HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-08-18 - Orange Coast Pilot1
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111111 CUii YOUR HDMiTDll IAllY PIPIR
TUESD AY. A UGUST 18. 1981 ORAN GE COUNTY . CA L IF OR NIA 25 CENTS
• e student keeps nnhorn baby alive
RIVERSJDE (AP> -Chris
Huscher, a student at Christ
College In Irvine, never expect·
ed to use the cardiopulmonary
resuscitation techniques he
learned in high school. but an in·
rant girl whose mother died
after a c ar wreck is alive
because he did.
The baby was in critical condi·
tloo Monday at Riverside
General Hospital, where she was
Produce
boycott
by Japan
By The Associated Press
Japan wants no more
California lemons or other fruit
until the state solves its fruit fly
problems, and California
Republicans want no more or
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .. saying
they'll try to impeach him un·
less he gives up control of the
pest-eradication project.
Florida Agriculture Com -
mission er Doyle Conner,
meanwhil e , asked U .S .
Agriculture Secretary John
Block to order the regulation of
all California produce. Conner
claims California was the source
of the five Mediterranean fruit
flies whose discovery in Florida
led omcials to quarantine 52
square miles of residential area
near Tampa, just west of
Florida's lucrative citrus belt.
Georgia Agriculture Com·
missioner Tommy Irvin also
said Monday he asked B.lock to
quarantine produce from coun·
ties bordering the areas in
California that a re known to be
infested by the flies. There was
no immediate response from
-washington.
On Saturday, South Korea and
Taiwan began accepting only
treated grapes, citrus. pears and
apples from California, said
George Strathearn, chief deputy
director of the state Food and
Agriculture Department.
The Japanese Ministry of
Agriculture, t 'orestry and Fish·
eries announced Monday in
Tokyo the U.S. Embassy was in·
formed Japan wants no citrus
crops or other neshy fruit from
California, beginning Wednes·
day.
Japan already is refusing
crops from a 2,427-square-mile
quarantine area infected by the
medfly, according to s tate Food
and Agriculture Director
Richard Romi nger. It is
threatening to ban the crops
from the rest of the state until
both sides agree on fumigation
procedures.
But, Rominger said, "We
don't have enough fumigation
facilities to fumigate all the
citrus.
"It would mean California
citrus growers would have to
find another market. It won't be
that easy because citrus goes to
all the markets that are availa·
ble to it."
Negotiations were to continue
today in Washington.
Scott Murse of the California
Farm Bureau Federation said
J apan had been expected to im·
port $67 million worth of lemons
this year in addition to S27
million worth or oranges, $14
million worth or grapefruit and
$7 million worth o( melons .
grapes and avocados.
In Sacramento. Assembly
Republican leader Carol Hallett
said Monday an impeachment
resolution against the
Democratic governor was being
drafted, and she would introduce
it Thursday if Brown has not
turned over control of the
eradication program to qualified
agricultural experts.
Crossword
corrected
At. many crossword fans have
notified us, our Sunday .punle
was (32 across) sabot aged. The
previoua week's definlUons were
Inadvertently coupled wtth the
new llJid.
Both portions are printed cor·
recUy In today's edltlon. Tbt
lar1e punJe appears on Pa1e C4
In ldcUtJon to the refular daily
puule on Paa• ee.
We < 127 down) rearet the er-
ror and apololiae for lbe (Oil.
fualon and frustration tt. caUMd
readen who couldn't th lbeir
vut vocabulartu iato too few
squares.
delivered by Caesarean section
from the mother's dead body
after the accident Sunday eve·
nlng. The mother, Roselia
Cervantes, 20, had been seven
months pregnant.
Her husband and the child's
father, Eliodoro Ceja, 28, was in
satisfactory condition at the
same hospital. Riverside police
Sgt. Tom Countri said Ceja lost
control of the car and it
slammed Into a tree.
Huscher, a 19-year·old college
sophomore, was driving to a
friend's house after a church ice
cream social when a woman
standing in Victoria Street fran-
tically waved him over. He
stopped ahead of the crumpled
vehicle and found 21 -year -old
Lauri Rush already pumping
Ms. Cervantes' chest, worklna to
spllrk a pulse.
"She didn't look good, her
eyes were glazed over,"
Huscher recalled. "She was ob-
viously pregnant and I didn't
really know what to do on a preg·
nant lady but Lauri seemed lo
know."
•'She took over chest part and
I did the mouth part In the
15-to-2 ratio, 15 pushes to the
Chl!st and two breaths. We did
that about 10 or 15 minutes
l:)efore ambulance arrived ,
though it seemed like forever.
"I didn't feel the lady had too
much of a chance for life all I
heard was a gurgling sound
when I breathed into her so I as-
sumed her lungs were full of
blood. But I thought the baby
would make it.
"When I walked up there I
WHO'S PULLING THE STRINGS? -Tonv t;rbano chats with
some fi ctional and celebrity look-alike ·ll'l a rionettes that h e
and two associates manipulate in shows. at 12 : 15, I :30. 2: 15.
o.-, ............ ..., a..w. MlfT
3. 4 :30, 6·30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays at the
Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach. A ball et troup(•
also entertains art exhibit \'iew<.•r..,
Task forc e
to probe
air safety
WASHINGTON (AP) The
National Transportation Safety
Board voted unanimoosly today
to begin an eight-week investiga-
tion into the air traffic control
system to determine whether
s afety has been reduced by the
air controllers strike.
A task force of the agency will
examine a broad range of sub·
jects from controller qualifica-
tions and work schedules lo air
traffic density. a spokeswoman
for the board said.
The spokeswoman, Barbara
Dixon, said the five board mem-
bers decided unanimously to
begin the investigation, but that
no decision has been made
whether to pursue the matter
with a report or recommenda·
lions.
The safety board, which in·
vestigates airline accidents. en·
tered the air controller issue
amid increasing concerns from
some critics of the Federal Avia·
tion Administration that safety
<See CONTROL, Page A2)
Couple find
belong ing s,
lwuse gone
SAN DIEGO <AP) -A San
Diego couple returned from
\
their month-long vacation in In·
diana to find most of their
belongings gone and -worse
yet -their thr~·bedroom house
snatched from its foundation.
Greg Fulse and Susan Carr,
th Navy enlisted personnel
ho have rented the house since
anuary. said Monday they were
ocked at the discovery and
ill haven't located all their
longings.
"I couldn't believe lt," Fulse
td. "But the way our luck W8'
ing, 1 wasn't iUrprised,'' re·
rrtng to a m lsf'ortune-fiJled
v cation.
n'he couple bave slnce learned
Uelr landlord, Larry Crawford, w .. s clearing the property to
bdild an apartment build1Qe and
h.'ad moved the bouae -after eSna>'ylna lts coatenta -to San
ldro, near the international
r, for HM ln Tijuana.
rawford b.u reportellly •aid
hJ ve acted ha•Ub' by i•· Cllaly a lut·mlDW. verbal to die aoatl•'• __ ,...,
UteJw..e away. ' ... '9dl4t.\• Pule• ..,. tMJ
11•• fo•• 1o me •f tbtlr
penonaJ properU with hll It•
tOl'My and bOpea lbe rat .. wttb
tbe houlelitt.er who la now vaca·
tlonlq.
··w~re goin1 to make it, I
think,'' Fulct said.
Victim's identity
still not known
A young woman whost body
was found beaten and stabbed
on the side of a road east of San
Clemente last week still hasn't
been identified , and Orange
County Sheriff's Department in-
vestigators are soliciting help.
They say persons who might
recognize the brown-haired,
brown-eyed woman found last
Thursday morning should call
the sheriff's department at
834-:n>o.
The victim, believed to be
from 18 to 23 years old, was dis-
covered on the s houlder of
Avenida Pico, about two miles
east of San Clemente. Sheriff's
Lt. Wyatt Hart s aid she ap·
parently had been killed from 24
to 36 hours earlier
She died of a skull fracture
and multiple stab wounds. he
said.
The woman was 5-feet·6·
inches and weighed 110 pounds.
She had a small tattoo of a but-
terfly on her upper left arm. he
said, adding that when found,
she was partially clad in a
yellow T-shirt with blue stripes.
~:~
I ,.,,)' . (•
••• 41
I DENT/TY SOUGHT
Woman /ound slam
Hart said investigators need to
learn the victim's identity
before they can begin figuring
who killed her.
Managing editor
post goes to Loos
SEOUL. South Korea (AP) -
A mine ln a maned ma ftekl
norda ot ~ exploded &mdQ,
kllllns one American~ ud
woundlns another.
Charles H. Loos, assistant
managing editor of the Orange
Coast Daily Pilot for the past 13
years. today was appointed
managing editor by Editor Tom
Murphine.
Loos. who Joined the Daily
Pilot staff In 1961, has previously
served on the newspaper as a
staff writer, Newport Beach city
editor, Orange County bureau
chief, and as education editor.
During his time u an educa·
lion writer, he won Uae pres-
tigious John Swett Award for
outstanding co~eraee or
California education in two suc-
cessive years.
"Charles Loos brings a depth
of experience and knowledee of
Orange County and tbe Orange
Coast to Lhe poaltJqa of manag.
inc editor." Murph!~ said. "I
ain very pleued to have Jilin in
tblt key position on the J)aUy
Pilot staff. Re h" a daerved
roputat1on ln Oranr• County
Journallam aa • one o tLI nneat
craftstnen who baa brouchL
Many awardl botb t.o the paper
and tQ bi aweJf."
Loot did hll nnt .U.t Clf ; ... n•npaper staff trom 1'11 \0
ltH where he Hrwed In a
namber of capaclUu, lnchadJnt atarr writer In Coata Mesa,
Newport Beub cit y editor, Or~p CounL.Y bureau chief and
fS.. urroa, ••ae AZ>
3-ton rhino
adds to county
animal lore
Orange County has had its
share of exotic animals roaming
the countryside in the past -in·
eluding the famed Bubbles the
hippopotamus and a giant South
American rodent ca lled a
capybara -and now it's got a
Lhree·ton white rhino to add to
the lore.
The fearsome-looking animal,
which was safely back in cap-
t1v1ty within an hour, pushed his
way through a gate Sunday and
wandered away from Lion Coun-
try Safari, the same animal
park in Irvine from which Bub·
bles escaped.
Except for the hole in the
metal gate at a service en-
trance, no damage was report·
ed. park spokeswoman Virginia
Brauer said Monday. The male
rhinoceros was found meander·
ing through one of the farm
fields adjacent to the park,
which is located 40 miles
southeast or Los Angeles but on-
ly a few miles from inhabited
areas of this rapidly expanding
community.
A security guard noticed the
animal was missing about 1
a.m Sunday, and he was safely
back in the park by 2 a.m., Ms .
Brauer said.
"The head game warden and
hi s staff just herded him back,"
she said or t he rhino, who ap-
parently has no name.
Police also were call ed. They
sent in a helicopter.
Ms . Brauer said the rhino
seemed to be curious about the
gate. which is used as an access
for construction crews working
on a park river. "He tends to
wander close up to there," she
said.
But the rhino's traveling days
are over for a while, she added.
He is being kept in a barn until
the gate is fixed.
The park, which features
animals roaming loose while
visitors drive through in cars,
came to international attention
several years ago when Bubbles
escaped. Extensive efforts to
capt ure her safely ended In
fallw-e when she collapaed after
being injected with a tran·
quiUzer, rolled down a hill and
s uffocated under her own
weight. The capybara, a rodent
some three to four feet lOfll that
resembles a lar•e r~ I P·
peared suddenly tevetal years
aao a nd vanlshed eq ually
nustertou aly.
MAltscJU.J:S, frHH CAP> -
A Frtncb·bullt lfanlu ,_boat,
captured lut week off tbe cout
of Spain= opponenu ol the Tehran r me, eat.erect French
waters a.y and waa cnaillnl
nearMarseUlet,otnclal11atd .
was really in shock, and you
think you forget everything you
learned. But It 's pretty
straightforward once you get
started, although I gagged a rew
times."
Officer Jerry Carroll said the
efforts by the young man and
woman kept the baby alive until
Ms . Cervantes arrived at the
<See RESCUE, Page .\2)
Airline
to end
service?
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. o.ltr ,. ... l4Mf
Western Airlines. which
operates two nights daily from
Orange County to Salt Lake Ci·
ly, would be forced to terminate
service Oct. 1 under a recom-
mendation made Monday to the
O range Cou nt y Board or
Supervisors.
In a brief report lo the board,
Murry Cable, manager of John
Wayne Airport, said Western
will not be abl e to comply with
1et noise reduction requirements
contained in a recently approved
plan to regulate which com·
mercial carriers serve Orange
County
Western o(ficials steadfastly
deny Cab l e 's contention .
Further, they claim, Western in-
tends to reduce noise beyond
levels contemplated by the other
four carriers s erving the
airport.
Western , bas ed in Los
An ge le s. be gan s ervice in
Orange County last October un·
der an interim air carrier access
plan. The plan also granted Den·
ver -based Frontier Airlines--
permission to serve Orange
County.
In approving a final draft of
the access plan in June ,
s upervisors permitted the addi·
twn of a third new entrant,
Pacific Southwest Airlines . cOn·
ly AirCal and Republic Airlines
served Orange County prior to
adoption or the interim and final
access plans. I
Western 1s not favored under
the final access plan, Cable said,
because or language that re-
quires commercial carriers to
use only new and quieter jet
aircraft at John Wayne Airport.
AirCal, Republic, Frontier and
PSA either have or soon will
lake delivery of the first genera·
lion of the so-called "s tage lll"
aircraft, the McDonnell Douglas
DC-9 Super 80.
Western does not intend to
purchase Super 80s According
to a report to county officials. it
would meet noise reduction ob-
jectives outlined m the access
plan by modifying engines in
older Boeing 737s now used on
Orange County-Sall Lake City
routes.
Further. Western officials
<See FLIGHTS, P age A2)
Lawsuit settled
HOUSTON <AP> A federal
judge says most of the issues
have beeen settled in a lawsuit
by Vietnamese refugee fi sh·
ermen who charged they were
intimidated by Ku Klux
Klansmen and others who want·
ed them out of Galveston Bay.
ORAIGI COAST WIATHIR
Night and morning low
cloud.5, but sunny Wednes·
day afternoon. Highs 75 to
82. Low tonight 65.
111101 TODAY
Did ~~t F'ra"klin D
Roowvelt know through de·
cod«I PM•~• of Japan'• pla"' to attack Pearl
Harbor? (~e Dewey Knni,
Page A7>
llDll
•
u . . * * • * Orange Coa1t DAILY RlLOTffuHday. Augu1t 18, 1981
Delly ptlel "--..., ... '"" O'.,_..
James Rivers. 13 . Matt Scott. 12. and Shane Kaplan, 12, have a close encounter wit Deerfield Saucer at the Deerfield Community Park playground in Irvine.
Crime benefit queried
State says hatchet victim not covered under law
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
state may not be able to pay
compensation to a 17-year-old
girl whose arms were hacked off
and who was left for dead.
Two hearing offi cers for the
state Board of Control testified
Monday that Mary Vincent of
Las Vegas. Nev .. may not be
eligible for $23,000 in crime-
viclim benefits because of the
way the law reads.
Miss Vincent was attacked in
September 1978.
I n s ura nce cove r e d her
medical costs. and she was a
student at the time.
Hearin g officers Peter
Pelkofer and Diane Kirkham
said they did not think the case
matched the purpose for which
tb!iard was set up. They said t ard is only allowed under
s w lo award funcU for re·
ha lion, actual medical ex-
penses and lost wages.
"I find it almost impossible to
decide," Pelkofer said.
They said her case was "nov·
el" because her education for a
job would not constitute re-
habilitation. she did not lose ac-
tual wages and no medical bills
are outstanding.
Pelkofer said a date would be
set in two months to announce
the decision.
Miss Vincent's attorney, Mark
Edwards, said he would appeal
an adverse ruling to the state
Court of Appeal.
Edwards said Miss Vincent
hoped to use some of the money
to buy artificial limbs that
would be more appealing ano
more functional than the hook•
she wears. Pelkofer said Miss
Vincent could reapply for
medical funds for these.
Miss Vincent was hitchhiking
in Richmond, east of San Fran-
cisco, when she was picked up
by Lawrence Singleton, who was
convicted of attempted murder,
rape and other crimes. He was
sentenced to a prison term of 14
years, 4 months . Her arms were
cut off with an ax.
She is interested in becoming
a dress designer and has
enrolled at the University of
Nevada at Las Vegas. Before
the attack, she had wanted lo be
a Las Vegas dancer. Edwards
said.
County-based jet impounded
Newport Beach man among 3 imprisoned in Mexico
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mex·
ico <AP> -Three U.S. citizens
are in jail here and the $3
million Lear Jet they new here
is impounded while Mexican
authorities investigate their pre-
s c n c e , according to U.S.
Consular officer Phil Ober.
No charges have beenn filed
a gainst Paul Robinson, 36, of
Santa Ana, Byron Potter, 29, of
Seattle, or a passenger in their
c ha rter ed c r a ft, Frank
Barcelona. 35 , o f Newport'
From Page A1
Beach. They were arrested last
Thursday.
Ober said Mo nday that
Robinson. the pilot, and Potter .
his co-pilot, flew Barcelona and
George Thomsea of Newport
Beach here last Wednesday
from Orange County. and that
Thomsen told them he was com-
ing down to recover an airplane
for his company, Thomsen Air
Charter, based al John Wayne
Airport.
A statement by the men said
soon after they landed Wednes-
day. Thomsen got out or the jet
and walked to a nearby twin·
engine Cheyenne, cut the chains
holding it, and took off. Uncon-
firm ed r eports said the·
Cheyenne was illegally flown
here after a dispute between an
unidentified Mexican firm and
Thomsen's firm.
Ober said the three men spent
Wednesday night in a hotel here
and were arrested and the plane
impounded when they arrived at
the airport Thursday morning
for ~e return night.
From Page A1
TIN MAN At firs t glance.
Steven Campbell. a s urveyor
in downto wn Kitc he n e r .
Ont .. resembles the tin man
f ro m the Wi zard o f Oz.
Campbe ll was c arry ing
three pilons on a pick ax
th at he had slung over his
s houlder:
EDITOR • • •
James Birges
rwtcharged CONTROL PROBE. • • later. as education editor.
He left the paper in 1966 to
become public information of-
fi cer for the University of
California . Riverside. He re-
turned to the Daily Pilot in 1968
as assistant managing editor.
The new managing editor was
graduated from the University
of Color ado, Boulder, with a
degree in journalism after at-
tending South Pasadena High
School. He is a member of the
Orange County Press Club,
Sigma Delta Chi, the society of
professional journalis ts, and
was affiliated with Beta Theta
Pi Fraternity at Colorado. He
'Served in the U.S. Army from
1959 to 1961.
Loos and his wife, the former
Judith Harrington. have three
c hildren, Scott. Joa n and
Michael. They make their home
in Newport Beach.
FRESNO (AP) -The As-
sociated Press erroneously re-
ported Monday that J ames
Birges had been charged in con-
nection with the 1980 bombing of
Harveys Resort Hotel-Casino in
Stateline, Nev.
James Birges w as not
charged. His father, John W.
Birges, was arrested and booked
for investigati. '1 of extortJon and
conspiracy.
J ohn W. Birges Tr. was booked
in Fresno for inve. Ugation of ly-
ing to a grand jury in Reno.
,Nev .. in connection with the
case.
Three other people were ar-
rested.
The bomb caused $12 million
damage.
Watching TV her undoing
(
SHREVEPORT, La. CAP> -
A woman who thought she saw
herself on television robbing a
gas station has confessed to the
crime, police allege.
Bond was set al $10,000 Mon·
day for Wanda Faye Dennis, 20,
who was he ld at the Caddo
Parish Jall.
OAANGE COAST
"She evidently thought we
caught her ln the act," said de-
tective )Uke Campbell.
The robbery waa committed
July 31 and re -enacted Aua. 9 by
city police as part of a regular
"Crime of the Week" feature ln-
tended to help police solve dif.
ficult crimes, officials aald.
Daily Pilat Cl1HlftM adnftl9'ng 114/142·H71
All othef d1,1rtment1 142~21
Thomas P Hiley ~-~b-ott-
Robefl N Weed
"'-•
Thomas A. Murphme
l-
Mtch .. I P Harvey ,.,_.,.Oi_
L Kay Sctiultz a-...-~
Kenneth N Godd1rd Jr ~o...ctor
Bernard Schulman ~
Chatlee H. Looi .__...,...,_
Cetol A. Moore .......
c .. ~,~ 1•1 Or.._ C..•I l' .... itftl ... C-No new\ ,,o,,.,, 1111111rali0ftt. fllllorlor m<tll•• or oo •tttou ,,,.nlS llotoon mu Ito •tP•OCluoCI w11r.ou1
foM( IOI .,.,,.,.,~ ol <OIJ'"'iflll Ow,..r
~ ·-------·----
has been substantially reduced
because of the strike by 12.000
controllers.
FAA sources, asking not to be
identified by name. said today
that agency also is considering
some form of independent in-
v es ti g a ti on to d etermine
whether air travel is as safe as it
was before the strike.
FAA Administrator J . Lynn
Helms has said repeatedly that
there has been no reduction in
safety because of the strike.
The air traffic control system
is being run by about 9,300 peo-
ple, including s upervisors, non-
striking controllers and military
controllers.
Ms. Dixon said the safely
board investigation will depend
on cooperation from the FAA as
the task force will be small and
will have to cover a number of
areas.
From Page A1
RESCUE •••
I emergency room. where she was
pronounced dead.
Ms . Rus h could not be
reached, but Huscher said she
learned CPR for her lifeguard
job at UC Riverside.
''We talked afterward,·•
Huscher sald. "She was on her
way to her lamlly'a house when
lt happened. I put my arm
a round her and gave her a biC
hug, but s he just kept aa)'inC
over and over asaln that ahe
never thoucht she'd have to uae
her trainlng in this kind of situa-
tion."
Huscher, who work• as a
musical Instrument repairman,
aald be still hasn't "1otten over
the excitement that the trainln1
actually did some aood."
"It was eomethinl I teh l bad
to do, and once I 1tarted It Just
came naturally," he ad~. "I
didn't even know the -.oman'•
name until I read It ln tbe
newspaper."
She said the probe would in-
clude comparing traffic density
before and after the strike. pro-
cedural changes adopted by the
FAA because of the walkout,
controller qualifications, work
schedules and reporting of near-
m isses or other irregularities.
From Page A1
FLIGHTS • • •
said, the airline in 1984 expects to take delivery of a plane con-
sidered moce advanced than the
Super 80, the 200-seat Boeing
767 .
Cable said today that he would
permit Western to continue to
serve Orange County if it would
convert to the Super 80s ·
··w e need them <the Su~r
80s > to meet our noise reduction
goal s and to car ry more
passengers... Cable said. The
Super 80s have about 25 percent
more seats than the Boeing 7:r7s
and OC-9-JOs now operated by
the carriers serving the airport.
"If Western wants to commit
<lo purchasing the Super 80s >
that's fine. If they don't, then
they don't have tony here ...
Cable also disputed Western's
contention that it can meet noise
reduction obJectives simply by
modifying its current neet of
Boeing 737s . "We don't think
their figures are correct,.. he
said.
If Western is removed from
the airport -and sources say
Cable has the necessary votes to
force the eviction its two
flights would be divided evenly
between Frontier and PSA.
Frontier. which operates two
rl ights per day , would be
permitted these departures .
PSA, which is scheduled to begin
service Oct. l , also would be
awarded three departures.
R e t est ordere d
of nuke workers
MIDDLETOWN . Pa. (AP>
The Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission has ordered the owners
of the Three Mile Island nuclear
plant to retest all 34 people who
took a licensing exam on which
two people later admitted cheat-
ing.
In a lette r lo Herman
Oieckamp, president of General
Public Utilities Corp .. the
owner. the NRC said Monday
the retesting "is required on the
basis that cheating was detected
in the April examinations and
there were rumors that other
c h eating ma y have taken place."
Liz Taylor's
romance with
Shah kin told
NEW YOR K <AP > -
Elizabeth Taylor had an intense
two-week romance in 1976 with
the Shah of Iran's former son-in·
law. but the shah forbade him to
marry her since she was a com-
m oner and a c onvert to
Judaism . the Ladies · Home
Joum·a1 says.
The romance blossomed a few
months after Miss Taylor's
second. short-ljved marriage to
Ri chard Burton. the magazine s aid in an excerpt from a biog-
raphy of Miss Taylor by Kilty
Kelley.
It said Mi ss Taylor , then 44,
and Amba ssador Ardeshir
Za hedi, 48 and divorced from the
shah's eldest daughter since
1964, met al a party he gave at
th e I ranian Em b as s y in
Washington.
Mi ss Taylor "nuzzled the Ira-
ni an ambassador on the dance
floor as they moved slowly to the
music," it said. "Soon a new
lo ve affa ir . was in full
swing."
"For the next two week'i, lhe
c o upl e w as ins epa rable,
clutching hands tightly in public
and causing high-society gossip
around the world." it said.
The exce rpt quoted an un-
named socialite who said, "I
found out after that she wanted
to marry Ardesh1r. but the shah
had forbidden it. He informed
Ardeshir that be could not re-
marry during the sha h's lifetime
and make her the stepmother of
the shah':; grandchildren."
Several months later, Miss
Taylor met John Warner, now a
U S. senator from Virginia.
They were married in December
1976.
Miss Taylor's representative.
Chen Sun Associates. said she
would have no· comment on the
e xc e rpt from the book ,
··Elizabeth Taylor: The Last
Star ...
Gossip columnist Liz Smith on
Monday quoted Miss Taylor as
denying she ever slept with
political columnist Max Lerner.
After b11 trt1nd l elila a.. aea W•t lll lllt liDltr• aoa1writtr 8arr1 Nila ..
b111n or11nJ1ln1 an anU· ha~ camp1t1n. Now 1upport1r1 lnchadt
IUCb Hollywood CtltbrttiH
II Gtor1e Se1al, Carol
B•nMU. Goldie Hawa, GetM
WIWer, Bd Aaaer, 'e•• Shpletoa, Elliot Go•ld
Cbrlt&opber Reeve, Nlluon
18)'1.
"You tee, I ••t nervous
when they s hoot piano
players," Nilsson aaid ln an
Interview. "So I decided t.o
do aornet,hing."
• That tomelhlnt turned lnto
a march on Washington the
last week of October, said the
•1-year-old mU1lcian, wboae
hit s have included
''Everybody's TaJkin' " and
"Me and My Arrow." The
event will be called March to
End Handgun Violence.
Pat Boor,e , sitting in first class section of fully loaded DC-10. ,.....~~~~--:-;~~~--
waits out delay at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. The departure de·
lay. which kept the plane idling on the taxiway for over 60
minutes. was blamed by the plane's captain on the air con-
trollers' strike.
Heroine due
medal at last
Donna Slack had about
given up, but on Sept. 11 , the
20-year-old Oak! and (Mich.)
Co mmunit y College
sophomore finally will get
the 1976 Young American
Me dal for Bravery from
President Reagan that she
was promised three years ago.
"I didn't mind at all that it
was late," said the West
Bloomfield woman who five
years ago risked her life to
save three boys from a
tornado, which leveled a
house where she was babysit-
ting.
In 1978, she received a let-
ter froro Attorney General
Griffin Bell telling her she
was chosen for the award.
The ceremony was delayed
because of scheduling dif·
ficulties at the White House,
according to letters Ms .
Slack received since then.
Attorney General George
Deukmejlan plans to formal-
ly announce his candidacy
for the GOP gubernatorial
nomination in a IO -minute
statewide prime -time
television commercial Sept.
17.
Oakland Mayor Lionel
Wilson will lead a seven-
member delegation to the
People's Republic of China to
formally establish sister city
ties with the port of Dalian.
Wilson and the other mem·
bers of the delegation will
visit Peking , Dalian .
Shanghai and Guanzhou dur·
ing the Sept. 15-25 trip.
A city official won't be de-
nied in his effort to give
Johnny Cash a token of the
city's appreciat1on for the
country music singer's new
song, "Chattanooga City
Limit Sign."
Paul Clark, Chattanooga's
public works commissioner,
was prevented from making
the presentation when the air
traffic controllers' strike
stalled Cash in Atlanta.
New plans call for Clark to
meet Cash onstage during a
concert the night of Aug. 27
at the Grand Ole Opry house
in Nashville.
Clark plans to give the
singe r a genuine Chat·
tanooga city limits sign and a
s ketch of Cash, encased in
plastic, that recently ap·
peared in The Chattanooga
Times. Clark said the metal
sign bears writing on its back
that says, "Thanks, Johnny.
We love you. The city of
Chattanooga, 1981."
Wilbur Mills . former
Democratic congressman
from Arkansas, was featured
speaker at reformed
alcoholics picnic over the
.weekend in Emmitsburg.
Md. Mills. who says he is a
"grateful alcoholic'' became
embroiled in controversy
when he involved himself
with a Washington D.C. strip-
per. Fanny Fox. in the
mid-1970s.
Texas reports tornado
Northern Maine drenched with five i nches of rai n
V.S. su mmary
Sflowors and tflwndors\Drma
rumbled acrost ,,,. Unlt9d ttatot
lrom Ille aoulflorn Plalna I\ tflo
CarollMS on Moftday, Wflllo t,..icat ''°"" O..Ws pet'9d soutNrn F~lde Wltfl ~l.-lon:9d WlllCI\ and .. a¥y
rains.
Heavy showers •ho toll .,.,
llO,,,_m Maine, wllfl more llww\ l 111-cllM ol rain ,_.,_ at c .. 111ow .,,.
•no "'° ... .._,-'°"-•no attt e .m .POT.
A ........ wes t-10C! llel-Mldlend end Abllone, TUH, •I'll
tflore -• wlOOly acatt.red "'""' derstonns In the central Htofl Plelns.
It WM a-y owr Ille Pl•I• ....
11ortllor11 Roclly Mownlolna, IM
0011-.. ..... 11110 .... o.-.........
wfllle aomo rain fomponef Ille
_-.., Peclflc C-t.
In FlorlOo, Dlnflts' -wlncb U · c..o.d SS mpfl IM lall9d IO f"MCfl
flurrl~ force of 74 mpfl. Some
., ... -_,_ by • lr..:flff of
rolft -tlcln _.. rU11nlno 1to4 feet obow -.not. n.. 1wm wn mo ...
•no sloWly ..nflwof'd ot s "'"' '° 10 "'""· Fer toeley, •fl-•ra ond ll1wn-
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Alla11ttc Cooat. Tllo Patlllc
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al'ld llltD -.,..... and oloflt ._ Oliff
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Favored
PEKII'iG (AP)
Some Chinese chUdren
aurter painful dla·
crhnlnatlon • for not be·
Ins an onJy cblld, JMt.,..
to • major newspaper comPlamed. T6e letters to the
Peoplt'a Dally a1reed
with t.b• poll~ of en-
co.,ra1tn1 pareata to
INi•e only one thlld to
lielp curb population
1rowt.b ln UU. naUon of
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we're t.istening •••
W))at do you llke •bout the Dally Pilot?
What don't 1ou Hkef Call-the number below and
your _..... will be recoftlecl. truscribed and
deUverW to-the appropriate~-
Th4' same 24·hour lft4wtrln1 aen>ict may
be \lied to reeord letten to t.be editor on any
topic. llailbox contri.,.tora must include t.helr
ume Ind telflllbaM number ror verific•Uoa. No
clrc....._ calla~ plHH.
Ten • nat'• on your 11\lad.
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, August 18, 1981 s
Bus tenninal stymied
Officials claim high rise would block historic district
l y GLENN 8CO'IT ., . ..., ........
Even tbo"'1i \b9)' haven't vii·
lted the alt•, tome federal of.
flclala are jeopardialn1 con-a tructlon of a central bua
terminal ln Santa Ana because
th' buildinJ mltht block viewt
of t.he old Oran~e County
Courthouse. '
The terminal 11 to be bunt at
the comer ol Roa.a ltreet and
Santa Ana Bo\llevarct -a Ml
bloc" aoutbweu of tbe old
courthouse. It would 1tand two
stortea hi&h, with another six to
seven atones of olflcea on top.
Officials of the Oran11 County
Tranait District said Monday the
reluctance of the Departme.qt ol
Interior to clear the proJect
could keep them from meeting
deadlines for applying for a $5
million federal grant to build the
terminal.
.Without that grant from the
Urban Mass Trantportatioo Ad-
ministration, the terminal prob-
ably couldn't be. built. With the
grant, the terminal could be un-
der con.strutUon by early next
year, said Brian Pearson,
transit dis trjct d e velopment
direct.or. ·
Transit district officials are
unhappy because the Depart-
ment of Interior isn't directly In-
volved in the project but. under
curr~t procedures for environ-
mental clearance, atill can delay
approvals.
· Al iuue ia the fact that lhe
te.rmh1al would be built tnsl~
the Downtown Santa Ana Hl•·
torlc Ol a trlc t. The Old
Court.house, a tum-of -the-ceniut=Y
structu re of Arizona red
sand.st.one, is the prize of that
dlatrict.
The Department of Interior is
lo charge of reviewing historical
districts and ofttclals have
claimed the terminal and its ex-
tra Doors of offices would ad-
versely affect the district by
blocking views .
Unless the federal officials ~rt
their negative finding, the dil!I·
tricl can't submit a final ap-
plication for the grant. Pearson
said the application should be
sent before the year is up.
Noting that several other
large office buildings already
have created a situation where
the old courthouse is like a golf
ball in tall grass, transit district
officials have encouraged
federal officials to visit the area
to measure the impact.
But to compli cate things ,
Pearson said, the federal
bureaucrats claim they can't
come because their travel
budgets have been cut.
Pearson said transit district
leaders don't object when people
who understand the area ralst
concerns that could delay such a
project.
"But we feel thia thin& kind ol
cam• in Crom left neld." he ot>-
aerved.
"'There'• an 1twful lot ol com·
petition for those .rants," he
added, ·•and (UMTA) operatee
on a first-come. first-serveD
basis.·• •
The central terminal wouUI
give the transit district an ofl.
site center for most of the bus
routes that travel through the
heart of the county. Currently,
the buses are parked along the
street at the corner of Flower
Street and Santa Ana Boulevard
on the west end of the Civic
Center
The Old Courthouse . with its
gabled roof. is about four stories
high.
Among other nearby buildings
ar e t he pr esent c ounty
Courthouse. the new Heritage
Building, both 11 stories; the
Wells Fargo Building, 10; the
Federal Building, nine; the
State Building and Santa Ana
City Hall, both eight, the Old
Courthouse Plaza, across the
s treet from the historic building,
six; and the county Ha ll of Ad·
ministration. a lso across the
s treet, which is fi ve stories.
OCTD project sealed
LA firm a warded $7 .7 million pact for new yard
A Los Angeles construction
fiTm has been awarded a $7.7
million contract to build a new
Orange County Transit District
maintenance yard in Anaheim.
After throwing out an earlier
round of bids, the transit dis-
trict's Board or Directors on
Monday grant~ the contract to
Stolte Inc. ·
The company is expected to
begin construction at the 10.5-
acre site in September and com-
plete the facility by February
1983.
It will be the dJatrict's third
maintenance yard and will in-
clude a 47 ,000-square-foot main-
tenance building, an o~rations
and dispatching center, a fuel
station. brake-check building
and a bus-washine facility.
The district currently operates
maintenance facilities at
Garden Grove and Irvine.
C. V. Holder Inc. of Gardena
was low bidder when bids were
initially submitted and opened
on April 14, but -the firm didn't
meet a district policy of using at
Slayer .. given
life sentence
William Samuel Caywood has
been sentenced to a life term In
prison without possibility of
parole by Orange County
Superior Court Judge William
Thomson.
The judge made the ruHng
Friday after a jury failed to
reach agreement in July on
whether to send the 40-year-old
Santa Ana mechanic to the gas
chamber for the slaying of two
Iranian immigrants.
Deputy District Attorney An·
tbony Rackaucka1 said be didn't
agree with Thomson's ruling,
but added that it was "not poor-
ly reasoned.··
Early said Caywood, upoo re·
ceiving his lif~ in prison sen-
tence, was "tremendously re -
Heved."
least 10 percent participation by
minority workers or subcontrac-tors.
When new bids were opened
on July 27, Stolte's proposal of
S7 ,698 ,000 was a mere $15,000
lowe r than Holder's revised
$7.713.000
OC f arlllers lllarket
gran.ted extension .
A pilot program that launched
a certified farmer s market
operation at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa has
been extended through Sept.
3.
Gary Martin . mark et
coordin ato r for the co-
sponsoring Orange County Farm
Bureau. said rair manager
Kenneth Fulk approved the ex-
tension after last Thursday's
event drew about 3,000 buyers
and more than 20 produce
seJJers.
Thursday was the last of four
scheduled market gatherings
in the southeastern parking lot
at the fairgounds on Fair Drive
authorized last month by the
county fair board.
The certified market draws
growers fro m throughout
Food poison
dips in U.S.
ATLANTA 1AP> -Reported
cases of salmonell osis. the most
common type of food poisoning
in the United States. declined 3.6
percent in 1980, the national Cen·
ters for Disease Control has
said.
Reported food poisoning cases
caused by salmonella bacteria
totaled 30,004 in 1980, a 3.6 per-
cent drop from 1979, the CDC
said.
Decreases in the disease .
which is generally mild and
causes diarrhea, we re reported
in all the New En land states .
@
Southern California to sell fresh
produce grown on their ·farms
a nd ranches directly to Orange
Coast consumers at a cost less
than at most supermarkets,
Martin reiterated
The market ope rates on
Thursdays between noon and 6
p.m
Music Cen ter
post awarded
George L Argyros of Newport
Beach, principal owner of Air
Cal and the Seallle Mariners
baseball club, has been named
an Orange County Music Center
trustee
H enry T S egers trom,
chair man of trustees. said the
board is responsibl e for solicit
ing, receiving and disbursing
contributions and grants to plan.
endow and cons truct the ne\\
performing arts center in Costa
Mesa.
Previously named trustees in
e lude D. J ames Bentley. J
Robert Fluor, Walter B. Gerken.
Charles W. He.ster, James K
Knapp, William S. Lund, James
K. Nagamatsu and Robert P.
Warmington
Argyros. president of the San-
ta Ana based Arnet Develop-
ment Co. and affiliates. also is
chairman of the Chapman
College board of trustees and a
member of the Orange County
C o un c il , Boy S couts o f
America·s e xecutive board.
August '""19 a long time from Christmas but In the
Jewelry bu1ine11 wa etart
planning for th• holiday aeaaon aa Hrly aa ~arch. That's the
time I make prellmlnary
telactiona for our Christmu
mailer and talk over plane with
the prlntar regarding the
stationery and proeftMa to be
U9ld In this year'a booki.t. '
liEM WISE pendants. pins. e arrjngs.
bracelets. and even some very
lnteresllng tumble polished
bead necklaces. II is not
difficult to encourage an
appreciation ol the l ovely
perldots once the Au~ust·born
perton has an opportunity to
beeome lemlllar with the line
natural per1dot gems.
Accurately photographi ng
jewelry la an art In ti.elf. Th•
background materi al• are
Cfltlcal and the prooft hava to
be oolor CIOfT8Ct9'( many times
to "*-aure we get • tru.
~tatlon of the artlcl89 to
befMtur9CI.
Pef'ldot, for lnttance. 11 •
partlcularly dlfflcult gem to
photograph well. It It thla month'• birthstone (along with
aardonyx •an alternative). W•
have heard woman aay they
don't Ilk• that birthstone, but It
11 bec41uae they havt only •Mf'I
aynthetlc perldote. wn.n -
have th• oppo r tunity to
Introduce them to the natural
perldot they agrM that It raally
le a kwtly gem.
W. wry a wtd9 v•rlety Of
nltutll perfdOI ..... ry. In t4K
ring• •fona, •• have a aalectlon ranging from 1175 to
ftD AM of_ oourN, thef9 ...
I \
Mary Berr. Ceftjfied Gemo1og1st
AKLES H. BA RR
We are WOf'king all year too
on our malling hst We try very
herd to keep a current address
Ille on all our customers but
tomellmea you forget to tell us
wtieo you move. If you have
moved alnce the lest time you
received mail lrom us or 11 you nevw have, but 'll(OUld like to
be Included In our malllngs will
you Juat g;w us • call and we
wlll bt h•PPY to add your
name. Our telephone number is
642-3310. Wa will bt pleased 10
hear from you.
Thara la still plenty ol time to
get In on our "Gem Wtu "
contett . . II runa through the
•nc:t or Auguat. There are some
*'I worthwhile prlzet .•. ISOO
In rnerchandlN for first. S300 In
merchandlM for aecond and
$200 In merchandiH for third
• • and • coniOlatlon drawing
tor lt1oat who don't win a t09' r,!•· So come In and test your
nowtedga.
,,
I
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/TuHdly, Auguft 18, 1981
...........
BULL RUN Bulls run down a Tecate, Mex-
ico. street ahead of 1,500 spectators. mostly
Americans , a t th1rct annuaJ running of the
bulls or Pamplonada. There were no serious
injuries reported a lthough some participants
were tossed into the air by the bulls. The
C\'ent drew 50.000 pt!ople.
Come join the fun at
Gilhooly's restaurant!
At Gilhooly's in Westminster you can enjoy our Tostada bar for just
3.25, served daily from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m .. and Saturday.
11:30 a.m~ to 4 p.m. And there's a delightful Happy Hour in the cocktail
lounge from 4:30 to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, as well as
entertainment for your pleasure Thursday and Friday evenings.
a company
we•tmln•t•r 300 westmlnster ma/1898-2521,
-------AIOUT
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNEI
0
0 Good '°' "''" plecH of Juicy. o<>lden bfown Kentucky Good IOf nine plec:H of Juicy, gold•n bf~n K•ntuclly ~ Fried Chlck•n. plu11lngl• Mrvlnga of cote 1l1w, f'T\lthed Frled Clllcllen, wlll'I lour rona. a 11rg1 col• alaw, 1 111941 o po1110 .. 1nd gravy, •nd 1 roll. Limit 1wo offera per • maal'led potata.11nd • medium 011vy. Llmll lwo offer•
z purcl\111. Coupon good only tor comblnallon wl'llllldatll ~ purcl\111. Co11pon good only '°' combin1llon wl'lltll I ord4tra. C<i1tomer P•Y• 111 1ppllc1bl• 111 .. ta• dlrll Otdett Cu1I01Mr paya all appllc1bl1 ule• 111
030 Offer e11plr•• AugUlt 30, 19811 Ot1-r •l<Plre• Auguat 30. 1981 OX>
,.nklPMlno toce llclpallng 1oc111on.., Oood
f11r1cM !lier vwy 11 1 PllC:H m1y very 11 Ptr•
tlon• Qood only 111 only In Sou11'11111 '°"''*" c.llloml• I C1llloin11 wl'ltr• you Mt
Ille Oft:.:;_: 11'11 Chicken 81ndwl111'1 w.,.. ~ Window 81nner
I
Epidemic typhus found
Flying squirrel blamed for reappearance of disease
ATLANTA (AP> -A new
epldemlc·typhws carrier, th• Oy·
ln& equlrrel, la reaponaible for
the reappearance ot the dileue
In the United States alter an
absence of more than 50 years,
acc:ordlna to the National Cen-
• ter1 for Dlaeue Control.
When improved hyaiene
eliminated body llce aa a health
problem in the United States,
epidemic typh1U alao disap-
peared, the CDC aaid. No
domestic caaea occurred for
more than SO years and Import-
ed cases ceased in the 19509.
But 21 cases of epidemic
typhus have been confirmed by
the CDC between January 1976
and February 1981. While the
number of cues ls low, ~e find·
ing £1 significant because the
new cuet apparently are linked
to a previously unknown carrier
-the Eaatern fiyine squiJTel.
•'There see ma to be increasing
evidence that the Eastern fiylne
squirrel does ln fact carry some
kind of strain of epidemic typbua
rickettsla," aaid Dr. Verne
N ewbouse , a research en·
tomologist with the CDC 's
leprosy and reckettsla br~ch.
"All of the tests that have been
done by other people than
ourselves have Indicated the
strain ls extremely close, if not
close enough to be called iden-
Major quake seen
in eastern U.S.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -A
Penn State geophysicist says a
major quake probably will occur
within the next 10 years in the
St. Lawrence Valley.
·'Sometime In the next decade
there will probably be a damag·
Ing one somewhere in the
eastern United States," Dr. Ben·
jamin Howell said recently ln a
telephone lnt.erview from his
State College campus office.
"There's a 40 percent probabili-
ty it will be in the St. Lawrence
Valley area."
On the average, there are four
serious quakes every SO years
east of the Rockies, Howell said.
The last major eastern quake,
he said, was under the St.
Lawrence River In 1944.
Howell said the St. Lawrence
River Valley bas several areas
that are seismologically active,
especially the LaMalbaie area
northeast of Quebec which is
subject to moderate quakes.
Howell uses standard
e ngineering procedures in
forcasting earthquake prob-
abilities, a method he feels is
accurate for 50 to 100 years into
the future.
Howell divided the eastern
United State~. into 12 regions
based on the geological features
and stresses. He takes earth-
quake data from the past, plots
It on a chart and extends the line
to project the probabilities with
the. aid of a computer.
Assuming the past informa-
lion Is typical, he said, the pro-
jections will be correct.
He said the same method is
used for predicting floods and is
used in Europe for projecting
earthquake probabilities.
The problem, according to
Howell , ls that unlike West Coast
quakes, those in the eastern U.S.
do not have predictable cycles to
indicate when they might strike
next.
He said the most accepted
theory is that eastern quakes
are triggered by fractures along
old lines of weakneses beneath
the earth's surface. Eastern
quakes cover a wider area than
their western counterparts,
although they do not occur with
the same frequency. ·
"We don 't know about their
causes to predict their occur-
rences,'' Howell said.
He said the probability of a
major earthquake in any given
area outside the St. Lawrence
Valley is one-tenth of 1 percent.
although that does not mean any
paticular area is totally quake-
free.
The worst quake on record in
the eastern United States, with
its origins in southeast Missouri ,
rumbled over a 1 million square
mile area in 1811-12, he said.
Its force was so strong that the
Mississippi River ran
backwards and its spillwater
formed the huge Reelfoot Lake
in the northwest tip of Ten-
nessee.
Ucat. with epidemic typhus."
The squirrel was identified as
a carrier by a group of re-
searchers in 1975 who were in-
v ea Uaa tlng Rocky Mountain
spotted' fever and found the
epidemic typhus organism in-
stead, Newhouse said.
Typhus causes sustained high
fever ,· severe headache,
malaise, and • rash and can be
fatal if not treated.
In its Rickettsial Disease
Surveillance Report fot 1979, re-
leased last month, the CDC said
the organism carried by the
squirrel is "indlsUneuishabie"
from the disease-causing or-
ganism carried by lice.
The report said 11 cases of
epidemic typhus were confirmed
between 1976 and 1979. ln an in-
terview last week, Newhouse
said an additional 10 cases had
been c onfirmed through
February 1981 and nine more
cases were reported elsewhere
but have not been confirmed by
the CDC
Th e cases occurred in
Georgia , New York, Pen-
nsylvania, Indiana, Ohio,
Massachusetts, Tennessee and
New Jersey.
··we would like to know what
the true status of this flying
squirrel associated typhus is,"
Newhouse said. "We would like
to know how important an ill-
~ess it is, how many cases there
are, how widespread it is. We
want to be able lo distinguish it."
Newhouse said researchers
"have no idea" how it is
transferred from squirrel to
!TI~"· _They also don't know why 1t 1s linked to squirrels and why
it occurs only in winter. Louse-
borne typhus is a warm weather
disease.
Researchers ass ume that
cases of epidemic typhus. which
also is called louse-borne typhus
or classical typhus, occurred
during the years when it was
believed eliminated but were
misdiagnosed as Rocky Moun-
tain spotted fever or murine
typhus, both sirrular diseases.
All three diseases are treated
with antibiotics , s o mis ·
diagnoses would not have en-
dangered patients, Newhouse
said.
HOW
YOU CAN GO
$
ORIFSS.
Sat ASU MIL 1111 WT COAST
WllHOUr ......
Our new ASAP Fare lets you take off
from Los Angeles International, Burbank or
Ontario to seven Eastern cities right away
for only $179 ($159 to Chicago). That's each
way wheq you buy a round trip ticket.
There are no other restrictions. No
1IAVIL 10 MY Of na aim.
Chicaio
Bo,1on
New York/Nc..,arl.
Wa'h1ng1on. D C
Philadclph11
F1 Llludcrdale
M1am1
advance purchase. No length of stay
requirements or time deadline!>. But seats
are limited and all flights are via Denver.
And when you Oy to any of these s~ven
Eastern cities, you can return from any one
of the other cities at no extra charge. For
example, you miaht Oy to New York and
catch a return flight from Washington, g.c.
lnJKldition, we'll give you First Class
for the price 9f Coach. Bu)' a full fare
Coach ticket on Continental or bring u• 1
another airline's (except World or CaP.itol
Airways) full fare Coach ticket to the5e
Eastern cities and we'll fly you First Class.
That's rig~t. First Class. This is on a first
come, first served basis, so reservations arc
suggested.
,Oona' get batk East in a hurry and
want to save money too? You can't do better
than ASAP.
CONTIMENrA
I
Continental' .S. is yours . Pick a c ity.
Any city. Now thl'. ugh September 15th you
can go anywhere e Oy in the mainland
U.S. for no mor han $179 each way with a
round trip ticket And 10 many citie!I the
fare i!I even less ,
ANY Of 111111 cma--;-i
Albuquerque lnditnapoli~ Okl1h1•ma Cit)'
Au\lln K1Ma' C11y Omaha
Casper Lincoln ~ona
Colorado Spnn Lubbock Phocn•~
Denver Mldl1nd/Odl'\sa San Antonio
El PIL\o Milwaukcc Tucson
Grand Junc110 Minn /St. Paul Tul\1 _J Hou,1on New Orleans W1ch111 ------
some restrictions. Just make
reservations nd buy your Coach ticket
either 7 or I days in advance depending on
your destin ion. You can return as early as
the first Sat rduy or stay as long· as sixty
days.
And i you've got children ages 2· 11
you can sh w them around the country for
no more th n $129 each way with a round
trip ticket hen accompanied by an adult.
Seats limited. So call your travel
agent, cor1pny travel depanment or
Continent~ And see how far $179 each
way can tll you.
Fares subj to change without notice.
RL.INES
'
'
§
Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT(Tueedey, Augu1t 18, 1981 Al
Profits
• trigger ~ffiU~
Libya dictator tal"get? lawsuits
SAN DIEGO (AP~ -
Investors who profited
ln MB F\nanclal, Inc.,
before lt went bankrupt,
are belnt aued on
1roundl that the con·
tracta violated state
u1urylawa.
U .S. explosives expert reportedly 'Qssociated with plot
RIDGECREST < P> -Oennla Wllson, an ex·
pert ln military equipment, left hi• job at the
China Lake Naval Weapons Center near here four
years a10 to take a job lo Ubya, where be made,
amona other devices. an ashtray that explodes. WU.aoo lnslsta he only made the ubtrays to
show off his expertile, not to further any terrortat
activities.
Yet other accounts of what Wllson did in Libya
contend the ordnance expert wu involved in ter·
rorlsm.
According to the New York Times, Willon
"who hM top security clearances," took unpaid
leave from the California weapoo.e center ••to work
al the terrorist training camp set up by Edwin
Wilson and Frank Terpil."
Edwin Wilson, no relation to Dennis,· and
TerpU were former CIA operatives. The men re·
portedly were connected with a mercenary
scheme to train and equip usasaination squads
targeted for Libya's dictator Moammar Kbadafy.
Wilson has repeatedly dismissed aUe1ations of
terrorist connections and asserted Innocence at a
Washington, D.C., grand jury to investigation of
charges of perjury and conspiracy to deal illegally
with explosives.
Despite the denials, Wilson's former
employer, the China Lake Naval Weapons Center,
has restricted his appearance on the base in con·
nection with work for his current employer, a
private Ridgecrest firm that does extensive con·
tract work for the weapons center.
Capt. J .J. Lahr of the weapons center said he
contacted Wilson's company and 1•made lt known
we prefer be (Wilton) not work on cla11Uled
project.a."
"!niUally; we requested be 1tay off a:tJ project.I
and the buef' Lahr Hid, "but later cbaqed that
to noo-aecwiJy project.I."
WU.00 took a leave ol ableace and LI beint ii·
sued "administrative leave" payment.I by hi•
company because, hi• employer aald, "We still
bold to the constitutional bellel a ~non LI inno·
cent until proven otherWbe."
"'Ibis ls the most distorted thln1 I've ever
been involved in -to tell the truth •nd 1Ull set
kicked in the rear end," Wilaon clalm1.
He said he believes be'• been duped lo a CIA
action. .
According to Wilson, the trickery be1an when
be and a friend, Robert Swallow, were asked by a
Pomona explosives manufacturer, Jerome
Brower, to go to Libya in 1976·1977 to help run a
firm manufacturing explosive devices Arab coun·
tries need for oil production.
Sources say Dennis Wilson wu paid for bis
work via money in Swiss bank accounts that were
kept by Edwin Wilson, Terpil and brower.
Earlier this year, Brower pleaded guUty to one
count of illegally shipping explosives and served a
four·month prison sentence.
Wilson is bitter about Brower and indicated be
felt his former employer and the U.S. government
may be conspiring again.st him and his friend
Swallow.
Thirty-two ol the 131
suits already have been
aetUed with SH,000 re·
turned to the estate, at·
torney David Osias
says. But 1,300 o~er in·
•estora have flied
claims totalin&
$21,078,272.
The investqrs were
promised returns up to
120 percent annually on
what alle1edly was to be
development of real
estate properties. In late
197B, the Ponzi-like
sc heme collapsed .
Founder Joseph Bello
pleaded guilty to fraud
and received a seven·
year prison term and iA
scheduled to be released
in 1983.
After MB Financial
we nt into bankruptcy,
retired Marine Gen.
Louis Metzger was
named trustee.
Oral Majority
seek support
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -For every action by
the Moral Majority, Oral Majority founder Bob
Kunst hopes to create at leait an equal and op·
posite reactJoo.
Kunst's stop here was part of a nationwide
tour to gamer support for the grassroots organiia·
lion. and he expects it to be one of the most suc·
cessful .
The Oral Majority initially oppoced a cam·
paign, spearheaded by Anita Bryant, in Dade
County, Fla., to repeal the human rights or·
dinance. After successful paaaage of a statewide
referendum which declared that "all natural
persons have the right to be let alone and free
from government intrusion into their private
lives," Kunst took bis campaisn on the road.·
The Oral Majority is in direct oppocitton, Kunst
says, to what he calla the Moral Majority's al·
tempt to regulate people's private lives. The eroup
believes that ·•everyone knows the dl,erence
between right and wrone on your own, and you
have the right to choose to do what you want to do
with your body," he said .
Af'Wll a
All THAT JAZZ -Entertainers Conrad Janis, George Segal, Tom
Bosley, and S¢atmari Crothers. from left, gather during a fund·
raising dinner at the Playboy Mansion West in West Los1Allgeles. The
event was held' to honor Bosley, who has received the Performing
Arts Theater of the Handicapped's first Humanitarian Award.
Kunst says the group "want.I to take on all the
victimless crime issues, prostitution, pomo1·
raphy, gay rights, and the freedom of choice la·
sues, including abortion."
Debate oo these issues, fueled by Moral Majority
leader Jerry Falwell, bas diverted attention from
the real problems facing ~ertca , Kunst said.
Before you buy any make of car,
call me. I'll save YO\J time & money.
Benefit from my buying clout I buy office. low overhead. Mo salesmen,
or lease cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions.. Grt prices from us.
100 for corporate fleets. We can ob-any make of car. TMn compare for
lain substantial savings fOf quali· yoorself. (And tell lOllf friends.I
f ied individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to ~ Roi. Hixson Equipmeal
shopping & hagghng. Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia. 714 64~.
~~
D1ily Piiat
Classifieds
"No response from
the Register -hired
thru the Pilot."
~~~1@642 .. 5678
charge it~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
call 540-1220 toll-fr••·
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elev!; k i ad a of B ... 71. PIHM vlait oar = . And Ill tlm• ...,.. Tnder loe'1 at
onnula wt~ tlle hlttnftUoD of tNl al• of treat , Newport l·co.::r.":' •ham DI ~ant and 8a;.rior
t.broullHHll tbe da1. A A""'-.ue (Milt to o.u,·. ....-. Meltll food ebaln _.Barclay'• Bau>. Hiit Utll Ilea fer
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Th• Palm Springe •FM'• neweet luxury rMOrt et only '32.00 per day.•
Much low•r than our nonnal aumm•r rat•. ·
Spend a day In the eun. R•lax, unwind and enjoy the reaotfa •rkllng
pool•, 25 champlonahlp tennl1 court1, 27 hole• of gotf, bicyQlea, game room, gift lhQP and much more.
UO,COmpflcated? YCMI bett Rancho Lu
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RANCHO
LASPALMAS
RESORT"'
New Rate Changes
for
Pacific Telephone
Customers
On August 4, 1981. the <Al!fomia Public Utilities Commlssion ln
Oedslon No. 93367 author1zed Paclftc Telephone to Increase nrtes
and charges for certain of Its seMc:es. These changes wtll be effective on
August 29. 1981
Basic Exchange Rates
Residence SaW:e
The monthly exchange nite for Residence Unmeasured Service (Flat)
is Increased $100. Customers who choose to convert from Unrne-lSUJ'ed to
Measured Service by December 2. 1981. wtll not be requlred to pay the usual
service connection charge. The rates for l.Jfeline and Measured Service
remain unchanged
8utlneee SeMce
The monthly exchange rate for Business Service Llnes ls not
Increased. H~ the ~ allowance associated with Measured Business
Service has been discontinued. The monthly exchange rate for Measured
Business Trunks Is Increased $3.50. ·
Seml-Publk: SeMce
The monthly exchange nite for Seml·Public Service (coin) is
increased $6.00.
Fomgn Exchange Rates
Residence Flat Rate Foreign Ex.change Service wtll be froz.en In all
areas where Measured Service is available.
Residence Foreign Exchange monthly rate is increased from 90 cents
to $1.50 above the new Unmeasured Service rate. All allowances are removed
from Business Foreign Exchange lines and trunks. A unlfonn rate of $15.50
was approved. '
Service Connection Charges
8ualna8 Service
Business Service Connection charges are increased.
Raldmce SaW:e
SeMce Connection charges for Residence SeMce .are Increased.
Charges for customers who pick up telephone sets at the PhoneCenter Store
are Increased from $16.00 to $23.00 regardless of the numbet of sets
ordered. Charges for a premises Installation visit are increased from $43.00 to
$53.15 (Installation of one telephone set). Additional charges will apply for
installation of more than one set. ·
Fomgn Exchange SeMce (FEX)
Additional charges will apply for service connection of Foreign
Ex.change Service.
Optional Services
The monthly rate for Optional Calling Measured Service (OCMS).
Optional Residence Telephooe Service (ORTS). and Wide Area Telephone
Service (WATS) will Increase.
Intrastate Long Distance Rates
Intrastate Long Distance Rates will change as fo~.
Charges for dial·direct calls will increase. Example a 4·m1nute dial
direct call from San Francisco to Los Angeles is increased from $1 68 to
$1.97 (Day Rate -Monday through Fri~ 8:00 AM to 500 P.M except
holidays listed in your &rectory).
The surcharge for Station to Station Operator Assisted calls. such as
Third Party Billed and Collect. is increased from 55 cents to 75 cents. HCMXNer;
the surcharge for a Station to Station Credit Card call is reduced from 55 cents
to 40 cents when customers dial "O" plus the number they wish to reach.
The surcharge for a call placed "Person to Person" Is Increased from
$1.55 to $2.00.
Telephone Set Charges
The monthly rate for telephone sets are increased to the f ollo.ving level:
Basic Rotary $1.00
Basic Touch·Tone• 1.55
Princess Rotary 2.10
Touch·Tone• 2.90
Trimllne Rotary 2.50
Touch·Tone• 3.25
Zone Usage Measurement (ZUM)
Changes in the calling rates and discount percentages are as f <>llotM>
-Charges for calls within Zone 1 are not increased.
-Charges for calls to Zone 2 are Increased one-cent per call.
-Charges for calls to Zone 3 will increase one-cent per minute.
-The evening discount (5 pm to 11 pm) Is reduced from 35% to
30%. The night discount (11 pm to 8:00 am weekdays and weekends)
remains at 60%.
Proposition 13 Discount
E>eisting discounts associated with Proposition 13 are discontinued.
Other Terminal Equipment
and Services
An additional Increase was granted to be spread over lndMdual
rates and charges on an equal percentage dlmtbution for the.following major
c:ategortes:
-Pr1vate Une Sava
-Private Branch Ex.change Sava (PBX)
-Key Telephone Service (KTS)
-fJcchange Mlleagc Scr\4oe
-Complex Serw:. Connection Charges
-Other T.-mlnal f.qutpment
The pertlel •tagt ma.a. wtll amount to ~'O>dmately 5.4%.
WNn ~an orcW for tenkc. our tli!Pf llNl?flat&le U/411 qtlOM J.10t1
«M~ ,-. and.dWJrga. Jf s,ou hew any quadoN ,,,_. collvaur
beat Pod~ TeMphone bullnal ofJb.
Al
Sports program rule
erves good purpose
The Reagan administration
says lt ls considering reductions
in the scope or the controvenlal,
9-year-old federal law that bans
aid to schools and colleges that
practice sexual discrimination in
athletic programs.
The impending review of •'Ti·
tle IX" rules was revealed last
week by Vice President George
Bush as part of the administra·
tion's attack on federal regula-
tions it considers unnecessary or
counterproductive.
Mr . Bush said the ad-
ministration believes guidelines
on sexual discrimination in
athletic programs are too vague
and impose excessive ad -
ministrative burdens.
No doubt there is room for
improvement of the Title IX
guidelines.
However. t he Reagan ad-
ministration should resist the
temptation to move away from
the intent of the law. That intent
ls to give high school girls and
college women opportunities in
sports simllar to those enjoyed
by young men for a long time.
And the administration
shouldn't be swayed from enforc-
ing a law that wouldn't have been
needed in the first place if it
weren't for the fact that the ad-
ministration of school and college
sports in this country has been
dominated by men. Too often,
those men have e xhibited de-
cision-making t hat can only be
described as self-ser ving.
Sports for women have en·
joyed a long-delayed flowering
under Title IX. It's been a good
thing, a healthy thing, and high
time, too. After all, why shouldn't
women have t h e same op-
portunities as men to express
themselves through athletics?
Consider the publie
The rule on sex discrimina-
tion in school athletic programs
is but one of 30 federal regula-
tions targeted by the Reagan ad-
ministration for possible elimina-
tion. They were selected on the
basis of suggestions from busi-
ness. government, colleges and
farm groups.
And while there's no doubt
many of the regulations a re
onerous, costly. or both. there's
also reason to believe that keep-
ing them in effect, perhaps in
modified form. may well be in
the public interest.
Lowering the restrictions on
content of lead in gasoline could
hardly benefit efforts lo reduce
air pollution.
Regul ations r equiring
m anufacturers of new chemicals
to submit information on health
and environmental effects of a
product before it goes on lhe
market may be a nuisance. And
so. no doubt, are requirements of
regis tering and testing new
pesticides.
But the public deserves. at
the very least, some assurance
that such products can be used
with reasonable safety.
And if the testing procedures
delay t he marketing of new
products. or increase their cost.
perhaps that's a price the public
would be willing to pay in return
for s uch assurance.
As for the regulation that
public buildings and programs
receiving fede ral funds be made
accessible to handicapped
persons. there's no doubt this can
add to building costs. But the ex-
a mple cited by the administra-
tion was extre me. A school with a
two-story building, it said, might
have to install an elevator to
serve a single student.
Surely it would be possible to
grant waivers in s uch excep-
tional cases. without doing away
with requirements for curb cuts,·
ramps, wider access doors and
accessible transportation which
do indeed enable t he ha.nd ·
icapped to lead more normal
lives.
Some of the mountains of
records and reports companies
are required to provide to assure
th ey are not discriminating in
employment doubtless could be
replaced by spot checks on com-
pliance.
But abolishing regulations
because some a re exaggerated or
burdensome could be a giant step
backward. A more r ational goal
would be sensible moderation
Good drive rs misled
A recent editoria l in this
space noted that the Department
of Motor Vehicles was surprised
more good drivers were not tak-
ing advantage of the offer to pro·
vide an automatic, four-year
li cehse renewal. without re-
examination, to drivers who have
had no traffic tickets or accident
involvements in the past four
years.
The good drivers supposedly
are notified by OMV computers
and sent the renew-by-mail form
60 d ays before their c urrent
license expires. The program is
expected to save t he OMV some
$3 million a year in license re-
n ew al processing costs. but
response has not been as great as
anticipated. said a spokesman.
Readers promptly advised us
of a couple of apparent glitches
in the program.
One driver who had not re-
ceived a renew-by-mail applica-
tion despite a 20-year ticket-free
record said she was advised by
her local OMV office that the of-
fer was "by lottery" so not every
good driver would receive one.
A driver who did receive his •
application and decided to take it
to the OMV office instead of
mailing it was handed an ex-
a mination fo rm and told "not
everyone is chosen." He took the
test under protest.
A OMV s p o kesman in
Sacramento' says both readers
h ad been mis informed by the
field office.
The program started out by
offering the automatic renewal to
a random samplin g of good
drivers, but t hat's been changed
to include all good drivers -it's
not a lottery any more.
The form should be returned
by mail because field offices are
not equipped to handle them. but
the second driver should have
been so advised, rather than
given a test.
''There's a mis understanding
about this in our fi eld offices,"
said the spokesman.
Good d rivers who have pro-
blems with the program are en-
couraged to phone (916) 323-3001,
or write to OMV, Drivers'
License Extension Unit. Box
11828, Sacramento, 95813.
Oplni oos expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Otner views ex-
pressed oo this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is mv1t · ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd / Co stly artw ork
Will bet you a small unspecified
s um tbal you can't cor\jure up the
picture in your mind of the most
valuable painting ever executed in
thl• country. trs called "Portrait of
Profesaor Groas," an 1876 work by
Thomas Eakins. Philadelphia's
. Thomas Jerreraon Medical CoJlege
owns it. Llat worth; $5 mllUon. J do
not have a tood 1ra1p or how the &Jn
tax lawt lnlluel\Ce art appralaala. A
topic ror the financial pages maybe.
ORANGE COAST ll;iil~ llillli
""811\llM -· .. , .. '"' , .. , ~ Qt Wnl .. , " • (ell• ..... ,...,_., , .. ,.. ..... "( ...... ,,.. ~, .... ,<.,ti.»
\
tr you didn't eat 80 hotdogs last
year, you didn't keep up with the na-
tional average. Sure know I didn't.
Who's eating all the hotdogs?
Though the late Mae West was not
lnterred in Brooklyn, N.Y., •he was
born and broucht up there, and the
Brooklyn cenotaph to her 11 ln-
scrl,bed; "Come up and aee me
sometime."
TllomlllMll,....I• Editor
Barbwa Kretlllc" Edltorl•! Pate Editor
Death takes Castro rivals
W ASffiNGTON -Within less than
three months, mysterious plane crashes
have eliminated two of Fidel Cutro's
potentially most dangerous rivals in the
volatile politics of Latin America:
Panamanian strongman Omar Torrtjoa
and Ecuador's President Jalme Roldos.
No one has made a connection
between the Cuban dictator and the
deaths of Torrijos and Roldos -much
less suggested that Castro's a1ents
were responsible for the plane crashes.
But stranger things have happened in
the violence-prone political arena or
Latin America. And there is no doubt that Castro has profited by the conven·
ient departure or two char ismatic
leaders who had contested the Cuban's
seJr-proclaimed role as the foremost voice of independence in the Western
Hemisphere.
PANAMANIAN OFFtaALS are sWI
investigating the cause or the air crash ·
that took Torrijos' life. Bad weather
over the jungle was a reasonable ex-
planation. -But it may be more than mere coin·
cidence that Torrijos' firm control of
Panama -and his successful negotia-
tion of the treaty under which the Unit·
ed States relinquished control of the
. Panama Canal -bad won him respect
across the Latin American political
spectrum. On grounds of ego alone, that
would have been enough to infuriate
Castro. But Torrijos had also made no
secret of bis distaste for the Cuban .dic-
tator's support of leftist guerrillas in
Central America.
Torrijos· opposition to Castro was
especially significant because be had
once been one of the Cuban's closest al-
lies. In 1974, for example, Torrijos was
the first leader in the hemisphere to rec·
ognize Castro's government -over
•
the objection of the Organization of
American States. After the Sandinistas'
victory over Nicaragua's dictator
Anastasio Somoza, Torrijos and Castro
jointly agreed lo give the new govern-
ment "respectful help."
81!1' WHILE Torrijos withdrew his
mllltary fo(ces Crom Nicaragua, Castro
sent in still more troops. Torrijos was
G. -J1-c1_1_11-11-11-1-~
I furious, and cooperaUon between the
two dictators ceased.
ln a conOdentlal cable tiled after Tor-
r ijos' dealh, U.S. Embassy political
analysts in Panama Wft'Ded the State
Department that hls absence ·•weakens
the forces of rerorm and opposition to
Cuban influence in the Caribbean
area."
State Departn>ent sources confided
privatefy to my associate Bob Sherman
that they expect U.S.-Panamanian rela-
tions to suffer as the result of Torrijos'
death. President Aristides Royo is con-
sidered a weak leader who may well de·
cide to use the United States as a
scapegoat lo distract Panamanians
from their own very real problems.
Adding to the problem is the fact that
TornJOS co-opted a significant portion ot
his domestic political opposition by gjv.
ing them jobs Jn the government. With
Torrijos' Iron control now gone. these
political extremfst.s or the right and left
m ay feel free to pursue their own goals.
Pulling Uncle Sam's beard is always
a popular sport among political factions
in Latin Americ'a, so the chaotic situa-
tion left in PanatJ\a by Torrijos' death
can only hurt the United States. And
whatever hurts the United States
pleases Castro.
The United States aside, Castro can
contemplate the post-Torrijos situation
in Panama with anticipation. The pros·
peel of political turmoil, as various
facllons vie to succeed the fa llen
strongman. can only give Castro hope of
yet another Caribbean conquest.
Castroism thrives on chaos.
SO WHILE THE Cuban dictator may
publicly mourn Torrijos, those are
crocodile tears running down his beard.
The case of Ecuador's President
Roldos is similar. although he didn't
Uve Jong enough to aclueve Torri1os·
status as a rival to Castro. At 39. Roldos
was the youngest president ever elected
in the Western Hemisphere when be
took olfice In 1919.
Roldos was swept into the presidency
by the greatest electoral margin in his
country 's history. His youth and
popularity made him an obvious rival to
Castro in Latin America -and Roldos
was obviously unimpressed with the
Cuban's reputation. He attacked Castro
for seizing refugees who had sought
asylum in the Ecuadoran ~mbassy in
Havana. The two clashed again when
Roldos had Cuban·backed Colombian
rebels arrested in Eucador and turned
them over to Colombian authorities.
But Roldos didn't survive to become a
serious rival to Castro. He died in a
plane crash alter on~ two years in of. !ice. Though the er sh Was Jijted of•
fi cially ~as an ace ent. the Cuban-
backed guerrillas actually claimed
responsibility for ~abotaging Roldos'
plane
Whether he had ~nything to do with
the deaths of either Torrijos or Roldos.
Fidel Castro profiled by both.
Can we revive domestic car chic?
We've asked the J apanese to kindly
stop selling us Americans so many
automobiles. That's a good idea. Equal-
ly good ideas are being offered, too, by
the new National Association for the Ad·
vancement of American Automobiles.
lt was just a year ago that the
NAAAA's founder. Homer T Pettibone.
who li ved in a typical VW-Volvo-Honda
American suburb. came ho.me with a
brand new car.
"Whal kind did you buy, dear?"
asked his wif•. Heloise excitedly.
''Look, it's parked oul front.." he 1ald
proudly. •·A beautiful four-door Ford
Fairmont."
''Well," said Heloise, paling, "there
goes the neighborhood."
NEEDLESS TO say, property values
tumbled~ the Pettibones were accused
of block-busting and ostracized by one
and by all. It w~s then that Pettibone
fo unded the NAAAA.
"For a ll too long ," he says, ---i ' ART HIPPE ~.
I
"domestic cars have been unfairly
stereotyped as big, expensive gas
guuJers. They have become second-
clus vehlcJes on America's highways,
shunned and scorned from Bel Air to
Beacon Hill. We must put an eod once
and fbr all to this truel discrimination
and learn to judge every car on its
merits, not on its n ational persuasion."
The NAAAA has already achieved
some progress In this direction. Bills
are pending in seve~al states to create
affirmative parking programs under
which employers would be required to
provide a quota of s paces in their
employee lots.for domestic cars.
CONGRESS EVEN NOW is consider·
ing equal rights legislation banning
segr egated garages. "Why should
foreign cars enjoy the services of $4~
an-hour mechanics:· asks Pettibone,
"while domestics must make do with
cheaper and presumably less skillful
care?" In the long range, Che NAAAA con-
siders busing a viable alternative. "We
are confident that children would over-
come their bias toward domestics,"
says Pettibone. "if they were car -pooled
to school daily in American cars.
Questions without answers
· ·co u~le this with American
automoti\te studies programs in our na-
tion's colleges," he says, ''and our
young people would grow up with pride
in their automotive heritage. Domestic,
we say, is beautiful!"
Que1tiona I Never Eipect to Hear tM
Answers to:
-Does the maxim, "You only Jive
once," justify doing what you wouldn't
do il you lived twice?
-Why do w~ dism•ss as "chiJdiJb.
ness" whatever does not happeo to •P·
peal to the child in ua?
-Since we profess to value alncerlty ~bove most other traita, why do we pre·
-HOW CAN lndJvlduala 1eem ao
falr·minded and warm·he•rted when
you talk to them on a one-to-one balla,
and yet act so prejudiced and mean·
spirited u a part of a c~vtty?
-Who really mallet up lboH
thousands ol jolret lb.at drcul•te dally,
some of them runnier than an.ythln1
heard oo the moet prof ea•lonal comedy
•ho'MJ? (I have never known, or beard ol, a penon wbo acknowJeclCed maklnl
up a •ln&l• IOOd joke.)
-If PA&SNTI live tor lbtlr
cbUdrin, and tbelr children Uve I or
tbtin, i.nd ao oa down t.he centwiet,
where doet it all ted, lf ever?
-Why do mo.at Am1ric1A1 look up to
educaUoe ud loot down ,apon edut•t~ people" (Our national aclUlopbrenta.>
-How many more billions of filtered
cigarette butts can the land absorb?
-Why Is it that the most offensive.
vituperative and uncharitable letters a
column.lat receivea are .from readers
who hasten to identify themselves as
"reliflous"? (Many even suffer from
the deJu.slon that they are expressing
"Christian" sentiments.)
-Why are most instructor• in the
fleld of "communication" unable to
wrlt.e a clear, coherent and simple
.,.,.airapb of expository proee?
-tr, u J have said before, we really
believe that the bett way to ma.inlaln
peace ls to prepare for war, why are we
ao alarmed. when other countries in·
ere ... their uoaa? (Which exposes tbe
funda.mlntal iUottc of the proPo1ltJon.) •
-WRY DON'T the "rtcht-to-lifers"
oppose with equal fervor the riCbt of the .
state to take lbe life of a C?iUsen? (lf
human llfe is lnlly "sacred.'' then only
God should h.ave the power to pass the
verdict ot death.)
-Why, ln tb11 a1e, abould surface
mall to Europe take nearly u long to
a rrive u It did in the days ot t.h• Hllln1 acboonen7
Why la It Lhat the 11me people who
are the Oerc:esl 1up90rtert ot "amall ..
1overnmenl internally an the 1nott ar·
dent 1upporter1 of "1troo1" tovem·
n>ent externally? <And can't they '"
the lnhereat contradiction?>
-Wby do w. pJ'Uch a doctrine of
"lndivtduallsm" and at the 1ame Um•
A measure of the NAAAA 's progress
is that the Pettibones are often invited
to parties now and even asked to park
their domestic In the driveway. "Of
course. we're the only domestic pre-
sent," he says, "but tokenism's a start.
And it we can just get celebrities like
Leonard Bernstein to buy American
cars. we might get an article in
Women'• Wear Doily on domestic chic.''
BUT THE NAAAA'S big project will
be this su mm er .. s "Drive on
Washington." Pettibone said thousands
of domestic cars will park side-by-side
down the mall. Then Lee lacocca wW
stand forth on the steps or the Lincoln
Memorial, raise his arms to heaven and
cry out: "l have a dream!"
· "Maybe someday," says Pettibone
hopefully, "Americans will come to ac-
cept the American car as one of their
own."
Where do I 10 to le& tbe $1.~ extra per
wffkly pay~k the TV 1ay1 wlll come
with the Rea.san tax cut! I don't have a
job . A.V.
penallse every DOD·Conlorm61l who C~
9
·------~--·-thlnU, acta and Uvet lD u lndh1duaJ ,...., • .,.... ...... u•, ..... .,..,.. manner! -.,,,~~.,,,.,....... ._...., .....
I
I
I
I I
11
I I
I
\
I
Dewey ew
Japan code
violated? • WASIUNGTON <AP) -Republican praiden-
lial oomlnee Thomas E. Dewey learned the United
States bad broken the J apaneae diplomatic coclet
but did not reveal it durtni the 1M4 campalp
after Army Chief of Staff Geor1e C. Manhall
pleaded that the s~ret be kept.
Although the 1 incident bad been known for
some time, detail• came to Ueht In papers
declaaaified by the National Security A1ency and
turned over to 'tbe National Archives. It ls
described in repoJU by Col. Carter W. Clarke, an
army intelligence officer who met with Dewey as
Marshall's messenger.
According to Clarke's reports, Dewey believed
President Franklin D. Roosevelt bad known,
through decoded messages, ot Japanffe plans to
attack Pearl Harbor.
"He <Rooeevelt) knew what was happening
before Pearl Harbor," Dewey is quoted by Clarke.
''Instead of being re-elected, he ought to be im-
peached."
Clarke said be met with Dewey in a Tulsa,
Okla., hotel room Sept. 28, 19", during a cam-
paign trip by the Republican who was opposing
Roosevelt for the presidency.
ln a letter from Marshall carried to Dewey by
Clarke, Marshall said the United States was win-
ning the war in the Pacific in part because it was
able to read the Japanese code, which bad been
broken lo 1941 but was still in use.
"You understand the utterly tragic conse-
quences if the present poUUcal debates regarding
Pearl Harbor disclose to the enemy any suspicion
of the vital sources of information we possess,"
Marshall wrote Dewey.
"The conduct of all operations in the Pacific
are closely related in conception and timing to the
information we secretly obtain through these in·
tercepted codes," the letter said.
Clarke recorded a second meeting with Dewey
in the governor's office in Albany, N.Y., on Sept.
28 and said that during the session Dewey talked
directly to Marshall by telephone.
Although Dewey refused at both meetings to
commit himself to secrecy, he never revealed bis
knowledge of the broken codes, which remained a
secret until long after the war.
In another document declassified by NSA,
William F. Friedman, head cryptographer for the
Army during the war. denied that the broken code
had given Roosevelt advance knowledge of the at-
tack on Pearl Harbor.
Friedman said only the Japanese diplomatic
codes had been broken at that lime and there was
nothing in intercepted diplomatic cables to reveal
the impending attack.
·'The premier of the country and bis minister
of war were not notified of the impending attack
on Pearl Harbor by their own high command,"
Friedman said. ··At the time of the attack, the only
codes we had broken were the diplomatic codes,
which did not have anything in them about the at-
tack."
ca11 eu-se11.
Put a few words
to work for ou .
...... o,.....w.
SA VE AM EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE
at Trader Joe & Preato
Most whole wheels of cheese weigh s to 10 ~ds. Wlten you buy a whole wheel of cheese
from us, we give you a
10% discount fro~ the
single pound price on almost every cheese. If a
whole wheel weighs more than 15 pounds, you don't have to buy It all. We'll give you a 10% discount rr you buy a chunk which
weighs more tban 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 al the . Intersection of 17th Street , Newport
Boulevard and Superior
Avenue (next to Denny's and Barclay's Bank).
MOW IM COSTA ..-sA
CVieK<SOn
~ental Healt~
By GEAALD WINKLER, D.D.I .
1 ON TOOTH~ICKS
The next sentence
may surprise you :
Toothpicks are okay!
Not recommended to be
used ln public, they do
have value in helpine to
keep teeth clean and
sums healthy.
The history o f
toothplcu is rather In-
teresting. They were
used u early as 3500
B.C., lo the form or
twigs, reeds and pieces
of arau. A wealthy, an·
clent Greek would pro-
bably carry a ring with
several lmpreaa.lve
looklne toothpM!k1 '
dan111DC from it. These
toothpicks mlghl be
made from aold. ailver,
Ivory or ebony. Others
were delicately carved
or e'mbedded with
THE BEST
jewels.
Dentists object to lhe
abuse al toothpicks, not
their use. They should
be used gently or lhey
will Injure your gums.
A denUsl should really
instruct you on how to
use them.
A toothpick can be a
uresaver Ir you've just
rlnished a steak and
can't reach that mad·
denlng spot. A soft, Oat
wooden toothpick. not a
bobby pin or sharp In-
strument, can free the debris stuck between
your teeth and make
you reel lnltantly more
comfortable.
Gerahl Wlllllller, D.D.S. '
and Alaoclacet
1411 Avocado, Salte sts,
New,..tlleacb Phae:Ml-4J•
In rHdtng enjoyment COINS to your
home 7 days a WMk In the
• Plilt .. 2-4321
·'
MADE PLEA
George C. MarsfJall
KNEW OF PLAN?
Prerident Roosevelt
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, ~1gu1t 18, 198i
P iggy comest a llowed
Show goes on despite Henson objections
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP> -The
MiH Piggy Pageant will go on as
planned, despite objections from the
creators of the celebrated s wine
For a while. it looked Uke the con·
test here next Saturday to select the
fairest sow in Maine would end up on
the 1arbage heap .
Henson Associates of New York Ci·
lY. creator of the M up pets, told con·
test organizers that calling the
pageant by Miss Piggy's name would
violate trademark protections.
The organizers consulted a local
lawyer, Roger Colin, who said since
Miss Piggy's name is not registered
In Maine, they could borrow it If they
formed a corporation.
Nine area folk met Friday night at
a local tavern, each kicked in SlO for
• the incorporation fee, and the Miss
Piggy Pageant Corp., was born.
The name is officially listed with
the Maine secretary of state's office
and the pageant can go on as planned
legaJly, according to Frank Kerr,
Miss Piggy Corp. board chairman.
Thirty pigs, Including a 900·
pounder, have been entered in a con-
test, which is part of Bath's bicenten-
nial celebration.
A local banker, Steve Searway,
was named chairman of the First An·
nual Search for the Fairest Pig of the
Universe.
Harriet Yasky, an attorney for
Henson Associates, said Monday she
was not familiar with the case and
declined comment until after she
speaks with contes t organizers.
VIOLATED'
Miss Piggy
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
This will result in an average
saving of $8 25 in California*
ON .......
BUICKS1 ·CADILLACS
Pl.US
.AN> GMC LIGHT-DUTY
Here's the best news you've seen in months. GMAC and your participating
GM dealer are now offering GMAC financing at only 13.8%.
That's right! You can finance any new General Motors car--or light-duty
truck, including vans --delivered in August at just 13.8%. And this means big
savings to you.
Your participating GM dealer is ready now to offer you this new
13.8% financing rate on all new GM cars, including the new Chevrolet Cavalier;
Pontiac J2000 and Cimarron by Cadillac.
So see your GM dealer today and pick out that new General Motors car.
light-duty truck or van that you've been waiting to buy.
LES
'
•
..... ~..------------..--..---~~--------------~---------~~------------..,...-------.-.,.---------------------·------~-------------------•
... . ~:·1 '" :~;·
. . .. ,,• .. ·
•• : J •
I .• ,,,·.-·
•
... ' ..
'
Orango Coaat DAILY PILOT/TuHday, Augu11 18, 1981
.,
' .,,, ... "') ...
,... :
.·;f;,.~I',,,:::".:: ..... ' .')". ··~ .... .:. ~-· .. ~ '• . )• ··~ , . , -.
-.
VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS
'
I.
Dally Piiat
TUESDAY, AUG. 11, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEV ISION
82
86
88
High interest rates
have a strangle hold
on sm,all business ... B3
D
~
0
'Yield' sign out for California's highw.ays?
SACRAMENTO(APJ -lnthe
idyllic year of 1963. Gov. Ed·
mund "Pat" Brown talked of
"no limitations except those of
our own imagination and en·
terprise" and applied that with
gusto to the state's highway
system.
Gasoline was 30 cents a gallon.
including 7 cents per gallon
gasoline tax. and California
boasted it had 2.594 miles of
freeway, "more than any other
state," with 10,000 more eagerly
planned.
That year. the governor's son.
Jerry, was at Yale University
law school and Adriana Gian·
turco was in Paris working for
Time magazine .
In nearly two decades. the on -
ly thing tha t has stayed the
same is the gasoline tax.
The price of gasoline has in·
creased fivefold while highway
construction and maintenance
costs have soared. Gasoline con-
6umption is down, cutting rev-
enues. Only 6,000 additional
miles of freeway have been
built. ·
The son. with his "era of
Ii mi ts" philosophy, became gov-
ernor, and Ms . Gianturco his
transportation chief. They have
s lowed the once-energetic
highway program, partly from
economic necessity and partly
fro m philosophy. California
s pends less per resident on state
and local road construction and
maintenance than do the other
49 states.
Many fear that the fabulous
freeway system that became a
state symbol is dwindling to
potholes.
"The financing mechanisms
for transportation in California
are inherently unstable,
threatening past public invest-
ments and requiring extensive
program cuts in the immediate
months ahead," warned the
California Transportation Com-
mission in April.
Agreement is widespread that
the highway proeram is in trou-
ble. Just how much and what
s hould be done have been hotly
debated in the Legislature this
year -with a showdown coming
in the next few weeks.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and
Ms. Gianturco say the shortage
1s onl y about $915 million over
five years. and that can be made
up by administrative economies
and some vehicle-related fee in-
creases.
The Transportation Com-
mission and m u ch of the
Legislature think the five-year
s hortfall will be closer to $2
billion and that the gasoline tax
should be r aised.
A $3 billion bill to do that is
st rugg lin g through the
Legislature. With highways so
close to Californians' hearts.
there are as many opinions on
NEWS ANALYSIS
wh a t to do as th e re are
lawmakers.
How did California's once·
exemplary highway program
find Itself universally described
as in crisis?
The program began In 1895,
when three new highway com-
missioners bought a team of
horses and a buc kboard and
made a 7,000-mile trip around
the state, mapping a network
that became the foundation of
today's state highway system.
State voters approved an $18
million bond issue in 1909 to
begin construction. A 2-cent-a·
gallon gasoline tax was initiated
in 1923 and increased in 1927.
1947, 1952 and last in 1963. ,
Federal money entered the
picture in 1956, mainly to build
interstate and federal highways.
.,
With gasoline consumption ris-
in g , lhe price low and the
federal dollars flowing, the
Legislature in 1959 adopted the
ambitious "California Freeway-
Expressway System." It called
for construction by 1980 of 12,400
miles of limited -access
hi ghways to connect every city
of 5,000 persons and serve every
industrial, farm and resort area.
Only about half of that bas
ever been built -or probably
ever will. A rethinking or the
plan began about 1972 in the ad-
m i nis tr at ion or then -Gov.
Ronald Reagan and his Hi ghway
Department outlined a scaled:
down project list.
Governor Broum has called a 111rtual halt to spendtng on construc-
tion and maintenance of Californw highways
"There was a realization on
tbe part of the department
management that the depart·
menl. over the years. had way-
overcommitled itself in terms of
planned projects." Ms . Gian-
turco says.
Then came the Arab oil em·
bargo, setting in motion lhe dou-
tax brought in $701 miUion. In
1979-80, the total was $800
million.
Meanwhile, inflation also
caused highway construction
and maintenance costs to in-
crease astonishingly. about 18
percent a year for the last six
years. The Transportation Com-
mission points out that since
1970 highway revenue has
dropped between 40 and 60 per-
cent in constant dollars.
The beginning of this massive
problem coincided with Brown
Many fear that the fabulous
freeway system that became
state symbol is dwind ling
a
to
potholes.
hie petroleum whammy that has
crippled the 'tilghway program
to this day.
As the price of gasoline has
risen and cons umption has
s tabilized a nd actually
decreased . r eve nue has
dropped. That's because the
gasoline tax, the main source or
highway revenue. is charged per
gallon and has not increased as
the price of gasoline soared.
Thus. revenue has increased
only slightly. In 1973· 74. the gas
laking office in 1975. The im-
mediate scaledown in highway
projects necessitated by the
economy fit nicely with Brown's
philosophy that more concentra-
tion should be placed on mass
transit.
·'The epoch of unlimited
freeways and the attempt to
pour cement from one end of the
stale to the other -that's over,"
Brown said in the early days of
his first term.
But highway lobbyists and
legislators who want more
highways have had a hard time
adjusting to the new fiscal reali-
ty and have heaped unending
criticism on Brown and Ms .
Gianturco a lmost from the
beginning.
The main recurrmg complaint
over the last fi ve years has been
that they hoarded or banked $600
million in s urplus funds that
could have been used to begin
stalled freeway projects. They
claimed the money would be
needed to match future federal
dollars.
William Hamm. the non-
partisan state analyst who ad-
vises the Legislature on fiscal
matters, also said Ms. Gian-
turco's department has had a
poor record in forecasting infla-
tion.
The department has been slow
to grasp the long-term funding
problem that started lo become
evident in 1979 but was not
acknowledged by the depart·
ment until September, when the
$91 5 million figure was an-
nounced.
Hamm says the deficit could
range anywhere from $760
million to $2.4 billion, depending
on the rate of inflation and con-
struction.
The Trans portation Com-
mission, a s emi-independent
agency that sets and revises
highway priorities each year for
.............
Stare transportatwn chief Adnana Gianturc(J lias placerl lree11:ai1s
''''a low pnonty durmq her tetlure in 111f1n·
the next fi ve years. 1s more
pessimistic.
A year ago, the commission
approved a $6 billion five-year
plan, known as the State
Transportation Improvement
Program or STI P
In June. the commission cul
out all new construction after
next May and pared the pro·
gram to about $3.2 billion.
.. This year we can no longer
afford many of the new con-
struction projects we planned to
The lar gest controversy at
present is the portion of the bill
that would eventually transfer
money from the 6-cent-a-dollar
sales tax on gasoline from the
general fund to transportation.
Some Assembly members.
particularly Assembly Ways and
Means Chairman John Vascon-
cellos. D-San Jose. thmk tbe
state·s equally shaky general
fund should keep at least the
amount of money it gets now
from the gasoline s a les tax.
The department has been slow to
grasp the long-term funding problem
that started to become evident in
1979 but was not acknowledged by
the department until September.
build ," said commission
Chairman Carole Onorato.
"Without new revenues , within
the next few years. we won 't be
able to keep the system we now
have."
The commission notes that
California's 7-cent gas tax is
lower than the rates of all but
three states. In 1963, the last
lime it was increased, the tax
rate was 23 percent of gasoline's
selling price; it's now less than 5
percent.
about $150 million a year
The bill picked up Brown iild·
ministration s upport in commit·
tee Wednesday. following an
amendment that cut from $230
m i llion to Sl 77 m ti lion the
amount of gas sales tax re-
venues that would be shifted
from the general fund lo
transportation.
The committee did not hold a
vote on the bill because of a lack
of quorum.
Cop's persistence tracks down Houston slayer
., .....
HOUiton police detecti11e Johftny Bond.3 credited wtth bnngmg
killer ef family to 1ustice.
Tot m urdered in crib haunted detective throughout investigation
HOUSTON (APJ -Johnny
Bonds was the son of a farmer;
Ma rkha m Duff-Smith was
raised in a fa s hionable
neighborhood. Their lives
became entwined In murder.
Now one is a hero and the
other has been sentenced to
death.
It all began two years ago
because Bond11, a police detec-
tive, was haunted by the slaying
or a baby boy found dead in his
crib, next to his teddy bear.
Bonds' digging overturned two
mistaken rulings of suicide and
solved the slayings of four peo-
ple. Duff-Smith, a 34-year-old in-
vestor, was accused or arrang-
ing to kill the four so he could in-
herit his family's money.
"One thing about lhls case la,
I was mad," said Bonds, 33. "I
was mad at Duff-Smith. I was
mad at the medical examiners.
To think that somebody could do
something this horrible and get
away with it.··
On July 6, 1979, Bondi waa
sent to investl11te the discovery
of three bodies -of Diana
W anstrath . 36, her 35-year-old
husband, John, and their 14·
month-old son, Kevin -·in a
home in the fashionable
Memorial area of Houaton.
Each victim ~ad been 1bol ln
l b e head. Wanatralh was
slumped ln hll chair; ht. wlfe
lay ln front of tbt fireplace.
Kevin wu face-down in h1I crtb.
Bondi sald M bad aeen many
' bodi• dw'lnl hit seven yean u
a bomicide det•ctlve but be
could not for1et Kev~n.:. and vow.cl toftnd tile baby•a lllller.
Tbe c .. •• e&Qled after tb• Harris CountJ med ical tx·
amlner ruled that Mu.
W amtratb abot ber buabmd and
infant IOD, dMD benelf. 8GDdl
w11 troubled becaua. UMn wu
no gun at the scene. Medical ex-
aminers said pe rhaps it had
been removed by someone try-
ing to save the family embar-
rassment.
Bonds didn't buy It: "When
they came down with that rul-
ing, I thought, 'Well. why do I do
this job?"'
Despite the ruUng, Bonds con-
tinued to investigate. He was en-
couraged by phone calls from
JUSt about every one of you is a
suspect.· And we asked them all
to take polygraphs. By confront-
ing all of them together. nobody
could say no.
"So everybody comes in to
take the polygraph. and Duff.
Smith's the last one. and he's the
only one that shows up with an
attorney," Bonds said . "He's the
only one who had a problem
with the polygraph."
Waldhauser Jr ··He said,
·veah. how'd you know?""
But Bonds still did not have
any link to a ·•hjt man " As a
last resort, he dug through trash
behind Waldhauser 's house and
found letters to Waldhauser
from a prison inmate. Allen
Wayne J anecka:
Janecka confessed to beinl
t h e hit man in bo th th~
Wanstrath and Zabolio slayiq,g&
and said he was hired by ___ ..;.. ______________________ ' Waldhauser . Waldhauser agreed
"Onf! thing about this case is, I
was mad ... to think somebody could
do something this horrible and get
.away with it."
friends of Mrs. Wanstratb who
said they did not believe she
could be a murderer.
Because the Wanstratha lefl a
sizable estate, he said, be con·
aldered all heirs poc1lble SUI·
pectl.
The one , who 1ot tbe Uon•s
share of the money was Diana's
adopted brother, Markham Duff.
Sm[tb. Bonda waa 1u1piclou1
when be met the brother t.be
nlabt after the bodies were dis·
covered. l
"He didn't show any emotion
at all -very bu1lneullte, ·•
Bonda said. ''Aa loon u be left,
we tboqbt: 'There'• aomethlna wroq. Thll lu.J doesn't react
rl1tit.' ··we confronted the whole
tamlly after the funeral and tc*I
them, 'Look, all ot y'all art
maldq money otf ot t.bll, and
Bonds said he was then cer-
tain he was on the right track.
He played a hunch and got the
file on another unusual death in
the family -the uns strangula·
lion suicide of Duff-Smith's
mot.her, Trudy Zabollo.
''By about July 24th (1979), 1
was convinced the ZaboUo case
bad been murder, too,•• Bonds
said.
The breakthrough came when
an anonymous caller alleied
Duff.Smith arran1ed Mrs.
Zabollo'• deatb. But all the
caller It.new wu that there wu a
"middleman" who wu a "real·
tor and coin collector."
BcllMH, bavlna nothina better
to to on, betan queeUonlJl& Duff.
Smlth'a bu1ine11 auocJatea,
uklfta eaeh if he collected colnl.
A IOftl 1bot paid otf when Bondi
asked the queatlon ot WaJter
to testify against Duf~Smith.
The Harris County Meditai
Examiner's office changed Utt
rulings in both cases from
suicide to murder.
In April, Janecka received Ott
death penalty for killing Ketin
Wanstralh, and Duff-Smith ~
arrested in the Zabollo slaytor.
He was tried recently and it toDk
jurors 40 minutes to return: a
guilty verdict.
Prosecutors used the puni~ ment phase to show Du f~
Smith's involvement in
W anstrath slayings, and jur
deliberated only 15 mlnut,11
before recommending the de•
sentence. · •
"This Is a proud day for ~
Houston PoUce Department,'
Assistant District Attorney
Mack Arnold said.
Bonds haa been transferred to
the Internal Affairs division and
aaya he won•t go back (o
homicide.
"I worked up there for a lonf
time, and I didn't reallie the job
was eaUng me up," he sa11.
"You have so many cases where
you know who did ll and )'OU
can't do anyt.hlng about it. O..
it's bad.
"I'll tell JOU 10metbln1 tltef'
be 1ay1. "My ldd la not ~to
be a cop. One ln tbe famllJ"'I enoulh ·· ...
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOTffuHday, Augu1t 18, 1981
Daughter-in-law wins round
• • tries patience
mE TIME MACIONE: One mode of lire that .
now seems to be accepted along this best or all possi·
ble coasts is that everybody wants to do everything
very Cast. Have Cun quickly. And when the task is
onerous, do it even quicker.
You have to guess that's why these so·called
convenience markets have sprouted up on so many
street corner s. The prices sure don 't lick the
supermarkets. But what they have to sell is alleged
speed.
Allegedly is used here becaus'e you lake pot-luck
on s peed when you 1
leap into one of these
corne r 24 -hour "we
--------~b\ _ sell it if you can rind TOM MURPHINt~~,t;. it .. place~.
If every ·
body tries to get to the cou nt e r for
check-out at the same lime. forget the flash. There 's
only a solo clerk and one cash register. No calling in
the reserve checkers like down at the really big
markets.
Just the other night, Cor example, this search for
speed at the Korner Kwickie Mart was observed in
Costa Mesa when about 22 people tried to line up and
get checked out a ll al once.
The lone c lerk, wearing a golden "Cal ,
Berkeley" T-shirt, tried to move everybody along
fairly. He checked each person out al deliberate
speed.
Since there are no rolling shopping carts at the
Komer Kwickie place, everybody in the line is car-
rying their goods U1 their arms. One rellow juggled a
six-pack and four bags or PQlato chips. Another lady
had both arms heaped with canned goods.
·· 1 think tM checkout line is over there to tM right, Zeb"
THE COUPLE APPROACHING the check out
stand. however, only had three items so it looked
like a breeze. It wasn't.
They finally got to the counter where the man in
the Cal, Berkeley T -shirt st arted checking the m out
when he was stopped cold.
··George. you pay ror the dried beans separate·
ly ... the woman ordered.
··Alt I've got is a $20 bill," the man protested.
··well. give it to the nice man, then." she in-
s isted.
"l don't wann a give ·em a 20 just for t hese dried beans... ,
"Then I 'II loan you a dollar," the woman an-
nounced, dropping her two items on the counter
while s he began to punch a nd probe within a
knapsack-sized purse.
FINALLY, SHE DUMPED the entire contents of
Superpurse out on the counter.
"Would you mind counting these nickels and
dimes to see if l have a dollar," she asked the Cal,
Berkeley T-shirt. He never changed his expression.
''The dried beans are only 83 cents." he pro-
nounced dryly.
"Well , then here." she replied. "take it out of my
$20 bill .....
The fellow just behind the couple in the line. who
was juggling the six-pack and four bags of potato
chips, appeared near collapse. His race was turned
sort or ashen.
AFTER WHAT SEEMED an eternity. the odd
couple scooped up their goods, paid for the dried
beans, got the knapsack bag reassembled and left,
just after the woman asked the Cal, Berkeley T-
shirt, "Sir, could you change tttls $5 bill and include
four quarters?··
The man right behind them rinally collapsed at
t he counter, dropping his six-pack and denting the
cans.
The Call. Berkeley T-shirt clerk finally spoke.
"How' re your arms," he asked.
RUFFELL'S ~Op••1w.
WHOLSTaY
DEAR ANN LAN 0£RS :
RecenUy you told a dau1hter·ln·
law who resented lhe fact tbat
her husband telephoned his
m other every nl&bt (even
thouah tbey had seen each other
during lhe day) that It was a no-
win situation.
YO U ARE WRONG. My
daushter·ln-law DID wln. My
son has stopped vlslUna me and
t here are no more telephone
calls. When I learned my daughter-
ln-law resented my son's visits
and daily telephone calls before
s upper (sometimes we chatted
for 30 minutes or more>. I asked
her what I could do to eliminate
the friction. Her reply stunned
me. She calmly replied, "Your
son's business is here, and our
c hildren are doing well in
Designer
introduces
a partner
By MARY JANE SCARCELLO °' .. O.lly ,.. ........
P ink and while streamers
marked the en\rance to "une
pa~Ue sans raison" given by
Vincent Jacquart.
Guests followed a trail of tis·
sue paper rose petals to lhe front
door where Jacquart and room-
m a t e Gary Harrison bad
t r a ns form ed thei r Newport
Beach apartment into a work of
art.
White canvas covered all
available walls. floors and
HAPPENINGS
furniture, and pink balloons
fl oated along lhe ceiling.
Although the party claimed to
h ave no r eason. its actual
purpose was to introduce Jae·
quart's new partner in interior
design, J ohn Mariani.
Mariani alld his wife Elizabeth
fl ew down with friends from
their home in San Francisco for
the occasion.
They'll continue to live in the
north and Jacquart will work
here in what Mariani termed
"shuttle decorating."
·'Vincent has great innovative
technique,'· he said, referring t.o
a computerized house J acquart
has designed for a Newport
Beach client. ·'San Francisco is
known for its easy luxury and
t actile impression s, so we
represent two worlds. This is a
case where one plus one equals
three."
Describing himself as the reb-
el in four gener ations of prune
farmers, Ma riani is looking
forward to the December issue
o f "Architectural Digest,"
where the couple's Nob Hill
apartment will be featured.
"It's an English country house
done in icy pink," he said. "San
Francisco women don't have
tans, so they look better in that
color."
Jacquart's work will grace the
November pages of "Arch.itec -
t u ra l Digest'' with a Palm
Springs home he decorated for
J ack Sheap of Newport Beach.
The designer c"ame to America
from h.is native France in 1977,
after a short slay in Beirut and
said, "It's the dream of every
Fren c hm an to come to
California."
His friend Dino Gerlando of
Los Angeles provided the
graphics. the only decorations
highlighted on the white canvas
walls.
Sheldon Lippe of Lippe/War·
ren Crystal in Laguna Beach· at-
tended, as did Arlene Altman
and Wendy Wonder, who design
jewelry.
.
school. We cannot move but you
CAN. Get out of our lives and
stay out. Disappear and leave Wl
alone."
I took her at her word. At age
83, I sold my farm where I had
lived for 52 years and moved
3,000 miles away to a place I
never heard of before I saw lt on
a map. I have no telephone· ln
my new residence.
I hope my m..ovlng has benefit·
ed my daughter -in-law. son and
1randchlldren. It cerutnly hu
devutated me .
Allbouch the climate ta a
are•t i mprove ment over the
place I left, lhe cost of livtna hu
nearly tripled. I have no car,
and in order t.o get to church, I
must ride a bus for 40 minutes,
then transfer to another bua. I
am depressed and lonely.
Once I read in your column
•'Time heals all wounds.'' I hope
your philosophy will prove true
for me. No name, please -Just
EXILED IN SAN DIEGO
Dear Exiled: Your self·
Imposed exile was an Ill·
conceived act or bostlllty de-
algned &o pun11h yoW' daupter-
ln-law. Wbat you have done la
bitten ofr your nose t.o 1pUe your
face -and as usually happens
lD ltlela CAMI, )'OU are tJM bll
loter.
Tlllere waa ao He4 &o ..,.....
your llfe and move J,... naUet
away. You could have ••llet&ed to )'our aoa that lD the best lD·
terest ol hla marrta1e be 11M>a.1d pboae you every o&ber day
<from work, ii poaalble> ud vii·
ll leas frequently. You Ille
would have 1oae oa mucb as
before and you would bave beea
lnflnJtely better off tbu you are
now. How I wl(b you bad written
to me before )'OU made that aell-
destructlve dedaloa.
Discover how to be date bait
without falling hook, line and lfnlcer.
Send SO cems along wilh a long,
•lamped, self-addreued e-n~lope
with your req~st to Ann Londer1,
P.O Boz lJ99S, Chu:ago, JU 60611
Vincent Jacquarl 1 left 1 shews party decor to Elizabeth and John Munam
Linda and Guy Colbert took
time away from their busy
Steinbeck's Restauran t on
Balboa Island to drop by, and
Ron Ep deserted the Sawdust
Festival in Laguna Beach to al·
tend.
While talking .with Mr. and
Mrs . Irving Felt of New York.
Ep discovered that he and Mrs.
Felt had some relatives-by·
marriage in CO{llmon.
Felt is chairman of the board
of Madison Square Garden, a
part or which is named the Felt
Forum after him. The couple
had been stayi ng in Ra ncho
Mirage before attending meet·
ings in Los Angeles.
Other guests included Compte
Patrick of Montfreid. Patrick
Shea. Dr. Michael Bear. Patrick
Harrison, Shawn Fa rnsworth
and Tari Soderline.
N ot a l I the boats in
Newport Harbor Sunday were
entered in the Character Boat
Parade.
Architect A. Bahar's boat,
· ·samarang, .. m oored near
Cano's Restaurant, was the site
of a marriage ceremony for
Beth Snevely and Tom Cham·
bers. both of Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs. John Snevely of Costa
Mesa and Dorothy Chambers of
Tustin
About 25 guests attended the
ceremony onboard . and several
hundred wished the couple well
at a reception afterward on Lido
Isle.
Special e ntertainment was
provided by "Street Player ," a
musical group which had dis-
banded but staged :t reunion
especially for t he occasion.
The couple will leave for
England in September where he
will work in real estate and she
will study art history
Gemini: Reason to Celebrate
Wednesday, August 19
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARI ES I March 21 April 19> Circumstances enable
you to gain greater control of your own destiny.
TAURUS !April 20 May 20> You have more "work·
ing room" as rt>d ,tape is removed What had been
withheld will become available.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20>. You'll have reason to
celebrate: desires. hopes. wishes are close to fulfillment.
HOROSCOPE
Accent on returns from business endeavors. possible pro-
motion and added prestige
CANCER I June 21 July 221 Wrillen message pro·
vides impetus. enlightenment and s purs a mbition.
Superior flashes green light for necessary changes.
LEO 1July 23-Aug 221 Disputes are seltled. Some
compromises occur long-range results will prove
favorable. Major domestic adjustment dominates
scenario.
VIRGO I Aug 23 Sept 221 Surface indications are
deceptive By d1gg1ng deep. you unearth greater finan·
cial possibilitiei.
UBRA <Sept 23 Oct 221 Reports should be re·
viewed; stock or business transaction subject to delay.
Know it. plan accordingly Contractual obligations are
part of scenano. Emphasis also on marital status.
SCORPIO IOct 23 Nov 21 >: What appears a setback
will boomerang in your favor Project is completed
despile "sniping·· by, those who are petty, envious. Aries.
Libra natives play key roles.
SAGITfARfUS (Nov 22·0ec 21 > · Affairs of heart
dominate: you make new starts and member of opposite
sex is very much involved Emphasis also on specula-
tion. children. variety and games of chance
CAPRICORN I Dec 22 Jan 19> Focus on home. re
pairs. safety measures and basic security Older family
member makes spectal request
AQUARIUS cJan 20 Feb 18> Expansion is keynot
ed. you perceive potential and are able to communicate
ideas in graphic manner
PISCES I Feb 19-March 20>. Opportunity exists to
build on a more solid base You locate "missing links ..
Focus also on payments. collection:. and income polen
ti al
. s....._._ ....... SAVE 300/o on
RICE CAKES Q BaSsto I tZZ HAa80l ILYD.
COSTA .. A-14 .. 1 IH
l .
i
J Fashion Show
Everything for a.ck·
to-School 7:30 Fri
and 1 I 3 on Sit.,
atTroderJoe•tMlnet
We have Rice Cakes on
sale for only S.69 per 411•
01. package. Compare this with S.99 found
elsewh e re .• Great with
hors·d'oeuvres, spreads
or peanut butter. We
especially recommend
Rice Cakes with cheese,
alnce they won't mull
the n avor. Available in
Natural Unsalted: and
Bu c kwheat Salted.
Please visit our newest
Trader Joe'a at the In·
t.ersecllon ol 17th Streel1 Newport Boulevard ano
Superior Avenue (next to
Denny's and Barclay'•
Bank.)
MOW IM COSTA~
Aug. 21·22 at .,_-------=---------------t
•
Huntington Center. IW.,_.,_MIMMM•WWWW•MMMMM•i.
YMCA -YOll YEM RllND
FAMILY VACATHI AT11ACTION
"fltnt,. center for mv
wife tnd I. awtmmlnQ &
campt for the kid•. Th•
YMCA .. a place I ctn
tN9t mv 1dde to."
Mr.IL Mia,.,.. .....
Penny Loafer
T ossel Loaf er
School
A NEW CH.APTER FOR THE 'HISTORY BOOKS
AT LAST .. ~., AND CHILDREN WALK TOGETHER
We ae amonq tt\e first
w;th ~I childrens shoes.
Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Cookbook Pull.o0ut Section
Good thtngt to ••t wlll be lnelde rour
D•Uy Piiot Thured•y, Aug. 20. TM bett
of ewer 1,000 recipe• aubmltted by our
readera, fe•turtng the wtnnen of th•
Piiot '•vortt• Recipe Conteet. Dlacower
new •dventur•• In cooking, from
mlcrow8ve to deHem, eoup to null.
Don'tmtNlt.
iArt /Croft Show
f Huntington~ #30 Fashion Island, N8wport Beach 844-2484
Illy 11111
I Mall Aug. 20-23. '°'home detlvert, c•H 142-4321 • • ' ..
I
Interest rates choke
small-business people
By JOHN CUNNIFF .......... ._.,..
NEW YORK -Their cash flows already
decimated by earlier rises in energy, tax and labor
costs, small businesses are viewing the current
high interest rates as a noose around their necks, a
survey suggests.
High Interest rates "are making a bad situa-
tion unbearable for many small firms," said
Professor William Dunkelberg, who regularly
analyies data from members of the National
Federation of Independent Business.
For the first time since quarterly surveys
were begun in 1973, a sampling of the group's
membership, which numbers
more than half a million, said
interest rates and financing
were their chief problems.
"With cash flows already
cut dramatically. borrowing
costs come right off the bottom
line," said Dunkel berg. "They
are very identifiable." Although
responding firms did not find it
harder to gel credit during the
second quarter, the percentage eu"'"'""
of firms reporting higher interest rates on short
term loans rose sharply, Dunkelberg said.
Average short-term interest costs reported in
the survey jumped from 17.6 percent in the first
quarter to 19 percent in the second. Five percent of
respondents reported paying 23 percent or more.
. For loans tied to the prime rate. the average
interest paid was 21 percent, up from 19 percent in
the fir~t three months. one reason being that the
few sources of relatively cheap funds have almost
disappeared.
A consistent theme.In the latest survey was the
continuance or lower interest rates in rural as
compared to suburban Wld metropolitan areas,
which Dunkelberg satd reflects, among other
things, lower overhead.
Survey returns showed 49 percent of com-
panies in rural areas paid between 16 percent and
18 percent for short-term loans in the second
quarter, compared to just 17 percent in
metropolitan areas. But even in rural areas credit
rates rose rapidly in the April-May.June quarter.
The concern of small bUBinesses about credit
problems cannot be isolated from other factors,
said Dunkelberg, who observes that the high in·
terest rates come atop an already deteriorated
condition.
He explained that ••firms operating on small
profit margins which must borrow regularly are
forced to reduce other operating costs -jobs. for
example, or they must go out of business."
In addition, he wrote in his summary of condi·
t1ons. "the combination of a lethargic economy.
constantly rising costs for energy, labor and inven·
tories. and inflation-induced tax increases, has
diminished many firms' cash nows to the point of
·survival borrowing,· that is, to meet payrolls. dai·
ly expenses and existing interest costs."
The frustration of small-business people was
expressed in statements written on the survey
questionnaires.
"Most or the time it (interest cost) has to be
taken out of profits because not all can be passed
on to the consumer." said a Washington state
machine shop operator.
A California retailer wrote that "interest rates
are too high to expand and wages are so high we
can't afford anybody so we just get by with what
we have."
Lawyers urge breakup of AT&T
WASHINGTON (AP> Justice Department
lawyers have insisted that "nothing short'' of
breaking up the American telephone & Telegraph
Co. will eliminate "all the evils of a classic
monopoly."
The lawyers stated their position in a brief
filed Monday that opposes AT&T's motion to dis·
miss the government's antitrust suit.
The lawyers' statement diverged sharply from
the position taken last week by their boss, Assis-
tant Attorney General William Baxter.
Baxter said he would drop the AT&T suit if
Co ngress enacted new regulatory legislation with
provisions that would limit AT&T's ability to use
profits from its monopoly services to subsidize its
efforts in competitive areas. That legislation
would stop·well short of breaking up the company.
Baxter said the legislation would settle the
AT&T issue faster than litigation. which could
drag on for years before any decision becomes
final.
But Baxter. an appointee of President Reagan.
did not have an opportunity to review his staff's
409-page brief because the staff was rushing to try
to meet the Sunday deadline imposed by U.S.· Dis·
tricl Court Judge Harold Greene. The brief was
filed at 2 a.m. EDT.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, August 18, 1981 a a :
-t ''ti'"'"''•"" •'Ultntutl •rlnlu•11 lu t•f'•• •H.,,,h,• lttl• b#-~., l1frd ••I• t•r !'if'tHnl1r• ttHd A.1rltuH11·· ( ''""Hueum b-.1 •a• tuw 11tt f>f"n>u••
')l't. lu t / ltt•• .. , .. .,, .• ,,, • mo-,.,,,''' •ult/ "u' '"''" of/r• .. tu bu11 lw tJC'rftplf"d >'"'"to tlu lnHt llu "fJl1tlrul1t1H "'"''"'""' htN11n1• tl/"•tu·,. Tit••
ml "''' •t """' .. /toll,.,., ru~ ''''"'' 4.IH u//#r tu""""' 11.r ~r>/,t1lulwn "' "" olf,rlo ht1r HQr•llttll llftit bt u "r .. q/* pJ ,,.,,, '''""'"'"• '" ",.'-""'' '"' ., lt1dt .,,, " .,,,. '· • .,,,. llHIWH .,, 1'Ult .H'OHltl lit "H'tl"' '"' '"'"' '" ,.,.,.,,~1n1lwl4 .,,. qunl1/1n1lt1JH ,,,.,,,, llft" ~(flel du. l11H • .,, ,, .. i 1tHI" ·""''"
2,400,000 Shares
._, JE1-;a111ERIC4 'ff' I "J111•a.1n••.1nc.-----•
Common Stock
l'rol)t11it'd New 1!111ue exptocted to be offered in late Au1tu11t 1981
Jt't Atnt'ricu Airllnt'li, Inc WWI or1<11nized in September 1980 for the purpo11e of providinir rea-ularly 11cheduled
ulrllne 11nvict' to and from Lonie Heuch Airport in Long Beach, (.'oliforniu. The Company plans to initiatt>
noni1top round trip ervlce offering first class und roach services und fure11 in late 19~1 btotweton Long Beach and
O'llure lntt'rn1ttional Airport in Chieaxo.
\ /• t ,,, ''"', ., /•, "~/" ,.,,, 11 /;,. h 1/I 1 • i. ll#ltu/,. u/ Ou ttl/t"t '''Y '' ''' 1111111.lt 1001 /;, "''''' '" t• 1 OJ1 I pl, o ., ,.,,,,,,,.I ''"" 1110! 1 ' ''' 1/rol¥•
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J ,,,, II I •1I111 d t • ,,,,, 11( Ill. 'flfft
\\edbush, ~uhlt>. l'ookt>. Inc
t! t lluUon It. t"ompnn) l•h I. t' Ho1h.rh1ld. I nl•rhnK. Tu .. htn Shur.on l.uf'h Hhuad•• lnr Unn W111rr Hr)nold• Inc.
,\ll•n,.& !.~?!J'P""' 11,.1•m•n l•r.!'J!!...Jltll lUrhanh \In. Hro" n & Son•
\lo•~••>. llallurlfn. t;•lahruok ¥1 \\•f'df'n In•. l'r•.rull, llall &. Turb•n Thnm•un )tr Klnnon ~urlllu Inc.
\lhr•I, Inc-. ·, llurnn, \\ h111PI• & ('o. Hobert ~;-~':'.!Jd & Co.
llulrhtr It. Sinic•r In.-. Th• ('hir111Co ("urpornlion
lllunt r~~!!.~ 1 ...... 1
c ...... 11. w ... don"' ('u
Hort trhu & t"ompitn)'
ll•ilJ~ll!.'!'.:O.l'" h
.. 011u II< llt•rahall lnr. t;pplor. C.urrut ti( "1\trnrr. Inc-. t'irot of .Vlkhiican l"orporMllun
lfo,.11rd. \h·ll. 1.~~~c~!JJ• ..... ri~drlrh• l11lor•l11lr S•eurilio Corporulion John•on, 1.anr. Sp11c·•. Smith & Co., lnr.
Jo•f'phllrnl & t •J. Inc· l.11d•nbur1r. 1'h11lmnnn & t"o. Inc. l.uldl"" Ad•n•• & l'rck Inc·. ~tdlonald & <:ompan)
\1or11&n. Olm•l•lf~~,!5!.!.'nt'dy & 1:11rdnn
l'1prr. Ju~fr!!)_.!:_ llop,.ood J'ur~~!J~.~nt.-r
ltuhin•On·llumphr•) l"ump1tn), Int Sc·hn•idt"r, llC>rnrl & llkkman. Inc·
Thr Ohio <'un1p•n>
lfobtrhun, t ulmsn, Slephrn• & Woodmttn
Sulru & l'u. * ....... _ ..... 1·ru1 .... ~.~!".~""" & ("
:<r1dl•r. "!:!!!!!.J Spillan•
Wh•al. t"ir•I ~c-urhi•h Inc. sur.1. 'lryJu~.~ ( ump"n)
lltrr. \\ tl•un & < 11., In• llur~•~;. "-;..'·l"tlh
t:llon. & !"11 .
II I I 'hri•lophf'r .!'. l'u l"o"'•" & I o II \. lhl\ld•on & Co. lnr.
I< 1; ll11·k1n"'" & l"u. .-1n1 Albtrn) Corporalmn
ln~t'lt:1mt-n1 ( orporutiun of\ tri1n11t
'•"h~rd,:..t 2"" «.Io
I< Ito,. l'!.ndHc\ lo
lldford. ll11mmntlt'~k In•
l'Rrlnr Suurllll'•. lnr HM) mund. J1tmo c\ \uoc1•l,., lnr
:-c·h•rrk, M••n 6. t rnn1 . ln1 Sit~ & Co. Inc
llanlfl'n, Imhoff lnr.
\loott & Sc-hi•>· l'amrron «. ('o.
l<odman It. l<•n•h•"· lnr.
\hatn•~ll•r & l>unt. Int.
\\t"tnrk h·Zll tmann· \\ h1hhrad Inc-.
\an KHprr & Compiln) .... __ ..
Sun lhl'JCU :0-..t"unllt• T•nn•••n l"apllal l"orpor•llon I n1>trul ll•rtla1t ln-.olmrnh t'orporalion
l\o !'->•• urilu••. 1111 \l11d ton aid. """'-"·~ llo") ••It. llr) tnka ~t. II 'u• Irk II. (um pan) I nr Thum•• t• "hll• & Co., Inc-.
l'!t J .. t 111.111 • •wf•o11 to 11th of t tu f11 rn ... 1w.1t1 ·• \1111 11 .. n1t·d "'"'' •' 11,. h• \.\t·•lho .. h '•1t.i.., f 1111h1· I r11 , C "rt .. ,r,1t1• I-In Milt .. l>t-JMr1 nwnt til • ~
t-111\\t•! 't I.ii• \11~1 l1' t ,,Jif 'HNlr;'
J 'h ,,., ... , 1.tJ '"' .1 ft j., 1111•' .,( t h1 1'11·11111111 .. n f'n•"'f" 1 tu·,,( .h·t ~.\ mt-rwd A1rl11tt•· Im
\,1 h•
t 11 I I•
• RECEPTIONIST ANSWERING SERVICE • • • AN INDIVIDUAL tlJMBER AT NO
TELEPHONE COMPANY CHARGES
• A PRESTIGIOUS ADDRESS AND PRIVATE MAIL BOX FOR YOUR BUSINESS
• A TELEPHONE SECRETARY TO HANDLE YOUR APPOINTMENTS , RESERVATIONS,
AND CANCELLATIONS
• A MODERN COMPUTER TO MAINTAIN YOUR DAILY CALENDAR, SCHEDULE, AND MESSAGES
• OFFICE SPACE and CONFERENCE ROOM AVAILABLE FoR vouR APPOINTMENTs
• MAIL LI ST & MAIL SERVICE CAPABILITIES FOR MAILINGS TO YOUR EXISTING OR POTENTIAL
CLIENTS
• WIDE AREA PAGING FOR INSTANT mMMUNICATION \
• ALSO TELEX, FACSIMILE, DICTATION & WORD PROCESSING .
• ALL SERVICES CUSTOMIZED TO YOUR NEEDS
Up Your hn•I Mlnl•I•• OwerhltHll Maxlmlu Re1ult1I
LOW llTRODUCTORY RATEi
Clll -AY • M•E DETAILS (714) 953.1234
WE'RE . AllS-llEIW•K •••
.. WE'VE --AllS•R .. YRI
OrengeCoa1t DAILY PILOT/Tueeday. Augu1t 18, 1981
Telex Service . ~ """*" YOll need T lie• IW ActlOr'I .M:i:iOn i:i:Li:X .
ORANGE C(~)v 5 s 7 • 46
San/Bar files
SEC statement
8.a/Bar Corp., Irvine, aMounced lt hu filed •
re11l1traUon statement with the Securltlet and Ell·
change Comml11lon coverin1 a propoeed pubUc of.
ferln1 of 500,000 1harea of common atoek. The of·
ferin1 wlll be made throu•h a 1roup of un·
derwrlters led by Montaomery SecuriUea. San/Bar
produces electronic equipment and componenta tor telephone and microwave radio communlca·
lions 8ystem s, and repalra and refurbl1he1
telephone equipment. • New World Computer C.O. l•c. announced lt la
·contlnulna It.I nc10Uat1ooa with Olympia Werke
A.G. to allow Olympia t.o acquire manufacturin1
and marketing right• for the company'• pro·
prletary Winchester disk producta. New World
Computer de11l1n1. manufactures and market•
high·peN'ormance, low.coat 5\1'4-lnch and 8·lnch
Wincheater disk drlvea to manuf•cturcra of mini·
a nd rnlcro·computers.
ORANGE COUNTY BRIEFS
•
WesJN'rcorp, 'l'ustln. Hid It hH fllt1d with th"
Sl·curitic11 und F.xchftn&c CommlHlon a rci1t11tr11
lion ~tatemcnt rc lnllna to the prosio•cid publlr• of
rerlng or 434 .000 shtu'c11 of common •hlC'k , of whtrh
'100.000 sharf>il will ht111old bt lhe rom1>•n)' •nd thP
bulurH'l' will be• aold 'Y c rtaln ullln•
11hurehol<kr11 E fo' llullon & <:o Inc 1rnd Kttldletrl
Arnell & S1,lll11nt• Inc hav~ bt1M doal•n•l•c
munHl(l'r11 of th~ 11ndt•rwr1tln11 iiroup, whhoh phina
lo orfor lhl• 11harc'" to tho publlr In auly Kt'p
t('mbl'f Wt•11pc1rc·orp dt111licn,., nurnufal'lurn,
murk,1l11 noc1 11t,rvlra11 tapc1, dl11<· nrut ltnti prlnt•r
ronlroll..r11 for u"c with mlnl<'omrrnton •nd
mlrr0<.·ompuh•n A prt'llnllnary pro11pt1rlu11 r la\
lnM tu lht' prupo1w1I offt'rl~ may bci obtaln11tt from
ft; I" Hutton & ('o lnr ti nr U11Uery Park Plaaa.
N1•w York. N Y 10004, Rltl'ntlon Pro1pectu1
Dt•purt11wnt , 11r St>hll<'r, Arnrll &t S11lllnn<' Inc . at
445 S l"il(llC'ron St . l.011 Anl(t'le11 00071 •
Tht• l>0urd or di rc•c'IOl"3 of MSI Data Corp. has
dt•l·hm.~d 11 rl'aulu r cMh dividend of 10 cents a
shnrc• on lht' con\mon stock. payable Sept. 16. 1981,
to stockholctt-r!'I of record Sept. t, 1981. It ls the 18th
consttulivP quarterly cash dividend declared by
MSI. The co mpany manufactures portable
handheld source data entry systems.
* Estey-Hoover Advertising and PubUc Rela·
lions has moved to Newport Irvine Center, 3300
Irvine Av e .. Newport Beach. The agency's offices
had been at 4300 Campus Drive, Newport Beach,
for six years.
COLLECTORS
CORNEA A.,• Coln•• St•mpa
GOLD • SILVER \
1-17-11
GeNCIMeMUM U.-O .... M .., ...
Kn.99n-.... tGLa ~l.Nh ..... ...... warmington homes -
a great place to
hang your hat
Warmington Financial -
a great place to
invest your money
100 C.-• ....,. .....,,
50,.._ ...... tat• '°"'Sit-.... ....... --70% Bilnk FIMnclng
IRA& K90gh
(114) 556-115()
South CoHt Plaza Vlll•g• -...... c•·---c--1
'ICTtTIO'IS •usoeau
MAMa ITATUdllT
T ... IOl-11111 "flOfll •r• fffftt
lillutlNUn: FIRST CABIN, LTO. :M ,. ........
Island, Hewpot18"<11, Ca. '2660
LI-J. -Ltoycl H. ~ m EM! 42"11 sc-t. s.i -~. c.. 92404
Thh IMisl""' It CoMvcled lly • llml*l~P..
To find out more about investment opportunities at
Warmington Financial call Linda at .
vvr~r~M11\JG TON Flt JANCIAL CORPORATION
A Southern Cohfornto Fom1ty Helping Southetn Co1ttoin1ons"
(714) 540·2635
A Cot1fom10 i!tOl<e<OQe
I om interested 1n Trust Deeds with Wormington F1nonc1ot:
Pe<sonolty IRA·KEOGH Pension/Profit Shoring
Nome
Address -.,.,,.----..,...-----------:-::::-:---Zip (Street) (CllV)
Phone Home WOO.
Piil.iC MOTIE
PICTITIOUI •UMMH.S
MAM• ITATIMllMT
Tiie l•llowlno person 11 dolno ...,,,_ .. :
MOTH!"LOO! GOLO, 1.-s W.
••tboe 91..S. •t. ,..._, •-11. CA
'*3. 11-. ,._, w.d, Jr .. ICIS W.
lel ... et¥d. 0 , H-.or1 •-11. CA
97.U. Tiii• ...,,,... Is 'Oflductecl by .,.
llldlv,.._., "_,A. W-, Jr.
Tlllt IUtlemlnC WH lllN wHll -
Cevt1IY Cterll of Or..,.e County Oii
""'· "· ""· .. 1 .... ..... llftM °""'9 CM .. o.lty .. lie(.
..... 1&. u. SolM. I ••• "" ,,..,
l'ICTITIOUI •us•••H
NAM8 ITAT•M•MT
Tiie lollowlnt "*"°" It dOlnt llUtl·
MUM: THI: Pl:IUOHAI. Pl.ANT
SEllVICI&, ~ $. 11"6 SI. ""'· A.
S...te -· CL '7107 DIW• J Mlwl..,, .OS S II-S4 .. ...... "' s.nc ...... c. '7101
Tlllt ""5n" h '°"°"'led by •" "" .. , ........
0.W• J. Mof...,
Tf'll• ttet-m WM m• with .,.
C-"Y 09"ll of Or-°"""yen Jiiiy Jl,1•1. ""• P\lellltlM Or ..... CMtl O.lly Pl,..
A ..... "· ... u. "'' Mal..,
Read all todays news everyday
in the
"'
"CTITIOUl•UIOllll
MAM9 ITAT•MllNT T II• l•llawlnt 111erM11 I• ,.,.,,
11111•-.. :
CAI SOUTH COAIT TAX
PL ... NN I NO Ul IUNCOAU
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llHcl. S-.11-m . ~ Hlllt, CA
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MM.alTATUM•T
TM lol,_1"9 --· *"• ffl1111 -1-•: COAST FLOOfllHG, ... O...-
A"9 ., Calli. Mew, C.. ,._
• Kelly J•ye SlrolCll. ,.. O.nvtf
Ave .• Calli. MeM, c.. m:i.
JoM Reedy, ~ O.nnr .Ave.,
COii• MHa,. CA. m•
Tiiis IMnlMU I• condllcled by • ....... ~.
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Tf'llt ·-w• fifed wlltl U. c-•Y cieni ot °'.,... c-•Y ... A_.tJ,1111.
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AMa•tCAH INSTANT '°*INT•ltl. ... , ............. ..._, 9e«f'I. CA ....... Ir,.,.~' aen-\ ll'YIM, CA
tt114.
Gery H• ... '°' I. Wllnul II ..
Afllllf!tlll\ CA-. Tllla Ml-)1 ceMIKIM llY a ...................
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Strahan joins Wannington Corp.
Und.a S&rabH has Joined the Warm-
ln1ton Flnonclal Corp. of Irvine as vice presi·
t.l"nl, Investment Division, and a111ialant to
chief executive officer. Robert C. Tucker.
MA. Strahan previously worked for Great
Western Savlng1 1and Loan and 1erved as
rlnunciul consultant to u local firm before
movlnM over to Warmln1ton l''lnunclal.
* .lark R. 81roe1 has been elected a direc·
tor or the Mlulon Viejo National Bank.
U1.1rno11 11 executive vice president of
N~wport lloml' Loan Inc . and Newport
C'c1nt.,r E11crow Inc ., and is president of
N'1wport Shores i''lnanclul Inc. and Newport
llumt-l.oun Financial Inc. He lives in
'l'ruhuco Canyon
ON THE JOB
* Beverly Cbrl1&IH1en has been appointed
"" manugtr or the Huntington Beach office of
SunU• llarbara Savings and Loan Associa·
lion She will be responsible for the savings
end checking operations, bu8iness develop·
mcnt and personnel adminlstratlon or the
full·servlce branch at 20981 Magnolia St .. cor·
ner of Atlanta in Huntington Beach. • Denny Freldenrlcb, treasurer of the
Laguna Beach Art.s Allience and president of
an Irvine·based communications consultant
business. has been named to the 1981
"Outstanding Young Men of America" list by
the United States Jaycees. Freidenrich lives
in Newport Beach.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
HEW YOtlK (API Ct.n.JL J1~ l2Vt Int.et JIM~ Pau:!l!' HASOAQ ...-.Clans ClowQ> n. 1Vt lntrcEtw I~~ Peyt _..,. ~ llldl COlrTle 11 11\lo tnlmt<n IO'ft I~ P .. rw and -.st ....,... ':'$ coioo. ~ Vt tn•"Wlf'I IS I~ p.,..£111
m•rtull ~.. ComCIH -•1 twe$oVC 21"" ,. .... Pttnlalr
• p.m. ""1c:ft flO MC ClftlSf'lr l•Vt lSYt J...,..OV 20\lt ~ p~ ... lncludal'WUll..._.. CmwTel 11 11\fo Jerico • 2oAto 1~ Petrll t ma~ 01: <_. ConPep JN JO\lo ~llfYf.CI \It,... P.illbon Inion for -.iy. Cordis 11 11\lt • I I pf , ..... 11\lo Plllla"-t Stock Bid Alll CrosTre 19Vt 19\li Keh,., 21.4 2S.I• P iere.SS AEL Ind 14 1•14o Cllllrf'cl 1 2 2\lt Kamen • .... ~ P ink,.,,, AFAProt 10 .... 12 Cvcllr"" 11...., 12 K•r....., • ~ PlonHIB AVM<:p •14 ~ 0.ntyM ....... 10 K= 4t JO Pl•tllM :~~~ 9" ~ OC..0.. I I~ 1~ K n 2• Poub 10\lo 1CW. O.YIMal 21 21'h Klmball 201'. 21\.\ Pl'HGM AdV!tou M\ •"" 09-1 1>-12 ~ Kl11111nl I~ 2"" Pr'5Uyn Afl•lh t 21 ... 22\'r Dell~ ""' JO KloofG JO'lll .._. ~~ AtellAMa lD\4 JI 0.CC... 11 12 K=V 11\lo ,, ...
Allcolnc ~ 1:-~· ~ J~ ~~~kU ·~" ,...,, .... ..... l~U\lo Piii~ Amerw·• JS\lt ~ Ol•llCn< lS ,. L•ncetn u U\'r Qvell AFllm •w. ... Oecllll • ""'= Lenci"" Wt ~ R ..... Pt-AG...C t•llo 1..-OOltrGft U\lt I L....co ,, Jt\lo Reycf'lm All!Gp I ,. ""' O.~ t Ullo U\lt Lflrws 1•14 1•V. R•ymnO A Mic,.,. -t7 E ·~ LldSlor ''"' 1•~ R .. w t AH•llM ,, ... 11 "' 1114 13 Llnlkt1 ,. .... lS ltoecliEll ~r:-'.M. 24\lo Miit l...o 12 22"" ~,.,. :i. 26\o'i RoCl«IM\' 20 .... llPnlEI 10tli 11 MG1io • ~ 22._ Rowlofl AW.Id 1 2S\lt 21 ...,.. ,_ •v. 1.-.1•Yt It-A ...... ' '"' EteH..cl 11'' ll\lt MadtGE 1 ... 1~ llu.Stov A,.sA 1~ l:Mlo llMd t ID 21 ......... ,.... N SMI'*' s 1WIO e11r0ev ""' 12'4 ersp • •11o s.lec.o
Al'I 1"'9 ·~ EnrA!llfH • 411o '" "' w. StHelGd ~22-Enlltv 15"11 IS\lt ~ r1. J1 m.. SIPaul
A I It '"" Entwl•t fYI 10 ~r10 ... 10 ICM Ser,.... Arden09 •14 .._ E.,i$L 11"' 12 INlllLP JDYt 12 s.n-AsclCoN O \lt 0 'lc:COll I': 1':.1• ~, ... lS\lt ~ 1:=. AUGtU I~ I• ~e"' 1~1~
AllMlts lOVt 21 ,...,,"' ~ 4 Mc "' 1• 11\"t 5'1Med ··~ ,.... r: "•rmGc> '"' 2'YI Mc .,, I~" $ltwmul • letk s • 71' 1 FldkGr 21 ... 22 Mcgu.I IW. I• Si.rails s •-CFr 14 Miit :::=-~=\lo :-J:w .,., --Slll<ONI == ='~ '"" 18'/t SC.lwtr FtE:n 1SVI 1' Mcll«ep 10\lo 10-.. SwEISv .._,.., 2 214 FIWn In S ~ t totAn I t-1' 1'111 SwElll' t ::!~ ~~\It ~:rc\au ~ Pt: Ill~ ~21 Si.ndyn ,.,J. 21\"t 21"'
tss IG """I~ SIOMkrv -= , ... IS Motu •
_., ....
~=~ • ~11 , .... ,'* ,. .. 21'111 nlCOI Wt •
BlrdS<wl l:W. I""' P'kl,_. t ICM IOYt 20" 21 Blr1c.llr 1 FenltO ~ ~ ,. JD
• JOHph L. Turner Jr. has been appointed
to senior vice president-Operations ror the
Republic Supply Company ol California, a
subsidiary or Fluor Corp .. Irvine.
* Gary Lee Keegan or Costa Mesa has been
appointed an agent with Allstate Insurance
Co . In the office located in the Sears building
in the' South Coast Plaza Mall. Costa Mesa. • Mrs. Gnaldlne MUia or Newport Beach
has been elected to membership in the
American Society or Notaries, a national non·
profit organization or persons who hold the
omcc or notary public. • James McCarthy has been appointed as a
project manager in the Costa Mesa office or
Psomas and Associates. civil engineers. land
s urveyors and construction managers. His
responsibilities will include project manage·
ment of the peripheral development of the
Anaheim Stadium property and major land
development projects in San Clemente. • Bruce Strickland has become division
president of Barratt Los Angeles (formerly
McKeon Construction >. He lives in San
Clemente • Armando Soils was recently appointed
director, Datapoint Applications. for
Newport Beach·based DPCS Inc .
•
Frank Llane11 is now assistant manager
of the new Citizens Thrift and Loan Associa-
tion office in Irvine 's Heritage Plaza Shop-
ping Centei:. Llanes will be in charge of auto
loan processing and general o ffic e
supervision.
~21 SlerlSI ~ f UPS AND DOWNS n n.,. Slr•wCt u ""' SUtwlrv UV. IJ'-S=rEI . ~ 22 22\lt , ..... 2014 IJ 1~ ~t;,r •' ~ ... JI~ !JV. TIME 0C tv .. 2 NEW YORK IAPI TN IOllowlnO 1111 ., .... u ~:::=·. JI'-Jl'l!i Ulow\ the Over · Ule • ~ Jl'll. ,,,,. 21'1· ,. ..... •loek• -•• ., ... 11 ~· ,.. ... -US> IOV. 11 T1KumP ., .. , ... ,._ ---,.,,.,.., ... _ "" 4W> SI TetcmA ~~ ~= r;c~~ "99#dltts of volume ............ r.,..,..,
"' ~ Tu.Ah ,. 1''4 No ..cw~ trldl;:r.:-U art Intl .v . ..-. ~~~I lll<O 12-.. uOec1 --_,.., cMngies .... IN
""' 411 IV. IY> Olff~t -Ille prevlout <IMinO lJVt ~ i~k~Pll ~ = lllO .... ~ -tode't"• ... 1 bid ptlu 2\lo 21'> II ""' ;~~,.J II 1r' I~~ nv.. ""' u" IJ'h I• UnMcGll 1 .... lO'h IS\lt I• US EN 7114 l \lo -...... R~ Pel. 1~1•14 us Sur 11 77\lt I o.lcnl D Up ••• Hiit M'h us Tro 1314 11'11 1 P•~A SJ .n Up 71~ ,~ 1•1'o UV•Btf'I J1W. ,,..., J Anc "'. , ... • ~ Up IS .. J •. ,,.~ ~:~"J 15"' "\It • OltcOll , • "' Up ••• ~ •1 ti"' n l4 s ...... UC JV, • I'> Up la.7 m"t •Yi v .. tR 62\lo 62~ • TmKll O . ._ . .. Up 1•.1 2\lo J V•IHll I 26 »'Ill 1 =:'18 2 "" Up l,..J 2:J'4 2JVI v ... 0us " t•llo • 1 \lo Up 14.J .. ·~ ~~,'!sf 11" IJ ' SGlvEa 3"" • .. Up IU ~ ... -~10 84lrnM. t • I Up 12.J ~ 15'11 Vl:=cJ: 10Yt tov. 11 Cl'llSlvr , ... . "' Up 11.S IWI~ VeH8 1~20 n ,,.,..,.,.. , ... . .... Up 1U ., . ._., .. WWI Erv 11-., ... ,, "-lot\ 211o . .... Up 1U el 17 Weldlrn •V. ..... I• B.-P '' 10 ' I Up 11 I ~411 WellO. 1 22111 u u RedMn I l VI • \lo Up 11 I 1•llo 1'\lt WO..., ~Jt\lo ,. Sci...tu , ... • " Up 11.1 2114 21\'J ~·r• 27\lt 17'111 11 Hen10v 1"4 ~ Up 10.1 »'Ill 22 ... WHOld MY> S7\lt 11 AIK:A 2~ '"' Up 10.0 DY>13 =~ 41-\ '" " ISL 2114 . \lo Up 10.0 llVI 1'\lo ~2~ 20 EqGld un ..... . .. Up t .7 ..... 20" Wl-0 ""'" 21 Slm~r ...... • IW. UP ... IO'Wo 11Yt WolvAlu 10 10\lo 22 Mlf'CIEq J . v. Up t .I
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1711> 11 W-Lot J I JIV.. 24 Tll·l lr.d 'S.14 .,. .. Up ...
U U \lt Wr~W "" '"" u y.,_., ... . " Up ...
::, sf"' zion '* u u .,., DOWNt l4\lt » ...... -_.k_ -.... 11 Pct. _c~
... -IM 11"i "°'::::t.: ~ 4"" -,,..... JV. ,.... IN s I Hwz..td ,,,. Ott '°A B-3 M ,,_ 10 11 Mortnln tl"t ~ , FSC<:p pt 2'111 -n• Ott M-4
BrwTom M l'I ~ Fr..,..£1 21\"t 21~ tClull 2~ 1'-A DAQ SUMMARY , Procli9Y 2,,. -,,. Ott 21.A
Buell• ICM 1011o FredG 3711o 37\lt Mwl,., """' ~ • Relblnv JW. ... Oft 21.2 -Bvffel• » JSVJ P:r<HNIC 1 17'111 171' Harr9'41 s 21 22Yt s OllM un 1 .... Ott 20.0 Bur~ UV. 1~ FullrHB ~ 2' HOi. t ll\lt 1Mlo • ~""! J -" Oft 11.1
CHL In 2 2\l't GovEFn 7'4 1~ .. JHO. IJ'lll IJ.111 NEW YOtlK IAl"I --ect .... -· 1 I• -,~ Ott 14.A
CPT I " I~ Gr•S<n ' g S3YI HYAlrt ~ "' the<--ttoellt "tf.:.... 11ty NASO. • N-EI I ,,,. -IY> Ott 1U ~•IWISv ~ » Gf"te<IM 12\lo 12Yt lcfilOG t JO\otl JIM N-Volume Aalled ~ t l~O ..... -, .... Off \6.1
..,,_. Jlli M GreyAdV 62llli .. y, k-11 I~ Pltro .. .... 1'11 2Yt -10 c ...... ' , .. -.... Oft JU
C .. El'I I-1 1).1• OHi-20 21Yt Nleltn A -41 l"lollH18 ,.1,100 -•l"t -\It II T.....,B 1 IOY> -2 °" 111..1 c:ris.c JJ M Oy~ w 111o lelM • 41111t -Hwl.Mtel IM.100 2" J\lo ~"" 12 ~ .... ~ I °" 14.I
CP n1V ~ l" H..... t 1N It 12Yt 1J S.lbel •. 1•.-1•14 U \lt -\lo 13 JV. -.... °" 13.J C•~ 17 17"' HardwM S Siio •EurO s I~ 1'\lt Wiiton . IUtOO 5'111 ~ --u AervSvc 2\"t -Oft 13.0
GtlVI ~ 1 Hrp,._ 11"1 """ Hwl~ 11'111 11-~~ ... '':£*I 11-16 '" +).14 IS Pwoi.t "" -... °" 11.1
CMrlllv »Vo J1'h H•= aJ\4o U-. WSll"S U Ullo t •• 1~ ISl"t _,.. It ... 8 14 ... -1 Oft 11.t
CllrmS • 15111 IS'WI H• u"' ~ 0 .. 11 ~ '"' B,.,.,,. o • 103.JOO 10 1(11.\ • I 11 For1unN 3~ .... °" 11.a
CllrtHou I ltl"t I~ HIK~ I 17t'I 11\.\ Hu<;:f. f ~ 20Vt TW1tb . IOUOO IO'ft I-. -11 WlllOll S'--,,. Off 11.a
CllmLH 27'6 DI'> Helm K ."" .... Hiii y 11Yt •v.. MGFO 1 .. 101,llOO 1.-. ••l't . "" " NwPtl cvp4 10 -1\lt Off 11.1
CllftVll 11Vt 1' HervCIF 26\lt ~ -22~ 23"" 20 P...ctr 3 --Oft 11.1
Cf'llNT IOW. IOS HOloelm 214 1-:2: ll,,. J2 /lo#IMC.o .... ··········· m 21 y_, • -1 Ott 11.1
CllW!b 4.5'-4' H-""'° 1114 ~ ~ = Oe<llMd ..... ............. , .. t2 IEllC.all>£ 214 -\4o Off 10.J u~ ................. un 2J Int OM '"" -"" Off 10..S Clr11co 6l"t ~llts M 4\lo eN'O ToUI ,_ ................... u• 2• llltTioor 114 -\lo Oft 10.J CIUSclG* 1't I :ixs.tctf'l1 21"" 22~ TP IN 11 CluUIA 1114 J1 I 1111 22\lo 2:Nti PCA lnC fYI N N-......... ............... J7 u tneoi. wt •l"t Vt Oft 10.0
CIUV18 9l"t 1' • ll'llralnd 1 1W. :~: ;r-;~ ,...._ ················ "' ,. K-.Fm 64 ~ Off Hl.O Tot.af Min ······ ...... ,. '"'.1IO 17 L"""'"° JV. -.. Off IO.O
. ·---.-·---...
,
Orange Coatt DAIL V PILOT/Tuelday, Auguat 18, 198 l s ••
It's Sood lo own property, especially lf It's
beachfront land in Hawaii. Amfac, lar1est of the
Hawailan·bued companies, recently aold 61h acres of
beachlronl property at It.a Kaanapall Beach Resort
on the Island of Maul. The price: $13.2 million, or
roughly $2 million an acre.
It's tou1h to make that kind or money ln retail·
ing, where Amfac operates the Liberty .Bouie depart·
ment at.ore chain In CaUfomia and Ha wail ; or ln the
resort and hotel business, where Am/ac runs a bunch
of hotels at airports, the lod1e at the Grand Canyon
National Park and the SUverado Country Club in
Napa; or in the wholesaling of drugs, electrical pro·
ducts and plumbing supplies, which Amfac does In
the western part or the country ; or even ln frozen
French fries, which Amrac's Lamb-Weston s ub·
sidiary sells to fast-food restaurants everywhere
(perhaps even to the Fred Harvey restaurants
operated by Amfac).
You can make that kmd of money in the sugar
business. where Amfac is a leading player through
Its canerields in Hawaii. Hawaiian sugar is sold here
under the C&H ~ label, the C&H •
standing for the \; e»
California and ·, ....., 1
H a w a i 1 4 , "},, cooper at 1 v e •--•-.-.111 __ .._ _____ _
~:~~=~~ne:u:~~ lllTll 1n1•nz
for growers ,
The Amfac fields make the greatest raw sugar con·
tributlon to the cooperative, accounting for
something like 30 percent or the total.
But the trouble with sugar is that It nuctuates
widely in price and the grower can therefore never
be sure of the cash flow from year to year. For exam·
pie, Amfac was recently getting 18 cents a pound for
sugar. compared to 27 cents earlier this year and 23
cents a year ago. The decline threw sugar operations
into the red. In the second quarter of 1981 Amfac lost
$3.8 million on sugar: in the same quarter last year
the company made a profit ofS9.4 million on sugar.
To avoid being whipsawed by this wicked price
gyration, Amfac sells some of the surplus land it has.
It's nothing new. Property sales mate a regular con-
tribution lo Amfac's profits. helping to even out the
troughs.
Am(ac's profits in the first half of 1981 were close
to what they were a year ago. But if not for the prop-
erty sales. they would have been lower. It makes a
difference, of course. where the property is located.
Amfac is able to get S2 million an acre in Maui
because of the investment the company has put in to
make that property a lush beach resort. About the
same time that it was selling these 6'h acres in
Hawaii, Amfac was also selling a 561h-acre industrial
site in San Jose. But that sale netted less than Sl
million.
Having land to sell in this manner gives Amfac a
large measure of control over how much profit it's
going to make. If the sugar business is down or the
hotel business is off or department store sales are
weak, Amfac can just go out and sell a little land to
make up lhe difference. It still owns more than 65,000
acres in Hawaii.
Pan American World Airways, now deep In the
red. would love to have some property to sell to make
up the difference. The only reason Pan Am s howed a
profit last year is that it sold the Pan Am building
that rises over New York's Grand Central Station.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NltW YO..KCAPI FINI Oow·J~ -,.., MoftMy, ...... 17,
ITOClll
. "'
--.,~
-VO -t"" .... •• --. -_.,. --_,.,. -1-.
..... ~ll :r. '1~ ~s-if':I
JO Tn1 .... "'·'» el'3 «IS.JS-J..tt U Utt 114.41 11' t7 Ill 40 111.U-1.-. ., s. J11 ,. Jn.I) ....... n-,..,. ~~ t::: Ulllt sa.-
•S Siii . . J.•"·-
WHAT STOCKS DID N EW YORK CAPI A4 17
WMAT AM(llDIO
T-y Jn 1110
>SJ ...
J7 •
NIW YORK (API A119 17
T~/.
,....,...,
... , .. ,.
IO ''
~.
";. ,.
ttS , ..
" IJ
H.,..,, & H.,,...., ••.010 per troy-·
--. ---____ .___..........._......_ ___ ...,... ........................ --------------· ·-• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Augu1t 18, 1981
THE .
t~"MILl'
CIRCl.:8
\\Can you unpack our bathing suits and take us
down on the beach, Mommy?"
,..\R,.ADl'KE by Brad Anderson
"
~ .• ·"'t. ~ ' ... _ ..... ' ....
"Let's get a different bad guy ... Marmaduke
· is too fast for us to cut off at the pass!"
Jl'DGE PARKER
l'VE NEVE!{ 6EEN ON
THE WEoT COAeT: I
OOT t\ GIRLFRIEND ~HO
'l'OU, LANA! ANY IDEA LNE!7 lN L.A.! MAl8E
WHERE YOU'~E OOIN6? l'U.00THERE!
BIG GEORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP) PEANIJT8 o---·-· ---VOOR STUPID 8EA6LE
~ST 6ROWt.ED AT ME ~
,_,,
"Remember ME?"
Hank Ketchum
-: ·,. e;;l ( ,,
I I
}
.. .
.. ,,
Tl' M BL£" EEO~
EASY! 1HE L.AS1 MAN iO CAW.-
ME: A CHEA1 WAS CARRIE:P
OUT OF Ht:Rf: Ff:E1 Ff RSI!
. J ·~
~ --/ ~ . . GORDO__,,_..r--
THE GUY AT THE HM1BllR6ER STANO SA~~ IF YOU USEO TO I
ET TMtSE FOR A DIME YOU MUST 8E A 111/llNER!J ~ 0L1Jt' SOR.1t.-t
I • 1. CAN'T
~0E by Harold Le Doux A ~' ~LON!
~ 1'k:>T f 10~.
8TRE:6 WILL c;,.J~"
bP.l:E-D 0P 'fHf; J..056/
8 -18
.~l'NK \' "INKERBE" ~
~
~NO
OPllJIONf
~rze! M'/ c>.rc.o!
---------.
l'M SO~E HE DIDN'T
MEAN ANv'THIN6 0't' IT ...
by Charles M. Schulz
WELL, ME DOESN'T
HAVE TO SE SO
8EA6Ll6ERENT !
by Tom K. Ryan
NANCY ---WHY
by Ernie Bushmtller
IT'S RAINING ~ ,' ,' •
DID YOU
COME IN?
\ . . . .
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
HOll4 , 400R FRl£NfY.:>
mYt"I ~l ARE PROBA8L.(.,)
All HER£ Al lfiE. PICKLE:
15 iHERE: A~HIN& lX>O'D
LI KE ro 5Jll.) 10 1fiE.M ~
ACROSS
1 H•dlat
5Evtnc:. •
eurprllt
• Flavoring
14 No more
'hn
15 Kitty
111 Entirety
17 PIP« -,. Clarlnet
IOCl<et
1t8port1
ptetfOrm
208urdtned
22 AlcOft 11tte:
2wcwdi
24 Pretty Oii 2t~lllntra
27Seth'tdad
2t Mlddlt: Pref
30 lndonellln
ooln
33 MethOdt
37 Arlaltly
31 helftlelt1I
3t0r\n•d
40~nPhlflp
!HE PRICE Of PEANUT .
BUTTE~ HAS ABOUT
7 RIPLEC> IN iH~
PAST 8 MoNTHS.
411Stegger
47 tnttllute
MOHDAY'I
PUZZLE IOI. YEO
19 Stud pl9Y9f•
53' Threw away
57()wonent
5aMMle
Changes
59 Attire e t C.ittornla
Yallty
62 Moon
goddetl
63 Continent
114 H9'lP)' stale
115 Rowed•
boat
88 Autumn mo.
117Pauee
OOWN 21Art1ubjeet1
' COiumn 23 NtclcWMt
bMt 25 Young ct\ap
2 U111Wftt tQPe 28 WWI weep.
3 Omit on; 2 word•
4 Plce and ellle 30 !owe Indian
5 CM~ 31 Cel11c
II Indigo ahNb 32 Nol dtttaol
1 Pfund« 33 °''""
40Smudge
428um
43 PlanO pert
45G~tong
47 Picture 4t Hectlle
a tamble -,. Hemp ptod·
41 A11t1Wopoldt I Pvta off uct
50 Cin:Umvtnt
51 Aavlehel .
52 Mentll bl•
53 Wlllper1 &4 ...,,_,..
42 11111 • or tO StUdlel 35 flange part
Ctmegle 11 Aftlclt 31 £qg mua +.~money 12 Wallllng eld 37 UMW mem-
._ ""' mlllu 13 Ard« blr
"'°''* S5 Prlnclpel
Mfrtddt
IO °"90Ut IMm
by Jim Davis
Al'JO MIS
SIDEKICK,
LAWRENCE OF
60XE.R SMOR.TS
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
l ~L)l:S'S
M,AYBE HE
WAS A SORE'
LOSE:~?
QUEEN PA6EANT WAT~IN&
~ 'TONIGHI !
BRABBLE
'OPAE off, i:JING.~t l.£f 1~
l'---&0 JC>b&INu ~
c'~N, "f:Rf
u>€ i:JO!
DB.SMOCK
8·19 IF YA RESAt...L.Y ee1..1eve
YOU'RES
t...Ar?Y GOPIV A ,
Klr?PO• wHeRe's YOUR wH1-re HOR56 •
~\.l.,
l&JMA1" All£ 'IOIJ
~1'f1N&
fOR?
MICHAEL-IHERE'S
~~ SOMETHING Tooo. L\FE'S TOO
~ToWASlt.A
SECOND CF IT~
°"• A\.l. R1l.4lf \ J~1" A
MINV1t ... \J\lAT
A ~Po11..£0
00&!
by George Lemont
-,'SIGH ~-1-r's <SON NA ee ANO"T"HE!R L..ONG,
t,..ONG r?AY'.'
'/00 SHOULD RE.AO
R ~-OR MAl-<e.
SOMETHING.-ITHINK
iiftlE IS ~10051
by Lynn Johnston
THRT's ·~ucoE
)t>U D6N'THA'JE.
RS MUCH LEFT
RS I DO
Sitcom stuff plays in Laguna
BY'IOMTITUS °' .. ..., ........
"Daucbtera' Darlln1." lhe tlnalt ln a Hrtet ol
three world premier 1 at the Laiuna Moulton
PlayhoUle, ls the stuJt that TV 1ltcom1 are made
of. The more succeaaful ones, that la.
This freewheeling comedy by David Marlow
spoWghta an unconventional divorcee, her three
1rown, wacky d1Ughter11 and a pair of mlddle-ased
lovers -one her two-time ex·buaband. To
paraphrase the title of a better-known play, the
subject ls neurosis.
There's enough off.the-wall humor to sustain
three fast-movlne acts, though Marlow's script
bogs down periodically. if only to catch its second
or third wind. Imaginatively directed by Doualas
Rowe, "Daughters' Dar·
ling'' revels In its own
goofiness and the eccen· INTERUISSIQN tricities or its characters. "'
The role or the
mother who's reluctant
to loosen the apron strings is tailor made for the
talents of Betsy Hewell, the Eve Arden of Orange
County. Ironically, however, she is the only real
disappointment of the cast, erratic in delivery and
deficient in the timing necessary to give Marlow's
flippant dialogue its sarcastic snap. Once her pac·
ing catches up with her characterization. hers will
be a fine performance.
The daughters of the title are a trio of highly
contrasting types -a would-be actress who gives
impromptu (and hilarious) performances, a
pristine beauty whose latest heartthrob speaks on·
ly Spanish, and a corpulent neurotic faddist out to
snag herself a lifeguard any way she can.
The latter role is a tour de force for Esther
Moszkowicz whose character is what Corlin
Archer's might have been had F. Hugh Herbert
dreamed her up 40 years later. Miss Monkowicz is
a study in comic resilience, beautifully employing
physical farce to amplify an already choice as·
signment.
Catherine Rowe has the showy part of the bud-
ding Bernhardt and makes the most of it. from her
Hepburnish entrance through a succession of
well-executed impressions. Jennifer Campbell is
the straight woman of the threesome, but her
scenes with the Latin lover (nicely enacted by Jim
Bentley) are skillfully played.
Art /Croft Show
Huntington C.enter
Mall Aug. 20-23.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
® HO~E UNDER 17 ADMITT£0
lAg.t llmtt ,,_,.vary
.n eene.n er••t
AU 13 m ANO (HJ Fil MS RECEIVE
THE SEAi. Of' THE MOTION PICTUAE
COOE Of' SELF AEOUl.ATIOH
HEAVY METAL (RI
ALSO PLAYING
AMERICAN POP IRI
WOLFDl lRI
ESCAPE FROM
NEW YORK IRI
I ntE a.IRE STRIKES
..CIC IPGI Pl)IJI C<Hiit
S.ttl• Beyond The Stars (PGI
BlllMunay STR9'EI IRI ""' Wholly Moses (PGI
........... ~
MIUIGll -l30-Q90 ......... "' .. ' Com Mtu &49-3.352
·~PC'llll ,. °"'""'' .... I•'"'_ ... ...........
........ ...,.. C!Mlf ... ._. PUIA
I Cftli Mtfl ~· i»l 9'11 \" »J9 ................ _
fl, ... ,Ml 5taO '°'""' ..,.. ~\)
·-·~-' ..._.. .. ,,., .
• lllMifMf t ,.... .. ._lllWYMF
.. ..
Vtterana Gene Benedict and Charles Anthony
turn ln 101Jddrformanctt u Mlaa Hewett'• ex·ex·
husband an married Jover, respectively, with
Benedict pr0Jectln1 particular dimension. Bruce
Morton adds to tbe hilarity with bl• macho
"OAueMTHt' o:::
411 •ltlMI (..,,...,., o. • ._ Meir.... ".,...... ·-· ... *""' ., Mlttl Smith, lltfl'l"I ~,, •• ~ ...... ,.,.., Jllft .,Ml, •141111 ......... , ._ ...... ,r...-. ....... ,,. ,,.,,....,. ~ 14. •·"'· ltwuell-.. ........ ~ ....... ~1., ........ .......,__ c ... ..-..... ~ ....... __.._ ..... 14 ,. ... CAl1'
IEll....,..l(elter • ....... .. .................... ,.._... • .._!( .. .., ................................. ~~
lrl• K ............................................. c...rtN ·-Mey l(etlef .................................. ~~I ~olllsy Ketter.... • ...................... ., ....... 0--....ct
.,,,..,..._,.., ................................. CMrM ~,,
Jef!My Ki.,. . . .. • • • ••" .. •• ••......... • .. an.ca_,.,.
Er,..... Cell._ .......................... , ............ JI"' IMMley
portrayal of Miss Moszkowicz' cloddish lifeauard.
"Daughters' Darlin&" completed the premiere
trilogy, an ambitious summer project, and will be
on view for two more weeks, Wednesdays through
Saturdays at 8 p.m., at the Moulton, 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Get there early and
allow plenty of time to find a parking place.
:·~~~re~ ISA~TERN IN CHINA
llTOM Saocltoack
581-S880
.......
A-OllW·lf! 171418799950
eotfa lllU o-c. ....
111•1919 4141
WednHdey, Aug. 1t only
"42ND STREET""
Ruby Keeler In Peraon
7:00 P.M.
Get Tickets Now
NOW PLAYING
fOUllT Alll 'Al LlY fol.Wllllln V~ey 839·1500
'""· WooOOIKlge
55Hlb55
WllTMl .. Tlll
Hl·Way 39 0!1111! In
891-3693
l•---* .. -... 1 ....,.._, .. -n .. 3
NU.111"9 ll T9a ..... m4, Sn·4141 1·mru. ~··0•0 Y1~;:'~~
UMIJI ~ IMm WUTMllllT111 wn-Oranot IQll 11< "''' l'i Oo.-' 17141 ~4401 11141637 0340 j/1411191 :1693
~ Oellr~t Tl'teai;;;i
I• NliiilJ kdlifi • ••,....,.,.JI
ONE OF THE BEST THINGS THAT EVER HAPPENED
IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN AGAIN.
AlAN ARKIN CAROL BURNETI
JACK WARDEN
-_ . ...,,
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Tuesday. August 18, 1981 87
Betsy Hewett en1oys the attentions of ex·husband
Gene Benedict r nght 1 and lover Charles Anthony
*BARGAIN MATINl!ES * ff onday thru Saturday
All PerlormencH before 5:00 PM
(Exc1pt SPtCill Engagements ind Holidays)
V. MIRADA MAll Mirodo 01 Roaecrona
LA MIRADA WAUHN 994·2400
------I "ARTHUR" 1'901 ···--·-·------···--!
__ ., __ _
"VICTO .. Y" IPOI
·---Nit tfiiil
"UNDER THE
RAINBOW" IPGI ·----... ---·---· "RAIDElll OF Tl*
LOST ARK" (POI ·---,--LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN --·--· "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK~;~) "--·--·-----~-
--·--"CHU CHU AHO THE
PHILl Y FLASH" IPG) ·---.,,...-~.
-~"SUPERMAN II" tPQ) ·----.. -
faculty al Cono1ewooo
213/531·9580 ---"SUPEA~A~" (PG) ·-·--·--
"CHU CHU ANO ''ON ANY SUNDAY II" (PO) THE PHILLY FLASH" IPG) .-.-.._ __ _ ,.,.., -· ......... -. *" I
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
focutty At Oe4 Amo
213/634·9211 __ ., __ _
"VICTORY" (PG) ....... -..,, .. -
LAGUNA
---· "ZORRO
THE GAY BLADE" IPG) ,, ............. ,,... _ .. .
-'--• "STRIPES" IRI t ;.tl. Hlo lr19-,_.., "•
so . COAST WALK ·IN
loulll Coott Mlwoy
at t<oodwoy
494-1514 --·--"FOUR SEASONS" (PG) ........ -.-------· "RAIDE"S OF THE
LOST A"K" IPG) _ ...........
... ""• .. , ., .... 1 JO .,,. 7:U ,....,,,,.,.,..._u
IMPOA'TANt::OTICE' CHllOAEN UNDER 12 fAEE!
H11H< '"' .,,, Ill"" '"'• '" • lD • hi Sv• ""'' •.OO I'll Cllff.fl • YOIJll AM CAii MlllO IS YOIJll 5"Mlll
If NO AM CAii Mlllf) WITll IGHrllON ACC0$0llY l'OSITlQll
-MMC ,,,. IOllTMU i•AU CM-A ~ DI Oii ,,,. llAOll
ANA><llM -·----·· "OEAOl. Y 9LHllNG" (lt)fujl ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN "ti« KNOWI YOU'ltE ALONE" (A)
heewoy •• ot lemon St
179·9150 Crtt( fl SOUNO -------·--IDP••-ine-..f'lliii't&iiiiif~
''TH£ BLUE LAOOON" {R) l"ITUOENT 900lU" (ltl ...,.
-"THE NIOHT TffE LIOHTI "SUMS LIKE OLD TIMES" ll"O) WEJn OUT IN Of°'"3&A" ll"OI
Crll( n SOUllO Clift I• liOUllO
8UINA PARJ
BUENA PARK DRIVE·IN
uncoln Ave •••• Of Cf\on
121·4070
f0UNIAr"4
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE· IN
-~·-'-·-~ "THEIMl"IM
STRIKES :!CK" (ll'OI
"ITAlt TilllK" {0)
,,. .......... ~ ........
"SUPERMAN II" (PO) -so" Oteoo lrwy or llfOoU"mr (So 1"AHY WHICff WAY YOU CAN" {POI
962·2 ... l Crlll 11 SOUN()
WISIMINS!tl!
Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE IN
---·-~ "THE CANNON9AU. AUN" (l"Ol I .....
"ARTl4Ult" (Al
CHlf ,,_ -----"T~f'ZAM THIE APE MAN" (R) .....
"CAVEMAN" lll'OI
Clltl F1 SOUHO
IA HABPA
LA HABRA DRIVE IN
._ ...... "'"-~'"'° '"°' ... _
171-1162
~til ~A. PA.Wt:
LINCOLN DRIVE·IN
(•f\COll\ A•e Wt" Of (ftOll
121·4070
PA ... C..I
hoch .... 0 So ()! G<l<O•ft 0.ove ffH WOY
191·3693 ..,.. __ __
"Df.ADLY ~U.NO" (It)
"HE KNOWS YOU'ltE ALOHt' (It
Clflt fl SOUHO ---
"OM ANY SUNDAY II" (ll'OI .....
"LOOK DOWN AND Dtl" lll'OI
Cllllll~
----·WI a-,_ "THE 8LUI LAGOON .. (ltl -"SHMtt LIKI OU> TI•I"' {l"OI ------· "RAtOllt CW THI
LOST ="(l"OI
HANQAll 11•· (~
ORANGE DRIVf·IN
ktftto Ano ftwy
• l•ore c o11eoe
558·7022
"ON AH'Y IUNOA'Y Ir' (N t
"Y.C::Yl (PQ)
ill! &t. .& .......
MISSION Olli\, f IN
0
• • t ~ '' • • ' "
WARNER OOIVf IN
·-A .. Wftl .... Otll .... O
M7·J 1
642-5678
--·-... _ "THllLIM~'l1'1
...... UQ
OU>Tm91"fN>
Put a few words to work for you
1ffl the ~ ....
. . ...
rn .. Daughter's Dar/mg· ot the l.ayu11a .\1ou/ton
Plnyhouse.
-
1:001•• NEWS KUNG FU
CtJne bring• 1n. i..ui.ra ol a
young men ne g1-up
wttn 111 1 cn1,_ 1emp411 to
iu11ic. 9 TIC TAC DOUGH
4D M•A•S•H
Tne docton ol me 4077tn
have mote then they can
n1ndle on a bad day In 11111
OR
TEARS OF LAUGHTER Ir an Angust ain
and Ocvou Erick son star in ··can you
Hear the Laughter'! The Story of Fred-
die Prinze" toniµht at 9 on Channel 2.
a> 0000 TIMES
Wlllon1 and 11111 Evans
lamMy try to netp a mytl•"·
OUI ~Iii. Qttl (P&tl I) Sl C!) ELECTRIC
COMPANY(R)
I ~=~:
NBC NEWS
MOVIE
• • • "Heidi" ( 1965) Eva-
M&1la Slngnamme1, a.,.
t11nd Mlllermayr A 1111 ..
Sw111 gtrl II ta~tn t1om he<
mountain hOIM In tne Alps
t>y hef 1un1 to 1n1 cny
Ch) THREE TALES DARK
ANO DANGEROUS
Three atoriH Involving
1nt11gue end bll.lltre lanl&·
sy are presented "Silver
Blaze, · stamng Cntfst<>-
phef Plummet aa Snenock
Holmes. "Tne Ugty Boy ··
with Barry M0<se, and
"Rocking H0<se Winn« "
featuring Ktnneth More
0MO\llE
·Die Laughing I 1980)
Robby Benson, Cneries
Durning A songwriting cab
drMI< 11 aided by a smart
monkey 1n proving h1msefl
innocent ol • murder
charge PG
UO Q JOKER'S WILD ID Al l IN THE FAMILY
Wtth the kids on vacation.
Arcn1e Biid Edith are laced
w1lh t>elng alone lor the
111st time in many years
ti) BENNY HILL
Benny port1ays Te• Cym·
bal the Golden Boy ot
Pop
fl3 KCET NEWSBEA T ~ STUOIOSE£
BMX A New Jersey t_,
coacnes k•ds •n moto-
cross. spectacular sand
sculpture,, 1ne rare fhght
01 a soler balloon t RI
(l)Q!NEWS ®J BARNEY MILLER
Jaci.. Soo A Reirospec.
live
(~;MOVIE
Mule Featner• Rory Cal·
noun, vo.ce ol Don Knoll~
Parson Beaur"'ijerd Shelby
owns an 1ncredlt>le mule
named Nelson with whom
he 11 able to communk:llte
thrOUOh mental telepathy
'PO'
8:561 EDITORIAL
7:00 CBS NEWS D NBCNEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
R1ch1e s t1111nds are
or<Wred 10 stay away from
his party alter he inv11ea 1
black youth to paay 111 htS
band D A8CNEWS G BUlLSEYE m M·A·s ·H
Hawkeye wanll to neal a
wounded 1<0<ean woman
whom an ROI< olhcer
w811ta lo question
ti) STREETS OF SAN
FRAHCISOO
Stone IS nard-preuecl IO
hnd a connectlOll t>etween
a-a motr1e lor 1ne l/IOOI·
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1ng1 of a pretty oo·e<I and
a pro1eu0<
fm OVEREASY
Canc8f Guest• act•"'
Mary Healy Hayes. D< Vin·
cent Dev111 (Al Q
8!) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
CJ) TIC TAC DOUOH
(!§} MERV GRIFflN 1
Guests Ronnie Schell
Jecl(y Ward, Carole Cook
Pit McCormack
t0) NUMERO UNO
Holt Bud GrMf'!apan Ilk••
an 1n-<1ep1h tool< at Klaua
01b1111 of Italy
(?JMOVIE * e * "• "David COPIM'f·
lletd" 1 t93~1 w C field•
Freddie Bartnotomew
eased on the story by
Ch.,les Oi<:ltena A young
orphan t>oy grows up In
the Engl811d ol the ISOO.
7:30 I) 2 0+4 THE TOWN
Hoata Steve Edw1rd1,
Melody Rogers A vl111 to
tne Ginza and Roppong1
d11tr1011. home ol tne
d1acos, In Tokyo, Japan. a
look ar 1ne &Itel Train.
fastest on the world, Vllft
Japan s 1tlcred1ble elec-
1 ronic1 center VISlt an ele·
gent Jepanese departrnenl
SI ore a a FAMIL v FEuo 8 SHA NA NA
Guests The Spinners D EVE ONL.A
Hosls Inez Pedroze. Paul
Moyer A profile or lhe Ille
of a lo• Angele$ homcide
COP a SlrOll down Ille
streets or Old San Juan a
tool( 81 windsurfing
Q FACE THE MUSIC
ID All IN THE FAMILY
Alter 29 years of hostile
Siience. Archie and n1s
brother Fred finally come
lace 10 lace fm MACNEIL/ LEHRER
REPORT
'1l) NEWS
P M. MAGAZINE
A moving company thll
moves entire buildings.
irullla hunllng with pigs lrt
F1anoe
(C)MO\llE
·space Movie ( 19791
Documentary Music by
Mike Oldfield Arcntval fllm
footage chronlcies tM In·
umphs ol 1ne U S space
program focusing on the
d1ama1ic Apollo 11 moon
landing 'G'
(ff) RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
earry Tompkins and Tim
Mccarver recap dlv1sionat
baseball standings and
1nterv1ew some o f the
game s top playets 0 BASEBALL
Balttmote Onoles st Cat1-
forn1a Angels
8:00 8 (I) WALTER
CRONKITE'S UNIVERSE
CJ Q)L080
T~ husband or one or
Lobos e .. 01rll11ends "
fl n, 1 1 ( £3~1 Lo· Anq1•l1
0 ;•1~1 11A( I 0" An l!'I• a ... , A ,. • l ,'"' A'Hl•· •••
D "fth• • " ABC.1 l I) All I•' ....
f •I 'AU C.B '> ,,, '>·•'<!•> 8 ••1J lV11tHJ•tn-.At.J•'•1 '
10 "(.C.,I 1All(.1 ,,..,, (),. q •
8) ; TI I lr1d 'Lo'. A11q1•I"
(I) 'I( (Jr· TV r1r111 I l .... A nq1• , . .,
ail 1\1 I I I' l'll':.1 l., Artq••I• •
'11!) ti,(/(.( I" PH< .. H llll '''''""LI••,, 11
accused ol murderlno •
tOOeo Sier (R)
8 MOVIE * • • 11on11da (1967)
Raymond Burr Geraldine
Brooks A d•Hbi.d detec·
11ve becomes a apeclal
police agent and la
assigned to find the 1n1per
reaponslble for hi• Injury D 0 HAPPY DAYS
Fonioe s.ts out to find out
now Po111e 11 earning extra
money to romance L0<I
Beth s r1en and t>eauttlul
roommete tRI
Q MOVIE * • ''i "Anlgnment.
Munich" ( 1972) AIChlrd
Basehart. Roy Scheider
The government Is 1111-111·
ed by a aaloon owner In
recov8'1ng atot.n gold dur-
·~ World War II W P.M. MAGAZINE
learn about che1111on
theupy, a n-1re1tmen1
101 arter10 scleros11. 11ulfle
hunting with pig• In
France, Steve Caney
makes a hammocl( with
n-spapers Capt Carrot
on ways 10, eta• 8111 Harr IS
rev-• ··Body Hall
ti) EVENING IN
BVZANTIUM
A once-great producer
altempts to make a come-
back, tesurfac:lng 81 the
Cannes Film Feallvlll Hts
plans are temporarily
stapped by an explollon tn
n1s1oom
&!) NOVA
"Voyager Jupiter And
Beyond The spacec111t
Voyage• I 1 1ourney
through the ouler SOiar
system to dete is docu·
mented (RIO
~STARRING
KATHARINE HEPBURN
Film clips n-1rH11 stills
anO 1nterv1-• n1ghhght a
two-hour retrose>eeuve on
the hie and caree< 01
l<alh&rine Hepburn. three-
11me Academy Award
winner and one ol Amerl·
ca· s most reepected and
talented ectresMa
{BJM()Vt(
'The Outlaw Josey Wales'
11976) Clint EHtwOod,
Sondra Loclt.e A man
t>ecomes an outlaw when a
1uthless band ol Union SOI·
d•ers deslroys n11 South·
ern farm and kills his wife
and son 'PG
($)BIZARRE \II
John Byner snows you
things slranger thi n 1ruth,
large< than life and zamer
tnan an)'1h1ng you've ever
seen 1n these 1pec1a1
encore preseotallona trom
tt>e snow11me Bizarre
hbrary
0MO\llE
"One-Trick Pony· (1980)
Paul Simon, Blatr Brown A
once•POPular performer IS
prauured by everyone
around n1m to drop his
style or muStC and wr11e
song• that can 1><1ng n1m
b&ck to the too •O 'R
8:30 IJ (I) QUICK ANO
OUIET
A recenlly doce11ed pri-
vate eye return• 10 help his
ne er-do.well son solve •
tough but lucrative cas. 0 9 LAVERNE &
SHIRLEY
Laverne and Shirley dls-
cove1 some 1urpr111ng
1nf0<ma11on while snooping
around 1n their employet's
olfloe (A)CJ
ID TOPSTORY
HOllS Jim Thom1111. Mary
lno8ftoll
ct> 10 MOMAHOH AHO OOM,AHY
Oue1ta Tht Ttu 1
COWfllla, "1'1yllt. Dlltw,
Abbe l.ltlit e:oo•(I) ~ * * ~ "Ctn You HMt Tiie l aughwr? Tiit l toiy Ot
Fr9ddle IJrllld" ( 1t 711) Ira
Anouttlin, l(wln HOOltl.
Tile Ille end Gal'-Of Ille
late GOmedlen It OttMI•
tlz.ed~A) D aH1U.1T....,.
9l.IJll
Waalllngtorl c;wnp.tlgne to
ei.er a blgC>ted DOC> who le
being lnYeetlgated IOt wNt
llPCIUll to be 1 rlClllly
mollvlled lhootlng (Al
8 9 THAU'I COM,AHY
Ja decldee 10 •ort00
1ytng In laVOt ol telllllQ the
111111111 truth end wind• up ln
~ trouble <Al Q
• MV.V QNR'IH
Oue111 Aonnlt Schell,
Jecky Watd, Caroll Cooio,
Pat McCorm1c;k. Ann
Melloney
• MYITERY
"Sergeant Cribb. Wobble
To Duth" Ser~nt C1tbb
of Scotland Y11d II c;1lled
In to ln.,..tlgate the dfflh
of cnarue Dauell, a man
wno wat cktermlned to
become IM Pe<latlllan
Champion of Ille WOfid (RI
ttJMOVIE * • e "The St1anger"
( tVG7) M11cello Mattrolen·
nl Ann K111na A hend·
1ome, 11one-nea rt1d
111anger ign°'" aoc:1ety'1
conventiona In th11 adac>ta-
uon ol Iha lamed Camu1
novel
11: t 8 CI.J M0\111!
"FoxM " ( 1080) Jodie FOi •
ter. Sally Keli.tman TM
victim• of broken hO<"ff
and uncaring Partnt1, tour
tMn·• gtr11 try to soothe
their emotional wound•
thr~n druga and aei. R'
9:30 D Qi> TOO CLOSE FOii
COMFORT
The wife of JK11i.·1 t>o)'·
friend p1y1 Jacllle an
untxpected vllll (R)
8:45 0MOVIE
"Happy Birthday, Gemini"
( 1980) Madeline Kahn, Aita
Moreno A Harvard llu·
dent's birthday p11ty 11 hit
1am11y s Soutn Ptlilldelphla
home t>ecomea an eve·
opening e11perlenoe tor hta
Vllll~ ciaHmllff 'R'
tO:OO G Q! Nl!RO WOLFE
The prime suspect In the
murder of a atrlplM'f 11 the
woman·a boyfriend, wno ••
also the coroner (RI
8Ge NEW8 8 l1JJ HA RT TO HART
Tne Harts M t MH on 1
g11morous gambtlng Ship
tn a wild ICheme 10 crack 1
countlrfett •1119 lnvolVlng
their pe1sonne1. IA) ID PRE.BENTE
"Los Lupensos I The
Mu11h111" The actlVlllee,
goers 1nd ob)ectlvet 01
11111 Me111can folklor1co
dance campany are
e•plOfed
Gi) PLEDGE 9REAK
Regula1ly scheduled pro-
gramming may be dttayed
due 10 pledge brealla.
(Q)MO\llE
"Cheech And Chong'•
Ne.Kt Movie" I 19801 RICfl·
ard 'Cheech" M111n.
ThOmH Cnong. Two mtn
have many adventur" In
1ne Loa Angeles aree wt1et1
they meet up with aome
low rldera, luscloua lldy
c18fkl. visit some Holly·
wood maasage panors and
go In pursuit of the ultl·
mete high 'R'
HOU81'0H BIO LAFF
Off
Billy C..y.tal hosts 1hl1
stand.up comedy competi-
tion taped et Rock~'el1tr'1
In HOUllOn
10:15 1°i) BOGART •
Th11 tribute to Humphrey
Bogart focuses on the
car-end personal Ilda
of 11tmdom'1 out1t1ndlng
'tough guy" with dignity,
11all1m and 111rlllng
truth• with scenes lrom
aome ot n11 most famou1
movie• and commen11
from Illa PM<• (8) M0 \11£
"Bronco Billy" I 1980) Clint
EHtwood. Sondra Locke
A former lhoe aalelman
from New Jersey reatlzM
his dream of per1orm1no In
I Wrld Weet lllOW. 'PO'
10-.30 • NEWS
INOEP£NOENT
Nl!TWON< NEWS
• FAST FORWARD
"Education" Academlca,
computer technologl1t1
and teacher• dlacuu the
I TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA 9 8:00
for TV series sturs
Geraldin e Brooks .
··Jroni,1de ... Pilot
Raymond llurr and
KCET 0 ·8 :00 "Vuyutcer· Jupitt-r
und Reyond " A d ocum e nt ary on
Voyuger l's trap throu ~h the outer !iOlar
~yblcm
K OCE ~ 8 00 S t ar rin )(
Kathurln<.• llcpburn A t wo hour
retrospet·h v<> on thl' famoui-, at·t rcs~
CBS fJ H:OO "Cun You llcal' thl•
l.u ut(hl{'r"' T ht• Sto r·~· o( f''r e ddll'
Prtn:w." An uffl-l·tlonah• tu·tount of the
~·ount( t•omt•chan·, r lM' 111 ~ho" liuH int!ss
growing promlf\ent.e ot
compu1e11111 modlH11 tHJu
01t1001~ttem1
11:00 • D •Cl) GI Qlll NIWI
• ITAfUMK
(;ep11111 k11~ fell• 111•~ 111
en 11111 .. 1 w11111111 t lu~•
ll lro wrllt II .. ,,llYfl hlrtl Ill
lltlf wlll
I NI WL vwro U~Joll
MANNI)(
War 01 N••v•a
• llNH'Y HILL
04tllny 1111tH lf1~IH 111 11141
Or eat lnvallll l;hlll1 fl•I "
• DKlK OAVln
lnYotv11111 a jewel .. llCl•Utl
Ill M•lleM leloon (Rl G QUNI MOKI .,...,.,,II refuge from 1
11IHfft '""" 111.1moi.t
111111 • '•v• wn.<e an old
1111111111 "" oytno • Mt .. IOH
IMll'Ollll LI
A Ol•mm out double """"
11M1 "•• rem1nlnt wtlel on ''••tt to M l him up lor 111
•11emyplot
• flOOt<IU
Mlk• II ••••med lo fll'ld OUI
111•1 •rt OIO lrMlnd la I
hlfoln puther
110\lnd him to droc> hit
tlYle ol m.iitlO tJld wtlla
eonge !hit Ct11 IHlng Nm
bact. IO 1'-109 40 'A'
1:N . MOMCAMll l W1la
Gueat 1111 Alldte Pt~
ltndl hknMff In Ill\ tfll l>M •
ruaing poe.itlOn whttt he
c:ondU(le I very lmpe>rlanl
plect t>y lt1c; end E.rnle
2:00 D Cit Nl!WI
(l)MOVll
"TM Silt Macnlne" ( 11178)
In 203 7 A 0 . 1Clenllat1
IOlvt the -OY l>(Oblem
by n11~ the~ of
the human libido 'R
1: 10 I a HtWa 2.20 EDITORIAL
MORECAMBE & WISE
Etle and Ernie tight World
War I the way II never wu
fought btfore and 11ng1e
with tht 1n11mou1 spy
Mi ii Harl
2:H 9 MOVIE
e * 'Whefe Hi ve All The
People Gone?" ( 197•1
Pe111 Or1ve1. Vttn•
Bloom Alter molt ot
f •rth'a population 11 o .. troyed by radiation, trle
•urvlvO<t 1truggle to live Noe Nrws
('%)MOVIE
Foirff' 11veo1 JOOte Foa
1er Sa11y l(elletman The
vlC:llma ol t>rOllen hOmM
end uncaring paren11. tour
IMn·· glflt try 10,IOOll'le
their emollonal wound•
ougn druga and MX 'R'
MO\lte
ll:IO ~ * t • "HUC:klt1M1ry
l'lnn" ( 19761 Aon HOWlfd,
Jack (ltm lated on the
ltOty by Marie TWlllr\ A
YOU11Q boy end I tl,INWfY
.ieve beoolftt NWOl...O In I
.., ... Of ldv'fnllHM while
flMlng down tile MIMllllO-
p4 Alv. on • rah
10:00. • '.t "Bowtry Biiiet·
1on" (t96t) tow.y Boys,
Vl1glnl1 Hewitt. TM llloya
decide to go to war, ao
they t0<m their OWfl l'Oflt·
lns!Ullll
n:OO (Cl • * * Man In The
Iron Matk ( 11130) loutt
Hayward, Joen Bennen
Baaed on • novel by Alea·
ender Dumas The
infamous Compte de
AochtlOrt places Lou11
XIV'a twin brotnet on the
~renc:n throne and lmprl·
SOfll Iha real lllng Ill the
Bntllle
11:30 O e ·~ Space Montter
( 1960) FrMCtne York Jim
my Brac;on Space crtw
mem1>er1 name a newly
found pllntt In memory of
a 10tnt1st-com11de who
lost hit 1118 there
12:00 e • * '• Magic Town
( 1947) Jam11 Stewart
Jant Wyman A small
peaceful town unoer~ a
cnange fOf the WOtM after
t>etng pubttc~ed as an
eomple 10 other towna
41) • • · Oe11411'1 Sanda"
I l
J
Ou•at ll•rry lletal1111t" 12 ttlhl ~Cl,OR'TMt--.....;.....,.
..., "Man Wllh TM tcy
yea· (1971) Keenen
Wynn. Faith Oomergue A
younv repartar c0"8rlng
tne murder ot 1n em1nen1
t 196!>) Ralph Meeket,
Ma111 English A brothe1
and 111ter Mak vtfl98811C8
on the F renc:h F0<e10n
L"'ij•on whom they t>etieve
murd8fed lhelr lather only
10 Iller learn tnal Iha actu·
ar tuller was I membef of
ltie<• own tamtly
(ll•rl 'Joi Jltfll
<C>M0v11
The Stunt M•rt ( 1\lllOI
Pit"' O hx1i. 8tev" 11•11•
hack W111ted by the
0011oe. a dlaturllfil Viet
nam veter111 find• 1n
untu11 h1ven Of• • r·11ov1e
... wn .... WO<ld W11 I
epic It _,..ng 111....c:! H
CI JMOvtl * 't Candy ( ttle8) Ew1
Aulln MatlOn Brando A
iulCIOUI yOUr'il "Yll'lPn.1
neade tor New Vo1 k after
oelng 11ped by • poet end
1 Spanllh gardener
11:30 8 Cl) CANNON
A b0Jt8f my1terlou1ly qu111
lhe ring juat t>etore an
important light (A)·
G Q!TOHIGHT
Guest host David s1 .. n-
b erg GuHll Margot
Kidder. Burt Reynolds,
Ronnie Mll••P ',
-~ A8CNEW8 NIGHTU NE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL
I ST AHL.EV SIEGEL
KCET NEWS8EA T
MO\llE
'The 81uH B101ner1 'i t9801 Jonn Belu1n1. Dan
Aykroyd Two ~ lfng-
ers must contend with the
Chicago police. the CtA.
neo-Nazls and the u S
Army to put together a
t>enef •t conc:er'1 to rllje
money fOf lhe<r pertah 'R'
1uo111 MOVIE
"Bruballtr ( ta80) Roben
Redford, Yap/lei 1<0110 A
reform-minded warden
uncovers wtde8preld CO<·
ruplion wt>en he entetl hla
newty ualgnod prlaon PO•·
~ u an Inmate 'A:
11:'6 (OJ MOVIE
"'Barbara Broadcast
( 1975) A glemorou1
autl'Oreu and M• eaperl
t>ecomes 1nvotvtd with tne
etottc ldventu;es ol a
reporter and net friend•
-Ml>NIGHT-
12:00 8 MOVIE
• •i, "Snafu ( 1945) Con-
o:ad Jant1 Rot>ert Bench·
lay Beale: tra1n1119 prov"
10 be easier for a g1oup of
toldiera than e<l)ulllng 10
poatwar tlfe 8 9 MOVIE * * "The 811Gk Bird"
( 19751 Oeo1g• Segal,
Stephane Audran Sam
Spade Jr foltows up on his
111ner'1 moet famou1 ca•
PIHNAHT
Dally TOMPkrna and Tim
M'C••ve1 recap dlYlllOn•I
lltNb•ll atandlngt ario
Interview some (If the
Q!_me'1 top Playere
tUO U Qt TOMC>f'~
Ou111t movie dlrect0< Mel
8rooh. comedian Miehlel
PrllChlrd. 1trlptH-• Ann
C0<10 and Tami~ tRI
12·40 8 THE SAINT
The i.adlng lady Of I
motion picture It kid·
n•pped along ¥rllh ~
teldlng man
12:46 (fi) MOVIE
"WllhOUI Warning" ( 19801
Jack Palance. Martin Lan·
dau A gu station attend·
ant and a Vietnam veteran
p11 themaetves egain11 a
1ernly1ng end power1ul
humanoid wfllCh attack• 111
prey w11h deadly l1y111Q
org1nl1m1 R'
1:00 Q PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA
"The Body Electro<;' HOSll
Damien Simpson Stacoe
Hunl Guett Theim• Rosa
Ptl D
• MOVIE * * * ' Thirty Sec:ond1
Over T ollyo" I 1944) Spen-
cer Tracy. Van JOl1nton
General Jimmy Ooolltlle
prepatea lor and com
mand1 B-291 In bombing
mlaslOns over Japan
• INOEP£NO£NT
NETWORK NEWS
(%)MOVIE
"Tne Hunter" (1979) Steve
McOuffn, Ell Wallach
Ralph "Papa" Thorton
teeda a dangerou1 Ille u e
modern-day t>ounty llYnt-
er 'A'
1:30 . MOVIE
e * * You119 Al Heer1'
1195-41 Frank S111at11, Oor11
Day Problems t>Hel a
young couple aher the
men 11eals n11 partnet's
flancee
(t)M0\11£
'The Tenant I 1977)
Roman Polanski, IHbell•
AdJanl A man rentl an
apartmtnt wnare 1 i>ravt·
ou1 tenant committed IWI·
cide and t>ecomea Pat•·
nood about hi• neighbors
'A'
1:50 •• NEWS
MOVIE
"One· Trick Pony" t 1080)
Peul Simon, Blair Brown A
once-popular per10f'l'nlf 11
preMured by everyone
JOHN DARLING
Hnllor discovers lhe
idenllty ot the 111au1n
3:00 a> NEWS
3:30 4D MOVIE
e * • Tne Pa1ama
Game f 1957) Doris Dey
JOl1n R1111 A union repre-
aentalrve fells m love w11n a
paiama tacto1y s new
aupenntendent e.nd man-
ages 10 COllV111Ce IHm thll
tne workers need 1111ae
C $J LAFF-A· THON
A comedian host and lour
comic conte111n11 who
compere 11ga111st one
another are featured in tnla
uncensored comedy g11me
Shaw
4-00 CC MO\llE
e * • · Tne Strenoer
(1967) Marcf!llO Masl101an·
n1 Ann Karma A hand·
some. stone-hearted
111anoe< rgnor1111 society s
conventions 1n th•• odap11-
1ton of the famed Camut
no vet
(SJ MOVIE
Oh God' Book II C 19801
George 8u1n1 Suzanne
Plestlene wnen things go
w<ong. GOd calls on a 11111e
g1r1 to t>e 1111 earthly ll••il·
ant 'PG'
4:36 8 VOYAGE TO THE
BOTTOM OF THE SEA
(1, "Z" MAGAZINE OF
THE AlR
4:46 1.J MOVIE * * *'• David Ana
B1tn5heba (19521 Grego-
ry Peek Suaan Hayward
Davia the ~·no 01 the J-1
lalls 1n love with Ba1hahe-
b1, anotner m1n'1 wile
M'rd•r•da11'•
Daytl•r .tforlr•
-MORNl«i-
t:OO(C; Swim Team" Stepnen
Furst A pampered gtoup
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atquire 8 oorgeous new
member who charges
them up 10< the chemplOn-
ahlp PG
1:30 'SJ • * * 111 Cry Tom0t-
row f t9!>!>1 Susan Hly·
werd R1cnud Conti
Aclteu ldhan Rotn strug·
gles with alconohsm and •
lading c.a11M11
2:00 0 · Bon Voyage Charlie
Brown t t9791 An1ma1ea
Oo1ec1ea by Bin MeloerlOez
Snoapy ana WOOdstoelo
101iow ncnange 11..aen••
Cn111111 Brown Peope.m.nt
P111y Linus and Ma.rc.e on
an 8dvet1lu1•!1Ued tour Of
England and France G
3:00 Qt • • • A Man Called
Sltdgll 119 7 II James
Garll8f Dennis WHVet A
gunman snoots au of hi.
con0<11 to protect htl to-
tune on QOld but enc• up
Without h1• money
'C e • * 'Hud<tebe<ry
Finn I 197!il Ron Howard
JKk Elam Based on the
ttory by Mlf1< Twain A
young boy and a runaway
slave become involved •n i
58'181 or adventures wfltte
11&11119 down tne M•SlfUOP·
pt Rrv8f on a rah
3:30 U * • • Tne VIOient
Enemy I 19681 Ed Begley
Suaan Hamptlhire A t>an<J ~
ol lriah terrorilll plots to
nbot&Qe e Britllh factory
(J) "No Oepoait. No
Reiu1n ( 19781 David 1
NIV4111, Darren McOallln
rne ct>tldren 01 negtecuve
parents dec;.de to stage
thl'r own kidnapping 10
~ some 1t1ent1011 G
U Candlealloe" ( 1977)
Jodte F'ost8f David Niven
8:00 rtJ 'Swim Team Stephen A 1omb0y trom lhe atreelS
Furst A pampereo group ol Loa Angetfl 1n1>en1s a
ol country clubbers tallered Brit11h est.ale ·o·
acquire e gorgeoua n-4:30 ( C, Up Rover A young
member who charges p1~ oecomes 1nv<>1veo
tnem up fa< tne cnamp10n· in a hle·&nO·deatn atruogte
snip 'PG with a gOld-nung1y land t:OO CC) "Up Rive<" A young t>aron
~ becomes tnvOlved 6:45 0 Coll Miner 1 Oeugn-
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with a gOld.tiungry lan<l rommy lee Jones Based
baron on L0<e1ta Lynn's 1u10-
(S) • * • ''I'll Cry Tomor-biography A young girt
row" 111155) SuMn Hay· from a P<>Of lemlly on rural
ward. R1cnard Conte Kentucky maHlet a much
Actre11 uman Roth 11111{1· old8f 1ocar bOy WhO eng1-
gtes with 11Gonot11m and 1 ,,_, n.r 11se 10 s1ardom
lad1119 ca•-In the mu..c Industry PG
by Armstrong & Batluk .... ~~~~=-==-~--, t-ul(HI W H 'I' 01 ON'T 'YOU
'TELL M E '(Ol.J'\IE.
NEVER PRl'l/EN A SKREEKI ST ICK-SHIFT 9EFORE'~
fl
Adult cartoons lighten 'NBC Nightly News'
1 ........ ,,.1
NEW YORK (AP> -One of the liveliest in·
novations at the "NBC Nightly News" is not alive
at all. It's a cartoon that owes its linear lineage to
Thomas Nast and F'red Flintatone.
Even though NBC has dropped Wall Disney
lhi1:1 fall, It isn't lacking for animation through the
combined efforts of Mike Peters, cartoonist for the
Dayton Daily News, and the animation firm of Ba·
jus-Jones in Minneapolis.
The all-news purslats may not like it, but
Peters' d elighlfu lly wack y eye for life 's
absurdiUes and his 1blllty to prtclc people wlth hls
colored pencil provide a nke light touch to t.ht
heavy news barraa e on networ k newscaatt .
Already he's turned Prince Charles Into a fro1,
while Santa Claus has come to the rescue of the
n1t1on's stranded Dlrplane travelers.
lf properly promoted and alven a re1uJar tlme
slot. Peters' cartoons could help NBC'• thlrd·rated
neWI proaram 1hed a •today lmase and ca.In •
fresher identity aa It wait.a for Tom Brokaw to
replace John Ch1ncellor on the "NlthUy Newt"
next April.
"We're juat trylna to widen the scope of th•
thlnp we do," aald Paul Greenbtrc. executive
producer of "Nightly New1:· "The baaic 1tren1th
ot NBC News l1 not Mike Peters' animation, but It
can be an attractive auet."
Peten h11 been provldlni two or three car·
toona 1 week tor the p11t QMIDlh, an arranaement
NBC Newt Pr .. ldent BW Small calla "eJSperimtn•
tal'' and "too early to evaluate."
Some oC Peters ' pointed wttlm1Jcal effort.I
have included a baaeball player poppln1 up ln •
football huddle; Pre1ldent R.apn, a1 Robin Hood,
robblni from the poor to Ii" to the mlUtary, and
lbe movie creature Alien reportlnc to an lan~~IJ'I·
Uon office and beln1 labe1ed a "suat worker,
Cutoona, 1lke NH t'a f1mo~1 uUrt t hat
punctured the power of politico Boss Tweed in th,e
early 1900s. are a newspaper staple. They haven t
translated easily to TV since more time is needed
to pjck up the cartoon·s subtleties and nuances.
But with better animation, cartoonists are now
better able to tell their stories on TV.
·'TV news has pros resaed tremendously since
the 1940s when John Cameron Swayze would Ju.tt
read wtre copy," aaid Peters. "With film and
satellites. the anchorman might read the news for
only fi ve minutes or a broadcast today.
.. But as far aa editorializing, we're stlll ln the
19408. All we have ls the station's 1eneul mana1er
or vice president reading copy. Ed.itorlallzin1 hat
Dr. Gary S. Mccarter
Is pleased to announce the
opening of his practice In
Podiatry.
For Complete Foot Care:
• o ;seaaes and Surgery of the foot
• Sparts Msdlclne
• Children and Adu/ta
2011 Westcllff Dr., SUlte 6
Newpott S.ach
631-4099
not made the transition to the visual medium or
television."
Petel'S says nobody bas tampered with his
editorial slant. "NBC has never saJd don't do
anymore Reagans. or anythin1 Jlke that. But they
are my editors and they may reject a cartoon
because they don't like an Idea or they don 't 1et
It "
· Greenberg said Peters' viewpoint ls not meant
as a substitute for news commentaries, which
nobody will do untU Chancellor makes the switch
next spring. ··we're always trytn1 to do news in
better ways. My only modlflcaUona would be ll
there's too much caricature, or 1omethln1 like
that. We don't want to offend anybody.·•
.....o,. I ,w.
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Pl•• vl1lt OW' newest Trader J oe•a a t the
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a·----------------------:----=-'"----=-·•-----·----_.,... ______ ...._ ____ -=------------.-... ~
..... - . .. -.......... -,, • .......... -'t-...•_.__..,._
It's been disappomtmg so Jar for Angel management
Baseball hierarchy
still po rulers fate
Revised playoff plan contemplated
NEW YORK (AP) -Pity the
poor baseball fan.
First, as be was gettlni to the
m e at of the season and an-
ticipating his team's chances for
post-season play, the players
embarked on a SO.day strike that
disrupted his summer and sent
him looking for other diversions.
Finally, the strike was settled,
baseball resumed, and Joe Fan
again began to look for his
favorite team in the standings
and ponder its fate for post·
s eason play, only to be told that
the latest concept was being
scrapped.
THE FAN CAN only sit and
wait for the latest format to be
announced -at least now he
can continue to watch games -
and hope that this time the
baseball hierarchy comes up
NASL owners
seek limit
on foreigners
CHICAGO (AP ) -North
American Soccer League
owners opened a two-day meet-
ing Monday with the co-owners
of the Dallas Tornado presenting
proposals for sweeping changes
including limiting the number
of foreigners in a team's start-
ing llneup.
"Alter lS years in the league,
we feel it's time to do some
monkeying a r ound with the
game." said Bill McNull of the
Tornado. "We need to make it
more exciting to get the fans."
McNutt said he and the club's
other co-owner, Lamar Hunt,
had "eight to 10 ideas" for the
owners to con sider. ''These
ar en't things we've just con·
jured up, and they're designed
lo improve the game artistically
and financially," Mc Nutt said.
Among the changes su11eated
by McNult and Hunt were:
-Allow only four foreigners in
the slfrting Uneup1 a propoeal
Intended to increas-e the attrac-
t l veness o f the 1• me for
American fans and cut the coel
of signing expensive forei1n
players.
-Enlarge the 10•1 by a foot In
every dJrectlon.
~
with a plan that satisfies the
players , the fans and t he
owners.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn and presidents Chub
Feeney of the National League
and Lee MacPhall of the
American League hope to an·
nounce, before the end of the
I t was what I
called dragging it in
a little belatedly , to
say the least.
-MeEllln Mlla.r
week. a revised plan for de·
termining which t e ams will
qualify for the post-season
playoffs.
The three met Monday and,
according to a spokesman for
Kuhn's office, the announcement
could come as early as today.
Feeney had said earlier Mon-
day, "We want to get this thing
settled as soon as possible."
The three have been discuss-
ing ways of closing the loopholes
in the split-season plan, which
was intended to revive interest
in baseball in as many cities as
possible, as quickly as possible,
following the strike.
THE PLAN WAS agreed upon
by the owners in their first joint
meeting after the strike was set-
tled. Both leagues accepted the
plan as did the players, but ac·
cording to Marvin Miller , ex·
ecutive director of the Major
League Players Association, the
plan was news to the players.
"We heard about this split-
season idea for the first time on
th at last Thursday of the
negotiations," said Miller, refer-
ring to the lengthy bargaining
session that began on July 30
and, after more than 12 hours,
produced an agreement ending
the strike. "Il was what I call
drauin1 It in a little belatedly.
to say the least.
"To introduce it at that time,
for the lint time -it would be a
miracle tr somethln1 llke this
didn't happen."
There were no miracles for
baseball and gaping holes were
expoeed In the second 1eason
format.
I -Ban passes to a 1oalkeeper
I by teammates.
-Replace all throw-Ina with
klck·lDI.
Under the plan, the division
leaders at the time of tbe 1trike
were declared winner• of the,
flr1t part of the seaaon ·and the
HCOod part Wll Ht up aa a
1eparate entJty, with the win·
nert of the two 1ect1ona meet.lnl
In bel\.of·flve. intra·dlvbional
playotf1. II the Hme team woo
both NCtioftl, lt Wll to fact the
team In lta dlvt1lon wttb tbe
next·belt overaJl record.
'
-Elimlruate off1ldea, or move
the off aides line beck from the
SS.yard line to Just outalde tbe
penalty box.
-Create a ione ln the mld.fteld
where a· player m1y remaJn only
for a 1pedlied period ol Ume,
1lmllar to the three·ltcond lane
In bMketball.
Honver, tbat left open tbe omht0m protpeet ot a t.a• IOl-
tn1 1•m• ln order to lmPl'O"
lta cMneel at• playoff bath.
Dilly Piiat
TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1991
LEGALS C4
CLASSI Fl ED CS
•
(
\:
Ange& smarting
Orioles invade Anaheim Stadium
By EDZJNTEL °' .. .,..., ...........
The Angels will try to put aome lire into their sputter·
ing machine tonight when they open the Second Season
home schedule al Anaheim Stadium against the Baltimore
Orioles. Game lime Is 7:30 p.m.
Dave Frost ( l ·l ) will go to the mound for the Angels
against the Orioles' Scott McGregor (7·2) in the first of a
three-game series against Baltimore and the first of an
eight-game homestand.
The Angels are still licking their wounds after going --
'If someone had told me that we
would lose four of our first five games,
I would have told them to ·go see a
shrink.'
1·5 against Seattle and Oakland (including being swept oy
Oakland I on a road trip to open the post-s trike season.
It's none other than Seattle who leads the American
League West Division today -a most unlikely occurrence
in a most unlikely of seasons -and the Angels are at the
bottom of the heap. four full games behind the Mariners.
Problems seem to abound the Angels as they open a
rugged homestand that features East Division contendors
Cleveland and Boston. in addition to Earl Weaver's
Orioles.
Mainly, it's a shaky pitching staff that has manager
Gene Mauc h looking for a way lo keep a high-octane of.
fense ahead of the opposition.
The Ange ls had numerous opportunities to make good
on the road trip but costly mental errors and blown
chances produced the worst of all hopes for a fast start out
of the gate.
"If someone would have told me that we would lose
four of our first five games. I would have told them lo go
see a shrink," Mauch said prior to Sunday's game in
Oakland. Well, Mauch can make that five-of-six after Sun·
day's loss to the A's.
No Angel starter has thrown a complete game or
Who's No . 1
in the East:
Penn St . or
Pitt? C2 .
won a game in the second half. Frost was the only one
involved in a game that turned out a victory. Deify "*" , ....... _
Dave F rost h"Pf'.'i Jw can chanye llw l1de trm1ght
Tony LaR"5sa
Bird ta01es
Dodgers
in Chicago
CHICAGO (AP) -Doug Bird
s hook off the shock, dismay and
disappointment of being traded
from the New York Yankees to
the Chicago Cubs with one effort
-a complete game.
Bird, a 31 -year -old
righthander who came to the
Cubs in the Rick Reuschel trade
on the day of ba1.iball's strike,
tamed the Los Angeles Dodgers
on six hits Monday In hurling the
Cubs to a 3-1 victory.
An.hough Bird has woo 15 of
his last 16 major league de·
clsions, he hadn't posted a nlne-
innlng complete 1ame since 1976
when he was with Kansas City.
He did pitch a "complete" game
againBt Atlanta on Aug. 31, 1979,
while with Philadelphia but that
contest was halted In the
seventh inning because of rain.
With a 17-mlle-an-hour wind
blowing in, Bird went the dis·
lance to post his second straight
victory for the Cubs.
"I was shocked and diaap·
pointed when \he Yankees
traded me, I did a 1ood job for
them," said Bird. "I was looking
forward to gelling a World
Series rtng. But I'm with the
Cubs and I'm going to do the
beat I can here. Everything is
line now."
Bird WU 5·1 for the Yankees
before being traded. He bu five
mlUor leaiue complete 1ame1.
"Re mixed and spotted hi•
pitches well, chanaed speeds
and kept tbe bitters off
balance," aaid Steve Garvey,
who wu robbed of a homer in
the etpth lnninl when the wind
kept h1I drive from 1oln1 over
the wall. ~
The CUbl 1t.aked Bird to a 1..0
lead when they 1cored an un· earned nm ln the nrat. but the
Dodaen 1ot that back ln the
•econd on 1 walk to Ron c;ty, a •lnJI• by RJck Monday and a lnlleld out.
Mesa selects Hagey, Carney
Two coaches to direct Mustang football program
By ROGER CAR~N
Of .. DloMy ...... """
Jim Hagey and John Camey. two coaches with
28 years of coaching experience between them at
Costa Mesa High School, will share duties as the
Mustangs' head football coach this fall.
The two were appointed following the recent
resignation of Tom French. who resigned his
teaching position for personal reasons after a
seven·year tour.
Hagey and Carney. along with long-time Mesa
aides Tom Ware and Doug Brown. begin the 1981
campaign Wednesday night with a general meet-
ing with all football parents at the Lyceum on the
school's campm;, beginning at 7:30.
"Everyone's responsibilities remain virtually
intact," says Hagey. "John Carney knows our
passing attack and I'm going to try to help devise
a running attack lo go with it. Tom Ware will con-
tinue with the defense. Doug Brown will stay with
the lines .
"Obviously we have to go with our established
passing attack," continues Hagey. "We have some
blesslngs in a very quick set of receivers and quick
secondary."
French's sudde n resignation was made
without comment, but Hagey noted. "He (French)
did nothing but improve things here."
Prior to French's arrival Costa Mesa had 14
straight years without a winning season. In the
past seven seasons the Mustangs won two co-
cha mpionships and went to the playoffs three
times.
Chances for another playoff berth and possible
title hin~e on the Mustangs' passinJt Jtame. which•
John Carney .Jim llagey
revolves around All ·Orange County tight end Steve
Cook. 6·4. 215-pound tight end Mike Matson and
three outside receivers Mike Anderson. Ty
C ulver and Onassis Nixon -along with
quarterback Steve Anderson
"We decided to approach ii this way (twin
coaches) on an interim basis," continued Hagey.
"After the season is ove r we'll kick back and take
a look.
. "~his is a veteran staff and we're very op-
llm1st1c about our chances. Our efforts in the sum-
mer passing games were very representative.
..
Oran;. Coaat DAILY PILOT/TUHday, Auguat 18, 1981
P---------------------..,. ~------------------------------------------------------------------.
Drinking in stands
brings on a brawl
From AP dlapatcbes
VANCOUVER, British Columbia [!]
The operators of the Pactnc Na· •II•
lional Exhibition stadium ordered a
thorough investigation Monday into a drunken
brawl at a Canadian Football League contest
between the British Columbia Uon.s and Hamil·
ton Tiger-Cats.
Fifty police orricers were called to Empire
Stadium Sunday to control 10 drunk fans who
went onto the sidelines, grabbed footballs and
fought with anyone in their way.
Eight fans were held by police for being in·
toxicated in a public place but were released
without being charged.
Exhibition spokesman Bill J oyner said an
investigation into the "unfortunate incident"
will be conducted with the city police.
Sunday was the first day football fans were
permitted to drink in the stands, but J oyner said
"our records indicate that there have been far
fewer alcohol-related problems at these games
since the PNE began serving beer over a year
ago
Quote of the day
"You don't just all of a sudden tum into
a robot," says the Dodgers' ltick Monday.
"And you cannot take the pride away from
an athlete or all of a sudden inject pride.
To say that baseball players would do
anything but play all out is ludicrous."
Baseball Cards take over stadium
ST. LOUIS -The owners of the ii
baseball St. Louis Cardinals complet-
ed their takeover of the corporation
that runs Busch Memorial Stadium Monday by
electing a s ix-member board of directors at a
s pecial shareholders meeting.
The vote of shareholders cut the former
12-member board in half. One casualty was
former chairman William J . Dougherty, who
had vehemently opposed the takeover of Civic
Center Redevelopment Corp. by Anheuser·
Busch, the nation's largest brewery.
Anheuser-Busch had been locked in a sum·
mer-long struggle with Apex Oil Co., of Clayton.
Mo., before announcing that it had gained con·
trot of 66 percent of outstanding C1vic Center
stock. The special shareholders meeting was
called by AnheUser-Busch shortly after the an·
nouncement.
Brett's homer aids Kan1a9 City wi n
0eor1e a...u11 lone home run • and three Toronto erron fueled a
flve·run fourth inntn1 Monday nl1ht
and carried Kansu Clty to a 6·3 vie·
tory over the Blue J aya. Former Coata Meu
Kilb and Oranae Coaat Collete pitcher Da•
QulMDbeny, relieved In the tllbth lnnin1 to
post hia 11th save of the aeuon. lolua Mayberry
had a two-run homer ln lhe nnt lnninl for
Toronto ... Chlca10 lert
fielder Roa LeF1ore slnaled
twice, scored twlce and
threw a rwmer out at the
plate, while Gre1 Laatukl
drove in two run1 with a
single and a tape-measure
home run as the White Sox
defeated the New York
Yankees, 4·1 in another
American Lea1ue 1ame. It
Brett waa the fourth 1trai1bt lou
for the Yankees . . Alu Tram•ell capped an
elght·run first inning with a bale.-loaded double
and Luce Paniall and IUft Gt.._ each col·
lected three singles as Detrolt cruahed Min·
nesota, 12·2. Daa Petry scattered four bltl and
allowed one earned run t.brou&b tbe flnt 1hl ln·
nings ... Steadf rain waahed out the
scheduled game between MUwaukee and Ttua
in Arlington. It wlll be played tonJ1bt 11 part of
a twi-night doubleheader ... Tom Paeloreli of
Seattle, who had 15 hlts to raise hll batUn1
average to a league-leadina .343, was named
American League player o f the week
.. Detroit placed outfielder Qamp 8ummen
on the 15-day disabled list
Morgan's double aids Giant victory
Joe Morgan snapped an 11th •
inning tie with a three-run double off
reliever Ron Scurry to lu d San
Francisco over Pittsburgh, S·l, Mon·
day night in National League baseball action
The victory went to reliever Gre1 Mlatoa who
helped the Giants out or a bases-loaded jaam In
the Pirates' 10th innin1 ... Winning pltch~r
Ray Burris and Tim Raines hit consecutive run
scoring singles in the second
inning lo lead Montreal to a
6·2 win over Houston . Raines
walked on four pitches from
Houston starter Vern Ruhle,
stole second and scored on
Gary Carter'• groundout in
the first. Tim Wallach, a
S a d d I e b a ·c k C o 1 I e g e
graduate, had a single for the
Expos in t h e second
Morgan ... Rookie Gleaa Brum·
met's force-play grounder scored Tommy Herr
from third base in the 13th inning to give St.
Louis a 2· l victory over San Diego. It marked
the Cardinals' debut at home for the second half
of the season ... New York Mets' outfielder
Joel Youngblood, suffering from sorenes_s in hiR
left knee, underwent an arthro~ram . . . Pete
Rose or Philadelphia who became the National
League's all-time leader in bits Wlth 3,631, was
named National League player or the week.
Baum gets a promotion
He's named general chairman of Crosby Southern
By OOWARD L . HANDY
Of ........... , ....
Gene Baum, one of the harder working com-
mittee members or the Crosby Southern golf
tournament for the past several years, including
his days under Paul Salata, has been named
general chairman or next year's event at Irvine
Coast Country Club.
Baum, a mem ber of the sponsoring 552 Club
that benefits Hoag Hospital, has been active since
the tournament began some seven years ago.
Dales of the 1982 affair lhal features young
and upcoming touring pros unable to make the
field for that week's m aJor or PGA tour event, are
Thursday and Friday. Feb. 8 and 9. This coming
year, the San Diego Open will be run during the
same dates as the Crosby Southern.
In addition to the new pros, many of whom
have gone on to greater success on the PGA tour
including some victories, veterans of another era
are also welcomed by the sponsors al Irvine Coast cc.
Committee members and the press will gather
at Irvine Coast on Monday, Nov. 23 for the annual
Hoag Clammer, a one-day affair to get the
machinery in motion for the next tournament.
* * • THE FOURTH ANNUAL Children's Hospital
of Orange County (CHOC) tournament wiJJ be held
Monday at Yorba Linda Country Club.
Because or some last minute cancellations,
there are openings for more golfers for the event
at $80 per person. This includes golf, prizes and
dinner.
Paul Rangel is chairman of the event and he is
J a n p u tting well
DALLAS (AP> -Jan Stephenson believes she
has a chance to become a superstar, now tbat ahe
has found a pulling str oke to go with the rest of ber
game.
"I've never really had all that much con-
fidence on the greens . . . I felt lite I had to hit the
ball really close to make birdie," she said. "My
boyfriend <Eddie Vossler) cban1ed my frip and
now I reel I can make it from anywhere."
Stephenson broke the $100,000 barrier by that·
tering two Ladies Professional Golf Aaaociatlon
records ln capturing the Mary Kay Cluaic Sun·
day.
Moving her right hand on the putter flrst to
help keep the ball in line, Stephenson uaed only 24
putts to shoot a career-low round of 14, e'-ht·
under.par on the Bent Tree Country Club Courae.
Are a go lfers qo&lify
CHINO -David BeaUy of LaJWla Hilla and
Brian Lindley of Fountain Valley led a IJ'O'lP ot
ellhl quallners for the U.S. amateur 1oll cham·
plonshlpe with 36-hole 1con1 of 142 Monday over
the Wettem HUia Country Club coune here.
Beatty ftred rounds of 11·71 wbile Lindley, a
member ol the Mesa VmJe Country Club mn'•
group, had a et Int.be monliq IDd a 73 lD tbe af·
temooo.
AlJO quallf)'in1 from the Ora.nee Coast area
w u John Burkle of Cotta Meta wbo bad roundl of
71·'73-144. A fourth area quallfter wu Robert Call
of Newport Beach wbo made the ftekt ln action at
SatJcoy Country Club.
1bo1e who qualllled wm partldpate in the U.S.
amateur championahlPI to be ta.Id at tM Olympic
Club JOll course ln San Prancltco, 8"t. 1.e.
'
not only looking for golfers but tee and green
sponsors as well.
"We play so they can," is the slogan of the
tournament that benefits the children in the
hospital.
For further information, contact Larry
McFarland at 547-9324.
• •• WITH THE MARCH OF DIMES tournament
out or the wa:v. Joe Costello will be putting into
GOLF
high gear plans for the ninth annual Costa Mesa
City golf champions hip tournament to be played
Sept. J2 and 13 on the Los Lagos and Mesa Linda
courses with a limited field of 350.
Many past winners have gone on to further
success on the golf cour.se including several on the
PGA tour al the present lime including Mark
O'Meara who won here in a playoff in 1979. Scott
Simpson. the winner here in 1974, is also playing
on the PGA tour.
The fee for entering the Costa Mesa event is
$40 which includes tee prize, green fees, a buffet
on Sunday and other prizes. Entry blanks are now
available in most Or ange County pro shops.
While the emphasis is on the low handicap
flillht. ~Olfers with handicaps up to 18 are invited
to p~rticipate in the flight competition. Any handi~ap over 18, however, must play to that
margin.
HERE'S A RATHER NOVEL way of entering
a celebrity golf tournament late in the year. It's
the Bob Elder /Celebrity miniature golf tourna-
ment at Camelot Golf Course in Anaheim Saturday
with a shotgun start at 11 a.m. ·
The $20 participant fee includes a round of golf
with a celebrity; an official ~ament T-shirt; a
coupon for a free game of golf; a coupon for a free
waterslide ride; and refreshments.
~lebrities will come from tbe Angels, Rams,
KEZV radio station and some others. The 1rand
prize for lhe top foursome will be a spot in the Don
Baylor/65 Roses celebrity golf classic Oct. 26.
Money from the tournament will benefit the
CysUc Fibrosis Foundation. For further Inform•·
lion, call 635·0900. • • * CIDP SHOTS -Southern California Section
PGA Professionals tested the Riviera Country
Club coune Monday, playln1 the 1001 tees tbat
will be used for the 1983 PGA championship Aus.
4·7 that year. lloe • ._. .. director of 1011 at
Riviera, says: The course ";iaytd 7,029 yard.a and
the sreena were really sllct. llke they wUJ be for
the PGA." ~ . . The 13th annual Anabelm city
championship will be held Seot. lt-20 ut1Udn1 both
the Anaheim HUia and Anabtlm Municipal
courses. Lam • .,,.._ ol Wat CoMt Amateur
Golf A.uoclalion, I.I belpin1 to promoc.. the event
and ur1ln1 member• ol bl1 1o1nn1 1roup to
partldpat.. The tourney wW include four hand.ltap
fii1ht. In addition to the champlon1hlp with a fteJd
of D> expected. Anyone interested In an entry
blank should contact MarSitoa at •·2029. Tbe en-
try fee la t.o which ®-not include a cart.
Reaervatiom for cartl thou.Id be made HPU'a&e-
ly. . . Concratulationa to m. lalld of Ocean View
Hilh and Mesa Verde CC. IUm wu the low ln·
divtdual (23$ for 54 bol .. ) in the Glrll Amertea
Cup tournament at Industry Hll1a CC Wt put
week u the Southern Call!ornta team won the
ch1mploaship. Alto to a.r,1 ara.. of Kna
Verde CC for wtnnh11 tht llrla (14-11) Utle with an
11 at Alonclra Paris Goll Course ln an lnvttatloaal
tournament.
Partridge released by Chargers
IUck Panrtd1e. a Golden Weal [!].
Collete product and veteran punter 4 • •
In the Natlonlll Football Leaaue. waa
relea1Jed by the San Ole10 Char1er1
Monday. Partrid1e finished third ln th~ NFL in.
punUnt In 1979 and waa obtained by San Oleao
from New Orleans last year. Mia 39.1 avera1e
was the Char1ers' hlahe5t average ln four years
. . . NFL teams mu1t be down to eo players
by lhi11 afternoon and a
number ot veterans were re·
leased Monday. Washington
asked wajvers on Ike Forte,
Bobby Hammond, Dallas
HJcliman. Jon McDaniel and
Zion McKinney and placed
Ray Waddy on the physically
unable to perform list
.. Other veterans released
Included: Minnesota wide re· Pertrld~ celver Kevin Miller; 11-year
deft"Mlve end BUI Gre1ory and former Notre
Dame runnina back Al Hunter by Seattle;
UulUmorc defensive end Roa FenaDda: Green
Oo linebacker Jlm Gueno: running back Doe
Wooct. by San Fruncisco; defensive backs Dave
Becker und Wentford Galnea by Chlca10
.. The Cowboys' Randy Huibea may be
throullh with football after dislocating his right
11 houlder tor the third time against the Rams
Saturd1ty nll(ht. lie will hold a news conference
with hh1 doclon to announce his future plans in
llw Ol,IJr fut un·
Baseball today
On thlA dalt In buaeboll In 196o
Mllwouk.-t• Hr.aves 1i1ce Lew Burdette
hurlud 1.1 no hitter and beat the
l'hll11dlda>hl1.1 l'hllll .. 11 1 0 at County
Kl1u.llum
Toduy'• Ulrthduyt1
llull of fl'1H11t1 ,,llchl'r Hurlel"h Grimes Is
KK Atlunlo Rr1tvc11 catch<>r Rruce Benedict
IA '-"I
Leonard begins training for Hearns
Hu1ar llay Lffaard, beginning •
two Wt't'kll or training In Los Angeles
for hh1 Sept 16 welterweight title
11howdown with Thomaa Heanu, sparred briefly
in front of a crowd of 400 spectators ... All·
star forward Marque. Jobnaon's request to be
traded will be discu ssed this week by
M ilwau k ee owner Jim Flhgerald
... Memorial services are planned today for
Jack Holley, t he head basketball coach and
athletic director at the College of the Ozarks
. . . Los Alamitos quarterhorse racing will con-
tinue through Friday in the daytime with first
post al 1 :30.
Telev1s1on. radio
TV: Noeventsscheduled.
RADIO: BasebalJ -Baltimore at Angels,
7 :30p.m., KMPC (7101.
. WEDNESDAY'S TV-RADIO
BasebaJI -Dodgers at Chicago, 11 : 30 a. m ..
Chahnel 11; KABC (790).
I
Penn St., Pitt
to stage war
No . 1 in East at stake
•·rom AP dllpatcbea
Ju t like Oklahoma and Nebraska in the Big
Eight (one has had at least a share of every title
since 1960 ), M lch1gan and Ohio State in the li1g
Ten (ditto since 1967 ) and Alabama and Georgia in
the South-eastern Conference, E•8lern college
football also has Its own Big Two.
They are Penn Slate and Pitt -or, in the iaat
couple of years, Pitt and Penn State. In ract, Penn
COLLEGE PREVIEW (•)
State's string of 42 consecutive non-losing seasons
dates back to 1938 and is an NCAA record. Pitt, m e~whlle, has recaptured some or its past glory,
wlnrung the national championship In 1976 and
finishing second to Georgia a year ago.
It is gen erally conceded that the two
Pe nnsylvania rivals will rule the roost again,
although Pitt can hardly expect to be as strong as
last year 0 1·1), including a 37-9 Gator Bowl rout of
South Carolina while Penn State should be im-
proved, although a killer schedule may prevent
anything like last year 's 10-2 mark (the Nittany
Lions trimmed Ohio State 31· 19 in the Fiesta
Bowl), which was good for eighth place in The As·
sociated Press rankings.
"We're a long ways from having the football
team we had last year," says Pitt Coach Jackie
Sherrill, who must replace 15 starters, "but unless
we have some bad injuries. I don't think we'll dip
too far. I think we're certainly in the Top Twenty "
And Sherrill 's blueprint sees the Panthers contend·
ing for lhe top again in 1982.
.. We will have a fine football team, there is no
doubt about that ... says Penn State's Joe Paterno.
owner of a 141 ·31 ·1 log in his 15 years atop Mt. Nil-
tany ··we have to have a strqng team to operate
against our schedule, which is the most difficult in
Penn Stale history." It includes the likes of
Nebraska. Miami <Fla.). Alabama, Notre Dame
and, of course, Pill.
The National Football League drafted a dozen
Pitt players and seven others were signed as free
agents. The losses include defensive end Hugh
Green a three-time All -American. winner of the
Lombardi Award and runnerup in the Heisman
Trophy voting and offensive tackle Mark May.
who won the Outland Trophy Green, May and
fullback Randy McMillan were first-round draft
01cks.
Pitt 's s trength wall be on o ffen se .
es pecially the high-powered aerial duo of
quarterback Dan Marino and flanker Dwight
Collins. The only returning defens ive regulars are
linebacker Sal Sunseri and safety Tom Flynn, but
the key will be tackle John Hendrick, who is com·
ing back from knee surgery and could anchor a de·
fensive line that lost all five starters
v
PARDON ME -The New York Yankees' Reg-
gie Jackson has some not-so-polite things to
say to umpire Bill Kunkel after the latter
ejected the outfielder following a strike out in
the second inning of Monday night's game
against the Chicago White Sox. Jackson. bat-
ting slightly over .200, has been in a season·
long slump.
Junior Sabot race scheduled
More than 150 boats start qualifying Wednesday ·
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Deity ..............
Junior Naples Sabot sallors from throughout
the Southwest started congre1aUn1 today at Udo
Isle a Yacht Club in preparation for the national
championship for the clus.
More tban 150 boats wUl start competition
Wednesday in the main tumlnl buln east of Lido
Isle in qualilyln1 race• that will apllt the vaat fleet
into told (championship) silver. bronie and iron
m1bta.
Champlon.ahip races for Ult fold and 1Uver
fli1ht1 wlll start Thursday w th two r aces
scheduled to start tn the main turnln1 basin.
Bronie and Iron Qlgbll w111 start from a Une set up
in the ••t tumln1 baaln.
The races wUI continue F'rlday from tbe tame
lotatJOM. The trophy p~tloo f~ lbe recatte wm be held Friday at $ p.m. at tbe Udo Ille
clubbouH. T1tt Naple. Sabot la an .. foot pram wlth'UM
Dut.cb wooden aboe lnslpla on the aaU wtdeb bl•
been• popuJu Junior aallboat for man.1 )'ean. In
recent yun It· baa alto bad a rapidly 1ro"1D1
share ol adull devotees.
Half of the sailors in the national cham·
pionship regatta are from the Balboa-Newport
Fleet which held elimination aeries for the title
event ln July. Local sailors will represent Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club, South
Shore Yacht Club. Balboa Yacht Club and Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
The remainder of the neet comes from other
yachtin1 areas from San Diego to Marina del Rey
with a goodly number from Arizona, New Mexico
and Nevada.
Jon Pinckney of BCYC ls the defendln1 cham·
pion, winnlnc last year's nationals at Coronado
Caya Yacht Club, San Dieao. Another favorite Is
Mall Tin1ler, Junior LIYC commodore who
finJshtd third lut year.
Social evenll are tntenper1ed between UM
rtcinf event,s. A family dinner la scheduled TbQfl· "-•Y at LIYC. followed by the National Cham·
lllonablJ) dance.
A family brntlaat la ~uled Friday al 9
a .m ., followed by the Na.plea Sabot AuociaUon an·
nual meetinf.
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•ICIOMD llACI. • f ........ Pttt IN ... , (Uplltml 54.60 n.a 11.00
lrnmtt.c 1-IOtl-.e'l"ll S.00 UO
llllMWllll IWlflllftdl SA
Alto reced: My Dreem, Bub,
l>tt Kid, 1141tdoon, tlml>ermt tl<. 0...
Httly, ._of Sc-. Wtt Houw, 5oulNrft
Grlt1,A<~.
Tl-:1:112/S.
$! DAii. Y DCM.181.1 12-tl pelcl II 2UO.
TMllllD lllACI. 11/ .. ml'"-
Ovff ..., U,.,., (McCtrfOfll •·• •.• 1111 c,_-.,. l~I UO sa
Provldtlntltl l~I S.00
Also rt<M: •It OtMll, Pe.-.. 111 Tn·
es,a.ta9ttll, T .............
Tl,,,.: t: .. 2/S.
U l.IUICTA 12-11 peldUtt.fO.
l'OUllTN llACI. • IWl<lfttll. Je-ye (McCtrr..,I S.40 t.tO 440
S-,,...IVtlefa-•I IM 1.a ~.....,., 11.illf'tml uo
Al'° rtctd: eH of ...... Nortflerty Glow, Ovr Dlltln'r, l"trll'f'• Ftrt-, Wiid ,..,..,
llunt111 1'1111, 5omet1tl110Hty, ere .... de
Cttllt.
Tl,.,.:1:11.0,
l'l""ltACl.•fw.....,. •
B'-T.....-i.. 10.-..I t.40 SA ..00
Udy 0-lelt IWIMtncll t.• UO
Mlr_...K ... (Mntl 1A
AIM ,_, Vkll.le'I Otl, P-...,.,
Jt ..... C-Oft LM<llY, Fly A .J«wr.
T'-: t:ltJ/S.. U IXACTA l._11 ..... tlB.•.
IUCTM llACSs 0... ...... .
~y(Mc ........ I ... ,... 1A c.1-..1v..._...1 , .. ut
HOftelto ...... ( o.i ......... 1 uo
Also noced: l"rlvtt• """'· Mtlffll<
Pr•'-· Ftl>uloua Otd, Twtetll ICNtM,
Htlo ....... Sir IVOtl, H .... tlre.
TIMe: 1:•4/S.
HVlllfTM llACI. • tw .....
l"orl ....... 1¥ lo.t-..yel I.. 2.60 LA
etcll .. T-IMcCWrotil lM a.a
P--.t e. ISN9rMll.trl >•
Al• r.c•: SM'a AS-. SI, E'Tttlat. TllN: l :IO.I. .. &XACT• 1•11 ........ ..
12 PtCX lllt , .. ,......, ....... ......
wtltl ftlM w!Mlfto llctwta cnve "'°"">·a l"kll SI• ~loft 11tlel \54 ... wttlt "9 ..,._ ""'-UdrilU ,..., _...,.
llMTM ltACI. Oflt mite.
l"l"I Adven<t ISNemtllerl .... 4,40 J, ..
Merry S(por1 I o.ltlttllMtye) 10.20 SM
Slllllful-1Vtlenl"91tl UO
Al• rtc•: Cuti o•o..: Vitti floret, 8ll'f
My Act.~. Pet llley.
TIMe: 1:a)/S.
Nlllf1'M ltACI. I .... mllelOfl tvrf.
Pierre Lt Moflt ICO&IMleOll tt• 7 A 1 a
GoedLMcllo.t.,_..,., to ... 7M
T...,..W lllldl l~I UO AllO rt<tll: Sett MtfUC, Pl-k .. _ •••II<. Ume tlcce, 1'1111 PtYlll•flt, I.Mt
A1t11le, ~lrttt, Mtdetetne Babtve. .. ,.......... Gt•••• ...... TIMe:l : •• O. u l.IUICT• 1J.1111t1c1 un.e. A~-ts.7'1.
Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Tuesday, Auguat 18, 1981 Cl
Lot ~Mlto• •••ndtnt• .......,. ..... ,1
~•n
K......-H.n ~=t=' l•weT-.
0tftf1YMtf(Nll .....,,...,
utry CM11et
K.-.iCltftt. "_ ..... OHl9t ,.,.,..,
... , ..... mm• tt .... ,. ,.
111 II .. A Ma .. ,. .. ,., ., .... -A". 4tj ••• ...... '" .... Its Ma a
TllAl .. lat
•&w-""'····· ... CNne......._... ewe-. .. 11..,,.w.tdl
lt\IW9it Htn'lt Oel' .. tMIM\ltltr ..... ~
J9M"""' ICe HllC-
Ptvl-'-
... 111 ... .. ,,., .. .. -.. . 1M • rt ,.
160 • t1 w
'" " JI " .. " 14 ..
"' n w • Id U rt U
.. tt IJ It "' . " ..
Cane:,i~.: ~" l.. I .................
EI ... Ttttaclltt .... Vljey AltlrttrtJ, 1 ...
.. 2. W ; tv.,. 1.tMI .... tfllomo Oll<llJlltlll,
J-1, .. 1,M . ............. Le ... clef, Telta<hef, W , ... (&AMI wlfl&
S.U,OOD; T•lb<._,.'1•.-0). .,......,, ....
llltwl ltt1t1lret•l'trdl Ttyttn Mf. J.iwi
Mc E...-...... Fltmlftt, l•, 1•, M ,
ATP tournement , .. ~.o-J ...................
Hffelf ~ *'• P .. DIJPH, •J. :M.
.,,, "--" ICrl-*'· ..... H~
.... W ; Ill_. SI-clef. ~
etdel, M, •1, •1; ltlcll F ... I .... .....
F•ltl, M , U , .. J ; Jdl" IWAltt .... 1Ctri11
K•rnt, .. 2 ... ,; MIU Celllll at. Jtltll
Fltrewtlll, M , 7•; ltty ~ *'· "-'
Avla. 7,., •·J; Mtr<ell FrH"'tll wt. ........... M9wt'1, 7•, M ; ........ a.-
def. Nici! St'll-. 7•, M ; Je,_ .........
ditf • .HM 9erowltll, U , W , M ; Sttfl Srl\ttlt
wt. PllC.t4 ""°""· W , W ; 111• Ht.._*"· Brtcl 0.-. ...... ,;Thierry Tu•--· lllolendSltdlOr, .. 1, 1-41,-tuH.
Men'• tournement , ....... ) ................. Cloli>.._,_.~Alt.-,M,M;
JoM Otv141 def A.iWld Amrltrtl. 7 ... •1;
JOM H._ ... -'-Smftll, t•, M , 1.._
Women'• Cenadlan Open
C.iT-1 .. .,... ............
lkttlflt ...... def. cetfly Tt,.,,.tr, .... •1, 11199 .... Mtr$Mlovt def. SNton Wtllf\, H. •-4, .. ,; a.tty""" Deftldef. Ctrol ~.
•2, .. J ; It-e1twit def ......... Wtlll«,
•·2, 7•; Di-. -lM clef. NIN a1tnd, M ,
•J; GlynltColetdef. Dlt-Fronw>lb...i,
2•, •I; lllou!Yft Ftlrtltnllt def. Mer,.,_
lltt<ll-. 1 ... w.
U.S. emeteur championehlp
O..tttyttle .....
(M......,. M .... C-., c-. CIH91
14 -o ... 1d BNttv 1Lt9WN Hlllal. 1w 1: 8r1tfl U......., Cl'oultttl" Vt lleyl, .,_,,,
IQ -Mtrtl llltllely ITt,.,,,..e City), .,_14; Ben StrN lllllvertld9l, 12·71.
I .. -Joflft e11r11te IC.It MIMI, 7HJ; 8111 Viele l....,_..1, n -12.
lU-lttftdY Dr•• <Gltftdortl, 12·71
14' -_,...., Or\lnd ILAK Afteitlesl. ~1'.
Alternele -10 -Ml<ll•el ¥Ilea cc..-1.n.n.
CAtS.-.., ~ Ullilt 1w -~c:.tt C~8"c111.n.n.
World Cup ro1ter• , ...... s..t .... l u .. 1TaDS;TATll -lot--<.trf .._.., Ul\IWrMfy ...........
-----111'11111,.,._ Unl.,,.rtlty of T-; --.Cliff Wiiiy, D.C. lflterNllofttl TrtCll
Cl•; toO-Jt"'" lllolllftSOfl, l11Nr Clly
Atlltell< Cl .. I>; ISOO-Sydney Muff,
VIII-Ufll-.lly; si-1111<11t_...,.,
Merill, AU.lt11ct WHI; JOC».-Mttt c.n-
lrowltl, ...... Ycwtt;'10,ooo-.Altieno S.-.
Ul\lvenlty of 0re90fl; n•~rdl~
Foster, Sfttlllte Trtell Cl"I>; _ _,__
lctwt.,-..S, U0Unt HUit.
.-relay-Mel l.ttttny, Unlv•rally af
Geor9l1; Sl•nley ,.loyd, Ul\lverally of
Hew1t111; James St11ford, U11lverllty tf
So•tlttrl\ Ctlltornlt ; c:trt l.•wla; .Htf
~II•; t.ac><etey-Welter McCoy, F**
Stt .. UN~y; Wittie Sfftltlt, A!Metk Al·
tk Trell O..; T111y Otr...,., l'tll ......
l"ltMer Cl\a; Cltff Wiiiy, EclWln --;
Hltll l1t"'P-TYll• PH<ock, ~le
JIH'llor Cell ... ; l"ol• veutt-llllly Ol-
l"t<Nk CtMt C:-; LM1C1 I~ llWll;
Trlple j~ll .. llMl!a, Atltll'llU w.t;
SNI llUl-0.w I.tut, AIMelka Wellt; De. cu~ ...,_,, Allli.tlc Attk ; H_..
au•o~• -1to-A11111 Wells, lr1t1111; a.-Alltfl w ...................... .,,,,.. .......... ....
Ge rMtny; MO-ltl>tttltn c;oe, lrlWll\. ,.__... o....t, ......... StM~ ...,.._ MttN..al, ,..._; ~
C09111.,., l,..lllNI; 10,-....Mtrttl Vt l111t,
F l11te11•; l lt llurdl•a-tve11 J1tll111,
CH<lttlltlftlll•; 400 llurcllH-Htrtld
kllm1411, w.et o.r-.,.
-r•tey-l(ryutof two11111111. ...,_, z-L.kMNrul, Pottfld: 1.eut11 1>un1c111.
l"oltfld; Mtrltll wwonlll, Pol-;...._
P111a. l'rtroe•; Allen Welts, Brltat11; 1•
rel•Y-t '1rnut We .. r, WHI OerMtny;
D•11141 JllM .... , Brlltln; Altona erydtftl>tcll,
.... tum; Irle Jot)oe, S-, K-GI·
Jll>e,., Holltftd; Herald k ltmllft, w .. 1 Oermtnr.
Hltfl ~d H ... I, W"t ~y;
Pole Vtlllt~ Mkllel .. lltl, FrMCe;
L. .... J__._,.RIO S&tlmt, H~; Tri-
pie I-.... 9111\IM, H ...... ry; ,,_t ..,.._
"'" "9Cc:MMtcll, --Oer-y. 04-'"''k ll .... Cztclloftov .. 1-. H--~ ............ ~ . Jtftllt!-~I Stfwt"_,I, Fin ltftll .•
111-,,...-J ... LUia 001\ttl .. , S.-1.,,
De .... MIOrer Iii\. ertteln. --100-UllM Heel..,.., s .... n; ,.,, ........
l(retoclWl...,t, c.dloN011tlllt; 400 Jtrmll•
ICrelocllvllovt, Czt<lloatovelllt; ,.._
loltlltt JtnUClllt, Pot-; l,._A,.,. 11111111.
Poland; J,o!D-Mtrklct Puke , 111°"*11•;
100 _.._'-'KIM u,...r, Pol-; 400
llurd--..<;t ...tt Bltll.MI, .......... * reltr-Ketlly Smtll•OOd, erlttln;
Wendy Hoyte, Brlltll\; .. veney Ge4111iwd,
•rtttlfl; $11111ey Tllorntl. erlttl11; J ........
1Cret0<lt•ltove, Clt<llotlove k.lt; 1.11141•
HegtlifMI, Swedel\, 1600 ••l•y-Jermlte Krttocllvllove, C1ecltotlovtlolt ; G•lly •-. w... Germany; Jocelyn Ho~ S"'ttlt, Brlltl11; VeroM Elder, Brlltl" •
Mlcllellt Scull, Brittin; Clt ... le S .... r,
.... (;erm91y.
Hltfl l"m-Ulrlk• Motertll, Well
0erf'lltflY, L.tflt jump -Mnt W~ryil •
l'oltnd; lll9t ""' -...... Fl.......,...,.,
Cu c"-lovtlllt; Dlecus-Mtrlt ""'k°"'•· Bwtaer••. Jtvtllll-AftlNMlt T ...........
Blll(ltr'lt .
R-.-Flte L.ovln, lllomtnlt.
0..., Ma flahlng
IJllWPOlllT CArl'• l.tedr .. 1 -tts .,. ..... , ......... u -· 117 ........... rocll fi.t\ • -,.ti-ttll. co.....,., '---'1-,_ ~' .. '*"·· ......... ,. cetlco ...... J .,.llowttll, IS> rtcll cad, 4M
mte:llM .. .
DANA WMAllf' -tt7 tfllle": 12A "-•
110 ll9fllto, 1 .,.._ .. ,, • rec11 ""'· m mte:lltrel.
IAM DlleG CMllM L.taet ... "llllff·
.............. '--1 -•10 ...... "' d ~ 1,• .,.e...u11. n-r• ..... 1,1'1 ............... _... __
1AJ161Ma0M-110.,....,..,a 1.,.c.41,
7 IS -. "" rot1I. GOii, IOI rt41 red! '941. 1'
"'-· MO .. tO UY CVtre•a ........ ) -SJ
.,..i.n: t ti,. <*I. 1• ,.... nldl c• .a
-··""'*~ AVIUUY ,.,_.._ ..... l -.. tfltltn:
.. red rt<ll COd, Jiii yell-0.1 .. 41' ......
l>tU, 2 llfto Ged, t• Mt<k: .....
IANTA eAaeAlllA -'7 tflllltn: *
ctllco 111 ... SJ bonito, 11 roo 11111, 1't
mt<lltrel.
VIWT\111.A -120 ...... ": 210 rocll ct41, 12
,_ ct41, 4 11119 <ed, JDS <Ilk • 11111•, 2llD -
l>tu, U rocll """· s lltllOut. s wrecwde, '1 _, .. , 100 mtellerwl.
1.01110 BIACM C .. 1_1 Plwl -41
tftOlert: «IS rocll fbll, • ~-.1. • ltfl4I
...... loe-'• M.trll -17 ...... "' s .... ,.."' u.. > .,.itowt.t11, 20 -r• ..... tn
11on11o,,,. ce11eo 11a&. 1 .-..._, m rec:11
11111.
DANA wttAaF -227 tfllle": 12A l>ta,
120 """'"'· 1 .,.1-111. • rocll 11111, m nitelltt'9I.
OCIANMOI -Mt efl9le": 1't llanlto, • ctll<o ...... S7 Mlftd ...... , r«lt 11 ... 116 mac-.
Mondal'.:.:•naactlona ULI. .___ .......
Dl:TlllOIT TtGEltS -Pltee41 CM ....
SumtNrl, _........,Oft ... ls.My ---
YovrtffdYoo ~
..... """"' .. MM1Y C.tll ... ~ ...... ...... ==-. "-" ._ ............ ~
....... L...-1.06 ANOll.H OOOOl1t• -..._ ..
o....., Ullla. ..... ---·--1Mity ......... ltte. CAii ... -......... _....
MIMW\ fl'IM a.. All_.. .. tllil T•ut
TL.Ou .. CAllOINAU-•--..
,__.. ..... r.._f/ltM~• ..... "-',_ '-" ........... .__, ..... .,..u.
......... 2 .......... ...
ICAHIM CITY KIHOI -11..-CllfolWI -..-.~ POO'rUU. .......,......L...-.
eAl.TIMOlll COLT• -C1tl lt•11 it~ --.iw •: Oet ... Jeo-'*'Y. _. IC.itll JeMIM, ~ ... .._
~-.,.. 06t&. ....... 1. ...... lttjvr9d .. _ ..... Actl ........... sit-........ .
CMlc;AOO e&AllS OlllltlM41 lt4Ky CMrMI, ... , ....... ,,,..,,. ..... ~
CNrlWt Ill t Ir-Ctftdil'-1 ...., °"""'" mtllirit-9Nt• ....-. Clll Dew e.c ..... JM T~<lt tlMI Wt.,tforf OtlM$. ...
'•"•Ive l>tClla; Jt• Nto"•"• Tim 1111...-... ..... ., Mufti,., ., ...... .,..
Clltrll• Ttyl.,, wlM rKtlvert; lttftdy 0.19"r, tltM ........... Slf'll4*0I, ,,...,. ~-· .... ...,_, ........ llMf'Nl!I, tNi ICefl .__...., ,_.,., •
CIN<;IMNATI llHOAU -Clll 0..-.
Tw-, r.-l"t ~II. Mtrll O'C-'I, ~IM Tom 91,,.., ....... klltr
OIT..olT 1.IOHS -c;.,. Dewie SI-.... «.,.. c.e.11..-.c11tn, arwa ,.......
t111111l11t Nell; Otfl Htrfy, otte11alve
,.,,.,,_, tfld OtvW Mar1l11, *'-I,.. llecll.
OltEEN eAY PACIClllS -Cwt JI"' o--9rttfl GtlWtl. llNOl<lltn; ~ Perry .. Hort<• ....-11 ..... ...._1 ... liltell•;
MIU ~-. _,i...-.Cll; SC.... ~ llief't, i.:111<1: Kit 1.t""et>. *'-Ive t.llle;
.._,, Klmbtll, •Ide tKtlver, •nd Tl'Of
T....,._,~vetM.
KANSAS CITY CHll,.S -$ltlNd Jtcll
ltll4'Wf, (;tflller, "two_...,., <lfllrlKta.
Clll W9YM Wt...,ntllOft, ....,d; WtYM A#t-,.,_, ,.._k llM; .......... 11 .... titr;
Terry lAW. _...'I': Gerelel ktn, ltCJll9,
tnd MIU~. qutrterllt<ll.
MIAMI DOl.~IHI -Cut Meve Fwl.,.., Ueflt -; _.,.. McltM, .... ,_.,_;
Nt .. ......,_, end 9111 S.rcey, ~ ...
t t Clll••· el\d Miii• M1trt1ll'I' ........ _..
P hirOWSlll, llNl>tCll•••· l'lte•• Delwl11
w1111-. r\IMll"l lltcll, °" uie ,...,.,...... .... .......,, .....
MINNESOTA VIKINGS -Cut 1Cew111
Miiier -It.., McCtll, wlelll rkel...n; 1(911
Hern., ....W"9 11«11; Brlwi Wllllt1t11, 1"'91
-; Mlllt G-. jllec.llk ller; 8" F•rt,
QUt rterllt<ll; ltl<lly 111.0lnton, Otfen•lft
tt<kle; Mera.a Finher, GorMre.tclt, IM
Ltrry ..,_, Mftity.
MEW ENGL.AHO PATRIOTS -........
Alltfl Oetll tfld ltl<ll Vlllelt, r..-1 .. MCIU,
-GwY Wl'ttf'tl. ...... -· °" u .. 111i-, ... ,,,. 11a . Pit< .. s1 .... S<lllf\411ff, .,,
l•fltlv• 9u1rc1. encl Berry 8ur9et,
ll~M<. °" U. reMrve-41..._t·-1
lllt.
NEW YOltK JETS -Cut llotl Wl'*tl, ..
......, ....... ; ....., ll«lotl, .......... JeMs
eflcl Ted Blt<ll-41. r-1"9 lltcllt; uo-,.1
J-1. w40t r«elver; -H-.t, '9fMr; Miiie ,..,_,, llaM Mel, Miiie Br~.
llMtlt<llM, "'-'II Sir .. -. -Ctrlot ~
cl••-· ..,_Ive bt<lla; Altfl ••-· lt<lllt, .., Oeftny ~. ~.
Pieced Merion.., .. ,. run11l119 l>t<ll, Oft IN
l11jurtd r-11•1 .
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS -Cut J.tf Mcin-tyre, II,.,._. Ptactct Jot Mtrllt tfld lton
Coder, ~ .. -·· end Jim JtlMr • Vince l'Mtller'°" -0,.. l-. wldt,.. <elven. Oft Ille i..1ur ... r-rve llat.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS -Cut lllk ll
Ptr1rlc19t, .....,.., , Mitt Pet1'%ellle. ~
ttckM; Jtell S...,._, •IClll receiver,~
Wtlloll, ..... b•Cll.,. Rob l'r•tt•"·
QlttrtfftlKll, -Rot> Treytor tn41 Tl"'
Peru, defemlve 11-. l'lt<ecl Jofln Jflf·
~. wldt receiver. Oft Ille r__.... net.,,..,, llst; Clltrltt DeJ~ • ..-ive ....... Cit!.,.. ~yaktlly-~ perform lht, end Sfev• Wllllm111,
ll11ebt<ller, °" trw ••Mrv•·-·f-.. 11·
'"''"' list. SAN FRANCISCO •UlllS -Cut Dool
W--ltey .i-1, r-11\0 lllCIU; Mle 0-N, ..... -..Iller, Hef11 Wlllltmt. .....
ly; ,.,..,, &Kii. plt< ... k ller; J-• ~.
tllcl L.ttry Btrller, llMl!lt<llen; Du"'-
Mtnfltll, .......... 1.t<lll9, .... e 111 --· ltc:ll.19. t<td Ptlll Frefl<ll end 1111 ......
; Erl< He.,11\0, wide rtctl-;
uda. lt<llle, elld Eel Jo41e,
.., tlW lnjurecl~•Mr . JM~~ret!,1.t<'kM, .........
...... -... W'1''41li; tM Ill . It ...... C.s
----.. ... -,.. 11111. SIATTl£ StlAH ~ -Cut 8 111
G....,.,, ~ ... -; Al H~ Jim
St-. rlH'l"l"9 l>t<llt, TerTy Re ...... .
.................. .JtflMNI, ............ .
Plt<ed L.trry Br-. r..-1119 lltcll, Oft Ille
l11llW9d-II.It.
TAMPA llAY llUCCANt:EltS -Cul~·
real -Y . ...,_.,..,,.. lltcll; Jot -· clet•Mllle llMMtl\, •l\d Herl> --rdl,
pltcekklltr. Pit< .. Ill.,..,., Crowder, ltcll•; Mtttl Qlltriey, ltletY; Tony $tl'l'luel .. ,..,..
-· -Jt<lllt "-"· wide rctl-, Otl Ille t11j11red r eHrve lltt. l"lecect W•I
llloll9tta. clef-Ive ...... Oft the Ifft <-r.tervelllt.
WASHINGTOH REDSKINS -A<qul,.... l H 5-tvey, oft-Ive ............ fr-...
Detroit u.. ... <oridltlofttl 1• •tit
<!!eke. Cul Hef'D $tlel\(er, DellH HtcJufttll
-a1tt llMU, 11"'"9<11tn. Ille F.w ..... ~ ..__, r-"'f lltcka; JetrTy HIH
-Jeflll MtDeftltl, wide rtcelft"; llllc:fl
DI"'..,• *"-Ive l.t<lll9; Terry ... ....._ Cfllf2
11•rt»tell; lrltn Speelman •rod Stndro
VHlellO, llitQllkurt, -o. .. Sfftl .... y, llWIW. "'-Id Ntll Ei.lllre -De ..,_.. Wtll1,.,_....eflcts,-J-a~
oefentl .. becll, Clfl ,._ lnjuto4 ,_..,... II ..
Pieced lllty W-y, <-"-<II, Oft tlW,..
.. ~tty._...,..,.,.rlorrl'l lkt.
CCK.LIOI
ATLANTIC COAST CONl"ElllEMCI: -
Ntmtel l"red e..t11t1 _,,._of -
e.tlloftlcltl$.
elttDGEl'OltT -Hemecl ..... ..,_ .... ., _ __.l<Otcll
£AST TENNESSl:tl STATE -HtfN4I C. Dwolll _,_ tttlleolk direct•. eflot<-
Stpl. 1 •
PFEll"FUI -N-J-L.elltl llMll btill .... I eot<ll.
f'ICTITIOUI 9UMNlll I' U I' I It t O It C O U It T O F llAMalT•TaMlllfT C Al.ll'OltNIA, COUNTY OF
Tiit ftl'-1"1 ..., ..... ere dot,. OllA"91 •
l>ldl-•: '" .. M9ll9r .... ~ .. 1.AOUHA SOFTWAlllf! lo IJIOUYIN, T'MI DIA flw CMee11 ti
DI. YOO
A<<••-•I ChlrOll'«IK
• ., ... ~N«•-Y
770.5251 C>nN IVUI WffltfN~
1101 l.Mlf fOIUT Oll"1l
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
u.lted
Choke Seats
SRISALE
aad
SUMllEI
CLl!llABCE
-
CONSUL TING, , ... C•ttlln• st.. Ill•-·
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ti 111 • SCart9 n.n,, .. .,... 20
(loo!< fet QUr td on Thu" I
lrvlM, Gt. "'714
'1111 Wll-ts <INIKled l>y t
NGUYEN, THI DIA lltt flltcl t petl-
tlClfl In IN c..t for M •d9r tllowlfto
petllloNf 1e ~ rwr ·M,.,. from -------------
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No. J t\ 700 c;lvk Center Drtve w.-.
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P'Oll CMANa Ofl NAMa .. -.................... .. 714-752-0960
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l"AUI. OAlllaN WOOl.OltlDO• '-
11 .... llelllMfl Ill Ht~.., ... •·-------------.. , ................ , .. dlMe9 111111· l'ICT1T10UI IUltNHS
lltr "'"'• trem PAUL OAltaN MAMlllTATIMa .. T W00L011110011 t.t PAUi. OAlllllJI Tl\e loll-lllf ..,._. ere ctol"f
YOUNG. l>lttl-•:
ll ll""""'Y-*tW .... all...,_ 1tt W..t WllMft ~---. 12'
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Oran~ Coast DAIL y PIL.OT (Tu
,\.~\
...._,,~
~' Books tell
estate facts
DEAR PAT DUNN : Wh re cun I get ln·
formation 11bout a llvln1 trust? I'm
particularly Interested in any benefits this
muy have for a husband and wife with no
children.
E M .. Newport Beach
AVS know• of two excellent booka on
Hlate planning. Tbe flr•t, "Plcnnln1 Your
Eat ate Wllb Willa, Pl'oba&•, Tru1&1 & Tues,''
by Denis CUrtord, 11 pubU1bed by Nolo Pre111.
U contalna a wealth of &e1al information
about living truats, planal•I to IJmlt la·
herttance and esta&e cues, alternatlve• to
prob•~. making a wUI ud provldlog for
chUdren. I\ per11on'• rllbt to die aad lecal
rights to a funeral of bl• or !Mr own cbolce
also are discussed In detall. C'beck for thla
volume ln bookatorea or order from Nolo
PrHs, 950 Parker St., Bertelt'y, Calif. M710.
It costs SIS plus tu and 85 cents posta1e and
bandJlng.
The other book, ''SettUDg and Safe1Hrd·
Ing Estates In California Without an Attorney
-With Forms," by CUve HJnckley can bt
purchased In a bookstore, or ordered for II
from the author at 106 E. Sunset Drive,
Redlands, Callf. 92373.
Missing persons advice
OF.AH PAT DUNN: Several years ago
you told about some private organization that
helps track down missing persons. Would you
please rt'pN1t lhat tnformalion for me?
0 S .. Huntington Beach
Write to the Salvation Army Missing
P.-rsun11 Buruu, P.O. Box 3847, 101 \-'alf'nda
St., San f'ranclsco 94119.
Restroonis not required
DEAR PAT DUNN Since laundromats
arc used by the public. aren't the) required
lo have restrooms available for customers
du nn~ bustne:.s hours.,
J F . Huntington Beach
No. An Orange County Department of
Building and Safety spokesman says public
restrooms are not required by either county
or state regulations In any building unless It
qualifies as a public assembly structure. Tbls
r e fers to buildings wher e large crowds
gatber. ll may surprise you to learn that
public re11troom fa cilities are not required in
restaurants unleR!'I they are very large, and
"ervice station facilities are mere ly a
rourtesy gesture on the part of station
owners.
Rules 011 guide dogs
DEAR PAT DUNN· l s it true that blind
persons actually do not own their own guide
clogs' If that's the case. who's responsible for
any damage a guide dog might do'
D J • Newport Beach
The guide dog belongs l.o the Ucensed
school that provides It. Any guJde dog user ls
responsible for damagf' done by the dog be or
i.he uses, and all blind persona and trainers
carry identification cards. Gulde dog users
have special rights to accommodate tht'lr
dogs, however. Landlords can't refuse to rent
(o a blind p.-rson who has a guide dog. Also, a
blind person or a trainer can't be refused en·
try lnto a public place, or on any common
carrier or any hotel or place or public accom·
modatlon, amusement or resort when accom·
panled by a guide dog, nor can additional
charges be made because or the dog.
Got <1 prohlem'' Then write to Pat
/Ju,m Pat will cut rPd tape. getting
the answers and action you need to
~olue mequllie.s m government and
busmeu Mail your question$ to Pat
nunn. At Your Service, Orange Coast
Daily Pilot. P 0 Bor 1560. Costa Mt'.sa , CA 92626 Ai
many le/ten o..~ 1J(Jss1ble will be aMwered, buJ phoned
mquanes or letter.~ not including t~ reader's full
name nddre.u and hu.uneu hours' phone number
t·annut t>e considered This column appears datly ez.
cept .\unday~ "
r4CtffC YllW
MIMO•l4L r.UIC
Cerre1ery Mor1uarv Chapel-Crematory
3500Pac1lw V1rw Or1v1•
NeWPOll f!Pat h
644 2700
McCOltMIQ( MOHU.UIH
laQuna Bearh
494 941 5
LaQuna Hill<,
768 0933
San Juan CaP•!.lrano
495 1776
KAUO. LA WK-MT. OLIYI
Mo11u1rv • Cem1Herv
Crerna 10"'
1625 Gisler Ave
Oosta Mesi
'40 555•
"MCI HOTHIH
llll llOADW 4 Y
MOITUAIY
I 10 8roadwtv
Cos1a Mesa
8'42•9150
a.1..n11••••0 ..
SMITH 6 TUTHILL
WHTCLlff CHAPIL •21t 17111 St
Co11a Mesa
S•f'-9371
Sleep key
to living
TOKYO (AP I Not
worrying and plenty of
s leep arc keys to living
to 100, claims a survey
of 1,009 Japanese cen·
tenarians.
The survey, com ·
missioned by the Health
and Welfare Ministry.
report e d most or
Japan's most·se nior
citizens attributed
longevity to a relaxed.
r egulated pace. Many
also said they practice
good diet habits and
JUccd raw fish. a com·
mon rood in the
Japanese diet.
The life expectancy
rote in Japan was 45 at
the tum o( the century,
but the Japanese now
are amona the world'11
oldest Ii vJ ng peoples.
Pll.JC Illa
TIDAT'I CIDSSlllD PVIZLI
ACAOSI 7 e 11auan eo1n MtOtN 31 8ul lAt 102 kl>Of t llrenQf! 17 Dutch 100 Fr" (Of) 33 Prlellly Pod Croat Palnl9f lnfftUt• 181 Smllll :M Wal.ti name 103J&paMM 8 DIP• or 79 Thal ,, \/llleyt 3e Hlllr Colt coin dlt>blea 80 ,,om the 1t3 lnlqullout 37 Furtout 1oec1nci.t 10 Mll\41~ mou1h 188Append1199 39 ~-elate 108 o\/.,llulf 1' Hurrlea 83 lurd4tned t87 Currani •2 ~1r~unll lot Alweyt1 19 Wtlll• W1M HCrollk lbl>r UF~pert 110 H.,a.tll 20 Part ol O!D 87 Snar• Arch i Ge Concealed •e Flth~t t130lan1 21 Mhla 89 Brllllh ttllor 189 Sllanklf't 48 R41c>roo t15Cl't1r~ keywonh 90 Tuelt'1 pat muele word part le .. 22 0.IMtlva 92 Tedtovl 171 Aunt1. In 50 e.1i back 11e C1mp1no obllaale monotony Madrid 51 S.yolld: lhallatl 2• MlllKI'• eon 9• Armedltlo i12 For"i god Pr1I. 121 Truman'• 25 Tiny amount H Under· 17• You· 11. 53 FOOlball ttom.iown 28 NMdl•bug ground 175 Jal alat, In POI 124 Verb lorm 27 LOH PHMl)9t Spat" 55 Propr .. ty 125 Roman robe 28 Vigor 09 S~ltary 177 Projaet 57 Calclum 127 R-c1rei 20 F'rtnctl tOO Argum.ni1 t74Common tymbol 128 A1teno1ng ar11ci. t~ Man'ename IUfflx 58 Petty 130 Explode 30 Pr•llx wllh 105 Shoe 111e 179ManlfMI quarrtll i32 Humorlti Pl .... Ot i07 8acllcomb1 191 o.mi,,.. 59 Rip 13' F xcl1mallori Mltlfy 1 t 1 Affttcilon 182 Highway 80 Branch t35 Mayday! 320..tro~ 112 Doctrine dl\/lct.r 6t Digraph i37 Mllllary maNelOutly 11' Twllll1 1113 o.11 bread1 63 Heert IM<* 35 Cav1lry torclbly t84 Blblk:al llgn 65Of11001 138 8001 Old IWOfd 11e Plural DOWN 66 Gamino Eng 37 With Q., .ndlng t Nsuiic.1 1mp1.,.,,.,, 11 i40 Contrl ..... 38 Cllyol I 17 Hall Ltl 2 Chem1ea1 67 Historic: 142 Frtgmenl ManUMh I 18 1nienw11v• IUl11X periods 1~ Co111 AO Wheel tfleOll 120 Indigo 3 AHNI 68 Cutting
14'4 ""'" 41 Smooth t22 Toaapo1 4 P11ron1199, tool• 145 0 11 or •°"ii 43 8row1111h 123 0et111v1 cry protection 71 Conaume 146 Rool th9de 125 Prl1119f t !! MongOI 73 Flags 1Uppot1 4• Spotted le1m w1rrlor 75 01 lhe note 148 Ctrd gem• CI Y'f 12e " ,_ 6 Indicated Lal 150 Picnic petl 45 Puao11« 1:ze Youno11., 1 Rec:llon 78 Heedlike 151 Grab di™* '' t Juet bOUllhl I APotlOllC structure 152 Europ11n 47 Soak nax ''3 Subdue• 9 A11e11get 79 Growing out craouat 49 Pr•ttlng 138 PHa11 10 Swtpped 8i 81Mbell I (>4 (l.C.tr omc device t37 Lollo •nd DI an Old club delec:tor 51 Auto style l>OIO (81 2 word• 82 Recuna lilt! NOt lht
62 In ''"°' ot 13g '•mu., 11 Wt1ffl edge 84 Ov•111ct Cl••OY 54 "lloP m91nb41f I 1 Monk1h()()(j 8!'1 ~111wa111n 158 0.Cef\/H 58 Satt~tei 14 I CO\HI 13 Bullllghttt i "'e 181 Song 57 Sllc:e "2 f!IHh llO<lc.I 14 Poe• bird 88 ott tootJ 162 Texllle 58 42nd and 146 l90l1tator 16 ~Ur1<111 r9d 91 u..u ...01 lebrk: M11ln 141 Coagu111111 powder 93 Te11cti.,·1 104 Estimate 82 Gum1hoe 1411 Slit 16 t ccenlrlc OP 185 RHCU41 8' Fiber knot 15:) Mel•y whHI llt. Naphrll.. 1611 Fireplace 65 Holldey <l•gger 17 And l at 117 Pr11M11lly P4IO h1ppeo1ng1 154 Sprinted 18 D111lt ot g8 Droop 170 W11pon 69 Dote 155 0 11 Romen quarlt 100 lmm•IHI 173 Nothing 70 Pronoun COUii Ill Ool<lto btHtfly 176 Behold! 72 Mtte awtn 157 Baille Finn Tou1.h 'lllng IOI Thll OM"l 180 Con11nen1 74 N...,ade city 159 ro11101 23 Luelle! l It Abbr
SEE CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR ANSWERS
PUIUC MOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUSINllSS
N-1 ITATIMINT The fell-11>9 per_, It dotnQ bull .......
1RlllOL.IT e. AJSOCIA TES, 1J0t
Dove St , N•-" &etch, C• '2MO Randell &ugene Trlbolet, 11
Herueoo. '"''"'· c:.. '2114 Tlllt llU9!11Ull It <-ltd bf an In· div..._.,
R..-11 E T•lllolel
Tllll ilal-1 .,_. 111.0 wttf. llW
county C••~ of Or-County on July
Jl,ltel .... , ..
PllOllW-.cl Or-C.ouil O•llY Pllol A\1111 4, tt, It, U , t•t lolJ+.I
ruauc MOncE
l'ICTITI~ au""'"
N-ll STATIMllilT
T II• followln9 p.,1on II dol ne
1>11•1,,..su
PUBLIC M0nt£
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINl!f>S STA HMl(NT 01' AaAHDONMI HT
H-1 STATIMllNT 01' USll 01'
Tll• lollow1,.g """'"' ere doing l'ICTITIOU' IUllHIH NAMI bullneM as: TM foll-Ing Offtont ,,_we •tltn t t ) N A T I 0 N w I D E OOMd ,,.. uw of the Flctltlou• 81111 PROFESSIONAL SYSTEMS/01 ,,.uN.,.,,.
HASCO. I JI NORTH AMERICAN VIDEO MOME~. 10011 GerflolO
SUPPLY co ,,, COMMUNITY "'•• .. HuntlnQlonB•e<ll,CA.,_ BUILOING MAINTENAHLE. PO Pll lllp H McNem ... 1119$
lo• US4l, S."t• An•, C• tllOj, "°' Mc Dermott, l,..•ne, C•ll•ornle •1114
So M.lln SI , S.nt• Ana, Ca. tllOI O•lt Slmbro, UlO Stflta,,.11• Ttr·
Mk.,_. Victor Lucl•no, 1UD So. r.ce, CorOl\a Otl Mer, Calllornl• Ur.JI
L• Ir .. , I.AK A,..les, C.. «IC>lt Thia ""'Inns •es '°"°ucted lly •
Tlllt ia.lnuu Is conducted by an '" limited per1nenlllp
dlvi-Dei. Slmbro
MichMI V Luci-T "'' •t.temen1 ••• '""" with lhe Tiii• •I.ti-I w•• llled wllll "'° C°""lf Ci.rk of Or~ CO\lnty 011 J"'' Covnlf Cterll al Or-County on JYly t4, 1te1 JI, 9''1 "MIU l't67D1 Publlv.d 0r•ft9f Coa\I Dallf Pilot,
Puot1\/Wd Or-CoHt Dallf Piiot •119 11 11, H, 5tpt I ttet ltO!Mt
Aug •, 11, ti, U , t•1 )Q:}~
PUIUC MOntE
tU1taa1CM1c;~.,0, T"I
tTAT8 0,. CALIPotlNIA
ftO• TMI
C~HT'Y O,OllANOI ......... uo·n 1 ooooT•••. °" ....
"°"C8 Of' '9Vl'tt8 .. SAU . .,. ....
Tt ... Tll•t•l APNO~U 0..1~ !ti t, .. 11.A.M, ,,, .. ·--... .... '"* ~. " f\lly ~* lr ............. .... c;-Me twtM ,.,,.._ t• 0.0. fll Trwtt ..... I M8y
lfO'flC8 01' tALa 1'1t _... 11 J-1m, •• 11191 N•
01' al AL ,lt0,8 an 1 .. U, 111.._ ltM!J ..... ltt tf Otflelal
Htllu h ller•llY 1 1¥11'1 lh•I illu., .. 111 IN tfflu fll Ult C-y 010110~ D WAllTMAN, ............ lt•<••••r •f o ...... Ce1111tt,
repftt,e11t•tlve ot tPle u\8\e of c.lltw!Ol8, WILL SILL AT l'UaLIC
OLAOYI I OOOOYIAll, Ot<tt-, AUCtlQfi TO HIOHl'T llOD8a
will'"' .. ,,1.,e\e , .... lo Ille 111 .... tt l'Olt C:.UW, C.ASMllll'S CHICIC oa end '-"t bkfldtr, _,the l•tMt encl ClllTll'llO CHCCK, (NYll>le et
<CM'Wlltltn• her•IMtllt1 111.ntl-d, -time • .... In 19Wful _, to! Ille tllllit<I to <onllrm•t1011 llY tl\e Ulllled It.a'") .i I,,. hollll frtnl .i1 ~riot c ... rt. Of' A119WI 21, t•t, e• lra "u lo Ille Old Or..,ge County tt ... M., °' lllefl•ll•r wltllll\ the tlmu Court,_.. ioc.100 111 Ult 100 a1eu ti
•llO,,... ot •••,et IN office of''"' H Wnl $ttlte A.,. llvd 1..,,-m«ly Wett
Ho•-· etton--Y for the p;r•ontl rec>-•111 ti l, Sent• An•, C•lltor .. 1•, •II
rtMl'll•tlw, at ... So, GOHI Hwy, rl9M, ltflt -lnt-91 t-eyuo ti
k . ~. Callfo•11ta, a11111e119111, 11 •lld new held.,., tt..,..... Ml4 OW9 ti
tit, lnltrftl, •"d nt•I• ol the de· Trutl In Ille pr-rty 111w1.o '" seld
CHWd, ~•II tllt rlOfll, tl\1t, lntett•t, County •ncl $1•1• ltt\<rllMll •• 4
and oKlate Illa! Ille h i.tie Of GLADYS L .......... d ••l•le lnt•rett '"•""to·
E GOODYEAR, dee.••-· 11•• t<• l>.IUICEL I LOI lt, Tr•\ 6111, City
Q11lr•d by OP•••llO" of l•w or Of lrYlftl, C-ly .. 0r-.. St•I•.,
01herwlM. ot .. r 111an, or In tddtllon to, C•lllorlll•, •• •llOW" on • m•P ••
tllel of,,,. do<••-· •I lllt time of lier CO<deO ill a-, H.I, P•• IS, 1•, ti
c1e .. 11 111 -10 all 111.11 Ctfltln , .. , •f\d ti, Mlac•ll•-• AMP•, recortt
pro11trw. 1lt1Hted tn t,,. COlll\\y of of Orengo Cbunty, C.lllO<ftlo Or•n9• C•lllornla, d .. <rlbed u PAllCIL 2 A llOft·H <lv11ve 84>-rollOW'\ p.irt...,.t •••ment owr •ncl ecr••
He S, Bl .. L-.oon. IOUled ti JOltt lllt $0u\t.ffltrly J 00 t .. 1 of Lot IO I"
$o Cou•t HwJ, '\Cl l•~. Callrornl•. ..Id tree I tor Pll<'poM• Of dr•lft891 -
otl>Kwllot Oft(flDed ., Trt<I Utl, LOI IOI l'IWllntalnlno '"' Utfflor of t ...
S, Unit S of protect 10<•1.., on AP lltll<tvrtl ••II '°"led -Lot II of U-40t41 ,_.,,., with •n undlvl-.. Id lrecl .OJt<etll to lllls H ltf'llenl
OOlt lnter9't1nL.ot 120 Trvttor or re cord o •"•'
Tiii• WI•" \Ullle<I 10 rulft, r~11I• LAWAENCI( D LATHAM AND
lion• lly L•-of 81 .. 1.•900ft Com KATHLEEH I lATH-
munlly "'"oc,.llOn, inc • ,.,rrent t.. TN tlreut eclMHa and other c-.
et. (O••ne"'' condlllon• rHtrv•-mon CIHlgn.tlon, It .,.y, of tllt r .. 1
1111"•, rlllf'JI• rights ol ••y, ••\<lmenlS, ..,_,, Ottcrlbed -.. la,,.,_,...
ano u l\tlngenc .. mbten< .. ol reconl to be " Mo.,,,,.,,. "'••· ''"'"'• T,,. ttrm• •nd conditions 01 ••le C•llforlll•
are • mini"""" t'S,000 utll down, T"' -nlgned T""'" dlw.lalm•
IMllent• -.,,. term• of w<PI credit •nf 11.olllty tor any ln<orreclftes• of
10 o• •<OPl•D•• to 111e perso"•I Ille ttruet Ndt'•U -othe< common
••P••--••llW -lo '"' Covrt. T.,. d .. i11Nllon, It .,.,, ·-" llereln .,.,,..,, of IN aMOunt Old to •«om-Stl<I Wit wlll be ..-, but wllllOvl
l>ellY the oflff •no , ... 0.l•nt• to be COY-or ••rranty, UP<'•U or Im
peld on "'"'"""'lion OI .. 1. by '"' Plied, •-ding ""•· PCKMUlon, or 'Ourt l ue•, renh , operat1n9 •nd onci.morancn , lo P•Y the i.np•ld
m•ln1-nce Ul>ellM•. -premluma O.len<o oA lrw nocehl M<Vfed bf .. Id
on lnturt nce •< r epta blt to \~t Deed of Tru•t. t•wlt t i• ... '°· 111-
l>UH NM• 1111•11 be prorated •• of IN Clvdl"9 H provlcltd tn .. Id nolettl, .0-
dall OI coriflrm•t1on of w1e Md clow nll<Att, If eny, """'r the lermt of ••Id
ot "'"'°"' 1"" .. am1,,.tlon ol 1111•. •o-Deed of Trvat. 1 .... t Mrge1 •nd u cordlf>9 ot conv•yance, ano •ny 111141 pen ... ol U. Tru11 .. end of the tru•h
ln•11•MI'• p011cv sNlll be al ,,.,. ... <rH leclby .. Id Deed of Trust
1Mn1ot at the pwrtlle•"' TM benellcl•rf 11ndtr wld OMO I/If
61Ch or 011.,, ••• 1nvlled lor 1"1• T rutt heretofore n•c11ted •"d a. pr~ny •no""'" boJ 111 writing and livered to the -.11.-• "''"•" wlll "" •f<••v.d al 1,,. 01110 of Fred Oecl.,allOft al O.la1111 -O.m-N H-. attorney lor U'll person•I lor Salo, ano • ••lll•n Notice of
r•P• .. •"t•tl••, •• :JOIOI So CoHt 0era1111 -Election to Sell TM ..,.. Hwy ,_., i....-. C.allfo•nla, at any dtr1l9ned <•uted H id Noll<t ol
11mt •II•• 11,.1 pul>llc•llon 01 '"" O.lault -Ele<llOft to S.11 to be ro nollt • -Delort m•~•no the sat• corded In U. ,_,,, whet• tllt rMI For 1.,,,,,., 1n101mat1on and Old P•-1Y Is IOc.i.O fr.nt• or e>tr1Y
lorma -'Y ., '"" office of Ille •l· <onCIU<llng WI• TITLI( IHSUllAHCE IO<MJ ror llW 1>1r-.•I r..,..e\trltetlw 41'<0 TRUST COMPANY, IOO N -In
T ... •19"1 •• '"''Vt<! to rljKI ... , St ' s.r.e. ...... CA '2101. IU /tSJ.7010. ano all DI"' JOYCE WILLIAMS
Oaled AUO<l\I I, tttl Date 10 "'-"' Itel ~ee D wartmen TIU• 1-ence -Per_,.I R..,........,l.all•• Tr ... t ~
,, .. N -H WMI T"'""· Atltor,..y ler IJ JOYCE WILLl"'MS
,..,_, R_._.wtlv• ""'._,,,.,, "-'""'
-le. C.11 Hwy Pubtl-Or-Co.•t D•llf Pll04, le . ....._, CA '2411 AllQ tt, U , SotQC 1, , .. , ~1
(lt41-D41
P.,D11\1Wd Or-Co.•I Da•IJ P1lol, "'9lJC MOT1C(
"'uo 11, ,, 11 ••• u~• ------------
f'UIUC MOntE
NOTICE TOCllEDITOH 0, aULll TRANSl'Ell
NO\lce '' heritt>f given to «edllo" ot 1"9 within nalNO ,,.Mlerorhl tPlat • bulk trMlsfer I• •bou• to be m~ on
pers,on•• proper•y her1lnetter
dtt<dC.O
TM NIT'll •ftd l>u.,,,.u -rH s of
IM 1nt..-O t•.,.•l•rorCsl •••
ROBERT l OWEN, 4011 ai.n
lle n1do, San Jua" C•Plllr •no, C•lll.,..nla
TM ,..,.,., •"" \>lnlntts .~,..ss of 111e 1nlondecl t•Mslereel•I are
YOUNG s HYUN, • Olamanle,
lrvtN C•Htorn••
EUN Y HYUN, 9 Olom•nle,
Ir vine, C.llforni.
Tll•l the pr--1y pertinent "''•'°Is 0.K•I-In ........ •• •II stoc• In
tr•Cle • ..-111. ··-........ fu,,.11Vf'9, f I• turet. equt pment. •••sefrrtotd
1n1erHt, .__d lmpro-nt• of
certain wnowocll "--Is louted
ti m11 CMn•no c.c>l•tr-• E·tOI,
wn J ...,., c.p!Jlr-. C•lltornia n.75
TM °'6IMU "•me -by IN said
lransf•rOf(ll •• Wiid •outlon n
THE SU8ST4TIOH
T"-1 .... d t>ul• lr.,,sler I• In\......., \O oe con•ummattd •• , ... office of
Pr~fHSIOnal EKrow S."'l<H, tt71 H
T "'"" .......... Sant. Ana, C•llfornl•
,,IOI, on or •tter S.Otember l, t"1.
Trw...,.... and-"' of the per-.
wit" ""'°"' <1•lm1 m•y .,. flled Is ProleHle>nal EKrow Servl<H, P.O.
80• I 1511, S•"I• An•. Ca lltorl'll•
'1111-1511 •"" lllt '••1 a.y tor llllng c I e lms DJ •"Y creditor sh•ll IM
September 1, 1911, wPllch It Ille
butlnn• ... , Detore Ille "''""mm•llon
date ~lfled at>ov•
D•lt<I A"V"SI 11. t••
Young S. Hyun
EunY. Hyun
'"tended TrMlSler"UI PuOllM'led Or•noe Co.it Delly Piiot,
Aug11JI 11. t'ltl 3712 .. 1
ruauc MOncE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
PEARL MARIE
HAMMER LILL VWHITE
ANO OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A·109l96.
To all h ei r s,
beneficiaries, c reditors
and contingent c re ditors of
Pearl M arie Hammer
Lil lywhite and persons
who may be otherw ise
interested i n the w ill
and/or estate:
A petition has been filed
by Ann M arie Lillywhite
Soper i n the Superior
Court of Orange County
requesting that Ann M arie
L illywhite Soper be
appointed as personal
repre sentative to
administer the estate of
Pearl Marie Hammer
Lillywhite, Costa M esa,
CA (under the Indepen-
dent Administration ot
Estates Act l. The petition
is set for hearing in Dept.
No. 3 at 700 Civic Center
Drive West, Santa Ana,
CA 92701 on Septe mber 2,
1981 at 9: 30 a .m .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting o f the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and s ta te
your objections or f ile
writte n objections w ith the
court before the hearing.
Your a p pearance may be
i n person or by your
attorney.
l'ICTITIOUS .U .. NllH I F y 0 u A R E A "-ir STATllMINT c R E D I T O R o r a TM lollo•lng .,.,.ons •rt doing ...,,,,_.~ contingent creditor of the
Od" FA&. 2:111 w.s1m1,.., .. Aw .• deceased, you m ust file c~10,.w, c. '2621 your claim w ith the court
Vicki L•• Forr••1•'· 2311 or present It to the WHtml,.ter Aw , Ce>ila Mna, C.. nm personal representative
John G••ll•m Forruter, u1t appointed b y t he court
:;:;:mi,.ter Ave · Cott. IMw, c. within four monU'ls f r o m
T11i. """""' '' cond1.c1.o by • the date of first Issuance oe,,...., :,,.~:!'m ForrH~ o f letters a s provided in
MR. ASSEMBLY, llJ E Paultrlno,
Cost• Mew, CA '2•,. FICTITIOUS 9U"NEU NAME STATEMENT
Tlllt U.t-1 ... Hied wttft IN Section 700 of the Probate
c°"n1v0er11a10r-c.-.1yonJY1y Code of Califo rnia. The "~~~!:~!':::' lt, 1•1 time for filing claims w ill
Ti.e 1o11ow1,. ,..._, •• oo•no """ ,..,011_ °'-CoeJt o.i~'~,: not expire prior to four D•nny Reyne Ids, 71111 R aplds,
M11nllftQllOft BMch, CA t7'48. Tiii• _.,,.., 11 conducted by an IMlvldwl.
Denny Rol!C>IOt
TPlls •i.lernent ••• tlled wllh ll>t Co11nty C141rlt 01 0••"9e Covnty on
AllQ t4, 1•11 .. , ....
PllOlltllM Or-C:oHt Dell~ Piiot,
AllQ. II, 25, Sept. I, I, 1•11 i.,._.t
NOflCI TO CO.TltACTOill&
Tiie COA ST CO MMU HITV
COLLt!GI OISTlltlCT 0" OllANOt! COUNTY, C.ALlf'OllHIA. K llflt lly •"d tt1ro119ll "' go ... rnlf\f 8oaro he••DIY otves "°'!« !Mt 111 .ccordanee
11tllfl ECIUcatloll COdt Se<tltn 11..,_S l11-
1erettw con\rec:tll"t ,,.. lnvlt.d lo r•
gltt .. IO be notified Of fll1u,.. lllfot,...I
blddlnct Pffle<lt. II .,... dHlrt te ..
<Ofttldlred, MllMlll. lett.,., ,._..
lo tllo c... c.smmw-•tt c.i .... 01• trlct flvrc"-tlnt ~t-111, 1a10
AM-A-, C .. to llMM, CA tMi.. 11 .. 1c.,..rl
l"\IO!ltflN Or-'°'tt Delly Pli.t, A\IO<lll II, t•t JllUI
T lie tollowlng per\ons an dOll\O
bu•tne\\ a1 A E MEDI COMPUTER, 1111
St.yl•r-Clrclt, Coet• Mew, Calltornl• ,,.,.
411 ... J T Yin, M D., 7717 Skyl•l'll
Clrcl•, C~t• MeH, C•lflcw"'• 91626
El•lnt I(. Yin, '711 Skyl•l'l< Circle, Co•t• Mesa, C•lllO<nl• ,,.,.
Tllll l>USIMH ll <onckKi.d DY •n II\ dlvldu•I.
All.,.J. T. Yln,M.O. ElalnelC YI" This Sltlemen\ w•s llled with Ille
County Clerk of 0r•ll9t County o" July u ..... ,..,.,
P110lllfled Or•nge Co.st Dall~ Piiot,
J11ly 11. AllO. 4, t t, II, "" )J4Mt
PUil.JC NOTICE
,.lc:TITIOUS aUSINIU
NAME STAHM8NT
The followl119 P9«)0ns ••• doing ""''""'' .. aELIA8LE M ESSE H OE A
SE RVICI , 2°'t e .. 1111eu C•nler ~Ive, •too, lrvlM, C.lltwl>I• t17u. Andrew Much11le, Ill, I lllptl•
Cowrt, Newport Buell, Celllor11I• .,~
Jeffrey ~ •• lll"IOe ~ ... ..,.,, 8t«ll, C.llfoml• "661,
Tiiis llwtlnust It concl11014I lly • .. nursl .. rtnunlllp. ....._ M9dlwt8, ru
Tiii• --1 •• Iii.I WWI .. Cevnty Clef~ to! Ot.,,.. c.-tv Oft A119 14, 1"1. .... ,.
~ltlllO Or-C... Ofl"Y '11et, A1141. I .. U, ..... 1, I, 1•1 »OMI
"'" •s •110 •• "· ia, u. , .. , u:i...1 months from the date of Ctl MICRO PURE, UI MICllO. th ..... i ti ed bO PURE WATER PU1ttFtCAT10 H J e ,..,ar ng no c a ve.
SYSTEMS, m Liiac L•"•· Cost• PUii.iC NOTICE YOU MAY EXAMINE
Me ... c.. mv -----------the file kept by the cour1.
R-rt Rev cioou, 111 Lll1t< 1.n ,.,c:TITl"'"S aus1w••• If you a r e Interested In the CO,Jla Mn4 C. '3621 ., w ,. ..
Tlll•Mlnuu1sconouc1edby•n l... "-ISTATaMaNT e s tate, you may file a
d1v•-•110DWI "· c;1t1en ,,.!~';'"'-'"' p;nc.' '' c1o•no 111111• r equest with the court to
:'fc NORCO ASSOC••TES, ,.1 oo... receive s pecial n ot ice of Tlllt JIM I••• filed will\ Ito th • f County c141r11 Or•noe c°"n1" o11Jwty st .. Newport 11Mc11. c.. ttwo e inve nto ry o estate
l1, 1•1. ""':'.:~.~~,'1,!.~~~7,!''botet, 71 assets and of the petitions,
"'•1• Thi• 111is111ns 1s conducted by• accounts and r eports ltubtl-Ore1191 Coen Delly ,.,lot d lbed I Se I 200 Aug. 4, "· "· u. "" ,.._., 11m11ec1p;rtne~1... escr n c t on 1
PllllC MOntE
,ICTITl~I aUSINllH
,_AMll STATeMINT
T,,. followl"g person• •rt dol"o
llllOUH;
t!XCLUSIYI! ,.RESINTATIOffS,
•S4.S Lot All.eos Bhrd., • 11", L80VN Hllls,C.A~
CLYOI HUUT, 2~S Lot All-.
• 11•, ~ Hllll. CA ..SJ SUSAHA HtlUOKA HUUT, '4~
Lot AlllOI 11..0 , 121•. l8tllN Hiils,
CAt~
TPl!i Ml""' 11 c~ Oy •n 111-
dlvldutl.
Cl ..... NllVI
T11l1 llW"-1 •ff fllecl wltll ,,_
CeiilllY Cle•ll of Or•noo' ~Illy ..
A119. 4, 1 .. 1 ,..,,_
l"liOll-Or.,,._ CMll Otlly "tot.
Allf. II, 11, ts, $9tlt i, "" ~I
R.ndln e. Trlboltt of the California Pro bate Tlllt NI-I •ff filed wltll IN
County Cl•rll o1 0r.,.. Courrty on July Code·
11, t"'· Jay C. Munns, Attomey ""'* at Law, 1136 Serenade PuOllSllH Orenot Coett 0.lly ...... A w t c I CA Aug. 4, 11. te, u, "" M1M1 venue, ff ov na,
---------91790; tef. (213) t11-01U.
PllUC 1111C(
l'ICTIT10US aUllNIUI
NAMll ITATllMeNT The IOllO'#lllO .,.,_ Is doing busl·
llUU H
ClC SEllVICIS, Sia Upper
Nlwllff\ Pl.au 0.lve, N-il0f1 8Mch,
C•lller!N t2* ·
Cetllerlnu \..,Ito CoCtretl, Ill• Clr-
u o W•y, ~ ••etll, c;.111onoi•
tt•SI
Tiii• b\&1-I• <el!Mlltd 11\' .,. Ill·
dlvldllel
C.t,.lne Co4trell
Tlllt tlotWIMftl -• llled wltll ti. COllnh• Clertl fll Orlll80 0-., tfl J11ty t4; ... , ,.,....,
lt11Dllt!IMI Or•fllllt CM\I 0.lly '1lot.
i11ty ti, 4141 t, II, le, ltlt U»•t
Published Orange Coast
Dally Pilot, Auo. 17, 18, 2'4,
19813686-81
AM.Mlt
IMntCICWT9UtT81'tlAL.I ... , .... 11 ...
TllANll"ACll'IC I SC llOW
COillllOllATIOH, • c.tltetftle <•"*'•
lllfl .. NY ..... fl-Trvt•.,,...tN 191'"''"'._,.,., ... ot vvst Wll.L Hl.L AT l'UaLIC AUCTIOH TO THI
HtOHU f l lOOCll '0-CAiH 1 .. ., ...
..... .,,,. ...... 1111ewtvl-yOftN
Unll911 SUie) ell r19M, ll11e aM !ft. t., ... _.,._,,....,_ ._ .. ..,11 ..... *' .... 0.0 Of TNll 111 tlle ~,,~ ... , •• ......,9slcrl ....
UUSTOll ANOlllWC l"AUl.tHO
• ti nol• 11\M\.
ll:Nl,ICIAllY aAYPORT
,. .. ANCIAL COll,.ORATION, e
C8'11orllMl C4t'l*ott~. Recor-•11
t t, t• • IMW'. HO. t•u In _.. 11510
p ... tJll et ortklel llecord• In 1N of
Ike WI U. II_,. vi OllANOI (;ouno. ly, MM! .... ef \"'6t dffcrl-Ille follo-#1"1 ., .. ,,,,
l.04 J9 elf tr eel No. llol I, In Ille Cit~ of Cotle MMe, .. w l\IYp recor-II\
llOeli 1., ...... 1 enll 4 Of MIK•ll--
M8P•, In '"' o111C• ot the County
llt<o•111trolOr-.Goun1,,C•lllorrll•.
S.I~ "'"° i. •loo ltnown u AsMnor Par~tlHo. t4t.1Un
MAY 81 ALSO !CHOWN AS: 1047
illoyc. i...ne, Coll• Mew.
"Cit• •tr•t --or co''"''°" Cle· •lgn.iton lt'1IOWll•bow, 1>D••rren1T Is give"•~ to Its comp1.-sa or correct>
MU)•·
TM t1e...i1<1MJ ...,.., Hid OMO tll
T ru•t. b'tl r•atGll of e brMCI> 01 dt4towlt
In Ille OC>He-tlon• secvred '"-•by,
,,.,•tofort 1.-c..ted -dellw,.... to
th• wnclt••IOllUO • wrltlln Oucl•••llon
ol Oef•Ylt -Oemtnd '°' S.••. -wr111.., AOll<• or lwe.c;ll -ete<Uot1 ID
UllM h -.. .-IO Wll Mid II'~ p;rty lo .. 1111, wkl eou.,.uon., •"" tllortWlter the ""°"'SIOr*' Ceil-MIO
notice Ill Dr'M<ll -of ele<llOft 10 be Reco.-~' 4, t9IO at iMlr.
NO 41'9 In -ta20 -t•, of •••d Oft1<1•1 Aecoros
WIO .... •Ill bit ...... bu1 WllllOvl
COY-"' or ••rrenty, •• .,, ... or 1 .... pll.0, r-dl"IJ 11\lt, POHtUIOft or ....
cumbr"""· "°pay trw ,..,..•lnl1>9 prl,.. <IP•! """of IN nolet1l se<vr.., bf \aid
O.ed al Tr1n1, wlltl 1ntere1\ •• In \aid
note ll'OVI-• .OVMKH, If ... Y. u-
,,,. ltfml of Wld Ouoed of T r.nl, Itel,
cll••OH-•• ..... '9sof ,,,. TruSIM•nd ol the ,,.,.h cr .. ted by .. ,d Deed ol
'"'" s.ld .... will ... held on T-d•f, 5ep1emoe1 I. 19'1, et lt'OO m, "1
the front entranett lo IM ottlcH of
Southern Peclllc Tiiie Company, SU
N Caotlllo Pa,., D•l•e. Suite 100, s.t>·
ta Ana, C•lltornl1 T ... lolal •mount ol Ille unpaid
!>•lance of theOOllg.o\IO" MUH'ed by ""d
pr-rtf to be .otd, '-tiler with In
terHt, 14111 Cllar90S, ano Hlll'l•led CC>i·
I\, .. ...,._, -edV.,,Cft. as Of tl'll
date,..,...,,," U0,61' lol
Dale AIJQ<>lt S, 19'1
TRll'NSPACI FIC ESCROW
CORPORAT ION,
a( .. 1tOfn.tl CorpotatlOt'I
ff u.d T rv\tM By SOUTHERNPACIFI(
TtTLECOMPll'NY, • torpora1e>" Ajillnl
SU NO'tll (.Mrlllo P•rk D•
!>utle 100
Sarli.a ....... (•Ill '1101 Clt41•n IJOO a, Fr-es!>ne1<1t10 P"DI'""° OrM!Oe Co.st Dally P1101 AvQ It 11, U, 1te 1 lSTMI
N01'1C~ TOCONTllACTORS CALUNO 1'0111 810$
Sc11001 D"lrl<t COll'ST COM
MUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT Bid Oeaollne 1 00 o'clock p m ot
IN 11'111 day OI AU9Ull, Itel Piao of BIO RM ••Pl Offlo .......
PurchoKlng "'91rtl, M• t.Yrl•n Perrin. Coati Community College ·Dl•l•l<t,
1110 Adam• Ave . Costa M .. a. CA 97626
Pro11t l ldentlfic.e t1on N•m• Orange ea.11 Coll-Env1ronmen
l•I Center Re·ROOllng Pro1ect, Bid • t014
Platt Pl.,., ar• on Ille Olllce of
PllyllOI FKll1tl•i Pl...,,ln9, CNll
Comm11n1tr Colltge Dl•lt1<1, 1J70
AO.ml Aw, Tr•llff l<.c;lllty, Cott.a Mew, CA mlll lltO S,.._5707
NOTICE IS HEREa V GIVEN 1Nt
t"• •-meet Sc-I Olstrlct of
Orange Co<Jn!'t, C•llfornl•. •ctlnQ by
and tllrougll lh Gonrn1n9 80trd,
her••n1 tte r r •t•rred to •1
. OISTAICT .... m receive "" to. bUI
not tawr 11-u.. -w.-.i.tted time,
Maled bids I<>< tN -••d of• c.ontrect lor 11'11-pn>jt<I
l •Ol Shall lie rt<tlved I" lllt plact
10entit1ed abow, -..,_II lie OPel'lld
.,,., PIAll lCly ,..... ·-.. '"' -... staled ti,... ano IM•• Tlltnt wtll be no .,....,.11 ,_,,..,tor
.. ,,, Iott of btd do<un,.nl\ to ~rant"
,,.. l'ttwn In good cond<lloft all•• trw Olcloe>enlngd<lte
E1c" bid mu't conform al\d be
rtti00nti1ve lo uw tontract docu~nt.s
E .ell bid Sl\all be .ccompenJed Dy
Ille _.,lty rtftned to In the contr.ct
c1o<umert11 -DJ 1rw ''" of .,,__ 'ubContractor' Tiie OISTRICT r ... rves Ille rlgllt to
••JKI .,., 0< all Dlds or lo w•lw any
lrr•9u1 .. 111 ....... lnlormalltltS In anr
Olds or In 11'11 1>i0cll1>9.
The DISTRICT fin oo .. 1ned lrom
trw Olrector of the °"'9rl"'"'I ol In·
dullri•I R•l•tlor" Ille gener•I Pf'Olll·
'"9 rew of Pt• diem w•oe• In trw
locality In -l<h this -·• '' to 1>e pertcw..-for .. ,,, cr•ll 0< type of
*Or • ....,, -to Ut<"1e \ ... C-
trect TIWte retes ••• on Ille at U'll
DISTRICT office loutt<I al PllY'IUI
Faclllllft Pl-Ing, CN SI Community
COll99f Dlllrlct, IJ70 Ad•m• Awn ... ,
Ce>ita Me ... CA t76lll Coples ,...y be obtained on r_.i A <OCIY of -rates ..,,.11 IM POtted at'"' Joe> site. TM '°'-'llO K-1• of II" d ..... w~ ,, baMd -• -••no dlly ol elllfll 111 ,_,.., Tl'll r•te tor llOfi<Ny
•I'd _,,,... ""'"' ..,,. .. be ., ....
tlmeencl~ll.
It -II be -ory .._, U.U COH·
TRACTOR lo whom llW contr.ct ll ••••dud. -l4'0ft anJ suOcOfttractor under him, IO pay not Ins .,...., \he
w ld -lfled rolles 10 ell wor'kmtft emplOywd by trwm 1n trw u ecu1IG11 of
Ille contr«t
No ~' ,...y wlllldraw Ills bid for • "'""° of lorty•flw <0 1 O.ys after
tllo oei. Ml lor 111e -•no of bids.
A ....,_,., bonc1 and a perlOrmenct
bond wtll bit required prior lo uec~ llOll ol IN Cor>lr«t The pey,,....t bond
•11•11 Ill '" llW lof'm Ml lortll '" tlW contrect cl0c"'"911tt.
Governing ao.rd
If.I Norman E W•tson
5•<r•tary,
&oent of Trutt"s
Pullllllled Or-Coust O.lly Pilot
~~. "· "· t•t ll .... 1
IN T"8 ClllCUIT COV•T 01' TN8 STATI 0, Oll8eotl ..... ~ .. ...,....
~ .. o.Mslle ........
In ._ AM~ of I .. M.errtaoe ef
MIC HAIL AHTHONY R081N50N,
l'•lllloaer, •nd CAROL llAI: ROatHtON,....,.._, ...... 1-.
tUllllMCNd -.... ......
To COllAL ••IE 11oa1NSON
It• ....... You .,.. ........, ~ .... to .....,
.,.. eotuM -11911tlon "'" ......
you Ill ..,. -.. """ t-_._ thirty <•> NYl '""' tlW NI• Of
MNICt OI INo --y.Mt. eM
111 <-. WI .,_ t8'1Yre '° • •· '9r •• 111 .......... 11ti..wkl ...., ..
Ills ~fer IN relief dHMMIMlft Ille,.."""' NOTICI TO TH8 lllS~()INT;
afAO TH E•IE l'A .. lltl CAilllEl'VU. YI
You ....... ,._., Ill \Mt<-fl(
-....... Wiil Wlol ~ty, To ,,_....,, ,_, -'"° wlWI ... ceun • •• ,..,., c ..... • .. _ _..
er "•"'"'·" TM "M•U•" ., .. .,,....,.. muM .. .,_ .... <-'
ettnt "" M!Nftlttr..., ......... • •Yt ..... wltll ... ,....,.. flt ........ ll
l'lllltt .. "' '"'"'""" 9"" lleft .......
" """!Cit .. -"""*""· ...,,..,, °'· If ... pMjlllfl ... Mt ...... 111 • .. .,,..., .......... ..vtc. --~ .... ''-· If Y4'11 M ... Sfly ...... _. ,_. ____ .........,_, .... ,,. MICMsl,,__,., ~
I TATI CW Ol'IOOM
C_..,fllWUUON
l,tlWw,.....,..~,_., t .............. 111_. ..... --~--..... --· ................ ~
Mldlet4 .............. ,.........,
......... Or-. (Mllo.lty ........
A119. M, 11. .... t, I. "'1 .....
FOR THE RECORD
Births
WUT811N
M801CAL c••n•• ··" Mr ellCI Mn. Devi• 9Mf ... Coola
MeM, lloy
Mr. e11d Mn . J im Frluell. Se11 Cl9"'e111e, 11oy
MIUIC* CO-UNITY
ttOM'ITAL .,.., ,.
Mr , -Mn. Whllam 1'••11. SM
Jlljlfl c:.i11r-. lley J""' 11 Mr. •11d M,., Do11eld We llt , Cep1tt,_ e..dl, elrl
'""' te S.1-A<oste, ~ 9Mcll. "'' ,...,.
Mr -Mn.~ Wl*ewlU. SM J ..... c.p .. ,-... ,
J..,11
Mr . end Mn. ThomH •lckme11, c..,1.1r-11MC11,111r1 , .. ,.
Mr. elld Mn. Steploe11 8•b<o<k,
1r ... 111e tllrt
Mr efld Mn. RJ<ky ffttlltll, SM Cte ........ ,ljWI
Mr. -Mn. i.-.... ~rd. o-"-lnl, My
~ ..
Mr . -Mn. OMlel 01-. SM J ..... c.pilt•-. elrt ,..,.
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Mr. -Mrt. JeHl'9y ~4'11:11, L•vuna a..c11, llOy
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COMMUNITY MOll'ITAL
Jiiiy 11
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Mt. etld Mrs. Ai,tlomo • I .. re, HIWll-
l119""' IMdl, 9lrt
Mr. -Mn. J-Z.tr. F-1e111 Velley,9lrt
Mr. -Mn. ·-·" Hell, HuM· .... ""' lleedl, 9lrt ,,.,," Mr. ond Mn. Mkl\MI Tyler, F-
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1"91on llMcll, Doy • Jlllyll
Mr. -Mn. llrlon Klo,,ot, Hllftt· ...... llMcl\, boy
Clleryl• He99erly, Hunt11191011
8oocll,91rt
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COS1e Mina, elrl
Mr. -Mn. R-Cr099f\, C-le MeM,llOy
Mr. end Mn. Cllorlet ·~ "· Hurwl ....... a.Kii, lloy
Mr elld Mn.. .---· l"'IM , olrl -"'°" CtwlMI Jiiiy.
Mr .• ,.., Mn . Cllorlet l eJorek,
Tutlln, boy
Mr. ond Mrt. Roe.rt llurrlt, I rvlfte,
boy
Mr. and Mn. H .... McSf\ofte, H .....
.... ""' hocll, boy
Mr. -Mrs. •-Loor, N--1 llN<ll, lloy
Mr -Mn.. Gffokl llHcll, F-10111 Volley, boy
Mr. -Mn. MerV\oll Uftd, H ..... 1ne1on lloedl, boy
Mr. •llCI Mrt. Goren l"ortlloeer.
1r ... 1ne.9lrt
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Mr. -Mrt. Lloy<I ~t, Hllftt·
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Mr. -Mrs. Rey,_ lock, Coola Me .. , boy
Mr. -Mn. H....-y Sc"--'"'°""• Coste MeM. 9lrl
Mr. -Mn. Thome1 Meer__,.,, Newfl0'1 llMdl, 9lrt
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Mr. -Mn. Slluplno Scott. Hwnl·
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Mr. -Mn. Gvy r ... e11111. c:..w Me .. , boy
HB airman
gel8 degree
St.all Sst. Arthur R. Taira, son of Mr . and
Mr•. Herman It. Tnlra
of 6392 Warner Ave.,
HunUn.itoo Beach. bu
earned • bachelor'•
d earee from tbe
military Hltnalon of
Cbapman Coll••e at
Travll Alr Force a ....
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MEICHANDISE
""'-" ......... Auc\tQft tt.t':: ... ltrll h r.nwru 6 •Atwpmtof'll C'.111.-°"" •""fftto\w ~ ... -... 1. ...... s.i.
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BOATS & MAllNE
ENPMENT
Ottngt Cout DAILY PILOT/fuad1y, August 18, 1981 • Cl
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678
....... ....... ,., w. ....... ,., w. ....... .., Wt He.Mt.., u. ...... ,., Wt • ,., Wt .............................................. •••···················· •.....••.•......••••... •·•····•••········•···· .....•••••....••••..... . ...........•..........
. Gt.rtt I 002 ....,.. I 001 •••rtt 1002 1002 .._... I 002 •••rtf 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1• ua 1111 ltll ,.
IOI! um •• I~ ....
IOM
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
IMI ~ ..... Motlc«
:: A II real utate ad·
::: ve rlaud in this
1oit newspaper 11 subject to
::: l!M FederaJ Fair Hous·
1• In& Act ol 1988 which
:: mallet it iJJe1al to ad·
11• vertise ''any preference,
limitation, or dis·
1.-criminalion based on
OCIANFIOMTS
Six to be ex.ct from
la0,000 down• u low aa
12" 1nttrut on the
balance. Call ror detalll aucai'Un·
7 0
AU•HTHOUSI
Ni&ht ll&ht and ocean
views 6 Bd rma,
playroom. family room,
pool and Jacuul .
1795,000. Owner anxious.
RCilylorCo
l1 J '1 "!
:: race. color. reli1ion. __ A_f_f_MIWl---1U--1
1• sex, or naliooal ori&in, .,...... J: or an u1tenllon to make 2 8d ... _
11ae any such preference. rm, l .... · 1 yr old
::: llmilataon. or d is· Adult complex. Take ::i criminatlon... over existing loan.
IP := Thia newspaper will not
ill» knowinflY accept any
n111 adverl11in1 ror real =: estate wluch is m viola·
: _t~io_n~or~t_he_l_aw ___ _
llOll
.RED CARPET
-754-1202
LUSE/OPTION
4 Bdr & POOL home
New cplS, cstm drapes
Varanl llOO/mo. ~
opt money . Onl y
_fil3,000. A&t 646-4~
HAllOlllMI
Award wJ nn lnc
"Jodele" estate home
lat reule otru111a 9n
this exqullitely appoint·
td townbome with
mau1ve view of bay,
ocean, coutllne ' nial\t I li&ht1. Now reduced to 11a.ooo.
H1 ! 111 ~. \ \I
.. ' .
j, t 1 I 1 I 0 I I
t • If I II tr 1 • id i
2PIMMSULA
POINT IAICiAIMS
OWCBALANCE 10~/ CaU now! 4 BR
Muit~an Villa. 1 house
from pounding surr
Secluded muter retrut
with fireplace New
kitchen. dane on ttled
patio. Hurry.
ST•STOSAHO
FIXER/3 BR & D§N
nuds your attention. Br
ing shovels and paint
brush Make SS's. Owner
will rarry at low 1n
terest. :: IAIOIS: AdYertfsen
WAI liMMlld Clillck .... odt = cWy ... report .... : ron 1111111"4ihly. TM 5 DAILYPl.OT.._. ~ SEA COVE
.... ltlbilty fw tlw flnt ~ 11•a PROPERTIES m1 l•corrtct IHtrtlom -...,---:::,;--
:: -,. " 114-631-6990
@
mo 71t-1111 :1-------.. ___ ..__.. TRY 13%
!E) HM1tl few w. H.I. $26,000 DWN! MODULAIHOME Republic homes! 4 huae
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
;a
HICiHUMDS :.'! Natural beamed wood
tou ceil1n115 . panel ing.
:: warm earthtones.
lit)>) Lovely view . this 4 :! Bdrm Edmborough has
IOU everything Ex cellent
:: rinancme S4~.ooo
Ulll .. -am ll7ll -IUl
Q3 -llll7
lUIO IClli3 ----
'°"' -llllJO -----'°'°
1110 tlJll
tilt
tut
tllO
1110
11111 -
Use the Daily Pilot
.. Fast Result" service
d1rtttory Your
service 1s our
specialty
Call 642·5678 ext 322
U you're in t.M market
ror a better car. be sure
to check the many autos
advertised for sale in
Clauified.
Lovely. spacious 3 Bdrm bdrms. ·2 baths, ram1ly
2 bath with rareplace.1 room. bnck nl'fplace.
ac.-ross Crom the bay 1 country lutcben. Owner
View from deck Adult , anxious. may carry luiiur) llVlng in best AITD 11 13"}. Pnce only
location Pool. sandy Sl 29 .~00. Act now '
beach. slips available ~2313
Owner will rmance with S25.ooo down
759-1616
CAIB
o~,a~ for a la ented reaestale
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
3 Ir+ I 30/o FIH. NEAR BEACH
Walk to beach from this
dehterul J Br hbme
Frplc. formal dimng.
prime area with LOW
DOWN . Owner will
Cinance balance at
ONLY 13% INTEREST
Just $144.900. Hurry. call
Ten Marquez 758-1221.
MO
DOWN! Must qualiCy for pay
menu. 5'7r needed for
cost College Park 3
sales proressional w a
stronf interest in people deve opment, a take
charge ability, who can
work well both indepen·
dently ' collaborative· ly Hl&hly challenging
position otrers career
growth opportunity +
independence. Gel in on
the ground noor ol lhiJ
dynamic Co. located at
lhe beach in So. Oran1e
County. Speclaliting in
Beach oriented lnvest-
m en t properties. In·
dividual ahoWd b11ve a high level ol energy. m
1tat1ve a. enlhusium to
rerru1t, train. mollvate ' manage Must have 2 Bdrm. 2 bath: family
yrs uper or broker's Ile room. double (1replace.
& eager to work ror a I cul de. sac street .A large piece of lhe pie bargain at 1134 .900.
6S·7S% w/ownership ~·2313
possibilities. Send re·
sume lo owner, 121 So
Hope St. N03 L.A. 90012
4 IR IACK IA Y
SI 37.500
Roomy. 4 Bdrm. 2 sty. w /cozy fireplace. Very
clean. light 111d airy.
New diahwuber. water
heater. paint. paper. skylight! Beautirully
landscaped patio. A
must see! 646-7171
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
THE REAL ESTAT&:RS
121/flo
Sll,OOODWH ·
Vacant and owner wlnla
out! Huie 2 Bdrm 2'" bath condo with large
ramlly living area. At
tached garage. 1115.900
total price. Call now.
s.6-2313
THE REAL ESTATE RS
D&fill
$94.900
THE BIGGEST
GARAGE SALE ON THE
ORANGE COAST
Investors deU&ht! ho 2
Bdrm. Units. Current tn·
come · 1740 Mo, 1 year
home protection plan in·
duded Call to see 1
846-7171
IS IN THE
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
llYINE
Slt,300.DWN
Fabulous. hi&hly up·
araded single story
Warmington. J Bdrm,
mirrored muter suite. 2
bath. large Uvin& area,
brick fireplace. Com·
munlty pool. spa and
tennis. Only 1133~.
Call now. S..2113
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
MoM~l>wMCI! Owner will consider any
offer. Trades, notes on
real eatate. tars. gold-or
aubmlt for down pay.
ment. Payment Sl600 mo PU CaU now and
let 11 write an offer I
Bruce Blom1ren. agt
?lf.1221 or TaMmT
WM~
!I ~ \ ' ...-,, '
•'SlllDOWM• DmllATI!
4 Bdnn I ba JIOal home
Allwnt hl·balante Iola. owe strallll-..
REALTORS
675-Hf I
LOOllMG FOl A CAllll IH llAL
ISTATl7 c ... i. -4 .._. yomo .......
wftll-.Weoffwy .. ,.........,. .....
IChl ... I. Pref.HioHI ...i1f•ct. Alw.ya
•• ....... Mfftofflctl
COLI 0,. NEWPOIT WLTOIS
JI 15 l. Coelt Hwy., C.-.. Ms-
675·5511
W 1-.~I I Y '\
TAYLOR CO
In.AL I 1 >I\~ ""'" l!I H
CilOICilAH COLONAL llAUTY
llG CAMYOM COUMTIY CUii
CALL FOi COLOl MOCHUU
Gorgeous view overlooking the 8th
green of the exclusive Big Cyn golf
course. Elegance personified ! Built by
the finest builder in Newport Beach
for his own personal residence on the
most prime site in area. 4 Bedrms
plus luxuriou s master suite, Jge
formal DR. Cam. rm. billiard rm.
refrigerated wine rm & 6112 baths.
Imported marble. crystal chandetier'5
& lots of wood paneling. Call to see -
$2.150,000.
WESLEY M. TAYLOI CO .. IEALTOIS
Ziii S.J~ ... loed
MIWPOIT CBffH, N.I. 644-49 I 0
THIMIJMCi
TOW.-tOME?
Call the specialists at
thf condominium 1n ·
formation center Touchstone Realty
~IWl61
~Loe ..
Atlracllve4 Bdrm Blurrs
condo on greenbelt
C1rmelita m•I. cov
ered patio. 1212.SOO
LEASEorTION
HEWPORTICH
Unbeatable terms! En
joy your own prtvate
pool, spa, and paddle
tennis court! Spanish
lllf entry. SpaclOl.IS llv
me room with soanng
ceilings. Gourmet cook·
111g kitchen. 4 generous
bdrms. OnJy S289.000
Won't last. hurry, call
613-8$50
THE REAL ESTATERS
AFFOIDAIU
MESA DEL MAR -
Aaaumable tst. owner
will carry 2.Dd. 3 Bdrms
and custom ramily room
wath vaulted ceilings
Excellent condtt1on.
very private yard
Sl~.000 .
AffOIDAILI
ME S A NO R T H
Northeate comfortable 4
Bdrm Camily home. Con·
venient to scbools and
1hoppl111. near Fairview
and Paulerino. See and
appreciate. M ,000.
64~5200
j PETE
' BARRETI . REALTY
Atta.De,.elopen
Pnme COiia Mesa area
20 unit condo proJect
compl approved. ready
t.o build. call 1~,6499
IQ!Oll'ii'ift
SllHDm'
With some paint & TLC
lhu Peninsula Pl
duplex would be a cute
summer reaidencelan· come property. Ideally
localed and loaded with
potential Atkmg only
S299.SOO.
1.-.0. ..... Dy
67J.t700
OCEANYIEW
HODOWH
Rare Harbor View Hills opportunity ~ Owners are
desperate and will help
rinance. Exciting new
"TICK ET" program
Buyers must quahry
Spectacular ocean view ! Secluded pool Only
$359 ,900 Hurry. call
613-8550
THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
IEACHDUPW
$30,000DWN
Lar1est West Newport
units! Huie assumable
lit, plus owner will
cal'l'y 2nd. Just 100 steps
to sand. Rare 32Xl37 lot
Only S279,900. Hurry.
call 613-85.SO
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
ByO..
Waablngton's beautiful
Olympic Peninaula.
Three bdrm country
home oo 5 acres ol land
and 300 ft on famous Sol
1\e rastest draw In t Due River. 1135,000.
West. . .1 Dally Pilot Terms nqotiable (20Sl
Cl111lfied Ad. Call To-_37_H_7_48 ____ _
day942·5618. Want Ad Result! 642·58'78
Clll(V FOTIAlTSllS
S l L 0 Y I Z E M M S l S
Y £ 0 M 0 L N E I E E l A
AUATDOEfllIITLETllYV
J £ l T I II 1 L £ A l W N A C l E N OD£1A£YOAAATllHlAlN
NSNTM£MEVNNlNCVAlTl
£MAOlSSllDATOASNSOMS
£MOTMHAtAAlPSADNOAO
S.l A£ S 0 S V k LI l LE I 0 MM N
HYOITLLHllNSYONVTEA
SlllAHCHOHllCITOlSL
I I t•LOVCCATEHTlOASS RLDRLLKOYOtEVEillDlll
Dalebout
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
O,_.. WIDMISDAY I ·I
JI 16 YIST A IMTIADA
COME WITH US ..• TO THI ILUFJS.
TASTEFULLY APPOI NTED FOUR
BEDROOMS . THREE BATH
CONDO .. LOVELY KITCHEN ASSUMABLE
FIRST TRUST DEED OWNER WILL CARRY SECOND 1239.000
1617 WISTCUH DI. H.1. '31·7l00
AFfOIDAIU etnHOMI
Two bedroom . one bath. fireplace.
walk-in closet. large sun deck and
community pool. Owner financing.
$92,500
U~l()Uf ti()'"f'
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Eatt Cou1 Hlghwey. Corona d•I Mor
WE'HAVE 45 OF TllE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN
lodt .., Oelaht
Lovely 3 Bd'rm 2 lfa wtlh
new French country
kitchen and used bm k
exterior Located tn the
heart or Newport's up-
p~r bay. O\'erlook1ng
country club Priced at
only $181.SOO with ex
cellent rmanc111g availa·
ble. Call 7$1·3lS1
C:. <,111 r l
-t" l•l~I iPI I~ l 11 •,
Want Ad Hel !_642-$178
OMTHESAMD
Cute bachelor condo on
the beal'h ror onl y
Sl20.000 Perrert for
vacation home or young
exertlt1ve For more m
formation call us now
SHADES OF MEW ENCiUHO
Large 4 BR . Trad itional in
Westcliff. formal dining + Fam.
Rm . 2 fireplaces. POOL & Spa.
Excellent floor plan with lots of
room for your large fa mil y.
$335,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
CE.
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
S MILUOM $ Y1IW S
Lovely Courtyard Entrance -Tiie
Galore -Plus Huge Bay View
Patio -Potted Plants -F1owing
Fountains -lndoor/O\Udoor Living
-This Two Bedroom. Two Balh
Condo Shows Beller Than A Model.
Shown By Appointment. A "Joy Of
Newport'' Listing ..
OllGIMAL 11.Ufff
Bright And Airy Three Bedroom
End Unit On Greenbelt Wilh Sunny
De ck And Open Beam Ceiling.
Located On Quiet Cul-de-Sac Near
Pool And Tennis. Owner Will Carry
Al 13.5%. $169,900.
79-911 uc.,. ..... ... ,, ... c..-
LIQUIDATION SALE
BAYFRONT ............
_,~El&al& 11 ... -····· ..,,..,. ..
To Place you r
"Fast Reault"
Service Dirtctory
Id .. CaUN"
SUCCIS R!!ALTY .... I S P U U 0 L l £ II L 0 N D P l L 8 0 .._ ........ _ ........ .................................... ,
.. t...111 ........ ..... J ............ "' .... ..
• •• ,IMP.I..• ..
llM~-
_,. 1lms •CASI •11111
Cll •• ..,. .....
641-1671 Iii.JU DAILY PILOT ..... ..,... ... '"' ................. Lilll l.tmM ........ Lllft ...
T~_,,_
l .-
tOQ,
-----------
..
. .
.f ...
\ .
C» Orange <:out DAILY PllOT(fueaday. Auoust t8. t981 ~!!!!.~.~ ........ ~!.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~!.~.~ ...... ~~~.~~.~!~~ ...... ~.~ .. ~1~ .... ..
~.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ........ ~!.~.~ ....... !~~.~~ .......... ~~!!~.!!.~ ~~ ........... "~!~~ ~~ .. ~ ... !~! ~~~ ... !~ e=.-.. -~r;~ ~~~ ... !~.~!
••••• 100 II 1002 Chtitf.. 1002 ottoM"' 1024 PllCl/SLASHID• TH....... H .... "9w ....................... Wl1Htr Rental. Sept
...................... ••••••••••"•• .. ••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... Owaer rtAdy to deal \'t -....a..u-di 1 JKDOWM Lelaurt World l BR June Stepe t.o btacb. I
IEAL ESTATE
SALES Ma.I
Major re1ional brokerage firm with 13
years experience tn the coastal area Is
searching tor an ~xperienced person
to manage Its expanding Newport of. fice .
Highly visible Fashion Island location
with 15 full time agents has the poten
ti al ror 27 agents.
This firm has over 125 fulltlme agents
and offers residential investment,
escrow, securities and mortgage
brokerage services to its clients from
8 offices located NewPort to San
Clemente.
The person chosen will receive liberal
starting salary and an override on the
omce production along with other
benefits.
All responses will be held in strict con·
Cidence. Send resume to : Drawer 18,
P.O. Box 2000, Corona del Mar. 92625
MOOUAUFYIHG HAHOlPOOCTI m1 lo beach! lmmac. TOw~r :dor~ '; ~:'\~::·,: OML.90 11111le1tory,fftdunlt.at: Br,newpetnlln t o4'\ su .oo4 down .ind no COtl>OS u PI r •de d I b r . fb~l c:l::d~:-!T!:'r!' i!~ Harbo'r Vin Hlab u . Will move )'OU n•ht Into tacbed aar'b'i" Al{' fpk, MiS::Jb St IST·ON1.
qu111fy1n1 for thh1 luvtl) 2 •pudoua muter auitt'll d#nlbdrm • 1 ·" •• bl. formatioo ctAler. aumable loant. HJ&hlY thl.e 1pacfoua ' bdrm 111 u ~ 1 1 0 1 n · , 3 Bdrm cul-dc-su!'l111me or 2' Hlry wilot\t-'CI m tr Pools. Juuu1. teonlt, Touchltone Realty up1radtd throu1hout home Owner wlU carry ..M'.!·3214, •nae 28r, 181, 14th St N1rely
Only 1129.$00 Call rw"' bdrm Huth mudt'IJ h.ave c lubho uae, wet bar. ~ • Showa ttkt model Must peptrt at 1".. Owner Low down. M300 28R. fum.l.tJ lied. avail Stpt II
rordeta1b 979$370 h dbl frplr Perr for cpl aeU f11t. Alkins 1231JOO very mOllvakd. Subm1t l"'BA. Total payment to WM 11 No PfU. &.UO
A .ittu o f'[110 Nt>ed.ahnanclngtoeillst COOi.POOL incl land. Come for In· 1lloltera~y Hurry!! HOO Split equity. mo.inclutll 1.Jt"ut t
LLST'ATE ;m~pWt('k:e~ ~ol ~~,s tnll7.9'>f lo1n.OpenS1t. Laarce family home Ln apectlon Sat, SWl l·I. _M!·3639 • .flS.57 rl»STl9
'" aMAvcl<'udoSt ai Sun. U. '768 Verde bt Uf l"-'J l'll k 4 iaeoPortWhee.leroruU .,_..IH/ Oceanfront. oo beach,
REALTORS CaM631-340S M11r,$ll-Umor911U341, Bd~~n ~""'~:.s:a ·+ 7S0.9* r/A W.U. 1100 apectaclalat new 2 Br
Bkr Co-0 huae bonua room. 1rut Trade Lwtury Newport ....................... ram '°'· 2 sty twnble.
1.-.d I 006 S 12 000 Dow• home for entertalnlni. home oo ~acre for Jn. Tri-plex. NE Calta Mtsa. $2000/Mo. CaU!7~2062.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice 3 18dnn. 1"' bitu Auurnable financing come Unit or ? Equity By owner Prime loc. (21 Beautlf11I 2 Br 2 81 con· NO CASH £•ondo Cloae to ahop· available. Call for d~ UIO, ooo. Act now ! 2BR units, 01 30R. 2BA domlalum bomt over-
TO OK for down l'uteJ pine OWMr will help tails Broiler Co-Op A1ent houae S2SO ,OOO . looltln& 811 Canyon
liR 2 Ba t'Ollll)(r, 1n11Jr finance. lllUOO. t.Sl~ll. Courtesy to brokers Golfcourte w /~omm.
OK. Despt>ralt! ~.ouo SUMSITRWn BLUJl'FS COND().Slnale 5441.9727 wkdys, M9-81&3 poolw•pa. teMIJ. CaU Ownr/agt~ 11161 06113 54Z,SIOI atory. aBr, 2ea, Unda ~vea BUI edmore6'4·7020
CoroaodttMs-1022 BY OWNER. N Hntg Plan New aDOllu. Ule, i.co.e,,..,.,., ZOOO WtMTa ••••••••••••••••••••••• A S S U M ,.. 8 L E fkh, 3 BR l~ ba, RV ac· etc. Auumible loan. ••••••••••"••• .. •••••• 3 bdrm family home oo 434 IEGOHIA "" C 1 t U owner/agt SZJ0,000 Trade Luxury Newport the oceanfront with . 12 7501 ceu. orner 0 P-BY OWNER. Woodbridge 855 2013 •-a... home on ~'t acre for In· · 1':le1111nt new 4 Ur V11· "' I M o't /01) () N ara<ted. °"'lier nexlble. -• r_,u...., panoramic Views t 0 rl an Pll rt 111 I \ u " I • ": . submit terms 775-7165. Cormel 3 br. 2"1 ba. S10k oc• ... ...-.AUOP i. ... L..... come Unlts or • Equity Sl.200/mo. \ii'•.,... ~dermkt.559-9345__ &A...-wlvn• ~· SU0,000 Art now ' wt rl-•H 1 ownr/C'onlrartor Juhl """"'"'"" 1191 ·"27 (7141 .._.EW IY OW .... EI Rein on tfie pvt beach a e ,63.,...1_14~et or COg'll>let'!!l.S575 ooo A Modl'l 2 Br i!ba. cl~e ---*VACA.Mr* " " Ju f Broiler Co-Op Agent w
-" t o pool and tcrnn1s EHDOFTHl 3 Bd 1 lot SUK 3BR•cSen.•.ooo. t>e''u~'~~sJom 4th~s 631·4Sl6
CDMILUFFS sm,1100 cull 7~9 8903 RAl .. OW down'mst~.~-Prlnc 37USeuhore ho~e. ~he w.::: livin: RE Salta people to learn H"'" Uafwlll.a..d
IYOWMER N1•w Nrvt'rUH•<Hn 3nlt, Bt>autiful 4 Bdrm S&S Oft! S41·~BKR. Ownerw/c .673-651!, room reaturtt heavy invutments & ex ••00•••••• .. •••••••••••
above beach. full ocean + 2•2 BA 2 car gar built home, on quiet cul OCIAtROMr wood -beam ceiling, chao1es XJnt oppty for GtMf"lll JZ02
& Jell) \U from l'\er) lhrrlookini: park S6SOO de sac. 1n pride of LAMJ-oleedl IOfl S4SOOOO paned windows with nght penon.100"; rom· •••••••••••••••••• .. •••
rm 3 lrg Br. lrg h\r rm+ down G3l-S737 ov.1nership neighborhood ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thi ff rin •,_ shutters and fireplace. mtsason available Con· ~ HB Duplex 19833 kit.,212 Ba,2·sty.2br1ck an lovely Goldenwesl ALot 110 e 1aaanestate Th fldent1al interview •-"HB,.,,,.ylbrt• ... ., r I d k be h sale. One or Newport e large sunny patio v· I owv ,._ ~
rp cs. 2 ec i., ·uc ASSUMABLE Estates Large family ForAUtHt Beach's fmest views. 3 provadea great outdoor ~-~.._tnce $3'7S2brw/deckt4t24 access. wm1 P\ t roud room with wetbar and l :.ere + bldg site, ienl· bd .. ___ h llving Owner will assist HRA •1 kS02br w/garden IS400 $1 ,250,000 p p Appl on "OZY r1repla('". Spark I I rm uumc Wll gueat QT. ··-CM 3bdnn 8379 ,. " Y sloping parcel hort apt or 2 um'•-w/flJlancmg or consider Need •harp 4·plex in HB ~ 11 ~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.-· JL714161J.6S2.S 103 ipnlugshgcoau..':.~' . .!}9'.~~n. distance from tennis & Realonomi;· ~~00 exchange. IS49,000 Have 7oK cash. Pnn on· S.SJOC~ 3+1ar. 1177FS1 • · .......... ....., '""' beach. Ownr has in· D.M. McnMl lltr It a7s.9797_ __ _ Renllmes631·4$M ~
LINDA ISLE
Exciting opportunity! Wade channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath. pool home
Slip for 2 large boats. $1 .495.000
Summer Occupancy.
LIDO ISLE HOMES
f'eatured on Homes Tours this love!\
traditional spa C'io us. custom 3 bdrm. "3
bath home. newl y redecorated . Pncect to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plu!>
lge recreation room & 2 p<Jl1os. Beam
ceilings Great for entertai nin g
S420.000. Best price for th e money.
. PEMIMSULA POINT BEACHFRONT
Panoramic ba y & ocean \'iew at
wedge. from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 i.q ft featur
mg marine room. $1.385.000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. 1m
maculate. Low priced at S215,000.
Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR
J 1, fl'•'"'' Dr .. "-B 675 6161
OPEN DAILY 2-6 PM.
ON BALBOA lsutll
I 16 Mwt.t A••· S4t5,000
Jl4/3141/1 a.by S4SO.OOO
208 ...... c ..... l.t. $675.000
IC.-.. IL CFwRI Sl.200,000
Ca•• Hd prt•i•w thHt flH
praperffu .ct filld CMlt how y. can
....... lc6oo lllaftd!
FENCED SPANISH VILLA
OW Worid C...._ GR ""'°lL 11
tlCrW wttll ..... poal + Vol.ybal cowt.
G1•rw tao.. with 5 ~ 12
..._. lllffetl ..... IM11g roa111 wftt.
..... & fW 1pl•ct: fCM'llld ..,.. M-.y
....., ............ Fr.ch doors.
tiled......,, HW & ~ ftoon, .....
IMdl4 .... whldowa. A trw fttatit wltti
flood ............ dKk ond lllllCh "'°"·
0..... wll uch•g.. ~ offfrt.
S4t9.000. u 1-1400.
CAPE COD ON WATER
Tlll1 11 011 a11theatlc Cat" Cod
nsldeac• by ~ar.tor ~ dalMd
& tklttd ..... brick aad ....._ Totalfy
coordiNted with ln•rioen OIMttitltt
.. ~ tllls 4 IMd. fClllUW\ 2 patios,
YU II o .... Uttt. 1.-ct louHGR. TIHp
fw Z baatL SHS,000 fM. 67U900.
SUPER AXER-SHORECUFFS
...., "-lowHt priced ._.. iR •
... _, H will IMffCIM le •• the
t.t.tfl" 1Ht's wt.at•• hn• In this 3
W. ... OR G ConMr. Swt.-ct by
......... priud -.., wffll frllMtl dCM
plHti& Mof 0 ...... ctow..." It llffdt
Nm crt.tf•lty to warll wffh wt.et JGll
..... OwHr will h•lp flHftc:t. I• cntlll••· S36t,OOO. Ul-1400
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAi ESTATE
s..-~ H'"'"~ p,,,.._" '-1 • ,.,.-..
24:lo w Co.1~1 li1W Newpo11 &.,.h
611-1400
JIS M.i1uw /lvt R.ilbc~ 1,i.,nt1
'7Ut00
1:.::' S<C~c4llA-4t~s·:::
-----MIM '7 GA' L ~
•............... qi ... ,__...,_.!lo.
..,._rolotillfOllfilofllPlt-"
'l.:,..·---= ----... ,
3 Bdrm, 2 bath, spa LI( eluded plans for custom 760-0835
5 BR/By OWNER ) a rd Eastsade Onl) villa Sl7S.OOO Spf'r Redllced Sl00,000 -4·PLEX. Tustin Near lcAoo ,....._ 3207
Sl27.900 1acular views • In Dover Shores 5600 Mo M~ Dw.HBI new in best .trea. good ••••••••••••••00• .. ••••
Call &IS 9161 MISSION REAi.TY sq.ft. of top quality coo· Ov.·ner-~iii'ronsider an; assumable fin w1 ~ Oceanfront 4 Br. den, 3
IRVIME THRACE
CORONA DEL MAH
X lgt master bdrm w
i:arden & frplr ll!t'
.,. 17Tll AT PROSPECT
TUSTIN, 731 311 1
I""'' 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I OPEN HOUSE z; ~EAlTY
e u s t o m k 1 t d c n . MEAT
hbrar). Lit, fH 1>001.1--------)ard patio L'lllqul' for t>"NERS ANXIOl'S asapm.l'lean &coi).3
larl(er fam1h lkl•.111 :,pra" hng I bedroom Br 2 Ba w l'OW'lyard en
sid e or hw) Near home Approx 2100 lry Near new carpels
b l 1 a nd microwa ve in eache~. mrnt•1 111·• ~q f~t'l. Family room eluded Close 10 schools '495,000 UWOl'r ··:in 11.llh r1replal·e Enclosed carr) B) appt. 1;133i1~ 11 J 11 0 Loni t c d 0 n and shoppuig. Call for
Open Sun I S Ql'IET cul dl' !>.IC. close details
~ ___ ~lo Suuth t'nasl Plaza
~~-1 Si l l! 500, ~ubm11 1
I H I
·1 \ R H J-; L L BEAC HOME H ~:\I.TORS !17!12.390 3 bdrm. 2 frpk~ \Im•· 1n
for St0.000 tl·:ist· oµl1on So. Coost COftdo
I & $2500 mo. on $49~1.llOOj 111•, 1lwn. suprr (an:inl'
-=-H/\NCH ~ r\EAL TY ~ SSl 2000
1_94 (173! struction. This 5 Bdrm tr T ad dwn. SJ12.000 Prine Ba SlSOO Mo. Yearly ~ M'"" 1 Id · 0 er. r es. notes on pleaa ""' 8314921 Furn or unrurn .,..1\. sty e res ence ts real estate. cars, gold or e ""'' or 675 8562 Divorce forces Sale
Lower 3 Arch Bay
Great. ocean \Jew. pvt
area . 4bdrm bettch
house 499-3144
the beat ol loca~ons ~Dd submit for down pay 499.47~ -=o...·-----
has the best of fmancaoa ment Payment s1600 P'RIMl COSTA MESA 3 Br oceanfront condo an
available. OWC -:;c>.~ mo, P&rl. Call now and 13 units on the pre· neat beachy Balboa at9,,.,~ mt. Full pnce in· let ·s write an orrer , stigious Eastside 1l2l 1 location w/stt parking
eluding the land Bru ce Blomgren br &r lll2 brwithawtal and spectacular view EMERALD IA y Sl,450,000. Call Dan Bibb 759·122I or7~0297 gross income of S.Sl.600. SHOO }'rly 644 7211 Agt
Only available front row roRr a0pr&w -.... n Offering price S600,000. 4 Br 3 Ba. family Home
lot In this gated area. •-~-. Pl se ·aJI Joh Cooke on quiet lane. entertaln·
Pl 67~ "311 ea c n ' •ft0 • pat;o olf Llv'"g &r ans and permits for ;r-a agt Johnson. Shelton & "'" • ...
ele.:ant villa Sl.SS0,000 l111111!111!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!j As~iates, 95S-2700 _ Family Rm SI.ZOO Mo
CA ROL TATUM RLTR 22 luxurious units. Ag_ent6'4·91160 ---
494,:0029 PRICE UDUCEO I 076 New p o r 1 Be a c: h . Corotto det Mer l2J2 Me rt t.och I 069 Limit fer ••• .. ••••••••••••••• Sl 540 000. 7141752 2584 ...................... .
l ••• °!'f.C! ................ 2113 Miramar. R ~ oLXffOME&INCOME2 2 Br 3 Ba. Jacuui. dou·
'--------lo firm pnce ol $419.SOO yn old Dnve by 2567 b I e garage Ne a r
BAYCREST until Sept. 1 7S'l rinanr· Elden. Then call 9'79 5099 Fuh1on Island New de·
m& at 12"k. Principals !8l t'Or S7~ Mo. 675-~1 or POOL HOME only.SS6-~,673-4226. - -2131991-0687 --
Large 4 bedroom. 3 bath VLST AS OF BEAUTY JUST US TED Cotto MftO 3224
S f d h th • 1 d i •s-• ·-This 4 bedroom. 21') bath 5 units Co5ta Mesa ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• e par ate enc e ome w1 1onna in1og A ,,_rr h rr · bl N H
Playyard h1ghllghts thas room, laving room. largt bd f I 1 ome 0 ers tocredi e • ewport ts area DLX CONDO 2 Br. + lrg
purchasl' b1S >1.'>11!1 I 1ni: 3 Br tr1 le\"''
POPPY STREET Sto 3tili6
Prett) Jnd pn' al•· .1
1
Whelan
*•POOL & SPA
k 4 rm, fam rm, P cs. ocean views. a covered Prict $335,000 Probate loft Br. 2"2 Ba. frplc, s uprrb 4 Bdrm pool atchen with separate Xlnt r·1nanc1·ng Im · I h d 1 _,. . d d · · patio. a us courtyar . sa e . ne""' court con· gar . a le. new S745 ho me 1n fabulous eating area. en an mediate occupancy r d h r 1· C II ,. 21
N h ood T .,0~1 custom pool with solar room ora spaan muc 1rma ion a .._ ~944Sor963-8377 __ _ ort w ry "•• possible S285,000 more' Ass umable Gold Coast Realtors
bdrm . 2'• ba (;real
rinanc1ng 548 1004 Real Estate
rlwn heating Located on 64.2-5161, 640-!1<17 financing available on 5_48-ll~fordet.ails SECLUDED l Br very COM CHARMER LUSE OPTtOH 5248.000 quiet. tree !med street. h' d f r prlYate. qwet &r woodsy DPLX Lu~uriou.~ i'Ubtom t•on [UIJ Excellent finanrang l ________ lllij 1hoimsew.:?!'...~u4I,.. a4m9~!Y MAKE AH OFFER ! Adults. no pets. Ntw
WITH FtHAHCIHG 1to 2500 sq ft 2 Crplrs. 4 w,,,ldhrldqc available for sale by MIEWPOIT CRIST •. ~.,,.,., . ...,. ...., carpets. drapes. range
3 Br 2 ba or 2., 1-:u1.,1 lxlrm. 2, = baths $l l5<1 owner S319.000 Call First time buyer and re 3 Income Propertaes Utils paid. Isl + Sttura
owner'i. urut + ~ br rt'll inv Sl95.tn> l>-l2 4623 RcalllJ 9 7 9 2 s oo. ex t I 9 llree. step nght up and L·ngO Easts1de Costa ~esa ty WS Mo 642·083S or
tal c:oltaj!e Allmsh.irp ' -:lSl-31100 (workdays>: 6422688 makeus anoffer Atwo I Owner wall carr)' 646-6423~~-----
cond w eM·cl lor:it11111 I TERMS. M". HTS l!l'!uRarnnc~ l'k"'-''""" <weekends). bedroom rondo with lots a. • .u ... " Prired to sell ' NEW 2 Br. 1 Ba. Quiet &
Owner will t'arn ll(c 2nd Wh\ nut rent Clachelor _ or character Vaulted cool. built ms . refrige
TO Best bu> in to"n for u n •I• 11 l• IP . "1th Lease option Turtlero<·k WESTCUFf 4 ID cJ~1~~gs5 ~ :e~b,arta~: s;. ..._ ,J"' Adults. oo petss I.st +
only $280.000 pa~ mt·nt 'Ahllt' ~ou re ll1ghland 3BR. fam rm. Spacious. o,_, & airy. amemtr""' Too good to ca..i..tn.o • I 071 ,... secu rat Y 595 Mo &
644-7211 ~1dl'tn2 Hdrmhoust' lt2 2•1 BA . professionally ~.. ...., ,... NEJ5SER 642083Sor646-6423 ' " H\ '"""" $160 ooo beaut. 4 Bd w/2 patios. last ! SISS.000 •••••••O•••••••••••••• · -u-.~.... · landscaped, many other M d I M be 8 3
•
\. . 75~:906l a I v a I ue Patri ck Cote Realty SlJ0,000 Open. daJly 4 1 ~ -Pres1d10 Dr 3 bdrm. 2 631-2242 xtras Xlnt f1nanc1ng Assume 10,95"4 int A re· t ; 2H/21ACOMDO COf)' UHY1 llX:. esa e ar auty 1
' ' ' DISA"'°'MTID?--498S640 498-SOSJ 292H'oll•·J!t' \\1· els gardner 4r water
~ · Tenore.63H.266 I & IO\·estmenl 32031 VaaTonada 7H fi.11 oil\3 ba, lg cov pat.IO, fplc, in
...-... .._ ________ , ~:tM~ ~~. ~:?: Iii~• .. o» .,:: •• ;~...... '""" "'"·" .::::~!';: ~;::
--,.. praee you ran afford~ sume 13'* loan Spa. Fors• IE.A.CH DUPUX L n dr y h ook · up .
-
, COLUGEPAIK Don't dispair. we ha\'e --------pool.clubbse 1100 Two gorgeous units 112 gardener meld. No peU 2 Ir 21a Co.do Just what you ha\C l>ct'n THI IL'lll!lll'. 552-1744 ....... •••••••••••••••• blocks to beach and only $875. Savage Wllde & Co
S vrr 0 C EA N f R 0 NT· New 2 Id O . 2 67 9006 109,900 looking for at Sl75.000 ,. .......... X" WATERFRONT w/20,.. yrs o cean view L_ ___ _
Du. u.a.OC'.'<..&11 67"'177 1 Terrahc location'" <.:am I _,... d 0 . Modular Type Homes. & 3 bdrm uruts The 3 E aide duplex tbdrm. m , .. ~ ;r-3 bdrm. din rm . hv. own. MC at 12"'~ mt · leased land, 3 pvt bchs. bdrm 1s "'-at for owner "E" l T 0" S pus View \'ery attrar • f f" p Sl760 3 p ... ~ Iba, gar.137Slmo " " " tn e terms I nn . am nn . . 21, mo.. yrs. n ee 24 hr secunty, fishing occupant Only $300.000 SPYGLASS ba. xtra large porcelain jU$l reduced to '220.000. pier from S:W.900 10'1 Call now 979-S370 -673-'2n!J. ---
Enjoy the good life'" tubw/ceramic lllewalls Hurry! Call Jarvis down.~al!§_ N I CE E ·SI OE
thas immaculate 1 Bdrm ,, I & noor. 4 covered patio O'Bnen 840·8208 John SALE BY OWNER ALLSTATE. TRIPLEX 3Br. 2ba +
home Perfect for 1•nter ""° D. . areas Pnce S230,000, S'1 Coombe Bkr Pnced for quick sale I" dtn Lge deck-upstairs
taantnl! or t·omfonJblt' D 'l11.fo,,. down, assumt $40,0001st H.t>or Y1-w HOllM Spacious 1800 sq. rt in S600 mo RMi lnvstmnt
family laving ThL,~UJll'r 'lt"{f..,' trust deed at 712"1 Xlnt Beautirul Palermo Orange County's most A~LTORS 152·21~----
SOUTllPORT morh-1 ' land lease S&300 per Model . Open and prestigious adult mobile fC 2 Br 2 bath. brand new
walh 11s bt'.1u11full) El Toro 1032 833·8600 year Can't change until spacious. 4 bdrms. 2"2 home park Call for ,.!.......°""' 2550 condo Pool S795
landSl a rwd 'Jrd JUtJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• year 200J. t4'C ant onJy ba, fam rm, pool and j'a~ annt. s.44·8120 ---'""r' 'I 754-J.202 .. ~ , 2nd trust deed due ' ..:a::= ••••••••••••••••••••••• Catalina \l~~1!>a\.11l;e BLOW 1/4 198687 Call owner for with solar heating AcreogeforS. 1200 arlabad-waterrront. Large garage. tiny house .
br111• 1 eanc"'a'n' ! h, .. ~~('''rt'hlil·~Ln1,1 Ml LU OM If 5_13 CAMPUS Dl:IRVINE appt daily after 5 pm. SJS0.000. fee land. Open ••••• .................. Come home to a retreat! .. vw.. .. .. • L h ,,,.. ........ Sat-Sun 1·5. 1963 Port ,._ _______ ml Spacious 2 Bdrm. 2 full
mo11vJted ~.OUll • lnl' rag 1 "'3}' Move to --1714 17~ Chelsea or call Kno11 1•
S400 Adults. no pets l61·om.._ ___ _
D.M. Manhal Rltr ~::u;i:~! :;'sJ~r~~a~~I * * 80% LOAN! Pro~rtie~~-752·28311 cl~:!:o :1~0.o&i0~0du!i view
7 60.0835 " pool spa & \lew 1 not at under 14'1. Call for MU 3 ID CONDO STEAL -this EastbluH s.5 acres with 8 beautiful _R_& H Inv t. 7~HJ~
Mesa Verde . 3 Br+ den.
2 Ba. ganinr rnc . 2941
_Pemba Or, 96&2453
Costa MHa 1024 a mat c:hbox 1 G reut details about the super A beauty with fr pl~. home. Price reduced uninterrupted view just 2 1 2 5 5 q ( t 0 (( 1 c e
••••••••••••••••••••••• lt'mtS Assume 9' i•·; in financing on this 2 Br patio & spa. Try SlG-20K from SJlS.000 t.o S2SO.OOO minutes from Dana warehouse. High growth --------•I INest Call Patrick Woodbridge condo down, assume ll''!'k or OWC Isl Pnme loca· Point Yacht Harbor area. Affordable hous·
Backbay area Condo Cor
lease 4 Br 3 Ba 2 car
garage. tennis court,
spa, pool. No pet.a. Ref's
required. S8SO. Call
7 14 1S44 8071 or
J.! 4 I 7 39-6521
MESA VERDE
ASSUMAILl
Nace 3 Bdrm 2 bath
home New roof. near
schools and shoP'> i\~k
ing Sl29.900 ror mort>
I n r o r m a 1 1 o n . ,. a 11
$40·1151
-~· HERITAGE . • REALTORS
Ttnore 631·126ii Faces park & pool New lease opl. Won't last lion Lusk Home OPEN Located Lil an area of ing Good labor forC!-
<>n the market Patrick Tenore631 1266 SAT /SUN Devan &r Co. magnificent homes ideal Exceptional clean air SH~.500 64.2·@_ for an estate or invest-environment. 244·9803,
ment. Available on 244·3ll4. __
terms $695.000. RIVER RANCH
17141 673·4400 5 a c rea. all renred
IZIJI 621•2121 ~real Well. Custom de-signed home owe at I ha· h.11 l••1 .11 . ·' -"""•I low interest for 10 yrs.
111'.al ~.-1.111 fu 111 Agt Mike. 247 2641 Eves
244·~
WMIC
REALTORS WM* H f:~l.TllR~
Newport Crest condo.
\\OOdbrldge plan 4. 2000 sq ft. 3 br
Real'IJ plus den. 3 ba. Pool. ten·
TERMS TERMS nls, walk to beach. By
• 551-llHHI -------•!owner, tenns,noagents
Spotless lrg 4 Bd. shows 1920 8arra11t1 Ph,,lnlnt BESJ ytl ll( IN ,_SS9-~~7456~-----hke a model Assume MU ·
9'•'· Onl) $161.000 or1-----(IM'Dlllff $8,000 DOWN
Nice 3 BR 21, ba home
with pool, spa. lge ram
rm. 2"'1 car gar $875 mo.
inclds pool service. Ask
ror B1ll,63l·l.266~--
CaleCJl""ArM 3 bdrm, l V, ba, gas lease option Patrick "'11DLU OWC lrclT1> 4Sr
Tenore.6311266. Toplaceyourmesaal(e 3 Bdrm 2 bath, Im · MO l~E T ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!'I befo~t.he maculate! Owner anx· "'""
readino public. ious. ~.000. VernJlles 2Br. 2Ba pen·
.!love $700 mo. 540-2281
Mr So Cit,_. WM* •••••••••••••••••••••••
***** " R M c... Ur thse, ocn view Sl56,000 phone oy c • • Auume Sl28.000 of S&L \ 1!1\'1,11111111 ••• .. •••••••• .. ••• .. •••
3 bdrm. 2 ba, bonus rm
Flpc, bit ins. pool +
service. Gardner, water
pd. Avail 9'1 Sl100 mo
64S-4~
Daily Pa lot 111!!!!!!!!!5!4!1-!7!7!2!t!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I loans at 173. $1828 mo. I l.11'11111 hl\ 1·~1 m1·111 ru .... ,....._ 3107
Classified.642·!16711 -= OWC S20.000 3rd TD. Ofc ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l .. ••••••••oo•••••••••••
Rf.Al.TORS
3 H + Pool + Spa
Harbor and Baker area I lave ~omethlnlt to sell •
Xlnt neighborhood Cl.1ss1f1ed ads do 1t well --------TBMS with SJ5K down Owner 1,..lft• I 044 Sell things fut with Daily
must setl Sl44.900 ....................... ..f!.!«ll..WJlnt Ads. _
COZY CONDO
2 Bdrm. 2ba end unit.
New carpets Clean and
bright. Assumahle 13''•
loan.
WIMBLEDON
YIUAGE
Eleg•nl ~ingll' rum1ly
home. Proleulon•lly di:
corated and landacpd. •
Bdrm. Jba & library
Alt , alurm. arnenll1e11
g11lore.
•
RED CARPET
754.1202
LUXURY WITH SECURITY Beautiful
Jasmine Creek home located on
lovely wide greenbelt. 3 BR, 2th
baths. Total privacy in security
gated community $369,900.
Madeline Crawford 752·1414
(W6.3)
l'22 IAMYOM. This lovely home
iihows like a model. 3 BRs. 2 full
baths, central air cond, beautiful
wooden noors, combined w/cptg,
warm (pie & lg ramily kitchen.
Shows pride or ownership. Priced
at $147,000 including land. Super
financing available. Alan Beel
~J-8700 ( W64)
VILUIALIOA 730-2270,Hm842·2682 l Acre Parcell <FSI ON THE BEACH Xlnt
l Br condo. View or 2BR, 2BA. condo, partial Ocean views, 40 Kona loc. Winter Rental Avail
Catlhna. Owner will ocean view. FEE. Fpk. Airport, prices start Sept 12. 7 Br. 2 Ba.
help finance. Submit of· auarded gate adult com· from S!0,500. Please call App1'1. _, mo. 126 E.
fer. mty. 1169,500. agt (808)329-7711. Real. Oceanfront, July 18th. _ lrMWa HMllJ , 758·0120,~. Estate Gallery, Kona. Aug. 2llt. or call (213>
3 br. ~ ba twnhome. frplc,
OW. small yard, S675
A&t, 631-91575
2 br. 2"2 ba twnhst. pool.
spa, frplcs, 2 car gar
w /opener, avail. 9/lS. ~Imo. 642·2D>
It's 1 BREEZE Inc or write 7~5719N Alii 398-~ (213) B»-2261.
Call84Z.5&78 CJasslfiedAtbff2-5&78 Or. Kallua, Kona. Hi Winter Rental: Sept. 12th
••••••liiiiiiiii~~l 92640 thru June 12th. Clean. 2 c ..... ,., Lott/ br. patio, garage & la~-S52S rents this 3bdrnl
home w /bnck fplc
H379 llir
UfSHOU NOMI WITH PllY.ACY.
One story perrect for couple or
small family. 2 BR + convertible
den & gard en rm. $340,000
Loasehold, Dona Chichester 642.ms (was>
UVI IM QMI -llMT THE OTH&
Drive by 365 Ogle Street, Costa
Mesa " see the neat duplei .
across from the park. Good
assumable loan. & seller wlU help
finance . $159,650. Larry l>)ter,
642.c35 <W~)
...,_ ....
"1.llOM 1lrM --"""OllW """°"--.°'-~.._,CA._ 1'"4)--("4lM4 ~
C"Yf'h 1 SOO dry. SSOO Mo +deposit.
••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Adults. 67$-3571. ___ ,
H.-.u.. Hat~ 1530! Modem 3br home
Mou.nt OUvt. 2 Iota. Sp H....._. 1142 w/dble gara1e ' huge
•EfrF C)'l)TeSs Lawn """••••••••••••••••• yardforklda! 11751 Mk Ofr. 841-0UI Cus~om 4br waterlroot,
C1-1rcW 85 boat slip, spa, RenUmetl3H~55Fee ._ I 00 forever view. S280C>/mo. EAST SIDE 2Br lBa t. ,.....,,.,., 6 Fu . or Ullfum. •9966 d • • '111
•••••••................ ya. 1ara1e. lit 6 last.
RARE C·l ·H Newport ln... Jl44 Mmo.641-J70t
Beach Property. 50' •••0 •••0 ••••••• .. •••• E. aldt·Bdwy, 3bdrm.
frontage ln prime loca-CARM EL Cottage Home. frplt, dbl gar, lrg yrd.
ticin.Ownttwillfanance. 3 br, ram rm, 2"'t ba. U$0 /m o No pets
Eulualve. Principals Corner. 950s:;&.134.s $41-*7.
only. Aak for I rene Lat--9"da 314138 -~r~.~21,<,......._Ba-.-Condo--.rrpk,
Loudon, Al\, 131·'247 or ....................... encl patio. 2 car 1ar
631-'1300. • SIGHT fr SOUND OF S7SOmo. 7SH314. M·F . -------I SEA lBR. frplt, gar. ;::_:,-.J..& --;216 ,.2 LOT 714-494·.$1.14, 337-2222 - -~ ----...................... .
High turtle count. MtwpertlMdt 116' 2 Br. 1 81. dbl car. yard.
62.SX307 lot. E.datln1 ....................... HOO. Avail. Sot 7
house on PfOPlr\.yy. flex· UDO ISLE charming 4 -.101s
Ible "'"· Owner will bdrm, 2 beth newl1 re·
c:ouldtr carryina tat decorated. i1aoo mo 1tt1•••.._. 124'
TD. A.Ulllc tl•~. Call Yearlr. Alto other m · ..................... ..
$40-115ltormort1Dlo. taJs avall. BIU Grundy, Brtnd MW. l br, I ba
... , ~ HERITAGE
11 f I\! t 1 II/',
-----·-
875-tltl houH fOf dtKrimlnatla• 1 -fainll)' 2 bib to btttfl Vtarly la w\nter, lbdrm Totally uparadtd
la adnn. f\lnl Utd pd, 0 a t d t " t r i 11 ( I .
Vrd. on Stuhore W. •.1*.Lmo.ISMIO
Newport. WO/mo· 6 NI. Bi ACH lb~rM.
.. , 0 '*80i 1"''-· ,_ .... r.d"" .. , .. ,. .......
I
"-"U•twW•d jW....Uifwtll•ll .,.,_.,...,.._111 Alclwih......_ .,_l••flU..... ......... s... 4100 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuttd1y,Augu1t 18, 1981 C7
•
0
••••••• ......... •••• ••• • .. •• • •• .......... •• ' ... ••••••••••••••••••• ..... •" • • ............ • ....... •• .............. •••••u • ............... Offlct ..... 4400 kt 9rW...... 41 Lott I P.-d IJOO
.............. )l4~Mtw,.,...... l26t ..... , .... J101 e .... Mft4I ll24 Mt.,.,.... ''' r•malt nnmle wanw.t ............................ ! .................... .!!~. • ......................... . ...................... ••••••••••tt•••••n•••• ....................... •••••••o•u•·••••••••• •••••••u•••••··--··••• non·•t:0ktr. •bdrm Office •pace •••U for 1500 SQ" U1bt In ~ Lot 1 h i blk at
1 IDRM homt with 1 • JASMINECREP:K IBr, aBa. 11*$1110 ' rom • J Br l Ba. Nr S Cat J BR, 2 ba, yl'l)t 11""1 mo hoUM NI. ~~ to part·tlmt Ille. Atro11 d.utal Prime lo(atloft •••• u•••••••tt•••••• tilt htln1 r:or Hd : ,·
bl,nttrKhoola,preftr Elt1ant. view Adullt. plrlaly fllrnlthtd '1111.S.A Adu.kl t500 Frok'.bttill,1110o.1ar ~ · fN1DHot1HGIJ*,alNB out to John Wayne W.&,...OMJ v·'vt:tadelOro/Vi~t•
ram ,,$0 nm San no PftJ s~1mo Oyt ~l-324' . No_Rf11 ~Im-Uie ne• U9 15th St rlahr Apt. tmmtd , l· 10. Airport I USO mo offeclaM ~ Nft 60-91.Uf
L e I n d r 0 ,$2~ fYl?59-l7IO , .... J707 ... YTIMl•S g:~t dJ~::r~· r:t·e~r': = ~h~ PllMllAnlOMf ~ Pmll1lcu lonUon U1 l. 0 s'T pf m D I ..
Slater/Ooldeowut 8111 Cenyon Townhol.lst •••••u••••tt•••••••••• "' w. Oftlte •r.at•, partln1 • .OOiqlt. SfroatolficH,2 New rt Btarh AJI this Shepherd Collle, blk Ir 84.2-213"1 AvaJJable Stpl Uixurlo111 2 Br 2 Ba unfront, 1bdnn,1 ba SPACIOUS18R BEACH YRLY REN. JtoJtotla etc 7.,_"40 far .. drin In rear I po to' boat flip wht wl blk rollar
1th 1~~acu:ar loll ~ra~ :~l~~~rudltt,no l.ar1• patio, wallt an TA~R1:r11~~htlot ~:;~~.~~:a~;~ MIWPOIT HAllOI ~·~~~-:r ~;:,:will t1ehan1e II arbor 19th , C..'M llMTALMl.1._..,.... • e~ew.scparae ' ciout . dlabwaaher. --or2d1y1wk Bachelor VMlMI u _.. Prin oaly.CalJBIJltler· IWH213 -'-" "ar 1ar1ae. Lcut 11000 ' · ••" ·•· -· reU ... f7).7Jl0 Thia 2 bdrm beauty Mo 844·Z4lB 3 br 1 ba "'bllt to bfarh r1replace, 111111•. Pool V ACAMT Chuck Ctotury 21· HIYt Ortice w /IJAObstructed Stnall office• 1bop 1pare • ..... LOST DOG!
new rplJ, adult ocrup . --a viii 8131 USO /mo' & laundry fee kZ$ 3 bdrm• 2 bath , P.N. rtfa. Prefer atablc view of N~ Harbor. for lea1e A/C le Ba S300 ftmaJe, colbe muc. COM condoavallnowSauna 1 • ll99WB1y t mature leuor . l M · 1 · 1,,,,.., ... · 1 · o c EA Np Ro NT 2 ~ler 87&.~710 · rlrtplact. bll·iN, newly 714 1640.8381 H no Approx .1. . Ml t on Mo. 11slon V eJO 1re1 aru ""'"'""
tenn '·1 d/w, "''"'· and Bdrm a with llllJ of wood 3 br, 2 ba. ~., bllt to bearh, 6~taal refurbl1btd Yrly al '750 ana wer call 'collect Mariner• Male. <714) W.~. Rewar~ lost . 4 l' old
aec
6~01
mo w
1
th ind ahuttm, (ll"t'placc. 1700/mo. winter, avail mo. • 213/1146·2.460 Burba nil ·7100 Low coat oHlce spare male ( olbt, YI<' Sh1ter & ~~~tu 0
.JleU pleaae mature aduJta S8151mo 9/8.6~·5710 HIWPOITHllGHTS WUI pay ios) s rent lat Share 2 olcauJte In pre-with shop area .--..--T1lbet1 on Ncwl11nd.
yrly CntoMtM J724 Spac&oua 2 Or. l~ Ba. clau 1t11lou1airport1re1.140 Overhead.re1rdoor,1m·...._ytol.o.-t 5025 ~7~83111f<*J hkr l.11511e 3S87r~o2Ba. farruly rood m, ....................... Townhouae atyle LaWI MI r to a hare 3 Br IQ. ft . For detalla raU pie pa~k1nc. quiet In· ....................... . ~ mo. cpta. rpa, llARBOR Vl.f..'W 4 bdrm, dr)( hook u1>1. aara11e. C d 85J.62M. dustrlal area ol Cott11 .-fo'()UND Rik Lnb mix , !Yaj_l~l.80-6066 2~.,ba.28turvw11ht11m1· SUSCASITAS Adults,no~.S.75Mo. Newport Creat. on ° S50E uid ct Men!'9-S370 IUSIMISSLOA ... .,. abt2'h1l(h,blut>rollar. S ' '"" 1 b n. • with pools, t.enni.s, ever • u e OI 1 ·.:..:. $500 000/U yn .. l.K unnyStudiowithallmu· ly rm, Corm3l dmma. ~um. r •Pt ..,.,5 ex Avail9-18 9-9270 ything olce l3SO Mo. Mesa.~• IXCEUINTLOCI •
998
9BMann v.1r Vnmoo11 & V1rtor111, Jor apple, $250. U369 view. b11iyard, privary up. Enrl. gar. Adults, no Quiet 2 bdrm. upstalra .EASTBLUFF. 1pacloU1 1 6'6-lll69 or 38SO. M r uerite. A
2 700
and ---<;M. lnjurt'd G45 5749
11800 mo yrly pets. 2110 Newport 81. unit In a trlpleJC Conve. bd.rm. Pool, quiet area Fe;;.le to shr 2Br home ..... 4450 4 rcoro~ 'tt +len!!f~~ JIMI LOAMS Loil: Red Ft'm CO<'kt'r
Large lbr, just steps to 548·4968_l!lwn8& 5PM._ nient E11stJud1• location. Sele adlt. No pel.s $500 1225 mo . + some up-•••••••••••............ apac·e. Mod otrlces. 2919 9 o 'lli o l v a I u e I 3 O s Pan Ir I I Gin ll er).
tht sand! 1235' All TRI LEVtJ, APT with M.wporlle«h 1769 $425A va119 I00..1625or m~4767 keep. Nwpt Hats ar~a For atore 'ornre apace So . Halladay , SA yra 1100.000 Pvt Ortega lfw y 8 116 utl ties paid' 119633 \X'ean view 3 &Irma, 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-6906 Oceanfront large 3 Br. 2 Lv m;i or call 631.o.o1 at rt110nibltrale1. 646-7512HH900 mooex 998-~Manru; R~ward 49llW24
bu,3cargar lnaprtmt-Ba Upper,2cargaraae. SOO 4ooo~Ft Lo "' I G R~tim_es631·~Fee Ne~·port locnllon · Spar1ou 2 Br I Ba • afUP . lo . SloracJt 4550Morlc)ip1.Trwt st rtma e crman
HOME FOR RENT 1120Cl'mo}rly Laundry fac . pool SJ9~ ~~~c&J~~ lease Sl.200 M IF roommate nttded MESA VERDE R ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deoedi 50]5 Shepherd. blk with tun
3 Bdrm. f650 Fenced Walerfront Homes. lnr 548-9556 immed. orcupancy, CM PLAZA Free standing convert ••••••••••••••••••••••• reel 1'1 }rs olJ 1''1eia yard & garage Kids 41 631-1400 I TllEVICTORIAN Laree 2 Br 2 Ba home.S3oo/mo ancr.ut11 1525MeuVttdeE,C.M guage.Approx288sqfi Want lnvtttor for ,Npt collar, 11r IJm('.r Pr &
pets welcome ~·2000 Newl y deror 2 Br Bayfront Condo, with 646·4395 H no answer 4 IJ Locbehindl.ME17thSt bayfront hpme Give MartnH R t•".ird
A t f 4b Id 3b dbl wgar, t1dults. rrpts. view,. seck~rityybldgl , 213/248-4132 ........a--•...L.•u CM.CallRoxie,642-4210, wellaecuredtstor2nd 6405194 ~""'no ee1 r.su y, a. egar drps blt1ns fncd yrd =·par 1Dg. eary L 1 0 0 1 SL E "";~ M·F,9toSooJy.Sl25mo T.D Af!,675-8181 Lost C.:ockerSparuel. f'.
l""illt ]244 tn Westd1ff Area Avail w patio. wtr pd Call I~. -Broker675-4912. WAT ER f R 0 NT Small •x-uta·ve olfic•, l..t~ W............ 4600 $-Ml-Mt.. Co. butt color The Colony •••••••••••••••••••• ••• !I 1~ no pets SllOO 636 4120 OCEAN VIEW, yrly. 2 .... , " ---.............. -7 In 1ne 5.51 0750 Woodbridge, 3 br. 1 •. ba 642 9567 VEAR·ROUNO FUN 667 Viclon.t $.ISO BR 1 Ba, f600 mo Avl Mature Male, 25+. non xlnt addrt111, S6118/Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types ol real estate
condo. $625, mo, avail Sp) glass Hall ocean , u. Soc a Ac.1• .. 11H o, LUXU RY TOWNHOUSE 9!l 64!:6780, 646-~ smoker, pro(. to shr 3 Br Terri(714)7SZ.UIM 2Br hse-Condo. 1mmac 1nves5t:.,.~ !_949 Lost 111 mul:p Sn Jilt
lm!!!.ed. 640-7SW pool. spa, 3 Brdm ' ~~~~~~F:P~~~~a! 2 Br 2'1 Ba 1650 sq rt East blurt 3 Br 2 Ba d~pte~ tn> pr mo incl Newport Modem Store ~~~~rs~~~aeu!~ter. ~,;::" • ~,~u~r l)~ias~uin' ~la~~
Northwood large 3 Br 3 famal) S2t:kXl pr mo A11t P111h11• • Piu~ mori; E11~r> extra. focd yrd. Townhouse Apb 2 car ulll Call Mark 9'13-8«3 or ofc nr post ofc '4SO. -&IN•-Reward, $'75 675 6715
Ba,dinrm.famrm,a lc. 76093JJ GREATRECRfATIOH dbl gar S625 673-6336. garage. No children, no _!!r 67S.Y!! 548 '" 2131477·700l 642_:2171 S4S.0611 Lost 10 ll untin111on
gardener & water meld 15 AC. PVT PARK '~·•<V!•FreeLeuons 642 9666 Adults on!} ~ !SSOMo.644-1010. OCEAN BREEZE Jerry ~lllY..t/ DIJlcounted Trust Oei!ds Landmark II 14 Male 1995 Mo ~~ 2 u Bd B 1""0 & 11'0 ~nop • 1 NEW BREEDAPTS ~tmo + secunty 2 br, Female lo .. hare. 2Br Newport Beach U x 50. available for Investors cat Dark an" on bark ruslr rm 2•2 a 111 lllht'lutJs •S..un.1 ~Ba. ~Uf!USlied. pool & $5.50. l805Westc1l((Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• In Id F d I I w bo1~0 ~1n.',.h1••t & Greentree 2·3bdrms. 2ba Like nu, W o. retr1g, • 1tvo1CimdHd~t: • 1 BR LOFT $480 pvt patio Blk to beat·h Jacuzzi mce & clean. S50 751_5S25 Anytime ....._., X l yie or e a1 s ft , , • • ~
h 0 me • 2 ca r gar S650 pr mo Kids OK. <,.,,,.,m,ng • Goll Frplc, rei: room. pool, New crpt. 642·~ per wk 11 all. Long term 0~ 5005 960·1957 Brok~r stomal' w blat·k h1?er
w 'opener, nr Greentree pets ma) be O••v•11<1 Hanq1 jacua1, gas & water Steps to beach. 3 br, 2 ba. desired 1142.9932 IETIJL SPACE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9K buys 12K. 3rd TD. 3 stripes Nn t•ollnr Needs
pool. S6SO mo 1nt'I John Marsha ll 8EAUTIFULAPTS. paid Adult.<..nopets 393 frplc, S7SO mo yrly M-iF 4BR,2''2-BA,near I Newport Blvd. sooo sq. PRINT SHOP yrs,324y1eld Med1cat1on !lti04952 water. S.St '!_!99_ 631·1266 <,1ng1e~ 1 & J Beo llamtlton. CM 645·4411 Avail. Se . I 673-2507 block to bch. Prime 10<.•a ft 60' per tt. Avail now · . 90K 20~ Isl TD 68'·1 960'61142
COLLEGE Park home.~ •oo'"' • Fu1n,~heu or631 2150 I Br. Steps l-;; beach. t1on. S237mo.631-2270 Call Thravmg business. C.M., LTV Call Chris 'shaw Lost gold brm•lt•l 18K
br, 2 ba, famlly lle11ut & untum•>111••J • A®•t Realonomics 67$.6700 low overhead. Call for 730-6050 gold c·ham. 131 J>('arls lndscpd ,700 l.oa•e L'IHl\j • No "~". ~ ... BllH garage parktng Yearly Npl Crest Condo 3BR. d63ell-~~ 165,000. Craig . -29K BUYS32K ( 2 • ~ n Mode1,011t1nDa•lv ~ u S440 Mo 673·3958 or 2'zBA $225MO Ml f' CeroMdefMer ~ a rross loll •
642-6724 1110 1, 544-6899 Ni!e Loe 548-4966. (20() sq fl. Ground noor. 20% 111TD.59'~ LTV diamonds Lost in Mar
&.ocJ-alHch 3241 Oakwood TOWMHOMES lrcadNewCo..do JBR w/2 rem $225 per CoastHi&hway li~hl 43KBUYS48K rioll llott'I, F<1sh1on ••••••••••••••••••••••• Westdirr. I stor~ 4 br. CONDOS fo'OR RENT bd I mo Isl & Last plus dep RealQ!!omics 67S.6700 ' 20~ TD. Orange Co . hh1nd area \'t'r} de Spec ocean vw 3br, study, 3 ba. c·ountry Garden A~rtment1 !Br, xtra lrg 1540 I rm, I ba. poo . 67 8 I • . 18K BUYS20K IH·ate ' 1213 17114 842!1
(rplr, hrdwd flours, kll<'h Anul 9 15 no pets Newport Beach N fir.ind new full 111ze garage, no pels Nr ! . ...I!! for lease Retail Store. ,,_,_._ 21 ~ 3rd TD prime Rt;WARU'
deck,nrtown bch S975 S9W 880••.r•P ''"' to wnhomes, double Hoag Hosp S650 mo+ Rent loft m Npt,Bch approx.IOOOsqfi innew ChrisShaw730-60.S2 REWARD! 4S4.6930 6429567 (7141645 1104 garages. pnvatt' yards. security deposit. home. ramily at shopping renter. Anchor Cltttaktll
5
~P~ Pvt party must sell 2nd Lost Hluc lo«· Hdg on
OCEANFRONT Mobile L1do lsle lgt'4br.3ba, NewportBeechS l1replace No pets 52451~ mosphere l'MX>tnrludes tenant. Irvine Ranch ·~ -TDforS27,000,20'1,for3 Cedar Wa} +between
H S650 & b~31JI dct•or c·omm "OO•bthSt. •«• ... IM.·ated 2 blorks from SanCletM.te 3176 all ulll plus use of Market, NewpQrt/Costa So. Orange COa.st Area _yrs '450/mo.6421067 Rosd Bonhe ur and omes mo up be;1t•hes tennis. I'll' 17141642·5113 downtown shopping, s •••••••••••••••••••••••!homeowners pool Mesa area CallS.SJ-4322 No exp nee. Wall train = --., h
Dbl wide.
4~~~ s 1500 mo 673 7~116 1 mm to beach SAM CLEMENTE 759·0780 or646-'841. S50,000 Req. Sl.5.000 cash Mackeret FWa MtC) ~~~rW,·h 1c~:m':i3~0 CHAltMIH<i HOME 675 Ol.54 1 Open dail) 10 Ii ,NMw 2 storv. 1 bdrm apt G~• WESTCUFf Alli down Will net k0.000 SINCE early 1981 clothe•. but •• '""" as
3 3 bdrm 2 ba Ocean l bdrm lw.uraous Poo 666 W 18th St . C M .. 'J 100 sq rt r ... a 11 5 .. _P now Plus. Call Mon-Fn !) 6 Specialmng an. d ~ ~"'" 2 Br bunj?.ilo~ in ex • Jae & gym In Versailles 2 Xlnl loc Orean View for tRt 415 ~-uu PM 408-867-0lll lst & 2nd TD lun<'ll l1dg l'.dl 1-.. 4397 View, fireplace S800 l tui.11 c ~uarded .eate S8SO Mo CallSJJ.fi666 t>4S 6334 64 4905 Clost' toshopg •••••••••••••••••••••• available High traHic --·-----s aflt'r 1 PM
Adults.aopets l'Ommuniti Sl275 mo Sparkhng dean 2 1Jr I'• Callcollect Storogl~ location Call Ml-8300. Mea.t market. totally b~siR~EMRt·~ w>11 t Found Sht'ltit' Mi"< _4~1036afier5 On 642 !1201 t'\l's OCUNFtlOMT Ba S-170 Fenced. u111!. C21Jl 249-1536 onBalboaPerusulanexl BowaeDevel Co. equ1pped.12S,OOOorw11l FINDAWAY ' sm:illremdlt
Vacant 8 25, LR 16x28. 644 16!17 J br. 2 ba. $850 mo paid Refr1ge 2 ~mall af\er6 ~M to Fun Zone 110•, fl x Just under 1000 sq ft. 10 ;:ii•~e~~ent for p ET ER D 0 B
8
s >L>~ fireplace. DR 9xll 2 Br Npt Isl -.aterfront uppt>r winter. Sept 12 June I chtld OK ~o pets 1960 r SC General Hosp. 20''2fl) new shopping center. • · BROKER
Kn with bkrst area dplx 3 Br 2 Ba rrµk . or~rlySL250 &1~_3447 Wallare ~9626 1Br. 1Ba. wideck. adlts 67.3294t,673-:llll Newport/Costa Mesa Skate Rental Sales, 760-6827 6406016 "~~~I~ !m~:~!~m:o.~~~: Range& box Pauo. gar sundeck. sltp ;nail W AT ..,; Rf RON T only S3J5 mo 891-1644 31 fl deep dry wall area Anrbor tenant Games, Etc Completely -
ya rd 900 Temple Ter 1 Muture cpl :-.lo pets BACHELOR Ne.ir42St arts JOPM _ ~ ftn1Shedreudoorentry Irvine Ranch Market setup.Choirebeachloc ~ ....... / Nwptllrh 6JI033.5
race S800 Mo Ut11s by S&O mo Isl. last & sec· $400 Mo Utd paid ~leld, Lg IBr dlx apt, dshwshr, HB 646-4841or5514322. $60()0.67S.418S,673-1401 ,,,.,,..._/ SCRIU 1£TS ~er 494-o~ + rers 675 7672 i,;5.2325 FAMILY Al'TS refng. l blk tobcb, gas & 846.:9501 C~ Small Business for sale Loaf & Fo.d IUft"L
Bluebird Canyon family Harb•H \'ir" Ho m l!s Yl'arll . ~mter. summer Spa rkhng cleantri:upts wtr pd Adlts. no peis Wanted.to rent storage ltlltah 4475 Arches _Marina Fuel ••••••••••••••••••••••• ANSWERS h.ome with wood burning 1 beaut e~et· ~ nr 31 2 R:i rentals linery Reali) for fam1hes with l or 2 Isl & last + dep. S390 garages. Costa Mesa ....................... , Dock. Uruon 76. 870.8122. A•w-.h
51
OO Medium F.po<·h
l1replace, chef k1tch . Sep Mother in 1a11 or 675-9111 c·h1ldren Near park No mo 493·5047or496-4292 645-MSS Coast Hwy frontage. Ap. 7·3:30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Skull t.:henl
yard l~r kids~ pets. On maids quarter~. lovely S650 mo yrly. 2 br. 2 ha 2JJe8t:;R-2 BA s.5oo SCl!lta AM 1110 Office a.hi 44 prox 500 sq. It. groW1d lrfH..... JI 's A F. U N Party. STUPJD
ly $650 . Hurry. •M69 °rounds alarm S\Slem. rr .. 1~. oar Nt•plUfll' A1 noor. So. Laguna. t\00 , o__...., 50 IS Ladi-OTI;· .·rs time ror C' al her d Is(' u. s Ing lt--'1--6]1 4555 .. "' " 398W w·15on 631·5583 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rr-,._, "" r J _.._,. • leaseSl400 mo 7590279 5485682 1 ' NEW CONDO near S.C. !617 Westclirt. N n.. Want mo Turner Assoc.••••••••••••••••••••••• WI now nda & Sandll' daughtn·~ bo)fr1end 1936ffarbor Blvd Fee Im maculate 3 Hr 2 Bd Winter Rental 2 Rr Deluxe 2 Br 2 l:la frpic' Plaza SmaU adult t'Om· financia l Inst. 7000s f 494-1177. _!61-8862 "Oh. well While silting
2BR, 2BA. Ocean view Steps to beach. Com mt} Furn Steps to beach. Avail Sept 1st s.ioo per plex Secluded corner Jsl.lloor Agent~l·5032. XW ~Loe Lost & Fo.d 5]00 next to tum she "onl
Lrg pauo Lrg rooms pool. frplr. micro w;11e garage parking tJttls mo 7S t 15<1J unit I BR+ extras. S460 ...l.. On Balboa Penisula. aU ••••••••••••••••••••••• have to worr' about S800 mo. 497·3142 S850 Mo Property Hou~e pa 1 d s 7 3 39 ~8 or Eaststde, sharp 2 BR 2 + S35 utl.l. T7S·2580eves. NEWPOIT lfA\;ft foot and auto traffic to _Looking STUPll) ·· _ LocJ-aH• lJSO 6423M0&6421910. ~4-6899 -Ba. S47S mo Al.so I BR. Apatt•tllhF ucishtd full service exec of the Balboa FelTy passes FOUN D ltm11. r ameo
....................... 1415 + sec B!lns. gar. -U•tww1S:.C. JtOO fires from 1397 "On In front! Great place for fQHMlll lM Shores area Call to
Atlractlve 3 Br 2 Ba Gii C.......,._ 3276 ~rfwlftllh 5n° pe11t9s7 .. ~7!~ ~den. Afi ••••••••••••••••••••••• f1i::J"1:~:S.~cr::~ar. ~store, art shop. of. UIW AU.J 1~nl1fy. uk for Juhe Townhome 2 car gar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Un~ , ca ;r.-S E _. W I M D rlre. etc 673 2943. Alf fl(( 760-9086 rec fac No pets S59s ozy cottagt> ~ sunn I ••• •••••••••••••• • ••••• $255 I Or dplx in quiet II' phone ans., word pro 67~J.:BJO PenotHlh 5 350
497-4072 kitrh,onl~ S240 •RJ.'>ll G~rat 3102 sare court for non VILLAGE m'ift~ul~~ERS ltETAJl.SPACE Call: ••••••••••••••••••••••• laCJlllMi Nigtltt 1252 Exqumlt• 3bdrm l'Xt'I' ••••••••••••••••••••••• smoker "' pre' rental New 1&2 bdnn lwcury COMPANlES H1gb traffic. great ex-SHE
••••••••••••••••••••••• home " stone fireplarc APTMTS FOR RENT rer 9!14 W 17th MS OJ.S8 adult apt.s tn 14 plans l 714 8"1·0681 posure 5000 sq. fl. on 64J.S671
3 Br 2 Ba Garden Home. dbl garage sr.oii• •n51 H B .. NB. Costa Mesa PRIVACY & Cj>UIET Bdrm from S46S. 2 bdrm p Lu SH o FF I c Es .' Newport Blvd S2500 mo. ~-----
Niguel Shores. pnvate Somethmgforf:\er)one l Like ne" 1 Br Apts from S5JS. Townhouse I 500.6000 sq ft 1801 or make otter lmmed Lost silver gra y
com mty, pool, beach Rentimes63\ ~555 Fee Bach to~ Br Unrum with garage Up or rrom S610 + pools. ten Newport Blvd c M Ph occupancy. Persian, LSt.h St & Bay.
S95o. 492·6700,6613.\26 Saltt A 3280 I Apts Certain locattons down. bakon> or patio, n1s. waterfalls, ponds! 646_9495 · Realonomics 675-6700 N B REW A R D ' Mt.. 1~ yw.. ]267 a Itel offer P oo I s Pa · pool. s~a. bbq. laundr)'. Gas for cook mg & heat-R•t11I store.•.._ E/s1de. Trade "Our old stuff for 675-~~2200 DI""" ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• fireplaC'e laun room. lu$h d-" 1 d 1ng paid From San THERIGHT .. ....,.,. J ••••••••••••••••••••••• New l Br. secunt). pools. beamed. c A 111. n s U$ s a ~.., an srap d · h CM Photo lab Up to950 new goodies with a ti's a BREEZE
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or Kath) J O ) time HOMEFORRENT Ac. nu crpt drapes. ~ g · ing Mature adults. NO DiegoFrwy nveNort SPACE 14 It 548-72.49 _Classifiedad.MZ-5678_ Class1riedAds6425678 4 Bdrm S67S Fenced 1 . d 1 . So .:arages. all built-ins PETS ~1esa Pines. 2650 on Beach lO McFadden · ·
yard & garage Kids & ~~~~ePl:~~·;::r~sed ~ardenN~F~~~nhouse Harla,549-2447 , ~~eS~ae~i~M~~~~~~n THl.%'t4T ~···························· pets welcome 545 2000 parking $450 mtl util ,.Stg~GMT ' · 642 1603 Lge 2 br. I ba oHr {7141893_5198 r..u.aa .. ...--...1. • • _t\geht,nofee. (WI 821 6660. Cll l ' garage,pa110,lndryfac • "'~'ll:llW
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HewportlHch 3269 ~7·3750 Bolboalsland 1106 Adults.cat OK $42.'iimo. Rooms 4000 JOOW to6000r Sq. Ftrr· Primlle • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL •
1298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s11s dep. 20)!) Maple ~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ater ront o ices 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tshnill1ttr Lrg tBR . stove. rer. D'W. 548 5861aft.2 Furn. C M home $200 Newport Harbor with • •
3 Br 2 Ba House with ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._ N --c II A Ad boat sl1'ps ava1·1a ble 8 Days • 3 lines • 8 Dollars
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· • 673 9473 · • ' 11211 642 UlO 24 hrs Plus a long list or special i . I 2 d HOMEFORRENT nogar~mo .o pels Newdlx2br.212ba, .. n··l mo a ns wer . • •
dit1onal utility Br .. fam 3 Bdrm S62S Fenced yard. patio. gar · derk • · • amenities. TerTiric leas
rm . frplc, ni cely yard & garage. Kids & Yrly smallest effr} tOI · Kids pets OK $630 Call ot•l1.Mahh 4100 lngtermsnowavaila'ble. • It's easy to place your 8-Day Week Classified by mall, and rt •
landscaped Sl150 Mo pets welcome 54S.2000 tage on Island. CUii.' Nr Lorri. wkdys 547·9571 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Today! • costs just SS -that's only a dollar a day! To Qua I I fy for th IS • 64-0·1327, 559-6188. omce ~n.L.!!E.(~-_ • buy Mature. quiet only evs wknd.s~·543" SEAL.AU MOTEl 1714) 675-1662
759:.6597 CondoflltWwns S300 incl Ultls & phone 2bdrm. lba, sto~e. new Wkly rentals DOW avail. • special offer. you must be a non-commercial us.er offering •
USTILUFf UnfwwtsMd 3425 675·6022 crpts & drps. rnrd yrd. s1 26 & up. Color TV loat 51 A•...._! merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the pnce must
Three Bdrm. 21
2 ba. end ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Pfftiiiasuio 1107 gar No pets S400 1936 Phones in room 2274 MEWPOIT CINTEI • be n O r ad T he cost stays the same whether your ad • unit Good condition and DELUXE CONDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wallace St 645 :WM Ne w port Blvd CM Presugac>1.m. full service • I Y U . •
location S850 per mo I . 2 bdrm. 2 ba. fireplace, H...titgtoalHclt 3140! ~7445__ EXEC offices. lnclds needs eight days selling tune or just one. Week~ 7~4175 3 Bdrm : 2 ' bath near patio. )earl) S650 Anul •••••••••••••••••••••••On the beach. yearly, I rcpt, sec, xerox. under-• •
ocean In Hu ntington 9 I THEWHl~ETlEE room a~kitcbenette & ground pk'g, telex & an· Seaview •Br 3 Ba. family Beach 2 cu garage & ~~ rT"5 b h tlq d nr e Use one word in each box About 4 words make one e rm. d1nmg rm. ocean & lo t s of amen1t1es ----LuxuryAdullunrtsataf. at J>e!' mo + ue ecor. co rm.
night light Ylell;S Pool & S650 monlh' \st & last Bachelor. $325 yrl)'. ~, fordable !Jvang 1.2 & 3 security deposit of S290. 644·7189-• cla~sified line of type, Minimum ad IS 3 lines. Please print •
tennas.SIMJOprmn mo dep Da)'s. call / blk beach 201 E . Br Well decorated 2306W Oceanfront.N.B. CdM Deluxe Suites, AC, plainly. 8471707 . E\·es call Balboa 67S ·9S62. Olympir siupool.hght-673-4154. ampl pkg, util pd 2855 . •
Waterfront lease. 4 Br 4 960-4769 752 6925 ----ed tennis court, Jacuzzi. ._.. 4200 E Csl Hwy. 675-6900
Ba. family rm. top ron _ Coro.a~..._. 1122 park hke landscaping ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnmeoffirespaceinnew • r------------------------------, • dition. dock for 40' boat NEW Be 1st tenent ••••••••••••••••••••••• Most beaut1rul bldg in Newport, av11I 8/29 to bldg, Dana Pt Ocean & • I •
$2200 Unusual adult complex Studio Apl w lutchen and H B 9/12. steps to beach. 3 br, mtn viewa Avail 8/81.
w gate & pool Near parkmg space SJSO. no FrorriSJ95 846 0619 new punt in 'out. t27 Pr•-completion le111ng • I •
4Br4Ba.clean&sharp. SC Plaza Secluded _pel5Dal'~,A~&4472ll_Deluxe poolside xtra 34thSt.85Nl867,67J.Ml0 bonus.661·~1 • •
next to tenr.:s & beach comer ~l t BR. d~n Costa Mtsa 1124 large 2~r. 2.ba. bltns. Newport 3 Br. I ~use AtlPOIT Alli
11500 mo. Bob or Dovie mg. patio, cent. air. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dswhr I 1 miles beach from ocean. parkmg. Furn 15 h ed
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759· 122.I 1460+ SJS ut1I 775-2580 NEWLY DECOR Adlts. no pets 1450 mo Wk 1 y a v a i I now . rurnlahed. Lg. window 38'DOCK evesweekends..:.~ts 1 Br gas pd encl.gar 536"8362·-675-5715. Executive Suites in . •
3 Br. 21-1 Ba Nicely de· • 2 br. I ba. serurity. d washer, po(,1. Adu lts MARIHEIS WALi( I 00' FIOM SAHQ Irvine. Walking distance • • corated Condo Avail. chi Id ok. no pets SC 642·5073. I. 2 & 3 Br Townhouse Newpoprt Beach to airport.
8·12. 875-BTIS. Plaza Area. S450. -z Ir. 1 lo~ Ap~. from Sm. Patios. lBdrm. tlOO/Wk. f'J.A%A 1 • •
Oceanfront, on beach, 833-1~/545-6844 aft 6 single & double car 2Bdrm 1375"/Wk. EXECUTIVE SUITES • spectacular new 2 br. EASTBLlJFFS Newly decor. as pd. garages, near Hunt. Newlyderor/sharp 2082Michelaonll212 •
ram. rm, 2 sly twnhse. New, lux. 2 br, 2 ba. encl gar .. !d>I. dshwr Harbour. Children OK. l114)W7·<>aZ,675·81Z7 2021BuaineuClr#213 • •
S2()00/mo. CaU6~2062. view, high wood beamed Adults. &42-~~· 840-6807. lBr 1 bile lo bay & bch 714-752 J 4
Duplex. Steps to brh. 3 r ceilings, spa. Adults on-3 Ir To~ • 1395 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. S400 mo. yrly. 2Br. yrly Coat M ,,... IQ. It • •
gar 6 yrs new lBR. 2eA ly. Xlnt loc No ~s Newly decor. gas pd . patio. Kid.1 OK. No pels S750 mo. Jones Rily Medicatio!oer-:i oltlre: •
up ~. 2BR. lBA dn s 12 00 I m 0 0 r r Ice encl gac.. pool, dswhr 960-7484, 646-9666. 673-6210 1round floor. prv patio. •
1700. NO PETS! Submit &« 46&4 .. res.64().~ Adulls.MZ-!i073. -$3S() + S350depoell. ALL OC:EANFRON1'3Bdnn2 563 /mo. 771·3350, • • on children. Vrly lease Rent to own. flexible NEWPORT ADULT. 2 Br. built ins, ba hoUJe. Weekly. Avail 4M-479'7
Jackie. 631 4046 or terms. lBr Condo, !i<> crpt1. drapes No peU. 8f22to9/19.~2147 Costa Mesa, 250 IQ ft • Publish my ad for 8 days starting •
5.52·7500. ~e!t•t,:~~~;11 im-1 11i~~!~:r~·210 McFadden Ave near ....... sa..n 000 •uite. Sl7S/mo. UUla ln· • •
Luxury 1 story house on C d 2 BR 2 B 8 d mo.+ utils. Noch.aldren. ~h Blvd.m494_._ •••••••••••• .. •••••• .. • ctd. 77t w. 1ttb. St. • Classification I Santiago Dr 4 Br with on o a roa . no pets. no waterbeds. '400/mo. 1 Br, 3 bl.ks from Moving r Avoid dtposit.I m·S350. •
separate master bdrm moor Huntlnaton 2450NewportBlvd. oceanontsthSt. le cut Uving upeo1e11 N.-pt Brh, small olfice. • Name I. suite, 3 Cull Ba Family Harbour. S75o, yrly lse. __ C:osta Mesa 2111-.cw Profeulonally 1i11re 818, l827 Westclitr Dr , I
Rm. Formal Dtnmg Rm 962·0720 I Br 1971. • Add • & Living Rm an very Newport Beach adults on-IMMID Adult.I only, no pets HOUSIMATIS N 8. fUO/mo.131-0800 • ress I
elegant neighborhood ly. 2 BR, exquisite OCCUPAHCYI 980-21175 132-4134 '""'TlllT C1'ty z · Phone , • Wall papen A carpets Veraaalles. Beaut 2 Br. I Ba Apt. Beam COSTAMISA IP----
thni·out. Perlert rond gardens, pool, Jaruul. ceilin.is. laundry rm. a..• ll41 "Ga" 2 or a room otnct suites. • I •
S1750 Mo. Broker By sauna. S)'m, 24 hr sec. pool Adults only, no ....................... , Avall now Call • Check or M.O. enclosed D I owner. Cooperation uud. 50/mo.631·6666 pets. 2 brapt, l blk t.o bt1ch • Rea~ ig &75-6700 • •
7S9·89'14. 3br.2 ba,alc,patlo,pool. TSl.MOMT 1142>1603 ~":rit oc,:: vrc:er~11 9!p • Charge my ad to : '•
2 br, 1 ba, l500tmo. 204 uuna, no pets •. 1525 SPACIOUS 2 BR. Adult. ~/mo.Avaft.'497.2944 • IXSICUITISUTIVI • '• .. th St. Front. Drive by mo n t h ·to· mo n l h . open beamed celllng, 0 * E I
tirat, thencall752·§4J9 ~7·S781, ~-ms lots of wood, serving .... ,.,. .... JIH I IN • "' xp. 1 •
• ft..&. 1L...&.-l._00 bar. S3951111p. No pet.a. •••••0 • .. •••• .. ··~··•• M/F to ahare Jarte new HmTA .. • .....,....1t1-. • 541J.7358 67UB0.1 Oceanfront for Wanter 1 h 1 d • ..... • , • ....................... ' • Rentals furnished • Irv ne ou.H mme · ..---0 # C w
CORONA 0£1.. MAR 2 Br. Upptr. balcony, unrum. Brcilter. 6?5-49. l2. with YOUD« pro(aaJooal New luaueyotnN 1pace • LJ\p, '• a br, 1 ba, aundeck. no encl3d £•r, d/w Adlts. NO FEE• A --;;condo male. 1325M"o.Ca11Jolln le lrvlne's bualut '
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~.~lmo.640-4090 Noptts.$425 54&-NMor t Is Villpl.Rent ls 5$}, ceoterl ,.., rrwy IC•. L------------------------------'• ~5448. rtn ~~ •• a* e~ · F/ oor1~ 2BR. 2BA rett Avail. nowl Call • M.I Is a.rltlM Mf•lli'n I
BEAlJTl FUL 2 Br. 2 Ba condo f\lmlahedp Jae 6 for det1Da. •
• Mtsa Verde, 1100 IQ ft. pa• .,,_., pool Loe nr 9C lu1 fr •I • I •1 P.•11t 1111• W .., .... • 3706 fplc, lndry, pello, dll· AU ., r•• ooc. --Jo Da~. 11 J I .. ...
....................... !,"'bl··= pr, Ad)U, co:LUI :/J.m/pm. wbd •• 1,261 ..... No....... • . c:e.e.M.. CA tJW •
a Br~~ t ill. 3I~aee 540-4400 Btcbtlon.6 -~ b9droOm •/mo.. a,~ bllda1 hom a=-.;. ~fr"" • I =·~-!111.f!HIJ! 'l:i1 -~~~la I "'.':"" H 1• =· .::~m.::· ci.ui.Aj!! !U!I •••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••· 1
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llAIYSITnNO We Cir.CrptCleanf11 CONS1'R.lR.EMOD •• ..,.... Oaraae 6 "ard deu· moval, malftt. JO yra prof. Low rat•. Quick, 2.Syruxp FrHat AJJ types, new c~!L!'
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fOJ• NEEDHELPTICALL Color br11btene.rs. wht 'Direct from m1nuf1c ~573'7 Frees MS-e:r77 I Pluu all home. ror appt, ca ••••••••••••••••••••••• : l>day Id ''The A~r)"', bk· crpta 10 mln bleach. turer-decor pillows Sam Fukumoto YARD Remodel Demo. Concrete · pens vt c ' Roberta D«or. ""'~-TILE l~ALLED
• lolht lcpt • •Ma· PU lt deL HaU, llv . .dia. "°' IJ.5 ; 111read1 etc Be~ MAIN?. • Clean.ups. brtsna Ir hau11A1. Orad· CreiUv•Prot-'OoaJ MZ·ISZI. --Tbe p1 r Han&cr Pror All Kindl. Guaranteed : DAIL y ~•lll&ll. e1..-.. av1 rm 17.SO; ~ch llO; ...Th!l.!r 151~ Tree trlmmlna. a ma.II In• cle&n·UD. MS-1512 La.'tcapUia, =Cll· MOVI• US• lnataJI~ Decorator qua I J!efs John 11!3-1667
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-·-OESICN!R oatlollaU"" · wvo -"S ti.. ~-bratkout, etump re· --"J R-·"I TR"'E O""'lCNS DIUCTOIY ' .-Rela.Ml.0101 Drywau:)_peclau.t REMOVED.EXPERT movil, .,a_. cl•••.up. 1-&5~ ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• Comml5'5-91575 """" c. Co> J ,_, lloown. wlll CUttomlae Qual ' prod. New • r• YARD CL""'""' UPS 1 1" ...... ..., ••or-. Fi t ... in•'·· by Richard --==---=---Prunlna. Sculpturln(I. , OOITNvw ! your weddlna sown•. ROBERTS CARPET mod .~·m.&MI """',. . ~ms ....................... n .... ...... of rt.oLfflOM Top.Thin.Removals. ' ...... '-*"' ICCetl,. etc. Bev Thayer REPAIR. Rclstretch. re· . ru' ~ 7$1·34'18 Ho.Mc...... P1rkln1LotStrlDtn1 Sinor. Lac, Ina. lJ yra ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cle•n·UD.631·2513
Your D111y Plkll 151·05e'l lay. AU ~n. ALL TEX R....,.& Exp. gardener-clean· •••••••••••••••••••••.. Lot liaht Poles' tfxtUttt TbhaP~t N.B ... ~:~:era. ONE !"REE LESSON!
Service Dlttttory 1'73-MllO Drywall. <lee' depen· ups, tree trim, comp. Want a REAU.Y CL~N pain.~. kumac Main •-you .... -New Approach! Enjoy JAYE Tiii CARE
ReprtMntatlvt .l .. •1n NoSttamlNoShampoo dable. Reas.at-9"-" malnt. F'ree est. Pele HOUSE? Call Olnfham tenanceCo.-.1901 Slarvin,1HousePainters I earn 1 n g ! B Q b Complete service and
•42·1671. nt UJ ·:ivllOReatiii:.. Stain Sptclalilt. Faet DIYW Au. •Alt 641-1088 _Girl. Free~. MHW ..... ~ Ouahty W~e~ Beardsley. 548-4M9. _ stump grinding. 10 yrs ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Bulldin& It RtmodtUn& drv · Free eat. 839-1582 The C.F · Grouo 75'-1"9 YARD CLJ.o:AN· UPS ROBIN'S CLEA.NI.NG ....... ................ Freeest. & ,._hr/..,.,. exo. Lie. Ins 640-9D ~C-.... Mvra·llc·lnil. 147.73201r..._,A~ Tape,Textw"e,Ae<>wUc Resld/comm'l.Sprink· Strvlc 1thorou1hly BRICKWORK : Small QUALITYPAJNTlNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• TVl.,.W
'•••••••••••••••••••••• HOME IMPROVEMENT •• ::::?................ CtW.n&•· Fteem. Rtas. reoaired. a5-DS clean hOUM. ~OIS7 Jobi. Newport, Cosu Stale lie. 3M950. ta Yl'l Neat patches &texture• •••••••••••••••••••••••
A.reyourtadyforthtTax AddiliON/Remodtlin& ACOUltlcCeilinp + Kevln47S.IWIM/67~U03 H....... Give a Girt! Scrub-a-Dub Meu, Irvine. Rds. Oranl!eCo.8311-1186 met1t. H3-14ll MOONLIGHT REPAIR
Seato111 Let mebelp you Ouarante«t. 142-1323 custom hand leJCturin' Btctrktl ••••••••••••••••••••••• pror. houaeclunlng 675-3175 -THE C.f. HOUP -PLASTER PATCHING TV' stereo repair. S2.50
brlo1 YOW' l'ffOnb up to IOOM ADDITIOMS ' Uc. 389N4 S32-M49 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JACK OF AU. TRADES service. Ras, reliable, EXPERT BRlCK & RES./COMM. EXT. lnl/ext. 30 yn exp service call. Free est
date. Accountlna by & llMOOILI... lc ..... /c.cnt. ELECTRICIAN-priced Plumbing, elec, beatina refs. Jean, S31·5016 MallOflry. Small Joba ' PROMPT UC'D Neat work Paul 5'5-2977 645·2492 a~yt_!me -Samatha.~ Kitchens, b1th1. ex ....................... right, frft m lmate on Oddjobs. 638-4068 ReliableCoul>ledoesren· repairs. Yrl>lc facinas. 754-IUf Restucoos -Textures WilldowClttRillg •"'9t Ser.ice pension• French doon Pool Deck.a and Patio., large oramalljobs. HOME IMPROVEMENT tal & yard clean·upt. Reta. 55l·4M5, 7eo.7074 Ext house painting only Int/ext Patchwork ..................... ..
...................... , wlndowa: 1kyU11hta. oak Muonry,SporUcTennls Lie. 11398Gl 673--0359 Plumbina. clu.,..ups. hauli.n1,etc.MH35S Jim Jennin11 Cua~om Wtdothejobright! Free est 64S-8258 CAUJUUO'S
9 TO 5: 115 a mooth, un lnter , oak 1ta1rway1 Courts. Lie 374087 Bob, RESID./COMM 'L odd joba. 28 yrs exp. Housecleaning by Donna M 110 n ry · Ser v 1 n g LEE Pamtlng. 84&-4889 pt llillg F~r all your house &
llm ittd calls Ma I I Plana Lie 30l007 Frtt 151·19M,147·7071 "1ahly qualified No job 979-2265 Reliable, rtferences. ef· coastal area aance 1969 Summer Special. ext/ant ....................... _window c!!i.&:._645-561!1_ -
Hand I I~• uu our tat Reu 30 yra. Allen DRIVEWAY CLEANING tooamaU.631·23&5 __ Hardwood Roon rlcient. 631-48915 _ All type1 Bnck, block. painting. Pror Rsnbl. McCORMACK PLMBG Original Window Washer L~&una ills AddrtU E Johl\IOO &40.~ or km prove ~~ur.1 ~me i G•••lilCJ ....................... Dial·A·Houaeteeper atone. 645-35l2 Free est. SUveS47"4281 .REPAIR' REMODEL Avg 3 br home. S35
91$ ·9334. 840-472.4 •!"· emove ll&v 01 rus ••••••••••-••••••••••• HARDWOOD FLOORS ThorougblReUable •BRICKWORK• -PAINTING-CUSTOM Stoppages Reas rates -~_t7698 -
....... •BWICI & SOM ataln~Forest., 8'7·4818 CLEAN-UPS/LAWN Cleafte4 •Waxed Local refs MS-1867 Block walls. dnveways, work, 25 yn exp_ Many Uc. 1294378 675 9UH "Let the Sunshine In"
"••••••••••••••••••••• Bulldm!\ln<'f ltMT THOMPSON'S Malntt~Landsrp Anvtime 132-81 S.A HOt1Htitttllg patlOI & tile. S3l·6'2166 local refs, Uc 11403941. Drains rrom StO. Main Call Sunshine Window
Otlvewaya. parltln1 lot Additions. remodelln!I. JONCRETECO&!r.'~ Freeeat. 542.9907 H~ ••••••••••••••• .. ••••••Custom brick, atone, Bonded,ins'd. Freeesl. from S20. Repairs. haul· Cleanin Ltd S48-8853
ltn tu, 1t1l<'oat1nc. plan• ~·ml'l!I Reu · Mowln&Sl0.Sl~S25 ....................... OON'TBEEMPTY, block, concrete, stucco. Hutchison,963-0911 ang , l a wns M&M --------• ~d A1phalt. 131 4199 l.i~ 310t4.2 Mi-11?0 CUSTOM CONCRETE H1ulina/Movln1125 Haul. cleanup, concrete THIRSTY OR LONELY Rds. Free est. $4$-949'1 AGAPE FORCE _!42·9033 ~ ._ t Remove old. lmt1ll new 7~·990tl955-0085 Mark removal Dump truck Moya..... Palntmg Co 3 aenera Property "•ag1••-t •
12PHALTREP•IRINO , ... ., .. to l00'1orl""11-1•a --o . ""-curlty Plus" will sit _, " ""-
,..... " "" ra · YARD CLEAN-UPS. tree ulck serv. 642-7631_ """ ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• tlona or painting ex-••••••••••••••••••••••• Sea1~11 ... 'Slrtplng u••••••••• .... •••••••• 64.)..8$12 your house, plants & Ce111m l;.kt. Ftttnt Cablntta l tow1ter lope -----work , Irrigation & re· DlTMPJOB.5 IV!tJt.631.7587 •A·I MOVING• cellence.838-SMl PROF. PROP. MGMT For Ad Action
Ll,..t3'73ll2 64,S.jl~I Roomaddlt'""-lnnl3h CO CRE'TECON~'Tlt pair. M1intenanre. SmallMovingJobl Top quality. Special OLYMPICPAJNTlNG By OCIP IOrangeCou.n
--'6'0r\ ,.....t&t TM 4420 f'oundallona, 1laba. Greenbelt Landacape, Call MUCE646-1311 HOUSISITTIM(J care in bandlln& 25 yrs Int/ext ~esl. ty Investment Proper·
........ 1-... "-' l•t "-"'lO 1 drlvtwa11, walllwayi, -1.01.29 Mature, reliable pro· exp Com.-1uve rates. ood •· L t ) Ed (714)534 6940
Cala
Daily Pilot
AO.VISOR
642-5678
-• m (~ • .. tt,-pm blorll walls ffi11nln1 "" -· ----HAULING-Student has .--G quauty wor. aes · , ____ . -·
•••:;:.•.:::;•::,:••••Rtmodc>I. 1111 ublnl'ta. well• Local rtfe. JAPAN~F.Gardener tge truck. Lowest rate. ~::i:~:~ ~ :O~e:ii. Noovertime.730-1363 Low rates 554·1903 loofiiMJ
•-•""A......, ~at loa. boohh•h•t~. ~ Malntenance.Clean·Up Prompt. Call759-t976 Callevn760-M66 STARVINGCOU.EGE P.,...t.cJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
SPIC&AUST a lldlna ,.lndo,.·•· fC...,_ten. • · _l'r:,ettstimate. 963-2598 Thankyou,Jobn. -STUDENTS MOVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• BALBOAROOF1NG CO
Herb's Garast IH~ rnmta. tb\f hanaln1 •••••••••••••;;:;;;:: •• Look in& for a home or C.._ U Yow Act t..chc...-i CO. Lic. l!T12.H36 "We gals should hang The only roof mg co ror l11!1!!!!!!11!!111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'11!!!!!!1 HarborBIColtaMc'H t4C7m HERtTAOEPAINTINC your own'! You'll find P uli •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• lntured.641·8427 together". SIO/roll. thecoast.673-6743_ _ ~ ROUGH OR rtNtStl 6 RgFUR8lSHING CO. many homes advertised Garages, Ule ha na. Clean-ups, landscaping. WATCH US GROW! Uphol. wallt. Q.0730 WANT ACTION• Have sometlung lo sell'
C-l-.. -•• 1r-i .... ~.---....... ~)0Uron• Doon fmclnj ft(' Rttld or m 25 yn rot sale in Classified llontruck.125.631-UW3 I Freee1limates. "I"" T~Ads 642-5671 _J;lassaredAds642·5678 Class1rledadsdo1twell ~ti®@ii~nt'r ' Chrlt~~ no Llr ~-fie7,2020 evea.day. Classified Ads 642-5671 1 642-2165'1 Want Ads Call64Z.5678 ~s1 1
H..a...w--11.....1 7100 ....._w_...._... 7100 w 7100 He ... W-.d 7100 H..a...w..-7IOOIHefpW..ted 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 Ptfl•• SJSO HetpW..tld 7100tf.t,W..tld 7100 .,.. _... • ....,. ....,.... Help -.ct .,. ..,. ............................................ .. ~· ........................................................................................................................................................................... . •••••••••••• · · GEMEIAI. OfACE EXECUTIVE •DMHSTIAT1YE Baby altttr. grand: C11haer. pllame, mature Dehvery men over 11 r'?r X E C U T 1 y E Small manurar turang "' mother!)' lype babysat Banking woman preferred. Apply L.A. Times to homes an E hrm needs someone * SllJE * SnaAUST infant my home 3 days MEW ACCTS UP l n person. We 11 s C . M 3 a m -6 ~ m . SICIET ARY with mlnlmum 6 months
24 Hour ISCORTS Few dull momenta. week 6 months previous bank· Supermarket. 3347 E Economy car required'. For Newport &h Tour• experience to handle ''~I IJl MCNL: 1Phllnenet.y.rmor yc.hee'"ac1e1sy!.~ PatM2·5357 Ing e1x=·E· g>ast Hwy, CdM. _ n o c o 11 e ct i n g travel compnay,1~y1r.1ng bookkeepuig light typ-
r ~ " "" Babysitter ror our tod· CASHIER ~$450/mo. + bonus. 60WPM. SH. 1 ng tng •telephones Must SOOTKlNGM.ASSAGE 1 can be. Call loll rrtt. dler Mon-Fn. Please ofC HOUSEWARESALES 646-0637or646-58'4. _ Salary commensurate be nonable&haveex
Fordilcriminatlngmen 1·800-282·S864 call after7PM or before Contact : Full or P/time. Apply: Dental Ins work 2·3 w/exper. Ins & travel , celf:nt skills. ~5047.
Call Peter, d4-4871 12 Noon. 644-1027 Cathy, 631· 1511 Crown Hardware. 3107 da/wk ea or pit ea day benefitl. 752-07111 Nona I uk for Traci. Au _you a ltntlemen ADYIRTlSIHG BABYSmER E.O E. M/FIV/H E Coast Highway, Dental Knowledge 'req FOOD
aJone in your eo·1, tall. SALISOPPT'Y MYHOME CoronadelMar Hourly wage open Meyer~'sinlrvine 'Guuds
interested in physcial Sell reader ad advertit· 8am·5:30pm willl Sept. IAIMAIDS CATERING Service 642•6880 , . -lmmedaateopenangs NOW fflllNG fitness, ~rta. plays, ing to local merchants in 14th, 3. 6 pm du r Ing Full and p/Ume. College need s rood pre p . Dental Sec y, experience.
bridge, travel? if so the c 05 ta Mes a . school. Harbor & Baker. OK 64o.5S44/C.M. worker&. S4. hr. Part highly motivated. San S..ctwidi w...n
please contact a lady Newport Beach. Irvine 966-2197 eves. tame. 5AM·9:3>AM. full Clemente Hospital area counterpart Call areas. Will train the BABYSl11'ERWANTED IUUTICIAH time SAM l 30PM Excellent hours &
Security Officer pos1
lions are now available
an Mission VitJO & So Laguna ror mature
minded andlviduals No
Answer Ad~. 642-4300, n"ht ""'rson. Good com p rt t' Tues Wed Full or p/tltM Rent sta· Lora's Kitchen. 3077 S. benefits. 496-2500 , ., ,,.. a ame. .. ·· Fl h s 24 hrs. pany benelita. For app't Thurs.. and occ. even· lion or comm. ex. rs Harbor Bl.. .A. 979-0747
0
__._. Office
FoodP...,
For total stress reduction call Mr. Mac: The Pen· ings. Must be dependa· 646-4935. ..:.fo~r,_,a,,.,10""-"'n1t._____ ,..... prior experience u
• teluation mwage. nysaver,642-0811. ble fr enjoy children. BEAUTY ARTIST t2) Frontdesk.dentalexper M-F 8 30·3. Pho ne necessary Must have
SttffJ().8.,54&2817 AIDE Good bourly pay. Newfutuonshopopens Clerical reqw.red.4daysaweek. weekdayufler l P.M own phone & car
For davcart in my C.M. Pluac, no calls after in Back Bay center. Npt . FIO,,,_ -..CE In a nice Newport Beach 5S7-6232 Veterans bring DD214
Rams Seuon Tickets
for sale, 2 for $600
7'2-0880 (213)~1101
For streu & weight
1011 • masaage by Ann.
541-<M07 lOAM·IPM
" •• ,,_ B h p rt ti h Ip "' vrn office. ~7580 •---~"-==----• Pinkerton's, 2701·B S home. Will consider 7om. "-'l·""""" c . a me e IEl"'lfeir~"( DENTAL """'ISTANT FULL Time, PITime. r I h'ld eeded Ex not nee 2 ~ -n.3o> Main. S.A (to rear o mother w/sma J c 1 Banll.iog n · p. · Advanced ealtb Center r Ana. serv. Typma req'd_ Radio ShaA .. store 1 5S7-9640 TELLER Beauty artists needed Exper req. RDA pre . No exp ner. Call btwn 8 '" r M ... "-pt Exp an Newport Beach bas an NB area. 541-SSCM 557-9020. Equal Opply ART GALLERY with or a .. eup""" · immed. opening for an & 4 :30PM, Mon· Fri.
clients nationwide seeks SUMITOMO BANK ' not nee Must be over 25. indiv. to work in their DENTAL FltOMT HSI t-63=1·;.:0.:.:14:.::0""'. EO=E=----l-!!E!!m!!p!!lo!!y!!e!!r.!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!1111•
attractive, intelligent, (714~S::9181 B6::6~~;y OPERATOR· psychiatric/psychologa· All phases. dental exper GEHEIAI. OFflCE Hang Glider Mfg, needs
reliable. rtawleuly ,... 0 E M/F/H cal practice Duties an· req. 4Y, dys wk. C.M Fulltlme bookkeeping. someone with ... _ ability groomed young woma.n r.. · · rent a station an CM elude patient schedul· 631-1420 10 i.ey. filin". Company ""' Beautiful, University r ug.1,_T • e to perform multiple Jobs
female, would like to parttame poeition. Rigid 81nking Boat Operator the. doc tors ad . asst Full· time RDA. 645·1711. ~in g & receiv i ng graduate, 28. petite withJoodreferences or area"" """er~ ang,dataentry.bi,lling& Dental / Ortho chairsade beneCits. N,B. 8·5. frommetalshoptoship-1
dress code demand! re· SAYIMH ACCT. Shore Boat Operator. mlnastratlve needs. Sur 546-5170 1~=~'------meet wealthy. aenerous, fin~ele&ance.~Ol!CM co=n· CoutGuardLacense.To cessrut randidate must . GENERAL OFFICE. ~hone=;::.;::.,,,5"4::.:7.:..-6366=~----euure gentlemen to ~ operate Shore Boat In h a v e w 0 r k 1 n g Dental 11st. 4 days a young company IS look· HAlDW All SALES j
spoil me. JODI, P.O l•-... •a•n•ua--Y•MAM--•I Avalon Bay, Catalina. knowledge of' all aspects week. Npt Bch of~ice. ing for• girt frid ay. re· Full or plllme Apply an 11473,N.B.93&60 A 2131510-0852 John Jen or orrice procedures in Exp. Salary ope n. adytosteP.:uptohigher rworson 3107 E. ColSt . YOUNG LADI~ availa· Nol the easiest ex -FUU. TIM E · PM · this ty-ol stttilig. Ex· Please call,640-5684. responsib11it1ea Excit· Highway Corona del ble to party anytime perience or your life Position avail In our So. BoDJnR~arts tor· --cell. o';"ganizational & Den lal. Exf. <?rtho asst. iJlg field ol Sportswear.
Call Gina or Lisa Possibly the 1reatest Coast Plua office. Ex-at pera communication skills RDA . Ful ·time Xlnt Carreeropply and vane· -'M=•r~·--
761-9036 Army. Beallyoucanbe per nee Please con· Shore Boat Operator, are also req'd. Gd salary • benerits tyorduUes:Generalorc. HOMIMAIBS C all toll rree tact: CoastGuardLlcense.To ""' bookkeeping, payroll & Earn $6.00 per hr Aa• ... DOPEHfHG 1.'""" ...... • .. u Kathy•mburaey operate Shore Boat an salary &frin&ebenefits 1!44L·l!..:!4~""!.:..·-----I ,., • •n """"~ _,. " ., k F · t · w ordering. Pref exper. • housekeeping. Approx. ,rem D....,? ~4066 Queenaway Bay Marina. pac age. or tn ervae D ..... ..,.._. time. 642-9651 l5 hrs per wk. lrvtne. D9 L 0 n g Be a r h . call: Alice Tompkins, T..._
Es OIT ASSEMIL Y CAUrNMMI 213/437·5611, M . 714·97>0700. E.O.E. MIF ""'-·-H 1 GEMEIAI. OfffCE CdM. NB Girl Friday
Mon.-Sat.10am·41m Expandina manurar fUCUWft Mon· .. ""•· our Y Dependable mature HomeServices.559-5022
7--64 turer needs entry level FEDEJl_Al. BONSAI Gardener. ss.001--------· ---~642~·:..!7998~---I person for typi.n1 • Ute Hous4:keepera wanted J1rv-. per10Mel for usembly __ .. _ 'd Cl.£11S Denl asst/Ortho. Npt accounting. ftfttaura.nt Seachrt Mot.el, ,--.J ir.-.-..J-" 5,60 N · • & hr. 3 yrs. exper. req · Bcb. 4 day. M-TH. or AM •-mot•l-rwr, p ... (. CaU 49'-9717 ..,..__...,.~ JJ o exp er 1 enc"' ~ &.o. Design, implement • ....... ,.... ...
nttessary Good wagea -..To-Cenler Dr 1 d · Register today for local only ir pre/. RDA req. Patricia: 49'2-6103. ext. Houirra1--. •••••••••••••••••••••••
COUHSBJHG
Family, Business. liJ arltal, Wei&ht Loss
lJcensed & guaranteed
67).Ul\ll • 675-8>32
Tense, tight & ta red?
Relax with run body
massage, 24/hrs. Reas
831·1638.
• ..__e..... , ~aled an ....., w u Bonsai an scapang. 642 2626 -....-'"" _.. .... .-: CoataMesa,Ca921S211 Trim , prune. cut trees, temporaryusignments. ~~-=~-----1 200ror1pp't. Mon .. Fri. l2:30-5:30pm. San Juan C1pi.1trano. Equal()pportuoity graes fr shrubery. 557 ftftJC Drain men wanted. Exp Rers req. Trans. nee Call Judj ror appoint Employer Responsible ror finish ....._, pref. Will train. Must Gentral SS/hr. Irvine. 752.7730
mmt, 131·9640. EOE. l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!l!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I work & maintennce, CJ'\•LfJ1-': have own truck. All rer n. 1.._ ._ c ... will be vuifled. Xlnt --r HOUSBlllPB At.._...,.T..... plapt i ng , grass. nav.754·6862. hOIOWlllrilMJ: Flex brs. Must drive. No e x per er I enc e Banking shrubery & flowers lo l!WOl!AAY 1'£11SONN£1 SflllllCls ~~!.!!%~:!::------!
1 neceuary Immediate UIC"'1YI completttheomamen· 372311rd1Stnet Drapery work room Good pay Gen ' 0 pen in g New p 0 rt s~UTA.IY tat design. Take ad lo needs aewlni machine MM • C• houaekeep111g. 760-6062
Beacb.54&7353 ~ any Slate Employment HeWllOrtte.cll ~ator. Full time 7 to Stoa ... ~ Newoortarea.
s4soi------Local Newport Beach office in Orange County. t .O.E. 5:30 Mon thni Thurs. A hl1hb visible position HOUSEKEEPER
savin&1frloaniueeking DOT 405. 161-010. Ad Most speak English. in terraclng with our Are yoe1deplnd•li, a self-motivated paldforbyemployer. CLlll/TYPIST Co.st• Mesa aru. memberresidenta.This do'fM..a.wcwil .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED: Airline ticket Ass..as
LlllMAHN
ELECTRO-OPTICS, It«:.
A growing laser manufacturing co.
located in San Juan Capistrano has
immediate openings in the following
areas ·
./ RECTRONIC ASSEMILEIS
./ MECHANICAL ASSEMILHS
.; ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS
.; MECHANICAL TECHNICIANS
./ QC INSPECTOR
./ STOCKROOM CL.ERi
./ACCOUNTING CLERK
Ex cellent benefits package
Competitive wages-
Por more information. conlacl
ManJO.-.t~
714-49).6624
LAAl<MAHN
ELECTRo.oPTICS, IMC.
33052 Calle Av1ador .
San Juan Ca pistrano, CA . 92675
E.O.E. M1F /H
HOUSEKEIPH Interior Design Sales·
Mature lady to care for Oare for decorating No
elderly lady. prepare exper nee Will lratn
meals. lllhl ho~ekeep .J..71~640-~-_
ing, hve-m 5 dys per wk JANITORIAL. mornings.
Car req'd. Will rea m· no Sundays.JO.~hrsper ·burs e PI ea s an l wk Relired person pre
personality 1mportanl r'd Call 847-0022. ask for
Salary opn 67>7006 _!,.arrxorJudy _
HYGIEMST J ......................... --Expanded duties. $2251 J.ul'TOI
per day. 2days. Newport R1leigh Hills Hospital tn
Center Newport Beach has an
~ _ ammed opening for a
-------~ Janitor Day shan. Ex· cell Cringe benefits IMFAMTIYMAM
We'll push you to your
limit to bring out your
bett. Army. Be all you
can be. Call toll rr~
1·800-282 ·5864
package For interview, rail Joshua Whiskey.
714·645·5707. EOE M IF
~ Roust.on or Dallas·
r ott Worth departing
Los Angeles between
September 7 and 14.
Would like round-trip
Please call days,
711-5837.
Loe. Mission Viejo co
needs Aatemblen w/2
yra. exp. Candidates
must have gd. manual dtx~rity, gd. eyesight,
neat in appearance & de-
pendable. Wort is in Ure
support m~lcal elec-
tronics. Gd. benefits.
Onl y responsible
persons seeking perm•·
nent emDlymt need aP,-ply. Call: Mn. Parelli,
58l..al30
SecretarywithSTRONG '"--~er•-'-'---,type ·"~·"·1•!:!•!"------i Individual must be fl llL Secret.rial skills, .. d IUYw .................. _V'V...... •• of Ct, .e
,,__.
s•s.cntcry S800 Month B k... Q alahe purchase orders. Call o•rva peraonable, tactful ' IHSUIAHCE thoroughneu' con· Too •dee1per rtu Sales S46·Cl606~1'5M·F. IUT wellorganiJed. Involves c......_7Cll Multi-branch agency fienial manner lo work ren mPo • ~ W /economy car to work a areal deal of phone If you a-"wer yes to lhe •:.=='" I I Fri d C II na has opening ror exper'd '' or Preeldent. Sa ary nc. CLltllllPtST flt. Mon· . ays. a contact' requires typ-above,wewantlotalkto indiv in personil lanes $800 onth
commensurate with ex· 6Jl-6!Ml Immediate opening, run ..!M~o!!!n~·F~ri!.!:...:. 142-=9430=:;·---1 ing fr mathematical you . We are looting for a Strong accountin1t back· Entry level positions
per . Full insurance IUSIOY time, Mon. lhru Fri. DRIVERSWANTED skills. housekeeper ground desired Salary ava ilable wath rast
benefits' paid career Exper. pr ererred. 8:»5.Pbont,flling .typ-Parttimedelivtry.Ear· MtW open. paid compan) paced. growth oriented
apparel. Pleuecall : Pill.me. P/time. Apply in&.646-4421. ty morning, L.A. Times. --Our home. Is in Irvine benefits. Rapid advan· rlrm. Excellent benefils
Ms. Dt'nny Parisi• at Seacliff Restaurant, CIVVI lrvlJtt/Newport Beach PLUS (Woodridge) cement ror right person. include medical & den · 71~ 3000 Palm. H.B. W~· P /T . A~o ki&chto "'•-Jl•Ou•tiablel M•'•g~ CAU., ... 9418 C•llP•ullnd03-... l tol.2w ...... ;.i,,,,nd MIWPOIT ..UOA Fri, 2-.tpm. hne deDeDdlble trens. U... ...._. HOUSEKEEPER. dining an u cellent working en-SAYIMCK l LOAM IUSIOYS helper. Country Club. ""°.Call Jeu:546-0235. W...... ..... rm. attendant ' cook. Insurance vironment. We are a
llOOlrvineAve., NB needed part lime. 11 or fu~Pc:ea,e.. 49t-2271, ask IUClllCA.L Hott Nttded lmmed. for am Self~~.~':*~!! for dynamic young market·
~= .... ,, .•...............
~!!~ ..... !!~
A A A MA I I IT IM G ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! co. Auillanct needed. Saks
Need• p/t, flt Sales Dis·
trlbuton. Potential
fl0 ,000 per week.
DyHmlc new wealth Pr04vclnc co. wants am-~ matJvaled people •o,w, For appt. call •t<MIO. MA Marketin1 Cd. 4000 MacArthur lvf Newport Beach.
E.O.E. 0 .. -r. Apply at·. Charlie'• OI PIX thus~-retirement residence, Ing Co, great people to ... COUMTllPllSOM IST!MAT ..,,_.._ Bch F/U Rot t casualty underwriter. work with. U you are a ChlU. 3001 Redhill. Bids. Expr. ott. Salary open Lal · me. a · must have ex per In career oriented ii\·
2, ste. 221S, CM.S4J.03Sl ~'art~:!~ 1 ~ ! ~ etr ',; wfdal worklqcood. for Plea1e call for appoint-lng wkndt. 4N·9'58. analyalng, evaluating & divadual with good typ-of lrvlne Haircutting. --------· 114-5$9-!Z3, Leonard
A.tslltlwtrS/I
lntereatln1 job.
Women's fublona. £x.
per. in tllil field btlp(w
but not mandatory. \¥111
train bri&bt penon w l1d
memory. Fut PIY· Top
pay. Non-imoktr. Apply
In penoo:
ACC.. Cl.Bl IACI S1111T ~ucedffeahh Cef\ter w "B"St. Tuatin .fterport~hhuan BABYSITTER. U mo. .,.td. os-ma ror 111 old blb1 boy Medi lov· "'4th. with aeneral 1n1 mature tttter. Mon· i.ewledft or. or fut Fri 1 hn. 1 dly bt our
itMlty to le.am, book· C :t b~ I0-11'17. 1teep6na data proceu. -·•· ~· t11 6 •all u~ts of BABYSrn'ER ~al • s-1cr101oclcal Mature, nper waman to i1iMlil Out* allo In· bab)'l.it in our home for ~fide · active Involve· Infant. Man-rrt. 9-2 PM,
b d rtcln c u 1 . lo either Palm Sprinaa or mtnt. 9:30-SPM, Mon-Selling anythtna with a making risk selections. in& skills and poeaess a l•-•c•a-fUK8f----i l::v~!. 7f2-~.orRX Rlvenlde area. A.II In· day thru Fr iday , DallyPllotClwlfiedAd Sal\ry commensurate ieneralknowledaeofof.
Banllln& __ •TUllS•
Ourrount.alnValltyand INIWUW l Cleanen. quJritt •~confideDUal. 145-7• is a almple matter wlexper. Call Sally rice procedures, Call
Cotta Meaa brwh tw COUNTERHELP ~:u~~at.i!'~~ Justcall542-5671. 1~~, p•iatM ary752·1121~---'f'!ri~l:l~o~t'o! UTDTIM ~'If.~in~~'.!n~~ ;1~,1~2~\';u0:rmf~: .... lly P111t ·· .. ······· ........... :: : 11 J I ................... ._._:
pennanttll posltloft with llAM foral)l!t. Rlvtnlde call Jerry llil
1n 011t1tan~ OP· DA.TA.IMTIY smaWH114Mn.l\11a • • :r.::~::nt. 1 y::c: For~~~hlftt Mln 1 'jr exper, full· IXIC.SICY . ~ GM Assip8t ~ . rteld Sales Supervisor . Pr.vlous banklnl ••· ••artinas.&upt.os.& 50 time. small 1rowln1 d d Good frlnae
perieoce requlred. For w"; pnMllCMto m1~ai• computer rompny, b:.ftt.: llfe ltllut&Me : Secrltllry ti : · Interview appointment l'lltol6aupervilloftfroln non·•aaoker. Cheryl bltlf'Dd dlllred. Penn. :
pleaat«dact! wltllln. 1..:m.=-::Dlll:==,:... ____ oposttlon. s.lary com· • .. r • .,...a ... ftlc-
FoWUlftV~y
Ann Galloway
(714)'1to1150
COlta M ..
Jackie
(114) 54().UIO
WANTACAREER? D&JC~ ~!!_!!rite to aklllt. : Llv"9U•v Ul!M Cotta Me1a -.11111D · mw. WlllonSl. r!T or PIT. Frln1e •
benenta. Sell Harokt. '95 --------~ : at•.. E.17lUt,C.M. -:
' .
' .
\ ' \ .
\ ' \ ~ '
Laa-a Beach •tm DU•Y DllYll IXIC ~ ;
flt·plt, tcllDllt otc ~..1 .ADMIM. T. • ·
Immediate openlnc for versatile In·
dMd1111. Mutt be upable of handl·
Ina r .. t.pacecl, varied and lntemt·
l.na dull• for neonpaper executive It pert0nnel admlnlltrator. Call:
M2..UZ1, !it.mforappt.
. ' • .. . .
eo tn:ck. CA lfc + 111 • • • drlv rte Beath Ste· Fait acc•ra.te lypl1\ : • •
•'---I --Ullll lleetrollt 15), : ~ C... ' : ~ C
OUlll la coUectJom. Sue !'ff. COM ~1f1I candidate will ~ H•t.inl\Oa Beach
'"' 1 mil. ol 1 'If ac· MOW IS 1HI TIMI SOU'IH COAST eotue
hil)tl•t exper. Od. for Job ..Un eo check IA* PenanntlDept .
..i.ry 6 rnn,e ~ Ille Dally l'tlot Htlp A11l~Buk Sil_., ~!fe. For more 111· WHt.ed dmlftctUoe. ar lqul V Em ply !!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!•!!I l'/t~a ~ 'T:e::.:: the ;. ,_ Wiii& ii IOl n~J I 1\a&Ao1 SALi Ida m
TU.17M19.&.0.t .K/P ~~~r >:r;.:r:~ ,:; ftll ti.•*" i ~11(M 01ll1 l'Uot brial ··---l!!!!l!f I airrvtta ... • .. .. ·-I DI.lb'. Pilot ... ,,, ,..... To place ••••~1oat01 t~e Je~ •••t••·-·-·: M..C.11~ ~., dra•l!f,~r•,
-·-.... _.kwll, ••·" ••........ : . ' =----=·· . . ~~~~Q~ ..... =-----~ ..... ~~__.._. ..... ~--._...,-t.J ~-~ ...... ~
-;UV'Jl!';::;:n;!;' ;;;'Y;;;:;;;::;;;::;~ .XI 1 t P~OAI d 111 t . , ..,..~ : • ...
Fore-~ ' =:.C.~: : 330:1a';'S'lreet : : 330 a~reet
AcnOtC ec'a. 118 ...,..., Nr. : Coata Men, CA : : Costa Mesa, Ct\ :
0= , ,~ ~~ ~ F.qual Opportunity Ernployti' ~ ; Equal Opportunity Employer :
Ao. -\ ,/ ".. :' ~ ,........_,._.-an ··········································· I ········································· . . -.. • Ddr Nil?""'"*/ '
...
•
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Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/TutSday, August 18, 1981
1
w.
Sell it all and put cash in your pocket! J
DAY WEEK
BDays
3 Lines
8 Dollars
Special fl at 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. Minimu m three lines. E xtra lines just $2.60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA darr call today 642·5678
1M MW Do~ly Pilot 8·Doy Week it's a Classified PLUS
~~!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~.~.~.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~~:.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~~.~.~~ ..... !!~.~,~~~.~~ ..... ~!~~ ~~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~~ ...... ~!~.'.t
REAL FSJ'ATE SALt:s · TAILOR WAITF.RSIWAITRF..SS~ While Kenmore n>frig. t L"4!11Sec,.._., HURSf.SAIDES rRf..SCHOOL PERSON Earn while RHTAUUMT SECRETARY 1-'x ;.d lunch&din ner yrold,Justmoved.m~ Elp'd' Pl secre(ary EXPERIF.NCF.O TEACHll learn investment sales NOW Htr111g Pfl' day & Sales l.1tr bkkpg, good t~11mi:. MI.It u re . ~ea l & A 'j ;n rson 2900 se!L._S2SO 842-9311 .
Salary open Pref 23 3-11, tl7 Conv hospt For Hunllngton Beal'h H E R IT AG ~· even111grounter ~rson CUWGl>.HOF Jnd uri:an1zat1un.1l hardwork1~g.<..11llform N~!Yn Bl~NB Stove,O'Kttfe &MernlL
yrs n per at least. Beach are1.1 F'ree mJr school Experpreferred, INVESTMENTS will nel Interviews IOAM or SAMCLEMEHTf )kills. 5ml non prohl leniew 6429852 RX .PO -worksgood,$85.548-851'
Mll·7878 medical. dental & hfe O\erl8 ~8788 tearh you creative 2PM. Mondaythru Fri 1s looking fur ,, l>r l.l1•ndnx, ~11·44!11 Cluners WAITIESSES/ or548-«85alt6PM
LEGALSECRETARY Onl)' pos1t1\e attitude P-ti~e.7days,2hl'1 da1 financi ng 1031 Ex day Ask for Maria. 43 salesperson "'th l'' lO ~. TEACHER HOSn5SES R f r t c --;;;;-~
Nwpt Center, SH & re 6428™4 ly Am delivery, LA changes, 1~vestor de· Fashionlslanc;!,_NJL perienceindiret1 selllng SECRETARY FT& P!"J',exp pn•r Ex pH 3/yrs min geo~'!· UOO ~S-8SJ:S :
cord keeping skills req Nursing Times $100 ~r w~k velopment&counsellni: RESTAURA NT Needs or have held llOl>•t•oru. neerled 1mmed1:it1·h ~8820 F lime avail Apply in S48·0 8Saft6PM
Salary open 752· t771, R.H •• LV.H. ugu.na Beach 494-8496 Ex per counselors re· respon.sible person for trhealattirne,!lutoiret~~ptumbRl•r& Hl'SllOll)lblt• µoMt 1011 Tr.•CHir.a persC~n JolHIY RogLer. 400 Refrioe-ra~r. xlnt -;;n-
SAS !SSS 3 to 4 days 3 to ll.30 pm ce1ve 100% commtSs1on rast fOOd Assistant Mi;r .. '"' "orking ~1th the pres• '""' """' Sn oast wy . aguna "
Liquor Clerk Full and Sml pm• COil\' hosp. lm The lS an unusual oppty Exper helpful. We offer dtml & t·ontruller Must needed for pri\ all' Beath ningrond S4S
partllme 294-4 p re maculate Cd staffing. 'fTIMEEYEMMGS for right pel"!IOll Con Wi.npi's lHll 111 Gduarantei!dmcornt' huvel(oodt)fllnl(skill~. i;rhool.646-l"44_ W A I TR~"SS 1 W a 1 ter 548--«>96. __ _ Co~ st H 'g h ,:~1;, 20362 Santa Ana Ave Adults with pleasant f1denllal interview Call Call Leolllltd after 6 PM 112 B ur111g tra1mnl( i.horthanrl & 'ornc .11· TEACH ER Special Ed wicar for.wirker basket Fngidaire refr1gera~Q~
New""r1liea1·h Santa Ana ll e1g hts personality who would Vince 546-S880. for ~SJIH44S. •3 v?nust,l'ommth1~s10n rnunt1ng kno"'ll'll)!t' Masters in Behavioral lum·hserv 9 JO.I 30PM, ror sale Sl50. Call. ~ 5493061 beioterestedln workmg ---" aca ion w1 pay r II 9 12 M Science pref'd Exp MI'' EamSl.5().Sl7S wk 848=-"·8"'"77'-'8"'".----~
MACHINIST in sales & promolloo RestaurManEt•°"'S. !14 Hosp1lahzal1on W~·avi<r t7~4~~til!lll0r~ wi t h D D multi ly Must be neat. lk,,cln IOZO
lmmediat.e opening for Nursing with Daily Pilot carriers RHl&tahS.. ·~ , insur.am.·e ' handic11pped adults '
I 0 0 I •-d 1.. sh 0 p 01 re1·tor or Nurs.1ng. 10-15 yrs old. Unlimited ForJ:t. lmmed. p/t1me open llS Complet~ lnunmg SECRET ARY Ahili'ty to "'rile 1m,.le personable & eneri:etic •••••••••••••••••••••••
IX " R N lh hf r II " ,.. 979 0747 aft IOA M ror 2 10-spd. I gm. l «Old. Minimum 5 yrs ell.I). w1 supervisory eamings avail to right rrof. 1ngs av.a1lable for rook6 ~It ilC'tory o owup ntcdt'd for Irvine ment behavioral pro an.>t i<lnt &hapel90ea.or$J60
with lathes, milling, & expcr Must~ able lo person. Work hours Newport Beach Lido Of· & delivery drivers. 116 Proleeted IO<'al ~;~rrow orrn·t• Mubt g r a m p J a n s ¥¥ both.642_2329 grinding machine Must o~g~n lte .• plan & de· S:30pm-8 30pm Mon Cice need.a creative, ag. Cooks must be llL lt'mtory havl.' 11serow t'X/Jr and Supervisory cxpcr re ==.::='-----
have own too~ Call fur It gate Contact Ad · lhru Fri. Some Sat gresslve agents who drivers 2.1 & over with rn Quah(1edleads l?(Kltl ty 111nl? sk1I ~ llrb q'd Sl.OOO per mo plus WAREHOUSEMAN Schwinns 5 spd ladies',
appt ":' 1n1st~ator., Newport avail For app'l call want to maximize in-good. dnv1n.g re_cord H 5 Mcrn thru Fri Pct bt'ndits 8.30 lo 4pM p , t Im t'. re 11 red 195; IOspd men's, 195; 10
San Gabnel Die & Moulrl l on v a I Center 642·4321 Ask for Ben d 1 v id u a I potent i a I. Looking for md1v1duals If you would hkl'lo hl'lll ht•alth & i:1·11·1 hc11rf1b United Cerebral Pab) Ship Rec Marine pro spd boys', S'IS Pvt 1)6{ .. ,
642-1450 646 7764 Wilhams HIGH COMMISSIONS! w 1 t h ~ u l g o 1 n g eall (ull for dpJll 'f'on1 or /\ 5501• , Sant a i\n a, dutlS S46·<Xi71 .!L_S46·3398. __.-
Nursing E.0.E. Call Walt,673-7300. personaht1es. Able lo 830JOJlor41Yl3213 :>.aclinl' 5.\24050 546.5760 WAHF.HOUSE hildia9 Maeariaha025
--·M· ... -,L·C-LEl_fl__ .... •y ... c..__ work eve01ngs Apply n 0 w & J 0 In ·, h I.' SL'l'f( L'TARY I d ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' " "-" ·-;-,r daily after Spm, ask for "Culhgwn " team'' Et:o · •· •· mini• TEACHER Part time, flexible 311 & 117 relief Conv Publisher of national RECEl'TIOMIST OP1,•n1ni,e. full tame 1851 STOCKHAHDUR REDWOOD2 X 6'S hospt ~•th excell re-magazines for arumal & for electrical contract<K' Jean or Bill. Me & Ed's :small rnn.•ultml? firm re KinderRarten Exp Illus 2' to 20' long. Fresh boun,ex~IJenlforrol putat1on Beach area. aviation enthusiasts Pleasant phone voice Pizza, 410 E !7th St , l11terltothd1u1lrlmi.:1·on min of HA r time P\t truck load arriving
lege student Coldwell Free mJr medical, den· seeks (2) special people Gd typing skil ls Com C M Sales ~l industr} nct'<ls lakc Sehool, CM 642-0411 Im mt>d iale full time weekly Save at 55' ft
Banker, aak for Claire tal & life Top salary for San Clemente 11anvbene 556-7550 Restaurant Cater1n1t • CIRN TOP SSSS t•h.rJ?e rl'~p11n'1bl dT EA<.: HERS AS opening in our ~l1Ss1on pp call Jim 646·9885
Clarie Johnson.644·9060 Flex hrs &tlll044 edr
1
1tonal1produrt1on of R•c:ptiorust. full •. p T firm has opening for lA vcr.mn ~11h 'l't·retariat SISTA NT ~per Id I \'ieJO Supersto~_! ,~:xii an.nime
I " " .. respon adult to opera le r ART /TIME ~ k 1 11 :. s a I a r, + classes for hand11·apped pt-rient·e reqwr.,.. .. a ~C~'-----..,....,.. .. -
M AINT ENANC E MAN PA NTR y COOK M F. re&. po51t1ons available '" Hobart auto sheer & I bl'nefil:. Wntc The Ua1 adults 2 yrs <'Ollegc r>. Personnel 3 Stinson Planks. t6lt.
fo r rellrement home Wed lhru Sun Pvt club A.DYER. rROD. MGR. airport area Looking learn portion control sun 11 g h I En er R) ly r11u1 \d 1170'J I' 0 I per req'd $750 per ,..0 SllO 24ft. Sl75 28ft. $200 ,
Basic knowlellRe ln Ask for Chef fred for sharp 1nd1\•iduals Exp prefbutw11ltrain S}stemi.1S no~expJnd !lo>< t$4i0 l'tl!>td ~es.i EXtt'lt \3Callon & 1n THEHDYATED 3 aluminu m laddet:
plumbing & elertnral 640.96.55 -Position requires t'x with professional al 9 JOA M to 6PM Mon ing O (' operJl1ons & <.:a 92b2t. s u ran<' e be n er 1 l ~ GIOUP Jacks, S.SO 1 rolling scar
needed N 8 631 ~ PARTTIMESALES ~:~~ile d~~r~o~t ~~h tllude & appearance. thru Thur 6AM to !PM ha s 1mmed1ate oi><•mng~ WkdH 8 30 to 4PM 1213172~5 I 00 fold . SJ00.124' EXT;Lad
M orc1ce supplies in store Must be able to answer sun 97g.0747 for appt ror SecrelafJ l'mte<J Cerebral l'als> F der Alum111um, fl5 All
McDONALD'S s hifts "Good working vertmngexper.helpful phones . no typing Lor1s K1tcl!en •PhoneAppl S<'lters • for Mfgr !> /\gen \1uiil Asso< ant a Ana. 5464~2 dnagement Morn1nu or afternoon 10 pt accuracy Ad· medium to hea\'Y .. · I s Call Mon n,9 ~m Great c.-ond Best Offer
\t ~D Id ' cs .. h I Restaurant (ClCpenencedonly l hJVt' O•u•d tul• .. •h"n" 546S760 W .. REHOUSEC'Ra"' c_..._ -----IOlS · , ona s o ·an cond1t1ons Appl) In neeessary .., r Appy IUSIOYS •f1eldSurve)Takers • """ ''"'.,' I ) "' "'""" "" Clemente has 1mmrd person Coast OH11•e SEC'Y /OfC MCil. in person 2102 Business Krisllnt'. 97911122 voi<'e and tq>e ac·<'urate 1 TEACHEIS 2 Expand mi: elertromt's ••••••••••••••••••••••• o~n1ngs for Asst Mgrs Supply 2121 llarbor Suµport edlton alstaffm Center Dr, Irv 1110 Day&n1ghtsh1Ct • I~ Goud llJ' l'Um OneCorP E &Art&onl' firm seeks responsible Persian Kittens. adults
& Mg mt Tralnt'l') Blvd ,_C M typing correspondence 851 1021 Waiter/Woftnss nll'n~uralP ~•lh .ih1hty fur Sut1al Slud1t'~ & person for immed full Shots' Reg. Cameo. etc
\f rDona ld ·s ex11er PARTTIML" & manuscripts, screen Breakfast&lunch 75!11150 I s.c·1en l'e. Exp'd. r\t time opening in $•"•+ <•"996S
Pref . but not r"" Xlnl " m0 calls. handllng mall RECEl'TIOMIST S I H I L'I s h 1 ,. d lM> ~ ,.., ERR•Uftrr.as"'... .. For dr's office Mu.st be For Tower Restaurant. 3 es 8 Pi ~<'retar• ... t'm coo . uar l'n Warehouse receiving & D ------1040· fringe benefits & oppty "'.., """' "" & stock 111ventory Fast L B h A I , I t !171 5533 d C 11 OCJI for growth neplles con Approx 25 hrs per wk accurate typing essen enlhus1ast1c, motivated t ag~_na 4~a~60 9~P ~ Jo'abric store, re ail l''< PVT. SECRETARY iro\'e ~~~~~'~:is:J't ·a ••••••••••••••••••••••• fidenllal Contact Bob or Various duties for taal for both positions & type well. Ex11 °· ma. · · u · perpref640-4040 Ori:aniwd, lo}al. 11ar1 TELEPHONE · KEESHOND Pu1>5. AKC.
Paul, 4!12 9202, IO·S Newport Beach Phys 8.30-S, M-F . salaries helpful, but not nee Mon Fri. SALt.:S Position open~, tim1·rnoming~ 54!10oiH SOUCITORS Champ sire MiF. Pet & w~<J1! c1an Hours flexible. C'Ommensurate with ex 642·4532. Coast Plaia Mall for at· SECRETARY !\eed 15 1mmed1ately to W~ndot ~nter. :x~e( show P vt p I y
Management restaurant • Must be over t8. very per &skills.Phone Pen· RECE.9'F/TYrlST live, s ports minded'" i\1•1111· national sales INUtk easy ev(>nang l'l' s esprn K? el 2LJ/697·1MS aft6pm. resp and have neat a"-at 4""1600 bet"'een u-• RETAIL d D t h hours Great for stu lransp ta oo M B l'ound ooct pos1t1onopenloquul ap • . v ,. ny ""' -Xlnt opportunity for a Parttimeclerka 111 ay ime r s dl'lll ,\ i·halhmRmi: l'X I d l 3" .. L' N Producl!!.1 714>~7053-1 assett ' tog pl.Iran ts Resumes req raarancr Must ha ere-4·5j!m (Qr interview t•heerful person With needed Call Snowden ntcni: opponurut} ~nrk en s .... ,non r rl 0 home only. neut • all
prior to person· I '" 1able rar Call 644·1641 good typing skills and STOPM'GO M1zeS_portsJ S404717 •nJ? ~•lh uur nallOnJt selling lall 966 0151 MttcltaMIM shou,S.S0.493-9660
terv1ew M.C Ba. li7 Monthru Fn8:30to3_,__ REAlESTATE front oCfice appearant;e MADm :.Jlt>l>lll'UIJlt' Informal! arter!,pm ••••:•••••••••••••••••• GldnRetnever pups,xlnl
.. F" R1vers1de Ave Part time sales Exper SAW in our national head· 4555 eo.tHwy.. Sales o r r 1 r e F. x 11 e r TEMPORARY Afttiqw1 1005 background w/papen. !iB ,Ca 92663 Ladies sper1alty shop Th1SISOur36lhyearsell· quarters nr 0 c Mewportleech rrof.~ net•e:.saq Maturi:' I E PLOY EUT ••••••••••••••••••••••• shots & wonned 1213)
M I.I Fashion Island. I day. ing fine !fouthe r n Ai r port Call Shara ~ T} Pl' tJ O 7 11" pm M M "' MaJohca Jardullere. old 586•1297 • .. anagement quor store some eves Flex hrs Cal1rorn ia homes 714 ~5 l49l ._..., Shnrthanrl!lll lOO~pmor piece wllh gargo)les, S---d 8 u
da)llme pos open to Cllll Mimi 759:_9951 Perhaps you would en· Marketing Reps 111 'rll dit·tJllnl( l'4u1pmen1 lf)ouarea S300, 1895 L C Tiffany Gamodye F "'10 SISO'
qua I md1v1dual or rou Part lime help, 3-4 hrs JOY J01n1ng a firm acllve RECEl'TIOMST Sales a produrl lhal is ~antl'<I !'>alJ n rnmmen~urate •SECRETARY cordial glass, signed and .;~1.88 am' Y Dog.
pie Submil resumes perda) Cortyping &fil in luxury residential CorlrvineE.scrow olhce Sl2,000 +o"'°""9 &neededby e\er~one ~Ith l'~Jl\'r Extellent l •~tthorwithoutShtd l numbered.S2:50.eleganl -, .,..,.
prior to 1nterv1e". mg LenMar Rentals areas such as Big Ca· Must have neat ·N~w dynamic mklg Eam1ngpotent1al complln) benl'fils <.:all •l'RX R EX:EPTIO~IST 80 year old Royal LHASAAPSOPl:PS
M C B 177 ··F 5403195 nyon, Spyglass Hill, professional appearance program S40,®~.IXX> \t ill it• after 'lam 1allt}pesofboards1 Wort'ester vase "'lh 3 reg f . 9 wks. adora·
Riverside Ave · N B · Irvine Terrace. Linda and pleasant phone •Ill staple product • l'.o Trammg 645 ~ •GEN Of'C CLERKS pastoral scene, hand ble, ~ea_~72ll_
<.:a. 92663 PART Time Ans ser\' Isle, etc. manner Hrs 8 5, Mon •No competition •Qualified Leads Pllmted and signed by I Need Female cOckapoo.
Medical Noexp nee CaUbtwn 8 lf)ouarepresentlyac thru Fn Pd health & •No door todoor •H1ghlnrome WeNeedYOU' artist. $900 , rapier. or ~le to breed "'
Chlropract1t· Asst & 4 30PM. Mon t'ra live 1n real estate sales oen'I benefits Call for •Gmdflrop"'y Linui..._"--y *•SECRETARIES•* r1rra 1650 snoctarular k d 546 3333 EOE ... ,... ., ,.,_ ...,....'1 $ IVICKI HESTON I . ,... . ma e <'Or apoo stu Rerept1on1st Ueaut do you have immediate apj>l SS2 4ai0_, Toru •Frtt sample Sys..._ T60 ~veil Fun 15.0'.!0 ~1th highly derora1ed 67s.9221 busy ofrlce Good ap PBX Ans Serv F T & & unlimited access to At lend free seminar Al 754-!l>Sl, S4S 6793 Sll80 RE f'shlsl20.llOO hilt, S2500 P p 17141 r__ t y _..._
pearance. healthy. en P T Exp helpful <.:M thi: president or your RECEPTIONIST Mon thru Thurs Aug 20 Al'ctPay Siablt'Sl4.000 & ASSOCIATES 955-2183 ~ o Oii 1045
thus1asllc. knowledge or 540 1777 10A~!:4P~1 rompany. or ts he hidden Dulae-s wall anrlude hght at 7. lS PM at 2919 Paper -SJ180 O\ertimeSIG.800 s I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ins billi ng, nog board away in an ivory tower typing, rihng, answer Ln , N. B. (lake An· SALESPERSON neerlerl t:xp ronsul1ant Ours pec1a ists'" TIFFANY IOWL FR EE Kl1TEN. 7 wks
computer very helpful saooo P'EI WED removed from the scene phonet. light bookkeep-n1ver.1ary Ln off Irvine for ne~ children's storl' L11 Reinders ARY. lnr Temip;~~!r•cal I 1905 L c T1Han} finger old, female, \'ery gentle:
Great career potenunl Our Ol'IN Co. is looking Our president IS ava1la mg 20 hrs per week Nr Ave. across Cro1'1 ne~· Ex per p time l'rlllt' 4020 B1rchEst'64EOt:: 540..0400 bowl. imde~C'enl blue Corch1ld ~7_3299 -
Cal! 631·5664. for ambitious people ble Do you need add1 Mam & Allon. Santa Ana Irvine Ranch F:irmers Marche' 642·47t4 369 ~; Newpart 833-8190 Free I 1tlass. llppx 4' 7 '" wide, Cote grey male ouldOOr" who want lo tum pt time tional training 10 help Call~neSSHl961 Mk q . 17l h St W e~ I po r I . 1Kl1<)4 Skypark Bl\'d ~1gne~ and numbered cat.' I vearold
MEDICAL.ASST hours 1nlo GOLD ' you increaseyouream· RECEPTIONIST Sales Square,CM 'Suite 23S Irvine CallSat.Sun.oreves · 642_9138 ~~~2~~e!~~f ~r~~; Po~odue~~i~oo~~';':_:{_Call ings? needed for insuran1•e Art' you looking for a SALESl'SlSON SECRETARY EXEC. . TRAIN& 1714183.5·63!12, • Beau11 rui-i;:;-sh Setter
fO & BO experience Experienced or inex brokerage firm m N.B. position with a future'• Part timt\ for µlant Per~onnrl Advert1s10i.: Show horse stables FOR SA L t, 1930 s urgently needs good
necessary Call 972 8432 PET ATTEHDAMTS perienced you may well Duties include telephone Energy l.'Onservat1on is store 64~339210-6 Dept ha~ openinl( per l.1\'1' in (714)244 :!21R. kitchenware Rare llall home Owners going lo
''9·4) Bus) Lagun11 Bt'aCh profit from our color answerma & lite typing the future If you enJOY expans ion Spt B('h li MJ338·1011 11nrl Fiesta Over 300 Australia. 760-SD \: k I 14 ho \'ideo tape listing & sales " h I ' · p1eres Buy one or all Messenger f' IT Call( enne ' ur 494·9!.4£ trammg program which For a p p ' t ca 11 working wit peop e & SALESP ERSON finan1·1al servu·es firm Tra~el Ageno Manager 840 4068 TO Gd home. Beagle, 2
DL Good rec CM area Picture frame shop seeks we feel is the finest (_714)644·5522._ believe IJl ener1t) ron HICKORY FARMS c:d l) p1n1?. shrthd . t•xp needed for Westminster yr old female capable""rsontoass1st servation, let us hear Opportun1l)' to sell ren'd Non ~mkr Call oHice of mulllbranch Beaut.Cul Antique .,.<.,_.. Call Karen 9 tpm "" available REC-~ST c ore .. w d b A .....,._,,, in all phases of produr u-nV'f'lll rom you ices in food & C 640012,bt~n 9&2 aoenr_v Excell op ar roe rmoire. ----714 S56 IM60 We are not a franchise. N B firm need! mature Orange & LA Co for gourmet s It• ls ~ ~rtunity for dynamtc & solid oak k 50 Day Free to you-Three palm
MHGMMT rOSmON }~~~e:.~~per pre· branch or subs1d1ary well groomed recept. the offire nearest you rr~~:1~l:St~~r~r~2 ;:,;~1 SECURITY GUARD mot1\·ated person I 2 675 7330, Eve631 7~ trees, lS, 20 & 30'. you
Fabm chain. CM & PR E·KINDERG1\RTEN JUSt headquarters Lite typing required call Mon·F'ri. IOam 4pm, Neat, rlean & r=pons.1 } rs management or haul 645-~--
Anaheim Xlnt oppt'y TEACH ER Asst direr· We have operungs for a Call 97~ 1010 <2131598-4556. s;<' Reep for Cast 1trow ble At prest1g1~~ It)( supen1sory ex per & RUTH'S AHTl9UES I )'r o Id German Geri646-4040 few highly motivatedRerpn;;ded. 5406 _J:.J>.:.E;_ S r omp c ehens1\'I' Shepherd ubmix. af· -tor. 1mmed F'1' employ ""rsons who have a de mg Co m NB Must have tarttnl? S4 hr lnqum• 504~ So Bayfront fo~tionat" & obedt'"nt """ Walnut Saks ol lrvme kno~ ledge of Sabre a " ~ " Models needed. All types ment, benefit! ~!!1!:!1_ sire to be more sur · <o>nc:., exp & transportation ill Pt:ll S36 t48i t E•-IL 1 & Balboa Island 5'9-942'7 _
M en . Women & ce!>sful. For an 1n ~ -Non-Smoker 40 hr.s per mus ... "' sa ary next lo Fen') Children No exp nee rreschool Teacher terv1ew appointment Restaurant Need outgo-SALES wk Colleen 851 9911 S«y/Recpt company benefits Call Wed.Sun l2 5 Need lov111g home for 4
548 7762 Ex~r . with at least 12 with the sole owner & tng personality for food COMMBtCIALR.E. SECRETARY Part lime llu:.' ~ If Arrh1te<'tural Tommie at Ass or SEMI-ANNUAL SALE beaut S mo old kitten~ units ECE. for qualit} rounder. call Wesley N prep, sandwich malung. Tired of selling houses 7 ft rm needs ~hurp gal Car.!)lo_Travel 833-2977 W (-20'1 ore 00 all stock & th~ir mama. 497.:..:1181
N E E D E D ' A church-related school. in Taylor. meat slmng, rash re days a week~ We need Npt. Bch area 9AM lo ~ l(ood skills !l~ pe 60 Bnttany Spaniel. female.
mecbamcally inclined Irvine No others need W·-·-~ ... T~ Co. g1ster 8 4 Mon -Fri one licenstt to learn the 1 PM Dail) T}pm~ & hte WP \I ar1·urutely. n TRAYa AGEHT · -H--I AKC, well trained seruor c1t1zen to do light 1 T r , .. -"' S4 k'lls brok shorthand Call rat, s 11 1 r d 1 Ex per1tnced. Sabre 77 umme Plate workfrom11AM3PM,S dappy opwAagles or , R ALT hr Alsoneedexp.As· s 1 tomanage, er S48·7796bef1PM • · w rien Y trained counselor Im tAppleTree8oy1St60 ~0383.:...._
dys wk WooderluJ work ay 5~~ .. ~ 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ill Mgr, 7-3. at S4.SO/hr commercial real estate. per:.onaht~ for phones mediate opening Ex Call 83.1-3317 Patty F• .... e 1050
d I -New""' .. n--~h 646-888~ Income from mgml Secretary Recepllon1~t .• rnd front desk C111l 11 f mg con 1t1ons! Pease 0 ""''""""' -hil 1 s type so I 1 w d 1714164(1..,.,72 t e bene its Cell ANTIQUE Bedroom Set ••••••••••••••••••••••• call645·1773 ver 18 No exper reQ . 644-4910 RESTAU RANT HELP w e you earn. uper ~pm P t•asan en > "' manager7S9-1921 2 Dressers, Queen bed * * I BUY * * but must be will.Ing to __ _ PIT counter work Buf· benefits; life insurance; phone manner. ab1hty to SERVICE STATION NURSES enroll in ('ollege ECF. Placinj!: your Classified fet style. f1exible hours. health insurance & den-work w pubhr Fran ATT'EHDAMT TROrlCALrLAMT SacrificeSSSO 979 4987 Good used Fum1ture &<
Openings for nurses as· ('(asses. Ca 11 Mrs . ad is so sunple . Just Ideal for housewives & tal plan. Contact Ken. SSS 4366 MAIMTEHAMCE AN'l'IQU E dinette set, 5 Apr liances-OR I will
s'ls in sml pri vate con-u er. · · · · give us a call on the rollege students. Airport · · ass1 1e Ads. your on1• J Exl)erienccd person ' u .,., • se or EU.1orYoo B ti SS2 9229 bet 9 12 675 6700 Cl r. d Appl• Chevron. 12.51 No "'ha1 ... •...,s A:l1 ue Bur I s ,
u 0 Th""'" only h Coast llwy, L 0 ret all 1n u rond valescent hospital. full '" n.. ~ ... '---phone and we'll help you area. Call Ron for Appl. !>lops OP.J>I08 N'nter needed So. Orange Co. . " MASTEIS AUCTI°" ~
time or Prr. Good work· word your ad for fast re. 2-SPM. 955-~ • p• 4 SERV I CE ST i\ TI 0 N area Good lransporta· Sacrifice~. 9'79-4981 '46-1616 133-9'15 · gn!;e~r;!'~~;~:;!~;~~ H~:;~=~naof suls";; .... ~;:;.a;: ~a1ly llDI """" ............ ..., ~r:"~:~·~r~rr.~· ~'":·:;.;.~," ~~~~~~.! J,•ur ~t~,
Gardens 450 Glenneyre, QuaUfied Hopefuli; Restaurant • : Sales . : S E W M A C H 4SW PM. Small growinR Les 957-8133 20SOFAS.new.blea •
La unaBch.494-=~78 .rEt~i~~lJ1A0ris :· A.T. LEO'S :· . Trainee . Sampe'!k~~~perall ~~~-~~~~e~~"Ct!~;i AP~tl~~~~~~~ICE 1:5'ts;~r~:1~ ----------------11 machine CM631·7770 83J.3300. BUY -SELL-REPAIR Round gounnet choPplna For District Manager SHOE SAL~ Attractive 549-3077 block S200. same as new
KIDS -
SUMMER JOBS.
Earn $30.$60 per week.
Tri ps Ir Prizes. Cll ...
Clmc•. '''"°'' ..
This hithly suC(es5ful local newspaper shoe dept tn Fashion r!"~l~T=!;!· of· Brown Whirlpool Wuhe; g gm Hitc~k dinin~
• • has an o~n1ng for a trainee 1n lht' Island Is looking for part r· C II p $70, Small O'Keefe l chairs $lOOea.631-92V2 ~
t h I .,._ C'd ice. a at,675-6300. M•rm't r•no• ... 0 Both KING INNERSPR1N"' circulation department. Basic skill$ will tme e P ""'P pre .. _..,,. •• f p V • New dinner house will be • entail supemsion of1oto14yearoldboy f!40·1810 TYPIST cond.7~3665 EXTRAflRM matt~,
• accepting applications for the • and girl home delivery carriel'll Areas of General office work. no Refrigerator . large set, never used, wpr\
•
followi·ng restaurant ~i'tions.· • !~srva1~°". will be delivery, collect1oos SUl'Pl.Y exper. required High F rtt1er sec sz25 S5N 30, sac_r., S241 drr,
Y"" ....., .... EC school grad. C.M. area 644·6440 Rick Eves ever 11& ..... queen u.
Selected applicant will reeelve liberal 5" IAUSTS Will be moving lo Irvine Jfil:ll!.14_ worth 1399. ruh 6n1y • 8 RTE ER • l rlj I I I h d d Look ~>'Ood araduat1on soon . Good benefits. 1211 del Usually tMM"' * A ND S s • n1 sa ary, reeu ar Y sc e ule learn • &kill Army Farmers Insurance Mdaytag$50wu hher " gas J_S4-73.W A
• • rabes, bonus opportunities and many fr • .,_ ell ., .......... ~ ..... Call ryer •a .. R SSES · • oc '"" ~.,, ""' Group 54().4100. ' " ~ NEVER USED~aSI ~A#> * W .Alf E Inge benefits surh as company paid den· toll free. 1 S00.21?-5864 2a d ._,, ,. " • tal and health plan. aroup life tn.~uranl't. E 0.E. Sid b "dt rel , --. nette. l290. Bdtft'I * W .AITERS v1c1Uoo and 1kk leeve. ----CUSTODI"'.... e· Y·•• "f· .......,, S540 Sora bed Sl7t ,. " • "'" washer l dryer, m ea. Bunks 5:200 M 1u tt>.)I • * COOKS • ~J::~~~icle is rurnl~hed durtn11 SYST EMS Ana lyst. Npt. 8ch. area. Full pott dlshwash(r. SlOO. apmgs, twn m. rull'E
A lj .__ . : S20,000 ~r yr Muet time, 3 IO UPM. Call· W. _ q n $l25 MOJtit;q * BUS PERctftllii.IS PP canta muat II\'.' over 18• have a aood have BS In Computer Chuck, 63l·llO Wards ftotUm refrl1. 18 n o 0901 '"
• ~ • drlvinJ ~ and be nent •r~aring. Science. Will 11nalyie. Valet _parttiftl,. Flexible cu n. xlnt. 2 dr, 1old, ---• * DISHWAStBS • Hours are aenerally 11 AM to 9PM. Mon·• du l1n " program com hra. Mutt be neat •P' . eo.rn..o Dbl bed . .,, Sora clllf~ ~ lhru Friday, Someoverlim(! is availt1· p uter 1ofl ware de peartng.Statl'3.7$. 18 6r RCA lU cu' Whirlpool 125. Hdbfd, SIS. Colftll' • * KITCHEN PREP • f/eyou are quallned and Interest~ in veloped tor comp1ny o-Jer. Good drMna rec Frott free Refrig., 00,,. end tablu, S20 '">t lf: • • lurnlnc the circulation business. <'Ont.act Host Processors con ~2· . ~rtone, alnt cond blO Ste~, ft5 631-4985-'
• Aug us t 19th thru ztst, • lheDally Pllot at 330 W Bay.C-08ta Mesa ~~:~~nd"at~ert'::!~~i~ WAnB&WAJTllSS bite WesH"J:ouae 2 Tropitone Cll•ll~ Wednesday, Thursday •· bef~l0:30AM or arter2PMdall.)'. lelhacrnt" term nal In For busy ' flDe dmtnc ~J~c W/HOll~ $4$0. \.ounaea. St50 "S:":r • Friday,lOAM·3PM. Ql . AlkforDonWllilamaorKenGoddard. the dtstnbuteddatapl'(). rm al .uterfr ont. ~a .. ~11079_ plt ct white Frtl\~
custnJ environment La1un1 kb. Exs-r. Ap. Relrlterator • cu fl. Prnh11la.I att. tll
• • ~ C...t T .. ply iD penon only. Aalt Nottold 111).12vol\122$ Pe~111 d1a1ni !,\.
• A. T. LEO'S rllet £:~>'~~\~~~ for Mr. wa,.. 42.\ So. ~ _ d11ira, Buffet. S?S
•
ltOI r.cffk Cfflf M-.,. c •• a:.> ay Street flee In Oranae County. Cou\Hwx,Llffaa_~!, New 'IO Frottlna 18' "'1-llll._. • ...__· '' ""'1 DOT 020 Off-010 Ad ~trlW Aenflet ~ 1"llibl J• U M C.-.. Mir Costa Mesa, CA paid for ~Y••lllo7.r Have aomethlna .roe • ...._,, • oeo, w
• 71, 11•..1 e : '"'"'ual OpportWlit Emplo ••nt to aell" Claulnld Olk. c ... ,.._ • • -•• """i Y yer : ads do rt wtlJ CaD Ka._ n lllirC '°.ell? OIO. Cll altrr .. •
••• • • • .......................................... • ~ant Ad Rauls 642-Sl'll NOW .. clol!_well ""'-...:S;....;l~K...Z....-....;m'-"'Lo.lK-.Z..~ • ...:.
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Cit Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tu11d1y, Auguat 18, 1981 !!°!':','!.~~ ......... !~.~· ............ !~~~ Allfot Waftftd tst Allfot,l•'°rlwd ~Allto1, -~ .W.a, U.H
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, tilt t I JO )(4 TOM PICKUP For1·1.. Ua-' •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.... ,, IOIO ,,..,..._. IOIO Mh11l1u• Pth Ii-I Cr.c:"' Wt/ ltH atlVIQUT ·~~~·S~~········S· i1MW•••••••••••·;7;· ;:;:;·•••••••••;;;; ;:.:;c•••••••••••••ttoi
W b d • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• II '" " ""' 111 P ~ "·~1 Qwttn 11ae IOla l'H'd, lood Iler e ' QlltCO me. DfCrul1 prlnll, ••1nl'd t:O<'~allelJ blbla. 8 • 10~ Camper Your tit •• I OtW drivr train, C1r16 N eu 'llO 3201 SlkfI'fln •nl It', I t15 5CMD 1 7 acer. rttlr ..... ltnuu
tond suo t'Ompl w!hear.cr. rr1me by 1rtl1t, Oak ftlmtd old A lb1001 a. In wlrtfriatruor la atove only 4,000 mllet on rt Wt P•Y cub on thupot 1 alh1> s . AM 1PM cu5 Rtbui It motor, nl!w teacher a. 24,000 m1 ~~II •Ptdht•l.S150ormde dblmantd'7S tnvHt n1mo1u HO to Is& Port •·POtl)' All buUt•n11M Rwuwtll Contartblayerat ~intflZ..aJO no.M3S palntandt1r•.1tmifm Perlcond.manyt'x~ru
oCftr 845 2!lll2 Ji!X<'nll1l 531102A$ '79 93'11 Bulaot, l'lo.~ alto btd but nuda •omr body ie BMW 2002. 1llver, •Int stereo r~·s"tl•, air •-12.750 firm t'lltnllllre a. fum1sb1naa .,....,..., 11rork .. -' " • .. .... 1 .... ""
11i., Lido 1'1e c1111 for Boy, bed w dr11wt'n. 1 ablppln& boxt"I. dlx re P'-a& Or..-IOtO Sleepa t In utellcint $ 1600 cond, 4 11pd, 11m rm 1unroo(~ ...,1 .... 1"' ...... 14.,,,
_ ru·t lll4)~I031l C1rl1wh1trdretstr.end tnforctd plywood,••••••••••••••••••••••• condition HOO C1tll 1tereo so .ooo mi . ~ C9Clllec ttlS
Rtdrcoraltnf Slilt' brown I able. co,,_r desk. day hln&ed bdl w1bupe, •P Upn&hl piano rtflnl1hcd bet wun lUam Spm tot bnt olltfl , f750l.l1 beiituffer SS4 839!1 Ponce.. t7IO •••••••••••••••••••••••
6 t 1 n 1 er(' 1.1 I 0 n ~d IM6 ._ prox b3x2'. 514lt3' & • rtbullt Good tone &31 7657 Call Denn11 1'ueid11y1 8 ci~----'13 BMW 200'l, 4 spd, oit'f ••••••••••••••••••••••• COHTIMrl.ATIMG
aofa/tlttPtT. 1150 121 II drawer dri:uor. SU 4X3x3', 1 for Uoo tJOO 49SM '78Toyoc:aChloook lhruS11urd11y19A M lo I l l· a_o0""uMUua ~!>.,~<!,...~1 orbt-ltorter 'U a PorHht' Jul CAIMUAC1 ~rowt1 club chain & 01 Smalllovou1,12;S Col f49!120 Biby Or 111d Alao ti mpa. aood cond. 6P M •I _ "!!~ .,..,. ,,.,,, restored Rbll ena Ne.,.. We specta!Jte"' le.uea tom1n.S~ All11dcond let' tbl. S7 ~lert·u CllLIM(iFAMS Ch1clttrln1 Sludto Llkt U500080. Mlll'ce. dy1 581 -0790 WANTED! c.,... '715 brakes 11000 nbo ror the business u !624~ r..ib1net,~&42~ Cuabella reverst new Mutt'*ll963-3840 ~·2mS;ev1114()..4W t•temodelTo otuud .... ~ ................... 962·7S10 t<·ut1vt Arproress1onal.
SACllACI wood blades, v11mbl~ BEAUT Antique Chw Motoriltd.... ti 40 * Cllrf. '10 v I Cy I I 14 C<tpri. llood tunning m1 1124, lo m1. xlnt. L St1 cffoa C~l.d Wuod&:.oedebarki:11m speed, li11ht 1nrludt'd Jo'ould• No1t1n1h1m & ....................... 'l2·T•Plc~ ,.00;y°1~1 1 11 1 cond, reli11ble. S9~01 lo1dtd w'xlru. S8000 ~ •9 1 King SIU l'rorat1v~ mon lbl & 7 l'h111r.., only Was $2311, take SlOO Derby Uprlaht puano PUCH MAXI Moped. on Auto I ren~ ' 110wer OB<l 556-8451, 631 5655 i~2993, l213199'7 5024 w I I
trartlr haht. b11ck1111m· S28s v11IUC' ~. wtutc Jud 7»0986 S7~ Cd. t'Ofld. 831 6208 ly 2SO m1 Orcal beach Slterln~ 6 c·yl t'ni:i nt. Oats. 9710 '81 911 SC Tnga: Brand C..-..Ct
rnon C<>ffl't' table Sl7S ea love stat, ~ value, Uled .Keomott W11herin '7 3 R-o ad• PI an o Ii lransp. ~.Sue M!l-9356 r t\JOOOOll)er y "I e 11 n ' •••••• n••••••••••••••• new Never r~(lttLered Mew .. Stocki 780-3653 S61~. Xlnt C'OOd i-:vt'¥, i1d running rond. S60 Chrumer Orchl'~lrt1ter aft8p__m 0 • ~ " Platinum Metall ic NABER~ Qut'un Slie II 1de a bed ~8 9988 Near new AM f' bike Him t PA eqwpmcut nest Honda "90" Street Blk<' HOW :~i ~!_~~t...• ltU .. ...., lh& Color. lcuther int. P. 7's, ~ '-
eouch Bh1dt brown t:xec dsk $tL Vmlor w1tr111n wheel~ S25 orrer 631-6635 ~ Oove/Quu:ist:._., c.,,,.,..,, alarm, ell' '33.SOOf'irm (' \01( ( \
wh ite Oh!f1n Ni!W I)' rhrs. locklnii dsk Files 642-8107 -s-~,.~..t... IOt.. _!19:3941 " ~ "'H•·'10)ttl40-U'1 Si!0614wkdyli. ,/ "' JI ; cloned $21S !l79S251 •-bk """'"' r--••-,,-... 78"" IUZ2.,_ <> '?" Nl-:WPOft1'RF.l\Cll ·73 911T ·r"r"a. blk /blk. .'••~111 "'• 11"' EVES • cae _,., 752·~3. Area rugs, 1·6X9 lemon ••••••••• ._............. u .. ne ....... r " IJ~os~s T Bolla .... yellow SllO 1·8' round S&rW Mdl 36 Motobecane 40'l'L $2'lS ~ ~ op r mint, new lires. Sl2.900 I '1' '""' •.J\I 'HW.I
Dining room Antique orogeS. IOH avocado 11reen s210 Mint rondJtion 549·0178 '60 Chev Pu:kup,,11ood L.i.I 752~_,_1145-0315
white table w12 leaves & •••••••••••••••••••••• Dropleaf coffer ta hie S275 ~9SIO Motobecane Moped tond11ion V 8 S800 Hl·tol r.., '69 Porache 911 T. nt•w ·77 Sr ville Xlnt cond 4cba1rs.Chm11cabinet, ov1ng S11le furniture, $80.$48·~ 1,,owmiles,SU0/080 offcr9682914M1ke ~·orVour(.'ar' m11 g11 & tire&, 0 ,.11 Wirl! whls, moon rf.
St'r v1ng tabll! SJOO hshld •lcms. beach Refrigeretor, s~o 00 lW6-4937 )j59 Ford Pll'k up Vllall'IJ J OHNSON & SOM paint Call7~0388 Very lo m11441<1 Pnced
Dinette Set Oct.igon cruiser bike, shotgun. Hammond Organ Like NEW SIAJES PEUGECYr LIKE NEW side w11h r11rk S1100 ur Liltcoa...Men'!l ----·r~ Hlot' Xlnt cond S6000 to sell S7800 640-234L
glass top &r Pede11tal surl boards & more S02 new. SSSO. Model L 122 $28 Les h .,.,,, f best orrer )4!10000 26211' llar"'·r fllv1 IEA"'1RIL!l Cu 11 M 1 k e Morn "'·· base w/4 yellow up· Begon111, Cd M 673-1400 95 s l ao _, m1. per '73VF'.(',APl' uv '72 240Z Burgun '18...:ville Well cared for holstered chairll S200 alt 6 -~-4352 -• cond j40Q ~9005 t 'ost11 Mesu !1'10 5630 dy Black int New tires 675 1556 Eves, 673 639'1 automobile S8900 Ftrm ~~1 Mo\ in!( Sale 2 stones & Lenox China-West wand. I Reg f60 OOv11lue l 5 0 V M ob Y I e l l e Nt'ed~ motor ~urk S.12.~ Wt 'Ell Xlot rondttion Seeto ap '66 912 4spd, blat•k lmron. I owner 968-9:117
r 11 9 d 1 discontinued, rompl CALL· 642 '516 Motobecane, not run 4!:19 S7S4 OVE preriale 675 gs IO . Ol!~ eng. Blaupunkt.1._ _______ _ Mattress & Boxspnng~. gar u toSpm ai Y iwrv for 12 + ser\lnl! l'Ch • -V nine. all or parts, ISO ·7s t: I Camino ~ 1 r:i bra. crpl rubber glass ,. .68 F1eetwood
QBluue .. eLon. v~!a1"se1~ SrluJ51r ~~i ~:~~ronAI~ ~~;d~s. SJOOO 67~8883 673-9482 i·lr<1n. stcn'l1. air mJ.:ll ,.._ looat ,7!,-~D t 280ZX \'en nire Sur S7500 .-u... "' ~ ' "' --US Diver d1v1n" Lank --&shell.,....,,. f' y G·-"' """I auunl 2+2 Afters 644U3tr.!Jim Brougham or \'1ctonan Side Ch111r:s !lwaps 556-!657 e,e·s_ Portable fiberglass spa. · k " • · Motorcycjes/ _-,..., or our uuu 11utomallr. loaded with Im mac inside & out
SOO Custom WJlnut M L'S T SELL seals 4· plug mlo wall -:S6~~t. mas · BC S80 Scoohn 9150 494114~ VW,Pors<·heorAudi optional features 28.000 Roh Roye• 9756 St~.645-4631
Cabinets for home enter Ever) thin11 1n house. Ready to u.se. Llke new -....................... '65 Che• PlcJi Up "' &:HICK m1 Perfeel l'ondllion ....................... 1----111111-... 11111111111
tamment centl'r $110 we 're mov1nl( nut or Best offer968-8198 TV• lodlo, '74 Honda Motorl')'t'le 19K Sharp. 960-5525 ~~RION Priced below whol~ale "1 DEALER IN U.S.A '69 Eldo, Good mlr but
4117 1280 Stale !179 4~7 Ventura lg sullcbe &r HIR, Shno IOtl miles. Perfert c·ond Vm• 9 570 vw PORS<..1H; AUDI for quick ~ale Call needs lot.s of TLC Good w b d garment bag. Userl on ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIOOO S49-3'1Sll 44S E Coast l11wav 646 4629 m ROY buy for mechan1r Make
at er e · quel'n~IH'. °"" 1060 ce. ~-~@1Cl Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr '77 Suzuki 185 Enduro ••••••••••••••••••••••• dl Bayside Or1v/ 72 240Z. new paint, ml , R CARVER orr 839·3901 6'drawers. like new . ••••••••••••••••••••••• TAKARA Dirt bike Suo wrnl> Frel' delivery Xlnl rood S.SSO Olfer CLASSIC! N(•wport Beurh 6730900 84M Xlnl S4:nt 080 ROLLS·ROYC(
'200 631 SGll after~:.> l~n:.a~doods r~eso.~~l Sgl800eld· Wave tool S'S" no dings Sl48 646 1786 495-6347 CHM YAN S.2 7159l~832l isoo"m11om CGMaro 9tl7
Moving from B.t)Shoreb " ,. < S 00 ,,.,, .uu., Toshib" port bl·' 51 .. ~· • H New 11 a 1 n l N .. ~ Premium pric•es -,..._. euc~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• u u ~t 5" 11 ' Ma y• tau Call ult 5, 831 2396. _I --'!!_"'-""" u 8rd" · ;.!:~;--11 onda Olfroad (.;ood ' 11a1d for any ws~J •·ar '80 2 door Hatchhark 850() "' .. < .. l'asselle fe('O er #u.;) ,. d s~ Goodyeur Stel'I tk•llcd ... <' ' \---......... '78 CCllllGl"O Ill was her S250 Ory1u, Pinto mare. sound W/E, Roller roaster cars, uni -.on ;wu. Radit1l~ l l\JI Wl'alhen (fore11rnordomrM1t·i m1 AM /FMtapestereo Sl50. Other 1trmi. at gre11l on trails. very gen· gue tonversation p1eres. Model 87005 642 7030 54&~47 Snow t·hu 10~ (;rt> at in good rund1t1on S4SOO. SSl-6284 ctosio WNOAH ltebuilt eng, new brakes,
give away pr11·cs tic 6409418art 7PM S200ea MAGNAVOX l'Ombrnu '81 KAWASAKI KDX 250 lravl'Hni:, run for lt111s SeeUsf"lrst ' '76 280Z. 4 sl!(l, am fm. I Toyota 9765 tires. rust intenor, T 7~2·5277 HottHholdGoochl06S 848-1765,848·6202 lion Siereo1record Bl Must sell $1575_ Mt Heauti rt-st bt.'t.1 Loli. of .1wner silverblue $S()('I() ....................... lops San)'o b1 Amt
Bk bd L' d Al!iiihinggear $3()-100 player. ~l'enrh C:lass1c, 6J>m673·S6SS r oom N"~ r11r1J••l ~g.966o , '75Cehl'a.new1Jam1.new stereo,SS000~17J7 un es r ru1t~no ••••••••••••••••••••••• Model airpla.ne kits, rost SJ995 sell for Sl.000 YAMAHA VERAGO 1600 ' • l ' I S280U sp1nd les XI l nd L I A M F M S l '74 260Z, 4spd, air, muui.. 'res· 0 m 1 · Che•rolet 9920 n l'O "" ummou.~ seuscape, S2-ss.uo.2900 w records Terms m1·1As Like new· with ' • i•r1•0 " '"67800 $~_:136 6190 3 x~· appro~ . asking --""°--642 9932 < Cassette 6 door~ Win Bluapunlct, snrf Copper .,.. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Antique Bedroom Sl'l S7SO, terms ~9-8986evs Antique free standing SSOO worth or extras dow . step van Ownl'd b)' wlblark tnt S4SOO offer Tri•ph 9767 SEE US FIRST!
with ,anllySJSO 25 ru rt rerrii: I Admiral I. bathtub w claw feet ISO loak & MarW Sacr1r1ce sale 12700 thnst1an Sl 777 0110 642 S9411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• We have agoodselertion
646-51122 $125 Mo ....... """ Cyclone large hvy dUl)
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1 Eqtli,.,..... FIRM CaJl&t0-4629 7S9-0271 IRcrt 97-25 '74 11 Triumph TR Ii o r NEW & USED
l'<"...VV g l s10 '69 c d L'ld . 9H d E 111411 ll.11 t.11 llhil () d x .I Pair dt'corat or dub 536 7488 a e -a .... o ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7 on a xpress freat ·70 Custom l 'hl'' le..,, \I 1 ···•••••••••••••••••••• ver rive Int i·onu <.:hevrolets' rhairs s75 eai·h Sml Good intr, nttds merh,Gl'tteral 90 I 0 cond 1200 m1 · 300 than 20.00J \1 1 l':1ll afln 1 '''1 ' ,.,,, •111111 ~· •79 S~ 2000 Must sell Cast 7SI 7116 rh-J SJ•~.......... Ntc~:Queenbox spnng& work .Makeofr8J9.J901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6428607 66612111!1 WEIU ~ ·-~-" .....,....,.,.. matt w frame S7S -----T Ded Do I Y l'onv > m1, lui:gu11e Voli1wOCJ19 9770 COHHRL
CHEV•OLET LIV RM f1JRNITl'Rf: Elt-c doer. Kenmore Bakers rack· wrought a~ u~mn Pi°a!lon 'Kl 't'amah11 400 300 '75 t'he'; VJn ~Ina 1u11d t i-~:l>t.:All~&THLt'l\S rack, rar co, er Onl\ •••••••••••••••••••••••
& Access . 1 ~ r old. rost S54l 760 95-&S iron large. sturdy. with •1:13 :;,.s 2341ane!I miles Under warr Must
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m usl 'ee 10 J11im·1 l't,>~n; 11' OR S6,900 9 5, 760-&96 1969 VW 'X.'4 lldrlaor JI .. 1
S2500.must bell.S800 or MochiHry 1078 ~~~:l~f shelves SSO loatsM•tcicace sell~IJ00,492802~ :~s8~~.,,.,orr i;:,;11 11111 FRE~=~SAL '74128 4-dr . IAJAIUG
offer 752 1483 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --S ' 1
1 ~20 6SOC<.: Yamaha Sperial Cormier DeLillo 54.000 m1. loolu av.ful . \1l'rhamr~ll> sohd n1('t' ~e rhest 9 dru~er Airless pamtmg system iMlsctl •oea ~ ce l978 Xlnt rood Sl ,<llO Alltoa WC!llted 9590 CHiNROLET runs temfk SlSOO interior &r geu 3-1 mpl(
chest w mirror kin~ hd "'agner Spra)1eeh zooO 1
W..ted 1011 •••;t;••••f:j••;•••••••• lrvineSS7·0;J43 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.,211 H~·•('lf uL\'I) Art5493-46U7 on 1 .. > .s 1 ooo r a 11
board. '475 sea 6 rt ~ora w 200' hose & gun S950 :,y•••••1• ••••••••••••••• Des~g•~e Ul.S~~llri~~~ir '80 Yamaha !iOOXT En Wt; PAY TOP l>tJl,I. \ H II l'?",' TINrG . ..,,TON~>L·,,, .11 1969 r 1 at 124 St al ion 4!17 6236 gold1onl'. S7S t:'l'~. 4992471 1AbN1T ge8rounw ldr) !>l}lt Qual work •• 9.,.,20e\'S duro SJJOO alter6PM for IO" ui.l'cl l'J " I ,, · oc. w,, ....... 8 1 <>r . w 640-9417 T bl S 12" R 2 a e + ID sor or ~ ..., S2Q.03JS .. 847-6017 or a.,on ..,....., or ei. 60 6S V left & n.iht --: I a e aw ogers Captarn 's chrs + hutch HA \'I:: TOOLS. WILL , , rorei.:n rlnmnlJc·, or 5 9 fer 549 0906 door, '73 left door l.S() Ouung Sl'l Ir.: tabll', 5 I! P Motor Modem air 7Sl ~ Tra,·el, Expert marine 77 Yamaha XTSOO En i:las~11'f' If 'out •Jr 1~ 4 ·3331 HOltdo 9727 each Westem lll) le whl
pressback 1•ha1rll l!d KolddownS7SO Call --eniiine repair & duro. xlnl cood, man) ~·"~r'T d1·.1n "'•' u' lt 111he\t t'ash for uoocl ••••••••••••••••••••••• rims ror Super Ht•••lli• condSJ9567375.S4 1714l&W-8542 WANTED PLAY serv1t•e 7 da)s~k extras, mu bl l>t'll IS' rnr,&,.in~ S20eaS48-!1744 HOUSE for m) Gran 645 13911 ~ u VISIT YOUR Sora. lo,·e~eal. o('('Jb Mltctl .. om 8080 daughters Call after 964 4800 ...,J 1015 ORANGECO ... ST 6·3 Cdmper Bus 12 \'olt
chair Earthlool' stri ped ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spm loots Moriite Motor HOlftft, Sttltt/ Autos, lmpotffd "' 1600 E'·erythinl! nt·~
tweed Oak trim 642-4336 ~--9030 a. .. t/SforacJt fl60 G •• ett •• e •• r.
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Stanley 6 pc· din rm st•t. 7•20960 1213)463-1101 1 ln.trwneat• 8083 IJ:iv1t & Bout Rat'k for GENERATORS i ••••••••••••••••••••••• TO AY.11 .. 1 '"" 1968S-.. mirrnred churnl'ab S.S50 " d"Ak •M WAREHOUSL' 1't lnOrDIMJIC-.fr 2l'llmplele '.17~111 ... , 11·.11 11.. -"f
I I " I ' \H ·" \ su.1200
6S MAUBU WG~
New ures. '500
~16SS
'72:-10\'A
6C)l,3spd
49S 9429 a fl 6pm
·709 Ca price Auto air.
p~ r AM F'M SH95
Sharp' 496 7762
'79 Che•effe
Hatchback Auto. FM
Tape 21,WI m1, deluxe
interior S3.900 OBO
962 8141 0 0 ....................... "' """ .-. u~1VERSITY ""la d r d B _ 545-7831 ti7S-Wl davs OVERSTOCK 2!125 lfarbor Bhd l'OI( 1 ~· :1 ,pd Iran~ & l ,... ' re t'n ers ma11
(J) Barnla)' free ~land R S J Athlel~t -Club Ibanez. Les Paul L'.opy 9 Shp .liihn.son~ 0·utboard, Portables/ alternators COSTA MF'..5A 1·1ll'll $51~1 for hoth I SALt-:S&SERVlcr; ~heels. t'Xl'l'llt>nl rnnd Con ette 9932
mg wall units for :.t1•rt>u F' AM IL Y Mrm brsh p lead rhythm. xlnl l'ond, S450 l'lect parts. Must sell, 9 79-2500 rnm pick l'ht1) :im \'11 OLDSMOllLE S220() 646 4013 ••••• •• •••••••• ••••••••
desk,etc S290S4110397 Inane & Mesa Verde $_225~631'4366 64Gml pvt ply Call C\'CS or -~;clC'lhrutk 111 r1H HONDA Late '66\'W \•on\en.nev. '73 Velle T Top 3SO
MUST SELL locations SJSO, 644-8772 Obie F'r Hom likt' Conn wknds 646-6463 llolh•) I harrel duJI feel! GMC TRUCKS t'lUll'h. nr~ M irheh n Au tom at11• A r. full
Mahogany Dbl tlt'd ~ Span1shSlyle6'rnuchlSO 80 BegmneruptoPror ~!~o~~l~~f~rE '82 Brougham motor r11rh ~I 1 ':.11147:.l!r.11~1 28SO llarborBlvd llrt'b. xlnl rnnd lo m1 pwr. stereo t·ass. orig
mattress N1gh1 stand &endlbl~&p1rtureS.S r~s!!>f\&~642'9666 646.4937 home. F'ordchass1s.at or96t.1171Jl'H"' COSTA MESA dl'.tapede<'k .S61Ml or o ~nH Xlnt rnnd
and dresser to matrh Xlnl cond Also 20 yrds ACCORDIAN dealer's cost. 20'x9S". Audi 9707 540..9640 be:.t orrer 4!'-1 »W f><U 9513, 673-1429 _
Like new Must Sl't' lo ne~ unused cpe padding GrtalSllape, S90 loat1, Power 9040 auto air. 1·ru~ control, •••••••••••••••••••••••1 67 Buie. 'tint rood. rt'blt '80 Conette. loaded. 4000
appreciate Onl) 11000 SSO Best otrer 549-1~7 646-~37 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wire whl t'tlvers. am Cm '7H i\ud1 5!U1 Lo:idt-•d IJOCJl'OI" 9730 en~, new paint sunroof m1. see throu~h lops Aft
Or ORO Mana 631 1797 Tredex Joggin!( Machine 5 string TeMessee hJOJO f' 1 .!> h 1 n IC b oa I 2 7 cass. 9 rolor t1 . 13.SOO S66Sll f 1 rm I J II d rt •••• • • ••• • • ••••••••• ••• St700 67~ 9434 6 644 4147 with heart monitor. S800 xlnl cond. SOO or offer Tnll}C'raft with oulng Coleman, rotan roof 6P~1 5:16 :111•1 ·i;; MI\ 11 i.hov. room 9935 Library tbl Mahog hand firm Ca ll after 6PM. Knsll.._S4S-l!>IJ 11ers . radio. depth air, 4 o KW gen ·cathy, '80 i\ud1 1i.~1 lint rnntl t'ond Transferred. must Rare Opp l) liO i·on\I DodcJ-~n~r~~t 3~u.rdii~r 5363100 Officaf•-*•t& Cinder. reblt eng & Mf',8511700. sunroof dir HIJUllUnl.t sell 1970.2498 Mint rood Absolute ~7~·i>:d•;;~:·;;·P~;;·~P··
a"8842 .. m trans Will trade kOOo Tr"OHHs T ti 0 SIHIOO or t Jkt• '" t'r 6 !I Jaguar X K ~: steal al S45(Xl 6:ll 5:112 ,, ...,.,-KIRBY home main Eqlllipua:af 1015 equily for rar or ? • "" 917 P>'mls !ll\:l 2IUJ 'l'i'l ll.'fli rompletel) reblt Red ~7 5864 \' K Auto p s lonneau Drop lear oak thl. 2 tainance system, all al·••••••••••••••••••••••• T 0 P on bal11n re •14·~·K••e•n•s•k•1•1•1 ••57·:~··0•8••0• Tnm v. v.1n• wheels .\t u~t 73 Super ~tie Sl)l'C1al I ro ' er Xlnt IJ900
h k tar hments 1nt'lud1ng Desks. chairs. sofas file ...... 80 .,.,,,8940 "" s " 846-7841 c airs. rm· er, rane. ,,,,~.,... or....., Inter xlnl. sl-nc: •Mo\ Audi 110 .,"""'-linmai see IO,SOtl 64~9200 .\.t1 F'"' ra.!>s In~ m1 wi r ker 1880 s800 separate power floor cabinets. calculators. ~" .. ~" "'""" h r..........t 99 .. 0 ~ 8842 polisher Xlnl cond Ask · typewriters. d1ctat1n11 SHOGUN es eaS1!}• 6'2 6820 II.SOU m1 Jll 11pUon' 5 Masercrti 9739 n,ev. startl'r el .iulot rvru .. Sl~o 960<0H dl ·7-F' b I 'I rt )r 50M ~.trr. $t 2~1MI ·······················1 Xlnt t ond SISOU ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thomasville Kmg 7 pc mg " -....... equip .. atr ron i ioners. • 1 1 erii JS ~ ~ Trait.n, Utilty 9110 S52 6412 1147 61125 \tust Sell ll>F1esla t..ess
Bdrm set Italian Prov NEW Home Pinball etc.Xlntopptytofum1sh Grandbanks Skipper ••••••••••••••••••••••• OR.ANGE, ·····"'KY 62.,1'(', than4000m1 5mos old machine Sl60 Eler· a complete oCC1ce Will maintained Call eves UllhtyTra1ler Good Con-IMW 971 2 COU~ S r '-,, n 5 YR W •• 0 0 PecC1n wood. Ask ing tronic sconng. ~0697. sell all or pan Cash & only dition S350 556·9096 WE PAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• "''' ;'llew front re{·ap:.. front mt y ..,900 n saoo,57:1-1255 6424548 earn• Information at 6733778askforLee Mter6PM TOP DOLLAR FurThi•Fll'llt EXCLUSIVE 1 brakes. rlutrh c·able 962 S900
Wrought Iron Pallo set 6 Lake & 10 Oec~Sea (714 1998·2000 c!urini: •79 Challen11e~. 454 l'hev AlltoSeniu,Ports llu)·orLl'3bl'0eal MASERATI GoodaroWldtu~n S4S<I '75Granada4dt.allAC.
Cushioned sofa. 2 swvl poles & reels. SIOto SIOO busin~s hrs. dominator Jet S800(1 & Accftsoriff 9400 FOR USED CA.RS In Oruni.w<·ounl\ DEALERSHIP 499-3173 PS. PR, PW. good <'On<l
ch rs. table. Askin" S275 S48-91q2_ ROYAL self rorrecl1n~ Xlnl C'ond 492 :.>23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALAN MAGMOH ( ·oml' ~ lJsTod1H" We'll deliver anvwhere '78 Flug C:onvt'rl Xlnt 519S0 640 OIS1 ~~3~~~eam set 540· Phone· mate New S7S typewriter 6 mn nld 'iOftHt' 12 HEAVY DUTY PONTIAC/SUIARU &· , · in the world ! · mel hanira ll~ & l'CIS Mo•tricll 9947
S h •-W . . Sac S80o 54&6906 2480 ll11rbor Blvd BE ... CH IMPORTS m I' l 1l'a11' o ~ n t• r •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Sears metal wardrobe. mil .. essonl2gnot --·---· Sklrr with ti ti Iii' 7'laddcrrack,ritsany C:OSTAMESA "' desperate'-Sal' Sli2.SO iO Ma\l'n('k2dr auto. d kb Ilk ISO gun. S65 Bearh cruiser H E L P ' I m " Johnson SIOOO ORO long bed m\n1 tru(·k. 848 Do\'t'Slreet 673 7108 ..,... r rown, e new. bicycle. S spd. Cost S2SO. ~!STRESSED solid OJk ~s.8986 S200 493-2450 549·000 549·1457 SADDLYACK 7 52-0900 R11uu running l'OOd tlOO
968·3875 Sel l $165. 2 Carl JX6' 6 drawer exe1· PORSCHES i~AU l969HarborBh•c! '6<! VW BaJa llu11 lR.~ 96113424
Antique sideboard. kmit Hayward twin.fin sur· desk. needs some re 40'ClanicSco Allt f Salt "'"" 631 7170 en"1ne.Sl600 Me 9950 size m;iuress, bnx spr !'boards. 6 rt & 6 rt 4 10, finishing. See to appret· Live aboard or rru1se at os or WAMY'ED 211402 ~lar11ueri11• rk~1 • 6-'2 3.1n1 ... ~~!'!!••••••••••••••• . d I S2SOtOBO ••n 9788 fl 18K 2 ...... ·h · VII ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 1~~100 \ lt'JO ·111 Spider. beautiful & un in g an rum l'. 01· SI~ earh Refrigerator. · .,..,. a er n. ~" t e' Y . IMPORTANT 1\llo~ us the opportun1l} \ \' F:RY l'l\WY l!Hi5 Squarrb1tt'k r11ns cas1onal rha1rs brn II 5 cubic rt. GE new Jam_,__ _ on an 2 S "en warm N<JTICETO tn 1·ons1der the purrhJst.' 1 EXIT HWY 1 HlOt. "ill ai•t•epe lrade + ~ell Sl6000tm
\'IO}I C'OUt'h. lwo lll'Sk!I. model, SISO li73·140~ couDUTER wood 1ntenor. sleep{ 6. REAOERSANIJ or trade IO Of)OUr!'ll'an 831·2040 49" .. 949 l'ol~h 848 17fi!i or 1213159': 1110'i much more All vcr1 rl.' after6PM ,....-, comp 1 et e w st a 11 ADV&.o:RTISERS Porsche Cheek with lli. .,.... 848·6202
asonable. good rond1 S -C -Apple 48K memory, dis<' shower. ready for ~ea &r The price or Ile ms Toda}• Closed Sundays MH"cedH ltwl 9740 '611 Bo". l(d rood ~lu.:.t
hon 548 0963 i1~0 \f5~. S ost drive. hi speed pnnler bristol cond SJ'l,500 advertised by veh1rle ~ $1 000 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• st' 11 S 1800 HI u t'
oo en l'~ rere1ver, JO WPC. S50 4 extensive bus1ne s~ • ' f LG W -d d k I! • se . lereo w1soundproofenrlosure 67J.Ol49 dealers in the ~ehit'le a£f1j Am Fm l'~ 6464947
drawers SISO l.g ,1nt11 Cra111 car spkrs SJ O fl N 18' Cruisers Inc f'1sh1ng classified advert1sm" I tl> SELLING YOL'R MB' '70 Squareba1 k ~1111on
man's drcsserS200 Best earh 2 chrome 4arm !~re::cRi-~g(~~~n boat & trlr, lwm fi(JHP rolumns does not 1n ·-.. -··0 4'-. OFNEVfBMW'S WE,AY ~lick. radials hkl• nt·~
ofr Dbl bed m,llt & rlothing fixtures. S40 JohoSJH261i Johnsons. xlnl cond ('fude any appl11·ahle ,.,...~~,'~OO:~"un Sales and Lt'asing at TOPDOlUR $$ mtr & bod' \lu:.1 'l'e'
box . gd cone! S50 each Mr Zoo Sex Wax ----Must sell644 4<SI laxes. license. translt!r c:,·ill J ·ck Ba""" So:!ISO 494 ~ .. p l b I I compel1l1,e pnrt>~ E' 0 ""' 642 6980_ T·Sh1rts. long & short 0 r a. e man u 3 ,77 28• <A.W -fl fees, rmance ('hariies. WE BUY cellent se r d rt JIM SU:MOHS L'n1que 69 bu11 Jerp HE RCU LON l'ourh & sleeves. new. f6 so each. typewriter. xlnl cond, m --rt-rees for air pollution con CLE.., u C ..,RS d n·i e an pa ~ alum bod> Lit tm•s 4o
E Ch I k 67"1"" •• 6PM eludes case S50 963-1366 lmmac, kept oul water, lrol dev1cece"'·r1·ral1oos """ "' epl IWO«TS as)' air, 1 e ne~ "' • .,,, ,u,er -· _. 160hrs.loaded.rull co'' •u l970 Harbor 8lvd chan CB $2500 obo Sacrifice $375 719 4987 Recon Ant1q smudge !Pm 1017 ers VHF' S23,SOO or dealer documentary AND TRUCKS Good sel(.'('tton or pre COSTA MESA 64S 5124
Beautiful ll!e lrml rhn pols Make grt dt<'O ••••••••••••••••••••••• {714) 494-8230 preparation rharges un· v1ously owned BMW & 631·1Z76833-9300 '70 auto stick. $17()(1 OHO
lbt + 6 h1h,1r k t hr~ planters or pool patio 16 mo old Goal Male S80 less otherwise specified other fin<' ('ar~ in ex --... -----•I 'fiO Bug Sll50 848 176:-,,
Medi! h' Y ..ohd oak. 42" ht rs SIOO 646·6270 080 24' SKI, JACK b_l' the advertiser rellenl rnnd11mn ·79 300 Turbo. Snrf. lthr. 848 6202
wide.standstn96' Xlnl -751-l.ZOI Cuddyc abin. 80hrs, ~•/ Mexico Stereo. immar
cond S95o, Sdt'ril1re Ov"~lll600EC~IDSl e ~rabbit hutrh;;, SIO e;, I VHF. r~~I covtehr. many Clonk• 9520 ~o'emap· ~~101yhal· hHa'l lllnlae~eses S24.900 lSl-~4 . " '·' YP 1 dble rabbit hutrh S25 Cd xtras . ....,uer an new. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " < 0 640·6215. 966·1779 Conlart anyt1mt 33241 cond 1 free rabhil prof malnt $15.500 other makes or autos. -S Piece Maple B{'(!room Acapulco Or Dan a M7-6eM 7S2·6692, after 6pm · 'IETTIEST trucks and ''ans For ad '79 300 TURBO DlESEL.
Set, greal 1·ond S350 Point -644-4JS9_ '57 T-llRD HlwH IUYY d1tinnul information on snrr. aux lank. stereo
MS·6916. TOSHIBA Copier, desk PARROT Red h~lld~d IMTOWH! Top dollu!'ll for Sports leasingpleasernll cass. 26.SOO mi. dk red. Beau~postoakwaterbed mdl. S700, 6' storaae TA M A/tz 0 ~d oot1,I•/ ,050 IEST~'. Cars. Bugs. Campt•rs. 714 '9721270 714 661 ·9611 pvt ply S26,000 Call wlair frames JU~t ·b' t SIOO "i ame rain• Chwhr ~ 914's,'Audi's 673·9336or answerad ed 1 ii s.sso ra ine · manui 213/592.J:M.2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (005UKZ) Ask forU /C MGR F'or ngood<l(lulandiiood ·~~·4300, __ ::~38· mus se typewriter S3S. All very 2' modern Cishtng boat JIM MAIUMO Ct I -·-I g_ood cond.673--2282 W1ntAds Call~~ for local fishine trips. VOUCSWAGEt4 &a ersa esserv1cesee • '10210CE
~1':u-~ t7 t4)846-7~alt8pm l8?l1Beat hBlvd Lomiles,loaded Look~
h's not too early to make HUNTINGTON RF./\('11 shar~ S7H039~--· • Mercedes 380SEL. '81. plans for your oUice 14~2000 SALES-SERVICE-lEASI NG
'69 \'W BUS n~s bod1
"ork S600 or best offer
Will trade ror iiood run nan& 289 848-481S
'68 SQUAREB/\CK
Lots new, S2000 Sam,
95J.4J60or 645·8471
·74 Convertible Xlnt
rond Auto. ne~ radials
A5kmg $4200 963 4000
'76 SCI RROCO
S3000 or bes I orrer
644-9817 aft S ll PM
I ChristmuPartyfrom 10 ----2oe w 1st SANTAANA silver melt lblue int,
tol30peoP,le f\allcater· . TOP DOI.UR 71 4 ~3171 snrf. just arrived. ·79 Bug Con,· S1h
ing avail Ya chting 55 Cadillac. New engine. PAID FOR CLOSED SUNDAY S4S.OOO t7 HIS40 3931 AM FM rass Lo M1
Conaultanu Charter tra_n1 & tires. Clean in· Th wkdal'!:, _ =5lnlrond 59200 673-1564
Services (714l 67S.21160 side Ii out. "1.:KKI firm. GOOD & CLEAN •Most bcltiRcJ MB '80 TD Osl w 110 '6S vw Ba.ia Buie. 110Qd
llRANG E COL':'\'l'Y'S
FINEST
LINCOLN MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
~ ?tAtUlt•
l.l~COL'.1 MERCL'RY
16-18 Auto Center Dr
SD f'~ > Lk f'orest exit
IRVINE
130..7000
·12 MARQUJS WAGON
Loaded S!69S
541 3484 P P.
'78 Mercury Monarch
Ghia. low mileage. xlnt
cond 645 6819
M1t1tmM) H52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·sc; Excellent cond Ong
owner V6, auto, new
brakes. rblt en11 SJJOO
0 BO S48 1432
'67 M~lang.
S300 must sell '
631 663.S
66 V8. auto. air. PS.
pony int Xlnt rood
Sl 195 I $33' 4242
OldtmOWe tt5S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·ao Cutlass Supreme
Brooghm. ai r. luadt'd.
23,000 miles 832 2247 -S4U270. USED CARS! Pwt Of Yow Manila beige palamino r on d . r e b 11 en~,
• Sii t060 '58 CAD Cpe de Ville IMW flwcJmt Or $24,SOO 7900 m1 lmmac S20001best olr IMO 410'J ~ tt60
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 to 000 m I Mech' I bOM eo.w •• P.P. 76G-87_01 Ot84&9566 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8'NAPL~SA801' • . L ~ Xlnl cond 13'7S/bllofr sound . P/PS.S.2444. Mc oretl IMn !! 28<lSL Late 1969. silver & VolYo 9772 ·73~r~uns good . looks
.7024 s m '30 Ford Coupe with Ill)' Orl.eGM red. both tops Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• I -Rumble-seat Restored lj Ow ,..._ "-l original rond. Sl5.7SO or 642-0619
S1bot!Dlothy SHIO. Mast Lo oew rond Orig lie 2150 .... _._ A&-,.a (714) 5l2·5~33_ orrer. days 549-7971. eves l#NIOVROLNYG<! DCOUUNTLaY' ·71 Arrow GT. 5spd. air. 1$0. Boat trailer W . latet. 15000.52800 nm...-..-... ~ 'I 1$2:2971. __ _ A r. 11m 1rm . xlnt rond
I' SLIPPER & lrlr:-N;; 4Wt.H1Drifts ts50 eo.t.MtM 445-5700 OIANGECOUHTY'S Just am vt'd' Stuttgar1 SALES SBYICE S295011>est &319949
u llt fr i creuoriea, •••••••••••••• .. •• ... ••• OU>UT 1981 300S-D Turbo. 50 D • '77 Volare P6 pb II <'
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·l '210 red wltan Int .. snrf. • .... .,.1111 Po.HCK tf45 'TT Newport 71, hln1ed LAlllT MOO& Sales·Servi(.le.Leulng Cl!SS. 548•934!. IM6-Z848.:_ _. __ "' •••••••••••••••••••••••
ma1t. Tiiler mut. 8 Cyl., Hp. w/only 8,000 Roy Ccr"r.IM. YOLYO 1980 f0at.a1.11u 817.X 2+-2 loadtd w/Jtlru, 118.9'0. milts. AC. PS, dual 0 11 Rolla Royce RMW '79 Z40-0, sunroof. auto :iutom11tlr. lo.dt'd wllh
Me-tanks, IJ(llltt1clloo r;ar 1540 Jomboree trans. air. stereo. ivory 11168 Harbor Blvd uptional rt11tum; 28.ooo
fack N Be h & bamboo, 35·000 ml COSTA MESA m1 Perfetl conditmn 1o1f1. S ... / end, b acked out front ewPOrt ac fl.t<>.11444 I m m ac s 1 7 • so o . _j46.9JOU40-9447 Prlc·"' .... 10~ ~ .. -1 ... 111,. Deeb 9070 arm. aUdml rear win-. 3100"'W. Cout llwy 851 6228 ~ IJll: w wll<I '~ ' ....................... dow. UXH.5 chrome NewportBfarb STOP!! · '81 2 door 242 DI. 80001 for qu11'k ult• tall
WANTED: To leaM TS' rinu, Dick ~ tlres, ___ 642-Hm Take llmt to relax and MG '742 m I . l m ma r u 1 at t _144 ~
prlult dock or allp cu1tom pal11t (dark ~--~ to-:::-vtl all ov .. r ahop at home It's sim ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bur1undy w/Camtl inl T llJ be wltbtn Hntln1toa bronmtt.Wc). fflr-u• "' pit with Dally Pilot MGC'U ,6tyl.1uto.con· S.ereo~Xtru.n~180 :0.,~~1 t 111moat Pf'C)pk
Harbour by ,.poa1lble 1 1 4 town to look for garaae Clau fled Ads And if ver1 Gnat cond .. grtat When you nMd ea~rt I h e m..,,ant to ...... T•1L!E:!!!!IL--1 Hitt ... you'll find U.em you hive aomtUuni to I.livest. Oria. owner mtatt ttrv1ce or I t t aucceu o any ~~ Hau 10metbln1 J_OD riCbt btrt In Clwilied II II r I di aell to btst offer Sandy l"f1ll "· um 11r1at aa'e Malle au"' WANT AC'l'10N? want l.o .UT Cuallied To place~ aaraie se • c.• 1 r en 1 1•131"'4742 · to lht SerYk~ Dlrtttory Yo v r1 I 1 II st t d In C U adltlo1t-'• .o-. Clu111led Ad Vlsor it _\&L! . In Cl1111fitd to solve Cl111lfled pho _!!~~=~===:=:====:;:;:::;:======.....1..::::::::::=::==:::::=~:::Jt.==::;::-=::::=:-=:'•=1...:"::&e~ad~1~c ~tta.~5171~·::::;:U642~-___ __ d He.I ! our ~· 6'2·5'11. • n t
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• • • • *
IUlll £1111 YOUR 11111111 IAllY PIPIR
TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
• e student keeps unborn baby alive
RIVERSIDE <AP) -Chria
Huscher, a student at Christ
College in Irvine, never expect·
ed to use the cardiopulmonary
res uscitation techniques he
learned in high school, but an in-
fant girl whose mother died
a fter a car wreck is alive
because he did.
The baby was in critical condi·
lion Monday at Riverside
General Hospital, where she was
Produce
boycott
b y Japan
By The Associated Press
Japan wants no m ore
California lemons or other fruit
until the state solves its fruit Oy
problems , and Ca lifornia
Republicans want no more of
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., saying
they'll try to impeach him un-
less he gives up control of the
pest-eradication project.
Florida Agriculture Com·
missioner Doyle Conner,
meanwhile , asked U .S .
Agriculture Secretary John
Block to order the regulation of
all California produce. Conner
claims California was the source
of the five Mediterranean fruit
flies whose discovery in Florida
led officials to quarantine 52
square miles of residential area
near Tampa, just west of
Florida's lucrative citrus bell.
Georgia Agriculture Com-
missioner Tommy Irvin also
said Monday he asked B.lock to
quarantine produce from coun-
ties bordering the areas in
California that are known to be
Infested by the flies. There was
no immediate response from
Washington.
On Saturday, South Korea and
Taiwan began accepting only
treated grapes, citrus, pears and
apples from California, said
George Stratheam. chief deputy
director of tilt! stale Food and
Agriculture Department.
The Japanese Ministry of
Agnculture, 1''orestry and Fish·
eries announced Monday in
Tokyo the U.S. Embassy was in·
formed J apan wants no citrus
crops or other neshy fruit from
California, beginning Wednes-
day.
Japan already is refusing
crops from a 2,427-square·mile
quarantine area Infected by the
medfly, according to state Food
and Agriculture Director
Richard Rominger . It is
threatening to ban the crops
from the rest of the stale until
both sides agree on fumigation
procedures.
But, Ro m inger said, "We
don't have enough fumigation
facilities to fumigate all the
citrus.
"It would mean California
citrus growers would have to
find another market. It won't be
that easy because citrus goes to
all the markets that are availa·
ble to it."
Negotiations were lo continue
today in Washington.
Scott Morse or the California
Farm Bureau Federation said
Japan had been expected to im·
port S67 million worth of lemons
this year in addition lo $27
million worth of oranges, $14
million worth of grapefruit and
$7 miJlion worth of melons,
grapes and avocados.
In Sacramento, Ass.embly
Republican leader Carol Hallett
said Monday an impeachment
SEE RELATED
STORY, PAGE AS
resolution against the
Democratic governor was being
drafted, and she would introduce
it Thursday if Brown has not
turned over control of the
eradication proet'am to quallfied
agricultural exP!rts.
Crossword
corre cted
Aa many crosaword fana have
notlOed us, our Sunday puule
wa.1 (32 across) sabota1ed. Tbe
preylout week's definitions were,
Jnadvertently coupled with the
newtrid.
Both portlona are printed cor·
rect.11 in today's edition. The
lar•e puule appears on Pa•e C4
in addWon to the rtSU)ar dally
pualeon P••• M . We UJ7 down) re1ret t.be tt·
ror md apoloclae for t.be coo-l ualon ud fruat.ratJon It eauiec1
readen 1'bo eoulda't ft( tbeir
vut VOC9bularle1 loto too fn
1qaare1 .•
delivered by Caesarean section
1rom the mother's dead body
after the accident Sunday eve·
ning . The mother. Roselia
Cervantes, 20, had been seven
months pregnant.
Her husband and the child's
father, Eliodoro Ceja, 28, was In
satisfactory condition at the
same hospital. Riverside police
Sgt. Tom Countri said Ceja lost
control or the car and It
slammed into a tree.
Huscher, a 19-year-old college
sophomore, was driving to a
friend's house after a church ice
cream social when a woman
standing in Vict-0ria Street fran·
tically waved him over. He
stopped ahead of the crumpled
vehicle and round 21 -year-old
Lauri Rush already pumping
WHO'S PULLING THE STRINGS? Tony vrbano c hats with
some fictional and celebrity look-a like marionettes that he
and two associates manipulate in shows at 12 15. t · 30. 2: 15,
M~1. Cervantes' chest, working to
spark a pulse
''She didn't look good, her
eyes were glazed over,''
Huscher recalled. "She was ob·
viously pregnant and I didn't
really know what to do on a pre&·
nant lady but Lauri seemed to
know.''
"She took over chest part and
I did the mouth part in the
15·to-2 ratio. 15 pushes to the
chest and two breaths. We dJd
that about 10 or 15 minutes
before ambu l ance arrived,
though it seemed like forever.
"I didn't reel the lady had too
much of a chance for life all 1
heard was a gurgling sound
when I breathed into her so I as-
s umed her lungs were full of
blood. But I thought the baby
would make it.
"When l walked up there I
DMly ...... ,_..,ca.-.~
3. 4:30. 6 :30 and 7:30 p.m . Saturdays and Sundavs at the
Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach A ball.et troupe
also entertains art exhibit vie" er..,
Air traffic safety probe due Closed-door
heari n g today
for Boni n Task force to study strike' s effect on nation's airlines
WASHINGTON (A'P) -The
National Transportation Safety
Board voted unanimously today
to begin an eight-week investlea·
lion into the air traffic control
system to determine whether
safety has been reduced by the
air controllers strike.
A task force of the agency will
examine a broad range of sub-
jects from controller qualifica-
tions and work schedules to air
traffic density, a spokeswoman
for the board said.
The spokeswoma n, Barbara
Dixon, said the five board mem-
bers decided unanimously to
begin the investigation. but that
no decision has been made
whether to pursue the matter
with a report or recommenda-
tions.
The safety board, which in-
vestigates airline accidents. en·
tered the air controller issue
amid increasing concerns from
some critics of the Federal Av ia-
tion Administration that safety
has been substantially reduced
because of the strike by 12,000
controllers.
Couple f ind
be longin gs,
lwuse g one
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A San
Diego couple returned from
their month-Ions vacation in In·
diana to find most of their
belongings gone and -worse
yet -their three-bedroom house
snatched Crom its foundaUon.
Greg Fulse and Susan Carr,
both Navy enlisted personnel
wbo have rented the house stnce
January, said Monday they were
shocked at t.be di.scovery and
stUI haven't located all their
bele>nilngs.
''I couldn't believe lt," Fulse
aali: •·aw. the WQ ~ l11clt Wlf 1otirl I wun•i 1urprlltd," N-
f erring to a mllfortune-fUled
vacation.
Tbe couple have since le.med
thelr landlord, Larry Crawford,
was cltarin1 tbe pr operty to
bulld an lp&rtment bulldinl and
had moved the bouae -after
eaapt)'lnc ita con*'ll -to San Yaldlo, oear the internation1l
border, few 1ale In Tljuana.
Crawford bu reportedly laid
be m11 bllve act-4 butily b)' ii··
1u191 -'1 a JUt•minute verbal
not.lee to tbe eou])le'a bouMlltt«
whUt they were away.
Meanwhile, l"Wff 1111 tbe)'
have fo und 1ome of t heir
pei'IOul property wttb bil at.
loney ud bopa t.be Nit la with
tbe hoaleeltttr who II DOW vaca·
Uoalnl.
"We',. IOlnl to make it. 1
thlnll," f\llee aitd.
FAA sources. asking not to be
identified by name, said today
that agency also is considering
some form of independent in·
vestigatlon to determine
whether air travel ls as safe as it
was before the strike.
The five board
members decided
unanimously to
begin the in-
vestigation.
FAA Administrator J . Lynn
Helms has said repeatedly that
there has been no reduction in
safety because or the strike.
The air traffic control system
is being run by about 9,300 peo-
ple, including s upervisors, non·
striking controllers and military
controllers.
Ms. Dixon said the safety
board investigation will depend
on cooperation from the FAA as
the task force will be small and
will have to cover a number or
areas.
She said the probe would in·
elude comparing traffic density
before and after the strike, pro·
cedural changes adopted by the
FAA because of the walkout,
controller qualifications. work
schedules and reporting of near·
misses or other irregularities.
On Monday. the FAA saJd It is
examining claims of more than
two dozen aircraft incidents dur·
mg the first week of the air traf·
fie controllers strike.
The controUers union released
a list of the alleged incidents
Monday, including nine uncon·
firmed near-collisions and other
reports that aircraft have come
closer to each other than regula·
tions allow
The FAA noted the reports
were unconfirmed and it may
take days to check them out and
it said there are hundreds of
near misses each year.
As the union stepped up its
challenge of administration
claims that fl ying is as safe as
ever .
Managing editor
post goes to Loos
............
MANAGING EDITOR
Chari.el H. ~
Soldie r kille d
SEOUL, SoUtll Kona <AP> -A mine In a marked mine fteld
OOttb at Seoul eQJoded 8-daJ, klllint one Amtrfeo IOldi• and wo~Ddln1 anotber.
Charles H. Loos, assistant
managing editor of the Orange
Coast Daily Pilot for the past 13
'years, today was appointed
man aging editor by Editor Tom
Murphine.
Loos. who joined the Daily
Pilot staff ln 1961, has previously
served on the newspaper as a
staff writer. Newport Beach city
editor, Orange County bureau
chlef, and as education editor.
During bis time as an educa-
tion writer, he won the pres-
tigious John Swett Award for
outstanding co•eraae of
California education In two suc·
cessive years.
"Charles Loos brines a depth
of experience and knowJedfe of
Orange County and the Oranie
Coast to the politioa of maaag-
ing editor," M~ said. "I
am very p1tued to bave him ln
thla key po1ltion' on lbe Daily
Pilot Ila.ff. He ha1 a ... n-.ed
reputation tn Oranae Oount,y
Journalism 11 ont of ltt ftiant
craftsmen who hH brou1bt
many awards both to the paj)V
and to himself."
Looi d.ld hla lint stint on the
newspaper 1taff from 1881 to
1968 where be aened in a
number of capaclU.ts. lneluclinf
staff wrlter ln Costa Mtaa,
Newport Buch clty edl~
Orance County bureau chief
(lee BDITOi , P as; Al)
A preliminary hearing opened
today behind closed doors in
Orange County Superior Court
into William George Bonin's al·
leged involvement in seven of
the s layings attributed lo the so·
called Freeway Killer.
Witnesses, members of the
public and news reporters were
barred from the proceeding by
Judge Kenneth Lae. who or-
dered the courtroom closed at
the request of Earl Hanson, the
34-year-old defendant's court·
appointed attorney.
Opening of the three-day long
hearing was cleared Monday af·
ternoon when superior court
Judge William Murray rejected
a request by prosecutors from
Los Angeles County lo have
Bonin returned to their jurisdic·
lion where he faces trial Sept. 14
in connection with 12 of the slay-
ings.
The request underscores a
jurisdictional dispute between
authorities in Orange and Los
Angeles counties over where
Bonin will be tried in connection
with three of the killings.
Bonin is charged in both coun-
l i es in the deaths of James
Macabe. 12, of Garden Grove ;
Darin Kendrick, 19, of Stanton.
and Stephen Wells , 19, of
Downey.
Sterling Norr is, a Los Angeles
County deputy district attorney.
told Judge Murray that
authorities consider it a necessi·
ty to rel~ jurisdiction over the
three cases to s uccessfully pros·
ecute Bonin. Prosecution of two
or the three cases wm depend
heavily on testimony by two of
Bonin's alleged accomplices In
the crimes. Norris said.
David Carter. an Oran1e
County deputy district attorney.
sa1d the jurisdictional battle was
nothing more than "a race" to
see which county can bring
Bonin to trial first. He claimed
Los Angeles authorities did pot
need all three cases to mount a
successful proeeculion, despite
Norris' comment to the con· trary.
Carter said Orange County of·
ficials were willlni to yield one
or two of the three disputed
cases to Los A.nplet ~·l auertcd that Offer wu .
)turray, prtor to reJe the
Los Anceles requ"t, eommant·
ed, "I think It ls a t.nible
sh• me two dlltrlct attol"DIJI' of·
(8" UAIUNG, Pa .. Al)
Gunboat sighted
MARSEILLES, France (AP>-
A Freftcb-bu1lt Iranian PDboel,
capttnd lut week ott tbe eout
of Spain by opponeau ol tbt
Tehran real~. entered French
waters today and wu endsiq
qear Marsefil•, otndall Hid.
wais really in shock, and you
-think you forget everything you
learned . But it's pretty
s traightforward once you 1et
started. although I gagged a few
times"
Officer Jerry Carroll said the
efforts by the young man and
woman kept the baby alive until
Ms. Cervantes arrived at the
<See RESCUE, Page A2)
Airline
to end
service?
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ot_Del.., ...........
Western Airlines . which
operates two flights daily from
Orange County to Salt Laite Ci·
ty, would be forced to terminate
service Oct. l under a recom·
mendation made Monday to the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors
In a brief report to the board,
Murry Cable. manager of John
Wayne Airport, said Western
will not be able to comply with
jet noise reduction requirements
contained in a recently approved
plan to regulate which com-
mercial carriers serve Orange
County
Western orficials steadfastly
deny Cabl e 's contention .
Further, they claim. Wes tern in·
tends to reduce noise beyond
levels contemplated by the other
four carriers s erving the
airport.
Weste rn , based in Los
Angeles. began service in
Orange County last October un·
der an interim air carrier access
plan. The plan also granted Den·
ve r-based Frontier Airlines-
permission to ser ve Orange
County.
In approving a final draft of
the access plan in June .
s upervisors permitted the addi·
lion of a third new entrant,
Pacific Southwest Airlines. <On·
ly AirCal and Republic Airlines
served Orange County prior to
adoption of the interim and final
access plans. I
Western is not favored under
the final access plan. Cable said.
because of language that re·
quires commercial carriers to
use only new and quieter jet
aircraft at John Wayne Airport.
AirCal, Republic, Frontier and
PSA either have or soon will
lake delivery of the first genera-
~ion of the so-called "stage Ill''
aircraft, the McDonnell Douglas
DC-9 Super 80.
Western does not intend to
purchase Super 80s. According
to a report to county officials, it
would meet noise reduction ob-
jectives outlined in the access
plan by modifying engines in
older Boeing 737s now used on
Orange County-Salt Lake City
routes.
Further. Western officials
cSee FLIGHTS, Page A2)
Lawsuit settled
HOUSTON (AP> -A federal
judge says most of the issues
have beeen settled in a lawsuit
by Vietnamese refugee fish-
ermen who charged they were
intimidated by Ku Klux
Klansmen and others who want·
ed them out of Galveston Bay.
DRlllU COAST llATHIR
Night and morning low
clouds, but sunny Wednes-
day a!temoon. Highs 75 to
82. Low tonight 65.
llllDI TODAY
Did PreriMnt FrankJin D.
Roo#WU know thr01'Qh ck·
c<><Ud tM•~• of JGpOJt'•
plou to oUock J>~arl
Harbor? fSu De\ofv KMW.
Po~ A7J
llDll
• • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTfTuetday, August 18, 1981
Newport man
among 3 held
in Mexico jail
By S'l'l:VE MARBLE
0( ................
A Newport Beach attorney
•nd two pilots remain jailed ln
Puerto Vallarta today while
friends and associates attempt
to flnd out why the men and the
$3 milllon Lear Jet they new in
on aPe belng held.
Att.6rney Frank Barcelona and
pilots Paul Robinson of Santa Ana and Byron Potter of SeatUe
were arrested last Thursday at a
Puerto Vallarta hotel.
But ao charges have been filed
against the men, said U.S.
Consular officer Phil Ober.
There were unconfirmed re-
ports today that the three men
have been freed and have been
granted permission to leave
Mexico. There were no further
details on this report.
IDENTITY SOUGHT
Woman found slam
Victim's
identity
unknown
A young woman whose body
was found beaten and stabbed
on the side of a road east of San
Clemente last week still hun't
been identified, and Oranse
County Sheriff's Department in-
vestigators are soliciting help.
They say persons who might
recognize the brown-haired,
brown-eyed woman found last
Thursday morning should call
the sheriff's department at
834-3000.
The victim, believed to be
from 18 to 23 years old, was dis-
covered on the shoulder of
A venida Pico, about two miles
east of San Clemente. Sheriff's
Lt. Wyatt Hart .said she ap-
parently bad been killed from 24
to 36 hours earlier.
She died or a skull fracture
and multiple stab wounds, he
said.
The woman was S·feet-6-
inches and weighed 110 pounds.
She had a small tattoo of a but-
terfly on her upper left arm, he
said, adding that when found,
she was partially clad in a
yellow T-shirt with blue stripes.
Hart said investigators need to
learn the victim's identity
before they can begin figuring
who kiUed her.
Thieves get
$164,000 car
WASHINGTON <AP) -A lllt
limited edition Rolls Royce con-
vertible with a sticker price of
$1'4,000 was stolen from a
dealer's shop in Bethesda, police
in the Maryland suburb said.
Michael Jackson, executive
vice president of Euro-Motor
Cars In<:., sald Monday the job
was the work of professional car
thieves. He offered a Sl0,000 re-
ward leading to the undamapd
recovery of the vehicle.
The ivory-colored Corniche
" \ convertible with navy blue top
arri¥ed at the dealership Thurs·
day, Jackson said.
ORA COAST
George Thomsen, a Newport
Beach man who arranged the
trip to Puerto Vallarta and ac·
companied the trio to Mexico
last week, today said, "the
whole thing is a giant mess
that's way out or hand."
Thomsen, who operates
Thomsen Air Charter out of
John Wayne Airport, said he
went to Puerto Vallarta to re-
cover an airplane that a friend
had chartered to a Mexican
firm. "Frank just went along with
me because he enjoys flying and
he was going to spend a couple
of days in Mexico," Thomsen
commented today from bis
Newport home.
According to ThomHn, the
plane he was to recover was a
Piper Cheyenne that belonga to
Jack's Box and Crate, a Santa
Ana firm that leased the craft
from Crocker National Bank.
Thomsen said the plane wu
seized when it landed In Puerto
Vallarta last week and the
American pilot who had been
flying the craft was told to get
out of the country.
"So as a favor," Thomsen
said "I agreed to go ~o Mexico
and 'get the plane which, in my
opinion, was stolen."
Barcelona, Thomsen said,
agreed to .join him and the two
pilots aboard the rented Lear
Jet strictly as a pleasure trip.
But others, including
Barcelona's associate Bill
Urban, claim Barcelona was
paid a fee by Thomsen to go
a long on the trip. They said
Barcelona was to be the lawyer
on hand in case of trouble in
Mexico.
Thomsen said when the group
landed in Puerto Vallarta, he
immediately ran over to the
Piper Cheyenne, cut the chains
that were securing it and took
off. He arrived in the United
States later that day.
Thomsen said he got word of
the arrests the following day.
·'I couldn 'l believe it,"
Thomsen said.
Urban said bis colleague
Barcelona was not planning any
vacation in Mexico and was sup-
pose to return the same day.
"It was not a pleasure trip -
he was paid a ree lo go along,"
said Urban. "lt seems like he's
being used as a scapegoat or
something. Frank's very con-
servative. he doesn't even drink
beer."
Urban said authorities in
Puerto Vallarta have not let him
talk with Barcelona. But, he
said, authorities there claim
Barcelona is in good health. "I've been told that the
problem here is that the judge in
Puerto Vallarta is sick and in
the hos pital ," said Urban.
"Under Mexican law, a person
has to be charged in a certaln
period of time but nobody down
there seems to know how long
that period is."
Urban said a Mexican at-
torney may go before a federal
judge ln Guadalajara to seek a
writ forcing local authorities lo
either charge the men or release
them.
From Page A1
RESCUE • • •
emergency room, where she was
pronounced dead.
Ms . Rush could not be
reached, but Huscher ~aid she
learned CPR for her lifeguard
job at UC Riverside.
·'We talked afterward,''
Huscher said. "She was on her
way to her family's house when
it happened. I put my arm
around her and gave her a big
hug, but she just kept saying
over and over again that she
never thought she'd "ave to use
her training in this lund of situa-
tion."
Huscher, who works as a
musical instrument repairman,
said be still hasn't "gotten over
the excitement that the training
actually did some good."
"lt was something I felt I had
to do, and once I started it just
came naturally," he added. "I
didn't even know the woman's
name until 1 read it in the
newspaper."
llllyPUit CIHlm.d ............. 714/l42•N71 All otti.f d1pert"'9nb 142-.4a1
ThomM P. Hiiey ..__... _ c:.....1-Oltioer
AC>bert N. Weed ,,.,.,.
1 Thom.. A. Murohlne
'-~o~atVey
l..K.wl:utu ......... 4
~ N. Godderd Jr.
CMillllllll ~
""'-d lctlulmen ......
=~LOOI
Cerol A. Moote ..... ...,
MAIN~
Jll Wttt ky SI , C.-1• IMM, CA
11111.•ll _... .... I tee. C•\a M9W. CA 9MM
COlll'r!vM 1"1 Or .... Coetl l'.-llfth19 C°""*"'• NO
"•'" 11ori.t, 1111111r•llo11&1 Hllo•I•• mt41.r or ..i .. rllttnMfllt h.,,,,. "'•• bit reproo11<td •llllCNI •Helot°''"""..,, ol <Ot»••...,• -,,.,
From Page A1
HEARING OPENED • • •
fices have to enter into a fl&ht
on such a matter.''
·'The state of California wants
the man vigorously prosecuted.
Somebody has committed a
number or horrible murders,"
Murray added.
Testimony in the preliminary
hearing is expected to closely
parallel that presented to the
Orange County Grand Jury
before it voted to indict Bonin in
connection with the seven slay-
ings in which Orange County has
jurisdiction.
In addition to the Macabe,
Kendrick and Wells cases, Bonin
was charged in the slayings of
Frank Fox, 17, or Long Beach;
Glenn Barker, 14, of Huntington
Beach ; Russell Rugh, 15, of
Garden Grove, and Lawrence
Sharp, 17, of Long Beach.
Bonin additionally is charged
with special circumstances that
could qualify him for the death
penalty if convicted of the
Orange County charges.
An indictment does not
establish guilt or innocence. The
preliminary hearing, in which
defense c ross-examination of
prosecution witnesses is
permitted, is being held to de-
termine if surricient evidence
exists to hold Bonin for trial in
connection with the Orange
County cases.
Among those scheduled to
testify are Gregory Miley, 19, of
Texas and James Munro, 19, of
Michigan, who have previously
admitted participating in two of
the slayings. They agreed to
testify for the prosecution in ex-
change ror favorable disposition
or the murder charges lodged
against them.
Bonin wa s arrested in
Hollywood in June 1980 while he
was under surveillance as a
potential suspect in the string of
more than 20 slayings. He was
placed under surveillance only
hours after the last death at-
tributed to the freeway killer.
that of Wells, whose body was
dumped behind a Huntington
Beach service station on June 2,
1980.
From Page A1
EDITOR • • •
later, as education editor.
He left the paper in 1966 to
become public information of·
ricer for the University of
California, Riverside. He re·
turned to the Dally Pilot in 1968
·as assistant managing editor.
The new managing editor was
graduated from the University
of Colorado, Boulder, with a
degree in journalism after at·
tending South Pasadena Higb
School. He la a member of the
Orange County Press Club,
Sigma Delta Chi, the society of
profeHional journalists, and
was aflWated with Beta Theta
Pi Fraternity at Colorado. He
served ln the U.S. Army from
1959 to 1981. Looe and hia wife, the former
Judith Harrington, have three
children, Scott, Joan and
Michael. They make their home
In Newport Beach.
Rede urge treaty
GENEVA, Swltaerland <AP
-1he Soviet Union today ar1ed
that tbe Geneva dllarmament
conference be1ln immediate
work on a treat1 outlawlnf
neutron wHpou.
The killings are so named
because many bodies were
dumped alongside freeways or
major highways.
From Page A1
FLIGHTS • • •
said, the airline in 1984 expects
to take delivery of a plane con-
sidered more advanced than the
Super 80, the 200-seat Boeing
767.
Cable said today that he would
permit Western· to continue to
serve Orange County if it would
convert to the Super 80s.
"We need them (the Super
80s ) to m eet our noise reduction
goals and to ca rry. more
passengers," Cable said. The
Super 80s have about 2S percent
more seats than the Boeing 7:rls
and DC-9-30s now operated by
the carriers serving the airport.
"If Western wants to commit
<to purchasing the Super 80s)
that's fine. If they don't, then
they don't have to fly here."
Cable also disputed Westem's
contention that it can meet noise
reduction objectives simply by
modifying its current fleet of
Boeing 737s. "We don't think
their figures are correct," he
said.
If Western is removed from
the airport and sources say
Cable has the necessary votes to
force the eviction -its two
flights would be divided evenly
between Frontier and PSA.
Frontier, which operates two
flights per day , would be
permitted these departure~.
PSA, which is scheduled to begin
service Oct. 1, also would be
awarded three departures.
. . . . . . . . . . . .
Deity ............. ,,..,., ...........
OPEN FOR INSPECTION Some 700 members of the Rapid
Deployment Force s pread out their perso!lal gear at El
Toro Marine Air Corps Station Staff Sgt. Keith Jackson and
Brig. Gen. Joseph B. Knotts. commandin~ general o~ t.he 7th
Marine Amphibious Brigade. spoke with a part1c1pant.
below. during the ins pection on ~onda~
After hi• fr1tod Jou Lie·
ao1 wu 1laln, tlDltt•
1on1wrlttr Harr)' Nll11oa
bt1an or11ntaln1 an anti·
h1nd1UD c1mp111n .
Now 1upporttr1 include
such HollywQOd celebrities
II Geor•e Se1al, Carol
Bumeu, Goldie Hawa, ~ae
Wilder, Ed Auer, lean
S&ar.tetoa, Elllot Gould
Cbr 1topber Rene, Nilsson
s ays.
"You see, l •4.!l nervous
when they s hpot piano
players," Nilsson said In an
Interview. "So r decided to
do somethlne."
• That something turned into
a march on Washington the
last week of October, s aid the
41-year-old musician, whose
hits have i ncluded
"Everybody's Tilkln' " and
"Me and My Arrow." Tbe
event will be called March to
End Handgun Violence.
Pat Boone. sitting m f irst class section of fully Loaded DC-W.
waits out delay at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. The departure de·
lay. which kept the plane idling on the ta.riway for over 60
minutes. was blamed by the plane's captain on the air con-
trollers· stnke.
Heroine due
medal at last
Donna Slack had about
given up, but on Sept. 11 , the
20·year-old Oakland <Mich.)
C ommunit y C olleg e
sophomore finally will get
the 1976 Young American
Medal for•Bra ver y from
President Reagan that she
was promised three years
ago.
"I didn't mind al all that it
was late." said the West
Bloomfield woman who five
years ago risked her life to
save three boys fro m a
tornado. whic h leveled a
house where she was babysit-
ting.
In 1978, she received a let-
t er from Attorney General
Griffin Bell tell ing her she
was chosen for the award.
The cere mony was delayed
because of s cheduling dif·
ficulties al the White House,
according to lette r s Ms .
Slack received since then.
Attorney General George
Deukmejlan plans to formal-
ly announce his c andidacy
for the GOP gubernatorial
nomination in a 10-minute
statewide prime-lime
television commercial Sept.
17.
Oakland May or Lionel
Wilson will lead a seven ·
member delegation to the
People's Republic of China to
formally establish sister city
ties with the port of Dalian.
Wilson and the other mem-
bers of the delegation will
v i s it Peking , Dalian.
Shanghai and Guanzhou dur-
ing the Sept. 15-25 trip.
A city orficial won't be de-
nied in hjs effort lo give
Johnny Cash a token of the
cit y's appreciation for the
country music singer's new
song, "Chattanooga Cit y
Limit Sign."
Paul Clark, Chattanooga's
public works commissioner .
was prevented from making
the presentation when the air
traffic controllers ' s trike
stalled Cash in Atlantcl.
New plans call for Clark to
meet Cash onstage during a
concert the night of Aug. 'J:7
at the Grand Ole Opry house
in Nashville.
Clark plans to give the
s inger a genuine Chat·
tanooga city limits sign and a
s ketch of Cash, e ncased in
plastic, that recently a p·
peared in The Chattanooga
Times. Clark said the metaJ
sign bears writing on its back
that says, "Thanks, Johnny.
We Jove you. The city of
Chattanooga, 1981 ."
Wil bur M i lls . fo r mer
D emocratic congr essman
f rom Arkansas. was featured
s p eak er at r e f or med
alcoholics picnic over the
weekend in Emmitsburg.
Md. Mills. who says he is a
.. grateful alcohol1c"' became
embroiled m con t roversy
when he involved himself
with a Washington D C. st rip-
per . Fanny F or . zn the
mid-1970s
Floridians flee 'Dennis'
Tropical storm dumps 22 inches of rain in 24 hours
Coastal f o recast
NIOfll -mornl"t ._ clouds, bul
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WedlWICl9Y. Wei.r 11.
lnlend low u tonlthl. n 111011 w.-..v.
El-rt, llghl verleblt wln4a
111ro119h tonight ucepl weal to
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eltt-. One-lo !·tool sOMth-ler-
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Trop!Qt tlorm OeMla alet'4NI In
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22 ll'ld!H ot rein In 14 l'loVn, ceonlno
wlctnpreed flooding e11d forcing
meny ...sldlnts lo , ... by boet todey
In low-lylng communlllu nter
Mleml.
111 -1Jlom Melne. rnldenh weft
p11mpl11g 0111 b•Hme11ts, 11111110
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flooding_ Al lt•t 40 femlllH ftet..el·
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•fttr ,,...,Y 7 lnchn ol rein i.11.
Nleenwhllt , tllOwtra tnd lllun·
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Rein-• reported_, U. cenerel
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fleSll-tlOod w .. cll w•• In ettecl 111 mu<·llotTeus.
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heevy IQlltlls ""' tllt IOlllllHlttm Co.tit Mid In IN Florldll l(eys.
The ""vi.ti tlooctfng was concen-
trated In en trH lnown ts Ille
Redleflell, t fennl .. region nof1ll -west ot ..,...__..wfll<ll I•*"' u
mlle•--bf ,.w-1.
"Tiie ~ -.. ..,.., J t• s
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foll<• 1pokeamo11 Normt11cto o,......1td\.
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8 . Tbompeun Jr,, IOft qf
Loll M. and Richard B.
ThomPIOD Sr. of 112~ Cb•~• Circle. Hunt
l!ljtGD Beach, baa bM
commlulontd upon
sradualloft trom omcer
Candidate School at
Newport, R.r.
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,We're Listening •••
Whal do you like 1bout the Daily Pilot?
What don't you llke? Call.tM number below and
your meM•te wlll be recordtd. transcribed and
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TeU us what'• on your m nd.
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOTfTuesday, August 18. 1981 H I F 1'3
Bus terminal stymied.
Officials claim high rise would block historic district
By GLENN SCOTT o1 .. ...., .........
Eve.n tbou1h they haven't vls
lted the site, aome federal or-
flclala are jeopardl1ln1 con·
slruclion of a central bus
terminal in Santa Ana because
Ute building ml1ht block views
of the old Oran1e County
Courthouse.
Th.e terminal la to be built at
the comer of Ross Street and
Santa Ana Boulevard -a fuU
block southwest or the old
courthouse. It would tteod two
stories high, with another six to
seven stories of offices on top.
Officials of the OranCf County
Transit District said MOhday the
reluctance of the Department of
Interior to clear the project
could keep them from meeting
deadlines for applying for a $5
million federaJ gtant to build the
terminal.
Without that grant from the
Urban Mass Transportation Ad·
ministration, the terminal prob-
ably couldn't be built. With the
grant, the terminal coutd be un·
der construction by early next
y ear, s aid Brian Pearson,
transit district development
director.
Transit district officials are
unhappy because the Depart·
ment of Interior isn't directly in·
volved in the project but. under
current procedures for environ·
mental clearance, still can delay
upprovals.
At Issue Is the fact that the
terminal would be built in.side
the Downtown Santa Ana His·
tori c Di s tri c t. T h e Old
Courthouse. a turn·of the-century
structure oC Ar izona r e d
111&ndst.one, is the prize of tha t
district.
The Department of Interior ls
In char,e of reviewing historical
districts and offi cials have
claimed the terminal and Its ex-
tra floors of offices would ad·
versely affect the district by
blocking views.
Unless the federaJ officiaJs Urt
their negative finding, the dis·
trict can't s ubmit a fin al ap·
plication for the grant. Pearson
said the application should be
sent before the year is up.
Noting that severa l othe r
large office buildings already
have created a s ituation where
the old courthouse Is like a golf
ball in tall grass. transit district
o fficials ha ve e n coura ged
federal officials to visit the area
to measure the impact.
But to c omplicate things.
P e ars on said, the fed e r a l
bureaucrats claim they can't
come because the ir travel
budgets have been cut.
Pearson said transit district
It.tad.en don't object when people
who undentand the area raise
concerns that could delay such a
project
••But we ftel this thing kind of
came in from left fi eld.•· he ob·
served.
"There's an a wful lot of com·
petition for those grants," he
added. "and <UMTA > operates
on a first-come. first-served
basis.''
The central terminal would
gi ve the transit district an off.
site center for most of the bus
ro utes that travel through the
heart of the county. Currently,
the buses a re parked along the
street at the corner of Flower
Street and Santa An a Boulevard
on the wes t e nd of th e Civic
Center
The Old Courthouse. with its
gabled roof, 1s about four stories
high.
Among other nearby buildings
a r e th e pre s ent cou n t y
Courthouse. the new Heritage
Building, both l l stories; tM
Wells Fargo Building, 10; the
Federal Buil d ing , nine . the
State Building and Santa Ana
City Hall. both eight. the Old
Courthouse Plaza, across the
st reet Crom the historic building,
s ix , and the county HaJJ of Ad·
ministration . also across the
street, which is fi ve s tories.
OCTD project sealed
LA firm awarded $7.7 million pact for new yard
A Los Angeles cons truction
firm has bee n awarded a $7 .7
million contract to build a new
Orange County Transit District
ma intenance yard in Anaheim.
After throwing out an earlier
round of bids, the transit dis·
tricl's Board of Directors on
Monday granted the contract to
Stolte Inc.
The company is e xpected to
begin construction al the 10.5·
acre site in September and com-
plete the facility by February
1983.
It will be the district's third
maintenance yard and will in·
elude a 47 ,000-square-foot main·
tenance building, an operations
and dispatching center, a fuel
station, brake-check building
and a bus-washing facility.
The district currently operates
maintenan ce ra cl lities at
Garden Grove and Irvine.
C.V. Holder Inc. of Gardena
was low bidder when bids were
initially submitted and opened
on April 14, but the firm didn't
meet a district policy of using at
Slaye r given
life s e ntence
William Samuel Caywood has
been sentenced to a life term in
prison without possibility of
parole b y Orange County
Superior Court Judge William
Thomson.
The judge m ade the ruling
Friday afte r a jury failed to
reach agreement i n July on
whether to send the 40-year-old
Santa Ana mechanic to the gas
chamber for the slaying of two
Iranian immigrants.
Deputy District Attorney An-
thony Rackauckas said he didn't
agree with Thomson's ruling.
but added that it was "not poor-
ly reasoned."
Early said Caywood, upon re-
ceiving his life in prison sen-
tence. was "tremendously re-
lieved."
August seems a 1ong time
from Christmas but In the
1ewelry business we start
planning for the hollday season
as early 11 March. That's the
ti me I make prellmln ary
selections for our Christmas
mailer and talk over plens wllh
the printer regarding the
stationery •nd processes to be
used In this year'• booklet.
Accur•taly photographing
jewefry Is an art In Itself. The
background materlals are
crltlcal and the proofs h111e 10
be color coH.cted many times
to IMke sure we get a true
repretentatlon of the artlclas to
bef•tured.
Perldot, for Instance. la 11
pertlcularly difficult gem to
photograph well. It Is this
montt'l'a birthstone (atone With
...dof1PIC • an alternative). We
have heard women say they
don't Ilka that birthstone, but It
la becau .. they have ooly seen
synthetic perldota. Whan we
have th• opportun i ty to
Introduce them to the natural
f*lclot they agrM that It realty
lea lowly gem ..
Wt CMry a wide variety of
natural per1dot jewelry. In t4K
rlnga alone , w• have •
atltctlof'I rang1no from S175 to
tHGO. And Of COutM, there ..
least 10 percent participation by
minority workers or subcontr~
tors
When new bids were opened
on July 27, Stolle's proposal of
$7 698,000 was a mere $15,000
lower tha n llolde r 's revised
$7 ,713.000
OC f arllle r s niarket
granted ext e n s ion
A pilot program that launched
a certified farmer s market
operation at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa· has
been extended through Sept
3.
Gar y Mart i n , m a rk e t
coo rd inato r f o r the co·
sponsoring Orange County Farm
Bureau, said fair manager
Kenneth Fulk approved the ex-
te nsion after last Thursday 's
e vent drew about 3,000 buyers
and mo re tha n 20 p roduce
sellers.
Thursday was the last of four
scheduled market gatherings
in the southeastern pa rking lot
a t the fairgounds on Fair Drive
authorized last month by the
county fair board.
The certified market draws
g rowers from thro\Jgh o ut
I
J ewish .. Teens set
part y on b each
The Irvine Je wish Teens vr·
g anizalion will be holding a
beach party on Sept. 2 in Laguna
Beach.
The party will include a visit
lo the South Coast Communities
J e wish Center . For more in·
formation call 857-1710.
Fire o n carrier
PORTSMOUTH. Va. (AP>
A fire a board the USS In-
dependence damaged the craft's
air operations room and carrier
control approach room . the
Navv s aid Monday.
Mary Barr. Cer1!hed Gemologist
Southern California to sell fresh
produce grown on their farms
and ranches directly to Ora nge
Coast consumers at a cost less
than at most s uperma rkets,
Martin reiterated
The market ope r ates on
Thursd ays between noon and 6
p.m
Music Center
post fi lled
George L Argyros of Newport
Beach, principal owner of Air
Cal and the Seattle Mariners
baseball club. has been named
an Orange Cou nty Music Center
trustee
H e nr y T S e gers t r o m .
chairman of trus tees. said the
board is respons ible for solicit·
ing. receiving and disbursing
contributions and grants to plan.
endow a nd cons truct the new
performing arts center in Costa
Mesa
Previously named trustees in·
cl ude D. j a mes Bentley. J
Robert Fluor, Walter B. Gerken,
Charles W Hester . James K
Knapp, William S. Lund, J ames
K Nagamatsu and Robert P
War mington
Ar gyros. president of the San-
ta Ana based Arnel De velop-
ment Co and aHiliates. also is
c hair m a n o f t he C h a pma n
Coll ege board of trustees and a
member of the Orange County
Co un c i l , R oy S co ut s of
America's executive board.
pendants. p ins. earrings,
bracelets. and even some very
1nteres11ng lumble polished
beed necklac es. It 1s not
d1 ff1cull to enc ourage an
appreciation of the lovely
parldote once the August-born
parSOfl has an opportunity to
become fam1llar with the line
natural perldot gems
We ere working all year too
on our malllng hst. We try 11ery
hard to keep a current address
hie on all our customers but •
sometimes you forget to tell us
wtlen you mo11e If you ha11e
moved since the last lime you
received mall from us or II you
ne11er have. but would Ilka to
be 1ncl1Jde<1 in our mailings will
you juat give ua a calt and we
will be happy to add your
name. Our telephone number Is
642-33t0. We will be pleased to
• hear from you.
HARLES H. BARR
There fa still plenty of ume to
get In on our "Gem wise··
contest ... It runs through the
end of Auguat. There are some •
very worthwhile prizes ... $500 j
In m.rchandlM for first. 1300 in
merchandlM for aacond and ~ In merchandlH for third •
.• 1nd • con1ol1t1on drawing I
for ttlOM wtlo don't win a top'
pr1n . So C0"'9 In and teat your 1 knowte091 J
HIF Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuosday, Augu1t 18, 1981
Truce ends Beirut Street fights
2nd blast planned
by jailed gambler?
FRESNO (AP> A heavy
gambler charged with
masterminding a Lake Tahoe
ca!>ino-hotel bombing planned to
place another bomb there or an
Bank of America's main head·
quarters. a federal court af·
fidavit says.
John Biq:es Sr. 59, twice stole
hundreds of pounds of dynamite.
firs t to build the bomb that tore
ap11rt the front of Harvey's
Resort Hotel Casino last Aug. 27
and then to build a second bomb,
the affidavit said.
Ouring the weekend arrests of
B1rgcs and four others, Birges'
:.on. James William Birges, led
FRI agents to a buried cache of
more than 600 pounds or
dynamite, said the affidavit that
accompanied charges filed here
Monday.
Presses stopped
by Polish printers
WARSAW. Poland (APl
Stall' employed printers belong-
ing to the independent union
Solidarity stopped the presses
and ~gan sit-ins today in prep·
c1rat1on for a two-day strike.
Private food vendors also s hut·
tc•n•d their markets.
J e t, privatt> plane
avoid collision
NEWARK, N.J . (AP> -A
Boeing 737 jetliner with 118
passengers aboard was forced U>
veer sharply to avoid a collision
with a private plaoe over
northwes t New Jersey, the
Federal Aviation Administration
says
The People Express jetliner
fr om Buffalo , NY ., wa s
descending to Newark lnterna·
llonal Airport when the incident
occ urre d Sunda y, FAA
s pokesman Irving Moss said
Mondav.
R e a g an criticized
on e cono ni y pla111l
WASHINGTON <A P > -In
putting his economic program
before the country six months
ago tonight, President Reagan
made 17 promises he has failed
to keep, according to Congress
Watch, a critical lobbying and
'research group that keeps an
eye on Reagan's performance io
office
BEIRUT. Lebunon lAP>
Syrlun troops and tanks dis·
eng~1.ied warring pro Iranian
nnd pro-Soviet militias in Beirut
today. ending three days of
street fighUne that killed 2.4 peo
pie and wounded 77, a pohce
spokesman 1taid.
The i;pokesman said Syrian
forces that moved an Monday
morning were table aflor 24
hours t o est ab lish burfcrs
separating the combatants in
the leemlne slums on Beirut's
lloulhem and southeastern sides
More than halfi the fatalities
and most of the wounded were
c1 v1lians caught in crossCire, the
spokesman said .
Militiamen from the pro
............
l runian Shute Moslem Amal or
ganaiution and the private army
of tht' pro Moscow Lebanese
Communist Party traded mortar
fire and rocket-propelltd
grenades an the fighting, which
broke out at dawn Sunday.
The cease-fire followed a five-
h our meeting Monday 1n
Damascus, the Syrian capital. of
* * * V.S. planes
ready to move
to Israel
LOS ANGELES <AP J
American-made warplanes
cleared for delivery by Pres1
dent Reagan after a nine-week
suspension, will start moving le
Israel "in a matter or davs or
hours," the administration says
But Secretary or State Alex
ander llaig, who announced
Reagan's dccbion to release the
16 planes, :.aid the admanislra
twn had not determined whether
Israel violated agrt>cments with
the United S tall's when 11
bombed lraq·s nuclear reactor
J unc 7
llaig also re fu sed to say
whether Rt.'agan recci ved a!>
s uranccs from Israel about hov.
tht• planes would be used
Amal leader Nab1h Berri, a
dclel(ulion from the Lebanese
Leftist National Movement. Syr
iao foreign Mini:ster Abdul
Ha lim Khaddom and Vasser
Arafat , c hairman of the
Palestine Llbt•ru1on Organiza
tion.
The session v. as reported to
have been instrumental an bnng
mg about the tru<·e.
It was not clear what touched
off the fighting The 950.000
Lebanese Shutes arc the largest
and poorest of the country's
Mosl(•m se<:ts, and they trad1
tionally supported the Com
m unast Party But most of them
<Are believed lo have switched
their allegiance to Amal after
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's
Iranian revolution in 1979 put
new lefe 1n the Shute cause
everywhere
Meanwhile. SCAudi Arabia an
nounC'l'd iLo; support .. in pnnc1
pll'' for Ll•banl'Sl' Prime
l\11ru~tcr Shaf1k Wauan·s re
quest for a n emergency !tumm1t
confl·rt·ncl• of Arab heads of
sl<All' to takl· up lht· c·cmtanumg
confrontatl(Jn b(•tv.t.•(•n Israel
<ind tht.· PLO in Lebanon
Wa1.1an . aftl•r a 24 hour visit
to thl· Saudi government. flew to
Kuwait looking for !>Upport A
govt•rnment s pokt-s man said
sPven mt.•mhers of Wazzan·s
('a b111t'l and I .ebanon 's l ' N Am
ba~!>ador c.:ha~san TUl'IOI .... ere.·
to attt•nd a propost•rl m<•etmg.
If a summit 1s held, the
spokt.•!>man ~aul. Lebanon will
sl'{·k at'll\'l' J1Jrl1<·1pation of all
Arah nation!> in the PLO con
frontal1on with Is rael in
southern Lt>hanon or a ban on
P<ilt•stm1an attacks at·ross tht·
bordt•r ·There must be a stoppage lo·
da\ for tomorrow's papers not to
appe<ir." !>aid Krzysztof Juras.
Solularity spokesman at the
llou!>c of th~ Polish Word, the
capital's main printing plant
Iran firi11g squaru
execute 2 .5 p e ople
The Washington · based or-
ganization, formed by Ralph
Nader, says its analysis or
R eaga n 's first s peec h t o
Congress shows he reneged on
pledges not to reduce Social
Security retirement benefits, to
continue aiding "those, who
through no fault of their own.
• must depend on the rest of us ··
Ex -CIA official
hits n e utro11 bonib
CAT HUNT A 7:; pound f<:male cougar tries to esc·apt• an
o f fi c e r · :. b u 11 e h b u t f' u ii s a n d w a s k i 11 e d 1 n '.".: «.> \\
Wt'stminslc·r. Hnt1::.h Columbia Th<.' cat. which aulhorttl\.'"
-.a ,\ wand('rt•d into town Tuesda~ alon~ the railroad track ....
''as seen in a cit.>n sel~· populated area and strolled into u
br(•wery hl•fore 1t was killl•d b~ a wildlife control offlcN
Reagan suspended !th1pmenls
or four J<'-16 JCt fighters to lsral'I
on June 10 pending a review of
whether tht• reactor raid v1olat
ed an agreement to use L' S
s upplied weapons only for de
rensive purposes The SUS
pension was broadened after
Is racl 's a1 r strikt• against
Palt•sllnlan targets in Beirut.
which killed an c~timated 300
pt·oplc
In all . tv.o 1-'·15 Jet s. c·o n
s 1dered the· most advanct'd
w«:1rplane. and 14 F 16s were af
fcl'lcd
Mon· than 400 peoplt.•. most of
lhl'm LebaneM• eivih :rns. wl're
killt-d by l!>rael1 attacks last
month on lht• l'.ales11n1an!t 111
Beirut and southern Ll.'banon,
and more than 1211.000 Lcbanew
v 1 llagcrs fh·d the1 r homes
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Iranian firing squads worked
ov1•1t1me l'Xecuting 25 more foes
of Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho
mt•1n1's regime. and more than
IGO more prospects for the ex·
ecut1oners were rounded up 1n
tht• pro\'mt"es. the official Ira
nran media reported
WASHINGTON tA P l A
former deputy director of the
C IA says President Reagan
mude a mistake in authorizing
production of the neutron
weapon. contending the arma·
mcnt would cause almost as
much damage to the target area
as standard nuclear weapons.
U.S. favors plea bargain • ID Douglas case
Twenly·threc of those execut
eel were members of the "cen-
tral comm1llt'<'" of Mujahedeen
Khalq, Iran's largest leftist un-
dcq~round movement. Tehran
lladio said Monday It said they
v. en· condemned to death for
··v.agang war aJ!amst God and
l; o<I° s prophet.'·
Dr Herbert Scoville outlined
his views in a report in which he
claimed use of the neutron
weapon would e nhance the
poss ibility o r all -out war
bt•cause. he said, the Soviet
Union would be less inhibited
about utilizing its own nuclear
arsenal in response.
WASHINGTON <A P >
.Justice Department officials
lean towetrd dropping criminal
charges against four McDonnell
Douglas Corp cxe<·uti ves 1f the
grant a1rcr«:1ft firm pleads guilty
lo making i lie gal overseas pay
mt>nts. department sources say
The source!>, who asked oot to
be 1denlif1ed. said the depart·
ment favors that plea bargain.
Attorney General Rudolph
G 1uh:m1 said Monday he expects
to make a dec1s1on late this
week or earlv next week The
Come join the fun at
Gilhooly's restaurant!
At Gllhooly's m Wes tminster you can enjoy our Tostada bar for ;ust
3.25. served daily from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p .m .. and Saturday.
11 :30 a.m. to 4 p .m. And there's a delightful Happy Hour in the cocktail
lounge from 4:30 to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday, as well as
entertainment for your pleasure Thursday and Friday evenings.
company
w••lmln•l•r 300 westminster msll 898-2521.
-------
1 s1A10UT99GIEAT I 9 DINNER () 2 OooCI tor ll'lrff plect1 ot juicy, golcS.n brown Kentucky
-,, Fried cntcken, plua alnol• Mrvlno• ot c<>lt 1l1w, mHtled 0 pot1IOH Ind QrtYy, ind • 1011 Limit IWO offer• .,.,
Z purch,., Coupon good only tot aombln•llM whlteldt fll I ordett Cu1t0<n1t P•Y• ell apptlc•blt HIH 111
030 Offer expires Augutt 30, 1881 I
l'rl( .. 111•y ·~ ., I l>ifllOljM\lflO loc•
llonl Good OlllY 111
llolltllem Ceil'°'"'· I WMtt YOu -
lfle ClllOMft ...,._1011
OooCI fOI nlM ple<:H ol Jutcy. gotOtn bfown Kentucky
Frltd Cfllcken, with tow rotla. • l•rQ• cote 111w, 1 lerge
m111hed PQl1tot1 1nd • mt<llum grevy. l imit lwo otters
per iwrcn1M Coupon good onty lor combtnallon white/
d11'11 ordef• CualOl'l'llt P•Y• 111 1ppllc1CI• .. , .. 1111
PrlCH m1y vary II P•I·
llC:lp•ting loe111on1 000d ~ty In Sou1ne1n
C•lltornl• wh1t1 you ...
tn• Chicken Sendwlell
Window 81noer • .,..,._ I
...:;,;;..--...... --... --
decision is has because the at
torney gem•ral and deputy at
torncy general disqualified
themselves as a result of legal
work done by their former lav.
firms.
counsel to rh!>cuss the t•ase 1n
late June.
Th<' tompany al!><> \\a ~ <ic·
cust.'<I of making false statt•
m l'nl.., to c·onn·al pa\ m<·nt!-of SI
mllltnn to a1rhm· per..,onnl'I and
guvt.•rnment off1nab in South
Kor1•a. th~· l'h1l1pp1nt•S
\' l'lll'tUl'la anc1 Zairl' Giuliaru·:. handling of the case
spa.,.mcd a controversy inside
thl' department when he met
with the compa ny's general
Tht' compan) and the four t'X
ecutl\·es .,.. ere 1nd1cted on t.·on
~p1raC'y and wire und mall
fraud ch<irges in November 1979
The} were accused or authonz
ing $1.6 million in secret com
misswns to promote the sale of
DC 10 Jetliners to Pakistan.
~tr Donne-II Douglas has denied
an) \HOngdo1ng Thl' c-ase is !>el
for tn:•I in Nnvl'mh1•r
HOW FAR
YOU CAN GO FOR
$
OR LESS.
St7t AIU FAIL 1HE WT COAST
W11HOUT WAITING.
Our new ASAP Fare lch you take oft
from Lm Angeles International. Burbank or
Ontario to seven Ea ... tern <.:ities right away
fur only $179 ($159 to Chicago). Thar" .. cad\
way when you hu)' a round trip ticket.
The re arc no 01hcr restn<.:tion ..... No
11AVIL 10 AWi OF THESE ClllES1
C'hll"~"
H"'lon
N1:"' Yorl./Ncw.irl.
\.\'u,hini!h•n. I) C
f'htlJtklphlJ
1 t I Judtnlo1k
M1o1m1 -
advance purchase No length of ... tay
requirement!> or time deadline~. But ... cats
ure limited ant.I all flights arc via Denver.
And when you ny to any of the:-.c seven
Eastern cities, you c~n return from any one
of the other citie-. al no extra i:hargc. for
example. you might fly to New York and
catch a return night from Was hington. D.C
In addition. we'll give you First Clas ...
for the price of Coach. Buy a full fare
Coach ticket on Continental or bring us
another airlinc'11 (except World or Capitol
Airway ) full fare Coach ticket to these
Eastern cities and we'll Oy you First Class.
That's right. First Class. This is on a first
come. first crved basis., S<.l reservations arc
suggcMcd.
Gotta' get b:ick East in a hurry and
want to save money too?'You can't do better
than ASAP.
CDNTINENTA
St79 OI WS 10 ANYOTHEI
MAINLAND U.S. CITY.
Cont1ncntal 's U S is }Our .... Pid, a t.:lt)
An) 1:11~ Now through Scptcmhcr l'.'ith )tW
can go anywhere v.c Oy 1n thl' 111 :J1nlttnd
U S for no more than $179 cm.:h "a) wi1h j
rounJ trip 11de1. A nJ to m:.in~ l ti it.:' lhl'
IJrc 1' C\Cll k".
11AVEL 10AMYOF1HISE emu:
All>uqucrq•ot·
Au,11n
C"pcr Col.1ra1J11 \pnnl!'
l~n,cr
11 l'J'"
GrJnJ JundhlO
H1"""'11
lrn.l1Jn.11"•h'
KJO\ol\ ( 01\
L111toln
Luhh.\\ I.
Mu.JIJnll/l Mt·"·'
M1l,.,1ul.rc
Monn /St 1'4111
N¥" Ori~""'
O~IJhUlllJ ( II\
On1JhJ
r"~uri.l
l'ht'll'flll.
'·'" ""'"""' IUI:"'"
Jul'"
W1.:ht111
Thcrl' are -;omc rc ... 1rk1ion' Ju ... 1 make
reservation ... and buy )Ollr Coat·h t1d .. ct
either 7 or 14 day ... in advance depending on
your destination. You can return a!> early a~
the firM Saturday or ... 1ay a~ long us !>ixty
day.... ·
And 11 you 'vc got 1:hildn:n age' 2-I I
you can !>how them around the ~:ountry for
rio more than $129 each wav '"ith a round
rrip ticket when accompanied by an adull
Seats are limited. So call your trawl
agent. company travel department or
Continental. And 'ICC how for $179 each
way can ta._e you .
Fare~ !.ubjcct to chaol!~· v.11hnut mHll'C.
IRLINES
\
. ' 0 l 0 ' ¢0 $ 0 5 ¢ 0 ; ; . ,, 5 0 0 ,,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. August 18, 1981 H/F ..
hnpeachment pressed
Surprise
smog
calls due
LOS ANGELES <AP >
The South Coast Air
Quallty Manaaemenl
Diistrict plans 11urprise
odd·bour visits lo ista·
tlonary air pollution
sources in the Los
Angeles basin as the
heavy s mog season ap·
proaches
Republicans push threat. against Brown over medf Ly
SACRAMENTO tAP> -Charging that Gov
Edmund Brown Jr . "abdica t ed hi s
responsibilities'' lo stamp out the Mediterranean
fruit fly, Republicans are pursuing their threat to
impeach him
.. Assembly Republican leader Carol Hallett
said Monday that an Impeachment resolution was
being drafted, and she would formally introduce lt
Thursday if Brown has not turned control or the
'This was the only way
to get the governor to
respond.'
medfly eradication program over to qualiried
agricultural experts .
No California governor has ever been im·
peached. Even the act of filing a resolution is so
rare there is no record or it being attempted for
over 40 years
Mrs. Hallett said she had unanimous support
from the Assembly's 31 Republicans and expected
at_ least five Democrats to join them, which would
still leave her five votes short of a majority of the
80-member lower house.
Hut Assembly Chief Clerk James Driscoll
said arti~les of impeachment could be approved b;
a maJOrtty or. ~ose m embers present and voting,
which means 1t 1s at least theoretically possible for
Al'W ........
MEDFLY SHIRT Assemblvman Walter
l ll'rr;:t•r. R :Vlar~·sville. was the center of at
t ention on the lower house floor in Sa('ramen -
to a!'> he displ"~·ed his Medny invasion shirt to
f(•llm.' Ass(•mbly members
Before you buy any make of car,
call me. I'll save you time & money.
Benefit from my buying cloul I buy ottice. Low ovefhead No salesmen.
or lease ca1s in conllact lots of 110 no commissions. Gel p11ces from us.
100 tor corporate fleets We can oD-any make of car. Then compare tor
tam substantial savings for quah· yourself !And tell your friends.)
fted ind1v1duals We do the price Call. 9 lo 5. Robt Hixson Equipment
shopping & haggling Ours ts a busy Co ask for V1rg1ma 714 64)-4800.
~J
Daily Pilat
Classifieds
"No response from
the Register -hired
thru the Pi lot."
~~~I @ 642-5678
charge it~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
ca II 540-1220 toll-free.
Gr.c10,.....;w.
WHY PAY 17.497
TIM'-itlLIASI V'(f IMIM 1-100
Only P.75 atT..-rJ .. &Pr_.o
T r • d • r D a r YI I n • 1 ST .~\It. we Hll a bottle Balanced B·lOO orreu of 50 tablets for only eleven kinda o f B $3.7$. PIHH vl1lt our v1tamln1. And Ila time ntwett Trader Joe'• at
rtleue (o.rmu.la will pro-lb• lntenecUon of 17th vldt a co"Unual 1uppry or S t r • e t , N e w p o r t &-complex vitamin• Boulevard aod Superior
throu1hout the day. A Avenue t11ext to Denny'•
1•4lna health food chain and Barclay'• 8J1nk> ult• thia ilem for
MOW IM COST A MBA
I•
36 members to pass a valid Impeachment resolu·
tlon.
11 the Assembly did vote impeichment, the
state Constitution provides that Brown would be
immediately relieved of his duUes, which would be
assumed by Lt. Gov. l\Clke Curb. Mrs. Hallett'a
close political ally, until the Senate conducted a
trial.
"September itnd Oc·
tober are usually the
worst months for smog
It's opportune, but not
the real reason that
we're starting this pro·
gram Jn this time of
yea r ," AQMD
spokesman Jeff
Schenkel said Monday .
tl would require a two-thirds vote of the
Senate, which is under Democratic control by a
23·17 margin, to remove Brown fr~m office.
The two Assembly Democrats publicly I UP·
porting the impeachment resolution a re John
Thurman of Modesto, chairman of the Assembly
Agriculture Committee, Bild Alister McAlister of
San J ose. Mrs. Hallett declined to name the
others.
The regional air quali·
ty agency recently ap·
proved addition of seven
new inspectors costing
about $250,000 a year for
!>alaries. benefits, cars
and other expenses. The
entire force or 100 in·
spectors will be rotated
on a 24·hour schedule,
Schenkel said.
Democratic leaders dismissed the threat as a
partisan Republican move to poliUcally embarrass
the Democrallc governor, and Brown's chief of
staff, Gray Davis, condemned it as "the basest
form of poHtical demagoguery."
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, D·San Fran·
cisco. an olf-and-on political ally of the governor.
cnllc1zed the impeachment move as "poht1cauy
motivated." and said it has no chance of passage.
The AQMD was
already conducting
vi rtually round ·the· 1
clock checks of oil re·
fineries, power plants,
the Kaiser Steel mill at
Fontana and a few other
major pollution sources.
"No one person is singly to blame for the
medfly, but some of Gov. Brown's actions have not
been decisive, .. Speaker Brown said in cautious
support of the l!overnor.
Plane crash probed
SAN JOSE (AP> -Investigators
are going over the remains of two
single-engine planes to try to dis·
cover why they colltded over San
Jose. killing one man and injuring
two others.
James Elbert Moses of Santa
Clara. 47, the pilot of the Cessna 172,
was killed in the Monday crash, the
coroner's office said. The pilot and a
passenger in the second craft, a Piper
Cherokee, were admitted to San Jose
Hospital with cuts and bruises.
Robert Short, 54, of Mountain View
was released, hospital spokeswoman
Candace Roney said. The pilot,
Bruce Marlow. 25. of Los Altos, was
listed in fair condition.
Abducted girl home
CORONADO <AP) A 3-year-old
girl. abducted 11 days ago during a
family vacation, is back with her
parents today after police rescued
her and nabbed her alleged kidnap
per as he awaited a $5,000 ransom
Maria Martin "is alive and well,"
Coronado Police Chief Jerry Boyd
said Monday night. "We have a sus-
pect in custody and are investigating
Designed,~
Fin is hed __:,:..:.;.:.,.
Installed -
the possibility several other people
were involved · ·
VA action hit
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
Veterans Administration has been
working "as much to protect the VA
as lhe veterans, .. a s pokesman for
the Paralyzed Veterans of America
said during a briefing on the de·
foliant Agent Orange.
"The VA was dragged kicking and
screaming into those hearings before
the Senate and the House on legisla·
lion to benefit the veterans," said
Gordon Mansfield, one of a panel of
ex-Gls .
Rose Bird targeted
SAN FRANCISCO tAPl -A group
claiming that Chief Justice Rose
Bird's rulings are based on personal
whim, not law. has moved to remove
her from the Supreme Court. the
second such attempt in two years.
The Committee Advocating Legal
Limitations claimed Ms. Bird has
"ignored the law whenever she feels
like 1t to get her own sociaJ order en·
forced " a nd has "coddled"
criminals.
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New Rate Changes
for
Pacific Telephone
Customers
On August 4, 1981. the Callfomla Public Utilities Commis.slon tn
Decision No. 93367 authoriied Pacific Telephone to increase rates
and charges for certain of its services. These changes IA/Ill be eff ect!ve on
August 29, 1981
Basic Exchange Rates
Residence Service
The monthly ex.change rate for Residence Unmeasured SeMce (Flat)
is increased $1.00. Customers who choose to convert from Unmeasured to
Measured Service by December 2. 1981. IAllll not be required to pay the usual
service connection charge The rates for Uf ehne and Measured Service
remain unchanged.
Business Service
lhe monthly ex.change rate for Business Service Lmes ts not
increased. Hov.iever. the usage alk:Miance associated With Measured Business
Service has been discontinued. The monthly exchange rate for Measured
Business Trunks is increased $3.50
Semi-Public Service
The monthly exchange rate for Semi Public Service (coin) 1s
increased $6.00.
Foreign Exchange Rates
Residence Flat Rate Foreign Exchange SeMce Wiil be frozen in all
areas where Measured Service is available
Residence Foreign Exchange monthly rate is increased from 90 cents
to $1.50 above the new Unmeasured SeMce rate. All allowances are removed
from Business Foreign Exchange hnes and trunks. A urnfonn rate of $15 50
was approved
Service Connection Charges
Business Service
Business Sef'VICe Connection charges are mcreal>ed.
Residence Service
Service Connection charges for Residence SeMce are increased
Charges for customers who pick up telephone sets at the PhoneCenter Store
are increased from $16 00 to $23.00 regardless of the number of sets
ordered. Charges for a premises installation visit are increased from $43.00 to
$53 15 (installation of one telephone set) Additional charges will apply for
installation of more than one set
Foreign Exchange Service(FEX)
Additional charges will apply for service conneetJon of Foreign
Exchange Service.
Optional Services
The monthly rate forOpoonal Calling Measured Service IOCMS)
Optional Residence Telephone SeMce (ORTS). and Wide Area Telephone
Service (WATS) \.Viii increase.
Intrastate Long Distance Rates
lntr~"tate Long Distance Rates \.Viii change as follOVJS
Charges for dial·direct calls \.Viii increase. Example a 4 minute dial
direct call from San Francisco to Los Angeles 1s increased from $1 6810
$1.97 (Day Rate-Monday through Frida~ 8:00 AM to${)() PM except
holidays listed in !,-OUr directory)
The surcharge for Station to Station Operator Assisted calls. such as
Third Party Billed and Collect. Is Increased from 55 cents to 75 cents. However.
the surcharge for a Station to Station Credit Card call is reduced from 55 cent-;
to 40 cents when customers dial "O .. plus the number they \.llish to reach
The surcharge for a call placed "Person 10 Person .. is increased from
$1.55 to $2.00.
Telephone Set Charges
lhe monthly rate for telephone sets are increased 10 the following level·
Basic Rotary $1.00
Basic Touch:fone• 1.55
Princess Rotary 2.10
Touch·ToneA 2.90
Trimline Rotary 2.50
Touch-Tone K> 3.25
Zone Usage Measurement (ZUM)
Changes In the calling rates and discount percentages are as follows
-Charges for calls \.llilhin Zone 1 are not increased.
-Charges for calls to Zone 2 are increased one-cent per call.
-Charges for calls to Zone 3 will increase one cent per minute
-The evening discount (5 pm to 11 pm) is reduced from 35% to
30%. lhe night discount (11 pm to 8:00 am weekdays and weekends)
remains at 60%.
Proposition 13 Discount
Existing discounts associated \.llith Proposition 13 are discontinued
Other Tenninal Equipment
and Services
An additional increase was granted to be spread over indMdual
retes and charges on an equal percentage distribution for theJollo.ving major
categories:
-Pnvate Une Service
-Private Bmnch Exchange Service (PBX)
-Key Telephone Service (KTS)
-Exchange Ml~ Service
-Complex Service Connection Charges
-Other Tennlnal Equipment
The pen:entage ll'lClUSe will amount to appro><lmately 5.4%.
WMn plodng an ord~ for seMce. our ~tottaJe wfU quote you
the appropriate rota and charges. If )IOU have any questions pleas4! call your
loco/ Podftc Te~hon. btdfnas o/lfce.
"' Orange Oout DAllV P.IL.OT/TuHday. Augu1t 181 1981
Sports program rUle
serves good purpose
The Reagan administration
s ays it is considering reductions
in the scope of the cont1'oversiaJ.
9-year-old federal law that bans
aid to schools and colleges that
practice sexual discrimination in
athletic programs.
The impending review of "Ti·
tie IX'' rules was revealed last
week by Vice President George
Bush as part of t he administra-
tion's attack on federal regula-
tions it considers unnecessary or
counterproductive.
M r . Bush said the ad -
ministration believes guidelines
o n sexual di scrimination in
athletic programs are too vague
a nd i mpose excessive ad-
ministrative burde ns .
No doubt there is room for
improvement of the Tille IX
guidelines.
However, the Reagan ad-
ministration s hould res ist the
temptation to move away from
the intent of the law. That intent
ls to give high school girls and
college women opportunities in
sports similar to those enjoyed
by young men for a long time.
And the administratio n
s houldn't be swayed from enforc-
ing a law that wouldn't have been
needed in the first place if it
weren't for the fact that the ad·
ministration of school and college
s ports in t his country has been
dominated by men. Too often.
those men have exhibited de·
cision-making that can only be
described as self -serving.
Sports for women have en·
joyed a long-delayed fl owering
under Title IX. It's been a good
thing, a healthy thing, and high
time. too. After all , why shouldn't
women have the same op-
portunities as men to express
the~elves through ath letics?
Consider the public
.The rule on sex discrimina-
tion in school a thletic programs
is but one of 30 federal regula·
lions target ed by the Reagan ad-
ministration for possible elimina-
tion. They were selected on the
basis of suggestions from busi·
ness, government, colleges and
farm groups .
And while lhere·s no douQl
many of the r egulations are
onerous. costly. or both, there·s
also reason to believe that keep-
ing them in effect. perhaps in
modified form. m ay well be in
the public inte rest.
Lowering the restrictions on
content of lead in gasoline could
hardly benefit efforts to reduce
air pollution.
R egul atio n s requiring
manufacturers of new chemicals
to submit information on health
and environmental effects of a
product be fore it goes on the
market may be a nuisance. And
so. no doubt, are requirements of
r egistering and testing new
pesticides.
But the public deserves, at
the very least. some assurance
that such products can be used
with reasonable safety .
And if the testing procedures
delay the marketing of new
products. or increase their cost .
perhaps that's a price the public
would be willing to pay in return
for such assurance.
As for the r egulation t hat
public buildings a nd programs
receiving federal funds be made
accessible to handicapped
persons. there's no doubt this can
add to building costs. But the ex·
ample cited by the administra-
tion was extreme. A school with a
two-story building, it said, might
have to install a n elevator to
serve a s ingle student.
Surely it would be possible to
grant waivers in such excep-
tional cases. without doing away
with requirements for curb cuts.
ramps. wider access doors and
accessible transportation which
do indeed e n a ble the hand ·
icapped to lead more normal
lives.
Some of t he mountains of
records and reports companies
are required to provide to assure
they are not discriminating in
e mployment doubtless could be
replaced by spot c hecks on com·
pliance.
But abolishing regulations
because some are exaggerated or
burdensome could be a giant s tep
backward. A more rational goal
would be sens ible moderation
Good drivers m~led
A recent editorial in this
space noted t hat the Department
of Motor Vehicles was surprised
more good drivers were not tak·
ing advantage of t he offer to pro-
vid e a n automatic. four-year
licehse renewal. without re-
examination. to drivers who have
had no traffic tickets or accident
involvements in the past four
years.
The good drivers supposedly
are notified by OMV computers
and sent the r enew-by-mail form
60 days before their c urrent
license expires. The program is
e xpected to save the OMV some
$3 million a year in license re·
newal processin g costs. but
response has not been as great as
anticipated, said a spokesman.
Readers promptly advised us
of a couple of apparent glitches
in the program.
One drive r who had not re-
ceived a renew-by-mail applica-
tion despite a 20-year ticket-free
record said s he was advised by
her local OMV office that the of·
fe r was "by lottery" so not every
good driver would receive one.
A driver who did receive his
•
a pplication and decided to take it
t o the OMV office instead of
mailing it was ha nded an ex
amination form and told "not
evervone is chosen." He took the
test Under protest
A OMV spok es man in
Sacramento says both readers
had been misinformed by the
field office.
The program started out by
offering the automatic renewal to
a r ando m sampling of good
drivers, but that's been changed
to include all good drivers -it's
not a lottery any more.
The form should be returned
by mail because fi eld offices are
not equipped to ha ndle them, but
the second driver should have
been so advised. rather than
given a test.
"There's a misunderstanding
about this in our field offices,"
s aid the spokesman.
Good drivers who have pro-
blems with the program are en·
couraged to phone C916> 323-3001,
o r write to OMV , Drivers'
License Extension Unit, Box
11828. Sacramento. 95813.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Otner views ex pressed on tnis page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo• 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 91626. Phone (7U)
t>•2·"432J.
L.M. Boyd I Costly artwork
Will bet you a small unspecified
sum that you can't conjure up the
picture in your mind of t.he most
valuable painting ever executed in
this country. It· s called "Portrait of
Professor Gross," an 1876 work by
T homas Eakins. PhiJadelphla's
Tbomu Jeffenon MedicaJ Colleae
owns It. Ult worth: S5 million. I do
not have a good 1rasp of how the gllt
tax laws infSuence art appral.saJs. A
lOpic for t.he flnanciaJ paces maybe
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot
l'\itlli.,._ t~y My OI IN ., .. , •I UO Mil .. , ~· . cn1a INw. ,. ..... , tet,.~• '° lk• ljtf, GMla Mh.t, C.& '1•2'
If you didn't eat 80 hotdoa• last
year, you didn't keep up wlth the na-
tional average. Sure know t didn't
Who's eatlng all the holdofs?
Thought.he late Mae West wu not
interred ln Brooklyn, N. Y., the was
born aod brou1ht up t.htre, and lbe
Brooklyn cenotaph to her la In-
scribed: ·•come up end tee me
aometime.''
T'9omnMurpNne Editor
.......... Kretblcll
Edltori•! Peoe Editor
2
_jff ... C'ffal( T1lT 111"6
MlGllT Wll" dBOOY/
Death takes Castro rivals
W ASJUNGTON Within less than
three months, mysterious plane crashes
have eliminated two of Fidel Castro's
potentially most dangerow; rivals in the
volatile politics of Latin America:
Panamanian strongman Omar Torrijos
and Ecuador's President Jaime Roldos.
No one has made a connection
between the Cuban dictator and the
deaths of Torrijos and Roldos -much
less suggested that Castro's agents
were responsible for the plane crashes.
But stranger things have happened In '
the violence-prone political arena of
Latin America And there is no doubt that Castro has profited by the conven·
ient departure of two charismatic
leaders who had contested the Cuban's
self-proclaimed role as the foremost
voice of independence in the Western
Hemisphere.
PANAMANIAN OFFICIALS are still
investigating the cause or the air crash •
that took Torrijos' life. Bad weather
over the jungle was a reasonable ex -
planation.
But it may be more than mere coin·
cidence that Torrijos' firm control or
Panama and his successful negolla·
lion or the treaty under which the Unit-
ed Stales relinquished control of the
Panama Canal -had won him respect
across the Latin American political
spectrum. On grounds of ego alone, that
would have been enough to infuriate
Castro. But Torrijos had also made no
secret of his distaste ror the Cuban die·
tator·s support · of leftist guerrillas in
Central America.
Torrijos' opposition to Castro was
especially significant because he had
once been one of the Cuban's closest al·
lies. In 1974, for example, Torrijos was the first leader in the hemisphere to rec·
ognize Castro's government -over
the objection of the Organization of
American States. Arter the Sandinistas'
victory over Nicaragua's dictator
Anastasio Somoza, Torrijos and Castro
jointly agreed to give the new govern·
ment ··respectful help ...
BUT WHILE Torrijos withdrew his
military forces from Nicaragua, Castro
sent in still more troops. Torrijos was
G.
-JA-Cl-11-D-IRl_D_I -~
furious, and cooperation between the
two dictators ceased.
In a confidential cable filed after Tor-
rijos' death, U.S. Embassy political
analysts In Panama warned the State
Department that bis absence "weakens
the forces or reform and opposition to
Cuba n influence in the Caribbean area."
State Department sources confided
privately to my associate Bob Sherman
that they expect U.S.-Panamanian rela-
tions to suffer as the result of Torrijos·
death. President Aristides Royo is con-
sidered a weak leader who may well de-
cide to use the United States as a
scapegoat to distract Panamanians
from their own very real problems.
Adding to the problem is t.he fact that
Torn1os co-opted a significant portion or·
his domestic political opposition by giv·
ing 'them jobs in the government. Wit.h
Torrijos' iron control now gone, these
poUtical extremists of the right and left
may feel free to pursue their own goals.
Pulling Vncle Sam's beard is always
a popular sport among political factions
in Latin America, so the chaotic s itua-
tion left in Panama by Torrijos· death
can only hurt the United States. And
whatever hurts the United States
pleases Castro.
The United Stales aside, Castro can
contemplate the post-Torrijos situation
in Panama with anticipation. The pros-
pect of political turmoil. as various
factions vie to s ucceed the fallen
strongman, can only give Castro hope of
yet another Caribbean conquest. Castroism thrives on chaos .
SO WHILE THE Cuban dictator may
publi cly mourn Torrijos. those are
crocodile tears running down his beard
The ce1se of Ecuador's President
Roldos is similar. although he didn·t
live long enough to achieve Torrijos'
status as a ri val to Castro At 39. Roldos
was the youngest president ever elected
in the Western Hemisphere when he
took office in 1979.
Roldos was s wept into the presidency
by the greatest electoral margin in hi s
country's history His youth and
popularity made him an obvious rival to
Castro in Latin America -and Roldos
was obviously unimpressed with the
Cuban's reputation. He attacked Castro
for seizing refugees who had sought
asylum in the Ecuadoran Embassy in
Havana. The two clashed again when
Roldos had Cuban backed Colombian
rebels arrested in Eucador and turned
them over to Colombian authorities.
But Roldos didn't survive to become a
serious rival to Castro. He died in a
plane crash after only two years in of-
fice. Though the crash was listed of·
ficiall y as an accident. the Cuban~
backed guerrillas actually claimed
responsibility for sabotaging Roldos'
plane.
Whether he had anything to do with
the deaths of either Torrijos or Roldos.
Fidel Castro profited by both.
Can we revive domestic car chic?
We've asked the J apanese to kindly
stop selling us Americans so many
automobiles. That's a good idea. Equal·
ly good ideas are being offered, too, by
the new National Association for the Ad-
vancement of American Automobiles.
It was just a year ago that the
NAAAA's founder. Homer T Pettib9ne.
who lived in a typical VW·Volvo·Honda
Am erican suburb, came home with a
brand new car .
"What kind did you buy. dear?"
asked his wife, Heloise excitedly.
"Look, it's parked out front," he said
proudly. "A bftutiful four-door Fol'd
Fairmont/'
"Well." sa1d Helolse, paling, "there
goes the neighborhood."
NEEDLESS TO Sly, property vaiues
tum bled, the Pettibone& were accused
of block-busting and ostracized by one
and by all. It was then that Pettibone
founded the NAAAA.
.. For all loo long ," he says,
--i' ART HBPPf 'S ,
.. domestic cars have been unfairly
st e reotyped as big, expensive gas
guzzlers. They have become second-
class vehicles on AOlerica's highways,
shunned and scorned from Bel Air to
Beacon Hill. We must put an end once
and for all to this cruel discrimination
and learn to judge every car on its
m erits, not on ill naUonal persuasion."
The NAAAA has already achieved
Questions without answers
Que1tion.t I Neuer E~ct to Hear tM
Answer• to:
-Does the maxim, "You only live
once," jUAtify doing what you wouldn't
do II you lived twice?
-Why do we dismiss as "childish·
ness" whatever does not happen to •P·
peal to the chlld In us?
-Since we profe11 to value 1iocerily
above most ot.her tralu, why do we pre-
fer to be lreated with lnainoere heart!·
ne11 ralher than frank 1Land-offilhnea1?
-BOW CAN lndividuaJa seem 10
ralr minded and warm•hearted when
you taUr to them on a on.-to-one balil,
and yet act so prejudiced and mean·
1plrlt.ed as a part of a coUldJ•ity?
-Wbo really malrt1 up thou
thoueandt or Jokes lbat clrc"1ale dally'
some of t.Mm funnier than an)'thln1
beard on the moet proleulonal cOftleclY
1hoW1? (I have never luaown, or beard
or. a perao. who aebowtec11ed matlnc
up• tlllste IOOd Joa~
-IP PAa•NTI llve for tbelr
cbUdrta. and thelr tblldrto live for lheln, and so on down l.be cenluri•,
where does lt all end, lf ever?
-W!\y do moet Ameriuns look up to
tducaUon and look down upoa tdUellted
people? (OuJ' n1Uon1l 1chllopbrenla.>
-How many more billions ol filtered
cigarette butts can the land absorb?
-Why is it thal the most offensive,
vituperative and uncharitable letters a
columnist recel ves are from readers
who hasten to Identity themselves as
"religious"? <Many even suffer from
the delwaion that they are expressing
"Christian" sentiments.)
-Why are most Instructors in the
fleld ol "communication" unable lo
write a d ear, coherent and s imple
paragraph oJ expository prose?
-U, as 1 have 11id before, we really
be.Mieve that the best way to maintain
peace is to prepare for war, why are we
10 aJarmed when other counll'ies in·
creue their arma? cWbicb exposes the
fundamental lU011c of the proposition.)
-WRY DON'T the ''right-lo-lifers"
oppose with equal fervor the right of the
state to t.ake the llfe of a cltiien? (If
human Ult is ltuly "sacred," then only
God shouJd have the power to pass the
verdict of death.)
-Why, in this a1e, 1hould 1url1ce
mall to Europe take nearly u ·Iona to
arrive u it did in the days or t.he 1ailln1
schooners?
-Why la it that the same people who
are the fiercest 1upporten ol "•mill''
1ovenunetlt tnlernaUy are the mott ar-
deDt supporters of ''stront" iovem·
ment nlernally7 <And cen't U!ey '"
lbe inbenllt cont.rad!cUoa?) -WbJ do we preach a doetria• ol
"Individualism" ud at t.he '"'" tJme penaJbe Htr)' DOD•tonlorml1t who
\hinU, acll a.nd uv .. in an iQctivlduaJ
mannerT
t It
som e progress in this direction. Bills
are pending in several states to create
affirmative parking programs under
which employers would be required to
provide a quota of spaces in their
employee lots for domestic cars
CONGRESS EVEN NOW is consider·
ing equal rights legis lation banning
segregated garages. "Why s hould
foreign cars enjoy the services of $45·
an-hour mechanics.·· asks Pettibone,
"while domestics must make do with
cheaper and pres umably less skillful
care?"
In the long range, fhe NAAAA con·
siders busing a viable alternative. "We
are confident that children would over ·
come their bias toward dome~ics ,"
says Pettibone, "II they were car-pooled
lo school daily in Am erican cars.
"Couple t h is with American
automotive studies programs in our na-
tion's colleges." he says, "and our
young people would grow up with pride
in their automotive her itage. Domestic,
we say. is beautiful!"
A measure of the NAAAA's progress
is that the Pettibones are often invited
to parties now and even asked to park
their domestic in the driveway. "Of
course, we're the only domestic pre-
sent," he says. "but tokenism's a start.
And if we can just get celebrities like
Leonard Bernstein to buy American
cars, we might get an article in
Women's Wear Daily on domestic chic."
B UT THE NAAAA'S big project will
be thi s su mmer "s "Drive on
Washington." Pettibone said thousands
or domestic cars will park side-by-side
down the' mall. Then Lee Iacocca will
stand forth on the steps of lhe Lincoln
Memorial. raise his arms to heaven and
cry out: "I have a dream !"
"Maybe someday." says P etti bone
hopefully. ''Americans wlll come to ac·
cept the American car as one of their
own."
UIYm
Where do l co to aet the $.1.SO extra pet'
weekly paycheck the TV ·~ will eom•
wltb the Rea1an tu cul? I dcn'l have a
Job. A.V. ..... ______ ....._.,,...,. ..... .
~, .... , ................ ,., ..... _ ... ............................ .
• , w • o f o P o '° ; o ; 4 4 ;:; PU I P '
llllJ Plll
TUESDAY, AU9. 11, 1911
coo; ;;ca coo ; u ;c a o J o;
High interest rates
have a strangle hold
0
0
HUITlllTDI IEICl /flllTlll VlllEY
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
82
86
88 on small business ... B3
Former congresslllen rap nuke foes
UNCHANGED IN VIEWS
Attorney Craig Hosmer
Parking
ban seen
s-uccess
By PWL SNEIDERMAN
Of -Deity ...........
The new parking bans along
sections o r Pacific Coast
Highway in Huntington Beach
have resulted in no major in-
creases in the number of cita-
tions written by police or com·
plaints from ticket recipients.
according to police.
··It looks like cooperation with
the parking bans has been better
than we expected." said Hunt-
ington Beach police Lt. Barry
Price.
He added that tramc officers
are now working on the remain-
ing enforcement hitch.
In some areas posted for no-
parking, motorists have been
leaving their vehicles on un-
developed land beyond the signs.
In such instances, Price said,
the drivers cannot now be cited
for the parking violation.
New signs warn beachgoers
that parking is prohibited at all
times on the inland side of the
highwa y between Beach
Boulevard 'and the Santa Ana
River and on the beach side
along this stretch from 8 p.m. to
5 a.m.
Also, a new parking ban is In
effect adjacent to Bolsa Chica
State Beach. on the ocean side
between Warner Avenue and the
Bluffs. This ban is in erfect dur·
ing all hours.
Ticketed violators must pay a
$25 fine.
The bans were initiated in an
attempt to reduce accidents
ca used by vehicles resting
partially on the roadway or pull-
ing abruptly into traffic.
Also. police say mishaps have
occurred when beach visitors
have darted across the highway
or across the Bolsa Chica beach
road between their vehicles and
the ocean.
Between the Santa Ana River
and Beach Boulevard, some
motorists have avoided tickets
by parking on private property
or undevdoped public land
beyond the signs.
Lt. Price said police can make
trespassing arrests only if they
view a driver pulling onto or
away from such property.
Much of the land is owned by
the state, Price said, and ar·
rangements currently are under
way to post these areas to pro-
hibit vehicular traffic. When this
is done, officers will be able to
issue tickets.
. Some or the land adjacent to
the highway is private property,
owned by Southern California
Edison Co .• a mobile home park
and others.
In such cases, a property
owner must complain before
police can take action againat
violators.
Beacbgoera who park on the
inland slde and across the
highway between the controlled
Intersections can receive $25
jaywalking tickets, Price said.
Valley school
meet cancele d
The resutar Fountain Valley
SC!hool Dlatrlct Board of
Trustee. mHtin1 scheduled for
Thu.raday baa been canctl-4
btcauH • maJOr1t7 of board
mtmben ,nu aot be able lo at.·'
tend.
The board11 next rt1ular meet.in& will be Sept a.
Hol~field , Hosmer views unchanged in 14 years
By DA VJD KUTZ MANN °' ................... Nearly 14 years aeo, former
congressman Chet Holifield
joined scores of dignitaries and
newsmen to mark the opening of
what was \hen one of the world's
largest nuclear installations -
unit 1 or the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
On that date -Jan. 4, 1968, to
be exact -commercial nuclear
power was frequently described as the energy beacon for dee·
ades to come. And San Onofre
represented Southern California
Edison Co. 's commitment to
that cause.
To be sure, there were voices
of dissent. But with war in
Southeast Asia preoccupying the
thoughts of many Americans.
anti-nuclear rumblings were
often distant and sometimes
barely heard.
When he threw the switches
that activated the $87 million re-
actor three miles south of San
Clemente nearly 14 years. aeo.
Chet Holirield had few doubts
about nuclear technology.
Today, the former chairman
of the Joint Congressional Com-
mittee on Atomic Energy still
feels as he did in 1968, when he
joined fellow Long Beach con-
gressman Craig Hosmer, utility
officials and more than 100
newsmen for the seaside plant's
inaugural run.
"I'm a 100 percent believer in
the absolute need for (nuclear·
produced electricity) ..... "
the Newport .Beach resident
and former Los Angeles-area
Democrat legislator said.
Nevertheless, in the years ince
San Onofre produced its first
megawatt, opposition sentiment
has grown significantly. helped
in no small degree by the events
surrounding the Three Mile
Island accident in Pennsylvania
in 1979.
When federal licensing hear-
ings for newly built units 2 and 3
resume Monday in Anaheim, the
antl·San Onofre forces will seek
once again to convince a three-
member panel that Edison Co. 's
twin reactors should remain dor·
mant while seismic hazards and
emergency evacuation issues
are explored further.
Explaining the position of the
challengers, retired insurance
executive August "Bill"
Carstens said:
"ln my opinion, (San Onofre)
is the greatest threat to life.
health and property that's ever
Hotel, said San Onofre and other
nuclear plants had proven
through experience to be
economic and safe .
"The safeguards are effective
and the economic goals have
been achieved." he said of San
Onofre's 14·year record, one that
has been marked recently by
lengthy shutdowns and multi·
million dollar repairs.
"I have no fears about it .
(Nuclear energy > will be rec·
ognized as being the hope of the
future and the source of the pr~s·
''There is no way that this nation
and t he American economy are go-
ing to p rosper without nuclear
energy .''
been foisted on the people of
Southern California.
"And for what?" asked
Carstens. who is bankrolling the
efforts of challengers to block
licensing or Edison's $3.3 billion
reactors. "It's just another way
to boil water." Holifield. 78. thinks it's the
best way.
Nuclear energy, he main·
tained , was the most
economical, the safest and the
most sanitary means of general·
ing the power that Southern
Californians need.
Describing the forces arrayed
against San Onofre in the up·
coming federal hearings,
Holifield said, "I think they're
alarmists and extremists."
And, added the former
lawmaker from Whittler. "I'm
very hopeful (the two new reac·
tors> will be on-line as quickly
as possible."
Holifield, who will attend Mon·
day's opening session of the
Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board at Anaheim's Marriott
ent for adequate energy," he
said.
Also unchanged in his views is
Hosmer, now a private lawyer in
Washington D.C.
Speaking of the plant's much·
publicized debut in 1968. the ex-
Long Beach legislator said,
"Our expectations were almost
unlimited in those days."
The ensuing years, he added.
have done little to alter that
opinion.
Hosmer claimed that nuc1ear
energy, m tile 14 years since San
Onofre's opening, had proven to
be safe technologically as well
as profitable for rate payers.
But even San Onofre's
strongest boosters have been!-"'·
able to !overlook the expensive
problems which have recently
beset the coastal power plant in
northern San Diego County.
Unit l's 456·megawatt reactor
bad to be turned off for more
than 14 months. from April 1980
to last June, to permit nearly $68
million in repairs to corroded
piping in the steam generators.
A four-week shutdown ended
Sunday night when another S3
million repair Job to a burned
diesel generator was completed.
Despite these problems,
Hosmer insisted that nuclear
critics had relied too heavily on
"great emotionalism" and exag.
gerations of possible risks to
further their arguments against
atomic energy.
··My concern has never really
been of nuclear safely,·· he said.
And referring to the future or
the nuclear industry, Hosmer
said, "There is no way that this
nation and the American
economy are going to continue
lo prosper without nuclear
energy. ."
Carstens. and the plant's other
challenge r s, disagree
vehemently.
"I don't give a damn if Edison
has spent S3 billion or not. We
have got to protect the public
from the bureaucracy of the
Nuclear R egulatory Com ·
mission," the silver-haired La
Jolla resident said in an in·
terview last June during earth·
quake safety hearings in San
Diego.
Carstens, who has spent mofe
than $50,000 of his own money to
right licensing of the 1,100
megawatt reactors, claimed
that federal officials were "rub·
ber·stamping" whatever the
utilities wanted them to. adding,
"They've got their orders to get
these (new plants) on line."
Though a Nuclear Regulatory
Commission spokesman denied
the charge, both Hosmer and
Holifield said they throught the
Reagan Administration was do·
ing its best to reverse what they
said was the anti-nuclear
climate that prevailed during
former President Jimmy
Carter's term in office.
··We would have been much
farther along if it weren't for
Carter," Holifield said.
Huntington Central Park project OK'd
Addition will include sports complex, gym, restaurant, equestrian center
By PATRICK KENNEDY
ot ... o.llYf'l•IUft
The Huntington Beach City
Council has approved fu-
~ure deve lopment of Hunt-
ington Central Park with the ad·
dition of a multi-field sports
complex, YMCA gymnasium,
restaurant, public equestrian
center and expansion of the
police shooting range.
The council also unanimously
rejected a proposed 111-acre golf
course and a hotel and conven-
tion center that had been touted
as a potential major revenue
producer.
The rejection of the golf
course and convention center
complex was followed by thun-
derous applause from the more
than 250 people jammed into the
council chambers Monday night.
The seven mem bet council
also rejected proposed purchase
of additional acreage at this
time to expand the 297-acre park
to Ellis Avenue.
Next month, city staff mem·
bers will present the city council
with schematic concepts for the
SLATER AV. ice~rA°AL
PARK _J
PARK OUTLINED
·council OKs development
~ I
approved future developments.
No timetable has been
established for park develop-
ment, according to city officials.
Mayor Ruth Finley said Mon·
day that the council's decisions
were "a general philosophy of
backing away from the concept
of making the park completely
support itself',"
Private co nsultant firm
Ultrasyslems Inc .. of Irvine, had
prepared a report on various re-
venue-producing attractions for
Central Park that could help of-
fset maintenance costs for the
city's 50·ark system
system.
·'The study showed that the
things that make the most
money were less desirable for
the park, .. Mrs. Finley said.
''Why have a hotel in Central
Park when there are other
places in the city for it?"
The mayor said the council's
decisions were "partly based on
public opinion."
Development plans for the golf
course, hotel, convention center
and a proposed amphitheater
were opposed by groups of horse
owners who have appealed for
stables in the park, and by local
homeowners who want the park
to remain it its natural setting
or trees, hills and lakes.
Although the council didn't
authorize purchase of additional
These vehicles, resting beyond the no-erklni signs alon1 Pacific Coast Hi&bway
ust east of Beach "Boulevard In Huntington
each, cannot be ticketed under the new
parkina ban. But the motorists could face
..., ........... ,
trespassing charges for driving on t.o private
property owned by the adjacent mobil e home
park. Also, lhe above pedestrian could be ell·
ed for jaywaUdna. potlce HY. which carries a
$25 fine.
acreage Monday, negotiations to
obtain the 21-acre Ocean View
Mushroom farm on Golden West
Street near Ellis A venue could
be entered following a city study
on potential private develop·
ment of the land.
The acreage is zoned for
recreational open space. But
owner Victor DiStefano said
Monday be would like to build
houses on the site. He said he's
been offered S9 million for the
mushroom farm . But city
estimates put the site's value at
S3.l million.
The site is adjacent to a lake
earmarked as a future public
fishing_pond in Central Park.
The city would develop the
mus hroom farm into either
parking, food concession or a
recreational vehicle camp-
ground to complement the lake.
according to Vince Moorhouse,
director of community services.
Although the initial goal of de-
veloping Central Park was to
use the site to produce revenue,
the approved additions won't
generate much money com·
pared to the city's $80 million
annual budget.
According to the consultant's
report. annual rent paid by
private operators lo the city for
the approved developments
would be approximately:
-$134,000 for a YMCA build-
ing
-$110,000 for a 10,000 square
foot restaurant and bar.
-$36,00-0 for the expanded
police shooting range, to include
skeet shooting .
-$25,000 for a 250-stable
equestrian center.
The six-field sports complex
for youth bueball. football and
soccer would generate enou1h
rent and concession lease in-
come for the city to maintain the
facUiUes, according to the re·
part.
Burglary
• meet topic
A burglary prevention meet·
Ina wW be conducted by Hunt-
l n1ton' Beach Nel1hborbood
W•tch al 7:30 p.m. Tbunday at the Huntlnatoo Beach Centn l
Library, 7111 Talbert Ave.
Tblt meet.l.q will be 1eared
eapedall)' to resJdenu ol the
area bound ed by Talbert
A tenue, 8ol11 C.blu StrHl,
Warner Avenue and Golden w at Street.
·HOPE OF THE: FUTURE:'
E:x solon Chet llolt/1eld
Golf links
sought
b y v alley
••
A Fountain Valley city cou.n·
cilman tonight will propose that
the city seek county permission
to develop a second 18·hole golf
course at Mile Square Park in
the last undeveloped corner ol
the county recreation area at the
corner of Brookhurst Street and
Edinter Avenue.
Councilman Eugene Van Dask
said there is a great demand for
additional golf facilities He said
the project could generate addi-
tional money for the city, which
has been plagued by financial
problems.
Van Dask said he will discuss
this proposal at tonight's counc11
meeting, which begins at 8 in Ci-
ty Hall. 10200 Slater Ave
Meanwhile. county officials
are continuing with their own
plans to develop this 84·acre sec-
tion of the park.
Orange County Supervisors
last year approved a develop-
ment plan that includes a n~
hole par-three golf course, a
rackelball cou rt area.
restaurants and a picnic area.
Bob Wingard, a county parks
program manager. said a more-
detailed developmP.nl plan and
an economic evaluation for the.
project are almost completed
He said these documents
probably will be presented to th~
county's Harbors, Beaches and
Parks Commission in Sep·
tember
According to Wingard, the
economic study has shown that
the proposed hard court area
may not be profitable, and a golf
driving range may be s ub·
stituted.
Initial plans have called fir
the nine-hole golf course to M.
operated by a private coil,.:
cessionaire. through a leaie
agreement with the county. ,•
But Van Dask said an 18-hol
executive golf course (shorter
than a conventional course):
might be a wiser developmeal
plan. -:
The councilman said an ad
tional 30 acres would have to
obtained from the park's cent
night field to provide enou
land for an 18-hole course.
He claimed the existing
Square Park Golf Course is
busy that it must turn a
players and that an additio
course would not hurt Its b
ness.
Hitchhike r
arrested
in robbery
Seal Beach police arrested 1
21-year-old unarmed hlteb.hllter
from Garland, Texas, Monday in
connection with an afte•"nOOft
robbery of Amerlun Savtn11
and Loan, 801 Paclflc Coast
.Hi&hway.
Police nid the men, ldeatlfled
as 'lb.)' Fore wu arrested b)' OI•
fleer R oaa Smith at1 •
McDonatd's, one hour a.ft.tr M
r•portedly banded a teller a note
and walked out of the bank wtdl
$200. ,
.t'-:1 Fon ls beinC held at Ora.nP
Cowaty JaU. • · ,
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, Augu1t 18, 1981
Daughter-·in-law wins round
• • tries patience
THfo; T I ME MACIONE: One mode of hfe that
now seems to be accepted along this best of all possl·
ble coasts is that everybody wants to do everything
very fast. Have fun quickl y. And when the task Is
onerous, do it even quicker.
You have to guess that's wt)y these so-called
convenience m arkets have sprouted up on so many
s treet corner s . The prices s ure don't lick the
supermarkets . But what they have to sell is alleged
speed.
Allegedly is used here because you take pot-luck
~ o n speed when you
leap into one of these
cor ner 24-hour ··we
sell it if you can find
it" places T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-q~''
Ir e very -
b od y tri es t o get t o th e c o unter fo r
check-out al tht• sa me tlmt·. forget the fl ash. There's
only a solo cl~rk ond one t•us h register. No calling in
the rest>rve chl'ckers llkt• down at the really big
markets.
Just the otht'r nlMht, for t•xumple. this search for
s peed at the Korner Kwkkle Mart was observed in
Costa Meso when nbout 22 Pt"<lplt• tried to line up and
get checked out nll ut nnct•
The lnrw rlt•r k . Wt•nrln 1t a ttolden "Cal.
Bt•rkt•lt•y" T shl rt . t l'h'<l to movt• every body a long
fa irly Il l' l'IWl'kt•tl t'lll'h pt•r!lo n out al deliberate
s pt.>l'd
Sim•e tht•n • m·t• nn rolhn~ shopping carts at the
Kom l'I' Kwk k1t• plut·t·. l'Vl'rybody in the line is car
rying tht'ir ~oodi-in tht'lr ur ms. One fellow juggled a
six-pack ond four bn..:s of potato chips. Another lady
had both orms ht•upl'd Wl th canned goods
• · 1 think the check-0ut line is over thne to the right, Zeb~'
THE COUPLE APPROACm NG the check out
s tand. however . only had three ite ms so it looked
like a breeze. ll was n 't.
They fi nally got to t he counter where the man in
the Cal, Berkeley T-shirt started checking them out
when he was stopped cold.
"Geor ge. you pay fo r the dried beans separate-
ly." t he woman ordered .
"Al l I've got is a $20 bill." the man protested.
"Well. give it to the nice man. then." she in-
sisted.
"I don't wanna give ·em a 20 just for these dried beans ."
"Then I'll loan you a dollar," the woman a n·
nounced, dropping her two items on the counter
while s he began to punch and probe within a
knapsack-sized purse .
FI NALLY, SHE DUMPED the entire contents of
Superpurse out on t he counter.
"Would you mind counting these nickels and
dimes lo see if I have a dollar ." she asked the Cal.
Berkeley T-s hirt. lie never changed his expression.
"The dried beans are only 83 cents." he pro·
nounced d ryly.
"Well , then he re." she replied. "take it out of my
$20 bill .....
The fellow just behind the couple in t he line. who
was juggling the six-pack and four bags of potato
chips, appeared near collapse. His face was turned
sort of ashen.
AFTER WHAT SEEMED an eternity, the odd
couple scooped up their goods, paid for the dried
beans. got the knapsack bag reassembled a nd left .
just after the wo ma n asked the Cal. Berkeley T-
shirt, "Sir . could you change this SS bill and include
four quarters?"
The m an right behind them fin ally collapse4 at
the counter. dropping his six-pack and denting Uie
cans.
The Call . Berkeley T-shirt clerk finally spoke.
"How' re your a rms,·· he asked .
RUFFELL'S '9rmcto,....w.
DEAR A NN LANDERS :
Recently you told • dauitit.er·ln·
law who resented U\e ract that
he r husb and tel ephoned hla
m othe r every ni cht (even
thouah they had seen each other
durin1 t.he day> that it wu a no-
wln situation.
YOU ARE WRON G. My
d11uahttr·ln·Jaw DID wln. My
!\On has stopped vlslting me and
ther e are no more telephone ·
culls.
When I learned my daughter·
in·law resented my son's visits
and dally telephone calls before
supper (sometimes we chatted
for 30 minutes or more), I asked
her what I could do to eliminate
the friction. Her reply stunned
me. She calmly replied, "Your
son's business is here . and our
c hildr e n a re doing well in
Designer
introduces
a partner
By MARY JANE SCARCELLO 0( .. .,..,, ...........
P ink and white streamers
m 1trked the entrance to "une
pa~lie sans raison" given by
Vincent Jacquart.
Guests followed a trail of tis·
sue paper rose petals to the front
door where J acquart and room-
m a t e Gary H a rrison h a d
t r an s form ed their Newport
Beach apartment into a work of
art.
While c anva s cover ed all
availa ble walls, rloors and
HAPPENINGS
furniture. and pink balloons
floated along the ceiling.
Although the party claimed to
have no reason , its actual
purpose was to introduce Jae·
quart's new partner in interior
design, John Mariani.
Mariani and his wife Elizabeth
flew down with friends from
t heir home in San Francisco for
t he occasion.
They'll continue to live in the
north and J acquart will work
here in what Mariani termed
"shuttle decorating."
"Vincent has great innovative
technique," he said, refe rring to
a computerized house Jacquart
nas designed for a Newport
Beach client. "San Francisco is
known for its easy luxury and
t actile impressions . so we
represent t wo worlds. This is a
case where one plus one equals
three."
Describing himself as the reb·
el in four generations of prune
farm er s , Ma riani is looking
forward to the December issue
of "Architectu r a l Digest."
wher e the couple 's Nob Hill
apartment will be featured.
"It's an English country house
done in icy pink," he said. "San
Fr ancis co women don't have
tans. so they look better in that
color."
Jacquart's wor k will grace the
November pages of "Architec·
tural Digest'' with a Palm
Springs home he decorated for
J ack Sheap of Newport Beach.
The designer c·a me to America
from his native F rance in 1977,
after a short stay in Beirut and
sa id, "It's the dream of every
Fr enc hm a n to co m e t o
California."
His friend Di no Gerlando of
Los Angel es provided the
graphics, the only decorations
highlighted on the white canvas
walls.
Sheldon Lippe of Lippe/War-
ren Crystal in Laguna Beach' at-
tended, as did Arlene Altman
and Wendy Wonder . who design
jewelry.
school. We cannot move but you
CAN. Get out or our lives and
stay out. Diu ppear 1tnd.leave us
alone."
l took her at ber word. At age
83, I sold my rarm where I had
lived for 52 years and moved
3,000 miles away to a place I
never heard of before I saw it on
a map. I have no telephone in
my new residence.
I hope my fl'\.OVlng has benefit·
ed my daughter-in-law. son and
grandchildren. It certalnJy baa
devastated me.
Alt.hou1b the clim ate i• a
g reat Improvement over the
place I left, the COit of llvinJ hu
nearly tripled. I ha ve no car,
and in order to gel to church, I
m ust ride Jt bus for 40 minutes,
then transfer to another bus. I
am depressed and lonely.
Once I read in your column
''Time heals all wounds." I hope
your philosophy will prove true
for me. No name. please -Just
EXILED IN SAN DIEGO
Dear E xlJed : Vo'u r aelf-
1 mposed ex lie was a n Ill·
conceived act of boatlllty de-
algaed to punlab your daag,bter-
111-law. What you have doae 11
bitten otr your nose to aplte your
face -and as usually happen•
la auc:b CUf'I, you are die btl
loter.
Tltete Wll DO affd &o ...-
you life aDd move 3, ... ...Uee
awa7. You coold llave HQeRed
to your soa lbat l.D lbe bet& la·
terest o1 hla marria1e be abMJcl
phone you every othe r day
<from work, If pottlble) ud vii·
It leH frequeatly, Yo.r Ufe
would have ioae oa much ••
before and you would bave been
Infinitely better off than you are
now. flow I wllh you bad written
to me before you made that tell·
deatrudlve decision.
Discover how to be date bait
wathout /allmg hook , line and linker.
Send SO cents along with a long,
stamped, ielf ·addreued mvelope
with yot.1r reqwat to Ann LanMn.
P.O Boz 11995, Chacago, Ill. 606Jl.
Vmcent Jacquart t left 1 shews party decor to Elizabeth and .John Muriani
Linda and Guy Colbert took
time away from t heir busy
Steinbeck·s Restaurant on
Balboa Island to dro~by, and
Ron Ep deserted the Sawd ust
Festival in Laguna Beach to at-
tend.
While talking .with Mr. and
Mrs . Irving Felt or New York.
E p discovered that he and Mrs.
Felt had s ome r e latives-by·
m arriage in co{Tl mon.
Felt is chairman of the board
of Madison Square Garden, a
part of which is named the Felt
Forum after him. The couple
had been s taying in Ra ncho
Mirage before attending meet·
ings in Los Angeles.
Other guests included Compte
Patrick or Montfreid, Pat rick
Shea. Dr. Michael Bear, Patrick
Harrison, Shawn Farnsworth
and Tari Soderli ne.
N ot a ll th e boats i n
Newport Harbor Sunday we re
entered in the Char acter Boat
Parade.
Architect A. Babar 's boat,
· ·s amar a ng , .. moore d nea r
Cano's Restaurant . was the site
or a marriage ce re mony for
Beth Snevely and Tom Cham-
bers. both of Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs . J ohn Sne vely of Cos ta
Mesa and Dorothy Chambers of
Tustin.
About 25 guests attended the
ceremony onboard , and several
hundred wished the couple well
at a recept ion afterward on Lido
Isle.
S pecial entertainme nt was
provided by "Street Player," a
musical group which had dis-
ba nded but staged a reunion
especially for the occasion .
The couple will le ave for
England in September where he
will work in real estate and she
will st udy art history.
Gemini: Reason to Celebrate
Wednesday, August 19
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARJ ES I March 21 April 191 Cl rrumstances enable
you to gain greater rontrol or your own destiny
TAURUS IAprtl 20 May 20 1 You have more "work·
ing room" as red J ape ts removed What had been
withheld will become availablt>.
GEMINI f May 21 June 20 ) You'll have reason to
celebrate: desires, hopes. wishes a re close to rulCillment.
HOROSCOPE
Accent on returns from busint>ss endeavors. possible pro·
motion and added prestige.
CANCER (June 21 July 22 1. Written message pro·
\'ides impetus . enlightenment and spurs a mbition.
Supe'nor nashes green light for necessary changes
LEO 1July 2.'J·Aug 221 Disputes ore settled Some
compromises occur long·range results will prove
favorable Major domestic 11d1ustmt>nt dominates
scenario
VIRGO 1Aug 23·Sepl 221 Surface indications are
deceptive. By digging deep. you unearth grt>ater rinan·
cial poss1b1Lities
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 221: Reports should be re·
vie wed: stock or business transaction subject to delay
Know it, plan accordingly. Contractual obligations are
part of scenario Emphasis also on marital status.
SCORPIO 1 Oct 23 Nov. 21 J: Wh at appu rs a setback
wall boomerang in your ravor ProJeCt is completed
despite "sniping" by_ those who are petty. envious. Aries.
Libra natives play key roles
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dt'l' 211 Affairs of heart
domina te. you m ake new starts and member of opposite
sex is very much mvolved Emphasis also on s pecula
lion. children, van ety and games or chance
CAPRICORN 1 Dec 22 J an 191 Focus on home. re
pairs. safety measures and baste :.ecunty Older ra mtl~
member makes specia l requl'St
AQUARIUS (J an 20 Feb 181 Expansion as keynot
ed: you perceive pote ntial and are able to communicate
ideas in graphic manner
PISCES f Feb 19·March 201 Opportunity exists to
build on a mMe sohd base You locate .. m1ss1ng links ..
Focus also on paymt'nt s. collcct1on:. and inrome poten-
tial
W'HOl.STBY s.,.,,_,_ .....
ltlJHAAIOtl IU D.
COSTAMISA-S4a.I IH
SA VE 300/o on
RICE CAKES
atTraderJoe·1~
We have Rice Cakes on
sale for only S.69 per 4V•
0 1 . package. Compare
this with S.99 found
e laewher e. Great with
hon·d'oeuvres, apreada
or peanut butter. We
especially recommend
Rice Cakes with cheese.
alnce they won't mask
the navor. Available In
Natural Unaalted ; a nd
Buc kwheat Salted .
Please visit our newest
Trader Joe's at I.he ln·
tersecUon ot 11th Street1 Newport Boulevard ana
Superior Avenue (next to
Denny's and Ba rclay'•
Bank.)
~ Bassto
School
Fashion Show
MOW IM COSTA MISA Everything for &.cit·
to-School 7 30 Frt
and 11 3on S..
Aug. 21-22 at ~-------------------t
Huntington Cent«. i.ww--...,._MM•llNWWWMMM,..llM#~li9
Art /Craft Show
( ~ntlngton C.-
M•t Aug. 20-23.
..
YMCA -YOll YEM •ND
FAMILY YACATill ATTIAC110N
"Our family doesn't have
to g o In 1epar a te
dlrtetlonl anymore. The
YMCA hM eomethlng tor
every member of our
family."
~ Wn.a.H.C.... ......
"Fltnett center for my
"'4fe 8nd I, ewlmmtno & cempe tor the kldt. The
YMCA It • plae9 I can
tn.IM my kid• to." ............ ,.,. .....
'2DO fOl 12 MONTH f#la.Y MEMIEISHIP
Peony Loaf er
Tassel loafer
A NEW CHAPTER FOR THE 'HISTORY BOOKS
· AT LAST .. ~ AND CHILDREN WALK TOGETHER
We ere omonq tt\e first
with ~41 childrens shoes.
130 Fashion lslarid, Newport Beach 844·248-4
' '
Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Cookbook Pull-out Section
Good thing• to eet wtll be lnalde your
Deity Piiot T'hurtday, Aug. 20. Th• beat
of over 1,000 r~lpee tubmltted by our
r••dere, feeturlng the winner• of the
Piiot f avortte Recipe Conte at. otacover
new •dventur•• In cooking, from
mlcrow•" to d9Herta, aoup to nut• .
Don't ml• It.
lllilJPilt
,
.. ___ _
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Auguat 18, 1981 H /F ••
It's 1ood lo own property, eapeclally ll It's
be~ch!ront land ln HawaU . Amfac, larfell of the
Hawalhui-baaed companiew, receoUy sold 6~ acres of
beachlront property at it.I Kaan.pall Buch Reaort
on the island of Maul. The price: $1.1.2 mlWon, or
roughly $2 million an acre.
ft'a tough to make that kind of money in retail·
ing, where Amfac operat.es the Uberty House depart·
menl store chain In California and Hawaii; or ln the
resort and hotel business, where Amfac runs a bunch
of hotels al alrporta. the lodge at the Grand Canyon
N allonal Park and the Silver ado Country Club ln
Napa; or ln the wholesaling of drugs, electrical pro·
ducts and plumbing supplies, which Amfac doea In
the western pert of the country: or even In frozen
French fries . which Amfac's Lamb-Weston s ub·
sidiary sells to fast-food restaurants everywhere
(perhaps even to the Fred Harvey restaurants
operated by Amfac).
You can make that kind of money in the au.car
business, where Amfac Is a leading player through
its canefields in Hawaii. Hawaiian sugar is sold here
under the C&H ~ label, the C&H •
standing for the ~; 0 California and 'i ,
Hawaii ..... ~
c ooperative ··-.~ .... 11~-------~!~~=~nessu:~~ lllTll lllUllJZ
for growers.
The Amfac fields make the greatest raw sugar con·
tribut ion to the cooperative. accounting for
something like 30 percent of the total.
But the trouble with s ugar is that it fluctuates
widely in price and the grower can therefore never
be sure of the cash flow from year to year. For exam·
pie, Am!ac was recently getting 18 cents a pound for
sugar, compared to 27 cents earlier this year and 23
fents a year ago. The decline threw sugar operations
into the red. In the second quarter of 1981 Amfac lost
S3.8 million on sugar; in the same quarter last year
the company made a profit of $9.4 million on sugar.
To avoid being whipsawed by this wicked price
gyration, Amfac sells some of the surplus land il has.
It's nothing new. Property sales make a regular con-
tribution to Amfac's profits, helping to even out the
troughs.
Am!ac's profits in the first half of 1981 were close
to what they were a year ago. But if not for the prop-
erty sales, they would have been lower. It makes a
difference, of course, where the property is located.
Amfac is able to get S2 million an acre in Maui
because of the investment the company has put in to
make that property a lush beach resort. About the
same time that it was selling these 61,, acres in
Hawaii, Amfac was also selling a S61h ·acre industriaJ
site in San Jose But that sale netted less than Sl
million.
Having land to sell in this manner gives Amfac a
large measure of control over how much profit it's
going to make. 1r the sugar business is down or the
hotel business is off or department store sales are
weak. Amfac can just go out and sell a little land to
make up the difference. ll still owns more than 65,000
acres in Hawaii.
Pan American World Airways. now deep in the
red. would love to have some property to sell to make
up the difference. The only reason Pan Am showed a
profit hut year is that It sold the Pan Am building
that rises over New York's Grand Central Station.
SJaCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
-;·~
--•'" -1'-_,... . "' ••
--+ -
_.,. --_,"' ~N
llQ+:euA, I W9\l._, ... ,S. •&11.
.......... t "9Y ........ , ...... "' ............. u ............... . .... ........ -~ ... .,.., .... M'IUI, •a.n.
leWC!tt 0-.·~·
llft:W Y~l(IAPI ,INI ~ ...... ~oc:u__.,· ._,., 17
• '"" Tu =r..o ~ ~~:.:s JI Tm -.. •11.2' «13.U 405.7~ J.U U Ull 11• .. 1 lH "7 11J 40 111.U-1 ... u sa JJ• •• an.u *"MD-J-54 ,..... J,42.1'1 Tr.,. t,40.• Ullll , , ... . SQ.9 •S tll< • . . . S,Alt.-
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW V~I( (Al'I A .... 11 --IH<I ..... u~ Toi.el l-H•• l'lltltt ..... _,
WM.Al """UOID
NEW VOlll( tAPI AvO 1) ~ ...
METALS
•z1,
w m , .. ,,
1J
C~ -~tlYt <•fllt a POVfle, U.l .
41fftlNltioM. ..... • c.enu • .,.,._,
lMc •"" CffttS. poufld, ............ Ti.11.1~1 Mel.Ill W9ell c.em-IM Ill ......_, ... C911lla _..,,N Y
_.._., $oMl.CIO per flatll.
~$471.CIOtroy or.. N,Y
SILVER
Hendy I. HIW'fNofl, It.• ... f troy OUMa.
GOLD OU OTA TIONS
S.la<tMI -1cl .... tifkH l>eMy:
u.e..1 !Nft'tl"' fl•l11t ~·'°· .. an.oo. UMlllt: ~ , ............... .
..... !....._fbtlfltMJM ... ati.t9. ~ . ..,,, .......... .
l111tt•1 1111• flai,,. Mll.00, "" lt.00. t-W .......
.. ..., & ···-·· efllf .... ., .-• ........... ....... ,......, ... ,., ............ .... .....
a...-.1 My NllY .,.._ ·~"641,to, .... fl.
SYMBOLS
•
. ···----. -·-·· ------
Or1nge Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuttday. Augu1t 18, 1981
TH£.
FA~llL\'
ClaCtM
by Bil Keane
_,.,,,,~~......._
BIGGEOaGE ---by Virgil Partch (VIP) PUNl:T
.. • ..
'1
o-----
,_,,
V()Of( STUPID SEA6LE
..AJST ~ED AT ME ~
f Tl: M BLE" ££08 ~~ 3 EASY! ~E: t..AST MAN TO CAt.L-
.~ ME A CHEAT WAS CARRIEP
"-OLJ'T OF HERE: FE:ET FIRST! €
, 'I "Can you unpack our bathing suits and toke U$
down on the beach, Mommy?'' "Rememb9r ME?"
"Let's get a different bad guy ... Marmaduke
· is too fast for us to cut off at the pass!"
Jl'DGE P .\Rl(l:R
l'VE NEVER BEEN ON
!'LL !>TOP AT fHE MNt\ THE WE~T COAe>T ! I
AHO uET OOME ~ FO~ OOT A EtlRLFRIE NO ~HO
YOU, LANA! ANY IDEA LIVEei IN L.A.~ MAY8E
WHERE YOU'RE OOIN6? l'LL 00 fHERE !
Hank Ketchum
-~:.a~( ,,
'I
TR'/ ~T f io~.
5TRE:56 WILL
c.JL-'-J
~DUP
n41: 1.0~!
8-18
Fl.:l~I( l' •INKERBEA'
<:i£T'
eE:C.ONO OPl~ION!
~!
V.'{ CA~D!
--------.
l1M SU~E ME DIDN'T
MEAA AN'r1'HIN6 BV IT.. .
by Charles M. Schulz
WELL. HE DOEStlT
HAVE TO BE SO
6EA6ll6E~ENT !
by Tom K Ryan
NANCY---WHY
by Ernie Bushm1ller
IT'S RAINING ' ' •
DID YOU
COME IN?
----
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
HOL..L4 I 40(.)R FRIE.N~
FROf(I ~l ARE PROBABL.l)
AL..l HER£ Ai ifi£ Pf~l£
OUE.EN PA6E.ANT WATGllN&
15 IHfRE AAAHING '1-00'0
LIKE. TO 5PP 10 ~EM~ NOi IN PuBLIC. , ED I
G.\Rt'U :l .D
l'HE PRICE Of PEANUT
BUTTE~ HAS ABOUT
T RIPLEC> IN "THE
P,AST 8 MoNTHS.
ACROSS
1 Herd flt
5 Evince
turpriM
9 Alvoflng
14Nomore
48Stlgglf
47 lnatltute
49Stud~I
53 Tllrtw IWty
570pponenl
58 Make
MOMDAr l
PU'ZZl.f IOI. YEO
thin
15 l(ltty
18 Entirety
17 Paper -
18Clennet
aocklt
19 8PM•
ptatfON'l'I
20 Burdened
22 Aleott title:
2word9
24 Prttty~I
" Conhllnerl
cnengee
59 Attire
e 1 c1111om11
valley
82 Moon
goddeu
83 Conlinenl
64 Heppy 1111e es Roweo •
boll
NAutumnmo
87 PIUM
27 Settl'I dee! DOWN 21Art 11JbitC'1
2t Middle: Pref. 1 COiumn 23 Necltwtll'
30 ~ but 25 Young Chep
coin 2 Untwtat r099 28 WWI ....,_
33 Methodt 3 Omit on: 2 worOt
37 AnaJlty 4 Pica Ind tilt• 30 1owe 1nc111n
38 S""'*'1• 5 Ctlattet 31 Celtlc
39 Orunlt11d 8 Indigo ll'lrub 32 Not dlatent
.0 John PNllp 7 Pl\ind« 33 Or1m1
8 Iambic -a. ...,,,., prod-
4 1 Allttwopofdl • Pl.It• Oft uct
421•119llt0t 108Mtiet 35 Aengtpen Clnlllll 11 Atldt 38 Ego mau
44 A*! MOMy 12 Wtlklng lld 37 UMW mem-
41 FW1 ,,.._, 13 At6of btt
40Smudgt
42Bum
43 Pllno 1*1
45 Giiied long
47 Plc1"'-'
.. Htclclt
50 ClrCIMft¥ll'lt
St~
52 Mtr!Ullbla
53Welpet1
54 Alrrlul'
"'°"* 65 Prlnclpel
5e Trtclle
to Dugout !Mm
1 2 3 •
14
by Jim Davis
ANO ~IS
SIDEKICK,
LAWRENCE OF
80XER 5MORT5
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
1 ~I.JESS
MAYBE HE
WAS A SORE
LOS E:~?
• -J ' ;; __ __..., -• • •• • --'
lXXJ 'TONl6 HI !
BRABBLE
COMEoN,(:,INbERl \.E.'f 1S
r----.--i:rO Joe.Gr I Nu ~
c·~. "ER£
11)€ (:,O~
FOR 8ETTER oa FOa •o aMt!
,
MICHAEL -'THEF£1S
Al.WAY_§ SOMETt-41NG
Tooo. LIFE'S Too
6HORf To WASTE A
SECOND CJ= IT~
()\(,ALL. Rll.rit'f! J~"f A
Ml~V'f~ .. lilltAi
'4 ~~11..~0
ooc,!
by George Lemont
-; S IGH~· l"f''S <SON NA ee ANO"f'HeR L.ON<S,
L.ON<S r::>AY/
Yoo 5HOULO READ
ti Sft1rti • OR MAI-<£:.
SOME1HING.-ITHINK
1iME IS PRECIOUS'
by Lynn Johnston
lHAT'S 1Cf'UCOE
YOU DON'T HA\IE
f\3 MUCH LEFI
AS I DO
~l's been disappointing so far for Angel management
I
'paseball hierarchy
Still ponders fate
I .
'evised playoff plan co~template1
f NEW YORK CAP) -Pity the
ppor baseball fan.
I Finil, as he was getting to the
Taeat of the season and an-
tkipating bis team's chances for
pf:>st-season play, the players
embarked on a 50-day strike that
d)srupted bis summer and sent
h)m looking for other diversions.
, Finally, the strike was settled,
~seball resumed, and Joe Fan
again began to look for his
f•vorite team in the standings·
rlnd ponder its fate for post-
-season play. only to be told that
the latest concept was being
!>Crapped. • ! THE FAN CAN only sit and
wait for the latest format to be
~nounced -at least now be ~an continue to watch games -
~nd hope that this time the
~aseball hierarchy comes up
I
NASL owners
~eek limit •
{»n foreigners
CHICAGO CAP ) -North
American Soccer League
owners opened a two-day meet·
ing Monday with the co-owners
of the D~llas Tornado presenting
ptoposals for sweeping changes
-including limiting the number
of foreigners in a team's start·
ing lin~up._
··After 15 years in the league,
we reel it's time to do some
monkeying around with the
game," said Bill McNutt of the
Tornado. "We need lo make it
more exciting to get the fans."
McNutt said he and the club's
other CO·Owner, Lamar Hunt.
had "eight to 10 ideas" for the
owners to consider. "These
aren't things we've just con·
jured up, and they're designed
to improve the game artistically
and financially," McNutt said.
Among the changes suggested
by McNutt and Hunt were:
-Allow only four foreigners In
the s~g lineup, a proposal
intended to increase the attrac·
liveness of the game for
American fans and cut the coet
of si1ning expensive forel1n
prayers.
-EnJaree the goal by a foot In
every direction.
-Ban PUHi to a 1oalkeeper
by teammates.
-Replace all tbrow·lna with
kick-ins.
...:...EJimlnate offsides, or move
tie offsides line back from the
~-yard line to just outalde the
penalty box.
-create a sone ln the midfteld
where a player ma1 remain onlJ
for a speclfied period ol Ume,
similar to the three-second a-.
in bulletball.
with a plan that satisfies the
pl ayers, the fans and the
owners.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn and presidents Chub
Feeney of the National League
and Lee MacPhail of the
American League hope to an·
nounce, before the end of the
It was what I
called dragging it in
a little belatedly, to
say the least .
-MeswtnMlller
week, a revised plan for de·
termining which teams will
qualify for the post-season
playoffs.
The three met Monday and,
according to a spokesman for
Kuhn's office, the announcement
could come as early as today.
Feeney had said earlier Mon·
day, "We want to get this thing
settled as soon as possible."
The three have been discuss·
ing ways of cl0sing the loopholes
in the split-season plan, which
was intended to revive interest
in baseball in as many cities as
possible, as quickly as possible,
following the strike.
THE PLAN WAS agreed upon
by the owners In their first joint
meeting after the strike was set·
tied. Both leagues accepted the
plan as did the players, but ac·
cording to Marvin Mlller, ex·
ecutive director of the Major
League Players Association, the
plan was news to the players.
"We heard about this split·
season idea for the first time on
that last Thursday of the
negotiations," said Mlller, refer-
ring to the lengthy bargaining
session that began on July 30
and, after more than 12 hours,
produced an agreement ending
the strike. "It was what I call·
dragging it in a little belatedly,
to say the least.
"To introduce it at that time,
for the first time -it would be a
miracle if something like lhls
didn't happen.''
There were no miracles fbr
baseball and 1aping holes were
exposed in the second seuon
format.
Under the plan, the dlvillon
leaden at the time of the strike
were declared wionen of the
first part of the season and the
second part waa set up u a
separate entity, wltb the win·
nen of the two 1ectiorts meettnc
in belt·of ·ftve, lntra-clivtaional
pla)'Offs. If the aame team won both sectiom, It WU to face tbe
team in lta dlvtaton with· UM
nest·blllt overall record.
Howner, tbat left Ol*l tbe
omlDOUI proepeet ol a team 109-
lnl ,...,.. lD orcler to ltnPl"O¥•
tta chances at a Pl•rott bertb. •
lilly Piii HI F
TUESDAV,AUGUST1~1M1
LEGALS C4
CLASSI Fl ED CS
Ange& smarting
Orioles invade Anaheim Stadium
By EDZINTEL
Of .. Dmty ..........
The Aneels will try to put some life into their sputter·
ing machine tonlght when they open the Second Season
home schedule at Anaheim Stadium against the Baltimore
Orioles. Game time Is 7:30 p.m.
Dave Frost O·l ) will go to the mound for the Angels
against the Orioles' Scott McGregor (7·2) In the first of a
three-game series against Baltimore and the first of an
eight-game homestand.
The Angels are still licking their wounds after going -
'If someone had told me that we
would lose four of our first five games ,
I would have told them to go see a
shrink.·
1·5 against Seattle and Oakland (including being swept oy
Oakland) on a road trip to open the post-strike season.
lt"s none other than Seattle who leads the American
League West Division today -a most unlikely occurrence
in a most unlikely of seasons -and the Angels are at the
bottom of the heap, four full games behind the Mariners.
Problems seem to abound the Angels as they open a
rugged bomestand that features East Division contendors
Cleveland and Boston, in addition to Earl Weaver's
Orioles.
Mainly, it's a shaky pitching staff that has manager
Gene Mauch looking for a way to keep a high-octane of·
fense ahead of the opposition.
The Angels had numerous opportunities to make good
on the road trip but costly mental errors and blown
chances produced the worst of all hopes for a fast start out
of the gate.
"lf someone would have told me that we would lose
four of our first five games, I would have told them to go
see a shrink," Mauch said prior to Sunday's game in
Oakland. Well . Mauch can make that five·of-six after Sun-
day's loss to the A's.
\Who's No .)
in the East:
Penn St. or
Pitt? C2 .
No Angel starter has thrown a complete game -or
won a game -in the second half. Frost was the only one
involved in a game that turned out a victory. Delly -19" ... _
Dave Frost hopes he can clu111ge the fide tonight
Tony LaRussa
Bird taDies
Dodgers
in Chicago
CHICAGO (AP> -Doug Bird
shook off the shock. dismay and
disappointment of being traded
from the New Yorlt Yankees to
the Chicago Cubs with one effort
-a complete game.
Bird , a 31 -year -old
righthander who came to the
Cubs in the Rick Reuschel trade
on the day of baseball's strike,
tamed the Los Angeles Dodgers
on six hits Monday in hurling the
.Cubs to a 3-1 victory.
Although Bird bas won 15 of
his last 16 major league de·
cisioos, he hadn't posted a nine·
inning complete game since 1976
when he was with Kansas City.
He did pitch a "complete" game
against Atlanta on Aug. 31, 1979,
while with Philadelphia but that
contest was baited in the
seventh inning because of rain.
With a 17-mile-an-hour wind
blowing in, Bird went the d.11·
lance to post his second straight
victory for the Cubs.
··I was shocked and dlsap·
pointed when the Yankees
traded me, I did a 1ood job for
them," said Bird. "I wu loqldn1
forward to gettin1 a World
Series riot. But I'm with the
Cut. and I'm goin1 to do the
best I can here. Everything is
fine now."
Bird was 5·1 for the Yankees
before bein1 traded. He bu five
major lea1ue complete games.
"He mixed and spotted bis
pitches well, changed speeds
and kept the hitters off
balance,'1 said Steve Garvey,
who wu robbed of a homer ln
the eilhth lnnln• when the wlnd
kept hla drive from foinl over
the wall.
The C\lbl staked Bird to a 1-4
lead when they scond an UD·
earned run ln the first, but the Dodaen 1ot that back la tbe
secoad on a walk lo ~ Cey, a aincle by Rick Monday and an
infteld out .
Mesa selects Hagey, Carney
Two coaches to direct Mustang football program
By ROGER CAllLSON
Of ...............
Jim Hagey and John Carney, two coaches with
28 years or coaching experience between them at
Costa Mesa HJgb School. will share duties as the
Mustangs' head football coach this fall.
The two were appointed following the recent
resignation of Tom French, who resigned his
teaching position for personal reasons after a
seven-year tour.
Hagey and Camey, along with lon&·time Mesa
aides Tom Ware and Doug Brown, begin the 1981
campaign Wednesday night with a general meet·
ing with all football parents at the Lyceum on the
school's campus, beginning at 7:30.
"Everyone's responsibilities remain virtually
intact," says Hagey. "John Camey knows our
passing attack and I'm going to try to help devise
a running attack to go with it. Tom Ware will con·
linue with the defense. Doug Brown will stay with
the lines.
"Obviously we have to go with our established
passing attack," continues Hagey. "We have some
blessings in a very quick set of receivers and quick
secondary."
French's sudden resignation was made
without comment, but Hagey noted, "He (French)
did nothing but improve things here."
Prior to French's arrival Costa Mesa bad 14
straight years without a winning season. In the
past seven seasons the Mustangs won two co·
championships and went to the playoffs three
times.
Chances for another playoff berth and possible
title hinie on the Mustangs' passini lame. which
John Camey Jim Hagey
revolves around All -Orange County tight end Steve
Cook. 6·4, 215-pound tight end Mike Matson and
three outside receivers -Mike Anderson. Ty
C ulver and Onassis Nixon -along with
quarterback Steve Anderson.
"We decided to approach it this way (twin
coaches> on an interim basis." continued Hagey.
.. After the season is over we'll kick back and take
a look.
"This is a veteran staff and we're very op·
timistic about our chances Our efforts in the sum·
<See MUSTANGS, Page C2>
..... •• • • • • • Ill• •• ,, ... ,.. -. r ·•~ ... -~-~-,-'!"•-.;e~;,.,_.,,_..,.. ______ """°...,llOO'!"'-•..., _____ u_-., .... ____ , .... _,_..,, .. ,,.,...,.,_ ...... ..._. ..... ...,. ..... .,_ .... ....,,._._.,, ... ..,,,..... .... _._. .... .._ ______ _
a H / F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(TuHdly, Augu1t 18, 1981
.---------------------------
Drinking in stands
brings on a brawl
From ~p dispatches
VANCOUVER, British Columbia [iJ
The operators of the Pacific Na· •. t
llonal Exhibition stadium ordered a
thorough investigation Monday Into a drunken
brawl at a Canadian Football Leaaue contest
between the British Columbia Lions and Hamil·
ton Tiger-Cats. ·
Fifty police officers were called to Empire
Stadium Sunday lo control 10 drunk fans who
went onto the sidelines, grabbed footballs and
fought with anyone in their way.
Eight fans were held by police for being In·
toxicated in a public place but were released
without being charged.
Exhibition spokesman BUI Joyner aald an
investigation into the "unfortunate incident"
will be conducted with the city police.
Sunday was the first day football fans were
permitted to drink in the stands, but Joyner said
"our records indicate that there have been far
fewer alcohol·related problems at these games
since lhe PNE began serving beer over a year
ago.
Quote of the day
"You don't just all of a sudden tum into
a robot." says the Dodgers' Rlcll Monday.
"And you cannot take the pride away from
an athlete or all or a sudden inject pride.
To say that baseball players would do
anything but play all out is ludicrous."
Baseball Cards take over stadium
ST. LOUIS -The owners of the Ill basebaJl St. Louis Cardinals complet·
ed their takeover or the corporation
that~ B~sch Memorial Stadium Monday by
electing a s1x·member board of directors at a
s pecial' shareholders meeting.
The vote of shareholders cut the former
12-member board in half. One casualty was
former chairman William J . Dougherty, who
had vehemently opposed the takeover of Civic
Center Redevelopment Corp. by Anheuser·
Busch, the nation's largest brewery.
Anheuser-Busch had been locked in a sum-
mer-long struggle with Apex Oil Co., of Clayton,
Mo., before announcing that it had Jained con·
trol of 66 percent of outstanding Civic Center
stock. The special shareholders meeting was
called by Anheuser·Busch shortly after the an-
nouncement.
Brett'• homer aid• Kaneu City win
o ...... B...U'I loot bomt ND Ill ind three Toronto erron tutted a
tlve·nan fourth lnllina Monday nt1ht
and carried Kan.au City to a 5-3 vie·
tory over the Blue Jaye. Former Coeta Mesa
fill'h and Orana• Coaat Collete pitcher Ou
QalMaberry, relieved ln the ei1hth lMin1 to
po1t hla 11th aave of the aeuon. Joa. •ayberry
had a two-run homer ln the ftnt lnniDI for
Toronto . . . Chlcaao left
fielder ltoD LePlore •lntled
twice, scored twice and
threw * runner out at the
plate, whUe Grea LHl•ld
drove ln two runs with a
single and a tape-measutt
home run as the White Sox
defeated the New York
Yankees. 4· 1 ln another
American League same. It
Br•tt was the fourth 1trai1ht loa
for the Yankees ... Alu Tra••eU capped an
eJght·run first innln1 with a buea·loaded double
and Lu« Parrtala and IUrtl GI.._ eacb col·
lected three 1ln1lea aa Det.rolt cnaabed Mln·
nesota, 12·2. DH Pdry scattered four bita and
allowed one earned run throu&h the flnt ab: ln·
nlnga ... Steady rain waabed out the
scheduled 1ame between MUwaukee and Teau
in Arllnaton. It will be played tonipt as part of
a twi·nlght doubleheader ... Toa Paelorell of
Seattle, who haid 15 hJU to raise his batUna
average to a le11ue·leadin1 .3'3, waa named
American League player of the week
. . Detroit placed oulfielder Claamp Sammer•
on the 15-day dlaubled list
Morgan's double aids Giant victory
Joe Morun snapped an 1 lth· Ill
Inning tit' with a three-run double oft
reliever lton Scurry to lead San
Franrlsco over Pittsburgh, 5·1, Mon-
duy nltrht In National Leaaue baseball action.
The victory went to reliever Grea Mlatoa who
helped the GlunlR out of a baaea·loaded Jam In
the Pirates' 10th innin1 ... WlMln1 pitcher
Ray Burrh a.nd Tim Raines hit consecutive run·
scorlntc alnl(lcs ln the second
Inning to lead Montreal to a
6·2 win over Houston. Raines
walked on four pitches from
Houston starter Vern Rab.le,
stole second and scored on
Gary Caner's groundout in
Lhe first. Tim Wallach, a
Saddleback Co lleg e
graduate, had a single for the
Expos in the second
Morgan ... Rookie Glean Bram·
met's force-play grounder scored Tommy Hen
from third base in the 13th innin1 to give St.
Louis a 2· l victory over San Diego. lt marked
the Cardinals' debut at home for the second half
of the season ... New York Mets' outfielder
Joel Youngblood, suffering from soreness in hiR
left knee, underwent an arthrof'ram . . . Pete
Rose of Philadelphia who became the National
League's all·time leader in hits with 3,631, was
named National League player of the week.
Baum gets a promotion
He's named general chairman of Crosby. Southern
By HOWARD L. HANDY .
Of•Dllltr .........
Gene Baum, one or the harder working com·
mittee members of the Crosby Southern golf
tournament for the past several years, including
his days under Paul SaJata, bas been named
general chairman of next year's event at Irvine
Coast Country Club.
Baum, a member or the sponsoring 552 Club
that benefits Hoag Hospital, bu been active since
the tournament began some seven years a10.
Dates of the 1982 affair that features young
and upcoming louring pros unable to make the
field for that week's major or PGA tour event are
Thursday and Friday, Feb. 8 and 9. Thls coming
ye'ar, the San Diego Open will be run during the
same dates as the Crosby Southern.
In addition to the new pros, many of whom
have gone on to greater success on the PGA tour
including some victories, veterans of another era
are also welcomed by the sponsors at Irvine Coast
CC.
Committee members and the press wm gather
at Irvine Coast on Monday, Nov. 23 for the annual
Hoag Clammer, a one-day artair to get the
machinery in motion for the next tournament.
* * * THE FOURTH ANNUAL Children's Hospital
From Page C1
MUSTANGS. • •
mer passing games were very representative. We
did very well against Edison, Mater Dei,
Capistrano Valley and the second time around,
Villa Park."
Hagey prepped at Downey High and was at
Orange Coast College for one year before moving
on to UC Santa Ba.-bara and a year of service ball
in Munich before completing bis final two years at
Long Beach State.
His coaching career included three yean at
Warren High and two yean at Artesla Hith before
coming to Costa Mesa, where be ser.ved under Nell
Peet. Max Miller, John Sweqy and French.
Camey prepped at Gardena and Fobom bllbl,
then went on to Sierra Collese and Sacramento
State as a defensive back.
Hls only coaching has been at Cotta Mesa,
belinoing under Miller. In addition to his ex·
perlence as football coach, Carney baa aiao beld
track and field and cross country duties after the
resignation of Joe Fisher.
Between the four coaches (tMy'U try lo find
another from staff or on a walk-on bull to tlll the
vacancy created by French's abeence) there ii eo
yean ol experience.
The ftnt ol two-a·daya belin Wednelday and
the nnt day of practice with padl la Monday.
Area .golf en qualify
CHINO -David Beatty of Laauna HUlt and
Brian Llndley of Fountain Valley led a aroup of
elaht quallften for tbe U.S. amateur loll cbam·
pionablpe with JS.bole acciree ot 1'2 Monday over
the Western Hllla Country Club coune beff.
Beatty ftred rounds ot 71.n wblle UDdley, a
member of the lleaa Verde Country Club men'•
croup, had a • In the mornlq and a 71 In t.be al·
temoon. A1lo quallf)'in1 from UM Oruc• Coat area
wu Jolm Burkle ot Colla M•a wbo ba4 rouadl of
71-TJ-14'. A fourth area qualifter waa Robert Call
of Newport Beacb who made UM Oeld ln acUoa at
SaUcor Country Club.
of Orange County CCHOC) tournament will be held
Monday al Yorba Linda Country Club.
Because of some last minute cancellations,
there are openings for more golfers for the event
at $8> per person. This includes golf, prizes and
dinner.
Paul Rangel is chairman of the event and be ia
not only looking for golfers but tee and green
sponsors as well.
"We play so they can," is the slogan of the
tournament that benefits the children in the
hospital.
For further information, contact Larry
McFarland at 547·9324.
* * * WITII THE MARCH OF DIMES tournament
out of the way, Joe Costello will be putUnJ into
GOLF l!I
high gear plans for the ninth annual Costa Mesa
City golf championship tournament to be played
Sept. 12 and 13 on the Los Laios and Mesa Linda
courses with a Umited field of 350.
Many past winners have gone on to further
success on the golf course lncluding several on the
PGA tour at the present time including Mark
O'Meara who won here in a playoff in 1979. Scott
Simpson, the winner here ln 1974, Is also playing
on the PGA tour.
The fee for entering the Coeta Mesa event ls
$40 which includes tee prize, green feff, a buffet
on Sunday and other prizes. Entry blanks are now
available In most Orange County pro shops.
While the emphasis is on the low handicap
fllrht, golfers with handicaps up to 18 are invited
to P~rticip,te in the flight competition. Any
handi.cap over 18, however, must play to that margin. •
HERE'S A RATHER NOVEL way of entering
a celebrity golf tournament late In the year. It's
the Bob Elder /Celebrity miniature 1olf tourna-
ment at Camelot Golf Course in Anaheim Saturday
with a shotgun start at 11 a,m.
The $20 participant fee includes a round of 1011
with a celebrity; an official tournament T·•birt; a
coupon for a free gaµie of golf; a coupon for a free
waterslide ride; and refresbmenta.
Celebrities will come from the Angela, Rama K~ZV radio station and some others. The aranci
pra1e for the top foursome will be a apot in the Don
Baylor /85 Roles celebrity golf clualc Oct. 26.
Money from the tournament will benefit the
CyaUc Flbrolis Foundation. For further inform•·
tlon, call m.oeoo. • • • aDP 8lfOT8 -Southern Callfornia Section
PGA Proleaalonata teated the Riviera CoWltry
Club course Monday, playtnc tbe Joec teee that
will be uaed for the.1183 PGA cbamplombla Au1.
4·7 that year. a. ....... dinetOr ot toll at
Riviera, aaya; Tbe courw played 7,oa yardl and
the green.a were really aUck llke tbey will be for
the PGA." . . . Tbe 13th annual Anabelm city
championship will be held Seot. lJ.20 utlllstn1 both
the Anaheim Hilla a nd Anaheim Munlcipal
counes. Larry Mar,.._ of Weet Coast Amateur
Golf AlaoclaUon, ii belplna to promog tbe e.et
and uralna members ot llil IOlftet t= to partJclpat.e. The tourney will lnelade four cap
ru1bta ln adcUtJoa to the cbamp6amblp wttJa a fteld
of 200 expected. Anyone tat...tect in aa eatry
blank abould eoatact JI.....,.. at---· n. •· try f• la ltO whlcll -.. not lacl• a cart.
RtMl'V.UC-for carta Uaalcl be mlllde HPU'Me· ly.
-·-------
Partridge released by Chargers
&Jell Panrl41e, a Golden West [i]-
Colle1• . product and veteran punter 4 • •
ln the National Football Lea1ue, :*a• , •
releaaed by the San Ole10 Charaers
Monday, Partridae finished third ln the NFL ln
punUns In 1979 and was obtained by San Die10
from New Orleans lu t year. Hla 39.1 avera1e
was tho Charaers' hl1hest avera1e in four years
... NFL teams must be down to eo player•
by this afternoon and a
number 01 veterans were re·
leased Monday. Washington
asked waivers on Ike Forte,
Bobby Hammond, Dallas
BlekmH, .loa McDaniel and
ZIOD MeKJnney and placed
llay Waddy on the physically
unable to perform list
. . . Other veterans released
included: Minnesota wide re· Part~ ceiver Kevin Miiier; ll·year
defensive end BUI Greaory and former Notre
Dame running back Al Hunter by Seattle;
Baltimore defensive end Ron Fernandes; Green
Bay llnebacker Jim Gueao; runnine back Ooa
Woods by San Francisco; defensive backs Dave
Becker and Wentford Galnea by Chtca10
... The Cowboys' Randy Hughes may be
through with Cootball after dislocating his right
shoulder for the third time against the Rams
Saturday night. He will hold a news conference
with his doctors to announce his future plans in
the near future.
Baseball today
On this dale in baseball in 196o :
Milwaukee Braves ace Lew Burdette
hurled a no·hitter and beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 1·0 at County
Stadium.
Today's Birthdays:
Hall or Fame pitcher Burleigh Grimes is
88. Atlanta Braves catcher Bruce Benedict
Is 26.
Leonard begins training for Hearns
Sugar Ray Leonard, beginning •
two weeks of training in Los Angeles
for his Sept. 16 welterweight title
showdown with Thomaa Keanu, sparred briefiy
in front of a crowd or 400 spectators . . . All·
star forward Marques Jobnaoa'• request to be
traded will be discussed this week by
M i lwauk ee owner Jim Fltzgerald
Memorial services are planned today for
Jack Holley, the head basketball coach and
athletic director at the College of the Ozarks
. . . Los Alamitos quarterhorse racin& will con-
tinue through Friday in the daytime with first
post at 1:30.
Television. rad io
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Baltimore at Angels,
7:30p.m., KMPC (710>.
WEDNESDAY'STV·RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Chicago, 11 :30 a.m.,
Channel 11; KABC (790).
P~RDON M~ -The New York Yankees' Reg-
gie Jackson has some not·so-polite things to
say to umpire Bill Kunkel after the latter
ejected the outfielder following a strike out in
Penn St., Pitt
to stage war
No. 1 in East at stake
From AP dispatches
Just Uke Oklahoma and Nebraska in the Big
Eight (one has had at least a share of every title
since 1960>. Michigan and Ohio State in the H1g
Ten <ditto since 1967) and Alabama and Georgia in
the South-eastern Conference, Eastern college
football aJso has its own Big Two.
They are Penn State and Pitt -or, in the last
couple of years, Pitt and Penn State. ln fact. Penn
COLLEGE PREVIEW [i]
State's string of 42 consecutive non·losing seasons
dates ha.ck to 1938 and is an NCAA record. Pitt. m_ea~wh1le, has recaptured some of its past glory.
wu~m!'g the national championship in 1976 and
finishing second to Georgia a year ago.
It ls generally conceded that the two
Pennsylvania rivals will rule the roost again.
although Pitt can hardly expect to be as strong as
last year < 11 · l), including a 37 ·9 Gator Bowl rout of
South Carolina while Penn State shouJd be im·
proved, although a killer schedule may prevent
anything like last year's 10·2 mark (the Nittany
Lions trimmed Ohio State 31·19 in the Fiesta
Bowl ), which was good for eighth place in The As-
sociated Press rankings.
"We're a long ways from having the football
team we had last year," says Pitt Coach Jackie
Sherrill , who must replace 15 starters, "but unless
we have some bad injuries, I don't think we'll dip
too far. I think we're certainly io the Top Twenty."
And Sherrill 's blueprint sees the Panthers contend-
ing for the top again in 1982.
"We will have a fine football team, there is no
doubt about that." s ays Penn State's Joe Paterno.
owner o( a 141·31·1 log in his 15 years atop Mt. Nit·
tan~ "We have to have a strong team to operate
agalllSt our schedule, which is the most difficult in
Penn Stale history ." It includes the likes of
Nebr aska, Miami <Fla.). Alabama, Notre Dame
and, or course. Pitt.
. The National Football League drafted a dozen
Pitt playe rs and seven others were signed as free
agents. The losses include defensive end Hugh
Green -.a three-time All-American, winner of the
Lombardi Award and runnerup in the Heisman
Trophy voting -and offensive tackle Mark May,
who won the Outland Trophy Green, May and
fullback Randy McMillan were first·round draft
oicks.
P itt's s tr e ngth will be o n off e n s e
especially the high.powered aerial duo of
qua~terback Dan Marino and flanker Dwight ,
Collins. The only returning ddensive regulars are
linebacker Sal Sunseri and safety Tom Flynn, but
the key will be tackle John Hendrick who is com·
ing back from knee surgery and could anchor a de·
fensive line that lost all five starters.
the second inning of Mond ay night's game
against the Chicago White Sox. Jackson, bat
ting slightly over .200. has been in a season·
long slump.
Junior Sabot race scheduled
More than 150 boats start qualifying Wednesday
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ....., ..............
Junior Naples Sabot saJlon from throughout
the Southwest started congregatlne today at Lido
Isle a Yacht Club in preparation for the national
championship for the class.
More than lSO boats will start compeUUon
Wednesday ln the main tumina basln east of Lido
Isle in qualif)'ln1 races tbat Wlfl apUt the vast fleet
into gold (champion.ship) silver, bronze and iron
mahta.
Champion.ship races for the gold and. 1llver
fllahts will start Thund1y with two ncea
scheduled · to start In tbe main tumU.1 buin.
Brome and Iron n11bts will at.art from a line aet up
tn the west turninc bulD.
The races will continue Friday froei the tame
locaUom. Tbe t.ropb)' preMDtallon for t.M reaant
will be held Friday at t p.m. at tbe Udo tale
clu~.
The Naples S1bot ii an a.foot pram wtt.b U.
Outeb wooden lboe inalpia OD the aail wblcb bu
been 1 popular Junior aailboet for ma111 1•an. ID
reeeat ~.,.. It bu alao bad a rapidly powtnc
....... of•adult devote..
Half or the sailors ln the national cbam·
pionshlp regatta are from the Balboa·Newport
Fleet which held el.imlnation series for the title
event in July. Local sailors will represent Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club, South
Shore Yach.,t Club, Balboa Yacht Club and Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
The remainder or the Oeet comes rrom other
yachUna areas from San Diego to Marina del Rey
with a eoodly number from Arizona, New Mexico
and Nevada.
Jon Pinckney of BCYC la the defendlne cham·
plon, wtn.nln.a last year's naUonals at Coronado
Caya Yacht Club, San Diego. Another favorite La
Matt Tlnaler, Junior LIYC commodore who
flnlabed tblrd last year.
Social events are lntenpened between the
raclnt eventa. A family dlMer la scheduled Thurs·
rtay at UYC, followed bJ the National Cham·
piomhlp dance.
A family ~reakfaat la scheduled Friday at I
a.m., folk>'llJed by the Naplea Sabol Auoelatlon an·
nu1I m..Un1 .
-------~----~---...._--~~~---------~~~-----~-----~..:....----~--..__~-~··~---~--..
44 0 0 0 0 5 µ
H IP Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tu11d1y, August 18, 1981
DEAR PAT DUNN· Where can l cet in·
rormutlon a bo ut a Hvl n1 trust? I'm
partJcuJarly Interested In any benefits this
may have for a husband and wife with no
ehlJdren.
E M . Newport S ek h
A \'S knows of twu excellent books on
Pstate planning. The flrtt, "Plannlo1 Your
E tate With Wiii•, Probate, Trusts & Tues,"
by Denis Clifford, la pubU11hed by Nolo Pre11.
It c'"'talrul a wealtb of legal information
about li ving &ru1t1, planning to limit In·
berltance and estate tues, al&ernatJves to
probate, maklng a wlll and providing for
children. A person's right to die and legal
rights to a funeral of his or ber own choice
also are dlscused In detall. Check for thls
volume In bookstores or order from Nolo
Press, 950 Parker St .• Berkeley, Calif. 94710.
It costs S15 plus tax and 85 cents postage and handling.
The other book, .. St-UUog and afeguud·
Ing Estates In California Without an Attorney
-With Forms," by Clive Hinckley can be
purchased In a bookstore, or ordered for S8
from the author at 106 E. Sunset Drive,
Redlands, Calif. 92373.
Missing persons advice
DEAR PAT DUNN: Several years ago
you told <.t bout some private organization that
helps track down missing persons. Would you
pl ew>e repc11t that i nform ~tion fo r me?
D.S .. Huntington Beach
Write to the Salvation Army Mi ssing
Pf'rSOruJ Bureau, P.O. Box 3847, tOI Valencia
St., San Francisco !M l 19.
R e strooms not re quired
DEAH PAT DUNN Since laundromats
are used hy the public. aren't they required
to h<.1ve restrooms available fo r t'ustomers durin~ business hours·>
J F .. Hunt ington Beach
No. An Orange County Department of
BulldJng and Saret y spokesman says public
rt'strooms are not required by either county
or state regulations In any bulldJng unless It
qu alifies as a public assembly structure . This
rerers to buildings where large crowds
gather. It may surprise you to learn that
public restroom racllUles are not required in
res taurants unless they are very large, and
ser vice station racllltles are mer ely a
courtesy gesture on the pa rt of st ation
owners.
Rules 0 11 {;(uide dof{s
DEAR PAT DUNN· Is it true that blind
persons actually do not own their own guide
dogs? If that's the <.ase, who's responsible for
any damagl' a guide dog might do?
D.J • Newport Beach
The guide dog belongs to the licensed
chool that provides It. Any guide dog user is
responsible for damage done by the dog be or
she uses, and all bl\Dd persons and trainers
carry ldentincation cards. Gulde dog users
have special rigb t5 to accommodate their
dogs, however. Landlords can't refuse lo rent
to a bllnd person who has a guide dog. Also, a
blind person or a trainer can't M refused en·
try lnto a public place. or on any common
carrier or any hotel or place of public accom·
modatlon, amusement or resort wh en accom·
panted by a guide dog, nor can additional
charges ht> made because of the dog.
• Got a problem·' Then wnte to Pat
Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting .. 1. the answers and action you need lo
•
solVt' 1nequ1t1es 1n gouemme"t and r1 busme.~s Mail your questtens to Pat
Dunn. At Your Sermce. Orange Coa.!t
Da ily Pilot. P 0 Rox 156-0. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As
many letters a., po.~sible will bt> a11$wered. but phoned
mquines or Letters not mcludmg the reader's full
name. address and husmess hours· phone number
cannot be coTl$1.dered This column appears daily ex-
rept Sundayi ·
l'ACIFIC YllW
M&«>llALl'UI(
Cemetery Mo rtuarv
Chapel·Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View 011yp
Newpart Beach
644·2700
McCOIMIQ( MOlTUAlllU
LaQuna Beach
49• 9415
LaQuna Hills
768 0933
Sari Juan Cap1$1rano
495 1776
~OI UW.._MT OLIVl
Monuarv • Cemeterv
Crematory
11125 Gisler Ave
Cosca Mesa
540.SS54
f'tHCI H OTHUS
llLL l lOADWAY
MOITUAU
110 e,oadwev
Costa Mesa
642·9150
I AlTllllGllON
5MIT'H & TUTHt1i
WISTCU" CHAPll
427 E 17tn St
Costa Meto
64&.937,t
>
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
MILWAL'KEE j A P1
Al l>f'rt J . Hayt's, Ill. who for
16 years was p resi1lent of
thc> !n lcrn ucion::il Assorin
lion of M11chrnlsts. died Sun
cl11v
TULSA. Okla. <A P >
~hr}' France11 Barnard, 92.
loal su1 vivor of an oil.
ranching. banking and in-
vestment empi r e t hat
donated an estimated S750
million lo charity. d ied Sun
rtay
G R EENWIG'U, Conn
<AP> am uel W. Mttk,
85. n pioneer In interna
Uonal udvertlsing. a former
publisher of}he Ro m e D.-i
ly l\m('ncn" and lonat1mc
d lr tetor of ~im<' Inc .. died
Saturday
TDDAT'I CllSSIDID PVIZLI
ACROSS 74 ltah~ coin l\erOlne 31 Bui I.At 102 8«b0f I Frtneh 11 Outen 180 Ff .. (011 3J Pnckl) poo Cro.1 paint., m.acure 181 Small 34 Wellhname 103 Jap.,,... 8 OI!>' or 78 That ,, YIJ19)'t 38 Hau COii ooln dlbb ... 80 Ffomtne 113 1n1qu1tout 37 furloue 1oec1nci.r tO Mine ear mouth 184 Appendage 39~11· 108 OvU1atutf 14 Hutrlee 838urd~ 187 Current 42 Metric unit 109 Al'N1y1 ti Willi.wine 88 CfOlk abbr 44H~o•n 110 H1rd•1tt 20 Pett of 01!0 87 Snare Arch 1&& Conefflecl 48 Flth IOO• 113 Giant 21 Mias 89 8fltl1h MllOf 1811 Shankar'1 48 A.prool 115 Chare-d ~ayworih 90 Tuck 't 1)11 muttc word parllc:lt :n o.1ent1vt1 92 TtdlOU1 171 Aunl1, In &O a.11 beck 1111 Cemplng obltaclc monotony Madrid 51 Beyond 1httter1 24 MllOd'1 ton 94 Armtdlllo 172 For .. t god Prel. 121 Truman·e 2$ Tiny amount 98 Undt•· 174 You· It 63 Football nom11own 28 Nteale bug oround 175 Jal alal. '" Po• 124 V•rb form 27 Lose pauagee Speln 55 Propr14tty 125 Roman robt 28 Vigor 99 Solitary 111 Project 57 Calclum 127 Regr11 211 Frencn 100 Argument• 178Common eymbol 128 Altenalng article 104 Man'1na~ suffix 58 Pally 130 Explode 30 Prcl111 with 105 Shoe llH 119 Manlftat QUltrel 132 Humor111 pl .. M OI 107 Backcomb1 18 t Demure 59 Rip 134 E11cltm111on satiety 111 Atfllcllon 182 Hlghw11y eo Brencri 135 Mayday• 320e11ro~ 112 Doctrine divider 61 Digraph 137 Military mlllclouely 183 Dell breed• 114 T)lllat• 63 Heart IMO-35 Cavalry t01clbly 184 Blbllcal sJgn 65 01 a fool 138 Soot Old 1word I 16 Plural DOWN 66 Gaming Eng 37 wnn Ger ending 1 Nau1tcal tmplemente 140 CO(ltrives 38 Cllyot 117 Heil Lat 2 Chemocal 67 Hlltoric 142 Frag~nt Manuaeh I 18 Interweave sum. peuods 143 Coats 40Wheet 1rack 120 Indigo 3 Arr"I 68 Culling 144 AHlll 41 Smooth 122 TOQpQI 4 P11ronage 100111 145 OaJ ol aong 43 8'own1Sh 123 Oe<1sive cr'y protection 7 1 Consume 146 Root lhaO. 125 Pr1n11< s 5 Mongol 73 Flags suppor1 44 SOollect term walflOr 75 01 lhe nose 148 Card geme cavy 126 A few 6 lndlceted Lat 150 P1cn1C pest 45 PU SOY9f 129 Youngll9' 7 Reckon 78 Headlll<e 151Grab dtnner 131 Juat boughl 8 Apoatottc structure 152 European 47 Soak tlh 133 Subdues 9 Arranges 79 Growing oul cap1111 49 Pressing 136 Pecan 10 Swappec, 81 Baseball 154 E1e<.11on1c device 13 T Lotto and as an old club d81CCIOr 51 Auto atyla polo car 2 words 82 Recline 156 NOi lhe 52 In favor or 139 Family 84 Overact 11 Wheel edge clergy 54 A lfoo member 12 Monkshood 85 Hawa11an 158 D1te9iYCS 56 Saltpeter 141 Coor1 13 Bullllgnter geese 181 Song 57 Slice 142 Flalh llood 14 Poe's bird 88 Sott food 162 Tcll:llle 58 42nd and 145 Leglelator 15 Hindu re<J 9 1 Used seeds la bric Main
62 Gumshoe
147 Coagulate powder 93 Teacher's 184 Esllmata 149 Siii 18 Eccentric gp 165 Rescue 6" Fiber knot 153 Malay wheel 95 Nephnc 168 F1rep1ace 65 Holiday dagg41r 17 And· Lal 97 Presently peg happenings 154 Sprinted 18 Basia or 98 Droop 170 Weapon 69 Bose 155 0 1 a Roman quartz 100 Immerses 173 Nothing 70 Pronoun court 19 "Golden brielly 176 Beholdl 72 Male swan 157 Baltic Ftnn Toucrl' king 101 That 011e t80 Conunent 74 Nevada city 159 Tolltot 23 Lucifer Lal Abbr
SEE CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR A NSWERS
"ICTITIOUS e USINUS
NAMI: STAl lMI Nl
TIM ..,.._,nu P'""°" '' dol"9 bull ,,.., ...
TRIBOlET &. ASSOCIAT ES, 1301
Oovt SI., ,..WllOf1 &ee<ll, C• tlMO
Rand•ll £u9ene TrlbOlt t, II
l'lerll .... tr"lne, CA. '2714
Tiiis bullfWU '' Conoutl.cl by an In· div~.
R-11 E Trlbol.i
Tiiis N l-1 w .. rllad will\ ....
COllftty Clerk ol Ota119t Counly on July >•.1•1 ... ., ..
PllllllW<! 0r*'9t COA\l Oally Pltot
AUQ. 4, 11, II, U, !tit )4) ... 1
ruauc 11ncE
l'ICTITIOU' a USINl:ll NAME STATElltll NT
Tl\t lottowlng pt "on IS doing
bu•ltM&S •i •
MR ASSEMBLY, Ill E P•11l•rlno, CMI• Mae, CA '76>4
D•nny Re ynoldl , 7611 R•Pld,,
l'lunt.....,,, BM<ll, CA., ....
Tllll MIMU 11 t-11<'1t4 Dy •n
lndlv-1
o.nnv Rono101
T1'\1 ttatt..-t wa1 ltlad wllll IN
Covnh Cieri. 01 Or•"9t County on
Aull 14, 1 .. f
1'1 .....
PUb11""9d o.._ Coell Oell'I' Piiot,
Auo 1&, 2S. Sept. I, I, 1'11 >6.S...I
ruu wnc£
NOTICa tO CONT"ACTOllll
Tll• C OAST COMM U NI T Y
COLLEGE OISTRICT 01' O"ANOE
COUNTY, CALlll'OltNIA, ecllnt by
•nd 111;0.,.11 111 9ov•rntn11 Board M,...llof 9'VH ,_Ice 11111 In tKCord9ntl
PUIUC •nteE ruauc NOncE
l'ICllTIOUS 8USINESS STATEMENT 01' ACANOONMl:NT
NAME STATEMENT 01' UH 0"
Tiie lollowtng perM>nt •rt doing l'ICTITIOUS au St NESS NAME
busl""n •• Tl>t loll-•nu per_,, "•"• a ban·
( I ' N ... T I 0 N 'W I 0 E don<KI ti. UM of '"" Flclltlou• 8u>I PROFESSIONAL SYSTEMS/(11 nH•N•-
NASCO, Il l NORTl'I AMERICAN VIDEO l'IOMES, IOOU Ga rllt ld
SUPPLY co 141 COMMUN ITY Avt .Hunttnotone .. cl\ CAtt ....
BUILDING M,\INTENANLE, P.0 Pl\1llp .. MCIUmtt , 1119S
8or1 US.J, S...I• AM, Ce '1705, 3309 McO.rmou, Irvin«. C•llfornla •1114
So M•ln SI. S.nla Ane, Ca '1701 0411t SlmO<o. l<IJD Sanl•,,.11• Ttr
Mk '-1 Vic lo< Lucl•no, 1430 So. ract, CorOftot del M•r. C""on>la '16U
L• Br ... I.OS Angel ... CA '001t Tlllt Du"""" WH conouo:tff l>y • Tl\11 ll<n!M<o• ,, Conduct.<! by .,, In llmlll>d P<lr1"1rtl\1p
dlvl-D•"' Stm,,,.o
Ml<'-1 V Luct•no Tl"' •1411ement ••• 111.a .1111 m.
Tiii• '"'temenl "" flied wllll 1111 County C"'rtc o1 Or-C°"nly on July County Clt rtc ol 0r"'9e County on July 14, 1'111
lt 1'111 l'IMUJ
1''61511 Pubh.,_ Ot.not Co.tsl Oally Piiot
Publl-Or-. Coest D•lly Piiot AuQ II 11 u Stot I "'' __.,
AUQ 4, 11, 11, U . 1''1 >43241 -------------
raauc NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAMl:STATUUNl
f Ill 1011-1"9 pe"onl •ro Ooln;
DU"l\H'H
A E MEOl·COMPUTER, 2111
Skylark Clrtl•, Costa llMH, C1lltorn11
•1'16
Allen J T Yin, M.O , 1717 Sl(ylerk
Circ••. Cone l!Mw, Celltornte 92626
Eieltw K Ytn, 2117 Skylark Clrtl•,
Co" a MtMI, CAlllorn11 mi.
Tlllt l><ftlMu I\ t onducl..t bv 1n In·
dlvtduet
Allan J l Yin. M 0 . Elel,,. I( Yin
Thl1 \llltment wes lllad with IM
County Cieri< 01 Oranve County on July u .... ,
.. 1.7001
Publlslwcl Or•not Coett Dally Piiot.
July 21, A"° 4 11, 1a, 1 .. 1 J.:M• 11
'111UC NOTICE
l'ICllTIOUS a uSINUS
NAMI: STATEMENT
TM loll-Ing -"°" 11 dol"9 Dull Mi,.,
111 MICRO.PURE, (2) MICRO.
PURE WATER PURIFICATION
SYSTEMS, 111 Lllec Len•. CHI• Mo•. C.O '1617
Roi.rt Ray Cltlell 711 Liiac Ln
Coste""-'._ CA. t26Z7 .,
Tllll °'81""1 11 <Of>duct.O Oy an In
dlvlduel
RWet'1 R. Clllllll
Tllla Uat-t ,. .. 111..S wltlt ""
County Cl••k ol Orenv-Coumy On JUiy
J 1.1•1.
flt67M6 PuDlllllwd o-..,.. Goeu 011ty Piiot
~UQ 4. 11, II, U, l"I ) .... 1
P'UILIC NOTlCE
wlu. EdUt.91~ COdt S.Clklfl a1Mt-J 1... PVllJC NOTICE
,., ...... ~rtKlO't 9" 11,_rlMO to '• ------------"ICTlllOUI eUSINISI
.. AMa ITATaMa NT t ltl.,. • IM "°'"'" of iutv,.. lnfor,.,,.1 ~1"9 iwoJ«ll. II you cr.11r1 to •
con•ldlnd, Wllfnlt • lettlf Of r_.i
to llle Coest Cornmljllllty c.tlt9t DI ..
trlct PvtCl\ .. lne O..a'1m•nt. 1'7t
Ada-·-· 0.t.t llMM) CA ..,_ ( ... I.,.,..,,
P\Ollll.,.. Of-C.09* Oally Pl!«, AUO\ftl lt, ,_, PIU I
"lc;TITIGUI e VllN811 .. _. tTATE»•M'T
Tiit fllflewlftt ...,_ I& ~ ._,_,, .,. ....
OAltY l'Alt It 08110Ni, 4U
C..-ClKle, Cer-*I M•r. CA ~
"ICTITIOUS IUSlllllS
llAMI ITATllMENT
TM lollowlnt ""or" .,. dotn9 llut lnauu
R ELt AeL E M ESSE N GER
SE "VICE, 20t l B1n lnt11 C1nt1r
Ori.,., • 100, '"'""· CAlll•ml• m is. A!lf..-ew Mecll11ta, Ill, t ltlptlO.
Co11rt, N•wPOrl a .. ,,., Calllornl•
'2aa.J.
JHI,.., ~-.. I Rltlttfe ~
Ne...-1 llM<ll, c.tlfomto t>ttU
Tllla llutl,_.H It COMv<llCI ll'f • ,._ .. ~ ...
i41tdft'w~.lll
Tiiiis ........,.,,, w• ftled Wltll °"
County Cler'll Of Oronte C-h on
r ... lollowln9 Pf'"'"' ••• dotno
Jl""Jat
EXCLUSIVE PRESEHTATl~S.
d d L.ol All-Blvd • • 276. I.a~
Hlltt,Cll ~
Cl. YOE NUUT, 'd.0 LOI All-, •2'1,~Hlll•.C•"6»
SUSANA l'IRUOK• NUUT, 10 0 1.01 au-a1..o . •V6, u...,,. Hlttt,
CAtJUJ.
Tflb "'8inna II <on411C'K by en 11 ..
f l'ttctu.11.
Ct)IWNwt
Tllt1 N~I w11 111..S will\ t"'
County Clerk of 0U"9t Ct11nty 11'1
AUQ.•,1•1 .
fl1611Ct ""'· 14. ,.,_ ,.. .. ,. ,..,_.,.,... Oronte CMn Oelty Pl!Ot "'*'"'" 0r.,.. c .... 0.,,Y "'IM. ""' 11, 11. ts, s..it. 1, 1•1 ,....1
....... , .. "· .. ~. 1, •• ,., f10641 0otY i., ll'o"• 41.S 0Dhlfl'I .... Qr• c••· C.-fltl IMr. ~WIS
Tll .. ....._. "~---,.., Oii "'" ------111'-.. -..... -t---
dlYI..... ,--1111•~ l-------------11'9nt ". I! Ill& Tl\IJ .. ...,,,..,. -fl... Willi IM
C:-Y ~ ol OI' ..... CotM!tY 911 J\11'( ll, 1.,,
"'""• ,._,....,. or-. c:.st 0.11, Pl ...
....... 11. , .. u. ltll am.et
•
To Pl;.ce your
Hfo'a1t Ru ult"
Servlte Oirrctory
ad . CaU Now
642-1671
bf.JU
a ; a a 3 5 0 & &JS 5 2 5 23 3 2 2 3
~P8•1C* CCM.IH OP TM• U AH 0 " CALlfl'O•NtA
NCmC8 °' TIIUIT l8't Lt.La AMaoo41t
AM.,_ "°'1CIOftTaUIT8•'tlAL• "0"™' COIJNTY Oft oaa No•
T I No. l l ••1"1 11'1' llM.tlUI
APNO ~" T " ...... , ...... Cl P:IC •sc ltOW ......... 0.. I ...... , ... t•t. at It • A.M., C:OIUIO•ATION, e c.tlfenli• c~•
Tille 1--. arid Tru.t c-. 11 ....... , .... M .. Trw-.~llle LAOH I OOOOYEA"· o.c-••duly ~IM'""""~ Mf 191 ... lnc*tul8N-...Oflr"alWILL C-II• ..,_. ,.._,,_,to o.d Of Trlllt ..... I i..y Hl.L At "V•LIC AUCTIOH TO TM f
NOTIC• Oft ,.... mt,_..,,, J-1m ... Intl..... l'llOHDT 11008" 1'"0" CAJH Cpeye
o""'ALP•O .. •ltTY 1~. lnlleell 111 ....... )11 .. 0ffk .. I 1111oettl1'11H f Mlelft lewlvl_y .. llle
NOi i<• 11 PtereOy tlven 111e 1 ltac.,. In °" _.~ Of tM C:-"Y Ur\lleol SWtotl all rltM. tftle.,.. in.
OIOltGIO WAltTMAN,u_."""'°' "•cord er a l Or •"t• Ca11nty, llf .. _Y'"tlo.,.._,_lflil\'ll-
r•11ru1nt•t1v1 of 11•• ntete ol CelllVnlle. Will. llLI. Af fl>V•L IC: ~ eeld Deed°' Tr ... l Jn "" ..-... rtv
OLAOVS £ C.OOOYEAH, Oe<ooef, AUCTION TO l'llOl'la&T 1100•" ....... ...n..4Mc'1tlecl
wllt Nil at., ... ,. 1ete, to II" M.,,... f'O" CASH, <:A$1o4tl lt'S CHECK Olt TltUSTOlt ANOREWC. PAULINO
encl llftt 114dder, under""'""'' •net ClltTll'tao Cl'llC:IC, 1,o•lll• et • •l"lll•mon
Clll41110i\I .. r•lflltlttr -11-d, •ncl limo ....... '" lawful -· flf 1111 • I N 1 f' I c I A" y • A y .. 0 It T
•11bJect IO <OnflrlTl•llOn D'I' Ill• Unll:W Matot> ..... iollt~,,..... -l'INANCIAI. CO"POltAllON, •
Suoerlor Court, on AUOVtl 21, ""· ,. t,.no to '"• 0 14 o, ..... C:o11nt y C•lll.,,... c.otpo .. 11ar1, "K Offecl ""'" It P M.., Or ""'"'•lier wllllln the time Ceurt-IOUlef In II" M at«ll Of 11, I•• lnttr NO 14t14 In"°°" IJPO '''°""'" bY , .... •I lhe off I(• 01 "'" N. Wiii *1• AN ...... (torMlrly Wiii ~ Ult .. Otfl<i.I AKOff • In !fie of. Howaer, atlorno tor the 119rtonel r.-6111 SI I. S...11 Ane, C:a lllor11le, •II llu •IN Rec:0t-Of ORANG IC-fO•nt•llve, al J111C1 So (OH i Hwy, rt9hl, lfllt -tnlereal ClftVI YM • ly; tel4 -., Of trual cr.w:rtt>M ,,. to 1.evunt. C•llfOrnl•, •II IM rlOfll, u. •nd -111111,.., It 111\def Mid 0-0 Of tollowlftO IH'tOaf'ty: II•, '"'""'· ano Ht•I• Of ,,,. • Trua1 In Ille .,._,,y 111 ... 1.o lft Miki t..ot ftOf Tract Ne. J)'I, In , ... City ..
CHMCI, MIG ... '"" r!Qtll, 1111•, lnl•••li. County •nd 11•1• dH crlbl4 "' ... <:0111 Mew ... ,., IMP fKO-In
•nd ttl•le th•l 11\e llllte of GLAO'l'S Lfftef"lidMl4lt1 IMer.lllft-IAI: -1', 000t1J-4 ol ~Klll-eu1 Ii GOODYEAR, IM< .. H d. 1191 «· PAltCI L I Loi 11. Traci 6atl. City M•Pt. In 11 ... Otfl(• or lhe Co11nty
quired Dy op11 a t Ion ol la w o r ol trvlne, County Of Or-. llet• Ill lt•cordlrofOr-.CGOiMr,C:•tltOrnl•.
otherwlN , ot,.r tllen, o• In 414dlllon 10, C•ll""nt•. es lllo-on • rn•, rt• hlel i.nct K e!IO llnown as .Uaot-
Ot•I ot o" c11cuwd,., the time ol fler cor4ecl "' 8-W , P .... U, 1•. 11 PercllNo. l•H U>1
de•lll, In -10 ell 1"81 Gerte ln , .. 1 tnd It, MIK•ll•-• Map\, rec.Orth MAY e E Al.50 KNOWN AS· JOO
pro119r1y 111 ... 1ec1 In 1111 County Of of OrlnQll c-ty, C:.lllorftl•. llOYO UN. 0.141 Moe Oran111 Calllorn1a. dncrl,,.d u PAllCEL 1 A non u c1111lve IP "(II a tlr•l .adrttot °'common di
10110.., p11r1.,....1 .. ~,,...nl ow r and ec.ron 1l9nat~lu,_nabo ... nowetrenty l1
No '· 91.,. l -. IO<at•O el >07'1 llW Sout'-tl ... ly ~ 00 1 .. 1 ol Lat 10 lft 9lven II to tli totnplel-IS or (OtrK I So (Offt Hwy 5o Laguna, (ellfornla, Mold tr.ct ro. __ ,Of Ort ln ... ..-0 neHI
01,,.rWIM ""<ti-" Tr<KI s~. Lot tor ..... ,.,elnl119 Ille U ttrlOr of ,.. T ... IMntfl<l•rv ..,_, H id o-cr .. s Unll S OI project louted on AP llrv<:t .. 11 wall toc•t.O -Lot II Of Tr1111, Illy,_ • .., of• 1><eac11 w cr.1 ... 11
U -.Ot-07 10901,., wlOt an undivided w ld trect adje<tnl lo 11111 H Mm..,t In llw oNIQellOn• 1ec11rH 11•.,•0y,
OOS.lftterKl•lll-01110 Trutt or or r ecord ow ne r M relofot•••Kut.O-O.ll1t•r..Slo
TlllS ...... •Ul>Jecl to ruin ...... r .. LAWRENCE 0 LATl'IAM ANO IM lllldltrtlQnld. wrltllln 0.Clarttlon
uon1 By Law• o1 Bl.,. I.A-COM· KATHLEEN B LATHAM ol o.feull -O.meno lor Seit, -munny A•-.. ,...., ln< curr•nt 141•· TM 51•--..u ancr oltwr com wfllllft -I<• ol l><M<h encr etec.llon tt
H covenann condlllo•"· rn •r.•· Mon d1$1-I-. 11 eny, of I,. ,.., Ct 11M IW undtrt!QM<l IO w ll Mold pro-
llon' •IQl>ll r '91111 ot wty .... ,.,.nu. Pr--1y dn<rt--.. 11 1111•-1.0 Olr1y lo 1.i111r w icl -iQalions. •ncr
•ncl ••Ill Ing tnc11m1><enc: .. or rec0rd . to bt It Mo11nlaln YI•• trvtn1, tller•afle• lfW ..,._,IQned c-oo wicl rrw 1erm• •n<I "''"'111on1 of Ult Celll-• noOG• cl brNCll -of etecUon to ,,.
••• • m1n1m11m S.J,000 , .. ., -"· Ttw _,.IQnld trv1t .. dl1o<t•I-R•<orcr.f No..,,.,,., 4, 19'0 •• instr
balanc• ._, .,.. 1trm1 ot suc11 credit .,.., ltetllllly for any tncorrec.tntu o4 NO «1'1 In -tlllO P4IOt IJfl, Of
10 1>1 •«eptabl• to 1111 per101>a1 IM •lf•t edclnu -otlllr common H id Ofltctal Rec0ro1 •~Pr•MtllAlh• And to ow Court Ten dHl-Uor1, 11 eny, ,-.. llereln »kl WI• will be ,,,_, o..t wlli-1
Plrttnt ol 11w 1moun1 Did 10 •«om-S.icl lel• will IM ...-. but wlltlo<ll <O•enal'll or w•u enty. ••Pf'ln 0r Im
pany llw otter Ind I ... balance to be (OV•-0..-warrenly, u pr•H Of Im Plf..i, r9Qarding 11111, -MUion o< t n-
pald on cont1rme1ton ol w11 by IM 1141.0, ,...,dl"9 1111•, "°'"""'°"· or cumbtancn, lo pey lhl remelnl"9P•ln-
Court T ..... rent•. ooertllno end •ncumbrancH , to PO Ille unpaid <IP•'"'"' ol l lw nott hl -.uroo by wl4
m•1n1eneno tapen1e1, and pr.,,,111m1 betence of "" notel1I -.. r.., by .. Id O..a o4 Trull. wllll lnler·u t •• tn wlCI
on ln•u••M• •«•Ptel>lr 10 t l\1 Oe.O ol Tr1111, to-wll $16,.,,50, ,,.. not• iwovl-. eovenctt, If .,,y, ,.,,_
pUrthewr \Niii lie prorat..i " or tM ctUdlllQ H pn>vicled tn wlcl nol1hl • .0. the terms ol Y id Ooocl ol Tru11; r ....
oa11 OI conr1rm•lt0ft ot w le 611d clow vtn<H, 11 eny, u.-r 1111 l••m• ol Mild <ll•roeundupann1olll\e Tru'1 .. •nd
ot "<'°"' Tl\" .. •m•nelion or 1111•. r• O..o ot Trv1t, 19", c11eroe1 •nd ••· of 1.,. trUlt• croe1ee1 by u td O..d ol
tor01nu or con•o•nce, and any tl11e ,,.n_ ol 1111 Trusi.. -ol lhe tru111 Trust. Said &el• will bl held on T .. 1-
1n1urancc poll< y •11111 lie t t Ille H · ., .. ,..,Dy Mild 0..0 ol Tru'I O•y, Stpt.,,.t>er I, lttl. 11 11:00 .m .. It
penH ol '"'pure,,. .. , The -kl•rv under u kl 0..0 Of Ille front entrenu to ow olllctt ol
8tcb or ofter\ ••• 1nv11..i ror ltli• Trust lllretotor• •Hcultd •nd CH Southern Pe<lfk Tiiie Compeny, SU
properly """ ""'" ,,. In wrlllnQ and ll1ter..s to Ille ...-11Qned • wrl"•n N Cel>rlllo Perk Orl1te, Suite 100, Son·
wilt Do reo1•td at IM ott1ce ol f:r.., O.clarttlon of 0.laull and O.m-le AM, c.a111ornie N Ho~ •llo<ney tor Ille per>on•I lor S•le, and a '"rltlt n NOiiet of Tiie IOl•I tmount ol Ille unpaid
roprt\lnl•li.•. at lOtOt So Coa11 Oel•ull and Elecllon to Stll Tiie un belen<t olllleObllQalionM<uradby1elcl
Hwy So UQUn•. C•lllorn,., •• •ny der,lgn•O cau1ed H id Hollo of pr-r1y to lie >Old, ._.,,., wllll ln-
llmt •lier lorsl publica tion ot 11111 0.l•ull -EIK tlon 10 Stll to ,,. rt l••Hl.IOlt"'"fH.•nd•llim•lff<M
"'1110 tnc10t•ore rna-ing ,,... u l• cor-•n tN county -· IM rMI II, UptnlM, -edvencft. •• or ,,,. For lurtr.r onlorm•t•on •nd btd Pr--1y II located Tr"''" 0..-... ,...., dale r.raol, 11 '30,"' :M
IO•m• •PPlr •I ,,,. offte• ol ,,,. .,. c-vclinu .... TITLE INSURANCE D•l• ·-·' J. 1'111 1or11a, for tilt PlfMH>al rti)re>enlatlw ANO TRUST COMPANY. IOO N M411n TR•NSPACIFICESCROW
IM r>Qnl •\ rHerveo to rtl•<I any SI , Set\141 ...,,., C.A '2101, IU/tU-20l0, CORPORATION, encl all Dt~ JOYCE WI I.LI AMS aC•hfOf'nla <0<po .. 11on
Oatt<I Augu\1 1 t .. I Oate IOAU9'1'1 l._I A\Mlld Tn.slff
I Georoe 0 w.,,.,,.., Tiit. insur ...... ..,., By SOUTHERN PACIFIC
P,,r_,.I Rti>ftMnt•ll•t Tr111t~1>y TITLECOMPANV.
"''"" N "-Al Mild Tn." .. • a corporal.,.,, •0tnl Altw,_y tar By JOYCE WILLIAMS JIJ No..-111 Cel>r~llo Park Or.,
l'tr-l ll-....,y 11.,. Aut'-llad 11-lvrc S..•te 100
.... ,. GMll H wy P111>tlll'ed Or-Co<nl Oally Piiot, 5.ent•Arw,C•lil '2101
Se. Le-. CA '1•17 •uo It. tJ ~ I 1 .. 1 ,.,._., (714lf111300
17141-tMt Qy Fr•ncH~ldrl<k
Pull'tu.G OtanQe Cont Deo1v Piiot, rtJILJC NOTlC( Pull't.,..., OrenQlt Coall 0.11'1' PllOI,
AvO 11 17 II 1'111 llt().41 AuQ 11 II, U, 1'111 JSTJ-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CllEDITOU
OF 8ULI( TllANS"E"
Nolke" llortby g1v1n to cradllor1 ol
,.,. wllhln na"""1 ttantleror(tl 111411 •
Dul~ tr.,.,sltr " •Dou• lo be medt on oer \on•I prop•r y nere tneft et
de\Crlt)e(I
Tht rwrnt and °"""'" adclrHl ol 1.,.1n11.-"""•!•rorh) •rt.
ROBERT L OWEN, 4011 811n Vtntdo. S•n Ju•n C•plstrano.
C•lllornla
TM ,,.,,.., t rld """-edclreu ol IM lnlendC!d tran1ter...,<1I ere
YClYNG s HYUN .• oi. .... nt•, ,,.,,,., (ellfo<n••
EUN Y HYUN, t Dia ma nte,
l•••ne. Celllomia Tllal tllo pr-r1y perllr>tnt ,,.,.'° 11
dlt<rlbtel In generet H •II 11«k In
trade, goodwill.,,_,,.,,.., fumltun,
HA tvr•,, •qv1pmel\t, tea1er.old
1nl1f1$1 • .._d lmpn>-nb of
Ol"l•ln Mne1wlc11 111op -It IO<elttd
at m11 Camino C•str-• E·IOI, »n J.-C..t><•lr-. Cellton-1• 92671
flll Dult""H na-llWd by U.. Wicl
tr•1tsferorh1 at w ld 1oui1ten k.
Tl'IE SU8ST•T10N
That W ld bulk tr.,,d tr 111111-lo
Dt con•ummat..i at 11\e olll<• ot· Prol~I Etc:row Strvket, 1'21 N.
T Utllll A.,.,,u.. Sent• Ane, Calltomle
'1101. on o< ,,,..r Stptttml>er l, 1•1
TM...,,. a nd -"' ot IM"'"°"
wltll WllOm ""'"' m•y l>I lllad iJ Prot1t"ona1 E«r-S.rvlc ... P.O.
80• 11S'1 S•nl• An•. Celllornl• ,,, .. 1Je7, •nd 1111 .... day lo< filing
t lllfTll Dr 1ny creditor '"•" bt StpttmDer 1, 1'1 1, w llltll h II\•
ou1IM<i• a.y oetort ,.,. cOMummellon
d•lt W11C•lled•bov1
0•11<1A~t 11, "'' YoungS l'lyun
Eun v HY"" lnltnded Tran,1er•(1I
Publt.-Or•-. Coe1t O•llY Piiot,
Augu\I 11, 1'111 l71Hll
ruauc NOTICE
"ICTITtOUS UUSINIU
NAMI: STATElltlENl
T ... lollowrn9 per10n1 er• dOl"9
busJ"" ...
Def• FA8. 1111 Wutm1 ... 1., .....
Cost• Mew, c.o 9UZ1
Vic'' Ltt Forrester, n11
W••tm1 .. i.r a.. Coote l!Mu, c.a .,.,,
Jo"n Gr•,,•m Forre1ter, 2)11
WHI,.,,. ...... Ave • Cos141 l!Mw , C• .,.,,
Tllll bulln•u " COftdU<l•d by • ~Mrlt pa~lftlp
John Gref\em Forre~ Thi' 11411-1 w .. Iliad •1111 IN
County Clt<tt ol o..,.. c;ou..1y on JUiy JI 1'111
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
P EARL M ARIE
HAMMER LILLYWHITE
ANO OF PETITION TO
ADM INISTER ESTATE
NO. A·109196.
T o a ll h ei r s,
b e n e f iciar ies, c r e ditors
and c o n tingent c red itors of
Pearl M a r ie Hamme r
Lil l ywhit e a nd p e r son s
who may b e o the rwise
i nterested in t he w il l
and /o r estate:
A petit ion has been f iled
by Ann Marie L illyw h ite
Soper in the S upe rior
Cour t o f O r a nge County
reques t ing that Ann M a rie
Li l lywhi t e So p e r be
app o i nte d as p e r s onal
repr ese nt a t ive to
a d minister the est a t e o f
P e arl M a r ie H amm er
Lillywhite, Cost a M e s a ,
CA (unde r the ln d e pe n ·
dent Administration o f
E s tates A ct). T he petitio n
is set fo r h earing m D e p t.
N o. 3 at 700 Civic Center
D riv e W est , Santa Ana,
C A 92701 on September 2,
1981 a t 9 :30 a .m .
IF Y O U OBJ E CT to the
gra n ting o f the petition,
y o u s hould e ith er a ppear
at the hearing a n d s tate
y o ur objectio n s o r file
writte n o b jec t io n s w it h the
court before the h e arin g .
Y our appearance m a y be
i n p e r son o r by y o u r
attorney
I F Y O U A RE A
C REDIT O R o r a
contingent c redito r o f the
d eceased , y o u mll5t fi le
y o ur c laim w ith t he c ourt
or presen t i t t o the
p ersonal r e presentative
appointe d by the court
within four months fr o m
the date of fir st issuan c e
of lette r s as pro v id e d In
Section 700 of the Prob ate
Code o f C alif o rnia. The
t im e for filing c laim s w ill 1'161111 t • . f Pull41111ta 0r-c ont o.ity Poot no e x p1 r e p rior to our
•1111 •. 11, ••. u. '"'' >42Ht m o nths from the date of
I the hearing n o ticed above. PUIUC NOTlCE YOU MAY E X A M I N E
----------the file kept by the c our t .
f'IC:TtTIOUI CUSINU.S I 11 you are Interes ted in the
T NAMI STa t 1MINT e s tate, y o u may f ile a
.... ~~-•no ,.,...., 1• dol"9 11us1-I request w ith th e c o u rt to
NORCO ASSOCIATES, 1301 0ow !r e c eive special notice o f
St., N_.i a .. c,,, c:. . .,..., t h e inve ntory of estate
1t•nd111 Euv'"' Trlbotet, 11 ass ets and of the petitions l'llflleve, tn.IM, CA. '2114 '
r 1111 11u.i11eu "conc1ve1ecr by • a ccount s a nd rep o r t s
11rn11ec1,,_r1,..,..,,1p. described In Sect io n 1200
Tl\ta ::;::·;:~:~ ,,.1111 111t of the California Prob ate
County ci.rto ol Or .... County on J Uiy Code.
a1. 1'111 Jay c. Munn1, Attorney
Publ''""' o-.,... eo.it 0.1~1~1: at Law, 1136 Serenade
•uo. •. 11, ••, u . , .. 1 MJMl Avenue, Wut Covln1, CA
---------91790; .... (213) 911-()123.
P u b lished O range Coast
D a lly Piiot, Auo. 17, 18, 2-4,
l'ICTITIOUS e USlllEH
NAME STATalltl ... T
19813686-81
Tiie 1011-no i-"°" 11 d0"'9 11v.i-1-------------
nen •• P'UllJC •TIE
CLC SERVICES, St• Uppe; l-------------Nl•POl"I Pin• Ori.,., N--1 a..ct1, C•lltornt•~
Cll,,.,lne LoulM Cottrell, Ut• Cir·
cle Wo. ~ hec.11, CAlll0rnla .,.,,
Tllh -nn~ '' <onduc'tH t y.., In· •l•ldu•I
C.lllef'IM C:t4 tr•tt
Tiits lllli.<Mnt Wft Iii.ti wtU. ""
Co..nty C:-ol 0r-. Colint't 6n Jut1 "· ... , .. ,~
Publltllef Of•"llll ONlll 0.lly Pllt4, '"'•"·a..,•, 11, 11 ... ,, nn•1
flrC'TltloUI eu1011a
MAMalTAHMaNT
TM '91'""1141 lil'<Mll Is l9tiflt Ml-,,.., ...
Pla$1MM0 H Ol&l~N$, It.IS
lntlM A-, Cotta Me ... c.1i... '1t11 """° S 0-lmew. 1U J 1r .. •n• ,. .. -. C.le MtM.. Cel!Mnlla ttNt
Tlllt IMIMll It c..-.c..-"' • Mo •l•lfU•I AweLO.i-Tlll1~ -111t111 .. t11 • Olwnl't (Mr'lr .. °' .... C*llltY ell Jvty
tJ..1•1. ,.,..,..
l'lltlltl'W Or#ltt Ceeet 0M+f ....
Jiii• .. """ 4, "· '" 1"1 ......
NO'TtCa TO CONT"ACTO"S
CALLING "011 alDS
Sthoot 0111,.ct COAST COM·
MUNI TY COLLEGE DISTRICT
81d Oeaclllne J-00 o'<lo<k p m o1
Ille 17111 dtV ol AllQ<ltl, 1 .. 1
Pleo ol Biel Receipt Office ot ltw
Purc11.,J119 A119nt , M1 Marl•n Ptrrlft,
Co .. 1 Community Coll-Olllrl<I,
1)10 A<MIM' Ave • Cost• -Ml. CA 'lltU
PrOl•<t ldentlll<•llon N•m•·
Or•noe Coast Coll--Envtr....,,,_.
te l Cetltt r Rt Roollnv Projacl, 810 • 1014
Pleet Pl•n1 •rt on lilt Office ol Pnn1ce1 F.c11111u Ptannln9, eo.11
Community (011•99 Olllrlct , UIO
Adam• Aw . T,.11., Fecltlly, CCKIA -w. C• '1tlill !1141 S~SI07
NOTICE IS l'IEREeY GIVEN !NI tllt __ ....., School Olu rkl o1
O••net County, CAlll-•. ectlnQ by •nd lllrovgh Ill Gov1rn1n9 eoerd,
hereln•rte r r efer f'ed t o .,
'OISTRICT, •tll recelYt up to. -
no1 •••• ,,,.,, ltw ~"'t"' llme, weled Did•"" tho •••rd of • cont.reel ro..-the I bo,,. l>'Ol«I
81Gs \NII be received Ill Ulol plea
ldlntlf1«1 •Do ... -lhall be --
•nd l)ul>ttcly rMd ·-al '"' aoo-\lt lad 11"" -P4K• TMre will lie no mpoall •"llllf'ld for
•e<ll wt of bid oocumenu to ov•••ni..
lllt return In good cone111i0n •lier llw
Dld -111ng0ate
E ech bid '""'' conform •nd be ru,>ontlve lo Ille cont rec I OO<umanl1.
Each bid lhell be ec.co<npanltd by
Ille -urlty reltrrld lo In 1111 contract ooc .. ,,..,.,u -bY .... lltt Of p,._.., tub<ontrtKIO..-l.
The DISTRICT rewrvn IM rlQlll to rejecl .,.,Y or •II blcl1 or 10 .,.,.,. •ny
lrreoul.,111•• or lntormallll .. In eny
bldl o< In lhe bidding,
Tiie DISTRICT ,,_, ol>telned from
'"' Dlroctor ol Ille o.t>er-t of In·
dUllrlel Reletlon1 Iha veneret """"''" Ing rate of oer dl•m W19'11 In 1,_
lot•llly "' wlll<h 11111 --h 10 ... Olrlo..-mtd for •ecll q .tt o< type of
..,,,,_,,_ -IO •1<ec1llt 1111 con-
lre<I. Tllew ratu are on flt• at u.. DISTRICT Office IO<elad et Pll"k et
Fecllltlft P1...,.1ng, Coe11 Comn11mlty
Gollaoe Olltrl<I, 1370 ..,._ A ........
CMle Mew, CA '161' COPIH may 1>1
oDt•lnacl on """""' A copy ol tMs.
rt111 tllall bl Po\t.O et ttw Jot> ille.
The ~-lftCI Kl\e<lult Of ... r diem ••Vt• 1, baWO -• -rlll"9 dar Of tltl\I Ill '-rt TM rate lo< llolldey •ncl .,.,...,,,,.. worll \hell be .i lem
llme •nd--lf
11 ..... II IM manNtor., upon U.. CON·
T II ACTOR 10 wl'lom Ille <onlroc 1 ,, •••r.a. -._, •"Y ... 11eon1ractor una.r him. 10 pay not 101 11\en tlw Mild ICl9<;1llecl ratet 10 all WOt1lmen
emplol"fd Illy llwm In "" uec11tlon ol IM<Ofllrect
No ~' ,..., wlllld,.w 1111 bid lor
• perioG ol lor1y.fl .. 10 1 IMyl •lttt
the ci.ttt sat to<,,,. _,nu o1 b1ct1.
A pey..-1 --• oertormW1C• bond will lie .._1...a prto< to .......
llon ol Ille conlrect Tht payment bond
11\•ll lie In ,,. lorm Ml forth In tM
contre.:1 dOcwnentt .
0o .. m l"9 Boerf
Ill No<men E. Welson S.Cre141ry,
8oel'CI Of T rusi..1
PubllW<I 0.91191 co .. 1 D•llY Piiot
Aug. II, II, 1'01 u-.,
~ . ' . "
Major l.Haue 11endlng•
AMa1t1(AM Lall.OU• ... °'"'"* W L ""t. 01 s.en1c •-<>••&encl Clllt-
Ke11 ... Clly
Tt~H
Min,.~
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Cf\lceoo 4, N•• York I
Qelrgjl U, MIMtlOI• J
K•-City S, T0<onlo J
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
Cubs 3. Dodgers 1
LOS ANGELES Cl<ICAGO
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Senior World Serie•
letOMy,1 ... 1 ........,, .. ......
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"'°"'DAY'S ••SULTS
.,, .... ts.MW_....... .. "' ...... I
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Oerln'l Ole,,__, C A~lrl 6.«I 4AO
0 •1 Fkki. Frefl 1a .. e11 JAO
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Bkent.....iel Ber
Tl""'. U.'3.
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s•COtto •ACIE. lSO yerO•
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4..10
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l ll"'"-h.t¥ Ila Arri,.. ,._ 11»
"-"'•t. OIMI
tt•T'M •AC•. t7'0yMft Am~w.N•l1Jt111ll11el '·" ,. lA ... , .. """" , .... ,, , .. , ..
l'a-Slr IHertl IA
Al ....... C.._., l.llelly, i...._ H#'d
lleM,0.0ltT411'\'.CM-..,14" .. ~· Tl-u.a.
U •JUtoCTA 0 ·11 .........
HVltnM "'"I· -•-Merry w...., tlldetr) 2•-• 1J-tl t .. c1e-...t1e G9 CTr-•I 4 • uo ..Jet-v S.Uy (PfllllM I •M
"'" ..... "'••""'-"'111¥, ..... Wllf Wllld, Mt 1¥ from HOim., Tutt to oa.1, IN
Mev•'10oll. Tlmt M 11.
U IXACYA CJ.II 1Nlcl '1k.M.
a IOHTM llAC•. «JO yordt
Mel'lef'll teJ.i ttre ... rl 10 «1
i u•-FNt.,...IW.,1111 $.40 4.00
•60 4to
UD
Ml eey, Nitro
...... ,.. T• ...... ,_,,
41M reteo. "9tM s.w1,
M•lllend, .. •l'•-i. rl-; JI '1
tl IJKll Sill ( l·W'2 Ml INkl UHM wllll
U WIMlllf 11< .. I• (ti•• llor"Mtl U Pie• , ••
conaolelltn oelel SU 20 wllll ttr wltv\1119
110.eU ,,..,, "°"") U 1'10 'I• '"•1<11
contoi.tlcNI pelo su.40 w1111 t21 •l11t11119
llcllth '""" "°'"'· -wralclll
NI MTM "AC•. t10 yerd\
T revel In SNw CCrc ... r I 1 40 • 00 J 00
GoodTlmtllt«>CPeullllel S10 >GO
Vl•lneAnne lAdelrl uo
AUoreceo. Awn N•tlw Aun. l•l•ncl 11.,..r, c ...... w.1ch Mtt fly, Hotme L.edr
Tl""' 0 JI, U •llACTA < .. 11 peld ... , JO
T•NTM ""ca. 400 Y••O•
J wU-Love lc.rdoztl
Sllew,_ HIQll t Peullrwl
My 1'1'9M Pa.t1 CMll<f\1111
uo u o 2 10 ,. u o
Alto ..... 1"9111 Hour. KllH W4111rw
Tlmt JO.OI.
U IUCTA l •tl iMIO U.S JO.
Att..-.Ce •,427
Del Mar
MOffDAY'l ll•SVLTI
u o
,,. ...... , ......... _ .... ,
-1•n ••c•. • tutltfttl WlldendS-tCMr:Ce,,Ofll 400 J.00 UO
Rine o1 Erin (Velctuuel•I 4 60 4 oo
Solle G-IOtell IJ.lO
Alto re<eo: l.efllefl, Liiiie "-·· 5"t't A T•N . ._..,, eao.,,. Ml" Wfllle Sfne<I, Fly
I ne H 1911 Eevie Tlmt 1 114/S
HCIOND "ACE.•'"''-' Peu 1ne e.11 CLlplleml S4 .o u.eo 11.00
1mmentfll luue I0.1ellout se'f'tll •.oo U O
AOMWelk IWllll-1 5.AO
At•o receel · Mr Or••m , B wb -bu !Cid, 810e0ool\, Eml>ermellc, O~
Nuty, 5lor\I of Sc ..... wer Houto, ~
Grll1, Ac-Ill"
Tlmt· I lll/'l.
U DAILY DOUeLE IH I !Mid \11' «I.
TMtaD •ACL t 1/11 rl\lle1
Over -U-(McC•rrOfll l.M •JO J.tO
c-~ •~,.,_,.,, t .60 s.•
ProvlclMIUel C~I 5.00
AIM! rec.cl; 8'9 Oenl>l1, Perin.rs lt1 T ...
••· a.ts BMu; Trondroy Tlmt. 1.~JIS,
U EICACTA Cl-11 pekl SlOt JO
,.OUllTM "ACE.• 1...-1on0
J•tld•Y• IMcCMronl S 40 4.to 4AO
Sonne1 Aolo IVe-..,.lel 1.IO 1.111
SMllOIY Ledy C Lipf\ernl '-"
AIM! ra.o Bit o1 llffu, N°'111erty G-,
Out OHtlny, Partly'• Fo-111ne, Wiid Fire,
Buntl" Pllll. Somel,,ln99Hy, Creme Ot
CH•I• Tlmt; 1 IJ.O.
""H •ACE.• lurlono•
8 tue T tf'llPl,etlon I Orteo<i I I 40 'l «> 4.ot
Ledy ~i.1a cw1 .. 1enc11 too LOO
Mfr«WIOuS K•lo C""91el 1 40
AIMI fk..S Vkkle'I Gel, P-Worft,
J•mOOC, Come On Lll<ky, Fly A Jenny.
Tl""' I; IO l /'l.
lJ EXACTA ().1J peld $115 SO
SIXTH ••ct:.°"' mile. (OflVlnclngty (McH•roue) ll .JO , •• Cl 1 AO
Celet1on9e (VelMY ... i.I t.20 UO
HOllCllO~(Oel-..S .. ye) UD
Alio reced. Prlv•te lllOOn\, Me)estlc
Prtl-. F•toulo<n OM, Tutcell ...........
Hak> RMtan, Sir Ivan, Hewk•tre
Tlmt I ll41S.
SEVENTM "ACE.• luoriongJ
ForluvollY 10.1-.. yel l to 2.60 UO
&•<k el T-CM<Cerronl J .M UO
P roudnl ... (~ktf'l l.00
Alto r«od· Siie's A S-. St. E'Ta119e.
Tlmt: 1:10.0. ts UU1CTA 1 .. 21 peid .. I.SO
tl l'IClt Sill C•t•l-4-41 !NICI "~.2111
wltll n1,.. wlM l"ll 110 .. • Cflw llor-1 P
P ick Sii c-ellofl peid \Sol 60 wllll .,. wln-
nll\g lkUl5 ltour llorWJI
alOMTM llACE. 0... mlle
l'lr~tAdv-•C~ll.trl 160 4.«I UO
Merry Sport C O.lllMuU.yel 10 JO UO
Skllllul Jo., IV•len1.,.l•I 4.40
Alto •«ed. Cucl O'Ot, 1111•1 F'orce, Buy
My Act, c:-.c-. Potl Roy
TIMt. I :ll l lS.
NINTM ltACE. I U. mllM Ofl 1"'1.
Pi.ne Le Monl CCM1..-111 • 1 40 1 a
0-L.onl COel-.er•I IOAO 1JIO
Tomoll\ Audi (~k.,I 4.IO
AIWI re<ed; Soft Merkel, PIH ll< F-
tu llc, Um•ll«•, Full Perment, Leo•
A uu le, Pl rat•. Made I el ne l•h•v•.
Ptodltloul, Gr•venhellUt
Tlmt: 1:!0.0.
'5 EICACTA ().11 pelCIS2U00 ""endlollc:• -1S,1to.
PVU MlltE
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Auguat 18, 1981 C3
Loe Al1tn1101 •tending• ,...__,......,,
.IOCJllvt ... , ....... t<•"'*"*" 0.ft!IY~ JeM~ , .... T_,,.
O•M YMlk N ll . .....,,,....,
Letty Ole,..1
K•M4'lfl C••'-JerMt I,.... 0tor91 ,,.,.,
TltAltta•a
m m •tt "'*,. .. SU tl W A Ml .. ,. ..
t u " w • .a A ". 4.U • • • »I ....
"' a. " ,. It~ M JD II ............
11-kll•-IG\
Cllerto\ 1'-"""I" e we-•
• Me"Witk" •wa.•11 Klf'rh o..-s...-· ... , .... " ............. IOMCooopot
W.tllh~ ....... J_
Ml t0t 1• M ,.. ., ..
IM JD ti 16
• ... ti 14
ltl ,. ,, " .. ,. .. " H I '1 l4 lll U2 UV U
t)Jl lJ ll , .. 10 ,. 14
C1n1~,1~en let )
ttflllflMll ......
fltot TellJCflo• def. VIJ•r Amrttrel, ,,.,
• 1. 0-l, Iv.., L-dtl SlllOMo 0 110 ... ln, ~1 ... , .....
Mf1e19t1'1 .. 1
Lonol Ott TaltJc-. ol. 6-J I ~ wlna in.oao T••tt<11er si•.OOOI .,...,...,.,,..,
ll•u• "•m•••• F'orol T •Yt•n -,,_ Mc Enrot ~ Fteml119, , ... 1-4, µ
ATP tournement
let Me-. Otllel ,.lnt.-S ......
H•rolcl ~ 0.1. Pel l>uPre, •1. :H.
• J, A-\11 Krl"'-0.1 Per Hjenqlitfl,
I l. o->. Auuell si._ -OomlnlQue B-1, >-4, .. ,. 6-J, Ilk • f'-1 0.1 ..... r
F e'91, ..... U , .. ,. J°"n Awtllll -· 11.evltl Ktrl\I, I J, 0-1, Miile Celllll Gel JOfll\ ,, ... _eld ...... 1-4. Ray Moor• ..... ..,,
A•l1, 1 •· • l , M••oll Fr••m•n Oef
!f\onooooel ~•'1, 1-4, ..... N-• Odl-
0.I Nk• S.vl•no, 1•, M , Je,.._ ,._..,
O•t J.tf eor-1e11., k ... ,, ~. Sten Smltll
0.1. P-•I PortH, •> ... J, 111• NHtete CIOI 8reO Or-. o l ... ,. Tlli.rry Twlall\fd9f
Aolet>d Slecll.,, 6-1, HI, 0.l•ult
Men's 1ourn1men1 ,., ....... , "''"'"_...,..., Clllj) Hooper Clef Joltn Ale•-•, M , M ;
Jonn 0.vld Cltl Anene! AmrltreJ, 1•. ••. JOM• Heye> dtf J-llon Smit!\, J-4 ...... 1-4
Women'• CenedJ1n Open
(HT---1
"'lntltWlldSIAelet
BettlN Bunvo Otl Cet"y h nvl•r, 0.1,0.1,
Regine Me"lllov• oet. sit.ron Wei.,,, k ,
• 4, .... le«y """Deni -C••ol llert•...S. O.J, O.l Ill-1-1 del AllOfl• Wei.._,
• l , 1• 0.... "-Lff dtl NIN 81•1\11. M ,
• l Gl..,I• C.Ole1 clef Olel\nt l'romllOl\1, t-J,
1 .... ,, Aowlyn F•l•Wfth °'' -tone
8••<•-. 1•, .. ,
U.S. amateur championship
Qloellfyl ... 11 ......
l•l~Hllb C-ry Clwll, Clll•I
10 Oevlel Be•lly ILegune Hlllll, 71-11;
&rlen Lll\llley Cf"oul\l•l11 V•ll•rl." 7>,
143 Mer'll Blekely CTemplo CllYI •... 14,
Ben S..... CRlwtnodel, n .11
I~ .lofvl BIKklt CCO!ll• Mewl, 1Hl;
Biii Viele CHe,...I), '1·11
10 A_., Duke CGl..-r •I, 1111 144 JOfln on.no 1 L.o• •-••~1. 10-1•
illlletl\e lo '" Mic II••• Mii•• CCv1>re.ll, 13 ll.
, .. '-Mk..,~, c.,.1
154 Ro«iert C..11 (HeWl>Ort 8eec111, n n
Wor1d Cup rosters
Cit ·-· S.,.C. 4-tl UNITED STATIS -.. l~I L ... l\, Unlwtr>lly 01 HouslOfl;
200-·Jeft PNlllPJ. un1 ... n11v of re,,,.._,
400-<llff wu.-,, 0 c ......... tlOMI Treo
Club, IOO -J•me' Aobln1on, , ,.,.., Clly Al,,letlc C.IUI>; ISOO SyOl\Of Meree,
v111.,,..,a Unhrer .. fy, StetP49<,,.__..,
Merlll. Alllltllu WHI, ,_ Melt C•ll·
lrowltt, -'l'or1<;'tG,OC»-Alller1o SelMM,
Ul\lvenlly of Oreoon. llO·lluro1n -Gr99
Fo•ltf', 51\eklet Tr.cl< Club, 400-llUrdlft.-
EOwln -· l.Aeune Hiii\ 400.r•l•Y M•I L•llenr. Unlvenlly ol
Geore••. Stan••• Floyd, Ul\lverJllY ot
How1lon. J•rnn S•nloro, Unlven lty of
Sout,,er11 Celltornoa, C.erl l owh. J•fl
Pll(lll .. , 160CH'oley -Weller M<C.oy, Florldt
Stei. Unl-1ity, Wiiiie Smttll, Alllletl< Al·
tic Tr.cit CIVI>, Tony O.ro.n. Plllledtlpfll•
PloneerClul>; Clift Wiiey, EOwll\ -· Hltll Jwmp-Trk• Peecoc•, M.0.110
J1111lor Cell-. Pol• •awll 11111, Olton.
P.c:ltk C.0.11 Chlb, LonQ l""'P. Cerl Lewis,
Tripi• Jump-Wiiiie Benk1, Allll•llU Wes1,
Sf\Ot PIA-0.w L•ul, Atlll•ll<> w ... 1; DI• cul Jolln Powell, Al,,lellt Alli<; H_,...,
t"'-Ol\09 -~9M·•· "•1111.id, (;tlllf • J•vell11 ••K• lltniwdy, ""Ill< C:..•t
Clllla. ·-,.. wl'A At,,f.rlll, M•d•llU Tr.c:•
(I_,.; -ot•lfA Atlll«O, .00-0.-........ "'°'*'" Tr•O (Ne, -.._, .... ~ Or .. ~~ Tr•d• Ckllt. I._
JM Mitl'lll, ,..,. G .... Atflkik ....... o ... ; .. .,.... W.... Allli.lk • W..,
10I 1111,.IH Sl•P"•nle Hlt llltWtf, Le\
,.,.._. H<nllrl• TnKIL Chill, _._....
S.ndr• ~. i..t 11,...1., Hit.Wit. T••k
(llllt;
400.rtl•Y All'-9 8rt w11, IMILI" Tr••
Chill; Je•M11• llollllen. VCLA, l'I~•
O tlflllll, VCLA 8•nlte l'IU9tre 10 ,
U11l....Wty flf T--· •w lyn A......,o, , .. , ... ,. LOffle ,.., •• , At•M• Tr•IL
CIU4t, AtllW lfl'lletten, UCl.A' 0.Men H ... M'f; __. .... ~tit. 0.lhe We11111,
Unl#t'M1y ef T-t-, LH NI Wetren,
U11l~llty ef Qnoefl,
Hit!' ~,..,.. 5-K .. , L°' A .......
Netwl• Tr.a Ct..ci, t.one l""'P -JWI Att-
fetWll, l.M N!telet N•l11t lle T••O Gl\111,
$Atl put. Oet\IM WllOcl. l(no .. 111. Trecll.
Clull; OIJC.,. L••ll• 011111 Atl1011e $1ele
Unl...,...KotJ J•.,..tln K•rtn $.,;11111 Gel Poly
i LO
au"o"• -100 "lllfl Welh, er1telft, , .. Alltll
Wellt, &r .... 11, *" H.,,INll WeO.t Wet1 G••""•"•· IOO '91>••11•n Coe, lrlt•l11, UGI>· SW... ()¥ett, &tllelll, )l•IM«MM
,...,_._ ~Ml11U.1, Ptl..cl, toOO E-
C09lllt11, I rt16f>CI, 10,000 MertU V•llllo,
Flnlend, 110 111irOI•• h an Jullw•.
C,.CllOalovekl•; 400 llutOI.. Ha,.ICI
5<11Mldl. WHI 0.t"*'f
400 ••••• l(ru1101 Zwolln•kl, Potenf. z-uu-rlltl, Polencl, Leuell Dunk.a,
Polllnd, ~rlen Woronl,., Poltllf, tM•INM
Plf\ff, "'""'· All.., Wall•, lrllell\, l'llO
••••• Hertmwt woe.er, w .. 1 G••....,.Y. Oevkl .-1na, lrlt.lft, Alfo11t l ryelt_,.,
lelth~m. Erl< Jol/Oe, Sw .. I\. K-. GI·
h l>ert . HollellO. H•r•ld :kllmlOt, w .. 1 c;.,,.,..,.,.,
HIQll JMMl>-<Mrd N-1:w .. 1 c;.,,,_y,
Pole V11111t ·JI•" Ml<htl IHllot, l'r•nc•.
LOllO J-U NIO Sielme, Huno .... Tri
pie fume> &el• a.11 .. 1. H""9f•Y, "'°' pw1 -11•11 llek llenl»cll, w .. 1 G•rm41111, Oltc...-
lmrlcll ~" CH <llo•lova-.e. H...,,...,
lllrow tt.•l·H•M Alevm, WH I c;.,,._.
JnOlll\ ,....,.II 51_.,..,,, Fl"•-
Rn.r•H Joa• Lull Gol\l•IH, Sc>ell\.
O•vlO -crelt. l rlteln -IC» u.-Hev•-. S-n. JOl>.J.,mll•
Kr •1«1111llove, Cl.Kllollo••"•. 400 J¥mll•
Kr•locll•llov•. Cu c11011ov•kl•, 100
lol•nt• J-Ma, Po•-. l iCJI>. Ann 1 .... 1,,
Po1eno, '.000 Mertel<• Putca. Aomenle,
100 llurdl.. L11<l11• 1.A"9t't. Polend, 4CJO
"wrellft ~· 8•eu .,., POlend
400 ••••r Kellly Sm•ll•-· l rlt•ll\,
Wend\' HO'(te, l rlleln, llewr .. y GodlMtd.
lrttelfl, SlllrMy Tllomft, 8t1teln, J etml ..
Kr•tocllvtlo••. C.u c,,o\lovO I• l.11\da
H•tluno, Sw•d•"· 1600 rela y Jarmtle
l(r •10<"•llov•, C.ucllo•lo•ekl•. G•tor
I WllMMW\, WH1 0.rm..,y Jocolyl\ Hort•
Smit"· l rllell\, V•rone E IO•r, &rltell\,
Mlcllell• Scull, Broteln, Cle\141• St~r.
Wtst Get'"*ly.
Ml9ll ju m1> Ulrlk• Meylarlll, w .. 1
O.rrn.,,y, Lone fumo """• Wloo.rctyk, Poleno, 5'lot pwl El.,.• ,lbt .... rove.
ClH,,...ov•kle, Ol1<u1 M•rla P.lkove,
Bulta•I•, J••tlln Ar>toenele T-•ov•.
I UltMI•
"-Fite Lovin. Aom•,.I•
Deep ••• fishing
N•WPO"T IArt•1 Le•4ll•t l -tOS
e1191en IM DOfll'°· 4S be•t. 111 me<k-. >
•oO fltll, 21.,.1ao.i.11, CDeftY°t ~J -
106 ... " .,. DOfllto, ll .-Nu, "
c•llco "*''· 3 .,.uowtall, ui roo cod. * rn•Oer•I
DANA WMA• .. -117 -'-" 124 !NIU,
120 DOflll.o, I Y•llowtell, 4 roO 11\h, ll1
me<k...C
SAN Dl•OO IMAM L••I ... , ,.,, ... ,.
me•'•• ....... a.-1 -•tO •"91•o 0
OOlllf\ll'I, 1.-.,.1-.11, lJ be"tcu0a, 1,1'1
-.110, I i..u. 1 -•i. we ben
SAM SIMEOM -110 •"Olef'> 4.J 11119 coo,
11' lleU, .,. rock Cod, Il l r.O --Cod, IO "'·-MOllltO IAY IVlrw'• L• .. 11111 n
•"91er1' I llftv cod, 101 r1HI •ocll. coo, UI
beu, 100 rock cOcl.
AVILA IAY I,._, left Llllt) -.. •"O""'' " ,.a roo coc1. Jed "Uo-l>etl. 41' Mue beu, 211"9 coo, 1• meckerel
SANTA IA•IAllA -t1 e119ler1 10t
<•llco INn. » bo11ito, JI roO llWI, lS.
m•d...C
V•NTUllA 110 •nei." 110 rocll. coo. 11
c-cod, 4 llf\O cod, JOS <•lko c.eu. JQO .-
beu, .u roe• 11111, s llall!IVI, s bllrrecuoe, 11
l>OnltO, 11!0 rne<U rcl
I.ONG IEACM Clotme•I l'lert 4t
englo,.. 405 roo 11'11, JJ m•<ktrtl, •Wind
b•u . (OIMeft'• -•rtl 17 englen . s
blu.tln """· 3 rellowt•ll, 10 berrec:ude, Ill
bOtl•IO, ?:M celko boll"· 1 Jen<! beH. J~ rock .....
OAN4 WMA"I' -111 _ .. " 114 l>eu ,
110 bonito. I yellowt•ll. 6 tock 11.,,, Jn
m eck.,et
OCEANSIDE 10 •noler• 1" -•to ••
Ull<O """· ,, ..,.., !NIU , l rock ""'· "• m•<k...C
Monday's transactions
IASllALL
.u.riUll u..-
0 ETAOI T TIGERS -Plec:oo Cl\amp
S11mmt'1, outti.ldltr, on Ille ls-4ay dlMblod
PVIUC MO'OCE You t'lfHld Yoo ~
lltl Cellef ~ Metly Ce•llllo, ~•lelltr llll•d
..... .._. ,,..,,. I VelltOllll• OI ..... """',... ... "_,...... . -.~w ....
LOS 41o101LU 1)0 0011-. -ttl~H o.,.., '-• oec...-lleM"'9fl,.,. VIit 1..._r
,....,._. ll•t C•llod _,,. .._.,.. leJC. ..c:-
MWMefl. ,,.,.,. ~ MlOfllo ...... TtUI
Le ... st 1.°'-1 .. (A"OINALS A_ .. U\lt
Ctm ..... loll .. INlr lell.O .... r 1//1 Ille ,..,.,.
llOfl 111e1 , .... 1"9<11-le l St.Mllwfl\
•AllCITIALL
.....-.. .. .i..tMH At-i.llH
K"NSAI CITY KINGS f.ltll'ff Cllnlfll\ w_..,,_..4
,.OOT•ALL. H.etleMll'-11~
I AI.. TI MO"C COL TS Cul "on
For_, ............. .,,.,, 0.••lel J .. llMf\,
tel•IY. -K•flll .>oonllll\\, dtfe<1tl .. M<•
,.l.ac;elll A..U. 04•1 QoHtd, Of\ Ille lftf-••
Mt .. 11•1 Atll••t• KtnSlllOll, Ml .. y
CHICAGO 8EAll!. Obl•l ... o Slee• , ... , ............. , lrOf'n .... r.en ~
(l\eroet• In e lr.00 (OfldltlOflel Upo<\ (lie, .. ,
mell.ff\9 Ille& .. ,...,...., C111 Oe.,. .. o ...
Jo. fum1>1cn •nd W•ntlord G•I,..._ d<I
len t lve bee'' Jo• Noonan, Tim
•fllellt'NClll, Biiiy Mull In•. Br eo lllMCI eno
Cll••ll• Tey1or. •IO• •e<••v•"• ll•nlllv
e.111 ... lltf\I -N•I• Simo'°", •Vtllll"O t.•<'. ~ .. Pert1•r. oefel\atve llNI.....,, .-.d ........ _ ....... -t•r .
C.INCINNA fl IENGALS C111 OM<on
T 11rner. fW'\1\1 "II l>•O , Merk 0 (Oflntll
qu•rterbeell, -Tom Bltlley, pleU llk ll.,
OETllOIT LIONS C.ut 0••1• $4"""°"'
•"4 Eddie COit, 11,.l»<k•"· Bruce 111..., .. ,
tul\l\ll\g b•t k Don H•rOy, ollentlv•
llnem.w1, -0 .. ld M•rtlt1, clefenll•e be<ll GlllEEN 8AY PACKERS Cul Jim
Gueno end l•I•" Ceorat, hneM<k•"· ScoU
P•rrr el\ll HOtece PH k•n• . .,.,..,,,,.. ll«k•,
Mike Melleuto, ctu•r1ubec,k Steve (Nm
ller1, t.kle, Kii LetllrOC>. 0tf1111lw lec~te
8ol>l>y 11.1...-11 wloe •K••ver encl ''°' '-'·°''"'" .. -KANSAS CITY C.HIEFS S1~ Je<ll
Auon.v. ceni•r. to two 0t-. year <otttr•C1' Cut W•'(ftt W•\hlnQIOn, guerd, w.,,.. Al\
O•r.on, ptecakltku . Ed B••••v, llnebec...,,
,.,,, lo._., wifely C.•r•ld S<Otl lecktt,
•M Mille Solomon, Q.,.r1,.rlwlck
MIAMI DOLPHINS C"ut Ste•c Fultom
119111 -· Jerro<d M<AH, wlelt reul•.,.
N•l• ....,.,..,'°" •"Cl 8111 Se:rcey otftit'KJ11e
t•cktet, •nd Mi~e M urony •no Pevf
PhHO•t.k.I. '•"•I>•< 1ter1 Pl•<•d 0.1 .. 1., w1111.,...., rurv>1ne oec ~.on IM r•wr...-10 "°' •IPD"I 11•1 MINNESOT• Vll'INC.S Cul l(otn
Miiiar -Aon M<C..11 woO. reotvtr\, (9"
ti•rrl,, runnlnv bMt.. Bn•n Wllti•m' ttgtll
encl, Mll<e o .. u o, pte<elaotk<tr. Boll f'•rr•,
querlerbecla. R1c1<y RobonsOf\, dolet1•lve
l•tkle, M.r<u• Fuitw,, torrwrb9<k ~
L•rrv er ... ,'""'' H[W ENGLAND PATfUOTS PleceO
A Uan Ct•r1l •nd A~" V1lleta runnirtQ bet•\, •M Gery WrtQlll, .. .,.. '"" on .,,. ll\jUl'9d
r•wrve ittl Pl.c:ed Sltvt S<P'tl"41tr o•
te ntl v-t 9 u•rd •nd 8•rry ftu•ott
tlneO.C.ktr on ltw tf't•rvt d1d not 'tt"PO''
"'' HEW YORK JET'> Cut 800 Wlnllol, d<'-
••n>i .. le<klt, BobOy ll•tt~. Homtt Jono
""" T<MI 8lo<kw111, •u,,,.,•no be<.11\, llovo
Jonts, wld9 rfl(.ll'Yttr , Wti ._.ut.r1, t•nh1r.
Mike Mehllt llgf\I en<I, Mil<t B•-•r>Qlon
tlntibM:l•tr, ~'" Streett~,. •nO Carl°" Ht>n
a et\Of\ o.fen\1¥e ba<llt Alan 81•MNn
t•<kM, ...0 O.nny ~''· -<hN1'1erbM:k Pr.c..eo M1r1on 8•rber runn•f'\9 ~· on ow injur.d ,.,.,._ h\I
ST LOUIS CAADtN•LS Cul Jtlt M<I"
lyr•, hrwbM ker Pie<~ Jo. Ad•mJ eftd Ron
Cooer. .,,.,.,,ve guero• al\CI Jim Jo.,,.,
Vtn<e Fe•t,.,\Of'\ .,., Oon LutJa\. wtdit' r•
cel¥tO, on the 1n1urero rHerv~ U\t
SAN DIEC.0 CHAlllC.ER~ Cut Rlt~ P•rlrl09t, .,.,.,,., , M411 Pelr,.lh oll_,._.
tac Ill•. J.ck Slt0f0t ••Orr rKttver, Whip
Welton, l1 r.eoac~er , Roi> PrttlOf\
quarlerbl-<~, •nd Rob Tr•vlor al'd Ttm
P•r1's. Off.,,, • .,. l1ne,,,.n PIM:ed JON"I H-f t•''°"· wl.c.tt rK.11v-e' on tM r~v...ctl6..
no1 r-1 ''" Cl\erl•• 0.J.,.nen, .,.,..,..., ••
l.c:tll•~ on thl rewrv• .. ~'f~K•Uy ~•toO•r form fj\I •nd Stevti WrHtm•n
""•Nc9'er. on fhf' 't'\•rve oun tootbaU
•ntury U1t
SAN FRANCISCO 44EAS Cul Don
Wooctt al\ll Roiy Jone•. runn•no b<o<k• A11 ..
OwtM . ••O-rft<e•vl'r. Ht'rb Wftll.m\ wfe IY. Freil Bo<k, pl•c•O.ICUr JemH Looney,
and l,iilrry 9•rker, l•M~CILl'r\. OuP,.w
Mar-II, Ot4.,.,..,. i.<kl•. •ncl 8111 .H._,
t•C-lt l'le<~ Pt\11 Frenc•• •ncl &111 Q•"O
runtung ~--~ f'tC Mf'HtnQ ••Ot 't<l'IV*"
l(en 8ung•rO•. l•C•I• and Ed Jod••.
llntb6<ktr 1 on •~ 1n1ur•O '~~rve lt11
Plecfd .Hen S...r•n. 14'<••• or\ Ille, • ...,,,..,
010 no4 '-1 '"' •n<I Ao Rr.oo.... <or nu 1Mlek, on llW r.s•,,,. rellr~ liJI
SEATTLE SE•HAW<S Cul Biii
GrtllO"'. dlth.•nJ•w ond "' Hunt•• eno Jim
Ston1, runn1no b•<•u terry A•n"41er llnt-r, end ROfl JONISOfl, wlelt rece4-
PltKod l,erry Brinson, running beo. Ofl llW
lnfu..O r-rw 11•1
TAMPA 8A'I" 6UCC.ANEEAS Cwt For
rt~1 ~.. Offl'f'\IYt' 06<.lil JOit. Mof'etl'IO
deten\lve ffMnwn •nd H•rb M •nft.ardt:
plec.-ock9r Ptec.o A•ndy C.rowct.r tecki.
M•rt. Cotnev, wt••• Tony S.muell, tlQIM
1no. •nd J.c.kl1 F'owt''· wtoe r«••".,., on IPtl lnJu,.ed re\ervt lut Plac.td We\
lloeens, Cltfenoltt tn<I, on lhll lt!fl <-
res.rw 11•1
WASHINGTON REDSKINS •cciu1rec1
Lu !.piw y, otfHl•I•• llnem•n, lram 11\1
O.lroll LloM IO< • condlhon•I l'G Oretl
CllOIC• CUI ~r11 *"<•r. O•llu Hl<IL,....n
•nd 1111 &efth , h,_be<ktr•, Ille Fot1• -
8000V Hernrnond rwnnlno 11«1<1 Je rry Hiii
al\cl ,,_ McO.nlel. '"'°" rt<O•vtf'> AICll
Dimler, dlrfttn\IW tackle, Terry Pltttt'\, tor
nerb•ck ; 8rl•n SP••lm •n end 5andro
v1111110. ple<ekl<U n -0••• Sml0tfll<y,
l>""t., Pieced N••• E'"'"• •M o. ""9fl0
W•ll•. Otten•lve etlOI, •llO Jeme• Stewert,
O.ltflJI,.. be<k, on llW ll\jur~ rewr ... 11•1
Pl.Ced R•y Waddy COtN.-0.0, on I,_ rt-
Mr~~lully unebl•le>o-~rlorm llll
COLI.EGE
•TLAN TIC co.-sT C.ONFEAENCE
l'l•rntd F'r..s S..•kal 1-olsor ot ... _..,
bell ottoc••I>
BllllOGEPOAT N•inecl BOC> B.,ont"
lillelll -•lbllll CM<ll
EAST TENNESSEE ST.-TE l'<•rnecl C
l>ouQIM Me•~ elf\lell< Olr•clor o"t<llve
Sep!. I.
PFEIFFER Nemed John Le ntz lleed
beJketbllll < .. <II
NOTICE TO C•EDITO•S
Of' IULIC TllANSPli•
NOTICE IS HEAE&Y Gii/EN lo 1ne
CreOllOtS Of LUAN I/AN TRAN,
l l'CllvlOu•lly, and TIET KIEM
CORPORATION. tr•Mleror\, wllow
ti111lne>J _,,,u I\ 97'1'2 Wntmlnlltt
4 v•l\ue , Gerdon C•o•• O•enge
(e11nty, Celllorl\1a Ill .. • Bwlk
frel\Slff ll .-it lo tw m-lo C.ALI
MAllKET, IN(.. lrfnJlt rff, wllOM bu•'""' -res• " ~n wu1m1 ... 1 .. Av•n"•· G•ro~n Grove Or•"G• County, C~lllort1I• The prOC>tr1Y lo be
lran1lerr•O h IO<•l•CI •I ,,.,
WHtmlnsler A...,,we, Gercten Gro,..,
0••1'199 County, C•lllornle, •M II not
tubJect to Uniform Commerclel c ooo ~CUOfl 611».
l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS
KAMI! STATl!MENT
Th• tollowlno oer\on' •r• do1nG
bus1neu .. s
REDWOOD HEIGHTS LTD NO.
1, )(II Forttt Avf'nU., L~QllN BH<ll,
C•11torn1a nut
SUPC•tOlt COUltT QI' TMa
STAT• QI' CAUl"OttMIA -011
TH• ~NTY 0-OltANO•
N9, A1'f7'1
0110.11 TO SHOW CAUH
l"Ott CMAMOa 01" NAM•
flCTtnous1us1N11u Is u "e" 1 o" co u,. T o,. MAM• STATIMRNT (AL l"O• N I A , COUNT 'I' DI'
T,,. IOltewCno Plf lOfll ••• 001119 0"ANO• .
butl.-s "' lft tM ~ .. "" ,.,..ketleft .. LAGUNA SOFTWARE I. NGUYEN, THI DIA,._ CM-of
01. YOO
ill<e14>r•-·• '"''°"'"' ... )(.,..,, NNec .. -r
770·5251 OP(N (VfSI W((M(HO\
RAMS
SEASON TICKETS
LiMited
Choice Seats
SKI SALE
•nd
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
Seid _,,y det<•lbed ltl "'"'"' o ell •lock eno Ir-encl 11\1 90od wlll
of 11\tl 11rottry ''°'' ...,,,lnen k"°""'
•• L...,. Ven Tr..,, 11\111•-lly atld Clc>-
1119 ~s 11 Tiet Klem C.oroor•toon
el\O toc•l•d et '"' Wulml""" Ave,..,., O<W'dtn Grow, Otenve C.°""
s.,..,,. lier1roeH. eenerel oenner,
301 Fore•I ••onu. Legune 8eec11, C•lllornta m}I
Judllh """ M<lnl\,. JOI Forni
A.venu• L•9un• 81•ch C•lifo,-me
l76SI
TrH~ bu11nen I\ tondu<.led by •
1tm11ed o-n,..nl'llp
R-HelgfllS Lid. NO. l
•II ml led per1ner"'IP Send•• H•r1MU,
c;.,..,.•I Panner
T "'' JLetemtnl w•5 Ille<! wilt\ 1"-
Co..nty Clerk ot Ot-Couftlf °"July
1•.·~· 111....S
PuC>h•htd Or~ Coell D•llY Pll~.
July 11. AllQ f , 11, II, 1 .. 1 l37Ht
ly, Celllwftl•. Tiie 8ulll. Sele Tten'9er PUil.iC MOJIC[ wlll llt ~_..,.,,.,.,..,on or •lloul 111e1 _____________ _
IOlll cMV of 5'tpleml>tr, ltll el • 00 AM Ill Cell Merti ... Inc .• .,., Wellmt111t•• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINClU
"··-· Get'oaf\ Grow, 01en91 Coun-NAM• STAT•M•NT ly, Catlforlll., So ,., •• •nown 10 "" Tt•o 10110•l"9 per.0111 •r• doln11 1 .... Du•lnen es lren'"retJ. •II -MU Nmes •• .., SOUTH COAST INVESTMENfS, edelr-utH llY .,.,..,.,°' to. Ille
111," '""a.JI PHI •rt Vltlnem )q19 Wuterly Pleu , Suite 101,
F OOCI CeflW •"° vi.tMM Merll.~I NtWP0'1 Bee<ll, Celllornl• flMO
Oetlcl: AllQldt 11, 1'1111 Petri< .. A -RW.iall V -.. J (.«IL.I MAAICET, INC Metnull Orlvt. Corone d el Mer,
IMKll TllOI Mini\ Call lot Ill• nt:is
Tr.,.,'°'" A-.t M. encl --0 frwl11, lllCMAllD O. OONALD •'11 Atller1011, LOll9 leecll, C.lllorl\le
•llf.USOCIAffl 90t1S
I Cit'._ wetl. lloneld F. •"" Linde O. S.lo, t441 S..tte 1• AllOtllU Drive, Gtenoel•, Celllornl•
Ott ... , QI__...,,... tt10t
p114111.-Otente CM ll Oallr Piiot, Tiiis bu1l,..u h ctno11<1to l>Y • A119 ti. 1•1 lltf>.11 Qtnetal pertfleral\lp PettleleA.~
r"'' SU'-llt wM 111 .. wltll 1119
Counly Clorto ol Or""' c..inty Oii J wty
h ,ltl1.
In IN Mell., of ... "-l<•llon "' JOHH PARZYCH, For Cllen .. 01
Ne""'
Tl\t .... keel., el JOHN PA" ZYCH '°' c,,_ ot ,.._ 11ev1ne -llaeo
In C.U'1. -It -lftt tram Mid
eppll< .. lon -JOHN PARZYCH lies
llllCI ., ...,itcetloft ~ne lhet Ill•
Nme llt CNflgH to SEAN THOMA$. N-, \Nnfore, fl la,,.,...., ••NO
el\CI dl,_..O, -•II..,_ 1Mtf'"1•
ed In MMI metier do-·...._ \1111
C011r1 111 ~ J., lllt 16 .. ...,
of ~·· Itel et tt:• e·ci.tt A.M., el Mid d9y to ...... ~ ....., tuell ...,.k.etlon for c ....... 91 ,.._
IMWld "" lie tr fteO.
" •• ""1111<" ........... ~· .. lllh Or .. To SNw C-.. Ot .,_..,..._
II\ Ille OltANO E COAST DAILY
PILOT, e ll•wspep., ot .. n•r•I
clrclllltlon, prlmN If\ Mid~'¥ ... ..... one. .... ..... ,... ._ lllC·
uulw WMlll prtor to 11\1 NY el Mid
Miring. OMM tllls >nl IW't Of AveWI, ltll.
RONA&.O H ... llENNllt
........... 1111 ~-e-1
TaAC:V '°"OON TMI LAWCH'IJKI .... °"""'A-C.-. ....... CA ti ..
l>t*f .... Or .. CMtt Delly ~Ci.c
Alll, A, II. II. ts, 1'11 a.ti.t
CONSULTING, tOO• Cetell11e SI., N•-
LMUM 8'•11, ee. nu1
w1111-H. WlllH, 100. CatellM
s1 .. ......,._ a..t11, ee. ms1
~ ...... ~ .... --. A·l-OaDllt TO SHOW CAUSl
~CHANGE Of' MAME
NGUYIH, THI OIA l\el 111.0 e pell
llOfl In llW (OUr1 IO< •n oreltr e llowtne
279'1 lAK( fl()Ctf\I ()11111
~II 111 o I
MUC Mlltl 213463-1101 lr¥1nt,C..'11U
Tiiis ""51,..u h t tnclvcl.O l>y • petitioner (O <,..._ ,.r Mme ltom --------------
-···~p. WICll-H. WlllH
Tiiis "91-' w" Ille.I with Ille c-ty Oen el Or-c-ty on Jul,
JI, 1 .. t.
""''" P\llllltlltd Or .... CO.ti Delly Piiot
""'· 4, 11, "· u. .... ,.,...,
l"ICTITIOUI IUSttt•U
HAM• STAT•M•NT
Tiie followl"t oertona ere dOll\9
b<ISl"9Mft:
PCM REALTY I. MANAGEMENT,
llOt Dow Sttwl, Suite JJO, N-Porf.
IHCll, CA tu60.
PAOl'ESSIONAL COMMUHl t'I'
MAHM>IEMl!NT, INC,. • C.llfornle
or-etlOfl. t IOI Dove Slf'MI, Sull•
UO, N-1 .. .acll, CA t2t!O.
Tlllt .,.,.._, •• cenducMd br • CW•
-•tMlft. ~IC--lly
~-m.lftC
Jeftf'ey I . Ola.n.
~ Tlllt ... .,......, WM flled with t1W
e111111y Cltfk of Ot•noe C:011nty on 1
NGUYEN, THI OIA to Olen• m•I
nouy.,.11oeng.
It I• htNllY orelt•ecl 11\el •II ,.,_,.
lroleretted In II• m•tt•r etorewld •P. SNt•• _. l"I' tou'1 In O.per1fl\elll No. J e \ 'IOO CM< Cel'ter Drive VllHI,
Sent• AN, Celltorl\le, on Sept. 1',
'"'· e4 IO:XI O'd O<ll e.m., encl 111111 •ncl lN re WW U UM , It •ny 11\oy
M•t, WllV .. Id pellllon for <"enot of
,..me \/O>lcl llOI De gr.,.lecl
11 II ""1 ..... or~.O ltlet e <Ol>Y OI
lhlt orelltr to -UUM l>e pulltllMCI II\ 11\1 0.lly l'llot, • ,..Wtl)<llltt of
oeMral drcuCetlcNI, publltheel In tlll•
t CMlnlV Ill i.eil onc.e • -" tor lowr con-1111 .. _ .... prfOr to tllo .,., of
.. 10-1119.
OATEOA119V111, 1 .. 1.
ltOflelcl H p,.,,,,.,
.JUO!ltOl IM S.-lor COUtl
NOUY•M, THI DIA
ttttL.,.....p
..... AN. C.A""' Publl.,,.. Or.,..( .. ,, Deity Pll9l
/lt.119, ti, I .. U , ~. I, ttl1 • *WI
Alll·•· ,.,. __ _. __________ _
&L.L.I" AND .. LATT, ......... w. ._,..,._......,, .... m .......,....,a,..
PM'*
""9lttMe 0r ... ceetC o.ity .. , .....
A111• 11. tt. n ....... '· 1•1 ,...._1
WP•1t101t cov•T OFCALlflOltMIA
COUNTY 01' OltANO•
CAS• NUMl•ll A1"742
OltHlt TO SHOW CAVS•
..ott CMAN9E 0" NAM•
IAslc for S..'ftdoy>
•• , .. ....., .... ""'k •tlM "'
PAUL. O. WOOl.011100• .... a.. c===========i efM-.
PAUL CMREN WOOLDRIDGE -
111.0 e petitlOll Ill IN1 COllrt lot .., Of· --------------
Cler ellOWll\Q 119tlllorwr to C~ 111•1· FICTITIOUS 8USINIS$
lier 11el'lle trol'll PAUL OAltEN NAMESTATl!MENT
WOOLORIOOI to "AUL OAlllN Tiie IOll-lflt .,.,..,., ere dolllO
YOi>NG. buelneu et.
II ii_..., ., ...... -•II ,...._ ltt WHI Wlll<Jn Aportmenb , IJt
1111•""'*' Ill "" matter ·•-kl • WHI Wll-. °'-· C.lllOfl\(e peer ........ 1:1111 <-1 If\ °"*1menl M•ry ~' Mo.,.r, t04 E. Balboe .... I .. 100 CM< ~ ~lw W... l lvel., 8altloe, Celllornl• tt .. t
S.nl• ll#le, CellfWfll•, tll ..,lt"'"r t, Nor...,,. e. Moyer, t04 E Belboe ""· .. '°'JD •'<kKk ........... """ ........ ..,,.. Celflottlle tltel Mid -· ...... uww, H .. , ,,..., Tiiis MlneM I• cendwclH bY ... II\
lleve, ""'Y ..w petftMfl .., CMftlll .. dM lllu•I. _ .......... lie......... MMyl,AWlt MOye•
II la......,°'*"" .... • U9'r flf Thia tleM!Nflt .., .. 111.0 wltll Ille
Utlt orlllilt tD ..... <-lie fl\lllll-Cow.lllY Clor\ flf Or._ C-IY Of\ July ... "" or.. c..tl O.lly ,.,..... • l•. "" new.__, Of ........ , ctrculeU..,,
jMlll .... lfl ..... _.., ....... -·. weft IW ,_ ~lw ..it.I liH10I'
te tf\I -.V flf MIO""'"'-'
0-Jutya. "''· "°"'ALO H. "" •H H •" .i-..•• ~-c.rt ,.....,..,.. or .... e-tt o.11" ""'" A .... ~. n, " as, ,.. ,.., ..
.. , .. .,
Publll!Md Clre(llt CMSI Delly ,.llot,
July 21, AUO. 4, 1', II, ltl1 ail H I
I
Swu Than., Aapst 20
1' I ' I •• T> ~ I
i~·
~L
Orenft -hlltr1on
•ewpor1 Buch C•rrlfot
Pat Boone, sitting in first class section of fully loaded DC-JO.
waits out delay at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. The departure de·
lay. which kept the plane idling on the ta.nway for over 6Q
minutes. was blamed by the plane's captain on the air con·
trailers' strike.
Heroine due
medal at last
Donna Slack had about
givea up, but on Sept. 11, the
20-year-old Oakland (Mich.)
Community College
sophomore finally will get
the 1976 Young American
Medal for Bravery from
President Reagan that she
was promised three years
ago. ·
"l didn't mind at all that it
was late," said the West
Bloomfield woman who five
years ago risked her lire to
save three boys from a
tornado, which leveled a
house where she was babysit-
ting.
In 1978, she received a let·
ter from Attorney General
Grtrfln Bell telling her she
was chosen for the award.
The ceremony was delayed
because of scheduling dif·
ficulties at the White House.
according to letters Ms.
Slack received since then.
Attorney General George
Deukmejlan plans to formal·
ly announce his candidacy
for the GOP gubernatorial
nomination in a JO-minute
statewide prime -lime
television commercial Sept.
17.
Oakland Mayor Lionel
Wilson will lead a seven·
member delegation to the
People's Republic or China lo
formally establish sister city
ties with the Port or Dalian.
Wilson and the other mem·
bers of the delegation will
visit Peking , Dalian.
Shanghai and Guanzhou dur·
ing the Sept. 15·25 trip.
A city official won 't be de·
nied in his effort to give
Johnny Cash a token of the
city's appreciation for the
country music singer's new
song, "Chattanooga City
Limit Sign."
Paul Clark, Chattanooga's
public works commissioner.
was prevented from making
the presentation when the air
traffic controllers' strike
stalled Cash in Atlantcl.
New plans call for Clark to
meet Cash onstage during a
concert the night of Aug. 27
at the Grand Ole Opry house
in Nashville.
Clark plans to give the
s inger a genuine Chat·
tanooga city limits sign and a
sketch or Cash. encased in
plastic. that recently ap·
peared in The Chattanooga
Times. Clark said the metaJ
sign bears writing on its back
that says, "Thanks. Johnny
We love you. The city of
Chattanooga, 1981."
After hla friend .Jolla Lea·
aoa was alaln, 1ln1•r·
1onawrlter Harry Nll11oa
beaan or11nldn1 an anti·
handrun campat1n.
Now 1upporters Include
such Hollywood celebrlUea
as Geor1e Se•al, Carol
Burne«, Goldie Hawa, Gene
Wiider, Ed Asner, .Jean
Stapleton, Elllot Gould
Cbrt1topher Reeve, Nilsson
says.
"You see, I get nervous
when they shoot piano
pluyers." Nilsson said ln an
Interview. "So I decided to
do something."
• That something turned lnto
a march on W ashlngton the
last week of October, said the
4l·year-old musician, whose
hits have included
"Everybody's Tulkin' " and
"Me and My Arrow." The
event will be called March to
End Handgun Violence.
Wilbur Mills . former
Democratic congressman
I rom Arkansas. was featured
speaker at refo rmed
alcoholics picnic over the
weekend in Emmitsburg .
Md M1Us. who says he 1s a
.. grateful alcoholic.. became
embroiled m controversy
when he invol ved himself
with a Washmoton D.C stnp·
per. Fanne FoI . 1n the
mid-1970s.
Floridians flee 'Dennis'
Tropical storm dumps 22 inches of rain in 24 hours
Coastal forecast
Nl9'1\ -,,_,,.119 I-<-. 11ut
•Ullll'f' ~'I' •"-moon.
Co•"•' low U to111111t, 75 lllt/I
W...,.....y.Watar11
I nlalld low 45 101119111, n 111911
w~.
El-,., 119111 varlalll• wind•
tllrou111 tonlolll ••<•Pl wut to
.out"-St 10 to 1e knots W.-..S.Y
ofte,_. One-to Moot '°"tltwestor·
ly ,,...II, Nlolll end mor11ln9 low
<'*'°' wttfl -1lol <IMrl119 Wed,.....
cloyo-noon.
U.S. summary
Troplul •lorm Oenlll• stollod lft S..111 f'ICN'lei. ...., ......., ,_,.. , .....
n 1"°'91 ol r91n In 14 llou"· <eu•lfto wlclespreocl lloocllnt 011<1 forclno
mony ,..._,, to 11 .. by bMI today
In low·lylno communlllH nou
Mlotnl. 111 Mrtr.m ,,_.Ina, , .. ..,...,,, -.
p11mplftt out buement•, 11111119
wos...O·out roacl• encl repo lrlnt
brOll9ft • ..,... •'l'tlctm• _., after a
12·'-' rolnstorm ceuMcl wlclfl.,.._.,
fl-11\1. At 1e .. 1.i fomllles .-.oc .....
eel INlr hom9I In CorlbOu Oii #loftcl..,
oner neotly 7 Inc"" ol rol11 tell.
Meonwlllle, •llow•,. •lld 111u11·
Oerttorrns ttre1c11tc1 from CO.Orel•
•lld 5outll Coro!IN ocrou IN low.r
MIHlMWi Rlw< v•lley to New,,,_. ••
!co oN toUt'-tl TtUl.
Rolft -,__ owr IN t-rel
RCKk' ~M ond ....W"' portl
of tllt toUtll -<•ntrol p1.-u1. A
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We'Te Listening •••
What do you like about the Dally PUot?
What don't you llke? Call-the number below and
your message wlU be recorded, transcribed and
dellvertd to the appropriate editor.
Th same 2A·hour answerlna service may
be used to rbcord letters to the editor on any
1 topic. Mailbox contributors must lnclude tbeJr
name and telephone number for vertficaUon. No
I. clrcul1Uon calls. please. •
' Tell u1 what's on your mind.
'
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, August 18. 1981 L
Bus terminal sty:mied
Officials claim high rise would block historic district
By GLENN 8C01T
O( ... o.My .........
Even thouah they haven't viJ.
lted the site, some federal of·
ficlals are jeopardlzlns con·
strucllon of a central bua
terminal In Santa Ana IMcauae
the building ml1bt block views
of the old Oranc• County
Court.house.
The terminal la to be built at
the comer of Ross Street and
Santa Ana Boulevard -a fuJJ
block southwest of the old
courthouse. It would stand two
stories high, with another stx to
seven at.ories of offices on top.
.Officials of the Orance County
Transit District sald Monday the
reluctance of the Department of
Interior to clear the project
could keep them from meeting
deadlines for applying for a SS
million federal grant to build the
terminal.
Without that grant from the
Urban Mass Transportation Ad·
ministration, the terminal prob-
ably couldn't be built. With the
grant, the terminal could be un·
der construction by early next
year, said Brian Pearson.
transit district development
direct.or.
Transit district oUicials are
unhappy because the Depart·
ment of Interior isn't directly in·
volved in the project but, under
current procedures ror environ·
mental clearance. stilt can delay
approvals.
At i.aaue is the fact that the
terminal would be built inaide
the Downtown Santa Ana HJa.
torlc Di strict. The Old
Courthouse. a turn-of-the-century
structure of Arizona red
sandstone, i11 the prize of that
district.
The Department of Interior Is
in charge of reviewing historical
districts and orficlals have
claimed the terminal and its ex·
tra floors of omces would ad·
versely arrect the district by
blocking views.
Unless the federal officials lift
their negative finding, the dis-
trict can't submit a final ap·
plication for the grant Pearson
said the application should be
sent before the year is up.
Noting that several other
large office buildings already
have created a situation where
the old courthouse is like a golf
ball in tall grass, transit district
officials have encouraged
federal officials to visit the area
to measure the impact.
But to complicate things ,
Pearson said . the federal
bureaucrats claim they can't
come because their travel
budgets have been cut.
Pearson said transit district
leaders don't object when people
who underst~nd the area raise
concerns that could delay such a
proj<.-ct
"But we feel this thing k.ind of
came In from left field," he ob·
served.
"There's an awful lot or com
petition for those grants," he
added, "and <UMTA> operates
on a first -come. first-served
basis."
The central terminal would
give the transit district an off·
site center for most of the bus
routes that travel through lhe
heart of the county. CurrenUy •
the buses are parked along the
street at the corner or Flower
Street and Santa Ana Boulevard
on the west end of the Civic
Center.
The Old Courthouse, with its
gabled roof, IS about four Stories
high
Among other nearby buildings
are the pre sent cou nty
Courthouse. the new Heritage
Building, both 11 stories: the
Wells Fargo Building. 10; the
Federal Building, nine: the
State Building and Santa Ana
City Hall. both eight, the Old
Courthouse Plaza. across the
street from the historic building,
six . and the county Hall of Ad
ministration, also across the
street. which 1s five stories.
OCTD project seakd
LA firm awarded $7.7 million pact for new yard
A Los Angeles construction
firm has been awarded a $7.7
million contract to build a new
Orange County Transit District
maintenance yard in Anaheim.
Arter throwing out an earlier
round of bids. the transit dis·
trict's Board of Directors on
Monday granted the contract to
Stolte Inc.
The company is expected to
begin construction at the 10.5·
acre site in September and com·
plete the facility by February
1983.
ll will be the district's third
maintenance yard and will in·
elude a 47 ,000-square-foot main·
tenance building, an operations
and dispatching center, a fuel
station. brake-check building
and a bus-washing facility.
The district currently operates
maintenance facilities at
Garden Grove and lrvlne.
C.V. Holder Inc. of Gardena
was low bidder when bids were
initially submitted and opened
on April 14, but the firm didn't
meet a district Policy of using at
Slayer given
life sentence
William Samuel Caywood has
been sentenced to a life term in
prison without possibility of
parole by Orange County
Superior Court Judge William
Thomson.
The judge made the ruling
Friday arter a jury failed to
reach agreement in July on
whether to send the 40-year-old
Santa Ana mechanic to the gas
chamber for the slaying of two
lranjan immigrants.
Deputy District Attorney An·
thony Rackauckas said he didn 't
agree with Thomson's ruling,
but added that it was "not poor-
ly reasoned."
Early said Caywood, UJ>On 'te·
ceiving h.is life in prison sen-
tence, was "tremendously re-
lieved ''
least 10 percent participation by
minority workers or subcontr~
tors.
When new bids were opened
on July 27, Stolte 's proJ>Osal of
$7,698,000 was a mere $15.000
lower than Holder's revised
$7 .713,000
OC f arlllers Dlarket
granted extension
A pilot program that launched
a certified farmers market
operation at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa has
been extended through Sept.
3.
Gary Martin . market
coordinator for the co-
sponsoring Orange County Farm
Bureau, said fair manager
Kenneth Fulk approved the ex-
tension after last Thursday's
event drew about 3,000 buyers
and more than 20 prodoce
sellers.
Thursday was the last or four
scheduled market gatherings
in the southeastern parking lot
at the fairgounds on Fair Drive
authorized last month by the
county fair board
The certified market draws
growers fr o m throughout
J ewish Teens set
party on beach
The Irvine Jewish Teens ur·
ganization will be holding a
beach party on Sept. 2 in Laguna
Beach.
The party will include a visit
to the South Coast Communities
Jewish Center. For more in·
formation call 857-1710.
Fire on carrier
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP)
A fire aboard the USS In·
dependence damaged the craft's
air operations room and carrier
control approach room . the
Navv said Monday.
@
Southern California to sell fresh
produce grown on their farms
and ranches directly to Orange
Coast consumers at a cost less
than at most supermarkets.
Martin reiterated
The market operates on
Thursdays between noon and 6
p.m
Music Center
post filled
George L Argyros of Newport
Beach, principal owner of Air
Cal and the Seattle Mariners
baseball club, has been aamed
an Orange County Music CenlE!l'
trustee
He nry T Segerst rom ,
chairman of trustees. said the
board is resJ)Onsible for solicit·
ing, receiving and disbursing
contributions and grants to plan.
endow and construct the new
performing arts center in Costa
Mesa.
Previously named trustees in·
elude 0 . J ames Bentley, J
Robert Fluor. Walter B. Gerken,
Charles W. Hester. James K.
Knapp, William S. Lund, James
K. Nagamatsu and Robert P.
Warmington.
Argyros. president of the San-
ta Ana based Amel Develop·
ment Co. and affiliates. also is
chairman of the Chapman
College board of trustees and a
member or the Orange County
Cou ncil . Boy Scout s of
America's executive board.
August seems a long time
from Christmea but in the
1ewelry business we start
planning for the hohday season
as early as March. That's the
time I make preliminary
selections for our Christmas
mailer and talk over plans With
the printer regarding the
stationery and processes to be
used In this year's booklet.
EiEM WISE pendants, p1na. earrtngs.
bf'acelets, and even some very
1nterest1ng tumble polished
bead necklaces. It is not
difficult to encourage an
appreciation of the lovely ·
perldots once the August-born
per90n has an opportunity to
beqome famlllar with the line
natural perldot gems.
Accurately photographing
jewelry Is an art In Itself. The
background m11erlal1 ere
critical and the proofs have to
be color corrected many times
to make sure we get a true
'9Pf ... ntatlon of the articles to
be f .. tured.
Perldot, for lnatance, 11 e
paf1icularly dlfflcult gem to
photograph well. It la this
month's birthstone (along with
Ml'donyit 11 an alternative). We
hlVe heard women aay they
don't llke that birthstone, but It
la becaUM they have only seen
synthetic perldota. When we
have the opportunity to
lntroc:luoe them to the natural
perldot they agrM that It re1lly
la a IO¥tly gem.
We wry a wlct. variety of
natural Pfridot J9Welry. In 14K
rings alone. *• have a
Mlectlon ranging from t171 to
$1500 •• And Of COUrM, there .,.
Mary a.rr. Certified Gemologist
CHARLES H. BARR
............ ... ... ,
We are working all year too 0t1 our mailing fiat. We try very
hard to keep a current 1ddre1s
file on all our customers but
sometimes you forget to tell us
when you move. II you have
moved •Ince the last time you
received mail lrom us or II you
~ have, but would like to 1 be Included 1n our m•lllnga will
you fust give ua 1 call and we
will be happy to add your
name. Our telephone num~r 11 I
642-3310. We will be pleased to I
hear from you. ,
There Is atlll plenty of time to I get In on our "Gem Wise"
conta.t ... it runa th. rough the I end of Auguat. There are aome
very worthwnlle prlaea . " . 1500
In merchandlM for ftret. l300 In
metch1ndlae for aecond and
'200 in merchandlM for third .
. • end a conaolatlon drawing•
for thoM who don't win a top prl•· So com. In and tut your
k~ge.
\ ..
HIF Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT (Tueadey , Auguet 18, 1981
Truce ends Beirut street fights
2nd blast planne d
b y jai led gamble r?
FRESNO <AP > A heavy
gambler charged with
masterminding a Lake Tahoe
casino-hotel bombing planned lo
place another bomb there or In
Bank of America's main head
quarters. a federal court ai
fidavit says.
John Birges Sr .. 59, twice stole
hundreds of pounds of dynamite.
first to build the bomb that tore
apart the front of Ha r vey's
Resort Hotel-Casino last Aug 27
and then to build a second bomb.
the affidavit said.
During the weekend arrt-sts of
Birges and four others, Dirges'
son. James William Dirges. led
FBI agents to a buried cache or
more than 600 pounds o f
dynamite, said the affidavit that
accompanied charges filed here
Monday
Presses sl op ped
by Po l ish p rin ters
WARSAW , Poland <AP >
State-employed printers belong
1ng to the independent union
Solidarity stopped the presses
and began sit-ins today in prep·
aration for a two·day strike
Private food vendors also s hut·
tered their ma rkets.
J e t, private pla11P
avoid <·o llisio11
NF.WARK, NJ t APJ A
Boeing 737 Jl•lllnt>r with l l8
passengers ubourd wus forced to
veer shurply to ovoid 11 cotllslon
with n private pl•nti over
northwe::.t New Jersey, t h to
Fl·derul Avrntlon Admlnlstrotlon
says.
The Pl'opll' 1-:xpn•g" Jt.1tllner
rr o m BufCulo. N y • WOii
descending to Newurk truernu·
t ional Airport when thl' incldt•nt
o c c u r r c d S u n d u y . I'' A A
s pokcsmon Irving Moss :sold
Mondav
R t'al(a 11 t•ri I i<·i ze<l
0 11 eco11o nt)' p la 1ui
WASHINGTON 1AP > In
putting his t•conomic program
before the country six months
ago tonight, rresidtont Reagan
made 17 promises he has failed
to keep. according to Congress
Watch. a c ritical lobbying and
research group that keeps an
eye on Rt-agan·s performance in
office.
REIRUT. Lebanon (API
Sy rlun troops 1rnd tank5 dl1
entlllil'd warrlna pro·lnnlarn
and pro-Soviet militia. In Beirut,
toduy , endh'" three deays or
street fighting that kllled 2A peo
pll-und wounded 77. a PollCl'
:spokl·smun Hutd
The spokc11man uld Syrian
torcc~ thut movl'd In Monduy
mornln& were 1&blo after 24
ho urs l o estubllsh buffers
~c p1m•llng the combatants in
the teemlnti s lums on Beirut's
11oulhem and aoutht11t1lern aides.
More thun h1tlf the falalitle1
ttnd most of the wounded were
clvllhms euught In crossfire, the
11poke11mun said.
Mllltlamcn from the pro
,.~ ..........
lruniun Shiite Moslem Amal or
ganizuhon and the private army
of tho pro Moscow Lebanese
Communist Party traded mortar
fi-te 1Jnd rocket·propelled
l(rcnades In the fl6'hling. which
hroke out at dawn Sunday
The cease fire followed a five
h o ur m eeti n g Monday in
Damascus, the Syrian capital, of
* * * U.S. pla n es
read y to m ove
to Israel
LOS ANGELES !AP J
American.made warplanes
cleared for delivery by Presi
dent Reagan after a ni ne-week
s uspension, will start moving lt
Israel ''in a matter of days 0 1
hours." the administration says
nut Secretary of State Alex
anctcr llaig , who announced
Hcugan's decision to release lhe
16 planes. ::.aid lhe administra
tum h11d not determined whether
Ii.rncl violated agreements with
th e Unit ed Stat es when it
bombed Iraq's nurlear reactor
June 7
lla1g also refused to say
whe\hcr Reagan received a::.
surances from Israel about how
the planes would be used
Amul leuder Nablh Berri , u
delegation from the Lebanese
Leftl11t Nutaonal Movement. Syr·
ian Foreign Minister Abdul
Halim Khaddam and Vasser
A raf ut . chairman of t h e
Palestine Liberalon Organiza·
lion.
The session was reported to
have been instrumental in bring.
mg about the truce
It was not clear what touched
off the fighting. The 950 ,000
Lebanese Shiites are the largest
and poorest of the country's
Moslem sects, and they tradi
t1onally supported the Com
munist Party But most of them
are believed to have switched
their allegiance to Amal after
Ayatollah Ruholla h Khomeini's
Iranian revolution in 1979 put
new lere in the Shute cause
everywhere
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia an
nounc('d its support "in princi-
p I e " (or Lebanese Prime
Minister Shaf1k Wazzan·s re
quest for an e mergency summit
conference of Arab heads of
state to take up the continuing
confrontation between Israel
and th(• PLO 1n Lebanon
Wauan. after a 24-hour visit
to the Saudi j?ovcrnment, flew to
Kuwait looking for support. A
government s pokesman said
seven me mber!> of Wazzan's
cabinet and Lcbunon's U.N. Am·
bassudor Ghassan Tuein1 were
to attend a proposed meeting.
If a s ummit is he ld. the
spokesman said, Lebanon will
seek acti ve participation of all
Arab nations in the Pl"'O con
fr ont at 1o n with I s rael in
southern Lebanon or a ban on
Palestinian attacks across the
bordt'r ·'There must be a stoppage to·
day for tomorrow's papers not to
appear." said Krzysztof Juras.
Solidarity s pokes man at the
!louse of the Polish Word. the
capital's main printing plant.
Iran firin g sq uads
execute 25 people
The Washington based or·
ganization. formed by Ralph
Nader. says its analysis of
R eagan's fir st s peech to
Congress shows he reneged on
pledges not to redure Social
Security retirement benefits, to
continue aiding "those. who
through no fault of t heir own,
must depend on the rest of us ..
Ex-CIA official
hits neutron bomb
CAT HUNT A 75 pound ft-male cougar t ries to escape an
off1eer·s bullet:, but f<ill s and was killed in ~t·v.
Wcstminstr r . Britis h Columbia . The cat. which authorit 11.'S
sa ~· wandt•r<'d into town Tuesda~· along the railroad traeb
''us seen in a densel~ IX>PUlated area and strollt•d into u
hrl'wery lx•fure it was killt·d bra wildlife control officl'r
Reagan ::.uspended shipment!>
of four F 16 Jet fighters to Israel
on June 10 pending a review of
whether the reactor raid violat
ed an agreement to use ti S
supplied weapons only for de
fensive purpose s . The s us
pe nsion was broadened after
Is rael 's a ir !>trike agains t
Pale!>tmian targets in Beirut.
wh1rh killed an estimated JOO
people
In a ll . two F·l5 Jets. con
s idercd the most advanred
v. arplane. :rnd 14 F 16!> were af
fecte<I
More than 400 people. most of
them Lebanese civilians. were
killed by ls ra(•li attacks last
month on the Palestinians rn
Beirut and southern Lebanon.
and more than 120,000 Lebanese
villa~ers fled their homes.
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Iranian firing squads worked
overtime executing 25 more foes
of Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho·
meinj's regime. and more than
160 more prospects for tht> ex
ecut1oners were rounded up in
the provinces. the official Ira·
nian media reported.
WASHINGTON (AP > -A
former deputy director of the
C l A s a ys Pres ident Reagan
made a mistake in authorizing
production o r the neutron
weapon, contending the arma
ment would cause almost as
much damage to the target area
as s tandard nuclear weapons.
U.S. favors plea bargain • ID Douglas case
Twenty.three of those execul·
cd were members of the "cen·
tral committee" of Mujahedeen
Khalq. Iran's largest leftist un·
derground movement. Tehran
Radio said Monday. It said they
were condemned to death for
"waging war against God and
God's prophet.··
Dr. Herbert Scovill e outlined
his views in a report in which he
claimed use of the neutron
weapon would enhance the
possibility of all·o ut war
'because, he said. the Soviet
Union would be less inhibited
about utilizing its own nuclear
arsenal in response.
WA S HINGTON I AP >
Justice Depa rtment officials
lean toward dropping criminal
charges a gains t four McDonnell
Douglas Corp executives if the
giant aircraft firm pleads guilty
to making illegal overseas pay
ments. department sources say.
The sources . who asked not lo
be identified, said the depart
ment favors that plea bargain.
Attorney Gen eral Rudolph
Giuliam said Monday he experts
to make a decision late this
week or t>arlv next week. The
Come join the fun at
Gilhooly's restaurant!
At Gilhoo/y's in Westminster you can enjoy our Tostada bar for 1ust
3.25. served daily from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Saturday,
11:30 a.m. to 4 p .m. And there's a delightful Happy Hour in the cocktail
lounge from 4:30 to 7 p.m . Monday through Friday, as well as
entertainment for your pleasure Thursday and Friday evenings.
company
•••lmln•l•r 300 westmlnster mall 898-2521,
-------AIOUT 1$199GIEAT I 9 DINNER (') . g Oooo for""" pie<: .. of tutey, golden brown ~nlucky ~ Fried Cllleken. olut tlngle MNlno• of COie tltw. methed
0 pot1toea end 011vy, 1nc1 • roll Llmil IWO off•,. "'
Z puren... coupon gOOd only for eomblnellon whlleldelk I orde11 Cu11omer oey1 •If 1pplle1ble HIH tex
Oooo for nlnt ole<:H 01 jutey, gOldef\ bfOwn Kentucky
l'rted Chlcu n. with lour roll•, • lero• cote 1l1w, • 1110•
mHhed po1110.1 end • medium orevy l imit two olft rt
per purcht ff Couoon gooci only lor comt1tn11ton wl'lltli
clerk ordera. Cu11om11 o•v• 111 eopllceblt u lff 11•
030 Offer expires August 30, 19811 Offer eXPlres.
August 30. 1981
Pnct• "''Y "•l'Y et 1 PllCH mey very el per·
01111c1oe11119 1oe.. 11c10111no 1oc1t1on• Good
ttOne Good 011l1 tn onty In Southern
tovtllenl C..lfoMI• I Callf0fnl1 where you Ht
UM Cl'lldl-:::-.:= the Chlck1n SenOWICll
WI Wlf'tdOW 81nntt -~:.· .. · ...
dec1s1on is his because the at
torney general and deputy at
torney ge neral disqualified
themselves as a result of legal
work done by their former lav.
firms
counsel to discuss the case in
late June.
Th<.' compan)' a lso wa~ ar
c·usect of making fal se state
ments to conceal payments of $6
m1lhon to airline personnel and
government offi cials m South
Korea. the Phil1pp1n es .
Venezuela and Zaire. G1uliani's handling of the case
s pawned a controversy inside
the department wht>n he met
with the company's gene ral
The company a nd the four ex
ecut1ves were indicted on ron
sp1racy and wire· and mall
fraud charges in November 1979
They were accused of authoriz
ing SI 6 million in secret com
missions to promote the sale of
D ·.10 1ethners to Pakistan.
Md)onnell Douglas has denied
an~ wrongcfoing The rase is set
for trial in NnvrmhPr
HOW FAR
YOU CAN GO FOR
$
Stn ASAP MIL 1HI EAST COAST
WllllOUTwunNO.
Our new ASAP Fare lets you take off
from L..o' Angeles lnterna11onal . Burbank or
Ontario to 11even Eastern cities right awa)
foronly $179 ($159 to Chicago). That's each
way whe n you buy a round trip ticket.
There are no other restrictio n .... No
nAVIL 10ANYOf1llESI ClllES1
C'h1~.11?1I
Hi"tun
"lcv. y..,~/Ncv. Jr~
'-"J•hing11m. D C
l'hdJdclphtu
I 1 Lau1knlalc
Mi.1m1
atlvance purcha!lt!. No 1e~.1h of su1y
requirements or time dead"'<ies. But 'cats
are limited and all night' arc via Denver.
And when you fl y to any of these seven
Eastern cities. you can return from any ope
of the other cities at no extra charge. For
example. you might fly to New York and
catch a return flight from Wa!.hington. D.C.
In addition . we'll give you First Class
for the price of Coach. Buy a full fare
Coach ticket o n Continental or bring U!.
another airline's (except World or Capitol
Airways) full fare Coach ticket to these
Eastern cities and we'll fly you Fif'\t Class.
Thar'o; right, First Class. This is on a fir t
come. first served basi~. so rescrvurions arc
suggesred .
Gotta· get back Easr in a hurry and
want to save money too? You can't do better
than ASAP.
CONTINENTA
Stn OI LESS 10 ANYOIHEI
MAINLAND U.S. cm:
Continental\ U.S. ii, your' Pick a cil.}.
An) cit). Now through Scplemhcr 15th )OU
can go an)" here we fly in the mainland
U.S. for no more than $179 each v.ay with a
round trip tit·ket. And to many citi c' the
fare I' C\ en le'"
I nAYEL 10 ANY OF THESE ClllES1
Alhu4uer4ut·
Au•lln
C'J·~r
C'nlnr.1tl11 Sprinl;''
lxn~cr 11 f'a,o
Grun1I Junll1un
lfuU\IOO
lnd1unr1pol"
Kan'J' Cit)
I •nl·oln
l.uhhod
M11llun11/(>lk"a
Mtlv.uu~r<·
M 11111 /'\t Pdul
rv. 0rkJO\
O~luh1•ma C ">
OmJh~
Prnri~
Phocn•'
San Anwn1n
t UC\On
Th"• v. "hllJ
There are some res trictions. Just make
rc.,ervations and buy your Coach ricker
either 7 or 14 days in advance depending on
your de~tinarion. You can return al. earl y as
rhc fi rst Saturday or May as long as sixty
days.
And if you've got children age' 2-I I
yolf can ~how them around the country for
no more rhan $129 each way with a round
trip ticket when accompanied by an adult.
Seat\ are limited. So call your travel
agent, company travel department or
Continental. And sec how far $179 each
way can rake you.
Fare' 'ubjcct 10 change v.i1h ou1 not 1~e .
IRUNES
1, .. ,a.41;tt., n.• lllll!O .,,.n,H1th•ft~""'r_....,..\lol1t, llllf>.IWll-._.,Cllt,.......,,.,,,..,.. l*lm t•...,ll<>•fl 1n uoiHJ1un"•""'·-'lllA fl'6t ,,..~,.r ..... > '" "''·""t .... Jt • ..is.. ........ n1i ... hollll'Hl!lllllt'l' 11)1111 ,.,,l•ltbMl'lfllc) \)'9AJIO.S.-1'4M•U•••·ll••••·r ....... ''"
' &
-------". L Or1nge Coatt DAILY PILOT/TUHday, Augutt 18, 1D8t
Sports program rule
serv~s good purpose
The Reagan adminlstrallon
says it is considering reductions
ln the scope of the controvcri;ial,
9-year-old federal law that bans
aid to schools and coJleges thut
practice sexual discrimination in
athletic programs.
The impending review of "Ti·
tie IX" rules was revealed last
week by Vice President George
Bush as part of the administra-
tion's attack on federal regula-
tions it considers unnecessary or
counterproductive.
Mr . Bush said the ad-
ministration believes guidelines
on sexual discrimination in
athletic programs are too vague
and impose excessive ad -
ministrative burdens.
No doubt there is room for
improvement of the Title IX
guidelines.
However. the Reagan ad·
ministration should resist the
temptation lo move away from
the intent of the law. That intent
ls to give high school girls and
colleae women opportunities In
sports similar to those enjoyed
by young men for a long time.
And the a'dministration
shouldn't be swayed Crom enforc-
ing a law that wouldn't have been
needed in the first place if it
weren't for the fact that the ad·
ministration of school and college
sports in this country has been
dominated by men. Too often.
those men have exhibited de-
cision-making that can only be
described as self-ser ving.
Sports for women have en·
joyed a long-delayed flowering
under Title IX. It's been a good
thing, a healthy thing. and high
time, too. After all, why shouldn't
women have the same op-
portunities as men to express
themselves through athletics?
Consider the public
The rule on sex discrimina·
tion in school athletic programs
is but one of 30 federal regula-
tions targeted by the Reagan ad·
ministration for possible elimina-
tion. They were selected on the
basis of suggestions from busi·
ness, government, colleges and
farm groups.
And while there's no doubt
many of the regulations are
onerous, costly. or both. there's
also reason to believe that keep·
ing them in effect, perhaps in
modified form, may well be in
the public interest.
Lowering the restrictions on
content of lead in gasoline could
hardly benefit efforts to reduce
air pollution.
Regulations requiring
manufacturers of new chemicals
to submit information on health
and environmental effects of a
product before it goes on the
market may be a nuisance. And
so, no doubt. are requirements of
registering and testing new
pesticides.
But the public deserves. al
the very least, some assurance
that such products can be used
with reasonable safety.
And if the testing procedures
delay the m arketing of new
products. or increase their cost.
perhaps that's a price the public
would be willing to pay in return
ror such assurance.
As for the regulation that
public buildings and programs
receiving federal funds be made
accessible to handicapped
persons, there's no doubt this can
add to building costs. But the ex-
ample cited by the administra-
tion was extreme. A school with a
two-story building, it said, might
have to install an elevator to
serve a single s tudent.
Surely it would be possible to
grant waivers in such excep·
tionaJ cases. without doing away
with requirements for curb cuts .
ramps, wider access doors and
accessible transportation which
do indeed enable the hand-
icapped to lead more normal
lives.
Some of the mountains of
records and reports companies
are required to provide to assure
they are not discriminating in
employment doubtless could be
replaced by spot checks on com·
pliance.
But abolishing regulations
because some are exaggerated or
burdensome could be a giant s tep
backward. A more rational goal
would be sensible moderation
Good drivers misled
A recent editorial in this
space noted that the Department
of Motor Vehicles was s urprised
more good drivers were not tak-
ing advantage of the off er to pro-
vide an automatic. four -year
license r e newal. without re-
examination. to drivers who have
had no traffic tickets or accident
involvements in the past four
years.
The good drivers supposedly
are notified by OMV comruters
and sent the renew-by-mai form
60 days before their current
license expires. The program is
expected to save the OMV some
$3 million a year in license re-
newal processing costs, but
response has not been as great as
anticipated, said a spokesman.
Readers promptly advised us
of a couple of apparent glitches
in the program.
One driver who had not re·
ceived a renew-by-mail applica-
tion despite a 20-year ticket-free
record said she was advised by
her local OMV office that the of·
fer was "by lottery" so not every
good driver would receive one.
A driver who did receive his •
application and decided to take it
to the OMV office instead of
mailing it was handed an ex
a mination form and told ··not
everyone is chosen." He took (he
tes t under protest.
A OMV s pokes man in
Sacramento says both readers
had been misinformed by the
field office.
The program started out by
offering the automatic renewal to
a random samplin g of good
drivers, but that's been changed
to include all good drivers -it 's
not a lottery any more.
The form s hould be returned
by mail because field offices are
not equipped to handle them, but
the second driver s hould have
been so advised. rather than
given a test.
"There's a misunderstanding
about this in our field offices."
said the spokesman.
Good drivers who have pro-
blems with the program are en·
couraged to phone (916> 323-3001.
or write to OMV, Ori vers ·
License Extension Unit. Box
1182.8. Sacramento. 95813.
Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views eic-
pressed on this page are those of their authots and artists. Reader comment Is inv1t ·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7t<l l
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd / Costly artwork
WlU bet you a smaU W15pecified
sum that you cao'l conjure up tbe
picture in your mind of the most
valuable pa1nUng ever executed in
this country. It's called "Portrait of
Professor Gross," an 1876 work by
Thomas Eakins . P h iladelphia's
Thomas Jeffer son MedJcaJ Colle1e
owna U. U.t worth: SS million. I do
not have a &ood grasp of how t,be gm
tax lawa influence arl appralnla. A
topic for tbe financial paaea m aybe.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat . ~ ..... -y oar .. 4M yMr •I nt W•" ... , ,I,, ~Mlt MtM .. .,_. (Orr't~t to 9o• I MO (.otte......, (,.' n.i.
It you didn't eat 80 hotdogs last
year, you didn't keep up with the na-
Uonal average. Sure know I didn't.
Wbo'e eating all the hotdogs?
Though the late Mae West was not
interred in Brooklyn, N.Y., abe was
born and brou1ht up there, and the
Brooklyn cenotaph to her la in-
acribri: "Come up and see me
sometime."
n.mn P. H•ley PubtlllW
Tllomn Murpftlne Editor
e.rwa KrwHlkll
Edttorl•! P1199 Edltor
•
... \ft. C:Q I T\00" TYIMG
MIGUT ~ OO¥i.BOOY I -
Death takes Castro rivals
WASHINGTON Within less than
three months, mysterious plane crashes
have eliminated two of Fidel Castro's
potentially most dangerous rivals in the
volatile politics of Latin America .
Panamanian s trongman Omar Torrijos
and Ecuador's Presidt'nt Jaime Roldos.
No one has made a connection
between the Cuban dictator and the
deaths of Torrijos and Roldos -much
less suggested that Castro's agents
were responsible for the plane crashes.
But stranger things have happened in
the violence-prone political arena or
Latin America. And there is no doubt that Castro has profiled by the conven·
ient departure of two charismatic
leaders who had contested the Cuban's
self-proclaimed role as the foremost
voice of independence in the Western
Hemisphere.
PANAMANIAN OFFICIALS are still
investigating the cause of the air crash
that took Torrijos' life. Bad weather
over the jungle was a reasonable ex-
planation.
But it may be more than mere coin·
cidence that Torrijos' firm control of
Panama -and his successful negotia·
lion of the treaty under which the Unit·
ed States relinquished control of the
Panama Canal -had won him respect
across the Latin American political
spectrum. On grounds of ego alone, that
would tiave been enough to infuriate
Castro. But Torrijos had also made no
secret or his distaste tor the Cuban die·
tator's support of leftist guerrillas in
Central America.
Torrijos· opposition to Castro was
especially significant because he had
once been one of the Cuban's closest al-
lies. ln 1974, for example, Torrijos was
the first leader in the hemisphere lo rec-
ognize Castro's government -over
the objection or the Organization or
American States. After the Sandlnlstas'
victory over Nicaragua's dictator
Anastasio Somoza, Torrijos and Castro
jointly agreed to give the new govern·
ment "respectful help."
BUT WHJLE Torrijos withdrew his
mililary forces from Nicaragua, Castro
sent in still more troops. Torrijos was
G.
-JA-Cl-AN-D-IRS_D_N -~
furious , and cooperation between the
two dictators ceased.
In a confidential cable filed after Tor·
rijos' death. U.S. Embassy political
analysts in Panama warned the State
Department that his absence "weakens
the forces of reform and opposition to
Cuban influence in the Caribbean
area."
State Department sources confided
privately lo my associate Bob Sherman
that they expect U.S.-Panamanian rela·
lions to suffer as the result or Torrijos'
death. President Aristides Royo is con·
sidered a weak leader who may well de-
cide to use the United States as a
scapegoat to distract Panamanians
from their own very real problems.
Adding to the problem is the fact that
TornJos co-opted a significant portion ot
his domestic political opposition by giv·
ing them jobs in the government. With
Torrijos· iron control now gone. these
political extremists of the right and left
may feel free to pursue their own goals.
Pulling Uncle Sam's beard is always
a popular sport among political factions
in Latin America, so the chaotic situa·
lion left in Panama by Torrijos· death
can only hurt the United States. Anet
whatever hurts the United States
pleases Castro.
The United States aside, Castro can
contemplate th.e post-Torrijos situation
m Panama with anticipation. The pros·
peel or political turmoil, as various
factions vie to s ucceed the fallen
strongman, can only give Castro hope or
yet another Caribbean conquest
Castroism thrives on chaos.
SO WHILE T HE Cuban dictator may
publicly mourn Torrijos. those are
crocodile tears running down his beard.
The case of Ecuador's President
Roldos is similar. although he didn't
live long enough to achieve Torrijos'
s tatus as a rival to Cas tro At 39. Roldos
was the youngest president ever elected
in the Western Hemisphere when he
took offi ce m 1979.
Roldos was swept into the pres idency
by the greatest electoral margin in his
country's history . His youth and
popularity made him an obvious rival to
Castro in Latin America -and Roldos
was obviously unimpressed with the
Cuban's reputation. He attacked Castro
for seizing refugees who had sought
asylum in the Ecuadoran Embassy in
Havana. The two clashed again when
Roldos had Cuban-backed Colombian
rebels arrested in Eucador and turned
them over to Colombian authorities.
But Roldos ciJdn 't survive to become a
serious rival lo Castro. He died in a
plane crash after only two years ln of·
fice. Though the crash was listed of·
ficially as an accident, the Cuban-
backed guerrillas actually claimed
responsibility for sabotaging Roldos'
plane.
Whether he had anything to do with
lbe deaths of either TorriJOS or Roldos,
Fidel Castro profited by both.
Can we revive domestic car chic?
We've asked the Japanese to kindly
s top selling us Americans so many
automobiles. That's a good idea. Equal·
ly good ideas are being offered. too, by
the new National Association for the Ad ·
vancement of American Automobiles.
ll was just a year ago that the
NAAAA's founder, Homer T PetUbone.
who lived in a typical VW-Volvo-Honda
American suburb, came home with a
brand new car.
''Whal kind did you buy, dear?''
asked his wife, Heloise excitedly.
"Look, it's parked out front," he said
proudly. "A beautiful four-door Ford
Fairmont."
"Well," said Heloise, paling, "there
goes the neighborhood."
NEEDLESS TO say, property values
tumbled, the Peltibones were accused
or block-busting and ostracized by one
and by all. It was then that Pettibone
rounded the NAAAA.
"For all too long." he says ,
------i ART HDPPI :S ,
"domestic cars have been unfairly
stereotyped a11 big, expensive gas
guzzlers. They have become second-
class vehicles an America's highways,
shunned and scorned from Bel Air to
Beacon Hill. We must put an end once
and for all lo this cruel discrimination
and team to judge every car on its
merits, not on its national persuasion."
The NAAAA has already achieved
Questions without answers
Q~atlon& I Never Eipect to Hear IM
An!Wera to:
-Does the maxim, ''You only Jive
once," justify doing what you wouldn't
do if you lived twice?
-Why do we dismiss a.a "childish-
ness'' whatever does not happen to •P·
peal to the child in us?
-Since we profess lo value sincerity
above most other traits, why do we pre-
10111 111111
fer to be treat.ed with lnslncere beartl·
ness rather than trank atand«flab.Detlf
-HOW CAN lndividuale aeem ao
fair-minded and warm-hearted when
you talk Lo them on a one-to-one baala,
and yet act so prejudiced and mean·
eplrlt.ed as a part of a colJeeUvlly?
-Who reall)' makta up tboae
thousands of jok .. that clreulat.e daJly,
some of them f unnltr lban anythlq
beard on the moat prof eaalonal comedy
showa? <J have never known, or beard
of, a person who acknowledged makln1
up a 11.qgle good Joke.>
-I P PA&£NT8 llve for lhetr
chUdren, and their chlldreu Uve tor
thein, and so oa down the c.ntwiea,
wheN doet ll all tnd, lI ever?
-Why do mo.t Amertcau look up to
educal.loa and look down upon educated
people? <Our n1Uonal acbllophnftla. >
-How many more billions of filtered
cigarette butts can the land absorb?
-Why is it that the most offensive,
vituperative and uncharitable letters a
columnist receives are from readers
who hasten to identiry themselves as
"religious"? (Many even suffer from
the delusion that tbey are expressing
''Christian'' sentiments.)
-Why are most instructors in the
field or "communication" unable lo
write a clear, coherent and simple
paragraph of expository prose?
-If, as I have said before, we really
believe that the beat way to maintain
peace is to prepare for war. why are we
so alarmed when other countries in-
crease their arms? (Which exposes the
fundamental IU01lc or the propoallion. >
-WRY DON'T the "ritht-to-Ufera"
oppose with equaJ fervor the rtpt of the
state to take tbe Ille of a clli1en? (It
human Ute it truly "sacred," t.ben only
God should have the power to pus the
verdict of death.)
-Wby. in this aae. lhou.ld surface
mail Lo Europe take nearly u Iona to
arrive •• ll did ln the days of lb• aalllng
schoctlera?
-Why it It Lhal the aame PtQple who
are tbe fiercest aupporten ol "small"
government lnternaUy are tbe mo1t ar-
dent supporters of "atroni" 1overn-
ment extem aUy? (And can't they aee
tbe lnberent ~trad.lcUoa? >
-Why do w.e pnacb a docll'Ule ot
"lndMduallam" and at the same Ume
penalise eve,.y non·conformlat wbo
thlnks, act. and Uvet (n an lndl•ldual
manner?
some progress in this direction. Bills
are pending in several states to create
affirmative parking programs under
which employers would be required to
provide a quota of spaces in their
employee lots for domestic cars.
CONGRESS EVEN NOW is consider-
ing equal rights legislation banning
segregated garages. "Why s hould
foreign cars enjoy the services of $45-
an-hour mechanics," asks Pettibone,
''while domestics must make do with
cheaper and presumably less skillful
care?"
In the long range, the NAAAA con-
siders busing a viable alternative. "We
are confident that children wouJd over·
come their bias toward domestics,"
says Pettibone, "if they were car-pooled
lo school daily In American cars.
"Couple this with American
automotive studies programs in our na-
tion's colleges," he says, "and our
young people would grow up with pride
In their automotive heritage Domestic,
we s ay, is beautiful!"
A measure of the NAAAA's progress
is that the Pellibones are often invited
to parties now and even asked to park
their domestic in the driveway. "Of
course. we're the only domesUc pre-
sent," he says. "but tokenis m's a start.
And lf we can just get celebrities like
Leonard Bernstein lo buy American
cars, we m ight gel an article in
Women's Wear Dail11 on domestic chic."
B UT THE NAAAA'S big project will
be this s ummer's "Drive on
Washington." Pettibone said thousands
of domestic cars will park side-by-side
down the mall. Then Lee lacocn will
island forth on the steps of the Lincoln
MemoriaJ, ra1se hls arms to heaven and
cry out: "I have a dream!"
"Maybe someday," says Pettibone
hopeMly, "Americans will come to ac-
cept the American car as one of their
own.''
lllllY•
Where do I IQ \0 Jel the 11.S> extra per
w•ekb paycheck lh• TV,_,. wUl come
wltb the ~a1an tax cut? I don't bave a
Job.
A.'l. ...... , .. __ ....._.. ............... ..
-.cu....,.,~•.,....,.., ... _ I r ..... .,_,.. ...................... ,...
t
• 4
~
f
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, August 18, 1981 H/F
Impeachment pressed
Surprise
sinog
calls due
LOS ANGELES (APJ
Th South Coast Air
Quallly Manage ment
District plans surprise
odd·bour visita to ala·
lionary air pollution
aou rces in the Los
Angeles basin as the
heovy smog season ap·
proaches.
Republicans push threat against Brown over medf ly
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Charaing that Gov.
Edmund Br o wn J r . "abd i cat e d hla
responslbilitJes" to atamp out the Mediterranean
fruit fly. Republicans an purauJn1 their threat to
impeach him.
Assembly Republican leader Carol Hallett
said Monday that an impeachment resolution was
being drafted, and she would formaJly introduct lt
Thursday if Brown has not turned control or the
'This was the only way
to get the governor to
respond .'
medOy er adi cation program over to qualified
agricultural experts .
No California governor has ever been im·
peached. Even the act of Ciling a resolution is so rare ther~ 1s no record of it being attempted for
over 40 years.
Mrs. Hallett said she had unanimous support
Crom the Assembly's 31 Republicans and expected
a t least five Democrats to Join them. which would
s till leave her five votes short or a majority of the
80-member lower house.
But As sembly Chief Clerk J ames Driscoll.,
said articles of impeachment could be approved by
a ma1ority of those members present and voting.
whi ch means it is at least theoretically possible for
..............
MEDFLY SHIRT Asse m b l vm a n Wa lte r
llerger. R-~arysville. was t he center of at·
ll•ntion on the lower house floor in Sacr a m en -
to as he displayed his Medfly invasion shirt 10
fol low :\sst'm bly m e mbers
Before you buy any make of car,
call me. I'll save you time & money.
Benefit from my buying clout. I buy ofllce. low overhead. No salesmen.
or lease cars 10 contract lots of 1 to no comm1ss1ons Get pnces from us.
100 for corporate fleets We can otr any make of car. Then compare for
tarn substantial savings for quah· yourself. (And tell your friends)
f1ed 1nd1v1duals We do the pnc~ Call 9 to 5. Robt Hixson Equipment
shopping & haggling Ours 1s a busy Co. ask for V1rg1nia 714 64).48XJ.
~J
Daily Pilat
Classifieds
"No response from
the Register -hired
thru the Pilot."
~~~r @ s42 -ss1a
charge it ~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County.
call 540-1220 toll-free.
G..-0,1J11W.
WHY PAY 17.497
TIMl-RELIASI vrTIMiM 1-100
Only $175
.t Trader J• & Pr-.
Tr • d er D • r w l n • 1 17.41-but we aell • bottle B•lanced 8 ·100 offera of 50 tablet• for only e leven kJnd a of 8 s.1.'75. PleHe vltll ovr vitamins. And lt1 lime newut Trader Joe'• a.t NltaN formula will pro-Uie lnter .. ctton of 17th Yide • cooUnual tuppry or S t r • e t , N e w p o r t B·c:omplu vlt•mlna Boulevard •nd Sua.rlOI"
lbl'O\llbO\lt the day· A Avenue <next to Denn1'1 1.-dlq heaJU\ food cbatn and Darci'""'• 8 _ .. ) ••ll• tbl• Item for -., 1 '" •
NOWIN COSTA~
.,.
36 members to pass a valid impeachment reaolu·
tlon.
ar the AH embly did vote impeachment, the
state Comtitution provldtt that Brown would ~
immediately relieved or h1I dullu, which would be
as11umed by Lt. Gov. Mike Curb, Mra. Hallett'•
close political ally, until the Senate conducted a
trlat.
"September and Oc-
tobe r are usually the
wo rst months for smog.
It's opportune, but not
the real reason that
we 're starting this pro·
gra m in this time of
Y «aar ," AQMD
s pok es m..an J e ff
Schenkel said Monday.
ll would require a two·thlrd11 vote or the
Senate. which II under Democratic control by 1
23-17 margin, to remove Brown from office.
The two Auembly Democrats publlcly sup·
porting the hnpeachmcnt resolution are John
Thurman ot Modesto. chairman of the A11embly
Agriculture Commlllee, and Alister McAllster of
Sa n J ose. Mrs. Hallett declined to name the
others.
The regional air quaJi.
ty agency recently ap-
proved addition of seven
ne w inspectors costing
about $250,000 a year for
salaries, benefits, cars
and other expenses. The
entire fo rce of 100 in·
spectors will be rotated
on a 24·hour schedule,
Schenkel said.
Democratic leaders dismissed the threat as a
partisan Republican move lo politicaJly embarrass
the Democratic governor, and Brown's chief of
staff, Gray Davis, condemned it as "the basest
form of political demagoguery."
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown. D-San Fran-
cisco. an olf-and-on political ally of the governor ,
cnllc1zed lhe 1mpeachmtnt move as "pobt1ca11y
motivated," and said it has no chance of paSBage.
Th e AQMD wa s
a I r e ady condu c ting
v irtually r o und-the·
clock checks of oil re-
fineries. power plants,
the Kaiser Steel mill at
Fontana and a few other
m ajor pollution sources.
"No one person is singly to blame for the
medfly, but some of Gov. Brown's actions have not
been decisive." Speaker Brown said in cautious
s upport of the izovernor
Plane crash probed
SAN JOSE (AP> -Investigators
are going over the remains of two
s ingle-engine planes lo try to dis·
cover why they collided over San
J ose, killing one man and injuring
two others.
J a m es Elbert Moses of Santa
Clara, 47, the pilot of the Cessna 172,
was killed in the Monday crash. the
coroner's office s aid. The pilot and a
passenge r in the second c raft. a Piper
Cherokee, were admitted to San Jose
Hospital with cuts and bruises.
Robe.rt Short. 54 , or Mountain View
was released, hos pital spokeswoman
Candace Roney said. The pilot.
Bruce Marlow. 25, or Los Altos, was
listed in fair condition.
Abd ucte d girl home
CORONADO <AP> -A 3-year-old
girl. a bducted 11 days ago during a
family vacation, is back with her
parents today after police rescued
he r and nabbed her alleged kidnap·
per as he awaited a $5.000 ransom.
Maria Martin "is a li ve and well,"
Coronado Police Chief Jerry Boyd
said Monday night. "We have a sus-
pect in custody and are investigating
the possibility several other people
were involved ."
VA action h it
L OS ANGELES CAP) The
Veterans Administration has been
working "as much to protect the VA
as the veterans," a spokesman ror
the Paralyzed Veterans of America
said during a briefing on the de·
foliant Agent Orange.
·'The VA was dragged kicking and
screaming into thos e hearings before
the Senate and the House on legisla-
tion to benefit the veterans," said
Gordon Mansfield, one of a panel of
ex-Gls
Rose B ird targeted
SAN F RANCISCO <AP> -A group
c la iming that Chief Justice Rose
Bird's rulings are based on personal
whim , not law, has moved to remove
her from the Supreme Court, the
second such attempt in two years .
The Committee Advocating Legal
Limitations claimed Ms. Bird bas
"ignored the law whenever she feels
like it lo get her own social order en-
forc ed" and h as "c oddled "
criminals.
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Much lower than our normal summer rates.
Spend a day In the sun. Relax, unwind and enjoy the resort'a aparkllng
pools, 2~ championship tennla courts, 27 holea of golf, blcyclea, game
room, gift shop and much mote.
Uncomplicated? You betl Rancho Lu
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Call 714/588-2727 or
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RANCHO
LASPALMAS
RESORT"' ., • ...,._. ........... -....ca1n10
New Rate Changes
for
Pacific Telephone
Customers
On August 4, 1981, the Callfomia Publlc Utilities Commission in
Decislon No. 93367 authorized Pacific Telephone 10 increase rates
and charges for certain of its sel\llces. These changes Wiii be effective on
August 29, 1981.
Basic Exchange Rates
Residence Service
The monthly exchange rate for Residence Unmeasured SeMce (Flat)
is Increased $1.00. Customers who choose to convert from Unmeasured to
Measured Service by December 2. 1981, Wiii not be required to pay the usual
sel'\llce connection charge. The rates for Ufeline and Measured SeMCe
remain unchanged
Bualneaa Service
The monthly exchange rate for Business Servtce Lines is not
increased. Ho.vever. the usage allowance associated With Measured Business
Service has been discontinued. The monthly exchange rate for Measured
Business Trunks is Increased $3.50.
Semi-Public Service
The monthly exchange rate for Semi· Public Serv1ce (coin) is
increased $6.00.
Foreign Exchange Rates
Residence Flat Rate Foreign Exchange Servtce Wiii be frozen in all
areas where Measured Service ls available
Residence Foreign Exchange monthly rate 1s increased from 90 cents
to $1.50 above the new Unmeasured Sel'\llce rate. All allo.vances are removed
from Business Foreign Exchange lines and trunks. A uniform rate of $15 50
v.ias approved.
S ervice Connection Cha rges
Business Service
Business Service Connection charges are increased
Residence Service
Service Connectlon charges for Residence Serv1ce are increased
Charges for customers who pick up telephone sets at the PhoneCenter Store
are Increased from $16.00 to $23.00 regardless of the number of sets
ordered. Charges for a premises installation V1S1t are increa.sed from $43.00 to
$53.15 (installation of one telephone set) Additional charges Wiii apply for
installanon of more than one set
Foreign Exchange Setvice (FEX)
Additional charges will apply for serv1ce connecnon of Foreign
Exchange Service
Optional S ervices
The monthly rate for Optional Calling Measured Service (OCMSJ.
Opnonal Residence Telephone Service (ORTS). and Wide Area Telephone
Service (WATS) will increase.
Intrastate Long Distance Rates
Intrastate Long Distance Rates will change as follows·
Charges for dial-direct calls Wiii increase. Example: a 4·mmute dial
direct call from San Francisco lo Los Angeles is increased from $1 68 10
$1.97 (Day Rate -Monday through Frida~ 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM except
holida~ listed in your directory)
The surcharge for StatJon to Station Operator Assisted calls. such as
Third Party Billed and Collect. is Increased from 55 cents lo 75 cents. HCMieVer
the surcharge for a Station to Station Credit Card call is reduced from 55 cents
to 40 oents when customers dial "O" plus the number they wish lo reach
The surcharge for a call placed "Person to Person ·· 1s increased from
$1.55 to $2.00.
Telephone Set Charges
The monthly rate for telephone sets are increased 10 the foll<M!lng level
Basic Rotary $1 00
Basic Touch-Tone11 1.55
Princess Rotary 2.10
Touch-Tone~ 2.90
Trimline Rotary 2.50
Touch-Tone* 3 25
Zone Usage Measurement (ZUM)
Changes in the calling rates and discount percentages are as follows.
-Charges for calls within Zone 1 are not increased.
-Charges for atlls to Zone 2 are increased one-cent per call.
-Charges for calls to Zone 3 will increase one·cent per minute.
-The evening discount (5 pm to 11 pm) Is reduced from 35% to
30%. The night discou nt (11 pm to 8:00 am 1A.1eekdays and weekends)
remains at 60%.
Proposition 13 Discount
Existing discounts associated with Proposition 13 are discontinued.
Other Terminal Equipment
and Services ...
An additional inaease was granted to be spread over Individual
rales and charges on an equal percentage distribution for the.following major
categories:
-Prtvate Une Service
-Prtvate 8'anch Exchange Service (PBX)
-Key Telephone Service (KTS)
-Exchange Mileage Service
-Complex SeNlal Connection Charges
-Other Terminal Equipment
The percentage Increase tMll amount to appro>dmately 5.4%..
When placing an order for seMce. our representadue will quote you
the approprlat.e rma and charga. I/ you have any questtons plea. coll your
local Pod/le Te~nc buafnaa of/ft:i!.
,
Dewey kne w
Japan code
violated? • WASHINGTON <AP> -Republican prealden·
tlal nominee Thomaa E. Dewey 1eamed the United
States had broken the Japanese diploma Uc codes
but did not reveal lt dw1n1 the 1M4 campaJp
afler Army Cbler of Staff George C. Marshall
pleaded that the secret be kept.
Althougtl the incident had been known ror
some lime, details came to light in papers
declassified by the National Security Agency and
turned over to the National Archives. It la
described in reporti by Col. Carter W. Clarke, an
army intelllgence officer who met with Dewey as
Marshall's messenger.
According to Clarke's reporta, ~wey believed
President Franklin D. Roosevelt had known,
through decoded messages, of Japanese plans to
attack Pearl Harbor.
"He (Roosevelt) knew what was happening
before Pearl Harbor,'' Dewey is quoted by Clarke.
"Instead of belng re·elected, he ought to be im·
peached."
Clarke said be met with Dewey in a Tulsa,
Okla .• hotel room Sept. 26, 1944, during a cam·
paign trip by the Republican who was opposing
Roosevelt for the presidency.
In a letter from Marshall carried to Dewey by
Clarke. Marshall said the United States was win·
ning the war in the Pacific in part because it was
able to read the Japanese code, which had been
broken in 1941 but was still in use.
"You understand the utterly tragic conse-
quences if the present political debates regarding
Pearl Harbor disclose to the enemy any suspicion
of the vital sources or information we possess,"
Marshall wrote Dewey.
"The conduct of all operations in the Pacific
are closely related in conception and timing to the
information we secretly obtain through these in·
terceptecl codes," the letter said.
Clarke recorded a second meeting with Dewey
in the governor's office In Albany, N.Y .. on Sept.
28 and said that during the session Dewey talked
direcUy lo Marshall by telephone.
Although Dewey refused at -both meetings to
commit himself to secrecy, he never revealed his
knowledge of the broken codes, which remained a
secret until long after the war.
In another document declassified by NSA,
William F. Friedm an, head cryptographer for the
Army during the war, denied that the broken code
had given Roosevelt advance knowledge of the at-
tack on Pearl Harbor.
Friedman said only the Japanese djplomalic
codes had been broken at that time and there was
nothing in intercepted diplomatic cables to reveal
the impending attack.
"The premier of the country and his minister
or war were not notified of the impending attack
on Pearl Harbor by their own high command."
Friedman said ... At the time of the attack, the only
codes we had broken were the diplomatic codes,
which did not have anything in them about the at·
tack."
call U 2-H 78.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
Grmd~W.
SA VE AN EXTRA I 00/o on
WHOLE WHEELS OF CHEESE at ,....,. Joe & f'rClllto
Most whole wheels or
cheese wei1h 5 to 10 pounds. When you buy a whole wheel of cheese rrom us, we 1ive you a
10% discount from the sin11e pound price on almost every cheese. Ir a whole wheel weighs more than 15 pounds, you don't have to buy It all. We'll
J.ive you a 10% discount
1f you buy a chunk which
weighs more than 10 pounds. This is a simple way to bear inflation-
and cheese always tastes better from a whole wheel! Please visit our
newest TTader Joe's at the intersection of 17th Street , Newport Boulevard and Superior Avenue (next tO Denny's and Barclay's Bank).
MOW IM COSTA MESA
The next sentence may surprise you:
Toothpicks are okay!
Not rerornmended to be
used in public. they do have value in helping to
keep teeth clean and
gums healthy.
The his tor y or
toothpicks ia rather in·
terestlnJ. They were used as early as 3500
8 .C .. i'l the form of lwlp, reeds and pieces
of 1rau. A wealthy. an· clent Greek would pro·
bably carry a ring with
several lmpreulve
lookin1 toothpicks
danltbw from It. Thete
toofbpfolu ml1hl be
made from cold. silver. Ivory or ebony. Others
were delicately caned
or embedded with
THE BEST
jewels.
Qenlists object to the
abuse of toothpicks. not
their use. They should
be used gently or they
will injure your gums.
A dentist should really
instruct you on how to use them.
A toothpick can be a
lifesaver if you've Just
finished a steak and
can't reach that mad-
derun. 5pot. A soft. nat wooden toothpick, not a bobby pin or sharp In-
strument, can free the
debris stuck between
your teeth and make
you feel lnatanlly more
comfortable.
Gerald Wllllller, D.D.8. '
and A1toela&ea
14tl Avocado, Suite MS.
Newport Beach
~e:--..11t
In rNdlng enjoyment comes to your
home 7 days a weetl In the
..., .... 642-4321
J
MADE PLEA
George C. Mqrshall
KNEW OF PLAN?
President Roosevelt
a s c
' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday. ~uguet 18, 1981
P iggy co ntest a llowed
Show goes on despite Henson objections
AUGU$TA, Maine <AP> The
Miss Piggy Pageant will go on as
planned, despite objections from the
creators of the celebrated swine
For a while, it looked 1ike the con·
test here next Saturdjly to select the
fairest sow in Maine would end up on
the garbage heap.
Henson Associates ot New York Cl·
ty, creator of the M up pets, told con-
tes t organizers that calling the
pageant by Miss Piagy's name would
violate trademark protections.
The organizers consulted a local
lawyer, Roger Golin, who said since
Miss Piggy's name is not registered
in Maine, they could borrow It if they
formed a corporation.
Nine area folk met Friday night at
a local tavern. each kicked in $10 for
• the incorporation tee, and the Miss
Piggy Pageant Corp .. was born.
The name ls officially listed with
the Maine secretary of state's office
and the pageunt can go on as planned
legaJly, according to Frank Kerr.
Miss Piggy Corp. board chairman.
Thirty pigs, locludina a 900-
pounder, have been entered in a con-
test, which is part of Bath's bicenten-
nial celebration.
A local banker, Steve Searway,
was named chairman or the First An·
nual Search for the Fairest Pig of the
\Jniverse.
Harriet Yasky, an attorney for
He nson Associates, said Monday she
was not familiar with the case and
declined comment until after she
speaks with contest organizers.
L
TRADEMARK HASSLE
Miss Piggy ,
GMAC LOWERS
FINANCING RATE TO
,.
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
This will result in an average
saving of $8 25 in California*
ON DEUVERIES OF
•
BUICKS • CADll I ACS
Pl.US
AND GMC LIGHT-DUTY
Here's the best news you 've seen in months. GMAC and your participating
GM dealer are now offering GMAC financing at only 13.8%.
That's right! You can finance any new General Motors car--or light-duty
truck, including vans--delivered in August at just 13.8%. And this means big
savings to you .
Your participating GM dealer is ready now to offer you this new
13.8% financing rate on all new GM cars, including the new Chevrolet Cavalier,
Pontiac J2000 and Cimarron by Cadillac.
So see your GM dealer today and pick out that new General Motors car,
light-duty truck or van that you've been waiting to buy.
LES
I •
•
Orange eo .. t OAILY PILOT/TuHday, August 18, 1981
' ·~.
.· '•' ';
..
•
r
·-:·
.·
I
l
VANTAGE
ULTRA LIGHTS
1.
VANTAGE
\ •
• I
• I c ,
Dilly Pilat
TU ESOAV, Aug. 11, 1981
High interest rates
have a strangle hold
0
a
lAIUll llACl /llUll CDIBT
FEATURES 82
COMICS 86
TELEVISION 88
on small business ... 83
For01er congress01en rap nuke foes
UNCHANGE D I N VIEWS
Attorney Craig Hosmer
Year-round
festiv al
on agenda
It's expected to be sort of a
year-round art festival accord-
ing to its designers, and s tate
Coastal Commissioners will be
taking a look at the blufflop pro-
posal Wednesday.
Robert Buettner, who owns
the Tudor Rose Antique shop in
Laguna Beach. and Ed Olsen,
are partners in the proposed
venture. They seek commJssion
approval to construct a full-time
arts and crafts exhibit center
and flower shop on a vacant
blufftop parcel at 577 South
Coast Highwa y in Laguna
Beach.
The site was once the home of
Laguna's Sawdust Festival.
Plans for The Village Green.
as it will be called, have been
endorsed by the coastal com-
mission's staff. Commissioners
wi II cons ide r the proposal
Wednesday in Santa Barbara.
The proposal includes four
kiosks for display of arts and
crafts, a 700-square fool nursery
display gazebo and two viewing
platforms tha t will offer
panoramic views of Main Beach
Park to the north as well as
South Laguna and t he Dana
strand to the south.
A rurt parking lot will provide
24 parking spaces for customers
and the remainder of the five -lot
parcel will be landscaped.
Unlike the three s ummer art
festivals, Buettner envisions a
year-round affair, with as many
as 16 artists and craftsmen ex-
hibiting and demonstrating their
work.
In addition to the sale of cut
flowers and cra fts. The Village
Gr een wi ll also offer "light food
service," Buettner said.
The Laguna Beac h bus i ·
nessman says he and his partner
are leasing the property from
owne r Ri ch a rd Merritt of
Porterville.
Book s ale
set in Lag una
A used book sale will be heJd
Aug. 29 in the lower level park-
ing lot of the Laguna Beach
Library from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Proceeds from the sale will go
toward magazine subscriptions,
new books and to finance the
children's reading program at
the downtown library.
Friends of the Laguna Beach
Library will be available to pick
up used books from donors prior
to the book s ale. For book
pickups, call 497-1733.
Old world
lecture topic
Members or t he Patience
Wright Chapter of the DauC)lten
of the American Revolution wtll
hear a lecture on ''Our Herttace
from the Old World," in Lquna
Beach &!pt. 1.
Robin Wlnlams of La1una
Beach will diacust Europe and
Illustrate her talk with '1ldes of
Florence and northern Italy.
The l\G'\Ch.OO meettnc ril be held at the Hotel Lapna 11q1n.
nln, atll:IO e.m.
For lntQnnaUOn. tall Laura
Stone 11 trf . ..-.
Hol i f ield, Hosmer views unchanged in 14 years
By DAVID KUTZMANN
0( , .. Deity ............
Nearly 14 years ago, former
congressman Chet Holifield
joined scores of dignitaries and
newsmen to mark the opening of
what was then one of the world's
largest nuclear installations -
unit 1 of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
On that date -Jan. 4, 1968, to
be exact -commercial nuclear
power was frequently described
as the energy beacon for dec-
ades to come. And San Onofre
represented Southern California
Edison Co. 's commitment to
that cause.
To be sure, there were voices
of dissent. But with war in
Southeast Asia preoccupying the
thoughts of many Americans,
anti-nuclear rumblings were
often distant and sometimes
barely heard.
When he threw the switches
that activated the $87 million re-
actor three miles south of San
Clemente nearly 14 years ago,
Chet Holifield had few doubts
about nuclear technology.
Today, the former chairman
of the Joint Congressional Com-
mittee on Atomic Energy still
feels as he did in 1968, when be
joined fellow Long Beach con-
gressman Craig Hosmer, utility
officials and m ore than 100
newsmen for the seaside plant's
inaugural run.
"l'm a 100 percent believer in
the absolute need for (nuclear-
produced electr icity> . . . , "
the Newport Beach resident
and former Los Angeles-area
Democrat legislator said.
Nevertheless, in the years ince
San Onofre produced its first
megawatt, opposition sentiment
has grown significantly. helped
in no small degree by the events
sur rounding the Three Mile
Island accident in Pennsylvania
in 1979.
When federal licensing hear-
ings for newly built units 2 and 3
resume Monday In Anaheim, the
anti-San Onofre forces will seek
once again to convince a lhree-
member panel that Edison Co. 's
twin reactors should remain dor-
mant while seismic hazards and
e m ergency evacuation issues
are explored rurther.
Explairung the position of the
challengers, retired insurance
executi ve Augus t "Bill"
Carstens said:
"In my opinion. <San Onofre>
is the greatest threat to life,
health and property that's ever
Hotel, said San Onofre and other
nuclear plants had proven
throug h expe r ience to be
economk and sale .
"The safeguards are effective
and the economic goals have
been achieved, .. he said or San
Onofre's 14-year record, one that
has been marked recently by
lengthy s hutdowns and multi-
million doll ar repa irs.
"l have no rears about it ..
(Nuclear energy I will be rec·
ognized as being the hope of the
future and the source of the pr~s-
"There is no way that this nation
and the American economy are go-
ing to prosper without nuclear
energy.''
been foisted on the people or
Southern California.
.. And for what ?" asked
Carstens, who is bankrolling the
efforts of challengers to block
licensing of Edisoh's S3.3 billion
reactors. "lt's just another way
to boil water.''
Holi(ield, 78, thinks it's the
best way.
Nuclear ene rgy , he main·
tain e d , wa s the m ost
economical, the safest and the
most sanitary means of generat-
ing the power that Southern
Californians need.
Describing the forces arrayed
against San Onofre in the up-
coming federal he arings.
Holifi eld said, "l think tbey're
alarmists and extremists."
And , added the former
lawmaker from Whittier , "I'm
very hopefuJ (the two new reac·
tors) will be on-line as quickly
as possible."
Holifield, who will attend Mon-
day's opening session of the
Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board, at Anaheim's Marriott
ent for adequate energy," he
said.
Also. unchanged in his views is
Hosmer, now a private lawyer in
Washington D.C.
Speaking of the plant's much-
publicized debut in 1968, the ex ·
Long Beach legislator said,
"Our expectations were almost
unlimited in those days."
The ensuing years, he added,
have done little to alter that
opinion.
Hosmer claameo that nuctear
energy, m the 14 years since San
Onofre's opening, had proven to
be safe technologically as well
as profitable for rate payers.
But even Sa n Onof re's
strongest boosters have been~
able to !overtook the expensive
problems which have recently
beset the coastal power plant in
northern San Diego County.
Unit l's 456-megawall reactor
had to be turned off for more
than 14 months. from April 1980
to last June, to permit nearly S68
million in repairs to corroded
piping in the steam generators.
A four-week shutdown ended
Sunday night when another S3
million repair JOb to a burned
diesel generator was completed.
Despite these problems,
Hosmer insisted that nuclear
critics had relied too heavily on
"great emotionalism" and exag-
ger ations or· possible risks lo
further their arguments against
atomic energy.
·'My concern has never really
been of nuclear safety," he saJd.
And rererring to the future or
the nuclear industry , Hosmer ·
said, "There is no way that this
nation and the American
Pconomy are going lo continue
to pros per without nuclear
energy. ."
Carstens, and the plant's other
c hall e n ger s, di s agree
vehemently.
"I don't give a da mn if Edison
has spent S3 billion or not. We
have got to protect the public
from the bureaucracy of the
Nuclear Regula tory Com -
mission,'' the silver-haired La
Jolla resident said in an in-
ter view last June during earth·
-quake safety hearings in San
Diego.
Carstens, who has spent more
than $50,000 of his own money to
fight li censing of the 1,100
megawatt react ors. claimed
that federal officials were "rub·
ber-slamping'' whatever the
utilities wanted them to. adding.
"They've got their orders lo gel
these (new Jllants) on line."
Though a Nuclear Regulatory
Commission spokesman denied
the charge, both Hosmer and
Holifield said they throught the
Reagan Administration was do-
ing its best to reverse what they
said was the anti-nuclear
climate that prevailed during
f ormer President Jimm y
Carter's term in office .
"We would have been much
farther along if it weren't for
Carter," Holifield said.
Laguna hears public on coastal plan
Council will seek f urther comments before deciding on endorsement
By STEVE TRI POLI
Of .. o.fty ..........
Laguna Beach council mem·
he rs say they'll seek more com·
ments from the public before de-
ciding whether to endorse a con·
troversial Loc al Coastal
Program to guide the city's de-
velopment in the future.
During a more than three hour
hearing on the proposed plan
Monday night, nearly three
dozen citizens commented on the
plan
ment of new subdivisions until
existing legal building sites were
built out. Many speakers at the
hearing said they were owners
o f undev elop ed land who
claimed the draft plan wouJd rob
them or the ability to profit from
development of their land.
Also complaining were resi-
dents or Irvine Cove, who said a
section of the plan calling for
public access to the cove wouJd
endanger delicate m arine life
there. The cove residents who
spoke, said public access should
be blocked.
for construction of a ffordable
h o us ing w e re necessary ,
especially for long-time city res-
idents who are now elderly and
of limited income.
The council's indecision at the
close of the meeting was a result
of calls from the speakers to
notify all property owners, in-
clurung those from outside the
city, of the plan's possible effect
on their land.
Coun cil membe rs proposed
everything from direct mail to
al l prope rt y o wn ers to
newspaper advertisements and
a mass mailing as a means of
telling interested persons of the
next public hearing.
Councilman Howard Dawson
said all property owners should
be no tifie d of the hearing
because "what's at stake here is
the constitutional and property
rights of those who have build-
in g sites."
But Co un c ilman Nei l
Fitzpatrick urged the council to
vote on the plan Monday, calling
attempts to extend the hearings
·'an attempt to kill it (the
coastal plan l.' ·
Complaints that the public had
not been properly informed
about the plan prompted the
council majority to hold at least
one more public hearing.
But the panel could not decide
when that meeting would be, nor
could they decide on how to
spread the word of the public
session.
Prior to that half hour debate,
a l least 35 people spoke al the
hearing, mostly residents op·
posed lo the plan, saying it
would affect their property in-
terests.
Representatives of the Laguna
Beach Chamber of Commerce,
who earlier criticized the draft
plan in a letter to the council,
complaJned about the plan's ef-
fect on business properties and
what they said was lack of prop-
er public nolific11tinn that the
plan was being considered.
Sanitary district
recall vote slow
The draft plan under con-
sideration would block develop-
Supporters, a minority of
those who spoke, lauded the plan
as a worka ble compromise
representing a ll political
persuasions in the city. Others
sajd the plan's provisions calling
Activity al half the precincts
set up for voters in the Dana
Point Sanitary District recall
election was reported to be slow
at rnid-montlng today.
Oruy seven voters out or .00
'AINTINO IN TH! PAfH< -Mary Def'ranco,
of Northrld1e and Dana Polnt, dabe oil on
still We paintlng near the 1a1ebo at Heisler
Park ln Lapna Beach. Sbe'1 part of a
private pajotinJ class that meets dally on the
blufftop to dabble in oils. In addition to vases and Clowers. the instructor allows his
students to paint landscapes and seascapes
Crom the blufft.op park.
had voted at polls set up at
Richard Henry Da na Elemen-
tary School, and poll inspectors
al Dana Hills High School said
only 15 had shown up out of 900
registered to vote there.
At St. Edwards Catholic
Church in Dana Point, poll in-
spector Nancy Bicks said 17 had
cast tlteir voles out of 1,654 reg-~tered. ''We're hoping they all show
up after work," s aid Rosemary
Miller, a clerk at the polls al
Dana Hills High School.
Officials at the county
Registrar or Voters office pre-
dicted a 20 percent turnout for
the election, called for by an1ry
citizens who objected to a
pension plan voted by district
board members for them.selves
a year ago last April.
At that time the board voted to
pay themselves $500 a month
after retiring from the district
with eight years or service.
Tar1ets for the recall election
a re members John McComb,
Angm Smith, Earl Hardisty and
J ack Schmidt. Voters tod ay
mUlt decide whether the men
•hould be recalled, then vote fOf'
repl11eements amon1 a list of slx
candi4atet.
Seekins election lo the board
PoStl are Lloyd Woerner . Jamee ff yde, Richard Run &.e, Fred
Roberti, Ann Kelly and Emily
Sparks.
Thi alx pollt lq th• sanitary
dlatrlct wlll be open until 8
tonJOt. Raulta of the elecllon
1hoUld be 1vallabl• aft.er 10 p.m.
b1 calll•I the Realat rar of
Vo&en oftlc. l1' llDta Ana at
814~.
·HOPE OF' THE Ft'TL'RF.'
Ex-solu11 Cllet Hol1/1eld
Housing
hearing
tonight
City council members tonight
will review a committee's re-
commendation that seeks nearly
a half million dollars m federal
funds t o upgrade low a nd
moderate housing in Laguna
Beach.
Tonight's session will be the
first of two public hearings re-
quired for oarticioatine in the
city's eighth year Housing and
Community Development grant
program.
The Housing Committee has
recommended five programs for
runrung, and has suggested the
city seek $498,300 in HUD money
for the projects.
Council members will conduct
the firs t publi c hearing
sometime a rter 6 o'clock in
council chambers. A second
public hearing probably will be
set for Sept. 1.
Of pr imary concern to the
housing committee is a project
that would see sewer and water
lines, as well as storm drain im-
prove m en l s m ade to the
Thurston Park area in Laguna
Canyon.
The half-century year old
neighborhood consists or three
dozen small houses equipped on·
ly with septic tanks.
Water pressure to the area is
dismal , and ma ny residenllf
complain that their tax dollars
do not com e back to the
neighborhood.
The housing committee sug-
gests more than $240,000 in
federal money go for improve-
ments to Thurston Park.
Other projects recommended
for grant funding include repair
of alleys in Laguna Beach: re-
moval of barriers at public sites
t hat h ind e r h a ndi ca ppe d
persons; a housing rehabilita~
tion program; completion of a
s tudy on future use of the city
sewage treatment plant and the
hiring of a housing consultant
for one year only.
Laguna Beach lost nearl~
$400,000 in federal housing gran\
funds last year because a plan
for a 70-unit low cost hous~
proj~tfellthrough .
At that time, some mem~
of the City Council said the cflf
was being unduly punished tot
something over which it had It!
tie control.
The low-cost and senior citi*I
housing project was to be bl atop the public Glenneyre Str
parking lot, but disagreeme
with the private developer of
proj~t resulted in its abandclll'
ment. ·•
Pancakes
event slated
They'll be serving up pan-
cakes with a view Labor DlY
weekend al Heisler Park ln
Laguna Beach.
The La1una Beach Lions
Club's annual f\lnd·raiser will be
held Sept. 6 and 7 be1lnnin1 at 7:30 a.m. each day in the park
alone Clift Drive. The park over-
looks the ocean.
DonaUons are $2.50 w1th pro-
ee eds coin& to Lions Club
cbu1Ues.
LHt year nearly 1,000 at-
tended Ute two-di.)' fMd. Tickets
may be purcha•ed at tbe park~
tbe day1 ol lbe event or In ad·
vanee al Blll Tbomu Cameral,
Lapaa aeaeb Hatdware or
ll~Hantwue.
------~-.,......~~~~.,..,_.,,_.~~~~~---..~------..--------------------------..._._..,..,....._~P.._•u~z.-._.._.,,.,_...,..,......, ... ...,...,UPl~O~S ............ $ ... °1 ..
ID • L Orange C.Oaat DAILY PILOTfTuHday, Augu1t 18, 1981
Daughter-in-law wins round
• • tries patience
THE TIME MACHINE: One mode of life that
now seems to be accepted along this best of all possl·
ble coasts is that everybody wants to do everything
very fas t. Have fun quickly And when the task ls
onerous, do it even quicker.
You ha ve to guess that's why these so·called
convenience markets have sprouted up on so many
street corners. The prices sure don't lick the
s upermarkets. But what they have to sell is alleged
speed.
Allegedly is used here because you take pot·luck
on speed when you
leap into one of these
corner 24-hour "we
DEAR ANN LANDERS .
Recently you told a dau1ht.er·in·
law who resented the fact that
her buaband telephoned hla
mother every ol1hl (even
thouah they had aeen each other
durtnt the day) that il wu a no-
win altuaUoo.
YOU ARE WRONG . My
dau1hter·ln·law DID wlo. My
son bu stopped vl1ltln1 me and
there are no more telephone
Cillis.
When I learned my dauahter·
ln·law resented my 1on'a viaiU
and daily telepbooo calla before
supper Caometlmea we chatted
for 30 minutea or more), I uked
her what I could do to eliminate
the friction. Her reply stunned
me. She calmly replied. "Your
son's business la here, and our
c hildren are doing well In
school. We cannot move but you
CAN. Get out of our lives and
stay out. Disappear and leave u8
alone."
I took her at her word. At age
83, I sold my farm where I had
grandchUdren. It certainly has
de vastated me.
Altbou1h the c limate 11 a
areat improvement over the
place I left, the coat of IM n1 has
nearly tripled. I have no car ,
and in order to get to church, I
must ride a bus for 40 minutes,
then transfer to another bus. I
a m depressed and lonely.
Once I read ln your column
"Time heals all wounds." I hope
your philosophy will prove true
for me. No name, please -just
EXILED IN SAN DIEGO
In •~h ca.ea, you are the bll
loser.
There WH DO Deed &o Qroot
your Ute and move s, ... mlln
away. You could bave 1uH8&ed
to your MO t•at ln tbe belt la·
terest ol h1J marrta1e be douJd
pboae you every otber day
<from work, II PN•lble> ~-ria·
U le11 frequently. Your llfe
would have Cotte OD mutb H
before ud you wouJd have beea
laflnltely better off than you are
now. How I wlsb you bad written
to me before you made tbat aelf·
deatnacUve decl1lon.
lived for 52 years and moved Dear Exiled : Your ulf.
3,000 miles away lo a place I l m posed ex lie w a1 aa ill· Diacover how to be date bait
never heard of before I saw it on conceived ad of bostUUy de· without /allmg hook, line and maker.
a map. I have no telephone in signed to pWIJsh your dau;Jater· Send SO centa along wtth a long,
m y new residence. ln·law. What you bave clone la atamped. .!el/-addrtued mvelope
I hope my moving has benefit· bitten off your nose to 1plte yoar with your req~•t to Ann Lander1.
e_d_m_y_d_a_u_g_h_t_er_·_in_·_la_w_._s_o_n_an_d _ _..:....(a_t_e __ •n_d_a_s_a_11_u_a_lf..:.y_ba....::p:..::pns __ . __ P_.O_Box __ 11_99_5_:_, Chicago, Ill. 606ll.
----------~"'°"' ~ sell it if you can rind TOM MURPHlll '~~,If it" places. Designer
introduces
a partner
lf eve ry -
body tries to get to the co unter for
check-out at the same time, forget the flash . There's
only a solo clerk and one cash register. No calling in
the reserve checkers like down at the really big
ma rkets.
Just the other night. for example, this search for
speed at the Korner Kwickie Mart was observed in
Costa Mesa when about 22 people tried to line up and
get checked out all at once.
The lone clerk, wearing a golden ·'Cal.
Berkeley" T·shirt, tried to move everybody along
fairly. He checked each person out at deliberate
speed.
Since there are no rolling shopping carts at the
Korner Kwickie place. everybody in the line is car-
rying their goods in their arms. One fellow juggled a
six·pack and four bags of potato chips. Another lady
had both acms heaped with canned goods.
"I think the checkout line i.! over there to the right, Zeb"
THE COUPLE APPROACHING the check out
sta nd, however, only had three items so it looked
like a breeze. It wasn't.
They finally got to the counter where the man in
the Cal, Berkeley T·shirt started checking them out
when he was st'opped cold.
"George, you pay for the dried beans separate-
ly." the woman ordered.
··Alt I've got is a $20 bill," the man protested.
"Well, give it to the nice man, then," she in·
sisted.
"l don't wanna give 'em a 20 just for these dried
beans."
"Then I'll loan you a dollar ... the woman an ..
nounced, dropping her two items on the counter
while s he bega n to punch and probe within a
knapsack·sized purse.
F1NALLY, SHE DUMPED the entire contents of
Superpurse out on the counter.
"Would you mind counting these nickels a nd
dimes to see if I have a dollar," she asked the Cal,
Berkeley T·shirt. He never changed his expression.
"The dried beans are only 83 cents," he pro·
nounced dryly.
"Well. then here." she replied, "lake it out of my
$20 bill .....
The fell ow just behind the couple in the line, who
was juggling the six·pack and four bags of potato
chips, appeared near collapse. His face was turned1
sort of ashen.
AFTER WHAT SEEMED an eternity, the odd
couple scooped up their goods. paid for the dried
beans , got the knapsack bag reassembled and left .
just after the woman asked the Cal, Berkeley T·
shirt. ··sir, could you change this $5 bill and include
four quarters?''
The man right behind them finally collapsed at
the counter, dropping his six·pack and denting the
cans .
The Cal, Berkeley T-shirt clerk finally spoke .
"How're your arms?" he asked.
RUFFELL'S ........ •1w.
B)' MARY JANE SCARCELLO Ot .. Oetfy ...... ._
P Ink 1o1nd while streamer•
marked the entr1o1n<'e to "une pu~tfo suns ruh1on " l(lven by
Vincent Jucquart.
Guests followed a trail of Us·
sue paper rose petals to the front
door where Jacquurl and room·
mate Gary Harrison had
trans form ed their Newport
Beach apartment Into a work of
art.
White canvas covered all
available walls, floors a nd
HAPPENINGS
furniture, and pink balloons
floated along the ceiling.
Although the party claimed to
have no reason , its actual
purpose was to introduce Jac-
quart's new partner in interior
design, John Mariani.
Mariani and his wife Elizabeth
flew down with friends from
their home in San Francisco for
the occasion.
They'll continue to live in the
north and Jacquart will work
here in what Mariani termed
"shuttle decorating."
"Vincent has great innovative
technique," he said, referring to
a computerized house J acquart
has designed for a Newport
Beach client. ·'San Francisco is
known for its easy luxury and
tactile impressions , so we
represent two worlds. This is a
case where one plus one equals
three."
Describing himself as the reb-
el in four generations of prune
farmers , Mariani is looking
forward to the December issue
of "Architec tural Digest,"
where t he couple's Nob Hill
apartment will be featured.
"It's an English country house
done in icy pink," he said. "San
Francisco women don't have
tans, so they look better in that
color."
Jacquart's work will grace the
November pages or ''Architec-
tural Digest '' with a Palm
Springs home he decorated for
Jack Sheap of Newport Beach.
The designer came to America
from his native France in 1977,
after a short stay in Beirut and
said, "It's the dream of every
Frenchman to come to
California."
His friend Dino Gerlando of
Los Angeles provided the
graphics, the only decorations
highlighted on the white canvas
walls.
Sheldon Lippe of Lippe/War-
ren Crystal in Laguna Beach at-
tended, as did Arlene Altman
and Wendy Wonder, who desian
jewelry.
Vincent Jacquart r left J shows party decor to Elizabeth and John Munam
Linda and Guy Colbert took
time away from their busy
Steinbeck's Restaurant on
Balboa Island lo drop by, and
Ron Ep deserted the Sawdust
Festival In Laguna Beach to at·
lend.
While talking with Mr. and
Mrs . Irving Felt of New York.
Ep discovered that he and Mrs.
Felt had some relatives·bY ·
marriage in common.
Felt is chairman of the board
of Madison Square Garden, a
part or which is named the Felt
Forum after him. The couple
had been staying in Rancho
Mirage before attending meet·
ings in Los Angeles.
Other guests included Compte
Patrick of Montfreid, Patrick
Shea, Dr. Michael Bear, Patrick
Harrison, Shawn Farns worth
a nd Tari Soderline.
N ot all the boats in
Newport Harbor Sunday were
entered in the Character Boat
Parade.
Architect A. Bahar's boat.
"Sama r ang," moored near
Cano's Restaurant, was the site
of a marriage cer emony for
Beth Snevely and Tom Cham-
bers. both of Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Snevely of Costa
Mesa and Dorothy Chambers of
Tustin.
About 25 guests attended the
ceremony onboard. and several
hundred wi shed the couple well
at a reception afterward on Lido
Isle.
Special entertainme nt was
provided by "Street Player," a
musicaJ group which had dis·
banded but staged a reunion
especially for the occasion.
T he couple will leave for
England in September where he
will work in real estate and she
will study art history
Gemini: Reason to Celebrate
Wednesday, August 19
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES c March 21 -Apnl 191 Circumstances enable
you to gain greater control of your own destiny
TAURUS cApril 20-May 20> You have more "work~
ing room" as red tape is removed Whal had been
withheld will become available.
GEMI NI <May 21-J unc 20 > You'll ha ve reason to
celebrate: desires. hopes, wishes are close to fulfillment.
HOROSCOPE
Accent on returns from business endeavors, l)OSsible pro·
motion and added prestige.
CANCER c J une 21-July 22>. Wntten message pro·
v1des impetus. e nlightenment and spurs ambition.
Supenor n ashes green light for necessary changes
LEO <J uly 23-Aug. 221: Disputes are setlled. Some
compromises occur long-range results will prove
fa vorable . Major domestic adjustment dominates
scenario.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 : Surface indications are
deceptive. By digging deep, you unearth greater finan-
cial possibilities.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct 22> Reports s hould be re·
viewed: stock or business transaction subject to delay
Know it. plan accordingly. Contractual obligations are
part of scenario Emphasis also on m arital status
SCORPIO cOct. 23-Nov. 21 I: What appears a setback
will boomerang in your favor Project 1s completed
despite "sniping" by those who are petty, envious. Aries.
Libra natives play key roles
SAGITfARIUS c Nov 22-Dec 21 l Affairs of heart
domlnate. you make new starts and member of opposite
sex is very much involved. Emphasis also on specula ·
lion. children. variety and games of chance
CAPRICORN c Dec 22-Jan 191 Focus on home. re·
pa irs. safe ty measures and basic secunl} Older family
me mber makes specia l request
AQUARlt:S IJan 20-f'eb 181 Expansion 1s ke}nol·
ed . you perceive pote ntial a nd are able to communicate
ideas in graphic manner
PISCES ( f'eb 19-March 201 Opportunity exists to
build on a more solid base. You IO<'ate .. missing links ..
F'ocus ali.o on payments . collections and income poten
ual
WHOl.STllY s......_.._ .....
19JJMAUOl ll.YD.
COST.AMISA-541-115'
SA VE 300/o on
RICE CAKES ..,,....Joe' ........
We have Rice Cakes on
sale for only S.111 per 4'4
oa. packa1e. Compare
tbla wilb S.t9 founcl elaewhere. Great with hora·d 'oeuVl'el, 1pread1
or peanut butter. We e1peclatly recommend
Rice Cakes with cheese,
alnce they won't muk
the fiavor. AvaUab&e in
Natural Unsalted; and
Buckwheat Salted.
Pleate vi.tit our newest Trader Joe's at the ln· ~nectlon ol 11th Stzeet1 Newport Boulevard ano
Superior Avenue (nnt to
Denny'• and Barclay'•
Banlt.)
~ BaSsto
School
fashion Show
Everything lor e.dt·
to-School 7:30 Fri.
and 1a3on Set ..
MOW IMC
Aug. 21·22 at t----------------------1
Penny Loof er
T ossel Loaf er Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Huntington Center. IWWW•MiMMMMIAlllWWw••MMMMla
YMCA -YOll YUi mtlD A NEW CH,AJ>TER FOR THE HISTORY BOOKS Cookbook Pull-out Section
Art /Craft Show
Huntington OW'lllr
Mall Aug. 20-23.
FAMILY YACATlll ATTUCTION
"Fltnen center for my wir. end I, twtmml, &
C*'ftll9 lot the kid•. ,,.
YMCA t. • pl9C4t I can
""" ~ kids to:· ....................
· AT LAST .. S.•I ANO CHILDREN WALK TOGETHER
We en omol'IQ the first
~th -.., childrens shoes.
130 Fashion Island, Newport Beach 944 .. 2494
/
Good thing• to eat wfll be lnekt• your
D•lty l'llot Thureday, Aug. 20. The be1t
of over 1,000 r.clpea submitted by our
,...,., feeturtn1 th• wtnne,. of the
1'ttet '•vortt• ""lpe Conteat. Olecover new adventure• In aooklnt. from
Mkltowave • cte ... rta. aoup to nuta.
Don't rnlM It.
lllilyllll
For home delvery, caH M2-4321
--
'
'
I
.... -., .........
It's been disappointing so far for Angel management .
Baseball hierarchy
still pomlers fate
Revised playoff plan contemplated
NEW YORK CAP> -Pity the
poor baseball ran.
First, as he was getting to the
meat of the .season and an-
ticipating his team's chances for
post-season play, the players
embarked on a 50-day strike that
disrupted his summer and sent
him looking for other diversions.
Finally, the strike was settled,
baseball resumed, and Joe Fan
again began to look for his
favorite team in the standings·
and ponder its rate for post·
season play. only to be told that
the latest concept was being
scrapped.
THE FAN CAN only s it and
wait ror the latest format to be
annowtced -at least now he
can continue to watch games -
and hope that this time the
baseball hierarchy com es up
NASL owners
seek limit
on foreigners
C HICAGO (AP> -North
American Soecer League
owners opened a two-day m eet-
ing Monday with the co-owners
or the Dallas Tornado presenting
proposals for sweeping changes
-including limiting the number
of foreigners in a team's start-
ing lineup.
"After 1S years in the league,
we feel it's time to do some
monkeying around with the
game," said Bill McNutt of the
Tornado. "We need to make it
more exciting to get the rans."
McNuU said he and the club's
' other co-owner, Lamar Hunt,
had "eight to 10 ideas" for the
owners to consider. "These
aren't things we've just con-
jured up, and they're designed
to improve the game artistically
and financially." McNutt said.
Among the changes suggested
by McNutt and Hunt were:
-Allow only four foreipen In
the s~lng lineup, a proposal
intended to Increase the attrac-.
tlvenesa of the game for
American fans and cut the coat
of st1ning expensive forel(n
players.
-Enlar1e the goal by a foot In
every dlrectlon.
-Ban puses to a goalkeeper
by teammates.
-Replace all throw-ins wtth
kick-Ins.
-Eliminate pffaidet, or move
the offsldea line back from the
16"-yard line to Just out.tide the
penalty box. ·
-create a aone in the midfield when a player may remain only
for a speclfled period of tlme,
1lmllar to the three·lffOnd 18" in basketball.
• with a plan that satisfies the
players, the fans and the
owners.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn and p residents Chub
Feeney of the National League
and Le e M acPhail or the
American League hope to an-
nounce, before the end of the
It was what I
called dragging it in
a little belatedly, to
say the least .
-MePtinMlller
week, a revised plan for de-
termining which teams wlll
qualify for the post-season
playoffs.
The three met Monday and,
according to a spokesman for
Kuhn's office, the announcement
could come as early as today.
Feeney had said earlier Mon-
day, "We want to get this thing
settled as soon as possible."
The three have been discuss-
ing ways or closing the loopholes
in the split-season plan, which
was intended to revive interest
in baseba ll in as many cities as
possible, as quickly as possible.
following the strike.
THE PLAN WAS agreed upon
by the owners in their first joint
meeting after the strike was set-
tled. Both leagues accepted the
plan as did the players, but ac-
cording to Mar vin Miller, ex-
ecutive director of the Major
League Players Assoeiation, the
plan was news to the players.
"We heard about this apllt-
s eason idea !or the first time on
t h at last Thurs day of the
negotiations," said Miller, refer-
ring to the lengthy bargaining
session that began on July 30
and, after more than 12 hours,
produced an agreement ending
the strike. "It was what I call
dragging lt in a little belatedly,
to say the least.
''To introduce it at that time,
for the first time -lt would be a
miracle it something like this
didn't happen."
There were no miracles for
baseball and 1apin1 boles were
exposed in the second seaaon
format.
Under the plan, the division
leaders at the time of the stri.lre
were declared winners of the
first part of the aeuon and the
second part was set up u a
separate enUty, with lbe win·
nen ot the two sections meetini
in best-of.five, lntra-divillonaJ
Pl•YOff•. If the same team won both HCtlonl, jt ... to fate the
team In it.I dlvlaloa wtth -tbe
next·belt overall record.
Howevw, that left open tbe
omlnow '"'°'pect of a team loe-
lnt PIDel lo ordel" to Improve
Ill cbancea at a pla,otf berth.
lllly Piiat L
TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1981
LEGALS C4
CLASSI Fl ED CS
Ange& smarting
Orioles invade Anaheim Stadiu·m
By EDZINTEL
Of .. Delty ...........
The Angels will try to put some life into their sputter-
ing machine tonight when they open the Second Season
home schedule at Anaheim Stadium against the Baltimore
Or ioles. Game time la 7:30 p.m.
Dave Frost (1-1) will go to the mound for the Angels
against the Orioles' Scott McGregor (7·2) in the first of a
three-game series against Baltimore and the first ol an
eight-game homestand.
The Angels are still licking their ~unds after going
'If someone had told me that we
would lose four of our first five games ,
I would have told them to go see a
shrink.'
1·5 against Seattle and Oakland (including being swept Dy
Oakland) on a road trip to open the post-strike season.
It's none other than Seattle who leads the American
League West Division today -a most unlikely occurrence
in a most unlikely of seasons -and the Angels are at the
bottom of the heap, four full games behind the Mariners.
Problems seem to abound the Angels as they open a
rugged homestand that features East Divi~ion contendors
Cleveland and Bos ton, in addition to Earl Weaver's
Orioles.
Mainly, it's a shaky pitching staff that has manager
Gene Mauch looking for a way to keep a high-octane of·
fense ahead of the opposition.
The Angels had numerous opportunities to make good
on the road trip but costly mental errors and blown
chances produced the worst of all hopes for a fast start out
of the gate. ··u someone would have told me that we would lose
four of our first five games, I would have told them to go
see a shrink," Mauch said prior to Sund~y·s game in
Oakland. Well, Mauch can make that fi ve·of-six after Su·n·
day·s loss to the A's.
No Angel starter has thrown a complete game -or
Who's No. 1
in the East :
Penn St . or
Pitt? C2.
won a game in the second half. Frost was the only one
involved in a game that turned out a victory. Deity Nee Stefl,.._
Dave Prost hopes Ill.' can change tile tide tor11ght
Tony LaRussa
Bird tallles
Dodgers
in Chicago
CmCAGO CAP) -Doug Bird
shook off the shock, dismay and
disappointment of being traded
from the New York Yankees to
the Chicago Cubs with one effort
-a complete game.
Bird, a 31 -year -ol d
· righthander who came to the
Cubs in the Rick Reuschel trade
on the day or baseball's strike.
tamed the Los Angeles Dodgers
on six hits Monday in hurling the
Cubs to a 3-1 victory.
Atlhough Bird has won 15 of
bis last 16 major league de-
cisions, he hadn't posted a nine-
inning complete game since 1976
when he was with Kansas City.
He did pitch a "complete" game
agai.Mt Atlanta on Aue. 31, 1979,
while with Philadelphia but that
contest w as h a lted in the
seventh inning because of rain.
With a 17-mile-an-hour wind
blowing in, Bird went the di.a·
tance to post his second straight
victory for the Cubs.
"I was shocked and disap-
pointe d when the Yankees
traded me, I did a good job for
them," said Bird. ''I waa looking
forward to geltinc a World
Series ring. But I'm with the
Cubs and I'm going to do the
beat I can here. Everything la
fine now." ·
Bird wu S-1 for tht Yankees
before being traded. He bu five
major league complete camea.
"He mixed and spotted hi•
pitches well, changed apeedt
and kept the hitters off
balance,'' said , Steve Garvey,
who wu robbed of a homer in
the ellhth lnnlnt when the wind
kept b1I drive from 1oln1 over
tbe'wall.
The Cubl 1taked Bird to a 1--0
lead when they scored an \Dl·
earned run in the tint, but the
Dodpn tot that back la the
second on a walk to Roll C.. a
alnsle by Rick Monda1 and an
Infield out.
Mesa selects Hagey, Carn~y
Two coaches to direct Mustang football program
By ROGER CARLSON
Ot•Del!Y ... ._
Jim Hagey and John Camey, two coaches with
28 years of coaching experience between them at
Costa Mesa High School. will share duties as the
Mustangs' head rootball coach this fall.
The two were appointed following the recent
resignation of Tom French. who resigned his
teaching position for personal reasons after a
seven-year tour.
Hagey and Ca rney, along with long-time Mesa
aides Tom Ware and Doug Brown, begin the 1981
campaign Wednesday night with a general meet-
ing with all football parents at the Lyceum on the
school's campus. beginning at 7:30.
"Everyone's responsibilities remain virtually
intact," says Hagey. "John Carney knows our
passing attack and I'm going to try to help devise
a running attack to go with it. Tom Ware will con-
tinue with the derense. Doug Brown will stay with
the lines.
"Obviously we have to go with.our established
passing attack," continues Hagey. "We have some
blessings in a very quick set or receivers and quick
secondary."
Fren ch 's sudde n resignation was made
without comment. but Hagey noted, "He (French)
did nothing but improve things here."
Prior to French's arrival Costa Mesa had 14
straight years without a winning season. In the
past seven seasons the Mustangs won two co-
championships and went to the playoffs three
times .
Chances for another playoff berth and possible
title hinie on the Mustangs' passini iam e. which
John Carney Jun Hagey
revolves around All-Orange County tight end Steve
Cook, 6-4, 215-pound tight end Mike Matson and
three outside receivers -Mike Anderson. Ty
C ulver and Onassis Nixon -a lo ng with
quarte rback Steve Anderson.
"We decided to a pproach it this way (twin
coaches) on an interim basis," continued Hagey.
"After the season is over we'll kick back and take
a look.
"This is a veteran staff and we're very op-
timistic about our chances. Our efforts in the sum-
($ee MUSTANGS, P1ge C2)
11# ........
DodQn ucond baltman Dovt11 ~· •t~ol.t tecond aMod of throw to Chfoago'• Ivan DeJttu1.
\
\
t
I ,
------------~-------~ -----
e>r.nge Cout DAILY PlLOT/Tuttd1y. Auguat 18. 1981
.---------------------...
Drinking in stands
brings on a brawl
From AP dlapatclle•
VANCOUVER. Brillah Columbia [i]
-The operators of the Pacific Na· II•
lional Exhibition stadium ordered a
thorouah Investigation Mondaf Into a drunken
brawl at a Canadian Jl'ootbal Lea1ue conteal
between the British Columbia Llon1 and Hamil
ton TI1er·Cata.
Fifty police olllcera were ulled lo Empire
Stadium Sunday to control 10 drunk fana who
went onto the sidellnea, crabbed football• and
touaht with anyone In their w11y
Elaht fans were held by police for beln1 In
toxicated in u public place but were rele11ed
without being charaed.
ExhJbition !ipokeaman Biii Joyner aald an
lnvest11at1on Into the "unfortunate Incident"
will be conductt'd with the city police
Sunday was the first day footb1ll tan1 we-rt"
permJtted to drink ln the atan<b, but Joyntr said
··our records lndltate that there have been far
fewer alcohol·related problems at theat1 games
since the PNE beaun scrvlna beer over a yur
aao
Quote of the day
"You don't just Mil of a sudden turn Into
a robot," s ays the Dod1eira' Rick Monday.
"And you cannot take the prldt• away rrom
an athlete or all or 11 sudd~n lnJett pride .
To say that basebnll playel'1 would do
anything but play all out Is ludicrous.··
Baseball Cards take over stadium
ST LOUIS The own~rs of the Ill
baseball St. Louis Cardinals romplet·
ed their takeover of the corporation
that runs Busch Memorial Stadium Monday by
electing a six·member board or directors at a
special shareholders meeting.
The vote or shareholders cut the former
12·member board in half. One casualty was
former chairman William J . Dougherty, who
had vehemently opposed the takeover of Civic
Center Redevelopment Corp. by Anheuser·
Busch, the nation's largest brewery.
Anheuser·Busch had been locked in a sum·
mer·long struggle with Apex Oil Co., of Clayton,
Mo .• before announcing that it had ~ained con·
trol of 66 percent of outstanding Civic Center
stock. The special shareholders meeting was
called by Anheuser·Busch shortly after the an·
nouncement.
Brett's homer 1ld1 KanMt City win
Oeiw .. -..U11 loq boOM n&n • and lbre4t Toronto •min tu.led a
Ove-run fourth lnnlaa Monday ni&bt
and cani41d Kanau Ctt)' to a &·3 Vic·
tory over the Blue Jay1. Former Cotta Mesi
Hlth and Oran1e Co11t ColJ111 pitcher Daa
Q11LNllberry, relieved In the .tahlh lnninl to
post bb 11th aave of the aeuon. l• Maylteny
had a two.run homer ln the tlrat lnnln1 for
Toronto . . . Chlca10 left
fielder ltoa LeFlore alnlled
twice. 1cored twlct and
threw a runner out at the
plate, wbHe Gres L••laakl
drove ln two runa with a
single and a tape·meaaure
home run as the White Soic
d e feated the New York
Yankees, 4·1 ln another
Amerlc1m Lea1ue 1ame. It
HrtU was the fourth 1tral1ht loaa
for the Y ankeea . . . Alu Trammell capped an
elaht·run flrat lnnln1 with a bU•·loadtd double
and Lance Parr11la and ltlrt& Gt..._ each col·
lectoo three aln1le1 11 Detrolt crushed Mln·
ne1ota, 12·2. Dan Petry 1cattered four hit.a and
allowed one earned run t.hroulb the nnt alx ln·
nlngs .. S teady rain w11htd out the
11chcdult.-d same between Mllwaukee and Texu
In Arllnaton. It will be played toniJ-bt aa part ot
a twl nlaht doubleheader ... Tom Paelorn of
Seattle, who had 15 hilt to raJae hiJ balllnl
uverul(e to a leaaue·leadln1 .343, wu named
l\merlean Lo1tue player of the week
Detroit placed outtlelder Champ Sammera
on tht• 15 day disabled llat
Morgan's double aids Giant victory
Jot' Mnrun snapped an 11th· • lnnln11 th• with 11 three·run double off
relll'Vt-r Ron Scurry to lead San
l"rnncl11co ovor Plllsburaih, 5-1, Mon·
d11y nll(ht In National LeMgue baseball action.
'rhl' vktory went to reliever Gres Minton who
helpt.'<i the Giants out or a bases.loaded jam in
the Pirulcs ' 10th Inning ... Winning pitcher
Ray Burri• und Tim Ratnea hit consecutive run.
scoring singles in the second
inning to lead Montreal to a
6·2 win over Houston. Raines
walked on four pitches from
Houston starter Vern Ruhle,
stole second and scored on
Gary Carter's groundout in
the first. Tim Wallach, a
Saddle back College
graduate. had a single for the
Expos in the second
Morgan .. Rookie Glenn Bram·
met's force·play grounder scored Tommy Herr
from third base in the 13th inning to give St.
Louis a 2· I victory over San Diego. It marked
the Cardinals' debut at home for the second half
of the season ... New York Mets' outfielder
Joel Youngblood, suffering from soreness in his
left knee, underwent an arthrogram ... Pete
Rose of Philadelphia who became the National
League's all·time leader in h1ts wtth 3,631, was
named National League player or the week.
Baum gets a promotion
He's named general chairman of Crosby Southern
By HOWARD L . HANDY
Ot-Deltypt ........
Gene Baum, one of the harder working com·
mittee members of the Crosby Southern golf
tournament for the past several years, including
his days under Paul Salata, has been named
general chairman of next year's event at Irvine
Coast Country Club.
Baum, a member or the sponsoring S52 Club
that benefits Hoag Hos pital, has been active since
the tournament began some seven years ago.
Dates of the 1982 affair that features young
and upcoming touring pros unable to make the
field for that wee~·s maJor or PGA tour event, are
Thursday and Friday, Feb. 8 and 9. This coming
year , the San Diego Open will be run during the
same dates as the Crosby Southern.
In addition to the new pros, many of whom
have gone on to greater success on the PGA tour
including some victories, veterans of another era
are also welcomed by the sponsors at Irvine Coast cc.
Committee members and the press will gather
at Irvine Coast on Monday, Nov. 23 for the annual
Hoag Clammer. a one·day affair to get the
machinery in motion for the next tournament. • • • THE FOURTH ANNUAL Children's Hospital
From Page C1
MUSTANGS. • •
mer passing games were very representative. We
did very well against Edison, Mater Del,
Capistrano Valier and the second time around,
Villa Park."
Hagey prepped at Downey High and was at
Orange Coast College for one year before movine
on to UC Santa Barbara and a year of aervice ball
in MWlich before completing h1a final two years at
Loni Beach State.
His coaching career included three years at
Warren High and two yean at Artesia Hieb before
coming to Cotta Mesa, where be served under Neil
Peek, Max. Miller, John Sweuy and French.
Camey prepped al Gardena and Foleom bi&hl,
then went on to Sierra Colleee and Sacramento
State aa a defenalve back.
His only coachln1 has been at Costa Mesa,
beginning under Miller. In addition to hi.a ex·
perience as football coach, Carney bu a1IO held
track and field and cross country duties after the
realp.ation of Joe Fisher.
Between the four coaches (t.he)''U try to find
another trom staff or on a walk-on but.a to nu the
vacancy creat.ed by French's abHnce> there iJ eo
yean d experience.
Tbe ftnt of two·a·daya besin Wedaeaday and
tbe flnt day of practice with padl la llooda)r.
Area golfers qualify
CHINO -Davld Beatty ot La1una HUI• and
Brian Undley of Fountain Valley led a c:roup of
ell)lt quallften tor the U.S. amateur 1011 cham·
plontldJll ,rltb ae.hol• •core1 of 142 Monday ov•r
the W....,. Hill• Country Club eoune bert.
s.tty ftred l'OUllda of 1Ml wbilt Undley, a
membeT of the Mesa Verde Country Club men'•
•roup, had a ee In the mornlnf and a 73 ln the af.
temoon. Alto qualifY1n1 from the Oran1e Coat area
WU Johll Bu.rkfe ol Cotta ..... wbo bad roaDdl ot
71·'11-"'· A fourth an• quallfttr WU Robert Call
ol Newport Beach wbo made the ft.eJd 1D action at
Satkoy Country Club.
of Orange County < CHOC> tournament will be held
Monday at Yorba Linda Country Club.
Because of some last minute cancellations,
there are openings for more golfers for the event
at ~ per person. This includes golf, prizes and
dinner.
Paul Rangel is chairman of the event and he is
not onJy looking for golfers but tee and green
sponsors as well .
"We play so they can," is the slogan of the
tournament that benefits the children in the
hospital.
For further information, contact Larry
McFarland at 547·9324. . • • • WITH THE MARCH OF DIMES tournament
out of the wav. Joe Costello will be putting into
GOLF
high gear plans for the ninth annual Costa Mesa
City golf championship tournament to be played
Sept. 12 and 13 on lhe Los Lagos and Mesa Linda
courses with a limited field of J:iO.
Many past winners have gone on to further
success on the golf course including several on the
PGA tour at the present time including Mark
O'Meara who won here in a playoff in 1979. Scott
Simpson. the winner here in 1974, is also playing
on the PGA tour.
The fee for entering the Costa Mesa event is
$40 which includes tee prize, green fees, a buffet
on Sunday and other prizes. Entry blanks are now
available in most Orange County pro shops.
While the emphasis is on the low handicap
flillht. ~olfers with handicaps up to 18 are invited
to participate In the flight competition. Any
handicap over 18, however,· mUJt play to. that margjn.
HERE'S A RATHER NOVEL way of enterin1
a celebrity golf tournament late In the year. It's
the Bob Elder /Celebrity miniature golf tourna·
ment at Camelot Golr Course in Anaheim Saturday
with a shotgun start at 11 a.m.
The $20 participant fee includes a round ot 1011
with a celebrity; an official tournament T·abirt; a'
coupon for a free game of 1011; a coupon for a free
waterslide ride; and retresbmenta.
Celebrities wilJ come from the Anaelt, Ram1,
KEZV radio atatton and aome others. The arand
prize for the top fouraome will be a apot ln the Don
Baylor /65 Rotet celebrity golf claulc Oct. 26.
Money trom the tournament .tll benefit the
CyaUc Ylbroala Foundation. For further lnforma·
Uon, call m.oeoo. • * • .
aDP Sll018 -Southern Cali.fomJa Sect.loo PGA Protea1lonala teated t.bt Riviera Country
Club coutH llODC1a1, plaY1n1 tbe lone tea that
will be UMd for th• HU PGA cb.amploubip AUf.
4·7 that year. a. lllHdl. dlnctor of aolf at
Rlvtera, ••11 : 11te aoune played '7,0lt Jania and
the sreena were rHlly altck like they will be for
the PGA." . . • The 1Jtb annu.i Anabelm dt)'
cbamplonahip will be held SeDt. lf.30 uUUan1 both
the Anaheim Htlla and Anaheim llunlclpal
counes. Larry • .,,.,_ of Weet Cout Amateur
Goll AaloctatJon, le IMlpm, to promcu the ••eat
and urfin1 membere of bil Solflnl ITOUP to
partidpate. The tourney wUJ include four handicap rupt1 lD addition to th• cbamp6onabip witb • fteJ4
of 200 ~. Anyone tm.erwted la an all'J
blank 1bould c:oatact llarfi8on at-. ... The•·
ti')' fee l• '40 wbleb dota DOt lnelude a cart.
ReaervatiOM tor cuu lboald be made Mpar.a.
ly.
-----------------------------~~
Partridge released by Chargers
atek Partrtcl1e, a Golden Wett m· Collep product and vetttan punter 4 l
In the NaUonal Football Leaaue. w11 . 9
rel ued by the San Dle10 Char1en
Monday. PartrldJe f-tnl1hed third In the NFL ln
punUna ln tm and waa oblalned by San Ole10
rrom New Orlearu lut Yetf. Hit 39.l avera1e
wH lbe Cbar1er1' hl1heal avera1e in four years
. . . Nf'L tHma muat be down to 80 players
by thla afternoon and a
number of veierans were re·
leased Monday. Washington
asked waivers on tile Forte,
Bobby Hammond, Dallas
Hlck111H, .Ion McDaniel and
Zion McKinney and placed
Ray Waddy on the physically
unable to perform list
. . . Other veterans released
Included : Minoesota wide re·
Partridge ceiver Kevin Miller; ll·year
deferuilve end Biil Gre1ory and former Notre
Dame running back Al Hunter by Seattle;
Baltimore defensive end Ron Fernaadea; Green
Bay linebacker Jim Gueno; running back Doll
Woodl by San Francisco ; defensive backs Dave
Becker and WenUord Galnea by Chicago
... The Cowboys' Randy Hu1llea may be
through with football after dislocating his riaibt
s houlder for the third lime a1ain1t the Rams
Saturday night. He will hold a news conference
with his doctors to announce his future plans in
the near future
Baseball today
On this date in baseball in 196o:
Milwaukee Braves ace Lew Burdette
hurle d a n o ·htller a nd be at the
Philadelphia Phillies l ·O at County
Stadium.
Today's Birthdays :
Hall of Fame pitcher Burleigh Grimes is
88. Atlanta Braves catcher Bruce Benedict
is 26.
Leonard begins training for Hearns
Sugar Ray Leonard, beginning II
two weeks of training in Los Angeles
for his Sept. 16 welterweight title
s howdown with Tltomaa Hearna, sparred briefiy
in front of a crowd of 400 spectators . . . All·
star forward Marques Job.lllloa'1 request to be
traded will be discussed this wee k by
M i lwauk ee ow n e r Jim F1t11erald
Memorial services are planned today for
Jack Holley, the head basketball coach and
athletic director at the College of the Ozarks
... Los Alamitos quarterhorse racing will con·
t inue through Friday in the daytime with first
post at 1:30.
Telev1s1o(l , rad io
TV: Noeventsscheduled.
RADIO: Baseball Baltimore at Angels .
7 :30 p.m., KMPC (710J.
WEDNESDAY'STV·RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Chicago, 11 :30 a.m.,
Channelll; KABC (790).
PARDON ME -The New York Yankees' Reg·
gie Jackson has som e not·So·polite things to
say to umpire Bill Kunkel after the latter
ejected the outfielder following a strike out in
Penn St., Pitt
to stage war
No. 1 in East at stake
From AP dbpatcbea
' I ..
Just like Oklahoma and Nebraska in the Big
Eight <one has had at least a share or every title
since 1960>. Michigan and Ohio State in the Htg
Ton (dJtto since 1967 > and Alabama and Georgia in•
the South·eastern Conference, Eastern collegei
footbaU also has its own Big Two. •
They are Penn State and Pitt -or, in the lasd
couple or years, Pitt and Penn State. In ract, Penn l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~-·
COLLEGE PREVIEW S i
State's string of 42 consecutive non· losing seasons!·
dates ba.ck to 1938 and is an NCAA record. Pitt, J
m.ea~wh1le, has recaptured some of its past glory,,
wmnmg the national championship in 1976 and
finishing second to Georgia a year ago.
It is generally con ceded th at t he two ,
Pennsylvania r ivals will ruJe the roost again
although Pitt can hardly expect to be as strong a~
last year I 11·1 >. including a 37·9 Gator Bowl rout of
South Carolina while Penn State should be im·
proved, although a killer schedule may prevent
ai;iythlng. like last year's 10·2 mark (the Nittany
Lions trimmed Ohio State 31·19 in the Fiesta
BowlJ, which was good for eighth place in The As·
·sociated Press rankings.
"'We're a long ways from having the football
team we had last year," says Pitt Coach Jacki e
Sherrill, who must replace lS starters, "but unless
we have some bad injuries, I don't think we'll dip
too far. I think we're certainly in the Top Twenty."·
~nd Sherrill's blueprint sees the Panthers contend·.
m g for the top again in 1982.
··we will have a fine football team, there is no
doubt about that,"· says PeM State's Joe P aterno, :
owner or a 141-31·1 log in his. LS years atop Mt. Nit · .
tan~. "We have to have a strong team to operate ·
agamst our schedule, which ls the most difficult in
Penn State history." It includes the likes of
Nebraska. Miami (Fla ), Alabama. Notre Dame
and, or course. Pitt
. The National Football League drafted a dozen
Pitt players and seven others were signed as free
agents. The losses include defensive end Hugh •
Green -a three-time All·American, winner of the
Lombardi Award a nd runnerup in the Hei sman
Trophy voting and offensive tackle Mark May,
who won the Outland Trophy Green, May and .
fullback Randy McMillan were first-round draft
Picks.
P i tt's s trength will be o n offens e ,
es peciall y the high·powe red aerial duo of
quarterback Dan Marino and flanke r Dwight
Collins The only returning dt:fensive regulars are
linebacker Sal Sunseri and safety Tom Flynn. but
the key will be tackle John Hendrick, who is com·
ing back from knee surgery and could anchor a de·
fensive line that lost all fi ve starters
the second inning of Monday night's game
against the Chicago White Sox. Jackson, bat
ting slightly over .200, has been in a season·
long slump.
Jitnior Sabot race scheduled
More than 150 boats start qualifying Wednesday
By ALMON LOCKABEY ...., ...............
JWlior Naples Sabol sallors from throughout
the Southwest started coneregatlng today at Udo
Isle a Yacht Club ln preparation for the national
championship for the class.
More than 150 boall will start competition
Wednesday In the main turnlna ba1in east of Lldo
Isle lo qualifyint race• that will spilt the vut fieet
Into 1old (champlonahlp) silver. bronJe and iron
night.a.
Champlon1hip races tor the 1old and silver
fl11ht• wlll start Thursday with t-wo rac"
achedWed to 1tart ln the main turntna baeln. Bronze and ll"()D fillbtt wU1 at.art trom a Une 1et up
ln tht·west turnlnJ "batln.
1bt race• wUl conUnue Friday from the same
locaUoal. The trophy preeentatlon for the re1atta
wlll be beld Friday at e p.m. at tb• Udo Ille
clubhoale.
Tbew!!ZIM Sabot l• an •foot pram wlth'tbe
Dut.eb n aboe lulpla OD tbe aall whleb bu
been a popular Junior 11ilboet for man1 yean. It\
recent )'tart lt hN alto bed a rapidly 1rowta1
•bare fl adult devoteet.
Half of the sailors in the national cham•
pionship regatta are from the Balboa·Newporl
Fleet which held elimination series for the title
event in J\4ly. Local sailors wUI represent Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club, South
Shore Yacht Club, Balboa Yacht Club and Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
The remainder of the neet comes from other-
y achtlng areas from San Diego to Marina del Rey
with a goodly number trom Arizona, New Mexico
and Nevada.
Jon Pinckney of BCYC is the defendinl cham.
elon, wt.nnlnl last year's nationals at Coronadd
Caya Yacht Club, San Diego. Another favorite is
Matt Tln&ler, junior LlYC commodore who
flnlshed third last year. ·
Social event.I are lntenperaed between tb6
radng events. A family dinner la scheduled Tbun·
ttay at LIYC, followed by the National Cham·
t>ionahlp dace.
A tamlly breakfut ll scheduled Friday at 9 a.m., followed by tM Naple1 Sabot Asaoclation an·
nual meetlnl.
llllyPHat
TUESDAY, Aug. 18, 1981
FEATURES 82
IRVlll COMICS 86
tELEVISION 88
High interest rates
have a strangle hold
on small business ... 83
D
a
o.lly .............. , .... ri<k O'o-11
James Rive.rs. 13. Matt Scott. 12 , and Shane Kaplan. 12, have a close encounter with Deerfield Saucer at the Deerfield Community Park playground m lrvme .
For1ner congress1nen rap nuke f Oes
L':VCHANGF:D 1.V VIEWS
Allnm ey Craig lfosmer
Sills asks
added EIR
on landfill
Indications are that the Irvine
City Council on Sept. 8 will sup·
port a plan to earmark a stretch
of coastllne for future city an·
nexation.
Irvine Mayor David Sills.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis and
Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido
have tentatively indicated sup·
port of the proposal made by ci·
ty planning commissioner Ray
Catalano.
City Hall sources say that the
proposal, which amounts to a
first step an an effort to extend
Irvine's boundaries to the
coastal area between Newport
Beach and Laguna Beach, is ooe
issue that transcends the tradi·
tlonal 3·2 split on the council .
The Irvine Planning Com·
mission has recommended that
the coastal area bet ween those
two cities be placed in Irvine's
sphere of influence, which is de·
fined as an area outside city
boundaries but earmarked for
future annexation.
That recommendation will be
considered Sept. 8 by the City
Council, which in turn will make
a r ecomme nd ation lo the
Orange County Local Agency
Formation Commission, the gov-
ernmental body that decides city
boundaries and spheres of in-
fluence.
Newport Beach currently has
a s phere of influence which
takes in most of the coastline
sought by some Irvine city of·
ficiats . Newport Beach
representatives have indicated
they won't give up the coastal
sphere wJthout a fight.
The city that ultimately an·
nexes the coutline will garner
sales tax revenue from the com-
mercial development planned
there.
The Irvine Company presently
owna much of the coastal land
and company representativ•
have indicated tbty'd Uke to._
the area remain u unln·
corporated coant1 territory until
development la completed theN
ln about 30 yean.
Holifield Hosmer views unchanged in 14 years
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of tlle Deity ,. ... tuft
Nearly 14 years ago, former
congressman Chet Holifield
joined scores of dignitaries and
newsmen to mark the opening of
what was then one of the world's
largest nuclear installations -
unit 1 of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
On that date -Jan. 4, 1968, to be exact -commercial nuclear
power was frequently described
as the energy beacon for dec-
ades to come. And San Onofre
r epresented Southern California
Edison Co. 's commitment to
that cause.
To be sure, there were voices
of dissent. But with war in
Southeast Asia preoccupying the
thoughts of many Americans,
anti-nuclear rumblings were
often distant and sometimes
barely heard.
When he threw the switches
that activated the $87 million re·
actor three miles south of San
Clemente nearly 14 years ago,
Chet Holifield had few doubts
about nuclear technology.
Today. the former chairman
of the Joint Congressional Com-
mittee on Atomic Energy still
feels as he did in 1968, when he
joined fellow Long Beach con·
gressman Craig Hosmer, utility
offi cials a nd more than 100
newsmen for the seaside plant's
inaugural run.
"I'm a 100 percent believer in
the absolute need for (nuclear-
produced electricity> ... ., "
the Newport Beach resident
and former Los Angeles-area
Democrat legislator said.
Nevertheless. in the years ince
San Onofre produced its first
megawatt, opposition sentiment
has grown significantly, helped
in no small degree by the events
s urrounding the Three Mile
Island accident in Pennsylvania
in l!n9
When federal licensing hear·
ings for newly built units 2 and 3
resume Monday in Anaheim, the
anti-San Onofre forces will seek
once again to convince a three-
member panel that Edison Co.'s
twin reactors should remain dor·
mant while seismic hazards and
em ergency evacuation issues
are explored further.
Explaining the position of the
challengers, retired insurance
executiv e August "Bill"
Carstens said:
"In my opinion. (San Onofre)
is the greatest threat to life.
health and property that's ever
Hotel, said San Onofre and other
nuclear pl a nts had proven
through experience to be
economic and s afe.
"The safeguards are effective
and the economic goals have
been achieved." he said of San
Onofre's 14-year record. one that
has been marked recently by
lengthy shutdowns and multi·
million dollar repairs.
"I have no fears about it ...
(Nuclear energy> will be rec·
ognized as being the hope of the
future and the source of the pres-
"There is no way that this nation
and the American economy are go-
ing to prosper without nuclear
energy.''
been foisted on the people of
Southern California.
··And for what ?'' asked
Carstens, who is bankrolling the
efforts of challengers to block
licensing of Edison's $3.3 billion
reactors. "It's just another way
lo boil waler."
Holifield, 78, thinks it's the
best way.
Nuclear energy. he main·
tained . w as the mo st
economical. the safest and the
most sanitary means of general·
ing the power that Southern
Californians need.
Describing the forces arrayed
against San Onofre in the up-
coming f ederal he arings.
Holifield said. "I think they·re
alarmists and extremists ."
And. added the former
lawmaker from Whittier. ''I'm
very hopeful (the two new reac-
tors) will be on-line as quickly
as possible."
Holifield, who will attend Mon·
day's opening session of the
Atomic Safely and Licensing
Board at Anaheim's Marriott
ent for adequate energy, .. he
said.
Also unchanged in his views is
Hosmer. now a private lawyer in
Washington D.C.
Speaking of the plant's much·
publicized debut in 1968. the ex·
Long Beach legislator said .
"Our expectations were almost
unlimited in those days."
The ensuing years , he added,
have done little to alter that
opinion.
Hosmer cia1me<J that nuc1ear
energy, m tbe 14 years since San
Onofre's opening, had proven to
be safe technologically as well
as profitable for rate payers ..
But even San Onofre's
strongest boosters have been un·
able to loverlook the expensive
problems whi ch have recently
beset the coastal power plant in
northern San Diego County.
Unit l's 456-megawatl reactor
had to be turned off for more
than 14 months. from April 1980
to last June. to permit nearly $68
million in repairs to corroded
piping in the steam generators.
A four-week shutdown ended
Sunday night when another $3
m1lhon repair JOb lo a burned
diesel generator was co mpleted.
Despite these problems.
Hosmer insisted that nuclear
critics had relied loo heavily on
"great e motionalism" and exag-
gerations of possible risks to
further their arguments against
atomic energy.
··My concern has never really
been of nuclear safety." he said.
And referring lo the future of
the nuclear industry. Hosmer
said. "There is no way that this
nation and the Ameri<.'an
E'conomy are going to continue
t o prosper without nucle ar
energy. . "
Carstens, and the plant's other
c halleng e r s. di s agree
vehemently.
"I don't give a damn if Edison
has spent $3 billion or not. We
have got to protect the public
from the bureaucracy of the
Nuclear Re g ulatory Co m -
mission," the silver·haired La
Jolla resident said in an tn·
terview last June during earth·
quake safety hearings in San
Diego.
Carstens. who has spent more
than $50,000 of his own money to
fight li censing of the 1.100
megawatt reactors, claimed
that federal offi cials were "rub-
ber·slamp'ing" whatever the
utilities wanted them to, adding.
"They've got their orders to get
these !new plants> on line."
Though a Nuclear Regulatory
Commission spokesman denied
the charge. both Hosmer and
Holifield said they throught the
Reagan Administration was do-
ing its best to reverse what they
said was the a nti ·nuclear
climate. that prevailed during
former President Jimm y
Carter's term in offi ce
"We would have been much
farther along if it weren't fo r
Carter:· Holifield said.
Suit seeks halt ~of UCI student fees
Class action seeks refund of $359 ,000 collected since April 1980
A class action lawsuit has
been filed to stop collection of
student fees al UC Irvine until
an election is held giving stu·
dents a chance to decide
whether the fees should be man-
datory or voluntary.
The suit filed in Orange Coun-
ty Superior Court by former stu-
dent Mark Zerbe and student
Chris Salmunovich also asks the
students' governing body, the
Associated Students of UCI, to
refund all $359,000 worth of stu·
dent fees collected since April
1980.
That was the date when Zerbe
and a group of students or·
ganized an initiative drive to
force a student vote on whether
the $9 per quarter student fees
should be mandatory or volun·
tary. Zerbe's sroup wanted the
payment to be vol~tary.
The student fees are not part
of quarterly tuition but are set lnJine cops plan by the student council to fund extracurricular activities. Fees 3rd variety s'houJ are currenUy still mandatory . and are $13 per quarter.
Tbe third annual varietf show Lawyer Alan Brodkln ol Costa
for the Irvt.ne Pollce Offtcen' Mesa, who represents Zerbe and
Association will be held Sept. 20 Salmunovlch, said the council
at the Oranae County Fair· was bound by t.be student con· &round.II Amphitheater. slltutlon to hold the elecUon but
Funds aatned by the usocla· refuted, reportedly because
Uoa t.brouCh ticket 1ale1 will ro 'members claimed that tome to letal defenae ror police of. 1i1naturea were collected by
ncers and to the city's youth miarepnsentaUon.
prol!'ap>. For more lnlormaUon He cl al med, howev-er, that the
call 776'-M63. peUUon wu ''very clear on its
race" and anyone reading it
should have understood the ls·
sue. He said the council avoided
the election because voluntary
Irvine plans
'expansjon'
Irvine Mayor David Sills has
sent a letter to Ralph Clark,
chairman of the Orange County
Board of Supervisors, request·
log further environmental study
on a county proposal to develop
a landfill dump north of Irvine.
The letter. sent at the requ•t
of the City Council, said tbat the
environmental studies now on
rue relaUve to the Bee Canyon
Landfill are out of date beeause
tbey were made before ex·
tensive residential development
took place in the northern por·
Mon ol the city.
,payments or student fees wouia
have meant the associated stu·
dents would lose a great deal of
funding.
The suit also lists the universi·
ty administratlon as a defend·
ant, claiming it should have
stepped in to require the elec-
tion.
The suit seeks $1.5 million in
punitive damages from the as·
sociated students and the ad-
m inlstrallon. If awarded, the
money would be dispensed to all
student• who paid fees since
April 118>.
Patrl.ck Moore, the uni -
versity's lawyer, said today
tbat administraton believe the petltion1 were partly invalid.
He added that uie university ad·
ministration shouldn't be in·
eluded in the polltlcal f11ht
amonc atudenta.
Zerbe recently returned to
lnlne after aervin1 an in·
ternahtp In Washinaton, D.C.,
with Common Cauae, uid
Brodkin.
· lf()Pf: OF rm; Ff Tl 1u:
Er sn/011 C'1C'I l lnll / 1elrl
Irvine woman
stable after
collision
A 41 year old Irvine woman
remains in stable condition lO·
day in Western Mcdi<.'al Center,
Santa Ana . after a weekend
auto mobile a ccid e nt that
claimed the lives of her husband
and fathcr·in ·law
Mr. and Mri.. Norman F .
Simpson of 32 Dragonfly and
Fred Simpson of 14792 Athel
Ave .. Irvine. had lo be cut from
the wreckage of their <.'ompact
car. which collided head-on with
a full -size sedan Sunday on
I rvane Center On\'<' near lhe San
Diego f''reewa y in Irvine.
Ros ary will be said for
Norman and Fred Simpson al
7 : 30 p m. Wednesday in the
chapel of Saddleback Mortuary,
220 E. Main St.. Tustin.
Mass for the two men will be
sa1<J at 10 a.m. Thursday in
Saint Cecilia Catholic Church,
Burial will follow at Holy
Sepulcher Cemetery. 7820 E .
Santiago Canyon Road. Orange.
Jarus L. Young , 16. of 18137
Sa nd Dunes St.. Fountain
Valley, was driving the four-
door sedan. which i:f<>lice alleged
veered into the path of the
Simpson car. Miss Young and
her passenger, Joseph B. Gatlin,
17, of 25325 Ginger St., El Toro.
weren't seriously Injured in the
crash. which police are still \n·
vestigating.
Fred Simpson is survived by
his son Victor of Irvine.
Norman Simpson is survived
by his wife Marilyn, their two
sons and his brother Victor.
U.S. water polo
member to teach
Dion Dickinson, a member of
lhe U.S. Wome n's National
Water Polo Team. will teach an
Irvine city Community Serv1ce1-
sponso.red water polo class b'
youth 10 years of ace and Wlder.
The coune, which takes plaM
from 3 to 4 p.m. al the H•rilalt
Parks Aquatics Complex, bee•
Monday. For more lnformatiGa
call 754·3813. 1
l
• • . . .....
L Or•nge Cout DAILY PILOT /TUHd•)'. Augu1t 18, 1981
Daughter-in-law wins round
• • tries patience
THE TIME MACIONE: One mode of Ille that
now seems to be accepted a tona thts best of all possl·
ble coasts is that everybody wants to do everything
very fast. Have fun quickly. And when the task is
onerous, do it even quicker.
You have to guess that's why these so-called
convenience markets have sprouted up on so many
street corners. The prices sure don't lick the
supermarkets. But what they have to sell is alleged
speed.
Allegedly is used here because you take pot-luck
on speed when yo u
leap into one of these
corner 24-hour ··we
TOM MURPHlll.~i;. ft~u;l~~r.:ou c.n rind
-If every ·
bod y tries to get to the counter for
check-out al the same lime, forget the flash. There's
only a solo clerk and one cash register. No calling in
the reserve checkers like down al the really big
markets.
Just the other night. for example. this search for
speed at the Korner Kwickie Mart was observed in
Costa Mesa when about 22 people tried to line up and
get checked out all at once.
The lone clerk, wearing a golden ··Cal ,
Berkeley" T-shirt. tried to move everybody along
fairly. He checked each person out at deliberate
speed.
Since there are no rolling shopping carts at the
Korner Kwickie place. everybody in the line is car-
rying their goods in their arms. One fellow juggled a
six-pack and four bags of potato chips. Another lady
had both arms heaped with canned goods.
· · 1 think the checkout lint it over thert to the nght. Zeb'·
THE COUP LE APPROACHING the check out
stand. however. only had three items so it looked
like a breeze. It wasn't.
They finally got to the counter where the man in
the Cal, Berkeley T-shirt started checking them out
when he was stopped cold.
··George, you pay for the dried beans separate-
ly ," the woman ordered.
··All I've got is a $20 biH." the man protested.
··w ell. give it to the nice man. then." she in-
sisted.
"I don·t wanna give 'em a 20 just for these dried
beans.··
"Then I'll loan you a dollar," the woman an-
nounced. dropping her two items on the counter
while she began to punch and probe within a
knapsack-sized purse.
FINAL LY, SH E DUMPED the entire contents of
Superpurse out on the counter.
··would you mind counting these nickels and
dimes to see if I have a dollar," she asked the Cal.
Berkeley T-shirt. He never changed his expression.
"The dried beans are only 83 cents... he pro·
nounced dryly.
"'Well, then here." she replied. ··take it out of my
$20 bill ... "
The fellow just behind the couple in the line, who
was juggling the six-pack and four bags of potato
chips, appeared near collapse. His face was turned
sort of ashen.
AFTER WHAT SEEMED an eternity, the odd
couple scooped up their goods, paid for the dried
beans. got the knapsack bag reassembled and left.
just after the woman asked the Cal, Berkeley T-
s hirt. ··sir. could you change this $5 bill and include
four quarters? ..
The man right behind them finally collapsed at
the counter. dropping his six-pack and denting the
cans .
'fhe Cal. Berkeley T-shirt clerk finally spoke.
"How're your arms?'" he asked.
RUFFELL'S ., .... o,...w.
DEAR ANN LANDERS :
Recently you told a dau1hter-ln-
law who resented the fact tbat
her husband telephoned hla
mother every nl1ht <even
lhoul}l lhey had aeen each other
durlna lhe day) lhat it wu a no-
wln ailuation.
YOU AllE WRONG . My
dau1hter·lo·law DID win. My
son bu stopped vlsltlnt me and
tbere are no more telephone
call.a.
When I learned my dauabter-
ln· law resented my son's vtalta
and dally telephone calla before
11upper (sometimes we chatted
for 30 minutes or more), r uked
her what 1 could do to eliminate
the friction. Her reply stunned
me. She caJmJy replied, "Your
son's buslneas Is here, and our
children are doing well In
Designer
introduc~s
a partner
By MARV J ANE SCARCELLO °' ....... , ...........
P ink and white streamers
marked the entrance to ''une
pa~Ue sans raison" given by
Vincent Jacquart.
Guests followed a trail of tis-
sue paper rose petals to the front
door where Jacquart and room-
mate Gary Harrison had
transformed their Newport
Beach apartment into a work of
art.
White canvas covered all
available walls, floors and
HAPPENINGS
furniture. and pink balloons·
floated along the ceiling.
Although the party claimed to
have no reason. its actual
purpose was to introduce J ac-
quart's new partner in interior
design, John Mariani.
Mariani and his wife Elizabeth
flew down with friends from
their home in San Francisco for
the occasion.
They'll continue to live in the
north and Jacquart will work
he re in what Mariani termed
''shuttJe decorating.··
"Vincent has great innovative
technique," he said, referrine to
a computerized house J acquart
has designed for a Newport
Beach client. ·'San Francisco is
known for its easy luxury and
tactile impressions , so we
represent two worlds. This is a
case where one plus one equals
three."
Describing himself as the reb·
el in four generations of prune
farmers.-Mariani is looking
forward to the December issue
of •·Architectural Digest,"
wh ere the couple·s Nob Hill
apartment will be featured.
"It's an English country house
done in icy pink," he said. "San
Francisco women don't have
tans, so they look better in that
color."
Jacquart's work wUI grace the
November pages of "Architec-
tural Digest" with a Pal m
Springs home he decorated for
Jack Sheap of N~wport Beach.
The designer came to America
from his native France ln 1977,
after a short stay in Beirut and
said, "It's the dream of every
F r enchman to come to
California."
His friend Dino Gerlando of
Los Angeles provided the
gr aphics, the only decorations
highlighted on the white .canvas
walls.
Sheldon Lippe of Lippe/War-
ren Crystal in Laguna Beach at-
tended, as did Ar lene Altman
and Wendy Wonder, who design
jewelry.
school We cannot move but you
CAN . Get out of our Uves and
stay out. Disappear and leave us
alone."
I took her al her word At age
83, I sold my farm where J had
lived for S2 years and moved
3,000 miles away to a place I
· never heard of before I saw It on
a map. I have no telephone ln
my new residence.
I hope my moving has benefit-
ed my daughter-in-law. son and
grandchHdren. ll certainly has
devastated me.
Although the climate ts a
1re1t improvement over the
place I lei\, the coat of Uvin& hu
nearly tripled. I have no car,
and in order to gel to church, I
must ride a bus for '° minutes,
then transfer to another bus. I
am depressed and lonely.
Once I read in your column
"Time heals aJI wound.a." I hope
your philosophy will prove true
for me. No name. please -just
-EXILED IN SAN DIEGO
Dear Exiled : Your aelf-
l mpoaed exile w aa aa Ill ·
conceived act of bottUlly de·
alcned to pwllab you da•P&er-la-law. Wbat you have d8ee II
bitten off your nose to 1pUe your
face -and as aaually llappeu
In such case•. you are &be bl• loser.
There waa DO aeed to •Proot
your Ille aad move 3,• mUes
away. You cou.ld have H"n&.ed
to your 10G dial la Ute Mil la·
terest o1 b.la marrta1e be aMtakl
pboae you every o t her day
(from work, ll po11tble) ud vii·
It lea• frequenUy. Yoar life
wou14 have 1oae OD mach aa
before and you would have beea
laflnltely better off than you are
DOW. How I wish you bad wrlt&H
to me before you made &bat self·
destructive dedalon.
Discover how to ~ date bolt
withotJl falling hook, Une and tinker
Send SO cent~ al.ong with a long,
stamped, stl/-addreued envelope
with your requeat to Ann Uult:feT1,
P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill . 60411.
Vincent Jacquart r left J shows party decor lo Elizabeth and John Munanr
Linda and Guy Colbert look
lime away from their busy
Steinbeck's Restaurant on
Balboa Island lo drop by, and
Ron Ep deserted the Sawdust
Festival in Laguna Beach to al·
tend.
While talking with Mr. and
Mrs. Irving Felt of New York,
Ep discovered that he and Mrs.
Felt had some relatives -by·
marriage in common.
Fell is chairman of the board
of Madison Square Garden. a
part or which is named the Felt
Forum after him. The couple
had been staying in Rancho
Mirage before attendjng meet·
ings in Los Angeles.
Other guests included Compte
Patrick of Montfreid, Patrick
Shea, Dr. Michael Bear. Patrick
Harrison, Shawn Farnsworth
and Tari Soderline.
N ot all the boati; in
Newport Harbor Sunday were
entered in the Character Boat
Parade.
Architect A Babar's boat,
··samarang," m oored near
Cano's Restaurant, was the site
of a marriage ceremony for
Beth Snevely and Tom Cham·
bers, both or Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Sn evely or Costa
Mesa and Dorothy Chambers or
Tustin. .
About 25 guests attended the
ceremony onboard. and several.
hundred wished the couple well
al a reception afterward on Lido
Isle.
Special entertainment was
provided by ··street Player," a
musical group which had dis-
banded but staged a reunion
especially for the occasion.
The couple will leave for
England in September where he
will work in real estate and she
will study art history.
Gemini: Reason to Celebrate
Wednesday, August 19
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES ! March 2l·Apnl 191. Circumstances C'nable
you lo gain greater control of your own destiny
TAURUS <April 20-May 20) You have more .. work
ing room.. as red tape is removed What had been
withheld will become available.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20) You'll have reason to
celebrate: desires. hopes. wishes are close to fulfillment
HOROSCOPE
Accent on returns from business endeavors. possible pro-
motion and added prestige
CANCER <June 21-July 22!: Wnuen message pro-
vides impetus. enlightenment and spurs ambition.
Superior flashes green light for necessary changes .
LEO <July 23-Aug. 221: Disputes are settled. Some
compromises occur -long-range results will prove
favorable. Major domestic adJustment dominates
scenario.
VlRGO <Aug. 23-Sept 221" Surface indications are
deceptive. By digging deep, you unearth greater finan-
cial possibilities
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: RePorts should be re-
viewed; stock or business transaction subject to delay.
Know it. plan accordingly. Contractual obligations are
part ol scenario. Emphasis also on marital status
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov 211 : What appears a setback
will boomerang in your favor. Project is completed
despite "sniping" by those who are petty, envious. Aries.
Libra natives play key roles
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec 21 I Affairs of heart
dominate: you make new start.'! and member or opPosite
sex is very much involved Emphas is also on specula
lion. children. vanety and games or chance
CAP RICORN ! Dec 22·Jan 19 1 Focus on home. re
pairs, safety measures and basic set unl) Older ram1l;y
member makes special request
AQUARIUS <Jan 20 Feb 181 Expansion 1s keynot
ed . you perceive Polenllal and are ablt• to communicate
ideas in graphic manner
PISCES <Feb 19-March 201 Opportunity exists to
build on a more sohd base You locate .. missing links ·
Focus also on payments. coll ections and income Polen
llal -
WHOLSTBY ,_.._.. .......
ltll HAAIOll ILVD.
COSTAMISA-141-1 IH
SA VE 300/o on
RICE CAKES
tltTrtlderJ..-1W.W
We have Rice Cakes on
sale for only S.69 per cv.
oz. package. Compare
this wllb S.99 found
elsewhere. Great wllh
hon-d ·oeuvres, s preads
or peanut butler. We
especially recom mend
Rice Cakes with cheese,
alnce they won't muk
lhe navor. Available In
Natural Unaalled; and
B u ckwheat Salted.
Please vialt our neweat
Trader Joe'a at the In· t.enectloo ol 11th Street.
Newport Boulevard and
Superior Avenue (next to
Denny's and Barclay's
Bank.)
cQ Bassto
School
Fashion Show
Everything for a.ck·
to-School 7:30 Fri.
and 1 & 3 on s.t ..
MOW IN COSTA MISA
Aug. 21·22 at ...__--------------------.
Huntington Center. 191•MIMMMIMWW••MMMIMWWWW"9
Art /Craft Show
HUntfngton c.r.
Mall Aug. 20-23.
YMCA -YOll YUi mND
FMll.Y YICAlm ATTUCTlll
0
"Fltn .. 1 center for my
wife and l.__~mmlng & c:ampe tot me kld1. The
YMCA 11 • piece 1 can Wit mt kkia to ... .............. ,.,. .....
--
Penny Loafer
T ossel Loaf er
A NEW CHAPTER FOR THE HISTORY BOOKS
, AT LAST .. '8.u AND CHILDREN WALK TOGET HER
We ore omonq the first
~th -..,, childrens shoes.
130 Fashion llland. NeWs>ort Beach 8.iM-2484 •
Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Cookbook Pull-out Section
Geed dMge to ••t wtH be lntlde your
D•lty "'°' Thurad•y, Aug. 20. Th• beat
of over 1,000 recipe• aubmttted by our
reedera, teeturtng the wlnnera of the
,.lot '•"'"• f'edpe Cont.It. Dtecover
new •dveftture• In cooking. from
mfcrewllve to deHem, eoup to nuta.
Don'tmlMlt.
llllJlllt
' "
Dally Pilat
TU ESOAY, Aug. 18, t9'1
FEATURES 62
011111 CDllT • COMICS 66
TELEVISION 68
High interest rates
have a strangle hold
on small business ... B3
D
0
Former congressnien rap nuke foes
UNCHANGED IN VIEWS
Attorney Craig Hosmer
Teacher
• pay issue
heats up
Newport-Mesa School District
teachers -seeking an average
13.5 percent pay increase this
year -were offered a 3 percent
h ike Monday by board of
trustees negotiators.
The offer. made in closed
bargaining session, has been re-
jected by the Newport·Mesa
Federation of Teachers negotiat-
ing team. said 8ill Cue. chief
negotiator.
Cue's comments, released late
Monday, brought some sharp
criticism from district superin-
tendent John Nicoll early today.
"I was surprised and a bit dis-
appoin ted to find that the
teachers' union has gone to the
press with its response to the
proposals we made in a closed
negotiations session Monday,·•
he said.
'·I had expected the union to
respond at Wednes day's
scheduled negotiation session.
Apparently the leadership of the
union has chosen a different
course by going public at this
stage of the process.
.. I have asked the district's
chief negotiator to inquire of the
union whether or not it wishes to
make further negotiating
sessions open to the press and
public."
The school board refused
earlier this year to offer any
wage or benefits increases until
the state legislature determined
fund allocalions to the various
districts.
Monday's initial board pro-
posal offers the 3 percent salary
hike. no increase in Jrnalth and
welfare benefits and the
elimination of stipends for
teachers who work with han-
dicapped children.
The teacher's initial demands,
submitted March 10, sought the
13.5 percent salary hike and in-
cr eased life and health in-
surance benefits.
Cue said Monday, "After
months of waiting and many
hours at the table. the teachers'
negotiating team at last knows
the district's position.
"The offer is unacceptable."
He said the union already has
demonstrated to the board that
money required to fund the 13.5
percent salary hike proposal ex-
ists within the 1981-82 budget.
The union contends the district
already is paying teachers
below the Orange County
average and that a 3 percent in-
crease would lower that position
as the result of inflation factors.
''We'll go back to the table
Wednesday and present a total
economic package counter of·
fer," be said.
Newport cops
slate auction
Unclai med property re-
covered by the Newport Beach
police Will be auctioned Satur-
day mominl to the highest bid·
de rs.
The 9 a.m. auctjon will be held In the parking lot of the police
atation •t 870 Santa Barbara
Drive. All items are sold on an
as·is buls without 1uarantee.
In all, Polle. wlll otter US
items lnC!ladln1 47 blcJcJ•.
rad101 and atereo equlpmtat and
varioua piece• of 1ardenlni
equlpmtnt.
Holifield, Hosmer views unchanged in 14 years
By DA vu) K UTZ MANN
Of -Cllllty ........
Nearly 14 years ago, former
congressman Chet Holifield
joined scores of dignitaries and
newsmen to mark the opening of
what was then one of the world's
largest nuclear installations -
unit 1 of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
On that date -Jan. 4, 1968, to
be exact -commercial nuclear
power was frequently described
as the energy beacon for dec-
ades to come. And San Onofre
represented Southern Cali!or.nia
Edison Co. 's commitment to
that cause.
To be s ure, there were voices
of dissent. But with 'war in
Southeast Asia preoccupying the
thoughts of many Americans,
anti-nuclear rumblings were
often distant and sometimes
barely heard.
When he threw the switches
that activated the $87 million re-
actor three miles south of San
Clemente nearly 14 years ago,
Chet Holifield had few doubts
about nuclear technology.
Today. the former chairman
of the Joint Congressional Com·
mittee on Atomic Energy still
feels as he did in 1968, when he
joined fellow Long Beach con-
gressman Craig Hosmer. utility
officials and more than 100
newsmen for the seaside plant's
inaugural run.
"I'm a 100 percent believer in
the absolute need for (nuclear·
produced electricity) ..... "
the Newport Beach resident
and former Los Angeles-area
Democrat legislator said.
Nevertheless. in the years ince
San Onofre produced its first
megawatt, opposition sentiment
has grown significantly. helped
in no small degree by the events
s urrounding the Three Mile
Island accident in Pennsylvania
in 1979.
When federal licensing hear-
ings for newly built units 2 and 3
resume ~onday in Anaheim, the
antl-San Onofre forces will seek
once again to convince a three-
member panel that Edison Co.'s
twin reactors s hould remain dor-
mant while seismic hazards and
emergency evacuation issues
are explored further.
Explaining the position of the
challengers. retired insurance
executi ve August "Bill "
Carstens said:
"ln my opinion, (San Onofre)
is the greatest threat to life,
health and property that's ever
been foisted on the people of
Southern California.
"And for what?" asked
Carstens, who is bankrolling th.e
efforts of challengers to block
licensing of Edison's $3.3 billion
reactors. "It's just another way
to boil water."
Describing the forces arrayed
against San Onofre in the up·
coming federal h earings.
Holifield said , "I think they're
alarmists and extremists."
And, added the former
lawmaker from Whittier, "I'm
very hopeful (the two new reac-
tors) will be on-line as quickly
as possible.·'
Holifield, who will attend Mon-
day's opening session of the
Atomic Safety and Licensing
Board at Anaheim's Marriott
Hotel, said San Onofre and other
"There is no way that this nation
and the American economy are go-
ing to prosper without nuclear
energy.''
Holifield, 78, thinks it's the
best way.
Nuclear energy, he main-
tained , was the most
economical, the safest and the
most sanitary means of generat·
ing the power that Southern
Californians need.
nuclear plants had proven
through experience to be
economic and safe.
"The safeguards are effective
and the economic goals have
been achieved," he said of San
Onofre's 14·year record, one that
has been marked recently by
UC/ student fee
refunds sought
A class action lawsuit has
been filed to stop collection of
student fees at UC Irvine until
an election is held giving stu-
dents a c hance t o decide
whether the fees should be man-
datory or voluntarv.
The sujt filed in· Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court by former stu·
dent Mark Zerbe and student
Chris Salmunovich also asks the
students' governing body. the
Associated Students of UCI, to
refund all $359,000 worth of stu-
dent fees collected since April
1980.
That was the date when Zerbe
and a group of students or-
ganized an initiative drive to
force a student vote on whether
the $9 per quarter student fees
should be mandatory or volun·
tary. Zerbe's group wanted the
payment lo be voluntary.
The student fees are not part
of quarterly tuition but are set
by the student council to fund
extracurricular activities. Fees
are currently still mandatory
and are $13 per quarter.
Lawyer Alan Brodkin of Costa
Mesa, who represents Zerbe and
Salmunovich, said the council
was bound by the student con-
stitution to hold the election but
refused. reportedly because
members claimed that some
signatures were collected by
misrepresentation.
lengthy shutdowns and multi-
million dollar repairs.
"I have no fears about it ...
<Nuclear energy) will be rec-
ognized as being the hope of the
future and the source of the pres-
ent for adequate energy," he
said.
Also unchanged in his views is
Hos mer. now a private law~er in Washington D.C.
·speaking or the plant's much-
publicized debut in 1968. the ex·
Long Beach legjslator said .
··our expectations were almost
unlimited in those days."
The ensuing years, he added,
have done little to alter that
opinion.
Hosmer c1a1 mect tnat nuclear
energy, in the 14 years since San
Onofre's opening, had proven to
be safe technologically as well
as profitable for rate payers.
.. My concern has never really
been of nuclear safety." he said.
And referring to the future of
the nuclear industry. Hosmer
said, "There js no way that this
nation and the American
f'conomy are going to continue
to prosper without nuclear
energy ... "
Carstens, and the plant's other
thal l e n gers, disagree
vehemently.
"I don't give a damn if Edison
has spent $3 billion or not. We
have got to protect the public
from the bureaucracy of the Nuclear Regulatory Com -
mission," the silver -haired La
Jolla resident said in an in-
terview last June during earth·
quake safety hearings in San
Diego.
Though a Nuclear Regulatory
Commission spokesman denied
the charge, both Hosmer and
Holifield said they throught the
Reagan Administration was do·
ing its best to reverse what they
said was the anti -nuclear
climate that prevailed during
former President Jimmy
Carter's term in office.
"We would have been much
farther along if it weren't for
Carter," Holifield said.
WHEN THE ?7? COME BOB-BOB-BOBBING ALONG The
couple in the catamaran did a double take when the "Walk
on Water" contraption passed them in Newport Harbor.
Deity .............. _., ... '"''f¥.,_ll
Paul Johnson was inside operating paddles fast enough to
·win the special Salty Sailor award among 42 entries in the
21st Character Boat parade.
Kindergarten
registration
open now
Parents residing in Newport-
Mesa Unified School District are
being asked to register children
now if they are to attend kin-
dergarten when school begins
Sept. 14.
Fred Carter, district director
or student services, said this
week parents of kindergart~ners
are being asked to call ad-
ministrators at their nearest
elementary school to make reg-ls tr atlon appointments and
avoid Inconvenience.
Schools, he said, are listed by
name in the telephone directory
white pages.
Parenti must provide proof of
children's ages and state-
required lmmunhations upon
re1tatration. -Hip school atudent. -except
lhOM aUending Back Bay HJ1b
continuation 1chool r-will r•«· l•ter the week be1tnnin1 Aq.
2'. Back 8ay'1 regilltrattpn
betlna Aug. 28, Carter said.
•
·JIOPEOFTHE Fl'Tl'RE'
Er-solon Chet /lol1f 1eld
Mesa sign
ordinance
due change
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Ot ti• Delly l"llet Si.ff
Costa Mesa's sign ordinance.
approved in 1974 to reduce clut-
ter and scheduled for complete
implementation by 1984 . is
scheduled for some major re-
visions following City Council
action Monday night.
Three council members. with
Eric Johnson and Ed McFarland
absent, ordered city planners to
draft ordinance amendments
that will all ow larger business
sign boards and lettering along
major city streets.
The proposal. which follows a
study by planner Reba Touw,
also would allow taller signs.
Many business owners who
will be forced to tear down
larger signs erected before the
1974 ordinance was passed. have
objected to the cost as well as
identification losses.
The Chamber of Commerce
board of directors has proposed
allowing the larger signs to re-
main and has suggested the city
clamp down only on signs erect-
ed illegally over the years
without city permits.
Monda y's proposal . in-
troduced by Councilman Donn
Hall, would see ordinance
amendments go before the Plan-
ning Commission Sept. 28 and
the council on Nov. 2.
If approved. the amendments
would put to rest once and for all
"grandfathering" proposals that
would m ake legal all s igns
erected before 1974.
Amendments would reduce
the number of city signing zones
from five to three and would al-
low signs on most major streets
to stand 25 feet tall rather than
the currently allowed 20 feet.
And they would. for instance,
allow ground signs along such
thoroughfares as Adams
A venue, Baker, Bristol and 17th
streets and Newport and Harbor
boulevards up to 120 square feet,
Currently. such signs are held
to 50 and 60 square feet .
·'The sign ordinance has been
a controversial issue since il
was enacted," Hall said follow'·
ing Monday night's session.
··we are continually beina
confronted to either change it or
leave it alone," the chamlM!r
board member emphasized.
"Recently, when the Chaml>EJ'
of Commerce made a concerted
effort to inform city officials C&
what it believes is the desireg
the business community. l fel
as did others, that it is a
time we revamped the o~·
dinance to bring it into th.is de~· ade,
· 'ln the seven years since ut'e
ordinance was approved by an
earlier council, Costa Mesa has
grown beyond the expectations ot many. Traffic volumes have
increased, business has grown
and the needs of both business
owners and shoppers havl
changed."
Hall said he is unsure how
many business signs wUJ stilt re-
main too large under the pro·
posed ordinance revisions.
4Serena' owner
costume winner
..
Mike Anderson, owner of
''Serena" won best costume
honors in Sunday's 21st annual
Character Boat Parade In
Newport Harbor,
An article appeartn1 Monda>'
In the Dlillf _,.Hot Hated t~e
wroagW'i .......
L Orange Cout DAILY PILOTITUHday, Augu1t 18, 1181
• • tries patience
THE TIME MACIONE: One mode of Ille that
now seems to be accepted along thl1 best of all possl·
ble coasts is that everybody wants to do everything
very fast. Have fun quickly. And when the task is
onerous, do it even quicker.
You have to guess that's why these so·called
convenience markets have sprouted up on so many
street corners. The prices sure don't lick the
supermarkets. But what they have to sell is alleged
speed.
Allegedly is used here because you take pot.tuck
on speed when yQu
Daughter-in-law wins round
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
RecenUy you told a dauahter·ln·
law who retented the fact that
her buaband telephoned bl1
mother ever/ olaht (even
thou&h they ba 1eeo each other
durlna the day> that it wu a oo-
wln altuaUon.
YOU ARE WRONG. My
dau•hter-ln·law DID wln. My
son bu atopped vlaltint me and
there are no more telephone
calla.
school. We cannot move but you
CAN. Gel out of our llves and
stay out. Disappear and leave us
alone."
I took her at her word. At age
83, I &old my farm where I bad
lived for 52 years and moved
3.000 miles away to a place I
never heard or before I saw it on
a map. I have no telephone In
my new residence.
1nndctilldren. It certalnly h11
devastated me.
Althou1h the climate l1 a 1reat Improvement over the
place J left, the cott of Uviq bu
nearly tripled. I have no car,
and in order to 1et to church, I
must ride a bus for '° minutes,
then transfer to another bu.s. J
am depreued and lonely.
Once J read in your column
"Time heals all wounds." J hope
your philosophy will prove true
for me. No name. please -just
-EXILED IN SAN DIEGO
I• Mell ea1e1, yoa are dae wt
loeer.
TfleN WU H aeff lo -.roet
yeu.r Ille a8d mo•e 1,• aUet
away. Ya. eoeW lane • ..,..w
&o yov aoe iltat la tile belt la·
tern& ol lll1 mama1e lae tlacMIJcl
plao•e you every other day
(from work, U poealble) ... vii·
It leH treq•eatly. Yoar Ufe
woald llave IOU oa m.elt aa
before and yoa wo•Jd llave bee•
lallaltely better off Ulan ya. are
aow. How I wlall you bad wrtUH
to me before you made that teU·
destnactlve dedtlon.
· leap into one of these
When I learned my dau1hter-
ln-law resented my son'a vialta
and daily telephone calll before
sup~r (sometimes we chatted
for 30 minutes or more), I asked
her what I could do to eliminate
the friction. Her reply stunned
me. She calmly replied, "Your
son's business is here, and our
children are doing well In
1 hope my moving has benefit.
ed my daughter-in-law, son and
Dear Ell:lled: Yoar aeU-
lmpoud exile ••• aa Ill· conceived act of llotWl&y de·
•lined to punlab yo.r dHOtter·
In-law. Mat yoa llave doee la
blt&ea off yov noae &o apl&e yeu
face -and as usually II~•
Di1cover how to be date boft
without falling hook , line and lffak.n.
Send SO centa along with o long,
&tamped, 1elf-addreued mwlope
with your request to Ann Lclltdna,
P.0 Bo:r 11995, Chtcago, Ill. 40611. corner 24-hour "we
....... -------r..\ sell it if you can find IDM MURPHINt~lt it .. places.
-If every ·
body tries to get to the counter for
check·out at the same time, forget the flash. There's
only a solo clerk and one cash register. No calling in
the reserve checkers like down at the really big
markets.
Just the other night, for example, this search for
speed at the Korner Kwickie Mart was observed in
Costa Mesa when about 22 people tried to line up and
get checked out all at once.
The lone c lerk. wearing a golden "Cal,
Berkeley" T-shirt, tried to move everybody along
fairly. He checked each persen out at deliberate
s peed.
Since there are no rolling shopping carts at the
Komer Kwickie place. everybody in the line is car·
rying their goods in their arms. One fell ow juggled a
six-pack and four bags of potato chips. Another lady
had both arms heaped with canned goods.
"I think th4? ch4?ckout Une ia OWT there to tM right, Zeb"
THE COUPLE APPROACHING the check out
stand. however. only had three items so it looked
like a breeze. It wasn't.
They finally got to the counter where the man in
the Cal. Berkeley T-shirt started checking them out
when he was stopped cold.
"George, you pay for the dried beans separate·
ly." the woman ordered.
.. All I've got is a S20 bill." the man protested.
"Well . give it to the nice man, then," she in·
sisted.
··1 don't wanna give 'em a 20 just for these dried
beans."
"Then I'll loan you a dollar," the woman an ..
nounced, dropping her two items on the counter
while she began to punch and probe within a
knapsack-sized purse.
FINALLY, SHE DUMPED the entire contents of
Superpurse out on the counter.
"Would you mind counting these nickels and
dimes to see if I have a dollar," she asked the Cal.
Berkeley T·shirt. He never changed his expression.
"The dried beans are only 83 cents." he pro-
nounced dryly.
"Well. then here ... she replied. "take it out of my
$20 bill .....
The fell ow just behind the couple in the line, who
was juggling the six-pack and four bags of potato
. chips. appeared near collapse. His face was turned
sort of ashen.
AFrER WHAT SEEMED an eternity, the odd
couple scooped up their goods, paid for the dried
beans, got the knapsack bag reassembled and left,
just after the woman asked the Cal, Berkeley T·
shirt, "Sir, cou ld you change this S5 bill and include
four quarters?"
The man right behind them finally collapsed at
the counter. dropping his six-pack and denting the
cans. .
'fhe Cal. Berkeley T-s hirt clerk finally spoke.
"How' re your arms? .. he asked.
RUFFELL1S
WHOLSTaY s....._.. .....
ltUHAUOl IL.YD.
6rmc10,....W.
SA VE 300/o on
RICE CAKES
Designer
introduces
a partner
By MARY JANE SCARCEUO
Ot .. D9Ny"91 .....
P ink and white streamers
marked the e ntrance to "une
pa~tie sans raison" given by
Vincent Jacquart.
Guests followed a trail of tis·
sue paper rose petals to the front
door where Jacquart and room·
mate Gary Harrison bad
trans formed their Newport
Beach apartment into a work of
art.
White canv,,u covered all
available walls, floors and
HAPPENINGS
furniture, and pink balloons·
floated along the ceiling.
Although the party claimed to
have no reason. its actual
purpose was to introduce Jac-
quart's new partner in Interior
design. John Mariani.
Mariani and hls wife Elizabeth
flew down with friends from
their home in San Francisco for
the occasion.
They'll continue to live in the
north and Jacquart will work
here in what Mariani termed
"shuttle decorating."
''Vincent has great Innovative
technique," be said, referrtn1 to
a computerized house Jacquart
has designed for a Newport
Beach client. "San Francisco is
known ror its easy luxury and
tactile impressions. so we
represent two worlds . This is a
case where one plus one equals
three." JJ
Describing himself as the reb-
el in four generations of prune
farmers-.-Mariani is looking
forward to the December issue
of ''Architectural Digest,"
where the couple's Nob Hill
apartment will be featured.
"It's an English country house
done in icy pink," he said. "San
Francisco women don't have
tans. so they look better In that
color."
Jacquart's work will grace the
November pages of .. Archite<:·
tural Digest" with a Palm
Springs home he decorated for
Jack Sheap of Newport Beach .
The designer came to America
from his native France in 1977,
after a short stay in Beirut and
said, "It's the dream of every
Frenchman to come to
California.''
H1s friend Dino Gerlando of
Los Angeles provided the
graphics, the only decorations
highlighted on the white canvas
walls.
Sheldon Llppe of Lippe/War·
ren Crystal in Laguna Beach al·
tended, as did Arlene Altman
and Wendy Wonder, who design
jewelry.
Vincent Jocquart r left 1 shows party decor to Elizabeth and John Muriani.
Linda and Guy Colbert took
time away from their busy
Steinbeck's Restaurant on
Balboa Island to drop by, and
Ron Ep deserted tbe Sawdust
Fes tival in Laguna Beach to at·
tend.
While talking with Mr. and
Mrs. Irving Felt of New York,
Ep discovered that he and Mrs.
Felt bad some r e l atives-by ·
marriage in common.
Felt is chairman of the board
of Madison Square Garden, a
part of which is named the Felt
Forum alter him. The couple
had been slayine in Rancho
Mirage before attending meet·
ings in Los Angeles.
Other guests included Compte
Patrick of Montfreid, Patrick
Shea, Dr. Michael Bear, Patrick
Harrison, Shawn Farnsworth
and Tari Soderline.
N ot all the boats in
Newport Harbor Sunday were
entered in the Character Boat
Parade.
Architect A. Babar's boat,
· ·samarang," moored near
Cano's Restaurant, was the site
of a marriage ceremony for
Beth Snevely and Tom Cham·
bers. both of Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Snevely of Costa
Mesa and Dorothy Chambers of
Tustin.
About 25 guests attended the
ceremony onboard, and several
hundred wished the couple we ll
at a reception afterward on Lido
Isle.
Special entertainment was
provided by "Street Player," a
musical group which had dis·
banded but staged a reunion
especially for the occasion.
The couple will leave for
England in September where he
will work in real estate and she
will study art history .
Gemini: Reason to Celebrate
Wednesday, August lt
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES c March 21-April 19): Circumstances ena ble you to gain greater control or your own destiny.
TAURUS <April 20·May 20 ): You have more ··work-ing room" as red tape is removed What had been withheld will become available.
GEMINI c May 21.June 201: You'll have reason to celebrate: desires, hopes. wishes are close to fulfillment.
HOROSCOPE
Accent on returns Crom business endeavors. possible pro· motion and added prestige.
CANCER (June 21-July 221: Written message pro·
vides impetus. enlightenment and spurs ambition.
Superior flashes green light for necessary changes.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 221: Disputes are settled. Some
compromises occur long·range results will prove
ravorable. Major domestic adjustment dominates scenario.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept 221 Surface indications are
deceptive. By digging deep. you unearth greater flnan· cial possibilities.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Reports should be re·
viewed; stock or business transact.Ion subject to delay.
Know it. plan accordingly. Contractual obligations are
part of scenario Emphasis also on marital status.
S<X>RPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21): What appeat'S a setback
will boomerang in your favor .. Project Is completed despite ··sniping" by those who are petty, envious. Aries.
Libra natives play key roles
SAGl1TARIUS I Nov 22-Dec 21 I Affairs of heart
dominate: you make new starts and member of opposite
sex Is very much involved Emphasis also on specula
lion. children. variety and games of chance
CAPRICORN IDec 22·Jan 191 Focus on home. re pairs. safety measures and basic security Older family
member makes special request.
AQUAIUUS c Jan. 20·Feb 181: Expansion 1s keynot·
ed: you perceive potential and are able to communicate
Ideas in graph1c manner
PISCES I Feb 19·M arch 201 · Opportunity exists to
build on a more solid base You locate .. missing links " Focus also on payments. collections and income poten-
tial.
j COSTAllmA-14 .. 1 IH ..,,.... ......... Q BaSsto
School
Fashion Show
We have Rice Cakes on
sale for onty S.• per 41U oz. packaae. Compare
tbla wllb S.99 found elsewhere: Great with hora·d'oeuvl"el, 1preada
or peanut butter. We especially recommend
Rice Cakes with cheese,
alnce they won't mask
the navor. Available ln
Natural Unsalted; and
Buckwheat Salted.
Pleue vilk our newest
Trader Joe's at the ln· leraecUon <A. 17th Street,
Newpe>rt Boulevard and
Superior Avenue (next to
Denay'a and Barclay'•
Bank.)
Everything for Bedl·
te>-School 7:30 Fri
and 1 & 3 oo Set .. Aug. 21·22 et ~----------"-~------'-------1
Huntington Center. i.wiw•MMMNww-.•••Mlllllfll_.._.~ ..
• • ,
1 Art ;eratt Show
; Huntington O.S I Mall Aug. 20-21.
YMCA -YM Ybl •II
F .. Y VACAml AT11K1111
"f'ltneee centtf for my wlf9 end I, .... mm4, I.
campl ftw the kldL "-
YMCA It a piece I can
tru11t nw lddl to.· .............. ,. .....
Penny Loof er
T ossel Loafer
A NEW CH,AJ?TER FOR THE HISTORY BOOKS
· AT LAST .. &,.,, AND CHILDREN WALK TOGETHER
We en among the first
, wifh S. •I childrens .hoes.
Coming
Thursday! Aug. 20th
Cootlbook 'utl-out Section
0.-.... to ••t wfff be lnakte your
D•ltr Not Tlturad8y, Aue. 20. The beet
of owr 1,IOO rectpea aubmltted by our
reltClera, feeturtnt ttte wtnnert Of the
ltltot '•"'"• "ectpe Contett. DtKover new •thenturea In cooking, from
mlefawa¥• to de•Mrta, eoup to nun.
Doft'tfftlM It.
lllilJ 1'111
'
•
IUllil CUil YDUR lllillll UllY PAPER
TUESDAY AUG U ST 18 . 19H1 OHANGE COUN IV. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
• e student keeps unborn baby alive
RIVERSIDE <AP) -Chris
Huscher, a student at Christ
College in Irvine, never expect·
ed to use the cardiopulmonary
resuscitation techniques he
learned in high school, but an in·
rant girl whose mother died
after a car wreck Is alive
because he did.
The baby was in critical condi·
lion Monday at Riverside
General Hospital, where she was
Produce
boycott
by Japan
By The Associated Press
Japan want s no more
California lemons or other fruit
until the state solves its fruit fly
problems, and California
Republicans want no more of
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., saying
they'll try to impeach him un-
less he gives up control or the
pest-eradication project.
Florida Agriculture Com·
missioner Doyle Conner ,
m eanwhile , asked U .S .
Agriculture Secretary John
Block to order the regulation of
all California produce. Conner
claims California was the sour ce
of the five Mediterranean fruit
fli es whose discovery in Florida
led officials to quarantine 52
square miles of residential area
n ear Tampa, just west of
Florida's lucrative citrus belt.
Georgia Agriculture Com·
missioner Tommy Irvin also
said Monday he asked BJock lo
quarantine produce from coun-
ties bordering the areas in
California that are known to be
infested by the flies. There was
no Immediate response from
-Washinlton.
On Saturday, South Korea and
Taiwan began accepting only
treated grapes, citrus. pears and
apples from California, said
George Stratheam, chief deputy
director or th4! state Food and
Agriculture Department.
The Japanese Ministry of
Agnculture, t'orestry and Fish·
eries announced Monday in
Tokyo the U.S. Embassy was in·
formed Japan wants no citrus
crops or other fleshy fruit from
California, beginning Wednes-
day.
SEE RELATED
STORY, PAGE AS
Japan already is refusing
crops from a 2,427-square-mile
quarantine area infected by the
medfly, according to state Food
and Agriculture Director
Richard Rominger. It is
threatening to ban the crops
from the rest of the state until
both sides agree on fumigation
procedures.
But. Rominger said, "We
don't have enough fumigation
facilities to fumigate all the
citrus.
"It would mean California
citrus growers would have to
find another market. It won't be
that easy because citrus goes to
all the markets that are availa-
ble to it."
Negotia~ons were to continue
today in Washington.
Scott MoJ'Se of the California
Farm Bureau Federation said
Japan had been expected to im-
port $67 million worth of lemons
this year in addition to $27
million worth of oranges, $14
million worth of grapefruit and
$7 miUion worth of melons.
grapes and avocados.
In Sacramento, Assembly
Republican leader Carol Hallell
said Monday an Impeachment
resolution asainst the
Democratic governor wu belni
drafted, and she would introduce
it Thursday if Brown has not
turned over control of the
eradication program to qualified
agricultural ex~ru.
Crossword
corrected
' Ju many crot1word ran1 have
notifted us, our Sunday puule
waa (32 acroea) aa~1ed. Tbe
prevloua week'• defihlt.iofts were
lnadvertently coupled with the
new p1d. ·
Botb PGttlou .... printed COi'·
redb' In toda1•1 edltlou. Tbe
tarp (NllJe appun on Pa,. C4
ln lddiUon to the re,War dally
puule ca Paa• M. We (12'1 down) rttret the er· ror aad aPololbe for the COD·
tUIJan 8Dcf fnitraUon It cawed reedlr'I wbo couldn't ftt tWr
v11t vocabul.,.._ lnto too few
squ.,...
dellvered by Caesarean section
from the mother's dead body
after the accident Sunday eve·
ning. The mother, Rosella
Cervantes, 20, bad been aeven
months pregnant.
Her husband and the child's
father. Eliodoro Ceja, 28, was in
satisfactory condition at the
same hospital. Riverside police
Sgt. Tom Countri said Ceja lost
control of the car and It
slammed into a tree.
Huscher, a 19-year-old college
sophomore, was driving t-0 a
friend's house alter a church ice
cream social when a woman
standing in Victoria Street fran·
tically waved him over. He
stopped ahead or the crumpled
vehicle and found 21 -year-oJd
Lauri Rush already pumping
Ms. Cervantes' chest, working to
spark a pulse.
"She didn't look good, her
eyes were glazed over,··
Huscher recaJled. "She was ob-
viously pregnant and 1 didn't
really know what to do on a preg-
nant lady but Lauri seemed to
know."
"She took over chest part and
1 did the mouth part in the
15-t.o-2 ratio, 15 pushes to the
chest and two breaths We did
that about 10 or 15 minutes
before ambulance arrived,
though It seemed like forever.
"I didn't feel the lady had too
much or a chance for life -all I
heard was a gurgling sound
when I breathed into her so I as -
sumed her lungs were full of
blood. But I thought the baby
would make it.
"When I walked up there I
WHO'S PULLING THE STRINGS? Tony U1·bano chats with
some fictional and celebrity look-alike marionettes that he
and two associates manipulate in shows at 12 · 1s. t : 30. 2: 15.
.,..., ...... ._..,ca..-~
3. 4:30. 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays at the
Festival of Arts grounds in Laguna Beach. A ballet troupe
also entertains art exhibit viewers
Air traffic safety probe due
Task force to study strike' s effect on nation's airlines
WASHING TON (AP) -The
National Transportation Safety
Board voted unanJmously today
to begin an eight-week investiga-
tion into the air traffic control
system to determine whether
safely has been reduced by the
air controllers strike.
A task force of the agency will
examine a broad range of sub-
jects from controJler qualifica-
tions and work schedules to air
traffic density, a spokeswoman
f<>r the board said.
The spokeswoman, Barbara
Dixon, said the rive board mem·
bers decided unanimously to
begin the investigation, but that
no decision has been made
whether to pursue the matter
with a report or recommenda·
lions.
The safety board, which in·
vestigates airline accidents, en-
tered the air controller issue
amid increasing concerns from
some critics of the Federal Avia-
tion Adminis tration that safety
has been substantially reduced
because of the strike by 12,000
controllers.
Couple find
belongings,
house gone
$AN DIEGO (AP> -A San
Diego couple r eturned from
their month-long vacation in In·
diana to find most of their
bek>ngings gone and· -worse
yet -their three-bedroom house
snatched from ita foundation.
Qreg Fulse and Susan Carr,
both Navy enJlated personnel
wh~bave rented the house since J a uary, said Monday they were
ab ked at the discovery ana
stil haven't located all thelr
bel0ngings.
"I couldn't believe lt," P\llse
said. ''But the way our luck wu
going, I wasn't surprised," re-
ferting to a ml1fortune·filled vac~Uoo. T e couple have since learned
th•l landlord, Larry Crawford,
waa, clearing the property to
builf an apartinent buUdin1 and
bad moved tbe houH -after
tm.:ytni it.a content.a -to San Yli , near the lntematlonaJ
bo , for sale In Tijuana.
Crawford bu reportedly said
he. •y·have acted hutlly by •· •Uiai only a lut·mlnute veHal
notlde t.o the toUple'• hoUMlltts wbUf they nn 1way.
lleanwblle FWCe aay. they
bavJ found some •f Ul•lr 11~ property wttb Ml ml· .--..·u..nnta_..
lUer WbO l• llOW ...... Uoinlli. .... ,,. aolnl to •• ll, l
t.blai, •• Nee takl.
; .
I
FAA sources. asking not to be will have to cover a number of
identified by name. said today
that agency also is considering
some form of independent in-
v es ligation to determine
whether air travel is as safe as it
was before the strike.
The five board
members decided
unanimously to
begin the in-
vestigation.
FAA Administrator J. Lynn
Helms has said repeatedly that
there has been no reduction in
sa fety because or the strike.
The air traffic control system
is being run by about 9,300 peo-
ple, including supervisors, non-
striking controllers and military controllers.
Ms. Dixon said the safety
board investigation will depend
on cooperation from the FAA as
the task force will be small and
areas.
She said the probe would in-
clude comparing traffic density
before and after the strike, pro-
cedural changes adopted by the
FAA because or the walkout,
controller qualifications. work
schedules and reporting of near-
m isses or other irregularities.
On Monday. the FAA said it is
examining claims of more than
two dozen aircraft incidents dur·
ing the first week of the air traf·
fie controllers strike.
The controllers union released
a list or the alleged incidents
Monday, including nine uncon·
firmed near-collisions and other
reports that aircraft have come
closer to each other than regula-
tions allow.
The FAA noted the reports
were unconfirmed and it may
take days lo check them out and
it said there are hundreds of
near misses each year.
As the union stepped up its
c ha llenge of administration
claims that flying is as safe as
ever.
Managing editor
post goes to Loos
lfl:W YORK <AP) -GON
1bot up ba late tradllt1 tOd_v. c ................... .
TIMN w • lmmecliat• ....._
tloe ... fllilMd the ,,. ••
Charles H. Loos, assistant
managing editor of the Orange
Coast Daily Pilot for the past 13
years, today was appointed
managing editor by Editor Tom
Murphine.
Loos, who joined the Daily
Pilot staff in 1961, haa previously
served on the newspaper as a
staff writer, Newport Beach city
editor, Orange County bureau
cbld, and as educatloo editor. 'DUl'inJ bis time as an educa-
Uon writer, he won the pres·
U•ious John Swett Award for
outstanding coveraae or
Callfornia education In two suc·
cellive years.
•'Charles Loos brln11 .a depth
pt experience and knowledP of
Oranp County and the Oranae
Coast to the PoSitioo ol manq-iq editor,•· Murplllne said. "I
Im very pleued to have him In
thlt key position on the Dally
Pilot staff. He bu a deserwd
reputation ln Oran11 County
Journallam u OM of IU a..t
erett1men who hH brOucbt
mab awards botll &OUM ,.r
and to himaelf.''
LoOI did bil lint ldnt on the
newpaper •tan rrom 1111 to lNI where be aened ta a
DlllDt.r of ~apadUM, ..... ...U..,
.,.,, writer la c .. ti ..... .
Ne~rt Beatb cllJ• edl~
Or .... ~ ....... cllllf , .. DnOa, .... Alt
Closed,. do or
hearing today
for Bonin
A preliminary hearing opened
today behind closed doors In
Orange County Superior Court
into William George Bonin's al·
leged involvement in seven of
the slayings attributed to the so-
caJled Freeway Killer.
Witnesses, members of the
public and news reporters were
barred from the proceeding by
Judge Kenneth Lae, who or·
dered the courtroom closed at
the request of Earl Hanson. the
34 -year-old defendant's court·
appointed attorney.
Opening of the three-day long
hearing was cleared Monday af.
ternoon when superior court
Judge William Murray rejected
a request by prosecutors from
Los Angeles County to have
Bonin returned to their jurisdlc·
tioo where he races trial Sept. 14
in connection with 12 of the slay-
ings.
The request underscores a
jurisdictional dispute between
authorities in Orange and Los
Angeles counties over where
Bonin will be tried in connection
with three of the killings.
Bonin is charged in both coun-
ties in the deaths or James
Macabe, 12, or Garden Grove;
Darin Kendrick, 19, of Stanton,
and Stephen Wells . 19. or
Downey.
Sterling Norris, a Los Angeles
County deputy district attorney,
told Judge Murray that
authorities consider It a necessi·
ty to retain jurisdiction over the
three cases to successfully pros-
ecute Bonin. Prosecution of two
of the three cases will l!epend
heavily on testimony by two of
Bonin's alleged accomplices in
the crimes. Norris said.
David Carter , an Orange
County deputy district attorney.
said the jurisdictional battle was
nothing 01ore than "a race" to
see which county can bring
Bonin to trial first. He claimed
Los Angeles authorities dld not
need all three cases to mount a
successful prosecution, despite
Norris' comment to the con·
trary.
Carter said Orange County of·
ficlals were willine to yield one
or 'two or the three dJsputed
cases to Los Angeles Count,y, but
asserted that oiler waa rejected.
Murray, prior to rejecting \be
Loa An1elet ,request, comment·
ed. "I think It la a terrible
shame two diatrict atto'rMy.' of·
<See REAalNG, Pap Al>
was really in shock, and you
think you forget everything you
learned . BUit it 's pretty
straightforward once you get
started, although I gagged a few
times."
Officer Jerry Carroll said the
efforts by the young man and
woman kept the baby alive until
Ms. Cervantes arrived at the
<See RESCUE, Page AZ>
Airline
to end
service?
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of -o.tfJ ~ ... S&llfl Wes tern Airlines . which
operates two flights daily from
Orange County to Salt Lake Ci·
ty. would be forced lo terminate
service Oct. 1 under a recom·
mendation made Monday to the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
In a brief report to the board.
Murry Cable, manager of John
Wayne Airport. said Western
will not be able to comply with
jet noise reduction requirements
contained in a recently approved
plan to regulate which com·
mercial carriers serve Orange
County
Wes tern officials steadfastly
d e ny C able's contention .
Further. they claim, Western in-
tends to reduce noise beyond
levels contemplated by the other
four carriers s erving the
airport
West e rn , bas ed in Los
Angeles . began s ervice in
Orange County last October un·
der an interim air carrier access
plan. The plan also granted Den·
ver-based Frontier Airlines--
permission to ser ve Orange
County.
In approving a final draft of
the acces s plan in June.
s upervisors permitted the addi·
lion or a third new entrant,
Pacific Southwest Airlines. <On-
ly AirCal and Republic Airlines
served Orange County prior to
adoption of the interim and final
access plans.)
Western is not favored under
the final access plan. Cable said.
because or language that re-
quires commercial carriers to
use only new and quieter jet
aircraft at John Wayne Airport.
AirCal, Republic. Frontier and
PSA either have or soon will
take delivery of the first genera-
~1on of the so-called "stage III"
aircraft, the McDonnell Douglas
DC-9 Super 80.
Western does not intend to
purchase Super 80s. According
to a report to county officials, it
would meet noise reduction ob·
jectives outlined in the access
plan by modifying engines in
older Boeing 737s now used on
Orange County-Salt Lake City
routes.
Further . Western officials
<See FLIGHTS, Page AZ>
Lawsuit settled
HOUSTON CAPI -A federal
judge says most of the issues
have beeen settled in a lawsuit
by Vietnamese refu1ee fish-
ermen who charged they were
intimidated by Ku Klux
Klansmen and others who want-
ed them out of GaJveston Bay.
DRllGI COAST WIATHIR
Night and morning low
clouds, but sunny Wednes-
day a!temoon. Highs 7S to
82. Low tonight 65.
111181 IDIAY
Did Prrlidlmt Franklin D.
Roo.wU know thtot.lflh tk·
cod«f nwuoge• of Japan'•
p1ana Co attack Pear'
Harbor? <S.. ~ KNtO,
PageA1J
11111
_ a a --~---~--------~~~~~-----..--~----..... ~--~--~~ ...................... ~ ........................... ":""' ............... ~~ ................ ~ .... ~, ... ,.~'I . ,.__ .......
u •.••• Orange Co11t DAil. Y PILOT /Tu .. day, Augu1t 18, 1981
Newpo~ man
among 3 held
Mexico jail • m
lb STEV£ MARBLE "" .. ...., ..........
A Newport Beach attorney
and two pllota remain JalJ.td ln ~uerto Vallarta today wblle
friends and usoclatea attempt
to find out why the men and the
$3 mi Won Lear Jet they ne-lo
on are beidg held.
Attorney Frank Barcelooa ud
pllota Paul Robinson of Santa
Ana and Byron Poller of Seattle
-to.re arrested laat Thursday at a
Puerto Vallarta hotel.
But no charges have been filed
against the men . said U.S .
Ca,psular officer Phil Ober.
There were unconfirmed re-
ports today that the three men
have been freed and have been
granted permission lo leave
Mexico. There were no further
details on this report.
IDENTITY SOL'GllT
Woman found slam
Victilll's
identity
unknown
A young woman whose body
was found beaten and stabbed
on the side of a rpad east of San
Clemente last week still hun't
been identtfied, and Oran1e
County Sheriff's Departmeat In-
vestigators are soliciting help.
They say persons who f!Ught
recognize the brown-haired,
brown-eyed woman found last
Thursday morning should call
t he s he rirf's departmenl at
834·3000.
The vlctim, believed to be
from 18 to 23 years old, was dis-
covered on t he shoulder of
Avenida Pico, about two miles
east of San Clemente. Sheriff's
Lt. Wyatt Harl said she •P·
parenlly had been killed from 24
to 36 hours earlier.
She died of a s kull fracture
and multiple stab wounds, he
said .
The woma n was 5-feet-8-
inches and weighed 110 pounds.
She had a small tattoo of a but-
terfly on her upper left arm, he
said, adding that when found ,
s he was partially clad in a
yellow T-shirt with blue stripes.
Hart said investigat~ to
learn t he victim's identity
before they can begin flfUrlng
who killed her.
Thieves get
$164,000 car
WASHINGTON <AP) -A 1981
lib'llled edition Rolls Royce con·
vertible with a slicker price of
fl84 ,000 was stolen from a
dealer's shop in Bethesda, pOliee
la the Maryland suburb said.
Michael Jackson, executive
vice president of Euro-Motor
Can Inc., said Monday the Job
was the work of professional car
thieves. He offered a Sl0,000 re·
ward leading to the undama1ed
recovery of the vehicle.
The ivory-colored Corniche
convertible with navy blue tep
arrived af the dealership 'nun-
day, Jackaon said.
Oeorae Thom1en, a Newport
S.aeh man •ho arranfed the
trip to Puerto Vallarta and ac·
companied the trio to Mexico
laat week, today 11id, "the
whole thins l1 a 1l1nt me11
that's way out of hand."
Tbomaen, who operates
Thomsen Air Charter out of
John Wayne Airport, uld ht
went to Puerto Vallarta to re·
coyer an airplane that a friend
bad ~bartered lo a Mexican
firm. ··Frank just went alon1 with
me because he enjoys nying and
he wu goln1 to upend a couple
of days ln Mexico,'' Thomsen
commented today from his
Newport home.
AccoNUna to Thomsen, the
plane he was to recover waa a
Piper Cheyenne that beloop lo
Jack'• 8Qx and Crate, a Santa
Ana firm thkt teased the craft
from Crocker National Bank.
'lbomaen sald the plane wu
seiaed when it landed in Puerto
Vallarta last week and the
American pilot who bad been
flying the craft was told to get
out of the country .
.. So as a favor," Thomsen
said, "I agreed to go to Mexico
and aet the plane which, in my
opinion, wu stolen."
»arcelona, Thomsen said,
atteed to join him and the two
pilou aboard the rented Lear
Jet strictly as a pleasure trip.
But others., Including
Barcelona's associate Bill
Urban, claim Barcelona was
paid a fee by Thomsen to go
along on the trip. They said
Barcelona was to be the lawyer
on hand In case of trouble in
Mexico.
Thomsen said when the group
landed in Puerto Vallarta, he
immediately ran ever to the
Piper Cheyenne, cut the chains
that were securing it and look
off. He arrived in the United
States later that day.
Thomsen said he got word of
the arrests the following day.
"I couldn't believe it,"
Thom.sen said.
Urban said his colleague
Barcelona was not planning any
vacation lo Mexico and wu sup-
pose to return the same day.
"It was not a pleuure trip -
he was paid a fee to go along,"
said Urban. "It seefl'IS like he's
being used u a scapegoat or
something. Frank's very con-
servative, he doesn't even drink
beer."
Urban s aid authorities in
Puerto Vallarta have not let him
talk with Barcelona. But, he
said, authorities there claim
Barcelona is in good health.
"I've been told that the
problem here is that the judge in
Puerto VaJlarta is sick and in
the hospital," said Urban.
"Under Mexican law, a person
has to be charged In a certain
period of time but nobody down
there seems to know how long
that period is."
Urban said a Mexican at-
torney may go before a federal
judge ln Guadalajara to seek a
writ forcing local authorities lo
either charge the men or release
them.
From Page A1
RESCUE •••
emergency room, where she was
pronounced dead.
Ms . Rush cou Id not be
·r eached, but Huscher said she
learned CPR for her lifeguard
job at UC Riverside.
"We talked afterward,"
Huscha' said. "She was on her
way to ber family's house when
it happened. I put my arm
around her and gave her a big
htag, but she Ju.st kept saying
over dd over a1alo that she
never thoucht 1be'd hive to use
her tralnln1 in this klnd of situa-
tion."
Huscher, who works aa a
musical lnatrument repairman,
said he still baJn't "lotten over
the ncitement that the tralnina
actually did some aood."
"It wu something I felt 1 had
to do, and once 1 started It Just
came naturally," be added. "I
cld.D't even know the woman's
name until I read it In the
neW1paper."
CIH•tfled ~ 114/t41-M71 All.,.., 1111aftlMM• ... ,...,
ltlalNOf'Pa •West ...... C•lt ...... C.t .UtJ .......... 11 .. , C• ........ CA .,.,.
From Page A1
HEARING OPENED • • •
fices have to enter into a fight on such a matter.''
·'The state of California wants
the man vigorously prosecuted.
Somebody has committed a
number of horrible murders,"
Murray added.
Testimony in the pre liminary
hearing is expected to closely
parallel that presented to the
Orange County Grand Jury
before it voted to indict Bonin in
connection with the seven slay-
ings in which Orange County has
jurisdiction.
In addition to the Macabe,
Kendrick and Wells cases, Bonin
was charged in the &layin1s of
Frank Fox, 17, of Long Beach;
Glenn Barker, 14, of Huntington
Beach; Russell Rugh, 15, of
Garden Grove, and Lawrence
Sharp, 17, of Long Beach.
Bonin additionally is charged
with s pecial circumstances that
could qualify him for t.he death
penalty if convi cted of the
Orange County charges.
An indictment does not
establish guilt or innocence. The
preliminary hearing, in whi ch
defense cross-examination of
prosecution witnesses is
permitted, is being held lo de-
termine if sufficient evidence
exists to hold Bonin for trial in
connection with the Orange
County cases.
Among those scheduled to
testify are Gregory Miley, 19, of
Texas and James Munro, 19, of
Michigan, who have previously
admitted participating in two or
the slayings. They agreed to
testify for the prosecution In ex-
change for favorable disposition
of the murder charges lodged
against them.
Bonin w as a rres ted in
Hollywood in June 1980 while he
was under surveillance as a
potential suspect in the string of
more than 20 slayings . He was
placed under surveillance only
hours after the last death at-
tributed to the freeway killer,
that of Wells. whose body was
dumped behind a Huntington
Beach service station on June 2,
1980.
From Page A1
EDITOR • • •
later, as education edit.or.
He left the paper in 1966 to
become public Information of-
fl cer for the University of
California, Riverside. He re-
turned to the Daily Pilot ln 1968
as assistant manaaina editor.
The new managing editor was
gr~dualed from the Univenily
of' Colorado, Boulder, with a
degree in Joumallam after at-
tending South Pasadena Hlth
School. He i1 a member of the
Oranae County Preas Club,
Sigma Delta Chi, the aociety ol
profeulonal Journall1t1, and
was atflliated with Beta Theta
PJ Fraternity at Colorado. He
served lo the U.S. Army from
1959 to 1961. Looe and hla wife, the former
Jud.Ith Harrinston, have three
c hildren, Scott, Joan and
Michael. They make their bome
In Newport Beach.
Reda urge treaty
GENEVA, Swltaerland <AP
-Tbe Soviet UaioD today urpcl
that tbe OW.a dlaarmaaMDt
conference bellll immediate
work on a treaty out11wta1
neutron napou. '
The killings are so named
b ecause m any bodies wer e
dumped alongside freeways or
major highways.
From Page Al
FLIGHTS • • •
said, the airline in 1984 expects
to take delivery of a plane con
sidered more advanced than the
Super 80, the 200-seat Boeing
767.
Cable said today that he would
permit Western to continue to
serve Orange Cou nty if it would
convert lo the Super 80s.
.. We need them llhe Super
80s ) to meet our noise reduction
goals and to carry. more
passengers, .. Cable said. The
Super 80s have about 25 percent
more seats than the Boeing 737s
and DC-9·30s now operated by
the carriers serving the airport.
"lf Western wants to commit
(to purchasing the Super• 80s >
that's fine. If they don't, then
they don 't have to fly here."
Cable also disputed Westem's
contention that 1t can meet noise
reduction objectives simply by
modifying its current fleet of
Boeing 737s. '"We don't think
their figures are correct.·· he
said
If Western 1:. removed from
the airport and sources say
Cable has the necessary votes lo
force the eviction -its two
flights would be divided evenly
between Frontier a nd PSA.
Frontier. which operates two
fl ights per da y, would be
p ermitted these d eparture~.
PSA, which is scheduled to begin
service Oct. 1. also would be
awarded three departures.
D<Mly ,, ... -.. , Gery·--
OPEN FOR INSPECTION Somt· 700 membt·r~ of the Rapid
Deployment Fo1 ce s pread out their perso~al gear at El
Toro Marine Air Corps Station Staff Sgt Keith J ackson and
Brig. Gen. Joseph B Knolls. commanding genl·r al o~ the 7th
Marine Amphib1ou:-; Hrigade. -.poke with a part1c1pant.
below. durm!! th(• m~pt•ttion on ~1onda~
---~----~-~·----.....-.--·~·--·.,._ .................. ~·~·~---~·~----·~·_.. .................. a•s ..... .-... s .. a•s•t .. 1~2•2 ... •z .. : .. 21211 .. 21111 .. • ...... -
Net ..... 'l•I
(flt 'let s.1 ... ....
. ;''i j ., ,.J1 ·3 I ..... !:JJ~i
If
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/n~•y. Auguat 18, 1981 N ••
kin Nel
Dow Jones Final
OFF 2.57
CLOSING 924.18
It's good to own property, especially if it's
beacbfront land in Hawaii. Amfac, largest of the
Hawaiian-based companies, recently sold 6'h acres of
beachfront property at lta Kaanapall Beach Resort
on the island o( Mau.I. The price: Sl3.2 million. or
roughly S2 million an acre.
It's tough to make that kind of money In retail·
ing, where Am!ac operates the Lil>erty House depart·
ment st.ore chain in California and Hawaii; or in the
resort and hotel business, where Amfac runs a bunch
o( hotels at airports. the lodge at the Grand Canyon
National Park and the SUverado Country Club ln
Napa; or in the wholesaling o( druas. electrical pro·
ducta and plumbing supplies, which Amfac doea in
the western part of the country; or even in frozen
French fries, which Amfac's Lamb-Weston sub-
sidiary sells to fast-food restaurants everywhere
(perhaps even lo the Fred Harvey restaurants
operated by Amfac).
You can make that kind or money in the sugar
business, where Amfac is a leading player through
its canefields In Hawaii. Hawaiian sugar is sold here
under the C&H ~ label, the C&H
standing for the t; e.
California and ,•· ,
H a w a I i j.,. ~·
cooperative ··-.. "-•h_..._ _____ _
!!::~~:~~ne:u:~~ lllJll llllNIJZ
for growers.
The Amfac flelds make the greatest raw sugar con ·
tribution to tbe cooperative, accounting for
something like 30 percent of the total.
But the trouble with sugar is that it fluctuates
widely in price and the grower can therefore never
be sure of the cash flow from year to year. For exam-
ple, Amfac was recenUy gett.ing 18 cents a pound for
sugar, compared to 27 cents earlier this year and 23
cents a year ago. The decline threw sugar operations
into the red. In the second quarter of 1981 Amfac lost
$3.8 million on sugar; in the same quarter last year
the company made a profit or $9.4 million on sugar.
To avoid being whipsawed by this wicked price
gyration, Amfac sells some o( the surplus land it has.
It's nothing new. Property sales make a regular con -
tribution to Amfac's profits, helping to even out the
troughs.
Amfac's profits in the first half or 1981 were close
to what they were a year ago. But if not for the prop·
erly saJes, thex would have been lower. It makes a
difference, o( course, where. the property is located.
Amfac is •l>le to set $2 million an acre In Maui
because of the investment the company has put In to
make that property a lush beach resort. About the
same time that it was selJing these 6'1J acres in
Hawaii, Amfac was also selling a S6'h-acre industrial
site in San Jose. But that sale netted less than SI
miUion.
. Having land to sell in thl~ manner gives Amfac a
la~ge measure o( control over how much prom it's
gomg to make. If the sugar business is down or the
hotel businesa is off or department store sales are
wea~. Amfac can ju.st go out and sell a little land to
make up the difference. It still owns more than 65.000
acres in Hawaii.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
'·"'·'· ..... ~:= •21JOI 4?1,700 =j' "°· 1'0,1 Jl7,IGO 31.,000 JW,000 •.•ao ....
UPS AND DOWNS
~·. Up 10 •• Up U Up ...
Up U
"" u Up 1.1 u: 1.1 u ...
UP u Up
"" .. j ! tt
"" u ~ 2j
NIW'l'OMWl-..._ ___ .,..
!'W'llt ..... --Kt ... ~ ..... ~ -t•'"""'O not-..., ot """,,_ ~1111011 i.2.100 ,,..... ,.
HWtlOO 0 21u,AOO av. ..... o.om.Pfrt t IU,AQO .... ..
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llOClcrtEn " lt,500 U 'J. "
Ali. "" 71.500 lfl'\ ..
METALS
N•W YOIUC IAPI -SHt -••"-metal prlcet ._..,:
C...-r • ._.. ...... c.ef'lh • pouM, U.5.
deft!MtloM. ......... ,_ . .,.._.
IMc •14 ~·• poufld, dettwrecl Ti.11. M7 _..h WM4I c ...... lte lb
,...._.,._~epoo.nd,N.Y . ....,_, ..... ~"-· ....._"21.001,..yor.,N.Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 o o s u o u e 4 u u z aw o a u czo µsue osososu;s ...:::.
•• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT{futtday, Augu1t 18, 1981
THE.
f"MILl'
Clatt:I
by Bil Keane
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81flQIORG£
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by V1rgll Partch (VIP) PEA t:TI o--·---
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..NST ~OWLED AT ME. !
--------
11M SURE HE DIDN'T MEAN ANVTMIN6 8V IT ...
by Charles M. Schulz
WELL, ME DOESNT
HAVE TO SE 50
8EA6L16ERENT !
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I
TtMBLE" EED8 by Tom K. Ryan 1
"Con you unpack our bathing suits ond toke us
down on the beoch, Mommy?"
by Brad Anderson
'l . • • -~""?.. \..' ···-'-•;:
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"Remember ME?"
Hank Ketchum
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EASY! iHE: l..AS1' MAN iO CAL.L-
ME: A CHEAI WAS CARRIEP
OLYf OF HERE: FEE:i Fl RSI!
"Let's get a different bad guy ... Marmaduke
· is too fast for us to cut off at the pass!"
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8 ·18 ~ GORDO
THE GUY AT TME t\AMB!JR6ER ST.ANO $A)S IF YOU USEO TO I
Jl'DGE PARKER
fi.\Rt'lt:l ,O
£T Ti1~5E FOR A DIME YOU MUST & A 11//#llERIJ ~ OtOt, SORJt.v
• · • 1 CAN'-r
IHE P~ICE Of PEANUT
BUTTE~ HAS ABOUT
7RIPl.-E.C> IN l'H ~
P,AST 8 M.oNTHS. I
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p~~leE by Harold Le DOU>< A rlJ!;MEr:rf,
Pr:L.ONf
by Jim Davis
ANO MIS
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LAWRENCE OF
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by Ferd & Tom Johnson
l ~UESS
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8TRE::;5
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Fl'NKl' "INKERBEAN
KOL.L'1' , 40VR FRIEN~
FroM ~l. ARE ~BABL.l)
All HERE Ai 'ffi£ PIU<lE:
QUEEN PA6EANT WAT~IN&
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KIPP01 WHe!Re!'S YOU~ WHl"T"E!!
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NANCY---WHY
DID YOU
COME IN?
by Gus Amola
by Tom Bat1uk
15 iHERf ANl.'iHING lX)O'D
LIKE. fO ~ 10 1fiE.M ~
0\.4, ALL. R1£M'f ! JVS'f A
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by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
-,'SIGH:-l'f'S GONNA ee .ANO"T'H5R t..ONG, t..ONG PAY.'
FOR •ETTE• •• fea •••IE by Lynn Johnston
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, r------r-------r------1 lt=iERE:~ N'11ft1N'1t) MICHAEL-TH~'s Yoo SHOULD READ !HATS 'Cf\u&E
D0,1RERE'e, ~IN' Ru.VAY~ SOMETHING-R SIOR)'-OR MAI-<£:. YOU D6N'T HAVE. o~ 1.V.:z_ 1RERE'S To oo. LIFE'S Too SOMETHING -llHtNK F\S MOCH LEFI ~1H'10 NW w11H, SHORT\o WR~ A TIME IS Pf'roOOS~ AS I oo. 1He~'8 NDPn;J'/ SECOND CF IT!
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