HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-08-13 - Orange Coast PilotAthlete · toses hU kg~ findS new inner strength
lb PIOL SNEIDEIUIAN .................
Tom Clard~. former Navy demoUUon dlvtr,
former police otflcer, WJI lyln1 In a Utah
Veterans Admlnlatratlon Hoapltal In ltT4,
thinking about kll1Jn1 bJmsell.
Durtn1 a March 1klln1 excunlon, he had
been hit by a car while croa1ln1 a road.
Clardy emeried from a four-month aeml-
coma with his rl1ht lea amputated at the knee.
Movement in bis left leg was permanently im·
paired.
According to Clardy, his doctor• concluded
he was mentally incompetent and recom·
mended he be placed in an inaUtuUon.
"I'm sure I was difficult to 1et 1lon1 with,"
the 36-year-old Fullerton resident saya. "I wu
sukldaJ. I couldn't aee me -a Navy fro1man
jock -living Uke that. I couldn't see me aa a
cripple."
· Today, you can find the same Tom Clardy
working out at the Golden West College pool and
weight room in Huntington Beach, looking
forward to laking part next year in the Han·
dicapped International Ski Races ln
Switzerland.
Or you can find him in th• ocean off Seal
Beach, swimming five to eight miles a day to
get in shape for a more immediate cballenae.
DUllil ClllT
...., ...... ~-.ca.tel~
"l don 't care how limited you are, you can still do more than you think you can." fays Tom Clardy
who plam to IWim from Catalina Island to the coast and teach physical education to the handica-pped.
Between now and early September, Clardy
will attempt a feat that some non-handicapped
athletes might hesitate to try -a 26-mile swim
from Catalina Island to the mainland.
If he can line up a sponsor to help pay for an
escort boat, Clardy is sure he can complete the
crossin1.
Just last month he went the distance in a
10-mile rough water swim between the Hunt·
ington Beach and Seal Beach city piers.
Tom Clardy, once a aulcldal amputee, la
now an athletl who refuses lo live within limit•·
lions.
The transformation hat been slow and dJ/.
ficull.
Before his crippling accident , Clardy had
led an active, outdoor life.
He learned to swim In shallow irrigation
ditches In Oregon. As a teen-ager In northern
Callfornia, he swam daily In the Sacramento
River and Lake Shasta.
After high school, he enlisted In the Navy
and learned scuba diving. He was part of an un·
derwater demolition team that exploded coral
hazards in shipping lanes.
Alter his Navy stint, Clardy became a
police .officer in Coronado. While on duty, he
was struck by a drunk driver. The resulting
back injury led to his disability retirement.
He worked elsewhere until the fateful Utah
car mishap that claimed his right leg.
While recovering in the hospital, Clardy
looked out at a snow-covered mountain and
wondered if he could ever ski again.
The hospital staff told him his goals were
unrealistic.
"The biggest problem is the labeling in the
hospital," Clardy recalls. "All they tell you is
<See VERSATILE, Page A2>
. . . . .. .
1111 11111111 IAllY PIPIR
THURSDAY AUGU5 r t ~ 1 q81 OR ANGF COUN T't'. C ALIFOHNIA 25 CENTS
Striking controllers lose global support
Reagan
inks tax
cut bill
SANTA BARBARA <AP) -
President Reagan reversed the
course of government with the
stroke of a pen today by signing
_into law the largest tax and
spending cuts in American his· tory.
By placing his signature on
t he legislation in an outdoor
ceremony at his secluded moun·
taint.op ranch, Reagan achieved
the No. 1 goal of his first six
months in office.
The new laws slash planned
federal spending on domestic
programs by an estimated $130.5
billion over the next three years
and reduce individual and busi·
ness income laxes by $749 billion
through fiscal 1986 -the cure
Reagan prescribed to revitalize
the nation's economy.
Federal income tax rates will
be c ut 25 percent over 33
months, beginning Oct. 1, when
the amount withheld from most
worker paychecks will drop
about 5 percent.
Additional 10 percent reduc-
tions in withholding will be
made next July and in July,
1983.
Starting In 1985, personal tax
rates, the standard deduction
and the $1 ,000-per-person ex-
emption will be adjusted each
year to help offset inflation.
Seventy-five reporters, photog-
raph e r s and television
cameramen were on band for
t h e signing cer emon y at
Reagan's 688-acre ranch in the
Santa Ynez Mountains.
2 sentenced
to combined
3,500 years
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
The longest prison terms ln Ken-
tucky history -over 1,800 years
each -have bee,i handed
against two men found cullty of
a series of robberies last year.
Benjamin Spencer, 31, was
sentenced Wednesday to 1,940
years and George T. Waldridge,
29, wu sentenced to 1,820 years
by Jefferson Cirdit Judie
Georce Kunzman. Tb& terms
will run consecutively.
Spencer's brother, Anthony, ls
to be sentenced Tuesday. He
pleaded guilty to charces in the
robberies and testlfled acainlt
his brother and Waldrid1e.
PrOMCUton have recommended
a 15-)'ear Hl\tenct.
Spencet ..tu be ellpble to be
conaldered for parole in 10
yean; Walclrldfe wUl be eUllble
lnlbyean. A~to~tbey ,~kitO five UIDI,
tied up retldentl wttb t .........
cordl and UlreattiMd • Moot
them ll U..1 dldll't c~a&a.
Mon U... •• 080 Ill ~
aitd vala•lale• were tat••: bet ........ and ......
beea ...... ed.
Reagan urged to reopen
talks in return for gesture
By The Associated Press
The International Federation
of Air Traffic Controllers As·
sociation tOday decided against
calling for world-wide action to
support striking U .S . con·
trollers.
The association's president.
Harry Henschler, told reporters
that president Reagan should re·
open negotiations with the U.S.
ProfesslonaJ Air Traffic Con·
trollers Organization in return
for the international gesture.
JRelat.ed photo, Page 86).
_ Ue called on air controllers
• who are' staging or planning job
actions to call them off.
Henschler said after the
federation's executive board
ended its two-day meeting that
the boarjl would recommend
postponing any international
1teps in support of the U.S. con·
trollers at least until Aug. 22.
Delegates of the 61 member
organizations of the interna·
tlonal federation will meet -"if
required" -on that date in
Amsterdam, according to a tele·
gram the four members of the
executive board sent lo Reagan.
"Your personal goodwill will
help to bring the matter to a
speedy, ami cable solution and
the f e de ration urges that
negotiations between both
parties reopen immediately."
the telegram said. "The matter
can be solved within 48 hours
* * *
given the goodwill required by
both sides.··
Henschl er said Portuguese
controllers had a~reed to call off their announced boycott of flights
to and from the United States
scheduled to start at midnight
Sunday . T he tower in the
Azores, part of Portugal, con·
trots the key southern trans-
Atlantic route.
Overnight flights to Europe
went off close to schedule from
New York after Ca nadian air --
controllers returned to work and
officials on both sides of the
All anti c predicted a ·'normal
schedule" today
There were some delays
Wednesday on flights from
Europe to the United States and
hundreds of would-be travelers
spent the ni ght sleeping where
t h ey co uld at Lond on 's
Heathrow Airport, but the pro-
blems were expected to clear up
quickly
"By tomorrow morning, as-
suming the lanes stay open, we
s hou ld be down lo a normal
schedule" across the No rth
Atlanti r U.S Trans portation
Secretarr Drew Lewis said
Wednesday
Ile said delays or onl y a half·
hour are foreseen today.
On a normal day. 120 jets de-
part over the North Atlantic
from the airport.
* * *
It's wrong 'Patco '
Firm absorbs controller gripes
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The 11 ·
day-old strike by the nation's air
traffic controllers has had
widespread effects, but possibly
none like one affecting a small
distributorship in San Diego.
Telephone calls at th\? rate of
20 to 30 a day -most from irate
people angered at being inconve·
nienced by the strike -have
poured Into the omces of Palco
on Harbor Island in San Diego.
But instead of reaching PAT·
CO tM well-publicized acronym
for' the Professional Air Traffic
Controllers union, the calls have
,one to the local distributorship
or Palco, a firm which
manufactty"es fishing lures.
Pat Saxon or Palco said
Wednesday she has been unjust-
ly harangued by as many as 46
callers in one day and that she'a
been rec:elvlJil miadJrected com·
plaints for three weeks. ni.t•s
more than a week before \he
controllen walked off their jobs
Aue. s, ultimately causing ru1ht
cancellaUOna around the world.
.. At least \hey weren't cuuin&
aDd crying then," Ma. Sexton
1aid or calla before the strike .,. ...
"I walked into the oMce tbla
mornln1 and two lines were
rlnctnl. 'lbe flnt caller wu a
woman whose daughter could
not set back from Eaypt. The
1econd cuued me up one aide
and down Ute other," ahe aald.
A apoktaman for the local
PATOO omce, who refused tO be
ldenlifted, Hid be bu no( been
llOtifted ol &DJ lr1te phone calla
to the air traffic controllers' un-
ion offices.
The spokesman said the PAT-
CO number being given by
telephone directory assistance
operators along with the number
of the Palco fishing lure maker
previously was unlisted and for
media use only. The fishing lure
distributorship's number Is in
the San Diego phone book.
.ORAIGI COAST llATHIR
Night, morning low
clouds otherwise s unny
Friday afternoon. Lows
tonight 65 at beaches. 67
Inland. Highs Friday 80
along coast, 82 inland.
118181 TIDIY
New York 's Whitney
Mwtum of American Art hot
b6come l>UM11land Ea.st. Sec
Page 84 .
11111 . .,_..,..... ..
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• Qlllllm °'• ... .~ Cl Cl • Ct , ........... ........ M
• 1 • , CM ........ g ........
------
u. .. • • • ) '
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday, August 13, 1981
Brown hackirig
gas tax hike
for road aid
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
Brown administration. after a
year of oppoaltlon, is supporting
a $2.8 billion bill to raise the
gasoline tax two cents per aallon
tor the highways.
However, the Assembly Ways
and Means Committee delayed
for a week its vote on SB215 by
Sen. John Foran, D-Sacramento,
because a quorum coufdn't be
rounded up Wednesday.
Already amended dozens of
time to gain votes in its difficult
passage through the
Legislature, the bill was altered
three more times Wednesday.
One of those amendments,
which reduced by $53 million the
amount of gasoline sales tax rev-
enJ,Jes that would be shirted
rrom t h e general rund to
transportation, made the dif·
ference for the administration.
After the amendment was ap-
proved 8· 7, Lonnie Ma this of
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s
Finance Department told the
4-car crash
cuts power to
Niguel area
More than 2.000 Laguna
Niguel residents were without
electricity early today when a
four-car pileup downed power
lines near the intersection of
Niguel Road and Crown Valley
Parkway, according lo Maurice
Luque. a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric.
Luque said the accident OC·
curred at about 1 a .m . He said
repair crews were sent to the
scene after the utility received a
telephone call from the Highway
Patrol.
Luque said half or the 2.363
electric custome rs had their
power restored by 2:45 a.m.
Work was continuing at 8:30
a.m. to complete the repairs, he
said.
A spokes man for the Orange
County SberiH's Department
said Highway Patrol officers
had both the northbound and
southbound lanes of Crown
Valley Parkway closed to traffic
al 9 a.m. today while repairs
continued.
committee that "the admlniltra·
Uon supports the bill." Brown
earlier had maintained that a
gas tax increase was not
necessary.
Author Foran said he was sur·
prised by the administration
support, although he said lat~r.
"I have no direct commitment
from the eovernor ...
When It came time for a final
vote on the bill, after nearly two
hours of discussion, more than
hall of the 23 committee mem·
bers were elsewhere. Many
were presenting their own bills
before other committees meet-
ing at the same time.
Foran said he thinks he can
get the majority vote in the com-
mittee, but still anticipates trou·
ble gathering the required two-
thirds vote of the 80-member As·
sembly.
The complex bill is aimed at a
deficit in highway runds that is
estimated to range from $900
milJion to $2.4 billion over the
next five years. The bill would:
-Raise the gasoline tax from
seven to nine cents a gallon
beginning in 1983. One cent each
would go to the state and local
governments.
-Incr ease the driver'!f
license fee from $3.25 to $10, and
vehicle registration rees from
$11 to $22, beginning in 1982. .
-Raise truck weight fees 50
percent next year and another 10
percent in 1985. Current fees are
$5 to $413 a year.
-Require that county
supervisors representing two.
thirds of the state's people ap·
prove the bill by Nov. 15. In Los
Angeles County, city councils
can act if the county won't ; only
those cities would get the
money.
-Shift an increasing amount
of the six-cent per-dollar sales
tax on gasoline from the general
fund lo transportation.
A typ1c~I motor,st now pays
about $90 a year in highway-user
taxes and fees. The bill would in·
crease about $24.
Foran's bill before Wednesday
would have shifted S320 million
of the sales tax money from the
general fund to transportation
over five years. His amendment
would delay the general fund
loss lo 1983 and reduce it to S177
million.
..., ..........
AT IT AGAIN -Iranian immigrant Ali Roushan works in his ~osta Mes~. me~al sho~·~ parking Jot on his fourth sculpture, To~ado, while awaiting results or lawsuits regarding ci·
ty nghts to regulate erection of his three previous big red structu~es and Roushan's constitutional rights to freedom of
~xpress1on . Roushan says he'll erect his latest 70-foot work
m about a month, topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands.
ORANGE COAST D1ily Pilat
Thomas P. Haley ~-C ..... l •«ub .. Otlte•
Robert N Weed ,.,_
Thomas A Murphlne ,._
Mlch .. I P. Harvey ·,
lilllWllt OI-
L Kay Sc"lulft
O...W•O.-. I l<ennech N. GOddard Jr. ~°"-• Bem.o SChulman ' ~
CNr•H LOOI ~ ........ ,_
Cerof A. Moot" ......
MAINO"tCE
U0 WHl 9er $t . C.Mle Mff<t, '" Mell -··u ... '*· (Mlt Mew, CA .,.,.
,..,,,19111 ,., 0r.,... , .. ,, ~lltll•Nhllt ,_ ...
MWS ,..,,._ •lluslrel1on\. tcl•IO•l•I m•U•• Of eel ••''"~-"'' ~.., .. ,. mey "" ••11roC111<H •llhovt •P"< ,., ....... .._IOI\ of < ... rtltM ow"''
.~ .....
Wreckage
not that
of Mesans
lh STEVE MARBLE o1 • ...., ...........
The crumpled fuselage ol an
airplane in a remote area of t.he
Sierra Nevada is not the U1ht
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months ago.
Authorities from Fresno Coun·
ty. who spotted the wrecka1e
last month, at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted off
from the Mammoth Lakes
airport last March bound for
nearby Bishop.
BIRDS OF A FEATHER? -Neither Echo. a
coon hound puppy. nor his feathered friend
seems to mind sharing a meal at the Medina.
Ohio, home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young.
Several of the Youngs' chickens are bold
enough to challenge Echo for his food .
The plane, which never
reached Bishop, is believed to
have crashed in the mountains.
That plane was piloted by 2S·
year-old Robert Reed and was
carrying 26-year-old Michael
Thompson, the son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken
Thompson. 'Pete' judges' top cai Sgt. Ken Abell, a member of
the Fresno Sheriffs Search and
Rescue Team, said he was able
to make out an identification
number on the wreckage
Wednesday after developing a
set or aerial photographs.
Oregon feline's meow wins $25,000 and starring role
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -
Pete, a 9--year-old black, short·
haired cat from Central Point,
Ore. was speechless after being
declared the winner of $25,000
and a starring role in a cat food
commercial because of his dis·
tinctive "meow." <Related
photo, Page 84 >.
All the excitement of the
lights, cameras and recorders,
vying lo tape •'the best meow in
America" also took away his ap-
petitite. He couldn't even bear to
look at the mouse cake, full of
Meow Mix dry catfood and
topped by a dressed-up gray ro-
dent.
Pete just dug his claws into
the shoulder of his owner, Shirl
Scott, as the fourth · annual
Grand Meow Off, sponsored by
the Ralston-Purina company,
ended Wednesday, not with a
bang, but a mew.
"Look at those beautiful
yellow eyes," said Ralston·
Don't leave
Walden Pond
witlwut it?
CONCORD. Maas. (AP>
Hawkers of credit cards and
giveaways have reached new
heights in efforts to make a sale.
Soliciting dead people is fairly
common, but now they're trying
to sign Thoreau.
Henry David Thoreau, a 19th·
century philosopher, writer and
social critic, wrote that ''with
respect to luxuries and comfort,
tbe wisest have never lived a
more simple and meager life
than the poor."
But now comes a letter ad·
dressed to Thoreau by name
with the enticing message:
"Imagine returning to Concord
with Sl00,000 ... You could pay
all your bills . . . Invest for the
future . . . And still have plenty
left over to treat the Thoreau
family to some pretty fancy lux-
uries . . . . .
"Think of the look on the faces
of your neighbors if you roll
down Belknap Street ln a brand
new luxury car -a car you pay
for in cash."
'J'he letter was received by the
Thoreau Lyceum, a center for
the study of Thoreau's work, in·
eluding those written at his
Walden Pond cabln here. It was
printed by computer to simulate
personal correspondence and
came from the Reader's otaest
sweepstakes.
Another letter addre11ed to
"Mr. Lyceum Thoreau" says:
"I believe you are the type of
person who would appreciate
tbla new standard of financial
security worldwide, and I invite
you to apply for the American
Expreu aold card today.''
Workera at the Lyceum H)'
they 1et so many lettera ad·
dressed to "Mr . Thoreau'' or
"Mr. Lyceum Thoreau•• that
they poet the funniest onea on
the wall .
Fired worker .
wiD8 lawsuit
110..WAUKl!E (AP) -A Jury baa decided that a man who
claimed be WU ftrtd from bll
company because be wu datlal
bla aeeretary lboWd be awantea
SI00,000. ' The amat Court jury decided
tbat Chari• Brockme1er, N,
w u """""'1l1 find u ctiltrtct
m aaa1er of tbe Dan • Br 8dltl'Mt Corp. Cnclit 8lniae
DlTta6oa ta 1191 .... He ......
.... lilllllClll.
The company claimed that
Brockmeyer WU fired beeaUM
be wu l.Datteatlve to NlneM.
The 1eeretary, Nancy Glubka,
wa1 dhmlued before
Brockmeyer ~ received a SIJ,080 ........... , from tbe com·
pany after .,._.naln1 JeaaJ -.e·
tlon alletlnl tlsat •be •• tbe
victim of"" dberlmlnatloa. •
'
Purina executive Chick Mat·
thews, as Pete cowered In his
cage.
Mrs. Scott and her husband,
Bernard, took lums trying to
drag Pele out without getting
scratched. Finally. they took the
cage apart from the top lo dis·
play Pete to his eager public.
About 100,000 cats had been
entered in the Meow Off this
year, said Purina officials. The
six finalists won a week's vaca·
tion at the Beverly Wilshire
Hotel while their cats got the
Hollywood star treatment, hav-
ing their pictures taken and
their voices recorded.
"All the other cats sounded
like they were being stepped on
or were in a trap, or they
weren't a cat al all," said expert
Pamela Mason, the chief judge.
"But Pete sounded like a real
cat; bis meow was appealing."
There were two runners-up in
the contest. Fred, a Charlie
Chaplin look-a-like, is owned by
Gary Murawski, 24, a peUy of-
ficer, lst class, from the aircraft
carrier USS Kennedy in Virginia
Beach, Va.
Little Thomas Moore, the
youngest of the finalists, was
also a runner-up. He is one of
five cats named Thomas who
live at the home of Henry and
Eva Moore, in RockvUle, M~.
From Page A1
Uther finalists were Angelo, a
black alley cat belonging to Hat-
tie and Homer Reynolds of
Providence, R.I .. and Molly, a
I '~·year -old part Persian
belonging to Mike and Jill
Shulgin or Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Elsa, a pure bred Blue Point
Himalayan, had been billed as
the class act of the Meow Off.
But Elsa was about to give birth
any minute and was withdrawn
from the contest by her owner,
Catherine Ladd, 30, or Boulder,
Colo. ·
While Elsa sat in a bathtub· at
the Beverly Wilshire Hotel and
awaited the arrival of her kit·
tens, her co-finalis t s were
transported down the street to
the Persian Room of the Beverly
Hills Hotel in airline cages.
It was a shame they didn't get
to enjoy the tablecloths covered
with paw prints the cen·
terpieces -goldfistt swimming
in bowls, with a bouquet of cat-
tails -and the band playing,
"What's New, Pussycat?"
The judges, in addition to Ms.
Mason, were comedians Louis
Nye and Joanne Worley, and ac·,
tor Dick Van Patten, star or
ABC-TV's "Ei~ht Is Enoudi."
They wore blindfolds with
whiskers and pointed cat ears as
they listened to recordings of the
cats' meows.
VERSATILE ATHLETE • • •
He said the number does not
match that of the Cessna 210
that has been'Soughl.
Because of this discovery,
Abell said, authorities have
called off a search of the moun·
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into the area near
Convict Lake to scrutinize the
wreckage.
Abell said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting it. He
s aid the call letters on the
wreckage were checked against
a federal registry which indicat-
ed the crash was more than five
years old
He said his department does
not investigate air crashes that
old.
Abell, who said he stripped
down a helicopter so it would be
light enough to make• pass over
the wreckage to take the photo-
graphs, said he's prowled the
mountains to see if he could spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane carrying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he s aw nothing during
several passes.
"We have nothing else to look
for," he said. "We have nowhere
else to go unless someone comes
up with a clue ...
that you can't , you can't. They told me l was
destined tor failure."
The turning point came when a friend's
family took him out of the hospital for a one
week camping and fishing trip in the moun·
ta ins.
"I swam the 10 miles," he recalls. "It took
me six hours and 40 minutes. I hurt, and it was
very difficult and I came in dead last. But I
made it.
"I went from an ugly, negative hospital
situation to something very beautiful.'' Clardy
explains. "That gave me a reason to go on, to
stop having the desire to kill myself."
Clardy was able to leave the hospital and
return to his mother's home in Garden Grove.
He began therapy· at the VA Hospital in Long
Beach and took classes at Long Beach State.
When he began having di(ficulty with his
studies, a teacher suggested Clardy talk to Dr.
Jack Whitehouse, who has led an active life
despite the case ·of polio 20 years ago that left
him a quadrtplegi~.
"This totally paralyzed man convinced me
that I could swim, snow ski and do well in
school," Clardy says. "He made me realize Ole
only thing holding me back is myself."
At pools in Long Beach, Clardy learned to
swim with the strength of his upper body, using
his remaining impaired leg as a rudder.
Three years ago, be decided to try the Seal
Beach rough water swim.
"That was when I realized I could do
anything I wanted to.··
Clardy endured similar frustrations in
leamin'g to ski. But eventually be mastered the
three-track technique. <Two skis are attached to
crutches the third is worn oo his remaining
leg.)
The amputee attributes much of his inner
strength to renewed religious faith. At a Bjble
class in. Anaheim five years ago, he met a
woman named Marian. The two were married
the following year.
Having clawed his way up from the depths
oC sell-pity, Tom Clardy is now a man with
' lofty goals.
He wants to Li ne up a sponsor for his 26-mUe
Catalina swim and begin preparing for intern•·
lional ski competition.
. "l know what my m1ss1on 1s now -
teaching physical education to the han-
dicapped," Clardy says. "I don't care bow
limited you are, you can still go on and do more
thln~s than you think you can.·:
............
Cesar Chavez. president of the United Farmer s Worker Union.
gives victory sign on picket line at Bertuccio Farms near
Hollister, after the Agricultural Labor Relations Board ruled
farm unions can send organizers onto private property during
strike to talk to workers.
Mayoi;'s angry
cook all fired up
Cindy Volper apparently
could stand the heat, but said
the overwork and underpay
got her down so she quit as
the chef for bachelor Mayor
Edward Koch.
Her replacement will be
Koch's fifth cook in his
tenure in office of less than
four years.
Miss Volper. 24, was paid
$300 a month and was given a
room in the basement of
Gracie Mans ion, the mayoral
home. She announced her
resignation in an angry let·
ter. "I can get a phone call at 4
in the afternoon saying there
will be 100 people for dinner
instead of 25," she· wrote.
··And in the same phone call
1 can be told there will be 10
people instead of two for
breakfast."
Whit e H o u se press
secretary James S. Brady
likely faces a fourth major
operation because of a
lingering complication in his
long recovery from a bullet
wound in the brain.
DONOR
Carol Burnett
The Carol Burnett Fund for
Responsible Journalism has
been created at the UC
Berkeley campus.
The fund was started with
a $100,000 donation from Ms.
Burnett. The money was part
of the award she received in
a libel judgment against the
National Enquirer.
The fund will be used by
the graduate School of
Journalism.
..
lvttYon• wu up for tb1
Count when lt cam• Umt to
•lat "Happy Birthday" to
J111 IHlt Cout 81111. who lurna Tl Au1. 21.
"Thia la really a 1reat mo·
ment for me. Ima1lne havint
a blrtbday party with all
these fine people. Yoll've
made ua very happy,'' Bute
aaid u he waa honored at the
kickoff of the 10th annual
free Uncoln Center Out-of.
Doors Festival lo New York.
The sort-apoken Basie,
bothered by artbrltis and
forced to UH a motorized
scooter to get around, rose
with some difficulty after the
birthday song was sun1 by
more than ~00 people on
hand, as he and his wife,
Catherine, thanked the en·
thusiastic crowd.
The slate of New York paid
official homage to singer
Harry Chapin, who promoted
the arts and donated his
talents at the guitar to world
hunger. He was killed last
month in an auto crash.
"Jf music feeds the soul,
then Harry's music meant
food for millions. It is up to
us to see it play on un·
diminished,·• Gov. Hugh
Carey said at the gathering
at Hofstra University.
Chapin's widow. Sandy,
urged business and political
leaders to continue her
husband's work. It has been
10 years since Chapin gained
notice for his ballad "Taxi,"
she noted, and said, "Just
imagine what all of you can
accomplish in the next 10
years."
Nine-yea r -old Justin
Trudeau looked at the
portrait of his father and de-
cided it showed what Pierre
Elliot Trudeau must have
looked like "before we start·
ed to ride on your shoulders
and pull out your hair."
The Ca n adian prime
minister was given the paint-
ing during a far e w e ll
ceremony at Nairobi Airport
before he left Kenya aboard
a Tanzanian government jet
for Dar es Salaam.
Despite Justin's assess-
ment, reporters agreed the
portrait did no favors for
Trudeau. It showed him in a
black suit with white stripes,
with a pale complexion and
longer. thicker hair than he
has.
But Trudeau appeared
pleased with the gift.
Heavy rain in Rockies
Marine air breaks heat wave in Pacific Northwest
Coastal fore cast
L19ht ,,.,labl• wind• lhroueh t0ft19f!I. A,..._ wlr>d• Wfflerly I
to IS llnotl with 2 lo > foot wind
waws. ~ •-11 1 to Jf .. I.
U.S. summary
Flelfl floods tollowed continued
haavy rein W-.O.y tMOU9" -
Ma1lco and COIM-, at --•lllet
continued to affect th• 110ut11ern RoOlft and_.,., Pi.Ina.
Tiie -ol CrcKUNCll, H.lo\., had
rec:elwcl Siil lnc:i.1 of rain In 24 "°""
and ,,. rain ••• conUnulne W9*1H-day
Minor 1treet lloodlne wH reoortad
In and around Colorado Sll'l1191, Colo. Tllund9nMwerl alto were Kel·
IHed .,,... Ille IOlllharn PtetNU and
,,,. Au .. uc and Gulf co .. ts.
Four lornadoe• were re1>0rled
aOOUI lei tnll.s non-I of C.-
Chrllll, T .. a1.
Skies -• ...-•atly 1unny from
,,,. ....,.....,. r-llllrdl of the "''"' 1l11lppl Valley a<rou tlla nortllerll Rockies to Ille tar Wnt. but smoke
from '°'"t fir• In Canada redu<ed
Ylllbtllty --11 of -nonll C-tr•I Vnltect Slates. COOi, m.rl,. air •••Pl Into ,,. HO<~ Oft Weclnftday, endlfl9 fl.,.
con....u,,. cleys of JtlHlne tO-to-too.
dellree Mat !Mt IMked llOf'mally cool
wota"' area ef Wuftl"11ton •nd
OreQOft. T.....,_...,.. retu.-cl to
Iha 10a In many places, with -• ••· pec:tad .. lie In .,,. JOI ancl '°'· .... Nal-WMtller Satvlca Said. Talftllll'•hKft a,_.i Iha nation al
mlddeY WMMldly ranjllld from •
1-flf .. at CAKant Cliy and Mon-
taray, c.llf., '°a ll'9fl of 104 al Palm
Sprl ... Calll.
,., Miiey, tuttarect •'-"• and
thundentlnM W9f'W ~t from ,,,. a..-rn lfttar-'HI ....... and
-'"'"' Rockies ac:t'ON tlM nonh
centr• l'lalM te tlle mi.Mlsalu1"1
Valley, .... ~ tlle lllo Or.,,._
Valley and Gulf c:Mtt .. tN extreme Sowt'-•· . HftlM .-W '4IO _,,.~In
the Soulh•••t deurh and
Callfonlljt't 1,,....lor velleys; In u. -......... ...-.... ••'"1 1tl .,.,.. tlM f'ac:lflc eoea1, ...nMm
Oreat LaUa and Mf'tharn Ne•
Eft91Mel.
California
Hor1,.m -centtal Calllornla
lalr lhroutfl Friday UC9'1t tor •-< loudl and 109 •leflll coast. Little
lempweture <Nn91. P•r11Y cloudy
aH.,._ and ewnln9t o.,., -SI• klyou and Sierra Neva4M with • few
1-.n °' tllunde.-0 tOCS.y.
Temperatures
NATION
"' 12
12
10
~ ..
'° 7' • '2
" u
IS f7
1' ..
12
71 .. ,.
to
tO ..
14 ..
" ,.
u
It ...
11 ft •1 .. ., • .. .. • .. • • 17 ..
" 1$ • • .. .. ,. ,. • .. • • • • • : • n • .. .. ..
...
tO
S1
" ,.
" • ..
71
71
M ,.
1'2
1S ...
75 .,
Ja
6)
" " M n
" ..
SI
61 a
" JI
14
71
S1 .. ..
" ,. ..
" ,,
It
" ... .. n n ,, ,. .. n
= .. • ., • • • .. • • ..,.
= • .. ..
S-...._dlfto ti .. 5-nGWlel • .,
San Dteto ,. 71
S... Fr..cltco .. SJ
San-IO ff
Senta AN 11 67
Santa..,_• n " S.ntaCNI .. tO Santa Marla 72 S1
S.nta~ca ,. ..,
Sto<k_, " " T-Valley •1 4S
TMrance IO u Yuma '°' 11
OLoeAL "' La
Am11-.n .. " At'*-f7 n IMl!koll. .. 1'
lelrut .. 11 ........ 1' ..
H6't0 .. •1 Wt.&1Mtl U I Vl(I kflln n ff
NOAA 1..1 S O.,.-.. (••••'" lruu.11 .. S1
I ' Aires S1 so
Cairo ., ..
(ALl~llNIA Carac:• .. ...
"' La C_,.,...n n S1
~Vall.., f7 .. Dublin 70 S1
Baenfleld 100 14 Franlltw1 ., " ........ 102 11 c;.,,.,,. n so
lea~ ., .., Helak*I .. " ...... .,, M Hong KOftl '° ., ., ....... .. ,. Jerv..i.m 12 61
Blylha 107 11 Jo'burg .. JO
:::atallna 76 u l(lav .,, ...
Cut,,... City 12 67 Lim. .. J7
Eur•• 62 SS LI.._. 12 " .. ,.. ... .. '7 Lelftdoft ,. S1
&.--.. " '7 MWld ., ..
LOftl9Mc.ll tt .. Manila '° 1J LOI.,._ .. .. Mo-n M
~·· " ,,, Hawo.1111 .. n .__.. ,, " Nicosia 1• 71
MonWCltfle • ... Oslo 71 61
~ ., ,. f'arla n S7
Mt.Wll-IO 61 IUo 71 " ........ .. "
.. _
12 " New11Df1 a.di 14 '7 iide•I Oellland .. : Sun, moon, OnW'le '° PalmS.Wt"ll 106 It TOOAY
PaNdlN 11 6S ""'-J:••·"'· ~.2 ............. .. 61 FlntMtfl •:••·"'· 4.1
Riv""'* '1 .. s.<ondlow l:Up.m. u
Red llluff .. 61 s.caM """ l :Jlf',m. '·' R..._.Cll't n .. Sun .. 7:6' --~·· ,._ ~ .. _ " • '''*•·"'· SacralNllle 17 • Moon Mh Thunday 4:0I a.m .,
S.111\M .. " rl9"6:•f'··"'·
SURF REPORT ... .... • 4
4
4
... ........ ....... ..,
• a • I a IW 2 I IW'
t a 1W
We're Ustening •••
.___ ____ _
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thureday, Augu1t 13, 1981 8
Putting panels to rest?
Nestande hoping to simplify county government
B)' FaEOIJllC& 8CHOEMEBL .... ....., .........
The Confidentiality and
Prlvacy Control Board bas not
met ln five years, yet lt is stUI
aUve and well accordlna to the
files of Orange County 1overn·
ment.
The mana1ement and plan-
ning team for the former Starr
Ranch (now Caspers Regional
Wilderness Park, localed east of
San Juan Capistrano) and a
committee formed to study the
Serrano Comm unit y
Park/Recreational Historical
Complex apparently have never
met sin~e being formed In 1975.
That the committees stilt exist
-on paper at least -is upset·
ting to county Supervisor Bruce
Nestande. Wednesday he pro-
posed a new set of guidelines to
control the formaUon of boarda
and committees and monitor
their work.
In a three-page letter to fellow
supervisors, Nestandt! proposed:
-lm~sltlon of a "sunset
rule" that would permit the an·
nual dissolution of any commit·
tee, unless supervisors took ac·
lion to keep the panel function-
ing.
-A requirement that the
board review annually the work
of all boards and committees.
Nestande conceded that the
value of such annual reports
may be questionable.
-Annual approval by the
board of allocations to each
committee.
"These changes. I believe,
would simplify the administra·
lion of boards, commissions and
County tightening
adult slwp rules
Strict standards on lhe loca-
tion of adult ent~ainmenl busi·
nesses in unincorporated areas
of Orange County have been
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors.
Under the standards, primari·
ly designed to control several
adult-oriented businesses in
Midway City . such establish-
ments may not be located
within 500 feet of any area zoned
for residential use, or 1,000 feet of any existing church, park
or school.
Also. adult businesses may not
be located within 1,000 feet of
each other.
Owners of adult entertainment
establishments will be given one
year to comply with the or·
dinance. That lime period may
be extended for up to two years
by the county Planning Com·
mission if an owner can prove
undue hardship.
The ordinance replaces an in·
terlm law regulating adult busi·
nesses that has been in effect
since December.
Supervisor Bruce Nei?tande.
who joined in the unanimous
vote to approve the ordinance,
said he did so "with great
hesitation.··
Nestande, who said he didn't
want to impose his values on
anyone else. added, "This is the
hardest vote I have ever made
in my life." Nestande is a
former state assemblyman. .
Another supporter of the or-
dinance, Supervisor Roger Stan·
ton. whose district includes
Midway City, said he wanted to
emphasite that "in no way"
should his vote be co nstrued as
an attempt to abridge freedom
of the press, a right guaranteed
under the First Amendment.
Too much to ask for
LITTLE ROC K (AP I -·
Whenever political parties send
out requests for contributions.
they don·t expect everyone to
chip in .
And so it was in Little Rock .
The Democratic
Congressional Campaign Com·
mittee sent out a letter recently
seeking help in thwarting a
takeover of the House by the
"right-wing political machine."
Della Combs got one like lots
of other folks. That's Delia
Combs. the executive director of
the Re publi can Party in
Arkansas.
Ms. Combs. not thinking the
letter was real funny. dropped a
line to Rep. Peter Rodino. D·
N.J ., a committee member.
··Because l hope lo do all I can
to win more seats for the GOP in
1982." she wrote, "I will not be
contributing to the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Com-
mittee as your letter to me re·
quests."
committee• and ai ve the board
of supervlaora the effective eon·
trot mechanism It haa been seek·
Ing over the past several years,"
Nestande said.
Nestande said that more than
100 county boards and commit·
tees exist.
"This somewhat chaotic altua·
lion has created a record·
keeping nightmare for those
charged with keepln1 an ac·
curate list of active panels, not
lo mention their changln1 mem·
berships."
An October 1980, study
showed that stipends paid to
various committee members
totaled $127, 145 annually.
That figure was lower than the
$138,000 spent on stipends in
1978, Nestande pointed out. (In
1978, the equivalent of $:i08,000 In
county stall time was used by
the committees: no such figure
was contained in the 1980 re-port.)
The supervisor said past ef·
forts by the board to control the
proliferation of committees has
failed.
Nestande's suggestions will be
considered by the board Tues·
day.
PATCO
assessed
damages
ST. LOUIS <AP I A former
air traffic contr oller who
claimed he was harassed by of·
ficials of the controllers' union
has been awarded $815,000 in
damages by a federal judge.
In one incident six years ago,
Taso P. Anthan charged, a con·
troller at Lambert-St. Louis In·
ternational Airport harassed
him by deliberately putting two
airplanes on a collision course.
Anthan said he was harassed
because he disagreed with the
union policy of filing grievances
against the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration for reductions in
control tower staff.
In a nine-page order, U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Roy Harper ruled
that the Professional Air Traffic
Controllers union "intentionally
or recklessly" caused Anthan
emotional distress.
The judge awarded Anthan
$650,000 in punitive damages and
$165,000 in compensatory
damages from the union.
Anthan said he felt · 'vinclicat·
ed" by the ruling. PATCO
lawyers said they planned to ap-
peal.
SUMMER
SALE
CONTINUES!
Drexel A.. Heritagev.
SUMMER SAtE
SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS
IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
Your F111om1 Onlgner Will Be Hepp' To Aaaitl You
H,.J.·GARRElT fU~N~TtJ~E
PROFESSIONAL HOU"I: ...... ttwv 1'tufa. 10 ··"'· '°. p.lft. u t I H•••o• IL VD .
1"4T£At0fll OESIONEAS '"· 10 •·"'·to I p.111. ht 10 •·"'·to 1:30 p.111. COSTA MISA •4M175t
I
\
,.
I
8 Orange Cout OAILV PILOTIThureday, Auguat 13, 1981
Cabin cruiser
' ~eek probed
I NEW YORK (AP> -Coast
uard officlall say chips of blue
int could help d.etermlne
hether a baree ran over a
c bin cruiser that sank in Long
I land Sound, k:llling one man
a d leaving four other people
laslnt.
Richard Lublin swam 10 miles
f m the pleasure boat to within
a mile of shore, where he was
I
lfid to open
(!!swald grave
s~ymied
I I FORT WORTH, Texas CAP> -+ lfarina Oswald Porter. widow
o accused presidential assassin
e Harvey Oswald, got no help
f om a state judge and cemetery
o ficial in a renewed effort to
ve Oswald's grave opened.
Mrs. Porter believes the grave
I empty.
Oswald, accused of the Nov.
2 , 1963, shooting death·of Presi·
nt KeMedy, was burfed in
ose Hill Burial Park in Fort
orlh on Nov. 25, 1963, one day
~ter he was shot to death by
alias nightclub owner Jack
uby.
Mrs. Porter this week went
tl see State District Judge J mes E. Wright, who ruled last
y ar against an exhumation at·
tqmpt by British author Michael
Eddowes. 1 "I pretty well cut the con-
v~rsation off." Wright said.
LHe said he advised Mrs .
Pprter to get a lawyer. ·
Eddowes sued to have the
grave opened last year. claim-
if1g that the man buried there is
not Oswald but a Soviet spy. His
l~wyers are appealing Wright's
riling.
~Mrs . Porter said she is
p agued by "little tiny pieces of
t e puzzle" and wants the ex·
h mation to end speculation by
dowes.
rescued. Lublin, the only person
known to have survived the
wreck. said the craft was hit by
a barge.
Chips of blue paint shnJlar to
that on the hull of a sunken
cabin cruiser have been re-
covered from a barge and tow
line and sent to the FBI to see if
they match.
Coast Guard Lt. John O'Brien
said this week that analysis ot
the paint chips could determine
whether the barge ran over the
Karen E on Sunday, slicing it In
half.
The Coast Guard has called off
its search for Lublln 's wife and
daughter and for the wife and
daughter of Thomas Markoaki.
whose body washed up on an
island Monday.
"l saw everybody go down,"
said Lublin, a 41 -year-old
lawyer. Lublin. interviewed
Tuesday at his home in West
Hartford, Conn .. said a barge hit
his 36-foot cabin cruiser after a
tug towing it ignored his pleas
for help. He said he asked the
tug and three other boats for
help because his craft had lost
power Sunday night.
"We bad four flares, and we
fired each time we s aw ·a
sailboat." said Lublin.
·'The tug came along and said,
'What's the problem?' We said.
'please help us,' and they yelled,
"Get out of the way; we're pull-
ing a barge.'
"All the captain had to do was
call the Coast Guard for us or
throw us a tow line. but he
didn't,'' Lublin said.
Crew members of the tug
David McAllister. owned by
McA llister Brothers Inc. of
Manhattan, acknowledged en-
countering the cabin cruiser. but
denied that the barge it was tow-
ing on a 1,300-foot line smashed
the yacht.
A spokesman for the company
said crewmen called for help for
the boat.
The Coast Guard scheduled a
hearing on the case for Aug. 18.
Lublin said when "the barge
smashed into us , it appeared to
cut us-in half.''
ATLANTA TRIBUTE-Artist Allen Klein of Cleveland
Heights. Ohio. displays composition of 18 of the 28 children
and young adults killed in Atlanta within past ~wo years.
Klein plans to send the work and a poem to Atlanta M; Maynard Jackson.
I
Recall announcements reduced Gull breaks
monopoly on
cool air
WASHINGTON CAP). -The
Reagan administration. saying
it may be "irresponsible" to
publicize some automobile re-
calls, will not tell the public
about every one.
Raymond A. Peck, head of the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, said this week
that the agency will lssue press
releases about recalls only when
they are "necessary for auto
safety."
Peck said the policy was not in
conflict with Carter administra-
tion practices. but his prede-
cessor . Joan Claybrook. dis-
puted that.
"This is a change," she said.
"Our policy was to. have press
releases on all recaHs unless the
manufacturer did it. We tried to
keep the public notified."
Ford Motor Compan y,
Chrysler Corp. and Volkswagen
of America reportedly have con-
ducted unannounced recalls in
recent months. They have sent
letters to registered owners of
the vehicles, as required by law.
Ms. Claybrook said 25 percent
of owners don't receive the re·
call notices because they have
moved or for other reasons.
But Peck said there is no rea-
son to tell the public about all
recalls. "The purpose of a recall
is to have it removed from use,"
he added. "It is not to create
publicity or condemn manufac·
turers."
He said a public statement
from the government helps
sometimes, especially when the
recall is major or the defect
serious. "In appropriate
circumstances, I will do exactly
what my predecessors did,"
Peck said'.
When the cars are fairly new,
however, it is easy to reach the
owners. he said. In such a situa-
tion, there is no reason to tell the
general public, he said.
Peck. a.11 attorney, said
manufacturers know they are
open to a flood of lawsuits if they
don't do their best to tell owners
about a 'recall.
Cambridge
OLYMPIA, Wash. CAP> -It's
been pretty gull-darned hot in
the Pacific Northwest these past
few days.
A sea gulJ tried its best to
break the human monopoly on
air conditioning Monday by wob-
bling from the record 102-degree
heat into the arctic splendor of a
department store near the
waterfront. Weak on its legs, its
beak crusted with salt. the bird
was sent out time and again, but
kept coming back.
The pooped bird was too weak
to fly.
\ I I
/.
'·' ,,.
.. .. "
'• .. . t
.. \
, ..
',1
•1:
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,•,
:I.
.•, ..
"'
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ti .,
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• Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thureday, August 13, 1981 .
·~UffiU~
jGlendale girl
heats leukemia
TIJUANA, Mexico CAP) -
Amanda Accardi, her leukemia
reported in remiaslon with -the
help ot Laetrile, ii under1oin1
bone marrow tests that could
pave the way for the 2·year-old
Judge says
'innocent'
• in sex case
Glendale girl to go home as she
wants.
At the same time, her family's
attorney prepared a le1a1 effort
to lift an arrest warrant out for
Amanda's father since he kid·
napped her from a hospital in
Los Angeles.
Attorney Hank Ramirez said
he would submit a petition Fri·
day to the California Supreme
Court asking it to throw out a
warrant for Accardl's arrest.
The high court, Ramirez said
in San Diego, will hear argu.
ments that a Los Angeles
juvenile court commissioner is·
SAN D I E G 0 C A P ) -sued the warrant on a· faulty in·
Municipal Judge Lewis Wenzell terpretation of law and that Ac·
has pleaded innocent throu1h an cardl was never served with a
attorney to eight misdemeanor court order designed to keep his
counts of soliciting prostitution. daughter in Children's Hospital.
Wenzell, a 38·year·old ap· Accardi said now that bis
pointee of Gov. Edmund Brown daughter's cancer symptoms
Jr .. is accused of hiring five a re gone she is anxious to go
prostitutes and paying them home. but he said his own con·
with personal checks between sc\ence is clear.
last Sept. 15 and April 2. "I will never apologize," the
Attorney Peter Hughes said 26·year·old former Glendale
Wednesday he would file mo-purchasing agent said in an in·
lions to move Wenzell's trial to terview.
another county because of local Accardi said he will never re·
TERROR OF THE DEEP -This great white shark, swimming
into a record ninth day in captivity, had been slowing
down. It was given large doses of medicine to liven it up at
Sea World's marine park in San Diego. The 100-pound male.
..........
only one of its species in captivity, has refused to eat
anything since its capture. Sea World marine handlers are
working around the clock to keep the denizen of the deep
alive.
media interest and remove the turn to America until he re·
San Diego district attorney as ceives "total assurance" that
\}rosecutor. his daughter won't be forced to
If the latter motion is ap-return to the Los Angeles
proved, the state attorney hospital.
general's office would take over. The doctors there wanted to
Hayakawa not hacking down
Wenzell is reported vacation· treat her with radiation and ex-
ing in Colorado but "he's in good perimental drugs without bis
spirits," Hughes told reporters permission, Accardi claimed,
after the arraignment conducted adding "if that wouldn't kill her,
by retired Municipal Judge it would cause her worse things
Kiernan Hyland of Sonoma than death."
County. Al Albergate. a spokesman for
A bearing for motions was set the Los Angeles County district
for Sept. 1. attorney, said Tuesday that bis
Police seized a customer list office was studying a possible
with several thousand names of charge of child endangerment.
prostitutes' customers, a If convicted or such a charge, a
spokesman said, but District At-defendant could face a four-year
torney Ed Miller said WenzeU is jail sentence.
the only one being prosecuted. Amanda was released last
No evidence was (ound that weekend from Hospital Del Mar
Wenzell ever misused his office,,_ in Tijuana, where she was given
Miller said, but "the acts or chemotherapy and regular doses
judges are more important to of Laetrile, the controversial
scrutinize than someone who has substance banned for cancer
had no capacity to deal with gov· treatment in the United States.
ernment decisions. 11 Although the Accardis have
"In his official capacity received donations, Accardi said
Wenzell was handling many h'e owes several . thousand
cases that Involved prostitu· dollans in medical bills and has
·' lion," Miller said. only $600 left.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -U.S. your decisions were based upon
Sen. S.J. Hayakawa has in· merit , upon substantive
formed state Republican leaders legislative issues and upon a
that he intends to run for re-commitment to a strong, pros-
election with or without their perous America rather than
blessings. simply trying to predict next
The Hayakawa letter to in-year's political climate."
dustrialist Justin Dart echoed a , Several of the14 GOP leaders
similar statement by Rep. Pete who were to assemble privately
McCloskey, R-Palo Alto, who in -today in Westwood were mem·
formed another hopeful. San be rs of President Reagan's
Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, that · K"t h c b' t 11 • l d' be has no intention of withdraw-· 1 c en a me • me u mg Dart, Los Angeles industrialists ing either and wouldn't reassess Henry Salvatori and Tex
that decision until December at Thomton.
the earliest. Also to attend were McCloskey
Dart called a meeting Wednes-and Wilson. ·
day of California GOP leaders to McCloskey has already begun
consider candidates for the next his campaign against Hayakawa
election. for next spring's GOP primary,
'·My soundings around the a nd Wilson bas said be was con-
state confirm my decision to sidering a run for the Senate in-
seek re-election," said the letter stead of governor.
from Hayakawa, who is current·
ly traveling in Asia. "It would McCloskey said that he had
be far more advantageous . . . if sent a• personal letter to Wilson
LEVI'S
STUDENT
DESl81ER JEAIS
stating that he would ·'under no
circumstanC'es" defer to Wilson
by dropping out of the race. ·
But a Wilson aide released the
text or the letter and it indicated
that there were circumstances
under which McCloskey might
withdraw : "I haven't quit
anything in my life and don't
want to start now. Should it be
the opinion or my advisory com-
mittee in December that I do not
have a reasonable chance to win
the nomination, I will. or course,
reassess the situation."
McCloskey's dropping out ol
the race would be a move highly
favorable to Wilson, who hopes
to be the only moderate in a
GOP Senate primary battle
loaded with political celebrities.
Besides McCloskey and
Wilson, others said to be in-
terested in toppling the 75-year-
old Hayakawa include State Sen.
John Schmitz, R-Corona del
Mar, previously listed amon1
Hayakawa's supporters; Rep.
Robert Dornan , R -Santa
Monica; Rep. Barry Goldwater
Jr., R-Woodland Hills; Loyola
Law School dean Ted Bruinsma.
and the president's eldest
daughter. Maureen Reagan.
Poor testimony
WASHINGTON CAP) -A
mental telepathist who performa
in nightclubs and on television
says evidence g.at.hered throo&b
the use or hypnosis should not be permitted in a courtroom.
Kreskin, who uses only that a.a
his name, asked the House
Judiciary Committee to hold
hearings on a growing trend by
states to permit hypnotically in·
duced testimony in criminal
trials.
LARGE 58.ECTION
OF BOOTS & SHOES AT
$12• SRGIO VALENTI,
JORDACHE, CHARDON,
CAL VIN KLEIN, CHEMIN DEFER
DISCOUNT
PRICES LEVI'S
Men's
IELLllTillS
.IUISI
CORDS s1311
LEVI'S
"11¥1111"
.... $26.00
ULE'l&11
$2788
All OTHER BRANDS
$14'' to·$18"
DRESS, WOIK, WESTRN ,
DAN POST, ACME, TEXAS,
JUSTIN, SPERRY TOP SIDER,
STREETCARS
,,,,,,,
• I
(
' . '
'·'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, Augu1t 13, 1811
Lite cycle of . Medlterr.ne1n fruit fly
1.
Female Medtly drtlls hOte In frvlt
and i.y. 2.f ~
2. \
Egg1 Mtch In 2·3 day1
...........
Discovery of Oriental fruit fly, left, in Pomona Valley has forced California to
open second front in ita war to 1ave its produce industry, already threatened
by fly'1 Mediterranean cousin, right.
Fly cousin seen here
Oriental species in Newport in 1980
The Oriental fruit fly threatening
crops in Pomona was spotted in
Orange County lut year, according
to the county's chief deputy
agricultural commissioner, Leonard
Liekhus.
and vegetable crops in Northern
California, the Oriental fruit fly is
much easier to control.
It took county agricultural officials
only three months to rid the pest
from the four county areas last Y,ear,
Liekhus said.
' Graphic shows that destruction of fruit comes with development of larvae
Although no mes have been report·
ed in the county this year, five were
found in sex lure traps last year
between July and October. One was
found in a Newport Beach backyard,
one in Yorba Linda, two in Fullerton
and one in Anaheim Hills, according
to Liekhus.
So far six Oriental fruit flies have
been found in the Pomona Valley
causing farmers to set pesticide·
laced sex lures and consider spray.
ing Malathion. i ;d=u~rlng::.:!....~me=d~f~ly~l~ife.::.....:..:cy~c~le~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-i
! Follow your team in the Baily Pilaf 642-5678
"If it were the Medfly we'd really
be worried," said Liekhus. "But the
Oriental fruit fly is one we can take
care of.''
· F.~mous Bedroom Ensembles
at 20°/~ 5avi1KJS
Headboards -Bedspreads
· Draperies -Boudoir Chairs
Complete Interior Decorating Services
nettl€ CR€€k
SHOPS
Newport Beach. 644-8860 Tualln. 544-1550
23 Faahlln Island E. 17th St. & Newport Frwy.
ltwport Center Enderle Center
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
WINE SALE S1 99
Davis Bynum Burgundy
Sebastian! French Cotumbard
ALSO OM SALE
s.irwoff Vodka c ....... c ...
J&I
fllei.U...'tC.lft
642-4774
2651 l"iHAn.
Newport .leach
(Neid to the nh/ Irvine
Ranch Farmers Mkt.)
~,.a~
D111YPuat
Classifieds
E Portable KENMOR $50 Dlne\te dishwa.s~ra $35 we. tb\ & 6 e h 0 u s e ~ ,:eJoveable roof $30.
646..0000· .
' "Sold everything I
advertised In the
Pilot."
Unlike its cousin, the Mediterra·
nean fruit fly which is infesting fruit
SKI MART'S
4TH
ANNUAL
AUGUST
14, IS, 16
BINDINGS
1/3 (>FF
FRll Drawings
Each Day for SALE
Skis of Your Choice!
CLOTHING
30-SOo/oOFF
PARKAS REG.
Vall .......... 185.00
Buffe . . . . . . . . . 85.00
Beconita ....... 110.00
Fico ......... .
SALE
86.00
29.00
Head .... , ..•. 1 /3 OFF HCC ......... .
Kitex ......... .
Obermyer •.•...
Valado , ...... .
ROSSIGNOL .•• REG. SALE
SM ........... 285.00 248.00
FP ............ 270.00 230.00
Strato ......... 240.00 215 .. 00
Haute Route .... 200.00 180.00
F5 ............ 275.00 230.00
ST5 ........... 230.00 194.00
54 ............ 250.00 186.00
SJ ............ 210.00 167.bO
CM ........... 225.00 180.00
FM ........... 200.00 165.00
EM ........... 185.00 130.00
Prostege IV ..... 160.00 90.00 I
LACROIX
Moch 2 ........ 330.00 198.00
SPALDING
Squad ......... 295.00 177.00
Comp M ....... 250.00 160.00
Comp F ........ 250.00 150 .00
440 ........... 210.00 128.00
385 ........... 190.00 114.00
AUTHIER
Comp GS ...... 260.00 178.00
Comp SL ....•.. 235.00 168.00
Torgo-S ........ 215.00 139.00
Surf .•........ 195.00 127.00
Cosmos ........ 290.00 184.00 • Corono-S ...... 190.00 105.00
K2
810 FO •••..... 275.00 185.00 I
710 FO ........ 250.00 185.00
305 .....•..... 215.00 138.00
305 M ......... 215.00 138.00
THEIKI
TRS .........•. 275.00 176.00
Bloc'k .•...•..• 275:00 ,, ....
White .......•. 275.00 175.00
SALE
BOOTS
OVER 1,500 PAIRS
OF BOOTS ON SALE
30-70o/oOFF
CABER REG.
Equipe ........ 225.00
Formidable ..... 195.00
Expert ......... 165.00
460 ........... 175.00
Grand Prix ..... 155.00
L. Equipe ...... 195.00
Equipe Jr.... . . 105.00
Munari ........ 140.00
SAN MARCO
AX-1 .......... 238.00
BX-1 .......... 188.00
LX-1 .......... 188.00
LX-2 .......... 158.00
AX-2 .......... 208.00
BX-2 .......... 168.00
SALOMON
SX-90 ......... 235.00
SX-90 Equipe ... 265.00
HANSON
Citation ....... 225.00
Shadow ....... 150.00
Vivo .......... 150.00
Classic ........ 160.00
Stillello ........ 255.00
SCOTT
Superlight ...... 190.00
Super-Pro ...... 205.00
Super-Hot ...... 235.00
GARAMOUNT
Total .......... 275.00
Olimpic ....... 250.00
Garo "H" ...... 225.00
G.T ........... 185.00
Ahrolight ...... 175.00
Magnum ....... 130.00
Arpege ........ 130.00
Diamond .•.... 200.00
lady Comp 15 .. 130.00
NOROICA
Novo 79 ....... 140.00
8rezzels ....... 160.00
Zepher ........ 180.00
Force II ........ 160.00
loser .......... 160.00
Gemlnf ........ 100.00
Cosmo, .••..... 130.00
LANGE
XLR •.......... 260.00
HllRLINQ
lmpul ... , • , •.. 135.00
lmpufae ....... 190.00
SALE
145.00
127.00
105.00
115.00
113.00
127.00
. 95.00
. 94.00
152.00
122.00
122.00
104.00
134.00
110.00
200.00
220.00
122.00
. 86.00
. 85.00
. 90.00
137.00
106.00
112.00
127.00
176.00
160.00
146.00
121 .00
. 97.00
. 75.00
. 76.00
110.00
79.00
84.00
108.00
118.00
. 80.00
108.00
. 80.00
. 75.00
230.00
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!T'hursday, Augu1t 13, 1981
Law school oaths OK'd ~, ,
r
Man says 'Playboy' ad damaging Bar association to allow religious bias in admissions
PITl'SFIELD, Ma11. <AP> -
A cabinet lnataller whoee pk·
htre appeared ln an advertlae·
ment tor Playboy Maaallne over
the caption ''The Playboy
Reader -hla luat Is ror life"
want.a $2~.000 In damages Crom
the ma1azlne.
The judae who heard the
lawsuit said he wlll issue a de·
clslon In about a week.
Tbe picture, which appeared
during a 1977 promotional cam·
paign in Tbe New York Times
and airport and train station
posters, shows mustachioed
Thomas Mazzeo on water skia.
. Mazzeo said the picture was
1
• used without his permission.
"It made me sound dirty. It
made me sound like a\ sex
fiend," testified Mazzeo ... 40, of
Safety seminar hourly
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
AU For Roy,
lWE SrtCIAUST ot
HOWARD Chevrofet
C-ol °""9-0..... Sit
NE\WORT BEACH
cars*bikes•
•skateboards•
trucks*baby
carriages •tea
carts•trikes
rollerskates•
walker!>· toys
•wagons••••
scooters• hot
rods*coupes•
trailers*hard
tops•convert-
ibles •motor
homes*lawn
mowers*limos
•corPorate
headquarters
•garden carts Model A's••••
*typingtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
vehlcles*golf
carts* model
trains* bikes
*pianos•cars
refrigerators *skates••••••
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pllol .
classified
ad.Call
6-42-5678 and a
friendly ad-
vlser wl 11
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
Pitt.afield, a father of four who
alnp ln hils church choir.
Maueo sald durln1 the two·
day, non-j ury trial before
Berkshire Superior Court Judie
William Simons that the ad·
vertisement falsely Identified
him as a Playboy reader and
damaged hls reputation and
business.
"I don't think housewives
want cabinetmakers with a
playboy's lust ror Ille in their
kitchens," he said.
Playboy attorney Stephen
Olesky contended that Mazzeo
s uffered "no measurable
damage other than the loss of
pay .the agency would normally
make to an amateur model" and
s uggested the judge awtsrd
Mazzeo "the $200 to $2~ we pay
ror amateur models ...
Sw .. t Datk Meat
PLUMS
LBS.$ 00
'FOR
HAS SUGGESTION -
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese Ill told the American
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian jails. He spoke in
New Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS (AP> -Tbe
American Bar AssoclaUon bas
amended Ila standard of ac·
creditation by lettlna church·
supported law achoola dis-
criminate on the baaia of re-
llglon.
The controversial amendment
appeared to fall Wednesday on a
voice vot~. but on a standing
vote at the ABA House of
Delegates, counted by tellers, It
passed 14'7·127.
The House then granted ac-
creditation for Oral Roberts
University 's 0 . W. Coburn
School of Law in Tulsa, Okla.,
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de·
nied approval because It re·
quired students to swear an oath
of religi005 belief, pledging to
follow the example of J esus
Christ. Faculty members also
must support and exemplify the
code, and hiring includes testl of
religious belief.
Accreditation is a serloua mat·
ter since graduates of law
schools which do not have ABA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer In most states.
The university sued the ABA
in U.S. District Court. The Judie
issued an Injunction forblddln1
the ABA to deny provisional ac·
creditation until after the House
of Delegates decides the issue.
At a meeting last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be in
"substantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis-
criminatioh on the ground of
race, color. religion, national
origin or sex.
A new standard waa drawn by
•n ADA committee which '
waters down the old anti·
dlacrimlnalion clause by add·
lna:
• 'Nothina herein shall be con·
strued to prevent a law school
• "'• •• •
from havin& a religious affilia-r
lion and purpose and adopting
p olicies of admission and ,
employment that directly relate , ,
to such affiliation and purpose 1
so long as notice of such policies
has been provided to applicants, I ;
st udent s, faculty and
employees."
Dean Gordon Schaber of the
McGeorge School of Law of the
University or the Pacific,
chairman of the committee, said
the exception was based on the ' "
First Amendment protection of 1•
religious freedom.
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
5th MONTH
ANNIVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
CALIFORNIA RANCH NIT.
W£ CAllY A WllE
SELECTION OF TIOPICAl HUIT
Jumbo Hoss IAIAIAS PllUPPLE
PAPAYA LIMES
IAIGOES COCOIUT
SPECIAL TY ITEMS
FOR STIAWIElllES SHARL YN MELONS
BLUEIHllES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ I ORGANIC
APPLE 1h
JUICE Gal.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
ORANGE HOk•iY
WE IRE IDW FD fURllG
FERURO'S FllE
FRESH FRUIT JUICES CWIY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PERSIAN MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON iiAYEllSTlllE APPLES 3 ~~sR $1 OO DELI
MEATY BEEF
BACK RIBS JUICY
CHUCK STEAK (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like)
SILVER TROWD
WHOLE SILIOI GROUND BEEF
PAnlES
6 to 9 lb. average
$2~.~
z=:x _-=-"".".._:-;;;:::=~e~~~~Si!I
I llEIGHBOR'S
Stoj, by o~ '1'iday & Satvrd:1y
for a tast" of some of o\•• ~in•
California Ronch. Market Products. -4 -!A1E! .: -
(~t to exceed 22% fat content)
CREAMY FRESH
POTATO
SALAD 99!.
John $169 Morrell
BRIUISWEIGER lb.
California Ranch Market $ 2 49 Specially Prepared
BIKED HIM 1b.
ERY
Fresh Baked '11 99 APPLE PIE ,,,
BAKEp IN OUR OWN RANCH OVENS
l
• s Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTIThuraday, Auguat 13, 1981
Irvine coast status
critical for citie,s
An ffort to place a stretch or
coasUine into Irvine's clty boun·
darlcs was boosted last week by
that city's Planning Commission.
The commission recom·
mended that the coastal area
between the clties of Laguna
Beach und Newport . Beach be
placed into Irvine sphere of in·
nuencc. wh.ich is defined as an
area outside city boundaries but
earmarked for ruture annexation.
Now the Irvine City Council
will consider that recommenda-
tion and decide whether to
forward it to the Orange County
Local Agency Formation Com·
mission, which decides city boun-
daries and s pheres of influence.
Some officials of Newport
Beach, which now has a sphere of
influence that takes in much of
the .territory sought by the lr\'ine
Planning Commission. have in·
dicated tl'ley won't give up the
area without a fight
Laguna Beach officials are
also eyeing the situatio n but
haven't yet made any public
statements on the matter. The city that' ultimately an-
nexes the routul area stands to
reap a large amount of sales tax
revenue Crom the commercial de-
velopment planned there. includ·
ing three hotels.
Officials from Irvine say that
their city should garner these
benefits because Irvine would
suffer most of the pollution and
tramc cost s associated with
coastal development.
Newport Beach officials say
they s hould get the revenue
because they are going to suffer
most of the costs.
Undoubtedly. both conten·
lions contain a measure of truth.
It is the responsibility or the
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission to place the politics of
the two cities aside and decide
the question on the basis of objec-
tive questions relative to the
costs each city will bear due to
coastal development, traffic pat·
terns, natural boundaries and a
number of other criteria.
College funding cut
Coast Community College
District officials were caught by
surprise a few months ago when
thev learned the district would be
receiving s ubs tantially less
Jnoney from the state than had
been anticipated.
The district. which includes
Orange Coast. Golden We st and
Coastline colleges. had just a few
weeks to trim S3.5 million out of
its budget.
Such massive cutbacks could
not be made painlessly.
The district was forced to lay
off so m e c l assified t non -
teachjng 1 employees in clerical
and maintenance positions.
Many other jobs created by
resignations and retirements
were left unfilled.
District students this fall will
find materials fees charged in
more courses. At Orange Coast
College. the man~· community
service lectures. formerly free.
will require a charge. At Golden
West College. the library and
tutoring center will be open
fewer hours.
Buildings will be cleaned less
frequently, and major main·
tenance and construction prOJ·
~els will be postponed.
Despite these cutbacks in
support services, the course of·
ferings at the three colleges will
remain virtually unchanged .
It is unknown how long the
colleges can cut back on main-
tenance before their facilit!es
begin to deteriorate seriously.
For the moment, however. it
is comforting to see that the col-
lege district was able to keep
most of its cuts away from the
classroom. Distric,t officials ror
rectJy decided that maintaining
the quality of education al the
thr~ colleges must be the top
priority.
Worth a second look
A Saadteback College ad·
ministrator has recommended'
that district trust ees reconsider a
plan they rejected last year lo
lease a Portion of the Mission
Viejo campus to a private de-
veloper
' Last January the trus tees
sought development proposals
from private firms for the 23·acre
parcel. located at the north end
of the campus near Marguerite
Parkway.
At that time. district officials
estimated the leasing agreement.
which would have included the
construction of condominiums. a
shopping center and commercial
offices on the property. would
generate about $400.000 a year
for the college.
Trustees and a dministrators
favoring the plan recommended
the money be used to purchase
more land for the North Campus
in Irvine a nd pay for construction
of a new classroom building at
the Mission Viejo campus.
Steadily declining financial
assistance from the state and
rapidly increasing enrollments at
the school prompted discussion of
•
the lease, which would have pro-
vided an income source indepen-
dent of the state allocation.
But after tax-cuttin g in-
itiative Proposition 9 failed last
year , and it appeared state funds
would continue flowing, the 111a-
jority of the trustees successfully
argued the district should hold
off on entering into a lease agree-
ment.
In a recent budget repQrt to
the seven Saddleback trustees.
"Roy Barletta, assistant s uperin-
tendent for business. said if state
fundlng for community colleges
continues at current levels. ac-
companied with yearly 15 percent
e nrollment increases a t Sad·
dleback, the district could face
multimillion-dollar budget def-
icits in the near future.
Saddleback trustees should
not count on financial assistance
from the state to keep pace. Pro·
g rams t.o provide private income
to th·e district. such as the lease
of the Marguerite Parkway land,
s hould be a priority item for dis-
c usston during the upcoming
school year.
Opinions expressed in the spac.e above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ts invit-
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642·4321 .
L.M. Boyd/Churchill's memory
The memory of Winston Churchill
must have been something special. 1
can't believe that he couJd recite all
of "The Decline and Fall or the
Roman Empire," as has been
claimed. It's known, though, that he
could deliver every line In at least a
couple or Shakespeare's plays.
During just the first week of this
yeu. the United States used more
e•soline than au o( U.s armed forces uaed throughout World War IJ. An
utonbhlng statistic, what?
Credit Mark Rwisell with th.at rin~·
ORANGE COAST 1a·1yPilat
ing cry: ''Sic Semper Adidas."
Meaning "We'll never run out of
sneakere."
The ancient Roman poet Ovid bad
this to say about baldness: "Uel1 la a
field without 1ra11, a plant wtthout
leaves, ot a head Without balr."
Animab in the Tel Avlv IOO eat a
strictly k01ber dtet.
ArtilictaJ eyesl1ht for th• blind lt
only at>out lO yHn a•ay, accordlna
to U. ttthrifuJ ·~ now work1n1 on lhls Odt. ..
ThorNs I'. Haley
Publisher ·""°"'" ~ ,..,., ... Editor '
Barura KNtbkll
' EdttOrt .. P"9 Editor
•
FDR memorial panel endures
WASHINGTON 1''or more yuun
than they llkl• lo rt•memb.-r ,
Republicans J(round tht>lr teeth In
frus tration over Frunklln Delano
Roosevelt, who rode roughshod, with Ir
ritating good humor . over the GOP
Now, of course, the shoe Is on the
other foot Ronald Reagan, an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the remnants
or FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North, South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress. Reagan stages
the modern equivalent of FDR's radio
"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people. His delivery is every bit as
persuasive as FDR 's and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS it's not surprising that
one or the hoariest boondoggles to SUr·
vive the onslaught of President
Reagan's budget cutters is the FDR
Memorial Commission. For more than
a quarter or a century. the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers'
money in a bootless attempt to achieve
a suitable memorial to the onJy presi·
dent who ever was and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 1955. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac.
comptishing anything in the years to
come. In fact, its whole reason for ex-
istence was obliterated years ago, when
i>rivate 'lonors erected a modest
memo r ial to FDR >i n downtown
W Hhingwn a marble block on Penn·
:o1ylvaniu Avenue outside the Archives
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two members or Congress.
Reps Dan Glickman. D·Kan., and Bill
Dannemeyer, R-Calif .. recently tried to
Q
----------------------~ JICI llDIRSDI
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FDR commission, they
were astonished to l earn that
Roosevelt's ghost still carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The feckless bipartisan duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR commission was a waste
of mon~. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had been
s pent in t he 26 years of the com-
mission ·s existence with literally
nothing to show for it. Another several
hundred thousand dollars has been
spent on vartous projects.
Glickman, who was in three-cornered
pants when FDR died, even brandished
a photograph of the exis ting FDR
memorial on the floor of the House. and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
beside the monument : "If any
memorial is erected to me . I should
like It lo consist of a block of stone
about the size of this <Oval Qlrice) desk.
and placed in the center or that green
µJot in front of the Archives Building." •
It was all to no avail The Glkkman
amendment lo kill the FDR commission
was defeated. 201 216. The vote had an
eerie touch to it: The House's electronic
voting system bl-oke down for the first
lime in three years. prompting one
member to whisper to Glickman, "The
ghpst of FDR has returned."
Whal astonished Glickman was not
just the economy-minded colleagues
who voled to keep the commission's
$30,000 budget intact -like Reps. Jack
Kemp, R-N.Y .. and Jim Jones. D-Okla.
but the way some or his fellow
Democrats chided him as a traitor to
ht s party who was "playing into the
hands of the Republicans."
THE HOUSE SHOWDOWN over the
FDR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission The author. Lucette
Lagnado, called it "a classic example
or the truism that a go\temment agen-
cy, once created. never dies; il just
keeps on growing "
Footnote: Congressional supporters of
the FOR Memorial Co mmission ob-
serve that building a monument to FDR
would be one way to assure the end of
the FDR comro1ss1on.
Be sure you don't get sick at night ...
To the Editor:
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedics may come
for price." Some cities, this article stat·
ed, such as Fountain Valley are con-
sidering charging for the paramedics
se r vices As we all know , th e
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless lives. They can't be com·
mended loo highly
But what astounded me is the quoted
ambulance transportation rates to the
hospital $100' While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich. it can be a lot to those
who are just making their pay checks
meet. I reckon those deciding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
medical emergency and cao't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high ambulance
rates, I called the bUling office of one
ambulance company asking if the rates
were really $100. The lady e~lained
that they charge $75 base rate plWI SS a
mile. Also, rates are increased lf it ii •
night call. (Be sure and don't get sick at
night.) And when emergency red lights
and siren are used, the patient la
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high to start with. The burden
still -falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover the am·
bulance fee.
As Senator Edward Kennedy said -
and I wholeheartedly agree -we are
the only country in the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the paramedics and am·
bulance services can't exist on nothi.Di.
The solution, if any, Is difficult to come
up wilb. Socialized medicine may affm
like an Ideal solution but in those coun·
trtea with socialiied medicine, the
quality of medical care declines aa the
person gets older, and is alm01t non·
existent for the elderly. So I! there is a medical emer1ency
wllh my household, I'll call the IOC9l
tnendly chiropractor. J.R. SASSO
Mal_tipulation
To lhe Editor:
An artlcle about the Irvine coast says
there will be homet so npenalve that It
ls termed the "•b•ik cout" and die
Irvine Compo' will bave to adverUM
111Uonall1 and brlematlcJnally to ftncl
buy en. Well, thft9 ,._ the oikt .,..._t
Uult Ill llMtr ........ fGr ,_ ~
are became it it needed to our children
will have a place to Uve. I've often won·
dered what's left tor the individual In
this m odern world. They've been
manipulate d by the adve rti s ·
ing/marketing world into how they
think about everything. There's a prop·
aganda statement to prove every
point. but there 's one I will never
believe again.
I've long suspected that the Irvine
Company and other large. out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -and I might add, I don·t ap-
preciate that kind oJ propaganda and
manipulation.
DONALD K. SPENCER
TELE PHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Bike vandals
To the Editor:
My family and I rode our bikes to the
Orange County swap meet August 8 for a fun day. When we got back to the cor·
ner wbere bike riders park (stuck back
In a comer out of public vfew) our
bikes bad been vandalized -end of run
day.
Bike riders have no place to park
their bikes. The DaUy Pilot ran an arti·
cle that the companf that runs the swap
meet makes over $1 million a year.
Surely they can afford to put in bike
racks ln public view.
We counted 78 bikes locked to
anything and everything they could find
to lock them to that day. We need help
and a bike rack.
GARY W. MICKEY
Not 'trailers'
To the Editor:
ln regards to the term "trailer park,"
I would like lo clarUy a point. A
"trailer" ls a recreaUooaJ vebicle,
towed by a car or U&bt truck.
A "mobile home" Is, and should. be
called, a manu!actured housing unit, a
dwelllng. Such dweUlnes are only
"mob;Je" from the factory to the site.
AU manufactured bouslnC u.nita aold
since July of 1880 are classified u' real
• l.ttltrs /rom reodtr:t ort 14>tlcome Tht
nqht to condi>n$(' leller.t to fat fJ}OCt or
.:hm1note llbfil 1s ,.t1trvtd Lt>tt"r11 oJ 30<1
1t•ord3 or leaa wt.It bf> 91v<'n prtftre11ce All
lttttrs muat indwdf' t1gnnlurf ond motlrng
oddrtn tNt nomH may be UJ1lhMld on re·
qu«'•I If au/f1c1tt1t reoton 11 apportnl
l'<1rtry IL-,11 not t>f' pubhahf'<f. IAtttrl ma11 hf
trlephr~ to 64? fl036 Nnmt and phOfl#
num~ uf 1"4-contnbu.tor mv1t bt glt>tn /or
t.itnfk.'Ollmt purpo~
--~~•
property. An assessed value is placeli
on said dwelling and placed ~tit property tax rolls in the same • er
as site built homes. ' ~i
~
THEREFORE. 1l behooves aJI or us lf>
stop calling manulactured housing cont
munities trailer parks, courts, tin bo•·
es, etc .. etc. which downgrades people
to second class citizens. or "living dJ1
the wrong side of the tracks" image. ••
If you ha ve never been to t-
M anufactured Housing show at Dodgft
Stadium. you are in for a very pleasaflt
surprise. The homes are luxurious a*-1
in no way should be slandered by caii·
ing them "tra ilers." ~·
FRANK H. BRADLE
Crucial t:ol e
To the Editor:
J < ~
Newport Beach City Council mer11 -
bers are about to vote on NewpoCt
Center. They are all good people. Th~
have been propagandized by the nip-
growt.hers and the build-everything-~y
canners.
I hope that the day before the v
they each can ride through New
Beach, th.en quietly sit in deep coun 1
with themselves. Then I. hope they ha .e
guts enough to vote their deep teelinfs
about our and their city. j
FRANKLIN S. G
Cartoon misinfonne
To the Editor:
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on M
Reagan paying $76,000 for a Steu
bowl, the previous week TV ne
explained the bowl was worth $75,
however Mrs. Reagan purchued it
$8,000.
As the cartoon is a gross case
misinformation I s uggest the sa
space be given to correctin& the error ..
The fact is, if your paper bad been
its toes the cartoon should have
canceled.
llllll•
It'• nice that President Rea1an c
declare the cont.rollen' 1trikt OYer
10 off on v•caUon and leave tbe rest
ua to flPt tbe meas.
•
..... , .. _.... ............ ..,...-n ... .. _...., • .-c ........... _,,,,,, ..... ...
............... oattrPI ... ,
•
-----~----~·~~~--------,...,_ --~
I
Orange Coast OAIL_Y P•LOT/Thureday, August 13, 1981 A9
A nietaphysical view of the corporUte world
In Aldoua Hwcley'a aaUrlcal Utopia,
the people, llutead of crouln1
themselvea, make the sl1n of the T , as
ln Heary Ford's model T automoblle.
"Brave New World" WH an lmpoaslble
spoof written ln the earlx part of the
centu~o denate the craller claims of
lhe news that when they Invested ln
General Motors they had bou&ht a piece
of the "incarnation of God's presence In
this world" a trtne nervous makin1.
From time lo Ume God, as manifested
in one religion or another. has been re-
techn cally advanced capitalism.
It wor ed. but now the crazy claims
have returned. The American En-
terprise lnstltule, one of a number or
richly endowed rigbt-wlng think tanks,
has published a )VOrk by Michael Novak
lilied "Toward a Theology of the
Corporation."
,,..,.\ ., .. _,..
n-.-.-.,,-.,-.--~z,
Mr. Novak's thesis is summed up in
this paragraph: "For many years one
of my favorite texts in scripture has
been Isiah 53:2·3 • ... He is despised
and rejected ol men; a man of sorrows,
and acquainted with grief; he was
despised, and esteemed him not.' I
would like to apply these "'1ord.s to the
modem business corporation, a much
despised incaraatJon of God's presence
in this world."
ported to have performed acts not
calculated to build investor confidence.
There was for example that scene, so
shocking to the banking community.
when Jesus drove the money changers
out of the temple.
The· American Enterprise Institute
CAEI), as one of the most prestigious
conservative thinkeries and one ex-
ercising great infiuence on the Reagan
administratio n, has got a major
breakthrough by the tail here.
Prudent stockholders might find In most of the world's religious tradi·
This fall's Italian import
you'll wont to wear now
by .. eA~~
The Bow Pump ... l::iy requHt,
The high heel Huggins
customers love, in Block,
Brown or Novy Coif all
with motching Suede Bow.
~ tL&Jj~ SHOES
99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551
ESTATE AUCTION
Ill ORINBE COUNTY
THIS IUIDIY, IUIUST 1am al 1 P.M.
Propf'rty Frum \lariou8 E8tatt>11, Ht>ir11 And O"nl'rll, lnd uclinJt
E11tatf'S Ccmfirmf'cl For ~alf' By Tht>
SUPERIOR COURT, STATE OF CALIFORNIA
and thf'
BANK of CALIFORNIA
£..tatr of Mr•. E. Luu .. (dt'i·l'll~tl}, E~11nr uf M ..... ..\. T . Evrrrtl (dt"t'rll•f'd )
E•l.Cr of Mr•. t:. Mc<t:Ullum (dttr11~d). Thr Proput, of Mr. 0 . llonit
JEWELRY . . a
DIAMONDS
A Sll.ECTION Of 170 DIAMOND, SAPPHIRE, RUBY, JADE,
EMIAALD, OPAL, PEARL, COLD AND ANTIQUE JEWELRY
Including
An tmportant single stone diamond and platinum ring of 3.65 carats
A fine singfe-stone diamond .md platinum ring of 3.15 carats
A fine emerald cul diamond ring of .85 carats
An attradtve pair of diamond earclips of 2.05 carats
A bei'lutiful opal and diamond brooch
An art de<o diamond and onyx lapel watch
A diamond and platinum ring of 1.10 carats
A st.n sapphire and platinum ring of 35.00 carats
A diamond and gold ring of 1.25 carats
An ov•l-cut sapphire and diamond ring of 1.20 carats
A fi1te diamond and platinum br.lcelet of 14.50 c.irats
A fine gent~man's diamond ring of 1.25 car.its
A tum-of-the-century diamond and platinum ring of 2.50 carats
A fine di.imond ring of 1.05 car.its
A fine di.imond and pl.itinum ring of 1.65 n rats
A marqul5e·cut diamond ring of .95 carats
A fine long strand of cultured pearls
An antique diamond and platinum brooch of S.70 carats
A diamond cluster ring of 3.50 cara•s
hceptlon.llly fine jade, diamond and platinum rings
An ~raid-cut diamond ring of 1.25 carats
A fine golden s.,,phire and platinum ring of 16.00 carats
A single stone diamond ring of 1.70 carats
,. A sapphire and diamond ring of 5.00 carats
A ballerina emerald and diamond ring of 4.70 carats
A fine tln9'e stone diamond ring of .65 carats
A single stone diamond ring of 1.65 carats
Ladiet' and gentlemen's diamond, platinum and gold wat<hes
OISCAIPTIVE CATALOG AVAILABLE -FREE PAAKIHO
INSPIQION: THIS SUNDAY, AUG. 16, 10 A.M. untll 1 P.M. SALi TIMI ,
AUCT10N: THIS SUNDAY, AUGUST 16, at 1 P.M. at the
SOUJH COAST PLAZA HOTEL
.666 ANTON BLVD., COSTA MESA
... Mc #I ""' ...... ,_, .. .,.., .. Aftf'ltoe C.lt
H. KLEIN manaucn.JIS•COMMISSIOMAHm . ,
lions God and mammon keep their dls·
tunce. The Bible verses about how rtch
men have approximately the ume
chance or gaining hea ven as a camel
has of squirmin~ through the eye of a
needle Is a theme found in most re-
lialons whe re tile s p iritual and the
material are traditionally reaarded as
qulntessentlally different Crom each
other. No more. As the AEl's Mr. No·
vak declares, "What Christians and Jews
who labor for large corporations most
lack ls an intelleC?tual and moraJ theory
that expresses the high spiritual voca·
lion their work serves."
IF SUCH IDEAS came in a smudged
pamphlet published by some backwater
re ligious reactionaries this offering
c ould be ignor e d . The AEI has ,
however , access to almost unl\mited
amounts of money which is used to pay
its s cholar-propagandists and for
voluminous publications plus a TV
broadcast service. What AEI people say
is what White House people think
What they apparently think is what an
alienist would diagnose as a persecution
complex compounded by rellalous de·
luslon. They are convinced that the bli·
gest, most powerful economic or1aniza-
tions in the country are reviled,
despised and mocked a la the Blble.
The arresting notion that Du Pont
chemical ls "the incarnation of God's
presence" is Mr. Novak's, but it ls such
a fetching one rest assured echoes of It
will soon be heard in s peeches by im-
portant administration people. The pie·
ture of the multibillion dollar organiza·
tional pilgrim slouching its way across
the s lough of a hostile world must ap·
peal lo people who oc~upy the highest
ranks in gove rnment, business and
education but persist in cultivating the
resentful psychology of the powerless.
THERE WAS A period some years
a go whe n con s e r va ti ves o f Mr.
Reagan's or Mr. Novak 's stripe were
out of power. when they didn't get a fair
shake in the media, although they were
never as far down and out as they liked
to think. In an y event. people on the
outs are inclined lo think that. if their
fellow ma n isn't with the m , at least the
metaphysical might of heaven is.
Once in power many a governor has
declared that God is on his aide, but on-
ly rarely have they said that God ls his
side, which Is what Mr. Novak is assert·
Ing when he .tiscovers that General
Electric ls the "incarnation of God,"
and not, as we had supposed, a com·
pany that sometimes hires future presl·
dents to sell its light bulbs, which ll
manufactures for profit.
The conservatives are beginning to do
the same thing to themselves that the
nuttier of the left Liberals did a few
years back in the short hour of their
prosperity. That was when left inclined
whites with more guilt than sense al·
lowed themselves lo be called honkies
as they gave in to the demands of les-
bian collectives . The intoxication of
grasping some small measure of power
robbed them of the judgment needed to
exercise it.
If the conservatives don't gel back on
the right side of the altar, and continue
to sa botage the Social Security system,
they'll team that God m ay be on their
side . but the voters aren't.
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
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Cleaners a~ Laundry
I 128 l"lne Ave. 646-2392
Same Day Senice on R..-st
MCNHl9y·Friday 7 o.m,... 7 p.m.
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Cont•ct LenM•
Eyewe., Styling
Refracting
Prescribing
Dr. Lou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
642-0720
1124 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach
nlhon'I ~
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•
1'1• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(Thur1day, August 13, 1981
Posting
of draft
lists set
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
names or 18· and 19-year-old
men who have realatered for the
draft will start 1otn1 up ln cotm·
ty courthouses, city halls and
other publlc places around the
country in the next few days.
Lists of men born in 1962 and
the first three months of 1963
and who registered before June
1 have been sent to state Selec·
live Service dJreMora for posting
as required by law. the Selective
Service said.
Deputy Director Brayton
Harris said the lists or ree·
istrants born in 1960 and 1961
are not yet complete and will be
posted later.
Men are required to register
with Selective Service within 30
days of their 18th birthdays.
Attendance high .........
Shakespeare offends
Sex scene in 'Romeo and Juliet' film irks parent
YELM, Wash. (AP) -The
Academy Award·winnln& fllm
version or William
Shakespeare's moat famous love
story baa failed to win the heart
of at least one local realdenl.
James A. Kitchen wants
school officials to ban classroom
showines of "Romeo and Juliet''
as part of Ute literature cur-
riculum at Yelm Hi&h School.
"What klnd of educational
value is there in showln& a guy
and a girl in bed. not even mar·
ried, and with no clothes on?"
asked Kitchen, whose daughter
saw the movie in class.
"There's no reason to show
that type of thing," be said. "I
don't even think adults should be
seeing that kind of stuff."
before their bedroom encounter.
Kitchen said Shakespeare'•
original work doesn't seem as
blatant as the Franco Zeffirelli
film venlon.
"1 don't think it's even ln the
book." he said of one scene
where Romeo and Juliet are in
bed.
"That's flat, immoral nudity,"
Kitchen said. "I don't see
anything beautiful about that.
"To m e it's promoll n&
something that shouldn't be pro-
moted. God said you don't do
that kind of stuff before you're
married."
Whi le Kitchen said his
daughter and some other stu·
dents were embarrassed by the
film, be conceded "the majority
thought it was great."
Besides displaying 13-year-old
Juliet's rather revealing
cleavage, the movie shows 14·
year-old Romeo's flanks as he
rises from his beloved's bed.
ror best picture and best direc·
tor. The film also won the
Golden Globe ~ward for best
roreign film. The National Board
of Review for Motion Pictures
called it one of the year's 10 best
fllms.
Terry Lombardo, one of the
teachers who showed the film in
class. said he can see both sides
of the issue because "I'm a
parent too.''
But whether the film or
original play is too mature for
students is a matter of personal
opinion, he added.
"Some people think some of
Mark Twain could be too mature
ror high school students," Lom·
bardo said.
Campaigns costly
TURLOCK <AP ) -The
Stanislaus County Fair set an at·
tendance record this year. part·
ly because it lasted two days
longer. The 1981 fair attracted
219,720 people in nine days.
SPECIAL DELIVERY Robie Bell . 14. smiles at his aunt.
Carol Wright, in Vallejo hospital as both admire Baby
Kimberly that Bell delivered in the back seat of a car
speeding to the hospital with Bell's grandmother at the
wheel. "He didn't panic." said Mrs. Wright. Kimberly
weighed in at 8 pounds, 13 ounces.
Superintendent Glen Nutter
said he watched the fllm after
Kitchen complained, and the
rugh school has stopped showing
it unW the board considers its
rate. Nutter said be will make a
recommendation on the film 's
fllle, but won't reveal it until the
board meets.
Supporters of the film argue it
is true to Shakeispeare's work
and note that Romeo and Juliet
are married secretly by a priest
The movie. starring Michael
York, Leonard Whiting and
Olivia Hussey, was released in
1968 with a PG rating.
It won Academy Awards for
best cinematography. costume
and design, and was nominated
WASHINGTON (AP> -Can-
didates for the 97th Congress
spent $242 million on campaig~
for the 1980 election, $45 million
more than counterparts two
years earlier, the Federal Elec·
Lion Commission reported. Part
or Lhe boost, the commission
said. can be attributed to infla·
lion.
'
41 llYllSIJI An.
SUITS A
llWPOIT WCI su.uu
co••· FRmAY TO
SEE BACK PAGE OF WEEKENDER THIS FRIDAY
NEWPORT BEACH
Oran9e County's Complete Video Store
* VIDEO MOVIE RENT .ALS * EQUIPMENT RENTALS * VIDEO RECORDERS * VIDEO CAM ERA S * VIDEO ACCESSORIES * INTELEVISION * COMPUTERS * BLANK TAPES * PRE-RECORDED TAPES
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LOCATION
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Newport Beach
548 -2213
Right Nex1 To
The Post Office
ENVIRONMENT AL
lb/6w SCOPING MEETING
What do you think ab,,ut widening
Pacific Coast Highway?
• N
PROPOSAL
The California Department of Tronsportotian (CAL TRANS) is proposing to
widen State Rte 1 (PCH) from four to six lanes between Rte 55 (Newport
Boulevard) and Golden West Street in the Cities of Newport Beoch and
Huntington Beach.
This is one of the initial steps in the project development process. and it
will be used to guide future studies leading to the circulation of o Draft En·
vironmental Impact Statement (DEIS).
The reason for this Scoping Meeting is to insure that various public agen·
cles. and any interested persons,. are involved early in the environmental
planning process. The purpose of the meeting is to identify the range of
olternotlve1 and the significant social, economic, and environmental
l11ue1 which st'tould be considered in depth in the DEIS .
This mffting will give you on opportunity to learn about certain features of
the project and comment on the decision-making process.
WHEN AND WHERE
The Scoping Meeting will be held on Wednesday. August 19th, at 7 p .m., In
the Huntington Beach City Council Chambers. at 2000 Main Strfft, Hun-
tington Beoch.
For further Information about this project, contact:
Mr. Mike Frey
CAL TRANS
(213) 620-2175
or: Mr. Al Gallardo
Federal Highway Administration
(916) .. ..a.3578
If you can't attend the mfftlng. you moy •end your written comments to:
CAL TRANS. Dt•trict 07
Public Tron.,ortotlon Branch
120 South Spring StrHt
Los Angeles, Ccillfomlo 90012
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Sat 1O·7, Sun 10·6
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THURSDAY, AUG. 13, 1911
BUSINESS BS
STOCKS 87
Sylvia Porter says
to take advantage of
'tax sweeteners' ... B7
0
0
Wallt to get ahead? Don't irk boss' Secretary
By TIM ,Ueoelatecl Preu
ThlJ la the First Maxim of Of·
flee Survival: Thou shalt not an·
ta1onJae thy boss' secretary.
Dan Doolin, who bas served as
executive secretary lo the presl·
dents of two companlea, ex-
plains it tbla way: "You are
your boss' eyes and ears. People
know this and they deal with
you, hoping through you lo reach
your boss.''
But the truth behind the First
Maxim ls sWl more complex.
for the top secretary in any com-
pany is, in a sense, a sort of
shadow boss who presides from
a position of enormous power.
Consider , tor instance. the
duties of Mary Lepis, secretary
to Roger Birk, chairman, presi-
dent and chief executive officer
of Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., one
of the nation's 10 largest
diversified financial companies.
* * *
In addition to dictation and
typing, Mrs. Lepta schedules
Birk's day. She diverta scores of
people who bope to see Birk lo
other departments -job
seekers to personnel, complain·
in g customers to customer
service. She intercepts all phone
calls and diverts most of them.
She screens his mail so that only
about one-fourth to one·lhird of
the letters addressed to Birk
reach his desk.
And more. She sees to it that
Birk reads documents and let·
ters in order of their Im·
portance. She plans his travel.
She accepts and declines his
social and charitable invitations.
In short, Mary Lepis controls
access to her boss and, since her
boss is everybody's boss, she is
certainly a powerful person at
Merrill Lynch. But Mrs. Lepls
* * *
doesn't see it that way.
"In all sincerity, 1 don't feel
powerful ," Mrs. Le pis 11y1
quietly. "H's efficiency, not
power."
Herbert C. Graves. a divisloo
president of Allegheny Jn
dustries, says because of the dif
ference between any secretary
and a boss· secretary. his com·
pany changed the title to "ad·
ministrative assistant."
"Al that level, the job changes
from being a good correspon-
dent to being good at the busi
ness," Graves says. "At that
level, a secretary is involved in
everything up to making major
business decisions.··
Mary Jane Daum says her
most important duty as Graves·
assistant is organizing his valua·
ble time: She knows which let-
ters he should read, which peo·
pie should be granted appoint·
* * *
ments, llPt'bkh phone calls he
should return, which documents
be should read.
Mlas Daum learned her job by
learnina the business, she says.
She has worked at Allegheny for
nearly 40 years.
"And I've been working for
company officers since 1950. It
all stems fro m experience
alone."
It's the sort of work that de·
mands maturity, a full un-
derstanding of the business, tact
and a sophisticated degree or
political savvy. A secretary at
the top knows nearly as much
about what's going on In any
company as the boss himself -
mergers. acquisitions, personnel
changes.
"You are privy to the work·
ings or the organization. the
total thrust." says Barbara Ben·
nett, secretary for J2 years lo a
* * *
man whd eventually rose to be
vice chairman of Union Carbide.
Executive secretaries in·
terviewed by The Associated
Preas say the worst thlng a boss
can do to a secretary is to keep
secrets.
"To do a good job, she has to
know what's going on," Miss
Bennett said. "To get top level
performance. an executive and
his secretary have to be a team.
ll 's a little like a marriage."
The flip side is that a
secretary must be entirely loyal
to her boss and also know how
to keep a confidence.
"Lying is part of the job."'
Miss Bennett said . "It should be
done very deftly."
The hours are long. Mrs . Lepis
is at her desk from 8 a .m. until 6
p.m., and frequently later. Dan
Doolin eiwects -and often re·
celves -phone calls from his
* * *
boss at illl hours of the night.
What's the reward?
"There's a lot of prestige,"
Miss Bennett says, ··and you re·
ally feel like you're part of the
whole thing. You really feel
you're making a contribution."
While the average secretary
working in a big city today
makes up to $18,000 a year, ac·
cordin¥ to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, a top executive as-
sistant can command around
$30,000 a year.
Many secretaries at the top
are bosses themselves. presid·
ing over assistants who handle
mass mailings\ routine cor-
respondence and detail work.
Some move still farther. When
h er boss retired from Union
Carbide, Mi ss Bennett was pro·
moted to an executive post in
personnel management.
* * *
Secretary shortage a threat to big bminess
By Tbe Associated PreH
If things go on this way, things
may not go on at all. Phones will.
jangle unheeded. Letters won't
be answered. Meetings won't be
held. Everything could grind to
a halt.
Here's the problem: There's a
nationwide shortage of compe-
tent executive secretaries and
it's getting worse.
The National Secretaries' As·
sociation says there are 80,000
empty secretarial chairs. And
the National Bureau of Labor
Statistics projects that demand
for secretaries will increase 46
percent by 1990.
By 1985, NSA predicts, there
will be 250,000 secretaria.l jobs
that can't be filled.
Perhaps the most dramatic
measure of the shortage is at the
Katharine Gibbs Schools, which
trains more than 4,000 skilled ex-
ecutive secretar ies yearly.
Gibbs recently had four unfilled
secretarial posts in its own ex-
ecutive offices, saJd Vice Presi-
dent Ruth Gonchar.
Gibbs graduates, meanwhile,
are besieged by corporat e
recruiters. The average 19-year-
old Gibbs graduate chooses
among 5 to 10 job offers with
starting salaries of up to $14,000
a year, sometimes more.
Though some companies have
yet to feel the tightening pinch
-at IBM and AT&T Long
Lines. for example, personnel
officers report no trouble filling
secretarial vacancies -most
are not so fortunate.
The personnel department at
Pillsbury in Minneapolis flays
rec ruiting secr etaries for
management staff is getting in-
creasingly tough.
"There are fewer of them and
they're on the mark~t very
briefly. Most of them get jobs
quickly ," said Pillsbury
spokesman Bob Rumpza. "What
this means is that we have to
work a lot harder to attract the
people we want."
At The Dow Chemical Co .. in
Midland , Mich .. Helen
Dockman, manager of office
personnel, says one problem is
that fewer people aspire to
* * *
Students at the Katharine Gibbs School practice typing drills in this file plwto from the 1940s.
secretarial jobs. But. she adds.
the big problem is that a grow-
ing number of those who do want
secretarial work can't handJe it.
"They make spelling and
grammatical errors on their job
applications," Ms . Dock man
says. "Very obviously. they are
not competent to do the jobs
we're seeking to fill."
One result of the shortage is
that the "pink ghetto .. is deepen·
ing into a rosy, middle-class
hue. Secretarial pay is going up.
The Labor Department re·
* * *
ports that in 1980 secretaries na·
tionwide earned an average of
between $11.296 and $17.132 a
year. In big cities, pay was
slightly more and, among big
companies with more than 25,000
employees. the average pay was
still higher -between $12.168
and $18,840 a year.
And those statistics did not in ·
elude salaries paid to top level
secretaries -the president or
board chairman's secretary,
commonly known nowadays as
an "executive assistant" or "ad·
* * *
minislralive assistant."
Average pay at that level is still
more.
Barbara Bennett. once
secretary lo the vice chairman
of Union Carbide, left when the
company moved from New York
City to Connecticut. She is con·
ducting an unhurried job search
with precise ideas about what
she wiJI find.
Miss Bennett plans to accept a
post as executive assistant to a
top officer of a company based
in New York City. Such jobs,
* * *
she says, generalJy pay around
$30,000 a year. Sometimes more.
That kind of money is appeal·
ing. It's the key reason that
more men are taking secretarial
work. Consider. for instance,
Dan Doolin .
One day Doolin, a high school
French teacher searching for a
new career, noticed In the
classified ads that secretarial
jobs paid more than jobs listed
under ·•coJJege graduates."
Within a few months, Doolin
* * *
had taken a job as secretary to
the president• of a French
publishing house based in New
York.
"I did feel a little strange as a
man In this work at first." he
said. "But I found that the peo·
pie I dealt with didn't find it
odd."
The Urban Jnstitute reports
that between 1972 and 1978 the
number of male secretaries in·
creased 24 percent. Government
and industry forecasters say
this increase will continue,
fueled by rising salaries pro-
voked by a growing shortage of
secretaries.
As the number of male
secretaries increases, business
is beginning to resemble itself a
century ago.
Young Lyndon J ohnson was a
secretary. So was Broadway
producer Billy Rose. Before
World War I , 75 percent of
secretaries were•men. In those
days, secretarfl'.L work was
man's work, a senafble first step
for young gentlemen eager to ·
learn a business rr.,..,the inside.
By the early 20Uf«lentury, with
widening use or Uae typewriter
and growth in facl"ory work that
drew men, secretarial work
gradually became woman's
work. Today, 80 percent of
secretaries are women.
But there aren't enough.
No single element created the
shortage, but a key is that the
U.S. economy·s service sector -
office work like banking or in·
surance is swelling. Another
element is feminism, which in·
fluenced a lot or women by turn·
ing up its ideological nose at
secretarial work.
The shortage is changing all
that. The people at Gibbs are
predicting that the 1980s will be
··the decade of the secretary.··
.. Change is in the air." said
M ~. Gonchar . '"The way
secretaries are treated and how
far they can rise is changing.
Businesses are just beginning to
realize that in order to attract
these thinking. capable, hard·
working people. they're going to
have to offer better prospects
and better money."
* * *
'Hideous,' 'dreadful,' 'grueling' tributes to Gibbs School
NEW YORK (AP) -Sarah
Pileggi graduated from "The
Harvard of Secretarial Schools"
21 years ago, but her memories
of Katharine Gibbs are still
clear: "It was hideous."
Katrina Ludlow finished at the
top of her Gibbs class last year.
Her recollection of her alma
mater Is similar: "It was dread·
fut."
Some 30 years have pass~
since Barbara Bennett finished
Gibbs, but she remembers. too:
''It was grueling. Alter I started
working, I never encountered a
situation that was more difficult
than Katie Gibbs.'' · .
These tributes please the peo·
pie who run Katharine Gibbs
School.
"We are very tough," nodded
Ruth Gonchar, Gibbs vice presl·
dent for academic affairs.
Rl1oroU1 dlaclpline may be
the alngle thing that 11 un·
chan1ed at Katharine Gibbs
School alnce it was founded 70
yean ago. Thia would pleue
KaUe Glbbe. Sbe was, after all,
a fonnidable woman.
In 11111 Mrs. Glbbe wu left a
widow with two 10D1 '° •upport wben her hut band fell from a
yacht otf the cout ol Rbode
laland and drowned. lbe IOld
ber Jewell ud used the money
to start a acbool In Providence, a
1cbool to train women ln men'a
work: secretarial work.
Today, women hold a virtual
monopoly on secretarial work,
tboulb men are be11nnlng a
comeback. Katie Gibbs baa
chaqed, too.
"Gibbs Girls" are now "Gibbs
Women" -and, yes, 10 percent
of them are "Gibbs Men.I' Al
ever, the Glbbl way ot doin1
thinp is called, with approval,
"Gibbsy." But that which is
Gibbsy has changed.
When Barbara Bennett went
to Gibbs in the 'SOs, Gibbsy was
looking and acting like a "young
lady." Hats ·and gloves were re·
quired.
"When I went to Gibbs, you
could identify Gibbs girls in a
crowd," Miss Bennett says. "We
all had on our bats and gloves
a nd the Gibbs accordian folder
we all carried because there was
so much homework.
"The rules were strinaent. We
were young ladies. There was
formal coffee every afternoon
with a aUver urn."
Gibbsy then wu knowing your
stuff well enough to do the job
precisely right. The first time.
"I remember a typing test
when the girl next lo me made a
mistake at the be1innln1. She
put in new paper and start~
over. They expelled her. You
weren't allowed lo start over,"
Miss Bennett says.
Today, says Katrina Ludlow.
Oibbly Is dresaing conservaUve·
ly -a sult in a aolld color I.I
Gibbslest of all. Turn up at
Gibbs wearing Jeana, or even a
denim akin. and they send you
home.
At work u secretary to thee•-
ecutJ.ve office aulte at lntema·
tlonal Paper, MiH Ludlow 1tta
playful uief when •he nan a
almple dress lnltead of a ault:
"Not up to your usual standard
today, Katrina." a pin-striped
executive says, grinning.
"What's the matter?"
And now, as then, Gibbsy is
doing the job right:
It Is not Gibbsy to "Wite-Out"
a typographical error. Typo·
graphical errors are not Gibbsy.
Now, as then, Gibbs students
wade through endless rules and
drills : A s pelling or gram·
hired on as a secretary at Sports
Illustrated. A year and a half
1 ater. s he moved u p to re·
s earcher. Eventually, she
became a reporter, the position
she holds now.
Gibbs graduates who moved
up the corporate Jadder are
legion -Marion Haller, director
of travel marketing at American
Express, Elizabeth Howard,
director of corporate relations at
Typographical errors are not Gib-
bsy. Now, as then, Giobs students
wade through endless rules and
drills: A spelling or grammatical er-
ror is most emphatically not Gibbsy .
m atlcal error ls most em ..
pbaUcally not Glbbly.
-5arah Plle11i came to Gibbs
from California in 1980. She wu
25. She arrived with a stanfol'd
history desree. a divorce decree
and no aeJf ·confldence.
"I WM convinced I couldn't
aet a jOti unless I went to Katie
Gibbl.'' abe aaya. "I bated every minuw ol it. They bad lt worked
4o you bad to 1pend four boun a
day praet.lcln1 to 1et th~ tbe •
next day'a clauea. You Jult blld
to make up your mind to do It."
When she fllllahed, 111. Plleai
NaUonat Diltillen, Joan Clark.
former ambassador to Malta,
now director-general of the State
Department Foreign Servtce.
But Gibbs' schools -ln New
York, Huntington , N.Y .,
Providence, Philadelphia,
Montclair, N.J ., Boston and
Norwalk, Conn. -produce two
kinds of 1ecretarlea: pro-
feuionall and pro1r ... ionall.
Both aorta -they break down
•bout S.50 in enrollment -set
the UJM tralninl; what they do
w1tb tbe training -ranitng in
cost from approximately $50 for
an evening class to $4,500 for a
long-term course is different.
"Progressionals" use their
secretarial skills to wedge a foot
in the corporate door and move
up to executive jobs.
"Professionals " are
secretaries who rise on the
secr etarial ladder. Barbara
Bennt!lt was one of those :
Through the years s he served as
secretary for a series of pro-
gr ess iv e I y more powerful
bosses. Eventually she Joined
Union Carbide.
"I started in new products.
Then I became secretary to the
division president. He became
vice chairman of the company,
then he retired."
Gibbs Is expanding lts
horiions into the computer ace.
Office computer operation and
theory is taught alongside t)'pm1
and steno. The Gibbs ConsulUn1
Group, new this apriri1, la an
"information·processlllc consul·
tant'' to businesses that need ad·
vice on operatin1 with the new
equipment.
But some thin&• never cha.nee.
"Business after business tells
u1 u..t, at the entry level, the
one thtn1 they can't ftnd la •UJ>·
port .tatr who speak and write
correctly," says Ms. Goecbar.
------~-.~----~~~--..
,
Cringe Coaat DAILY PIL,OT/Thuraday, August 13, 1981
Porkers show jogging
aids diseased lie arts
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Pill runnini
on a treadmill appear to prove Joa·
1ln1 11 lood ror humans, at least
lhoae wttb some desree ot heart di•·
ease, say University or CaUrornia re·
searchers.
After nve months of 1tudyln1 tbe
Yucatan mlnlswine, wltb
cardiovascular systems similar to
humans', a spokesman said Wednes·
day the flndlnss reverse a pre·
Hmlnary conclusion reached three
years ago.
The coronary arteries in the pl11 In
the new experiments, in contrail to
those used in 1978, were partly closed
surgically. Their so·called collateral
blood vessels with exerclae 1rew to S
or 10 times normal slse, boolUna
blood flow four to six times.
The improved circulation saved 40
p e rcent or the heart tissue
jeopardized by tht' cloHed arteries
. while in 10 other pigs kept orr the
motorized treadmill "only about 17
·percent or the jeopudlaed tissue"
was salvaged, Dr Colin Bloor said.
Bloor, a UC' putholoi)• professor
who directed lbe «"S~arch. Is presi-
dent or the San Oi.,10 County chapter
of the American Heart Association.
Bloor said the jo11ing pi•s were
uerclted strenuously for five
months alter their arteries were re-
duced SO to 70 percent or normal alie.
Two of the pigs died of heart attacks
durtn1 the 1rueUn1 runa lastJn1 up to
several houri.
Bloor, In an Interview, warned that
persons with heart condiUont should
Their blood
ves sels with ex-
ercise grew to 5 or
10 times normal
consult physicians, however, before
starting strenuous exercise.
By lhe time the study ended. he
said, lbe pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per-
cent or maximum.
The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate. Bloor
said. While exercising, the pigs'
heart rates went up lo 220 beala a
minute.
CHIEF -Dr. Paul M.
Johnson of Irvine has
been elected presi-
dent of the Orange
County Dental Socie-
ty, a 1,300-member
non-profit organiza-
tion. 1
Channel
levee
rise due
The Orange County
Board of Supervisors
has approved a $3.5
milUon project to raise
the height or levees
along the San Juan
Creek channel to pre-
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach.
The construction proj-
ect, whicil has been ap-
proved by the Stale
... Coastal Commission,
will raise the levees
from two lo six reel by
1983 along a three-mile
stretch from the mouth
of the creek lo where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmen-
tal Management Agency
oHicials have been
plagued with siltation
problems in the creek
bed for s~veral years,
and have been prevent-
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission bas
refused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it rem<>ves to offset
the dredging costs, mak·
ing such a project too
expensive, officials say.
County officials say
raising the levees and
allowing the creek chan-
nel to rise to its natural
level will eUminate the
AP .......
A Yucatan minis'wine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
San Diego. where scientists say study show1 humans pan prevent heart attacks
by jogging, especially if they aiready have coronary disease.
need for dredging, ad-
ding nature can ttlen
take it s course .
Construction is expected
Countian perishes
Heat fatal after woman loses direction
BAKER. CaUL (AP> -A 75-year-
old woman who missed a freeway en-
trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115-degree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
days later. authorities said.
' Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana
died of heat exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
Bernardino County sheriCf's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
A piece of white cloth was found
tied lo her cane, an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
: of Long Beach and the widow of
former Long Beach City Councilman
· Melvin L. Campbell, Mrs. Campbell
had driven to the Victorvill~ area
community or Apple Valley on Aug. 3
lo visit a friend and started back
home last Thursday.
But instead of going south toward
Orange County she ended up going
100 miles northeast on Interstate 15
before slopping to ask directions at a
service stat.ion in this town 50 miles
from the Nevada border.
Mrs. Campbell was given direc-
tions to get back home and beaded
orr on a service road that
paralleled the freeway. But she
missed the overpass to the south·
bound lanes and continued on the
road even after it veered orr from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand, and on Sunday her body
was found inside.
Before you buy any make of car,
· call me. I'll save you time & money
Benet it from my buying clout I buy otfiet. Low overhead. No salesmen .
to begin in the fall.
Party set
in Irvine
The Irvine City Coun-
cil has approved a S350
e xpenditure for the
printing of invitations to
a party that will be held
later this year in
celebration of the 10th
anniversary of the city's
incorporation.
· Invitations will be sent
to past and present city
oHicials and members
or the business com -
munity, said city ad-
m in is tr at or Ken
Lazette.
The exact date and
location or the party
have not yet been de-
termined.
. or lease cars in C011tract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us.
100 for corporate fleets. We can ob-any make of. car. Then compare f«
tain substantial savings f« quali· yourself. (And tell your friends.)
CONV£NIENl DISPOSABLE
COLOP\.AST· BRAND
lied individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to 5. Robt Mixson Equipment
shopping & haggNng. Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia 714 645-4UI.
~rmMIO,....W.
SA VE AN EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE
at Trader Joe & PrOlllo
Most whole wheels of cheese wel&h 5 to 10 ~·· When you buy a whole wheel or cheese from u1, we give you a 10~ discount from the 1Jn1le pound price on
llmost eveey cheese. If• whole wtiffl weighs more
\ban 15 pound•. you don't have t.o buy lt all. We'll live you a 10~ discount lt you buy • chunk which
wei1hs more than 10 pounds. This ts ·a simple way to beat lnOation-
and cheese always tastes better from a whole wheel ! Please visit our newest Trader Joe's al the Intersection of 17th Street, Newport Boulevard and Supe,.tor
Av~nue (next to Denny's •
and Barclay'1 Bank).
MOW IN COSTA ..SA
642-5678
Put a few t.00rd& to·work for you
In the llllJ Piiat
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now c..1rry the complete COLOPLASJ ltne-the
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world Eve<yth1ng fOf colostomates •tecstomates and
urinary os!Of-nates-all with convenient COLOPl,AST
d•'iQOSclbthty COLQPLAST rehab11tty-plus case pack
economy fie sure to ask t()f y0ur FREE copy of INS!GHIS-
the put>1tcatt0n that's iust for y0u-atway<. inc~
coupons fOf freto samoies fll.3714 MOULTON PLAZA PffA .. MACY
23M5 Moutton Partiw.y. Laouna Hiii•
(Ne•t to El Rand'lo ....,._,
A BARO HOM~ HEALTH CARE CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
College
builCling
·backed
A but to appropriate t2 million
to becln conatructlon of an
85,000·aquare-foot clauroom
buUd1n1 at Saddleback CoUe1e
ln Mission Viejo baa woo ap-
prov al from the atate As·
sembly'a Education Committee.
The meuure was approved ln
a 9-0 vote Tuesday, with !bur
committee members • absent. It
will now 10 to the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee,
which ii expected lo conalder
the approprlatloM but In about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265, Is sponsored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson <R-Newport'8each). If
it wins final approval from the ruu Aasemble and state Senate,
c:on~trucUon funds will be al-
located from the Capital Outlay
Fund for Higher Education.
Saddleback College Superin-
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was in Sacramento for
Tuesday's vote, said the $2
million will allow the communi-
ty college to begin the first
phase of the $7.5 million con-
struction project.
He said full fundinJ for the
classroom building was initially
included in this year's state
budget. However, during a last
minute budget-cutting seaslon,
members or the State Education
Finance Committee deleted the
money, Lombardi said.
Saddleback College officials
say the school is in desperate
need or more classroom space
due t.o rapid increases in enroll-
ments over the past five years.
Jn his 1981·82 budget report for
the Saddleback Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
assistant superintendent for
business, said district enroll-
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
Even if Saddleback receives
the $2 million under the bilJ now
being considered, the district
will still have lo come up with
$5.5 million to complete the
classroom building.
"Raising that money will be
the next step," Lombardi said.
·'But where it is going lo come
from we don't know yet.··
... ,. • "l!I' ••
Deify ......... .,,..,.,,........
TOP DOG Casey. a six-month·old s helly. gets s pecial at
tention from owne r Michelle Stewa rt. 12. after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids' dog s how at Newport Be ach's
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dogs vied fo r honors ranging
fro m ?fst groom ed to best t rick Case~· was Judged be~l
o verall.
Mesa files lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
Costa Mesa Caty Attorney Tom
Wood has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
to halt Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit. filed last Wednesday,
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 to lake "the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro·
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
wells in late June after process-
ing drilling applications through
the state and Orange County's
Environmental Management
Agency.
Wood contends the oil firm ig-
nored requirements for city
drilling permits and laws passed
in 1964 to prohibit new drilling.
Schools cut costs
of driver training
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days under an arrangement with
Sarto's attorneys, Rutan and
Tucker or Santa Ana.
"l ~m not seeking a tem-
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction at this
time." Wood said. "It's part or
a plan for getting cooperation
for an expedited trial.
A Santa Ana driving school
has been chosen by Newport-
M esa Unified School District
trustees lo offer driver training
to an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about half or·
the cost of last year's program.
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower or
two bidders for the contract
awarded Tuesday. Academy or
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach, quoted Sl32 a student.
The school board trimmed
driver training, a requirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
would not offer its previous an-
nual $60-per-trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
summer and will continue lo of-
fer $60 per driver.
The driving program, to be of-
fered to students before and
after school and on weekends.
will cost the district about $5,400
in general funds and an un-
known .amount for electricity re-
quired to operate driving
simulator$.
In addition to behind-the·
wh e el tra i ning in autos
furnished by the firm. the driv·
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near the district's Newport
Beach headquarters .
Last year. the district painted
''streets" and "intersections" on
a Newport Harbor High parking
lot lo offer behind-the-wheel ex·
perience to youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver, a school official
noted. ·
; . , ' '
"In return. they C Barto at·
torneys) have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have bad
a trial."
Barto actually gained ap-
proval early this summer from
the state to sink four new wells
on its 18-acre property lying ad·
jacent to a 6().home subdivision
in south Mesa.
"Part or the plan." Wood said
of his court action, "is. if we can
agree lo basic facts, that both or
us will file motions ror summary
judgment.''
Meanwhile. he said. Barto will
continue to pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
whe re homes are valued at
about $250.000.
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DEAR PAT DUNN: What do all the num·
bers on the lower left.hand portion of check•
stand tot? Are they bank branch and account
identiClcation numbers or what?
W.H., Costa Mesa
Check• are aow proceHed by bllbl)'
aopbl1tlcated tomp'8ter 1y1tem1 whlcb
respond to the aumben In the lower left·hand
corner or the "M11netlc Ink Chuacter
Recopltlon" (MICR> code. The nrat rour
numben Indicate the city where the bank ac·
count Is located; the second rour stand for the
bank's name; the neat three numbers ID·
dlcatie the brancb; and tbe last numbers
$&and for the accou•t number.
These encoded-numbers allow the check
lo be proceased throuab various computer
centers from the recelvlna bank, to the
Federal Reserve OHJce, to the paying bank,
and are one way by which the banking ln·
dustry handles the large volume or "paper
work." Callfomlans write at least 20 million
checu a day -or an average of one check
per person per day.
Container broken
DEAR PAT DUNN: I have a glass and
silver carafe which I like very much. My
problem is that the glass container was
broken and I can't seem to find any way to
get it replaced. It's a Coming brand. but I
can"t find another container anywhere .
J .T .. Irvine
Write lo Corning Gius Works, Consumer
Service Department, Comlng, N. Y. 14830.
Describe the carafe (model number, cup·slze
of the broken container, etc.>. You may be
able to order the replacement container
directly from Corning or will be told where It
can be purchased.
Clip these numbers
DE AR READERS: U your complaint
ranges from automotive to solar, or you need
lnformatlon on anything from starting a new
business to your Cal Vet loan, here's an up·
dated "CLIP AND SAVE" Ust of agencies
and toU·free numbers with a brief description
of what each agency does:
The Air Re.sources number ls (800 )
95%·5588. It handles pollution violations.
The Attorney General's office Is (800)
952·5225. It handles consumer complalnta and
provides information.
T he Bus iness and Trans portation
SolarCaJ Office ls (80f) 152·M7t . It bH a
solar ho& lloe and lnforma&toa re1ardla1
11olar eoer1Y. CoaAmer Affair. bH tbne Unn. The
(Mt) t52-Ult 11 for aa&omotlve repair eotn·
plalntt; <•> 152·5517 la for solar eeer11
compla.latl, and (Mf) 152.5173 ll for eot·
m .. otoey llcent lnl and elllforcemeat.
Tbe Controller'• omce Is <•> '52·5111. It
handles Uie Senior Cltlzeu Property Tu
Po1t~ment Program.
The Economic and Buslaeu Develop·
meat number 11 (8") t5Z·551Z. It baadle1 new
buslneu laformatlon.
The Ener1y CommlH lon'1 aumber 11
(800 ) 85%-751'. It handles lnformatioa oa
ener1y conaervatlon.
The Health and Welfare namber la <•>
852·7050. It handles tax Information and H ·
slstance.
Health Ser vices bas tb.ree llne1. The (Mt)
822·6222 line h andles medical complala&a.
Call (800) 952·5250 for beaJtb referrals, and
(800) 95Z·5SZ8 for Medi-Cal Information ud
assistance.
The Stale Compen sation Insurance
number Is (800) 652-1481. It band.lea problem•
related to bllllng.
The Depa rlment of Motor Ve hicles
numbe r ls (800 ) 95%·5275. It bandies
mobllehome complaints.
The Criminal Justice number Is (8")
952-5558. It handles lnformatloa on Crime
Resistance Task Force.
The Social Services number Is (8")
95%-5260 for Infor matio n on program
participation. The Public ln~ulry Hotline
number ls (800) 952·5253.
The U.C. Medical Center number ls (ltt)
85%-7?21. J : provldH poison Information and
treatment advice.
The Veterans Affairs number ls (800)
952·5626. It bandJes lnformatJon on Cal· Vet
loans.
• ··Got a problem? Then wn te to Pal "" 1 Dunn. Pat wall cul red tape. getting
• thP answers and actaon you need to
•
sol~ mequltte.! rn govnnment and
busrneu Mall your qu.f!.!tacru to Pat
Dunn. At Your ~nnce, Orange COO.ft
Dally Piwt. P 0 Boz 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. A•
many letters as possible will be answered. but phoned
inquiries or Letters not including the reader"s /uU
name. address and business hours' pl"me number
cannot be considered This coluum appears daily ex-
cept Sunday., · ·
N••~ •••ru .......... t't
'W.-FURTHER REDUCTIONS
i\ : DRESSES FOR ALL OCCASIOMS
AMD SPORTSWEAR FM cias,ir~ Ad
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Orange Coeat OAILV PILOT/Thursday, Augu1t 13, 1981
Disney characters • in museum
Mickey , Donald and Pluto highlight New York animation exhibition
NEW YORX (API -Bom a1
• lllrf. paunchy UtUe water fowl,
Donald Duck had become a
11pluttt9rin1. ravln1 International
11tar by the lime he went to war
In 1M2.
Vhadimlr Tytla 'a sense or
dramatic ml.llculature and body
ma111 In drawlna StromboJi, the
corpulent puppeteer an Pinoc
chio.
The subtle arm motion of
Mickey Mouse by Frank
Thomaa In "The Brave LltUe
Tailor" (1938).
Lundy's three-minute dance
between the spider and the Oy ln
"Woodland Cafe" (1937).
Pluto tangled lo flypaper in
"Playful Pluto" ( 1934). drawn
ney's poSt-war work A alrlke by
animators In 1941 marked the
end of the fir1l iolden era at Dis-
ney Studios, und although many
anl ma tors returned to rtolsh
their contracts, they later drift·
ed to other studios. Ford said. "l Uke the wartime cartoons
because .ever yone Is at the
height of his powers. but the
films are very casual," Ford
said.
Donald Duck drew several
wartime assignments. but Ford
da.uer, a Bible becomes Mein
Kampf. Worse, a big-eyed boy
who loved bunnies becomes a Ut-
tlti thug who cheers for foxes,
finally to become a hulkina
robot In Hiller's legions. The last
scene transforms the ranks of
soldiers into ranks of crosses,
stretching on to the horizon.
Now the Irascible duck Is •
star among stars In tile Dilney
animation exhlblUon at the
Whltne)' Museum of American
Art, which focuaee on the pre-
war and wartime yep.rs at the
Walt Dlaney Studl06. In one
phenomenal decade, the Dianey
a nimators created Mickey
Mouse, Goofy, Pluto the Silly
Symph onies and the first
feature-length cartoons.
"ln animation. lime Is b.m.
and a.m. before Mickey and
after Mickey,'' said Greg Ford,
guest curator of the exhibition
Referring to the evolution of Disn~y technique, he $aid: ''You
look at Steamooat Willie (the
first Mickey Mouse talkie in
19281 and then Pinocchio (1940).
It is absurd how much happened
In just io years."
''The more I look at it, the more
magical it seems, the great pains
taken to seem effortless."
Donald was back that same
year to play a German munl·
tlorui worker in "Der Fuehrer's
Face." Starving, overworked,
goaded by loudspeakers, con·
stantly interrupted by the im·
perative of saluting images of
Hitler, Donald is captive in a
s tate so totalitarian that six
bayonets threaten every time he
wavers.
An oafish German band puts
music to his misery: "When
Hitler says we are the master
race, we go 'heil, heil,' in the
Fuehrer's face" a song which
wa& a million seller for Spike
Jones
The Whitney's second floor
h~s been transformed into a big,
dark rumpus room where adults
and tots jockey for position
around television screens show·
ing the Seven Dwarfs or Dumbo.
Drawings cover the walls~ and
cartoons play twice a day in a
small theater.
Ford said he wanted to de-
monstrate that Disney was not a
one-man show, but a big band in
which many talented animators
played distinctive solos.
.,...,..._ Jn the 1934 cartoon "Orphan's
QUIET CAT -This purebred Himalayan. Elsa, held by her Benefil," anjmator Dick Lundy
owner Catharine Ladd of Boulder. Colo .. was disqualified invented Donald's "fighting mad" pose, in which a squawk· from the finals of the $25,000 1981 Meow Off in Los Angeles. ing duck hops up and down,
Elsa was removed from competition after failing to meow holding one arm out in a stiff jab
during two days of preliminaries. Afterward. it was dis · and swinging the other menac·
co\'ered Elsa is pregnant. which may have h ad great bear· ingly.
m g on her n~post! Among Ford's favorite solos :
~"'--~--'-~--~~~~~~----------~-----
SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTTERS
Designed, Finished ~~
by Norm Ferguson Ford said it
is the first cartoor1 sequence
which s hows the character
"thinking."
The flypaper scene is djssect·
ed in a series of s ketches
retrieved from Disney archives
for the Whitney exhibit.
"Some people think I am tak·
ing the magic out of it. I don't
think so,'' Ford said. "The more
I look at it the more magical it
seems. the great pains lo seem
effortless.
"I have an interest in identify.
ing as many animators as I can,
because to this day people don't
know what they did."
As a kid, Ford confessed, he
preferred the Warner Brothers'
Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck.
"Disney always seemed too
precious to me," he said. "I
started getting interested in Dis·
ney when I got interested in
animation, about 10 years ago."
The s how includes little of Di s·
could not recall Mickey ever go-
ing to war. Minnie Mouse did
her bit by saving bacon drip-
pings in ·•out of the Frying
Pan." and Goofy sank most of
the Japanese navy. and the Ris ·
1ng Sun. too, in "How to be a
Sailor."
In "The Old Army Game" of
1942. Donald is a G I who
believes he's been sawn in half
in a scrape with a sadistic
sergeant. Reduced to tears by
the illusion or his haloed hind-
quarters ascending to heaven,
Donald contemplates suicide
before locating his legs again.
The same Saturday afternoon
audience which roared at
Donald's double amputation was
hushed after seeing "Education
for Deatl\," a 1943 propaganda
film about Nazi education.
The animators make their
case with riveting transmog·
ri rications a crucifix is
warped into a S"1lstik&4tudd.ed
But it's all a bad dream.
Donald wakes up in America
and planL'> a duck kiss on a little
Statue of Liberty. The final im·
age is of a tomato splattering
on the Fuehrer's face.
$216,000
opal found
MELBOURNE . Austral1 a
(AP J Opal dealer Phillip San·
ders said he round a 34 ·carat
stone worth $216,000 in a parcel
of black opal scraps he bought
from a South Australian dealer
for less than $6.000.
Sanders said he purchased the
scraps because he had not been
able to afford his usual trip to
the South Australian opal fields
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, August 13, 1981 Bl
rnrn~~m~~~-
'Flukists' forecast jobless rate hike
By JOHN CUNNIFF
A ............
NEW YORK Among the economic miracles
or accidents of the lirst few months of the Rea1an
udmlnistratlon is a decline In the nation's jobless
rate. But, some say, the president's luck may be
running out.
First. some news about the Improvement.
One year ugo, the rate stood at 7.6 percent,
with close to 8 m illion people unemployed. In the
CUMMIPP
latest completed survey. for Ju·
ly. the rate dropped to 7 per·
cent. with about 7 .5 million
workers idle.
To be sure, a year ago the
economy was in a recession.
But to be fair, it s hould be noted
that some non-Job measures
suggest that the economy has
not improved much since then
and that 1t may soon return to
recession.
But the Job situation has brightened decidedly.
In a statement accompanying the July figures,
Janet L. Norwood, commissioner of the Bureau of
Labor Statistics, provided this summary :
"Since the recession low of July a year ago,
employment has risen in all major industries ex-
cept for construction and government. Labor force
participation has held steady, the percentage of
the population employed has increased and the un-
em ployment rate has declined."
Having read and digested that material,
however, economists are now looking for the
worst. The rate shouldn't be that low, they are say·
ing. They are looking for flukes. They are forecast·
ing higher rates to come.
The flukists look for a major revision in the
figures. They are always looking, and frequently
they find what they are looking for. Revisions are
not uncommon, a consequence in part of the s peed
with which the figures are initially compiled and
released. July's rate was released Aug. 9.
There is also the matter of seasonal adjusting,
the purpose of which is to remove from the figures
any strengths or weaknesses resulting solely from
seasonal influences. Miscalculations do occur in
such adjustments
Another group tends to accept the figures as
accurate but claims the rate is now too low to be
maintained. Typical of their statements is that the
economy isn't strong enough to support so low a
rate. Note: Low is relative. In July 1979, the job·
less rate was only 5 6 percent.
Economists at one of the nation's largest
banks, for example, maintain that "there doesn't
PUU~E P UBLIC NOTICE
appeur to be any fundamental 1tl'afth In demand
from which rehlrina could start." They ar1ue that
"employment growth la 1re1ter than the
economy's current atrength wa,,.....,"
They have plenty of com,..,. Public state-
ments by prominent business eeoMmlsts seem to
indicate a consensus that the etoaomy ls due to
turn down over the next rew months, bringing the
job market with It.
Some even claim that the economy has never
really emerged from the recession of 1980, except
in the eyes of academic analya. They add that
hiring In anticipation or the pt e:1U11tt's economic
program passing was done ,... ill enthusiasm
than in recognition of economJr a a •1e1.
And so there is a wides"""" f"llng among
the professionals that those · J'91t Jottlesa figures
aren't going to be repeated 11' tbe remaining
months of the year. The job market is headed
lower, they say.
But before accepting their word, perhaps you
should consider two other fact.ors : First, President
Reagan has enjoyed a run of cood luck: next, the
pro~essionaJs have been wrona. embarrasainJly so, in the past. '
Even before passage of the new economic pro.
gram, one or the most professional of the pro-
fessionals gave some cautionary advice to his
high.paying customer..
He began by suggesting that some of the lead·
ing economlsta, and the business and financial
community, may have been made too "skeptical"
and "cynicaJ" over the year about the possibility
of improvement.
He then suggested that they may be overlook·
ing something. and he referred to a recent poll
that showed the put)llc In recent months has
become more optimistic about the nation's long-
term economic future
Without going into a•long economic analysis,
he cast his vote with the public "We heartily
agree," he said.
Oxy, Iowa Beef merger OK'd
At simultaneous special meetings in Los
Angeles and South Sioux City , Neb., the
shareholders of Occidental Petroleum Corp. and
Iowa Beef Processors Inc. approved the merger of
the two companies.
Iowa Beef will become a Yilolly owned sub·
sidiary of Occidental upon the filint Wednesday of
a plan of merger with the Delaware ~ecretary of
state. fowa Beef is a Delaware corporation.
The acquisition of Iowa Beef, in an exchange
of stock valued at approximatelf S800 million, wiU
BUSINESS BRIEFS
result 1n Occident al Revenues for 1981 ap·
proachmg S18 billion.
Iowa Beef processors is the largest beef
processing com pany in the United States. It
operates 10 beef plants and one ,... plant in seven
states . Founded 21 years ago, _. rewlutionized
the meat-packing industry wiU. tJs introduction of
boxed beef. Sales for the first '1111 ol fiscal year
1981 were $2.4 billion; ea~ f()r the period
reached $26.2 million.
Occidental Petroleum Cori,.. a diversified
natural resources company, had sales of $6.5
billion for the six months ended June 30; earnings
PUBLIC NOTICE
were $387.6 million. • Shearson Loeb Rhoades Inc .. as manager of
the underwriting group, announced the public of-
fering of 1.4 million shares of Comprehensive Care
Corp. common stock at $15.50 a share.
Proceeds from the sale of shares offered by
the company will be used to expand its operations
through the purchase or construction of additional
alcoholism and psychiatric treatment facilities
The Newport Beach-based company is
primarily engaged in providing alcoholism and
psychiatric treatment services in seven hospitals
operated or managed by it, one hospital managed
by a joint venture partner and 61 general indepen·
dent hospitals. Comp Care is the largest private
provider of hospital-based alcoholism treatment
services in the United States
• The reorganization of Tustin-based Eldorado
Bank into a one-bank holding company has been
completed, according lo J .B. Crowell, presidept.
The reorganization became effective at the
close of business Aug. 6.
Under terms of the reorganization, approved
by shareholders on May 'l7, Eldorado Bank is now
a wholly owned subsidiary of Eldorado Bancorp.
the holding company.
A,. ........
WARDE TO HEAD CONTINENTAL -Con ·
tinental Airlines' board or directors has
named George Warde president a nd
chief executive officer to replace A.L.
Feldman. who committed suicide Sun·
day Warde. 59. who joined the company
Aug. 1 as president and chief operating
officer. also was elected a director of the
co mpany. a Continental spokesman said
from Los Angeles
Bank takeover
plans revealed
Officials of American City Bank, California's
22nd largest bank, said they have agreed in princi-
ple to be acquired by a fo reign bank pending
stockholder ratification and state and federal
regulatory clearance
S Jon Kreedman, chrurman of the board of
American City Bank, said United Overseas Baok
Ltd. of Singapore has agreed to buy the bank for a
reported S83 million, or S26 10 per share.
American City Bank, with 1980 net income of
$3 4 million, concentrates on business and not on
consumer banking.
Acrording to a spokesman, American City
Bank will retain its name and continue business as
usual. with Kreedman remaining the bank's chief
executi ve
"•CTITIOUS eus1M•SS
MAME STATIMI MT Tllo lollowl"O porsons art doing
bvsl llHS • .,
AIRPORT CENTER CLEANERS,
11021 SllVSNt•ll Clrcll, Unit F, lrvlno,
CA mu.
Sano 'N S.• Pro,.rilu, Inc., •
Calllornl• cor·po,.llOI\, IMJ1 Pacific
Coest H,.y • Sunwl S.acll, CA .010.
Jorry D. ~Y. Ifft S.IN Or •
HUl\llllQllOft 8Mcll, CA '1M1
Tiiis _,....,ts cOl\dvettd by • cor -··""'
.. tCTITIOUS eustNESS
MAME STATIMEMT
T 111 lollowlno ,.rsons art doing
bu11ne·u~
SIERRA INVESTMENTS, INC ,
1.0. Eas1 Kattll• ,....,..,., Oranoa. CA ., .. ,
SIER RA REALTY ANO INVESTMENT, INC , a C:.llfornla COf'
-•UOft, IU. Eut Katella Awn ... Orang•, CA~
Tl\ls bl.&l,...s h cOl\dvei.c:t bY • cor·
porallOft.
SIERRA REAL TY ANO
INVESTMENT, INC
"ICTITIOUS austNISS
NAMI STATUHNT
TM IOll-lllQ "''""' ts dolno O..sl
Ml.I •I
LI N COL N PLACE
APARTMENTS, LTD •J Cor_a ..
Pl•1• Drtvo, Sullo 100, Nowport
• .. , .... CA!ltornl• '26'0 ,.,.., L AOams, ICM Linda I~.
Nowport 8"<11, CAtltornla t1MO
Tiiis O..slneu h c-clod by • llmlteG~,,..\lllp
AlanL AOams
T11ls , .. ._, w•s fllld w1111 u..
cou .. 1y cien. ""JuAv 11, ""
C lassic country elegance
at Rancho Santa Fe.
J orry D °""OeY
~'NS.• Pr-rtl.s, tftc. Dor"" L. Adams PrMl-1
Tiiis "'81-1 WM ltlld wltll , ..
Covnty Clorll ot Oranoa c .... nty on
A11g 4, 1•1
"""" PutMI"'" Or•noe Coa.I Dally PllOI, Aug. l, IJ, 10, 11, 1'11 UJt.411
NIUC llTICE
.. ICTITIOUS auSINIHS
MAMI STATaMENT
Tl\• lotlowlna porsons •ro doing
11v11neu as:
M. R. ENTl;RPRISE!>, 1401 Dove Slrttl. SUit• 400, ,. __ , Boach, C1'
'2HO.
Mlc,..tt R. Harden, 2615 8ay$1>of•,
N••-1 &eac11, CA n..o
Randy JolW'IM>n, •'1 Se•ontll Strut,
Mannaii.n Buch. CA m ...
Tiiis llvslneu ll conductod by • g111orAl pwtn.rsfllp
MICllHI R Hardin
Tiiis st.a1-t WI$ 111..S •1111 ti.
Couftty Cltrk of Oranoa C""nty 011
Aue •. 1•1 ""',. PlllJll-Orenoa Coa•I Dally Pilot,
Aug. l , tJ, 10, V . t"I ,_...1
PUIUC llTICE
,..ICTITIOUS e USIMIH
MAMIE STATEMENT
Tllo I01towl11g perM>n• art doing
INSINUa.S;
ONLY THE OYSTER KNOWS
N Felr Drive, Co.le ""9w, CA 91l2'
J tllrwy Ct•l'll, lllSA Oet M11r Aw .,
Cotta ~CA91l2'
G.,.ri. A. w ..... llSA Del M•r Aw , Cost• MIM. CA.,,,.
Thi• "'"'""' Is cone111ct1d by a oenoral iNtrtnenhll>
Jlflr.., M Clarll
Thi& stet-I •M 111..S •Ill• 1111 c .... nly """ of Orange c .... nty on
=~I &alley, Publl\IWG Or-Coall Dall:l~I~
Tiiis stat-I WI$ lilllCI •1111 1M July 21, lO, Aug I, 11, t•t Jlllt.f1
COUfllY Clet1l OI Or-COUfltv on JuAy
JJ.1 .. 1.
LAW OP .. ICES 0 ...
M<GIE & PAUL. IMC.
A "RO .. EUIONA.L COii ... MH1tlac-.rt 9-._
Shlll,....,,Wte•
1191 D-Strwt
N•WP9'1 e..dl, CA nMa ..... ,,.
Publl-Or•noo Coast O•llY PllOt,
Jiiiy >O. AUVUi1 •, IJ, 10, 1•1 l401-41
Nil.IC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS e USIMIU
NAMS STATI MEMT
Tllo lollowlng porsons ore Clotng
bullnllUH.
COAPORATE IMAGE, tlt1 AlllO
A••""'· C~ta Mose, CA 91617
Jamos Wltll8m Washington, Jr., tl17
All..,A•tnw. C°'ll Mesi, CA 9'617.
Ann ...... Chor W•lhl"910fl, "" AlltO AYIRUI, Colle Mesi, CA 91'17.
Tiits bull,...s ts COl\Clu<l•d by an In·
dlvl-.
J w. Wuhlnoton, Jr. Tiiis st.Ctm1nt wn ltlld with 1111
C0\11\IY Ct•rll of Orange C""nly on
PUBLIC NOTICE
LWnta .. tCTtTIOUS auStMEU
MAMa STATEMINT
Tll• lollowlng ,.,,011s ero dolno
llvtlnoss •:
BLUERIOGE BUSINESS PARK,
SU NCN'll\ 81 .... kloa ,.....,.,., O•an111,
CA 911tz, IMAlllng _.,.,,_, IOIO tnd
A.,.nuo. Sult• •OO. Sen Oleoo, CA 91101)
SEQUOIA PACIFIC
DEVELOPMENT COMPAN Y, a
O•••••ro COfporatlon, 1010 S.conCI
A.,.nua, Sult• •oo. San Olaoo, CA '2101.
NORWICH PROPERTIES. INC.,
• C•llOf'Rle co•po,..tlOft, J410 Camino
Oet Rio Harth, S..Oltt lOO, $an 01100,
CA tJlOI.
Tiiis bul.INM " conduct.a by an un
ln<orPOf'•led M-l•llon oc,,., thin a
pert norsNp
INC
SEOUOIA PACIFIC
OEVELOPMEHT CO Mk .... t J Mc.._,
YIU Prttldlftt
NORWICH PROPERTIES, ....... •. "" ""11'1' Mk hHI N-<11,
PublllhtCI Oranoo Coast Daily Piiot, PrHl.,.,,t
Aug l, fl, 10, 21, "" J'7MI Tiiis stat......,1 was llled wllll lllt
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITlOUS e USIMaSS
MAMI STATaMllNT
T"4t tollowt"9 Pt,.,.,., Is clOltl9 busl·
MIS •1
c .... nty CMtl'll oc Oranoo County on July
n. "" """" Publi"'9<1 Or"'llf Co.HI Oelly Piiot,
July JO, Aug. l, IJ, 10, 1'11 J40t-t
P UBLIC NOTICE
MASSI MOS PIZZA, ~· E 11ttl STATIMINT O"
Sir"'· Coslll "'""·CA tt•V. AeANOOMMENT Of ISMET PEPIC, *' Hiet ,....,..,., U51 0 .. PICTITIOUS
Hunt1"91on 11u<11, CA 91647. eusi1taSJ MAMI
This -•neu Is conouc1.a by '" In· T"4t totlowlno """" 1111 --
Aug. •.1•1 dlvl.,..al . lht uw ol tho llctll'-busl,,..s nemo.
Ptln lt lsn.I Pwoic CONTRACTORS SPA & SAUNA, Publl&htd Or9n00 Cout Dally Piiot, Tiii• sta._t was lltld wltll llW HJ North Espt•nadt, Oreftgo,
Aug.•. lJ, 20, 21, 1"1 J•l>-tl County Clll'k ol Or-Co..nty on J11ty C•lllornl•.,...
22, "" Th• fictitious O..slnen ft1m1 re·
PUIUC llTICE
PIWU forrod to ........ was 111«1 In 0. ... 111 Publllhed Oranoit Coast Dally Pltot, C.Unty Oft o.c. t, 1'90.
July 21. lO, Aug .•• 13. 1•1 J297-4! "'""" LllWll 471, North EW>l•...00.
-------Oi'•noe.c.t11orfti1.,...
STATaMaMT OP Ae AMOOMMaNT PUBLIC NOTICE T"''' buslnou wn c-uc1ec1 by •n
OP USI 0 " _ ----___ , lftdlvlduet.
PICTITIOUS •us1Ma1S MAM• All ... ~s
Tllo IOllowl .. ---llH .-aci "'CTITlOUS aUSINEIS Tiiis statement WIS Iliad with '"' tho 1111 of 1111 Flctltl°"l 811sln1u MAM& STATIMaNT County Ctet11 ol Or11not C-IY Of\ Jl/Ay
Mama: TM lollo.tno s-r-. Is CIOlnv bust· 21, 1•1. PtH"7
•LUE NOTE LABEL. co .. 1112 ....... , Publl-°' ... <:Nil Dally Piiot.
Watllaf Aw,,..., Cypnu, C:.tllom.. l.OOGE ELECTAtC, ZIM Senta JUiy U , 30, Aug '· 13, t•t ntl .. I.
*». Ana ,..,....,., eo.111 Mose, Cellfoml• -----
PUBIJC NOTICE Tiit Flctlll-8utlMSs Name ,.. '2•27
IHnd lo ...... w• fifed '" Or.,,1119 Maryland P. Lodge, 211'9 Seftla c-tv.,, Hs-111. Ana, A-. Coslll Mn.t, c..lltwnle
Jo .. ,111 ... LllftClry, Htl We lhr 91617
A-, Cypnu, c.!llorftle ..... Tiiis Mlnets Is c-.C-by .,. lft-PICTITIOUS e USllfHa
Tiii• MIMll ... cOflduclH by .,. Cll•lfU•t T.:::.:JTATa..-.. ,T ~ blnl IMM41Uo1. l!Nrt._ p Lod9e • "9 ~ I ~"'
J-.N,. Uftelry Tiiis se.c_, -moo wttll n. neu ••· T11i. .. _ wes Iliac! wltll n. COUlllY c ...... Ill Or.,,._ C-y, Jwly "ANTA$YLANO LINGIElllE,
Cou"4f Ct•ll ol Orlnfl C-ty IHI 11, 1'et 11')2 Joreleft Avoftue ne. trvl,..,
,. 4 '"' ,.,...,4 ca111orftle mu 119. , • Pl_,. Publl.IMCIOr ..... Coost Dally Piiot l(e...., N. ""<Utt, 17.az Jordotl "''*'-0r.,.. co.at o.tlr Pllo4. July ti JO A.lo.• ll 1"1 ~,· •w-, n •. ,,.,.,., c..11....,., 9270 • ao •7 t• .. _ .. 1 ' ' ' ' ' Tlllt .....,_ 11 c9ftdllc .... 1i1Y t11 lft• A\19. '• 1.. , • , I _..,. -ell•~.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Fairbanks Ranch . Per-·" haps the mos t impo r-
tant private residential com-
munity ever c re ated in
Southern Cali fornia . I, 240
prime master-planned acres
at Ranch o Santa Fe, a n a rea
r~ned for its prestige, the
tratlitional beauty of its ar-
chitecture and ch arming earl y
California ambience . He re
you w ill find estate sites of
one acre and large r w ith all
access controlled by electron-
ically activated privacy gates.
T hro u g hout time this
land has attracted swash -
buckling romantics yearning
to call it their own. One s uch
man was Douglas Fairbanks.
Awe s truck upon seeing its
breathtaking natural beauty
he determin ed that he re was
th~ perfect place for his and
Mary's dream house. But a las,
it was not to be.
Fairbanks' passion for
this land continued, however,
as he turned it into a working
ran ch where citrus g roves
were planted, lakes built and
streams created. Today, it can
be the perfect place for your
dream home.
Panoramic views across
the valley to the coast in a cli-
mate of refreshing seawashed
.. Towering eucal yptus
fOM ts, orange groves and
beautiful rolling meadows
offer a ra re, uncluttered set-
ting . A lakeside clubhouse
with beautiful tennis facilities
Fairbanks
Ranch
are nearing completion. A full
equestrian center a nd wan-
dering trails will be included
a s w ill Fairbank~ Village
PlaLa, to be built at the south-
wes.t entry of the Ranch to
p rovide con venie nt s hopping
and professio n a l services.
It will almost bl' impos-
s ible to believe you are onl y a
few minutes from the San
Diego Freeway, twenty-five
miles from downtown San
Diego and comfortably close
to Orange County and Los
Angeles.
Fa irbanks Ranch holds
every promise of becoming
one of the most prestigio us
and sought after addresses in
Southern California. A place
· of enchanting beauty and e n-
d uring cha rm. It is one of the
last opportunities to e njoy a
truly elegant, rural lifestyle
with every m o d e rn con-
venie nce. All homesites are
improved with natural gas,
sewers and cable television
and of course, aJJ utilities are
unde rground.
·-secure an a ppointment
to viait Fairbanks Ranch to-
day. ~anch tours by appoint-
me nt only:
. Fairbanks Ranch Realty Co.
P.O. Box 2012,
Rancho Santa Fe,
California 92067
Telephone (714) 756-3795
(213) 277-9488
Fro m $175,000
Equal Hou Ing OpportunJty Gr
Developed by Watt Industries, Inc.
-
..
I
I . i
! I
-I . * Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT1Thur1day, Augu1t 13, 1981
•
•
FUU CREW AT AIR FORCE BASE A full ,
crew of Air Force controllers work al guiding
an Air Force C-141 plane in the air at Travis
Air Force Base. The Northe rn California
base. one of·the largest in the western United
States, has re located more than eight Air
...........
Force Controllers to civilian airports such as
Sall Lake City. Tucson and San Francisco
Two of the controlle rs shown here art> Ail'
Force controlle r trainees The c·ontrollt>rs
st rike is in its lllh day
Home Savings loses $17 million
BEVERLY HILLS (AP) -H.F. Ahmanson
Co., parent of the nation's largest savings and loan
company, has reported a second-quarter loss of $15
million -its first loss since going public nine
years ago.
COLLECTORS
CORNEA
Rere Coln• & St•mpa
GOLD & SILVER
1-12-11 .... a........ .. ...... c ..... ,. ..., ....
K"'tff-t41l.1S MU.7f Mepfe Lelli Mll.7S M11.7f
100 Car-. ..... "" .. 511 ,._ lff7.JS ....u '°"' 511-8e9t .,. ... ..,, ...
·10% Bank Financing
IRA& Kebgh
(714) 55&-M50
South CoHI Pin• Vlll•g• -·---fA•---c.-...... ,
PARKINSON'S DISEASE
IS NOT HEREDITARY'
By Terry
Grant,
R. Ph. g
Any ml•dll'lnl' JIO\H'rfUI
enough to t rt· at a d1i.t·a~l'
or d1s<.'omfor1. l0ffot'l1\ l·I.'.
also has some J.>Oll'nllal
ror harm Th1i. 1 ~
particularly trlll' or mall~
of the ne" drug~ 1ndutl
mg M>me "hi t h ma\ lw
dispensed w1thm11 a pre·
l><.'ript1on
Tha t l!> wh) 11 1s im11or
tant for e\ er~ famtl~ to
have a pt·r~onal fam il~
physidan and µharmJC'~
to take care of thl·m
Coopcratinj? "1th µhy.,1
c1an!. f or tht> hC'tler
health of their patients
has been our chief dul\'
for a long lime \\"l' "iii
welcome you :.1•l1•r11ng w.
t o be your personal
pharmacy
YOUR DOCTOR l'AN
PHONE L:S wht>n \OU
need a med1cinl! Pick up
your prcscrtpllon 1r shop
ping nearb~. or "e will
deliver promptly without
e x tra charge · /\ Rreat
many people entrust us
with their prescriptions.
May we compound and
dispense ~ours"
ly • .• AL .____,....._ __ ...-...
HOUOWAY
Tht' t·a~ll'St \\U.v to figure
t hl' l'OSI or It\ tng Is to
lakt• )'our inromt• a nd
add JO pl•rt"•ent
•••
Tt•<'nager to fath1•r "I'm
nut t;uli:atang I'm tntn).?
I O rt• ;HI h I ~ h ll rrl pl' I
~tickt•r
•••
A 1-(0'>SIJ> 1~ snm~om• who
.,ulfl·r~ lrom at·utl' in
d1~l'l'l'lllll1
•••
You kno\\ .vou n• i.:l'lt in~
on Wlll'n \our birthda ,.
cak<· collapi.l'" from thl'
\H'lght or the t•a ndll'l>
•••
Our clt•l·twn~ miRht be
more MH't·t·~~ruJ 1r "t•
1>1<•kt•d l'Und11lates ac ro rd in~ to "hat the'
\\on't ~land for 11hlead cir
what th"'.' do stand for
•••
Take a spin to Tire City,
1950 Ne wport, Cost a
Mesa, 648·3554, for a High
Speed Wh eel Balance.
DAILY PltDT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5678
WANTED
DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds,
gemstones, gold and salve< from private indivi-
duals and estates Careful examination and
evaluabon by our experts Highest pnoes paid.
10·9 dally. Sal 10-6. Closed Sunday. Ptione
today. Ask for Betty Grace°' Erle Zalasllus
" fM OITl(lH Of flllnl I~ 0V£11 60 YlAIU
Jf:W[LS by JOS[PH
Soult Coast Plaza, Cotta Mesa • 54CMO&e
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONl'5
• later••• onJv ... v--1 ··-·~1.1 • _ .... w...a.1
• Weekly c:o••I•-••
• Nonl'91v f111e4I•••
•• -··· lo a .,..,. • So•them C.'-'onla
C ""'-''I our
loan lltfo....tlon ••,,,k•
lnr ~·lilt h~.11111114 n1•,•dc •
(714) 75SM515
AMEl .. CAN HOME fllO...,OMll
230 Nev;poll Ct ntor 011vt
Ot119n Plaza
Newpon 8tttlt.
Cahlorni•
92900
For the quarter ended June 30, Home posted a
foss or $17.4 million, despite a 13 percent increase
in gross revenues to $382 million and a modest $22
million increase ln savings deposits.
PUT $38.00 TO WORK AND
I EARN $19 ,456 IN 4 YEARS!!!
w ............... ....._ ... ,...of .... • e !ROMY ....,.. to nll1t •• ill te. tt..cillg of ow e ...t dlalg ... i. 'OltMt•IM Wiiii r...,...· for •
• PAY/CAILET.V. •
hwy doy thov-..dt of ,..,.. ,..... $31.00 •
• .cl_.. .. ttw roe• tr.ck ..t .._...._.ill v..,_
• .clloM. •
• So w'-y it0t bet $31.00 oa • y--i .-d •
• .eftion 1110•I• 1~0 which 11 beNd • 1ocJ1c Ht •
a ,...._, CIMI wCM!ld MOit •Wety ,...... ill Y" e . ' ...,,._
• becCMl!liRq o llG WIHHH~ •
: ?~ ~~ : e _ For lroc.._. .<:4 •
•••• 1714) 957-4086, 548-7690 •••
CONSTRUCTION
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
• Residential
• Commercial Buildings: Takeout
Commitment required along with leases.
• Land Leans up to one year 50% appraisal.
CONTACT:
•Jeff John.son-
Irvine om~ (714 )851-4050
TI-IE UNCONVENTIONAL BANK. Herit~e B~!Jf~-<=)
·------------
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllllAl ,.._ LEN De ..
PUBLIC NOTICE ·----------.
l'ICTITIOUS MISll•I» l'ICTITIOUS a USIN•SS
NAMa ITATIMINT NAMl ITAHMINT
TM lollowl"O .,...ton~ •r• dolnt Tit• loll-1•19 IM''°"' are Clolnt
IMdlMu es. butlMH es:
THE eAXTER GROUP, M1' Via $AN OlttOO INVl!STMINT AS-
OJM>rto, 5ulle ?C» .. NewPO<t eee<ll. SOC IATES, IJ Corporal• Piere,
<,:ellfOf'nle ~ NowPOf't llMcll, C.lllOfl'I• nMO Jerre M. e19dQ911, ton Collier Ptlw M. OtM, 4'4 lsallell• Ter· y,.., W.ttMIMter, c:.111or111a ti.13 rau,c*'-del M¥, CAlll!offll• t»2'
Nl< .... M J. Goeros, 2126 NOrtfl Ktltlt A.-· 1'12 SH VIII ...
LIWtll i.-. SellU AM, c:.tllorlll• Orh'•• C«dlff by the SN, Celllonlla "* '2001 • ~lcllMI w. Miiiet, *' Golt)« Tiii• butlM•t It <ondllcled ll>v • u... Wfttmlnater, C.lltonll•.... ..,., .. _.....""p. Dane A. Tr-, l5t 1"" Mrwt, ""'°' M. Ocllt ,\pl 1', C.UI "'"41, C:..lltomle ..., Tiiis l~ •• llled with IM
l"lll1 ..,_~MH It condll<IM t't' a c;.unty Clerll I/A Or .... e-nt'I on JIMY
teflttAI ~. 20, 1 .. 1 ,., .....
Jttft M. "~' , .... ~ -lli.d wllll lfle
C-l'r Owk"' Or1119t ceunc., ... '"'' )l, 1 .. 1
"*" ......... C>lflft C...I Deity f'llet,
Jiiiy "· ......... 1a. ,,., ,.,..,,
Pll8uC NOTICE
CO)(, CASTLE ~ Nl~SON,
~ ~c.MYOMc• tm~...._ ..... , ..
, ...... ,C..tllU
PwlltMe Or ... CNlt Delly PllOt,
Jv4y ti, JO, Mia·•. I), 1•1 not.fl
. . . .
Shareholder decisions
are often tender ones
The lnvc•lor, faced wlth a 1eneral offer to
shareholders lo purchHe tome or all of the 1ban1
of a eorporatlon (a "lender ofter'') may often feel
he has a "Hamlet-like" choice. Should he continue
to hold h.is shares ln the bellef that he will be able
to sell for more hater? Should he retain hla shares
and continue to earn dividends while avoiding
capital 1alns taxes?
Or, bould he sell to the tender offeror on the
prospect that the offeror ls wllllna to pay a pre·
mium for the quick acquitltlon of a laree number
of shares a premium that may not again be
available after the purchue is completed? Like •
Hamlet, the investor a~es the future full of doubts
and contradictlona. but also like Hamlet. a de·
cision must be made.
The Securities and Exchange Commisaion
<SECl receives many inquiries from puzzled or
disappointed shareholders faced with a tender of·
fer. Of course, the merits of any particular tender
offer involve judgments about the economic
prospects of the company and the offeror which
are unique to the particular tranaaction.
However, there are some mechanics of lender
offers which repeat themselves frequently and the
SEC believes that investors should be more aware
of them.
One or the most frustrating features to the non·
professiona.l investor is a matter which involves
the expiration date of a tender offer. Tbe expira·
lion date is always prominently displayed in the
tender offer, but there are often other, equally im·
portant deadline dates for the investor which may
be missed. For example. there is often an earlier
date called the "proration date."
Proration means that all securities tendered by
a certain Lime will be treated as If received at the
same lime, and therefore, if more than the
specified maximum are tendered, the tender of·
feror agrees to accept an equal percentage of each
lot tendered, in order to reach the total amount of
securities sought. ,
If more than the maximum are tendered before
the proration date, and not later withdrawn. then
the securities tendered after the proration date are ·
simply not accepted and are returned to the
owners Therefore. if an investor tenders his
securities before the expiration date. but after the
proration date, he or she may find that they are
unable to participate In the tender offer.
Proration is used as an alternative to the "first·
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
come-nret aerved" method becaUJe it la more fair
lo the non profeulonal Investor who may not
become aware of the tender ofter early throuch an
announcement over a tinanclal news service or In
a flmanclsl newspaper, as a professional lnvestor
would
Luwful notice of a tender offer does not require
I hut the offeror guarantee that every affected
iecurity holder will receive a notice of the' tender
.Jrfer. At Its barest m lnJmum. public notice may be
satisfied by publlcation of the tender offer <in full)
in a newspaper of general circulation.
M05t tender offerors go beyond this and do at-
tempt to notify each security holder of record ln·
dividually. Proration protects the investor who
doesn't read financial publications regularly but
depends on receiving notice In the mail.
However, although it does provide some protec
lion it i!S not a guarantee that the small Investor
will be able to participate in the tender offer since
mail notice i!> not an absolute requirement, and
mail service is not always perfect.
Tender offerors who do send notices by mail are
not required to Insure that every notice is de·
livered and frequently investors fail to receive
notice because either they did not send a change of
address to the company (this happens more often
whe n the company does not pay regular
dividends>. or the change or address was not
processed by the date that the list of security
holders was requested by the orreror.
Another group of investors who may be affected
by receiving notice or a tender offer late are in·
vestors whose securities are held by a broker or
bank in "street name." These investors may not
receive their notices as promptly because there
are delays encountered when the tender offeror
has to find out from the registered owner (the
broker or bank> how many copies are needed for
forwarding, plus delays in the actual forwarding.
These delays often leave the stockholder or
bondholder with very little time to make a de·
cision. However, this is one of the drawbacks of
leaving securities in street name, which must be
weighed against the conveniences , in deciding
whether having your securities in street name ls
desirable .
If you have any questions about a tender offer,
you may write to the SEC's Office of Consumer Af·
fa irs, Robert R .. Wolf, Director, 500 N. Capitol St ..
Washington. D C 20549
I ,
J •
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Tumre I ~""'' R---
Pct.
Up CU Up CU
Up 40.0 Up Jt.6
Up Jl.1 Up 11.a
Up 11.4 Up 16.7
Up 1U Up IS.O Up ,..J
Up IJ.J
Up 12.5 UP 12.S Up IL S
Up 11.t Up 1U
Up 11.S Up 11.S
Up II.• Up 11.2 Up II I UP II.I Up II.I Up 11.0
Po:I.
NEW YORK IAPJ --SI ecttw -· S ~ 11icKlll .._i!M by NASO. 6 _.._ vo1...... t ld ••'eel a.. ,
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s
Research your
'tax sweeteners'
Th" 1981 tax law started out as a clear·cut blU to
reduce personal Income taxes by steps and to Jtt
business lo.ke long.requested write<0lfs. The 10=
have been reac h e d , but the legis lation b
mushroomed far beyond the orisinal intent. At f
simplicity, that's gone -replaced by complntly lb
guarantees fortunes (or tax advisers. '
One point emerges with dauUog clarity even o •
of the mire of milHons of words. There are "tQ.
s weeteners" for you, no m atter what you~·
classification :
i ndividual s ,
investors.
~ s t a t e
phmners ; s mall
businessmen,
co mpany
owners .
exec uti ves, SYlVIA PORTER
.J
real estate invest.ors, dealers, banks. The tax relief Is
in the law a nd so are the potentials (or tax breaks -
but you will have to search carefully.
l'~ollowmg are significant questions with answers
I put together with the help of the editors at
Prentice-Hair, the tax guidelines publisher First , for
individuals, investors and estate planners :
Q. Do you invest in stocks. real estate and
similar media in hopes of making a profit?
A. The top rate on investment income will be 50
percent in 1982 <as has been the top rate on earned
income>. This also means that the maximum rate on
capital gains on sales will drop to 20 percent from the
Present 28 percent <only 40 percent of capital gain il'
included in income at regular rates; thus 40 percent
of the 50 percent is 20 percent). And this lower 20
percent rate applies to sales after June 9, 1981.
Q. Do you wa nt a better retirement plan?
A. The maximum contribution ·you can make to
an Individual Retirement Account, the best tax
s heller ever ·d evised ror us . as m iddle· t 9
upper-income taxpayers, has been boosted from
Sl,500 to $2,000 a year.
If you are an individual who is an active
participant in an e mployer-qualified plan, you , too,
can now deduct contributions to an IRA (this is a bi&.
break for the millions "frozen" in private pension
plans who can now create their own retirement.
programs as well )
On top of this. the ded uction for yearly
contributions to a self-employed (Keogh > plan ha~'
been doubled to $15,000.
Q. Have you been paying the ··penalty tax" OQ,
0
marriage? ~
A. If you're a two-paycheck married couple.
you'll receive tax relief in 1982. The problem has
IJeen that if both of you have paying jobs. r eceive
good salaries and live together .as s ingles, you've had
to pay less federal income tax than if you filed a joint
return as a married couple. Now. the "penalty tax''
on marriage has been eased.
Q . Do you work overseas?
A. Americans working abroad will be entitled to
a $75,000 exclusion from income, plus a housing
allowance. in 1982. This is phased up to $95,000 in four
yearly $5,000 installm ents. It substitutes for a
complicated variety of deductions and exclusions
now in the law.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT now JONES AVERAGES NEW YORKCAP) Flnel Oow·Jones ...,91
for W.cl" ""9-17 I TOCKI
JO Incl °:ri'.Jt ~ .. i.:r. ~-~ 10 Tm <IOS ... 411.fJ 407 70 .e07.21 ~ 2 79
IS Utl 11UO 11S.61 111.74 114.Al ~ 0.22 .s su. 37l.7S m .n no.~ 372.14 ~ 0.10
lll<kls 4,00S,100 Tr•n 2.11.s, 100
u111s 1.us.eoo U Stk 7,Mt,100
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI Auq 11
Adv•n<ed Oe<llned unc11anqeC1 Tot.I I HUft New hlQlll New lows
WHAi AMOOIO
H EW YORIC (AP) All9 12 .. ""'" oy. ,., , ..
7'1 1:
-1~
METALS WEDHE.SOAY ~· • c._....•-cent'• -nd, u.s. +_:
llonl.
""'n c•flb• ~-I·,..: zi.c •"" C4fOts. pound, ........ --. • # TltlS7.~MetelSW9"t.,,_llelt II
,....,._,...C...he pound,H.Y I . •
Mercwy "'40.00 per llasll. • ,...._ P'0.00 lror 01., H. v
SILVER WEONE$0AY 1' h ~ ' . HendY& H-. ltOjO,erlroy-• I • . ..
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT,(Thuraday, Auguat 13. 1981
TV boycott looms again
NSW YORK <AP) -The
Co.UUon for Better Televl1lon
baa renewed Ill threat to boycott
companies that advertlae on
network tel•vi•lon pro1ram1 lt dee~· excesalvely violent or
lewd.
The conservative coalJUon of
more than 300 political and re· llakllla croups, one of which i1
t.be Moral Majority, called off a
boycott ln June. saying ad-
verUsen bad pledged to work
wit~ networks for cleaned-up
a hows.
Bµt lls leader, the Rev.
Donpld Wildmon, said in an in-
QUEENIE
tervtew eubU•hed Wednesday In
the New York Daily News: "If I
were a bettina man, I'd bet that
before the 1981·82 lelevlalon
season ls over, there'• a 90 to 95
percent chance there'll be a
boycott.
"I have a hunch that It's in·
evltable. ''
Wlldmon mentioned several
programs he said would have
problems finding sponsors, in ·
el uding "Flamingo Road,"
"Knot's Landing" and "Three's
Company."
" 'l>allas' will hang on, but it
won't attract the same ad·
JULLHEAD CITY, Ariz. (AP> -The future of
l yJlhead Ci ty may depend upon its gamblio'
nel&'bbor to the north.
But then again, the future of its neighbor -
Latlghlin, Nev. -is s imilarly entwined.
"We are obviously dependent upon each
other." said Judy Dimit, executive secretary of
the Bullhead City Chamber of Commerce. "They
need us for services and employment and. obvious-
ly~ the casin~ bring tourists, which helps us."
Local officials on both sides of the Colorado
Ri\fer that divides the two communities say that
Laughlin and Bullhead City are booming.
Bullhead City. which is seeking to become the
state's 37th city, is one or the fastest growing com-
munities in Arizona.
Laughlin officials believe their community
soon may rival Lake Tahoe as a gambling center.
It all began, they say, with Don Laughlin, who
aome 15 years ago was looking for a place where
be c9uld set up a dozen slot machines. .
Laughlin bought a one room bar and an eight·
unit motel across the river from Bullhead City.
which then had about 700 residents.
vertlsera. The majority of ad-
vertisers h ave become a lot
more careful. and there'• a 1ood
deal of distreaa merchandise out
there.·· WUdmon said.
NBC, whi ch broadcasts
"Flamingo Road ," said ad·
vertising sales were not 1lu11lsh
for the show. A spokesman for
CBS, which presents "Knot's
Land1n1" and "Dallas." said lt
would n ot dlscusa its ad-vertisers.
NBC said its position is that no
speclal·lnterest group has the
right to appoint itself spokesman
for viewers.
l!iE ........ ~
ASSOCIATE DEAN
Robert Hoeppner
OCC fills two
faculty posts
• Robert L. Hoeppner. 49, of Cotta Mesa bu
been named Oran1e Coaat Collete's asaoclate
dean of counsellna and auidance, and George L.
Blanc, <U, of Fountain Valley the colleae's director of community services.
Hoeppner replace• Dr. Jerrel T. Richards.
who was named dean of counaelln1 and auldance.
Hoeppner . who came to OCC in 1964, bas
served aa counselor and psycbolo1y instructor. He
ia also a licensed marriage, family and child
counselor.
Blanc replaces Jean Thompson, who reti~ed.
A former restau.rant owner, Blanc was the col-
le1e·s associate dean of continuing education.
hibachis ••
gesundheit!
10''x10" single grlll hibachi. Cast
Iron body, wooden baH and han-
dle. #1315. Reg. 5.99
88
::=~~~~: .#~~~, .. 5.88
Hillachi with legs, g 88 R ... 14.tS . . . . . . • . . . •
DIRECTOR
George Blanc
Today there are seven casinos in Laughlin and
Bullhead City has a population that's pushing
20,000. breeze away the hot 1pell1 garbage gobbler unclog your drain problems fire awayl
One of the reasons for Bullhead City's im-
portance is that state and federal governments
c.ontrol all but a few hundred acres of land on the
Nevada side of the ri ver. What that means is that
Bullhead City has become the bedroom communi-
ty for most of Laughlin's several thousand casino
employees.
Put a 3 speed. 20" box Ian In 21 •• your window to coot your
home. #3713. Reg. 29.95
Badger I by tn-Slnk-Etator
handles big Jobe eaally.
Quiet, dependable. Reg.
39.95 2811 Drain King unctoga drains
with running water. #186.
Reg. 8.39
5a1
KMp Kidde "Fire Away" ex·
tlngulaher close at hand for
emergency protection for home. 711
boat, auto or recreetlonat vehicle
flrea. #10BC. Reg. 11.95
Laughlin boasts a population or 93 people.
The Laughlin boom has driven property values
in Bullhead City r apidly skyward, local officials
said.
''When we came here five years ago, we could
have bought a 40-foot riverfront lot for $17 ,000,"
Mrs. Dimit said. "Now. if you can :even find one.
they're going for $2,000 per front foot."
Expansion in LaughJJn is expected to continue.
Don Laughlin's 100-room Riverside Resort and
Casino is planning a 17-story. 200-room addition
witb a 1,000-seat convention center.
The Edgewater Hotel and Casino is expected
to open late this month, lacking only approval
from the Nevada Gaming Commission. A $16·
million, six-floor . 162-room hotel. it boasts the
town's first heated pool.
· IJbe Colorado Belle is expected to begin con-
atructioq this summer on a 13-story hotel and The
Nntda Club, owned by the Del Webb Corp .• just
bad a $4 million facelift. Laughlin owns 92 acres of
the town that bears Ms name. including a pair of
tra~hooting ranges, and calls the federal govern-
• ment "the biggest enemy this area has" because
ol its refusal to release surrounding lands.
The Nevada Colorado River Commission ,
ho~ver, is considering the release of more than
l,000 acres of state land for residential develop-
meni west of Laughlin.
What that means to Bullhead City. nobody
I kno*8. What that means to Laughlin. local of. I ficials say, is a golden-lined future.
r B>lRT riders up
.: bAkLAND (AP> -More people rode Bay
A'lq Rapid Transit trains in 1980·81 than in any
yeai4 since the trains started rolling in 1972, BART
off\dals say.
:rhe railway served a bout 46.9 million
puaengers during the past flscal year , officials'
aaid. That was 3.7 percent higher than had been
pndcted.
• : Overall, BART has carried more than 275 ~ mmton riders more than 3.6 billion passenger·
, ..
.......o, •• ;We
U11Hllecl!
E DRY ROAST PEANUTS .. ,,..,. ..... ,, ....
our newest Trader Joe'• al the intersection of 17th Street. N ew p o.rt Boulevard and Superior
Aven1.1e (nut to Denny '• and Barcley'1 Bank).
up against Ille well paper
Aa90f19d color• and patterns of wallpeper
tor decoretlng eny
room In the houae. 300Yt Improve your In· 0 off
tertora now.
STANLEY
Inch by Inell •••
Stanley 20' tape meaaure
with M1Y reeding ¥•" tape.
'33-320. Reg. 13.25 911
expand your horizons
. . . with 'th11 19" color
Magnavox portable.
Beautiful true to Ille 33911 color. #4188. Reg.
399.95.
............
Femoua latu flat wt1H pelnt from
Glldden. lffutlfut llet flnt1h
ec:rube clean, ltaye cotor fut.
Euy wat.r clean-up. a•1
Extra terge 20 quert beg of
Vlgoro Potting Mix. Superb 211 medium ror growing Indoor end
outdoor potted pqni.. Reg. 2.99
.•• and your leewe, lawn debfl1,
ttaatt and "'°'91 Package of 2S
. 32-gatlon eln "'*''· 341
apoonH so your plMtl wlll
grow up big lftd strong
Spoon 'It fertilizer llaa ell the
nutrleni. your plants Med to
grow luah and healthy. e oz.
Reg. 3.39 2'~· '
11411
• ......... 114 •• se ......... tM.•
D1HyPilat
THURSDAY, .AUG. 13, 1911
COMICS
FEATURES
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
C6
C7 cs
C10
Tom Pestolesi and
U .S. volleyball
got a good dose of Romania l
recently. See C3 .
No such thing as the· fn~redible Hulk? Here's one
You just don't recognize him without Ram jersey No . 32 • • By .JOHN SEVANO
Of .. ....,,.... .....
He Is menacing aa he ll powerful and consis-
tent as he is punishing. His teammates call him
"CB" althoueh "Incredible Hulk" might be more
apropos.
The second of three children, Cullen Bryant is
unusually quiet and shy for someone as physically
intimidating as he Is . At 6-1, Z36 pounds, he's as
gentle as a feather floating through the air.
That's ofr the rleld, though. When he's In a
game, It's an entirely different matter.
ONE NFL COACH REFERRED lo Bryant as
having "the same power and effect as Earl
Campbell. The only difference is speed."
Whereas Campbell might try to slash or fin·
esse on occasion. Bryant ls just the opposite. Put
an opposing Jersey Ul front of him and he'd JUSt as
soon run over than go around It.
Bryant is remarkably durable considering his
style. Since becoming a starter in 1978. the
University of Colorado product has played in 47
straight games. Last year, in handling the ball 236
times, be fumbled only once, tops among NFC
runrung backs. In eight years. he's handled the
ball 949 times and fumbled on just nine occasions.
AND, THAT'S NOT ALL.
He led0the Rams in 1980 in rushing (807 yards>.
receiving (53 receptions) and total yardage
< 1,193). All this and Bryant still hasn't re·
ceived the publicity some of his contemporaries
with half those numbers have.
··cutlen is Mr. Consistency," said his offensive
coordinator Lionel Taylor. "You never see much
about what he does until after the game is over.
"Some guys just have more flare than others.
rve seen running backs who have played only two
big games and Ii ved on that the rest of their lives.
I'd ta.Ice a handful of CBs over those players all
the time."
"THE MAIN THING FOR ME is to play con-
sistent football," said Bryant softly as he relaxed
in his room. "The lack or publicity doesn't really
bother me. /
"Al this point, with the type of team I'm on
and the offensive line I have in front of me, I can
be as good as I want to be. If I carry the ball
enough I can gain more than a 1,000 yards easily.
No question."
The elusive "l ,000-yard club" is the one goal
Bryant hds yet lo achieve. And, it's an achieve-
ment he wants badly.
"l would like to do it because that's the
measuring stick or running backs:· said Bryant.
"The fact I'm an all-purpose back. though ... I
take more pride In that."
during the off-season, five-to-six times a week to
maintain.
BRYANT IS AN ARDENT USER of weights.
He has bench pressed a high of 520 pounds -Car
and away the best on the Rams -and he hopes to
improve that to 550 and eventually 800 pounds
someday.
His total as it stands though is tops in the
NFL.
"Especially an the game of football, the most
important investment vou have is the body," ex-
· 1 can be as good as I want to
be . If I carry the ball enough I
can gain more than 1,000 yards
easily. No question.·
plained Bryant. who once entered and became a
finalist ( 1975) in a Mr. Colorado contest (he was
disqualified after reaching the final three when it
was learned he was a professional athlete).
Bryant claims it's partly because or his size
and speed that he's been a success in the NFL.
"I DON'T R EALLY KNOW how punishing I
am," said Bryant · T ve broken a lot or tackles but
I don't think 1·m punishing as much as I'm in·
timidating
"If I can get in ~ome good lacks at the begin·
ning of a game 1t makes things a lot easier for
me.··
It's hard to put Bryant's value in terms or
dollars and cents although the reported $225,000
he's making this year doesn't seem enough.
How much is a running back worth who can
block. run. catch passes and can be counted on in
the starting lineup every game?
BRYANT WILL TELL YOU he doesn't know
and doesn't really care All he's interested in is
doing the same consistent job he's been doing -
without the fanfare.
"The recognition now is at a level where I re-
ally don·t want to get any more," admitted
Bryant, adding that his private hfe is more impor-
tant lo him. "They say when you get into a Super
Bowl and have that kind of exposure things are
never the same That's true.
··1 may not be on the cover or magazines but
people recognize me on the streets now and that·s
good enough for me "
Diiiy,.... """""' a-t....., Cullen Bryanrs phys1que borurs on the Incredible Hulk"s reputation He ·s 6-1. 236 poundl. Bryant also takes pride in his physical stature
-something he worked at for three hours a day
At the rate Bryant's progressing, thouih. the
limelight may be just beginning
.
On the road--Angels are sometimes little devils
By EDZINTEL
Of .. o.lty~Maft
SOMEWHERE OVER THE GREAT
NORTHWEST -A thick, brown cloud
layer hovers over Mt. St. Helens as a
reminder of the commanding power of
Mother Nature.
Above, some 50,000 feet in the air, a
727 jet full or passengers passes over
the geographic phenomenon.
Two cameras, one with a telephoto
lens, the other with a wide angle attach·
ment, begin clicking simultaneously as
their operators jockey for position at
the same port hole windows.
A few rows in front of them, more
faces are pus hed against windows ,
while other eyes peer over their
shoulders.
The center stage of attraction for the
moment is obvious. Still, not every
person is attentive to the scene below.
In the aisle, a massive chunk of
human being is crawling along the
floor, trying to make a toddler with a
pacifier in her mouth notice his playful
act.
pitcher, as he tosses Ott a pacifier given
to him by the child's mother. to arrive with luggage at 8 : 15 and be on
the bus at 9 a .m . for the1commute to LA
International Airport.
li gious weightlifter. has the physique
now of a Rocky Balboa. He does not.
however. have the disarranged face. So this is what it's Uke on the road
with a major league baseball ·team, But at 9 a .m., some of those who said
they'd be there aren't there. It's been
over two months since they've done this
sort or thing and apparently the strike
h a d a n adver se effect on some
m emories. No matter. the bus door
shuts at exactly 9 a .m. and off we go to
Freewayland .
Next to him. Bert Campaneris and
Juan Beniquez are trying to find a word
in English to describe an electrical unit
of meas ure. fi ve letters. They are
s peaking in Spanish so no one can help
them.
The toddle r doesn't notice but
Edward Nathaniel Ott, the Angels'
fulltime catcher and sometim e DC
<"Designated Clown") pursues, much
to the delight of passing stewardesses.
"Hey,. hey,'' Ott bellows In a low,
baritone voice to the baffled child.
Finally. unable lo win her over, Ott
raises from the floor , staring blankly at
an elderly woman seated along the
aisle.
"Can't figure it out," Ott says to the
woman. "Usually I have them eating
out of the palm of my hand."
"Here. try this," says Bruce Kison, a
COMMENTAR Y
huh? Fun and games, just like down on
the field or play.
Well, yes -sometimes. Not always,
but sometimes. •
We began our road trip some two
hours ago on the freeways of Orange
• and Los Angeles counties. Players
began arriving, sorr)e alone, some by
cbaCfeur -driven cars Cin m06t cases, the
chaffeurs are wives, all others are
friends> at Anaheim Stadium around 8
a.m. Players were carefully instructed
On the half.filled bus, quiet is the or-
der of the morning.
Up front, coach Bobby Knoop pores
over old stats on the Seattle Mariners .
Behind him, outfielder Brian Down-
ing reads the day's sports section,
careful not to miss a paragraph on the
All-star game of the day before. He also
spends a long period or lime on a story
about Roberto Duran. Downing, a re·
Kison is seated in the rear of the bus.
saying nothing. only singing to every
song that comes over the radio. He
never stops singing. even after the
music has stopped
Fred Patek. the ageless infielder with
the look of a keeper at a general store in
Oklahoma Cit y. pulls out a book but
doesn't open 1t. falling asleep before he
can put on his glasses.
The bus arrives at LAX. The usual
<See Ll'ITLE DEVILS, Page C2)
Angels earn some salvation
They'll cool heels until Friday's series opener· in Oakland . '
SEATTLE -These may be the dog days of
August but for the Angels, today is oot quite as
doggy as it could have been.
Under normal circumstances, a victory over
the Seattle Mariners in mid·August doesn't uncork
champagne bottles. But this 1981 baseball season
has been Car from normal as the Angels proved by
escaping the Northwest Wednesday afternoon with
a 4·1 win over the Mariners in 11 lnnings.
At first glance, the Angel• may have only
saved face by salvaging one out or three from
Seattle, but when you read between the buellnes,
the surf acing fact ls that the team needed the win
-very badly.
"YOU'RE DAMN RIGHI' we were concerned
coming Into the game," shortstop Rick Burleson
said u be held an ice pack to b1a rl1ht shoulder af·
terward. ''If you don't push it, then you wind up 0-8
after this road trip and where are you? Now we
have to ~n two-of-three from Oakland just to get
to .500."
11le Angels are in Oakland today where they'll
open a three-eame weekend Ml a1ailllt the A's
Friday. And no one is downpla)'tn1 the Importance o1 the upcom1n1 1ame1.
"We can deflhitely uee three 1tral1ht wins but
we can sUU have a lood road trip ii we play well
and wtn two,'' said 1econ4 bueman Bobby Grich.
It .,. Grieb who was Wednnday's outr11bt hero
as be belted two home nma In the Klnadome, ln-
cludlq the 1a.me-wiMer -a tbrff·run blut to
rteht in the tltb innin1.
"llAD WE L08T ALL Tll&SE," he contJnued,
"It would have been crUlblnc, a1m011t embarrua-lna."
nesday, a solo shot to right in the second inning.
That single hit nearly stood up until Seattle
designated hitter Richie Zisk unleashed a Dave
Frost pitch for a home run in the seventh to tie it
a nd eventually send the game into extra innings.
Frost. recalled from Sall Lake City on May 24
Had we lost all three it would
have been crushing. almost em-
barrassing.
-8obby Qrtch
after undergoing surgery last Sept. 17 for the
removal of bone chips in his right elbow. bad hls
best outing since returning.
HE PITCHED EIGHT INNINGS, allowing just
the one run on four hits while striking out five.
Frost was relieved by Don Aase in the.ninth
and all be did was throw no-hit, shutout ball for
three lnn1n1s.
That. combined with Burleson's three hlts
were the most encouraging signs to Mauch Wed·
nesday. And he needed cheerin1 up after Monday
and Tuesday.
"Frost pttched s ix innine• of power and two or
cunnin1 with his head,'' Mauch sald. "It's a darn
shame to win only one game but at least we got
what was left."
Thl'outh the wont of ·the ftnt half or this road
trip, Mauch said the .Wtude withln tbe ballclub
was quite settUn1. "Their attitude hun't been bet·
ler," he said. "You keep beat.Ina a piece of lron
and heatinl on It, preUy soon, you'll wear It out.
Ematlom are no dlltereat."
R esigns
Costa Mesa High football
coach Tom French has re-
signed his post for perscmal
reasons. A replacement Ls
erpected to be named early
next week from his staff.
French was unavailable for
comment.
Fre'\ch'a seven.year re-
cord cu Costa Mesa's coach
reflects a 34·36·1 record. in·
clWing a-2.-1and 1·4 marks in
1976 and ''18, each worth o
portion of o league cham·
pion&hip.
.,.,.._
Jim Antkrton ~~· a dout* ~ e11 Angel Rick Bur~'°" u out.
Grtch, wbo sat out dM 1Mt llx 1•met prior to
the ltrtke after bebaa bit oa tbe tlnmab bJ a plteh
JUM 8, f<Kmd tbe 50-daJ lbike laJGff tlae pelfert
preterlpUon for hb ~er.,. Ill tlllt le.W. Hftft,
he •• 5-for·ll and ... ·~ Illa RMUUl.lH
1ame hlttil\I streak to lt wtt.b 1111 ftntt hOeer Wed·
P90IT W O HE W.U AMAZED to be able to
pttdt • .... u be did. "Now lt'• Juat a quesUon or bOW laill;l'lJ 80 Ute am time. I threw oal7 a
Pttellll 111 ............ Wb6dl WU wonderful.
"Aft4if;J0etn1 the ftnt two,· I now the con·
<he ANOlh.I, Paae Cl>
Jim HCJ(lefl. Tom Ware and
John cam~ ore con.tidertd
the Leading candi<tattt to
rt!J>loct Frtneh .
" '
Or•nge Coast DAIL 'V PILOT!Thurtday, Augu1t 13, 1981
··--------------------------.. ~..-------------------------------------------------------------------------....... Rudi'• two bette pace Red Sox
JM Radt belted \wo homen and ••
Dwlpt ·Evaa1l Gary AJJ ..... , D.H• tapldol and , •• atee hlt solo aboU
u Boeton ripped the Cblcaio White
Sox, 8-1, ln American Leap• actJon Wednesday
. . . GrU, Nettle.' two-run homer ln lbe 1lxth
lifted the New York, Yankees to a &·( victory
over Texas . . . a1ea ........ drove ln three
runa and scored three with a home run and two
1inaJes as Cleveland routed
Miiwaukee, M, 1nappln1 a
aeven·came Cleveland lotlng
streak . . . Terry Cl'owley
drove ln the wtnnln1 run with
a buea·loaded sacrifice fiy
lo the 1lxth Inning. 1lving
Baltimore a •·3 second·1ame
victory and a 1plU of a
double-header wlth Kansas
City. Kansas Cily won the
Swimmer captures
Channel three times
From AP dispatches la DOVER . England -John
Erikson, a 26-year-old pbyaical
education teacher from Chicago, bu •
become the first person to aw1m the Entll•h
Channel three ways noa-stop.
RMdi opener. 10.0, behind Frank
Erikson emerged from the 2l·mlle
waterway between England and France just
betore midnight Wednesday on the P'rench aide.
His total time for the three trlps was 38 houri,
27 minutes, according to the first reports re-
ceived by the Channel Swimmlnt Association ln
Dover.
"We are absolutely in awe of it because we
didn't think it could be done," Audrey Scott, the
association secretary, told The Associated
Press early today.
Wbtte'• grand slam homer and Hal MeRae'1
three RBI ... Damaao Garcia drove ln two
runs with a »Queeze bunt and a sacrifice fiy to
lead Toronto to a 4.3 victory over Detroit, end·
in1 an ei&ht-game winning streak for Detroit
starter Jack Morrta . . . Run·scorin1 singles by
Hosken Powell and Mickey Hatcher in the
seventh Inning lifted Minnesota to a 4·3 win over
Oakland. Corona del Mar High product Matt Keoa«b went Mil innings for Oakland, allowing
six bits and two runs, before being lifted.
Erikson is a bachelor who lives with his
father. He had made two previoua unsuccessful
attempts at a three·way swim in the last two
years, giving up after two crossings. Jn all.
before his latest record swim. be had swum the
Channel eight times. four of lbem in two two·
way crossings.
Kingman powers Mets to another
The New York Mets are un-•
beaten throul(h three National Lea· gue starts with the Chicago Cubs to-
day following a 7-4 decision Wednes·
Erikson was returning to England by one of
the observer boats that accompanies all Chan·
nel swimmers.
He had entered the water in near-perfect
conditions Tuesday morning at Dover's
Shakespeare Beach. Exact details of his three
stages were not immediately available.
day. Dave KJngman and Ellis Vateotl.ne drilled
consecutive triples to open the 10th inning to
provide the Mets with the winning edge . . .
George Hendrick hit two home runs and rookje
Orlando Sanchez singled home the go-ahead run
Scott s aid she believed that Erikson did the
first crossing to Cap Gris Nez on the French
coast in 10 hours, 10 minutes, then swam back
to land at Folkestone near Dover in about 13
hours.
The swimmers are allowed 10 minutes on
the beach between stages. Scott said she heard
from a boatman that Erikson was sustained on
his swim by doses of baby food, given to him by
the crew of the observer boat.
as St . Loui s ripped
Philadelphia, 11·3 ... Andre
Dawson r a pped his 15th
home run or the season and
went 4-for-4 to back the com·
bined eight-hit pitching of
Ray Burris and three re·
lievers as Montreal dealt Pit·
lsburgh a 3-2 setback ...
Pinch-hitter Dennis Walling
lined a run·scoring single to
Kingman center field in the eighth in·
Two other swimmers have attempted three·
way swims but failed.
ning to snap a 4-4 lie and lift Houston lo a 5-4
victory over San Francisco ... Pinch-hitter
Brtaa Assehtlne scored an unearned run In the
11th inning on a grou.ndoul by Ed Miller to give
Atlanta a 4.3 verdict over San Diego and a
three-game s weep .
Kevin Murphy, a Londoner, failed last week
after several attempts over the last five yeans.
Cindy Nicholas. 23. a Canadian law student of
Scarborough, Ontario, gave up last Sunday
after two crossings in 22 hours, 21 minutes. Newport Beach's Davis leading
The English Channel is one of the moat
challenging long-distance swims in the world
because of rapidly changin( weather conditions.
LOS ANGELES -Lee Davis of !I Newport Beach and Jeff Hart of
Solana Beach fired 2·under-par 698
Wednesday, leaving both at 139 and in a tie for
first place halfway through the Pacific Coast
Amateur golf tournament at the Los Angeles
Country Club.
Quote of the day
"I got hit on the blind side when
someone missed a block," says the Rams'
Jeff Rutledge. "But he got cut this morn·
ing."
In a lie at 145 is Fountain Valley's Brian
Lindley.
The 15th annual 72-hole tournament began
Tuesday and will finish Friday.
From Pace C1
Ll'ITLE DEVILS • • •
airport crowd is there.
The players all m anage to get
by the autograph hounds, main·
ly because there aren't any.
How do es a tourist from
Lynchburg, Virginia know what
Mike Witt looks like. anyway?
Moving onto the plane, Bobby
Grich , the Angels ' DDJ
C"Designated Don Juan") is
already sizing up the stewardess
corner. He settles into the first
row of seats so that he can get a
g ood angle on the passing
scenery.
Manager Gen e Mauch, the
best dressed among the team for
definite reason. holds a stern
fa cial expression, as he will
through the rest of the trip.
Geoff Zahn pulls out bis pocket
Bible and readies himself for a trip lo the land of spirituality.
The blue with red trim Angel
suitcas es are all carefully
packed away with Special
Handling tags dangling from
their handles.
Each player bas a DS
<"Designated Seal") witb their
names on pieces of paper on
their seat. It's coaches and staff
up front, starters and veterans
next. then the new players, subl
and rookies, and finally, \be
writers.
Soon, Ott gets up lo make the
rounds. Slowly, he moves to the
rear of the plane where he'll
eventually entertain passengers,
all of whom have no idea who he
is . One woman suggests,
however, that he should run for
senator. "Not a bad idea," says
Ott. "Hey Rank (Steve Renko),
would you vote for me? Rank.
Rank? That's OK, Rank, don't
wakeup."
Jn the meantime, Beniquez
and Bobby Clark have 1one into
a throwin1 warfare of
Macadamia nut.a. "Aw, come on
you guys, grow up." barkl Witt.
and he receives a handful in the
face.
The plane touches down al
Seattle Airport and again. as
players file into the lobby, no
one notices. Airports are all the
same.
Leaving on the bus that will
take the team to their hotel,
home for three days, some one
spots Rod Carew, frantically
waving from the side of the
road. "Wait, wail!" everyone
yells.
"Oh no, that's OK, you can go,
it's just the ball boy.
"Yeah. go on, it's just a new
batboy from Puerto Rico."
Along with Carew is pitcher
Ken Forsch and coach Jimmie
Reese. The three have just flown
in from Cleveland following the
·All-star game.
"Hey nice pitch." Ott yells
out to ftorsch in reference to his
home run ball served up to Gary
Carter the night before.
Pitching coach Tom Morgan
tuf'NI around and glares at Ott.
"Aw, come on, Mo, you're my
buddy." plead5 Ott.
"No I 'm not ,·' responds
Morgan.
"Yes you are," says Ott.
"No I'm not," insists Mor1an.
At the hotel, the comedy
marches on.
The players tend to break up
into small groups, meeting all
together as a learn only at the
stadium.
It's a thoroughfare throughout
the day as the guys try to ftnd
things to do to pass away the
idle hours leading up to the
evening's game. It's not an euy
task in Seattle.
"I love t.be road," aummarbes
Grich. "It makes you glad God
invented hornet.''
Irvine North /alls
3-2 defeat ends title dreams
Irvine North's quest for a
berth io the Little Lea1ue
Regional Tournament at Saa
Bemardlno fell short w.._.
day DiOt u ln1lewood ;am.-.
to a dlree-run outbunt M -UM
start and hUal oa lor a N Yk·
tory ln tbe Hmlftaala ti UM
Dlvieonal PllU'Offt, •
Tbe •l•••H collected two sln,_ md a doaMe la .....,
the,-. Ill au.IGD VWO-Youti
At.b eUe Pan ud , will meet
!!•~:....~-5-1 ··--otft' Granada mua 111 t.U GU*' Mii
ol the ....aftnals. tom•t at I :•
I}
r..
for the rlCbt to advance.
Irvine No?'Ut anaweTed back
With a nm In the bottom ot the
ft.rst whee IOke Slewart lina'ed
to score OIH'J Renteria and
a•lilr rwa wu P'ek .. up ID t.M
MCOOd when DaYN ToW'&lelld
1ln1led and eventually ac.'Ol"ed on
a bue bit by lake Ctpolla.
net. however, wu tlM lMt
Ume Irvine Nonb eOlald pt a
~ ,. Ant .... c..n
Ray Roeehmaa'• &U·IUr ...U.C· t1on ....... • .., owna ,.
eoril • DlvWaa $ ebam....._
\l
From Page C1
ANGELS •••
tribution I had lo make. Ir you
lose three, you have a lousy
plane ride lo Oakland. I think
we'll be all right now."
Burleson wasn't so sure.
though. "Tbe big question is,
can Frost come back with
another game like this?" he
sajd. "And we've got to get pro-
d uction from Baylor (the
Angels' designated hitter was
3-for-12 in the series with no
RBI)."
Burleson, who led off the 11th
inning with a double and scored
the go·ahead run on Grich's
homer, said that he required a
cortisone shot in his throwing
shoulder before the game,
something he said he needs
about twice a season.
''The tendon there flares up
and the cortisone lubricates il
so that at least I can play. I'm
not going to miss any games at
this point. It'll be sore tomorrow
(today> but I'll be ready by Fri·
day."
Aase said after Grich's second
home run , the mood in the
dugout picked up considel'ably,
inferring it wasn't al an all-time
bigb prior to that.
"I think we looked at his hi~ as
a breakthrough." be said.
Grich said he didn't see the
ball come off his bat and had no
idea where it was until be
rounded first. "Then I saw the
right fielder <Gary Gray> run·
nlng towards the line and I knew
it was do~ there somewhere."
When be saw it hit the tarp
above the wall some 3llO feet
away, Grich raised his arm.a in
jubilation. •
During his rehablJitation
period, Grich wore a cast over
bis rl1ht band and wrist.
However, he often put a velcro
wrap, with weishta lnaide, 9ver
the wrist and SWUDI • bl\ wttb It
on. That, he sald, as .much as
anything, was the key to bis
1peedy recqvery.
?Cow, \be Angela hope they
have recovered from the pre·
openin1 night Jlttera and ean
make a run for American West'• °',.., n.,.
They'll get a better reedlftl on
\hemselves &Jain1t Oakland
(the team with the fltlt nae>
this weekend. • ... ••~_. -b1--
* ~NOYD -It_.. e-, ..... ................................. ............. _.. ...... ... .... .......... -. .......... --............ , ............ -..
Ill..-, "I ....... I -,.._ ....... .. .............. _ ..... -. ..
~-............ _ ..... , ........... , ..... ,_.
........ 1 .................. . _____ .,...._ ....... .. _____ ,.., ___ "_ ............................
J
Baseball today
On \his date In baseball tn 1979:
St. Lowa apeedsttr Lou Brock beat out
an infield amash otr the JJove of Chtc110
pitcher Dennis Lamp for his 3,000th career
hll as th Cardlna11 beat the Cubs 3·2. '
On this date In 19459 :..
Baltimore pitcher Jim Palmer, whose
career had been threatened by arm trou·
ble the year before, no·hit the Oakland A's
8.0.
On th.is date in 1948:
S1t.chel Paige made his major leatue
debut for the Clevelan Indians at the aae
of 42, throwlng a five-hitter to beat the
Chicago White Sox 5·0.
Today's Birthday
Oakland A's inlle er Fred Stanley Ls 34 .
Cleveland Indians first baseman Andre
Thornton is 32.
Aams-DaUas sold out; TV five
The Rams announced that their [i]
Nationel Football League preseason • ,
game against the Dallas Cowboys
this Saturday night has been sold out and will be
televised locally. The last of the 69,006 Uckell
tor the game at Anaheim Stadium was •old
Wednesday afternoon, the Rama said. Kick'off
time for the nationally televised came is 5:30
p.m., POT rather than the previously stated 8
p. m .... The Rams waived four players Wed·
nesday, including veteran guard Gres Horton.
Also cut were rookies lolua Aadenoa, a de·
tensive end from Bethune·Cookman; linebacker
Jerry McLain from Wasbi.ngton; and guard
Tom Pettifrew from Eastern Illinois .
Raiders' trial getting stickier
LOS ANGELES -Legal com-[i]
plexities mounted Wednesday in the • •
tangled case of the Oakland Raiders
versus the National Football League. with one
juror's impartiality being challenged.
A question of bias on part of juror Tom
Gelker remained up in the air, with U.S. Dis·
trlct Judge Harry Pregerson considering the
next step as the panel remained al an impasse
in its marathon deliberations.
The judge met with attorneys behind closed
doors for two hours, but deferred ruling on a
motion by the Raiders to remove the juror. The
problem arose when it was found that Gelker's
cousin, Bruce Felker. once owned the Portland
Storm of the defunct World Football League.
Theriot wins 8~0 (1 :49.42)
Former Newport Harbor High •
and UCLA t.rack and field star Brtaa
Theriot captured the 800 meters In
1:49.42 Wednesday.njght in an invitational meet
in Varnamo, Sweden. Earl BeU was a winner in
the pole vault with an effort of 18·0"11 . . . Mon·
treal hockey star Serge Savard made his retire-
ment official ... Chicago Black Hawks goalie
Tony Esposito is now officially an American
citizen and plans lo play for Team U.S.A ....
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -·Atlanta al Dodgers.
7 :30 p.m .. KABC (790)
Lopes can't
silence crowd
But boos turn to cheers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -National League All·
star second baseman Davey Lopes ls tbt primary
tar1et of Dodger Stadium boo bird.I these days, but
he l}\8Y be on the verge of sllenctn1 them.
"l guess it's my batting avera1e." said Lopes,
who had fallen to .165 alter 1olng hitless ln hla last
five at-bats. The Loa Angeles veteran bad been
booed for failing to get the ball out of the in.field in
Davey Lopes
seventh.
his first two plate ap·
pearances.
But the boos turned
to cheers after the top
of the fourth innin1 of
the Dodgers' 8-5 victory
over the Cincinnati
Reds. Lopes had just
taken a hit away from
Cincinnati's Dave
Collins.
Then , more
chee r s cante when
Lopes singled home the
tying run in the bottom
of the fourth, singled
and stole a base in the
fifth and cracked a lWO·
run ho mer in the
Lopes knocked in three of the Dodgers' runs
and had three of their l3 hits. After his homer, his
fourth of the season, he was accorded a standing
ovation and then tipped his cap to the crowd of
36,494.
"I'm not bitter," he said. "It just pushed me
harder. I know I can hit.
"But I'm not denying, the boos hurt. But I
heard them boo Mike Schmidt in Philadelphia and
Joe Morgan in Cincinnati, so who am I to com-
plain?
"After my s econd al-bat, Reggie (team-
mate Reggie Smith> pulled me aside and told me
what I was doing wrong. And Danny (Coach Dan-
ny Ozark) told me to relax, that I was an lmpor·
tant part of this club. That made me feel good, to
know that my peers and my coaches believe in me.
That really helped."
The Dodge rs jumped out lo a 3.0 lead In the
first inning against Cincinnati starter Tom Seaver.
But the Reds quickly got even when George Foster
slammed a three-run homer in the third inning, his
15th, on a 3·0 pitch from Los Angeles starter Bob
Welch.
After the Reds took a 4·3 lead in the top of the
fourth, the Dodgers knocked out Seaver, handinf
him only his second loss in rune decisions but bis
' first since April 18. It snapped his six-game win·
ning streak.
Pinch· hitter Jay Johnstone started the rally
with a bloop double to right and Lopes singled him
home to tie the game. Lopes. who had taken
secon<t on an error. scored the goahead run on a
single by Ken Landreaux, who also had three hits.
Landreaux eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by
Ron Cey.
Neyer takes customary dive
Megan Neyer easily captured
the ooe·meter diving title with
a score of 534.66 points Wednes-
day afternoon in the U.S. Out-
door Diving Championships at
t he Marguerite Recreation
Center.
Wendy Wy land fini s hed
second with 501.48 points.
followed by Chris Seufert with 498.45 points.
The 'meet began Tuesday with
the men's one-meter competi·
lion, won by Greg Louganis. and
continues through Saturday
Mi ssion Viejo Nadador.es
Coach Ron O'Brien labeled one
of Ne yer's e fforts, a l1h
somersault. as "The best I've
seen any wom an do."
Neyer's consistency showed
through the day with 8s and 9s
awarded by the judges.
Today's a genda found the
women's one·meter prelims in
the morning, followed by the
women's one.meter finals al 4,
followed by the men's three·
meter finals.
Michele Hain finished fourth
with 462.66 points. followed by
Janie Serwan with 452.64 points;
Tristan Baker with 449.94
points; Karen Gorham with
44 2 .44 points, and Kelly
McCormick with 440.91 points.
Neyer, 19, also won the three·
meter title at the indoor national
meet in April at Columbus.
Ohio.
A total of 35 women entered
the three-meter competition,
with qualifying Tuesday after·
noon and the finals Wednesday
afternoon. Eight divers qualified
for the finals.
W e know how critical a QOOd "mobile home" Is to backpackers. That's
why we offer dtstans by The North Face .. the llncst avallab~ HiJit·
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Rtmc.mbcr Ski a Spons for all your backpaddna. ski, tcl\J'\is, racquctb41l. I and SCMrel sponinQ need•. 4 tocattons 10 save you.
l
-----~ . ----~-.-.--~~
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Au~uat 13, 1981
Ronlania --it's no place for a sports vacation
Just ask f{untington Beach's Tom Pestolesi. Life at the World University Games wasn't all that super
By CVaT SE EDEN ............. _
Don't expect Tom Pestolesl to aeek employ-
ment with the Romania Travel Bureau. The r or mer Huntington Beach Hith volleyball standout
paints a aometJmea ertm picture of Bucharest
where he spent two weeb at the World Unlveralty
Games.
"There was no rerrteeratlon and no mllk. So
we drank warm Pepsls for breakfast," the 21-year-
old former Alt-CIF performer recalll. "When we
got on the plane, there were all t.bese 1uy1 wlth
guns.
"It wasn't like what
we were used to in
America."
Whatever the
athletes carried Into the
village was X-rayed,
Pestolesi says, and a
few athletes even had
their western-influenc-
ing jeans confiscated at
the airport. There is no
place, apparently, for
Ca lv i n Kl ei n s in
Romania.
STILL, FOR
Pestolesi, the chance to
race the top volley -
ball teams in the world
and watch some of the in other
Roy als
• await
tourney
When the Costa Mesa
Royals captured the
Southern Califo rnia
Regional so ftball
tournament in San
Bernardino last
weekend they qualified
for the ASA national
competition in Fargo,
North Dakota , Aug.
20-23.
Jan Culp, a pitcher for
the Orange Coast
College Pirates this past
season, pitched fi ve
straight s hutouts to give
the Royals the SoCal li·
tie. They defeated
Lakewood, l ·O, San
Diego, 2-0 ; Hemet, 6-0;
a nd Long Beach twice,
1-0.
Members of the team
which ls made up of
players from this area
between 18 and 24 years
of age, include:
Eva Brown (Golden
West, Chapman, lB);
Jean Vetter <Chapman,
C>; Pam Knox <Golden
West, CS Fullerton, ss);
Lori Donigan (Golden
West, Cal Poly Pomona,
OF >; Kathy Burns
(Orange Coast, OF·lB);
Jan Culp <Orange Coast,
P ).
H e l en Gilligan
C Golden West, Arizona
State, lB-C·OF> Kathy
McBride <Golden West.
3B l; S haron Nichols
(Golden West, Chap-
man, P>; Kodee Murray
<Golden West, 2B); Lisa
MacKe lvey <Chapman,
P -28 ); Kim Nutter
<Golden West, P-OF>.
Kim Savidan (Chap-
m a n , OF>; Erin
Gallagher (Orange
Coast, Oregon State,
38); Sue Stein CCS
Fullerton. OF>; Ronda
Chambers (Orange
Coast, P-OF); Julie
Trofolz C Fullerton, P>.
sports compete far outwet1hed the clrcumatances
created by poliUca 1n Romania .
To l\Oman.la'• credit, Pettoleai eay1, the food
wasn't bad. There WH plenty of roaat beef,
chlcken, lamb. rice and veeetablea. And, or
course, warm Pepals.
"We could have had 101t'1 milk, but that was
totally gross," Pestolesi polntJ out.
Pestolesl had already traveled to Europe
before departing with some or the top U.S. col-
legiate athletes for the biannual Game1, July
16·30. He'd been to Italy, Greece, En&land and
even Egypt.
"But Romania waa weird," be 11y1. Pestoleal
and the other athletes would have preferred more
pleasant circumstances after being crammed into
a chartered 707 jet for eight hours during the mid-
dle of the "1ght.
111E U.S. CONTINGENT left New York at 1
a.m., and because of the time difference, arrived
in Romania at 4 p.m.
"We were kind of burned out, and then we still
had to go through customs," he says. He also re·
calls what it was like the day the U.S. athletes re-
turned to New York July 31.
"Everybody just went after hamburgers, ap-
ple pie and miJk," he says.
In between, of course, there was plenty of
volleyball, but Pestolesi would rather not go into
detail about the U.S. performance.
The U.S. finished eighth among the 28 teams
.competing ln volleyball. Sound.a lm_preulve, but aa
Peatolesi point.I out, the U.S. needed only to win Ill
pool play to advance to the final eight. ,
THE v1croa1ts CAME OVE• dreaded
Libya and a much t.ou1her Holland. The U.S. Iott
to eventual gold medal wlMer Romanla, 15-5,
15·12, 15·11, dropped a flve-1ame match with
Russia and a four-game battle to Japan.
"Romania played Its national team. A couple
of the countries uaed their naUonal teams, so they
Surf's hoi}es sink in
SAN JOSE -The California's Surf chances
for a berth in the North American Soccer
Leagu°e playoffs took big dip Wednesday night as
San Jose pulled out a 2-1 victory before 9,745.
San Jose scored twice to take a commanding
position and the Surf's lone goal came with 81 : 23
spent when Ossama Khalil tallied off an assist
from Steve Ryan and Paulo Cesar.
Khalil's goal, his 11th, puts him in a tie with
Steve Moyers as the Surf's leading point-producer
(26).
Surf Coach Laurie Calloway started five
Americans in the lineup and despite the loss. was
pleased with the efforts by his new lineup.
G GAB 4)(4
KIN
had been playing to1ether for a lon1 Ume,"
Pestolesi says.
Pestoleai, who after playina two years of
volleyball at Lone Beach State, will play next yearl
at the University of Hawaii, said the ded1ion to
field a World University Games volleyball team
was a last-second move, promfted by some late1 funds. Coach Marv Dunphy o Pepperdlne lben
held tryouts, and Pest.oles! was amon1 the 12 t
players to make the team.
2-1 setback
"Our defense was more stable than in some : re~ent games," said Calloway. Tony Crudo, Joe '
Clarke and Charlie Greene were impressive in the I
defensive line with main defender Carlos Alberto ,
missing from action (ha mstring pull).
San 'Jose's winning edge came in the second ,
half when Joseph Horvath was awarded a penalty 1 kick. His shot was blocked by Surf goalie Mike l
Mahoney, but Horvath quickly stepped up · and
followed through with another s hot off the block to !
score.
Next for the Surf is the Los Angeles Aztecs !
Friday night at Anaheim Stadium. a team which
hasbeatentheSurfinthelastninestraightoutings. '
..
'I \
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11
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Ka,..1 City CGete •·•I •• 8alllmore
Cl"l.....,.7..,),n MllwaukH (Lercll ).SI et Cleveland
ls.MMner 141, n
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•-Y-CGuldry S-JI el Oet"'ll (,,_.,..,
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T .. r'tO-AI._ (llovgt 1-101 at ~ C.._on 7-11. n
H-y-IH.trrl• 2·11 •• Chi<eoo (~Ill ' .. ,,
HouttOf\ IKne-r S·ll •I Sen 01900 CWellllMI
SI. Louie ISlllrl•y •·JI •I Pllll-ltlfll• (Carlton ~I). n
, ~r'MI (Saftderson .. 21 el PlttMlurQll
t • CTl-Ml,n
Only -t<-.Jed
AMERICAN LEAGUE
1
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1
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CAUPOltlllA UAnLe
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Tocelt 41 4 t 4 T-t J6 I ' I I
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C..lfomle 101 -000 0)-4 S..ttte 000 000 100 ~,
I -llMl"9r. OP -Soellle 2, 1.08 -
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NATIONAL LE.AOUE
Oodaere I. A.eta 5 CINCt'fliAfl-1.0IAM09Llt ...... .. ....
S 0 I 0 L°"' JO S J J J
I I 0 0 LMIOr .. Cf S t ) I
)IJO 1.-... 11 •llO
s I • 0 Gerwy "' s I t I S I I > Gey JD J 0 I t ! n ! GuertW 11 2 O O o
JO I O Sclotclec 2 0 0 I
4 0 I I YH99f'c I 0 I t t 0 0 0 Awtlitll H J 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Wekll P I 0 0 0
1000 J--. .. 1110
0 0 O 0 St .. ert p J I I t
1000 No-p 0000
,: : I~ t T-t )t tl>I k_a,1--..
CIMl-1 OOJ 100 001-4
Los A11etM1 >Go JOO 10K-I E-~Jln, OP-Clncl11ne1I J LOl-
Clne:l-1 IO, Lot Anvelet f JB-o-y,
Cey, ,.._., Jolw'lt-HA-l'"Olliff CU),
Lo"t (4). SB-Lenoreeua, Lo"• S-
0..1 .... SF-<.y.
CltlclMMI
Seever (L. M ) --Price
Combe .... ""--...
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2
1
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Ho-(S,71 I\'> ] I I 0 0
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HBP-By W•lch (Knlohll. T-J.41. A-», .....
AttrMl ,Glelltt4 .
Hou.tlon 003 010 010-S 14 2
San Frenclsco 000 CICM ~ 1 I
Ill \lflle, Semolto (". Smll h Ill. Sml th "' •nd Pu)ob, AshbV <ti. Blue. 8relnlno UI,
Hollend 161. Mint°" Ill end Mey. W-
SembllD, ~. L-Nollend, J-l $-Smith (I)
HA-San Francisco. Event 1101, Martll•
UI. A-1,701
-7,C...4
New Yor11 000 010 JOO )-1 12 I
Cllluto 010 001 200 ~ 6 I
Lynell, Leecll 171. ,.. .. .,. Ill -s-.
Kre,...., C:-111 161. Capllle 171. Slftlth (7),
Tkltow Cl), EHtwkk 1101 end 0.vl.t W-
Aiiet\ ~ L-Tldr-. 2·S HR-CNcago,
90fMls (I), Lum UI. H-York,··-· (II A-1,172.
CPNIMtt 11, ll'MlllH J
SL Lut 200 020 JOS-11 1' 0 P1111-.,,.1a 003 000 000-J 1 0
Marllner, SykH 141, Llltell 171 anci
S.ncMr; Alltll..,., Lyle'"· PYoly (7), No6"
(t) •ncl B. a--.. W-Sylles 11-0), L-lllulhwn ( ... ); S-Lltt•ll 121. Hiii-St. Loult,
Hendrick. 2, CUI, HerMnder (6). A-U,566.
E•-J,Plr-2
MontrNI 020 00 I 0C»-J t 0
Plll*lrQll 000 100 001-2 I 0
Burris, s.Msan 16). Reardon (9), LM 19)
end Carter; ScHomon, v. Crur 171. ltomo (I).
Jee•_, 191 and Pene. W Burri• (4-51. L-
Sol-(S-4). S-L" (61. HA-Pllbbut911,
E etler (7). Mo,.treal, Oewton llSJ.
A-11,1»9.
•r-• .......... Allani. 010 IOI 000 01 14 l
Sen Diego 011 000 100 00-J 10 >
M.....,., Gerber 16), Bredfonl 111. CMrlP <•>. Moneetusco <Ill; WIM, L\K .. 111. o.
Boone (IOI, c..rtl.t (II). W-C.mp C .. 11. L-
Curtl• ll-41. 5-Moftt.etUKo (I). A-S,otit
LITTLE LEAGUE
Ma}orl (11·12·YHr-olda)
DIVllfONAI. ll'l.A YOPPI
Cait ....... YlejeY-A~ ......
1 ......... 1,1""'9 .... t
........... -~. 4 ,,.,, ..... """" 110 ..... , s 2
lrllehMw and OOUOIH; Stewart efld Slloddy, o..r1cor.
E9COflO!Oo S, GrllNCle Hlllt I ,......,..,ow ,..._,, .,.,
~~n.•no.......,,s:a.
NASL
WESTEltN DIVll lCHI
W L 01' OA IP ....
Sen Diego It 11 to 4S .. ISS
LCK Anotlft 11 12 .. S2 '4 ljO
SW1 II It S1 .. • 114
San ~ II It 41 11 J9 10S
etOllTMWalT DIVIS'" V~ It II .. • 5' I .. C....,., 16 IS 5' S2 ft 141
Soettle IS U J7 S1 • t M ~ ISU •4TC2 1M Ed"**'1 U II 5' .. e 110 EASTaltN DIYISIOff n 1 n • 1'1'61SJ
141'"45'
62A a676
IOUTMaa .. DIVISION
AU....U 17 IJ 61 ,.
Fort Lowdltnlole 11 IJ SO 42
Te.....,.er, 14 17 60 62
J~llle •• 14 .. d
C•NTRAI. DIVlllON
.. "' So4 lat e IM
1S "
D Ull
• 114 '° ltll J7 IZS
Cllk • 21 t n 44 S1 '"
Ml-. II 11 " a SI 151 Tulle IS 1• S3 '4 e Ill
O.llae S :U 14 .. ZS ~
SI• polnU Pfe-erdM tw e ............ or °""'""'Victory. ,.._ ~ .... .,_,, wlctory. One boftin POlnt for .....,y tMI K°'" _..,.a muJmum of ttw•...,. _
H• '*"" llOllll II •-rdtll tw o-1lme 0t .,_..,.ON!•: . .......,..le_
Sen Jo. 2, s.rt I
Lot Ange!Ot a. Sen OleQo I v PnC.ollWr s. SNttl• 0
GOWllOl4,W'""l ...... 2 Tempe 8ay6, Atlante O
Toremo 4, -lreal J Cotl Olk.Peo 3, Oollot 1
T ... r'•O-Mlnnnote Pt TwlM
l'rimr'aO-
Los AftOotlos •• SWf, t p,m.
Surf atatlatlca tc.9..,,..,...
C.llfomle 0 I I
SMIJoee 1 I t
ScOflno -1. Son -'-8, Lklner CU.....,,
Norv-), l):J7;2.San~ ....... t11.•:•;
1. CPll!wnloa, KMlll (Ryon, GetM), tl:IL
S-. -Galltomle ti. S... J-. U; S.-
-Ca llfornla Cl!Ufloney> •· 1•11 Jose (Newitt) I; Fwlt -Callfernl.t JI, S.. ,._
It; C..-kkU -Cellfomlp I, Ion,,_ S,
Offtldlft-CPlllilw'llla 0 San,,_. •~-•.1u.
Coelt area reauh1
&.A.UUHAQI .... 4 .............. c....
L.Pw "" t--n•A: A PlllfA -I ....
Hll-.nt (1'1·t,._..>; a "'""' -1, .,_ I"""'.,._..; C "'""' -I ....... ,.,.,......, 0 ~--'· ••1 ~ CH •t6-t71; I "llelll -t . Al WeN <•.-......
LPOAleader1
,.....__,~
I. Kllllly IMlll-1f1. tl, .. ,A6f, J, 0.-CICIMl,fflt,SJI, a.~ Gerner,..,. w . •• J ........ , ...,,;;; .
f, Jllfllr R.,.lft, SIU,61'. ,,,_., ... ,,.,..,m,
'· NM(y '""""llMlllOll, ., ..... •. ..,.,. -..l"W, .,.,,...
•• IPnllr• "°"· ... 1.111. 10. AIT'fY Ale.Mt. 1'1) ......
PGAleadera
, .............. 11)
ICOltl ... 1.eAHAI I. B~ Uteae, JO,ot; t T°"' Kite ,._, •.
I. Rey l'!oft, 10U, •·(lie) Jerry p.;...,.; Tom WtltMI\ 70..z.
AVUtAOa OIUYl .. 0 DllTANC•
1. 0.-i PloN, 1n.s; i. "'" c-..... m .1;
3. Ille) Tam Pw1Mr -1111 $#ldlw VU· s. l'wuy r •• ..,. 11...a • •
DAIVl .. O PIRCl .. TAOI I• PAIRWAY
I. CMvln ~ •• tOI; t. Mike Reid, .77';). Cite> Ja• ,_.._, -1111 ......... 7e ; s. LerryHef-,.744.
•R••ws '" Reouuno• I. JeCll Hk•'-. .no, 2 I~ 1.ietJM,
111,). c:.tvln ~ •• 707; '· JONwly Mlltff, l'Ool;S Andy ............
AVIRAO• ll'Una PI A ltOU•D
I. TomW•to11. 21.M; 2. A .... T.apje, &10;
). Fr-G-r. 21.11; 4. Monlt HMalay 2'."; J. Bud Allln 21.t6. '
PllKeNTAO• Ott W~AR MOUIS
I. BnKe LleWt•, .tt•; 2. Jerry ....... 217;
l . Tom w.uon .. tu, •. llley l'loyd, .212· s. Andy llNll, .210, •
IAOl.a LIADUIS
I. Bruce Llelike, 10. 2. Ill•> ~rd r~ *'° Brvce Oouo••u. t. '· 111e1 BOC>by W..S•lnt, Lon Hltlkle. Merk Heye1
and Bob Clampett, I , t . ~11•1 Lenny Wect•lnt, ._.,., Walrel, IC.elth Ferout. Jim
Slmont, Jeff Mltci.11, Bob Glider encl Grao p_,,,,
llltOll LIADaits
I, Bruce Lletae, Jl2; 2 Jerry Pete, JOS; J.
Vence HNlner, 2'2; 4. Tom IC.Ile _,. S Lerry lff1oon, 2M. ' ' ·
pa1:u MC*EY LaAOlltl
I Tom Weta.on, $)41,110; 2. Rey Floyd,
SJH,•; l. Bn>ce LleUlle, '120,Atl; 4. Tom
Kite, S1«1,o11'; S. Jerry Pele, UU,'12; 6.
Johnny Miiier, 1116 .... ; 7. Hele trwln,
SIU,'°"· I. CrelQ Slaeller, S17',14S; t . Leny
Helson, 117',161, 10. Curtis Str•nve. '17',sJt.
C•n•1:~z !!f.•n <at ) ..... R ...........
Slew°"*"' dtf. VIies CierlNltlt, t-7, 7'4, M ; Mand Amrttra) *'· J<J/ltft ._...,, M, .....
7·5; 8emM Mltloft *'·Sammy Gl.-ve,
7-6, W ; Helm Gwllllerdt •· Kevltl Clln'eft,
W , .. ,, .. 2; Ellot TeltK.,.r o.t. Herry l"r1tz .•
.. 3, .. t; ,,_.., McHemere def. Tony Glefn.
melve, .. i. W ; lrl.n TH cller *'·Jim C)u. leln, 6·J, 7-6; Sclllomo GllcUt.ln def.
Austell Sf,,_, .. l. w.
Waatarn Open
letCle ...... 111111
a.c....1t ....... ....
OevlO $leoler def. St.n Sml1". 1-4, J.S, M ; Han~ Pflst.,. *'· Mkl\Nl ltu,..., 1·S. M .
Men'• tourn•mant ( .. PP lte419, ... Y.) ,..,.... ..... ..
Biiiy ltnlQfll d91'. 0.. w1111..,._ W. .. a, H lflrsu. Kyle MKy *'· Kevlfl Grewy, 7·S,
4-6.M lttllnll)
Women'• tournament
C..R~VL) .................
Pem Shrl-dtf. DI-. Oe;llor. ~ M , .... , ......_def."'-"' LeVIPm. 7-4, w. W ; ,....... Man"'°"• dtf. Terry Holl ... ¥ .. , ......
NFl Exhibition
MATIOlfAI. COflPIRl .. CI
W.--.DI""*'
'-" FrMCIKo
Newon.n. .._
W LT ll'P PA l"ct.
•11 ... i.
I 0 0 t1 2• t.000
1 0 0 2A D 1.oao 0 1 0 ,, ....
0202''1 .000 l ....... Dlwts._
MY Gl.nb I 0 0 2J 1 1.000 w n Nngton I o o 16 IO 1.0llO
SI. L.owls I 0 0 11 10 1.0llO
0.11.. 0 , 0 11 21 .ooo
PllllMlllfll• 0 I 0 10 U .000
C:..Ual Dl..U.
0.11"1111 ' 0 0 21 " 1.000 Grettl e.ty I 0 0 21 11 1.000 h,.,.e .. ., 0 I 0 11 2.4 .000
GfllutD 0 I 0 1 2:11 .000
Ml-. 0 I 0 6 :111 ,000
AM9alCAN CONl'IRUKI 1.-.ot..w.
H-~ HY Jets Mlafl\I . ..• ,_. . ..., .. 1 0 0 .. 21 1.000
I 0 0 » 1 IMO I 0 0 :Ill 4 1.000
OIO U2A.OOO
0 I 0 14 21 .000
C..r•Dlvtai91
I 0 0 lS
I 0 0 24
I 0 0 U
I I 0 SS .._..~
31 1.om 17 I.GOO
10 , ...
4S ..
0..laftd
So•ttl• SM! Diego
lt•-Glty
0.nWt'
I 0 0 11 1' 1.-
0102427 ·-0101011 ••
0101014 ••
0107».• ...... ,. . ._
MlllNIGU et W•l"9IOll, II
SC. LoMla M S.Pttle, 1! ........... ._
o .. tMet a-. s:ill
S.11 0-...t San l'rPMllCO, n a-.................. n
Clllclnnnl M Ootlolt, n
HtwlntlM!dait T-B•y,11
NY JIT$e1Atl .. IP, 11
Pit..,,..,. et PhllMtll'Ne, II
Oell'lond 'II. a,_ .. yet Mllw..,.._, 11
... U-. M HY Glents, n Dtll'fW .. ,._,,II
.............. on-.11 ~·•.......,.c11,,11
Canlldlan '°4>tlNlll Leaeue
IAITl ... OIYISMMI
W L T fllct. " M .......,. ltt ... MI UI on-1 10.-111• .....,... •••••m T........ IS I A9 -1• . ....,. ........ ...
ar.CMWl!MP • I 1 1• Ma • ,........,. 4 I I .• 1't II
...-..... JI I .7• -.. 'WIHtiUa t t 0 .• ti • ~ t t ••• " ..
THE WINNER -Megan
Neyer was the easy win-
ner in Wednesday's one-
meter diving finals at
Mission Viejo .
Diving u.a.~c11111111t111-. let ........ Vletfl
W_.t 1 ofMlff flNlla -I. M..,.n HeyW
(MINIOn Viejo), 5)4 ... ; 2. WMdy Wyleftcl
CMINloft Vle)ol. so•.•; •. CIWla ~
Cttlmbell Olwnl, 4tl.4J; '· l lchela ....,.. IOlll.....,. CMy). 44U6; S. JMle ........
t lHIOn Vlflo>. 4U.M; •. Trlai.i ·-(Ml ..
&Ion Viejo), .ut ... ; 1. Ke,.... Got'Nm Ci..
tlonel ~I. '42.44; I. Kelly M<Grmk•
(llft.t.), ... tl.
HC0910 llACI. 6 lurloftet. Tl~ (V~ .. le) 28.00 IUO S.«> 8rl1MW91I (Del-.U.M.,.) 1.00 4.00
ProudOoke IMcHM9'1') UO
Al• ...... : "'°""° Lee, EpllOCle, M. .,.... Mfl'I ..... Allc:PMe Klcl, Ronftle'e Jewel,
"'"' JGfW\. MltW '"''*'•·Sir tt. ~. GleNHollt.
Time: 1:12.0.
•tOAILY OOUll.I (II .. ) Nl411.Ma.to.
TMIRD llACI. I 1/16 mllff.
AMr NoANm IMcHer ... ) a.ao 2.40 a.a
Jimmy IN Olp COelef!OvUeye) >.40 UO ..... , Point ,~.... uo
AllO rPCeCt: L\Kwllin, ,,_. .. ., Sur-. E~
voyto......,.
Time: I: G..0. u l~A 1•11 PPlcl saso
POUR'Tit llACI. 6 tw .......
V ... ClrpMft IV~lel 15.40 1M U1
A.....,,...._.,. IMPf..-LI LOO ....
GW'-0...CWINMCJ) llM Al• raed: ~ FrMt, Pl-1t1,... Wey °"' e.c. ~y ~ ........ ...,. Ydy HIJINl!y, S... 'H S..Cy, HYP«le. Tlntr. t: IU.
Pl"" RACI. I~ mil•., turf. Greet Gr ...... (WI,,._) ILOO UO
Rule .. ,...... <McCerrtr1I >.» SwMIP~ IOI.,>
uo
l..00 uo AIM rec:ed: ~. s 1or•. ••ca l'feftdl ,_.... .. ,The 1'9 T. .......
Time: l :ft4/S..
U IXACTA ll•l l pplcl t llUO .
llX'TM llACll. 4 furlongs. Wlc"'9w(Mc:~) 1.20 uo uo
Pr ..... ltleuftd IC...,..> Jl.20 11.40 ..,...,..,_I.Ad CPlnca y) uo.
Al•,_.., Gow1 Compll4"1Ce, Isle Sb1"8
A..,._ Gummo -.. Glow AMn, Sud\ a Geftu.n-, ltklftt It l'11n, Ebofty "-• MTMm ..... ~ ...... Gold .
Time: I. II J/S..
llVIUnM RACe. II/It mites on 11#1,
Jene'• HMllllwt (Oll1M•I a1 AO 1'.«> 11..a
l.Ny OltlMA IMerqw11 J.oo 1.00
Gray Ur IOlar) ...o
Al• ra•: e.tla O'Avrll, l..cw """69,
Gr.,1J• Oeaeo, MaYCI Gonne, Mayen, 0.merttcotu, "-To Etwnlly, ACll AO
Leu, I'm Aeocfr.
T lme: 1.'4 4/S.
U DAii. Y OOUk.e CM I Nld au.a
U ll'tCX MX IK+MN> pold -m.oe wftll -wtmlnl tklm hi• ... _,; 11
PIO SQ ~aitlOft pold t l,IH.to wllfl M
........... llclrftt ......... ,.
•teNTN ~. 6 l\wloflet. 1tl"9'• l'llldllr (Mc...,...., 11.:111
Nelen'e INu CVPleftlwtel
A•,.,..,., Je4ln CMcCerrcnl
•M ta »• ue uo
ttlno Ala. r •ced: H•llv• Stepper, tt.1-...
TI-: 1.11.
H"81fTMllAQl.-y ..... hklt "-,_..., s • ua ut
....... ~la.NI ...... ......... .,..,er..ew, ,.
Me r.-i ••• oi.... o.tll, ow. so., '-'Me ou.llo, Ouy ,.._,., WtwC A ...... ''-·~ •miACTA 1 .. 1) ...........
lleMTN ltAC&. -y ..... .......... IT,...,,.) 11.. SM U1
11111'. Marry OolcJI ,,.,...,, ... • ...
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• Tlftle:tt. ...
ta•XACTA IM ) ..........
I& "CIC MX IJ.1+1+SI poNI ......
Wltll lllflt llliMllle lkllft (till ,__,l ti
PICll II• CPN91Ml9n ,..._MS.» wltfl 111 .-,
111,.. tit ..... '""" "'""'.
'"""' llM8. lSO YM'tll. L ..... .._(...,,IMI 11.40 4.» Me .......... ,.....,, ......
hty .,_. DelJ OIW_,.I U1
Al• r.-; Mlwl Oelltfll, ~ ....... llldlM "-If, IN<-p H 11¥. l.Mrle ... .. ......... GeHMtk•.
Tl"": 11.M. ' ' ti aXACTA 1•~1 pelcl WUO.
A ........... -, ...
MC*IYl.IAO•RI 1 •• ...,,,., ......
2 Darrell Wallrlp >. ltlcllerd Pwtty
•. Del• e.r-oc S. ltk •y ltudcl ....... yP ........
1. Terry ..-1e
I Jotty RICiey
9, Herry C...I
10. Cale v...-auo11
"'9,l:U
»l,t1S
276.1» n..• 1'4,JOO "'• .. ...,
1$7,IOS
15',9'0
121 "9$
O..p M• fl1hlna
NIWll'ORT IArt'a Laoef'otl -IOI
eno1ers: 2t0 bonito, a bets. 2 Y••1oWta11, "" mec .......... roe• Cod. 10. .... ,.. LKWI -
1• .......... Gt Donlto, 110 ..,.., lien,•
ullce ..... I 1"91towt..ll, > rock ""'· 1.»1 mec:ller'll.
DAMWHARl'-JU .... ~: 171 ....... ••J ...... 111 medlerol, ..... ""'· OCIMIMDll -ltl anele": I lllorrKude,
'" ......... t7J C.alko ...... 61 ..,,.. llel4. , u llowt•ll. 4 llelllMll, a. roo flah, ru
IN<&wel.
IA .. DllOO CM&M u .. I ... Pl•r• -·~ ...... .._, -"' ......... 129 . ••Ncor9. ,., yellowflft ...... ,, clDlllNn. I ..
.,.l'-all, t7S llorllto, '2 M tl, IOt ft\K ...... I.
IAM M•ON -" ..,. .. ," 2011no cod, u rao c.e. Mt red roo cOd, •n .,,,,. NA. tS
rod~.
MORllO IAY IVl1"1"1 ........... -11 eMIPfs: I llftt cod, '1 rock COii, 1• roc1 rock
Ced, l«S ........... -........... ,.,_, •
........., -11 ... lers: IOS yellew llMa, tO rock ciod.
AYll.A MY I~ ... LAlltl -........... .
I line Cod, IOS red roe• ,od, ISi yellow ..... .
..., l'Ocll 11111.
IAlfTA MRIARA -14' fflll8M: 160
Ulko ..... s Uno COii, • ,_ C4iod, ID ,...
tneppel"A,12 bdrtlto, I llellbut, -roe:• 11111, ~....a.ref, 1 wroc:ucie, 1 w1111e -11oi..
VltfTVllA -• ..,..eni Sl7 rotll cell, 12
,_ cod, J llflo cod, 61 ~lco bftl, " -
bets, S NI*"'. 21 boftlto, 200 m.c:•-. 111 roo f191\. t ...,.reclllle.
OXMAJID -17S ......... : U 02 rock 11111, S
celko bee, UO ..-.wel, 22 -to. 2 une
cod.
PORT Mua•IMI IAwterlcHI -U
..,. .. ,.. Mt calko N H, M roe• fllfl. I
llellbut, I 1"911owtMI, 121 '°"Ito, 10 mec:U<el,
22• rock <Aid, :Ill'"~. MAUIU -11 ........... 200 cellco Mt., 10
Mtld llOU, 45 llonlto, J llorrecuda, JOO rocJi '""· SANTA MC*ICA -llS enele": S"4 -IMltt, 1 NlllMA, "caiko bou, 1tt -.. ... m mec..,...,
Thia week'• trout plant•
LM ........ -Bl9 Roe• c.-. PyrwNd I.ell•,"-....... c.-et F .............
l'lat.
... ........ _ ...... rl.A .. ,0.-v .. ..., UIQ, 0......,.., Ullw.
... Oie91t -C-• Reteno!r.
......._ -San Jooquln Rlw r IMldlcllo
1'0<1!1. SOlcMr ~. si.rti-IMr L.Mo.
ll--IC.ffY! ltlwr (Democrat Dem to
ltltl Powerflou.ta, 1ore11 ~r'*-10
Ool!Meret Dem, IMflell• Dem lo lorell
PowerflouN, Kita 11'-•rllouN lo LA••
1-.i.). •
T ..... -,.._ C,_, IC.,.,. llU-
1 l'"•rvlew Oem to IC AJ PowerllouH,
Jofln.....,. lrldge to l'alrvtew Dam>.,..,..
permll!C <:.-, Tule Alw r (Hortfl *'° '°""'
ForkaOf llMlll F-1.
loye -._., CTMll, llt PllW O eMI,
lltllop CrMll (~, Mlcldle, Sooutll end I~
leke Ill, ~le Crff•, lndepe-e
CrHk, LAii• s..rl11•, L-Pine Gr-. Hortll Le••· 0.1< CrH• (Horlll l'or•I.
SIMl»Mnh Gr"'· Sowlll 1.a•e. T .......
Creell. TINmaN Creek, Twttle CreMI.
..._ -1111e uu cu"*' and ~>.
lr·I._...,, "-""'Ir. a..c ... .,.. CreMI, C-
vkt '--• 0....-<:noll, El....., l.Mle, o..ree l.Mle, Gina C,....., Gr9"' !AU,
GreM er..11. Ollll ~.NII ... Greft. Jww
....... "-Vinlftt er.ft, I.ft Vlnlflt 0.....
1$Pulll l'erll), Uttte W•lur ltlw r, Lwllolly
..... e. llMIM ........ ~er.-.,,,_., Le••, McGee er.ti, Miii ,,..,, 0-
Al_ (...._,~lftt ...... ~I. A._ Croell. ,......._ C ........ lt.O Cl-' ,,..,...._ c;..,. lo Tom'• ll'lae, T_.t
PIOCe ,...,_ .. ltoc• 0-LMO, Aoc•
Cnell Ulloe • tllt Md 9' t11t , ... ,, Rock
ene11 Lalle, ~Creel, s ...... ,, er-.
~ ...... LA4'e, SMrwl11 Crff•, Sllwr
Ub,.......,~T ........... ,T..-1
...... lWtll LoMs "~ cu,.., Mid ~>. n.111 ~ ,...,_,...,, v~
Lall.a IU,.., ... '->, Vl~la er.k.
WallllM AIWf (Clwlt l'IM C......-1G t-9' Wllltw, l.M'lltt ........ c:.on..
• ._..toSonclh Br1d9e).
Voyagers
highlight
weekend
Voya1en Yacht Club boldl the
yachting spotUght ln Newport
Harbor thia weekend with two
major events -the sixth race of
the Humphrey Bocart Series for
Performance Handicap Raclng
Fleet yachta, and the annual
Seamanship race.
The Seamanship race is uni-
que in that It starts with all
boats at anchor, requires crews
to change heads' on windward
leas, regardless of the weather,
spinnaker changes and jibes on
downwind legs and a man over-
BOATING
board drill. Aller boats have
crossed the finish line they must
again anchor and furl all sails
before being c locked as
finishers.
In other local events, Newport
Harbor will conduct a one-
design regatta for boats on both
Inside and outside courses, and
Dana Point Yacht Club will
stage the fifth race of its Dana
Point Series for Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet yachts.
Top event in the Los Angeles-
Long Beach area will be the na-
tional championship regatta for
the Mercury Class which gets
under way today at Cabrillo
Beach Yacht Club.
More than SO Prindle-18
catamarans will see action
starting Saturday in the second
national championship for the
class at Long Beach. Head-
quarters for the regatta is al the
Queen Mar).
Southern California Yachting
Association calendar:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
Long Beach Yacht Club -In-
vitational fiegatta, Saturday,
Sunday.
Huntington Harbour Yacht
Club Bolsa Chica Collection
No. 4. Saturday.
Buccaneer Yacht Club -Las
Parejas race <man-woman
crews) Saturday.
S.nta Monica Bay
Santa Monica Yacht Club
Small Boat Regatta. Saturday, Sunday.
Windjammers Yacht Club -
Queen Mar y Layover race
< PHRFl Saturday, Sunday.
King Harbor Yacht Club -
Cecil R. King Portsmouth Han-
dicap race (centerboards)
Saturday. Sunday.
San Diego
San Diego Yacht Club -Gold
Star eliminations, Saturday,
Sunday: Leo Series <Solings)
Saturday, Sunday .
Southwestern Yacht Club -
John Bate Overnight race (han-
dicap) Saturday. Sunday.
Silver Gate Yacht Club -
Commodore's Series <SDHF>.
Saturday, Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -Pro-
Am regatta (Sabot) Sunday.
Santa Clara Racing Associa-
tion Doldrums Series. Satur-day.
North and lntand
Anacapa Yacht Club
Anacapa Island Series. Satur·
day. .
Pacific Corinthi an Yacht Club
Classic Yacht Race, Sunday.
Santa Barbara Sailing Club -
Summer Series, Saturday, Sun-
day.
Westlake Yacht Cl ub -
Coronado-IS junior national
championship, Saturday, Sun-
day.
Pomona Valley Sailing As·
socialion -Class racing, Satur-
day. Sunday.
Mercury Class
sailors here
S AN PEDRO -Thirty Mercury Class sailors started
competition here today ln the
national championship regatta
for the 50-year-old sailing class .
The regatta continues through
Saturday.
Skippers and crews from the
entire Pacific Coast are on band
for the title event. Entries are
from San Diego, Newport
Beach, Los Angeles, Santa
Barbara, Sant.a Cruz, Monterey,
and San Diego, according to
Chairman Thomas Bradley of
Newport Beach.
Last year's champion, Pat
Bradley of Monterey Pen.lnaula
Y acbt Club is on band to defend
his title. Last year's re1att.a wu
sailed in Santa Barbara.
Soccer clinic
set for UCI
Pot.entlal youth soccer
coachea can earn their "C"
certlnc.Uon this weekend at a
three-day coachint clinic at UC Irvine.
Clinic apokeama.n John St\lart
aay1 the tl2S price lnclucltl in·
etrudlon, room and board and
meals. '11te cllnlc ii Ml to becln
at •=• p.m. l'rtdAJ aad eon· cl• Suaday aftel'DOOD at I: JO.
1.Me l'tliltratloD wUl be AC•
NiMd ft'Om •:• lO 9 p.m. Fri· day al~ the MHa Common•
Br..,..11 al UCI . For addl·
UoDal laftll1DaUoa. call .._. al ......
. ..
I'
• •t
·'
•'I
11. 11
··'
..
. , "
• I )
,'I
'.,;
: .
LI
.. t
.11
P.
DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Auguet 13, 1981 S·
,------------------....;----.---------==-~--------------------------------~~~~~~~ JIM NIEM I EC
Hunting
is slow
Calllom1a'1 1981 hunUna aeaton 1ot off to a
slow start tbl1 past weekend, when nlmrod1
headed to our coutal mountains In qunt ot mule
deer. HunUna condiUons were typical or years
past, when hunters had to contend wtth daytime
temperatures In excess of 100 desrees.
1bese same condltlons wtU most likely prevail
throughout our early season, especially tor those
hunters who have taken Zone A ta11.
Opening week saw about only tlve percent of those in the Cleld taking, or even seeing legal
bucks. Most of the deer were In the deeper more
shaded canyons and bad to be stepped on before
they would leave this cooler area.
Tbe bucks that were harvested were in good to
excellent condition accordina to fish and game
personnel in the tleld to validate tags.
SP ECIAL CARE should be taken by any
hunter who lucks out and takes a venison during
the hot month of Au1ust. As soon as is possible the
entire deer should be skinned and then hung to
glaze in the shade of a big oak or pine tree.
It is important to cool the deer quickly to avoid
spoiling the good eating meat. Once the glaze has
formed the sooner the meat gets to a locker for
processing the tastier it will be. Most game is lost
due to the inability of the hunter to follow these
steps.
With the full moon approaching next week.
hunting pressure should be light, as this is not the
time to be out trying to find deer during the
daylight hours. Come the first couple of weeks of
September more hunters should improve on their
chances of bagging a nice trophy buck.
Dove hunters should be able to look forward to
an above average opening come September. There
is a large population of mourning dove in all parts
of California, and the more popular va!Jey areas
also currently have a good number of/Whitewing
dove.
UNLESS A COLD SNAP moves in prior to
ol>ening, or we get a lot of tropical moisture mov·
ing in from Baja, there will be plenty of dove for
all to hunt.
Southland hunters who are looking for a semi·
private area to gel in on some good dove shooting
over opening week, should give a phone call to the
Tejon Ranch. For the second consecutive year.
this giant ranch. located only two hours from
Orange County. will be open to dove hunting for
unattached hunters on a reservation basis onlv.
Game manager John Ortega reports that ·there
are plenty of dove in th~ valley bunting area and
that hunters should expect easy limits coming
opening morning.
Last year all hunters bagged limits on this
ranch. The number of hunters will be limited so it
ls a good place to get a beginner out for their first
hunt with a better than even chance of getting in
some good shot gunning. For more information on
the dove bunt, call (805) 327-8481.
Mexico will be opening its dove season about
the middle of September, and there should be good
• hunting for both types of dove below the border
• again this season.
Even though Baja and mainland Mexico have
been on the dry side for the past nine months,
there are plenty of farm ponds and secret springs
to provide ample water for dove and the native
quail populations. Regs on hunting Mexico are not
expected to change much this season, but they are
not yet off the press for the 1981-82 hunting season.
Ra111S featured
Nolan Cromwell, Pat Haden, Doug France and
Wendell Tyler will be among the featured
speakers Sunday at the Rams Kickoff Luncheon
hosted by the Rams Booster Club and the Anaheim
/Chamber of Commerce.
• The third annual program, to be held in the
California Room of the Anaheim Convention
Center, also includes Coach Ray Malavasi and
General Manager Don Klosterman.
Dick Bass, ex·Rams sta.r halfback and Rams
play-by-play announcer on the radio. will serve as
Master of Ceremonies for the program.
Tickets are priced at $20 per person or $200 per
table. For reservations. send checks payable to
Rams Kickoff Luncheon, Anaheim Chamber of
Commerce, P.O. Box 969, Anaheim. Calif. 92805.
For further information, phone 535-2833 or
751·6343.
Bagel run sch e dule d
The winner of an Aug. 23 lO·kilometer run in
Laguna Hills will have to make hi5 or her way
through the bole of a giant bagel.
Tbe race will feature the giant bagel at the
finish line. The race, which will benefit the
Muscular Dystrophy Association, begins at 8 a.m.
at Kaplans at the Laguna Hills Mall.
'
Pre-entry fee is $8 with T-shirt, $4 without.
Final pre-registration day ls Monday. A late entry
• fee of ~ will be char"ed.
Distance derby set
The 27th annual Distance Runners Derby wiU
be held in Huntington Beach Saturday starting at
the pier. · Tbe 10-mile run will begin at 8 a.m .. with the
3·mlle run and l'h-mile run at 9:30 for boys and
gir~ 19 and under.
A $3 pre-regt.tration fee will be accepted at
the Civic Center ,through Friday. The event ls
sponsored by the Huntington Beach Community
Services Department. •
A S5 regiltratlon tee will be accepted the
morning of the race.
Trider DarwlD 'I sr • ....W.w•Hllabottle Balanced B·lto off era oh A , tablet• for onl1 el•••• Und1 of B ti.Tl. PIHH vlalt our ADcl lta Ume ....... Trllder J0e•1 It 11 will J>fO> U.. ~ of tM Olllllnual 1uJP11 of S t r • • t , N e !' p o r l
-
•• vit1mlD1 9-lnant aDd llUJMrlor
the d11. A A.-. ;111 to o.nn1'1 lllelUI food eb8tn and·Bare 11 Bank>. Uah Item tor
W IM COSTA t •IA
I
I NO DEALER SALES I
_ AD STARTS THURSDAY _
CARDllAL GLOVE
COMBO
3!!.)44
You get one pair of ruuet
driver'• glO'fe9 and one pair
of leather palm gloft9 with
2" cuff. (Let'• have a big
hand for 'em. )
DISSTON 12"
HACKSAW BLADES
79:AK OF10
Get enough, a dull bl.a<\• ia heck (you
notice how we never say the other word ...
thi.e i.e a family ad).
SllL 11A"
STANDARD
CIRCULAR SAW
28~7~
Comes with combination blade and blade
wrench. Hu the abilit y to cut 2~" at 90°
and ~Ye" at 45°. 10 a.mp burnout protected
motor.
EVEREADY C OR D
BATTERIES
15~
Thia ia a good price. ( I waa ~onna watch
the tube tonight but the only good thing
on TV waa the clock and a v&M. Ahh, well. )
M. I;.. -
d ·CON FLEA STOP
These are the guy. who make
the stuff that kiU.. mice and
now they can get rid of pre -
adult fleas and stop the
reinfestation for 75 days.
2!!
BROWN TWEED
llDOOR/OUTDOOR
TURF CARPET
I !?.rr.
Just when you think the world i• falling
apart, you pick up our ad and a .. that
it isn't all bad . Take our p ric•, they
aren't half bad (rny jokes, on the other
hand, well, that's another story).
Tub.ts Extra
PENNZOIL
MOTOR OIL
30 wr. 8s:r ~ ,~SGA~ 96c ,/ ·'U\ Qv4Ml #
--lOW/40 wr. QT.
If anyone ia leaving on vacation, will they
pleue r.U. the hood of the car and check
their motor oil (Hey, who etole my
battery?).
PUROLATOR
PRODUCTS
PCV VALVE 99c
~xi' FILTER I 6 6
xsv 199
~~,.. AIR FILTER
I hate to lecture (who's he
kidding?) but I can't streu
enough the importance of
preventative maintenance on
your car. (Got that?)
R.C.C. JACIS · ·
2TON
4TON
6TON
8 TON
4•• 7••
1099
1s••
Only the clever or thOM intel'Mted in
eaving money ( eomeone call my name?)
would con.aider getting one to do their own
work.
PBILMOIT
AUTO RAMPS
97
#96241
·20'' TWO
SPEED
IOI FAI 19aa
My brother haa the
craziest hobby. He ilk..
to ezperiment with
electricity. (I think I'm
related to an electric fan. )
D.E. 10 LITE
FIR FIEICB DOOi
898~
Now t hat you know
what t he d oor loob
like , let'• ... if it'll
fit. It'• 1 ¥.''x6'8" and aYai.lable in 30", 32",
or 36" width•.
MURRAY BICYCLES
20'' BOYS' IMI
88~~
Com• with the
BMX frame and
for k , bo:a • ~yle
handlebar, and 20":a2.125" black knobby
t.in8. White with gla. black.
I It ~
• i
. ..
. . • • .
1 1
I .
I I
I
--~----~------------...... --~--~"~-~----._... ...... -....... 111!119""""'!1•~•--••• .................... ~ ...... a .. ~ ..................... a•s•a .. a•s~s•c•s .. a1911s~
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(Thur1d1y, Augu1t 13, 10811
T•E ·
'".'"" CIBCl:I
lilGGEOaGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
,.,, "If I WOI borned in the hospital, who come to
buy me and bring me home?" "They don't bulld 'em llke they used to.''
by Brad Anderson DEN~l8 THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
r ~ l 8-13
1 . Ji
"No, I don't want to trade my popcorn
for your dog biscuits!" "Lucky thing I learned to make peanut butter
sanw1ches or we woulda STARVED to death by now I"
----------------~~~~~----'------~~------------------~·
MIOON Ml' LLI NS
l..ET'6 C:iET A TAOLE I N THE CORNER
WHERE WE CAN TALI\ ... AND OROER
ME A DOUOLE OOUROON ON THE
ROC~! WE'VE OOT TROU~l..E'
I I ,. ~® DoYou
··7"fHfE L.An:sr IN SJIC>Witt \ D~MON5TRATE? ·. ~ ~~~t>S ... fAm ,b.CCESSO R1es ...
I
.I
!t1.; ACtaS 52 Belt~
I 1 MOf"Y 51 Wrlth
.I'
tr,....,. 57 St. Uwr9nCI
· 11 .. lttbutery:
14 Of..-. 2 word•
11 ""'° 11~ eo Eliplorw ,,....,.. Jotwi -
.. 11Hormt -11 Contrtw
Wll*llDAY'I
PUZZLI IOlVID
11 Miii Ind t2 MOllem edict
. ,_.-. 13 Urgt dew ... NfiiMl. •,...ilK!~~
2wordl f48eckld
j 1t Allln coin ta Sllltmllh
20 Wll'9 city DOWN J: 21 9'oOp 1 Hot roc:ll 2a AooepCt 2 cu.tome:
MDIII....... Ok
......... 38'ntfllllg t7 ,,..... 4 IMtl llllt
• Lolls 5....,,..
S2 -hMd Judie . u.. . .,.,,,.,..,
MC.-.. 7 ... '*1 11c,... ..... ...... ..... .,.....,....
' .• .._.. ' tO ,.. .... ....... ,,.,...
.:4tMI-: ~
....... 12 ... •-
MOW CAN YOO
SAV iMA1" A&oUT
SOME.ONE. WMO
OSEV 10 P006LE
---..:a.. ~ATE wrrM
LIZZIE BORVEN ?
PMNIJTI
HIE*41lif:1"1 SWEE'TSl
KIN I Hf:LP '(A wrrn
v't:R WASH?
VCIOlf AT TME ~6
Pl.ACE! V0011te IN
MV SUPPER DISM !
IF TMIS WERE '™E
COLISEUM, WOUL.Ottr
TMERE 8E A LON6 LINE a= Sf'ECTAM liWTIN6
TO 6ET IN?
l ·IJ
by Charles M. Schulz
o·-,-....-..
WHY, "l>WJK ~U,
L.IMPIV J..lt:ARV! A FEW CHORUSes
UV"WHIS1l..E WHIU: ¥00 W'eRK~ WHAT WOUL.P 'tt>U
i...1tre10ro?
HELLO-WE'RE WHAT'S
TAKING A
T V POLL---
O N YOUR
TV SCREEN
RIGHT
NOW~
by Jeff MacNelly
n , . . f ~f !f
" i
-; !
by Ernie Bushm1ller
A SPOT OF JAM
AND TWO
FINGERPRINTS
B 0 0 0
· by Gus Arriol a
Fl:NK l' WINKERBt:AN
.SO K£U...Y 15 oor ANO AROO~D
AND HAVING A LOT OF RJ~ .
--'"
.,,
by George Lemont
1"HA-r'c::> .MAKe A cu-re SAMPl...15R FOR A c>oc-ro~'S OFFIC!!!, eH, KIPPO~
by Lynn Joh.nston
BUT EU.'f'··· SOME
Of 1HeM ARE 50 Ha.PLESS ~
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Orange Coast DAILY P,ILOT/Thureday, Auguat 13. 1981 .
Good reason to revive lunchtime encounters , ' •
f l I~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 48, once
dlvorc.dil now happily married t.o my bo11 who la
53. (J wt call him Mr. X.)
We are well known ln t.bia community and l
cannot dilcuaa thl• problem wlth anyone, for ob·
vioua reaaona. Will you please adviff me?
Mr.,X. rails about five times out of alx. I thlnk
lt haa somethln1 to do with hi• drtnkin1. He
becomes furious when I mention it, but the facts
are these: When we firat beeame lntlmate, il was
durin& lunch hour and he wu always tot,>er. Those
episodes were eitcltln1 and hi&hly aatilfactory. His
failures seem to occur after he baa had several
hi&hballs and a bi& meal in the evenln1.
This problem la be1innin1 to make me
nervous. I am unfulfilled and Mr. X. la frustrated
and defensive. -NO GO IN SACRAMENTO
Dear Sac: AlcoMl 11 • depreuaat. Trae, It caa
give a penoa a 111111 aad remove lablbiUou
(wlllda may be belpf\11 &o a ally py), bat tbe bJlll
111 lllllll
I• temporary. ID tlle eod, boole II a dowuer aad
can make aa erectloa hnpoulble.
aweal &etta bave ... &bat aJcolllol .... a
direct effect H UM &HUclee ud destroy• tbe male
bormoee kDowa aa tea&eaeroae. I auicut )'ff re·
vltalbe Uae "DOODen." It will lUutrate tbe pol.at
far better than an)'llllag yoa can aay.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a child or the
Holocaust. I am alive today because my parents
had the foresight to send me away -a girl of 14,
alone and friendless In a foreign country. Only
after I had children mysell did 1 understand what
courage they had to do it.
Crisis Center benefit
Big doings planned at Mesa Verde
By MARY JANE SCARCELLO °' ... .,..., pti.t .....
A ctress/singer Shirley Jones
a nd her husband Marty
Ingels will serve as honorary
c hairm e n of a benefit
planned Nov. 14 for the Family Crisis
Center in Costa Mesa.
A dinner, silent auction and reg·
ular auction will be held beginning
at 6:30 p.m. at the Mesa Verde Coun-
try Club in Costa Mesa, and tickets
are $20 each.
The crisis center staff specializes
in providing family stress
workshops, parenting classes. pro·
fesslonal short-term family counsel·
ing as well as individual counseling
for adults and youth.
Funding for the work comes from
the city of Costa Mesa, the Orange
County Justice System Subvention
Program and the United Way. plus
private donations and grants.
For more information about the
center, call 642-8380 or for auction
ticket information, call 840·1341.
T he Board of Directors of the
Laguna Beach Museum or
Art has appointed new mem-
bers Alton Crowell J r. and
Tom Megonigal.
They will fill vacancies left by re·
signing members Tim Carlyle and
Ed Behme, according to Charles
Culp. president of the board.
Crowell, a Newport Beach attorney,
has revised the museum's by-laws to
conform with current regulations,
and Megonigal has been a Life
Me mber of the museum during the
four years he's lived in Laguna
Beach.
Wine war bubb/,es
Mother, father, brother, three aunu, four un·
cles and aeveraJ other relatives per1.Jbed In the iaa
c hambers o f A u achwlh and Treblinka.
Grandmother. 72, waa left to starve ln the "model
camp" of TberesleOAtadt.
For the next 38 years 1 1hunned anything that
mi1ht remind m e of the past. I avoided books,
movies, televlalon, even newspaper write-ups deal·
ing with the atrocities. ll wu as if I were tryinl to
deny that part of my life.
Suddenly I realized I could bear to read about
the Holocaust, think about it, even watch TV pro·
1rams dealing with the subject. Al about the same
lime I noticed many new boots appearing in the
library, some historical, others written by aur·
vivors or the death camps.
P l ease consult your experts on 'this
phenomenon. Does It lake nearly 40 years to deal
with happenings or such horror? Or , la it a mere
coincidence that all the 1urvtvor1 walled 40 yeara
before writ.1n1 lhelr memoln -the aame 1pan of
llme lt took me to talk about priaon camp ex·
periences? -RICHMOND, VA.
Dear Va.: ~re 11 eMlll81 .mapc aboat tlte
number 4t. Some aanlvon were able to wrt~ aad
talk aboat &lie Holocaust •a1'Y yean •Co -ud
did. It'• toed tllat yoa caa •• talk a.,_t w~at
bappene4. A ... , pot1aut book • eoaoea-.t Hr-
vlvaJ ll "Of Blood Md Hope," written by Samuel
Piiar. <hbllllller, UWe 8l"OWll 6 Co.).
'
Are JIOUI' parmt• too ltrict? Hord to rNeh? Ann
Londerr bookUt, "Bugged 811 Parmt1? How to Get
More Freedom," could help J1ot1 bridge the gennatU>n
gop. Send SO cent• with Jlotlr requelt and o long,
tromped, self.addreutd envelope to AM Landn1, P.O.
Bor 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611.
Some people
don't feel ...
When you come right down to it, there are two
kinds or people in this world: those who can
tolerate a cricket ilJ the bedroom at rught and
those who can't.
I won't tell you which group I'm in. I will only
say it's a very revealing trail and orrers an insight
into the person's total personality.
Th06e who tolerate crickets al bedtime are the
kind of people who can sit through "Aida" and not
hear a person sitting behind them who is ripping a
breath mint out of a wrapper at 82 decibels.
They're the kind of people who can go camp·
ing and be oblivious to a party across the lake
where the thump-thump of a stereo playing weird ,
music is carried by the winds to your campsite.
They're the insensitive kind or people who can
s leep right through a crying baby at 3 a.m. and '
have the gall lo say the next morning, "Why didn't
you wake me? I'd have warmed the bottle."
They can play poker with the guys unlll 3 a.m.
and then come home and tell you with a straight
face they don't know if the Floyds are getting a
' ;
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CAGLIARI. Sardinia (AP> -A
restaurant owner poured French
wine and cognac into the streets or
this port city in the latest skirmish in
the "wine war" between France and
Italy .
passersby and tourists m downtown
Cagliari and cost Deldda a fair
amount of money, since he emptied
several bottles of top-quality wine
and brandy.
divorce or not. Ha! Ha! j •
Filippo Deidda , owner of a
fashionable restaurant, conceded
that "good wine has no country." but
said he will boycott French P('oducts
until the dispute is resolved.
The protest attracted dozens or
The wine war. which has resulted
in acts of violence by French wine
producers against Italian shipments
and threats or boycott of French ex·
ports by the Italian side, has stirred
nationwide attention in Italy, one of
the largest world producers and ex·
porters of wine. Shirley Jones and Marty Ingels
You can't miss 'em. Whenever you ..ue a j
mouse in the house in the ran. these are the fl akes
who will tell you, "It's only a field mouse and he's I
just as scared as you are" ... when you know in
your heart the mouse is pregnant and is building a
condo In your spices.
Oh. make no mistake, it takes a special breed
of person who can lie in bed and hear a cricket's
blood-curdling screech in the closet, then the
bathroom, then Wlder the bed, and feel nothln1.
Aries: Pleasant
• is due
. .J' ...... ~-1!.Y ASHLEIGH l
~~~!;II :Ii Bi:µJ-Ll~TJ
Niclwls couple
celebrate 50 years
That's it. These people don't reel. They don't
acknowledge a dripping faucet, a hook that isn't
fastened above a zipper. a stamp put oo a letter
crooked, a cupboard door in the kitchen stand.in"
ajar .
1 ·
surprise
Friday, August 14
By SYDNEY OMARR
AlllES <March 21 -April 19): Surprise due, and 1t will
be pleasant. Family member has good news related to
money. Focus on wishes, aspirations. career or business
opportunity
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Superiors tend to make
promises which are dirricult to ruJ!ill. Keep expectations
on practical level. You are going to advance. but
probably through your own efforts
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Obtain hint from Taurus
message. Solidify long-range plans, communications.
Whal had been an abstract concept can be transformed
into oractical measure.
CANCER <June 2l·July 22>: Obtain accounting. take
stock, check inventory and become aware of costs.
HOROSCOPE.
Changes are necessary; be willing to let go of "losing
propoelUon." Perceive potential.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22> Break with past indicated -
emphasis on new start, originality. the imprinting of
your own style and possible renegotiation of legal
agreem ent. Publicity could accompany efforts.
VIRGO (AUi 23·Sept. 22>: Emphasis on
conservation, determining direction . providing
information to associate who could be planning property
investment. Focus alao on basic chores. employment.
resolutions regardlna health. recreation and nutrition.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Good lunar a spect
coincides with Increased social activity, added
popularity. intensified relationship with member of
opposite sex and a speculative venture.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23 -Nov. 21 ): Be ready for
"rebuilding program " Accent on property. longstanding
neaotiations, basic security and dialogue with older
family member. Professional appraisal of assets may be
necessary. Aquarius figures prominently.
SAGITfARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec 21>: Emphasis on
movemept. presentation of ideas, constructive
expression of Intellectual curiosity. Be ready for change.
travel, variety -charisma is highlighted and romance is
in picture. Keep eye on Virgo.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19) · Basic money Issues
dominate scenario. You obtain truth concerning costs ,
SUCCESS
l'LL
GLADLY HE:AR
WHAT
YOU HAVE
TO SAY,
Loyal and Percy Nichols celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary recently with a festive
reception at their Baysbores home.
Honored by family and friends, the couple was
presented a gold loving cup by their daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David V. Schweitzer.
Their three grandchildren, Brad. Lorie and Pam
Schweitzer, recited a poem commemorating their
life to"ether.
They're just animals! They can put a book
down in the middle of a page. never wash th~ir
hands after playing with the dog, don't brush after
every meaJ, and call their mother on Mother's Day
. COLLECT!
But mostly, they're people wbo can sleep while
an animal is under their bed rubbing its leis
together with -a sound that shatters glass. As I
said, I won't tell you which group I'm in. but you
all know who you are out there.
IF YOU'LL-.
PROMISE NOT TO
CHANGE MY MIND. One young couple to go, please
' ' .
expenditures and possible returns Home repairs are
part of personal cycle. Domestic environment commands
portion of spotlight Watch Taurus'
AQUARIUS <Jan 20-Feb 181 What bei?ins as a matter of deception will boomerang in your favor. Lunar
cycle high. and you're due for a comeback. Cancer.
Scorpio. Pisces persons figure prominently
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20); t,yhal appeared elusive.
out-of-reach will become available. You'll be on a more
!lolid fooling -emotionally and financiall y Older
individual becomes valuable allv. lends benefit or
experience. Keep eye on Capricorn' ·
RUFFELL'S
t.ftfOLSTERY .
AUSTIN, Texas (AP> -The groom's parents
beefed about the whole thing; the bride's sister ad·
milted it was a rare event.
Nevertheless, Clayton Collins, 17, married
Carri Crowder. 19, in a formal ceremony at the
Arby's Roast Beef restaurant where the bride
works.
Miss Crowder wore a flowing white gown with
a long train. ColHns wore 'a tuxedo. Many of the
guests, seated at plastic orange tables, wore jeans.
A brass candelabra was placed beside the
electronic cash register. A portable arch, adorned
with flowers, stood in front of the menu board.
Joe Thompson, the restaurant's manager who
s-~-..-
1t22H.u1ott ILYD.
COSTAMBA-'41-1 IH
SICK
AND TIRED?
a lso happens to be a minister. performed the
ceremony.
"I've bad some interesting weddings before -
on a ski slope and in a park -but never in an
Arby's," Thompson said.
The bride, who has worked at ttie restaurant
for six months, said the idea for the rast·food wed·
ding came up about a week ago. She 1.$ not a
member or a church and didn't know where to
have the ceremony.
Clayton and Lydia Collins, the groom's
parents. were not exactly thrilled with the at·
mosphere.
"It's not what we wanted," said Mrs . Collins .
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too) HOP OM 0¥ER!
Because of
ALCOHOLISM
orotherchemlceldependency
To our Fun Summer Sale ...
and Save 25% -50% -75% on
selected dresses. tops, skirts. pants,
blouses, shorts, swimwear and
Through your mind
and into you . . .
Learn how you can help now! Yes, there Is
som ething you can do -even if the victim
won't seek help.
Attend Our Free
Community EducationAlcohotlsm
Intervention Pr<>Qram. Every
Saturday Morning, 1oam tll Noon
accessories (all
from our regular
stock) PLUS our
super $5 and
$10 e&cksl
HYPNOSIS CONSULTANTS
Alcohollsm Recovery Services JOt Victoria Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
( 1W 6'42·2734 Ex. 129 Approvtd for Medicare
SALE
STAATS
FRIDAY, AUGUST
144th at 9:30
-Come Early I 1
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(fhur1d1y, Augu1t 13, 1981
Stop Gap theater mounts impressive 'Miracle Worker '
8y TOM TITtJS ''Tbt Mtracle Worker." In the hands of Vlctor11 °' ... .....,,......., Bryan, this part comes pulaaUn&ly to lift In one of
Slartlflt wlth a piece of loaplred cuUDI -a the flnett performances of the year. Miss Bryan
rtal blind tblld pl1yln1 the role of Helen Keller -project.I a tou1h, lrlah atubbomne11 mixed with
the Stop Gap theater company bu come up with r81lralned compuston in a powerhouse portrayal.
an excf'll nt production of "The Miracle Worker" Al Helen'• concerned parents, Lenn Belanger
at the Newport Harbor Acto,,n Theater. and Rochelle Savltt present an almost uncomforta·
Wlllla m Gibson's blo1raphlhl drama re· bit contrast. Mil• Savltt endows her role with
celve1 strong and sensitive treatment from dtrec· 1r11t sincerity, while Belanger's stren1th Ilea
tor De.I'\ Laffoon, who has drawn hit pllYtt• both prlmarlly in caricature. His heavily accented
from the Newport Harbor theater and hls own performance (remlnJscent of Vaughn Meader do-
group or handicapped Ing JFK> often is at odds with his ramrod-stiff de·
younpters~ It is an up· meanor and unbending authority, which are well
liftlne. inspirational INTERftlSSIQN presented. show calculated to touch Robert Knapp as Helen's older brother gives a
the hearts of its a u· sensitive performance In a sketchy role, amplify.
dlence. Ing his character's emotional estraneement from
The presence or 10.year-old Carolyn Snow his father. Nathalie Michaud as Helen's aunt and
Margeson (a 10th generation blind person) In the Mary Perrin as the KeUers' maid offer solid sup-
key role of Helen certainly gives additional port.
Vtctona Bryan f tef t J and Carolyn Snow Margeson
in a scene f rom "The Miracle Work~."
"THE MIRACLE WOOER" is one of two
stage shows closln1 out this weekend. The other is
Bil Gekas· production of the rock mustc,1
1'Grede" for the San Clemente Summer Theatel',
wbich gives its rinal performances tonltht tbrou1h
Soturday.
Curtain is 8 p.m. at the San Clemente Hi1h
School theater, 700 Ave. Plco, San Clemente. Call
492·S101, ext. 265, for reservations.
Continuing their respective enga1emenll at
local playhouses this weekend are:
-"Deathtrap" at Sebastian's West Dinner
Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-9950>.
playlng nightly except Mondays at varying curtain
times through Sept. 13.
-"T he Wlz" al the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
< 979-Mll). on stage nightly except Mondays at
varying times through Sept. 6.
credence to the s how. She adapts to her part, and In addition to her excellent performance, Miss
the surroundings, so well that director Laffoon not· Bryan also designed the elfective three-level set. mE NEWPORT mEATER Arts Center ts
ed, "By the last week of rehearsal she was so com-"1mportlng" the recent production of "Godspell''
"The Country Girl" at the Irvine Communi·
ty Theater's Turtle Rotk Park playhouse. Sun·
nyhill Road off Turtle Rock Drive, Irvine CUckets
at the door >, playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8,
Sundays at 2, through Aug. 23. fortable on stage that her character suffered and "The Miracle Worker" concludes its brief, by Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high
we had to put In more 'blindness."' two-weekend run\wlth final performances tonight school student.s under the direction of Joe Swllt. "Murder in the Magnolias" at tbe Hunt·
ington Beach Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown
Avenue. Huntington Beach (847·4465) running
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Aug. 29.
Nevertheless. it is the role of AnnJe Sullivan, through Saturday at 8 p.m. and a 2:30 matinee The show plays Friday through Sunday of this
the once-bUnd student who, at 20, becomes Helen's Sunday at the AcLors Theater, 390 Monte Vista St., week and next at 8 p.m. at the theater. 2501 Cliff
special tutor. that makes or breaks a production of Costa Mesa. It's an experience worth reliving. Drive, Newport Beach.
~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
J)
......
ANlllill'I OIM-1.n 17Hl50
OllTa ... Solltll COISI 546-2711
NOW PLAYING ... c ..
llW&llOI t•Ma ct•TU UWAAOI UDOUIACK HANllM OIUWl·lll
• ~1 Ma.I 979-.,• • fj Toro !18•·!>180 A""*"1 879 98!>0
tnaJIOI tMm•TOll TWll tlA tin ClllllU Miisi1111 DlllWM• Hun11ng100 BNch 848 0388 Ot1nge 634 391 1 Sin Ju~n C~p•sllano
493 ·~~
HEAVY META&. IRI SHOWS AT 11:30 1: 15 3:00 4•4!5 1:30
8:30 a. 10:15
i,!:; _ ...... "" Showt .. 12:00 4-00 1;00. zo,,o, The 01y Blade jPGI Z;JO &·10 1
e¥O UhOnMV ne~ t Sound •I 1><1 .. •n l•low
Yo"' A"'-'""'°" your _k.. If ""AM cer 1edt0 wtttl ..,..,.°" ~ry OOSI'~"· bft .,...,, own AM POl'Ub ..
HEAVY METAL (R) ALSO PLAYING AMERICAN POP IRI
WOLFDll (RI
ESCAPE FROM
NEW YORK IRI
I TffE a.tRE STRIKES
BACIC fPGI Plus! Co-H it
Battie B•rond Th•
Sta11 IPG
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
M E ET TH E ODDEST AN D FU NNI EST
COUPLE OF T H E YEA R
AIAN ARKIN CAROL BURNEIT
JACK WARDEN
Roller Skates
new location
Skate-Away Dist., Inc.
Direct Factory Outle t
Hi-top & J ogger Style
Rollerskates
now only
52895
t reit SOO 00 value)
with a FREE 4-way skat e wren('h
Open everyday 11 am-7 pm 642-8516
Skate-Away Dist .. I nc. "'""'' ~r ,;.uo1
711 W. 17th Unit D-4 Cost a Mesa u.~ .... ""'--'....._-+-.--•
in The Mesa Industrial Park ~
Professional Skates & Accessories Available ~ ~
I I
...... _ -·---
Al's Gerege offers the traditional aide of
CllUal with our own handeome 5 IX)Cket
Jean. Thia go anywhere. do anything
jean looka great with our 1<>0% cotton
~ f'lrt by La Coste. The C.ole Haan
camp moe with Vibram sole completes
the ootfit.
Al'SGARAGE
58 FASHION ISLAND
Nl:WPoRT BEACH
(714) 844-7030
NW
SHOWING 1 Orenge Drive In 551-7022
I UA City Cfnema, Orenge
134-3911
O..enge Mell,137-<13'°
' Hlwey 39 Drive In,
WHtmtnster 191-3&93 , __________ _,,
1
UA Clneme, Costa MeH
S40-05M
· AM~~,,., ~·~._ ... ., ........... ~ ...... ~ ...... ................ . ..:..... NOW PLAYING · ---!UU --·--n111 Dr-.. 6JN XMO -ViltlO &»ellC)
..._ _,. OMST CINIMAC8NT8•
Coell ..... 549-3352 ........... ., "'·"31 '"'-0! .. 134-Jtll
WMM"ey, Ayt. 1t only
"4tND ITRHT''
Ru~ K .. ler In htwn
7:00 ,,M.
Get Tick.-. Now
ttOW Pl.AVINO
•llMI Nlf111 c:our •Ml MU ruu t tosll Mai ~9 l~2 8•u ~19 ~3J9
........ UNlllACI • CIMOOMI El lo<o S.1·5480 t O•ano• &3• 1~~3
•llllWMe'I C•llU WllT • --~ 891393~ ·--......... ,._..,,.
rA.ClflC'I '°'TII COH 1' l~ .... Bucft •94 1~1·
"~"'"' ltllCOll Olllft•tl
e.ien. P•r~ 121 •OIO ... u....,.....,n ... u Mw.a. ~13 9310 ,_
ONE Of THE BEST THINGS TltAT EVER HAPPENED
IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, August 13, 1981 <=•
brooke shields
martin hewitt
endle~love
PolyGram Plct"'9• A Unlvcnal Release
••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ tftl \ .. ,,o.f t.l>t~ itW-looo Mt
SPECIAL SNEAK PREVIEW
... On the Eve of the Full Moon
Tomorrow Night August 14, 8:00 p.m.
Regular Engagement B99lns August 21st.
CINEDOME UA MOVIES 4
Orange • 634-2553 Bree • ~21
EDWARDS CINEMA WEST
Westminster • 891-3935
EDWARDS SOUTH COAST EDWARDS SADDLEBACK
Costa MeH • 546-2711 El Toro• 511 ·5880
You're ne\ler
too)VUngto
learn the
*BARGAIN MATINEES•
Mondey thru Saturday
All PertormencH before 5:00 PM
(E.xc.,I Spedll E•p .. maftts IH Hofid1Y$)
.,. __ _.. __
"ARTHUR" ,.,..., .. --.~---·--"TARZAN
THE APE MAN '' t111 ,, ... --. ..... ---·---· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" IM'
·---N(Wiii/
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN --·--· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK::JtG>
__ ,.,.. ___ _
-·--"WOLFEN" .. , ·---..... -
LAKEWOOD C ENTER SOUTH WALK IN
Foc:uttv Al Del Amo
213/614·9211
I AG UNA
•'n.-Sf~•
"VICTORY" IPQ'
·--.-. ,... Wiiil w----··•-"UNDERTHE
RAINBOW" IPO' ·-------,,_ __
"SUPERMAN II" .,. ·-.-.-. .......
Focully 01 Condlewood
213/531·9580 ,,_ __ _
"SUPERMAN II" (PO) --·-·---.. -
"ON ANY
SUNDAY 11" IPO' ·----------· "ZORRO, THE GAY
BLADE"IPO) , ___ ..... __
-...-·· "STRIPES" jR) ............... -
so . COAST WALK·IN
Soutn Coott Hlwoy
OI ltOOdwO'f
494-1514 --·----·-Ali.-• "TARZAN "RAIDERS OF THE
THE APE MAN " (R) --""'-LOST ARK" IPQ) ---"
... ,., •. ....,, .... 7:l0 '"" w-7:\S \...,,~,. ....
IMPORTANT NOTICE! CMILOAEN UNDER 12 FREE! """' t•• """"' MN a rv f11 6:30 • S.1 S•• Helt 6:00 rM ~ SOUllO • l'OUll AM CAii MOIO t$ l'OUll ~
rlf NO AM CAii MIJIO WITH IQllfTION ~ l'O$l!lDll
-IMIG AM ~l•AU. Cllf.'I ~ .. Oii AM MOIO
ANAH!tM
ANAHEIM ORl'w E·IN
.. YOU'RI NEVER TOO YOUNG
TO LaARN TM! ICC)M••
"THI NIGHT TM! UCIHTI
WENT OUT IN~·· (N I -he••OY ti ot l•"'°" SI ··AOAO 0Am9'' (N) 179•fll0 CINHU04JllO
------~-• ..,.-~.,""-,..,,11""·-=---.,..., ..... ,':'-: .... :=,,..~ -
"TAIUAN T .. AN 11Wf• (RI ... n:::;:u .. Utl ftt.UI _,. y
"CAWMAN'' (N ) f" "CAM"11 COVIU" (PG)
CtNf ·ft SOUND CtNt fl M>llllO
9UI NA PA'1W
BUENA PARK ORIVf.IN
Unco1n ""·well ol ttnott
121-4070
J uur.· • ..,
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
ORIVE ·IN
·-~·-...·-~ "THEEWtRE
111UKH ~"(PO)
"STAR TMJ(" CO)
fMl---"IONfllMAN 11" (N) -Son o..oo Frwy 01-11ut1t(So)"AHY WHICH 'f!AY YOU CAN' (N I
. 962·2411 Cltlf fl SOUMO
--.. ;;.~;f· J
t "n. *OHT t.-UCIHTI "ON ANY SUNDAY 11" (N) WENT OUT IN QeCMOIA" (NI --"LOOK DOWN ANO Dtl" (fill "fllOAD QAMll" (N) _ ..,.....,_~
··n. CANNON8ALL MIN'' (NI . -"MTMUf'" (N I
Ctlll fl SOIJlio
"1.1.1 .. 1
LA HABRA •1.i1v1 •N
.. t ".i ...... '
LINCOLN c1w1vE IN
\l!ICOtfl ........ ., ~ ..
12H070
ClllE ·fi SOUllO.-_ __ ...... __
"TAIUAN T .. AN MAH" (It) -"CAVI MAH" (NI CM·R IOUM>.
"ON AHY '=""I" .IN>·
"LOOK DOWN AHD.DIK"(N I
------· "~Of'TM LOST AM"
IN> -••HAMGAR11''
~ -----
.. "'•
0'1ANGE 1>~1vt 1N
''Oii Arri 'IJA" r (Nt
•.• ,.,.., '(Nt
MISSION l •'VI oN . .
Cle Orange Coa•t DAILY PILOT{ThUrtday. Augu1t 13, 1981
I 111 l-<'-l l-\ Y --1••..we KUNtl l'\I
ea!WMY .......
Hanle le~ to write,
PfodUoe end ·-• pot• no lllrft '--1n 8fl oMolel
;-...=::,~ C">O
Ou.ta Morgen Felrol\Md,
Day~ looel«, Atthur
~ o.nc.., Chip Toi·
bet1' Illy ,..._.
• fllMTHA CUMI. UGHTAND~
An ~ IOOll • lllllen
1n10 ti. ~ of • 1t1en1ec1
O*-' I Cfloi900t1Pf* u
Iha beOi"t IO ~ her own pieoee.
• 8HIAK flMVllWI
AOgef !bert end Gene
Slekel rtvt.w "\/~ory,"
"N obody'• Perlekt,"
"Under The Aelnbow" tn<1
Othere. t-.JO e O TAXI
A 111gt!tened boy. Oefen<I•
Ing • jall egalnlt the men
who ltlli.d hi• •httllf
lat,..,. lneplr• coureot 1.,
·~Otyldull
I TIC TAC DOUGH M•A•t •H
A grateful patient devol•
hlnlMlf to H .... e,e wnlle
Radar 11111 In IOY9 encl
Kllnger memea by ehort·
weveradlo
DESERT STORY -Gene Hackman and
Catherine Deneuve star in the movie
"March or Die" beginning tonight at 9
p. m. and continuing Friday on Channel
4.
Louie'• mother lln1lly
move. out, lelavtng IM
lecll«OUI ~lcher OS--
fully plennlng nOtMltop
te>l'NlnOe wjfh Elaine. (RI Q ID UWAN HlU.MAN! A
~
Lllllen Hellman recollec:11
'-long , ... ,ion.Np with
wrltet Dellllell Hemmett
• J4Jl1'( GAN.AHO
• OOOOTlMU
Florid• enO the family Oil-
-lhel c;.,, hM cancer
(Part 21 e ID n.rcTNC
COMPNl'f (A)
Cl) CMNEWI D.== OO HOl.DMEI
Peut Dooley It 1 .. 1ured In
thlt two-ect play by Julel
Felller depicting the lrlll•·
blllty of urben Ill• .MOW
"Bronco Biiiy" ( t980) Clint
Eutwood. Sondra Locke
A former lhoe NINmen
from New Jeraey ru"1u
Illa Cl<Mm ol petlormlng In
e Wiid W•t allow. 'PO'
uo I JOKEA'I W1l.D AU IH THE ,AMll Y
An lnveatlgator with the
government com•• to
queeuon Archie •bout one
Of hie ~t friends Incl 00-
work.,.
• llNHYHIU.
Benny doM • comedic
tlk..off on "Bonnie and r ~ Nf!WUl:AT G 8TUOtOe&
"Cop Show" Explorer
~ .. Mlill lhe Olendlle.
Arlzone Police Oe9t., New
Vor1t City kids meke A't on
dleco dancing CAI
Cl)IBHEWS
(II llAAHEY MILLEA
Barney 1n<I hit detecllv•
go underground when en
elt tr1"1c controller go..
bet-le end tri.. to "lend"
pueengert alngle Ille In
the city'• aubw1y 1yttem
CC)MOVIE
'"A Force 01 One" (1979)
Chuck No,,11, Jennifer
O'Nllll A m11ter of the
mertlll art• embark• on a
revenge-motivated eeerch
for the killer• ol hi• adopt.
eO son 'PG' 1:861 EOITOAW.
7:00 C8I NEWS D NeCN£WS 9 HAPPYDAYIAGAIN
FCHUle hlr• I ,_,tty dlt-
abled mecnenlc ...no bit·
ler1y rejecte eny olf., of
lt'tendehlp
• MCNEWS I~
,.. llOOn .. Frank II In
charge. Hewtteye 1klp1
camp, run• 1 blocklde to
lind Tripper end wet·
comet I new 1<.1rgeon
(Per1 21
• STREETS OF BAH
FMHa8CO
A handsome young bank
robber -• 40-yeet-old
woman tetlet to ot>teln
lnlormetlon ebout the
1*\11.
• OYIREASY
Oueat: elnger Heler1 F0t·
reat.CR)Q
• MACHa. I L.aHAEA
l90fl'T
Cl) TIC TAC OOUOH 9 ....VGIWFIH
Ou.11 Morgen FllrCl\lld,
Elayne BoOller. Arthur
M0rr9)' Oencett, Chip Tol-
bert.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
(DJ ~HOUUCW
HOMOA
"Tiie Thlrteentll Reunl·
uon·· A young woman jout·
nelllt leaml of ,, , 9l'Qll
heppeollngt et en experl-
mentll c:tink: when &he
unco-. some hmbleu
cor'peM.
CZ) CHAAl.E8 CHAMPUN
TAU<.8 WTTH GEOAGI: cue<O..
7:IO 8 2 OH THI: TOWN
Hottl. Steve Edw1rdt.
Melody Aogert A vlllt to
the Brltilh Colony of Hong
l(ong and the ChlneM bor·
Oar.
D THt8 WM AMERICA
"A Family Album" A IOOk
It th• 1trength ind
~of the family
11 the .._,tlll aocil.I unit
at the turn-ol·t~tury.
• SHANANA
Gueate: The Kingaton T rlo
• EnOHLA
Hoeta: Inez Pedroza. Paul
Moyer. A took l*Wld the
llea0111-of Ille wer In
ltrMI, e look 11 ~Ill; e
vlllt with • men whO col·
lecll old earl. D FM'A THE MUSIC
• AU. IN TME FAUil Y
Edith ii ttunneO when &he
dlacover• the .... ~
behind the beroetnt the'•
~ getting •• the butcher
lhOp.
• MACNE1t. I LBtAER
AUOAT ID NEWS
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
People who heve hid
"near deeth" uperiences,
• llren~rl"s competition In
Cape Cod.
Q! FAMILY FEUD
(8) THE W0..LD'8 .
GREATEST 1:8CAP£8
Tony Curtis Introduces
deeth-dtlytng 11unt1 per-
formed by top escepe ert-
1111 at Knot11 Betry \Firm
In Buen1 Perk, Celll<>thle.
7:48 CZ) MOVIE * * * '"Dinner At Eight"
j 1933) John and Lionel
Barrymore, Jean H1r10w
Aeverbtfetlons of varytng
Intensity ripple through
New York C1ty'1 high eoc:t-
ety u the ou-i lllt ror an
Important eoc:tll engage-
ment la prepared.
l:OO 8 (() THE WAL TONI
Erin meet• a Chltfmlng end
ellglble young becfWllor (Al D a N8C MAGAZJN£
wrnt DAVID BAINl<LEY 8 MOVIE
'* * "Legend Of Couger
Cenyon·· ( 1974) Two young
boys tr1ppe0 In • hidden
oeve come 1-.10-face
with a de1dly couger
8 9 MOAKANO
MINDY
M0tk ..-nbles Mlndy"I
jeep In their IMng room
(A) D MoV1E * * "S .. dt 01 Evil"
l<athetlne Haughton. Joe
OeltMandto. Evil ta puaed
on to a community through
aome plenta • med gar·
detlet hu grown.
• P.M. W4A.ZIHI:
People wtlO h1ve hed
1J KNXT 1CBS1 Los Angeies 0 KN~C 1NBC1 LOS Angeles e KTLA 1tnd 1 Los A ngeles D "-ABC TV 1ABC1 Los Anqeles;
Cl) l\FMB 1CBS1 Scln Diego G l(HJ TV (Ind 1 Los A nQeleo;
l1J) KCST tABC1 San Diego
ID KTIV tlnd I Los AnqelP-. m KCOP TV 11no 1 Los Angeles
&') KCET TV 1 PBSI Los Angeles
Ii> KOCE TV 1PBS1 Huriltnqton Beclcl1
.. ,_ deeth" ellperlenoee, One of Holl~ and
th• uttlmete wMkend. Broadway'• g,.., .. , ieg..
CM! Tell P'WC* .. ltlllen erlda *9 "CNeago." "I
peeto aeuoe. JuOj MleMu Love You." "WlMln You're
haa i-a-tor the A!one" encl "It'• Thet Olo
bedl end 11omectl. Joyce ~ Moon" end .. '°"*
Kulhewlll hu 1 111rtety of by \/le Oetnoflt for -al
lotd-.,p tel>iel muelcal numbe" In 111111
• MOVll c:tuelc 1964 apecjej. ••'11 "lol Pai-" (1980} .. 46(D)~y~
Rldlerd Burton, Robert CZ),_, .. .,.
Ryen Two men wage • "F1110" C 1HO) Oom
llteloog bettle during the OelulM. Anne 8encroft. A
rowdy hlatory ol lh• portly oompulll\le Mlet
AIUkan ttfrltory. lln<lt thet nothing can e ~ J TOWN dampen hla dealre for food
Thlt documentery rocu-until he flltt In love. 'PO'
on thrff young A1l1n 10!00 8 Cl) KNOT8 LAHOING
Amertcen mu1lolan1 I<.,.,..., trull In Sid begin•
Cmembeta 01 the oroup to waver wnen he begin•
Hlro1hlm1) who blend apendlng long nlghtt work·
rock, jazz and Latin mullo lug with an ettrectJve
with tradttlonet Aalan employee.(~
ln1trument1 to ••Pr"• 11 • • NEWI
thelf multk:ullurll IOentlty 20 I 20 ID MAGC ~CW • U.8. CHAONICLE
Oil PAINTIHG "Superior Force" Jim
"DeMrt &in,.,.. Lehret report• on 1 police
(C MOVll dog ebuM cue In 5Yc>erl·
"Blue Coller" ( 1978) Alch· or. W19ccn91n, flied by tlle
atd Pryot, Hllvey Keitel ACLU In behalf of _,
ThrM truatreted Detroit men who Claim tlley -•
Milo lac1ory worker• turn untuattflebly etlld<ed and
to Cflme, bringing them rnllmeO by I.he dogs.
Into more conhlc1 and a:l MOYIE
potenllel denger then they "The Stunt Men" ( 1980)
-c;ountecl on 'A' Pet" O'T~. St-Ralls-(Q) MOYIE b1ck. Wented by the
• • • "H igh P1elt'l1 pOlice, • disturbed Vlet-
Orifter" ( t973) Clint Eut· n1m veteren fin<I• .,, wooo. Verne Bloom A unaure "-on a movie
nemelea 1trenger rem.. Mt whet• a World Wer I
the cowerdly rMident• of • eplC le being filmed. 'A' w .. 1 ... n town to ch~llenge (Q) MOW
the rulhleu gang wnlch "The Ouoew Joeey Wllel"
hU been ttfrorlzlng them. ( 1976) Clint Eastwood,
CS) MOVIE Sonor1 Locke. A man
"Running" ( 1979) MlchHI become• en oullew when •
Ooogtu, Sunn Anspach. ruthless b41/'1d ol Union IOI·
H•vlng 1111.0 •t n..,ly diel's oe1troy1 hi• South·
everything In 1111 111•. • ~-ern term and kills his wife
yHr-old divorced man end son. 'PG'
decldN to try out 11 a (S) MOVIE
merllhoner '°' the u s "Lun1" ( 1979) Jiii C11y-
Otymplc Team ·po· burgh, Manhew B1rry 0 MOVIE Guilt spurs an American ..
"Bon Voy1ge, Cherlle <>per• linger'• unorthodox
Brown" ( t9791 Anlmlled 11trac1ion to her IMn-ege,
Olrac1.0 by Biii Melendez Woln addict eon. 'A'
Snoopy and Woodttoek 10:30 • NEWS
tollOW e.ch1nge atudentt m INDEPENDEHT
Charlie Brown, Peppermint NETWON< NEWS
P11ty, Llnul Ind Matcte on • THE HUMAH FACE
an ectventur.-fllleO tour o1 OF Ctt1HA
England anc1 France •o· "One Hundtecl Enteruin·
l::IO e O 80eOfll 1UD01f.8 manta" A treYeling ecro-
Klp mOYM Into the IMt belle troupe " proltlecl,
'-of llfe wtth .,, old bud· llkittretlng the impoli~
0y wtlo'• become • Item-of entenllnment In the
boyent rock ater (Al II-of the CNMM peo.
• T<W 8TOR'I' pie. (Al
Hotta: Jim Thorn.u, Mery Ii) VIKING8I
I~ "Bitter It The Wind"
• 8NfN< PMV1EW8 Megnua Megnuseon •um·
Roger Ebetl •n<I a-lnea tome ercheologlcal
Sllkel review "lllctory," dlggir>O• th•t ,._,some
"Nobody'• Perfekt." lntereatlng •nd morbid
"Under The Rainbow" •n<I lacta ebout the Viking war-
ot,_,.,a. rlora wtlO conquered Ir ..
l'l) JULIA CHILO ANO land. (Al 0
COMPANY Cl AOO STTIWART
"Dinner For The Boq'" CAI Rock .,,,u1lc'1 reigning
(8) MOYll mile ... aymbol 1ter1 In
"The Blu" Brothera" 11111 concert, taped live at
C 19801 John Beluehl, Oen llWI Forum In Lot Angete9.
Aykroyd. Two bluet ling· tinging many ol hi• hit lln-
.,, mull contend with the glee u well N cuts lrorn
Chicago police, the CIA, tome Of hie albuma,
neo-Nazl• •nd •he u.s. 11:00 e a a Cl) o a
Anny to pu1 together a NEW8
benelh concert to rllM e 8TAATIWJ(
~tor their'*""· 'R' 1<1111 end McCoy land on a
l:OO 8 Cl) MAGNUM, P.1. ~I not knowing thet It
A cflent with a milllng le being guarded by an
flance 1nd no money lllen women.
entera Megnum In a I ~l'WB>GA*
metalllon running-biking--
ew!rnmlng race to "'*'• "Walk Wltll A Deed Man"
money end find '* men Manni" egr-to kep •
I!!] bleokmeller who has tie.I a a MOYll h<lvndlng • w..nny t>uei-• * "Mardi Of Die'' (Part -then ~· up
11 11977) GerWI Hactunen. hlmtelt u the large1 of 1
Mlll von SyOOw Fotlowtng poltce ctr.gnat.
Worlcl War I, a French lor· • IENNY HtU.
elgn legton troop led by a Benny la a llenpec:tled flue.
bitter Amerlcen are ~ with an eye tor •
ullgned to protect an ~tty glr1.
archMofoOlcal expedition • DICK CAVETT
TUBE TOPPERS
NBC G 7 : 30 -"Thia Wa s America." A look at the strong family
unlt at the turn or the century.
KCOP t9 8:00 -"l ee Palace ...
Richard Burton and Robert Rya n star In
the movie version of Edna F~rber's nov·
el about Alaska.
N8C IJ 9:00 ''March or Die."
Gene Hackman and Max Von Sydow star
in a movie about the Foreign Legion. <See photo, left.>
KOCE 9 9: 30 -· · Lllhan Hell map:
A Profile.·· The writer talks about her
long relationship with Dashiell Ham-
mett.
CPart 1 of 2)(R) ID THI TOM OOTTU
IHOW
"A LOU Sutvlved" A wfd.
-lherM Ille ltOI'/ of Iha k>M ol hit wife
(B)MOVW
"The OrMt 8entlnl" ( t9791
Robert Duvel!, Blythe
Denner A rough·•nd·
reecty Merine Corpe ottlAr
fecee domMtlc battlM
when lie triee to lmpc>M flit
mllltary ldeale on Illa fern!·
'1__ 'PO'
11:.IO Cl) 'T ' MAGAZJNe ~
,.,.~ '1:80. Cl) ntl .-nMONI
George lntroa-hie new
clerk Merc111 to the l<>Y• of
cem~ng.(A)
D ~TONIGm
Hott: Johnny Careon
Oueat1: Richard Benjemlr1,
Paule Prentlu.
8 0 MCNIWI NGHTUNE
I L.ET8 ~A OfAl
ITAHl.EV lll!Gli.
• CAPTIOHED A8C
NeWI .MOVW
"Wholly Moleel" C t980)
Dudley Moore. Lerelne
"'-nen In blblleel Egypt,
• lalM prophet nlmecl
Herachel MYMdropa on •
divine c:on....tatlon with
M-Incl declOel he
mutt be the one to lead hi•
people out of li•vety 'PG'
(%)MOVIE
"Feme" ( 19801 Eddi•
Barth, Ir-Cir• Four
tllenled lluder\11 apend
an hC"lng tour yeara 11
the High School ot Per·
forming Arte 'A'
~Ml>flGHT-
12:00 . Cl) MAOtGAN
A prleoner WhOm Mldlgen
Is eecortlng from Europe
to N-York ucapet
aomewhere In Llabon. (Al
8 MOYIE • • 'n ··operation W•r·
heed" 111164) S..n Con·
nary. AHr.O Lynch Two
mldcep mlltltt join the
RAF d<Jrlng World War II
end eocidentelly become
'--=.... CHAN.JE'I
The Angell end 8oeley
lnfl"r••• en antique auto
r f/My to treclc down at06en
Mn1C)lee of a -fuel. CAI
• OUt•tOet.a
Matt .. c:omered by lht'M
Sioux lftdlene .. ha goea
to flt!d t*P for the trMZlng
PMtltgen of a trlC)pecl
trlln. (Part 2)
• ....aH:
...e1111L.1
Tile IMF must s><evwit en
........, trom carrying out
lilt alllgnrnent without
~ the ldenttty ol Illa
target.
• AOOKD
The murder of a conatruc-
Uoo OClfl'IPMY ~ It wit·
nMMd by • woman anO
hat married boyfriend.
12: 11 (D) MOVIE
"~ From Alc:atrar'
(19791 Clint Eaatwood.
Patrick McGoohen. A
hardened convict,
returned 1her his llret .....,. "°"' "the Rock," ~ to br.-out eg.in
'PO'
1t:a0 D 8 TOMOMOW
Oueatt The VIiiega P-.
pie, Buddy Hld<ett (C)MOV'I(
"Sdllioid" C 19801 1<1-
Klnt6.1, Marlarul Hill A
etazecl murdeter wl\O VIM
ICIMor• to do -rt With •
.. , .. , ol dlvor~ or
unhlpplly merri.o women
Mnd• 1 letter to en IOVICe
eolurnnlal efter Mch klfl.
~-~ACUl.AA
LONOOH
Suunne S-1 t•k• ua
on 1 dazzling lour or Lon-
don to -the tight• •nO
IOI.Inda of Soho. Plt:adllly
Clrcu1 encl the Tow. of
London.
1:00 fll NYCH1C
PHe.NOMENA
"Aelnc1rn1tlon·· Ho111.
Demien Slmpeon, Stlc:le
Hunt. Gueeta: Robert and
Loy Young.
tD MOYIE
• • "Aoclen" ( 1957) Kenjl
s-1re. Yuml Shirlkewe
Eer1h 11 menac«1 by e
numw ol -and d .. dly llylng CtNlures
from the Stone Age
• IHDEPENOINT
NETWOMNEWI
(H)MOVll
"WhhOut Wlmlng" ( 19801
Jlldc Palence, Martin Lan-
deu. A gu-lletlon ettend·
ent and e Vletl1em ve'ltf 111'1
pit them..._ egllnat •
terrifying Ind powerful
humanoid wtllCh •II eek I It&
P'9)' with deadly llytng
organlems. 'A"
1:108 MOVIE /
• • 'n "Oo Not Fold. Spm.
die Of Mulllete"' ( 19711
Helen H1ye1, Miidred
Netwlck. Four elderly
women CfHI• • ficilon•I
cherlC\er to complete •
computer que11lonnelre.
but the Jok• r-.111 In mur-
det. 1:201:::::.
"Between The Linea"
C 19771 UndUy CrouM.
Jeff Goldblum The 1t1fl
member• ol an "under-
grouncf' BOiton ~
pet have varloua romantic
end journeliatlc
encount.,. lllitll MCI> other
end Iha aibjects of their
atorlea. 'A'
1::IO • MOYIE
*'*'h "Stloc:t< TrMtment"
(19641 Stuart Whitman.
C#ol L~. A paychle-
trttt aib)ect• • private
lnwistlgetOt to utenallle
~ ,,..,.,,.,,.. Ir) .,,
a.,.,... IO gain j)OeMtllon
of en Inmate'• llOlen for.
tune. 1:•• NIW8 (%)MOYE
"Fallo" C 1980) Dom
Oel..uiM. Anne Bancroh. A
pOrtly compuillve Mttf
lin<I• that nothJnO can
dampen his Oeeire for food
JlfllN he felts In IOve. 'PO' 1:801 NEW1 1:11 MOMCAM8E' WllE
Ernie OU10oea hlmMlf In
JOHN DARLING
7Hl5 IS A CHA NNEL
ONE NEWSBREAk/
hie ~Of "Mutiny On
TMlounty "
bit!~
"The "eppy "ooll•r"
( 1t71) Lynn ReOoraw.
JeM.PWre ~ TN
~ Of N.w Ycn'a ,_.
RI girl. xavwa Holiandef,
la tOld 'R'
CJ.)MOVll
.. Jedi The AIC>oer" ( 19801
LH P111er1on, l:ddle
8ytnia. A llenOiel\ medmen
liud4M lciotlWld Ywd wfllle
OC>Muctlng a OrillY -man oNMde 10 ellmlnete
proatttutlOn 'A'
1:11 . IDfTONAl
l:JO MOVll
• • ~ "Alric•. Te11a1
Style" ( IH71 Hugll O'Brl·
en, John Miits. American
oowboya ere hired to
prove that African wild 111'11·
malt can be d-tlcatao
·~·w. Erle flndt I WI)' to lnttf·
rupt Ernie, wl\O It h•lllng •
,_.,lie duet with guea1
1ter Lulu. l:rlc trlM to pro-
tect Ernie lrorn the eccuN·
tlOnl of e motl'ler·IO-be
a:aoe MOVIE * * 'J\ "Zarlk" I t957) Vie·
tor Meture, MlchMI Wllcl·
Ing Ottven from hit lllllege,
•men~• ru1Neaa
oull-19eder
2:14 8 HIW8
2:48 . Ml:W8
2:I09 MOVIE * • '" "Torp•ao Bay··
C 1"21 J8/nN Meeon. LMll
P1lmer An ltallen 1<.1bm•·
rlne crew ••perlenoel 1
fri.tldty encounttf with 1
Brllllh mlne-aweeper off
the CONI of North Alric•
during World Wtt II
a:ooe MOYIE
• • '" "The O.vll'• Hand"
P&et) Aobe<I Alda, Und1
Ct1ri.t1en A men llnO• that
hi• Innate good-pr•
....,.. .. him from becoming •
10111 pat11Cipent in .,, •vii
YOOdOOwlt
3;30 AA8CAl DAZZLl
The Uttll Aaecal1 get In
and out ol the derndelt
trouble
3:'6 CZ) CHAIU!.8 CHAMPUH
TAU<.IWITH~
CUK0.-
4:00 (~ MOVIE •
"The Stunt Men" ( 19901
Pet., O'Toote, Stave Rllta-
beck Wented t>y th•
police, a dltturbed Viet·
n1m veter1n llndt •n
unaure tie....,.. on 1 movie
Ml wtWlre e World W91 I
epic 11 t>etng hlmed 'A"
4:15tD MOVIE **'" "'A"au In Reno'
( 19561 Jottn Luno. Corot
Slngleton A 1.0y body·
gu91d becomea Iha objeet
of ~ employer's elfec.
Ilona. ·
I 4:ad~=
* * * "Dinner At Elgllt" •
( 19331 JOhn ano Lionel
Barrymore. Jean Harlow
Reverbtf1tion1 ot v1rylng
lntenllty ripple through
New York City'• high IOC>-
1ty'11 Ille gueet Ntt for an
Important 80Clal angage..
ment le prepared
4:16 8 8T AA TAE<
f'rida11••
Da11t I•~ ·"o.,lt-•
-MORHIG-
1:00 {1:) "'The AJtz" ( t9781 Jeck
W•lort. All• Moreno. A
bumbler unwlttlngty atum·
blet Into 1 gay belhhouH
wtllle ..... Ing refuge lrorn
hll murder.minded
brother-ln-taw. 'A'
t!OO ()) "ONdmen'• Floet" ·a·
8:IO a:l • ... "Heidi" ( 19e51
Ev1·M•rl• Slnghemmer.
OertranO Mlttermryr A Ill·
flt ..... olfl le ,..., "°'" her mountain llotne In Iha
.411',>e by hat aunt to Iha
tM (ir·. • • "T'wo w.-. In
Mottler T-·· (1fl2) Kint
~ ldwefctO "°*>-
llllOft A nWo llCled actor
tlnd• hepplneee In en
..... ,.,,, produc«'• loO
.. .. CC> ..... ~ "lflgeOoon"
( t"4) o.w ~. Cyd '
Charl1M. Two friend•
""""*upon~. a ~ In IN lcottlefl lllgh-
1t.nc11. #lidl oorr... to •Je
tor • elngle dey.,.., 100
~"
'1:00. ·~ "Trlple Trouble"
(1950) lao 00fcey, Huntz
I
Hall. The eo-y 8oy9 fln<I
their good Intent.lone trip ,,,.,,, uo.
I
'1:80 G • • "Aelurn Of The
Te.an'.' (19621 Dele
Rotlerteon. Joanne Dru A
I rencher 111"\iOO* to hang
on to hit lend and hOrne.
~"Running Wiid" C 1973)
UOyd Brtdgee. Dina Metrlll
The good GUYii fight Iha
b.o guya In Ille contemc>o-
rary American Souttl.-t ·a·
-AFTERHOOH-
12:00. * • '-' "In Name Ooily"
(1939) Carole Lombeord.
Cery Gr ent. A Mlfilh _.,.
.no.. only CC>nC9lrO tor her
hutbencl It Ille ttatut and
-''" 1111 -brlnga llaundlty refu-him •
divorce !Nit would enlble
him to merry the girl he
IHllylovea
m • * 'n '"Thunder In The
E11t" ( t953) Alan Ladd,
0.boreh Ktfr. A bUnd girt
ettemptt to help relieve
tenelont 1her • man Miit
guna to• mehere)llh.
1:IO (t) "Swim Team" Stephen
Furat A pernpered group
of country clubbera
e<:qulre e gorgeous new
member who cherge•
them up for the c:hampjon-
allt.p 'PG'
(.$) * * * "Two WMlla In
Anotllllr Town" ( 19621 Kint
Oougtu. Ectward 0 . Aob-
lneon A m1agulded 1e1or
find• happtneu In 1n
..... ,.,,, producer'• !Ob
2:00 0 "Legetld OI Frenc:hia
King" Brigitte Bardot.
Cllkldle C.,dinlle Five
"""' let nothing get In
lhelrw1y.whenlheylengle
wi1h 1 flmlly of iOC8I
cowboy• over 11141 rig.hit to
1n Oll·•lch ranch
S:OO a * * V. '"Uva A Little,
Love A Little" C 1969) Etvta
P1ea1ey. Mlcllele Cerey A
phOtogrepher for a "girlie'"
meglUlne h•a trouble with
• lealout Qtrllrlend
3:30 D * * "Don't Puall. I'll
Cherge When AHdy"
I 1969) Enro CeNlico. Sue
Lyon An 1teli1n POW
somehow ge1t drahed onto
the United States Army
ct> .... "Held[" ( t9651
Eve-M1rll S~mtNr.
Gertrand Mittermayr A It·
tie SWISll girt It teken from
her mountlln home 1n the
Alpt by '* eunt to 11141
City
··o.aoman's Ftoet" 'G'
4:30 0 'Bronco !Wly" (1980)
Clint Eaatwood, Sooidre
Loe•• A former ehoe
salMmen from New JetMy
reallxn hi• dr_,, of per-
forming in • Wild Well
lhOw. 'PO'
l:OO {1:) "Running Wild" 119731
Lloyd BridgM. Oinll Merrtll.
The good guyt llgflt Iha
bed guyt In the contemc>o-
'"Y American Southwett. ·o·
1:30 ()) • • '* "ll'a Alwayt Fllr w .. 111er" ( 1955) Gene Kel-
ly. 041/'1 Delley. A 10Ca1 TV
at.vie! decidet to broed-
caat • reunion of thr•
World Wer II Anny bucf. d,_
by Armstrong & Batiuk
1 COUL-0 USE A ~EAK ~ROM !HE NEWG /
••cavatlno In Morocco. Oueat: Steven Spielbtfa. ~------------------~=-:=~=-~~~~~--~~--------~------------------~
Musical star films 'Dallas'
By BOB THOMAS ., .. , .... "-......
HOLLYWOOD -Howard Keel thought
something looked familiar about MGM's Staie 2S,
where be was shooting a chapter of "Dallas."
"Ob, yes, now I rem«!mber," said t.be actor.
·'Thia la the sta1e where I brolce my leg on 'Annie
Get Your Gun.' "
That waa in 19o&9, when Keel wu besinnin.1 bla
careef aa MGM's resident leadin1 man in
musicals. Many of hie films were remakes:
"Show Boat," "Roberta.~· "Lovely to Look
At," "Rose Marie," "Klamet." He a1ao starred 1D
"KJ.le Me Kate" and "Seven Bridea for Seven
Brothen," as well as a few non.mualcala aucb u
"Callaway Went Tbataway" and "Ride Vaquero.''
Now it'• 1981, and Howard Keel la back on the
MGM lot after a »-year ablence to appear aa
Clayton Farlow in Lorimar ProducUons' "Dallaa."
"I'm not replacln1 Jim Davi.a.'' Keel em·
phulzed. "Nobody could do that. Jim wu an on,UW abeolute11 perfect for the rol• of Jock
Ewt.na. i uaed to meet Jlm at celebrity roll toGma-
mentl, and l was thrilled that he eou.ld ea.Joy 1ucb
IJ'eat IUCCtll late Ill hl.1 career. ·
"Qaytob Farlow la a Uttle Uk• .lock, I ,.....
Ke'1 rlcb .. CfMI• and a intl7 pod ro • will. Dllf8"9Dt frosa tb4 Zwinl fmntly, 1 Uttle 'more
aopbllUcat.ct, but roup anMiDd tbe edl•· A no-nnm ... p11 with Sood IDAIDcU. M 1 matter ol
fact, IMlt • ta.. mimc.ilnii l'ft boWD ban
M.a .... It'• • Amenoa fallle tlaat tM rteb ................... .
Al ........ bit tJdchr • tlile mtcldl:i.. dd
.. I 81• ... Mir .,. lft1. liit be I.I M
robust as when he aan1, '11'U be callln1 you, 00-00·
oo, 00-00-001' to Ann Blytb In "Rose Marie." His
passion is golf. Arrivina back in Loa An1eles be
went dlrecUy to the Bel Alr Country Club, wbete
he wu interviewed between aeulom on the driv-ing ran1e.
fna laat film WH ""l,ar Wason" w1tb John
Wayne and KJrlt Dou1~ ln 1917. Since then, be
hH been "the IYPIY baritone," •lnain1 ln mualcal
prod\JcUona all over the UDit.ed Stalel and ln
Australia and Enaland. The mott frequent abows
are "Came.lpt.'' "Man of La Manche" abd "South
Paclllc."
He reteamed with Jane Powell for a 1ta1e
venlon of "Seven Brides for Sevea Brotbeql," but
somehow It didn't work. He bu alto combined
with another MGM alumaa, Kat.bl')1) Gra)'IOll, in a
nllht club act.
''When 'Dallu' came Ilona. It seemed Ideal.''
uld KMI. "I bad been tr1velln1 three-quanen ot
the year, and I found that U..... la no way to travel
tradoully anymor•. Not ma.1 ... you bave JOQr own
priv.tejet, which I don't.
. ••J bad a.ome Und llacinl ta. aam• IOI• over Md ovw. Aleo. ~1 ........ i.u. wW b9
Mftll lD September. De W ,_ •••>wW• wtth Judy and me, bat now tt wu Ume to 1.ule down."
.. He adm.ltMd that be dkln't aow muda uoat
the Mri• When tbe otter came, bat WU. ,.., ••
• "Dall•" edcllct. ··What'• Ladmar?" ....... wbtn ...... mT&ed to Yllk .... eompu1. MWd to
read <•.utlclft > for ta.. role ol C1aJtGa hrlcM.
Ke.I rWPUed: "SorTJ, I'm a aa., ........ , 90 I
Howard Knl 114/IJ with JOfTOtl Marttn of • • l)QIJai.,,
nev• do It. But If you want to let me trJ the part,
I'll dO tbl belt fft1na I e•." ~.,. Ltaa.ard Katama •• wlllln• to ao on that buts, ud ltNI . ....,... oa tbe CJIS Mtt•
twice Ult MUOD. lie ..... dane a ...., ...... t.bll
year md tiOPel the eni•cemtnt coallDues. U not,
tbe G1P11 BarttGDe will bit t.be road a1aln.
CBS wins rating race
NEW Y.ORK CAP) -CBS continued to
dominate the networks' prime·time ratin11 com·
petition, winn.ln1 the tbree·wa.y race for t.be 12tb
straieht week despite a notably 1troni effort from
NBC, figures from the A.C. Nielaen Co. 1bowed.
NBC Uated four of the week's 10 bi1beat·rated
programs to three for each of the comi)et1n1
networks and ended an eilbt·week run I.ft lut
place.
NBC's escape from the ratinp cellar wu
. enhanced by an eplaode of "Facta of Life," tbe
week's No. 1 proaram, and the strike-4ela.yed ma·
Jor league bueball AJl·Star came, wbJcb finished second.
CBS won the race wtlb an avera1e ratiq of 14
to 13.• for NBC and U .3 for ABC. The networb say
that means in an avera1e prime·time minute dur·
ln1 the week, 14 percent of tbe country'• TV.
equipped homea were tuned to the No. 1 network.
...... o, •• , ...
SANMl&'8.IBI
ONLY $2.49 SIX PACI .. ,,..... ..... ,, ....
• ptj Ml. Uae world· ....._ viaft our nttat
UDOUI ._.... bl 'ftoacler Joe'• '' Uae ln-uae • .,.., -.! ~ ot 17th Street
1111a ''fJFw• • · 1'lwpGrt Boulevard and !. e'ft I& Of ~riQr Avenue (next Lo OD •. 4•. Lt11tt Dennr'• and 8arel1y'1 Dan.......... ..... . .
NOW IN COSTA t•IA
•
INDEX
Tt ftKt Yttr A•. Ca"
642·5678
NOUSfS Fii SAU
l1f"M'tat """"" .... ... """"" , ... , ...... . ( fltK\lraNt tMltfl! . ., ... , "•' l-.t•""'•
llM4 """' u t .... ·~ .... \.JI.\ , __ ........ ,
lhUW •••W'• "'••h i.. ...... ,.11. L..,.,.., .. .,., .... ~'"'° ~fr"!:.-;'-
'-• JtHft \ •pt\.U ..... 'wnloA .. ~ .. 11r .. ---I••··· •ntm1~,,
11 .... ~-.... ~ aw mm
M rU&t'•OfS.W A,..n .... 111• 1<>< i..t. ~!!'r,;;,,,
t tftWtth I.oh l'r•.-,
l OfnW.01•I f'r•HH
l WOft\l .. if.M' "-"' • ..,..,~ l Ath '•h
l~t~hco>lmtd
ltw'fHIW l'r«;prth 1~1•t t'rus-ro ...... '"' ..... \14*ft. 11•'" Trlr ~,. •
lilo..tttHI u .. ,,,, Mtt\f•tt
~=-~~ ~!e.'7~.,.J
tM ol "•'" hov k•nt~ t •'"'' (,fm t'" Mt~l tL•l•tr t.u h•Rlt kt'41 t "-tllft• 'A •At.fl
RENTALS
l~twrntd..-d ·-1.1.,,,.,,,..
t~twr•urlAI
C lftdoftlit\Uflt'i'li t wt•
l ondotn1n1""'' l "' To-nh4.M.l'*" t'Mrn To.~""'l"I lNPt•f"h1tn
IN:p'"'" l nt ... ,,. .......
Aphlf'ltwrn
Ap&-. ··~r.-tit \ Pll
""""'' MOMI • 11<,.rd tta&t>l .. \ICA,.I"
lj¥it1il l""9w ..
'-ttUhrt MrMail · \_...,Kif' M•ftl•h
ktntaf .. I••~•'" c.:~._,..,,., Rt f\I
llllott M..i•I ~~,Jc .. nt.I
lndu\ltt1I Mf'n' "' "1:atl9&f'
Kf"flil•f, Vt•ntf'd
"l"f" tt• .. b h
BUSINESS, INVEST·
MENT, FINANCE
"'-'ICM"'\' Oi1"'9'1 ttlP•""'"" ¥. •nlf'd
llht'\l""'nlOpv-1t1 \ .,.,..,...,,.,.. .. ·•~hd
\ION'\ Id l.o..n \I~\ ••Mfd \lor1t•I.,... Th"
AMIHllCEMENTS. rmatms &
LO\T & FOUND
AMWivru rftlft"I" l 4f .,,.., ......... ,,,, ... ~~
IAM ' .... ... r..-~.1,
"'-111 l lw~
lt•"'I
SUYICES
EMrtOYMENT &
mPAUTION
""~" hhlltKh'"' J.MV.•Jllllf"ft
11..r, ll •lllf<I \I & I
MERCHA~DISE
Ww.tV4• A~l•lliif"
A\M\MWI
t4•t\tlf'' tk.MWlftl \l•l•tt•I•
l .tNt ,,..., ' t fitW .. " ... "" l •h I..,,,
•rtt\0 \1~ .. , .. , ... _.,.
'••hit'"'''" 11or ..... ltt-.."t+-)Mt c,1111..d"
J••u lt\ '''"'"'~ "•'h'""''' \&t\C«t141~1tit" \t1"c ... l•MvW.., 9" •"h·d """t•l lft"'lruntt·nif"
Ofh• c t """'' t~v•Y r .. ,
~~~~:~:,::
llplfl .... c .ood• qiou ft..,.hwr11nl H••
~·r.dlO ft1t'1 ~Pff'Q
IOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT
C.,.•Mr•I
flcMt\ W••llil ""rf\Hf'
fto.\" \l•UM' t fl'illi
tito.I\ Po-.t'r
8o•h Mt-nt lh11rh t Ho•h '-111 hh'-li~ Out~·
"'"''' 'lprod ' _..I Roitl" tr.ienr.,t'
TUMSPOUATION
A1n r•ft f4rnprr .. Mlt H'"l'M t:1"1ric c., ..
"\la1or (,r ..... ~,.,.," \lllwUm,~W ,.,.,.,
lr•lk-h Tr a\ fl
TtitlWf\ l Uhh
4wtO'"\ttt P.rt"'
AUTOMOBILE
\l('ti.l •I .\JI\,..~• l.'6.a.un • likt•r•t ... ,,.,_ •• ,,"
""1fh M•lt M1•I
&Wh .. ,IOtt\4.•91
Thursday. August 13, 1,981
Looking for a piano? Find it to:
day in classification #8090 !
....... ,., Wt ........ ,., Wt ,., Wt ....... ,., Wt ........ ,., Wt ....... ,., Wt ....... For Wt •••••..........•....... •.......•...........•.. .......•............••• ••.....•••.....•.•.... ···-··················· ....•••••.......•............••..••..••.........•............•.....•.
tMrtl 1002 '"-rtl 1002 ~ 1002 GtMrtl 1002 G ... nil 1002 OtMrtl 1002 Gt•rtl 1002 Gt•rlll 1001 •••............•••••.. .....••........•.•••... ······~················ ..................................... ,......... ..•.•............••••.. ..•........•.••••...... . ......••..............
\\' I ~~ ! I '! \ REAL ESTATE LINDA ISLE -,..,, ,.;
1~11
lllU llQI
TAYLOR CO. SALES MANm
Major regional brokeraee firm with 13
years experience in the coastal area is
searching for an experienced person
to manage its expanding Newport or.
fice.
Exciting opportunity! Wide channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home.
Slip for 2 large boats. Sl ,495,000.
Summer Occupancy. ·~ lltll EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
1\1 .\l l<ll\:--. .. :'11 l'llli
l...U .-
UIM
:: , ... ..,,. Hetke:
MR. I MRS. PllNCTIOM SI lS.000
HIA TID ICIDNIY ·SHAl'IO root. LIDO IS.LE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home. newly redecorated. Priced
to sell qu~ckly at $475,000. Must see.
:~ All real eatate ad·
:: vertlaed i n t h is-
10:• newspaper Is 1ubjecl lo :: ~= ~~~ re:r :~h
:\:; makes it lllecal to ad·
vertiae "any preference,
limitation, or d is·
:;: crimin1tioQ baaed on
1:1.1D race, color, reliclon,
::: sex, or nallooal origin,
::: or an intention to make
,,... 1ny such prtference,
1"" limitation, or dis -~1~: crimination. ··
ROOM FOR PADDU TBMS
Immaculate picturebook 3 bedroom
home nestled in flowers and shrubs.
Large grassy back yard for the
c hildren. pets or guest house.
Beautiful pool with large deck area.
90' wide frontage . 1.oned for income. A
wise investment for young or not so
young. Call 644·4910 to see any time.
CHIAT FtNANCINCi AVALULE
ror;, Down. and owner will co-operate
on fantastic financing . Beautiful·
custom, new , Balboa Peninsula home.
Three bedroom . four fireplaces.
library. family room, stained-glass,
nothing could be cozier. $395,000 Fee.
U~IVUI: ti()Mf§
Highly visible Fashion Island location
with 15 full time agents has the poten·
tial for 27 agents.
This firm has over 125 f ulltime agents
and offers residential, in vestment,
escrow, securities and mortgage
brokerage services to its clients from
8 orfices located Newport to San
Clemente .
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings . Great for entertainin g
S420.000. Best price for the money.
WESLIY N. TAYLOI CO., llALTOIS
2111S-J ............
MIWPOIT CIMTEI, M.I. 644-491 o REALTORS. 675-6000 PENINSULA POINT IEACHFIONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge . from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur-
ing marine room . $1.385.000.
ta
u.i ,..,,. This newspaper will not 0 11
~
""'' ll\ol
knowinf l.y accept any TUSTIH IEAUTY
advert11ing for real 3 BR 2 BA fa mily rm, &
estate which la in viola· din. rm Dbl. detached lion or the law. o.'MIJI ,_ ~=--~~-'----• garace. Home complete· •-------•I ly redecorated on large "'" cul-de-sac lot in Co. := lllOIS: ._.........,.. strip. Mickey Sharer
~ ...... ct.ell..... -=960-~1:.:;980=.:... ---= .., .......... .,.. ~?.; '°" , ....... ..,. n.
r.w DAILY PLOT •-11 = hlMlty for .... flnt
:;,:: IRcorrnt hlttrtlo.
l11Ji °"" !~':: I •
lll<J ·------... ~'DI
!::: jHMMt for Wt
:E: 1;;:::~··········io-Oi ..... ._,....
~I t•t••t•ttttttttttet••••
l UMllUEV A.Ill!
HUGE!
5 or 6 bdrm home with
pool. Great area. Owuer
will help with financing.
Sl65.000
MORE .
5 bdrm w/swimming
pool and jacuzzi solar
heated. RV area. As·
sume FNMA Sl69.000
•
RED CARPET
754-1202 a 5 Bdrm pool/spa home
in Costa Mesa under ;:.~ s120.ooo. Owner wiJI help , ________ ,
lOU on financing Call w .. --~ ~ 9'19·5370 today for more '"~"""' ~: details. Sharp 2 story 4 bdrm, 2'"2 bath home. 2 frplcs. A LLS 'f'A TE shake roor. redwood I rt dtck to waters edge +
boat dock S335.000 ! REALTORS INCLUDING LAND'
lilt;
\Ill/ WOODSIDE •--a:::rop.
VILLAGE 11675-7060•
• 3 Bdrm. 2 atory. S 11,000 I !!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I down. SJlll,900
•3 Bdrm, 2st.ory, 111,500
down. Sl14,900.
•3 Bdrm. I story, S9500
down.let,900.
: .. .o •3 Bdrm. 1 story, S9400
·••• down. 183,500.
:1"' •2 Bdrm, 1 story, S8800
down. 187.900.
,.,.. •2 Bdrm, 1 story, S8600 :::~ down. ~.900 ..,.., All havt' pools. spa.
11.<1.> sauna available. Walk lo
:: South Coast shopping.
:: Call for more details.
Mbl 546-2313 -THE REAL ESTATERS
EXECUTIVE :.'.1 $227 ,000
:: Almost new 2 story ""~ beauty. Sun filled ~-= kitchen. rormal dining
roo m. wark and cozy
family room too ! 2nd
story hosts secluded ~: master suite with
:: ~i;e~l~:e~ i3n ~ ~~:e~
::,: sized bdnns too! Don't
,. .. , miss out catl. .... @
mu
Ytllt ~H>1
11l0' Vl!>J
Ylitf
w1ie•
..... I
».llH
-~· .......
lrt\'wlt ,.._,
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631 -6990
AXER
A.th.0.•elopen
Prime Costa Mesa area
20 unit condo project
compl approved, ready
to build, call 752·6499
Plan IV Real~
SANDDOUAltS
This 3 Bdrm 2 Bdrm
duplex presents a great
mvestment opportunity
in West Newport The
location ol thls property
(only 2 lots rrom the
ocean and steps to the
bay) coupled with tht'
unbtlievable funncing
make this offenng re·
alistic and smart Ask·
mg only S26s,OOO.
lcAoo l.a.d Uy
73-1700
• RHLTORS
COUNTIYFUHCH
2443 EHi CoHI Highway, Corona del Mat
WE HAVE 45 OF THE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN
The person chosen will receive liberal
starting salary and an override on the
office production along with other
benefits.
C,/e ~ o/
,i \
All responses will be held in strict con-
fidence. Send resume to: Drawer 18,
P.O. Box 2000, Corona del Mar, 92625
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. im·
maculate. Low priced at $215.000.
T REALTORS
675·5511 ---·
llCiCANYOM
Exquisitely upgraded
Mooaco on colfcourse. 3
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3.l' fl"i'•d• O• ,, I\ B c/) clbl
Bdrm. formal dining, C ...... _ 1021 Cot.._._.__ 102 .. fam ily room, assumable CN'Olle -n1,..... ..
loans. Submit all offers. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOOIUMG FOi A. CAREER IM llAl
ESTAn7 eo .... ht oltd disaat 'fOllr..,..
.ttll-. Wt offer yoei CJOOd co.Na.Jo.
~ .. Prot.ttloHI .... 11..ce. Alwcrp
nailable. Neot offiu!
.__ ... ___ .,, Ask!Jli! SS 000 CDM ILUFFS
SIO,• AITD UMIVllSITY PAD
DEA.NE HOME
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 l. Coost Hwy., CorGM .. M•
675-5511
$239,000
Charming and spcacious
3 BR + ramlly room
home. Corner location
across rrom parll, pool
and tennis. Reliring
owntr will calT)' rinanc
me at reasonable rate. MOVE IN MOW
This large 5 Bdrm 3 Ba
home is in immaculate
cond1t1on with new
carpets, drapes & paant.
Walk to shopping &
schools Assume large
loan and owner will help
r1nance. Only 1176,000.
IUYEIS WANTED We can help you rind
OCEANFRONTS
6 to be exact from
125,000 down & as low u
12% interest on tht'
bal1nct. Call for details
and the super locations.
JACOBS REALTY
675-66 0
your dream house. Call --------our Costa Mesa · Newport Beach Residen· Telling t~e .IDOl'lt people
tt1l Specialist. Delorts possible is import.ant to
Gelberg lhe s uccess of a ny
TSL PROP ERTi F.S garage s~le. Make sure
642-1603 yours 1s listed 1n
I Cl ass ified , phone
Classified Ads 642-5678 _.642-~567=-8.-· -----
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
'1CTURESQUE IA YSHORES
Charming living w /raised brick
hearth, wood paneling & shutters.
Delightful 3 BR. 1 BA. Space for
outdoor li ving w /2 patios. Room for
remodeling. Outstanding value at
$l35,000 LH
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
THl ... HCi
TOW~OME?
Call the specialists at
the condominium tn·
formation center
Touchslooe Realty
963-0867
759·1616
SELL idle ti.ems with a
011ly Pilot Classified
Ad. 642·5678.
CIE
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS Of SERVICE
SPECIAL CUSTOM IAYRlOMT
FEE Land . Four Years Old .
Cathedral Ceilings. Parquet F1oors &
New Carpets. Lots Of Wood & Glass.
Three Bedrooms & Convertible Den.
31Az Baths. Separate Dining. Huge
Famliy Room With Wet Bar. Kitchen
With Pantry. Breakfast Room. Sauna .
Study. Three·Car Ga rage. Wood Deck
Overloo ks Bay & Dock . See To
Appreciate. $1 ,600.000.
ISLAMD llVrHG
Move Into This Bright Four Bedroom
Lido Island Home. With Only 207c
Down. Assume The Large First Trust
Deed Al 12'/r & Owner Will Carry A
Second At 1 2 'ir . A Fabulous
Oppartunity To Own Property In One
Of Newport Beach's Most Picturesque
Communi ties. An Excellent Bu y.
$475,000.
(!)· ·--0••••'•""'"
IYOWMll .
above beach, full ocean
& jeUy vu from every
rm.3lrgBr,lrglivrm +
kit.. 2Va Ba. 2·sly, 2 bnck
frplcs, 2 decks. beach
access, senu·pvt road.
11,250,000. P P Appt Oii·
ly.714/~
1ZOt~10,....
Charming 4 bedroom,
fruh new paint. dt·
c o ral o r t ouch
throughout. Buutlful rrool lawn, pool Sile
back yard. By owner.
COIOHA Da MAI ,..__..._,....,...__...,_.._., Last weekend before we
Sharp & spacious bst. StlS,000. 840 San·
dupln. Private corner 5 Bl/BY IJWNEI tiago. Mesa Del Mar location with lots or 851-9100, ~148
t r e e s 3 + d e n 1201 DOW ...
downstairs and 2 bdrms. llVINE TBIACE 10 "' upsta irs. Very attrac-CORONA DEL MAR No qualirying. Highly· · r· · upgraded 4 bdrm, coun· live creative 111anc111g try kit , 00 Ice lot. Call S320 000 X-lge master bdrm w . 17141 673-4400 garden & Crplc. lge ~7-2819,owner/ugt
UIJIU .. 2121 custom ktt . Qt'n , SIX UN ITS Prime
1 h..ti.itfi,.1 ·''' ,, "'h1,.,1 library. LR, FR. pool, Eastside rental area
11,.,11 ~:''"'" Fu m yard, patio Unique ror S240,000 Owner f111anc· larger ram1ly Ocean mg. Dev111 & Co 642·6368
side or hwy . Near So. Coast Terrace 3 br. 2
beaches lmmed. occ ba condo for sale by
S495 .000. Owner can owner. SU:~.000 Call ror
carry. By appt, 673-3745. details, 961"3652.
\ lh1 l'l"f'I "' ll.1rh1" lr1H•,1nw11t Co
OpenSun.l-S. LlT'L DOLL HOUSE·
~~~~~~!!!!!!!~ Unique 2 bedroom home. '!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!' r ~ Fe al u res fa m ii y room
Find out about the high· IEACH HOME with f1repl1ct'. Up·
earning real estate salts 3 bdrm. 2frplcs. Move in grades galore Prime
career opportunities for Sl0,000 lease/option location close to bake
w i t h TH E R E A L & $2500/mo. on '495.000 trail and park 1142,500.
ESTATERS. Licensing purchast.67~8589. make orfer! TARBELL.
school rees completely JASMM CUB REAL TORS. 979-2380
refundab~ to school. of Luxurious 3 bdrm. 3 --------your choice. Extens1.ve bath on the greenbelt. 3 HOUSES sales t.rainmg. For Ill· List is S370,000 BUT ·
formahoo, call 751~191 owner Is motivated • Call ON 1 LOT IDIMHI I.a.ct 10061 Carl, IOG Properties,
••••••••••••••••••••••• (213 1433·7493 o r EASTSIDI
NOCASH (213)434-4450 n.A..$179,900 TO OK Cot down Cute 3 -..,., BR 2 Ba couagt. trade POm STIHT CalllMS-11161
OK Desperate. $385,000. Pretty and private. 3
Ownr/agt.1-661·0693 bdrm, 2"1 ba . Great leltoe ,.... 1007 financing.548-1904
••••••••••••••••••••••• Co1ta M... 1024 PIU-..E •••••••••••••••••••••••
COMM'l CO.NB
r,; bk>ck to Balboa
F er ry Great toe
$8$0,000.
675-1771
MESA. VllDE
ASSUMUlE
Nice 3 Bdrm 2 bath
home. New roor. near
schools and shops. Ask·
ing 1129,900. For more
informat io n. call
S40·1151
--~"~ HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
CoroH del M. I 022 l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
. OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY
/
***** lll+Pod+S,.
Harbor and Baker area
Xlnt neighborhood.
TaMS
with 135K oo-n. Owner
must sell Sl44.900 .
''"'"' , ..... . -· a\ill
lfOUCB>
C harm i ng wood
shingled townhome Sun
rilled kitchen overloob
cozy patio. 3 la rge
IH IA YSHO.ES
Charming country 3
Bdrm 3 Ba home,
private masttr suite
w /balcony, gate
guarded community
with 2 beautiful private
beaches. Excellent
owner fmanclng makes
this a great buy at
S349.SOO.
LIQUIDATION SALE
BAYFRONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Npt Hats duplex. 3 Br 2 434 IEGOHIA. Ba + new 2 Br 2 Ba
t\1;t·tlA•.>lftt: AUlu. \ttJ•tf"tl
AUTOS, IMPORTCD
\,f'M'r•J , .. ,. Horr.;u
'""' \u.tm 11.,.1,,,
llll•
l'..,Wt
""'" l>•bYll
f tHttl l
t'141 1 ......
J.a,;i.i•I
.lt!tl-... 'n ,._.,,nw""'-'"•" .. ,.,, .. ""''.-,It .. Mt~n, "" llGll Upp!
t'Mh''t4
P"1lt C"i.1t P~t,hv K¥1U~l1
"41tl,Mw\•'t
K'"'' :1 .. i.
StilNrv r .....
rl•••lll' \ulb••.:•11 \vho
AIJIS, MEW . ,,......,-,.,
UTIS. USH
.... -· bdrms ph• sewing room
~::! too. Only 1100,000. call '''" @ .~ .. ,;,,
Wih
Yil • -~"'' ltlU
D.M. W..W llty
76o.otJS '"' ,,,-;r. ......
:11.&I r.:i.. ...
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631·6990
ir.-. 1--------v;u
IRYIMI SHAIPtE
Pin sharp 4 Bdrm, ram
rm. gourmet kilchen,
atrium, best Irvine toca·
tion. Drastic reduc:Uon.
$205,000.
»iU
~j· f'ifj ., ..
vtlll y;~ mo •a: •"-' Wl\:l 'lllU ,,,..,
m11 lfirl
....
HAHOlllOGE
Award wlnniqg
."Jodelle" estate home .
lat reule offering on
thil exquisitely appoint-
ed t owohome with ,
mHtive view of bay,
ocean, coulline Ii night
Uchu. Nbw1reduced to
$731,000.
• I : ' • .\ \
' ~ ' ·. . . ..
RCliylorCo
lecll lw DIWlt
Lovely 3 Bcfnn2 lfa wit h
new P'rench country
kitchen and 1.-cl brick
exterior. Localed In the heart ot Newport'• up-
per bay. overlookin• couotry ctllb. Priced at
only 1187.500 wtth ex·
-------• ~llent fllwldn• anl'-· ' ble. c.o 7)1.Jlll
<::. "
_,..., ' 'I I
OMTHllAT
S.ndy beach In front.
pier end slip. Lu•• lff'o r•c~. ,,.., lidt yard
wllb ,,., lJn.-CW." I --------;
8dnn or 2 Bdna IOd den IMHSTOl'S witb new kltehu. .,.HT
Be.atJful'1clittllW. AJ1ume '",.. loan or 64J.1200 M nuactna avall•b&e
BALBOA IS. CAPE COO
Thh It• ...... He. Capt Cod,......
by cltcorator ............ tkM4
91011, brlcll Hd b••••· Totolly
c.OCM dlalhd wlffl luwlw -lllfft• •a•""* tW1 4 bed. f-.na 2,..... + .,. vu 1.. • q•l•t Uttte isleld
1oat1oa. TIHp tor 2 ...._ sees.ooo
'"· '73-6900.
OOEAN BLVD. VU-4M
~Hht stntt w/nt.te D 9'••••
7Sft. frHtOft, 2 ltfel loh H4 i:' atlc YU .t oc .. & ""1· lmrtr
wporl rtthl .. H w /flM (.... '
.. el}ty Of ltJtOH doys -WOOd ,........ .. ..... ,. .. .... , .....
Sl,310,000. Ul0 t400.
INl•BmJSIU TIS••· ll1NIJ UISDmslft ~NIT.
.. ll14-4UTI
Hm.Tll11111Tm.
IPD • •Y 114 PJ., llll ..
m4ClllEM
YOUI TOIS • CASll ISClllT
c.1 • • •n.m1 "•• llRJ .... HEMS
CL S I t II R AYR AT G'N TH 0 G
S Y A K S A L E l P l 0 N 0 Y S E C
L E P L V If Y S E E M M P G £ I R A
AIYCISP OWPARAMMNTA
E W P A S V J R L P R C E A R M I S
N Q A 0 0 H U 0 R E A M S A P A E R
I U P V l R A R E S R Y 0 0 If S N A 0
I L M L W G E P R D M D R R I D l C S
U t A E E M P 0 A R 1 V E L S R A P A
Q Y 2 E Y E S M If l II R R 0 E R R I S
SOlHPAOTLATARRAGOlfM
YPTSXMSAMGIRAWPtOTY
Y R A M E S 0 R 0 A E R A E Y R C A 0
2 A If P H II G R G L E Y 0 I T P M C I
IRAlSTl~L LLOCLHLPO
Elegant new 4 Br Vic· Terms, AJTO or con· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lorian pa rtial vu . tract S275,000. 64~7400-=
ownt/contraclor just """'Own~'"'"r'-. ------• ZIOO sq.fl EXECUTIVE ,...., HOME . great area completing . ..,,s,ooo. across from park and
CAMEOSHOllS C~-.. Wimbledon Village. 4
UICUTIVEHOMI --'"""" BR 3 Ba. 2 bonus rms 4
Harbor and ocean view. Sharp 3 Bdrm, 5 years fplc's •11 uP(tades Xlnt o r 1 m at I c p 0 0 I & new, large open kitchen, tow int. wumable loans
landscape. 3 BR 4\'J ba. lovely atrium,earthtone w/S70,000 down. Blue
S850,000. carpets. Asking 1134,900. Chip Propertjea, 11$7-2040
46UCAMDEN CallS40.11.Sl -------• OPEN SUNDAY l·S MISA WIST ~~~ Weha;~oew 2
IEAl ESTATl 644·6397 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f bdrm condol left from
1139,000 lo 1117,000. Call
now! Lu.ak HVHll 3 BR, ram
rm, llO deg ocean • b•y
vu. Quiet cul de sic.
SaH.500. Ownr/agt.
5'5-3127
IYOWtia
4bdnn, 2ba, PoOI. Jae
Meu del Mar area
I 160 I 000. 5i56-7271
'::' ~\\4llA-4i,~S· : ..... lilr QAT I. POUM-----
•
.............. ti the ... ~ ... ~ ................ _.
TNI M I "-now 1\11 ttle
""" llllUMll Jab !'ft ...., ,_., of. He '""""9 new
Rt ·1ll1! 11 <}i°1-> f~\ ·. tlrv
t I ' : • I • ) I ' ~ I
,, ... '"'" ,, ....... ,
'°' Ca.ifted Ad ACl1<»1
~ PETE
' BARRFT r RtAl Tr
1t only 1%Wi. A kl< oC ...... bdrm 2 be. Only
lltt,tOt. Call now nsm.
f~O..UW.u
ACTION Cll •
A MILY NM ..... ....... Cal• ~ .... 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~·1 'A L LSTA lE ~ • .... ,_.will Dlil.r UAL TOM ~·-·
----.. Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOTtrhur1d1v. Augu1t 13, 1981
Recycling:
'serioua'
WOODBURY, N.J .
<AP> Three realdenta
of thl1 southern New
Jersey communJty have
bten fined Sl 15 each
because their garb11e
wasn't up to s nuff.
Judge John S. Holston
Jr. said he lmpoeed the
fines because. he wants
residents to take the
community's recycllntr
ordinance seriously.
Herbe rt Hood, clty
superintendent of public
works, testified at the
hearing that all three of
the residents had re·
cei ved warnings after
inspectors round glass
and other recyclable
mate rial s in their
garbage. The local law
requires that aluminum,
o the r metals, paper, and
glass be separated and
put out for a special col-
lection.
-
ltOTIC• Of' l ... CIAL MIHI ... NOTICE IS HERllY OIVl!N INI
..,.,.. will .... Sclec .. 1 ..... 1 ... of ...
eo."' ott Olrec*• ol '"' C•t.a MeM iMllMy Olttrlet .i 71» 11.m., ~ 20, 1"1, 111 Ille "Int ,._ C~e
R_,, If IN Coet.a Meu Civic Celllff,
11 "lllr °'1w, C•te MeM, C•llforlll•, "OR THI! "0LLOWING PVRPOSI: SETTING A TAX RATE TO '1AY
THI! PIUHCIPAL ANO INTUH:ST
OH IONOS ISSUED IV Tl41 DISTRICT, ANO ADOPTION 0, THI! 1"1421'1$CAL VllAlt 8UOGET, c:.au-.. s.i..11.,.,
Ol9Crlct l'lorlrw T. Relehle
Clettt ol t11e Ol~rkt l'\otll~ Qr ..... COHI Deily Piiot. Awe IJ. 1"1
1 ~
• ti lt'tgot
• h•ftdlet
• YOU'ii grab aule
• faster in e Dally Pilot e classlfled e ads. C:.11
• 642·5671
PU8LIC NOTtC• NS7"'7
NOTICE 11 hereby Mrv.d 1 ... 1 l... "CTITIOUS 8UllNIESS
Cout Community Col .... Dl1trlcl, NAM• ST ATl!}llUIT
ll70 Adatna A-, C:.U MeM, CA Tiie IOllOWlr19 perSGf! Is OOlng bull· '2•». ect1119 In th c•peclty •• Leeo neu •-=
AgellCy .... C.....0 '°be pr ......... .,. CALWEST GROYP, 2717' CemlllO
•nvll'Ofll'Nftt.af lmclecl '"""' -dreft C-s>lstrtllO, Wte 201, Le-Ni9ue1, rePOrt rel•tl"V lo -tlble e11v1r-CA .,.,1.
"'•ntel lmpectt -rete4 by COii· RICHARD D. BROOKS, l:JO c.i1e Urud!ftt e •ooo _,.. foot. low-Plume. s.n Clemente, CA '2101. ttory, edmlnl1tretlo11 <•111••. Tllh~lscOllductedby.,,111. ~.,... ,.......,.., NV9CI ""'"" dlvlduel. er••t. lendlc-'no. Metwelkt, or-lll<Nnl D. 1.-,
1110 lot CH'•I-""""""-All Ille Tiiis ~119meftt Wiii flied wllll the
•i.v. Is IO Yll• pi.c. °" • a.m ecre co1111ty a-"' 0r.,. C001nty Oii JUiy parc.i of ,...., lo<Al'8d Oii .... _.._ "· '" 1. cpr11er of W••n•r Ave1111e •11d
NewNpe St.wt Int ... City of,_...., Vellrt. "'""' Publl""4 er.,... Coetl Delly Piiot,
July JO,~•. 13, 20, net ~1 T"9 c9rtlft -1~1 ln\ttoect r•
_, ............. lot puOll( "''"''*' ------------'" Ille Office ol P9trslu1 FecllltlH Pl ......... c:-t ~,., Col ....
Dltlrlc1. Tr.iter "klllty, 1110 ~ PllUC tlTIE
A ........ C.u Mew, CA '262' -!tie 'ICTITIOUS 8USINIESS C-y Oil Or .... lllw•ry locetM et NAME ITATIMENT
11"5 LOI"'-· l"-t.ln Valley, CA Th• fOllOWlllQ --Is dolft9 bull· 9210I.
Dr. N«m4111 E. WebGn s.c.....,.,,
8oerde1Trv .... t
CeestComtnUlllh Colle99 Ol&trkt o ............... ttel.
Pullllltled OrMge CMtt Delly Pllol, AUQ. IJ, 1"1 ,." .. '
"ICTITIOUI 8 USINIS.S
NAMalTATaM•NT The fOllowlllQ _ _, It clol110 bull· neuu.
n•ss as,
LAK E "OllEST DENTAL
CENTER, U.22 Tr•lluco, Lnt "ornt, CAtUlO.
G ... y P. JOllH, JIU P•clflc .,, CotleAMu, CA92W.
Tl•I• buslnfts Is conducted by .., In· dlvldulll,
Gery P. Jonn
Thlt 'tel-I WH filed with IN Co11nty Cl-of Or•11ge COllnly Oii Aug. S, 1'11.
"'"Ill Publltlwd er.,. Co1ul D•lly Piiot,
Auo. .. IJ, 20, "· '"' 3.SH-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
R X ·A E H A I I L I TA T I D N "CTITIOUS BUSlltlES.S EXPERTS, Slll Hell Ave11 .. , HYlll· NAME STATIMIENT
lftQIOll 8Hch. CA t2Mt. Th• foll I ~ r dol"" CLYDINE C. 5TEIEVES, S111 H•ll butlttess•:" "9 ~·'°"• • e . ..,.
" ....... HuntlllQlon .. eel\, CA '2Mt. I CONTRACTORS SPA .. SAUNA
d,!1':,.. _,... 1' cOllducte4 by .,. 1"' division "' 0.ltftler Sid lllC., 'n N~
· Clydlrw c. 5tffvH Et4>1e"*"t, <>Anoe. C.llloflll• t3'69 Tlllt au...,_t wes fifed with IN Delmtw Lid. lllC., c.111,_.., 472 ... ortll &pl....,. 0r-.. CA n... COVllty CIHk Of Orenge COllnty Oii Tiii• Mlllfft •• c-ct..i by •
All9. J, 1''1. "l61'll COf'OOfetlOll
PUCllllfltd er.,... Coot Delly Piiot. 0.lmler Lid, lllC. s. Woff,
4119. '·II, 20, Z7, '"' Ull .. 1 ~h~r~I wu fifed wllll Ille
Co1111ty Clef'll o1 0r-. eo....ty. JUiy JI, 1 .. 1.
---~---------! ... ...,. Puoit-er.,. Coest Delly Piiot,
July n , '°·Awe.•· ll, '"' nu .. 1. , rtHCI llOTHllS
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main St
Huntington Beaoh
536·6539
P4ClftC Y•W
MIMOllA'-PAii
Cemetery Mortuaty
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pacific \/1ew Drive
Newp0rt Bea.ch
644-2700
MICOIMCIC MOITUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Htt11
768-0933
DEA TH NOTICES
BURTON
ALFREt> B URTON,
passed away on August 8.
1981. He is survived by his
wire Alice, daughters Ruth
McQuade and Prudence
WllUams, son John Burton
o f Westminste r , Ca., 7
grandchildren and 2 great-
grandchlldren. Services wiU
be held on Friday. August
14, U181 at l :OOPM at the
11 San Juan Capistrano
' ..e5·1776
Harbor Lawn Memorial
C hapel with Rev. Aaron
BuhJer o( the H11rbor Trinity
Baptist Church of Costa
Mesa otnclatlne. Interment
services Immediately lollow-
1 ng. Services under the
direction or Harbor Lawn·
Mount Olive Mortutry of
; HAllQI LAWK-NT. OUYI
Mortuary • c.,,..tory
Cr•"18tOry
1625 Gisler Ava .
Costa Mesa. ~5554.
I•
H 1,
I
'I•
• 1:
Cotta Meu
~5554
MEalJLL
MAXINE OELWEfN
MER RILL resident of
FountaJn vailey, Ca. Paased
away on August it. 1981.
Born April ao. 1~. ln L<MI
Angela, Ce. Survived by
her dauehter Chri1\lne MM"
rlU Cl"QWtil of Aua..im, Ce ..
brother Rkbard John Mtr•
rlll ol Socauel Ce .. and a •I•·
ter Ina A. Otlw.tn. Ftmera!
1 1n•lct1 wlll be beJd on
ul"Nay, Alllutt U, 1911 at i!i 4·00PM at Paclllt' Vl•w
.Clliuuy Claapel ........
Alt:1'hciftt' Vltw Mtmori•I
Partc, Newport Be.ch. Ca ••
Paclflc ·Vlew M6rtuary ldittdon
Nm,1 .. ,.1 PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
"" ~ " " •-Nl-7ml ~ '9CTITt............ Nl-7tt1J ·-· ............
.,...tTAft41M11tT • o••T~ 0 , IUNa10.couno. NOTICE OF OEATH OF •cmao.uwTHrlALI ,,. .......,. ..,_it~...... NOTIC8 0..--uu~.,.., GENE L . LETTS, •k• °" ....,.... "· 1te1 .. 11 • ..,,,.
__ , JEANNE •• KIS KO -GEN& LETTS, aka G .L . l'llUT AllURl(AN TITLI AOLCIWIOOOLAHOlll'AURVICI, ANO 0, PETITIOH TO HOHTO---~... L ET Ts .. N 0 0 F INIUlllAHCI CIOMPAH\' .. TrvMN, ~ ee-Clf'ci., """'""'"' 8e«ll, ADMINISTER ESTATE CMAMMOll'NMM "' .,. awe-Tru. ... ., "*"'"'"
-CAM'9UMNaa.-.at PETIT I ON T O AD · Tt11•1",t11Nt c.,.t.tn 0-.ef T""" 0.IM wu...,, .. c:. ..... C
1
"
19
• NO.A ·10tla5. 111u.---.... ~·-.. 111 MINISTER ESTATE NO. HHlll .. .., t<ATHIRIN OAVLI .._..,,.._ 8Mdl. CA. T 0 a I I h t I Y S , re JANA JAHCAJI ICOTT • Mlw, & 1-COCHRAN, 111 -rlecl ......,. 6
... .,'~.._. 1
' ~ ''
1111
.,.. b•ntflc:rarlts, creditors ~ SMA"OH MA1u1 ""'f"AM. • "'" """· o•R•t.o • 1tAv0t • .,. -r'"
.. ---'J• Of fflelller, .,., IA8RINA J•N• T 0 • I I h • I r s , -. -·---........ u, , ... o.-Mw11-and contl~t crwu ~ors ,...1,.N.wa.. .. ,._ b t neflclerlas, c reditors 1"''"~-,.., 11 ... '"....., 1110t. Tlllt .. .._. w• 111• wllll ... Jtanne e . KIUko and .IANA JANIAN ICOTT .,,. .. .. OfllCMI It • Ot c_,, Clef• .. °'..._. c-•.., persons who m•i be ..... ~ ... ., ... ,,...1,,,.,.,.,,.,...,,G andeontl~"tcrtdklt~!of =:1y, c:eu•tn1Hi, :;:..::_.r:
.....
11
• .... h I I .. sted I t ........ I .. 111 ..... -' lw Ill ...... ... ,,,. L. ~ S, a a vwne IMI cet..i11 "°41u .. Oeleult •110 .. .... ot erw se n re ,,. ... 1,.,... ..... """"'IMI'--. Letts, •k• G .L. Lttts Ind lltetlell .. Sell ,...,~ rec;w..., ....._, 0r-. c..11 o.ir, "
1
... ; w lll and/or estate: from JAHAJAN"'N kOn t•JANA P•rtona who· mar, be Ar"" 1•1 .. 1,.ll\lmellt 11e • ..,., "' •we '" •·"·Seti r. ''" ..,. A petition has been fifed JAN UN &TATHAM ..., IAtRINA l .. ___ ... 1 •-t..,, t .. -... 11 1..oe. ,. .. , .. ,. 01 Ofll(le1
111"'711 P'*'"'" 01.,... C.-11 o.11r "tet. •ua. .; u. lO, 21. "" ., .. ,
G I JINI "'"I"" •• IA8RIHA JINI 0 ,...,...,, .. n .... rt•.., n , ... RKWOU•hllel C8Ullt11.wllt "'*"-by Kathleen •rnuy n STATHAM. u ,, •• .,.,.., INt will and/or tst.t.: 1111t._ '° ..ic1 o..41 Of Truu .. 11 ••
the Superior Cou-t of •" .....-1,........ 1n ,,.. ~ A Pttltlon has bffn flled ... 11, _,1.,,., , • ..., 1ewi111-y AM ....
ttortc•0trT•un1•·•u&.e &ll'llO.---T.S,M .. Tll-1
Ora~ County req~tlno ~...., .....,.. 1111• ~ Ill b v R L tt I t-.. lfl• Uni ... , ....... ol •-r~·~ ..... t t th' G ..... °'",.... .... I .. ,.. CMt Clllter y trna . e $ n ... !Min •fllf-. to"'"'~ TIU. ha a een arn Y ...., 0r1~ -..11tiee "'-· c:e1tl9'111•, 111 Superior Court Of Ora"9f 111t11r•11e• COM""' 1out•e1 •t 11• eppolnted as per~onal ..... ......, •. ,.,, •• 11:• e'<iecll County requesting that l!eat "'f"' '""" 1111,,. '""-' s.ni.
"ICTITIOUI 81111••11 NAMa ITATaMl•T
'1'"9 toflOWlno --It d9lllt Outl· " ..... Oft .....,..., I. Itel, el ti :00 A.M., ..... ·--~~. eJ tuly ~ TrwlM uneler elld
-Wini .. DIM llf Tr11tl recor..._ Ji.o ly JJ. t•, h lnp NO. t"2t. Ill ._ 11'1S, fll"ll9 ~ et Otf~l.•1 lte(Ortt Ill
lfle ~ Oil Ille C-IY ltKOf'Cltr Oil Oren .. Cet111ly, Cellfor11l1, WILL
IELL AT PU8LIC AU CTION TO HIOHl!ST 11001!11 "011 CAIH,
CASHllElt'S CHl!CK 0 11 Cl!RTll'llO CHECK IPIYMle •I time of , ... Ill
l•wflll .._,. ott Ole Ulllted Ste'"I et the s.utll f,_ •nt•enc• .. Ille o~ or.,... C:.-ty c..un ...... IOc•ttCI ...
IN DI 11*11 ftl Wotl Setli.t Alie 81wt.
lfertNffy Wtst "' "'""· $allte AM, Cell..,,_.., ell rltfll, lltle elld lllt•""'
repres entative to Id· .. "' ..... """n1111rewiwcevw.1f Vtrna R Ltlts be appoint· AM,C.11,.,,,...e11"'9trleh\.11t1e11M1 minister the estafe Of 111y ~ ....... ""Y Ml4I 111tllllt11 lor ' tnltretl<Mftyedtou11ct-11e1dw tt E KI k f r t ~ ef -...,.. 1194 M ll'MtM. td at personal reprettf'I• under Miid DMd Of Trutt In the t1r0ptr Jeanne · 52 o
0
,.os
1
111. ,.,.._.,..,... "* • ~"' tt1i. tatlve to •dmlnlster the •• •llu•wct 111 .. ,d c-111 ..,. , .....
N f WP ORT C INtElt PfllOll'EllTll!S, $00 NewjlO#t c:e11t.ar Drive. 54•. 200, N-pol"t e..cJI, CA
tlMO :~~t ~~~~ls~';:u1cC; ~.:':" o':1r;-;1f~ ":.::!-::' !~ Htar. of GeM L. Letts, ~.'~~~. •
of Estates Act). The petl· 1911eref dfQMtllll, "*i.... 111 ""' aka Gene Letts, •kfl G .L. u1111 11. con.,111110 of ot1e 111 tlon Is set for heari•"' In ce1111t11 •...,.. -.t• • -* '-Letts, Costa Mesa, Ca Cun· etn,.o 8llcl '""•o a1 • .,..,..,, .. •'• Q-llthlt ._ • ..,.., ...._ ,.Y .. der the Independent Ad· thow11 end dncrlMd lfl ,,.. co11
Jollll Keith Y011k•"· tilt ll'ert Wllfflet Piece, NlrwpOt'I ... ,,, \.A
""° Tiii\ ..,..,..., " c.....,.ted ,., .,. Ill dM""411
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic ...,,..Ille OMW.My11, 1•1 ministration of Estates dom11111•m ,,.,. for N•w110rt G1a11 Center Drive West $ant• ....... N, "'-T-11 ....... recordM Allril J, 1t7' 111 , .. ,..... Act). The petition IS set for Mok IMJ,pegtt..atotlt ltKIWlveof Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep-...,_c-hearing In Dept. No. 3 aj oi11c1•1 11ecorcK ot 0••1199 ,_,,,
JOllnK. v.....,-1
TlllJ --· w• llled wltfl l~ COIJMJ Otr11 ol Or.,..a c-ty Oii JIAY
tember 2, 1981at9:30 A .M . T"OMASO.t.UMSOOH 700 crvlc Center Drive C.UflWllle .
IF YOU OBJECT_, the ===--c...,... West, Santa Ana, Ca 92701 ::~~~ ,,_., 1111wes1 "',..
granting of the pett:lon, 0 1411s,,_,. on September 2, 1981 at ''"'P'• '""""' •• • .. ...,,, '" '°"'"""' you Should e ither a ar "'*'.,.. 0r.,.. eo.M 1>e11, ....... 9 . 30 a m 111 .,.. 1o ell "' 11'9 r.., ..,_,,,,, 111-
1, '"'· ...... ,.
P\11111 ..... Ol'llnQe Coetl Deity ll'U~.
A119 •. tJ. IO, V. tte1 UV.et
CM ... YM ....... -... Id" II -Miid 0... .. TJIAI ••to_. untlv'-t Ollt Mii l11l•••U In the fe110.1,.. d .. etllled property
et the hearing and late Jlllyta.•.4"'·'-'I.'"' •tt41. "1t y'ou' OBJECT to the cludl119 wltlloulllmlletlellltlec-011 "CTIT10U18USt ... SS bj tl fll •reea ...,llled 111 Ille dkWlrltl8'1 r• NAMI ITATIMC•T your o ec ons or e •------------grantlngofthepetitlon, you ferrM 1011e1ow111 '"°''"Tree•,.,, r ... '"''°""'"O ,__,is..,......,. written objections wilt\ the PVBUC NOTICE should either appear at the .. thown.,, • mep flled 111 11ooo11 ""· neu .. . A L-"old '"'-' '" -··' Lot ft Tt1'1 6111, 111 t"' City ti Newport .. Kh, Cownty of Or.,.._, St•t. Of C.llforlll•. H per m• ,.. corded Ill ._ m. P~ U to JJ, ltt-cl11tl ... MIK.otle-s Mepa, IJI '"'of· Ike of Ille Couflty ltK-r of Mid
COUrt before the t\ffrlng, --------h I nd t t ob-IN9H 47 -·of mlscell--"'•Pt L P O"FICE SERVICES, lllS Your annaaranct mav be NOTIC•Oll'TltUITl•'llAL• ear ng a Sae your 111 Ille office of'"' Or-COUllty Perkvl-Clr ,C.toMeM,CA'21W.
........ -• ,.._ ..._ .,.. Jec tlons or file written ob-R•coNter. Mine L.Ou1 .. H._, •• Per11v1ew In person or by your at-NOTICI 11 HER••" 01vl!N, ,,... jectlons with the court E•cetit"'9 ""r•frorn U111t11 '"'°"9h cir .. eo.u. Ma., CA nw.
'°""'"·
tortley. on W•d,...,, """" .. a., '"'·et t:oo before the hearing. Your ,. 111e1ut1w, H ,,_,,on 111e Pl•n. This bW11e1• Lt cOllducted by M 111. I F Y 0 U A R ~ A e'clocti e.J11. of Mid My, 111 IN office b I Eaupe!ftt lllerelrom, •II miner•••. dlvlou... ~ of ltl!AL ISTATI SICUll lTllES appearance may e n oll,a-t,petro1eum,ot11er11yc1rocerbon MIMLOOll .. Hegan C REDITOR or a oont-SlltVICI, touted •I 202t North person or by your at· ... bltellCft-•llUftde<'groundweter Thh Itel-I We$ flled wit/I ti. TNlltor or record owner· RONALD
L. IARTHOLOMEW •nd PHYLLIS A. 8ARTHOU)MEW.
The 11.-.-. ... •114 Miier com-"'°" diNIQnetlon, If .,..,, ol ,,,. r .. 1
property dHcrllltod •llow It PY,_,., to be: m Tiiier W•Y. Coron.. •• MM,
CelllomMI '21615.
In gent creditor of th\ de-•r-wey, 161tte 20a, 111"" City o11o111. torney 111 •• unc1er or Which mey be produod count• c1 ... 11 of Orange COU11ty °"
r...O t flle our r-~ ... .... Si.ta "' . E from .. ,d lot -th UllCMrll••. plene A110 • 1'11 cea-.., you mus ~ •• ~::;,.1;,'T~i Oe~OIETOWN I f y 0 u A R A p.lr•ll•I lo -uo feet below I.lie Pt•· . . f't671U
clalm with the court or RECONVEYANCI CO AP.,. CREDITOR or a cont· Mnt1urf.teeolMldlottort11tp1Hpote Pub4IWdOre11ge c ... stDellyPllot,
Tiie Ulldenlgnecl TruslM dlKlel"'t •ny llelllllty lor My l11eorrec:l11Ht ol
Ille 1tNet eddrMs encl Olller Coml'llOll *" ... 'lotl. II ... Y. INwll Mrel11.
present it tQ the perinal celllornle cor00t•ll011, ti duly •P· inQent Creditor Of the d&-of protPKllno for, l"' Uplor1t1on, cM· A11g. 6, 13, JO, J1, 19'1 )4tt.l1
r epresentative appol ted 110l11t" Tru.t• Ullder end 11Ur-t to ,__. st fll our we1o0me111, Pf'Odl.>cllon, ntr•<ll011 e11d ------------b he rt Ith I the ...-r °' Mte conler,..., 111 thet cer-Cea'""', YOU mu e Y teklno 01 .. Id ml11ere11, 011, OH. MUC lilllnV'r: y t COU W n OUr telll OHCI ol Trust .. t cut•d lly Claim With the COUrt Or petroleum, ollwr hydrocerlloll tub-"""'"-<
monthc; from the date of GEOROll L VAllltATO ANO ANITA present It to the per$C)nal st ... Ce\ -... ,,, from .. Id lot llY ------------
S.ld Mle wlll be m.cie, bul wlt'-1 cov-or werreMy, .. press Of' Im.
plled, J'eoetdf119 Utle, llOtMtMOll or .,..
cu,,.br•ncH, to P•Y th• 1111p•ld
bel..-ce ol IN llOM(ll toe-lly ukl
first Issuance of letters a s VARRATO,......._,.,,. wit• .. lolnt representative appofnted "'Hn• o1 m1ne1,, -"•· ci.ttk 1u or T,c. SAUE ., .. lded · Sectl 700 of tenentt, recorded Aueult 26, lteo, In . 01,,., •llUl-111 from "'rlect loc•·
prov '" on look 1J7l6 of OHk .. i ,._Ck of Mid by the court within four llon• °"""'°'"'no or rwtQNIOrtno •-110TtcE o" tNTENoao SALi! the Pro bate Code of County, II ..... 104, R•<orclet"'a months from the date of orlylnooutlldt ofl"9~rlblld ATP\llLICAUCTIONO ..
California. The time for 111ttrume111 Ho. 11m • ..,, '•°" o1 • first Issuance of letters as 101, 11 11tl110 1111dent_ 1,..1 .... _,.., ux 0E110.o REAL "'o"•nv
filing clalm s will not ex bruch or <1ef•11•t 111 pey1ne111 or ·ded I Sect' 700 f of tu<h ""-•••. oll, O.Ot, "''°"""'· PuBuc ... o r1cE 1s HEAE1v · · f th· performe110 ol Ille Olllloet1011t PrOVI n ion O otll•r llydroc•rbon sutKt•nc•• elld GI 'VE N th•t on the J11d d•y of Deed "' TrvJt, ·-"· m. IU to. 1,.. C IUClll!o .. IWOVlo.d In Mid llOI• ( t), -
v---.. If....,, -'"' lerms ol wld 0..0 el Ttw(, ..... Che1"901 -e•·
--ef ... Trwt• -ol the trusts u-•• ..,,...,u1c1 Oeec1o1 Tr.,.1.
ptre prior to our mon s N<u•ec1~.l11<IUdintllwltwM<h the Probate C o de of w•t•t.•ue11or111•b0ve.1he11,,.,,."° S.pt•m-. 1,.1, •t IM ....., of
10
,
00 frO(T'I the date of the hear-Of' Clef*'"· Natlct of """"" ... ,.._ California. The time for right .. -.. -!tie ... riot• or MY o'CIOCll AM. ol lhel CS.y, ill -office
. t' eel bo ~· ...... , .. ltet 111 .._.. 1-12 of I portlo11 '"'••ol above .. ,d Pl•11• f 1~-T c~1 ·-T~ .. ~·~ ol --mg no IC a Ve. cor...,. ..._, • - -fllln"' Claims Wli not ex-P•r•ll•I --·~ l•I ~1-'"'pre· o ·-•• -«-· ' -··· v-you MAY EXAMJ NE Olflclel llecotW of Ml4 Coullty, •I • -•--C00111ly Of 0r.,.. SUila of Catllorllle Hoe 1w , Rec.orW't 1111~ Ne. pire prior to four months sent surtec:e ot ti. w ld iot for..,, 111• und.,Jlgned. R08EltT L the fife kept by the court. '271, WILL Sl!LL AT PUILIC AUC· from the date of the hear· ---1-ver ... rewrvtd '" '"' Cl TAO .... -Tu COlleclDr·T•-· If You are Interested In the TION TO THE HIGHEST 81001111 I noticed bo dud from l11vHIOr\ rtel Ul•te of H id c-tyol Ore1>9t. ln-wenc• Tiie btrwflel.vy u,,...r s.ict Oeed of
Tr11tt heretofore el!ecuted e11d •·
11Wrecl to lM ~ e wrlltoll
DeclerMlort ol Def<tUll Md o.m.,,.,
for S.te. •llCI • wrllt•11 Nolle• ol
Def-I end El«llon lo S.11 to be r. corOed 111 IN c-y _,.. '"' rtlll
''-"" I• loc•led. T,.... ... ., ,..,,.,
CDllduttlflt Mle, TITLE INWllANCE AND TRUST COMPANY, IOO N. /Mill
Streel, s.nte .OU... C.llforllle '2101, 111•1 ~J020 JOYCE WILLIAMS
I ng a ve. . StrvltH •• llmlted, • C•lllor11I• ~--estate, vou may file a re-:,<>~.;.::,"~.~~;=.·~~II~ YOU MA y Ex AM IN E Limited P-.1,.rtl\lp, •«Of'dtd Apr II ~:.:·;.:.: :z..:.~!!" :t'::':':::
quest with the court to re-.. ,., 111 rltltl. 11ue .,... '"'.,."' ,_ the me kept by the court. 11. ,.., 111 '** m11. -1uJ of 01 c.111ern1e. cs.teG J._ n . ,..,, .,,.,
c e lve special notice of the "''d 11y IL • Tt'\llUe. 1118fld10 thet ,... If re · terested · n the 11<1•• AKOr'dt 11-.1"9 -"°directed "" 11w &oerd
· t of e ta•-assets •• Pt'OllfftY t1twite 111 Mid County -you a '" f 'I 1 """c•L>: of s""rv•--• o1 .,,. Mid"°"""' of 1nven Ory S "" Sl•te, dnctlbtda followt. estate, VOU may I e a re-E•Um•nls lor ecuu. lngrut, Orange, int_, to sell. will offer for and of the petitions, ac· Lot 1u o1 Trect No. ""· city ot quest with the court to re-•or•u, tneroeclwnfft1, '-'· mel11· .. , ......... , ., "'°"'-..., 01v111on 1
c o u n ts a n d re Po r t s Newport lie.ell, c-tty of O•Mge, celve s,_,.ial notice of the t•nM1U, Clr•lft99e, use • ..,,..,meni, •• Pert '· °'""""' 1 01 "'* Rn•,.... -
• I Sect" 1200 s ol r~O£..~. --,. • _.. ~1r, -oc .... --· •• st.o..n In l• •ti·-c~ In -·e·· ~re••• •I d escribed n ion <~ '"I:,;;';;·.:,.:-:, 'i.21 111: 1nv~ntory of estate assets th. cOfldotNnlum p1en -•.c:rl-Pu"aLiC' A;;cT•ON,
101
,,.""hi;...s1 bi.,.
of the Californ ia Probate ctualve "'MMe.II--~. In 111e and of the petitions, ac· '"th• decleretJ011 of cov-t•. c-1· d•• 10, cw. 1n 1ew1u1 ,,,.,.,.., °' ,,,. 0.te: "ueust 4, Itel. Tiiie lnturMIC.e
end T rut I '°""*'' es Mid T 'Vil ...
Code. office ol ,,,. c_., recO<der of ~d c 0 u n ts and rep 0 rt s lion\ .,,., rntrlcllon• for N•wPOrt Unit..i Sl•tes, or lor M90tlebl• -··
county. . -d 1...,,,. • Sect' 1200 GI.., Towni-,, ••uro.d April l, the ru1 pr_.-ty 11tueteo In IM c-. The tlr ... --or ocher conwno11 escr ,,,.,.._ IO IOn 1'7' In -1l0t2, -MS ol Ottlclel ty of Orenge, St.le of C.lllornla, •nd KLEIN & CUTLER, At·
torneys at L:aw, by: Leslie
K leln, 9920 La Cienega
Blvd., Ste. 631, Inglewood,
Ci. 90301 ; tel: 213/641·5800
~•Wllllems Aut.horlred Sl.-.lurt
detlONtlon, 11 ....,, o1 -r•• p,.,.r. of the California Probate Aec0<C1S o1 <>renoe COU111y, C•llforn.I• du<rlbed •• 1o11e>wi, 1o •It:
ty IMnt.......,. Otten"-' II 11Ur~.,, COde l'AlllCIL •: l'lt«H'tr•TY LOCATIO IN lo be: ..... Cor11Mld Drive, eor-•• 8 Id M d k i Eacluslve --""~"-·to Pub11"'8d 0r.,,.. , ..... Delly PllOI, Aug. IJ. 20, J7, 1'11 ~•.C.lltorllle. r gman, or n , P•rot•t8""2.t>ove,1oruw•fldoc. COSTAM•IACIT\'
·The.,,.,........., ,,.,..by d~l•lms Ste~meler, Gould & :upency tor P•tlo •nd tntrywey Tr1e1N .. ,_ u12 .. 1 •II 11•11411ty for ..,y lllCorrectneta 111 Sh• ro Inc. pur-•. CMllned .. r•ttrltted com· The N 3.80 II In Lot "-
R, I h rd Goukl m011 ., .. ) In'"' "decler•Uon". At)o dncrllled •s AP 11S.61J..OS Mid 1lrwt eddr-... °'"'r Commotl By: a. c a I f•· .1 ... 1 ...... ,_.or o•~, ,_ LHI Asseu. .. SwtntlMt Collslruc· PublllNcl Or-CCMISl Delly Piiot deilOfl•llon. ~ ·~ -... .,_ II c I
A119. n. 13, "· '"' >622 .. 1 S.ld Ml• Wiii ........ wit'-! WM• Attorney at aw aulon•tlon Of w lo pr-rty f) PWPO'I· :'1 ~" flC
r..,ty, ..__ ... l'"91fed, "99Mdl119 1904 Botu A enue •d to ... , 1525 BrvlnlNlrk L•ne. S.nl• " mum OCC•PlOOI• bid $100
tltt•. poueuloll, or e11<urneirenc ... i. Westminster, CA 92683 A'!-_,Hd•!~.u.;,:: .,!2~ wlt'-t cove ""~ltTY LOCAT•D IN NOTICll TOCONTlllACTOltS PllJC llTI( wtltl't llW prl11Ctpel ... ._. of "" Ttl (714) ""°461 --"UNTINOTCMUUCM CITY
CALLING flOtt 8101 Nol& M other Ollll_.tloft MCWed W : C n•nl or werrMty, ••PAH °" lrnplf..i, Th•I por of Ille SW... o1 Fte<llonel school ohtrtct: co As T COM-Mid o..ci o1 Trust, w1111 1111-1 -PUbllshed Orange oast es 10 title,_...$!°" or •11CurnbrM<r. Sec "· Twp ss.
11 11
w. sea,. M. c1esc
MUNITYCOLLEGE DISTRICT otllff tums es -•dltd 1"'rel11; p1.,. Dally Pilot, Aug. 13, 14, 20, 10 .. usfy the -Id 11<1t•11<• -on .. fol Beg •t llw most Nty corner
0
1 81d Dieodlne; J:OO o'clock p.m. ol WPtl•ICNI CCMl•TO" HWl llCes, If any, under 1"' term• 1981 3616-81 llw not• or notn tocur.c! by w ld Deed Tr "0•, 111 N Ml or U" E 111.50 ft 10 the Jntdeyp $etlttmbtt, 1"1 CALll'OttNIA, CCMINTV tflereof Mt lftl-on well ldlfen<ft, of Trutt, lo Wit ,1',22• 1•. PIU6 Ult
1
,,. beg ol • ,..,,.,.,.nl <LW'V• conce"t
Pl-ef Bid ltecetot OHke of 1"' O"OllMO• -pluafws.cllw9"entnpe11Wtof lollowtng Htlmei.o cost• ... .,... .. , w1., 11~v1119 • t.:liul o111761 ft·•
COHI <:onwnu111ty Coll ... OIJltkl. lnllleMelterol lly Hid DMd .. Trusl. The,.,.. publlc•llOll of lhh NOll<t OI S.lt E, tllSWly•IOSdcu,,,.111<v., ... 1re1 Purc"-"'9 ._..,.,Ms. MMIMI ,.,,.In, At"ns tlle Tr ...... Mt ef Ille truth c.-..teo PVBUC NOTICE •"4 UvMKn •t Ille 11,... ol Ille 111111•' /'"'•I to W1 '""'• be•ro N to. or .....
1310 ~ Ave., C:O.I• Mew, CA
111
• "4IPltut1 .. of •-t at Niki 0111'99tlo11, '"'"'°'"' "o''•"T•Eno· Jul• Jl
1
,.
1
.no•• of •• sr 1r • dlltence of 110 ,,. '2t2' ThomnM.~ tHSOllMIY estl...-ct ·-· cNr9" SVP•llOll C:OU•T 0" TH• STATI •
1
he ol Project l...,.ttbtlOll N-: GolOWI "orOlefloeof N•mt •nd .. .,.._of t!W Trvs ... , et IN O"CALl"«Ml•tA FIRST AMERICAN TITLE 1 10 1 b90 • rewrw c..-.e <-
WHl Oii._ lnl«lor St.al,...., ..... OltOSlt TOSftOW CAUH Um• Of 111111•1 !MH>llc•llOll ol lhl• .. o. TH• COUNTY Of' OltANGIE INSltAA~~E COMPANY, ~:·;:.:·:10 ... :.;~.:::~::.:~ ~:1:~i WI,,...,,, W•ll ProJec:t -ltM!d •IOU "<Ml CHMIOll O~ NAMa Notke, It Sofl,M.10. ,. Chrtc C:-Ort,.. ..... ~ • c.lllorll .. corpor•llOll, •11o1e o1 102 o · 11 .. e dislMlu of It 61 Piece"'-Mt Oii Ille: TM 81WOCk T ........ M. OIAmben !Wis "'" e O•led: Jiily n. ,., .... ~tftl AST RUST EE II I N 17 U' 1 .. w ' 90 ft M . P•r!Mtshlp. J>OO NewPOr1 llvd.. petition Ill 11111 c-t lor .. ormr ••• THE GEORGETOWN Plel11tlft: EOWA.AO H08ER -EVE BAUCE A BEASLEY . " • I ... IL lo
Newpwt ...... CA.,.., (fk*H911Cll) 1-1 .. pe(llJ-r to CMnge .... -ltECONVIYAHCE CORP., N08Ell AUU.0.ltedOflk•• u.. SEly line ol Id Tr ...,., Ill Nly •to
!71'1 '7Ml:JOO lro"' n.otn.t Mebry CMmbera lo •c.llfortlllecwporMtoll, Def-: PHILLIP DANIELS, LIN· tit £est FllU\Slrffl Ml SEly llne lolheptol f»9. NOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN !NI Tl\on\M ........ Petty. • T,,..... TON H. COLLI EA, DOROTHY E. sent.a Ane CA '2101 Also delcrtDtd •$AP ltl.S.~t
Ille -....._,.,.., Scl\ml Olltrlct of II It MrMtr ordered 11\ol ell --ly· 111!.ALESTATE COLLI EA. EARL GAAA, JA., OREL Tat. 111') s•n11 ~:~.A~ .Hl#llff191011 ...,_
Orenge Col.w*t. C.lltomle, ectlne 1ty t11r•r eslN Ill I"' n>Mt•r •for-Id-. SE.CURI Tl ES SERVICE, I' AR LI SS, SECURITY TITLE Pub11"'9cl 0r.,,.. c .. tt 0•11• Piiot, Mlt1l-eccept.eblOld$llO. •nd llltOVOh ltt 0o ... r111119 8Nrd, pe•r Wore ltlls c-1 111 [)epertmft e c.llfwllMI ec°"*"etlOll, INSUit ANGE COMPANY, e C.lllorllle July 10, Aug •. U, Itel JlJt .. 1 h •re In• I le r r efer red to e 1 No. l •t 100 CJvk Ce11ter Ori.,. WHI, lb....,. COl"llOf'•llcwl, -ell~· Uflkllown
"DISTRICT", will recel,,. • to, -S•nte Me, c.lllorlll•. Oii S.t. 2, Itel, By· DJ ~ clelml"t lllY i.g.1 or tQUlt.able rlQllt,
not let.ar Ulen ,,,. --•t.IM tlmt, el ID JO o'cloc• e.m., .,... then end Its~ • 1111•, ~. ,..., or 1111.arett In the pr~ M•ltd *' fw ,,,. ..,.,., o1 • c011trec1 ti.re -c-, If .,.Y tit.., heve, <SE.AU ,..ny deKl'llled In '"' ~1111 ed-
for I,,....,... pro19ct •hy Mid peuttOll for change o1 ,..,..... :IG:IDN ••-•y s..1te10t ,,., .. lo ~flt' lltte, or.,.., c.-NOTICE OF DEATH OF lldl _, bt recelv.d In tN piece '1\ould llOI be ora11ted. Sllltl M., CA 92,0. °" plelnllfts' ""'9Co, llefned •s DOES
ldtllutlecl .._.,.,... "'•" bt --II I• '"Iller or«Mred 'It.et• capy ol T...,.._ 111'1 tS).1'6f I tltfOUQflSO,lncMlw. AB RA HAM ZLOTNICK e~ ....... k lw reed eloucl •I'"'..,..,.. thlt ordtr lo Show c.use be llUllll"'8d P11llll•ll9CI ..._,_ HerllOr Newt IUMMOMS AND OF PETITION TO
PUii.JC tlTIE
P~ltTY LOCATl!O lit
COSTAMIEIACITY Trect Ne.1511
Tllo w 1.20 ft of Lott.
Al'o dHcribed •• AP 424·0S1 ·JO (lor,,.•r1' 11 .. 111-611
,.., ,._ • 111 The 0.lly Pllol, 1 new~ o1 ,...., C-......_IQID "' s~t:!.~'":~..:':C~·,o.oo c1epos11,.. oenm1 c1rc111et1on, pW)jlllled In lN• ~~~:~::i=-;,~::~:.n:.eoest NOTICEt \'111111e ... bffll ..,.s. The ADMINISTER ESTATE 'llllredlorNC.111etollllclOOC"'"""tHo C01111ly •t IHit once e wtell lor lour 1,.1 D7HI COOlrt l'MY-. ... IMl'(Ollwl-1 NO. A10IS21
.,., ............ .,,.,. In 90od c-ltlon COllM<llllw ... ks prior fO "'• dey ol -your llelnQ ... d """"' .,... ,..._., T 0 a I I h e i r s '
w11111n to •Y• •"• 111e bid_,,. Mid,_.,.,... PUBLIC NOTICE w•111111 30 «Mys. AMII.,. ,,.,~1'°" b eneficiaries, c r editor s ~le. D•ted July2t, t9tt. btl-. I d lt f
Eecll llld """' co111orm elld 11e Ar1-c. Pollc,,.ttl 1---11.,... ..,..,. .,. -11 Ille edltlc.e ot en and cont ngent ere o r s o
respo111.tw 1011wc0111rec100atme11tt. JudQe °' "",_,.,., C001rt NOTICE TO PERSONS ettomey"' 1111t JNtt«,.,.... JllOU!d "° Abraham Z I otn lc k and
Eec11 bid "*1 "'•<-ltd"" PubitWd er•llOt eo.it o.tiy PllOI. INTERESTED IN THE '°promptly '°,,..,your ••111•11 persons who may b e tlw NC"lty •et«,.., .. In,,.. Cotlltec:I Ai.o .•• ll, 20, 21, Itel u02 .. 1 ,..-... ".,,.,, mey lie llltd Oii tlmt. do<.-•_"" 111e 1111 o1 pr------------·--E ST ATE 0 F J AN E Av1so1 VRed he s1c1o cMnlendedo. otherw ise Interested in the
subcontr«!on. OTICE KAUL, DECEASED. El trr'"-1...,.... dkldlr contr• Ud. will and/or estate : T.._OtSTAICTr_r_t,,.rl9Mlo PUBLIC N N ti I her-ynlven· tlneuctleftcl•e-....-ud.r-t't l h be f 'led
,_ o ce s vu • • •• cte111,.. 0o 30 cr1n. LH .. '"'•-· A Qe 1 on as en 1 reJe<I M"f or •11
lllch M lo wel,.. Mly T I I I -ZI t I k d ,,,.....,,ties -lflformto111'" 1n 111y NOTtceo,.T1tuST••'ISALI o a persons n · c1e11 ..,.....,.. by Jeanne o n c an
llkl•orinttwtNddllla. .,. terested, whether a s s1u .... .._.,1e1Wetc011•Jo• Howard A. Zlotnick in the T"9 DISTRICT lies ....,_, IYom OT CE .:·~E~EBY GIVEN ,,.., dlt heirs legatees "" •lloeM ell •It• ·-10• .... ,r. s I c t o f Orange ,,,. ~"' a. °"*1J•-• of 1~ N .!,... w " 1.., •t, 00 ere ors, • · · • ll•urto l-91•t4 .... 11te, d• •st• uper or our
duwllll ltelMklM the.....,., _w.i._ ::'c:C" •. m. !f Mid •Y.' 111 ..;. ottk. or devisees, In the estate -··.,,..,...... escnt.a, 11 ,..Y County requesting that
1,.. r ... °'"'diem w .... 111 u. 01 REAL ESTATE secu1t1T1ES of JANE VERONICA. • ...,...,....,..._,_.,...., .. ,_..,. Jeanne Zlotnick and 111
wt11c _. 1 .. 11e I( A. u L d d h s 0Esc1uPT10N oF PROPERTY A ZI t 1 k be ap loullty II this • SERVICE, touted et 2020 Nortt• ecease , W 0 e i-erul I: Tllel 110rlloll ol Ill• Howard . 0 n C •
11et1onrwc1'°'.ec:11.,crm1tor
1
""' .. a...-w•y,111ti.•.1 .. a.cttvefs... last address was 2489 .... t ......... 1 ~.-of 111e 110<111wes1 point ed as personal -"-..... ,,_ ........ -....... Ccully ol Or ...... Slal• of B ....... ..-t d ••Kt. n... r .... .,...,. 111e .e.,. c .111or111e, THE OEOAGETOWN T iebout Avenue, ronx, ~"' .. -...... ~"' representatives o a ·
OISTltlCT OffkeloQted.tOfflceof RECONVEYANCE CORP., e State of New York, that s.c1i.21.....,..4 -.r ..... IO minister the estate of ~ Fecllttlft "'-
1
"" ccco. C•t1t0<lll• c°'"'e11on, • ciw11.,.. letters tes tamentary or of ~~11.:: •. ~~':~~Y~ Abra ham Zlotnick (under tm>MMll, Gala Mew.~..,., lllOll'lledTrwt4elllldef'...., __ llo I ti ... _ be _, " d t Ad
"OlitUIMd .. ,......... ",...,"' ti.u u. -ot -conferr.d 111 t,.1 CM· adm In s tra on ... ve en °'.,..., ,...,. o1 c.11rw111e. •• ,.., the I n de pen e n -••*"""'•PC>11tMe1111e1o41s11., i.111 ONC1 o1 Ttuat -I/led w LEE Issued to ROBE RT J . ""-_.... 111 ._ 51 P8l9 10 °' ministration of Estates
Tiie '°'-""' KlledUI• ol per diem SIMMONS, • llllQI• ....... rocorlled KA u L , by Surrogate's ~IC~~=·~·~ A ct). The petition is set for
w..,. ""-4......, • _.,.. *•"' ""'uat
21
•
1"°· 111
._ tJ7tt °' Of. Court, County of Bronx a 11e-r1 ..... 1•1ows: . he"'rinn In Dept. No. 3 at ,...,. (I).,.,,._ n. , ... for llolle.y llcl1t AKordl of Mid Count.,, .t.... -.. w
.... -'ltN wwtt -11 • et.._. 1oo. 1tecorcs.r·• 1111lrufn•m No. court o f competent ...,,.....,..,. ~c-of 700 Civic Center Drive,
111n .. 1111-....i1. H1U,llYl"'Mtonot•11reec1toroe1wn jurisdiction of the State of t11el_,,.._,,....,,,. .. ...,..o.v1t West, in the City of Santa ll IMll 11e ,.....,., t..,..,, "'-CO..-In peyment or PHfortMll(• of aw• Peel11 Ind .,..._, •-wet Mertll 1' I • Se t 2
TRACT'Olt io -u. CAlltrect " .... ''°"' -w• thereby, t11<hocll,. New York. 1ts1111._21w,...-. offic .. 1,... Ana, Cal forn1a on P • • ew• ................ y IUllCofl Ir•• ,,.., bretellerdef .. 11, NotleeolWfllcll T l'I at the fol I owl no (Offt, Ill ... omc. °"Nici c~t,,.. 1981 at 9:30 A .M . ~ Nm. to pay"°' , ... 1N11 111e wH recorded"""" "· ,..,, 111 ._... person Is Indebted to or <«lier, Wiid po1111 '*"' Oii""" _, IF YOU OBJECT to the to 11 -11 tlrw of IN ..,...._. -rlM Of Mkl :-mi:.::':'...;:~1111,: .. KlltMfl "': :•", ~~~·1,:c:.:~1== l'\Oldlng personal property 1Kt1on, MUlflo• '",.,. ........ a. f .. t granting of the p etition,
1iwc•rect. J;/ 16,.,, w 1'LL SELL AT PV•Ltc of the said decedent: ,,..., 111e -"'Mild ..c11on ..... you should either appear
No blddlr ,...., wltfldf' ... 11111114 for •uc nOH To T"E HIGHEST 110. No debts or monies are !::!: :r,.1ne.'~~o1f,:: at the hearing and state
• ,.,..., o11or1., .. ,,.. 10 1 4tlrs •tw Dl!R l'01t ~. 1ewi111-y of"'-iowed to any person or or· ,,.. .,.., w1111 .,. ,..1111 and MUt11 your objections or file '"!~'°', ~....,..-."!.°!..."'.!'_. U
11
lted """' •1 PIY*• II IM"-~an 11 at f o,. H 0 ME -....,.., sectlOll 1111e • .. 1c1 -.«IOll; written objections with the ~ ,...,.,_, _,.. _.._,,_~ ol Yle. ell rltht. IJtle...., .,._. -•• • ...-......., ..._
11o1111"'"11e ...,1,.. "'°'to ••«i.o lleld 11y 11. ti Tr11AM, ln 8fld101111t,... AV I NGS ANO LOAN, ~• llW1lltr ss• •· _, •-.. , ... court before the hearing. t1011o11t11~r.c1. T'llelNYIMllt...., el ll'Oll9f1Vlll\Mte lllNltC-y _, GARO E'N GROVE, =:.11~-:..oi.:::::::r!:= Your appeara n ce may be =~=~ * 1ortt1
111
IM
5't::·~':.°'::~~ .,,, City COUNTY OR ORANGE. qverter:--. ..-o• '" .s•· _, In person or by your at· ~ 8eel'd of Newport 8Mdl, CIVIi!., "' 0r.,.., That the uf"ld9rslgned de· • ...,. ..., .... 1111e .. Ille IOU!Mete torney. .., "_._ e. w.iMll St•t• of C111ltor11Mi, .. ,_ M-. r•. sires to r~lve the safd CMMt • ._, -.a-.. 1n .,.. '° 1 F y o u A R E A
Sec:rewy, 'ordff In._•·~ 17
llM '' pertonal property or col· ;::!1~.=r=•-=,~~-=.-:. CR~DITOR or a cont· eo.df/ITrvtteet MIM.eti-~lllU.Ofttc.eflM :.i.r nd t .-dlto f th d ...._Or.,..Coetto.t1yl'l1et, c--1wr--.o1N1tt-r. ecttheCl•mCl}a ore· lloletr..,..:o.xe...-.ny_,. lngen ere r o e e -
-· • t .. ·t II ted • ..-llM •...,..,., ""'"1p sed t fll your Awe. ta. a. tt11 • ...., ,.. ._. ..... or..., c--. it'TlOVt ,,. co ec or re· o.Net• .. ..., _ 1.._, U..C• _. cea , you mus e •"""'""-"MIY·• .. ,...~ celved from the state of,., .... ._.. .. .,.,.....~. claim with the court or :! ::O::r:;...-::=,1•=: California to the said state P•~• 21 n. W'lll llM twt.... present It to the personal
Mer, c.1lfWltlt. w h e r e I e t t e r s te11t11 is..oe ,_. ., 1118 tMC"-•1 represent•tlve appointed .... ~..... f ...-ter ............. of.. th t 1 .... 1 f ,,,. .... 'Iii..,..,....._ ...... ....., 11 ..... _,,. t es tame rt ta r y or o Hutlleut -u•rt•r •' M1cUM1 u . by e cour w m n our 4141 n.-m"' ,., .. Y ,_.19(,,.. 1" iadmlnlstr•tlon have been ,_,,. •--. ,.._ tt_., 111 a. months from the date of
.. If ••r:_ ....._ 81
..,., -Issued. R..-c11 .. 111..1-c.t-o.s..A111, first Issuance of letters as •;:.r.-.... Wlll .. _.i....,._. "II persons having c:•tr "Mlllllfn, c-y • 0r.,.., ~rovlded In S6ctlan 700 of ,__,,_. -~ ~ , ...... ~ •• llW "'-,.. ,...,,, • ...,.. • ~-·---; !alms against the de·,.,.."'._ J1...., 11 .. "'1.. he Probate Code of 111
,., '
1111
"• • -""*--. cedent or en Interest In c.11w nwa. 111 h ... Ice•'"' Callfornla. The time for Mttsty ... ,,_..,.. .. ~ _. • c-t...-.-• ...,__, I t
..... .,. ..._ _.,_.... 1«tnt ., aid estate and wishing to IUTl*"f o. GalSCT of. TM• flllng claims w II no ex· =r°::. •.T;:;: .:',.T:;: bJect to su1cth remt1ovtfl ·~~~ plre prlOf' to four months
...,.110., " .,,,.,, llMlr ... ...._.mus I give wr t tn rio ct o i..;;;:-"' • .-w. • .. ......., from the date of the hetr-
t11erfff 1M 11111.,._"' wdl~•.;such Objection tO the TO T•HI D•ll'IMDANT; "cMI lngnotfCtdlbo\'•. r.:t"' ......... ~~--=:.:: Dtrsonorpersonsll'tdtbted ,........,.,. ........... ,.............. YOU MAY EXAMINE ·~ .. ,, '"" _. rr1111• f..! ._._. lo, or holding personal "" ....-..... 11 ""'_.... • _.... the flit lltw>t by the court. '"*"'' .. .., ......., ......._ ~roptrtv of, th9 dtc.edtnt. ::, ~--= .=: = If you •rt lnt..-ested In the ·•-*11 Htl~ '-· dW'" sucP, notice must bt given 1119 .. 111 ""'.,,, 1 .,.....,.... utatit, you m1v fllt • f'e1 ~.':::~: ;::.~=· .:' ,::· o tht pereon hotdlng the ..... c,..,....._ u..-. • -. quest with the court to re·
Net1ee,1u1a.""• person•! property or ::'~ ... •;.:..--:=.-.:~ celvt sptc:Jaf notice or the ~. Jllty!J. ,.., i-11Jnst whcNn the clalm 11 _, _.. ,.,.._....._,...,., Inventory of estate Hatta
,.... HOROITOWN lm•de at the lddr .. s H .. ,...... ..._... 1a .. __....... and of tht petitions, ac-=~=="v lltltd lbove within: 30 wkll _..._.Ill.., • .,_ it " co u n l$ and r •ports •Tlwta, DA y s • ft., , , ,. , t ............. .,.....,.,......,., dffcrtbld In SectlOn 1200 e.1 RaM.UTATI publlc•Uon of thlt notice. = ............... "' .. -of tht Cellfoml• Probet. ='!.':!'!t~ DATED: JU"92.S, 1911 -OATH~•""· COClt.
,.__... RobertJ.Kaul =..._, Hl~A.~ :::=r· AtAdmlnfttretor • ..c..,......_, A...._, .. "-~ OftN-...teof .·.;;;,.__,,_~ .. AMINA.a.
-.................... I Jane v.toftlat kaul, ~l'i'Miilii~·· MILLH,_ ... ~ catll. ""' r-...... ~~ oec...-:. _ _,,... ........ _ en., ..,~ ,,...,.=--......,. ...,.. ..... Pullfllllld Orange c~ ... I'll==·· ~ IMd orenge Coest ,.,_.,... .... ::lc-..r Nly ..... J_,.y JO. Aug,,~ ..... CllllDllly,_, Dally PHot, Aut. 6, 1, 11, ='1""".::. ....... , -!l •, 11, "'' J356.11 ............... ,., -.. , .. , 3532 .. 1
Lui Auel-........ Kurt W. i.'-Ji
Minimum otC.,,C.lll• bid SUI!).
"RCH'trltTY LOCATl!OIN LAG41NA8aAOtCITY
Anll8Mcll~ Lot It In Blk J1.
Also ducrlbed .. AP M•·•O·U (IOtmtrlr· OU.JU-411 Lest At--... ,,,_ F. F-ler Ml111m...,ecc.,...._•bldSl7)00
NCllhocllH ...... Lot 4 In 81k •7
Also de$<tlbed H AP •U·OS·l1 llotm•rly· 0»-JOl·S.>
L .. l Attn ....... J°"" I'.,_.., .. el
Minimum «<llPI•~ bid SJ.500.
Anll._11......_
LOI l in Biii •1.
Alto dHCrtbtd H AP M4·•SS·U
Clorm•rl' !KS.l01·Sll LHt A._ .... J-"· ,_ •t •t Minim..., •cc-.ellle llld $l.SCID
"ROlll'SITY LOCAT•OIN CAl'llTllANOU•t•llEO ICHOOL.OtlTltlCT
TrectN•.IU The E 11 ft Of Lots 11, IJ elld IJ 111
811< I -"" ~It ~I Of Lot X fy. tno .,.,_,,,.Sly pr.,..,..u.,, of 111e
E •lld w fines ol ""E "ft of Let ta •s sd por ol Lot X -• ..,.,:de•c• ..,
ltotoluttont ol Ille •••rd •I 5-,vlson ott o..-.. Count.,, Cetll.
H r•c Mer II, 1"3 111 Bk 654a, l'g 111 of OA OlldOrM190C-y,
EX lhel por ol Lot II IYlllQ NII' et t"' w1, 11ro1onee11°" Of tlle Nty line of Lot IS In Bt• I.
Alto dHcrlbed es AP "l·IU·JT (lorm•flY: IJ1·2a-Sf)
uat A&MMe .. C..Co ~ lllC• Ml11t"'um ICCtlltellle bid $1,000.
P~ltTYLOCAT•Dtll IADOUMac tt~\' UNll't•DICMOO&. Oll?lllCT
Loi• I-' 111 59( 2, Tw116S, • 1 W. HI & MM.,_,, 8fl lfle Oftklel l'tet
et ad 1-fllM 111 ltle Oitlrlct LMlcl Of• Ilea, S.pl. JO, Ila,
l!X lhe S .,, It of Ille E Ja11 It el • l.eea. Alto '"'1lllld 111 Ai-to•11 .. 1 L•tt ,._...._ ........ """"'0-
Mllll-ecc...-e bid Mt.•
T"9 S •1111 of t1W Eau ft ef WI
1111 Sect. T.-p6 $,It 1 W, ... & M ..
tllowll ell ... OHklal l'IM ef tt •-flled In tile OIStrlet Lent 0Mte Se!M.
•.1•1
AIM deterllltod MAP N241 , ... ~A-......•. MIWyO......
Mllllmum ecc--.e llllt '1,!91.
Orange Cout OAJLY Pll.O'r/Thureday, Augu1t 13, 1981 DI
--..,..... ~ .............. l'ICT'IW9utl... ~Tc::,:_.~ n. -=~~:.. ._. MMllTAftMmWT 11111.t•-t•V.C.C.t -•: ~lr' .... "!.'"' .... .,.,._,art ... Ill Natlct It ... rellf ''"'" It,,_ 1HOWCAM AUTO •IAUTY, -••ACt(_,.. INV•ITMIN1' COM-c...-.. fl DAVID It. McC:O~UM Wel ... A11e~CIMl--.CA""7 -t,.... Tr---...... ..._......_ .. 0-T__..,_WalteeeA..,, :Arv• =:.,,""':.;-c;,....,llM tW...W •U0tra1c-te-... C••--CA9U7.
.:.:• ' CA C.-tr •f Orn .. , lt•t• ef Tlllt..._. .. ~.., ..... ....,.,., Tllc• ,,.. .. """ ........._. (Mi-;;.; 11111 ... tr...-.............. .
•1eu Drtn ', N••••rt eHctl, tt lie 1M9 '9 ltOelN WllT,All.. OMIT~ Cal....... Tr.,...._,.._..__..,.., le Tillil ........... -, .... •lttl -JeM 0 . He<ult, Tll"' U"8r .... k•-1• Cllf ti H1111llfte'"' C_.y 0-" 0r81191 Ceulllf ff
•••1Mtrt ''"' Drlwe, N••Hrt hectl, c...Mr ef OtMet, ..... A14 II, "'1. ~~..... c.I~ tt .. .,..,_,....le ~ ... OrMtllCMtto.A:l"I ... ..:..::::. ~;J::~·..!::1 = ._,_,. Ill ,_,.. Ml All 1'9C• Ill Allf. II, .. 11, ..... J, "" mM1 ,.............. ,,..., tllltlnt, .......... ...i ....
TMt _,_, It t~t .. lly e wHt fl 9'111 MCHINI S~ -.i-1 MJC 9'1l ..,._.,. ._ff ACI MANU,ACTUltlNO'-----------.._., 1..11rrf T\lc~ ... ~et t• ~ttl« •t Cltr ef · AMIMtt o... .. ,..,,..., c-.-... CA. C...y" °'.,.· ,. ... ..,.._
f!Wt ......,_. _ 111• w1"' tM '"•"Cellfenlle. lllOTICIOPT•!iltl•u· a.u c:-., (lane ., Of'aft91 cewMy Oft Tlw lllllk ........ •Ill lie tMNft• Oft A ........ ltll •• ll;OO ··""·
Aut. 7, "'1. ,,,... "'et aft9r ,,. ltt *Y If ..... fl I It l'T AM I le IC AN TIT LI ,.,._ .__,, 1'11 9t Mt• A.M. • Ora..,. INIU"AHCI COM•ANY .. Trw• l'l*I .... or .... CMll Delly ,..._ ~ Glrtilr•len, wllMt ...,., It er "'"--Trvt* er S...t1111;;/
Allf. ti.•. rt ...... a. "'1 at.11-11 I-lnl!N lllw •• Twllrl, Cellfwftla. ''"' ... ., ll8t ""°"" 0..." Trwt
eeonca °" T•urni• .. u.Le "--.....U
Lfttdlla"" tlllfll clatrflt N141, tllKwtM llr ~I I . JONIS 8M
le W • t. .._,, l•tM Tr-"t ... ltHl!TA It JOHii. ......... Md wife .. 1 ......... _...i __ llM ' •
1W U. Tr~ fltr UM ,...1 ttw• Md ,_.. "*-" •. 1•· at lfl· ..,,. it~ "'· aw. "'lllM ia.t1, ,... .. ., • .,.: . l»t, "Offklal ........ ., o. ..... o.-..,.. ... ttel. c-ty, Glllfwlll•, .... --..
==lell tNI ctr\11" Nallkt ti 0..8¥11 aM '"'*'"'"or.., C•nl o.lly ,.,... l!ltttlM .. s.41 ...... une.r _.,.
fltCTITIOUS aut1•HI 1' ... .._ ..... I
llAMa ITATIMll•T 'r. O. MltVIC• COM'ANY at dutr 'Ti.t ....... "' --., ... 1 .......... T,,.... YMlr ............. Ml-.•: .,_,..., ... al 1rV11t WILL SELL OltACEflUL EXl"ECTATIONI AT l"U.LIC AUCTION TO THE
A t• "'1 Me\' I, lttt, .. 1--. "'· 211S, lft 119' ., JIMI.., Moll I ..... , ... Ut, ti Ollldal
J7 .. I ...... 1 leMf, • O , L.. HIGHIST •1001ie FOle CASH N't:'•C:.'"': =~ -Oii c ... y ... at ti-ef ult In lawtlol _., 9' .. U,.,_ ....,.., all rltM, ... ....,. lftc ••• c.itfwtlla c....... .. ............... ~ .. --
lttt-" ..... c-.ty, •Ill..,., ....
~ It Wi141 0... ti Trwt Mii 8t llWlk 9llCtlM fW ,., lawM ......,
21 .. 1 fltrllel leMd, • O. La111 .._.. 1¥ K ~ ...._ 0.. flf 'T,,.. II>
N...,..,c.l...,.,..taw. ,,.,....,.,.,..,..., ...... dltcrlllld:
., ... """" S&e• of~ .... -!ft--.. tt 1'11"11 "-'ICM Tlllt teOTICa l•VITI .. •1a. 111111r•nct ~y lt«IH et IH Nttlce h lltr••Y t lwo 111•1 1118 1!8R l'lllfl sc.-. In .,. CJIY ti .....,
... ,,. of Tnnt-ti ... CMM C-. AN c:.tl"""8 all lflet rleM, Ullt -MUlllty Cell ... Dl1lrlct ,, Of'wiee ,,...;....~ .. --.. ••llr lt C-IY, Callf"111e, wlll ,_,.,.. -ltd UftC1ff Wi141 Died of Tr"'* 1111 .. ,,..,_
blch MP lit lt:OO a.t11., l''rklrf, A.., IY lltiMlled I" .. i. c-y -Stelll 21, Hit at Ille ""'<NM111 OeNrt"""' dHcr""" •:
., .... ....._.ll~he Ctr• TltUSTOlt · STE PHIN le . pWtl~CllMw-Maemel HAYDEN, Iii end DONNA J .
-Olllclfl1 ..... l11t. ~ • ........, ......... 1 i-
=.-tM-.,,utldnlt11 ll!NEfllCIAleY: PACIFIC CIT.Y
fl\lt .....,,_. -...... ..... •ANI(
C-r Cltrii" Or.,... County • ..,..,, Oeelller l , 1•, •• IMtr.
""'· It, "'1. ~:i.~:W":* 1':77~ ":!7 't: c....,..a...,._ .
......,...... ·--ofOf' .... C...,, ........ .., ...... c.o.w Dfl" of tl'lltll ........... tollowlftl ..,. ...... ~:
,,,,._ ~ tDll Lat t flf Tract Ne. -., .. -~
' flttaJI rec--..lft ..... P .... 46I04'1~
"'*llfltd or.._ CM.t Delly PlltC, Clutl" ef Mital!-MailN. lft .. A,_ , •• f1 -l "" ...., offk• " ... ~ Ill_.., Of .... .. _. .. ' '-· ' Or .... c-.ty,
"411 ......... r.llTwo,CA.
"(lf•lllrwt ......... orc-• ·~ 11 lllllwll tlloft, no wwr.,...,
la ti-.. '° Its c.llpte-or CW· <9<'-1.'' Tl9 llleNfkleryllftflrtaid fllCTITIOUS au11..... Deed" TNlt, !Ir,..._, of. "'-t\.,
MAMll ITAT•M•NT ...... 11 In -•lllle•ll•n• MCllrtd
The ftllowlno --• .,. 0111,.. 1 .. ner • .........,. .. ec....., --. "'"'-·= """" .... 1111dtt"'91Wd •• ,1.-CALI 1'0111 NIA • 111 e TN I! Y DeclereUOll If Def..,11 -~
MAltkETINO, m.s W. H.trverel, S.nta lw sate, .,.. wtiltln notk• of llrMCll
Al\a, CA t21'CM. •nd ., •IKtlOft to Uln• the Uft•
Wiiiard J ar Marl-. 17112 •u1. dtrsleMd '° .. 11 u ld prepotty \0 '°"-· ,_al11 V•ll9', CA '27'1. .. tlefy Mid .......... -,,_,...,.., J•MH T. l'ol•Y ....... Sowtll ,,. ~ ~ .... netlct of
Fi.-, S.... Ni.a, CA tt7t7. llrtadl -of 1'9ctloft '°lie 1tec..-Tlll1 IMlllNSI It <Oftdllcltd lly a Aclfll IS, ltll, •• IM.,, No.. 17'20 Cll -rel,.. .... ...,,. Mid Otfk ... lltc<Hm. .Jaf~ Stld .... wlfl lie ........ lllllt ••-Ti.II .. _. -tlled wltll ti. ca-..-c er _,_., ._. <H 11'1'1-
C-ty Clerll of OI> ..... C-ly -llllell.,....,....... tKle, _..,.,,er en
A119, It, !tit. CllMW8"Cft, tt pe't Ille rtt11•l11lftl
flltll7• "'"" ..... 11#11 of ... _,,, "'.,,...
Pulllltllld or.., Cent Dolly l"llot. 11y Mid Died of Tnnt, wltll '""'"' .. Aue. U, •.11. Sepe. I, 1•1 ~ 111 ..id r-. _......., 8CNan<•. H t ftY,
-tl'e lerfM of .... Oetd of Trwt, -----------Ifft, ~ e!MI U.Ptftlft of -
TN ... -flf ttie lfVlb CrMlllCI bl'
ttlcl o.11 el Tf\llt. Seid "" wlll ...
llelcl °" T ...... y, S..•mtlef I. 1•1 at
ltl19llt 2:00 l".M. .... ~ """--fltCTITIOUI •u11••• Ir-. .. "" Clwk C-r llulldl"L -........ ITAJ'IMl•T l!a1t °"PmM A-. lft ti. City flf
Tiit fOllOWlfll ,., .. "' ••• dolftl or.._, CA. .,...,_ •: Al tN time of u. 1 .. 11i.1 PUlllkatkwt
LAkE AleltOWHEAD VILLAGE of 11111 MCiee, tM ta4.ll -of ti.
LTD .• 21SI OUfll:lllt Dr1w, lull• • 112, un••ld lltlence of "" o.ilt•ll•n
lr•IM, CaflfOmle t27tS. tecurwd Illy ti..-... dncn!IM ... of
G c .....,.,,..., lrw:., • C.llf<HNt trult -..,_... costs, ••-.
c<H-tlkwt, 2112 DuPotlt Drift, Svltt •lld ... 8'1Ctt 11 U0.2~ . .U. To ....
• 112, lnrlne, Callfomla t17U. ttrmlM .. llP9fllnt lllcl, 'tOU rney call
Tiii• lluliMH II c-.Cttd 11., • ,... 17U ) m.-.. -
porallan. D ... : ...... '· 1'91, 0 C ,.._.ttlft, Inc. T. D. Sl!ltVICE COMPANY
J . It. J«ll-• Ulll TniAee Vice Prell_. Uflde ~
of tald toll• dllltkl lac.led •I IS10 A LEASEHOLD l!STATI! IN AND
A•eMt Awt,.,w t , Co111 Meu, TO THE FOLLOWING DESCIU•ED CetlfwN-. et -ch lime Mid llkll wlll PRDPEleTY:
MPlll!lk ly ...... llndrMClfOf'. LOT 11 01' TleACT NO. 6121, AS
PUltCHASE 01' IMPACT PRIN· SHOWN ON A MAP ltECOlllDl!D IN
TING Tl!ltMINAU; INFORMATION 1001( 2J4, PAGES t, 10, ANO 11 01'
SEltVICl!S MISCELLANEOUS MAI'$, Rl!COllOS All llldl art lo lie lfl KCOf'defKe "'IUI O I' 0 It A H G E C 0 U H T Y ,
lllt 1110 Form 1ns.,uclla111 -Condi· CALIFORNIA.
11tw11 .,,.. Stieclltcall111t ~ell .,., 110W The tttetl --. °' o111« um..,.. °"Ille.,,.._, lie -ured In 1,. Office dulintllon ol H id property: 11 ot Ille Pwtllellnt A99n1 of 1ald call• ,..,__., to tie: 11.,2 Vie Pai.Uno,
llll lrkl. lrwlM, Cl\ '2715.
EKll bidder ,,,..SI lulln\11 wltll 1111 Stld Mlt wlll lie,,... •lt'-t CAI,,.
bid e callltr's cllectl, certified cf\ecll, ...,,1 ,. w.,.,.woty, expnu or ln\Plled,
or lllddtr'1 l>orld Mede P8Y•lll• lit .,. .. to llllt, -leMIOft or tflC--• order OI I,. Coesl CamMunlly Col""' to utlil'y llW "'-"' 1191-. clue ., Olltrlcl •oa•d ol Tr111ttu 111 •11 IN~ or_ tetll,... bl' .. 1c1 Died
•mount l\041 .. llllWI five Ptfttnt "'" of Trwt. la wit: 125,"9.•. Illus U.
ol tllt "'"' bid • • ..,... ... 1 .. thet IN lollowino fftlmtttd '"''· HPtll-llldcler wlll enter Into ,,. PfotlOMd -~" 81 IN thM of 11111 lftlllel
COftlrecl 11 tflt ._ Is ••trMcl to pullllcaUOft Of tlll~ Netk t of Stle: lllM. In IN,.,...., Of lalture to enlw I~ '211.JOLJI.
lo tlKll ~reel, IN practtdS ol IN DATED: ......... •. t"1.
Clleck '"411 lie lorl .. IH, or lfl Ille c-l'IRST AMERICAN TITLE
of a llOfld, Ille lull WM t ..... Of wtll lie INSUleANCE COMPANY
IOl'ltlled \0 Hid coll ... fhtrk l. a CalllornUi Cot'POf•llan
No llldlllr mty wil--"'-1114 for AS TRUSTEE
a ,.,IOll ol lortf•tlft IUI oays alllw lltUCE It. •EASLEY
Ille .... .., fw IN _Int !MrtOf. AUTH01t1zao OFl'ICElt
The IMrll of Tr .. ._ r"""" IN 11' E.t I'll .. Slntl ,,1 ...... of reJecllftl M Y -•II lllds Seolta Ma, CA '2701 or 10 .,91 .... ., 1.......,.erltlft or 1~ 171') s-.n11
fttrnellllft In .. ., Md or In tlM ll>lddl119-Putllllllllcl or.._ eoe.i D•ll't Piiot,
HO*MAH E. WATSON A .... ' IJ. 20 t"1 Mf7~1
St<rei.r.,, 9oerllof --·--·-------Trwsleu, Coesl Com~ty
Collllllll Olllrkl
PUlllll-Or..-Ca.al Dtlly Piiot,
"'"•· '· u. ltll NS-791\1 I NOTICE OF DEATH OF
HARRY (N .M.N .)
GEISE" ANO OF NS-79112 P ET I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 •
NOTICE OF DEATH OF MINISTER ESTATE NO •
WALTER KISZKO AND A·109l40.
OF PETITION TO AD· T o a I I h e I r s ,
MINISTER ESTATE NO. beneficiaries, creditors
A-109834. and contingent creditors of
Tiit. •'-1 •• flltcl wllf\ the AMI ..... Secretary c_, c1er11 of o.-..,.. Covnty .., Ow Clt't 9oule•erd West
Aue. •• Hll. OrMet. CA .,,...
"16"11 171•> ..... "'*'--er.., c.o..1 1>o11., Pl"°" f'WllllNd 0r .... coeat De11., Pl..._
To a I I h e I r s , Harry (N.M .N.) Geiser
beneficiaries, creditors and persons who may be
and contingent creditors of otherwise Interested in the
Walter Kiszko and persons w ill and/or estate:
who may be otherwise In· A petit ion has been filed
terested in the will and/or by June Geiser L09an &
•estate: Lela E. Geiser in the
A petition has been f iled Superior Court of Orange
by Kathleen Garnsey In County requesting that
the Superior Cou rt of June Geiser L09an & Lela
Orange County r'eques11ng E . Geiser be appointed as
that Kathleen Garnsey be personal representatives
a ppointed as personal to administer the estate of
representative t o a d · Harry (N.M .N.) Geiser of
m inister the estate of Costa ~esa, Ca. <under
Walter Kiszko of Costa the Independent Ad·
Mesa, ca. (under the In· ministration .of .Estates
dependent Administration Act). The petition 1s set for
of Estates Act) The petf. hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
tion Is set for hearing In 700 Civic Center Drive
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic West, Santa Ana. Ca. 92701
Center Drive West, Santa on September 2, 1981 at
Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep-9:30 A.M .
A ... IJ, 20, 11, 5"1t. l, 1•1 __., A ... I),•• 11, 1"1 USMI
COMOflclated Report of Condition of "AMERICAN
STATE BANK" of Newport Beech, Orange County,
and Domestic Subsidiaries at the clow of business on June 30, 1tl1.
Sbte Bank No. 1072
Dollar Amounts
ASSETS In Thous:Mds
Cash and due from banks ...................... 3,321
U.S. Treasury securities ...................... 2,464
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't. 1
0:1Y:~~:o~ds~~r::a·nd ....................•.. 2'800
political subdivisions .......................... 176
Other bonds, notes,
and debentures ..................•............... 1
Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to
resell In domestic offices ...•.•.............. 6,500
Loans, total <excluding
unearned Income> ..........•..... 42,768
Less: Reserve for possible
loan losses .......................... 471
Loans, net .•..........•..................... 42.297
Direct lease flnant:lno .......................... 4,239
Bank premises,
F.R.&E., etc •.................................. 368 Reel estate owned
tember 2, 1981at9:30 A .M. IF YOU OBJECT to the
IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, granting of the petltton, you Should either appear
you should either appear at the hearing and state
at the hearing and state your objections or file
your obJ~ctlons or f lle written objections with the
written objections with the court before the hearing.
court before the hear ing. Your appearance may be
Your appearance may be In person or by your •t·
in person or by your at-torney.
torney. I F y 0 u A R E A
'............. M....11ww. IM•1ttllwW. .._..,_Wt '".•,• .. 111.~ •• ~.~•••••., ~···············---··· ,;;;;;;............... . •••.••............... ~······················
P.w ltJ.6 .,.._ I ... .,.,...... IM ...... IMn-,11." •• ".•." •• ~ ... !~ . ·········-······· ....... ·-······· .... ···--··· .. ·-~~ ... ~k SMISO I. w!i~:' '*'· .__ ·-·-· IN'llmfUl 1111t r 11aeta1. lm l~IA. ,...,••iotl•ll1 KAUii mediate on upantr -..Callld. _,, oOaer •
IUITICALLY UAL
Wltb paaoramlt
wbltewatlr Md oceu ,...,,, tw. ....... a
atr11. lat fta1ulo1. Five bdrms in HarbOr View. Well poutbl1. szu.ooo.
1u·•1 maintained home on ree land and wtth MWl!t_,.
A W ... AT rixed rate assumable loan. $339,000. ,_. IMO
S 12',tOO It ... .._ fw.... ".::·c··, .. -~ .. ···••••• ...._,t\tb9dl._.. llMNld .. be ..... ,
Amtalttu Incl .. • • la.r•• ...... ........ wltb llrtplat1, oalt
c1b!Mtry ud beaUIJlvl
lu1b l•nd1capln1. "15,000 . ..U
1'11 OWlltf bu rtalJy ,__
i!Y• uu. i bdrm. 2 ba. 1 en Peri T ....,t g:~e':c:.,a io::
lte&y Model la Ulliv. I Uoa ia part.~ 1ettio1
Pan Villalt I• lot ot 'lA~~ ~~ ~ • 675·5930 • '1 •ltll lov~ pool Double tart. Ntw appUucea, • • t 3637 E. Coast Hwy. 1 atfacbtd aara1e. cen • eare•,'::,.~~pev'· tll~: Af I Corona del Mar I tral air eondltlonlna ~~-·~· ~ ~-tr•ctlvtte'ml. • ·
' . .
.lJ!!UO don osen
.,.,.. llJJ .......................
ILOW 1/•
JUSTUSTID
Cute 2 Bdnn ftxer near
Harbor Hl1h. Great
potential. A11umable
loam. Won't la.st Joyce
Walta.UJ.1.218 .
'R&'M*
I 11t\IJ111e'
the n~'!'y~ove to 513 Cut~Da:IRV*f
bHutUl&.I El Toro and aet a lrt s Bdm •tate L.eflle IMdl I Ha,...;;... _____ _
wlpool, 1.119 ' view toot ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• IY OWNll
a matcbboa>. Grut lad!M&t!lt Beautllul v. ac lot in
tmn1. Altume t~"° la· 1,n.fe. WeatcDff, ' Br 2..., Ba terut. Call Patrlt ll Walled ind aated ocean SU 9 9 O O 0 WC ..
R&'M*
f• ~ 'I T 'Ii '
rront utate with OwnrlAat. 831 12611
rabuloua view. Pvt steps Norm i Kaley
to the 11nd. Call for
brochure.
CAROL TATUM. RLTR.
*-0029
MU JIDCOMDO
' '' .. A bHuty with rrplc,
paUo • ipa. Try 11~20K l~ •tPR""PECT down 111wne l1W1t or """ ~ Jea1t opt. Woo't Jut. TUSTJN1 73J·llll
Palrlck 'l'j t3HJM ..............
Ollitf> IMI-••••••••••••••••••••••• .......__
F.W. 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OV OCEANFRONT·New M.I. W.AIM Modular Type Homes,
SU,000 down, nice !Br. leased land. 3 pvt bcba,
2't;Ba home, 't; bl.It to U hr security, fiahing
bch, owner will fin1nce. p ier rrom U•,900.
$205,000. ....:!-=·=lS:__ ___ _
SUMSlfl.1. Ac,...terWt IJOO
54 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••
OC EANFIOMT B11 Bear Lak• 1 acre •
B .._. Balboa l 't; acre plrcela. Sewer. Y owner . ._. water Ir elec avail Joe Lit price reduction. TllMS,TaMS
SpotleH lr1 4 Bd, shows
like a model Allume
K o/o. Only Sltl,000 or
le11e option. Patrick Taore. 131-12111.
Al.Gt
F.ALltlt
I ac~ + bldg site, gent·
ly 1lopln1 parcel short
distance from lennia &
beach. Ownr has in·
eluded plans for custom
vi lla. St7S,OOO. Sper ·
tarul1T views!
.. Zb d-'---?'80 Zoned A·l. Terms. Dya . 1--------i 4• r ...,.,....,. (714 )888·4270; Eves : BEST VALUE IN
R&'M*
Ii~ \I l "Ii',
Hwt ...... 1Md11040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON EXCLUSIVE HUN·
TJNGTON SEACUFF''S
GOLF COU RSE !
3bdrm. pool, xtra Ir& lot
Many xtraa. 139S,OOO I Broker· S33·SU3.
I 83'7-Gll.
MlSSION REALTY
~31
FAIULOUS
II the word ror this
OCEANFRONT unit
with cuatom decor in
every detail PLUS rront
row whitewater view
S3$S,OOO
Let-V-. I.I 497-1761
EISTIJIFF
3 Bdrm 2 bath', Im·
m1cul1te! Owner an.x· ioua. S205,000 .
lo, Mee.., Ur.
541-772'
NEW LISTING
4 Br 21,1, Ba. on Vt Ac
Westcllrr. '2S9,900
OWC. Norm & Kaaey
631·1266
PllCI IBMICm>
Limited Time Of'fer
2113 Miramar. Reduced
lo rlrm price ol SOJ,$00
until Sept. I. 75% rinanc·
In.& at 12%. Principals only. 6S&-3llOO, 87H226.
(714)S8.U891 or write
Box 1281, Bi& Bear Lake,
Ca. 92315.
KAILUA
KONA ·HAWAll
178 Fee SlmpJe Acres
Resort Atta, Central
location. Frontage on 2
major h ighw a ys .
Mafnillcent view.
MIWrolTCUST 121 acres 15,270,750
First time buyer aod re· 16.9 acres $3,533,S87
rt"" d 20 acru $3,658,CMO liree, step .,.t up 10 20 acres 13,136,320 make us an offer. A two
bedroom condo with lots For more deuuled in·
of character. Vaulted rormation, pie.ase caU
ceilln11 and wttbar are (808)1161·2895 Rudy or
J u 1 t s om e or t he write Fanns & Ranches.
amenities Too 1ood lo lnc. PO Box 225. Hilo. lut' StSS,000 Hawaii, m> ANXIOUS SIU.a
Unique Deane home In
super area. Close to
evel')'thln& Owner leav-
in1 ltat.e. Be cre1Uve and submit.
IFYOUUll
QUALITY and good
architectural tastes with
a Spanish nair. visit new
Portorina house. Great
viewa aod excel fmanc-in1. k3s,OOO.
Hert.or ¥1.w Cote ea Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• t " R It ._..., ,...,.,., 1400
Mo•e in rond1t!on. 3 ' & Investment Prime retail toe. Harbor
bdrm, 2 .b• h~me in ~S777 and Newport Blvd. CM Harbor View High H · 4000 sq rt or less. ~340'2
631-2242
L .... Ylleiotl.E.
4'7-17,1
sum able loans Highly Eves. ~3270. upgraded throughout
Shows Uke model. Must IASTaUllFS Ct .. hflLoh/
sell rast Asking $2311,$00 By owner tBr, 2Ba, ~xec Cryph 1500
incl land. Corne for Ill· house , at appr1111l ••••••••••••••••••··~·· spection Sat, Sun 1·6. S2'0,000, 103 dn. OWC Westminaler Memo~11I
1860 Port Wheeler or call bal lS\.'JDk 110 lM hold. Part D lot IJI beautiful
760-9S860wner/Agt Owner requelres coop Meditation Section.
....... H. 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.;. ________ , Ele11nt ' Br. custom in
H•lbtfw Neille Gale Ranch, H.-.. I 042 beaut. view, real mar-
••••••••••••••••••••••• ble, pool sl.ze yard,' rar Twnhse l'n.> sq rt. 2Br, aar11e. equestrian lot 2...,Ba , 1uard g1te 162$,0IO. Owner/Broker
comm ., owner will 7»070l,6M-S742.
finance. Ownr/aat a-.....a-.i IOSJ $242,500. (714) 997 ·5490 --..--._,.... ........................ lrtlle I044 3Br, 2...,Ba, 3 car garaae ••••••••••••••••••••••• + RV /boat storage,
(i0KIOUS
WESTCUFf 4 ID Spacious, open & airy,
beaut. 4 Bel w/2 patios.
Assume 10.9S3 int. A re· 111 value . Patric k
Tenore. 631 · l.2166
Clean • cmy, 3 Br 2 Ba w/courtyard entry.
Near new carpets and
microwave included.
Close to 1chool1 and 1hoppln1. Call for ~
l&ila.
dinette In kilchm. new
carpetin1. ru11y lndspd.
rncd, pvt pool • jacuzzi ¥1UA IAUOA
area overlookin1 L· 1 Br rondo. View or
Nl1uel Golf Course Catalina Owner will
1331,000. &C1I help fin~. Submit of. OPEN HOUSE SUN. UH fer.
2 Br. 2 Ba." den, cnr lot, lntbr, HJ.I Ill up1radea. 11.SUOO. 24382 1--=-=~::..=..:;...::..:..:::.::;..._
Ct marroa Ct. (In Lake Trade Luxury Newport
Part) 131"*90wner. home on \.'I acre for In
0
'
come UniU or ? Eq uity NewpertlMdl I 6 1280,000. Act now'
••••••••••••••••••••••• Broker Co·Op Acent
--TH-.... ---IA YCREST 63HSlS.
TOWtttoeim POOL HOME OPEN HOUSE Call the apedallata at Sunday, Ul Wild Goose
th d lnium In Lairge' bedroom, 3 bath 1169,000. Plan 2. Owner e con om · home with formal dining anxious. Call Tim Rhone rormaUoncenter.
Touchltone Realty room, llvinf room, large now! 63J.12l86 9S3-(.W7 kitchen with separate
-eating area, den and TAIMMIOI cuatom pool with solar * * 1WLL • butin1. Located on
No, not a fndt but the quiet. tree lined street.
street thia cbarmiDI Eacellent financlna BLUFFS CONDO-Single
Irvine cc.to Is on. Va-avallabh. For ule by story, 3Br, 28a. Linda cut 6 read7to10. lhlle owner. $319,000. Call Plan. New applias, 1.Jle.
IJl offer I Aa.tini 9 7 9 · 2S 00. _ext. 1 9 etc .
1
Assumable loan,
StOl.900 (workdaya). 842-2888 owner/agt 1230.000
lweekenck). ..!SSS.=20=13:....__ ___ _
""'"""' fllAM"I•
w/IRS 1031 tax ex· Sacrilice.$'700.531·9561.
chan e. 7~9396 Hart.ora..w.
WANT houee ":' Newport Mount Olive 2 lots Sp
Hel&hta ror client Cleo, aE&F Cypress Lawn
U n I t e d Bro It e r s Mk Ofr. 646-0181 673-7711, $48-2739 owrcW
!DESPERATE! Must ,__.... 1600 sell home Close to • ....., .. ,
beach. 22~ down as·•••••••••••••••••••••••
sume loans 1197.000 RAR E C·l·H Newpo~ A t Ladorls ~9161 Beach Property SO
· frontage 111 pnme io<'a· CREATIVETERMS!'' uon. Owner will fmance.
Undermrlrtbyl20,000 Ex clusive Pnnc1p•ls
3 br, 2 b1.1&e bonus rm, on I y Ask for Irene
hv rm • rorm~ d111 Loudon. Ail. 631-4247 or area w/frplc Open 631·7:ll0. beam ceiling, compl re· -:~='------
rurb1Shed, new crpts,'--------•
pauit, landac1ptt1g Low C.2 LOT
pnceforBadrBayarea High lralfic count
1189,SOO. 631·S476, 62 SX307 lot. Existing
642-77'4 house on property. Flex-
ible uses. Owner will --1·-·c•1-1•.•,-•I consider carrying 1st
A A TD Aaltlng 1199~ Call CHmY I.All 54()..JlSl rormore info.
: -HERITAGE . . REALTORS
3 Bdrm ramily home
with separate in-law's
qrtrs. Pool siie comer
lot . Very privalA!. Fan·
ta st ic fina ncing. S21~~NHOUS£ t·• c .. do .. a.../Tow•
2313RedlandsDr -...SfwMk t700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fri/Sat/Swi •Mon. Leisure World I BR. C/21 Mlwpwtc.tr
'40.5l57 642-0l 1 l
188,000 Studio Condo AJ.
sume 13~ loan Sp1,
pool,clu~
552-1744
other than bank premises .................... 3,224
Other assets . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 176
IF y 0 u ARE A C REDITOR or a cont-
CREDITOR or a cont· lngent creditor of the de-
lngent creditor of the de-ceased, you must file your
ceased, you must file your c laim with the court or
claim with the court or present it to the personal
present it to the personal representative app0lnted
representative appointed by_ the court within four
by the court within four months from the date of
months from the date of first Issuance of letters as
first Issuance of letters as provided in Section 700 of
provided in Section 700 of the Probate Code of
the Prob'at e Code of California. The time for
California. The time for filing claims will not ex-
fillng claim s will not ex· plre prior to four months
plre prior to four months from the date of the hear-
from the date of the hear· Ing noticed above.
_. .. , .... u l'tt•y.lnlllf 3 bdrm, din. rm .. liv.
OCEMRONT
MEWIYOWMER 3 BR & den, S119s,OOO.
3111 Seuhon!
WATERFRONT-w/20'1.
down. OMC at 12~ int ..
S17SO mo., 3 yrs. Price
just redu~ to '220.000
Hu rry 1 Call Jarvis·
O'Brien 840-8208 John
TOTAL ASSETS .••.........•................. 67,S66
LIABILITIES Demand deposits of
Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ............................ 14,302
T ime and savings deposits of
Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ............................ 34,.414
Deposits of United States Gov't .................. 72 Deposits of States fnd
pofltlcal subdlvlslons ........................ 10,518
Certified and officers' checks ...................... 6
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES ................................... 14,380
Total demand deposits ...•.................... -44,932
Total time and savings deposits ............... 59,312
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC AND
FOREIGN OFFICES ............•.......... S9,312
Other llabllltles .••...•...............•......... 2,281
TOTAL LIABILITIES ........................ 61 ,593
Subordinated notes & debentures .•........•... 1,000
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY Common stock
No. shares authorlied: 1,200,000
No. snares out.standing: 1,004,423 .. 1,256 ~~'fl~cONT.Rie'u=reo ·· ······ .. ' .. l,.455
CAPITAL .......•....•.•....................• 2,711 ::=,~~tf nvenc:1-es · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 2·262
and other capita I reserves .........••.......•.•. 4-TOT AL SHA REHOLO E RS
EQUITY .................................... •.m
TOTAL Ll~BILITIES AND
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY •••.•.•••••....• 67,S66
MEMORANDA
Time ~•rtlftcatH of deposit In
ctenomlnatfont of $.100,000 or moni •.•..•...... 1,339
Other thne deposits In .
amounts of $100,000 or more ........•••.•... 16,163
MarMt value of lnvntment
1 secw~tlel ..................................... 5, 60 The undefllgntd John E~, Prftldlnt end
S.R. ~ltf .. ld sr .. Vice President/Controller of the
1bov..namtd btnk, Heh diet.,..., for himself alone and not fOr the other: I haw perllOMI knowledge of
the matten contalMd In tttls APOrt tlnclucllno thl
rev.,. skit herMf), and I bettew that NCh stat•
ment In utd report Is true. Each of the undln'9nld,
tor htmMtf atone and not for the other, certH._. un-
dlt' penalty of perlury thet ............ ng IJ true and
corf'9Ct.
/s/JoME ......
/aJS.R; Whftfletd Sr. ........ OrWllltt.iill ...... -...._ .... .....
Ing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE
YOU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court.
the file kept by the court. If you are Interested In the '
If you are Interested In the estate, you may file a re· '
estate, you may flle a re-ques1 with the court to re-
quest with the court to re· celve specl•I notice of the
celve special notice of the Inventory of estate assets
Inventory of estate assets and of the petitions, ac-
and of the petitions, ac-counts and re po rt s
co unts a nld reports described In Section 1200
described In Section 1200 of the California Probate
of the Callfornla Probate Code.
Code.
MEAD AND MEAD, At-
KLEI N & CUTLER, At· torneys at Law, by: 'r•nll
torn.ys at Law, by: Laslie F. MNd, 111.1 1f01 Dov•
Kltln, tt20 La Cl•net• Str• Suite 171, .... PGrt
Blvd., Stl. 631, lntlewoed, Beactt, C.. 92'61; tef:
Ca. 90301; ttl: 2U/M1·S.0 714/UMa3
IY ... tOf'TtllAMWALITAT&M91fT-
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W• llato•y clrtll\I tllat lll• •II••• lta•t ar• ta ecc.nllllclt .-.. ..._. ......,_..., ... ,_ _. .._.., •.
,. ,.,... .... Ill---· ,,_, ..... ., " -...... c..e .. -. .......... ~ . . .....,,....J ......... lr. ,,......
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......°'Wlllt Calli....,,..._._ "· Q,. ... M. u. ..
'
**rta&SPI Separ•te fenced
playyard bitbli&hta this superb 4 Bdrm pool
home In hbuloua
Northwood. Try kOM
dwn.
rm., ram. rm .• F/P, 21,1,
bl, xtra larp porcelain
tub w/ceramlc tile walls
6 floor.' covered patio
areu. P11ee 123o,OOO, S3
down, lllW!lt '40,000 Lst
trust deed at 7W~. Xlnt
land leue sesa.oo per
year. Can't change until
Owner w/carry. 673-6578
OCIAHFIOHT
$450,000
This offering is an estate
sale. One of Newport
Beach's final views. 3
bdrm home with guest
apt or 2 units.
Realonomica 67s-6700 •ooo year 200l l4"9 int. only
11 2nd tru1t deed due --------\\bodbr1qe 19-17. Call OWl>er for 1.-..iSJOO,OOO Re hi ippt. daily after 5 pm. In Dover Shorea. 5600
I (714) 7eo.tt25 sq.ft. or top quality ron-
551·34I09 atruction. Thia s Bclnn
mt8m11n f'kwy,lrvlw Tbe .ruteat draw In the Medlt. style residence la
West. .. a Dally Pl.lot the beat cl locations and
Have 1o•ethln1 you ClalfllJed Ad. MZ-W18. ha& lbe best ol financlna
ant to Ml.IT ci...lfied available. owe 185o,ooo !d. do It well. "2-5171. '"9 I 044 at 9~.,. lot. Full price In·
Jillllllllllll .. ll•l••1•1•1• ... 111···!··~·!.'~·~· cludina the l•nd $1,(50,000. Call Dan Bibb
rorappt.
10.1n llAln
6n.JJI I
Coombe Bkr. _:..:.~o.:...::==-----
tum.I IOQ '"SftWMJ"' wmt
YllW. Beautiful S 8R home
w/pool, spa & view! Exeellent .
location on cul de aat. Great
mwmble Joan. U99,000 Darlene
Herman 752·1414 (V88)
AVWE ·.
•
MACNAB
~-S-...... & TIMMIS. Beautuul Northwood condo w/upsrlded
·floor It window covertqs. 8tePI
to pool. Auum1ble tat T.D.
S79,,950. Mack Haneon 551.fJOO (\W)
---mMltMllili --
llAWIMD. Spectacular view or
clty, mountains • llcbta!
· Proleuionally decorated 3 BR •
fam rm. Beautiful Jarden
w/waterf aU·Kol pond. 185,000
,.,. Paquin 9'2·1235 (V70) •
I
IM
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurad1 , Au u1t '3, 1ee1 Af t •• fta 'h~ Af• ..... u.... .Af• , • .,, ~ ..._ ... ~ ~~~ ..... !~~ ,_.. 4•71 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• • s ••••••••••••••• C>Mw•••llttte Ottitr•••ltt• "-"U* •ti~ C .... WIM J7J4 MtM HJ4 lrvlM J14 fRt;E rm w/pvt ~.PLUSH OYFICE • ........ Al.l'ACI ''''''"''''"''"''''' ............. .,, ... ,.,. •••••••••••••••••u•u , .. ,,,,.,, .. ,,,,,,,, •• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• , .. ,,,,, .. ,,, .... ,,,, •• ~;;:;1't;•;;:~·T;~:: In ~:~;_!or7'5il~~ln1. ::.~:::: arv~. r~.M1s3~ Klt~~amc. areal ex
•-'' pit, IOM ..._'••tty l:9"11Ct..._ W.. IJH Mlnlfi..... Jlit SUS C .a. •rr•s J Ir T•.,•••• Townhouae. tnd unit, 2 Private room • bath '* poture. mi SCI tt on ................................. ~ ••••••••• , ...................... ....................... A4' A N lu .t~-iu pd N .. Blvd $2500 mo ~ ........._ ..... _ 1 br .... .... •• • ewv ~vr • Br 2 Ba lmm1c Pool. Nice patio. 1%25 cno ewpo~. Jf
1
nm..,., ~..._._.._.._~n__:R:.£.1' tu'TSID• l BR N..., .. .._._ • Br I ""'"'• · ..,. .,..._, 1 -i ....... hr or -11Le ur er • cu --------~ ..... CllSI .... po .. ..._.... .. ' llP Encl pr Ad111t1 no tftC ,.,., _., ..... Nn pet.a '725 Mo Ytar l'! m'1 "'
cottase. teml fu.nUlhld. Bl CanaJ rr.t pet.a, ZllO. Newporl 191 dulta~M2 50'73 ~a1t 16C).tm2 Boom Cd Mffom e ~~'=~~rs 87W700
1ard •tt•,..., mo ~1. --~·4988blwn8'5PM • 2 Br. 1 Ba Nr s C.t Oranaetree, I br condo. Female non amoll:er ficft amu rrom Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
IP:arost, .!~~ 81~ Chip UIC. SlllCOMDO --;....-... 3741 Plau, S.A Adultl '5oo tort, ate, 1menities 1300 mo. Av1il Stpt lit. Hall AMaervicaavaila-.... trlel...... 4500
,,... ,,.,-d'--Nn ., ..... -"'.'.'. Adut•· onl" Av11l Im· 1-, .. , ...... 1,....1• ---. •••• , .. ,, .... , ....... .. , llftlllt ' • 4 Br. rtCna. micro, ... ....................... " -~ .. 'J ...,. Vte ...---. r JVfU ·-SQ FT tr & S Ac,_. poaal,w/1.lllltiOMo.CaU SIGHT-SOUNDOP'S&A lrftt,C:..-9'11tt med. S450 833-0618. 2 lovely tonntetl11a 1q.ft up at ft'MOOable l.OOO ta OIHwd~ ins
CONDO near So Coaat Ml·OteO. b>O wk Aua. nlr '400 1 Br. apt. up ur down Mf·IM30. -rooma, w/blkon)'. pvt rent1l1 No leaat rt· ~5msi1 ·
Phu. woodsy at· 1.;C T.tf mo with b•lcony or ~Ito, L..-.ltee:h 3148 bath. lut. ptlv .. all u&ils ulred ull lo<'
moaphtrt Seeurlly icfi ~ b • Ir Jlli1494 s 337·2222 cilhedral ctallnc. poo1' ....................... fd Mature peraon THlllCIHT uoo sq fl Xlnl red d REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COMI WITH US ••• COROH.A D& MAI.
SOUTll Of' lllCillWAY llOME AND
INCOMt: TWO STORY TWO BEDROOM IN
FRONT ONE 8£DROOM UNIT IN RF.AK
Wlll'H TWO CAR GARAGE. .wvrH 25~ DOWN
OWNER WILL CARRY RAl.ANCE "'IVF. YEARSAT15r; 1299,SOO
'::1'c~~tlfome1. Inc ~~~~iew.11.C:' 10
Htw..ttltodl 376' 1p1, lush landscapm1 1~:r~h ~d'. ~f0::c~~ ie'~lmo. 111·~~~ 115 SPACI ;'!e'\~t :: AC ~r
• ·1400 MO-SZ'U .... 1.~~~••••• .. ••••••• Adult.I . no ptl.a $460 " beach ~. 496-1079. Furnished room In Costa THI RIGHT rices. can be spilt. 2919S
-L l ltot'" house on 3Br.oceanvu,new,2car J!R ~92447. -..... ~-_.,..E llaladay, SA. 646-7512. Bir J Br 1 Ba Vaulted Suxutryl Or ,4 8 with ok1. Avail 9/1 to 6/l5 2 Br Upper, balcony, Oreanvlew. lBr. open Mesa. Nice, qwet ·-· '"'"'-
548 6900 tt11Jn1. h1>k'. fMd yrd. an ••0 r. '950. Bkr ns.9080. di beams 1 blk t.o bch. k 50 For working person. Not GUAIAMTllDI -...:.__
dbl&•r $M 673-413.18 separato muter bdnn. --enrlsd gar, d/w, A ts mo. 75l·'293 under 32 yurs old •to&OOOSq. rt. Prime 2500 SQ f'T Light in
suito, 3 run Ba. l''•mlJy No peu. se. 5411·9<*4 or I_.. ... ..__. -315-2 642-4794. Watcrfro!IC offlcea ln dustraal PJrimh e 'w()(' ataoo D .. PoW 312 Rm,FurrnaJDinlneRm. &40·5446. ....,....."...,..... Ml t from •'uhion NtwPort Harbor wllb n•xl to o 11 aynr ........... ••••••••••• & Llvlnl Rm in v:z. Stunning. largt 1 Rr ....................... nu es bo
1
.
11
bl Airport S12so mu
2 Dr t U1 dbl "ar. yard. 1 t l&hbo h C d A p 1 •. 2 Br 2 Ba {:()(\do On 11olf Island. Kltr btn prlv at • ape a•• a e ,,..
5 1
... .,
Saoo AYlll Sept 7 ~:f11~.i:~ It c~rpeti a::a esas.f'Mooo7IO r~c course 'washtr dryer Employed male or 11tu Plu.sa lonaUatols~ial '" . ~-1617 ~sTCLIFF DR, ""'.I. "l 1·7300 496 7078 thru-0ut P•rfect rond. •h St rdrig'e lnrld ssoo' dent. 12.50. 840-*7 amenltles Temlic leas-SSOOsq ft. 3front omces. 2 "" " • .. I.,. -7 -tn&termsnowavallable tarae drive 1n rear ...--......~~~ HaH•W4f•h«ll lJ40 C Sl?50 tMloo07.._..8,!,~ker £ast&lde 2 Br. l Ba, up-•92:!~-Hoteis,Mohts 4100 CallToday' doors 3phasepower 31
........ •••••
00
•••••••• ~j>er•_ ~-'"-· -sta 1 rs, no pets N r N.wpori ltodl 3169 ••••••••• .. •••""""' 17141675-8662 sq rt 1779 Whittier St RE Sales people to learn wperta..dt Jl6t NR REACll 3bdrm. 2 br, Iba. SSOO/mo. 204 :irhools & sho!" k25 ....................... SlAUllCMOTB. lo.tSI A•....,• C.M.540·~
investments & ex ....................... 2\.tba,fl mnn.rncdyrd, 44lhSt Front.Drlveby ~=(~:41~: ~1 61.\S. ____ Oceanfront for Win ter Wklyrentalllnowavall. ~ -----·-Small orrlce &--;hopspace
changes. Xlnt oppty for Coiy beech rotta&e. 2 Br aar. wld bkuJllf, tttlrrr In fl~L th.en £aU7S2·64~ _ ieeior•Fi&eSurldoy liEAUTIFUL 2 Br. 2 Bil. Rtnlals. Furnished It S126 & up Color TV H!WPOITCIMTEI for lease. AIC & Ba S300
right person 100'l-t•om· I Ba. Pwn Winter ~n· ..£!. S89S ~1 Brunell • eeo·1 • Mesa Verde. llOO sq ft unfum. Broker. 675-1l!!t Phones m room. 2274 Preatlaious. full service Mo M1Ssaon Viejo area mission available <.:on tal. 9·1681. thru 6l5-82 \\'alktobtoarh 38r.2Ba @~ Port111 •Plusmore fplc lndry, palio. dis NO FEE! Apt & Condo Newport Bl vd C M EXEC offices lodds 8SS·!QS
rident1al Interview ~_Mo.J12·1 -Fireplace. d w. beam ORE.AT AECRUTION· hwshr. encl gar. Adlts. rentals ViUa Rentals ~7445 rcpt. sec, xerox. under· U--:..
4
550 ~~....Y.!J!£e LJOO ISLE cluirming 4 cC'1lina. washer & dryer. l(!fllllS•FreeLksons no pets.~. 675·4912 Broker On the be.ch. yearly, I ground pk'g, telex & an· ... ;;;~ ............. ..
Ha.Pl bdrm. 2 bath. newly ff 2 cu 1t•ra1e. s mall u11v & pro ihopt • i 3107 Ma~ _240._4400 Plllf NnllPORT room' apt kitchenette & tique d8CW c:onr rm Free standing conven
Need sharp4·plex 111 HB decorated
51800
mo .I.•.!c!. S64.S Mo 96G-632S. r /., r;J ·-'~ HeaJUIClulll •Sluna Bachelor, newty decorat ft tft bath., S290 P'~ mo + 644-7189. --garage Approx 288sq ft
Have 70K cash Pnn on Year!)• Abo other l't'D l"ite 3244 (Jfff/ /(JJM'au'J ;:,~~~:011!1~~1; ed. pr Iv ate pal i o. COUNTRY CLUI secunly deJ)06it of S290. CdM !nlUlle Suites. AC, Loe behind 1811 E 17th St
I}' 675·9797 lals avail Bill Grundy, ............ ••••••••••• 011v1ng Renge ~astside location No UVIMCW 2306 W OallDlront N.B. l,hlpl pll1. utJI pd. 2855 CM C1ll l\oxie. 642·4210,
----m .
6161
ORAMGmEE leautiMligC•yoa IEAUTIFULAPTS: ~ts S~<1:_5!8-_~-Bachelors. 1&2bedroom ~ ~.Cstli1 .6'!_5-6900_ M·F,9!o5onl .Sl.2Smo. IY OWMll Yearly & winter, lbdrm 2 Bd, I Ba. 2 car garage. Beautifully redecorated S1ng195 ' & 2 Bed· PINE BLUFF APTS apts & townhouses. s....,. ....as 4200 Prtmr orncespaceln new ......., W..ted 4600
4 lg units. U>ng Beach & 2bdrm. rum Uhl pd adult comm. Tennis, El Dorado Mdl 3 Br, 2~2 rooms •Furnished 2 Br 2 Ba Cluld OK, 00 f'rom 1510 644.1@99 ....................... bldg, Dana Pt Ocean & ••••••••••••••••• .. ••••
Cash flow IO'i f'm Yrd, on Seashore W pool, gym, sawia Avail ba, wet bar, parquet &Unt111n.shed •AClult pets Pauo. vle~. frpk. 3 -8R 2 ba yrly Si20 ,.;
0
Newport, avail 8129 to mtn views Avail 9 _81. Pror prop mgr. sgl. St_J~~-1144 1451 Newport S450 mo & Aue \ • mo Isl. last rt rs Security gated, ~~~e~1·o~~:~~s.1; end gar • gu stove, Frpic bltm paho gar. 9/12, stei;is to beach, 3 br, Pre-completion leasing wants sm beachfront
Waikiki 2 BR rum condo SSOO mo 548-2.90! & cleaning deposit \ iew 51200 mo 9 10 6 SSW Like 'new i29 ~th St new paint '" out 127 bonu~. 661·33Sl____ apt Sept Apr Will exch
14th Or v1ew. pool, Ocean front. year round. WarnerCan.SS!l-9400 _7l0.51ll_ 63121SOA~~6107PM Don't dishirboccupanu 34thS_L8§7.a!67,67}~ AIRPOIT AIEA prop mgmt serv. for all
nrbeach Saleorexchg 2 bdrm, 2 IMI ~ 5407 NwptHgts,cute2br.2ba 01kwood Lgelbdrm.lba,dshwhr. oa 5 G~·3319904_ Newport 3 Br. 1 Mu.w rur11iafled r Ufl· orean.._f.4J!~J534·6940
S98,_<>09_Qwner_614 1451 Seashore rollage wlfrpk. lge Gerden Apertmenta carport, upstrurs. S:tJ5. BEACH YRLY REN Crom oceaQ, par)l~1t lualtMcl. ~ , a>.rroldfemaleislookmg
22 Units Newport Bch. Winter Rental Sept· yard & gar. S7SO month NewportBMchN. 645-6625.Avail.8/16. TALS 18r & bllchelor Wkly ne.fl. ••~ J&ftett!ltt'•S.• for liv. qln, N.B .. low
Sl.540,000 Luxu rious June. Steps to beach, 3 tomonth.543.1!1L__ 8801rvonii ••1 '0'4' 1 or 28R_ Buill·ins Jones Rlty673-62IO 67$-m . 1l'\19e. W~ C08t ot exchange terms OW~7S2·2S84 Br, new paint in &out. JASM INECREEK (714l645
·ll Drapes. carpets. Adults Blurfs-2 BR 2,,-BA Enc IOO'FIOMSAMO tuj~ ~sed &45-31~1 __
4-PL--EXES 127 34lh St 857 0867, Woodbridge. 3 br. I'• ba Elegant. view. Adults. 17~~ .~~l~blhl on!! No pets. 64.>0816 ga r . f> 0 0 I s 6 7 5 Newpoprt Beach UEC.~l s·--Exrcul1ve With family
673-S4l0 _ condo. S62S mo. avail. no pets SlSOO mo Dys (714) 642·5113 640·5296 S40-7SS9 1Bdrm, $300/Wk v•n "" "'~ needs minimum three 2 Bdrm.lbalh NeurSo S•C.._.. 1176 1mm~ 64G-769Q_ ___ 7_52-~0,evs?S9·1790 S525-31R/21A ~ ==-2Bdrm SJ7S Wk 2082 M1chelson•212 bedroom~eor cordo
Coast Plaza Terrif1r ....................... Woodbridge 4 br. 2 ba, Big Canyon Townhouse 2 rhildrt!n OK Pool. no Newlyde{'Orl~harp 2021 BusmeasCtrll213 for <by ) Sept ).st Costa
rental area Super eond1 l bdrm, Ocean view, So fam rm, gardener Nr Luxurious 2 Br. 2 Ba I bdrm luxunous. Pool. J!els_, 557 1634, 751 37o3 VACANT <7141_997-0U'l..._675 ~127_ 7 l-'·752·0234 Mesa. Newport Beach
lion. San Clemente A\ail srhools.parksSIOOOmo. Spertacular golfcourse Jac&gymlnVersa.1lles S375 Large upper. 2 3 bdrm , 2 bath , IBrlblktobay&brh. Costa Mesa.
704
sq ft area Call968-0234After
A!!!.!5. ·~ --12131424·7462_,_4.24·68'74 & lake yiew, separate 2 S8SO Mo CaU631·~-bdrm. l ba. adulL!., nu fireplace. blt·ins. newly $400 mo yrly 2Br, yrly Med1cal 'General orrice. l_.QO PM 3·2·2·1.Supercond1llon --caq(arage.IA'aseStooo Yearly 2 Br. 1 Ra . pets, 311 W Wiison refurbished.YrlyatS7SO S J Rlt dO
1
Near break ev('n the Ho-·· u.....__,_ ... _... Northw. ood large 3 Br,. 3 mo 750 mo ones y f roun oor, r1rv pa 10 I ... --B d r a Mo.644·2416. carport S65oMo indds 6312177 673-6210 563 mo 771 ·3350 .... 1Rtt1/••Ht first year Under IOX ••••••••00
••••• .... •••• a. 111 rm, am rm_. c, ut1ls Avail Sept. 5 t019 I So Cst Vlllas 2 br, I ba, --4°• 4797 ri......, ..
gross. lolboo lsa..d 3206 gardener & water meld. 0 C EA N f' R 0 NT 2 ~'-Ba}'. Ave 673-1674 ' SS2s Woodside Village 2 Steps 'to beach Furn 3 Co:ta ~tesa "'0 •q rt •• :::::."'•••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• S99S Mo. 544-~---b 2 b ~ So C l Tu Br 2 Ba Minimum, 2 ., . "' • •··-~~·REC CARPET Ill 754-1202
Bayfronl Yearly. 3BR, leach 3241 Bdrms With lots or wood DUPLD r. a 5 __!!eeks 642-2643 suite $175 mo lJt1ls tn-_ ....
2BA. frplc. lrg pauo. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• and shutters. rireplace. 2 bd rm S600 3 bdrm, 2 race 3 br, 2 ba $625 p p Vac-At--R.......__.._
4
250 rid 779 W 19th St Opportwlity SOOS
avaJI Sept 1.5 SJ400 mo Monarch Bay T 4 Br 3 mature adults. S87S mo ba $750. steps to beach 968·~2----"'""' 9"f1IP 771 3350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675·7~67~ __ Ba Din. ram & lndry yrl} Orean view Yearly ren VER-SA I LL~ spar 2 br, j;ti)i;:N•W•ELLS-R;;~ orr1ce. Store Bu&ine&s PRINT SHOP
4 PL EX. -Tustin Near Corona det Mer 3222 rm Kids OK S1000 Mo •tARBOR VIEW 4 bdnn, tal 110 24th St. NB 0 14) IAY TIMIYS 2 ba . ser gate. Clbhse , quet Club Lovely 2 br, 2 14''1X40 :kl19-A Harbor Thriving buslness. C.M , -~... 831°""'&675-8074 624·0704 SPACIOUSlBR. ocean view. adults, no ba view ron"o. 24 hr Bl vd, Cost a Mesa. low overhead Call £or new m best area. g....,., •••••••••o•••••••••••• -·~ --·--2•. ba. 2 story with fam1 ------' ... .,,. c
assumable fan w 20'1. 2 Bdrm. J ba. spa, be Spec ocean vw 3 r. I'-' rm. formal dining. 0 ~ "' k c:----• ' d I b • CR•~o~ ""U S7SO_ ~] 1997 ser' full re(. mnthlv 3l'rOSS from Fed co det111ls _,,ooo ra1 iz d S312 000 l
l . N "' h f I h d d floor s " b S850 Large patio, wal in EASTBLU"". •pac·1ous I Avl 9 I 7fi0.2SS3 Avail no~' S47S. agl 631 1266 wn . rinc garage rras1on rpc , rw . ,.1ew.b1gyard,privary 3br,2 a, i mo h rr ~ _ hliiiillllililrJllllll"'lll"•
please At.rt 1131!49'll or Island, redel'Orated. deck. nr town bch $1800 moyrly winier, Sept.. 12-June I. closet , di s hwas er. bdrm Pool quiet area Beautiful Lake Elsmor S49-l:J66 l~~Jhl
499-4721 _ SHS per mo. 2 yr lease. SllSO_J~ ___ oryrlySl.250 64.>3447 ~'j~~l~~~yf!~~~ Pool Sgle adlt No pets SSOO view. I Br l Ba .,.et bar' N-_..pl Bch. small omce. ~ r · Fo S•b 0 1213) 991-0687 or 12131 Sun drenched h1lls1de TRI LEVEL APT with W A T ·E R F Ro NT S99W Bay St mo&44~767_ Wknds, Wk ly or Yrly 8x8. 1827 Westclifr Or . r• •-• ~
G 0 ~ d r 1 nya n w::: g 782·33J!L --home, 3 BR. J BA . O<'ean \'1ew 3 Bdrm~. 3 BACHELOR Near 42 St 646-tlll Near Hoag Kosp Beaut 673-2181 _ _ NB SISO !!12_~!0000 :t • i
Beautiful Costa Mesa DOLL HOUSE DU'1.U Formal din, f'lreplace, ba. 3 car gar In a prime S400 Mo. Ut ii paid newly derorated 2 story Rentoh to Shan 000 I 7TH STIHT
Trt·Plexooadoublelot. Front unit. 2 Br 1 Ba. 2400ftcarpeted Front& Newport location 575.2325 apt. 3 Br 2 Ba fr-pk , ••••••••••"••oo••••••• COSTAMISA ChewtlcdSena.
I yrold, Lrg 38R owners S800 Mo Back unil 2 Br back yard WI gardn~r-Sl200 ' mo yrly Yearly. Wllller, summer NEWPORT HEIGHTS dAsdbuwltrs,. lndnory n}t'.,"· .t:5r Moving? Avoid deposits 2 or 3 room office suites So so.~c .Pooll A unil 2, 2eR units Huge 1 B S6ooM 644 5403 S900 mo Lease. Avail. Waterfront Homes, Inc rentals Briery Realty Spacious 2 Br 11'1 Ba ,,.. • .,,., & cut living expenses' Avail now Call range oas rea yrd. Beautifully main· ~a_. ___ o._. __ ._ Sept. Is l ror app . 631·1400 67s.S!_I L Townhouse style. Laun 548-02_30_ Profess1onully since Realononucs
675
_
67
No exp ne<' Will train
ta 1 n e d w man} 497·1825 After7PM --dry hook-ups. garage Oceanfront large 3 Br 2 1971. ------SlS.000 cash down PILI!>
amenities Ca ll Geri VIEW-VIEW 2 Br home, rernge. dtS· CCNMio•W-Adults. no pets. S47S Mo Ba Upper. 2 car garage. HOUSIMA TES Ground Oooromre space approx S7000 ror equip Days, 631 4402 f.\ es lla~bor View Hills Mon-hwasber, stove. washer U L..t±s:f ~va1I 9-18._~9?79 frpk. yearly least' S\200 ___ 832 4134 Avail for lea.s;e 400 to needed Call Mon-f n
te to Model 4 bdrm · 11...-....-v -1400 sq fl L til rurn
9
.
6
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867 0111 760-0734 r c•.1 &b kf l j & dryer, frpk , patio~•••••••"••••••••••••"•••• .. ••••••••••••••"• Quiet 2 bdrm. upstairs Mo_642_;344J Prorremale.noo smoker Harbin Investment ----
--ami Y rea
35
rm, Walk to beach S800 Call NEW Be 1st tenent Gtt1tral 3102 unit ma triplex conve Large 2 Br 2 Ba To share prestigous Service Inc 1~ E 17th Earn Sl~.000 or more 3 SIX COTTAGES car rrage Avail Sept 847·8122 dJlys, 642-0166 Unusual adult complex nienl Eastside location Ba yrront Condo. with Turtlerock home f'rplc, SA 541-4171 mo It s possible With S1tuatedonone·halfacre I 1500 mo i nc l eves. w gate & pool. Near ••••••••••00
••••• .. •••• S42SAvail911642162Sor view. security bldg . pool,.JBR.
2
BA.lotalup------M ELLOWf'R~H call
m Pnme rental area or gardener& water OCEAN FRONT Mobile S.C Plaza Secluded AnMTS FOi RENT 541H1906 _ pool, parking Yearly graded. many Xtras No For Lease prof orfire 64.S-2727
Costa Mesa All have f/
1 ~ / //a~ Homes S6SO mo & up comer unit l BR din· H B .. N B .. Costa Mesa SPACIOUS 1 bdrm. patio. ~so-'--~roker_~S;4912 pets. S340 mo & share ~f:vcee in 1:i
1
::nr!q ~11i A-L A R M C 0 be e.n rec en 11 Y r e ('•(11(1)1(/ '1 , . Obl_w1_de 499-_ J!l_6__ ing. patio. cent.' air Somethlng for Everyone adult. no pels SJSO. .llHI 752·2.836 H. e'1l H B Hunt Harbor BURG LARY OC. 7 yrs furb15he.d with ~ew roofs •• fM4t•tltN -k6o+S~ uW . 77s.2S80 Bach to 4 Br. Unfum. 64>783i OCEAN VIEW ~ -d
and paint Five have 7' LCIC)mCI H• 3250 eves week~nds No pets Ai>U Certain locations 10 steps lo sand Ll?e 2 College student wants to a r e'a 8 3S 51 18 or Sell or ronsi er partner cozy r1replac~ Best or f>'i-l-81.'J1 ""•••••••••••••••••••• --orrer Pool. s pa. Spacious 2 Br 1 Ba bdrm +patio+ 2 car shr near OCC b> Aug ~-3701 848-3180 -----
all, seller will carr} -~lE Co , ....... CdM HOMEFORRE.NT IUUTIRI. HOUSES-fireplace. laun. room, Laundryrac.,pool S~5 park ing S750 mo 18t!!.,S200.97S.02~ lSX2B'omcespaceinin Meat market, totally
SJ00.000 at 1325'"', Sub .-·
11
.. -,.. 3 Bdrm S625 Fenced COHDOS beamed ceilings. --~!IS56 -Furniture available MF lo share large new dustrial complex, nr equipped S2S,000 or ~111
mil on down payment yard & garage Kids & Apt . Newport Beach garages, all buill·ins I Newly decor2 Br w1gar, 848·4~!Q!'~Ves 962·~ Irvine house immcd John Wayne Airport sell equipment ror
and price 963-5671 2 bdrm. l ba cottage 711 pels wekomt> 545·2000 Costa Mesa Call us. we Garden & Townhouse adults. crpt.s. drps. bll· WESTCLIFF, l br condo, with young professional SSOO mo 675-1698 Sl8,000 64&-111144
n . GoldennxlS.S75mo lst& A&_enhn~r~ manage 600 unlls on or desicn.NOFEE. ms Fncd yrd w/pat10. adults. no pets, pool. male. S32S Mo t.:allJohn EXEC--UTIVE lftvHhMftt 'J m I :<:.J l ·, 11{:.I:.J last, S22S secuMty, uvail loCJURO Hkjuet 32S2 near water. S7SO & up. TSL MGMT. 642-1603 wtr pd c3:111-s. 636·4120 newly decor . new ap 552·4030 Opportwlity so 15
immed 642·4210 ....................... Call Delores Gel berg lalboo p..,_ 3807 667 V1ctona S4SO _(lies ssoo 673-6640 SUITES •• •••••••••••• .. •••• ,..
_ RE~L ~TATE C-~sta M~ -3224 3 Br 2 Ba Garden llome. TSL MGMT 642·1603 •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• 2619SantaAna "L" S475 Ve;:;~illes 2br, 2ba, dtn "Gay Male Female''. IN U1ticfw IR•n""-"t
Ovt of COll!tty ••••••••••• .... ,....... Niguel Shores. pnvate ; 2 br. I ba, secunty, 2BR. spacious nr Bay & LUXURY TOWNHOUSE rm, former model. S72S G R.C RoomateContact HEllTAGE Proprietory remodeler
Properly 25SO 3 Br 2 Ba College Park. commty, pool. beach child ok. no pets SC ocean Yrly. kSO met 2 Br 2l, Ba 1650 sq ft 642-6149 (Sand.)'.l Service 11 ·7PM PLAZA needs s20.ooo
10
com
...................... , bit-ins. D W. fr pie ~~-!92-070Q._661·3S26. Plaza Area ~. uhl Mature adults No Every extra. rncd yrd, Vers&1lles bach ·p;~lhs;, (21316:.>-:.MO. New luxury offi ce spare plete luxury Newport
Carlsbad-waterfront Available S700 Ask for THI SHORES 833·16S31~6844aft6 ~ 67S.411L____ dbl ga r S62S 673-6336. clubhse " pool. nice. ---------in Irvine 's busiest Beach home 4-0'f-60';
Come home to a retreat! Pete. 751·319_1 __ 3 Br 2 Ba pMvate com· EAST BLUFFS 2 br. 1 ba. 2 sundecks. 642·~. _ k2:S. 642.6149 (San<!Y > 4BR. 2BA condo Laun-center' Easy Frwy ac·· return within 4-6 mos
Spacious 2 Bdrm.~ full SECLUDED l Br very mty, pool & tenntS. S8SO New, lux 2 br. 2 ba, gar $650/mo. yrly, utils D•a Poiltt 3826 Bra~ 3 br. 2-ba dry, pool,jac, patio. ten cess Avail now' Call Details. days 64.>7123. Ba. gorgeous view private, qwel & woodsy. ..Mll"-49~3444, 644·5403. vt~"."· high wood beamed _p_aid. 673-1166 ...................... Steps to beach Nr pier nis courts. S32S mo + for detutls eves 645·1090
Sll0.000.Lowdwn Adults no pets. New ceilings, spa. Adults on· Lge 2br Iba wl2patiO) Large bachelor. Dana f'J~~S73-6640 _ utj_L631-21J!l After7PM lli_·l231 ~0.4230
R & H lnv'l. ?,!i:!-2197 carpets. drapes, range L. N. SHORES ly Xlnl loc. No pets gar & '1nd,.Y. SSSO/ mo' Point. Parking. laundr}. -M F to shr house 10 •DRUXl OfffClS• 2125 s q ft o rt1ce Utilspa1d Isl +securi· 2 bdrm and den, 2 ba S1200 /mo Office yrl.)'..675-3213 $~498-0318 OCEAN VlEW. yrly, 2 Costa Mesa Non
warehouse. JUah arowth ty S52S Mo 642 083S or garden home. on 644 4684 res 64().8862 BR I Ba. S600 mo Avl smoker S280'mo incl 1.2 & 3 room No lease re " " oceanside. walk to . · ' . Bachelor, S325 yrly, ,, H_..gt.hocll 314 9 1644·6'1a>·64&3189 quired AdJ A1rporter area Affordable hous-646·642.1 b h S8SO Avail View condo. city llghu. blk beac h. 201 E ••••••••••••• .... •••••• Coz-y 2-Br.::..o...:1 -Ba-· <>-am ulil.S4S.~_J Hot~l_!p.ll223 9·12. mg G~ labor force NEW2Br I Ba.Quiet& eac mo ocean2 BR2Ba.loft.2 Balboa 675 -9562 , ""' Femate. CdM. S27S Mo
Ex t;ept1onal clean air cool, built-ins. rernge !fl5661·S9118 __ decks . luxury! Lse 752-6925 THlWHIFR.E.TREE ceilings. trplc. gar Plus ulil. Eves, G7S.9206. Office spare a'·a1I for
environment 244·9803. Adults, no pets Isl + Misslott Vltfo 3267 Sl,000. 964-3466 sis-1 Char\ning Luxury Adult wi1ls al ar Newport Heights. No Daxs, ~2628_ __ part·time use Across
244·3114. -securit y SS9S Mo ....................... 2 br+den,2"'bacondo ... ~,yr/Oct l l br fordableliving.1,2 &3 kids/ u .SS00.64.>1682. Fl Gorgeous 28R. 2BA fromHoa gHospltalNB.
Reolhtale 642-083Sor646-6423___ HOMEF'ORRENT 2 r ar gar , refrig . :~~l~~tUssxi.67&-:aJ • Br. ~ell. decora.ted Versailles l Br. Bachelor condo furnished. Jae & 631-~IO._ W-'-~ 2t00Mesade1Marbeaut>· 813 -4 Bdrm $625. Fe1dnced& washer .. dryer,gasBBQ, -=-Olympics11.epool,bght Penthouse. balcony 1 Loe SCPI & NtMflAYAIOMT ~ d & garage K s S 2S C det Mer 3122 ed len~is rowt. Jacuzzi. ocean view. k SO mo poo nr 111 ~ •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Presidio Or 3 bdrm. 2 yar pool, Jae. sawia. 7 01'0RC1 park hke 1.andscapmg A v a
1 1 8 1 7
Pal OCC. 540-31!66 Jo Days Office a-pace. paramg, • ,......__...,,_., t.. ba lg cov patio fplr in-pets welcome S45-2000. 631·321J or919-4031 •••••••••• .. ••• .. •••••• '--( I bid Arter 9pm & wknd's, ·anilor1al.etc 76().~.
INVESTORS
•••-eoc.. · ' · A t noree ---U 2 br 1 ba beamed HMosBt .,.,autt u g 10 2131-1.IUllft: IG-6 dail . ·~ •
776
_ _ --Older Res1den1.Jal Bch or els gardner & water. gen I -----Newport Versallle stdio n~ue ew ~ck gar 00 ......, ......... lttsites1...... 445
Waterfront property To S77~ 557-4ln, S45 6445 Newport~ 3269 c 0 n do PL, jar . le c~ng, ~1 No kidsipets From $395. ~19 Easlblurf 3 Br. 2 Ba S200/mo. l'-'l blocks from ..................... .
purchase&oqointly de. avail9-1. ••••••• .. •••• .. •
00
••••• sauna.gar refrg. S425 S62S ~-i&s2· Deluxe poolside xtra Townhouse A~. 2 car bearh. Female. non· For store & office space ·--------velop l will prov a de Spacious 3 Br. + Den. Newport Island Home mo. 8Sl·8<llO lteeve. · large 2br. 2ba, bltns. gara~ No children. n smoker. Eve!: 631·5668 at reasonable 111tes. WATaRONT
100"{ fi11ancmg. Charles L n d r y hook -u P • 4br. 2ba, privacy, steps Villa Balboa, 2br, 2ba, vu C~GlhllM dswhr. l '"1 miles beach ts. Mo. 644-lOlOb. Housemates. F pr;f.. 500 to 4000 Sa Ft. o~E .. -_
Perry. 956-12.81 gardener lncld. No pets. Lo ocnlbay, Sl2001mo. or ocean & bay• lge with fireplace, 2 bdrm, Ad Its, no pets S4SO mo. $525/mo: t security 2 r, College Park area.C M MESA VERDE bR """"'° -
Hffd 91..HCMM! $876 Savage Wiide & Co. 673-~ patio. micro. frpk, S800. ocean view. 1st & last + S36·~· ~vt patio. Blk lo beach. S200/mo. + shr uttls PLAZA Prestigious location in
Client usedfu huge home 675-~. New Exec Home. pre· 642·6149 (Sandy) sec dep. 644-7877 2 B E D R 0 0 M ew crpt.1142-7233 Call 54S-0231al\ 5. 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M. Newport Beach All this
overseas Want 3500 to BeautifulnewXmdl.de st1gious area Oce~n Wooclwldge NearOcean Upper2BR. TOWNHOME Pool, Stepstobeach.3br.2ba. Female Roommate. non __ 54MIJ~ _ gi!~e: :;
1
':!~~a~~~ 5•000 +sq rt Can be corated & la~dscaped view. pool. spa. tenntS. 3 bdrm condo, 1v, ba. I ba,frpl.beams.deck. pa.rlt. near beach frpl.c. S7SO mo yrly . smolter. 00 pets SJOO Offlce~se Prin only Call Bill Mer older Like w. Orange Somer1set C1t1ho~e serurity gate Sl49S per S62S per month. Bus. carport, quiet mature 963-5191 Avail.Se .1.673-2507 Corona del Mar lnclds U A 67~7300 Co. Large cash down <Baker BearSll 3B 3 mo.760-gr/or642-7745 851·2000, Home 67~1792 adlt.s.S.S75TSL MARIHERSWAJJ( S•C.._... 317 ut_ils, washer 'dryer Small ~:'et~avceh olf1ce. re. &t. .
available. WiU look at ~a . 2 ca!rf1•ers ~~510y USTILUH Ask for Doug Am· 642·UKl3,6'2-3153 I 2 & 3 Br. Townhouse ................... ~ .. _R!'IV.644-3377 --xlnt address, $696/Mo.
any good, well bu lit es P ·31P Three Bdrm. 2\1 ba, end mennan ExctlewtLoc Apls. from k 75. Patios. Studio Apt. Ocean view. Female nnmte wanted, Terri (71f}7S2·1194 house.Agt.54~1366 __ 264:;86:11:~e.endsd unit.Goodconchtionand Rent to own. rtexible Newly deeoraled, single & double car Allutilsmcld.S320~o. non ·smoker. 4bdrm Newport Modern Store
AduJ•· 0 pets location. S8SO per mo terms, lBr Condo. So charming. 2 bdrm, sep garages near Hunt 332 Encino Lane, an house ln N.B Steps to or ofc nr post olc k SO.
..... farage. ..,, ~· , Week d_!P-759.,.175 Coast Plau. avail im· Ilse. Avail Sept I S72S Harbour.' Children OK Clemente. See Manager bch _ S19S/rno. 631-~74. 548 sit 213/477· 7001 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .......................
475 773
W ilson Seaview4Br3Ba.ramily med.JohnSSS-8917 673-3017 84()..6807_ AptC. Roomsnatetosha~home Jerry Mo.eytol.om SOJS
Hoees ,.. .. allied
63
J.48ll9. rm. dining rm. ocean & "'-'* u.fww 3600 Coste MtM 3124 • S39S 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. SAN CUM84TE in Irvine. Qwel, neat. Newport Beach
15
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Rt'llh1ll~Rl\1lty
I 1~:: 7: ;1111
••••••••u•• .. ••••3•
00
0•7• l:>d~g iR°:~ i1urr5~~· night light views. Pool & ::r::.•.-:. ................................... ,. palto. Kids OK. No pets New 2 story, l bdrm apt. Tennis, pool S2SO mo SSSO. l805Wet.cUff Dr IUSINISS LOAMS
lelbooP .... I o. . a. -tenn15.SJM>Oprmo Corona de1Mar.2bdrm. HIWLYDECOll. 960·7484,646·91i66. Xlnt loc. Oceao View 551·8298 751·5525 I~ SS00.00011.Syrs .. 19'1 . ....................... S4l-4l6S,&75-17Slevs 1 b patio comer unit l B pd I gar S600.2Br.2 fuU Ba.Uni· Closetoshops G.,.._n 998-9350 Mannx
ON ntE BEACH. Xl~t E. side duplex !bdrm. Waterfront lease. 4 Br 4 ss1:·1 yw lse. 644-72:20 d/w~·s::: po;,i'n~dults que &eparale unit. Super Call collect for•..t 050 nTALSPACE
loc. Winter Rental Av11I Iba. gar. $375/mo. Ba, family rm, top con· orS4S-S?SS • 6C2·5a73 · · sharp. CloM lo beach. (213) 249-lS36 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• NewPort Blvd. 5000 aq. 21tdLOAMS
Sept 12. 7 Br. 2 Ba 673-2HT7. dllion,dockfor40'boat. CORONA DELMAR . No pets 833.8080 . after6PM Balboa Isl, 2 garages, rt.60tperl\ Avaltnow. 90" or va lu e /30 Appl's. S900mo. Inquire NI C E E •S ID E $2200. 21r. I loA9t .ir......1....AM / SI.SO Call yrs Sl00,000 Pvt
126 E. Oceanfront. July TRIPL"'v. 3Br, 2ba t 2 br, 1 ba, sundeck, no Newly decor. C:as pd 833·3307 . _.... mBaolbomoa./Martnl>!' mSotaert's Realonomlcs 675-6700 mooey, •8350 Manny h 21st II """ le & h ~ SS25/mo 640-4090 h I Br, l Ba. upstalrg, lg •••••0"""•1•••••••• ~ -L8l · Aug. · or ca den. Lge decl1-upsllirs. 4 Br4 Ba. c an . 5 a~., · encl Jar., pool, ds wr patio. enclosed gar, kOO NEW CONDO near S.C Sept. 1 Marilyn 752-0202 Cww .. Ms ti4ofi1;;1a. Trwt Wr'TIS·~-'*'· r-l21h ~211~· IWi tnvstmnt S~ ~~e!t :r ~~le .,........ ........... Adults &eS013. mo +'400~ NS-9088 Plaza. Smalhdult com· wkdys 8.J>.5:31. '200 sq. f\. Ctou.nd noor. DtHi 5035
nter na ...... oept 7,,.,. '" 71tft.1221 ••••••••n• .. •••••••••• MIWPOIT --Ba I d pin. Secluded comer sa..-= CoastHlpay. .. ........... •••••••••• lhru June 12th Clean 2 2 B 2 b th brand new .-06 2 Br I~ • sm yar • unit. 1 BR + extras. k60 '""."-r! • Want invator for Npt br patio g1raie1tl1~n· rd p~'sm Exclusive Big Canyon .... ..._. · 37 APAITMIMYS. closetobeacb.Chlldren S3Sutil.77s.2580 ve . onBalboaPftllsu MICJ.,. ~nt home. Give dry.~ Mo, +depolit. con °· ?slt.202 townhouse. 2bdnn, 2ba, ............ , .......... l·lBdrm. From 12'70. OK. Dys 1146-0638, evea to F'un ZoM 11111• f'l•IJ r~~ ~ •ti~ lit or 2nd ~d~1"· ..,....,,. Newport""""'· •m•ll 2 "'· •"· '.J:::1
mo. ~~~= t:r,o:J"~ :::,•· • '.':~~=~· ,...,,.. "':lf:i:m't.~oo ,.,. ~1 .,. • :,;;;~ 11111~ .ll, ""'''
c..t.MtM 3124 Br. duplex, private &40-8l26or4'7 A t t. '73-4082 :::Newport81vd HH~!!-ll•J "••••••••• .... •••••••• A.&11-a~
4
4t0 tfnant. I t Ranch S.....,~Co. •••••••• .. ••"•.••••••.. yard. NO PETS. Locale Oceanfront, on beach ....... __ p-&--.&.. 1707 Colla Mesa __. "' S E A W I M D ~• -Market N'ewpmlCosta All tv-ot real estate
1 Bdrm wl~. r1ttplace, ref's requirtd S»S. Gu spectacular new 2 br. - -......... ••••::••Coodo••••" ..... w•••::.~,•,••N••8••w••"nt' MeH 1tta Call ~1·4322 lnvtat~~ since IH9 rurnished.1ara1e. deck, "water paid. 673-Z256. ram. rm. C2 'uty t~, 2''b•r••2·~:··1·b•::•to·•~;;;,• IW.. New 2 Br. 2 -· . , VILLAGE 11.11 e~"'u , • . a or64&-4141. S=** .. ,_
1 $550 7512113eve $2000/mo a 675--• -· .. ..,..,. • OC'"••·~YI rrpJc, vaulted ceJlinsa. f1nanc1al in.at 7000s.f. 1...:.:~=-=.o=..----~ • · · 3 Br. 1 Ba. S400 Fenced · · SCSO 7rly. D Alvarado --~ deck, iaraae. Q\llet, pre· New 1•2 bdrm l111ury ls\. floor. Al81541·S032, ca-arcW MTDt HwtW-yard. 2 Months advance. BLUFFS a~!:· ~ ~&h, Pl. 675.er70 Connie or 2 Br. I Ba. Apt. Beam atlslous 3rd. floor view. adult •P'I in 14 plans 1 .... ..... 4475 '42·Z 71 S4M6 I I
H..._ JI 4J 646-490L ram. rm. ra • m· !Zl3} f58-M. celllnaa. laundry rm, PoOI spa • sauna. _,5 Bdrm fl"Om $46S,} bdrm MIWPOIT ..,.04 ....................... n.i.. ,_. T t ....__.._ ....................... Clean 3BR, 141.BA. carpet ruaculate. Near f:.l M... J7J4 pool. Adulta only, 110 ' Ml4 from I~. Townbouae F1UJ Mtvice Htt. el· C..t ffw1 f..U AP' .,,.cowiwv rus U'IC~
Cuatom 4br w11 terfront. throuahout, ruud !lOOOmoiBkr,ff+O
34
· ........... , ........... peuL ... G..... ... .... from MlO +pools, teo· rtces from Ul1. "On (ll'Ol MO 1q. I\ crVund •x~~tt1~leldfor.,!nv:to~
15' boat 11 p, IP•. yard c•rdtner, no pm. WATHFIOMJHoMI ... OIO TS "' •• NZ-lnlM -"""' nit waterfallll POftdl! Call'' nee. olfim trom flool'. a. l.q\11\a ssoo -Y1f .-vr etaa s
forever view. S2900/rno. Avail Au1 22 u Mo. zsty custom hotne 4 ea, CASA DI l Br. OardenASI'. sw..a ....................... ~ Gu ror C'OOktni it hetl· 1105. ln<'lda. eec~rtal, mo · Tuur A~aor . ~lll$T ~~..;_.. ___ _
Fum.orl.l\f •• 831-2071. formal dlnln& ~ ALLUTlllTIJ:SPAID retrtte.Ad\llta.ooJ*a. "THE LAKES 101 paid. From Su ~am, word pro. -..1177 u ~ lntuut. nud
•-.... JI.a SPECTA"'" '"R CITY bre1kr11t oooll, 3 car 541-wate.rfront C!Ofldo, 1 ,r Dft&o ~drive Nor\h ttlllftJ,TriH,qwt9. --'20,000, 2 yur T.O. on
_,.... vuW\ I• io.eta ttJ Compare before you SPACIOUS 2 BJl Adull, loft, (~ ctnttal • r on Beach to McFadderl nfEHEADQUART!RS IW~Lec Or. Cly home. Llruna ••••••••••••••......... LJGRTSVlEW pr.,~ee .pan ' reat. C111tom dHl(n 0,.. ...... , ....... c•lu-1• ceed . &$1:$ Mo. Ul3) •WotmMcFaddtn COMPANU~ On Balboa Nnl1ul1. all lnvut menta. R.E. LI fUrn J bdnn hN. 11r 2 Br l S. rnlcron•e S Ip Cl, lit dec.k, boet BBQ ""'' uw -"'1111 2178 S d VIII I l1m Beadl. ll.IOPfl'mo eomp.ttor; laUndry rm: docll nail. at extra feat~rt1. Pool, • loll of wood. sema1 · to uwln a1e. '14 •t root al\d auto tralflc to 8"'*tr.•1.ew __ _
• liflS • bu1tlotttdfdaw/vu. cbarlf. Forleueoel)'. eov rd •ara1e. aur· bar. *410. NoP111.211t 2 B r . Pltluru que 71 m.s · .._ .. wbD are Meklns t.i-tBai...""7,._. Clltalfitd Ada are the
GARAGE IAL& ldt "' !pO. ~.ISHM u u · 11Ddaci11611. Mii "" m-M atrtam l'1lllil t twlm· MKY Pl it Clualfted. WIO your book •tort. art allop, of. 1ara1e of)'ardNlt! It'• •-Call Pe .. v Pattison rouncltd •ltll_ pluth •••fl< h . a.a .nu. Oral\aetttt toodo. by [ ~ l aa ape_rt..-IQllt nm lftlroMl c;.,..."9ftror .,...., '4. a •utctsslut :~~~ =: 1Ar1t11,_t1a, ...... ~~SS· 11
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rwayto\tllmoft .-r'# d U.O. Adulta, DO pelt, 8.1 .,,., ,,_ ri.-ut....t .. ~.--D .... 117L .-... ••r 1our drawlac car • 7115 WutAdR•? fQ.5f1! ••· ea. ~u-----·· ---
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DIUCTOIY
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Your Ually Pilot
Service Directory
Re piest.ntat i ve
642-5671, ed JU
C..,.tStntcit ........ H......... a....c..... ,..... ,.,..... loofllcJ ..••...••...••...••.... ...................... . .•......•............ ······················· ..••...•....••......... ·········•·•··········· .................................................................... . •Dl.\a...A.IAMO• WeCartCrptCltllMl'I H!RITAOE PAJNTINO Sam Fukumoto YARD Want a RF.AJ.J.Y CLEAN ree Trlmmle&. re '1ne palntln& by Richard ':'lit Paper Hanger. Prof BALBOA ~FINC CrO
_t1 lil.]J8 00 tum rle1n • uphob Ir REFURBlSHINC CO MAlNT. " Clean·UPI HOUSE! Call Olneham moval, malot 30 yr1 Sinor. Ur. IN. 13 yrs '11 IJ\Jtall Deeoratorqual, The only rvu.rnit co or
1 Truckmoontunlt Retld. or <'omm ~ yn Tree trlmmlna. amall Olrl F~._!!L~JY!_ up. Farmtr. h•vc happy N 8 c1.111tomt'N f rtust St~e~~l tht'Coaat ~8'14~
......... Wor uar ~:nte exJ> Lie.~-89'7 w l!J!d!£.!R!i! 64.1-3540 ROBIN'S CLEANING ulo. X_lnl ttf s..u_a18 Thanijou, 631-4410 p•--L--WILBER ROOflNO, Int' ....................... --~ ~ .-. ....-.. NEED HELP?! CALL. Shampoo &i •warn CICIO o.c.,...., n1u TOPPID & Servlc:e lhorouahly SunrlseLandscapt DB's PAJm"INC ••••••••••••••••••••••• All.typea, new CONtr ..
''The Aceountary", bk· Color bnaht.tncn, wht •••••••••••••••••••.... REMOVE!> EXPERT clean house. ~7 M1Jntt'nallce Int/ext Neat. reliable, ONE Jo'REE u:.~SON • re·rooflnc. ""· bondl'd.
kPI 'accta PU• dt.I crpta lO min bleach Direct from manuf1t1 YARDCLEAN·UPS Quality Houi«lea.nlng Ron,56C37'7 rtfl. DaveMS-0.188e~ New Approach! Ef\JOY llr. 322179 Fret est
Lowest rat '8S7·4G46 Hall. Uv.-dln. rma lt5: lurer decor p11lowa, 751·3'16 with Personal Touch Crullve-Prolts$iooal Quality Ptg l.owHt ratt's I e. 1 r n 1 n I ! Bo b 1121·*1
--ava rm 11 ~: couchhO: apr uda etr Btv --Fre41e1l. Beth~l56 Land a cap in g . ~o OC Neat prompt ~rdstey 548-@_ S.w..,,A111Gltw
lrWalStnktt chrSS Guar clin> pct Thfilr~1'.Q68'1 Exp 1ardenrier clean •HOU1eelean.ln1• bnckwort. l""S, patio Serv.14&-S684'"636-'/1C9 .,.~......_/•_.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• odor Crpt ~pair l5 yra ---ups, l~e l m. romp .... ,.._,...,. -.... M kl
DESIGNER. natlonally t'XP Do ~'Ork myseU. Dryw.. malnt. Fl'ff ffil. Pete Pro(etaional·Thotough COVt'r'S, 1prinkten1 Rt't& Slarvln1HousePaln1.trs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cstm orus,R II oa
known. will customize Re rs. S3l·Ol01 ........... ~ ... ~....... 141· lOM Xlnt Local Refs Uc, C·2'1·3721M. 831 M97 OualltyWort. Reas. Neat patches & textures a Ile rat ons epa irs
your wtddlna 11own1. NoSteam/NoShampoo DrywaUSpectallJI YARDCLEAN·UPS Charlie831-6054 Striplilg Freeest,__~_Doug frff e•t~ Jtl-14lt Consu= In your
acrtss ·etc Bev Thayer Slain Spec1albt. Fast Quat.' prod New At re-R e s 1 d I com m • I Reliable. Great work • ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY PAJNTING PLASTER PATCHING home 7
1Sl·058'1 drv Fr~_est_839·U82 moct1389&44.5a2·SM9_ Sprinklers repaired Sttad,y job, Refa. Call ParklnaLolSlrlping State llc 33e50 16 yrs lntlexUOynexp. S,,..ltn
lllHlhn :;.J. ALL TEXTURES' 485-308S af"'r • PM ..... ,,..-Lot. light Poles & fixtures Orange Co. S»-1886 Neat wort Paul 5'5·297'7 ...................... . ···-· ROBERTS CARPET D U "-- -~ • _.,~ d M M ln -, ----SPRINKLERS&SOD ••••••••••••••••••••••• REPAIR. R rywa Clean• depeo-H-..a GI Gift' "A " D b pamle · armac 8 THI Cr '--•011• R stuc~ Texture~ T estretch, rt'· dable. Ree. 631·2345 -~ ve a · ..-..:ruv-a·. u lenance C.O. 966-1901 1 . • '" e '""" ~ Tree Removal DlG I AVALOHCOHSTl. hty All repairs ~------••••••••••••••••••••••• prof. housecleaning RES.ICOMM. EXT Int text P1drhworlc Land!c~646-7Q'.!.O _
Bulldi.nc&Rt'modcllng __ ql-3490 D•'fWAUl•All JACKOFAJ..LTRADES service Reas. reliable. PROMPT LJC'D Freeest __ 645~ ,,u ...
AatwerillgSertlce 24yra llc·lns.· 8477320 CeJMn9,ACCMtk 'fheC] _Grou 7~~" Plumbmg,elee,he11tin1 refs.Jean,631-5016 o"RiC.KW.ORK·· .. s~:ii _ _LS~JSlt -,._...lltt ::: .•.....•..•...•.•... ;u0°••,............... HOME IMPROVEM !!:NT ...................... Tape, Texture. Acoustic Odd Jobs 631·4068 Reliable Couple does ren Jobs Newport Costa Ext house painting only ....................... TILE lNSTALLED 1fml~;edl.5eaafi:~11~::i:I Additions Remodeling Acou~lt<'Cellings+ Ce11ings.Freeest Reas HOMEIMPROVEMENT tal •yard clean-ups, Men lrvine' Refs Wedolhejobrighl' McCORMACKPLMBG All Kinds Guaranteed
Handling: ust' ou r Guaranteed 642-1323 rustom hand1extunng ~e.Y.!!IS'7S-9088/673-1503 Plumbing, clean ups, haulln etc 642·~ 6'15-ltis · LEEPaml.lllg 846-.as.9 REPAIR&REMODEL R~rs __ John893-Ui67
Laguna HUis Addrm lOOM ADOfTIOMS Uc 3899t4 ~32 ~ Btctricol odd jobs. 28 yrs exp PAM & BOB'S _Cleaning, BRICK-Walls. Walks~ Su~mer Spec1al-:-;xi/int ~~op:~~ Reas~~;~~ TrH Se"iu
851·9334. _ _ _ _ & •EMODB..IMG Cet1Mt1t/Co.c,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9'79-22& rtfs, reas. pnces. Call PI ante rs . Pat I os . painting Prof R nbl --- -••••••••••••••••••••••• A•..._.. Kitchens, batbs, ex •••••••••••••••••••••••ELECTRICIAN priced Carpentry -Masonry art 6~7012~---v t' nee r 5 etc ~~t.Steve~J..:.4281 Drains from tto Main JAYETIHCAlE
........ pansions, French doors. Pool Decks and PatlOll. right, rree estimate on Roofing Cer. Tile Housecleaning by Donna Block work . Conrrete PAINTING -CUSTOM rrom $20 Repairs, haul Ori~~:;;;~·;;;;r.;;·i~; windows, skylJghts, oak Masonry, Sport & Tennis Inge or small jobs Drywall · more 499-4~ Reliable, references. ef Lie. Ref's. 646-1597 work . 2.5 yrs exp Many Ing , I awn S M & M ~a:v~•1°tsp%;~•;_ajo ;:s
rep1irs. nakoat1ng intt'r., oak stairways Courts Uc 374067 Bob, ~·~ !396621 _§'.!3-lm9 Hardwood Roon ficient. 63H695 ----local refs, Uc. #403941 642 9033 exp Local rds. t-'ree
S&S Asphalt 631·4199 Plans. Lie. 301007 f'ree 851 1~~71.078__ RES ID COMM 'L ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dial·A·Housekeept"r F;~~cs~ ~~08~~a~~:h~ Bonded. ins'd. t-'reeest Pool SerYice, lepoln est Lie ~ 641).9~
Lic'd. est Reas 30 yr.i. Allen DRIVEWAY CLEANING Highly quaUried No j.. HARDWOOD FLOORS Thorough/Reliable '\t HutchLSOO 963-0911 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ASPHALTREPAIRING E Johnson 84().~ or Improve your home' t_oosmall.631·2345 __ Cleaned&Waxed Localrers 64S-1867 L~rry 750-9028e ~-OLYM-PICP~NTING Complete service re TREE DE.SIGNS
Sealcoating & Striping 840·4724 !!_es~ _ _ Remove ugly oil & rust Gorde1tiftg t\ftytime, 832-48111 S.A. CUSTOM MASONRY Intl ext free est pairs, & solar r.nstall. So ~~~~~~~R~:~11n~.
Commlresld Freeest GE•WICK&SOH SY!•n..:...f'orest'..LS~-4888 •••••••••••••••••••••...,............_ HCM1M1tttt.g Brlrk, Block. Sto~e. Goodqualltyworlc Cal Pool Sen·1ce Cl u 6312513 Lie •397:.12 645-8181 Builden.Since 1947 THOMPSON'S CLEAN·UPSILAWN ~ •••••••••••••••• ···ooNi-°B.EEM.PTY.··· lOO 's or local rer s Low_r_&t!L. _5.54 1903 ~·8663 -~!!!:!12.--·-~off•·----Add:tions. remodeling. CONCRETECONSTR Maintenance Lnd!>cp Haul, cleanup. concrete THIRSTY OR LONELY ~~~iRTBRICK &° AGAPE FORCE: S w 1mm1 n g Po o Ii. !!'!~?••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• plans t-'reeesl Reas. Lie~--64284~ Freeest _ 1)42·~ removal.Dumptruck Painting Co 3 g1merll repl astered & re PIANOLESSONS V01 "'SWAG!fij Lie 310942 S49-_217_0 CONCRETECONSTR MowmgSI" SIS·S"" _nuick serv 642-7638 "A I Masonry Small jobs & ttons or paintmg ex · modeled by Ile contrat· -u. "" "' .""L! ".;xcur ty Plus" will sit repairs Frplc racings tor t:all Tony ror free Your borne Popular & SPEQAUST Corpetthr Foundations. slab1>, Hauling 'Movmg S2.5 DUMPJOB.5 your house. plants & Refs SSl 4MS. 750-7074 cellen_!'e ~~I ~~ l21~l965-0230_ _ improvising Juilhard
Herb's Garage l99S ••••••••••••••••••••••• gl1veway:,, walkways, 7S4·9904195>0006Mark SmallMovingJobs ~.§31-'75117 ___ -------p~ lrained. BA degree. 1
Harbor Bl Costa Mesa Cabinets & counter too-.. ock walls. relainang YARD-CLEAN:-UPs 1 -Call MlKE646-1391 VACATIONING' Mo•lftcJ ....................... Property Mallogeine..t write my own arrange 548-6226 R ddi " &rlo,--h walls LoC'ul refs · rtt -..--------• w h h ••••••••••••••••••••••• r be · -_ _ _ _ _ oom a "lions 1s 953.8255 work. 1mgauon & ,.. ;1(ltJLING .Student has Exp. housesilter •••••••••••••••••••••• .. e gals s ould ang PROF PROP MGMT ments or g1nnerh
laby5ittillig work F'reeest 754 '420, ---pair, Maintenan~t ... lt\Kk Lowest rate. Responsible. re rs •A·I MOVING• logether .. Sl01roll By OCIP <Orange Coun· Seth~orl)1_S4J-7~1 _
••••••••••••••••••••••• J_bet 7&~!_n:!,5'll!.i>.!!!.L Child c.,.. Greenbelt Landscape. fTonrpt Call759-1976 646 3572 Top quality Special -~oL wa!!-s .P9·0712_ ty Investment Proper Witdow C~
Will Babysit my home. Remodel. ktl. cabinets.•••.•••••••••••••••••••• ~1·0!?9 ______ Thank ou John ___ J.utorial--- -rare 10 handlio& 25 vrs PAPERHANGING lies). Ed,(7l4J S34·694fl •••••••••••••••••••••••
days, infant & up pat1oi., bookshelves. C~1lld~abrle. hMy horc"~. JAPAN~EGardener Ct..UpYOllrAct ••••••••••••••••••••••• eNxp. Compet.J7t!.':e1,;._~tes 25y rsexp Freee!>I R .c._I .. '-CALLJUUO'S Warner Newland area slidi ng windows. ext e ours '" Maintenance.Clean-Up QOV_!'rt~ ..:!!'" ~-Labor.S81roll&up. • .... ,......, I h &
848.64SQ frames. door hanging area. S4Q:.9915 _ ---Free esltmate. 96~2598 Garages, bte hauling J.C. CLEANING STARVING COLLt:G E 300/o Off ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'or al your ouse
Mot er will Babysit 6467228_ -COfttracton,GtMf"OI ltonlruck_S~.631·1993_ Resicf.lromm'I Ltc'd STUDENTS MOVING WOODREF'INISHl'.:R wl!tdOW('.!!!&.64S·5689
A&es 1·5. Fenced yard ROUGH OR fl NISH ••••••••••••••••••••••• GARl>EHIHG TR EE SHRUB TRIM ReaLf'~est _968-~6 CO Lie. lfTl.24·436 w8~~v:;~~;:lht~n:~~r Boa~~·~~~elr Original WindowWa1her
Hot lunchu Call Doors.rencU\g,el<' CONSTRUCTION . WANTB> Garage & yard clean Lond$capiitg Insured 641-11427 home For appt. call i-\\g3~~~e.S35 847-~'--_ _ _ _ Chris~4043 Add remodel. roncrelc Mow mg. edgmg, rakmg, ~~r~~e!>l. 557·827J_ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YI ATCH US_GR.9W ' RC!!!crls l)ecor 5~ ~ Huve you read today's ----
BABYSITTING Ti"°ade -yo\ir o ld stuH for ~re~esLs8l·~art 5 s wee P 1 n g Free HAULING & DIJMP I Clean.ups, landscaping ABC MOVING Ex per Class1f1ed Ads? Ir not , '"Let theSl.lllllbtne In'"
My home, I yr & up. nr new goodies with a Find what you want m estimates 646·0944 or JOBS. ask for Randy, Free estimates prof. Low rates Quark . Find what vou want I in you're m1SSU1g the best Call SunshUle Window Y.!.£!.Q.r.!!~~·~-~s5-ill!d~d_6!2..Jfil!. Dail_yP1lo!.~lass1fie2L ~-57_37 __ _ __ ~-_ _ __ 642-~7 carefuL_~rv•r! ~041.0 Da!_ly£'1l<ltClass1f1edl, bar_gains llltown' Cl!,!uning,Lld_ ~3
./
TELLERS·
Wells Fargo Bank has
1mmfdiat.e openings ror
Tellers Six months pre-
vious banking ex-
pe rlence preferred :
heavy cashiering wlll be
considered Openings
are in Tustin, El Toro
snd Laguna Hills.
Good salary and
bend1ts. For more In·
formation please rail:
Jessica
(7141973-3724
Soorr (It) /IS.'
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
Banking
UECUml
SICllTilY
Loeal Newport Buch
anlna• • ioa.n ta sedllnc
a ae lr·mot lv aled
Secretary wtt.h STRONG
secretarl•I a kllla,
thoroughnesa Ir con-
&enl.•1 mlllMr to work
for Pruldenl Salary
commenaurate wlth tx·
per. Pull l11aura11u
bentfilt • paid carttr
apparel. Pltatecall: Ms. DmQ)' Parilla
'fl .......
MIWPOIT IA&IOA
SAYMMILOAM
llODh°*tA" .. NI 1.0.E
The Bluest Mamt ..
on the Or-. Colst
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
ADS
You Con Sell I!, fuld It,
Tr~ II Wttl\ o Wont Ad
[842·5878 ]
CASHIERS
UTUTEM
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3rd Shirts
Start mg S4 up lo S4.50.
We promote to manage-
ment & supervi.s1on from
within
WANTACAREER~
CO$l.a Mesa
517 W Wilson St
631 9600
Laguna Beach
494--9233
HunttngtOn Beach
962-9116
Personnel Dept.
~-4840
Applicants must have uptrlt'nce 1n
breakfast and eea cookery. grill llld
broiler coolung and r•nerel food
prtparation
•Top pay
• Compuy paid lanr11c•
Medkal• Ult
• P1WnuUeu
• Pront abriag plaa.
• Mtrtt nae tt¥le•t1
Applicanl.8 must be 18 and above eod
have txptnence.
Apply in person
2 PM tel PM
115 E.11&al St.,
Celta •na
11
I
.... • I ~ . ..... -. ..
... oranQ. Coast DAI~ y PILOT(Thur1d1y. Aug.uat 13, 1981 ~'-!!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... !!.~. ~.~~ ..... ?! .. ~~~ ......... .
~W..._ 71 .. tw9 WIMH 7100 .... WllllH 11 W..tt4 7100 Nur1ll1 rtCTUU .. AMtta llC.,/TYPIST Rutaur1nt Heed out10-------1s.e~tary 1" ................... ~~;r ................. ,, ........................... ••••••••••••• .. •••• LYM J.I 1:30,M Good people iklllJ Gtntral Ofr wo.t nHr loa pet10nallt7 for rood WIS '"· SICllTAIY
CATlllJHO Sttvltt UIC.SlCY ... IUL°"9CI JANlTORW..mornln&a, ml prtuon\'ha.p Im nwdtd. ruutJme. flexl OC Airport, cali Mt. preJI, 1tndW1clJ mulna, CO~U Or1antud, Joyal, part 0 ttd • food prep d d Good f 1 Tut o~tr 1 ~•ti ore noS\lftdays, J0.15 hr1 per macul1tt, Id 1lamn1 bit houra Saturday• , Zilllitt na.m meat •htin.I, u1h re Tired of 1eWna boUMt 7 Imam s.t-U
worktra. k . br Part ntt t r lilt M1&1t hav i;.av ' wit. Rttlred Pfl'IOll ptt 203&2 Sa,.ta Alli Ave 1omt ev'tnlnf• Wtll ~ ---Siller. 1·4 Mon ·Fri da 1 a WffkT We neecl
llmt $All.t:J>All. run ~ntn~ ... ~t...,.wutuct In am mf: bl!~"~! I'd. Call 147.oo&2, uk ror Sant• Ana Hti1ht1. treln. Start 3 TS/fir llC.,/TTrtST 14/hr. Aleo need exp. Al on! UctnHt to lean> th• ~~==~=~
ll m~ UM· l. 30P M o 1r~1on ~~~ Perm. ,rocedu~. Sale1uard Larrl..orJuct f.JOSl Loe. So. Q>allt Vlllac~ ~ewr.ort Stach ad· at Mar. H. at 14.50/hr sklllJ to manaae, broker •SICllfAIY• ~~1t!,~~c~ :;01s. rn':aurite to 111rW~ •yatem back1round L1borert needoo. com Nun1011 Shoppln11 Center, Call ,!~~ !1:,~u~· lirm ate,. -commttclal real ttlale. £xcelltnt oppty. ror
• • · 47 Mt:.~l helpful Start at 114 400 merdal Jobd, S4 pr hr. ll.H. Larry, 7~ .f308, t t _ pe~iu' RESTAURANT HELP lo come from m1mt tharpaaJtoWOft In rut· ~.&Elr.:.___ ---R1pld lncreue:a pcj.,1. Apply comer of Bear & --mua ype ...... .,m PIT counter wor• Bill· while you i..m Super ed N lk! h
Cleanln1 http, pl~ -------111 bit. Pia call. 'rom MacArthur. Coll• MH1 ~:l4p~r!~~ ~~ ~: 'l~SCHoot. ~a~ Hrs· 9·5pro ret 1tyle f1wble hours benefits, Uft tnau.rance: ~m'I :e_~ate !fc
nllbtclub, mornln11 MS 2142 W da 1 ' A1k for KevU\. maculate. Gd atallllll IACHH · · Ideal for bol.laewlvtt II beallh insW'antt fr deft· Excellent t,YPb\a It die 11'7$.l~ ... 80u~ ~Sl"YS/T. Orocery
1
Slort Pltlme 1Aadln1 Yacht Bkr ne;u 203$2 Santa Ana Aw~ Foboottl untlnston Beach llCROMST rolle1e atudenta Airport tal plan Contact Ken, taphone Jk(!Is required
CltriaitP/T "" --poalllon.nutwewomao Charter Ste Non Saota Ana Htl&hll •c Eiptrprtferred, rorelectricalcontractor aru CtURonforAppt 17H100 Cballenfln1P01llti0ftfot
odd J p~f'd APfll1 U\ Pfl'$00 smoker Good sit Ills ~·3Cllll over 11 _,,.. Plea11nt phone voice. 2·5PM ~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I n1ht 1a . Call
11_ 1.m.b•. Please call l''ut ucurate typist Wells Super Market: li1urt aplllude nee' P/llme, 7 da~. 2 hrs. dai· Gd typ1n1 skills. Com. Restaurant iales Laila,m.2900
llBM Electronic 75) 3)47 E COllSIH_!t._CdM. 673-$252 N I ly. Am delivery, LA .R!M.bene.B7550 COOi Gmd n oppt to eam :;;!;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CLIU/nPIST Xlnt. phone aktlls. -----ura n1 Times 1100 per week. Recepuon.lat. fuJI 41 prr Brukraat u~rlrnce S8K /wk wlrcrd break !
Answer telephones, type R .. ponaible. Orcan1zed. G rd ·LIGALSEC'Y lllYN La una Beach.494-8496. •poaltloftl available in necessary Patio C•fe. Ing , multi-mrkt1 •Y•---------
purcb11e order1 Call ~~,n.'1,'H°'!~irfaobrle3. £N'xr. uaNOW' HIRING Small Newport Center X·IAY TECHS PIT. Student ok. Need re-airport area, Look In& New rt Bch, 87!Htol corp Only Si mo nu. • •SICUTAlllS• *
546-0808belll.t6M.f . "~ ., _. low firm lffka trainee liable help tor chores, for sharp Individuals Restaurant Over UM in resv, CaU CustServlSASlUOO
COUICT10NCUll :i~~~~(ii~r:~•-Security Officer posi· with xlnt typina akalla. l(Spt••TOIY gardening, windowa. with proreulonal at· McF•ddens Bayside btwn9-l2,64&4327. SHllO/MOftiageS18,000 o~aterlrvi.nttreditun· lion• are now available <714>~. M clean ·up, etc No lllude & appearance now aecepting appUca· ''"'les ff! T651Dlct/FaahlS16.IOO
ion ha• Immediate full in Mission Viejo & So. LEGAL SEC'Y TECHS Ly_una 497-23153. Mutt be able to answer Ilona ror line-cook Exp H SHllOIRE/NutCo$18,000
ti · · p 1 Exp Ortho asst RDA luU Lagunu for mature· J.S yrsexp. 4\ dtuo. exp QC Inspector, min l yr med I um to he~ v y onJy, Apply an person, Fabric store, 811 ex· ExpCoosuhant Oun h:i':r~ft~n!c~r~c!f. tame Xlnt salary & minded Indi viduals No req.4day wk,nex bn medlcalmfc.exper.pre-phones , no typing 2·4pm, Mon Fri 333 perprefM).4(MO LiiReindersAay,lnc,
tactSteve.s.56-3110. benefits~---prior experience 1s lrvine.8SH7J3 YOU'ii frrred . Mon ·Thurs ~eeessary SS hr. Apply Ba deN B SALES 402081rch&t'64EOE
Exp salesperson needed necessary Must have Legal Sec Pttt time IMYnlD-&-4:30. 64l·l224 in person 2102 Business Rest au rant Catering Newport/133-8190/Free Ca•,•aa/AW tornewCtuldren's store o wn phone & ear 9AM to IPM dally •ToJoanlbetlTeam ~~n1t!:1 Dr. Irv Jl70 ftrm has opening for Now accepllng applica
Mature for elderly lady p 1 rt 11 me pet 11 e V~lerans ~nng 00214 Shorthand & typinl re •To Earn Dynamite Pity IHI l9hilit S.. --~ respon adult to operate lions for Cull & p/time --------Work Sat. and Sun Marche'. 642.4714 369 E Pinkerton s. 2701 B S quired Call Pat at •To Receive Super ForJ:t lttc.,.._.t Hobart auto sheer & sales staff Expenenced SECIETAIY DIC.
541-3618 ' 17th Street Westport Mai~. s A (lo rear or ua7796 bet~""'n9 & l. Benefits L' l ' t learn portion control. in micro computtr pro-Personn•l/Advert1'1U1' g COMPANJON/AJDE c,.uate.CM Radio Shack store !. _....,. ____ --'!-""""--•ToCrealeYourOwn Prof. t r.xecu ive sui e in Exp pref. butwilltrain. grammlng or use very "'
Desperately needed ror ~ 557·9020 Equal Oppty LEG AL SECRETARY Schedule Newport Beach Lido Of· Irvine. heavy telephone, 9:30AM to 8PM Mun, helpfuL Successrul ap. Dept. haa opening per Florist delivery person Employer Nwpl Center. SH & re fice needs creative, ag· light typing, rront ortice, thru Thur. 6AM to IJ'M plicants wiU have back· expansion. Npt. Bch, elderly¥· live in/out: wanted . Hours flexible, · cord keeping skills req + gressive agents who prof ess ional ap. ground in sales & financial services firm,
C.M. area . .:45·3563 ; S4 1011 n<>r "-·-~···8990 -Salary O""'n 1~2 1771 3% Casll Bo l t . . . pearance ex per nee Sun. 979-<Yl47 for appt . . , d C II Gd, lyplna, shrthd .. exf. 646-5282aft.l:~m. ~-"""""" , Hair Dressers wanted uc1n5 ,... " . nus wan o maX1m1ze In· _851·0744 _· --, Lort'sK1tche!!_ positive att1tu e. a req'd, N~·smkr. Cal : Full-time Warehouse Well known salon ~ .N dividual potential ··-Retail _l.ev : (714)540-1530_. __ fWO.Ol23btwn.9&2,
Co•,..• D• truckdriver Good Pay! Beginners or exp Rent Liquor Clerk. Full and A variety of au1gn HIGH COMMISSIONS! ltl<:Ef'TIOHIST SALES Office Gil\ Store, ~II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ...,&Clerical As k for Bob EOP or percentage Guaran· part·time 2944 P11c1f1c ments Short & Ion• CallWalt,673-7300. htctlHYts.th HOUSBCllPfMG Lido Village, Exp. req -=
Type 50 WPM. 10 key. 957·0536 teed Call owner CoastH1 hwa term . including So Attractive real estate Full & p/llme <morn ~al o n 67:H655 lisht bookkeeping, FULL Time. p T1·me 548 1311 Orange County d I olf' angsL Pennanenl pos1·
SECURITY GUARD
-Neat. clean & respons1· -· MACHIMtST Org Co A•-rt ar•a IEAL EST An eve opment ice near lions various office duties Ans sen T•.....iftg r"" 'd ""..., "' Orange Co • · rt E Nonsmoker.CPAF'1nn No exp nec 'Cailbt'°;n8 HAIDWAIESAW Immediate o~ning for 714-760.1641 SALES ce l lent t";.':':ng ~ Sales Peri TI. bit Al prestigious loc
Evenings in our El Toro Starting S4thr Inquire
Store k 75 per hour 711 PCH SS1487.
Contact.
Costa Mesa. $800.1900 & 4 JOPM. Mon Fri full or P time Apply in loo I & d I e s h o P Anahe1m..\rea Th111 IS our Jlllh year sell telephone answering
MoCallCarole7S4 l040 6310140 F.Oj: ----person 3107 E Coast Minimum 5 yrs exl' 7 14-731-5411 1ng fine Southern s kills . Health / in -
MAILCLl:RIC
Ftume. pennanent j)0)1
lion. COOK
P IT . Also kitchen
helper, Country Club
Top wages, (99-2271. ask
• for ohef.
COOICS
2 day cooks l night
cook. Conlact Jean
Pierre. Between 10 JO
AM-3 30 PM. Bayshore
House , El Tor o
7 •· 770·3222.
COOKS Helper, airline
catering. C M area
Over 18 w/valid Calif
driver 's lir Call .
Marvin Davis. lOAM to 6PM ,646-l<XM
COOi(
Wanted for small family
restaurant. Call 631-6351
aft 12noon.
:O UR I ER -Orange
Coast Sa v111gs bas P T
opening. Gd dnv1ng re
cord. Afternoons. Car furn'd. CaU: Kathleen.
7S4-1801, 1700 Adams.
CM EOE ,
DEUHB.P
Caier111g exp. S48-21 l2
D 1Et4T AL llCEPT.
Office exp. req, Dental
up, pref. Wed:Sat. Top
salary for qualified
rsoo. 542-3658.
Dental ins work 2·3
da wit ea or pit ea day
Dental Knowledge req
Hourly wage ope n
642-6880,
DENT AL RECEPT
Front & back. ore exper
req. Full-Ume. NB atea
548.5504
Dental Assistant RDA
X-ray license Xlnt
benefits Call Mon·Fri
633·1382
DENT AL. chairs1de asst.
floxp'd Parttime.
644-oo91
D ..... Offlce
Front desk, dental ex per
requirl'd, 4 days a week
In a nice Newport Bearh
office, 645-7580
DIHTA.LASSIST.
Experienced. Easy.
paced offi~ in Newport
Gd hou~s & salary
646 -~411 wk.da ys ;
646-5594 after hrs
DENTAL ~IST PT 3
dys. no Sat. ROA pref
Carman: 661·2290.
OENTAL~tsT,ANT
Exper req, RDA pref
NB area.~
Dent asst/Ortho, Npt
Bch. 4 day. M·IB, or AM
only if prer. RDA req.
642·2626
H1ghway Corona del with lathes, nulling, & California homes Chester Hipple Stcy/llilrpr GEHERAL OFFICE ~1!1r grinding maclune. Must Perhaps you would en· sur~e_ig.5~1_. - _
help nel'dl'd for busy have own tools. Call for YOLJ Joy joining a firm active RECEf'TIOMfST
N e w p o r t HOMfMAJCRS appl. M•dlclll Senk•s in luxury residential For dr's office. Must be
PACIFICSTEREO Small mortgage bank·
SECURITY AGfHT (_710951·~ 1ng firm in Irvine
F/t1me 2/yrs. previous Dulles includ.e: phones, Ophthalmologists· of· Eam S6 per hr hspkg. m San Gabriel Die & Mould areas such Wi Big Ca· enLhus1asUc, motivated
f1ce.Typ1ng,tiling Exp, CdM , Npt ·Irvine, 6@.1450 nyon . Spyglass Hill, & type well Exp exnorience mandatory --------1 typing and light book· .. -Sales keeping Comfortable
a mUJt Start $800 mo P Time approx 15 hrs --------~ursing Irvine Terrace, Linda helpful. but not ner D1s: 646-2471. _ __ per wk Girl Friday M•ILc•-RN-UHC~ Isle, etc 6424~32
Hof1!e Servtces ..... ~9-5022 "" ..-IC J.11 & 11·7 relier nv H you are presently ac· REC-~ST -General Part time, flexibl e a-uvni Two girls to work family HOSTESS hours, exceUent for col· hospt. Wllh excell re live in real estate sales
owned commerc1al laun-Pf I\ ate c I ub 30 + lege student Coldw•ll putation. Beach area do you have unmedlate PBrhes1, 1g1ofus Nhewp~rt
d G "' Free mJ·r medical. den & unhm1ted access to c aw 1rm as 1m-ry d trauung, exp, hrs wk incl days, eves. Banker, ask for Claire _.. f helpful 1077 w Baker, & wkend~ Mature. neat Clarie Johnson. 644•9060 tal & life. Top salary the president of your mru operung For experf c M Call~l~--496-57_6_7forann't _ _ Flex hrs 6428044 , company.oris hehidden r,ecept1omst ront o ·
:LL OFFICE Person v;;:;;l) away in an ivory lower ice 1ppearance. voice, GEHERALOFFtCE llousekeepers wanted Maintenance persons or duties in cludinr I removl'dfromthesce.ne professionalism 1mpor·
Working knowledge SeaclirfMotel. needl'd for steam clean bkpg,, lite typlllg. an~ t Our president as avail~· tant Lt typing Good
A J'. AIR & payroll a 49'-97J 7 _ ang, Full-time positions busy phones, Able le ble Do Y~, nel'd addt-benefits Salary open,
must Computer input HOUSB<Hf'EI avail~ M~lly ~ghtwork work under pressure & llonal training to help ~all_Htlda~955·Q.313~
exp helpful. Heavy Mon :Fri 12:»5:30pm Cal1Chns,64H079 maintain a pleas in~ you Increase your earn· RECEf'TIOMIST
All positions reeeivl' full
com~any benefits 1n
eluding employee dis
counts. paid vacations,
medical & dental in
surance & prof1teenng
program. Applications
bem1 accepted
IUL10CIC'S
SOUlHCOAST
Personnel office. Tues
thru Fri , 1°'5pm,
3333 Bristol.CM '
E.0.E.
Prof.~ env ironment Real
~ Estate knowledge pre·
Marketing Reps to sell ferable Contact Mrs
a product lhat as wanted Adamson at 833-9911 C9
& needl'd by everyone AM lo 4 I-----Earning potential
'40.000.'50.000
• Co Tr8111sng * Qualified Leads
•High Income
Llqvldywt fMrcJJ
AL 1s!.r:a~~·6793
SEC'Y/llCEPT.
One part/time position
available. morning or
arcernoon. 12:»5::.>. 55
wpm a ml!St S51hr to
start. Near OC Airport
833,9971 . -----
SEC'Y TO V .P.
phones. lite secretarial Refs req Trans nee MA I NT~NANCE MAN personality. Full time mgs? lmmed opening for
respons1b1ht1es. Front .SSlhr. Irvine 7S2-7730 for retirement home, Call for appt art lOAM Experienced or inex-mature individual in
0H1ce appearanc e Basic knowledge 1n 979.0747 iienenced you may welJ busy Auto repair center Located m NB. Xlnt op. HOUSBCEIPH/ plumbing & electrical profit from our color · FV 0 If' d
3ales
------1 SIOOOWK.P/T Call Kim 64..HXll M f .
Large established So
Cahfomia bwlder seeks
s harp, reliable in·
d1v 1dual to perform
\ anety of secretarial
duties P061t1on requires
accurate tyPtng, filing &
ab1hty lo do general ad·
mm tasks Shorthand preferred ln exchange
ror ab1hty to function
well 1n busy office com.
pany offers fnendly at
mosphere, competitive
salary & good benefits
Send resume & salary
history to J L Cookey.
Presley or Southern
Calif . P 0 Box 2200,
Ne11o port Beach. 92663
p'ty for advancment HOMEMAHAGEI needl'd NB 6313SS5 PARTTI~ESALES v1deotapelisting&sales in ive rs ie Con la r I Jenn' fer --. . . . Office supplies in store training program which respon incl answering
c710955 L~ Full charge housekeeper Management restaurant Morning or afternoon 11.e reel 18 the finest phones, wnlmg repair
traml'd ui all phases or position open toqual ap shift~ . Good work tnF available orders. bookkeeping.
home management for plicants. Resumes req conditions Apply in We are not a franchise. collecting money and
business fanuly ui Hunt prior to personal in· pe rson, Coast Office branch or sub;idiary secunng parts Must be
RlTAJL
Part lime clerks
STOPN'GO
MAUm
4555 ComtHwy.,
Newport leach
9-~m4...W-T-F..._S.llam
>ec Reep for fast grow
mg Co. an NB Must ha\e
exp & transportation
Non-Smoker 40 hrs per
wk C91leen. 851·9911
GENERAL OFffCE
f'ullt1me bookkeeping.
10 key, f1hng Company
be nefits N B 8-5
,645 171 !.
mgton Harbour Cook1nl( terview M.C B , 177 Supply 2121 Harboi JUSl headquarters. aggressive, accurate
essential Salar) open "f " Riverside A\•e . Blv~, c M. We ha ve ononings for a and able to follow pro-
Call Rlla, 8461476, aft ~~.L.Ca.!r41663., Part lime work. im ,,.. cedur es, Mon-Fri, &.,.calJ84~ M ll few h1ghly-mot1 vated 9.5.30 Starting salary
11!!~~!'!!!---!!I!' 5ecretary1Recepllon1s!. -:: type 50wpm. pleasant ROOFERS Lee Roofing
is looking for hot roofers
with tnan. 5 yrs exper
Journeyman 119 22 hr
~2,7~WaltorVmte
GENF.RALOfFICE
Filing Clerk. Phone Mrs
Stone : S4~~3
General
The lolboa lcry Cllllb
ii ROW~:
Mointaacaoce
Secntcry
A highly visible position
1nterfacmg "\'llh our
member residents. This
indiv idual must be
personable. tactful &
well organized. Involves
a great' deal of phone
contact & requires typ-
1n g & mathematical
skills
Spo Atte.dc.t Working an our men's
recreational fac1hty. Re-
quires an 111div1dual 21
years old lo meet mem-
bers· needs & to perform
cleaning & matnlenance
run rhons
/ Hoat/HoatetJ
A perfect everung JOb for
someone Wllh 6 months
minimum diMer house
experience Outgoin g
perS'onahty essential
Please call for appoint·
ment 9 :.> SPM. Mon-
da y lhru Friday.
645. 7358
Ho usekeeper. non ana~emenl quor store mediate o pe nin gs, pcrsons whohaveade· 1850. Apply &-1230 al daytime ,~· open to La gun a Be a c h sire to be more sue s mok er. $5 hr Mon,, qual md1Ytdual or cou Telephone sales. de cessfuL For an in· Fountain Valley Body 8 5pm No Lauuna I S b t Works 751·""""" · " P ~, u m1 resum ei. li very drivers Up to S6 terv1ew appointment ._., 4_97·2353 _ prior to inter view. per hour 497-4188after 2 wtth the sole owner &
HOU.SB<Hf'EI M C B · 177 '' f ·' l! m founder. call Wesley N RECEPT/nPIST Soilbo.t c~
Hskpg & child care. Sun Riverside Ave · N 8 · PARTTIM E Taylor
& Morr onl> Laguna Ca 92663-' -HANDICAPPED WesleyK TCIYlorCo.
Xlnt upporturuty ror a
cheerful person With Male or female n l'd
good typing skil ls and F ume incl wkends Ap
front o((ice appearance ply at 2633 W Coast
m our national head !!wL._N B 64.5 7100 Beach area 641 8700 MAMAGB to take my calls in your R'EALTd'Rs
days IE\al 497 3983 Ha l lmark Girts & home_~§941 __ 2111SanJoaquanH1lls
eves Cosmetics Exp pre Part lime Sec Rl.'cp Newport Beach
rerred. ~7373 Pleasant manner Basic 644-49~10-'----
q u a rt e r s n r 0 C SA.LES
Airport Call Shara Anexcit111gnewconcept IMFAMT'RYMAM
We 'll push you to your
limit to bnng out your
best. Army Be all you
can be. Call loll free
1·800-282·~
IMSUUNCE
Mu lti branch a11ency
has openmg for exper'd
t0dn in personal hnes
Strong acrowrtmg bark
ground desired Salary
open. paid company
benefits Rapid advan·
cement for right person
Ca II Pauline 96J.0941
Insurance
UNDYWllTEI
Self-starter needed for
easualty underwriter.
must have exper in
analyzing. evaluating &
making nsk selections
Salar) commensurate
w exper Call Sally
848-6264
Medical clerical skills 957-8507 RECEPTIONIST
Chiropractic Asst/ AskloLfut~-----Progressive real estate
Receptionist. Beaut P/TIME EY&UMCiS company investment busy office, Good ap, company 15 looking for a
pearance, healthy. en C-...Mg person with a pleasant
tbusiastic. knuwledge or Youth CcnWn phone VO!Ce and basic
7141_?55 1(91 _ _ related to the interior
RECEPTIONIST design mdustry IS ex
Real Estate Investment panding lo the Orange
Co Good front office ap-County Area Apphca
pearancc, light typmg. lions now being accept
4 ~, day work week ed for consultants who
N e wport Be a c h a re professional ly
S49·2988 oriented and highly ins. billing. peg board Adults with outstanding typing skills to fill a
computer very helpful attractive personalities. challenging position
Great career potential who enjoy working with Responsibilities are Recp.tTypist P1' 8 :.>to
Call63l·S664, 10 15 year old youths vaned. ancludtni: heavy l Ph one. errands
MHGMMTPOSmOH evenings 6·9PM Call contact with clients Irvine. near OC airport
Fabric chat0. C M & 642 4321. ext 343. There1s roomfor career .8331554__.__Ma.r1uerl!L_
between 2PM to 5PM. th u· I t R l31 ,, t A l
mot1vatl'd A complete
training program lS pro
v1ded High comm1ss1on
plan, with no income
limit S46·3788 Ana,heam Xlnl oppt'y ask for Lon grow in a s mu a mg en 'os ess. p Gen 64a-4040, _ working environment. Complex 3 weekdays Sales
-------PBX Ans Serv F T & So Coast Plaza area per week 9AM to 5PM. Model fuU figure, needed P1T Exp, helpful. CM Salary & benefits com· Will train. Call S4H855 CJIWGAH OF
by photographer 540·1777 10AM-4PM m e n s u rate w , ex · btwn 9-1 for interview SAM CLEMIH'TE
-__ 549-__ 3497_ PBX -perience. Call 549-3185 l!P.e_l is Io o kin g ( o r a
MODELS/ESCORTS ror interview, Ask for l·--------1 sales person With ex T~Oollars95J.0971 RECEPTIONISTS Kathr_yn ___ 1· peneoceind1rectselling or have held positions Models needed All types Stop'! Tak.e time to relax To place your message that reqwre meeting &
M e n . W o men & Apply Today! and shop at home It's be'°relhe relating lo the public
Children. No exp nee simple with Daily Pilot read111gpubUc. Weoffer:
548-7762 IVICKI HESTOHI Class1f1l'd Ads, And 1( phone 11.Guaranteedincome
... UISIS ••Dir.s you have something lo Dally Pilot dunng training
" ""' s; & ASSOClATES sell. call a friendly Classified,642·5678 112 Bon11.J1.rommiss1on EXPERIENCED Specialists m Classified Ad-Viser at 113 Vacalaon With pay 3· 11. 11-7 Conv. hos pl 642-5678 H · 1. Beach area. Free mjr TemporaryClerical 14. osp1tauiat1on
ml'dical. dental & Ufe, Personnel insurance
Only positive altitude 540-0400 115. Complete training
642-8044 18004 Skypark Blvd, with factory followup
S 2~· I , 116. Protected local ""'RSING _u_ite ..., rvme "v territory LVH l-11 :30 PM SIOOO Pa WEB 111 Qualifil'd leads
RCTaylorCo
phone manner, ability to
work w public fran
~:i~-
SECRlTARY
Mature. responsible
lady needed for Me m
surance office 9am lpm
da ll ) T }p1n g &
shorthand required Ex
perience preferred
557·~--
SECRETAIY
Part time M~Fn Must have good l ing skills
& SIH optiona . Call Mis·
sion Beechcra1\. \8741 N
Airport Way S3nta Ana
S40·2720 ----
SECRETARY
Leading publishing firm
has immediate opening
for secretary with icood
typing & s horthand
skills. Excellent benefits
& good location Send re·
sume lo. Sheila Lawlor.
CBS Publications. 1499
Monrovia Av,, Newpo"
Beach 92663. 646·445 I
ext,_3_1_6. ___ _
SECRETARY
Computer software fann
located near the 0 C
Airport has an am
EOE
:iERVICE Stauon Allen
da nl Exp'd Days &
eves full & p time Ap
ply Shell Station. 17th &
lrvme,_N_.B~-----
SHYICE STATION
ATTIHDAMT
Apply Chevron. 1251 No
CoastH L.B
)crv1ce Station Allen
dant. F T eves. exper
Also Mechanic's helper,
f' T days Apply 1n
person Mac's Texaco.
L8S-02 Beach Bl11d. H B
968.650S'--·---
Stw Modi Open
Experienced. quality
work, Costa Mesa
642·9652
SHlf'f'tMG DB'T. TUJMEI
Package & ship small
parts for C M Co All
ffmale dept Excellent
~n~ls. ~ _ _..13_. __
mediate opening Cor iHOE SALES Attractive
data entry person tn our shoe dept m Fashion
documentation area Island tJ looltmg for part
Job responsib1bL1es an lime help Exp, pref'd.
elude accurate 65wpm 1_64_0.ii78iilii0 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
SHTO Sec'ys
Register today for local
temporary a.ssignments. Daily Pilat ........ · · ·· .. ·· .. ,
<DOG LOVER : ' Sml priv oonv hosp. Im Our new Co. is looking
maculate. gd staffing for ambitious people
20362 Santa Ana Ave ~ho want to tum p'time
Santa Ana Heights h ours into GOLD !
S49-3061 Ground nooropp'ty Call
6 40-9900 U you would h.ke to help.
call
typing for techn1c111•
manuals, updates, some
proofreading & ofc
skills req 'd. Ex per. pre
ferrl'd but we will train
Pleasant surroundmgs
& excellent salary & fr.
1nge benefits Non·
s moker Call Sheri
M1ckelsoo for 1mmed
mterview. (7141540-6952
557-0045
W AN'(EDl Kenhel help
n•aded will 'train
S46-2M8
DOMESTIC HELP
Mature lady lo care for
elderly lady, pre pa re
meala, light housekeep·
ing, live in 5 da per wk.
Car req'd. Will relm·
bu rs e . Preas a n t
per.aooality important
Sal open67~7006
ORJV ER for pickup & de·
livery. MIBt have valid
Caill. drivers Ile. & gd.
drMog rec. Apply at:
Hub Auto 'Supply, 2120
Harbor Bl., CM. ~2464
ORIV ERS Croa country.
No special lie. req'd.
MacGr~'gor Yachts, 1631
PlacenUa, po.ta Mesa
Electronics
CllW~ To wor\.,.ith, 1uperv.ise
It schedule 10 men
crews, u.t..lling alarm
syatenu, Steady work
w/oational t'Ol!lpany of·
rm na 11nt wage/bonus
paclt11e. Call Don
8(ha r (213 51313
..... HI./
UCftOMtST
P /tlrae for N.B. de·
vtlo per. Mon·Fd,
l·•· M111t have depeo-
dat>lt car Is good phone ..,
Field Sales Supervisor
l.1m1ted openings a\·a1IJ ble 1n tht' Oran11e
roast area. for self mot1\ ated. cartt'r
urll'nted md1\ 1dual who can work With
f'1t•ld Solies People. Tram. moti\·ate anri
i:el re~ults . Station wJgon or \'an
necessary. Exceptional earnings. pluJ Job
related benefits availa ble for the M!ilhl
people. H you can produce result!.. not
1ust lJlk ahnyt tl .. calL 960·0694 for
interview . .-\~! .r9! .NJ! i:;llanCe.
Ot9p Coat
Daly Pilot
330 W. Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA
Equal Opportunity Employer
........................................ '.
I
~ally Pilat ····· ....... · .. ······~
General Assiprmt ·
. Secretary ti
. Executive Office
Immediate opening for veraaui. In·
dividual. Muat be capable of handl·
Ing rast·piced, varied and intemt· ins duties ror newspaper execuUve
It peraonnel administrator. Call:
642-4321, Ext. m for appt
~C...t
DellrPllt
330 W. Say Street
Costa Mesa, CA
F.qual Oppyrtunity Employer.
. • • . • . . •
. . . ......... , ...... ..,. ......................... ·
Nursing
STAFfDEV.
DIUCTOI
LVN with ability lo
teach & supervise. Exp.
desired , Call Ad·
minlstrator, Newport
Conval. Center, 646-7764.
Selling anything with a
Daily Pilot Clan1ried Ad
is a simple matter
just call ~5678.
for details 1151-9195.
PHOTO LAI
Printing, misc. duties.
will train. F/T, amm.
opening. Mature person,
exp'd on Nord Printer
pref. $4.75/hr start. Non·
smoker. Apply in person
10am-t :30pm , Onsite
Photographies, 3303
Harbor Blvd .. Urut E·5.
Commerce Part, C.M.
-KIDS
SUMMER JOBS.
Earn $30-$60 per week.
Trips & Prizes. Cll ....
a•~•., t6M6tt.
REAL ESTATE SALF.S
READY TO BE
A WINNER?
IC• tMW , .. how to
..,. $50,000 + ......,.
IF!
.YID.! are tired of floundering in a
Oeid office.
~ crave specialized, personal
"How To" training from one of
the most successful sales trainers
in the business.
YO~ want to work in a plush,
we ·located office with a group
of highly moti vate d
professionals.
Ylli.l. want on-going sophisticated
eoucation & training.
Yfill desire the chance to grow Wfi1i a rapidly expanding,
progressive company.
C'M1ti ME ~OW in absolute co I ence an ....
830-3031 or492·3213
n o w & JOln the
"Culligan" team! ' EEO
MCS,IMC
Cr\·Llf\:
The f a'J test draw in the j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
West .a Daily Pilot Have something to sell? '!!~~II!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!
Classified Ad Call To Classiried ads do It well. >laane;d glass studio seek· ..!ID'. 642·5678. --ing exp craftsman, Call
D •1 ,.1 A. for appl. 64&-7474,_ __ : II J I .................... "-: Stl'PLY
Sales SPECIAUSTS Look beyond graduation Trainee
For District Manager
This highly succualul local newspaper
has an opemn1 for a trainee in-the
clrcuJaUon department. Basic skills will
entail supervision of 10 to 14 year old boy
and girl home delivery carriers. Artas or
supervision will be delivery, collectiOll5
and sales.
Selected applicant will receive liberal
startlna aalary, regularly scheduled
ralaa. bonus opportunities and many fr
lqe benefits such as company pa.id den·
ta! and health plan, aroup life Insur•~.
varation ind 11ck leave.
Cdmpany vehicle 1s furnished durln1
wortln1 hours.
Applicants must be over 18. have a 1ooc1
drMnc r~ and be neat appearlna .
Houn are 1enerally 11 AM to 9PM. Mon·
day thru Friday. Some overtime is 1vall1· ble.
If you are qu1Lified and intttested In luminl lbe circulation bualriesa, contact
t.be Dally Pilot at 330 W Bay, Costa Mesa
bllore IO:IO AM ot arter 2 PM dai.ly.
Atk for 0.. W\Uiamaor Kea Goddatd.
33005.~
Costa Mesa, CA
~ F.qual Opportunity Eq>toyer : . . ................... , ...................... ··
learn a skill. Army
Be all you can be Call
toll rree l-G212·581W
TEACHER.Pre School.
Full time, permanent.
liberal benefits. Also
AIDES. Call Marilyn
847-51.84.
Telephone Solicitors
WE'RE EXPANDING
START IM ·
MEDIATELY
Salary + lucrative
bonus
138-llll
TIAYB.ACHMT
Exp. comm'I aaent
needed for rut &TOWing
0.C. letnc'Y· Apollo exp.
preferred. Cheryl :
113·0492 .
TIOPICAL fUMT MAIMT9WCI
Experienced 'Ptrsoo
needed. So Onnae Co.
aru. G«ld lranspotta
lion needed. S.O.s.411 ·alte;.W.•: 'p/llm;
ror Frueh Cuisine
llut111rant. Aho
•ltchee htlp. o.,,. Oftl1
HtO I:. CoHt H•1·· 1 C•M. All fw P .. LI.
••Wo!'tlll!D I
------·=
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, August 13, 1981
Sell it all and put cash in yOur Pocket!
DAY WEEK
81>ays
3 Lines
Special flat rate for non.commercial users offering merchan·
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for 8 days
or one. Minimum three lines . Extra lines just $2.60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 6'2·5678
..
"
.... 8 Dollars Th9 MW Dally Pilot 8•Day Week lti Q Classified PLUS t I
.............. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------------....... HttpW_.... 7t00 lkydH 1020 ,_,...... IOI ,_lliwt IOS Mlsctl••• IOIO OfflceFw ... •& loots Poww 90401Motof'cvdtt/ Tntcli1 9560 MtotWmhd 'f590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ... •••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tc,.1,_.e 1015 ••••• ;................ Scoofert 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• W..,/W.... Racl.ng 'l2 spd. Titanium Nu 3·l>C sectional !IOfa. For Sale de~rator re· p t lotualSonia Drum ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHARAC'l'ER BOAT for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1965 CHEYROUT WEMllD '
Apply btwn 9AM & frame/forts, full com· natural/berrin&bon, pd modeling Antiques, ro ess, ~ pl Used Quantor 406 parade Aug 16Lh Past 78 Honda XL 350, xlnt lf. TONrlCKUP YOUllDOTIC
Noon. Charlie'• ChlU. 1>,.a1nol1, 1moold.S1100 Sl350sellS7SO.~HI013 English din . set. ~~~k: :.~t10 ~~2.81; Microf1rhe reader winner! Pnce 1i. nght! condition 3700 total Has~ neo. dnve trllln, &llmsHCAllS.
3001 Redhill Bids. n. ~e645·54.12 Must Sac immed. Brand Armolre, china cab.. ' · printer. $200 080 Slip avail 673 7677. l!l•l~s~~50.960-723.S _ only 4.IXXl miles on re
_Ste. 122e,CM 10 spd bike, hke new nu hv rm. game set. coffee lbls.lthrloveseal. Compact rolltop desk Norelco mini cassette 67F873 _ __ _ '77 HONDAEXPRESS built enguie. Runs well l~M «]
NAITRESS /Waller Ualve1as100 dinette. curio, lamps, TV. much more. Open St50.ColorTVw/remote d1ctaph.one, $75 OBO t4'.35 John.son01B S95-0 2690miles,$175 bul needs some body
w/car for wicker basket 675-8243 etc Bst ofr &sl 11125 Sat . 9.3pm 448 lsabeUa S200 Lamb/mJnk Jacket 0 I Y m pi a add Ing Runs good. . 675-<Jm wor·L --. T CdM 19(}.9031 Sl75.St•reoconsoleSlSO hi e S30 R m "' ~b ~~ ~~~~~: ~~~:,~ !f~~ ~rr~~~: R:cl~n=~ ~al~ee ~~81~ ~;:~·::~ir. e~ table; ~·3722 ~na; t o"n . EI~ r l ~ i <' AVOs:·~~~:~, 6 ·~ln~u~~~~ ~,n~f~~~ $ 1600 . ~
ly . Must be neat. S80.646-0916 vibrator. $98. Royal cof~table,dineltesel. Airline ticket, 1 way, typewriter, S90 980 man. ski. dive, xtras 495·6347. <orbestoffer> 3lOOW.CoastHwy
pe"onable & energetic. )(hw1nn. :.> in cruiser eler typewriter wlrase All CorS350. 843-7916. LAX to Ph1ladelpb11, 7.52 7855 Daon Corp xlnt $1375. !m:.216!1 '77 llusky :.'JO. Mint t'Ond1 Call Dennis Tuesd1.1ys Newport Beach
979.0747 aft lOAM ror w/1pringer 2 spd $98 Both like new' -------must use before.Aug 15, Co_ntarlLex_ --t1on S800 or best offer thruSaturda}S9A M to -642·94ai ~ kickback.~. 548 1067 557-3044 oroge S. 1055 will sell at discount, Leopold cherry wood P/P wil ~ 6 8200 6 PM at TOP$ D,,.. ·~ •$ - - -$150.640.6233 desk.6S"xJ6",xlnt cond Prideofownersh1pmde 64 --=----581 0790 ~ W "u.. " "u" o..11!.17 2 l"spd, I gm, 1 gold, 7' Courh, hi ba<'k Colom al ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 llonda. Offroad Good -•_ ---For Clean Us A"I A_..A.... .,. th r Ad rr of Used beige carpel for Liv S400~n50_;_ ---luxe '80 33' Paeem1.1ker. We need cosmetologists xlntshapeS90ea or St60 style . down .filled u 0 ams 0 & bdrm ..M SF fully equ1p'd NB Cond.SJ.50 • Cht•.'10 Cars&Truck~ & manicurists for both.642·2329 rushions. multt.rolored Brookburst 20681 mg rm . &vvu Pets 1017 F d CI ~9147 Wepaycashonthe~pot'
Shorecll·rr bai·r salon. ----------IJ r b ood d SurburblaLane cond,S40.~1-:549 __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• shp or eta1ls a I _ __ 'l2·TC111Picbp S<!hwtnns 5spdlad1es' $nen a nc.g con ·--· 24 .. Atl s JI s Nd ConuresP t 552:8691,7~ '81KAWASAKIKDX250 Auto. trans. power Contactbuyerat 492 ·2288 bet. 9 & 3 $9$ lOspdmen's $9$ 10 ~ ~stolr !ig·1621 Huge Garage Sale Anti· das .modcroLS aw. an ay urro '79 Ch II 4.54 h Bl Must sell Sl575 Aft. stttnng 6 cyl cg Oc-.SANFIS
CHEVROLET
(Vickie) spd'boys' S75 Pvt p'ar· Dinette set, wood-gram que. t~ls. much more heavy uty e 175 w/lrgcage.Sl40. dom1~a~~~eJ~t S:O:ov !e.~§73·~ --etc Very cl ~a'"ne;
ty' ~·~ .. ....:.. formic a. 4 chairs, like 1836 Irvine N Bch. --54&-,P -~9823 d !1U00608).
WAllHOUSIMAM
P l time , ret i r e d
Ship/Rec. Manne pro-
ducts~71
__ _........, F S l J hn W 81 d (' Xlll!.con~·~ _ YAMAHA VERAGO 1600
WWilt9Ualarlahl025 newJSgoo.=\ GsZt~SAu~.E8 -~At~yEs: r!nn~seCl~b ra~~~~ P~~;~{o;~gh~ni~~~ Pio.trl2 miles Like new with OH1Y$49'5
••••••••••••••••••••••• AC.urn.I. clothes. comer group. membership S7SO inclds r a.{e, SlSO. Call 673 7616. S k If r with 9 9 II P $500 worth of extras HOW AID Cht•roltt
REDW0002X6'S Wood & suede bckgam· pachtnko mach & other transfer fees. (7 10 20 g~lio;;-aqwi;.;:;m-:-all J ohn son $1000 OBO Sacrifice sale $2700 N~~v;b'/;!te1lESlllACll
2' lo 20' long. Fresh mon tbl & chairs. only items. 19871 Flagstone. 485·8700_ access. with wrought ~9-891J6 Fll!_M Ca!!~ -
l ruck load arr 1 v in g S2S5 value si.xr, white H B. Adult tr1rycle Lrg rear iron stand SJ.S. 552 7250 40, c1.-...t-,...._0 '79 Honda Express. great 133-0555 _ ;~ek!~-11~r~ a~4~~5 ~~~~. 5~~ttta$:S0& ;~!~: --Fin~ basket Cable lock Good 6 ;0 ;;-1d Go.;1 Male iso Live aboa":d-: ~ise at cond 1200 m1 S300 ·77 Toyota SRS long bed.
brkfst nook, S250. value G•OC)e/f'atio S• ~nd $60. 63l·OlJ7 --080 lllKn, 2 421 rhevy VS. 642 360'1.. -shell, boot. AF' AM FM
an une ---S600 Xlntcoad. Prices from SO' to $450. R.S J Athletic Club 7511201 onan 2 5geo worm wood MotorHGMH, Salt/ cass. new tires. lo mile!\.
Cah 1035 54&-9988 Guitar amp S250 ~omp FA_M IL'( Membrshp. 2 rabbit hutrh~. S10 eu.-1 mtmor. sltoeps 6. com· R...t/S'°"'°9f + 160 Best ~rre.r 6:ll ~ -
;•••••••••••••••••••••• Modem Wal breakfront. Piano xlnt action/tone Irvine & Mesa Verde dble rabbit hutrhS25 Cd plete w stall shower. re ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·77 CHEV P U full pwr
San Clemente •
~ll-0510 ~9i.t~!f
WANTED!
Lale model Toyotas anO
Volvos Ca ll u i.
TODAY!!! 1.
Earle Ike
TOYOTA-YOLYO
W ARlttOUSI CLEIK
Expanding electronics
firm seeks responsible
person for immed full
time opening 1n
Warehouse receiving &
shippin& dept Call:
MI rio, 556-3880
• Hlmalay~n Kittens. $250 matching bureau. $450. Turq and other !!>callof!!:$350,~·8772 I cond. I free rabbit ady for sea & bri~tol WE CAN SELL air. 1111 wheel. eruise. Sea~~h. lines. papers. St25 OB0645-lll64 Jewelry, gold and silver, SpantSh Style 6' couch $50, 557 6934 cond S32.500 YOUR RV stero tape. ex cellent ""....,_II••
I 5.8321.879 -S f bd-S~ ll silverplateandsterling &endtblS.S&pirtureS5.I Pl\RfWT Tame g~t'en 673-0149 ~1304' • 548j800or646-~ c: ........ .
l»ott 1040 :o:c: & cha'1/as1to~ Giant flower pots. 32" Xlnt rood Also 20 yrds .. in g e d MACA W loat1 Refit/ ---Y•s 9570 "'u .. 001. s40.uu ~......_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• d' tbl 4 h across, fiberglass. can't new unused rpt padding Trained S800 .. c·aue Ch.:...£--9050 GEMllATORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• KEESHOND p · AKC pecan tn r rs · ha d SSO Best offer 549 1057 " ...-.n WAREliOUSE .. ...._.. 1oosl Champ s·1re. MUIJ6F.· Pet.: !~,.s.70990. refr1g S250 rust. manne r ware --. . 2t31592 3542 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RSTOC CLASSIC! _..,..... /F "' '"" dee and usables. Rem· Tredex Jogging _Machine p A-R ROT-Red headed 42· modem fishing boat OVE K CHEVY YAH ••••••••••••••••••••••• s h o w . Pvt pt y ---- ---inglon. Browning patent with heart morutor. S800 AMAZON with raite for local fishing tnps Portablei. alternators. Ne,. Pa 10 1 N e ..
.. etter written by A 213169'1-l:MSans m. ~~n ~1~ro~r6~~J':'6\~: 16 ca. xlnt cond w/case firm. Call after 6PM, Tame trained $4110 171.!1~7~art~m -elt-cl parts Must :.ell. Goodyear Steel belted Conan Doyle, framed AKC Sllky-Terriers. Sl2S, skateboards. retail SJ6.3100 2131592 "'°'" Sail 9060 pvt ply Call eves or d , h wilb picture, SZ7S; letter 673-7873 S25. S7 ea. Baby equip. NEW ti Pl b II ---·~ ----loots, wknd:. 646-6463 Ra ials . I All·\\ eat eri written by Rud yard adorable. shedless, Queen sizesola bed. good Much misc Comer 43rd · ome n a PiClftOs & n--.. 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --Snow l'hain ~ Greal K · r f d · h shots, M S225. F Sm marh1ne St60 Elec· ._...,..... , TralleN, Trani 9170 traveling. fun for trips 1p 1ng, rame w1l 551.2348__ _ rond Sl50. & River Ave. on Bay tronic M..'Oring. 646-0697, ···~··•••••·~··•••••••• I 6 Habit Cat •••••'It••••••••••••••••• Beauti rest bed. Lots of picture, SDI. miniature 548-2511 Ch an n PI Newport 642.4548 Steinway 5 l walnut Used 4 l1mes Xlnl conci '71 Holiday Vac 22',
oiJ portrait ol woman, ~/rcl~~~Z:lD Sgl matl.lsprgs. like Beach, 675-1~ Fri. Sat, 6 Lake & 10 Deep-Sea grand, bit tn 1948. better Trlr SJOOOOBO IQaded + '74 Ford ~o~": F ~ewS t":~~eot . wit~ 'lt:\:'1 tablh S200 842·7159 new. $20. 5' blue deror Sun. poles&reels.SlOtoSIOO. than new cond. ,Ham· 96().5!M3Eves RangerXLT250Camper Cassette 6 doors Win ci::l~ry ~olore ~aWi . AKC at purebred Lhasa rha1r. Sl5. Fabric swag 601 HAMILTON, CM 54&-9832 ~:~~ ~~f:3~ & I 1ano. HOllE 14 S750 Special w 'shell 33.000 do1A. step van Owned by
&taphy on sheepskin, A""o. 4 puppies, 7 wks ~ S...~J.1!_494·lll3 Fri, Sat & Sun. Tools, Phone-mate, New, S75 -- ---or bestolfer67S·6792 I!!! .§46.:Ql~ Christian $1777 OHO
framed, S685. P/p. Call old $150/080. 751-1317 Dbl bed. S50 Sofa chair. hshlditems, elt Smith & Wesson 12 g riot Kowaii Baby Grand . l5'Fin; ni~. but needs Trailers. Utilty 9110 759-~l -(714)~2183. Lh A 8 S25.Hdbrd,S15.Coffee& Garage Sale-furn . gun. $65. Beach cruiser walnut,~n:,." work . xlnl traile r .·••••••••••••••••••••••• 'rea. asa P80 pups. end tables. S20 both. lamps, & many misr. b' 1 5 pd c S250 ....,.UU'tV tM,. .-Utility Trailer Good Con as W..ted 9590
FO R SALE-l930 's wks. M & F. adorable, Stereo $75 631-4985 Otr of Magnolia & Heil. s1:neil~S.' 2os~ari SportingGoods 8094 "°""'be_sl_E•.,..!906 d1t1on $350. 556·9096. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~he;i~:::· ~~':r ~~ SZOO ~a 556-WL --2 T r~o;;;Ch ;;s-; Westminster Fri/Sat . Haywa rd twm.fm sur ••••••••••••••••••••••• REDLASl-:R After6PM WE PAY TOP 001.LAR
pieces Buy one or all Puppies Elkhound mix Lounges. $150 each 5 S.5 m. fboards. 6 ft & 6 rt 4 in. SCUBA ~egulators l.500 Su1~1 '78 RM 125 Xlnl for top used car~
840·4068. $25. Seve~ weeks old, piece while French S• rr--s. $135 each. Refrigerator. New , still in boxes 6'.3:1677_ -673-7873 cond S700 or best offer foreign. domestics or
phone Mike Duncan Provincial set Sl75 F pe L'_h _,_ li 11 5 cubic ft GE new Retail $00 Now selling 14 sailboat, super fast Comet 3 Rall Trailer. 2. class1rs If )our car 1s Driental Vases 145 Sehl ....,S-5203C M · ' um ... itc app ances, · r $136 25r• OF"" Call GI ··--' A I extra l'l"an sec us '" · · . Pecan d1n1ni: set. 6 Clothes. Sat/Sun only model. Sl50 673-1405 or ' r ass over""""" c ass Ball 12" wheels$~ or " · · clock S90. pitcher/wash S\d. Poodle puppies, chairs. Buffet. $550 20122Cy~St.Santa after6PM. El!r1Lund~~8821 bual '894-Z729_ !?!suirrer55J.Z723_ . FIRST' ~:;~~ :;!~i~:i~~~c:;J: .P~1te, 7 wks old. AKC, !!.61·!.!!_32 _ _ Ana Heig hts. Across Stereo system. Cost TY.~~io, • •liOBIE lS .. A.utoSffYice,Porh ~
631.5979 S!fpers,S275. 7~0966 Quozel Thomas Jefferson from OC Airport 546-4968 SlOOO, sell ~. Stereo H1Fi, St.no 8098 GOOD BUY ATS1200 & AcctuOries 9400 "'-------1 M Bassett Hound to good Lamp. S6S 080 Solid Mov·ing Sale furn refri'g receiver, 10 WPC. S50. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-7lOO Jc Uric an Mahog RoU Top • •• • •• • •••••••••••••••• home only. neut .. all Oak Game Table, SJOO kltch items: Aug: 15. 16: Craig car spkrs. SlO Beautirul Color TV. 2 yr Must sell 18' Sol Cat SFT Six PAC Camper . g:~1k~~.~,~~r shots, $50.493-9660 OBO Call after 6PM , 9574 Azalea. FY each . 2 rh~me 4 arm wrnty. Frett delivery catamaran. w trutler. shell paneled, sliding
-Gldn Retriever pups. ~Int 536-3100 -rlolh1ng fixtures, $40 St48 646 1786 xlnt rond. Si600 firm I wind Rear door SIOO
:h1nese Antiques. ap· barkground w papers. Furniture & furnishing; Honn I060 each. Mr. 1.og Sex·Wax Toshiba ~b~-~l;r;, Ca!.1_497·~_.!4,_499-2002 631_3929_ -----pral·sed w/documents ••••••••••••••••••••••• T Sh'rt.s l ls •-hort rd S22S · shots & wonned. !213! sale, Lido Isle Call for 16 h d ~'"-tnut geld · 1 . on • s rassette reco er loots SI-/ '"'' E bl 600 flower vase. S75; teapot, S!IS-7297 ann't ; 1714 )!l>1·03ll. . anoods "''""' Sl800. sleeves. new. .50 each Model : 87<ni. 642·7030 Doc' ... r-9070 v " ~ngme. re t I ex· $225; lge 24" high vase, ~ -----mg. g mover · 673·1405 Alter6PM. ·----;-- -•• Int shape. strong. S350. ssoo. 355~ Samoyed: 8 Mo SlSO? Redecorating Sale-brown Call alt. 5, 831·2396. -.:...:.:o=.:. loats & MarW ....................... custqm h1ith back seats ~~----1 Good Family Dog & tan H errulon Recon. Ant1q smudge lqui,....t NEED28'Sllpforbeaut SlOCL.67_!..(&~---
!\ntlque Dresser S300 499·3188 sofa/sleeper. $t50 !2) HCM1SeholdGoods 1065 pots Make grl de~o ••••••••••••••••••••••• Searay in DANA POINT Drop Leaf table w/2 -1045 brown rlub rhairs & ot· ••••••··~··•••••••••••• planters or pool /patio G ral 9010 or Newport. Call · Glyn, YW PARTS!
ChainS400.645-7386. FrfttoY• l S125All d d Lge luminous sea.scape, hlrs$10064&6270 ette 49'1·4a.2evesor973-0307 Transaxle.dualWebcrs.
Beautiful Antique ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~ g ron . 3'x4' approx .. asking ic;ur. Can~n-;-ro; sale. ·;a··x•D•e•d••u•ct°ion°00o0000°:1:~~· Slipsav~il -uptose·.cdM Yard var. l:iwnmower
W I . HELP ! Well behaved. ~ ------$750,t~nns.5:i9-8986evs • ..., etc Jerr 963-3888 ardrobe Armo1re, lovable cat needs gd C 1....... unsexed _,each Hand Boats-Cars -Planes area S9.00 ft Peg11y ·~ y_ -solid oak. 1450. Day MOpytcv INTERESTED I N madequilt~75.~4~ 213654·2341 Pattison. 955·2473 675-7330, Eve6.11·71S8 temp home until owner King sir:e.' Decorative H E A LT H A N D ---Autos forS. · finds a t.~oo.45 traffic light, backgam· NUTRlTlON? Have Ion JWTC family mern. loats,Mairit11lmlict/ wkdys~9·5EM_ ..................... ..
Antique sale.Sat Aug ts Free c ats . Mother. moncoffeetable$175ca Generatorsforsale.cost bership, $6()() + s2oo St"lct 9020 •••12' beam. up lo 45' IMPORTANT
9AM to 3PM. Booth's, daughtercombo 14mo& -700.365.1_ -+ lO"'r·overstock 9-12 tran s fer fee Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• log. sail or pwr 3 blks NOTICETO
collectables. rum. Ray 4 mo Pride of Conlem porar-• black Mon-Fri (7141 543-1784. ~:1405 ----Marine Electrir1an No of fun_Zolj_e_~.73194~ READERS AND of Hope, center for han· , o · Ill dicapped. 111354 lrvine ow~hip.~29:.l. form 1ra round top. 6-9 Mon-1burs842·6224 78 RECOttDS es1gn'msla repair WANTED To lease 75' ADVERTISERS
Blvd Tustin. Mulll·colored kiltens Looks like marble lOxi2'Carpet Blue. Over 1600. All types. Qual_wor1<.~20ev~ private dock or slip The price of items
-="-.-..-...-...-=--------1 Tiger stripped, grey, Str<!ngchromebasew_l4 freensheared. pile.new Cofltacl anytime. J32.41 HAVETOOLS,Wll,.L within Hu.nt inl(ton advertised by vehicle
blk . white & orange cha1rs,ooeneeds r1pa1r. 50. 751·2:B7 Arapulco Dr Dana Travel' Expert marine Harbour by rt'!>Pons1ble dealers in the vehicle
RUTH'SAKnfi)UIS 548·6219All4 Table S35 Chairs SS 1_ lry 1070 Point engine repair~ & ~a_rt£ 714~.Jl666 rlass1f1ed advenising 504~So.Bayfroot 96J.8067Eve's -•• TOSHIBA Coper desk service. 7 days1wk columns does nol in
B lboa I I nd Fwwihrt 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1 ' I d I' bl a 5 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Green modular sofa grp. White gold wedding/din· mdl. S700, 6 storage 964·4800. Tn11Hportatioft c u e any app ica e
11 I lfo Or-.. Co.ty
2925 HarbOr Blvd
COSTA MESA _9t9-isoo __
HIGHIUYEl
Top dollars for Sports
Cars. Bu,is. Campers.
914's, Audi's
Ask for UC MGR
JIMMARIMO
YOLKSWAG9'
187ll Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842·2000 -r -
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAM
USED CARS!
Tap Dollar .
Paid
For Your Car '
JOHHSO.. & SOW'
Lillc•Merc ''
262:6 Harbor e1":'J.
Costa Mesa 54G-$1Q.
WtP.!l.
OVtK
lllltlool&
ForYourGood ~
VW . Porsche or Audi
VW PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E Coast Hi-..ay
at Bayside Drive
Ne~~rt Be!£h !7~
Premium pnces
paid for any used car
I foreign ordomestk l
m good condition
l t ,
llOl8 11.11 IM 1111!1
~'la \ft•,,1 ~ll(H.10
WEIUY
USED CARS & TRUCKS
COMElNOR
CALL FOR
fRH APPRAISMi
Cormier·DeL1llo
CHMOUT
18211 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEAcil
147-6087 or
-~49-3331 ~
Highest rash for good
cars & vans
551·8285. ---.----
Aldos. IMport.d · . ..................• , .. next to Ferry * I BUY * * Folds into foam beds 5 ner riJlo ......... aised al cabinet SlOO, manual loots M"'--••••••••••••••••••••••• laxes, liceme. transfer Wed-51111,12-5. * . . piecesS400.84G-4336 S1.-"."'!i1i650:498-7120 typewrite.r~. AU very E_;;__. 9030 C•-n.S./ fees. finance rharges. SEMl ·ANNUAL SALE Good ed F t re & .""" ,;x. ood nd 6'73-2282 ,_,.........., R 'J 91 20 fees for air pollution ron· Alldi 9707 1~·20%olfonallstock. A Ii us ~r;;1 r ·11 Good Cond. Hide-a-bed. B r a z I I i a n g co ....................... " trol devirecen1firat1ons .................... ._.
mira cle
mazda ~F as~~-, Y w1 S145 Solid maple dining. AQUAMARINES cut & 7 shipping boxes, dlx re-'80 5'7H.P SEA GULL ••••••••••••••••••••••• or dealer documentar} 2150 H..t.or ... cl '78 Audi sooo Loaded:
1010 ~ASTHSAUCTIOM room set. 4 raptain polished. Only S50 per i~forc_ed plywood . Motor. forward & re· 10"' Camper Four Star preparation charges UO· Cotto MeM 645-5700 $6650 Firm. Call art lpplwts chairs, round table + 2 stone' 64().86811 hinged lim wlhasps, ap-verse. low hours $525 wt refrigerator & stove less otherwise specified 6~M 536-J!OO_ - -
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1
•1••U•Yu:::.·::::;:,:0 64M6N, 13J-9625 feaves, glass-top china · prox 8x3x2'. 5x4x3' &i 642-7056 _ __ _ PB or t ·a;..~ t Y !'_~I bv ~ a_dvertiser_. __
ArTw"'""'A cabinet & drawers A Coledonlt.. 4X3x3'. 7 for S300 . •79 7"sHP Suzuki Out utane. "'fU'<'I'" size""" =-, '-s ""7 •133 I IVY PUIM'TUH below SJOO 642-3215 A very s,_.ial Cust de· ~9-0120 board, l1'ke ne~ $425 Sleeps 6 In excellent Attt'-s/ ""' ""' .., Les 957-8133 -' · · .--condition. $1250 Call ~ HARBORAREA Queen me Hide·a·bed sign. Gold & Fresh CllUMGFAHS 67J.U>3 Classics 9520 APPLIANCESiRVICS 20SOFAS,new,S98ea. courh. Black/ brown/ Water Pearl bracelet. C -between lOam -Spm •••••••••••••••••••••••
BUY-SEU,.REPAIR 1$Loveseats.S75ea. while Olefin. Newly Call forappltoinspecL asabella, reverse, ~aocv~ !',,,..Boat Rark for 631·7657 PRETTIEST
54t-3l'T7 .5 or554-4l80 cleaned $215. 979-5251 644-0323, eves. woodd b~d:s·. vari~b~e .. rn.!m31 d81'._S Camper s!teJI. fits Toyota '57 T-llRD
..,,.lte Whirlpool Washer. ~ 1"F La"'°'1 "T" Gold EVES. LAD~' DIAMOND w.: si39.~eS~~~ e ' WANTED 1-0 to-25 H p & Cou rier long beds. 1 .... T-.... I. "" 1'th ..... ,_o ha'r · BRIDAL.SET•..,.,. panelled new dual " "'"" St75. Kenmor e cop· SlSO ma.uwi.,c ~ Dining room Antique MustseU &;"~ Judy7»-0986 outboard in gd ~on~ spkrs. foldmg full bed, BESTOffER!
fertone dryer, elec, white table w/2 leavu & B Chi ObJ' ts Have 2 5 Hp Elgin air b """'"'" Liv rm furniture & ac· 4 chairs. China cabinet, eau. nese ec · "" ca ·over, storage. l"""vru.) 175.557-m SACllACE Magnificent. inlay cooledtrollingmotorfor boot.S6S0.962..703S
Whirlpoolwasher Works cns .. lyrold,costS2500, Serving lable $300. Man'1Coocord Mariner scree.ns . furn , sale.St15.S6l·l993af\er MototilHllln 9140 THEODOR E
great S100. ~i.::11• tllOO or offer. D1inette Se~: p0cdtagon1 watch (unused), Cost ~orcelams. cloisoone, 5 m. __ •••••••••••••••••••••••
548·2454, aft.er5PM . I ass top "' e esta Sl,000. sac~ilic~ $800 figurines. m~ny rare loob. Power 9040 '79 Puch Spl MKll. lo ml,
Microwave, Norelco, Beautiful glass inlaid oof· hboalsseterwed/4 cyheal1.lrsows2uoop·. 080. Dunblll lighter, and unusual misc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond ~or best of· Sl25. Trash comp, Oaf· fee & end tbl. $450 979-3941 silver,(u-nused} cost Appolntments 754-1:113 ,.....,,w..ted re 642.lltie9Jetr
fera Ir Sattler. St25. 673-4743 S210, sacrifice $150. Call Mft I _r_. ------•
ROBINS
FORD
1000 HAlll\OR 81 VO
C0$1A Ml \A b41 0010
631-1743 Virtue tble, 36 x 46·70" Antiques: Oak. cher· DlckS75-34'15 Ct••-197f P .. Y•diffel '67 HONDA125cc seo. 6 fiber olw chairs rywood chopping U-·'"'--1071 W..ttcl IOll Sportlisher S154mo Runsgood,$350. CecllllCC.• U pr I g ht freeze r , " .'.,.,. lso ---r ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... Se SO S130 84111637 847 7865 ,_. orig owner, S49K id f S20 ea, 96().133> alt 7 or blocks, m...,., more. A ....................... 0 L 0 S T y L E "" a ray mo • i · evs ""'"'
Fri& a Ire, 17 cu l, week-ends brand new •asher & S II d Ing lab I e fo r TURNTABLE-with nip 25' S~lp Jaclt Sm mo Foxl-GT moped needs miles. S2SOOOBO
lroslfrtt. $65. 556· 1633 Orange floral couch. 8~ dryer <Kenmore), elec-RockweD Unisaw, near· need~ to play old 18 re-Slip rems included minor repairs S150 494-5453
eves rt 1150 ~ ll ~!.,o3037nlc. 549·4721 or ty new,'3115.S»S'723 cords.mat.eves. Plusequilydnpaym'l 6'5-UllM 55 Cadillac. New engine.
G E refri.g side by side/ bie. Si.2S. Wood:° nf~ .....,. Alrless painting system, BAR REPRlG. Small Da 1»6620ev551-93Z7 Mlni-bikes/Honda 50 Ital· trans & Urea. Clean in·
lce waterdoor.k50080 cabinet, twenty 8 inch MaUress ~ Bouprtnaa. Wainer Spnytecb 2000 elec. refrig. to take to Fishin g b oat 27 ' jet $0. Like new . side & out. $3,300 firm .
SG·l864 drawers,@5.552·3889 Queen. Ute new St35. w/'NJ' bole• llJll $950. oolle&e. a.tap! 951.2551 Tollycraft wUh 011trig· Reasonable offer . .-646--..::..;6Z7~0~. -----
Brown Wh.irtpool Wubtt While splnclle lullabye BlueLoveteaUlOS.Palr Z471 afl.6orwtndsanytime. aera , radio, depth 710.8063. 4W.._,Drifts 9550
J'IO, Small O'Keele • crib ' mattress, 195. of Vlctoriao Slde Chairs finder. rebll ena. & 'T1 CimaUi moped xlnt •••••••••• .. •• .. ••••••• Merrril r ... l'IO. 8otJl k50. Cullom Walnut MIH•lr I• IMO Studenll al~ tn Alla. trant. WIU lrlde ~ cond must sell '80 Jeep CJ•$, 12.5xl5
&ooctconct.•as ~Ot~J:m~~-~~~i Cablnets forbomett1ter-....................... Want SUIJl!t ~Chinese equity for car or . $2SO/OB0.873-4499 · lires , spoke whls.
J5' lidt bJ tJcle refrl&. talnment center $110. Lo .. l.llM brush p11nt1n1 tcr.r. T.O.P . on balance. custom arill •bumper.6
Avocado. Xlnt cond. m=7t40afttt3PM d'J.1260. Helium Bouquet. de· 497.a3. sst-S.otUMNO. PUCR MAXI Moped, On· cyl al( ml 556 4347
... 112-7250. ia·.':::el,~k~~· Walerbed, queenslse. llvered~fect ror Mmkll '**'" !~.:,.~~':!~~ 6'2·S722 · ·
Refrl1er1te>r. lar1e eomoieco1orTV; &/drawers, Ulte new. neryoc..,_,_1'7M4ll ...,,.... 1013 '77 Flb~ralau 41 fl arupm RAIETIUCK
rreuer aec. $225. wolb llO. 2332 SZI0.631"8Mlafter5:30. Loi Caballttot Health ...... , ............... , Grandbanltt. Sklp~r Honda "IO"StreetBlke II ~414 tO·SUO Rick. Eves , Movln1 from Bayaboree. Club lle.mbtnhlp, '250 Sacrifice mu1t nil. maintained. Call eves tao. '":: •·l914 · C::::· . ..-iHerculon Mui t u ll! Maytaa orotter.CllllAMwerAd WalDlll Baby Oraad onlJ ra.v --· lf'OUP, Incl. end h ._,. J> ...... NZ..-athn P lano. Xlol cond. S7S.rnlasU , _ m.3841 • .. -..--&
lla1t•f l'Uber • 111 tables fll5 752-1~ •11 er, -· rycr, "-· ' · 541-JIM or""""' 'Tl BeMUi D 1325 0 '76 --· -drytt hOwll. • · $150. Otbtr Items al . '18 Sea lby Weeketlder r S Cyl .. 4 IJ>. w/only 8.000 • I ft _...couch with 3 five-away pric11. Rama .... Tkbta lbalWI, Let Pa..t Copy• VHF CB. 9*ereo Mtt llotobeclne 40TL $225. mlltt AC, PS. dutl 1u
pillowMc.*'50 TR·m1. fertale,lfor.,. lud/rbyth.n, xlnl coad. wt.' trlr •~:New 50-0111 tank•. poaltrtctlon r~ar m.Jm Bunk beds. Fnillwood m..-(2JJ)411.UOl .!=· a1.-coed Sll ~ ~ end, blaclwd out fronl ~~JN~:..as:a= ;~n~lnt cond ~hr• ti .. 12· Klamth aluminum Sc fllO 5Z~: ~~~srt:~r=~
Mt """ lllld wonb · Cttlilfe&-b'lla,,. 05 I boal t.t llm. 11•. ;•,.·H~·-=:::..··c~·l:K nm,, Dick ~-a. llret. · • Anllqoe Bedroom Set YffM ..-....,.. lfht ......... -.......... SU50/bett otr. Tim "'""' _,"y ~ .,, ..,. .. HM. teer '24' dtL 9tdlvanl&Jl3BO. iDchMltd. •••'*Lua• metal duk "LIO miles Perfect cond uuo~l <dark
"!!.•! = !.~ 111
' lap.IMrlW9 "'"""r11r....,suo. HOUB•o"~• ti bron71.1.•.a• l...4 •-~ -Oii '1 I .. OM d,.... ailtal ftlt , -•· it RM J10 XMt l'ClllCI L:~-:--'-~~:.:...::~'•~~ • del. Uillll1-., '~,:'•;:r::b. r~j •IALLOOMS , • ._. .... ....., II , oceu....,. JJO hp Many Xlr11. Utt ,...
rn:!!' ... u.it _.... IS. ~""8iilllld=-91111• I :~~o. =."u:!~ ........ 11. ll*t ... ·=~·~~~· ...
·-lit "• • ....... •flirtliiiJ.~ •ah 1oar •bop= of ch~aettr SHot SELL \die t&tnll triUa • •--~ .... ... J, ..aY.Cal.. ., ... DI PHI& C..W...a ,..,. ..... .... .. .... Ofl!mMt ' ....
We'll Buy
Or Sell
Your Cleon
Import On
CoMiqnment'''
Coll Our
U\~d Car
Monoq~r
TODAY"'
83 l ·2040 49!>-4949
~oddleboc ~ BMW
Minion Vi!'to
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOi USID CAIS
ALAMMA9MOM
POHTIAC/SUIAIU 2480 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
Mt ... JOO 549-1457
POISCHES
WAMTID
Allow u.s Ult opportunity
to conaldtr Ult purchase
or trade·ln o( your clun
Porsche Check with U1
Today•
WllUY
CLIAMCAIS
AMDTIUCIS
·-OHl'IHL
-••f v;, -, f ,
':o ~ ~ • ---
'80 Audi 4000. xlnl r¢1d.
sunroof, air. Blaul!unkt.
saooo or take over
pymts 963-2000. 97M668
..!fil!!.
~~~ ............. !?.'.~
Tt..Mottbc~.
PwtOfYaw
IMW PwdMaM Or
LHMC.-. .. '-
Mclaren IMW!!
lwyOrLHM
•10..Pholle,.,.!, (7141 522-5 .
$1 •noo m·· ·~ '! OF HEW IMW'S'
Sales and Leuln( at
rompetilive prices, Eli·
cellent serv(te :and P,rts
dept. " •
Good selection ol l't·
vio1.1.sly owned BMW a
other fine cars ,,. ••·
cellenl condition.
I
We also have a fttM
rompany th.al Ir:• other mtkes or a •
lrucks Ind VIM. , ad·
ditiona I adonn1lldlll t ofl
leaalna please call !
114/972·1270 114/IMl,_I
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Or Cout DAILY PILOT(Thurada , Au u1t 13 1981 ..._.lllurW ......... ,rW ......... All9e.UIM ....._UMd Mtot,UMd ................................ i ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~hs11W ...... ! • .w , .......... rW ........ ,.. ,.,..... I t71t¥ .... _ '771 .... . 9771C1M11 ""~ ttJ ....... tfU ,;;{............ ......... ............. ...................... . ...... ~~1 ............................................ 1.............. ....................... ....................... ...................... . ..................... .
.. tJll..... "~..... •n ............ '740'11·1 Porttlle. hit vw COIDJl•t• f1ctory 11 YO&.VODUL• All\lme ...... un 'T7 &I CamiDo, Ill power •MUST.~JC ....................... , ...... , __ , .. ,, ............. , .... , .. , ..... , ................ , ,..&ored. 9blttnl· New r11to SUNROOP for INORANOCCOUNTYI Eldorado clMHI w/ea. opUou, tnaAN eo11trol, VI, •iato. air, pony Int ~ hr'ftle.. '11.-X, am/hn1tereo, 'T4 XKI IJ Converttb Convert .,., J50S£. braltu. lllOOO obo. JM!! I 4 tended rent• unit. AMtrM atereo nu, PS, rHtored. 11450. •q= OM.I 1/c, 1u&o. brown C!Olor, herd top. BRG color, low Secriflce D) 000 Cell ·'711 i 1 VW fldory Camper, SAL& smYtcl Loaded, mint cond. CaU c1mper lbell, etc. k800. l·W ·5815
la o..t1 tnoo. a4'154. ••714, m11u1•. lllnl tond. Har ' i · ... •-· 9716 excellent cond. Radl11J. AND~ ?SHIU Ul·l 'H M utan& Obie. ,.__ __ ........... 11 .... '15,500 Firm N --D.. .,... -,-1tereoc .'J l Kal OVtltSWD!lJVl!RY lMO SeVlllt EJe11nte, ,, ... ~.._.......... All/FM, .. , 1lr coad, ~..... IVU9-..r ft.-I ..... _ , • .,,.,, Ml wan . 1'Y"'• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~ ~ All nice -'-Xlnl llAUnflULll ..... a en. -mett redttan int, anrf. #I DE.Al.ER IN U.S.A: '72 Superbettle Air, EXPERTS loeded, i.nel moon root, , dr 11.cm orta ml l.lnt ~ S3S.'i0 ':CM'.SC
'll uoi lur1un· lf74XJ1L.8nt1sbrerln1 cau. U:Z.500 54a.t'4.1. ~ IOY Lo1ded.Xllllcood loml I .Mf.5127 coc1e1.S1• · · ·
dy/B11ck Illa. New Urtt. cm, new pelDt. tnl 2 yn •2141. P'lrm. IAIU•I '17 CPE DEVILLE D-131'7 ''41/a MUSTAMCa
X&at coocWon. Seeto1p. =d.~11 Mrvtce recorda 'll aoo FD Turbo Dietel. CAIVll 'IO Rabbit ronvert. Low VOLVO Good tranaPortallon ?JC_.. SIOO Doesn't rwi, new enf.
preclate. 1'1&·9510, ,1 .•8!.__ Loeded w/optlona. Low 1 ltOllS·ROYC£ ml,alr/c,AM/FM cua. lteeHarborBJvd MOO. PP.983-8031 EveM2.7111 S1,ooo OBO. Ca I
'J58.0a'11 W... ml. T1keovtr leut No 1MU•111w" WbJte. hllO. Xlnl cond COSTA MESA '79 Blunts Xlnt rond. , between S and 7pm
Del. "n .rt, allv, ._spd, ...................... money oeeded. 544-6190 =:::' .. "" 131· •lll!IO. 64 ... tl0l 140-t4 Load4d, alters ISN M~~N ...;:541-=:-7-08'7""'------
A/C, 1lereo. IW<, SSl50. 'IO RX7 · Fully equipped, daya. 711:_33:12eves c DAYS ·• Bue. reblt enc. new 8151-3264 •~w., '6' 'M uat. convert . l '15-sunroof, 11.treo, air, red, lO to SUN tlru, new ball, xlnt A.llhtl, Uted ownr, s.c1t. auto, xlnt
'll Det 110 SL. Many low lies ~1127 eves. • '10 HOCI To,o .. 1 t7U cond 51900. 7»8652 ....................... '11 Seville Xlnt cond. c.r.ttt. ttJ coad. k900 132.5974 or
'. &
feetures. 7000 mi. lncl 5 ..._.,.... 973 Lo miles, loaded. Looks ...................... VW A.MC ttH Wire whls, moon. rf, ...................... S5Z·l800 -~lo:.!!!!!!!!!!;~!!!!.l!.!.....~ yr warr. ll50 like over .Jhar · 97....ooe. '76 Corona wen. auto, CAMPll ....................... Very lo ml <44K> Pnced '73 Vetle T ·Top. 350 -=~;..;;.o..-.---tt-•-ir
·-ts •-IUI'>< 1 tir• it-• ale, roof rack, 13100 or Reblt enclne. need! li&ht 1971 Pacer, mired school toaeU. 179>0. 640-2349 Automatic Ale full ONswolilo •• pim ,,._,......, o••~R -v-bodvwori& IUIOO ' I •••••••• ............ , .. • 14 HOZ, wire whls. """'"95 White, &ood meth cond best offer. SSZ.6564 1 M'i 23IS tucher'a, 24,000 m l. '11 SevllJe. Well cared ror pwr. stereo cau, or I 'n Olds Re&'ftlcy •·Ale,
amlfm sler 13750 COUNTY~ Looks fine SLZ.500 i1 Toy Celka GT, Den · . Perfcond, many extru automobile S8llOO Finn owner. Xlnl eond Alt, AM/FM, Loaded.
(JU)424.ISll: 140.1588 EXCLUSIVE ~04 Gurney map. 36K mi. '14 Special edit~n Love 12.lSOFlnn. lowner •m &44·81513 SfJ.1429 31100ml. ae..ISl·~.
af\3 m. M &§ED &Tl n-1 t746 S3000. l73ht\5. Bug. 59.ooo mt. Great 581·•17.«>-1490 '74 Eldo, ahowrm cond. 'IO Corvette, loaded, 4000 PL...a-tfS7 " liiiftA .... ,.... In cond. SZ950.11$1·9550 C_....__ ft I 5 red/white, all opts, only ml, see lhtouth topt. Aft .,.. it280Z2+24Speed,Alr. DEALERSHIP ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7SCellc8,newpa t,new '12 B j B N -I •-" 6 .. .-..4147 .................... , .. la•&trvke-Leuin1 All/FM SS,700 OBO. We'll deliver anywhere '75 Opel l~sedan. runs t1ru,• lo m l. S2800 a a ug . ew ....................... llike t.-.646-1274 .,,.. '72 Pinto wen wlrack. lewC.wr,lllc. 138-5648,M'l·ZOOt.fu'.!.:._ inlheworld1 &ood. under low blue 646-1 • ~~ln:P:~:F~l~~·~: COHTN\.ATIH6 c...,. auto traiw, nice It. blue ~ IWUl ltoJCe BMW ... 9725 IEACH WORTS boolr. 51295 . .,. 7074 '76 SRS fiftback. perfect "2·004 CADl.LAC? .• Fleetwood Brghm ...................... body. cd mile•&•· l800
1*.lamboree ........ ••••••••••••••• MSDoveStreet Ptttgeot 9741 c!ond ~spd,stereocass We spedalixe In Jea~s lmmaciMide•out. ESTATE SALE '67 ..!IW~7.!..·~&450=.'------
.._JOl\a.dl ftM444 i1Fiat 128Cpe, xlnt in & ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3250 IM&-1111 1980 Scirocco, metalhc for the busine11 ex· SUl95.~l Couear. new paint. &ood '15. xltra can. nu paint ~--752-0900 . 6 7 P t S 1 -• -red, 13,0I» mi, stereo, utl e '.....,eu al tires. Best olr. 780-9396 •. 1 AMI_. '11 BllW 3ZOi 4 spd 0 t, new paint, tires, 1969 Harbor Blvd e u g e 0 8 Voltaw.,.. t770 tape, AC1 AUoya, xlnt ec v 1'"" t00 · "' t rea. ""' can.,
11,0IO ml, secioo. xlnt clutch, 38MPG. S2000. 631•7170 tS16on0w0aeNon dGood buky ........................ cond., 18100 OBO. Lerps.lec"-C..-o ttlJ Forti tt4 11650/080.631-0198
-.-· 960·6013 ee 5 wor lt6t-"'""'·21" Ofl41w ltll ••••••••• .. ••••00••• ~ ... tt60 . -· .._._ ... ... t7 0 631 5429 "" -· .... ~...................... '70 LTD 0 ood trans , runs 0•1 ........._ t7ZO '7tS--'-2000 .... re 4 --·---l"'1"'1UG '68VW~rback.New Ct•cs 78Z28·Ulteoew,low 11 5.:.. ... ~ ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••0 • ~ ~ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 1975 5040 ,.._ ~-w "-•"'--LI il .......... we """ nner" "'3 F _...... '--"· Conv. LO mi, luuaee MechanicaUy sobd, nice trans axe • new brks. "9 •-. m eaae, ,,__., s4&.J11U1 • ur~ •""'"..,......
SIAZIOD S:~~f7= Only SELLJNG YOURMB~ :ae!tu~l~=r~,:,1: ~~ef~'1~~~034 C':fi ::e~~1n;i.U::rrm~!~ NARER" '1SCama:~ze.AIC, '18 Piesta. 1mmac. lo good 1142-~19.
T·TOPTUllO! ' . ' WE PAY stereo cassette, air & _!9'J.6236. sell IWG-31182 CADTLLA"f: AM I F M. a 11 P w r ' m1 .. loaded, sport. l3400 POl9tktc ttH Sm MONTH '7 4 121..,.. TOP DOU.A.I SS sunroor SS800 t " .. rad11ts. lo miles. S2.llOO 675--2861 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• + UO ph.m tu for 48 54,000 mi, loots awrul, Call Jack Bacoo 646-8665 lt6' VW '64 I 61... /1.00 H.iri.o llll.11 or best offer. Must sell '68 Ford Fairlane, needs .75 f'lreblrd Formula
lll61. OEL·OAC. Adj runsterrific.11500 JIMSLIMONS P M t7SO S unroof, AM /FM 8 Flared fenders, mae c,,..,,,...,.,, ">40•llOO 631.7010. l.ltllework Creme wltan int, im-
c.,...14,811; Res.·'8560. Aft5483-4607 IMPOITS .~ .................. tr1 ackb , bne~ enaine, sw..'!:!.1!·.., ~ce13Uent cond. ,71 C-Ill 646-01 MS mac! All pwr, cruise,
at.art up-$2356.60 +your HOIMla t727 1970HarborBlvd 16 912E. bmlcork, mt c utc • ra..es. urea, ,..,., ...,_, &DOIADO -· '69 Ford E200auper van. a •c. amlfm wlboo6ter.
pyml. Offer expires ....................... COSTA MESA cond . Miked"" SSH900, seau, and much more! Late '66 vw convert, new s· ........ Rebuilt ena. new brakes. 302 auto, t'USt camping new rad.lall orig own. 1115/81~~ .. NeOW's ' VISIT YOUR 63HZ768J3.9300 ,~ 9S'J:i reslor~. an tx· clutch, new Michel.Jn '79. ilver,...,... 1trwp1ne tires, CUil Interior, T Interior. Needs work. (213)592·1481 ,......,.., eves 57~~ cellent car' St900. Call Urea. xlnt cond, lo mi. amlfms~.Auto,ful· tops . Sanyo bi Amt ll000080531).511$.4 --
:JRANSPORTATION ORANGE COAST l~!!l!!!lll!!!!!!l!!!lll!!!!!!l!!!lll!!!!!!l!!!lll!!!!!!l!!!lll!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!~ '77 POISCHI 924 497-6236. ale, tape deck, $68()0 or ly equip, xln i cond stereo, SSCXK>s.56-1737 '67 Fir e bird convert,
CO.NSULTANTS H"-111.lDA '79 300 Turbo. Snrf. lthr. l mmac.! lo mi, air '80-'65 VW left &i rieht beatoffer •:.MO 111,800 CL-tt 0 Mercwy ttSO wblte w/redlnt .. newlop
VI"" Mexico Stereo. 1mmac. rf S8500 S50 · (714) 4~754, 499-4764, -•rolet 2 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• & brakes. xlnt cond. 4MZll HEAD~AITERS $24,900 ~t~kreof. laTtape. ~n .~. ""'70. edooaAhr. w'7!.~1trn dsootv:.: whJ 'TI Rabbit, 4 spd. ree. 1121-8194 ....................... ORANGE COUNTY'S k500. &44-4QM, ~3234 640-6215; 968-1779 "" or vis ,........ · ~ ...,..., ,r1e 1aa. new alt ' H D SEE US FtRST! TO AY!!! '79 300 TURBO DIESEL. 645-2187 s~:a.r::a.:ru:r Beetle ball. l29&6. 7EM170 ~~nd:::i-r~~·t::. Wehaveaeoodselect1on LINCO=TRCURY 1!'u::S::7¢~~i:'t. UMIYEISITY snrf, aux tank, stereo '75 Porsche 9142·0· Many Rare Opp'ty '80 convt. loaded. mintcond. 11,000 of NEW &i USED DEALERSHIP ~12em 848-118113 SALES&SERVlCE cass, Z6,SOO m1. d.k red. extras Must sell '68 Bug Snrf, rblt eng, Mint cond. Absolute underBlueBook Chevroleta! OLDSMOllLE pvt ply 12'7,000. Call 549·472lorfl46.3037 New paint, brks. cltch, steal at $45CJO. 6:11·5:112, 7~8321
H--. • 673·9""" or answer ad ·77~ 924, lo mi. xlnt, starter. 5411-1348. SS7·5864. COMMflL
CHEVROLET ~ "1""'61•• '67, nu brakes & battery,
xlnt trans 17·19mp&
$500/0BO. 831-0198 __ ,.. ,,..,., '79 Fleetwood Broueham. C'iMCTIUCKS 1226,642·~. loaded wixtras, 18900 '63 Camper Bu.\ 12 Volt. '79 Dal Rabbit snd fully loaded. low mi. LINCOLN·MERCURY
16-18 AuwCenter Dr
SD Pwy·li Forest exit
IRVINE
U0.7000
•--------i 491.29931 (213)997·5024 1600 Everything new stereo, AIC, S.~pd. l $9950. Extremety sharp ~~~~~d '70 220 4-dr, 4·cyl, RH, P or sc he 924 . ·11•.,, ~g r~-~1800 Call I ownr 14200 760-~ CallChuck 1·956-12.111.
'J\. )< II·" I• ' Ii . I
""-ll\H"-\
1980 (Dalsiml 2BOZX 2+2
automatic. loaded with
optional reatures. 28.000
m1. Perfect condition
Priced below wholesale
for q ulck ule Call
646.4629
540-9640 auto. tape deck. radials, sacrifice Needs some er • · I '67 Bug, xJnt rond. reblt
--- ---xlnt condition' PP repair Will sell below '79 Van Low m1 Runs enf .. newpaint,sunroof. Have something you
~4~1200 -------'81 El Camino. 4000 rni.
1500 down. Assume SELL idl~ items wi.th a Have something you 548·~ aft &PM wkdys book to cover. Call Dys: greal Loaded. Xlnt Sl700.67S.9434' want to sell? Claulf1ed
Dilly Pilot Class1f1ed want to sell? Classified Sat/SunaUday. 642·1822; after 6pm cond . $8000 080 ads do it well Call lease of 5214 per mo. Classified Ads, your one· a<b do it well. 642-5§78. 49J.6&9. 499·5641 evea. Sell Idle Items 6'2-5878 NOW "2·$111. After 6. 957·2819. slop shoppin& center
ATLAS CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. s.46-1934 3 blocks
AOulh ol San Diego Freeway oll Harbor Blvd Complete
body shop. Sales Service. Pans 5efv1ce Dept open
Monday thru Friday 7.30 A.M. 10 5:30 P.M. and 8 AM 10
5 P.M. on Saturday
• IEACH IMPOtn'S Ma Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel 752·0900 Call us.
we re the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot & Saab.
THEODORE ROllNS FORD
~ern salea. service. parts, body. paint & tire depts.
Qbmpetitlve ratea on tease & daily rent;als. 2060 Harbor
•vd .. Costa Mesa. 642·0010 or 540-8211
JOHNSON & SOH UHCOLN MllCURY M28 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-5630. 57 Veers
Of friendly family service -Orange County's oldest Llfl·
OOln·Mefcury dealership.
SOUTH CO.AST DOOGI
Harbor Blvd .. Coata M..., Tel. 540-0330. RV service
"-----1allsts. cuatom van con'191'alons
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 833-1300. Al the
triangle ol Jamboree MacArthur & Bristol behind
Victoria Station Sales. Sefvice. Leasing & Parts. Fleet
discounts to the public
0 NAIERS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd . Coata Mesa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County s Largest Cadillac. dealer. Sales. Service. Leas·
Ing.
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICIC-POMTIAc.MAZDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills 837·2400
CORMIER..Oe&.ILLO CHEVROLET
18211 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. Tel. 847·6087 or
549·3331. Sales. Service. Parts. Full Leasing Dept,
Freew1y close to all Orange Co.
• ALAM MAGNOM POMTlAC..SUIAJlU
2.480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mas&. Tel 549-4300. Sales.'
Service, Leaalng "Mr GoOdWrench.'
0
IARLI IKI TOYOfA·VO&.YO
1966 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. (714) &4&·9303 or
~7. t 1 Volvo dealer In Orange County and whet'I
you Uk tor a Toyota at Earle IMl'a, you get ltl
• • IOI LONGftRE roHTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminsl81'. Tel 892·6651. Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales,
Service. Parts.
UMIYHSITY HOHOA
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640. 1 Mile
South 405 Freeway. Sales. service. parts & leasing.
• SANT A AHA DATSUM
2001 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tel. 558·7811. Your·
Original Dedicated Dataun Dealer
• MIRACU MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd., Coata Mesa. Tel. 845-6700. #1 dealer
In So. Calif. See the 111new1981 GLC.
• .ALLIH·OLDSMOllLl-CA.DILLAC
SUIAaU-GMC TltUCICS
San Diego Fwy. at Avery Elclt on c.m1no Caplstr1no In
L90una Nlguel Tel. 831~.
• SAM DI SAMl'IS CHlftOUT
401 S. El Ca1T1ino Aelt. s.t Clemente
s11 ... Service. L..ino And Parts
Orange County'e NEWEST Ohlwotet dNler: ''Growing
Your Way." hit El Camino off-f9mP
831-o&IO 412-e600
COST A MESA DATSUM
2845 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. ~10. Serving
Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So 405
• SUNSET FORD, INC.
(Home of Willie the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd.,
Westminster. Tel. 636-4010.
• NAHi< PROTO LIHCOLN-MIACURY
Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a
week 7 30 A.M. to 6 30 P.M. 848-7739.
0 COMMB.L CHIVIOUf
2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Ovw 20 years MrVlng
Orange Countyl Siles, leasing, _..,Ice, Call 5'46·1200:
apeclal parts llne; 546·9400; body shop line; 7~.
• CHICK IYIRSOM l'OltSCHl-AUDl-VW
415 E. Coast Hwy., Newport Be.:h. 673-0900. The only
dealerthlp In Orange County with theM three great
~es under one roof!
• IOY CARYH ROLLS IOYC&.IMW
1540 Jamt>oree Road, Newpo11 BMch. 840-e444. s .... ,
Sef'vlce. Pertt And Leu ng.
Athlete loses his kg, fintD new inner strength
By PtllL SNEIDEaMAN ...................
Tom Clardy, rormer Navy demoUtlon diver,
former police otrlcer, waa lyln1 In a Utah
Veterans Admlntatratlon Hospital In ltT4,
thinkln1 about kllllna hhmelt.
Ourlna a March 1ldln1 excursion. he bad
been hit by a car while cre>1sin• a road.
Clardy emeried /rom a lour·montb semi·
coma with hls ri1ht leg amputated al the knee.
r,tovem.,nt In his left lea waa permanently lm·
paired.
According to Clar~y. his doctors concluded
he was mentally Incompetent and recom·
mended he be placed in an institution.
'Tm s ure I was dlfficuJt to 1et along with,"
the 36-year-old Fullerton resident says. "I was
suicidal. I couJdn't see me -a Navy frogman
jock living like that. I couldn't see me as a
cripple."
• Today, you can rind the same Tom Clardy
working out at the Golden West Colle1e pool and
weight room in Huntin1ton Beach, lookln1
forward to taking part Qext year in the Ha n-
d icapped International S k i 'Races in
Switzerland.
Or you can find him in the ocean orr Seal
Beach, swimming rive to eight miles a day to
get in shape for a more immediate challenge.
DUIGI CDUT
DelllY ,.... ..... "' a.net...,.,
"I don't care how limited you are. you can still do more than you think you can." says Tom Clardy
who plans to .twim from Catalina Island to the coast and teach physical education to the handicapped.
Between now and early September, Clardy
will attempt a reat that some non-handicapped
athletes might hesitate to try -a 26-mlle swim
from Catalina Island to the mainland.
Ir he can line up a sponsor to help pay for an
escort boat, Clardy is sure he can complete ~he
crossing.
Just last month he went the distance In a
10-miJe rough water swim between the Hunt·
ington Beach and Seal Beach city piers.
Tom Clardy, once 11 suJcldal amputee, Is
now an athlete who rerusea to Uve within limit•·
tlorus.
The transformation has been slow and dlf·
ricult.
Before his crippling accident, Clardy had
led an active, outdoor life.
He learned to swim In shallow irri&ation
ditches in Oregon. As a teen-ager in northern
California, he swam dally in the Sacramento
River and Lake Shasta.
Alter high school. he enlisted In the Navy
and learned scuba diving. He was part of an un-
derwater demolition team that exploded coral
hazards in shipping lanes.
After his Navy stint, Clardy became a
police omcer in Coronado. While on duty, he
was struck by a drunk driver. The resulting
back injury led lo his disability retirement
He worked elsewhere until the fateful Utah
car mishap that claimed his right leg.
While recovering in the hospital, Clardy
looked out at a snow-covered mountain and
wondered ir he could ever ski again
The hospital staff told him his goals were
unrealistic.
"The biggest problem is the labeling in the
hospital," Clardy recalls . "All they tell you is
<See VERSATILE, Page AZ >
• • • • •
Ylll 11111111 llllY PIPll
THURSDAY. AUGU ST 13 . 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Striking controllers lose global Support
Reagan
inks tax
cut bill
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
P resident Reagan reversed the
course or government with the
stroke of a pen today by signing
_ Into la w the largest lax and
spending cuts in American his·
tory.
By placing his signature on
the legislation in an outdoor
ceremony al his secluded moun·
tainlop ranch. Reagan achieved
the No. 1 goal or his first six
months in office .
The new laws slash planned
federal spending on domestic
programs by an estimated $130.5
billion over the next three years .
and reduce individual and busi·
ness Income taxes by $749 billion
through fiscal 1986 -the cure
Reagan prescribed to revitalize
the nation's economy.
FederaJ income lax rates will
be cut 25 percent over 33
months. beginning Oct. l , when
the amount withheld from most
worke r paychecks will drop
about 5 percent.
Additional 10 percent reduc-
tions in withholding will be
made next July and in July,
1983.
Starting In 1985, personal tax
rates, the standard deduction
and t he $1,000·per -person ex-
emption will be adjusted each
year to help offset inflation.
Seventy-five reporters, photog-
raphers and te l evision
cameramen were on hand for
the sign i n g ceremon y at
Reagan's 688-acre ranch in the
Santa Ynez Mountains. his first
public appearance since he
(See TU CUT, Pare A2)
6 sentenced
in Ahscam
conviction
NEW YORK (AP) -Three
former congressmen and two
others were sentenced today to
prison terms ranging from three
to six years and fines of up to
$40,000 for their Abs.c am
bribery-conspiracy convictions.
A fourth former con1reasman
was glv~ the maximum 15-year
term, a technicality to enable
the judge to order a medical
study to determine ll he can
withstand life in prison.
After imposing the sentences
before an overflow crowd in the
Brooklyn federal courthouse's
lll'te ceremonial courtroom,
euaually ..-erved for jury aelec·
tloa Md dlilen lnductJon pro.
1ram1. U.S. District Judie
Geor1e C. Pratt stayed tbe Hn·
tw. P'"d'DI appeall. All tbe sentencet were COGC\6'.
• reat. Fonner Rep. Michael My91'1,
D·Pa., wu MDtenced to tlane
coaeurreat Utree•JHr prilOll
t_._ ror ccmvletaoa. on char ... ot ~ briber)' and ..
&el"l&llte n•9' for radlttaeriil.
llelliioWMftlwd••· clie amcA•, , ... U>
i'.
pro1ram presented at s p.m. Sundays tbroUlh Aus. 30 on the treen in Irvine Bowl
Park a :smt of thf Lapna Beach Festival of
Artl. Lia laU II arttstJc director for the cast
of32.
Reagan urged to reopen
talks in return for gesture
By The Associated Press
The International Federation
of Air Traffic Controllers As·
sociation decided today against
calling for world-wide action to
s upport striking U S con·
trollers.
The association's president.
Harry Henschler , told reporters
that president Reagan should re·
open negotiations with the U.S.
Professiohal Air Trame Con-
trollers Organization in return
for the international gesture.
(Related photo, Page 861.
He called on air controllers
who are staging or planning job
actions to call them orr.
He nschler said after the
federation's executive board
ended its two-day meeting that
the board would recommend
postponing any international
steps In support or the u .S. COO·
trollers at least until Aug. 22.
Delegates of the 61 member
organizations or the interna·
tional federation will meet -"if1 required" -on that date in
Amsterdam, according to a tele·
Woman held
in husband
death plot
A Huntington Beach woman
who aJliegedly offered to pay a
"hit mAli" $25,000 to murder her
physician hus band has been ar-
r ested by Huntington Beach
police.
The wire, Martha Stebbins
Ochsner , 46, or Carousel Lane,
was scheduled for arraignment
in W est Orange County
Muni cipal Court today on
charges or solicitation to commit
murder and solicitation to com·
mil robbery.
Lt. Merle Schneblin said the
"hit man" Mrs . Ochsner at·
tempted to hire was undercover
police detective Brian Gerold.
He said the woman was ar·
rested Tuesday in Huntington
Central Park as she aJlegedly
handed Gerold a photo of her
husband, a diagram or his om ce
and a down payment of $5,000 in
pa wn slips for jewelry.
Schneblln said the woman
promised to pay the remaining
$20,000 when the "hit" was com·
pleted.
The undercover detective was
wearing a hidden microphone
when the arrangements were
.made, and other officers moved
in to make the arrest.
Schneblln said Mrs. Ochsner Is
separated, with a divorce pend·
lng , rrom Dr. Harold C.
Ochsner, who resides and bas an
office in Long Beach.
He said the woman asked
Gerold to ktll her husband in his
ofrtce durQ11 what would appear
to be a ctn.1-related robbery.
Schneblin said poll&e learned
from an lnlormant In JuJy that
Mn. Ochsner wanted to have
her hHband killed. The un·
dercover detective talked to the
woman. aayinc he could do the
job, he laid.
·After several telephone con-.
veraaUon1 and meet.ia11, the
woman •treed to atrtke tbe deal
In HunUn1ton Central Park,
Schneblln uJd.
gram the four members or the
executive board sent to Reagan.
.. Your personal goodwill will
help to bring the matter to a
speedy, amicable solution and
the federation urges that
negotiations between both
parties reopen immediately,"
the telegram said. "The matter
can be solved within 48 hours
* * *
Wrong firm
gets 'Patco'
strike gripes
SAN DIEGO <APl -The 11·
day-old strike by the nation's air
traffic controllers has had
widespread effects. but possibly
none like one arrecting a small
distributorship in San Diego.
Telephone calls at the rate of
20 lo 30 a day most from irate
people angered at being inconve-
nienced by the strike -have
poured into the offices or Patco
on Harbor Is land in San Diego
But instead or reaching PAT·
CO. the well -publicized acronym
for the Professional Air Trame
Controllers union, Lhe calls have
gone to the local distributorship
for .Palco, a firm which
m anufactures fishing lures.
Pal Saxon o f Palco said
Wednesday she has been unjust·
ly harangued by as many as 46
callers in one day and that she's
been receiving misdirected com·
plaints for three weeks. That's
more than a week before the
controllers walked orr their jobs
Aug. 3, ultimately caus ing flight
"'ancellations around the world.
"Al least they weren't cussing
and crying then," Ms. Sexton
said or calls before the strike
begari.
"I walked into the office this
morning and two lines were
rlrging The first caller was a
woman whose daughter could
not get back from Egypt. The
second cussed me up one side
and down the other." she said.
ORANG I COAST WIATHI R
Night , morn i n g low
clouds otherwise s unny
Friday afternoon. Lows
tonight 65 at beaches, 67
inland. Highs Friday 80
along coast, 82 inJand.
INSIDI TBDAY
New York's Whitne~
Muaeum of American Arc Itel
become Dtmeyland E:cut. SH
Page 84.
INDll
...,_...._. .. .,_ ...... C1 LM..... M .-. .... t=: .,,.::
~ g =-...... : 1:.-:-••. ~
... I J ' C7
I
j
u ..••• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur1day. AUAUlt 13. 1881
...........
BIROS OF A FEATHER? Neither Echo. a
coon hound puppy. nor his feathered friend
seems to mind sharing a meal at the Medina.
Ohio. home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young.
Several of the Youngs' chickens are bold
enough to challenge Echo for his food.
Gas tax raise in mill .
Brown backs amended bill to hike levy by two cents
SACRAMENTO <A P > -The
Brown administration, after a
year of opposition, is supporting
a $2.8 billion bill to raiH the
gasoline tax two cents per gallon
for the highways.
However, the Assembly Ways
and Means Committee delayed
for a week its vote on SB215 by
Sen. John Foran. D-Sacramento.
because a quorum coufdn't be
rounded up Wednesday.
Already amended dozens of
time to gain votes in its difficult
passage throug h the
Legislature, the bill was altered
three more times Wednesday.
One of those amendments,
wrnch reduced by $53 million the
amount of gasoline sales tax rev·
e nues that would be shifted
from the general fund to
transportation, made the dif·
ference for the adm inistration.
After the amendment was ap-
proved 8· 7. Lonnie Ma this of
Gov. Edmund Brown J r . 's
Finance Department told the
committee that "the administra·
lion supports the bill." Brown
earlier had maintained that a
gas tax increase was not
necessary.
Author Foran said he was sur-
prised by the administration
s upport, although he said later,
"J have no direct commitment
from the governor."
When it came time for a final
vote on the bill, afler nearly two
hours of discussion. more than
From Page A1
half of the 23 committee mem·
bers were elsewhere. Many
were presenting their own bills
before other committees meet·
ing at the same time.
Foran said he thinks be can
get the majority vote in the com·
mitlee, but still anticipates trou·
ble gathering the required two-
thirds vote of the 80-member As·
sembly.
The complex bill is aimed at a
deficit in highway funds that is
estimatec1 to range from $900
million to $2.4 billion over the
next fi ve years. The bill would:
-Raise the gasoline lax from
seven to nine cents a gallon
beginning in 1983. One cent each
would go to the state and local
governments.
-Increase the driver's
license fee from $3.25 to $10, and
vehicle registration fees from
$11 to~ beginning in 1982.
-Raise truck weight fees 50
percent next year and another 10
percent in 1985. Current fees are
$5 to $413 a year.
-Require that county
supervisors representing two-
thirds of the state's people ap·
prove the bill by Nov. 15. In Los
Angeles County. city councils
can act if the county won't ; only
those cities would get the
money.
-Shift an increasing amount
of the six-cent per-dollar sales
tax on gasoline from the general
fond to'iransportation.
BOYCOTT ENDED. • •
given the goodwill required by
both sides."
Henschler said Portuguese
controllers had u reed lo cail off their announced boycott of flights
to and from the United States
scheduled to start at midnight
Sunday. The tower in the
Azores. part of Portusal, con-
trols the key southern trans·
Atlantic route.
Overnight flights lo Europe
went off close to schedule'from
New York after Canadian air
controllers returned to work and
officials on both sides of the
Atlantic predicted a "normal
schedule" today.
There were so me delays
Wednesday on flights from
Europe to the United States and
hundreds or would·be travelers
spent the night sleeping where
they could at London 's
Heathrow Airport, but the pro-
blems were expected lo clear up
quickly.
"By tomorrow morning, as-
s uming the lanes stay open, we
should be down to a normal
t.chedule" across the North
1\tlantic. U.S. Transportation
Secretary Drew Lewis said
Wednesday.
' He sald delays of only a half·
hour are foreseen today.
The rught zone "has opened up
'again and it is our feeling that
'We will be getting thins• back to
;normal ," said Gerald
Fit.zgeraid, operations manager
-of international flights.
On a normal day, 120 jet.a de·
part over the North AUantlc
from the airport. I
ORANGE COAS'T
Trans-Atlantic travel was
thrown into havoc Monday and
thousands of passengers were
stranded when Canadian con·
lrollers refused to handle rughts
to OT from the United Stales,
claiming that a strike by
American controllers had made
the U.S. air traffic system un·
safe. Many flights were can-
celed and there were lengthy de·
lays on others.
The Canadian controllers
agreed Wednesday to end the
boycott, in return for an inquiry
into the safety question. U.S.
authorities deny that th.system
is unsafe.
Jean-Luc Pepin, Canada's
minister of transport, had begun
actions that could have led to
$5,000 ftnes, job suspensions and
firings against the Canadian
controllers. More than 25 con·
trollers were suspended.
Lewis said domestic air
service remained at about three·
fourths of normal as the strike
by members of the Profesalonal
Air Traffic Co ntrollers
Organization over wages and
working conditions entered its
11th day today.
Damage surveyed
OVERTON, Nev. <AP) -As a
team of federal, state and local
officials tried to determine the
extent of damage done by floods
that swept through the Moapa
Valley, residents of the area
continued today the painstaking
process of removing lona of
sticky mud from their bomea
and businesses.
Dilly Pilat CIHtfftM ~I 71'/l42•5f71
All otftef ._.rtlMftts 141-4321
Thomas P Haley
...,._ -CN9t hecul• .. Otlte.,
.AC>bert N. Weed ""-'
Thomu A. Murphlne ·-MIChMI P. H1rvey ...,_,. °""'*
L. Kay SChultt
0..-.. 0.--I
l<enNfh N GOdd1rd Jr 1 ~~ ..
lllmerd lehulman · c......
Qw191H Loot ............. -~A.Moore ...........
MAIN CWP:ICE
no Wnt ••v St • Ce1&•• Meu. CA Mall •ddreM ... '"°· , .... MtH, c A ,,.,.
(OOfrlOllt ltll Or ..... CoHI l'11blttlll"O (-y Ho
f\tW\ \torte\, utu\tr•Uon") f'd1tor .. , m•U•r oir I d wtrh\em•nt\ lll'ntn m•v ~ 'U•O<luuo wltl\o\ll
l>M< ••I ... ,mr\\-of tOOYrt~I owowr
s.<-Cl<h\ po\! ... jMld ,_ ( ... II Mow C .. 1fotftle
tUl'S t•..01 S"""ript!oll h t•"'°' '4 ct.....,.,,,,
ly "°' .. ' U '° -Illy mllll•tf d#\llfWllOI\\ ~ 00
Mo.\lflly
A typical motorist now pays
about $'90 a year in highway.user
taxes and fees. The bill would in·
crease about $24.
Foran's bill before Wednesday
would have shirted $320 million
of the sales tax money from the
general fund to transportation
over five years. His amendment
would delay the general fund
loss to 1983 and reduce it to $177
million.
From Page A1
ABSCAM. • •
Former Rep . John M.
Murphy, D·N. Y ., was given a
three-year sentence for a con-
spiracy conviction and concur·
rent two·year terms for conflict
of interest and acceptance of an
unlawful gratuity. He was fined
$20,000.
Former Rep. Raymond
Lederer, D·Pa., was sentenced
to three three.year terms for
conspiracy, bribery and in·
terstate travel for racketeeriq,
and a two-year term for accept·
in& an unlawful gratuity. He also
was fined $20,000.
Former Rep . Frank
Thompson Jr., D·N.J ., was or·
dered to undergo medical study
pending actual sentencins
because of a doctor's report that
s aid the former congressman's
cardiovascular system c~nnot
withstand prison life.
Technically, however, he was
sentenced to the maximum 15
years in jail and rined $40,000,
because the maximum sentence
is required to order such a
medical study.
Angelo Errichetti, a New
Jersey state senator and former
mayor ol Camden, N.J ., drew
the stiffest sentence, a six-year
term for his bribery .conviction
and an overall $40,000 fine. Er·
richetti also was sentenced to
concurrent five-year t.erms foT
conspiracy and interstate travei.
Philadelphia Councilman
Louis Johanson was given con·
current three-year terms for
conviction of conspiracy,
bribery and interstate travel. He
also was fined $20,000.
The judge told the defendants
that according to government
guidelines they would be eligible
to apply for parole as early as 14
months and no later than after
20 months.
Thompson released a state·
ment saying again that he was
innocent and that "therefore, I
s hall appeal to receive the
justice which is my due. I re·
iterate my f ailh in our system of
justice, or which the appeal
process is a fundamental ele·
ment." Myers, as"ked about the sen·
tenclng, sald, "I'm not happy,
but I'm not sad."
Murphy said he would appeal,
"and I have complete con·
fidence in the American
Jurisprudence system.'' He de·
nounced the FBl's stinc tactics.
Hit lawyer, Michael Ti&ar, said
he believed Murphy'• appeal
would be successful.
Let's hear it
for clapper
NEW YORK {AP> -It took
two attempta, but Aabrita
rurman ha• found hi• way aca1n
lnto the Guinness Book of World
Records for 50 hours of noft·ttop
clapplq. He 1ald he did It to honor hla
suna, Sri ChlnmO)'.
Furman, al. who ruu a lta·
tlonery •tore here, clapped bit
baodl rrom 1:07 a .m. -llClllda7
unW lO:OT a .m . Wednelday. It
beat the t• re1cord Of a boura.
6 mlnatea Ht by Pubudu
Senanayaka of Sri Lanka.
He wu foreed to abaDdoa llU
nrlt try lut .... becil ... a..
DeN IQS ........... IDUll be
beard from 100 Jarell. lllld "-"
Yon meet aolM dJdn•& ~
~Mm.
Reagan cuts not eno~?
Republican solon says President made 'serious error'
Preaident Rea1•n drew
crlt1cllrn Wedneada,y nlght for
hla bud1el·c uttin1 pro1ram
from a 1urprl1in1 source -
another Republican.
Rep. WlWam Dannemeyer, R·
Fullerton, claimed In an addrcsi.
before soo membeu of the
Oranl(e County World Affairs
Signatures
on bills
cost $4,000
SANTA BARBARA <AP> -
Taxpayers paid more than $3,800
to get the signature of House
Speaker Tip O'Neill, 0 -Mass ..
on bills that he oppose~ cutting
income taxes and the federal
budget
Americans forked over at
least another $136 Wednesday to
send the bills from Washington
to the West Coast so President
Reagan could sign them today
while vacationing at his ranch
near Santa Barbara.
Council that the president
··made a 1eriou3 error In Juda·
ment in seeking the cut.a that he
did."
The president's ml1taken,
Dannemeyer asserted, and that
he should have cut $80 to 1100
billion. instead of $35 to $40
bllUon.
Because larger cuts weren't
made, Dannemeyer predicted,
the deficit in the federal budget
for the fiscal year that t>e1tns
Oct. 1 will be at least $45 bllllon
and perhaps as high as S80
billion. ·
Had lar"er cuts been made.
Oannemeyer said, interest rates
-now at record levels -would
fall because the federal govern·
ment, which uses between 35
and 40 percent of all available
credit, would be able to reduce
borrowing.
"The answer is further budget
cuts," Dannemeyer told the au·
dience at the Anaheim Marriott
Hotel. Dannemeyer said he and
his staff have prepared a list or
272 items' that, if eliminated,
would cut an additional $52
billion from the budget. He did
not cite specifics, other than lo
say the cuts would not affect
programs for the poor.
Rep. Dan Lungren , .R·Long
Beach, also addressed the coun·
c il. Neither Rep . Robert
* * *
From Page A1
Badham, R-Newport Beach, ncfr
Rep. Jerry Patterson. D·Santa
Ana the two other con-
sressmen representing Orange
County -attended.
Lungren, speaklhll to what be
called the so· called "Reagan
revolution," said "this is a part
of history we re very fortunate
to see."
"I think It's refreshing to have
a president who seems to have a
sense of where he's going. Presi·
dent Reagan has shown u.s the
job or president or the Ur\ited
States is manageable," Lungren
!iaid.
Fired worker
wins lawsuit
MILWAUKEE <AP> -A jury
has decided that a man who
claimed he was fired from his
·company because he was dating
his secretary should be awarded
$500,000.
The Circuit Court jury decided
that Charles Brockmeyer, 34,
was wrongfully fired as district
manager of the Dun &
Bradstreet Corp. Credit Services
Division in May 1980. He sought
$1 6 million.
* * *
The legislation was sent first
by government Jetstar to Hyan·
nis, Mass., where O'Neill was
vacationing . The same plane
then brought the bills bacJ< to
Washington, where Vice Presi·
dent George Bush signed them
Wednesday in his role as presi-
dent or the Senate. TAX CUT SIGNED. • •
The round-trip for O'Neill's
signature took two hours and 25
minutes and, at a rate or Sl,613
an hqµr for use of the plane, cost
$3,871, according to a notice is·
sued by White House officials
here.
Richard Oarman, deputy as·
sistant to the president, brought
the bills to California on
Wednesday via commercial
airliner. That trip from
Washington to Los Angeles cost
$136, the standard government
Care, according to the notice.
Oarman traveled via automobile
from Los Angeles to Santa
Barbara.
The final bills were not ready
for •s igning when Congress
began its recess this month, and
the president left the nation's
capital Aug. 6 for a four-week
vacation.
From Page A1
began a four-week vacation last
Thursday.
Deputy While House press
secretary Larry Speakes said
before the signing that the presi·
dent's priority after he returns
lo the White House next month
will be "~o make the economic
program work."
He also is promising further
budget cuts and plans to meet
next week with budget director
David A. Stockman to begin
plotting those reductions.
The legis.lation signed today
sets a federal bud~et of about
$700 billion for fiscal 1982, $35.2
billion lower than the spending
plan submitted by former Presi·
dent Carter before he left office
in January.
It reduces spenaang tor SOC1al
Security by $2.2 billion, mostly
by eliminating the $122-a-monlh
minimum benefit. Food stamps
are cut $1 .7 bilHon and employ.
ment training $4.6 billion.
VERSATILE ATHLETE • • •
ll also reduces by $11.6 billion
the government's authority to
enter into contracts to build low-
ancome s ubsidized housing.
Rep James R. Jones. 0-0kla ..
chairman of the House Budget
Committee, has called the
Reagan budget .. the most
monument al and historic
turnaround in fiscal policy that
has ever occurred."
The legislation cutting taxes is
equaJly staggering.
Three.quarters of the cul9 will
go to individuals , mostly
through rate reductions averag-
ing about 25 percent at each in·
<'Orne level.
For a typical family of four
with one earner and j $20,000 in·
come, the tax reduction will be
about $25 this year , $228 in lM,
$371 in 1983 and $464 in '1984. By
the time the bill is fully ~ffective
in 1984, the family's tax liability
will have droppe4 to Sl.549 from
the current $2,013. ..
that you can't, you can't. They told me I was
destined for failure."
The turnjng point came when a friend's
family took him out of the hospital for a one
week camping and fishing trip in the moun·
ta ins.
"I swam the 10 miles," he recalls. "It took
me six hours and 40 minutes. I hurt. and it was
very difficult and I came in dead last. But I
made it.
"I went from an ugly, negative hospital
situation to something very beautiful,'' Clardy
explains. ·'That gave me a reason to· go on, to
stop having the desire to kill myself."
Clardy was able to leave the hospital and
return to his mother's home in Garden Grove.
He began therapy al the VA Hospital in Long
Beach and took classes at Long Beach State.
When he began having difficulty with his
studies, a teacher suggested Clardy talk to Or.
Jack Whitehouse, who has led an active lire
despite the case of polio 20 years ago that left
him a quadriplegic.
"This totally paralyzed man convinced me
that I could swim, snow ski and do well in
school." Clardy says. "He made me realize the
only thing holding me back is myself." ,
At pools ln Long Beach, Clardy learned to
swim with the strength of his upper body, using
his remaining impaired leg as a rudder.
Three years ago, he decided to try the Seal
Beach rough water swim.
''That was when r realized I could do
anything I wanted to."
Clardy endured similar frustrations in
le arning to ski. But eventually he mastered the
three-track technique. CTwo skis are attached to
crutches the third is worn on his remaining
leg.)
The amputee attributes much of his inner
strength to renewed religious faith. Al a Bible
class in Anaheim five years ago, he· met a
woman named Marian. The two were married
the following year .
Having clawed his way up from the depths
or self-pity, Tom Clardy ls now a man with
lofty goals.
He wants to line up a sponsor for bis 26-mile
Catalina swim and begin preparing f<Jf' iplema-
tional ski competition.
"I know what my mission rs oow -
teaching physical education to the han-
dicapped," Clardy says. "I don't care bow
limited you are, you can still go on and do more
things than you think you can."
I
I
J:vtryOM waa up for UM Count when tt came Umt to
1tn1 "Happy ltrthday" to
Jan 1rt1t Coot B11lt, who
turna 77 Au1. 21.
·'Thia ta really a 1rt1t mo-
ment for me. lm11lne havtn1
a birthday party with all
these Cine people. You've
made us very happy," Buie
aald as he was honored at the
kickoff of the 10th annual
free Lincoln Center Out-of.
Doors Festival ln New York.
The soft-s poke n Basie,
bothered by arthritis and
forced lo use a motorized
scooter to get around, roee
with some difficulty after the
birthday song was sung by
more than 500 people on
hand, as he and his wile,
Calbertne, thanked the en-
thusiastic crowd.
The state or New York paid
Orange Coast DAILY PILar/Thurtday, Auguet 13, 1981
\ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ ' \ ' ' ' I ',, ,,
~
official homage lo singer ;j!lj
Harry Chapin, who promoted
the a rts and donated tils
talents at the guitar lo world
hunger. He was killed last
-~ ........ month in an auto crash.
Cesar Chaves. presulent of the United Farm Workers Union . "If music feeds lhe soul,
gives victory sign on picket line at Bertuccio Fanns near
Hollister. after the Agricultural Labor Relations Board ruled
farm unions can send organizers onto pnvote property dunng
strike to talk to workers ·
then Harry's music meant
food for millions. It is up to
us to see it play on un-
diminished," Gov. Hugh
Carey said at the gathering
at Hofstra University.
Mayo~'s angry
cook all fired up
Cindy Volper apparently
could stand the heat, but said
the overwork and underpay
got her down so she quit as
the chef for bachelor Mayor
Edward Koch.
Her replacement will be
Koch 's fifth cook in his
tenure in office of less than
four years.
Miss Volper, 24, was paid
$300 a month and was given a
room in the basement of
Gracie Mansion, the mayoral
home. She announced her
resignation in an angry let-
ter.
"I can get a phone call at 4
in the afternoon saying there
will be 100 people for dinner
instead or 25," she wrote.
··And in the same phone call
I can be told there will be 10
people instead of two for
breakfast.··
White House pres s
secretar y James S. Brady
likely faces a fourth major
operation because of a
lingering complication in his
long recovery from a bullet
wound in the brain.
DONOR
Carol Burnett
The Carol Burnett Fund for
Responsible Journalism has
been c r eated at the UC
Berkeley campus.
The fund was started with
a $100,000 donation from Ms.
Burnett. The money was part
of the award she received in
a libel judgment against the
N ationaJ Enquirer.
The fund will be used by
the graduate Schoo l of
Journalism.
Chapin's widow, Sandy,
urged business and political
leaders to continue her
husband's work. It has been
10 years since Chapin gained
notice for his ballad "Taxi."
she noted, and said, "Just
imagine what all of you can
accomplish in the next 10
years."
Nine-year -o ld Justin
Trudeau looked at the
portrait of his father and de-
cided it showed what Pierre
E lliot Trudeau must have
looked like .. before we start-
ed to ride on your shoulders
and pull out your hair."
The Canadian prime
minister was given the paint-
ing during a 'arewell
ceremony at Nairobi Airport
before he left Kenya aboard
a Tanzanian government jet
for Dar es Salaam.
Despite Justin's assess-
ment, reporters agreed the
portrait did no favors for
Trudeau. It s howect him in a
black suit with white stripes,
with a pale complexion and
longer, thicker hair than he
has.
But Trudeau appeared
pleased with the gift.
Severe weather strikes
Rain activity widespread, more wet weather due
Coastal forecast
NIOlll, mor"l"O lo• cloud1
ot....-.IM 111nny lllrougl! P:rlay.
Coe•• -65, 1"1-'7. Coa11a1 111011 IO, Intend 12. Weter ...
El-•, llQl\1 variable •INh
"19111 end momlftt '-'t wftll •"-• "°°"•Inell -•rly I 10 U k"Ob end
1 to >-fool wtnd ••ves. Soutllwest
•-II -lo J Ifft. NIOflt, mor"l"O
I-ClouOI, clffr alt.tr-.
U.S. summary
S...,......., l\e1 1truck In per11
of ArllOllo ond IOUlll••" Nevode,
•1111• --•• -llluncler1lorm1 were ....,ar1ed '" Ille Ploln1, ce ntral
Georolo, tlle CorollnH ond mid·
Allo"lk C•st stotff.
S-1 ollO ll1199red over Ille
IOUI....., Hew E"Olond coast w-
doy -wldelY·K oltered 1"owen end I....,.._,..,. fell •'°"9 ,.,.
Gull COOll -Ille -.-m Atlonllc
Coa1t.
L.oler IOcMy, 1Mwen olld lllu,,_
.,., ........... fOA<MI tor T••H lllO
Ille ..,..., MIHlnlppl Velley, end
ocrOM h c-•I Gull C:.OOst r091oft
to P:torldo ond IOUlllem <>-rolo.
S<ot-ltlurldenl«ml ere eapect· eo ecrou perts 01 Ille Soulller"
Plote.,,..1on.
Templf'lltWes oround -notion 01 mld"ltfll POT r..,...S from St I" L.oromle, Wyo., lllOtol" •1"r'lle, Collf
California
Tempe ratures
NATION
Ml Le ~ ,.,.,.,,., 12 S7
Al~ 12 ff .02
AINlf'lllo 70 .. ·" A1 ..... 111e M St
All.mo '° .. Allenk CtV 76 .. l.D
••ttl!NA 12 .. ·*' . , ""'"""" " .. ••smerc11 " S1 .... ff ..
80ltorl IS 10
er.-v11e ,, 11
•utt•lo 71 ..
ChorlstllSC 14 7S .S7
Cl\o,,.,, WV 12 • , ... .,.... 11 Wt.JS
Cllluga M .. c lllClllNtl 7t u
Cle,,..... IO .a
Col..,,.. IO 5' Oo ,_ ,., W\11 .. ,,
o.n-74 ,. .01
OHMol.,.. ....
O.\l"Oft ti .,
°"'""' 71 .,
H~ 11 .. • 01
HolOM 'M ,.
~ 11 ,. .._..... " 11 ,,,..." ti ..
JKlllM¥tle " n .as
ltoNClty a ., .11
YIV ... ., ,.. .11
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M~T-" n ..... ,, .. ...... . .. = .. .. .. . .. ,.
Oo•1ono ..
Poto Aotllft 12
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ANwooclClty 71 So<•-11
Solln. ..
Son Oleoo ,.
Son P'r.-C:IKO ..
Soni• ...,,,.,. 12
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TllertnOI m
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eor1-
e 19 a.or
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Cetollne
LO"O 8Ncll ,,_.,",..,., ..
Newport llo4Kll
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Son.JoM
So"to Ano SontoCrw
To-Vollrt
CANADA
102 ti ,. S4 " ,. ,. '5
11 ..
t2 6S 14 .,
to '5
10. 11
11 '5 ., ..
IO tt 11 ., .. ..,
" 45 , .. ~
Ed-
Montroel
Oti.wo
Aetlne Tor-
Vonc-Wlnnl1199
11 "° .02 rs 41
..,
S2 .. ..,
S7
S6
11
SS .., ..,
n u
11 .. ,. " ..... ., ..
71 " 7t S7
Sun, moon, tides
TOOAY
S.Co!ld 1119'1 1:33 p.m. .. ,
,.IOAY
l'lrot-J:J1 o.m .0.4
First 11'911 10·000.m. u *-'°"' 2:Stp.m. 2.0 s.c-111911 t :Olp.m. .. ,
Su" lets 7:•1 p.m .. rlM1 P:rldoy 6:U o.m.
-..us·oso.m., rlMl 7.JOp.m.
SURf REPORT
,..., ..
Af9/MM. 24 14 24 ,
...... ·--
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M 14 ,,,
14
a.J 14
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= , .. ,
lolr , .. , -fair , .. , , .. , . .., -· fell IOlr
~ ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. ,.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .,
10
We're Listening •• ~
What do you Uke about the Dally P.ilol?
What don't you like? Call the number beM tild
your meua1e will be recorded, &rdHrtW Md
delivered to the appropriate edtMw.
• The same Z4·hour ._........ ·tii"Ytft may
M used lo rffOfd l.U.rt to tM dtor on any
e...,lc. Mailbox ~a.ill lDelude tlMlr
u1ne and=*-• fw MiftciaUon. No t'lrcwau.a , ...-.-.
Tell• wlllt iii r.r 11111&
Co unty tightening
adu lt slwp rules
Strict standards on the loca-
tion of adult entertainment busi-
nesses in unincorporated areas
of Orange County have been
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors.
Under the standards, primari-
ly designed to control several
adult-oriented businesses in
Midway City, such establish-
ments may not be located
within 500 feet of any area zoned
for residential use. or 1,000 feet of any existing church. park
or school.
Also. adult bus inesses may not
Seniors offered
college courses
Older Laguna Beach residents
m ay register for Saddleback
College courses scheduled at the
Senior Citizens Club head-
quarters beginning Aug. 24
Offerings Include Spanish,
dancing, creative writing, estate
planning, music. short story
c l assics , armchai r travel.
genealogy and yoga. For in-
formation, call the Senior
Citizens Club al 497-2441.
be located within 1,000 feet of
each other.
Owners or adult entert~inment
establishments will be given one
year to comply with the or-
dinance. That time period may
be extended for up to two years
by the county Planning Com-
mission if an owner can prove
undue hardship.
The ordinance replaces an in·
terim law regulating adult busi-
nesses that has been in effect
since December.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande.
who joined an the unanimous
vote to approve the ordinance,
sa-id he did so "with great
hesitation."
Nestande, who said he didn't
want to impose his values on
anyone else. added ... This is the
hardest vote I have ever made
in my life." Nestande is a
former state assemblyman.
Anothe,r supporter of the or-
dinance, Supervisor Roger Stan-
t on , w hose district in cludes
Midway City, said he wanted to
emphasize that "in no way"
should his vote be construed as
an attempt to abridge freedom
of the press, a right guaranteed
under the First Amendment.
PATCO
assessed
damages
ST. LOUIS <AP> A former
air traffic controller wh o
claimed he was harassed by of-
ficials of the controllers' union •
has been awarded $815,000 in '
damages by a federal judge.
In one incident six years ago,'
Taso P. Anthan charged. a con-:
troller at Lambert-St. Louis In-
ternational Airport harassed
him by deliberately putting two
airplanes on a collision course.
Anthan said he was harassed
because he disagreed with the
union policy of filing gr ievances
against the Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration for reductions in
control tower staff.
In a nine-page order, U.S. Dis-
trict Judge Roy Harper ruled
that the Professional Air Traffic
Controllers union ·'inte ntionally
or recklessly" caused Antban
emotional distress
The judge awarded Anthan
$650,000 in punitive damages and
$165,000 in co mpensatory
damages from the union.
Aothan s aid he felt "vindicat-
ed" by the ruling . PATCO
lawyers said they planned to ap-
peal.
SUMMER
•
SALE
CONTINUES!
Drexel . !b.
Heritage •
SUMMER SALE
SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS
IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
Your F1von11 Oes1gn1r Will 81 H1pf>Y To A11111 You
H.J.GAl\REJf fU~Nll'J RE
PAOF ESSIONAI. HOU .. I: Mon. tftni Thura. 10 •·"' to IP·"'· JJ 11 HAUOI k YI. tlllTEAI~ OESKlNEAS Frt. 11 •·"' to IP "'· let 10 t .M ... l :Jll P·"'· COST A MISA 64'~Z71t
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurad1y, Augu1t 13, 1911
Reagan's 'hit list'
bf standards flayed
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Rea1an admloiatratlon la draw·
ln1 flre from consumer, environ·
mental and women's groups
over lta broadest attack yet on re1ulallon1 1overnlng every·
t;hln'l_ from aex dlscrlmlnation
to help for the handicapped.
, Vice Preaident George Bush
announced Wednesday that ao
Dlore rules have been targeted
for possible elimlnatiop or ea.s·
loll ln response to 2,500 in·
lvidual suageations for reg·
ulatory relief. That swells the
Jdministration's regulation "hit
list" to 91.
New go vernment
forme d in I ran .
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP>
Iran formed Its th ird post·shah
government today and rep0rted
new arrests of more than 200
leftists In a crackdown that has
at least 300 people before firing
squads since late June.
The prime minister, Moham·
mad Javad Bahonar, named his
cabinet before parliament and
asked for a vote of confidence so
bis 22 ministers can take "effec·
live strides towards God's
satisfaction," the official news
a1ency Pars said
Poluh l a borers
end food protests
WARSAW, f"oland CAP> -
Heeding the Communist Party's
back·tO·work call, national
leaders of Solidarity called for
an end. to s trikes and street
marches protesting Poland's
food crisis.
They also urged the workers
to improve the economy by
working a aix·day week for the
next two months, giving up the
Saturday holidays they won
through strikes six months ago.
Sovie t parents
le ave son be h ind
CHICAGO CAP> -Arter a
long legal struggle in a st.range
land, Mi c ha el and Anna
Polovchak have departed tor the
Soviet Ukraine. leaving behind
their runaway _13·year·old son,
who was granted political
asylum.
Walter Polovchak touched off
international controversy las t
summer when he was granted
asylum by the U.S. government
and the parents launched a
custody battle that remains In
the courts.
Officer to face
espionage. trial
SCOTT AlR FORCE BASE.
Ill. <AP> -The Air Force says
it will court.martial the missile
launch officer accused of mak·
ing unauthorited contacts with
Soviet personnel and passing
them classified information.
Second Lt. Christopher Cooke,
25, commander of a Titan II
nuclear missile squadron at
McConnell Air Force Base in
Wichita, Kan., is accused or
passing classified documents to
the Soviets on three different oc·
casions.
Sightseeing plam!
crashes; six die
SKAGWAY. Alaska <AP) A
short sightseeing trip for five
tourists turned into disaster
when their single·engine charter
plane crashed and burned. kill·
ing all six aboard. officials said.
The Piper Cherokee PA·32
owned by Skagway Air Service
went down at about 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the mountains near
White Pass, Alaska State
Troopers and U.S. Coast Guard
officials said.
Oil rigs dumped
BERWICK. La. <AP) A
seagoing construction barge
flipped over s uddenly and
pitched three jackup drilling
rigs into the Atchafalaya River,
drowning a captain of one rig,
Donald Whit worth of Houston,
the Coast Guard said.
AP ...._.
CATCH ME IF YOU CAN -Chester lhe sea gull. chased here
by Pat Ferris of Eugene. Ore .• has a sticky problem. He has
a double-hooked lure snag~ed on his beak. That makes it
difficult to eat and sometimes the lure clamps the beak
shut. <?fficials at Fern Ridge Reservoir near Eugene are at·
tempting to capture the gull to relieve him of his handicap.
U.S. Embassy gets
bodies from Laos
Lethal bombs
safely moved
DUGWAY PROVING
GROUND, Utah <AP> -The
transfer or 128 lethal Weteye
nerve gas bombl from Denver to
the Utah desert went aa well "as
we could reuonably expect ln
terms ol health and safety," ac·
cording to Gov. Scott Matheson,
an OJ>ponent of the move.
Sixteen Iron pallets, each car·
ryln1 eilbt nerve 1aa bombs,
were transferred Wedneiday u
soldiers armed with M·16 ritlea
and jeeps carrying mounted
machine guns kept watch.
16 injured
as stairway
collapses
Soldiers could be seen alttinl
atop the 7-foot·lone bombs inside
the tralJera aa more pallets were
carefully moved from two Alr
Force C·141 &tarllftera. The
f lanes had carried the bombs
rom the Rocky Mountain
Arsenal at Denver lo Michael
Army Alrrteld, 6~ miles
southwest of Salt Lake City.
"We are satisfied from our In·
volvement that the efforts on the
part of the military in moving
the Weteyes has reached as hjgh
a level aa we could reasonably
expect in terms of health and
safety," Matheson said.
But the governor, who has op.
posed the transfer vigorouaJy,
added that he would be unable to
breathe a final sigh of relief un·
til the entire move ls completed.
Arsenal spokesman Art
Whitney described the operation
a~ l~e first phas_e of "the largest
a1rhft of chemical weapons in ELLINGTON, Conn. (AP> -the history of the Army."
A party marking two wedding The Weleye bombs, along with
anniversaries baited abruptly 760 other bombs and three one·
when a two.story stairway col· ton containers of CB nerve agent
lapsed at the Elllngton Ridge to be transferred from Colorado
Country Club. injuring 16 people, in similar operations over the
authorities said. next three weeks, will be
Fifteen people were treated trucked under guard to Tooele
for minor ·injuries at Rockvllle Army Depot for permanent
General Hospital and released. storage in hundreds of igloo·
Edmund Keating or EIJlngton s haped bunkers.
was hospitalized in satisfactory The schedule for the 13 other
condition with chest and ab· flights and the truck movements
dominal injuries, nursing to the deP.Ot will not be made
s upervisor Christine Lunn said. public until after each plane stop
About 28 people were posing of the operation is completed.
BANGKOK. Thailand CAP> -by anti·government guerrillas Jn for a photograph on the wooden The Army said it is withholding
The U.S. Embassy today re· Laos. staircase and platform outside the Information for security and
ceived what were described as the club when it gave way short· safety reasons.
the remains of four U.S. airmen On July l3, Robert Schwab, an ly before 4 p.m. PDT Wednes· The first two planes lifted off
shot down over Laos. They al· American who lives in Bangkok. day, state police Trooper Robert from Stapleton International
legedJy were recovered by Lao turned over three sets or re· Waitkus said. Airport Wednesday morning and
anti.government forces. ma1ns. ··1 ran out to the terrace and flew over Rocky Mountain Na·
George Brooks. a board Brooks, who was contacted by everyone was sprawled all over tionaJ Park and the Continental
member of the National League telephone here, said he arrived the place," said University of Divide while teams of military
of Families, an organization set late Wednesday night speclfical· Connecticut football coach Walt chemical disaster specialists
up in 1970 to find Americans ly to receive the remains. His Nadzak. stood watch at six ground points.
missing in action, said he acted organization maintains contact Nadzak said the group was The transfer has stirred con·
as an intermediary in handing with the Lao resistance from the celebrating the silver wedding troversy in Colorado and Utah
over the remains to the em· United States. he said. anniversaries of Dr. Allan and since the Carter administration
bassy. He said he met 8 "Mr. Mona Kemp of Manchester and decided in 1978 that the bombs
They were received by Lt. Col. Kasem ... a Lao res istance Lester aqd Devra Baum of Ell· would not be destroyed but
Paul Mather , who said they leader who c rossed into ington. Kemp is a dentist and s hipped Instead lo Utah for
would be flown to Hawaii Salur· Thailand for the purpose of Baum, a garage owner, Is storage. Congress ordered them
day for identification at the U.S. handing over the remains. But Democratic town chairman in either moved or destroyed by
Army Central Identification he did not know what the guer-Ellington. this Oct. 10.
Laboratory. rillas hoped to gain from these Nadzak, a guest at the The unarmed bombs contain
It was the second time in a actions. celebration, had been scheduled no explosives. but each contains
month that remains had been Brooks said he hoped the Lao to pose for the photograph but, 346 pounds of CB nerve agent, a
forwarded to U.S. officials here government would be spurred after a round or golf. he went to colorless, odorless liquid that
through civilian intermediaries. into turning over more remains the showers and missed the kills within minutes by blocking
after rep0rtedly bein~ recovered to U.S. officials. photo session. nerve paths in the body. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:..;.::..:...:..;.:.:.:..:.;.;,;.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cambridge
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Orange Col.It DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Augu1t 13, 1981 H I F
Fires dying down
across California
•
War escalates
against med.fly
LOS GATOS <AP> -Elcalat·
ina their war a1aln1t the
Mediterr'anean fruit fly, ornctals
workln& to block lt1 ml1raUon to
the nation's marketbaaket will
start pesticide sprayln1 today
over another city.
If a fertile medny reaches a
commercial (arm, tbe affected
region would be sprayed within
24 houra. "That's the kind ot
response you can expect In the
Central Valley," Scribner said. 9)' ~ Ateocla&ed Prell
A half-dozen b lazes lhat
1corched more than 50,000 acres
acrou California died down to·
day, 1lvln1 weary firefighters a
chance to rest, use11 dama1es
and investigate five days' worth
of fires.
"ll'1 just been a great week
for u., hasn't It?" Callfornia
Department of Forutrv
s pokesman Jeff Row joked
Wednesday night as firefighters
anticipated full control of the
largest of the blaie1 blackening
Northern Calilomia.
T hat fire wiped out 25,300
acres of bru1h and watershed on
Cow Mountain weal of Clark
Lake In Lake and Mendocino
counties. CDF officials sald
arson was suspected in the
blaze, which destroyed struc·
lures worth an estimated Sl.5
mllllon.
Mweum canceu
'fake.' exh ibit
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San
Diego Museum of Art says It has
cancelled an exhibit of 18th cen·
tury Japanese prints after a res·
ldent expert said the works
were fakes. .
Steve Brezzo. director of the
museum, said Wednesday that
the prints were purported to be
done b y Japan ese artis t
Utamaro, which date from the
Go lden Age of Japanese
printmaking. But while prepar-
ing the showing, doctoral stu·
dent Sung Yu discovered they
were done ··by a group of
fakers," Brezzo.said.
Loan in terest
may reach 36 o/o
SACRAMENTO <AP >
Finance firms could charge up
to 36 percent interest for small
loans, under a bill approved by
the Assembly Ways...and Means
Committee.
The vote was 13-0 Wednesday
on SB140, which author Sen.
Kenneth Maddy, R·Fresno, said
would let consumers borrow for
s uch purchases as appliances.
Camera1 nixed
in Buono rase
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The
state S upre m e Court h aa
crushed the media's hopes or
capturing the murder trial of the
alleged "Hillside Stranaler" for
television.
The high cou rt r e fused
Wednesday to review a lower-
court order denying television
cam eras access to the Los
Angeles Superior courtroom
where Angelo Buono will stand
trial. No date has been set for
the trial.
Metro-Media, NBC, ABC. CBS
and the Radio-Television News
Association had sought the bear-
ing, arguing lhat an earlier
Court of Appeal ruling was
based only on Buon o 's un -
substantiated objection.
Tax credit seen
for nwtorists?
SACRAMENTO <AP> A
motorist could take a Sl.000
personal income tax credit for
converting his car to burn
alcohol fuel , under a bill ap-
proved by the Assembly
Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee.
A 9-1 vote Wednesday sent
SB178 by Sen. Dan Boatwright,
D-Concord, to the Ways and
Means Committee.
Pair arreBted
in pot seizure
OROVILLE <AP> A former
probation officer and his wife
were arrested after the seizure
of an estimated $1 million worth
or marijuana In an elaborate
greenhouse. offlcers report.
Butte County investigators
said Wednesday that Perry Alan
Beall. 32. of Lake Concow, and
his wife Marsha, 31, were re-
leased on $5,000 bail each after
being charged with marijuana
cultivation and possession of
marijuana for sale.
They were arrested after a
morning raid by Butte and
Colusa county authorities. along
with federal agents.
AP..._...
BLOCKADE ENDOR SED Actor Robert Blake. left. and
s inger-songwriter Jackson Browne conduct press con·
ference in Los Angeles where they voiced their support for
the planned blockade by anti-nuclear groups or the Oiablo
Canyon Nuclear power plant near San Luis Obispo
Property tax hike
plan ruled illegal
REDWOOD CITY (AP) -In a
ruling that could cost California
counties millions of dollars, a
judge has ordered a rollback in
property taxes to conform with'
Proposition 13.
Judge Melvin E. Cohn accused
local government officials of
"creative taxation" in ruling
that a 2 percent-a-year increase
in property tax rates should not
have been applied retroactively.
The ruling Wednesday in San
Mateo County Superior Court is
almost certain lo be appealed,
county and state oCCicials said. It
could not bt> determined Im·
mediately how much money was
collected statewide nor whether
rebates would have to be given
immediately in the two counties
to which the ruling applies.
Cohn's ruling came in two
homeowners· suits, one from
that county and a second from
Santa Clara County. The cases
were originally (i)ed separately
but were consolidated.
Proposition 13 , the tax·
slashing initiative passed over ·
whelmingly in 1978. allows local
governments to lnc,ease taxes
by 2 percent a year lo cover in·
nution.
Because the initiative also
rolled back prope rty assess-
ments to their 1975 levels, the
counties applied the Inflation
factor back to that yea11.
But Howard Jarvis and PauJ
Gann, authors of the initiative,
testified last week that the infla·
lion factor was not intended to
be retroactive. Cohn ci ted their
testimony in making his de·
cision.
The San Mateo County As·
sessor's office estimated the 2
percent Increase, applied In
1975, 1976 and 1977, cost tax
payers S4 million, officials said.
The state had instructed coun-
ty tax assessors to make the in·
flation factor retroactive.
Cohn. however. ruled that the
state Legislature and Board of
Equalization had gone beyond
their duties to interpret constitu-
tional amendments .
LEVI'S
STUDENT DESl81ER
JElllS
BegiMing at 9 p.m., hellcop·
ters sprayln1 malathion will
s weep 30 square mllea ol
Livermore, virtually all of this
city or 48,SOO where a medny
was identified Monday.
The city Is a gateway to the
lush San Joaquin Valley, within
California's 600-mll e -lon.e
agricultural Central Valley.
The move 1s "a significant
escalation or the war against the
medfly," said eradication chief
Jerry Scribner, noting this is the
first time aerial spraying has
been s tarted after only one
fertile fly has been found.
Roadblocks started Wednes·
·day to i~pect vehicles for fruit
on interstate highways leading
from the area.
Scribner. who earlier had said
h e was not confident that
medOies could be kept out of the
valley, said Wednesday the pest
probably would not travel to the
agricultural area on its own. But
he noted that the fly could
"hitchhike" with a careless
motorist.
OCCicials declared It will be ii·
legal to transport host produce
anywhere within Alameda, San-
ta Clara and San Matep coun·
ties, the 2,082-squafe·mile
federal quarantine zone, without
grocery receipts. It had been 11·
legal only to carry fruit out of
the area.
With Livermore added to the
aerial treatment zone, the spray
region swe lled to 517 square
miles -1mor e than double its
size when spraying began JuJy
14 . Almos t a ll is d e n sel y
populated. •
Another 35-square-mile spray
zone enlargement Is planned in a
week, when the zone is expanded
to the rldgeline of the Los Altos
foothills.
California's Central Valley,
the heart of the state's farm In·
dustry and supplier of half the
nallon's produce, lies in the path
of the immediate threat.
More than 200 varieties of
fruits and vegetables. compris·
ing more than a third of the
state's $14 bllJion farm business.
can play host to the Insect which
lays its eggs under fruits' skins
and causes them to rot.
Scribner reacted ancrily to a
group or Republican lawmakera
calUng for his realgnatlbn and
said he Is not planning to resign.
Min i-tornado
sla ms Indio;
• • • rw in1uries
Jl'lDIO <AP> -Twenty freight
cars were derailed In unusual
100-mile-an-hour winds that
blasted this desert area, Upping
over cars, toppling trees and
downing power lines. officials
said. No Injuries were reported.
One law enforcement officer
termed the savage half-hour
rain and wind storm that hit
about 4 p.m . Wednesday a
··mini-tornado.
·· r ve been working here 14
years and these are the highest
winds I've ever seen ." said Lt.
Roy Ramirez, adding the storm
was ••t.otally unexpected.
"I was out in my unit and my
c ar was swaving back and
forth : I thought I would be
flipped,·· he said
A Southern Pacific official
who asked not to be identified
said a stationary train contain·
ing empty cars and some loaded
with scrap paper was pum-
melled by a "mini-tornado" in
the downtown area.
Hail and rain also pelted the
area. causing minor flooc:Ung,
according to Sheriff Gayle Janes
of the Indio s tation of the
R 1 ve rside County Sheriff' a
Department.
··w e are surrouncjed by moun·
tains and lhe storm circled in
the vaJley and then just dumped
everything here," Janes said.
Light thunderstorms also hit
eastern San Bernardino County
and eastern Imperial County
W ednes day evening. And
heavier thundershowers were
reported over the Death Valley
area. Imperial Airport reported
s trong. gusty winds and near
zero visibility.
Winds in excess of 35 m1les·
per·hQur were recorded during a
. brief storm that smacked El
Centro, toppling power lines and
a water tower.
LAROE 511.ECTION
OF IOOTS & SHOES AT
s12• SllOIO VALINTI,
JORDACHE, CHARDON,
CALVIN KLEIN , CHEMIN DEFER
DISCOUllT
PRICES LEVI'S
Men'•
IELLIOTillS
.IUIS I .
CORDS
~$13 88
50%,0F
LIYl'I
"11¥11 01"
$2J88
AU OTHER BRANDS
'1411·to '18'8
LEVI'S
BOYS
s9••
'1011
DRESS, WORK, WESTRN,
DAN POST, ACME, TEXAS,
JUSTIN, SPERRY TOP SIDER ,
STREETCARS
....
... ...
'I' ,,
" I
•C
"' ,
'.l
" ''· .ti
'•
I
1. ,,
VI
'
.I
·:
-
Orange COut DAIL. Y PIL.OT/Thur1dav. Augu1t 13, 1111
Lite cycle of .Mtdlterr1ne1n fruit fly
Female Medtty dfllll hOle In fruit
and a.ya 2-e ew• --
1.
Metur• Medfty mates
In the mo<nlng when
temperature ls above 54•
Egge hatch In 2·3 days
............
Discovery of Oriental fruit fly, left, in Pomona Valley has forced California to
open second front in ita war to save ita produce industry. already threatened
by fly's Mediterranean cou.Tin. right.
Fly cousin seen here
Oriental species in Newport in 1980
The Oriental fruit fl y threatenln1 and vegetable crops in Northern
crops in Pomona waa 1potted in California. the Oriental fruit fly is
Orange County last year, accordln1 much easier to control.
t o the county 's chief deputy It took county agricultural officials
agricultural commissioner, Leonard only three months to rid the pest
Liekhus. from the four county areas last Y,ear,
Although no flies have been report·-Liekhus said.
Graphic shows that destruction of fruit comes with development of larvae
during medf ly life cycle
ed in the county this year. five were So far six Oriental fruit rues have
found in sex lure traps last year been found in the Pomona Valley
between July and October. One was causing farmers to set pesticide·
found in a Newport Beach backyard, laced sex lures and consider spray·
one in Yorba Linda, two in Fullerton Ing Malathion.
and one in Anaheim Hills. according "If "t th M dfl 'd all
Fotkiw yoitr team in the llily Pilaf 642-5678
to Llekhus 1 were e e y we re y · be worried," said Liekhus. "But the
Unlike Its cousin, the Mediterra· Oriental fruit fly Is one we can take
nean fruit fly which is infesting fruit care of."
F~mous Bedroom Ensembles
at 2 0°/o SavillCJS
Headboards -Bedspreads
Draperies -Boudoir Chairs
Complete Interior Decorating SeJV1ces
nettle CREEk
SHOPS
NtwPtrt 811ch. 644-8880 Tustin. 544·1550
23 Fuhlon l&Jand E. 17th Sl a ft••Plrt frwy.
Newport Center Enderle Ctnttr
BACK BAY.
LIQUOR
IHI SALE S1 99
Davie Bynum Burgundy
Sebaatlani French Columbard
.ALSO OH SALE
Slllllntoff Vo6a
C9Hdl•Club J&I
~'1Ght
642-4774
2651 '" ........ Newport leach
(Next to the new Irvine
Ranch Farmers Mkl.)
~~
D1llyPUat
Classifieds
-E~MORE Portable K '" her s:io Dinette
db\s\b&"; chrs i,is. Lge.
t h ouse
d 0 ..!...eab\e roof $30. w/re .. -· &46.0000·
"Sold everything I
advertised In the
Piiot."
SKI MART'S
4TH
ANNUAL
BINDINGS
1/3 OFF
FRIE Drawings
Each Day for SALE
·skis of Your Choice!
CLOTHING
30~80°/oOFF
PARKAS REG.
Vail ....•...... 185.00
Buffe ......... 85.00
Beconlto ....... 110.()9
Fico ......... .
SALE
86.00
29.00
Head ········· 113 OFF HCC ......•...
Kitex ......... .
Obermyer, .... :
Valado •....•..
LOTS OF
KIDS CLOTHING
SUITS, PARKA8, PANT8
AUGUST
14, 15, 16
FP ............ 270.00
Strato ......... 240.00
Haute Route .... 200.00
F5 ............ 275.00
ST5 ........... 230.00
S-4 •......•...• 250.00
S3 ............ 210.00
CM ........... 225.00
FM ........... 200.00
EM ........... 185.00
Prostege IV ..... 160.00
LACROIX
Moch 2 .....•.. 330.00
SPALDING
Squad ......... 295.00
CompM ....... 250.00
Comp F ........ 250.00
440 ........... 210.00
385 ........... 190.00
AUTHIER
CompGS ...... 260.00
Comp SL •...... 235.00
Torgo·S ........ 215.00
Surf .......... 195.00
Cosmos .......• 290.00
Corono·S ...... 190.00
K2
810 FO , ....... 275.00
710 FO ........ 250.00
305 ...•• ' ..... 215.00
305 M .•..•.... 215.00
THESKI
TRS ..•......•• 275.00
Block •........ 275.00
White .. ' •••••• 275.00
SALE
248.00
230.00
215 .00
180.00
230.00
194.00
186.00
167.00
180.00
165.00
130.00
90.00 I
198.00
177.00
160.00
150 .00
128.00
114.00
178.00
168.00
139.00
127.00
154.00
106.00
186.00 I
18&.00
139.00
139.00
171.00 ,, .....
175.00
SALE
BOOTS
OVER 1,500 PAIRS
OF BOOTS ON SALE
30-70o/oOFF
CABER REG.
Equlpe . . . . . .. 225.00
Formidable ..... 195.00
Expert. . . . . . . . 165.00
460 .......... 175.00
Grand Prix ..... 155.00
L. Equipe ...... 195.00
Equlpe Jr ....... 105.00
Munari ........ 140.00
SAN MARCO
AX-1 .. . . . . . . . 238.00
BX-1 .......... 188.00
LX -1 . . . . . . . . . 188.00
LX-2 .......... 158. 00
AX-2 .......... 208.00
BX-2 .......... 168.00
SALOMON
SX-90 ......... 235.00
SX-90 Equipe ... 265.00
HANSON
Citation . . . . . 225.00
Shadow ....... 150.00
Vivo .". . . . .... 150.00
Classic ........ 160.00
Stilletto. . . . . . . 255.00
SCOTT
Superlight ...... 190.00
Super-Pro ...... 205.00
Super-Hot ...... 235.00
GARAMOUNT
Totol .......... 275.00
Olimpic ....... 250.00
Garo "H" ...... 225.00
G.T ........... 185.00
Allrolight ...... 175.00
Magnum ....... 130.00
Arpege ........ 130.00
Diamond ...... 200.00
Lady Comp 15 .. 130.00
NORDICA
Novo 79 ....•.. 1-«:>.00
Brezzels ....... 160.00
Zepher ........ 180.00
Force II ........ 160.00
Laser .......... 160.00
Gemini ..•..... 100.00
Cosmos ......•. 130.00
LANGI
XLR .••••...... 260.00
HllRUNG
lmpul ......... 135.00
lmpulM ..... , . 190.00
SALE
145.00
127.00
105.00
115.00
113.00
127.00
95.00
94.00
152.00
122.00
122.00
104.00
134.00
110.00
200.00
220.00
122.00
85.00
85.00
90.00
137.00
105.00
112.00
127.00
175.00
160.00
146.00
121.00
97.00
76.00
76.00
110.00
79.00
84.00
108.00
118.00
80.00
108.00
80.00
7&.00
230.00
I
' 1
ale model sues
an says 'Playboy' ad c:lamaging
PITl'SFlELD, Ma11. <AP> -
A eablnet Installer wbOM pie·
tare appeared ln an advertlae·
1Dent for Playboy Ma1asine over
the caption ''The Playboy
Reader -his lust la for Ute"
wanta $250,000 in damages from
\he ma1azine.
~
The jud1e who heard the
lawsuit said he will issue a de-
claion in about a week.
The picture, which appeared
firing a 1977 promotional cam-alen in The New York Times
and airport and train station
-posters, s hows mustachioed
Thoma.a Mazzeo on water skis.
llazzeo said the picture was •ed wit.bout his permission. .
·. "It made me sound dirty. It
laade me sound like a sex ·
fiend," testified Mazzeo, 40, of
Bicycle Safety
Safety seminar hourly
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Roy,
LEJSE Sr£CIAUST ot
HOWARD Chevrolet eor.. Of Do.. -o.... Sii
NEWPORT BEA"CH
cars*blkes•
•skateboards•
trucks*baby
carriages•tea
carts•trikes
rol lerskates •
walker~· Loys
•wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods• coupes•
trailers*hard
tops•convert-
lbles•motor
homes*lawn
mowers*limos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
•typingtables
wheelbarrd'ws•
recreational
vehicles•golf
carts*model
trains*blkes •pianos•cars
refrigerators
*skates••••••
Pltt.sneld, ,a fa th er or four who
tings In his church choir.
Mazzeo ,said durlna the two-
d ay, non:Jury trial before
Berkshire ~uperlor Court Judie
William s1lmons that the ad-
vertlseme,Rt falsely Identified
him as a Playboy reader and
damaied his reputation and
business.
"I don•tl think housewives
want cab~netma!cers wit~ a
playboy's ~uat for life ln their
kitchens," 1be sald.
Playboy' attorney Stephen
Olesky codtended that Mazzeo
suffered· "no m easurable
damage otiher than the loss or
pay the 81,ency would normally
make to an amateur model" and
s uegestedl the judge award
M aueo "lh'e $200 to S2SO we pay
for amateuf models.''
swrt Dark Meat
PLUMS
$ 00
LwS.
FOR
HAS S UGGES TIO N
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese Ill told the Americ:an
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian jails. He spoke in
New Orlea ns .
NEW ORLEANS <AP> -The
American Bar Association haa
amended its standard or ac-
credltatlon by lettin1 church·
s upported law schools dis-
criminate on the basis or re-
ligion.
The controversial amendment
appeared to fall Wednesday on a
voice vote, but on a standln1
vote at the ABA House of Delegates, counted by tellers, It
passed 147-127.
The House then granted ac-
creditation for Oral Roberts
University's 0 . W . Coburn
School of Law in Tulsa. OkJa ..
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de-
nied approval because It re-
quired students to swear an oath
of religious belief, pledging to
follow the example or Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
must support and exempllly the
code, and hiring Includes teat.I or
rell1tous belief.
Accreditation Is a serious mat-
ter since 1raduatea of law
schoolJ which do not have ABA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer in most states.
The university sued the ABA
in U.S. District Court. The Judie
issued an injunction forbidding
the ABA to deny provlalonal ac-
creditation until after the House
of Delegates decides the Issue.
At a meetin1 last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be in
"s ubstantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis -
crimination on tbe ground or
race, color, religion, national
origin or sex. t
""""''
A new standard waa drawn by
an ABA committee which
water s down the old antl-
dlscrtmlnatlon clause by add· • ~
Ing:
"Nothing herein shall be con-I
strued to prevent a law school ~
from having a religious affilia-
tion and purpose and adopting
policies of admission and
employment that directly relate •
to such affiliation and purpose • ,. ,
so long as notice or such policies 1 ,.
has been provided to applicants, I ;•
s tude nts , faculty and .,.
employees." 11
Dean Gordon Schaber or the
McGeorge School of Law or the '
Uni ver sity of the Pac ific, •.:
chairman of the committee, said · 1
the exception was based on the
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom.
. f,
k
'·
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
. '•
I •,1 I JI
5th MONTH
AlllllVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
CALIFORNIA RANCH MKT.
WE CAllY l WIDE
SELECTION OF TlOPICAl FRUIT
Jumbo Han llllllS PllUPPLE
PIPIYI LllES
lllGOES COCOIUT
SPECIAL TY ITEMS
FOR STUWIHllES SHARLYN MELONS
BLUEIEHIES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ I ORGANIC .
APPLE ~
JUICE Gal.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
ORANGE HO••iY
WE IRE IOI FD rURllG
FUURO'S FllE
FRESH FRUIT JUICES
t
I '• I l ·.
CWIY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PERSIAN MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON ii0~NSTINE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 OO DELI
OUR MEAT: IETIER THAN JUST A CUT ABOVE
-==~~~~~::::;;~:fi~:;;~~:§i~:;::~~=-iiii:llmii:ilfl~;;::=--::z..~~~·-=-~o=--=--· .-___.. -•11--=~
JUICY MEATY BEEF Lean Boneless
CHUCK STEAK BACK RIBS
(Also Marinated if you like)
(Moriinated if you like)
$ 29
lb.
SILVER TROUED
WllOLE SILIOI GROUND BEEF
PATIIES
(Not to exceed 22% fat content)
CREAMY FRESH 99! POTATO
SALAD
John $169 Morrell
BUUISWEl&ER lb.
California Ranch Market $ 249 Specialty Prepared
BAKED HAM 1b.
ER);
Fresh Baked '~1' 99 APPLE PIE ,,,
BAKED !M OuR OWN RANCH OVENS
CRUSTY
If Wsgot
wheels,
you'll move
it faster In a
Dally PlfoS .
classified a<t. Call
.z:s:-~ ~El&HBOR'S I 99
UISER
ROLLS
642-.5678 and a
f rlendly ad-
viser will
help you
turn your w,...slnto
cash.
Stop tPY on '°Tidoy & Sotvrd::11y
for 0 ttotht of some of ovt ~in•
Co1ifor io Ranch Manet ProJucts.
UVEMAINF $ :LOBSTER
0w,....w. ... ~ ........ , ................... ~ ................... -
.....c.IW .. ¥9'"' ... ·
• .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTIThul'lday, Augu1t 13, 1981
College district hit
by state funding CU.I
Coast <.:om munil y College
District officials were caught by
surprise a few months ago when
they learned the district would be
receiving su bstantia lly less
money from the state than had
been anticipated
The distric t . which includes
Orange Coast. Golden West and
Coastline colleges. had just a few
weeks to trim $3 5 million out of
its budget.
Such massive cutbacks could
not be made painlessly.
The district was forced to lay
o ff some classified <.non·
teaching> employees in clerical
and maintenance positions. 1
Many other jobs created by
resignations and retirements
were left unfilled.
District students this fall will
find materials fees charged in
more courses. At Orange Coast
College, the many community
service lectures. formerly free.
will requJre a charge. At Golden
West College, the library a nd
tutoring center will be open
fewer hours.
Bulldinp will be cleaned less
frequently, and major main ·
tenance and construction proj-
~cts will be postponed.
Despite these c utbacks in
support services. the course of
f erings at the three colleges will
remain virtua lly unchan~ed.
It is unknown how long the
colleges can cut back on main
tenance before their facilities
begin to deteriorate seriously.
Fo.r the moment. however, it
is comforting to see that the col·
lege district was a ble to keep
most of its cuts away from the
classroom. District officials cor·
rectly decided that maintaining
the quality of e ducation at the
three colleges must be the top
priority.
Business can help
In adopting a no-frills budget
for the coming year , the Foun·
tain Valley City Council denied
funding to two social service or-
ganizations a nd to the city's
quarter!} newsletter.
Ant1c1paling a deficit as high
as Sl million at one point. the
counctl was rorced to establish
s pending priorities in order to
balance lhl• budget.
As some council members
have pointed out . the fact that the
o rganizations and the newsletter
were Rot funded does not m ean
they are without value.
One of the organizations de·
nied fun<.Jin~ was YSP. Inc .
wh ich counse ls young law·
breaker!> and child abuse victims
and oversees a rt>stitution pro-
gram for voung off enders
Tht> olhN organization. TLC
Feedback Foundation. delivers
meals to elderly residents who
cannot prepare them.
The newsletter has informed
residents about new laws and
about local recreation programs.
Because the city has little
money to spare . Mayor Be n
Nielsen has approached several
local corporations for help.
According to the mayor. ITT
Cannon has offered paper and
printing aid for the city newslet
ter. Other firms are being con·
tacted for similar assistance so
t hat publication of the newsletter
can be continued without cost to
t he city.
Nielsen sugges ted that other
local companies may be able to
s ponsor the social ser vice pro·
grams.
This is a commendable a p-
proach. Local corporations cer·
tainly have a s take in the quali ty
of life in Fountain Valley . These
companies could enhance their
images as good neighbors while
helping som e worthy projects to
continue
Boaters' needs cite d
Much of the concern over
plans tu develop the Bolsa Chica
marshlands has been expressed
by residents of the city of Hunt·
ington Beach. which surrounds
t he county territory.
But Newport B eac h
yachts man and archHect Bill
Ficker recently m ade the in-
teresting point that his city also
h as a major stake in the possible
development of the Bolsa Chica.
Ficker observes that develop·
ment of a public marina at Bolsa
Chica. as included in the plan ap-
proved by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors. could re·
lieve some of the congestion
a long Newport's ocean front
Even the development of a
Dana Point marina has not re-
duced the crowds swarming to
Newport Beach for its boating,
fi shing a nd s wimming op -
portunities. Ficker contends. And
the county's population is contin-
uing to grow.
In recent years. Bolsa Chica •
h as s haped up as a battle
between environmentalists. who
wish to prese rve the wetlands.
and t he landowner . Signal
La ndmark Company. whic h
wants to build homes on much of
the Bolsa Chica.
But Ficker makes the valid
point that a third side to this dis cussion exists -the county 's
pressing need for more public
recreation facilities along the
coas t. espe~iaJly for boaters.
'The waiting lists for docking
space are lengthy.)
In late September. county
s upervisors will review their
Bolsa Chica pla n as part of a
larger Local Coastal Program. It
then will be presented to the
California Coas tal Commission .
During the remaining review
hearings. the viewpolrn of county
recreation enthusiasts should re·
ceive ronsideration along with
-the more familiar opinions of en·
vironmenlalists a nd the land·
owner.
Opinions expressed in the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on tn1s page are those of their authors and artists. Aeadef' comment is lnvit·
ed .· Address The Oallv Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 0 141 642·4321
L.M. Boy d/Churchi ll's memory
The memory of Winston ChurchiU
must have been something special. I
can 'l believe that he could recite all
or "The Decline and Fall or the
Rom an Empire," as has bee n
claimed. It's known, though, that he
could deliver every line in at least a
couple of Shak~peare's plays.
During ju.st the llrst week or this
yaar, the United States used more
C.-Oline than aJl of it.s armed forces
used tbQ>ugbout World War II. An
aston.iShing statistic, what?
C1'edJl Mark Russell with that ring·
IDC cry: "Sic Sen) per Adldat."
Mtanln1 "We'll nHer run out or
naea~ers."
If you are 30 years old, rou were
born the same yeu the 22nd Amend·
menl to the ConstttutJon Umtted U.S.
presidents to two term1, the year
J ohnnie Ray popularized walling
ballads such a "Cry," and the same
year Lucllle Ball firs t went on
teJevisioo wiCb her "I Love Lucy"
shows.
Q. What was the rlrst country alter
the Anvrican Revolution to rec·
Ofniz.e !be United States u an ln·
dependent nation in Ila own ri&htT
A. Morocco. ln 1789.
Venezuela's government bu a
Mlnjstry for tbe Developmeat of In·
telli gence.
The ander1\ Roman poet Ow1d bad
this to·~ about baldne11: "UllY 1' a
field wlt!lout arua, a plant without
Jeeves, or a held wttbout halr."
FDR memorial panel endures
WASHINGTON -For more years
than they l i k e to r eme mber ,
Republicans ground their teeth In
frus tration over Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, who rode roughshod, with ir·
ritating good humor. over the GOP.
Now. of course. the shoe is on the
other foot. Ronald Reagan, an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the femnanta
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North. South and West When he's in
difficulty with Congress. Reagan stages
the modern equivalent of FDR's radio
"rireside chats" and ap~als directly to
the people. His dehvery 1s every t?it as
pcrsuasi\Tt as FDR's and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS it's not surprising that
one of the hoariest boondoggles to sur
v i ve the ons laught of Pres ident
Re agan's budget cutters is the FDR
Memorial Commission. For more than
a quarter of a century. the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers·
money in a bootless attempt to achieve
a suitable memorial to the only presi·
dent who ever was -and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 195.5. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac·
complishing anything in the years to
come. ln fact, its whole reason for ex·
astence was obliterated years ago. when
private donors erected a modest
m e m orial lo FDR in dowotown
W ashjngton -a marble block on Penn·
Sylvania Avenue outside the Archives
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt hjmself.
But when two members of Congress.
Reps Dan Glickman, D-Kan .. and Bill
Dannemeyer. R-Calif.. recenUy tried to
__ G.
.111:1 AllllUI -!f?4'
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FDR commission, they
were astonished to learn that
Roosevelt's ghost still carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The r eck l ess biparti s an duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR commission was a waste
or money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had been
s pent in the 26 years of the com.
mission's exis t ence with literally
nothing to show for it. Another several
hundred thousand dollars has been
s pent on various projects.
Glickman, who was in three-cornered
panL'> when FDR died. even brandished
a pholo~raph of the existing FDR
memor ial on the floor of the House. and
r ead aloud an excerpt from a plaque
b eside th e monum ent : "If any
memorial is l'rected to me . . I s hould
like it to consist of a block of stone
about the size of this (Oval Office) desk.
and placed in the center of that green
plot in front or the Archives Building."
ll was all to no avail. The Glickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated. 201·216. The vote had an
eerie touch to 1t The House's electronic
voting system broke down for the first
time an three years. prompting one
member to whisper to Glickman. "Th~
gt\(>sl of FDR has returned.··
What astonished Glickman was not
just the economy.minded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission's
$30,000 budget intact like Reps. Jack
Kemp. R·N.Y., and Jim Jones. D·Okla.
but the way some of his fellow
Democrats chided him as a traitor to
h1 i. party who was "playing into the
hands of the Republicans."
THE HOUSE S HOWDOWN over the
f.DR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
com mission. The author . Lucette
Lagnado. called it .. a classic example
of the truism that a government agen·
cy. once created. never dies: it just
keeps on growing."
Footnote. Congressional supporters of
the FDR Memorial Commission ob·
serve that building a monument to FOR
would be one wa) to assure the end of
the FDR comm1ss1on
Be sure you don't get sick at night
To the Editor.
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedics may come
for price." Some cities, this article stat·
· ed. such as Fountain Valley are con·
sidering charging for the paramedics
se r vices . As we a ll kno w , t h e
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless lives. They can't be com-
"mended too highly.
But what astounded me is the quoted
ambulance transportation rates to the
hospital $100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich, it can be a lot to those
who are just making their pay checks
meet. I reckon those deciding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
medical emergency and can't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the hjgh ambulance
rates, r called the billing office or one
ambulance company asking if the rates
were really $100. The lady explained
that.they charge $75 base rate plus U •,
mite. Also, rates are increued lf it la a
night call. <Be sure a nd don't get sick at
night.) And when emergency red Ugbta
and siren are used, the patient,. ls
charged extra . Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high to start with. The burdeo
stilJ falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover lhe am-
bulance fee.
As ~nator Edward Kennedy said -
and I wholeheartedly agree -we are
lhe only country in the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the paramedics and un·
bulance services can't exlal on nolhlna.
The solution. if any. ls difflc:ult to com•
up with. Socialized medicine may ••m
like an ideal solution but in those coun·
tries wltb socialized medicine, the
quality or medical care deeUnes u the
person geta older, and 11 al moat non·
existent for the elderly.
So lf there ilr a moedlc&J emer1eaey
with my bouaebold, I'll call the local
friendly chirvpractot.
J .R. SASSO
Ma~ulacion
To the Editor:
An artlcle about Lb ln1ne eout ..,.
there will be bomtt so Ul*lllv• that tl
la termed the "•Mik cout•• and tbe
lrvtDe Company wUI bave to ldfft'tl.M
natJonally and lnt.emaUoftally to ftad
buy en.
Welt there sa. tbe old ........ thet 11111 tMlr ....... ,.. flilt ........
are because it is needed so our children
will have a place to live. I've often won-
dered what·s left for the individual in
this m od ern world. They've been
manipul ated by tbe advertis-
in~/marketing world into bow they
t hink about everything. There'• a prop·
aganda statement to prove every
point, but there's one I will never
believe again.
I've long suspected that the Irvine
Company and other large. out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -and I might add, I don't ap·
preciate that kind of propaganda and
manipulation.
DONALD K. SPENCER
TELE PHONE YOUR
L ETTE R TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Rat control
To the Editor: Tom Murphi.ne._ July 30 Just Coasting
colutn4= The Orange County eontrot de·
partment provides a very good booklet
describing the habits ot rats and the
steps the homeowners can take to pre·
vent and control them. An inspector will
vlslt on request, bait your property and
point out problem areas which are at·
tractive to rat.a: Rat con&rol can only be
accomplished bJ neipbors working togethe~ to k'4!P the properties' clean
and free from overgrown trees and
plants. It's l\ot tometbing ror' ''someone
else" to do.
WINDY si'EVENSON
Nol 'traile rs'
To the Editor:
In regardl to the term "trailer partr,"
I would like to clarify a point. A
"trailer" is a recreational vehicle,
Lowed by a car or U,bL truck,
A ''moblle home" (1, and 1bou.ld be
called, a manufactu.red housing unJt, a
dwelllna . s-.cb dweUln11 are only
.. mobile" from the factory to the site.
AU muutactured b.ousina unit.a sold
alnce Jwy of 1990 are ~luJlfied aa real
property. All uieased value Is placed
• Letttrs from '•*'« a" ~lcomt Th, "'f/ht ro ~e ktte,. lo fir tpX't or ~"'"""°'~ ltbtt ti H111rr1'fd f4ftf'r• of 300
wcwcb or ltu 1£.'lll bl Qt~ prt/nmct All
lttltr• m1ut incl"* 1agn4t11rf' and 111adtng
odd,,., bW namtt may bf' Wllhlwld Oft rt·
q11ttt 1/ IU/(14'.tt'nl r#OSOft ,, opportltl
Pnff'll 14•11 not bf publnlat'd f.totrers mav bf rrlt~ tu Hi.,. ,\om• 01ld phont """'bf'r o/ IM <'OftlribMlor mua ~VI"" #Qr
a•trtfjcOhofl purpoee
on said dwelling a nd placed on t~
property lax rolls m the same mann~
as sate built homes . "
THEREFORE, it behooves aJI of us Co
stop calling manufactured housing co11t-
munllies trailer parks. courts. tin boi·
es. etc .. etc. which downgrades peopfe
to second class citizens, or "living Q)l
the wrong side of the tracks" image. "
ff you have never been to t he
Manufactured Housing show at Dodger
Stadium, you are an for a very pleasaaJ,
surprise. The homes are luxurious aria
an no way should be slandered by call-
ing them "lratlers .. ·
FRANK H_ BRADLEY
Crucial vo te ... ,
~ To the Editor: :,
Newport Beach City Council me~~
bers are about to vote on Newport
Center. They are all good people. Tb~
have been propagandized by the nch
growthers and the build-everything-yo '
canners. •
I hope that the day before the vo!'
they each can ride through Newpo
Beach, then quietly sit in deep couns
with themselves. Then I hope they hav,t
guts enough to vote their deep feelings
a bout our and their city. '\
FRANKLIN S. GOO!)
Cartoon misinfonned~ . .
To the Editor: • ~
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on M~.
Reagan paying $75,000 for a Steub41D
bowl, t he previous week TV netitl
explained the bowl was worth S7s.~.
however Mrs. Reagan purchased it fdt
$8,000. ...
As the cartoon is a gross case 'I
misinformation I suggest the santt
space be elven to correcting the error.~
The fact is, if your paper bad been Ci
ita toes the cartoon should bave beth
canceled. ;
lllllYSll
It'• nice that President Reaaan c
declare tbe cocitrollen• ltrt,ke ov•
10 off on vacetioa and leav. t.bit rest
u1 ~o f\Cht the mesa.
. . . . . .. • . .
DillJPUlt
THURSDAY,
AUG. 13, 1911
lllTlllTll llll:H/flllTlll lllllY BUSINESS
STOCKS
BS
B7
Wreck not that
of 2 Mes~ men
By STEVE MARBLE o1 • ..., ..........
The crumpled ruselage of an
airplane in a remote area of the
Sierra Nevada ls not the light
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months
ago.
Authorities from Fresno Coun·
ly, who spotted the wreekage
laal month, at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted off
from the Mam moth Lakes
airport last March bound for
nearby Bishop.
The plane, which never
reached Bishop, is believed to.
have crashed in the mountains.
That plane was piloted by 25·
Huntington
housing
panel set
A joint committee made up of
real estate representatives and
Huntington Beach residents has
been formed by Mavor Ruth
Finley to study housing prob·
lems in the city.
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors presi·
dent James Logan chose
chairman Eugene Kadow, Larry
Schley, Shirley Miller and Harry
Polgar to sit on the committee.
Mrs. Finley appointed Neal
West, Beverly Kenefick, Karen
Kallay and Andy Barber.
"Because of the cost of land
I'm not sure whether we can do
anything too meaningrut in the
way of affordable housing," said
Mrs. Finley. "If the committee
can come up with usaf>fe ways
ot tmancmg nousmg an ttunt·
ington Beach it would be a good
thing," she added.
The local committee is an out·
growth of a similar s tatewide
committee and will hold its first
meeting Aug. 27 at 3 p.m. in the
Board of Realtors office. 8101
Slater Avenue.
500 compete
in lifeguard
• • competition
More than 600 lifeguards from
as far away as Australia,
Florida and New York began
competition today in the 1981
U.S . Lifesaving Association
Championships al Salt Creek
Beach in Laguna Niguel.
Competition will resume Fri·
day at noon and culminate with
an awards ceremony at 7 p.m.
year·oid Robert Reed and was
carrying 26·year·old Michael
Thompson, the son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Keo
Thompson.
Sgt. Ken Abell, a member of
the Fresno Sheri(('s Search and
Rescue Team. said be was able
to make out an identification
number on 'he wreckage
Wednesday after developing a
set of aerial photographs.
He said the number does not
match that or the Cessna 210
that has been sought.
Because of this discovery,
Abell said , authorities have
called off a search of the moun-
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into the area near
Convict Lake to scrutinize the
wreckage.
Abell said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting it. He
said the call letters on the
wreckage were checked against
a federal registry which indicat-
ed the crash was more than five
years old.
He said hjs department does
not investigate air crashes that
old.
Abell. who said he stripped
down a heli copter so it would be
light enough to m ake a pass over
the wreckage to take the photo·
graphs, said he 's prowled the
mountains to see if he could spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane car rying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he saw nothing during
several passes.
"We have nothing else to look
for," he said . "We have nowhere
else to go unless someone comes
up with a clue."
Bus driver
training set
at Ocean View
The Ocean Vi ew School Dis-
trict in Huntington Beach is of·
fering bus driver training that
will include classroom and
behind-the-wheel instruction.
Participants will receive $3. 75
per hour for 40 hours of training.
Those who complete the course
successfully will be placed on a
s ubstitute drivers list. eligible to
enrn $6.172 per hour.
To qualify for the course.
participants must pass a
physical exam and learn to
drive a school bus and other
equipment safely and to main-
tain discipline aboard the bus.
Application deadline for the
program is Monday. More in·
formation may be obtained by
calling the district's personnel
office, 847-2551.
RAISES HER SIGHTS
Betty Mignanelli
FV trustee
01ay try
for council
Betty Mignanelli, president of
the Fountain Valley School Dis-
trict Board of Trustees for the
past two years. has decided not
lo seek a second school board
term.
Instead, she plans to run next
spring for a City Council seat.
Although two weeks remain
before the school board election
filing deadline, Mrs. ~ignanelli
said she was annou:'lcing her de-
cision early. hoping to spur
other residents to run for a
school post.
Mrs. Mignanelli was elected to
the Fountain Valley board in
March, 1977, the top vote getter
in a field of seven.
The Fountain Valley Chamber
o f Co mme r ce vot e d her
"Outstanding Citizen of the
Year" for 1979.
"I have received a wave of
calls from people in the com·
munity encouraging me to seek
election to the Fountaln Valley
City Council in April," Mrs.
M ignanelli said in a prepared
statement.
··After giving this a great deal
or consideration and lengthy dis-
cussion with.. m y family and
friends. I have decided lo accept
this challenge."
Three Fountain Valley school
board positions must be filled in
the Nov. 3 election. Trustee
Sheila Meyers also has decided
not to seek re·electlon . Trustee
Roger Belgen, whose term also
expires this year, is undecided.
According to the Orange Coun-
ty Registrar of Voters office, on-
ly one person. William Manes.
had taken out papers for a Foun-
tain Valley School Board seat as
or this morning.
Sylvia Porter says
take advantage of
'tax sweeteners' ... B7
0
0
Putting pan~ls to rest?
N estande hoping to simplify county government
81 FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL o1 .. ...., .........
The Conridenllality and
Privacy Control Board has not
met In five years, yet It is still
alive and well according to the
files or Orange County govern·
ment.
The management and plan·
ning team for the former Starr
Ranch <now Caspers Regional
Wilderness Park, located east of
San Juan Capistrano) and a
committee formed to study the
Serrano Co mmunity
Park/ Recreational Historical
Complex apparently have never
met since being formed in 197!i
That the committees still exist
on paper at least -is upset·
ting to county Supervisor Bruce
Nestande. Wednesday he pro-
posed a new set of guidelines to
control the formation of boards
and committees and monitor
their work.
Jn a three-page letter lo rellow
supervisors, Nestande proposed:
Imposition of a "sunset
rule" that would permit the an·
nual dissolution of any commit·
tee, unless supervisors took ac·
lion to keep the panel function·
ing.
A requirement that the
board review annually the work
of aJI boards and committees.
N estande conceded that the
value of such annual reports
may be questionable.
Annual approval by the
board of allocations to each
committee. ·
"These changes, I believe.
would simplify the administra·
lion of boards, commissions and
committees and eive the board
of supervisors the effective con·
trot mechanism it has been seek·
ing over the past several years,"
Nestande .said.
Nestande said that more than
100 county boards and commjt.
tees exist.
"This somewhat chaotic sltua·
lion has created a record-
keeping nightmare for those
charged with keeping an ac-
curate list of active panels, not
to mention their changing mem·
berships .''
An October 1980, s tudy
s howed that stipends paid to
various committee members
totaled $127,145 annually.
That figure was lower than the
$138,000 spent on stipends in
1978, Nestande pointed out. (In
1978, the equivalent of $508,000 in
county s taff time was used by
the committees: no such figure
was contained in the 1980 re· !J)Ort.)
The supervisor said past ef·
forts by the board to control the
proliferation of committees has
failed.
Nestande's suggestions will be
considered by the board Tues-
day.
BB cops seek driver-rapist
Huntington Beach police are
searching for a man who al-
legedly stopped a young woman
motorist by indicating she had
car trouble, then forced his way
into her vehicle, drove her a
short distance, and raped her.
Police said the victim, from
4-car crash
cuts power to
Niguel area
More th a n 2.000 Laguna
Niguel residents were without
electricity early today when a f~ur·car pileup ~owned power
lines near the intersection or
Niguel Road and Crown Valley
Parkway, according to Maurice
Luque, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric.
Luque said the accident OC·
curred at about 1 a.m. He said
repair crews were sent to the
scene after the utility received a
telephone call from the Highway
Patrol.
Luque said half of the 2,363
electric cus tomers had their
power restored by 2:45 a.m.
Work was continuing al 8:30
a .m . to complete the repairs, he
said.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Sheriffs Department
said Highway Patrol officers
had both the northbound and
southbound la nes of Crown
Valley Parkway closed to traffic
at 9 a .m. today while repairs
continued.
Costa Mesa, was driving north
on Brookhurs t Street from
Pacific Coast Highway· at 4 a.m.
Tuesday w~eo the incident OC·
curred.
The assailant, driving another
car, told the woman there was
nuid dripping from her auto and
that it needed repair, police
said.
The assault took place near
the Orange County Sanitation
Plant on Brookhurst. Police said
they are looking for a white
man, age 24, with medium-
length reddish brown hair, an
acne complexion, wearing thick
tinted eyeglasses and driving
what appeared to be a silver or
light-colored Plymouth Arrow.
At 2:30 p.m. Friday, represen-
tatives of lifeguard teams en-
tered in this year's competition
will take part in the grueling
iron man event, which includes
rowing, S'Wimming and running.
Rhino breaks out of Safari compound
At 6:30 p.m . Friday lifeguard
te ams will take part in the
Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek relay,
a n event which pits team
against team in dories and
swimming. '
There will be 11 events held on
both days or the competition.
The U.S. Llvesaving Association
sanctioned championships at
Salt Creek have been held al the
Laguna Niguel beach for the
past three years.
It's rhinoceros mating season
at Lion Country Safari in Irvine
and one of the horned beasts got
so carried away that he busted
through a containment gate this
morning at the wild animal com-
pound, said park spokesman
Virginia Brauer.
The thlck ·s kinned animal
s auntered over to a field just
north of Lion Country Safari at
1: 15 a.m., s he said. adding that
park rangers were able to quick·
ly lead the rhino back to the
compound. ·
This morning's incident is
almost identical to an escape bid
made by a rhino last month, she
said.
In both cases the str ong,
heavyweight beasts were able to
knock down a gate at a tem-
porary holding area for the
rhinos she said.
The rhinos were moved from
their old pen to the holding area
early this summer because the
pen was too near an open-air
amphitheater that Is being con-
structed at Lion Country Safari.
All of the rhi noceroses will be
moved to a permanent, heavy.
duty pen as soon as construction
is finis hed on it in a few days,
Ms . Brauer said.
Park officials have said that
precautions have been la.ken to
insure that no wild animals wilJ
get near any of the fans who wiU
attend the 10,000·spectator am·
phithealer when it opens for
business on Aug. 21.
Deify,.... .... .._
AT IT AGAIN Ira nian immigrant Ali Rous han works in his
Costa Mesa metal shop's parking lot on his fourth sculpture.
"To~nado." while awaiting results of lawsuits regarding ci-
ty rights, to regulate erection of his t hree previous big red
structures and Roushan·s constitutional rights to freedom of
expression. Roushan says he'll erect his latest 70-foot work
in about a month. topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands .
Mesa author finds being single can be profitable
Popular best-selling book claims living alone likeable experience
By JOEL C. DON Of_....,,......,.
Lynn Shahan was beaming.
Her first book had been out only a month
and it was already No. 4 on Time magaline'a
best seller llst and heralded In full.page
newspaper ads.
And all sbe did waa sll down at the
typewriter to put together a practical guide on
her llfestyle: being sin1le.
"Uvtng Alone and Liklnl It" coven tbe
Co.la Mesa woman '1 thoughta on learning to de·
pend on oneself: to eat, play and amuae yourself
without that overwbelminl need for another
warm body .
"Jt's a lifestyle that in effect bas come into
ita own when you talk about 25 percent of tbe.
population being 1in1Je," 11ld the 39-year-old
Ms. Shaban. ·'It's an acceptable Wettyle. Ten
yeart qo It wasn't ."
She said at one time people believed "tbere
was 10anethinS strange about tbe penoo wbo
wasn't married and had three cblldren by tbe
Umehewa1»."
Ms. SbaUa leamed bow to II•• alone the
hard way. She ""uent .. llnlle Mn ud wu
quickly tuned olf b1 what lbl ••• M • ae• of
unhapplr*9. She autterid ~' IODel'"•·
deprellldan and tM ...... -~ .. ..., ...
perience as they approach middle age and find
they have no one special to come home to every
niiht.
-Instead of landing a quick husband or live-
in boyfriend as a solution, she learned bow to be
by her:self and ~njoy it.
Armed with her experience a1 1 Garden
Grove high school counselor and encounters
with single! workshops and the like, abe decided
to help others overcome'the fear of belnl alone.
"At 30 Prince Charming dldn•t cotne
along," she said. "I woke up and reallied that
that mJght never' happen. It wa1 a very
traumatic realizatlon.
"I aaw a need. I knew if I feJt the way I felt,
othen were like that too." 'ftlouCh 1he'1 never been murted , lh.
Sbabaft Hid the book II ..... ally lna.nded for
widowed and dlvor~ penou u ?Ced to
tMe·acen on thdr flnt timeout from e.
ReseU'ch fOf' lbe booll: lDduded attendance
tl aem1nan wber. 1be found dlYOffed people
lOlt and abudooed lD tbelr new-foud life u
•In .... la addition to proridl.nc a praeUeal llvtq
t\dde OD IDOMJ m~emmt, Mt.laa fW OM
ud CIUMlr' boutebold ud aoelaJ 1ldl9, .... al.lo
decided to tackle "-....ac.a1 luall tblll pl~~··-·~.__.. •--.u Ille bU .·~-ber JMll al I
j
single person, Ms. Shaban said, "I'm not sour
on marriage at all. A lot of people have asked if
in writing the book I'm advocating Uvlng alone
as a lifestyle. There's no question that living
with someone is better. lf the right reliliombip
came along, I'd get married tomorrow.
"But I've seen so many people in bad rela·
tionships who are arraid to leave because
they're afraid of living alone."
Her living alone prescription la simple, lf
not just plain common seue. If you're single,
you're obligated to malte a good life for
yourself.
"Many people ru~h off to search for the next
warm body. They don't have I lood time for
themselves. As a result of that they don't know
themselves and they get into a poor rela·
tionabip."
M1. Shahan Isn't a member of any ·~J!•
lf°"P Of' other social boy·meets·1lrl ore •·
Uona. But she's all for lbem.
"'lbe only Ume J feel alone la wtien I want
to .,., .. lbe sMd. "But for many people beiq
alone ta a very atarll feellnt. ~t'• an experience
tbet many people feel they don't have tile
capacity or rwoure?ea to deal wlth." ,
8be owes the quick 1uceet1 ol her boH, ID
pa~ lo the pubUther. tbe Loi Aat•let·baMd
Stietlorit Pren, owned bv Robert J . IUnaer.
J
I
I
--
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Augu1t 13, 1981
Porkers show jogging
aids diseased hearts
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Plat ru.nnlnt
on a treadmlll appear to prove Joi·
glnc la 1ood for humana, at leaat
thoae with some degree ot heart di•·
ease, say University of California re·
searchers.
After five montba of atud.Yinl the
Yucatan mlnlswine , with
cardiovascular . systems slmllar to
humans', a spokesman said Wednes·
day the findings reverse a pre·
liminary conclusion reached three
years ago.
The coronary arteries in the pigs in
the new experiments, ln contrast to
those used in 1978, were partly closed
sur1ically. Their so·called collateral
blood vessels with exercise 1rew to S
or 10 times normal size, boosting
blood now four to six times.
The improved circutatioo saved 40
percent of the heart tissue
jeopardized by the clogged arteries
while in 10 other pigs kept off the
motorized treadmill "oply about 17
percent of the Jeopard1%ed tissue"
was salvaged, Dr. Colin Bloor said.
Bloor, a UC pathology professor
·who directed the research, is presi-
dent of the San Diego County chapter
of the American Heart Association.
Bloor said the jogging pigs were
exercised 1trenuou1ly for five
monlhl after their arteries were re-
duced 50 to 70 percent of normal slze.
Two of the pigs died of heart attack•
durlna the aruelina runs luting up to
several hours.
Blool', ln an lntervlew, warned that
persona with heart condJtlona should
Their blood
vessels with ex-
ercise grew to , 5 or
10 times normal . size.
consult physicians, however, before
starting strenuous exercise.
By the time the study ended, he
said. the pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per·
cent or maximum.
. The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate, Bloor
said. While exercising, the pigs'
heart rates went up to 220 beats a
minute.
-~ ..........
CHIEF -Dr. Paul M.
Johnson of Irvine has
been elected presi·
dent of the Orange
County Dental Socie-
t y, a 1,300-member
non-profit organiza-
tion.
Channel
levee
rise due
The Orange County
Board of Supervisors
has approved a S3.5
million project lo raise
the height or levees
along the San Juan
Creek channel to pre·
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach.
The construction proj·
ect, which has been ap·
proved by the Slate
Coastal Commission,
will raise the levees
from two to six feet by
1983 along a three·mile
stretch from the mouth
or the creek to where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmen·
tal Management Agency
officials have been
plagued with siltation
problems in the creek
bed for s'?veral years,
and have been prevent-
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission bas
refused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it removes to offset
the dredging costs, mak·
ing such a project too
expensive, officials say.
A Yucatan miniswine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
County officials say
raising the levees and
allowing the creek chan·
nel to rise to its natyral
level will eliminate the
need for dredging, ad-
ding nature can then
take its course .
Construction is expected
to begin in the fall.
San Diego. where scientists say study shows humans .can prevent heart attacks
by jogging. especially if they already have coronary disease
Countian perishes Party set
in Irvine Heat fat al after woman loses direction
BAKER, Call(. (AP) -A 75-year-
old woman who missed a freeway en-
trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115-degree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
community of Apple Valley on Aug. 3
to visit a friend and started back
home last Thursday .
The Irvine City Coun-
cil has approved a S3SO
expe nditure for the
printing of invitations to
a party that will be held
later this year in
celebration or the 10th
anniversary or the city's
incorporation.
· days later, authorities said.
Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana
died of heat exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
Bernardino County sheriff's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
But instead of going south toward
Orange County she ended up goin~
100 mHes northeast on Interstate 15
before stopping to ask directions at a
service station in this town 50 miles
from the Nevada border.
A piece of white cloth was found
tied to her cane, an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
of Long Beach and the widow of
former Long Beach City Councilman
Melvin L. Campbell, Mrs. Campbell
bad driven to the Victorville area
Mrs. Campbell was given direc·
lions to get back home and headed
off on a serv ice road that
paralleled the freeway. But she
missed the overpass lo the south-
bound lanes and continued on the
road even after it veered off from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
lnvitatl9n& will be sent
lo past and present city
officials and members
of the business com·
m unity, said city ad-
m i pis tr at or Ken
Lazette.
The exact date and
location of the party
have not yet been de-
termined.
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand, and on Sunday her body
was found inside.
· Before you buy any make of car,
call me. 111 save yo"' time & money
Bendit from my IMlying clout I buy off ice. low overhead. No salesmen.
or lease cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us.
100 for corporate fleets. We can o~ any make of car. Then compare fOI'
tain substantial savings f11 qual~ yourself. (And tell your friends.I
, fied individuals. We do the prir.e Call. 9 to 5, Robt Hixson Equipment
shopping & haggling. Ours is a IMlsy Co, ask for Virginia. 714 64~481.
~r-.dO,-..W.
SA VE AN EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE at Trader Joe Ir PrOlllo
Moat whole wheel• of cheese wel&h 5 to 10 ~·· When you buy a whole wheel of cheese
from UJ, we &Ive you a
lK dl1count from the sln1te pound price on
almoet every cbeue. If a wbole wheel wel1hs more Utan 15 pounds, you don't
have to buy It all. We'll 11ve you a 10~ discount n you buy a chunk which
wel1h1 more than 10
pourida. This 11 'a simple way t4 beat lnOatlon-aQd cheese always taates
better from a whole wheel! Pleue vlalt our
newest Trader Joe'• at
the inter.aectlon of 17th Street , Newport Boulevard and Superior
Avenue (next to Denny 's· and Barclay's Ban.It). ·
MOW IN COSTA ...sA
642-5678
Put a few worc:U to work /or JIOU
in the llllJ Piii
, t
•
CONVENIENT, DISPOSABLE
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OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now carry the complete COLOPLAST 1one-tne
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u•1nary os1oma1e<.-all with convenient COLOPL.AST
d•SPQ!>itbt~ry COLOPLAS T reloabol•l'f-plvs case pack
economy
Be SUfe to aslt f()( your FREE cooy of tNS!GHIS-
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MOULTON 'LAZA "4ARMACY
2*5 Moufton Partlwey, l.a9una Hiiie
(Next to El Rancno Matket)
A BARO HOME: HEALTH CABE: CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
( ) I' 1-: ~ l\1 () ;\; t· HI '.I ,\ \ 1 I, I' \ 1
S1\l'l Hll:\Y 1(1 ·\ :\1 I I' \I
g
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Soul,,.,,, C.//loml• "-OloMI Ollie":
.,., E. t..a PlllM A¥e .. Anaheim, CA 9*7
-Valle¥ View ... luene PMI. CA 80UO 18'11 Amefll ~ .• c.matlllo, CA '3010
_....,. __ ..,. ........ _ ......
20115 a ~,a1on tMt., careon. CA 90741 2302t LalCe c.m., °'·· (t..Q 1'°'990. El Toro, CA eaeao
1001 E. 1""*'91 H.!!Y·i la H*9. CA IOll1 G) '140 ~ llMI., "°"9 IMolt. CA tm01 12131 H lhd., T9"1f'Ot, CA IOIOll 10'9 IMN IM!., TUltln. CA_, ~ 231 N. CltNt Ave., Weef'CO'ltn& OA t'17-'lr.Mi
.. lfttwr/ "°°"9" tnl/MM .. • ,...,_...,..
-...... ------~--------~~~~----~~-
College
building
backed
A bW to appropriate S2 mllllon
to be&ln construction of an
86,000-aquare-foot claasroom
bulld.lni at SaddJeback Colle&e
ln Minion Viejo bas woo IP·
proval from the state As·
sembly's Education Committee.
The measure wu approved in
a 9-0 vote Tuesday, wlth four
committee members absent. It
will now 10 to the A11embly
W aya and Means Committee,
which ls expected to consider
the approprlationa bill in about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265', is sponsored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson (R-NewportJJeacb). If
it wins flnaJ approval from the ruu Assemble and state Senate,
c:onstructioo funds wlll bEI al-
located from the Capital Outlay
Fund tor Hl1her Education.
Saddleback College Superin-
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was In Sacramento for
Tuesday's vole, said the $2
million will allow the communi-
ty college to begin the first
phase of the S7 .5 million con·
struction project.
He said full fundinJ for the
classroom building was Initially
in cluded in this year's state
budget. However, during a last
minute budget-cutting session,
members of the Stale Education
Finance Committee deleted the
money, Lombardi said.
Saddleback College officials
say the school is in desperate
need of more classroom space
due to rapid increases in enroll·
ments over the past five years.
In his 1981·82 budget report for
the Saddleback Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
a ssistant superintendent for
business, said district enroll-
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
Even if Saddleback receives
the $2 million under the bill now
being considered, the district
will still have to come up with
$5.5 million lo complete the
classroom building.
"Raising that money will be
the next step," Lombardi said.
··But where it is going lo come
from we don't know yet.''
o.My ...... ~ .... ..., ......
TOP DOG Casey, a six·month old shelty. gets special at
tention from owner Michelle Stewart. 12. after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids' dog sho\\ at Newport Beach·~
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dogs ncd for honors ranging
from ~st groomed to best tnck. Ca~e~· "'as Judged he~t
overall.
Mesa files lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Wood has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
to bait Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit, filed last Wednesday,
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 to take "the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro·
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
wells ID late June after process·
ing drilling applications through
the state and Orange County's
Environmental Management
Agency.
Wood contends the oil firm ig·
nored requirements for city
drilling permits and laws passed
in 1964 to prohibit new drilling.
Schools cut costs
of driver training
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days Wlder an arrangement with
Sarto's attorneys, Rutan and
Tucker of Santa Ana.
• · 1 am not seeking a tern·
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction at this
time," Wood said. "It's part of
a plan for getting cooperation
for an expedited trial.
A Santa Ana driving school
has been chosen by Newport·
Mesa Unified School District
trustees to offer driver training
to an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about hall of
the cost or last year's program.
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower of
two bidders for the contr act
awarded Tuesday. Academy of
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach, quoted Sl32 a student.
The school board trimmed
driver training, a requirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
would not offer its previous an·
nuaJ S60-per-trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
summer and will continue lo of·
Ill
(er S60 per driver.
The driving program, to be of·
fered to s tudents before and
after school and on weekends,
will cost the district about $5.400
in general funds and an un·
known amount for electricity re·
quired to operate driving
simulators.
In addition to behind-the·
wheel training in autos
furnlshed by the firm, the driv·
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near ttM! district's Newport
Beach headquarters .
Last year, the district painted
"streets" and "intersections" on
a Newport Harbor High parking
lot to offer behind·lhe-wheel ex-
perience to youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver, a school official
noted.
"In r eturn, they (Barto at-
torneys ) have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have had
a trial."
Barto actually gained ap-
proval early this s ummer from
the state lo s ink four new wells
on its 18·acre property lying ad-
1acent to a 60·home subdivision
ID south Mesa.
"Part or the plan." Wood said
of his court action, "is, IC we can
agree to basic facts, that both or
us will file motions for summary
judgment."
Meanwhile. he said, Barto will
continue to pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
where homes are valued al
about $250.000.
•
' ' • I I
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C111fwion
Momstaln lllce1
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Auguat 13, 1981
-,
.............
QUIET CAT This pu_rebred llimalayan. Elsa. held by her
owner Catharinl' Ladd of Boulder. Colo . was pulled
from the finals of the S25.000 1981 Meow Off in Los Angeles
Elsa wus removed from competition aftC'r failing to meow
during t WO clays of pn•liminaries Afterward. ll \\as d1~
covert:>d Elsu 1:, pregnant. which may have h<.id great bear
ing on hl'r repose.
Designed, -..,_._,;;:. Finished -
Installed
Disney characters • in museum
Mickey, Donald a nd Pluto highlight New York animation exhibition
NEW YORK t AP> liorn as
a sllff,!uunchy lltlle water fowl,
Donni Du ck had become a
splutlerma. raving international
star by lhc time he went lo war
inl~.
Now the iras cible duck 111 a
stlr among stars in the Disney
animation exhibition at the
Whitney Museum of Amencan
Art. which focuses on the pre-
war and wartime years at the
Walt Disney Studios. In one
phenomenal decade. the Disney
animators cre ated Mi ckey
Mouse, Goofy, Pluto, the SiJly
Symphonies a n d the firs t
feature-length cartoons
"ln animation, time is b m .
and a .m. before Mickey and
after Mickey." said Greg Ford,
guest curator of the exhibition.
Referring to t he evolution of
Dis ney technique. he s aid· "You
look al Steamboat Willie !the
first Mickey Mouse talkie in
1928> and then Pinocchio 11940>
It is absurd how much happened
in jus t 10 years "
The Whitney 's se cond floor
has been transformed into a big,
dark rumpus room whe re adults
and tots Jockey for pos1t1 on
around television s creens s how-
·ing the Seven Dwarfs or Dumbo.
Drawings cover the walll>, and
cartoons play twice a day 1n a
s mall theater.
Ford sa id he wanted to de-
monstrate that Dis ney was not a
one man s how. but a big band in
which many talented animators
played distinctive solos.
In the 1934 cartoon "Orphan's
Benefit," animator Dick Lundy
invented Donald's "fighting
mad" pose . m which a squawk-
ing duck hops up and down.
holding one arm out m a stiff Jab
and swinging the other menac-
ingly.
Among Ford's favorite solos
Vladimir Tytla's sense or
dr <•matic musculature and body
muss m drawing Stromboli. the
corpulent puppeteer 1n P1n()('
~·hio
Tht> ~ubtle arm motion or
Mi c key Mous e b y f'rank
Thomas in "The Rrave Little
Tailor" t 1938}
Lundy's three-minute danre
between the s pider and the fl y in
"Wood.land Cafe " t 1937>
Pluto tangled in fly paper m
"Playful Pluto" (1934 >. drawn
ney'i. post war work. A slnke by
animators m 1941 marked the
end of the first golden era at Dis-
ney Studios, and ulthough many
a n imators r eturned to finis h
their contracts, they later dnrt-
e d to other studios Ford said
· · 1 lake the wartime cartoons
because everyone lS at the
h eight of his powers, but the
films are ve r y casual," ForJi
ltltld I
Donald Duck drew several
wartime assignments. but Ford
"The more I look at i t , t he m or e
magical i t seems, the great pai ns
taken to seem ef f ar t less.''
by Norm Fe rguson Ford said ll
1s the first c artoon sequence
"hil•h s how s th t• r h a r acter
· thinking ·
The rJ ypuper :.n•ne 1s dissect·
l'd 1n a "erie'> of s ke tc hes
retrieved from Disney archives
for the Whitney <'Xhibit
"Some pt'ople think I am tak-
ing the magic out of 1t I don"t
think so." Ford said. "The more
I look at 1t the more m agical 1t
seems. the great pains taken to
!'!eem effortless
"I have an interest 1n 1dent1f) -
ing as many ani mators as 1 t•an.
bt-cause to this day people don't
know what they did ..
A':. a kid . Fo rd confessed, he
prl'ft>rred thc Warner Brothers'
Rugs Bunny and Daffy Duck
.. Dis ney a l\\ ays see med too
precious lo me... he said "I
'>tarted gt>lling mtcrested in Dis
ne) when I got inte rested m
a nimation. about 10 yea rs ago ..
The sho w inrludes little of Dis-
could not n •call Mickey ever go-
ing to war. Minnie Mous e did
her bit by saving bacon drip-
pingi. in Out of the Frying
Pan," and Goofy sank most of
t he J apanese na \). and the Ris
mg Sun. too, 1n 'llO\\ to be a
Sailor "
In ··The Old Arm> Game" of
1942, Do n ;i ld 1s a GJ who
belit•ves hc·s bee n sawn in half
in a scrape with a s &d1s l1c
sergeant. Rcdured lo tears by
the illusion of his haloed hind
q uarte rs a scl'ndmg to heaven.
Do nald conte mplates suicide
hcf<m: !orating his legs aga in
Tht> sam e Saturday afternoon
<1ud1t>nce whi c h roared at
l>on;ild's double amputation was
hushl•d aflN st-emg "Education
for Death." a 1943 propaganda
film about Nazi education
The animators make their
e ase with ri veting transmog-
r 1 ficat1on" a c ruc ifix is
"a r!)t'd into a s "'as11ka studded
dagger, a Bible bec·omes Mem
Kampf. Worse, a big-eyed boy
who loved bunnies becomes a Ill·
lie thu& who cheers for foxes,
finally to become a hulking
robot in Hitler's legions The las t
l>cene transforms the ranks of
soldiers into ranks of cross es,
:,trelching on lo tht> horizon
Donald was back that same
year to play a German muni-
tions worker in "Der Fuehrer's
race." Starving, overworked ,
goaded by louds peakers. con
stantly interrupted by the 1m
perative of saluting images or
llitle r, Donald is captive m a
s t a te i.o totalitarian that six
bayonets thre1tle11 every time he
wavers
An oufis h German band puts
music to his misery . "When
ll1lle r says we arc the mas ter
ra ce. we go 'heil. heil.' in the
Fut.>hrcr ·s face" a song which
wa:, J m1lhon sell er fo r Spike
Jone~ ·
Rut 1t 's all a bad dream
Donald wak<>s uµ in America
and plants u duck kiss on a little
StalUl' of L1bt'rt\ The final 1m·
·age 1" of a tomato splattering
on thl' Fuehrcr's fa ce .
$216,000
op a l found
MEl.HO U HNI-:. Aus lral11:.1
1A P 1 Opal deall'r Ph11l1p San
cll•rs ... aid he found a 34-carat
stonl' worth $216.000 in a parcel
of black opal srraps he bought
fro m a South Australia n dt>aler
for ll-ss than $6.000
Sandt•rs said he purcha!'.ed the
~<'raps b('t ausc he had not been
able 111 afford his us ual trip to
th1· South Australian opa l fields
ROLL-UP BLINDS IN WHITE OR NATU RAL From Taiwan
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28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters 21 .99 Also hOldS keysi 2.22 BLACK. WHITE,
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HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627
-c-~ -=:-=:_-. ..._ ___ _
__ __ / )1t>n & Wome n's tr aditional \\-ear~ -«
~=--STO R E -WIDE CLEA R A~CE SALE
STARTS Sl 'NOAY, AUG. 16 10 A.M.
<. (
------~--"C'-
Sunda _, •. \ug. 16 through Saturda~. \ug. 29
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
)1ajor {'redit Card!. Accepted
---
... .
J
For Tho8e Who Shop For Quality --~
3565 Eut eo... H.fPw•y'~
C..ron• del Mu
675-1850
No ot her newspaper brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school. and college districts and county
government than the Diiiy Pillt
NATURAL MONKEY POD SALAD
WORKS From The Phll1pp1nes 13.99
QUILTED NYLON
COSMETCETERA BAGS
Perennial versa111e favontes have
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6' LONG
2' >'WIDE 4.99 J' WIDE 5.99
4 WIDE 7.99 6 WI DE 11 .99
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8 LONG >18' WIDE 21 .99
Smootf11y finished bowls
to mix and serve lhe
sc1lad of lhP day
5''• • d1a
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2.19
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6.49
12" d1a
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29.99
r
1 1 ~l~ ~ I SQUARE ~ 3 1 • SQ
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BURNT ACCENT NATURAL
BAMBOO WORK BASKETS
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11 .99
ACCESSORIES FROM OUR
GRAND WHITE PORCELAIN
SELECTION From Japan
BUTTERFLY CONDIMENT
:::~ ~
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GIANT
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4 '• • d1a
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14 oz
1.89
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Set a neatly natural table' Large and lovely baskelry to
hold toys laundry or har¥es1 Oval bac bac "
BURNT BAMBOO
ACCESSORIES From Chtna
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to hold plants
books or 1owe1s
3 SHELF UNIT
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2 SHELF UNIT , •• x , ••
sv,· deep 8.22
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2•.
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3.99
STAINLESS STEEL INFUSERS
FOR BOUQUET. GARNI OR
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GLASS HOLDER
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Straw carpeting ~jijipijj'1jii~ In 9' widths cul tr.
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EXAMPLES·
6' )C 9'
24.14
g• )( 12'
4UI
, DIRECTLY ACROSS
SOUTH COASr PLAZA MON. TO FRI . 10 A.M.-1 P.M.
I
SLIGHTLY WEST OF BRISTOL AT 1313 SUNFLOWER
(TAKE l '"STOL EXIT OFF 4015 FREEWAY)
YllA • MAltfll C..Alllf • NO TELf'"OME 011 MAIL OllOUS • AMf'lE Fl•R l'AlltllMG
SAT . 10 A.M.-7 P.M.
SUN. 11 A.M.-1 P .M.
Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT/Th ursday, August 13, 1981 ioi I F
U.S. in recession?
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Interest
rites will remain ''painfully hl.b,"
unemployment may reach 8 percerit
before 198Z and the U.S. economy
may now be ln a recession, Prttldt nt
Reatan•s top economic adviser uys.
"1bert '• tome posslblUty we're ln
a recaelon n1ht now," Mul'1"ay L.
Weldenb1wn. saJd Wednelday. But, be added , 0 1 lhlnk we wtU aee a m•·
Jor exPMJ,lon In 1982 and the Yurt abeecl."
t,f."' ~\~ .._,,~
Research your
'tax sweeteners'
The 1981 tax Jaw startt'<I out as a clear-cut bill to
reduce personal income tllxes by steps and to I
business take long-requested write-offs. The 10
ha ve been r euche d , but the l egislation h
mushroomed far beyond the original intent. As (
simpli city. that's gone replaced by complexity
guarantees fortunes for tax advisers.
One point emerges with dazzling clarity even Q
of the mire of millions of words. There are "t
::.weet e ners" fo r you . no matter what
1ncti vi du a l s
inves t o r s .
cslatf' .;,.,... '"""
c lassification. ~
planners. smull _
bus iness me n. ..A-.-.-•-.-------... ~ : ":i ~ ar ~ ~ SYlVIA PDRTf R
l'Xcc u t 1ves :
re<1I estate investors. dealers. banks. The tax relief'i11
tn the law :rnd so a re the potentials for tax breaks -
but you will have lo search carefully. •
Following are signifil'ant questions with answerS"
I pul together with the help of the editors at~
Prentice Hall, the tax guidelines publisher First. for
mdividuals. investors a nd estate planners :
Q. Do you invest in stocks. real estate and
similar med ia in hopes of making a profit ?
A. The lop rate on invest rnent income will be SO
percent in 1982 {as hall been the top rate on earned
income! This also means that the maximum rate on-
cap1tal gains on sales will drop lo 20 percent from the
present 28 percent <only 40 percent of capital gain is
int'luded tn income at regular rates. thus 40 perceM
of thl• 50 p<.-rccnt is 20 percent l. And this lower 20
percent rate appli es to sales after June 9, 1981.
Q. Do you want a better retirement plan?
A. The maximum contnbut1on you can make tQ
an lndiv1duC1I Retirement Account. the best Lax
s h(•lt1•r ever devised for us . as m iddle· rt>
upper income taxpayers. has been boosted from
$1, 500 to $2.000 a year
Jr you an• an individual who is an active
part1c1pant in an employer-qualified plan. you, too,
can now deduct contributions to an I RA <this is a big
break for the million!\ .. frozen .. in private pension -
plans who ean now rreate their own retirement
programs as °"ell I
On t op of this. the deduction for yearly
contn but1ons to a sctr employed <Keogh 1 plan has
been douhled to $15,000 .....
Q. llan· you been paying the ··penalty tax" o0
m urnage·•
J\. If you're a two paychl•ck m arried couple,
you 'll receive tax rchl'f 1n 1982 The problem has
bC't'll that if both of you have paying Jobs. receive
goo<I salaries and live together as singles, you've had
to pay less feder al income lax than if you filed a joint
rl'turn a!> a married couple . Now. the "penalt y tax"
on marriagf' hll!. been eased
Q. Do you work overseas"
A. Americans workin~ abroad will be entitled to
a $75.000 exdus1on from income. pl us a housing
allowance. in 1982. This 1s phased up lo $95,000 in four
~earl)' $5,000 installments ll substitutes !or a
complicat ed variety of deductions and exclusions
now in the law
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORl<IAF» Flnal Dow.J°"" 011\ tor Wtd .. Aug 12 N EW YORK (AP) Salo. Wad prlo
...., net c""noe o1 ,,.. 11t1Hn "'°'' •<ll•e Now YMk Sloe~ E•<"-no• ••~. 1r.01no n•11...-.11v el ..-e uwn '' Euon • 71I0.600 JS•1o M4rt1011 no.600 ,., • Tea Ulll 1'3,100 21\lt Slmp Pa t 7JI .lOO l()lo<i Cllla\Svce 701,600 6' l TV Corp 61),200 20""
UAL In< 670,IOO ??!o MoDll • •13. 100 Jt .,. Am Alrlln IOl.500 is·~ OcclCltnt Pet ,., 100 1'>11 Tex.co Inc iM,lOO •II) • '•
GIWnFln '°' 400 ··~ .... ~ri· R~'O\ !:!::: n.. · .'!
CO!ll Telep "3,:IOO 11 "'t
AMERICAN LEADERS
PC1 Up 11 l
Up 14 3 Up 11 I Up 10 >
Up U UP 11 Up 71 Up 71 Up I I
Up t 7 Up '1 Up 6.1 Up t I
Up • • up • • Up t4 Up • J
Up t I Up 6,C I.Ip U Up )t Up SI Up S 1 UP ).I Up SI
Pd. Off ... Oft 1.1 Off I) Oft 7.l Off 7 t Ofl s. Ofl s 9 Ofl u on p Ofl s. °'' u °'' s a Otf S.1 °'' u Off • ' 8i! • ' u ~·' Oft .,
Otf 4. Olf •.> Ofl ..,
Of( '~ °" u °" 4.J
STOCKS °"" Hiii! Lew C.... 0-. JO Ind tsu• ts5" .. , n '"5.21 ' ot 10 Tm •OS .. 412.fJ ten.70 .01 ll • 11' 15 Ull ' '1410 tlS •1 lll.7A 114 41,.. 011 i5 Slk 373 I) 377 » ll0.S6 Jn.'4 • 0 16
Ind us •~s.?ot
Ulll\ S Tren 21 •• $~
.S Sta ,...._,
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YUR.C (API AUO U
Advanced Oe<lln•d Un<ll..,~d
Total IHuH New nlolls
Mew Jows
WHAi 4!.IE .. 000
IO<Yy ,., no ~ 1 .. 1 1' 10
NEW YORK IAPI Aug 12
AOven<eo O.<llned Uncn.n~d Tol•I IHUts
Ntw 111(111•
.... IOW•
SILVER
Hendy & Her"'..,, W '50 Pflr tre'(
SYMBOLS
Prev. ~r.
i
..
I •
•
.... .... .......
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT1Thur1d1y, Augu1t 13 1981
~V boycott looms again
•i NEW YORK <A P > -The CoaUUon ror Better Televllk>n bu yeoewfld lta threat to boycott
eoiqpantea that advertise on
netytOl'k televlllon pro1rama it
deema exce11lvely violent or
••• d.
Tbe conservative coalition of mon tban 300 poUUcal and re· lipaaa 1roup1, ooe of which la
tbe Moral Majority. called orr a
bo)'~ott in June, saying ad·
vertben had pledged lo work
with networks for cleaned-up
fhoW..
terview eubll1hed Wednesday ln
the New York Dally N WI: "If I
were a ~ttJna man, I'd bet that
before the 1981-82 televlaton
season is over, there's a 90 to 95
percent chance there'll be a
boycott.
"I have a hunch that It's In·
evltable."
Wlldmon mentioned several
programs he said would have
problems finding sponsors, In·
e luding "Flaminio Road,"
"Knot's Landing" and "Thne's
Company."
verU.en. Th majority of ad·
verUaera have become a lot
more caraful, tnd there'• a 1ood
deal of dlstrcsa merchandise out
there,'' WUdmon aald
NBC, whlch broadcuta
"Flamlnao Road," said ad
vertlslng salea were not slug1t1h
for the show. A apokeaman for
CBS, whkh present• "Knot'a
Landing" and "Dallas," aatd lt
would not dlscuss its ad·
vertisers.
OCC fills two
faculty posts
• Robert L. Hoeppner, 49, of Cotta Meu baa
been named Orange Cout Colleae·a u1oclate
dean ot counaeUn1 and autdance, and Geor1e L.
Blanc, 45, of Fountain Valley the c:olle1e'1 director
or community services.
Hoeppner replaces Dr. Jerrel T. Richards,
who was named dean or coWllelln& and guldance.
Hoeppner, who came to OCC in 1964, has
served as counselor and paycbolo&Y Instructor. He
hi also a licensed marria1e. family and child
counselor.
B t its leader, the Rev.
Do d WUdmon, said In an In·
" 'Dallas' will hang on, but It
won't attract the same ad·
NBC said Its position ls that no
speclal·lnterest group has the
right to appoint Itself spokesman
Cor viewers. ASSOCIATE DEAN
Robert Hoeppner
Blanc replaces Jean Thompsol), who retired.
A former restaurant owner, Blanc was the col-
lege's associate dean of contlnuln1 education.
DIRECTOR
George Blanc
::t QUEENIE
..
i "Bof, am I &lad to be back. My body couldn't take J uo8ter day of vacation."
~:boom towns
fiti d each other Ii ,JULLHEAD CITY, Ariz. CAP> -The future of
But•ead City may depend upon its gamblin'
eel-bor lo the north.
. But then again, the future or its neighbor
· i...'41thlin, Nev. -is similarly entwined.
"We are obvious ly dependent upon each
other." said Judy Dimit. executive secretary or
tbe Bullhead City Chamber or Commerce. "They
lleed us for services and employment and, obvious-
ly, the casinos bring tourists, which helps us."
Local officials on both sides of the Colorado
River that divides the two communities say that
Laughlin and Bullhead City are booming.
Bullhead City, which is seeking to become the
state's 37th city. is one or the fastest growing com-
munities in Arizona.
Laughlin officials believe their community
soon may rival Lake Tahoe as a gambling center.
lt all began, they say, with Don Laughlin, who
some 15 years ago was looking Cor a place where
he C9uld set up a dozen s lot machines.
Laughlin bought a one room bar a nd an eight-
lU)it motel ~cross the river from Bullhead City,
which then had about 700 residents.
Today there are seven casinos in Laughlin and
Bullhead City has a population that's pushing
20,000.
One of the reasons for Bullhead City's im·
., portance is that state and federal governments
control all but a few hundred acres or land on the
Nevada side of the river. What that means is that
Bull.Kead City has become the bedroom communi-
• ty for most or Laughlin's several thousand casino
: employees.
Laughlin boasts a population or 93 people.
The Laughlin boom has driven property values
: In Bullhead City rapidly skyward, local officials
·said.
• When we came here five years ago, we could
' hay~ bought a 40-foot riverfront lot Cor $17,000,"
Mrs. Dimit said. "Now, if you can even find one.
they're going for $2,000 per front foot. ..
Expansion in Laughlin is expected to continue.
Don Laughlin's lOO·room Riverside Resort and
Casino is planning a 17-story, 200-room addition
with a 1,000-seat convention center.
!lie Edgewater Hotel and Casino is expected
to open late this month, lacking only approval
· from the Nevada Gaming Commission. A $16-mtm>n, six-floor, 162-room hotel, it boasts the
town's first heated pool.
· • 'lbe Colorado Belle is expected lo begin con·
· struetioq this summer on a 13-story hotel and The
N..ada Club, owned by the Del Webb Corp., just
bad a S4 milUon facelift. Laughlin owns 92 acres of
the .,wn that bears his name, Including a pair or
tr..,.hooting ranges, and calls the federal govern-
' ' JJ\ent "the biggest enemy this area has" because ot Ill refusal to release surrounding lands.
The Nevada Colorado River Commission, I "ho•er, Is considering the release of more than
I • 1,000 acres of state land for residential develop-
1
1 I mellf; west of Laughlin.
What that means to Bullhead City, nobody
{ k~. What that meanB to Laughlin, local of·
~,';lclaJt say, is a golden-lined future.
<ll • •
f,~RT ride rs up
1
;· f>AKLAND <AP) -More people rode Bay
Rapid Transit trains in 1980·81 than in any
atnce the trains started rolling in 1972, BART
Slay.
,;;:. ·~he railway served about 46.9 miHion
. fjii"engers during the past fiscal year, officials'
said. That was 3.7 percent higher than had been
ed.
• erall, BART has carried more than 275 ·~ m .. riders more than 3.6 billion pHsenaer·
I I ...... 0, .. 11,w. u .... .
I DRY ROAST PEANUTS .. ,,......,.., .......
our new• Tuder Joe'•
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Euy water clean-up.
Drain King unclogs drains
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the maaw mix•
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Extra large 20 quart bag of
Vlgoro Potting Mix. Superb 211 medium for growing Indoor and
outdoor ~ plant9. Reg. 2.99
•.. and your laavee, lawn debf'ia, 3•• truh and n\of'ef Pactcage of 25
32-gellon 1"9 Hnera.
- . I K ~-w.
fire aw1yt
KHP Kidde "Fire Away" ell·
tlngulaher cloae at hand for
emergency protection for home, 7••
boat, auto or recreational vehicle
llrH. #10BC. Reg. 11.95
..
apoontt 10 your pllntl wlll
grow up 1111 and strong
Spoon 'It ftnlll.zer hU •II the
nutrients your planta need to
grow luan and healthy. 8 01.
Reg. 3.39
toltly
Ill llot •... ,
I 2''
30-g ellon water hMttr with enetty
MVtng *"'C* ... ehut-off.
11411
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THURSDAY, AUG. 13, 1981
COMICS
FEATURES
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
C6
C7
CB
C10
Tom Pestolesi and
U.S. volleyball
got,a good dose of Romania
recently . See C3.
_ ..... _.
No such thing as the Incredible Hulk? Here's one
'•
You just don't recognize him without Ram jersey No. 32 • By JOHN SEV ANO Of .. .,..,~ .....
He is menacing as he is powerful and consis-
tent as he 1s punishing. His teammates call him
"CB" although "Incredible Hulk" might be more
apropos.
The second of three children, Cullen Bryant 1s
unusually quiet and shy for someone a s physically
intimidating as he is. At 6-1. 236 pounds, he's as
gentle as a feather floating through the air
That's off the field. though. When he's 'in a
game, it's an entirely different matter.
ONE NFL COACH REFERRED to Bryant as
having "the same power and effect as Earl
Campbell. The only difference iii speed."
Whereas Campbell might try to s lash or fin-
esse ao occasion, Bryant is just the opposite. Put
an opposmg Jersey m front ot rum and he 'd Just as
soon run over than go around it.
Bryant is remarkably durable considering his
s tyle. Since becoming a starter in 1978, the
University of Colorado product has played in 47
straight games. Last year. in handling the ball 236
times. he fumbled only once, tops among NFC
running backs . In eight years, he's handled the
ball 949 times and fumbled on just nine occasions
AND, THAT'S NOT ALL.
He led the Rams in 1980 in rushing (807 y ards).
receiving I 53 receptions) and total yardage
I 1.193). All this and Bryant still hasn't re-
ceived the pubhcaty some or his contemporaries
with hal( those numbers have. ,
"'Cullen is Mr. Consistency,"' said h is offensive
coordinator Lionel Taylor. "You never see much
about what he does until after the game is over.
"Some guys just have more flare than others
I've seen running backs who have played only two
big games and li ved on that the res t of their lives .
I 'd take a handful of CBs over those players all
the time."
"THE MAIN THING FOR ME is to play con-
sistent football,·· said Bryant softly as he relaxed
in his room. "The lack of publicity doesn 't really
bother me.
"At this point, with the type of team I'm on
and the offensive line I have in front of me, I can
be as good as I want to be. If I carry the ball
enough I can gam m ore than a 1.000 yards easily.
No question."
The elusive "1,000-yard club" is the one goal
Bryant has yet to achieve. And. it's an achieve-
ment he wants badly.
"I would like to do it because that's the
measuring stick of running backs , .. said Bryant.
"The fact I'm an all-purpose back. though . . I
take more pride in that."
during the oH-season, five-to-six times a week to
maintain
BRYANT IS AN ARDENT USER of weights.
He has bench pressed a high of 520 pounds -far
and away the best on the Rams -and he hopes to
improve that to 550 and eventually 600 pounds •
someday
llss total as at st ands though is tops in thel
NFL.
.. Especially an the game of football, the most
1mp0rtant investment vou have is the body." ex-
· / can be as good as 1 want to
be . If I carry the ball enough I
can gain more than 1.000 yards
easily. No question.·
plained Bryant, who once entered and became a
finalist I 1975) an a Mr Colorado contest <he was
disqualified after reaching the final three when it
was learned he was a professional athlete)
Bryant claims 1t 's partly because of his size
and speed that he's been a s uccess in the NFL.
"I DON'T R EALLY KNOW how punis hing I
a m ." said Rrvant. "I've broken a lot of tackles but
l don't think-I'm punishing as much as I'm in-
tim1dat1ng.
·'If I can get an some good licks a t the begin-
ning of a game at makes things a lot easier for
me.
ll 's hard to put Bryant's value in terms of
dollars and rents although the reported $225.000
he·s making thi!> year doesn't seem enough
!low much 1i. a running back worth who can
block, run. catch passes and can be counted on in
the starting lineup every game?
BRYANT WILL TELL YOU he doesn·t know
and doesn't really care All he's interested in as
domg the same consistent JOb he"s been doing -
wilhout the fanfare.
·'The recogn1t1on now as at a level where I re·
a lly don't want lo get any more:· admitted
Bryant. adding that his private life is more impor-
tant to him '"They say when you get into a Super
Bowl and have that kind of exposure things are
never the same That's true
··r may not be on the cover of magazines but
people recognize me on the streets now and that's
good enough for me.··
Delly~ ...... 11ya..... ~ Cullen Bryanl"S physique borders on the lncred1ble Hulk"s reputation He's 6-1. 236 pounds Bryant also takes pride in his physical stature
something he worked at for three hours a day
Al the rate Bryant's progressing, though, the
ls mehght may be Just beginning
On the road--Angels are sometimes little devils
By EDZINTEL
Ot -o.lly ...........
SOMEWHERE OVER THE GREAT
NORTHWEST A thick, brown cloud
layer hovers over Mt. St. Helens as a
reminder of the commanding power or
Mother Nature.
Above, some 50,000 feet in the air. a
727 jet full or passengers passes over
the geographic phenomenon.
Two cam eras. one with a telephoto
le ns. the other with a wide angle attach-
ment, begin clicking simultaneously as
their operato rs jockey for position at
the same port hole windows.
A few rows in front of them, more
faces are pushed against windows.
while other eyes peer over their
shoulders.
The center stage of attraction for the
moment is obvious. Still. not every
person is atte ntive to the scene below.
In the aisle. a massive chunk or
human being is c rawling a long the
floor. trying to make a toddler with a
pacifier in her mouth notice his playful
act.
The toddler doesn 't notice but
Edward Nathaniel Ott, the Angels'
fulltime catcher and s ometime DC
I" Designated Clown") pursues. much
to the delight or passing stewardesses.
"Hey, hey," Ott bellows in a low,
baritone voice to the baffled child.
Finally. unable to win her over . Ott
raises from the floor, staring blankly at
an elderly woman seated along the
aisle.
"Can't figure it out," Ott says to the
woman. "Usually I have them eating
out of the palm of my hand."
"Here. try this," says Bruce Kison. a
pitcher, as he tosses Ott a pacifier given
to him by the c hild's mother .
So this is what it's like on the road
with a major le ague baseball team,
COMMENTARY
huh? Fun and games. just like down on
the field of play .
Well, yes -some times. Not always,
but sometimes.
We began our road trip some two
hours ago on the freeways of Orange
and Los Angeles counties. Players
began arriving, some alone, some by
chaffeur-driven cars (in most cases. the
chaffeurs are wives, all others are
friends> at Anaheim Stadium around 8
a .m . Players were carefully Instructed
lo arrive with luggage at 8 : 15 and be on
the bus at 9 a.m . for the commute to LA
Internationa l Airport. ·
But at 9 a .m .. some of those who said
they"d be there aren't there. It's been
over two months since they've done this
sort of thing and apparently the strike
had an ad verse effect on some
memories. No matter. the bus door
shuts al exactly 9 a m and off we go to
Freewayland
On the half-filled bus. quiet is the or·
der of the morning
Up front. coach Bobby Knoop pores
over old stats on the Seattle Mariners.
Behind him, outfielder Brian Down-
ing reads the day's sports section.
careful not to miss a paragraph on the
All-star game of the day before. He also
spends a long pe riod of time on a s tory
about Roberto Duran. Downing, a re-
ligiou!. weili(htlifler. has the physique
now of a Rocky Balboa. He does not.
however. have the disarranged face.
Next to him. Bert Campaneris and
Juan Beniquez are trying to find a word
rn English to descrihe an electrical unit
of measure. five letters. They ar e
s peaking in Spanish so no one can help
them
Kison as seated an the rear of the bus.
s aying nothing. only singing to every
song that ('Qmes over the radio. He
never i.tops singing. even after the
music has stopped.
Fred Patek. the ageless infielder with
the look of a keeper at a general store in
Oklahoma City, pulls out a book but
doesn't open at. falling asleep before he
can put on his glasses. ,
The bus arrives at LAX. The ·usuall
<See LITTLE DEVILS, Page C2)
Angels earn some salvation
They'll cool heels until Friday's series opener in Oakland • SEATTLE -These may be the dog days of
August but for the Angels, today is not quite as
doggy as it could have been.
Under norm al circumstances, a victory over
the Seattle Mariners in mid-Aueust doesn't uncork
c hampagne bottles. But this 1981 baseball season
has been far from normaJ as the Angels proved by
escaping the Northwest Wednesday afternoon with
a 4-1 win over the Mariners in 11 innin11.
At first glance. the Anget. may have only
saved race by salvaging one out of three from
Seattle, but when you read between the baselines.
the surfacing ract is that the team needed the win
-very badly.
"YOU'RE DAMN &IGHT we were concerned
coming into the game," shortstop Rick Burleson
said as he held an ice pack to his right ahouJder af-
terward. "If you don't push it, then you wind up~
after this road trip and where are you? Now we
have to win two-of-three from Oakland just to get
to .500."
'Ibe Angels are In Oakland today where they'll
open a three-eame weekend let against the A'a
Friday. And no one is downplayin1 the importance
of the upcoming 1amea.
"We can d efinitely uae three atratibt wina but
we can sUU have a 1ood road trip if we play well
and win two," said second bueman Bobby Grich.
It wu Grich wbo wu Wedneeday'a outrltbt hero
as he belted two home nm.a in the K1n1dome, in·
cludins the game-wlnner -a thr'ff·run blut to
ritht In the 11th lnnint.
.. HAD WE LOST AU. TRaBE," he continued,
"it would have been cn11biDC, almost embarra11·
1n1."
Grich, who aat out UM lut lb IUIMI prtor to
the ttrlke after be.Ult bit OD ta.. tlaumlt bJ a pltcb
June I , found the IO-da1 Rrill• l.,alf U.. perfect
pl'ftC'ripllon for hi• recovwy. lil tbe leeule Md•,
he wu 5-for·ll and be nteDded tall_. "
1ame hltUns 1tHak tote with bit ftnt floiaer ~•·
nesday, a solo shot to right in the second inning.
That single hit nearly stood up until Seattle
designated hitter Richie Zisk unleashed a Dave
Frost pitch for a home run in the seventh to· tie it
and eventually send the game into extra innings.
Frost. recalled from SaJt Lake City on May 24
,
Had we lost' all three it would
have been crushing. almost em-
barrassing.
-Bobby Grich
after undergoing surgery last Sept. 17 ror the
removal of bone chips in his right elbow, had his
best outing since returning.
HE PITCHED E IGHT INNINGS, allowing just
the one run on four hits while striking out five.
Frost was relieved by Don Aase in the ninth
and all he did was throw no-hit, shutout ball for
three innings.
Thal, combined with Burleson's three hits
were the most encouraging signs to Mauch Wed-
nesday. And he needed cheering up after Monday
and Tuesday.
"Frost pitched six innings of power and two of
cunning with bls head," Mauch said. "It's a darn
shame to win only one game but at least we got
what wu left.''
Throu8h the worst of theifirst half of thia road
trip, Mauch said the at\ituae within the balJclub
was quite settling. "Their attitude haan't been bet-
ter," he 1a.ld. "You keep beattn1 a piece or iron
a nd heatln1 on it, preUy IOOft, you'll wear it out.
Em~ a.re no dltferent. ••
Fa08T 8.UD HE WAS AMAZED to be able to
pitch a loQ • be did. "Now tl'• Jutt a question of
how IClftl I'll 10 t.be nest time. J threw only a ·
pitches in ellht lnnlnp which was wonderful.
"After biol the nnt two, J know the ('OD• <8" ANGkL8, Pa1e Cl)
'
Resigns
Costa Mesa High football
coach Tom French has re-
signed his post for personal
reasons. A replacement is
expected to be named early
next week from his • staff.
French was unavaUabte for
comment.
French's seven-yeqr re -
cord as Costa Mesa's coach
reflects a 34-36-1 record. in·
eluding 8-2·1 and 7-4 mark.I in
1976 and '78. each worth a
por1'°'1 of a league cham·
piomhip.
Jim H~. Tom Wore and
Joma Conwy ore cona1dered
the ltodlq candtdatH to
r~e F''fftth.
'· il
I·
•
--.... ---
-----~
b Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thuradav. Auguat j3, 1981
~--------------------""""!I• ~~------------------------------------------------------------------. Rudi'• two belts pace Red Sox
,_ .... belled two homen aod •• D•ct ·£vU1, Gal')' AU ..... DHt
Sta etoOll and .II• Klee bit tolo •bot.a
H too ripped lhe ChJca10 WbJi.
Sox, 8-1, tn American Lea1ue acUon Wednelday
. . . Grall NeWet' two-run homer tn lbe alxth
lifted the New York Yankees to a M vlctory
over Texas . . . Riek Muataa drove ln lbree
runs and scored three with a home run and two
Swinuner captures
Channel three times
DOVER, England -John From AP dllpatchet a
Erikson. a 26-year-old physical
education teacher from Chicago, has
become the first person to swim the English
slnales u Cleveland routed
Miiwaukee, M, anapplo« a
aeven·aame Cleveland lotlns
streak . . . Terry Cro.tey
drove In the wtnnin1 run with
a t>ues~loaded sacrifice fiy
lo the sixth inn1ng. aiving
BalUmore a 4-3 second.game
victory and a s plit of a
double-header with Kansas
City. Kansas Cily won the
opener, 1~. behind Frau
Channel three ways non-stop. .
Erikson e merged from the 21 -male
waterway between England and France just
before midnight Wednesday on the French side.
His total time for the three trips was 38 hours.
27 minutes. according to the first reports re-
ceived by the Channel Swimming Association In
Dover.
"We are absolutely in awe of it because we
didn't think it could be done," Audrey Scott, the
association secretary, told · The Associated
Press early today.
White'• grand slam bomer and Hal Mcaae•a
three RBI . . . Damuo Garcia drove ln two
runs with a squeeze bunt and a sacrifice fiy to
lead Toronto to a 4·3 victory over Detroit, end-
ing an eight·game winning streak for Detroit
starter Jack Morril . . . Run-scoring singles by
Hosken Powell and Mickey Hatcher in t he
seventh inning lifted MiMesota to a 4·3 win over
Oakland. Corona del Mar High product Matt
KeoulCh went ~ innings for Oakland, allowing
six hits and two runs, before being lilted.
Erikson is a bachelor who lives with his
father. He had made two previous unsuccessful
attempts at a three-way swim in the last two
years. giving up after two crossings. In all,
before his latest record ~wim. he had swum the
Channel eight times, four or them in two two-
way crossings .
Kingman powers Mets to another
The New York Mets ar e un· •.
beaten through three NaUonal Lea·
gue starts with the Chicago Cubs to-
day fo llowing a 7-4 decision Wednes-
Erikson was returning to England by one of
the observer boats that accompanies all Chan-
nel swimmers.
He had entered the water in near-perfect
conditions Tuesday morning at Dover's
Shakespeare Beach. Exact details of his three
stages were not immediately available.
day. Dave Kingman and Elli• Valentine drilled
consecutive triples to open the 10th inning lo
provide the Mets with the winning edge . . .
George Hendrick hit two borne runs and rookie
Orlando Sanchez singled home the go.ahead run
Scott said she believed that Erikson did the
first crossing to Cap Gris Nez on the French
coast in 10 hours. 10 minutes, then swam back
to land at f'olkestone near Dover in about 13
hours.
as St . Louis ripped
Philadelphia, 11-3 ... Andre
Dawson rapped his 15th
home run of the season and
went 4-for-4 to back the com-
bined eight-hit pitching of
Ray Burris and three re-
lievers as Montreal dealt Pit-
tsburgh a 3-2 setback ...
Pinch-hiller Denals Walling The s wimmers are aUowed 10 minutes on
the beach between stages. Scott said she heard
from a boatman that Erikson was sustained on
his s wim by doses or baby food. given to him by
the crew or the observer boat.
. lined a run·scoring single to
Kingman center field in the eighth in-
Two other swimmers have attempted tt1Tee·
way swims but failed.
ning to snap a 4·4 tie and lift Houston to a 5·4
victory over San Francisco . . . Pinch-hitter
Brian Asselstlne scored an unearned run in the
11th inning on a groundout by Ed Mlller to give
Atlanta a 4-3 verdict over San Diego and a
three-game sweep .
Kevin Murphy, a Londoner, failed last week
after several attempts over the last five years.
Cindy Nicholas, 23. a Canadian law student of
Scarborough, Ontario, gave up last Sunday
after two crossings in 22 hours. 21 minutes. Newport Beach's Davis leading
The English Channel is one ol the most
challenging long-distance swims in the world
because of rapidly changin~ weather ~onditions.
LOS ANGELES -Lee Davis of l!I Newport Beach and Jeff Hart of
Solana Beach fired 2-under-par 69s
Wednesday, leaving both al 139 and in a tie for
first place halfway through the Pacific Coast
Amateur golf tournament at the Los Angeles
Country Club.
Quote of the day
·'I got hit on the blind side when
someone missed a block," says the Rams'
Jeff Rutledge. "But he got cut this morn-ing."
In a tie at 145 is Fountain Valley's Brian Lindley:
The 15th annual 72-hole tournament began
Tuesday and will finish Friday.
From Pace C1
LITTLE DEVILS • • •
airport crowd is there.
The players all manage to get
by the autograph hounds. main·
ly because there aren't any.
Ho w does a tourist from
Lynchburg, Virginia know what
Mike Will looks like, anyway?
Moving onto the plane, Bobby
G rich, the Angels' DDJ
<"Designated Don Juan" l is
already sizing up the stewardess
corner. He settles into the first
row of seats so that he can get a
good angle on the pass ing
scenery.
Manager Gene Mauch, the
best dressed among the team for
definite reason. holds a stem
racial expression. as he will
through the rest of the trip.
Geoff Zahn pulls out his pocket
Bible and readies himself for a
trip to the land of s pirituality.
The blue with red trim Angel
suitcases are all carefully
packed away with Special
Handling tags dangJing from
their handles.
Each playe r ha s a OS
( .. Designated Seat") with their
names on pieces o( paper on
their seat. It's coaches and stalf
up front, starters and veterans
next. then the new players, subs
and rookies. and finally, the
writers.
Soon, Ott gets up to make the
rounds. Slowly, he moves to the
rear of the plane where he'U
eventually entertain passengers,
all of whom have no Idea who he
is . One woman s uggeats ,
however, that he should run for
senator. "Not a bad idea," says
Ott. "Hey Rank <Steve Renko),
would you vote for me? Rank,
Rank? That's OK , Rank, don't
wake up."
In the meantime. Beniquez
and Bobby Clark have eooe Into
a t h rowing warfare o(
Macadamia nuts. "Aw, come on
you guys, grow up." barks Witt,
and he receives a handful in the
race.
The plane touches down at
Seattle Airport and again, as
players file into the lobby, no
one notices. Airports are all the
same.
Leaving on the bus that will
take the team to their hotel,
home for three days, some ooe
spots Rod Car ew. frantically
waving from the side of the
road. "Wait, wait!" everyone
yells.
"Oh no. that's OK . you can go,
it's just the ball boy.
''Yeah. go on. it's just a new
ba(boy from Puerto Rico."
Along with Carew is pitcher
Ken Forsch and coach Jimmie
Reese. The three have just flown
in from Cleveland following the
All-star game .
"Hey, nice pitch," Ott yells
out to Forsch in reference to bis
home run ball served up to Gary
Carter the night before.
Pitching coach Tom Morgan
turns around and glares al Ott.
"Aw, come on. Mo. you're my
buddy,'' pleads Ott.
"No I'm not," responds
Morgan.
"Yes you are," says Ott.
"No I'm not," insists Morgan.
At the hotel, the comedy
marches on.
The players tend. to break up
into small groups, meeting all
together as a team only at the
stadium.
It's a thoroughfare throughout
the day as the guys try to find
things to do to pass away the
idle hours leading up to the
evening's game. It's not an euy
task in Seattle.
"(love the road," summarizes
Grich. "It makes you glad God
invented homes."
lroine North /alls
3-2 def eat ends title dreams
Irvine North's queat for a
berth ln the Little Lea1ue
Reslonal Tournament at Saa
Bernardino fell short wectn..
day nllbt N Inglewood J.....S
to a tiiree-run outburst Ill ,"9
start and hun1 oe f~r • l-1 ""° tor-y In the 1emltiaal1 ol the
Dlvllooal Playoff1. ·
Tbe winners c:ollected two
1lnll• and • double ln IJltUDa
the Jump at lllH'-VMJo-Youda
AtbleUc Park ud w(U meet
Eacoadldo. a 5-1 wlllfff cner
Grauda Hl1ll ID the ot.blr ball
of the Mmlfl.Dab, t011l.Cht at 5: JO
& '
for the rl&bt to advance.
lniDe North answered baclt
wtlb a nm in th• bottom ol tbe ftnt wben Mike Stftart linaled to a,ore Gary ReMerla and
anodlr nm wu pl5 .. ap In t.be ,._,. wbm Dani To .. eod
•lnlhd m nmtuall,J teored on
a blle bit "1 llllle Cipolla;
'nat. bowewr, •N tbe l•t
Ume lrYtae North coald pt I runner ,_ ftnt ltaM. COMll
Ray Rotduau 'a all...., coQee • Uon r«orded a .. , ....... ,.
cord . Dlvliton 5 dwD .... .
I) • ' l
From Page C1
ANGELS • • •
trlbution I had to make. If you
lose three, you have a lousy
plane ride to Oakland. I think
we'll be au right now."
-Burleson was n 't so sure.
though. "The big question is.
can Frost come back with
another game like this?" he
said. "And we've got to get pro-
duction from Baylor (the
Angels' designated hitter was
3-for·l2 in the s eries with no
RBI)."
Burleson, who led off the 11th
inning with a double and scored
t he go-ahead run on Grich's
homer, said that he required a
cortisone shot in his throwing
shoulder before the game.
something he said he needs
about twice a season.
"The tendon there flares up
and the cortisone lubricates it
so that at least I .ca n play. f'm
not going to miss any games at
this point. lt' II be sore tomorrow
(today) but I'll be ready by Fri·
day."
Aase said after Grich's second
home run, the mood in the
dugout picked up considerably.
inferring it wasn't at an all-time
high prior lo that.
"I think we looked a~ bis hit u
a breakthrough.'' he said.
Grich said he didn't see the
ball come off his bat and had no
idea where it was until he
rounded first. ·'Then I saw the
right fielder <Gary Gray) run·
ning towards the line and I knew
lt wu down there somewhere."
When be saw it bit the tarp
above the wall some 380 feet
away. Grich raised bis arms in
jubilation.
During his r e h abilitation
period, Grich wore a cast over
his right hand and wrist.
However, he often put a velcro
wrap, with weighll inside, over
the wrist and swung a bat with it
on.
That, he said, as much as
anythine, was the key to bla
speedy recovery.
Now, lbe Angela • hope they
have recovered from the pre·
opening night Jitters and can
make a run for American West's
othn nae.
'Jbey'U get a better readinl on
themHlvea against Oakland
(the team with the lint na1>
thla weekend. -by Ed DM.el
* ~ NOTat -It_.._., •:e .......... _... .......... ---------· .... ........... ...., ......... --,... ......... ,........, ..... ......
fl..-, "I Mt ... I -...., ... -..ii .............. -.... -~ .. _, ..................... ,. .,... . ._._ ............. ,_ .. ............................... -.-.. ..-....... -....... . __ .... _,.., ....... ..... ..........................
•
Baseball today
Oo thla date In baaeball tn 1979:
St. Loult speedster Lou Brock beat out
an lnl14'ld emash oll tbe alov. ot Cblc.,o
pitcher Dennls Lamp tor hia 8,000tb career
hit as the Cardinals beat the Cubt 3·2. '
On this date ln 1969~
Baltimore pitcher Jim Palmer, whose
career had been threatened by arm trou·
ble the year before, no·hlt the Oakland A's 8--0.
On this date in 1948:
Satt'hel Paige made bis major league
debut for the Clevelan Indians at the age
of 42. throwing a five hitter to beat the
Chicago White Sox 5·0.
Today's Birthdays:
Oakland A's Infielder Fred StanJey Is 34.
Cleveland Indians first baseman Andre
Thornton ls 32.
Rams-Dallas sold out; TV live
The Rams announced that their
National Football Leaeue preseason
game against the Dallas Cowboys
this Saturday night has been sold out and will ~
televised locally. The last of th~ 69,006 tickets
for the game at Anaheim Stadium was sold
Wednesday afternoon, the Rams said. Ktck'olf
time for the nationaJJy televised game is 5:30
p . m .. PDT rather than the previously stated 6
p.m .... The Rams waived four players Wed·
nesday, including veteran guard Gres Horton.
Also cut were rookies John Andersoa. a de-
fensive end from Bethune·Cookman: linebacker
J erry McLain from Washington; and guard
Tom Pettigrew from Eastern Illinois .
Raiders' trial getting stickier LO~ ANGELES -Legal com-[i]
plex.iUes mounted Wednesday in the C t
tangled case of the Oakland Raiders
versus the National Football League, with one
juror's impartiality being challenged.
A question of bias on part of juror Tom
Gelker remained up in the air, with U.S. Dis-
trict Judge Harry Pregerson considering the
next step as the panel remained at an impasse
in its marathon deliberations.
The judge met with attorneys behind closed
doors for two hours, but deferred! ruling o~ a
motion by the Raiders to remove the juror. 1 ne
problem arose when it was found that Gelker's
cousin, Bruce Felker. once owned the Portland
Storm of the defunct World FootbalJ League.
Theriot wins 800 (1 :49.42)
Former Newport Harbor High
and UCLA track and field star Brian
Theriot captured the 800 meters ln • 1 :49.42 Wednesday night in an invitational meet
in Varnamo, Sweden. Earl BeU was a winner in
the pole vault with an effort or 18-0'h . . . Mon·
treat hockey star Serge Savard made his retire-
ment official . . . Chicago Black Hawks goalje
Tony Esposito is now officialJy an American
citizen and plans to play for Team U.S.A ....
Telev1s1on. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: BasebaJl -Atlanta at Dodgers ,
7:30 p.m .. KABC (790 ).
Lopes can't
silence crowd
But boos turn to cheers
LOS ANGELES CAP) -National ~l'le All·
star second baseman Davey LOpes ts tb4t prllbiary
tar1et ol Dodger Stadium boo birds thete d.ya, but
he may be on the verge of silencin1 them.
"l guess it's my batting average," sald Lopes,
who had failen to .165 alter goioa hitless tn bis lut
five at.bats. The Los Angeles veteran bad bffn
booed for failing to get the ball out of the Infield in
Davey Lopes
seventh.
his first two plate ap-
pearances.
But the boos turned
to cheers after tbe top
or the fourth Inning of
the Dodgers' 8-5 victory
over the Cincinnati
Reds. Lopes had just
taken a hit away from
C i n cl n n a U' s O a v e
Collins.
Theo , more
c heers c ame when
Lopes singled home the
tying run in the bottom
of the fourth, singled
and stole a base In the
firth and cracked a two-
r u n homen i n t h e
Lopes knocked in three of the Dodeers' runs
and had three of their 13 hits. After his homer, his
fourth or the season, he was accorded a s tanding
ovation and then tipped his cap to the crowd of
36,494.
"I'm not bitter," he said ... It just pushed me
harder. I know I can hit.
"But I'm not denying, the boos hurt. But 1
heard them boo Mike SchmKit in Philadelphia and
Joe Morgan in Cincinnati, so who am I to com·
plain?
"After my second at-bat, Reggie (team-
mate Reggie Smith) pulled me aside and told me
what l was doing wrong. And Danny 4Coach Dan·
ny Ozark) told me to relax, that I was en impor-
tant part or this club. That made me feel good. to
know that my peers and my coaches believe in me.
That really helped."
The Dodgers Jumped out to a 3-0Jead ja U,e
first inning against Cincinnati starter Tom Seaver.
But the Reds quickly got even when Geor1e Foster
slammed a three·run homer in the third inning, bis
15th. on a 3-0 pitch from Los Angelet starter Bob
Welch.
After the Reds took a 4-3 lead in the top of the
fourth. the Dodgers knocked out Seaver, banding
him onl y his second loss in nine decisions but bis
first since April 18. It snapped his six.game win·
ning str~.
Pinch·hitter Jay Johnstone started the rally
with a bloop double to right and Lot>es singled hjm
home to tie the game. Lopes. who !lad taken
second on an error. scored the goahead run on a
single by Ken Landreaux. who also had tbree bits.
Landreaux eventually scored on a sacrifice ny by
Ron Cey.
Neyer takes customary dive
Megan Neyer easily captured
the one-meter diving title with
a score of 534.66 points Wed.nes·
day afternoon in the U.S. Out-
door Diving Championships at
the Marguerite Recre ation
Center.
Wend y Wy lan d fini s hed
second with 501.48 points.
followed by Chris Seufert with
498.45 points.
The meet began Tuesday with
the men's one-meter competi·
tion, won by Greg Louganis. and
continues through Saturday.
Mission Vi ejo Nadadores
Coach Ron O'Brien labeled one
o f Ney er·s efforts . a n2
somersault. as "The best I've
seen any woman do.··
Neyer 's consistency showed
through the day with 8s and 9s
awarded by the judges.
Today's agenda found the
women's one-meter prelims in
the morning, followed by the
women's one-meter finals at 4.
followed by the men's three·
meter finals.
Michele Hain finished fourth
w<th 462.66 points. followed by
Janie Serwan with 452.64 points;
Tristan Baker with 449.94
points ; Kare n Gorham with
442 .44 points, and Kelly
McCormick with 440.91 points.
Neyer, 19. also won the three·
meter tiUe at the indoor national
meet in April at Columbus.
Ohio
A total of 35 women entered
the three-meter competition.
with qualifying Tuesday after-
noon and the finais Wednesday
afternoon. Eight divers qualified
for the finals .
W e know how critical e aood "mobUe home" is to back~ckus. That's
why wt offer destans by The North Face •.. the 4nest aVJilabl.e light·
wc!Qht tents. bac}(packs. sleeplng bags. and handsome. functional dothlng
Perl'orman~ Is the key and all products from The North Face are Fu.II
Ufetlme Warrantied
Remcm~r Sid & Sports for all your bac1<pac:~g. t kl. tennis. racquetball,
and acneral sporting needs. 4 locations to save you. •
:i
I·
range Coaat DAILY PILOT/rhuradav. AUAUlt 13, 1981
AP ........
• -Neither Echo, a
his feathered friend
• meal at the Medina.
Ohio. home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young.
Several of the Youngs' chickens are bold
e nough to challenge Echo for his food .
.x raise in mill .
amended bill to hike levy by two cents
The half of the 23 committee mem·
er a bers were elsewhere. Many
rting were presenting their own bills
! the before other committees meet·
allon ing at the same time.
Foran said he thinks he can
Nays gel the majority vote in the com·
ayed mittee, but still anticipates trou·
15 by ble gathering the required two·
ento, thirds vote of the 80-member As·
't be sembly.
The complex bill .is aimed at a
ts of deficit in highway funds that is
'icult estimated to range from $900
l h e million to $2.4 billion over the
.ered next five years. The bill would:
y. -Raise lhe gasoline tax from
!!nts, seven to nine cents a gallon
n the beginning in 1983. One cent each
: rev-would go to the state and local
Hted governments.
:1 to -Increase th e driver 's
dif· license fee from $3.25 to $10, and
>n. vehicle registration fees from
; ap-$11 lo $22., beginning in 1982.
s of -Raise truck weight fees 50
Ir . 's percent next year and another 10
the percent in 1985. Current fees are
stra· $5 to S413 a year.
rown -Re q u i r e t h a t county
at a s upervisors representing two·
not thirds or the state's people ap-
prove the bill by Nov. IS. In Los
sur-Angeles County. city councils
ation can act if the county won't; only
ater, those cities would get the
nent money.
-Shirt an increasing amount
final of the six-cent per·dollar sales
·two tax on gasoline from the general
than fund t.O transportation.
ENDED ...
d by
uese
111 off
ights
tates
night
the
COD·
rans·
a rope
'from
l air
'and r the
•rm al
?lays
from
sand
•elers
Yhere
o n 's
• pro.
.ar up
:. as·
n, we
•rm al
oiorth
. a ti on
said
half·
led up
g that
eek lo
rald
nag er
!la de· lantic
Trans·Allantic travel was
thrown into havoc Monday and
thousands or passengers were
stranded when Canadian con·
trollers refused to handle flights
to or from the United States,·
claiming that a !Jtrike by
American controllers had made
the U.S. air traffic system uu·
safe. Many flights were can·
celed and there were lengthy de-
1 ays on others.
The Canadian controllers
agreed Wednesday to end the
boycott, in return for an inquiry
Into the safety question. U.S.
authorities deny that t~system
is unsafe.
Jean·Luc Pepin, Canada's
minister of transport, had begun
actions that could have led to
$5,000 fines, job suspensions and
firings against the Canadian
controllers. More than 25 con·
trollers were suspended.
Lewis said domestic air
service remained at about three·
fourths of normal as the strike
by members of the Professional
Air Traffic Controllers
Organization over wages and
working conditions entered its
11th day today .
Damage surveyed
OVERTON, Nev. <AP) -As a
team of federal, state and local
officials tried to determine lhe
extent or damage done by noodJI
that swept through the Moapa
Valley, residents of the area
continued today the pai.Qlltaking
process or removing tons of
sticky mud from their homes
and businesses.
ClatttflM ed¥entetnt 1'1"142·M71 All ottter -..11ments Ml-4321
MAINOf"CE no wn1 ••v St , CMlt M•w. ca ~•<ldrw .. 9oa IMO, CCIII~ MfH, CA _.,._,. __
''°''•OM "" °'-c .. ,, "vbll\1\1"9 ,_, Ho "t•\ \IOrlh, lllu\lratton\ .0110 ... 11 m4'1•r or t ll
""'"""''"'' 11 .. e111 mo tw rtpro<1uoe1 .. 1111ovt -..<•ti ptrm"''°" ti <ot>V•iqhl Owlltr
SK-""' '°''• p.tlO at (O\lt Mru Cthlornlt IV"S 144-1 \-rl~I-lly Urrotr .. 00 -"'""
•• "'•" U to "'°"'"'' mt111.,, °"''INll'Ofl\ t• .. "'°""''" ------
A typical motorist now pays
about $90 a year in highway.user
taxes and fees. The bill would In-
crease about S24 .
Foran's bill before Wednesday
would have shifted $320 million
of the sales lax money from the
general fund to transportation
over five years. His amendment
would delay the general fund
loss to 1983 and reduce it to $177
million.
From Page A1
ABSCAM. • •
Former Rep . John M .
Murphy, D·N.Y., was given a
three·year sentence for a con-
s piracy conviction and concur·
rent two-year terms for conflict
of interest and acceptance or an
unlawful gratuity. He was fined
$20,000.
Former Rep . Raymond
Lederer, 0 -Pa., was sentenced
to three three-year terma for
conspiracy, bribery and in·
terslate travel for racketeerin&,
Dand a two-year term for accept·
ing an unlawful gratuity. He al5o
was fined $20,000.
Former Rep . -Frank
Thompson Jr., D·N.J., was or-
dered to undergo medical study
pending actual sentencin&
because of a doctor's report that
said the former congressman's
cardiovascular system cannot
withstand prison life.
Technically, however. he was
sentenced to the maximum 15
years in jail and fined $40,000,
because the maximum sentence
is required to· order s uch a
medical study.
Angelo Errichetti, a New
Jersey staw senator and former
mayor ol Camden, N.J ., drew
the stiffest sentence, a six.year
term for his briber)',.conviction
and ..an overall $40,~fine. Er-richetti also was sen enced lo
concurrent five-year erms for
conspiracy and interstate travel.
Philadelphia Councilman
Louis Johanson wu given con·
current lbree·year terms for
conviction of conspiracy,
bribery and interstate travel. He
also was ftned $20,000.
The judge told the defendants
that according to government
guidelines they would be eligible
to apply for parole as early u 14
months and no later than after
20 months.
Thompson released a state·
ment s~g again that he was
innocent and that "therefore, I
shall appeal to receive the
justice which is my due. I re·
iterate fl)»tfaith in our system of
justice, or which the appeal
process is a fundamental ele·
ment." Myers, aslted about the &en·
tencing, said, "I'm not happy,
but I'm not sad."
Murphy said he would appeal,
"and I have complete con·
fidence in tbe American
jurisprudence system." He de·
nounced the FBI's 1tin1 tactics.
Hit lawyer, Michael Ti1ar, aald
he believed a(urpby'I appeal
would be successful.
Let's hear it
for clapper
NEW YORK (AP) -lt took
two attempts, but Aabrlta
Furman hu round his way •lain
into the Guinness Boot or World
Records for 50 houn of non·atop
cl•Pllina. fie said he did tt to honor hi•
1una, Sri Chlnmoy.
P\annan, M, who nana • Ila· u.....,. at.ore here, clapped 'bM
bands from 1:07 a.m. · MondaJ
unUI 10:01 a.m. Wedntlda.y. It
beat the 1* record of 4Z houri.
s mlqutes Ht by Pubudu
Sdanayaka ol Sri Lanka.
He was forced to abandoa IU
n.nt try lut ... becauM OUID-
DMI layl the ............. be
beard from 100 yarda, and New Yon 1tnet DoAH cDdll't ......
modateldm.
Reagan cuts not enoUgh?
Republican solon says President made 'se rious error'
Prealdent Rea11n drew
crltlcllm Wednesday nlaht ro.r
hla budiet·cuttlnt program
from a 1urprl1ln1 source -
another Rtpubllc•n.
Rep. WUUam Dannemeyer. R·
Fullerton, claimed In an addr~sb
before 500 members of l.be
Oran1ee County World Affairs
Signatures
on bills
cost $4,000
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -
Taxpayers paid more than $3,800
to get the signature of House
Speaker Tip O'Neill, D·Mass.,
on bills that he opposeil culling
income taxes and the federal
budget.
Americans forked over at
least another $136 Wednesday to
send the bills from Washington
to the West Coast so President
Reagan could sign them today
while vacationing al his ranch
near Santa Barbara.
Council that the president
"matde a aerlous error In Judi·
ment In seeking the cuts that he
did."
The president's mistaken.
Dannemeyer asserted, and that
he should have cut $80 to $100
billion. instead of $35 to $40
billion.
Because larger cuts weren't
made, Dannemeyer predicted,
the deficit In the rederal budget
for the fiscal year that begins
Oct l will be at lust $45 billion
and perhaps as high as $80
billion. ·
Had larl{er cull been made,
Dannemeyer said, interest rates
-now at record levels -would
fall because the federal govern·
ment, which uses between 35
and 40 percent or all available
credit, would be able to reduce
borrowing.
"The answer is further budget
cuts." Dannemeyer lold the au·
dience at the Anaheim Marriott
Hotel. Dannemeyer said he and
his stair have prepared a list of
272 items' that, if eliminated,
would cut an additional $52
billion from the budget He did
not cite specifics, other than to
say lhe cuts would not affect
programs for the poor.
Rep. Dan Lungren. R-Long
Beach, also addressed the coun·
cil Neither Rep Robert
• * •
From Page A1
Bad.ham. R·Newport Beach, nor
Rep. Jerry Patterson, D~Santa
Ana the two othr con·
gressmen representtn1 Orange
County -attended.
Lungren, speaklnll to what he called the so.called "Reagan
revolution," said ''this is a part
of history we r~ very fortunate
to see."
"I think It's refreshing to have
a president who seems to have a
sense or where he's going. Presi-
dent Reagan has shown us the
job of president of the Urtlted
States is manageable," Lungren
£aid.
Fired worker
wins lawsuit
MILWAUKEE <AP> -A jury
has deci~d that a man who
claimed he was fired from hi1
· company because he was dating
his secretary should be awarded
$500,000.
The Circuit Court jury decided
that Charles Brockmeyer, 34,
was wrongfully fired as district
manag e r of the Dun le
Bradstreet Corp. Credit Services
Division in May 1980. He sought
Sl 6 million.
* * *
The legislauon was sent first
by government Jetstar to Hyan-
nis, Mass .. where O'Neill was
vacationing. The same plane
then brought the bills back to
Washington, where Vice Presi·
dent George Bush signed them
Wednesday in his role as presi·
dent or the Senate. TAX CUT SIGNED. • •
The round-trip for O'Neill's
signature took two hours and 25
minutes and, at a rate or $1 ,613
an hqJ.ar for use of the plane, cost
$3,871, according to a notice is-
sued by White House officials
here.
Richard Darman, deputy as-
s istant to the president, brought
the bills to California on
Wednesday via commercial
airliner . That trip from
Washington to Los Angeles cost
$136, the standard government
fare, according to the notice.
Darman traveled via automobile
from Los Angeles to Santa
Barbara.
The final bills were nC1t ready
for signing when Congress
began its recess this month, and
the president left the nation's
capital Aug. 6 for a four-week
vacation.
From Page A1
began a four week vacation last
Thursday
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said
before the sagmng that the presi-
dent's priority afler he returns
to the White House next month
will be "J..O make the economic
program work."
He also is promising further
budget cuts and plans to meet
next week with budget director
David A . Stockman to begin
plotting those reductions .
The legislation signed today
sels a federal budget of about
$700 blllion for fiscal 1982, $35.2
billion lower than the spending
plan s ubmitted by former Presi-
dent Carter before he left orfice
in January.
1t reduces s pencung tor :social
Security by $2.2 billion, mostly
by eliminating the $122·a·month
minimum benefit. Food stamps
are cut $1.7 billion and employ.
ment training S4 6 billion.
VERSATILE ATHLETE • • •
It also reduces by $11 .6 billion
lhe government's authority to
enter into contracts to build low·
income subsidized housing.
Rep. James R. Jones, D·Okla ..
chairman of the House Budget
Committee. has called the
Reagan budget ·'the most monum e ntal and historic
turnaround in fiscal policy that
has ever occurred."
The legislation cutting taxes is
equally staggering.
Three-quarters of the cut& will
go to i ndi vidual s, mostly
through rate reductions averae·
ing about 25 percent at each in·
come level.
For a typical family of four
with one earner and ~ $20,000 in·
come, the tax reduction will be
about S25 this year. $228 In ltl8t.
$371 in 1983 and S464 in 1984. By
the lime the bill is fully ~ffedlve
in 1984, the family's tax liability
will have droppe'41 lo Sl,549 from
the current $2,013. •
that you can't, you can't. They told me I was
destined for failure."
The turning point came when a friend's
family took him out or the hospital for a one
week camping and fishing trip in the moun·
ta ins.
"I swam the 10 miles." he recalls. "It took
me six hours and 40 minutes. I hurt. and It was
very diHicult and I came in dead last. But I
made it.
''I went from an ugly, negative hospital
situation to something very beautiful," Clardy
explains. "That gave me a reason to· go on, to
stop having the desire to kill myself.''
Clardy was able to leave lhe hospital and
return lo his mother's home in Garden Grove.
He began therapy at the VA Hospital in Long
Beach and took classes at Long Beach State.
When he began having difficulty with his
studies, a teacher suggested Clardy talk to Dr.
Jack Whitehouse, who bas led an active life
despite the case of polio 20 years ago that left
him a quadriplegic.
"This totally paralyzed man convinced me
that I could swim, snow ski and do well in
school." Clardy says. "He made me realize the
only thing holding me back is myself." ,
At pools in Long Beach, Clardy learned lo
swim with the strength of his upper body, using
his remaining impaired leg as a rudder.
Three years ago, he decided to try lhe Seal
Beach rough water swim.
"Thal was when I realized I could do
anything I wanted to."
Clardy e ndured similar frustrations In
learning to ski. But eventually he mastered the
three·track technique. <Two skis are attached to
crutches the third is worn on his remaining
leg.>
The amputee attributes much of his inner
strength to renewed religious faith. At a Bible
class in Anaheim five years ago, be· met a
woman named Marian. The two were married
the following year.
Having clawed his way up from the depths
or self.pity, Tom Clardy Is now a man with
lofty go{lls.
He wants to line up a sponsor for bis 26-mile
Catalina swim and begin preparing for ipterna·
lional ski competition.
..1 know whal my m1ss1on rs now -
teac hing physical education to the han-
dicapped," Clardy says. "I don't care how
limited you are, you can still go on and do more
things than you think you can."
•,
----~----~------------~----
...... ______ _
l:v1ryon1 wu up for tht Count when lt came tlmt to
1tn1 ''Happy Blrthday11 to
J111 IJ't•l Coot Baal•. who
turnt 11 Au1. 21.
· 'Thll 11 really a 1r11t mo·
ment for me. lma1lne h1vtn1
a birthday party with all
these fine people. Yo\l've
m ade u.a very happy," Buie
said as be was honored at the
kickoff of the 10th annual
free Lincoln Center Out-of·
Doors Festival in New York.
The soft-s poken Basie,
bothered b)' arthritis and
forced to use a motorized
scooter to get around, roee
with some difficulty after the
birthday song was aune by
more than SOO people on
hand, as he and his wife,
Catherine, thanked the en-
thusiastic crowd.
The state of New York paid
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThur1day, Augu1t 13, 1981
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ ' ' ' . ',, ,,
~
H /JI
' -~-a:. '
official homage lo singer ~
Harry Chapin, who promoted
.........
Cesar Chaves. presulent of the United Farm Workers Union.
gives victory sign on picket hne at Bertuccio Farms near
Hollister. after the Agricultural Labor Relations Board ruled
farm unions can send organizers onto pnvate property dunng
stnke to talk to workers ·
Mayot:'s angry
cook all fired up
Cindy Volper apparently
could s tand the heat. but said
the overwork and underpay
got her down so she quit as
the chef for bachelor Mayor
EdwardK~h.
Her replacement will be
Koch's fifth cook i n his
tenure in office of less than
four years.
Miss Volper, 24, was paid
$300 a month and was given a
room in the basement of
Gracie Mansion, the mayoral
home. She announced her
resignation in an angry let-
ter.
"I can get a phone call at 4
in the afternoon saying there
will be 100 people for dinner
instead of 25." she wrote.
··And in the same phone call
I can be told there will be 10
people instead of two for
breakfast."
White Hou se press
secretary James S. Brady
likely faces a fo urth major
operation because of a
lingering complication in his
long recovery from a bullet
wound in the brain.
DONOR
Carol Burnett
The Carol Burnett Fund for
Resp<>nsible Journalism has
been created at the UC
Berkeley campus.
The fund was started with
a $100,000 donation from Ms.
Burnett The money was part
of the award she received in
a libel judgment against the
National Enquirer.
The fund will be used by
the graduate School of
Journalism.
the arts and donated his
talents at the guitar to world
hunger. He was killed last
month in an auto crash .
"If music feeds the soul,
then Harry's music meant
food for millions. It is up to
us to see it p l ay on un-
diminished," Gov. Hugh
Carey said at the gathering
at Hofstra University.
Chapin's widow . Sandy,
urged business and political
leaders to continu e her
husband's work. It has been
10 years since Chapin gained
notice for his ballad "Taxi,'.
she noted, and said. "Just
imagine what all of you can
accomplish in the next 10
years."
Ni n e -year -old Justin
Trudeau look e d at the
portrait or his father and de-
cided it showed what Pierre
E lliot Trudeau must have
looked like "before we start-
ed to ride on your s houlders
and pull out your hair."
The Canadian prime
minister was given the paint-
ing during a 'arewel l
ceremony at Nairobi Airport
before he left Kenya aboard
a Tanzanian government jet
for Dar es Salaam.
Despite Justin's assess-
ment, rep<>rters agreed the
portrait did no favors for
Trudeau. It showe<i him in a
black suit with white stripes,
with a pale complexion and
longer, thicker hair than he
has.
But Trudeau appeared
pleased with the gift.
Severe weather strikes
Rain activity widespread, more wet weather due
Coastal forecast
Nlgl\I, morning low clo11ds
OIMtwlM WMY 11\rougtl F tldey.
Coa~• -,j, '"'-•7 CoHt.I l\IQI\ IO, lnl-12. Wnr ...
El-e, llO"I Yert.ble winds
nto"' -,,_,."'° "°"" wit" eltet· noon winch Wftterly I lo U llnots and
2 10 ~ wind waws. Sout .. _ ..
•-II -to 3 Ifft. Nl9"1. mornlno •-cloUds, clffr etter-
U.S. summa ry
l•t1t-eioa-.......
C•t•llN
LongBNch
Monrow I•
Newp0'1 8Neh
0n1 ... 1o
Pe lm .. ,..
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61 ,.
County tightening
adult shop rules
Strict standards on the loca-
tion of adult entertainment busi-
nesses in unincorporated areas
of Orange County have been
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors.
Under the standards. primari·
ly designed to control several
adult-oriented businesses in
Midway City, such establish-
men ts may not be located
within 500 feet of any area zoned
ror residential use, or 1,000 feet
of any existing church, park
or school.
Also. adult businesses may not
Seniors offered
college courses
Older Laguna Beach residents
may register for Saddleback
College courses scheduled at the
Senior Citizens Club head-
quarters beginning Aug. 24.
Offerings Include Spanish.
dancing. creative writing. estate
planning. music. short story
classics. a rmchair travel.
genealogy and yoga. 1-'or in·
formation, call the Senior
Citizens Club at 497-2441.
be located within 1,000 feel of
each other.
Owners of adult entert~inment
establishments will be given one
year to comply with the or·
dinance. That time per iod may
be extended for up to two yeQrs
by the county Planning Com-
mission if an owner can prove
undue hardship.
The ordinance replaces an in-
terim law regulating adult busi-
nesses that has been in effect
since December.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande.
who joined in the unanimous
vote to approve the ordinance,
said he did so "with great
hesitation.··
Nestande. who said he didn't
want to impose his values on
anyone else, added, "This is the
hardest vote I have ever made
in my life." Nestande is a
former stale assemblyman.
Anothu s upporter of the or-
dinance, Supervisor Roger Stan-
t on, whose district includes
Midway City, said he wanted to
emphasize that "in no way"
should his vote be construed as
an attempt to abridge freedom
of the press. a right guaranteed
under the First Amendment.
PATCO
assessed
damages
ST. LOUIS <AP > -A former
air traffic controller who
claimed he was harassed by of·
fi cials of the controllers' union ·
has been awarded $815,000 in ·
damages by a federal judge.
In one incident six years ago,·
Taso P. Anthan charged, a coo-:
troller at Lambert-St. Louis In·
ternational Airport harassed
him by deliberately pulling two
ai rplanes on a collision course.
Anthan said he was harassed'
because he disagreed with the
union p<>licy of filing grievances
against the Federal Aviation Ad -
ministration for reductions in
control tower staff.
In a nine-page order, U.S. Dis-
trict Judge Roy Harper ruled
that the Professional Air Traffic
Controllers union "intentionally
or recklessly" caused Anthan
emotional distress.
The judge awarded Anthan
$650,000 in punitive damages and
S 165,000 in compensatory
damages from the union.
Anlhan said he felt · ·vindicat-
ed " by the ruling. PATCO
lawyers said they planned to ap·
peal.
SUMMER
SALE
CONTINUES!
SUMMER SALE
SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS
" IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
Your F111or1te Designer Will 81 H•Pt'Y To A111st You
H.J.GAl\RETf fU~NITIJRE
P"<lfESSIONAl HOUf'l: llllon, ~"' Tttvre. 10 '·"'·to IP·"'· ZJ 11 HAltlOI 9LY0.
INTE .. IOR 0£StGNEA5 '"· ,, ........ I'·"'· let. 10 '·"'·to l:*i ,..... COSTA MISA ·•~H71t
... ,, Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Thurtd•v. ~ugu1t 13, 1981
Reagan's 'hit list'
bf standards flayed
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Rea1an administration la draw·
ln1 flre rrom consumer, environ·
mental and women's groups
over lta broadest attack yet on re1ulatlon1 1overnin1 every·
~In-_ from IH discrtmlnatlon
to help for the ha,,dicapped.
• Vice President George Bush
announced Wednesday that 30
more rules have been targeted
for possible elimination or eas·
Io\ in res ponse to 2,500 in·
l vi dual su11estions for reg·
ulatory relief. That swells the
idmlnistration's regulation "hit
list" to 91.
New g o vernme nt
forme d in I r~n
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP>
Iran formed its third post-shah
government today and rePOrted
new arrests of more than 200
leftists in a crackdown that has
at least 300 people before firing
squads since late June.
The prime minister, Moham·
mad Javad Bahonar, named his
cabinet before parliament and
asked for a vote of confidence so
his 22 ministers can take "effec·
tive strides towards God's
satisfaction," the official news
aeency Pars said
Poluh labore rs
end food protests
WARSAW, Pola nd (AP> -
Heeding the Communist Party's
back-to-work c all, national
leaders of Solidarity called for
an end. to strikes and street
marches protesting Poland's
food crisis.
They also urged the workers
to impr ove the economy by
working a six·day week for the
next two months, giving up the
Saturday holidays they won
through strikes six months ago.
Soviet p are nts
le ave son be hind
CHICAGO (AP> -After a
long legal struggle in a strange
land , Michael an d Anna
Polovchak have departed for the
Soviet Ukraine, leaving behind
their runaway ,13·year·old son,
who was granted political
asylum.
Walter Polovchak touched off
international controversy last
summer when he was granted
asylum by the U.S. government
a nd the parents launched a
custody battle that remains ln
the courts.
Officer to face
espionage. tria l
SCOTI AlR FORCE BASE,
Ill. <AP> The Air Force says
it will court-martial the missile
launch officer accused or mak·
ing unauthorited contacts with
Soviet personne l and passing
them classified information.
Second Lt. Christopher Cooke,
25, commander of a Titan II
nuclear missile squadron at
McConnell Afr Force Base in
Wichita , Kan ., is accused of
passing classified documents to
the Soviets on three different OC·
casions.
Sightseein g plam!
crashes; six d ie
SKAGWAY . Alaska <AP) -A
short sightseeing trip for fi ve
tourists t urned into disaster
when their single-engine charter
plane crashed and burned kill·
ing all six aboard. officials said.
The Piper Cherokee PA·32
owned by Skagway Air Service
went down at about 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday in the mountains near
White Pass, Alas k a State
Troopers and U.S. Coast Guard
officials said.
Oil rigs d u mped
BERWICK._L;t. (AP> -A
seagoing construction barge
flipped over s uddenly and
pitched t hree jackup drilling
r igs into the Atchafalaya Ri ver,
drowning a captain of one rig,
Donald Whitworth of Houston
the Coast Guard said. '
.,..,....
Lethal bombs
safely mpved
DUGWAY PROVINO
GROUND, Utah <AP> -The
transfer of 128 lethal Weteye
nerve 1u bombs from Denver to
the Utah desert went 11 well "aa
we could reasonably eJCpect ln
terms of health and safety," ac·
cording to Gov. Scou Matheton,
an opponecit of t he move.
Sixteen iron palleta, each car.
rying eight nerve 1a1 bombs.
were transferred Wednesday u
soldiers armed with M·18 rifles
and jeeps carryln1 mounted
machine guns kept watch.
16 injured
as stairway
collapses
Soldiers could be seen sittin1
atop the Hoot-long bombs inside
the trailers aa mo~e pallets were
carefully moved from two Air
Force C-141 &tarliftere. The
planes had carried the bombs
from the Roc ky Mountain
Arsenal at Denver to Michael
Army Ai rfield , 65 miles
southwest of Salt Lake City.
"We are satisfied from our in·
volvement that the efforts on the
part of the military in movin1
the Weteyes hu reached as high
a level aa we could reuonably
expect in terms or health and
s afety." Matheson sald.
But the governor, who bu op·
posed the transfer vigorously,
added that he would be unable to
breathe a final sigh of relief un·
Ul ttie entire move Is completed.
CATCH ME IF YOU CAN -Chester the sea gull, chased here
by P at Ferris of Eugene , Ore .. has a sticky problem . He has
a double-hooked lure s nagged on his beak. That makes it
difficult to eat and somellmes the lure c lamps the beak
s hut. ~fficials at Fern Ridge Reservoir near Eugene are al·
te mpting to capture the gull to relieve him of his handicap.
Arse n a l s pokes man Art
Whitney described the operation
as the first phase of "the largest
airlift of chemical weapons in
ELLINGTON. Conn. <AP> -the history of the Army."
A party marking two wedding The Weteye bombs, along with
anniversaries halted abruptly 760 other bombs and three one·
when a two-story stairway col· ton containers or CB nerve agent
lapsed at the Ellington Ridge to be transferred from Colorado
Country Club. injuring 16 people, in similar operations over the
authorities said. n ext three weeks , will be
Fifteen people were treated trucked under guard to Tooele
U.S. Embassy gets
bodies from Laos
for minot ·injuries at Rockvllle Army Depot for permanent
General Hospit.al and released. storage in hundreds of igloo·
Edmund Keating of Ellington shaped bunkers.
was hospitalized in satisfactory The schedule for the 13 other
condition with chest and ab-flights and the truck movements
dominal injuries. nursing to the deP.<>t will not be made
supervisor Christine Lunn said. public untll after each plane stop
BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> -
The U.S. Embassy today re·
ceived what were described as
the remains of four U.S. airmen
shot down over Laos. They aJ.
legedly were recovered by Lao
anti·govemment forces.
Geor ge Brook's. a board
member of the National League
of Families. an organization set
up in 1970 to find Americans
missing in action, said he acted
as an intermediary in handing
over t he remains to the em·
bassy.
They were received by Lt. Col.
Paul Mather. who said they
would be flown to Hawaii Satur·
day for identification at the U.S.
Army Central Identification
Laboratory.
It was the second time in a
month that remains had been
forwarded to U.S. ofCicials here
through civilian intermediaries,
a fter rePOrtedly bein~ recovered
by anti-government guerrillas in
Laos.
On July 13. Robert Schwab. an
American who lives in Bangkok.
turned over three sets or re·
mains.
About 28 people were posing of the operation is completed.
for a photograph on the wooden The Army said it is withholding
staircase and platform outside the information for security and
the club when it gave way short· safety reasons.
ly before 4 p.m. PDT Wednes· The first two planes lifted off
day. state police Trooper Robert from Stapleton International
Waitkus said. Airport Wednesday morning and
"I ran out to the terrace and fl ew over Rocky Mountain Na·
Brooks, who was contacted by everyone was s prawled all over tional Park and the Continental
telephone here, said he arrived the place." said University of Divide while teams of military
late Wednesday night specifical· Connecticut football coach Walt che mical disaster specialists
ly to receive the remains. His Nadzak. stood watch at six ground points.
organization m aintains contact Nadzak said the group was The transfer has stirred con·
with the Lao resistance from the celebrating the s ilver wedding troversy in Colorado and Utah
United States. he said. anniversaries of Dr. Allan and since the Carter administration
He said he · met a .. Mr. Mona Kemp of Manchester and decided in 1978 that the bombs
K asem." a Lao resistance Lester aqd Devra Baum of Ell· would not be destroyed but
l ead er who c r ossed into ington. Kemp is a dentist and shipped instead to Utah for
Thailand for the purpose of Baum, a garage o wner, is storage . Congress ordered them
handing over the re mains. But Democratic town chairman in either moved or destroyed by
he did not know what the guer-Ellington. this Oct. 10.
rillas hoped to gain from these N adzak, a guest at th e The unarmed bombs contain
actions. celebration. had been scheduled no explosives, but each contains
Brooks said he hoped the Lao to pose for the photograph but, 346 POunds of CB nerve agent, a
government would be spurred after a round of golf. he went to colorless. odorless liquid that
into turning over more remains the showers and missed the kills within minutes by blocking
to U.S. officials. photo session. nerve paths in the body.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
... ,.
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Orange Coaat OAJLY PILOT/Thursday, Augu1t 13. 1981
Fires dying down
across California
War escalates
against med.fly
LOS GATOS (AP> -Eacalal·
Ina their war agalnat the
Mediterranean fruit Oy, otnciala
working to block its miaratlon to
the nation's marketbasket wlll
start pesticide 1prayin1 today
over another city.
If a fertile medfly reaches a
commercial farm, the affected
realon would be sprayed within
24 hours. "That's the kind or
response you Cl)n expect ln the
Central Valley,' Scribner said.
By TIN: A.111oelated Pre11
A half-dozen blazes that
scorched more than 50,000 acres
acrou California died down to·
day, stvtn1 weary firefighters a
chance to rest, assess dama1ea
and lnveaU1ate five days' worth
of fires.
"It's just been a great week
for ua, hasn't it?" California
Department of Foreatrv
spokesman Jeff Row joked
Wednesday night a1 flreflahters
anticipated full control of the
largest of the blaiea blackening
Northern Cautornia.
Thal rtre wiped out 25,300
acres ol brush and watershed on
Cow Mountain west of Clark
Lake In Lake and Mendocino
counties . CDF officials said
arson waa suspected in the
blaze, whlch destroyed struc·
lures worth an estimated Sl.S
million.
Mweum canrels
'fake' exhibit
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The San
Diego Museum or Art says It has
cancelled an exhibit of 18th cen-
tury Japanese prints after a res·
ldent expert said the works
were fakes.
St.eve Breuo, director or the
museum, said Wednesday that
the prints were purported to be
done by Japan ese artist
Utamaro, which date from the
Golden Age o f Japanese
printmaking. But while prepar-
ing the showing, doctoral stu·
dent Sung Yu discovered they
we re done "by a group or
fakers," Breno.said.
Loan interest
may rearh 36C/o
SACRAMENTO t AP >
Finance firms could charge up
to 36 percent interest for small
loans, under a bill approved by
the Assembly Ways ,.and Means
Committee.
The vote was l3·0 Wednesday
on SB140, which author Sen.
Kenneth Maddy, R-Fresno, said
would let consumers borrow for
such purchases as appliances.
Canieraa nixed
in Buono ca8e
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The
s tate Supreme Court has
crwshed the media's hopes of
capturing the murder trial or the
alleged "Hillside Strangler" for
television.
The high court refused
Wednesday lo review a lower·
court order denying television
cameras acceu to the Los
Angeles Superior courtroom
where Angelo BuonC' will stand
trial. No date has been set for
the trial. •
Metro-Media, NBC. ABC. CBS
and the Radio-Television News
Association had sought the hear·
Ing, arguing that an earlier
Court of Appea l ruling was
based only on Buono's un·
substantiated objection.
Tax credit seen
for motorists?
SACRAMENTO <AP> A
motorist could take a $1,000
personal income tax credit for
converting his car to burn
alcohol fuel, under a bill ap·
prov e d by the Assembly
Revenue and Taxation Commit·
tee.
A 9·1 vole Wednesday sent
68178 by Sen. Dan Boatwright,
D-Concord. to the Wa ys and
Means Committee.
Pair arrested
in pot seizure
OROVILLE <AP> -A former
probation officer and his wife
were arrested (lfler the seizure
or an estimated Sl million worth
of marijuana In an elaborate
greenhouse, officers report.
Butte County investigators
s aid Wednesday that Perry Alan
Beall. 32, of Lake Concow. and
his wife Marsha, 31 . were re·
leased on $5,000 ball each after
being charged with marijuana
cultivation and possession of
marijuana for sale.
They were arrested after a
morning raid by Butte and
Colusa county authorities. along
with federal agents.
AP .........
BLOCKADE ENDORSED -Actor Robert Blake. left. and
singer-songwriter J ackson Browne conduct press con·
f erence in Los Angeles where they voiced their support for
the planned blockade by anti-nuclear groups or the Diablo
Canyon Nuclear power plant near San Luis Obispo.
Property tax hike
plan ruled illegal
REDWOOD CITY <AP> -In a
ruling that couJd cost California
counties millions of dollars, a
judge has ordered a rollback in
property taxes to conform with'
Proposition 13.
Judge Melvin E. Cohn accused
local government officials of
"creative taxation " in ruling
that a 2 percent-a-year increase
in property tax rates should not
have been applied retroactively.
The ruling Wednesday in San
Mateo County Superior Court ls
almost certain lo be appealed.
county and stale official!! said. It
could not bt' determined Im·
mediately how much money was
collected statewide nor whether
rebates would have lo be; given
immediately in the two counties
to which the ruling applies.
Cohn's ruling came in two
hom~owners' s uits, one from
that county and a second from
Santa Clara County. The cases
were originally filed separately
but were consolidated.
Proposition 13, the tax·
slashing Initiative passed over·
whelmlngly in 1978, allows local
governments to lnc,ease taxes
by 2 percent a year l o cover in·
flation.
Because the initiative also
rolled back prope rty assess·
ments lo their 1975 levels, the
counties applied the inflation
factor back to that yeu.
But Howard Jarvis and PauJ
Gann, authors of the initiative,
testified last week that the infia·
t10n factor was not intended to
be retroactive Cohn cited their
testimony in making his de·
cision.
The San Mateo County As·
sessor 's office estimated the 2
percent Increase , applied in
1975, 1976 a nd 1977, cost tax·
payers $4 million, officials said.
The state had instructed coun·
ty tax assessors to make the In·
fl a ti on factor retroactive.
Cohn, however. ruled that the
state Legislature and Board or
EquaJlzation had gone beyond
their duties to interpret constitu·
tional amendments.
LEVI'S
STUDENT
Beginning at 9 p.m .. hellcop·
ters 11praying malathion will
s weep 30 square mlles of
Livermore, virtually all or this
city or 48,SOO where a medny
was identified Monday.
The cily ls a 1ateway lo the
lus h San Joaquin Valley, within
California's 600 -mile -l on~
agricuJtural Central Valley.
The move 1s "a slgnlficant
escalation or the wa r against the
medlly." said eradication chief
J erry Scribner, noting this Ls the
first lime aerial spraying hu
been started a fter only one
fertile fly has been found.
Roadblocks started Wednel·
·day to i1\5pect vehicles for frult
on interstate highways leading
from the area.
Scribner, who earlier had said
he was not confident that
medllies could be kept out or the
valley, said Wednesday the pest
probably would not travel to the
agricultural area on its own. But
he noted that the fly could
"hitchhike" with a careless
motorist.
Officials declared it will be ii·
legal to transport host produce
anywhere within Alameda, San·
ta Clara and San Mat~ coun·
ties. the 2,082-squafe-mile
federal quarantine zone. without
grocery receipts. It had been II·
legal only to carry fruit out of
the area.
With Livermore added to the
aeriaJ treatment zone, the spray
region swelled to 517 square
miles 1more than double its
s ize when spraying began July
14 . Almost a ll is de nsely
popuJated. ,
Another JS-square-mile spray
zone enJargement is planned in a
week, when the zone is expanded
to the ridgeline of the Los Altos
foothills.
California's Central Valley,
the heart of the state's farm In·
dustry and supplier or half the
nation's produce, lies in the path
of the immediate threat.
More than 200 varieties of
fruits and vegetables. compris·
ing more than a third or the
state's $14 bHlion farm business.
can play host to the insect which
lays its eggs under fruits' skins
and causes them to rot.
Scribner reacted angrily to a
group of Republican lawmakers
c alllng for hls resignation and
sald he Is not planning to resign.
Mini-tornado
slams Indio;
• • • TW in1uries
JrlOIO <AP> -Twenty freight
cars were derailed in unusual
100-mlle·an-hour winds that
blasted this desert area, tipping
over cars, toppling trees and
downing power lines, officials
said. No Injuries were reported.
One law enforcement officer
termed the s avage half-hour
rain and wind storm that hit
about 4 p.m . Wednesday a
"mini-tornado.
· 'l 've been working here 14
years and these are the highest
winds I've ever seen," said Lt.
Roy Ramirez. adding the storm
was "totally unexpected.
· · 1 was out in my unit and my
car was s wavlng back and
forth: I thought I would be
flipped," he said.
A Southern Pacific official
who asked not to be identified
said a stationary train contain·
ing empty cars and some loaded
with scrap paper was pum·
melled by a "mini-tornado" in
the downtown area.
Hail and rain also pelted the
area, causing minor flooding,
accQrding to Sheriff Gayle Janes
o f the Indio s tation o( the
Rivers ide County Sheriff's
Department.
"We are surrouncjed by moun·
tains and the storm circled in
the valley and then just dumped
everything here," J anea said.
Light thunderstorms also hit
ea stern San Bernardino County
and eastern Imperial County
Wednesday eve ning . And
heavier thundershowers were
reported over the Death Valley
area. Imperial Airport reported
strong, gusty winds and near
zero visibility.
Winds in excess of 3S m11es·
per·ho.ur were recorded during a
. brief storm that smacked El
Centro, toppling power Unes and
a water tower .
' LARGE 58.ECTtoN
OF IOOTS & SHOES AT
$12 88 SllGIO VAi.iNTi,
JORDACHE,CHAIDON,
CAL VIN KLEIN, CHEMIN DEFER
DISCOUNT
PRICES LEVI'S
Men's
IELLIOnOIS
'8UIS I .
CORDS
~$1388
LIYl'I
"11¥1101"
.... $26.00
uu 11&11
$2788
ALL OTHER BRANDS
'1411 to '18'*
LEVI'S
BOYS ,, ••
'1011
...
DRESS, WORK, WESTERN ,
DAN POST, ACME, TEXAS,
JUSTIN, SPERRY TOP SIDER I
STREETCARS
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....
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Orange Oout DAIL v "LOT {Th ur1d1y. Aug Ult 13, 1111
Lite oycl• of _Mldlterr1ne1n fruit fly
1.
Female Medfly dl1119 hole In fNlt
and laya 2-e eggs --
7.
Mlltur• Medtly ma1e1
In tN morning when
tempefature 19 above tM•
Eggs halch In 2·3 days
Ar .......
Discovery of Oriental fruit fly, left . in Pomona Valley has forced California to
open second. front in its'war to save its produce industTJI . already threatened
by /ly's Mediterranean cou.Ttn. right
Fly cousin seen here
Oriental species in Newport in 1980
The Oriental fruit n y threatenln1 a nd vegetable crops in Northern
c rops in Pomona was apotted In California, the Oriental fruit fly is
Orange County last year, accordlna much easier to control.
to t he county's c h ief d e puty It took county agricultural officials
agricultural commissioner. Leonard only three months to rid the pest
Liekhus. from the four county areas last y,ear .
Although no fil es have been report·-Liekhus said.
Graphic shows that destructioo of fruit comes with development of larvae
during med/ly life cycle.
ed in the county thJs year, five were So far six Oriental fruit rues have
found in sex lure traps last year been found in the Pomona Valley
between July and October. One was causing farmers to set pesticide·
found in a Newport Beach backyard, laced sex lures and consider spray·
one in Yorba Linda, two In Fullerton Ing Malathion. and one in Anaheim Hills. according
' Follow ydu r team in the Dlily Pilat 642-5678
to Liekhus.
Unlike its cousin, the Mediterra·
nean fruit fly which ls infesting fruit
"If it were the Medfly we'd really
be worried," said Liekhus. "But the
Oriental fruit fl y is one we can take
care of."
F~mou s Bedroom Ensembles
at 2 0°/o Savi11CJS
Headboards -Bedspreads
Draperies -Boudoir Chairs
Complete Interior Decorating S~1ces
n€ttl€ CREEk
SH 0 PS
Newport 811ch. 644·8880 Tustin. 544· 1550
. 23 F11hlon l&11nd E. 17th St & Newport Frwy.
Newport Canter Endtrla Center
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
WIN£ SALE 5199
Davia Bynum·Burgundy
Sebaatlanl French Columbard
642-4774
265 I l"IM Ave.
Newport leach
(Next to the new Irvine
Ranch Farmers Mkt.)
~~j
Dilly Piiat
Classifieds
-ORE Portable KEN M ber 550 D\nelle
disb&9: cbn ~. Lge. thl b 0 U I e
d 0 ~eable roof $30. w/re•·-· 646·0000·
"Sold everything I
advertised In the
P ii ot."
SKI MART'S
4TH
AllllUAL
BINDINGS
1/3 OFF
FRIE Drawings
Each Day for SALE
·skis of Your Choice!
CLOTHING
30-SOo/oOFF
PARKA S REG .
Voll ........... 185.00
Butte . . . . . . . . . 85.00
Beconlto ....... 110.00
Fico ......... .
SALE
86.00
29.00
Head ......... 1 /3 OFF HCC .....•.•..
Kilex .•...•..•.
Obermyer ..... :
Valado ...••...
LOTS OF
KIDS CLOTHING
IUITI, PARKAI, PANTI
AUGUST
14, 15, 16
FP ............ 270.00
Stroto ......... 240.00
Haute Route .... 200.00
F5 ............ 275.00
ST5 ........... 230.00
54 ............ 250.00
S3 ............ 210.00
CM ........... 225.00
FM ........... 200.op
EM ........... 185.00
Prostege IV ..... 160.00
LACROI X
Moch 2 ........ 330.00
SPALDING
Squad ......... 295.00
Comp M ....... 250.00
Comp F ........ 250. 00
440 ........... 210.00
385 ........... 190.00 .
AUTHIER
Comp GS ...... 260.00
Comp SL· ....... 235.00
Torgo..S ........ 215.00
Surf .......... 195.00
Cosmos ........ 290.00
Corona·S .•.... 190.00
K2
810 FO ........ 275.00
710 FO ••...... 250.00
305 ........... 215.00
305 M ..•••.... 215.00
THEI KI
TRS ..........• 275.00
Block .• , ...... 275.00
Whit• ........• 275.00
SALE
248.00
230.00
215 .00
180.00
230.00
194.00
185.00
167.00
180.00
165.00
130.00
90.00 I
198.00
1 77.00
150 .00
1 so .oo
126.00
114.00
178.00
168.00
139.00
127.00
1 6 4 .00
106.00 .
186.00 '
186.00
139.00
139.00
176.00
171 .....
176.00
SALE
BOOTS
OVER 1 ,600 PAIRS
OF BOOTS ON SALE
30-7Q%OFF
CABER REG.
Equipe . . . . . . . 225.00
Formidable ..... 195.00
Expert. ........ 165.00
460 ........... 175.00
Grand Prix ..... 155.00
l. Equipe . . ... 195.00
Equipe Jr ....... 105.00
Munari ........ 140.00
SAN MARCO
AX-1 . . . . . . . . . 238.00
BX-1 .......... 188.00
LX-1 ......... 188.00
LX-2 .......... 158.00
AX-2 . . . • . . . . . 208.00
BX·2 .......... 168.00
SALOMON
sx.90 ......... 235.00
SX -90 Equipe ... 265.00
HANSON
Citation ....... 225.00
Shadow ....... 150.00
Vivo .'. . . . . . 150.00
Classic ........ 160.00
Stilletto. . . .... 255.00
SCOTT
Superlight ...... 190.00
Super-Pro ...... 205.00
Super-Hot ...... 235.00
GARAMOUNT
Total .......... 275.00
Olimpic ....... 250.00
Garo "H" ...... 225.00
G.T ........... 185.00
Allralight ...... 175.00
Mognum ....... 130.00
Arpege ........ 130.00
Diamond ...... 200.00
Lady Comp 15 .. 130.00
NORDIC A
Novo 79 ....... 140.00
Brezzels ....... 160.00
Zepher ...•••.. 180.00
Force II ........ 160.00
Loser ...... ., ... 160.00
Gemini ........ 100.00
Cosmos •.•••... 130.00
LANGI
XLR •••••...... 260.00
HllRUNG
SALE
145.00
127.00
105.00
116.00
11 3 .00
121.og
95.00
94.00
152.00
122.00
1 22.00
104.00
134.00
110.00
200.00
220.00
122.00
85.00
86.00
90.00
1 37.00
10 5.00
112.00
127 .00
1 75.00
160.00
146.00
121.00
97.00
76.00
76.00
110.00
79.00
84.00
108.00
118.00
10.00
108.00
80.00
7&.00
230.00
I I
'. j
-
ale model sues LaW school oaths OK~d i 1
an says 'Playboy' ad damaging Bar association to allow religious bias in admissions I .J
PITl'SFIELD, M111. (AP) -
A cablnet Installer wbote pie·
lure appeared In an advertlse·
meat for Playboy Ma1a1lne over
the caption ''The Playboy
Reader -his lust Is for life"
wants ~.ooo in damaaes from
e ma1azlne. ~
The jud1e who heard the
lawsuit said he will Issue a de·
etalon in about a week.
The picture, which appeared -4urtng a 1977 promotional cam·
'9alen in The New York Times
and airport and train station
-posters, shows mustachioed
1'bomu Mazzeo on water skls.
'llazzeo said the picture was
~ed without his permlsslon. .
" "It made me sound dirty. It
lllade me sound like a sex
liend," testified Maueo, 40, of
· Bicycle Safety
Safety seminar hourty
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Aslc For Ray,
tWE Sr£CIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
C:O.-ol ~ -°'*' s .. NEWPORT BE~CH
cars*bikes··
*skateboards*
trucks*baby
carriages*tea
carts•trikes
rol lerskates •
walker~· toys •wagons••••
scooters• hot
rods*coupes*
trailers*hard
tops*convert·
ibles•motor
homes*lawn
mowers* Ii mos
*corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
*typi ngtables
wheelbarrd'ws •
r ecreational
vehicles*golf
carts* model
trains*blkes
*pianos*cars
ref rlgerators
*skates••••••
If it's got .
wheels,
you'll move
It faster in a
Dally Plf ol .
classified
ab. Calf ~2-5678 and a
friendly a~
vlserwill
help you
turn your whletsinto
cash.
Plttafteld, a father of four who
1ln11 ln his church choir.
Mu1eo aald durln& the two·
day, non-jury trial before
Berk.shire Superior Court Judie
William Simons that the ad·
vertlsement falsely identified
him as a Playboy reader and
damaged his reputation and
business.
•'I don't think housewives
want cabinetmakers wltJl a
playboy's luat for life ln their
kitchens," he said.
Playboy attorney Stephen
Olesky contended that Mazzeo
s uffered ''•no meas urable
damage other than the loss of
pay .the agency would normaJly
make lo an amateur model" and
s uggested the judge award
M aueo "the $200 to S250 we pay
for amateur models."
PLUMS
LBS.$ 00
FOR
HAS SUGGESTION
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese III told the American
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian jails. He s poke in
New Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS (AP> -The
American Bar Association bu
amended its st andard of ac-
creditation by lettin1 church·
supported law schools dis·
crimlnate on the basis of re·
llglon.
The controversial amendment
appeared to fail Wednesday on a
voice vote. but on a standing
vote at the ABA House of
Deleaates, counted by tellers, ll
passed 147·1.27.
The House then granted ac·
creditation for Oral Roberts
University's 0 . W. Coburn
School of Law in Tulsa, Okla.,
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de·
nied approval because it re·
quired students to swear an oath
of religious belief, pledging lo
follow the example of Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
must aupport and exemplify the
code, and hlrln1 lncludet tests of
religlous ~lief.
Accreditation ia a serloua mat·
ter since graduates of law
schools which do not have ABA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer in most stales.
The university sued the ABA
in U.S. District Court. The judge
Issued an injunction forbidding
lhe ABA lo deny provisional ac·
credltation until after the House
of Delegates decides the lsaue.
At a meeting last month, the
A BA accreditation committee
found the law school lo be in
"substantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis·
crimination on tbe ground of
race, color, religion, national
origin or sex.
A new standard waa drawn by
an ABA committee which
waters down the old anti·
discrimination clause by add· i ~
Ing:
"Nothing herein shall be con·
strued to prevent a law school
from having a reUgious affilia·
lion and purpose and adopting
policies of admission and
employment that directly relate ' ~f
to such affiliation and purpose , ..
so long as notice of such policies 1 ,.
has been provided to applicants, I :• s tudents, f acu l ty and ,.
employees." ., 1
Dean Gordon Schaber of the '•'
•I
McGeorge School of Law of the '
University of the Pacific,
chairman of the committee, said
the exception was based on the • 1
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom. ' (,
· .. 1:
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
..
·~
I ••1
I it
5th MONTH
AlllllVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
CALIFORNIA RANCH MKT.
Wl CAllY A W1DE
SELECTION OF TIOPICAl FRUIT
Jumbo Hau llllllS PllEIPPLE
PIPIYI LIMES
lll&OES COCOIUT
SPECIAL TY ITEMS
STUWIEHIES SHARLYN MELONS
FOR BLUEIElllES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ I ORGAlllC ~
APPLE ~
JUICE 111.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
ORAllGE HOk•iY
WE IRE IOW FEA fURlll
FUURO'S FllE
FRESH FRUIT JUICES
.
' 'I ' I t,
I
I !,
I .
CWIY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PERSIAN MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON iff DEISTllE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 OO DELI
MEATY BEEF
BACK RIBS JUICY
CHUCK STEAK (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like)
SILVER TROUED
WllOLE SALIOI GROUND BEEF
PATTIES
6 to 9 lb. overage
s2~b~
llEllHBOR'S
Stop by o~ w-Tldoy & $otvrday
fot o tolt• of some of 01.•• Un•
California Ranch Market Prwucts.
-l.0iiiER$
0w,...~-i..t1w1 .,...., ......... » .....
~ .... _ . ._......,._
,...... ... u. ... ,..,, ....
(Not to exceed 22% fat content)
I
99
CREAMY FRESH
POTATO
SALAD 99!
John $169 Morrell
BUUISWEllER lb.
California Ranch Marltet $249 Specially Prtpartd
BAKED HAM 1b.
Fresh Baked
I
' . . ~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT1Thurad1y, Auguat 13, 1981 ..
College district hit
by state funding cut
Coas t Community Colle ge
District officials were caught by
surprise a few months ago when
they learned the district would be
rece iving s ubs tantially less
money from the state than had
been anticipated .
The distric t . which includes
Orange Coast . Golden West and
Coastline colleges. had just a fe w
weeks to trim $3.5 million out or
ats budget.
Such m assive cutbacks could
not be made painlessly
The district was forced to lay
o ff so m e c lass ified <.non-
teaching I employees in clerical
and maintenance positions. '
Many other jobs created by
t esignations and retireme nts
we re left unfilled.
District students this fall will
find mate rials fees charged in
more courses. At Orange Coast
College. t·h e m a ny community
service lectures. formerly free.
wilt require u charge. At Golden
West College, the library and
tutorin g center wlll be op~n
rewcr houri.
Buildings will be cleaned less
frequently, and major main
t e nance and construction proj-
~cts will be postponed .
Despite these cutbacks in
support services. the course of·
f erings at the three colleges will
re main virtually unchan~ed.
It is unknown how long the
colleges can cut back on main·
t e na nce before the ir facilities
begin to deteriorate seriously.
For the moment, however, it
is comforting to see that the col·
lege district was able to keep
most of its cuts a way from the
classroom. District officials cor·
rectly decided that maintaining
the quality or education at the
three colleges must be the top
priority.
Business can help
In adopting a no-frills budget
for the coming year. the Foun-
tain Valley City Council denie d
funding to two social service or·
ganizat a on~ a nd to the city's
qua rter!) news letter.
Anticipating a deficit as high
as Sl million at one point. the
council was forced to esta blish
s pe nding prior ities in order to
balance th<.• budget.
As som e council me mbers
have puinted out. the fact that the
o rganizations and the ne wslette r
we re Rot funded does not mean
they ore without value .
One of the orga nizations de·
nie d fund ing was YS P . Inc .
whic h counse ls young law·
bre akers a nd child a buse victims
and oversees a restitution pro-
g ram for vo ung offe nde rs
The othe r o rg anization. TLC
Feedback Founda tion. de livers
m eals to <.>lderly residents who
c annot prepare them.
The newsletter has informed
residents about new 1aws and
a bout local recreation programs.
Because the city has little
money to spare. Mayor Be n
Nielsen haS-approached sever a l
local corporations for help.
According to the mayor . ITT
Cannon has offered paper and
printing aid for the city newsle t
ter . Other firms are being con
tacted for s imila r assistance so
that publication of the newsletter
can be continued without cost to
the city.
Nielsen suggested that other
local companies may be able to
s ponsor the social service pro-
grams.
This is a comme ndable a p-
proach. Local corporations cer-
tainly have a stake in the quality
of life in Fountain Valley. These
companies could e nhance their
images as good ne ighbors while
helping some worthy proj ects to
continue
Boaters' needs cited
Mu<:h of the concern over
plans to de velop the Bolsa Chica
marshlands has been expressed
by residents of the city of Hunt-
ington Beach. whic h surrounds
the county ter r itory .
But Ne wp o rt B e ach
ya c htsm a n a nd arc h·itect Bill
Fic ke r recently made the in·
teresting point that his city also
has a major s take in the possible
d evelopme nt of the Bolsa Chica.
Ficke r obser ves that deve lop-
ment of a public marina at Bolsa
Chica. as inc luded in the plan ap-
proved by the Orange County
Boa rd of Supe rvisors. could r e·
lieve so m e of the cong es tion
along Newport's ocean front.
Even the development o f a
Dana Point marina has not re ·
duced the crowds swarming to
Newport Beach for its boating.
fi s hing a nd s wimming op -
portunities. Ficke r contends. And
the county's population is contin·
uing to grow
In recent years . Bolsa Chica •
has shaped up as a b a ttle
between environmentalists. who
wish to preserve the wetlands.
and the lando wne r , Si g n a l
Landmark Company, whic h
wa nts to build homes on much of
the Bolsa Chica.
But ft'icker makes the valid
point that a third s ide to this dis ·
cussion exists -the county's
pressing need for more public
recreation facilities along the
coas t , especially for bo aters.
! The waiting lis ts for doc king
space are lengthy.)
ln late September, county
s upervisors will revie w the ir
Bolsa Chica plan as part of a
larger Local Coastal Program. It
then will be pres ented to the
California Coastal Commission.
During the remaining revie w
hearings, tbe viewpoh'll of county
recreation enthusiasts should re·
ceive c!onsideration along with
·the more I amiliar opinions of en·
vironmentallsts a nd the land-
owner.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on tnis paoe are thOse of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit·
ed.-Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Me~, CA 92626. Phone (714) 6~2-4321
L.M. Boyd/Churchill's memory
The me mory of Winston Churc.hiU
must have been somethlne special. I
can't believe that he could recite aU
of "The Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire.'' a s has been
claimed. It's known, though, that be
could deliver every line in at least a
couple of Shakespeare's plays .
During just the firs t week of this
year, the United States used more
i.-oline than all or its armed forces
used lhl::Pughout World War II. An
utonl8hfl\g statistic, what?
Credit Mark Russell with that rit\8·
lftl cry: "Sic Sell)per Adidas."
lltanln1 "We'll nner run OQt of
ntakers."
If you are 30 yeara old, 1ou were
born the aame year the 22nd Amend·
ment to the Constitution Umtt.ed U.S.
president.a to two terma, the year
Johnnie Ray popularised walling
ballads such a "Cry," and the same
year Lucllle Ball first went on
television with her "I Love Lucy"
shows.
Q. Wbat was tbe first country alter
the Aivrican Revolution lo rec·
ogniie !be Unlted States as an ln·
dependent nation in Ila own ri1htf
A. Morocco. In 1789.
Veneiuela's government bu a
Mlnlstry for the Development of In·
telligence.
'M>e andel1\ Roman poet o.td llad
tbl1 to u,y about bald.nesa: "Ulb' II a
fte)d wltbout srua, a plant 1'ilhout leavet, or a head wltbout bai.r."
FDR memorial panel endures
WASHINGTON -For more years
than th ey like to remember .
Re put>lic ans g round their tee th in
frust ratio n ove r F r anklin Delano
Roosevelt. who rode roughshod. with Ir·
ritating good humor. over the GOP.
Now, or course. the shoe is on the
other foot. Ronald Reagan. an erstwhile
New Dealer. is tromping the remnant.I
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North. South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress. Reagan stages
the modern equiva lent of FDR's radio
"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people. His delivery 1s every ~it as
persuasi\P"e as FDR's and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS it's not surpris ing that
one, of the hoariest boondoggles to s ur
vive t he onsl a u g h t of Presid ent
Reagan's budget cutters is the FDR
Memorial Commission. For more than
a quarter of a century. the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers'
money in a bootless attempt to achieve
a suitable memorial to the only presi·
de nt who ever was -and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 19SS. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac-
complishing anything in the years to
come In fact, its whole reason for ex·
1stence was obliter ated years ago, when
private donors erected a modes t
m e morial to FDR in dowtitown
Washington -a marble block on Penn-
sylvania Avenue outside the Archives
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two mem~rs of Congress.
Reps Dan Glickman. D-Kan., and Bill
DlUllle meyer, R·Calif.. recently tried lo
G.
-Ja-c1-11-1-111_1_1 ---~~
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FOR commission, they
we r e astoni s hed to learn that
Roosevelt's ghost still carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The feckless bipartisan duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR commission was a waste
of money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had bee n
s pent in the 26 years or the com·
mission's e xistence with literally
nothing to show for it. Another several
hundred thous and dollars has been
s pent on various projects.
Glickman. who was in three-cornered
pants when FDR died. even brandished
a photograph of the existing FDR
memorial on lhe floor of the House. and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
b esid e the m o num e nt : "If any
m emorial is erected to me ... I should
like it lo consist or a block of stone
about the size of this (Oval Office) desk.
and placed in the center of that green
plot in front of the Archi ves Building."
It was all to no avail. The Glickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated. 201·216. The vote had an
eerie touch to it The House's electronic
voting system broke down for the first
ti m e in three years. prompting one
m em ber to whisper to Glickman. "Tht
ghpst of FDR has returned."
What astonished Gli ckman was not
just the econom y -minded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission's
$30,000 budget intact like Reps. Jack
Kemp. R-N.Y. and Jim Jones. D-Okla.
but the way some or his fellow
Democrats c hided him as a traitor to
has party who was "playing into the
ha nds of the Republicans."
THE HOUSE SHOWDOWN over the
FDR memor ial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission . The a utho r . Lucette
Lagnado. called it "a classic example
or the truism that a government agen·
cy, once created , never dies: it just
keeps on growing ...
Footnote: Congressional supporters of
the FDR Memor ial Commission ob-
ser ve that building a monument to FDR
would be one wa} to assure the end of
the FDR commission
Be sure you don't get sick at night l '
To the Erutor :
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedics may come
for price.'' Some cities, this article stat·
• ed. such as Fountain Valley are con·
sidering charging for the paramedics
s ervi c e s . As we all know , the
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless lives . They can't be com·
·m ended too highly.
But what astounded me is the quoted
a mbulance transportation rates to the
hospital $100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich. it can be a lot to those
who are just making their pay checks
m eet. I reckon those deciding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
medical e mergency and can't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high ambulance
rates, £ called the billing office of one
ambulance company asking if the rates
were really $100. The lady explained
that. they charge $75 base rate plu.s U ._ ,
mite. Also, rates are increued U it la a
night call. CBe s ure and don't get sick at
night.) And when emergency red lightl
and s iren are used, the patient, is
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high to start with. The burcSen
stiJJ falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover the am·
bulance fee.
As S,natoc Edward Kennedy said -
and I Wholeheartedly agree -we are
the only country in the world in wbicb
we are punished ror being sick.
Naturally the paramedics and am·
bulance services can't exist on nothlna.
The solution, if any, is dlfflcult to come
up with. Socialized medlclne may seem
like an ideal solution but ln those c°'8\·
tries with 1ocia1lsed medicine, the
quality of "*"cal care declln• .. tbe
person geta older, and la alma.t non·
existent for the elderly.
So lf there is a medical emerataey
with my household, I'll call the loeal
lrieodly ct\jropractor.
J .R. SASSO
Ma~ulation
To the Editor:
An art.lcle about the ln1ne c:out..,.
tber~ will be homet IO HJ*lllW that l1
is termed the ''abelk cout0 and the Jritae Cocnpany wUI bave to advtr11M
nat,ionallJ and intematJanall.y to ft8d
buyen.
Welt Utert ,_. ta.. aid u...-Uttlt iD ....., .......... ,. , ... pWtb
are because it is needed so our children
will have a place to live. I've often won-
dered what's left for the individual in
this modern world. They've been
manipulated by the advertis ·
in~/marketiog world into bow they
thank about everything. There'• a prop·
aganda s tatement to prove every
point, but there 's one I will never
believe again.
I 've long suspected that the Irvine
Company and other large, out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -and I might add, I don't ap·
preciate that kind of propaganda and
manipulation.
DONALD K. SPENCER
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Rat control
To the Editor: Tom Murphlne's July 30 Just Coasting
cotu~ The Orange County cOetrol de·
partment provides a very good booklet
describing the habits of rats and the
steps the homeowners can take to pre·
vent and control them. An inspector will
visit on request, bail your property and
point out problem areas which are at·
traet.lv• to rat.I: Rat coo\l'OI can only be
•ccomplisbed b7 neiglabor1 w~rking
together to keep the P*'OS)erties clean
and free from over1rown trees and
plants. lt's not eomething for'"someone
else" to do.
WINDY sfEVENSON
Not 'trailers'
To the Editor:
In regarda to the term "trailer £arir,"
I would like to clarify a po nt. A
"trailer" is a recreatioaal vehicle,
lowed by a car or U,ht tn.ack.
A "mobll• home" ls, and ahouJd be
called, a manufactured boUllni unJt, a
dweUln,,. S~cb dweUln11 are only
"mobile· ttom the factory to the 1lte.
All ma.oulactured boualn1 unit.a •old
•Ince July of 1980 are clu~Uled a1 real
property. An umsed value Is placed
• l.etttn from ,...,.. arr ~lcomt Tht
rtfhl ro ~tt wrcc'• to ftt IPJC«' or
rltlflltlGff ltMl t8 ..,.,,vtd tAttnt o/ 100
uteonb or ltu wtU k ,.~ prt/ntnct All
lttltr• m1_,t 1r1el..U ~ti.rt a1ld 1na1hng
addrtu but riamr• ma~ ~ wcthhdd on rr qa.ut 1/ 11Jf1~1tnr rta1on 18 opportftt
Pt>tl'l/ M~ll riot M • .Pf'blfthtd Ltrttrs may ~
r rl rpllotwd '" 6d fOl8 ,\a mt and ""°"' "'""&«of llw t'OftlribMl01 m1&11 bl 8'""' for
' fnfiCattt"' JJMrpolr.
on said dwelling and placed on t1'f
property lax rolls in the same manneJ
as sate built homes.
THEREFORE, it behooves all of us~
stop calling manufactured housing com-
munities trailer parks. courts. tin boi·
es, etc., etc. which downgrades peop~
lo second class citizens, or "living OJI
the wrong side of the tracks" image. ;.
If you h ave n e ver been to the
Manufactured Housing show at Dodg•
Stadium, you are in for a very pleasaD),
s urprise. The homes are luxurious ariO
an no way should be slandered by caU-
ing them "trailers .. :
FRANK H. BRADLEY
Crucial vote
To the Editor. ••
Newport Beach City Council mem:
bers are about to vote on Newport
Center. They are all good people. Th~
have been propagandized by the noi
growthers and the build-everything-yo~
canners. :!
I hope that the day before the vo!
they each can ride through Newpo
Beach, then quietly sit in deep couns
with themselves. Then I hope they have
guts enough to vote their deep feelings
about our and their city. :
FRANKLIN S. GOOD
~ Cartoon misinformed
. To the Editor: ~ ~
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on Mr1.
Reagan paying $75,000 for a Steu~
bowl, the previous week TV oe•1
explained the bowl was worth $'75,~.
however Mrs. Reagan purchased it fdt
$8,000. (.
As the cartoon is a aross case fl
mi1inlorm1tion I suggest the sa111e
space be given to correctine the error. ~
The fact is, if your paper bad bee~
its toes tbe cartoon should have
canceled.
L . KEPPLEf
lllll YIB
It'• nice that President Rea11n c
declare the controllert' 1trike over
10 oil on vacalloo and leav. tbe rest
u.s lo flt.ht the me11. • DISGUST
~---......... __, ...... __
........., ........ ,,.... ....... ,I ..... ,_ ....... ......, ... o.lt'(f'llef..
..
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...
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D1llyPllll
THURSDAY,
AUG. 13, 1911
lllTlllTll IEll:H/flllTlll lllllY
BUSINESS
STOCKS
BS
87
Wreck not that
of 2 Mesq men
By STEVE MARBLE o1 • ...., .........
The crumpled ruselage or an
airplane in a remote area or the
Sierra Nevada ls not the light
plane carryln1 two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months
ago.
Authorities rrom Fresno Coun-
ty. who spotted the wreckage
last month, at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted orr
rrom the Mam moth Lakes
airport last March bound for
nearby Bishop.
The plane, whic h never
reached Bishop, is believed to•
have crashed in the mountains.
Thal plane was piloted by 2S-
Huntington
housing
panel set
A joint committee made up of
real estate representatives and
Huntington Beach residents has
been formed by Mavor Ruth Finley to study housing prob·
le ms in the city.
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley Board of Realtors presi·
dent James Logan chose
chairman Eugene Kadow, Larry
Schley, Shirley Miller and Harry
Polgar to sit on the committee.
Mrs. Finley appointed Neal
West, Beverly Kenefick, Karen
Kallay and Andy Barber.
"Because of the cost of land
I'm not sure whether we can do
anything too meaningful in the
way of affordable housing," said
Mrs. Finley. "If the committee
can come up with usaf>fe ways
01 rmancing nous1ng 1n ttunt·
ington Beach it would be a good
thing," she added.
The local committee is an out-
growth of a similar statewide
committee and will hold its first
meeting Aug. 27 at 3 p.m. in the
Board of Realtors office, 8101
Slater Avenue.
500 compete
in lifeguard
• • competition
~ore than 600 lifeguards from
as far away as Australia,
Florida and New York began
competition today in the 1981
U.S . Lifesaving Association
Championships at Salt Creek
Beach in Laguna Niguel.
Competition will resume Fri-
day at noon and culminate with
an awards ceremony at 7 p.m.
year-old Robert Reed and was
carrying 26-year-old Michael
Thompson, the son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken
Thompson.
Sgt. Ken Abell, a member or
the Fresno Sheriffs Search and
Rescue Team. said be was able
lo make out an identification
number o n \h e wreckage
Wednesday after developing a
set of aerial photographs.
He said the number does not
match that of the Cessna 210
that has been sought.
Because of this discovery,
A bell said , authorities have
called off a search of the moun-
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into the area near
Convict Lake to scrutinize the
wreckage.
Abell said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting it. He
said the call l etters on the
wreckage were checked against
a federal registry which indicat·
ed the crash was more than five
years old.
He said his department does
not investigate air crashes that
old.
Abell, who said he stripped
down a helicopter so it would be
Light enough to make a pass over
the wreckage to take the photo·
gr aphs, said he 's prowled the
mountains to see if he couJd spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane car rying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he saw nothing during
several passes.
"We have nothing else to look
for," he said. "We have nowhere
else to go unless someone comes
up with a clue ."
Bus driver
training set
at O cean View
The Ocean Vi ew School Dis-
trict in Huntington Beach is of-
fering bus driver training that
will include class room a nd
behind-lhe-wheel instruction.
Participants will receive $3.75
per hour for 40 hours of training.
Those who complete the course
successfvlly will be placed on a
substitute drivers list, eligible to
earn $6.172 per hour.
To qualify for the course.
participants must pass a
physical exam and learn to
drive a school bus and other
equipment safely and to main·
lain discipline aboard the bus.
Application deadline for the
program is Monday. More in·
formation may be obtained by
calling the district's personnel
office, 847-2551.
RAISES HER SIGHTS
Betty Mignanellr
FV trustee
may try
for council
Betty Mi gnanelli, president of
the Fountain Valley School Dis·
lrict Board of Trustees for the
past two years , has decided not
lo seek a second school board
ter m.
Instead, she plans to run next
s pring for a City Council seat.
Although two weeks remain
before the school hoard election
filing deadline , Mrs. ~ignanelli
said she was annou:1cing her de-
cis ion early. hoping to spur
other residents to run for a
school post.
Mrs. Mignanelli was elected to
the Fountain Valley board in
March, 1977, the top vole getter
in a field of seven.
The Fountain Valley Chamber
o f Co mmerce voted her
"Outstanding Citizen of the
Year" for 1979.
"I have received a wave of
calls from people in the com-
munity encouraging me to seek
election to the Fountain Valley
Cit y Council in April," Mrs .
Mignanelli s aid in a prepared
statement.
"After giving this a great deaf
of consideration and le/lgthf dis·
cussion with. m y family and
friends, I have decided to accept
this challenge.•'
Three Founta in Valley school
board positions must be filJed in
th e Nov. 3 election. Trustee
Sheila Meyers also has decided
not to seek re-election. Trustee
Roger Belgen, whose term also
expires this year. is undedded.
According to the Orange Coun-
ty Registrar of Voters office, on-
ly one person. William Manes.
had taken out papers for a Foun·
lain Valley School Board seal as
of this morning.
Sylvia Porter says
take advantage of
'tax sweeteners' ... B7
0
a
Puttin"g panels to rest?
Nestande hoping to simplify county government
By FREDERIC& SCHOEMEBL o1 .. 111M¥ ..... ....,
The Confidentiality and
Privacy Control Board has not
met in five years, yet It is still
alive and well according to the
files of Orange County govern·
ment.
The management and plan-
ning team for the former Starr
Ranch <now Caspers Regional
Wilderness Park, located east of
San Juan Capistrano) and a
committee formed to study the
Se rr ano Com munit y
Park/Recreationlfl Historical
Complex apparenUy have never
met since being formed in 1975.
That the committees stilJ exist
on paper at least -is upset·
ting to county Supervisor Bruce
Nestande. Wednesday he pro·
posed a new set or guidelines to
control the formation of boards
and committees and monitor
their work.
In a three-page letter to fellow
supervisors, Nestande proposed:
Imposition of a "sunset
rule" that would permit the an-
nual dissolution of any commit-
tee, unless supervisors took ac·
Uon to keep the panel function-
ing.
A require m ent that the
board review annually the work
of all boards and committees .
N estande conceded that the
value of such annual reports
may be questionable.
Annual a pproval by the
board or allocations to each
committee.
"These changes, I believe,
would simplify the adminislra·
tion of boards, commissions and
committees and eh:e the board
of supervisors the effective con·
trol mechanism it has been seek-
ing over the past several years,"
N estande .Jaid.
Nestande said that more than
100 county boards and commit·
tees exist.
"This somewhat chaotic situa·
t1o n has created a record·
keeping nightmare for those
charged with keeping an ac·
curate list of active panels, not
to mention their changing mem·
berships."
An October 1980, study
s howed that stipends paid to
various comm ittee membe rs
totaled $127 ,145 annually.
That figure was lower than the
$138,000 spent on sOpends in
1978, Nestande pointed out. (In
1978, the equivalent of $508,000 in
county staff time was used by
the committees; no such figure
was contained in the 198> re-
port. I
The supervisor said past ef·
forts by the board to control the
proliferation or committees has
failed.
Nestande's suggestions wilJ be
considered by the board Tues-
da y.
BB cops seek driver-rapist
Huntington Beach police are
searching for a man who al-
legedly stopped a young woman
motorist by indicating she had
car trouble, then forced his way
into her vehicle, drove her a
short distance, and raped her.
Police said the victim, from .
4-car crash
cuts powe r to
Niguel area
More than 2,000 Laguna
Niguel residents were without
'\!lectricity early today when a
four-car pileup downed power
lines near the intersection or
Niguel Road and Crown Valley
Parkway. according to Maurice
Luque, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric.
Luque said the accident OC·
curred at about 1 a.m . He said
repair crews were sent to the
scene after the utility received a
telephone call from the Highway
Patrol.
Luque said haJf or the 2,363
electric customers had their
power restored by 2:45 a.m.
Work was continuing at 8:30
a.m. to complete the repairs, he
said.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Sheriff's Department
said Highway Patrol officers
had both the northbound and
southbound lanes o f Crown
Valley Parkway closed to traffic
al 9 a.m. today while repairs
continued.
Costa Mesa, was driving north
on Brookhurst Street from
Pacific Coast Hi ghway at 4 a.m .
Tuesday wpen the incident OC·
curred.
The assailant, driving another
car, told the woman there was
fluid <lrlpping from her auto and
that it needed repair. police
s aid.
1 The assault look place near
the Orange County Sanitation
Plant on Brookhurst. Police said
they are lookirtg for a white
man, age 24 , with medium·
length reddish brown hair, an
acne complexion, wearing thick
tinted eyeglasses and driving
what appeared to be a silver or
light-colored Plymouth Arrow.
At 2:30 p.m. Friday, represen·
tatives of lifeguard teams en-
tered in this year 's competition
will lake part in the grueling
iron man event, which includes
rowing, sWimming and running.
Rhino breaks out of &ifari compound
Al 6:30 p.m. Friday lifeguard
teams will take part in the
Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek relay.
a n event whic h pits team
against team in dories and
swimming. ,
There will be 11 events held on
both days of the competition.
The U.S. Livesaving Association
sanctioned championships al
Salt Creek have been held at the
Laguna Niguel beach for the
past three years.
lt°s rhinoceros mating season
at Lion Country Safari in Irvine
and one of the horned beasts got
so carried away that he busted
through a containment gate this
morning at the wild animal com-
pound, said park s pokesman
Virginia Brauer.
The thick-s kinned animal
sauntered over to a field just
north of Lion Country Safari at
L 15 a.m., she said, adding that
park rangers were able to quick·
ly lead the rhino back to the
compound. ·
This morning's incident is
al most identical to an escape bid
made by a rhino last month, she
said.
In both cases the strong,
heavyweight beasts we re able to
knock down a gate at a tem·
porary holding ar ea for the
rhinos she said.
The rhinos were moved from
their old pen to the holding area
early this summer because the
pen was too near an open-air
amphitheater that Is being con-
structed at Lion Country Safari.
All of the rhinoceroses will be
moved lo a permanent, heavy.
duty pen as soon as construction
is finished on it in a few days,
Ms. Brauer said.
Park officials have said that
precautions have been taken to
insure that no wild animals will
get near any of the fans who will
attend the 10,()()().spectator am-
phitheater when it opens for business on Aug . 21.
o.ityPMle ..........
AT IT AGAIN Irani an immigrant Ali Rous ha n works in his
Costa Mesa met al shop's parking lot on his fourth sculpture.
"To!""ado." while awaiting results of lawsuits regarding ci ·
ly rights, to regulate erection of his three previous big red
structures and Roushan·s constitutional rights to freedom of
expression. Roushan says he'll erect his latest 70.foot wo rk
in about a month. topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands.
Mesa author finds being single can be profitable
Popular best-selling book claims living alone likeable experience
By JOEL C. DON Of .. ....., ........
Lynn Shahan was beaming.
Her ftrst book had been out only a month
and it was already No. 4 on nme maead.ne'1
best seller list and heralded lo full.pa1e
newspaper ads.
And all she did was alt down at the
typewriter to put together a practical guide on
her lifestyle: being single.
"Living Alone and Lildnl It" coven the
Cost~ Mesa woman'• thoughts on leaminl to de·
pend on oneself: to eat, play and amuae yourself '
without that overwhelmin1 need for another
warm body.
"It's a lifestyle that in effect ba1 come lnto
ita own when you talk about 25 percent of the
population belnt 1inele," said the at-year-old
Ms. Shahan. "ll'a an acceptabJe llf•lyle. Ten
yean aao it wasn't."
She aaid at one Ume ]>eOple believed "then
was tomethlnl 1tran1e about. \be person wbo
wasn't marrW and h.ad tbJ-.. cblldreo by the
tlmebewMa."
Ma. Shalta learned how to II\'• alone the
bard way. She ftotlauea&41d llnCle but and wu
qulckly tumed off &1 wbat • aaw M • Ma ot
unhappinell. She 1ulfend ......_,·kmelia111,
dep1 e11km and UM ,....._ .... ; .... __, •·
perience as they approach middle age and find
they have no one special to come home to every
nhtht.
. Instead or landin1 a quick husband or live-
in boyfriend aa a solution, she learned bow to be
by hetself and enjoy it.
Armed with her experience u a Garden
Grove high school counselor and encountera
with singles work1hops and the like, 1he decided
to help others overcome·the fear of belnl alone.
"At 30 Prince Charmin• didn't cotoe
along," she said. "I woke up and reallied that
that might n ever happen. It wa1 a very
traumatic realisation.
"I .. w a need. I kQew ltl felt the way I felt,
othen were like that too."
Tboqh 1he'1 ne\'er been married, 111.
Sbabu 1ald the book II 1ener.Uy intended for
widowed and dJvorced penona u opposed to teeD·-.ers on tb~r lint tlme out trom home.
ReHarcb for the boot iDc:luded atleadanee
•t Mtnfnars where •be found dlYOlftd people
lost IDd abudoned lD thelr MW·foad Ille u
•1n ..... ID edd.lUon to p?OYtdlQI a pradlcal Uvtq
IWde on money maaa-::!I ..., for one
ud other boulehold ud 1kllll, .... allo
dedcled to taclll:N "' ....aoaaJ lllatl tUt pl~··~·~~ .......... Ifie laal •&,,.q ... ber JMR U a
I
single person, Ms. Shahan said, 'Tm not sour
on marriage al all. A lot of people have asked ll
In writing the book I'm advoc•tine living alone
as a lllestyle. There's no question that Uvlng
with someone is better. If the riCbt rel•tiooahip
came along, I'd get married tomorrow.
"But I've seen so many people ln bad rela·
tlonshlps who are afraid to leave becaus~
they're afraid of living alone."
Her living alone prescriptlon ii simple, lf
not just plain common sense. If you're 11n1le,
you're obli&ated to make a 1ood life for
yourself.
"Many people rush off to search for the next
warm body. They don't have a 1ood time for
t hemselves. Al a result or that they don't know
themselves and they get into a poor rel•·
tlonshlp."
Ill. Shaban l1n't a member of any 1in1la
eroup or other social boy-meetl·llrl or1anila-
Uon1. But 1he'1 all for them. • ·
"The only time I feel alone ta when I want
to bie," lbe said. "But for many people be!q .
alone ii a very ltan feeUn1. It'• an experience
tbat many people feel they don't have the
capacity or rwource1 to deal with." ,
Siie owes UM quick 1ucce11 ol her book, la
part. '° tbe pubDl•r, tbe Loi Anaeltt·baHd Stiettord Preu, owned by Robert J. Rlnier .
J
I
I
.. Orange Co11t DAILY PILOTt1'hur1day, Auguat 13, 1981
Porkers show jogging
aids diseased hearts
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Pit• run.nine
on a treadmill appear to prove Joi·
•ln1 11 tood tor humant, at least
those with some deeree ol heart dll·
ease, say University or California re·
searchers.
Aller five montbl of atudylnl the
Yucatan minlswln e, with
cardiovascular systems similar to
humans', a spokesman said Wednes·
day the findings reverse a pre·
limlnary conclusion reached three
years ago.
The coronary arteries ln the pi1s in
the new experiments, in contrast to
those used in 1978, were partly closed
surllcally. Their so-called collateral
blood vessels with exercise 1rew to S
or 10 times normal size, boosting
blood now four to six times.
The improved circulation saved 40
percent or the h eart tissue
jeopardized by the clogged arteries
while in 10 other pigs kept off the
motorized treadmill "oµly about 17
percent of the jeopardized tissue"
was salvaged, Dr. Colin Bloor said.
a UC pathology professor
'wh ted the research, is presi-
de San Diego County chapter
of the American Heart Association.
Bloor said the jogging pigs were
exerclaed atrenuou1ly ror fl ve
months after their arteries were re-
duced SO to 70 perc"'t of normal alze.
Two of the pl11 died of heart attack•
durlna the 1ruelina runs luting up to
several hours.
Bloor, In an Interview, warned that
persons with heart condJti001 should
Their blood
vessels with ex-
ercise grew to , 5 or
10 times normal . size.
consult physicians, however, before
starting strenuous exercise.
By the time the study ended, he
said, the pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per-
cent of maximum.
. The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate, Bloor
said. While exercising, the pigs'
heart rates went up to 220 beats a
minute.
...........
CHIEF -Dr. Paul M.
J ohnson of Irvine has
been elected pres i·
dent of the Orange
County Dental Socie-
t y, a 1,300-member
non-profit organiza-
tion.
Channel
le vee
rise due
The Orange County
Board of Supervisors
has approved a $3.5
million project to raise
the height of levees
along the San Juan
Creek channel to pre-
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach.
The construction proj-
ect, which has been ap-
proved by the Stale
Coastal Commission,
will raise the levees
from two to six feel by
1983 along a three-mile
stretch from the mouth
or the creek to where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmen-
tal Management Agency
officials have been
plagued with siltation
problems in the creek
bed for several years,
and have been prevent-
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission has
refused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it removes to offset
the dredging costs, mak-
ing such a project too
expensive, officials say.
A Yucatan miniswine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
San Diego. where scientists say study shows humans .can prevent heart attacks
by jogging. especially if they already have coronary disease.
County officials say
raising the levees and
allowing the creek chan-
nel to rise to its natyral
level will eliminate the
need for dredging, ad-
ding nature can then
take its course .
Construction is expected
to begin in the fall.
Countian perishes Party s et
in Irvine Heat f atal after woman loses di r ection
BAKER, Calif. (AP) -A 75-year-
old woman who missed a 'freeway en-
trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115..cfegree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
community of Apple Valley on Aug. 3
to visit a friend and started back
home last Thursda.v.
The Irvine City Coun-
cil has approved a $350
ex pendilure for the
printing or invitations to
a party that will be held
la t er this year in
celebration of the 10th
anniversary of the city's
incorporation.
· days later, authorities said.
Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana
died or heal exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
Bernardino County sheriff's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
But instead of going south toward
Orange County she ended up going
100 miles northeast on Interstate 15
before stopping to ask directions at a
service station in this town 50 miles
from the Nevada border.
A piece of white cloth was found
tied to her cane, an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
of Loog Beach and the widow of
former Long Beach City Councilman
Melvin L. Campbell, Mrs. Campbell
had driven to the Victorville area
Mrs. Campbell was given direc-
tions to get back home and headed
o ff on a ser vice road t hat
paralle led the freeway. But s he
missed the overpass to the south-
bound lanes and continued on the
road even after it veered orr from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
lnvitati9n& will be sent
to past and present city
officials and members
or the business com-
munity, said city ad-
m i pis tr at o r Ken
Lazette.
The exact date and
location of the party
have not yet been de-
termined.
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand, and on Sunday her body
was found Inside.
: Before you buy any make of car,
· call me. I'll save yo\.I time & money
Benefit from my buying clout I buy office. low overhead. No salesmen.
or lease cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us.
100 for airpotate fleets. We can ob-any make of car. Then compare fllf
1 tain substantial savings for quali· yourself. (And tell your friends.)
f1ed individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to 5, Robt Hixson Equipment
shopping & haggling. Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia. 714 64~48Xl.
Ci.....tO,.-,W.
SA VE AM EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE .. , ...... J ... ,, ....
Mo•t whole wheels of cheese welth 5 to 10 ~·· Wbeo you buy a Whole wheel or cheese trom us, we 1lve you a
lK discount from the 1ln1le poumt price on
almolt every cheese. If a whole wheel wel1hs more than 15 pounds, you don't have to buy It all. We'll live you a lO'r. discount 11 you buy a chunk which
wei1h1 more than 10
pourids. Thls ls ·a simple way to beat lnnauon-and cheese always tastes
better from a whole wheel! Please visit our
newest Trader Joe's at
the Lnteraecllon of 17th Street, Newport Boulevard and Superior
Av,nue (ne~t to Denny's · and Barclays Danit).
NOW IN COSTA MISA
I
CONVENIENT. DISPOSABLE
COLOPlAST' BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now c.arry the complete COLOPLAST lme-the
icVgtSI sett.rig d1!.PC>Sable ostom1 apphances '°the
WOtld E11e<yth1ng fOf colOStomatr.. •lecstomates and
urinary ostomalec;-all with co•wernent COLOPL.AST
01sposab"'ly COLOPLAST rellclb1l1ty-pju\ case pack
economy
Be sure to as!\ I()( your rRH CoPY of !NS!GHIS-
lt'le publ1Catoori thats 1ust 10< you-alway\ 1ncli.Jdes
couoons for tr~ ~m~ 1114114 MOUL TON ,LAZA '"AIHIACY
23115 Moulton Pertlwey, LAgune Hiile
(.._111 to £1 Renc:tto Metk.t)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
< H'F:'\; l\10:\. I· Ill '.J ,.\ \1 1. I' \1
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!ll1n E. I.a ... ,me Awe., Af!INllTI, CA 12107
-Velie¥ View It., "*'-Plrk. CA IOlao teel Amell! M ., c.metlllo. CA 93010
tft ----·------·---
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23021 LMe Center Or.,(~ 'MIO. £1 Toro, CA~ 1001E.l~H=WJ· Ll ....... CA.U1 Q ''"° ~ ' "°"9 leeatl. CA tlll07 22DH .• ~~'*8
10l8 !MM--· Tuel Z1I N. Cllrul A•,~ 117111 • .. ~ "°°"'" ·~,,..,. °". ,...,._ .....
COiiege
building
backed
A blU to appropriate S2 million
to be1ln construction of an
8$,000.square-foot classroom
bulld.lnl al Saddleback CoUe1e
in Minion Viejo bas woo ap-
prov al from the state Al·
sembly'1 Education Committee.
Tbe meuure wu approved in
a 9-0 vote Tuesday. with four
committee members absent. It
wUl now 10 to tbe Aaaembly
Ways and Means Committee,
which la expected to consider
the appropriations bill In about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265, is sponsored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson (R-Newport'8each). U
it wins final approval from the
ruu Assemble and state Senate,
c:onstruction funds will ~ al-
located f'rom the Capital Outlay
Fund for Hiaher Education.
Saddieback College Superin-
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was In Sacramento for
Tuesday's vote, said the $2
million will allow the communi-
ty college to begin the first
phase or the $7 .5 million con-
struction project.
He said full fundinic for the
classroom building was initially
included in this year's state
budget. However, during a last
minute budget-cutting session,
members of the State Education
Finance Committee deleted the
money, Lombardi said.
Saddleback College officials
say the school is in desperate
need or more classroom space
due to rapid increases in enroll-
ments over the past five years.
In his 1981·82 budget report for
the Saddleback Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
assistant s uperintendent for
business, said district enroll·
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
Even if Saddleback re<'eives
the $2 million under the bill now
being considered, the district
will still have to come up with
$5.5 million to complete the
classroom building.
"Raising that money wiU be
the next step," Lombardi said.
"But where it is going to come
from we don't know yet."
(
o.My ........... .,..., ......
TOP DOG Casey. a six-month-old shelty. gets special at·
lention from owner Michelle Stewart. 12. after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids· dog sho" al Newport Beach's
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dogs vi(>d for honors ranging
from ~st groomed to best tri('k Casey was Judged best
overall.
Mesa file s lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Wood has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
to halt Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit, filed last Wednesday,
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 to take "the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro-
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
wells in late June arter process-
ing drilling applications through
the state and Orange County's
Environmental Management
Agency.
Wood contends the oil firm ig-
nored requirements for city
drilling permits and laws passed
in 1964 to prohibit new drilling.
Schools cut costs
of driver training
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days under an arrangement with
Sarto's attorneys, Rutan and
Tucker o( Santa Ana.
"I am not seeking a tem-
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction at this
time," Wood said. "It's part of
a plan for getting cooperation
for an ex pedited trial.
A Santa Ana driving school
has been chosen by Newport-
M esa Unified School District
trustees to offer driver training
to an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about half of
the cost or last year's program.
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower of
two bidders for the contract
awarded Tuesday. Academy or
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach, quoted $132 a student.
The school board trimmed
driver training, a requirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
would not offer its previous an-
nual $60-per-trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
s ummer and will continue to of-
fer $60 per driver.
The driving program, to be of-
fered to students before and
after school and on weekends,
will cost the district about $5,400
in general funds and an un-
known amount for electricity re-
quired to operate driving
simulators.
In addition lo behind-the-
w heel trainin g in a utos
furnished by the firm. the dri v·
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near tbe district's Newport
Beach headquarters.
Last year, the district painted
"streets" and ''intersections" on
a Newport Harbor High parking
lot to offer behind-the-wheel ex-
perience to youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver, a school official
noted.
"In return. they <Barto at-
torneys) have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have had
a trial."
Barto actually gained ap-
proval early this summer from
the state to sink four new wells
on its 18-acre property lying ad-
jacent to a 60-home subdivision
in south Mesa.
"Part of the plan." Wood said
of his court action, "is, if we can
agree to basic facts, that both of
us will file motions for summary
judgment."
Meanwhile, he said , Barto will
continue to pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
wh ere homes a r e valued at
about $250,000.
I
' • I I
Rentals-Sales ~ Service
Puch
Rosi
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A highly train~ staff to
aclG-ess your cycling 'needs
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Motobecane
Astro-Dalmler
ColnCICJO
Lawll Ir Knight
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOTffhuraday, Auguet 13, 1981
Disney characters • in museum
Mickey, Donald a nd Pluto highlight New York animation exhibition
NEW YORK <AP> Born as a swr. paunchy little water rowt,
Donald Duck had become a
spluttering. raving international
star by lhti time he went to war
In 1942.
Now the irascible duck rn a
stlr umong stars in the Disney
animlttion exhibition at the
Whitney Museum or Amencan
Art, which focuses on the pre-
· war and wartime years at the
Walt Disney Studios . In ·one
phenomenal decade, the Disney
animators c r e ated Mic key
Mouse, Goofy, Pluto, the Silly
Vladimir Tytla's sense of
dramatic musculature and body
mass in drawing Stromboli. the
corpulent puppeteer an P1noc·
<'hlO.
The subtle arm motion or
Ma c k ey Mouse by Frank
Thomas in "The Brave Little
Tailor" ( 1938)
Lundy's three·minute dance
between the spider and the rty an
"WoodJand Cafe"< 1937>
Pluto tangled in flypaper in
··Playful Pluto" ( 1934 ). drawn
ney'i, post wur work A stnke by
animators In 1941 marked the
end of the first golden era at Dis·
ncy Studios. and although many
t1111mators r eturned to finish
their contracts, they later drift·
ed lO other studio!) Ford said.
"1 like the wartime cartoons
because e ver yone 1s al the
height of his powers, but the
rilms are very casual,.. For.d
said '
Donald Duck drew several
wartime assignments. but Ford
dagger. a Bable becomes Mein
Kampf. Worse, a big-eyed boy
who loved bunnies becomes a hl·
tie thue who cheers for foxes,
finall y to become a hulking
robot in Hitler's legions The last
i.cenc transforms the ranks of
soldiers into ranks of crosses.
i.tretchmg on to the horizon.
Symphonies and th e first
feature-length cartoons
"In animation, time 1s b.m .
and a.m. before Mickey and
after Mickey," said Greg Ford,
guest curator of the exhibition
Referring to the evolution of
Disney technique. he said · "You
look at Steamboat Willie (the
'·The more I look at it, the more
magical it seems , the great pains
taken to seem eff artless.''
Donald was back that same
year to play a German muni·
lions worker in "Der Fuehrer's
Face " Starving. overworked,
goaded by loudspeakers. con
stantly interrupted by the 1m
peratlve of s aluting images or
llitler. Donald 1s captive m a
state so totalitarian that six
bayonets threaten every lime he
"avers
An o&Jish German b;.ind puts
music to his misery "When
11 atler says we are the mas ter
race. we go 'heil. heil.' in the
~·uehrl•r's fa ce" a song which
was u m1llton i.eller ror Spike
first Mickey Mouse talkie in
1928> and then Pinocchio ( 19401.
It 1s absurd how much happened
in just 10 years .··
The Whitney 's second rtoor
has been transformed into a big,
dark rumpus room where adults
and tots Jockey for position
around televjsion screens s how-
ing the Seven Dwarfs or Dumbo
Drawings cover the walls. and
cartoons play twice a day in a
small theater.
Ford said he wanted to de·
monslrale that Disney was not a
one man show. but a bag band in
which many talented animators
played distinctive solos.
.,...._._ In the 1934 cartoon "Orphan's
QUIET CAT This purebred Himalayan . Elsa. he ld by he r Benefit," animator Dick Lundy
owner Catharine L add of Boulde r . Colo . was pulled invented Donald's "fi ghting mad" post. in which a squawk-from the finals of the $25.000 1981 Meow Off in Los Angeles ing duck hops up and down,
Elsa wa~ re m oved from competition afte r falling to m t>ow holding one arm out in a stiff Jab
during two days o f preliminaries Afterward. it \\3S d1 ~-and swinging the other menac
covered Els a b µn•gnant. which may have had greal bear ingly.
by Norm Fer gui.on Ford said it
1s th<' first C'artoor1 sequence
which s hows the (.'haracter
"thinking ·
The nypapt r scene 1s di~sect·
ed 1n a ~eri t•s of s ketches
retrieved from Disney archives
for the Whitney ex hibit
"Some people lhink J am lak·
ing the magic out of 1l. I don't
think so." ~·ord said. "The more
I look at 1t the more magical 1t
seems. the great p<.tin:. taken to
seem effortless.
"I have an interest in 1dent1fy-
1ng as many animators a::. I c•an,
because to this day P<'<>ple don't
know what they did "
As a kid. Ford confessed, he
prt'ferred the Warner Brothers'
Rugi. Bunny and Daffy Duck
"D1snt-y al\.\ a ys seemed too
precious lo me." h(.' said "I
started gt>lting interested tn 01s
ney when l got interested 1n
animation. about 10 years ago "
The show includes little of Dis· ing on hl'r rl'pose Among Ford's favorite solo!>
~-'"--~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~
Designed, ____
could not n •call Mi ckey ever go·
mg to war. M1nn1 e Mouse did
her b1l by saving bacon dnp·
ping!) in ·out of the Frying
Pan," and Goof> s ank most of
the Japane!-.C navy. and the R1s·
ing Sun. too. in Ho" to be a
Sail or "
ln "The Old Arm v Game" of
1942. Donald 1s ·a G I who
lwlieves he's been sawn in half
1n a scrape with a s~di st ic
sergeant. Reduced to tears by
the illusion of his haloed hind·
quarters ascending to heaven.
Oonald contem1,lates s uicide
ht'forc locating his legs again
Thi:' same Saturdav afternoon
;.1ud1t>nce which roared at
Oonald's double amputation was
hus hed aft<·r !>ee1ng .. Education
M>r Death." a 1943 propaganda
film about Nazi education
The animator!> m ake their
ease with ri veting transmog·
r ifi cat1on s a crucifix is
"<1rpt.·d into a S\\aSt1ka studded
Jones ·
Rut 1t 's all a bad dream
Uonald wake::. up in America
and plants a duck kiss on a little
Statut-of Libert~ The final 1m
'age IS Of a tomato splattering
on the Fuehrer's face.
$216 ,000
opal found
MELH OU H N~. Australia
c AP 1 Opal deHler Phillip San
dcrs swd ht! found '1 34·c<.trat
stont' worth $21().000 in a parcel
of black opal scraps ht-bought
from a South Australian dealN
for ll-ss than $6.000
SandPrs '>aid he purchased the
scrap!-. bN·ausc he had not be(•n
ahle to <.tfforcl his usual trip to
thl· South Au!)traltan opal fields
-r -----
Finished
Installed -._. __ "",..-__ ROLL·UP BLINDS IN WHITE OR NATURAL From Taiwan
WHITE RICE PAPER & BAMBOO
Stunning sho11 1nc;p1red blinds are con
s1 ructed or two layers of rice paper with
malchsltck bamboo ribs Complete with
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__ ..;,..._--..._ ___ _
.. _ / · :\1.-n & Women's traditional ~ear~ --\
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STARTS SUNDAY, AUG. 16 10 A .M.
' ( --~ ..
Sunda~· .. \u~. 16 through Saturda~, \u~. 29
to a .m . to 6 p.m.
)1ajor Credit Cards .-\C'cepted
I
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No other newspaper brings you more
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A wonderlul selection of heavy clear g:ass ULAR r-----...#
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PUZZLE ~<"I•~, TEA GARDEN
KEV RING [,.-~ FLORAL HANTAN
Bright plasllc _...,..oJl!:fH'.I. From Japan
cubes form a Wonderfully
bigger cube bright, onental
that rolales floral design ~~~~i
from here 10 on assorted U
there and challenges color back·
you to mal<e rows grounds of
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Also holds keys' 2.22 BLACK. WHITE,
Jewelry Section TURQUOISE OR RED 1--------------1 One size fits all ~()~~
NATURAL MONKEY POD SALAD
WORKS From The Ph11tpp1nes
Smoolt\IY f1n1stled bowls
10 mox and serve lhe
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5' 1 ·• d1a
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2.19
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11.99
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lined zippered
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6" deep a· w~1~d~e:::::;~~9_]Cif
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Large and lovely baskelry to
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GLASS HOLDER
19" 1a11 at hOOd 12.49
TEAK & BLACK DINING
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Molded leak
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ts perfec l
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29.99
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STOOL 10· x 14"
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3 SHELF UNIT
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I
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MON. TO FRI. 10 A.M.-1 P.M.
SAT. 10 A.M.-7 P.M.
SUN. 11 A.M .-1 P .M.
Orange Coeat DAILY PILOT.ffilursday, August 13, 1981 HJ F
NY E COMPO ITE TRA S CTION
OllOftOIO .. , IN(l.llOt U•Ol' O• , ....... •0•11 llllOWUf ll'A(ll'I( .... 10 0 0 111 01 fllOlf ANO CINCIHHA'ft Hoc•
••CMANOUANO ··~u•o •• '"' ll9AS0 Alo0t"'U11Ul
U.S. in r ecession?
WASHINGTON <AP> -Interest
rates 1rill remain "painfully hl1b."
unemployment may reach 8 percent
before tefl2 and the u .S. economy
may now be lo a fee<'fl Ion, President
Reagan's top economic adviser s ays
"1bere'a ~me poisslbllity we're In
a f"ffellJon rlpt now," MUrTI)' L
Weldenbaum, saJd WtdQllday Bul
lie added, ··1 think we will aee a m~· Jor o.panaioa In um and I.be years abHd "
The 1981 tax Jaw started out as a clear.cut bill to
reduce personal income taxes by steps and to I
business take long·requested write-orfs. The 10 e
have been reached, but the legislation h
mushr oomed far beyond the original Intent. As f
simplicity, that's gone replaced by complexity
guarantees fortunes for tax advisers.
One point emerges with daizLing clarity even Q
or the mire of m illions of words. There are "
s weeteners" for you, no m a tter wha t yo
c lassification· ~ ' individua l s ,
inve s tor s.
cs tatr _..,..
planners , s mall _
h u :-1 n ess men . ,.£-.;a,_·,.•._ ______ _
~ ~. ":i ~ ~ ~ ): SYlVIA PORTER
execut i ves ,
real estate investors, dealers. banks . The tax relier is
in the law and so are the potentials for tax breaks -
out you will have to search carefully. .•
f<'ollowmg are significant questions with answerl"
I put together with the help of the editors at':
Prentice Hall. the tax guidelines publisher Fir st. for
1nd1viduals, investors and estate planners .
Q. Do you invest in stocks, real estate and
s imilar media in hopes of making a profit?
A. The top rate on investment income will be 50
pen:ent in 1982 <as has been the top rate on earned
incomel This also means that the m aximum r ate oo-
capit;,il gains on sales will drop to 20 percent from the
present 28 percent (only 40 percent or capital gain is
induded in income at regular rates, thus 40 percen•
of the 50 percent is 20 percent). And this lower 20
percent rate applies to sales after June 9. 1981.
Q. Do you want a better retirement plan'
A. The maximum contnbut1on you can make tQ ..
an Individual Retirement Account. the best tax
s h c I t l' r e v er d <.' v 1 s e d for u s . as m i d d I e · t'.O
uppt•r income taxpaycrl>. has been boosted Crom
$1,500 to $2.000 a year
If vou an· an individual who is an active
participant in an employer -qualified plan. you, toor
can now deduct contributions to an I RA <this is a big
break for the millions "frozen" in private penslon-
plans who c·an now c·reale their own retirement
programs as well J
On lop of this the deduction for yearly
contributions lo a self employed 'Keogh > plan has.
been doubled to $15.000. •··
Q. £f<tvt· you been paying the "penalty tax" o0
marriage?
A. If you're a two-paycheck married couple .
you'll rt>ce1 ve tax rehcC an 1982. The problem has
lH?l'n th<1t 1f both of you have paying JObs. receive
good salaries and Ii ve together as singles. you've had
lo pay less federal income tax than if you filed a joint
rt>turn as a married couple Now. the "penalty tax"
on marriage has been eased.
Q. Do you work overseas ..
A. Americans working abroad will be entitled to
a $75,000 exclusion from income, plus a housing
allowance. in 1982 This 1s phased up to $95,000 in four
,·earlv $5,000 installments It s ubstitutes for a
compi1cated variet) of deductions and exclusions
now in lhe law
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT now JONES AVERAGES
HE W VORK(APJ Flnal Oow·Jo<ltt •"9~ tor Wed .. AUQ 17 N E W YORK (API S•IU, WtO price -"*' CNl\Qt ol lflt +1l1H11 mo.t •ctoYe Ntw Vorl Stock Exci..t>Qt l\\Utt,
tredlt>Q ,,.llONll~ al mo<9 ll'IAn ~I Enon t TI0,600 lS•t• '"'
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NEW VOAK (API· Se in We d P<ICI • ,,., ,,., , .... o4 '"' ten most I Cl lYt Amerlca.1 Stock Exc11At191 Is~, lredl119_ n•lk>Nlly al moro lll•n SI
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Clla mp Ho 175,600 J • '• fubMMex • 111,SOO ... ~
Sunoanc.eO 111,200 71.. • "
UPS AND DOWNS
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STOCKS
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WHAT STOCKS DID
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SYMBOLS I •
,.
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Augu1t 13 1981
~V boycott looms again
.
1NEW YORK <AP> -The
COaUUon ror Belter Televltk>n
bu ~wfld lts threat to boycott
coiqpanlea that advertise on
nttytc>rk televlJion procrams ll
detms exceaalvely violent or
lewd.
Tbe conaervaUve coallllon or
more than 300 political and re-u.-. IJ'OUpl, one of which la th• Moral Majority, called ott a
boycott in June, saying ad-
ve1111ers had pledged to work
witfl networks ror cleaned-up a bows.
tervtow eubUthed Wednesday tn
the New York OaUy New1: "Ir 1
were a Bettln1 man, l'd bet that
before the 1981·82 television
season is over. there's a 90 to~
percent chance there'll be a
boycott.
"l have a hunch that lt'a in-
evitable.·•
vertlJera. The majority of ad-
vertlacra have become a lot
more careful, and there'• a 1ood
deal ol dl1tre11 merchandlae out
there," Wlldmon uld.
NBC, whlch broadcaau
"Flamlnao Road,'' said ad·
vertlalng sales were not sluaallh
for the sbow. A apokeaman for
CBS, which presents "Knot'•
Landing" and "Dallas," aaid It
would not dlscuaa Its ad·
vertlsers.
. . .
OCC f i lls t w o
f acuity posts
• Robert L. Hoeppner, (9, or Coeta Me11 bu
been named Oranee Coaat Coll11e's aasoclate
dean ol counselln1 and ,Wdance. and Geor1e L.
Blanc,~. ol Fountain Valley the colle1e'1 director
of community aervlces.
Hoeppner replaces Dr. Jerrel T . Rlcbarda,
who wu named dean or counaelln1 and 1uldance.
Hoeppner, who came to OCC in 1964, has
served as counselor and psycholoay instructor. He
Is also a licensed marriage, family and child
counselor.
Bµt its leader. the Rev.
Do d WUdmon, said In an In·
Wlldmon mentioned several
programs he said would have
problems finding sponsors, ln-
c I udl ng "Flaminio Road,"
"Knot's Landing" and "ThrH's
Company.'' .. ·Dallas' wlU hang on. but it
won't attract the same ad-
NBC said Its position is that no
special-Interest group has the
right to appoint Itself spokesman
for viewers
ASSOCIATE DEAN
Robert Hoeppner
Blanc replaces Jean Thompson, who retired .
A former restaurant owner, Blanc wu the col·
lege'a usociate dean of continuin& education. DIRECTOR
George Blanc
QUEENIE
••
..
• t
• ..
l'ft
"Boy, am I aJad to be back. My body couldn't take
~day of vacation." ~...i..~__;;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~boom towns
Jiid each other
i ... IULLHEAD CITY, Ariz. (AP> -The future of
Bullhead City may depend upon its gamblin'
aell(abor lo the north.
. But then again, the future of its neighbor -
· i..~hlin, Nev. -is similarly entwined.
· "We are obvious ly dependent upon each
other." said Judy Dim it, executive secretary of
tbe Bullhead City Chamber of Commerce. "They
Qeed us for services and employment and, obvious·
ly, the casinos bring tourists, which helps us."
Local officials on both sides or the Colorado
River that divides the two communities say that
Laughlin and Bullhead City are booming.
Bullhead City. which is seeking to become the
state's 31th city. is one of the fastest growing com·
munities in Arizona.
Laughlin officials believe their community
soon may rival Lake Tahoe as a gambling center.
lt all began,'they say, with Don Laughlin, who
somi 15 years ago was looking for a place where
he cquld set up a dozen slot machines.
Laughlin bought a one room bar and an eight·
unit ,motel across the river from Bullhead City.
which then had about 700 residents.
Today there are seven casinos in Laughlin and
Bullhead City has a population that's pushing
20,000.
One of the reasons for Bullhead City's im·
• portance is that state and federal governments
' control all but a few hundred acres of land on the
Nevada side of the river. What that means is that
Bull.Head City has become the bedroom communi-
ty for most of Laughlin's several thousand casino
\ employees.
Laughlin boasts a population of 93 people.
The Laughlin boom has driven property values
: in Bullhead City rapidly skyward, local officials
·said.
(•When we came here five years ago, we could
' hay' bought a 40-foot riverfront lot for $17,000,"
Mrs. Dimit said. "Now. if you can even find one,
they're going for $2,000 per front foot."
Expansion in Laughlin is expected to continue
Don Laughlin's 100-room Riverside Resort and
Caslno is planning a 17-story, 200-room addition
wit!\ a 1,000-seat convention center.
fhe Edgewater Hotel and Casino is expected
to open late this month, lacking only approval
· rrom the Nevada Gaming Commission. A $16·
mitttQn, six-floor, 162-room hotel, it boasts the
town's first heated pool.
· The Colorado Belle is expected to begin con·
struetioq this summer on a 13-story hotel and The
Ne.ada Club, owned by the Del Webb Corp .. just
· had a $4 million facelift. Laughlin owns 92 acres of
lbe _,wn that bears his name, including a pair of
trQ11hooUng ranges, and calls the federal govern·
' ' meat "the biggest enemy this area has" because ' at its refusal to release surrounding land5.
," The Nevada Colorado River Commission, ~ho'W"1er, is considering the release or more than
I t 1,000 acres of state land for residential develop· I m• west of Laughlin. I , What that means to Bullhead City. nobody
.; kmnta. What that meall!I to Laughlin, local of.
~<lela~ say, is a golden-lined future. .
I r ~ . ' f ,.,..RT riders up
' .: f>AKLAND (AP> -More people rode Bay
Rapid Transit trains In 1980-81 than in any
lince the train.a started rolling in 1972, BART
saay.
he railway served about 46.9 milUon
"•,il.d. ..... MOn./n~~ :~~.~ ~~c~t h~~; ltie:: ·h~~i~:·
ed.
• erall, BART has carried more than 275
·~ m . _riders more than 3.8 billion p•u•n1•r·
~.· ....... 0,..-.W. ~ u .. .....
I DRY ROAST PEANUTS .. ,,..,..,.. ........
our newe.t Trader Joe'• ll tbe lnt.enectlon of 17th
Street , Ne~port Boulevard and Supmor
AHnue (next to Denny'• and Berday'1 Bank).
breeze away the hot spells
Put 131peed. 20" box ten In 21 •• your window to cool your
home #3713. Reg. 29.95
up against the wall paper
Ata0rted cotora and
pattern• of w1llp1per
for decorating any
room In the houae. 300~0 off Improve your ln-
terlora now.
STANLEY
Inch "' Inch •••
Stanley 20' tape meaaure
with "'Y reading V•" tape.
#33-320 .... 13.25 a••
--
hibachis ••
gesundheit!
10"x10" alngle grill hibachi. Caat
Iron body, wooden base and han-
dle. #1315. Reg. 5.99
88
Doultlt hiltachi, #1354, 11 88 Rtt. 1.H ........... ~.
Hibachi with legs, g 88 Rtt. 14.t S . . . . . . . . . . •
\
J
garbage gobbler unclog your drain problems
Badger I by ln·Slnk-Er1tor
handles big Jobs eully.
Quiet, dependable. Reg
39.95 2811
expand your horizons
. . . with th11 19" color
Magnavox portable.
Beautllul true to Ille 33911 color. #4188. Reg .
399.95. .
spred .... lltln
Famou1 latex flet well paint from
Olldden. Beautiful flat flnlah a•• aorubt cleen, ataya color fut.
Eaty wew clean-up.
Drain King unclog• drlln1
with running w1ter. #186.
Reg. 6.39 511
Extra large 20 quart bag of
Vlgoro Potting Mix. Superb 211 medium tor growing Indoor and
outdoor potted ptanta. Reg. 2.99
... and your leevee, lawn ~rt1, 341 trllh and n\oref Pectc-oe of 25
321Jallon •• "'*'·
- . I K ~--
fire awayl
KHp Kidde "Fire Aw1y" ex-
tlngulaher cloae et hand tor
emergency protecilon for home, 711 boat, auto or recreational vehicle
llrea. #10BC. Reg. 11.95
lpoonH IO your plants Wiii
grow up big and strong
Spoon 'It lertlllzw hu all the
nutrlentt your plants need to
grow lulh and heetthy. e oz.
Reg. 3.39
.. ...,
In hot
WlllF
211
SO-gallon water
he9W with tn«IY M¥lnO ......... lhtlt-off.
114''
.......... 124 ••
st ......... 114•
II
II ,. • • " If '· rs
• ,.
If ,,
t ..
"
~
F. ...
Diiiy Pilat
THURSDAY, AUG. 13, 1991 H/F
COMICS C6
FEATURES C7
ENTERTAINMENT ce
TELEVISION C10
Tom Pestolesi and
U.S. volley ball
got .a good dose of Romania
recently. See C3 .
No such thing as the Incredible Hulk? Here's one
You just don't recognize him without Ram jersey No . 32
4 By JOHN SEV ANO
Of•Dltly.......... •
He is m enacing as he is powerful and consls·
tent as he is punishing. His teammates call him
"CB" although "Incredible Hulk" might be more
apropos.
The second of three children, Cullen Bryant is
unus ually quiet and shy Cor someone as physically
intimidating as he is. At 6-1, 236 pounds. he's as
gentle as a feather fl oating through the air.
That's off the field, though. When he's 'in a
game, it's an entirely differe nt matter.
ONE NFL COACH REFERRED to Bryant as
having "the same power and effect as Earl
CampbelJ. The only difference is speed."
Whereas Campbell might try to slas h or fin·
esse on occasion , Bryant is just the opposite Put
an opposing Jersey in front or him and he 'd Just as
soon run over than go around it.
Bryant is remarkably durable considering his
style. Since becoming a starter in 1978, the
University of Colorado product has played in 47
straight games. Las t year, in handling the ball 236
times. he fumbled only once, tops among NFC
runrung backs. In eight years, he's handled the
ball 949 times and fumbled on just nine occasions.
A.ND, THAT'S NOT ALL.
He led the Rams in 1980 in rushing (807 yards>.
receiving ( 53 receptions I and total yardage
( 1,193). All this and Bryant still hasn't re·
ceived the publicity some or his contemporaries
with hal( those number s have. ,
"Cullen is Mr. Consistency," said his offensive
coordinator Lionel Taylor. "You never see much
about what he does until after the game is over.
"Som e guys just have more na re than others
I've seen running backs who have played only two
big games a nd lived on that the rest of their lives.
I'd take a handful of CBs over those players all
the time."
"THE MAIN THING FOR ME is lo play con-
sistent football." said Bryant softly as he relaxed
in his room. "The lack or publicity doesn't really
bother m e.
"Al this point, with the type of team I'm on
and the offensive line I have in front of me, I can
be as good as I want to be. If l carry the ball
enough I can gain more than a 1,000 yards easily.
No question.·'
The e lus ive "1,000-yard club" is the one goal
Bryant has yet to achieve. And, it's an achieve·
ment he wants badly.
"I would like to do it because that 's the
measuring stick of running backs," said Bryant.
"The fact I 'm an all-purpose back, though . , . I
take more pride in that."
during lht' off-season, five-to-six times a week to
maintain.
BRYANT IS AN ARDENT USER or weights.
tie has bench pressed a high of 520 pounds -far
and away the best on the Rams -and he hopes to1
improve that to 550 and eventually 600 pounds1
someday.
l11s total -as it stands though is tops in the,
NFL.
.. Especially in t he game or football, the most I
1mp0rtant investment vou have is. the body," ex·
· 1 can be as good as I want to
be . If I carry the ball enough I
can gain more than 1.000 yards
easily. No quest ion .·
plained Bryant, who once entered and became a
finalist ( 19751 in a Mr Colorado contest <he was
disqualified a fter reaching the final three when it
was learned he was a professional athlete)
Bryant claims it's partly because of his size
a nd speed that he 's been a success in the NFL.
"I DON'T REALLY KNOW how punishing I
am.'' said Bryant. "I've broken a lot of tackles but
I don't think I'm punishing as much as I'm in·
timidating
"If I can get 1n some good licks at the begin·
ning of a game 1t makes things a lot easier for
me "
It's hard to put Bryant's value in terms of
dollar~ and C'ents although the reported $225,000
he's maki ng this year doesn't seem enough
llow much is a running back worth who can
block. run, catch passes and can be counted on in
the starting lineup every game"
BRYANT WILL TELL YOU he doesn't know
and doesn't really care All he's interested in is
doing the same consistent JOb he's been doing -
without the fanfare
"The recognition now is at a level where I re-
ally don't want to get any more." admitted
Bryant. adding that his private life 1s more impor.
tant to him "They say when you get into a Super
Bowl a nd have that kind or exposure things are
never the sam e That's true
"I m ay not be on the cover of magazines but
people ret·ognize me on the streets now and that's
good enough for me ."
Ditty ............ .., awit191 ...... C'ullen Bryant's physique border!/ Ori the lncred1ble Hulk's reputation He's 6-1. 236 pounds. Bryant also takes pride in his physical s tature
something he worked at for three hours a day
Al the rate Bryant's progressing. though, the
limelight may be j ust beginning
On the road--Arigels are sometimes little devils
By EDZINTEL
Of ... Diiiy ...........
SOMEWHERE OVER THE GREAT
NORTHWEST -A thick. brown cloud
layer hovers over Mt. St. Hele ns as a
reminde r or the commanding power or
Mother Nature.
Above, some 50,000 feet in the air. a
727 jet full of passengers passes over
the geographic phenomenon.
Two came ras, one with a telephoto
lens. the other with a wide angle attach·
ment. begin clicking simultaneously as
their operators jockey Cor pos ition at
the same port hole windows .
A few rows in front of them, more
faces are pus hed against windows.
while other eyes peer over their
shoulders.
The center stage or attraction for the
m oment is obvious . Still, not every
person is atte ntive to the scene below.
In the aisle. a m assive c hunk of
human being is crawling along the
floor , trying to m ake a toddler with a
pacifier in her mouth notice his playful
act.
pitcher , as he tosses Ott a pacifier given
to him by the child's mother. to arrive with luggage at 8 : 15 and be on
the bus at 9 a m. for the commute to LA
ligious weightlifter. has the physique
now of a Rocky Bal boa. He does not.
however . have the disarranged face.
The toddler doesn 't notice but
Edward Nathanie l Ott, the Angels'
fulltime catcher a nd someti me DC
<··Designated Clown''> pursues, much
to the delight or passing stewardesses.
.. Hey, hey." Ott bellows in a low.
baritone voice to the baffled child.
Finally, unable to win her over, Ott
raises from the floor, s taring blankly at
an elderly wom a n seated along the
aisle.
"Can't figure it out," Ott says to the
woman. "Usually I have them eating
out of the palm of m y band."
"Here, try this ," says Bruce Ki son , a
So this is what it's like on the r oad
with a major league baseball team ,
COMMENTARY
huh? Fun and gam es, just like down on
the field of play.
Well, yes sometimes. Not always,
but sometimes.
We began our road trip some two
hours ago on the freeways of Orange
and Los Angeles counties. Players
began arriving, som e alone, some by
chaffeur-driven cars (in most cases, the
chaffeurs are wives, all others are
friends> at Anaheim Stadium around 8
a .m . Players wer e carefully instructed
International Airport. ·
But at 9 a.m .. some o( those who said
they'd be ther e aren't there. It's been
over two months since they've done this
sort or thing and apparently the strike
had an adverse effect o n some
m emories. No m atter, the bus door
shuts at exactly 9 a m . and off we go to
Freewayland
On the half-filled bus. quiet is the or-
der or the m orning.
Up front, coach Bobby Knoop pores
over old stats on the Seattle Mariners.
Behind him , outfielder Brian Down-
ing reads the day's s ports section.
careful not lo m iss a paragraph on the
All-star game of the day before . He also
s pends a long pe riod or time on a story
a bout Roberto Duran. Downing, a re·
Next to him, Bert Campaneris and
Juan Beniqun arc trying to find a word
in Englis h to describe an electrical unit
or measur<.'. five letters. They are
speaking in Spanish so no one can help
them .
Kison is seated in the rear or the bus,
s aying nothing, only singing to every
song that comes over the radio. He ·
never stops singing , even after the
music has stopped.
Fred Patek. the ageless infielder with
the look of a keeper at a general store in
Oklahom a Cit y. pulls out a book but
doesn't open 1t. fa lling as leep before he
can put on his glasses. ,
The bus a rrives at LAX. The •us uall
(See LITTLE DEVILS, Page C2)
Angels earn some salvation
They'll cool heels until Friday's series opener.in Oakland • SEATTLE -These may be the dog days of
August but for the Angels, today is not quite as
doggy as it could have been.
Under normal circumstances, a victory over
the SeatUe Mariners in mld-Aueuat doesn't uncork
champagne bottles. But this 1981 basebalJ season
has been far from normal as the Angels proved by
escaping the Northwest Wednesday afternoon with
a 4·1 win over the Mariners in 11 innings.
At first glance, lbe Anget. may have only
saved face by salvaging one out of three from
Seattle, but when you read between lbe baselines,
the surfacing fact is that the team needed the win
-very badly.
"YOU'RE DAMN a JGRT we were concerned
coming into the game," shortatop Rick Burleson
said as be held an ice pack to bis right shoulder af.
terward. "U you don't push it, then you wind up 0.6
alter this road trip and where are you? Now we
have to win two-of·three from Oakland Just to get to .500."
The Antels are in Oakland today where they'll
open a tbree-1ame weekend Ht a1ainst the A's
Friday. And no one ls downplaytni the importance
of the upcoming 1ames.
"We can deftnitely UM three 1tral1bt wlnt but
we can st.Ill have a 1ood road trip lf we play well
and wtn two," said se~ baHma.n Bobby Grieb.
It WU Grieb who ... Wednelday'I outr11ht hero
as be belted two home runa lD the Km1dome, in·
cludini the 1ame·wlnner -a three·run blast to
ritbt In lbe 11th lnnin1.
.. HAD Wf! LOST ALL TBaSI!," be conUnued,
"it would have been cruabinl. almott •mbarrau·
int."
Grich, who sat out the lat lb t•IDM prior to
the ltrlke after beiat Mt• \be uau.9' b1 a pltcb
June I, found tlae 11Ma1..,.._• li,ain tM perfect
pf'91Criptloa for hll recovery. In IM Seattle Mli•,
he wu 5-for-11 and he exteDded tall eamr te
1•1ne hUUa1streakto11 with ldl ftnt bolaer w ....
•
nesday, a solo s hot to right in the second inning.
That single hit nearly stood up until Seattle
designated hitter Richie Zisk unleashed a Dave
Frost pitch for a home run in the seventh to' tie it
and eventually send the game into extra innings.
Frost, recalled from Salt Lake City on May 24
I
Had we lost· all three it would
have been crushing. almost em-
barrassing.
-Bobby Grich
after undergoing surgery last Sept. 17 for the
removal or bone chips in his right elbow, had his
best outing s ince returning.
HE PITCHED EIGHT INNINGS, allowing just
the one run on four hits while striking out five.
Frost was relieved by Don Aase In the ninth
and all he did was throw no-hit, shutout ball for
three innings.
That, combined with Burlesoo'a three hits
were lbe most encouraging signs to Mauch Wed·
nesday. And he needed cheering up after Monday
and Tuesday.
"Frost pitched six Innings of power and two of
cunning with Ms head," Mauch said. "It's a darn
sham("; to win only one game but at least we got
what wu left.''
Throu1h lbe worst of the1nrst hall of thla road
trip, Mauch said the au.ituae within the ballclub
waa quite settling. "Their attitude hasn't been bet·
ter,'' he tald. "You keep beatin1 a"plece of iron
and beatin1 on It, pretty eoon. you'll wear it out.
Emodona are no diflerent."
FaOIT SAID HE WAS AMAZED to be able to
pltdl .. lOftl u he d.ld. "Now lt's Ju.t a quesuon or
bow Iona 111 10 tbe next time. I threw only 82
pltcbel ln etaht lnnlftll wb.lch was wonderful.
"After bin1 tbe fil'lt two, J know the con·
(8" ANGELS, Pate Cl>
Resigns
Costa Mesa High football
coach Tom French has re·
signed hts post for personal
reasons. A replacement is
expected to be named early
next week f rom his • staff.
French ioos unavailable for
comment .
French's seven·yeqr re·
cord as Costa Mesa's coach
rt/lects a 34·36·1 record. rn ·
cltubng 8·2·1 and 7--4 markl fn
1976 and '78. each worth a
portion of a League cham·
piOMhlp.
Jim HGfJC'W. Tom Ware and
John C.nNtl are contu.Wrtd
thi t~ltg candidatt1 to
rtploce F:mtdi.
'· ~
I·
All • ..
It.
•
b Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThuraday, Auguat 13. 1981 iii----------------------~~ ~~------------------------------------------------------------------.
Audi's two belts pace Red Sox
Joa .... belted two horaen and a · Owtctit ·Evau. Gal')' AU ..... DHe
Sta~ and JI• &ke bJt IOlo 1bota
H BOiton ripped the Chlcaco Wblte
Sox, S..1, in American Leaaue acUon Wtdneaday
. . . GraJ1 NetUet' two-run homer ln tM sixth
llfted the New York Y1nkee1 to a 5-4 vlctory
over Texas ... Bick MUllbll drove In three runa and •~ed three wltb a home run and two
Swimmer capt ures
Channel three t imes
From AP clllpa&cllet 11
slnaJes u Cleveland routed
Milwaukee, 9-4, 101ppln1 a
aeven·1ame Cleveland lotlng
1trealc ... Terry Crowley
drove lo the wtnnine run with
a bases-loaded sacrifice ny
lo the alxlh inning, eivlng
BalUmore a .C·3 second-game
victory and a split of a
double·header with Kansas
City. Kansas Clly won the
DOVER, England -John
Erikson. a 26 ·year·old physical
education teacher from Chicago, has
become lhe first person to awim the English
Channel three ways non·stop.
Rudi opener, 10-0, behind Fraak
Erikson emerged from the 21·mile
waterway between England and France just
before midnight Wednesday on the French side.
His total time for the three trips was 38 hours.
27 minutes, according to the first reports re·
ceived by the Channel Swimming Association ln
Dover.
"We are absolutely in awe of it because we
didn't think it could be done," Audrey Scott, the
association secretary. told · The Associated
Press early today.
White'• grand slam homer and Hal Mcaae•1
three RBI ... DamHo Garcia drove lo two
rurus with a squeeze bunt and a sacrifice fly to
lead Toronto to a 4·3 victory over Detroit, end·
idt= aa eight-game winning streak for Detroit
starter Jack Monil . . . Run-scorin& s in&les by
Ho1ken Powell and Mickey Hatcber in the
seventh inning lifted Minnesota to a 4·3 win over
Oakland. Corona del Mar High product Matt
Keouo went ~ innings for Oakland, allowing
six hits and two runs, before being lifted.
Erikson is a bachelor who lives with his
father. He had made two previous unsuccessful
attempts at a three·way swim in the last two
years. giving up after two crossings. In all.
before hi s latest record f wim, he had swum the
Channel eight times, four of them in two two·
way crossings.
Kingman powers Mets to another
The N~ York Mets are un· •.
beaten through three National Lea·
gue starts with the Chicago Cubs to-
day following a 7.4 decision Wednes·
Erikson was returning to England by one of
the observer boats that accompanies all Chan·
net swimmers.
He had entered the water in near.perfect
conditions Tuesday morning at Dover's
Shakespeare Beach. Exact details of his three
stages were not immediately available.
day. Dave Kiagman and Ellls Valentine drilled
consecutive triples lo open the 10th inning to
provide the Mets with the winning edge . . .
George Hendrick hit two home runs and rookie
Orla.nclo Sanchez singled home the go.ahead run
Scott said she believed that Erikson did the
first crossing to Cap Gris Nez on the French
coast in 10 hours, 10 minutes, then swam back
to land at Folkestone near Dover in about 13
hours.
-;.:.. ' ; -·""· ..
as St. Louis ripped
Philadelphia, 11·3 ... Andre
Dawson rapped his 15th
home run of the season and
went 4·for·4 to back the com-
bined eighl·hit pitching of
Ray Burris a nd three re·
lievers as Montreal dealt Pit·
tsburgh a 3·2 setback . . . The swimmers are allowed 10 minutes on
the beach between stages. Scott said she heard
from a boatman that Erikson was sustained on
his swim by doses of baby food. given to him by
the crew of the observer boat.
Pinch·hitter Den11ls Walling
tined a run·scoring s ingle to
Kingman center fi eld in the eighth in·
Two other swimmers have attempted th!'ee·
way swims but failed.
ning to snap a 4·4 tie and lift Houston to a 5--4
victory over San Francisco . . . Pinch-hitter
Brian A.sselsti.M scored an unearned run In the
11th inning on a groundout by Ed Miiier to give
Atlanta a 4.3 verdict over San Diego and a
three-game sweep .
Kevin Murphy, a Londoner, failed last week
after several attempts over the last five years.
Cindy Nicholas, 23. a Canadian law student of
Scarborough. Ontario, gave up last Sunday
after lwo crossings in 22 hours, 21 minutes. Newport Beach's Davis leading
TI\e English Channel is one of the most
challenging long.distance swims in the world
because of rapidly changin~ weather conditions.
LOS ANGELES -Lee Davis of !I
Newport Beach and Jeff Hart of
Solana Beach fired 2·under·par 69s
Wednesday, leaving both at 139 and in a tie for
first place hallway through the Pacific Coast
Amateur golf tournam ent at the Los Angeles
Country Club.
Quote of the day
·'I got hit on the blind side when
someone missed a block," says the Rams·
Jeff Rutledge. ''But he got cut this mom· ing."
ln a tie at 145 is Fountain Valley's Brian
Lindley:
The 15th annual 72·hole tournament began
Tuesday and will finish Friday.
From Pace C1
LITTLE DEVI LS • • •
airport crowd is there.
The players a ll manage to get
by the autograph hounds, main·
ly because there aren't any.
How does a tourist from
Lynchburg, Virginia know what
Mike Witt looks like, anyway?
Moving onto the plane. Bobby
G rich. the Ange l s' DDJ
< .. Designated Don Juan" I is
already sizing up the stewardess
corner. He settles into the first
row or seats so that he can get a
good angle oo the passing
scenery.
Manager Gene Mauch. the
best dressed among the team for
definite reason, holds a stem
facial expression, as he will
through the rest of the trip.
Geoff Zahn pulls out his pocket
Bible and readies himsell for a
trip to the land of spirituality.
The blue with red trim Angel
s uitcases are all car efully
packed away with Special
Handling tags dangling from
their handles.
Each player ha s a DS
<"Designated Seat") with their
names on pieces of paper on
their seat. It's coaches and sWf
up front, starters and veterans
next, then the new players, sube
and rookies, and finally, Lhe
writers.
Soon, Ott gets up to make the
rounds. Slowly, he moves to the
rear of the plane where he'll
eventually entertain passengers.
all of whom have no idea who he
is . One w oman suggeats,
however. that he should run for
senator. "Not a bad idea," says
Ott. "Hey Rank (Steve Renko>.
would you vote for me? Rank,
Rank? That's OK, Rank, don't
wakeup."
In the meantime, Beniquez
and Bobby Clark have gone into
a thr owi ng warfare o(
Macadamia nuts. "Aw, come on
you guys, grow up," barks Witt,
and he receives a handful in the
face.
The plane touches down at
Seattle Airport and again, as
players file into the lobby, no
one notices. Airports are all the
same.
Leaving on the bus that wilJ
take the team to their hotel,
home for three days, some one
spots Rod Carew, frantically
waving from the side of the
road. "Wait, wait!" everyone
yells.
"Oh no. that's OK. you can go,
it's just the ball boy.
"Yeah, go on, it's just a new
batboy from Puerto Rico."
Along with Carew is pitcher
Ken Forsch and coach Jimmie
Reese. The three have just Oown
in from Cleveland following the
All-star game.
"Hey, nice pitch," Ott yells
out to Forsch in reference to his
home run ball served up to Gary
Carter the night before.
Pitching coach Tom Morgan
turns around and glares at Ott.
"Aw, come on, Mo, you're my
buddy," pleads Ott.
"No I 'm not," responds
Morgan.
"Yes you are," says Ott.
"No I'm not," insists Mor1an.
At the hotel, the comedy
marches on.
The players tend. to break up
into small groups, meeUng all
together as a team only at the
stadium.
It's a thoroughfare throughout
the day as the guys try to find
things to do to pass away the
idle hours leading up to the
evening's game. It's not an easy
task in Seattle.
"I Jove the road," SJlmmarizes
Grich. "ll makes you glad God
invented homes ."
Irvine North /alls
3-2 def eat ends title dreams
lrvlne North's queat for a
berth in tbe Llltle Lea1u.
Realonal Tournament al Saa
Bemardino fell short WedMI·
day nlaht u ln1lewood J-..4
to a tl\ree.run oulbunt ac ..
atart and buna oa for a s.t fie.
tory in the MDllftDlll of the
Dlv1aoaal Pl•yoff1.
Tbe wlnnen colleded two
1lnl)el ad a double ID _....
t.M Jump at lllalioD Vlejo-Yoali
At hletic Park and wm meet
tllCCllldldo, a 5-1 winer o•Hr
Gnaada HWI iii t.be ~ ball
of the aemllluli, tontibt at S:JO
' l '
for the rtpt to advance.
Intn. North answered back
with a nm In the bottom rA lM
ftnt When Mite Stewart linl)ed
to •tore Gar1 Re.terla and an~ nm wu ptcll .. 11> tn tbe 1ffCIM ....., Da.td To........S
1lqled • eYentu~ •cored oa • ..... bit.., lllk• Clpolla.
Tbato 11owe .. ' ... .... llllt Ume lntaie Nortb eGWW Ill a
runner Piii& ftnt baM. COMll
Ray Rolcbawi'• au..iar coUee· Uon reeordecl • f.J onrllll ,.. cont • J)lriajoa 5 dut.la,....
ll • l ... 1
From Page C1
ANGELS . • •
tribution I had to m a ke. rr you
lose three, you have a lousy
plane ride to Oakland. I think
we'll be all right now."
-Burleson wasn 't so sure,
though. "The big question is,
can Frost come back with
another game like this?" he
said. "And we've got to get pro·
duction from Baylor <th e
Angels' designated hitter was
3·for·l2 in the series with no
RBI>."
Burleson, who led off the 11th
inning with a double and scored
the go·ahead run on Grich's
homer, said that he required a
cortisone shot in his throwing
s houlder before the game ,
something he said he needs
about twice a season.
''The tendon there flares up
and the cortisone lubricates it
so that at least l .can play. I'm
not going to miss any games at
this point. It'll be sore tomorrow
(today> but I'll be ready by Fri·
day."
Aase said after Grich's second
home run, the mood in the
dugout picked up considerably.
inferring it wasn't at an all-time
high prior to that.
"I think we looked at his bit as
a breakthrough," he said.
Grich said he didn't see the
ball come off his bat and had no
idea wher e it was until be
rounded first. ''Then l saw the
right fielder (Gary Gray) run·
ning towards the line and I knew
il was down there somewhere."
When be aaw it hit the tarp
above the wall some 380 feet
away, Grich raised his arms in
jubilation.
During his rehabilitation
pertod, Grlch wore a cut over
his rl1ht band and wrist.
However, he often put a velcro
wrap, with weights lnaide, over
the wrist and swung a bat with It
on.
That, he said, as much aa
anything, was tbe key to bla
speedy recovery.
Now, the Angela bope they
have recovered from the pre·
openina night Jlllers and can
make a run for American West'•
°''-nae. They'll get a better readlnl on
themselves against Oakland
(the team wit.b the f'lnl naa>
this w~kend. ... ......... _. -by_.._.
* ._.. ........... ~ ... ...,, ... ..... '" .,. .. -It ..... _.,·-=
............ _.. .... I --........................... _ ... ee ... ,. .. ,......., .. .__ .,..-, .. , ..... ,_....., .......... .......................... ., -. ....................... , ...................... ,_,. ....... ,_..., ............. .. ........... ,.....-........ . __ ..... _,....,,.. ...... _ ... """" ...................... ..
•
Baseball today
On thls date ln baseball In 1WJ9:
St. Louis speedster Lou Brock beat out
an inlleld emash off the &loV9 of Chka10
pitcher Dennis Lamp for bil 3,000th career
hit u the Cardinals beat the Cubs 3·2. '
On this d•te In 1968:.
Baltimore pitcher Jlm Palmer. whost
career had been threatened by arm lrou·
ble the year before, no.hit lhe Oakland A's 8-0.
On this date In 19'8!
Satchel Paige made his major league
debut for the Clevelan Indians at the aae
of 42, throwin& a five·hJtter to beat the
Chicago White Sox 5·0.
Today's Birthdays:
Oakland A's Infielder Fred Stanley ls 34.
Cleveland Indians first baseman Andre Thornton is 32.
Rams-Dallas sold out; TV live
The Rams announced that thelr
National Football League preaeuon
game against the Dallas Cowboys
this Saturday nlgbt has been sold out and wlll be
televised locally. The last of th~ 89,006 ticketa
Cor the game at Anaheim Stadium was sold
Wednesday afternoon, the Rams said. Klck'olf
time for the nationally televised 1ame is 5:30
p.m ., PDT rather than the previously stated 6
p.m .... The Rams waived four players Wed·
nesday, including veteran guard Gret Horioa.
Also cut were rookies John AnderMD, a de·
fensive end from Bethune·Cookman; linebacker
Jerry McLain from Washington; and guard
Tom Pettigrew from Eastern llllnols .
Raiders' trial getting stickier LO~ ANGELES -Legal com· [i]
plex.itles mounted Wednesday in the C ,
tangled case of the Oakland Raiders
versus the NationaJ Football League. with one
juror's impartiality being challenged.
A question of bias on part of juror Tom
Gelker remained up in the air, with U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Harry Pregerson considering the
next step as the panel remained at an impasse
in its marathon deliberations.
The judge met with attorneys behind closed
doors for two hours. but deferredl ruling o!!t a
motion by the Raiders to remove the juror. 1 ne
problem arose when it was found that Gelker's
cousin, Bruce Felker, once owned the Portland
Storm of the defunct World Football League.
Theriot wins 800 (1 :49.42)
Former Newport Harbor High •
and UCLA track and field star Brtan
Theriot captured the 800 meters in
1 :49.42 Wednesday night in an invitational meet
in Varnamo, Sweden. Earl Bell was a winner in
the pole vault with an effort of 18-0lh . . . Mon-
treal hockey star Serge Savard made his retire·
ment official ... Chicago Black Hawks goalie
Tony Esposito is now officially an American
citizen and plans to play for Team U.S.A.
Telev1s1on . radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Atlanta at Dodgers.
7:30 p.m .. KABC (790 >.
Lopes can't
silence crowd
But boos turn to cheers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -National Leane All·
star second baseman Davey Lopes 11 ~ prilbary
lar.iet oC Dodger Stadium boo blrda theM days, but
he may be on the verge of sllencin1 U.em.
"I guess it's my batting average," aeld Lopes,
who had fallen to .165 after goin& hiUess in bia lut
flve at·bat.s. The Los Angeles veteran had been
booed for f~Hing to get the ball out of t.be tnlleld in
Davey Lopes
seventh.
---. his first two plate ap·
pearances.
But the boos turned
to cheers after the top
of the fourth Jnnlng of
the Dodgers' 1-5 victory
over the c;ncinnati
Reds. Lopes had j ust
taken a hit a way from
Cincinnati's Dave
Collins.
Th e n , more
c hee r ;i cam e when
Lopes singled home the
tying run in the bottom
of the fourth, singled
and stole a base in the
fifth and cracked a two·
r u n ho m erl in the
Lopes knocked in three of the Dodaers' runs
and had three of their 13 hits. After bis homeT, his
fourth of the season, he was accorded a standing
ovation and then tipped his cap to the crowd of
36,494.
"I'm not bitter," he said. "lt just pushed me
harder. I know I can hit.
"But I'm not denying, the boos hurt. But l
heard them boo Mike Schmidt in Philadelphia and
Joe Morgan in Ci ncinnati. so who am I to com·
plain?
"After my second at·bat, Reggie (team·
mate Reggie Smith) pulled me aside and told me
what J was doing wrong. And Danny ~Coach ~n·
ny Ozark> told me to relax, that I was en iinpor·
tant part of this club. That made me feel Cood. to
know that my peers and my coaches believe in me.
That really helped."
The Dodgers jumped out to a 3-0 Jead ja Uie "
fi rst inning against Cincinnati starter Tobi Seaver.
But the Reds quickly got even when Georae Foster
slammed a three·run homer in the third inning, his
15th, on a 3-0 pitch from Los Angeles starter Bob
Welch.
After the Reds took a 4.3 lead in the top of the
fourth. the Dodgers knocked out Seaver, banding
him only his second loss in nine decisions but bis
first since April 18. It snapped his six-game win·
ning strn k.
Pinch-hitter Jay Johnstone started the rally
with a bloop double to right and Lopes singled him
home to tie the game. Lopes, who pad taken
second on an error, scored the goahead run on a
single by Ken Landreaux. who also had Usree flits.
Landreaux eventually scored on a sacrifice Oy by
Ron Cey.
Neyer takes c u s tomary dive
Megan Neyer easily captured
the one-meter diving title with
a score of 534.66 points Wednes-
day afternoon in the U.S. Out·
door Diving Championships at
the Marguerite Recreation
Center.
We ndy Wyla nd fini s hed
second with 501 .48 points.
followed by Chris Seufert with
498.45 points.
The meet began Tuesday with
the men's one-meter compeli·
lion, won by Greg Louganis, and
continues through Saturday.
Mi ssion Vi ejo Nadadores
Coach Ron O'Brien labeled one
of Neyer's e fforts. a 1112
somersault. as "The best I've
seen any woman do."
Neyer's consistency showed
through the day with 8s and 9s
awarded by the judges.
Today's agenda found the
women's one·meter prelims in
the morning, followed by the
women's one-meter finals at 4,
followed by the men's three·
meter finals.
Michele Hain finished fourth
wfth 462.66 points. followed by
Janie Serwan with 452.64 points;
Tristan Bake r with 449.94
points; Karen Gotham with
442.44 points , and Kelly
McCor:mick with 440.91 points.
Neyer. 19, also won the three·
meter title at the indoor national
meet in April at Columbus.
Ohio.
A total of 35 women enteTed
the three·meter competition.
with qualifying Tuesday after·
noon and the finals Wednesday
afternoon. Eight divers qualified
ror the finals.
W e knO'N how critical a Q<>Od "mobile homt" ls to backpackers. That's
why we offer destans by The North Face . . the !nest available light·
~aht tents. backpaoo. sluplna ~as. and handsome. functional clothlfli.
Puforman~ ls the key and all products from The North Face art Full
Ul'etirM Wanantied.
Remember Sid &. Sports for all your b.ckpac~i· ski. tennls. racquetball,
and ~nttel 1porttna needs. 4 locations to serve you
'· ~
••
"
i
(
HI P Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thur1d•y, Augu1t 13, 1981
.era OP PltClAL •HIM ..atlel It MUleY OIVllt ... ........ '-............... ., ..
..... "DNwtln ..... c-. ..... ......,., 04*1d .. ,, ........ ....
•• "91.111 .. ,.,.. ..... ~·
·-M .. C:... ..... CIVIC ca.r, 11 """ Oftllt c ........ Cltlflnllt, 110111 T .. I iiOl"OWINO '°ltllOH1
11n1NO A TU RATI TO l'AY TMI lllllNClllAL. ANO tltTlltHT ON eONOI lllUIO IY THI
OllTat<:T, MO AD0"tON O• THI
•••• ll•KAL YIAll 1uoon. CllU Noew lallllary
Dl*ld ..... .,.T.••Nt Cteni Of IM Dltlrlct
~I .... OrMtt CoHt 0.lly ,,.._ A.,.. ,., , .. ,
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
SARASOTA. Fla. tAPl
JemH Haley, tl2. 24·year
veteran or CongreSIS end
originator or programs lo
aid Indians and w1sr
veterans, has died at hts
Gulf Coast home lie was a
Delll-O('rat
PORTLAND, Ore cAPl
J eue G . Siii, 99, a
pioneer newsreel a nd aerial
photographer, died Sunday
S ill photographed every
president lo visit Portland
Crom Theodore Roosevelt to
Dwig ht Eisenhower u nd
was a freelance pholOR·
rapher for Palhc News .
IT llACA, N.Y. IAPJ
Jack C. Kie f er, 57 . a
s taUslician and member of
the Nationa l Academy of
Sciences. died Monday .
Kie (er's le a ching career
sparmed three decades at
UC Berkeley und Cornell
University
DEATH NOTICES
BURTON
AU'RED BlJRTON
passed a''<l} on August 8.
1981. IJe 1s surv1v('d by ht~
wcfe AJice, daughter:. Huth
M c Qua d c a nd P rud<•ncc
Wilhams. son John Burton
o f Wes tmins ter. Ca • 7
grandchildren and 2 great
gra ndchildren Slumb rr
Room visitation will be held
on Thursday, AuRuSl 13. 1981
from 12 noon to 5 .00PM. at
from 12 noon to 5·00PM at
Mo rtuarv ~ervict.•s will be
held on · Friday, August 14.
1981 at I OOPM al the lla r bor
Lawn Memorial Ch l.lpcl with
Rev Aaron Buhler of lht'
Harbor Tr1n1l)' H apt1~l
Church of Costa Mei.a. of
ftciatmg lntermcnl i.cr v1ccs
1 m mediately follo" 1ng
Services under the dcretc1on
of Ha rbor Lawn Mount
Oltve. Mortuar~ of Cn'ila
M csa 540 5.S.'>4.
SLA1TERV
JACK '"JOllN" S L AT
TERV, resident of Ne"port
Beach Ca Passed a" a\' on
August 10. 1981 IO the City or
llope, Duarte. Ca lie was a
member of St .Joachim's
Catholic Churc h , Costa
Mesa. Ca. Survived by his
wife. Margarette Slallcry of
Newport Beach . Ca . son
Mic hae l Slattery of Ohio.
daughters Marlene Yahnert
of Ohio and J e annie Skadal
of Anaheim, Ca .. mother
Hazel Quillan of West Cov.
ina, Ca . and his sister Judy
Fickle of West Covina. Ca.
and S grandchildren. Rosary
Prayer Services will be held
o n Friday. August 14. 1981 at
11.00AM at the LaPalma
Chapel al Backs Kaulbars
M orLua r y Graveside
ser vices will be held Frid ay.
August 14. 1981 at I OOPM at
R ive r si de National
Cemetery, Riverside. Ca
The famil y suggests
memonal contributions ~
made to the Cit~ of Hope
C ancer Research. Attn ·
Employee Staff Chapter .
1500 E. Duarte R oad.
Duarte, Ca. 91010. Directed
by B acks Kaulb ars
Mortuary. Anaheim. Ca
P'IHCl•OlMHS SMnHS' MOITUMY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
~39
,AClflC VllW
MIMOllAL ,AH
C.rrelery Morcuarv
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beac h
644·2700
McCOIMICI MOITUAa•s
Laoun• Beech
49-4·9'15
Leguna Hlll1
768-0933
San Juen C.p1streno
495·1776
tWeOI LAWt4-MT. OUYI
Mortuary • C.metery
Cre,,.tory
1625 G111., Ave .
CpateMeM
SM>-5554
,_CIMOTMml
..a.laOAOWAT
MOCT'UdY
110 8'oedW1y Colt.a~ ..
642-9160
~ tecoemtACTHI
CALU ......... kMll Ol#IU NIWllOltT .. l\A UNIPllOtc~ OllTlllCT
ei. O...IM. t.• a'ctcll 11.m ... .. • ,..., fl ....... ,., ..._. ..... ~•:1u1111_...i.
lt .. ~-...CAWV llteltcl 141Htl llt11ta11 N t "'' · c:.AllNT UIVINO llllOUlllllMINTI TN~f ™I DllTlttCT ~ llw. .,.811 HM1 lllJ lltac-
llt M..ca1'-..,. CA~ N0T1CC ti Nl•ltV OIVIH tlleil
U. -••Ml'llM k:Mel Ottltlct .. Or ... ~. CallfWlll•, t<llitt.,, en41 111'911911 lb 00¥t•lll"t ... r<I. llt'tol1tlher referrtd I• •• "OltflllCT", will r«•lw MP lt, 1i1o1t ""' IMIW .... , .............. tlmt,
_._ ..._,... ,,. -·• flf • conlrect ,., ttw ...... llf'lt)«l,
ll•L"'.-11 .. rtalllff Ill Wit ffac.t lditftllf-....... """ tllell .. _.__
.... -kly , ........... '"' --lllltll lln• ......... .
lhert wOI 119 t NIA -..111 r.cwlr9CI ••• tt(ll ... tf ..,. wc11me111• •• ..,..,.,... h retw11 Ill OOOd conctltltrl
•llflln N/A _.,I •"~ ti. llld -nl ... ..... •ac:11 IH41 m11tt conform end lie
............... 1"'~rte1·~• ~8"' .id llNlt ... _'°"',,... ... "'
IN •wrtty ,...,,. • '" h c.,.tract OK ............ llf Ille 11•1 Of pr__.,
MlkMlrauon. Tiie DISTRICT ,_.,.. lht rlfllt ..
reject MY "' .it -or 10 wel,. et1Y ln..,i•IUft or '"'°""'•1111• In .,.Y .......... ~"'" Tiie OISlatCT hH mt.I,.., frem 1i. ov.ct• ..... o.--Of ,,.. Mlrltl "-'llMlls Ille 9'"9' .. -vell-
l"t rett Of -diem .... , 111 tlw 1ac.iHv h1 wfllOI tlll• _.. It 10 bl oerf.,.,.,,.. for HCll er.it °' type of
-~ -to ellt<ute ,,. <-lract. n.. ,_ •e °" tilt at Ille
OIST•ICT office loot•• el "" Plac .... le Sl., C:.t.. Mose. CA 91•21. Coples mey 11t oat.lned on rtqUtlt, A copy flf ..._ ratft stall llt pOSltd • Ille jOel illt. Tiit ........,.,. ldledula of par di-
.., ... , Is b..o -e -lllng dey of •IQM (I) hourt. Tiie r81e f0t holldey
9nd _.tlmt -11 .... II be al ltMt llmtMCl ........ f.
ll 11\tll 1119 mend9tory 11POn lhe CON·
TRACTOlt to whom lhe <Oftlr9<1 h
-erdltd, --•nv sub<ontreclot ulld9r him, to pey not '"' 11 ... n Ille Nld 'llt<llled race to ell -111me11
emplo'l"CI llr llltm In ltle ••Kution of , ... ,_, ...
No llicldlf' mer wltll<lr-Ill• Did for e pel1od Iii IOrty..Hw (4S) deys eftH , ........ lor ""_,,..of bids.
A peyrrwll bOllcl ..., e pem>,.,,,.,.ct
bond Wiii llt .._1rec1 prior lo taecu· lion of IN conlr ect. TM pay,,_t bond •hell 119 In Ille l•m ... forth 111 tr. C011lr9<t Otc-b. Governing 8Nrd By Dorotlly H.-,.y Fl-r
l'llr<1'18Stne Oi~tor Pvtlfl.,_. a-.,... Coe\I D.ily PllOC, Aue. IJ, JO, ltll
NS 7'tff7 l'ICTITI OUS 8USINHS NAME STATEMENT Tht IOl!owjng per-It CIOlllQ l>u\I ,.. ....
CALWEST GROUP, 2712• Cemlno Ceplllr•no, Suite 201, l.eOUN Hlgutl, CA t'Ul1
RICHARDO. BROOICS, llO Celle Pl11m•. Sen ClemeMt, CA n101.
Thi• buMneu I• conducted t>y 1n In dlvld11al. RIC'hMd 0 Broot<1 Tiiis tt•i.rntnl wes llllld wlll\ tht Counly Clerk of Or1nga Counly on July
lJ, '"' .. , .....
PUIUC HE
AMe.aJ
lfOTICI O~ TauSTll'S IAL.I &~HO.~ T.1.N•.TlltMI On...........,), 1 .. 1, et 11 •00 A.M ..
Ttue 1---T .... ~y.
H dlll~ ~nttcl fr\ill .. under ----' 10 0... Of Tr~I ftctrlled J11-1y 1J, 1•, H ln't Ho UfJI, 111 "°"' 1)1'7S, P-oe »> 01 Oltkltl aec;ord• In tllt f/fflu qi Ille C-ly AKOr .. r of Or•,... C011n4Y, Calllornle, Will Sel.I. AT PUBl.IC AUCTIO N TO H IGHUT 81 DOER FOR CASH, CASH1£a•s CHl!CI( OR Cl!aTlf'lf.0 CHECIC II»,_ et ll"" of .... Ill ltwlul .._,, of IN Unlltcl Sl•llll •I Ille i$oUlh Ir°"' efllrellCt IO Ille Old
Orellee County Collrt'-w toc•ttd 111 Ille JIOO l>locl Of W9'1 S...te Ane 81Yd
(formerly Wffl •tll SI,_ I, S.111t Ane, Call'9rllle, all r19111. tlllt •llCI lnlM•I
COllveyed to encl,_ held by II Un0tr
Mid 0..0 Of hull •.> lo .,. undivided one l\tll lllttftU 111 1111 tollowl,.. dtKrllltcl-r1y
A 1.-lnlMKI In MCI to LOl n, Tree! n21 .... Ille Clly Of NtwPG" BtKll, County of Or•nga, Sltlt of C•lllotnle. H pe~ mt1P ,.. corded Ill 8ooll m , Pegn U to :n. ln-<lutlve, MIK•ll-• M.lpS, In,,.. of· lkt of llw COllftly Recoroor of wlO County. TrllSlot or re<ord owner RONALD
I.. BARTHOLOMEW tnd PHYl.1.15 A. 8AATHOl.OMEW. The tt,...t _,... •nd other com-
mon dttlgnallon, II env, ol the •Ml
P•-,,Y detcr11MC1 •llOve 11 purpo,,ed 10 be: m Tllltr Way, Coron. 001 M•r,
Ct lllomlt t»ll. ,
The undtr'll9ned Tru•IH dlKlalms any li.blllty tor eny lncorrectntn of
Ille ttre.t -n• -.,...., common O.slgnetlotl, II any, •-n heroin.
Stlo Wle Wiii llt ,,,_, M Wlllloul cov.....,,. or warrtnty, e1pren Of Im. p11«1, ,......dlnv 1111e, ~an11on., en-
< 11mDr•n<t1, 10 pey tllt 11npeld
bttenc1 of Ille not•l•I -"'" by Mid 0.tcl Of Trwtt, 1-11 UJ,IU.60, ln-cllldlng •• provi-In Uicl note Ill, ed-Yen<fl, II •111. vnclll< Ille term• of NH
Oetcl .. TNll, '"'· <Mr~1 •ncl ... pe,,_ ol 1111 T""''" encl Of IM trwsls c rtettd tty Miid Deed of Trust. Tiie ...,..kier, undtr H id °"41 ot Trv•l llerttefore tat<11IH •nd d9-llve rte! to Ille .....,... "ened • ..,, l!Wft
O.cl¥.,.IOll ot Oefa1111 end Dtmtnet for S.I• . .,.d • •rllttn Nollet ol 0.181111 tnd Ele<tlon lo Sell 10 llt ,.._ cor-In llllW county wllere lhe rMI P,....,., Is IOCaled TrldlH or 1»r1y <onclucllne ule, TITl.E INSURANCE ANO TRUST COMPANY, IOO H Mtlll
SlrMI, Sent• "M· Ctlllornl• 91101, 11141 tU.2020JOYCE WILLI AMS.
Oete: .August•. '"' Tiiie ln-411\Ct ....sTn.ittcom.....,y e\ wld T ru\1te Joyct Wllll•m• Autr.>rlred S19nt1ure PU!Mllhed Orenge CCMISI O•lly Piiot, AUQ. 13, 70, l1, 1 .. 1
U7MI
Publl•htd Ora,... Coast O•llY Pllo(. ----.-llJC--Mll-TIC--(----
Jul~ :IO, AUQ. •. 13, 20, '"' 340t-ll rw nu
PUlllC MOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USllllHS
NOTICI TO CONTllACTOaS
CAUJMO ~11 llDS School Ol11rl<I: COAST COM· MUNITYCOlU!Oe OISTalCT NAME STATEMENT Bid l>NdllM: 2:00 o'clock pm. Of Thi fOllowlng Ptf'9on Is doln9 -..11. theJrdlllevol~r, '"' ntu eJ Place of 8111 Receipt Office of "" I. A K E F 0 R E S T 0 IE H l A L P11ra-lftQ ...... Mt Mori.,. ,..,....,., CENTE~ 2S-l12 Tr•llU<o. Ult l'°'est• CoH l Comrf'Nnlly COiiege Olslrkt,
CA t1'JD. 1210 ....,,,s AY9., Co.le Me .. , CA G•rr P Jonts, 216) Paclll< • l • .,.~
Coste liiWM, CA 9'UV. Pro)eet 1-tlOcetlon H•me: Goldtn
Thlt Duslntss Is conducted °' ... In· WHI Cotlevt Interior St..lrway -dlvlc!Uel. WI-Well Pnljtcl RtO+cl I IOU
Gtry P. JOflff Pltct "'-.,., °" Ille Tiie Bhirock Tiii\ stet-I ., .. llleo w1lh Ille p.,,,..,.hlP. UOO Ntwporl Blvd.,
County Cieri! ol o ... n~ Coun1, on Newpoo1 BMch, CA '2"'2 (Boe> HtllChl A11g. j, 1911. ( 11 •l tn.aDO
f'IVal NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN n-tl Pullll\lltd Orenga Cw•I Oelly Pilot. lllt ..,.,.,..,..,,,.., Sc'-1 District Of
Aue. I, 1J. 20, V , '"' Utt-II 0••"91 C:-IY. C.lltornla. KllftQ tty
end IMOUlllh II• Gover11lnQ Botrd, PUBUC NOTICE hHelnetter """'d 10 •• -------____ "DISTRICT'', wlll ~tlvo up lo, but
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINHS NAME STATl!MENT Tht lollowlng person\ •rt dolne
"'''lness as~ 1 CONTRACTORS SPA 6 S.0.UNA,
dlvl\lon of O.lmltr Sid Inc:., •12 Hoflll Eiplanedt. Orange, C•lllornle 9"69
O•lmler lid. Inc., C•Hlor11la, '72 Nof111 Espl~ Orenge. CA t? .. 9
TlllS bllslneu '' cond<lcttd llV • cor p0retlon Daimler I.Id, Inc. S Woll,
Ste. Trtes..
Thia Jl•-.il wes flled "'"" ""' C011nt, Clerk of Or-Counf,, July
21, '"'· ,.,_,,
Pul)llthld Or-CO.JI 0.lly Piiot, J111, u , >o. Auv. •. 12. 1 .. 1 m1~1.
'ICTtT10US 8UllNUS NAME STATEM•NT The lolloWlnv __, ll d9ll\9 llMIM· neua au•EN DESIGNS, 2• Moren•.
'"''""·CA mu. ............ aur..n. 1• Morent. ,,.,, ..... CA fVIS. Tlllt ....,..,.., 11 conctuctlld by .,. ln-
dlvi... UMF.8..,..
Tiiis • ...,,,..., wn Ille with Ille
COUolty c1er11 of Orenve County on AUii. ll, 1"1. ,.,..,
l'ullll ...... O' .... Coast Delly Piiot,
°"'II IJ, JO, V , Sepe. J, ltl1 ,_...
not Iller 11'*1 llw allO,,..•Ultcl lime, ualed ~ lor Ille awerd of • 'onlrect f0t tht-pro)«I Blclt .,..., lie re<•lvect 111 tllt pfac.
IOtnllfled ...,,., -\htll llt -ned
encl publi<I' reed aloud et IM --\t.led llmt tnd ptKe.
Tlltrt wlll be • '10.00 °"'°'" , .. qulr.O lot N<h wt of bid doc-\\ to
g~rnM the retutn In -" 'oncllllon
wlthl,. 10 °''' •fl•r '"' llld -Ing dt le. Eecll llld m11tt co11lorm en4 llt rMPOllSl.,. to ttw contrecl wcu,.....b.
Eacll bid ll\811 11t t<<-lllecf by the -Ul'llY rtlerred lo In Ille COftlrect
doclll'IWtlls -bY , ... Ill! of P<--wtxontrac:IO<l.
The DISTRICT ,_,,..,the rlghl to
reject eny or all blcl• or to w•lwe any lrrt9Ularlll".,. lt'lformalltles In .,.,
bid• Cit 111 tlw bldcllf\9. Tiie DISTRICT hes abttlMd fnwn tlw DlnclOr Of ... Otl:NK't....t Of ,,..
dl.lstrt.I l'Nl~ ttlt ........ PAYetl· Ing rete of per di.m ., .... Ill Ult
IOCellly ill wtlkfl tllh wort1 I• to lie
performtCI for tecfl er.rt °' type Of _.,.,.... _.., to e..cw the nin-
trect. TllHI r-ere on Ille al the OISTalCl Offkt IOUteO at Office ..
Ptly ... l"actlltltt Pl-1119. CCCD. mo Mems.. eo. .. Mew. ~ .....,
be....,,_ Oii ~. A C09'f of 1-rtlft lllell lie pomed et Ille )oll 11te. Tiie........,,. KNcNlt Of per dltm
........ "'"'" -• -"lnu dey of t'9M Ill flouts. Tiie ••It for hotlcley
--'lmt --""'" ... , .... ··--.............. II .... II t. mef\dol1ory -t1W CON· -------------1 1aAC10lt to wllOfl'I Ila c:onlrecl II
~•uc lllOTICI NOTICE It hentty wned lflet Coul GO!nmVnlty Cotle91 Ol1trl<t mo Merna A-. Cost. Mtu,
'2U., ac11111 In II• capacity ts A1911<y 1\11 c-to 1119 1><tpered e t11vl,.,,...,,...I lmp«t 11udy lllCI dr
rtflOrl ,..l•lllll Jo 11Mallllt M1¥1re,.. mt11I .. l,,,_b eeMrett4 llY c-slr..ctlftt • 41.000 _.. foot.'~ lltr,, edlllllllttr•llon t •11ttr, ~ .... ~ ............. • ......, .., .,..,,..., .,._....., er•'
l"t * dr ....... ,.,,._., All tlle eMw II ..... ~ ell e I.ill KN
H'Cefflfl ............... ....... ctr11•r of Warnt r Avtftllt e114I
N ........ St.-.... Qty .. ,_...
Valley.
The .. .,. -1~1 im.ect ...
_, .. ...a . ._..., ~k "'--111 tM Offkt .. ~ ,Mii
,,....._ CMla ~"' Cflf .... Ollff'let, T~ ,a<lllCY, 111'0 .-.mt A-.c.i.-...CAft6at aM .. C811MY .. OfMtlt ._._., ltC.-. M
11M.S UI A..._,,.._..... Ylltey, CA
ft7GI.
ew.-. -upon e11y Mlb<Oll !rector
~ Nm, to PtY llOI I-n-tn ti•
said tOO<lfled reto. to ell worll"'°" emp!O'tfd Ill' ttwm 111 IN .. eculltll Of Ille <oratrect. No lllOdtl' mlY wltlldr .. 1111 bid for • perled ot lorty.flw IOI deys el_, tllt ..... Ml tor the Ol*llftQ Of Dldt.
A ...,_,, bond -• per1trmance llOllCI wlll be l"tqlllrW P<lor .. tllOC!t-llOll Of h cOlllract. The peyment _,.
lhall lie Ill tlWt fotm Ml 1ott11 Ill ti. Ctftlrect 00<-t.
Oo\Mlllllt 9oerd Byt/..........,I! Webon
Sot<MMy,
a-9tf TrtltlHt Pi*ltMll Or .... CO.ti Oally P116t,
A119, IJ. :IO, 1'11 MIMI
.....
NS.7"11
NOTICI 0" DIATH Of'
J e ANN I Ii. KISZKO
ANO Of' PETITION TO
ADMINISTl!R l!STATE
NO. A·109IU.
To all heirs,
beneficiaries, creditors
and contlng nt crtd ltor1 of
Jeanne E . Kluko and
persons who may be
otherwise Interested In the
wlll and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Kathleen Garnsey In
the S uperior Court of
Oranoe County requesting
that Kathleen Garn sey t>e
appointed as personal
representative to ad·
minister the estate of
Jeanne E . Klszko of Coste
Mesa, Ca. (under the In·
dependent Administration
of E states Act). The petl·
lion Is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive West, Santa
Ana, Ca. 92701 on Sep-
tember 2, 1981at9:30 A.M .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objections wtth the
c ourt before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
In person or by your at·
torney.
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,...,, Ml"••• COU•T W CM.l ..... tA. C*l•TY
CWCNlAIMe OltH• TOIMOWCAUM .... , ....... cw .... , ...... ~ ..... ......
Ill Ult ~ ..... """ket .... flf 111
rt JANA JANllAH KOn, 1 ~. .,, 5NAlllON MARii IT A THAM, llOf mtllltr, 11141 IAelllNA ,.,, ••
~MlllN. ... 0-.flfH-. JANA JANIAN SCOTT e114I
&AeRINA JIN8 ~l~H M¥t Iii.II o
felltMll ....... <-' ..... .,., el·
lawllll lleCI ....... , .... llltlr MMtt trwn JA,.A JANIAH ICOT'T tt JANA JAHIAH STATI4AM 11141 a.AIRINA JINI l"Nl~P$ It SA8RIHA JIHI 5TATHAM. It It..,_, ., ...... lflat ttl ,_,_ 1114trftltcl lft Ille mttltr
efor ... 141 ...... before 11111 '°"" Ill Ottlert,,..... NO. I 81 700 CM< Ct11tw Oflv. w.tt. ..,,.. Me. c.i11ot1111. 91\ ltitlemW t, 1,.1, el lO;JO O'(loCll
a,lft,, .,.,._Md lllert-t-, II
.,.y ttlty ........ Wfl't Mid .. 1111 .. ....
C:flMte .. -.,_.. "°' .. ., ... , .. .
1111 '""''" "'9< .. ,,..., • <.,., .. 1111• 0<4'ler It 1MW t-.. ...,..,.,_. In
Tiit O•llY Piiot, e ne••P•per OI ttntral c1~_.ICNI, .,,...,_ 111 thll
, ...... ,, .. -· tlltt • _.. ,., ·-(tftN<utlW wwlll 1Wlor IDlht dey Of
.............. , 0.... Jiiiy ti, '"' ........ .._ , ...... -..... c... THOMASO L.UMSDOH
~Vonl(.,..._ Newpo,, 9-'.h, Ge '2..0
17U)H2.._,.
PvllllPIM Or ..... CMll D•llY Pllol,
J111y n. JO, Al4-•. u, '"' »11 .. 1
PUBUC NOTICE ----------NOTIC• OP TaUSTl•'S SALE T.LIM.._,4'
__,
PUBLI NOTI E PUBLI
N•7tl:rt • ....,.
NOTICE OF DEATH OF u..., ,_.
GEN E L. LETTS, •ka 0:0::.:.r;.;•,'::~~1~"~ 111 GENE LETIS, aka G.L. l"llUT UUIUCAN TITL.I L E T T s A N 0 0 F IN5UltAHCI COM~ANY .. ,,,,. ... °' M~ Trv.--" ._,. ... .,. .. P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 • '"'""· • -mi.111 o.. et Tl'Vf1 MINISTER ESTATE NO. tllt<lllN ... KATHUIHI OAYl.'S
A-109872. COCH•AN, ... """'4t'•"'f -'
T 0 • 1 1 .. 1 1 r s , 01 •A1.D u •AUCH, .,. ,.,,n1.,r"4
• " m•11, •1141 •«•tlllCI ~· u, "" .. beneficiaries, creditors 11111•11.....,. "° 11 ..... '" _.. um.
and contingent creditors of .,. .. • .. 0t11<1.1 Re<.,.d• o1 ~~
G L l t k G C•Wlly, c.i11••. -~· .. ene • ..et s, a a ene 11 .. 1 on••n Noll<• 01 o.1•1111 llfl4
Letts, aka G.L. Letts •nd llt<lleft w a.11 111er_.., rMO<'W41
persons who may be ~,u •. 1,.1e11n,1.-1no 417•,111
otherwise Interested rn the ..... UOOI, peoe , .. 1• Of 0111<1•1 II.ctr-. Of Mid c-•v. w11111Mtr 1nc1 Wfll I nd/Of' estate ; ltllfw.111110 Nl4' °"41 ol Trwtl Mii ti
A petition has bt:en filed PYlll~ -""' 1 ... cHh, ••wfti• ,_Y
by v..,... R Letts In the 01 II•• u1111tc1 ~ute. Of Anwrlu, t1 111e "'' ·-• mtl11 t11tre11et to l'lrtl Amtrl(1111 Tlllt Superior Court of Orange 111111r•11~• c:;ompeny '°'•'•d •I 1u County r equesting that ... , ,. ..... ,., ... ., '" t1w cJtv 01 s.1111
Verna R. Letts be appoint· A11•, ce1UOt'nle, •II IM• •klftl, 1111t •""!
ed as personal represen· 1n1trt1t<Gnvn9Cl10•"4-htl4lllY 1 1111cler "lei °"41 OI lru•f In llW prOjler tatlve to administer the 1y '"u•tea 1n w1a c:.-•Y -sttt•
estate of Gene L . Letts atml11tc1•1
k ,.~ L~ ka G L' ~A•c•1. i: a a .....,ne """$' a • · Unit )I, co11•htf110 01 ltrlelll
Letts, Costa Mesa, Ca ( un-•lrspect -111r1eo •ltfMnll. tt
der the Independent Ad· thOWf'I end 41t'C•lb•4' '" "" n n ministration of Estates doml11lum plen ••• NewjlOrl Ol en Tw~. <KOflMO "Pfll s. lt1' '" Act>. The petition Is set for 1too111>0t1 • ...-•~•0•7t 11><•'3lvu1
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 0111c1e1 Re<ord• of or-C-ty,
700 Civic Center Drive ce111orllla. ~AaCIL.2; Wes t, Santa Ana, Ca 92701 An .....,1,,,_ 11i.1r1 1n1., .. , .,., '"
on September 2, 1981 at ••mP•• 1n1trn1M•,..,.,.,1n com,,,... 9 :30a.m . In •"4 IO ... of u.. , .. , P<-flY, In
If YOU OBJEC.T to the ~~~!';',;;1!:°','~";~''::'.:~~
granting of the petition, YOU 11rrtc1 to-· In 1.o1 1 01 TrKI 10JO>,
should either appear at the .. •llOWn on • mtP 111.0 '" _.. "'·
hearjnl'I and State'yOUr ob-"~' O -.e ol mlKlll--""" ""' In lhe offke of llw Or-C°""IY ~ctlons or flle written ob-Rtcor61•.
ctlons with the court Eace11tine 111ere1rom un•h 1 lh•011911
fore the hearing. Your >t 111e1u•lve, ••,,,,,..,.on 11w pt•n
b i Exc•pline thlrelrom, ell mlne••I•, appearance may e n oll, gH, pelroleum, olhtr hydrocerbon
person or by your at· wtistencts....., 111 undergr-.d ... ,.,
torney. In or unoer or w111c11m•vllt1><o4'uctd
I f y O U A R E A lrom Hid Joi wlllcll uncllrlln • plene "r•ll•I lo Mid UO Itel below lhl pre· CREDITO R or a cont-un1•urf•uof u ldlo1l0tlMPV'llOM
lngent creditor of th e de-01 pro•pecllng •or. the .. 1>1or•llon. de·
Ceased You must file Your vtloomenl, produ<Uon, ulr•ctlon tnd • taking ol ••Id mlntr•I\, oll, o••· c l aim w it h the court or P•lf'oteum. otht• llyd•oc•rbon •ull
present It to the per,sonal ,,.,.,., -wet•• 1ro"' ~·• 101 llY
representative appointed mtan• of mine• ..... 11 •• Otrrl<kl Of'
,.iCT1TIOUS llltlNal
....... IHff•lfT ,.,. ,......,... _...,. It .......... ........
CUSfOM CUTlll, ~ f'~la
itrMI, Cliltt Meta. c:.A ..... JINHI lllR H. Wl!el•, )44t Fw<Mtt llr•t, C.t.e NWM. CA tt.-.
Tiil• ..,_.n,u 11 <~WO •r .. Ill .... ...,
Jtlll\11 ... H W.-W Tllll II.el-I WM lltN Willl .. Ce11nh Cltrll ol Ofaftt9 c-ty tft
Al>O ··'"' """" ~ll~llllNd Or ..... COHI Olilf Ptlo4. A .... l, IJ, l0, l1, ltll iJ0141
'ICTITIOU5 8UllNUS
NAMI! ITATIM•NT fhe IOllowlne PM .... II ClolnQ llUU•
lllHM. N llWPORT CINTIElt PaOPERllES, MIO N-port Ctflt.f Otlvt, Sit. 200, Htwport Btacll, CA
tJ..O Jolln lttltll YOflkt,., !tit .. or1 w_,., Pleet. M-• .. .,.. I.A
t2~ Tiii\ ...... neo Ii <-led lly ... 111 dlvl-
J-It Yonke" Thli wet-I wtt llled •1111 l~ (OlllllY Cltrll of Ortncie (.ounly 011 July '· '"' ,., .... n
PUOll""° Or ..... Coell O•lly PIMIC,
AUii •. ll. 20, 21, 1"1 1$21 ti
"ICTITIOU5 IUSIN•U
NAME STATl ... NT
The toi1-ine PtrlOll I• Clolng llMlil·
neu •• I. P. OFFICE SERVICES, IMS Perk vi ... Or . COIU Mffe, CA,,.,,. Mine 1.oulH H~. lllS P•rllvl-Clr., c.ooi. Meu, CA '2'11. lhl1 bulinHS IS condu<ttd llY en In dlvi-' Mine l.ouilt H• .... Thi• w1twnenl •tt llltd wllll Ille Counly Clerk ot Orenve County on
Aug.•,'"' f'UT1U Pubtlilltd Orange co .. 1 0•11' Piiot, A119, •• ll. 20, 11, lttl l•t9·11
T.C. SALi! •Ut1
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
clalm with the cou rt 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 7QO of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing claims w ill not ex·
p lre prior to four months
from the date o f the hear-
ing noticed above.
NOTICE IS HEREBY 01\/IEN, 11\tt on Wt4',,....y, A11911st 1'. '"'·el t·oo o'clock •·"'-of wl• dey, In IN office ol REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, loceltd el 2020 North Broedw•y, Suitt 21», 111 Ille City of S.n· le Ane, County ol Ortnge. St.le Of Callfornlt , THE GEORGETOWN
RECOHVEYANCE CO RP .,• C•lltornl• corPOrallon, " duly •P· POlnttd Truatte under and p;ir-nl lo
the powtr ol Wle conltrrtcl In ll'Wil <tr· ttln Dud 01 Tr11•I eucultd by GEORGE L. VARRATO AHO ANITA VARRATO, hl6band end wllt H joint
ltn•nli, •KOf-Auou•I U, ltlO, In Book 1ni. of Otflctel Recor~ of wld County, et pege IO•, Recorder'• ln\lrum.,.t Ho. J1W. by •MICll'I of • breecll or cltfawll In peymenl or pertorm•nce ol lllt obllgello11• \tc11rtc1 tlltAOy, lncludl"11 INI llrM<h or del.,11, Hotlu of wlllch WH re·
corCltCI AOfil t, ""· In ._ 14012 of Offkl•I Re<WOI of uld C-ly, al
"ge INT, lllecorelff'l lnslrwmonl Ho
9111, Wll.I. SEl.L AT PUILIC AUC· TION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, lewflll ,_y Of the Unit·
Id Sl•t"-•II payebll et the llr,.. ot
ult, ell rl9h1. 11111 -Int""' now lleld by It " TrualH, In .,.. to ll'Wil re· al property sltuell In wld County •nd Stitt, MKrilltcl •IOI-I
. other equipment lrorn w11tct IO<a· by the court within four lions on e<ljolnlng Of' nelehtiorlng ••nd NOTICI: OI' tNTENDED Ul.E m o nths from the date of or 1y1ng ou11100 01 1,,. •oov1-c1tKr111tc1 AT ~u•L•c AUCTION OI' first issuance of letters as 101, 11 .,.,,.. unotrttood ,,.., the-~ TAil 01:•0•0 auL. ... o~••TY
lded I "--ti 700 f ol sucll ml,,.,.,,, oll, Cl••. pellC>l .. ,m, PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY prOV n ~ On 0 Ollltr llydroUl'bOn >11Dll•nco end the Probate Code o f ••ttr.euet10t11\t110ve.irw11h .. tno GiVEH •nei on th• tn4' do 01
~Pltm-, 1911, •I the hour Of 10·00 California. The time for' rlgllt to enter upon'"" wrlKt or .,..y o'Cloc k AM. ot 1,..1,,..,, lfl IM omu
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested in the
estate, you may fi le a re-
quest with the court to re-
ceive s pecial notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac·
counts and reports
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
filing Claims Will not eX· porlion lhertol •l>Ove U ld Pl•nt OI lht Te• CollKtor·T,.1twr~ of -
• ..1.... P•r•ll•I lo -jjj) '"' below IN pre County ol 0r.,..., ~el• Of C.lllotllla, pire prior tO four n10nthS wnl wrlKt of llw W1d lot lor •ny lllt ulldtr>lt ntd, ROBl!RT 1..
from the date Of the hear· pur-wnet_v.,, H rtwtnrtcl In llw CITRO.,, ti Te• CollKlot·TrNwrer
Ing noticed above. :::v~c~~0':1'~~;,~1•:;• ;•t! .. ~!~~:: 01 Hid c ..... ty 010r.,...."' ,__nu
YOU MAY EXAMINE LlmlltO Par1ntrilllP. 'rKorClld "~11 ol ,.,. -tr. ••lllen tuthorlrellon Of ~ the Stet. COnlroHer ol the SlAlte of the f ile kept by the COUrt. II, IMO In -IUl't. ~ ~U ol OI Celllorn1t, de!MI J-U , 1"1. en4
If you are interested in the 11<1•1 Rtcot.n h•v•na -... dl•ecllld bY u. Boerd
t t f'I f'A•CEL.l: of SUP*'"''°" of llw -COUllty of es a e, you may I e a re-Etumenu tor econ. 1111reu. Or•nv•. int-s 10 Mii. •111 ofler lot 1.ol IU ol Tract Ho Ult, Clfy ol HtWPO•I BHth, C-IY of Oren~. Stale of C.llforftle, •• per mop re corel<td In 8-12' ~ II to 21 In· CIW11¥t of Mltul..,_~ ~. In Irle olll<• of the c.,...ty rKorOtr ol H id covnly ..
quest w ith the court to re-'"""· encro«llment. '-1. main ,.,, •"4..,iti1><ovlded by Dlv1uon 1,
celve special notice of the t•n•nu, 0•••,...., uw, ..,l<>,meM," Part •. CNpter 1 of 111e •--
,.,,, -ofher --·· •• """"'" In ' I c-I ' " IS I Inventory of estate assets '"' condon'llnlum .,..,. .,.., dff<••llld P~·: .. 1~ Audi~~~~· hi~~~.
and of the petitions, aC· In lht dKlaullon OI COY .... nb, Conell· dtr tor (..,, in lawful monty ol tht
KLEIN & CUTLER, At-
torneys at L.aw, by: Lesli•
Klein, 9920 La C ienega
Blvd., Ste. 631, Inglewood,
Ca. 90301; tel: 213/641·5800
The Slrtet ..,.._ or ~her common 0ttl9nallon. It .,.y, ot tne rMI p,_,.
ly llere lnebove 4'ncrllltcl It p;irpor1ed to be .... C«llend Orlve, Coton. Otl
M•t. Ctlllornle.
co u "!ts and reports ~~~ ;~~",~~~::, 7'~-;1r;.' unH•d si., ... or 1or M90Ue11t• "pe"
described In Section 1200 ,,,, in ._. llO'n -.., 01 Olli<••I the •••1P'-1Y111uettc1 In.,.. c--
of the California Probate Records of Or~ C-ty, C•11•0tn1a ~~.~·r~er:"i:iC::.~ ;f.~tomla, •11d
Code. ..A•c•1.•: ~11~•RTY LOCATIO 1N
B r Id gm an , Mn rd k In, P•~~~:~t:..:~'::!~ ::":::':'c!~ cosu MHA CITY
Ste9meler, Gould & ;upt ncy 1or P•lio tnd •ntr,••• TrectNa.>461 The Undtr'llQnKI' hereby dlKlalm• all llal)lllty tor any lncorrectnen In Hid \lrMt eddreu ot other common Pul)llthld Orenoe Coest Oelly Pllol o.11gne11on.
Shapiro, Inc. purpostt, oe11~ •• ru1rlcte<1 com ll1• H l.IO 11 in Lot I•.
By: B. Richard Gould' m;~:·,~:~~ :;~~:·0~:::,·;ommon l :11.'01,'::.::!° ·~s~i::2~11,..,,_ Auo. 1t u. It, '"1 ,.n .. 1 S•ld wle wlll 11t ....cit without wer· Attorney at Law dl1lgnat1on 01 Uld P<OPt•1y ., purpGf'I lion Co., Inc. 1904 BofM Avenue td 10 .. 1su arulnber• 1.tne. Sen•• Minimum eccepteblt bid l!OO. ranly, UP<tu Of lmpOtcl, f*99rdlng
1111e, --·""'· or tncumtir1n<•. to w1111y the prtnc1.,.1 belence ol the Westminster, CA 92613 A~~·!i':·,;,~~:~-"''"°"'cove .. llC>nllTY L.OCATH ...
Tel: (714) 191-4461 "•nl or ... ,,.,.,,, ......... or Implied, HUNTIMGTON 8EACN CITY
Published Orange Coast "101111•. _t .. \lon or 1nc:umt>-.nc.. T1111 por o1 1111 SW'.4 of Freu1oria1
Dally P ilot Aun 13 u 20 to .. ,,,,Y ""' u-ld bel•nc• duo on S.c It rwp j s. R 11 w. SBB ' M, o .. c
Note or ofher Obll9111loll HCuttcl llr wl4' Oeo4' ol Trwst. wltll lnterHI etld
SUNlllOa COUllTOf' CAl.lf'OllNIA, CIOUNTY
Of'OllAMOI!
otller ...,,,. a provl-U..rel11; plws
•dwancff, II any, under Ille ltrm1
lher .. r -lnt ... tl on ~II .... MCI\, end Piii$ leff, d\t<lff -H-ift Of lhl Tr11$let -Of Ille 1"'11tl trMte<I Dy u ld Ootd of Trull Tiie lolal
ernOlllll of wld 001l9111lon, lncNcllng
I ... • I • ll'tt not• or"°"' it<urtd by .. Id ~ .. lol Bee ., ""' mcKI Hly corner ol 1981 3616-81 of Trull, 10 ,.,1 il•.l1• T•. Olui 1,.. Tr •404, Ill H 60 or U" E Ill.SO It 10
A1'r7U In lllt _,.,. o1
lht """'''•llon of Tf\on\H M. Cflambers For 0...nge Of Neme oao.11 TO SHOW CAUSE
l'Oll CHAJtGE Of' NAMI
Tlloma M. O...mben hes llllO •
Ptlltltll '" ""' "''"' '"' ... otOtr ••• •o•lnv petlll-• 10 ci-.. his name lrom lllolne1 Mabry Ctlambtra to
Tll-Mot-ean """'-II b htrel>y ordered INI •II PffJGM lnltr Hlltd In lht m811M •lot.,.ld • peer befott IN\ c0utl 111 Dttlt'1mtfll
Ho l •• 100 Ovit c...1 ... 0<'1¥1 WHI,.
S•nle NI•, C.ill0tnle, on Sepl. 2, '"'· el IO:JO o'cloc~ e.m., encl then -there llllow ceuu, II .,.y they ht¥1, why .. Id pellllon lor c:l\lnge of ,..me lhould nol llt QrMllO. II Is lutlt...r ordered 111•1 • copy Of 11111 orlltr lo .now ,_ bl puOll•hed
In The 0.lly Piiot, e newspaper of
OtMr•t clrcw••tlon, P<lbllslltd In lhl• county al IH~I once a wetll lor l0ut
conH<ull,,. w"u prior to Ille 11e, of \aid 119.,1ng. Oelt<I J11ly iq, IHI
· Ari-C. Pollchelll J11dllf of lfll S-lot Court Publl\lltd Orange C.0.SI Delly Piiot, Aug. •• IJ, 20, 21, 1911 U~l .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
reH011ably Hllmtltd fff\, cl\trll" SUf'•a1011 couaT 01' THE $TATE
end t •pen-of lhe Trv•llH. •I 1'-Of' CAl.lll'OllNIA tlmt of 111111•1 publl<•llon ol this "°"THE COUNTY Of' OllANGI
Hollct,i\'41.046JO , .. Ch•k C--..... ~
Oel•d JIJly ?l, '"' .... ~ ft1't1 THE GEORGETOWN Plelntlll EDWARD HOBER -£VE
RECOHVEYAHCE CORP., HOBER
• Ctllfornle <"'-•tlo11, 0.ltlldtnt "HILi.iP O"NIELS. LIN .. TNSt• TOH H COl.l.IER, oo•OTHY E By a EAL ESTA Tl! COi.LiER, EARi. GARR, JR., OREL SECURITIESSERVICE, FARLESS, SECURITY TITl.E • C.lllorlll• corportllon, INSURANCE COMPANY,. C.llforNI llt "9ef\I or_.allon, .... •II pe,_.s Ull«ftown
av· o.J. Morver. c1elmlnv MY leGal °'~I.Mite r19ht, It& Pf'ftl-lltlt, ....... I .... ot Int.rest In tr. pre> ISEALI per1y OOKrlflod In Ille complelnl 41<1· 1020 H. e..-ev. S11llt 21» .,., .. to lllAlntlff•' UOe. or et1Y <-Sente Me, CA n1• on plalnllffs' tnereto, ,...,,..., u DOES
Tt~ (114) tU.ntt I lhr°""' 50, lnclwilve.
Publlslled HewP0'1 ~arbor News SUMMC*S
Prtu comtllned wllll the Or-Coe\t C.. N...-W aum ' O.lly Pll°'-JulyJO,AllQOilU, IJ, HOTICEI Yoo.a hive -JWCI, Thi 1t11 2S7MI coun m•v,-lcle •Inst yow wllllOUI . ~ '°"' .,.... ..... """" yow ra\Poft(I
PUBLIC NOTICE within JO de~ Rted "" lnformtllon below. -----II yo11 With W -·the eclvl" Of en
NOTICE TO PERSONS euorney 111 th1.i ,,...11 .... yoo.a "-Id oo
INTERESTED IN THE '°promptly'°'"'' your •r1tt•n
ESTATE 0 F JANE re._u,11 ... y.mtylltflled.,.llmt. AVISOI Utlltd ht llOo o....-. PUBLIC NOTICE KAUL, DECEASED. Et 1r1-,,._ -ldlr con1re Ud.
___ ______ Noticelshereby given: ~;!::,':".!:~~~~01:,=:
NOTICI! Of' T•USTEE'S SAL.I T 0 a 11 per s 0 n s I n . clotl q ... 11 ...
T.s. .... .... · t er es ted, whet h er as s1 u111tc1dtMuolkltert1con•1t•
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. lhel c reditors, heirs, legatees, "" e~ ... •tit HU<llO, .,. ... ,,. on Wednesday, ""911~ 19, 1tl1, 81 t:OO h hater lo lmnlfflate,,,.nta, de tsle o'<Jocll a.m. of Mi4' dey, 1,,"" oftk• or d evisees, in t e estate mtntrt, ., r--Herl ... 11 11ey
of REA1. ESTATE SECURITIES of JANE VERONICA ••9'Hl•.11WOt..,r••••..s.••'-
sERVtcE, •octt•d el 2020 Horth KA u L deceased, whose DESCRIPTION OF PaOPER1v Bro.clwey,Sulttlo.,lnlNClt;yofS.... last address WaS 2489 Perce! 1· Thel portion ol lllt •• "ne, CounlY of OrMOt. suite of •outllwnt quert ... of the n«thWMt Cellfornl•, THE GEORGETOWN Tiebout Avenue, Bronx, querier Of IN 90UlllN~ que.Ur 01 RE CONVEYANCE CO•P .•• State of New York, that Stcllon12,-..Hp4toulh,r .... 10 Cell torn I• cotporellon, n duly •P-I tt t t t f _,,, 111 Ille R.ancllO Saft Jwen C•)cNI 0. POlnt•d T, .. , .. --""_,,'to e ers es amen ary or o Sent• Ant, c11v • Anlthelm, c-IY of
""powor o1 u1e confMred 1n 111etur· administration have been Onll9t. Stel9 of c.Jlfornle. •• per
Uln °"4of Trual t..Cuted by I.EE issued to ROBERT J . m•P -•n ._ jl ,... 10 of
SIMMONS, ... ,... ........ r.c ... de4' KAUL, by Surrogate's ml1uu_, ~."'.,,. olfkt of AUlllllSI 21, 1'IO, In Boe* 11111 of Of· , .. c-t;y Rec.otdw .. uld County, llcte• Rll(.Clt$ of se;d c-ntr. 11 .,... Court, County of Bronx a d ... crlb.outooowt:
100, Recorcltr'I IMln1,,,.ftl No. C 0 U rt 0 f C 0 mp el 8 n t 9qtnnlng II tlle t.Olllh_,. t-r of
, .. u .11rr•sonotetweK11•001 ... 11 jurisdiction of the State of 111e1and4'ncrt11tc11111M-to0tvld In P•Y'-"' or perfotmM<t of lfle • Pegln -wlft, r«MO.o Marth 1, 11~11ons 1«uted ti.re«>y, 1nc111c11nv New York. 1u1 111 11oo11 tlSf Pitt•. 0111~1 r•
,,.., brt•ch or 0tt ... 11. Notice of""'''" T h a t the f 011 0 w I n g Cord$, 111 -off la .. Seid ~•Y ...
we1 recorded .. , ,.., ""· 111 -Pttrson Is Indebted to or <11~0·,· 1~d~,..nt ~ Oft"_; .... ot ~Id uo1t of Offlclel Records of Mid COllll-h ldl I t ·-... -· -· ..-•• -''·et Pt9t 714, Recoro...•1 lnttrvl!Mlflt o ng persona proper Y M<llon, "°"'" o· , •• JO" .. ,, ... ,.'"' No. H192, WILi. SELL Al PUBl.IC Of the said d ecedent; trom "" canter Of Stiel lllCllon, Mid
AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST 810-No debts or m on ies are c ............ ,. Ille 1111.ne<UOll of the DER l'OR CASH, lewful -y .. -d t CMll•r llM Of C.m• "-from un11tc1 Stet"-.,, per•l>t• ••the Umt w e o any p e r son or or· tt1t ., .. , w1111 Ille ,..n,. ino _,.,
Of ..... •II rltflt. tlltt etld lrater'esl now g a Tl I z a t I 0 n • H 0 M E qw.rttr -tlon ....... Mid lllClloft; 11e1d 11y 11,osTr.....,.,1,.and to11'18t re· S A VI NGS ANO LOAN , 11te11e•-"'"'WIO''-t1I0111•
•• pr_.-ty SI ...... 11'1 Mid '-lY -G A R 0 E N G R 0 v E I ...,, .. llM of the 18114141ttcrltloel ... MIO St•t•, dt1<r111tc1 ts fotiows: O E dNd tot"'"" ti.. ot Ml4' .-....... Loi u, Block B, Tract Ho •• ,,. City c U NTY OR O RANG . Querier;~ towlll o• ... 4S" -·
01 N••-1t1eec:11,Countyo10r-.. That the undersigned d e · 11.,.. &11e1 • .,.. 111111 to t11e ~
~~:=,t111c.=i:.· ~i<A~ ~t Ires to receive the said :, ~-=1 ~i::.:nr:'ci::
Ml1<et1-. ~ 1,. "'-ottic. of,.. er~onal property or c.ol • J-11, 1.,.11n ._ '°",... 42. Of· c-•Y ,_.,. .. ..idc-1y. lect the clalm(s) a nd to re -11c1e1 re<tAll; tNnQ _.,.., •ICNlt Ttoe 1"'"'...,_w.._~ move that collected or re· 111e ...,., 11 .. ot M!41-s °' 11N111,
de t litll N flf tM r ... .._, 0.0.ltts .. Mid -llM; IMll<t ~ ,/..:;:......:....~11 ~ celved from the state of 0•14 .... _. .. .,.,..,.. • ...,,,..,,...
10 tie· •tt ,._.,A-. c.-•• allfornla to the said s tate P•"et 2. n. _,.. .,_. ,_., ..
Mar, c•tlffnlla. h e r e I e l t e r s eo11111 moo '"t Of 1 ... '°"'"-"
"" 111•••........, ... .....,. tstamentary or o f_.., .. ~.,...._ .. .,.
: .. ":~:: ::;,::v .!":.r-=:.! dmln lstratlon have been =~.:1~ .::.'~:i: 1t1~~:',. :.!; •11~1• Issued. "-M..,. J-c.. o. ~ ,.,..,
........... 11 .,........._ •• _ All p ersons having c"' "',.,....."" c:-.t't., 0tMt11. ~~~~.,i.::=.:.':::,":~lalms a gain s t the de· ::'941e41"111c.1.::-:;· ~.Tm':
MlllfY ""iw1nti..i 11e1enet., IN ced e nt or en Interest In un-,,..., "' .. Oftlu., ttw
Hot• or -•iteUM tttww41 ~ aid estate and w ish ing to c-tr Re<M411tttutu_..,. uld o...., T,._ wit!\,,,..,...._. bject to s ue .. r e moval 5TA'HMllMT • oeJICT °" TNa Mt!Or-•~Wlef'Olll•..... " ACTION ••v•"ce1, 11 e11,, 11Mer ttw ~"" •must give written notice o f c._..11t .. ..-. 11tte 10.........., ,.,.,,.._.lf'll_.eft1ut11--.c.e.' uch objection to the 111t-.c.
.,,. Pltn ·-· ,...,.... .... ......... .. rson or rwirsons Indebte d TO THI Pel'l!HOAHT: A Ctwll Ille Tr11S1" aftd 9f -I ... UM... -eMlltlaillt llM MM f1'M 11¥ tflt ......... h u 1d a... ., Tt11•t. TM .... , to, or hold I no per~onal tiff....,....,....",.."""•..._ ·-• °' Nkl *'"'*" '"'_.... ropertv of, H'lt deeedlnl. tt11t tewwl'-y._ _. ..... •..,. ::':~st~m:•r=.~ 'ICt~ notice ~!.dbtl glvt!" ~:' .:='.".n-:-,::.::
tln'le ., 111111•• 11t111111uu .... 11111 o "' person ""' ng ... 1a t11e ....,..._ u-.. ,.. • ... Htttce,11mo. ... .s. / trsonel propertl or vow.....,. w111 • eMaf'94I • • O•lff~~~,J:'~=•tOWN Oldlnst whenit t... theddc11 m II ~ic::::."j0::'.:::'~9: R•COHVl!YANCICOlt~.. m• • a ... II ress ..... ,...... ............ ~ ec.tHwlll"u.,...,.ee-. • listed above withi n : 30 W11lc11_......it 11t ... ,..._,," •TrW•. DA YS lfltr first .......... .,,_..,~., t~~g;:~•c•. ut>llcetlon of this notice. ::=._,...... ,......... "' "" CM!·
• CllffWlllO~•• OATEO: June 2.S, 1911 DARo_..a. ""· ••"9Mt Rot..rt J. Kaul .,..._ ~ av o.J. ,.,_..,, As AdmlnlslHtor Oft ~ Of th9 Estele of Eie"c." t ' ~ _,.,.,.....,...... J•n• Vet'Oftlu Kaul, ~. ....., Ml'-U•.
....... CA.. DK.a.cs ... ._ ... _ ~~~·.::=..., PubOthlid Or119 COM9 ... :;,.m•-~;:i:~::..~c-. Delly PUot, J uly 30, Aug . ..._,........:-o.11~,_
,., • .., 6, u, ,,., ~· , ........ -. .. "'"" ..., • • ,
lollo•ln9 ullmtt.O co'"· ••Pf"\ff lht btQ ol • _,,..._, '"'"' conuw• end edvenu• ti lhe lime of the inlli•I Wly 11•"1"11 • •eclius of 111.61 It. e publlc•llon of 1111\ Holltt of S•lt lradl•I lo Ml curvt be•rt H 60 or ....
ll I 374 1' E. 111 sw1, ••v Ml c11rvo Olr'u • ~•ntrel
DATED JulrJl, '"' •"Qit ol •• SJ' IJ''edlttanceof 110.l4 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE II lo 1"e l:le9 01. reverse ,.,,.,,. con· IHWRAHCE COMPANY, cot NElr hew ing• radiu• of j0,00 II,
• Ce11torn1• corporttlon '" SEly •IQ Ml '"'"' lhru • centr•I
4S TRUSTEE ' angle of 10? O ' 21" • dl•~t of" '1 BRUCE R BEASLEY Ill, th "'•1 U' 1• W 114.tO fl Mii. to AulhoriLed Olllcer lhe Se1'y line ol Ml Tr M04, l.h "'ly •lg
11' e..11 Fiflll Strffl '"' Sfly line to''-Pl of lltQ. Sentt Ane CA 91101 AIM> CIH<rlbld el AP 11J-jtj,.(lt Ttl 1714) S.S..l211 I.HI .iuw-Huntlnoton H•rllour
Publl•hld Or-Coell O•lly Piiot, c-::.~lmumK<tlltebl bldUiO July >o, AUQ •· u. '"' >u1.-1 • '
PUlllC MO~E
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ABRAHAM ZLOTNICK
ANO OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A108521
To all he i r s,
bene fi c iaries. c redilors
and contingent c reditors of
Abraham Zlotnic k and
perso n s who may b e
otherwise interes ted In the
will and/or estate :
A petition has been filed
by Jear)ne Zlotnic k and
Howard A. Zlotnic k in the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Jeanne Zlotnick and
Howard A. Zlotnick be ap-
pointed as personal
representatives to ad·
minister the estate of
Abraham Zlotnick <under
the Independent Ad ·
m inistration of Estates
A c t>. The petition Is set for
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive.
West, in the City of Santa
Ana, Callfornla on Sept. 2,
1981 at 9 : 30 A.M .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
g ranting of the pe tition,
you should eith er appear
at the h earing and state vour objec tions or flle
written objections with the
court before the h earing.
Your appearance m ay be
In person or by your at-
torney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont·
lngent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
cl1lrn with the court or
Qresent It to the personal
representative appointed
by t he court w ithin four
months from the date of
first Issuance ot letters as
provided In Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
Callfornla. Th• time for
flllng clalms w lll not e•·
pire prior to four months
from the date of th• hear·
Ing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINt!
the flit kept by th9 court.
If you are Interested In tht
.state, you mey file • re·
quffl With the court to re·
celve special notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of lht petftl0tts, ac·
c ounts and reports
desc r ibed In 5ectk>n 1200
or tho c.1uom11 Pr~t•
Code. ' Hewn A. ZllMkll
•• ..., •• L!ew .... AMfftl-.;,
Satt DMlo, CMN; tnM OM>_,.,. .
PutJl1"'9cl or"* coast
Oafly Pttoe, ~. 6,_!1_ 13, 1911 ~..,
~•ONaTYL.OCATIDIN COSTAMl!SACITY Tr Kl N .. 11St1
T llt W I JO It ol lot 4
A l~O dncrlbtd •• AP '2•·0Sl·10 (IO<mtrly 11 .. 111-42)
l.e\I As--.... ltllf'1 W. Rletldi Minimum ecuptal)le bid 1100.
f'•Of"EaTYL.OCATl!DIN LAGUNA 81ACM CITY
Arc:lt hecll Helt!MS lol '"n 81k 11 Allo dt\CrlMd H AP U4·40·U (lormerly OSS-122-0ll
L .. I A•--· .J_, F. F-ltr Mlnlmumac,ct91ebl1bld •11.soo
Arclt8Hcll...._. lot • In Blk •T Al'o dts<rlbtd u AP •~•·OS·ll llormtrt,· OU<IOI Soll I.HI A•--... J-F. Fowlef ti el Minimum «c:tPltblt 1:llcl U,MID
AnltileKliH ....... Loi ) 1n Biil 41
Also ducrlbtd es AP •o·•U It llormerly OSS.>Gl·SJI
1.tll Al-. Jofwl F. F-ler ti ei Minimum Kc"'°'l>lt bid n .soo
~ltOP«aTY 1.0CA TIO 1 N CA~STliNOUNll'IED
KHOO&. DISTlllCT
TrectNe.16J The E II II of l.ols 11. 12 encl IJ 111 81k I 8'ld uw Hly -·llelf of l.ot It 1,. Ing l>tl-1"' Sly Ptolol\tltlion ol""' E end W llne~ol IN E II fl ol 1.ot IJ H
Id por of L.ol It -· ~ by Rttolu1lon1 ol Ill• Boa rd ol
5-rvl-. of OrMtit C-y, C.llf. ea rM May 13, 1"3 In Bii •s.. Pg 21S ol OR ol td Oranga c-,,.
EX thtl por ol Lot 11 lylflt NIY ol tllt Wly Prol~llon of ti. HIV llne of Lot lj In 81111.
Alto du<rlbed H AP 6t2·1U·2t tlormtrly: IJl-2'>-S41
l.eal Al-.. CllCO Propeftlo. '"'· Minim""' •<t•llteble bid Sl.000.
~aortl•TYL.OCATeOtM IAOOl.IMCI( YA~IY UNll" .. OICHOO&.IMIT•ICT
I.oil l •nd •In Sec I, T ..... 6 S, R 7 W, Sel & MM.-,. 611 .. O#ld al Plat
ot Id ltncl flltcl Ill Ille Olllrlel 1.tncl Of. llct, '"'·JO, lta. EX lllt S 201.11 It el the E toUI " .. Id l.alJ.
Also Ot9crill9d .. APta .. 11.ot l••• A ............. ...,.,.,~ Ml11lmwm tc<ttlltlllt l>tO $61,JOD.
The S 2a Tl II of Ille e 2Cll.71 It of I.of , 111s.c1, T""•s. R 1 w. sea & M .. tMwll tft ... Oftklal Plal Of Id i... llled In the Olstrlcl ... .., Offl<t S...
)0, 1112. AIM deter"*' n AP Ml.011.0S
I.Ott A-········""""~ Mtlllrnum k <..,._t 11W Sl,150.
If .... _,,, h llOI .. -..... "ftre II IJ Uld, lllt rl911t Of , .. ..... wlll (MM.
Ho 11141 wlll .. '"""'4 r.r 1-~ 1i. mll'll"""" ._. "'°"9 Mlt ... lol"lf'I IOllOwhlfl .. lealil Clil1tn,tlaft til
-II IOC .. 8'91111 of .... W ..,cal IW ..fClll of IMd • -.C,,.._ Mw. 1'111fl\ll'~~ .. 1-•'8141 t11 Mf
It the """., ~" ........ ..... ,,tllt ,.,..,., It M141. IW11" ......
tw"t.. M 0.fll'llll Ill_.._ -7 .. flewl
tt'1t t11M 19fllt1 Cllllft wtltl .. C-. ty ,., Illy ptllCIMt ,,_ Ille .. , •
wlllcll tl't 111 t11t• ..... 1'-_,. , ..................... ._ ... ~
'"*· Aller .... IOI' .. _... .. ..,,.41, • •w<ll Tu Cell~tW-t~. W#M
•.uc•·--"-~"' Mdllet•fl8'UI. ,, .. _ ............. ,.... ...
........ 1aw111 -...-........ .. .....,..",..,._.. ..... . ...... ................ "'.
•••••T L.. CIT•o• ... Tea C:aUttt• T-tf "9 c:..y 11 °' ......... .,~ 0...fl ... i U.~Rt, ,,... ... ~~°"'"
"""· ... 11 .. ""
L INDEX '
Tt .... Y•h,Cd
642·5678
ltMSlS FOi SALE c."'".i 11.lloe>ol"'oM • "-'""" , ...... ,.1. '(",,.,,,.nu tw1• h c·.._.,. :II••
lal• """• .......... IJ l•v ·--··•\•lk\ llvn4•f\Ct•"' ,..,,. 9\
l lf\le.t l..«••• IWIMh i.c ... 11.11, ........ , ..... ,
»•~....-.. \_,,., ~': 1':1.!:."! ~
"'-" J¥•" f ...... "" 11"'41 """'"Ano ""11 ... ·h -•l·•-•Nnw~ .. ,
"""'~'"-''•k IEALESTUE
Att""'' lor N11.-~ttft'Vt1h '°' ~, .. Hu<h ~r-rt) h\tilil"\,r,..,,,
lttnri"\ l.&:11 .. '".,. .. l cwnmrrn •I Vn,,,..rH
t Oftdomuuwm.. '•'' Uupk-n l nlh ~1, l'°'-t~•vl:w\111'~ t,.,-umr .,, .. ,,,
lflidWft_. Pr~rH 1 ....... ~
\l*lf' ltl'IW 1th l't'
Mc..;Nn '""""" M.-1w.,, ~::':1~ ~nt)~tito11
flutol"il•lt" h-1 ....
M.rw'""' t.im' t•'"''' 'tut t.,h\t t:u ,,,._._.
Nut t "'ll•lr """'"'
IENTALS
fkN\n t 11rnn ht'ti *'°"'-"" \ .. t,un.t'""~ l~hH•l)t'lnf
I Ol\ldQelU\iU•"-•" t wrf'I
C°"'°°""•-""'M'l "f To-~turn
fQiafthuw"f' l n• l>v~ru" •urn l~f'U''llftt Aph t'Wf"ft
4."9111 lft(url'I
45th rwr• °' 1 11111 Moon''
"'"""' l\niold l~thM<>'f'I, ,,...,,, 111,nw ..
"-"'"""' M.,.nl•I .. \ M•hon Kf'lll•I" k~.1 .. 10~., .. ... ., •• """fol ftt'M
Ofhn Hrflll•I
.._.''""'' Mt"ne•I 1Mu."'"'H"nll•I ::i:.t.~: .. •ftlfd \I.,, .... M•t"'
IUSINESS, INVESl·
MENT. FINANCE
~..,,,nn .. Wt>trl
~"'1~.,, v .. no d
IA''"'""Af()ptlQf'l \ IMf'11Hnrnt ~ •Df.-d 'lfJllW' t11l.o.n
\&.,.,,\ .. •nlrd
\hwtun' Tf1 ...,
ANNOUNC(MCNTS,
r£1SONALS &
LO~T & FOUND
Aftrw"-ln• t-n--,...nh
t •' l'f••I ._,,.,.,,4,.lfl' ..
thiit 6 trNf"ld
t"f'f"'"•'' '<Yl•l 1 tw•• 1,.,"1
SERVICES
CMPlOYMENT &
mrAIATION ""*"' lrblrYC11nn
Jub "'"'"'' "•'• "·••..t \I~. ~EICHANDISE
4ftt"'twt ..
AP$AI•~ '"' 4\*t.hOtl HH ,,I .....
Kwkttftll \1 .. 1 .. ,..1,
t •"""''•"' ....... t(,ll'h• "' l •b 1 ....
t)"' lo \r;u turnltur• c;., .... ,,tr
''°""' ltw-Ad <••W • Jt•t-lr\
U'hlor\ \l•ttr.tnrf\
"l\ff'l11"'"4"·" Mt~1'11•~"' 'tl .tnl~ ti \ht\1t •I ln,trunit nh
Ofh<l' t wrn 4 t ~1.11v p ...
~':~~~::-!:
'C.JOftH'lol f,IUI\ ~OU' kr<tttl\ll lllnl tl1r
~7•rilrdtO ll1t'1 ""1fftU
BOATS & MAllNC
EQUlrMENT
C..rftrf'f•l
Ho•b """' """''"' ho•I• \l.,nn~ t qu111
Ko•h l'o'"' p.,..,c, """' « bttt'f ho•h '-•l
1-ti.C• 'lip.. '*" "°-''~''kt Ktwh Nnri11.t-
flANSPOIJATION
A1rrt•h
t •ml'tf"' '41t-tlrnl
t.h-ntK l .10 ~ .... ,.,,.._ s,.-,.
MOlor llo,. l)lll< """ Tr•tl•f\ Tr•ul
Tnt .. t"l,l Ohh
4lilrC .. "n•rt i'•''"'
AUTOMOBILE
~t•I
Ant"iYft ( lu \I\"'
Mott'•lloft \ t<t\11 t.·111
~•h M•tT H•"'I •
I 'Wftttl 0flo"'
r ..... "' ,..,.
A~Lir.sua.,:. , ... "" ...... "''
AUTOS, IMPOITED
Vtn.vt •I U • Morrwu \ .. k
Aw.tu•"""''"' 1111'4
t".Ti' U•laUA ..... ,,.,.
.~,.,
1'-14 J ... w-. , ...... .
h.4ff1Wnn t.tu .. M•"I• ..... ,,~.._."'" .... )"'
\Ill lll)ll
~
t'•rHtl'f'if
t"t'\Q:..-;.14
""'""'' N'""'\lft KoU, MuHt* M•K••
M•k
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'"""'"" \ulP!w.1,:vn ,,,."'
•·••1'••
u..-.1 \Ml" ... ~
l•~'""' \.4M4ftt '"""'"*' \'llr .. ll"f l._
UTIS, MEW
Ailts, USED
l"•lllll!W•~·' \\.tr''"''"" ~"'!!'" Uy'!~ .. t'lll•' lflll""tl .. ,_.....
ll••rfh ~ ...... ""' ll!l"lOll .... -... I~•· I·"-· , .... ,llH
f'1Mtit1k1ttMt1f ,, ....
lhursday.Augu1t13, 1981
Looking for a piano? Find it to:
day in classification #8090 !
.......
~.~.~ ...... ~ ~.~.~ ....... ~.~~........ . ...... ~~ ....... ~.~.~ ...... :,~~~~!:.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ..... ..
I 002 ._... I 002 G ... NI I 002 ••• ,.. I 002 I 002 .,.,.. I 002 t1Mrtf I 002 Ge•r.. I 002 .........••.••..•.••••••...........••••...... ······~················ ..•...........•........•.......•••........•••. •••!••················· •••••............•.•... ~······················
REAL ESTATE
SALES MAHAii
LIMDA ISLE
Exciting opportunity! Wide channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath. pool home
Slip for 2 large boats. $1 ,495,000.
Sum mer Occ upancy.
,....._,, Mc91kt:
Ml. & MIS. PRFICTIOM $131,000
HIA TED IUDMIY·SHAPID POOL
Major reaional brokerage firm with 13
years experience In the coastal area is
searching for an experienced person
to manage Its expanding Newport of·
Cice. LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home. newly redecorated. Priced to sell qu.i_ckly at $475,000. Must see.
All real utate ad
vertlsed lo tb l ..
newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
inc Act " 1.968 which
n " makes it Ulepl to ad·
vertise "any preference,
limitation, or dis ·
:::: crimination based on ,..,., race. color, religion,
:::: sex. or nat.lonal ori&in. :~: or an intention to make ,..., any such preference,
,..,, limitation. or dis · ~.·.:; criminal.ion "
ROOM FOR P ADDU TIHMS
Immaculate picturebook 3 bedroom
home nestled in flowers and shrubs.
Large grassy back yard for the
children. pets or guest house.
Beautiful pool with large deck area.
90' wide frontage. 1.oned for income. A
wise investment for young or not so
young. Call 644-4910 to see any time.
GWT ffMAMCING AVAIL.AIU
20% Down, and owner will co-operate
on fa ntastic financing. Beautiful
custom, new, Balboa Peninsula home.
Three bedroom. four fireplaces,
library, family room, stained.glass.
nothing could be cozier. $395.000 Fee.
U~IVUI: t1()MfS
Highly visible Fashion Island location
with 15 full time agents bas the pot.en ·
tial for 27 agents.
This firm has over 125 f ulltime agents
and offers residential, investment,
escrow, securities and mortgage
brokerage services to its clients from
8 offices located Newport lo San
Clemente.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge ret•reation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420.000. Best price for the money
WlSLIY M. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOIS
Ziii S-J ....... loed
NEWPOIT CIHTll. M.I. '44--4t IO REALTORS.675-6000 PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home . 3700 sq. ft. featur·
ing marine room. SJ.385.000
u ..
:!:~ This newspaper will not
:.;: knowinflY accept any
llol,, advertising for real :;.~ estate which Is in viol•·
..... lion of the law.
TUS T1H IEAUTY
3 BR 2 BA family rm. &
din rm Dbl. detached
garage. Home complete-·-------•I ly redecorated on large "'" cul·de·sac lot in Co. ~~ EIROIS: AdurtlMn strip. Mickey Shafer !: tlMMIW cllac:k lliieir.. 960-1980.
~ doily .... ,.,.. ..... =: ron ,_.....,. n.
r.w DAILY PILOT et •u
::: WNlty for ... flnt
:'.;: 1 l•correct huertlo• •11•1 ....lw tl'ilJ ...... ,.
:: ~ , .... ,
:!':: HMSforWt !: •••••••••••••••.••••••.
II-'<• 1Gttterol I ooz ::.~ '······················· I
I UHIBJEV AIU!
a S Bdrm pool/spa home
in Costa Mesa under ~:1~ Sl20,000. Owner will help
HUGE!
5 or 6 bdrm home with
pool. Great area. Owuer
will help with financing.
Sl65.000
MORE
5 bdrm w/sw1mm1ng
pool and jacuzzi · solar
heated. RV area As·
sume FNMA. Sl69,000
•
REOCARPET
754-1 202
...,,1 on financing. Call W"',._.,.,,_,..
;:: 979-5370 today for more "'• l:llU"Wl"" • ~.,, d t ils Sharp 2 story 4 bdrm, 2"'2
'"' e a · bath home, 2 frplcs.
;1u\
jut•
.1111
A LLST'A TE shake roor. redwood I,. deck to waters edge +
boat dock. S33S.OOO ! REALTORS • LNCLUDlNGLAND!
_W_O_OD-Sl_D_E_ ·~ec:::rop.
VILLAGE •675-7060*
•3 Bdrm, 2story, SU.000 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I
down. Sl00,900.
•3 Bdrm, 2story, SU ,500
down SU4,900.
·.3 Bdrm, l story, S9500
down $$4,900.
•3 Bdrm, 1 story, S!MOO
down. $93,500.
AXER
MOVllMMOW
This large S Bdrm 3 Ba
home is m immaculate condition with new
carpets. drapes & paint.
Walk to shopping &
schools. Assume large
loan and owner will help
finance. Only $176,000.
IUYEIS W AMTID
2443 Ea.t Cout Hl9hw1y, Corona CS.I M.1
WE HAVE 45 OF THE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN
REALTORS
675-5511
LOOICIMG FOR A CARHI IN HAL
lST An7 Co.e In -.d dhc.lt yow ......
wilt -. We ott.r '°" CJOOd COMllis._
tch1 ... L Prot.sllCNICll ...... ce. Alw.ya
GY ..... Neat office!
COLE Of NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 l. Coast Hwy., C--dal Mer
675-5511
OCEAMFROMTS
6 to be exact from
S25,000 down &r as low as
12~ interest on the
balance. Call for details
and the super locations.
JACOBS REAL TY
Tff NQHfj TOWMHOMl7
Call the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center.
Toucbstene Realty
ll6MW7
The person chosen will receive liberal
starting salary and an override 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
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den , spacious Plan 8, im ·
maculate. Low priced at $215.000
ltGCANYOH
Exquisitely upcraded
Monaco oo gollroune. 3
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J-ll R"r'•d• o ..... "i B bl~ 6161
Bdrm. formal dining, C ..._. ._._
family room, assumable Of'OH -....,.... I 022 Costa Meta I 024
loans. Submit all offers ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ask.in11 000 CDM ILUffS
UNIVBSITY PAD IY OW.a D l A M l H O M l above beach, run ocean
Sz-000 & jetty vu from every n , rm. 3 lrg Br, lrg Ltv rm+
Charming and spcacious kit.. 2~, Ba. ~-sty. 2 bnck 3 BR + family room ,. home. Comer location frplcs. 2 decks, beach
across from park, pool access. semi·pvt road.
and tennis. Retiring Sl,250,000 P.P Appt on·
owner will carry financ· --------""'"IY,..-..... 7=14'---167----..US25=---
ing at reuonable rate COROMA DB. MAI
sao,• AITD I 2°/~Jo yiaan
Charming 4 bedroom,
fresh new paint. de
corator touch
throughout Beautirul
front lawn, pool siie
back yard By owner
Last weekend before we
list Sl35,000. 840 San-759·1616 Sharp & spacious duplex. Private comer
location with lots or 5 BR/By OWNER tiago Mesa Del Mar
~1·9100, ~148
SELL idle items with a
Dally Pilot Classified
Ad. 1142-5678.
trees 3 + d en
downstairs and 2 bdrms
upstairs Very attrac
live creative financing
S320.000
IRYIMl TEUACE 12% DOWN
CORONA DEL MAR No qualifying. Highly· upgraded 4 bdrm, coun
X·lge master bdrm w try kit . on l&e lot Call
67M670 l!E
110111 ILlllS CD.
17141 673·4400
12111 Uf.2121
lh1· h.11 lh11 .111·.1 '11hl1•'1
lk.11 E,1.111· Firm
ga rden & frplc. lge 957·2819,owner agt.
custom kit . den , SIX UNITS Prime
library, LR, FR. pool. Eastside rental area
yard. patio. Unique for SU0,000 . Owner financ·
larger family Ocean in Devm &Co. 642-6368
side of hwy Nea r So Coast Terrace 3 br, 2
beaches. lmmed ore ba condo ror sale by
S495,000. Owner can owner. Su~.000. Call for
carry By appt, 673-3745. details, 968-3652.
OVER 55 YE.ARS OF SERVICE
•2 Bdrm, l story, S8800
down S87.900. ---"'-=--~=---'"'-'-~-1 We can help you find
your dream house.Cul --------
SPECIAL CUSTOM U YFIONT
FEE Land. Four Years Old .
CathedraJ Ceilings, Parquet Floors &
New Carpets. Lots Of Wood & Glass .
Three Bedrooms & Convertible Den.
31,2 Baths. Separate Dining. Huge
Famliy Room With Wet Bar. Kitchen
With Pantry. Breakfast Room. Sauna.
Study. Three.car Garage. Wood Deck
Overlooks Bay & Dock. See To
Appreciate. $1,600.000.
OpenSun l..S. Ci'T·L DOLL HOUSE ·
Unique 2 bedroom home ..,,, •2 Bdrm, l story. S8600
:::'.: down. $85.900.
1'112' All have podls, spa. "..i.: sauna available. Walk to ~ South Coast shopping
~ Call for more details.
...... 546·2313 IOI.\)
"-'-'J
111;"' .. ,~
flJiS .,;.
>VU .... ,
11JIQ
THE ~EAL ESTATERS
::; UIC"'1Vl ..... , $227,000
:: Almost new 2 story
•r;.; be a u t y . S u o Ii II e d :!;: kitchen, formal dining
room, wark and coiy
family room too' 2nd
story hosts secluded ::.:,~ master suite with
::; crac klin g b r ick
'01 fireplace. 3 more queen ::: :~o~~ too! Don't
,.,.1 (I)
IJ\tli . ,,,
•Ui ••Id" .,, .....
!tllU
"I.Ill ...... ,
....
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
114-63 '·6990
~; I EDUCED ~;C ha rming wo od :;r.: shingled townhome. Sun
-rilled kitchen overlooks ~" cozy patio. 3 large
bdrms plu_, sewing room
~::! too. Only 1100,000. call
~ .... (I) '-•tt ,;1,
"''' -..i;
v;..i.1
Y7iLt or.Lo '''i 'i.th w;~
,,;~ ...... ti tit
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-63 J-6990
-r.11 ~~ HAllOl llDGE
,;i; A w a rd w i n n I n g
~.!: "Jodelle" est.ate home.
•m lst resale ofrering on
:~ this exqulaitely appoint·
""" ed townhome with •
~ massive view of bay. '"i ocean, coastline at night ~~ Uahta. Now reduced to -
~· •4 WI• WU
11111 -
$738,000.
•I, '•, ' I
4 \ ''
. ; . . .· ''
'
1'.ollS I-'--~~---~
wr. = l•-•OM-THl-•IA-Y-• =: Saod1 beach in front,
~ pier and allp. Lar1e ter>
,,., race, ,,_, side yard
Atfw. l)eyeloptn
Prime Cost.a Mesa area
20 unit condo project
compl approved. ready
to build. call 7S2·6499
Plan IV Re~I~}'.
SAMDOOU.AIH
This 3 Bdrm 2 Bdrm duplex presents a great
investment opportunity
in West Newport The
location of this property
!only 2 lots rrom the
ocean and steps to the
bayl coupled with the
unbelievable financing
make this offering re·
alistic and smart Ask·
ing only 1265.ooo.
lalboo Isa.cl Rlty
67).8700
• RH.LTORS
COUMTIY fl&«:H
INIAYSHOUS
Cha rm ing country 3
Bdrm 3 Ba home,
private master suite
w /balcony . cate
guarded community
with 2 beautiful private
beaches. Excellent
owner financing makes
this a great buy at
SJ.49,500.
D.M. McnW Rlty
76CMll5
IRVIMl SHAIPll
Pio sharp 4 Bdrm. fam
rm, courmel kitchen,
atrium, best Irvine loca·
lion. Drastic reduction.
1205.000.
leek.., Dll4llt
Lovely 3 Bc!rm 2 If. with
new French country
kitchen aod UHd brick
exterior. Located ln the
heart of New))Ort'1 up-
per bay, overlooltin&
country club. Priced at
only '11'7,500 with ex·
eellent flnancin& avalla· b&e. caum.nt1
c::.' I o
...,.., ', • t • I
our Costa Mesa · . Newport Beach Residen· Telli~g the most people
tlal Specialist. Delores possible is important lo
Gelberg the success or any
TSL PROP ERTi ES garage s~le. ~ake sure
642·1603 you rs 1s listed 1n
I Classified , phone
Classified Ads 642-5678 _642_·567'-'--"8.._. -----
RESIDENTIAL REAL ES TATE SERVICES
rtCTUIESQUl IA YSHOUS
Charming li vi ng w /raised brick
hearth, wood paneling & shutters.
Delightful 3 BR. 1 BA. Space for
outdoor living w /2 patios. Room for
remodeling. Outstanding value at
$335.000 LH
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
BALBOA IS. CAPE COD
11lb It -...... He c.,. Cod mld11C•
by ............... 1.-4 & lfdltd
91111, brick Hd ltH1111. Tot1tly
coordlHttd wltlt tu.no. -llltle•
....... tWs 4 It.ct. ._,_ 2 ...... + .,. vu I• a .-1.t Uttt. lt119d 1oc..-. TIHp for 2 ltoah. $US,OOO
fte.6734900.
m:EAN BLVD. YU-alM
Pt111i• *'"' w/"fett lllt ••••· 71ft. frHt•t•· Z It ... Iota .. ,
f • • mile VU of oc,. & jttty. lllif
......,.,.. re1ldt11t:• w /..,, c...,_ Ir
••llty of ltytoH d1y1 -wood ,.... ....... "·1· ........... Sl.JS0.000. Hl·I 00.
::; with 1pa. llllmaculate 3 ---------1 • ., 8dnn ~ z 8dra ..o den 1MfeTOl'S :ii wlt!i uw kitchen. ......,,
-.. Beautltulty~Uecl. Auume •~~ loan or :i.~ 64WJOO m ftnandna available
ISLAND LIVING
Move Into This Bright Four Bedroom
Lido Island Home. With Only 20<k
Down. Assum e The Large First Trust
Deed At 12'7r & Owner Will Car ry A
Second At 12 %. A Fabulous
Opportunity To Own Property In One
Of Newport Beach's Most Picturesq ue
Communities. An Excellent Buy .
$475.000.
(!)· ·--...... .,..,.
7sg.9100
#2Corpcull..._ ..... ... c......
LIQUIDATION SALE
BAYFRONT
...... SlllllS••·
lllPllJ HI'S mtllft ~ Piil ......... "
UYFIE llTI •T Ill
m • •Y 12·5 PI~ llTl SU
m4c..lM
YIUI llllS • CASll ISClllT c.1•••JS.mt••• cQQ,
HERll
Cl S I t N R AYR AT 6.N TH 0 6
S Y A K S A L E L P I 0 N 0 Y S E C
L £ P l V W Y S E £ M M P & E I R A
AIYCISP OVPARAMIUTA
E W P A S Y J R L P R C E A R M I S
MQAOOHU OREAMSAPAER
9UPYLRAR£SRYOONSNAO
l L M L V 6 E P R D M 0 R R I D I C S
U I A E E M P D A R I T E l S R A P A
QYZEYESMNLNRROERRIS
SOLHPAOTLATARRAQONN
YPTSXMSAN&I RAllPtOTY
Y RA M l S 0 R 0 A £1R A E Y R C A 0
Z A II P H N 8 R 6 l E Y 0 t T P M C t
IRAESTIALPLlDClHLPO .................. =::: ...... Ill.~
.Find out about the high· IEACH HOME
eantlnc real estate sales 3 bdrm, 2 trplcs Move in
career opportunities for Sl0,000 lease option
w i th TH E RE AL & $2500/mo. on k95.000
EST ATERS Licensing purchase. 675-&89
Features family room
with fireplace Up
grades galore Prime
location close to bike
trail and park Slt2,SOO,
make oHer! TARBELL.
REAL TORS. 979-2390 school fees completely JASMM CRES< refundable to school or Luxurious 3 bdrm. 31 _______ _
you/ choice Extensive bath on the greenbelt. 3 HOUSES sales l!aimng. For tn· List is $370,000 BUT
formation, call 7Sl..Sl91 owner ii motivated ! Call ON 1 LOT lolboe I.a.cl 10061 Carl. IDG Properties,
••••••••••••••••••••••• (213 )433·7493 or IEASTSIDl NO CASH t213J43'·44.50.
TD OK for down. Cute 3 °"'J Sl7t,t00
BR 2 Ba cottage, trade POrPY STUET CaU64.S-9161
OK. Desperate. 1385.000 Pretty and private. 3
Ownr/agt. 1-661·0693 bdrm. 2 "'2 ba G real lolboe ,..... 1007 rmanc1ng. 5"48-1904
•••••••••••••••••••••••Costa Mesa 1024 Pl.It-ti •••••••••••••••••••••••
COMM'l COIHB
"'i bLock to Balboa
Ferry . Great loc
$950,000.
675-1771
MESAYEIDl
ASSUMAIU
Nice 3 Bdrm 2 bath
home New roor. near
schools and shops Ask·
ing Sl29,900. For more
Information. call
540-llSl
#~~ .. HERITAGE
. • RE ALTORS
. OPEN HOUSE
REAtrY
/.
***** l H + Pool + Spa
Harbor and Baker area .
Xlnt neighborhood.
TaMS
with SJSK down Owner
must seU. St4UOO
co ....... M9' I 022 l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
••••••••••••••••••••••• Nt>t Hgt.s duplex. 3 Br 2 11i1llllllml~111ii. 04 llGOMIA Ba + new 2 Br 2 Ba ....i
Elegant new 4 Br Vic· Terms, AITD or con· '!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!
t o r i an pa rt i a I vu . tract. SZ7s.ooo. 645-7400
ownr/contractor just ...:0~•~0::.:.r~. ------i 2800 sq.ft. EXECUTIVE HOME. great area complelin&. SS7S,OOO. across from park and
CAMIOSHOllES MOYEIH Wimbledon Village. 4
EXIC"'1VEHOMI COHDmOH BR 3 Ba. 2 bonus nns 4 -
Harbor and ocean view. Sharp 3 Bdrm. 5 years (pie's all upgrades. Xlnt
D r 1 m 11 I c p 0 0 I ar new. lar1e open kitchen, low int. assumable loans
landscape. 3 BR '"" ba, lovely atrium. urtbtone w/S70,000 down . Blue
$8$0,000. carpels. Asking 1134.900. Chip Properties, 957.2040
461S CAMDEN Call 640-1151 -------OPEN SUNDAY J .5 MESA WIST ~ r#llP ~ We ha~~ new 2
RUL ESTATE 644·6397 I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ bdrm condoe left. From
1139,000 to S187,000. Ca ll
now ! Lusk HVHls 3 BR. ram
rm, 1IO dea ocean &r bay
vu. Quld cul de sac.
1319,500. Ownr/agt.
54$-3127
IYOWta 4bdrro. Zba. pool, Jae
MeudelMararea
S1&0,000. 556-1271 fk, l h 1 I Io# l\l· 1!tv
I , , , ,1111
,, ... .,.,,, .... ,. .. ,,
ror~Ad
ACftOff Cah A
PETE
BARRt TT
RtALTY
at only lm~. A lot " llouH. 5 bdrm z be. Only '10t,IOO. Call now
'71-5170.
ALLSTATE:
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
fl!Al £STAT1
S.·"-""··~~
Mm a.... ,.,... .. ... c..... ...... :... = ~ ~ .... -----.......... , ...... o.117 illl• ...........
21U6 W C«*! Hwy JI~~ Avt ,.,._, 8-11 ...,. hllild
u~•• •7Ntll ... ,.... -r .........
,
..... _. ...... ---~-...
1
. . . .. ..
Orange Coeat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Auguat 13, 1081 HH' DI
t
..,.. _.,,,.. ~tnoua 9"•Hu
~.~ .. iii6 t~·~.~ .. i ...
................... _,,. . •.•..••.............. ~
•'-Mt F-""Wt ~.~.~ ....... ·•••••·······•········ ~ .... ~ ................ . ~r.~ ... !~ .... ~~ ... !~!, ..... •.• .. ·.·." .. ~ ... !~!
~ ........ ..-...... _._._, USTaUllP
•ICTITIGUl Mlll•IU _,.Cl TO CHDfTWll UMe IT&Jl .. •T
.. ..,.. IT ._ .... , CW eut.11 , ..... ,,.. TM ........ --la ..,.. tu16> -•··-tteu.•'"-••u,c.c.1 -•· -:::..-.:-Ille ,_, .... , ,,. ...... llttlu la llartlf t lwt n It IM IMOWCAM AUTO l lAUTY, ,_
Late option. Tl&rtkrod1 Hlplalld S8R. fem rm. t~BA . profnalonelly
l1Jldataped, inao1 oUwr
1lr11. llot n.n1orbl1
BEAUTIFUL SOBET 4 bdrm, f1t11 rm. fpk-t,
Xlnt fhtantln1 Jen
media te otcupaao
poulble uu.ooo
"2·Slll. NN107
.
l•ACICITI INVHUlllNT COM-,.......,. ti DAVID a. McCOl.1.UM Wtl ... Aw.,c..n.-.._C.A""7
iltANY, Tilrw U.. Ht"-1 ...... Tr ...... ,"'-..,.._,...,_ It 0.. T ........ , Ital Wal,_. A"9.,
Otl-., ~ ... Cll, Call,.. Illa lib MllCtlw •It City tf ~la -... c.ce--... CA WU.
flNI. CA, Ct11nly •I Ott ll .. , lltl• et T"" ....._ I• c~ •Y M lfl-
RUSTJCALL Y RIAL Wltb puo raaflt
wbltewettr ud otte
vlewa, thlt maulve a
bedrwm, 2~ betll bocnt
abould not be mlutd!
Amultlea lnd udt a
lar1t muwr bedroom
wttb flrtplatt, 01k
u.bl.Dell"f ind beautiful
luab laod1caplo1. llfS.000 . .,..l2
AW ... AT
Five bdrms in HarbOr View. Well
in,amtained home on fee land and with
fix~ rate assumable loan 1339.000. Yn-1 Tew , nir .. u...r ....,,,,.,, C:ell,_,. NI• W. trllfttfw I• alltYI ., • ..._., T_. .... Plue Otlwt, N•"etrl lttelt .. M 111Mt te ltOllN WCIT"ALL 0.. ,_,,,,.
,............ • ,,_.,,..,.. ..... ....,_, ..... •• TMt ........ -..... """ llW J a11a O. HtUell, Tllru U ... r ••U k e11•rlo City t i H11nllnttt11 Ca\lflly Clan: tf Or~ Cauntf tfl Ntw"rt ...... Orio, N••••rl .. Kii, Cauftty tf Or ..... , St ... _. Ayt. II, "'1
Sin.tot
Th• owotr baJ really
lino W. 2 bdrm, 2 ba
&radley Model in Un.Iv
Part Villa .. I • lot ol
tare. New 1ppU1ncts.
rerpet. dnpea, tile.
Good locttlcn. Very at·
trullve tvma.
......... ,., ....... •••••••••••••••••••••••
lttcll.CM-...a...... c.llfW!IMI. ,., ....
T"'°' C. HtO t ll, TllfM U-TM ~y It .. lt-f«rff I• ~I .... C.9'19' ClMtl Dallf lltlle(,
llZJP...tT ........
N"'-' ~Off,.., ........,1 leacll, *K'*f Ill ...,.rel H I All 1110 In A .... IJ, •.11, lftll. a. lt'1 »>fl , ..... ,.,....,...., I ..... ltldwM, ......................
Tlllt ~-· I• <-ll<lff h e Wiii fl .... MACHINa IHOll" _,.._. P11JC llll£(
.. ,.,.,,.,__llllp. kM Wll •• ACa ~Nl"ACTIJltlNOl-----------
1.Mry T11eii.r • ._ .... It IW 'Mllni.r • U, Cllf AMMM 0.-tl l'WtlW af C .... Mnt, CA., C-ly af Oreneit, T,I. ..._ 1._
Tlllt Ila--Ill .. wllll t"9 $1a .. 9f(Allfwftle. lfOTICIOPTltUIT91t'IAl.I ,,..,.,
1'111111-0'"'91 C...01 O.Uy lltlloe,
CtlHll)' Cltrl of °"''""' C_., °" Tiit tluli ,,..,.,., wlll tie <tllllWll· On AlltllM 29, 1"1 at 11:00 1.111.
A"l. 7. 1•1. tntltd Ill tr •ft., IN Ill ... ., tf .... Jf 1 "a T AM I( It IC A N TIT LI
A .... IJ, :io, 21, ....... ,., ,......, ,.,._ IMlllff, 1"1 •I 10:00 A.M, M Orw,..r IN5UltANC! COMPANY •t Trvt• -~ .......... -,._ .. 0""1 .... ~ f ee,..., cw-etlOn, ..... .., •• II ... ...~ • .. _, __ -aneo -.. y .. ... 1800} IMM 11 ... Twllll, Callfwnl• or MUMOI '"'"" Of -11111w
"""· U, JI0, 17, ~-. l, 1•1 »».. l.att•t• ltr ml,..clelmt ..,, .. ,, Tt11••. of lflet etri.ln Oeed Of ,,.,.,
lllOT1CI Of' HUITl•'S IALI .._ ... ...-nt
Se f• .. 1, a-11 tt IN Tr911tf.,M, .. u_""' DOUGLAS E. JOH ES elld tll ~-tt14'---lltff llHETAlt JOHfi.~tftCl wlft,
lltf , ... Tr_,.,., 10r .... ,_,, llW• --~ FeOr...,y •• 1"°• •• 11\-
'l'H f'l ere· Sarnt •••-"' JIW, In -IM 1, lMl9t Otted A..,.1 io '"' 1m. ot Offl<i.1 •ecortb of 0r..,.. ,....11 h lf•ll ' c-•Y. Calllwnle, elld _..,..,, 10
fr-terM I.NI un.111 Nolllce of 0.ftltfl -
"'*I-Or-Cotti Dally PlloC, llec:tl., lo Sell .,__, recwdlN
"CTITIOlll IUllNHI T I. ......... ,
ltAMSSTATIMl•T T. 0 se.Y1c~ COMPANY •1 .. ...., TM folltwlflt i-00111 •re dOIAt ...,.._ T ....... "'*' Ille '911ewlftt
wtl-... O .K.._. ._. ot Wvtt Wll.L SI U OllAClFUI. IXP!CTATI N$ AT PU8LIC AUCTION TO THI
JJtol ,.., .. , •oa4, • 4S, Ltt ll,.. HI OHIST 8 100Elt FOii CASH HlfWI. Cllllfontle fM17
Tiit C'aftt# '°' """" ... I -°"" =~::. ~:.: ~> 1: .. 1:;r
A ... 11, 1tt1 Mey I, 1•1. tS IA5l.NfT>Mt M. J l1S. In • JMl ... I 1100 1400, ..... 14t, of Olllcl•I
llecon11 o1 Mid eo...n..,, wlll ""'*r -....,,._lo Mid Dwd Of TrllSt 1411 ti MJC •m "'*1c -.tllon '°' c.111. 1_.u1 _..,
-----------of IN Uniltd SC.tn of A....,lco, al IN
mol11 ---lo Fin1 A....,1011 Tiiie l11t11rorice Cempe11y IOC t ltd ti 11'
f "I Filtll SltMt, In lltt Cllf ol Sonte
Ano, C..lllwlllo, ... lllet '""'·title end
f'llMt&, lllC., t C..lllorNt <.,_ellof\ tltla -......... ~td te .... -
21601 Jfertlea 11 .. d. • 0 , Le111111 "9W -, II l#llllH .... Owd 04 Trvtt lfl lllOTICa INYITlllO llot
......... Callfwnl•fM17. 1,_~,..,..,,..,..dtlerlllef· Nollu It llerooy elven 11101 the
Tiiis ""'-• Is <ondll<IM by o <tt • T II U ST 0 It . ST E pH E N II lottCI of ff'\llt ... of Ille CMsl Cem
porollan. · m111111, Coll ... Ol•l!ICI of Or.,,.. ThaOlnterlor MottrflOI HA'l'OfH, Ill a fld DOHN~ CWllly,Clllllornlt,wlUrtnlw ... led Int•'"''°""""" "° --lleld "' ft ..,,., wld OMd .. Tr11111n ,,. ,,..,_ -CNMI Fl!Nu , 11\C ::;.c:.EN, ..._,.. -wife " ,_ft lllck 11P ID 11.00 e.m , Jfrldaf , AlllWI ~-... ,w ....... Jutldmtfl 8 ENfl'ICIAllY; PACIFIC CITY 11• "'1 ••Ille""" .... '"' o...ri ....... I)' altwlled in U kl C-ly -Stoia deKr....,e. ,..,,..., ol said t oll• dl•lrlct IO<Oled 01 1:110 Tiit. .i.1-1 ... llled •1111 ti. BANK Ada mi AY t nue, Coale Mesa, A LEASEHOLD ESTATE IH ANO
TO THI! FOi.LOWiNG DE$CRllEO PROPEllTY:
COlllllY Clttl el Or•,... Covnly or •ec.-Ck,.,., J, ,..,, •• Instr. Celllornie, et Wl\lc:fl time .. 10 bid• •Ill A119 II ,,., NO.tClll.ln._ IJ7U,poge•1.o10t-bePllllllcly~-·Nd for. ~-........ llclel •ecerds ,,, IN ofll<t of tlle PUllCHASf OF IMPACT PAIN· A~alL.tw Rtc ........ ofOr-C-y; U lddtad TING TERMINALS, INFORMA'TION *I ...... ,CMliw Dtlw of lrvtl detcrlbet Ille foll-lt19 P'f> SERVICES
LOT JJ OF TRACT NO. '321, AS SHOWN OH A MAP RECORDED IN
BOOK Bl. PAGES t, 10, ANO 11 OF
MISCELl..ANEOlJS MAPS, RECORDS
OF ORA N GE COU N TY ,
we.• "'1y: All bids trt lo lie In eccordt11u wltll 1,,,IM Col...,..• tl71t LOC t of Tract No. -.. H per mop
• ,. 1...,, •«onlltcl 111 ._ 400, Poeet .. to 41 ln-
PllOll....., Or-Coe11 O•llY PllOI, <llltl ... of Mltcello-1 AUpt, In h
A-IJ JO 11 s.111 J "'' -»-11 office of Ille County R«order of said
Ille Bid Form lnatrucllona end C~· CALIFOllNIA. "°"' -S.clllcellon1 wlllcll ••• -Tiie ,1,..1 tddrfls or olller common
on Ill• end mey lie 10C11red In Ille office dolgnellon ol ulo properly: Is
of Ill• """"'"Ing •nl ol .. ld coll9 ....,.,..,led to be: 1Nn YI• Pet•llno. ~ ' ' ' ' Orenee o.unty.
UGUll11r'nl"91t.tr, EI T cwo, CA.
"(II• tlrMt......., or common c1e-1te11atloft It "-> •llow, no • .,.,_.,
It,,,,.,. .. to Ila '°"'Pletenau or ccw.
•tel,..).'' Tiie lleNllctery 11-r atlll l'ICTfT10UI 8UIUtlH 0..0 of T,...,., by ,..._ of e btNcll or MAMa ITATUilllNf d•ftllll In Ille obll9•Uon1 M<llrH Tiit fotlowlt19 person• ere dolt19 Ille,.. ,..,..lllfo<w ellt<"'*' efld dlt-
,,..,ll_s es 11 ... ,.... 1o Ille -ll9fttd • wrltlltn C A LIFOll H IA IRETNEY O.Clerllt .... of Dtf ... 11 Mel~
MA•ICETING. m) W H•rYttel Sent• lcw Sole, -wrl!Wfl notice Ol IH'HCll
Ano, CA '21CW •11d of e lecllon to ce11se Ille 11n.
Wllltrd J t y Ma••-. 11Jll B11t· ...... ....., "' Mii atlO P•-rty lo '"""'*'· F...,.1t1n v.11..,, CA n l'OI. .. 11,,.,...,, .,,..tlofll. -111e...nw J a m .. T. Fole y, lt06·B So11t11 Ille..............,,_ Mid -Ice of
Fi-. Soflta AM. CA '2707 _,H ell end of -lion ID lie Aec..-
Tllh ,,..,"""' ,, conduCltd Oy • Aprtl IS. ""· •• ln•tr Ho. 11m ol -••I pe,_Sfllp '°kl Ofllclol Rtcord1.
Jey Mt•'-Sold u lt wlll be -· °"' •tt-Tlll• • .,.......,., wos filed wllll Ille co.,.,...,. or _,_., ••Pttt• or lm-
C-ly Cler-ol O.enge Co11t11y on plied,.....,..,.,,. tltlt, pos-sfon. or en
A,.. II, 1"1 c11mlH'tneH, le pey Ille romt1nlt19
~16117• prl11Clpol .,... ol Ille -(IJ M<Wtd
-
llhtd Or-Coal! Otlly PllOI, Oy Uld ~of T"'SI, wlUI lrllel'Ht ..
A 10. 11, S.111 J. "'' ,,.._., In uld-provided, ad•-, II eny,
11-,,_ "'"" of .. kl Owd of Trust. 1------------1 .... , ... , ... '""' .. ,.._of ....
Tnut• -of 1"" lnn1s crwol!ed lltf
stkl o.ct .. T ..... I. Sold .... •Ill be
llekl en T-y. S..flltrnll« I, 1•1 t i N.,_.. 1.00 P.M. el Ille C ........... A,.. _ _,.
l'ICTITIOUI IUllM•n •••nee "" .... Clwlc c...'9• 811lkllne,.., NAMl ITATIMINT Ent ~ Aw-. In Ille City Of , ... IOll-1119 penon1 ... dolnt Orenoo, CA.
111111,.., .. , Al tltt time o11,. lnlllt l publk el,.,.
LAKE AR ROWHEAD VILLAGE of tllls notice ..... IOl•I ·-·of tlle
' L TO., 11» 0...Ponl Orlw , $1111• • llJ, 11npold bolence of Ill• obll9ollon
lrwlne, c..tltornle t27U ttc11redby Ille •llove dascrllled dMcl ol
G c "'-"'"· In<., • Ct llforll4• lr111I -.. 11....-CM lt ••• ,..,..., cor-ellOfl. 11n DuPont or1 .... S11lle •nd OllYtn<tl ,, uo.2 ... n. To ....
• 112, lrrirw, Collfor.,10 t 71U termllle Ille_.,,. bid, YOll m•r cell
Tlll1 llutlrwu It c-..Cled br • cor 111•1 m.-..
POt•I""' Otla: A....-t S, 1"1.
G C p,_rflH , In< T. 0. SERVICE COMPANY
J. R Jock-. .. uld Tf'\111 ..
Vice Prttldenl U flele ,..,.,
Tiiis 11111-1 wOI llled wllll Ille AMIS.-SK..tery c..,,.,, Cl•r-ol Or•noe C..,nly on 0... City llollleYerd Wttt
Aut. •. "'' Or ...... CA 92'61 ""7m (114) ~ PllOll-Or-C-sl D•lly Pll04. ""*hlled Or ..... Cootl 0.11, P ll04. A119 IJ, 10.11, 5apt J. ltll ,. ... , .... IJ, 10, 27, lt'1 JU>.411
NIUC IOCE
Consolidated Report of Condition of "AMERICAN
STATE BANK" of Newport BNch, Orange County,
and Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business Oft
June 30, 1911.
State Bank No. 1072
ASSETS
Ooll•r Amounts
in Thousands
Cash and due from banks ...................... 3,321
U.S. Treasury securities ...................... 2,<4M
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't .
Ohlrlcl. lrvlne, CA '27U.
Eecll bldlltr mval '"°'"" •1111 llh Salo w i. will lie m-wll'-t cov• l)ld. <Miiier'• Clltck, (etllll•O <Mck, nenl ,,, ..,.,, .... Y ... ,,.."or lmpll .. ,
or blclder'1 l>Or\cl meoe POY•bl• lo Ille H to 11111 -JHMOfl or enc11m1H'..,c.n order Of ,,. Goen Comm11t1llf Coll9 10 w111,Y IM .,_Id INlence -on DI llrlCI Boord ol Tr1111eu 111 •n IM note or noctt W<llred by Mid o-
emo....c noc lets lhtn live' percent U,.I of Trldl, 10 wit: W .ttt.•, pl111 Ille
ol Ille""" bid .. • 11110•t11lee lllot lltt lollowlno ullmo1ec1 co1h , ••penlfl
bldc»r wlll ent., Into Ille pr-Md end tdVtn<n •I tM time OI ,,. lnlll•I
CDfllrtcl 11 Ille •em• 11 ••trded 10 p11bllcallon of lllh Hollo ol Sole lllm. 111 Ille • .....,, OI ltllllrt lo enler '"' '20 SOI.,.
10 well cOfllrocl, Ille procffdl of Ille OATEO Allglnt •. ltll.
<lleck ""II lie lorl .. led, or In Ille COM FIRST AMERICAN TITLE
of • bond, Ille Ml """' lllereof wlll lie INSURANCE COMPANY lorleltlld lo Hid cOll9 dlllrlct. • ColllOf'fll• ,.._0 uon
No bldllltr moy wlllldr-1111 bid lor AS TRUSTEE
t period of lorly-llwe 1451 ~'l'I •I~ BRUCE R. BEASLEY
Ille cltle Ml lor Ille -nln9 lllertol. AUTHORIZED OFFICEll
Tiie 8-rd of TrllSlett tHtn'H Ille 114 EH i Flllll S1r .. 1
pri.11191 of reJtcllnt ally t tld t ll blck SttllA M t CA '1101 ~ to welw eny ln't9"'1Mlll" or In 11141 )jt.nll
lormotlllH In.,.., llld or In U.. Olddlnt Pllbli.,.., Or-Cot•I O•ily Piiot,
HOR MAH E WATSON A1o19 • IJ JO "" S.91-11 s.c,.1¥r. tto.rd of • • • Tt11sl•s, Cotti Commllllll'f ----.,.-llLJC ____ ""_( __ _
cot19 Ohlrlcl rv '"' PllOll-Or-Co .. I D•llr Pllol,
A119. l, ll, 1911
U»-11 NS-79'11
PHUC lllTIC( NOTICE OF DEATH OF
HARRY (N .M .N .)
GEISE'R AND OF NS-79112 PETITION TO AO-
NOTICE OF DEATH OF MINISTER ESTATE NO. WAL TEA KISZKO AND A-109940.
OF PETITION TO AO-T o a I I h e i r s ,
MINISTER ESTATE NO. beneficiaries, credi tors
A -109834. and contingent creditors of
To a I I he i r s, Harry (N.M .N.) Geiser
beneficiar ies, c r edi tor s and persons who may be
and contingent creditors of otherwise interested in the
Walter Kiszko and persons will and/or estate:
who may be otherwise In-A petition has been tiled
lerested in the will and/or by June Geiser Logan &
estate: Lela E. Geiser .in the
A petition has been filed Superior Court of Orange
by Kathleen Garnsey In County requesting that
the Superior Cou rt of June Geiser Logan & Lela
Orange County requesting E . Geiser be appointed as
that Kathleen Garnsey be personal representatives
appointed as personal to administer the estate of
representative to ad· Harry (N.M .N.> Geiser of
minister the estate of Costa Mesa, Ca. (under
W alter 1<1szko of Costa t he I ndep e ndent A d -
M esa, ca. (under the In· ministr ation of Estates
dependent Administr ation Act). The petition is set for
of Estates Act). The petl. hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
tion is set for hear ing in 700 Civic Center Drive
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic West, Santa Ana, Ca. 92701
Center Drive West, Santa on September 2, 1981 at
A na, Ca. 92701 on Sep· 9:30 A.M.
a94!ncles and corps .....•.....•............... 2,800
Obligations of States and
political subdivisions .......................... 176
Other bonds, notes,
and debentures .....................•.•..........
Federal funds sold and securities
purchased under agreements to
resell In domestic offices .................... 6,SOO
Loans, total (exclud ino
unearned Income> ................ 42,768
tember 2, 1981 at 9: 30 A.M . IF YOU OBJECT to the
IF YOU OBJECT to the g r anting of the petition,
granting of the petition, you should either appear
you should either appear at the h~arlr:ig and st~te
at the hearing and state your ob1ect1 o n s or file
your objections or f ile written objections w ith.the
written objections w ith the court before the hearing.
court before the hear ing. Your appearance m ay be
Your appearance may be in person or by your at-
in person or by your at· torney.
torney. I F Y 0 U A R E A L ess: Reserve for possible
loan losses .......................... 471
L oans, net .................................. 42,297
Direct lease financing .......................... 4,239
Bank prem ises,
F.R.&E., etc. .................................. 368
Real estat~ owned
.bl11go ., ....
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ILOW 1/4
Ml.UOM 523 CAMPll' l\...,,9Vw.r
JUSTUSTID
Cute 2 Bdrm fiur near
Harbor Hlch. Great
poteotl1I Assumable
loans. Won't last Joyce
Waltzt63H288
WM*
IH \I ll•fl"
the ri1ht way! Move lo ""' "•1"~
buutltlll El Toro and 1-... •-a.. 1041 -------1et 1 Ira 5 8dm estate ....,,_. -.
wlpool, ape 6 view (llOC •••••••••••••••••••••••
a m1ttllboa) Great locM.•
term a. A.taume 9\t~ In· tr n. fe.
terut Cell Patrltk Walled and cated ocean
Teoore.831·12111S fro nt estate with
fabulous view Pvt steps
to the sand Call for
brochure
CAROLTATUM,ftLTR ~
IYOWHEI Bea,ut1ful 1, ar lot 1n
Westcbff. 4 Br 21, Ba
S259 ,9 oo ow e
Ownr Agt 631 1266
Norm &Kasey
WM~,
R F:Al.TOR~
HUJIDCOMDO
A buuty with trplc .
patio 4i ape. Try l 10.20K
down, assume Ill,;% or
lease opt. Won't laat
Patrick T-.ore&31·12M
WM~
H ~ .\I fllli" --------
M.l.WGAIH
Sll.000 down, ruce 3Br.
2•1Ba home. ~ blk to
bch, owner Wiii finance
S205,000
SUMSfTl.l.
542-~lot
OC EAMFtlOMT
By owner Best Balboa
loc Lge pnce reducuon TERMS, THMS
Spotjeas Ir& 4 Bd, allows
like a m~I Assume 9'><'~. Only St61,000 or
lease option Patrick
Tenore. '31-12186.
•Lot
For4L»M. l •-------I 4 & 2br d 640-7990 BEST VALUE IN
EASTBl.UFF
don osen
I Tt ,,,ti•(·.
111lf ATPR~PECT
TUSTIN, 131-3111
OlllerlMf ...... •••••••••••••••••••••••
1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OV OCEANl'RONT·New
Modular Type Homes,
leased land, 3 pvt bdis,
Z4 hr sttunty, f1Shing
pier from 134 .900 499·3816
Ac....,. fw We 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Big Bear Lake·! acre &
1"9 acre parrels. Sewer
water & elec avail
Zoned A·l Temu. Dys·
(7 14 1866-4270 . Eves
C714 )585·8891 or write
Box 1281, Big Bear Lake,
C;a 92315.,.
KAJLUA
KONA HAWAII
H•t ...... IMcti I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I acre + bldg site, gent·
ly sloping parrel short
distance from tennis &
beach Ownr has in -
cluded plans for custom
villa. h75,000 Spec
tacular views '
MISSION REALTY
494-073!
FAIULOUS
178 FeeSimplt Acres
Resort Art'a, Central
loratton Fronuge on 2
-maJ o r highwa ys ...!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!i!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!'l--------•I M agmf 1cent view
MEWPOIT CIEST l2l acres S5,210.1so
PllCI llDUCID
Lim lled Time Offer
2113 M 1ramar Reduced
to firm pnce of $419.500
until Sept. I. 7511 ftnanc·
mg at 12''1-Pnnr1palJ
only 556-JIOO. 673 4226
3 Bdrm 2 bath, 1m
maculate! Owner anx
ious S205,Wl.
lo, Mcc-6, lltr.
541-7729
MEWLISTIHG ON EXCLUSIVE HUN
TJNGTON SEACLIFF'S
GO L F CO U RSE '
3bdrm. pool, xtra lrg lot
Many xtras S395.000
Broker 633 6633,
637-6266
4HIJOUS SBJ..11
Unique Deane home in
super area Close to everythtng Owner lea v
1ng state Be creatt,·e
and submit
Ul·JJ42
~Sunhcm
• lkalt'
IS the word for this oc £AN FRONT Un ll
with custom decor in
every detail PLUS front
row whitewater \ tew
SJSS,000
L..-.Y .. l.E
4'7-1761
IFYOUUKE
4 Br 2h Ba. on 1 • Ar:
Wutr ltff $259.900
OWC Norm & Kase)
631·1266
WM~
Rt.Al.TORS
QUALITY and good H--...n.w
arch1tertural tastes with Move in condition 3
a Spanish Oair, HSlt new bdrm. 2 ba home 1n
Portofma house Great Harbor View High a~
vu!ws and excel financ sumable loans H1ghl)
ing S4~.Wl upgraded throu!!hout
LCHJlllMI Y .... 1.£. Shows Like model Must
4'1:.1 761 sell fast Asking 1239.~
1nrl land Come for in L..-. H• I OSO specuon Sat, Sun 1·6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!WiO Port Wheeler or t·all Elegant 4 Br custom in 760_.9596_ Owner >\Bl H•lllfJlow Nellie Galt Ranr h.
H..t.itr 1042 beaut. view. real mar WESTCUFf 4 ID ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble, PoOI size yard, 4 <'ar Spacious, open & air),
Twnhse 1760 sq ft 2Br, gara1e. equestrian lot beaut 4 Bd ,. 2 patios 2~ Ba. guard gate 1625.000 Owner/Broker Assume 10.95'1 int A re
comm . owner will 7Si9·0706 644·5742. al value Palr1 r k
f 1 nan c e 0 w n r I a Ill LeCJ-e ~--1052 Tenore 63J.J.266 s2~.soo 1114,997.s.90 ...................... .
'"'" I 044 38r, 21,, Ba. 3 car garage Iii" i ~J &I •
0000
••• .. •000•0 •0000 ~ RVl boat storage. ~~
GORCiEOUS dinette tn klll'hen, new : ~-.i!: Clean & cozy. 3 Br 2 Ba ca~tJng, fully lndspd,
wt courtyard entry ford , pvt pool & Jacuui YllUIAU04
Near new carpeta and area overlooking L I Br condo View of
mirrowave 1ncludtd Ni1uel Golf Course Catalina Owner will
Close to schools and S339,000 ~8 help finance Subm it of shopping CaU for de OPEN HOUSESVN 10.4
1
fer ,
tails. 2 Br 2 Bal den. cnr 1.o4. lrolitf' 963-1112 up1rades, 1LS4.900 2'382 --'-L-e-H.\~.,H·H
hf •d I Y
•,•, 1 .'000
Cimarron Ct (Jn Lake Trade Luxury Newpon
Park) 831'99C90wner homt on l, acre for In
u... __..~-1069 come Uruts or • Equity rww,......__,. S280.000 Ac t no w ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Broker Co·Op A~ent
F'1rst 11me buyer and re 16 9 acres 13,S33.587
ttree, step nght up and 20 acres S3.6S9,040
make u5 an offl!r A two 20 acres SJ.136,320
bedroom condo with lots For more detailed in·
of chararter Vaulted formation. please call
ceilings and wetbar are 1808 1961·~ Rudy or
J us 1 s 0 me o f 1 he write Farms & Ranches.
amrmttes Too good to Inc PO Box 225. Hilo.
last • Sl65.Wl Hawa"'11"-"'='---
t . ; R I laiM11 Propert, I 400 Cole ea ty •••••••••••••••••••••••
& ln\f•\l mf'nt Pnme retail loc Harbor
640-5777 and Newpon Blvd CM
4000 sq ft or less s.3-3402
Eves,_S43-:rz'IO
USTllUFfS C...t.ryLota/
By owner 48r. 2Ba. extc Cryph 1500 h o u~e. at appraisal •••••••••••••••••••••••
1240.000. 10''\ dn OWC Wutmmster Memorial
bal IS' ,r: I 0 Lse hold Park D lot in beaultful
Owner reque1res <'OOP Med1tat1on Ser11on
w I RS 1031 tax ex Sacr1f1ce $700 ~1·9561
chanJI! 760-9:1l6 Hori--L.;_,. -
WANT hou.5e tn NewpUrt Mount 01.Jve 2 lots Sp
Height.\ for chent Cleo, 1 E& F Cypress Lawn
U n 1 t e d Bro k en Mk Ofr 646-0181 673 7771._S48 2739
'DESP.ERATE ' M u~I COMfMrcW
sell home Close to ProfMrty 1600
be~rh 22'·: down a~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• sume loanh $197,000 RARE C t H Newpor~
Ajl Ladoru 00 9161 Beach Propert} 50 frontage in pnme loca CREATl\'ETERMS' '' lion o ,.ner will finance
Under mrttl by $20,000 Exl'I U!>l\e Pnnc1pab
3 br 2 ba. lgt bonus rm. onh A~k for Irene
II\ rm & formal dtn Loudon ~. 631 4247 or area ~ frplt' Open 631 7300
beam ce1hnR rompl re
furbished. nev. t"rpts.'----c-.
2
•l•OT---· paint. landscapmg Low
pnceforBarkBay area High traffic t'ounl
11 89.SOO 631 S4 76. 62 SX307 lot Existing
642:]744 house on propert) Flex
THMIMG 63HS16_.__ IACKIAY BA YCREST OPEN HOUSE CHBUIYUIE
1ble uses o,.ner will
l'Ons1der carrying l~I
TD Asking 1199.500 Call
~ 1151 formoremfo TOW.,.OMI?
Call the specialists at
the condominium in
formation center
Touchstone Realty
983-Ql67
••TMlllO!
No. not a fruit but the
street this charming
Irvine rondo Is on Va
cant & ready lo go Make
an offer! Asltilli
S!Ol.900
i ~ldbrldge
RUlllJ
551·3000
POOL HOME Sunday. 121 Wild Goose 3 Bdrm family home
Large 4 bedroom, 3 bath 1169,000. Plan 2 Owner ~·1th beparate in law's
home with formal dining anxious. Call Ttm Rhone qnrs Pool size l'omer .. ~ •• HERITAGE
room. living room. large now! 631-l.266 lot Very pnvate F'an
kitchen with separate ta s l 1 c f 1nant'1 n K ..... 1111!!!!1~111111'1111!~~~
eating area, den and 12190·~NHOUSE 14 CHdo111i.l .... 1/Tow1t-
. . REALTORS
custom pool with solar S.O..t fw.. I 700
heating. Located on 2313 Redlands Or ••••••••••••••••••••••• quiet, tree lined street FniSat/Sun&Mon Leisure World I BR. Ex~elltnl financing BLUFFS CONDO.Single C/21 Mtwpot1 C• singlestory.end unit, at
available For sale by story 3Br. 2Ba. Linda 640.5357 642-Gl I l tacheA garage AJr. fpk.
owner S319.000 Call Plan' New applJas. lile. ----llllll-•1!!!!11~1 a ss um ab I e I 11 a n
919 2 S 00 · ext 19 etc Assumable loan, $88,000 Studio Condo As· 837 ~._dl-71216
(workdays), 642 2688 owner agt 1230.0QO sume 13'l loan Spa. 0.. ... Wat.r
<weekends) ~-_ _ _ PoOI. clu~e A Low tnlerest rate as
THlkUff
PUH"X"
~ 17~ well as a low pnct for
other th6n bank premises .................... 3,224
Other assets .................................. 2, 176
IF YOU A R E A CREDITOR or a cont -
C R EDITOR or a con t · ingent creditor of the de-
ingent creditor of the de· ceased, you m ust file your
ceased, you must file your claim with the court or
claim w ith the cou rt or present it to the personal
present it to the personal representative appointed
representative appointed by the coort within four
by the court within four months from the date of
months from the date of first issuance of letters as
fir st issuance of letter s as Qrovided In Section 700 of
pr ovided in Section 700 of t h e Probat e Code of
the Probate Code of California. The time for
California. The lime for filing claims w ill not ex-
fillng claims wlll not ex-pire prior to four months
pire pr ior to four m onths fr om the date of the hear -
f rom the date of the hear· Ing noticed above.
lt?t8arranu P1i .. -.1r.,.~ 3 bdrm, din rm . Uv
OCEANFRONT
HEWIYOWMER
3 BR & den. 1895.Wl
3711 Sea5hore
Owner w c~73-~78
WATERFRONT~ 20'1 this 2bdrm,2ba lnthe
down. OMC at 12'1 Int . heart or Newport Beach
Sl760 mo . 3 yrs Pnce Boat sl.Jp avail Submit
Just reduced to s220.ooo all offers Agt 645-0701
Hurry' Call Janis Wknd's, 213-433-408.S &
O'Brien 840 8208 John 714~7 3144
TOTAL ASSETS .............................. 67,566
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of
individuals, par tnerships,
and corporations ........... _ ....... -.. -..... 14,302 Time and savings deposits of
individuals, partnerships,
and corporcltlons ............................ J.4,A14
Deposits of United States Gov't .................. 72
Deposits Of States and
poll ti cal subdivisions ........................ 10,518
Certified and officers' checks ...................... 6
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
OFFICES ......................... 14,380
Total demand deposit s .............. 4.4,932
Total time and savings deposits •..... 59,312
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC ANO
FOREIGN OFFICES ....................... 59,312
Other liabllltles ................................ 2,281
TOTAL LIABILIT I ES ........................ 61,593
Subordinated notes & debentures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY Common stock
No. shares author ized: 1,200,000
No. shares outstanding: 1,004,423 •• 1,256
Surplus ...........••.•.•............. 1,455
TOTAL CONTRIBUT ED
CAPITAL ..•...........................•.•... 2,7 11 ~=~~f~:~~a~·nc:,e·s · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 2'262
and other capita I reser ves ••..........•........• -0.
T OTAL SHAREHOLDERS
EQUITY .•....•...•.............•.•......••• 4,973
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
SHAREHOLDE RS EQUITY •......•.•.••••• 67,566
MEMORANDA
Time certificates of deposit In
denomlnetlons of $100,000or more .••••••.•.•. 1,339
Other time deposits In
amounts of $100,000 or more .•..•.•......... 16,163
M:!c"::1t~~ ~ .'~~.~~·.~~~· ..... '. . • ............. S, 160
·The '-lnderslgned, J°"n Engberg, .,_.esldent and. S.'R. Whitfield Sr., Vice Presldtnl/Controller of tl'it
abow-n.med bank, each dlclares, for himself •lone
and not for the other: I have perSOMI knowtedget!!.
th• matters contained In this r.pcwt <Including ~
revene side r.reot>, and I belt.Ye ttwtt Heh sta_.
mefrt In said report Is tr\Mt. E.ch of the undersfOMd, for Nmself alone and not fOf' the other, certifies un-
der penetty of perjury that ti• torevoino Is t~ erMI cornet.
11/JoME /s/S.R. le SI'. ........ .,....e... Deley ",...
'
'
ing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMIN E
YOU MAY EXAMI NE the file kept by the court.
the file kept by the court. If you are interested in the
If yoo are Interested In the estate, you may file a re-
estate, you m ay file a re-quest with the court to re·
quest with the court to re· celve special notice of the
celve special notice of the Inventory of estate assets
inventory of esta te assets and of the petitions, ac-
and of the petitions, ac· c ount s and re p o rt s
c o u nt s an d r e ports described In Section 1200
descr ibed In Section 1200 of the Callfornla Probate I
of the California Probate Code.
Code. MEAD AND MEAD, At.
KLEIN & CUTLER, At· torneys at uw, by; Frank
torneys at Ltlw, by: Leslie F. MNd, Ill, 1101 Dove
Klein H20 La Cienega Street, Suite 170, Newport
Blvd.,' St.. U1, Inglewood, 8Hdt, ca. 92660; t.I:
ca. 9Ul1; tef: 213/641·5'00 rt4/13J..9033
IY~llO!lt TMI .-UAL ITATIMIUfT -
VIA• l•ND MC8•1• ft, "9 • u..,....._._..._. ... c...... ...............
T.tel alMlln..t .. ..._ • . . . . . • . • • .. , "" .......... • .... • • • • • • ,.._.,,..,
,..., l .... lllw . .. • . .. .. .. .. • • • . • . .. .. • .. .. • .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. •.-.sa.i c:.ttll ........................................................ ,...,,,. o,_,...lft.,..(tf\ltrlllliNd-...... .............................. 1,, .. ..,, -.Clel .,,.Ill lltllftdt .. .. • .. .. • . .. • .. .. .. .. .. • .. .. .. • .. .. .. .. • .. "• u_._...._,__..,.,.............................................. •
0.lft 1'-1 ,,.,,,...., .. _~.I'.'""'" ".... ...... ................. •7.att lllC-IDK-> l11~alld hrllhK .... 1111, ........... ,............... ............................ o ..... , ln--lft '..-u1 H4lt1Mw•-
wi--.1an ... .. ......... • .............. • ......... •• ..... .._ M.M.9,. AC~,.,..,. llNHll ,,_'-"t........... .. . ... , " .... • ... · · .. , •... ,.. 1--111 irora• C..llforn6a
.__,._ '" • ..... • .............................. I~ A«._.. .. ..._,,_, __ Olrea1 CM..._._.._.,._,,,.................................... ..,m
We llata•f c •flll y tllat t ll• •••w• lt•fllt •rt Ill
----wlltl .. ._. ........... "' .. ,_ ...._ ~ "· t• ,..... ta tlla 111wr•n<a Ce"""'1...,,., tf ,,. .._ ., c:.I~ ..._. ...... '"""'-J· ~. ~. ~ 111--...A.k--. .....,,
....... Or' .... c.... o.lly ~ ... ''·"' u, M, ... ""
rm . ram rm . FtP, 212
* * IMftl & r•A ba. xtra large porrela1n r~ « tub wteeram1c til&walls S t p a r a t e f e n c e d & noor 4 rovered patio
playyard hi&hlights lhl5 areas Price S2:Wl.OOO, 5'1
s uperb 4 Bdrm pool down, assume S40.000 lst
hom e In f abulous trust dtfd at 71.;% Xlnt
Northwood Try k OM land lease 1853 00 per
dwn year Can't change until
$3411,000 year 2003. 14~ int. onl)(
OCEAtRONT
$450,000
Thts offering is an estate
sale. One of Newport
Beach's finest v1ewi. 3
bdrm home with guest
aptor2wuts
Realonomics 67HIOO
Coombe Bkr
2nd trust deed due --------• ~l{lef brldgt 19116-87. Call owner lor • •·ally appt. dally alter 5 pm
1141: (114) 76G-8'25 s st . 3000 I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1ntl 1rranu Pk,.\.lnhtf The 11.stesl draw In the --------Weat. .. a Daily Pt.lot
Have 1ometbln1 you CltssiliedAd.642-~78. ::~o~ ::i: ~;,~~ed lnM I 044
··················-..··~·
IJi[
Mn.I IOC• "STIW Air wmt
YtlW. Beautiful s BR home
w/pool, spa & view I Excellent .
location on cul de sac. Great
usumable loan. $499,000 Darlene
Herman 752·1414 (V68)
~ I TIMMtS. Beautiful
Northwood condo w/upgraded
fioor & window coveringa. Step11
to pool. AasumabJe 1st T.D.
$79,950. Mack Hanson 551·8700
(Ve9) ""'--!Dtilo lllilll"'•kll!W•
Redlsced Sl00.000 In Dover Shores S600
sq.ft. of lop quality con·
struction. This 5 Bdrm
M edit. style residence l5
lbe best of locations and
has tbe best of finanting
avai(able. owe S950,000
at 9t,A,a3 int. Full price in·
dudi n g t he land
l l,4S0,000. CaII Dan Bibb for appt.
tOGa'SUALn
'7S.JJI I
RH LTORS
f•t .. kYltws
A Southport model with
spe<'lacular views. The
home is hlghly up1raded
with built ins 1n the
SELL idle items with a
Deily Pilot Class1fled •----=---=""---•
Ad, H2·5678. W111t Ads -=:....::.~-----. ')•-----
SIAWIMD. SpectacU1ar view of
city. mounta ins & lights!
·Professionally decorated 3 BR &
fam rJTt . Beautiful Jarden w/waterfall·Kol pond. aas,ooo
Jaae Paquin 642..WS (V'/0) . . .
4 OMctl .... 4-~-rctll ....... 4471
Jl4 FREE rm wlpvt phone, PLUSH orrlCES. ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••• 1n txcb. lot tltani.111. UO tOOO •fl It llO' llTALIPACI ) l r T•w••• Univ.nil'/ Pa.rll Ttrract Coct M l ~ Newport IMvd. C.M. Pt. ft1P tralric', areat n
dtto pd TownhoUN, tnd U11il, 2 Pnvalt room fr b1tb W-tel poHrt. _, MJ ft on
EASTSID!. cute I 8" Nt•port Shafte 4 Br. 3 ~:~~If., ~~~wbr' ~t 2 Ba .!:!""t ~I. Nice patio U2$ mo. MIWPOIT Newport 8tvd $2500 mo
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
C'Ot.ace. Mmi f\lmlahfd, Ba Canal honl. Aduli. &e.SOTa ,,o PIU "'"' Mo ur J!!W .... 54..mr ,. •• A 0t male olfer tmmt'd
1ard al"fa, s.&s mo lit. • ., least 18G-tl»2_ --Roo m Cd Y Hom" Spar oua rutt\ltJve of. Ot'cupaDCy
lul, uc Blue Chip -• 2 Hr 1 Ba. Nr Cat Orao&elrft, I br (Ondo, Female no11-1moktr fict1 acrau from Clty Jttalol\om tt '7}§700
ProJ!.rtl 1· DIC. Sf'DCOMOO Pl111. S.A. Adulta. ~ lofl, 1 /c, amtnillu l300 mo AvaU Sept lll Hill AlletrVlceaaveU.· ................ 4500
SrACIOUS I II No l4 Sd 3232 Adult• onb' AveU Im 190-bit 'optional' Fromm •••••••••••••••••••••••
CONDO ntar So CoHt SIGHT SOUND OF SEA lritt, CJe-. ~ med. S'50 03 OSll, 2 lovtly coanttl lna IQ fl up at tftlOOabkt 1,000 SQ F'T w ofr &
Plan. wooday at m ·CMBO - -HOO wk Au&. wnlr kOO 1 8r 1pt up or down ~lHM30 ---room1, wtbt.lcooy, pvt rental1 No llHt r~ rom tta 0 1H dr S2'7S
moapbere. Security lie C-w-T.HN mo with b•lcony or patio, L..-. IMCh 3'4t bath, kit priv,, I ll ullls qui~. call US: jl.H3Sl
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COMI WITH US ••• CORONA Dll MAI
SOUT ll o .. HI GHWAY llOME ANO
INCOME TWO STOKY TWO BEDROOM IN
1''RONT ON~ BEDt<OOM UNlT IN ltEAR
WITH TWO l'All GARAta:. Wl111 w ; DOWN
OWN1.;R WILL C'A RJlY llALANCE FIVI!:
$4$0/mo 3 bd'rm, lh ba, 1011 m4HIM-SUM .. 3'l·22Z2 cathedrel ('fiJ.11111. pool & ....................... pd. Mature prr1on. THI RIGHT 7.500 aq ft Xlnl toe ,.
WaterfrantHomee. lnc. coum vlcw.91400 Mtw..,.IMdi l1H apa, lush lllndaraplna. lbdrrn, nt'w, lrg dt-rk. 1310/mo l.\t, last & 175 SP'""CI tlOOO sq ft Fenced yd 631· 00 ___ M0..)314 ........ ~.............. AdultJ, no pelt '400 Ii North end Close to ~$45 Ml9~5533 ,.. space has mod AC or
811 2 Br. 1 ea v-;ulted Luxury 1 1tory house on 3 Bt, OCtaD vu, new, 2 car ~· 549.2447 l>farh '525. 494-7079._ Furnished roum in Co~ll THI RIGHT fires, can be ~pht 2919 S
ceillng, rrptc, fncd yrd, Sanlill&O Dr 4 Br with pk •. Avail 9/1 to 8/15 2 Br Upper, b11lcon y. OccllnYl('W, tnr. open Mesa. Nl~e. quiet hou.u• NICI Haladay, SA 646·7~12.
dbl gar'.-· 613 separate master bdrm. ~~ enclad gar, d/w Adlu.
1
t>t>11m11, I blk tO brh, 1450 For workm& person. Not GUAliHTllDI :1411 8900
D aulte, 3 full Bu Family No pets ~ 548 ~or mo. 751 t293 under 32 yeara old 300 to llOOOSq Ft Prime 2500 SQ f"'T. Ughl in .. PoW lZH Rm. •'ormal Olnl.n& Rm. _540 5446, L-o ...aa.._, 315" 6'2, ~194_._ W aterrront otrices in dustr11I l'nn1tt l~allon • • '•' •' •••• ••••' ••' '••• •-LI In R ~ "~ • 2 Br. t Ba. dbl au. yard. • Y 8 m. In 11fry Stunnlna lar11t-1 Ur ••••••••••h••••••••••• Minutes from fashion Nfwport Harbor wltll nut to John Wllyne ssoo. AYllil Sept 1 eleaanl neijihborhQOd. Garden Apt Pool&rec 2Br2 811 Condo.Ongotr hl1nd Kitchen priv bo1t slips available Airport S1 2so mo
YEAR..~ AT w; $299.500
t617 W!STCLIFF DI, M.I. Ul-7300 '96·1076 Wall """"' & c:arpelJ areo s~ Mo 710 W course. waaherldryer. !!:Ill ployed male or stu Plus a Ion& IJsl of special 975 1262
thru.oul. P"rfc:cl cood. t8th St. rofri~c intlrl 1600 dent.S2S0.640S987 amenities Terrific leas ~sq ft 3fron1orrtrtt~.2 ~~~!!!I!!~~!!!!!!~~!!!!~~~~~~~ H.tiwgtorea... 3240 S 1750 Mo. Bro kt r Easlstd"., Br. 1 Ua, u 49'.l6700 H.-.L..&.., u...L...L. 4100 i?I lermsnow
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av1ulable large drive in rear -••••••••••••••••••••••• Cooi>eratlon 758-8974 "' " ~JJ .....,,. .....,... Call Today d 3 fth~· 3 KESalespeopletoleam wportt.odl 3169 NR BEACH 3bdrm, 2 b-r. 1 ba. SSOOlmo 204 stairs, no Pl'l1> Nr .... port.._. 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714f6·7~ •662 oors . .,.....,epower t•
Inv es l men Is & ex •••••••••••••••••••••-2-..,ba. tam rm, fncd yrd, 44th St Front Drive by YE.All•"°"HO hlN. schools & shov-c k2$, •••••••• ••••••••• •••••• SEAL.All MOTB. ;i-e sq ft 1779 Whither SI r hanges Xlnt oppty for Cozy beech cottace. 2 Br or. wfd hltups, gdnr in· first then ull 752 '49S Soc111 Act11111,,. 01 631-~l" Oreanfront for Winttr Wkl) rcnla~ now avail _!Mt S-'t! A•....._L ~ M ~-~·-_ ~~~1:r::11~':': ~:. :ar·9.~'r ~t:_rl;:· cl. $89S_s;)).Wlt --' ~~~~~F:~~~: BEAUTIFUL 2 Br 2 Bo Ke,atalsB~um~~.~; $126 " up Color TV HfWl'OIT CINTS s~:I~:!~~ &cs~c:ps~
~~~ 1oterv1ew k50Mo972·1CllO Fireplace, dw, beam . P11toe1 •PluslT\Ofe fplc, lndry. pat.lo. d1 NOFEE'.Apt &Condo Ni:wpo rt Bl vd CM EXl!:C offices Jncld) fil Miss100V1ejoarea Walk to beach 3 Br 2 Ba t Mesa Verde. 1100 &Q ft un um ..!! _ Phones in room 2274 Prtt&Ligl~ full nrvu:e
:.a. mce LIDO ISLE charming 4 ceiling, washer & dryer. ='·~~es:!N. hwshr. encl l(ar, Adltx, rent1ls Villa Rentals 641-7~---_ rcpt, set', xerox. under 9085.
HELP! bdrm, 2 balh, newly re-2 car a a rage, 'mall <P.o & p•o shOpJ • 'l no pela IMO 875·491.2_8rpker On the beach, yearly, l ground pk'g, telex & an Sto,..,. 4550
Net-<hharp 4-pleun 11 R decorated S 1800 mo yard. 5645 Mo 960-632$ Health Clubs , S.un.t j l07 Mace 540 4400 p1111 UMPORT room apt. k1tcheoette & tique decor conf rm ••••• ••••••••••••••••••
Have 70K ca.sh Pnn on Yearly Also other ren· I IN 3244 (.JJ. ::;f'~/lH.J • Hyd•omuaao•. Bachelor, newly deeor11t " ft "'" bath. S290 per mo + 644 -71B9 Free standlnll conYl'rt lv6759797 lats a\a1I Bill Grundy. " Sw1mm1ng • 0011 ed. private p11tio. COU~CLUI security deposit of $290 S , garage Approx2.88 sqfl
".J -675 6161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Olmng Ranne "'"' ,,...,., W "'··anf"""I N 8 CdM Deluxe wtei.. At:, Loe behind lB8 E 17th St IY OWHH Ye~rly & Wutter. lbdrm ORAHGmH h.tiM lig c..,. BEAUTIFUL .APTS: :e·~ts~ ;:~n No UV1"G mtt54~,, "'" ampl pkl(, 11111 pd 2855 CM Call Roxie, 642-4210,
4 lg units Long Bearh at 2bdrm. rum. Uhl l>d 2 Bd, 1 Ba, 2 car aarage. Beautifully redecotuted Song1es I & '8ed· Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom E Cr;t H~ 875.:,6900 M·F 9 to5ooly Stas mo
Cash Clow 10': Fin Yrd , on Seuhore W adult comm. Tennis, EIDorado MdJ 3Ur.2', •ooms ofu1111,hed PINEBLUFf'AP'TS apts&townhouses. S-rR...tals 4200 Prlmeorticesp:icelnnew .... -~.W---' 4600 S119_,500644_·l4:'il Newpcirt s4•0 mo •. pool, gym.sauna Avail ba. wet bar. parquet &Unlurn.slled •~lull 2 Br 2 Ba CluJdOK.no t'roml:llO 644·1900 •••••••••••••••••••••••bldg.Dana Pt Ot'ean& _...... " °' Aug 1 $580/mo. Isl. last firs Security gated. L1\'1ng •No Pe1ai • pets Paho, view, frJ)lt\ 3 BR. 2 ba. yrty 1720-~ Newport. avail 8'29 to mln views Avail 9181 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Wa1k1k128Rfumroodo S5QO m.!!,548-2901. & cleaning deposit. view 11200/mo. Model• Open 0411y encl g.i r . ga~ stuY e. Frplr. bltns. patio, gar 9/12,stepstobe11rh,3br. Pre completion leasing Prof prop. mgr, sgl.
14th nr Ylew, pool, Ocean lront, year round, Warner Carr. 5.59·&400 730.5252 9 10 6 $550 Like new l.29 J5lh St new paint in 'out 127 bonus 661 3351 wonts sm bcachfront
nr beach SaleoreiH'hg 2 bdrm. 2 ba $865. ~07 Nwpt llgta, cute 2 br. 2 ba Oakwood ~31 2JSOAM 63! 6107PM Don't disturb occupants -~th_fil:-857_ ~.., 673 }41Q AIRl'ORT AREA :~~;e!t,~rse~~~,f~~~~I
S98,000QW!ler6441451 Seash_or:e _ __ cottoge wtfrplc, lge GudenAp•rtmenta Lg1•lbdrm.1ba.dshwhr. Days .G_us_.l!3·3}L9904_ Newport 3 Br I house Furni s hed or un orj>art_F.dm41534'6940
22 Units Newport Bch, Winter Rental Sept· yard & gar, 1750 month Newpor1 Beach N. carport, upsta1~ S31l~. BEACH YRLY REN from ocean, parktnl! furnished, Lg window
Si.s40.ooo Luxurious June Steps to bearh, 3 tomonth.5487145 880l1¥1n11101161h• li'.'§·6625 A_va1L8tl6 TALS lBr & bachelor, Wk ly avail now Executive Suites In :l>yroldfemaleislooking
OWC,752·25114 Br,newpaintm&out JASMINE CREEK (714)6'15·1104 1 or 2RR Bu1lt1ns JonesRltv673-62W __ 675-6775 JrvineWalkinod1stanre for Liv qll'!i,NB. low 127 341 h SI 857 0867 :!J -• cost or exchange term~ 4 Pl.EXES · · oodbridge, 3 br. l'• ba Elegant. view Adults. Newport Beach S. Drapes, rarpcts Adults Blufls 2 BR 2'-1 BA Enc IOO'FIOMSAMO Lo airport d1sr_~sed_~311!1 _ 6J3·54lO condo. S625 1mo. avail no pets SISOO mo Dys 1700 1601 s1 •Do·~·•• 11i1M on.!l No~· 64.H.it6 g a r P o o I S 6 7S Newpoprt Beach !'LAZA
2 Bdrm. I bath Neor So Smt C.._. 3176 Lmmed 64G-!691l_ 752·6020,!\'S 7§!·1790 (71 4l 642·5l l3 S525-llR/21A 640~~S4G-7559 tBdrm, S:KJO Wk EXECUTIVE SUJTE:S ~xe~~~li~in7~t~mra1~:~
Coast Plaza Terrific •••••••••••••••••••••••Woodbridge 4 br 2 ha 81u Canyon ·ro~house 2 "h1ldren OK Pool, no 2Hdrm S375 Wk 2~ Michel1><>n •212 bedroom house or corclo rentalareaSuper1•ond1 lbdrm.Ocean view.So fam rm grd · N. • "" -' N t t 0 S Cl A 1 . . a ener r Luxur10~ 2 Br 2 Ra I bdrm luxunous. Pool. _pets_ 557 1634, 751 3703 VACANT ew Y deror sharp 2021 Business Ctr •213 for (by l Sept 1st Costa 1 n A~~15 4e:~e vai schools, parks. StOOO mo Spectarular 11011 course jar & gym In Vers31lles s375 Lorge upper 2 3 bdrm. 2 b a 1 h . t7l4J997·~ 675--8127 714-752·0234 Mesa. Newport Beach
3 2·2 1 Super t'on<ht1on ---121fil24·7462, 424·68'14 & lake ~·iew. separate 2 S85o Mo ~aUSJJ-66!'1__ bdrm, I ba. adult:., no flreplare. bit 111s. newly lBr 1 blk to ba) & bch. Costa Mesa. 7<M sq ft area Call 968-0234 Aftttr
Near break even the H0tn•1UnfwRishtd Northwood large 3 Br 3 car garaiie Lease SIOOO Yearly 2 Br l Ba pets. 311 W Wilson refurbished YrlyatS1SO k OO mo yrly 2Br. ~r() Medical General office, S OOPM
first year Undttr IOX ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba. din rm. tam rm, a c. Mo 644 2416 carport S650 Mo melds 631 2177 mo S750 mo Jontts Rily fround noor pr\ patio
gross lol»oa lslcMd 3206 gardener & waler meld u!tls Avail Sept 5 1019 I So c51 Villas 2 br. 1 b.i, ~~.§210 56 3 m o 771 3350. lni.ns/lillvHt/
••••••••••••••••••••••• S995 Mo. 544·9835 0 C EA NF RON T 2 ~~Ave. 673-1614 _ SS25 Woodside Village 2 Steps 'to beach Furn 3 494 4797 Fillmc• rllllll RED CARPET Bayfront Yearly 38R. lhoch 3241 Bdrms with IOU of wood DUPLEX br. 2 ba SSOO So Cst Ter Br 2 Ba Mm1 mulT\ 2 Costa Mesa 250 'q (t ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 754 1202 2BA, frplc. lrg patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• and shutte~. fireplace. 2 bdrm S600 3 bdrm, 2 rare 3 br. 2 ba S62S P P ~~k! 642-26-Cl suite S175 mo t:uls m lvsiRHs
• • 1 av&JI Sept LS St400 mo Monarch Bay T 4 Br 3 mature adul~ S875 mo ba S?SO. steps to beach !!68·3652 Vocation Rentah 4250 rid 779 W 19th St Opportwlity 5005
-1 675·7009L67~ --Ba Din. fam & lndry > rly Ocean view Yearl> ren ---••••••••••••••••••••••• 771 JlS(I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 PL EX . Tust111 "Jear Col'Ofto .. Mar 3222 rm. Kids OK SIOOO Mo tat 110 24th St. NB <714J IAY TlMIERS VERSA ILLES spar 2 br l:'JDI AN W!o:LLS Rae· Office Store Business PRINT SHOP
new tn best area. good ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831·8065&675·8074 HARBOR VIEW 4 bdrm. 624·07.<>i.. -----SPACIOUS 1 BR 2 ba. ~ec gate Clbhi.e. quet Club 1/1\ely 2 br. 2 14'tX40 :1>19 A llurbor Thriving bustness. CM
assumable fin w 20' r 2 Bdrm. 3 ba. spa, dble Spec -;;-;;-e~w Jbr. 212 ba. 2story wrlh fami ocr.•~,_..,. ocean Ylt'W, aduJLs. no ba view condo. 24 hr RI v d. Cos I a M eSd. low overhead Call for
dwn S312,000 Pnnr garage Nr Fashion frplc. brdwd floor!>. ly rm. formal dining. ~vn• L lk J?els 1750 ~7 1997 ~er full ree . mnthl} arrou from ~·f'dco details 565,000 Cra1i: please Agt 113tH921 or Island, redecorated deck , nr town bch view. big yard, privaC'y. 3 br, 2 ba , $850 mo arge patio, wa 111 EASTBLl!FF, lopac10us l Avl 9 1 700-2553 Avail now• $47), &.Ill 631·1J96
499·4121 $745 per mo, 2 yr lease. 11150. •n• """'" $1800 mo yrly winter, Sept 12-June l, c loset . dtshwasht>r. bdrm Pool. quiet area Be»u\Jful l ..... A El•.1nor ~9 1366 1•••11"!"'"''•111• .,..,....,..,...., 1 s1250 645 3447 nreplace. ga rage Pool s 1 .. ..,..~ ~ · i ~W hi ForS•byOwtwr m3J~10687 or <
2lJ) S~n dr;nched hillside TR I LEVEL APT With ~7¥E-R .F ~ONT & laun399drwaB('a~S~l r!o~~~&INo pets s.soo ~k~d~.B~~l~a o;e~·~f)r ~~f.t 1~~\~:~~~,;rr~cre: • , ' Good f1n11n nng ----home, 3 BR. 3 BA , ocean view 3 Bdrms. 3 BACHELORNear 42 st , .,9111•1•!1!1••·~~"' Beautiful COl>la Mesa DOLL HOUSE DUl'LEX Formal din , Fireplace. ba, 3 car gar In a prime $400 M 0 Uli 1 paid 646-9183 Near lloag llosp. Beaut. 6_7J.21_8L 'I U Sl50 mo 631 O'-JOO : • i
Tri Pl ex on a double lot Front unit, 2 Br. t Ba 2400 ft carpeted. Front & New po rt Io cat 1 on ____ newly deroraled 2 story RHtofs to Share 4300 I 71H STREET
t yrold LrgJBRowners S800Mu Backunit2Br. back yard w1 gardner. s1200 moyrly. &1.5·2325 -HEWl'ORTHEtGHTS dp~ 3 8~/ 811 frplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTAME:SA Ch..nkalSenhs
unit 2.2BRun1t1> !luge lf!a ~Mo.644~5403 S900 mo. Lease Avail WaterfrontHomes,lnr Yearly, winter. summer Spal.'lous 2 Br. l '-7 Ba A~u~[~. no'Ype~~·~;; Moving? Avoid deposits 2 orJroomoffit·e~uurs Sw~Pool
yrd Beaullfully main Se pt Isl for app, 631-1400 rentals, Briery Realty Townhouse style Laun :148·0230 & ru( hYinl! expen~es' Avail now Call So Orange Coast Area
ta' n e d w man Y VlnAl-Vlnu ~1·1825Af.!er_7PM 675-~l_lL d h k Proress1 onally s1nc:e RAalonom1"• 615~..,()() No up lllPt' Will tram amen1t1es Call 1.ert "'" "'" B h ( d ry 00 -ups, garage Oceanfront largr 3 Br 2 1971 "" '" '" Days, 631 4402 t:ves. Harbor View Hills Mon· 2 r. ome. re nge, IS· COftdo......._ A~ Adults. no pets $475 Mo Ba Upper. 2car garage, HOUSEMATES Ground flooroff1cl.' spat'e Sl5.000 cash down Pllll>
760 0734 tec1~0 Model. 4 bdrm. ~w~~~~~. s}~;fc w::~~r U1tf. :.w.d 3425 UltfurNshfd Avail 9_1!.~9279 frplc, yearly lease s1200 832 413i Avail for leas~ '400 to app~o~ ~I f~ t.~ip
family & breakfast rm, 3 Walk to beach siioo Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet 2 bdrm, upstairs Mo 642 3443 _. 1400 :.q (t l.ttl furn nee e a . on rt
SIX Con AGES car fa rage Avail Sept 847•8122 da · 642 0166 NEW Be Isl tenenl Getteral 3802 umt in a triplex conve Proffemale, non·smoker Harb 1 n In\' e .. t m ent 9-6 PM 498-_867·011 ! S1tuatedononehalfacre I 1500 mo incl ys, Unusual adult complex ment Eaststde location Large 2 Br 2 Ba To share prest1gous Service Inc: 1625 E 17th Earn St0,000 or more .J
tn Pnm~ rental area or gardener& water ~s . w gate & pool Near ••••••••••••••••••••••• S4.2s Avail 9/t 6t2 J625 or Bay front Condo. tAtth Turtlerock home rrpk. SA S4J 4171 mo It ·s possible v. ith
Costa Mesa All ha\e r OCEANFRONT Mobile SC Plaza Secluded AnMTSFORRBn' ~.6906_ _ _ view. security bldR pool,)BR.2BA.totalup For Lease prof office MELLOWFRESll call
been recently re ((111111ar/r/, //rn Homes $650 mo & up romer wut I BR, dill· HB .. N.B .. Costa Mesa ~ol, parking Yearl)" graded.manyXlras No ~!12'1
furbtShed with ne"' roofi. ,iJ. .,J. J · Dbl wide 499-ll16 mg, patio. cent air Something for Everyone SPl?IOUS I~. patio. -50 Broker6?_S.49!2 _ pets S340 mo & share ~f:,c: in ':ito~~t·~q 59f1\ A L A R M C 0 and paint Five have .. ~J.tr•711'fll'tU<'J L~Hils -3250 5430+1~ ut1l 775-2580 Bach to 4 Br. Unfum au t.nopets-.v OCEAHYIEW ut.Jl 752·~ Heil. H 8 Hunt llarbor BLRGLARY OC 7 yrt.
roz) f1replac·es Be I of 'WW f/'.J-.Y1.9~ ••••• ••• ••••••••••••••• eves week.ends NQJ!ets Apts Cert.am locations 64.'>-7836 10 steps to sand L~e 2 CoUege student wanll> to a re 3 1135 s 1 111 0 r Sell or rons1der partnt'r all, seller will ca rr} f ' HOME FOR Rt;NT 0 f( er · Poo 1 · s Pa · Spacious 2 Br 1 Ba bdrm + pabo + 2 rar shr near OCC b) A 848 3180 S300,000 at 13 25'• Sub 3'41 E. Co11t Hwy., Cdfll 3 Bdrm S62S Fenced IEAUTIRIL HOUSES-fireplace, laun. room. Laundry fa c, pool Sl!5 park 1 n g 57 50 m 18th 1200 97~ ug 1 968 3701 - --__ _
m1t on down pa)menl yard&garage Kids& CONDOS beamed ceiling s, 548-~ Furniture availabl~ IM '-- -19i28 omcespat·e1n1n Meat market, tolall>
and price 963 5671 2 bdrm, I ba cottage. 711 pets welcome 54:1·2000 Apt , Newpon Bea rh garages. all built·ins I Newly decor 2 Br w gar. 848.4557 or eves 962.2305 F to share large nev. dust rial complex. nrl equipped. $25,000 or Y..111
Goldenrod '575 mo. lst & AgenhJlQ.fee Costa Mesa Call us. we Gd a~denNO&FTEoEwnhouse adults. rrpts. drps, bit WESTCLIFF, 1 br cond -!:i~hn:o~u~~~:s7:,~~I John Wa )ne Airport ;e81 :iooequ1 pment for l '/f11;<:rJ:Jll(:£J last. S22Ssecunt)', a11a1l •---..... i--i manage 600 units on or es1gn. . ms fncd yrd w/pat10. adults. no pets. pooo. male S325Mo Call John Ssoomo 6151698 b ._ 646-l!&M immed~"2!0 --r--"'"J"''"'" 3252 near water S7SO & up TSLMGMT. 642·1603 wtrpd Call l·S.636·4l20 newly d"""r new al. EXECUTIVE fut•HhMlit R ~AL ~TATE - -••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Delores Gelberg lolboo l'ftlinllllo l 807 667 V1ctona $450 I ssoo'"~v . p ~2·4030 ---OpporMty 5015
Costo MHO 3224 3 Br 2 Ba Garden Home. ~L MGMT __ .§42·160J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2619 Santa Ana ··L·· $475 i? rs, · 67~0 SUrTES ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.tofCCMltty ••••••••••••••••••••••• Niguel Shores. pnvate • 2 br. 1 ba. security, 2BR. spacious nr Bay & LUXURYTOWNHOUSE Versailles 2br. 2ba, din "Gay Male 'Female" IN UlllqwiltYnhntftt
l'ro,.,ty 2550 3 Br 2 Ba College Park. commty. pool. beach child ok, no pets SC orean Yrly 1450 incl 2 Br 2, Ba 1650 ft rm, former model. $725 G R.C RoomateContac1 1 Het.ITAGE Propnetory remod.eler
....................... bit ins, 0 W. frplc $950. 492-0700,~-~ Plaza Area $450 util Matu.re adult.s No Every :xtra, fncd s~rd. 642 6149 t.S!Jn<!YJ --Service.11 7PM I !'LAU needs $20,000 to com CCor~~bh~~;~1:~![r~~~ ! ~;~'~~:~3~ioo Ask for lHE SHORES 8~·16511~6844 aft~ .[>elS~.:.fl72__ _ __ dbl gar S6:!5 673 6336. Versailles bach penlhse, 121316:J>.:1>40 New luxury off1re space plete luxury Newport
Sp c· 2 Bd 2 ( II --3 Br. 2 Ba. private com· EAST BLUFFS 2 br. 1 ba, 2 sundecks. 642·9666 clubhse & pool, mre, -1 n Ir\ 1 ne · ~ ti us tc's t Bearh home 4or~ .50•, 8 ious rm, . u SECLUDED I Br. very mty, pool & Lenms. ssso New, tux, 2 br. 2 ba, gar. $650/mo. yrly, utils 0--,-....... 3826 $425.642·6149.(Sa!ld..Y) 4BR. 2BA C'Olldo. Laun renter' Easy frwy at· return within 4.6 mos
SBa. gorgeous view private.quiet&woodsy. Mo.493-3444.644·54_ 03 vicw,highwoodbeamed nai·d.61~11~---_ auto 011n Brand new 3 br 2 b dry.pool.Jae.patio.ten ress AYa1l n1111o ' C:all Details. days 645·7123, ll0,000. Lo~ dwn Adults. no pets New ~ ....._ "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 8 nis courts SJ2S mo + fur details
_..!!_!H Inv I 752-2t97 carpets, drapes, range. L. M. SHORES f:111xf~t 5/: A~~ll~~~-Lge 2 br. t ba, wl 2 patios, Large bachelor. Dun a ~1:~1~0 =c~;'~ier '!ltl~_After 7P~f ·SS t •1231 '40..230 eves IWS·l<W
2 125 sq ft or I 1 t· c Ut1ls paid Isl + secun· 2 bdrm and den. 2 ba s I 2 o o m 0 o ffice gar. & lndry S550i mo Point Par1dn1:. laundry. --- -2 M 1 F to shr house 1n -DELUX"' n-.C"'"' * warehouse Hrgh growth ty SS~ Mo 642-~ or garden home . o n 6444684 res 640-881i2 yrly 875-8213_ $295 4980318 OCEAN VIEW , yrly, Costa Mesa Non ~ "'"'"'"' ~
area Affordable hous-646-6423 oceanside. walk lo --:...i...:-- -Bachelor, $325 yrly, ,, H~ghlftleach 3840 BR I Ba. $60() mo Avl smoker $280 mo ml'I 1.2&3room Nolea~ere
Ing G~ labor forre NEW2 Br I Ba Qwel& beach S850 mo Avail View rondo, city lights. blk beach 201 E ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9 lS..4·67~;646-3189_ l!lil 545.7975_ _ quired AdJ Airponer
Exc_ept1onal rlean air rool, builtins. refrige. 915661·5998 ocean 2 BR 2 Ba.lofl,2 Balboa 675 -9562 TH W Cozy 2 Br I Ba Beam llotel833-J223912 244 9803 decks, luxury' Lse 2 · E HIFfUTRff ceilings, frplr, ga Female CdM SZ15 Mo ~v;~~:ment. · Adults, no pets !st. + Mi11i011 Viefo 3267 Sl,000. 964-3466 75 ·5925 . Luxury Adu~t uml~ at af Newport Heights r{0 Plus ut1l Eves. 675·9206. OHm~ spare a\ ail for
. . -sec u rit Y SS95 Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br + den 2~, ba condo S79:1 y rly. Charm iog fordable hvmg 1.2 & 3 ktds/rwts S500 &45-1682 ~~n~2628 __ -p(raormt tl1lmoa~ lul~p11'a'1c':.,o,sn~ RHI hhltt 642-~or646-6423 HOME FOR RENT ' · · bayfront Oct 1 I br Br Well decorated .x-. ---... "" ·• 2 car gar, refrrg, · • · v 11 1 B 8 h 1 F Gorgeous 2BR. 2BA 631 ••0 W 9hd 2900 Mesa del Mar beaut) 813 4 Bdrm. 1625. Fenced washer, dryer. gas BBQ, adults, uuls pd. 675--3063_ Olympic siu.> pool, light ers11 el! r. ac e or condo runushed, Jar & ...,1
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pres1d10 Or 3 bdrm . 2 yard & garage Kids & pool, jac. sauna, $725. Corotto .. Mer 3122 ed tennis court. Jaeum. Pen tho use. ba I cony pool. Loe nr SC Plaza & PRIME IAYFIOHT
RHldewtiall.ach ba, lg cov patio. (pie, in· pets wel7"'e 545-2000 631·3213or971M031 ••••••••••••••••••••••• park hke landscaping ocean view. S4SO mo OCC 54().3666 Jo Days Offlre space. parking,
Older Res1dent.tal Bch or els gardner & water. Agent, no ee _ Newport Versallle ;.di~ Uniq.ue 2 b~.1 ba, beamed Most beaut.trul bldg in A v a 1 1 8 11 pa 1 After 9pm & wknd ·!>. J_anitonal.._!l<' 760 9.U-0
Waterfront property To S775 "7 4:B'7, S45-S..4:1 Newport 1eocJt 3269 c 0 n d 0 p L , 1 a c . ce1hng, Ylew deck. gar H B 213.L@l_(MOO. t0-6 da.!l.Y_ s:i6-4776
purchase&orjo111tlyde· avatl9·1 ----••••••••••••••••••••••• sauna.gar refrg •·2· & carport Nokidslpels FromS395.a.6-0619 Eastbluf( 3 Br 2 Baar s2001mo. l'~-b-;-_Alts from ltnlutessll...td 445
INVESTORS
l I II d S N I I d H " " ...,,. ., .. ,.,.,., -,---Townho~ Apts. 2 c ""' •••••••••••••••••••••• ve op w1 prov1 e pac1ous 3 Br. + Den. ewport s an ome mo.85l·80001teeve .vow • .....,..~ De uxe poolside xtra j beach Female. non· F 1 & ffi
100% hnancing Charles L n d r y hook u p , 4br. 2ba, pnvacy, steps large 2br. 2ba. bltns. garage. No children, n smoker..:._EytlS· 631 556! or s ore o ice i.pare --------· Perry. 9$-1281 gardener tncld. No pets. lo ocn/bay, Sl200/mo. Villa Balboa, Zbr, 2ba, vu Chew :Hl:wj ~ dswhr 1'2 miles beach ~~Mo. 644-1010 31SOOs:4b~OO~e~s Ft. W ATllNOMT .,,,. __ ... ~H-1. S875 Savage Wilde&Co. 673-3335 of ocean & bay. lge with fireplace, 2 bdrm. Adib, no pets S450 mo $525/mo. +security 2br Housemates. F pref . OtueJl'"EILDG
nwwv -675 9006 patio, micro, frplc . l800 ocean view 1st & last + 536.8362. pvt patio. Blk to beach' College Park area, C M MESA VERDE R rTnoo Clie nt used o hugehome ·-· New Exec Hom e, pre 642·6149(Sandy) _ sec dep 644-7877 2 -B-E 0 R 0 0 M ~ew~_2t.642-72J3 S200tmo. + shr uttls Pl.AZA Preslleious location in
overseas. Wanl 3500 to Beauttful new X mdl, de· stigious area. Ocean WaeA-"'-Near Ocean Upper 2 BR. S be h b b Call S.S-0231 afh ~ _ 1525 Mesa Verde F:. c M Newport Beach All this 5000 + ft c be corated & landscaped view eool spa tennis -....,. TOWNHOME Pool, tepsto ac .3 r.2 a, 54~123 plus a 60' boat r id L~q W Oan Somerset Citihome securlty g~te. s'im pe; 3 bdrm condo, l '·• ba, Iba. frpl , 1>c:ams, deck, park, nea r beat"'h frplc, $750 mo. yrly. female Roommate. non Owner will exchasng1pe o er. l e range Ss2< per month. Bus. , carport, qwet mature 963.<191 Ava1·1. Se .1. -~ ,,.,.,,. smoker, no pets. $300 Offl .r...a..' Co. Large cash down <Baker/Bear St). 3 Br 3 mo. 76().9307or642-7745 " adlts $S75TSL " 0 ,,,...,.,, Corona del Mar lnclds ce-s. Prin. only. Call Bill Mer·
available. Will look at Ba . 2 car gar. S850. 851·2000, Home 67S.1792 . MARIMEISWAUC S.C.._.. 317• ulils, washer1dryer NptBeach rell.Agt{67~~. any good. Well bul'lt Resp. parties only USTILUFF Ask for Doug Am &4Z·U'm.642·3153 Small ev""utive office, Th Bdrm 2tn b d l, 2 & 3 Br. Townhouse .... ~................... priv.644·8~'.!J_ """ house. Ail...:..~1366 642·86631vrmg. unj~~oodrondlti:~ =~d merman ExcelefttLoe AplS. from S47S. Patios. Studio .A~. Ocean view Female nnmte wanted. d.nt address, S6961Mo.
2 Br with stove, enrlsd location. S8SO per mo. Rent lo own, nexible Newly decorated. slnete & double car All utrls tncld. $320 Mo. non-smoker. 4bdrm '.!'~m ill4ll~·ll~ __ Rl'dh 11 l ~~ Rl'Jlty
I ;~:-; ·; ::1111 1tnt• farage. Adults. no pets. terms, !Br Condo. So. charming, 2 bdrm, sep garages. near Hunt 332 Encino Lane, San h . N 8 S Newporl ModemStore
....................... 475. 773 W. Wilson. Weekda,ys 7s&-4l7s Coast Plaza, avail Im· hse. Avail Sept 1. $725 Harbour. Children OK Clemente. See Manager ... ~huseS 9rn1 teps 10 or otr nr po11t ore 1450
631 43119 Seaview 4 Br 3 Ba, family med John:ISN911 673-:1>17 o~" ·6807. _6.,pt_C. "" · 1 5 mo. 63l 3574 548 511 2131477 1001 ~!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!! HomH Ftniiibt<' · · rm. dining rm, ocean & i1...&--C ta 3824 '""" -Roomroat.eto sha~ home -••••••••••••••••••••••• 180deg vunewBluffcon· nighllifhtviews.Pool& o.pltH1__,. l600 OI MtlO • S395 2 Br 2 Ba Pool. SANCUMEHTE In Irvine. Quiet. neat Je!!J_ MoMJtoL.om 5025
..... , .... 3107 do 2 BR 2¥1 ba. S!n:I. t nn· lSX>prm •••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• paUo.K1dsOK.Nopets New2story,lbdrmapt Tennis, pool S2SO mo Newport Beach 15 X 50, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... 541-4165; 675-1781 evs e IS. o. Corona del Mar, 2 bd~. NEWLY DECOll 960.7 646-9666. Xlnt loc. Ocean View "1·8298 Ssso I~ West.cliff Or IUSIMISS LOAMS
ON nlE BEACH · Xl~t E. side duplex. '1bdnn. Waterfront lease, 4 Br 4 1 ba, patio, corner urut. l Br. gas pd, ebcl gar $600, 2 Br. 2 full Ba. Uni· Close to shops G~--=-~ - --m .~Anl'.!,ln:ie _ SS00,000/Uyrs .. IY:.
loc Wint.er Rental Avail Iba, gar, 1375/mo. Ba, family rm, top con· ~7S I year lie. 644-7220 dlwuher. pool. Adults que separate wut. Super Call collect Cln1CJH HT Al. SPACE 998-9350 Manny
Sept 12 1 Br. 2 Ba 673-2007. dilion, dodc for 40 boat. or 549·87~ 642·5073. sharp Close to beach C213) m1S36 for...... 43so New Port Blvd 5000 IQ 2utd LOANS
Appl't SllOOmo. Inquire NI c E E •SIDE *-CORONADEL MAR "I I lo~ No pets 833 8080, atler6eM ....................... ft'"" n " ·1 126 E Ocun!ront July •<JJW 2 b ba , _ _. __ .. a r -Balboa Isl, 2 garages, ""' per nva1 now 9 0 '1 o r v a I u e 3 O · ' TRIPLEX. 38r, 2ba + r, 1 • 5"'""""•• no N l deco pd 833-3307. 5-t1Alla lHO mo mo, Sl50 nr mo ea Call yrs St00.000 P111 l8th. Aug. 21st. or t1U d•n Lie .. -k·u-airs. 4 Br 4 Ba, clean & sharp. pell, S52S/mo 640-4080 ew 'I . r. as ,.. R •A-'75-5990 siootmo Rlff 1r:;;lmnt next to tennis & beach. encl gar .. pool, dshwr lBr. lBa. upstairs, 111 ....................... Balboa/Marine Starts eaiunomics _675-6700 .1.!L.Oney. •9350Manny
Bob Adults. 1142-5073. paUo, enclosed ar. S400 NEW CONDO near S.C Sept. 1. Marilyn 752-0202 Corw .. M.. Motigwr 'rrwt Winter Rental. Sept. 12th 7$2·2l91 11500 mo. or ~vie .,....., ... FwNllM4 mo. +'400 e . Pina. Smell adult com· wkdys 8::1).S::I>. "!"9 ., lbru Jwie 12th. Clean. 2 2 Br 2 bath, brand new 759·1221 •n••••••••o•••••••••• HEWPOIT 2 Br 11.t Ba. sml yard, pl~x. Secluded comer 4.200sq ft Ground noor D"4i 5035
br,paUo,garage&lall!l· condo.Pool.1795 Exclusive Big Canyon ............ l706 A'AITMINTS. close to beach Children Untl.lBR+extras S46o s~~ Coast H1ghway •••••••••••••••••••••••
dry. $500 Mo. +depo111. 7:14-1202 lollmhouse. 2bdnn. Zba, ••••••••• .... •••••••••• l·lBdrm. F'rom UTO. OK. Dys 846-~. t-ves t S35uUI. 'T7S.2580eves on Balboa Pe.nlsula next Realo~cs 675-6100 Want investor for Npl
dult1.m..m1. --N•wportHei"hts,smalJZ pvt. gar. S1250l mo. Beaut.decor2Brduplex mo.+ullls.No<"hlldren., 548•5263 -'--tamh•_ 11._. 20101_F",u1n1 1.orle (10~ It x For lease Retail Store. baytront home. Glvr ,.~,._.._.__ Jl2,. "' &'-' 64Q.8128or"1.SC11. Yrly$800/mo.AvaU8/20 ,_...._.. ~-" .. ..,. ..... approx. tOOOsqft mnew well secured 1st or 2nd _,.,..._ .. Br. du81ex, prlvele ent 813-<tOSZ nopets.nowa .... ~s. H•lf!l91• oruafwNl•d 3900 873-2!M3.67~39ll shopping center Anchor T.0.A 675-6161 ....................... yard. N PETS. Locale Oceanfront, on beach, · , 24.50Nwport81vd. H.-.. 3141 ....................... Offlctl_...
4400 1 t 1 R h S
I Bdrm widen. fl.replace, ref's required. S3115. Gaa apectacular new 2 br, ..... , • •• J707 Costa Mesa ....................... S E A W I ~ D ~na: t' Nrvrnrrt/Canct --~Co.
Jumilhfd. gara1e. dttk, 6 waterp!ld,81S.22S6. ram. rm, 2 sly lwnhse, ....................... l....O N 2 8 2 Ba COndo f"llll ....................... M!!a ea~ea.e~~ S:'il·~l2; ~1! .. ~:!.J!areui. ace' es1,,~9ale
I SSSO. 7Sl·83eve. 3 Br. 1 Ba. so. Fenced 12000/mo. Call675-!062. 2 br, 2 ba, l bUt to beach, YI f~;k, v~~ed ~Iii.op: VILLAGE 1611 WestcUrr. N 8. Want 846 4841 .. "'-""'
H•tllfta , yard. 2 Monlhs advance. BLUFFS 3 bdrm, 3 bath, S650 yrly, a Alvarado OCCWAMC deck, garage. Qultt, pre-New 1'2 bdrm lu.xury financial inst. 7000s.f. ~ • , S~ iii H~ JI ,.2 ••• •901 lam. rm. Neulral. Im Pl. 615·8'70 Connie or 2 Br. l Ba. AJ)t. JJum adult ...... i-14 1 1 lat. floor. A&tntS.1·5032. Co-.rdal w--__. .. .....,.... .. .1213) ~ ceillnd1, laundry rm. stlgJou1 3rd, Ooor view. ....., QJ Pans ............ ,. 1 ,.,.
....................... Clean 3BR, l"4BA carpet maculate. Near pool. ~· PoOI . •Adulta ooly, 00 Pool. apa Ir aaune. "7S Bdrm from-· 2 bdrm MIW'Olf IUCH """ ,.4 S 642·2111 MS..06 I
Custom 4bt waterfront. tbrouihout. fenced StOC)Omo.Bkr,6'4·0.!!L. C..t.MIM 1724 peU Mo.8ff.9tl4 from ~.Townhouse Full service t xec. of· (;;,~~t·u;;•,:;l;;;~·~: Dil-co-u,;~ TN1St Deeds
115' boat s)lp, s pa. yard 1ardentr. no petJ. WATllFIOM'rHOMI ......... •••••••••••••• 1'SL.11GMT 60-1'03 I .__ 1144 from lelO + ooots. ten· fices from S3t'1. "On f:"· 500 ... ". 11 .... un"d. eva.llab.le for lnvtstol"ll
lonver view. sac>O/mo.. •v I Au• -et ..... M c •s .... DIOIO "-1111, waterf•lll, D!'"'dt' CalJ'' Utt. o1n--from .... ll JU "I t ld "" d·•~ "II -'"'· -o. 2stycustomhomc4BR. ,.. ,.. lBr.OardeoApt.Sto~• ....................... G••forcootinaf"~a ~-r. So. Laauna. S500 l\I )'If . ror .._.111
Furn.oriml -lll·2IO'l8, f orma l dinin g 6 ALLlJTUJTt!SPAID refrife.AduJta,oop«a, "THE LAKES" lni paid. From Sa~ S~lncldl.aec:rewial, mo Turner AUO<' ~~er _ ~.._. 1141 SPECTAC\JLAR CITY breakfast rm, S car $33$.Ma-tm. waltrfroot condo. l Br Dleio rnry drive North P .e 8T!iu word pro. 4941117 24~ interest. need ••••••••••• .. •••••••u• LIOtn'SVIEW far., l&tcloaeta.tr.nt.ry, C.cnpart btlore you SPACIOUS 2 BR Ad\lll lofl, (rp.lc, central air oa Bead.I to McF&ddtn ~"lf£ADQtiq~'ERS -IWC:.....Lec 129,000, 2 ~at T.D on 1ia'::.!c~~: ~~C:: =~: ~o':t!·v:it al e::! !~;~~,r;.,~~f:~ d~~~~ r:• 0~= ~~~:i ~=lll SS2S Mo. 12ll> ~~s~:!t:d ~rir.:~~ C7~~:~~ ~ ~-~=t •~ ~~~.l~~·w:~a
'UI / llu,. ton• decb •/vu. dlarp. For le.aM o.lJ. rondt •It~· lueb bar. S410. No pm. me 2 Br. Pl ct u ruca u e TH ~l People who an MdJaa · --A.RACE ML& .. ID ......... Call Pean P1Wtoa, la-~--...... .,. AM •• It. SU·7UI. Ortnaetree Condo, by ... 'C1:.' ,_., nnl fueln ,~.,-G ''"Zfl.IMI C11111fied Adt ~ l •• D-1 ... ~lot ln'in• ......__ 1'14·155·2471 wkd•"• --,..,...,.., .... ~ --•WW\ r9' ,...,,. .. ror 1--ao 1 .•• .,,, t.arp t1a1-• .. ' ~at'"·....._.,..._:\. . etrum, t.eWa • awlnt· '-" "' """'' Inc a 1A..1. Will .,,.,,p ............ •--.......... a·~ w .. "1,.... To p&tce S400 \1° ..... --nw ln A II Se ... Ut ClASSlfllD .&aw u-,~ -IWR, aruhop of. ••ra1eoryanhe.lt! lt'• ,our dr1•l~.:'.,._u1 rd -•-· • no Sit · fwl. me lt'uBREEZE m I· •a ... · -• ad bt lbert To pltet rice. etc IU·UU. 1 betltr'"""'/IO'·ll mo-;_ ,.. ~ WutAdR!Wf IG11'71 l CJ&MLOed.\AkfGllD '5Z$.17S.tm. Mt•llJI ourad call l"fl-le! ... '"' "''
,----~--~ J
Athkie loses his leg, firidl new inner strength
8y PIUL SNEIDERMAN ..................
Tom Clardy, former Navy demoUUoss dJvtr,
former police officer. wu lyln1 ln a Utah
Veterans Admlnlatratlon Ho1plt1I tn 1174,
thlnklna about kl11Jn1 bJmaelf.
D\arina a March 1kUn1 excunton, he had
been hit by a car while cro11tn1 a road.
Clardy emeried from a four-month aeml-
coma with his right lei amputated at the knee.
Movement In his left leg waa permanenUy Im-
paired.
According lo Clardy, hla doctor• concluded
he was mentally incompetent and recom·
mended he be placed In an institution.
"I'm sure I was difficult to 1et alon1 with,"
the 36-year-old Fullerton resident aay1. "I was
suicidal. l couldn't see me -a Navy fro1man
jock ll"'lng like that. I couldn't see me as a
cripple."
Tom Clardy, once a auicldal amputee, 11
now an athle~ who rerus to Uve within llmlta·
tlons.
The traMtormatlof\ hu been slow and dll
flcuit. ~ore his crippllns accident, Clardy bad
led an active, outdoor life.
He learned to swim In shallow lrrl1at1on
ditches ln Oregon. As a teen-a1er ln northern
Califomla, he swam daily ln the Sacramento
River and Lake Shasta.
Alter high school, he enlisted ln the Navy
and learned scuba diving. He was part of an un-
derwater demolition team that exploded coral
hazards ln shipping lanes .
Alter his Navy stint. Clardy became a
police omcer in Coronado. While on duty. he
was struck by a drunk driver. The resulting
back injury led to his disability retirement.
· Today, you can find the same Tom Clardy
worklnl( out at the Golden West College pool and
weight room in Huntington Beach, lookln1
forward to taking part next year in the Han-
dicapped International Ski 'Races in
Switzerland.
......, ,... ..... ..,a.N9 ......
"/don't core how limited you ore. you con sti(l do more than you think you can." 1oys Tom Clardy
who plans to swim from Catalina Island to the coast and teach phy1tcal education to the handicapped.
He worked elsewhere unUI the fateful Utah
car mishap that claimed his right leg.
While recovering in the hospital, Clardy
looked out al a snow-cover~ mountain and
Or you can find him ln the ocean off Seal
Beach. swimming five to eight miles a day to
get in shape for a more immediate cballen1e.
Between now and early September, Clardy
will attem~t a feat that some non-handicapped
athletes m1ght hesitate to try -a 26-mUe swim
from Catalina Island to the mainland.
If be can Une up a sponsor to help pay for an
DWlll CUil
THURSDAY. AUGUST 13. 1981
escort boat, Clardy is sure he can complete ~he
crossing.
Just last month be went the distance in a
10-mile rough water swim between the Hunt-
ington Beach and Seal Beach city piers.
wondered if he could ever ski again. .
The hospital staff told him his goals were
unrealistic.
"The biggest problem is the labeling in the
hospital." Clardy recalls ... All they tell you is
<See VERSATILE, Page AZ>
• • • •
Ylli 11111111 llllY PIPll
ORANGE COUN TY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Striking contro1'ers. lose global support
Reagan
inks tax
cut bill
SANTA BARBARA CAP> -
President Reagan reversed the
course of government with the
stroke of a pen today by signing
-into law the largest tax and
spending cuts in American his·
Lory.
By placing his signature on
the legislation In an outdoor
cer emony at his secluded moun-
taintop ranch. Reagan achieved
the No. 1 goal of his first six
months in office.
The· new laws slash planned
federal spending on domestic
programs by an estimated $130.5
billion over the next three years
and reduce individual and busi·
ness Income taxes by $749 billion
through fiscal 1986 -the cure
Reagan prescribed to revitalize
the nation's economy.
Federal income tax rates will
be cut 25 percent over 33
months, beginning Oct. 1, when
the amount withheld from most
worker paychecks will drop
about 5 percent.
Additional 10 percent reduc·
lions in withholding will be
made next July and in July,
1983.
Starting in 1985, personal tax
rates, the standard deduction
and the $1 ,000-per-person ex-
emption will be adjusted eacb
year to help offset inflation.
Seventy-rive reportera, photog-
raph ers and television ·
cameramen were on hand for
the signing ceremony at
Reagan's 688-acre ranch in the
Santa Ynez Mountains. his first
public appearance since he
(See TAX CUT, Page AZ>
6 sentenced
in Ahscam
• • conv1ct1on
NEW YORK (AP> -Three
former congressmen and two
others were sentenced today to
prison terms ranging from three
to six years and fines of up to
$40,000 for their Abscam
bribery-conspiracy convlcUbna.
A fourth former congressman
was liven the maximum 15-year
term, a technicality to enable
the judge to order a medical
study to determine If he can
withstand life In prison.
After imposing tbe sentences
bef °" an overflow crowd ln the
Brooklyn federaJ courthouse's
lar1e ceremonial courtroom,
usually reserved for jury aeJec-
tion and citizen induction pro-
grams, U .S. Diatrlct J udie
Geor1e C. Pratt stayed the sen·
tel)ces pend1n1 appeala.
All the sentences were eoncur·
• rent. ' Tonner Rep. Michael )(yen,
D-Pa., WU teotenced to three
coneurrent three-yen priaon
tenlll few toaVidloal OD dlar ..
of OOlllpiraey, brtbef'J ud la·
tenUle trawel for rack....nq. fie allc> WU ftried .. ,000.
(e. OICA•, .... Al) . . •
TARANTB.LA TWIM.aM-TamboUrtnes ac-
cent the whirlln1 of Headier VOik , Ahne-•
Marie Slttello and Adelaide MaclteDDie of
Ballet Pacifica. Their Italian dann it one of
seven aequences iii • "FelUval of Natlona"
Reagan urged to reopen
talks in return for gesture
By The Associated Press
The International Federation
of Air Trame Controllers As·
sociation decided today against
calling for world-wide action lo
s upport striking U.S . con-
trollers.
The association's president.
Harry Henschler. told reporters
that president Reagan should re-
open negotiations with the U.S.
Professiohal Air Trame Con -
trollers Organization in return
for the international gesture.
<Related photo, Page 86>.
He called on air controllers
who are staging or planning job
actions to call them off.
Henschle r said after the
federation's executive board
ended its two-day meeting that
the board would recommend
postponing any international
steps in support of the U.S. con·
trollers at least until Aug. 22.
Delegates of the 6l member
organizations of the interns·
tional federation will meet -"if
required" on that date in
Amsterdam, according to a tele·
Woman held
in husband
death plot
A Huntington Beach woman
who allegedly Offered lo pay a
"hit man" $25,000 lo murder her
physician husband has been ar-
rested by Huntington Beach
police.
The wife, Martha Stebbins
Ochsner; 46, of Carousel Lane.
was scheduled for arraignment
in We s t Orange Co unty
Municipal Court today on
charges or solicitation to commit
murder and solicitation to com-
mit robbery.
Lt. Merle Schneblin said the
"hit man" Mrs . Ochsner at·
tempted to hire was undercover
police dete.Clive Brian Gerold.
He said the woman was ar-
rested Tuesday in Huntington
Central Park as she allegedly
handed Gerold a photo of her
husband, a diagram of his office
and a down payment of $5,000 in
pawn slips for jewelry.
Schneblin said the woman
promised to pay tbe remaining
$20,000 when the "hit" was com·
pleted.
The Wldercover detective was
wearing a hidden microphone
when the arrangements were
made, and other officers moved
In to make the arrest.
Schneblln said Mrs. Ochsner is
separated, with a divorce pend·
i n1 , Crom Dr . Harold C.
Ochsner, who resides and has an
office in Long Beach.
He said the woman asked
Gerold to kUI her husband ln bis .
office durin1 what would appear
tu be a dru1-related robbery.
ScbnebUn said police learned
from an lnlormant in July that
Mn. Ochsner wanted to have
her huaband killed. The un·
dereover detective talked to the
woman. aaylq he could do the Job, be aald.
Att.r several t.elephone COG·
wer1ation1 and meet1n11. the
woma •,reed to atrlke the deal
in Huntln1ton Central Park,
Schneblin aald.
gram the four members of the
executive board sent to Reagan
··Your personal goodwill will
help to bring the matter to a
s peedy. amicable solution and
the federation urges that
negotiations between both
parties reopen immediately,"
the t~legram said ·'The matter
can be solved within 48 hours
* * *
Wrong firm
gets 'Patco'
strike g ripes
SAN DIEGO (A P> -The 11·
day-old strike by the nation's air
traffic controllers has had
widespread effects, but possibly
none like one affecting a small
distributorship in San Diego.
Telephone calls at the rate of
20 to 30 a day -most Crom irate
people angered at being inconve-
nienced by the strike -have
poured into the oCfices of Palco
on Harbor Island in San Diego.
But instead of reaching PAT·
CO. the well·publicized acronym
for the Professional Air Traffic
Controllers union. the calls have
gone to the local distributorship
for Palco. a firm whic h
manufactures fishing lures.
Pat Saxon or Patco said
Wednesday she has been unjust-
ly harangued by as many as 46
callers in one day and that she's
been receiving misdirected com-
plaints for three weeks. That's
more than a week before the
controlJers walked off their jobs
Aug. 3. ultimately causing night
"'ancellations around the world.
"At least they weren't cussing
and crying then," Ms. Sexton
said or calls before the strike began.
"I walked into the office this
morning and two lines were
rirging. The first caller was a
woman whose daughter could
not get back from Egypt. The
second cussed me up one side
and down the other, .. she said.
DRAIGI COAST llATHIR
Night, morning low
clouds otherwise sunny
Friday afternoon. Lows
tonight 65 at beaches, 67
'inland. Highs Friday 80
along coast, 82 Inland.
INSIDI TODAY
Ntw York's WhUntu
Miutum of Amtrican Art htu
becorrw Dimeyland Ea.t. See
Page 84.
019nge COut OAILV Pll.OTIThuraday, Auau1t 13, 1981
. ~ ........
BIRDS OF A FEATHER? Neither Echo. a
coon hound puppy. nor his reathered friend
seems to mind sharing a meal at the Medina.
Ohio, home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Young.
Several or the Youngs' chickens are bold
enough to challenge Echo for his food.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Gas tax raise in mill
Brown backs amended bill to hike levy by two cents
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The
Brown administration, after a
year of opposition, is supporting
a $2.8 billion bill to raise the
gasoline lax two cents per gallon
for the highways.
However, the Assembly Ways
,and Means Committee delayed
tor a week its vote on SB215 by
Sen. John Foran, 0 -Sacramento,
because a quorum coufdn't be
rounded up Wednesday.
Already amended dozens of
lime lo gain votes in its difficult
pa ss age through the
Legislature, the bilJ was altered
· three more limes Wednesday.
One of those amendments,
which reduced by $53 million the
jlmounl of gasoline sales tax rev·
enues that would be shifted
from the g e n e ral fund to
transportation, made the dif·
ference for the administration.
After the amendment was ap-
proved 8-7. Lonnie Mathis of
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's
Finance Department told the
committee that '"the administra-
tion supports the bill... Brown
earlier had maintained that a
gas tax i ncrease was not
necessary.
Author Foran said he was sur-
prised by the administration
s upport, although he said later.
"I have no direct commitment
from the governor."
When it came lime for a final
vote on the bill, after nearly two
hours of discussion, more than
half of the 23 committee mem·
bers were elsewhere. Many
were presenting their own bills
before other committees meet·
ing at the same time.
Foran said he thinks he can
get the majority vote in the com·
mittee, but still anticipates trou-
ble gathering the required two·
thirds vote of the 80·member As·
sembly.
The complex bill is aimed at a
deticil in highway funds that is
estimated to range from $900
million to $2.4 billion over the
next five years . The bill would:
-Raise the gasoline tax from
seven to nine cents a gallon
beginning in 1983. One cent each
would go to the state and local
governments.
Increase the driver's
license fee from $3.25 to $10, and
vehicle registration fees from
Sl 1 to $22, beginning in 1982.
Raise truck weight fees 50
percent next year and another 10
percent in 1985. Cu rrent fees are
$5 lo $413 a year.
-Re quire that county
supervisors representing two-
thirds or lbe state's people ap·
prove the bill by Nov. lS. In Los
Angeles County. city councils
can act if the county won't; only
t hos e cities would get the
money.
Shift an increasing amount
of the six-cent per-dollar sales
tax on gasoline from the general
fund to transportation.
r rom Page A1 ~BOYCOTT ENDED ••.
given the goodwill required by
both sides.'•
; Henschler said Portuguese
~controllers had aiueed to call off ~their announced boycott of flights
lo and from the United States
scheduled to start at midnight
uoday. The tower in the
Azores, part of Portugal. con·
{ trols the key southern trans-
• Atlantic route.
Overnight flights to Europe
went off close to schedule from
• New · York after Canadian air
• controHers returned to work and
officials on both sides of the
, Atlantic predicted a "normal
schedule" today.
. There were some delays
Wednesday on flights from
Europe to the United States and
hundreds of would-be travelers
spent the night sleeping where
they could at London 's
Heathrow Airport, but the pro-
blems were expected to clear up
quickJy.
,. "By tomorrow morning, as· f suming the lanes stay open, we
... should be down to a normal
~schedule" across the North
•• Atlantic. U.S. Transportation
~Secretary Drew Lewis said
.. Wednesday.
•. He said delays of only a half·
•. hour are foreseen today. i The flight zone "has opened up
!'t again and it is our feeiing that ~ we will be getting things back to
normal ," said Gerald
Fitzgerald, operations mana1er
of international flights.
On a norrnal day, 120 jets de·
part over the North Atlantic
from the airport.
ORA GE COAST
Trans-Atlantic travel was
thrown into havoc Monday and
thousands of passengers were
stranded when Canadian can·
trollers refused to handle flights
to or from the United States,
cl aiming that a strike by
American controllers bad made
the U.S. air traffic system un·
safe. Many flights were can·
celed and there were lengthy de·
lays on others.
The Canadian controllers
agreed Wednesday to end the
boycott, in return for an inquiry
1nto the safety question. U.S.
authorities deny that the system
is W115afe.
Jean-Luc Pepin, Canada's
minister of transport, had begun
actions that could have led to
$5,000 fines. job suspensions and
firings against the Canadian
controllers. More than 25 con-
trollers were suspended.
Lewis said domestic air
service remained at about three-
fourtbs o( normal as the strike
by members of the Professional
Atr Traffic Controllers
Organization over wages and
working conditions entered ib
11th day today.
Damage surveyed
OVERTON, Nev. (AP) -As a
team o( federal, state and local
officials tried lo determine the
extent of damage done by flood.a
that swept through the Moapa
Valley. residents or the area
continued today the palnstaJdnt
process of removing tons of
sticky mud from their homes
and buaineates.
Dilly Pilat Cla11m.d adYentelnt 7141142·5171
All oth9t cMpa,,fMntl 142·4121
Thoma P Haley .......,.,.,..,C-faec..,... O!flC<lf
Robert N. Weed ~
I Thomas A. Murphlne -r-.
M•C:hHI p Harvey \ ~~
L. K-, khuttz 0-.0-~ . \ l<Mlntth H Goddatd Jr ~ew-•
leMerd Sdtutmen '
0.......
OW•H.Loo1 ,..........,.,_
Cerol A.: MOore • .........
A typical motorist now pays
about $90 a year in highway.user
tax.es and fees . The bill would in·
crease about $24.
Foran's bill before Wednesday
would have shifted $320 million
of the sales lax money from the
general fund lo transportation
over five years. His amendment
would delay the general fund
loss lo 1983 and reduce it to $177
million.
From Page A1
ABSCAM. • •
'Former R e p . John M .
Murphy, D-N.Y., was given a
three-year sentence for a con-
spiracy conviction and concur·
rent two-year terms for conflict
or interest and acceptance of an
unlawful gratuity. He was fined
$20,000.
Former Rep. Raymond
Lederer, D-Pa., was sentenced
lo three three-year terms for
conspiracy, bribery and in·
terstate travel for racketeering,
and a two.year term for accept·
ing an unlawl\11 gratuity. He aho
was fined $20,000.
Former Rep . Franlt
Thompson Jr., D-N.J ., was or·
dered to undergo medical study
pending actual sentencing
because of a doctor's report that
said the former congressm~·s
cardiovascular system cannot
withstand prison life.
Technically, however. he was
sentenced to the maximum 15
years in jail and fined $40,000,
because the maximum sentence
is required to order such a
medicaJ. study.
Angelo Erricbetti, a New
Jersey state senator and former
mayor of Camden, N.J .. drew
the sWfest sentence, a six-year
term for his bribery conviction
and an overall $40,000 fine. Er·
ricbetti also was sentenced to
concurrent five.year terms for
conspiracy and interstate travel.
Philadelphia Councilman
Louis Johanson was given con·
current three.year terms for
conviction of conspiracy
bribery and interstate travel. Ht
also was fined $20,000.
The judge told the defendants
that according to govemment
guidelines they would be eligible
lo apply for parole as early as 14
months and no later than after
20 months.
Thompson released a state·
ment saying again that be was
innocent and that "therefore, I
shall appeal to receive the
justice which is my due. I re-
iterate my faith in our system ol
justice, of which tbe appeal
process is a fundamental ele·
ment." Myers, uked about the sen-
tenclnc, said, "l'm not baJ)S>y,
but I'm not sad."
Murphy said he would appeal,
'•and I have complete con·
fldence in the A merlcan
Jurisprudence system." He de.
no~ the FBI's sUna tacUcs.
His lawyer, Michael Tigar, said
be believed Murphy's appeal
would be successful.
Let's hear it .
for clapper
NEW YORK <AP) -It took
t•o attempts, but--A.tbrlta J'unnan bu found his way acaJ.n.
·•nto the Gu1nneu Boot of World
RecordS for JO bou.n of non-stop
dUDUtl . He u1d M did It to honor la1I
IUMI. Sri Chlnmoy. Furman, a., who ,,.... • lta·
dooerJ at.ore ben, el~ b.udl from 1:0'7 a.m.
uaW ll:O'I a.m. Wedll•daJ. t
beat u. ta NCOrd o1 a boun,
e mtnulH Ht by Pubudu
Seft~aka of Sri Luka.
He wu fcn.d to abandon ldl
first trJ la.t weq beeaUM Gula·
nea ..,. tbe appla• mat be
9'i8"1 fr'Om t• , .... ud New
York at.reel D06M didn't aceom-•
m.odMe blm.
' Man gllilty kidnap • m
Sex off ender convicted of assaulting Danish woman
A t.acun• Buch man wq con·
vlcted toda1 of th• klclnappln1
1nd aexuaJ assault of 1 young
Daalab woman while be wu free
on a 125,000 bond awaiting an •P·
pe&I ot an earlJer sex. crimes
convlctlon.
An Oran1e County Superior
Court jury found Donald Stephen
GltUn, 38, or ~ Alta Laruna
Niguel
~urgeon
under fire
Blvd., (uilty Of one count of kid·
nappln1 and two countl each of
rorclble rape and other sex act.a
after deliberating one day.
Gittin was arrested in coMec·
tlon with the aasault last
January by Laguna Beach
pollce based on the female vic-
U m 's description of the car·
drlven by her alleged attacker.
The woman tealified during
the trial before Judge Kenneth
Lae that she was walking down
Pacific Coast Highway after
spending an evening with
friends at a tavern when she was
accosted by the defendant, who
forced her lo his home where the
sex acts are alleged to have OC·
curred .
The woman said her attacker
later freed her near her home.
From Page A1
At the time of his arrest, Git·
Un, a car 1&leaman. waJ free on
an appeal bond lsaued by
Superior Court Judae William
Thomson.
The bond was sought by Git·
tin's attorneys after bis coovic·
lion on charges of assault with
lntent to commit rape, assault
with intent to commit murder
and sexual acts following a trial
in which two teen-age girls
testified they were threatened at
gunpoint.
Thom50n permitted the appeal
bond over the protest of Deputy
District Attorney Jan Cummins.
who prosecuted the current
case.
GitUn has been held at Orange
. County Jail since his arrest after
Thomson revoked the appeal
bond. Dr. Ralph J .W. Small, who
pleaded no contest to involun·
tary manslaughter in the death
of a breast implant patient two
years ago, now is accused of
violating his probation by prac-
ticing without insurance. TAX ClJT SIGNED. • •
A hearing is scheduled Aug. 26
before Santa Ana Superior Court
Judge William Murray after dep-
uty probation officer Marine
Nichols filed a complaint
Wednesday.
According to the allegation,
the Laguna Niguel physician has
been practicing medicine in ,
Paramount under the
supervision of another doctor
since mid -1980, when his
medical license was reinstated.
But authorities charge that
Small's in surance carrier had
dropped him after his arrest and
he had been unable to obtain
another policy.
Murray said Small's attorneys
have told him they hope to reach
a settlement under . which the
doctor can be insured in a group
plan at a Los Angeles hospital.
Also, William Stewart, one of
Small's attorneys, said Wednes·
day that efforts have been made
to post a bond to allow Small lo
practice medicine.
Small, 31, pleaded no contest
as part of a plea bargain in Sep-
tember 1979 t o involuntary
manslaughter in the Nov. 27,
1978 death of Kim Plock, 33. The
mother of three small children
died of respiratory failure fiv e
days after a breast enlargement
operation al his Santa Ana
clinic. Small is an ear. nose and
throat specialist.
Authorities claimed her death
was caused by large doses of
anesthetics and tranquilizers
given her before the operation.
From Page A1
began a four-week vacation last
Thursday.
Deputy, White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said
before the signing that the presi-
dent's priority alter he returns
lo the Wblte House next month
will be ••to m ake the economic
program work."
He also is promising further
budget cuts and plans to meet
next week with budget director
David A. Stockman to begin
plotting those reductions.
The legislation signed today
sets a federal bud£et of about
$700 billion for fiscal 1982, $35;2
bilUon lower than the spending
plan submitted by former Presi·
dent Carter before he left office
in January.
It reduces spending for Social
Security by $2.2 billion. mostly
by eliminating the $122-a·month
minimum benefit. Food stamps
are cut $1.7 billion and employ-
ment training $4.6 billion.
It also reduces by $11.6 billion
the government's authority lo
enter into contracts lo build low·
income subsidized housing.
Rep. James R. Jones, D·Okla ..
chairman of the House Budget
Committee. has called the
R eagan budget ·'the most
monumental and his toric
turnaround in fiscal policy that
has ever occurred."
The legislation cutting taxes is
equally staggering.
VERSATIU ATHLETE • • •
Three.quarters of the cuts will
go to indiv iduals, mos tly
through rate reductions averag-
ing about 25 percent at each in·
come level
For a typi cal family of four
with one earner and a $20,000 in·
co me, the tax reduction will be
about $25 this year, $228 in 1982,
$:171 in 1983 and $464 in 1984. By
the Lime the bill 1s full y effective
in 1984, the family's tax liability
will have dropped to $1 ,549 from
the current $2.013
Cafe giving
spree halted
BALTIMORE <AP> A well
dressed man who handed out
about $3,000 1n a fas t -food
restaurant here says he can't
understand why the assistant
manager ordered him to stop
dis tributing the $50 and $100
bills
·He wouldn 't even let me
finish my strawberry milkshake
before telling me to leave. And I
gave the guy $150, the bum,"
said ·Roland Sylvester Crowther ,
describing the spending spree in
the Re1sterstown Road branch of
Gino·s restaurant.
Assistant Manager Jim Loni
said he ordered Crowther to slop
flashing his roll of bills because
he feared there might be a rob·
b<'ry
that you can't , you can't. They told me I was
destined for failure."
The turning point came when a friend's
family took him out of the hospital for a one
week camping and fishing trip in the moun·
ta ins.
"I swam the 10 miles ... he recalls. '"It took
me six hours and 40 minutes. I hurt. and It was
very difficult a nd I came in dead last. But I
made it.
"I went from an ugly, negative hospital
situa~on lo something very beautiful," Clardy
explains . "That gave me a reason to go on, to
stop having the desire to kill myseU."
Clardy was able lo leave the hospital and
return to hjs mother's home in Garden Grove.
He began therapy at the VA Hospital in Long
Beach and took classes al Long Beach State.
When he began having difficulty with bis
studies, a teacher suggested Clardy talk to Dr.
Jack Whitehouse, who has led an active life
despite the case of polio 20 years ago that left
hinl a quadriplegic.
' ''This totally paralyzed man convinced me
that I could swim. snow ski and do well in
school," Clardy says. "He made me realize the
only thing holding me back is myself."
At pools in Long Beach, Clardy learned to
swim with the strength of his upper body, using
his remaining impaired leg as a rudder.
Three years ago, he decided to try the Seal
Beach rough water swini.
''That was when I realized I could do
anything I wanted to.··
Clardy endured similar frustrations in
teaming to ski. But eventually he mastered the
three·track technique. (Two skis are attached to
crutches the third is worn on his remaining
leg.)
The amputee attributes much of his inner
strength to renewed religious faith. At a Bible
class in Anaheim fi ve years ago, he met a
woman named Marian. The two were married
the following year.
Having clawed his way up from the depths
of self-pity, Tom Clardy is now a man with
lofty goats.
He wants to line up a sponsor for his 26·mile
Catalina swim and begin preparing for Interna-
tional ski competition.
"J know what my m1ss1on ts now -
teaching physical e ducation to the han·
dicapped." Clardy says. '"I don't care how
limited you are. you can stiU go on and do more
things th~u trunk you can ."
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Augu1t 13, 1981
Male model sues · Law school · oaths OK'd
Man says 'Playboy' ad damaging Bar association to allow religious bias in admissions
PITl'SFIELD, Ma11. (AP) -
A cablnet inataller whoee pie·
ture appeared in an advertlH·
ment lot Playboy Ma1aaine over
the captlon "The Playbor,
Reader -hJa lust la for We ·
want.I $250,000 in damaaes from
the ma1uine.
The jud1e who heard the
lawsuit said he wlll iaaue a de·
clalon ln about a week.
The picture, which appeared
durina a 1977 promotional cam·
palgn in The New York Times
and airport and train station
posters, shows mustachioed
Thomas Maueo on water skis.
Mazzeo said the picture was
used without his permission.
"It made me sound dirty. It
made m e sound like a sex
rtend," testified Mazzeo, 40, of
Bicycle Safety
Safety seminar hour1y
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
'1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Roy,
LEASE Srf CIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
Clltt* OI Oo... end 0..... Sii
NE'M'ORT BE1'CH
car s•bikes•
•skateboards*
trucks.baby
carr iages•tea
carts•trikes
rol ler skates •
walker~· toys •wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods•coupes•
trailers•hard
tops•convert·
ibles•motor
homes*lawn
mowers•timos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
•typingtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
vehicles*golf
carts*model
trains*bikes
•pianos•cars
refrigerators
*skates••••••
If It's got
wheels,
you'll move
It f aster in a
Daily Pilot .
classified
ad.call
642-5678 and a
friendly.ad-
vlser wlll
help you
turn your
wheels Into
cash.
Plttafleld, a father of four wbo
1lnp in h11 church choir.
Mazzeo Hid durin1 the two-
day, non-Jury trial before
Berklhlre Superior Court Jud&e
Wllllam Simona that the ad-
vertisement falsely identified
him aa a Playboy reader and
damaeed his reputation and
business.
"I don't think housewives
wa nt cabinetmakers with a
playboy's lust for life in their
kitchens," he said.
Playboy attorney Stephen
Olesky contended that Mazzeo
suffered "no m easurable
damage other than the loss of
pay .the agency would normally
make to an amateur model" and
suggested the judge aw1ard
Mazzeo "the $200 to $250 we pay
tor amateur models."
Swfft Dark Meat
PLUMS
LBS.$ 00
FOR
H AS S U O G ESTIO N
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese Ill told the American
Bar Association underused
miHtar y prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding or
civilian jails. He spoke in
New Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS <AP> -The
American Bar Aaaoclatlon hu
amended lta 1tandard ot ac-
creditation by lettln1 church·
s upported haw schools dla·
crlmlnate on the basis or re·
ll&lon.
The controveralal amendment
appeared to fail Wednesday on a
voice vote. but on a atandin&
vote at the ABA House of
Delegalel, counted by tellers, it
passed 147·127.
The House then granted ac·
credltation for Oral Roberts
University's 0 . W. Coburn
School of Law In Tulsa, Okla.,
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de·
nied approval because It re-
quired students to swear an oath
of religious belief, pledging to
fo llow the example of Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
must support and exempl1ty the
code. and. hiring includea teall of
relieiOWI belief.
Accreditation is a serious mat·
ter since graduatea of law
schools which do not have ADA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer in most states.
The university sued the ADA
in U.S. Dtstrlct Court. The judge
Issued an injunction forbidding
the ABA to deny provisional ac-
creditation W\tU after the House
of Delegates decides the isaue.
At a meeting last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be in
"substantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis·
criminatlon on the .ground of
race, color, religion, national
origin or sex.
A new standard was drawn by
an ABA com mlttee whlch
waters down the old a nti·
discrimination clause by add·
log:
· · ~othine herein shall be con·
strued to prevent a law school
from havin& a rellglous affiUa-
tlon and purpose and adopting
policies o f admission and
employment that directly relate
to such affiliation and purpose
so long as notice of such poUcies
has been provided to applicants,
st ud e nts , fa culty and
employees."
Dean Gordon Schaber of the
McGeoree .School of Law of the
University of the Pacific,
chairman of the committee, said
the exception was based on the
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom.
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
5th MONTH
ANNIVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU 'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM TH E RANCH TO YO U
CALIFORNIA RANCH MIT.
W£ CAllY A WIDE
SELECTION OF TIOPICll FIUIT
Jumbo Hats llllllS PllUPPLE
PIPIYI LIMES
llllOES COCOIUT
SPECIAL TY ITEMS
FOR
STRAWBERRIES SHARLYN MELONS
ILUEIHRIES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ I ORGANIC
APPLE 1h
JUICE &al.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
~ORANGE HOa•iY
I
WE IRE IOI FD tURllG
FERRARO'S FllE
FRESH FRUIT JUICES CWIY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PERSIAN MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON GRAYEllSTllE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 00
DELI
OUR MEAT: BEnER THAN JUST A CUT ABOVE
~ ~. ~-
JUICY MEATY BEEF lean 89ne less
BACK RIBS CHUCK STEAK ·PORK ROAST (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like)
0 $. 49 $ 29
lb. lb. lb.
SILVER TROLLED
WHOLE SALIOI GROUND BEEF
PATIIES
6 to 9 lb. average
$2~~
llEIGHBOR'S
Stop by er. '"'fiday & Soturd:.y
fOf a tast'9' of some of ov• •in•
ColHornia Ranch Marlcet Produd1. = -·-
(Not to exceed 22% fat content)
CREAMY FRESH
POTATO
SALAD 99~.
John $169 Morrell
BUUISWEIGER lb.
Californta Ranch Market $2 49 Specially Prepared
BAKED HAM 1b.
Fresh Baked
'
•
L Orange Coa1t DAILY Ptlaf!Tl'tur1ct1y. Auguat 13, 1981
Irvine co a st status
critical for cities
An effort to place a stretch or
coastline into Irvine's city boun-
daries w as boosted last week by
that city's Planning Commission.
The commission recom·
mended that the coastal area
between the cities of Laguna
Beach and Newport Beach be
placed lnto Irvine sphere of in-
fluence, which is de(ined as an
area outside city boundaries but
earmarked for ruture annexation.
Now the Irvine City Council
will consider that recommenda-
tion and decide whe ther t o
forward it to the Orange County
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission . which decides city boun·
daries and spheres of influence .
Some officials of Newport
Beach, which now has a sphere of
influence that takes in much or
the territory sought by the Irvine
Planning Commission. have in·
dicated they won't give up the
area without a fight.
La~una Beach officials are
also eyeing the s ituation but
haven't yet made any public
s tatements on lh matter.
The city that ultimately an-
nexes the coastal area stands to
reap a large amount of sales tax
revenue from the commercial de·
velopment planned there, lnclud-
ing three hotels.
Officials from Irvine say that
their city s hould gamer these
benefits because Irvine would
s uffer most of the pollution and
traffic costs associated with
coastal development.
Newport Beach officials say
they should get the revenue
because they are going to suffer
most of the costs.
Undoubtedly. both conten-
tions contain a measure of truth.
It is the responsibility of the
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission to place the politics of
the two cities aside and decide
the question on the basis of objec-
tive questions relative to the
costs each city will bear due to
coastal development, traffic pat·
terns, natural boundaries and a
number of other criteria.
No frills for schools
Laguna Beach Unified School
District trustees have approved a
$6.6 million. no-frills budget for
the 1981-82 school year
The budget, down from last
year's $6. 7 million s pending
package. shows only $2.374 al·
located for textbooks in the up-
coming school year and only
$1 ,000 for school s ite improve-
ments.
More tha n 80 pe rcent of the
district budget will be s pent on
employee salaries and benefits.
School trustees have said
they will seek private sources of
revenue to purc hase much -
needed s upplies and equipment,
which the district could not af-
ford from its federal. state and
local income sources.
Appro val Qr the budget
comes arter a year-tong struggle
to erase a predicted SS00.000
deficit, which saw the closure of
Aliso Elementary School in South
Laguna, the layoff of teachers
and maintenance employees and
reduction of educational pro-
grams.
Laguna Beach school ad
minis trators are to be con-
gratulated for the ir work on dis-
trict funding, a n increas ing
headache in the race or shrinking
state and federal dollars .
And though s ome Laguna
Beach and South Laguna resi
dents may not agree with where
recent budget cuts f eU in order to
g e t the dis tric t books into
balance. it appears the Laguna
Beach Unified School Distric t
will be in much sounder financial
shape than many other Orange
County districts
Worth a second ,look
A Saddleback College ad -
ministra'tor has r ecomme nded
that dis trict trustees reconsider a
plan they rejected last year to
lease a portion of the Mission
Viejo campus to a private de-
veloper.
Las t J anuary the trustees
sought development proposals
from private firms for the 23-acre
parcel, located at the north end
of the campus near Margue rite
Parkway .
At that time. dis trict officials
estimated the leasing agreement,
which would have included the
construction of condominiums. a
s hopping center and commercial
offices on the property. would
generate about s400.ooo a year
for the college.
Trustees and administrators
favoring the plan recommended
the money be used to purchase
more land for the North Campus
in Irvine and pay for construction
of a new classroom building at
the Mission Viejo campus.
Steadily declining financial
assistance from the st ate and
rapidly increasing enrollme nts at
the school prompted discussion of
•
the lease, which would have pro-
vided an income source indepe n-
de nt of the state allocation.
But after tax -cutting in
itiative Proposition 9 failed last
year. and it appeared state funds
would continue flowing, the ma-
jority of the trustees successrully
argued the district should hold
off on ente ring into a lease agree-
m e nt.
In a recent budget report to
the seven Saddleback trustees.
Roy Barletta. assistant superin-
tendent for business. said if state
f uncling for community colleges
continues at current levels. a c-
companied with yearly 15 percent
enrollment increases at Sad·
dleback, the dis trict could face
multimillion-dollar budget def·
ic1 ts in the near future.
Saddleback trustees s hould
not count on financial assistance
from the state to keep pace. Pro-
grams to provide private income
to the district. s uch as the lease
of the Marguerite Parkway land,
s hould be a priority item for dis-
cussion during the upcoming
school year.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner view s ex·'
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comm ent is invit·
ed. Address The Da11v Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642·4321.
..
L.M. Boy d/Churchi ll's memory
The me mory of Winston ChurchlU
must have been something s pecial. J
can't believe that he could recite all
of •'The Decline and Fall or the
Roman Empire," as has been
claimed. It's known, though, that he
could deliver every line In at least a
couple of Shakespeare's plays.
Duting jugt the first week of this
year the United States used more
cuo&e than all of its armed forces
used throughout World War II. An
astonishlni statistic, what?
Credit Mark Russell with that ring-
ing cry ~ "Sic Semper Adidas."
Meaning "We'll never run out of
meakm."
U you ~ 30 years old, you were
born the aame year the 22nd Amend-
ORANGE COAST
lily Pilat
ment to the Constitution limited U.S.
president& to two terms, the year
Johnnie Ray popularized wailing
ballads s uch as ''Cry," and the same
year Lucllle Ball first went on
television with her "I Love Lucy"
shows.
The ancient Roman poet Ovid tiad
this to say about baldness: ''UllY la a
field without 1ru1, a plant without
leaves, or a head without hair."
Q. What was the flr11t country after
the American Revolutlon to rec-
ognt1e the United States as an ln·
dependent natJon in its own right?
A. Morocco. In 1789. •
Venezuela's government bas a
Ministry for the Development of In·
telligence.
,
FDR memorial panel end11res
WASHINGTON For more years
than they lik e t o remember ,
Republicans ground their teeth in
frustration over Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. who rode roughshod. with ir-
ritating good humor. over the GOP.
Now, of course, the shoe is on the
other fool. Ronald Reagan, an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the remnants
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North, South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress, Reagan stages
the modern equi valent of FDR's radio
"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people. His delivery is every bit as
persuasive as FDR's and members
of Congress know il.
SO PERHAPS it's not surprising that
one of the hoariest boondoggles to sur-
v 1 v e the o ns l aught of President
Reagan's budget cutters is the FDR
Memorial Commission For more than
a quarter of a century, the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers·
money in a bootless attempt to achjeve
a suitable me morial to the only presi-
dent who ever was and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 1955. It
has demonstrated little Ukelihood of ac-
complishing anything in the years to
come. In fact, its whole reason for ex-
istence was obliter ated years ago, when
private d onor s e recte d a modes t
memorial to .FDR in downto wn
Washingt.on a marble block on Penn-
sylvania Avenue outside the Archives
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two members of Congress.
Reps Dan Glickman, D-Kan .. and Bill
Dannemeyer, R-Calif.. recently tried to
Q
-JA-Cl-Al_D_fRS_O_N -~
save the government a little money by
abolishjng the FDR commission. they
were a s t o ni shed to lear n that
Roosevelt's ghost stil'l carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The feckless biP'3rlisa n duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR commission was a was te
of money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had been
spent in the 26 years of the com
mission 's existence with literally
nothing to show for it. Another several
hundred thousand dollars has been
spent on various projects.
Glickman, who was in three-cornered
pants when FDR died, even brandished
a photograph of the existing FDR
me morial on the floor of the House. and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
bes id e the monument : "If a n y
me morial is erected to me ... 1 s houJd
like it to consist of a block of stone
about the size of this (Oval Office ) desk,
and placed in the center of that green
plot in front of the Archives Building."
ll was all to no avail. The Glickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated. 201 216 The vote had an
eerie touch to at The House's electronic
votmg system broke down for the first
time in three years , prompting one
member to whisper to Ghckman, "The
gh_ost of FDR has returned."
What astonished Glickman was not
just the econom y minded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission 's
$30.000 budget intact like Reps. Jack
Kemp. R-N. Y . and Jim Jones , 0 -0kla
but the way some of his fellow
Democrats chided him as a traitor to
his party who was "playing into the
hands of the Republicans ··
THE ROUSE SHOWDOWN over lbe
FDR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission . The author, Lucette
Lagnado, called it "a classic example
of lbe truism that a government agen-
cy. once created, never dies ; it just
keeps on growm~."
Footnote: Congressional supporters of
the FDR Memorial Commission ob-
serve that building a monument to FDR
would be one wa) to assure the end of
thl' FDR comm1ss1on
. ,, .. ·~·
Be sure you don't get sick at night "'::& •·'~·-
To the Editor:
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedic:! may come
for price." Some cities . this article stat-
ed, s uch as Fountain Valley are con·
sidering charging for the paramedics
se r vices. As we all know, the
paramedics do wonderful work s aving
countless lives. They can't be com·
mended loo highly.
But what astounded me is the quoted
ambulance transportation rates to the
hospital -$100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich, it can be a lot to those
who are just making their pay checks
meet. I reckon those deciding the rat.es
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
medical emergency and can't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high ambulance
rates, I called the billing office or one
ambulance company asking if the rates
were really $100. The lady e~lained
that they charge $75 base rate plus SS a
mile. Also, rates are increased if it is a
night call. <Be s ure and don't get sick al
night.) And when emergency red lights
and siren are used, the patient is
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangementa can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change lbe fact that
rates are high to start wltb. The burden
still rans back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover the am·
buJance fee.
As Senator Edward Kennedy said -
and I wholeheartedly &$ree -we are
the only country in the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the paramedics and am-
bulance services can't exist on not.bing.
The solution, if any. is difficult to come
up-with. Socialized medicine may seem
like an ideal solution but ln those coun·
tries with socialized medicine, lbe
quaMty of mtdical care declines as the
peraoo gets older. and ls almost non-
exbtenl f~ the elderly.
So lf there is a medical emergency
with my household, I'll call the local
friendly chiropractor.
J .R. SASSO
Ma~ipulaiion
To the Editor:
An artlcle about the Jrvtne coaat aay1
tbttt will be homet 10 eqMmlH t.ba.t It
it termed the "abelk cout" and tbe
Irvine Company wtU have to edvertJM
na\lonall7 and tntematioGalb to ftOd
buyers.
Well there soet the old ar._...
that au thllr demllldl f9r t•-..,... ...................... ~
will have a place to live. I've often won-
dered what's left for the individual in
this modern world. They've been
manipulated b y the adverlis
ing/marketing world into how they
think about everything. There's a prop-
aganda statement to prove every
point. but there's one I will never
believe again.
I've long suspected thal the Irvine
Company and other large, out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children and I might add, I don't ap.
preciate that kind of propaganda and
manipulation
DONALD K . SPENCER
Byp ass needed
To the Editor:
A major help in the traffic problems
of Newport Beach would be the building
of J. straight, four-lane road. some place
south of Corona del Mar, linking Coast
Highway with Bonita Canyon Road.
This should be built for and known as
the Corona del Mar bypass. This should
be done before there is any more de·
velopment, down coast or in Newport
Center.
Then, and onJy then, should the Irvine
Company proceed wilh logical and now
acceptable developments; such de·
velopments would become an asset for
us, rather than something that we must
now fear and fight. Without such a road
in place no matter what the hopes and
promises, there will be serious negaUve
impact on the whole area.
JEAN MORRIS
Laguna's needJJ
To the Editor:
The selection or the lifth city council
member and mayor m Laguna Beach
on July 28 defies description. For
almost two hours the show that the four
council members displayed was second
to none. They played Russian roulette
with the 20 apollcanta who applied for
the vacant seal. How silly can people
be?
Bear in mind Laguna Beach is a
general law city. Its City Council i11ov-
erned by state law and Ute city'• or·
dinancea and genel'al J:>lan. The duties
ol the mayor are as follows: Cl> Chall'
City OouncU meeliPI• under the
Robert.I Rules of Order and CoUow the
aulhorlied council aaen~a. (2) Oltictal-
ly represeart Latuna Beach at rlbbon·
cutuns ctre&DOniet or otbtr 1uctl rune.
lions, etc. (3) TM mayor bu 80 lep1
ri1bt to make decasions on La1una
Beach matters without the express con-
sent of the council members. < 4) The
mayor may, under emergency condi-
tions, perform hm1ted duties and is then
obliged to call tht' council members to
an e mergenc) meeting Remember that
the mayor as not el ected by the citizens
of Laguna Beach and is only another
council member who has one vote.
ONE OF THE major reasons for pas t
confrontations at the council chambers
was lhal prior mavors refused to accept
the fact that they were just another
council member llopefully. in the
future, thjs mistake wall not be repeated
by any future mayors
There as much work to be done. The
generaJ plan <consisting of 153 pages >
s h ould be implemented promptly,
because it 1s the wis h a nd the will of the
citizens of Laguna Beach Equally im
portant are people• and people issues
and open space programs. These in
elude affordable housine. a total com-
muruty center. day care centers for
working mothers a nd seniors, helping
s hut-ins, a teen-age center. and much
needed parking for Laguna Beach.
This as a turning point in Laguna
Beach history The adminis tration nov.
is in a position to help solve many of the
problems mentioned above, and, in do
mg so, make Laguna Beach a better
pl ace in whirh to live.
ALANE. ADAMS
Cartoon 1nisinformed
To the Editor:
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on Mrs.
Reagan paylng $75,000 for a Steuben
bowl, the previous week TV news
explained the bowl was worth $75,000,
however Mrs . Reagan purcbased it for
$8,000.
As the cartoon is a gross case of
misinformation I suggest the same
space be given to correcting Ute error.
The fact ls. if your paper Jo.bad been on
its toes the cartoon shoule1 have been
canceled. ·
L.KEPPLER
It'• nice t.llal President Reagan can
declare lbe controllers' strike over aad
10 off oo vacaUOD and le.ave tbe rHt or
us to figlll lbe mess.
DISGUSTED
,--,
-
bllJPlllt
THURSDAY, AUG. 13, 19'1
BUSINESS 85
STOCKS 87
,
Sylvia Porter says
take advantage of
'tax sweeteners' ... B7
D
D
Djd earlier fall cause Lagt1nan's death?
lb STEVE MITCHELL ... ....., ..........
Three police officers and a
ride-along civilian saw Robert
Gary Wardman strike bis head
on the pavement while bein& re·
moved from a patrol car behind
the Laguna Beach police station
23 days ago.
Niguel has
power cut
by crash
More than 2,000 Laguna
Nleuel residents were without
electricity early today when a
four-car pileup downed power
lines near the intersection of
Niguel Road and Crown Valley
Parkway, according to M1turice
Luque, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric.
Luque said the accident OC·
<'Urred at about 1 a.m . He said
repair crews were sent to the
scene after the utility received a
telephone call from the Highway
Patrol.
Luque said half of the 2,363
electric customers had their
power restored by 2:45 a .m.
Work was continuing at 8:30
a.m. to complete the repairs, he
said.
A spokesman for the Orange
County Sheriff's Department
said Highway Patrol officers
had both the northbound and
southbound lanes of Crown
Valley Parkway closed to traffic
at 9 a.m. today while repairs
continued.
500compete
in lifeguard
competition
More than 600 lifeguards from
as far away as Australia.
Florida and New York began
competition today in the 1981
U.S . Lifesaving Association
Charrtpionships at Salt Creek
Beach in Laguna Niguel.
Competition will resume Fri-
day at noon and culminate with
an awards ceremony at 7 p.m.
At 2:30 p.m. Friday, represen·
tatives of lifeguard teams en-
tered in this year 's competition
will lake part in the grueling
iron man event, which includes
rowing, swimming and running.
At 6::1> p.m. Friday lifeguard
teams will take part in the
Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek relay,
an event which pits team
against learn in dories and
swimming.
There will be 11 events held on
both days or lhe competition.
The U.S. Llvesaving Association
sanctioned championships al
Salt Creek have been held al lhe
Laguna Niguel beach for the
past three years.
Reunion canceled
The Laguna Beach High
School reunion for the 1976
graduating class scheduled for
Aug. 22 has been canceled due to
lhe few responses from class
members . For information call
J ennie Clark at 494-3098.
The four witnesses later told
Investigators the man's head hil
the ground from a distance of
between three and 20 inches.
And, based on a pathologist's
report, due today, that distance
ts "not consistent" with a severe
skull fracture which resulted in
the 35-year-old spa salesman's
death nine and a half hours after
he was taken Into police custody.
Meanwhile, a police depart·
menl investt1alloo into
circumstances surroundin1 the
jallhouse death of the Laguna
Beach man was expected to be
completed today and forwarded
to acting Laguna Beach poUce
o.ttr ...... ...., .....
AT IT AGAIN Ira nian immigrant Ali Rous han works in his
Gosta Mesa m etal s hop's parking Jot on his fourth sculpture .
"Tornado ... while awaiting res ults of lawsuits regarding ci-
ty nghts to regulate erection of his three previous big red
structures and Roushan·s constitutional rights to freedom of
!?xpression. Rous han says he'll e rect his latest 70-foot work
ID a bout a m onth, topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands.
Love-eager rhino
stages a getaway
It's rhinoaeros m ating season
at Lion Country Safari in Irvine
and one of the horned beasts got
so carried away that he busted
through a containment gate this
morning at the wild animal com-
pound. s aid park s pokes man
Virginia Brauer.
The thick-skinned animal
sauntered over to a field just
north of Lion Country Safari at
1: 15 a .m., she said, adding that
park rangers were able to quick-
ly lead the rhino back to the
compound.
This morning's incident is
almost identical to an escape bid
made by a rhino last month, she
s aid.
In both cases the strong,
heavyweight beasts were able to
knock down a gate at a tem-
porary holding a r ea for the
rhinos she said.
The rhinos were moved from
their old pen to the holding area
early this summer because the
pen was too near an open-air
a mphitheater that is being con-
structed at Lion Country Safari.
Seniors plan
Talwe trip
A five-day trip to Lake Tahoe
is scheduled for late October for
Laguna Beach Senior Citizens
Club members.
The $159 price tag includes bus
transportation, lodging, side
trips, and luggage handling. It's
$40 more if you want to have
your own accommodations.
The bus leavea Oct. 25 and a
$25 deposit will reserve a seat.
For information, call 497-2441.
chief Neil Purcell for.review.
Purcell abo was to receive the
written report ftom Dr. Peter
Yatar of the county coroner's of·
flee which indicates Wardman
might have received a severe
skull fracture before police took
custody of the man.
Wardman was found lying on
Business
• can remain
in home
Laguna Beach planning com·
missioners approved an
architect's request to keep his
business in an old Cape Cod cot·
tage zoned for residential use.
Commissioners, in a 3-2 split
vote, with Steven Riggs and Art
Casebeer opposed , Jack
Cressman was allowed to use his
secondary residence at Glenn-
eyre and Cle<> streets for his
architectural business.
In approving the business use,
the commission majority said it
interpreted the city law to read
the house does not have to be the
primary residence or the appli-
cant, in this case, Cressman.
Cressman sought the home oc·
cupation use after being denied
a zone change to commercial for
the property in May 1980.
In denying the zone change,
the council said it feared "spot
zoning" where the new com-
mercial designation allowed.
Cressman moved his architec-
tural equipment into the build·
ing anyway in mid-February,
and was told in April by a build-
ing inspector that he 'd have, to
apply for lhe home occupation
use or move the business out of
the old wood house.
The architect had indicated he
might have to tear the building
down and construct a larger
duplex should his request be de-
nied.
College sets
classes at
Laguna High
Saddleback College in Mission
Viejo will offer 13 afternoon and
evening classes at Laguna
Beach High School beginning the
week of Sept. 8.
Courses include anthropology, art history, painting, photog-
raphy, basic computer pro·
gramming, literature. composi-
tion. environmental studies, his·
tory, psychology and Spanish.
All c lasses are taught by
Saddleback instructors and earn
college credit. Courses are open
to high school juniors and
seniors with clearance from
their district as well as persons
18 and older.
Laguna Beach High School
students can register for t he
Saddleback classes during their
r egistration period for high
scbool classes.
All others must register in
person at either Saddleback's
Main Campus in Mission Viejo
or the North Campus in Irvine.
For more Information call
559-9300 or 497 ·3785, extension
218.
the sidewalk outside the Main
Street bar on South Coast
Highway July 22 at about 1 a .m.
Paramedics c alled to the
scene determined the man was
Intoxicated, Purcell said, and he
was subsequently transported to
the city jaH and placed in a cell.
At about 10 : 30 the next morn-
ing, officers found the man un·
consicious and not breathing.
Despite efforts by fi remen ,
police and paramedics ,
Wardman died at South Coast
Medical Center shortly after
noon.
Following a pre liminary
a utopsy re port lhal showed
Wardman died of a skull frac-
ture, Purcell said OH icer
Charles Maine, 29, was in-
terviewed by superiors and pre-
sented a written report on the in·
cident. 11> both reports, Purcell
said, the officer '•stated that
there was no dropping of the in·
dividual or striking of the head."
But after purportedly being
pressured by fellow officers to
tell the truth, Maine went to
s upe ri ors an d admitted
Wardman had slipped out of his
grasp and fallen on his head
while being removed from a
patrol car.
The officer has since been
placed on adminstrative leave
with pay until conclusion of In-
vestigations into the incident.
In Dr. Yatar's report, the
pathologist "has established the
time of the skull frac\ure as
between nine and 12 hours prior
to Wardman's death." Capt.
Purcell said.
In a telephone conversation
with the pa thologis t late
J
Wednesday, Purcell s aid he
learned lhe autopsy "further
established that the documented
dropping incident involving our
officers on July 22 while being
removed from a police unit was
not consistent with a severe
skull fracture of this nature.•·
The acting police chief said
taped re-enactments of the inci-
dent, performed by the officers
and civilian involved. "is consis·
tent with Dr. Yatar's opinion."
"We have determined the
dropping of the victim was
between three and 20 inches
(from the ground)," Purcell
s aid.
He said the difference in dis-
la nce estimated by the wit-
nesses is due to lhe various loca-
tions at which the three officers
and ride-along civilian observed
the fall.
"Based on Dr. Yatar's opin-
ion. a skull fracture of this
magnitude could not occur from
a fall or dropping from a height
of three to 20 inches.
"One can certainly, at this
point, conclude Mr. Wardman
apparently had a terrific falJ
prior to our arriving, either
right there on the sidewalk
where h e w as found . or
somewhere else that would fit
within the ni ne to 12 hours."
In addition to the in-house in·
vestigation due today. the dis·
trict attorney's office is conduct-
ing an investigation into the
jailhouse death.
Deputy District Attorney John
Conley said the results of that
probe should be completed late
this week or early next week.
Crash wreckage not
missing area plane
By STEVE MARBLE
OI Ull D9ifY ..... IUlf
The crumpled fuselage of an
airplane in a remote area of the
Sierra Nevada is not the light
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months
ago.
Authorities from Fresno Coun-
ty. who s potted the wreckage
last month. at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted off
fro m t he Mam m oth Lakes
airport lcu;t March bound for
nearby Bishop.
The plane , whi c h ne ver
reached Bishop, is believed to
have crashed in the mountains.
That plane was piloted by 25·
year-old Robert Reed and was
carrying 26·yea r-old Michael
Thompson, the son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken
Thompson.
Sgt. Ken Abell, a me mber of
the Fresno Sheriff's Search and
Rescue Team. said he was able
to make out an id~ntilication
number o n lhe wre ckage
Wednesday after developing a
set of aerial photographs .
He said the number does not
m atch that of the Cessna 210
that has been sought.
Because of this discovery,
Abell said. authorities have
called off a search of the moun-
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into the area near
Convict Lake to scrutinize the
wreckage.
Abell said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting it. He
said the call letters on the
wreckage were checked against
a federal registry which indicat-
ed the crash was more than five
years old.
He said his department does
not investigate air crashes that
old.
Abell, who said he stripped
do.wn a helicopter so it would be
light.enough to make a pass over
the wreckage to take the photo·
graphs, said he's prowled the
mountains to see if he could spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane carrying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he s aw nothing during
several passes.
"We have nothing else to look
for," he said. "We have nowhere
else to go unless som eone comes
up with a clue "
'Queen/ set
for seniors
·'The African Queen," star-
ring Humphrey Bogart and
Katharine Hepburn. will be
shown free to Laguna Beach
senior citizens at 2 p.m. Aug. 21.
The film program. sponsored
by the Senior Citizens Club and
Laguna Federal Savings and
Loan, and will be shown in the
South Coast Theater.
For free tickets, contact the
club center at Sl5 Forest Ave.
Mesa autlwr finm being single can be profitable
Popular best-s elling book claims living alone likeable experience
By JOEL C. DON °' .. ....., ........... Lynn Shahan was beaming.
Her first book had been out only a month
and It was already No. 4 on Time ma1azine's
best seller list and heralded in full-page
newspaper ads.
And all· s he did was alt down at the
typewriter to put together a practical ,Wde on
her llfeatyle: being smile.
"UVing AJone and UJdn• It'' covers the
Costa Mesa woman's thouchta on &eamlnl to de-
pend on oneself: to eat, play and a.muse yourself
without that overwhelminl oeed for another
warm bO<ly. "It'• a lifestyle that tn effect hu come into
lta own when you talk about 25 "1-cent of th•
populaU.on being 1in1le," said th• •year-old
Ma. Shahan. "It's an acceptable llf•tyle. Ten
years qo It wun't."
She said at one time people bellend "then wu aometlWal ltJ'an1e about t.be person wbo wun't marrted and had lhrM ebildren by t.be
time be wu IO."
.... Shaban learned bow to .... aloM tbe
bud way. Sbe f~uent.ed alqle ban ud wu
qulcldJ tumt4 off b)' what •M 1aw •a ... ol
unbappiWt. Sbe suffered tbroalb JOileltMtt,
depreaalon and the sudden fear :tlllt manJ P ·
perience as they approach middle a1e and find
they have no one special to come home to every
niiht.
-Inste ad of landing a quick husband or live-
ln boyfriend as a solution, she learned how to be
by herself and enjoy it.
Armed with her experience as a Garden
Grove high school COUMelor and encount,n
with slnales workshops and the like, ahe decided
to help others overcome the fear of beinl alone.
"At 30 Prince Cbarmtn1 didn't come
alon1," she said. "I woke -.p and reallied Ui.t
t hat micbt never happen. It waa a very
lraumaUc realization.
"I saw a Deed. I kn.w if I felt the way I felt,
otben were like that too."
Tboutb she's never been married, Ma.
Shahan 1*1d the book l1 ienerally intended for
widowed and divorced penont u oppoeed to
tee11·aaer1 on their flrtt Ume out from home. Retearcb for the book includ..t attendance
at Hllllnars wbere abe found divorced ,.ople
Iott and abandoned in t.belr new·found life u
tlniJ•.
In 9dditlon to proftcliaa a pradlcal livi.nt
fulde oa money maaq~ ••tl8' for one
and otber boUlebold ....... *1111 ..... allo
dttkMd to taekl• die etDOtloul lllMt tbat
plalUI the llnll• l*'IOll· 1boulb •he bu iDJOyed ber yeara u a
single person, Ms. Shahan said, "I'm not sour
on marriage at all. A lot of people have asked if
in writing the book I'm advocating livlng alone
as a lifestyle. There's no question that living
with someone is better. If the right relationship
came along, I'd get married tomorrow.
"But I've seen so many people in bad rela-
Uonshlps who a re a fraid to leave because
they're afraid or living alone."
Her living alone prescrtptlon ls almple, if
not just plain comEQ.on sense. Ir you're 1in1le,
you're obligated to make a 1ood life for
yourself.
•·Many people rush off to search for the next
warm body. They don't have a good time for
themselves. As a result of that they don't know
themselves and they get lnto a poor rel•·
tlonshlp.''
Ms. Shahan Isn't a member of any •lnllet
croup or other social boy-meets·slrl or1anlu-
tlon.a. But ••• au for tbem.
"The only time I feel alone la wben I, want
to be.'' lbe said. ••But for m•1 people belnl
alone la a very atan feellna. It'• an tQerieace
that many people feel they don't bave the
eaJadty"" reeoureet to•&& wtUa.~·
Sbe owee the quick IUC'Cell ol ber book, ln
part, t.o the publtaber, the Loi Aqelft·baMd
Stratford Prut. owned by Robert J. Rlnau.
,
'
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT!'rhuraday, August 13, 1981
Porkers show jog ging
aids diseas ed he arts
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Pip runn.lnl
on a treadmlll appear to prove JOI·
Jin& Is good tor humaM, at least
those with aome derree of heart dis·
ease, say University ot Calltomla re·
searchers. , After tlve months or studying the
Yucatan mlniawine , with
cardiovascular systems similar to
humans', a spokesman said Wed.Des·
day the findings reverse a pre·
liminary conclusion reached three
years ago.
The coronary arteries in the pirs in
the new experiments, in contrast to
those used in 1978, were partly closed
~urgically. Their so·caJled coUateral
blood vessels with exercise grew to 5
or 10 times normal size, boosting
blood now four to six times.
The improved circulation saved 40
percent o r the heart tissue
• jeopardized by the clogged arteries
• while in 10 other pigs kept orr the
motorized treadmill "only about 17
percent or the jeopardized tissue"
'•was salvaged. Dr. Colin Bloor said.
Bloor. a UC pathology professor
who directed the research, is presi·
dent of the San Diego County chapter
of the American Heart Association.
Bloor said the jogging pigs were
exercised s trenuous ly tor five
months after their artertea were re-
duced SO to 70 percent of normal size.
Two of the pigs died of heart attacks
during the grueling runs lasting up lo
several hours.
Bloor, in an Interview, warned that
persons with heart conditions should
Their blood
vessels with ex-
ercise grew to 5 or
10 times normal
size.
consult physicians. however. before
starting strenuous exercise.
By the time the study ended, he
said, the pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per·
cent or maximum.
The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate, Bloor
said. While exercising, the pigs'
heart rates went up to 220 beats a
minute.
A,.WI,.,....
CHIEF -Dr. Paul M.
J ohnson or Irvine has
been elected presi·
dent or the Or ange
County Dental Socie·
ty, a 1.300·me mber
non·profit organiza·
lion.
Channe l
levee
rise due
The Orange Co unty
Board of Supervisors
ha s approved a $3 .5
million project to rajse
the he ight or le vees
along the S an Juan
Creek channel to pre·
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach.
The construction proj·
ect, which has been ap-
proved by the Stat e
Coastal Commission,
will raise the levees
from two to six reet by
1983 along a three·mile
stretch from the mouth
of the creek to where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmeo·
tal Management Agency
o fficials have been
plagued with siltation
problems in the creek
bed for s~veral years.
and have been prevent·
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission has
refused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it removes to offset
the dredging costs. mak·
ing such a project too
expensive. officials say.
A Yucatan miniswine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
San Diego. where scientists say study shows humans can prevent heart attacks
by jogging. especially if they already have coronary disease
County officials say
raising the levees and
allowing the creek chan-
nel to rise to its natural
level will eliminate the
need for dredging, ad·
ding nature can then
take its co urse .
Construction is expected
to begin in the fall.
Countian perishes Party set
in Irvine Heat fatal after woman loses direction
BAKER, Calif. (AP) -A 75·year·
old woman who missed a freeway en·
trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115-degree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
days later. authorities said.
community of Apple Valley on Aug . 3
to visit a friend and started back
home last Thursday.
The Irvine City Coun·
cit has approved a $350
e xpenditure ror the
printing of invitations to
a party that will be held
la ter thi s yea r in
celebration of the 10th
anniversary of the city's
incorporation.
Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana
died of heat exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
But instead of going south toward
Orange County she ended up going
100 miles northeast on Interstate 15
before stopping lo ask directions at a
service station in this town 50 miles
from the Nevada border .'
• Bernardino County sheriff's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
A piece of white cloth was founc!
tied to her cane. an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
. of Long Beach a nd the widow of !' former Long Beach City Councilman
: Melvin L. Campbell. Mrs. Campbell
Mrs. Campbell was given direc·
lions to get back home and headed
o ff o n a ser v i ce road that
paralleled the freeway. But she
missed the overpass to the south·
bound lanes and continued on the
road even arter it veered off from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
Invitations will be sent
to past and present city
officials and members
of the business com·
muntty, said city ad·
mini s tralor Ken
Lazetle.
The exact date and
location of the party
have not yet been de-
termined. had driven to the Victorville area
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand, and on Sunday her body
was found inside.
: Before you buy any make of car,
call me. I'll save you time & money
• Benefit from my buying clout. I buy office. Low overhead. No salesmen.
• or le~e cars in contrxt lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us.
: 100 for corporate fleets. We can olr any make of car. Then compare for
tain substantial savinos fOf quali· yourself. !And tell your friends.I
• tied individuals. We do the price Calf, 9 to S. Robt Hixson Equipment
· shoppiDQ & haggling. Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia 714 64>41Dl.
Gr..cto,..mgw.
SA VE AM EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE
at Trader Joe & Pr.to
Most whole-wheels of cheese wei1h 5 to 10
PQUJ!da. When you buy a whole wheel of cheese from ua, we 1lve you a
10% dlacount from the sln1le pound price on
almoet every cheese. If a whole wheel weighs more than 15 pounds, you don't Mve to buy lt all. We'll live you a 10% discount
{f you buy a chunk wh ich
weighs more tha n 10 pounda. Tbl8 Is a simple way lo beat infiation-
and cheese always tastes better from a whole wheel I Please vlall our neweat Trader Joe's •l the lntersecllon of 17th Street. Newport 1 Boulevard and Superior
Avenue (ne"t to Denny's and Barclays Bank ).
MOW IM COSTA ..SA
642-5678
Put a few word& to work for you
in the Daly Pilat
CONVENIENT, DISPOSABLE
COLO PL.AST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
Wf! r><J"" arrt the con1p1ete COLOPLAST 11ne-ine
iarg~r s,e11ong d•s~ble ostom; all()llanc~ 1n the
world E 11e•'(1h1ng tor cotostomatl'!> •lt<'Stomates ancl
urinary ostornate~-all with C011venoent COLOPlAST
d•SOO'><ll>lllY COLOPlAST ~lldb•'•ty-Olus ca~ oac;k
economy
Be sure to a~lo. tor your FR([ copy ot tNSIGHJS-
tr>e DVbl1Cat>011 that's rust for y0u-a1way<; includes
coupoos tor fret> samoles 7114 114
MOUL TON 'LAZA '"AfUllACY
23MS Moulton Pmwey, Laguna Hlllt
(Next to El Renc:ho Merket)
A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTU
OPE:'\; 1\10:\;. I· Hf ~~A '.\1 Ii I' \1
S /\T li H. i> i\ Y I 0 t\ M l I'. i\ 1
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Huntington Beach, CA 92&47
SavtlHHn C•llfoml• AegioMI Olf~t:
llen e. Le Palma Ave., Anaheim, CA 92807
89&& Valley View St .. INene Pat!'i...CA 80920 1eee Amell! Ad .. c.mar111o. CA -..u10
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1001 E. lfTlt)efiel H,!ry-i Le Hebra. CA 90931 1i> 4140 Long 8Mcfl BMJ., ~ BMcl\, CA 90«>7 • 22931 Hewtttome BIYd., TOfl'enot, CA 9090& 1095 lrvlne Bl~, Tustin. CA taeO
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"Mweu<y Room" r;11/1""1 Oii I,.,~ ,,_Ill
'=======================:::::.-~
College
building
backed
A blU to abproprtate $2 mUUon
to begin construction of an
85,000·aquare·toot classroom
bullding at Saddieback Colle1e
in Miaaioo Viejo bas won ap-
prov al from the s tate As·
sembly's Education Committee.
The measure was approved in
a 9-0 vote Tuesday, with tour
committee members absent. It
will now go to the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee,
which is expected to conalder
the appropriations bill In about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265, is sponsored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson <R·Newport\Beach>. Ir
It wins final approval from tbe
full Assemble and state Senate,
c:onstruction funds will be al·
located from the Capital OuUay
Fund for Higher Education.
Saddleback College Superin·
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was in Sac r a mento for
Tuesday's vote, said the $2
million will allow the communi·
ty college to begin the first
phase ol the S7.S million con-
struction project.
He said full fundinj for the
classroom buildin& was initially
included in this year's state
budget. However, during a last
minute budget-cutting session,
members of the State Education
Finance Committee deleted the
money, Lombardi said.
Saddleback College officials
say the school is in desperate
need of more classroom space
due to rapid increases in enroll·
ments over the past five years.
ln his 1981·82 budget report for
t he Sadd le back Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
assist a nt superintendent for
business, said district enroll·
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
o.My .............. , ............
TOP DOG Casey. a six-month·old shell~·. gets special at·
tention from owner Michelle Stewart. 12. after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids' dog s how at Newport Beach's
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dogs vied for honors ranging
from ~st groomed to best trick Casey was 1ud ged best
overall.
Mesa files lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
wells in late June after process·
ing drilling applications through
Even if Saddleback re<'eives
the $2 million under the bill now
being considered, the district
will still have to come up with
$5.5 million to complete the
classroom building.
Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Wood has fil ed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
lo halt Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit, filed last Wednesday,
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 to take ·~the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro·
the slate and Orange County's 1 Environmental M anagemenl ·
Agency. "Raising that money will be
the next step," Lomba rdi said.
"But where it is going to come
from we don't know yet."
Schools cut costs
of driver training
A Santa Ana driving school
has been chosen by Newport·
Mesa Unified School District
trustees to offer driver training
lo an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about half of
the cost of last year's program.
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower of
two bidders for the contract
awarded Tuesday. Academy or
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach, quoted $132 a student.
The ~hool board trimmed
driver training, a requirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
would not offer its previous an-
nual $60·per·trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
summer and will continue to of.
fer S60 per driver
The driving program. to be of·
rered to students before and
after school and on weekends ,
will cost the district about $5,400
in general funds and an un·
known amount for electricity re·
quired lo ope rate dri vi ng
simulators .
In addition to behind·the·
wh eel training i n autos
furnished by the firm. the driv·
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near thoe dis trict's Newport
Beach headquarters.
Last year. the district painted
··streets" and "intersections" on
a Newport Harbor High parking
lot to offer behind·the·wheel ex·
perience lo youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver, a school official
noted.
Wood contends the oil firm ig-
nored requirements for city
dr illing permits and laws passed
in 1964 lo prohibit new drilling.
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days under an arrangement with
Sarto's attorneys. Rutan and
Tucker of Santa Ana.
"I am not seeking a tern·
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction al this
time," Wood said. "It's part of
a plan for getting cooperation
for an expedited trial. '
·'Jn return, they (Barto at·
torneys) have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have had
a trial."
Barto actua lly gained ap·
provaJ early this summer from
the state to sink four new wells
on its 18·acre property lying ad·
jacent to a 60-home subdivision
in south Mesa.
.. Part of the plan." Wood said
of hjs court action, "is, if we can
a~ree to basic facts. that both of
us will file motions for summary
judgment.''
Meanwhile, he said. Barto will
continue to pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
where homes are valued al
about $250,000.
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Orange Ooaat DAIL v PILOT/Thurt day, Augu1t 13. 1981
Irvine coast status
critical for cities
All effort to pla<'e a stretch of
coastline Into Irvine's city boun·
darles was boosted last week by
that city's Planning Commission.
The commission recom·
mended that the coasta l area
between lhe cities of Lagun&.1
Beach and Newport Beach be
placed into Irvine s phere or in
fluence. which is defined as an
a rea outside city boundaries but
earmarked for future annexation.
Now the Irvine City Council
will consider that recommenda·
tion and decide whether to
forward it to t he Orange County
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission, which decides city boun·
daries and sphe res of influence.
Some officials of Newport
Beach, which now has a sphere or
influence that takes in much of
the territory sought by the Irvine
PlaMing Commission, have in·
dicated they won't give up t he
area without a fight.
La_guna Beach officials are
a lso eyeing the s ituation but
haven't yet made any public
statements on the matter.
The city that ultimately an.
nexes the coastal a rea stands to
reap a large a mo unt of sales tax
revenue from the commercial de
ve lopment planned there. includ
ing three hotels .
Officials from Irvine say that
their city s hould garner these
benefits because Irvine would
suffer most of the pollution and
traffic costs associated with
coastal development.
Newport Beach officiaJs say
they s hould get the revenu~
because they are going to suffer
most of the costs.
Undoubtedly. both con ten·
tions contain a m easure of truth.
It is the responsibility of the
Local Agency Formation Com·
mission to place the politics of
the two cities aside and decide
the question on the basis of objec·
tive q uestions relative to the
costs each city will bear due lo
coastal development, traffic pal·
terns. natur al boundaries and a
number or other criteria.
Don't rush planning
Trying to win simultaneous
city review of two villages pro·
posed for Irvine. the Irvine Com·
pany has off ercd to pay for some
temporary help at the city plan·
ning department.
The I rvine Citv Council
would be well advised to kindly
turn down this off er and tell the
city planning staff to continue
processing onl y one village at a
t ime.
A total of 40.000 new res1·
dents are expected to li ve in the
city after the completion of the
two villages. which are to be built
to the east and west of existing
Woodbridge.
The immense logistics of proc-
essing both villages at the same
time might create a situation in
which thorough city review of
each village would be hard to
achieve . The addition of tern·
porary planners is no substitute
for the expert. m eticulous city
planning for which Irvine has
become known
Addition ully. s imultaneous
city review of hoth proposed
villages r aises the specter that
both might seek City Council de·
velopment approval at the s ame
time.
Thousands of acres of vacant
land in Irvine h ave been ap·
proved for development.
It would be unwise for the
City Council to give premature.
simultaneous development ap·
proval to both villages.
Irvine city Director of Com·
munit~ Development Larry
Hogle has a dopted the right ap·
proach in telling his staff to begin
developme nt review only on
Village 12, the.sma ller of the two
I rvine Compa n y -proposed .
vill ages.
The c ity staff is now con-
sidering Village 12, which is to be
built east of Woodbridge. Village
12 will have fewer traffic prob·
lems than Village 14. the other
village the Irvine Company pro·
poses to build west or Wood·
bridge.
Review a nd approval of
Village 12 should precede a ny r e-
view and approval of Village 14.
Worth a second look
A Saddleback Coll ege ad·
ministrator h as r ecommended
that district t rustees reconsider a
plan they rejected last year to
lease a portion of the Mi ssion
Viejo campus to a private de-
veloper
Last .J anuarv the trustees
sought dt'velopment proposals
from private firms for the 23-acre
parcel. located at the north end
of the campus near Marguerite
Parkway
At that time. district offi c ials
estimated the leasing agreement.
which would have included the
construction of condominiums. a
shopping center a nd commercial
offi ces on the property. would
geqerat e about S400.000 a year
for the college.
Trustees and administrator s
favoring the plan recommended
the money be used to purchase
more land for the North Campus
in Irvine a nd pay for construction
or a new classroom building at
the Mission Viejo campus.
Steadily declining fina ncia l
assistance from the state and
rapidly increasing enrollments at
the school prompted discussion of •
the lease. which would have pro·
vided an income source indepen
de nt of the st ate allocation.
But a fter tax -cutting in
itiative Proposition 9 failed las t
~·ear. and it appeared state funds
would continue flowing. the ma·
jority of t he trustees successfully
argued the district should hold
off on e ntering into a lease agree·
ment
ln a recent budget report to
the seven Saddleback trustees.
Roy Barletta, assistant superin·
tcndent for business, said if state
funding for community colleges
continues at current levels. ac·
companied with yearly 15 percent
enrollment increases at Sad·
d leback, the district could face
multi million-dolla r budget def·
icits in the near future.
Saddleback trustees should
not count on financial assistance
from the state to keep pace. Pro·
grams to provide private income
to the district. s uch as the lease
of the Marguerite Parkway land.
should be a prior ity item for dis·
cussion during the upcoming
school year.
Opinions expressed in the spate abOve are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader tomment Is invil·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714)
6•2·4321 .
L.~. Boyd/Clwrchill's memory
The memory of Winston Churchill
mut t have been something special. I
can't believe that he could recite all
or •'The Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire, .. aa bas been
claimed. It'• known, though, that be
could deliver every line in at leut a
~pie or Shakespeare's plays.
'
During just the first week of this
year the United States used more
••• o~e Utan au of lta armed forces
used throughout World War U. An
astonishing statistic. wha t?
Credit Mark Russell wlth that ring.
In& cry: "Sic Semper Adidas."
Meaning "We'll never run out of
s neakers."
The ancient Roman ~ Ovid had
thls to St1' about baldneta: "Udy la a
neld wit.bout fr'US, I plant without leav~. or a bead wtlbout hair."
Thomas P. Haley
Publlwr
ThotMa A. MurpltlM
Editor ·
Barbara KNlbiclt
Edltorl•I Page Ed itor
• '~,1\iE Bf>LJTIFUL,CLEANJRtSH AIR. I I . P11Y "™~'S Na' ENQK,.lf~ tvtRYOO. I
FDR memorial panel endures
WASHI NGTON -For more years
than they like t o remembe r ,
Republicans ground their teeth in
frustr ation over Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, who rode roughshod . with ir-
ritating good humor. over.the GOP.
Now, of course, the shoe is on the
other foot. Ronald Reagan, an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the remnants
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North, South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress. Reagan stage!i •
the modern equivalent of FDR's radiO"
'"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people. llis delivery is every bit as
persuasive as FDR's and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS 1t·s not surpnsmg that
one of the hoariest boondoggles to sur·
vive the onslau ght of Pres ident
Reagan's budget cutlers is the FDR
Memorial Commission. For more than
a quarter of a century. the commission
has been squandering lhe taxpayer s'
money in a bootless attempt to achieve
a suitable memorial to the only presi·
dent who ever was and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 1955. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac·
complishing anything in the years to
come. In fact. its whole reason for ex·
istence was obliterated years ago, when
p rivate donor s e rected a modest
memorial to FDR 1n downtown
Washington -a marble block on Penn
sylvania Av<:nue outside the Archives
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two members of Congress.
Reps Dan Glickman, D·Kan . a nd Bill
Dannemeyer, R Calif., recenlly tried to
Q
-JA-Cl-A-ND-IR-SO-N -~
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FDR commission. they
were astonis h ed to learn that
Roosevelt's ghost still car ries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The feck less bipartisan duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that lhe FDR commission was a waste
of money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had · been
spent tn the 26 years of the com-
m ission's existence wi th literally
nothing to show for it Another several
hundred thous and dollars has been
spent on various projects.
Glickman. who was in three·comered
pants when FDR died. even brandished
a photograph of the existing FDR
memorial on the floor of the llouse. and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
beside the m onument .. If any
memorial is erected lo me . . I should
like it to cons ist of a block of stone
about the size of this tOvaJ OfficeJ desk.
and plciced in the center of that green
plot m front of the Archives Building."
It was all to no avail The GLickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated, 201 216 The vote had an
eerie touch lo it The House's electronic
voting system broke down for the first
timl' in thn·e year s. prompting one
member to "h1i.per to Glickman. "The
~h.ost of FDR has returned."
What astonis hed Glickman was not
J U~l the econom)-m1nded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission's
SJ0.()00 budget intact like Reps Jack
Kl'mp. R·N.Y .. and Jim Jones, D·Okla
but the way som e of his fellow
Dl•mocrats chided him as a traitor lo
hi~ party who was ··playing into the
hands of the Republicans.··
THE HOUSE SHOWDOWN over the
FDR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission. The author . Lucette
Lagnado. called it "a classic example
of the truism that a government agen·
cy. once created, never dies; it just
keeps on growing."
Footnote· Congressional supporters of
thl' r DR Memorial Commission ob
sl·rvc that building a monument to FDR
would be one wa) to assure the end of
the f'DR comm1ss1on
~
Be sure you don't get sick at night
To the Editor:
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New param edics may come
for price." Some cities. this article stat·
ed. s uch as Fountain Valley are con·
sidering charging for the paramedics
services. As we a ll know. the
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless laves. They can't be com-
mended too highly
But what astounded me is the quoted
ambulance transportation rates to the
hospital -$100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich, it can be a lot to those
who are just making their pay checks
meet. I reckon those deciding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
'Are you supposed to jusl die if you're a
medical emergency and can't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high a mbulance
rates, I called the billing otrice of one
ambulance company asking ii the rates
were really $100. The lady explained
that they charge $75 base rate plus $S a
mile. Also, rates are increased if it ia a
night call. (Be sure and don't get sick at
night.) And when em ergency red lights
a nd siren are used, the patient is
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high lo start with. The burden
still falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance r ates to cover the am·
bulance fee.
As Senator Edward Kennedy saJd -
and I wholeheartedly agree -we are
the only country In the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the pa,amedics and am·
bulance services can't exist on notbini.
The solution. if any. is difficult to co~
up with. Socialized medicine may seem
like an ideal solution but in those coun·
tries with socialized medicine. the
quaUty Of medical care declines aa the
perllOf\ geU older, and is almost non·
existent for the elderly.
SO if there is a medlcaJ emergency
with my household. I'll call the local
rrlendly chlropraclol'.
J .R.SASSO
Manipula tion
To the Editor:
An article about the Irvine coast HY•
there will be homH 10 expenalve that It
Is tttmed tbe "a.hetk cout" and tM
Irvine Company wW have to advertlle
naUonally and lotemaUonally to ftad
buyers.
Well, there toes the old arpmat that all thllr demandl for fMt :-~
.,.. becaute tt ta nMded so our ~ldren
will have a place to live. I've often won·
dered what's left for the individual in
this modern world. They've been
manipulated by the advertis-
ing/marketing world into how they
think about everything. There's a prop-
aganda statement to prove every
point, but there's one I will never
belit:ve again.
I've long suspected lhat the Irvine
Company and other large, out-of·lown
development companies really didn"t
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -and I might add. I don't ap·
predate that kind of propaganda and
manipulation.
DONALD K. SPENCER
TELEPHONE YOUR
L ETTE R TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Bypass need ed
To l))e Editor:
A major help in the traffic problems
of Newport Beach would be the building
of a straight, four-lane road. some place
south of Corona del Ma r, linking Coast
Highway with Bonita Canyon Road.
This should be built for and known as
the Corona del Mar bypass. This s hould
be done before there is any more de·
velopment. down coast or in Newport
Center.
Then. and only then. s hould lhe Irvine
Company proceed with logical and now
acceptable developments; s uch de·
velopments would become an asset for
us, rather than something that we must
now fear and fight. Without such a road
in place no matte r what the hopes and
promises, there wrn be serious negative
impact on the whole area.
N o l 'traile rs'
To the Editor:
JEAN MORRIS
ln regards to the term "trailer park."
J would like to clarify a point. A
"trailer" Is a recreational vehicle,
towed by a car or light truck.
A "mobile home" la, and should be
called, a manufactured housing unit, a
dwelling. Such dwellings are only
"mobile" Crom tbe factory to the site.
AU manufactured houslo1 u.nlt.1 sold
sin ct July of 1880 are· clualfled as real
• /,pflf'r~ /rt>m rt'odtr11 art u'flcc>mt Tht
right 10 rondnur letttr!t to /1t lptll't' or
t>hmmolf' 11/>t>/ •~ r4>•;r1,1d l.tllrr.t 1l) 300
U'(>rd• OT ltu IL'lll ~ gtt>tn prt/trt>nC(' All
lctlttr$ must mcllld1 llRnoturt and 111alhn11
c.ddrtH hut nomf'~ mny /'>(' wtthMld on rt
qu11t t/ ~u//rC'irnl rt'oaon I~ opporf'nt
P11tl ry u,11 nof be 111Ablt1hfd l .. tltf'r• may ~
trlrpltOflt'd lo 6.f2·r.ot6 Namf' and pltonl'
11J1mbfir n/ Utt~ conlntlulnr mu.ct hf gu~ /nr
u·rrh ·Oft'1'1 purpo~H
.. -
property. An assessed vaJue is placed
on s aid dwelling and placed on the
pro1)(lrty tax rolls in the same manner
as site built homei.
THEREFORE. 1t behooves all of us to
stop caJling manufactured housing com
mumt1es trailer parks. courts, tin box
es. etc .. etc. which downgrades people
to ~ccond class c1t1zens, or '"living on
the wrong side of the tracks" image.
I f you have never been to the
Manufactured !lousing show at.Dodger
Stadium, you a rc in for a very pleasant
s urprise. The homes are luxurious and
Jn no way s hould be s landered by caU·
ing them "trailers ...
FRANK H BRADLEY'
Cnicial vol e
To the Editor:
Newport Beach City Council mem·
hers are about to vote on Newport
Center. They are all good people. They
have been propagandized by lhe no·
growlhers and the build·ever ything-you-
canners.
I hope that the day before the vole
they each can ride through Newport
Beach. then quietly sit in deep counsel
with themselves Then J hope lhey have
guts enough to vote lheir deep feelings
about our and their city.
FRANKLIN S. GOOD
Cartoon nii s inf onned
To the Editor:
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on Mrs.
Reagan paying $75.000 for a Steuben
bowl, the previous week TV news
explained the bowl was worth $75,000,
however Mrs. Reagan purchased it for
$8.000.
As the cartoon 1s a gross case of
m isinformation I suggest the s ame
space be given to correcting the error.
The fact Is. if your paper had been on
its toes the cartoon 11houJd have bee'n
canceled.
L. KEPPLER
CllllYSll
It '1 nice that President llea1an can
declare the controllers' ttrike over and
10 otr on vacatlo9 and leave the rest of
us to Opt t.be mi"ss.
DI SO UST ED
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-"
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Augu1t 13, 1981
Male model sues Law school oaths OK'd
Man says '•Playboy' ad damaging • Bar association to allow r eli gious bias i n admi ssions
Pl'M"SFI£L.0, Mall. (AP) -
A cablnet lnataller whOI• pie·
ture appeared In an advertlle·
ment fOlt Playboy Ma1uJne over
tbe cap tion •'The Playboy
Reader -his lust ls for llfe" i!l!•nta $2!0,000 ln damages from
lfte maiutne.
The Judie who beard the
lawsuit said he will Issue a de·
etalon in about a week.
The picture, which appeared
durina a 1977 promotional cam·
palp In The New York Times
and airport and train station
posters, shows mustachioed
Thomas Mazzeo on water skls.
Mazzeo said the picture was
used without his permission.
"Il made me sound dirty. It
loade me sound like a sex
.fiend," testified Mazzeo, 40, of
" . •
•
Bicycle Safety
Safety seminar hourly
at Huntington Center
daily thru Sun.
1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
; ALL MAKES!
·833-0555
Ask for Roy,
lWl SPECIAUST at
HOWARD Chtvrolet
c-oleo.. -°""" s.. NEWPORT BEACH
cars•bikes•
•skat eboards*
trucks*baby
carriages•tea
carts *trikes
rol lerskates •
walker !°>· toy s
•wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods•coupes•
trailers*hard
tops•convert-
ibles*motor
homes*lawn
mowers* lim os
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's••••
•typingtables
wheelbar rows•
recreational
vehicles* golf
carts*model
trains*blkes
*pianos*cars
ref rlger at ors
*skates••••••
If It 's got
wheels,
~ you'll move
· It faster In a
Dally Pllol .
classified
·ad. Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad·
vlserwlll
help you
turn your
wheels Into
cash.
'
Plttlfteld, a father ot four who
1ln11 ln hi• church cholr.
Maueo aald dwina the two-
day, non-Jury lrlal berore
Berkthire Superior Court Judie
William Simona that the ad·
vertlument falsely Identified
him u a Playboy reader and
damaaed bis repulallon and
business.
·'I don't think bousewlvea
want cabinetmakers with a
playboy's lust for life in their
kitchens,'' he said.
Playboy attorney Stephen
Olesky contended that Mazzeo
s uffered "no measurable
damage other than the loss of
pay the agency would normally
make to an amateur model" and
suggested the Judge award
Muzeo "the $200 to $250 we pay
for amateur models.··
HAS SUGGESTION
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese III told the American
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian jails. He spoke in
New Orleans.
NJ:W ORLEANS <AP) -The
American Bar A11oclatlon bu
amended lt1 atandard of ac-
creditation by lettln& church·
supported law schools dla·
crlmlnate on the baaia or re·
ll&lon.
The controversial amendment
appeared to tall Wednesday on a
voice vote, but on a standlna
vote at the ABA House of
Delegates, counted by tellers, It
passed 147-127.
The House then granted ac·
creditatlon for Oral Roberta
University 's 0 . W. Coburn
School of Law In Tulsa. Okla.,
which opened In 1979.
The school previously was de·
nled approval because it re-
quired students to swear an oath
of religious belief. pledging to
follow the example of Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
muat 1upport and exemplify the
code, and._ ~rina lncludea tetta of
rellsio..a• oellef.
Accreditation la a serious mat·
ter since graduates of law
schools which do not have ABA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer in most statn .
The university aued the ABA
in U.S. District Court. The Judi•
issued an injunction forbidding
the ABA to deny provisional ac·
credltatlon until arter the House
of Delegates decides the issue.
At a meeting last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be In
·'substantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbldding dis·
crimination on the ground of
race, color, religion. national
origin or sex.
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
A new standard was drawn by
an ABA committee which
waters down the old anti·
dlscrimlnallon clau.e by add·
lne:
"Nothing herein shall be con-
strued to prevent a law school
from havlne a reUgioua affilia·
lion and pUJ'pOle and adopting
policiea of admission and
employment that directly relate
to such afflllalion and purpose
so long as notice of such policies
has been provided to applicants,
students , facult y and
employees."
Dean Gordon Schaber of the
M cGeorge School of Law of the
University of the Pacific.
chairman of the committee, said
the exception was based on the
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom.
5th MONTH
ANNIVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ 98 ORGANIC
APPLE 1h
JUICE Gal.
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PLUMS
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FOR
SELECTION OF TROPICAL FRUIT
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SEEDLESS WATERMELON GRAYEllSTlllE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 00
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CHUCK STEAK BACK RIBS PORK ROAST (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like) c $ 49 $ 29
lb. lb. lb.
SIL VER TROLLED
WHOLE SALMOll GROUND BEEF
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6 to 9 lb. average
$2~.~
NEIGHBOR'S
Stop by or ':riday & Sotvrd:ay
fCN' a taat" of some of Ol·• 'ine
California Ranch Market Products.
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10 lb~
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FOR OUR SENIOR CITIZEN NEIGHBORS
10% DEE c;,~~:;:
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WE HAYE TOPAZ
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THURSDAY, AUG. 1,, 19'1
BUSINESS BS
STOCKS B7
Sylvia Porter says
take advantage of
'tax sweeteners' ... B7
D
a
l)id earlier fall cause L8g11Dari 's death?
8y STEVE MITCHELL .. ...., ..........
Three police officers and a
rlde·along clvlllan aaw Robert
Gary Wardman atrike hi• head
on the eavement whUe being re-
moved from • patrol car behind
ttle ,Laguna Beach police station
23 days a10.
Dormant
boards
assa·iled
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of-~ ..........
The Confidentiality and
Privacy Control Board haa not
met in five years, yet it is still
alive and well according to the
files or Orange County govern·
ment. .
The manage ment and plan-
ning team for the former Starr
Ranch <now Caspers •Regional
Wilderness Park, located east of
San Juan Capistrano> and a
committee formed to study the
Serrano C ommunit y
Park/ Recreational Historical
Complex apparently have never
met since being formed in 1975.
That the committees still exist
-on paper at least -is upset·
tin1 to county Supervisor Bruce
Nestande. Wednesday he pro-
posed a new set of guidelines to
control the formation of board.a
and committees and monitor
their work. ·
Jn a three·page letter to fellow
supervisors. Nestande proposed:
-Imposition of a "sunset
rule" that would permit the an-
nual dissolution of any commit·
tee, unless supervisors took ac·
tion to keep the panel function-
ing.
-A requirement that the
board review annually the work
or all boards and committees.
Nestande conceded t hat the
value or such annual reports
may be questionable.
-Annual approval by the
board of allocations to each
comtnlttee.
"These changes, I believe,
would simplify the administra-
tion of boards, commissions and
committees and give the board
o( s upervisors the effective con-
trol mechanism it has been seek-
ing over the past several years ."
Nestande said.
Nestande said that more than
100 county boards and commit·
tees eltist.
·'This somewhat chaotic situa-
tion has created a record-
keeping nightma re ror those
charged with keeping an ac-
curate list of active panels, not
to mention their changing mem-
bershiJ)6."
An October 1980. study
showed that stipends paid to
various committee members
totaled $1Z7.145 annually.
That figure was lower than the
$138.000 spent on stipends in
1978, Nestande pointed out. (In
1978, the equivalent of $508,000 in
county staff time was \lied by
the committees ; no such figure
was contained in the 1980 re-port.)
The super visor said past ef-
forts by the. board to control the
proliferation of committees has
failed.
Nestande's suseestlons will be
considered by the board Tues-
day.
The four witnesses later told
investigators the man's bead hit
the ground from a distance of
between three and 20 lnches.
• And, based on a patholo1i1t's
report, due today. that distance
is ''not consistent" with a severe
skull fracture whlch resulted In
the S>year-old spa salesman's
death nine and a half hours after
he was taken Into police custody.
Meanwhile, a police depart-
ment investliation into
circumstances surrounding lhe
jailhouse death o( the Laguna
Beach man was expected to be
completed today and forwarded
lo act.in& Laguna Beach police
....., ........ "--
AT IT AGAIN Iranian immigrant Ali Roushan works in his
Costa Mesa metal s hop's parking lot on his fourth sculpture. "To~ado:· while awaiting results of lawsuits regarding ci-
ty nghts to r egulate erection of his three previous big red
structures and Roushan·s const itutional rights to free(iom of
txpress ion. Rous han says he'll erect his latest 70-fool work
in about a month. topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands.
Love-eager rhino
stages a getaway
It's rhinoceros m ating season
at Lion Country Safari in Irvine
and one of the homed beasts got
so carried away that he busted
through a containment gate this
morning at the wild animal com-
pound, said park spokesman
Vi rginia Brauer.
The thick-skinned animal
sauntered over to a fi eld just
north of Lion Country Safari at
1: 15 a.m., she said, adding that
park rangers were able to quick·
ly lead the rhino back lo the
compound.
This morning 's incident is
a lmost identical to an escape bid
made by a rhino last month, she
said.
In both cases the strong.
heavyweight beasts were able to
knock down a gate at a tem-
porary holding area for the
rhinos she said.
The rhinos were moved from
their old pen to the holding area
early this summer because the
pen was too near an open-air
amphitheater that is being con·
structed at Lion Country Safari.
Rabies clinic set
tonight in Irvine
The Irvine city Animal
Se rvices Department will
s ponsor a canine rabies clinic at
7 tonight in the parking lot of Ci·
ty Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road,
Irvine.
The price for rabies vaccina-
tions will be $3 per dog. The
clinic is for dogs over the age of
four months. Residents can also
register their dogs at tonight's
clinic.
chief Nell Purcell for review.
Purcell a.Lao was to receive the
w,ritten report from Dr. Peter
Yatar or the county coroner's of·
fice which' indicates Wardman
might have received a severe
skull fracture before police took
custody or the man.
Wardman was round lying on
Business
• can remain
in lwme
Laguna Beach planning com-
missioners approved an
architect's request to keep his
business in an old Cape Cod cot·
tage zoned for residential use.
Commissioners, in a 3-2 split
vote, with Steven Riggs and Art
Casebee r opposed, Jack
Cressman was allowed to use his
secondary residence at Glenn-
eyre and Cleo streets for his
architectural business .
Jn approving the business use,
the commission majority said it
interpreted the city law to read
the house does not have to be the
primary residence of the appli·
cant, in this case. Cressman.
Cressman sought the home oc·
cupation use after being denied
a zone change to commercial for
the property in May 1980.
In denying the zone change,
the council said it reared "spot
zoning" where the new com-
mercial designation allowed.
Cressman moved his archltec·
tural equipment into the build-
ing anyway in mid-February,
and was told in April by a build-
ing inspector that he'd have to
apply for the home occupation
use or move the business out or
the old wood house.
The architect had indicated he
might have to tear the building
down and construct a larcer
duplex should his request be de-
nied.
500 compete
in lifeguard
• • competition
More than 600 lifeguards from
a s far away as Australia.
Florida and New York began
competition today in the 1981
U .S . Lifesaving Association
Championships at Salt Creek
Beach in Laguna Niguel.
Competition will resume Fri-
day at noon and culminate with
an awards ceremony at 7 p.m.
At 2:30 p.m. Friday, represen·
tatives or lifeguard teams en-
tered in this year's competition
will take part in the grueling
iron man event, which includes
rowing. swimming and ruMing.
At 6:30 p.m. Friday Lifeguard
teams will take part in t he
Laguna Niguel-Salt Creek relay.
a n event which pits team
agains t team in dories and
swimming.
There will be 11 events held on
both days of the competition.
The U.S. Llvesaving Association
sanctioned championships at
Salt Creek have been held at the
Laguna Niguel beach for the
past three years.
the sidewalk outside the Main
Street bar on South Coast
Highway July 22 at about 1 a.m.
Paramedics called to the
scene determined the man was
intoxicated, Purcell said, and he
was subsequently transported to
the city jail and placed in a cell.
At about 10:30 the next morn-
ing, officers found the man un-
consicious and not breathing.
Despite efforts by firemen,
poli c e and paramedic s ,
Wardman died at South Coas t
Medical Cente r shortly after
noon.
Following a preliminary
autops y 1report that showe d
Wardman died of a skull frac-
ture, Purcell s aid Officer
C harles Maine, 29, was in-
terviewed by superiors and pre-
sented a written report on the in-
cident. In both reports, Purcell
said. the officer "stated that
there was no dropping of the in·
di vi dual or striking or the head.'·
But after purportedlx being
pressured by fellow officers to
tell the truth. Maine went to
superior s a nd ad m itted
Wardman had slipped out of his
grasp and fallen on his bead
while being removed from a
patrol car.
T he officer has since been
placed on adminstrative leave
with pay until conclusion of in·
vestigations into the incident.
In Dr. Yatar's report, the
pathologist "has established the
time of {he skull fracture as
between nine and 12 hours prior
to Wardman's death," Capt
Purcell said.
In a telephone conversation
with th e pathologis t late
Wednesday. Purcell said he
learned the autopsy ·'further
established that the documented
dropping Incident lnvolving our
officers on July 22 while being
removed from a police wlit was
not consistent with a severe
skull fracture of this nature."
The acting police chief said
taped re-enactments of the Inci-
dent. performed by the officers
and civilian involved, "is consis-
tent with Dr. Yatar's opinion."
"We have det e rmined the
dropping of the victim was
between three and 20 inches
<from the ground )," Purcell
said
He said the difference in dis·
l a nce es timated by the wit-
nesses is due 1.0 the various loca-
tions at which the three officers
and ride-along civilian observed
the fall.
"Based on Dr. Yatar·s opin-
ion, a s kull fracture of this
magnitude could not occur from
a fall or dropping from a height
or three lo 20 inches .
·'One can certainly, at this
point, conclude Mr. Wardman
apparently had a terrific fall
prior to our arriving, either
right there on the sidewalk
wh e r e he w as found , or
somewhere else that would fit
within the nine to 12 hours."
In addition to the in-house in·
vestigation due today. the dis-
trict attorney's office is conduct-
ing an investigation into the
jailhouse death.
Deputy District Attorney John
Conley said the r esults or that
probe should be completed late
this week or early next week.
·Crash wreckage not
missing area plane
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... Olf., ..........
The crumpled fuselage of an
airplane in a remote area of the
Sierra Nevada is not the light
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months
ago.
Authorities from Fresno Coun·
ty. who spotted the wreckage
last month, at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted off
from the Mammoth Lakes
airport last March bound for
nearby Bishop.
The plane, which never
reached Bishop, is believed to
have crashed in the mountains.
That plane was piloted by 25·
year-old Robert Reed and was
carrying 26-year-old Michael
Thompson, the son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken
Thompson.
Sgt. Ken Abell, a member of
the Fresno Sheriff's Search and
Rescue Team. said he was able
to make out an identification
number on the w r e c kage
Wednesday after developing a
set-of aerial photographs.
He said the number does not
match that of the Cessna 210
that has been sought.
Because or this discovery.
Abell s aid , autho rities have
called off a search of the moun·
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into \the area near
Convict Lake le\ scrutinize the
wreckage.
AbelJ said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting it. He
s aid the call lettera on the
wreckage were checked against
a federal registry which ind1cal-
ed the crash was more than five
years old.
He said his department does
not in vestigate air crashes that
old
Abell. who said be stripped
down a helicopter so it would be
light enough to ma ke a pass over
the wre<'kage to take the photo·
graphs, saM he's prowled the
mountains lo see if he could spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane carrying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he saw nothing during
several passes.
"We have nothing else to look
for," he said. "We have nowhere
else to go unless someone comes
up with a clue."
'Queen/ set
for seniors
"The African Queen," star-
ring Humphrey Bogart and
Katharine Hepburn, will be
s hown free to Laguna Beach
senior citizens at 2 p.m. Aug. 21.
The film program , sponsored
by the Senior Citizens Club and
Laguna Federal Savings and
Loan, and will be shown in the
South Coast Theater.
For free tickets, contact the
club center at 515 Forest Ave.
Mesa author finds being single can be profitabk
Popular best-selling book claims living alone likeable experience
By JOEL C. DON
ot•Dml!Y ..........
Lynn Shahan was beamlog.
Her first book had been out only a month
and it was already No. 4 on Time maguine'a
best seller list and heralded ·lo full-pa1e
newspaper ads.
And all she did was alt down at the
typewriter to put toiether a practical fuide on
her lifestyle: being single.
"Uvlng Alone and Liking It" coven the
Costa Mesa woman's thoughts on learn1n1 to del
pend on oneself: to eat, play and amu1e yourself
without that overwhelmln1 need for another
~arm body.
"It's a lifestyle that in effect bu come into
tu own when you talk about 25 percent of the
population being stngle," aaid the 39-year-old
Ms. Shahan. "tt'a an acceptable Ufestyle. Ten
yeara aro it wasn't. ..
She aaid at one time people believed "there
waa aomeWnc 1tran1e about the person wbo
wun't marrlecl and had three chlldfell by the
Umt bt WM Jt." .
Ill. Shahan learned boW to U" alone tbe
hard way. Sbe frequented atnJI• Nri and wu
quickly turfted off by wtaat the NW • a Ma ol
ullhappmeu. Sbe 1uffered tbrouO loaellMa.
depression and the 1udd• fear tiaat many a ·
perience as they approach middle a1e and find
they have no one special to come home to every ni~ht.
lnstead of landin1 a quick huaband or live-
in boyfriend aa a solution. she learned how to be
by herself and enjoy It.
Armed with her experience u a Garden
Grove high . school counaelor and encounten
with singles workshops and the like, abe decided
to help otbers overcome the fear of bein& alone.
•·At 30 Prince Charmine didn't come
a1ong," she said. "I woke up and realised that
that might never happen. Jt waa a very
lraumatlc realbatJon.
"1 Nw a need. I lulew lf I felt the way l felt,
others were Uke that too."
TJaoqh 1be'1 never been married, 111.
Shahan tald t.be booll ls 1eaerally lntended for
widowed and d1 vorced peraona u opPoMCI to
teen·aeen on tbelr flnt Ume out from bome.
·ReMarch for the book included at*Mlan«
at seminars where 1be found dlvorctd people
lost and abandoned ln their new-round ltf e u
sing.lei.
ln addttJon to provjdinc a pradlca.I ll•inl
1ulde oa money mana1emeat. •atlnc for one
and other bouMhold and IOOial Milli, Me a1lo
decided to tackle tbe emodoeal lllUet that
plaiue the •lnll• pel'IClll.
Tbou8b 16• bu enjoyed _,.T 7ean u a
~ . ---..... ......
-J
single person, Ms. Shahan said, "I'm not sour
on marriage at all. A lot of people have asked if
in writing the book I'm advocatin& llYinl alone
as a lifestyle. There's no question that Uvtn1
with someone Is better. Ir the rl&ht relatiouhlp
came along. I'd get married tomorro•.
"But I've seen so many people in bad rela-
tionsl\lps who are afraid to leave becauae
they're afraid of living alone."
Her living alone prescription t. almple, it
not just plain common sense. If you're single,
you're obligated to make a iood Ufe for
yourseU.
"Many people ruab off to search for the next
warm body. They don't "-ve a 1ood time for
themaelvea. Aa a re14Jt of that they don't ·know
themselves and they get Into a poor rela-
tionship.''
Ml. Shaban lsn 't a men>ber of any sln1I•
aroup or other .aocial boy·meeta·11rl or1anlu·
Uona. But ahe'a all for them.
''The only Ume I feel alene t. when J want
to be,'' IM said. "Bit for many~ belna 1
a&one Ls a very ltut feeliD(. It's an experlenee
that many people feel tbey don't have UM
ea'9dt1 <"' reaourc• to deal wttla."
Shi ow. u.. ca•lk 1attea ol ber boall, la
part, to the publl•ller' u.e Lot Anplei·MMd
Stratford PnU, owned W ltobert J . R.blaw.
, ........ ... .. -
•• I
e r·
)
I
ID Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thureday, August 13, 1981
Porkers show jogging
aids diseased he arts
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Pita runnJn1
on a treadmlll appear to prove Joi·
alna ts 1ood for humans. at least
those with some degree of heart dla·
ease, say University of California re ·
searchers.
exercised 11 trenuou1ly for five
months after their arterieJ were re·
duced 50 to 70 percent of normal size.
Two of the pi1.s died of heart attacks
during the gruellng runs luting up to
several ho\lrs.
College
building
backed
A bill to appropriate $2 mllllon
lo be1in construction of an
85,000-aquare-fool claasroom
building at Saddleback Collece After five months of atudyin1 the
Yucatan mlnlawlne . with
cardiovascular systems similar to
humans', a spokesman said Wednea·
day the findings rever!te a pre ·
liminary conclusion reached three
years ago.
Bloor, in an interview, warned that
persons with heart <iondllions should
Their blood
· In M1uion Viejo bas won ap.
proval from the state A•·
sembly's Education Committee.
The coronary arteries in the pigs in
the new experiments, in contrast tp
those used in 1978, were partly closed
surgically. Their so-called collateral
blood vessels with exercise grew lo 5
or 10 limes normal size, boostin1
blood now four to six times.
The improved circulation saved 40
• percent of lht h eart tissue
,•jeopardized by the clogged arteries
:: while in 10 other pigs kept off the
· motorized treadmill "only about 17
:·percent of the jeopardized tissue"
· was salvaged, Dr. Colin Bloor said.
: Bloor. a UC pathology professor
who directed the research, is presi·
dent of the San Diego County chapter
of the American Heart Association.
Bloor said the jogging pigs were
vessels with ex-
ercise grew to 5 or
10 times normal . size .
consult physicians. however, before
starting strenuous exercise .
By the lime the study ended, he
said, the pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per·
cent of maximum.
The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate, Bloor
said. While exercising, the pigs'
heart rates went up to 220 beats a
minute .
...........
A Yucatan miniswine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
San Diego. where scientists say study shows humans can prevent heart attacks
. by jogging. especially if they already have coronary disease
Countian perishes
'.Heat f atal after woman loses direction
BAKER, Calif. (AP I -A 75-year-i old woman who missed a freeway en-
. trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115-degree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
: days later. authorities said. ~· Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana ! died of heat exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
• Bernardino County sheriff's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
A piece of white cloth was found
tied to her cane, an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
of Long Beach and the widow of
former Long Beach City Councilman
~ Melvin L. Campbell, Mrs. Campbell
: had driven to the Victorville area
community of Apple Valley on Aug. 3
to visit a friend and started back
home last Thursday.
But instead or going south toward
Orange County she ended up going
100 miles northeast on Interstate 15
before stopping to ask directions at a
service station in this town 50 miles
from the Nevada border.
Mrs. Campbell was given direc·
lions to get back home and headed
of f on a se r v i ce road that
paralleled the freeway. But she
missed the overpass to the south·
bound lanes and continued on the
road even after it veered off from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand, and on Sunday her body
was found ins ide.
Before you buy any make of car,
CHIEF -Dr. PauJ M .
J ohnson or Irvine has
been elected p resl·
dent of the Orange
County Dental Socie·
l y, a 1,300-member
non-profit organiza.
ti on.
Channe l
levee
rise due
The Orange County
Board of Supervisor s
h as approved a $3 .5
million project to raise
t he height of levees
a lon g t he San Juan
Creek c hannel to pre·
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach .
The construction proj·
ect, which has been ap·
proved by t he State
Coastal Commission ,
will r aise the levees
from two to six feet by
1983 along a three-mile
stretch from the mouth
of the creek to where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmen·
tat Management Agency
o ffi c ia ls h ave been
plagued with s iltation
problems in the creek
bed for s~veral years,
and have been prevent·
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission has
refused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it removes to offset
the dredging costs. mak·
ing s uch a project too
expensive, officials say.
County oHicials say
raising the levees and
allowing the creek chan-
nel to rise to its natural
level will eliminate the
need for dredging, ad·
ding nature can then
tak e its co urse .
Construction is expected
to begin in the fall.
Party s et
in Irvine
The Irvine City Coun-
cil has approved a $350
expenditure for the
printing of invitations to
a party that will be held
later t h is year in
celebration of the 10th
anniversary of the city's
incorporation.
Invitations will be sent
to past and present city
orricials and members
or the business com·
munity, said city ad·
m inistra t o r Ken
Lazette.
The exact date and
location of t he party
have not yet been de-
termined.
; call me. I'll save yo\.I time & money
Benefit from my buying clout I buy office. low overhead. No salesmen,
or lease cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us.
~ 100 for airporate fleets.We can ob-any make of car. Then compare for
tain substantial savings for quali· yourself. (And tell your friends.I
CONVENIENT. DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST· BRAND
. f ied individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to 5. Robt Hix son Equipment
shopping & haggling. O.rs is a busy Co, ask for Virginia 714 64~4l0l.
Gr.ct Opftllllg We
SAVE AN EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE at,,...._ Joe & Pr•lo
Mo1t ~bole wheels of oheeH welgh s to 10 DOUDda. When you buy a
wbole wheel of cheese from u., we give you a
lK diacount from the 1ln1l• pound price on almost every cheese. Jr a wbo&e wheel weighs more tbaa 15 poond.s, you don't
have to buy It all. We'll
atve you • 10% discount O' you buy a chunk which
weighs more than 10 pounds. This Is a simple
way to beat Inflation-
and cheese always tastes better from a whole
wheel! Please visit our
newest Trader Joe's at the intersection or 17th Street , Newport Boulevard and Superior
Avenue (next to Denny's.
and Barclay's Bank).
MOW IM COSTA MISA
•
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
WP """" ar•y the C()n1Dlete COLOPLAST hne-the
lc!•g~r seii.ng dl!>DO!>able osromy aDOliances 111 the
"'°'IO E><e•y!hong l0t colo!.1omates •lecs!omates and
u•olld•y osromare~-au w•th convenoent COl.OP\.AST
O<~l•f'f COLOPlAST rehabtllf'f otuscase pack
economy
Be sure !O aSk I()( y0\.11 FR[[ copy of lNS!GHTS-
the puO'oeatl0'1 rna1 s tusr t0< y0u-arway<. •ncluOes
couoons 10< frtt samoles
7ta-3714
MOULTON PLAZA PHARMACY
23ee5 Moulton Perttway. uguna Hiiia
(Next to El Rancno Merket)
A BARO HOM£ HEALTH CAR£ CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
ond locn. afaodation
() p EN M () N F H ' f I •\ \ 1 Ii I ' ;\ l
S Al'l'HD/\Y J<> .\ :\1 ·I I' '1
t:.flc ---_..._ ___ _
The measure was approved ln
a 9-0 vote Tuesday, with four
committee members absent. It
will now go to the Aaaembly
Ways and Means Committee,
which la expected ~to consider
the appropriations bill in about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265, is sponaored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson (R·NewporhBeach). If
it wins final approval from the
full Assemble and state Senate,
c:onstruction funds will be al·
located from the Capital Outlay
Fund for Higher Education.
Saddleback College Superin·
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was in Sac rame nto for
Tuesday's vote, said the $2
million will allow the communl·
ty college to begin the first
phase of the $7.5 million con·
strucUon project.
He said full fundinB for the
classroom building was initially
included in this year's state
budget. However . during a last
minute budget.cutting session,
members of the State Education
Flnance Committee deleted the
money. Lombardi said.
Saddleback Colh;ge officials
say the school is in ct.esperate
need of more classroom space
due to rapid increases in enroll·
ril ents over the past five years.
In his 1981·82 budget report for
t he Saddle back Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
assistant s uperintendent for
business, said district enroll·
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
Even if Saddleback rereives
the $2 million under the bill now
being considered, the district
will still have to come up with
$5.5 million t o complete the
classroom building.
"Raising that money will be
the next s tep," Lombardi said.
"But where it is going to come
from we don't know yet."
De41y ,. ........... ,..., .......
TOP. DOG Casey. a six -month·old she ll~'. get~ ~pecial al·
tent1on from owner Mi chelle Stewart. 12 . after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids' dog show at :'<Jewport Beach·s
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dogs \'ied for honors ranging
from ~st groomed lo best trick. Case~ wu~ .1udged best
overall.
Mesa files lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Wood has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
to hal t Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit. fil ed last Wednesday,
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 to take "the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro·
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
wells In late June after process·
ing drilling applications through
the state and Orange County's
Environmental Management
Agency.
Wood contends the oil firm ig-
nored requirements for city
drilling permits and laws passed
in 1964 to prohibit new drilling.
Schools cut costs
of driver training
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days under an arrangement with
Sarto's attorneys, Rutan and
Tucker of Santa Ana.
"I am not seeking a tern·
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction at this
time," Wood said. "It's part of
a plan for getting cooperation
for an expedited trial
A Santa Ana driving school
has been chosen by Newport·
Mesa Unified School District
trustees to offer driver training
lo an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about half of
the cost of last year 's program .
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower of
two bidders for the contract
awarded Tuesday. Academy of
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach. quoted $132 a student.
The school board trimmed
driver training, a req\lirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
wouJd not offer its previous an-
nual $60-per-trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
summer and will continue to of·
. ,
fer $60 per driver.
The driving program, to be of·
fered to students before and
after school and on weekends.
will cost the district about $5,400
in general funds and an un·
known amount for electricity re-
quired to operate driving
simulators.
In addition to behind-the·
wheel training i n a u tos
furnished by the firm. the driv-
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near the district's Newport
Beach headquarters.
Last year, the district painted
"streets" and "intersections•· on
a Newport Harbor High parking
Jot to offer behind-the-wheel ex·
perience to youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver, a school official
noted.
"In return. they (Barto at·
torneys> have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have had
a t rial."
Barto actually gained ap-
proval early this summer from
the state to sink four new wells
on its 18-acre property lying ad·
jacent to a 60-home subdivision
in south Mesa.
"Part of the plan." Wood said
of his court action, "is. if we can
agree to basic facts, that both of
us will file motions for summary
judgment."
Meanwhile, he said, Barto will
continue lo pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
where homes are valued al
about $250.000.
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D1ilJ Piiat
THURSDAY, AUG. 13, 1981
COMICS
FEATURES
ENTERTAINMENT
TELEVISION
C6
C7 ca
C10
Tom Pestolesi and
U .S. volleyball
got ,a good dose of Romania
recently. See C3 .
No such thing as the Incredible Hulk? Here's one
You just don't recognize him without Ram jersey No . 32 • By JOHN SEV ANO of•~Pllll--
He is menacing as be is powerful and conais·
tent as he is punishing. His teammates call him
"CB" although "Incredible Hulk" might be more
apropos.
The second or th.ree children, Cullen Bryant is
unusually quiet a nd shy for someone as physically
intimidating as he Is. At 6-1, 236 pounds, he's as
genUe as a feather floating through the air.
That's off the field, though. When he's 'in a
game, it's an entirely different maller.
ONE NFL COACH REFERRED to Bryant as
having "the sam e power and effect as Earl
Campbell. The only difference Is speed.·'
Whereas Campbell might try to slash or rin·
esse on occasion, Bryant ls just the opposite. Put an opposing Jersey ln front of him and he 'd Just as
soon run over than go around It.
Bryant is remarkably durable considering his
style. Since becoming a starter in 1978, the
University of Colorado product has played In 47
st raight games. Last year, in handling the ball 236
times, he fumbled only once, tops among NFC
runrung backs. Jn eight years, he's handled the
ball 949 times and fumbled on just nine occasions.
AND, THAT'S NOT ALL.
He led the Rams in 1980 in rushing (807 yards>.
receiving (53 receptions) a nd total yardage
(1,193). All this and Bryant still hasn't re·
ceived the publicity some or his contemporaries
with half those numbers have. ,
"Cullen is Mr. Consistency," said his offensive
coordinator Lionel Taylor. "You never see much
about what he does until after the game is over.
"Some guys just have more fl are than others.
I've seen r unning backs who have played only two
big games and lived on that the rest of their lives.
I'd take a handful or CBs over those players all
the time."
"mE MAIN THING FOR ME is to play COD·
sistenl football," said Bryant softly as he relaxed
in his room ... The lack of publicity doesn't really
bother me.
"At this point, with the type of team I'm on
and the offensive line I have in front or me, I can
be as good as I want to be. If I carry the ball
enough I can gain more than a 1,000 yards easily.
No question."
The elusive "1.000-yard club" is the one goal
Bryant has yet to achieve. And, it's an achieve·
ment he wants badly.
"I would like to do it because that's the
measuring stick of running backs," said Bryant.
"The fact I'm an all-purpose back, though ... I
take more pride in that."
durtng the oH-season. five.to-six times a week to
maintain.
BRl'.ANT IS AN ARDENT USER of weights.
He has bench pressed a high of 520 pounds -far
and away the best on the Rams -and he hopes to
improve that to 550 and eventually 600 pounds
someday.
His total as 1t stands though -is tops in the
NFL.
"Especially in the game of football, the most
important investment vou have is the body," ex·
·I can be as good as I want to
be . If I carry the ball enough I
can gain more than 1.000 yards
easily. No question.·
plained Bryant, who once entered and became a
finalist (1975> in a Mr Colorado contest (he was
disqualified after reaching the final three when it
was learned he was a professional athlete).
Bryant claims it's partly because of bis size
and speed that he's been a success in the NFL.
"I DON'T REALLY KNOW how punishing I,
am," said Bryant "I've broken a lot of tackles but
I don't think I'm punishing as much as I'm in·
t1midating.
"If I can get 1n some good licks at the begin·
ning of a game it makes things a lot easier for
me."
It's hard to put Bryant's value in terms of
dollars and cents although the reported S225.000
he's making this year doesn't seem enough.
How much is a running back worth who can
block, run, catch passes and can be counted on in
the starting lineup every game?
BRYANT WILL TELL YOU he doesn't know
and doesn't really care All he's mterested in is
doing the same consistent job he's been doing -
without the fanfare.
"The recognition now 1s at a level where I re·
a lly don 't want to get any more." admitted
Bryant, adding that his private ltfe is more impor·
tant to him. "They say when you get into a Super
Bowl and have that kmd of exposure things are
never the same. That's true.
"I may not be on the cover of magazines but
people recognize me on the streets now and that's
good enough for me.··
. Dllltr ...... "--"'a-tee ..... Cullen Bryant's physique borders on the Incredible Hulk's reputation He's 6·1. 236 pound3. Bryant also takes pride in his physical stature
something he wor ked al for three hours a day
At the rate Bryant's progressing, thou.gh, the
h melight may be just beginning.
On the road--Angels are sometimes little devils
By EDZINTEL
Of .. o.I,, ...........
SOMEWH ERE OVER THE GREAT
NORTHWEST A thick, brown cloud
layer hovers over Mt. St. Helens as a
reminder of the comm anding power of
Mother Nature.
Above, some 50,000 feet In the air, a
727 jet full or passengers passes over
the geogr aphic phenomenon.
Two cam eras, one with a telephoto
lens, the other with a wide· angle attach·
ment, begin clicking simultaneously as
their operators jockey for position at
the same port hole windows.
A few rows in front of them, more
faces a re pushed against windows,
while other eyes peer over t heir
shoulders.
The center stage of attraction for t he
moment is obvious. Still, not every
person Is attentive lo the scene below.
In the aisle. a m assive chunk of
human being is c rawling along the
floor, trying to make a toddler with a
pacifier in her mouth notice his playful
act.
The toddler doesn't notice bu t
Edward Natha niel Ott, the Angels'
fulltime catche r and sometim e DC
("Designated Clown") pursues, much
to the delight or passing stewardesses.
"Hey, hey/' Ott bellows in a low.
baritone voice to the baffled child.
Finally, una ble to win her over, Ott
raises from the floor, staring blankly at
an elder ly woma n seated along the
aisle. "Can't figure it out,'' Ott says to the
woman. "Usually I have them eating
out of the palm of my hand."
"Here. t ry this ," says Bruce Kison, a
pitcher, as he tosses Ott a pacifier given
to him by the child's mother.
So this is what it's Like on the road
with a major league baseball team.
COMMENTARY
huh ? Fun and games, just like down on
the field or play.
Well, yes -sometimes. Not always,
but sometimes.
We began our road trip some two
hours ago on the freeways of Orange
and Los Angeles counties. Players
began arriving, some alone, some by
chaffeur-driven cars (in most cases. the
chaCCeurs are wives, all others are
friends> at Anaheim Stadium around 8
a. m. Players were carefully instructed
to arrive with luggage al 8 : 15 and be on
the bus at 9 a .m . for the commute to LA
International Airport.
But at 9 a.m., some of those who said
they'd be there aren't there It's been
over two months since they've done this
sort or thing and apparently the strike
had an adverse effect on some
memories. No matter , the bus door
shuts at exaclJy 9 a.m. and off we go to
Freewayland .
On the half.filled bus, quiet is the or·
der or the morning.
Up front, coach Bobby Knoop pores
over old stats on the Seattle Mariners.
Behind him. outfielder Brian Down·
Ing reads the day's sports section.
careful not to miss a paragraph on the
All·star game of the day before. He also
spends a long period of time on a story
a bout Roberto Duran. Downing, a re·
Angels earn some salvation
ligious weightlifter. has the physique
now of a Rocky Balboa. He does not.
however. have the disarranged face.
Next to him. Bert Campaneris and
Juan Beniquez are trying to fi nd a word
in English to describe an electrical unit
of measure. five letters. They are
speakfog in Spanish so no one can help
them
Kison is seated in the rear of the bus,
saying nothing, only singing to every
song that comes over the radio. He
never stops singing. even after the
music has stopped.
Fred Patek. the ageless infi elder with
the look of a keeper at a general store in
Oklahoma City. pulls out a book but
doesn't open it. falling asleep before he
can put on his glasses.
The bus arrives at LAX. The usual
<See Ll'M'LE DEVILS, Page C2)
They'll cool heels until Friday's series opener in Oakland
.,,._..
• SEAITLE -These may be the dog days of
August but for the Angels, today Is not quite as
doggy as it could have been.
Under norma l circumstances, a victory over
the Seattle Mariners in mld-Au1ust doesn't uncork
champagne bottles. But this 1981 baseball season
has been far from normal as the Angela proved by
escaping the Northwest Wednesday afternoon with
a 4·1 win over the Mariners in 11 innings. ·
At first &lance, the Angels may have only
saved face by salvaging one out or three from
Seattle, but when you read between the baselines,
the surfaclag fact Is that the team needed the win
-very badly.
"YOU'•E DAMN RIGHT we were concerned
coming into the game," short.stop Rick Burleson
said as he held an ice pack to bll rl.lbt shoulder af-
terward. "If you don't push it, then ye>U wind up 0.8
after this road trip and where a're you? Now we
have to win two-of-three from Oakland just to 1et to .500.''
The Angels are in Oakland today where they'll
open a three-aame weekend set a1ainst the A 's
Friday. And no one is downplaying the Importance
of the upcoming games.
"We can definitely UM three atraipt wlnl but
we can •Ull have a good road tnp lt we play well
and will two," said second baseman Bobby Grieb.
It wu Grich who wa1 Wedaelday'a outri1bt hero a11 he belted two home rum in the K.lqdome, in·
cludina the aame-winner -a three-nm blut to
rlaht In the lltb lnnin1.
"HAD WE L08T ALL TBll&B," he continued,·
"lt would have been crushlne. almOlt •mbarrau-
lDI.''
nesday, a solo shot to right in the second inning.
That single hit near ly stood up until Seattle
designated hitter Ri chie Zisk unleashed a Dave
F rost pitch for a home run ln the seventh to tie it
and eventually send the game lnto extra innings.
Frost. recalled from Salt Lake City on May 24
Had we los t all three it would
have been crushing. almost em-
barr assing.
-Bobby Grich
after undergoing surgery last Sept. 17 for the
removal or bone chips in his r ight elbow. had his
best outing since returning.
BE PITCHED EIGHT INNINGS, allowing just
the one run on four hits while striking out five.
Frost was relieved by Don Aase ln the ninth
and all he did was throw no-hit, shutout ball for
three innings.
That, combined with Burleaon's three hits
were the most encouragtn1 signs to Mauch Wed·
nesday. And be needed cheering up after Monday
and Tuesday.
"Frost pitched s ix lnnlngs of power and two of
cunntn1 with his head," Mauch Hid. "It's a darn
shame to wirl only one 1ame but •t leut we 1ot what was left.''
Through the worst "<>f the,ftrat half of tbit road
trip, M.uch said the aWtude wtthln the ballclub
waa quite settling. "Their aUltude haan't been bet·
ter," be aald. "You keep beaUnl a· piece ol iron
and heatina on It, preny IOOll, you'll wear it out.
Emcitlons are DO different."
f'lt08T SAID H& WM A•.UED to be able to
r>ttch • Ions at he did. ••Now tt'a Juat a qudtlon ot how laal l 'U 10 tbe ant Ume. I threw only 82
pttchm ill elOt lnnlall wbioh wu woaderf\&l.
R esig n s
Costa Mesa High football
coach Tom F1rerich h<U re-
signed his post Jor ~rsonal
reasons. A replacement is
expected to be named early
next week /rom hi• • staff.
French um unavailable for
comment.
French's seven-year re-
cord o.s Costa Mesa'a coach
reflects a 3•·36-l record. in-
cluding 8-2·1 and 7..f marlcl m
1976 and '78. each worth a portion of a LeagMe chclm-
piOMldp.
Jim H~. Tom Warr and
John Ca~ are c~
the lt at.hng cancUdaftt to
rrpl.oct Fmteh •
Jim ,..,..,.'°" comp4etr• a double pla11 °' A•l Rick Bur~ton u o..t.
Grich, who Ht out the lut lb sam• prior to
the strike after betnl hlt oa the thamb bJ a ~h
Junt e. found tbt ~ay ltrlU laJCG tM perfec:t
prescrtptlon ror bit neo•• 1. Ia tM s..tUe wtH,
ht W• $-fC)l'.U ud he~ lala C!WfflldVt
aame hitilq at.real to 1• wtLlt MS fin\: Miner W9'·
"Aftti' .. i09bll tbe llnt two, I Dow tbe COD·
<See ANGILA, Pa•e 0)
t
'
I
(
of
~e
RUdl'a two belts pace Red Sox
Joe atteU belted two homers ud •. · o.C' Ev .... o."' "'_...._, o ... Sta etGe and llm Bice hit toio •hott
as ton ripped the Chlcaco Wbl&e
Sox, S.l, In Amertcan Leacue actloa Wtdne1d11
. . . Grall Nett.let' two·run homer In the ablb
Utted the New York Yankees to a M victory
over Texu . . . Rlcll Mau.Ille drove tn three
rwis and scored three with a home run and two
Swimmer .captures
Channel three times
DOVER. England -J ohn From AP d.llpatchea a
1in1lea as Cleveland routed
Milwaukee, 9-4. anapplng a
stvtn·same Cleveland loslng
streak • • . Terry Crowley
drove in th~ winnln1 run with
a bales-loaded aacrUlce ny
In the sixth Inning, givins
Baltimore a 4-3 aecond-1ame
victory and a s plit of a
double-heade r with Kansas
City. Kansas City won the
Erlkson. a 26-year-old physical
education teacher Crom Chlcaao, hu
become Ole first person to awlm the English
Channel three ways non-atop.
Rad opener, 10-0, behlnd Prank
Erikson emereed from the 21 -mlle
waterway between England and France just
before midnight Wednesday on the French side.
His total lime for the three trips was 38 hours,
27 minutes, according to the first reports re·
ceived by the Channel Swimming' Association in
Dover.
"We are absolutely ln awe or it because we
didn't think it could be done," Audrey Scott, the
association secretary. told The Associated
Press early today.
White'• grand slam homer and Hal Mcaae•a
three RBI ... Damato Garcia drove in two
r uns with a squeeze bunt and a sacrifice fly to
lead Toronto to a 4·3 victory over Detroit, end-
ing an eight-game winning streak for Detroit
starter Jacll Morrta . . . Run-scoring sin1tes by
Hoaken Powell and Mickey Hatdaer in the
seventh inning lilted Minnesota to a 4-3 win over
Oakland. Corona del Mar High product Matt
Keoudl went 5% innings for Oakla.nd, aUowlng
sii hlts and two runs, before being lifted.
Erikson is a bachelor who lives with hi s
father. He had made two prevtous unswccessful
attempts at a three-way swim in the last two
years, giving up alter two crossings. In all,
before his latest record swim, be bad swum the
Channel eight times. four of them in two two·
way crossings.
Kingman powers Mets to another
The New York Mets are un-• beaten throu~h three National Lea-
gue starts with the Chicago Cubs to-
day following a 7-4 decision Wednes-
Erikson was returning to England-by one or
the observer boats that accompanies all Chan·
nel swimmers.
He had entered the water in near-perfect
conditions Tuesday morning al Dover's
Shakespeare Beach. Exact details of his three
stages were not immediately available.
day. Dave Kingman and EJlla ValeatlDe drilled
consecutive triples to open the lotb inning to
provide Lhe Mets with Lhe winning edge . . .
George Hendrick hit two home runs and rookie
Orlando Sanchez singled home Lhe go-ahead run
Scott said s he believed that Erikson did the
first ct ossing to Cap Gris Nez on the French
coast in 10 hours. 10 minutes, then swa m back
to land at Folkestone near Dover in about 13
hours.
The s wimmers are allowed 10 minutes on
the beach between stages. Scott said she heard
from a boatman that Erikson was sustained on
his s wim by doses of baby food, given to him by
the crew of the observer boat.
as St. L ouis ripped
Philadelphia, 11 ·3 ... Andre
Dawson rapped his 15th
home run of the season and
went 4-for-4 to back the com-
bined eight-hit pitching of
Ray Burris and three re-
lievers as Montreal dealt Pit·
tsburgh a 3-2 setback . . .
Pinch-hitter Dennis Walllag
lined a run-scoring single to
Kingman center field in the eighth in·
Two other swimmers have attempted three·
way swims but failed.
ning to snap a 4-4 tie and lift Houston to a 5-4
victory over San Francisco . . . Pinch-hitter
Brian Asselstlne scored an unearned run ln the
11th inning on a groundout by Ed Mlller to give
Atlanta a 4-3 verdkt over San Diego and a
three-game sweep .
Kevin Murphy, a Londoner, failed last week
after several atte mpts over the last five years.
Cindy Nicholas. 23, a Canadian law student of
Scarborough, Ontario, gave up last Sunday
after two crossings in 22 hours, 21 minutes. Newport Beac h's Davis leading
The English Channel is one of the most
challenging long-distance swims in the world
because of rapidly changi ng weather conditions.
LOS ANGELES -Lee Davis of l!I
Newport Beach and J eff Hart of
Solana Beach fired 2-under-par 69s
Wednesday, leaving both at 139 and in a tie for
first place halfway through the Pacific Coast
Amateur golf tournament at the Los Angeles
Country Club.
Quote of the day
"I got hit on the blind side when
someone missed a block," says the Rams'
Jeff Rutledge. "But he got cut this morn-
ing."
In a tie at 145 ls Fountain Valley's Brian
Lindley.
The 15th annual 72-hole tournament began
Tuesday and will finish Friday.
From Pace C1
LITILE DEVILS • • •
airport crowd is there.
The players all manage to get
by the autograph hounds, main·
ly because there aren't any.
How does a tourist from
Lynchburg, Virginia know what
Mike Witt looks like, anyway?
Moving onto the plane, Bobby
Grich , the Ange l s' DDJ
<"Designated Don Juan") is
already sizing up the stewardess
corner. He settles into the first
row of seats so that he can get a
goo<! a ngle on the passing
scenery.
Manager Gene Mauch, the
best dressed among the team for
definite reason, holds a stern
facial express ion, as he will
through the rest of the trip.
Geoff Zahn pulls out his pocket
Bible and readies himself for a
trip to the land of spirituality.
The blue with red trim Angel
suitcases are all car efully
packe d away with Special
Handling tags dangling from
their handles.
Each player ha s a DS
c"~ienat.ed Seat") with their
names on pieces ol paper on
their 1eat. It's coaches and staff
up front, starters and vetel'IDS
next, then the new players, subs
and rookies, and nnally, the
writers.
Soon, Ott gets up to make the
rounds. Slowly. he moves to the
rear of the plane where he'll
eventually entertain passengers,
all of whom ha ve no idea who he
Is . One woman s uggests ,
however, that he should run for
senator. "Not a bad idea,'' says
Ott. "Hey Rank <Steve Renko),
would you vote for me? Rank,
Rank? Ttiat..'s OK, Rank, don't
wakeup,"
In the meantime, Beniquez
and Bobby Clark have gone into
a throwing warfare or
Macadamia nuts. "Aw , come on
you guys, grow up." barks Witt,
and he receives a handful in the
face.
The plane touches down at
Seattle Airport and again, as
players file into the lobby, no
one notices. Airports are all the
same.
Leaving on the bus that will
take the team to their hotel,
home for three days, some one
spots Rod Carew, frantically'
waving from the side of the
road. "Walt, wait!" everyone
yells.
"Ob no, that's OK, you can go.
it's just the ball boy.
"Yeah. go on, it 's just a new
batboy rrom Puerto Rico."
AJong with Carew. is pitcher
Ken Forsch and coach Jimmie
Reese. The three have just flown
in from Cleveland following the
All-star game.
"Hey. nice pitch," Ott yells
out to Forsch in reference to his
home run ball served up to Gary
Carter the night before.
Pitching coach Tom Morgan
turns around and glares at Ott.
"Aw, come on, Mo. you're my
buddy," pleads Ott.
"No I 'm not," r esponds
Morgan.
"Yes you are," s ays Ott.
"No I'm not," insists Morgan.
At the hote l, the comedy
marches on.
The players tend to break up
into small groups, meeting all
together as a team onJy at the
stadium.
It's a thoroughfare throughout
the day as the guys try to find
things to do to pass away the
idle hours leadine up to the
evening's game. It's not an easy
taak in Seattle.
"I love the road,'' summarizes
Grich. ··n makes you alad God
Invented homes."
Irvine North falls
3-2 def eat ends title dreams
Jtftae North's quest for a
berth ln the Little Le11u•
Restonal Tournament at San
Befnardino fell abort Wednel· daJ dlabt 11 Jn1lewood Jum.,.. to a tine-nm out~m at tlll start and huna OD for a ,_, vic-
tory ln tbe ••mlflnala' ol the DtTbaaal Ptayoff1.
The winn•n collected two •tatlel and a double ln mettlal u..~ at 111,.loll VleJo Yoat.i Atbletle~ Paris and wfll mftt BM!l9"~-• 1-1 ....... °"' Or1.9 st• 111J11 in UM other ball el tM ......,......, toalPt 9l I ;• ,
for the right to ad\'uce.
Irvine North uawered back
with a run ln the bottom ol the
nnt w1JtA Mlk• Stewart 11.naMd to 1core 0•1'1 Reatula and
anocller nm was picked up la tM seccad when David TOWll.MDCI
tl.n,i.t and evll'ltually ec:ored oa
• bue bit by Mille Cipolla.
Tbat, bowenr, wu the Jut
Um• lntae !fOrtJI could ~ .,..., ,... nm bale.
RaJ RGldtJnan•1 all·ltat eaDet· tion recorded a N ov...U ,..
tonl .-DI~ 5 dlamploill.
•
From Page C1
ANGELS • • •
tribution I had to make. If you
lose three, you have a lousy
plane ride to Oakland. I think
we'll be all right now."
-Burleson wasn't so sure,
though. "The big question is,
can Frost com e back with
another game like this?" he
said. "And we've got to get pro-
d u ction from Bay lor (the
Angels' designated hitter was
3-for-12 in the series with no
RBI)."
Burleson , who led off the 11th
inning with a double and scored
the go-ahead run on Grich's
homer, said that he required a
cortisone s hot in his throwing
shoulder b e fore the game,
something he s aid he needs
about twice a season.
"The tendon there nares up
and the cortisone lubricates it
so that at least I can play. I'm
not going to miss any games at
this point. It'll be sore tomorrow
(today) but I'll be ready by Fri-
day."
Aase said after Grich's'second
home run, the mood in the
dugout picked up considerably,
inferr1ng It wasn't at an all-time
high prior to that.
"I think we looked at his hit as
a breakthrough," he said.
Grich said he didn't see the
ball come off his bat and had no
idea where it was until he
rounded first. "Then I saw the
right fi elder <Gary Gray) run-
ning towards the line and t knew
it was down there somewhere."
When he saw it hit the tarp
above the wall some 380 feet
away, Grieb raised his arma in
jubilation.
During his rehabilitation
period, Grieb wore a cast over
his righl band and wrist.
However, he often put a velcro
wrap, with weights inside, over
the wrist and swung a bat with it
on.
That, he said, as much as
anythina, was the key to his
speedy recovery.
Now, the Angels hope they
have recovered from the pre·
openin1 ni1ht jitters and can
make a run for American West'•
oCJtier naa.
They'll get. a better readina on
themselves a1aht1t Oakland
(th• team with the rlnt nae>
t.hil weekend. ,.._._1 -byFAI_._
* ...... llOTa -'' _.. ----= .................. ..,,, .. _..._ ..... _.. .... _ .... .... ........ ......, .............. _ -r. ........ ,......., .. ._ ..... fl..-;"••-·-............ . ................ _ ....... _,,_,.., _, ............... _ ... , .... -----·---·-.. ......................... __ .. _. .. ,....._. ___ .. _____ ,...,. ......... -. .. """"' ......... ..., ........... "
'
Baieball today
On thJt date In baseball In 1979:
St. Louis speedster Lou Brock beat out an Infield smu h off the i1ove or Chka10
pitch r Dennis Lamp for h.b 3,000th career
hlt the CardJnala beat the Cube J•2 •
On thla date ln 1969 ~
Baltimore pitcher Jlm PalmM, whose'
career had been threatened by arm trou-
ble the year before, no-hit the Oakland A 'a
8·0.
On thls date in 1948:
Satchel Paige made bis major lea1ue
debut tor tbe Clevelan Indiana al the age
of 42. throwing a five-hitter to beat the
Chicago White Sox 5-0.
Today's Birthdays:
Oakland A's infielder Fred StanJey la 34.
Cleveland Indians first baseman Andre
Thornton is 32.
Rams-Dallas sold out; TV live
The Rams announced that their [il National Football League preaeason 4 •
game against the Dallas Cowboys
this Saturday night has been told out and will be
televised locally. The last ot the 89,006 tickets
for the game at Anaheim Stadium was sold
Wednesday afternoon, the Rams said. Kickoff
time for the nationally televised came ls 5:.30
p.m., PDT rather than the previously stated 6
p.m .... The Rams waived four players Wed·
nesday, Including veteran guard Gre1 Horton.
Al so cul were rookies Jobn Allderso., a de·
fensive end from Bethune-Cookman; Unebacker
J erry McLain from Washington; and guard
Tom Pettigrew from Eastern Illinois .
Raiders' trial getting stickier
LOS ANGELES -Legal com-[il
plexities mounted Wednesday ln the C •
tangled case of the Oakland Raiders
versus Lhe National Football League, with one
juror's impartiality being challenged.
A question of bias on part of juror Tom
Gelker remained up in the air, with U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Harry Pregerson considering the
next step as the panel remained at an impasse
in its marathon deliberations.
The judge met with attorneys behind closed
doors for two hours, but deferred ruling on a
motloo by the Raiders to remove lbe juror. The
problem arose when it was found that Gelker,'s
cousin, Bruce Felker, once owned the Portland
Storm ol the defunct World Football League.
Theriot wins 800 (1 :49.42)
Former Newport Harbor High •
and UCLA track and field star Brtu
Tberio& captured the 800 meters in
1:4.9.42 Wednesday night in~ invitational meet
In' Varnamo, Sweden. Earl Bell was a winner in
the pole vault with an effort of 18-0~ . . . Mon-
treal hockey star Serge Sa•anl made his retire-
ment official . . . Chicago Black Hawks goalie
Tony E.lp0elto is now officially an American
citizen and plarus to play for Team U.S.A ....
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Atlanta at Dodgers,
7:30 p.m .. KABC (790>.
Lopes can't
silence crowd
But boos turn to cheers
LOS ANGELES <AP> National League All·
star second baseman Davey Lopes ia the primary
target ot Dodger Stadium boo birds these days, but
he may be on the verge of eUencing them.
"I r uess it's my batUn1 averaae," aaJd Lopes,
who had fallen to .165 after going hitless ln his laal
rive al-bats. The Los Angeles veteran had been
booed for falling to get the ball out of the infield In
Davey Lopes
seventh.
his first two plate ap-
pearances.
But the boos turned
to cheers after the top
or the fourth inning of
the Dodgers' 8-5 victory
over the Cincinnati
Reds. Lopes had just
taken a hH away from
Cincinnati 's Dave
Collins.
Then, mo r e
c hee r s cam e wh en
Lopes singled home the
tying run in the bottom
of the fou rth, singled
and s tole a base in the
fifth and cracked a two-
r u n homer in the
Lopes knocked in three of the Dodgers' runs
and had three of their 13 hits. After his homer. his
fourth of the season, he was accorded a standing
ovation a1'd then tipped his cap to J.he crowd of
36,494.
"I'm not bitter," he said "It just pushed me
harder. l know I ran hit.
"But I'm not denying, the boos hurt. But I
heard them boo Make Schmidt in Philadelphia and
Joe Morgan in Ci ncinnati, so who am l to com ·
plain?
"Aft er m y s econd at-bat, Reggie (team-
m ate Reggie Smith> pulled me aside and told me
what I was doing wrong. And Danny (Coach Dan-
ny Ozark) told me to relax, that I was an impor-
tant part or this club. That made me feel good, to
know that my peers and my coaches believe in me .
That really helped."
The Dodgers jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the
first inning against Cincinnati starter Tom Seaver.
Rut the Reds quickly got even when George Foster
slammed a three· run homer an the third inning, his
15th. on a 3-0 pitch from Los Angeles starter Bob
Welch.
After the Reds took a 4-3 lead in the top or the
fourth. the Dodgers knocked out Seaver. handing
him only his second loss in nine decisions but his
first since April 18. It snapped his six-game win-
ning streak.
Pinch-hitter Jay Johnstone started the rally
wiLh a bloop double to right and Lopes singled him
home to tie the game . Lopes, who had taken
second on an error . scored the goahead run on a
single by Ken Landreaux, who also had three hits.
Landreaux eventually scored on a sacrifice ny by
Ron Cey.
Ney~r takes customary dive
Megan Neyer easily captured
the three-meter diving title with
a score of 534.66 points Wednes:
day afternoon in the U.S. Out-
door Diving Championships a_t
the Marguerite Recreation
Center.
We nd y Wy la nd finished
secorrd with 501.48 points .
followed by Chris Seufert with
498.45 points.
The meet began Tuesday with
the m en's one-meter competi-
tion, won by Greg Lougani.s, and
continues through Saturday.
Mission Viejo Nadadores
Coach Ron o· Brien labeled one
of Neyer's e ffort s, a l !h
somersault, as "The best I've
seen any woman do."
Neyer 's consistency showed
through the day with 8s and 9s
awarded by Lhe judges.
Today's agenda found the
women's one-meter prelims in
the morning, followed by the
women's one-meter finals at 4.
followed by the men's three-
m eter fioals.
Michele Hain finished fourth
with 462.66 points. followed by
Janie Serwan with 452.64 points;
Tris tan Baker with 449.94
points, Karen Gorh am with
142 44 p oi nt s. and Kelly
McCormick with 440.91 points.
Neyer, 19, also won the three-
meter title at the in door national
meet in April at Columbus,
Ohio.
A total of 35 women entered
t he three meter competition.
with qualifying T uesday after·
noon and the finals Wednesday
afternoon. Eight divers qualified
for the finals.
We !<now how etlllca1 a good "mobllt home" i5 to bacl<packer5. That's
why wt ofTtr deslQns by The North Face-... the encst avo.lloble B~ht·
wf!taht tents, backpacks. stccplnQ baiJ, and handsome, functional clothing
Performance Is tht key and all products from TI1t Nor1h Face are Full
Ufe1lmt Warrantied.
Remcm~r Ski ' Sports for all your backpacking. ski, tennis, racquetball.
and Qtneral sportln,i Mtds. 4 loa.ittons to serve you
I
•
.. ...
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Aupust 13, 1981
Romania--it's no place for a sports vacation
Just ask Huntington Beach's Tom Pestole$i. Lif e at the World University Games wasn't all that super
By CUI T SEED EN sport.a compete far outweiched the c!rcumatancea °' .... ..,........... created by polltlce in Romania.
Don't expect Tom Peetoleel to seek employ-To Romania's credit, Pestolesl Hy1, tbe food
menl with the Romania Travel Bureau. The wasn't bad. There was plenty of roast beef,
former Huntin1ton Beach High volleyball standout chicken, lamb, rice and v•aetables. And, of
paints a sometimes grim picture of Bucharest course, warm Pepsla.
where he spent two weeks at the World University •·we could have bad aoat'a mllk, but that was
Games. totally gross," Peslolesi point.a out.
"The.re was no refrlgeraUon and no milk. So Pestolesi had already traveled to Europe
we drank warm Pepsls for breakfast," the 21-year-before departing with aome of the top u .S. col-
old former All-CIF performer recalls. "When we legiate athletes for th blann l G J l
got Orf the Plane. there were all these auys with G-e ua amea, u Y 16·30. He d been to Italy, Greece, En1land and
guns. even Egypt.
"It wasn't like what "But Romania was weird," be says. Peatolesl
we were used to in and the other athletes would have prererred more
America." pleasant circumstances after being crammed into
W h ate v e r t h e a chartered 707 jet for eight hours during the mid-
.competing in volleyball. Sounds lmpreaalve, but aa
Pestolesl points out, the U.S. needed only to win its
pool play to advance to the rlnal eight.
THE VICl'ORIES CAME OVE& dreaded
Libya and a much tou1her Holland. The U.S. lost
to eventual gold medal winner Romania, lS·S,
15-12, 15-11, dropped a five-game match with
Russia and a four-game battle to Japan.
''Romania played Its national team. A couple
or the countries used thelr national teams, so they
Surf's hopes sink in
had been playin& together for a lon1 time,"
Peslolesl says.
Pestolesl, who after playln1 two years ot
volleyball at Long Beach State, will play next y~r
at the University or Hawaii, said the declalon to
field a World University Games volleyball te8'n
was a last-second move, promfted by some lllte
funds. Coach Marv Dunphy o Pepperdlne th'n
held tryouts, and Pestolesl was amona the j2
players to make the team. l
I
2-1 setback
I
athletes carried into the die of the night.
village was X -rayed, SAN JOSE -The California's Surf chances ··our defense was more stable than ln so~e
Pestolesi says, and a THE U.S. CONTINGENT left New York at 1 for a berth in the North American Soccer recent games." said Calloway. Tony Crudo, J~
few athletes even had a.m., and because of the time difference, arrived Leagu°e playoffs took big dip Wednesday night as Clarke and Charlie Greene were impressive int e
their western-influenc-in Romania at 4 p.m. San Jose puJled out a 2-1 victory before 9,745. defensive line with main defender Carlos Albe
ing jeans confiscated at "We were kind or burned out, and then we still San Jose scored twice to take a commanding missing from action (hamstring pull).
the airport. There is no had to go through customs," he says. He also re-position and the Surf's lone goal came with 81:23 San Jose's winning edge came in the secodd
place. apparently, for calls what-it was like the day the U.S. athletes re-spent when Ossama Khalil tallied off an assist half when Joseph Horvath was awarded a penalty
Ca 1 vi n KI e ins in turned to New York July 31. from Steve Ryan and Paulo Cesar. kick. His shot was blocked by Surf goalie Mije
Romania. "Everybody just went aft.er hamburger&, ap-Khalil's goal, his lllh, puts him in a tie with Mahoney, but Horvath quickly stepped up a~
S T I L L • F 0 R pie pie and milk," he says. Steve Moyers as the Surf's leading point-producer followed through with another shot off the block
Pestolesi, the chance to In between, of course, there was plenty of (26). score. ,
fac e the top volley-volleyball, but Pestolesi would rather not go into Surf Coach Laurie Calloway started five Next for the Surf Is the Los Angeles Azteqs
ball teams in the world Pestoleai detail about the U.S. performance. Americans in the lineup and despite the loss. was Friday night at Anaheim Stadium, a team whic;h
and watch some of the _gr_e_a_t _a_t_h_le_t_es_l_n_o_th_e_r ___ Th_e_u_.s_._f_iru_·_s_hed __ e_ig;;...h_th_a_m_on....;g;;_th_e_28_t_ea_m_s_.:.P_le_as __ ed_wi_·th_t_h_e_e_ff_o_rt_s_b-'y'--hi_s_n_e_w_l_in_e_u .... p_. _____ h_a_s_be_a_te_n_t_he_S_u_r_r_in_t_h_e_la_s_tn_i_n_e __ str_a....;ig'""h_to_u_t_in_g_a_. _
Royals
• await
tourney
When the Costa Mes a
Royals captured the
Southe rn California
R egional softba ll
tournament in San
Bernardino la st
weekend they qualified
for the ASA national
competition in Fargo,
North Dakota, Aug.
20-23.
Jan Culp, a pitcher for
the Orange Coas t
College Pirates this past
season. pitched five
straight shutouts to give
the Royals the SoCal ti·
tie . They defeated
Lakewood. 1 ·0 ; San
Diego, 2-0 ; Hemet, 6-0;
and Long Beach twice.
1-0.
Members of the team
which is made up or
players from this area
between 18 and 24 years
or age, include:
Eva Brown (Golden
West, Chapman, lB);
Jean Vetter <Chapman,
C); Pam Knox (Golden
West, CS Fullerton. ss) ;
Lori Donigan (Golden
West. Cal Poly Pomona.
OF >; Kathy Burns
<Orange Coast, OF·lBl;
Jan Culp <Orange Coast.
P l.
H e len Gilligan
<Golden West. Arizona
State, lB·C·OF> Kathy
McBride (Golden We st.
3 B ); Sharon Nichols
(Golden West, Chap-
man. Pl; Kodee Murray
(Golden West, 2Bl : Li sa
MacKelvey <Chapman,
P -2B>; Kim Nutter
<Golden West, P-OF).
Kim Savidan <Chap-
man, OF >; Erin
Gallagher (Orange
Coast. Oregon State,
38 ); Sue Stein <CS
Fullerton, OF>; Ronda
Chambers (Orange
Coast, P-OF); Julie
Trofolz.(Fullerton, P).
f. Own Your Own \ Buelneaa Show
NI fOll lootq IOI I Mintil ol
'°"'own? Plan 10 1111!1d 111t
lllllkllj)lecl ol I BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES I • Frl~lllMI e trlbulO<el!lpe e Otllt,.nlp1 ~VHltne!ltl
• l'ull 1nc1 Plt1 JllM 0pportun11i.. • 1n-1men11f1omt60101100,ooo
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THE WINNER -Megan
Neyer was the easy win·
ner in Wednesday's three-
•meter diving finals at
Mission Viejo.
DMng u.1.0......a. ... 1 • ....,.
(et ....... Y•Je> W-'sJlftltMfl,..lt-1.-........,.,.
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(Olll"'*"a City), ...i. .. ; s. J .... ~ glaaioftVlejo), 452.6'; 6 Trlttlft B-... (Mis-
aloft Vlelol, ut ... ; 1. Ka,.... Gotham (N• tloNI Aquiitlo), "1.M, I . Kelly McCOtmlell
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WWDMalNY'S lt&MILTS
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Al• t9Cl9CI: Mello ua, El>I ... St • ._
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Fleet JdWI, Miit.,. Plftllle, Sir IC. ~. Oleu....._
'Tl-: 1:11.0. u DAILY oouau 111-1> paid ti.261.'°.
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Mo.-Noatrwn CMcH ..... 1 J.10 t.• U1 Jim..., h Otci C Oot1-.a,.1 >.• uo ~llOl .. (0....,.....1 uo
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c-,od, J llft9 c;Od, '7 callco .,.,., u -
tlau, S lwllbut, 2' llonlto, 200 mackerel, 111
roe .. I bit, t -•KIMSI.
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callco bMa, ISO mackerel, tt bonito, 2 111111
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11111.
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l>Au, I llellbut, 19 cllko l>An, ltS bonito, tU
"'l<llerel
Thia week'• trout plent•
Lee ........ -Bio Roell c.-, Pyramid
Liiie, uiic-r Plrv 0-at Frenc:-·s
FIAi SM __ ._ -Bio hat Like, a--
Valley LIQ, ep_., LOU.
"" CJ1e99 -Cuyamec1 A ... .-..ol,,
M..,• -Sen Joaquin River (lllllcldle
Fork), Solc .... r LOil•, StarllWN-• LoM.
IC--l<ern ltl""r COemocr•t o.m to Kltl "-rllowse, Borell ~•r-to Oemocral Oam, Isabella Oam lo lloAll
PowerllOuM, Kit> P-••llOUM to Lelle
lsebellal.
T ..... -,.,_ Cne41, ICIN\ ltl""'
<Far.,lew Oam to KltJ Powerhouw •
J-enori. to l'ol"'kw Dami, "-
permlnC c..-.. Tuk Al,,., (Notti\ -s.MI Forh of Main Forlll.
l•W -Biiiet Cr-. U19 Pl,.. Ct-. 81sllop C ...... C~. Mldclle, Soutll and ln-
lalle Ill, Goo<UI• Creek, Independence
C•••"· Liil• S.11tlna, l-Pine er-.
Hortll Lau, Dall CrHll (Horth l'orkl.
$11e.,..rds CrHlt, Soulll lelle, Ta-c...-. Tl-~. Tutti. Cr-.
,.._ -l8lwe l.et.e CUP!let and i.-1. 8tlcltloot' R_...,r, Buckeye C•-. C...-
"lcl L.ae. Oeedn\lft cr .. ll, Eti.ry U411, Geor .. Lella, Gloss CrHll, GrMlt LIM,
Grffft CrM41. ~I uu, t4111oft Cteell, ,,_
Liiie, L.ee VlnlftO c.-, l..M Vlnlfte 0-
CSoutft l'«tll, llllte Wal!IM ltlver, LYndy
Ull•, Mamie Loll•, Mammotll Cr-. MMy lake, McOM er..11, Miii C•Hll, 0-••-ce.nton crautno .,,.. •It stw1n11> • ••-CtMk. ltoll!Motl C,.ell, ltoc• Cr-1 ParedlN ea.,.,. to Tam'• Piece, Tom's
Place ~,,. ltocll Ct-1..0lle, 11«11 c;,..... LIQ" lfto MCI of tN roedl, ltoc.ll CtMll LIU, ltlltll Ctwtl, Sedcll-. ere..
Saddl ..... Loll•. SM••ln C•Hll, 511,,., lake, S.-..r ~ Ttoeo Lelle, TtWl'lllUll Lau, Tliwln Lolles .,..,_.. 1u,.,.., Ind
lowerl, Twin Lellft (Mommotfl), V"1!lftlo
l akes (~ and ~r), Vlrvfnlo o .....
Walur ltl""' ICtwll l'llt Cl""'9f'-.I to ,_,, of Walker, ~ltt ,,__.s '-
orouncl to s.w-. Bridge I.
Voyagers
highlight
weekend
Voyagers Yacht Club hoJda the
yachting spotlicht in Newport
Harbor this weekend with two
major eventa -the alxth race ol
the Humphrey Bo1art Series for
Performance Handicap Racln1
Fleet yachts, and the annual
Seamanship race.
The Seamanahlp race la uni·
que in that ll starta with all
boats at anchor, requires crews
lo chan1e heads' on windward
lees. regardless of the weather,
spinnaker changes and jibes on
downwind legs and a man over-
BOATING
board drill. After boats have
crossed the finish line they must
again anchor and furl aU sails
before be i ng c locked as finishers.
In other local events, Newport
Harbor will conduct a one·
design regatta for boats on both
inside and outside courses, and
Dana Point Yacht Club will
stage the fifth race of its Dana
Point Series for Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet yachts.
Top event in the Los Angeles-
Long Beach area will be the na,
tional championship regatta for
the Mercury Class which gets
under way today at Cabrillo
Beach Yacht Club.
More than 50 Prindle-18
catamarans will see action
starting Saturday in the second
national championship for the
class at Long Beach . Head·
quarters for the regatta is at the
Queen Mary.
Southern California Yachting
Association calendar:
Los Angeles·Long Beach
Long Beach Yacht Club -In·
vitalional Regatta, Saturday,
Sunday.
Huntington Harbour Yacht
Club Bolsa Chica Collection
No. 4, Saturday .
Buccaneer Yacht Club -Las
Parejas race <man-woman
crews) Saturday .
Santa Monica Bay
Santa Monica Yacht Club
Small Boat Regatta. Saturday,
Sunday.
Windjammers Yacht Club -
Queen Mary Layover race
( PHRF> Saturday. Sunday.
~ing Harbor Yacht Club -
Cecil R. King Portsmouth Han,
di cap race <centerboards>
Saturday, Sunday.
San Diego
San Diego Yacht Club -Gold
Star eliminations, Saturday,
Sunday; Leo Series (Solings>
Saturday, Sunday.
Southwestern Yacht Club -
J ohn Bate Overnight race Chan·
dicap) Saturday, Sunday.
Silver Gate Yacht Club -
Commodore's Series (SDHF>.
Saturday, Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht Club -Pro·
Am regatta <Sabot> Sunday.
Santa Clara Racing Associa-
tion Doldrums Series. Satur-
day .
North and Inland
Anacapa Yac h t Club
Anacapa Island Series. Satur· day .
Pacific Corinthian Yacht Club
Classic Yacht Race, Sunday.
Santa Barbara Sailing Club -
Summer Series, Saturday, Sun-
day.
Wes tlake Yac ht Club -
Cor.onado-15 junior national
ch ampionship, Saturday. Sun·
day.
Pomona Valley Sailing As-
sociation -Class racing, Satur·
day, Sunday.
Mercury Class
sailors here
SAN PEDRO -Thirty
Mercury Cius sailors started
competition here today iD the
national championship regatta
for the 50,year-old salllng class.
The regatta continues through
Saturday. .
Skippers and crew$ from the
entire Pacific Coast are on hand
for the title event. Entries are
from San Diego, Newport
Beach, Los Angeles, Santa
Barbara, Sanla Cruz, Monterey,
and San Diego, according to
Chairman Thomas Bradley of
Newport Beach.
Last year's champion. Pat
Bradley of Monterey Penlnaula
Yacht Club is on hand to defend
his title. Last year's regatta wu
sailed in Santa Barbara .
Soccer clinic
set for UCI
Potential youth soccer
coaches can earn their "C"
cerWlcation this weekend at a
three-day coacblng cllrUc at UC
Irvine.
Cllalc apokaman John Stuart
aaya the tm price lnchldel l.n. atl'UetJCln, room and board ..t
meals. ~ dinfc la aet IO .,.....
a\ •:• p.m. l"rictai aad ~
elude Sunday~ at a:•.
Wte ....... doll WUl .. M· cepted from 4:• to f p.m. ftt.
day at the llHa Commou Breueway at UCI. For ....
t1oul lnfomaatieia, eall lllaut a ........
a
,
I J
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~· c Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday, Auguat 13. 1981
An innovative use
for former school
The Costa Mesa City Council
has signed a contract leasing the
former Rea Middle School pla nt
at 601 Hamilton St. for the next
five years.
The facility was closed as a
school this year b ecause of
declining stude nt enrollment in
the Newport· Mesa School Dis-
tr ict .
Rea will cost Costa Mesa tax·
payers $110,000 a year in lease
fees. Upkeep on the plant and its
acres of recreational grounds will
be an added cost.
It's doubtful that subleases
on most of the 24 classrooms. a
gymnasium, and multi-purpose
cafetorium to non-profit groups
that operate social and recrea·
tional prQgrams in the city will
do more than pay for m ain·
tenance.
If so, the City Council has
stepped forward as a municipal
pacesetter in organizing a system
to gathe r such programs as TLC.
SOS, Boys a nd Girls Clubs,
theater groups and other or·
ganizations under one roof. so to
s peak, at moderate cost to the
groups.
The res ult could be unan
ticipated civic pride, centralized
fundraising for ''here-at -home"
soc ial p rograms and un ·
precedent e d comm unication
among groups f osteriQg causes
for isolated segm ents of the city's
population.
At the very least, it will af ·
ford innovative and creative op·
portunity among s pecial social
groups, such as the potential for
staging dress rehe arsals by the
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse on
the cafetorium st age as senior
c itizens partake of noontime
meals .
College funding cut
Coast Commu,nit y College
Di strict officials were caught by
surprise a few months ago when
they learned the district would be
r ecei ving s ubstantially less
money from the state than had
been anticipated.
The district, which includes
Orange Coast, Golden West and
Coastline colleges, had just a few
weeks to trim $3.5 million out of
its budget.
Such massive cutbacks could
not be made painlessly.
The district was forced to lay
o ff some c lassifie d (n o n ·
teaching) employees in clerical
and maintenance positions.
Many other jobs created by
resignations and r etirements
were left unfille d.
District students this fall wi ll
find materials fees charged in
more courses. At Orange Coast
College, the m any communit y
service lectures, formerly free.
will require a charge. At Golden
West College, the librar y and
tutoring cent e r will be open
fewer hours.
Buildings will be cleaned less
freque ntly. and major ma in·
tenance and construction proj-
~cts will be postponed.
Despite these cutbacks in
s upport services, the course of·
f erings at the three colleges will
remain virtually unchan~ed.
It is unknown how long the
colleges can cut back on main·
tenance before their facilities
begin to deteriorate seriously.
For the moment, however. it
is comforting to see that the col-
lege district was able to keep
most Of its cuts away from the
classroom. District officials cor·
rectly decided that maintaining
the quality of education at the
three coll eges must be the lop
priority.
Inflation hit$ lunches
Grocery s h o ppe r s w h o
haven't kept a penny by penny
account but ar e confident their
weekly supermarket treks a re
costing a lot more each year now
have som e figures for com-
pa rison.
Me als in Newport-Mesa
School District cafeterias are go·
ing up o nce agai n this Sep·
tember.
High school students will pay
30 cents more this year. middle
schoolers 20 cents more a nd
elementar y students 15 cents
more. Nutritionally balanced meals
will go for 85 cents. a dollar and
$1.15 at the elementary. middle
and high schools respectively.
District officials recalled re·
cently that lunches cost only 45
cents in elementary schools back
in 1977. They were 50 cents at
middle schools and 60 cents at
high schools. •
The cafeteria people t ake
pride in operating ·what they call
a "self-sustaining " meals pro·
gram. Although they still get
some federal and state money to
defray the cost of m eals. the
operation doesn't cost the school
dis trict a dime in general fund
money.
This year 's price hikes partly
result from President Reagan's
e fforts to cut back on federal
spending in the schools. but some
of the increases are the result of
just plain inflation.
If ever y cloud is expected to
have a silver lining, perhaps this
inflation indicator could be tern·
pered by a little good news.
Students will be payi ng even
more -between a dime and a
quarter more -for similar
lunche5 in Saddleback Valley and
Anaheim schools.
Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is mvit·
ed . Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 9'2626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Churchill's memory
Tbe memory of Winston Churchill
must have been something special. I
can 'l believe that he could recite au
ol "The Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire ," as has been
clalmed. It's known, though, t hat he
could deliver every line in at least a
couple of Shakespeare's plays.
During just the first week of this
year, the United States used more
1asoline than aJl of Its armed forces
used throughout World War II. An
astonishing statistic, what?
Credit Mark Russell with that ring·
la• cry: "Sic Semper Adidas."
Meaning "We'll never run out of
an••ken."
If you are 30 yura old , you were
bon the tame year tb• 22Dd Amend·
menl to the ConltituUOO limited U.S. ,....1denta to two term•, tbe year .lobanie .Ray popalariled walllnc
ball8cll JUCh • "Cry:· and tbe 1am1
ORANGE COAST
llilJPilllt
year Lucille Ball first went on
television with her "I Love Lucy"
shows .
Q. What was the first country after
the American Revolution lo rec·
ognize the United States as an ln·
dependent nation ln its own riaht ?
A. Morocco. lo 1789.
Venezuela's government has a
Ministry for the Development of In·
teJllgence.
The ancient Roman poet Ovid bad
this to say about baldness: "Ugly ti a
field without grass, a plant without
leaves, or a head without hair."
Animals ln the Tel Aviv IDOO eat a
strictly ltosber diet.
Artlnclal eyesight for the blind la
only •bout 10 years away, accordlna
to the technical experts now worklna on UU.one.
Thomas P. H•l•Y
PubllllMtf
/
FDR memorial panel endures
WASllINGTON -For more years
t han t h ey lik e to remember .
Republicans ground their teeth in
frus tration over Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. who rode roughshod, with it·
r it ating good humor , over the GOP.
Now, of course, the shoe is on the
other foot. Ronald Reagan. an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the remnants
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conser vatives from
North, South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress. Reagan st ages
the modern equivalent of FDR's radio
"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people . His delivery is every bit as
persuasive as FDR's and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS it's not surprising that
one of the hoariest boondoggles to sur·
vive the onslaug ht of President
Reagan's budget cutters is the FDR
Me morial Commission. For more than
a quarter of a century, the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers'
money in a bootless attempt lo achieve
a suitable memorial to the only presi·
dent who ever was -and thanks to the
Twenty.Second Amendment ever will
be elected more th an twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 1955. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac·
complis hing anything in the years to
come. ln fact. its whole reason for ex·
istence was obliterated years ago, when
private donors erected a modest
m e morial t o FDR in downtown
Washington -a marble block on Penn·
sylvania Avenue outside the Archi ves
Building, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two me mbers of Congress.
Reps. Dan Glickman, D-Kan .. and Bi ll
Dannemeyer, R-Callf., recently tried Lo
Q
-JA-Cl-Al-D-IR--SD-1 -~
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FOR commission, they
were astonished to learn that
Roosevelt 's ghost still carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
T he fec kl ess bipartisan duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR comm ission was a waste
of money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had been
spent in the 26 years of the com
m ission·s exis tence with literally
nothing to show for it Another several
hundred thousand dollars has been
spent on various projects.
Glickman, who was in three-cornered
pants when FDR died. even brandished
a photcgraph of the existing FOR
memorial on the floor of the House, and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
b esid e the monument : "If any
memorial is erected lo me . I s hould
like it lo consist of a block of stone
about the size of this COval Office> desk,
and placed in the center of that green
plot in front of the Archives Building."
ll was all to no avail. The Glickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated, 201-216. The vote had an
eer ie Louch to it . The House's electronic
voting system broke down for the first
ti me in three years. prompting one
member to whisper to Glickman. "The
gh,osl of FDR has returned."
What astonished Glickman was not
just the economy.minded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission's
$30,000 budget intact -like Reps. Jack
Kemp, R·N.Y . and Jim Jones. D-Okla.
but the way some of his fellow
Democrats chided him as a traitor to
hi~ party who was "playing into the
hands of the Republi cans."
THE HOUSE SHOWDOWN over the
FDR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission. The author. Lucette
Lagnado, called it "a classic example
of the truism that a government agen·
cy. once created. never dies; it j ust
keeps on growing."
Footnote: Congressional s upporters of
the FDR Me morial Commission ob·
serve that buil ding a monument lo FDR
would be one way lo assure the end of
the FDR commission .
Be sure you don't get sick at night
To the Editor:
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedics may come
for price ... Some cities. this article stat·
ed , such as Fountain Valley are con·
sidering charging for the paramedics
servi ces . As we a ll know , the
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless lives. They can't be com·
mended too highly.
But what astounded me is the quoted
a mbulance transportation rates lo the
hospital $100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich. it can be a lot to those
who are just m aking their pay checks
meet. I reckon those deciding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
m edical eme rgency and can't afford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high ambulance
rates. I called the billing office of one
ambulance company asking if the rates
were really $100. The lady explained
that they charge $75 base rate plus $S a
mile. Also, rates are increased lf it is a
night call. (Be sure and don't get sick at
night.) And when emergency red lights
and siren a re used, the patient is
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high lo start wltb. The burden
stiU falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover the am·
bulance fee .
Ml Senator Edward Kennedy said -
and I wholeheartedly agree -we are
the only country in the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the paramedic.a and •m·
bulance services can't exist on nothln1.
The solution, lf any, i1 dlfflcult to com e
up with. Socialized medicine may seem
like an ideal solution bul ln those coun·
tries wit h socialbed medlclne, t be
qua]Jty of medical c1re de(Uoea u the
per1'0ll 'ets older, and ls almost non·
existent for the elderly.
So lt there i• a medical emergency
with my household, I'll c1ll the local
rrtendly chJroprador.
J.R. SASSO
Manipulation
To the Edltor:
An article •bout lhe lrvlae cout ••YI
there wllJ be bomet so HPm1ln that lt
la l«1Md the "abeik COMt" aacl dM
lrYiae Campany will have to adYel'ttle
aaUoillall;; ud lnt..aauc.an; to ftlld
bayen. •ta. ......... tM 1111 .... ,
a.at .U dMlr' dtmudi far fMl ~
are because it is needed so our children
will have a place to li ve. I've often won-
dered what's left for the individual in
this modern world. They've been
manipulated b y the a dve rti s ·
ing /marketing world into how they
think about everything. There's a prop-
aganda state m ent lo prove every
point, but there's one I will never
believe again.
I've long suspected that the Irvine
Company and other large. out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -a nd I might add, I don't ap-
preciate that kind of propaganda and
manipulation.
DONALD K. SPENCER
T ELE PHONE YOUR
L ETTE R TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Bike vandals
To the Editor :
My family and l rode our bikes to the
Orange County swap meet August 8 for
a fun day. When we got back to the cor·
ner where bike riders park (stuck back
in a corner out of public view) our
bikes had been vandalized -end of fun
day.
Bike riders have no place to park
their bikes. The Daily Pilot ran an arti·
cle that the company that runs the swap
meet makes over $1 million a year.
Surely the'y can afford to put ln bike
racks in public view.
We counted 78 bikes lock ed to
anything and everything they could (ind
to lock them to that day. We need help
and a bike rack.
GARY W. MICKEY
Not 'trai le rs'
To the Editor:
In regards lo the term "trailer park,"
I would like to clarify a point. A
"trailer " is a recreational vehicle.
towed by a car or llCbl truck.
A "mobile home" la, and should be
called, a m1nuf actured housing unit, a
dwelling. Such dwelllncs are only
"mobUe" rrom t.be factory to the site •
AU manutactw-.d houslo1 wlit.a sold
since July or 1980 art cluallied u reaJ
• l.t>tltr& /rom rt<Sdrrii crt 11..itlcomf' Tht
raght In C'ond~•t lttlc" lo f&l spoct> or
f'fl m1nolt llbtl I& rt tri•fd L.A'lttr.'( of J(HI
uiords or ltu wtll ~ gat1tn ~tff'rrnte1 All
ltUfr1 musr 1ncludt 11gno1urt ond llt(llhng
oddrlfat but nomtt rnor M withMld on rt
q1.,11 1/ $U/f1 C'1t nl rtaaon ts opportnr
POf'f'?I IL•ll Ml bt J7"blllh~ lA'lltrS "10)1 bt
ltlrpltontd tu 641 lllN .\omt (Jftd pll1JM
.. .. "'bd nl '"*' t011rribtiror mu bf ,..,..,. fM
PfNfic'QllOft pii~WI
proper ty. An assessed value is placed
on said dwelling and placed on the
property tax rolls in the same manner·
as s ite built homes
THEREFORE, it behooves all of us Lo
s lop calling manufactured housing com·
munities trailer parks. courts, tin box·
es. etc .. etc which downgrades people
lo second class citizens. or "living on
the wrong side of the tracks" image.
lC you have n ever been lo the
M anufaclured Housing show at Dodger
Stadium, you are in for a very pleasant
surprise. The homes are luxurious and
in no way s hould be slandered by caU·
ing the m "trailers ...
FRANK H. BRADLEY
Crncial vote
To the Editor:
Newport Beach City Council mem·
be rs are about to vote on Newport
Center. They are all good people. They
have been propagandized by the no-
growthers and the build-everything-you·
canners.
I hope that the day before the vote
they each can ride through Newport
Beach, then quietly sit in deep counsel
with themselves. Then I hope they have
guts enough lo vote their deep feelings
about our and their city.
FRANKLIN S. GOOD
Cartoo n m is infon ned
To the Editor:
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on Mrs.
Reagan paying $75,000 for a Steuben
bowl, the previous week TV news
explained the bowl was worth $75,000,
however Mrs. Reagan purchased il for
$8,000.
As the cartoon is a gros1 cue of
misinformation I suggest the same
space be given to correcting the error.
The !acl ls, If your paper had been on
Its toes the cartoon s hould have been
canceled.
L. KEPPLER
It'• nice that Prealdtnl a .. a:an can
declare tbt controllers' l&liJte over and
10 olt oa vacation and leave the rut of
us to flsht the mesa.
DISGUSfED
........ , ............ ' ........ ... ~.:::::::;· ......................... . ................ ~
....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. Augu1t 13, 1981 A7
Male model sues Law school oaths OK'd
Man says 'Playboy' ad damaging Bar. association to allow religious bias in admissions
PITTSFIELD, Ma11. (AP> -
A cabinet installer whOM plc·
ture appeared In an advertise·
ment for Playboy Maaulne over
t be caption "The Playboy
Reader -bis lust la for life"
wants $250,000 in damaaes from
the magazine.
The judge who heard the
lawsuit said he will issue a de·
etalon in about a week.
The picture, which appeared
during a 1977 promotlonaJ cam·
paign in The New York Times
and airport and train station
posters, s hows mustachioed
Thomas Mazzeo on water skis.
Mazzeo said the picture was
used without his permission.
"It made me sound dirty. ll
made me sound like a sex
fiend," testified Mazzeo. 40, of
Bicycle Safety
Safety seminar hourly
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Ray,
UASE Sr£CIALIST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
CotY* OI OoYe.,_, o....i Sb
NEWPOAT BEACH
cars*bikes*
*skateboards•
trucks*baby
carriages•tea
carts*trikes
rol lerskates •
waJkers ·toys
•wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods• coupes•
trailers*hard
tops• convert -
ibles*motor
homes*lawn
mowers* limos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A's**0
*typingtables
wheelbarrows•
recreational
vehicles*golf
carts*model
trains*bikes
*pianos* cars
refrigerators
*skates••••••
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
It faster in a
Dally PiloJ .
classified
act ca11
6.42-5678 and a
f rlendly ad-
viser wi ll
help you turn your
wheels Into
cash.
ll •
Plttslleld. a father of four who
sln11 in tua church choir.
Ma.ueo sald durtnc the two-
day, non-jury trial before
Berkshire Superior Court Judie
William Simona that the ad·
vertlaement falsely Identified
him as a Playboy reader and
damaged his reputation and
business.
"I don't think housewives
want cabinetmakers with a
playboy's lust for life in their
kitchens," he said.
Playboy attorney Stephen
Olesky contended that Mazzeo
suffered "no measurable
damage other than the loss of
pay the a1ency would normally
make to an amateur model'' and
s uggested the judge aw&rd
M au:eo "the $200 to $250 we pay
for amateur models."
PLUM·S
LBS.$ 00
FOR
HAS SUGGESTION -
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese III told the American
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian jails. He spoke in
New Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS <AP> -The
American Bar A11oclaUon hu
amended ita atandard or ac·
credltattoo by lettlna church·
11.1pported law achoola dia-
crlminate on the baals of re·
llglon.
The controversial amendment
appeared to tall Wednesday on a
voice vote, but on a standing
vote at the ABA House of
Delegates, counted by tellers. it
passed 147-127.
The House then granted ac-
c reditalion for Or a l Roberts
University 's 0 . W. Coburn
School or Law in Tulsa. Okla.,
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de·
nied approval because it re·
quired studenta to swear an oath
of religious belief. pledging to
follow the example of Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
must support and exempllly the
code, and blrina Includes teats of
relilious belief.
Accreditation Is a serious mat-
ter alnce 1raduate1 or law
schools which do not have ABA
approval cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer in most states.
The university sued the ABA
in U.S. District Court. The Judge
issued an injunction forbidding
the ABA to deny provisional ac-
creditation until after the House
of Delegates decides the issue.
At a meeting last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be in
"substantial compliance" with
a ll standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis·
crimination on the ground or
race, color, religion, national
origin or sex.
A new standard was drawn by
an ABA com m ittee which
waters down th e old anti -
discrimination clause by add·
Ing:
"Nothing herein shall be con·
strued to prevent a law school
from having a religious atfilia·
lion and purpose and adopting
policies of adm isslon and
employment that directly relate
to such affiliation and purpose
so long as notice of such policies
has been provided to applicants,
stude nt s . faculty and
employees.·•
Dean Gordon Schaber of lbe
McGeorge School of Law of the
Un iversity of the Pacific.
chairman of the committee, said
the exception was based on the
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom .
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
5th MONTH
AlllllVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SHOP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
CALIFORNIA RANCH MKT.
W£ CUIY A WIDE
S£l£CTI091 OF TROPICAL FllllT
JumboHa11 llllllS PllUPPLE
PlPlYl LllES
lll&OES COCOIUT
SPECIALTY ITEMS
STUWIERllES SHARLYN MELONS FOR BLUEBERRIES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ 98 ORGANIC
APPLE 1h
JUICE Gal.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
ORANGE HO••iY
WE lRE .IOW FEltURllG
FERRARO'S FllE
FRESH FRUIT JUICES ClUIY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PEISWI MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON GRAYEllSTlllE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 00
DELI
OUR MEAT: BEnER THAN JUST A CUT ABOVE --~. '::::;:: _: -
JUICY MEATY BEEF Lean Boneless
CHUCK STEAK BACK RIBS PORK ROAST (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like)
0 $ 49 $ 29
lb. lb. lb.
LEAN Sil VER TROUED
WHOLE SALMOtl GROUND BEEF
PATIIES
6 to 9 lb. overage
$2~b~
llEIGHBOR'S
Stop by ori ..-.,iday & Sotvrd~y
for o ta1t1t of some of 01.•• •in•
California Ronch Market Products.
·loiiiER$ Ow,... w.-.-... ...,
w..tw 4ve .. the Air ttr•• ~ltV•-•'-wtM......... cell w fer rew ..,,
(Not to exceed 22% fat content)
CREAMY FRESH
POTATO
SALAD 99!
John $169 Morrell
IRIUISWEl&ER lb.
California Ranch Marlcet $249 Specially Prepared
BAKED HAM 1b.
Fresh Baked
CRUSTY
UISEll
ROLLS
. \ ...
101111:•
-.. • •• ,. -.. " • ' • • t• • • •
. Dilly Plllt
THURSDAY,
I AUG. ~3, 1981
BUSINESS BS
STOCKS 87
. ' ... . .. I t •• • • .. # . . .. . .. . . . . . -__ ··1
Sylvia Porter says
take advantage of
Wl!!!!!fl~ 'tax sweeteners' ... B7
D
a
Mesa auth<:>r finds being single .can be profttabk
..., .............
Popular best-selling book claims living alone likeable experience
B1 .JOEL C. DON Of .. ..., ..........
Lynn Shaban was beaming.
Her ftrst book bad been out only a month
and it was already No. 4 on Time maauine's
best seller list and heralded In full·paae
newspaper ads.
And all s he did was sit down at the
typewriter to put together a practical iulde on
her lifestyle: being single.
"Llving Alone and Ll.kiog It" covers the
Costa Mesa \voman's thoughts on learning to de·
pend on oneself: to eat, play and amuse yourself
without that overwhelming need for another
warm body.
"It's a lifestyle that in effect bas come into
its own when you talk about 25 percent of the
population being single," said the 39-year-old
Ms. Shahan. "It's an acceptable lllestyle. Ten
years ago it wasn't."
She said at one time people believed "there
was something strange about the person who
wasn't married and bad three children by the
time he was 30."
perience as they approach middle age and find
they have no one special to come home to every
night.
Instead of landin1 a quick husband or Uve-
in boyfriend a.s a solution, she learned how to be
by herself and enjoy it.
Armed with her experience u a Garden
Grove high school counselor and encounters
with singles workshops and the like, she decided
to help others overcome the fear of being alone.
"At 30 Prince Charming didn't come
along," she said. "I woke up and reallied that
that might never happen. It was a very
traumatic realization.
"I saw a need. I knew if I felt the way 1 felt,
others were like that too.''
Though she's never been married, Ms .
Shahan said the book is generally intended for
widowed and divorced persons as opposed to
teen-agers on their first time out from home.
Research for the book included attendance
al seminars where she found divorced people
lost and abandoned in their new-found life as
singles.
single person. Ms. Shahan said, "I'm not sour
on marria1e at au. A lot of people have asked ii
in writing the book I'm advocating llvin1 alone
as a lifestyle. There's no question that Uvin&
with someone is better. If the right relationship
came along, I'd get married tomorrow.
"But I've seen so many people in bad rela·
tionships who are afraid to leave because
they're afraid of living alone."
Her living alone prescription is simple, if
not just plain common sense. If you're sinale,
you're obligated to make a good life for
you rself.
"Many people rush off to search for the next
warm body. They don't have a good time for
themselves. As a result of that they don't know
themselves and they get into a poor rela·
tionship."
Ms . Shahan isn't a member of any sinales
group or other social boy-meets-girl organba·
tions. But she's all for them.
New book fJy Lynn Shahan tells why if you're
single, you're obligated to make a good life for
yourself.
Ms. Shahan learned how to live alone the
hard way. She frequented single bars and was
quickly turned off by what she saw as a sea of
unhappiness. She suffered through loneliness,
depression and the sudden fear that many ex-
In addition to providing a practical Uvina
guide on money management, eating for one
and other household and social skllh, abe also
decided to tackle the emotional issues that
plague the single person.
Though, she has enjoyed her years as a
"The only time I feel alone is when I want
to be," she said. "But for many people being
alone is a very stark feeling. It's an experience
that many people feel they don't have the
capacity or resources to deal with."
She owes the quick success of her book, in
part, to the publisher, the Los Angeles-based
Stratford Press, owned bv Robert J . Ringer.
Victim's fall
being probed
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of_....., .........
Three police officers and a
ride-along civilian saw Robert
Gary Wardman strike his head
on the pavement while being r~
moved from a patrol car behind
the Laguna Beach police station
23 days ago.
The four witnesses later told
investigators the man's head bit
the ground from a distance of
between three and 20 inches.
And, based on a pathologist's
report, due today, that distance
is "not consistent" with a severe
skull fracture which resulted in
the 35-year-old spa salesman's
death nine and a half hours after
he wllS la.ken into police cilatody.
Meanwhile, a police depart-
ment investigation into
circumstances surrounding the
jailhouse death of the Laguna
Beach man was expected to be
completed today and forwarded
to acting Laguna Beach police
chief Neil Purcell for review.
Purcell also was to receive the
written report from Dr. Peter
• Yatar of the county coroner's of·
fice which indicates Wardman
might have received a severe
skull fracture before police took
custody of lhe man.
Wardman was found lying on
the sidewalk out.side the Main
Street bar on South Coast
Highway July 22 at about 1 a.m.
Paramedics called to the
scene determined the man was
intoxicated, Purcell said, and he
was subsequently transported to
the city jail and placed in a cell.
At about 10:30 the next morn-
ing, officers found the man un-
consicious and not breathing.
Despite efforts by firemen,
police and paramedics ,
Wardman died at South Coast
Medical Center shortly after
noon.
Following a preliminary
autopsy report that showed
Wardman died of a skull frac-
ture, PurceU said Officer
Charles Maine, 29, was in·
terviewed by superiors and pre-
sented a written report on the in·
cident. In both reports, Purcell
said, the officer "stated that
there was no dropping of the in·
dividual or striking of the head."
But after purportedly being
pressured by fellow officers to
tell the truth, Maine went to
superiors and admitted
Wardman bad slipped out of his
1rasp and fallen on his bead
while being removed from a
patrol car.
The officer has since been
placed on admtnatrative leave
with pay untll conclusion ot in-
veaU1atlons into the incident.
ln Dr. Yatar's report, the
pat.holollSt ...... estabU.hed the
time of the skull fracture u
between nine and 12 houri prior
to Wardman'• death," Capt.
Puttell Mid.
In a telephone conversation
wlth1 the patbolo1i1t late
WedDHd ay, Purcell said be
learned tbe autop17 "further
•ubUtbed that tbe documented
Rabie8 clinic tel
Tb• lnltie cU1 Aalmal SenleH D epartmen t will. ,,_.... a eaalDe ralMI tlale Ill
1 ._..... • u. "'1du 1at e1 a . tJi•Rlill, • .,., 1••'*-.... lntK
............... 9M111f
"-wOI .......... .
dropping incident involving our
officers on July 22 while being
removed from a police unit was
not consistent with a severe
skull fracture of this nature."
The acting police chief said
taped re-enactments of the inci·
dent, performed by the officers
and civilian involved, "is consis·
tent with Dr. Yatar's opinion."
·'We have determined the
dropping of the victim was
between three and 20 inches
(from the ground)," Purcell
said.
He said the difference in dis·
tance estimated by the wit-
nesses is due to the various loca-
tions at which the three officers
and ride-along civilian observed
the fall.
"Based on Dr. Yatar's opin··
ion, a skull fracture of this
magnitude could not occur from
a fall or dropping from a height
of three to 20 inches.
·'One can certainly, at this
point, conclude Mr. Wardman
apparently had a terrific fall
prior to our arriving, either
right there on the sidewalk
where he was found, or
somewhere else that would fit
within the nine to 12 hours."
In addition to the in-house in-
vestigation due today. the dis-
trict attorney's office Is conduct-
ing an investigation into the
jailhouse death.
Deputy District Attorney John
Conley said the results of that
probe should be completed late
this week or early next week.
..., ................
AT IT AGAIN -Iranian immigrant Ali Roushan works in his
Costa Mesa metal shop's parking lot on his fourth sculpture.
"Tornado," while awaiting results or lawsuits regarding ci -
'ty rights to regulate erection of his three previous big red
structures and Roushan's constitutional rights to freedom of
expression. Rous han says he'll erect his latest 70-foot work
in about a month. topped off by the infinity symbol in which
he stands.
Hot pursuit ends • ID Newport
Teen ·leads police on 75-mile chase to Corona. and back
Officers from seven Orange
County law enforcement agen-
cies were led on a 75-mile chase
early today that began in Tustin
and extended to Corona in
Riverside County before ending
in Newport Beach.
Sgt. Dan Spratt. spokesman
for the Orange County Sheriff's
Department, gave the following
account of the incident :
A deputy on patrol in an unin·
corporated area of Tustin about
3:2S a.m. attempted to stop a
1973 Mercury Capri that had run
a stop sign. The vehicle sped off
and the chase was on.
Alter enterina and leaving the
Santa Ana Freeway, the chase
moved onto streets in Orange,
up the Newport Freeway to the
Riverside Freeway and east to
Corona.
Then it was back to Orange
County, down the Newport
Freeway and into Newport
Beach. The chase ended about
4:30 a .m. when the neelna vehi·
cle collided with a Newport
Beach Police patrol unit at Nep-
tune Avenue and 54th Street.
Neither the driver, a 17·year-
old Tustin youth. nor Officer
Tom Tolman was injured in the
collision. The youth wu taken
into custody and lodged at
Love-eager rh~no
stages a getaway
It'• rblnoceroe matiag season at Uon Country Safari in lrvine
and ooe ~ tbe horned beasll 1ot
so carried away that he busted
thJ'OUlh. containment sate this
morniq at the wUd animal com-
pound, aaid park apotumaa
Vll'liala Brauer.
Tbe thlck·•klaaed animal
.. ........,.. over to a fteJd Jmt
aOi1Jl ol Uon Country Satar\ at
1:11 a.m., lbe Niel. addlnl that
park ,...,.,. were able to qulek·
I)' IMd the rtU.no back to the
compound.
TMa mOnUDI'• laeld•t ..
&llDOl& ldentlc.J to aa eec:a,. bid
made b)' a rhino latt month, she
yidl .
In both case• the 1tron1.
heaV)'Wel,._t beaata were able to
knock down a 1ate at a tem-
porary boldin1 atea for the
rblnot she Mid.
Tbe rb1aol were moved from
tMlt old pen to the boldi.q area
early Uall 1ummer became t.be
pen •• too near an open·air
........... that .. belQs con. ltr1ld..t 8l Uon Country Safari .•
Pm alftdAls U•e Nkl tNt ~ha••Miotak• .. laiun"tbat;DD WiJd aalmala will
le\ near •llY ol lhe taDt.
Orange County Juvenile Hall,
according to a potice
spokesman.
Spratt said the lengthy chase
involved the sheriff's depart·
ment, California Highway
Patrol, and police in the cities of
Orapge, Corona, Brea. Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
He said the pursuit was
"handed off" from one jurisdic·
lion to the other as the chase
proceeded.
Asked if officers had de-
termined why the youna driver
wouldn't slop, Spratt said.
, "Well, you know ... kids.
Burglars
grab cash,
scr•p gold
Bw-&Jara kicked thelr way into
five Newport Beach medical and
d.atal oCfteea thll Wfflt, trab-
blq preeeripti• J>ldl, cMb and
terap IOld UMd for ftlliq teeth.
Polle. 4ald the thle•et ent.nd
the OlftHI 1n the 2011 Wlltellft
Dr. indcal complex tom.time
MondliJ slmply by k.lckiq doortl
and 1pUnt.ertq them in ball.
la all, officers uld, &he
burl)an llDt l.1CIO in ca1h, ISOO in
urap 1old , a camera and
numerou1 pr•~erlptlon pad•
from amcea belODltBI to Dn.
Donald Julian, .Joba 8DJ4er,
Frank De'10i'e aad deatllU on.
JC>bn aerece aDd Frau ltidl.
Wreck not that . .
of 2 Mesa men
By STEVE MARBLE
ot•OlltrNll .....
The crumpled fuselage of an
airplane in a remote area of the
Sierra Nevada is not the light
plane carrying two Costa Mesa
men that vanished four months
ago.
Authorities from Fresno Coun-
Dormant
boards
assaile d
By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Dllly"6111St9"
The Confidenti a 1 ily and
Privacy Control Board has nol
met in five years, yet it is still
aJi ve and well according to the
files of Orange County govern-
ment.
The management and plan-
ning team for the former Starr
Ranch (now Caspers Regional
Wilderness Park. located east of
San Juan Capistrano) and a
committee formed to study the
Serrano Commu nit y
Park/ Recr eational Historical
Complex apparently have never
met since being formed in 1975.
That the committees still ex.isl
-on paper at least -is upset-
ting to county Supervisor Bruce
Nestande. Wednesday be pro-
posed a new set of guidelines t.o
control the formation or boards
and committees and monitor
their work.
In a three-page letter to fellow
supervisors, Nestande proposed:
-Imposition of a "sunset
rule" that would permit the an-
nual dissolution of any commit-
tee. unless supervisors took ac-
tion t.o keep the panel function-
ing.
-A requirement that the
board review annually the work
of all boards and committees.
Nestande conceded that the
value of such BJlnual reports
may be questionable.
-Annual approval by the
board of allocations to each
committee.
"These changes, I believe,
would simplify the admlnistra-
Uon of boards, commissions and
committees and give the board
of supervisors the elfecUve con-
trol mechanism it bas been seek·
ing over the past several )'ears,"
Nestande said.
Nestande said \hat more than
100 county boards and commit·
tees ex.lat.
•'Tb.ls somewhat chaotic situa·
lion bas created a record·
keeplna nightmare for those
charged with keeptna an ac·
curate Ust of active paneJJ, not
to mention their chan1tn1 mem-
benhips."
An October uao, 1tudy
1howed that stipends paid to
varlou1 committee members
totaled SlZF,145 annually.
That fttutt wu lower than the tt•,ooo •t»at Oil tUMnd.I in
19'11, NettlDde polntecf out. (ID
lt'18, lbe eqwvaleat of sa.ooo in ..
countJ ltaff dme was uac by
tb• commltwa; no IUab ~ ~a• cOatained ln UM -re-port.)
TM ~ Nici PD' tf.
fOltlbt;ltiebOard to~ ... '4n.at.i..-ot commlUaile laal allld .
ty. who spatted the wreckage
last month, at first believed it
was the Cessna 210 that lifted off
from the Mammoth Lakes
airport last March bound for
nearby Bishop.
The plane, which ne ver
reached Bishop, is believed to
have crashed in the mountains.
Thal plane was piloted by 25·
year-old Robert Reed and was
carrying 26-year-old Michael
Thompson, th~ son of Newport
Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken
Thompson. ·
Sgt. Ken Abell. a member of
the Fresno Sheritrs Search and
Rescue Team, said he was able
lo make out an identification
number on i h e wreckage
Wednesday after developing a
set of aerial photographs.
He said the number does not
match that of the Cessna 210
that bas been sought.
Because of this discovery,
Abell said. authorities h ave
called off a search of the moun-
tains. A team of hikers was to
backpack into the area near
Convict Lake to scrutinize the
wreckage.
Abell said he's not sure where
the airplane came from and who
might have been piloting iL He
said the call letters on the
wreckage were checked against
a federaJ registry which indicat-
ed the crash was more than five
years old.
He said his department does
not investigate air crashes that
old.
Abell, who said he stripped
down a helicopter so it would be
light enough to make a pass over
the wreckage to take the photo-
graphs, said he's prowled the
mountains to see if he could spot
any other wreckage that might
be the plane carrying the Costa
Mesa men.
He said he saw nothing during
several passes.
"We have oothing else to look
for," he said ... We have nowhere
else to go unless someone comes
up with a clue."
500 compete
in lifeguard
• • compe tition
More than 600 lifeguards from
as far away as Australia,
Florida and New York began
competition today in the 1981
U.S. Lifeuving Association
Championships at Salt Creek
Beach in Lacuna Nlauel.
Competltioa will resume Fri·
day at nooo and culminate with
an awards ceremony at 7 p.m.
At 2:30 p.m. Friday, repraen·
talives of tifeauafd teams en-
tered in this year's competitJon
will take part in the rrueUna
lroo man event, which includes
rowtna, swtmmina and Mlllll1q.
At 6:30 p.m. Friday Ufe1Uard
teams will take part in tbe
Lacuna Nisu-1-llll Creek f'91ay,
an e\'ent whlc:ll ill \um
11aio1t te•m ln otlH and
aWimmlq.
11*e wtll be 11 event.I held on
bOtb day• of the ~ompetitlon,
T'he U.S. Liv•aviJlt Attoclatloft
• H•dlcilied cbamplon1blp1 at
Salt a. have been held at the
Lasuna Ni1uel beach tOf' the pelt three ,..,..,
.... .
-Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, August 13, 1981
Porke r s show jogging
aids dis eased lie arts
SAN DIEGO <AP> Pip runnln1
on a treadmtll appear to prove 101·
1ln1 is &ood for humans, at least
those with some de1ree of heart dis·
ease, say University of California re-
searchers.
After ftve montha of atudyin& the
\'u cata n mlntswlne, with
cardiovascular systems similar to
humans', a spokesm an said Wednes-
day the findings reverse a pre-
Umlnary conclusion reached three
years aao.
The coronary arteries in the piga In
the new experiments, in contrast to
those used in 1978, were partly closed
surgically. Their so-caUed collateral blood vessels with exercise 1rew to 5
or 10 times normal size, boosUn1
blood now four to six times.
The improved circulation saved -40
percent of the heart tissue
jeopardized by the clogged arteries
while in 10 other pigs kept orr the
• motorized treadmill "only about 17
percent of the jeopardized tissue"
was salvaged, Dr. Colin Bloor sald.
Bloor, a UC pathology professor
who directed the research, is presi·
dent of the San Diego County chapter
of the American Heart Assocjation.
Bloor said the joeglng pigs were
e~erclsed atrenuou1ly for flve
months alter their arteries were re-
duced 50 to 70 percent of normal atze.
Two of the·pigs dled of heart attacks
during the grueling runs lasting up to
several hours.
Bloor, in an Interview, warned that
persons with heart conditions should
Their blood
vessels with ex-
ercise grew to 5 or
10 times normal
size .
consult physicians. however. before
starting strenuous exercise.
By the time the study ended, he
said, the pigs were running more
than an hour a day and their heart
rates were pushed to almost 80 per-
cent of maximum.
The resting heart rates of pigs is
the same as the human rate, Bloor
said. While exercis ing, the pigs'
heart rates went up to 220 beats a
minute ..
AP ........
·A Yucatan mmiswine runs on motorized treadmill at University of California at
·San Diego. where scientists say study shows humans .can prevent heart attacks
by jogging. especuzlly if they already have coronary disease
Countian perishes
;Heat fatal after woman loses direction
BAKER, Calif. (AP) -A 75·year·
old woman who missed a freeway en-
: trance and wandered down a sandy
desert road in 115-degree heat was
found dead in her stranded car three
· days later, authorities said.
Winifred Campbell of Santa Ana
died of heat exposure after burning
out her car engine in an effort to keep
the air conditioning running, San
· Bernardino County s heriff's Deputy
Joseph Perea said.
A piece of white cloth was found
lied to her cane , an apparently failed
effort to attract help.
A founder of the Assistance League
of Long Beach and the widow of
former Long Beach City Councilman
Melvin L. Campbell, Mrs. Campbell
had driven to the Victorville area
community of Apple Valley on Aug. 3
to visit a friend and started back
home last Thursday.
But instead of going south toward
Orange County she ended up going
100 miles northeast on Interstate 15
before stopping to ask directions al a
service station in this town SO miles
from the Nevada border.
Mrs . Campbell was given d1rec·
tions to get back home and headed
off on a service road t hat
paralleled the freeway. But she
missed the overpass to the south·
bound lanes and continued on the
road even after it veered off from the
highway and turned into a dirt route.
The car eventually got stuck in
deep sand. and on Sunday her body
was found inside.
CHIEF -Dr. P,,aul M.
Johnson of Irvme has
been elected presi·
dent of the Orange
County Dental Socie·
ly. a l ,300-member
non-profit organiza-
tion.
Channel
levee
rise due
The Orange County
Board of Supervisor s
has approved a $3 .5
million project to raise
the height or levees
a long the San Juan
Creek channel to pre·
vent potential flooding
in Capistrano Beach.
The construction proj-
ect, which has been ap-
proved by t h e State
Coastal Commission ,
will raise the levees
Crom two to six feet by
1983 along a three-mUe
stretch from the mouth
of the creek to where it
converges with Trabuco
Creek.
County Environmen·
tal Management Agency
oCficials have been
plagued with siltation
problems in the creek
bed for several years,
and have been prevent-
ed from dredging the
channel by the Coastal
Commission.
The commission has
r efused permission for
the county to sell the
sand it removes to offset
the dredging costs, mak·
ing such a project too
expensive, Qfficials say.
County officials say
raising the levees and
allowine the creek chan-
nel to rise to its natural
level will eliminate the
need for dredging, ad·
ding nature can then
take its co ura e.
Construction is expected
to begin in the fall.
P a rty s et
in Irvine ·
The Irvine City Coun-
cil has approved a $3:iO
expenditure for the
printing of invitations to
a party that will be held
later this year in
celebration of the 10th
anniversary of the city's
incorporation,
Invitations will be sent
to past and present city
omcials and members
of the busin ess com ·
m unity. said city ad·
m ini s trator Ken
Lazette.
The exact date and
location of the party
have not yet been de-
termined.
Before you buy any make of car,
call me. I'll save you time & money
Benefit from my buying clout. I buy office. Low overhead. No salesmen,
or lease cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get prices from us. 100 for corporate fleets. We can ob-any make of car. Then compare for
ta in substantial savings for qua Ii· yourself .1And tell your friends.)
fied individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to 5. Robt Hixson Equipment
shopping & haggling. ours Is a busy Co. ask for Virginia 714 64~U.
CONVENIEN~ DISPOSABLE COLOPlA~T · BRANO
Gr..cto,...w.
SA VE AN EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE
at Trader Joe & Proato
Moat whole wheels of
cb eeae wel&h 5 to 10 ~· When you buy a whole wheel or cheese from UI, we give you a 10~ diacount from the
aln&le pound price on almOll every cheue. tr a whole wbeel weighs more than 15 ~. you don 't bave to buy It all. We'll
live you a 10'7o cllacount
(J you buy a chunk which
lJel1~s more than 10
pounda. This Is a simple way to beat inflation-
and cheese aJways tastes
better from a whole
wbeeJ! Please visit our newest Trader Joe's at
the lnteraection or 17th St re et, Newport Boulevard and Superior
Avenue (next to Denny's· and Barclay's Bank).
MOW IM COSTA MISA
642-5678
Put a few worda to work for ,au
in I/le ~· ....
•
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HE.RE!
We now car• v 1ne compte1e COLOPLAS T t.ne-the
latge\t se11tn11 cltSOOScJble ostorriy appliances 1n the
worl<l [ ...eryt111ng '°' c04ostomat~ 11ecstomates and
urtnary ostomate~-all with convenoent COl.OP~AST
d•~b<t•ty COLoPLAS> T rel1c1btl1ty-plus case pack
economy Be suie to asl\ tor your f'Rf[ copy ot INS!GHIS-
tne OUbhcatt0'1 that s 1ust tor you-alway<. tneludes
couoons tor lrtt samoles 1"4114
MOUL TON PLAZA PHARMACY
23M5 Moufton P1rtlway, Lagune Hitt•
(N9•1 10 El R1nctlo Marllel)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan ciaociolion
01'1· N MO'\: I· H I 'I ,\ \1 I i P \1
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S0tilMnl ea11toml1 ~loMI Ofl/Cfla:
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-Ville;' View 81., luen• Pertl, CA 90l20 1llMI Amelll Ad., C&menllo, CA 93010
t~Tx; -----·--.. ----·--
2071f 8. •..ton 81~. C.90n CA 90749 ~ Lalle c.nter Dr., (UM ~Of•1), Et lcwo, CA tal30 •
1001 l 1""'8ftal H~'l La H ..... CA tal31 (i) 41«) 1..°'"9 lelch 19m1,, t..ong leech. CA IOI07 •
2-Hewlhome lthd~ TOfftnoe OA -1• tmna IMl, Tllltln CA... ,& 23& N. cew. All9., W-CowtM, CA t'l1'11 Ullll• MMIMW; lloom" ,,..,,.,. M. ,....,._Melt
Colle ge
building
backed
A bUl to appropriate $2 mUllon
to be1ln construction of an
85,000-aquare·foot claaaroom
buildin& at S•ddleback CoU .. e
in Mission Viejo baa won •P·
proval from the s tate Aa·
sembly's Education Committee.
The measure was approved ln
a 9-0 vole Tuesday, with four
committee members absent. It
will now eo to the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee,
which ia expected to c0nalder
the appropriations blll In about a
week.
The bill, AB 2265, la sponsored
by Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson (R·Newport'8each). If
it wins final approval from the
full Assemble and state Senate.
c:onstructlon funds will be al-
located from the Capital OuUay
Fund for Higher Education.
Saddleback College Superin·
tendent Robert Lombardi, who
was in Sacramen to f or
Tuesday's vote , said the $2
million will allow the communi·
ty college to begin the first
phase or the $7 .5 million con·
struclion project.
He said full funding for the
classroom building was initially
included in this year's state
budget. However , during a last
minute budget-cutting session,
members of the State Education
Finance Committee deleted the
money, Lombardi said.
Saddleback College officials
say the school is in desperate
need of more classroom space
due to rapid increa~es in enroll·
ments over the past five years.
In his 1981-82 budget report for
the Saddleback Community
College District, Roy Barletta,
assistant s uperintendent for
business. Sllid district enroll·
ments have climbed about 15
percent a year for the past three
years.
Even if Saddleback re<'eives
the $2 million under the bill now
being considered, the district
will still have to come up with
$5.5 million to complete the
classroom building.
"Raising that money will be
the next step," Lombardi said.
"But where it is going to come
from we don't know yet."
O.lly~ .......... ,,...,._
TOP DOG Casey. a six-month·old shelty. gets s peC"ial al·
tention from owner Michelle Stewart. 12. after the dog won
top honors in the annual kids' dog show at Newport Beach's
Eastbluff Boys Club. Fourteen dog~ vied fo r honor~ ranging
from b}'st groomed to be~t trick. Case~ was Judged best
overall.
Mesa files lawsuit
to halt oil drilling
Costa Mesa City Attorney Tom
Wood has filed a lawsuit in
Orange County Superior Court
seeking a permanent injunction
to haJt Barto Oil Co. of Santa
Ana from drilling on the firm's
land in south Costa Mesa.
The suit, filed last Wednesday.
follows a city council decision on
Aug. 3 lo take "the necessary
actions" required to enforce
Costa Mesa's ordinances pro·
hibiting new oil drilling in the
city.
Barto began drilling three new
we lls in late June after process·
ing drilling applications through
the state and Orange County's
E n vironmen tal Management
Agency.
Wood contends the oil firm ig-
nored requirements for city
drilling permits and laws passed
in 1964 to prohibit new drilling.
Schools cut costs
of driver training
Wood said he expects the case
to go before a judge in about 60
days under an arrangement with
Barto's attorneys. Rutan and
Tucker of Santa Ana.
"I am not seeking a tem-
porary restraining order or a
preliminary injunction at this
time." Wood said. "It's part of
a plan for getting cooperation
for an expedited trial.
A Santa Ana drivin1 school
has been chosen by Newport.
Mesa Unified School District
trustees to offer driver training
to an estimated 1,800 students
next school year at about half of
the cos\ of last year's program.
Santiago School of Driving,
which offered to do the job for
$63 per student, was the lower or
two bidders for the contract
awarded Tuesday. Academy of
Defensive Driving, Newport
Beach, quoted $132 a student.
The school board trimmed
driver training, a requirement
for youths who seek driving
licenses before age 18, from the
district curriculum earlier this
year when it learned the state
would not offer its previous an·
nual $60-per-trainee allocation.
But, a school official noted,
the state reversed itself late this
summer and will continue to of·
ftl
fer $60 per driver.
The driving program. to be of·
fered to students before and
after school and on weekends.
will cost the district about $5,400
in general funds and an un-
known amount for eledricity re-
quired to operate driving
simulators.
In addition to behind·the-
w heel t r aini n g in autos
furnished by the firm. the driv·
ing school will offer simulator
training in a trailer to be parked
near the district's Newport
Beach headquarters.
Last year, the ~istrict painted
"streets" and "intersections" on
a Newport Harbor High parking
lot to offer behind-the-wheel ex-
perience to youngsters before
putting them on city streets.
That program cost the district
$120 per driver. a school official
noted.
"In return, they <Barto at·
torneys) have agreed not to drill
the fourth well until we have had
a trial."
Barto actually gained ap·
proval early this summer from
the state to sink four new wells
on its 18-acre property lying ad·
jacent to a 60-home subdivision
in south Mesa .
"Part of the plan," Wood said
of his court action, "is, if we can
agree to basic facts, that 'both of
us will file motions for summary
judgment."
Meanwhile. he said, Barto will
continue to pump oil from the
three wells already constructed
near the Ocean View Park area
where homes are valued at
about $250.000.
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---------
Orange Co••• DAILY PLLOT(T'huraday, Auguat i3, 1981 I -------------------". N
lroine coast status
critical for cities.
An effort to place a stretch of
coastline into Irvine's city boun·
daries was boosted last week by
that city's Planning Commission.
The commission r ecom-
mended that the coastal area
between the cities of Laguna
Beach and Newport Beach be
placed into Irvine sphere of in·
fluence, which is defined as an
area outside city boundaries but
earmarked for future annexation.
Now the Irvine City Council
will consider that recommenda·
lion and decide whether to
forward it to the Orange County
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission, which decides city boun·
da ries and spheres of influence.
Some officials of Newport
Beach, which now h as a s phere of
influence that takes in much of
the territory sought by the Irvine
Planning Commission. have in -
dicated they won't give up the
area Without a fight.
LaJ!Una Beach offi cials are
, also eyeing the situation but
haven 't yet made any public
statements on the matter.
The city that ultlmately an·
nexes the coastal area stands to
reap a large amount of sales tax
revenue from the commercial de·
velopment planned there, includ-
ing three hotels.
Officials from Irvine say that
their city should garner these
benefits because Irvine would
suffer most of the pollution and
traffic costs associated with
coastal development.
Newport Beach officials say
they should get the revenue
because they are going to su!f er
most of the costs.
Undoubtedly~ both conten-
tions contain a measure of truth.
It is the responsibility of the
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission to place the politics of
the two cities aside and decide
the question on the basis of objec-
tive questions relative to the
costs each city will bear due to
coastal development, traffic pat-
terns, natural boundaries and a
number of other criteria.
I .College funding cut
Coast Co mmunit y College
District offi cials were caught by
s urprise a few months ago when
they learned the district would be
receiving substantially less
money from the stale than had
been anticipated.
The district. which includes
Orange Coast. Golden West and
Coastline colleges. had just a few
weeks to trim $3.5 million out or
its budget.
Such massive cutbacks could
not be made painlessly.
The district was forced lo lay
1>ff s ome c la ss ified <non -
teaching1 employees in clerical
and maintenance posit ions.
Many other jobs created by
r esignations a nd retirements
were left unfilled.
District students this fall will
find materials fees charged in
more courses. At Orange Coast
College, the many community
service lectures. formerly free.
will require a charge. At Golden
West College, the library and
tutoring center will be open
fewer hours.
Buildings will be cleaned less
frequently, a nd major main-
tenance and construction proj-
~cts will be postponed.
Despite these cutbacks in
su pport services. t he course of·
ferings at the three colleges will
remain virtually unchanged.
It is unknown how long the
colleges can cul back on main-
tenance before their fa cilities
begin to deteriorate seriously.
For the moment, however , it
is comforting to see that the col-
lege district was able to keep
most of its cuts away from the
classroom. District officials cor ·
rectly decided that maintaining
the quality of education al the
three colleges must be the top
priority.
Boaters' needs cited
Much of the concern over
plans to develop the Bolsa Chica
marshlands has been expressed
by residents of the city of Hunt-
ington Beach, which surrounds
the county territory.
But Newport B eac h
yachtsman and architect Bill
Ficker recently made the in·
teresling point that his city also
has a major stake in the possible
development of the Bolsa Chica.
Ficker observes that develop-
ment of a public marina at Bolsa
Chica, as included in the plan ap·
proved by the Or ange County
Board of Supervisors. could 1'e-
lieve some of the congestion
along Newport's ocean front.
Even the development or a
Dana Point marina has not re-
duced the crowds swarming to
Newport Beach for its boating.
fi s h ing and s wimming op-
portunities. Ficker contends. And
the county's population is contin-
uing lo grow
ln recent years, Bolsa Chica
h as s h a ped up as a battle
between environmentalists. who
wish to prel\erve the wetlands,
and the l a ndowner. Signal
Landmark Company, which
wants to build homes on much or
the Bolsa Chica.
But Ficker makes the valid
point that a third side to this dis-cussion exists -the county's
pressing need for more public
r ecreation facilities along the
coast. especially for boate rs.
I The wailing lists for docking
s pace are lengthy.>
• ln late September. county
•
s upervisor s will r eview their
Bolsa Chica plan as part of a
larger Local Coastal Program. It
the n will be presented to the
California Coastal Co mmission.
During the remaining review
hearings, the viewpoint of county
recreation enthusiasts should re-
ceive consideration along with
the more familiar opinions of en-
vironmentalists and the land-
owner.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those ot the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex·.
pressed on tt11s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit-
ed. Address The Oailv Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7 14 )
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Churchill's memory
The memory of Winston Churchill
must have been somelhiJ\g apecial. I
can't believe that be could recite all
or "The Decline and Fall or the
Ro m an Empire,'' a s has been
~!aimed. It's known, though, that he
ceuld deliver every line In at least a
C?Ouple of Shakespeare's plays.
During just tbe first week ot this
yeu t. the United States used more
1asonne Utan all or its armed forces
uaed throughout World War JI. An
a1tonlshlng statistic, what?
Credit Mark Russell with thaL rlng-
ln1 cry: "Sic Semper Adldae." M'•nlna "Wo'U never nm out o( , •n~aken." p
U ~ are ao yean okt. you were
born tM same year t.M 22Dd A.mend·
ORANGE COAST
lalyP.ilat
ment to the Constitution limited U.S.
presidenta to two terms, the year
Johnnie Ray popularized walling
ballads su6 M "Cry," and the same
year Lucille Ball first went on
television wit.b her "I Love Lucy"
shows.
The ancient Roman poet Ovid had •
this to say about baldness: ·'Ugly ls a
field wil.hout erata, a plant without
leaves, or a head without balr."
Q. What was the rlrst country after
tbe American Revolution to rec-
ognize t.be United State• aa an in·
dependent nation in lt.s own n,bt?
A. Morocco. fn 1789.
Veneauela's government has a
ft(inistry for the Development or ln·
telliaence. '
Thomas P. H•l•Y
Publl"'9f'
•" '"'°"'6 A. Mllrpltl• Editor .
.. l'Mra Krelltkll
Edltorlel P ... Editor
'AA,"M Br>LJT\fUL,CLEAN .f'RESH AIR .•. PITY °™~'S NCJ Et'Q)GH ~ NRYM.'
FDR memorial panel .endures
W ASlllNGTON -For more years
than they lik e t o remember,
R epublicans ground their teeth in
frus tration over Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, who rode rough.shod, with ir·
ritating good humor, over the GOP.
Now, of course, the shoe is on the
other foot. Ronald Reagan. an erstwhile
New Dealer, is tromping the remnants
of FDR's liberal coalition underfoot
with a coalition of conservatives from
North, South and West. When he's in
difficulty with Congress, Reagan stages
the modern equivalent of FDR's radio
"fireside chats" and appeals directly to
the people. His deli very is every bit as
persuasive as FDR's -and members
of Congress know it.
SO PERHAPS it's not surprising that
one of the hoaries t boondoggles to s ur
v i ve the ons laught of President
Reagan's budget cutters is the FDR
Memorial Commission. For more than
a quarter of a century, the commission
has been squandering the taxpayers'
money in a bootless attempt to achieve
a suitable memorial to the only presi-
dent who ever was -and thanks to the
Twenty-Second Amendment ever will
be -elected more than twice.
The commission has accomplished
nothing since it was founded in 1955. It
has demonstrated little likelihood of ac-
complishing anything in the years to
come. In fact, its whole reason for ex·
istence was obliterated years ago, wben
private donors erected a modest
memori al to FDR in d o wntown
Washington -a marble block on Penn·
sylvania Avenue outside the Archives
BuildJng, the size and location of which
were selected by Roosevelt himself.
But when two members of Congress,
Reps Dan GUckman. D-Kan., and Bill
Dannemeyer. R-Calif.. recently tried to
G
-Jl-Cl-11-D-IR-SO-I -~
save the government a little money by
abolishing the FDR commission, they
were astonished to learn that
Roosevelt's ghost still carries weight on
Capitol Hill.
The feckl es s bipartisan duo
thought they had persuasive evidence
that the FDR commission was a waste
of money. Their evidence included the
fact that more than $500,000 had been
spent 10 the 26 years of the com
mission 's existence with literally
nothing to show for it. Another several
hundred thousand dollars has been
s pent on various projects.
Glickman, who was in three-cornered
pants when FDR died, even brandished
a photograph of the exis ting FDR
memorial on the noor of the House. and
read aloud an excerpt from a plaque
bes idl' the monument. "If any
memorial is erected to me . I should
hke it to consist of a block of stone
about the si7.e of this <Oval Office> des)c ,
CJnd placed in the center of that green
plot in front of the Archives Building."
ll "'as all to no avail. The Glickman
amendment to kill the FDR commission
was defeated, 201 -216. The vote had an
eerie touch to it: The House's electronic
voling system broke down for the first
tim(' 1n three years. prompting one
member to whisper lo Glickman. "The
gh,ost of FDR has returned."
What astonished Glickman was not
just the economy-minded colleagues
who voted to keep the commission's
$30,000 budget intact -like Reps Jack
Kemp, R-N. Y., and Jim Jones, D·Okla.
but the way some of his fellow
Democ•rats chided him as a traitor to
his party who was ·'playing into the
hands of the Republicans ··
THE HOUSE SHOWDOWN over the
FDR memorial followed by a few days
an Investigator magazine article on the
commission . The author, Lucette
Lagnado, called it ··a classic example
of the truism that a government agen-
cy, once created. never dies ; it just
keeps on growing "
Footnote: Congressional supporters of
the F'DR Memorial Commission ob·
serve that building a monument to FDR
would be one way to assure the end of
lhe FDR commission
Be sure you don't get sick at night
To the Editor:
Recently your newspaper published
an article "New paramedics may come
for price." Some cities, this article stat-
ed, such as Fountain Valley are con-
sidering charging for the par~medics
services . As we all kn ow, th e
paramedics do wonderful work saving
countless lives. They can't be com-
mended too highly.
But what astounded me is the quoted
ambulan ce transportation rates to the
hospital $100! While that wouldn't
MAILBOX
bother the rich, it can be a lot to those
wbo are just making their pay checks
meet. I reckon those dec,iding the rates
must think everyone is made of money.
Are you supposed to just die if you're a
medical emergency and can't alford the
$100 or the upcoming paramedic fee?
ASTOUNDED at the high ambulance
rates, I called the billing office of one
ambulance company asking if the rates
we re really $100. The lady explained
that they charge $75 base rate plus $5 a
mile. Also, rates are Increased ii it is a
night call. (Be sure and don't get sick at
night.) And when emer gency red lights
and siren are used, the patient is
charged extra. Oxygen is another extra
charge. Billing arrangements can be
made which eases the situation some.
But that doesn't change the fact that
rates are high to start witb. The burden
still falls back on the people who pay
higher insurance rates to cover the am-
bulance fee.
As Senator Edward Kennedy said -
and I whoJebeartedly agree -we are
the onJy country in the world in which
we are punished for being sick.
Naturally the paramedics and am-
bulance services can't exist on nothing.
The solution, if any, is difficult to come
up with. Socialiied medicine may seem
like an ideal solution but in those coun-
tries with socialized medicine, the
quality of medical care declines u the
person gets older, and is almost non·
existent for the elderly ..
So if there Is a medical emergency
with my household, I'll call the local
friendly chiropractor.
J.R. SA$SO
Ma~ipulation
To the Editor:
An artlcle about the lrvlne coatt la.JI
there wUl be homes IO upenaive that il
·1.s termed the "tbe!k coast" and the
Irvlne Company wtll have to adverUM
naUcna111 and tntenaUonally to find
bUyen .
Well, ttieie 1on the old arpaMDt that au ....,. ,.... .... ,_ fMt pvwUt
an betauM It la wded IO OW ddlctnn
will have a place to live. I've often won·
dered what's left for the individual in
this modern world. They"ve been
manipulated by the advertis -
ing/m arketing world into how they
think about everything. There's a prop-
aganda statement to prove every
point, but there's one I will never
believe again.
l "ve long s uspected that the Irvine
Company and other large, out-of-town
development companies really didn't
have a whole lot of concern about our
children -and 1 might add, l don't ap·
predate that kind of propaganda ~nd
manipulation
DONALD K. SPENCER
Bypass needed
To the Editor:
A major help in the traffic problems
of Newport Beach would be the building
or a straight, four-lane road, some place
south of Corona del Mar, linking Coast
Highway with Bonita Canyon Road.
This should be built for and known as
the Corona del Mar bypass. This should
be done before there is any more de-
velopment, down coast or in Newport
Center.
Then, and only then, should the Irvine
Company proceed with logical and now
acceptable developments: s uch de ·
velopments would become an asset for
us, rather than something that we must
now fear and fight. Without such a road
in i>lace no matter what the hopes and
promises, there will be serious negative
Impact on the whole area.
JEAN MORRIS
Cartoon mis inf onned
To the Editor:
Regarding the July 28 cartoon on Mrs.
Reagan paying $75,000 for a Steuben
bowl, the previous week TV news
explained the bowl was worth $75,000,
however Mn. Reagan 'purchased it for
$8,000.
Aa the cartoon ls a gross case of
misinformation I suggest the same
space be given to correctin1 lbe error.
The Cact is, if your paper bad been on
ils toes the cartoon should have been
canceled. L. KEPPLER
Election ef f ecu
To tbe EdltoT:
Jn the Newport Beach City Council
election ol UllO, the bit question wu :
wbo was aolng to run Newport Beach 1n
• 1. .... ,. t•MI ,_,. • .,,-It-. TM""'' loo••-••• It" le ltl tlNC•W t H,.,.Nle It .... I\,._ .... IAll .. l• .. -•tit fr I~~ e tll ......... -',,_t All .. t'9n m<nl II' ,_ ....... "' •• ,.. _.., ...... " 1111111 -_, .. •ti...._., _. ,_, ti WIKltllt rM-It ..., ..... ,_.,,
Wtll Ml•....,,,,_. '--lletl l'IWr M ............ ..., ... ... _ ......... _...., .. _ , .... , .... _ ........ .
•or1l1C.•lt., ,_,,_,
the near future the people or big bus1·
ness?
Remember the big blitz of advertise-
ments where the Irvine Company and
the Koll Company indirectly backed
their three candidates for the council
race? They used all the tricks and then
some to buy the election.
BASICALLY they didn't level with
the people on two items. If Paul
Ryckoff. Ray Wi lliams, and Dick
Clucas got elected and preserved the
status-quo. then these companies would
yearly lose tens of millions of dollars.
And the other item is also of elemen-
tary logic. More building means more
businesses. means more money means
a bigger airport means more people
means more traffic -and so the
vicious circle continues, more morbid
each time around.
IL is now possible to see the effects of
the e lection wh ere this city is
t hreatened with an overbuild of Chinese
walls of high rises. intolerable traffic
and unbearable airplane noise and ex-
pansion.
I wonder how many people now
reflect back on this 198> election and
say w1th r emorse -"this was not our
finest hour."
And to make matters worse, these
s a m e unscrupulous over zealo us,
money-hungry forces will start early in
1982 to buy the next election.
DON WILLIAMS
Crucial uote
To the Editor:
Newport Beach City Council mem-
bers are about to vote on Newport
Center. They are a ll good people. They
have been propagandized by the no-
growthers and the build-everythlng-you-
canners.
I hope that the day before the vote
they each can ride through Newport
Beach, then quietly sit in deep counsel
with themselves. Then I hope they have
guts enou1b to vote their deep Ceelinga
a bout our and their city.
FRANKLIN S. GOOD
lllllY Ill
tt•s nlce tbal Pralde:nl Requ can
declare the controllers' strlke nw and
go off on vacation and 1eave the Nil of
us lo npt the meeJ.
DJSGUST&D . ...., .. ........,.._...._. ....... _ .... . ........, ................ _..,._ .... ,.. ... ................... .,..,,,., ....
-...... "'
a c •zu+ u ••••• r-• Y,.+w a;u •• <• •c;
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Auguet 13, 1981
Law school oaths OK'd ·
Man says 'Playboy' ad damaging Bar. association to allow religious bias in admissions
PITTSFIELD. Mau. (AP) -
A cabinet lnataller wbOH pic-
ture appeared in an advertlle-
mtnt for Playboy Ma1aslne over
tbt caption "The Playboy
Reader -his lust la for Ute"
wanta $250,000 in dama1es from
the magazine .
The judae who heard the
lawsuit said he will Issue a de·
etalon in about a week.
The picture, which appeared
d urin& a 1977 promotional cam·
paip in The New York Times
and airport a nd train station
posters. s hows mustachioed
Thomas Mazzeo on water skis.
Mazzeo said the picture was
u1ed without bis permission.
"It made me sound dirty. It
made m e sound like a sex
fiend," testified Mazzeo, 40, of
Safety aeminar hourfy
at Huntington Center
dally thru Sun.
1981 CARS I
cmdTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Ray,
LEASE SrlCIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet
C-OI OoY9 ond 0uM 61•
NEWPORT BEACH
cars*bikes•
*skateboards*
trucks•baby
carr iages•tea
carts•trikes
rol lerskates •
walker!>· toys
•wagons••••
scooters*hot
rod s• coupes•
trallers•hard
tops•convert-
ibles•motor
homes•1awn
mowers*limos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
M odel A's••••
•typingtables
wheelbarrows·
recreational
vehicles•golf
carts•mode1
trains*bikes
*pianos•cars
ref rlger ators
*skates••••••
If it 's got
wheels,
you'll move
It f aster in a
Dally Piiot .
classified aet . ca11
6-C2-S678 and a
f r lendly ad-
v iser will
help you
turn your
wheels Into
cash.
Pltt.dltl~1 a father of four who
all)p ln ma cburch choir.
Maneo Hid durln1 tbt two·
day, non-Jury trial before
BerUhlre Superior Court Judie
William Slmons that the ad-
vertisement falsely ldentlfled
bim u a Playboy reader and
dama1ed his reputation and
buslneu.
"I don't think housewives
want cablnetmakera with a
playboy's lust for life ln their
kitchens," he said.
Playboy a ttorney Stephe n
Olesky contended that Maueo
suffe r ed "no m easura ble
damage other than the loss of
pay the aaency would normalJy
make to an amateur model" and
su11es ted the judge awiard
Mazzeo "the $200 to $250 we pay
for amateur models ."
Swfft Dark Meat
PLUMS
LBS.$ 00
FOR
H A S S U GGESTI O N -
Presidential Adviser Edwin
Meese Ill told the American
Bar Association underused
military prisons could be
used to ease overcrowding of
civilian iails. He spoke in
New Orleans.
NEW ORLEANS (AP > -The
American Bar A11oclatlon bu
a mended tt1 standard of ac-
credltatlon by letttn1 church·
eupported law schools dia·
crlmlnate on the basis of re·
Ilg loo.
The controversial amendment
appeared to fall Wedneaday on a
voice vote, but on a standina
vote at tbe ABA House o f
Delegates, counted by lellera. It
passed 147·127.
The House then granted ac·
creditation for Oral Roberts
University's 0 . W. Coburn
School of Law in Tulsa. Okla.,
which opened in 1979.
The school previously was de·
nled approval because lt re-
quired student.a to swear an oath
of religious belief, pledgin1 to
follow the example of Jesus
Christ. Faculty members also
mwst supPort and exemplily the
cod-:_1 and hiring Includes teata ol
rella1oua belief.
Accreditation Is a serious mat·
ter since graduates of law
schools which do not have ABA
approvaJ cannot even take the
bar examination to be licensed
as a lawyer In most states.
The university aued the ABA
In U.S. District Court. The judge
issued an injunction forbidding
the ABA to deny provisional ac-
creditation until after the House
of Delegates decides the issue.
At a meeting last month, the
ABA accreditation committee
found the law school to be in
"substantial compliance" with
all standards except those under
the standard forbidding dis -
crimination on t he ground of
race, color, religion, national
origin or sex.
A new standard was drawn by
an ABA commit t ee which
waters down the old anti· ,
di1crlmlnation clause by add-
ing:
"Nolhlng herein shall be con-
strued to prevent a law school
from having a religious affilla·
lion and purpose and adopting
policies of admission and
employment that directly relate ,
to such affiliation and purpose ,
so long as notice of such policies :
has been provided to applicant.a,
stude nt s. fa cu lty and
employees."
Dean Gordon Schaber of the
McGeorge School of Law of the
University of the Pacific,
chairman of the committee, sald
the exception was based on the
First Amendment protection of
religious freedom.
CALIFORNIA
RANCH MARKET
5th MONTH
ANNIVERSARY SALE
DISCOVER A PLACE YOU'LL LOVE
TO SH OP -FROM THE RANCH TO YOU
CALIFORNIA RANCH MIT.
wt CARRY A WIDE
SELECTION OF TROPICAL FRUIT
Jumbo Hass BlllllS PllUPPLE
PIPIYI LIMES
llllOES COCOIUT
SPECIAL TY ITEMS
FOR
STIAWBElllES SHARLYN MELONS
BLUEBERRIES CASABA MELONS
GROCERY
TOPAZ PURE $ 98 ORGANIC
APPLE 111 JUICE Gal.
WE HAVE TOPAZ
WILD CLOVEP I
ORANGE HOk•iY
WE IRE IOI FElfURll&
FERRARO'S FllE
FRESH RUil JUICES CANARY MELONS CRENSHAW MELONS
PERSIAN MELONS HONEYDEW
SEEDLESS WATERMELON iftlYEllSTlllE APPLES 3 ~~R $1 OO DELI
OUR MEAT:.BETIER THAN JUST A CUT ABOVE . ~ --.~~--:....--....:
MEATY BEEF
BACK RIBS
Lean Boneless JUICY
CHUCK STEAK (Also Marinated if you like)
(Marinated if you like)
SIL VER TROLLED
WHOLE SALIOll GROUND BEEF
PA RIES
6 to 9 lb. overage
$2~b~
llEIGHBOR'S
Stop by or 'Ticlay & Soturd~y
few a ta1t11 of some of Ol•• ~ine
Califofnla Ranch Morlcet Products. -=
(Not to exceed 22% fat content)
10 lb.
Box
FOR OUR SENIOR CITIZEN NEIGHBORS
10% Off
CREAMY FRESH
POTATO
SALAD 99~
John $169 Morrell
BRAUISWEl&ER lb.
California Ranch Market $249 Specialty Prepared
BAKED HAM 1b.
ERY '1199 APPLE PIE ,,,
BAKED IN OUR OWN RANCH OVENS
Fresh Baked
~~~--..-~--~~~~..-~,,....,-;e~ ................. "'"!'P,"9~· ........... IP' ......... "!""'•IQllP":W ....... 1111111 ..... ~.~ ................. llll!' ......... :.0111111114111110•~ ..
. ••
DOW Jones Final
OFF .86
CLOSING 944.34 .
.. ,.'\
~~~ .. ,.
..
Research you~
'tax sweetener .,.
The 1981 tax law started out as a clear-<:ut blll to
reduce personal income taxes by steps and to let ,
business take long.requested write·offs. Tbe goals
have been reached , but the legislation haa
mushroomed far beyond the original intent. As tor
simpUcity, that's gone -replaced by complexity th~t
guarantees fortunes for tax advisers.
One point emerges with dazzling clarity even out
of the mire or millions of words. There are "'talt
sweet e ners ·· for you. no matter what your
classification : n . individuals .
investors. e s t a t e ~,..
planners ; small businessmen, .. A_ ... ~_ ... _______ _
~ ~ ":i ~ ~ ~ ~ SYlVIA PORTER exec uti~e s ;
real estate investors, dealers. banks. The tax relief is
in the law and so are the potentials for tax breaks -
but you will have to search carefully.
Following are significant questions with answers
I put together with the help of the editors at
Prentice-Hall. the tax guidelines publisher. First, for
indilriduals, investors and estate planners :
Q. Do you in.vest io stocks, real estate and
similar media in hopes of making a profit?
A. The top rate on investment income will be 50
percent in 1982 C as has been the top rate on earned
income). This also means that the maximum rate on
capital gains on sales will drop to 20 percent from the
present 28 percent (only 40 percent of capital gain ~
included in income at regular rates; thus 40 perceaL
of the 50 percent is 20 percent). And lb is lower 20
percent rate applies to sales after June 9, 1981.
Q. Do you want a better retirement plan?
A. The maximum contribution you can make to ~
an Individual Retirement Account, the best lax
s helter ever devised for us , .as middle· to
upper-income taxpayers. has been boosted from
$1 ,500 to $2,000 a year.
ff you are an individual who is an active
participant in an employer-qualified plan, you, too,
can now deduct contributions to an IRA <this is a big
break for the millions "'frozen" in private pension
plans who can now create their own retirement
programs as well>
On top of this, the deduction for yearly
contributions to a self-employed <Keogh) plan has
been doubled to S15,000.
Q. Have you been payirtg the ··penalty tax"' on
marriage?
A. If you're a two·paycheck married couple.
you'll receive tax relief io .1982. The problem has
been that if both of you have paying jobs. receive
good salaries and live together as singles. you've had
lo pay less federal income tax than if you filed a joint
return as a married couple. Now. the "penalty tax"
on marriage has been eased.
Q. Do you work overseas?
A. Americans working abroad will be entiUed to
a $75,000 exclusion from income. plus a housing
allowance. in 1982 . This is phased up to $95.000 in four
yearly $5,000 installments. It substitutes for a
complicated variety of deductions and exclusions
now in the law.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
)
Pct,
VP 11.S Up U Vp I .> Up 7.7 Up 1.1
VP 1.0 Up 7.0
Up •.7 Vp ,_.
Up •.J
Up • 1 Up J,t Up S.t
Up U Up S.7
Up '·' Vo U
NEW YON< IN'l -Sa'" noon II'--fWI -. "' ... ..., ,,_, ..,._ ............ 5Jlocl(
~ -""°"'9 nohONlty II....,,.~
t.11c.n 11 •lS.l'OD J.5•;. t '-
Hucls80H 11 "41..eoo Jt • \lo i>om.Ptrl s J~,JllO II\, " s.QeEngy s 111,too 21'-, 11,-
S..ndanoO 11',JOO nii. • 11. Ml<hlE s 11'.JOO ~ 1"1
TrltonOG 111,200 1'V• + 1:i. lnll 8nknot '7,500 •~
0.1111011 "· 100 111v. • •i-:
MarmGp pi 'I0,500 "'" • "
MnALS
~ IM2111> ~-POON. U.$ .... 11 .. lions.
L.-42<-•"°""41· DM Ullo~-,._,dellfft9CI.
Tit! $7.:m1 Melali W.. compoal .. "' A--...7t-ac.<1b epo;IM.H Y
~WCI.OD per llasll .......... M21.001royer., H.Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
UMM: monll"f flxl"f .-1.00, off 'IUO. L..-.: a!Wr-ll•lftO 1407 U , off
tlO.U.
.... J eftlt-ll•lfle ..,-..IO., off p 17.
~r ...... 1 M07 .... efl SJ.GI. z.wtdl: ..,.. 11111119 .-.-. efl .. _., "9t.oo ......
MeNy & M•~-•: o•I' •ally ""°'• M7 .is, flff tit.ts. t .......... 9111y delly OlMt .-.a. ... tlO.U. ........ : ... ., .... ., ""°" ,_lu_
W7 .. t,flff •H.14.
.·
Orange COut DAILY PILOTfThuttday, Augu1t 13, 1981
'FV ·boycott looms again
Nf:W YORK (AP) -The
Coalition for Better Televlalon
haa renewed lt1 threat to boycott
companies that advertise on
network televlalon pro1rams It
detm1 excessively violent or
lewd.
The conservative coalition of
more than 300 pollUcal and re·
ligious 1roup , one or which la
the Moral Majority, called ott a
boycott In June, sayln1 ad-
vertisers had pledged to work
with networks for cleant!d-up
a hows.
ttrvlew QUbll1hed Wedneaday In
the New York Dally New1: "If I
wer a betUn1 man. I'd bet \hat
beroro the 1981 ·82 televl1lon
11eaaon la over, there's a 90 to"
percent chance there'll be a
boycott.
"I have 1 hunch that lt'I In·
evltable."
vertisera. The majority of ad·
verllsen have become 1 lot
more careful, and there'• 1 food
deal of d1alreea merchandlle out
there,·· Wtldmoo said.
NBC, which broadcaah
"Flaminio Road ," Hid ad·
vertlalna aalea were not 1IU11llh
ror the ahow. A 1poke1man for
CBS, which pre11n\1 "Knot's
Landln1" and "D1ll11:· aald It
would not dl1cu11 Ill ad-
vertlaera.
1 OCC fills two
f acuity posts
~ Robert L. Hoeppner, 49, of Cotta Mesa baa
been named Oran1e Coast Co1Je1e'1 aaaodate
dean of courusellna and 1uldance, and George L.
Blanc. ~. of Fountain Valley the colleae·a director
of community services.
Hoeppner replaces Dr. Jerrel T. Richards,
who wu named dean of coun.seUn1 and au1dance.
Hoeppner, who came to OCC ln 1914, has
served as counselor and psychology instructor. He
ls also a licensed marrla1e, family and child
counselor.
But Its leader, lhe· Rev.
Donald Wlldmon, said in an Ln-
Wlldmon mentioned several
programs he aald would have
problems flndlna 1ponaon1, In·
eluding "Flamtn10 Road."
"Knot's Landini" and "Three's
Com~any."
" 'Dallas' wlll hana on, but It
won't attract the s ame ad-
NBC aald Its position Is that no
speclal-lntereat 1roup ha1 tht
right to appoint ltaell apokeaman
for viewers. ASSOCIATE DEAN
Robert Hoeppner
Blanc replaces Jean Thompson. who retired.
A former restaurant owner, Blanc was the col·
lege's associate dean of continuing education.
DIRECTOR
George Blanc
QUEENIE
"Boy. •m I glad lo be back . My body couldn't t.altt!
•nolher day of vacation."
2 boom towns
aid each other
BULLHEAD CITY, Ariz. <AP> -The future of
Bullhead City may del>{!nd upon its gamblin'
neighbor to the north.
But lhen again. the future of its neighbor -
Laughlin, Nev is similarly entwined.
"Wt• a re obvious ly dependent upon each
oth~r." said Judy Dim it, executive secretary of
the Aullhead City Chamber of Commerce. "They
need us for services and employment and, obvious·
ly. the casinos br ing tourists, which helps us."
Local officials on both sides of the Colorado
River that d1v1des the two communities say that
Laughlin and Bullhead City are booming.
Rµllhead City. which is seeking lo become the
slate's 37th city. is one of the fastest growing com·
munit1es m Arizona.
Laughlin officials beli eve their community
soon may ri val Lake Tahoe as a gambling center.
It a ll began, they say, with Don Laughlin, who
some 15 years ago was looking for a place where
he could set up a dozen slot machines.
Laughlin bought a one room bar and an eight·
unit motel across the river' from Bullhead City,
which then had about 700 residents.
Today there are seven casinos in Laughlin and
Bullhead City has a population that's pushing
20,000
One of the reasons for Bullhead City's im·
portance 1s that stale and· federal governments
control all but a rew hundred acres of land on the
Nevada s1dt' of the river. What that means is that
Bullhead City has become the bedroom communi·
ty for most of Laughlin's several thousand casino
employees.
Laughlin boasts a population of 93 people.
The Laughlin boom has driven property values
m Bullhead City rapidly skyward, local ofricials
said
"When we came here five years ago, we could
have bought a 40-foot riverfront lot for $17,000,"
Mrs D1mit said. "Now, if you can even find one,
they're going for S2,000 per front foot."
Expansion in Laughlin is expected to continue.
Don Laughlin's 100-room Riverside Resort and
Casino is planning a 17-story, 200-room addition
with a 1,000-seat convention center .
The Edgewater Hotel and Casino is expected
to open late this month, lacking only approval
from the Nevada Gaming Commission. A $16·
million, six-floor. 162-room hotel, it boaslJl the
town's first heated pool.
The Colorado Belle is expected to beg(n con·
strucUon this s ummer on a 13-story hotel and The
Nevada Club, owned by the Del Webb Corp., just
had a $4 million facelift. Laughlin owns 92 acres of
the town that bears his name, including a pair of
trapshooting ranges, and calls the federal govern-
ment "the biggest enemy this area has" because
of Its refusal to release surrounding lands.
The Nevada Colorado River Commission,
howe.ver, is considering the release of more than
1,000 acres of state land for residential develop-
ment west of Laughlin.
What that means to Bullhead City, nobody
knows. What that means to Laughlin, local of·
ficials say. is a golden-lined future.
BART riders up
OAKLAND CAP> More people rode Bay
~tea Rapid Transit trains In 1980·81 than in any
year since the trains started rolling In 1972, BART
offlc.lals say.
The railway served about 46.9 mllllon
passengers during the past fiscal year, ofllclali
said. That was 3.7 J)t!rcent hither than had been
predicted.
Overall. BART has carried more than 275
million riders more than 3.6 billion pa111en1er·
milt>S.
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home #3713 Reg. 29.95
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R90. 8.39 511
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8Hutllul true to llfe 33911 color. 141H. Reg.
399.95.
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acruba cl•n. ttaY9 cotor fut.
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outdoor potted plant•. R9g. 2.99
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32-oellon t in llnert.
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