Teem 'PG'
I 1t:IO D • *'.t "Trlll Str.et"
( 1a.7) Ranelofph SGoll.
Ro~ Ryan Kanau'•
wheat empire and llt
l>eglo1llng9 .,.. proflled.
CC> "A Force Of One"
( 18781 Chudl Norm. Jen..
nller O'Neill A mut« of
tlll m"1i.t wta ambettca
on • r-ioe-motfvated
-di for Ille ..... Of flit
a<1op1e<1 aon. ·pa·
-AFTERNOON-
1 12:00 ••• * "CflllC'•
Choice" (18631 Bob Hope,
Lucille Ball A harall Clrama
critic reneg11 on hla
promlM not to re\ltew Ille
play Illa wit• llU written.
1:00 CC) * * * "Siik Stoctcinga"
( 1857) Fred Atlalre. Cyd
Chari-An American ntm
producer become•,
lnvOIVed with a lemllll ·
Rulllan agent In Paris
1:80 * * • "Forbklelln
Pl-i" ( 18561 Wall« Pid-
geon, Anne FrlnCll. 8eaed
oo $h¥Mj)Mle'a "The
Temp1111 " An out« ~
mlaalon la ~ to
locate • prof-wllO llM
been llvlno for • numl>ef' of
~ on • distant ptenet of
lhe Mure
:t.IO 0 ··eon Voy1ge. Charlie
Brown" ( 1878) Anlmeted
Oirectecl by Bi• ~.
Snoopy and WOO<lltoclt
IOllow 1xellengl lluelenlt
CMllll 8rown. Peppermint
P•lty. Linus and ~ ... cle on
an aelventur•ftlild tour ol
EnglenCI Ind France 'G'
3:00 a • • * "Cleopa•ra"
jP1r1 2) ( t9631 EllubeU\
T •ytor. Rleherd Burton
Tiie love atory of Juliul c .... r enc! Cleot>•tra ii
Ml agalinsl tlll lf)ICtacie
of ancient Rome.
CC)*•* "JllClt Tiie Giant
Kiiier" ( 1802) Kerwin
Mllllewl, Judi Mwedltll.
Alt.,. retculng the king's
oaugllter from • ~
monater. a young term llKI
la r-ardeel for Ilia hlto.
ltm
3::80 0 • • * "She Wore A
Yellow Ribbon" (1948)
John Wayne, John Agar.
lnelieM attlCk an under·
staffed cavllry outpost
CJ) "Bon V0)'80I, Chartie
Brown" (1878) AMMled
Dirac1ecl by 8111 Melendc-
St!OOCJY and Woodlloclt
follow IXchengl Sluder>tt
Chertie Brown. Peppermint
Pally, Unua anCI Marcie on
an IKlvenwr•fllled lour of
England and France, 'G'
4:00 II "DMtll train"
8:00 CC) '' Anlmsla Are 8-lllful
People" ( 18751 ~
tary. CrMturea of Afric:8n
wllellil• .,. -in ,,,..,
nalurlll habllll. 'G'
5:30 CID "BlllClt &Muly" (18711
Mark Letter. Waller
Slezak Baaed on the story
by Anna 8-11. A ·proud ...o aWMC>mlly ~tllul
llOtM coma under the
ownetalllp ol many di....,..
people. ·o·
by Armstrong & Batiuk
REED, 'WE v·-:.. G-OT A ~08LEM ! WC:: 'RE ON
IME AIR IN LESS TH"'N
DON'T WO~RY, CM .... ~LlE.1
W E'LL COME U P WrTH
SOMETHI N&.'
l='l ~EMEN r:'ROM IWO
COMPANIES RESPONDED IO A r=1~ ON .,,...E EAST 510E "THIS A~TE:i<NOON ~ Houa. AM? 'NE HA'IEN'T GO'I IAPE OF
A SINGLE ~rRE "TO 9-0N!
The Jean Compliment
A. The Moccaln . . . · 1 with a twnd eewn leather upper and vlbr1m IC>te
for rugged durablllty. · I
B. The O~ Boat ...
with a qulltied nylon upper, aaddle leathet eyelet 'i
attiy1. 'hiking IOle and 1 2 part removable
tnnereo•. In kNlkt r
·M.'SGAAAGE
5e FASHION JSLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) ~.,..,
A.I I HE HOME OF=
CHANNEi... ONE'S NEWG OIREC-IOR, REED RoeEr;ns,'
.IH! .q
.. -. . .
-
• t
·--· ----...--..
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedneaday, Augu1t 12, 1981
Ait'tonioni hits
-'lt~lian pitfalls\
'!J ~~~DMONT
NEW YORK -The
dlrector who brought
you the trendy London
fuhlort pbotoerapher in
producer requests (or a mm abroad. NOW PLAYING _ ....... ...........
Cl•llMA U•Taa
Wettllll"94« ""*"' u ctn -Or• "4·Jtt1 "Blow Up," th• ob-
seued Journallat in
Luchino Vl1conU died
three years aeo. Hl• di•·
ciple Fraoco ZefflrelU l•
into opera and intern•·
llonal television aerials,
and filmlnt in Italy lies ~=================
t "Tbe Passenger," and
who painted gru1 and
· colored water in "The
Red Det~rt." l1 alive.
filming and depressed in
bis oat.ive ~\aly.
Michelangelo Anto·
nioni, pushing 70 and
frustrated by filming
schedules and producer
apathy, says hit first
movie in Italy since 1964
probably will be bis last
in the country.
last on his li1t.
Lured by an explosion
of private television sta-
tl ons which bou1ht
s tocks of mostly
American celluloid to rm air time, 35 mllJjon
fewer Italiana -a i.2.5
percent drop -went to
movie theaters last
year .
Antonioni himself still
aw a its release of his
co ntroversial and
technically revolu-
tionary film , "The
Oberflald Mys tery."
2
NOW PLAYING
AUmMI n TOM 11t• 01W111 AnaN1m ~IYt·ln SldOlebKk Woodllltclgt Ct~
879-11850 ~1·58&0 SSH>6SS 634-1553
COITA •u fMH• YAlUY lAIUU IUCll WllJMlllTUI Soulh Coasl founlllln Valley Soulh CoaSI Ht·W'f 39 Olive 1n
541-1711 839•1500 494 1St4 891·3693
r:•==-==r-.=-==;;;r, , ... .._ o.11y •• .... , ,.,..,.,.. I "Shootin• in Italy to-
day is grotesque-.nd in·
•suiting. Rome ls the only
town you film five days
. a week instead or six.
'Producers hav e
1 vanished. Distributors
w h i c h open e d In -=====;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::========-I England in July and will
have limited tastes. And
the government doesn't
cart about movies," he
said.
Antonioni's green eyes
sadden at the scene. Al
"present he Is the only ac-
li v e moviemaker of
Italy's classic Big
Three.
Federico Fellini, idled
for two years after his
semi-successful "City of
·Women ," talks of
•capitulating to U.S.·
premiere in the United
States next year .
Trans ferred from
videotape to film by a
new process tested in a
Los Angeles film lab. it
contains scenes where
colors magically evolve
from green to purple as
the camera follows the
characters a nd their
moods.
"Oberwald" marked
the first time In 16 years
that Antooioni chose his
one-time companion
actress Monica Vitti -
as a star.
brooke shields
martin hewin
·endless love
PolyGram Pictures A Univcl'8al Rclca~
• •' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • C llfJll l 4'1\tl'-•I ( .. ) S1wJ1ol'\ lfk
Orange Dt1ve In 551-7022
UA City Cl.MIN, Orange
634-3e11
Or•noe Men,m-0340
Hlwey 3t Drive In,
WHIMll'lster 191-3813
UACtne ... CosteMeH
5400ll4
Roller Skates
A'f LAS'f TH• weRL•'S
FIU'f ..... n H••••• Mn••·
NOW PLAYING
lDWAllOI ClllHIA ClllTUI OwUOI UDOUUCll UMellM INUH·lll Com Illes.> 979 4141 [I IO<O ~··~80 Alllhelln 879·9350
lDWA•I NUlrfHIOTOI TWI• UA CITY CHtllU Mtuio. •• , ... ,.
HunlillQIOll llNcn 8A8 0338 Or~noe 634 3911 s.n JUMI <:aotstr~no
493 4~~
• PNW.tlM l{;T\ff I...._ I htr...r.t~l.,llftt'OilJ.111 ~~ .... -..... ,
NOW PLAYING
•llMI IOUTll C:OUT MA• lllU rWA rAClflC'I IOUTll COAST l40>i,.. ae~· 49' ,,,.
OUflll.• t Coslil II~ !>49 33~ 81H )2'J !1339
... 419·1 IUIUUCll • CllEN>MI [I Toro !181 !IUO I Or•n~ 634 1'.~J
•utWUID'I t•MA Wlll .,_,.ICClPTlD WHl,,,.,,slei 891393S ,_,.._
LlllCOU DAIYMll 8uto.i P••k an 4010
IM LA MIMAIA Dlllff·lll u ""~-)23 9310 •S..·-111..,._,. ·-
HEAVYllETAL IRI
SHOWS AT 11 : 30
1:15 3:00 4:45 6:30 8:30 & 10:15
•WOPEI HEAVY METAL IRI ALSO PLAYING AMERICAN POP tR)
new location
Skate-Away Dist., Inc.
Direct Factory Outlet
• " I_, ,,, '
Hi-top & Jogger Style
. Rollerskates
now only
••• 5
WOLFSt lRI
ESCAPE FROM
NEW YORK IRI
I llt£ ...... STRIKES BACK IPGI Plu1I Op-Hit
a.1111 a.rod Th• Sttrs CPG
z-..n..., ....
(POil A Ito lhow1119 Oft tt First
Jtt• 'P<l'
8 111 Murrty sn1•• '"' Plus
Wholly MOMS C'GI
You're never
too young to
learn the
*BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5:00 PM
(Except Spec11l Eng1g11111nls and Holidays)
VI MlllAOA MAU Morado 0111011,tons
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99 ... 2 .. 00 "9---...CAll-"ARTHUR" '"' tUt,-. «at,-· .... ---·--"TARZAN
THE AP£ MAN" 1111 ..... _._.,.,,_
----~· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" (PG\ ,_,-. ... r::M; Mii(
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN -----· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK:;~> --ll:a.l:M.aa.-.--·"°-"WOLFEN" 1'11 ......... .. ,,_
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK·IH
FoculTy Al Del N:no
213/634-9211
~GUNA
lt'n.WUftll8'T--•
"VICTORY" IPG\ ,.,..., ..............
.,.. __ _
''SUPERMAN 11" '"' ·-~ ...............
focull'f 01 Condlewooo
213/531·9580 ... ~-"SUPERMAN II" (PG) _..,.,_ ,.,., -........ ,, ..
"ON ANY
SUNDAY II" IPG\ ,.,... .,. ... ,., ... -.. __ ._.
"ZORRO, THE GAY
BLADE" fPG) ,~.,..--~ .....
9&4_.,.
"STRIPES" (A) ,,....,, ......... "'
so . COAST WAUHN
South Cooat Hlwoy
01 l roodway
494-1514 -----"TARZAN
THE AP£ MAN" (R) __ ,,,.._
--·UMMAU.-• "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" IPG) ----"'"
... ,..., • ..,..., a ... 7 lO \14 \.• 7: 1S \--..• ,,.,. .-.. ,.
IMPORTANT NOTIC(t CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE!
"•t•ot ... Wt1-Mtt1 Tfttu F11 6 JO• Sat Svo Het1 6:00 , ..
CH--fl SOllNO •YOU-AM CAii MOO 1$ l'OUll UfMf!I
tlf NO AM CAii llAOIO WITll tGHmON ACCUSOllY l'OSITDI
-lllNG "" '°"1MU i •AU CM-41 QIWl.llS GO 1111 /tM MOICI
ANAHl lM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
Fr••-Y 91 ol i.etnon s1
"YOU1'1 NIVER TOO YOUNG
TO LEARN THE SCORE"
"T"E NIOtfT THE LIGHTS
WEN1' OUT IN QEOflQIA" (PO) -"ROAD~ .. (l'O)
CINI'. II SOUND --to------.---------.. -._----.-.... , ......... =,ij6~ -"TARZANntf~MAN"(R) --•
179·9150
~ "STUDENT ltOOIEl " IRI
"CAYE ..... " IJllG) ..,"CAMPUS CORPMS" (POI
CtNl II 500HO Ct!lt fl ~O
au• NI' PAilW
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
llflCOll'I AY• W••I OI •no" 121·4070
1nuNIA.N
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE·IN
·--...·M.L•--"Tfff OPIAa
STIUKH::_CK" (l'O)
"STA" TMlt" (Q)
"9---"SUPPMAN II" (l'O) -son 0te90 '""" 01 e.oo-""'°'1 (So>"ANY WHICH 'f!AY YOU CAN" (l'O)
962·2411 Cllff Ft SOUHO
S.OCh llYO So OI
GQ<Otn GI°" keewcll
191·3693 -'"" .. THE--N-l_Q_HT_ntl_U_QHT_S_
"ON ANY -=AY 11" (flQ)
"LOOK OOWN AHO DIE" (fl)
Clllt II SOUllO --··-,__,, "ntl CAHNONIALL RUN" (flQ) -" Al'THUR" (f'Q)
Ctllt .. IOUllO
I JI.. H A61tA
LA HABRA ORIVf IN
!-lll-n 9-ft_. •-•-171-1162
ft1 i ,.4 A ' •U~
LINCOLN Ol:llVE IN
IJll<Oll\ ..... W•ol OI Knoll
121 .. •010 . ---
WA.t4 ·•
W.NT OUT IN OEOflOtA" (PG) -"flOAO GAMU" (l'O)
Clllf • " SOUllO . .... _-___ _
"TAMAfll TH!.:.N MAN" (RI
"CAYE MAN" (flOI CNll fl SOUllO ~
"OH ANY IUNOAY II" (l'O) -"LOOK DOWN ANO.Dte"(PO)
--·--M&81• "IWDIRS CW T'ltl! LOIT AM"
(flQ) -"HANGAfl 11'' (l'O)
ORANGE OlllVE IN
S-IO I'"" lrwy a Slote Coll•Q•
551·7022
"Oft ANY ~y II" (flQ)
"vtCTOM" (flG)
I'• :.~ l'I• "''•
MISSION DL'IVf IN .. . . .
0 HUGELY ENTERTAINING!" ;'-~ ·~MA~· -::~·~·-~{ ~· (!911
ISAAC STERN I~ C HINA
Wednesday, Aug. 19 only
"42ND STRUT'
Ruby KHler In Person
7:00 P.M.
Oet Ticket• Now
I "ZORRO, T~ GAY BLADE" (PG)
II "FOX ANO THE HOUND" (PG)
"ONCE UPON A MOUSE"
Ill "ON ANY SUNDAY II" (PG)
lj
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I I Orange Coast DAILY PllOTJWeclnelday, August 12, 1881 ,•l ll~A r ~; ~~~~~~~~~~~-1---~~~~----~-------1·--~--------~~~~~-1~~~~~~~~----~--1~~~--~~~~--------.... ------~--------------~\·
PIU lllll PIU mil NaS 11111 MlS.. r,
~----~~~~~----~-·-----~----~----~~~-'1-~--~----------~----·1-------------------------~~~~~--~---------~----------------..-... ---
Nl-7tlta NS-7•11 f'ICTITtout 9Ut1111•M ••CTmoua •u11••• f'teTtnOUt eu11M1u "IC'n".,. au .. ••• '~f:!::::t,•
NOT.cl! 0,, D.'"'TH o• NOT1c•-... lfAMll•T•,..,... .. ., NAMan•, ...... ,. ~''"' ..... , ....._,.,."'..,l(t -.. . ... .. vr o• ... TH 0, Tiie ....... ,.. "'""' .,. ........ Ylle IOll•wln9 '9•dll• e•• ...... '"-MllWllll --.,.. ... ,.. • J SAHM I • , K I I Z K 0 H A R R Y ( N • M , N • ) MIMM •t ... IMltlMu .,., Tiie ftllhlllt "''01'• ••• 1111"• ttu!i':~0:.~1111 ..., ..... •"• •111• Ml-•1 '
AND 0, PITITION TO 0 IE 's I! R AN 0 0,. lllCTl•HTH STltUT JOINT M.l..5. OILIVUY H ltvlCI, ""~~/~ACll'IC AflOGI ATH, IOI..,.., ""'MAL. HOJ~tfA~ f'UllTV .... UAVICl1._~·· I
ADMINISTl!lt ISTATI PIT IT ION TO AD· vlNTUAI, t..., Al9'flll111" '''"'-:!~:!1!:!.~~~11•• u"11 st. UN•,.,..,,. c1''''· H11n111111 ... tut IMH Afffl.,., w ... "''"'"•'· :t::::' ....._ .._.._ ..-11.. t NO ... lllll•H,Hwlll ........ 9Mch,CA...... ••tell.CA.... Celll«IM.... MIKI AOOtltt, .. ., Del-. • 109IU. MINISTIR ESTATE NO. uu.v IHOW, '"" ._,,, .. 1., Lu:Hu \"..i"o~ ~!: 10200 0 _,._ Mci...M, , ... --~· J"""' v terttoy, o.v.M., INC., su.tt .......,'"""CA,... To a I I he I rs, A·1otl40. LaM,Hunti..-IN<ll.CA.,.,., cA;ai~-· 1 • -...,. .......... c1rc1e,Nunt.,,.....9"c11,c..-.... • c•111om1e '*"°''11 ... , '"' 1o1.., •(iCa AOGC!tl. •n ~
btneflclarle s, creditors To a I I h e I r s , L.aM~~~~7~':.:~· EDNA AL•CI MOrr, 10llOO IOlu A11 .. 11der O••" MU.•"· ""' =11•, w .. 1m1111ter, C•lllor11I• '''"'·~IMtfl..CA..... 1 and contingent creditors of beneficiaries , creditors MICNAIL IPIVl!'Y' HUI Aven111. Unit S4, Wt1IMl111i.r, CA '"' .. ,.Circle, HllllU"910ft IMCh, CA Thi• --II~·" ""
Jtannt E. Kinko and 1ndcontlngentcredJtorsof •M;::-~. H111111~ 9HCll, "~j1 _,_1,conowct..,oy.nlll• ~. """,.." 11 ,..,.,,, .. 1t¥ 1 ,.!~:.,.~··~...,•y •c..r· lllvtw.i:J:=:~'·
persons who may be H•rry <N.M .N.) Getstr ~111, .M..inet• ,, con411<teo •Y • a1v1-1. hu.INndllndwlfe. .....,..v. 1.n11y, Allee....,• otherwise Interested In the end persons whO may be ...,.,.1 ...,....,.. u.-LMC¥ Mote O-tlw Mel.Hf o.v.M., 111e. TM• , .. ....,_. .. ~...., ......
• .. .
wlll and/or estate: otMrwlse lnttrested In the Kelly.,_ '1\1• ......,_, w• fo• w1ui .,. c!":Y ~=-:l o.-:..:"c:.Y ': ~ '""•Y. ~Y o-e10r .. eMtt'ft11JlllY
A petition has bffn flled wllland/ortstate: ~.~~~.::!!!!..'!.yw~J111,.1 f.~t~.c:i.not0r.,...c_.y°"J"'y A111.1.1•1. ..._.._.. :O~':~laueoc••HS.lllC. f,.
by Kathleen Gernser In A petition has been flltd to, 1"'· -... --" -· Y •••m• ,.,., .. MHc •·TOW ..,..c..... Ort!.f1 ....,, tht Superior Cour of by June Geiser Logan & '1M4fq •ub11-0r..,..eo..to.t1yP11ot, PwettW4!0r.,.c-..oouyPn9'. ~.!!.~~~-tt~ ..... ca,... . 0 c t ti L. I E G I I th PuMllMd Or119 CMtl 0.11 Piiot Jiiiy "· AuQ. i, ll, "· "" a11Mt Allf, '·II, It, 2', 1•1 MJO.tl ---........ --
l range oun y roqUff no ea • es.er n e Jiiiy» _ •·-s ,.,.1 Y_7._..1• ~ ... ..,.._..CA,... ~ .
PfCTtTIOUS IUSl•HI
NAMI tTAY•M••T Thai t.lltwlnt per-•re dol"9 blltl-M: SWEET ALICE MUllC. l'°t
P!Ktlltlll -. .... C..t. MIM, Ce. 9J621
Allee McC•ll111>1, 1221 W. CM• H._,,.,..,, "-Pott a..cto, Co. ttMa
Mitt! 0.Vldloll, 211 •11mw St., Co.I•-... C.. fttf1 Thlt bw1tne11 It COllduCteO by I
..,.., .................. p.
Allee McC.lll!m Tlllt __ , w• flied with 11>e
c_t., Cftn of °'~ county °" A119UIC 10. 1•1. .. , .....
Pllbllll* Or .... C0.$1 Dally Piiot Aug, It It, 2', Sof>'. 2, 1•1 lJ6MI
hat Kathleen Garnsey be Superior Court of Orange · ••• ._ · .. -.... '""" ~ ....... 0r.,.. c.Mllt o.11y ,.._, ·~ •
appointe d es p ersonal County requesting that PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTJr.17. ...X mil , ~~0r,~9c-1•110o11y.!'..~, J111yn.1t,A14t.1a.1tt1 b1'Mt j' ._.
representatlv& to ad· June Geiser Logan & Lela -"y • .,._. · •· · -~ V 1
m inis ter the estate of E. Geiser be appolnttd as PICT•nou•eu•i••·· -••CTfnou1au11N•u .. ..,.... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE PVWC NOftC& .,· ,
Jeanne e. Klszko of Costa personal representotlves ' MMll ITAnM ... T' .. ,..... 1TATIMC111f ·~~~=:::' _ ·-----------wt
Mesa, Ca. (under the In· to adminis ter the estate of Thi ltlloowlnt ........ It llelne IMltl M~:~.f,ollOWlnt ... ,..,. II deh\fl °"'" TM fOllowl ... --· .,. 001119 PICTITIOUI IUMNHI PICTITtout•UllltUI
dependent Administration Harry CN.M .N .) Geiser of neat.,., 1L101NG GARAGE oooits 1a.1 ....,,.... .. 1 NAMI ITATSMllNT •AMS 1TATIM111tT of Estates Act). The petl· Costa Mesa, Ca . (under '"" o.oLo excHANOE, so42 M1tche11, T1411n. ct111orn11 ""°' •uuu1. v Hou11, t,, •· r11. 1o11-1,.. "''°"' ••e 001119 ™ fouowi,.. ,.,_,, •re ..,.,.. ~ ·:
tlon Is .... t for he•rlnn In the Independent Ad· Alcorll,lrvlnt,C•lllOO'nl•tt7u SLIDING GARAGE DOOR c o .. PMllwlM,C•l41 ..... CA '2••· IMlllnetJM. touc1;rwoo·IE~'OUICKOIL CH"'NOI -.. • AINI Verdllll JO'I Alcorn lrvlnt l"I ~11 .._., ,..,_,, I JC111"4 A. ill'O&.LINO, 14U H. 0 .. "'NGI COUNT" ·THL&TIC "• .. . De pt. No. 3 at 700 Civic ministration of Estates ce111or111n21u · · ' -;;.~-; ~;--~,:i:'~r~i cte .... ono. 0r-.. cou'1. CLut~71.,1 1rv1ne eo:,11-;.,0. "'"' "" "~ S4rwt. No. 4· H1111•·
Center Drive Wes t, Santa Act). The petition Is set for Thi• ---I• cOllClll<tH Dy.,, In· MllClllll, Tvalln, C.lllornl• tMO 111"0INIA M. ·~LINO, tw ... *· Tldllll, CA "'30. lngtM tlMCll, C.lllefftl•.... 't
Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep-heerl~ In na..t. No. 3 •t c11v1we1. Tht1111111neu 11c-1ec1by.,,1n cine1M111,0r....-,CA""7· ATHL.OH coAPORATION , • 1 ,c"•''" "'· R ... n . 11°' "1111t· ..,..,, .. Al .. Vlf'dllll dl•lduel flllt ~ II <°"*'<led ..., !ft. Clllforfll• C!°"PO<.CIOfl, ICl'l Brtllkllll, nt 0"" No. 4• Hulllln9I011 ... ell,
tember 21 .1981 at 9 : 30 A.M. 700 C vie Cente r Drive T1111 ••-w• m• w1111 .,,. Fren1,11 Gll1 C1mpainell• 11v1c1u.t111 (HUIOoftcl ~ w11e1. kill• Ml, CAtt105. C•lllornt. ...
IF YOu OBJECT to the West , Santa Ana, ca. 92701 C01111l1 Clertl of Or•noe c-ty Of\Julf Jr . J ... A. '"''"'° OOUOL.A& INVl$TMl!HT5, • W•llM L. Rotert. t50f Hlllltf,.tlHI, ..
granting of the petition, on September 2, 1981 at te. "'1· T1'111 •l•i.ment •• 111.., "'"" .,,. Vlr9lfll•M. lllofllno C•llfornl• corpoutlon, 11'1 1rv111e ~t,·· -1""'°" lffc:h, CMllwnl• ,• ' should Ith 9 30 A M fl1'7t11 Counly CltR qt Orainee Counly on July Tl'llt tlil.......,I •• "'" with 11'9 IOllllVWd, T111t111, CA""°· Oowlll W. Wllll•M• UOt H111•I· yOU e er appear ; , , P11C.lllll9d Or ..... Coell Delly Piiot, 20, ltll. County Clerk OI Or-County Oii JllAY Tlll1 IMl.Jl ... tt It COMll<IM DJ • llltlOll, No, •• Hunll ..... len IHCh, f at the hearing and state IF YOU OBJECT to the J11ly "·Aue. s, ll, "· "" mM1 ll'IMoQI JI, 1"'· ~r•l jlai'-'Mrlfllp, .. .
I ,.,,.., •THL""'CO•PO•ATION Coll!~--., Your o~ect ons or file granting of the petition, -Pub11"*' OrNIOlt c-1 D•llY Piiot, .. ......,. " " ,~, ~·-1 1 &-~ t-"
PUBUC NOT C n 29 j P'*'1"'9cl 0..11191 Coe1t Deify Piiot, wtlli.ni G. Oovla, n I ,._ ,..._ I c-... 11< ...., D't e If ! written Je<:tions with the you should either appear I E July • ·Aug. · 12• "'1 ,,....... A111. s, 12, "· u, '"t >m .. t PrftfdMl _,.,, ~. t
court before the hea ring. at the hearing and state T1111 ".._' w• 111ed .1111 1111 W_.. l . R•n
Your a,.....a rance may be your objections or file P1CT1T1ou11u1111111s PUBLIC NOTICE PllUC 1111( c-n1yci.rtofOrenoe C01H111onJ11t1 -'1111 ,..,.......,. w•• tlled ""'"'the ·• PICTITIOUI IUll•IU I ..,..... I · j •AMII STATllM8111T 20 1•1 ...,ounly Cl•n. of Or-C-.ty °" J111y ''
•AMllTATaM••T n person or by your at· wr tten ob edions with the ™ fotiowine 111,.... is c»111o 11us1-------------1-----.. -.,-,-,...------11 it 0011, KllNOALL 6 ..... "· '""
The fol-Ing --I• dol119 ...... tor'ney. court before the hearing. neH •a: PICTITIOUS MlllNllH PICTfTIOUS aUSlNIU ltlNOTON PuDll•-Or-c~1t fta11"y':'11'!!.
11111 •: I F y O u A R E A Your appearance m ay be INTER STAMP co., >'1 G,..,,.... NAMa ITATIMINT NAM• SYATIMll•T A , • o,, 11ss 1 o NA L LA w July 29. ""'"s.12~,, ;;1 .,.. ,.,:;, NEWPORT CREST APTS., 1409 c R EDI TOR or a cont in person or b you t L-, COIYMeM,CA921U7. Tiii following .. ,.., .. Is dol"9 Dull· Th• tollowln9 perl4nt ... doln9 COlll"OUTION S-rlor Aw .. N-por1 .. tell, C.. • y r a • NANCY GRANT, J'7 Grtnol!I• 'IOU H : llutl-et: 4"9 MKA1t1111r II~, ..... IM
926'.ll lngent creditor of the de· torney. L•ne, C01141MIM, CAm.27. BERTA V't ART. •7tl WlnCllOnll MR. O'S FINI GIFT$ .. COLLIC· ,._...,. 9Mdll,CA'26M
K•lhul11• • .-.. ' "" Lot ceasec:t, you m'-ISt file your I F y 0 u A R E A Tlllt ....,_ 11 conoucled Dy •n In· A .. 11 ... , ..... P•I .... , CAlllO<nl• 90Ul TllLl!.S. Sii . ""' Sln•I. N"'"" :~.~W:.~~~:n;:;m1YM 1"" ~~~~ti~t~o tr:e ~~~n~~ fn:e~P~~~~o~~fath;0~!: d•~·:·~~:.,,.:. ......... 11 -~.'1r~~i.!·:=.' ~·-;:·,!~'. ::r~.{~=~~11=e~~: "~~m:::::r fll .... Publlllled Orenge Coell Delly Piiot,
PUBLIC NOTICE
July 22, 'l'I, Aug. s, 12, ltll l211 .. I
K..,,.,,.,. BH•r representative appointed ceasec:t, tou must file your county c1er1< c1 Orenee Count,°" J111y Thi• Dullneu t1 conauc11<1 Dy •n in· e1111oe, CAlllornl• '2661. PUB T111 fo11.,..,1119 person• •r• oolne c:..~:Y ~~! ~.!!*'cO:~~Y ': by the court within four claim w ith the c ourt or 29• '"1· Pmm d••1ou•1· Romrt.M. Vender ov, .. 11 ~::::-i-•• cof\cNct.d oy • cor. ____ LI_C_N_OT_._1_C_E __ 11u.i::-E·~EllOLE,., ,.,"' s1r .. i, J'"'
,t,U0<111 IO,1•1. months from the d a te of present it to the personal Pub11.-0r.,... eoest Delly Piiot, Thi• u.t.,,_, .., .. "'*' wllh '"' Rl;GLCORPORATION su,.a111011 covttoP ae111oai. c.i1tor111u*1 \
.,.,.,,., first issuance of letters as representative appointed July"· Aue. s, 12, "· 1t11 ~1 County c1ertt c10..""911 Coutttr °" J111y Gino OI SMC>, Prnldent CAUfl'ORNtA. COUNTY ~•orel • Hecht, .is E ••• ~
Puoo.,,...0rongecoesto•11YPl1ot provided In Section 700 of by the court within four -10,it1i. T11i, JUi~t wes llled wtt11 ,,. OflO•A•o• E0etw•tM,..,.._,c.111orn1••*1 • -,.._.,._._12_·_"_·"_·~ __ ·2_·_1.., __ ._»>_•_ .. _1
1 the Probate Code of months from the d a te of PUBLIC NOTICE ,,,_ counl'fOH'llotOrengeCountyonJ1111 °•0 •ttTOIHOW Oeore Fo.ut, 200S Ent Ocean.• Pullll...0 0r""911 C-t Dally Piiot, )I 1"1 CAU .. ,Olt t•I-, c.lllomle9*1 '
California. The time for first issuance of lette r s a s --------------Ju1y22,21,A4'Q.s, 12. "" iu1,.1. ' · "'"'... cHANO•OPNAMll. Thll 11u.ine1a 11 cOlldllcteo .,1 •. ~
filing c laims will not ex· provided in Section 700 of PICTITIOUS IUSINEU PU011"'9cl Orenge Co.II Delly Pllol. CASI NO. Al"717 llmlled HttiwnNp.
------------ip ire prior to four months the Probate Code of NAMllSTATIMllNT PUBLIC NOTICE A11g.S,t2,1t,u ,11111 is11 .. 1 •n '"'e m•tter of •PPlf<•llon of 0.0.-11•"«"' i,; ll'ICTITIOUS•USl•EH .-.------------1PHI LLIP8Rl!TT8RADWAY. Tiii• .._,,..,. wn tllld with_ .... .,. NAMI STATIMINT from the date of the hea r· California. The tim e for ... !."!.',°'1-'"CI 119"°" II "°'119 ....... --_,,. .'IVr MR, ,. MRS. STEVEN MITCHELL County Oer11 ol Or .... C-ly on July
Tiie 1o11-•1111 person 11 doing 1111.i-ing noticed above. filing claims will not ex-M 0 8 1 LE MO r 0 R c v c LE PICTITIOUI •UlllllllH ~ 1iw; "••e filed• 111t111on In u.1scourlfor •n 20, 1t1t '
n•u n : YOU MAY EXAMINE plre prior to four months REP,t,IR,. RENTAL, 1149 Skylerk NAMlllTATllMC•T .f.~ .. ·~~:i;i:::o--l.l.li:c .... R.ETl'llTI P11 .. lllhed Or .... "-1t "·11~':t!'. PJ~:t~L~:u~~Ll.LLE~it1~1~~: the file kept by the court. from the date of the hear-L•ne.N._.iBe•cll,C•lll«nletMO n.!:9 .. f.oHow1ne .-_,is c1o1n9111111· "~C:::~!::~1:::S eRADWAV 10 PHILLIP IRETT Ju1yn,29,Aue.s,u:n.i """ i2rM'i'
COHI Hl9llwo. Coron• del Mer, If you are Interested in the Ing noticed above. Slty1::~1~~ .. ~:.:.i:;i~ Jr., 11" BENNETT & ASSOC l,t,TES, 1271 Tiii lollowlng person! .. e doing MITCHELL ••
C•lllornl•t2Ut. estate, you may file a re· YOU MAY E XAMIN E r111s11u111111s ltcondllc:ledDy1n ln· G••nl'f•e, •27•. Leeu"• eeec11 1>111•nne•: 1"'...,..,.,°"_ec1.u..1.11 111,_ PlaJC!lla Dolor•• Krull,• cemor"1' cOf'· quest with the court to re-the file k~t by the court. dlvic1uei. ce111om1.n.s1. ' ESTELLE ALLAROALE, MS> E. lnterHted "' -m.uer •tor1Mld •P. 1------------POf'•tkln.>07 MJll-Orlve,Cor""8 di! If Wllllem J-Edtltwl..ser Jr. Selldre a ...... 11 941 M81dow .. ,.. COHI Hwy., COO'on•del Mar, Ce. t1W peer before lhlt COWi In ~rtmelll Mer,CA tUJS. celve spe<:iai notice· of the you are nterested in the Lll1111N18eech,ceiiiom..nui. • Fr--.. "otie"'°"· "' 81y11.,. wo. > •• 100 Chrk Cenlef' Drive West. ~ .,1!,"!..~nns •teondu<leo by .n 1 ... inventory of estate assets estate, you may file a re-Thi• stet-• .... 111.., with 11w This -.ineu 11 conc1uc11<1 ~Y .,, •n· or1 ... o.2. "-" a .. ,11. C•. 926'0 ~nl• Ane, c.111orni., on Sal>t. 2. 1911, llOTtc• OP SAU OP
and of the petitions, ac-quest with the court t o re· Coun1y c11rk o1 Orenee county on Juty olvldllll. J-v. R-•l$011, '" ••vs1e1e •110:>0 •.m., -•11en -•hen.-lllAL •AOl'l•TY AY
DcMons• Krull counts a nd reports celve s,,_1·a1 not1'ce of the 29• 1"1· ,.1,7174 s...ci.e e.nneu Drive, 0.2, Newpori a .. ,..,, C•. 92"° c•1ttt, II eny ll'ley twiw , why Mid 11911· •••VAT• SALi Tiii• Itel-I WM llled with Ille ..--Tiii• IYl-t WM flled wllll aw TlllJ OullflH6 11 cc1nducl8d by en Ill· lion for ~ of Mme tllovl4 not Ill ML Attt IFS County Clerk ot Oren .. County on described In Section 1200 Inventory of estate asset.s PuDlllhed Orengi1 Co.ti D•llY Piiot, Cou111 Cl k f Or c I ltl•I-e•enled. Su""°" COllrt of Ill• Sl•t• of
Alig.,, l9ll. of the California P robate and of the petitions, ac-July 29, A11g. S, 12, "· ltll l»f.fl All ,y 191:' 0 ange oun y on ;:,_,. Ro«>ert-. It It f11rther order.a -• ttpy of' C•lllornl• tor.,. c.o.J,ty of OrMei. ,.1.,... 11' ' · PHIM6 Tiii• at.I-I *•• flled with IN '"'" oreler lo.,_ c-lie P\llllltl'led In Ille m•lter of Ill• ell•le 01 Publl-OrengeCoe1tDellyPllot, Code. CO Unt s and r e p o rts -------------Publl-0r""911 CoeslOellvPllot CountyOerk o#Orenge CountvonJ1tly In the Delly Piiot. e ,,.._per ol H~LEN Mil.LEA, •II• MRS.
Aue. s, 12, 19, u, 1"1 JS21H11 described in Se<:tlon 1200 PUBLIC NOTICE Aug , 12 19 u 1911 :Msal ao. 1"1. genere1 c1rc11t•l10n, l>Ubllllled In u.ts DOUGLAS MILLER, a. HELEN P.
KLEIN & CUTLER At of the Cal1'fornla Probate . ' ' ' • flt67a2 county •• ••.it once. -k tor,_ MILLEA,conMtV•I ...
I • ' Publllhed Or-CM•I Delly Piiot contt<utl•• -ks""'°' lo Ille deY of Notice 11 --·-UWI IM ..... torneys at Law, by: Leslie Code. PICTITIOUI auSINIU PUBLIC NOTICE ,.1111. s. 12, "· z., 1,.1 uiw· u •d .... ,,1111• 0er111Mc1 w111 ... , •• ..,1 .... ,.,.e, °"
Klein, 9920 La Cienega NAMlllTATIMIENT DATEOJutyzt, 1911 0<e11eru.11t11c1aivotA111Utt. •••.•1
PICTITIOUSIUllNllS Blvd Ste 631 l~lewood MEAD ANO MEAD, At· The loOowl119 ""°" 11ootnv11u11. _.,.-.: RoneldH.P,......r, 1111 olllu 01 Pl•n11ed Pro11cttv1 ·-· STAT•M••T ., • I I ""' .. , .. ICTITIOUS IUSINaSS ~ ... ,_ J~ol u. 5ervlc11, lllC., 22"2 UI CAl*nt Orlve, The following pertons ere doing Ca. 90301 ; tel: 213 641·5800 torneys at LaW, by: Frank AMCO BUILDERS SUPPLY, U14 NAMll STATIMaNT 5'.lperlot c-t office 4, L•11u111 Hlllt, Co11nly of
blltlllftl .. , F . Mead, 111, 1101 Dove Newport 81YCI., COii• Mew, C•lllOf'nl• Th• followl"f "''°" 11 dol119 bull· PICTITIOUI •USINllH De•I• o .• ., Or•n9e. St• of c.llfonll• ••• .._. J·B INVESTMENTS, •12 a.•-PU011"'9cl °':\" eo.11 Delly Piiot Street, Suite 170, Newport •u21 neu 1" •AM• STATIMlllllT 1111 • ............, Awe. (1141 ts1 ..... to 11'9 hltlMSI -DKt Dr .• $H1 8eecll, C•. t07., Aug. t2, IJ, "· ltl »22 .. 1 BeKh, Ca. 92660; tel: D-ld s. Woodl, ... De Sol• fer· ~I SSt l.DVNE CO NSULT I HG, Tiii lollowlne --•• dolrt9 blltl· ....... 1....,, CA.,.., bidder, ... lllOjKI IO coftlll"INtlon Dy Mark c . 81-!Mcll, '12 B••-r•et, cor-0.1 Mair, Celltornte tllUS 42_, •rlt "-~ ""' 21S, N-oort 11111 .. , 0141 "1.-..,Id 5-ler c-t. •II rltM, 1111• IM Dr., SHI llNcl'I, C•. t07_, "9lJC llTIC( 714/833-9033 Tl'llt llullneU 11 conclUCled Dy en In· a .. cl'I, cllllomlt 92M4 AMERICAN OIL EXCHANGE, 567 P11bllllled Orenge Coetl O.lly Piiot, lnltrHt ol Wiid ~rv•191 Ill end to RHemery L. 81tdelllcl'I, 412 dlvl-1. Oerl-Ann Mls.slldlne, 4280 Perk Sen HlcOI• Dr .. 5""141 10.. Newpon July 2t, Aue. S, 12, It, ltll ~I ell lhl Clf'tail11 r .. 1 ,,_r1y lltuete In ee10oe Dr., SHI ....... c.. to?_, PubllsNcl Ort1199 Co.st o.lly Pllol OllNlld s. w-Newport. tpl. lU, "*•Port 811cll, e..,,.,, CAlllornl• nMO. • the Co11n1y of Or•n11, Sl•I• of·
c_.,.. s. Jellklnt, 1102 I.anding NS-79112 Aug. 12, ll, It, 1'11 MJMI Thlt 1i.i-t wet filed wlll'I ow CAlllorn1•'2MO. T"-J. Mott, 111 Oomlnoo Or., PUBLIC NOTICE C.lllornl•.' -11wiVI~ 4"crlb.cl H Awe., SHI 8Mch, CA. to780 NOTICE OF DEATH OF County Oerti ol Or.,. County on J111v Thi• bwlneH 1• concluded Dy en In· Newport llH<:h, C•lllomle t2..0. loll-•, to-wit;
Tfll• bullM11 Is conducted by• WA1. TER KISZKO AND -~ ..,.ar 24, 1 .. 1. dlv1c1u.1 r11111M1ness 11 col'Mlucteo Dy en'"' PARCEL 1: o-111ne u111t c In gener11-"""11lp ,-_,., ... ,_ ""'"' Derl-AmMIMlldlne dlvlo..M. NOTICE OF OE'"'TH 0 ,.. eulldl119 No. >llS, H Mid u1111 11 IMrttC. e~ OF PETITION TO AD· PuOll-~ Coesl Delly Piiot. This •wt-I was fllecl with the ThornnJ. Motl "' r "'°'"" on tllM ~If\ Collctomlnh#fl Tlllt ..,..,._, wu lllecl wllll 1111 MINISTER ESTATE NO. PICTIT10Utau111111111 J11ly 2t,A119. S, 12, It, ltll >JIHI Counly Cleftc of Or-Couflty on July Tlllt IUl-1 wes tiled with ow WINE FRED DYKSTRA PIM •tlKhed to --•pert°'
Cou11ty Clerk <ff Or•noit County on ... -1-~. NAMl ITATllMl•T -------------20• 1•1 County Clerk ol 0r•"ll9 County on c u R T I s s I a k • tMI cert• Dec ...... .,.. Of C-1, August 10 1911 "' .,_ Tiie lotlowlng _..... It dlol119 1M11I-PUBLIC NOTICE Pl6MH Aug.), 1911. W SS Condlllont Md ltettrlcll-recoreled ' · "'"* T o a f I h e i r s , "'"es: PuDll-a-.,. c:o.1 o.11y Piiot, ,.,.,.., I NE FRED 0 . CURTI , ,.._,..,., 2 lf72. 1., 9tOll.,.. P ...
Publl-OrMOe eo.11 oe11y P11o1 bene ficiar ies, creditors s1ERRA OIL PARTNERsv. 11111 -Ju•wtt.w.A119.s, n . it1i m 7.ei. Publl"'9cl<>r.,,.. eoea1 D•llY ~llot. a k a W I N I F R E D m , of Offk1111 Aec-1n u.oit1cee1
Aug. 1.2. tt, 2', Secit. 2,.1t11 li6MI and contingent c reditors of erookhurst, Fountein Vell•Y. CA f'tCT1nousau11N11S1 ------Aue. s, u, "· i., 1t11 :M77.., DYKSTRA CURTISS, aka ,,. c-.ty R«°"*' o1 0r.,.. Cowl\·
.... ,,. .. -· WalterKlszko a ndpersons moeFAANK R. DARLING, 111u The i!=:'.,."!:.=~·.~. 0oine .. PUBLIC NOTICE · .,---. WINlt:REO 0 . CURTIS~ !~t~=~1~~
-
_________ •tM; ____ who may be otherw ise In· e rookllunl, Fount•ln V•ll•Y. CA IMlslneue: --------P UBLIC NOTICE AND OF PETITION T111 No. 71JA.,.,,..., l'KOrWd '" ...
PICTIT10UI 8UllllllUS NAMI tTATIMll•T Thi lot_.,. penon It dol"9 bull-
M11 n : Bil.LS GLASS WORKS, '15 N.
Cl'llPlllW9 •ti, A,,.._lm, C•. ttlOI Wiiii*" Brown Maia, W N. CNP. pe-. -Im, Ce. '2901
ThK llullne1• IJ <-.Cted by M ln-dlvl-.
WIHIMn e. Maick Tiiis --1 w• llled wllll U. C1111nl't Clerk of 0.11199 County on August 10, ltll. .. ,.., ..
PUOlllhed Ort1199 Coell o.l ly Piiot Aug. 12, It, 26, Sept. 2, ltll JSU«I
te r ested In the will and/or 92Joe. 111 0 1vERS1F1Eo CO M· "1CT1nauiau11•111s ADMINISTER ESTATE 211, P.,..us enc1aotM1ac.11-,.
estate·. Thlt Ollslneu 11 c011ducled by • MOOtTIES IHTE AHATIONAL; (2) N.AMIE ITATllME•T fllCTITIOUS MISINllSS WO A10f7""' Mept In tlle office ol Hid Collflly llmlted pe..-sl\lp, OI STRllUTION CONSULTANTS Tiie followlntl .-r.-, It dol1191M1tl-HAMlllTATaMeNT i• T. -· Recor•r, Shown •lld defined H A petition has been flled Fr-R. 0¥11119 1NTE RNATIONAL; U> M.U.M.s ...... es: Tl'le io1iow1nu 111,_, 11 "°'"' Dllsl· o a I I h e I r s , "CoMmon ArH" 011 1111 •Do ... by Kathleen Garnsey in Thlt 1t.i-t w•1 tlled wllll 1t1e AERO -AUTO CRAFTER$, UOO S. MODEL·TECHHIC5, JU> Birch neu 11: t>eneflcial'ieS, Creditors relerredtoCOlldarnlnlum ,....,, C t Clerlt cl Or C Jul LYOll Street, s.m. AM, CA 92JOS. SlrMt, N.wport Betteh, CA 926'0. d ti t d' f Exc•tno IMAll"IM ..... _II.,. et the Superior Court o f ouny ..... -•yon ' DAVID WAVNE MILLER, llClll DOUGLAS A. YATES, 27• Ce<ll GTSTEXASLTO/OTSTEXASll. wan, cfon noen ere 1torsl 0 Lot1A ..OlofwtdTrtetNo.JIJt ......
Orange County requ~stlng 20•1"1· ,.,...., s..o1111 A-, Founl411n v.11..,, CA P1ece,ec.i.Meu,CAn.21. ~!~·11 1~1=~-:.riw, Newport ne red Dykstra Curt $5, 101111119 U1c1LGUJ011Cto1. ~
that Kathleen Garnsey be P11bll"'9cl OrMQe c.c-1 o.uy P11ot, 92709. Tl'll• llullrwu Is conc1uctec1 Dy •n Ir.. R*-1 E. ""-· 1m s.r.ua.eo aka Wlnefre d D. Curtiss, AIM ucepe1119 _, ,_,,.,.. .-o I. ·
appointed as p e r son al ~uly22,2',Aug.S, 12. "" J272 .. I Cor~~c~~ .. ~:.~~c~=R, U7' dl•ld ... IOouulas A. Yells Drive, Newport ... c .. , C•lllornl• aka . Winifre d Dykstra ~":.-:r=·~ ~'":::.:.::.~ ;::,~~=::,"\~~v:st~~:~f PUBLIC NOTICE 111:::!,::::..i: cono11<1ee 11y • c!~t'y~~=~•:=J~~ :r::~:=•.:.,!~ c011<111cted Dy• ~~~~:~~: =~~ =~~~ w~o !•::,•!,:~.·~=.~~=11~1•:!d4 :::: • I
Walter Kiszko of Costa -fllCTtn-... eu••••u O.vklW•.,neM111er 20' 1"1· ,.1...., R_,, E. AM'-may be otherwise Interest-eac111•1w '""'" o1 w•Y ower. llMltr
M C -· .. Tiii• __ , w• 111«1 with ,,. Gener.i P•r1rwr e d In the w 111 and I o r •no -l-,.,,..... of ..,., l...ClilJ 3 esa, a . (Under the In· NAMaSTAT .. •lalllT Countr Clerlt ofOrenee C-tyonJlllr Pullll-Or1ng11 Coetl Dally Piiot, T"ls 11.e'-l wet llled with llll end• 11C111ft Wfllch no llul141flt Of' olllor
dependent Administration TM IOllOW•ne --•r• dolnt 2', 1911, J.11Jy 22. 2t, Aug.,, 12.1•1 u1 ... 1 '"""tY Oerll o#Orenge County on July estate. str11ct11re hH bHn .,., ... , fer.
of Estates Act>. The petl-..., .. _ .. : ,,..,.,. ._ "· t•1. A petition has been filed nec•n•ry or cte1tr•b11 l11•ren o•
ti on Is set for hearing in 10~R:o~~t~O:.~s.~~~:t~ ':~.~: Publllhed Or-coe.i oeuv P11ot, PUBLIC NOTICE PuDll"' o...,. eoe11 0.111 P1101 Ju· by Crocker National Bank, :.1r.:S· .':v~!':v~~ ":::= ~#
Dept. No. 3 a t 700 Civic c.111om1am21. ~"'Y 19
' AllO· '· 12' "· 1•1 m 7 .. 1 •Y 22· 29' A&;e. s. 12' t•• ~ successor to United States tetep,_ _,...., _,..... . ...o .c'.
Cente r Drive West, Santa c.':i~:;.!~. ~!;!:!11::.· ~~.~~it! PUBLIC NOTICE "~c:;,_~:!:~::::s PUBLIC NOTICE Natio nal Bank of San <011t,,_1 llWnlo, ~. *•'"'·
ll'fCT1T10U11u11•1u Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep· StrHt, South PeMdlM, C•lllOf'nl• ----------·--Tl'le 1011-lng per&ons •r• doing D iego, in the Superior ~~:;,·...'!!..~. ~·-~r~ NAMa STATIMll•T C t f 0 C t .,_.,. .,.. • ., .,_ --.n -Tiii 1o1iow1ne .-non 11 dolll9 ~ti-tember 2, 1981 at 9 : 30 A .M . "*-PICT1TIOUs auttNllSS 1>us1n .. su: llOTICI TOCOteT•ACTOttl our O range oun Y over11•,,...-ot,., encro.dwnenta Of
""" "' IF YOU OBJECT to the Thlt ~-•• <ondll<leo Dy. cor-.. ,..... STATIMCNT COIT DRAPE RV AND CARPET CALLI ... "°" llDS requesting t hat Crocker • Ilk•., llalmllor kind, .. .., wltrl
I 11«1t10ft. T111 to11ow1nu Plf"IOft is dolne 11us1. CLE,t,NEAS, 1wc., "" Log•n ScllOOI Dlstrkl: CoHI eom ....... 11., National Bank s ccessor t111 r._... to convey 11110 -tt to 1
XCALIBER INVESTMENTS, ., grant ng of the petition, PRONTO MARKET NO. '· nesu1: Av111ue, CO&te ......... C•lllornl• t»• Coll ... Olttrkt t th u it d 'st ut N My per .... firm, llO*IC utlllly or llOY· : EHi Coell HI ....... .,, •304• cor-.. you should either appear INC. NEWPORT INDUSTRIES, L TO., R & R c~. Inc.. (a CAllfornl• lld Oeedllne: ,,., o'Clock p.m. of 0 e n e a es a -tr'll1'118"IAll .....,,
M•r. CA t:itlS. at the hear Inn and state Oevld YOdai, s.c ..... ,., .. , C•~lllo SI'"'· Cos141 Maw, CA corpor•lfOll), 1291 Loe•n Avenue. IN "411"'-"' ··--1"1. tlonal Bank of San Dleno, Alto •llUPt•-from Mid l.olll l afld. L•wrence J. Vtenl, UOO Pull .. ,. c I ~ CAlltornl 92'2' -• .._... • ... ~~· •m. H•wport a.eel'!, CA ~~lt~~~ij;~;~~~;tthfti~: ~=~~;w~: ;:s ... ::!~O:~':"y ': :~~11;~~~=-~~~'::62~1 J:!~~1"~'""'uo .. ~~=:;:+?;=~!; ~=P~s:;>~~t::tict.:e~~sc:':~ ~;.;::~$:;~,
di!i"!..~1'"'"du<"'dby M ln .. court before the hearing. """CJ T11111M11>Kl lteondllctedbyen 1n. A&RCLEANERS,INC. mo u.ms Awe., Coste Me .. , CA m inister the estate of 1111111 to .,,....,11111W1ocoor.-.~
L.--.c.e J. VIMI Your appearance may be Pllblltlled Orenge eoest Otlly Piiot. dM•u•1· R~dw. Aou11ev. n.». Wlnefred Dykstra Curtiss wrlece "'u. "'°'""Y...,. •""""
fllll mtemenl w•• flied wllll .. In person or by Y"''r at· A ... '· 12, "· 2', ,.., UllM1 .we .... 8 . Emmons Prtllclef'll ProJ•CI ldenllllctllOll Heme: aka w ·1nefred D Curtiss' Of S00.00 fHI for eny tJ11rpou vv Thlt l&etement WU llled with ,,. Tllll ·~· wes flled with "" Or1111• COHI Coll••• Enerey . ' .. .._ • ,_,,.. ...... "' County Cler• of Ounee COlllllY on torney. CounlyCler11iolOr ..... Coun4yonJ11ly Cou111yC1-ofOr-Countv011J11ly c .............. -..-REllD •1•1 aka Winifred D ykstra rKlf'd. f!
Auo. J, 1•1· ,.1.,.. 1 F y o u A R E A Piil.iC lllJC( 20, 1t11. 21• •t11. Pi-. Pl-.,. "" 1111: Office of Curtiss aka Winifred D. PARCEL 2: N.,.. ... e1valw• e••• · ~ R Pl-,., .... .....,lkaf P'teffltles Pl_,,,,. <Tr•ller C ti ' ( d the I ments tor 111111'9' -s ..,_,,_I< Ptfb!I"*' 0r.,. coe.a D•llY Piiot, C EDI TOR o r a c ont· PICTITIOUllUllNIU Publlllled OrMQe eoes1 D•llY Piiot, PuDll"'9cl 0r..,.. eoest o.i1y Pl191 Comtilu>, c:-st c.omm11nt1y co11... ur ss un er 0 • ut1111111,-... ri tor ell Pll'llOtM ~· Aue.'· tl, ••. 2', ttll m 1 .. 1 ingent creditor of the de-ltAMI ITAT'll.,..•T July 22, n. Aug. s, 12, ,,., HI'-*' Nly 2', -.... s, 1t n, 1•1 l<IOHt 0111r1c1, u10 Ao•m• Ave., CHI• dependent Administration 1nc1e1e11111 .--. 111e_.,,., 11ut "°' :
ll'ICTITfOUI IUll•llSS .. ,..... nATaMaNT
f"8 f0Jlowln9 Ptf'tont ere dol"ll llUJl,...n:
COASTLINE MARINE Sl!RVICE, 41t M•ln SI., Ste. tt, H11nll119ton IH<h,C. .....
Mlrtln H. Tyler, I09 H11nll.....,.. st., Hw!IW.....,. IMKh, C.. 92641 PMll E......,, 119 Staillft'I Orlw, L...-llM<ll, Co. Thlt IMltlMH Is COllOUCIM bY 8 llmlled ,..r1Mrsl\lp.
~In Tyler
T"ft ttotl!Nnl wes 111111 with the,
c-•• c1er11 of Or•nee C411111tv °" AllllUtf 10, 1 .. 1 • "..,n PuOll"'9cl OrM!ll (MM Diiiy Pllet
AUii. ll, If, 2', Sof>'. t, t•I I aQHf
ceasec:t, you must flle your Tiit '°"-"' _..... 11 doll!• IMI· ----------·--.....,., CA._.; Office e1 ,,_ "°"''· of Estates Act). The petl· 11,,..1tld to, ttw c-1noct10ft, , .. .....,. ,. i
claim with the court or Mtua: P UBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE o1rKtwm•>JJW101. tion is set for heerln~ In tlon. rePl•c•m•nt, repelr, m•fn· 1 CALIFOflNIA SIDING, 20U So. v.. NOTIC£ 15 HEAEIY GIVliH !Mt D t N l t 700 C I te11111ce, °"9r•llon end llM ot 111 I present It to the personal Heu, SMtll AM, CA 92101. ~--------·--' tM .,..,, ....,,... Sc'-1 Ol•trk;t et ep • O. a V C neceuu., or •••r•ti•e roedw•Y•, • '~ r e presenta tive appointed ,..,_ Artllllr $Hrt, 201' So. v.. f'ICTITIOUSIUM••U 111119US 0r-.. c:.wity, CAlllMnll•, Klilll..., Center Drive, West, In the 1ld1w11u •M <Onllllllt o .. r th•
by t he court within four Ne.,. s..t. AM, CA t:t101. HAMii STATIM•HT P1CTmou11u111t•H •"' ltll'Outlll Its Oonrnlite ...,,._ C I t y of Sa n ta An a fou.,..,11111tncr1t1111 lonct:
th f th d t of Tll4 liullMtt I•'"""''" by ... Ill· TIM lolltwlllg --I• ..... IMltl· ....... STAYllMSNT herel11• lltr re fer red to •• California on Augus t 26' PAllCllL A: Lots A, • ...., c of .& mon S rom . e a e otv•~·~. "DISTRICT," wlll Aalve ·-to, 11uC , Trecl Nt. 712t, In Ille Cou11ty of "
fl t I of I -....... , Tiii IOllowlng --II d0i"9 llu•I· .... 1981 t 9 30 A M ' rs ssuance etters as ...... A . ...,. FARRIS STAMP COMPANY, ltJ6 MU .. , MC ...., tllM .,. ............. llftM, a : • • Or•l\98, SIM• of C.lllonll•, •• ... •
provided In Section 700 of Tllll ui-t w• 111ec1 *""a. Port c11e1-Piece, H-1. 8"ch, DAVID ¥WAR A EN & AS· ... ...,._1ort1w-•ot•C011trect IF YOU OBJECT to the map recorclM 111 Ioli: 2'1, P .... rt ,.
the Probate Cod e o f c-tv c1er11 Of 0r.,,.. '°""'Y.,. CA HMO. soc1ATES, u1u MecArf1111r 1•1::::=1_. In IN_.._ granting of the petition, =,!' .. of.:'~~·~".::
California. The time for "'"'· 1' it11. ,,.,.,. c11e-;:.~0:."ec~· :!'!!t5•8!:'11.~ ~~~evwo. s.uttew, irvtne, C•lltoml• "'"''Nied....,.., _. wn 111 °""'" you should either appear cOU111y.
fillng claims will not ex· ~111W110r-.eoo11 0111,P11ot ttMO. O••ld w.,....,, ma Mec:Arthllr _,,...1c1yl"Md•'-'.-1,.-.-at the hearing and state •AAtmL•:i...t•A.• ... c "'TP••
Plre prior to four months A119.s, 11, 1',2', ,.., a4SW1 T1111 Mines&11 c0ftcluctee1 b.,.,, In· I011t1vwo. Sulte3's, 1rv1ne, c.uro.nl• .UT~• .. , ... , ~.ece~.00 ....._11 ,. y o u r o~ectlons or flle No. mi.•,., ll'\lll 1'9CtniM In._
f dlvldu•I. n11s ......,. -~ -..-ltt l ti Ith th n1, .,.,... 41 Ml 4' Of MIK•l'-rom the date of the hear· _,,. _ Tiiden J. ,.,,.11 Thi• --.111 concNc-i.d .,., .,, 1111:. .,.,... "°" eodl 111 of bid doc11111"'tt to wr en ec ons w e M1pa, In '"' otllo 0, tlll COllflty
Ing noticed above. ~ ...... Thlt N"""911t WIJ lllad ....... .,. lncor,.,.ieo Mtoclellon otlllr ,...,, • ...; ....... retur11 ... 9'0d , .... "'.... court before the hearing. fletorw., ---y. YOU MAY EXAMINE Cou11lyCler1<0fOr .... c--.iy011July pertnerllhlp. wltMll 10 .,. ...., .... l»ld _ .... Your appearance may be PAAC:IEL Ci t.MaA ..... of Troct :I
the file kept by the court. fllCflTIOUSIUllltHI tl,ltll. O.vldWM..... ·:.ell bid m111l <ollform"" .. In person or by your at· :·.':i:-"·• • .-_..""!----Mt ..... :"-~. ,,,
f MAMa ITAYIMll•Y PttJIJI Thia tlM-1 wn llled wllll Ille t -n _... } I you are Interested lrYthe P111>41"*' 0r_.. eoes1 0at1y Piiot. county e1et11 otOrengeCOllllty °" Jiiiy ......,.. ... .,.~1roct110wl'lltflh. orney. M•••· 11 the offlu ., t111 c-•Y estate, you may file a re-w!::.,..~~119 ,__ •re dolnt July lt,Aug.s, 12, 1t.1t11 "3MI 1, 1"' 1oe11 e1c1 8'1M1 111 aittomM111tc1..., I F Y OU A R ,E A RecerwfllwHCOllflty. ,. I
quest w ith tht court to re-MOIAX IMll!'OATS, mo1 C•ll• ·-"'6P11 ==.,-=~~1':';'•'•1 CREDITOR or a cont· PA1ACllL. oi L.ot•A ... •.,Tr.cl , ... '
celve speclal r,otlce of the 0r ..... c.istr-lffc:I\. C• . ...,. PUBLIC NOTICE P1tbli.-0r.,. CMt• °""Y '"''11• "*°""«""-... ,,..,... lngent creditor of the de-::~ ;:..• :r.,...-: ~~::.= 1
Inventory of estate as~ts Mlt'jorte v. Ac...,, 1t1• Corleft. __,,.. Jiiiy 22• 29' Aue. s, u, '"1· .,..,., Tiii 011T1t1CT r_.... '"' rf9M • ceased, you must file your M•••· 111 111e tftlc• et '"-c_,., •
end Of the natltlons, ac· ...-·::,=:~·~. t10et P1CT1nouuu11•11a PUBuc· NOTlcc-reJect MY., •11 .,.. °' '° w••...., cl aim with the court or Reco.-Wtf Mldc...._. •=::::':::.,• co u t'l. is a n'd reports c .... ~. Coptacr-'"'"· c.. •AMUTAHMllNT .,. ~~1!: .:-:,.~1111• 111 .nv present It to the personal .!-:..:' .,_ .':"~-::' .::i~·::
TM tollOWlllf Mf'-• •re Mlllf described In 5ec:tlon 1200 ~~1 --.. la UHllclHI ..., 1 ne~":.~ltWlflt ,..,_ 11 dlllnt lllltl• PICTtTIOUllUll•au· -TllO OISTRICT NI tMAllNCI lnM representative apr.olnted hrftlll ~Md "'"" tlle 111111 ~-· of ......... "•llfo-la P r-·t HA OUL.L COMUNICATIONS, .... ITATllMll•T , .. owner of ... °'"*"'*" ...... by the court with n four dncrlllocl .... fl«Clll I .......... THI! INTl!AI~ ARTISTt, ,. n• -•• , ....... e .....,.....-v........... 11 ... •a • •• , T .,..,.................................. th f th d t f ... mutwl ... .,._..of...., lollt'IC...Or. •t1t.C•wMIM,C.. Code. ........¥ .... ~ -" l'llM '"" 02, ....... 1.. h• followl119 ~-· .,. ffln9 '"' ...... ---..... In ti. mon s rom e • e 0 perllOllt .... , .. , •• lh•I Ctrl•ln
...... -Tllll :=!."':-.,.1 ... .-lll'I .. V•ll~~lll .,._,'"'°SM Ml~~~NllNT AU~O STUl!O, IOClilty "'~ .... --It to .. first Issuance of letters H Declw ........ ~. CtMtti-
llktllH I. Sctltlltt, rt MllMr• KLEIN a CUTa..ER. At· Couilt't°"1!fll0r .... CM!tV ... JlllY '"""St., 02, ,_1411., VllltY, c.. tm ...... ..,.....,Clty,CAmu. ~ ~_,. .. ~""..!!,!!""' provided In Section 700 Of ~RI-........ ~ .... ,_.., -~--. .. --.. w..,~"'c..mtS · •-.. uw ..... Lesia. u ,ttll. n10e N1coue st1NGAC1u, ut w. _,......, -._..._ -<M-the Probate Code of ..... 11 • •·~ ""'"'141' 'i
Wlly, 1,.,IM;·:::r::-· f1 ........ Klei.:; tt2t L. ·c-....... "'.... Thi• IM'-' 1• ctftlluclM by NI Ill· Wll':I~~ ~~ '::'w. WlllOll t;~.~ .::.·..::.· .:·~ ": Callfornla. Tht time for ::::;.."' .. efllc• .. '* c-ty .
'---.1. ~-. t7 ..,.. ... atYd.0.5:'' 111, J.MttwoM, ~.~-:, Coett Det•~= 1t1vldu•t....,_ .,._ sv .. a o.e. ..... CA tam 1t11rt1c11 •tc111t1• ~-1,.., ~ filing clalm.s wlll not tJC· •v11.11CT ~: All~. '9MI· fitt 1111~~.'f.1•~..., 11y • ca. ; tel: tf1/'41-~ Tiii• ....._,,. -111 ..• 1., u. n1~ Minos• ;, cOlld..Ci.ci •Y • ~""':!!. ~ .!:,''~·,:: filre prior to four months !'~ -:".:':".e..';;·~ 1\i
....-...... ,,.,..,o...-.c11 _.__ -...... _ ...... ,~ ......... ' PlJBUC NOTICE ~t~ "'°' ... c:.wity "Oft ...,.r•• =::::..C111 c:-..,.., .. .....,.."',......" 1'om --theeddatboe of the hear· "'••Y'tt,....._ ,. ~ ~ ,._ -,_. -.,. ,..._ . ' . f't..... This ttAltllflllflt -llled •1111 ... C...., ti ... ,....._.. ........ ti ng nvuC a Ve. ~ C011tct$t."f ~ ff: lllM: ~.
Tllla ......... -fl ........ A .. .tt.ta.tt, , .. , l"lltlll .... 0r.,.c...1De11, PllOt C.U11lyQel'llOfOr11191C-yt11July ---YOU MAY EXAMINE Vl•~U.-...... CA ..... c....ay ci;; • 0r.,... c.-v"' .. -::::::::-J11tyn,Mt.s.1t.1t,1t11 ~ 10,1,.1. ..:;.::=?~~=:= the fllt kept by the court ... ~":.:".::=.c":'J.t \1 ,...... " ' """" -..C_ '"' ,.. ......... --.,. ...... -Pt10tl.._.0r.,.. o-t Doll~'::' tftllt (I) ..,,,, ""' r• • ,....., If you art Interested In the .. ,,, •' ,.,, c .. 11 •!If ••1•ncti> (1
,...... Orwlllt c.... o.tlY Hot ....-..: PtJBUC NOTleE Julyta,2',Au9,s,n . 1•1 am,.f llM _._-" -11 ... ~ .._ est1tewriou may file 1 rt• n1011co' "" 111•• uuru "'~'I ~ Mle-11.1', .. ._.t,Hat ..,,.., MTJTI.......... T .. I ,_INH • llUl.LlllTON ti __ _.... t -t .. -t t ......... INll ... et1U.•.-ny '•
llWITATW"' Al'AATMllNTS, LTD .• ,,o,... ... • It----··, ""'911hCOH-ques U1 .... cour 0 rt· ...... Tiii ~ .. """""'.,.. .. \'' .
f It's AM ~-as Tllo ,........_ .. -.,, .._ t.a ,,,. ....... -. ~ llMd!. tta1now ..,.,..... fllS .a TAACTWI .. "'*" .. coMrlc& " celve SPKl•t notice of the ... ...-.. ..,_ * , WV'...,._.. ......... 1 CMlferNo... · .wnATWNT _.,.. .. ,...,.. ... ,1••• lnv~Of estate assets ..... ..._ .. ._ ... ..,.....~ 1 lou'll moue•ft "MA ICI ... '$ tCOftHt,_,., "1' ... .-eo, • ee;...,.... "''""""-• , Tiit loli.wtflf _.,_, oro ...... llMlr NM .. ,_. .... ._ .._ .. d Of tJtl wltl .. ,_..... M .. ...,..... ,, """k c... ........,, c... ..,. .,,o ... " ... ..a """ ,,,...1, ..._._•: , •fCTl'1_.....,.... ..._ ....._ ,._ ..... ---an pe on11 •c· "_, ....._..., ... ._,... ,...k~ as1erlna Met.CA-. ....,.,,l!Mcll.~,... 1AVKA•eo..M0111.1 11W'O•, ..,..n .. .,.....,. ,......,_w"""'1n ... llK.,.. .. counu and r1port1 .-111111-.. ... "'""· ~~· D.llyPll_. J•C.CM4, ... UrM111Marc-.. ~ ...... 4aQl1!9r--,• Mn•--.CllMAl--.c.flfwlll• n......,...~ .. ._...,, .......... descrtbed In Section 1200 o.tiM:Nllr-"" v. •D, ................. C.Hflr• C•ll'9nll• ,._... ....... jtjf ..... ...., -a; ... ...,_,......,_ .. _.._ f ....... "-llf I p......... ~...,.Cf,..,. • classified ..... """'· ..., .......... _._.u. • .. ...,. a11i.... v-.,. ,.. .... CA1.1~0tt•1I' c,c, '"1 w, ..., ......... 1111tT ,.., ..,. ... .. 0c~ -om a • _.... Mlftfea. •NC. ~ ~
d "•II .... J.a.t ...... ~C:W-ttttf ........ C.. ..... ~.,.,, A .... -....rtlNdl.CA...._ ...................... , -· ~-----I I • -~. •D.lls ..... •'-"'~ , ... ..,..... I• C1114111C•..,. ..... L .......... ,, .. ...,.." .,...., .... MlllM, Utt •. ..., .............. -........ •• ....._ -·---642·5671•nd. .... ,..._...,...,. C..•....,,Gtl*""',.. Aw .• ~'-".CAW. .......... ........,.,..,._.. K•.,.• _. C>ION. At· ~~::::· ' .-
.frf.-...ly .,_ ........ ~...... "° Tlllt.._11~ ... Wllll,._ Ylllt ....... lt_...c ... ..,e .............. ,.....,.._... ......... ~-wnu .,.._ ._,...._ ..,~ .....,. • ....,... ..,1 • 1a .. ..,_. • .._ .,. • hnlfYI M Law, HN W. c:..-. !',~
•... vl---wlll •c.Cllll =•,_.,,_ w. ... ,., ... _._ °'"·..,,.. ~--··•~ c ... ..._..,, -~· tllilrY&u.. ~ ,.... -'11111 ........ -.. .. .. ""' ........ -'""' .. .,.... ....... -,.... .... ... Tiull .......... -,.... ..... .. °"""*'9.... ...,..., ~ca. ; --...w. help you turn ~::.r-.. 0r-.. c:.-. "':=_a..11Grw111tc.t.iMT•'-" ~awtt"Orwlll~•MV ~l='9 "°""" c-...."' =:.-•-tel: Cn4J.., .. , -=:.~=-t, your~ls ....,,.. .,... ~--,,... ...,...,T,..... c-.. =.,.. .... ...,...., .. '1
__ 1n_t_o_ca_"lh_. ____ .~.~ew1o.o;-= ,,~":.'~ii.C::.o.t".:= ,.:;:.~.:.~ii.C:-~·.=; ~~ .. ":.Clllll...,.= ~-~a.ecr.: .:..·~1't.:'-~ ~ .. • ..... ~~J?:
-
I I ,
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.. . . •• . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .... . . .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneedav, Auguat 12, 1981
AP .......
CAT MAN Former professional rooiball
player Greg Harris keeps a watch over his
pet. "Minka." a 97-pound mountain lion.
When full grown. the cat should weigh about
160 pounds.
Photo labs
waste silver
WASlllNGTON (AP> -By failing to recover
s ilver from photographic wastes. 44 photo
laboratories run by 24 government agencies threw
away silver worth as much as $325,000 in 1980, con-
gressional auditors say.
. The General Accounting Office. in a report.
said the 44 labs dumped 6,500 troy ounces of silver
down the drain in 1980, and the practice continues.
Prices vary from day to day, but the un-
recovert:<f silver was worth between $71,500 and
$325,000 m 1980, and the cost of recovering it would
have been just a fraction of that amount, GAO
said.
The agency said the Defense Department and
Veteran.s J\dministration were doing a good job in
recovenng photographic silver, but many civilian
agencies ignored the problem, even though it was
called to their attention in a 1977 report.
Government agencies use substantial amounts
of CiJm for medical X-rays, microfilm records, mo-
tion pictqres and still photographs.
Sliver can be recovered from scrap film and
from the film processing solution.
DEATH NOTICES .
OOIU"MAN Craig A. of Costa Mesa. Ca.
DAVID DORFMAN. resi-and grandmother Gladys dent or Los Alamitos. Ca Montoya of Garden Grove.
Passed away on August 10. Ca Services held on Tues-
19:111. He ls survived by his day. Au gust 11. 1981 at
wife Anne, has daughters · IO:OOAM at Harbor Lawo
R ox~n a Bloom of San Memorial Chapel with inter·
Gl;lbrael. Ca and JoA nne ment services immediately
Willens of Ne w Jertfy, 3 following. Services unde1
brothers. I sister and 5 the direct ion of Harbor
gr andchildren Grues1de Lawn·Mounl Olive Mortuan s er vice11 wi ll be held on of Costa Mesa. 540·5554 ·
Travel curse
conquerable
BOS'roN (AP> -Some people cet those lint
queasy reelln1s Just thlnldnc about buclrinl over
blt waves oh a UttJe boat or bouncint acroes back
roads In a car with bad spriqa.
But doctors aay motion alclmess, that curte of
travel, can be conquered -at least most of the
Ume.
The atrate1ies ran1e from putttn1 kids ln car
seats to slowing an astronaut's racln1 heart with
biofeedback. All or them may help None is
foolproof.
And Utls can be a problem for people who
travel, however they travel. For no matter bow
disdaln!Ully old salta vow that they never 1et
seasick, no human being with healthy inner ears la
Immune from this a1lJnent
Motion sickness drugs help if the turbulence la
not too great. And most people will get used to the
movement and stop feeling ill In two or three days
at sea.
"Ninety percent of people will adapt to it or
respond to the drugs and be all right," said Dr.
Charles Wood, a motion slckneu expert at
Louisiana State University School of Medicine.
"But there is a certain percentage that only God,
or avoiding it entirely, can help.''
People get seasick, carsick, airsick or
spacesick because of overexcitement of their
vestibular systems, the structures in the Inner ear
that control balance. But sight, too, has something
to do with it.
The nausea usually starts when what you feel
differs from what you see.
"One theory is that it's a sensory con.fiict,''
says Wood. "You look at a room when you're sil-
ting aboard ship, and the room appears to be sit-
ting still. And yet your vestibular tells you that
you're bouncing up and down. When you get on
deck. you can see the horizon. It resolves the con-
flict, because you can see what you're doing."
Staring at the horizon is a time-honored and
effective way of relieving the effects of motion
sickness. It works, too, for people riding in cars
es pecially children, who seem to be especially
prone to the illness.
Dr. Edward Schor of Baltimore City Hospitals
reported on a solution ror kids' car sickness in the
New England Journal of Medicine.
Small children orten get sick when riding in
the backseat. Tbe trick, Schor says, is to put the
child in a car s eat so he can see the passing
scenery out the windows.
The Navy. for obvious reasons, has long been
interested in finding a cure for motion sickness.
But the search has intensified in recent years since
astronauts found that floating weightlessly in
space stirs its own revolting form of motion sick-
ness.
At the National Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration's Ames Research Center in Mountain
View, Calif., doctors are working on a promising
treatment called autogenetic feedback training.
Space sickness was a frequent nuisance for
astronauts in the Apollo and Spacelab programs,
and NASA wants to make sure it does not disrupt
the s pace shuttle.
.. .,...
"ICTITIOUS aUSIMHI
MAMa ITAT•Malff TM tollOWlftt ,_...... .,.. dDlft9
llutllms•:
FANT/81DOLE CLAllENIONT,
17701 Mllc ll•ll Hort II, t rvlne,
C•lllomlt '2714. ,..,.. o.-.1opo,.,11c_.,,,11101
Mltc11911 Nortll, lrvlne, C•llfor·nle
t171l. w. Scott 81441•, 17701 Nlltclltll
Hortll, lrvlN, Collfornle '271>.
Tiils ..._. Is COftdUC1114 by e .. -.. ~-'"" 0e-.1opnw.1 c-P'fl•
IMnlwlll G. """
Joints
predict·
effects
Tuesday, August 11, 1981 at
2 : 30PM at Harbor Lawn·
Mount Olive Memorial Park.
Services under the direction
of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Mesa.
540·5554.
PARKEY Prttldll'll
BOSTON (AP) -The
hands of victims of
childhood diabetes tell
the story of miseries
likely to follow later in
life with complications
of blindness and kidney
failure. a s tudy con-
cludes.
KNOX JEFFREY RA NDAL
KNOX, resident of Costa
Mesa, Ca. for the past JO years. He was a veteran in
the U.S. Navy, he worked as
a cook at the Victoria Sta-
tion Restaurant for the past
10 years and was previously
a graduate or Corona del Mar High School. He is sur·
vived by his parents Clem
and Betty Knoit of Santa
Ana Heights, Ca ., brother
EWART R PARKEY. age Tiiis ... ...._, wu flleo wlu. u.
83. Resident of Las Vegas. County c-°' °' .... c-ty °" A .... 6, 1"1. Nevada. Passed away on ,..,. Thursday. August 6, 1981. Pu1>u11wte1 o •• ,. .. c oa11 oellv
Born in Sneedville, Ten· ~.:_~ ""'· 12~~· s.tK. 2•
nessee on September 14. ----------1897. He was a resident of Huntington Beach. Ca. for 33 years and was preceded in ----------death by his wife of 56 years. 'ICTITIOU$ 8USINISI NAMl ITATIMIMT Dona Parkey. He was re· Tiie to1tow1nt lleftoM er• c1o1n9 tired from North American 1>u1tn•H•: Aviation. He is surv ived by SERLING/NIAllSH, :DOJ Herbor
his son and daughter-in-law. 81~:;~"°"':.·~:.~!';. Joe and JoAnn Park ey -0f SotbAN.CAt110i. Las Ve1as. Nevada and his R~ S«t,.,..,. H. Fol• W••·
daughters and sons-In-law s.;~.~1:'·c0flduc1ed 11y e La Vera and Lonnie Aldridite _... .. ...,_..,.... of Huntington Beach. Ca .. and CMr10nt -Evelyn and Lloyd Wardlow Tiiis -.a.n-1 wu 111ec1 w1t11 ,,.
----------of Fountain Vall ey , Ca., County c1er11 "'Or'"9t CCMHlly °" Auo. It, ttll. N eotune Society a I s 0 8 u r v i \' e d by I J ,....,.
CREMATION au111AL AT SIA grandchildren and 12 great-Pwbllalled Oren .. Coeat O•llY
646_7431 grandchildren. Graveside ~.:_~1. ""'· 12;:;,:· Stllt. t.
services will be held on ----------v .. , IOCltl -.... 11., _.wet«•.. Tuesday, August 11 . 1981 at PHUC •nu ::.."'.',.~~~~· 1 :OOPM al Good Shepherd ----------~11,_1,...-1to1to Ce metery. Officiating will ~~2·=:"::"::· ====cam==·'=..,='·:!..! be Or. J . Allen Kirkpatrick -of the Southern Ba ptist
,..Cl llOnBS
SMITHS' MOITUMY
627 Matn St
11Unhngton Beach
536-6539 ---
• rM:McY•w
..-.0114&.PAH
Cemetery Mor1uary
Cttai>el·Crematory
3600 Pacific View Drive
~por1 Be•ch
644-2700
McCOIMCI MOITUAR•S
Laguna Beach
494·941S t.aouna Hills
f68;0933
Sen Ju~ C.p1strano
495·17'16
Church or Founlain Valley . Ca.
• TOMUN
ANNA E. TOMLIN. resi
dent of Costa Mesa. Ca Passed away on August 10
1981 in Costa Mesa . Ca. Sh
Is survived by her husban
John S. Tomlin. dallghte
Mrs. Mel Femmer of Marin
del Rey. ca .. son C. Robe
Clay ol Gardena. Ca .. step
daughter Donna Matthew
of Riversi de, Ca.. broUle
Glen Kuhns of Fullerton. Ca
Services will be held o
Thursday. August 13. 1981 a
2:30PM at Pacific Vie
Chapel with Rev. Bruce A.
Kurrie orrlclating. Inter
ment will be at Paclllc Vie
Memorial Park. Paclfl View Mortuary, Newpor
Beach, directors.
... ,,..
FICTITIOUS 8UllNHS
NAM•STAT•MaNT
Tiie ,.,.._Int ~ -dOlftt llltt!Nll•: COLLEGE OAK~. 11101 Mlt<llefl H.,,,,, lr'lllnt, Call'8ml• 92714.
F•nl/81441• Cl.,tmOflt, 177'1
Mltc11911 Nortll, lrvlM , C9llfOtl'I ..
'2714.
Tiiis IMIMu II ~ -, •
llmli.cl~. F9"1/..._ Cl.tlWllMI
8y .. Ml o.v....-.nt Co. ~ .... ..,_
MlrlNll G. FMt ~
Tiiis ·~ WN flied wltll 111t CeuMy CIHll of Or.... Cowtty t11
""-· '· ttl1. FMl'llM
PllMl1Mcl Or•n .. Coo1t Delly
....... Mil-"· "·,..""' 2, "" .,....1
SUN•~COU•TOP
CAL.I f'OltWtA ~----· 1,. .. _..., ..
tlMl'llllll"C ....... L.....,.,.._Hk'*t
Ftr0..ef"-a-.
By studying finger
joints, doctors are able
to predict who will de-
velop the worst conse-
quences o r juvenile
diabetes. according to a
report in the New
England Journal of
Medicine.
Childhood diabetes,
unlike the more com-
m on adult diabetes. fre-
quently damages the
small blood vessels. The
disorder is the leading
caus e of irreversible
blindness in the United
States.
R esearchers at the
Unive rsity of Florida
found blood ve ssel
damage is far more like-
ly if the victims have
s tiff finger joints,
a lthough the reason for
the relationship Is un-
certain.
The doctors calculated
diabetics face an 83 per-
cent risk of damage to
blood vessels after 16
years of diabetes il they
have stiff joints. The
danger is only 25 per-
cent if their fingers
move freely.
No link
in drug.
ZUNDEL oaoe•TO ..... CAUM ... CMMe8 ....... .
CHICAGO (AP) -
Use of tile anti-nausea
drug Bendecttn does not
appear to lncrease birth
defects in expectant
mothen who take It dur·
ing the ftnt trimester of
pregnancy, accordinf to
the most comprehensive
study of the dru1 to
date.
EMELIA MARJ ~._...NICMl•,_fllM•
ZUNDEL. resident ol Coal J9tllleftlllM~fw•~ ...
M-a c r th ""'•.......,•c-.•-"9 • a. qr e past l .,_ La&.aY M0tte1 '"OtOU
years. Passed away o • CftMTAL ""°"•'•MARGOT· AUfust 3, 1981. She was TIN. member of the Church " '' llero9Y ., .. ,,, tMt on
Jesus Christ of LatteN11y ::=:.•~.,...::::':
Saints, Cotta Meu Jr O.O-• 1-.iouwcMtCoMtr Wmt. SM lt aurvlved by h Ott.t-... ....... ~.•
d1u8bte' Barba a Johnson ::;-' ..... .::.• .=o~:.:O""it = ot o.& ...... Ca., slater Aaoa *' ...,.1 9'IY .... .-..ieR .., Mary llacJl(ensle an cu-.." -IHv•• 11et •
brother WUllam Zundel both •:=--....,.....,.. ... • C8" .. of Alaliama. Private ... ..., .... , ..... _....
mtmOJ'lal urvlcee were 111 .. lilllf .._ • s 1C •
held tor family memben on = :i:.:1!.e.~-= ty, The family rtquetll that 11 1 ....... ,,.... .... ..,., CODtributlonl bt made to the ... ...,...
Dt•bet• P'oundatlon, 11744 w~~~---
SkypUtr Blvd., Irvine, Ca. ~·• Harbor Lawn Mount Olive .._.a.. llortuaryotCoataMesadlr~· ~ .. ~ ..... ~ o.u, lora.M).5554. "'1 ...,
The study, involvin1
6,831 women, analysed
the relation of birth de-
f ecta to Bendeetln and
other commonly used
drup taken durinl the
tint three montb• of
prepancy.
Rtlultl ol the study,
publllbed lD the Joanal
ol tbe American lltdlcal
A11oclat1on, conftrmed
earlier, a ... extenai•t,
flndbap that BelldediD ••potUn .. not dlOCi•l·
ed wltll any particular
type ol malfonnatAoe.
-.,
APWll .......
A <fe/ectmg East German soldier leaps barbed wire bamcade on way to West Berlm and f reedom in
this December. 1961 photo. Such escapes have smce become 1mpos.~ible as the east side of the Berlin
Wall has been fortified with mmefields
Few ignore Berlin Wall
After 20 years, structure still symbol of death and tyranny
BERLIN <AP> -In the Soviet
zone of Berlin, the s potlights on
the Brandenburg Gate went
dark. Tanks and trucks rolled in-
to position bene ath its thick
sa nds to n e columns . Eas t
German militia in hobnailed
boots began rolling out barbed
wire.
lt was shortly before 2 a.m.
Sunday, Aug. 13, 1961. It was the
beginning of the Berlin Wall.
Twenty year s la t e r , t he
barbed wire has given way to a .
100-mile barrier which rings the
Western haJf of the city. The
wall s tands as an example of
German thoroughness. with tank
traps, automatic machine guns .
watchtowers and whitewashed
concrete walls.
The wall made West Berlin in·
to an island city, frozen under
Allied occupation some 100 miles
inside East Germa n territory. It
tore families and friends apart
and for millions became a sym-
bol of death and t yranny . But for
the East Germans, it s ymbolizes
at least one success story: The
functionary who s upervised con-
struction of the waJI -Erich
Honecker -is now the leader of
East Germany's government
and Communist Party.
The wall is something few can
ignore.
''It's kind of hard to miss a
14-foot concrete wall," s aid U.S.
Army Sgt. Steven Thillen of
Rockford, Ill .. commanding a
two-Jeep wtit patrolling the U.S.
sector. "I don't think Berliners
have learned to live with it.
They just put up with It."
Tbillen, an 8-year-old child
when the wall went up, patrols
the wall daily with five other
men ln two jeeps, one outfitted
with an M-60 machine gun.
Follo wing the post-war
division of Germany into mil·
itary occupation zones. move-
ment from the Soviet zone to
the zones occupied by the United
States, Britain and France
became increasingly difficult.
Berlin, as a city occupied and
protected by all the victors in
World War II, became the main
"escape batch " for those
wishing to flee the Commun.isl·
ruled East.
According to West German
figures, the year before the wall
was built some 150,000 people
fled to the Western zones. As
Iranians ban
mixed sexes
• on mountains
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Iran's Revolutionary Counc)l
hu banned men and women
from cllm bing mountains
together, Tehran Radio re·
ported.
It said the order was issued by
the Physical Traintn1 Depart-
ment followina a RevoluUoaary
CollDclJ decision to se1re1ate the
sex• on Ule mountain slopes.
The broadcast also reported
the council barred boxinl, Hy·
Int it wu not an Islamic sport.
Iran's fUndamentaU1t lllam1c
re1lme, whlcb overthrew the
moaardt1 ln um, bu ordered
that ma1H And females be
aep-ejated ln muy pubUe aDd
apOrtlDc evpu, lndudlq awtm. mtnc.
It mCCM1taiet Moelem ....
to..., velll wben ·~ in
public. •
E ast-West tensions mounted
during the Cold War and Soviet
leader Nikita S. Khrushchev de·
manded that the Allies leave
their sectors. the number of
refugees rocketed to an average
of 1,800 a day.
Many we re milita ry-age men
or highly trained t echnicians
vit al to the rebuilding of a state
stripped by the Soviets for war
reparations.
So while East Berlin's 1.1
million a nd West Berlin's 2.2
"It's kind of hard
to miss a 14-foot
concrete wall."
millfon residents s le pt, the wall
went up.
Seventy-one people are known
to have been killed attempting to
cross the wall since that Um~.
Now, the escapes from one baU
of Berlin to the other have been
reduced to a trickle.
The East German government
has hailed the wall ·as "the day
we saved peace in Europe.·· Two
weeks berore the 20th an-
niversary of the wall's.construc-
tion. the Communist Party
newspaper Neues Deutschland
published a lengthy article en-
titled, "How the Economic War
against the German Democratic
Republic Collapsed." It con-
tended that the wall was built to
protect East Germany from an
"impe.rialist" West bent on lur-
ing away the work force.
The Eas t Germans point to
their spectacular rise to the 10th
economic-industrial power in the
world and to the fact that the
wall forced some form or in·
ternational recognition for East
Germany as a nation.
After so many years. many
residents appear to take the wall
and Berlin's status as a fact or
life.
Children bounce their soccer
b~lls against it, graffiti artists
s pray-paint it with jokes.
political st at em e nts or ob -
scenities; fishermen throw their
hooks into the canals that form
watery borders to catch Com·
munist -own ed Cis h. Tourists
flock through the wall at check·
points, and Allied soldiers are
encouraged to cross the border
to see the East for themselves.
Even the East Germans show it
off, bringing virtually all visit·
i11g dignitaries to it for a view.
Sgt. James Welker. com-
mander of the autobahn crossing
where U.S. military vehicles
pass from East German ter-
ritory into West Berlin, said he
was sent to Russian-language
classes for a year so he could
deal with the Soviets a cross the
bo~der.
"We are the l<>weflt. level of
l•ce-to~ace contact with the
SovieU and we tceep It stmp)e -
no ~ti.cal disr!uJslons -jt.tit to
ht1lttate the opet"afton." the
29·year-<>ld military policeman
from La Grange. Ill .. said.
Will such contacts some day
allow the wall to come down?
Several years ago, Chanceller
Helmut Schmidt said he did not
believe the wall would be re-
moved in his llfetime.
lo an interview published in
the magazine Stern, former
Chancellor Willy Brandt, who
was Berlin's mayor at the time
of the wall 's construction,
echoed Schmidt's comments.
"The wall will disappear when
the relations in Germ any and
Europe radically change, and I
am rather skeptical whether I
will ever live to see the day,"
Brandt said.
it . '
-
I
' I -.. •
I '·
I
I.
I.
... .. .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedftt•day, Augu1t 12, 1981
A~ .....
CAT MAN Former professional football
player Greg Harris keeps a watch over his
pet. "Minka ... a 97·pound mountain lion.
When full grown. the cat should weigh about
160 pounds.
Photo labs
waste silver
WASHJNGTON <AP> -By falling to recover
silver Crom photographic wastes, 44 photo
laboratortes run by 24 government agencies threw
away silver worth as much as $32.5,000 in 1980 con-
gressional audJtors say. '
. The General Accounting Office, in a report,
said the "4 labs dumped 6,SOO troy ounces of silver
down the drain in 1980, and the practice continues.
Prices vary from day lo day, but the un-
recovered silver was worth between $71,500 and
S325,000 in 1980. and the cost of recovering It would
have been just a fraction of that amount. GAO
said .
The agency said the Defense Department and
Veteran_s J\dministratlon were doing a good job in
recovenng photographic silver, but many civilian
agencies ignored the problem, even though it was
called to their attention in a 1977 report.
Government agencies use substantial amounts
of film for medical X·rays, microfilm records. mo·
lion pictures and still photographs.
Silver can be recovered from scrap film and
from the film processing solution.
DEATH NOTICES .
OO&FMAN Craig A of Costa Mesa. Ca
DAVID DORFMAN. resi· and grandmother Glady11
dent of Lo.s Alamitos, Ca . Monwy11 of Garden Grove.
Passed away on August 10, Ca. Services held on Tue!! 1~1. He is survived by his day. Au gust It . 1981 al
wife Anne. h1r. daughters · 10 OOAM al Harbor Lawo
Roxana BI oo m or San Memorial Chapel with inter
Gabriel. Ca and JoAnne ment services immediately
WllJens of New Jersey, 3 followihg Senicelt unde1
brothers. 1 sister and 5 the direction of Harbor
grandchildren Graveside Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuar)' services will be held on of Cosla Mesu 540 55$4.
Tuesday, August 11 . 1981 at
2:30PM at Harbor Lawn.
Mount Olive Memorial Park.
Services under the direction
of Harbor Lawn Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Mesa
540·5M4.
KNOX
PARKEY
Travel curse
conquerable
BOSTON <AP) -Some people 1et tbote flnt
queasy reeUnaa jUJt thlnldn1 about buckln1 over
bil wavet on a Uttle boat or bouncln1 acro11 back
road1 ln a car with bad sprints.
But doctors say motion 1lckne11, that cur1e of
travel, can be conquered -at lust most of the
tlme.
The strategies ran1e from putUna kldl ln car
seats to slowing an astronaut's racln1 heart with
biofeedback. Ail of them may help None la
foolproof.
And this can be a problem tor people who
travel, however they travel. For no matter bow
dlsdalntully old salta vow that they never get
seasick, no human being with healthy lnner ears is
immune from this ailJnent.
Motion sickness drugs help lf the turbulence is
not too great. And most people will 1et used to the
movement and stop feeling ill in two or three days
al sea.
''Ninety percent of people will adapt to it or
respond to the drugs and be all right/' said Dr.
Charles Wood, a motion sickness expert at
Louisiana State University School of Medicine.
"But there is a certain percentag"e that only God
or avoiding it entirely, can help." '
People get seasick, carsick, airsick or
spaceslck because or overexcltement of their
vestibular systems. the structures In the Inner ear
that control balance. But sight, too, has something
to do with it.
The nausea usually starts when what you feel
differs from what you see.
"One theory is that it's a sensory conruct,"
says Wood. "You look at a room when you're alt·
ting aboard ship, and the room appears lo be ait·
ting still. And yet your vestibular tells you that
you're bouncing up and down. When you get on
deck, you can see the horizon. It resolves the con-
flict, because you can see what you're doing."
Staring at the horizon Is a time-honored and
effective way of relieving the effects or motion
sickness. It works, too. for people riding In cars,
especially children, who seem to be especially
prone to the illness.
Dr. Edward Schor of Baltimore City Hospitals
reported on a solution for kids' car sickness in the
New England Journal of Medicine.
S mall children often get sick when riding in
the backseat. The trick, Schor says, is to put the
child in a car seat so he can see the passing
scenery out the windows.
The Navy, for obvious reasons. has long been
interested in rinding a cure for motion sickness.
But the search has intensified in recent years since
astronauts found that floating weightlessly in
space stirs Its own revolting form of motion sick·
ness .
At the National Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration's Ames Research Center in Mountain
View, Calif .. doctors are working on a promising
treatment called aulogenetic feedback tralnlng.
Space sickness was a frequent nuisance for
astronauts in the Apollo and Spacelab programs,
and NA:;A wants to make sure it does not disrupt
the s pace shuttle.
... ,...
"ICTITIOUI eust•aM
·-• ITATaMellfT T ... !ol~ --M• CllMnt llusi-M: FAHTtalOOLE CLAltEMOHT. 17101 MllCll•ll Norlll, lrvln•. Cellfomla '2714.
Felli O....IOpNm Com~ny, 1no1 Mltcllefl N0<'111, Irvin., C:.lllornl• ,,,,,
W. Scott Bktdl•. 11101 Mll<Mll Nortll, lnrlne, C:.lllwnl• mu. Tlllt ..,.,_, II <~ by • 9tl~•l -1nenft ... I'-0.W...,._ICompefly --.10.,_ ,.,..,.,I
Tll~ ste•menl ••t fli.d •1111 IM County c-of OrMOI ~Y on
AUQ 6. 1•1. ,,'1111
P"lllltllecl Ore1\9t COHI Oelly
Piiot. Ayt. IJ, It, 26, Sepe. 2.
,., 36~1
Joints
predict·
effects
BOSTON (AP> -The
hands of victims or
childhood diabetes tell
the story of miseries
likely lo follow later in
life with complications
of blindness and kidney
failure , a study con·
eludes.
JEFFREY RANDAL KNOX. resident of Costa
Mesa, Ca. for the past 30
years lie was a veteran in
the US Navy, he worked as
a cook at the Victoria Sta
lion Restaurant for the past
10 years and was previously
a graduate of Corona del
Mar High School. He 1s sur
vived by his parenla Clem and Betty Knox of Santa
Ana Height!!, Ca .. brother
EWART R. PARKEY. age
83. Resident of Las Vegas.
Nevada. Passed away on
Thursday. August 6, 1981
Born in Sneedville, Ten·
nesaee on September 14 ,
1897. He was a resident of Huntington Beach. Ca for 33 years and was preceded in ----------death by his wile of ~ years. "CT•Tiou1 au11••11
By studying finger
joints. doctors are able
to predict who will de·
velop the worst conse-
quences or juvenile
diabetes. according to a
report in the New
England Journal of
Medicine. •AM• l'TAT8Ml•T Dona Parkey. lie was re ™ '°'~ ,.,_ .,. clOift9
tired from North Amerir an 11u.i-•: Avtalton. He 11 survived by SEltLING/MAltSH, JJOJ Horllef
hls 1100 and daughler-in·law. •1~::;~':;:.·~:i.~'!';,
Joe and JoAnn Parkey of s.AloMo,CAtm>. Las Vegas, Nevada and his lltk.1-d SMlfte. m N. Fol• Woy,
,daughters and sons-in law s.;::.~7:!\0llduc,.., by •
Lavera and Lonnie Aldrld11e 99f*'•I~. or Huntington Beach. Ca .. and Gller!ofte Mo~11 ' Evelyn and Lloyd Wardlow Tlllt ... ..,.,_, ... , .. .., wllll l:W
----------of Fountain Valley, Ca .. C-y c1er11 of Or811t9 Go<Hl(y on ""'-11, 1'11. Neptune Societ a I s 0 s u r v Ive d b y I I .. I..,. Y grandchildren and 12 great· P .. 111111 .. 0 O••net1 cooat Oelly CltlMATION IUlltlAL AT HA Pltot, Aue. 12 lt ,. Sept 2
6,..6_7431 grandchildren. Graveside "'' ;..,.;~1• • • _.. services will be held on
., .. , -1o1 -""IY --... .... ,.. T d A t I I 98 "'"1,.. .. , .. ..,....,"1 ,,..,0.._., ues ay, ugu1 . I l at -··•-c,_..i.. ... mc... 1 :OOPM al Good Shepherd c.11..,,,..._..NI.. Cemetery. Orriclatlng will
~=Jt:="':: .. ==:===cam==·'•=r.~ be Dr. J. Allen Kirkpatrick -of the Southern Baptist
,..Cl llOTMllll
SMn'HI' WOITUMY
627 Main St
Huot~aoh
• ,Aelfle YllW .._.,.,AL,MI
Cemtl4HY Mortuary Ola pet-Crematory
3500 PacUlc view Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
Church of Fountain Valley.
Ca.
. TOMUN
ANNA E. TOMLrN. real
dent of Costa Mesa, Ca
Passed away on August 10
1981 in Costa Mesa. Ca. Sh
la survived by her husban John S. Tomlin. dal.lghte
Mrs. Mel P'emmer of Mann
del Rey, Ca .. &on C Robe
Clay of Gardena, Ca .. step·
daughter Donna Matthew
or Riverside, Ca . brothe
Glen Kuhns or Fullerton. Ca
... ,...
"CT'ITIOUI 8Ull•HI NAMalTAHM••T
Tiie '-'-Int 119rtOM 8A .......
1111si-u: cou.101 OAl(S, 17101 MltCNll H-. lrvllw, callfomt• tz7 IA. l'•nl/8ld.ie CIU•m.,.I, 177'1 Mllclletl Nonll. lrvlM, Colltomlo
'1714. TM1 bwelMM It ~ a., o
""'"'"' "9't""""'-· "WfVllddle CIM--.c 8y .. Olll O.W....,_t Co.
a.Mr .. Pet'IMI'
l!NnMll G. "ont ,.,....,.
T,.,_~w•lllM wltll 1119 ClilllltY Clef1l Of 0..Mt9 Collllty M •"1.t.1•1. "'"* PuMltMCI Oron .. CNtt Dolly
....... .-.. 12, "·-....., t, Hit JUUi
Childhood diabetes,
unlike the more com·
mon adult diabetes, fre·
quently damages the
small blood vessels. The
disorder Is the leadlne
cause or irreversible
blindness in the United
Stales.
Researchers at the
University of Florida
found blood vessel
damage is far more like·
ly if the victims have
sti ff finger joints .
although the reason for
the relationship is un·
certain .
The doctors calculated
diabetics face an 83 per·
cent risk or damage to
blood vessels after 16
years of diabetes if they
have stiff joints. The
danger ls only 2S per·
cent if their fingers
move freely.
Services will be held o ----------
Thursday, August 13. 1981 a MIC •ra
No link
in drug,
,
2 : 30PM at Pacific Vie.
Chapel with Rev. Bruce A
Kurrie orticlaling. Inter
ment will be at Pacific Vie
Memorial Park. Paclfl Vlew Mortuary, Newpor
Beach. di.rectors.
MN•NMI COUH °' CMJNttWIA
COUlfTY CM' Oii AH a ,,. .. M.-r ..
-~ ........ ~== .,....
ZUNDEL CMHMl•TOIMOWCAUN .... ~ ......... EMELIA MARI L.elllf~NkMk'-m..•
ZUNDEL, resident or Coat ""*" 111 ... ~ "" .. .,., • Mela Ca r th ...... ......., .. Ci._..flll'MIM • . Qr e past l ,,_ 'llk•V AMO••• ~ICHOU ye an. Paased awa)' o • CttMTAL ,.,..,._, •• MA•OOT·
Aurust 3, 1981. She wa1 ""· member of the Church 11 1• ,.., • .., ., .. , •• '"•' •II
Je1ua Christ of Latter-day ::.=.•=---.:::': Satnh. Co1ta Meu 3r :c••"•u•NtCtv!lc.MW Ward. She~ 1urvtved. by h ._..,..AM.~ ...
dau-. BarNra John on :::'.-• .::' ..:.~:.!i .. it =
Of Del Mar, Ca., titter A•na tttey """1 ..., Nl4' "''""" .., Mary MtcKentl• an c1'•11t9 .. 11•-111e1114l 11••.,.
brOUter WU II am Zllftdel bolb "::"' ._..., ......... • _,,,., of Alabama . Prlvatt ... .,., ...... _.,......_
memorial urvlc" w•r• "' .. 011ty ""'-• on C •
held for famll)' members on· = ~=-==-• = ly, 11w family requeata that 11 1 1 ....... ,,..,. .... .,.,
toatribuUonl be made to t~ -:.=r--
SDtabetfl ro..nctaUon. ln44 ~~,;.....,. kyswk Blvd., Irvine, Ca ,,_..., ..
Harbor Lawn·Mounl OUvt ---~
'MortuaryofCOltaMeHdlrtc• ~\!'i"..:t" Detty
ton. 540-5554. ""
f
, .
CHICAGO <AP> -
Use of t)le anti-nausea
dru1 Bendectln doea not
appear lo lncrease birth
defects in expectant
mothers who take lt dur-
ina the ftrat trtmetter or
prelJWlCY, accordlna to
t.he most comprehensive
study of the dru1 to
date.
The study, involvtna
8,837 women, analyzed
the relation of birth de·
fecta to Bendectln and
other commonly used
drup taken durin1 the tint three month• or
pre1NDCY.
Renita ol the 1tudy,
pubUthed tn the Jo.amal
OI the American lltdleal
As10ClatJon, conftrmed earlier, 1... extealv•,
ftndlnp that 8endedin
e•IM*U'e ta not ueoelat·
ed wtUI an1 putanlar
t1pe ot ma.UormaUon.
~--_,..--~~----~----=:......-lir-~---------------------..;......_ ............... ~--J
• • • • • • • • p . . . . .. -
..........
A c:U!/ecting East German soldier leaps barbed wire barncade on way to West Berlin and freedom m
this December. 1961 photo Such escapes have since become 1mpos:uble as the east side of the Berlin
Wall has been /ort1/1ed with m1n€/ields
Few ignore Berlin Wall
After 20 years, structure still symbol of death and tyranny
BERLIN (AP! -In the Soviet
zone of Berlin, the spotlights on
the Brandenburg Gate went
dark. Tanks and trucks rolled in·
to position beneath its thick
sandstone columns . East
German militia in hobnailed
boots began rolling out barbed
wire.
It was shortly before 2 a m .
Sunday, Aug. 13, 1961. It was the
beginning of the Berlin Wall.
Twe nty years later. the
barbed wire has given way to a .
100-mHe barrier which rings the
Western half or the city. The
wall stands as an example of
German thoroughness, with tank
traps, automatic machine guns .
watchtowers and whitewashed
concrete walls.
The wall made West Berlin in·
to an island city. frozen under
Allied occupation some 100 miles
inside East German territory. It
tore families and friends apart
and for millions became a sym-
bol of death and tyranny. But for
the East Germans. it symbolizes
al least one success story: The
functionary who supervised con·
struction or the wall -Erich
Honecker -is now the leader of
East Germany's government
and Communist Party.
The wall is something few can
ignore.
"It's kind of hard to miss a
14-foot concrete wall," said U.S.
Army Sgt. Steven Thillen of
Rockford, Ill., commanding a
two-J eep unit patrolling the U.S.
sector. "I don't think Berliners
have learned to live with it.
They just put up with it."
Thlllen, an 8-year-old child
when the wall went up, patrols
the wall daily with five other
men In two jeeps, one outfitted
with an M-60 machine gun.
Following the post-war
division of Germany into mil·
itary occupation zones, move-
ment from the Soviet zone lo
the zones occupied by the United
States, Britain and France
became increasingly difficult.
Berlin, as a city occupied and
protected by all the victors ln
World War II, became the main
"escape hatch" for those
wishing to nee the Communist·
ruled East.
According to West German
figures, the year before the wall
was built some lS0,000 people
fled to the Western zones. As
Iranians ban
mixed sexes
• on mountains
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> -
Iran'• Revolutionary Counc)I
has banned men and women
from clim bins mountains
to aether. Tehran Radio re·
ported.
It aald the order wa1 issued by
the Phyalcal Trainln& Depart-
ment ro11owtn1 a Revolutionary
Council decialon to 1e1re1ate the aex• Oil the mountain 1lope1. ne broadcut alto reported
tbe councU barred boldq, H)'-
tn1 It wu not an l1lamJe sport.
Iran's f\andamentaU1t lllamle
repmeh whlcb overthrew the
monarc 1 ln 1m, hu °"*"
that malea and female• be
tel".lated in man1 publle ud sportlq tvfDt.I. lncludlq mm. mtnc.
It tncour.,es lloel•m ..,...
to weal' Yeill Wba I,,.... In
pubUc. •
East-Wes t tensions mounted
during the Cold War and Soviet
leader Nikita S Khrushchev de·
m a nded that the Allies leave
their sectors. the number or
refugees rocketed to an average
of 1,800 a day.
Many were military-age men
or highly trained technicians
vital to the rebuilding of a stale
s tripped by the Soviets for war
reparations.
So while East Berlin's l.1
million and West Berlin's 2.2
"It's kind of hard
to miss a 14-f oot
concrete wall."
million residents slept, the wall
went up.
Seventy-one people are known
to have been killed allempt.in1 to
cross the wall since that Um~.
Now. the escapes from one half
of Berlin to the other have been
reduced to a trickle.
The East German government
has hailed the wall ·as "the day
we saved peace in Europe." Two
weeks before the 20th an-
niversary of the wall's.construe·
lion. the Communist Party
newspaper Neues Deutschland
published a lengthy article en-
titled, "How the Economic War
against the German Democratic
Republic Collapsed." It con·
tended that the wall was built to
protect Ea.st Germany from an
"imperialist" West bent on lur·
ing away the work force.
The East Germans point to
their spectacular rise to the 10th
economlc-induatrial power in the
world and to the fact that the
wall forced some form or in·
ternationaJ recognition for East
Germany as a nation
Arter so many years. many
residents appear to take the wall
and Berlin's status as a fact of
life.
Children bounce their soccer
balls against it, graffiti artists
s pray-paint it with jokes.
political statem ents or ob·
scenities. fishermen throw their
hooks into the canals that form
watery borders to catch Com·
munist -owned fish . Tourists
flock through the wall at check·
points, and Allied soldie~ are
encouraged to cross the border
to see the East for themselves.
Even the East Germans show it
off, bringing virtually all visit·
ing dignitaries to it for a view.
Sgt. James Welker. com·
mander of the autobahn crossing
where U.S . military vehicles
pass from East German ter-
ritory into West Berlin. said he
was sent to Russian-language
classes for a year so he could
deal with the Soviets across the
border.
"We are the loweei level ol
ftte·Co·face contact with the
Sovteu and we teep It stmpae -
no poijU,caJ discmston.s -JUJt lo
tacllltilte-the opt't'afton," the
29-year-t>ld military policeman
from La Grange, Ill.. said.
Will such contacts some day
allow the wall to come down?
Several years ago, Chanceller
Helmut Schmidt said be did not
believe the wall would be re·
moved in his lifetime.
In an interview published in
the magazine Stern, former
Chancellor Willy Brandt, who
was Berlin's mayor at the time
of the wall's construction,
echoed Schmidt's comments.
"The wall will disappear when
the relations in Germany and
Europe radically change, and I
am rather skeptical whether I
will ever li ve to see the day,"
Brandt said.
!Off GtnnCin bonier QUGfdl r~ bodr o/ Petn Fkhl•r. JI.
/frat perlOfl..to ,,.,Uh au,..., to cn>1• thf SerUft Wall to tht
West 0111Augu.tt11, 1961.
• \ ..
·"4---,..-------~~---------1------_.;..,-----------~--~t--~~-.;..--
-
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Augu1t 12, 1981 ••• ----------------------~~------------------------· ---------------------_--.... 1·------~·---'!"----------~i--------------------~---1------------------------·-------------------~~1------------------------(J< '91.. ,_... PIU Illa PIU 1911( fml... ... .. .....
N•1t1tl N•7MU •1CTtnWU4#t1111u "'T OT -....... lfATIJMltT NOTIC• Of' 01~ H Of' N ICI -D•ATH 01' TIM ...... ,flt ,.,_, ., ....... J I AHN I I . K 111K0 H A R R Y ( N • M • N • ) ..,,..,.. .. •: ANO Of' NTITION TO I I I SI R AN D 0 ~ llXTU.HTH ""HT JOINT
ADMINllTl!1' aSTAT• l'•TITION TO AO· :.::i~~~~~'· HO. A-t..... MINIST•9' l!STATI! NO. IClt..t..Y UiOW, !M71 e,v,,....,.
To •I I ht I r 1 , A·t""'°' ~.~1Mc11.CA-....
bentflcler lH, creditors T o • I I h t I r 1 , ••1t'-A iltOW, ""'' ..,.-.... WM """4llllMll 9eKll. CA ........ end contingent creditors of btneflclerlts, creditors Mt CH Aii. sit1v1Y, , .. 11 Jeanne e. Klsako and •ndcontlnoentcredltonof ..,. ..... '--. HW!tl .... 9ffcll,
persont who may be Herrv (N.M .N.) Geiser ~::".Mi-. 1, <MlllK'I .. h • otherwise Interested In the I nd pert0ns Who may be ..,..,., ,...,~.
wlll and/Of' estate: otMJ'wlse lnttrested In the 1<tttr1Mw A. petition hH been filed w lll and/or estett: T"1' .....,_.. -,. ... w1111 tM
by Jcathlffn Garnsey In A petition has bffn filed ~~tci.t;" 0r..,.. Cewlty °" ""''
the Superior Court of by June ~Iser L~n t. ,.1...,.
Orenve County requesting Lela E . Geiser In the ,.....,..,... erMet c.. .. o.uy ,.1 ....
that Kathleen Garnsey be Superior Court of Orenge Jiiiy "· "· ""'· s. 1a. '"' ii1M 1
appoi nted as personat County requestlno that -'BLIC NOTICE -
•1~tTtOUI MIMMI• '6AMlllTAH ... llT Tiie ,..._l"t -Miit .,. .. lllt
!NtJMU•t • M,L.I DILIVCltY HltVl(I, 1UU eelu Ave1111e, U11U H ,
W.ttnl~ CA tt11a '-UTHlji Ll .. OY MOTT, lbOO eolM A-. Unit 16, WftlmlMtet,
CAtMIS. IONA M.ICI MOll, 1 ........ Ave11ue, Unit S., Wet1m1111ter. Cit .,..,,
Tlli. ....... It_.._ 11¥ ell i... dlvl41 ... I.
LlllMt I.Mt¥ -Tftlt ......,_I wa flied wttll .. C.U111y CllR of Of.,_ c-y.., Jiiiy
lt, "" P1'1WI P1!41111Nd 0rM91 C.0.tl o.lly Pl'"-Jwy ~ . ..,._ s, u. "· 1•1 ntl-41
PUBLIC NOTJrv.
l'ICTITlout eUtttllM NAMI STAT8fdNT
representative to ad-June Geiser Logan & Lela rv
minister the utate of E. ~Iser be eppolnted as -----------P1CT1T1ou1au1111H1
Jeenne e. Klszko of Costa personal representatives I PICTlftOUUu••••U MAMa ITATIMUfT Tiie f91!fffln• ,._.._, tre Hlflt _._ .. ,
SWEllT ALICI MUSIC, IHJ
PIK..,11• Aw., G•t.a Mone, Ga, '2627 AllU ~C:•lhHll, 1!21 W, CM• H'911wey,........, 9Hcll, Ca . .,.._,
Metil Otvldloll, 111 Pel""' St., COiie Mtw, C., m21
M esa, c a. (under the In-to administer the estate of TM,..-:=.·=~:.... IMlsl ,.!~.1.°'IOWl"I .. ,..., 11 dOl ... tlull·
dependent Administration Harry (N .M .N.) Geiser of IMHHI ILIDIHO OUAGI DOOR\ 1~1 of Estates Act). The petl· Costa Mesa, Ca. <under THI O,OLO utcHANOll, ~2 M11c11e11,T"'u".c.o111ot111•tMO'
I I f h I I th I d d t "'d AkOnl.ltvlN,c.lllttcfllet'l71S SLIDING GARAGE 00011 CO .. t on s set or ear ng n • n e Pen en "' -A1t11 v.,....,.1. toci Attorn, 1rvin., 1)41 Mllc,.11, T.,,11,,, c;.11,°",,1• ""° Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic ministration of Estates c.111or111u21u ,.,.11e11 o..y c-.1. J•. 1~1
Tllll IMitlNU It COfldllUH Dy e ....... 1_._.,...., Center Drive West, Santa Act). The petition is set for "''• NIMM I• t~ D, •n In· Mllc11t11, T .. 1111. c.i11°""'••MO
"n•, Ce. 92701 on Sep-hearl~ In "--t. No. 3 at ,. • ..,... T111t _.,,. .. i, c-i.ci bJ.., 1,, .
Allw Mc:C.1111111 "' '" ..,..,... Al• Vtnlult dlvlClll•I. tember 21.1981at9:30 A .M . 700 C vie Center Drive n11 ... ..,....,. wa 111.a •"".,. Fr..i<la G<IY c-11• Tl1ll _, •• 111 .. with trle c-iy Clefl>. of o...... CeuMy Oft
A..,.I0,1'"
IF YOu OBJECT to the West, Santa A.na, Ca. 92701 c-ty0eRofO.-~ytf1Ju1, Jr
ti f th tltl n on "-ptembe 2 1981 at 21, 1t11. T111a •tetement wn 111ec1 w1111 -gr an ng o e pe O , .,., r • P1U'11 county c1-of Ol'enoe cou111y on Jiiiy PIN*
PUClllSllM Or ..... Cotlt Delly Piiot you should either appear 9: 30 A.M . P11b11"*' o..,,.. cot11 o.11y P11ot. 20. 1tt1.
A14 12. lt, ». leelt. 2, ,,., "'6-41 at the hearing and state IF YOU OBJECT to the Juty tt, ""'-s, 11, "· "" U»4'I "'MO'
your object ions or flle granting of the petition, -PUBLIC NOTICE--Ju~:;~'.~~~2~•11 0•11;2~'::· written objections with the you should either appear
court before the hearing. at the hearing and state
Your appearance may be your o~ect ions or file PiCT1T1ou1 •u11111111 PICTITIOUI •u••••u J I NAMa ITATIMINT NAMl ITATIMlllT In person or by your at-written ectlons w th the Tiit 1offowt,. .,.,,_ 1, •ine tius1·
TN ... _,,._._, 11 dolft111W1o-torney. court before the hearing ........
_. ., I F Y O u A R E A Your appearance m ay be 1NTE1t STAMP co .. a.1 G-.-s_'::'~; ~!'!~".':~~. 1~ CREDITOR or a cont-in person or by your at-L-.. ~=~Y~A<;.~~-G••noit••
.,..., lngent creditor of the de-torney. L-. c.taMeM,CAm.n.
K•tll•rl11• ''""· iou LH ceased, you must file your 1 F y o u A R E A Thi• !Ml,..., 11 conc1Uett11 bY e111,,. Cerll10t,WettCowln•,ee.tt79t claim with the court or C REDITOR or a cont-dlvlC111•1;..~yGr~ Tlllt~tlltorlductM •Y.,,111-....,. -" dlvlduol. present It to the personal lnoent creditor of the de-Tllb ... ~ ... llled wllll -~1 .. .-representat ive appointed ceased, ~ou must file your c._,,,,,cieno10renoec-tvonJu1v
n1s .u..,,_, .. ., 111-4 """" o. by the coort within four cl aim with the court or 21• 1"1· •1671n County Cieri& ol Ou1199 Cou11ty °" r Aueu111o. 1•1 months from the date of present it to the personal P11b11.-°'.,. eoe11 oe11y Piiot,
Ptwiu f irst Issuance of letters as representative appointed Jo.11ytt,Aue.s.12, 1t, 1'11 u.u1
P11Dll"*' 0r.,. co .. , oe11, Piiot provided In Section 700 of by the court within four
_A_.,._·_12_·t_,_.,,._._Se9' __ ·2_·_1•_1 __ w_•_ .. _.1 t h e Pro bate Code of months from the da te of
California. The time for first Issuance of letters as
filing c laims will not ex-provided In Sect ion 700 of -----------1pire prior to four months t h e Probate Code of "~~'::!:~::::' from the date of the hear-California. The time for r11e 1V11-1ng .,.,_, 11 c1o1,.. llusl· ing noticed abOve. f iling claims w ill not ex-
11•.::.:=LJLLY FILLY _ BOUTIQUE YOU MAY EXAMINE plre prior to four months
POUR LE JEUNE FILLE. im e. .. the flle kept by the court. from the date of the hear-
cou t Hlt ll••Y. coro11• d•I Mer. If yoo are Interested in the Ing noticed abOve.
c.i11or111e'261S estate, you may flle a re-YOU MAY EXAMINE o04orn ,. Krwu, • C•lllO<'fll• <Of· quest ~1th the court to re-the file kept by the court. POt•ll4n. J07 Miiford Ori,.., Cw-dill ...
Nil.IC llltE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTlnous •UllNllU NAMll ITAT•MllNT Tiie loOOWlftl person It dolno bull·
MU .. : MOllLi MOTORCYCLE REPAIR t. RENTAL, 1749 S•Yl•r-LeM, N--1 ~"• Celll.,..111• 92MO Wllllem J-Edel,,...,., Jr., 110 Sll:ylerll LMW, Colllorllle tJJMO Tlll1 ~ .... , It cOftdu<led by tn Ill· dlvldu•I
Wiiii..,. J-Edel""""' Jr Mer, CA mJS. celve special notice of the If you are interested In the
T11l1 lllAlftH1 '' tonci..ctff by..,.,,. inventor y of estate assets estate, yoo may file a re-T111a ... ._, •• , 111..i .. 1111 111e
•11•1-· and of the petitions, ac-quest with the court to re-count, c1er1< o1 °'-county on Jwl• Oolorn de Krull 21 "" T111s •'-'-• •M "'" w1111 111e coun ts and re Po rts celve special notice of the • · p,.11,.
COll"I' Cler-ol 0t•"99 County tft described In Section 1200 inventory of estate assets Publl.,,.., Or-co.11 Delly Piiot, Aue.>.''"· Pl., .. of the California Probate and of the petitions, ac-July n . Aue. s. n. n.1 .. 1 :wHI
PUC111.-0r_,.c .. 110.11yP1eot. Code. cou nts and reports -----------
Auo s. 12. "· H, '"' mo.et described In Section 1200 PUBLIC NOTICE
KLEIN & CUTLER, At- of the California Probate -----------
torneys at uw, by: Leslie Code. ,.1amounuse11111ss
K leln, 9920 La Cienega NAMUTATIMINT PICTITIOUI aUllNIU NAMI STATaMl•T Blvd., Ste. 631, Inglewood, MEAD AND MEAD, At-Ttw 1011ow1na ,.,_, 11 001,,. busl·
Ca. 90301 ; tel: 213/641-SIOO torneys at Uw, by: Fr~nlc "'"•.•:,.·co au1LOERs suPPLV. u14 Tiie lollowl111 persons ••• dol111 ..... 1-•t: J·B INVl!STMENTS, .,, 8•1-0r., 5MI INcll, Ce. to7«1
F. Mead, Ill, 1101 Dove NtwPor1llV<1 .. eoa1a -...011tom1• PuDllllWd 0r*'1111t Cotrt Delly Piiot Street, Suite 170, Newport .,,,,
A"'· '2• u· "· 1•1 J62J~I Beach, ca. 92660; tel: 0-lcl s. -· ... De Sol• T•r· IMt1I c lllt*M<ll, •12 8•1-0r .. SHI 8Mcll, Ce. to7«1 Rotem•ry L. lledeb•tll, ttJ •••-°'·· s... e..:11. c •. to1«1 NS-79'12 C-..t'll S. Jenllllls, 1101 L-"'9 A ..... SM18Mc11,ce.to1c NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Tiii• bual,..u 1' conc111cted by • WALTER KISZKO AND oentrel~. 0 Mw11 c.e1NtNc11 F PETITION TO AD·
T111s l\tWtlWlt w•s 111ec1 w1t11 ti. MINISTER ESTATE NO. Cou111y ci.r-ol Or•"Ve Cou11ty Oft A-109l34.
A ...... IO, "''· T I I h . p,.,..., o a e 1 r s ,
Put>11-0r-coe11 0.11, P11o1 beneficiar ies, credit ors
A.,., 12. "· ». s.ot. 2. 1•1 """'' and contingent creditors of Piil.iC !ITU · Walter Klszko and persons
who may be otherwise In·
PICTIT10Ut •u1111au NAMI ITATIMINT Tiit lollowlf'll .,.,_ It CIOll\I bull· MU .. : tlLLS GLASS WOltKS, US N.
CM-••. A-Im. C•. '*' Wllllem .,_,, Me<,, W H. Cftlp. .,._, .-,,.,.1,.,,, Ce '*1 Tiiis butlMM It C-.C-by .,. .,,_ dlvkluel. Wllllem 8. Meo
Tiiis --was flied wlll\ IM c-•Y ci.n ot Or•,... cou11ty on A119Usl tO, 1911. PtWIM PllClllthecl Or-Cotrt O.lly Piiot A .... 12, It. 2', Se91. 2, 1'111 U6HI
....C•Tll
terested in the w ill and/or
estate:
714/UJ..9033 ·~~i:=:::..:11~~~:~::~.
,..._._ OrClfl99 C411tC Delly Pllol
A119. 11, IJ, It. 1•1 MJIMI
PICTITIOUI au11•11ss NAMl ITATIMl•T Tiit lol._ftl _... 11 dolflt tlutl· ....... SIERRA OIL PARTNERS V, 11113 ••oo-ll11rst, Fev11t•l11 V•ll•Y. CA n101. FltANK R. DARLI NG, llllJ aroOllurtt, Fou11teln Velle,, CA n7oe Tllh butlMu Is c-clff by • llmlled psr1ner1Np. Fr-R.0-11 .. Tiiis Jte-.1 -flled wlttl h Cou11ty Cler11 CJll Ol'M191 C-y Oft July 20, 1M1. Pl-Publltlled Or-Coast 0.lly Piiot, Jul' 22, 2', Aul. s, 12, t•t 12n~1
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI eu11••• MAMI ITATIMINT TN 1 .. 11w1119 _...,, •re dolftl Du.._., TRAO!Elt JO«'S MARKET NO. as, tU I . 17111 lltrttt, CHI• MtH, Ctlllornlen.27.
dlvlcluel.
OoNklS.-Tllls atelemtftt ••• llled wllll ltMt County Cler1I ol Orenge c-ty 011 July 24, I'll
Pl ..... PuDllllWd Or.,. Cotll Delly Piiot, July 2', Aug. J, 12. 19, 1•1 ,_...,
-~--~~~--~--~-
PUBUC NOTICE
PICT1T10UI austNIU ..._ITATIMINT
....!.~°!~I"' ,.,,_, ... 09'111 ~
11 1 DIVEltSll"IED COM· MODITll!S INTEltNATIONAL; UI DI STltleUTION CONSULTANTS INTIERNATION4L; UI M.U.M.S AEltO -AUTO cunERS, 1500 s. LYOft S1.-, s...t. AN, CA '210S. 04VIO WAYNE MILLER, 11141 M ltll A-, F-teln V•lley, CA '270I. JOHN ARLIE UNGER, 1*1t CO#'llle Circle, Viste, CA '20l3. Thia _.!IHI 11 tllftdutled by • -·l ~p. 0.vld W•-,ne Miiier llllt lt.1-1 was llled wltll Ille COUflty Clet1c of Of-c-ty Oft July ll, 1911.
'-""" PubUthecl Ol'etlQlt C.0.11 Delly Piiot, July H. Aug. S, 12, 1', 1•1 DJ1~1 ----------------
PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS aUSINEU NAMI STATIMINT
"Cnnoua evti••u ~.,..,.. .... ,
Tiie , ......... --· .,. delq _, __ ,
MC L.900/fOACll'IC AJIOCIATal,
""• hMJtt Clrclt, Hv11ll .. t1" ••ec:ll.CA ...... 0-..-Mcl.Hcl, , ... ._.,. CltCle,l'Mlt ........ 11,CAtllMt. AleHnder Oun MCLHI , "* lenolrt Circle. Hllfttln.-.n 1~11. CA ..... Tllll W.ltwu It <M ... ~IM lty e "" ........ woe. OMt•-Mcl.eocl Tlllt .. ._.was fll ........ c_., c1 ... 1i " o..,,.. c-ty tft A .... J, ,.,, ,.,., .. "'*'.,.... er.,. c. .. 0.11, ,.1..._ A111, ,, ti, tt, M. I_, ,.._.I
PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS eUllNIU NAMI STATIMINT
A petition has been filed
by Kathleen Garnsey In
the Superior Court of
Orange County requesting
that Kathleen Garnsey be
appointed as personal
representative to ad·
minister the estate of
Walter Klszko of Costa
Mesa, Ca. (under the In·
dependent Administration
of Estates A ct>. The peti-
tion is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Clvlc
Center Drive West, Santa
Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep·
tember 2, 1981at9:30 A.M .
PtOlllO M•rlltt No. I. l"c., • C•lllor11le c..,_•tlOfl, S» Min'-' Strttt, ScMltll (lteudef\e, C•lllorftl•
t11QO.
T11e 1011-1119 persons ••• doing ---
Tiie IOllowlftg ,,..._ 11 doll\I buM ,, ..... ,
XCALllEA INVESTMENTS, JltS EHi Caul ........ Y . .,04, C._ *4 M.,. CA mn. L•wrtfttt J. Vlenl, UOO P•r-
Nt--1, •>12. N.._, e .. d\ CA ., ....
Tlllt llullneu It conductH by "" Ill• dlvl-. ~J.v1 ... 1 TI!lt .U-wes 111 .. wltll tM Cou11ty Cltrll ol .Or•"Ve Count' °"
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objections with the
court before the heiring.
Your appearance mav be
in person or by your at·
torney. A119, J, 1911. Pl.,.. I F Y 0 U A R E A
PyllllWcl o..,. Coul O.lly Pll°" CR EDITOR or a cont·
Au1. '· •2. "· 2', '"' u 21 .. t lngent creditor of the de-
PICTITIOUS aUllNIU •AMI ITATlfd•T TN followl111 --• .,. cto1111 llutl,...n: C04$TLINE MAltlNE SERVICll,
419 Mel11 $1., Sle. 21, Hu11t1119to11 Bte<h, Ce. nMI
Mef11n H. T,ler, Jl9 H""'41,,._ St., H...e....,, 8Mcll. O. nMI ltM ~. 719 "-'' Otlw, ~8Mcll,Ca.
Th11 ....i-11 tonclueled by e cor·
pontllM. PRONTO MARKET NO. 1,
INC.
Oevkl YOO., S.CreUtry Tiiis IU'-1 •• llled wllll 1M COUflly Cieri! ol Ot-Couftty Oft A111. ), 1.,. l'tUW PUlll"'*f Or ..... CMtl 0.11' (ltlloC. A .... S, 12. It, 2', I_, lJIH1
PICTITlouteUllN•U UMllTATIMINT
TN '911"1119 ...,_ It doifte ....,. ...... : CALll"OftNIA SIDING, lOIS So. y_,, Neu, SMte Mt, CA '2707. p, .. ,.,,,_ $Hr .. 201J So. v ... Neu. SMle Mt, GA '2107. Tlllt llutlftesl II cOftduc lied by e11 Ill· ............
~4.SMra Tllh ....,.,_, -llled wl1" 1M c-1., Clerti ., C>re11tt cou11ty °" A111. J, Ult. Pttl .. 1 f'ulll"'*f OrMet CMtt Dtlly Piiot. Aut. S, ll, tt, H, ltl1 USU1 Tlllt butlMn 11 tondllcttd b' • lll'llllM~. MwtlnTyler
ceased, vou must file your
claim with the court or
present It to the personal
representative appointed
by the court within four
months from the date of
first Issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
fllino claim s w ill not ex·
plre prior to four months
from the date of the hear-------.. ------Ing noticed abOve. ,_ .. ,._
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the fife kept by the court.
,.,..,,, If you are Interested In-the
P111111"*' o.-. toe• o.iiy 1ti1ot estate, yoo may file a r•
A.,.. •t. "·•.Sept. 2' '"1 ' ,...., quest with the court to re-
Tlllt ·--w• flied wltfl .... C-1Y Cler11 of Ore,,.. Glllllt' °" ......... 0."'1
PtCTlnOUS •UStNHI
MAMa STATIMINT TIM ftl'-11111 P«toft• 1rt tMtl\ll WtlMM•: THIE INTlltlOA 41nlST~, t•
SooMI C.... Or. •>tt, C-'e MMe, C.. ... -
ceive special notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac·
coul\h and reports
described In Section 1200
of the C.llfomla Probate
Code.
"klwlW 11. ~. 11 MeMt.... KLEIN & CUTLER, At· W•y=··~"· 17 ......,_. tOrMp 8t Law, by: L.ellle Wey,t~.C..ft7U Kltln, "21 La Clene1a
..... J. ~--" ~ .... ""•'r· "'· ~ ....... . W•y,ltvlM,Ca.'2111 C• ..... 2 ...... , ·-Tlli. -.i-. II ~Oftdll<IH bye • I ' -·-~r::".~11 ......... Of-. CMll Dell't ~
TMtt ....._. -"'" -"" .. • ....... ,,, It,... .,,,..I PlJBUC NOTICE
c-.tr c~ • °'.,. ~ ... ---------------1 l'1CTtT1GU11Ut1•••
l'ICTITIOUI eullNllH NAMISTATIMllNT busfftHt •t: llOTICI TO eoteTaACTOal COIT DRAPERV 4NO CARPET c:ALU ... ll'oa etDS Tiit lollowt,. ,..._ Is dolftl busl-
MM H .
CLE ANERS , INC .. Ut7 Lo1•11 Sc-Olterl<t: c..tt c:.m"""'lty Avtt1 ... , c.t.a Meta, C.lllwftle m2' COii ... Olltrl<t R .. "C"-"•· Inc. I• C•lllOf'fll• Bid OMdllfW: 2:00 O'clOO P.1'11 ... corporetlonl, 12t7 L09•11 A..,.,, .... Ille "9\deylf ...,.,.._ 1'111. NEWPORT INDUSTRIES, LTD.,
01 C•lll"lllO s1 ... 1. Coste Mew. CA tt611. c .. t• Mete, Olllornle '2Ut f'i«:e f/I e141 lteteltlt: Office of .. This _.,.. Is c-.Cled by • tlW· PvrcMllftl .......... Ma. M«1aft PUYlft, MICHAEL IRUCE EMMONS, '41 ObrlllO Sirwet, Coste Mew, CA t2627. Pl>f•ll011. COHt Comll\Uftlly Coll... Dl1trkt, Rt. A CLEANERS, INC. U70 -A ..... C•ta ""-M. CA Tlllt l:lutlfMU Is conOllCled Dy "" Ill· dlYldu•l. lt~dW. Aout .. y, ~.
Mlcri.11.El'llMOftS Prftldlttlt PrtJtct lde11tlfl<•tlo11 N•mt: T1111 at.a~t •H llled wltll tM Or•11ot Cou t Coll•I• Energy Cou111Y Cler1I of Or-Couftty 011 Jiiiy c-wt..,, ,,,.._ ltl!elD • 1111 Tllll .... lem9nl WM llled with t'-Cou11ly Cle,. ol 0r.,. Coutlty on July
20, , .. ,. 21, '"'· f'lece ,.._ ,,.. °" Ille: OHl<t Of ,1...,. 1'1Mm Pftytlcel "•lllt+n Planning 1Tr.i1er Publl"*I Or-Cots• D•llY Piiot, PublllMO Ol'enge Cotsl 0.lly Piiot COfll ...... ), Cot .. Commufllty Coll ... July 22, 2'. A111. S, 12. 1•1 U IMI July 2', Aue. S, 11, It, 1•1 ~I Olttrltl, 1J70 Ad•mt Ave.. c .. t.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI eUstN•U NS19SU
llAMI STATIMINT PICTITIOUS eUllNIH TIM lol-...0 .,.,-..,. It dolne llUll· NAMll ITAT•fdNT
M•I •s: T 11t followlng _..,. 1 t c1io1119 Dusi· FARRIS STAMP COMPANY, lt» Mii •1: Port Chtl-,.,_., Newport hecll, 0 AV I 0 WA R R EN t. AS · CAt2MO. SOCIATES, tt7U M•cArlll11r TILDEN J. FARltlS, 1"'6 Port ltoultverd. 5111te>4S, lrvl,.., c.tlfonlle CIMls .. Pl«t, N---1 IMtll, CA '27U "*· o ... 1d w.,,..... 1t112 Me<Anltllr Tlllt """'-'la ctflduettd by e11 lfl. loulevero. Suitt :MS, lrvliM, Cellforftl• dh•ktvel. ft71S
TildtnJ. 'writ Tllh M1Ms111 c.onctucltCI t>y ..., un-Thl• stetement ••• llled with tM llltOf'llO<etecl -'-tlofl olhtr INft • cou111y CllN1I of Of'-c-., on July P41'1NrtN~
ft, lttl. 0.vldWMl'Wft
Mete, CA 9Ba; Office of .-'"9tttr, Olroctw (7U) S ... S107. NOTICI 1$ Hlltl!eY GIVEN _,
Ille .... ,. .....,.. kMol Oltlrkt et
Or ... c:-tr. Callfenlle, Klint..., e11d ttlfougtl lb CMftrftlfl9 loerd, lltr•l11•fl•r rthrrtd ti •• "OISTltlCT.'' _.N reat ..... to, '-"
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t• IN .-.W pntjecl
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"-9 Wiii lie • OS.• -...it ,... Qlllrtd i.r-" •t"' bid __ .,, .. "' .. , ........ ret\lrll Ill 9MC1 COftdltlOfl
wl ... 11 10 ...... eflw IN bid °""""" ..... llecll bid 1'111111 co"form •IMI tit ,. ............. C.ill,Kt~. .. ,.1171 Tlllt tltl-t wet flltd wllll 019 Publlllled Or""Ot CANlll Delly Piiot. COUlllY Clertl CJll Or-C-t., Oii July July tt, ""'-s, 12, tt, ••1 JUHi '· I'll Eec:ll W tflell .. .u~..-"' p,..,,, --Wiiy ~ t• 111 tM ~-t
PuOllSlled Or ..... CMtl Delly PllOI, :cu:::.:: by ti. 1111 of ,.,.,_. PUBLIC NOTICE Jotly U, 2', ~ S, 12, t•I. ~1 Tiie OISTalCT ,_.,..IN rteM ta
PICTITtOUI aUJlttlll& teAMllTATIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE
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-•t; PICTITIOUI eVlltllU Sl!A OULI.. COMUl'llCA TIONS, •AMII ITATIMINT UlfO 1111 .,_ St., 01. ,. ... 11t•l11 Tiit IOllOwlftl per-• ere Hl"t ., ...... Ca.""' Du., ....... l • SI ...... In• ..._, '""° $eft CONVI Nll!NT AUTO IT&•eo. .,_ SL, Ga. l'--.111 V•lltY, Ce. •111 eoi ... M!Owty cu.,, GA ft .. .S. ft70t NIC:OU.E STIHOACIU, 112 W. Tlll1 ...._It <Mllueled • ., M.,,.. Wll-, C..U IMM, CA m17. •IY14111et. HUMEYA ADAMS, tn W. WllMi'I ....... ~ Str"t, C.a Mtle, CA '2627. Tllll ........... -llled Wltll 1111 Tllll Ml-h C~led 111Y e
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PUBLIC NOTICE
.. .
..
. •
--------1
Oronge Coast DAILY PILOTIWednaday, August 12, 1981 • * •11 ! I
I
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 Among people looking for a rental~ 70o/r
read real estate classified ads.
INDEX
T1 Pbc1 Your Ad, C1ll
642·5678
MOUS(S ro• SAU
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R[NlALS
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BUSINESS. INVEST
MEMT, FINANCE
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EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
~~ Pllbh1Mr'1 Notice: l~ All real estate ad·
''" vert1sed in this 1ui1 '"'" newspaper Is subject to l': the Federal Fair Hous·
1.. ing Acl ol 1968 wtuch
:;: makes 1t illegal to ad·
vert1se "any pre(erence.
l1m1t11tion. or dis:
cnm1nation based on
race. color. religion.
sex. or national or1gm.
or an intention lo mike
any such preference,
l1m1tation, or dis·
crimmation "
IJll +
j ••• ,. , ..
"
, ..
''"
!•11 '. ... ••
... .. ...
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Thul ne"'sp.aper w1JI not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate whlch is m viola·
tjon of !_he law_. _
EIRORS: AdYertfMn
1houkl ched.....,. odi
dally Cllld report ·~ '"°" "'-clafety. TM DAILY PILOT m....s
liabllty for .... flnt
:.:;· lncorrtct luertlon
:: : o..ly. ...
I' ...
I o "" Ho111t1 for S. "' ,,, ...•..•••.••........••.
:.::· General 1002
PRESTIGIOUS llG CANYOH
Immaculate 4 Bdrm Broadmoor. Beam~ ~e!lings, neutral decor, pool,
spa , r1rep1t, cul de sac location make
this a desirable home. Asking $Gss,OOO.
To see, call
IOllllit ....,....°", 675-6000: 644-0452
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 EHi Cout Hlgh1ny. Coron• del Mar
WE HAVE 45 OF THE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN
.i I
A -
REALTORS
675·5511
IROADMOOR EUGAHCE: GGrCJtot11ly
dtconsted pool ho• ht l roachoor Harbor
View Hllt1. 4 bedroO.s. fwRMy "°°"'· 2
firepocH with la•a rock fociftg. ftrictd to
Mt! at $370,000. . . .....•••••••...........
EXECUTIVE COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
$227.000 2515 E. Coad Hwy .. Caroaa dt4 Mar
.. Almost new 2 stor y 675·5511
"'" I be a u t y Sun f ii I e d I ~~~~~!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ;.~. kitchen. formal dilling ..::
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
• room . wark and cozy
family room too ' 2nd
story hosts seduded
ma ster suite with
cra<·kl1ng bric:k
fireplace 3 more queen
med bdnns too! Don 't
m1ssout rail
ESl.FY N
~YLOR CO. PERSONALS &
LO~T & FOUND
\ lh
I ' ...
I t •) , .. , ......... ,
" ,,.11 lul
1 ••. "
SERVICES
11, t.
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPARATION
'-t ,ul• lh.11111 1fo111
J '' '4,m1,. I 11•11 "•M11I \lA. •
MERCHANDISE ,, '
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EQUIPMENT
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142-5171
,. ... , ..
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SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-63 '·6990
H OISE PIOf'BTY
Lots of wood, stained
glass and country
charm descnbe the al
mosphere or this Santa
Ana llgts 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
home The owner will
carry large 2nd and you
can assume the 1st Full
orice S 163.900.
REDUCED
Char ming wood
shingled townhome Sun
fillrd kitchen overlooks
: '. co1 y patio 3 large • , bdrms plus sewing room
• • too Onl) S100.cm. call
•I . ' ...
' .-
...
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
7'4·631·6990
THIHIOMG
TOWtiltOME?
.. Call the specialists at
· • the condominium in :~: formation center ... .... Touchstone Realty
~(i67
HAHOIRIDGE
::·1 A w a r d w i n n i n g
'"" "Jodelle" estate home. ::·.7 Isl resale offering on
:" · thul exquisitely appoint·
• ed townhome with
' massive view of bay .
"" ocean, COl!Uine & night
.:; : lights. Now reduced to
,,, •. 1739,000.
'"'
i!i.1 1.flllll '.1 ,\ \£11.
i!i l'. i[ ! ! ~I •
Rmq IJll(J '>'•tJO Anyl1n1c
E.v.tbl11!1 p,,., 8111q
..... Find out about the hJgh· ~:~ earning reaJ estate salts ~'.!·: ~a{ter ;~ptrtRn~t!e~
ESTATERS. Llcensinl
.... school fees completely
, ~fundabJe to school ol
,.,1 your choke. Extensive
•••· salts training. For In· ;;:~ formation, call 751-8191
~~, ............... ,
;.·: IAUOA 'f" This sophisticated con· ;.~: temporary 3 Bdnn home ,.... Is all wood and class, :zr; wtth hl&h cetin1s and,
,.,.. on a larae lot. Euy care ~ yard. double 1ara1e
.....
!ffol
plus boat 1tora1e-
lea ves you free fdr
PeninJula PoUlt beacl"s
and bay. •ooo.
64Z.5200
J PETE BARR En
REALTY
DllLY Pl&Or
ClASSlfllD ADS · .......
REALTOHS ~llll'l' IB4o
ON llG CAHYOH GOLF COURSE
SPECTACULAR ''YHSAILllS" $895,000.
Largest lot of all the Big Cyn Deane
Homes! What a spacious & beautiful
yard for entertatning ~ Lovely pool &
spa plus a darlin~ gazebo (with even a
chandelier ). Gated front courtyard
with fountain. Dramatic foyer w/huge
crystal chandelier, 2-story ceihng in
living rm. for mal dining rm, paneled
den w/parquet floor. 41 2 baths; 4
bedrooms includi ng glamor6us
master suHe with marble bath. Call
for appointment.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. RULTORS
2111 S• Jot11tW tat Rood
NEWPORT CEHTH, M.L 644-4910
RfSIOENTIAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES
FUHKY FIXER • COM
Bring out the best in this primely
located duplex. Live happily ever
after in this cozy 2 BR. owner·s
unit + receive rent on attractive
2 BR + Den rear unit. Bring
elbow grease and offer. All for
$289,500 .
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
mE
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
llG CAHYOH
YllWI
Beautiful Versailles Model 01) Quiet
CuJ -de-Sac. Wide Winding Stairway
With Spectacular Suspended
Walkway Overlooking .P,iarble
Entry & Spacious Living Room.
Elegant Features -Garden Kitchen
-Den With Fireplace · Hug~ Master
Suite · Highly Landscaped Garden
With Paddle Tennis Court. Great
View! $875,000.
MISA VllDI
Beautiful Contemporary Homel'"Jn
Costa Mesa's 8est Area. Features
Include Five Large Bedrooms, Two
Impressive Fireplaces. Gol'geous
Living Room & Famlly Room,
Skylights, Wall Coverings, Wet Bar
• Fantastic! Price, $223,500.
f
'
WATllflOMT
Sharp2 story 4 bdrm, 2'h
bath home, 2 frplcs,
shake roof, redwood
deck to waters edge +
boat dock $335,000'
INCLU OlNG LANO!
lalboa lay Prop. ......
•67S.7060.
IUYEIS W AMTED
We can help you find
your dream house. Call I
ou r Costa Mesa · t
Newport Beach Res1den
ual Specialist. Delores
Ge Iberg
TSL PROPERTIES ___ 642-1603
OCEAHAOMTS
6 lo be exact from
S2S,OOO down & as low as
12% interest on the
balance Call for details
and the super locations
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
~ 75'-1111
UHIYEISfTY PAii
Plan IV Real: y
AFFllDABLE
2 Bdrm. l ba · 1 yr old
Adult complex. Take
over existing loan.
6REDCARPET
-754-1202
WAT'BRONT
WIUTlADE
Luxurious French
Normandy 5 Bdnn 5 Ba
estate wtshp ror so·
boat. Will trade for
smaller home or income
property or' sell for 20r~
down and carry balance
at 12 °, Priced at
Sl,675.<m
7J4
DEAHE HOME1-------
S2Jt,OOO
Charming and spcacious
3 BR + family room
home. Comer location
across from p.art, pool
and teon1s Retiring
owner will carry fioanc·
mg at reasonable rate.
75'·1616
OPPORTUHfTY
knocks orten when you use result.getting Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast
market.
Phone642·5678
New Exclusive Listi1g!
LARGE PENIN. BAYFRONT
.... laytro.f loc.tloft ... Newport
Harbor Yacht Ci.la. SpecloH .. d
hsWy decarGIH 5 bed. 6 ....... ""'
hotM wtffl lar'9f ,.tlo °" ....... Motter Mlite with CCMIYt"atfOll ...._ , __ C
YU °" IA Y. Anu111ablt loan1 of
$900,000. to quallfltd buytr.
SI ,600,000. fff.
LUXURY PENTHOUSE CllfOOS
~ IMa9 with Y•s. Hew..._. wttti
.... fiatst of .... iffe,, ~. NCS#y. n... to Mlect yow colon. Cal for
dttalls. $369,000 to $439,000.
631·1400.
SUPERB YU-OWtlR flN.
hpeclally largt trl·lt•ef llOllll wit•
btHtlhl dtcor by dtcontor
... ~· Hospftalfty & ...., ..... l
btd. + *"-' •'""°"" • ,.. e.p
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. im-
maculate. Low priced at S2l5.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3-ll p,,,,,,<f, Dr .. ~-I\ t:dS 6161
REAL ESTATE
SALES MANAGER
Major regional brokerage firm with 13
years experience in the coastal area is
searching for an experienced person
to manage its expanding Newport of·
rice.
llighly vis ible Fashion Island location
with 15 run time agents has the poten·
tial for 'Z7 agents.
This firm has over 125 fulltime agents
and orrers residential investment,
escrow, securities and mortgage
brokerage services to its clients from
8 offices located Newport to San
Clemente .
The person chosen wi ll receive liberal
starting salary and an qverride on the
office production along with other
benefits.
All responses will be held in strict con·
fidence. Send resume to: Drawer 18.
P.O. Box 2000, Corona del Mar, 92625
INCOME PROPERTIES
2285 & 89 Santa Ana Ave.
li7 Hamilton
415 Hamilton
1395 & 99 Baker St.
COMMERCIAL
3 Lots · 23rd & Newport
RESIDENTlAL
2030 Monrovia
$265,000
$175,000
$190.000
$375.000
$275,000
$ 95,000
THE HEISSER COMPANY INC.
714/ 641-0763
DELIG HTF UL
DUPLEX Two . 21--------bedroom units with
skylights and ba)' views.
Walle to beach ~.ooo.
assume $290,000 at
131.,'k.
PRIDE OF
OWNE RSHIP -
Palermo model, 4
bedroom , country
k ltchen, super master
s uite, love ly yard.
1325. 000 fee
3 HOUSES
ON 1 LOT
WTSIDI
o.lyS11t,tOO
Call~lllSl
OPEN Hl)IJSE
REAL TY
/
YOU 'LL FALL IN !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
LOVE-Ab5olutely darl· --------.. -mg three btdroom Coun·
try home. perfect 1n
every wa y Bricks.
beams. French doors
Irresistible at $225,000
LUXURY PLUS AN IN
CO M E -Thi s new
custom duplex in Old
Corona del Mar has a
three bedroom unit, and
a two bedroom unit. Best
quality on the market
1449,000.
***** l IR + Poof + s,.
Harbor and Baker area.
Xlnt oeil)lborhood
TBtMS
w1t.h SJSK down. Owner
must sell Sl44,900
~lll"ttt=~ t1 . · .....
THATS WHATS
UHlquEAIOUT
U,._.l()Uf tl()"lfS COlY CllO
Reajtors, 675-600() 2 Bdrm, 2ba end uniL '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I New carpeU. Clean and bright. Assumable 13'7<
•••....................
CoroH .. Mcr 102 • ••••••••••••••••••••• CDMaUFfS
IYOWHB above beach. full ocean
& jetty vu from every
rm 3 lrg Br. lrg Liv rm +
kit . 2~ Ba. 2·sty. 2 brick
frplcs, 2 decks, beach
access. semi·pvt road.
Sl,250.000. P.P Appl on-
1 ly. 714167~-----: I Costa Mae 1024
loan
Wl-.motl
VIUE
Eleaaot single family
home. Professionally de·
corated and bndscpd 4
Bdrm, 3ba & library
Air, alarm. amenities
galore.
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
.............••........ --------
ASSUMUI I I ~.':'!'.'!'!'.':'!~~.!~;~~
FIMAHCIHG ON EXCLUSIVE HUN· USTSl>E TINGTON SEACLI FF'S
Beautiful 4 Bdrm plUJ G 0 L F C 0 U RS E !
ram i ly. featuring 3bdrm. pool. xtra lrg lot. Many xtras. SJ95.000 enclos~ courtyard. en· Broker· 633 6633 tert11ners backyard 63'1-6266 '
with Koi pond and lovely ·
patio Very open and lots Hwf~tow
of glass. Asking Sl97.500. Herbiw I 042
For an appointment to ••••••••••••••••••. •••• see, call ~1151 'J'wnhse 1760 sq ft. 2Br.
/
2 "'1 8a , guard gale Lusk H\itUs 3 BR. fam comm , owo er will
rm. 180 deg ocean & bay finance. Ownr I agt. vu Quiet cul de sac S2.42,500. {714) 997.5490
Us~~~oo. Ownrtagt !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f 1n1H 1044
CORAi. CAY ----MlSA Da MAI •••• •••••••• .. •••••••••
4 and 5 Bdrm new 1"1111111_.._...._._......, .... ~lli If you've wailed for a
waterfront homes. dream come true, this is
S200,000 down . builder 5 BR/BJ OWNER 1t! A touch of magic has will finance balance. No made this the most
qualifying. Gated IRYIHETERliCl beautiful home wino
com munity . Fro m CORONA DELMAR equal in this area Ex· S670.<mtoS9SO.OOO amine 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
X lge master bdrm w
aarden & frplc, lge
c us tom kit., den ,
library, LR. FR, pool,
yard. patio. Unique for
larger family Ocean
side of hwy Near
buches. lmmed. occ .
$495,000. Owner can
beauty ror its flawless.
innovative des1fn and
appearance. At 128.900
and VA tenns it won't
last. 751·3191.
THl«IHG·
TOW...OMl1
Call the specjali.sts at
the condominium in·
formation center.
ToucMtone Realty
9634167
GORGEOUS
Clean & cozy, 3 Br 2 Ba
w/courtyard entry.
Near new carpets and
mic rowave included
Close to schools and '
shopping. CaU for de· '
ta lit . ...... ""' + ..... Wllard ,_ ...... For ..... ....,... ..... 11 .. t"o ..... ,..+ pri•• IP& UH9UESTIOMAIU YllW
Of OCIAH & IA YFROMT dotf..4p!
OwMt-wtl http flMHt. S97S,OOO.
.__ .. _ .. _ .. _, carry. By appt, 673-3745. l'f OW"""M
HMMf OM A Hl.L Open Sun. 1,5 " e-l',\N1 H
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTArE
S.t R•n••, r,.,.,.,,,~ ~"""'
2436 W Cou1 Hwv
Ntwp011 Duct!
631-1400
.!IS M•.-Ave Ra.lbw lalalld
'7J.ffOO
Overlooking the btue •bdnn, 2ba. pool. jac
Pacific isthlsS Bdrm + lillllllllllllllllillllllll"4111111111~_.. .... lll Mesade.IMar1rea I f ,\ l TY
fam rm home,_ Complete IISO,OOO. SS&-7271
with pool and jacuul
ind perfect for enter-
tainin1. '195,000. Owner
will carry.
.. 1 .'000
RCTc1ylorCo
~. ' 1\ • RHLTORS
**TMIELO! No, not a fruit but the
$10-AITD
12" .. 30'""
Charmin& 4 bedroom, atreet lhi1 charming
fresh new paint, de· Irvine condo it on. Va.
c o r 1 t 0 r t 0 u c h canUr ready to go. Mike
throuahout. Beautiful 111 offer! Aakina
front lawn, pool 1iit 1101.100
Sell tltlnp fast with Daily HIVe aometlllnc to sell? ••••••• ~ ••••• !~
Pilot Want Ads. Classified ads do it well. NO CASH
s~~
This ~r':"Bdrm
home la decorated in a
traditional at)'le with
charm inc wallpapers,
custom window cover·
ifll•· lop quality carpet,
and ele1ant wood floora.
The home offers a
playroom with bullt·ln
ublnets and utra
atorace, family room •
formal dln.lq room,•~
Ba, ltltcbm talln.1 art•,
t::~ .'.:!;./'~::."::; (~i)Woo45DS-l ·~'3000~.dfC
LIQUIDATION SALE
BAYFRONT -·••111•··· lllNlrm'SmtlMfll WI ...
TD OK for down. Cute 3
BR 2 Ba cctta1e, trade
OK. Desperate. 13BS,OOO.
Ownr/alL l.esl-0883
ic.. .... dll Mir I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llal. 1135,000. IMO San· ~"
tlaao. Meaa Del Mar .
_as_1_-t_1_00_._5'5._Ul......_48 ___ 1 '9!tB•rr•nn """"·ln!M
s.ltctTenili1•1
**M&SPA ........ umrn•• 1...;:;:=::.o==--=-;:::=""'--1 pool 6 a ma1nlflctnl
11\b neat condominium
Is ready to move lnto on
a qwet sr-abelt near
1 hoppl n1 ud Jr.
Coll11t. 2 Bdrm 2112 Ba,
c:o1y frple, 2 (ar prqe.
A lood ilVMIDftll at
S107,000.1$l·a1tl
Separate fen ced
play1ard lqhliShll tbis
nperb 4 Bdrm pool
home in fabulous
Northwood. Try S.OM
dwn.
•••ti.tr~••
m•~• •nm•W1a1111 c.t••mm1 ...
~Q,
view of the ottan and lllbt• of Newport. "25,000.
D.N.Mw t E•tr
1
Fore1mt~Ad
ACflON
Calla
Dell)' Pllot Al)VllOI ...
c::. ... '--1-" ' .'! I 'I ' '
. •
... _... . p • • •
.. • 'orang1CoutOAILYPILOT/W1dnead1y,Aunu1t12,1981 ........... w. OftwrlMllt• ~Ottwrl1tlbt... Otllltra.-.... .......U ... 'rbv' "-'"U•fw d thd
-- ! M::;;ti;~·.; ... i°'' ~~·.;.·.·;;~1;;;;·i·r· e;;;·;;·,;·;;;;-1· ... ;:::;;;:;~;;; .. iiOO ....... ;;.;;;, ...... jif6 ;·w· .... ;2;;
I • ~.~~otttott~(\i;;i;',;;t,~HtU• ~:.':':'..':'!!.o ouue ~:.':'!..~eueuo tentttolHHtlltU•tll ••••tttHfllllltt•ttttt tttttttfUHtHH!Htt. outt••tOtttttttllfUt totttt lHUHIHl•tl•ll netee1eenueeeeeeeeu
....... l04 I .,.,..... 1069 Mtw__..._. I06f UST&.&llPI ~ ............... ~ UMrTS Baylront. Vt1rly. 3BR. Monarch Bay T 4 Br 3
...................... ...................... ....................... r-". Bv owner 48:t, 2a.. tlltc Dalebout D ' -· 2BA. frplt. Ira patio, Ba. Din, fam ' lndry
OUTSTA'«I•• '"'IULOUS ....................... I •• -ds OK SJOOO M _., "' llouu. at appralul -~.. ,avail Stpt l5 Sl400 mo nn Kl o
Y.a..ue 11 the word for lhl1 $240,000, 1"' dn OWC Rtuonabie pr1ttt and f7$-7009,f1$.MOS Ul ~~4· -
Lovely a Bdrm Cam· OCEANFRONT unit BEAUTIFUL SOtllSET bal JJ\.t~.110 1.Mhold Bay & Beach areat term• avallablt c ............. lJJJ Spic ocean vw :tbr.
bridt• model Ip detira· with cualom decor lo Owner requelru coop Call 9'7t-$370 now tor df "•••••••••••••••••-•• fr pie, hrdwd floors.
bit Greentree loeaUoa. every detall PLUS front Five bdrms in Harbor View. Well w /JRS 1011 tu U • Real Estate tal.lund1howin1 2 Bdrm, 3 IHI, 'P'· dblt deck. nr town/bch Larae mllttraultt with r.w whitewater view. han 1• ..._ A .. farace . Nr f uhlon 1150. 49'-ml.
atudy, 1tdudtd yard. $3$5,000. maintained home on fee land and with WANT 1MMe NtwJ:rt LL f'TATE aland, redecorated Sun drenched hill11dr
hfauWuUy landM:1Ded, L.tmeV.. u fixed rate assumable loan. $339,000. tl't,hta ~or :11e't leo, ~I,.. $745 per mo, 2 yr least home. 3 BR. 3 BA .
featurilll .... arbor. 4t7.17,t It II lltt.tf«tdleel 81:.,i,•1,LM..!,: era. REALESTATEEXCELLENCESINCE1949 REALTORS 12131 t11.Q887 or <213> formal din, Flreplac~. 11.,$00. --_.., 712-3382 2400 n carpeted Front &
H• IOIO ltJJPoriT__. COMI WITH US .•. TO COlOtU Dk -....,Jr___.. At11Ho•-•v back yard wt gardner ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,,..... A.MW•.____ ........ ,.,..vr~r DOLLH""'~ v.-..c.A •tM'W\ mo ...... Avail Elea111t 4 Br. c1.11tom ln ¥"" ~·--. Propttfy 2550 Front unit, 2 Br. t Ba -"""~ don osen
' • I t ~ I ..
... ....1-J • • ~ tl ~'t't E ·c· II. AlmOlt kit value' the trRONT ONE BEDROOM UNlT IN REAR one property, 3 acres, B *"""M ... c.,,., 4 ·l82SAl\er7PM Nellle Gale Ranch, ~L ~ ~ • 0675 5930 • LOTYA.LUl1 TWO STORY , TWO BEDROOM HOME lN ....................... S800 Mo. Back unit 2 Br. Sept Isl for app.
hl:upoot. j;j;~ v'::.ci. ~::; •• • ~' · oast wy. hoN mt come1l hwllh Lt! Old WITH TWO CAR GARAGE .. LOCATED 3bdrm house, 1 ba. l a . ..-. o.-.-........ 2 Br home, refnge, d1~ IT11iATPR~PECT uefirt lot __ !$ __ ;_ CoronadelMar ewpor c arm an a SOUTH OF HIGHWAY ,OWNER WILL ownerwiUca1TyatlS3 hwasher.stove, washer _......,TU-.-.::S:..::T-=lN~7c1·..:3:.:ll.:.l--1 t::.:&. ~r/~~e; quiet locatlon with 4 br CARRY FIRST TRUST UEEO. ASK FOK Sl39,000. San Bemad1Do VllW-VllW & dryer. frplc, patio
CHOICE FLOOR PLAN.1 H7•~0T!!!.i.!'44!!!:;..S!!;7'2!:L. --~-------·-------• home + e:i•r ai 1lip ln· oorTIE AUS'n:RO. S299,SOO. area. 4654!56. Harbor View Hills Moo· Walk to beach. S800 Call 2 atory, 3 'aood size1-THI..., credlblt EW of Malo Carlabad·waterfront tec1to Modtl. 4 ,bdrm. 8'7·8122 days, 642·0166
bdrms, family room. a~ Mip91 IOSJ .. .u.• "X" IKDOWM ifl~uo~P ~:'A~~: 1617 WISTCLI" DI, H.&. 6Jl-7JOO Come ~tda retmt! family & break.fastrm. 3 ev.!! __ _ pro1. 1700 IQ I\ Only •••••••• .. •• .. •••n•••• ... _.. Shari>. clean double unit _,.. 000 -~ _ ~ -<tvr-vew-v-v'ftrt Spacious 2 Bdrm, 2 run car garaee Avail Sept 1 __ H•
St34,900. 3Br, 2~Ba, a ca.r 11111e 3 bdrm , din. rm .• Uv. mobile home. All new -· ~~ .._. -----Ba. ioraeous view I S 1500 mo 1 nr I -..--3250
'Redh ct + RV /boat 1torage, rm . ram. rm .. FIP, Z\'t appllaocee, new cariiet -WATfRfRONl V'll -P Ill •. Tlb suo,ooo. Lowdwn gardener& water •••Ho;t'E.FORR•;.t;;••• tll Va~Jt.·; dinette in It.ltd.en. new ba, xtra lar&e porcelain ins. fl replace & larae HOMn.. Ac-tor S. 1200 1 a ac . c "' uron R ._ H lnv't. 7< ... 2197 '(,,1 d / .11 3 Bd ~ "" d .. ~"1 car-tlna Ml" ,_ .. _pd t b / · tll t•· I t ti O """ · -._...... Condos with usumable • "' 11(.1•~1•1-" (' • H<a rm _, r en<'e """ ' J 111'.Q ' u w ce.r1m1c e wa "' pr v a e pa o wner REAL ESTATE •••• .. ••••• .. •••••••••• ,. , ·~,., ya rd & garage Kids & 552 ~ 7500 fncd, pvt pool fl jacuni 'floor. 4 covered patio will carry part finanC· 63,.,400 Bi& Bear Lake-I acre & loans, 2·3 Br. CaU the 212 S s Q ft off Ice .... ,-''l,,JtNl-1/•.j pets welcome 545-2000 _________ 1 area overlooklna L· areas. Price~.OOO.S% Ina. 1 .... acre parcel&. Sewer. Expert. A(t.988-2297. warehouse High growth "'7'
PREMIUM ~!.!u000el. ~~Course. down, asswneS40,000 lat !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J water ' elec av all. lltcw P,....+y 2000 ~rea Affordable hous· 6'1.:J-811.<J~ Ment, nofl!_!;__
-._.._,.. trust deed at 7~~. Xlnt ! DESPERATE! M u1t Zoned A·I. Temu Dy1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ing. Good labor force 3141 "' Co a..,... Mlglltf 3252 LOCATIOu land leue, ~.00 per ull home. Close t C71')8H·4270 ; Eves· Trade Luxury Newport Ex~ept1onal clean air ... H t Hw)'.,Cdtl •••••••••••••••••••••••
" FOXIOIOH~TS. year. Can't changt until beach. 22~ down as· (714)S85·8891 or write bome on ...., acre fol' In· environment 244·9803, ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3 Br 2 811. Garden Home. Superb view with lots ol onl I * 24' 3114 -= N I S'--privacy 4 bdnn. 2" ba. 11AUfY year 2003. H~ mt y aume oa111. •19'1.000 Box 1281, Bi& Bear Lake, come Units or ' Equity · 2 bdrm, l ba cottage 111 ague ""'~· pnvate
Fordham Model in Exceptlonal2sty, I yr. 2nd trust deed duel!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I A1tLadoris.64.\-91U Ca.92315. S280,000. Art now ! Rtaflbtalit Goldenrod~7Smo 1st& rommty. pool. beach
ViUa&e II. Univ Park. o Id , 1 ta In g I a ss. L986·87 Call owner for1--------•I CREATIVETERMS! ! ! KAILUA Broker Co.Op Agent W.ted 2900 last, S225 secunty, avail $850. 492§7_i)O, li61·3S26
Extensively upg raded hardwood fin. Lovely appt. daily alter 5 pm. Redllctd SJ00,000 U1tder mrkl by S20,000 KONA · HAWAII 631·'5_1_6__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• !_m_med 642·'210_ _ THE SHORES
throughout. Walk to landacaplne. mountain '"'!(7!1!4!) 7!60-!!!!M2S!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ln Dover Sborea. 5600 3 br, 2 ba. lge bonus rm, 178 Fee Simple Acrtt UMITS ltsldtllffel ltach Cotta Mtso 3224 3 Hr 2 Ba private rom
church, ahopplng, golf view. Elaborate sec 1~ sq.ft. of top quality con· llv. rm & formal din Resort Are.a, Central A · 60 30 40 16 Older Residential Bch or ••••••••••••••••••••••• mty. pool & tennis ssso
and tennis & swimming. system ui this 4 br, Cam ---------i slruc:Uon. This S Bdrm area w/frplc. Open location. Frontaae on 2 c n{ Slit, · · · Waterfront property. To DLX CONDO 2 Br. + lrg Mo 4~3·3444,644 ~03
S176,SOO Call today for nn. frml din rm Lge. BEST VALUE IN Medit style residence 1s beam ce.ilin&. c:ompl re· major b I & h w a Y s a 1 for ael·UJll. ~3666, purchase & or Jointly de· loft Br 20,., Ba frplc,
informatJononoutstand· assum oan ol Sl.56.700 the but ol localioo.s aod furbiahed, new crpta, Ma&nifict!llt view Whelan velop I will provide gar , a e. new SHS MiuiOll Viejo 1261
ing Lerma bfm& offered. plus owner will carry £ASJBlUFf has the best oHmancing Pilot, landseaping Low 121 acrea ~.210,750 100"\-financing Charles [JJ.~ or96J..8177_ •••;to;,tE.FORft"ENT • •• ~~u~~lD0~.1::000 ~a~~[aTe!2~~· ;~: :~=~~1~,o~::e: r~~;~~~~~:~!s~r::. :·:ca~es ::=::Real Estate. Pe_ri:y 956-12Jll 3b?t~.~s~a 't,)~.e Tr~~~· ~·a~dd~ga~e ~~~~e:
-
. • ..... 000 eluding the land 642.7744 20acres S3,l:.i,320 p I 0 p E I T y Rttltah Available S700 Ask for I WATERFRONT IOUI .• .,...,, . Sl,450,000. Call Dan Bibb For more detailed in M ... ._. &Glb...O_... pets we come 545 2000 HOMES Roy Mee:... Ur f I .... •0.1. f r I 1i "'""' ~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• t>ete 7ll·~--Agent, no(~. -
REAL ESTATE 541-77H • or appl. -"' <~~)~f~ e;~~y c~r We manage 1000 Units in HCMllH ,_.st.ct SECLUDED 1 Br very
631-1400 IOG6a"S7" • awl I I TY OCEAtROMT' write Farms & Ranchea, Costa Mesa Ne"':'port ••••••••••••••••••••••• private, qwet & woodsy H.wport IHcJt 1269
-Great view at harbor en· Inc PO Box 2:25, Hilo, Beach For professional lelMHI ,....._ 3107 #.dulls, no pets New 2••0;·;,;~t,:i;·h~;;·~·; ~~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~ HartaorYitw trance. Prime large lot Hawaii 92lli20 management ol your in·••••••••••••••••••••••• ca rpets drapes range
If 523 CAMPV5 Dl· IRVlftE ......... •••••••••••••••••••••••A REAL FAM ILY New Modular Type DELIGHT!
Homes. leased land. This lovely home is
Oceanfront Pk. J pvl located on a qwet cuJ-de·
bchs, 24 secunty, fishmg sac and close to the com·
pier from S34 ,900. munity park and lake. 499·3816 With 3 bedrooms. 2 baths -=--'-==------• and an endJess llst of top loddtdlt I quality ame.n1t1es. this
ly n. Sta home lends It.sell to ac·
Walled and gated ocean live family living .. As·
fro nl estate with sumable f1nanc1 ng
fabu.lous view Pvt steps available. S20S,OOO
lo lhe sand Call for 495-1720 ~ZJi~'i.';;A1\JM RLTR • 4!N-OOZ9 Lingo A. LAllt Alolf.t.n
ForA.Uttlt
1 acre + bldg site. gent-Newport ltodt 1069 ly sloping parcel short
di.stance from tennis & •••••••••••••••••••••••
beach Ownr has in· BAYCREST eluded r'ans for custom villa. 17S.OOO Spec· POOL HOME tacular views '
MISSION REALTY Large 4 bfdroom. 3 bath
49'-0731 home with formal dining
Divorce forces Sale room , living room , large
kitchen with separate Lower 3 Arch Bay. ealing area. den and Great ocean view. pvt custom pool with solar area 4bdrm beach heating. Located on house. 45-3144. quiet. tree llned st.reel.
EMEIAU>IAY Excellent financing
Only available front row available. For sale by
owner S319,000. Call lot 1n this gated area. 919 ·2SOO, ext 19 Plans and pennits for (wor kdays). 642·2688 elegant villa. $650,000.
CAROL TATUM RLTR. (weekends).
494-0029
Classified Ads, your one-
stop sboppuig center
Find what you want in
Daily Pilot Classifieds.
Move In condition. 3,700 sq. ft_ 4 bdrm. ' come property please ON THE BEACH Xlnt Ullls pa.id Isl + secun
bdrm, 2 ba home in PRIClllDUCB> bath c~lom home. ~all '-1Hs1 PrOplrty 1400 call us We can give you toe Winter Renlal Avail ty SS2S Mo 642 083S or
Harbor View. High as-LimitedTimtOrftr for private ahow1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• personalserv1re Sept 12 7 Br 2 Ba 646.6423 sumable loans. Highly 2113 Miramar Reduced Sl,38S,OOO. ]'SL MGMT 642·160]_ Appl's 1900 mo. Inquire ----.
upgraded throughout. to firm price of '419.SOO FOi SA.LE .._, ....... •-126 E Oceanrront, July NEW 2 Br 1. Ba Quiel &
water . quiet. no
kids peJ~ S65C!. 968-6164
Newport Island lloml'
4br, 2ba, pnvacy. ~tep\
to ocn 1 bay, s1200 mo
Shows llke model. Must until Sept. l. 7S% financ· Mew...._ •-, 18th. Aug. 21st or rail cool. butll ·ins. refnge
sell fast Asking S2~. ing at 12'7c Principals Offlu........... l .6XGrota! 67S S990 · Adult.s. no pets Isl + 3 Br 2 Ba House with rncl land. Come for in· 1 --.-... In super rental area -1 security 1595 Mo swimming pool + 2 ad
673·333S
sperllon Sat. Sun 1·6 ony.556-:f!00,642·0346. Tuslln·3'00&qf\ Positive cash flow Winter Rental Sept 12th 642083Sor~ d1t1onalut1l1tyBr .fam
l860PortWheelerorcall Fullerton·22'15sqn w '22'A dwn Assume lhru June 12th Clean, 2 1 Me~adel M~rbta~t;81J rm . frplc . n1 cel) 760-9~0wner1A USTILUFF Orange-MOO sq n $98,000 loan & owner Wiii br. patio. garage & laun Pres1d10 Dr 3 bdrm. 2 landsraped SllSO Mo
4 bdrm, fam rm, (pies. Xlnl fmancmg. lax ad car r Y r u 11 pr Ice dry SSOO Mo + del>O'tt ba. lg cov patio, fplc, Ul 640 1327. ~ 6188. uff1n• VILUIA.LIOA. Xlnt financing. Im vantages.ChnsPauls 119S.OOO Call Bob A~ults 67S·~71 els gardner & water 7sg~91 ~a~;li~~ndgw~~~ww~~ ~0e5d511abt{e .o~~~r~0n0cl --Mo~~!4\~~jiay Horwiti agt 979-S370 or H..till~ 1775. SS7·4391, ~S·644S New Exec Home. prt>
help finance Submit of· 1?42·Sl6l,64(}.8!0'1 Prime retail toe. Harbor 851.217_s_ -~ HarbOw 3142 5avail 9 1-----sllg1ous area Oct>un
r 0
..... lll>nr..&• • d N Bl d CM · 111( doWll ••••••• •••••••••••••••• pac1ous 3 Br. + Den view. pool. spa. tenm~. er. '"'-...........WU. an ewport v . 8 units. OWC, trade. Cus~om 4br waterfront, L n dry hook . up. security gale Sl495 per -lr.oktr t6J.tll2 MEWPOITCIEST RE ~LTORS 4000 sqflorless.~3402 Owner desperate agt SS boot s lip. spa, gardentrlllcld No pets mo 7609~774~
Trade Luxury Newport f'trst llme buyer and re· ~L ....... Eves, 5'8-3270 646-ls..4 forever Vlew, S2:600tmo S87S Savage Wilde & Co
home on 1, acre for ln· -OCCCI09 C h Loh/ ----Furn orunlum 960-9966 61S 9006 EASTIUJFf come Units or • Eqwty liree. step right up and Li do s e .west end or c-:.,,;'l 1500 RE Sales people to le.am --------Three Bdrm. 21, ba end
S280 0 0 A makeusanoffer Atwo island, Community investments & ex.LOCJ9Mlleocti 3141 Beaut.afulnewXmdl.de unit Goodrondlltonand
· O ct now' bedroom condo with lots beach al each end of ••••••-.•••••••••••··~·· changes. Xlnt oppty for••••••••••••••••••••••• corated & landscaped Broker Co·Op. Agent of character. Vaulted street. 4 Br. 31,4, Ba, Westminster. Memorial right person lOO"k rom· Lg furn I bdrm hse. nr Some rset C1t1home location S8SO per mo 63.!·4~6 -----1 ceilings and wetbar are gourmet kil<'hen, walled Park: D lot m beau.tiful mi.ssion available. Con· M.am Beach. S6.Sll per mo <Baker/Bear St). 3 Br 3 Week da_l's_7S9-<ll1S
BLUF FS CONOO.Single just some of th e patio. comm. tennis, Med.1tal1on Section. fidential interview. •ti1S(!H!M-7!W:!6_ Ba. 2 car gar SSSO Scaview4Br3Ba.fam1ly
story, JBr. 2Ba. Linda amenities. Too good to yacht club. Submit all Sacrifice.1700.~1·91561. S46·5880 Vince ._._ rt•-L 3169 Resp parties only rm . dinlllg rm. ocean &
Plan New appli S Lii last' 1165.000. ff .. _.. le --=.!-'-=' -""'wpo ~ 642·8663 Iv msg night light views Pool & . a . e. o ers-purc.._.,, ase, H.t.or L.w. Har! •••• •••• •••••••••• ••••. --- -s etc Assumable loan, t Cote Realty trade. Owner creative Mount Olive. 2 loU Sp Need sharp4-p.lex in HB Cozy be~ch cottage, 2 Br 2 Br with stove. enclsd tennis UKX>pr mo
owner agt 1230.000 and anxious. Will help 11E&F C)'J>ress Lawn H lOK h p 1 Ba furn Winter ren-garage Adults, no pell; ~2013 & l n \•estme nt finance. ~.000. Mk Ofr. 646-0181 ave cas nn on· lal 9-lS 81 thru 6 1S.S2 S47S 773 W Wilson Waterfront lease. 4 Br~ OCE~~oMT 640-5777 D.M.Mlr t1lllr ft..67S.9797 -k SO Mo 972-1000 QI 4889 Ba. family rm, top ron ~ -d1tton, dock for 4-0· boat NEW IY OWNER ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 7~35 1600 n OWHEI i.iDOtSLE charmin11 4 2 BR cottage, w1yard. $220()
r= --------llj 4 lg units. Long Beach. bdrm 2 bath newly re eood neighborhood . k 75 3 B~t.~~s::s~ooo M.I . IA.IGA.IM IACK IAY RARE C·l·H Newport Cash flow IO 'k Fin. dero;ated S1800 mo 642·'834; ~4259 _ 4 Br 4 Ba. rlean & shJrlJ
Owner w/ca.rry. 67J.6578 111.000 down. nice 3Br, CHmY LAICI Beach Properly so· S119,500. 644·1.SI Yearly. Al.so other ren· 180 deg vu new Bluff eon next to tennis & beach
2"41 Ba home, VJ blk to frontage in prime loci Waikiki 2 BR fum condo Lats 1v11I Bill Grundy. 'do 2 BR 2i;, ba, 1975 11500 mo. Bob or Dovie
OCEAMFIOMT' bch, owner will finance 3 Bdrm family home uon. Owner will finance 14th nr view, pool, 61S-616t _ ML 41~_, 67S.1781 ~--7S9 1221
S 000 S20s ooo with separate in-law's --450, · · qrtrs Pool size comer Exclu.sive Principals nr bearh Saleorexchg Yearly & Willier. !bdrm l"IH 324 NtwPort Shores 4 Br 3
Thlsoffenngisanestate SUHSlfl.L lot. Very private fan· only Ask for Irene S9810000wner&M-t~ & 2bdrm. rum Uhl pd ...................... Ba Canal front
sale One of NewPort 542.Uot l 15 l i r (j nan c'" R Loudon, Agt, 631 4247 or 22 Units Newport Bch. Y rd, on Seashore W E side duplex lbdrm. 9ji2 6683 :d:~·~~es!;~ewg~~s~ OCEANFIOHT S219,000. 631·7300. Sl.540,000 Luxurious I ~port S~O lmo & lba,gar,S37S1mo NewPortHe1ghtsold 2Br
By owner. Best Balboa OPEN HOUSE 1·4 --------•I OWC, 7S2·2584_____ -tmo MS-I 673-2077. I Ba ho11Se. larjte }ard. ~l~r 2 wi!ts. 67s.6700 loc. Lee price reducUon. 2313 Redlands Dr. C.2 LOT 4·PLEX, Tustin. Near Ocean front. year round. N l c E E · S I D E 21,, car garage Adults.
___!!_!>!!.Q.mics Fri/Sat/Sun&Mon. High traffic count. new in best area, good 2 bdrm. 2 ba S86s. ~0'1 TRIPLEX 3Br. 2ba + no pets.1st &last +S200
.SELL idle items with a 4 "2brdp!Jt.~7990 C/21 MtwpwtC.tr 62.5X307 lot Exi.sling assumable fin wt 20'h ~shore ____ den. Lge deck·upsta1rs dePos1t S69S Mo 461
Daily Pilot Classified Have something lo sell' 640.5357 642·0313 house on property Flex· dwn. S312,000 Prine Winter Rental Sept-S600 'mo R&H lnvslmnt Santa Ana 541J..5041afl 6
Ad. 642-5678 Classlfie<!_adsdo 11 ~tll ible uus Owner will please. Agt 8:11-4921 or June Steps to beach. 3 7S2 2197 38' DOC-k ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •
: 8-D~! ~~n~•K· ~~l~r~IAL :
IOKUMDEI
This Newport Crest con·
do 11 priced al Sl69.000
Owner anxious. Ca ll
Tim Rhone NOW !
631-1266
consider rarry1ng Isl 499 '721 B t &
k I __:_ r. new pain in out 2 Br 2 bath, brand new J Br 212 Ba :'oii<'t'I• di' TD. As mg 199.500 Call --------•I l27 34lh St 851·0867, condo Pool d c do ' 540-llSlformoretnfo. Cll ... ~TMENT jJJ.S.l~. 1Ml20Z corate on A'a1I ""~ ----· 8·12 67S.677S PROPERTIES WIMTB Newport Heights. small 2 Exclusive Big Can) on -~~-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
e It's easy to place your 8-Day Week Classified by marl, and it e ...................... . e costs just $8 -that's only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this e Leisure World 1 BR. e special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering e s-ta•• 1010 ~~t~s~.g~A~~.1~i>~~:
• merchandise fo r sale UP to $800 per ad. and t he p rice must • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ass um ab I e Io an
• be in your ad. The cost sta ys the same whether your ad • 1-.·s·su·MA.1U--L•o•A.•N•1 837·3264; m 1126
needs eight days selling time or just one. MO 9UA.UFYIMG O.tt.Water
• • freshly painted, sharp 4 A Low interest rile as
Bdrm 2 bath, large yard. well as a low pnce for
• Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one • new driveway Brick this 2 bdrm. 2 ba In the
c .. c1••'-/T••• ............. 1700
AColdwellBanlter Co. 3 Bdrm family home on Br. duplex, private townhouse 2bdrm. 2bt1.
UGUMAICH the oceanfront with yard NO PETS. Locale pvl gar 11250 mn
panoramic views. ll.200 ref's reqwred. 1395 Gas ~8126ort97·!>471
4"LD mo 'winler ~ater~d 673-2256 Oceanfront,---;;~ bea<'h
t >t'•o/o 3 Br. I Ba S.00 fenced spertacular new 2 br A.1 ..... Lo. La r g e a n d f u 11 Y yard 2 Months advance (am rpt. 2 sty twnhse
0 c ea n views with r u r n 1 s he d 6 b d rm 646-~I ~ mo Call 67S 2062
Calalma sunsets from bayfront home with every unit. Ntar Main dock Sandy beach and S'A.CIOUS 1 IR BLUFFS J bdrm. 3 bath.
Beach and Village. patios. Sl!iOO/mowinter Condo near So Coast fam rm Neutral Im
Pricedfor qukksaleby WaterfrontHomes.lnc Plata , woodsy at maculate Near pool
motivated owner! 303 631·1400 mosphere Security SIOOO..!!!..O ~~r~·0134
down takes it. First time r-c&.............. kSO/mo WATEIFIONJHOME
orrered-can't last! Call ~ -3176 Waterfront Hornes, Int' 2 sty custom home 4 BR .
JohnTucker ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ ~1-1400 formal din1n1: &
'
I bdrm. Ocean view. So ll4-ltJ San Clemente. Avail D .. 'oW 322 breakfast nook. 3 car
Au JS 498-4331 •••••••••••••••••••••• gar . lge d05ets. pantry. 2 Br. l Ba dbl gar. yard. 3 fplc 's, lge deck. boat
$600 A ·1 S t 7 dock avail at extr:i Hat11t1U ..... 1Md 496-70'16 vat ep charge for leaSt' only
• classified line of type. Minimum ad IS 3 lines Please print • firtplace. s years new. ~~~ ~~PN~ ~::
I I Owner anxious. Move in TWO FOi OHi
• painy. • condition. Asking allorrers.Agt.64S-0'70l. TWOhouseaononelotin
••••••••••••••••••••••• -Call Peggy Pattison GtMral 3202 H.t .... leoch 324 714 9SS ·2473 wkdayb
Sl21.soo. For an appom. l· Wknd's. 213-433-~ & d . bl
• 714 cc7 31.. very e11rea e area. r ------------------------------, • menttosee,call540.1151 ·oN . ..... Owner will carry first,
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 8 ~PM NR . BEACH. 3bdrm . ..:.."------• •
Location view 10% as· 00 qualifying. 2 bdrms
sumable. Lrg a l e bOI s•m Cll
• •
3bdr m . 2~ba lux. eac · n y ,_,90() a FOaYOUR
townhouse. 2 frplc's, loday979-S370 LUSIHG NHOS
• • l!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!ll!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f landscaped back & side A CAll
• •
l'tlllng the most people yards. Loe. atlDpofhiU LLSTATE CARLEENMORRELLI
ibl ,_. overlooking E . • 675-1771
• •
poss e "" important 1° Fullerton. This is the REALTORS -.!IJl••lllm!I the success or any nicest condo In town &:---------i II:
• •
garage sale. Make sure friced to seU quickly at yours is listed in CI ass if i ed. phone --""-17~9 .... .S00-'-'-.-"738-0IS4~..-....-· ___ 1
• • 642·5618. Have something to sell!
To place your message
before the
readini public,
phone • • l Classified ads do it well.
• • ~~~ ............ !!.~~ ~~ ............ !!~
• Add $2.60 for e1ch addfflon1l llne for 8 time• • • • • • e Publis h my ad for 8 days starting e
• Classi fication • • • • Name •
• Address e
• City Zip Phone •
: Check or M.0 . enclosed D :
e Charge my ad to: e
: # Exp. : • •
• • • • • lailJ Piiat ::.::. ~.UHU : • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DUSSID FOi A PAaTYt This 4 BR
& Fam. Rm home is located in
one of Turtle Rock's loveliest
neighborhoods. Prof. decorated.
Spacious yard , with wrap.around
patio $329,900. Call Madeline
Crawford 752-1414 CV65)
Ml•HT Ll•HTS, MOUMTAIMI &
SUMSITS. Flowering court.yard
leads to a beautiful tile entry &
1arden kitchen . Upgraded
flooring & wall coverings. 3 BR
2\'l BA 4th BR possible. $175,000
Pat Terry SS1·8700 (V66)
. r J. 4-~----~
~~ ,...,_ ... . ,_......,r...,'°"""-...-....._, ..... ..__
Dally Pilot
Classlfled,642-5678 Have someOung to sem l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I Classified ads~ it well.
Mtwport .._.. I 06' Newport ltocJi I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
THIH IM IA.YSHOll • PllYA.TI
IUCHIS. Charming Country
French. nawless 3 BR 3 BA din
rm $90,000 price reduction
$495.000 excellent fin ancing or
$340,000 fo r lg corner lot gard en
home with seller financing or
new on the market -move·ln
ready 1-s to ry "Bayshore '
Charmer.'' Dona Chichester
642·8235 ( V67 )
._ .... __ ._... ... ,.a..
8-pM -...,CA.... 9'w'P(lft ..... C4llllO
("4)....... (ft.4)......,
2Viba, ram rm. fncd yrd. EXEC. SID CONDO
gar, w/d hku.-. gdnr in· 4 Br refng. micro. dis
_!!.__ S895 _SJ6.0l2~~1..__-i pout, w s S950 Mo Call
Walk to beach. 3 Br. 2 Ba 63! 0460_. __
Fireplace, d/w, beam llGC~T.-.w
ceiling, washer & dryer. 3 bd'rm. ~,.., ba. golf
2 car garage, small course view. Sl400 ard. S64S Mo 960-632S. __ 640-5Z74 __ er.-. lJ4 ••••••••••••••••••••••
ORAMGmEE
2 Bd, I Ba. 2 car garage,
adult comm. Tennis.
pool, &Ym, sauna. Avail
Aug. 1. $.W>/mo. 1st. last
& cleanin& deposit.
Warner Carr. SIMOO
WoodbridJe, 3 br. IV. ba
condo, Im/mo. ava.il.
lmmed. M0-7880
ORANG ETREE-2 Bdrm
I Ba, 2 car aar. Adult
comm unit y. Tennis.
FIOHTROW
VllW
Sp1c1ous single story
Eastbluff home with un
obstructed Upper Bay
and night lights view 4
bdrms. & family rm Im
mediate occupanq
11, lSS per month.
(7141 6 73-4400
121>1 •2a.21u
f ht• h.tl l••t ,tit ,1 'uhh·•I
11i ... 11-,,1.111 ~ 11111
pool, gym, •auna . \ 11111"'~'"'
1580/ mo. lat • laat 11.11 h•11 h1H•,t41wi11 r.,
+sec. dtp'llit. W.IMOO. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Wa tr. Luitury \ story hoUH on
Dttf'ftlWC.. Santiago Dr. 4 Br. with
3 Bdrm. 3 be. 111, dis· 1eparate mulfr bdrm
hw11btr. C1oM to pool suite. I full ~ . Family
and nc ttnltr. AHll Rm. Formal Oin!"I Rm
A u ' LIVlftl Rm. an ¥try · t le1ant nei1hborhood fioodbriql 4 br, I ba, Will p1pm 6 etflltll
f11n rm, prdener, Nr U.ru-out. Perfttt cond
ttboola,Plfb.•1•mo. II 5Ulo ,...,4 lll1Mltl11L41447• --· ·~r,;__
a-..._. I br, l ba. tliOOlmo l br, ..,,_. H k OO/mo. 204 4tth St .. ....... _.,,........ Drive by ftnt, ltttn call
ltacll ,_. from l4SO 752 ..
mo. Ad-:.°1il r,Ql~-~l=tr:::=Pl~&Of;:::::_
WANT ACnONT Q AISIM> ADS c ,..IQ.,. ..
1
.. 4 ' •
"-"U* hh• bat ••••11·~ . ....__ ........... · . ........_ Or .· .......... ., .......... "" -wzc: _,., "I~_,. I 1r.... 41M A.All--.__._. 4"00 enna Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Auguat 12, 1981 • D7 ... .. a..;.:__.. •• • • •• • ....... •••••••• • •• •• • • • • ......... •• •• •• • ~ -"" ' .. .. -•IN'P-U6t MIWI rt--... "76 •••• ................ ••••••••••••• ................................ .
......... -.........~-• ...... HJ4 Mew,.,. .... 116 Ntwport I Br. I lloUH Pr1meolftct1l*tlnnew te•trW...., 4 '-ti,._. UOO TNYtt 141 W • 7100 • i·~~·.~~~~··~~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• .... ••-•• from oc.11, parkln1 bld1, DlM Pt. Oftu • ••••••••••-••••••••• ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• •••••••••••H••••••n• .., ..... _..., ---~ PINE awrr ~M'S . 81v1Ja I BJU~ 8A. lie • k 1, 1¥ 1 11 , D 0 w. mtb vie.. Av all I/IL 2SOO o." UJbl Ill· WIVILll lor t•1tubur1b ...................... . l::o'Jf"· ~n V'."aJlln. 2 Br 2 Ba Child OK. no I a r P 9ol. t t'1 I 5. Pre-completlon lf11ill1 duatrial. PrhM localion F• lllr 1111. Need to ahr 1u • Aulatant Man11er to ~..r.=:...--1 pets Patio. view, frplc, 640-~~. IOO'fl!IOMS bacl1&1.• oul to John Waybe ~ .J.rlvin 8'7~»31 •or k d J r er t l "I Ottant~ Penlntula, 2 enel 111 , 111 •tove, N·--n~ ..... ,OIT ........ Airport $USO mo. lllr rKl' T.ahlt 110• 11t clau 3 w/mall&ll'I' eak}' levtl Br. 2 Bt WLnt.r rtnt.I. SMG. ~ .. ll'Yl'"·~m "' --fl& l2112 AK r"'-'· 111 nd f.day trt Le po11slton w/po11lble
/Mo _91· l50AM GHI07PM YACAMr 18drm, ~ '300/Wll Yu rn l1hed or UD· --:!-· -· Cal 1n:9/2!S Grwp,':;lft Pb 1rowth. SoUd retail U ·
Vurly 2 Br. l Be . I or 28R. Buill·i'iil I bdrm. I bath, ZBdrm 1.175/Wk rurol.lbed LI window Ofrlcespa~.211•qft,-+ Oary N2·$424 or Jell peratleMC2yn.fAO
.... IMlltC.,_ nrpon 16.W Mo inckfs Drapea, carpda Adult.I ltttplace, blt.-lns, Mwly Newlydecor/sbarp Eucutlve Sullea 111 2:,S~fl•~=·Mls-6U.U7' Sll·5'71 Sc:bwan7M-l5111 ·
8fauur1.10y ~led utlla Avail Sept 5. 1019 onl .N . ~11 refW'blahed. Vrlyatl'/$0 __.i.ll!!ll7'°'32,17W127_ lrvme WalklnJdiatuce ! t '500REWARDfor ll\fooo j;T" t& Bobytltter/Houttbeper
£1 OoradoMdl n 2~ w Ba Avt 8'73-mo lit l blk to bay• IK'h, toatrport. St...• 4110 mum ot Blue • Gold 'f •w 1• needed. 1.»5.:.1. Muat b r, · · S525--Jll/UA S.00 mo. yrty 28r, yrly Pt.A1A ....................... Macaw tlba ll'om 10301 ,,.,., be able to drive chlklrtn
1 a, •et bar, 'Parquet D..a.D 2 cblldrtn OK Pool no $750 mo Jones Rily DICunYI SUfTIS Free 1t1ndin1 convert SamOll Dr , H B. on Aua ............ •••••••••••• to1ehool. SlOOwec!k CaU v1~~ s~~~ ••ted. 2 bdrm. l800. 3 bdnn, a ~.Sf!·~~7513700 f7UZ10 2oaUllcbehoafZl2 a1r111.Appros8aqft 4lh He wu 1 very Im· .,._W..te4, 7071 ...:.96J..=-"zea=1·'------, J~Uiz ~~ 17~. sttips to beach. $375 Lar11 upper. 2 Ste'* w beach. Furn. 3 2Qll8uain-..Clrt213 Loe beblnd 111 E ntb St portant family pet, 1011 ••••H••0•::;:::.:.::.::•••• Babysitter needed. my
--~ · -"""n vltw. Yearly reo· bdrm, l ba. adulta, no 8r. 2 Ba. Minlmum 2 14.7 J..OJJ4 CM. Call Roxlt. MZ>4210i ii critically UJ in holpital v _ _._ home for 2 chiklreo, 1 &
C1d1" a tal U024thSt.N8 (714) pets, 311 W. Wilson w s.SG M-F9to onl . mo. 4cthia hu putonemore Stolts Polltlon w/nl~e 2i,;yra .Mon6Wedl·6.
Pw htlM l4 624-a704 631·2177 VERSAILLES apatl.2 br, Yec.tloa..... 4250 C:~iC:~~: :th~· ..... WlllMd 4600 burden on the family. lam 11 y u 11 v e ·In Tues H . 'lM>-UU ....................... a br I 2 ba. 1850/ me>. So. Cat Villas 2 br. 1 ba 2 ba, sec. Cite. Clbhae.. ....................... rrou.nd floor prv patio' ....................... Call anY«me 9'2·7073, alde/conpanlon. Exp. ' .,... _______ _
Tem; 3 mo Woodbrld&t winter, Sept, 12-June 1, sszs. Woodlide Village 2 ocean view, adults, no lNDIAN WELLS Rae· SU/mo. 'ni,.uso', P rof. prop. m•r, 111, 658-!30UIO·f'74t. 1lnt reh Pleasant, IAIYsmB
rental. Seml·fum. Au1 or rl 11250. G4S-~ br, 2 ba ~.So. Cat Ter· . 50. 5.5'1-lWl q(l(!t Club. Lovely 2 br. 2 4~·4797 wanla am. beacnrront LOST: Gokl Se.lko watch, positive, neat sober, re· Nwpt Hp elemtntary 29· s.50, mo. 2BR. 2BA, race 3 br 2 ba M2:5 PIP EASTBLUPF, apacloua I bl view condo 24 hr 0 1 apt Sept-Apr. Will es:ch. vie. 17156 Ed&ewater, liable. Do drive. Pref. 5 school area. 84$.lSJJ ~at~48~·8730 eves U•fw lie.ct. 988-311$2.' . bdrm. Pool, quiet UH aec., full rec. ~nlhly Co~la ~~!· ZSUU~ Int prop, m1mt 1erv. for all H.B. Au&-$, 81, 6P.M daya on, 2 otl. Peggy I•-------. Sgle adll. No peb tlOO Avl $-l 7eo.zs53 · aute. mo. · orpart,Ed (71')534..a940 REWARD.SGMBO _.'3....,l .... ·2_..427...___ IAIYSfTTll
CNdo•',' o · ll02 IAYTUielaS mokH787 eea~tif~l cld, 719 W tltb. St. J>yroldlemlleillootlng Loil : 2/yr old r.,d H..,Wlllhd 71 neededfot2weeustart
..... I bed 1425 ........ ............... SPACIOUS l BR Ntar Hoa& Holp. BeauL view l Br ~e El.stor, 77•·3350 tor liv. qtn, N.B .. low Doberman. remalc. Vic. ...................... Ln1 Sept. lit thru Sept.
....................... ArTMTS FOi lt84T newly deoorat.ed 2 atory Wk da Md a wety fr. Nwpt Bel\, small otnce, ce>tt or es:chance terms La1una Beach. 4lM·7700. AAA~ Co. 14th, 8am4pm, Mon-Pri
NEW. Be ht lenent. H.B .N B.,Cost&Mesa Large patio walk in •P' 3 Br. 2 Bli. Crplc, 8'1s.'hai Y or r Y b8, 18Z7 Westclill Dr., diJc1111ed.~3lJ1 L~·-Needs d11lributon Pff. (2) &Iris. ages to" 8
Unusual adult complex Somelhll\lforEveryone closet, di b h dsbwr lodry rm &•r · N.B.SISO/mo.S3l·c»oG Executive wlth family _._-..i F/T.F ra .NO-SG58 M u at have own
w/ &•le " pool. Near Bach. lo 4 Br. Un/urn. fireplace, g!ra~!.s p~j Adulti, no pets ' S69S ........ to si... 4300 N E W P 0 R T needa minimum .three Lost: iamese, dark tra111porutim ' ref's
S.C. Pla.za Secluded Apts Certain locations &laundrylac.kZS 5-48-0230 n•••••••••••••••n•••• PENJNSVLA bedroom ~or condo altered male vie Broad-A.CCMTG.e&.m Wood brsdce area,
comer unit I BR din· ofler Pool, s pa, 399W BaySI Oceanlroot larce 3 Br. 2 'lovln1?.Avol!1 deposilJ 2 premium air cood'd. ror (by)Sept. tstColta moor Homes COM 8/5 Fillo&. lile typing, Irvine. Call Ginnir
ing, 'patio, cent. air Ii replace, laun room. 646-tlll Ba. Upper, 2 car garage, cut li':"ng ex~es! oks avail Facing on Meta, Newport Beach 644-743S personable Will lrain 552·0461 aller5:30prn
S46o+S3s utd 77S.2S80 beamed c e i I 1 n gs. frplc, yurly lease. $1200 r~~fesssonally since Npl. Blvd. 876 & 928 sq ft. area. Call 8-0234 After Los l : s i Iv er gray Good benefiu Newport
eves week-cods. No lJ garages all built-ins a.... Mo. 642.3443 HOUSRU... Open beam cell 'a• , 5:00 PM. . Persian, 15tb St & Bay, travel company Calll•-------·
IEAUTIM HOUSES-Garden' 41 Townhouse •1...,._ lwei lt4 L 1 r g e 28r -2J:j';" -TES skylite, bdwd. nn . new N B R E W A R D ' Kathy * * COMDOS design. NO FEE. ....................... Baylronl Condo, wsth 832-413f cpU, parting SI 2!S per ..... u /linttf/ 675-304.5, s.9-2200 714 675-7071
Apt Newport ~ach TSLMGMT. 642-1603 THEWHIMITIH view secunl)' bldg sq fl Matt.673-6806 ~ Lost: Fem. Cocker A.ccMlllllgClttt BANKING eosii Mesa Call us we lolM>a ,_... 3807 Luxury A~u!l units at al· pool,' parking Yearly cu. n'-~I Idea! tor Arch1lecl or ~··•••••••••••••• Spaniel. Nr 0 C C Eicell. co benefits,
manage 600 units ~ or ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• rBordawble llil vding. 1.2 &d3 ~ Broker67H912 -'".c~O .. v ltft•. O:S•cner. 800-1200 sq ft. 0 I +sa•1t 5005 ~!~!.rd . 966 . OSSO, pension' pro!it sharing
oear water f7SO & 2BR spacious 8 & r. e ecorate M 1 1 'f1' .... d ,t t S .. ypark aru lmmed .., .. _, -·~ plan, medical 4i dental Call Delores Gel berg up oce~n. Yrly ~ aincl Olympi~ sltie pool, light· 1 ~ ':{'e ~~~~ ~oeup ael I\ 1'1. er~ occ~anc · 751·2332. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found: Black kitten coverage. Prefer 10.key TSL MGM!_~t603 ulll. Mature adults. No edt:nr~~dlacuui, Versalriea. View, jac, · · ~-~-Exec.officew11hvlewlor ~~IHT~OP Burke S~hool , HB. byt.ouch 4clmowledgeor
M S C ·---R!t_U. 675-4172 ~rt be eutil~ :i~PmJ. pool, & more $550 mo. Oldest & largest agency lease, Nwpt Bch. shr Thr1v1ng busmesa, C.M.. Please claim or adopt. how Lo post & balance r o I ... _ 2 br, 1 ba, 2 sundecks, H ': a g. in MS-007~~ l1l So. Calil since 1971 services w/olher pro-low _overhead. Call ~or 968·300i accls. l yr exper In
3 bdd rm . condo0, drapes Mar $650/mo yrly utils · F. ,..,... .,.,0619 OC., ... .., VI~ Credits· ABC.NBC.CBS, less1onals. 5'48·1166 details 165,000. Craig. Lost : White & yellow payroll. Contact An, an cpt10g. verlooks · · · ro m ........ .....,.. !l;An .:;..... 631·1268 c k t · I v I 714 540-8671 EOE Greenbelt. Pool. spa, paid.673·l!!!L_ DE LAWARE PINES lOsleps tosand Lge 2 Cosmo.Ph1lDonahue Ollicespace,2157sqrt, oc a 1e . c . -·---·-·-·-·
clbhse avail. Se<· Onte. Lge2br,lba,w,2patios, AP'l'S. bdrm+ patio+ 2 r11r *'-"Orf• 5ubleB11e, under ~rkl, Bus hard /Adams. ACCOUNTS
S625Mo. gar. & lndry. $550/ mo. Spaciousl&2 8drm. purking 5750/mo to all new clients who lurn./unlurn. AdJ . lo 968·035lor962-6323. PA.YAa.ECUll( --~m.82~=31 yrly.675·8213. Frpl c, stove, dis· Furniture available. needaplaee ~ra~~~~e Jes~,· Lost: loo~allwhiteF Organized individual
* 2· b.r. l ba, seeurity, orot1a .. Mer 3822 hwasher, garbage di&· 848·4S57 oreves962-2305 Newport Beach, 641 1899 nr;>: Park. ~ /se; fl: ~~li-d~r:.s.1J.ierrace. re-wslh busy A/P dept. Lite
child ok, no pets SC ....................... posal. pool: laundry fac. WESTCLIFF, I br rondo, ServingaUtheS. Coast Kathy 641·0'244 Ci...Nc.I Sen.. Found .· Watch· Hunt· ty pin&, &d benefits,
Wells Fargl> Bank.
Newpart Center otf1ce.
has the following sm
mediate openings:
TIU.BS
&I mo. banking ex
perieoce &/or cashier·
ang
CUSTOMst
saYICE
6/mo previous bwin11
exJ)l:rience preferred Plaza Area. '4SO Fantastic ocean & city Small. quiet complex. adults. no pets, pool ' · Newport Beach area
. 833-16SJ/~6844aft6 light view from every Adults only Pets con newly decor . new ap'. CardenGrove,1195-3482 Furn or unfum office. Sw~P-ington Beach Aug. 61h _640-~89SO~-·-----B>PCLIU
3 BR 2.,_, Ba,-;;;-cpls. room 1 Br. sooo Mo Ca ll sldered 1 ~r. S450tmo 2 ~ ssoo 673-ft640 _ AC, ulil pd, larking, So. Ora.nee COut Area. 842_-_4929~·----·-------.i
paint, Nwpl Terrace Anthony days 642-5757. Br $550 mo 19221 Versailles 2br, 2ba dm OpenSat.too! 10.S Coast Hwy, B '425 No exp nee. Will train Found:darliogcaliroklt· ACCOUNTS :~';:ri:n':~e=mg
11 1 1 S e 1 m 1 5 1 ev_es & wknds_644-8889. Delaware St (So or rm , former model, 5725 mo. 64$-7500. !~P:! c~ ~::1·~~'t:, ten on Goldenrod COM llf'OIT Cl.Ill
714·738·4526 $69() per Uniq_ue2b~,lba,beamed ~~~rihl~>, ~~h~fs 6426149 (~1 _ _ 17nfSTl&T nttded Call Mon·Fn Call673-8866 Entry level pos Must Congenial atmoss>Mre.
mo _ ce1hng, view deck, gar after s ·~PM F'n Mon Versailles bach penthse, Pniffemale,oon-smoker. I COSTA.~A. MPM 4(11.867-0lll Found : alleclionale know 10.key by touch Lovely offices Ex
EASTBLUFFS &carpon.Nok1dstpe1.S 9-SPM. · rlubhse & pool. nice. To share pfestigous1 2or3roomofficesurtes Newpo rt Bearh 1 BlueptSiameseM,Lag Call:Sandi,842-770'l cellent salary &
New. lux 2 br, 2 ba. ~ 645-16112 D-el;xe pool!1d; xtra k~ 642 6149 (SaniY > -Turtlerock home. Frple, Avail now Call operator beauty salon, Bch, needs gd home I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ benefits Please con-
v1ew, h1&h wood beamed C~Gahlase large 2br 2ba bllns Brand new 3 br, }-.ba pool , 3BR. 2BA. total up-,!!e!.,I~ 675-6700 S.SOOO 9/yn established 494-239~-tact:
reihngs, spa Ad ults on with fireplace. 2 bdrm. dswhr 11; mil~ beach' Steps to beach Nr pier gr~dedslwmany x~,ras~o Ground flooroffice space business. Low rent, Found · conlacl lens. Accounl.U'lg DElllEOI KIM
il 2 ~~n~ loc N0o1 rlS ocean view lsl & last + Adlls, no pets '450 mo No 2tlS ~ 673-6640 :: J 752.ztJ, mo s e Avail for leue 400 w l350/mo. incl wl. Owner Laguna Hotel, about 2 17 I 4tf7J.Sot I
., ••.• .,... !!,o "•n88621 ce secdep 644-7877 536-8362 OCEAN VIEW. yrly. 2 -'-1400 sq ft Ulil furn moving to Lake Ar· weeks a o.CaU Holel_ GENERAL @ ':".....,.,,,...,~ ___ Near0cean.Upper 2 BR, 2 B ED R 0 0 M BR 1 Ha,~ mo Avl Rmmte wanted, Male lo Harbin Investment rowhead.675-1347. Found. Kitten 6to7 mo s .• u ,. ,,,~
View condo, city hghts, J ba. frpl, beams, deck, TOWN HOM E Pool 9 1644 6780.._646-3189 shr 2bdrm apt. '2001mo Service lnc. 1625 E 17th A L 0 E V E R A Female. Black & Grey ACCOUNTING
ocean 2 BR 2 Ba.,loll, 2 carport, quiet mature park , near be ach• Cozy 2 8~ 1 B~ Beam Please call George SA.5-41-4171 __ PRODUCTS Nal'I firm Abyss'in1an Yellow
decks, luxury Lse adlts S575TSL 9635191 ce I g f l 642-e38laft8am. For Lease: prof office need area center eyes. Friendly Call SUPERVISOR WELLS
FARGO
BANK
s1 .. ooo. 964-3466 642-16(!;1.._642·3153 -· Ne'w';or~' H~rg~ts .11~0 College student wants lO space 7~ per sq It. manager lor Orange After &PM. 494-3236.
2 br + den. 2i,., ba condo. .,~_....__.1 __ MARINERS WAU( kiduets l500 645_1682 shr ne11r OCC by Aug. Move in allowance. 5911 Coast Area Tremendous Found. Australian Sheep
2 car gar. relrig Lil__,..,.._ l. 2 & 3 Br. Townhouse ------· 18th, $200.975-0235 Heil, H.B Hunt Harbor returns upon invest· shepherd type. Tricolor Join I growtn1 division washer dryer gas BBQ, New I y decor ale d , Apts. from '475. Patios Versailles I Br Bachelor M/F to. ha 1 a re a 8 JS 5 118 0 r m e n t I n ( 0 M r . Calm , loving, S48-S703. or Emenion and enjoy
pool, j~c. sa~a. S725.' tharmin~ .. 2 bdrm. sep single & double ra; Penthouse. bakony Irvine sho:eal~emn:; 968-3701. Mell ren. 714)599·6M5 Please give this dog a allthebeoefltsolalarge
631·3213or979-4031 hse. Avail Sept 1 $725 garages near Hunt ocean view l450 mo with O""a I . j 19X28' ofrice Spal•e m In· Eam Sl0,000 or more a home corpor.atwn in a small =.-.-=:~.-----673·3017 H bo 'Ch Id OK Av a i I 8 • 17 Pol · Y ~ ... pro essiona -~------r company atmosphere. Newport Versallle stdio -------Jo~680~r 1 ren 2lJ/8Sl·0400:JO.S.daily male.S32SMo.CallJohn dustrial complex. nr mo. It's possible with Found : 817. Female Weseekan individuallo
660 Newpart Center Dr
Newport Beach, Ca.
con d o PL ia c Co1taMl'SO )82 --· ---552-4030. Jehn Wayne Airport. M ELLOWFR~H .call German Shephvd mix sauna gar rer~g S42S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ., .... -..E ,., ... CH Eastblufl 3 Br. 2 Ba SSOO mo. 875-16198 ~2727 Black with blond mark· supervise the general Equal Oppt Empl m/f/h
· . ...~ "!l;l't '" -Townhouse Apts 2 ca r . v· Sunll •. accounting stall You mo. ~l-11000 lteeve nm;"' LY DECOR. 2Br._2Ba. bltns, patio, dk garage. No children, no "Gay Male/Female" EXECUTIVE ings. ic. ower .. will be mponsible tor BEAUTICIAN wanted.
Villa Balboa, 2br. 2ba, vu I Br gas pd, encl gar akylites, gar, adlts. no j!els S6SOMo 644•1010 G.R.C. RoomaleCootact SUITES IEMTAL YA.1.D Harbor. Evess.s9·105'4. recording or sales and Busy Cost.a Mesa shop
or ocean & bay, lge d/washer. pool Adults pets '475 mo. 4922 Ed--·------Service.ll-7PM. Includes all equipment. Found.Tamebird, accounts receivable, needs a Hairstylist
patio,micro.frplc,S800 642-5073 ______ inger.846-8319 _S.Ci....t. )176 (213)6»:.>40. IN Best location in Morro Identify preparationoffsnancial Guarantee+ com·
642-6149 (Sandy/ 2 Ir. I la Apt Nr. new Jbdrm. 212ba, ................... ~... HlllTAGE Bay. C1W. Need quick 645-3547 reports for corporation mission.
Wooclwldgt Newly decor. C:as pd lrplc, dbl encl gar. patio Stud.Jo Apt. Ocean view. Home to shr. unlurn 2Br. PLA1A ule Seller is leaving Found· Toy Collie Mix and internal manage-631·9754
3 bdrm condo H• ba encl gar .. pool, dshwr. S 6 o o / mo. A 5 k r 0 r All ut1ls incld. l320 Mo l nalr, kitchen prtv •,; New luxury office space slate '60.000. rem a I e , very s m 1 ment in addition lo being 111;1.0J<:. MA.GI · · Ad"' .,.., <hr> Rosemary G 848-2262 332 Encino Lane, San util. S325 mo. (masttrl. in l r vine's busiest 6ll ••42 Seacliff; H B 960-1481 responsible for the com-Small m· •·"""desia S625 per montb. Bus ...,ts . .,........,,.,. ·· Clemente See Mana•er •-5 -0 . w/bath. Adlts center! Easv Frwv ac· -.& · I I d ""'' ..,, HJ 2000 Ho 3 I • ........ or 964·"633. " N • ... , , "'ound. Lro .voung bl k pan Y genera e ger firm wan•-... arp gal "" . , me 673-1792 r ioa aa-. A. .. uc • f ,. n cess. Avail. now' Call r · . .., , ac Olh ta• ...... d "'"" '-r * ....... 2 B 2 B Pool ~ ne 5 req 5'4v-08'8 a sho-"' red ' I Do er re o.cu ulies tn· to man"0 •custo-er As.. or Doug Am Newly decor gas pd , ~ r. a , pu fordetails •wll 1ema e g 1 d rd 1 ·--... merman encl gar .. pool. dswhr p;1l10 Kids OK No peu SAN CLEMINTI 5 •· SSI I "JI 64" .. 230 Hun tin glop Harbour cu e roo maln& mon· orders,schedululg,
Adults. 642-sa73. 960-1484, 646-9666. New 2 story, l bdrm apt. M/F Rmmt. wntd. to shr --·--6---''-'-'-'-""::;..;;..;;..1 Aug 1. 846-14.50 lhly accounlJ closing A P, AIR, daily reports ~HI.....,. 3600 --.. • SOOO. 2 Br. 2 fuU Ba Um· Xlnl loc Ocean View apac. 2 sty. C.M. hm •DB.UXIOfffCES• Lost : Shetland Sheepdog. dand travel audit A cashdJSb&receipts,
Co•••r•o•n•a•d00e•l•M00a0r•.•2••bd••r•m••. N.:; ..... ,.Olf que separate Wltl. Super Close lo shop& Min. lo bch. Jacuzzi, From l room up lo 1400 .. ,.,.._.-..£ male. sable w/wh1te egree 10 accounting or typing. SafegrdSyslm ... , ............. ~ Call "--t w /D mnv J.lrs $250+ I -finance is preferred for Pleas•"' but assert lba'pauo'-merunil • A All•~•~. sharpie.Closetobeach coua: · ~. · sq.lt.Noleaserequired Oppo I ltr 5015 throat Reward ' lb h LI I ~ ...
w l·lBdrm From $270. No pets. 833.8080, c213)249-1S36 Call Juds _645 ·2362
1
Adj . Alrporter llolel •••••••; •• -;;••••••••••• 1133-0272. 15 c 1 engng posi persooality;troubl.e 550r7•5.1 8Y7~~r lse 64+7220 mo. + utils Nochtldren. 833-3307 after& PM 6-10.PM Avail. 8/15. 8.Jl.3223 ~12. U•: ._-'-----& lion A minimum 2S shooting ability req. '""" ,,., l le beds -4BR B condo _...,.._ Found: Money on Lido hours college level ac-Must havexlnt refs. A.partMltlh~ no~~·~owa 'Blvd !Br, lBa, upslasrs, lg s.toAM lllO ,._. 2 A. ._Laun-lmiltesa._.. 4450 Propretory remodeler lsle.Fn.817. counting and 3 years +releveotexperienef
••••••••••••••••••••••• C ewport patio, enclosed gar, S400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~r. pool, Jae. patio, len-•••••••••••••••• .. ••••• needs S20,000 to com-~ general accounting ex-Non·smkr preferred. lalNN lst.d l70 osta Mesa mo. +S400 . 846-9088 NEW CONDO near S.C. nis courts $32S mo. + For store 4i offiee space plete luxury Newport F 0 u n d Fem a 1 e penence is required Mon-Fri8:»SPM ••••••••••••••••••••••~ IMMED 2 Br 1•2 Ba sml yard Plaza Small adult com· utll. 63l-2(11(). After 7PM · al re11onable rates. Beach home. 40'H·60% chihuahua, long hair vie Some supervisory ex· Benefits + good pay,
Beaut. decor2 Br duplex OCCUPAHCYI close to beaCh. Child re~ pl~x Secluded corner !':,I F lo shr house 10 500 to 4000 Sci Ft. return within 4-6 mos. RossmoorShopCenter. penence Is preferred com men. w/ability.
Yrly '800/mo. Avail 8120 2 Br I Ba Apt. Beam OK . Dys 846-053!!, eves unit 1 B.R + extras '460 Co st a Mesa· N ?n. MESA VERDE bR Details, days 645-7123; 598-8215 E N ...,.... ~.n9193 + $35 ulll 775-2580 smoke $280/ I Emerson offers an ex-· ew...,.' ~ A ent. 673-4082 ceilings, laundry rm, 548-5263 · eves. r. mo. mc PLAZA eves64HOOO Found ; orange& white M Bo l rts k ..... __ ,-1-.. . .&-)707 pool. Adults only, no H· ..... i....t-... _...._-A.. C-._lele.e..I uill. 5-45-7975. U2S Mesa Verde E, C.M. u~, to I --so•s cellent salary and com· a p~ counter, s~ --_,"'!""'f--"'...-.--~_... Fetn I CdM 927 M 5 ,_ .,_ .. cat. approx. 1 yr old, pletebenefitspackagein an~ in ye ntory. Valid ....................... pets. H~ )842 or U11fwMslled ltOO a e. · 5 o. 4 121 ........................ Monrovia & 19 l h. addition to an overall at-Calli. Lie. nee. Harrison
2 br. 2 ba, I blk to beach, TSL P1._GM!_ 642-l&OJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~lus ulil. Eves, 97s-9206, Office s..l.M IUSINESS LOANS 548-0492 mos phere or career Boat Ctr. S.A. 542-7211
S6SO yrty. DI Alvarado 1 Br-,Garden Apt. Stove & N~w 2 Br 2 Ba. Condo, s E A w I N o •YS, 558-2621! Npt Beach SS00,000/15yrs .. 19%. Found: Ped lg reed pe t growth with an Industry Boat riggerlmech. Mere.
Pl. 675-6670 Connie or refnge. Adults. no pets. rrplc, vaulted eeilings. VILLAGE Fl Gorf~ 2BR., 2BA SmaU executive omce, 998-93SOMaMy rabbit, tame, back bay leader. For immediate exp. nee. Harrison Boat
l213) 459·~ SJ.15_248-1377 deck. garage. Quiel, pre condo Um.15hed, Jac & dnt . address, S696/Mo. 2114 LOAMS are a . Whose p el' consideration. please Ctr. S.A. 542-7211
Caata Mna 3724 Newly decor 2Br w/gar, stigious 3rd Ooor 111ew New 1&:2 bdnn luxury pooOCCI Loe nr SC Plaza & Terrs (714)752-llif 9 0 ,., 0 I v a I u e 130 646-1929 call for an interview ap-IOOTH "'~D ......... a<Uls, crpc.s, drps, bit-Pool. spa & sauna $875 adult apU in 14 plans I · 540-3666 Jo Da~s · !'fl paintment. "'' n:n "'"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 105 Fncd yrd wipatio, Mo. 846-9414 Bdrm rroro '465, 2 bdrm Alter 9pm & wknd s, Newport Modem Store yr 1 .. S 100, 000 P v l PenolNlls 5350 New p 0 rt Arc hes CASA DE ORO water pd 636-4120 caU lnlH JI"" from SS35, Townhouse 556-4776 or olc nr pest olc '450. mooey. a9350 Manny ....................... EMERSON Marina CaU btwn. 9AM' ALLUTlUTIESPAID 1• 2619 "L"S .... from 5610 +pools, ten· Prof. F :5-J> lo shr cute 548 si t. 213/477-7001 Y...rfwT--' SHE & 5PM, 642-4644. Man·
C .. Ar . ., anta Ana ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jerr ._. T":T... ~ F om pare ""ore you '475. • ._TH E LAKES .. ms. waterfalls. ponds! older home. E lside Y Dffcfi 5035 E 5 C O.R T S & ri. ask lor Judy or
n:nl. Custom design SPACIOUS 2 BR Ad ll waterfront rondo 1 B Gas lor rooking & heal· C.M , w/same. S300tmo. Newport Beach 15 x so. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOD""' 'NG ELECJllC CO. Harvey features: Pool, BBQ, .. u · 1 · • r 1ng paid From San + ulils. Tncia64S-8373. SS50 11105Westcli.rrDr. Want investor tor Npl """"' cov. rd garage s u r open beamed ce1hng, oft, lrplc, central air Diego Frwy drive North 751 SS25 An"'' b 1 IJS.t 199 hxtustrial IUS IOY
rounded with ·plush lots or wood, serving cond , SSZS Mo t2Ll! 00 Beach w McFadden $200/mo l\'f blocks rrom · ,..me ay root home. Give COEDS-would love to ControlsOivtSion Full time experienced
landscaping. Adult liv bar ktO No pets 2256 592-2178. then West on McFadden beach. Female, non PRIME L""ATIQN Tell secured lit or 2nd party with you Call Sue 3300S Standard St bus boy lorday shift. Ap-ing al 1ts best. NopeU Maple 548-7356 , 2 Br Picturesque lo Seawind Village smoker.Eves 63l·SS68. "" .D.A 675-6161. or Kathy anytime (adjacenttolhe ply in person BEACH
l Br rum. from '44S 673·8803 Orangetree Condo, by (7l4)89J.5198. GtllrtlgH 1941 Newport ltYd. S ....... MhJ. Co. 9S3-9J63 Newport Frwy> HOUSE INN 619 Sleepy
JSSW WI.Ison i;u.1971 • 2 Br 1 Ba Nr S Csl stream. tennis & swim for~..t 4350 C~Mne All types ot real estate (7141641·5240 Hollow Ln. Laguna ----"'=-'-'-~-=-·~~""'"'-Plaza, S.A. Adults. SSOO. ming Avail. Sept !st. ltOCNM 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newfreeatandln18,000 investmentssincel949. YOUNG LADI~ Avail•· Beach _____ _ SUS CASrT AS No lJ. ~3232. SS2S. 67~9Z211. ••••••••••••••!•••••••• Balboa Isl, 2 garages. sq.It retail bldg or? S ble lo party anytime. equal oppty Busy contractor needs
Fum l br apt ..... •. U . . P--"-T Furn room 1n Costa mo/mo suo pr mo ea w~,,.._._..-glot. pee ..... Ill Call Gina or Lisa. em ployerm/f/h d d .. ,_ •. . · · · ......, • CHOICE WT SIDE ni11ers1ty ., ,. errace M h ·1 · ,..., ...., JlldTDs 761 9036 epen ,.,,.,, • resporw. up. Encl. gar. Adults. no . Townhouse nd 't 2 esa ome, avai now, Balboa /Marine. Starts Air . NNN. 95< sq.ft. 642 • !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ble people willing to·
pets. 2110 Newpart Bl Sharp lBr m sm dlx B 2 B 1• e un~ • 1 SZOO/mo.646-5006 Sept. 1. Marilyn 752.0202 714/6'HSOI 548-MlS ·2171 545-0611 EJrNlllUf A.DYmTISIMC; work. Finiabing or some
5'48·'968btwn8&5PM, complex w/pool Cpts, N~· pelSa.S:m~~· y':; FREE rm w/pvt phone, wkdys8:»S:~. c A N N E R y Discounted Trust Deeda UIVlll k.nowledge of conc~t~
drps, lrplc. bltns 1 · in exch lor cleanin° Offlc 1_....... 4 .. 00 VILLAO"•"" available for lnvesto-* ~llTr * ..,A115~a':.~r °"'"ad advert'·· .,.~_ ...... , LaCJ-11 lhadt 3741 range/oven, dsbwshr, ease. 7so.1002 Costa Mesa. 75l·M2S •· • -"" ~sq. fl. of. ••· •1t ox ... ""' .., -="""""'";;;;:"°"'~-----••••••••••••••••••••••• adlu, 00 pets. S410 mo. Orangelree, 1 br condo, . ••••••••··~·• .. •••••••• fice or retail abop space Xlnt yield. For detaUs 2'HOW' ESCORTS Ing to local merchants · CARETAK ERS SIGHT-SOUND OF SEA 381 Hamilton. loll, a fc, ameni ties. Private room & bath. 18~7 Weslcli!I. N.B. Want avall. immed. '475/mo. 9&o.19S7 Broker. l h e Cost a Mes a• Reliable mature couple
'300 wk Aug. wnlr '400 -Adults only. AvaU im· Nice patio. S22S mo. rsn anclal snsl. 70005.1. 673·6522. 24'M lnleresl,•need t5J.I ll MC YIM Newport Beach, Irvine for caretaker of small I.
mo lrfh, a.., 9Wef med. S450. 833·0618, New.Mll-3227. lit. floor. Afent541·S032. Rn Al. SPACI $20,000, 2 yea:r T.D. on SOOTHING K~GE areas. Wiii train the story comm'I bldg Jn
!7l4>C94·51M.337 2222_ t Br. a_pt. up or down 559·9430. Room CdM Home . MEWPOITllACH Newport Blvd. 5000 sq. ?~·v;!~m":'ri La,Ea FordiJcrtminalingmen right crson. Good com-N.8 . Apt.+ salary, For
Newport leedt l76t wi!~edbalC01:11 rlinor pat11~, '--IMdt ll4I f~ale DOf!·S moker. Full service exec. of· fcla.
16001
per fl. AvaU now. Broker.116l~l4S . . . Call Pde!' ~H871 pa1n1yM nents. For app't more info 41 interview. •••••••••u•••••••••••• ca ... , ra ce1 g, poo "'-....... .-mo. Avail Sept lst. flee• 1 ..... m s-7 •• 00 ..-..:.=~=-==----Are you 1 gentlemen ca r. Mic: The Pen· ca11646-GIO. 1 I\ I ds · •••••••••U• .. ••••••••• 7rn nu "" <>• • I ~" 3 Br, ocean vu. new, 2 car spa, us an capmg. lbdrm, new, lrg deck, ...,......,3. C.U" exec. offices from Realonomics 875-6700 , SAN& SlCUll alone in '/OW' 60'1. tall. nnaver,,_.oau. Carpenter needed. Must
pica. Avail 9/1 to 6/15 ~du~~:Z:, pets. S46o & North end. Close to 2 lovely connecting Slll5. Inclds. secretarial, C ...._. .._._ 2nd T.D. 75~ lo1n to Interested in physcial AEROBIC Instructor-be up In raidenUal ft·
_.WO.'='""""'B'"'kr .... m9080. p. beacb.$525.tM-7079. rooms. w/balcony, 1>,vt phone ans., word pro-orw_.._.. value. 24/mo. Dlacount fitness , concerts. plays, experonly,NewportBch model (framing It
THE
"GOOD
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Brunell • 880'1 •
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(714) 8'S-1104 ..............
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2 Br Upper. balcony. 0 . balh, kit. priv .. all uUJ.a ceulng Telex qwip 4200 aq. It Ground noor. ~. 26~ mum. Xlnt bridge, travel? If so area. 759-~ tin ish ) FOR EM>,~
enclsd gar, d/w. Adlu. eeanvsew, lBr, open pd . Mature person. 111EHEADQUARTEM Coast HliJlway. payer. Prime ocean re-please contact a lady ... -•·-· QUALIFICATION'S
Nopet.t.'4Z.S48·9Cll4or beams.l blk tobch,~ S310/mo.1at.lul &S75 COMPANl~ Realooomics 67W700 sldentlal. Payable coun terpart. Call s:.':=-!w 631-234$,831·2004
540-5-446. mo.751-4293 dep.64.S-Mle,675-S533 714/8Sl--Oli81 For lease Retail Store, $1 ,080/mo. S55,000. ADl•erAd 524.M2-dlO. ~----..-.~ C h hel r1·
Stunning, large 1 Br. l.8CJmM~ ltS2 Fumiahed room In Coela PLUSH O FFI CES, appros.lODOaqf\.lnMW 1-:f6:-l·.._80......,.. _ __,,_.,... __ ...;:Z4--..,;;hra~. ------1 A~~~on up. n.ec . :~P~a~ pe~. ~':;;
Garden Apt. Pool & rec ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• Mtsa Wice, quiet houN. 500·1000 sq It. 1801 1110pphl1 cente.r Anchor !.!. -Car Wash, 2950 Harbo11
area. S395 Mo. 710 W 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo. On toll For wortlne person. Not Newport Blvd. C.M. Ph tenant, lrvlne Ranch R1m1SaloaTickett Aler••• Pltw Blvd., C.M.
18th.St. course, wuber/dryer. under H years old. •ttl5 Market, Newport/Colla Leif I,... loraalt,ZforJeOO Ver y fine llort ID l.iii~-~iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;:
l br. clean. pvt, crpt.a, ~~:oe lncld. 1800. "2-47'4 M .. W,_ Mesa area. CaU 551-4322 ........... _, ........ 752-GllO tm>ta.UOl ·f'81lloe bland haa U • CAMnr
drp1 Convenient loc. · Mlnutu from Fathlon i1'..--• or646-4ML • I u 111k 1100 cellent patlUon Muat be fNIJKM
Gu, waler. SJOO ..... pcwt.... lt6t Island. IGtchen prlv. PM4SUl.A Ca-1rcW •u••o••• ............. For tot.aht:aa reduction txl)f.rieDC!lrd worlln& Oft
§41·94211 .................. ~ .. •• Employed male or slu· Spacious eaecutivc ~-..... 4471 . 6 relaxation muaare. fine clotbln1. Top u M
3 br, 2 ba, ceotralJy local· Oceanfront ror W1nttr dent • ...,, fieee auou rrom City ....................... TRAGEDY St~ 10-8 S.2817 talary. 5 day wk No TVTI .
ed lmmeculate Adults Rentals. F'umlal\ed • .............. .._............... 41 ot Hall.Alhervleflavalla· Coul Hwy fniotaae. AP. RASSTRlJCK WIUTE MALE 38 will nl1ht1. MATTHEWS,
. t N . occ' unfom. Broker. 67$-012. ~ -ble, 'optjcml' From 22S f:" '""" ft -.-.a t s ed'-"' .. ,.., ...._, d · h'-1• •1 Mrt Hubert758-'""1 'r'·' no pe S. ear . HHHH• .. •t•Hneeot 9' fl Up at 1'9&10ftable ,., ~IQ. · l•vw"" W wo w .. , ICIW 0 aoyt ml etl for ' -_, 540-2245. NO FEE! Apt.. 4i ~ SIAUllMOTIL '.-at' 1' N 1 r. So. LISUftl. S000 allHlents It.Ill bve no cuh.5»3283Steve Ambltlo111 emfloyed MARKETS
l Br carpe~. drapes, rent~~.C:~rla. Wkly ~llllla now avail. ,.,.d.C.Oifa..3:0: re-:fi1Jurner Auoc. 11om,;:.:::.a.acbool Foralrwftwtiaht couples/1ln11u to S~o,tj21Ml:lr'd:~fls
pool. Adultl, quiet at· , Sl28 l up Color TV 10 .. TSLIP . ~· arelnal.y lou·m•acebyAon. man• •1m1llbua PIT Wepro~~~mi~a$0a.t
mosphere. e .. tnua l PAft 11WP11f Pbonea In 'room. 2274 " .......... ..... 4100 ~= ~ 54a·o.o'1 lOAM.SPM ~•....,· =-----mtnt ••~Ion f.-04' • f::~~o_na~ ltnanta. c-.-wcL•• Nt •porl Blvd Clrl .. 11•11 Iii,... .... iiQ0'..: .. ,\•;.;•0~·· bavt COO\plet.e medical Ptn•~s.mc. IUO trrlthlln. . · ,..,,en · ~"" -fff.'1445 -,.. ._ _. ""' .-...... lnurance. peuonal ........ _,............ AIS•••s WANTACAAEER!
BEAUTlfUl. 2 Br. 2 Ba. LMMa On lht beach rt l ~ .... 4MO ~ee office. 2 rear over •.PHdl111 money • • C~ I Loe. Mlae6oa Viejo co. Colt.IMeu
Men Ve~. llOOsq. ft, P.chelon, lJdbedroom roocn •Jlt. klt~.:':etl~ • N ......._ C4ll'9 ::•d~~mpte paJ'k. buralna dell.re lo'" Jamll1 h alneu I ntt41 AIMtnblen w/2 $17 W.WlllonSt.
fplt. lndrJ, PIUo.. dlt-•ptl 'townbnuaft. b1th JaO per mo + =· 6-.a11...a.z. '· f arei. Ameriea from U. ID.lldt Marital 'wel&M Lola: )'ti. u,. C1ndldatet Ill·•
hnhr. tfttl 1ar, AdJU, ..!))sn IO M4-l900 1eeurlty depolk ot -tnn IJJ • aa a membetot YOOR Lie~. ,.rnteed I ll)ual haft Id. muu1I 3no1~-9IOO. --~ 3 BR.2ba, 711J. ~mo. zaW.Octantroot N.1.C.IM 1.000 SQ rr w/ofc. ' r~A Mt o( EIO'OPI m.Mtm-g · dt•ttri&y, Id. e)'811llt. Laiunaltach
vr ••ct -rr,!t, bftnl. pa~ 11r. 154 ~.flail .... ice ~ sta. O/JI dr IZTJ • .,.,... the eot· · ' ntat ••PPMruttAdt· •a
Baclletor, --~ detotat· U~e ntW. m ab St. · DIC otncet. lntlda 1 · •er JOU. Jlllt u1J Al luat IS lb• ottr· ••Wt Wclft 11 lft "''
td, private pati o, Doe'tdJIWbocnputa. ~ ..... ~~~ 4 l"qlt. He., xeroa, lllder· 1.-ICI fl. Xlnt lo( + 41'1·11a for mote •n• :r,t~'::."':e.'f,' ~'"I°" lttdGd t~c·
taatalck lotaOoe. Ho .R!zt=Gw,ZJHP·!!Ot u w,.n. ..... ~··-1••-.,.... i*'s. tm••• eooo 1q fl hnc.d 14 __ ..._ .... roe et • .....,,,.,
...... BEACH YRLY IEN· "~•&Ii a.-. la .. Ull• ..... cml. rm. •PIH U..mcid AC ol· ,,.,,......... ' 1 Oal1 ru,eul•lt
bd bl.dlbwllr TALS 1Br 6 llllltllilar 9 ·•~trl~Jtw, fM;Tlll. ""9,r•be1111t.a11 s 1'e laawt *'*ii tail Mii 1411 .... ._..~ ':~ ~. -lO!ll ltiPMI . •ifi'w.A.: ~ .._. ~ AC, Ralld11, SA. •'ISl.2; Wtlt. . .a DaltJ ~PUot ".................... ~ ~~ ·~:.;
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Orange Cout DAit. Y PILOTIW•dn11d1~, Auguat t2, 1981 . ;
------111... c.,... ........ " .. ""I I I '•dtclf" I ,..... Plettw/..,.. ,,.......,. s-....................... ....................... . ........................................................................................................................................ .
· · •DIA~* ~~~~~~!!'!.~ TUii fOfflD I ROBIN'SCLEANINO CltlD•UJll, landJcapiJt&. AGAPU'ORCE Nealpat"Chel•te1luN1 SPRINKLERS•SOD • SPBIAl Tl4 7S.1 'truckrno1111t~ REMOVED EXPERT Servlce-atboro bly rrte"thna&CI PAINTINGCOMPANV fine . n 14)1 Tree Removal. DIG IT
$117 -.;;., !'Ji l1 .... 11p"1 , ..!.9tk U r &4$-rUe YARDCLEAN·UPS. cltan 7 &tiU 3GeOlltratlonlof PLAS1ERPATClllNG Landaca 64e-71n0. • r-. ....................... Sba--...tatum ci.a 751·347! QuaUtyHOUMCleanina Tree Trlmmln&, re Paintl.n&Exctllence lnt/m30yneap Tiit
Tll1t'1AJ.J..you Y NEEDHJ:l.J>"CA.U. •u_, n. Exp aardener clt10· wltbPel"IOfta.IToucb. moul, malnt. 30 )'rt ___ aa-S1S1 Neatwork P1ul5'$.Z9'77 ••••••••0 •• .... •••••••
fora "Tb• Accowi~ry", bk· ~~ ~~~ie~~t .. 0••••~••••0••.u;•••• upe, ttt\l trim, comp 11 Bah lM up. rarmer. have QuaUtyPt1.Lowestrate1 Rutuccos-Teature• TILEINSTALL~~ ....
»Inda. •)'ad llpt "acctc, PU 'det. Hall Uv -din mu '1$· t\ .. fY: N i malnl. Free nt. Pele WANTED! Houaectean· !9.11lp. Xlftt(!f~l.8-In OC Neal prompt Int/ext Patchwork AU K1nd4. G1&1ran~.
I.ht Lowes\ratn.~74844 ava~l7.50.'couch llO: ""O:S' ·:.5.Sd,.._ MMOM ln•.up'd, reliable. SunrileLand.lcape ~!"·~1 836-7149 Fnust. ~8258 Reta. Johnl93-1W7
DAILY lrWllStmctt chr $5. c;.;, ellrn. pc{ mAll. T..,_;.'R™'" -'r•• hoo"t.m·7125aJ\4PM Mliat.eoance StarvlncttousePalnters '1 •lat TrM~ Pl.OT odor Crpt --1r •• !Col\ 1 u Lo;)• •H0 ........ 6 • * Roo, 5'$o4377 ""altty Worll Reas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••• •••••••••••••••• · ... .,... · "' yrs Drywall Clean "de pen· 0 ••••••••••••••••••••• _..,.,,,..aruna · -vu •••••• ••••••••••••••••• S•YICI DESIGNER, nahon•llY· exp. Do work myself. dable Rw &31"'5 JACKOFAIJ.TRADES Profe11lonal·Thorou1b •owr Fttet•_t. S48~Doll& McCORMACKPLMBG JAYE'TlllCAU DlllCTOIY known, will customl.J.e Refs. $3Hll01 . . ' Plum bin•; elec, butinl Xlnt local 1Uf'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY PAJNTrNG REPAIR' REMODEL Topping, prwtln1. rt·
OOITNOW ! you r weddinc ~owns, NoSturn7NoShampoo DIVWAU...,Atl Oddlobe. l»408I Chartie&31.-. BRICKWORK . Small State lie. 33&950. 16 yrs Stoppaces.Reas.rates. moval&aprayln1.1oyrs All,_,_.. acresa., de Bev Thaytr Staln SpeclaJist. Fut TheC.F. OtoUp 15'-1539 HOMEIMPROVEMENT Reliable. Great work! Jobe Newport, Costa Oran eCo. 831).18116 Lie. 1294378 875-9194 u p. Local rels Free
YourDallyPilot 8Sl·05f1 dry.Freutt. W.1582 Tape,Texture,Acoustk Pl11mbln1. clean·up1, Steady job. 1Uf1. Call Mesa, Irvine. Reh. THIC.F.GIOU~ DrainstrSI0.4infrS20. est.Lic.OC11561.640-9D ServlceOl~clory ......,. ROBERTS CARPET Celllnc•.Freeut.Reu. odd Jobs. 21 yra up 1fter4PM.646-722I 67~3175 RES /COMM EXT Odd repairs.Hauling. TREE DESIGNS IU~tive ....................... REPAIR Rat.retch. reo-Ktvinl7~9Cl8/87).lli03 f19.m5 Give a Gift! Scrub-a·Dub BRICK: Walls, W1llcs, PROMPT LIC'D Lawns M&NMZ-9033 Prunlng,Sculpturing
'42· 671,ntlZJ AYALOHCOMSn. lay Allrepaira. ti Carpenlry·Ma&0nty prof. housecleaning ~le•:~·:~·s ~a:lto:· _ ho754-153t
1
~ rootStr'flce,I.,..,.. T(!'~!~PR~~;;~311,
Ww•rilMJ Strtk• .......................
~TO s· Sis 1 month, un
llmlled calls. Mall
Handling ; use our
Laguna Rills Address
9SUJ34. ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot
repairs, sealcoating
S"5 Asphalt. 63H199
Uc'd.
ASPHALT REPAIRI NG
SeakoatinJ & Striping
Comm/resad. Free est.
Uc U97:1i2 64s.8181
Bu.lldlng & Remodelin& 6734l4llO •••• .. •••••••••••••••• RoofmJ . Cer. Tile service. IUas, reliable, Block work Concrete Ext use palnUng on Y •••••••••••••••••••••••
24Yrt·Uc·lns ~ C..,.Acomtk ELECTRICIAN priced Dr w ll ·moR.-.4968 refa.Jean,831·5016 Lie Ref's ~1597 Wedotbe,obr1ght! complete service re Tlltoriltg
HOME IMPROVEMENT ••••••••••••••••••••••• riaht, free estimate on H.-dwood ADon Reliable Couple does ren· . . LEE Pain . ~ pairs, & s~ar install So •••••••••••••••••••••••
Additions/Remodeling AcowstkCellings + largeoramalljobe. •••••••••••••••••••••.. tal ' yard clean· ups, Frplcs, Pali011, Planters. Summer Special, ext/int Ca I. Pool Service. PIANOL~ONS
Guaranteed. 642-1323 customhandtnturln& Uc. #396621 673-0M9 HARDWOOD FLOORS haulin&.etc.642-4355 For a Job done n&ht p11nllng Prof Rsnbl 642·M63 Your home Popular &
I OOM ADDITIONS I.le. 389944 S32-$MS R~ID./COMM'L Cleaned• Waxed HOUJedeaning, mature. Larry 75G-90Zleves. Free est. Sleve547-4281 S w i m m an g Po o Is improvising. Ju1lllard
Ii REMOOllJHG C ..... /Cwrett Hl&hly qualified. No Job .Uytlme,llJ2.4881S.A. exper. Own trans. Reas. C~STOM MASONRY PAINTING-CUSTOM re pl as le red & re trallled, BA. degree I
K't h b th ••••••••••••••,•••••••• too am all. 631·~ H.... rates. Call now! fl48..438S Bra~k, Block, Sto~e, work, 2S yrs exp Many modeled by lie contrac write my own arrange· P~~io~~\-~cbs~~· Pool Decks and Patios, AnyEleclrlcalWork ....................... PAM & BOB'S Cleaning, lOO 1 of Ioctl refs. local refs. I.le U03941 tor. Call Tony for free ~~~~0:,~~~~ers
windows'. skyhght.5, oak Muonry,Sport& Tennis Lae or small. Free nt. Haul. cleanup, concrete refs. reu. prices. Call 64.S·8Sl2 Bonded, ina'd Freeest est (213) ~ __ w a...dow Ca..-&...
inter • oak stairways. Courts. Uc. 3'1~. Bob, Work cuar. (213)4.31·1027 removal. Dump truck. aft. 6, 673-7012 EXPERT BRICK & Hutchison 963-0911 r rty ... "' .. ..._..,, Hl l"'""' G•7 7C178 i .. ., • ., 76... Masonry Small J00bs & I --ro,. ··••1)11• ...................... . Plans LI.~. ""1007 Fr~ °" . """•"" . --...L......._ u c .. serv · .....,, "" Hou•e~learun· 0 b" Dono a. ' r...J....&.L.-1~ ' "" ""' ORIVEW YC .,._......., .... ' • ~ repairs. Frplc facings. _ .. ..,....,,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let the Sunshine In" est Reas :.>yrs Allen A LEANlNG •••••••••••••••••••••• DUMP JOBS Reliable, references, ef· Refs. ~l·'5M. 7fl0.7cn4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROF PROP. MGMT Call Sunshine Window E. JohnJOn IWO-S6S6 or Improve your home! CLEAN·UPS/LAWN SmallMovangJobs f1c1ent.831.a5 ParkingLotStr1ping By OCIP IOrangeCoun· C Ltd
840-4724 eves. Remove ui1Y oil & rust Malntenance·Lndscp Call MIKE 646-1391 Dlal·A·Housekeeper Mo•iltcJ Lot light poles & fixtures t y I n v e s l m e n l leanin" · S48-88S3
GHWICK & SON ~lalll. Forest., 89'7·41188. Free est. 642·990'1 HAULJNG-Student has Thorough/Reliable ....................... painted Mannac Main pro Pert i es I Ed , CAU JUUO'S
Builders Since 1947 THOMPSON 'S MowingSlO-SIS-$25 lge truck. Lowest rate. Local refs. ~1867 •A·I MOYIHG • tenaoceCo. 966-1901 17~S3HB40 _ For all your house &
CONCRETE CONSTR Haulina/Moving S2s Prompt Call 7S9-1976 H IM&... T I l S · I p .&... window cln .. 645·5689 Additions, remodeling, L 39 642 ., • ..., / HMS ... ..., op .qua 1 Y· pecaa ape • ...., ltflftlshlRg plans. Freeest Reas ac. ..,._ 754.9904 915S-009SMark Thankyou,John. .. ..................... care in handling. 25 yrs .............................................. Orlginal WindowW asher
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie 310942. S49·2170 CONCRETECONSTR. YARD CLEAN·UPS, tree Ci.. U Yow Act DON'T BE EMPTY exp. Competitive rates "We aals should hang WOOD REFINISH ER Avg 3 brhome, ~
VOLKSWAGEN C---'-Foundations, slabs, work, i~alion ' re· Garaaes~litehaultog THIRSTYORLONELY Noovertime.7~H353 together" SlO roll Boats.antiques.etc. 631-7698 SPECIAUST -,............ driveways, walkways. pair, Maintenance llontruclt.SZS.6311993 STARVINGCOLLEGE jlfillol.walls.839-07:.1 Chns49&-4486
Hub 's Garage 1995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• block wallll, retaining Greenbelt Landscape, T ''Security Plus" will ait STUDENTS MOVING PAPEIHAHGIMG --.-----Tht BlcPfl MarbtP*•
on the Onlwt C4*t Harbor Bl Costa Mesa Cabinets &.counter tops walls· Loe a I re fa · 851·0129. REE/SHRUB TRIM your bouse, plants & CO Lie. 11Tl.U436 25 yrs exp Free est loofilMJ
548-6226 Room addil!ons & finish 953-82SS JAPANESE Gardener Garaae & yard clean· ""JS. 631·7S87 Insured 641··842'1 Labor. $81roll & up ••••••••••••••••••••••• work Frttesl. 754·4420 ups. Freeest.M7·827l =-BALBOA R00f1NG CO hbplttilg (bet 7&9am,S&!0..2!!!.L CIHldC_.. Matntenaoce,Clean-Up HAUL INGWANTEO VACATIONING~ WATCHUSGROW ' lO'Yo Off The only rooring co. for
••••••••••••••••••••••• R od 1 k' b' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Freeestimat.e. 963-2598 " ... TONTRUCK Exp. housesatler. ABC MQVING Exper wallp•perifwehan1:1t. thecoaal.673-6743
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS B b I In h em e · it. ca mets. hildcare M" home h. Res 'bl r"fs BOOKS bro"n"t to your a >'5 ll g, my ome 1 patios, boo kshelves. Fl 'bl · h ~ CM GAIDMHG L.ESTER5'7-0t27 ponsi e, " prof Low rates. Quick, _., WILBER ROOf1NG, Inc
year and up. Nr Vic sliding window s. ar:ax~().e'*'l5ours. WAMTID HAULlNG&OUMP 6463572 ---carefulserv1ce ~·04!.Q.. home For appt. call All l""""'· new constr &
tona. CM 642-6'82_ frames, door hanging ln ed . JOBS k ( R d JmlitorW Roberts Decor 539·5506 , ~-o..trocton. G al Mow g, ging, raking, as or an y PoillttltcJ Tbe Paper Hanger, Prof re· roofing, ans. bonded, Will Babysit my home, 646-7228 ------IMt sweeping Free '641-8427 ' ........................ ~ .. ,................... install Oe(Orat.orqual lie. 322179. Free est
Tou Con Sd It. Ftnd II,
Trod• II Witt. o Wont Ad
days, infant & up ROUGHORFlNISH ... coN"sri\ucrioN•••• estimates. 646·0944 or H a...-g J .C.CLIAHIHG Finepa1n.tin~byR1chard Freeest SteveS47-081 8Z7·0861 __ ~ ] :..~ Newland area ~~· fe~mJ4~tc Add remodel , concrete 64:1·5737 •• ~~••••••••••••••••I R Resi~/com~'L ~~ SUlor Lac, 11\S. t3 yrs of Pi.ct LfftOlll --S.wlftc)/ .-.. atioM ~ •5678
Mother wall Babysit
Ages 1·5. Fenced yard
Hot lunches Call
847-2214.
IJ!.._ f.ree est S81·8360aft. S am Fukumoto YARD Want a REALLY CLEAN I eas. ree es . happy N B. customers ••••••••••••••••••••••• One Cd ~••c.
Selling anythmg with a HERITAGE PAINTING MAI NT. & Clean·ups. H~USE? Call Gingham Have you read today's Thank ou.631-4410 orSf:"'rRE•E•LESSON•,• Cstm Dress Making Fo,t C.rtdot Ac>Pooval
Dally Pilot Clas~ified Ad & REFURBISHlNG CO. Tree trimming, small Gari. Free est. 64S.Sl23 Classified Ads~ u not. DB's PAINTING New Approach• EllJO)' alte rat 1ons1 Repa1 rs
lS a sample matter Resid or comm. 25 yrs landsca Ill 64s.3S40 Find what you want in you're massing the best Int/ext. Neat. reliable, I e a r n I n g ' B o"b Consult at1on an your ll'~ a BREEZE
1 ust ca 11 ~56~ ex . Lie"~. 997.2020 Classllled Ads 642-5678 Daily Pilot Cla~1f1eds. bargains in town! refs. Dave64S-0389 evs Beardsley. 541H~. home 760-8370 CliaalJed Ads 6i2-5618
HelpW.W 7100 elpW..ted 7 100 HtlpW~ 710 HtlpW~ 7IOOHtlpWmhct 7 100 tlpW..W 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
H.tpW•kd 7100 ~W.ted 7100 elpW~ 71 00 H.tpW..tflf 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CASHIER
Pa.rt/time. Exper only
Apply Earl's Plumb
ing, 28922 Camino
Capistrano. Mission Vie JQ:.. 495.-'-040="-1 __ _
CASHlliR
HOUSEWARE SALES
Full or P/time Apply
Crown Hardware, 1024
Irvine tWestcllfQ.fill_
LADY TO Lave an. 2 3 Medical Office exp .need4:<1· Work ExpOrthoasstROACull· GENERAL0Ff1CE Hang Glider Mfg. needs days wk Must be Ch1ropract1c Asst with public Filing, 10 lime Xlol Salar" •· som'"""e Wlth the ability k b · ' "' """' versatale Car prefd S35 Receptionist. Beaut ey, P ones. Work on
6 I benefils.644-14m CLERICAL lo perform multiple Jobs day 673·:m3 busy office. Good ap-Saturdays. Apply Tues-enera COOi< DENTAL AS.51ST. Prr. 3 Exp sale!pel'l90fl needed from metal shop lo ship· ~ d y -ht Bk ds pearance healthy en day through Thursday
P IT Also kitc hen dys, no Sat RDA prer for new Children's store ping & receiving C~ tn~ acS r~ee thusiastir0 knowledge of 12 -4. Contact Mr
Office helper. Country Club. Carman:661·2290. Partl1me Petite SmaU Irvine Company Phone:547-6366 akr erG eodc kolln ins ball.Jn'g. peg board· Weiner Jewels by
T """'"I .. Marche'. 642·4714. 369 E see ks entry level HE•'TH smo er o s I s. h If I Josenh ~9086 op wages 4=-u• ·as.. Dent asstlOrtho. Npt clencal help for Accoun-tu. figure aptitude nee computer very e P.u -c..:.:.:.=-"="'--Entry level position re· for cher. Bch. 4 day. M·nl, or AM 17th Street. Westport ting/Purchasing. Some EYBYIOOY LIKES S7J..S2S2 Great career potential. OFFICE Person Vanety
quires proven office COOKS Helper, airline only if pref ROA req. uare. CM. exp helpful A WMB ---Call6315664. of duties including
skills. orgaruz.ataon, and catering c M area 642·2626 Florist delivery person Be part ol the fastest LEGAL SEC'Y MGMMT POSmOH bk pg., bte t)'plllg, ans
good le I e Phone Over 18 w valid Calaf . ...-..-~~------wanted Haun nex1ble. Cal 556-2932 growing company in the Small Newport Center M busy phones. Able to
1---------1cOOK Needed. immed. DENTAL, chairside asst.
for r etire ment re· .Exp'd. Part time
sadence. &·94Sll 644-0091
Clerit'al
personality For more driver's lie Call DIPUTYCLBll Suoeerbow',644-8990. SMITH/HOAGLAND health & nutrition field law farm seeks trainee Fabri~ cham, C M .. & work under pressure &
CA T ER ING Serv I re information ca ll (7141 Marvin Davis lOAM to Starting salary SS.:Jl/br. 1---------1 17981 Sky Park Circle Unlimited income opp. with xlnl typing skill! Anaheim Xlnt oppl Y maintain a pleasing needs food Pre P. 998-2328, moming5only 6PM . 646-1004 ' Harbor Municipal Court FOUNDRY Supervisor Suite K lrvine92714 ty Mr Casey. 834-l'TSS (714)640-6300. GenM6-4040 ---personabty Full tame
workers. S4 hr. Part ~!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I has openinp for men & LEG•• 5-EC-;;-Model full figure. needed Call ror appl. aft tOAM tame SAM·9.l>AM , Full COOK women. H you type 18·25 hr. Req~res 3 yr.s. General HWlH CLUI """ 1 by photographer 979.0747 time SA M. I · 30 PM CLEll/TYPIST Wanted ror small family 4-0wpm & are interested Foundry Maanten~nce Two girls to worldamily Allen dent, Mon . Fra J..S yrs exp. & d1sso exp 549-3497 P A~l~N-T_E_ R / Lori's Kitchen, 3077 S. Answer telephones, type restaurant. CalJ 631-6351 in a Int benefits call Mechanic exper. Darert owned commercial laun· tOa m ·4pm 644 ·4664 req 4 day wk. nu hrs ._.OD~ESCOITS MAINTENANCE MAN Harbor Bl .. S.A 979-11747 purchase orders Call aft 12noon 833 0411, ext 332 for coast.. or new Cupola ~or dry. Gd training, up. (10.2). Irvine. SSl-1733 ... ~
fora S46-0606bet.8&SM _F __ COURIER Orange mboore 'NlnfBo. t601 Jam· ~~~U:~ cons~& ~pa~; ~~f~l~U~7~ Baker, HOM&WtBS Legal Sec. Part.time. To 953-0971 ~jJ'~T~!~~~~ssary,
--------COLLECTIOMCLEIK Coast Savings has P/T ree, · · of building, Installation · · · EamS6perhr.hspkg in 9AM to lPM daily Modetaneeded.AlJtypes. Part time work, Im CHILDMOMrTOI Greaterlrvinerreditun· opening.Gd.drivingre· E.O.E. & const. of pipe GEHEIA&.OfffCl CdM, Npt., Irvine Shorthand&typingre M eo , Wom en &
Llve·in. 1581/mo. Free ion has immediate full cord. Afternoons Car ( 0 0 G L 0 V E R machines. fUpair weld· Worklnc knowledge PITame approx. 15 hrs quired. Call Pat at Cbaldren No exp nee mediate openings.
room & board. Complete time operungs. Pnorexp fum'd Call: Kathleen. WANTED> Kennel help ing machines. <>oerate A.IP, AIR & payroll 1 per wk. Gari Friday 548-7796 between 9 & l 548·776=2,______ ~ealegp~:n: 5~1~:. c :e.
<"are of 41yr old girl, helpful but not nee Con· 7S4·1801, 1700 Adams, needed will train electrical welding must. Computer Input 1!.!!.meServlces,SS9-S022 HUlSESAIDlS livery dnvers. Up to 16 clean room, wash & iron tact Steve~o. __ CM. EOE l-"-S46-=-=2848='------fabrication machines. up. helpful. Heavy HOSTESS LEGAL EXPERJENCEO per hour 497.4188 after 2
her clothes. Requires COMPANION AIDE DELIHB.P DOM!STICHaP Hrs.SAM·l::.IPM.Take phones, liteseci-eUrial Private club. 30+ SECUTillES 3-11. 117 Conv hospt ,1,>m
3/mo expenence. non Desperately ~ed for Caterin ex . 548-2112 Mature lady lo care for ad to nearest State responsibilities. Front hrs/wk. incl days, eves, We have several open· Beach area. Free mjr
smoker, non·dranker, elderly M. live an/out, -elderly lady, prepare Employment Service or. office a pp ear a nee · & wkends. Mature. neat lngs in the legal field medical, dental & life
valid Calif. Driver's Lie C. M. area. 645·3S63. DENT AL RECEPT. meals, light housekeep. rice in Orange County. Located in N. B. Xlnt op. 496-S767 for app't Some of our pogilionsre Only positive attitude
PARTTIME
SHVTIH
to take my calh
644-5841 Contact Mrs. Zamar 646-5282 all. 8: m Office exp req. Dental ang, llve in S da per wk. DOT Sl9.l31-010 Ad paid p'ty for advancment Housekeepers wanted quire typing, shorthand, 642-8044 __ _
ripa : (71419S7·162S C wf Data txp. pref. Wed·Sat. Top Car req'd. Will reim·1"!!ro!l!r!l!b!l!y!l!e!l!m!l!plo!!!!!!!y!l!er!I!.~!!!!!! Co nta ct Jennifer SeacliffMotel, & word processing Ir NURSING
before2·:.>ptn °.,_., salary for qualified burse . Pleasant !~ m4>95s.t680. •fll7 you have any one or LYH J.ll:lOPM
. &try&Cltric~ _2e_rson.S42-36S8. pers.onality Important Full-time Warehouse GEHEIALOFFICE H...,.. .. _, these requirements Sml priv ronv holp Im Part time newspaper
work early Saturday
and Sunday momlnas.
Must have large station
wagon, van or pickup
truck Good driving re·
cord necessary. Work
consists of delivering
bundles w Daily Pilot
newspaper carrier
Cleaning help, plush NB Type 50 WPM. IO ey, DENTAL RECEPT Sal oeen67S.7006 truckdriver. Good Pay! Fulltime bookkeepmg. _ __._, please caU: maculate, gd staffing
nightclub. mornings lag~t boo~keepa!'g, P'ront & back ore exper ORIVERSCn>Ncountry. Ask for Bob EOP 10 key, filing. Company HOMIMAMA4HI D5-torJoy 20362 Santa Ana Ave.
6'13-1834 ~!~·~~ok0::.1~p~u~l~~ req. Full-time.NB area. No special lie. req'd. 951-0536 benefits. N.8 . 8 5. Fullchar,ebousekttper TIAPIRSOMHa Santa Ana Heights
Cleric.alP/T Costa Mesa. S800-S900 ~·S504 MacGregor Yachts, t631 Full-time Girl Friday, .._64S=--·l.._7l=l.._. -~----trained in aU phases of SEIY1Cl5 549-3061
odd jobs. Please call Mo Call Carole 754-1040 Dental As:11stant ROA Placenta, Colla Mesa bookkeeper. GEN ERALOFFJCE home management for Specaall.st.s in NUrs1ng
631·2254 X ray ltrense Xlnt Electronics ~~ Filing Clerk. Phone Mn . business family in Hunt· OfriceSupport& STAffDEY.
Clerical
DEPARTMENT CLERKS
Excellent opportunity to
join an ind11Stry leader
and share in the many
benefits we olfer. You
will be respansible for
typing. filing, answerinl(
phones and other related
clerical duties Requires
typing 45wpm and 6
months general office
experience.
Emerson olfen a com·
plete benefits package
which Includes life and
medical lmurance. paid
vacations, 12 paid
holidays · including
Christmas week shut·
down, paid sick leave,
company pa.ad pension
plan, a credit union, an
on·slte cafeteria, free
parklnl and more! Our
e1(ellent salaries are
compUmenUd by an en·
vlronmenl that en·
eour11es growth and ad·
vaneemeot within our
co'mpany. For Im·
mediate consideration
pleue call:
EMERSON
ELD CO.
lnMtrial
Conlroll Dlvtalon
UOO S. Standard St. <AdJacell to lbe Nnport Fwy.>
(714) Ml-5240
em~av:Tr/h
CONTROLLER SZT.OOO ~~e1382r.ts. Call Mon·f'ri CllWLIADEIS FULL Tame, P/Time. Stone: 540-9373. :~~~i~l~r~r~;~~nng ExecutiveSearch. DIUCTOI
yr. Require BA Deg . .....,.__ To work with, supervise ~~::~O:.Yr.'ug~d8 GEHBAl.OFFICE Call Rita. 84&1476; aft Newrrt Prof Bldg LVN with abahty to
wathMathmjr &3 yrs. D....,Offic• & schedule 10 men & 4.30PM. Mon-Fri Lile typing, faltng. 6,call~ 363 ~ui~:f:ZIDr tdeeac
5
h1r&esdupeCrvaise11.EAxdp:
ex per Direct financial Front desk, dental ex per crews, Inst.ailing alarm 631.01.,'. EOE answer phone. 6 hr day, N h rf I f f d d k Systems Steady Work ""' HOUSBEIPEI ewport Bear · Ca m1'n1'strator, N°wport a a rs o co. manu ar· require . 4 ays a wee . · s day wk. Apply btwn "' t1iring 0-Rings. Prepa re In a nice Newport Beach w/national company of· GEMH.AL OFFICE gAM & Noon. Charlie's :sk~~:. r!:il~ ca;;gsu~a ,7 141;::1313 Con val Center, 646-7764
financial anaylsis of office. ~7S80 ferin: .lint cgf{~us help needed for busy Chili. 3001 Redbill. Bldg. Beach area 641.8700 2'/hr Answenng Serv Nursing
operations, establish D ............ SSIST. par age. a on N e w P o r t •2,Ste112216,CM d E 9 3983 00% . LY .... ~ I l ·~opu mjr economic objer· m•-A Schaper(213)98S-1313 Opbthalmologlsts' of· · · ays ( val : 4 7· l employerretaaned. "JI'" ·~ "'
lives " ix>licies. Direct Experlenc~d. Easy· Ral.t.~ol.!..llL/ fice.Typlng,filing.Exp. Gro~~ry Store P/tlme eves. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!i!!!!I Smlp,r1vtconvdholtpr.f·lm· ~reparation ol budget & paced office Ill Newport. R11 -... a must Start $800/mo. position, mature woman IMSUIAHCE Liquor Clert. Full and macu a e. g 5 a aog
· I r ts Gd hours Ii salary RIC.,,OMIST o ,,.,. "•11 pref'd Apply in person. Multi-branch agency part.time. 2944 Pacific 20362 Santa Ana Ave. inancia orecas · re· d · p / i r N B d ""'-"Y.-..•_: ----------·----1 Wells. Su""r Market, Santa Ana Hea'ghts portincome.expenses& 646 ·S411 wk ays , tme or ·. e· GENERALOFFJCE .. ~ hasopeoingfor exper'd CoastHi&hway earnings Contact 646·SS9hAerbn. veloper. Mon-Fri, 3347 E.CoastHwy,CdM. indlv in penooal lines Uve In Housdtttper '_s.._9_·306_1_ -----
nearest Slate Employ-Upm. Mustbave depeo-ACCOU11i..1Tl.._.G1--------1 Strong acrounllne back· Cook Must be ex· Nursing
ment Service off ace in To Place your dable car' good phone "I " Guards ground desind. Salary perlenced & have re· llH
Orange County. DOT ""'ast Result" voice. 6'1H!25. NOW HlllN" open, paid com pany rerences Own room a, • 1.86.117·014. Ad paid ror ,. EXEC. u,.y SmalJ Irvine Company 9 benefits. Rapid advan-. 3 to 4 days 3 to 11 :30 pm
Good starting pay with
regular scheduled an·
creases.
Call Don Williams at
642·4321 before UAM or
after 2PM daily
Part-time Sec/Reep
Pleasant manner. Basic
clerical skills. 957-11507
~sk for Sam.
PART Time Ans. serv
Afternoons ' evenings
No exp. ntt. Call btwn 8
& 4: 30PM. Mon· Fri
892-1212 EOE by employer Service Directory needed. c:i-od Cringe ae e k s entr y I eve I Security Officer posi· cement for right person. ~tr97~n beach Ca 11 Sml prav conv hosp Im·
ad Call Now benefits, life Insurance clerical help for Accoun-lions are now available Call Paulinelm-0941 · · macul1te. Gd staffing. I•-------• Un1 /Purcbuin1. Some In Mission Viejo & So. MACHMST 20362 Santa Ana. Ave. Part-Time 642·5678 ~ttton~~~yp~~: exphelpful. Laauna for mature· Insurance lmmtdiale opening for Santa Ana Heights
ht.JU ;;~surate to skills minded individuals. No' UMDBWllTB t oo l Ii d ie s hop 1.;S49=-·-==306~1 ____ _ TELEPHONE
Applicants must have experience In
breakfast and egg cookery, arllJ and
broiler cookinc and general food
preparauon.
• Top pay
• c.m,..)' paid W.rHtt
Medkalt We
• Palcl vatat...,
• Pront•rt .... H • •ertt .... rt•lewa
Appll~anll mUJt be 18 and above and
have capttien(e.
Apply in persop
2 PM tol PM
1'5 I. 17~ S&.,
c.&a •na
®~!'!!~~~;
Cll 556-2932 prior experience is Self-starter needed. for Minimum 5 yrs exp •-------• S46-9003 neceuary. Mu.st have casualty underwriter. wllb lathes, milling, &
EXICSIC'Y/
ADMIM. ASSIST.
Fast accurate typist
(IBM Electronic 75)
Xlnt phone skilla.
Responslbae. Or1anlled.
Mana1e office for 3 Ell·
ec's. S/H desirable. Nr.
S.C. Plua. Top beftefiU.
llJOO/mo. (71A)~9003.
S .. p-... CI le own phone & car. must have exper In grlndingmacblne.Must 17981 .. y ..... re · Veteran.a bring 00214. analyzing, evalua~g & have own tools Call for _.:::;S.;::;;lli;.;;;;le:;...:K"'-=Jrvme~ ..... m=-1:;..;;4_1 Pinkertoo'a, 270l·B s. makl.na risk se~ns. appt
1--------•1 Ma.ill, S.A. (to rear of Salary commensurate SanGsbrielOle&Mould
To place your message
before the
reading pubUc,
phone
Dally Pilot
Classified, M2>S671
Radio Shack store). w/exper. Call Sally 642-!450
SS7·9020. Equal Oppty _.'4&-=-6264~;;..._-----1 Maintenance persons
Employer. JANITORIAL. mornings, needed for steam clean·
l!!!!!i!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I noS1111days, »JS bn per in&. Full-time positions
Hair Dressers wanted. wk. Retired person pre· avail M-Uy nightwork
Well known 11 Ion . f'd. CaU 847-0022. ask for Call Cbri;. 641·1C179 ·
Be1inner1 or exp. Rent ~La ........ r~ry"-'-or_J~ud~y ____ Management tt1laurant
or percentage. Guaran-JAMTOI positlonopentoqual. ap.
let d · Ca II 0 w n er : Full lime. pvt, school plica.nts. Resumes req. WantAdHetp? 642-5678 548-1311 CM ......... 1 · t I ·
I •1y p•1at ---_::l;.:...::::;::e.:.:•1--,-.-,-at-I • . att@. ~-vu r::~~e: ;ioB~. :~; ·. II I ................... \. : II J I ···················.\. ~~~.',c~~=~e Ave ..
lhn11emert liquor store
' lt... : • ~ • daytime pos. open to ~ Field, ~tes Supervisor =.. :. General A :. qual. individual or COU· pie. "6ubmlt resumes
' L l · fw9t..ry t. · prior to Interview, .im ltd optnilljs available in I.be Orange _,. WI W M . C. 8 ., 177 • • F • •
CoHt area, for 1elf·mol(v1tfd career r.,.,....._ Ma... RI Id A N oriented individual who can w0.t with Uii;illift UllM vert e ve.. .B ..
Field Sales P~le. Tralo, motivate and _,C;.;a""'. '*=~3.._ ___ _
get result•. Station w11on or van lmmeclllM~ for versatile Jn. : MA.....e•
necessary'. Exceptional eamillp, plus JOb dlvidual MUil be ~ble of ba.ndl· ~ Ha 11 mark G lfta •
related beoefita available ror the rtsht Inc lut·l*'9d, •arie<S a.nd lntef'tt\, : Co1D11tiu, E•P pre·
Nursing
llM.VN
X-IAY TECHS
IESPIUTOIY
TECHS
YOU'ii
IMm'ID-
•To Joln the 11 Team
•To Earn Dynamite Pay
•To Receive Super
Beneflt.s
•To Create Your Own
Schedule
+ 3%C.8-
Seeking part·tlme in·
divldual for general of·
fice functions involving
extensive telephone
work. Requires mature
personality, abillty lo
work Oexible houn. This
ia not a aales position
Call (714) 998-2328 ,
morninp only.
P(nMIM•••s c •••• , ... ~
Adulta with owtancUn•
attractlve 111nonaUlles, who enjoy workinl wttb
10-ts year old youths
tvenlAc• l·tPM. Call
••2·4321 , ext. 343.
between 2PM to SPM, A variety of usl10· pllforLori. menta Sbort It lone -..-.... ................. ......._ __ _
term , lncludtnc so PBX Ans Serv FIT • 'Or1n11Counly. PIT. E1p. belpful. CM.
Or1 CoAirport arta 540-lm 10o\M-4Pll
114-760-1641 PBX I
Anabelm Arta
714-7 .. 1411
~pie. H you ctn produc~: mu.Ill not Inf du&Mt tDr ll'Wlpapet taecutive : Ctrnd. M0-7173 ~~\!: .. ".'~V!r lt._ r5.'' 11.I.. II•. •4 (or. • per'IOllDli ldftltnblrator. Call ~ Manlcuri.t wanted Cor RT Af_ J)-, If ~:naql'e ~l.111. rn tor •PSJt. : busy Mem shop. Coot.act Ml•• s.m...
. .
.a~:
Colla Mesa, CA
Equal Opportunjty Empk!fer . . ......... ~ ....... , ..................... , ... ·
J!!!.f•r,ets.zm l•------•I .. __ ...........
Mldi<al • ASSOClATD rut.Ion ltla.od Office Nvnlaa Spedllill\I in
1*dt 8adt ~ct Otrt IM-lYM a.. Ttm,onryCMriul
t o do I KO •• In· J.ll • 11·~ rdef <roov. r.. 11 tn._.. Pmd""' • lllotpt. ~ atell ,.. 5«)0400 ~ l·I da11 JIU' putaU01. lteeh ana, i.Ma 1111rt BJvd.
· · ,,.. mjr. IDldlcal. dlil· ld!RI IC!W
,.. .... 'M ...... taJ • lie.~....,,.
AIUrNl!!-.:fHa. na 1n.~ M!fltltw •n
I •
r
DAY WEEK
8Days
3 Lines
8 Dollars
Orange Coast DAILY PtlOTIW9dnnday, August 12, 1981 •
in your. pocket! ··
Special fiat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan-
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for 8 days
or one. Minimum three lines. Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 6'2·5678
I
n. ftflW Dally Piiot 8·Day ~ek It's a Classified PLUS
HtfpWa.ttd 710 HtfpW•ttd 7100 HelpWlllhd 7100 .a,w...w 7100 w.w 7100 HelpW..tild 71 HelpW..ted 7IOOH.apw..-71 ........ IOOl""t.Y• ICMI ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SIOOOPBWHK -------Rental Hostess. Apt . .-------•ISalet Sales SICIEfAIY y..._..1 ~ FOR SALE-1930'1 C1n't keepbt1u, cb1rrn
Our new Co. it looltlng IHI &hh 5.. Complex 3 weekd1ys Sale1 Earn hQO.UIO per day SIOOOWI. P/T Part time Moo-Fri. Must Preschool, exp'd. Full ldtcben.ware. Rare HaU in& in-out cat. fiulfy blk·
for am bilious people ForJ~ per week. 9AM to 5PM. CUU.~ Of takina O~ers door lo Call Kt.n: 8'5-1.33t M·F, have &ood typing sklU.. Time 6'2-0tll a!ld Fiesta. Over 300 grey 63l-:1147
who WIDt to tum p/lime Prof. Qftk• Will train. Call 5'5-4855 SAM a ••m door for W¥t1.comp1ny 9-4pm. W-T·F,S.Uam. 'S/H op&nal Call Mis· . h«teSoti I pieces. Buy one or •II Adorable pups, 8 wka,
bou r s in to GOLD ! Newport Beach Lido Of. btwn 9·1 for interview 11 I 00 kIn 1 f 0 r 1 finance attic lnlulallon ' sioo Bffcbcrall, 18'141 N. Tele/ c tors M0-4068. Terrler/Sbeltie Collie
Groundflooroi>ll'ty. Call f1ce needs creative, ag· appt. uleaper1on with U · procrun. Offices in SICIEfAIY Airport Way. S.nta An• swf AE~ANpi:c . "'91.ct1 IOI mix.6'4·=l2=10'-----
fordet.aill.1Sl·411115. gress1ve agents who Restaurant-Need outao-perienceindi.rectaeUing Or1n1e irL.A. Counties. WatCoutdistrlctaalel $40-2720 MEDIATELY •••••••••••••••••••••• Free Black Lab mix.
Phone people, No sales. want to max1m1ie •n· ing personality for food or hlVe held ,poslliOfl.I ~::~:Ti :ceFrle~rest olftce~~M~~ Salary + lucrative llUY APPUAHCIS Male.4mo.old.
Distribute doorhangers dlvidual potential. prep,sandwicbmaklna. that require meeting• 1 0 am 004 rom co!'ftt'io u ~le,.,._ bonus Lea 1157-8133 flM.1703.
In aftnoon &/or worlt HIGH COMMISSIONS! meat slicina. cuh re· relatlne to the public. c2u)~ P m · ~ood ~ 6 tyj;'l;i •SICUl'AIY• 838-1132 KARBORAREA Autr1llan/Germ1n
phones in pm $4/br +'4 Call Walt.VIJ.7300 ~ste r · 8-4 Mon.-Fri. We offer: E..O.E. skills. AW>mative leas· Eitcellent oppty. ror *TS.,....• APPLIANCE SERVICE Shepherd mi• pups free
per app"t + bonus Call /hr Also need exp. As· Ill. Gu.ranteedincome in& bickcround helpful, abupealtowort in fast· •olldton BUY-SElJ.,REPAIR to gd home 6/mo. old. Mtkeaft~pm: Ms-49U. ltfCEP'TlOMIST st Mgr, 7·3, at k .SO/hr. duf'inatrainin& but not necessary. Start· p1ced Newport Beach 548--!Mm 642-2018.
Pro"ress· 1 t t 646-8883 #2. Bonus, rommlssion SalH 'I aJ t t or Are you tired ol work Inc -"'-"''-"-'"""--~---PICTUU FIAMIMG " IV!! rea es a e 113. Vication with pay Ing u lary up to Sl~ + comm · re es a e c. full time for part time White Whirlpool Wuher, Free kitten, 8 wks old.
Good people s kills company inves tment Restaurant 14. Hosnltaliut.ioo . WN Tl•$$$$ 'benefils. For app't con· Excellent typing & die· Sl75. Ktnmore cop· female, very gentle. needed. Fullt.Jme. nexi-company is looking for a Food Prep & sandwich r-PAlfl'ft&...t• tact. tapbone skills required. M.ly 7 pertone dryer. elec, $57.3299 person with a plusant maker lfyouarefriend-insurance ,,_ L-••ura ~hlllen&ini~itk>n for Why not try working 5175.$.S7-7l)S ..;:;;::;.~;;;..;;... ____ _
ble hours. Saturdays & phone voice and baste ly ~onsc•aA•:-.• 'd •~ Comp&ete lralnmc _.__ nihtcil.C.. · p1rt time for full time HELP! Well behaved.
some even1n15 Will typing skills lo fill a pe°ndible"""~;';;~t yo~ wilhfactoryfollowup S unll&hl En e r gy J172.,....Dr. Liiia,833.2900 money.Work2Dto24hrs Wlurlpoolwuher.Works lovable cat nttds gd
train. Start 3 75/br. challenging position. Now hiring for full time !Mi. Protected local Systems Is now exp1nd· Ste. II, lnillt per wk In plush new of· great. SlOO temp home until owner
Loe. So. Coast Village Res ponsibilities are position. 8-S. Mon-Fri territory ing O.C. ope.raUo111 ' (714113).fJll li ce In t he Santa S48·US. aller5PM finduel.~
Shopping Center. Call varied, includmg heavy Exper. pref. AP.fly in #7.Qualifledleads. • haslmmedilteopenlng.s sec-.a.•y An1/Costa Meaa uu Microwave Norelco Britt1.nySpuiel F 2yrs
Larry, 751-fi:ll6 __ contact with c ltents. person. Stonem1I Ttr· for: _,,_ * •SICUTAlllS• * for well esllblished Co Sl25. Truh 'comp car: old. Good w/chlldrftl.
PLASTICS Co. laking ap. There is room for career race, 29LS Redhill. Costa If ~ou would like lo help, *Phone ApptSellers• 11eeded Immediately CuatServ/SASlS,&00 Earn in& potential ol $220 re rs ' Sattler, 'Sl2S S48-9'3.5
pllrationsfor2nd&Jrd growthinasllmulatmg Mesa. c1.: (experiencedooly) Responsible position SH90/Mortaage$lS,OOO ~rwk.bue+comm+ 631·1743 Free cats . .Mother,
s hifts. Working with working environment Rest1uranl U}.303lor492·3213 •PhooeSurveyTallers• wortlng with the presi· T65/Dict/FuhJS16,800 nus. Call ~ for U..--.p"""r~i""'g'-h-t-f -re_e_z _e _r _,1 daughler combo.14mo&
saws & vacuum form· So Coast Plaza area COOIC ~~unia!"~~! i~J •F~~=~~~ra• ::~~ ~::=,r·:iri:'. SH90/RE/NeatCo$18.000 appt Frigidaire, 17 cu ft. 4 m 0 pr 1 de 0 r
ing. Ex per. helpful but Salary & benefits com· Br•akfast exper1°ence ExpComultantOun T• "Ya A,.__ frostlree, S6S. SS6-1633 o ... tu,,. 66-2930 will train. Only respons1· m f n s u r ate w ex . " !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! shorth1nd • some ar-Lit Reinders Agy, loc E -~1' wne. • .,
ble & dependable people periencf Call S49·3l85 necessary. Patio Cafe, I•-------• Siies counting knowledge 4020 BirchF.at'64EOE x p. comm •cent eves M ult1-colored kittens need apply Must speak for interview Ask for NewportBch.673-1401. su11ir. Gmd fl. oppt. to um Call 9·12nooo, Mrs. needed for fut growing GE refrig s1dt by side/ Tiger stripped, grey,
nuent English, SAM to Kat!lrrn~ Restaurant COMU:-CW. l.L S8K /wk w/rcrd break· We1Yer, (714)540-8180. Newport/&lJ.8190/Free 0 .C. agency. APollo exr. ice water door. $4.WOBO blk, white & orange
3 :30PM . Sc hulti McFaddens B1yslde -preferred. Chery : 6'.S·Ul64 548-6219Aft4 lt ar-/TY .. ST .,.;A li Tl-d or ... lling hon•es 7 ,ing, multi-mrktg sya.1--------·-------•I 833-0492 Plaslics,&&2-1026 ~a-1 n · now acce....,.g app CB· .... .., -Onl st 5.,.-... ••15 ~'-"-'---=-----Brown Whirlpool Washer F• il•t 1•iro General Ofc work, near uoru for lin~cook Exp. days a week! We need corp. 1 mo nu.1 ~·-SICl!fAIY DIC. Waner-W11tress, plt1me s70 s u O'K c ' • -Pume7 .. -ys2hrsd~·. OC A II M I ooabc-....... to•-1mthe Overl3Kinl'ftv.CaD •l ·A-you .. -ppy1n p I/Ad ii f F h C . , m1 ue ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ""' · · .., 1rport, ca r on y Apply in person. " ~ "" bl ,_12 &46-"'327 "" ..., ersonne vert s ng o r renc u1s 1pe M l S7o Both ~im::'s~~•v;:i"w~· Z1ll.&1tt.._7__52-~ 2·4pm, Mon·Fri. 333 sklllstoml.Dl&e,broker • wn ' · yourjob? ~pt. has opening per Restaurant . Also ~";ond~3665 ** IBUY **
Laguna Beach. 494-ll4S6. I RECEPT/TYP1ST Bayside N.B. commercial rul estate. SAL ES MAN Wanted : ;: ~:!: .;::;ppredat.ed up1nslon. Npl. Bch. kitchen help. Days only. 25• aide by side refri& Good used Furniture &
New port Beach ad· Restaurant. Cater ing ln~ome from mgmt Candy Industry; Ter· •3· Are you being paid financl1I services rmn 2640 E Co ast Hwy. Avocado. Xlnt cond. Appliances OR I w1U n /TIMETlACHEI vertising 'P R firm firm has openmg for while.you.le~. Super ritory Orange County. wh.at you'reworth' Gd.typing,ahrthd.,exp CdM Ask for Paula $400 seUorSELLforYou
Arter noons 3. 6. 5 seeks a cheerful person, respon adult to operate be.nel1ts; life wurance: Send resume to R.J Al· U you canoot a.ns..;.er all req'd Non-smkr. Call. 640. 7092 belore llam . 552:7250 MASTllS AUCTION
days/wk. N e.. Susan, must type 60wpm Will Hobart auto. slicer & health i.nsura.Dce "den· len. P.O. Box 10757, or the above questfons •64().!!!!!0!!W!!!bt!!wt1!!!.t!!4'!!2!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!! WflllNr/Wflitrns Refrigerator . 11 rge 64'-'"'•ll).f6J5
64().8820 train Hrs · 9 Spm learn portion control. tal plin. Contact Ken. Co.ta Mesi,CA92627 with1yes,youoweitto-= Apply btwn 9AM & 6F re6eieOrRseck 5E225
'T/TIMEDf:MO 644-6037~-Exp.pref.butwUltrain .• 67!!!!5·!!67!!00!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I yourself to give us a SECURITYGUARD Noon Charlie's Chili . H -44 •c ves llUYFUIHITUIE
Fri's •·th C 9.30AM to 6PM Mon. -= SALES call: Neal. clean 4t responJ1· 3001 Redhill, Blda. u . 661·1014 Les 957-8133
at .,. r ar nee. ltEC£9'1'/S£1>'Y thru Thur "Au to lPM 1-------• bl A U..L. Joe " M t h •· c.•1 0718 (213)877 1•n a-• ...,,,. """' 1• Now accepeini appliCI· D6-or '-e t pres r;ouus Ste. 1226,CM ay ag was er .. gas 20SOFAS,new,felea ~ ~ -·~ Immediate opening Sun 979-074'7 for appt. Sales lions for full' p/Ume TIA~a Starling S4/hr. lnqwre WA I TRESS/Walle r dryer.SSOuch. lSLoveseall,S'15ea.
QC lrupector, mm I yr Pleasant phone \'01ce & Lon's Kitchen E.lP"D OI sales staff. Experienced SBVICES 711PCH.536-1487. w/car for wicker basket . ~2G. 957·5708or5.SH180 medical m!g;'6per pre· appearance. Good typ-,..________ SHOP .. .a.111o.1HS in mien> com"'.t"'r pro-s d b de ref · 5250 fer r ed. Mon Thu r s ing skills & knowledge of 1-•RA " ...,..... Specialist& in Stcy/ll*pr lunch serv. 9:»1::.IPM. 1 e-Y·SI "f· · Carpet. 49 aq yrd. Never "4·30"•1...,..,• I ff' k C II We 'r e looking for 1rammingor uae very OfficeSupport' Small mort111e bank· M·F.EamSLSO-S175wk wuher.'dryer, l25u. used. TOP QUALITY !!:. · ·.,., ._ gene ra o ice wor a m.a.u I ple · In M k helpful. Su,.,,_•!ul 1n. port d••b be SlOO 9 12 M -s1espeo toJO ar ........ " ExecutiveSearch ing firm in Irvine ly. Must be neat. .. wu r, Grey-blue S696. Leu am . noon. rs . p . I ..... C 8 I S plicanll ....:11 bava b1ck· ., • ., •••• ltit.a.•EST ... TE w 1714 .... "8180 artumecer~. oome, o . •w " Newr.,:Prol.Blda. Duties rnclude: phones. personablt&eneraellc ,,_,_ thanwbo&esale.64.>7430 ~ "' eave_[·~~ ~ ST,_.,.,'-0 c 1 r · · ground in sales • f M f SALIS _." .., I 1 o r n II s # 1 3113 an M.iiuel Dr. typing and light book 979.0747 a t lOA or Wards froctlree relri&. 18 Waterbed, king, must
Th h • bcepffoMst MAllm Tire /Auto Service positive •ttitude. Call Suite160 keeping. Comfortable appl. cu Ct, xlnt, 2 dr. gold, sell. coil matt., mirror.
lSlSOurl6l yearsell· Ex ecutivf s uite 1n Center. Lev: (714)540-U30. Newport Beach, Ca. i t R I •-7/il."...,.,0
n n e 0 u e r n Irvine, heavy telephone. -SALES. Offtce Gift Store, 9l2ll80 Est le knowled "'" 1 "'--'"""•
j g (I S th 4555,.__...i!!c-z.. -· env ronmen · e a W ... .....,. ...... u ...... '-E7 -· .,.,..,,, cabinets, SSOO/OBO
Califo rnia homes lighttyping.front off1ce. M•wporf We offer our employees Lido VUIA&e. Exp. req. 1714)760-1311 fer:ble. Coota!te ~~:: ~e nud ros~llogfist.s lkycltt I020 S-=~""1,_·4249=~-----
Perhaps you v.ould en· professiona l ap · an excell. stlrtlng S.l.o n.873-t555. Ada t 83J.99JI (9 ca man1c ur1s s or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1mmonslude·•·bedl lOO
joy joining a hrm active pearance, ex per nee !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Sllary & an outstandl.DJ ~· ~'5f:;d AM~ a Shorechrr hair salon Racing 12 spd. Titanium Simmons s&l bed, COltl an luirury residential 851.0744__ ROOFERS. Lee Roofin& benefitspacb&etbatln· S..P .. Tlllt 1 em ma · 492·2288 bet. 9 & 3 Crame/forb, full cam-pl,S'1S.645-7tm,MS-6521
areas such as Big Ca· is looking for hot roofers c t u d es : Li f e , Eveninp In our El Toro SIC"Y/lEC.-r. (Vickie/ pagnola, 1moold.11700 Round gowmet cbopplng
nyon, Spyglass Hill, lfCEPT/TYPIST with min. 5 yrs. eitper. II edical/Dental In-Store. k .15 per hour. SICllTAIY One. part/time P:09ilion Eve&u-5432 block S200, ume UMW.
Irvine Terrace, LlDda Law o ffices. O C. Journeyman. S19.22/hr. suraMe, profit sharing, Contact: Matur e, resPonslble ava1l1ble, morn1t11 or WA.llHOUSEMAM 10 spd bl.ke, Like new 6 gm ffjtchcock dQJtng ::1~0~~re presently ac· Airport area S800 mo. 6427222, Walt or Vince. ~~ :!:' discoants • pf=~~O lady needed for Ule in· lltemoon, 12:»~:30, 5.S p / time . re t 1 red Univea• SlOO. chain s1ooea.631·9Z'n
live in real estate sales CallSJJ.9124.____ S..,_,Cll~ (714)9$1-l3M sunnceotfice.hm·lpm ~m ~ musdc .Jbr lO Ship/Rec Marine pro-~ 9 fl L1wson "T" Gold
d I ltltl".,.........._.IST Male or fema•--". -. d • i I y . TY Ping It s rt. ear rport. ducts 546-0i71 Schwinn Beach Cruiser, Ith t ""-ha. o you have mmediate ~u-""" .., ""' 1f you're look.Ina for an shortha.nd required. Ex-833-Wll. s"':•" ma C1w1g c ,..'!:· & unlimited access to For dr's office Must be f /time incl wltends. Ap-excttl41 career in aales1--------• perience preferred. SICllVTOVI. WANTED. Salesman for gd rood w/lock & chain. ..,., ....,1513
the president of your enthusiastic. mouvated ply It 2633 W. Coast tr ajo working ilh tbe Sales $57·5642. ' Food Industry. Career $80. 646-G816 Liv rm furniture ' I C·
comp1ny,orishehidden & type well Ex"p !!wy,N.B.66-7100. puebu/ .. we've :ot the Prof.541.uplt sec-.a.•y LCal~fe ~·t~~'lild·si>e<!_~~ oOpRpoArNtuGniEty.CTOeUmNTtoyry Schwinn. 2D In cruiser cess., lyrold.costl2!5oo.
away10an1vorylower helpful. but not nee SALESIADVERTISJNG opPortunity ... • we're ~ _,,_ auorrua._ er ~ w/spr ln er. 2 s pd mustselJ,IBOOor ofrer
removed from the scene 642 45~ -----Growing O.C. Publica-w1itin1 to hen from MarUUni Repa. to sell Le1din1 publishing rinn sharp. reliable in· Send resume to R.J. Al· kickb1ck. .S48-11167 7~·1483
Our president is availa RfCEP'TlOMIST lion looking for exp'd you! •product that Is wanted bas lmmedi1~ opening dlvidUll to perform ~n P.O. Box 10757. Costa 2 10-spd, 1 gm. 1 gold, -Be--ti-f_l_lass __ . -1-ld-..-r
ble. Do you need addi· pros-top commission -•uracu•. lineededbyeveryone. for secretary with good variety of secretarial esa,CA92627 xlntsh1n.l80ea.orS160 f au •. u id mb a S coo tional training to help P r estigious Newport paid,8~968283S-3M9 n~---· potenl.lal tynin1 tr sborthnd dutiea. POllltion requires ,... ee .. en t I. '5
you increase your earn· Bcb law firm has am· MIL sutlBS Ea~ S50 : skills. Excellent benefit.I iccunte typing, filing & IECWTIOMST both. 642-231.9 ""'67.._3-4'"--'-'7"""43"-------.....
ings? med openingforexper. SAUS 714-117~000 •cO~ &goodlocation.Sendre-abilitytodogeneral•d· lmmed opening for Scbwlnns Sapd ladies ' Virtue tble. 38 x 46-70"
Experienced or anex· recepllorust Front of· An exciting new concept MARK C. *Qualified Leads sume to: Sheila Lawlor. min. tasks. Shorthand mature indivi.dual in $95; lOspd men's. $95, 10 $80, 6 fiber glass chairs
perienced you may well face appearance, voice, related to lbe interior BLOOME * •Ulhlncome CBS Publications, 1499 preferred. In exchange busy Auto f!palr ~e~ter spd boys', S75. Pvt par· S20 ea, ~1320 alt 7 or
Profit from our color professionalism impor-design industry is ex· _..... ~ Monrovia Av., Newport for ability to function In FV. D1 vers1raed t 5441.33111. week-en<b
t t Lt t I Good E al 0 Emfti... Lkus,1• _. .,, ll · b Jfi respon. incl answenng -"-'=..::.:.:.=-----video tape listing & sales an YP ng panding to tbe Or1nge qu ~Y ....,yer ""' S Buch 92M3. 646·44S1 ::"Y1n0,,'!}f .. n·endlce cyoamt: phones. writina repair 1•111111 g tWarWI 1025 Orange floral couch. 8"i training program which benefits Satar} open County Area. Applica· 5,._ ext 311. .--·~.. ..... rt $'"" n_.._ __ .. It
C II H Ida ~0313 Al: 7~ $4.M'193 mosphere, ......,,pellt1vf ordtrs bookkeeping ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ...... nc"'1UIJU poo a we feel is the finest .J!. 1 • --lions now being accept· 11 ' _:::;wilt fi collecting money and IEDWOOD 2 X 6'S ble •. S12S. Wooden file
available. RECEPTIONIST1Typist. ed for consultants who To Place your SECRETARY sSeaodryr ... wne•"""' •. 5nea11
1trsy. securing parts. Must be 2' to 20· long. Fresh c1bmet, twenty 8 lnett We are not a franchise, with d1c t apho ne & are professionally "Fast Result'' SALISTIAIMB "° .. 1 drawers-. 55231119 • branch or subsidiary-switchboard exp pref'd oriented and highly y n g . men. stereo Computeu oftware firm history to: J,L. Conkey. ag:re:1s ve, accurate t ruck load arriving •ffl· ·
just headquarters front ofc. Tues.Sat Pvt motivated. A complete Service Directory spe1kers. tra.nlporation located near the O.C .. Presley of Southern an a e to follow pro-weekly. Save at ~/ft White spindle lullabye w b · f 1 b un.. · d C II N Aa·r!Jort bis 10 Im· Calif. P.O. Box 2200. cedures, Mon -f'rl , PP call J im 646-9885 crib' maUress, $86 e ave operungs or a counlr>: cu . 644·~ tra1nmg program 11 pro-a . . . a ow provided Call: $40-76$3 i 1 f Newport Beach 92663 9-5:30. Starting Hlary a.nxtime Wood spindle CHidJe.
few highly-motivated RECEPI'IONlST v1ded High commtSsion 642·5671 Sales me ale open nc or , . S8SO. Apply 8-12:30 at SSO. Other items. Call
persons who have a de· Real Estate Investment plan. with no income Wanted: overweight dall entry pe!'50" In our E.O.~. Fountain Valley Body c...,. Ir aAe p
sire to be more sue· Co. Good front office ap. limit. 546-3788 lat. J22 neople Interested In Jos. documeota~1~~ ar~a. SERVICE Stauoo Atten· Works. 751.8820 l11llip ••• 1030 675-74'0 r 3 M
cessful. For an in· pearance, light typi,ig, [Dg weight ' l•inlng Job respons1bilitiea m· dant. Exp'd. Days & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 chairs, swivel rotkera.
terview appointment 4l, day work week money. Fool proof. Call dude: accurate 6Swpm eves. Full 4t p/time. Ap-Meft.._... Pentex 35 mil. Xlnt cood earthtones, S50 ea
with the sole owner & New P 0 rt B e a c h . Dolty: 557•2234 or Kiy: typln1 ror technical ' ply: SheUStation, 17th & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Almost new J1mes, Zenith ccnsole color TV,
founder, call Weslty N S49·~-· __ __ 8Sl·ltlO. manuals, u~lel, some lrvine, N.8. ~ IOOS 87~0138 works, $50. St&-2332 ,
Taylor proofre~dtnc " ofc. Service Station Allen· ••••••••••••••••••••••• C• 10J5 Couches: green Herculon We•~M. T~ Co Saleswomen/men skllt. req d. Exper. pre· d t FIT Letter written by A. co ......,, · I d • Tht Ill t MarbtpiK f rred but will t In an , eves, exper. C Do I r d ••••••••••••••••••••••• mer ··~P. inc . en R ALT ws 1 e ft r• · Also Mechanic's helper, ~nan Ye, ~•me 2 Him1l1yan Kittens, tables, St65. 7S2-132A
2lll San Joaquin Hills Oft tht Orqe Coast THI ,..ATID Pluunt iurroundlnp F /T d1ys. Apply in with plctw-e, '275, letter Se1lpt ch. lines papers 8 It bei&e couch Ith 3
Newport Be1ch DAl'v PILOT .. OUP 'excelled Sllary •fr. . M • T written by Rudyud ~-• · w 644-4910 I.I REAL ESTATE SALES in1e benelits. Non· ~Beac~cWvdex~~· Kiplln1. framed with shots ff15.832·1179 plllowb1ckS50 CLASSIFIED Rr•oy TO 8( Is hiring prolesslonal re-smoker. C1ll: Sheri 968·6SOS • · · picture, S300; mini1ture DocJ1 104 673-2076
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Calla
Daily Pilot
AO.VISOR
642-5678
U. till salespeople. Cill Mlcllelaon for lmmed. oil portrait ol womin. •••••••••••••••••••••• KING INNERSPRING ADS Penonoelfor1creatop. interview. (714)~. S.w Medt()pen with fnme on table KEE.5HOND Pups. AKC: EXTRA f1RM ma~s A WINNER? portunlly with our crow· MCS, IMC Experienced, quality stand, $2ZS; lovely 14th Champ 1irt. Mir. Pel' set, never used, worth You Coo Stl II, Find II.
T rodt h Wrltl a Wont Ad
[642·5878 )
Ont c~ Serv1t•
fo\I Crtdtt ~oval
You don't need 1 gun to ·~------~
"draw fast" when you lfyou'reloollingforabet·
place an ad in the Daily ter job, you won't want
Pilot Want Ads' Call to miss the employment
now -642-5678. columns In Classified.
1 c• •w-lllowto LDICOG>P1111. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t work.Colla Mesa. Century color calll· s h ow . Pvt ply . SS30, sacr. S2411 del ,~ H 0 1 642-9652 craplly on sheepskin, 213/W7-1365aft6 m. Never used queen 11,
..,.$50,000 + ... .,. Jl).7JN•OO w~~~ ~ :.T~hCJ°~dj~ SHl,,..Wf. lr1med, 115115. P/p. CaU AK C Silky Terriers, worth SM, cub only
(Callflkln.Frl,94) aclsdoltwell.§42.5fl8, TIAlt& (714)955-21.D. adorable ahedleu 1218 del. Uaually home.
IF:f .fl d . . 111. 1·1y Pilat ........ : .......... ···:. P1ckace •c ~P small Griiti.oaht fGoodreeaer.:_!~t~ up. ~23.a M im. F '300: &~~:=Wall Unit good Ell are tired o oun enng m a earta for .•. Co. Ex· a . .."'.N .m. 1-....... · dei(J cellent beneflta. Must be 556-91111 Toy Poodle, female, bllt. qua ity, ._.. office. cood with numbers. Oriental Vuet us Sehl AKC reclatered SL50/or-5411-M!IO
• Sala 54$-0U!. clock teo pitcher/wuh fer. &40-7Mt Nu 3-pc Hdiooal .IOI•. mu crave specialized, per&Onal T . b ln m Cwio/Cbftt MINl SOINAUZER naturallbmin&boD. ~
;-.--~ "How To" training from one of rlllll Sffll •-w s';:s. Ple'xt-11111 sis: AKC RrolSTERED S1350sellf150. 5.S7@3
the most successful sales trainers · fir n:.trict 11--..i. ~ ,._ ai.st11 S200 142.7159 Must Sac. lmmed. Br•Ad
-KIDS
SUMMER JOBS.
in the business. N ..._., Reclttert.o4ay for local Ahtean Mllloc. Roll Top AKC • purebred Lh•ll nu llv rm, a•me ·•· Thia hllhl)' 1uccessful local DIWl)>llper tempor55af.? .enta,. Delk bNW. cGftd $3000 APIO 4 P'IPlliet 7 wkl dinette. curio, lampe,
YQll want to work in a plush,
Weir.located office with a group
or h ig hl y m otiva ted
professionals.
YOU. want on.going sophisticated
edueation & training.
YQll desire the chance to grow WTili a rapldly expandin1,
progressive company.
~~ ME ~ow In absolute Lenee an ....
hu an openln1 for 1 trainee In Ult II Call Ht.-@•no · old, s'uo/QI0.751.1311 el£. Batolr. ~1-IJZf ·
dra&laUoa department. Buie skills will 4 rei LlaMa AP90 pupe a Recliner m11111e cflal'X
taWlsupervilionot1otoHyearoldbo1 m.•Ln-: T111fAMYeLASS wb:.,,,. adoribie. w l bact rollers • -9 c1rt bome chllvery carrien. Areat ot U 1 IOWL SIOOea W.ttfl vibrator, SH. vy•I aupenlliolt will be delivery, coUectlont Geor1eousl lrrfclttttftt · elec. typetrriW w ase, udMlel. ltMOW¥Pf"°"""'\MMCts blu with earple Puppies Elkbound mix SH. Both like ew.
Seltded appllc.ant will receive llbeul J72J ... ser..t lll1hlllbta. •~ Inch 125. S.veo weeks old, SS7·IOM
1tartJn1 ular1. re1utarl1 acbeduled ...,._..._. diam..,, WW .. crtnte :::;:,~:,r Duncu7 ""', .... Co--u ... c"'"b'-.111-.-.,.-ct-ColDn--l-al
rai... bc:eut oPPOriWliUes and IUQY ft· t.O.I. at '475. CaU tv•. at · · ' atyle ~ down·Hlled IDie bmeftta aucll u ~paAy ~den· (nt) ,..._Pip. Std Poodle pup plea, ~uablooa mdi·cqlottd
taI ud bealtll plan, ll'OUI life~. Stained llMaltudiowk· CbintH Antlquea, ap-1tllite, '.:S7~KC, linen fabrlc, fOOd t0nd.
Vl<'dloa M!l llek. leave. inl eap craftaman. Call pralatd w/4locumnt1, """'• -' SZSO/blt air. lltl =:1 veblcle 11 furallMd tltartaa for appt. MtTf1' no.er ..... t1S: teapot. 11 lluMll ._,to 1ooct SACMClt ....., ..... 1:':.t M over 11, i.lww a pod ._I NM t :: = lliP vue. =~ .::.::·· all Wood • lutde bck1am·
• *iYial rteOrCI aad bt Dell ---.. Baullent eompan1 Aatlq\ae 0,...., hOO Okta "*'"-pupe ilnt moo tbl 6 chain, only : • lbn .,.. .-.nll.1 u All to llPM, Moil· btllefttt. Room far rapid 0 , • 1 ... / • b ~ ~-.... / • sas nu ~ ~hh• tllJdftrrtU1.lomeovtrtimelu•tf... .. .......... Allllf ID rop -• llVI• • 1 ac ••• .,.... wipaper1, love atat, ta . ....,. W.. penoD: • !. 1till·St. a..ln '6791. abota 'ww.ed. CZU> Mll. lattaa •..&Lui
ff 10e are quliliad aod ..._ ..... ID C.11. ' leutll•l A•ti•H •TPf brtflt -*· Ci50,Talit
...,... ... dmal1t.ioll II t I e.tad s·-1hrfro .. /Ar••fr•, .... ,..; • llo. SJM? llOO.XJntcmd.
=..0,0,PUauu•w. Ba1,o.I..•• _.._ ... ...,. IOl6d Olli. Dir aim Goof ramll1
lO:,,AMor1ftet2P•41Uf. :.~.=P...,•~ =;..,...,..... !!!a.M Modera Wll llNlllrDflt,
A*for0....._ar .. °'611iid, Cu Hf. Nt•e'Jlt, --Alll~ nww .. ,. laO/ .... man·ua .. -· ..... '· ........ ....__ o ... Celit t9lllet1Mll, ,.,., 111 llU I'• Calllr. I'•_, lof1t> .. llM nttu Plif · TIACI• .,..,.._..., ..... ar-...1 ... 111t·to "9d • "'* aaso 330 ySVlli Cwt. •~:Pril. •· -lnm ,,..,. • .._,_.., r.f• 61.. *Ut clln ,.. _ _,,., I( CA ..... • ...... CUI. "' l eta .... If 1aa ...-.. ..
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I
I
2 Tropilone Cha11e
Loun1es. s1so each 5
pleee while French
Prov1nc1al set. Sl75
Pecan d1n1ng set. 6
<!hairs. Buffet. Ssso.
963-1932.
Quotel Thomas Jefferson
Ump, S6.S 080 Solid
Oak Oame Table. S300
080. Call after 6PM.
SJ6.J100
FW111ture & Curnishings
sale, Lido lsle. Call for a 'l : 714 915 ·031_1_. _
Redecorating Sale-brown 4 tao Herculon
sofa/sleeper, SlSO. (2)
brown club chairs & ot-
toman, Sl25. All gd cond.
962-'38$.
C-.yltd
King size." l>ecorative
traClk light, backgam·
mon cofree table Sm ea
760-3653
Contemporary black
form lca round top
Loolts like marble
Strooe chrome base w/4
chairs. one needs repair.
Table $JS. Chairs SS.
9Ute67 Eve's
Cl'ff1! modular sofa grp
Fold.I into foam beds 5
· ec kOO. 80'4336
Good Cond. Hide-a-bed.
Sl.S. Solid maple dinang
room set. 4 captain
chairs, round table + 2
leaves. 1Jass-top china eabfnet & drawers
below, S300. 642-3215.
Queen size Hide-a-bed
couch: Black/ brown/
white Olefin Newly
cleaned S215 979·525 I
EVF.S.
Dining room Antique
white table w12 teaves &
4 chairs, Cluna cabinet.
Serving table S300
Dinette Set Octagon
glass top & Pedestal
base w/4 yellow up·
bolstered chairs s200
t79-1
An liq uu Oak. ch er
rywood , chopping 11.lockti. much more Also
brand new washer & dr7tt (Kenmore>. elec
tron lc 549 4721 or
3037
Mittl'ess & Boxsprings,
Queen. like new S135
Blue Loveseal Sl~ Pair
of Victorian Side Chafrs i.so. Custom Walnut
C.biaet.s ror home enter-
tainment center SJ 10.
' ·UtiO.
Watelbed, queensize.
$/drawers, Hke new. S1w. l..fi041 after 5. ~.
H .. 1.akffioodsl0'5 ....................... uae lumlnoUI eeascape.
31x•' approx., asking s7SO, terms. S»Wevs
LNTERESTED IN
)tEALTH AND
N'UTRJTION? Have Ion Oenarat.on for sale, cost + 10~-overatock. 9·12
MOii-Fri (7141 5'3-1784,
8-9 Mon·'IbW"S 842-8224
10ill2' Carpet. Blue,
sheared pile, n~ .
• 1·2:87
Jtwelry 1070 .. , .........•......•...
Wlllle gold wedding/din·
ber rin&. appraised at
060. SeU $650. 498-7720
Br11lllan AQUAMARIN~ cut &
P,tJilbed. Only $5oO per
'64G.8688
ACollctonlttM
A veoi special Cust de·
a(Ut Gold Ir Fresh
Waler Pearl bracelet. tau lor appt to inspect.
6"· eves.
LADIES' DIAMOND
91UDALSET'900 .. u S.S:MM
ttu•• •rr to7t .......................
Sll•tins table ror
ltocl•tll Uniuw, near· --~5123
.............
·~ .................. . .......
lltUl!ID Bouquet• de. lit ct Perfect for
COHMfl.L
CHEVROLET
·~,. ll.1: I• • I\ . '
'·~I\ \H-.,'
541>-1200
I
. •
• • • • •
WfDNl SOAV . AUGUST!:?. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA l'1 l f NI <)
Pinocchio writes tu doomed boy, 8
He dldn't1know it Tuesday, but
Fransie Gerln1er's wish was
coming true.
Fransie ls an 8-year-old South
African boy who may be dead by
the time he's 16 from a pre-
mature aging disease. Pinoc-
cht;, the puppet who became a
real boy after wishing upon a
star, ls Fransie's favorite
storybook character.
Fransle wanted to go to Dis·
oeyland to meet Pinocchio, but
Atlantic
flights
• ·resuming
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Reagan administration,
bolstered by the support of
airlines and Canadian air traffic
~ontrollers' resumed handling of
U.S. flights, appears to be
str engthening its hand in a
.strike by 12,000 U.S. controllers.
Officials sought to restore air
traffic between Europe and the
United States to near-normal
levels today as Canadian con-
trollers ended a two-day boycott
that had c ut trans-Atlantic
flights io a trickle.
Dick Stafford, a Federal Avia-
tion Administration spokesman.
RELATED STORY,
PHOTOS-A3, 83
said the key trans-Atlantic con·
trol center near Gander. New·
foundland, reopened at 3:30 a.m.
PDT today after being closed
s ince 1 a .m. Tuesday.
Transport Canada, the govern·
ment agenc.y that operates
Canadian airports, said ~on·
trollers ·throughout Can ada
agreed shortly after midnight to·
-day to resume handling flights
to and from the United States.
Airline executives, after meet·
ing Tuesday with Transportation
Secretarv Drew Lewjs, said they
stauncMy s upport P resident
Reagan 's handling of tbe
crisis and his decision to rlre the
striking controllers.
But the executives said the
strike, in its 10th day. will have
far-reaching effect.S on their in·
dustry, forcing layoffs~ pay cuts
and s crapping of marginal
routes. Some companies may
have to be restruct'ured, they
said.
The end of t he Canadian
boycott and of one in New
Zealand leaves only Spanish
controllers refusing to handle
flights to the United States in
s upport of the. American
strikers.
But action by controllers in
other foreign countries sym·
pathetic to their American coun·
terparts could still create havoc
for international travelers.
Australian controllers, saying
U.S. skies are not safe because
of the strike, were seeking a
court injunction to stop flights
between Australia and the Unit·
ed States. That same safety
argument was used by the Cana-
dian controllers in their boycott.
Portuguese controllers have
voted a boycott beginning Satur·
day and the intern ati"onal
federation of controllers' unions
meets Thursday· in Amsterdam
to discuss joint international ac-
tion.
<See PLANES, Page AZ)
Grandmother
arrested /or.
'growing pot'
LA JOLLA <AP) -A 55-year-
old grandmother was arrated
alter police discovered she was
allegedly growing marijuana in
the backyard or her home in a
fashionable neighborhood.
Authorities said Tuesday they
uprooted ~ mature marijuana ..
plant.a, some or them 8 feet hllb. ln what they deacr1bed .. ooe or
the city's lar1eat pot hauls.
The woman with the green
thumb, Jane Scblmpff, was
booked for lnveall1atlon or
po1aea1lon, culUvatlon . and aale
or ~ariJuana. ·
' I WU 1urprtted to learo it la
a felony to trow them -t.be'y
are ~autUul and intere1tln1
planta," Mn. Scblmpff said. "I
reallY thoulht that mar{Juana
would be le1all&ed and t.bat I
coulcf make tom• mone)' from
tt."
U the bad r. 1Used the •alue ol
•her backyard crop, "I would'
ha ¥1 doae a better Job ol cover·
: : int It up," he told reporters.
. ".
his father, Herman Gerln1er,
couldn't afford the trip from
Orkney, South Africa.
So Fransie's setting the next
best thing.
A letter from Pinocchio wu
mailed from Disneyland'•
Character Department Tuesday,
asking Fransie to be the ex·
puppet's pen pal.
Pinocchio got Fransie'a ad·
dress from an Associated Presa
story that told about the South
African boy's disease, procerta.
The letter said : "Dear
Fra.nale. The Blue Fairy told me
that you are one of my bl11est
fans. She also said that you are a
real boy like me. Jiminy Cricket
Che i5 my official conscience)
sends his love and wants me Lo
make sure that you stay out of
troubte. It mu.st be fun to live in
South Africa. I wish I could vbit
there someday. Maybe we could
be pen pals. Here's my address:
Pinocchio, Character Depart·
ment, Disneyland, 1313 Harbor
Boulevard, Anaheim , Calif.
92803, USA . '
··I am sendina some pictures
of me and some of my friends.
Your pen pal, Pinocchio.''
The letter should take at least
a week to reach Franaie, who
lives at 22 Marlowe Weg, in the
small goldmining town with his
parents and 10-year-old brother.
about 105 mllea southwest of
J ohannesbur~.
Bald and emaciated, with only
40 pounds on bis 3-foot-8-lnch
frame, be has old-lookln1 but
strong bands. He wears rubber·
soled slippers that provide soft
padding for biJs bent toes.
He has big brown eyes, bulg-
ing over a spindly nose offset by
small elephant ears, and once
asked his 31-year -old mother
Maida, "Why do I look 10
Ugly?'' I
"What can I say?" sbe said,
"I say, 'No, you're nol ugly.
You're a very pretty boy'."
His doctor, Dr. Martlnus vu
Zyl, says the child will live to be
16or17.
"Victims of this disease die of
coronary heart disease," he
said. '"U he gets a coronary.
he'll die, just like that."
(See DISNEY, Page AZ>
'Title IX' reviewed
Sex discrimination in sports 'too vague'
.................. ca.-.~
BREEZING ALONG -Jim Fiala of Downey borrowed the
sail design from windsurfers a nd put it to work powering his
oversized skateboard . He said he has hit speeds up to 40
mph along the \>ike trail in Huntington Beach.
WASHJNGTON (AP> -The
Reagan administration said to-
day it is considering a sharp re·
duction in the scope of a con·
troversiaJ 9-year-old federal law
that bans aid to schools and col·
leges practicing sexual dis·
criminatlon in athletic pro·
grams.
The review of the "Title IX"
rules was announced by Vice
President George Bush as part
of the administr ation's attack on
Kennedy
threatened
by Sirhan?
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Ac·
cusing convicted assassin Sirhan
Sirhan o r m a king threats
against U.S. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, Los Angeles District
Attorney John Van De Kamp to-
day asked state offlciala to re·
voke Sirban's scheduled 1984
parole.
In .a prepared statement, Van
De Kamp did not give detaih of
the alleged threat against Ken·
nedy by the man who killed the
lawmaker's b rother, Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy, 13 years
ago. But Van De Kamp scheduled a
newa conference to answer ques·
lions following a meeting \Yith
the chairman or the state Board
of Prison Terms.
An aide to the Board of Prison
Terms said a board spokesman
would be avaUableJater today to
comment on Van De Kamp's re·
quest.
Van De Kamp also described
alleged threat.a by Sirhan to kill
a prison dentist and an unnamed
writer who h ad criticized
Sirhan.
Weapon8 ban eyed
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union said Tuesday It will seek
a United Nations ban on all
weapons ln outer space.
Teachers go back to school
Instructors aim to strengthen grasp of science basics
By RICHARD GREEN
Of ... Delly ..........
The latest skirmish in Or. Mare Taa1epera's
battle against ill-prepared university freshmen is
being waged in a three-week science coune being
taught at UC Irvine .. Thirty teachers from the Irvine Unifled ~chool
District are attending the sessions to ·strengthen
their grasp of basic scientific principles to be r e·
fayed to their elementary pupils.
Dr. Taagepera, a
UCI lecturer and critic
of a n edu cational
system that produce•
freshmen who can't
function 1n introductory
scien ce and math
c lasses, open•d the
course last week. Her topacs ror five
da'ya r e lat e d to
chemistry and conduct-
ed simple experiments
designed to dem ·
onstrate the proceaa
of scientific inquiry.
In t his wee.It 'a
phase, UCI lecturer
Fl'anklin Potter ta Marer~ teachlDI pbyalc1 topic•
1ucb u motloo and fore•, ener1Y. beat and U1ht,
astronomy and eleetrtcal devkel. .
UCI UIOC!late profenor Dr. Wtndell 8tan.ley
Jr. will emph.,in bloloa -r.-om "11'11"9 to
photosynthetll -In the ftnal 1'eek.
Dr. Taa•eper• expecta tbe elementary achool
teachen to 1et aome sorely nMded confldence lD
presentlni tbe acimUftc baaica to tbelr atudeDta.
Too Often they pfOllWI tbroup bifb Kbool
without ever 1eW111 a flrm ll'MP on tbe analJUeal
prtndplel reqcilnd to IUeeM afMr IJ'lldu8Uoa.
Dr. TU&ePera 1a11 lbe dilcevtl'M WI tane
yean aso In introduttory blolotY eta .... IM
taupt at UCI. · • ·
A survey she conducted lnvolvlng freshmen
confirmed her suspicions that some didn't have the
educational background to allow them to compete
in collegiate science and math classes.
She visited high schools in Los Angeles and
Orange counties, laking some of her students to
their alma maters to help spread the academic
facts of life to teen-agers.
And last year Dr. Taacepera told the state
Board of Education, in no uncertain terms, that
some drastically unprepared students were run·
ning lnto problems at unlvenitles and c0Ue1es.
"It's just amazinc "some of these kids are
coming to college and still having trouble with
percentages," Dr. Taagepera said last week.
She cites such problems as:
-Elementary, junior hl1h and hilh school
teachers who don't give enou1b emphasis to the
scientific basics.
-Insufficient coun1eling tervices. .
-Poor study babita and low motivation.
-Deficient high school curricula or studenta
avoidlna esaentlal colle1e.preparatory cla11ea.
She bu tried to tackle tbe latter three throu1h
school vbita. The present course attacka the fir1t
problem.
She is uncertain whether 1he wlll try to off er
an QJ>anded venlon ln future 1ummen. But abe ia
aure more counes of tblt type are needed .
Georctanna Teaford, a alxth·1rade teacher at
St.onecreek Elementary School in Irvine, a1reea.
"I'd like to know a lot more about science,"
ah• said. "A refresher COUl'H like tblt la Juat what
I needed."
"Thll course la a real poeltlvt 1t.p," said
Dorothy Terman, toordlnator of protram develop.
ment for the ~bool diitrtct, wbo 18 a1lo llttlal In
on tbe tbJ'ee..week -coune. ''TMn are to •any
problelM le= to under·preparect 1tu .... tt. lome at the eme are lllOelatM .ttb broke
IMHD•. •
"But tome ltudenu, lf not cball-.9d In bi.it
1cboOI, Jmt don't baH UM miDtll dlld,. .. or tlie
,.....-., powen DMdN tor eon.,."
I
federal regulations it considers
unnecessary or counter -
productive.
Today's announcement means
30 more federal regulations will
undergo an in-d e pth '"r e·
consideration" to see whether
they can be modified or done
away with.
Bush said the administration
feels guidelines on sexual dis·
crimination in athletic programs
provided virtually all the ria·
lion's 16,000 public school dis·
tricts and more than 3,000 col·
leges and universities are too
vague and impose excessive ad·
ministrative burdens.
The vice president told a news
co nfer e nce the review
represents the administration's
·'ongoing effort to lighten the
regulatory burden borne by
Americans across the country."
The athletics discrimination
<See RULES, Page AZ)
Gas firms guilty
in additives case
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
nat,ion's four producers or lead·
based "anti-knock" gasoline ad·
ditives violated antitrust laws in
maintaining identical prices for
their products. a Federal Trade
Commission judge ruled today.
The compounds are sold to
gasoline refiners who blend
them with gasoline to increase
Court nixes
job award
to Michelle
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
state Court of Appeal bu re·
versed a lower court rullna that
awarded Michelte Triola Marvin
$104,000 for r e h abilitative
purpoees alter the breakup of
her six-year cohabitation with
actor Lee Marvin.
In a 2·1 decision Tuesday with
Justice Joan Dempsey Klein dis·
senting, Justices James A.
Cobey and Rodney Potter ruled
the rehabilitative award was not
proper under California law. But
they did not overrule the princi-
ple under which Ms. Marvin
sued the actor in 1972 for the
equivalent or community pro·
perty -$1.8 million, or half the
assets he earned while they
lived together -even though the
couple were never married.
The onetime nightclub sin1er .
who contended Marvin promised
to care for her for life, could not
be reached for comment today.
Her attorney, Hollywood divorce
expert Marvin Mitchelson, said
he was confident the California
Supreme Court would overturn
the 2nd District Court of Ap·
peals.
·'This is the same court that
told us that people who live
together are sinful. That's the
r uling the California Supreme
Court struck down ," Mitchelaon
said.
"The court said the award was
outside the issues or on.. case,"
said Kagon.
Teens collide . .
on bicycles,
fall 40 feet
octane levels and prevent engine
damage from "knocking."'
Administrative l aw judge
Ernest G. Barnes upheld 1979
FTC charges that Ethyl Corp.,
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
PPG Industries Inc., and Nalco
Chemical Co. used unfair "an·
licompelitive marketina prac-
tices" between 1974 and 1979.
Barnes said that of tbe 2-4-
pri ce increases during the
period , the companies an-
nounced identical prices effec·
tive on the same date 20 times.
In the othe r four. identical
prices took effect within a day or
two of each other, be said.
No conspiracy between the
companies was alleged, but they
were charged with usina prac·
tices that let each other know in
advance about price changes.
Barnes ordered the coot·
panies, among other things, not
to announce price changes to the
news media until 30 days after
the changes. They also were
forbidden from using a prici.na
formula that systematicalli
matches a competitor's price.
Barnes also ordered them not
to use "most-favored nation't clauses in contracts that prom
ised customers they -wil
always pay the lowest price ex
tended to any other custom~e The FTC had said Ethyl and
Pont used these clauses but PP .
and Nalco used them onl
minimally. 1
The judge a lso ordered thl companies to tell customer
about transportation costs wbe
they are included in the pric~
Under the order, the companJee
can allow customers to furnislt
transportation for the shipment.
Barnes said the companiel ..
practice of giving 30 days' ad·
v ance notice of price chang~
and Issuing press releases abou
them "gives rivals an. o
portunity to respond in a wa1.
that reduces uncertainty about
Industry price levels before ~
initiators' new price goes into e~
feet."
IR~llll COAST WlATlil.~
Night, morning low
clouds with mostly sunny
artemoon.s. Lowa tonicht
in 80s. Beach hiiba Thurs· ' •
day in low 70., mid.SOS in·
land.
Two teen-11e blcycllst.a were 111181 JllAJ •
injured before dawn Tuesday
when they collided on a Corona
del Mar 1ldewalk and toppled
over an oceanfront bluff tallin1
40 feet.
.
Tlw fanriltl wUla teoo in· ~
Cot'MI #m altot 0 1Molf CU
o/ AnwricaM into llPPf1' -.
come broclcd1, complete
IDfth •tahll chang.,. (See
Staiu.e Scoring, Page All). Both cyclist• -lt-year-old
Steven Timothy R7an and 1,
Robert McCord, both of Newport
Beach -were treated by llDEI paramedlca and tallen to Hoa1 Hotpttal.
Ryu, who 1uffered a frac·
tuted skull and a broken noee, ta·
lllted ill fair condiUoa. llcC«d
wu t...-.ct for lae«'atioal to
hla bud and releued.
Police Hid lb• mlsbap oc· cu.rred at about 1 a.m . ..._ the
cycltata wn r1dlq ta~
dlr9Ctlom. Nlttber bad a Upt
oa bil bike.
-
... .... -... .. . . ~------·
Or9n09 Cout DAIL V PILOT/WednHday, Auguat 12. 1981
Al' .......
Look. up in the sky: it's a bird, it's a plane ... it 's SuperSchmitz. That's how State Sen. John Schmttz.
R·Corona del Mar. characterized humelJ a3 he announced his candtdacy for the U S. Senate seat now
held by Sen S.I. Hayakawa
Schmitz' hat • rmg • ID
State senator launches bid for U .S. Senate seat
Claiming his membership in
the John Birch Society proves
he's a "real conservative,"
State Sen. John Schmitz bas
launched a tentative bid to seek
a U.S. Senate seat in 1982.
The Corona del Mar resident,
standing with a caricature of
himself in a Superman costume,
made the announcement Tues-
day in Sacramento.
Schmitz said if he does run for
lhe Senate seat now held by
Republican S.I. Hayakawa, his
wife, Mary, will seek his state
Senate seat.
His wife could not be reached
for comment.
Schmitz told reporters that he
was attracted to the crowded
Senate race because the large
field of potential candidates like-
ly wiU split the_Republican vote
into so many pieces that 25 to 35
percedt of the primary vote
would win the nomination.
"In a Republican primary,"
the' senator said, "probably the
majority aren't ready for me.
Probably one-third of the
Republicans are ready for me."
Other Republicans who've set
sights on the seat include incum-
bent .Hayakawa, Reps. Pete
Mcclos key. Barry Goldwater
Jr., San Diego Mayor Pete
Wilson and President Reagan's
daughter Maureen.
On the Democratic side. likely
csndidates include Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. and former As-
sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy.
For Schmitz, Otis marks his
third bid for the U.S. Senate. He
withdrew from the 1976 race and
in 1980. he finished third in a
field of seven Republican can-
didates with 19 percent of the
vote.
· A spokesman from Schmitz's
Sacramento office said the de-
cision to have his wife seek the
state Senate seat came "so that
the conservative -:a use won 't
lose a seat."
Schm itz , who d escribes
himself as a."natural Moral Ma-
jority" candidate, said his John
Birch Society membership
should be an asset.
"You have to distinguish who
is the real conservative. So
which one is a member of the
John Birch Society? That's a
pretty good badge to tell which
one is the conservative and
which one is the phony,"
Schmitz said.
Dlltr .......... "' ClleNt ._.
SUDDEN STOP -Firemen work to extricate
an unwelcome auto from the Din Ho €hinese
.Restaurant in the shopping center at Lake
Forest Drive and Trabuco Roaq lp .§I 'Toro .
Driver Gatno Digiuro. 80, lost control of the
car in the parking lot and crashed into the
building. No lone was injured.
. Jnjunction denied in nudity suit
'Group argues LA County ordinance 'unconstitutional'
I
1 LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
1tederal Judae bas refused to halt
the arrest of nude aunbathen
•pending a decision on whether
the Los Angeles County or·
[dlnance that prohibits nudity at
!public beaches ls constitutional.
U.S. District Judae A. Wallace
Tashima on Tuesday denied a
Thoma P. Haley ,__...,c-beelltl'le OH-
Robert N. Weed ........
I Thoma A Murphine • r.....
MlchMI P. Harvey 11 ,,..,.,..... o-tor
L. Kay Schultz • OW.WI!~ \ , ~ N Goddard Jr •
Of'CllMM 0......
8-'n•d Schulman c.....
ai.•H.Loos ............... Eflt0t
Cerol A. Moore ..........
reque,tt by the Clothina Optional
Soelefy for a preliminary iltjunc-
tion -Mocking the arrest.a. Bu\ be said he would consider
the 10Ciey'1 request that be set
a tri~ date for the constitutional
issue· next week, said attorney
David keJtenbaum, one of two
American Civil Libertle~
lawyer.J represenlin1 the
society.
In denying the request for the
injunction, Tashima ruled that
the "abstention doctrine" re·
quires a federal court to
.,.,itbhold judgment when a 4tat.e
court is able to rule on the aame
issue, aaid Deputy County
Counsel Anthony Serrltella.
ACL'U attorney 1 stephen
Yagman said the society will ap-
peal Tuhlma'1 declaion.
The aroup araued th• or·
dlnance la unconatltutlonal
because it ls too vafue and com·
plex and because lt violates
freedom ol 1peecb, expreaaloD
and UIOclaUon. •'The main purpose of the
First Amendment la to protect
th'e commwucation of idea,"
Ya1man aald. "If .,.ople are
aeeklna to communicate talroulb
the preMDtaUoa of tbemMI••
wlth ao clotblq on, the Collltltu·
Uon MY• they can."
I
NB seeks
c oastal
plan d e lay
Newport Beach city officials
have been lnlormed that their
atate·mandated local coastal
plan ls beaded for trouble and
could be denied ,unle11 the city
aarec8 to a dozen separate con-
dltlona.
In ruactlon, Newport City
Councll members have uked
the Stuto Coaatal Comml11lon to
poatpone this month's hearing
on the coa1t1I plan.
The hoarlna on the plan, which
tho city hH worked on for three
yt1ar1, wus scheduled In Los
An(lt1h,. for Au1 . 19. Newport
council mcmbtlr1 have request·
ed the hoarln1 be delayed until
October
A. droft report, complied by
comml ulon planne rs, was
l'lrcululcd In the city last week.
The plunnera. In the report,
recommendt!d that the city's
coastal plan be denied.
The report cites nine problem
orea11 ln the coastal document
Including the proposed align.
ment of University Drive which
now comes to an end on either
side of the Upper Newport Bay.
Earlier this year, against the
advice of the coastal com-
mission. the city Included
University Drive in the coastal
plan's circulation maps.
More recently. the council
agreed to go out to bid to find a
firm to complete environmental
documents on completing the
road.
Comm'ission planners claim
that the road would have un-
sound environmental effects on the bay.
Although the commission's
draft report asks d enial of
Newport's coastal plan, com-
mission planners note the docu-
ment could be salvaged if the ci-
ty agrees.to meet 12 conditions.
The l_ist of conditions include:
-Deleting University Drive
from circulation maps.
-Developing a policy for
localing and constructing more
public restrooms.
Asking the Orange County
Transit District for summer bus
service along the Balboa
Peninsula.
Developing a recreation.
serving shuttle system to serve
designated areas.
-New policies on encourag-
ing affordable housing.
Commission planners further
s uggest that the city take
another look at constructing a
pedestrian walkway from the
Balboa Pier to the Wedge.
Plans for such a walkway
were killed earlier this year
when residents complained it
would only bring problems and
more noise.
The planners also propose that
land at the corner of Pacific
Coast Highway and Jamboree
Road, where the Irvine Com·
pa ny hopes to construct offlce
buildings, be reserved for
··recreational and marine com-
mercial use."
... ....__
Steven Wallaert r right J. president of PATCO Local 291 m Norfolk.
Va., arrives shackled at U.S. court in Alexandria un th un1dentif1ed
marshal. Wallaert made a successful plea to be released from his
jail term for refusing to work dunng the azr co11trol/ers st nke
From Page A1
PLANES AIRBORNE • • •
The Federal Aviation Ad ·
ministration Is seeking ways to
ensur e service on overseas
flights in the event Portuguese
controllers carry out a threat to
begin blocking a trans-Atlantic
route over the Azores.
The protest by the Canadian
controller s had res ulted in
scores of cancellations and de·
lays of eight to 10 hours in those
flights that were able to depart.
Thousands of passengers were
stranded at many European
airports.
Flights normally going over
Gander were rerouted to a new
east -west route just south of
Canadian air space. The new
route, however, could handle on·
ly four planes an hour I a fifth or
the normal traffic load during
peak periods.
There was little acUvity Tues·
day from the f rofessional Air
Traffic Controllers Organiza.
lion, although the union won a
victory of sorts in U.S. District
Court in Washington.
Judge Harold Greene reduced
a fine of $4. 75 million he had ten·
lalively imposed against the un·
ion and said the controller could
not be penalized for refusing to
work after they bad been fired.
From Page A1
DISNEY • ••
When Fransie was a year old,
his hair began to fall out and he
failed to develop fatty tissue .
The visits to specialists began.
"My aim is to make him hap·
py and let him enjoy his life for
as long as he's here for us," said
his father. "That's all I care
about."
The Pinocchio letter was read
to The Associated Press by a
worker in the Character Depart-
ment who wanted to remain un-
identified.
He reduced the fin e to $750,000,
the amount originally imposed
for the first two days of the
strike
A federal judge tn New York
City, however. threatened to ar·
rest union president Robert Poli
if he did not appear in hi s
courtroom today Judge Thomas
Platt, who fin ed the union
$100,000 an hour after the strike
began, wants to know where the
union's money is so it can pay
the fine.
A lawyer for the union said
Poli is expected to appear before
Platt today.
From Page Al
KNOCK • • •
forbidden from using a pncmg
formul a that systematically
matches a competitor's price.
Barnes also ordered them not
to use "most-favored nation"
clauses m contracts that prom·
is ed c us t o m er s they will
always pay the lowest price ex·
tended to any other customer.
The FTC had said Ethyl and Du
Poot used these clauses but PPG
and Nalco used them only
minimally.
The judge also ordered the
companies to tell customers
about transportation costs when
they arc included in the price.
Under the order, the companies
can allow customers lo furnish
transportation for the shipment.
Barnes said the companies·
practice of giving 30 days' ad·
vance notice of price changes
and issuing press releases about
them "gives rivals an OP·
portunjty to respond in a way
that reduces uncertainty about
industry price levels before the
initiators· new price goes into ef·
feet."
St ay h eal thy, see H awaii?
This allowed the companies to
test the waters to see whether a
price change would last and
whether rivals would follow suit,
the judge said. He said the prac-
tice resulted in "chilling the
vigor of price competition."
OAKLAND (AP ) -Free
Hawaiian vacations for two
Alameda County employees who
use little or no sick leave are be·
ing considered by the county
supervisors.
The supervisors voted 3·1 with
one abstention Tuesday to begin
offering a free trip to Hawaii for
two plus ~ to one employee
and cash awards of $100·S600 to
others who used one day or less
leave during a six-month period.
Another time period would be
considered for a second draw·
ing.
The board must re-approve
the proposal next week if it is to
teke effect.
The FTC said that in 1977.
domestic sales or the anti-knock
compounds totaled more than
$550 million , and that the pro·
ducts were used in about two.
thirds of the gasoline produced,
thus contributing to the prices
paid by consumers.
TEAK COASTER SET
6told .... CHtt.n ............ .,
Teak Salt &
Pepper Set
56.aa· 54.88
~ ................. ''· .. ..
CRO• HARDWARE
WllTC&R
1114.,.... ....
Mewplt ....
641-llU .............
HAlllOI Yf/1# CIMlll . ............. . ... ..... ....
64MIJI _ .......... Yapnu aald tbat 700 nude
1uat)9t.biin baH bMD MHltld atcount)'beacbestbl1swnmer •• ~lllli .. illlilll ......................................................... ~
# A . ..
. •
I .
.. . -_____ ..,_._ ...... ~ . -..,.. .. ........-..--~-...---.-. .............. --
Kini Jaan Carlo• nd his
wlfc, Quwn Sona, ended a
Medl~rranean crulse aboord
the royal yacht fo'ortuna
becau.e or bad weatht'r,
palace lt()urces suid.
The king and queen Ot'w lo
u Mediterranean hsland Crom
a French airport ut Hyeres.
Their v1tcution with their
three chlltlren was to con·
llnue there
Juun Carlos and Queen
Solla began the cruise last
week . They stopped in
Sardinia two days, then
sailed for the southern coast
of France. but returned to
the Balearic Islands by plane
because of bad weather
._p....__
Actress Jac:ly11 Smith arnues 111 Wrldon's Heathrow Airport
with her new lwsbarid. Bnt1sh /tlm cameraman Tony
The Dalal Lama is con-
s ldering r eturning to his
native Tibet after an exile of
more than 20 years, but says
the people must call him
back.
R1chrrumd The couple. wlto were married in Califorrun last
week. u11/l spend 10 datJS m Bntain on honeymoon
Chaplin tvidow
to remarry?
Si r C harlie Chaplin's
wido,w , Oona, 54. will re·
marry sometime this year,
the London Daily Mail re-
ported
The newspaper said the
groom will be American
s creenwriter Walter Bern·
~lein, 59 The couple have
been cruising recently m the
Mediterranean. the paper
said.
Lady Chaplin, who has
eig h t c hpdren and 12
grandl'hildren and lives in
Switzerland. 1s the daughter
of the lat e Ameri c an
playwright Eugene O'Neill.
Chaplin died Dec 25. 1977
Rita J e nre tte, recently
divorced from former U.S
Rep. John W. Jenrt>lte, has
been a ncwsmaker for some
time. but no" i.he'll be mak-
ing news another way s he'll
be writing it.
Mrs. Jenrette. who posed
nude for Playboy magazine
this year, will be writing a
weekly column for the
Philadelphia-based National
News Bureau
Her first asi.1gnment for
the feature s ynd1t'ation
service will be covering the
Mi ss America beauty
pageant in Atlantic City,
N .J .. the week of Sept 6
After that. Mrs. Jenrette
"will be writing about
whatever her little heart de·
sires." a spokesman added .
0 h 1 o Go v . J a m e·s A .
Rhodes worries about
energy. North Carolina Gov.
James B. Hunt Jr. is con-
cerned about federal grants
to states.
But Gov. Peter T. Coleman
frets about Australi an beef.
After all, a governor has dif·
ferent priorities in American
Samoa.
"I don't feel left out. There
are bigger states, and they
have bigger problems. But
our problems are jusl as big
to us," Coleman said at the
Nattonal Governors' Assoc1a
lion meeting in Atlantic City,
NJ
''What matters are the
feelings or the people inside
the country," the 46-year-old
Buddhist s pir itual leader
said in Denver. "I am en-
couraged that the Chinese
leaders have publicly ad
milted their own faults for
past events in Tibet and have
apologized Things are
changing for the positive."
The Dalai Lama went into
exile in 1959. nine years after
a Chinese invasion of his
mountainous country He has
lived in Dharamsala , India,
ever since He is regarded as
the leader of 6 million
Tibetan Buddhists, and has
followers around the world
A,, ........
Actor Hal Lmden plays a game of cards with his daugliter.
.Vora. at New Yorks John r Kennedy Airport as they await de
parture of their flight tn Israel Many flights were delayed due
to impact of cur controllers stnke
Wetness, heat continue
Widely scattered thun<;terstorms dampen Southwest
Coastal f o r1-cast
Nlgllt, morning low cioudl
ot.,.rwl• """'' <tfte,_, Coeotal -60, lnl-U CoHt.11
1119'1 -l'OI. lnl-mld«ls Wet.,
70.
El-re, llglll verloble winch
nlglll -..-nlng "°"'' with •fl••· ,_ wlncll w .. 1 to IO<lltlwfll 10 lo 11
lnoU -1 to >foot wind weYft Sovl'-ta •-" 1 to 1 !Mt.
U.S. sumrnary
Wl<Mly Kettered tt>vnderstorm1
rum-ec..-,.,. Sovl-Ht, with
wide.-rein o.., wttlern h llH
end tlnlfle ,,_,..'°'"'' In I .. Gull
Coen *"" -•loflt 1.,. 1: .. 1 ..... S.•-·
On T-y, -_,,_, '°""-In Ille ~I.•• o temperotllf"• of
" ..,.... WH record9d et tM S.•I·
11 .. r-1nt.,ne11-1 Alr-1 -
1i.. flfltl strelgflt doy llWlt S.attie
........ In ,_.tur .. •llO .... 90.
1.eter todey, thundenlorm1 ore
oredlcllld lrom llle IO<llllern Aoo1e1
to tM ~rol Gull Coefl encl I.,.
Allentk SM-rel, .moe teatiered
lllvndef'ttonftS ore eapec.led lo ll"lllfr
over~ of Ut.lh encl Ariton•
T-lllufft eround IM Ntlon et
mldn'11f!t renged from S3 In t..er.,,. .. ,
Wyo .• to,. In 81ytM, c.111
California
-of ~n c.lllOnllo "'°""' De lelr lfW'OUlf\ T--.y excOCll for
s ome nl9llt end ••rly mornln9
cNtt• -clouds nttndlng lnl.o u. _., CMftlll velleYt. "'9 Nelloftel
.,, .. .,., S.rvlce a.kl.
Te,.,,...returH .-itd be werm,
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hleM In t"9 mid "-Md loOft In flle
'""*-1.0flt llHcll oMt tM Or ..... County
mot,..,..llMI ••-stoould •IN be .-, lnt"9~. wlt11 lll1Mln
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We're Listening •••
What do you lJke about the Dally PUot?
What don't you like! CaJI the number below and
your message will be recorded, transcribed and
delivered to the appropriate edllOr.
Ttte same 24·hour answering service may
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topic. Mailbox c:ontr1butors mu t Include their name and telephone numbtr for verification. No
clrcuJataon caJls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981 H I F
Nukes • nnss
d e adline
WASHINGTON <APJ More
tha11 a month after a deadUne
requiring emergency s ystems to
warn the public of accidents at
nuclear power plants, l be
Nuclear Regulatory Commjsslon
h as moved to ext e nd the
deadline lo some undecided date
In the future
As or the July l deadline, only
six of 48 nuclear plant sites
around the country, including
San Onofre near San Clemente,
had the n •qu1red systems fully
installed, ac('ording to an NRC
staff document discussed by the
comm1 i.sion at a closed meeting
Tuesday.
That document also indicated
33 of the plant sites had no part
of the system installed and 17
sites had not even ordered the
systems by the ongmal dea<1·
line.
NRC spokesm an John Kopeck
said the commission voted 4·1 to
instruct the staff to rewrite a
November 1980 rule that set the
July l deadline.
The staff was not told to use
a ny specific new deadline in
rewr1tmg the rule, Kopeck said.
adding 1t would be the staff's
responsibility to come up with a
suit able dull' for consideration
by the tomm1:-.s1on
As outlined in the N RC's 1980·
yearbook, tht.• Final Rule on
Emergency Planning says 'ad
min1strath.'l' and physical means
a re to b<' cft tablished by July I .
1981. for 1>rompt alerting and
not1f1cat1on " of the public within
a 10 mill' r;.11hus of a nuclear
plant s ite
Kopt.•ck saad s u<·h systems
would c·ons1:-.t of fixed sirens.
radw systt.•ms or trucks which
ust• i.ircns or broadcast warn-
ings
Richard l'dell of the Cnttcal
Mass Energy ProJC<'I, a Ralph
Nader group that wrote the com
m1ssmn on .July 2 to complain
about the failure to meet the
deadline, said one of the major
rt.'commcndallons to follow the
Three Mile Island nuclear acci·
dent was for a better system to
warn the public of danger
"Thi:-. is n•ally the last straw,"
Udell said .. Al the very least we
s hould have a clear indication of
when utilities will be required to
carr) out the rule."
Kopeck noted that the meetmg
al which action was taken was
closed to the public under an
N RC ruJc allowing such meet-
ings in cases in which enforce-
ment actions could lead to civil
penalties .
Commissioner Peter Bradford
favored enforcement action and
Commissioner Victor Gilinsky
was on vacation and not at the
m eetin g, NRC s pokesman
Joseph Fouchard said. He said
Commissioners John Ahearne,
Thomas Roberts and Nunzio
Palladino, the NRC chairman.
voted to extend the deadline.
The staff document on the
e mergency systems said six
plant sites met the deadline and
another five had partial systems
set up for at least a fi ve·mile
radius in operation by July 1,
Another four had systems fully
instaJled by Aug. 3, it said.
The 10 plant sites listed as now
havi ng full sys tems wer e
Ca lvert Cliffs in Maryland,
Maine Yan kee in Maine. Crystal
River in Florida. McGuire in
North Carolina. Oconee in South
Ca rolina, Hatch In Georgia,
Arkansas Nuclear One in
Arkansas, Cooper in Nebraska.
Trojan in Oregon and San
Onofre.
Gem
Talk
RyJ.r . HUMP/IRJES
Certified Grmoilw111t. AGS
THE HELIODOR?
whal s that ~
Just as California wines often
win international awards in
"blind" tastings in competition
with better known, more ex-
pensive European wines, some
lesser-known gemstones have
proven to be very popula r when
compared to the classic
varieties. In a recent test con-
ducted by a magazine, people
wer e s hown 18 differe nt
varieties of colored gemstones.
All of the stones were presented
side by side and people were not
told the names of the varieties.
APWI ........
WANTS CLEANUP -Tom llaydt-n. along \\'Ith olhl'r en:
nronmcntal activists. addressed a "tox1t· awan..ness dav'' rall~ outside the Capitol in Sacramento Tul'sda.' ''here lh.ey1 tailed for cleanup and prevention of pmsonous wust(':-in
(.';.i lifornia
S eiz ed fire w orks
blown up in Azusa :
i\ZUS/\ ( i\ P J A fireball of
orang(>, grey and black s moke
roared hundreds of feet inlo the
sky 20 miles east of Los Angeles
and spread out in an ominous
mushroom shap('d cloud
But it was n't a disaster that
threatened life A lot of precau
lions were taken before lhe spel'
tacular (.•x plosion and blaze
'><'l h> firemen erupted
Talong into their own hands a
JOb thal was handled by military
Capture d
sh a rk get s
new tank
SAN DIEGO <AP> A great
white shark that has been in
c·apllv1ty longer than any of its
kind has been taken from a
public exhib1t1on tank and
transferred to a smaller tank
because of erratic swimming,
Sea World officials said
J ackie O 'Connor ,
s pokeswomun at the marine
park, said the 5 1 i foot. 100-pound
shark has shown a lack of ap·
petite while s wimming in a 15·
foot deep. 14 ,000-gallon tank
open to public viewing. but that
was not worrying scientists as
much as the abnormal s wim·
ming patterns.
"He slowed hi.; s wimming
s peed some Friday, and since
then he's sometimes been a little
faster, s ometimes a little
slower ." O'Connor said. "Today,
he showed a continual loss of
swimming speed."
O 'Conno r reject ed th e
possibility that people watching
the shark caused the trouble.
"We had been very careful.
restricting such th\ngs as flash
photography and loud noises ...
she said. "But we needed him in
an area where we could work
with him closelv In the smaller
holding area we can be in the
water with him and treat him."
explosi ves expert!> until thh
year. the fin•men rrum several
eastern suburbs of Los Angeles
dei.troyed ahout S250,000 Hl
se1w d fire"orks.
A few dozen spec·tactor~ sa"
a n 1mpress1ve ~ho" so me
described a:-. like hemg up close
at the detona tion or an atomic
bomb
El Monte Fire Chief Charles
M astcn. president or the Los
Angeles County c hapter of the
Cahforma Fire Chiefs Associa-
tion . s aid. · I never knew it
would burn that hot and that
fal>t It's awesome "
Masten ~aid cit y and county
fire departments were left
"holding the bag" following an
accident 13 monthi. ago in San
Diego in wh1eh three military
bomb dis pos al experts were
killed while transfrrring hun-
dredi. of pounds "' Mexican
made fireworks from a storage
bunker to a tru<·k
"The mil1tar} had always
tak e n care of our seize' fireworks, but refused after th
incident because they deemed ·
was too h a1.ardous ... Masteci
said. l
Covina fire officials, who cami-
paigncd against fireworks rot
many yeari., began the di~
cussions of how to safely des tro)'
confiscated fireworks.
Truckloads of fireworks. mos\
of them seized during the Fou.r14
of July holiday. were brought 1t
the detonation site. A 5-by·9
root trench was dug. filled wil explosives and covered wi
chicken wire to prevent esca
or large chunks of explodill
debris. Diesel fuel was pour
on the fireworks. which includ
2.5 million firecrackers. 850.~
bottle rockets and some gener .
ly legal "s afe and s ane
fireworks thal arc hanned in
few communities
The combination was light~
by a Oare tossed by Fire CaptaSh
Bill Franklin of Azus a.
0
Engagement and wedding
rings of cU•monds •nd
gold tMt Join together In
r•stlng bNuty.
J. t:.JJ"'"f'lm.6 J.-1.1'6
The collection included such
classic beauties as the ruby,
emerald, sapphire and topaz. So
which stone proved t,o ISe the
favorite? The heliodor ....
that's right, the heHodor, a love·'
ly yellow atone that ls not very
well known. Others that ranked
bllh were tht green tsavorite,
the red s pinal, and th• blue
tanunite. All of these were
chosen over \be emeralds,
rubles and sapphires. Why? The
be autiful color• appeal~ to
people and, wilboul kaowiftl MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
that they were "anubblDI" 1823NEWPORTBLW .COSTAMESA @ cli le, exrenslve stonee, tbey 31 YEA .. l IN THE IAMI LOCATIQN
simply pie: ed what. they liked Bl"llAmericard~ter Cha --.-.--.,
beat Colored 1em1tone1 .,.. 'lllll•••••illl•••lil•miilillllllii•l~ililiilli-llllililililliiil b1comln1 ver y popular_tn•'
America.
,,
I j I
I I
I I
I I
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I I ' . t I
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I
. --.. -. .. ........... --------_.,;---..... .. ........ -.
,
H/F Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Wedneaday, Augu1t 12, 1981
rnmu~rnrn Deadly nerve gas bombs moved ·
Brown raps Reagan,
criticized by Bush
DUOWAY PROVING
GROUND. Utah CAP) -The
rtrst or two Air Force C·Hl
transport planes, each carryln1
64 deadly Weteye nerve 1aa
bombs, touched down at Michael
Airfield here lhia mornJn1. com·
pleUn1 the tint tranarer ol tb•
bombl rrom Colorado lo Utah.
The second Ulgbt rrom
Stapleton lntematlonal Airport
in Denver was expected to land
a abort ttme later.
The ftiibtl be1an a tbr•week
Hries of 15 nl&bt.e to carry out
the controversial transfer ol •
lethal Weteye bombs rrom the
Rocky Mountain Araenal to a
permanent 1tora1e In 11100-Uke
concrete bunkers at the ~le
Army Depot, 35 mllea southwest
or Salt Lake City.
The exact time or the rlrst
movement of the bombe, each
containing 34'6 pounds or the
n erve agent GB, had been
withheld from the public by the
Army for what it termed securi·
ty reasons.
ATLANTIC CITY <AP> -The
·national 1overnors' meetlnl
ended with a fiery excban1e
between the White House and
Democratic covernors over the
economy and over the propriety
of criticizing President Reagan.
California Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. accused Reagan
T u esday or wrecking the
economy, the states and the
cities, and Vice President
George Bush called Into question
t he national spirit of anyone who
could say such a thing.
"For us to criticize and quib-·
ble at this time only damages
the national interest," Bush told
the governors shortly after
Brown had delivered his
broadside at a news conference.
Polish communists
Mmand unrest end
WARSAW, Poland <AP> -
The Communist Party CentraJ
Committee ended an emergency
meeting today with a sharp at-
tack on Solidarity and de·
manded an end to the bitter pro·
tests over shortages and pro·
posed higher prices for food.
The 200-member committee,
meeting for the first time since
its election at the party congress
in July, bla-med "irresponsible
Solidarity advisers and ac·
tivists" for the nationwide wave
of protests.
The U.S. personnel are train·
log Honduran servicemen ln
helicopter maintenance, air
operations and small·unJt tactics
but have been instructed to
carry no weapons, State Depart·
ment spokesman Alan Romberg
said Tuesday.
Nevada town3 mop
up after flooding
OVERTON, Ne v. (AP> -
Residents of several s mall
Moapa Valley farming com-
munities faced the laborious
process of removing tons of mud
from their homes today as they
attempted to get life back to
normal in the flood-damaged
area.
About 700 r eside nts were
e vacuated from Overton on
Monday night after two separate
fl oods hit the town within
several hours of each other
There were no major injuries.
although one elderly woman was
hospitalized in Las Vegas after
s pending the night In a field
buried to the waist in mud.
The first plane took off from a
remote runway at Stapleton,
whlch is adjacent to the anenal,
at 4:45 a.m. PDT. The second
plane's departure was delayed
until 5:30 a.m. Armv officials could not immediately be
reached to explain the 20-minute
delay in takeoff of the second
plane.
The 45-minute flights over the
Rocky Mountains ended at
Ougway Proving Ground, 65
miles southwest of Salt Lake Ci·
ty. The born bs will be stored
temporarily al Dugway, then
moved in weekly truck convoys
lo Tooele Army Depot for
permanent storage.
The Army says the flights will
be ma~e once or twice a day.
three l1mes a week, until all the
bombs are in Utah. Each plane
will carry 64 bombs.
The route chosen for the
flights takes them north from
Denver, across the Continental
TRAIN CRASH DEADLY The boda·es of four I . . d . a~.......-Divide over Rocky Mountain Na· P e were injure an the Tuesday incident. The tional Park and then across
U.S. S llOOls down workmen have been reco vered after a head· freight train was apparently "on the trac ks northweste rn Colorado and
f , on collis ion between a freight train and brak· at the wrong time.·· according to a northeastern Utah.
b ll ing commuter train in Be verly, Mas s .. 17 s pokes man for Boston & Maine Railroad . The Army says the route was runa1vay a OOn miles northeast of Bos ton. Twenty-seven peO· selected because the planes will
CUDJOE KEY . Fla CAP> _ not have to pass over any cities 'or towns. Nevertheless. six
The U.S Air For ce has shot Bl · d dl teams of military chemical dis-
down a runa wa y military azes w;n e ;n 3 states aster specialists were positioned balloon carry ing SJ.5 million It It on the ground along the route so
U S worth of radar equipment after they can reach a crash site . • Sends m e n it was located over the Gulf of · within JO minutes . Mexico. officials said By The Assodated Press lnstitute's arid lands ecology Jenkins. to aid Honduras The expe rimental 180·foot Firefighters working the des-project operated on the federal She &aid scientists ba¥e not A lawsuit was filed in Utah to
balloon, nicknamed .. Airman er ts and the unus ually dry government's Hanford nuclear determi~ where Lbe st\Jcly will block the transfer, and Utah
WASIUNGTON {AP> -The Fat AIT>ert," was downed Tues-forest'> of the Pacific Northwest reservation on Rattlesnake go from here. Buildings, inctud-Gov. Scott Matheson publicly
U nited States has sent 21 day by missiles fired from an believe they have the upper Mountain in the desert of ing an obeervatory on th" mQ\9· criticized the move. Congress,
military trainers, some of them F·4 aircraft about 165 miles hand in their battles against southeastern Washington. tain 's summit , were un -however. with prompting by
from the Army's elite Special west-northwest of Key West blazes that hav e charred A 40·square-mile blaze six damaged,shesaid. members of Colorado's delega.
Forces, to Honduras to help after airmen spotted it at an thousands of acres of brush and weeks ago and the fires this Airborne tankers and water lion. ordered that by Oct. 10 the
bolster security along the 140· altitude of 25,000 feet. Lt. Susan timber. week have devastated 80 percent trucks were enlisted in~ fights bombs either be in storage at
mlleborderthatcounlryshares L. Hankey said from Fort Lee Among properties heavily of the lands under study, said in Waahioaton, OHl(dh aoij Tooele Army Depot or
_w_it_h_E"'--1 S-'-a_l_v~a-=-do.:..;r""'.-------Air ~orce Station, Va'....' _____ d_a_m_a,g_ed_w_a_s_B_a_t_t_e1_1e_M_e_m_o_n_·_a1 __ B_a_t_te_l_le_s...:p:...o_k_e_s_w_o_m_a_n--=E=-d::.:y~e;;...__n_o_rtbern_ • ..___c_a_ll_fo-.;ff1L..:;;i~;:.;· .... _·_, ~_,..__ __ d_e_s_t_ro_'f_ed_. --------
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JfEADING ENJOYMEN:F 7 DAYS A WEEK In the -•Jc rlllll
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Firefighters near
control of blazes
By Tbe Aasoclated PreH
Fires that charred 50,000 acres
of Northern California and
forced hundreds of people to nee
homes and camps were nearly
van9uisbed today , say
firef1ehters attacking the
smoldering remnants.
Busy U.S. so. closed to through
traffic since Saturday, was
scheduled to reopen at 10 a .m ..
revivlng the main traffic link
between Lake Tahoe area
gambling resorts and their San
Francisco-Sacramento area
customers. Fifty miles of the
highway were closed when a
two-car collision killed two teen-
agers and sparked a blaze that
ate through 3,600 a cres of
timber.
Executive named
at Continental
cleared away Tuesday appeared
to be the last legal roadblock to
construction of the 17-mile
superhighway from Los Angeles
International Airport eastward
through southern suburbs of Los
Angeles.
Mortgage bill
backed by panel
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
Assembly's banking committee
would let lenders issue
mortgages with low monthly
payments but steadily increas-
ing debt.
With no debate Tuesday. the
Finance. Insurance and Com
merce Committee voted 10·0 for
SB809 by Sen John Foran, 0 -
San Francisco. It goes to the
Ways and Means Committee .
... -... ---.... -. . ...... ~ ....... ~ .. ...--. . .......
ROCK 'N ROLL RUINS -The Rev. Larry Pyle
of Lakewood's Assembly of God Church sur-
veys the results of his appeal to parishione rs
to "clean up your homes of morally damag-
' • • tt • • 'f
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, Auguat 12, 1981 H/F
,. ..............
inf! influences." The result was this mound of
rock mus ic records and tapes. pornographic
magazines. marijuana and liquor covering
the church floor.
Build!ng JI
per011t
bill backed
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A )
state Senate committee has ap-
proved a compromise bill to let
local governments that have
finis h ed half their coastal
management plans iSSl.lf' !l
bullcUng permits. ..,
By a 6·0 vote Tuesday, the ·A
Natural Resources and Wildlife 1<l
Committee sent AB385 by As· • l -t
semblyman Tom Hannigan, D·, h'
l'~airfield, to the Senate Finance
Committee. fl
The 1976 California Coastal ,, 1
Act established a state Coastal ,
Commission and six regional , >
commissions and required alJ ,)
c1t1es and count ies along the 11t
coast to write coastal manage-,.,
ment pla ns.
The regional comm1ss1ons is· ,.,
sued building permits until the ,i 1
local governments finished their .11 land use plans a nd the acco?Qpa· n
nying ordinances. That was s up-,J
posed lo be done July l. The re·
gional commissions ceased to '\
exist on tha t date.
LOS ANGELES (AP>
George Warde, president of Con-
tinental Airlines, has been
named chief executive officer.
s ucceeding suicide victim A. L.
Feldman.
State growers prepare for med fly
llannigan's bill would set a \)
new final deadline for plans of
Jan. 1, 1982. and would let local
governments that have finished •1
the land use plan. but not or-•' 1
d1nances, issue their own build· "'
ing permits. . '
Developers and some local '''
governments had wanted to be '\I
able lo issue permits whether 11J
they were done with the land use
portion or not, while environ-'':
mentalist groups wanted the ·t•
statc commission to r etain build-.,.
ing permit authority until com-;..
pll.'lt' plans were done
The airline's board of direc·
tors on Tuesday named Warde.
59, to the post a nd also elected
him a director of the company,
said Contine ntal spokesman
Julian Levine
Roadblock c leared
infreeway plan
LOS ANGELES <APl -As
part of the estimated $1.5 billion
pr icetag fo r the Century
Freeway now in its 20th year
of delay -the Reagan Ad·
minis tration has reluctantly
agreed to pay for 3, 700 housing
units that would be displaced by
the highway.
The housing issue that was
LOS GATOS <A P l -Growers
1n the nation 's richest
agricultural region are bracing
for a Mediterranean fruit Oy in·
festation as officials express lit
lie confidence they can stop its
spread.
A fertile female medny has
already b een f o und in
Livermore, just west of the lush
San Joaquin Valley.
· "We haven 't seen the last
medOy yet." said e radication
head J erry Scribner on Tuesday.
He said he was not confident
that the fly could be contained
before reaching the valley.
Scribner said he would an-
nounce today in Livermore the
latest plan of attack on the
pesky insect, which has plagued
Northern California for more
than a year. including whether
aeriaJ pesticide s praying is lo be
increased .
The valley is part of what is
known as the Central Valley,
which stretches about 600 miles
through California and produces
most of the nation's peaches.
plums. apricots. grapes and
other host crops
No flies have been found m
co mmercial farms . But a
federal quarantine has been im-
posed on Alameda, San Mateo
and Santa Clara counties. from
which no unfumigated produce
can be shipped.
"We are praying," said Clark
HOW FAR
YOU CAN GO FOR s
Biggs of the California Farm
Bureau Federation in
Sacramento. He said the state's
growers "have very s trong as·
s urances from many of the peo·
pie out in the valley. the county
agriculture commissioners."
that a plan is ready to combat
the pest if it reaches the region.
"They are ready to go," Biggs
s aid, adding that initial stages or
the plan will involve "determin·
ing what kind or an mfestalion
they have and then going in
ther e, increas ing the trapping,
determining whether it can be
handled on the ground or going
to aerial applications."
California crops valued at $4 7
billion annually can play host to
the medfly ln San J oaqutn
County alone, host crops were
valued last year at $277 millfon.
"We are sort of frustrated ..
sort of helpless.·' said Ellie
Conway, executive secretary of
the San Joaquin Farm Bureau.
"If it continues through Sep-
tember or October, then you are
look i ng at a threat to the
apricots and cherries come next
spring," he said.
Scribner is expected to an-
nounce whether he will set up
temporary quarantine
roadblocks at Altamost Pass
west of Li vermore and at
several other sites around the in·
festation.
Plan toughened
SACRAMENTO <AP l -An '\\
A:-scmbly subcommittee has
stiffened a plan that would have
made 1t easier for foreign.
tr ained nurses to work in
Californii. After a noisy hearing
f uesday, the Subcommittee on
Health Personnel voled 7-1 to ' .,
send the proposal to the As· ...,
scmhly Health Committee.
SAVE BIG -!
SAVE UP TO 9.51 • • I
J
. •
OR I FSS.
Stn ASAP MIL IHI EAST COAST
· WllHOUTWAlllNO.
Our new ASAP Fare let!. you take off
from Lo:-. Angeles International. Burbank or
Ontario 10 !>even EaMem c1tie~ right away
for onl y $179 ($15910 Chicago). Thai'., each
way when you huy a round trip 1ickc1.
There are no other restnction!oo. No
DAVEL 10 ANY Of THESE CITIES:
('"h._·.i)!n Ph1IJJdrh1J
ll1i-1o n F1 L•u1knl.1I" J
Nev. Ynr\./!'lc .. Jr~ M1Jm1
WJ,l11ng1nn, () C -----------
advance purchase. No length of \lay
requirements o r time deadlines. But !.eats
are limited and all flight!. are via Denver.
And when you Oy to any nf thc"c -,even
Eastern cities. you can re turn from any one
of the other cities at no extra charge. For
example. you might Oy to New Yori.. and
catc h a return flig ht fro m Wa'>hington . D .C .
In addition. we'll g ive you Firs t Clasl>
for the price of Coach . Buy a full fare
Coach ticket on Continental or bring u-'
anothe r airline's (except World or Capitol
Airway'>) full fare Coach tic ket w these
Eastern c ities and we'll Oy you First Class.
That's right. Firs t C la-,s . Thi~ is o n a firo;t
come. first ifrved basis. so re!\ervation!I are
l!uggested. \
Gotta' get back East in a hurry and
want to save money too? You can't do better
than ASAP.
CONTINENTA
EARN A D L
sm Ol IBS 10 ANY 01HEI
MAINLAND U.S. CITY.
Continental\ U.S. 1s youri.. Piel-. a c11y.
Any city. Now through September 15th ynu
can go anywhere we Oy in the mainland
U.S. for no more than $179 each way with a
round trip 1idc1. And Ill many t:it1e-' the
f arc i!. even 1c ... :-..
!!~E '°~:,~l~l=\I i
Au,11n Kanta\ ( •I) OrnJhJ
Ca,p<"r Linc<,ln Pcun ..
Colordllo !)pnn11' 1.ubbod Ph1icn" J I Denver M1dland/Odc,s.1 Sun An111n1<1
l El Paw M1lwau~cl" Tu1:,on I
Grand Junc11on Minn /S1 Jl4ul Thi'.; _J
Hnu,ton New Orlcdn' Wi.h11~
There arc ~omc rei.1ric1ion!oo. Ju~I make
re..,ervation~ and buy your Coach ticket
either 7 or 14 day'> in advance depending 1rn
your destination. You can return ai. early a-;
the fir~! Saturday or i.ta} a~ long as ~ix ty
day ...
And 1f you've gor children ages 2-11
you can .,how them around the country for
no more than $129 each way with a round
trip ticket when accompanied by an adult. •
Seat!. arc limited. So call your trnvcl
agent. company travel depanmcnl or
Continental. And ec how far $179 each
way can rake you .
Fares subject to change without notice.
IRUNES
D.eUver the llltlJPlllt Boys and girls 10 or older -
.·: · Call 642·4321 and apply today. lailJ Pld
MEN'S FAMOUS MAKER
KNIT SHIRTS
Choose from a large selection of solids and
prints. Sizes S·M·L·XL.
Regular
15.00 7.99
LARGE SAVltGS If OUR OTHER DEPTS.
SAVE OM LADES SPORTSWEAR, JUllORS,
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FIRST QUALITY ...
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Choose from delicate floral print or bold
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BATH REG. 10.50-11.00 ............ 2.99
HAND REG. 6.50·7.00 .........•...... 1. 99
WASH REG. 3.00 ........................ 1. 4 9
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BATH TOWELS Looped or sheared
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velour jacquards
IF PEflFECT 4 9 9 12.50-14.50 •
"STEMWARE BONANZA"
SAVE UP TO 13.96 ON STEMWARE
FROM COLONY AND MICASA
Blown, etched glass stemware from Colony
Asst pattema & sizes. Goblets, wines. saucer
and fluted champagnes & cordials.
COMPARE AT 99,TO 1.99 5.00TO1.00
Blown cut crystal stemware from Mikasa
Asal. patterns & sizes. Goblets. wines, and
saucer champagnes.
~~ARE AT 3.99 ro5:99
•em AU,.,,_ MID llZU II EACM IYa.
IALE PRICES 8000 THIW SUtt AUQ.11, 1111
IRVINE
.
l
d
e
s
l,
l·
\0
O·
lf
ts
r·
tl
ee
lY
of
)n
ty
!C·
ut
fil·
1ed
of
~d
mg
Art post
MC·
Hen
t of
UY· y on
peo·
l()ien
I re·
lS of
J ad-
1' ve
snost
1erve
'July
!lent,
Ire to
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td to a
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U1 nol
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.....
~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday. Augu1t 12. 1981
I F 1 ct. , ...... ., ... SJ.Ill
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Fllwleaa ....... ..... 2 ct. VYS ·l ZUll ....
VVS·% 11.llO 11.• VS· 1 1tMt .....
3 ct. FltWllH n.HO 11.750
VVS·l UJIO ZUIO
YVS-2 D.7IO tUIO
VS·l %1.750 17.ZIO
I 11.111 ..... ••• Ull .. .. 11.• I.Ill
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11.111
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Farmer
detours
manure
W ORCESTER.
Enatand <AP> -John
Bennett's farm haa a
different air about It
these days.
After compl aints
about the aromatic
qualities of manure
from his 200 cows and
the-silage on his 300-acre
dairy farm, Bennett did
something sweet for the
nostrils of Worcester.
A• ""'-.,. -on e0<1ecteo ,..., ecco<o•nv 10 c«1••ice1 .. by ~ • .,,,~" GemolOQi<el L•t>0t••0t• H e i n s t a 11 e d 1 8
inc 0<111e~'"•111ut•o'"._1ca perfume s prays that Pr--on11141~--•• • th d li f ~ IAILLIAHl TABLE ... » eo OVEl\All ()(PTi1 ... SI 61 GIRO\.[ THICllHESS h11N MEOOM gave out e e Cate ra·
C1JlEl • ..oNE·MEDtVM H UORESCENCE. HONE fAINT BLUE GRAINll'fG Nil gr a n c es 0 r a Im 0 n d
II Ille dlemcw>CI you Ml/I IO MOI It t -... I Site OI quellly OI nc>I MINn ._ --·· piHM ~I IOt IPle blOSSOmS , WallflOWerS ~ we -~ All ~get ot Scienlille ()em LaDo IOI -llbllon OI QUeltt, tnlllyM teQtlO"'Q '"" l>\>ICn-and rOSeS.
d be Peld br UfllJl'lfoal OlelnonO lnckittrlM p,_ tubjeel to -.. due lo ....,,._. -
l '\'l\'E R.SAL DIA ffO.\D l .\'D(',4'TRIES The sprays are con·
~2 ............. """ 201. tt ....... ,_ a. .. ~ .. 2 ..... ....,........, ~. ~-·-·· """ :11 -• 1·..... t r o 1 I e d b y a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~U weathervane. and they
41 llYllllll '"· IVITIA
llWNIT lllCI 141.uu
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~111LO~CATION
f. Own Your Own \ Bualn••• Show
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vO•• o.-.n Ptan to a11end the
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cos••~u641 -1 289 • Fu11anopa1111me oppot1un111n
1 u. .,._ ...,., • ln•Htmento l1om 550 to S IC)0,000
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HERE'S GOOO MEWS!
MO MORE FLEAS!
OH YOUR PET OR IH YOUR HOME
PROVEN EFFECTIVE AGAINST:
FLIES
turn on whenever the
wind blows from Ben·
nett 's Manor House
Farm at Lower Wi ck
toward the center or t his
cathedral city two miles
away.
The industrial
perfume cost s $20 a
gallon, bu t Bennett
dilutes it with water and
says his scenting system
'costs less than 20 cents
an hour lo run.
"It's my gesture to the
townsfolk." said Ben·
n e tt. 49. "Arter all.
10.000 of them buy my
milk."
Trustee named
SACRAMENTO CAP)
-Gov. Edmund Brown
J r . has appointed
J eremiah Ha llisey. a
lo ngtime friend and
political supporter , lo
the state University and
Col l eges board or
trustees.
Lev rs
FLEAS
ROACHES
RATS
MICE
SPIDERS
MOSQUITOES
CARPENTER ANTS
BEES. WASPS
CRICKETS
MOTHS
WATERBUGS CORDS • BELLS • NUYOS
,.~ ..........
Three generations of nuclear weapons are displayed outside Pantu assembly plant near Amanllo. Te.t·
as The plant will soon begm production of controversml neutron warheads. according to Energy
Department.
Neutron bomb plan defended
Weapon could be sent to Europe in 'a few hours'
WASH INGTON I AP ) -
Neutron weapons stockpiled in
the United Slates could be de·
li vered to troops in Europe in
"only a few hours" in the event
of a crisis, Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger says.
The United Stales. therefore.
will not be penalized strategical·
ly by keeping the weapons at
home in recognition of European
"sensitivities" to having them
deployed in their countries.
Weinberger said.
T he defense secretary de·
fended the administration's de·
cision last week to resume pro·
duction of the weapon. which
was halted by former President
Carter in 1978 after an outcry of
protests from NATO allies.
Asked if the neutron weapon
increases the chance or nuclear
war, as Europeans rear, he
replied: "No. I think it makes it
much harder to launch a conven·
tional war and thereby helps
preserve the peace .
The Soviet Union called the
decision the latest "in the cam·
paign or silence, lies and decep·
tion which had long been used by
the United Slates to cover up de·
velopment work on this most in ·
human var iety or mass ·
des truction weapons.'·
The State Department d is·
missed Moscow's criticism as
the "expected and standard prop·
aganda line "
Weinberger said the Soviets
are upset because the neutron
weapon "gives us the greatest
deterrent against their kind or
warfare , overwhelming masses
of infantry and tanks."
He said the Soviets have 45,000
tanks compared with the 11 ,000
NA TO tanks in central Europe
White House spokesman Larry
S peakes said the United States
will cons ult European allies
before sending any of the new
weapo n s ove r seas but
acknowledged that their opin·
ions were not sought before
Reagan decided to resume pro-
duction.
Speak es w o uld no t say
whether the United States plans
to eventually seek permission
from allies to store the weapons
in Europe.
The we apon 's ·'enhanced
radiatJon warhead" as intended
to kill the crews or massed tanks
by penetrating t heir armored
hulls with s hafts of intense
nuclear radiation.
The theory is that such
warheads would kill the enemy
in the immediate battlefield
ar ea but spare friendly troops
and innocent civilians, as well
a s the ir s tructures, on the
periphery of the battlefield.
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Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner
15 Convenl'"nt Locations
642-5678
Put o Jew words to work for you
in the Daily Pll.
STUDENT 512'8 BRUSHED DENIMS '688
MEN'S PANTS
MOVIN-ON LEVIS • SUNDECI PAN1S
• OP • LIGHTNING BOLT • llITTANIA
• llONZED AUSSIE • CATCH IT
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REG.$26.88
LEVIS
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~81~s $
JEANS
SIZES4 TO 14
YOUR
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v1Lou1 s11Rn REG. s21.95
YELOUI TOPS REG. $21. 95
conoN DRESSES
., ••
YOUR
CHOICE
REG. '549,95
BLOUSES • INIT TOPS • SWEATERS
•OVERALLS
88
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..., ....
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12, 1 .. 1
STOCKS BS
SPORTS 86
•
Airlines. appear to be
recovering from air
controllers strike . . . 83
D
a
, School candidates weighing chances
With just two weeks remain-
ing ln the county's filing period,
school board members and
potential candidates in rour west
county districts are pondering
t heir chances for a Nov. 3 eltt·
lion victory.
Candidates wishing to run In
the fall contest must file papers
with the Orange County .
Registrar of Voters by s p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 27.
In the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
Burglary
alarm
fine hit
Huntington Beach city plan-
ning commissioner Wes Ban·
nister has criticized a recent or-
dinance imposing a $25 fine on
business owners with more than
three false burglary alarms a
year
In an Aug. 7 letter to Mayor
Ruth Finley t he insurance
broker charges that the or·
dinance actually will increase
crime by c ausing business
owners lo turn off their alarms
for rear of having to pay fines.
Bannister said that burglars
will deliberately set off false
alarms themselves by smashing
windows and wailing until the
owner finally shuts the alarm
off.
"They'll go to a door and hit it
with ~ sledge ha mmer and take
off and come back in three or
four days," Bannister said in a
recent inter view. ··People un-
derestimate the intelligence of
criminals."
The chances of that happening
are highly unlikely. according to
police. lf there was any evidence
of a break-in that would not be
considered a Calse aJarm. ac-
cording to Robert Bennett, com·
murucations supervisor.
The purpose of the ordinance
is to cut down on the number of
false alarms that have risen to
450 a month recently. Bennett
added.
Most of the false alarms are a
result of employee negligence
a nd few are received from
homeowners, who are generally
knowledgeable about their
systems, said Bennett.
Bennett said that the old
policy of not ans we ring calls
from businesses with more than
four fa lse alarms until their
system ts repaired was ineffec·
live.
trustees Zita Wessa and Steehen
Smith have announced their In·
tention to seek re-election.
Re Steveils, a certified nursing
assistant who resides ln Hunt-
ington Beach, also has filed
papers to run against them.
Doris Allen, a high school
board member for the last five
years, said she has decided not
to seek another term. Havlne
lost a close race last fall for the
7lst District Assembly seat, she
plans to run again for that state
post next year.
In the Huntinston Beach City
(elementary> School District,
three terms are exph1ne.
Dave Sonluen and Paula
Hulse have been trustees for
four and a hall years. He is
seeking re-election; she iJ not.
Roy How. a first term trustee,
said he is undecided but is ~an
Ing toward another run for
trustee.
According to the Reeistrar of
CATCH OF T~E DAY -Anyone can request a window ta·
ble at a bays1de restaurant. So to further impress his date K~thy Waggone r of Garden Grove, Tim Magill of Foun·
tam Valley arranged a personal table on the Newport
Voters office, no challeneers
have filed ln the Huntin1ton
Beach City School District.
In the Fountain Valley School
District, 14-year school board
veteran Shella Meyers has de-
cided not to continue. Last year
she wu elected to the Orange
County Board of Education and
will continue in that post.
Another veteran Fountain
Valley trustee, Ro1er Belgen,
said he is lea ning toward
another run but has not reached a flDal dttision.
Board Preside nt Betty
Mignanelli, whose term also ex-
pires in November, bas not yet
taken out papers from the
Registrar's office. She couJd not
be reached for further comment.
William Manes, who last year
led an unsuccessful recall cam·
palgn to remove Belgen, Mrs.
Meyers and Mrs. Mlenanelli,
has taken out papers to run for a
..., .......... ..,~....._
Beach pier. They enjoyed their lunch of ~oast lamb rice pil~ and heart-s haped melon with cherries despit~ the
cunous crowd of onlookers and the arrival of a policeman
who nixed the serving of wine on the pier. ·
Fountain Valley school board
seat.
In the Ocean View School DisJ
trict, serving primarily north
and central Huntington Beach,
tw o in c umbent trustees,
M arlanne Blank and Charles
Osterlund, have taken out
papers.
Trustee Darrell Carter, whose
term also expires in November,
has not yet tal<en out papers. He
could not be reached for com·
ment.
* * * Filing
deadline
Aug.27
Orange County residents who
wish to run for local school dis-
trict seats and positions on other
governing boards have until 5
p.m. Aug. 27 to file with the
Orange County Registrar of
Voters office.
Candidates must reside within
th e dis trict they wis h to
represent.
In the Nov. 3 election, three
seats will be filled in each or the
following school distr icts: Ocean
View (in north and central Hunt·
ington Beach), Fountain Valley,
Huntington Beach City and Seal
Beach.
Also two seats must be filled
on the Coast Community College
District Board of Trustees. This
panel governs Golden West,
Orange Coast and Coastline col-leges.
The following positions also
will be on the Nov . 3 ballot:
three seats on the Orange Coun-
ty Water District Board of
Dirtttors, two directors' seats
and one assessor-tax collector·
treasurer post for the Sunset
Beach Sanitary District ; three
seats on the Surfside Colony
Storm. Water District Board of
Directors; and three seats on
the Surfside Colony Community
Services District Board of Direc·
tors. .
Mo r e information about
eligibility for these posts and fil.
ing procedures can be obtained
by visiting the Registrar of
Voters office, 1300-C S. Grand
Ave., Santa Ana, or by calling
834-2244.
Art Anthony
ivon'-t resign
Irvine post
Irvine City Councilman Ar1
Anthony will not resign his post
as a result of his recent convic·
lion for assaulting his wife . So far. police have not not.iced
any change in the number of
false alarms since the ordinance
was passed late last month.
Police will not enforce the or-
dinance until later this month
when all business owners have
been notified of the new or·
dinance.
County dumps seek caretakers
Anthony iss ued a written
statement before the start of
Tuesday's council meeting say·
ing that he decided to stay on
a fter speaking with about 70 peo-
ple and evaluating about a dozen
unsolicited comments he'd re-
ceived.
Tour planned
for museum
Registration is being conduct·
ed now for a private lour of the
Norton Simon Museum in
Pasade n a, spo n sor e d b y
Coastline Community College.
The Lour will take place from 9
a .m . lo 5 p.m. on Thursday,
Aug. 20.
The museum houses many
great works in painting,
tapestry, prints and sculpture.
Following a morning tour,
participants may spend the af·
ternoon in personal viewing.
The $15 registration fee covers
round-trip bus . transportation
and museum e ntry fees .
Registration information can be
obtained by calling the college,
963.()811.
.
Boys camp given
foundation grant
R.M. Pyles Camp for un-
derprivileged boys ln Hunt·
ington Beach and three other
Orange County lnsUtutioos are
amon1 56 SoUtbern Calllornia
orcmllations to receive 111a11ta
lb.la year from the UnJon Pacific
Pouadation, a New Yorlt·bued phJJathropy.
Other Oran1e County lnaUtu-
Uont lbartna benefit• totalln1
$2t4,5IO include, Chlldrtn'1
Ho.pttaJ in Oranae, ProYideoce
SP"Cb and Hearin& Center in
OrlQle and the United Way ot
Oranae County. •
.
Rent-free living, right here in
Orange County'?
Not impossible, des pite
escalating housing costs.
Thal is, if you already own a·
trailer or motor home, and. if
you don't mind Uvlng In a dump.
Orange County government,
with the blessing of the board of
OCC offers
data at plaza
Class schedules and registra·
lion materials for Orange Coast
College's fall semester will be
available Aug. 21-23 at South
Coast Plaza's second annual
"Community College Days."
The OCC exhibit will include
displays, demonstrations and an
information booth.
The 104-page schedule is also
available at the college's ad·
missions and records office.
Registration at the college
begins Aug. 17, with classes
beginning Sept. 8.
Laguna cops
seek bandit
A clean·1baven ablrtleu man
with what hla victima detaibed
as a "1ood tan" robbed a
jewelry store in Lquna Beacb,
eaup{n1 with nearly '200 in
cash and watebel.
PoUce searched north IAcwaa
Beach near tbe Laauaa 0,......... abop at llO N. eo.t
Hl•laway for nearly aa bour
follOWlnl tM Tueaday .......
robbery wtt.hout apottlna tbe ...
peel.
~· ... ,~-.~•••••,ta A4
supervisors, Is looking for seven
people to live at and maintain
the county's seven landfills and
solid wute transfer stations.
The idea is the brainchild of
Ray Rhoads, manager of the
county Solid Waate Management
Program, who says It's leas ex-
pensive and more desirable to
have resident caretakers Utan
hiring security guards to patrol
the four dumps and three
transfer stations located in the
county.
Caretakers, Rhoads said in a
memorandum to supervisors,
can watch out for flrea and deter
Service held
for Newpo~'s
Dr. Bernard
Bunal rites were conducted
Tuesday at Holy Sepulcher·
.Cemetery in Orange for Dr .
Donald P . Bernard, 60, of
Newport Beach, who died lut
Thunday.
Dr. Bernard. wbo bad a
private practice la Westminster,
w a1 on the stat( of W eslqlinlter
Community and Fountain Vallty
Community botpltala.
He served in the U.S. Navy
from 19SO to 1'74, _..... bit
Navy career u comm~ ol·
Heer of the Na•1 Beatoa•I
Medical Center id Guam. u. ll nm•ed bJ ldl wife,
Helen, two Miii. a ........... a
brGtllll' aad two ...... .
Tb• famll7 baa ,.,. .. -..
memorial donatloH to I\.
loaddm Cathotic QuCell. *' ~81111 Ave., Colt.a M•a.
vandalism. He said a system has
proved highly effective in Los
Angeles County.
Under a proposed caretaker
agreement submitted to the
bOard. the county would provide,
rent free , sites for the
caretakers' trailers and a
"clean" water supply, although
potability would not be auured.
And caretakers would be
given a radio so they could re-
port troublesome activity to
county officials. The agreement
specifies that caretakers not act
as semi-policemen.
Caretakers may have a spouse
or other person live with them
and may keep two or three
animals.
According to the proposed
agreement caretaker s must
acknowledge "that landftll sites
are rural areas with attendant
hazards such as wild animals.
dust, allergens, etc. and agree
not to sue the county over any
injury or loss caused by such
''huard.s.''
And, caretakers must notify
the county if they plan to be
away overnight or for periods
longer than eight hours. ,
Dumps are located in San
Juan Capistrano, Irvine, San·
Ua10 Canyon east of Orange and
Olinda, north of Brea. Trash
transfer stations are located in
Huntington Beach, Stanton and
Anaheim.
"Discounting the opinions of
those who are my political ad-
v e rs ari es, the thoughts I've
heard and read are almost
unanimous that I should serve
out this term, which ends in July
1982,'' Anthony wrote.
"This public sentime nt,
coupled with my own desire to
fulfill the obligation I assumed
when elected in 1978, has led to a
decision to complete this term of
office, if at all possible."
Anthony has said be will not
seek re-election when his term
runs out next June. He indicated
Tuesday he wut not seek any
other elective office either.
"I have other priorities at this
moment, and none of those
priorities include public office,"
he said.
welfare policy rev~ed
Motor home or trailer owners may get 'rent-free' site
The Oraqe County BoUd of
Supervilon bu decided to move
away from an earlier require-
ment that Jtl'Olpedive meneral
relW welfare reclp6enta be able
to Pl"O'• they have llved ln the
COUllt1 for • days.
Supettllon toot tb• action
Tueeday on tbe advice of tbe
eounty CcMatl'• Oftlce, wbkb
eoneluded that tb• re1utwi.,::;
quinmeat --be ltrm by a .......... C!omt JuQ9 at .. Ue:ibMrllll on lta CClft• IU . n. ............ to. ................ ," ........ -.0 tl..a that Wiii. Ja .... D :,.~r::~:
may not be strlcUy adhered to.
Supervllon impoeed the ra-
ldency requirement amid con· cerns that so-called "county
boppers•• were movin1 into
Oranae County to take act.an· taae of welfare benefits.·
Supervilon turned ulde a pro-
posed one-year re1idency ni·
qulrement ID favQr of tlM JO.day
nale.
<Hneral ,....., ia providM to
P90Dle wbo either do not quallty
for 0.. an awa1Uq odaer' fonDI
ol ..., .... Mlkluee. Tbe NI•
ldenct requirement waa lm-
Daied to.._ tnenuln1 cotta ot
lbt •--al relief pro1ram,
wbklll dire otbel' forma ol U ·
slstance, ls funded excheivel)I
with county funds.
The county was sued by tbe
Le1al Aid Society over lmpoel-
tlon ot the 30-day retldency r•
qulrement. 'lbe toelet1 acted on
behaJI of a weUare rec:lplent who
had been dented benefits
became 1be wu unable to prove
the had lived tn the county for 30
days.
OFF & RUNNING DEPT. -Good
heavens, Imagine the coastal s urprise
when it was announced only yesterday
that Dapper John is seeking higher of·
fice again. Dapper John, of course, is
our very own coastal State Senator J ohn
G Schmitz.
The surprise. in this case. isn·t that
John Schmitz. the noted Republican
from Newport Beach. seeks higher of·
~
T-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 ®"'
fice. What the heck. he's done that
before.
As a matter of fact. at one point in
his up-and-down political career. he
veered awav from the GOP ranks and
r an for Pres.ident of the United States on
the American Independent Party ticket.
QUICK QUIZ: Who was Schmitz's
running mate for vice president or\ the
AIPticket?
But I digress As noted. the surprise
isn't that Senator Schmitz is running for
something again.
The eyebrow-raiser is that Dapper
John dusted off his long-standing mem-
bership in the John Birch Society as <A'ie
qualification for office proving that he is
indeed a conservative.
Now why did John go and do that?
Everybody knows he 's a conservative.
He probably holds m embership card No.
3 in the Birch Society. Why bring it up?
You were or the opinion that the
John Birch Society. either as a threat or
a virtue. depending on your views. went
out of st~·le back with hippie haircuts
and mini skirts.
But then. somebody just pointed out
that mini-skirts are making a comeback.
Well. mini·skirts are a whole lot
more exciting than the John Birch Socie·
t~'. And that ·s, another contradiction in
the J ohn G. Schmitz image. Most
Birchers talk r eally dull stuff. They
seem to lack much senst of humor.
JOHN SCHMITZ IS A WITTY fellow.
He can even get away with poking josh
at the far right Ile particularly like~ to
isn't dull
lampoon th~ press at the drop of a
podium.
Further, Schmitz isn't dull. Years
ago. It was once reported that John. in a
statement opposing gun contro ls.
declared that everyone ought to be able
to own a machine gun if they wanted to.
I think Schmitz later denied the state-
ment, or modified it, or declared that it
was taken out of context.
That aside. the words "Machine Gun
Schmitz" s urely did make a lively
headline .
John Schmitz isn't dull.
BACK IN HIS EARLV political
career, Schmitz got elected to the state
Senate and then ran and was .elected to
Congress arter Jimmy Utt died. He then
became anti-Nixon. once declaring that
he didn't mind Nixon going to China. just
so long as he stayed there. Schmitz fell
from favor with the GOP and ran for
president as a n independent.
Then he got beaten out of his con
gressional sea't by former Orange Coun-
Sam! Somebody'• got an eye on your 1ea1
ty assessor Andy Hinshaw. who was
later convicted of mis using his public of·
fi ce while assessor.
Schmitz thus claims todav that later
events s urrounding both Nixon a nd
Hins haw proved that he'd been the right
man all along.
THAT ASIDE, J ohn G. Schm itz
seems to be back full circle in mounting
another U.S. Senate campaign as he did
tentatively in 1976 a nd 1980.
And just remember. Dapper John
isn't dull.
If a n y b o d y can arouse Sa m
Hayakawa from his slumbers. Schmitz
ought to be able to do it.
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PllMS -11ac-.. 11e1rc .. 1 ............•...•.•....•.•......••...• '36"
HA11,CU1'S -. fw M• . . . • . • • . . • • • . . • . • . • • • . . • • . • • 11 I •
'90: '4600
reg. •14•
rag. •20"
Student awarded
$3.85 million
COORDINATOR Warren
Wilcox of Costa Mesa has
been named coordinator of
the South County Service
Cente r for the American
Rep Cross. The center. at
27324 Camino Capi strano.
Laguna Nigut>I. serves
Orange County fr om
Newport Bea('h south
A La Mlrada college student
won a ~.85 mllllon suit uguinst
her insurance company and her
rormer lawyers who foiled lo
negotiate u settlement after she
was ln an accident that left a vie
tim paralyzed.
Under the Orange County
Superior Court ruling Monday.
Oeborah Betts, 23, is to receive
the damage payment from All
state Insurance Co. and the
lawyers who represented her
after she allegedly ran a red light
in 1975 and smasht•d Into another
car, paralyzing the driver, a 32
year-old Seaside \\Oman
In 1977, lhe family or that
woman. Anne Galucc1 . w1>n a
$450,000 judgment against Ms
Betts Allstate pauJ the $100.000
allowed under her auto insurnnl'e
poli cy to Ms. GalucC'1 But that left
Ms. Betts with a SJ!i0.000 cit.' ht
In her suit. Ms B~lts alleJ(ed
lhal Allstate. which also insured
Saddleback library
to open weekends
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo will operate its library un-
der an experimental Friday and
weekend schedule beginning
Aug. 28 and continuing through
the fall semester.
Steve Tash , library
coordinator, said the 95,000·
volume collection will be open
until 9:45 p.m. on Fridays and
from 8 a .m . to-1 p .m . on
Saturdays. R egular library
hours are 7:30 a.m . lo 9:45 p.m.
Monday through Thursday.
Under the old schedule, the
library closed al .5 p.m . on
Fridays and remained closed on
weekends.
··Because we are orrerang
more Friday night classes and
because or Student interest 10
the extended hours. we are 1m·
plementing the new hours."
Tash said.
''This still 1s an experiment
and its continuation will depend
on runding and student/l'<>m·
murtity use," Tash said.
Non-students who want to use
the library can obtain a resident
borrower 's library card if they
are al least 18 years old artd
have proof of residency w1thm
l he Saddleback Commun1t;-
College District boundaries. h--==-=================== ...... -==--=-==:::o;·
THE
MEDICAL CARE
CENTER
HOURS: Monday through Saturday 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Sunday 9:00 a.m.-e:oo p.m.
EVENINGS-WEEK-ENDs--.fOLIDAYS
M11. Galucci. failed to negotiate
the t•luim "m good faith" for an
out of court settlement as re-
11u1red by law
Thl• award granted Monday
<.·overs punitive damages, as well
as emotional surrering and dis-
tress. and the $350,000 that Ms.
Betts s till owes Ms Galuccl.
Jury foreman L.S. Duckworth
of Fountain Valley said "it
St•emed like it was Allstate's
apathy more than anything else"
lhal It'<! to the large amount of the
damagl's against the insurance
('um pan~
Enrollment
at OCC hits
record high
l ncrt'ased a r ea population
rnupled with a state law have
hrought a record high 12,178 stu·
11 .. nb to the s ummer session of
Onmgt• Coast College in Costa
Mesa. officials said.
J\ccord1ng to Ken Mowrey,
cfrun of admissions and records
u !\late law that allows free no~
of student~ from other college
d1'>tnet~ 1s partly responsible for
tht· 700 student increase in s um.
mer from l::isl y€:•ar.
Mowrey s aid unemployment
also hul> generally forced up
t·ommumty college enrollment.
II c said people return to college
to pick up u new skill.
lie also cited the influx of
Southeast Asian refugees as
another reason for the increase.
Mowrey said during the fall and
'>pnng '>l'mesters. the refugees
t•onstitull•d about 5 percent of
the college's 33.000 population.
The Natural Way
with Herbs!
~)
Fully Qualified Physician On Duty For Treatment
of Illnesses, Injuries and Routine Check-ups
X·Ray & Laboratory facil ities
Reasonable Medical Office Fees At Large Savings
Over Emergency Fees • Get Rid of Cellultte • Los'? Unwanted Pounds
FREE BLOOD PRESSURE CHECK
17672 Beach Blvd., Suite A, H.B.
<Between Stater & Talbert)
• Herbal Energy Tablets
• Skin and Hair Herbal Care Money-Back
Guarantee!
Call Enzo 963-4634
848-9800 Seven Days -24 Hours
Fr&o.t •9~ ~ PLUMS ..... 11 lb.
Freesto~e ¢
PEACHES ... 59 1b.
-_ _.....~-..... -
rnrn~~~~~~
Local gas prices
may set record
By ARIFBAn Of .. ..., ...........
Orange Coast motoruts may feel a
slight financial pinch next summer
as the average price for a gallon of
gasoline in the area is expected to
rise to record levels, exceeding the
$1.50 mark.
According to the latest figures re·
leased by the U.S. Energy Depart·
ment, the national average, current·
ly $1.34, is expected to jump to about
$1.47 by next summer. The average
includes prices of leaded and un·
leaded regular and leaded and un·
leaded premium gasoline at full-and
self-serve pumps.
However, the average price locally
and elsewhere in California already
is $1.42.
All prices are weighted average
rather than s traight averages.
Calculation for the weighted average
is based on the number of gallons
sold in each o f four g rades of
gasoline.
For instance, a service station may
sell 100 gallons of regular gasoline at
the self serve pump to every 20
gallons of premium at the full-serve
pump. If a straight per gallon
average were calc'ulated , the
average price would be distorted
because of the price difference and
quantity of each grade sold. The
weighted average, however, makes
allowances for this disparity, giving
a more realistic and accurate figure.
But numbers can be deceiving, ac-
·cording to Dan Lundberg, publisher
of the Lundberg Letter. an oil com-
pany newsletter.
Lundberg said state taxes make it
seem like Californians are paying
almost 10 cents more for a gallon or
gasoline. But in reality. after adjust·
ing for the 6 percent state tax, local
motorists are actually paying only
3.6 cents more than t)le $1.34 national
average for gasoline, barring all
local and state taxes.
Therefore, if the national average
rises to $1.47, as the Energy Depart-
ment expects it to, then, based on
current figures, local motorists could
be paying in excess or SI.SO on the
average by next summer.
Current local gasoline prices vary.
In Fountain Valley. Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa, leaded
regular at a self-serve pump, the . cheapest grade. runs from Sl.27 to
$1.35 per gallon.
But ln Irvine, Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach, the same grade runs
anywhere from $1.32 to $1.39.
Unleaded premium, a more ex-
pensive grade, at a full-serve pump.
runs about $1.47 in Fountain Valley,
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa.
In Irvine, Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach area it costs about
$1.51.
The lower end of the market is
dominated by independent gas sta-
tions such as Go-lo, Mohawk and
others, while the major brands, such
as Mobil, Shell, Chevron and others
generally tend to be more expensive.
While local fluctuations can be at-
tributed to area land value and
property rents, r egional price dif-
ferences stem from several basic re-
asons, experts said.
First, according t o Lundberg,
gasoline prices in California are
higher than the national average
because of a 6 percent s ales tax.
Second, according to an Energy
Department spokesman, the cost of
transportation of gasoline from east
of the Rockies, where a great deal or
the refineries are, lo California adds
to local prices.
PUSH ends
Coke boycott
ATLANTA CAP > -Operation
PUSH has agreed to end a boycott of
the Coca-Cola Co. in exchange for a
Coke pledge to channel $30 million in·
to black businesses and the black
community, both parties have said.
The Rev. J esse Jackson. the civil
rights leader who heads the Chicago-
b as ed People U nited to Save
Humanity, launched a boycott of the
soft drink giant last month after a
breakdown of eight months of
negoti ations to increase Coke's sup·
port of black businesses.
Under the compromise announced
Coca-Cola will appoint 32 black·
owned distributorships over the next
year and will double the amount or
its advertis ing in black·owned
ne wspapers and magazines to $2
million, Coca-Cola President Donald
Keough said at a news conference.
We Merit Your Interest.
EARN1f'!0·23°~INTEREST
With Secured Truat Deeds. Rates
vary according to amount charged
borrower. Yields can be higher If
loans prepay becauae of bonus as
allowed by state law.
Call Investment Division
953-8500 or 997-17 41
Call Direct or Col/eel
mz~t«M:
Your Full S.rvlct1 Home Loan Brokt1ragt1
32a South Tustin Avenue
Orange,C.lifomla 92968
$50,00.0 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• l•t•r••t onlv pe,,__t.
•llM-•eo--dal ·•-w..tW
• W-'dv c-•lt .. at•
• •-dtlv t.IMI ....
• 6-tlMtoSv-n
• Soatlltua C.llfo...U I
Cnn1ac1 our
•-" 1Rf«K9atloa ..nice for vour final'<'mg need~
(714) 759-1515
AMU,ICAN HOME MORTGAOI
230 Newpor1 Cet1ter Onve 0.1tgn Plue
Newpon 8eac11.
C.hlomoa
9264!0
• • I • • • .. ~ ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Auguat 11, 1981
New tax breaks
for high incontes
WASHINGTON (AP > -Upper·income savers
will receive a generous new break over the next 15
months in the form of tax-free savings certificates
created under the new Reagan tax law.
The one-year certificates will go on sale only
from this Oct. 1 until Dec.31, 1982. Buyers will be
able to deduct up to $1 ,000 in interest oo an m·
dividual tax return and up to $2 ,000 on a joint re-
turn.
Interest rates would be equal to 70 percent of
the prevailing rate on a 52-week Treasury bill. At
today's rates. a certificate would bear 9.6 percent
interest, which means an individual could invest
up lo $10,400 in certificates before reaching the
Sl.000 tax-free mterest limit.
Banks, savings and loan associations, credit
unions and other depository institutions authorized
to issue the certificates must make them available
in denominations as small as $500. Theoretically,
that puts them within the financial reach of
average taxpayers lacking the Sl0,000 minimum
required to invest in higher yielding Treasury
bills.
But as a practical matter, only Americans in
higher tax brackets will find the certifi cates more
profitable than other savings plans that pay higher
interest but are subject to taxes.
The savings and loan industry, the only driv·
ing force behind creation of the certficates, says
some small savers in lower tax brackets will find
the certificates more appealing than regular sav-
ings accounts that pay ony s1.; percent interest.
Small savers also may prefer the certificates
lo the popular money market funds. Although
these funds are now paying 17 percent fo r
minimum in vestments or $500, they are not
federally insured and interest rates vary from day
lo day.
There is no dispute. however. that the bulk of
the certificates will be sold to upper-income
groups .
can you offon
tog1ve
your mone
to a total
stranger?
Of course not! You have trusted the Warmington Homes for
three generations and Warmington Financia l will have your trust
tor generations to come. We offer the high yields necessary to '.
suNive in today's inflationary times For solid investments coll
Linda at
" -". ,, .
"" ) I . '
... .
. • ...,. ,J'
'if/. ~ WARMINGTON J ft ~
FINANCIAL CO RPORATION
17662 COWAN STREET, SUITE 200; IRVINE, CALIFORNIA 92714
(7 14) 540·2635
"A Southern California Family Helping Southern Colifomions"
I am interested 1n Trust Deeds with Warmington Financial:
Personally IRA-KEOGH Pension/Profit Shoring
Name ____ _
Address _______________ Zip
Phone Home _____________ WOfk
NEWS
from all over California is rounded up e·ach day
in the Daily Plllt
• ..
WE TRY TO SEE YOUR BUSINESS IN ITS BEST LIGHT.
At Her1tage Bank. we try to see things your
way. It's important to look beyond routine
forms, unbending rules and regulations. So
we take the time and trouble to develop
banking policies that rT)aY raise some eye-
brows. We may be unconventional, but you
can bank on our sound flnanc.ial policies.
We're businessmen as well as bankers. So
where others have said "no wa';/.' chances
are we can envision a number of ways to
help you. Heritage Bank. Unconventional
because If you clOse your eyes to other
points of view, you're part of the problem
not the solution.
THE UN ONVENTIONALBAN~
•erit~e ank
~'ffDIC
Accounts Insured to SI 00,000
ANAHEIM MAIN OmCE, n1 No. Euclld St., (714) 851·4100 •ANAHEIM STADIUM OFflCl 2099 So. State College 8tvd .• A~helm.
(71') 851·415.i •AIRPORT OFFICE., 2171 Campus Dr., lrvlne, (714) 851-4000 •COSTA MESA OFFICE. 1720 ~dams Ave •• {714) 851 -4165
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE. 1501 Superior Ave .. (714) 851·4161 •SANTA ANA OFFICE. 1100 No. Tustin .\ve., (714) 851·4149
W0008k10GE OFFICE. 4180 Barranca r•rkway, lrvlne, (714) 851-4141 . . .
. • .
..,
:
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' ll
I
0
p
t• ft
l
0
C•
b
C•
a1
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.... • • . . -... • • • ' •• • • • ,. • • • .... 1. • • • .. • .. .......... .. ..... -..... .._.._ ... _._.... __ -..... p •
OrMOt Co• OAILY PllOT/WednHday, Augu1t 12, 1M1
A~ ...... ~LECTRIFYING Although it may be a bit
shocking to local residents of Westlake·
Village and inquiring s heriff's deputies-,
Renee Nadel thinks her custom-built Rolls-
Royce golf cart is the next best thing under
the sun. The electric cart, which carries Ms .
Nadel and her dog, Robbie. around town
quite comfortably. meets all the require-
ments for a street-legal motor vehicle. It runs
for nearly two hours on a four-hour charge
and has a top speed of~ mph.
Treasury bill yields decline
WASHINGTON <AP> -Yields on short-term
treasury securities fell nearly one-half percen·
\1lge point but remained above 15 percent for the
!fecond week in a row, government officials have ale ported.
at an average discount rate ol 15.122 percent. down
fro.m the 15.571.percent or the week of Aug . 3, of-fl c1aJs saJd earlier this week.
i About $4.3 billion in six-month bills were sold
The government also sold about $4.3 billion In
three-month bills at an averaage yield of 15.235
percent, down from 15.674 percent ,... .,....0..-..W. cAilk>IMl COLLECTORS CORNEA JUMIO PISTACNOS
$4.49 per Pomd R.,• Cofna 6 St•mpa oourt,JtLVEA
at T ....... JM & Pl'Ollfo .._.0.. ... M MlvwCLttM ..., ...
You would expect to pay Trader Joe's at the an-
18.99 or more for these terseclion of 17th Street,
b I & • d r y • r o a s led Newport Boulevard and platach1os, but we got a Superior Avenue (next to gieclel shipment to sell Dennr.·s and Barclay's for only $4.49 per pound. Bank . Please visit our newest
~= === :i,.c:::-.,., ........ ~ Sllwr •• ':.: = 70% S.nk Fln•nclng IRA & Keough
(714) 556-aSO
HOW IH COSTA MESA South Coelt Plue Vlll•g• ..._ ........ , ___ C.-,....,J
"CTITIOUI 8U,INISS NAMa ITATaMaNT
Tiit lollowlno perMlfts era dolftO 11c111nu101.
COMP·ICEN CO .• 17U Slart>lrd Drive, COll.o Mou, CA 91H6.
• HERBERT A. GRIMM. 27H
Starbird ~Ive, Coile MaM, CA t26:N..
KAY GRIMM, 272S Slar!Mrd Orlve,
Celle MoM, CA 9162'.
T "Is 1>111ln.u II condw< led by •
"nerel PMtMrllllp. ...,_,.A Grimm
Key Grimm
Thll It-I WM lllect wltl\ IN
c.Pwnl y CIOfll; Of Or.,._ Cownty ot1 Jwl'f
11.1 .. 1 ,,_
PuD!lsNct Or .... C:0.11 o.lly Pllol,
Jyly u. "· ""'9-s. 11. "" ,, .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS SU~ElllCMt CIOU llT
IUtMa STATEMENT 01' THa STATa
Th• IOllOW•no per10111 a re dolno 01' CALll'OllNIA
bullllftt ft: ~ THa COUNTY
BLUE NOTI! LABEL CO., 1112 Ol'OllANO•
Welker A-. CYPf'eU, Celllomle In Ille matt.r of IN llPl)llcallon o1
to.JO. SUSAN RAE NAGY, FOR CHANGE T. IC. L., tnc., a C.lltMnla corpore. OF NAMI!.
llO<'I, mt Welker Ave...,., Cre>reu, NO. A'""'
CelllomlatOUD. OllDUtTOSHOW
Tl\11 llullMst Is condllctH Dy a <or-CAUla l'Ott
p0ullon. CHANOa 01' NAMa
T. IC. L, Inc. ,,.. appllca tlotl ol SUSAN llAE
T. IC. IAftdry, PresldO<'ll NAGY for c ....... of MIN, he•lno
Tiiis Ul-1 #ti 111.0 wltll IN -llle<S In Court, Md It -!no
Counly Cl..-11 of Oron .. Co..nly M from seld eppllcellot1 11\al SUSAN
Awg. l, Hit. llAE NAGY ._ 111.0 en -...1ca1 ....
~=,:: :::.. ~T.:;!1,.~~wnrrg.'-c-..e to
A-.,. .. Law N-. l .. ref_, 11 11 ....... ..., or~ "" ...,.,_ ...... ...., ...._ nl end dlrecled, 11\at alt .,...MM tnlel"HI· c-.-... ~... ed In Mkl_do_eti.fwe tflh
Ft.,M! cOllf'I In ~ l ., h 2nd My
_ _ P-1-Or.,._ Coast Oalty Pli04, of Sept., 1"1, M IO:JO •·"'·of Mid day
NOTIC• UfVITINO •IDS Awo. S, l2, 1t, 2'. 1"1 >SIMI to,_ c-... y IUCI\ ~lullOft let
1------------1 <Nllee Ol -lllllllcl nol lle9f'Mled. ltECEIPT 01' PAOPOSALS. S..lecl 11 Is ~ -· INC e C9" Of P•C1POMl1 wlll 1119 recltl....i "'1 ,,.. Glry -.,C mJa tltls OrCIW to SM. c-1119 ,_...,_,
of lrvl,,., ~ OI IN Work, Ill "9 Of· In u. Or .... C-1 0.lly ~lo4, 0 flee Of 1 .. O ry Cieri!, located ot 11l00 ntw1pa,.r of ..... rel clrcwlotlen,
Jam"°'•• lloed, Irvine, Calllornl• l'ICT1nou1•us1•au printed 111 Mid c...,,..,, e1 leosl MC;o
'2714 1111111 2 00 p.m. on W.01\Hdoy NAMCITAT•M••T .. ch w.111or ._ wccnslve _.,
Augull "· 1 .. 1. for , ... CotlSltU<llan .. TIN '°"OWint --Is l90lftt Dusi· "''°'to lM ... ., of Mid ........
UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY PAlllC MUOI: • Oal.OU•b77111dayo1Jllly, t"1.
SIC1' TE BOA RO REMOVAL The Ille LOU eitVHO & ASSOCIATES. HIM "-kl H p
Of IM-• Is loca1ao al UnlY•rWIY Olo"'°"d Au., 8•11100 lllanct Jl.ldgtofi... ,.._,,
Ori.,. at Beecll Tr" une, Clly of Calltontlo '2MJ. ' $o41orlor Court
Irvine. Ltlllll ~ 8runo, • ,._ P11bllllled 0r.,.. Coesl Dolly PllO(,
DE SC A IP Tl 0 N 0 I' W 0 RIC : Woy, C.U MaM, c.lltwftla t2'•. J11t'1"2t, &41t. S, 12, It, 1 .. 1 JXM1
o.n.011111 •lltlno lkol•OO.rd laclllty, TN•~ la COflCNded .. .,. .,, ......
modify u lsllno block well -1111to11 lnc.--attc1 -l•llCM otMr lllM • ------,,.-.-11-1(-----lanctscaplng etld lrrloellot1. Enol,..r's porl1WShlp, ..._ E1t1mate 121.000. Louis 8r11110
OPENING Off PROPOSALS: Th• Tiiis sui-1 was llled with llW N$-7'7tt
propouts wlll t. pUbUCly opened -County Cltrll of Oro,,.. COWlll' on I U p • • I O 11 C o U 11 T O I'
, .. d el 1:00 p.m. on Wectnuctay Awg.l,1"1. CALIPOll•IA, COU•TY 01'
A1191111 It, 1 .. 1. al Ill• above-1''67 ... OllA ...
mel'lllONG of Ike OI IM Ow,..,. Pvl>lllNd Or.,._ Coe11 Oellt' Piiot, 1• CIVIC C••T•ll OlllV• w•IT
0 B T A I N I N G C 0 N T R A C T Awt. S, 12, It, 2', 1t'1 J.Ut•t IAJllTA MIA, CALll'OIUA fl79'
DOCUMENTS. The -lllcellons ere MA••iM• 01'
enllllect," Unlvtrslly "•rk lmpro,,.. -II' ...,,,.t:: P•TITION•a: DOLDll•I •· menll CIP U0·2t''. Plen1 and ~ .,..,....: L.A•tel'OltD
'P9(111c•ll-and •II ~ontrecl dO<w-•••roeto••T: CMaST•• L •• menls may be obtained from IM SUN•IOltC:OUllTOl'Tita U.ICl'OltD
• • • • • • • • •
If it's got
handles
you'll grab
a sale
faster in
Daily Pilot
classified
ads. Catt
642-5678
N$7'Ml
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINESS
lfAME ITATUll•NT
T l\e IOll-lftQ perM>f!1 ere doing
IM.tllMU•:
OAUERIA 11 PAATNEllS, J200
llrlltol Str•. SUlle "60, C.0.t• llMM, Celllornt.f263'
Daniel W. Dane-. lto.J Yacl\t
Collnle, N•'""""1 Beach, l allfornle •it~
T'*"-L Sdvlber, "3 S.ndee1-
lle, Co,_ dlltl Ma<-, Celllornle 92162S
Ja-• Alderson. m West 11•1
Sir"'· Sant.a AN, c.lllrornle '270.
WIHLam J. IC9M9y, Jr , •11 AIOffn
Piece, .._port !Mach. C..lllornla
ft..s
J a"'H G. O.et1an, 700 Sowll\ 0 r a II o • G r o v •
loul .. MCI, P~. c.lllornla t110:S Jecll ._, 12» Port ewtlsle,
New-1 8Mdl, Calllomla tJM0
PatrlQ. S. '*--· IJ:Jlll Opel,
a.111oe .. , .... Calllomla 9*2
This IMnll'IHS Is conductM Dy • -ral-1Mr1Np. n.o.-L. Scl\ri-Tllla ... ...._.. wa fl.., wlll\ n.
c-1., C1en1 o1 0r.,.. c-t't., July "· "" .., ...
PvtllllNd Or ... COo1t Delly Piiot,
J11ly 22. "· ...... s, 11, "" 32~1
PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITtOUS eUSIN•U
"AME ITATU1WlfT
Tiie 1911-1119 -lql!S are Mll'l9 Ml-•= STl!Vl!NS & ASSOCIATE$, 1n F
lllvOf'tlctl Dr., Newpot1 8Hcll, CA
'**-MICMll IClngtle'f Slle-s. JtS Bey View T9"oce, -c..to Mou, CA.
Tllla .._.Is~ 11'1' on m. div...._
MlllOStewns
Tllla .....,_. was filed wilt\ IN
Count'( Clor1l of Ore,,.. C-.ty on
A ... 7. ""· Oeper1-of Puclll< Woru, City Of ITAT• °" CALIPOIUOA IUPllC.S Cl'AMILY LAWI lrvlne, 1noo Je-H Roecl, lrvl... l'Olt TMa CASE NUMe•ll D·1alll l'ttm1
C•lllornle A llotl·relwnclable 1 .. of COUNTY Ol'CHIAMOa NOT1c•1 '"'*"'-Or.,,.. Cent Delly Pl!ot, s11f.oo w111 i. ci-oect '°' ,_,, ... of ........ ., .. tllw .... ..._ ""'c..t....., A119. 11. "·a..-... 2. t.st ua•1
dKwmen1s. Pl-enct IO«lllcallons •LADYS a. OOOOYUll, etcl* ...... .,_ ...... .,_ .....
•Ill lie malle<S for en _.,._I c~" ~ llMf'f .... rw ,...,... ...... a
of SS.00 C.. No..... ...,._ .......... _._ ..... .
PROPOSAL GUARANTEE; Eocll NOTICaOl'SALa u ,.. ...... _ .. OllWt«Of • '
pr(ll>OMI \hell t. eccompenl.o "'1 a Ol'llllALPllOPllllTY o....., ...... ~. ,_ ........ ·---------
PUBLIC NOTICE
<.,.llll.Oorcnl\ler'1 checkMDICllllOnct Notice II llerelly e lven tllat .. ,,....... • ... .,_ r...-o w l'ICTITIOUS8USl•ata
ln'tM •-1 of 10 percent of IN tolll OEOllGE D. WAllTMAN, as ...,_ ...... If_,, MOf •........... NAME STAT•M.a•T
Diet price payallle lo Ille Clly of lrvl,. repreHftlatlve ol 11\t utel• of AVllOI TM lilllowlnt ~ Is dolftt ~
as a ouorenlee ... , the Dldcttr, II 1111 GLAOY$ E. GOOOYEAR, ~. Uate• 11111 , ... ••111•••0•0. •I neu•:
proposal It ecc-...ec1, #Ill promptly u . wlll Mii M prlv• .. uM, to U. ........ ........ ,.... ._..., c.-e u.. ... Cal '#aST l!NO LIMIT1!0; Clll A ...
Kiii• ... Clll'ltract, te<llf• ... Y ....... I OI -.... ~. -· ... t........... ...... • -... IH. r..-.. OIAN SPOllTS, •t Hiio Cir., H-
WO<llmews ~llon lnWf'-t, CMdlt..,.'-9.,,.,... -*'"' ... __..•a-. Lao i. ...._._ I,... e.dl,CA.,..,.
and lumllll • sat11focl0<'f l'alltlM sullJect ta co11llrmat1011 11'1' IM ... ..... IC_., 0-..., Mocl1, 4"1 Hiio
p.,.formenc:t llOltct I" I,._,_. 100 5-rtcw c-t . ., ...,.. 2t, t•1, .. II Ulllll-.. ..-cw el,_..• Cir., MuilM! .. 1 8Mcll, CA.,....
percent of llM IOC•I l>lct price tll'ICI o 12 ~.M., et lllHuft.er •lltlll'I tfte tllN 1 • ....... • .-...... ~ Thll MlllMu la c0flduc1H ll'P ... if>.
LOllor and Mat.,.lels Bond In Ille OllOwect"'law,etltloofflceofl'redN. tlocHto •-.. 1•1-eto, tfe nu dlvklliel. emount Of 100 percent of h toYI bid ~. •-r for IN--• ,..1 -., • ,......... • -..c-. 11 IC__.,, G. Mecll
price. reMflUt,,,., et -So. c..tt Hwr,1 ..., ........... -,...._... o Tiiis ...,._ w• filed wlltl IN
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Code, tho Owner hH dtlerml,.ct IM c .. Nd, ond all IN rllM, lltlo, Into,._ TIN pelllltlfltr llol lllM o pellU.. .,,...,
oenero1 prevamno r•tes of weon In and .. ._that u. E1'9t• ef GLAOY$' ,_..,... .,_ .,..,., ..... II you 1a11 "'*lltlwd 0r.,,.. C-Dolly fl'li«.
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• .. . .
San/Bar sets record ·
lrvlne·bued 8H/8ar Corp. bu reported
record l a.lea and eamln11 fOf' flJcal 1911. For
lhe year ended June 30, total revenva r-oae 48
percent to $20.2 ·million from tU.f mUllon ln
the prior neca.t year. Net eamtn11 advanced
to '899,374, or 4.9 cents • share, from *29,204,
or 2 cent.a a share a year 110. Per-share
earnJn1a were restated to reflect tbe 3·for·2
1toclc split paJd on Aus. s.
San/Bar manulacturea and auppllea
products and urvicea for the tele·
communications industry tbrouah its
OIWliE COUNTY BUSINESS
transmlsslon systems division In Irvine and
its business telephone systems division and
telephone service center, both or which are ln
Gurland, Texas. • Amfac Inc. has terminated negotiations
with Westgroup Inc. for a joint venture and
management contract for the Newporter ha
at Newport Beach. Amfac had announced on
July l that it t\ad entered into discussions
with Westgroup commensurate with tllat
firm'• announcement of an• agreement with
Del E. Webb Corp. to purchase the 300-room
Newporter. • . _ITT Grinnell Corp.'• Pipe Hanger
~1vtslo~ has opened a new engineering office
m Hu.ntmgton Beach. The office is expected
to eliminate costly time delays encountered
serving West Coast customers from an East Coast office. • Chesapeake Industries, a holding com·
pany, has moved its Newport Beach officee to
500 Newport Center Drive in the Fashion
Island development. Ex-major leaguer Tom
Murphy of Frost Spence Trinen, Costa Mesa.
r epresented the company in its lease of
1,070 square feet from the Irvine Company.
• Cushman Electronics Inc., Newport
Beach, has reported an 18 percent sales in·
crease for the third quarter ended June 30,
1981. Sales advanced to $4.8 million over the
like quarter last year , while net income rose
to $198,000 from $152,000. The board of direc-
tors also declared the company's 8th con-
;
MWt 9d 4.00 NL l'ldlll ltM NL Gitt $ec L6' NL Hllnco 7.36 NL HI Yid 9.14 NL
LI"""" 1.U NL P\lrltn tU• NL Tllrlft IM NL Trend 12.21 NL ,_ ... Proo:
0Yft0 7.'1 NL ll'ldull ._. NL
ln«m 6,f7 NL ,, I"""'°":
81'1d ,,_ 9'.12 IS.22 DI-I0.41 IUS C)l'Mll ..... 10.12 Inc-6.53 7.14 NOIRe
aecvUve ta\.l•rt~rly f;"'' dlvt4-d. TH dJvi4endo(I~--· ~~· ~ 1981 to .... ••I' ltl lull yea.r. " • • • ~ -.
A n... O.,. , .. MtdlUJ wtU asv~ 11
project man11u for • gas proJeet in the
offs hore area or tbe Kin1dom of Saudi
Arabia. Tbe project was awarftcl to Fluor
Ocean Serv1ces by the Arabian American OU
Co. Value ot tb• p~ '°' Fluor, Macl-
quarteNCt In Irvine, wu not cUii-:loMI. • Su Diego -o .. a Eleetltc c.. b .. atened
an agreement to atudy the leulbUlty of build·
tng a photovolt.alc power station as part Of 1
continuing effort to develop alternative and
renewable resoucces. Jolnin1 SDGfJP: ln the
study project are Acurex Solar Corp., Moun·
lain.View, and Arco Solar lnc .. Chai.worth.
• lDternaUoaaJ Bu.sllletl Matlllaea Corp
has leased approximately 80,000 aquare feet
in the recently completed ts.story American
City Bank Tower at South Coast Plaia Town
Center. fBM leased the fourth, fifth, sixth
and a portion of the tbird OoQr oo a ~-t#m
basis. • Wentu ln&ttHtloaal Int., Garden
Grove,. ~as announced significant improve·
ment tn its future net revenues estimated for
its oil and gas leaseholds. New information •
based on reports from the company's coaault·
ing geologist on several important pt0perties
in Ohio, 1'8' placed l\Awe net revenue at
just over Mt mWloo -~ tbait 10 U.il'Jes
that r~rst pubJlst\ed on Aprtl . 7 and ahnost
four times that pubUthed in its suppifJDent
on June 1. 1 ' . ._ ~·
leftdJ' Alla. Shtlp ..... tu. a..dll·
Uoe said It has completed a $22.5 mOlioJJ sale
and leaseback of its new admini.ltrative
headquarters in Mission Viejo to the Pruden·
tial Life Insurance Co. The association will
use the proceeds from the sale to retire high .
cost. short-term commercial borrowings
• Printronlx Inc., Irvine, has signed a con· tr.a~t w\th the General Services Ad·
mm•sl!ation for sales of its PlSO, P300 and
P600 lme per minute printers to atl federal
agencies and·their contractors.
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The new that Hollday Inna plant to unload t.be
Harrah's Car Collection ln Sparks, Nev., la a 1ood ex·
ample ol the corporate mlnd at work.
The Harrah's Collectlon is one of the fiaat
showpieces of antique automobiles ln the world. On
display are 1,000 cars. Including early Forch,
Packards. Rolls-Royces and the wonderful Bu11tU1.
Jt was a collection lovingly assembled by Bill Harrah
rrom profits made at casino tables. Harrah's
operates hotels and casinos in Reno and South Lue
Tahoe.
Harrah began collectina lbe classic cars in 1948.
Sy 1962 he had enough to turn the collection into a
museum. open to t he public.
Bill Harrah died in 1978. And in 1980 Memphis·
based Holiday Inns. anxious to get into the gambling
business, bought Harrah's company, Along with the
casinos came ~ ~~se~m-ell~ ~ l.-;
trinke t that )' ci. 1,~' H o lida y Inns ..-.
feels it has no
use f~. i c h a e 1 lllTDI lalNITZ
Taylor. a San
Francisco Chronicle reporter, reported recently on
efforts by citizens to save the collection. There are
various plans afoot. One even calls for federal law to
give Holiday Inns a substanUal tax break in return
for donating the museum to the government.
Why does Holiday Inns want to get rid of the col·
lection? Taylor cited a memorandum issued internal·
ly by Mead Dixon, Harrah's chairman. It said: "We
can no longer afford to hold assets that do not pro·
duce income ...
Here. in that brief sentence, is the ethic Holiday
Inns adheres to. It's not the car collection doesn't
produce any income. There's a $4 .95 admission
charge to the museum But it takes money lo keep
the cars in the perfect condition they are In -and
Holiday Inns can turn a buck much more easily at
the nearby roulette tables.
Holiday Inns has come a long way in 30 years.
The chain was started after Kem mons Wilson. a de-
vout Baptist. took ms family on a trip to Washington,
D.C .. and was appalled at the sleazy. roadside motels
he found along the way. Back in Memphis, he teamed
up with Wallace E . J ohnson <both were home
builders> to det elop a family oriented lodging chain.
Holiday Inns went on to become the world's
largest hotelkeeper. But for many years. they re
tained their Southern Baptist heritage. It was a
wrench in 1960 when they decided to rescind a ban on
the serving of liquor in Holiday Inn restaurants.
It was an even bigger wrench when they decided
to get into the gambling business. By that time just
about all the oldtimers had left the board -and so
these matters could be decided in a businesslike
fashion. After the decision was made to become a
casino operator, L.M. Clymer, one of the oldtimers.
resigned as president of the company, citing "my
overriding regard and respect for my Lord Jesus
Christ."
Today, in addition lo the Reno and Lake Tahoe
properties, Holiday Inns has a new casino-hotel in
Atlantic City and owns 40 percent of a Las Ve1as
casino. Revenues from gambling are such that they
may account for nearly 25 percent or the $1.8 billion
Holiday Inns collects this year.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT D9r! Jp"~~-~1 ~!!Wit ·~
'Of TllftOey, Au9. 11.
N EW YORK (.AP)-S.let, T ... 1. Sl'l<e JTOCkl 0... ... ~ 0.. Cll9
elld rwt <he,. of the flftffn rnos1 ecu... 10 lnO ..._15 .SS.• .,. 50 .,,_. s 6Q
Hew York 5'oc* Ead,.,._ lliWH, IO T 402AI «11'• ,._·. 406..a + 1 S1 tr.Olno net1or1e11y et ~then i 1. u ut:' 11z.u 114:.,. 111:..t 114.,.! 2·10 ~"~~ 1·=·= = ! 1~ '6 Sill 11'0.lt J7S u 3'7 61 l12 74+. J.00 Tea Utll co:t00 21,.,_ + ~ I"°"' J.l•t,'llO
Oc<ldent P9t 111,100 ~ + "' Tren •.22•,tOt
Mottll I 717,lOD ""' + ..., Ullll .1.n2_!.l00l00 O<ilfW .. t 617,000 1..._ _ v. '6 Stk .. .. . .. . .. .. • .. .. • , .,..,
S .. rf Drug Ul,700 20~ + "-CltlelSv<e .0.,000 M + 2
tlM ~.ooo ""' • :w. Exi.on • Sotil,000 liV> • v.
AmEJCp,..u Sl7,000 •7l\ + '"
Uft()ffeet "'·'* 4j\,oo • ~ Gulf 011 "7,700 '°"' • " Gomw EOll 43.IOO ~ + ~ OowCMm 417,lOO Jl"' + I">
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW VOllK (AP) -Tiie IDllOWlfl9 115' 1Mw1 tN ,._ Yotll SCoO Eacl\eft09
PKlll enO Wen'4"1ll lhet ...... 191e ..
tllt '"°'' eno Oown the most l)elld on perce111 of cl\a'IQe ,..9en11ff1 of vOI._ l'llr Tuetde)'. No 1K11rft1et trdno ... _ SI ere 111<:1-'*°· Net elld -cenle9e <llen9n ere 1M Oifterenc• -=n ~ Pf'9rioln clOl1"9 ~ke-T v;,u I
Herne U.. 0.0 Pel. 1 N~ete 11 71"> + I~ Up 17 ..
2 Pten ""'di .._ + " Up 10.0 J Am$1\1p8 1 14.... + 114 Up t .4 1 .. tlclll•HY 714 + " Up t .4 . ~=~ ~~ ! t ~= ::~ 7 ~C-16 + IV. Up l .J e 11t 12h + I Up 1.4
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11 -·~ Off u ,__.,.°" u
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GOLD COINS
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WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK !AP) A119. If
AdY•nced ~ Totel 1 ..... 1 .... "'"" Hew tows
WtV. T AMO DID
NlW YORI( (AP) Aug, 11
METALS ~
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...,._., 5MDM per flftla.
~P'OAOl!"D'YO& .. N.Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
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-Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday. August 12, 1981
Mauch positive
.despite losses
Mariners enjoying second season
By EDZINTEL °' • .....,,... ....
SEATTLE -There's freaky
things happening in Seattle.
Fpr one thing, ll's so hot, it
could make an onion cry.
Tuesday's temperature in
downtown Seattle at S p.m. was
90 degrees.
Now a heal wave here occurs
about as often as the Mariners
baseball team wins two games
in a row. Like once a summer.
Well whaddya know, the
~ apners just won their second
in a row Tuesday night.
Well . one thing we know
for sure, this streak, like the
heat spell. won't last.
Neither should the Angels' los·
ing streak although they've
shown little indication yet that
they're ready lo come back from
their recent vacation.
The Mariners, meanwhile,
want lo think that they can be a
part or an honest-to-goodness
race for a divisional title come
September. The realistic thing
about it is, time is on their side.
And if Seattle continues to
play like it did in Tuesday's 4·1
victory over the Angels, it just
may have some fun here.
The An~els .. on the other
hand, haven't had much fun -
yet, today, the Angela played the
Mariners in a rare early after·
noon weekday game and if the
Mariners completed the sweep,
you wouldn't want lo be sitlini
next to Angel manager Gene
M aucb on the ride to Oakland
tonight.
As glum as it all sounds, moet
of the Angels aren't too con·
cemed that they're two games
orr the divisional lead with 48
games remaining in Season II of
Strikeball '81.
"If we bad coptinued the
season as we left off and trailed
Oakland by six at this point, eo·
ing lo Oakland (for three games
beginning Friday), then it might
be critical," said Mauch. "As it
is, it's important.
"The thing about it is, I've
never experienced a season like
this before. There's just certain
things I've got lo do now like get
the two relievers (Don Aase and
Andy Hassler) ready and the
starters ready."
Tuesday night. the Angels col-
lected just five hits (two each by
Rod Carew and Bobby Grieb)
and none of them were extra
base hits. What might co n ce rn
<See ANGELS, Page 88)
Rookie stays calm
Dodger crowd can't rattle Red pitcher
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Scott
Brown, a 6·6 Cajun from
DeQuincy. La., surveyed the
large crowd of 45,817 at Dodeer
Stadium and called it "pure ter·
ror."
"I've never seen 45,000 peo·
pie," the Cincinnati right·hander
said after making bis first major
league appearance a successful
one. He may have been awed,
but the 24 ·year ·old rookie
stymied Los Angeles in relier as
the Reds edged the Dodgers, 7-6.
Dan Driessen slammed a
three·run homer in the seventh
inning lo lift the Reds to the
comeback victory.
Brown, summoned from In·
dianapolis of the International
League only hours after the
baseball strike was settled,
pitched 2'Al innings and gave up
only two hits and no runs to pick
up the victory.
"He was outstanding," said
Cincinnati manager John
McNamara. "We wanted only
one inning out or him but he was
so sharp we stayed with him.
The Dodgers aren 't the easiest
lineup to face in your major
league debut."
The big crowd, which matched
the Dodgers' season average,
was a res ult or Fernando
Valenzuela's bid for a 10th vic-
tory. But Valenzuela gave up
two runs in the first inn1na and
a home run to Dave Concepcion
in the third.
The rookie, who started for the
National League in last Sunday
night's All -star Game, eventual·
ly was knocked out in the fifth
inning.
"I threw some good pitches
but they hit them,'' said the 20·
year-Old left.hander. ''I had prob·
le ms with my control (he
walked four) because I didn't
throw much during the strike.
When I pitch regularly again,
I'm sure it will come back."
The Dodgers had broken a 3·3
tie with three runs in the fifth on
a walk, a single by Steve
Garvey, doubles by Ron Cey and
Pedro Guerrero, a nd a wild
pitch.
Reliever Terry Forster, win·
less for two years and O·l this
season, appeared in command,
pitching out of a jam, in the firth
when h e took over for
Valenzuela, getting the side in
order in the sixth and retiring
the first two Reds in the seventh.
But he gave up successive
singles to Ken Griffey. Concep.
cion Chis l,500th big league hit)
and George Foster. Driessen
followed with his homer down
the right field line.
"I've never seen lightning
strike so fast," said Dodger
Manager Tommy Lasorda.
"I hit a mean slider,"
Driessen said. "I was just look·
ing to make contact and when I
hit it, I was hoping it would not
go foul."
After the Reds took a 2·0 lead
in the top of the first, Dusty
Baker tied the score with a two·
run homer in the bottom or the
inning, his fifth. Concepcion
homered off Valenzuela lo lead
orr the third, his firth. a'nd
doubles by Guerrero and Bill
Russell tied the game in the
fourth.
Danny Meyer
BVD TUCKER
Play ball!
lnnne North and Seav1ew -
two Little League powerhouses
-put on an impressive de·
fensive battle Tuesday night at
the MiStson Vie10 Youth
Athletic Park Playing m the
Little League dw1swnal tounia-
ment. the two teams have been
inching their way towards re·
g1onal compet1tzon wh1ch will
be held in San Bernardino ne.ct
week. and maybe. even the Lit·
tie League World Senes in
Williamsport . Pa later this
month. In Tuesday's action.
Irvine North's Gary Rentana
r top left 1 roars back for a pitch
during the late innings against
Seaview. Teammate Michael
Balsamo r top nght J takes a
hard swmg and makes contact
Meanwhile. lrvme .'Vorth's
Michael Stewart r No. 9. bot·
tomJ scores a run and watches
a play at third base along with
Seaview catcher Kevin O'Con-
nor. To see who won this
dwis10nal thriller. see Page 88
Delly Piiot Photoa by Cherlea Sterr
Does Meyer really deserve better? • SEATTLE He really deserves better
than this but who ever told Danny Meyer
that baseball is fair? No one, absolutely no
one.
But then, things could be worse. Meyer
could be removed from baseball
altogether as he figured he would be when
he graduated from Mater Dei High Sehool
in 1970.
He might be working (or his dad in El
Toro or maybe for himself near his home
in Woodinville, Wash.
Somehow. though, baseball was in the
future for Meyer. He just didn't give
himself enough credit back then. Besides,
.400 hitters, as Meyer was for three
straight years at Mater Dei, don't come
along often.
So here he is, 11 years later In the big
leagues. The problem is, he is a member
of a Seattle Mariners francbJse that for
five years, since its inception in 1977, bas
battled a war for credibility. And he's bat·
tling his ·Own war with the Mariners for
respectability.
Meyer should have won the war long
ago. His major league career batting
average is .258. and. he's hit .278 and .275
the past two years. In his first year with
Seattle, Meyer hit .273 with 22 home runs
and 90 RBI. That year, he appeared in 159
games.
It all began in 1972, when, as an infielder
at the University of Arizona, Meyer. was
drafted in the fourth round or the summer
draft -much to his own disbelief.
"I just didn't think I was good enough at
the time," he said Tuesday as he and the
Mariners prepared to meet the Angels at
the Kingdome.
But Meyer was good enough, as he
demonstrated by a .396 batting average at
Bristol, Va. That was tops in the AA Ap·
palachian League and earned Meyer the
Louisville Slugger Silver Bat Award and
Player of the Year honors.
In 1974, Meyer batted .304 al Evansville
or the AAA to earn a promotion to Detroit
in September.
In two years at Detroit, Meyer batted
.236 and .235 before being drafted by Seat·
lie in the 1976 expansion draft.
Although he was originally drafted as a
second baseman, Meyer has played third.
lirst and outfield since.
In 198>, the Mariners, short on talent in
the outfield, switched Meyer' from third to
left field. ..
He had a hot start al the plate. maintain·
ing a .300 mark through July 26. It was a
good year, 1980, for Meyer as he raised his
totals as a Mariner to the top spot on the
foUowini;t all·lime lists -games (572), at·
<See DANNY, Page 88)
Football in Saskatchewan has to warm one's cockles
REGINA, Saakatcbewan -Having taken the
noon balloon to Saskatoon, one ls obligated to
fumiab a report to the curious population of the
real world.
and people must come from all over the province
to fill it. Revenue comes from sources other than
the sort of television packa1e peculiar to the NFL.
ference in the money a guy can make. Otherwiae,
this is a great place to play. Ed (Alsman) ls rl1ht.
You can leave the field here after losing a 1ame
and get a standing ovation. I don't know if this
would be the cue anywhere in the Stat.es or. for
that matter, anywhere else lD Canada.
"I got a clipping from back home," Bobby
Hosea says. "The guy who wrote it Is all wrong."
He refers to a story written by • Los Angeles
writer who caught Ferrasamo'a opening act in
. Vancouver and wrote that faclllUes in the CFL
were ot slum quality. l or openers, the Saskatchewan Rou1brtden,
wbfch ii the local aide, created much rejoicln1 and
dancing on the boulevard when it defeated Mon·
trdl by a lar1t score durln1 which time much
ab\.Ole wa1 applled to Vince Ferraaamo.
•. !Vince came here trom the I.Os An1elet Rama
ancJ la • celebrity ln Canada because be ea.ma -at
• le:2t ra paid -a salary somewhere in the
· ne hborJlood or the entire payroll of tbe
S atchewan team. Therefore, it ii andentanda·
. • ltle • .-i a celebration would enaue w"ben Fer· · · ·;e• waa booed bY the home cUenta of Montreal a remt>ved from the 1ame, mucb to th• anptsb
••. map who wtltel tht cbeckl. ..
· ~ , You...,,., cMc:k out IDotball ln Sukatebewu
" -.... Gile'• eoct•. It II tbe Green Bay of Ute Can .. • P'ootbaD IAepe, on11 mucb more IO. n.e Slacltum ln Repna holds fewer than J0.000 •
The Rou1hr1der or1aniut100 la operated by
voluateers from the community and money ia
rais~ by p&Qcake breakluta and bake sales and,
once a year, a $200 a plate dinner where a ribald
evening la spent rafflln8 off two or three
automobiles.
"There ts no doubt it ii a different at·
mosphere," 11y1 Ed Alsman, tbe uailtant 1entral
manqer ol the Rqupriden and a former Ram•
uaistant under Chuck Knox. ''Fot ooe thln1. you
can ION a 1ame here and if tbe team 1*8 like it
wu tryU., to win, nobody boos and the coach
do.a't 1et bunt in etno end nobody want.I to klll
anybody. J know that 11 bard to believe, but It II
the bonelt. to God truth."
A player who clahn1tobeCOaifortab'"11 Ken
Clark, wbO did the punUac ...,.. tM Ra.. ~ dt·
clded Frank Corral could do botb kinds of kick.. ...
"Naturally," Clark 1111. "there ii a a.
'"Ibey booed Vinnie. pretty eood. I couldn't tell
for sure, but I don't thlnk he llked lt very much.
Has Vinnie ever been booed before?" ·
Not around here, be wasn't.
Bobby Hoeea, a defensive back from UCLA,
11y1 be ii dellahted with the 1urroundin1s aod
treatment.
"lt ii ab9olutely 1reat plaYinl here," Hoeea
says. "My one resret i• that tbe people back home
don't bear more about what ii loUaa oo up here.
Our 1ame1 are on cable TV now, tboutb. Do you
think' that -10 help set Canadian football a UtUe
more recoptUon down t.bereT"
WtU, then wu IJ'Ml Interest In Ferraaamo
prtorfto Lut Sunday. WbeV*' that will c:ontlnue 11
\IDcertal.n.
"It was too bad the writer saw Vancouver'•
faclllty,'' says Norm Fong. "It 11 the worst in the
leaeue."
Norm Fon1 Is the Saskatchewan equipment
man who did the same Job for the Lot An1elea
Sharks ot the World Hockey A.nociaUon. He 1bowa
• visitor around the layout of the Rouprtden' pre-
mises includina a huge loeker room, welcht room,
aaunaa, whirlpool and louqe .
It compares f avorab&y wttb tbe mulUmUUon,
dollar eetup at Rama Park lD Anabetm.
"Then ii not a1 mueb money here, 11 Bobby
HOHa aaya and Kea Clark Doell aanement, "but
neJtbe.r la lt tbt end of the world.•·
Sukl~bewan sot a lot cloler to UM center of
tbe Wllvene the day It put the bolt on Vince Fer·
raaamo .
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CaMTltAL DIVISION
Cllk ego 20 t .. 4J M 110
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Tutw u u SJ "' • 1• Oellot S 14 ts U 2' S2
SI• pOlnts are ewerded fore ,...,..tloft w
overtime •ktorv. F-points for• ......,. •lctor,. 0.. lleflus p01ftt tM ._., ....
1<or.,. wtttl • mulmum elf 111 .... ,... .-me.
NO _,. polllt It awerdecl lor O...,,lffle W '"°°*" ...... : T--y'tkw'ft J~llet, "°" .............. , E*'-2. Ge1eOrY I Teeye._
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Orange Coaat OAIL y PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981 HI F
El Niguel hosts tournament
Full field entered in Sea Country Classic
By HOWAaD L. HANDY ... Dlllty ..........
..
Se• Country Clu1tc 11 the oew name for El
Nlfuel Country Club'• moat preatl1loua touma·
ment.
The three·day, 54·hole competition wm replace
the member-guest and a two-man lnvltatJonal
event of other years accordlnc to John Densmore,
tournament chairman.
"In the past, we have had these two touma·
menta and some members were unhappy that we
tied up the course for such a period of time,"
Densmore says. "Now we can have one bil three·
day event In the summer and concentrate all of
our efforts on makinc it a truly outstanding af·
l•lr."
The event will take place Thursday. Friday
iand Saturday and its success wu assured 10 days
alter the first announcement.
"11:1E FIELD WAS FILLED witll 64 teams at
that time," says publicity chairman Je111 Watson.
"The two-man teams are from all over Southern
GOLF
California, Arizona, Nevada and Texu with only
30 to 35 percent Crom our own club. I would say
that no more than 60 of the 128 players are from El
Niguel."
Club pro Paul Scodeller says the competition
will be on a scramble for.mat the first day; a
partner's better ball competition the second; and
an aggregate score of both players the final day.
''This tends to separate the men from the boys
on the last day of competition," he says.
At $450 per team and with prizes for the 12 low
net and three low gross teams, the tournament will
have players from 41 different country clubs .
* • * TWO MEMBERS OF the Southern California
Golf Association team competing in the Pacific
Coast Goll Association championships at the Los
Angeles Countrv Club this week are from the
Orange Coast area.
Lee Davis, 36, is a resident of Newport Beach
and will be right al home at LACC where he is a
member. Among his accomplishments are : 1975
SCGA amateur champion; finished second in 1977
and third in 1975-76·78 and fifth in 1980 in the PCGA
championships.
He ls a nine·tlme Los Angeles CC club cham-
pion; was third in the 1981 SCGA amateur;
quarterfinalist in the 1978 U .S. Amateur;
semifinalist in 1976 in the California Golf Associa·
lion championship and has advanced to the 32·
player cut each year since 1975; and was captain
and AlJ·American on the USC golf team In 1966.
The other member of the team from this area
is Bian Llndley, 24, of Fountain Valley. He is a
member at Mesa Verde Country Club In Costa
Mesa and was the runnerup in the California Golf
Association championships this year. He won the
1980 Costa Mesa city title and was 1975 Los
Angeles city men's champion. He also is a
graduate of use. • • • 'l1fE FIRST LAGUNA BEACH Chamber of
Commerce golf classic will be held Friday, Sept. 4
at Cuta del Sol Country Club in Minion Viejo.
TODrS
VODKA
1.7"llR.
659
The event ls Umlted to uo players with Aus. if
111 the entry deadline. Coet of the event, lnclucttns
dinner and toll, ia $40 with 1dditlooal diMer
cuests at $15 each. '
A new Datsun 280ZX ii beln1 offered for the
first golfer wbo score• a hole-In-one a chamber of.
ficial says .
For further ln/ormaUon, contact the CbamtMt
of Commerce at 494·1018 or tournament chairman
Joe Jahrau& at 49'-6538. , 1 • • • CIDP SHOTS -Jolul Arpe has been named
general chairman of the 1983 PGA championship
which will be contested Aug. 4.7 at Riviera Coun·
tqi Club. This will mark the first time the PGA
tournament has been played in Southern CaUf<*QI
since 1929 when it was held at Hillcrest CC
... Members at Rancho San Joaquin Goll CourH
are excited about the opening of their "new1l
course sometime next month. They are mowtna
the greens on the new part of the course and feel
certain it will be open for play shortly. The big
event this month Is Saturday's two-man better ball
tournameot . . . There are perhaps more promr.
nent names on the list of past winners of the Costa
Mesa Open tournament than for any other similar
event in the area. Chairman Joe CosteJlo has an
nounced the dates for this year's event -Sept. 12
and 13 -with the rield limited to the first 350 en·
tries. The fee is $40 for the 36-hole competition.
More on this later ... Although he has cut down on
his tournament play schedule, Alan Taple of
Laguna Nig~el is s till second on the putting
leaders list for the PGA tour. He is averaging 28.10
putts per round with Tom Wataon the.leader with a
28.51 average. While he isn't in the top 10 birdi~~
any longer. Mark O'Meara is in the top 80 It'
money won and if be remains there, will have dn
exemption for next year. '
Surf needs victory
to keep hopes alive
SAN JOSE -The California Surf's chances of
advancing to the North American Soccer Lea.eue·
playoffs were j olted Tuesday night when twp
teams the Sud' must pass -Jacksonville and Ed·
monton -scored victories.
The Su r f, 11 ·18 with 113 points, finds
themselves in 18th place in the overall NASL rank:·
ings. The top IS clubs qualify for the playoffs .
With three games remaining, starting with
tonight's battle against the San J ose Earthquakes .
the Surf can not afford to lose if they have any'
hopes of advancing.
The last time the Surf saw the Earthquakes,
San Jose was dealt a 7-0 defeat at Anaheim
Stadium .
Surf Coach Laurie Calloway is expected to
start Mike Mahoney in goal again. Mahoney, play·
ing in only his second game of the year against Los
Angeles Saturday night, gave up four goals, but he
really couidn't be fa ulted on any of them.
The 33·year-old Englishman saw 33 shots from
the Aztecs in the Surf's 4·31~" At the Coliseum.
After tonight's contest, the Surf returns home
for an 8 p.m. battle with the Aztecs Friday night at
Anaheim Stadium.
CASE OF &39.54 l.o.uTER
Seagrams VO· ...
•
CASTILLO
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POLYESTER CORD TIRES
TUBELESS BLACKWALL 1111 NICt "o oc -..c,. 1-.U !All
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IOOTl'UfS + 2 ftlUS 2 STEEL BELTS
THI U.S. ICMmlfJRJ I UDINI SYSllM um ,.,
IOYS comu ....... TillS WITH IOOORAI ,.,
UNllOW-M-T1IAll lllUAL & Ml~ POI TllAD WIAI & MILUll. Slf POI YVllSIU •••
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WW W:f M ·-·-
MOlonnft •ora• OILI At Pep loys Low Prices
·:-.,~~3::-: J_ 79§.
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120 E. FIRST ST, AT CYPRESS • 15221 BEACH BLVD.
PHONE 893-85°44 PHONE. 547 7477
llHyl'lllt
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12, 1911
SPECIAL 01 ETS
USING HERBS
SLIM GOURMET
..
H /F
C2
CB
C9
Microwave • • •
P.air frozen foods with a microwave oven for fast meal
Can you imagine making a
homemade soup and a stuffed
meatloaf in less than 40
minutes?
It's easy with frozen ingre·
dients and a microwave oven. In
fact, with some frozen foods and
a microwave, you can have a
complete meal on the table in
less than 30 minutes.
There are advantages besides
time·saving to teaming frozen
foods and this type of oven.
Because little or no water ls r e·
quired, retention of water-
soluble vitamins . in frozen pro·
ducts is superior. Vegetables re·
lain their bright colors and fresh
flavors. Shorter cooking times
mean energy savings, too.
FACT (Frozen Food Action
Communications Team) offers
these suggeslions for a family
supper that can be ready in 40
minutes or less and combines
good nutrition, convenience -
and some hearty eating besides.
Fi\MILY SUPPER FOR FOUR
Cream of Broccoli Soup
Rolled Meatloaf with
Vegetable Stuffing
Com on the Cob
Tossed Green Salad
Strawberry Cheesecake
ORDER OF PREPARATION IN
MICROWAVE OVEN
1 Assemble tossed salad;
refrigerate.
2 Defrost cheesecake at
room temperature. 3 -Prepare Cream of Broccoli
Soup; keep warm until ready to
serve.
4 -Prepare meatloaf.
5 Prepare corn on the cob;
follow instructions on package
or in microwave cookbook.
CREAM OF BROCCOLI SOUP I 1 package ( 10 ounces> frozen
chopped broccoli
.-14 cup frozen chopped onion
-6 tablespoons butter or
margarine
8 tablespoons flour
I/• teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon pepper
Generous dash allspice
In 2-quart round glass
casserole, place broccoli, onion
and butler. CoveT with glass ltd.
Microwave on HIGH 8 to 9
minutes or until broccoli is
thawed. Stir in flour and season·
ings. Gradually add broth and
creamer. stirring until smooth.
Re ·cove r . Microwave on
MEDIUM 8 to 9 minutes, stir·
ring occasionally. Let stand,
covered, until serving time.
Makes 4 servings.
CONVENTIONAL COOK ING :
Saute onion in butter or
margarine in medium-size
saucepan until soft and tender,
about 5 to 7 minutes. Stir in
flour, salt, pepper and allspice
until smooth and well blended.
Gradually add broth and
cramer, stirring constantly over
medium heat until mixture is
smooth. Add chopped broccoli,
thawed. Cook, over medium
heat until broccoli is tend.er,
about 15 minutes.
ROLLED MEATLOAF WITH
VEGETABLE STUFFING v. cup frozen chopped green
pepper
1.4 cup frozen chopped onion
1 'h pound! ground beef
lh cup fine dry bread
crumbs
densed tomato soup
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
peas and carrots, cooked
1 cup shredded Cheddar
cheese
1 teas poon prepared
mustard
In small glass bowl, combine
green pepp er and o nion.
Microwave on HIGH 1 minute;
drain. Combine with ground
beef, breadcrumbs, egg, season·
ings and ~ cup soup. Mix
thoroughly. On waxed paper, pat
meat firmly into a 13x9-inch rec·
tangle. Spread peas and carrots
to within 1 inch of all edges ; pat
into meat. Sprinkle with lh cup
cheese. With aid of waxed
paper, roll meat tightly jelly·roll
fashion starting at long edge.
Seal seems and ends; use waxed
paper to transfer to 2·quart ob-
long glass baking dish. Cover
with plastic wrap.
Microwave meatloaf on HJGH
10 to 12 minutes, turning dish OC·
casionally. Let stand, covered, 5 •
minutes. Spoon off fat. Combine
remaining soup and mustard;
pour over loaf. Re-cover.
Microwave on HIGH 4 to 5
minutes, turning dish once.
Sprinkle with remaining cheese.
Let stand, covered, 5 minutes.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
CONVENTIONAL COOKING:
With. all the summer
Fruits, desserts are
easily made . . . C7
1 Can (13~ ounces) chicken
broth
1 cup frozen non·dairy
creamer, defrosted
1 egg, slightly beaten
'h teaspoon salt
l,il teaspoon pepper
1 can ( 10~ ounces I con·
Thaw frozen chopped green
pepper, chopped onion and peas
and carrots. Combine green pep·
per, onion, ground beef, bread
crumbs, egg, salt and pepper
and 't!t cup tomato soup. Mix UD·
til thoroughly blended. On a
sheet of waxed paper, pat meat
mixture firmly into a 13x9-inch
rectangle. Spread peas and car·
rots to within 1 inch of all edges.
Pat into meat. Sprinkle with lh
cup shredded cheese. Using the
wax paper, roll meat jelly-roll
fashion starting at the long side.
Seal seams and ends. Using the
wax paper, slide meat roll into a
2·quart shallow baking disb.
Bake in 3!iO degree-oven for SS
minutes. Remove from oven.
Combine re maining soup and
mustard. Pour over meaUoaf.
Sprinkle with remaining cheese.
Return to oven for 5 minutes or
until soup is hot and cheese is
melted.
Rolled Meatloaf with Vegetable Stuffing, Cream of Broccoli Soup and corn on the cob
make hearty eating when time is short.
I
I I
'j
Cook fancy or folksy favorites
It's easy to cook platters-full of beautiful entrees.ahead of time when you
use frozen vegetables. and your microwave oven.
Something old, something
new , so mething plain,
something fancy. Now it's easier
than ever to cook the perfect
dish for any kind of company
meal or family get together.
, The best of your party and
ethnic recipes can be adapted
easily for new super-swift
microwave cooking.
Entertaining doesn't have to
be expensive. When every peMy
counts. It's easy to stretch your
family meals to feed unexpected
guest s if you have frozen
vegetables in your freezer and a
microwave oven on your
counter.
Discover how easy it is to en-
tertain any day of the week. Do
you have an hour? Try the
gorgeous Turkey Pinwheel
Roast. U you're really busy, you
can prepare a complete Chicken
Barbecue in less than 30
minutes. Start with these dishes
and then experiment by design·
Ing your own e legant
vegetable/melt platters. Soon
you'll be creating fancy dishes
every day of lhe week.
One of lhe easiest and meet
economical ways to prepare a
variety of satisfying meals it to
buy a whole turkey. Even if
yours ls a family of only two or
three, a whole turkey can be a
big bopn to your budget.
Ask your butcher to cut up the
turkey. Be aure to aat bim to
butterfly the turkey breast ao
you can easily make the
gorgeous Turkey Pinwheel. Try
the barbecued chicken sauce on
the turkey th11ba. Cook tbe other
parts of the turkey, and UH In
aumm.-salads, cUHrolea and
soups.
Always use plain, blanched
froaen ve1etables for that "Just·
picked" Oavor at at.able prices
year'round. Because frosen
veaetablea are qulck·frosen
abortly aft.er harvestina, you can
be IUN tbal tbe Yitamlnt and
mlneral1 are retained .
IOuowave eookln1 11 a natural
to auaunlH their crl1p1.
crunchy texture.
For best results, defrost
frozen vegetables prior to cook·
ing. To defrost, put the package
In the microwave oven at !iO per·
cent power (see r ecipe for
specified times). Drain off any
exterior liquid on the vegetable
a nd remove ice crystals for
raster cooking.
To insure microwave cooking
success with any recipe, choose
your cooking utensils carefully,
being sure to use only round or
oval containers. This will pre-
vent overcooked corners. Metal
reflects microwaves and pre·
vents their penetration into food,
so use only glass or porcelain.
Use the dish you plan to serve in
and you'll have less clean up
later.
By applying these basic prin·
ciplea on shape, size, density,
time, power and food placement
you can adapt any recipe for
microwave cooking. Always re·
member the two most important
rules of thumb:
• Most meats, vegetables and fruit should be cooked for 6
minutes per pound.
• Cook 80 percent done in the
oven, and the retained beat will
Onish the last 20 percent out of
the oven . Follow these
guidelines and you'll eliminate
unnecessary stirring, rotating of
pans or peeking In the
microwave oven.
To ensure proper cooking of
dishes such as the Chicken
Barbecue, be sure to follow the
suggestions for placement of the
chicken pieces. Remember that
density of foods ls important.
For example, frozen broccoli
spears should be placed with the
stems In a ring near the outside
perimeter of the dish, and the
broccoli noreta in the center of
the diab. This way everythinJ ls
cooked to tender-crisp perfection
at the same time.
1'be more food, the looter the
cooldq time. The rule of thumb
for frozen ve1etablea la 8
minutes per pound. ·But keep In
mind that porous foods such u
fto1en cauU.flower will take leaa
time to cook than dense foodl
Ute frosen llma beam.
Uneven shapes cauae unewa cootlnc tlmea. For beat resuJta cook ,..urorm1y shaped and lbed
food1 f.o&'etber.
1'hroql9out the day I coot1nl
Ume1 wW vary directly .wttb
nuctuliq current1 Let• •lee·
trleal ner1y means lonaer
C90M:1.!'me. Learn to 8cljUlt re-a,.s. IUl'e to allow ltMdtnl tlme after cookln1. Froaen
.. , ....... wtll be Y.rJ map
wbeil "'"*""' U.... II ~flallbed. and wtll beeome tncler map wld.le ........ ,. Nner add aalt.
( ... l'ANCY, Pa .. CI)
Microwave tips
• Dense foods, such as chicken
breasts or hamburger patties,
take longer to cook, so place
them at the edges or the dish for
greater concentration of the
microwaves.
• Microwaves release the
natural sa lt in frozen
veget.ables, so never add salt
when cooking.
• The pTesence of s ugar or fat
in food s Increases the
microwave heat, so compensate
by reducing the cooking time
and power level.
• Moel microwave failures are
the result of overcooking.
Remember that foods cook 80
percent in the microwave oven,
and the final 20 percent when re·
moved from the oven.
• When cooking meat, it's a
good idea to use a thermometer
made apeclflcally for a
mlcrowav\'-oven. Remember not
to place the tip agalnat a bone.
• Tbe amount of power comtn1
to your hoUle nuctuates durin1
peat use limes of the day, ao
microwave cooldnt time• may
have to be extended durint tbeH
daily power draina.
• Tllblly cover all foodl wblcb
need moist heat to cook. such as
frozen vegetables, casseroles
and meats. Use plastic wrap,
paper towels or a dish lid.
• Cut pieces of food in uniform
sizes and de nsities for even
penetration of the microwaves.
For example. frozen cauliflower
and broccoli florets cook at the
same time and temperature In a
microwave oven.
• Occasionally syringe off
meat juices from the pan to
shorten the cooking time .
• Paprika retains natural
moisture, so sprinkle generously
over s uch meats as a whote
chicken or turkey to eliminat.,
the need for coverint.
• Learn to farni.sh and you'll
never worry about browning,
Create eye-pleasing, m outb
watering d.isbea by tarnishlnl
with cut-up fresh fruitl and a
sprinkling of coconut. A fe~
tablespoons of bottled salad
dtesalng, tartar aauce or
chutney add navor and color.
• Keep your microwave cleq.
To eaally remove baked-on dltt
ln your microwave oven,
moisten the •pol and turn on tbe
oven for 30 aecondl to aollen.
F.-ee booklet offered ·
t
l'
~~------------=-·-----------
Orange CoMt OAILY PILOT/WednHday, Auguat 12, 1981
Vitamin A loB• ·
rm/ ul to eyes·
'1 .JUNB a&ra
Thole who lsnore the
erita of 1 dally e1rrot
r dirk areen or dark
ellow veaetables ud
ruits, are cuttln1 off
aay acceaa to vitamin A
at a. needed to main-
aln IOOd vlalon.
If (hey alao l1nore the
l'ltake of flab rich in 0U1,
od do not take any
PECIAL DIETS
ltamln supplements, il
11 po11ibie that nl1ht
lindness will occur.
In a recently
published book, "Total
:Vision" (published by A
W> by Dr. Richard S.
avner and Lorraine
usky , an entire
cornta, •De\ Cll>" de ·
terlor,to_ to a condlUon
or xel'ophtha!m6ia which
causes thickened and \ dried out eye llasue. If l y MA&TIN SWAN£
untre1ted, the ailment Many •hoppers f au to see a money-
can dlAroy the cornea aavinJ opportunity that 1taret out at them
and bllndne11 can re· from almoet every aupermarket shelf.
fera are powerful mover• of merchandile.
A good example la the current SMP from
Lipton Cup.a-Soup. A packace of CUJ)·•·Soup
sells for around 75 cents, while a yeJlow·and-
blue oval on tl\e front or the box announces
"Save $1.07 wltb Coupons Inside."
auJt. I'm talldnl about coupoaa on 1peclally
Juat u an apple a day marked packa1es. We call them SMPa. ,..,... ~ ...._. ..-. .... llW<llaM ,,ic..,..,... ~-
may keep the• doctor I challenae you to w1lk down any c~-~.:':.''.:e.-::'.::= ~r.=-~:.' ... ':"=:~ .... ':."'c~i! awav, IO a carrot a day g oce aisle in your fav~_. ..... aunarmar ... et c....,.., ....._. 11-1 ~ • ,_.... '1'"J9'.ll. •• ~ k r ry vn...:i ..-~ • ,, ...... ""''-.................... """"'"... ltAV• HAIR CAita. ltKelve ••• r9M>d. a.N .... may e~p your evea and not find at leaat I doHD producta•witb llMlw.._eU• ... -Wt.ln14 JJ91rUM r9411lfllelref\lftd~m.11'1efn111tconMnt».-ellr..,. oka~Here .•re some clall arked paci..a"es · m..u-, .... ..,. ,,..,.. w1t11 ,,......_Offen ..,Y "-Soft,.."""_._ enc1111e ,..~,..
reel that .,._ bigb ln lpe y m a a • _, ............... lflelt_,_9f .. <4111VY.Ai. Ct lptwttllttlepriee<lrclH.t'•PlrUO.C.ll,tttl. ...... M uf t tt1... sup .......... ~Mdlref\IM. ltllVLON COl.OltSILK.ltett lve•SJl'tfl.Wld-• vitamin A : an ac urera are pu1~.. more m 1 , .. .._... ..... _ _. • ...., ., ......, »<em-. .... u. l'9Cllltrec1 ,.._ *"'· • .....
STUFFED 8-•ET on supermarket shelves becauae the coupons Tiit• ,......, ....... c-... 1a.11 i. -......,. •ott '""" ...._ "°"""1e Co1on1111 -• ,...,,.,,,. n "° &--a f ....,.., ctljlll wttll tltl !Wic9 Cll'Clecl. l!•Jl,..t J-JO. 1"2.
POTa.ro•a r.rlni.eu on the backt o packa1ea or tucked oA11v.1tOM ""''"" ~. ,._, .... ._. STAY,.ltl!ll MAXl·PAos n S••'"'' otter. n c,q n11Jde have the bJab-t --..t-m""'on ra•,.. ,_._,,,,_,.It-MIMI or,_,. All ....... IY It-Rec:elve lfll'.-»unt c...-n1. s.nd ttle reqi;lrecl r• 4 tweet potatc>Em ... i--.,.. -.. MllllllllnCMe......_..,_.,.....,.,.,...._......, flllld Nrf'n Nd ltVM un1 .. rv1 Prodllel c.. Sym-
u. cup bot mi''-With food prices continuaJJy 1oln1 up, many "'-•-flWCMM -•• fr ... tltrw ,.cu.t "' IMll• '"'"' ..., .. 11ey1,... "'-•-'·Pedl. ,_.,... Jein. ,.. La ant ee SMP ....... on of lb on Otlty .... .,.,., tilt , •••••• , ,.,.,,, wllll Ille ati_lta. 1(4 CU= oraDte juice Comp el I COU...,._ U e e • l"""Clll!lt 11Jr1c.e clrclM eM. ceftta f11r,.,..... ._ uLTltlX DI_.... t i lttf\lncl Offw. 5-1 u.. •• ly practical ways to reduce the COila of their ~-.,.,,.. o.c. 11. ""· .,..1rec1 ,..._..,.... _, two un1verse1 PnicMt c.-2 la Mpooal butter od ilb I • all MAYleLLtNe Mel-W~ SI ....... O..W. t ymllalt from k.llkll Uttru 01-Mllll IWoiJ>t<h.
Or marlarioe pr ucts w out ,owerm1 qu ty. s.M .,. ,..,,, .. ,_..,,... form, -UNven•• e:.,.,..o.c.21, 1•1. """"" c.-. ,,,,.. ,....., ., -.. Mllllur'e wtllp 8-1 ""' ................... ,.. '°""'· 1 tablespoon grated The beat SMPs are thoee with coupona ""''9C11ve "•le• ~ .. , c+-e lltMft w,, uav MAG•c 1tt111nc1 OtMr. ,.,o .... ,.~ •. IE•
Oranle rind whose total value exceeds the price of the _,._..,or Mo1""'9 ~ c1e-.,...,...... "-· ,.,.. """· 1t.ce1ve • »<9ft1 ,_ •""' '' '" Up It-C._• \Wei ... e ....-r ,._... < ......... s..d IN JKUtt 1tlcke<, 1M ••II« ,...
------------cm~r-r-nr£aEFUNos------------·
B,ake pot aloes until item on which they are found. The companies wltll .. "'" cltclH. • .,... o.c. JI,'"'· celpt wlttl lht !Wk• clrctecl •""' .,_ -· .-... u th .. ... .. ..__ th r L NEW '"••DOM ANvoAv ,.,... Of'w. "tcehe. •""' z1Pcodt. EJCPI,... ~. J•. ,.., J chapter is devoted to lbe
'aubject of vitamins and
ision. The authors
state, "The eyes are
fork-tender, about 1 ca em power pac.s ~auae ese o . -----------:-------------------------
hour. Cut off tops IJ.lld ~~~~~~~~~~~~============~~~~~~~=====================================================================~ scoop out potato from r
1ensitive to even slight
deficiencies, ·and de-
t>ending upon the situa·
lion and the stress in-
'volved, the 'amount of
vitamins used up by the
eyes can vary widely
from day to day." They
~-;ontinue, "Driving at
~igbt, especially when
,there are many oncom·
-ing headlights, also dJps
into the body's reserve
~of vitamin A."
The eye has the ability
•to adapt to changes in
light, but it is dependent
upon a substance called
rhodopsin. One or the
co mp onen t s o r
rhodopsin is a close rel-
ative of vitamin A and
the other is protein.
When the body's re·
serves or vitamin A are
deficie nt, eyesight
changes may be the first
function that makes the
Joss known.
Suspect t his as a
possibility if you have
~rouble seeing in the
dark, take a longer time
to adjust to darkness
and when the eyes are
l'ilot only fatigued in the
dark but also there may
be dark spots in the field
or vision.
Authors Kavner and
Dusky explain, "Since a
defi ciency of vitamin A
strips all the mucous
m embranes of their
necessary food. these
delicate lini,.ags of the
eye, throat, intestine,
urinary and r eproduc-
tive tracts dry out and
are unable lo resist the
normal invasion of bac-
'"l e r I a ... Othe r
symptoms or a vitamin
A deficiency include
dandrurr and r ashes ;
dry flaky skin and hair,
and peeling naHs.' ·
If the vitamin A defi·
cl ency continues, the
eye condition worsens,
adding burning, Itching
and inflamed eyes, and
possibly slyes and con·
j unctivitis.
At its ex tr e m e,
•vitamin A deficiency
produces dryness or the
shella aod tops. Discard
tops. Beat potatoes with
milk, orange juice, but·
ter and erated orange
rind, until smooth. Stuff
potatoes with UUS mix·
lure, swirling top with
the tines of a fork .
R e heat and serve.
Makes 4 servinas.
CARROT RAISIN RING
3 cups grated car-
rots
2 eggs, beaten
Yi c up milk or
cream
~ teaspoon salt
i.il teaspoon pepper
IA cup seedless
raisins
1 tablespoon brown
sugar
Combine carrots with
beaten eggs. Stir in
milk , salt, pepper,
raisins and brown sug-
ar. Pour into a 1-quart
greased ring mold .
Place mold in a pan of
hot water and bake in a
350-degree oven for 45
minutes or until carrots
are tender. Remove
Crom ring and serve hot.
Makes 8 servings.
BUTrERNUT BOATS
1 large butternut
squash
2 teaspootls butter
2 teaspoons orange
marmalade
Dash or gineer
Cut squash in half
lengthwise. Scoop out
seeds and discard. Place
1 teaspoon butter in
each cavity of squash:
add 1 teaspoon orange
marmalade and a dash
of ginger. Place cut side
up in a baking pan. Bake
in a 350-degree oven for
45 minutes or untiJ fork
tender. Remove from
oven. Cut each half
lengthwise. Ma kes 4
servings.
June Roth is the author
of 29 cookbooks, including
"Aerobic Nutrition:· If you
have a special diet ques-
tion, you may write to June
Roth clo the Daily Pilot,
P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa
92626. Enclose o self·
addressed stamped en·
vel~ .
. . Fancy cooking
,\-rom Page Cl .
Micro-cooking brings out the natural salt in my
food.
CHICKEN BARBECUE
2·pound chicken wings, disjointed
'h cup bottled barbecue sauce
1 package (10 ounces) frozen Brussels
sprouts
2 small whjte onions, quartered ·
Use 14·inch oval cooking dish. Brush each
piece of chicken well with the barbecue sauce. Ar·
range the chicken in the oval porcelain baking dish
as follows : five drumettes at each end of tbe oval
dish, five wing sections on each side, and the 10
tips tucked into the center. Microwave on 70 per·
cent power for 14 minutes.
Defrost the Brussels sprouts for 2~ minutes on
50 percent power. Add to the center of the chicken
wings; sprinkle onions over the top o! enli,re dish.
Cover with plastic wrap and microwave on. high
for 4 minutes. Let stand 3 mlnutes before serving.
Makes five servings .
TURKEY PINWHEEL
11\ turkey breast (3-4 lbs.) from a 14 lb.
whole turkey <have butcher butterfly turkey
breast)
1 package ( 10 ounces> frozen chopped
spinach
2 tables poons each chopped partley,
m uabrooma and green onion
2 cups herbed dresalnj cubes, crushed
Pepper
Paprika
Butterfly turkey breast. Defl"Olt apinacb in
microwave oven for 2 mlnutu on 50 percent
power. Squeeze out excess molature. Combine
1plnach wfth mushrooms, panley 8llid ODiOILI Cov-
er breast evenly with spinacla s$Ufftn1, tucklnl ex-
tra amount into center of b.-eut. Roll -'1P breut to
form an even load, tuckinl ln ed1es. TJe securely
with atrln.a.
Place herbed 1tutrtn1 bl ~of ovaJ or
road mlcrowaVP.·PfOOf dllh. ~ tutl&., loaf OD
top ol 1tufftn1. Sprlnkl• ,.....,,..,, ,,_ pepper
and ~·· Cover wttb pl..Uc ~ llJc_,.ave
OD 90-JOo percent power far .. , """:t: pound,
turnlq oace midway tbrGulb c1clt.
Check temperature wltla mterowaYE tber.....-.. makinl tun nat to tOMll cb.
Temperatme lbould read 111-llt ~· .
from owa and place a lea& of i6w Mlm fcil1 Dftl' tartr.,. to f9lal.n .... ,. 1At tUilld 4-1 mlDUllll Mtore
aerviq.
If
' ,
,.sec ,,.... I I C S...rh.rnG.ewn
WIM!e f.ytr•t a. .. ,~." t..e•
s~:::· I I 1-w •• n.,.. Y
1-lb.
Pkg. .
.;::;.. 6 I C ~2-l.Jter '-.=l Bottle ~1lf·•· """ ...... o.-...... ,, .. w.•"• ,,.........o.. .. ~11,.
Sof .. woy
Sl1c•d
'•.c•n•d , ......
IAVl'2.00 (JICW5IVE Mfl'.'WAY Of'F9.I
MAGIC MOUMTAIM TICKETS! .. . .. .. . . .
~3f;;:$139 $119
Half
Gallon
_.....
_.,, •• 8-01. 99c
!~) '"'*• ...... O...Lw-i!ll t)1
'~· s .........
"-..f..C
~ -.....
...-W Pkg.
lb.
QUALITY MEAT
· 7-Bone Roast ~~ ,. 1121
Chuck Short Ribs -::.~ .. 1111
Arm Pot Roast ~ • 113•
Boneless Steak '"='= • 11"
Cross Rib Roast ~ • 11"
DAIRY
:z:-t Cottage Cheese ,_ ... ... 85'
~ Lucerne Buttermilk .:.89'
2:t Lucerne Sour Cream ,. 89'
~Lucerne Yogurt 3r.::.~oo
~Whipping Cream'-,.. ~11
LIQUOR BUYS!
m;,Kavlana Vodka --:: '611
mEC Ea'lyTimes'":':"' :: 110"
3¢ Gllbey's Gin .:.. :: '9"
m:i.J & e Scotch.:.. t: 116"
:M C.K. Mondavl Wine ::'3 ..
WholeFilletButts .... "='~ •1352 zt MontereyJack:==. '211 ·:;;; Hetneken Beer 65.'3" ....... _ .. , ... _, ..
Smoked Ham =-.:::. • 11 11 :l;:C Orange Juice --*2" GROCERY
Center Ham Slices.== ... *2" 2¢ Kat Kan ..=.. ir. n:.• 59-
Sliced Bacon ':.' ~ ~at ZZi¢-~Meal a. ... i;... ':: 79' 3' PurexOetergtnt"'t:...._::99-
TurtceyLegOuarters~-t:. 59' m;,30.s11ce Bread ...';... '::59' 21Et-Shasta Dtet Soda 6E ~,.
PremlumGroundBeef ~ .. ~" ~lnnamon Rolls ~ ;t, ~a •v-a Juice Cocktail 8E'114
Safeway Corn Dogs .. ~41 :a;, Hawaiian Bread ..,.. ~~11 •Char*I --. J)...~
FRESH PRODUCE!
Crispy Celery ~
Russet Potatoes u ... ,
Barlett Pears ,_,_
Fresh Broccoli o.. ,.._
Ripe Avocados ':..':
Extra Large Nectarines
_59'
~:.11"
• 35'
• 59'
4,,,~00
• 59'
BACK TO SCHOOL
C-f •Flex 3 Note Book <:' i.!2"
X Mead Organizer ::. a.!2"
Aladdin Lunch Box i.:.. ... '3"
PH Chee Folder -33'
Filler Paper..:~~.. .:1. 1118
SEAFOOD & DELI We've Given LOW PRICES "New Name •• ~ a-~== .. 99'
Sllced Bok>Qna -.-:.: ~4'
Chopped Ham _,.,.. :: ~n
Ptnk Sltmon Rout ..F.&. • ~·
Ff1lh Psch Rlllll ·= • ~11
• ...... AM''"'"'' et Le ha. -..oft ¥t9)o
·~ .................. . .,..,,~Dr ............ ...
>
----. .., ~--~~-...... ,..,.-...--.................. ~~-.......... .--............ _ • ._._,. ... ,_._.,.._._,_.,_ ... ,_ ..... !"'.--."""'"" ..... -'!I .................... . ----------~--;-----~--~~--------~~--~~ ........
Orange.eo.-t DAILY PILOTtWedne1d1y, Augu1t 12, 1881
-~ ......... CAT MAN Former professional football
player Greg Harris keeps a watch over his·
pet. ··Minka.·· a 97-pound mountain lion.
When full grown. the cat should weigh about
160 pounds ..
Photo ·labs
Waste silver
. WASHINGTON (AP) -By failing to recover
ilver from photographic wastes, 44 photo
aboratories run by 24 government agencies threw
away silver worth as much as $325,000 in 1980, con-·
iressional auditors say. ·
. 1be General Accounting Office, in a report,
s aid the 44 labs dumptd 6,500 troy ounces of silver
down the drain in 1980, and the practice continues.
Prices vary from day to day. but the un·
recovert;ci silver was worth between $71,500 and
~25.000 m 1980, and the cost of recovering it would
·have been just a fraction of that a mount GAO said. . '
The agency said the Defense Department and
Veterans Administration were doing a good 'job in
recov~rjnJ photograph.ic silver, but many civilian
agencies ignored the problem, even though it was
called to th~ir attention in a 1977 report. .
• Government agencies use substantial amounts
of film for medical X-rays, microfilm records. mo-
llon pietures and still photographs.
Silver can be recovered from scrap film and
from the film processing solution.
DEA TH NOTICES
BURTON ter Inez A Oelwein. Funeral
ALFRED 8 U RT ON. services will be held on
passed away on August 8, Thursday. August 13, 1981 at
1981. He 1s survived by his 4 • OOPM al Pacific View
wire AJice, daughters Ruth. Mortuary Chapel. Interment
Mc Quade and Prudence at Pacific View Memorial
Williams. son John Burton Park. Newport Beach. Ca
or Westminster, Ca , 7 Pacific View Mortuary
grandchildren and 2 great· directors ·
· grandchUdren. Services will
be held on Friday, August
14 , 1981 al ·1.00PM at the
liarbor Lawn Memorial
Chapel with Rev Aaron
Bubier of the Harbor Trinity DEATHS Baptist Church of Costa
Mesa omciating. Interment ELSEWHERE services immediately follow·
ing. Services under the
direction of Harbor Lawn-
M ount Olive Mortuary of
Costa Mesa, 540·5554. MURRAY HILL, N.J .
• MERRILL (AP> James 8 . Fisk 70
• MAX I N E 0 EL W E IN' former chairman and p;esi·
"MERRILL, resident o f dent of Bell Laboratories
Fountain Valley. Ca. Passed died Monday. Fisk als~
@Way on August 11, 1981. served as director of the
Born April 30, 1920, in Los Division of Research. U.S.
A11geles, Ca Su.rv.ived by Atomic Energ y Com ·
her daughter Chrnsll!"e Mer· mission, and was chairman '°Ill Crpwel.1 of Anaheim, Ca . of the U.S. technical del·
'brother Richard John Mer egalion at the Geneva
rill of Soquel. Ca. and a sis· Nuclear Test Ban Con
-----------. ference.
Neptune Society
' C .. !MA110M aUlllAL AT HA
••
646-7431 v .. , -lal -.uity .. ..--..... , .............. , _, .,..,
_...,_~ MfVl<K.
c:..41 'I«,,... ,.,, .. 11.
t4 "''· tem.tallr
,_Cl ..OTMMS '
SMITHS' MORTUAIY
627 Main St
t-t.lntington Beach
5~6539
r~~Y•W
MIMOllA&. 'All
Ce11'8t8f)' Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3600 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
6"·2700
McCOIMICIC MOITUAUS
Leguna Beach
494-9415
'..II Laguna H11ts
768-0933
9-1 Juan C.p1strano
495-tn&
CHEVY CHASE. Md
<AP> J. Simmons Fea·
treu, 56, a correspondent
for Time magazine for 20
years. died of cancer Tues·
day
CHICAGO <AP> Frank
L. Sulzberger, 93, a trustee
of the University of Chicago
and retired president and
chairman of the Enterprise
Paint Manufacturing Co ..
died Saturday.
HENDERSONVILLE ,
N.C. <AP) -Byron Price,
90, newsman, diplomat and
chief U.S. censor during
World War II. died Thurs-
day.
COUNC IL BLUFFS
I owa IAP l -Ned E Wiiiiama, 83, a drama
critic and onetime press
agent for such stars aa
Jean Harlow and Duke Ell·
lnr,ton. died Thursday.
LA JOLLA <AP> -H.N.
Ollpluult, 12. a co-founder
of Yank maauine in World
War ti and one of Ila
editors, died Sunday.
UCLA· h0nor8
cOast students
Tbirty·two UCLA atudenta from the Oranse
Cout have been named t.o the dean'• honor Hat at
the col\e1e of letters and ecjence for the aprtna
quarter. ·
To qualffy for the honor Uat, a student muat
earn ah A·~lnua avera1e· wblle taldna a ruu
schedule of classes. · ·
Tho8e makln1 the llat lnelude: ·
. · Costa Mesa-David Dawe, Anne GoUert, Adele
Kenyon, John IUu\sen and SuHft KJeea.
Huntington Beach-Stephen BourcH!r, Paula
Dugan, Curtis Holmes, Grace King and Lynn
Tavar-0ni. ·
Nickolas Tomasic, Brian Trela, Celina Wang,
Jennifer Young and Kathleen Downs.
Cynthia Ramberg, Peter Wrobel, Nina
Froeschle, Craig Holland, Erin Mihara and Susan
Pickett.
Laguna Beach-Meryl Ginsberg, Eliot Krieger
and Elaine Zubko. .
Newport Beach Kevin Baldridge and Bonnie
Wai.
Laguna Niguel-Dianne Jones and Karen
Overstreet.
Fountain Valley-Ling-Sheng Chen, Gar y
Coleman, Tsui-Lun Liu and Robert Schofield.
FOR THE RECORD
Births
~~IAL.
""'" Mr. end Mn. ~ 0..., l..e""'9
BHcll, lloy
Mr. •lld Mn. Mlcheel Col•, c:-u
Me ........
Mr. eftd Mn. lllMll ,.IMller, lrvlM,
tlrt
IN. -Mr.: o.i ... Mlve. lrvl,.,
llOy
Mr. eNI ~ Allln I-. c.r-
del Mer,...., .,u
Mr. end Mn. lllclWlrd Q11ll1t.,.o•. .. _Pelrt a..ai ......
Mr. eftd Mr-. OwltM ArmslrOftt,
lrvlM,...., .. ,,,
Ml. end Mn. Ille herd Herr i-. 0...
Point, tlf1
Ml ...... Mn. o...ld Col• ..........
Beed\, t1n
Ml. eNI Mn. Hlr..,... 1"11jl•ere.
Hllfltlfl .... a.etll.lloy
Ml. -Mn. Dwlnl• Hol._, c:-u ,. ... 91'1 .,,.
Mr. encl MIL NHI .. rl,.., CMte
MeN,11'1 .,u
MT. end Mn. a.rt ""9"9"-... ._1
BM.ell, tin
My16
MT -Mr-. llotlerl Ferre11. c.u MeN,glrt
Mr. end 1llW-. OoMy Mmpsan, H""t· '"''°" --· 9lrt MllSICMt
COMMUNITY
NOIPITAL ., .. ,1
•Mr. end Mrs. Hervey L.11119, S.n
Juan Capblr.,,.., girt. Mr. Mel Mrs.
Wllllom Mandigo, L.a1una Nlgvel,
boy.
.. ...,....
.. ICTITIOUS BUllN•IS
NAMm ITATUHNT
The follow"'9 ~ ere doifl9 llusl-•= FANT/BIOOLE CLAREMONT,
11701 Mltcllell Horii!, I rvlne,
Call!Wnll '2114. Fent Ou •l-11eomp.ny.11101
Mllcllell Nortll. lrvlN, Celllornl•
'2711 w. Scott Biddle, 17101 Mllcllell
Nort11, 1,.,,.,., ca11tom1e mt>.
Tiiis llUllftels b '-.Ctecl &y • _ .. -1Nnl\lp.
F-0.W..,.,_I COft'IC*IY
--llG.Fent
"'911dcnt
Tiiis ste......,t wes lllecl wltll the
C-y CteR of 0r.,.. c-ty on
Aug.•., ••.
"16"111 Pu&1l111ed Orenge Cou l Delly
Piiot, Aug. 12. lt, 26. Sept. 1.
1•1 1625-tl
"'CTITIOUS BUllNR•
NAM• STAT•M•NT
The followl119 --ere doing IMalMS&et:
settLING/MAllSH, uoi Here.or
8"'41 .• Suite Ht. SeMe AN, CA 9262'.
CMn«te Mel'WI, '30 H. l"etr Wrt,
Senta AN, CA '2103.
Alclwnl Serllnt. ftO N. f<elr Wey.
Senta AM, CA nm.
Tiiis 1llalflKs f1 <-WCI ..., •
...,....1....-...p.
a-IOtle~
Tiiis -"*" WM lllecl wltll lhe
C-y Clertt of Or-C-y on Aue."·'"'· "1ta1t
Pu&t111Wd Orenge coul 0 •11• Piiot. "4111. 12, It, 26. Sept. 1,
1•1 *7~1
... 7'111
"ICTITIO'll BUllN•ll
NAMR STATUAINT The followln9 peftoM ere OOinO
lluM-H: COLLEGE OAKS. 1"01 Mlk llell
Nonll. trvi.., CallfOnll• m 14.
f<enl/Blddl• Cleremont. 11701
Mttcllell NOf111, lrvlrie, Callto~11I• mu.
Tiiis tlull-11 Condloc:"4 by e
llmlled per1nerMlp.
"MtllMddleCle...mom a., Fent 0e ... 1opment co. Geflerel ,.,,_.
Mw'IMllG. P'llftt
P\"etldlftt
Tlllt ltMffneflt •• lllecl wlttl tN C-.tv Cler1l of o.-.,.. C-y °"
Aut.6, 1"1. . .,,.,..
1'1t .. l111ed Or•fl .. (OHi Dally l'lie.. A\la. 12, It, 2', $ttlt. t,
1•1 ,.,...,
WN•IOll C:OU•T OP
CAUNllNIA COUllTY OP ......
lflhMMWf/I ... ~ .......
l.MWy""*-N~ ... a.. • .._ ._.
OllMtl T09"0W CAUM ... ~ ... ......
LMtly ""*-.......... ,.... •
,..,.
Mr. end Mn. Rlc ... rd Olilflell'I\.,. San J.-ea.Mair-. &oy. '
Mr. e11d Mrs. ICennetll Bron10,
C-.>ltlr-8-11, boy,
Mr. end Mra. Dern II Burnett,
Lffllna ........... .
llllft Mr. 9fld Mn.. OlllM!ltl9 H-11, Sen
Juell c:.,ltlr-. '9y.
Mr. erid Mn. Jeffrey Provence, Sen
Juen Capitlr-. llOy. .,..., ..
Mr • .,,,. Mn. C. John Otl G-... lrVIM, girt.
Mr . ..,. Mr'L Al1ftur TeylOr. 1..e.-Nltuef • ....,.
, .. , 11
Mr. -Mn. Mel1I Rkt, 1....-e Nltuef. gin. ,,., 17
Mr. •NI Ml$. 0-. C-lt, DeM
Point, gin.
_,,...COUT
MIDfCALC .. fTell ""'tl Yola .... l'Wra. 0-. ~ • ..., ""'t4 Mr ..... -L Mt .... y JNI• .... , ........... ...,.,....,
""'· .... Mn. Cr ... "-· .....,_ Nia-I,..., Mr. •nd ,., .. 1.., M . OIMllCefl ,
t.e9llN e..o. . ..,i Mytl
""'· ..... Mn. Al ..... ~ ........ BMcll. lloy
Ml. •NI Mn. Tim Smlltl, La .....
Nlauet ....
"''" Mr. 8IWI Ml'L Ocflnh H-, S...
Juell C~r-. '9¥ My17
MT. •fld MrL Wll ... Miii ... , l..e..-W
Nl11MI, 1111 ""',. Mr. •nd Mn. Mlcheel Etlet>, So. .....,..., .. rl
Mr. end Mn. llklWnl I.. WIMI-.
~ ........... "
Benefit
'swim'
slated
"Splash for RIO," a
s wim-a-thon benefitting
the Rehabilitation
Institute of Orange
County , will be held
Aug. 22 at 9 a.m. at the
institute's pool, 1800 ·E.
La Veta Ave .. Orange.
The institute, which
serves as an outpatient
rehabilitation service
for physically handi·
capped children and
adults, will receive pro·
ceeds from swim-a-thon
participants.
Each participant must
gather sponsors who will
.pledge money on a per·
lap system.
For information. call
633-7400.
Cult..,,ral
course
atOCC
An English course, de·
s igned to increase
cultural a.ware ness
between U .S . and
foreign.born students,
will be offered for the
first time at Orange
Coast College in Costa
Mesa. Titled ''Bridges
Across Cultures," the
three-unit course will
meet Monday s,
Wednesdays and Fri·
days from noon until 1
p.m.
ReglsttaUon for. fall
classes begins Aug. 17,
while classes begin Sept.
8.
For information, call
556-5T72.
~LAW'6-MT.OUYI J MOft"'ry • c.,,..tery c,.,,,.1ory
1625 G11lef Ave .
11 CoetaM ... , , 5-4(). 5554
................ ~ ........ ...
CHIC GO ............... C-..Mr-A <AP> -Oald• ,,_ l..nLaY a.tott•I NICHOL.I Ll•clley, 53, assistant dean • c.._,~ -011••• MA'"90T· at Columbia CoUe1e and a TIN, Chtca~o television hoat, 11 •• w.-. •rNr .. tMt •II
OCC sets
deaf clas8
An Introductory
coune in deaf culture,
it.I laniuage and It.I hit·
tory, ts belQI offered for
the ftnt time at or..,1e
Cout Colleae in C'oeta ......
•• ,_,_ lllt-.lH Ill tlll Matter
died hursday of a self· ~'" ...,. .... _.. lnntc:ted bullet wound In the Ne. •at,. 'Mc c;....., heed. poHce uld. Df1W ..,..AM.~,~ .,,.,.., • '91• rctodl ....... llM
................ ~ lfllflY KANSAS CITY. Mo. <APV tlley ~ .,., ..,.. ,..tbN.1tw
-G•rreU 8•allef Sr., 81, ::=. .. llOfll• tflHI• Ht ..
lon1t1me Kansas City .... ....._ ........ ·~• publlaher and Democrat .... .._. ..... ,_ .. ,......_
political nsure, died Friday :.=.. ':' ~:.:,:::. t:.: at St. IOlePh HotpU.al. a.ey ...... _ • ... ..,...,
Lo$ ANGSLa CAP> -
01 •t• •· ••1ea, U , bio1rapber, coun1etor and
frleld to Pr....Sent Herr)' S
Truman '°" ao yean •. died Friday.
; .............. ..,., ............ 0.-"'-~ .... ......... ,,_ ......... .._..c-t
........ Of .... C-t O.lly """""" ... "· ....... .. ,., ....,
u.ted u Communfea·
uou t 75 ln tbe cla11 acb .... e, tile feu.Ma.alt cour. ....-Tuetda11 aD4I ~ li'ora ~.,
p.m.
The fall Hmeater bellDI Sept. 8, Wll'-
re1l1traUoa be1la11la1·
Au1.11.
u•~•
A <;Iefecting East German soldier leaps barbed wire barricade on way to West Bertin and freedom in
thi3 December. 1961 photo. Such escapes flave smce become impossible as the east side of the Berlm
Wall has been fortified with minefields
Few ignore Berlin Wall
After 20 years, structure still symbol of death and tyran~
BERLIN CAP> -Jn the Soviet
zone of Berlin, the spotlights on'
the Brandenburg Gate went
dark. Tanks and trucks rolled in-
to position beneath its thick
s andstone colum ns . East
German militia in hobnailed
boots began rollln g out barbed
wire.
It was shortly before 2 a.m.
Sunday, Aug. 13, 1961. It was the
beginning of the Berlin Watt.
Twenty year s later, t he
barbed wire has given way to a
100-mile barrier which rings the
Western half of the city. The
wall stands as an example of
German thoroughness, with tank
traps, automatic machine guns,
watchtowers and whitewashed
concrete walls.
The wall made West Berlin in·
to an island city, frozen under
Allied occupation some 100 miles
inside East German territory. It
tore families and rriends apart
and for millions became a sym-
bol of death and tyranny. But for
the East Germans, it symbolizes
at least one success story: The
functionary who supervised con-
struction of the wall -Erich
Honecker -is now the leader of
East Germany's government
and Communist Party.
The wall is something few can
ignore.
"It's kind of hard to miss a
14-foot concrete wall," said U.S.
Army Sgt. Steven Thillen of
Rockford, Ill., commanding a
two-Jeep unit patrolling the U.S.
sector. "I don't think Berliners
have learned to live with it.
They just put up with it."
Thillen, an 8-year-old child
when the waJl went up, patrols
the wall daily with five other
men in two jeeps, one outfitted
with an M-60 machine gun.
Following the p ost-war
division of Germany into mil·
itary occupation zones. move-
ment from the Soviet zone to
the zones occupied by the United
States, Britain and France
became increasingly difficult.
Berlin, as a city occupied and
protected by all the victors in
World War II, became the main
''escape batch'' for those
wishing to nee the Communist-
ruled East.
According to West German
figures, the year before the wall
was built some 150,000 people
fled to the Western zones. As
Iranians ban
mixed sexes
• on mountains
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -
Iran's Revolutionary Council
has banned men and women
from cllmblo1 mountains
together, Tehran Radio re·
ported.
It said the order wu issued by
the Physical Trainln& Depart·
ment following J RevolutlCJnary
Council declalon to tell'•t•te the aexe1 on the mountain 1lope1.
The bn>adcut alao reported
the council barred boxiq, HY·
tna lt wu not an ltlamlc sport . Iran'• fundamentalitt lalamlc
re1lme, which overtb,... the
mourcby lD 11'1t, bu ...-.
that malea apd"'femaln b9
1ecnpMdtnmu1.lNWlelM.
apOrtbls ....m. lneludlal fttm·
mini .
I It tlK.'Ol9'... ll01lem ......
to "*" Mia when appeam, la · public.
East-West tensions movnt~
during the CokJ War and Seviet
leader Nikita S. Khrushchev de·
manded that the Allies leave
their sectors. the number of
refugees rocketed to an average
of 1,800 a day.
Many were military-age men
or highly trained ttthnicians
vital to the rebuilding of a stattt
stripped by the Soviets for war
reparations.
So while East Berlin's 1.1
m_illion and West ·Berlin's 2.2
"It's kind of hard
to miss a 14"-foot
concrete wall.''
million residents slept, the waU
went up.
Seventy-one people are known
to have been killed attempUn1 to
cross the wall since that time.
Now, the escapes from one half
of Berlin to the other have been
reduced to a trickle.
The East German government
has hailed the wall as "the day
we saved peace in Europe." T'ftO
weeks before the 20th an-
niversary of the wall's construc-
tion, the Com munist Party
newspaper Neues Deutschland
published a lengthy article en·
titled, "How the Economic War
against the German Democratic
Republic Collapsed.·' It con·
tended that the wall was built to
protect East Germany from an
"imperialist" West bent on lur-
ing away the work force.
The East Germans point to
their spectacular rise to the lotb
economic·indust..rial power m tbe
world and to the fact that the
wall forced some form of in·
temational recognition for East
O~DH1ny as a naUon. '
After so many ye.rs. many
residents appear to take the wall
and Berlin's status as a fact of
life.
Children bounce their soccer
balls aga.lnst it, graffiti' artists
s pray-paint" it with jokes,
political statements or ob·
scenities; fishermen throw their
hooks into the canals that form
watery borders to catch Com·
munist-owned fi s h . Tourists
flock through the wall at check·
points, and Allied soldiers are
encouraged to cross the border
to see the East for themselves.
Even the East Germans show it
off, bringing virtually all visit·
i,ng dignitaries to it for a view.
Sgt. James We lke r , com ·
mander of the autobahn crossing
wbere U.S. military vehicles
pass fram Ea9t German ter·
ritory into Welt Betlin, said be
was sent to Russian-language
clatsee for a year so be could
deal wilt\ the SovieU "roA tbe border. ·
"We are the lowest level of
face-to-race contact with the
Soviets and we keep it simple -
no political discussions -just to
facilitate tbe operation," the
29-year-old military policeman
frem La G~uge, JR .• said. wm ·such contacts 50~ day
allow the wall to come down?
Several years ago, ChanceUer
Helmut Schmidt said he did not
believe the wall would be re-
moved ln his lifetime .
Jn an interview published in
the magazine Stern, former
Chancellor Willy Brandt, who
was Berlin'.s mayor at the time
of t he wall's construction.
echoed Schmidt's comments.
·'The wall will disappear when
the ~elations ln Germany and
Europe radically change, and J
a m rather skeptical whether J
will ever live to see the day,"
Brandt said.
--------·
l
--------~-
flt(TITIOUI IUllMI ..
'9.AMCJT.\TaM&MT
Tiie tollo•lnt P9f'Mnt If• dol111 ll\ltlnHt .. :
SWl!l!T ALICI MUSIC. 1402 P11<ontta A"'~ C:.t.a MtM. C.. nt11 All<• M<C1llum, 1111 W. COlat
Hlgllw•Y,........., lelCll, Cl .,...
_., Davi.tr\, 11' Pllf'flor St •
Cnt• MHA. C•. m 21
Thll boltlllHI It <Oll""t ted llY a ........ l~p. Allee M<C.llllfl'I
Thh 1111-1 .... llled wllh 1119 c ou111y Clark c>I o.a.,.. ceunty .,.
All9\dl 10, 1"1
1'16'1 ..
Plllllitlt9d ()>-c .. 11 o.i1y Pll04
Aut It, If, i.. Sa9f t. 1•1 ~1
PVIUC llTXE
.
NS-1\ltlS Nl-ntl 1
NOTICe Of' DEATH Ofl NOTICE Of' D•ATH Of'
J8AHNI 8 . KISZKO HARRY (N .M .N .)
AND Ofl PETITION TO G I I S E R A N O 0 F
ADMINllTl!A ESTATE PETITION TO AO ·
HO. A-10IUS. MINISTBA ESTATE NO.
T o I I I h e I r 1 , A ·10M40.
b t neflc;larles, c r tdltors T o a 1 I h e I r s ,
and contl~tnt creditors o f benefic ia ries, c reditor$
Jeannt e . Klszko Ind andcontlnoentcrtdltors of
ptrsons who may be Harry (N .M .N .> Geiser
otherwise lntt r estod In the and persons whO m•y be
wlll end/or estate: otherwlH interested In the
A petition has been flied wlll and/or estate :
by Kathleen G arnsey In A petition has been filed
tht Superior Court o f by June Geiser L0c;3an &
Orange County requesting L e i• E . Geiser In the
that Kathleen Garnsey be Superior Court of Oranoe
appoi nted as personal County r e ques t ing that
r epr esentatl ve to ad-June Geiser L0c;3•n & Lela
minister the estate o f E . Geiser be appointed as
Jeanne E. K lszko of Co 5ta personal represe ntatives
Mesa, Ca . (under the In-to a dminister the estate of
dependent Adminis tration Harry (N .M .N .) Geiser o f
of Estates A ct). The peti· Costa M esa, C i'. (under
tlon Is set for hearing In the Independent Ad·
Oept, No . 3 at 700 Civic minist ration of Estates
Center Drive West, S anta A ct). The petition Is set for
Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep-hearing In Dept. N o . 3 at
tember 2, 1981 at 9 :30 A.M . 700 Civic Center Drive
IF YOU OBJECT to the W est, Santa Ana, C a . 92701
granting of the petition, on September 2, 1981 at
you ShOUld either appear 9 : 30 A .M .
a t the hearing a nd s tate IF YOU QBJ ECT to the
your objec t ions o r file granting of the petit ion,
written objections with the you should either appear
court before the hearing. a t the hearing and state
PICTITIOUllUllNHs Your appearance may be your objectio n s o r I lle
"""'' STATIMl!MT In person or by your at· written o b jections w ith the
T11e 1o11ow1ne .,.,._ 11 ~!NM torney. court before the hearing.
neu'" I F Y O U A R E A Your appearance may be sU:.~~-~ ~:.!!,~A~i:.'~ CREDITOR or a cont · In person or by you r at-
nw lngent c reditor o f the d e · torney.
Ketharln• aoer , lO., los ceased, you must file your I F YO U A R E A
Ceruio..w..teovi .... c. 111" claim w ith the court or CREDITOR or a cont-Thi• OUlineu I~ <onclVcMCI by •11 lfl· di.,._. present it to the personal ingent c reditor o f the d e -
K•-lne Ba1ter representative a ppointed ceased, ~ou must flle your
Thi$ "'-' .... flied •ilh tllt b th rt Ith' f I . Ith county Cl•rk 01 O<•noe cou .. ty on Y e cou w in our c aim w the court or
"11111111 10, '"' months from the d a te of present it to the personal
l't..,61 firs t issuance of letters as representative appointed
Publ•.i.ct e>renoo c ... st 0•11Y Piiot provided In Section 700 of by the court within four
_"U11 __ 12_·_"_·_24_.s._"'_·_'_·1_"_1 __ ,_n_1_ .. _1
1 the Pro bate Code o f months from the date o f
California. The time for firs t issuance of letters as
filing c laims w ill n o t ex-pro vided in Section 700 of
-----------•pir e prior to four months the Probate Code of "~c:;.~~!:~!':::S from the date of the hear -Californ ia. The time for
,.IUC MOTICE
Th• 1of1ow1ng .,.,._, I• doing bu•I Ing notic ed abOve. filing c laim s w ill not ex-
n•;!.~';LtLlv FILLY eouTlouE YOU MAY EXAMINE p ire prior to four months
POUR LE JEUNE FILLE, utt 1 .. 1 the file kept by the court. from the date of the hear-
co .. 1 Highway. Corona del Mar. If yo u are intereste d In the ing noticed abov e.
c.111orn;anu~ esta te, you may f ile a re· YOU MAY EXAMINE OoforK Olt Krull, • Catllornla <or . poranon • .,, Miiford or1w. c orona.,., ques t with the court to r e · the file kept by the cou rt.
Mar. CA mu ceive special notice o f the If you are interes ted in the
Tht• bullneu" <on011<1td by .... 1n inventory of esta t e a ssets estate, you may file a r e·
dlvl-i>otorn<M Kfull and o f the petitions, ac-quest w ith the court to re·
This 1te1wnen1 ..... '"'"' .. u11 tnt count s and r e P or t s celve special notice o f the
Counly Cieri. ol Orange Counly on described in Section 1200 inve ntory of estate a sset s
Alig.>. t"'· ,0 ,us of the California Probate and of the pet itions, a c·
Puti11.i.c1 0r-co.u1 O•lly PHOI. C ode. co unt s and r e p o rt s
Aug. s. 12, "· ,,, '"' >nHt d escribed in Section 1200
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl:SS
NAMIE STATIMINT
KLEIN & CUTLER, At·
torneys at Law, by: Leslie
Klein, 9920 La Cienega
Blvd., Ste. 631, Inglewood,
Ca. 90301; tel: 213/641-5800
of the California Probate
Code.
Tne following persons .,. doing bu,,,.... ...
J.8 INVESTMEMH , •t2 B•IDol A.::i~:~lr.l-:r CO<ltt 0•11~~~: Or .. SHI Beech, Ca. '0740
MEAD ANO MEAD, At·
torneys at Law, by: Frank
F . Mead, Ill, 1101 Dove
Street, Suite 170, N ewport
Beach, Ca. 92660; tel:
714/833-9033 ~rk C. Bl-bach, 612 8•1Dol
Or . SHI llHcll, Ca 'ICl740
Rotamary l Bled•bac11. 611
BllbOe Or , Saal Beec:n, Ca. 90740
Cwolyn S Jenkin•. 1101 Landing
A"' • SHI lleecn, Ca. t0140
fhl• t>u•lnen I$ conG11<l•d l>Y • Qenor11 per-tnenf11p.
Marl<C 11'-bocll Tllll lle..,,_I WM filed •llh lllt
countr Clerk of Oranoe County °" Aug<llt 10, ltll ,1..,U
PUDlllilltCI O<enot CO<IJI 0•111 Pllof A.,g, 12, It, 26, Sept, 2, 1•1 J~I
NIUC MOTlCE
l'ICTITIOU$ 8USINESS NII.MC STATIMl!N'T
The toll-1"11 1Mrton I• doing bull· ,,.,,.,
BILLS GLASS WORKS. •U N
Chip-•ti. AtllMlm, C•. '2801 Wiiiiam er-n Ml<k, u s N CNP. pe-• .-..-1m, Ce '1IOI
This blnl11en Is t onducted by •n In·
dlvl-1. Wllllem 8 Mick
Tnb Itel-I w•s filed .. Ith the Cou11ty Clerll of Ora119e Count, on
August 10, ltll .. , .. , ..
Published OrM>Qe CO.\I 0 111' Piiot Auo 11, It, 26, S.PI. 1, lttl 3SIHI
PllUC MOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS
NAME STATEMENT Tiie loll-1119 penon f\ doing IN•l
ntHM
XCAL1 8ER INVESTMENTS, 2MS
EUI Coesl Hl9'1 .. •Y. •>04, Coron. Oltl
Mi r, CA '2a15
L•wrence J Vlanl, UOO Park Newport. •>U. Newport Beec:I\, CA
'1UO.
Tiii• bu\IMU h conOIKtad Dy •n In dlvldlMI
L.ewrenu J Vl•N
fll~ statenwnt we• 111..i wlllt lllt County Clerk of Orange Counly on Aug l , lfll ""' .. Putlll.,.., Orenge c ... 11 Oally Piiot,
Aug. S, U, "· 14, 1 .. 1 JUl .. 1
PllUC llllCE
l'tCTITIOUS 8USINl:SS
MAMIE STATl!Ml!NT Th• followlng per>0n1 •r• Going
bullolneuas
!COASTLINE MARINE SERVICE,
"' Main St .. Sta U , tiunllngton BNclt,Ca .,._
Merlin H. Tyler, JOI Huntington
St .. H-lntlon llNch, C•. f?...e
Paoil IElstmen, 119 Sllf\n's Ori,,.,
Leo-lle«ll, C•
Tiiis INSlllOH h <ondutted by a
llmlled pertnen hlp, Marlin Tyler
This si.--WH Ill.cl with t.,.
ColH'lt' Cterk ol Oranoe County on
August 10, 1tll.
1'16'171
Pubtl.,.., Ora1191 c ... 11 Dally Piiot
A.,g, 12, If, i.. Sa91, 1, lfll ..... I
l'ICTITIOUI IUllNl!U
MAMI STATl!MINT
T,.. followtne -tc1111 ••• d•l119 bvsl-•:
THf INTERIOR AllTllTE, lfOI
SOutll Coot Or. a J1t, GoUa ~M, Ca, .,.,..
RkMrd L kllUllt, t7 MlfldreQ
'W•y.:. I~,~. '271J
-.. Ole,.. .. t7 MM!cl•.U •• ., .• ,..,.,..,Ce. '271.t
....... J. Ollet"9C•, 11 Mlflllt•• Wey, lrvlnt, C1. ft71S
Tlllt 1W.i11ttt It tolldU<tH DJ 1 ..,..,.1,.,_..,..
0.vlcll.~
Tlllt .. ..._, -Ill• wltll 11\e
PUIUC MOTlCE
NS-79112
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
WALTER KISZKO ANO
OF PETITION TO AO·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A ·109834.
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, c r e ditors
and contingent c reditors o l
Walter Kiszko and persons
who may be o the rwise in·
terested in the will a nd/or
estate :
A pet ition h as been filed
by Kathleen Garnsey In
the Super ior Cou rt o f
Orange County requesting
that Kathleen Garnsey be
a ppointed as personal
representative t o ad
m i nis t e r the estate o t
Walter Kiszko of Costa
Mesa, Ca. (under the In·
dependent Administration
of Estates A ctl . The petl·
tion is set for hearing In
Dept. N o . 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive W est, Santa
Ana, Ca. 92701 o n Sep ·
tember 2, 1981at9:30 A .M .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the pe tition,
you should eithe r appear
at the hearing and state
your object ions o r file
written objection s with the
court before the h earing.
Your a ppearance may be
In person o r by your at-
torney.
IF YOU ARE A
Publll/locl Orenoe Co.1ll O•lly Pilot A.,g 12, tJ, It. ttl1 ,._.,
f'UIUC llllCl
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINf.SS NAME STATEMENT Tiie lofl-•l\Q .,.,_, I\ OO•ng t>u•I· ,,.,, .,
SIERRA Oil PARTNERS V, lt113
Brookhursi, Fount•111 Valley, CA
tllOI
FR ... NK II OAllllNG, ltlll
Brookhur\I, Founl•ln ll•ll•y CA
"'°' Thi\ bu\lness •• conduct•d bv " 11m11eo pe..-i/'t1p
Fren& R O•rllng
fhos llaltment w•• l1lecl •1111 Ille
County Cllf'll ol Clf•l\OOI County Oii Jul,
20, '"' "'-PuDlltlled Clr•nvt Co•sl Da lly Piiot, July n. H. Auu s. 11. ,,., J212_.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAMl ITATEMINT Tiit 10110 .. 1ng per .. 011' art doing
buslneuat TRADER JOE'S MARKET NO JS, 10J E. I/th Stru t, Coll• Mtu,
C•lllorN• mv Pronto Market No 1. Inc. a
Calltomla corpo,.llon, SJt Mlulon
Street, S...11\ Pet•d•n•, Celllornl•
tlOJO
Thi• ~lltt• It Condll<leO by •t or
por•tlon. PRONTO MARKET NO I
INC
David VOda, Secretary
fhlt tU.l-1 WIS Ill.cf wlll\ IM
County Clerk of Orange County on
Avg l, ltll
l'U1W
Plllllltlled Or-Co.Ill O•llY Pllol,
Aug S, 11, It, U, l"I UIMI
PUil.JC MOTlCE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS
NAMC ITATl:Ml:NT
The tollowl119 .,.,_, h OOlnQ bu"
neuat:
CALl,ORNIA SIDING, :/OU !.Cl Van
Natt, s.nt. Alta, CA '7101 ,r_ "'""" Sa., .. tolS $o VM Nus, S.m. ""'· CA '2701 Thi• bull11KS I• <Olldu<e.d by an In·
dl•l-1
Fr.,, A. S.1rs
Thll atei-t WM fllael with lllt
County Clarll of Orange County on A119,J, l .. I
""'"'' PubH-Orange Coul 01lly Piiot,
Aue S, 12, It, U , '"' J4SHI
C R EDITOR or a cont·
lnoent creditor of t h e d e -
c eased, you mus t file your
c laim w ith the court or
present It to the personal
representative appointed
b y the court within four
months from the date of
firs t Issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 o f
the Probate Code o f
Calif o rnia. The time for
filin g c laims w ill not ex·
pire prior to four months
fro m the date of the hear·------... -~--[---
Ing noticed above. .....,. '''""'
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interes ted in the
estate, you may file a re-
quest with the court to re ·
celve special notic e of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, a c ·
c ounts and report s
desc ribed In Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
KLEIN & CUTLER, At· torney1 at Law, by: L•sllt
K ltln, tt20 L• Cl•nsta Blvd., Ste. 631, l~ltwoocl,
Cl. 90J01; t .. : 21'/M1 ·SIOO
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIU llAMl ITA'TEMINT
Tiie lollo•lng pef\ons are doing
ltUJlnet.a .. ,
MOJAX IMPORTS, J/001 C•llt
Or....ct., Clpltlreflo Beecll, Ca. '2•2• -tOl'i. V. Aeotla, 1tll Corl-
Cler·O, Colle Mffl, Ce '1tJ6
, ...... """"' de Colon'll>I, 21001 Call• OrMIMM, Capltlreno Buch, Ca.
'2'24
Tllla °"'lnou II cond11(ll d t f • .....,. .. ,.,, ...........
llMl'Jwlo v. A<otll
lltl ... l'aww de Colomot
TMt •t-1 •• Ill.cf wllf1 h c~, Clel'll of Or....-Counly 011 Jiiiy
u, '"'· .. , ....
~,...... °'""' Cooal D•llr Pllof Allt• s, 12,, t•, Jt, Ht1 Uls.:11
P\llllllllltd Orlfltit , ..... O•Oy PllPI ' PUBLIC NOTICE
A11t. U, IJ. It, H•t '62141 --
C_.y Clltll of OfMet C11111ty 411 -------------1 lllC'l'ITIOUI aUSIMIH
A.-tt, ltlt. rmJC tl'fl( MAMllTATIMINT
flltlt14 Tiit IO!lewlflt IM'IO'\l .,.. H l11g "'* ..... o..,. ee. .. Deity,.,.... ------------1.,...,,.... .. ,
Orango Co&1t DAILY PILOT/Wednnday. Augu1t 12, 1981
l't(TITIO< 8Ull118U
NAMa n•TIU.WNT
Tiie 1o111wlnt 1N•te11• er• llol"I llllslntts• 'l)(Tl!INfH '1Rlllt. r )OINT
Vl!NTUNI, 1 ... 1 AltollQUlrl $1rMI.
11111• H, "'1ntl11910ll .. ach, CA t2Mt
KlllV iNOW, IM/\ aar11tWOI• l •n•, Hunllf181M iee<h, CA.,_
I ARLA $HOW, lM/I l••ll•l•IM• Lane. H111111nui0n ... ,II, CA., ....
MICHAll '"IV 'I', UH i l 1rf\ll..._ L.ent, HW1ll119ton le1e11,
CAtttH,
Tl\11 -•ntn la tc1nd11<ltG Dy •
toner al --tl\lti Kally$1Ww
Thie stet-I ... Ill.cf .. 1111 11\0
C...,,1y ClotB ti 0.-•"91 Geu11ty on Nly
10. ''" '"' .. , P1.1bll•11oc1 °'~ co.st 0.11, P1'91. Jul' 12 1', A110 S. 12, lftl U/Mt
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllCTITIOUl IUtlNaH
NAMa ITATIMUIT f ... IOllOOOllllO pet_.. i. OOll'Q IN>I n.u .,
THE OOlO EXCHANQE, SOO
Altor11, '"'',,.· C•lll~lll• tt/n Al•ll VH0..11, ~) AltOfll. Ir vino
Cl lltornla fUIS
Tllll .,.,_ .. " tenclv<led by ... Ill
dlvldll•I
Al ... V•rd<HI Tnl• u ... ~ ,,..i fllod .. Un 111•
l'IC'TI TIOUa •uttNIU
•-'MelfATalldllT
l h• 11111aw1.,, ,.,.,1t1 .,. dotnt
Mhle .. H
.,, L.1 OILIVIR'f u11111ca. IUto l a tte A"'e•we, Ulllt U , WHtmln.Rtf, CA '2tll
LUTHlllR L!l40V MOH, 10100
I 01t1 A-. UNI ,., W•alf'flln•m. CA tl.-J
'ONA Al ltli MOTT. 10200 atiw A"'•nue U"ll io.. W•tlMllltlaf CA ntQ
Tnlt Mino" 16 (Of'4Juttfl! DY an In dtwl011•I
l.lllhff l t<Oy Molt Thll ..... .._, w .. fllld •1111 fh•
(ounty c .. rk ot Otanwe Cou111v on Jlil'I lt. 1\1111 .. ,.,, ..
l'ul>llNltd Oranoe C.O.st 0111• 1>1111. J11ly H , Aug ~. 11. tt 1•1 lM-el
P UBLIC NOTJ<'":
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINaH
NAMI! STATCMCNT
rne IOUOWlllQ per-. IS dot119 """ ~,, ..
\LIOINC, OARAC.E DOORS, tl41 Mll<ll•ll. fu\lln Celllornla ,,._
SUOING GARAC.E DOOR CO ,
U•I M•lll\011, lu\l•rt, C.•lllorn1• f l*
Fr•ntl\ 011y (am~nell• J< l:MI
M•lll\•11 T1.1•lln C•lllO<lll• 9ltl0
T n1\ OU\J~\ It londv< lt<I Oy •n If\
(livtdu•l
Co.1nly c .. r~ of O<..,. (OUnly on J11ly tr
JI, 1't t rnit \t•t•,,...nl .... , fll'° wttn .,,,
""' 111 (.u;.nly t "'" UI O• ~""" t ounty 011 July PuOll\.IWcl Or•nQot CO.\I 0•1ly Pllol. 10. 19'1
July 1•. "'WO ~ 11 "· 1tt 1 l»-~t
PlJBLIC' NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAME STAT!MlNT
I lie 1ouw1119 P'"""' " doing °"''
,., ... ,,
Publl•IW<I 0.•no-lU•\I 0•11• Pllol,
July 11 lV Auti ~ I/ '""' JlU 11
P URI.IC' NOTICE
llfh o "ICTI ffOUS IU$1NE SS
INlER Sf AMP CO i.1 C.1ell0bl• NAMt STATlMtNT
l •M, CO>W ~. CA 9UJ1 I II• '""""'1~ per ,.,n l\ doing t>u\I
NANCY C.RANI. >•• C.1•noo1e n ..... L•ne,Coota~w.CA'l-1nl j fllRI A V• ART •flt w1ncho119 fnl\ _,,,.., h concluci.4 01 • .,1n Av•1111~ u P.1,... L•1t•0<n1• ~n
dlvld\Jal Ru.,.tl• M V•nMr Uu, .. n, c/tt
Nen(y Gr•nl W1na\ong ••~llu• l• "•Im• fM\ ..... .....,, •I• lllod with ltw t.•11to1n1• 'IOUl
Counly Cler" ol 0<""9t Coun1y on July ""'DU$<"""" cono11<l•d by •n '" >t. 1911 dl••Oual
'1•1111 R<MWn• M v..-r Ou•Mn
P"bll'ht(I <>•noe '°''' D•••v P1•0•. Thi~ U•Ctnwn1 •• , hltlld •11" '~
July,, A.,g ~. ''· "· 1911 ~I Counly ,,.,. OI °''""°" COV~ly on JUI•
PlJBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tl\• IOllowl119 fl(!r'M)fl IS dolf19 t>u\I
"'".' M OBILE M OIORLYCll
1V 1991
l'l-PullllV-0 Ur•!\111! C.o•\l o ••• , PllOI,
Jul1 ll.1~ Aug ~ II, 1'1111 J141 81
f>UBLIC: NOTICE
l'IC TITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME UAfEMIHT f llt foflowl119 oer'°" " OO•ng bu\I ,..,, .,
111u1nout eut11••11 NAM&tlATS.MaMf rr,· fatlo ...... ,.., .... , .,. dtln• ..... _ ..
MC l.•001,.AC"IC .\SIOOIATU,
UN• l111elre Circle, H11nt11111on ltacll, CA 9»4'.
o-.i-*~· i ... •-"• Cir( It. HUlllll\CllOfl leecl\, CA tlWt Ale .. ndtr DHn MCLt9f, t•O ..
ltNll'e Clrrle, .. ""1111'10" IHO, c;A '2tft
l Ill• 1>111lneu I• 'MleluUed •1 • h11.---.. 11·
0...8'-McL.eM Tiii.a , .. i-t w•t flltll with Illa
COUlll'I Cl•r• OI O<a11u-County "" A110 J, 1"1 .... , ..
P11t11llllH Oranvt CN U O•lly Piiot, Aug l, U, It, i., t .. I l4JO 11
T'.,
l'ICTIT10UI 8U .. Nl.U ~tTATaM&WT
T"-IOllOWlllf IN•-t are -.1111 _,_. ...
IOL WIST AN IMAL H0$1'11'AL, tt4t lolH Alfaflu•, WHIMlllltl•r, c.111 .. 1111 ,._,
Jo...., v ""'1••Y. o.v.M . 1 .. c.,
• c1111 .. n1a "'-•lien . .,., llotw AVtflilO, Wttlmlntt•r. Cellrornl• ,, .. ,
T111, Mlnnt It 'tlflCklCllO by • t ot
POt•llon.
J°'*911 v 81tllay.
0 V M, Int JOW9fl V, &.rifer
Pretleltll4
U.Offtt"of
MA•C•.TOW . ,
H1S VII°'"""· 1411 .. lll U4ltMMIMYiM191
Ne•l'Wt 8aaCll. CA~
,..,,_ I
l'1cnT1ou11u11..au PUBLIC NOTICE Mii.Ma STATl:AlllNT _ _ ---
l>U!~O~~owlng ff,.on• •rt doing l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
AUEMBl y HOUr.t , llJ f. NII.Ma ITAT .. MaNT
Pavlwlno, Cast• Maia, CA thh bu!::.~,~0~~~"'1"' per'°"' •r• doing JOSE~ A SPOLLINO, tdJ N. ORANGE COUNTY ATHLETIC Cltvel-. Cl<MO-, CA ttM7 VIRGINIA M SPOLLINO, lOJ N CLUB, ll•ll lrvlne 8oulalfard, S1.1lte 701, f Ullin, CA "6JO, Cl•• .. -.Or.,c.t.CA'2MI A fHLON CORPORATION, •
This butlnou '' conOl.l<tad by In c.111orn1a COfllOllllon, IOU lr-1111,
dlwldu•U IH-nd a Wiit) Sant• Ana, CA '110S
J_,,.A Soolllno DOUGLAS INVESTMENTS, a Virginia M Sc>olllno l;•llfornl• corporeuon. 11•1 1rvl11• TlllS ll.ll.,,,.111 ,.._ Ill to wllh the 8oule•e,d, TUllln, CA ttWD
Coun1, Cl•rk of Or-County on J11ty Tith t>uslneu I• tOnGuCl•d br •
JI '"1 g•noral JN111\ertnlp, ~UIW ATHlON CORPORATION P\lbfltlled 0r ... uo CO<l\I O••IY Piiot. Wiiiiam G o. ....
AliO S, 12, If U , 1 .. 1 Hl4 ti Pnsidtflt •
rnh •l•l.,,..nt •e) Ill.cl .. 1111 Ille PVIUC MQJ1C( County Cl•r' OI O.•nve County on Jury
-------------10. '"'
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllC'TITIOUt 8UlllllU
N.AMI STATIMallT
T ... IOllOW1"9 porSOf!t •rt •01119 11<1sl11estas.
ROGERS' QUICK Oil CHANOI.
1509 Hllfltlnqton SCIWI, NO. 4, 1411111
lnglOll IMcll, Clllloml• ....
Charlu W. 11099"· UOt H1111t lnglon, No. 4, H11nllng1on 8Hcll, C•lllornla.,...
Wallda L.. Rogors, UOt Hllllfll\lllOll. No 4, HU"llngton ee.ch, Celllornlt ,, ....
O•vld W Wllllam.1 UOt H1111t l11gton, NO. 4, H11n1111gton Buell,
C•lllor11I• t2t4I
Tl\h bl.lslnou .. C.O<ldll<IM Dy • genoral ,.,-lnltf'Jlllp.
W-L.11-n Tiii• JUl ......... I wal fllod .. 1111 Ille Cou111, Cltrl< of Or-County on July
11, lttl .... , ....
l'ICTtTIOUS 8USINl:SS
NAME STATEMIENT
llHOOES, ltENOAll. a HAii· R INO TON 111.,IJt
A .. R 0 I' t s s I 0 .. A L L A w Pwbll.,.., Or.nve to.st Dally Piiot,
f ht IOllO•lng P••tOl\l .,. OOlng
bu\lneua1
COllPOllATIC>fol July )t, A.,g. S, IJ, It, lfll Jl6/.ft
MR 0 S FINE GIFTS & COLL EC
Tl BLES. Sii ttlh Strtet, Ne•POrl 8tatt1, C.lll0<n1a ,, .. J
RGGL C0<PO<•llcw. • C•lllornta <Of
Poratlon 9•1 Ea\1 B•lboa Bou••••rG
Bal-. Calll0<n1a '1Mt
Tiii\ bu\ln•n I• conCIU<ltd by• <0< -··-Rc.GL CORPORA flON
Gono Of S•no, PrHIGe"t
Tiii\ , .. ltmant w•> 1119'1 wlln llw
Coun1, Cl•r~ of Or •nQt County on July
)1, l ffl
429' Mac""11Wr ll•d .. S..lta ltl N ... par1 INcll, CA.,_
l'I ..... PuOIO\'*' Orange Co.t•I Oe•ly Pllol, Jv'• n n Aug s ,,, 1 .. 1 3111 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
su .. 1111~ COUllT 01'
CALI l'OllNIA, COUNTY Ol'OllANO•
0110! II TO SNOW CAUSE 1'011
I' 161,.. CHA NOE 01' NAM•
PuDll\/Wd Or•-Co.t•I Dally Pilot, CASI NO. AIM/II A11g \, 11. tt, 16 1.-1 Hll 11 "' lltt melter ol appllcallon ol
l'UIUC Mm:C
PHILLIP BRETT BRADWAY
MR & MRS STEVEN MITCHELL
h•~• lllect • oe11Uon •n "''' coun for •n
PUBLIC NOTICE
1'1CTITIOUS 8USINISS
NAMI STATl!MINT
fht IOllowlng person• •rt Going
bu\lneHl.J
WEE NEEDLE. JOS Palm Str•t. B•lbol, Cllllcwnl1 '17661 Ge orgl • Hoehl, 41 S ., • .,
lagew•tar. Bllbol. Calllornt• '*' Deb,. l'•ul, 200) Eatt Ocu n. Balbol , C.lllornl• ., .. ,
T nh bol'lneu " conauc led by a llmtte(lpw1-p
GeOrol• He<hl
Thi\ 1tatement ••• filed with 11\0 Cou111y Oen o1 Orenoo c-.., on J111y
20, 1911 1-------------order •llOWlng petitioner to <Nl\QOI nl• l'IM4M n•me l•om PHILLIP BRETT Pwbll_()>_to.Sl O•llY Piiot, FICTITIOUS I U"NESS
NAMISfATEMl:NT BRAOWAY to PHILLIP llllEfT J11ly1J,2',""'9 S,U,ltll l11H I
REPAIR & RENTAi. I/ft S,,,.,,
L•n•, Nt*POr'I Buell. C1h1ornle 91660 Wllll•m JOl\n Edelllau~r Jr I/ct
~~yla1' l -. C•l1l0<n•• tl't>60
Hu' buS'nt-u 11 cono~t•d O'f •n 1n
Olvitdu•I
BENNE T! 1. A~SOCtAI ES, 1171 Tht lollowtng Ptr\On• a<e doing
Gttnoyre, •11• Lagun• Btacn. llu\IN\\•t
MITCHE LL
11 •S nen t>v oro.re<J tl\at all per-.s
W1tl1•m JOl'n E<Mltwu\.r,. Ji
lhl\ •lllllfl'l4tlll wo lllt!CI .. 111\ In• County Clerk of 0<""91! Cuu11ty on July
lt. 1911
1'16111•
PUOll\lllld Or•n~ Co.\I 0•11, Pilot
July 14, AllQ ~ I) 19, tftl llll 11
PUBLIC NOTICE:
l'ICTITIOUS IU$1NE5S
llAME STATEMENT
f ht IOOOW1119 per-. I\ doing bu\I ne\s .,
C•llf0<nta t26SI ESTELLE AlL,.,.ROALE. 1'SJ E
S•nll<• Benntll, ~·· M••dowl•"' I Co•SI ... ..,, Corona Gel M•r. C• nus l •gvn• Baec:n, Calllornl• U1Ut Fr-A Rol>ert-on. fH BOSIO. Thi> t>u\l~f I• candu<ltd ow •n in Or•••· 0 1, Nt•PGrl Buen, C• t1'60
Givl-J-V A-•''°" 91~ B•v•loe 5-fa Bt,.,,.11 Ortwt 0 ), N"'porl BHCll C• '1..0
Tiii' •lalllfl'l4ttll .... flltd with Int r11 .. l>USIMU "<ondutltct Dy •n In
Count, Cl~r~ 01 O•angt County on dlWIOual Aug ) 1 .. 1 Frank A ROO.rt>On
Flt/... fhlS t .. ltmen( .... llltO Wlln ""'
Put>lli.twd Or111go (IM\I Oally Piiot. COUf\t~ Cl•rk Of Qfange Count1 on July
'"'''•'''° tn .,. ~u9r •l0tew'o •P. Ptar btlOft 111" <OW1 •n a-rtmenl No ) •I /CtO C••k C.nler Orin Wut, MH9Mt
S4n1a A,.., Clhlorn1• on ~I 2, ltlt, llfOTIClf 01' MU! 011
•I 10 lO • m . and tntn and Ir.rt "'°"' lll:AL l'llOPCllTY AT , ...... II ..,y lr.y NYt, why U ld pell rlllYATI SAL•
lion lor en-ol nafl'l4t sllould not be Ne. Al•US O••nlltO Swpt rlor Court of Ille Stah of
11 " 1unner °'""'"' "'411 • '°"' 0 1• Calll0<N• tor Ille Counly o1 o. ... ee tnl1 OrOtr 10 \llOw <•uw bt put>ll.ned In Int m11ter of the o t•tt of 1n Int 0 11ly Piiot, a naww.iper ol H E L EN MI LL E II, I k a MR i
gentr•I <"<ulallon, P\lb4•v.d 1n thll DOUGLAS MILLER, •ka HELEN P Aug S ll. It 16 14'1 JO) II JD, 1 .. 1
l'IUttl <Ounly II IU\I 01\U ... Mk for '°"' MILLER, c_u, ..
PUBUC NOTl('E
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME STJHIEMENT
Put>O\n.d Oran~ Co.111 Oally Pllol tonsee1mve week\ prior LO th• ... .,. 01 Notice 11 herft>ot Vfven tl\al Ille ""
Aug ' 11 1• n "" lS16 t' W•G ,. .. ,."II Otr\lgned wlll Mii at cw•••ta w4e, 011
I OA f E 0 July ?t. 1981 or after IN 11111 CS.y of AUIUll. lfll, al ••atlC .a11ncE Ronald H Prenn•r. '"' olllca ot P••nn•d Protective rv r.11 J~ Of IN S.rvl<H, lllC , l1"2 y ~ ... Orlw ,
AMCO 8 Ull.OERS SUPPLY 1~14
Ntwp0r1 BlvG (0>1• M0\<1 Callt0<n1•
'1UI
-------------• S.-rlOt Court olllce " L.•g11ne Hiii•, Count, of Tn• lollowif\11 _ _, IS !JO•r>Q l>U\• I l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS De1111h 0 llcry Orang•, St.te of Clllf0<nl•, tel~
neU•• NAMIESTATEMINT etllW••tmlMterAve. (/U ) •s1--.. to h hl~t -!IHI
OonalG '> wooch, ,.., Ot !lo•• ht ••ct, C0<ona 0.1 Mar C•ll1orn1• t1-1S
fhl~ bu\tntt.\ U (Of'MluCted Dy 4Hl 1n
OivldUll
M l'>~llDVNE CONS Ul T HIC. fn• /ofl-1119 per'°" it ooing t>usi WHIMIM'9r. CA t?ta 111-r. --jec:t to t-irm•tlon b' 41'0 P•rk. Nt•PG'l Apl 11, N-P0<1 nen •s 11141 H t.otn w ld Suc>fflor Court. •II r19ht, 1111• -
8 .. ch <•llfOfn•a 91..0 AMERICAN 01 L EXCHANGE, $4/ Pullll\""' Or•noe Co.t•I O•lly Piiot, lnlHHI of Wld <onMrv•t.e In ..... to
D••ltf>t Ann Mi\\lldu,. '7~ P•r• S•n NltOI•• D• Suitt lilt NtwPort J11ly ~·.Aug S. 12 "· Ut l "'4 .. 1 •II IM GIH'i.ln rMI pr_.ty "' ..... In
Oon.IG') w-Thl\ \Wlemtnl •• , filed Wlfl1f\ tM
Counl~ (ltn. of 0<•"9t County on July ,. '"'
NtwpOrt apt 2•, Ntwport Burn Buch Calll0<n1a '1'60 the Cou11ty ot Ora11ge, Slet• Of C•1110,n••~MO ft\~ J Molt, 111 Domingo Or. 1.•UBLIC NOTICE C•Utor"'i•. PMlk"l•r•Y dew:rlmc:J ., ftu~ °'1'\•~'' 1 coru1vi ••d bv .tn m flrite•PC>t1 6••<h, C•Hfor-n1• 91660 .-foUow,. to-wit
01•1G11•1 fhls buslntts h <Dn<lv<ltd by •n on PA RC El I Dwelling U111t C In fl..... D.rlf'fW 4tlfl Mt\\1ICJH• d 8 J I N
Put>llshodOr-Coa.t D•llY Polol tnos •l.llJ!n.nt ... , '''"° wom tn. 1•1-1rnon-.s J Mull NOTICE OF DEATH OF s:O~dnn!. t~tl:~.:,.• ~~~:~
July n. Aug ,, U, 1', ,,., 1~t1 l.ounh C.1••• of C•••nQ< I.Wiiiy on Jul~ fhl\ .t•lomt>nl ••• 111eo ••In Ille W I NE FR E 0 0 Y KS TR A Plan •tt«hed to -m.-• per1 ol
/<) , ... , ,l_S Counly c ...... ol Orano• Count, "" c u R T I s s I a k a 11\al CWlain 0.Clerellon of COVHllnll, ""II J. l't t WINEFREO 0 . CURTISS, COfldltlo<H -Rfltrlctlons re<.Of'<MG Pul)llSIWd llUl\Qt L11••• L>•llY P1101 1'16/Ul Ffflfu.,., l, tm, In --..... p~
July,, 1'I AUQ ~ 11 t4tt 321/ ,, Pvb11\1Wd Or•nQt CO<lll D•••• P•lol. a k a w I N I F R E 0 ns. of Olfk••• lle<Of'cb In tM office of
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'tCTITIOUS I USl .. !SS NAME STATEMENT
fht tollo"Wlf\Q per"ons •r• doffl(I •
buslntu "'
PUBl.IC' NOTICE
111 OIVERSIFIEO COM l'ICTITIOUS•USINESS
MOOITIES INTERNATIONAL, ()) NAME STATEMENT
OISTRIBUllON CONSULIANfS rn~ follow•~ p'"'°" "doing t>u\I
INfERNATIONAl, Ill M U M S Mn .. AERO AUTO CRAFfERS, tSOO s MODEL TECHNICS, 140 81rcll
Lyon Slrffl, s.nt• An•, CA t,,OS ~trot, Newp>n Buth, (A '17..0 OAVIO WAYNE MILLER 110.1 DOUGLAS A "'"res 114 (tc.11
$ud1t1t .. w ...... founl•1n Vall•Y. CA Pl•tt C~I• MH• CA 'l?U/ '110I fr"' buslnf''\~ 1\ conc:hK.ft"'O b't' •n 1n
JOHN "Al IE UNGER IJ1' Glv•ou•I
C0<Dle Circle, Vl\I•, CA t?OeJ Oouo•••"' V•I••
Thi\ bus.Mu h condvcted by • ''"' U•1f"fnent .,., .. , f1ltHJ ''"'" ,,. gtneral PMlnftr\/110 Cou11ty Cl•n. o1 Or•,. C:ou~ly on July
0.VIG WAyne Moller )0 l'llll
Tllll •l•lomMI ..... "'"" With ""' l'l....n County Clerk of Orill\90 Counly on July Publl•Nd Ounoo Cf\ot 0•1iy P1101,
19 I'll luly 72 1'I A.,g S 11 1"91 J)/f I I
1'167176
Publ"lllld Or•rtQO Ccw\I Daily Pllol, July 1', Aug ,, I,, It tfll W/ 11
PlJBLIC NOTICF.:
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS I USINESS
liAMl STATEMENf
f t't~ t0Uow1n9 ~''on' err OolnQ
"ICTITIOUS IUSINEU bu\1n .. , •>
NAME STATEMENT COi i ORAPERY ANO CARPET
Tlle lollowlngPtPrwn l•OO•nQt>u\I CLEANERS, INC 11'/ log•n
n•n H A•tnv• COll• ~"' C•l1torn11 9161-
NE WPORl INOUSlRIES, LIO , R & A Cl~•nttt, Inc (a C•llf0<nla
u 1 Cat>rlllo Slr~•I, Co"• Mew, CA (orpor•llonl IHI Lo91n A .. nu•
'11611 Co••• Mrw Cal1torn1a 9~2'
MICHAEl BRUCE EMMONS, .. , r111, °"'"'"'' .. <Onductt<I by • (Of C•brlllo Slrttl, CO'\I• M .. •. CA '1611 por~llon
Tnl• Du\lnen" <ondUCl~G by an on R & A CLEANERS INC
dlVIOIJ•I Rk .... rd w Roulltf
M1cri.1 B Emmon• I Pttt1<len1 Tnls •lett,.,.,.fll w•• 111eo will\ the l h" >Ullement w•s flied wltn lho
County Clerk ol Or•noP Coun!Y un July County Clar• Of 0<•"91 County on J11ly
10, Htt 11 l~tl ..,...,. .. ,..,..
Published Or•nge co.1~1 01111, Pllol Publh1'90 Or•noo CO<l•I D•ll y Piiot
July n 2' A.,g s. tJ. l'ltl J11Wt July n. Auo S 11 1• 14'1 ~ 11
PlJBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
"ug '· t), I'"· 1 .. 1 l•/7 ti DYKSTRA CURTISS, aka IM County llecoroitr of°'-Court·
WINIFRED 0 CURTISS ty, c.1t1om11. -• '""" ,_.,,,¥!.._
Pl'BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
I II• loflOwif\Q ~f\OI\ 0\ doing buSI
neu tt\ c. f~ TEXAS Lf01G rs TEXAS II
L l 0 t111 Serttl-011•• N•wpOrl Buen, Callf0<nla 'l?t.00
• ' lntrrest In -to Loi• 3 -4 of Trect ANO OF PETITION TO No. 1t24e• w ,,..P recor<teo 1n a-
AOMINISTER ESTATE ttt, P~•4S-.. o1 Mltc:elle-•
NO. A109746. Maps In Ille olll(a of •.id County
Recorder. •how" •"d defined •1 T 0 a I I h e i r s I "Common Aru" on .... •bove·
bene f iCI arieS, Credi l Or S reltrre<l IOConclomlNum Pten
and contingent cred itors of Lo~:~·:..,"'\ :9:.':;';.~~!,°;~2~ .:'.
W lnefred Dyks tra C urtiss, 101n;119 Wiid Loh hnd 4.
a k a Wlnefre d D. Curtiss, AtlO •K-41"11 -,.._,,.,.. ""'o
aka Winifre d Dykstra ~": .. t::'.:·.!i~ -'":.=.,•1~.
Dy • C urtiss, a k a W inifred 0 . lerul In H id lott l •fld 4 non
Curtiss. a nd person s who exclu•ln euemenh e 11d no11
may be Otherwise interest· UCIUtlve rlgil'IU of way 0....,., ulleler
e d i n t he w 111 a n d I o r end uc>on ,,...w PO<tloM ot Mid Lob J •nd 4 Up0n wflk h 110 llulldlfll Of 0-
RoDtrt E ""'._ 1$ll S.nll•llO
Dr 1¥«. N•'#OOr-t 8••t h C•l•fOrnl•
'1..0
This l>U•lnH\ " tonduclu llmlltO PlrtlWt i/'tlp
ROt»rtE An•-~r•I Partrwr
lhll \l.ll_.,I ... , llled with Illa
<.uunly Cit"' ol Clf•noP t.ounty on J111y
t1 19'1
PuOI•"' Or.1N9 '°""Dally Pilot Ju
I y 11 ?• A11Q ), I). 1911 JU•-tt
P UBLIC NOTICE
llfOTICI TO CONTRACTOU ~LLINO 1'011 llDt
S<ltool Olstrkl c ... ,, CommU<11ty
Coll-O•"rlcl Bid O...Sllnt 1.ao o'<too p.m of
the JSOt UV of A1191nt, 1•1 Pla<.a ... Bid Re<elPI Office Of .,..
P11rclla lng Aotnt, M$ Merl•n Perrin,
Coast Community Coll-Ol•lrlcl,
1310 Adams An . Co.I• ~s•. CA
'uu Projact IG•nllllc•llon Name
Or•11g• Co•ll Collet• Enar9y
Conwnallon-urtt R!BIO •IO'll
Piece PIMs .,. "" tilt ornu of
Physic•• Fec:lllllH Plannl119 ITr•llt<
Comptu1. to.•t Com"""'11y Col••
Ohlrlct, UIO Adam\ A•• , Colla
M•w. CA t2'». Ofllc• 01 Jollrl Potter,
Olra<IDr 17141 SJ6.S101. NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN 11\al
eS tale. strwct11r• "•s been erected ror
A pet ition has been flied nMUHry or detlrlbl• l1111rts\ or
b C k N t . I B k tgreu. i.1evhlon ~. -rQnlUl'd Y roe e r a 1ona an ' .. ,, .. ..,., condulh '°" t lac:tr1c11v.
s uccessor to Unite d S tates te••P""-.,.., ....... pu,_, end ec
National Bank o f San <outremMet ~. -n. dl•IM,
D . ' th S . r wal•r, OAS -SIHITI lllPH • .,,., ec 1e g o, tn e uperto coutt•-U1r.r.to,1ndlor101Cllroo1
Court o f Orange County ov1rna11oun11otM<encn>«h,,..,,tso1
r e questing tha t Crocker •llkeorc11u1mll•ir klnd,l099hr•lt11
National Bank, s uccessor ,.,. rig111 "°'onwy ••o --no 10
to the Unite d S lates Na· =~z.::=t.:..";','· po11111c utt11ty or'°""
t ional Bank o f San Diego, A1.., eaceoc1ng rrom u 1c:1Lots 111\d
be appointed as p ersonal '•11 11s, o11, nvdroc-s, m1ner11s
represent a t I v e t o ad. :~~.,01,:e~~t~so!r'~U::w.,,:
m in i St e r the est ate of roghtto ante< -Ille wrface or -
W inefred Dykstra C urtiss, wrtK• of u. pr-r1y aboore • Cke>tf1
aka W inefred D. C urtiss, !!..!!!!:. '!·~,:,;,:.n,~ :;:.0!:
a k a W I n If red Dy k s t r a record.
C urtiss, aka Winifre d D . PAR CEL 2· Non· .. <hn lv. use·
C t I ( d th I mt,,ll '°' lnor•u --Vet&. put>lk ur ss un er e . n · 111111u ... _.. -tor 111 purpo-
dependent Adminis tration 1nt1<Mnte1 v.r.10, 1nc1w11111, .,.,, not
of Estates Ac t). The pell· limited 10. "" <onttrucuon. ltSt.all•·
l ion Is set for hearing in 11011, rep1aumen1. repair, m•111.
• Ill• •--nemacl klloOI Ohtrlct ol
ten•nc•, oper•llOll end 11M of •II Dept. N o, 3 at 700 Civ ic necuu ry or cteslreble road••Y•,
Center Drive, West, In the Side••••• and COlldulh onr 111• l'ICTITIOUS IUStNESS
NAME STATEMENT
T lie IOl-1r>Q pet'_, I\ doing """ ,...,, .,
FARRIS !>TAMP COMPANY, 1'136
POf't CMl•H Place, Newport Bt•<ll
CA nt60
TILOEN J FARRIS, lt)t P0<t
Cn•••u Pl«• N•WpOtl Bea< h. CA .,_
Tiiis -IMH I• conducteG Dy an·~ dlvldual
ftio.n J F arri\
Tllh statement w•s 111«1 with Ille
county Cltfk Of Or-county on July
21, ... , .. ,.,.,,
Publi•hed 0.-Co.1\1 Daily Pilot,
July n. A.,g s. n . .-. n11 >ll'l 11
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATl!Ml!Nf
Tiie loflowir>Q per'°" Is dOlt19 butl ntn o SEA GULL COMUNICATIONS,
17090 59,, Bruno SI • GJ, Fovnlaln
V•ll•y, c.. 92JOe Sle~ Brt•n 9r-. 110.0 Sin llruno SI., G,, FOUlll•ln V•ll•v. C.•
'"°' This 11<61NU I• <.Ondvcl..i by an In dfvlelual,
$1~8'°"'1!
Tiii• tlll_. Wet fll9tf wltll 11\0
(ount' Cllt'tl ol Or.,,. eo..nty 011 on
Julr 3, I"'· 1'1U444
P\11111-()>.,.._ Coett O•llY Pilot
July tt, Al.II. l , 12, "· 11111 »ft.ti
PUBLIC NOTICE
NSltSll
l'ICTITIOUS I UStNESS NA.¥E STATEMENT
Tnt IOllOWlllQ per-. Is oou1g l>U'I
n~i\ '' OAVIO WARREN ~A S
SOCIAl ES. tt/11 M.cArll\11r
Boul .. •rG, Suitt :Ml. I ..vine, C.etllornle
n11s
Oew1d warren, 1'/11 Me<Artl'IU•
Boult•11rd, Suite lo, lrvlnt, Calllornl• 9111)
Tiii\ bv\>ntt• I\ COl\CllKt.O by an i111
1ncore>or•ted .. \\O(l•Oon otntt tMn • p11rlntor.,.,lp
°''"OW•rr-.n f nl\ ""tenwnt wn filed with tllfl
County C•e.-. ol O.•noe County on July • Ifft "'"n' PuOlilflwd Clt-W it 0 1111'1 Piiot,
July n . 29, A.,g s. It, ''" 31&.,11
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10US IUSINEJJ
NII.Mil STATll\'RNT Tht IOllOWl,,g per>0nJ Me dol11g
l>Ulln.SJU
CONVfNIENT AUTO STEREO,
t ill BOISI, Ml,,..,ay City, CA '7..S.
NICOLAI STINGACIU UJ W
Wll.on, C:C.ll MetA, C-4> '2•11
HUMEYA ADAMS, 222 W WlltOfl
Strffl, C041• ~'II. CA '1•71
Thia bl.l~lneu IJ (01\dlKteel h •
.. ,,.r•l !Nfilllrll\lp
.Hl<OI" Slll\ol<IU Tlllt l t.li.tl'ltn4 wn lllod .. 1111 t,_ c ... nty Glef°ll Of 0r""9t Counly Oii Jlilf
10, lttl.
"""" Plil>tllltld Or..,._ COtil 0.11, Pllet, July n. 19, ""9 s, u, 1"1 n11 ti
Oraf\91 CclufttV. Cefllontla, actfflg by and thr.....,, lb Gover11l1>9 B~rd,
h t r e lnafler relerred to •• "Olr.TRICT," •Ill receive UP to, .,.,, not lellH' l...,. llW _.,. U.tl.cl tll'lle,
watoct blcb tor tllt •-•d oC a conlrec:t tor 1ne-.. P<'Olt<t
Bids w ll be rec:elvect In lh• l>lau lde11tlfl<od -ve • .,.., tll•ll be _....,
end !Mttll<ly rNd •-•I 11\0 -v• stelod tlme-lll•ce.
Tllen Wiii be a W .00 Otpolll r• quired tor MCtl wt of INCi do<um..,h to
guarant• .,. rtturn In-" condition
wltl11n 10 cla~s altlH' tllt bid -1119
d411•
Each bid mutt conlo,.,,. •lld be
responsive to tllo COlllrKI dOCU,.,.lltl.
EKll bid w11 lie eccompenlte by
Ult t«curlly reflH't'ed to In Ille contract
do<--by nw list of or~ wt>ccw.tractors_
"'9 DISTRICT r...,..., 11\0 rlgllt 10
reject .,,, °' all Dlds or to waive anr
lrr1eu1w111.,. °' 1111orme1111es '" .,,y bids or In tllt blddj119.
The DIST RICT NI Obl•lnt4 lrom 111t 01-tor Of 11\e OttMflm.nl of In·
du•trl* Rotation• 11\0 """°r* l>t'tv•ll·
Ing ••t. ol ,.... dl•m •-.i• In 11\0
locallty If\ wNcl\ lttl• -• It It Ill 1Mrlorrned IOr tecll crefl er type of
.. Of' • .._ -t• tlllK~• tllo ·-lrHI 1-roln .,. ... rti. •I Ult
01$TAICT Office IO<•tld II Offlu ol Pllytlcet l'e<llltlH Pl-lflt, Co ... t
Com-tty Ctll ... Dlftrlcl, IJ10 AN"" A ... , C.lol llMU, CA .,.._ Cepl .. ll\IY .. 1*olflH M ,_.,, A
<tit'!' ., .,_ , ........... ---.. U.)19 .....
ni. IWeoolno K'*llll• ol "' dlefft
w•lll"I It.._ -• -llfflg Ny Of eftlll (t) ._.. , .. , ...... h9lldly
lllCI ~--eltall lie ., .... lllMlllCl ...... lf.
CC 11t.fy o.f Sa nAt a A n
2
a
6
, ro~~~~~!~~~: B .,.., c 01 a 1 orn1a o n ugus t , Tr.cl No. 1121, 1n ,,,. c ownt, ot
1981 at 9 :30 A .M . Or•nga, Slit• of C•lllOMI•. H .,.,
IF YOU OBJECT to the IMP rKor9d in 11oo11 •1. P99111 JI
nrantinn Of the petition end • of Mltcell-~.Ill IN " ,. • / ofllct of ... C-tv Raco.-el ,_,.
you s hould either appear '°""''
at the hearing and s tate PARCEL•: LAOA, ... cttT•••
your object ions o r file No.1J12.npotmep-.c-d 111a-
ltt ob, t' 'th th 1ll, p._, '1 -• of Mlscall-t w r en iec ions W I e M•P•. in ,.,. offlc• 01 ,,,. co11111,
court before the hearing. Recorc1arofS11cltount'I"
Your appearance may be PAllCEL c l..aQ A -• of Tr1et
In person or by your at· No. 101. • ,,_ mw ~ tn eeo11 294, P99K • -Jt of MIK•ll-out torne y . M•P•. In ,,,. 0111,. of 111e C...flty
I F Y 0 U AR E A Rec .. ~ofMICI~.
C REDITO R or a c o nt· PAllCl!.LO:Lot1AencllofTract Mo. 7124, es -map racOl'dltd 111 a-lngent c r editor of the de· ni. p .... cs..,.,•., Mltc:••'-
c eased, you mus t file your M•P1. 1n 111o offlc.• ot 111a ~nty
c laim with t h e court or RacorCIOrafllld-ty.
present it to the personal .!r:!:' .:fe<.':"~ :' ~~"'!::
rep resentatl ve appointed •u•d•n• 1m11H•d """ 1111 1en11
by the court within four o.tcr111oe1 111 Mid Perc:.t 1 IMft rw
th , th d t f IMlftlltllel ...... ICl/llllo-19'111y mon • s rom e a e O port10111 t11er101 llY tll•t urtet11
first iss uance of letters as o.c1ar .. klfl ., c ............ ~"'
provided In Section 700 of end RHt•ICt'-•-dlld "*-T >.
t he Prob a t e C ode of m1. 111 ._ ""· P ... '"., Off1t111
C 11 f . Th t I f Recordl, In \tit otflce Of HNI C:-ty a ornaa. e me or R•COt-~ •
filing c laims will not ex· sua JfCT To·,..,< .......... c-·
p lre prior to four m. onths Ilona, rnlrktlena, ,....,,.,leflt, ••.
from the date of the hear·!:!:~~~:"'" •ltlMI _,......,
Ing notic ed above. "'-~, ._ .,. 111K
YOU MAY EXAMINE v1as.r-.~Ht11s,CA m1t.
the file kept by the court • ., ~=-~ ":.:"'..'~=.:::-.: If you are Interested In the ,,,11, ., ,.,, c1111 ,,,. 1111.,.u
estate, you mav file a re· .v111111ud ., flOI• 11c11rell lly
A119.1t, .. ,1',--.t.1"1 11627.., f'tCT1TI°"'8VSIMIU THI! flrteU • FULLEIUON
NAMa l'tAHMllNT APARTMSNTS. LTD . l'.O ... tlMO, '-
If it's got wheels ~°!~1"' ,.. ..... •r• 111Mt ~,:,:~'"t. Ntw11or1 .. .K ...
---,,,,.... .. ~....,...,.co,..
lllCTIT10ll1 IUSINl$S .. IUC llTS( TRA(~ .. ~ tM tefttrect It
quest w ith the c ourt to re-~~~:=-.-:.-:.:.=::
celve special notice of the 11e """..,. w1101c.
NAM91TAT11MaNT ..,.,...,., .... wpetl ... , wlKol\lrlKlor
Tll• following 1Htrton1 u• oolng ""*' lllM, la pey -1 ... INlfl U'lt Ml-... lllC'TITIO< 8US1Nass a.Id -In. rMft .. Ill ---
IAY HA".OR #1()111. MANO•, NNlll ITAH .. tn -~ ~ tnem In IN lft<111leo1 fll
,.. tht ll!Wt, C:O.t• Mt••· ~lllornl• T ... folflMlllO ,,....., II dolllt bull· .... (llfttrlld, mn -• H• ....._ mey .,.,._ 111t .w ..,
Wit-Alllto11 '1'"""11 Mt ll\I CALl,ORNIA CTC, 1101 W, ... • •rlllll ff tllltY ltot ._,, ar..r IN
.. ,...,, C.lol M9N, Gellfl>mlt '26'1 Attt,. ,.....,., •Hell, CA n.... dltl wt fOr .......... If tM4M.
lrtr11t L.. 'l'IM\to * Utt $trwl, Olltlley "• Miiier, tlOI W. aey A...,,,..... ..... .,.. e ~-~ ....... c..411Wllle "'27 Attt.,.....,.,.IH<lt,(A...0. _... Wiii .. ,....,........., Ill IMC.,.
Tilla ~ ~-..W*I lly trl 111• Tiii• Wtiflft.I It UfldllClell .. a ,..,. .... _IKl.1'111 .. y,,.;!Mllll
.,wtwel 11m1 .............. ,. IMl1•1" IM terflll ... fttt11111,..
........ " VN'lt 0 . , . Mlti. Clllll'KI •llnlll'llL
Tiii• ---... 111• •IWI n. "'" .............. ,.. .. •1111 t"9 ~...,. c-1yo.t1i•Ol'.,,..~111JY1y c ... "'' om,,°'.,," c,u111~ lfl -a.w.u. IS, tttl All8-a, 1"1 SIK""'l, '*'• ,..,. ...... n.MI ~or.,. C...I C»tly ~lot ~--Ol'M9t Cee9' OailY ~.... ,......... ~ .... OMii MIY ,.....
.Jiii• '1, 1t, ...... J, ll. 1"1 ' HllU\ Alll• t, It, '9, ft, ttlll -..1 Al19 ... ll. "'1 ,...,,.,
you'll move it "$U KIH0'$ KCHllNU", .. ,. •• ,.o •• c.lllONll• CNtr1nertlllp,
f.s ..... r In a ,..,,,k c:..1 H..,_.v, c-... "o ••• ..... 44'l •••<II Str•••· ,. MM, CA.... ._...,. IMcl\, t.ellMml• "'61 Dally Piiot J• c;. a.1. 1..n Ll1Mt'9M orc1e, ,afVI o. .,..,..,1 c.r..., .. ...,,.
Classlfled !0..1. HW1tllltftr1 lucll, C:..llt0t11l1 C.lllarnla c0f1Nt1t1on, ltM Stet•
'J'lMT, $1rHt, *l""lel•, M8QeCIMIMltt
d ,.._,, M""'9 J, a.I, 1 .... U-41tiM (Ir. 11111
8 • ~ tit, 110,~1 ....... c..tllW!lle Tlllt 0Utl1"U 11 ~c~ l>Y '• 642·5678 and •aw. ,,.,..., ,_.,.,.. a friendly ..... ~ ..... ,.~.,.,..... ,....':!,_
ad·vlsor wlll ,,. =' -,.._ ••• .. Tait .......... _ =•:: help you turn c.-.r c.11f11 .. °'.,.. c-.ty • CllllM' o erut 0r,.. c-.ey • .,,..,
r.our wheels A" ... ""· "''"" "· '"'· ......., ntoc .... sh ~ar... e.-e o.ii, ...-. ,.......,.. ~ c.-o..r ,..., ~----·--· _____ ... ~ ,., ,., -. ,.., _.., JitAr n,"'-.. J, n. ""· .n7M'I
Inventory of estate 11sets •1• " ....,.. • ._ 1e _.._ •
and of the petitions, ac· :1
11!,.'; :=:.,.a:,::=.:;::
c ounts and reports lleftlf_.....,..._ .. .-,
d escr ibed In Section 1200 °"'"~""
ot the Callfornl1 Probatt 0"90TKT•w•
Code. c..J.•.:ra.,~ ...... , ........
KEENE llfMI DION_, At· =-~-=
torneys •t Law, nu w. ~Olftnr
CNtt Hl ... w•y, Stt. 411# ....., •·a-.
Newport le"'"• Cl. tlt61; :::;::;~ ....... ttt: ('14) '4S-4IM 1M CA -
~ °' c..-o.llY..,... ,.......,:.----Ollff .... Alie·~ .. 11. 1.-i.... -.., .~ ...... 8"MI
• 111n1n 111t1 PIPll
W£0NtSOAY . AUGUST 1:.'. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Pinocchio writes to doomed boy, 8
He didn't know 1t Tuesday, but
Fransie Geringer's wish was
coming true
Fransie is an 8-year·old South
African boy who may be dead by
the time he's 16 from a pre-
mature aging disease. Pinoc-
chio, the puppet who became a
real boy after wishing upon a
s tar , is Fransie's favorite
storybook character.
Fransie wanted to go to Dis·
neyland to meet Pinocchio, but
Atlantic
flights
• resuming
WASHINGTON (AP > -The
R eaga n a dmini s tration ,
bolstered by the support of
airlfoes and Canadian air traffic
controllers' resumed handling of
(J.S . flights. appears to be
strengthening its hand in a
strike by 12,000 U.S. controliers.
Orficials sought to restore air
traffic between Europe and the
United States to near-normal
levels today as Canadian con·
trailers ended a two-day boycott
that had cut trans-Atlantic
flights lo a trickle
Dick Stafford, a Federal Av1a·
tion Administration spokesman,
RELATED STORY.
PHO"FOS-A3, 83
said the key trans-Atlantic con-
trol center near Gander, New-
foundJand, reopened at 3.30 am.
POT today after being closed
since l a .m Tuesday.
Transport Canada. the govern·
ment agency that operates
Canadian airports, said con·
trollers throughou.t Canada
agreed s hortly after midnight to-
-day to resume handling flights
to and from the United States.
Airline executives, after meet·
ing Tuesday with Transportation
Secretarv Drew Lewis. satd they
s taunchly s upport President
Rea gan 's ha ndling of the
crisis and his decision to fire the
striking controllers.
Rut the executives said the
strike. in its 10th day, will have
far-reaching efrects on their in·
dustry. forcing layoffs,, pay cuts
and scrapping of mar ginal
routes. Some companies may
have to be restrudured. they
s aid.
T he end of the Canadian
boycott a nd of one in New
Zealand leaves only Spanish
controllers refusing to handle
flighLc; to the United Slates in
s upport o f the Ame ri can
strikers ·
But action by controllers in
other foreign countries sym-
pathetic to their American coun-
terparts could still create havoc
for international travelers.
Australi an controllers, saying
U .S skies are not safe because
of the strike. were seeking a
court injunction to stop flights
between Australia and the Unit·
ed Stales. That same safety
argument was used by the Cana·
dian controllers in their boycott.
Portuguese controllers have
voted a boycott beginning Satur-
day a nd t he International
federation of controllers' unions
meets Thursday· in Amsterdam
to discuss joint international ac-
tion.
<See PLANES, Page A2>
Grandmother
arrested for
'growing pot'
LA JOLLA CAP> -A SS-year·
old grandmother was arrested
after police discovered she wu
allegedly growing marijuana in
the backyard of her home in a
fashionable neighborhood.
Authorities said Tuesday they
uprooted S6 mature marijuana •
plants, some of them 8 feet blgb,
in what they descr\bed as one of
the city's largest pol hauls.
The woman with the 1reen
thumb, J ane Schimpff, was
booked for lnvesllgation of
possession, cultivation and eale
or m arijuana. .
"I was surprised to learn it is a felony to grow them -they
are beautiful and lnterettln1
plants," Mrs. Schlmpff Hid. "1
reall,y thought that marijuana
would be te1aU1ed and that I
ct>uld make some money trom
lt."
lf abe bad reallied the value ol
· ber backyard crop, "I would'
have done a better Job of cover·
· • ln1 lt ~.'' 1he told reporters.
his father, Herman Geringer.
couldn't a fford the trip from
Orkney. South Africa.
So Fransie's getting the next
best thing.
A letter from Pinocchio was
mailed from Disneyland's
Character Department Tuesday,
asking Fransie to be the ex-
puppet's pen pal.
Pinocchio got Fransie's ad-
dress from an Associated Press
s tory that told about the South
African boy 's disease, progeria.
The letter said : "Dear
Fransle, The Blue Fairy told me
that you are one of my biggest
rans. She also said that you are a
real boy like me. Jiminy Cricket
(he is my official conaclence)
sends his love and wants me to
make sure that you stay out o.f
trouble . It must be fun to Uve in
South Africa. I wish l could visit
t here someday. Maybe we could
be pen pals. Here's my address:
Pinocchio, Character Depart-
ment, Disneyland, 1313 Harbor
Boulevard, Anaheim, Calif.
92803, USA .
.. I am sending some pictures
o( me and some of my friends.
Your pen pal, Pinocchio."
The letter should take at least
a week to reach Fransie, who
lives at 22 Marlowe Weg, in the
s mall goldmining town with his
parents and 10-year -old brother,
about 105 males southwest of
Johannesbur~.
Bald and emaciated, with only
40 pounds on his 3-foot-8-inch
frame. he has old-looking but
strong hands. He wears rubber·
soled slippers that provide soft
padding for his bent toes.
He has big brown eyes, bulg·
ing over a spindly nose offset by
s mall elephant ears, and once
asked his 31 year-old mother
Magda. "Why do l look so
ugly? ..
"What can J say?" she said,
"l say, 'No. you're not ugly.
You're a very pretty boy'."
His doctor. Dr. Martinus VaJl
Zyl. says the child will live to be
16 or 17
"Victims of this disease die of
coronary heart .disease," be
said "If he gets a coronary,
he'll die, just like that." <See DISNEY, Page A2>
'Title IX' reviewed
Sex discrimination in sports too vague'
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Reagan administration said to-
day it is considering a sharp re·
duction in the scope of a con-
troversial 9-year-old federal law
that bans aid lo schools and col·
leges practicing sexual dis·
crimination in athletic pro·
grams.
The review or the .. Title IX"
rules was announced by Vice
President George Busb as part
of the administration's attack on
Kennedy
threatened
by Sirhan?
SACRAMENTO <AP > -Ac·
cusing convicted assassin Sirhan
Si rhan or making threats
against U.S. Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, Los Angeles District
Attorney John Van De Kamp to·
day asked s tate officials to re-
voke Sirhan's scheduled 1984
parole.
Jn .a prepared statement, Van
De Kamp did not give details or
the alleged threat against Ken-
nedy by the man who killed the
l a wmaker 's brother, Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy. ~ years
ago.
But Van De Kamp scheduled a
news conference to answer ques·
lions rollowing a meeting ~lh
the chairman of the state Board
of Prison Terms.
An aide to the Board of Prison
Terms said a board spokesman
would be available later today to
comment on Van De Kamp's re-
quest.
Van De Kamp also described
a lleged threats by Sirhan to kHI
a prison dentist and an unnamed
writer who had criticized
Sirhan.
Delly "91 "--.., QlllftR tun
BREEZING ALONG -Jim Fiala of Downey borrowed the
sail design fro m winds urfers and put it to work powering his
oversized skateboard. He said he has hit speeds up to 40
mph along the bike trail in Huntington Beach.
Weapons ban eyed
MOSCOW (AP> -The Soviet
Union said Tuesday it will seek
a United Nations ban on all
weapons in outer space.
Teachers go back to school
Instructors aim to strengthen grasp of science basics·
By RICHARD GREEN
Of tlMI Deity l'I ... Suff
The latest skirmish in Or. Mare Taagepera·s
battle against ill-prepared university freshmen is
being waged in a three-week science course being
taught al UC Irvine.
Thirty teachers from the Irvine Unified School
District are attending the sessions to strengthen
their grasp of basic scientific principles to be re·
fayed to their elementary pupils.
Dr. Taagepera, a
UCI lecturer and critic
of an ed u cation al
system that produces
freshme n who can't
function in introductory
science and ma t h
c lasses, opened the
course last week.
. Her topics for hve
days related t o
chem1stry and conduct·
ed simple experiments
designed to dem ·
o nstrate the process
or scientific inquiry.
Jn this w eek 's
phase, UCI lecturer
Franklin Potter la MartTaagepera teaching physics topics
such as motion and forces, enel'g)', beat and U•ht,
astrononJy and electrtc.i devices.
UCI associate professor Dr. Wendell Stanley
Jr. will emphasize blolo1y -from viruses to
photoeyntbesi.s ln the final week.
Dr. Taagepera expect.a the elementary school
teachers to 1et 1ome sorely oeeded confidence In
present.int the aclenutic b11ic~1 to their atudentl.
Too oft.en they prorreu throull\ httb aehool
without ever 1ett1n1 a firm 1r11p on the analytJeal
prh'lclples required to t utffed after 1raduaUon.
Or. T•a1epera 11y1 1he dllcovetecl this thrff
years -.o ln introductory bloloey. daases 11M
la'ltht at UCI.
A survey she conducted involving freshmen
confirmed her suspicions that some didn't have the
educational background to allow them to compete
in collegiate science and math classes.
She visited high schools in Los Angeles and
Orange counties. taking some of her students to
their alma maters to help spread the academic
facts of life to teen-agers.
And last year Dr. Taagepera told the state
Board of Education, in no uncertain terms. that
some drastically unprepared students were run·
ning into problems .at universities and colleges .
"It's just amazing · some of these kids are
comlng to college and still having trouble with
percentages," Dr. Taagepera said last week.
She cites such problems as: '
-Elementary, junior high and bigh school
teachers who don't give enough emphasis to the
scientific basics.
-Insufficient counseling services.
-Poor study habits and low motivation.
-Deficient high school curricula or students
avojding essentlaJ college-preparatory classes.
She has tried to tackle the latter three through
school visit.a. The present course attacks the first
problem.
She Is uncertain whether 1be will try to orter
an expanded version In future 1ummen. But she Is
sure more courses of this type are needed.
GeorgiaMa Teaford, a sixth-grade teacber at
Stpnecreek Elementary School in Irvine, a1rees.
"I'd like to know a lot more about science,"
t he said. "A refresher course like ttlil la juet wbat
f needed."
"This course is a real poaltlve step," said
Dorothy Terman, coordinator or pro1ram develop·
ment fOf' \he aebool d,latrict, who 11 alao 1ltUn1 t:n
on the three-week .:oul'M. "Then are so many
problems leadin1 to under-prepared 1tudenu.
Some of the problems are a.uodated wllb broken homes.
"But some atuduta, lf not c:ballenced in bl1h
achool, Just doG 't have tbe mmtal dllcipUne or the
rea1G111n1 powers needed ror coll•~·"
J
federal regulations it considers
u n neressar y or counter·
productive.
Today's announcement means
30 more federal regulations will
undergo an in-depth "re-
consideration" to see whether
they can be modified or done
away with
Bush said the administration
feels guidelines on sexual dis
cnmmation an athletic programs
provided virtually all the n'a·
taon's 16,000 public school dis·
tricts and more than 3,000 col·
leges and universities are too
vague and impose excessive ad·
m anislrative burdens
The vice president told a news
ronfere nr e the rev i ew
r epresent:. the administration's
'"ongoing effort to lighten the
regulatory burden borne by
Americans across the country."
The athletics discrimination <See RULES, Page A2)
Gas firms guilty
in additives case
WASHINGTON !AP> -The
nation's four producers of lead·
based "anti-knock" gasoline ad·
ditives violated antitrust laws in
maintaining identical prices for
their products, a Federal Trade
Commission judge ruled today.
The compounds are sold to
gasoline refiners who blend
them wi th gasoline to increase
Court nixes
job award
to Michelle
LOS ANGELES !AP > -The
state Court of Appeal has re·
versed a lower court ruling that
awarded Michelle Triola Marvin
$104.000 for rehabilitative
pur poses after the breakup of
her s ix-year cohabitation with
actor Lee Marvin.
In a 2-1 decision Tuesday with
J ustice Joan Dempsey Klein dis-
senting, Jus tices James A.
Cobey and Rodney Potter ruled
the rehabilitative award was not
proper under California law. But
they did not overrule the princi·
pie under which Ms . Marvin
s ued the actor in 1972 for the
equivalent of community pro-
perty $1.8 million. or half the
assets he earned while they
lived together -even though the
couple were never married.
The onetime nightclub singer,
who contended Marvin promised
to care,for her for life. could not
be reached for comment today.
Her attorney, Hollywood divorce
expert Mar vin Mitchelson. said
he was confident the California
Supreme Gourt would overturn
the 2nd District Court of Ap·
peals.
"This is the same court that
told us that people who live
together are sinful. That's the
ruling the California Supreme
Court struck down," Mitchelson
said.
"The court said the award was
outside the issues of t~ case,"
said Kagon.
Teens collide
on bicycles,
fall 40 feet
Two teen-a1e bicyclists were
injured before dawn Tuesday
when they colUded on a Corona
del Mar sidewalk and toppled
over an oceanfront bluff falling
40 feet.
Both cyclists -19-year-old
Steven Timothy Ryan and
Robert McCord, both of Newport
Beac h -were treated by
paramedic• and taken to Hoag
Hospital.
Ryan, who aurrered a rrac·
tured 1kuJl and a broken note, le•
listed in fair condJUon. McCord
was treated ror lacerallom to
bis head and releued.
Pollet said tbe mtabap oc·
curred at about l a .m. when the
cydiltl were rtclln1 ln OfPCl'lt.e
dlrec:Uoail. Neither had a Upt
on bit bike.
'
octane levels and prevent engine
damage from "knocking."
Administrative law judge
Ernes t G Barnes upheld 1979
FTC charges that Ethyl Corp.,
E . I. du Pont de Nemours & Co ..
PPG JnClustries Inc .. and Nalco
Chemical Co used unfair "an·
t1compet1tive marketing prac·
t1ccs" between 1974 and 1979.
Barnes said that of the 24 --
pri ce increases during t he
period, the com panies an ·
nounced 1dent1cal prices effec·
live on the same date 20 times.
In the other four. identical
prices took efrect within a day or
two or each other, he said.
No conspiracy between the
rompamcs was alleged. but they
were charged with using prac-
tices that let each other know in
advance about price changes.
Barnes ordered the com-
panies, among other things, not
lo announce price changes to the
news media until 30 days after
the changes. They also were
forbidden from using a pricing
formula that systematically
matches a competitor's price.
Barnes also ordered them not
to use "most-favored nation",
clauses in contracts that prom·
is ed customers they will
always pay the lowest price ex·
tended to any other customer.
The FTC had said Ethyl and Ou
Pont used t hese clauses but PPG
and Nalco used them only
minimally.
The judge also ordered the
companies to tell customers
about transportation costs when
they are included in the price.
Under the order. the companies
can allow customers to furnish
transportation for the shjpment.
Barnes said the companies'
practice of giving 30 days' ad-
vance notice of price changes
and issuing press releases about
them "gives rivals a n op-
portunity to respond in a way
that reduces uncertainty about
industry price levels before the
initiators' new price goes into efS
feet." •
.DRANCI CDAIT llATHll
Night, mornln1 iow
clouds with mostly sunny
afternoons. Lows tonight
in 605. Beach highs Thurs-
day In low 70s, mid.SOS in·
land.
lNSIDI TODAY
The famU11 with two in·
COfnel hoa &hoe Cl wlaolt Clou
of Ammcona into up.,.r fn.
come bracket&, complete
with t tottu chono11. r See
StotUI Scorino, p~ All).
llDll
A.a • • • • Orano-Oout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, Auguat 12, HMU
Airpo~t crush 'survival of the fittest'
8J RADY A'l'KINl:f
• 0 ........
LONDON ....; M1 wile,' Lna;
and I bec•m• •l•tlatlct .t Lem~
don'• Gatwick Airport. It wu
one ot the mott hopel .. 1 reellnp
either of u1 h ad ever ex·
perienced, and our ordeal i1n't
over.
Returnin1 home to Detroit
after a two-week vac•tioo 1tay
in Enaland, we were told on ar·
rival Tuesday at the airport tbat
our 1:20 p.m. fllsht would be de·
layed becauae of the U.S. air
traffic controllers' strike. We
were a11ured that t he maht
P.ventually would get off.
We found Natl ta the ~rowded
intemaUooal lounle and MtUed in wt&b pd boob.
Otben did the Hme.
Youn11ter1 kept the video
••me machines busy throuab
the lone afte~. • ·s.,.ce Bat· tles" wu a particular favorite.
Behind us, a Texan told an
Enllishman seated beside him
that the striking controllers
"made a big mistake."
.. They had it made and didn't
know it," he said. "I think Preal·
dent Reagan is going to beat
them now."
The big crowd was extremely
well behaved. Those with long
Wnnon widow lived
on mushrooms
LONDON (AP) -John Len·
noo's widow, Yoko Ono, aald in a
British newspaper interview
publhhed today that for three
months after the ex-Bealle's
death, she stayed in bed and ate
only chocolat e cake and
mushrooms.
In a copyrighted interview by
the Daily MirTor, the ex-BeaUe'•
widow was quoted as saying she
had no hatred for Lennon's con-
fessed murderer, Mark Chap-
man, who await.a sentencinc for
the Dec. 8 assanination in New
York.
"It's s till bard for me to take
his death in," Yoko was quoted.
·•For three months afterwards I
could eat only chocol9te cake
and mushrooms. What wu there
to stay healthy for anyway?
··1 spent nearly all of those
three months in bed."
Interviewer Ray .Coleman
quoted Yoko, 48, as saying:
··1 don't par\icularly hate the
person who pulled the tri11er. I
have strong emotions of sorrow
and hate and resentment -but
where do you put them? It's not
like you can throw it at this pool"
thing who doesn't know what he
is doing."
In the two months after Len·
non's death. said Yoko •. who was
Suspe ct s ays
'railroaded'
ATLANTA (AP) -Wayne 8 .
Williams, accused In two of 28
killings of young blacks. says in
a letter he's innocent and baa
been "rattroaded'' by news
media and law officials, a radio
station reports.
The letter to W AOK sports an-
nouncer Joe Walker was broad·
cast by the station Tuesday. It
was dated July 17, the day
Williams was indicted ln the
murders of Nathaniel Cater. 27.
and Jimmy Ray Payne. 21. the
station reported.
No trial dale has beea set for
Wi l l iams, a 23 -year-old
freelance photographer.
ioterviewed at the Dakota apart.-
meat bui.ldlni outside which her
husband was shot, she received
200,000 letters of sympathy.
"For 10 years I was the deviJ.
Now suddenly I'm an angel. Did
the world have to lose John for
P89Ple to-change their opinion of
me? It's unreal. If it brought
John, back, I'd rather remain
•ated," she was quoted as say-ing.
From Page A1
RULES. • •
provisiqn was included in Title
IX of a 1972 education law in
which Congress empowered the
old Department of Health and
Human Services to cut off
federal aid for any school that
does not treat athletics pro·
grams for both sexes equa1Jy.
HEW issued regulations to en·
force Title IX in 1975 but its en-
forcement efforts have been
dogged by controversy. Sports
programs for gitls and young
women have grown rapidly in
the Cace of threats from federal
civil rights officials to cut off 1 school funds for Title IX viola· ,
lions. No institution actually has
lost any aid.
Even before today's announce·
meot, Education Secretary T.H.
Bell had ordered a review of
bow to enforce Title IX, includ-
ing whether it applies to colleges
whose only link to federal aid is
student aid.
A fact slieet provided by the
White House at Bush's new con·
ference said the "reconsidera-
tion " bad been undertaken
beca~se concern bad been
raised over provisions that the
schools must use the same pay
scale for male and fema le
coaches and spend equally to
publicize male and female
athletic events and purchase
equal amounts or equipment and
supplies for both sexes.
The administration also said it
was reviewing the ruJe because
"concern has been raised about
record,keeping, overall cov·
er age and requirements for
comparable expenditures for
both sexes.''
delays took them in atride.
There were cheers when fii1hts
rinaJly were called.
Every one lauehed when the
public addre11 system asked
''the parents of Abdul Muaaar to
meet him ln the ice cream aec·
tlon on the third noor."
A pa rticularly loud 1roan
echoed throuah the big waiting
area when a flight to Los
Anaetes was canceled. Poor dev·
lls, I thou@t. But that can't
happen to me.
Then it dld. At 5: 15 came the
announcement that Northwest
flight 43 had been canceled. We
were banded a letter on the
airline'• 1tatlonery blamlna the
cancellation on "the lndustrlal
acUOQI now belnf taken by the
varioua air traf le controllers
over the North Atlantic who will
not a1Jocate slot times to trana·
Atlantic nt1hts."
The letter also told ua that
Northwest was unable to provide
hotel accommodations or meals
or tell us when it could put us on
another rtlght.
We were on our own.
We were told to leave the In·
ternatlonal lounge and collect
·our luggage-. First, however,
those who had purchased duly·
free goods had to selJ the items
back. My wife returned a 1old-
plated oecldace and asked tbe
saies clerk to hold It until we
couJd flnd another nlebt.
Fat chance!
An enormou1 crush of people
swumed around every reserva.
lion desk.
Everywhere the word wu the same: Nothing.
"It's the survival of the flt.
test." said a Northwest reserva-
tion clerk. "I don't have any
idea when or how you people are going lo get home."
Laker Skytrain said it hadn't a
seat available to the United
States or Canada for a week.
We manaaed to get tickets on
SENATOR SUPER-SCHMITZ? -State Sen.
John Schmitz. R-Corona del Mar, standing
beside caricature of himself io Superman
costume, announced he will seek U.S. Senate
seat now held by Sen. S.I. Haya~awa next
year. The John Birch Society member said
his wife, Mary, will seek his state Senate
seat.
Injunction denied iii nudity suit
Group argues LA Co~nty ordinance 'unconst itutional'
LOS ANGELES CAP> -A
federal judge has refused to halt
the arrest of nude sunbathers
pending a decision on whether
the Los Angeles County or-
dinance that prohibits nudity at
public beaches is constitutional.
U.S. District Judge A. Wallace
Tashima on Tuesday denied a
request by the Clothing Optional
Society for a preliminary injunc-
tion blocking the arrests.
But he said he would consider
the society's request that he set
a trial date for the constitutional
issue next week, said attorney
David Kestenbaum, one of two
American Ci vii Li bertles
I a wye r s r epresenting the
society.
In denying the request for the
injunction, Tashima ruled that
the .. abstention doctrine" re·
quires a federal court to
withhold judgment when a state
court. is able to rule on the same
issue, said Deputy County
Counsel Anthony Serritella.
ACLU attorney Stephen
Vessel sei zed
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A
Danis h vessel "carryin g
military hardware and ex-
plosives material" to Iraq has
1 been seized by the Iranian navy
after it passed through the
Straits or Hormuz, the official
Iranian news agency Pars re-
ported today. The seizure was
made Monday.
Y agman said the society will ap-
peai Tashima 's decision.
The group argued the or·
dinance is unconstitutional
because it is too vague and com·
plex and because it violates
freedom of speech, expression
and association.
''The main ouroose of the
First Amendment is to protect
the communication of ideas."
Yagman said. "If people are
seeking to communicate through
the presentation of themselves
with no clothing on, the Constitu·
lion says they can."
Yagman said that 700 nude
sunbathers have· been arrested
at county beaches this summer
and that nearly 200 of them have
been arTaigned on the charges.
Those convicted could face a
maximum penalty of $500 and
six months in jail.
He said all or those cbarged
intend to ask for jury trials. The
first trial begins Aug. 18.
TEAK COASTER SET
an Air Canada night for Toronto
at. noon on We dnesday .
However, the one-way ticket•
were $577.90 apiece, which was
nearly as much as we had paid
fo r our original round-trip
licket.s. And we had to transfer
to Heathrow Airport, on the
other side of 'London, before
finding a hotel for the night.
It was nearly midnight when we got to our room
''I suppose I should remember
the kind thoughts we had at our
morning devotional." said an
Ohio woman traveling with a
Methodist group. ··However, I
don't know if I can. Morning
seems so long ago."
* * * From Page A1
PLANES • • •
The Feder al Aviation Ad·
ministration 1s seeking ways to
e nsure ser vice on overseas
flights in the event Portuguese
controllers carry out a threat to
begin blocking a trans-Atlantic
route over the Azores.
The protest by the Canadian
controllers had resulted in
scores of cancell ations and de·
lays of eight to 10 hours in those
flights that were able to depart.
Thousands of passengers were
s tranded ut many European
airports.
Flights normally going over
Gander were rerouted lo a new
east-west route Just south of
Canadian air space. The new
route. however, could handle on·
ly four planes an hour. a fifth of
the normal traffic load during
peak periods
There was little activity Tues-
day from the F rofess1onal Air
Traffic Controllers Organiza.
lion. althou~h the union won a
victory of sorts an U S. District
Court an Washington
Judge Harold Greene reduced
a fine of $4 75 million he had ten-
tal1 vely imposed against the un-
ion and said the controller could
not be penalized for refusing to
work after they had been fired.
He reduced the fine to $750,000,
the amount originally imposed
for the first two days of the
strike
A federal ;udge an New York
City, however. threatened to ar·
rest union president Robert Polj
if he did not appear in his
court.room today Judge Thomas
Platt, who fined the union
$100,000 an hour after the strike
began. wants to know where the
union·s money ts so it can pay
the fine.
A lawyer for the union said
Poli is expected to appear before
Platt today
Giraf fe dies
in B a ltimor e
BALTIMORE (A P> -An
Angolan giraffe named "Pearl '"
coll apsed and d ied at the
Baltimore Zoo. the only zoo in
the country exhibiting the sub·
s pecies.
Steve Graham, the zoo direc·
tor, said Tuesday that Pearl had
seemed 111 smce Janua ry when
she began losing hair from all
parts of her body
One of nine Angolans at the
zoo, Pearl died five hours after
falling to the ground in her cage.
It was not known whether the
giraffe collapsed because she
was weakened by disease or if
she fell in an accident.
t ----~ight-f/Cf'~ FnJMie (,.,....,_, (i.ft), • _,,.,. ffOfn a nn pr.malure ogtng dileale, ii shown with
6 Mid'"' ce_..,. ........ ,,.,., Tedc Salt &
Pepper Set #ail /alMr H~ mid broClwr Paul, JO, .. ara.,, South Afrim.
Thomas P. Hetey .._.__CIN9!~~
Ro0ett N. Wffd ......._
I Thoma A. Murphine 1 ._
MlchMI P Herwy } .............
~-=-\ ~ N. GOdderd Jr ~ .....
lemerd lchulmen a....
OIMmM.LOOt -......... ·--·=6.,Uoofe
C1Heffled .... ,. ..... 714/'42·M71
All ott.r d1part1Mflta 142~1
C.Y'leM 1'11 or .. C.91 ~11111"9 C.._..., NO ~Wt t•lft, llhl.Ctel~ tOllOtlet ..,_. .. , O< •d
••'11t0fftt"h ~111 ,...., IW n111roo11e..i ... 11101.11
-let ...,_'*\ .. <•••U-
Fro m Page A1
DISNEY • • •
When Fransle wu a year old,
his hair be1an to fall out and .he
failed to develop fatty tluue .
The visit.I to 1~l1ll1ta .be1an •
"lly aim It to make bim hap-
py and let blm -.Joy hi• life for
•• Joas u he's here for ua," ·~
his father. "That'• all I care
about.''
Tbe Plnotthio letter WU read
to The Auodated Pl'ell b7 a
worhr la tlM CMl'acter Depart. meat WbO Wailted to nmata mt·
iclentllhMl.
56.88 54.88
. ,,.... ............ ._ ''· ....
CROWll HARDWARE
WISTCIMIP ............... ..........
641-1111 .........
... , .... ,.. .............. Stere .. .
coaOMA•MM
•• Jll7&0Mll~ • 67Wlll ......... _....,
-Atlltoreloper,7 ......
W8111dtft Opift n.n; Tl I P. M.
HAllOI YllWC9iiB
1614hli ....... . " ..... ..... 644a70 ._ ............
I ~
I .
t
lAGUNA BEACH /SOUTH COAST
Laguna cha
By SfEVE MITC'lflt:LL
Of , .. .,..,, ,., ... '"'"
Terming it a "socialist pro
posal" by "overzealous draft·
ers," the Laguna Beach Chamber
of Commerc:e ha:. c:ume out
s harply opposed to a Lol·al
Coa st al Pl a n d rafted hy a
citizens' task furce.
The plan, wh1c:h rece1V<.'Cl City
Planmng C:omm1ss1on endorst•
ment last ~eek with some ma1or
changes, goes to the l'1ty Council
Monday ni ght for review and
possible adoption
tr approv1•d b) thl' City (.'oun-
cil the document, along with lm·
plemenling ordinances, will be
forwarded to the state Coastal
Commission ..
Commission e ndorsement
\\ ould mean a return of local
zoning and development control
m alters to Laguna Beach of·
fic1als
But ID a two-page report re·
leased Tuesday. the chamber
lambasted the draft land use
plan. saying it was designed to
"downzone, rezone, a nd create a
nl'w zone, adversely affecting all
the areas of the city.··
CATCH OF THE DAY .\n~one can request a window ta·
bll' at a hav<;1<1l' rt•stuurant So to further impress his date Kath~ Wciggont·r nf Garden Grove, Tim Magill of Foun·
lain V;ilh.•v arrangt•cl a pt>rsonal table on the Newport
Diiiy Piiat
• WEDNESDAY, AUG. 12, 1911
STOCKS BS
SPORTS 86
Airlines. appear to be
recovering from air
controllers strike . . . 83
D
0 ..._ __
r raps local coast plan
If adopted, the letter con·
tinues, "it Is likely to lead Into a
great many property owner
(law) suits against the city for
its arbitrary deprivation of prop·
erty rights.''
But city officials say that,
while the draft plan does include
a land use map downzonlng
some established residential
areas. the Planning Commission
has recommended that those
areas not be '1ownzoned.
"The commission, in its rec·
ommendation, fell that proper-
ty in the downtown, or non·
hlllside areas should not be
reclaulfied (downzoned) u part
of the Local Coastal Plan proc·
ess," said city planner Kyle
Butt.erwick.
The chamber letter is also
critical of the plan's contention
the city might not be abJe to sup-
port more new homes than those
a lready designated as legal
building sites.
The draft land use plan sug-
gests potential subdivision (such
a s on vacant hillside properties
in Laguna) not be considered for
development until existing legal
building sites are built out.
0..., ............. .., .......
Beach pier. They enjoyed their lunch of roast lamb, rice
pilaf and heart-shaped melon with cherries despite the
curious crowd of onlookers and the arrival of a policeman
who nixed the serving of wine on the pier.
The task force report shows a
total or 2,756 new dwelling units
could be constructed in the city
without approving a single sub-
di vision just by building out
those existing legal lots and by
developing other lots to the max·
imum.
For example, the owner of a
multi-residential zoned lot with
just one cottage on It could tear
that house down and put up
several more in its place.
The c hambe r lette r also
c riticizes what it terms the
plan's "neglect to address our
decade-long parking problem."
Dul planning commissioners
last week also recommended a
parking authority be established
for the downtown area
"I believe the Planning Com·
mission addressed both of the
chamber's concerns, and its rec·
om mendal1ons will go before
the council next week, .. said Ron
Smith. the city's director of
commumly development.
Council members will review
the land use plan, and the plan·
ning commission 's comments
Monday at 7 p.m. in council
chamber~
:county changes
1welfare policy
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has decided lo move
away from an earli er require
ment that prospective general
relief welfare recipients be able
lo prove they have lived in the
county for 30 days
Supervisors took the action
Tuesday on the advice of the
county Counser s Office, which
concluded that the residency re
quirement might be struck down
by a superior court judge at an
upcoming hear ing on its con
stitutionality.
The board added language to a
resolution approved two months
ago that that will, in effect, al·
low the 30-day requirement to
serve only as a guideline, which
may not be strictly adhered to.
Supervisors imposed the res-
idency requirement amid con-
cerns that so-called "county
hoppers" were m oving into
Orange County to take advan-
tage of welfare benefits
Supervisors turned aside a pro-
posed one-year residency re·
qu1remenl ID favor of the 30-day
rule.
General relief is provided to
people who either do not qualify
for or are awaiting other forms
of welfare assistance The res·
1d ency requirement was im-
posed to stem increasing costs of
the general relief p rogram,
which unlike other forms of as-
sis tance. is funded exclusively
with c:ounty funds.
The county was sued by the
Legal Aid Society over imposi-
tion of the 30-day residency re·
quirement The society acted on
behalf of a welfare recipient who
had bee n d e nied benef its
because she was unable to prove
she had h ved ID the county for 30
days.
At an initial court hearing on
the issue. Judge Leonard Gold·
stein expressed concern a bout the
the const1tut1onalily of the pro·
vision and ordered the county to
pa y the wo man benefits,
retroactively, pending a second
hearing, scheduled for Tuesday.
Anthony won't quit
Irvine City Council
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony will not resign hi s post
as a result of his recent convic·
lion for assaulting his wife
Anthony issued a written
statement before the start of
Tuesday's council meeting say·
ing that he decided to stay on
after speaking with about 70 peo-
ple and evaluating about a dozen
unsolicited comments he'd re-
ceived.
"Discounting the opinions of
those who are my political ad·
versaries, the thoughts I 've
heard and read a re almost
unanimous that I should serve
out ttus term. whicn ends in July
1982," Anthony wrote.
''This public senti m e nt,
coupled with my own desire to
fu lfill the obligation I assumed
when elected in 1978, has led to a
decision lo complete this term of
offi ce, if nl all possible."
Anthony has said he will not
seek re-election when his term
runs out next June. He indicated
Tuesday he will not seek any
other elective office either
"I have other priorities at this
moment, and none of those
priorities include public office :·
he said
J County seeks
landfill Laguna cites violation of zoning ordinance
4 caretakers
Rent-free It ving, right here in
Orange Counly"
Nol 1mposs1ble, despite
escalating housing costs
Thal 1s. 1f ~ou already own a
trailer or motor home and, if
you don't mind living in a dump
Orange County government,
with the bless1Dg of the board of
superv15ors, is looking for seven
people to live at and maintain
the county's seven landf1lls and
solid wasle transfer stations
The idea is the brainchild or
Ray Rhoads, manager of the
county Solid Waste Management
Progra m. who says it's less ex·
pensive and more desirable to
have resident caretakers lhan
hiring security guards to patrol
t he four dumps and three
transfer stations located in the
county.
Caretakers, Rhoads said in a
memorandum to supervisors,
can watch out for fires and deter
vandaUsm. lie said a system has
proved highly effective in Los
Angeles County.
Under a proposed caretaker
agree m ent submitted to the
bOard, the county would provide,
re nt free. s ites for the
caretake r s · trailers and a
''clean" water supply, although
potabihty wouJd not be assured.
And care takers would be
1lven a radio so they could re·
port troublet1ome activity to
county olflclalc; The aireement
specifies that caretaker• not act
aa semi·pOlicemen.
Architect flayed for moving business into residence
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... Delly ...... , ....
Jack Cressman says he knew
the risks he was taking when he
moved his s mall architectural
business into a slightly sagging
C'a pe Cod house he owns at
Glenneyre and Cleo streets.
• · t moved in very quietly and
lay low," the outspoken Laguna
Beach architect said of his mid·
February move. "I didn't put up
a ny s igns, and l told the
net ghbors what l was doing."
And now the city has filed a
c rimina l complaint against
Cressman for violating the city's
zoning ordinance by moving his
busmess into a residential area.
It's not llke Cressman didn't
try to go the legal route to get
his way, he says.
He appeared before the Ci\y
Council 15 months ago to request
a commercial zone designation
Laguna cops
seek bandit
A clean-shaven shirtless man
with what bis victims described
as a "good tan" robbed a
jewelry store in Laiuna Beach,
escaping with nearly SZOO In
cash and watches.
Police searched north Lquna
Beach near the La1una
Ort1lnals shop at 330 N. CoMt
JH1hway ror nearly an hour
followtna the Tuetday afternoon
robbery wtlhout apottlnt tbe ••·
peel.
on the residential lot upon which
his once dowdy wood Laguna
"charmer" sits.
The council flatly rejected
Cr essman's request, saying it
would result in "spot zoning"
and place a commercial building
adjacent to homes.
Cr essman argues that bis
house, located right acr06S the
s treet from the Albertson's
Market loading dock, is tailor
made for a low-profile pro·
fessional business use.
"Laguna Beach doesn't have
an office/professional zone that
could accommodate a proposal
like mine, .. Cressman said. "My
neighbors feared a commercial
designation could lead to a fast
food restaurant next door to
them, and I really sympatbize
with that."
Cresaman's argumeota that be
would be willing to sign a deed
restriction with the city also
failed to sway bis neltbbors or
the city.
''The city said such a restrlc·
lion on the tiUe would probably
be unenforceable and llleial."
So that declaloo left the
architect. with several optlcml:
-Sell the wood·1hln1le house
and lot;
-Maintain it u a rental Qn.it
and continue to t.ake • necatiYe
cash now ol SZ,000 per IDGllda;
-Tear it down aad ,.,._. it
wilh • nine-bedroom 1tuceo
duplex.
de decided lnlt.ad to IDOYI
bis clraft.llll boerdl. Dmdll ..
maJI bD tbe buUclllll .,..,. .,..
-erytbinl wu ftDe ud ~ ..
til the building inspector showed
up in April.
Another option, according to
the building inspect.or , would be
to apply for a home occupation
permit, and that's what be did.
Cressman will appear before
the city's Planning Commission
tonJght in an effort to keep his
business in the bou.se.
He says there's more than
economics involved ln ht. re·
quest. adding the old bouae.
called "Cleosball," bu some
historic value to the community.
He claims the old bulldlnt
bou.ses the ghost of a woman
killed as a r esult of a love
trian&le ln the 19409. A likeness
of her face suppoledly showed
up ln mildew ln the room where
she was murdered.
And be says he's conflrmed
the fact that drut iuru Timothy
Leary once lived ln the 1,100
square foot house before movint
out to La1una Canyon ln the
1980s.
That mleht be atretch.lna the
bulldinc's biatortcal worth, be
admlta, but lfe'd 1Wl like to keep
tbts boule lntact.
Wbetber Plaanin1 Com-
mlaaJonen will buy cr ... man'•
arpmenta for a low·proftle bull·
neu UH remalnl to be .....
RclG Smltb, director ol CCllD•
munlty dnelopment for tbe dty,
Hid lt wU1 all depend OD bow tbe
commlaion 1Dterpnta tbe dty
code r91ardla1 flome oecupa·
t.lom.
Al for tbe crtmlaal complaint.
laaJtb Mid it wW be beard nest
meill.lablcourt.
..............
~ BIGch archtttct Jack CrtHmon 1tond• Hr front of ~ he
toGriU to COHWr1 to home occupatbi Ult. ...
·~-·~~--~--------~·,_._----·--__, .... ,_... •• ..._..~....,...--•• .._.._. •• ~-........ " ..... ~ ........................ f... .... , .................. ~ .... ~ ...... ~ ••• ~ ... j t~ -.. . . . .. H/F Orange Coaet OAILY PILOT/W•dnHday, August 12, 1981 I
OFF & RUNNING DEPT. -Good
heavens, imagine the coastal s urprise
when it was announced only yesterduy
that Dapper John 1s seekjng higher of·
f1ce again. Dapper John. of course. is
our very own coastal State Senator John
G. Schmitz.
The surprise. in this case. isn't that
John Schmitz. the noted Re publican
from Newport Beach. seeks higher of·
(;';)
T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-f .~',
fice Whal the heck. he·!'. done that
before
As a matte r of fact. at one point in
his up-a nd-down political career . he
veered awa ,. from the GOP ranks and
ran for President of the United States on
the American Independent Party ticket
·QUICK QUIZ: Who was Schmitz's
running mate for vice president on the
AI P ticket?
But I digress As noted. the surprise
1sn·t that Senator Schmitz 1s running for
something again
The eyebr ow-raiser is that Dapper
John dusted off hi s long-standing mem·
bership in the J ohn Birch Society as one
qualifi<:ation for offi<:e pronng that he is
indeed a conservative
~ow wh~· d 1cl John go and do that.,
E\·cr\'bod\' knows he·s a conservative.
He p1:obably holds membership card No.
3 in the Birch Society. Why bring it up'?
You were of the opinion that the
J ohn Birch So<'u:t~. either as a threat or
a \'irtul'. depending on ~·our news. went
out of st~·le ba('k "ith hippie haircuts
and mini-skirts
But then. somcbod~· just pointed out
thc.tt mini skirts arc making a ('Omeback
Well. mini skirts are a whole lot
more exciting than thl' John Birch Socie·
ty. And that'!-. irnother contradiction in
the J ohn G. S<:hmitz image. Mos t
Birchl•rs talk rcalh· dull s tuff The\·
seem to lack mu<'h Sl:nse of humor ·
JOHN SCHMITZ IS A WITTY fellO\\
He ('ctn e\·en get awa~· \o\.'ith poking .1osh
at the far rig ht. He µartil'ularl.v likes lo
isn't duJI
lampoon the prl'ss ut the drop uf u
podium.
Further. Schmitt i1>11 l dull Ye.1rs
ago, it wa1> once reported that John, tn a
statem e nt opposing gun tontrols.
declared that ever yone ought to be able
to own a machine gufl tr tht!y wantl'd to.
I think Schmitz later denied the stale·
ment. or modified it. or declared that it
was taken out df context
T hat aside, the words "Machine Gun
Schmitz" s urely did make u li vely
headline . ·
John Schmitz isn •t dull.
BACK IN HIS EARLV political
career . Schmitz got elected to the st ate
Senate and then ran and was .elected to
Congress after Jimm~· Utt died lie then
became anti Nixon. once declaring that
he didn't mind Nixon going to Chma. Just
so long as he stayed there. Schmtll fell
from favor with the GOP and ran for
president as a n independent.
Then he got beaten out or his c:on
gressional seal b\' former Orange Coun·
Sam! Somebody's got an eye on your seal
tv assessor And\· Hins haw. who "a~
later con\"lcted or"misusing his puhl.c: of-
fice while assessor .
Schmitz thus claims todav that later
events s urrounding bot h Nixon and
Hinshaw proved that he'd been thl' right
man all along
T HAT ASIDE. J ohn G . Schmitz
seems to be back full eirc:le in mounting
another U.S. Sen ate campaign as he did
tentatively in 1976 a nd 1980.
And just remember. Dapper .John
bn't dull
I f a n ~ bod ~· c a n a r o u ~ l' S a m
l lavakawa from his slumbers. St·hm1t z
ought to be able to do it
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HAll.CU1'S -fw M• . • . • • • • • . . • . • • • • • • • . .. • • • • • • • ' I I •
reg: •4500
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I
t.~ over Call~ornla is rounded up eac~day
••. In the Illy Pllll
.. ... .
Student awarded
$3.85 million
COORDINATOR Warren
Wilcox of Costa Mesa has
been nanwcl t·oordinator of
the South Count' Ser vice
Center for the Ameri<·an
Red C'ros~ The c:enter. at
27324 Curnmo Capistrano.
l . a g u n a '\J 1 g u e I . " l' r ,. es
0 r a n g l' C o u n t ~ I r o m
'.'Jl·wpo11 Bt•ac:h south
A La Mirada college student
won u $3 85 million suit against
her insurance compuny and her
former lawyers "ho failed lo
negotiate a selllem<•nt aftt'r <,he
was In un accident that left a v1c
t im paralyzed.
Under the Orungt• County
Superior Court ruhn~ Monday,
Deborah Betts. 23. 1s to receive
t he damage paynH•nl from /\II
s tale Ins urance Co and the
lawyers who r eprcsentl'd her
after s he allegedly rao a red light
in 1975 and smashl•d inlo another
car. paralyzang the drl\er. a 32
year old Seaside woman
In 1977. the fum1h of thi11
woman. Anne Culucci. won a
$450,000 judgment against Ml:>
Bell'S Allstate paid lht• $100,000
allowed under her auto msuram•t•
pohcyloMs Galucc-1 Butthatlt.•n
Ms Betts with a $350 ,000 debt
In her suit . M-. Bells alleged
lhat Allslalt.•, wh1('h also ms url'cl
Saddleback. library
to open weekends
Saddleback College in Mission
VieJo will operate its libr ary un-
der an experimental Friday and
weekend schedule beginning
Aug 28 ancl ('Ontinuing through
th e fall semester.
Steve Tash. library
coor dinator, said lhe 95,000·
volume collecl1on will be open
until 9. 45 f. m . on Fridays and
from 8 a m lo l p . m . on
Saturdays Reg ular library
hours are 7 30 a m . lo 9 .45 p.m
Monday through Thurs~iay
Under the old schedule, the
library closed at 5 p .m . on
Fridays and remained closed on
we(•kends
··Because we a1 t' o ffering
more Friday night dasse-, and
because of student interest m
the extended hours , we arc 1m
p lcmenting the rH'w hours,"·
Tash said.
"This still 1s an experiment
and its continuation will dei>end
on funding and s tudcnt/l'om
munity use,"' Tash said
Non students w ho want to use
the library can obtain a resident
borro"er 's hbran-card 1f the'
are at least 18 \·c;Hs old a"d
have proof of res 1dcnc~ \\ilh1n
the Saddl eback Commun1t v
College District boundarie; ~"-'-========================================-:
THE
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HOURS: Mond•y through Saturday 8:30 •.m.·10:00 p.m.
Sunday 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
EVENINGS-WEEK-END5-4i0LIDAYS
--..
MN Galucci, railed to negoUate
the tlu1m "1n good faith" (or an
out of l'Ourt settlement as re·
11u1n.'CJ by la\\
The award granted Monday
<·overs pumt1ve dumaacs. as well
us emollooul s uffering and dis·
tress. and the $350,000 t hat Ms.
Betts still owes Ms G alucci
Jur)-foreman LS Duckworth
uf Fountain Valley said "it
:o.t•l'ml•d like 1t was Allstate's
a path) more than anything else''
th at led lo the I arge a mount of the
damage·-. ui.:amst the insurance
t•o m pan'
Enrollment
at OCC hits
record high
I ncn•a:-.l·d area popul ation
touplt'fl Y.1th :.i s tale law have
brought a n •('ord high 12,178 stu -
dl•nt:-. to the summer session of
Orangt• <'oust College m Costa
Mt-sa . 11ffit1als said
A('('ordmg to Kt.'n Mowrey,
llc<.1n or Jdm1ss1ons and records,
a s tate la\\ lhut allows free flow
or students from other college
d1 slrit·ls 1s partly responsible for
the· 700 <,ludc•nt incrt.'asc in s um-
mer from last year
Mo" n•\ s aid unemployment
al~u ha" gt•ncrally forced up
«11mrnun1ty c·ollege enrollment.
lie said people return to college
to µ1<:k up a new skill
lk ul..,o t·1ted the influx of
Soul111·a"t Asian rerugees as
anotht•r n·J<,on for the increase.
:\towr<•\ saul dunng the fall and
spring st•mcsters, the refugees
rnnst1t ut('(I about 5 percent of
the collc•gt"s 33.000 population.
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AUG.12, 1tl1
STOCKS BS
SPORTS 86
Airlines. appear to be
recovering from air
controllers strike . . . 83
D
0
• e stores square peg in round hole?
Irvine City Council members
couldn't agree Tuesday over
why retail business development
has been delayed in the city.
Some agreed with an Irvine ·
Company asse ssment that
bla med the problem on high In·
terest rates and an uncertain
economy.
Councilman Larry Agran said
the Irvine Company could be do·
ing more to attract retail busi-
nesses. however.
Discussion of the issue came
a fter Dick Cannon, vice presi-
dent of commercial-industrial
division, reported the Irvine
company Is "very encouraged
by what we think Is an exciting
future."
Cannon said several shopping
areas will be completed in the
city in 1983 instead of next year
because of dramatic increases
in the cost of borrowing money
over the last year.
Those increases have scared
potential new businesses and
discouraged existing others
from expanding, Cannon said.
CATCH OF THE DAY -Anyone can request a window ta-
ble at a bayside restaurant. So to further imprds his date
K athy Waggoner of Garden Grove. Tim Magill of Foun-
tain Valley arranged a personal table on the Newport
Council m em bers who
agreed with Cannon Hid the city
may have to re-shape It.a plam
and place moat commercial de-
velopment in the planned Irvine
Center at the junction ol San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways.
Mayor David Silla said after
the meetine that the planned
University Town Center near the
University of California campus
may have to be reduced in she
from original projections.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis
said the city is caudlt in the COD·
tradlctlon of wantln8 com·
merclal development without
heavy auto traffic, while re·
tailera want their stores in
places where heavy traffic now
brings customers.
"We're trying to put a square
peg in a round hole," Vardoulis
said. "You can't have extremely
high commercial activity
without traffic."
Vardoulls said nearby cities
have the traffic flow to support
major commercial centers "but
............. .,...,......_
Beach pier. They enjoyed their lunch of roast lamb, rice
pilaf and heart-sh aped melon with cberries d espite the
curious c rowd of onlookers and the arrival of a policeman
who nixed the serving of wine on t he pier.
you wouldn't want to live there
-we're avoiding that in Irvine
and I think rightfully so."
Sills said heavy commercial
development in Irvine Center
would put business in the one
place in the city that has a very
heavy traffic flow.
Agran called the Irvine Com-
pany report "a dismal assess-
ment" and said he is "just not
satisfied" with Cannon's view
lhal local mercha nts a re as
vulnerable to the economic
situation as others.
"We're In much better shape
here to withstand the ups and
downs in the economy than other
communities," Agran said. He
suggested that the Irvine Com·
pany cul rents on retail outlets
to combat rising vacancy rates
and allract new business.
"((the (Irvine ) company
wants lo back off on University
Town Center. then I suggest
they immediately institute a
moratorium on residential de·
velopment," Agran said.
1County changes
welfare policy
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has decided to move
away from an earlier require·
ment that prospective general
relief welfare recipients be able
to prove they have li ved in the
county for 30 days.
Supervisors took the action
Tuesday on the advice of the
county Counsel's Office, which
concluded that the residency re·
quirement might be struck down
by a superior court judge at an
upcoming hear ing on its con·
stitutionality.
The board added language to a
resolution approved two months
ago that that will, in effect, al·
low the 30-day requirement to
serve only as a guideline, which
may not be strictly adhered to.
Supervisors imposed the res·
idency requiremenl amid con·
cerns t hat so-call ed "county
hoppers" were moving into
Orange County to take advan-
t age of welfare benefits .
Supervisors turned aside a pro-
posed one-year residency re,
quirement in favor of the 30-day
r ule.
General relief is provided to
people who either do not qualify
for or are awaiting other forms
of welfare assistance. The res·
idency require ment was im·
posed to stem increasing costs oC
the general relier program,
which unlike other forms of as·
s istance. is funded exclusively
with county funds
The county was sued by the
Legal Aid Society over imposi·
tion of the 30-day residency re·
quirement The society acted on
behalf of a welfare recipient who
h ad b een d e n ied benefits
because she was unable to prove
she had lived in the county for 30
days
Al an initial court hearing on
the issue. Judge Leonard Gold·
stein expressed concern about the
the constitutionality of the pro·
vision and ordered the county to
pay the woman benefits ,
retroactively. pending a second
hearing, scheduled for Tuesday.
Anthony won't quit
Irvine City Council
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony will not resign his post
as a result of his recent convic·
lion for assaulting his wife.
Anthony issued a writte n
statement before the start of
Tuesday's council meeting say-
ing that be decided to stay on
after speaking with about 70 peo-
ple and evaluating about a dozen
unsolicited comments he'd re·
ceived.
"Discounting the opinions of
those who are my political ad·
versaries, the thoughts I've
heard and read are almost
unanimous that I should serve
out Ul1s term, which ends in July
1982," Anthony wrote.
''This public sentiment.
coupled with my own desire to
fulfill the obli gation I assumed
when elected in 1978, has led to a
decision to complete this term of
office, if at all possible ...
Anthony has said he will not
seek re-election when his term
runs out next J une. He indicated
T uesday he will not seek any
other elective offi ce either.
"I have other priorities at this
mo ment, and none or those
priorities include public office."
he said.
County seeks
landfill
caretakers
Laguna cites violation of zoning ordinance
·Rent-free living, right here in
Orange County?
Not impossible , des pite
escalating housing costs.
That is, if you already own a
trailer or motor home, and, if
you don't mind living in a dump.
Orange County government,
with the blessing or the board or
supervisors, is looking for seven
people to live at and maintain
the county's seven landfills and
solid waste transfer stations.
The idea is the brainchild of
Ray Rhoads, manager of the
county Solid Waste Management
Program, who says It's less ex-
pensive and more desirable to
have resident caretakers than
hiring security guards to patrol
the four dumps and three
transfer stations located in the
county.
Caretakers, Rhoads said in a
memorandum to s upervisors,
can watch out for fires and deter
vandalism. He said a system has
proved hiehly effective in Los
Angeles County.
Under a proposed caretaker
agreement submitted to the
bOard, the county would provide,
r e nt rree , sites for the
caretakers' trallera a nd a
"clean" water supply, although
potability would not be aaaured.
And caretakers would be
1rv111 a radio so they could tt·
part troubl•1JOme activity lo ;a Clllklolll. Tiie ..........
1 &Ut caretaker• not act
u 4=·h1v• 11pou1e
br CllW penOG live wttb tlMtn
aad may keep two or tbrH ••Ima ...
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. DlltJ Ple.t .....
Jack Cressman says be knew
the risks he was taking when he
moved his small architectural
business into a slightly sagging
Cape Cod house he owns at
G lenneyre and Cleo streets.
;,I moved in very quieUy and
lay low," the outspoken Laguna
Beach architect said of his mid·
February move. "I didn't put up
any signs, and I told the
neighbors what I was doing."
And now the city. bas filed a
criminal complaint aealnst
Cressman for violating the city's
zoning ordinance by moving his
business into a residential area.
It's not like Cressman didn't
try to go the legal route to get
his way, he says.
He appeared before the City
Council 15 months ago to request
a commercial zone designation
on the residential lot upon which
his once dowdy wood Laguna
''charmer" sits.
The council flatly rejected
Cressman's request, sa)'in1 it
would result in ·'spot ICllllnt"
and place a commercial bulldlne
adjacent to homes.
Cressman argues that bi1
house, localed rilht acrou tbe
street from ~be Albert~on'a
Market loadin1 dock, 11 t.Uor
made for a low-profile pro-
fessional bualne11 use.
"Lal\ID8 Beach doun't have
an offlce/proteuloaal &OM that
could aet!Olftmodate a propouJ
like mine,'' Cnaman said. "MJ
netobon feared 1 comlllefdal d~ltioa COQld ... d to ....
freataurant aext door to them. wl I r9allJ aympetNN
with~.·· c..._mn•a auumnll tMt M
Architect flayed for moving business into residence Ron Smith. director of com-
munity development for the city,
said it will all depend on how the
commission interprets the city
code regarding home occupa-
tions.
would be willing to sign a deed
restriction with the city also
failed to sway his neighbors or
the city.
·'The city said such a restric·
lion on the title would probably
Park patrol
paying off
in Irvine
A park patrol proeram in·
stituted by the Irvine Poltce
Department on Aug. 1 bu re-
sulted ln 16 arrests for violatioaa
ranging from ille1aJ pouession
of alcohol by minors to curfew
infractions, police Capt. James
Blaylock aald today.
He aald the Protr•m la aimed
at belplnc solve problems in city
parks such as:
-Loud and beW1erent eatber· Ina• durtq late evenlnt hours.
-Vandalism to park facilities
and to 1urroundln1 residences. -Drue and alcohol abuse by
youns adult.I and juven.lles.
-lntimldat.loa of nearby r.l·
dents by band• of 1oun1
penona.
Blaylock said l.be police •
partment la al10 lncrea1la1
patrol• near aboppiaC cmten
where YoUlha CCJGll'el•te.
Blaylock Hld ~·t lntM'I Ju. ..... ..U..GWJ' pnbl-
DIJJ be more Y1'1bl• tlla'D
elM ..... ,lbleelntMbM•
ta..ift park .,.. -,.., commerclll reertaUoa
facUW.. .
be unenforceable and illegal."
So that decision left the
architect with several options:
-Sell the wood-shingle house
and lot;
-Maintain It as a rental unit
and continue to take a ne1aUve
cash now of $2,000 per month;
-Tear it down and replace it
with a nine·bedroom stucco
duplex.
He decided Instead to move
his draft.int boards. oenclJa and
maps into the bu1ldln1 and ev·
eryt..biq wu fine and dandy un·
til the building inspector showed
up in April.
Anotber option, accordini to
the buildint inspect.or, would be
to apply for a home occupation
permit, and that's what be did.
Cressman will appear before
the city's Plannin1 Commlaslon
tonllht in an effort)" keep his
buainea in l.be boute.
He aaya l.bere'a more than
economics involved in bis re-
quest, addtn1 tbe old bouae,
call~ "Cleo1ball, •• bu some
hlltoric value to the community.
, Re claims the old buildln1
hoUMS the po.t ot a woman
killed aa 1 result of a love
triaqle ln the llMOll. A Ukeneu
of her face 1uppGHdiy abowed
up in mildew ln the room wbere
,abe wu murdered.
And be •• ,. ..... ccdlnned
the fact tlaat druc ~ 111DC!daJ
Leary ~ UYecl la the 1,100
141uan foot boule ...... mcmns out to Lapna c..,on In the
19'DI.
Tb8t mllbt be ltntcbiQI the hl.ldlal'• ldltortcal W«tJa. IM
admits, but he'd still Like to keep
the house intact.
Whether Planning Com ·
missioners will buy Cressman's
arguments for a low-profile busi·
ness use remains to be seen.
As for the cri minal complaint,
Smith said it will be heard next
month In court.
.............. ~
MAGel TAKll HONORS -UC Irvine•a All·A n
bubtball player Kevlo 11.,.. towers over Irvine Mayor
Davkl Silla. who 1ave him an honorary city plaque Tuesday
In ~tlon for bis outstanding play on the basketball cauil
·Ill H/F
OFF & RUNNING DE PT. -Good
heavens. imagine the coastal s urprise
when it was announced only yesterday
that Dapper John is seeking highe r or.
fice again. Dapper John. of course, is
our very own coastal State SenatQr John
G . Schmitz.
The surprise. in this case, isn't that
John Schmitz. the noted Republican
from Newport Beach. seeks higher of·
~
T-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-f -~r,
fi ce. What the heck. he's done that
before.
As a matter of fact. at one point in
hi s up-and·down political career. he
\ eered awa\ from the GOP ranks and
ran for President of the United States on
I he American Independent P arty tic ket.
QUICK QUIZ: Who was Schmitz's
running mate for vice president on the
AIPticket'!
But I digress. As noted. the s urpr ise
isn't that Senator Schmitz is running for
something again.
The eyebrow-raiser is that Dapper
J ohn dus ted off his long.standing m e m-
bership in the Jo hn Birch Society as one
qualification for office proving that he is
indeed a conser\'ative.
Now wh~· did J ohn go a nd do that?
Everybody knows he's a conser vative.
I le probably holds membership card No.
3 in the Birch Society. Why bring it up?
You were of t he opinion that the
John Birch Society. either as a threat or
a \'irtue. depending on your views. went
out of ~t~·le back with hippie haircuts
and mmi skirh
But then. ~omebody just pointed out
that mini skirts are making a comeback.
Well. mini-s kirts a re a whole lot
more exciting than the John Birch Socie·
t~·. And that ~ a nother contradiction in
the .John G . Schmitz image. Most
Birchers talk rcall v dull stuff. Thev
seem lo lack much senst: of humor. .
JOHN S{'HMITZ IS A WITIV fellow.
I le can even get a way with poking josh
at the far right. lie particularly like~ to
isn't dull
lampoon the press at the drop or a
podium.
Further, Schmitz isn't dull. Years
ago, it was once reported that John, in a
statem e nt opposin g gun controls.
declared that ever yone ought to be able
to own a machine gun it they wanted to.
l think Schmitz late r denied the state·
ment , or m odified it, or declared that it
was taken out or context.
That aside. the words "Mac hine Gun
Schmitz" s ure ly did make a lively
headline.
John Schmitz isn't dull.
BACK I N HI S EAR LY political
career. Schmitz got elected to the state
Senate and then ran and was .elected to
Congress after J immy Utt died. He then
became anti-Nixon. once declaring that
he didn't mind Nixon going to China. just
so long as he stayed there. Schmitz fell
from favor with the GOP and ran for
president as a n independent.
Then he got beaten out or his con-
gressional seat by former Orange Coun·
Sam! Somebody's got an eye on your 1eat
ly assessor Andy Hinshaw. who was
later convicted of misusing his public of·
fice while assessor. .
Schmitz thus c laims today that later
events surrounding both Nixon and
Hinshaw proved that he'd been the right
man aJl along .
T HAT ASIDE , John G. Schmitz
seems to be back full circle in mounting
a nothe r U.S. Senate campaign as he did
tentatively in 1976 a nd 1980.
And just remember. Dapper J ohn
isn't dull.
If anvbodv ca n a rouse Sa m
Hayakawa ·rrom ·his slumbers. Schmitz
ought to be able to do it.
PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR:
Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Advertised Values.
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Get your hair styles In the newwt c.reffwe IC)Ot( -the Ledy Diana. Call today for an ap-
pointment for this easy cut and blowdry.
,
reg. '4500
reg. •1400
reg. •200o
Student awarded
$3.85 million
COORDINATOR . Wa rre n
Wilcox of Costa Mesa has
been named coordinator of
the South County Service
Center for the Ameri<.'an
Red Cross. The center. at
27324 Camino Capistrano.
Laguna Niguel . serves
Orange County from
Newport Beach south
A I.a Mirada college student
won a $3.85 mlllion suit against
her insurance company and her
former lawyers who failed to
negotiate a settlement after she
was in an accident that left a vie
nm paralyzed.
Under the Orange County
Superior Court ruling Monday,
Deborah Betts, 23. is to receive
the damage payment from All·
state Ins urance Co. and the
lawyers who represented her
after she allegedly ran a red light
in 1975 and s mashed into another
car, paralyzing the driver. a 32·
year-old Seaside woman
In 1977, the family of that
woman, Anne Galucci, won a
$450,000 judgment against Ms
Belts. Allstate paid the $100,000
allowed under her auto insurance
policy to Ms. Galucci Butthatleft
Ms. Belts with a $350,000 debt
In her suit, Ms Bells alleged
that Allstate, which also insured
Saddleback library
to open weekends
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo will operate its library un-
der an experimental Friday and
weekend schedule beginning
Aug. 28 and continuing through
the fall semester.
Steve T as h , library
coordinator, said the 95,000·
volume collection will be open
unW 9:45 p.m. on Fridays and
from 8 a .m . to 1 p .m . on
Saturdays. Regular libra ry
hours are 7:30 a.m. to 9:45 p.m.
Monday through Thursday.
Under the old schedule, the
Ii brary closed at 5 p.m . on
Fridays and remained closed on
weekends.
"Because we are offering
more Friday night classes and
because of student interest in
the extended hours, we are im·
ple menting the new hours."
Tash said.
"This still is an experiment
and its continuation will depend
on funding and student/com·
munity use," Tash said.
Non.students who want to use
the library can obtain a resident
borrower's library card if they
ar e at least 18 years old ai\d
have proof of residency within
the Saddleback Community
College District boundaries. p.o:========================---==-==-====·
THE
MEDICAL CARE
CENTER
HOURS: Monday through Saturday 8:30 a.m.·10:00 p.m.
Sunday 9:00 a.m.-&:00 p.m.
EVENINGS-WEEK-ENDs-HOLIDA VS
Ms Galuccl, railed to negotiate
the cla11p "m good faith" for an
out·of court settlement as re· quired by law
The award granted Monday
covers punitive damages, as well
as emotional suffering and dis-
tress, and the $350,000 that Ms.
Bells still owes Ms. Galucci.
Jury foreman L.S. Duckworth
or f'ounlain Valley said "it
seemed like it was Allstate's
apathy more than anything else"
that led to the large amount orthe
damages against the insurance
company
Enrollment
at OCC hits
r e cord high
Increased area population
coupled with a stale law have
brought a record high 12,178 stu·
dents to 1he summer session or
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa, officials said.
According to Ken Mowrey,
dean of admissions and records,
a state law that allows free now
o~ s~udei:its from other college
districts 1s partly responsible for
the 700-student increase in sum·
m er from last year.
Mowrey said une mployment
a lso has generally rorced up
community college enrollment.
He said people return to college
to pick up a new skill.
He also cited the influx of
Southeast Asian refugees as
another reason for the increase.
Mowrey said during the faJI and
s pring semesters. the refugees
constituted about 5 percent of
... the college's 33,000 population.
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AU0.12, 1911
STOCKS 85
SPORTS 86
Airlines. appear to be
recovering from. air
controllers strike . B3
D
Q
State. to probe OC Fair concessionaire
By JERRV CLAUSEN
Of .. 0., " ........ A state official in Sacramento
said today he'll seek an In·
vestig~tion into possible conflict
of interest activity Involving a
Del Mar Fair director and a con-
cessionaire who operates an·
nually al the Orange County
Fair.
George Gomes, chief of fairs
and expositions for the State
Department of Agriculture said
he'll ask the State Fair Political
Practices Commission this week
to check dealings involving Del
Mar Falr board member Frank
Strauss and Lloyd Crutchfield.
Crutchfield's conceaalon firm,
based in Encinitas, has worked
the annual OraDge County Fair
in Costa Mesa for at least the
last five years. It fielded a fish
and chips trailer and a beer
stand for the last month's event.
Gomes contends that Strauss
voted to award Del Mar Fair
contracts to Crutchfield, that
fa1r's largest concessionaire,
while allegedly living rent-free
in a La Costa area home owned
CATCH OF THE DAY Anyone can request a window ta-
ble at a baysidc restaurant. So to further impress his date
Kathy Waggone r of Garden Grove. Tim Magill of Foun-
tain Valley arranged a personal table on the Newport
by the concesalonalre.
Crutchfield. who also is a home builder, could not be
reached for comment today, but
Strauss said he has twice voted
In favor of contract awards to
Crutchfield.
He said he "never really
thought about" possible conflict
of interest.
"What I should have done at
the time was abstain from vot·
ing, then there would have been
no froblem," Strauss said.
I asked to resian over the Incl·
dents, Strauss said, he will.
If there la hanky panky, con·
jectured Ken Fulk , Orange
County Fair mana1er, none of It
la going on in Orange County.
"I'm absolutely confident he's
not furniBhin1 a house for any
board member (in Oran1e Coun·
ty) or fair employee," Fulk
said.
Fulk, respooalble for ,rading
the performance of food and
drink booths al the annual
Orange County event and rec·
ommending approval of con·
...., .... ,......~.....,_
Beach pier. They enjoyed their lunch of roast lamb, rice
pilaf and heart-shaped melon with cherries despite the
curious crowd of onlookers and the arrival of a policeman
who nixed the serving of wine on the pier.
tracts to the board of directors,
said competition is keen for space.
•'There's always a fight for
space," he said. "I just don't
give out a lot of space."
Fulk said he's looking for
quality, not quantity in Orange
County.
He said concessionaires who
stay near the bottom of the
performance list for severa:
years are dropped from the fair
and new ones introduced.
Crutchfield, he said, is con-
sldered "a good concessionaire
who does an exceptionally clean
job here."
Fulk said he is careful in deal·
Ing with current and potential
concessionaires.
''I've never accepted a ~eer
from Crutchfield," he comment·
ed. "I've never accepted a sam-
ple of concessionaire beer in all
my life."
But the manager said he had
"sampled" fi sh at Crutchfield's
fairgrounds trailer this year and
deemed it "excellent "
County changes
welfare policy
The Orange County Board or
Supervisors has decided to move
away from an earlier require-
ment that prospective general
relief welfare recipients be able
to prove they have Jived in the
county for 30 days.
Supervisors took the acti,on
Tuesday on the advice of the
county Counsel's Office, which
concluded that the residency re-
quirement might be struck down
by a superior court judge at an
upcoming hearing on its con-
stitutionality.
The board added language to a
resolution approved two months
ago that that will, in effect, al·
low the 30-day requirement to
serve only as a guideline, which
may not be strictly adhered to.
Supervisors imPQsed the res·
idency requirement amid con-
cerns that so-called "county
hoppers" were moving into
Orange County to take advan-
tage of welfare benefits .
Supervisors turned aside a pro-
posed one-year residency re-
quirement in favor of the 30-day
rule.
General relief is provided to
people who either do not qualify
for or are awaiting other forms
of welfare assistance. The res·
idency requirement was im·
posed to stem increasing costs of
the general relier program.
which unlike other forms of as·
sistance. is funded exclusively
with <.:ounty funds
The county was sued by the
Legal Aid Society over imposi-
tion of the 30·day residency re-
quirement. The society acted on
behalf of a welfare recipient who
had been denied benefits
because she was unable to prove
s he had lived in the county for 30
days
_At an initial court hearing on
the issue. Judge Leonard Gold-
stein expressed concern a bout the
the constitutionality of the pro-
vision and ordered the county to
pay th e woman benefits,
retroactively, pending a second
hearing, scheduled for Tuesday.
Anthony won't quit
Irvine City Council
Irvine City Councilman Art
Anthony will not resign his post
as a result of his recent convic·
tion for assaulting his wife.
Anthony issued a written
statement before the start of
Tuesday's council meeting say-
ing that he decided to stay on
after speaking with about 70 peo-
ple and evaluating about a dozen
unsolicited comments he'd re-
ceived.
•'Discounting the opinions of
those who are my political ad-
versaries, the thoughts I've
heard and read are almost
unanimous that I should servP . .
out Uus term, which ends in July
1982," Anthony wrote.
''This publi c sentiment.
coupled with my own desire to
fulfill the obligation I assumed
when elected in 1978. has led to a
decision to complete this term of
office, if at all possible "
Anthony has said he will not
seek re-election when his term
runs out next June. He indicated
Tuesday he will not seek any
other elective offi ce either.
"I have other priorities at this
moment, and none of those
priorities include public office."
he said.
County seeks
landfill
caretakers
Laguna cites violation of zoning ordinance
Rent-free living, right here in
Orange County?
Not i mpossible, d espite
escalating housing costs.
Thal is, if you already own a
trailer or motor home, and, if
you don't mind living in a dump.
Orange County government,
with the blessing of the board of
supervisors, is looking for seven
people to Live al and maintain
the county's seven landfills and
solid waste transfer stations .
The idea Is the brainchild of
Ray Rhoads, manager of the
county Solid Waste Management
Program, who says it's less ex-
pensive and more desirable to
bave resident caretakers than
hiring security guards to patrol
the four dumps and three
transfer stations located in the
county.
Caretakers, Rhoads said In a
memorandum to supervisors.
can watch out for fires and deter
vandalism. He said a system has
proved hi&hlY effective in Los
Angeles County.
Under a proposed caretaker
agreement submitted to the
ooard, the county would provide,
rent free , 'slles for the
earetakera' traileu and a
"clean'' water supply, alt.hough
potability would not be assured.
And uretakera would be
ijvea a radio so they could r•
tort troubleaome activity to ~ olfklala. Tbe •IJ'eement
)~ that caretaktrt not act u aead·poliffmen. Cll"tlalrert may have a 1pouse
or o&Mr' penoa Uve w'UI them
and maJ keep two or three ...........
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. Deity""' .....
Jack Cressman says he knew
the risks ~e was taking when he
moved bis small architectural
business into a slightly saaging
Service held
for Newport's
Dr. Bernard
Burial rites were conducted
Tuesday at Holy Sepulcher·
Cemetery in Orange for Dr.
Do nald P . Bernard, 60, of
Newport Beach. who died last
Thursday.
Dr. Be rnard. who had a
private practice in Westminster,
was on the staff of Westminster
Community and Fountain Valley
Community hospitals.
He served in the U.S. Navy
from 1950 to 1974, endin1 bis
Navy career as commandln1 of·
fleer of the Navy Re1lonal
MedlcaJ Center in Guam.
He is survived by hl:a wife,
Helen, two sons, a dau1hter, a
brother and two alalert.
The family has 1u11e1ted
memorial donations to St.
Joachim Catholic Chutch, 1964
qrange Ave., Costa Mesa.
Sale burglarized .
Thieves who apparently knew
the combination to an ottMe sale
In Newport Beacb'1 Reuben E.
lAe ...... u.rut, made off wWI
ttl,000 In cub um week.
Police aald lt II unclear WIMD
or boW the bur1lan entered tbt
restaurant.
Architect flayed for moving business into residence arguments for a low-profile busi-
ness use remains to be seen.
Ron Smith, director of com-
m unity development for the city
said it will all depend on how th~
commission interprets the city
c.ode regarding home occupa-
t10ns.
Cape Cod house he owns at
GleMeyre and Cleo streets.
···1 moved in very quietly and
lay low," the outspoken Lal\ID•
Beach architect said of hia mid·
February move. "I didn't put up
any signs, and I told the
neighbors what I was doing."
And now the city has filed a
criminal complaint against.
Cr essman for violating the city's
ioning ordinance by moving bis
business In~ a residential area.
It's not like Creasman didn't
try to go the legal route to 1et
bis way, be aaya.
He appeared before the City
Council 15 months •10 to request
a commercial ione dealpation
on the resldenUal lot upon wbicb
bis once dowdy wood Laiuna
"charmer" sits.
The council flatly rejected
Creaaman's request, aaylnc it
would result ln "•pot IOlllq"
and place a commercial bulldlnt adjacent to homes.
Cre11man ar1uea tbat bi•
hoUMi located n,bt acrou tbe
street from tbe Albertaon•a
Market loadinl dock, la tailor
made for a low-prolUe pro·
feaalonal bua1neu UH.
"Lapa Beach doesn't have
an aftlce/prol.,&onal.,... tbat
could accommodate a pnpoea1 like~," Cnaaman nl4 •111y
n~I feared a commerelal d.. UOD eo.14 lud to a felt
f rauurul ant dOai' to 'tMm, iiDd I r.lr ,, .. ?Ww
wltla tMt." er • .,.,., ... ,_1111 t1111t111t
wOilW lie wWml tD .._ • ....
ffltltetiell'. wUi u.. dtJ ....
'ailed to sway his neighbors or
the city.
"The city said such a restric·
lion on the tiUe would probably
be unenforceable and illegal."
So that decision left the
architect with several options:
-Sell the wood-shingle house
and lot;
-Maintain It as a rental unit
and continue to take a ne1ative
cash now of $2,000 per month;
-Tear It down and replace It
with a nine-bedroom stucco
duplex.
He decided Instead to move
bia drallln«i boards. oencib and
map1 into the bulldlnl and ev·
erytbln1 wu fine and dandy un-
W the buildlni lnapeetor abowed
up in April. Another option, accordlq to
the build.lnl lnapector, would be
to apply for a home occupation
permit, and that's what be did. Creuman will appear before
the db''• Plannlnl Commluion toollht ln an effort to keep b1a
buatneu ln tbe house.
He a a ya there• a more than
economics bsvolved ln Im re·
quest, addlna the old house. called "Cleoeball," hu aome
blataric value to tM community.
' Be clalma the old btdldlal
...... Ule po.t of a woman
ldlled •• a result of a love trtucle ID tbe tMOI. A Ilk__,
of blr faee auppoMdly abowM
ap bl IDildew ta t.be room wbere
llM w• lllUl'dend.
ADii ... ..,. be'• cciilftrmed
UM fact Ulat dnil.ISU ~
....., ODCe 11..a la t.be 1.1•
..... foot --..... IPCMDI.
out to Laguna Canyon in the
1960s.
That might be stretching the
building's historical worth. he
admits, but he'd still like to keep
the hQUSe intact.
Whether Planning Com ·
missioners will bUY Cressman's
As for the criminal complaint,
Smith said it will be heard next
month in court.
Media 'muzzled?'
Agency heads asked to avoid reporters
Newport Beach City
Councilman Paul Hummel. who
claims inaccurate and mislead-
ing information is being fun·
neled to the media, is asking
that city department heads no
longer talk with reporten.
"I think we should restrict all
responses to one source," Hum·
mel auuested. "I think It's
hllblY out of order for reporters
to 10 to department beads.''
Tbe. councilman said he in·
eludes the city attorney and
Police Chief iD that list.
Hummel said repotten often·
1et inaccurate Information or
"take aomethlnl out of context
and 1et it wrona."
A retired Naval officer, Hum·
mel aald the one-source a,..tem
"ll tbl way we did lt in the
mWtary.''
Fellow council members
•In.cl to hue the clty'a pro-
Hdural ethics tommlttee review
bla rwaMlt. Councilman Don
Stta.. 1ald be •treed wttb
Hammel. llQOr Jackie Heather
·wondered if Hummel was trying
to "muule" the press.
City Manager Robert Wynn
said he has an "open door"
policy with the press and has
bad few problems with that ar·
rangement.
"ll he's looking to me to put
out all the press releases, I can't
do that," said Wynn. "I don't
know all the police problems or
public works items."
Hummel said there have been
several articles recently that
have been incaccurate because
of statements by department
heads. He did not indicate which
articles he was referrtnc to.
"It's up to the council to ex·
presa opinions," Hummel COD·
tlnued. "The city staff
r~:ts the clty. It has no
0 ."
He said emftoyeee alvlnl ln·
formation or atat.emen" to the
preu "place them11tn1 in terri·
ble jeopard)'• It
''I ihlDk lhat .taat we need ll
more coordlnaUon," said Hum·
met. "We Med more preu re·
ltaaes."
OFF & RUNNING DEPT. -Good
heavens , imagine the coastal s urprln
when it was announced only yesterdar
that Dapper John is seeking higher o
fice again. Dapper John, of course, is
o ur very own coastal State Senator John
G . Schmitz.
T he surprise. in this case. is n't that
John Schmitz. t he noted Republican
from Newport Beach. seeks higher of·
~
T-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 ®"·
fice. What t he h eck . he's done that
before.
As a matter of fact. at one point in
his up-and-down political career. he
veered awa~· from the GOP ranks and
ran for Pres ident o f the United States on
the Amer ican lndependent Party ticket .
QUICK QUIZ: Who was Schmitz's
running m ate for vice president on the
Al P ticket?
But l digr ess. As noted. the surprise
isn 't that Senator Schmitz is running for
something again
The eyebrow-rais er is that Dapper
J ohn dus ted off his long-sta nding mem·
bership in the John Birch Society as one
qualification fo r office proving that he is
indeed a conservati\'e.
Now why did J ohn go a nd do that"
E,·erybody knows he's a conservative.
He probably holds membership card No.
3 in the Birch Society Why bring it up?
You were of the opinion that the
John Birch SoC'ictv. either as a threat or
a virtue . depending on ~·our views. went
out of style back with hippie haircuts
and mini-skirts .
But t hen. somebody jus t pointed out
that mini-skirts are making a comeback
Well. m ini-s kirts a re a whole lot
more exciting than the J ohn Birch Socie·
ty . And that·s another contradiction in
t he J o hn G. SC'hmitz image. Most
Birchers talk reall v dull stuff Thev
seem to lack much sens~ of humor. .
JOHN SCH~UTZ IS A WITTV fellow
He> can e\·en get awa~· with poking josh
at the far right He particula rly likes to
isn't dull
lampoon the pres~ ut the drop of a
podium.
iurther. Schmitz Isn't d ull. Years
ago. it was once reported that John. in a
s tatement opposing gun controls .
declared that everyone o ught to be a ble
to own a machine gun if they wanted to.
I th.Ink Schmitz later denied the state·
ment, or modified it. or decla red that it
was taken out of context.
That aside, the words "Machine Gun
Schmitz" s ureJy did m a ke a li vely
headline.
John Schmitz isn't dull.
BACK I N HIS EARLV political
career. Schmitz got e lected to the stat e
Senate and then ran and was .elected to
Congress after Jimmv Utt died He then
became anti-Nixon , once declaring that
he didn't mind Nixon going to China. j us t
so long as he s tayed the re . Schmitz fell
from favor with the GOP and ran for
president as an independent.
Then he got beaten out of' his con-
g ressional seat by former Or ange Coun-
Sam! Somebody's got an eye on your aeat
ty assessor Andy Hins haw, who was
later con victed of misusing bis public of·
fice while assessor
Schmitz thus claims todav that later
events s urrounding both Nixon and
Hinshaw proved that he'd been the r ight
man all along.
T HAT ASI DE, J ohn G. Schmitz
seems to be back full circle in mounting
another U.S . Senate campaign as he did
tentatively in 1976 a nd 1980.
And just rem e mber. Dapper J ohn
is n't dull.
l f anvbod\ can a r ouse Sam
I layakawa ·rrom ·hts s lumbers. Schmitz
ought to be able to do it.
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Student awarded
$3.85 million
COORDINATOR • Warren
Wilcox of Costa Mesa has
been named coordinator of
the South County Ser vice
Cente r for the American
Red Cross The center. at
27324 Cam ino Capis trano.
Laguna N i guel . ser ves
Ora n ge Cou n ty fr om
Newport Beach south
A La Mirada college student
won a $3.85 million suil against
her insurance company and her
former lawyers who failed to
negotiate a settlement alter she
was in an accident that left a vie·
tlm paralyzed.
Under the Or ange County
Superior Court ruling Monday,
Deborah Betts, 23, Is to receive
the damage payment from All·
state Insurance Co. and the
lawyers who represented her
after she aJlegedly ran a red light
in 1975 and smashed into another
car. paralyzing the driver, a 32·
year-old Seaside woman
ln 1977, the fam ily of that
woman, Anne Galucci , won a
$450,000 judgment against Ms
Betts. Allstate paid the Sl00,000
a llowed under her auto insurance
policy to Ms. Galucc1 Butthatleft
Ms. Belts with a $350,000 debt
In her suit, Ms . Belts alleged
that All state . which also insured
Saddleback library
to open weekends
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo will operate its library UD·
der an experimental Friday and
weekend schedule beginning
Aug. 28 and continuing through
the fall semester.
S t eve Ta s h , library
coordinator , said the 95 ,000·
volume collection will be open
until 9:45 p.m. on Fridays and
from 8 a .m . to 1 p.m . on
Saturdays. Regular library
hours are 7:30 a .m . to 9:45 p.m.
Monday through Thursday.
Under the old schedule, the
li brary closed at 5 p.m. on
Fridays and remained closed on
·'Because we a r e offering
more Friday night classes and
because or student interest in
the extended hours, we are im-
plementing the ne w hours,"
Tash said.
"This still is an experiment
a nd its continuation will depend
on funding and student/com·
munity use," Tash said.
weekends.
Non-students who want lo use
the Ubrary can obtain a resident
borrower's library card If they
are at least lS years old aM
have proof of residency within
the Saddle back Community
College Dis trict boundaries. r-========================-==="""'"'=-:::r;;;;;'=l·
THE
MEDICAL CARE
CENTER
HOURS: Monday through Saturday 8:30 a.m.·10:00 p.m.
Sunday 9:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
EVENINGS-WEEK-ENOS-4-tOl,.IDAYS
Ms. Galuccl, failed lo neeoliate
the claim ··1n good faith" for an
out-of-court settlement as re-
quired by law
The award granted Monday
covers punltl ve damages, as weU
as emotional sufferine and dis·
tress. and the $350,000 that Ms.
Bell-. still owes Ms . Galucci.
Jury foreman L.S. Duckworth
o f Fountain Valley said "it
seemed like it was Allstate's
apathy more than anything else"
that led to the large amount of the
damages against the insur ance
company
Enrollme nt
at OCC hits
r ecord hig h
Incr eased area population
coupled with a state law have
brought a record high 12,178 stu·
dents to the summer session of
Orange Coast College in Costa
Mesa, oHicials said
According to Ken Mowrey.
dean of admissions and records,
a stale law that allows frtt now
o~ studei:its from other coUege
districts 1s partly responsible for
the 700-student increase in sum·
mer from last year.
Mowrey said un employment
also has generally forced up
community coJlege enrollment
He said people return to college
lo pick up a new s kill.
He also cited the influx of
Sout heast As ian refugees as
another reason for the increase
Mowrey said during the fall and
spring semesters, the refugees
constituted about 5 percent of
the college's 33.000 population.
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The news that Holiday Inns plans to unload the
Harrah's Car Collection in Sparks, Nev , Is a good ex·
ample of the corporate mind at work.
The Harrah 's Collection is one of the finest
showpieces of antique automobiles in the world . On
display are 1,000 cars, including early Fords,
Packards, Rolls-Royces and the wonderful Bugattis.
It was a coll ection lovingly assembled by Bill Harrah
from profits made at casino tables. Harrah's
operates hotels and casinos in Reno and South Lake
Tahoe.
Harrah began collecting the classic cars in 1948.
By 1962 he had enough to tum the collection into a
rnuseum. open to the public. ·
Bill Harrah died in 1978. And In 1980 Memphis-
based Holiday Inns. anxious to get into the gambling
business. bought Harrah's company. Along with the
casinos came ~
t h e c a r \::.
museum. H's a ,1 ~ 7>
t r i n k et t h a t ·' I ...,,1 H oliday Inns 4~ ~ reels it has no ·--~.__'-'ill... ________ _
use f%. i ch a e I • lllJll lllUllJZ
Taylor, a San
Francisco Chronicle reporter, reported recently on
efforts by citizens to save the collection. There are
various plans afoot. One even calls for federal law to
give Holiday Inns a substantial tax break in return
for donating the museum to the government.
Why does Holiday Inns want to get rid of the col·
lection? Taylor cited a memorandum issued tnternal·
ly by Mead Dixon, Harrah's chairman. 1l said: "We
can no longer afford to hold assets that do not pro·
duce income."
Here, in that brief sentence, is the ethic Holiday
Inns adheres to. H's not the car collection doesn't
produce any income. There's a $4.95 admission
charge to the museum. But it takes money to keep
the cars in the perfect condition they are in -and
Holiday Inns can turn a buck much more easily at
the nearby roulette tables.
Holiday tnns has come a long way in 30 years.
The chain was st arted after Kemmons Wilson , a de-
vout Baptist, look his family on a trip to Washington.
D.C .. and was appalled at the sleazy, roadside motels
he found along the way. Back in Memphis. he teamed
up with Wallace E. Johnson <both were home
builders) to develop a family oriented lodging chain.
Holiday Inns went on to become the world's
la rgest hotelkeeper. But for many years. they re-
tained their Southern Baptist heritage. It was a
wrench in 1960 when they decided to rescind a ban on
the serving of liquor in Holiday Inn restaurants.
It was an even bigger wrench when they decided
to get into the gambling business. By that time just
about au the oldtimers had left the board -and so
these matters could be decided in a businesslike
rash.ion. After the decision was made to become a
casino operator, L.M. Clymer. one of the oldtimers,
resigned as president of the company. citing •·my
overriding regard and respect for my Lord Jesus
Christ."
Today. in addition to the Reno and Lake'Tahoe
properties. Holiday Inns has a new casino-hotel In
Atlantic City and owns 4-0 percent of a Las Vegas
casino. Revenues from gambling are such that they
may account for nearly 25 percent of the $1.8 billion
Holiday Inns collects this year.
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, August 12, 1981
M h )} f'{U)• e t
. 8UC 0 p 9SI IVe
l c1)t (llun1 ' ,,
despite losses
Mariners enjoying second season
By EDZINTEL
or ... o.tty ""' .....
SEATTLE -There's freaky
things happening in SeatUe. ·
For one thing, it's so hot, it
could make an onion cry.
Tuesday's temperature in
downtown Seattle at 5 p.m. was
90 degrees.
Now a heat wave here occurs
about as often as the Mariners
baseball team wlns two games
in a row. Like once a s ummer.
Well whaddya know, the
M armers just won their second
in a row Tuesday night.
Well , one thing we know
ror sure, this streak, like the
heat spell, won't last.
Neither should the Angels' los-
ing streak although they've
shown litUe indication yet that
they're ready to come back from
their recent vacation.
The Mariners, meanwhile,
want to trunk that they can be a
part of an honest-to-goodness
race for a divisional title come
September. The realistic thing
about it is, time is on their side.
And if Seattle continues to
play like it did in Tuesday's 4·1
victory over the Angels, it just
may have some fun here.
The An~els •. on the other
h and, haven't had much f~ -
yet, today, the Angels played the
Mariners in a rare early after-
noon weekday game and if the
Mariners completed the sweep,
you wouldn't want to be sitting
next to Angel manager Gene
Mauch on the ride to Oakland
tonight.
As glum as it all sounds. most
of the Angels aren't loo con-
cerned that they're two games
off the divisional lead with 48
games remaining in Season II of
Strikeball '81.
"If we had continued the
season as we left off and trailed
Oakland by six at this point, go-
ing to Oakland (for three games
beginning Friday), then it might
be critical," said Mauch. "As it
is, it's important.
"The thing about it is, I've
never experienced a season like
this before. There's just certain
things I've got to do now like get
the two relievers (Don Aase and
Andy Hassler ) ready and the
starters ready."
Tuesday night, the Angels col·
lected just five hits (two each by
Rod Carew and Bobby Grich l
and none of them were extra
base hits.
What might concer n
<See ANGELS, Page 88) P lay ball!
Rookie stays c alm Irvme North and Seav1ew -
two Little League powerhouses
-put on an impressive de Dodger crowd can't rattle Red pitcher f enswe battle Tuesday nigl1t at
the M1stso11 V1e10 Youth
Athletic Park Playing m the
Little League dwrswnal touma
men/. the two teams have been
mchmg their way towards re-
gional compet1tzon wtuch unll
be held in San Bernardmo nert
week. and maybe. even the Lit
tie League World Series m
Wzllzamsport. Pa later this
month In Tuesday ·s act10r1.
Irvine .'Vorth"s Gary Rentana
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Scott
Brown, a 6-6 Cajun from
DeQuincy, La., s urveyed the
large crowd of 45,817 at Dodger
Stadium and called it "pure ter-
ror."
"I've never seen 45,000 peo-
ple." the Cincinnati right-hander
said after making his first major
league appearance a successful
one. He may have been awed.
but the 24 -year-old rookie
stymied Los Angeles in relief as
the Reds edged the Dodgers, 7-6.
Dan Driesse·n slammed a
three-run homer in the seventh
inning to lift the Reds to the
comeback victory.
Brown, summoned from In·
dianapolis of the International
League only hours after the
baseball strike was settled,
pitched 2'h innings and gave up
only two hits and no runs to pick
up the victory.
"He was ou'tstanding," said
Cincinnati manager John
McNamara. "We wanted only
one inning out of him but he was
so sharp we stayed with him.
The Dodgers aren't the easiest
lineup to race in your major
league debut."
The big crowd, which matched
the Dodgers' season average,
was a res ult of Fernando
Valenzuela's bid for a 10th vic-
tory. But Valenzuela gave up
two runs" in the first inning and
a home run to Dave Concepcion
in the third.
The rookie, who started for the
National League in last Sunday
night's All -star Game, eventual·
ly was knocked out in the fifth
inning.
··I threw some good pitches
but they hit them," said the 20·
year-old left-hander. "I had prob-
lems with my control Che
walked four> because I didn't
throw much during the strike.
When I pitch regularly again,
I'm sure it will come back."
The Dodgers had broken a 3·3
tie with three runs in the fifth on
a walk, a single by Steve
Garvey. doubles by Ron Cey and
Pedro Guerrero, and a wild
pitch.
Reliever Terry Forster. win-
less for two years and O·l this
season, appeared in command.
pitching out of a jam, in the fifth
when he took over for
Valenzuela, getting the side in
order in the sixth and retiring
the first two Reds in the seventh.
But he gave up successive
singles to Ken Griffey. Concep-
cion (his l,SOOth big league hit)
a nd George Foster. Driessen
followed with his homer down
the right field line.
"I've never seen lightning
strike so fast," said Dodger
Manager Tommy Lasorda.
''I hit a mean slider ,"
Driessen said. "I was just look·
ing to make contact and when I
hit it, I was hoping it would not
go foul ."
After the Reds took a 2-0 lead
in the top of the first, Dusty
Baker tied the score with a two-
run homer in the bottom of the
inning, his fifth. Concepcion
homered off Valenzuela to lead
off the third, his fifth, and
doubles by Guerrero and Bill
Russell lied the game in the
fourth.
Danny Meyer
1 top left J roars back for a pitch
dunng the late mnmgs against
Seaview. Teammate Michael
Balsamo 'top right 1 takes a
hard swing and makes contact
.Wean while. Irvine .Vorth"s
Michael Sletrort f No 9. bot·
tom 1 scores a run and watches
a play at third base along unU1
Sea1Jtew catcher Kevm o·con-
nor. To see who won this
drvisumal thriller. see Paqe 88
Delly Piiot Photos by Cherie• Sterr
Does M eyer re ally d e se rve better? • •
SEATTLE --He really deserves better
than this but who ever told Danny Meyer
that baseball is fair? No one .. absolutely no
one.
But then, things could be worse. Meyer
could be r e mo ved from base ball
altogether as he figured he would be when
he graduated from Mater Dei High School
In 1970.
He might be working for his dad in El
Toro or maybe for himself near his home
in Woodinville, Wash .
Somehow, though, baseball was in the
future for Meyer. He just didn't give
himself enough credit back then. Besides,
.400 hitters, as Meyer was for three
straight years at Mater Dei, don't come
along often.
So here he Is, 11 years later in the big
leagues. The problem is, he is a member
of a Seattle Mariners franchise that for
five years, since its inception in 1977. has
battled a war for credibility. And he's bat·
tling his own war with the Mariners· for
respectability.
Meyer s hould have won the war long
ago. His major league career batting
average is .258, and. he's hit .278 and .275
the past two years. In his first year with
SeatUe, Meyer hit .273 with 22 home runs
and 90 RBI. Thal year. he appeared in 159
games.
It all began in 1972, when, as an infielder
at the University of Arizona, Meyer was
drafted in the fourth round of the summer
draft much to his own disbelief.
"I just didn't think I was good enough at
the time," he said Tuesday as he and the
Mariners prepared to meet the Angels at
the Kingdome.
But Meyer was good enough, as he
demonstrated by a .396 batting average at
Bristol, Va. That was tops in the AA Ap·
palachian League and earned Meyer the
Louisville Slugger Silver Bat Award and
Player of the Year honors.
In 1974, Meyer batted .304 at Evansville
of the AAA to earn a promotion to Detroit
in September.
In two years al Detroit, Meyer batted
.236 and .235 before being drafted by Seal·
tie in the 1976 expansion draft.
Although he was originally drafted as a
second baseman. Meyer has played third,
first and outfield s ince.
In 1~. the Mariners, short on talent in
the outfield, switched Meyer from third to
left field.
He had a hot start al the plate, maintain·
ing a .300 mark through July 26. It was a
good year. 1980, for Meyer as he raised his
totals as a Mariner to the top spot on the
followin~ all-lime lists -games (572), al·
<See DANNY, Page 88)
BVD TVCKE R
Football in Saskatchewan has to warm one's cockles
and people must come from all over the province
to rut it. Revenue comes from sources other than
the sort of television package peculiar to the NFL.
The Rougbrider organization is operated by
volunteers from the community and money ii
raJsed by pancake break:futs and bue a.tea and,
once a )'ear, a $200 a plate dinner where a ribald
evenina ls apent raffling otf two or three
automobiles.
"There is no doubt it is a different at·
mospbere," says Ed Alsman, the usiltant 1eneral
manager of the Rou1hriden and a former Rama
asalatant under Chuck Knox. "For one lhiftl, you
can loee a same here and ii tbe team look• Ukt lt was tryln& to win, nobody booe and tbe coac:b
doesn't 1• hlaDc in effl1y and nobodY wants to ll:lU ~·~I lmow that l1 bard to befleve, but lt 11
~to God trul.h.''
~ clahm to be comfortabl" lJ Ken "'!ISJl '*"'9 the Ra. ~ d•· cl_.~._Jdndlof lllck. ...
''Naturally," Clark 11,a, "u.ft 11 1 o.
f erence in the money a gey can make. Otherwise,
this ls a great place to play. Ed (Alsman) la rl1ht.
You can leave the field here aft.er losin1 a fame
and get a standing ovation. I don't know t thla
would be the case anywhere in the States or. for
that matter, anywhere else in Canada.
"They booed Vinnie pretty 1ood. I couldn't tell
for 1ure, but I don't think be Uked iL very much.
Hu Vinnie ever been booed befor•?"
Not around here, he wasn't.
Bobby Hoeea, a def@Mive back from UCLA,
says he la dell1bled with the 1urroundin1s and
treatment.
'1lt la absolutely 1reat playtn1 here," HOlea
aaya. "My one rqret ta that the people back born•
don't bear more about wbat ii lolal Oil up bere.
Our 1ames ate oa cable TV now, thou_... Do you
tblnk that will help 1et Culldlan t•ball a UtUe mo~ recOcnlUoa down there!''
Well, there wu 1reat interest 1n P'erra11mo
prior to lut Sunday. Wbetber tUl .ut coatiDCM ii·
uncertain.
"I got a clipping from back borne," Bobby
Hosea says. "The guy who wrote it ls all wrong."
He refers to a story written by a Los An1eles
writer who caught Ferra1amo's opening act in
Vancouver and wrote that faciliUes in the CFL
were of slum quality.
"It was too bad the writer saw Vancouver'•
facility,'' says Norm Fong. ''It ls the wont ln the
leaiue."
Norm Fong ls the Saskatchewan equipment
man who did the same Job for the Loa An.telea
Sharks ot the World Hockey Aaaoci1Uon. He 1how1
a visitor around the layout of the Rou1hridera' pre-
mlffl 1Acludin1 a hu1e locker room, welaht room.
11\lnu, whirlpool and lounge.
It compares favorabl)'. with the mulUmUUon1
dollaraetup at Rama Park In Anaheim.
"'lbere l• not 11 much mon91 here," Bobby
Hoeee MY1 and Ken Clark nodJ acreement, "but
neither ta tt the end of the world.''
Se*•tcbewan 1ot • lot cloffr to the center Of
the unlvene the day it SKlt the boff on Vince Fer-
ra11mo.