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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-08-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. . • ' TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 19, 1CJIO 1ML.~-..-·~·~ • e on Bank Depositor Draws nted Cash, Cops ' • • • --Planner Home FV Man's Trial Sex or Death -Tale Rebutted A tem-.age girt who lives in Leot.ta Heat.er~• Fountain Valley home testified Monday she never beard Heater threaten to hurt or kill a hitchhiker who claims the ex-convict held him agaiJlst his will last May as a "sex slave." Wanda Rainey. 17. told an Oran~e County SUperior Court jury lD Judge James Turner's courtoom that contrary to his testimony, Jonathan Leonski, 18, appeared to be enjoying himself during the two days he spent at Woman Given life Sentence TITUSVILLE. Fla. (AP) -A 35-year-old woman has been sen· tenced to life imprisonment for her part in the slaying of her former employer, who was beaten to death with a frying pan. Janice Gould pleaded guilty and was sentenced Monday, becoming the third woman to plead guilty or be convicted in the March 28 slaying of optometrist John Bradford. Bradford'& widow, Prlacilla, 36, pleaded guilty to murder charges Aug. 4 and was sentenced to life imprilonmeat. Joyce Cummings, 18, was convicted by a Semlnole County Jury last week, but bas not been sentenced Heater's residence on Goldeneye Avenue. Heater is standing trial on charges be forced Leonski to stay at bis home after picking him up last May 6 and then threatening the North Carolina native unless he bad sex with both him and Miss Rainey. The girl, her hair braided in Bo Derek fashion and wearing a white dress, said she never saw Heater, a previously convicted sex offender, strike Leonski with a belt or threaten to kill him if be did not cooperate. Leonski testified that the de- fendant had threatened him several times and struck him with a black cane and tied him up Miss Rainey. under question- ing by defense attorney John Flood, told the seven-man, five- woman jury that she did see. Heater put a belt around Leonski's neck so he could walk like a dog. But she said the 18-year-old hitchhiker consented to doing this. Leooski bad testified be was forced into it. Miss Rainey said she never perceived there was force being used oo Leooski to have him engage in sexual acts with her or Heater. She testified that the young drifter eventually asked her to (See SEX, Page AZ) What Holdup? Deposiwr Not a Robber James Arnold KJliep told Newport Beach police Mon- day afternoon that if be wu a bmDk robber, someone fortet to tell bim about tt. TBB .. YUa.ot.D Garden Grove man entered tbe Home SaWlll ad Loa in Newport Center at about noon, j))analq lo make a depoelt. -" 'l'Ut'a wblll bia daJ toet a turn f« the wone. Kailp fWed out a de1*it slip at a customer COQllter failiq to-nodce that aomeoae bad acrawled a .. ltick up•1 meaaee Gil tbl back of tbe lllp. ,... nar CUJB that .,..,..h1n1 wu amiA came wbea tbl taller UoTed a baDllle of bWI in bla dincUoa, ac· tl.aU., a 8llllt alarm at tbl same moment. Km.p ............ , DOlice Mid I.a., and pulbed tbe pile of bllll bliS at tbe teller, nmtndlna ber that be wu mak- tn1 a~ not a withdrawal. At tldl pomt, tbe teller lbowed tbe eonfUHd customer tbe ~ m•aqe. Be 6lQll•tMt nrprile. •UNWlllLB. POUCE elwpd into tbe Newport Center~ ud loan leoldq for tbe bandlt. 'Rey found Knlep........ - lat IJllPtorl uld they lebed tJa.e robbery note .. nw.c.. clMnd up the mllundtntawtta1 wl let Knlep --...... .., ..... b1a depollt. I He's Got You Covered I Business Loans Unpaid BJ DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. OlltY ""'Sc.ti The half-million-dollar Hunt- ington Beach borne ol Orange 1 Couty Plannini' CommiuJon cbairmaD Rleba.rd .J. Footaer will So cm the aadiao block Sept. 22 to pay orr business loans Foot.Der is alleged to have ob- tained by exploiting his public position. Footner said Monday be would make no comment on the published reports which indicat- ed he used bis position as leverage with lenders to help secure business loans totaling about $600,000. If you see this man pointing this at you, you'd better give up and drop your speed. Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of bis de- partment's band-held radar units, which look a bit other-worldy. Traffic officers say although they've been in use for three Deity PIM ....... ~ O'o-41 years, with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun pointed their way. Relax. It'll only hurt you in the wallet. GW 'Boosts Loan Prime To 13.5o/o BEVERLY HILLS CAP> - Citing a contin•ed slowdown in savlnp; combined with strong loan demand, Great Western Savin11 & Loan Association boosted its prime mortgage rate- today 0.5 percent to 13.5 percent. The nation's second largest thrift, with $9.6 billion ln assets and a unit of Great Westem Financial Corp., said the new rate ls the lowest on owner· occupied, single-family home loans. Great Western ts the first thrift to poet a 13.5 percent rate aince mort1a1e interest rates beau climbing again ln June. following a substantial drop from their peak of about 17.5 percent last March. On Monday, Security Pacific NaUonal Barut, Los Angeles, the natJon's tenth largest, raised it.s prime mortgage rate on new home loans t.o 13.25 percent from 12. 75 percent. 'Nothing Political' Carter's Partner Def ends Libya Deal WASHINGTON (AP>. -Billy ''It was just good old Soutbenl Carter' a partner told Senate lo-hospitality,.. Coleman told a veatlpton that Billy obtained a special Senate jualclary aub- $220,000 lolm and tbe two ICJUlbt committee. an oil deal wttb Ubya after be-Pbllip W. Tone, tbe aubcom· lnl warned the lJbyam mleht mittee'a •peelal coumel, dll· be tniu to uae them "to in-closed that the State Depart· nuencie U.S. policy." ment wuned the two in a lilUer' Tbe partner, Henry "Rand;y" Dee. 12, 1'11, that IJbyu ol· Coleman, teltifted be and Billy ftclall were .. Mlabliahlnl ~ cliare1arded tbe State Depart~ tacts outside W......,_. meat wand.DI ~--tbey em-"Tbei.lbJ-bDpe to aM RCb aldend tbelr relatlou wttb tbe eoatadl to lnR1llDCe U .s . policy lJbyana u ''notbiq poltUcal. toward their country and tbe Arab world," the letter aald. • Tbe letter. wrtuee bJ a State Commoner Qualifies Department LlbJ• delk ~ . tald that Ahmed Sbabatl, SACltAMENTO (AP> -of the Llb)'u Forelp Uallcwt Cltizeu Party presidential can-Bureau and tbe man Bllly dldate Barry Commoner bu Carter wu c1MHn1 W'Wl. wu qualified ror Callforllia'1 Nov. 4 one of tbe Ubyan oftlelall mat- electlon ballot, Secretary of lD.l •ueb coatac:ta. State March Fonc Eu said Fri-But Coleman said be and day. • <See BILLY, Pase Al) Supervisor Harriett Wieder, who appointed Footner to the planning body. asked the county counsel's office Monday to in- vestigate the charges. Court records indicate the businessman-planning com- missioner's home at 16551 Carousel Lane, which be bought in 1971, will be offered at a sberifrs auction next month to pay off debts resulting in part rrom bis involvement with Caliromia Filter Corp. The company declared itself bankrupt last year in U.S. Dis- trict Court. According to court records, California Filter Corp. executed a promissory note for a $50,000 loan in Aug. 1979. Though some interest was paid back, the prin- cipal and additional interest re- main due. (See AUCftON, Page AZ> Coast Weather Mostly-sunny Wednes- day afternoon following night and morning clwdi- ness. Lows tonight a at the beaches to 81 inland. Higba Wednesday 70 to 74 aloot tbe coat. 76 to 80 in- land. INSIDE TODAY It gdl '°"f1lwr ewry day /or a bcmk. Uke netyOM else, to make a profit °" 1ervice1. To ea1e the ~ere. maftll bcmb ~ ffY· inQ to f1'HU out the nickel mad dirM account• while .. atUuUng brooder aenrices (and hlQher C~I) far the /.wer bid more profital* ac- count• mncmling. SH ~ A1. •••ex '" Y_ ..._ a .. &AMlll"I a .,_......_a..-. .,,. UIL..,. M _.. .... • --............... .. -M=~M f:: CM -51:.:... ii=: ....... ~ ........ ,. ,.......... . • .... 1 .............. ~ ....._a.a..--, .. •• a .... -"" . ..... ,, .. , . · n Fears Ouster Froni Debates .... etl :::aw.'=.:.-:;~ utiJ;;-•-•· fl New Yn. ll .,., ftClt dear ti ell.her would •~ tW.r •~for An ...... ....... cleat.,. fort to cla:!!~tf• rHldent CaNr'.... ... ...... ,\spin WU I ftnn IUI)~ ol Seti EdWard M . KeMedy and aer ved aa Wlaconal n atat e Writ,er Def en~ Iran Column • CHICAGO <AP) -S)'ltdicated : colu.amlat Jack Andenon aays ··=be reaebed the • 'anguiahinf'' de- cision to diacloee the detaib ol ·an alleged U.S. plan to invade Iran because he is convinced the mission would fail. ··Because of the political nature of this plan. because it almost certainly would not suc- ceed. I decided to expose. it," be said in a speech Monday Digbt. Anderson has reported that President Carter is plannlna a m ilitary oper ation aimed at freeing the U.S. hostages in rnid- October, limed for maximum advantage of his re-e lection ::Bank.Joh _-.:...Qgitive __ On Trial A m a n who remained a . fugitive for eight years following the multi-million dollar "Mission . Impossible" break-in at the Monarch Bay branch of United . CaUfomia Bank went on trial on bank burglary charges today in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Ha rry James Bar ber. 38, is among six people who were in- dicted in connection with the world's largest bank burglary over the weekend of March 24-27. 1972. . Barber, however, was not ar- rated unW lut "ay 12 when Federal Bureau of 1n .. 1u,atkla . .,eau located him llvinf under :an Mltamed name ID Broolnt.lle, • Pa. · Five other defendants, arrest- . ed al locations in California and ··Ohio shortly alter the burglary, are serving sentences following ·their convictions in feder a l -, court. The bank suffered a cash loss ·in the burglary of only $'5,2S6. ' : But losses to safety deposit box · holders wer e conser vatively estimated at between $4 and $6 ·million. · Negotiable bonds, cash, jewels .and rare coins we r e among valuables ta.ken after the boxes were systematically forced . open.· The burgJary team -which went as far as renting a Laiuna· Niguel ccmdominium a.a a bue .'of operations -· used lar1e drills ·and special elltploeivea to gain 'entry to the vault from an attic area where they could wort without beina seen. The first arrest in the cue oc- curred in June. 1972, when . Charles A. Mulli1an, then 38, or ·Youngstown. Ohio, returned t.o Orange County to dispose of a getaway car outfitted with false compartments. D u ring Mulligan's t rial, testimony indicated that much of the loot quietly left California in a pleasure boat trailered from the state by the burglary team. While large amount.a of cash were uncovered by agents in the :v ounptown area, most or the ,:stolen property hasn't been re- :covered. DAILY PILOT ,.,. 0<-tM.i 0..ly P1101. wot• -· " tom-II•-.-•. •• _,._ 1» 111< 0••-tMit -IWne t-r \o!NI< .. • ..,,,_, .. ....-..-_, ""-,,..., '"' GMS• _.._ -'*1 ....... _....,.,. l::t\" ~~:; ~·~ ~-=f ;.,~r;.n: tN'OI•~ S..wro." _,,. ~t¥\ fM PttM:iipel =''•':.."'-=~ e.::~.a~:-· PO. ._,, __ .... \lletM __ _ JM-ll.C41rtof 111<•-•··-c..-·---'-.. K-, ..... ,_, .. .....,..... ""-1144•,,.CdllOt a.n.. ....... ...... -~u .... ~" -<:'::: ••• , .. ...... L ....... llHc .. : 10'7 .... tM~~ ...... , """'""*' llN(ft ,,., .............. _ • , ... phoft• (714)~ a..llflM Mwertlllfttta-Ml'I ,,.,,, ... , .. _ -- campaign against Kooald Reagan and John B. Anderson Tbe White Houae and Defense Secretary Harold Brown have flatly denied the allegation. and the White House labeled the s tor~ "grotesque" and "Ir · re s pon s ible .·· Several newspapers that normally carey Anderson's column, including the Washington Post. the New York Daily News and the AUan· ta Constitution. did not run the column Monday. la bis s p eech . Anderson c laimed Carter ordered last April's rescue attempt or the American hostages in Tehran because his ratings had slipped in the public-Opinion polls. That effort was aborted because or helicopter failure. and eight soldiers died in an aircraft col· lision during the withdrawal from the lranian~eff.· ----- The columnist noted that -Gfftel"'~ding in the polls has dropped again and said the president has ordered plans be prepared for the "limited in· vasion" because "it just comes naturally to him to react politically." However, Anderson said un- identified experts believe the p la n -which be did not describe in detail during his s peech -would fail. He said it was only because these experts believe the plan is fl awed and th at Carte r 's motivation is political that he and bis staff were able to learn details of the alleged mission. "We would have a very dif. fi cult time carrying this <mis· sion) ·out," and for that reason, be said. be cfecided to publlab bis fiadinp. "J can uaure you it was an aaguiah.lng decision," Anderson added. "J don't think newsmen s hould pry into military secr ets except in special circumstances." Ande rs on said that while Carter has not actually ''or- dered" the invasion, "he has started preparations for a limit· ed invasion or Iran" and that one "control point" in the opera· lion already has passed. He said a final decision whether to carry out the plan will not be made un- til two more "control points" a.re passed. Andenoo said one thing that would make another rescue at· tempt very difficult is that many of the hostages were removed from the Occupied U.S. Embassy and taken to other locaUona in Iran as a result or the aborted miasioo last April. Tbe eolwnnillt'a remarks were delivered at the annual cooven· tioo ol the Barber and Beauty Supply Institute. Boy's Body Found' SANTEE, Calif. CAP) -The body or Andrew Auer , missing 9-year-old son or a deputy Los Angeles County district at· torney, bas been found hidden under brush less than 100 yards from his borne northeast of San Diego. ......... Actor James Stewart, 12, la beiDI treated ln the cor- oaary care unit ol St. Jdm's Holpl&al lD Suta llODica, but =-mm uya be bu not lrecl a heart attack and tMre ii DO CIUH for alarm. coordlaator for the H nator'a un· 1ucct11ful campal10 for the Democretlc prulde nUal nomlnallon. Jn ldd1Uoo. campa11n sources aald Ander on and Mitchell Ro1ovln. the campalp lawyer. and 1trate1l1t Da"ld Garth would ... HW WIYI to Ulure Andenon 'a admlHlon to the firtt t.levt.led debate Sept. 18 ln Baltimore. Illa partlclpaUoo is considered critical by senior campaip aides. The League of Women Voters. wbich is apoMOring the debate. has said Anderson must have a lS percent average among the major public opinion polls to be invited. Sources said the campaian would propose that the average date back to include polls taken Tun1 Right at 17th Ce11tury during the early sun:imer aftd spring. Anderson began nmning aa an lndepeodent April 24, and hla 1tandln1 1n the polll llnt rose to u bi-'1 u about 23 per· cent. then dipped during the two major party nominaUnl{ cooven· tlons. To make hia side trip to Waahincton. Anderson canceled a news conference and meetlna with edlton ln Providence, R.r. Arter that, be planned to resume a coast-to-coast campaign trip . which incl..._ 1tope in ODnnec· t.lcut, Dl1Do6a, lowa, Mlnnelota and CalllClf'Dla. In a speech prepared for de- livery before a aallonal meeting of the American Legion hen, Anderson a ttacked Reagan's call for American military s upe riority over the Soviet Union. ,· Fr .. Page Al AUCTION • • American State Bunk, which granted the loan. filed a com· plaint for damages against Footner because. as president of the firm. he had guaranteed in writing the payme nt of the • money The bank then sought his home to pay off the debt. Walter Schroetler. assistant vice president of the bank, said in court documents that he was the loan bfficer who handled the California Filter Corp. transac· lion and that if Footner had not signed a "continuing guaranty" in which he cited his community standing. among other things. the loan would not have been made. The compan y. forme d in August. 1978, was to manufac· lure and distr1bute air filters and oil rilters . Footner claims in the court records that he was president of Cahforrua f'ilter Corp. for only a few days and that he was never a Mockholder at any time. He said ht• received no compensation as president and d 1d not benefit from th<' loan • -·-pry mouffi-:--Miis ~. ;atrol man -Billy~-costumerl-TalbOt 1s part ~f 7."'jijyrnoliih" O'Meara (left) gives dfrections to Mil~ P rOl-!!Css," o!l_even!_.on Fridays ~~mg_ -· -~~-r -d~c~,.~~OODm-·-~ ~ as. a bu~incl>S.man._ who · ac -Standtsh '""tOOJrnnlC~-RiCliciraTafOOf-iiie °f\uJ.{uSf iilPly moUCll · ----------------- Coast Transsexual Sues in Navy Ouster LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former Navy chief petty officer w h o says t h e mil itar y ··maliciously tried to destroy me" is suing the federal govern- ment ror booting her out of the military following her male-to- female sex charige surgery. J oanna Miche lle Clark. formerly Michael F. Clark. filed the complaint Monday in the U .S . Court o f Claims in Washington D.C. Ms . Clark, 42, of San Juan Capis tra no, alleges io her lawsuit that her dismissal from the Navy and later the Army re- ser ves violated her rights to privacy, a fair hearing and equal protection under the law. "They created a living hell for m e, and now they're doing the sartl e for the Norton Sound Eight." she told a news con· ference here Monday. Eight women sailors were ac· cused of homosexual misconduct aboard the U~ Norton Sound. So far two have been acquitted a nd one found guilty. <Story Page A3.) Neither Army nor Navy public affairs officers in Washington were aw~ of the suit and said the complaint would have to be reviewed before a statement could be made. The American Civil Liberties Union be.re filed the complaint oo behalf of Ms. Clark whoooted "not one cent" of military funds went toward her Medi-Cal-paid surgery or follow-up treatment. Ms . Clark. who was dis- charged from the Navy and later had her enlistment voided by the U.S. Army Reserve, is seeking an Wlllpeclfied amount of back wages and retirement benefits. She had served 17 years of ac- tive and reserve duty with the Navy when she bad pr_e-sur~e~ FroaaPageAJ SEX ••. go away with him and marry him. Questioned by p r osecutor Dave Himelson, the girl said she waa a frequ e nt visitor to Heater's home before moving in last May. She sald s he b a d known Heater for a year, meetin1 him throuab a mutual friend-. - - Miu Rainey aaid ahe doeln't pay Heater any room or board and that the defendaa t 1omeUmea stvea her present.a aocb u marijuana. She said that, alt.boucb Heater aometlmea bas fill of temper, be bu never burt ber. s creening a t the Stanloro Univer sity Me dical Cente r Gender Identity Clinic in 1974. Ms . Clark said. She then received an honora- ble discharge when she had the oper ation in J une 1975 in Oklahoma City and Ms. Clark said she later learned her rec- ords ahd been cbanKed. classi- fying her as a homosexual .. when they knew fully well I was not." Two months later. she was ap- proached by an Army recruiter and enlisted in the reserve. Ms. Clark said, adding that her pre· vious discharge. her resume and full disclosure of her sex re· assignment were forwarded to Army officials. She also passed a pre-enlistment physical, she said. Ms . Clark s aid s he had reached the rank of sergeant first class after 19 months when the Army voided her enlistment, following an incomple te in- vestigation of charges of drug ad- diction. theft of classified docu- ments, subversion. fraudulent enli~tau:.nl4llld morals violations. "Obvious ly lhe charges weren't true -they add up to treason and I'd never be walking the streets if they were," Ms. Clark said. "I would like to be re-enlisted -I bad a very dis- tinguished military career for 19 years." <e CONCORfi QUARTZ f'rom Page t I BILLY ... Carter continued their Libya dl'alings and arranged thl' loan fo r Billy and tried to set up the 011 dca1 through Shah1t1 and other Li- by anoffic1als Coleman said he picked up tho $220.000 m checks from the Lib· yan embassy in Washington for 1 he loan to the president's brother lie said the 5220.000 is part of a $500,000 loan and said the rest 1s still coming to Carter later so far as he knows The partner said a member (If the widely-political Li b} an del· egation that Billy hosted in Cicorgia m .January 1978 made the f1r..t offer of a business deal with Carter. Coleman said the member of the delegation told Carter the Libyans realized he had financial problems and asked "1f we had any commodities to sell.·· Later. Coleman said. he and Billy settled on a commodity. "And what was that'.' .. Tone asked. "Oil. .. Carter replied. Coleman said the Charter Oil Co. did make an agreement to pay Carter up to 55 cent<; for e very barrel or Libyan oil he could supply, but Libya has not agreed to supply the oil. Meanwhile. the head of the Senate invest1gat1on of Billy Carter's ties with Libya says t h al s o far , he s ees no born bs he lls and no "maJor breach of public trust" by Presi- dent Carter or his advisers. _ quu:es Mlcl mvcsts il'l..c.o.mruuUe.:i...--. which hav<' heen in serious f1nanr1al difficu lties. re cap1tah7.es t~m . and then pro ceeds to make them profitable ... Footner once 11 -;t c d hi s personal asse~ as toppmg $2" m1l11on but. according lo court records. his annual income o' Sl3l.OOO has s hrunk to his plan- ning commissioner salary of $9.600. Though 1'~ootner declined com- ment Monday. Supervisor Wieder ~a id in a memo to County Counsel Adrian Kuyper that she wanted to know of anyi legat.: problems that could arise frorr> the allegations m a Los Angeles- Times art1rle. "Based on the allegations con tamed in thts article, would you. please advise as to any legal ramifications of the activities> reported, as they might reflecl on this commissioner's con- tinued service to the county.'' she asked Kuyper. .. Also," she said, "would you include in your a nalysis dis· cussion of whether there is any impropriety in listing 'planning co mm.issioner' and the income the refrom on an application for personal or business loans." In an interview, Mrs. Wieder said she felt "very badly" for Footner because she didn't know he was having financial prob- lems. She said she would reserve Judgment until she knew more of the situation and spoke to her appointee. The Times article claimed Footner had arranged financing for two companies with which he was involved by telling loan of- ficers he was a good credit risk because he served on the plan· ning commission. rtnal aqumenta in the aex pervenion cue were espectecl to 1et under way today wUb the Jury '::cf!nnin1 dellber.atlons either y or Wedneeday. Trial I .aging 73Aell <Jf/a/J11 <Jf.ewfitJJ/ GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP)·- Tbe murder trtaJ c:l aix Ku JClux ltlanamm and Amertcu Nam bu boaed down tA a ftlbt over tbe ... ,,.... fl two pl'OMCUdclG wltatNa who testified liat weet, } 35 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 644·2494 I • ' Today's Closing N. 't'. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980 N TWENTY-FIVE CENTS uiet Jet Too Heavy for OC Use It would take a t:a mlllloo = .. job of UM Joba w.,_ IWW*J to NcWarlJ lie· eommodM• tbe MW~·· jet tbt .. unu.. la to lo- tndtlee early neat year. .Airport mana1er Raul Re1al.ldo Mid there are olber wa19 anMld tbe problem, bu& be •tneeed Uiat the bottom line ii t.Ut tM new DC-t 1uper., ell· ceeda tbe welcbt the runway WU builttowilbltand. H• aald the runway la de· a!JrMd to wve jeta up to 96.000 pounds. Tbe super 10, with tank• ftlled, weitb.t lD at 140,000 pounds. Alt California officials, who hope to bepn uain& the auper • out ot-Jobb Wayne by FebnW'y, aald they'll trim the weltbt down to 124,000 pounds by carry- 1.q less fuel. Re1ah1do said it will be up to the Board ol Supervisors and the Federal AviaUon Admlniatration to make a declslon on the super IOI. "U the board decides to ac· commodate the super 80, we can do it but over the long period there will be s ome conse· quences," he said. For ooe, be s aid, the 20-year life or the runway would be s hortened . The runway is rougblylOyearsold. The other alternative, be saJd, would be to reduce the number ol annual departures from John Wayne. This would a ccom- modate the new jet by trimming down the amount of weight that touches down on the runway during the course of a year. "There are trade-offs any way you approach it and, certainly, one of them is holding off on the Super 80 until the runway is strengthened," said Renlado. Debts Pinch Plallner By DAVID KUTZMANN Of -o.lty "9llt ..... The balf·millioo-dollar Hunt- ington Beach home of Orange County Planning Commission chairman Richard J . Footner '"'"~ --~-~·in~ • .wlll&P on t}\e auction block Sep~. "' ~ ~ • 'r:.. ·_}%._K_ 1>~..JifLbusiaes.1. l.nd.I.. _ .:...:.....--~~---.. ----·::-?if Footner is alleged to have ob- tained by exploiting bis. public position. lle'a Got Ve• C'oeeNd , U you aee thil man potntina thla at you, you'd better give up and drop your speed. Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of his de- partment's hand-held radar units. which look a bit other worldly. Traffic officers say although the units have been in use for \.hree years, with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun pointed their way. Relax. It'll only hurt in the wallet. Columnist 'Anguished' Jack Anderson Tells Why He 'Exposed' Plot CHICAGO (AP)·-Syndicated eohunnlst J act Anderson says be reached the "anp.ishinl" de· d.lioa to disclose the det.a.Ua ol an alleled U.S. plan to invade Iran becauae be is convinced the misalon would fail. "Because of the politic al nature of thia plan, because it almost certainly would not suc· ceed, I decided to expose it,'• be Hid in a speech Monday night. Andenon has reported that President Carter is planninC a military operation aimed at freeing the U.S. hostages in mid- October, timed for maximum advanta1e or his re-election campaltn a1aln1t Ronald Reatan and John B. Anderson. The White House and Defense Secretary Harold Brown have ... flatly denied the allecalion, and the White House labeled the story "grotesque" and "ir· r e sponsible ." Several newspapers that normally carry Anderson's column, including the Washington Post , the New York Daily News and the AUan- ta Constitution, did not run the column Monday. In bis s peech, Anderson claimed Carter ordered last April's rescue attempt or the American hostages in Tehran because his ratings had slipped in the public-opinion polls . That effort was aborted because of helicopter failure, and eight soldiers died in an aircraft col- lision during the withdrawal from the Iranian desert. The columnist noted that What Holdup? Deposiwr Not a Robber James Arnold Kniep told Newport Beach police Moo· day afternoon that lf be was a bank robber, someone forgot to teU him about it. TD .._Y&Aa.OLD -Garden-Grove. Dian entered the Home Savinp ud Loan in Newport Center at about noon, plan.niq to make a depo1lt. Tbat'• wbea hll day took a turn for the wone. Klllep ftUed out a deposit slip at a customer counter 1 falllq to DOtlce that someone bad scrawled a "•tick up' m ..... on the back of the slip. TllS nJtl'I' CLUB that aometbiq waa amlla came wbea tm teller 1boved a bundle ol bWI in hll direction, ac- U•atilll a 8'leat alarm at tbe Mme moment. a.Mp~. police Mld later, and puabed the pile of bAUI b9Ck at tbe wller, remtdn1 ber tbat be wu mak· lnl a d9Dad Dal a wttbdrawal. Al this point, U. tMler lbowed tbe coalUMd cutomer the ,...,..., ... .,..He expr•ld surprise. Carter's standing in the polls baa dropped a&ain and said the president bas ordered plans be prepared for the "limited in· vaslon" because "it just comes naturally t o him to react politically." However, Anderson said un· identified experts believe the plan -which . b e d~d n~l describe in detail dunng bis speech -would fail. He said it was only because these experts believe the plan is flawed and that Carter's motivation is political that he and bis staff were able to learn details of the alleged mission. "We would have a very dif. ficult time carrying this (mis· slon) out," and ror that reason. he said, be decided to publish bis findinp. "I can assure you it was an anguishing decision,"· Andenoo added. "I don't think newsmen should pry lnto military secrets except ln special circumstances.'' Anderson said that while Carter baa not actually "or· dered" the invasion, "be bas started preparations for a limit· ed 1nvulon of Iran" and that one "cootrol point" in the opera· tlon already bu pused. $486,000 l.DOt Taken KIWNGLY, Coan. (AP) Three armed men r<>bbed • Purolator Security Inc. armored truck today and escaped 1rith *450,000 worth of cold and $3e,400 in cub, state PollC. aald. No abott were fl.red in the rob- bery. Tbe three hooded budltll two armed with •botlUDI ua one armed wttb a bandpn, held up the truck wblle lt was pullecl to t)le Ade ol tbe road so one of the Purolator 1uard1 could urinate, state police tald. TIM be&lt ~ about ll:IO a .m. Footner said Monday he would make no comment on the published reporta which indicat- ed he used his position as leverage with lenders to help secure business loans totaling about $600,000. Supervisor Harriett Wieder, who appointed Footner to the planning body, asked the county counsel's office Monday to In· veatlgate the charges. · Court records indicate the businessman-planning com- miuioner's home at 16551 Carouael Lane, which be bouabt in urn, will be offered at • sheriff's auet:klft next month to pay olf debt.a re1u1Un1 in part from his in•olvement with Callfornia niter Corp. The company declared lbelf bankrupt lut year in U.S. Dis· tricl Court. According to court records, California Filter Corp. executed a promissory note for a $50,000 loan In Aug. 1979. Though some interest was paid back, the prin- cipal and additional interest re- main due. American State Bank, which granted the loan, filed a com- plaint for damages against Footner because, as president of the firm, he had guaranteed in writing the payment or the money. The bank then sought his home to pay off the debt. Walt.er Scbroetter, assistant vice president of the bank, said in court documents that be was the loan officer who band.led the California Filter Corp. transac- tion and that if Footner had not signed a "continuing guaranty" in which he cited his community standing, amon_g other things, the loan would not have been made. The company, forme d in August, 19'18, was to manufac- ture and distribute air fillers and oil fl.lters. Footner claims in lhe court records that he was president of California Filler Corp. for only a few days and that he was never a stockholder at any lime. He said he received no compensation as <See AUcrlON, Page A2) GW Boosts Mortgages To 13.5o/o BEVERLY HILLS <AP) - Citing a continued slowdown in savings, combined with strong loan demand, Great Western Savings & Loan Association boosted ita prime mortgage rate today 0.5 percent to 13.5 percent. The nation's second largest thrift, with $9.6 bUUon ln assets and a unit or Gre at Western Financial Corp., said the new rate is the lowest on owner- occupied, slngle-ramUy home loans. Great Western is the first thrift to poet a 13.5 percent rate since mortgage interest rates began cllmbinl •lain ln June, followinC a subalantlal drop from tbeir peak of about 11.5 percent lut March. Tbe ... wu in tbe form ol_ 1old 1alt, wbleb 11 used l_n -media., pbaeotl'apby and to """'------------------------' decorate ~and porcelain.. On Monday. Security Paclftc Natiooal Bank, Loe AnceJea, the nation•• tenth lar1ett, railed lta prime mort111e rate on new home loans to 13.25 percent rrom 12.75 peteent. He said the $2 million figure is what airport consultants VTN Consolidated of Irvine estimate it would cost to bolst er the runway and its tax.iway. VTN is under county contract lo provide an airport master plan and noise and land use study. The final report won 'l be m a de public until mid· September. The super 80. billed as lhe quietest and most fuel-efficient commercial jet yet built, bas been ordered by 12 different airlines including Air California. During a landing and takeoff demonstration at John Wayne Airport. lasl week, sound read- ings indicated t he s upe r 80 gene rates a n aver age of '7 .S rlecibels less than the Boeing '737, now in use at the county airport. Dally l"tlet SUfl - NEWS, ADVERTISEMENTS FROM 1800a BRING SMILE Randy Summers May Sell Editions Found Inside Frame Attic Puzzle Old Papers Discovered Randy Summers bas a family mystery on bis bands. It all started last week when he was helping bis mother clean out the attic' in the family's Newport Beach home. Sifting through some of the dustier goodies, they came upon two old paintings. On an impulse, Summers de- cided to pry the oak frame off one . Out flutter ed several newspapers -yellow, brittle and chipped on the edge. The oldest was dated 1800. It carried a page two story an· nouncing the death of George Washington. It also featured a bylined piece from John Adams. The copy of the Ulster County Gazette -printed in Kingston, N.Y., apparently was stuffed behind the painting generations ago. But who put it there and why , Summers s aid , i s something or a family mystery. He believes it goes back to his grandmother's side of the family -the Kennecotts, famous in the copper industry. "I was told 'the paintin1s were brought back from the Spanish· American War but even then the papers would have been pretty old. "I have no idea why they'd put them back there. My parents found the newspapers ln the ·eo. when tbey reframed the painlinl and decided to leave them there," be said. Su mmer, owner of a Costa Mesa dental tab, said be remem-~ ben the painting, a depletion OI Fire at Embassy CHESl'ERTOWN, Md. (AP) -No tnJurlee were reported In a rtre that filled a tbree·•tor)' So- viet Embauy relOrt compound wltb smoke ud no lnveatl11Uon 11 pendlnl, autlaoriUes said. The fire Monday lD a rum .. ere.inC room of the main bulldlAI of tbe Eattern shore complex wa1 quicklyextiqull~. a young girl, hanging above the fireplace when he was young. Later. he said, it was relegat- ed to the attic with the other family treasures, a collection that goes back to 1906 when bis family bought the Peninsula cot- tage. After finding the old papers, he immediately had them ap- praised and was told that if be framed them properly. he could just about name his price. "l guess I'll sell the m," be said, a note of uncertainly in bis voice, "but I sure plan to read them fll'St." Or~::J :ast \\·eath e r Mostly sunny Wednes- day afternoon following night and morning cloudi· neas. Lows tonight 63 at the beaches to 67 inland. Highs Wednesday 70 to 74 along the coast, '16 to 80 in- land. INSIDE TODA~ It get& tougher every day for a bank , like everyone else, to make a profit on se r uic et . T o ease th e aq~eu, many bank& ore try· mg to f reeu out the nickel and dlrrwr account• while in· atUuting brooder ser ukea 1and hjghn chargeaJ for the fewer but more profitable ac· counta remaining. See Page A7. l•llex ,,,.,_.......,.., ........... ,,,, .,_ ....... AMu.we 9' ........... .. ....... ,,,,,.,, ....... ,,,,, ............ .. ~ ............... M CllllllHMll Or ..... ~ "' ..., ""'"'"*"' CNl*I ... 114.1 Cua r• .,.. ._.. ., .. .......... At Or. 1111 -M ....... M --· ........ All 1-..-.all T......._ AU AtloU ~ At1'tl ................... ......_ ........... M ·- l'UC Altom. Charge For Extra 411 Use SAN FRANCIS<..'() <AP) -Paclllc Telephone cu.1tomer1 who make more than JO local directory uaJaunce calla per month will be charted for the utra cans. U1• tui. Public uuu. t)' CommJ ion ruled today 1'elephon u rs will be alJ~'ed 2IO rrff calla within their home 1u'H, but wm hav \0 pay 1$ ten\a for each mra call Curn•ntly, cW1lomert do not pay for dlrectol')' aa1lltance calls. Sylvia Sl~ae-1, a melrnber of. TURN Toward Utility Rate Billy Warned On Libya WASHlNGTON (AP> -Billy Carter'a partner told Senate in· veaU1aton that Billy obtained a $220,000 loan and the two sought 10 oil ~~l with Libya after be> ln1 wamed the Libyans might be trytn(J to u.ae them "to in· nuence U.S. policy." lJmt Deflftl~t Joh Ageµcy's Boss Missing By PATRICK KENNEDY 0. .. OallY ,.,._. llaft Local authorities c an't find Robert L. Cunningham, former president of the now-defunct cor- poration that once ran Hunt· ington Beach's federal jobs pro· gram. loan of federal money that was unauthorized. .. . . ' I Norm•Hntlon s~ld the PUC'1 decision wu "another hidden way of lncrt>asm.11. r.-venue '' The partner, Henry "Randy" Colema.n. testified he and Billy dlareaarded the State Depart· ment warning because they con· sldered their relations with the Libyans aa "nothing political. Cunningham, who has lived in Orange County since the early 1970s, hasn't been located in re· cent attempts by officials. Among the various charges of misuse or Comprehensive Employment Training Act (C ETA ) m o n ey , most authorities s ay Cunningham, who signed all Western lransac· lions, is the key figure. What Cunningham hats to say is anyone's guess. I l'ar~aHa f 'frir KU,. 2 TARZANA <AP> n ~lderly couple died m a fire today ln the1r thlrd·noor coodom1n1um Los A.o&ele city fire spokesman Ted Aquaro sa~ the major blaae broke out JUSt berort-6 a m at the Encino Spa Adult Con dominums and was brought ®der control about 2.5 minutes later by 12 tire compan1e~ The dead were 1dent1f1ed as J ack and Cecilia Shoen, both 77 Cause of the fi re was under mvestigation, Aquaro said. OMuf! l 'IM Pri•E> RatE' to I 1.%5 P~t NEW YORK <AP) Chase Manhattan Bank today raised its prime lending rate by one·quarter percentage point to 11.25 percent in response to recent sharp increases in its cost or funds The prevailing prime nationwide is 11 percent, but Wall Street analysts are predicting other banks will follow Chase's lead to produce the first general increase in the prime rate since early April when it peaked at 20 percent. 62 Kill~d h1 Pnhu1d Trai11 Collbl••n WARSAW, Poland (AP> -A freight train passed a red warning light and slammed head-on into a passenger train out· side Torun in northern Poland today, killing 62 passengers and iniurini? "many others." the official news agency PAP said. The PAP said the engineer "probably was ·asleep" and :missed a red warning light. The crash occurred at aboul4 a.m. ea.paign Sags ''ll was just good old Southern hospitality," Coleman told a special Senate judiciary sub· committee. Philip W. Tone, the subcom· mittee's special counsel, dis- closed lhat the Slate Depart· ment warned the two in a letter Dec . l2. 1978, that Libyan of· ricials were "establishing con· tacts outside Washington. ·'The Libyans hope to use such contacts to influence U.S. policy toward their country and the Arab world," the letter said. The letter, written by a Slate Department Libya desk officer, said that Ahmed Shahati, head of the Libyan Foreign Liaison Bureau and the man Billy Carter was dealing with, was one or the Libyan officials mak· ing s uch contacts. But Coleman s.aid he and Carter continued their Libya dealings and arranged the loan for Billy and tried to set up the oil deal through Shahili and other Li· by an officials. .............. In llospifftl Actor James Stewart, 72, is being treated in the cor - onary care unit of St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, but a spokesman s ays he has not suffered a heart attack and there is no cause for alarm. He headed Western Institute of Careers. Inc., a non-profit corporation that handled Hunt· lngton .Beach's $2.6 million federally funded job proitram. western was dismantled last February by the Orange County Manpowe r Commission amid charges or fund misuse and after a preliminary audit by the county It was alleged that Cun ningham had obt&ined a S16.000 Injured Baby Held In Protective Care PLACENTIA (AP> -The fair condition at the Un1vers1ty 2-month-0ld sQn of Anita Brown, of California-Irvine Medaral the Jehovah's Witness who died Center. where he wi ll remain of cancer shortly after giving pending a j uvenile cour t de birth to the child, is being kept cision on whether he should be in protective custody arter being removed permanently from ha.s No one claims to have seen or heard Crom the man since he signed a letter or resignation on Feb. 4. No formal charges ever have been lodged against Cun - ningham. But Cunning ham 's whereabouts could quickly become an important issue. The Orange County Distr ict At· torney's offi ce is studyulg the case "We would hke lo know where he 1s," commented Huntington Beach police detective Randy Tohuren "We've ~ot our feelers out hut 0Hlc1ally we re not look· 1ng ror him un less the district al· trirnt!y der1d~ lo file charges." Tohur"n li·d the police in- 111:!'>l1gat11Jn 1nlo Western ac- t111 1 l1c ~ lci <>l Jcinua r y and d1 sc11vt-n«i a ronlw.1ng and al- legedly inappropriate system or ftnan,.1al tran!iactions in which appart'ntly Cunningh&m both re- que'>led and approved ,,f federal funds for We'!tem f 'ruwa Page A I admitted to a hospital last week father's care. with severe injuries. In an interview Saturday, the AUCTION However, police said Monday baby's father said Gregory was Ure·,-wiU seek ...no c ria.•fo.al--illitt.t.£d.Jtr.l\e.IL''J.:«1o.~t'.Jtilli ~--....., • • -charges against Tom . Brown, e r rands _and for:g<tl that he pre&~~dJd;;t'~-;f-rt.f~"" who said his infant son Gregory wasn't strapped into his car tbeloan ' s uffered a fractured skull, six seat. ·1 went around. opened the Shroetter descnbed Footner ~ --xudersOD Capital ~upport BOSTON (AP) -:--Seeking to pick up the support or discon· tented Democrats and worried that be will be excluded from the first presidential debates this fall, John B. Anderson abruptly canceled part of his campaign schedule today and was to re- turn to Washington. The independent presidential candidate scheduled meetinp in Washington with two prominent concressional Democrats, Les _ Aapin ol WlscoDlin and Shirley Chilbolm ol New York. It wu not clear lf either would auouaee their support for An· denon'• Haina independent ef. fort to challenge President Carter and Ronald Reagan. Aspin was a nrm support.er of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and served as Wiscon sin state coordinator for the senator's un· s uccessful campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. After that, he planned lo resume a coasl·to-coast campaign trip which includes stops in Connec- ticut, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota and Californi a. In a speech prepared for de· livery before a national meeting of the American Legion here. Anderson attacked Reagan's call for American military superiority over the Soviet Union. Fairgrounds Projects Oeared By JERRY CLAUSEN Oftlleo.ity ...... S .... An out·of·courl settlement signed Monday night in Costa Mesa City Hall prepares the way for new Orange CountY. Fair· grounds development and proba· ble completion of an am· phi theater there by nextsummer. He said the $220,000 is part of a $500,000 loan and said the rest is still coming to Carter later so far as he knows. broken ribs and ear damage in door, and pulled the baby seat as a business man who 'ac· an accidental tumble from a o!-lt· and be fl ew out onto the quires and invests in companies parked car. . s1~~walk. . which h ave been in serious Gregory, wtio was adm1tt~ to He sc!ea,med and cried a lot, f i nancia l diffi c ulties, r e - E s p~ranza lnt~r co m mun1~y but h.~ didn t seem to be really capitalizes them, and then pro. Hospital Friday, was reoorted m hurt. ceeds to make them profitable." "Also," she said, "would you include in your analysis dis- cussion of whether there is any impropriety in listing 'planning co mrnissioner' and the income therefrom on an application for personal or business loans." In an interview, Mrs. Wieder said she felt "very badly" for Foolner because she did.n •t It.now he was having financial prob· lems. She said she would reserve judgment until she knew more of the situation and spoke to her appointee. The Times art icle claimed Footner had arranged financing for two compames with which he was involved by telling loan of- ficers he was a good credit risk ~~cause he ser ved on the plan· ning commission . The article also claimed the planning commissioner over· stated his annual income to lenders lo help secure financing for business ventures. Strikers Jailed In addition, campaign sources said Anderson and Mitchell Rogovin. the campaign lawyer, and strategist David Garth would seek new ways to assure Anderson's admission lo the first televi&ed debate Sept. 18 in Baltimore. His participation is considered critical by senior campaign aides. The League of Women Voters, which is sponsoring the debate, has said Anderson mual have a 15 percent average among the major public opinion polls to be invited. Io a specially called joint session, Costa Mesa City Council members and Orange County Fair Board members unanimous· ly endorsed an agreement by which the city drops its lawsuit against the board. Turn Right at 17th Century GRAND RAPII;>S, Mich. (AP) -The pres ident of Grand Rapids' "s triking munic ipal workers' union and three other people were arrested today as police officers broke through a picket line at the city's sewer plant. The union leaders will be charged either with disregard· ing a police officer's order or pedestrian interference, police Io return, the Fair Board agreed lo comply with noise standards set by the county and state, improve s treets fronting on the fairgrounds when required, install traffic signals and comply with city ordinances in any future commercial development on the costumed Talbot is part of "Plymouth Progress," an event on Fridays during August in Plymouth. said. Plymouth. Mass., patrolman Billy O'Meara (left) gives directions to Miles Standish lookalike Richard Talbot. The ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sources s aid the campaign would propose that the average dale back to include polls taken during the early summer and spring. Anderson began running as an independent April 24, and his standing in the polls first rose to as hiib as about 23 per· cent, then dipped during the two major party nominating conven· tions. To, make his side trip to Washington, Anderson canceled a news conference and meeting wtlh editors in Providence, R.I. OAANOE COAST .. DAILY PILOT TM Of...,._ C...i• 0.Ut PHO\ •l'f'I llltt\IC.fll t\ CCM'T'.lntd ,,_ Nt•• Pt"\ U OVIM•v.N by ,._ °'•~ Col\t Pu011~"'9 Com.Po""• S.0.tett Odll-• -'• -I--41¥ '"'°""' F•~• It< t.DI• -· ,._\ .. I(~ tt11t1l"'9\°" I••<" '•Wl'\11,rt V•tttY. """"•· L•tvrt• 8•K"'''°"'" C...\I • tilf\9.f• r.,qi~• tChUon ,, P"#bH1Md s..wca.n .,... ~" TM _,.~""• 1M.illthtm'4 P'oloM ., a\ UC W.\\ 9•Y \,t .. t P 0 8•• 1S.0 <:Mt•~'-• CetltMt\tA t)tlt •-n11.-.,.,.,.°'"' •"'9 ~ • ..., JK•• CWllrt V;c• ~,-~tdltl'\t end Glftftftl Mi.M4l'' ~ .............. ............ di!« o., ...... .._ ........... llM-1 ... EdllOt T~e (1H )MMll1 Ct111111M Actwertl .. 111 M2·111'1 state-owned land. The agreement was negotiated by Richard Witte, attorney /or the Nederlander Corp. or Los Angeles which plans lo construct a S7 million amphitheater on the grounds across Fair Drive from City Hall.. City officials, concerned about traffic and noise expected to be generated by fairground facilities expansion, sued the Fair Board in August 1979 in an attempt to make the state agency route its plans through the city planning system. The Fair Board's stance, that the fairgrounds belongs to the state and isn't under city jurisdic· lion. was upheld in Orange County Superior Court. The city took the case to the Fourth District Court of Appeal where it has remained awaiting judg_!!l~t. Subsequent to filing that ap- peal, City Attorney Tom Wood, fair officials and attorney Witte had been meeting in an attempt lo work out an &P'eement between the two battling government en· llties . Tbelr work resulted in the agreement signed in the joint session by Mayor Arlene Schafer and Falr Board President Ken Job MOO. Pair Injured In Balboa Pier Plunge The oper ator of the Orange County International Raceway said today he is in sore but good condition alter he and a woman toppled off a pier to a dock 10 feel below Sunday evening near the Balboa Pavilion. Bill Doner , a 44 -year·old Newport Beach resident, and Ginger Slomb, 33, were re· portedly standing on the pier with a pair of marlin they'd reeled in whHe deep sea fishing. ' Doner, who broke two ribs and suffered internal injuries, said they were posing for a picture and backed up al the request -of the cameraman u n til they backed into a gate. The gate, he said, s wung open. Both fell to the dock below. "She was knocked out for about three minutes," Doner said from his Hoag Memorial Hospital bed. "I landed right on my back. I felt like I'd died.'' Mrs. Stomb also was treated at Hoag and released later Sun· day evening,. Jn addition to the 8,000·aeat am· NOW I ERA pbitbeater, the Fair Board's D OD maaterplancalltforconstructlon SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A ~1: ,. °==· 'fi"..:!l.'r"'""~f:.'!; of a aclence and Industry museum federal appeals court bu ruled ,...r,., .. "'::. .. Ti ...... ~ .. ~·~ ,,.., .. at PaJnrtew Roed ud Arlineton U-at the National Or1aniuUon ~::::.:=:::....-• ·-··• .,.,"''''..,. 94 Drive, a hotel •t Fair ,J>r!ve and for Women may lnterve.,. ln a ~ ...... , ... ~ ... ,. •• •• , .. , • .,._, Newport Boule••rd And other . awt cballenainl t.be eJttenalOG ol <e CONCORD. QUARTZ \f3Jell <JUa/heJ <Jlewf;tJJI 35 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 644-2494 ~~':":."': :,_..,:-:''...':.M~~·...:z~: commercial eaterprlHI at ratlficaUon ol tbe Equal Rt1hta ·~a...i::~;'~;;;,,;_,i,~ ........ ;:;~~:;;•;&&;•.•~~··;;;;;;;;;;::..._...::11~F-=ia~\,.._..,===-mRoaCl!l!'!!!e-land"'9~F~alr~~Dri~v~e~ .... ~~A~m:..endmem.:xir.=.;.J·1-...t~a!.air:.a.::=1~=-wl'..;:..:ki•~~'--'~......a.:~:..u. ..... ~__......J._o_,,~...;i..l~~~-- I !: I '·I I ' i: l' I I APWl,.ptoolo ALICIA HARRIS 'GLAD TO BE OUT' OF NA VY COnvlcted •• Leeblan, But Saye She'• Straight Sailor Discharged In Gay Sex Hearing 2States Begin Recovery By The .bMOcla&ed Preu Oovernors of two s tates ea rmurk e d hundreds of thuunnd8 ut dollirs for cleanup U» cv11cuated residents began re- lurnin.& home after rainstorms that sent normally plllc id a1treu m s r aging over their b11nks Most nood waters quickly re· ceded, le aving emergency workers to tackle mud and debr is in Ohio. P ennsylvania and West Virginia. But the heavy rain also knocked out e l ectricity and telephone ser vic-e. made hi~hways im· passable and swelled streams until floodwaters reached roofs in some towns . West Virginia Gov. Jay Rockefeller said $200,000 was be· ing allocated immediately for northe m parts of the state. And the state may request federal disaster aid after damages are assessed in the next few days, he said. Penn sylvania Gov. Dick Thornburgh earmarked $500,000 for three counties hit by flooding last week and asked Pres ident Carter to declare the counties disaster areas . The storms moved into West Virginia and southwestern· Penn- sylvania early Monday morn- ing after brewing in eastern Ohio late Sunday night. In Morgantown. W. Va., where LONG BEACH CAP> -Declar· ulations. but was the first lo be 3.8 inches of r ain fell in 61h in1 abe is .. glad to be out,'' a teen-found guilty of misconduct in the hours. the National Guard was a1ed sailor ~ound guilty of case. The c~ses of five other called out to open emergency bomoeexual nuscooduct aboard women remru~ to be heard. s helters for flood victims. ~ U~ Norton Sound says she '.f~e b~arin~ b y the Ad· Flooding was r eported in eight willleave~_._J!av whethlli!Jlot--11ll.l!!~~.Q!~cj)aru A0J!j.:;. ... ~est Virginia counties, , -WH-Ml a urai on~v91.t~an11u, 'fro m the tip of the state's . "I ~ th•t 1 ever joined and the recommendation of t.!te northern Panhandle to more (th N ) I'm glad I'm out " board was foT a general d1~-t han 100 miles to the southeast. Fir~m!vyRecruit Alicia Harris c.harge under honor~ble cond.i· Near Weirton, W. Va., ~00 of Chicago said Monday after a tions -the most senous penal· f a milies were temporarily Na board recommended her ty, th~ panel can rec?~mend .. It evacuated from their homes. for '7 ra1 diacbarl(e. rema~ up to the ship s captam And 200 families were left home- gene . to de~1de whether to. follow the less in Osage, a small mining lb. Harris, 18, ~as the third boards recommendation. community near Morgantown. of ei1ht. women sailors ac~us~ Ms. Harris, who says she is Flash flood warnings were lilt- of 1ea~a.r:Ua~ a~rd the missde not a homosexual, s aid she ed for southern West Virginia test ship m violation of Navy reg-believes the rumors about her late Monday night. but the Na- sex ual preferences started tional Weather Service was pre- County Solon Fails to HaJt "because I had a real close dieting downpours in the friendship" with another woman southern part of the state. . sailor, Fireman Recruit Wendi In Pennsylvania, Monday's Williams, 25, of The Bronx, N.Y. storm brought minor flash flood· Ms. Will.iams' hearing began ing to the southwestern comer today-following preliminary mo-and 100 people were evacuated. Tests Ordered lions Monday by her military de-Smoa Test Bill fense attorney. e Meanwhile, t he American SACRAMENTO CAP) -AB· semblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana, failed in an at- tempt to ambush the bill to set up annual vehicle smog inspec- tions for most of Cali!prnia. It happened Monday when the Assembly voted on whether to waive the rules to allow SB1948 by Sen. Robert Presley, D- Riverside, to be beard this week by the Aasem)>ly Ways and Means Committee. The deadline has passed for committee consideration, but is routinely waived for many bills. Robinson tried to muster votes a1alnst the motion to waive the rules oo Presley's bill, but it paased•l4. ( Piiot Logbook J Civil Liberties Union pledged to appeal to the secretary -of the Navy the fmcling of the board in Ms. Harris' ·case. Ms. Harris said she had planned to leave the Navy regardless of the hear- ing's outcome. "I'm not a homosexual. I'm straight," she told reporters. "l figure they jus t had to start with someone" after the first two dis- charge hearings ended with ac· quittals earlier this month for two of her shipmates -Tangela Gaskins, 25, of Newark, N.J., and Barbara Lee Unde rwood. 22, of Orlando. Fla. "We're certainly going to be appealing this,'' said ACLU at- torney Susan McGreivy. For Accused Air Hijacker -Don Juan Bigfoot Still on Prowl 6 ... Tuesday, August 19, 1980 DAILY PtLOT U • GERMAN LIFEGUARDS GET TRAINING IN BAILING OUT OF FAST-MOVING LIFEBOAT Sixteen Visitors ·Quite Awestruck' With Life Along the Orange CoHt Visitors 'Awestruck' Gernw11 Lij'eguards View Orange Coast By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OflM Diiiy Pllol Sll ll A group of visiting German lifeguards soon will be shoving off for Schnerverdingen with tales of killer surf and how much o f the ty p ical well-t anned Southern California girl you <'an see in those stnn~ b1k101s The group of 16. mostly }oung people who work as volunteers at home are mcmb<·rs of the German national lifesaving associati(JJ'I. .. They were quite a\liestruck, .. says Newport Beach Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabev. one of the few lifeguards they encountered who could converse with them an German. They found a lot to talk about too, with N e wport Beach seasonal Lifeguard Ll. J cff Horn and Huntington Beach City Lifeguard Claude Panis. The German lifeguards were touring the Sou thla nd l ast weekend a re due back at their apartment house in Newport Beach today and wall leave ror home next weekend Home is hardly lik e the Orange Coast, the young people involved in a n e du cationa l exchange program with the U.S. Lifesaving Association found. "We have 300 rescues a day some days," says Lt Lockabey they have300ayear " Giant su rf spawned b y Mexican hurricane act1v1ty slammed into Southland beaches with waves up to 12 feet tht! week they arrived The Germans are a<·customed to placid lakes, ponds. pool!, <Jnd rivers of the S<'hncrverd111gen region. "Monday and Tuesday. we didn't even want them in the water ," said Ll Lockabey "They Live in a s mall area in the north of Germany, near Hamburg," he added. saying many are studenLc; and onl) a couple in the group are paid lifeguards or swim coaches at home. During their local stay. the young Lifeguards spent several days training in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach. Language was a problem. said Hunti ngton Beach City Lifeguard Lt Bill Richardson. adding that only Lifeguard Panis could converse with them and only two of their group spoke fairly fluent English. To the layman. it might seem all lhe same. but Lt. Lockabey and Lt. nichardson say there are marked differences in their two departments when it comes lo some procedures. Newport Beach has a long shoreline to handle and patrols it a bit dHferently in addition to having both rough surf"and calm bay waters. Huntington Beach lifeguards have a unique advantage in a fairly short beach sandwiched between two s tate beaches, Huntington and Bolsa Chica, ~d their Tower Zero on the pier affords a view to the boundary in both directions. "What we did was, we broke them up into t hree or four groups, says Lt. Ricbardaon, adding that some worked on the lifeguard boats, some with the jeep patrol and a couple in Tower 7.ero. ·'They are really impresaed with our Junior Life1uard program,'' Lt. Richardson added , pointing nut bis city baa 600 )'.Ol&n-U_lefS ~ntQlled in it. The vast turnouts on Oranie Coast beaches also impressed the Germans. ' One thing they found intriguing in taking local ocean lifeguard training drills wu use of the familiar oran1e buoya used by l~-.l guards in rescues. German lifeguards work oo a simple swim-out-and-haul· them-in basis, without auch technical aids. $500 HQokup Fee Sought by Vtility SAN DIEGO CAP) -The San Diego Gas & Electric Co., with two m illion c ustomers in \°'lilderness Bill Backed WASHINGTON IAP) -The flouse has approved a bill to pre· serve 53 sections of California forest land totaling 3.5 million acres as wilderness areas. The bill. the biggest wilder- ness bill ever cons idered by Congress except for the Alaska Lands Bill, was approved Mon- day by voice vote and sent to the Senate T he largest wilderness areas v.ould be a 500,000-acre Trinity A 1 ps Wilderness. a 190,000-acre Ca rson Iceberg Wilderness. 100.000·acre San Joaquin Wilder- ness and a 101.000-acre Siskiyou Wilderness. The bill also would set aside 675.000 acres in Yosemite Na- tional Park and 750.000 acres in Sequoia.Kings Canyon National Park as wilderness. Orange, Imperial aod San DM90 counties, la comiclerini • ..., hookup charge for tuture cllmta. Al present, new customers are charged SlS.80 for electric and gas service. But old clients in ef. feet are subsidizing new boot-up& with higher rates, a spokeeman says. Dave Gillman, vice president. s aid "we 're looking at something around the UOO level" for electricity alone. The utility hopes to avoid uk· ing for a moratorium in new hookuP6 as was done Aug. 1 by Puget Sound Power in ~llewe, Wash., Gillman said Monday, "but we're watching it very closely . . . it does show one • lion." Gillman said if the large new hookup fee is authori&ed by the California Public Utilities Com· mission "it would go a lODI way toward eUminatinl the need for a moratorium." It may be two months before SDG&E decides whether to leM the big hookup fee, Gillmu said. The utility has raised rate. by more than 60 percent thll year alone. 1. l· I I I l I .. I I 'j I • Striking Back PAIN • .,,.,..UM Dan. -Crimlnal coodlUon laave clHl'f1 aone from bed ID awrw aroun.d our coa1tal re llMa In .._t u.,... Ttiil •· tbe u....-. thleve1 and ~ba .. beat.dlAaltlntbechopt. SoaM replar ctUMU. it de~. aru't playtn1 fair When aome hood .... \alb ~m. Uwy're nchlin• bad;. C~lder the cau o1 Cotta MtH ttrvlce 1h1Uon •raw £arl ii. Griffttbl, who la practically In his dotaee at ••• 53. ltr. Gritt\lha wu talllnc hl1 cuh baa to the bank Juat the other' da,)' when aome youn1 punk with a aun •• aawted hlm ln the bank part.i.D1 lot. ML GalPnTllS HAD tbe unmilieated 1a11 to knock the 1\11\ out of this creep'a hand. ~alle him on the pave- mut, chase him with bis own eun, foot-race him, attack the suapect's car and eventually cause the creep to eet capt~. Now what the bell kind o( a way is that to act? Doesn't Mr. Griffiths know the rules? When the hood stuck that toy eun in his face, the Costa Mesa man was supposed to meekly hand over the cash baa and then bee for Ms life. Then consider the case of Santa Ana's 40·year-old bunellne burglar who was trying to rifle the eoods in a Thanks! Sams place. same time tomorrow?' Israelis St rik e At PLO BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP > Uellcopter -borne ls r aell com mandoa struck Into southern Lebanon overnight ln their big· 1e1t attack against Palestinian b1t1et ln2\l!ayeans, and as m any as SO guerrillu were reported killed. Israel repe>rted lhree dead among It.soldiers The larae-scaJe raid against four Palestinian strongholds set off an a rtille ry due l between Israeli-backed Lebanese Chris- tian militiamen and Palestinian defenders a t an 11th-century Crusader castle just north of the lsraeU border. That fighting was reported still continuing at mid- 'day. BOTH ISRAELI P rime Minister Menachem Begin and Pa lestine Llberation Organiza· lion chief Vasser Arafat inspect· ed opposite sides of the border battlefi eld, coming within a few miles of each other. Israeli officials said troops and warplanes from three commands were used in the attack , launched Monday night. It was the third raid on guerrilla bases in Lebanon ~ withinone week. OHicials in Tel Aviv said between 40 and 50 Palestinian fighters were killed . The PLO re· ported only 12 dea d a nd 14 wounded, and Lebanese provin- cial authorities put the PLO death toll at20, with25others wounded. The PLO claimed two Israeli commandos were killed and at least 28 wounded. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv later said thr-ee of its men were She Stash e d t he Ca sh Scott G<>rdon Cleft). guardian for Helen Rennard. and Robert Lawrence , auditor for the l<'irst National Bank of Akron, Ohio, count piles of money found in Mrs. Ren- nard 's condemned house between mat- .. WORLD I NATION Af'Wlre....,to tresses , under heaps of tr ash and in old furniture. Mr s Rennard, 80, said she had hidden the m oney. which may tot al $50 ,000, and then forgotten about it. Warehouse Blast Kills 90 in Iran Upheaval In Poland Spreading By The Associated Press Al least 90 people were killed "Well, if It lsn 't Frank Jones1 class of '58.' ----------k i I led and 12..wounded.------..,.-n d--9-5-w ovrnte ct-w h e.,,-11 · hostages spent their 2toth day in captivity today, their prospects for being visited or freed no bet- ter following another appeal fro m representatives or nations allied with the U.S. 1overnment. GD ANSK, Poland (APJ Helicopters airlirted police rein· forcements to this stnkebound region o f nor thern Poland . sour ces said today, as angry workers rejected Commun ist Party chief Edward Gierek's back-to-work appeal and prom- ise of pay raises. local saJoon. Again, the saloonkeeper obviously wasn't playine fair. HE'D LOCKED ALL the entrances.· There wasn't a sinele wtlatcbed sliding glass door around the place. All the windows were secured. Thus chelted, the hapless burglar had to attempt en· try by sliding down the chimney. a la St. Nick. He got stuck. He jammed up in the smokestack for four hours. And how did the burglar escape this trap? Why, he had to call tbe cops. Can you imagine a real burelar s uffering that kind of indignity? He became a blight upon his own profession. IF PLAIN CITIZENS among us keep up this kind of oppression against bandits, sneak·thieves a nd thugs, there's no telling where it might lead. Why , do you realize that some would-be rapist might get shot? Or the next thine you know. the papers will be reporting on an automobile owner who used a tire iron to attack the euy •tealine bit hubcaps. Slnald residents all start lockine their doors and win- dows, there mieht not be any way for a honest burelar to make a living. ALL OF TIOS could heap another heavy load upon the taspayers. Burglars will have to start collecting un· employment. Then what about the hapless gunmen and robbers who get assaulted by would-be victims? Somebody will no doubt suggest they should collect hazardous duty pay. And who will pay their hospital bills? The taxpayers, that's who. Reeular people, of course, collect workman's com- pensation if they suffer injury while employed. Now we may need to add Robber Recompense to give thieves a little paycheck ir they eet beaten up on the job. AUTHORlTIES SA.ID the raids touched off an artillery battle between Leba nese Christian forces and PLO gue rrillas at Beaufort Castle .. an ancient fort built by French Crusaders about five miles north of the Israeli border. Arafat claimed his forces re- p e 11 e d th e assau l t. PLO spokesman Majed Abu Shrar said the raid was a ''prelude for an all· out invasion of the whole of southern Lebanon to liquidate the Palestinian r esistan ce move· ment" and warned all Arab gov- e rnments to "wise up about what is coming t.efore it is too late." Israel said the raids were part of "preventive measures" to de- ter guerrilla strikes against the J ewish state. IT WAS THE BIGGEST Israeli strike across the frontier s ince March 15, 1978, when Isr aeli troops invaded all of soulhem Lebanon up to the Lit ani Ri ver, some~ miles north of the border, in an attempt to· 'root out terrorist bases." They did not withdraw completely until mid.June 1978. An army s pok esm a n said Isr aeli troops from three com- mands and the air force crossed the border Monday night and at- tacked Palestinian guerrilla posi· lions about five miles north of Metulla. No Slackening in Rain 3-inch Srww Pouxlers Central, Idaho ..... ly ~ """' ... ,,..,..1,.. 11ourt-....-..1.,_w_ .. Myatt.<-. 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CIMIMMI " ,. .21 O•l·l"t W'tl\ .. 74 0.11w r '2 .. Holl\ ton u It lndn•11ll1 • .. .7• J.chnvll• '° ,, Kens City '° 1• L. .. v._ 100 7J Llttle "oc-~ 100 71 Lot A"9tlft IS ... L.oulsvlt .. ., 7S ·°' MemPlll• .. II Mlemt .. 7' 1.0) Nesllvllle ., 72 .Of NewOrleeM " 1S NtwYont ., 10 Otrle Cfty .. ,, Onlelle '° n "'-nl• 107 ,. R09ICI City •s SI SIP·T~ ., 7J .Of> S.llL.tle t2 J1 '911 01'9t JS 70 S.11 Fren ., SJ Tuite 100 ., AcffUlq '° ,. lofll.-s • ,, .. ~ • I• t111tc• ti '° A lco hol Abuse T arget PRAGUE, Csec hos lovakia (AP> - Csechoek>vakla Is preparin1 a campa1p to control alcohol abuse. The officl•I news aeency 01K said exl1tin1 le1islatk>n la no lonaer adequale to combat abue ol alcohol whJcb l• involved ln 35 per~t of all crtmes. The ret>Ort allo cited accidents caused by dMUlken chiv~n. and the problems ol Job absen- lelism and dlvorce llnked to excess drtnklna. H•vAN l(lnQilon Nont-Bav M•Hll•n Merldo Mu lcoc11y Monterrey N•u •u S•n J....., St ic:1tti Teouc191111>11 lrlnld..i ll•k•rsll•ld Blyt ... Euntka Fresno unc.,ter Merv1w111e Monterey Monterey O•lttelld Aed Bluff Redw-Clty ll•no Soc r .,,,...... Soni• a..-.. StocklOll Tllermet Ukleh Berstow Catalina El C.ntro LC>fl9 Beoch N•WPOr'I IN(ll Otlterlo Jli'elmSprl,... Son Ber-di"° S.111e•11a Telloe V•llev; TOOAY llO 17 llO ,. 18 II llO 17 9~ so I~ S6 n ,. .. n .. ,. llO ,. .... .. ll " ., 101 $4 JI " CM ti .. • u tJ .. ,, " U SI 01 71 S• .... IS SI M S1 11 H 14 S7 ,, 60 101 n ,, $4 u " IO ~ 100 .. IO .. " •5 .... 101 61 7t 60 " .. 74 41 5«411141-4 :i.p m O 5«-Nqih U •?te m I .I Wl!0..H04Y l'lrttl-,, ,..,,,,. J,J l"lrtll!ltfl tl:O:h .m. U S.C-1-J:41p.m. J.1 Su11rl-•:n a.m.,M1•1:ap.m. Moonrttnt:14p.m.,Mt11':fte.m . S.rt llepere left: .,,...,.., lleltf\t In 1"1, m ... lmul'll "•foht 111 1 .. 1. period 111 M<Oftdt. Zumo 1 2 11 ...,,. Mellk • ' J 10 ,..~"""'-......,. ' a u s.no .... ~ t i u ..... : ,, __ lleltM In'"'· mew I_ ..._.lfl....,etrcMlleft, lum• 1 t '"' lento Mollke I t •• ~ ........... ,, .... Soft O!ote C-y 1 J ,,. 01111 .. 11. ,., w .. no••v: 1..1111e <Mllef, warehouse containing explosives blew u p in Ira n's oi I-r ich Kh uzestan province, the offi cial Pars news agency reported lo· day. t'ars said the explosion oc- cur red Monday night al a warehouse for a road construc- tion company in Gachsaran, and that the blast was sparked by a fire in an adjacent building that was caused by an e lectrical short-circuit. Khuzestan province, in the southwest, has been t he scene of r req uen t a nti-governme nt sabotage attacks for over a year by a utonomy-seeking Irania n Arabs. IN ANOTHER development, the newspaper Azad~gan report- ed that Gen. Hassan Yazdi, sought for involvement in last month's a borted coup, com· m1tted suicide Monday as rev- olutionary guards were about to arrest him. Meanwhile, the 52 American Hijack Term Due SACRAM ENTO CAP) -Sen- tencing is set next month for Stephen W. Bilson, 25, of Ceres, who was convicted by a federal court jury of attempting lo hi- jack an airliner from Stockton to Ira n last May. After the latest meeting Sun- day with envoys from Holland, Italy, Belgium and Japan, the speaker of Iran's Parliament, Hashemi Rafs anjani, said he was reluctant to allow a visit. He contended that during pre- vious visits by foreieners the captives had "leaked" inform&· ti on that was u.sed in the U.S. rescue effort in April that failed, Japan's Kyodo news service re· ported from Tehran. Rafs anjani told the envoys Iran hoped to have better rel•· lions with their 1overnments, but added, "ll is our understand- ing that the U.S. superpower in· fluences these countries." THIS WAS THI: SAME ~i­ t ion he took Thursday when he met with eight Western nations who appealed for help in getting t he hostaees released. The appeals appear to be part of the new diplomatic initiative to get the Americans freed. The campaign was announced a week ago by Secretary of State Edmund S. Muskie. Representatives of the In· temational Red Cross last visit- ed the hoetaees in April, several weeks before the aborted res c ue. Sinoe then, the Americans have been reported dispersed in more than a dozen cities. Sources said the strike spread to the northweste rn port of Szczecin, 10 miles from the East German border, idling an un· deter mined number of factory and city t rans port worke rs. There were unconfi rmed reports of labor unrest in Elblag, another Balti c industrial center and the number of s triking en· terprises nationwide rose 174 . Poland's head of state Henry Jablonski today called the strike an "action against the interest of the party, nation and state, .. Gdansk r adio reported. "This we cannot accept." he was quoted as saying. "What is at stake is the law and order m this country -and something even bigger . Poland. the fate of the nation." Jacek Ku ron. t he leader of tht• dissident Committee for So...·1al Self-Defense. told rep-Orters m Warsaw that helicopte rs ne" more police to the Baltic coast industrial area aroun d Gdansk. where the strike wave began last Thursday in protest against the government's decisions lo raise meal prices. Exercise your gray m atter every d ay. Read t he in f ormat ive, entert aining DAILY PILOT 642-4321 · . • I I ~ 1. I i t r. ~: 'I I ' ~ . .. t~ . ~ • CALIFORNIA TUllld.y, August 19, 1980 State Austerity Seen Govemmenl FwuiU'l! Abil ity Weaketu SACRAal£NTO <AP) -"TM Democratic chairman of the Asumbly 'Wan •nd Mu ni Committee nya be and the Brown adnllnastratton ue draatic cuts tn 1overnmtnt spt'ndln1 comlna ln t-..o yura Assemblyman John Vucon- cellos. D San Jose. told a ne <'onferl"ncc · ·'Those pt<>ple ~ho have be o as'k lna for drasttr cuta In aavtmment. 1 think. ·~ about to get what they've bttn asltlna for " THE ll£MAllK seemed to be ai m ed. i n part against a Republican plan to hold down In come taxes Vasconcellos said the state &overnment's unrertain re· serves may drop to a deficit or $20 million or more by next June. And a year from next June, there could be a deficit of Sl.4 million, even if hundreds of millions of dollars worth of pend· ing legislation fails to pass he said. ' The Sl:4 billion t1gure came from r.ov Edmond Brown Jr 'a fo'inancr Departm nt Uut It 111 bas d on th • a umpl1on that •ll r urrtnl prol(ram11 will aN Cull C'O t oC ll\'in• ln('ru1es MXl year, \\Nch hHn 't h1ppened ror man) ytan Thl5 )"Hr, for uampl , mo t statf pmanma got 9 p\'rc·tnl Jn. ere . compar~ tu 13 percent inflation But VaselOncellos said he and the •claurustrltton set> au.sten· t y ahead t'ven If tht> June 1962 deficit 1 maller than $1 4 billion Ont target of their mes ue appt>ared to be a Republican. sponsored attempt to pass what would amowit to a $231 million income lax t ut for 1982 over Bro" n's veto THAT BILL, AB2001 by As- s em b I y w o man M a ri a n Bergeson. R·Newport Beach, would make permanent the an- nua I upward ad justing or tax brackets for inflation Without the bill, the firs t 3 percent or in· nation will be exempted from lhf' annuul udJus lmcnt, starting tn IU82 V usconcello~. who voted Cor Mrs. Bergc"on's bill before Bro wn vetoed 1t. said he no lo ne er s upporl s it, partly be\'tluse all automatic cost·of· ll vlng Increases are to be re· examined this fall. JI(' also said the brunt of any local government spendln& cuts next year s hould fall on cities a nd counties, rather than schools, which have had to meet prescribed spending limits since 1W73 The slate budget for the cur- rent ftsral year sets aside $620 m1lllon. or 3 percent. as a re· serve for emergencies. WHJLE THAT could be used to rund the $20 million defkit and other proposed s pending, Vasconcellos said such a course would be "imprudent." He s aid that 11 the reserves are exhausted, the state could find itself without money for a deep recession or a natural dis- ast er . Houseboat Hassle interference. Families a re protesting their ouster so that marina can be completed at Waldo Point near Sausalito. One of 13 houseboat owners arrested in ~quabble over con~truction of luxury pier ts dragged from his residence by sheriff's deputies for violating court order against ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=-~~~~~~~~----- Gas Price Reduc tions Before P UC Producers, Actors Due For Talks Layoffs Irk Engineers LOS ANGELES (AP) -In response to a state P ublic Utilities Commission request, Southern California Gas Co. has submitted a $12 miJHon rate cut proposal to the PUC. A spokesman for the utility said Monday the proposed an· nual reduction was r~uested to adjust for the utility's property tax savings from Proposition 13. .,..,,......,... Slill "' L arge "When Proposition 13 passed two years ago, the PUC asked us to estimate th e s avings we would accrue from lower taxes on our property and cut rates ac· cordingly ,'' said Southern California Gas spokesman Tom Sanger. "This is the final adjust· ment we're passing on to our customers now that we know what that final tax was." The rate request was filed last Friday. U approved, it would become effective Sept. 1 . George Manuel Bosque, in a 1973 military academy photo, is s till being sought in $1.8 million Brinks robbery in San Francisco. Also sought is his reputed lover, Carl Denton. Note d L yric ist Dies NEW YORK CAP) -Harold Adamson, who wrote the lyrics for such popular songs and show tunes as "Time on My Hands" and "Did I Remember," has died at the age of 74. Hal David, president of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, said that Adamson died Sunday in Beverly Hills. Adamson, who was born in Greenville, N.J .. wrote Haaty Pudding shows at HarV'ard University and broke into Broadway with such shows as "Banjo Eyes," which starred Eddie Cantor. HAWI'HORNE <AP) -Plagued by economic woes in recent years. aerospace firms have now been charged with discrimination against American engineers. LOS ANGELES (AP> -Talks Th e American between the film and television ( ) Engineers Association tndustry and the two unions STATE sponsored a demonstra- representing 67 ,000 striking ac· tion in front of Northrop tors ~re~ res~me Thursday for· Corp. 's aerospace plant lo the first time an more than two protest the layoff of 26 weeks. •• \ American engineers from firms that are employTng Merpber:i of the Moti~n ·er--\.~~gn engineers. More than lOOengineers picketed ture and Television Pr cers '4l frmttoftheplant. Negotiating Committee agreed '" - to a resumption of negotiations. O oum·s R e lut i L·e ,,\dtnil• IO llitap The Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of VISTA CAP> -The grandson of famed circus Television and Radio Artists, ~Jown Emf!letl Kelly has admitted he killed two men representing the actors alre.dy mwhatpolicetermedhomosexualslayings. had agreed to the talks.· . Paul Anthony Kellr. 22, pleaded guilty Monday Meantime 85 the strike en-to f1rst·degree murder an the death of the Rev. Henry tered its fifth week, SAG issued Kuizenga, 65, and .to second-degree. murder in the an "open invitation" to in-death of Brent_ Bailey, 2.2. The slayings took place dividual producers to sign lastNovembertnOceansade. permanent three·year contracts instead of tbe interim agree· ments awarded earlier in the strike. 't'ourh'• Ha119in9 Ruled Areidetual OCEANSIDE CAP) -Authorities have con. eluded the death of a 12·year'Old boy found hanging "I believe in treating myself to special times like free Summer Concerts every Thursday night at Fashion Island." 'IHURS. Where can I listen so beaulif ul music amid the Rora and fauna under a nighttime sky? Fashion ls.land, of course. They'll be offering the c1auic sounds of the bis bands, which Richard loves. But I'll take Broedway Show tunes and popular ballads AUG.21 ~ ... . . from ~ Lyric Opera SinF's· The~ niahts ue Thursdays belinninl at 9 P.M. Just think. Les Brown, lbmmy Doney, FASHION ISlAND Please send a free brochure about Sun short term trust deeds. N'mr ---------~-----~--~- Bob Crosby. And best of all, it's f~I Where elst can Richard and I flnd events the whole family wUl 1ov~? Nowhere but Fuhion Island . NEWf'ORT CENffR We're special , because you're special . . • • • . . • • • Strt't·I ---------------------- Ci•Y-------------------- Z1r _______ rh .. n1· ------------ Sun f lnanclal Strvktt 201()0 Brookhunt,Stmt Hunt1ntton ~·~~.~A 92646 OP . • . . . . •••·•···••••·•••••··•··•····•·······•••·••••··••·•·•·····•······ from a tree at a friend 's home was accidental. Oceanside Police Detective Bill Donnelly said Gustavo Pulido apparently became entangled in an old rope noose hanging from a branch in the tree he was climbing. - l111t-grn1 io11 Tal k..; f)~f"U'•d LOS ANGELES CAP > -Because of uncertainty over what final form the city school integration plan will take, district officials cancelled parent informa· lion meetings scheduled today. Stu Bernstein, an integration planner for the dis· trict, said the meetings will be rescheduled after a final outline for mandatory busing is issued by Superior Court Judge Paul Egly, of Laguna Beach, later this week or early next week. The pr1me rate has come down. So have Interest rates on trust deed loans arranged by Republic. Now Is the lime to bom>w. Before lnlerest rates mlght climb s ky high again.as so many economists predict. You'll find we can be OexJble Jn arranging tenns and payments. You may borrow from 8 10.000 to Sl,000.000. Tu.ke anywhere from 30 days to Ove years to repay. You'll Ond we're fast In many~ we've J:>een able to arrange slZeable loans within • 48 to 72 hours. So hurl)( Join the Republic and talk over your needs wtlh one of lhe experienced loan brokers at RepubJlc Home Loan. The company . / that's thumbs down on In terest rates and thumbs up on loans. JOIN THE REPUBLIC I Republic Home Loan 19772 MacArthur Blvd .. lrvtnc. CA 92715 1714)851 0991 Ul"t'n!IC"d Urokcr •Offices al~ In F.ndM and COVlna \ Or.nn. "--st n .... ly ~·-• 'E1 .. , .. ~ ... , .... ~.~---•••••••T•uetda-•y•, A•ug-us•t•lS•,•t9eO••••••R•o•be-rt•N•W•eed-•/•Pu•b•l•l.s•he•r••T•hom••••s•K•ee•v•l•I /•E•d•li.or .. ..-'-'U9 "9f ,...."" ~ ~ ~~.~ Barbara Krelblch /Edllorlal Paoe Editor frax~ayen Need-=- ~ eto Override One "' the nrat orden ol bualnele tor the 1tate Le1ialatw-e thlt weelt ahoWd be a awift override of Gov. Brown'• veto of Assemblywoman Marian BerlQOn'• permanent tax indedna blll Sblce the measure wu puMd 79-0 by the AAemblY and 33-0 by th Senatl'. the ovenid 1hould not be debit•· ble, delpite the 1ov mor'a ·•uncert1ln ff'OOC>my '' arru· IDelll~ It ii patently uni air to force .orktn lnlo hllher tu brackets every lime tbey ret"elve a c:oet.o/.Uvln1 pay in· Cl'eBH lO help COmJM'nsat rol' ll\n1U()fl Tax lndeJCln• wipes out that lnequity California taxpayen already ataod to benefit from Mrs. Berseson's ori1inal tu l.nduin• bill which will re· duce their lneome tax paymeota by an esUmaled 1210 million ln riscal 1980-81 and by PIO mUUon in t•t-82. But ln order to obtain the aovernor'a slanature on that measure lasL year Mrs. Ber1eaon waa forced to ag1"ee to a two-year limit on the indexing. As promised, she introduced a new bill making tax indexing permanent and won the unanimous approval of fellow lawmakers. It's been very apparent for some time that overpay- ment of taxes has been responl!ible for huge state sur· pluses. This may be comforting for the governor. He can claim he hasn't raised taxes, while the state grabs more and' more of your dollars. But the increasingly large holes in t heir paychecks a re anything but comforting for the wDrk· ing taxpayers. The Legislature should lose no time overriding the governor's veto. Oiarter Interest Fades Several months ago. at the urging of Chairman Ralph Clark, the Orange County Board of Supervisors com· missioned a $.50,000 study to determine if voters should be asked to approve a charter form of government. . A blue-ribbon committee was formed and a consulting firm employed. There have been many meetings and m\lch discussion on switching to a constitution-type system. Now, it would appear that the initial enthusiasm for the idea is fading. Though the charter study committee has not made its final report, three of its nine members have indicated they don't think a charter is necessary. Their unexpected comments came after a public hearing at which only three people showed up to speak. As one committee member rightly observed, if Orange County residents were hot and heavy for a switch to a charter form of government. there might have been a bigger turnout at the hearing. But there wasn't. And that's a pretty strong indica - tion that despite its ups and downs Orange County citizens are satisfied with the general law form of govern· ment now in existence. Either that or they don't feel it's important enough to pursue. In eithec instance, it seems pointless to continue the chart.er· issue. · Seeins Excessive There's a move afoot to increase the per diem al· lowance for state legislators and state employees who travel on official business from the present $46 to $60. The 30 percent boost would cost $7 million a year for tbe lawmakers' in-session daily allowances and $30 million fo r the traveling state employees. The increase, backed by the California State Employees Association, (CSEA) figures $34 for lodging, $5 for breakfast, $5.50 for lunch, $11 for dinner and $4.50 for incidentals. The legislators• per diem, which is paid seven days a week when the Legislature is in session (up to 220 days a year) would give them $420 a week in addition to their an- nual pay of $25,555 (which goes up to $28,110 in December) and their slate-leased cars and free gasoline and phone credit cards. · According to the state Department of Finance, the state Consumer Price Index will have increued 75 per- cent from December, 1974 to December, 1980. The pro· posed $60 per diem would represent an increase of 114 percent in that period. The last adjustment, from $4(Mo $46, was made in January, 1979. When the Board of Control considers the proposed ln· crease in October, discussion doubtless will focus on the board rule that refers to allowances for "good, moderate- ly priced establishments catering to the general public." The CSEA proposal admittedly was based cJn a survey of first-class establishments. We doubt first-claaa living at taxpayer expense is what the taxpayers envision aa ap- propriate. Perhaps it's time for the board to consider once again a voucher· supported system, rather than a flat daily rate for state travelers. This would make it possible to grant higher allowances for travel in more expensive bla-clty areas, without an across-the-board increase . • Opin ions expressed In the space above ire those ot the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of lhelr author• and artists. Reader comment is Invited. AddrHs The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA i2626. Phone (714) M2·'321. Boyd I Model Robber ByL.M. BOYD Tbe lnfamous Black Bart committed 28 holdup_s lo California between 187S and 1883. A model robbe r. he never shot anybody. ·And he refL a poem usually at each crime scene. Unfortunately for him he finall y left tomething el se, too . A bandkerchlef with the laun· Dear Gloomy . t GU8 It seems FAIR to say that the Democrats' m 1ln worrle1 are Foret.in Alf airs, lnfla· lion aM Rea1an. D.M. ~'l OM,_., ere Ml• ..... _, , .... ,. ......... . _....rr,..._, .. ,,...., .. .................. _ .. ...... , ........ ,..... dry m1rk F.X.0 .'1. which poltce t raced to the S•n Francisco realdenee of a dicnlfted old 1ent1eman with a white musUche, one Charles Bol~, who dressed impeccabfy and carried a sllverbeaded cane. ma Hft· tence was loni. But hla behavior wu ao 1ood ln San Quentln that he waa tumed loote after only four years. When he tot out of prlaon he left no clue to hi.• future. Mow he lived out the rest of his Ille is a mystery. Q. That treat Flemlah painter Peter Paul Rubenl always uaed bif fat •omen for hl• model1. la it lnle he wouldn't hive anythln1 to do wltb a I emale u.nle11 abe weiJhed over aoo pounda? A. 'Jbat can't be ri1ht. At a1e 53, be married a l .. year· old 1lrt named Helene Four~ ment, who wu no more •Isa· bll tban the OUlbL to bave been. J-*A:ndenoo Castro· Offers Carter Support N&W YOU -Poor Jimmy Carier. Wida tnenda Uk• bll, be hardly DHdt eneml11. Now aeeret ._. DeDartmeat doc:u· menu IDd rtilla'ble tnteru.ence 10Urcee reveal that the f1tett VOhlll&eer lo board the Carter bu4w ii none other than CuD&i ~t Fidel Cut.ro. who baa eedoned Carter fOI' re· e&eeUoe. SO ru, to lbe intense reUet of Carter'• campalan atatr. tbe Manl1t dk· tator baa refrah t d from a atroG1 public en · doTaement. Tb• cloaelt he bu come was a blut at the Repub· llcan plat· form. But in private conversations with American and Nicaraguan offlclall last month, Castro eit- preaaed support for Carter that WH u positive 88 it WU UD· Earl Waters solicited. He Indicated that he'U do notblnJ that would put Carter on the spot before the November election. One conversation was between C11tro and Carter's United Na· lions ambassador, Donald McHenry, al an informal recep-tt on July 18 in a former Manafua country club. Oelega. Uou from 30 nation• had ar· rtved ln the Nicaraguan capital for ceremonies the next day marting the first anniversary of the successful Sandinista revolu· Uon . ONE OF THOSE present at the reception said the 45-minute Castro·McHenry conversation was not planned -or at least appeared not to be. "People were mingling, and Castro and McHenry were at different sides of the room before they found themselves together,·· the source said. At any rate, according to in· telligence sources. Castro pledged his fi rm support for Carter's re·election bid -clear- ly intending his views to be re· layed to the While House by McHenry. Secret cables to Washington reported Castro would do oothing to embanass Carter before Election Day. In other conversations, some with Nicaraguans and one in· vol ving U .S . Ambassador Lawrence Pezzullo, Castro was even more expltcil. A high- ranking intelligence source told my associate Dale Van Atta that Castro "passed along a virtual promise that he would cau.se no crisis during the next fo ur months." THE SOURCE added: "We have taken that to mean the military improvements. and the heightened activity b y the Russians in Cuba, would become less visible, or would stop." As I have reported in recent months, Castro and the Soviets have been bee fing up the Cubans' military strength at an alarming rate in the past year, particularly in the missile de· partment. It's evident that Castro, re· member lng Carter's pathetic backdown on the Soviet combat brigade last year, views him as a president who can be pushed around. A Castro promise not to em· barraas Carter is of course an embarrassment in jtself. As one White House source noted: "No presidential candidate would ever want to receive Castro's public support." CHEMICAL CASUALTY: Chris Johnson joined the Army on graduation from bigb school in Rapid City, S.D., and was shipped out lo Vietnam to fight his country's enemy. Today - one Bronze Star, one Purple Heart and 11 years later -he is fighting his country for justice. He is pushing the government for health-care aid for Agent Orange victims. ·'I took shrapnel in the arm and hip and lost a leg," Johnson said. "I just figured that was the price I had to pay. I used to think I was lucky." What changed his mind was the e·rrects he is convinced he s uffered from exposure to Agent Orange, the Dow Chemical de· foliant used in Vietnam. Years after his return, he showed the classic symptoms of Agent Orange poisoning : weight loss, blurred vision, dizziness and severe skin eruptions. The real horror came when Johnson's son was born with 26 different deformities. "He had club feet, a hole in his heart, a Oat top of his head, fingers over- lapping, his intestines hanging out of his body," Johnson said, adding: "Thankfully, he didn't li ve." BORN-AGAIN BREZHNEV? According to Karl Marx, re· ligion is the opium of the people. But the pragmatic atheists in the Kremlin don't boggle at the us e of religion to serve their purposes when all else fails. Ac· cording to intelligence sources, · the Soviet bosses are believed to have employed an itinerant Syrian faith healer to work whatever magic he c an on ag. ing, ailing Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev. Brown's 'Excellent' Poll Rating Baffles Abraham Lincoln was right! You can fool some of the people all of ~ time. Witness the latest poll sbowine 2S percent ol the people think Gov. Jerry Brown is doing an excellent job. He wouldn't tet 2 percent of the Letislature to give him that good a rating if the members gave their honest opinions, despite his following of sycophants and those hoping for Jud1eabipe or other lucrative ap- pointmmta. Tbe real unadulterated truth b that Jerry Bfbwn has been and coatinuea to be exactly what Houatan Flournoy, his 1974 R e - publican oppoc1enL pre- d l ct e d he would be , "The ereatest dlaaater that e\ter hit Calllond ." Prom ~ time be took office ln tt75, and even before, be bu been so consumed with his personal ambtuona to become PretldeDt that the bualneaa of belnc covernor la of little sicnlfican~e to him. It ls an Art Hoppe irksome chore at best and one which be shirks and shuns, ex- cepting in those instances where be feels the office can be used to further his higher aspirations. IN FACT for most of last year and the early part of this year he abandoned the state entirely. leaving the job of governor to Gray Davis, his assistant who became the surrogate governor while Brown traipsed the eastern states seeking delegates to the Democratic National Con- vention. He got one I Humbled, he came home with bis tail drag. ging, vowing he would devote the last two and a half years of bis term to working bard on state business. Even as he utte r ed t hose words be was making his plans for a l9M Presidential bid. 'The plans involved using the people of California as guinea pigs in program.& be hoped to put into effect to demonstrate to the na· Uon what a great leader he ls. To make sure he got attention nationally, be appointed a new Wa s hington lob b y i st to represent his administration at the nation's Capitol. But the job, which pays a salary greater than Brown bimsell receives, is not for the purpose of lobbying for the benefit of the stale but one lo build up support for Brown's next campaign. This was revealed by Joseph Beeman who formerly held the post and spent his time building the 1980 campaign. THE PROGRAMS, mostly warme d over versions of Brown's previous bad dreams, have yet to be detailed although scanty outlines point to efforts to raid the s t ate e mployees' pension funds to finance low· income hous ing, c ontinued blocking of new power plants while Brown's appointive dilet· tantes search for .elusive "alternate" sources, and r e· newed efforts to employ and ap- point so-called "minorities" re- gardless o( their qualifications. Fortunat ely for the people, Brown continues to be all rhetoric and no performance. H is attention span to state problems ls limited almost to ex· Unction by his absorption with bis aspirations. He has been correct· ly faulted for his failure to provide leadership. Again the people are for· tunate for this shortcoming. His on ly excursions into leadership have been most cost- ly to the taxpayers, as for exam· pie his enthus iasm , after passage of Prop. 13 to make that property tax cuttin g measure work. He commjtted the state to a monumental spending pro- gram. playing Santa Claus to bail out the prodigal cities and counties. This has created an an- nual expense of $5 billion which is in addition lo the other billions allocate d local government through one program or another. EVEN AS a manager of state operatioos Brown is a disaster. Padded payrolls, incompetent employees and management, il· legal contracts , mismanage- ment and waste have become so common that exposure of them fails to ro use any concern w h a t soeve r a m o ng the legislators. The result ls that since be took office the state's budget has grown from $10 billion to $25 billion. Unaffected. Brown continues to present each budget as "a model of austeri- ty,·· apparently agreeing with Goebbels' doctrine that a lie re- peated often e nough will be believed to be the truth. A Platf onn of Happiness Could Be the Wlllller That Harvard-educated 1orilla who 11 run.nine for president hu at last unveiled bl• ea1erly awaited platform. MOit experta promptly &creed it bad far more appeal than the one drawn up by the Democrats altei-mucb blcllerlnc. Tbe centnl plank in the pubUc·IPirlted slmlan's stands on Lbe luues wa1 a pledce that, ll eletl· ed, be would allow all Americana to 1lHp late. "In talkln1 t o t b e voten," aaid the birautt repre aen · tall•e ol the common man, "I bave found tbat more Americana would rat.her aleep lat. I.ban have their income lax· • cut 100 percent, wblcb, b)' tbe way, I will also accompll1h "'po.taCld ,. Other immediately popular propaeall oftend by tbe bell student. of the pational mood ill· eluded d.ispoea~le kitchens, a re· search Pl"08J'•D\ to develop a no- calorie cheesecake and three martin.la in every lunch pail so that ,..our American aleelwodcen. too, can enjoy lax· dedpctlble three· m arllni lunc,es." KNOWING AMERICA'S love affair with the automoblle, the astute campaigner devoted much of his platform to helping bring about a happier consum· matlon. "I not only promise a car in every tarage," he said, "but a tar11e for every car and a park· lnl place for every American. Under m y administration, motorbts wUI enjoy 25-cent·•· 1allon cuollne, one·way streets that to the ritht way and the total ell"llnf&lon of all bridte tolls ud ~ bo\lfl. What have rush hours ever d on e for America?" he demanded. The broad·browed intellectual aald be would alao launch • ~1'-=====~=~- study aimed at doing away with the frustrations caused by red lights by replacing all red lights with green lights. He said bis preliminary investigation of this sweeping proposal indicated that at the very least it would drastically reduce traffic con· gestion on the nat ion 's highways. THE STAUNCH defender of the common weal offered a com- prehensive national healLh care program with the goal of finding cures by 1984 for the lour atruc- ti on s that most. plaaue Americans : the common hangover, tennis elbow, the femlnlne headache and socks that fall down. His hard-hitting legislative program calls for completing all airports; banning busy signals, hold buttons, childproo f medicine bottle capa and ln· dlvldual plastic mustard con· talners; replacln1 automobUt horns , seatbelt buuera and telephone rln11 with Bermlada t bells ; imposing the death penal· ty on supermarket shoppers who don 't open their purses until after the clerk has rung up the total; and establialung a stand- ard hemline length that could be chansed only by a t wo-thlrds vote of the Congress. But perhaps the most in· genious concept offered the elec· torate by the imaginative an· thropoid is a Federal Chaise Longue Project. When fully im· plemented, it will completely ellminale all standing in line. THE EVER-MODEST Whlte House hopeful said that while the other candidate• professed concern for the public welfare, he Celt be wu the only one with a platform designed to make people happy. Asked how he hoped ever to Implement such pie-lo-the-sky propoul1, the tousle-haired 1trate1i1t naahed his crowd· plta1ln1 smile . "Euctly the ..me way lbe Oemoeuts hope to," he said. .. ,, Banking Costs to Rise CheckUig Accoww No Longer Simple Matier ..... ._... ..... Tbtt Anleri('t.n banll ·~ ll elaa~ fut. It C'Olta ..... It eaa more. A.ad lt la ~ IDON t"CllDPlltat.td •Ytty da,. Y• eu allo kM* for-an'° ~ 1pread ol lnlerett·bMrial et.ff• ... and ol eutomatioa. To tet..boM bUl pa.yin• and debk urda. ''~jrlca tt's one aure th.ln1~ •• William D. Piche· ty. •ffior vie• preatdut ror peraoaal banklna servlcu at ConUnental llllnois National Bank & Trust Co. ln Chl~a,ao, when uked what was ahtad for the del)O(lltor. T8E CHANGES A&E due Mrtly to le1LslaUon passed ln M,rch. Restrictions on interest ra H and on the kinds of ser•es that can be offered by fina institutions are beini phaeed . The c a1ao are linked to inflation to rising costs in the bankina · ustry. lncludin& the cost ol y. "To thee delivering servicH ... are go- ing up, it's ine to be reflected ln pricing . . . tomers will re~ ceive credit what they have on deposit an ey will pay for transactions,· Plechaty said. "Somebody wh ants to write a lot of checks I have to pay for each one of ose checks ... There are going be some win· ners and there a going to be some losers." THE WINNERS, ccording to financial experts, e going to be people with hef bank ac- counts. "The people that h e money . can make more mo y," said Bob Walters of Shesti ff & Co. Inc-., an Austin. Texas, rm that advises banks on pric g and services. The losers are going to the people who keep only a mall amount in the bank, but , in lhe past, have had free cbe~g accounts. "I would say that free ch k- lng in the context or how it been viewed in the past is p . ably dead," said Plechaty, a . ing that there is no way a bad( can offer even minimal service9i without charge, to a customer who keeps a balance of, say. $200~ "It just doesn't pay for itaell," be said. WALTERS ESTIMATED that only S percent or 10 percent ol • ballks offer free cbeckln& today, compared to as many as SO per· cent in 1977. He s aid most banks require a customer to keep a minimum checking balance ol several hundred dollars or Da.V a monthly service fee -usually $3 to ~ -and possibly a per· check charge of 10 to 20 cents as well. Banks, savings and loan as- sociations and thrift institutions traditionally make money on (-CON UMER J whet " Down aa ''the 1pnad'' tt.. difference betwffft wbat WY have to pay for moaey de- potlted lil accountl aocl the ln· ter.at lbey can chars• on loans. Hlab lnternt rates oD ••vino cerUlkat• have cut the apreaa. Tht removal of cellint• on PH•book savlnp d"'41 In ab years under lhe leaislaUon palled 1n March will narrow the merlin aaaln. CBEC&ING ACCOUNTS and there are more than 275 milUon of them -have been the banks' last source of "free" money, on which they do not have to pay interest. But that too is changing. NOW (negotiated order of withdrawal) accounts. which are, in effect, interest-bearing checking accounts, were in· troduced in New Eneland eight years ago and spread to New York and New Jersey. As of Maf, there were just over 2.5 million NOW accounts in the six New England states. Thanks to the spring legislation, they will be legal on a nationwide basis starting Jan. 2, 1981. Credit unions started offering share drafts -also interest· bearing checking accounts -in (F1rat In • Serie•) 1974, and Jim Williams, presi- dent of the Credit Union Na- li on al Association , Inc ., estimates there will be 2.3 million share-draft accounts by the end of the year. Automatic transfer accounts let customers shift money from interest· bearing savings accounts, automatically. as they write checu. "BANKS CAN 'T MAKE money like they u.sed to -tak· ing in low-cost deposits and con- verting these into long-term, higher-rate yields," said Herb Wegner, bead of a Washington, D.C .• consulting rtrm. "The banks have to go to a transac- tion charge ... · • Wesner and Walters said that some banks are trying to get rid of customers who malntaJn very ' small bUaaces, oft.en u low u $10 or $15. ·'There are a lot of banks that have decided to do that," said 'tl alters, addinc that the institu- liCIDS would rather provide bet· te1c services to fewer, more profitable customers. Regulators are still consider- ing •hat rate of interest to allow on NOW account.a but most in· duatry spokesmen4said they ex· pected it to be in the ruge of s percent. Passbook accounts and time-deposit certificates will continue to carry higher interest rates. NO ONE 18 willlna to predict exactly what lntereat-beenn1 check• will COil. Prlcea for ex· l1tln1 NOW accounts vary. Ken Rekh or the U.S. Learue or Savlnp Aaaocialiona said that u of the middle of last year, se percent of the aavln1s and loana orrerlnc NOW account.a had no aef'vlce char1e or minimum balanc• requirement. As the ac- counts apread, be said, ''There will be more variations ln pric· \DI& policy." Curt Prins, staff director ol the Consumer Affairs Subcom· mlttee of the House Banking Committee, said holders of most New York City NOW accounts must keep b>ig minimum balances -over $2,000 in some cases -to avoid stiff service fees . ·'The average person is nol go- ing to be able to afford a NOW account," said Prins. THE FEES THAT will be im- posed on a NOW account with only a few hundred dollars, will more than offset the interest, he said. Walters said the monthly cost to the bank on the average checking account today is $5.50. Banks will price NOW accounts high enough so they can recover that cost , plus pay interest and make a profit, he said. •'Banks are going to say. 'Look. I don't mind paying in· terest to somebody who's keep- ing a lot of money in my bank. Why don't we divide our check· ing accounts into the people who have money and the people who don't?' " Financial institutions, meanwhile, are trying to cut paperwork costs and attract business with new services. THERE ALREADY are almost 15,000 automatic teller machines where you can withdraw or deposit money or check your balance. More than 200 financial in- stitutions let customers pay billa by telephone. Some 150 banks, savings and' loans, etc. offer debit cards that can be used for retail purchases. Wegner estimates that a direct debit transaction costs the bank a dime; the total cost.a of processing a paper check are over SO cents. SOME BANKS A&t: ex- perimenting with storing can· celled checks electronically in- stead of returning them to customers. Holders of share draft accounts do not eet can· celled drafts back, and some bankers say that the lntroduc· lion of NOW accounts is the perfect chance to expand so- called "non-return" or "tnmca· lion" programs. "It's a way to contam increas· ing costs," said Robert V. Sabeck. executive vice president of the Valley National Bank of Arizona. Govemmern Rapped in Survey DES MOlNES, Iowa (AP) -Readen of a na· tional women's magazine have expressed "an enormous discontent" with the way 1ovemment affects family life in America, the maguine's managing edit.or says. Ninety-two percent of the ~pondenta to a questionnaire being published in Better Homes and Gardens maeulne said government policies harm middle-class American families. Seventy· three percent said they want government out of their lives as much as possible. THE SURVEY INDICATED THAT middle· class Americans feel threatened by inflation, gov· ernment spending, hi&ber taxes on married couples who both work. and government-ordered school busing. Results of the survey, answered by 46,817 readers, will appear in the September issue of the magazine, which has a circulation of 8 million. More than 4,000 of the answering readers also wrote let· ters. "'Those completed questionnaires and letters reveal an enormous discontent," says managing editor Kate Keating. "ACCORDING TO A MAJORITY of the respoodents, the overall effect of government pro- gr ams and policies is to weaken rather than strenithen family bonds and well being." Ms. Keating said: "Our middle-clau families are angry and frustrated about government. They feel their pockets are being picked, their opinions ignored, their wants overlooked and unfulfilled." GOURMET MARKET rJ Tired of traffic jams? l>Ge't for1et to check witb ua about oar free 'bome delivery l\'Io~NiNG FREsu PRonucE DELANEY Lar&eJalc)'Nec'eL···········*'b. BROS SEAFOOD Sweet 'ftlom...-Grapet .. 'lie lb. • UMes•'i=~~a!t•toe8 ....... ·~ ·.~· FRESH 1.0CAL SWORDF1SH ...... t.18-1b. · • ~-· · · · ~ • .... " · · · • ._ .,. Fre1b FUet of Pacific Red Sn•pper, 1.0 lb. Delldam Ripe ................. 3 lbe. 8k PRIME & ~~p CHOICE BEEF Fresh l.oc•I Tbre1ber Shark ....... ·.1.98 lb. •red at leut 3t ya s. Ute peak of perfedloll LIQUOR DEPARTMENT N9w la Ume te nu you .. I.new! Deluey'1 Priv•&e L•bel AD Chabll.a or Via Roae mo mm ...... i • • 1.lt qed, cut, wrapped" frozen. Old 8a'1mllh lrtala Whlakey <qt.) • • · · · · It.St WHle Beef ................ 1.59 lb. IDad , of Beef .......•.•.... 1.8t lb. Bel Arbres Vlneyudl mo mm · Wllole or Lamb ................ 1.89 lb. Zlnlaadel (reg. US) .................. 3.50 ,, ' Boaad au Vlneyarda 1 .loh••llNbefl Rle1Un1 {rel. 8.95) .,. · .J.85 Bolla Wiiiet 8oaveorTrebblano .................. f .U See....,~ <Uter) 5.$5 ......... J qt. I.II (All ... tlOf prft~I do DO( .... tHl ( ()pea O.Jly •· 7, Cloeed Stm4a)' it» Newpon Blvcl., Newpon Beach ' 673-5520 I APWl ...... lo S•tnc.. t.me Stir"••"°"' Ooot tC•n Store IMatHI ¥0\.tl .Ate•I COSTA .... 641 ·1289 1111'---llllHION vc.io495..(M()1 2.0 c:.-c ......... (lo• °'9fo ,...,. ol A•_.,. l'kwf I The Schoof of THINKING Some topics include: • Develop imagination • Learn to think Logically • Roll of subcon scious in thinkiniz • Fast vs slow r ate of thinking · • Roadblocks to lhinkin!Z and much, much more Call for Brochure Classes now forming (714) 536-6313 LACOSTE SHIRTS IN STOCK BOYS DEPT . . Blffler Jack Ford, who sold his interest in the Del Mar News Press. has joined a group bu y in g a downtown San Diego building for $300,000. Tueecs~. Augu11 19, 1980 We Asked Our fur Expert: ' UPI P1'01o WHAT MAKES I. MAGNIN FUR DAILY PILOT A 1 Bid l..0111 An attempt by a ttorn ey William K unstler to get contempt con - victions against him a nd three d e fendants in the Ch icago 7 t 1 ial has bee n overturned. . COLLECTIONS SO FABULOUS THIS FALL? 1. "The techniques. Fur designers are artists. They influence each other. You'll see tech niques combined: ribbing, contrasts, evening furs with hand-beading, satin and metallics. And unusual collars are important. !here's a lot more individualism in furs this fall. PREVIEW SAVINGS! SAVE 10% IN AUGUST! Select from our new Fall Fur Collections, and enjoy a savings off our fall prices. You may enjoy our savings now and arrangments may be made tD let us bill you in November, 1980, if you wish. • See the I. Magnin Fur Collection Yourself. A special representative will show the Collection in South Coast Plaza on Wednesday and Thursday, August 20 and 21. Fur Salon. Fur products labeled to show country of origin. m a g n South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa 957-1511 NewService! ~ L I .n Orange County to Seattle . on the Top Banana when you buy a round-trip ticket. Introducing our new service to Seattle-2 convenient flights every day. The only no-change-of-plane service from Orange County to Seattle! 50% off. Every coach seat. every light. every d ay through September 15. All you have to do is buy a round-trip ticket I Just call a Thlvel Agent. your Corporate Travel Arranger. or Hughes Airwest: Burbank (213) 247-8333 Orange County (714) 540-2060 Los Angeles (213) 772-5100 Ontario (714) 933-8585 .. 1 1 .. r-:-_ 0 { j I Al OM. v PU.Or PEANUTS NO OtJR KIND OOf 5H'T 6Ef TO VOTE ... WE OONi ~AVE AM4<'™1N6 TO SA; A800T &JES ON IN TME WOltLD d .. f FUNKY WINKERBEAN SHOE "There! Two whole days without getting Into trouble!" by Jeff MacNelly MOON MULLINS by Ferd & Tom Johnson 8 19 ,._ __ 1i r MISS PEACH G>~, ......... -, .. IM KE~PING UP WITH 1HE .JONESES ~ u fEE, WHIZ, A~THV1R' I HE'~ NICE, 91.AT Mt.A5f YOIA overz:oo ir (,..> , ,, , ~. , ' 1' . ..... , ; t L..t. \. l 1 1 f1 •, I I \......0 ',,1,, I ' THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane GORDO , "People who don't hove any children don't get to be ancestors.'' DENNIS THE MENACE TUMBLEWEEDS I HOPE TUM~L.E:WEEDS L.1Kl1S YOUR NEW ~LONP WIG; AUN1 HIL..DEGARt7. NANCY NANCY GETS ON MY NERVES --- SHE'S SO FUSSY ABOUT EVERYTHING by Mell Lazarius IT'S A ;:.L ". CATCAtN& 1'0MTIT/ A LETTER FOR YOU, NANCY by Charles M. Schulz ..._,_ ......... \ .. .--. .. by Tom Batiuk DRABBLE COMICS I CROSSWORD BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch "This, George. is the latest thing. It opens op into; two· man tent with twin beds and a wet bar." by Kevin f'tgan .i£LL1 l'M ~OU.'{ I B«DU~f '(O\) 1'0 ~1JC1l A \.OIJS'/ 8~E6AU. ~ME, vAL£R.1£. I AMOLIJ1'£L.~ lANNOf ~1611~£ ouf WM'i ou~ 1tl L~f 'f"A'( 6AM£ ! 111E l.0~1' 6£'~ ouit lh1'1'E~ IC£tl 1'1l'ttNu 1'o VuLI. £Wt M',11 ~ 1'11€ I.IN£ I ANO All.1'1t£ O~O~I~ V!1'£14E~ ltAO 1'o Oo WAS IC'.EEP 1'11£ 8ALL LOW A~O All.ll~. ~ 1.t1E FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE DR. SMOCK 0 i IFYOU KIDS DON'T" 51RRT USING youR LEQ-5, THE)''LL r SHRIVEL UP~ RNDfALLOfF ~ FROM LF\CK oF ose.!H <SURGERY I by Gus Arriola 11''S ,A MOUTH·WATER11Je, TIDBIT! by Tom K. Ryan IF HE: roESN'r, I PRAG-HIM IN 10 IHE: 5iORe,ANV'1\MJ SALE:SME:N IALK SOMe SENSE: IN'IO HIM! by Ernie Bushmiller SLUGGO -·· THE STAMP ON THAT LETTER YOU SENT WASN'T PUT ON STRAIGHT "'-~:' U11' LlffLE 61..fEOfQ.S 1'0 'flt( 1~~1£1.(7 P.LL ~IC,~f ~ by Lynn Johnston .__ __ .-,__riff AM) by George Lemont I S 1'"H 15 AN01'"H e R WAY OF ,-Sl-l-ING JV\e MINS V\l l l-l-ee A V~RY SL-OW RtCOV SR.Y , POCIOR. :' TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE .ACROSS t Middle Comb form 5 Lyre 9 Hit hard t 4 English river IS USA 16 Of a hme perk>d 17 Dispatched 18 Actor Paul 45 No Amencan canals 46 NaCl 47 Thtel<set • •9 Sailboats 53 "Walch ovll"' 2 words 57 W1seone 58 Test 59 Laye1 61 Afrte.an nvet 19 Admired 62 Not glossy ones 63 Biblical weed 20 Kind of drum 64 Madder 22 Awe genus 24 Garrets 65 Ilk 26 Stipends 66 Trees 27 Oregon bay 67 Ollice item 29 Poellc COO· UNITED Feature Syndicate Mond3y's Puzzle Solved ' .. l .. 0 I 00 0 , I ( CH O ( " 0 • I I 0 l , ( I N OO N Ill A 111 A I I 00 (" I c u T f J N A I I N 0 I • c II A , ( " _, II A T I • f A I l l • ... N • r N(-• TIYEOO llf T I N(f.Y I A E c r -c11L1 -· ND• E II ". Ulll ( . ~ l AN e r• " f F I 11- l I I T f N s I " ' T A CH [ (II T I I N A U l I UC l A II AG II A I l l • E I p" "". .. 0 0 N I s (" II I so MI E 12 Stea111e tracllon 30 -de mer 33 Philip. DOWN 1311 not 40 Divulges 42 Calm Edward. et al 2 words 37 Rasp 38 Subside 39 Gyp$y Rose 40 Seed coat 41 Study 42 '20s dance 44 Number 1 2 3 ' .. . t ltahan C•ty 2 t School Fr 2 Happening 23 Sponsorship 3 Ac101 Robert 25 Distress call 4 Not simple SMeat 6 Asian river 7 Regenerate 8 P11ate ships 9 UK counties 1~Fash1ons 11~~tal ~ 28 Profile 30 Driule 31 Kind ol sax 32 Not obese 33 Engrossed 34 WOodwmd 35 Story 36 Turmeric 37 Deco1a1e<1 ·-----. - 43 -C1uces 45 Remained 47 Ray 48 Legal affair 50 Color 5 t EurOj)eans 52 Slink 53 Leg of - 54 Glacial ridges 55 Bone Prefix 56 Time period 60 Legal lhings 12 13 ' Tueeday, August 19, 1980 DAILY PILOT A9 QUEENIE Dlplo•ats to Speak at Saddlehaek "Altar comultil.ll m,y .u~rior. our answer aa bona er ..... ·· !\·11 ro,,IJ1t·~rf11 •1 DON CHAP•AN ... ...., ......... \ y Some heady International i .. u .. will be bandied about ln Mllllon Vlt· Jo thta fall. by diplomata from w .. tem £urope, Japan, and the Mid· clle Eut. But the diplomats won 't be attend· ln1 a fonlp policy confertoce or ex- cban11na communique. ln a cloeed door 1e11fion. They will be 1peakln1 during the H meaCAr to 1ludenta ln an lnterna· Uonal rel•lklnl clus at SadcUeback Colleae tauaht by Dr. Tom Alex· ander. a former U.S. Forelp Service o/flcer Alexander, of Laauna Beach, hu arranaed for the consuls aeneral of Weat Germany, Japan and Eeypt to speak to the clus. ln addltioo, public affairs officers from the British, Fl'ench, and Israeli consulates will speak. Alexander taid the course will be built around r elations between Western Europe and the United States. Such topics as the U .S.-led ERA Walk Drugs Useful For Angina By PETER sTEJNcRoHN Slated Dear Dr. Stelncrobn: I am 48 and have de· veloped angina pectoris. My cardiologist is known By O.C. HUSTINGS to be conser vative and tells me to forget about Ot-o.tt• PIMiUYff bypass co~ary s urgery at this time. The 4th annual ERA He says that my condition can be controlled by Walk sponsored by three use ~f nitroglycerin and other drugs. If these chapters of the National aren t helpful, there's time enough for surgery Organization for Women economic boycott ot Iran and boycott ot t.be Moecow Olympic• will come lnto P.lay. •'I U be expecting the represen- taU vet to explain for the sludenta why Weatem Europe is oot u strong in lta ·~ of ua," aald the former president of the Laguna Greenbelt, toe . "It will give the students an eyeball to eyeball look at lntema· tlonal relations. Sometimes the textbooks are rather dull .• ~ Alexander. who also taught the class in 1977, said whaling, trade, and other economic subjects will be probed when the Japanese consul eeneral viaila the class. "How is it that a country we de· teated so conclusively is perhaps our strength lo the Far East?" he asked. Alexander's younger brother. Holmes Alexander, an associate editor of the Tampa Tribune, alJo will speak to the clua . The younger Alexander is one of 14 members of the National Conference of Editorial Writers who participated in a fact·finding tour of mainland China. Alexander tried to arrange for the Chinese to speak to his class. but to no avail. He Hid there is still a chance representatives from Saudi Arabia wlll attend. The speakers who are scheduled to appear follow : Eyal Sher, information officer, Israel; Mohammed Gawaly, Consul Gener a l, Egypt; Angus McKay, public affairs officer, Great Britain; Marie·France Twining, press at· tacbe, France; Heinz F. Lewalter, Consul General, West Germany; and Tauneo Tanaka, Consul General, Japan. The class will meet Mondays and Wednesdays from 10:30 a.m. to noon, beginning Monday. Baja Cooperating TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -Robert Kent, U.S. cons ul general ror northwest Mexico, says be will retire Aug. 31 with relations between Baja California and neighboring California at a high point. Kent gjves credit to Gov. Robert de la Madrid. Among achievements, said Kent, is a recently worked out means of finding and returning cars stolen from Americans. We've got our heart set on a diamond. A sollra1re diamond rests 1n the cencer of our beautifully delicate 14 karat yellow gold "nbbon" DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE l t in· Oran.tre County will a er on if necessary. be b Id . La 8 h e Ul guna eac a&W. MITZI WD.IS I admit that I ~ave Saturday. been comfortable smce · Check-in time J or the heart pendant. $375. l .'ve b e~n taking walk is 8 :30 a .m . at ABOUTASECOND nitroglycenn under my Main Beach Park with •. tongue. l also. take _pills the starting time at 9 TRUST DEm LOAN . . to swallow. Wtll you ex· a.m . The route will be platn bow nitroglycenn works? Mr. C. divided into two parts; a Dear Mr. C.: Let's say there's the specific tre~tment and general treatment of aneina pee. tons. four-mile section and a UP TO SSOQ 000 six-mile section along 'I the sidewalks o( Laguna A ::i;:h~:·~r~::.· .r.~~ Newpo~.~~~3~.~?.1;.J.nc - SLAVICK'S AM Jewt'lt'D Sin~ 1917 h shion lsland, Newport Center, Newport Beach, 7\4/644·1380 Wt>stnunstt'r I Laguna HiUs I Mission V•tJO I North Orange I The City Los Cenitos ck Brea Malls Also Greater Los Ang•les I San Chego I Las Vt'g•S u,.. ~of Slo"'<k'• co•w•~t <iurg• f>Uns <>< Anwriun E>prn•. VlSA. M.a•ttr CNra•· , Mmiber Fint ft'Wtltrs G111/d Before considering nitroglycerine, I'd wonder about your way of life . Are you overweight'? Tak· lo1 too many saturated fats? Do you smoke? Drink too much? Work too hard? Uve under great pre- ssure? It's important that you give your heart a chance by removing every pouible barrier to its normal function. route and co 11 e ct 1714) 760-6060 . pledges for each mile '-================================!..-:==========================~­walked. Children are en-- couraged to participate. Child care will be available for a small NOW THAT THESE ARE lJNDIEB control, tum to the action of nitroglycerin. This 1$ rapidly absorbed from the mucous membrane under the tongue. It acts within two to five minutes , bringing relief from pain; and its effects may last for as Ions u 15 minutes. donation. For pledge sheets and further information call 960-6350 or 832-4229. • • • PHIL ANTHONY , Orange County's 1st Dis· trict supervisor, may have a legal cloud over bis head, but you'd It produces its good results by causing vascular relaxation -in veins as well as in arteries. In managing angina, nitrates can also be taken as oral remedies (swallowed in pill form>; and sometimes in the form of nitroglycerin oint· meat -not so commonly used because ol difficul- ty in estimatin1 proper dosage. never know it from those leading bis re- election drive. The Friends of Phil Anthony are planning a $250 per person Cund - raiser for the county supervisor Friday at the Upper Newport Bay home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lintz. IN MANY PATIENTS nitroglycerin is inef· fecive because dosage is not large enough. And maybe the pills are stale. Nitroglycerin is even used in patients who are having a heart attack. It enhances the blood flow and oxygen supply, especially when there's a com- plication like congestive heart failure. The host committee includes Bob Fluor. chairman of the board of the Fluor Corp. ; county Sheriff Brad Gates; Stb District Supervisor Tom Riley, and Ed Buster, executive vice presi- dent, Townsend Tex· Other helpful druga in angina are propranolol and a recent one called nifedipine. Be thankful you have a conservative .cardiologist, Mr. C. Drug therapy can be quite helpful and often obviates the need for bypass surgery. FV Officer Naval Flyer Coot Guard Lt. (j.g.) Michael P. Lucia, son of Delbert P. and Rebecca G. Lucia of 18831 Santa .II artana, Fountain Valley, waa designated a naval aviator. HAllOI LAWf'-MT. OUVI Mortuary • Cemeterv Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa 540-5554 ... C:lllOn4•S llUllOADWAY MOITUAllY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa &42·9150 IALT%&1B•llOM SMITH & TUTHn.L WUTCUff CHAPll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa M&-9371 ,_ClllOTtmS SNtTMS' MOllTUAIY 827 Main St ~ntangton 8Hch S3HS38 ... Al&, cou.MLN•A' ... 7t018o1M"-~ w.tmiMW 193-3525 L u c ia is a 19 7 4 troo. graduate of Fountain Anthony's friends say Valley ftigb School and they've Invited some a 1978 graduate of Coast speci al guests to the Guard Academy New cocktail reception. They London, Conn. ' include state Treasurer FV\Voman Joins Group Lee F.dwards of 18107 Palmetto Circle, Foun- tain Valley, bas been selected to serve in Hostesses, a University of AriJona student or- ganization, during the 1980·81 school year. Hostesses represent the university at events on campus and in the commwiity. Jest Unruh, state Con· troll er Ken Cory, former R e publican state senator Denn is Carpenter and GOP Congressman Bob Badham. • • • NEWPORT BEACH R e public an b e ad · quarters chief Karen Hochadel says there will be an open house at the headquarters Sept. 5. Orange County Republican candidates will be on band to meet voten from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. The office ii at 318 N . Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. * * • MAllYJAH:~~:~:~T,,......., TBEaE WILL BE ~n .._..,, ...,._ c.a. ..._.. ...., .. open house Sept. 7 in •"•"'' "· ••. s""''"" "' Mr Costa Mesa in honor of llutMM Wtlr Our9'1, "" .,...,.. Miiter, • .-... 511-. Mu .. , _, Assemblyman Dennis •• •11 • • ,,.., LM Jw MNlff, Man1en D-Huntin""on -.111W """" an_.. • .._,., • •w ~.,. .. .,... • .... ....,. Beach, and hta wife, •"""1• .-e11:"""•tst...1-Linda. ===-~~· net via u... It will be from 1 to 4 ..... p . m. at 3128 Country ..:•i:= :':: ~ ~ Club Drive, Colt.a Meta. _, • ...-"· 19. • " -· Call boltl Ann and Mike C:.:."'..•.=.~-=:~_: Mound (541-1983) for de· , .. A11ce ..._.., c:ar-.i Mer, taus. Alto boltln1 the :;:_ •.:::= ~:-_-~.: event are Sharran and ~.,. . ._..1111111tr 1111 ._...,.., John Renna (Mt-3583) •••ti •• , .. , .... s"'"" • "''""' and Arlene and Jim ... ,..,a..i..::f' . .....,,,, Schafer (541-1421). J, MA-.0 MHMM.,........ ef * * * CMI• ...... Ce.~ ... , 911 ~ "· ,.. 111 c... ..... ca. AMONG TBS con· lff•h'"., "'' .,,. ...... ,, .... trlbutora lJl favor of ::C:-..::"C::..S.::.~ Propo1lllon 11 on tbe ::.-::: .. ~=June tlallot waa atate J-. ._. et Det ....._: •-· 1'raD1port1Uon Com· MICCIAI ICll ~• :.'.:::.-:. ... .:;..·:.c~--;'z:t ml11toaer Ivan Hlnd•· ....,,. INC" --. '-'..,....-* • ...., nker of Corona del 4M4411 .,..., ...... ,.,,.. .. ,, .... Mar. Dr. Rladeraker, ~Mt =. ~=.,-:-.:; wbo l'GlltlibuUd $100 to len.MlnC.Pt1treno • ....,.. .. •911111y ,_.. ..... UM ca_., la UM fcwmer -.1111 =::i::-:.=-c~ cbancellor of UC ~-------~..,, ~-"'"'_....,.*"""-,..,... Rl•tndde. PRovoNT~ PONT APARTMENTS 8EUlJSE 'rOU BELJEVE 'rOUR APARTMENT S~ULD BE AS DISTINCllVE AS 'rOUR LIFESTYLE Promontory Point is not for everyone. It's for the person who appreciates the exceptional, who understands and requires a unique lifestyle. and who is willing to pay for it. Simply stated, Promontory Point is luxury. A luxury lifestyle that is unmatched in Southern California. Promontory Point is spectacular ocean views. Twenty-six variations of floor plans with skylight.s, lofts, decks, patios. And all the quality extras you'd expect. It's a mHlion dollar rec center with pools, health spa. sauna. lounge, game rooms, banquet and conference rooms and library, a permanent tennis pro and lighted tennis courts. Promontory Point is an award winner. It has won recognition for design excellence from the American Institute of Architects, Architectural Record, Sunset Magazine and the National Association of Home Builders. And it's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects in the country by resident.sand industry leaders alike. The Point is unique, it is understated luxury for some very special people. Promontory Polnt ... A pla" for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent lifestyle. Rents from $665-$1500 675-8000 Gl • IDt ) I l •• Business Mortg age Rates 'Threat' H o1isi1ig l 11diUJtry Recot' ry (;01tl<l tall WA.SHJNOTON 'AP) Houalna tart.I rose •·•percent ln Jul)'. follo•tna a 33 ~rC'tnt Jump 1n Juue, the 1ovtrnment rtP.()rta But butlders and eC'onomlau H.) that a tudden aurae •n mort1a1e rates t~aten to denatt the 1ndu1try't. rM'overy Meanwhile. other 6ZOvemment ftgures 1bow~ that a pai.nl\ll owe of ha1h unemployment an<1 double-d111t lnflaUon (Urthtr eroded wa1e and salarls hut month. whlle factones were ldled even more by \ht' recenlon "WHAT ALL THI Kt:PRESENTS ia aban donment or the hope the economy wlll straighten out quickly.'· said Otto £ckJtein, head of 'Datu CALL TOM MARSTON ABOUT A SECOND TRUST DEED LOAN UP TO 5500,000 · Newpor~.E~!:!?l!.~~~~!,nc • 714 7{J.) (:j){J.) ~--~ C1~rwp,11t ~ 111t·1s11r1c· ~Jljit'l1/t'S0Jlt..' -!l C'nrporot.: l'la.zu · 'rnllt> :!01 ~nq>c1n Center · N.:wp<•rllkot·h. Ci\ 92000 FREE SEMINAR THE TEXAS MARKET THE TEXAS MARKETPLACE OFFERS TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITIES FOR APPRECIATION ANO TAX SAVINGS ON YOUR INVESTED SS. l ET US SHOW YOU HOW TO BUY AND SELL TEXAS PROPERTY ANO RECEIVE THAT NEEDED TAX RELIEF. • How to Save Tax Dollars • How Real Estate Puts Inflation to work for you • How to Own Real Estate with a small amount of cash invested * Depreciation. Leverage & Group Investing • How to Generate Dollars for Investing • The Texas Market 7:30 P.M. WEONESOAY -Augu~20 7:30 p.m. THURSDAY · Augus1 21 Manon t1ote' ~ .. d .. ~Ull .., .. ., •• ,.., .. nutwl Fashion Island 1015 West Bell Ad. Newport Beach (Adjacent to Dlsneylend) ****** RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED ******* CALL (7141 644-0390 Rt11nurt't'll Inc . lt l.t-xtnl(ton. Mu11s econom1C' forecashlll: firm .. The rcet:1s10n h1u. a long wuy!' to go lt surely wlll a\r~kh out lo the \'Od of the year, if not fyrtht'r ... htt 11uid Pro:1pefts for u rapuJ st&t1 to an t:conom1c re· •' covery, 1f anything, arc glboml<lr now," added Sur1cJra Shuber ist'nior economist of Chase £conomtitrtcs Associates of Bala Cynwyd, Pa The Commerce t>epartment reported Monday that tlousina Htaru tncreased from an annual rate of t ,20lt nullion uruts In June to 1,266 million in July BUILDING PERMITS -FREQUENTLY a harbinger of future activity increased lS per cent to an annual rate of 1.24 miJUon, the depart· ment said. Until June, the housing industry was in a tailspin. leading the economy into a severe re. cession. Housing starts had fallen to an annual rate of 906,000 units . Despite the recent improvement, the pace of starts still is far below the 1.75 million total last year . Ecooom1sL'I believe the industry must build 2 million housing units a year to meet demand. During the first seven months of t.his year, 659,700 housing units were s tarted, compared with 1,031.800 for the same period in 1979, a decrease of 36 percent. "WE'RE PLE ASED BY J ULY'S increase. but unless the recent rises in mortgage rates stop, re· covery will be nipped in the bud," said Michael Sumichrast, chief economist of the National As· sociation of Home Builders. '"We anticipate a slow, arduous r ecovery - far different from the housing upturn after the last recession." said Ken Kerin. an economist for the National Association of Realtors. Mortgage rates. after falling to as low as 11 .S percent. have gone up in recent weeks to 13 to t3 s percent. , A:30-year. $60.000 mortgage at 11.5 percent in· terest means monthly principal and interest costs of $594. but a t 13 percent . the ,costs reach .$663.60. Sumichrast estimated the rates could cut hous· ing starts by 50,000 for the remainder of this year and another 100,000 in 1981. $50,000 to $500,~00 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lnl•H•I o nly s-vm•"' • lnco•• • Co•••rc!.I • Reelclend•I • Weekly co••lt•enl• • lltonlllly t-dlnt• • 6 month• to l v-r• • Sowthern C.Hfomu l +1ntrH.I 11LH loan lnfonaatlon ••rvlce hu \t1ur lmdnriny nt•t'd• (714) 759-1515 AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE 230 Newoori Center Drive Oes•gn P1a1a "'"wpon Beach Ca1ororn1a 92660 "We bought this place by getting a 2n d T.D. from Santiago Bank at a reduced rate. Jan's folks took equity I have investment in· formation worth s200 It's yours on a money back guarantee Call Robert Miller (7141 552-6807 out of their house the same way." ONLY 151/2%* interest! Call today to see how you can use second trust deed financing to buy a · new home or to make cash available from the home you are living in now. 1USTJN m.moo r~ /~"~ NEWPORT BEACH 7IM200 ORANGE 997·1llO COLLECTORS COAN ER Rare CcMn• A Stamp e GOLD A Sil VER Prtcea for 8-1 MO a. .. C .... $412. SllYer Cl. '1S.tt ... ., S.11 l(r11~rr.,,cl\ ~. "'"· MePI• Le.i '6JS. ""'· 100 CorON• UOJ" $417. so Pesos '1U. '"'· '°"' SllYtr 8•ot llto'll. 11'0'% Call fer t""9fl1 'I-• (714) 556-aSO South CoHt Pleza Vllrage 9-ei•-n (IC,_ hom-C:..11,....) •typingtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles•golf carts•model trains*bikes *pianos•cars refrigerators *skates•••••· If It's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad· vlser wlll help you turn your wheels Into cash. s l er Ve h icle Parts Off e r R app ed DETROIT I AP) Chrysler Corp. plans to of· fer owners of defective 1978-80 Omnis a nd Horizons free replacement parts, but the automaker says i\ won 'l pay for the labor on cars with expired war· ran ties. A leading auto consumer group head said that Chrysler 's offer doesn't go far enough and predict ed at least seven class-action lawsuits will be brought over potential defects in the front·wheel· drive subcompacts. CHRYSLER SAID ITS OFFER applies "in the event of a problem not due to misuse or abuse" in· volving front wheel bearings. automatic transax· Jes , ignition distributors and engine oil pumps. About 750,000 or the cars have been built s ince their introduction in the 1978 model year. Chrysler said owners whose one.year or L2 ,000-mile warranties have not expired can have their cars fixed at no cost. But people with cars that are older will have to pay ror the labor, Chrysler said. The No. 3 automaker said it reached its de· cision after noticing problems on company-Owned vehicles. Company officials also confirmed that some owners who complained about the problems have been paid for the parts. but declined to say how many cases there have been. CLARENCE DITLOW, DIRECTOR OF the Washington-based Center for Auto Safety, said Chrysler should be liahle for both parts and labor. S i zzli11g J o h Foundry worker pours moulton bronze from electroni c furnace into ladle at .Rockwell Internationaf's Uniontown. Pa., plant. Bronze is used to make castings for water meters. which Rockwell has made for 100 years. "It's our feeling that s ince there is a defect, Chrysler ought to pick up all the costs including the labor. " said Dillow "Chrysler has taken a ste p in the right direction But unfortunately, they should have taken two steps." Dillow said he has received more than 100 complaints about the cars ' automatic transaxle. the combination trans mission-drive axles used on front-wheel-drive cars. ()v~r l~lu• Co unt~r NASO Ustinqs HEW YORI( IAP1,C.•t1VIB JI .. J1•. H•rtfNt lf\.1 "A• t•1he1sn d ...... JA s,,_., • Ll•· 2• NASDAQ Q1JOl•1ton> '-""'"'-JI ; .JJ HtnroF l7 • JP'>. NoCArC'.\ I~ 1S' • 51\Awmi ... 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Funds E•llfr 1J lt NL upll l3 1' IS 06 Ft Id• r• • NL II 96 11... ll'ICO 1.S. f.76 Ft•lnc t.13 NL ~Fd ln-t 11 t1 IS.OJ IYftl 11 16 NL "'-(p t 11 1068 Tr1111 t.11 1003 M0<11 10.1 NL Onolh I J7 9 U Vtnl 11 St U.7• Mui« 10 01 NL "'°"' l.J9 l .OI se Eqly IS 06 IS.IS MuSlll I• ti NL $111r&oa I 66 t.4fl 58 II.Gr 1412 17.60 Mulnl II '17 NL ~I 10"4 11 '1 ~ In I• 6' 15-Jj Mu~ 10 51 NL Pljgrlrn Gfo II\ Ut 10 61 OUll 111 •I NL Pllo Fd IS.S. 16.71 nc • 1' s.12 M-o ' • 3' OJ Sowr In 14 SI IS 27 00.. II n 1.00 NL M-o In 1... UI SIN 90nd G<tt fr\ICom Pl-r Fund. Com SI s .... 21.. NI. F"'1CI 1',. 21 '3 Olv•o s 1 • 1S w.1111 11,,. NL 11 Inc 11 .. U.07 Proor1 • 71 1 ll W.lltn 101 JOSS NL ,...n Inv 14.lt NL $1Frm Gt t Sf NL IGllnel NL Pl1Qr111 1UI 11,)4 Sll"rm 81 12 AA NL HIV8nd ' IS NL Pllfrnct uts UOJ MSlrfftlM. ........ . Price ,..,,. ., bctl ., ot NL v.~ ... ~ 11 ,. NL °""'II IJ fi foll Fed! .0 II NL wa'j~ O t~ J .. =n<s. ri· ~ =t ~E~ ~,1 .. ~:1~: ~ 1N~ '=t Prl~ I .00 NL. Sllick. 11.77 NL ~ Mr11ther1 h flte to HI. Sltln$pcl 0.V.0 ... 11 =L Pro ~\llCH "ti NL ~w 1 11 ~ Nll MNT Ill' NL SMil\Tt n ·-2 ,. STOCKS I BUSINESS Tu .. .ctay' Cto.i~ Pricf'a NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS UIHUl_""_ ,,_, ... w•· Yef11 •• ..,_,,, ... ~Ill< l"tW, ........ ~lr6'1 <tll0 ''"''""•U •IO<ll. ·~·---•,-.1 ... 11-al A•-lal'9l!fl\•U1<lli.•Oule1~o"ll lMllNI TUllldl)'. Auoua119, IMO N OAJL v PILOT A I I Dow Jones Final Down 8.78 CLOSING FIGURE 939.85 Savings Bonds Ads Mislead By JOHN CUNNIFF Al"t-....ANlytt NEW YORK -"We don't feel we've been misleading ln the past," said a Treasury Department official i9 an- nouncing that U.S. Savings Bonds no longer will be prolioted as a good investment. Is that so? So it wasn't misleading lo tell people that "Savin.gs Bonds make a comfortable retfrement almost a certainty." And it wasn't misleading to assure parents that bonds would buy a college education? OR TO RECRUIT SOME OF the most successful bus1- ~essmen in the country lo encourage workers to buy Sav· mgs Bonds when, if they had any financial sense at all, those businessmen scorned bonds for themselves? Apparently it wasn 't rrusleading either to advertise that bonds paid interest of 6.S percent or 7 percent when. in order to obtain that measly rate, the buyer had to hold the bonds for 11 long years. r 'IE JJ''.S AN ,.f L YSI.~ During which time " the same federal gov e rnm e nl r an up eno rmous debts l hat helped spread an infla - tion that . at current r ates. would halve the buying power or those bonds, even after payme nt of dividends. In August 1978. when Savings Bonds were paymg 6 percent, a Treas ury official was asked to defend the pro- gr am. LC $75 were put into Savings Bonds, he responded, the owner would have $100.80 after nve years . IN REALITY, OF COURSE. THE buyer won't have $l00.80 or anything close to it in comparable dollars, a con- sequence or raging inflation. He'll be lucky if he has haJf that much in purchasing power. But Uncle Sam didn't let that dampen his enthusiasm -only his s ense of fair play. The same sort or reasoning was used in projections tbat claimed to show how you could save for retirement or the education or a child. Nothing whatever was said about the erosion of inflation An oversight? It requires great naivete to believe that a department that handles the world's biggest (inane· ing job simply forgot about inflation when making projections of school and retirement expenses . No. it wasn't a n oversight Not when the subject so consistently was left unmentioned at i tim e when infla· lion was on everyone's mind. Not when in the .. Build for the Future" brochure cu1ou"' the word was n ' l mentioned once although any projection of buying power must deal with it.· INSfEAD, THE SUGGESTION THJlOUGHOUT was that "they'll continue to increase in value," and they'll put "personal savings goals within reach," and "bere's how your dollars for education grow.'' Many people saw through the promotion and sold their bonds, some of them lo go into bank certificates that of· fered them higher annual rates for six months than the Treasury offered over an 11-year period. ~ .4111erfc.-o n Lf'odert1 1' ', 'I ..... SQiOt riont~ r rous .. .. Television -----' TONIGHT'S LATEST USTING~ .. u·-....... ~ ._ ....... _ l lt "•' Clllllltl'lt 1 110 ~~ctttllonlld If ............ OOUll*. .MAUOI Ctrol ~ IM 1 901 to --'* bQM fMf1I I.hen )Ult PfO~ It IN -"to get a promo11on .... MIUJON OOUM MAN 111¥4 r8tum 1 tr~ 111 Olllilll l .. I IWQlll IO IMtll thll ... ~· llev<t tlapeeO end '"'' .... • undiat .. r.11 '°'"-• lfTAdlA TM9' Al t.Wndy .. .,,..led ........ hletinoetPMta tit* Nin to a-•04 ,....i·~ .OU)~ lob Clllll\llt\ of1ert IOl'll ~II -'J'rM""'O tlC>A. Gll &ooi.s ~ • t>rou n .. .,, c«d. Ill'° I ' 19111119 ... ~ ano '-'"11\0 IOIMt • l'UMMll'Ge flying Higll CM1lln1 llld OOIOthy 11\fOW a W•l)flle ~1\1 el W~llaM 11111 ~y e 1111 M.,k fOlr ... Nm ... I 10 dt1nll to WMll•m and Chrl1t1n1 1 ~t 1P.,1111cc1 1'10 ~Vll'HI a .... I .,.,,.. 11\d Ghlrley 0111 tOver that C1tmlM 11 wO.kll\Q H 1 llOl~IOI lor I ~1111eri. !RI • THI 000 OOUtlL.I I ell' Q111tl Otel• In tr®l>le won the 1n1em11 ~v•nve 8ervtc. when he·• called 111 on • mtn01 matter MD. (I) c• WOV. •a ·111ancl• In The a11 .. 1n ( 111771 Geotoa (, &011. Oevl(I H.,mn1ng1 aa..o °'' 111e t\O..el by £rnell Hem1now•y An ul\IUC.OMtlul man ltOlll .. n1mM1t on • t•OOlc•' tale, Ot"Y to find !he WO<ld a.10 a wit movlflQ 1n on hlfTI 0 HecWOV. M"""'on $Clvnldt ~· tl'll 80 petcent In-- trap Cl) C81NIWI 9 MJCNIWI uo• ~MIA!< ~ tchecluleel pro- granvNr>o may be del•yed due 10 P*IOI btelkf Henry Winkler as Fonzie speaks lht! language of love to Linda Bove. a member of the National theater of the Deaf, on tonight's episode of "Happy Days" at 8 o'clock on ABC. Channel 7. • *'' "Ode TO BIHy Joe" (UU7) Olynni. OConno<. Robby &•~•on lhe romence between lwo S®t"-fn tfff'·•o•ra •• je0911d1H d by • haunlll\Q MCtll lfom the boy'• c>HI ~'~ "Aeun111ng 81<111 P•renla And Cnlld•en" HO I CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH DICl<CAWTT Gueet: Shltley W1n1et1 (Part 1of 21 G 8TUOI08EE "Lat Snow" A behind· tM-~ look at how TV Is planned. P'O<h1Ced and - t>roadcut. highlights of two ... sons ot Studios .. (!I MPV OAIFFlN 7:00 8 CU HEWS D NeCNEWS 9 KUNOFV A journey 10 • mysterlOUI • Indian burlal ground and lnlo th• l rlghtenlng recaSMI ot the human mind •walls C•ine wh8fl hi encounters a young wom- an Wl'IO has ISUped from 111 Insane asylum 8 M!CNEWS 0 Cl) JOKER'S WILD .. HOORAY FOflt HOU.YWOOO Don Adarnt. Don Ric:klll •nd Ch1118St~ H.aton atar in thlS zany r8Vl8w ot stars ano IHms lrom Cnap- lin to "Midnight CowbOy " • STAEETS OF 8AH FAANC48CO Stone searchn tor e robbe<·klller and the rere 11\d prloelau stamp that he ttole ID MACNEIL I LEHAEA AIPORT 7:06. PtCMaO Pledv-t>,.•• cont1n,.., 7:30 8 2 ON THI TOWN Taped on tocauon 1n Hawaii Connie ChunQ and Stave Edward• !revel to varlou• lalands to bring u1 a 11arlety or 1oca1 11orl" of lnl41fHt. 1nc1udlng an-8C1U· at m1tljuen• bull on Kauai. D SHANANA GUMt1· Danny and The Juniors 8 t 100.000 NAME THAT TUNE 0 OJ FACE THE MUSC fD MACNEIL I LEMMA AEP<>f'T Ui> NEW8CH£CK Cl) P .M. MAGAZINE Goat Lady of Jamul &:00 8 Cl) THl WHIT£ SHADOW Selam1 flunks a niatory tnt and II ott the team. until his instructor teacnes him lher• 1• more than OM way to ttay eliolble CAI O THE Channel Lbii ng• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA tlno) Los Angeles 0 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS} San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ind I Los Anqeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego Gt KT1V Clnd I Los Angeles • KCOP·TV (lno) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) 1_os Angeles t.tllAOVINTUM.I CJ# 8 THMl'S COMPANY IHl..wf L080 CMHy and JM:k jokingly Lobo'• dapertm•nl It handcull th1m1elvea aHlgn.O lo p101ec1 Play. 1o0ether \hen reallze they boy centertold Cendlt heve no key lo relo11t.t1 the Loving, ,.ho 11 hiding from culla (CC)(R) delln tllre11a 11 Ille Orly GJ MERV GRIFFIN Hol Spr11\g1 IRI G NOllA 9 PN80NiA: CEU. "l.lvinQ Macllmoa The 81..0CK H work and remarkable dlS· V8fl reallz.ea she mull cove11111 ot • new genera- brNk Marilyn II ah• 11 to llon ot b101og1111 called turthet ner relauonthlp nelural anglne0ta promise with Granam benellta and 11ppllco11ons yel to bo ••plored (CCI (RI 8 <1Jl HAPPY DAYS ([I) CEl.EBRfTY A IOY91y compul .. oc>lf•· ~RT tor knock• Fonzie tor A "Al Mer11no loop when 1111 tallt to 9:06 fill) ANO THEH I WROTE ... r~ to • snap of hit Wtn4 S~L OUE8~ fingers (RI SAMMY CAHN 8 MOVl£ Lyrlc11t Sammy Cahn per-*• 1.\o ··ren Llltll tnd11ns' tor ms many ot thl songs In C 10751 Oliver Reed. Elke h11 ealenarve reperto1re Som,,_ A_ga1111 Chrlltle' 1 and lhares enecdotn on au~nae novel la re-hOw 11\ey came 10 be writ· anacted u 10 geople len stranded In a Mlddte Eesl-9:30 G TAXI ern tlotel are rnethodlCally Lalka talls 1n love w11h a murdefed, one by OM (2 woman lrom Ills native hrs ) country, then learns she is GJ P.M. MAGAZINE one lhe mountain folk his Miiton Williams. caterer to llallandet people naiad (R) tne Sl•fl, "Miu Million 10:00. 0 NEWS Ootltr Leos" ol "" 192011. • 9l HART TO HART Chef Teo on herbs. Dr The Hartl' dog runs away Wasco on tetanus shot•: with the weapon used In Linda Herrla on trevellng the murder 01 a wealthy with children nelghbOf (RI ., THE Rf.8€LS Cl) NATIONAL NEWS After being Hrlously Ui> NEWSCHECI< wounded In battle, Ph1llp 10! 15 &i) Fl.AMBAAOS Kent settles down to civil-"Flying High" Chnsllna la.n Ille es • printer and • and Dorothy throw o tarnlly m•n In his new-au1prise par1y 81 Wiiiiam lound country (Part 2 ot 2) •nd S•ndy'a flat, Mark • SPEN<INO Of' LOVE forces himself to drink to Or Leo Buacagll• explOfn Wilham and Christina s TUBE TOPPERS KHJ 1J 8: oo "Ten LlttJe Indiana." Agatha Christie's c lauic murder m ystery, tra n s ported to a Middle EaMem hotel, with Ollver Reed and Elke Sommer. CBS 9 9 :00 "Is land in the Stream." George C. Scott stars in this movie version or an Ernest Hemingway novel about a man trying to isolate himself from society. NBC D 9:00 -"Ode to Billy Joe." Robby Benson and Glynnis O'Connor star in this movie inspired by the popular song. G FMI TO CHOOae "Who Pro1ect1 The Con111m.,1" Dr Miiion Friedman lo<*• •t how lhe con111mer protection mo11-1 of lhe PHI 20 yeert hu Ktuatly huf1 lhe contumer (CCI !_RI 11:00 1DG ())~ ..ws Nr#LYWEO GAME MOVIE * * '.\o "The Only Way I 1072) J1n1 Seymour. M1tla Potter Thi Nazi occupe11on of o.nmark 11 po<tr•y>ld (2 hr•) GJ TH!. 000 COUPLE Fell• chanoes h11 llnleky way• In an 11tort IO win back hi• e•-Wlle ., THE IENNY HIU SHOW There's money 1n commer- c111s end wllh Benny 1n charge there's also laugh ter and chaos 11;25 fm PRE8ENTE "Bobby Rodr1g11az. v101- n1tT1 Vlleran A loo~ al Iha p<Oblemt of a Cnic:ano Vietnam v111111an who returned lrom the war unable 10 cope w11h tam11y or SOCltlty 11:30 II (J) CANNON A Hollywood pubhc:1sl IS tramed for lhe murde< ol he< t0<me< boyfriend and cti.r>t (R) U THE8E8TOF CARSON Guests George Burns Marvin Hamhscn. 6e11 Armstrong Donald J Duck (R) U DATlNO OAME IJ ®) ABC NEWS JOHN OAP.LI NG .. HOGAH'S HEM>U Newlurk mu11 nc:ape from camp to Aid a wounded undefgroul\CI IMdlr • OETBMART MIA narrows n11 -en for the murdetw to everyone on board (Part 2) • CAPTlONEO A8C NIWI 11:&0 8 QI SOAP Thi qUMtlonl of whether "'"8ICI hu died. Letlle wlN lhool Biiiy' Joel.le wlll IOee his baby. Du1ch wlll chOoM Eunioe or Corinne, and Polly w"I marry Danny ara con1td .. eo (R) 11:55 SI CAPTIONIEO A8C N£W8 -Ml>NIGKT- 12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE A sma1111me lh1ef -o new retl&etlon ot nlmMllt In 11m1tror G) MISSlON: IMP068181.E The IMF aeta oul lo deatroy a eoun1ert11111ng ac;heme thr111en1ng the economy 01 • amall Alrlelll country a> THE OOOOIE8 Thi GoodleS go to Wala become a eenution 1n E•Sleddtod a1mo11 105'! th9tr heads to IM WelMl druids end beal Welsh rugby players 12:30 8 DA TINO GAME ti) HATIOHAL NEWS 12:40 II Cl) 8AAHASY JOHE.8 A amall-to,.,n sherlll suspects 1ha1 his youl'IQ wile may be lnvolYed In a aeries ot murdetl (RI t••~ au..te: ~ a.ldl T~ and I ~ of "" ~ of c.w.. tlan maglClane • MOYll • • • "AoObery" I 1017) Stanley Baker. Jam•• Booth A 8'1tlltl trllln 11 robbed of • fonune .,.., Mlll111t plBl'""'O by the ,,..,.. 11 ht • 55 min ) • MOYll To Be Announced. (1 hr , 35 min.) GMA~ Birt Mlpl • young woman find hit loe1 hulbMl<I and wander• Into IOtbldden territory UMd by lhe lndi· ant to buly theit dMd. • MOYll * * * * "GrMt Ei<pectl· tlont" 11047) John Mlh, Vllarle Hobaon. 8aMd Of\ the 81ory by cn.r.. Olde· - A young bOy't Ille ii deeply lnnu.nced by • Chance eric:ount• with Ill eec:aped llfi-(2 hrl .. 15mln.J • MCMI • • t;, "FrMcis In Tl'll Navy" ( 1055) Oonald O'CoMor, Julie Adema • All., Francis le IUCtlOned off he 80tYN ~. Identity ptobletn In the N~vy 11 ht . 1 30 ~TCH GAMI 1;JO NIW8 2:00 NIW8 MOVIE • •'h "The Oamblef From Natchez" ( 105 41 0 111 Robertaon, Olbrl Pagel A m111 a¥9h(181 hi• fathlt'• murder by fellow q_amblert. (2 hre.) 2=25 8 MOVIE * * '.\o ··Malk Of Mareetl•" (107t) Jamee F11en11no Christine Belford. A PflY•t~ llluttl oern•nd• 1 "coOI million" for hll rOle In IOIY· 1ng the d1aappe11ance of • l>Mvtiful '*'"' ( t nr • 55 min.) 2:a0e ..-.a 2':a61 NIM t:M NIWI a!OO e MCMI * * "God1llle" ( IO!le) ~ Butr. TMMtll SNmur• The terr0t of • rnon11.,·1 ettacll 11 wtt- neaaecl by • newsman In TOkya 11 hr. 25 min I S:15. MOYll * * * "The Phlllldelphll Story" ( 1040) K1thartne Hec>bum, J.,,,_ Stewart A young Phll•delpnl• NO ~0E3LE'M JOHN I TE LL Me:., HA\/~ YOU £VER S~EO COKE"! J l l $ woman'• "'atrl... I• ..... -~by !fie Ol!Y• _,......., (2 !VI.., 40IMl l HO. MOYll *•It "f1111n Ano••" (1'461 Allee f •. Dina ~A-W9daa wMlttly ~ lot '* mONy llO M c:an dul"C) hit 1or • ..iv.a. odf to beCOl'M tM llfWM ~ wh•n the w11tre11 11 mwdered. (2 hn.) 4:111 NIWI ... MCWtl • • "Legtol\ Of Th• Doomed" ( 1061) 8111 Wlllleme, Oewn Ak:Nrd. An Amerlc1n b.eOm.t lnYOlwd with the netf\191 wNle In the Frenc:f\ Forelgll Legion. (I hr., 30 min.) Wedaesfl•w'• Daw•l•e Me.,le• n•• **"""GMtt a-.t" (1951) e-y 8oy1. Lloyd Corrlg111. Trying to expoee a flll!e tiplrttuellst. the aoy. get llC)OOlled. (' ht.) -AFtBtHOON- 1a:oo •• ~ ''Buflelo 8111" (1844) Joel McCrM, Undl Oetnell. TM famoue hunt· er. trell guide end ~uer, WIMlem F. Cody, ~ .,, .A/Mri- c:an legend. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) • * * * "The HiOh Wall" (1048) Robert Tlytor, Audrey Totter. An ..,.. bomber pilot _,, to ptychottwr9'>)' In order to ab9olw hl"'Mll of reepon- 1 I b lllt y for hl1 wife' a rnwder. (1 hr.,50 min.) • * * "The Maa1er Of BlllantrM" (1053) ErrOI Flynn, 8Ntrlol Campbell. A young Scotsmen ~ hta country end turn1 pirate ""*' a rebel- lion In which he wu if>YOlwd f Ills. ( 1 hr.. 30 min ) 1:00. * * * "The Oc:tooer Man" (t1147) John Milts, Join Gr-wood. a.G **"BecllFrom £temny" 11•5el Aot>en Aymn. Anita Ellberg. Ill •··~ ....... The Beaau And Children" C 107 I) Blff Mumy, 8errr f\ob!na. - ~ • •.,., "8Mch Blanket Bingo" I tffS) Frankie Avalon, Anlwtte Funlcello. by Arf!t•trong & latluk the c:onc;epl of mankind' a eng~t (Plt1 7) CCCI lltnlt..., potanllll for O'"· 10:30 GJ llJ N£W8 ~--:-~-------~.i.__~~~=-=-=~--L::=:::::::::::=~~~~~~~~~~4 CD KOCE·TV (PBS) Hun11ngton Beach CBS Top Ticket Nettrork Wins Poli tical Vieioors NEW YORK (AP) -Al least three sets of ratings have been compiled for network coverage of the .Democratic National Convention, and about the only consistency Is CBS' position at the top in each case. Figures from the A.C Nielsen Co., complied over the weekend for the convention Aug. l l · 14, show CBS with 20 percent of the audience for juat over 19 hours on the air from New York's Madison Square Garden. NBC HAD A !l1mllar s hare for 19 hours , while ABC a\lracted 17 per- cent of the a udience for nine hours' coverage -excluding four hours of the network's "20-20" news magazine broadcast during the convention. ABC maintains "20-20" was an in- tegral part of its convention cov- erage, and for head-to-head coverage in prime-time, 8:30-11 p.m. <EDTl Monday, 8-11 p.m . the rest of the week, and including "20·20," CBS had 19 percent of the audience to 18 percent foT both ABC and NBC. For 8% hours of "common cov- erage," when all three network& were on the alr at the ume Umc, CBS got 20 percent of the audience to 19 for NBC and 17 for A BC Three's a Crn1ed O C Vide o Set For Emmy Show THOUGH NIELSEN provh1e11 the audience figures, the networktJ themselves Interpret them. The figures ror total and common cov erage were provided by NDC ; AH<.: &ubmitted the ratintu1 for prlmc·tlme Orange Coast Video hu been There was agreement In another Wh en .John Ritter takes Heather Lowe out on a dale, he drags Suwnm• Somers along since she's handcuffed to him and they don't huvc lht? key --on "Three's Company" toni ght at 9 on ABC, Chunn('l 7 huitwl Wolfe is the waitress. chosen by NBC to provide location area, but again the figureM differed Actress Nixed NBC Pact facilities for the 32nd annual Emmy Both NBC and ABC said more people awards show, announced Paul watched coverage of the DemocraUc Boykin, vice president/general convention than saw the Republican manager oC the mobile facilities com-, meeting In July. pany. NF.W YORK <APl Actre!ll'l NBC'a research department said Marlette llurtley tiaY!I she was or The TV industry awards presenta· 115 million viewers saw at least pert fered Q chunt•e to toke Jane Pouley'A tion will be broadcast live from the of the Democratic convention, com-Job H co·hoRt of NBC'll "'roday" Pasadena Civic Auditorium Sep(. 7 pared with an audience of about 100 rthow, bu\ turned \t down becaUAe the on local station KNBC. million for the four-day GOP session. network's new11 department wouldn't Oranae Coast Video is providina 10 ABC estimated 80 million vlewera for take her serious!~ . ._ a the Democratic convention, a 22 per-M 1 Ha 1 f t d 1 r cameras and videotape equipment cent increue over the audJence for 11 rt ey I le n or the vtt<'a • ~ortheprogram. the Republican meetinc. tlonln& Mllll Pouley In June ond ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=:....._~~~~~~t~h:e~re~w:e~r~e.....'..:re~po~!.l'U that &he would become the 1>4?rmanent co-host with Tom Brokaw to prop up the show's fntllng ratings. However , Miss a•auley returned to work after her Vll<'llllOn. In an interview published in Parade magazine, Miss Hartley said she almost quit before her three- week vacation relief stint was up. MOVIE RATINGS F.GR MRENYS AND lOUllG PEOPLE A FANTASY, A MUSICAi.. A PLACE WHERE OREA MS COME TRUE "A arnER .FILM THAN Ille ...--o111e1.eng. •lo -,,.,_ .-... •11t•OMfl' al ,,..., _ IDr -&, ""'" c.WO- (ii] AU. ~I ol\OMITllO ~ OeNr1l Awd- 4 UN1\1£1lSAl f'IC1UR£ NOW ~l /\YING ....... ,..,. ""' ~1$slon Viejo 830·8990 .......... ,. cosia Mesa ~O· 7 444 .. ._. CllllU llUT Westminster 891 ·393!> cnHW Orange 634·2~3 ""°'IC• ............ AnaM1ft\ 879·9850 '5 TAR WARS, ••• ,, -TIME MAGAZINE •H. Jr'i ,, Mt.1. I ~ ~---------"" ].It's Old Pal No Dallas Fan AKRON, Ohio <AP) -Bill Daily is one person who isn't caught up in the mystery over wbo 1bot J .R . Ewing. As Larey Hagman's former co-star lD the television show "I Dream of Jeannie," Dally spent five years with Hagman in the series durinl the 1960s. The show, which also featured Barbara Eden, baa been in syndication since produdioa was stopped. DAIL y . IN r\&aON roa the "3rd annual all- American Soap Box Derby , played Ro1er Healy to Hagman's Tony Nelson in the bitbJ.y succeuful comedy about an astronaut wbo found a female genie. "I've never watched 'Dallas,' "Dally aaid. He said he didn't know an)'thinl about the abow, that Hagman's character bad been abot in the lut episode this season or that the show bu taken the country -and parta of the world -by rue. "You're kiddinl, Larry was oo the -cover of 'Time,' " Daily said. This 'Dallas' thine la the most bizarre thins I've ever beard in my life.•· DAILY SAID HE DOESN'T watch much television, especially situation comedy. "lf It is really great, I as k myself why I'm not in it, and if it's lousy, l sit and ask myseU, 'why am I wasuna my lime watching this,' " be quipped. Still, Daily has made much of bis llvellhood through televiaion "alt·coma." After "I Dream of Jeannie," he had a run as Howard Borden in "The Bob Newhart Show." He said be makes a pUot for a possible television show each year, but oone have been purchased recenUy. Lately, most of Dally'• work bu been devoted to a play he wrote for the dinner theater circuit. "Lover's Leap" bas been playin& around the coun- try since 1978. The show opens in St. Petersburg, Fla., tonight. ........... C....,_ ctwTIA I IOUIM OOMf 1 Cotto Meto LOQvno eeocn 979-otlAI 4M·l&l4 UICOUI OIM·• U. C1111t1A 'WOOOlllDll lut!IO Potll Wtllmtl\tltl Moll C"'8IA IMne 8'1-4()70 193-0Mt &&l-095!1 llWIMH OMY Iii MOff nitNttt .... llO,__lllCCt't!O IOlllOll ...... 111 I I ENTERTAINMENT J INTERMISSION •u UA Movie~ 1714) 990·4022 WlSJll ... Slll UAC1nema 893·0546 U9'MN COW90Y (NI ~··· , ...... cam •u n •• wm•••STll UA Cinema Saddltbat~ Ht Way 39 011ve In 540·0594 S8l ·S880 (714)8913693 llAllSl C1nedome 634 2553 ....... •C- Z131U1·'510 s c ..... "".°"""' 494-151 4 SC,.._,. .. _ 494.f514 ''""'" ~u..t&I 979.9150 \tilt: ...... ..... ·-121-4070 INce ..,... • "'• ........ •IDDl• AOI curr111 ll1»11a...t:ao..i-..:a..1 ... ,,..,.. .. , ....... Of CLOll INCOUNTlll 01 TMI THllD IUND !N J 111M4 .... S1aM1•t•4s .................... rlNAl COUNTDOWN (N I I 1t41-2t4Mt4M 14M:4S-1M• ............. THI HUNTll INI l!l41-Jt»41 .. IM111-111 .. ,,. ............ <-'- '"' 1MP111 mNC11 uac ,,., ........, .......... 111»4.-.s,-...11-1.,.., ~ ........ , ....... IJM.ti~.':2..tMS Olhrle Ma-· ...... XANADU INI "" TMI NUii IOMl IN I Tueeday. Auous1 19. 1980 DAIL y PILOT A 13 Opelllng With a Bang 'Black Comedy' Staged in Laguna Bf!ach Optruna nl~ht In the thH \er 111 frau1ht with all torta of p tfalls. but few art quite 10 dlaconcert lna .. th.-•troke or Ill tuck th1t befell the Act I V t'Ompany Thurlday Mldway throua h tht' firs t pertormlllct of Peter Schaffer' "Plack Comedy" \n the La~una Beach lllih School 11udltorlum. "•lACW. COMIOV" A comtoG, I>• _, k N!tt • dltt<loll DY Mlll\ .. I M'(IWHI o<ffll< a"° llUl\11"41 0e•l\111 ., Hew••• e.11tr P•OOutH OY ....... larhl\ •• .. •"'•" by •ct IV fllu••d•v 11\r~ ~Y el t • m \<tlurdo allar rMIOll ., > » ti .... l ............ t<lljl\ "-' -llot'lllm u~ ... o .... l•-•••<11 "'"'"'"'"""ti. 1411 ."""''~· ,,_., ... ('ar.i Nlt1"41 MIU f 1;n1i.at Co~t ,,..,_ott Haro111 Gon•"il" c ... S<1111ppallllljtl , .. , can )tit .. _ t--••IVt • MtUi ffln Sull•v•n Morm•n ScPlroc:tu t 1r.1othv O-ao.°'•' S•~t•r oa.cy R•o the elevated plalfor m serving as the bedroom ga ve way with performers J eff Keane and Dolores Salazar aboard TO THEIR credit, and that of the rest of the com pany on stage, the show went on as if nothing untoward had occurred. After all, the room was supposed to be in total darkness in the comedy, during which full light on st age signifies a blackout and vice versa. The players, a group of USC g r a ds completing their first three-show summer season in Laguna before returning to Los Angeles. managed to work their way .around the ruins to deliver an enjoyable, if somewhat un· even. production. lntefmiasion Tom Titus "Black Comedy" Is a direc- tor 's show, and Micha~J Michetti hall mounted an offering that ca p i t a lizes o n S haffe r 's mar velous comic ingenuity. The slapstick possibilities of a haJf- dozen people stumbling around in the dark while conducting as· sorted Intrigues and deceptions are weU met by Michetti's am· bilious but largely unpolished cast KEA.NE, IN THE central role or the young scuJptor who sets up most of the deception, is the best of the troupe , working feverishly at the hilarious busi· ness or replacing his ''bor· rowed" furniture while its owner babbles on, una ware. in the blackness. Frances Mills plays his fiancee precisely as written -overly cute and irritatingly shrill. E rin Sullivan nicely interprets the dour old maid, who gets her firsl taste of Demon Rum, over- coming the problem or youth. Norm a n Sch rod er is th e personification of Robert Morley as Miss Mills' stuffy. military· minded father, but could be a touch stronger. Less effective are Timothy Dang as Keane's limp-wristed neighbor and Miss Salazar as his old. and unquenched, flame. Both could put a bit more bile into their interpretations without overdoinJZ it. Darcy Rice as the Sho1mna11 of Year fore ign·born power company mun is engaging in minor duty "BLACK COMEDY" is the final link in the chain of three shows by the newly formed Act IV players (the others were "The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell or the Crowd" and "Wait Until Dark"). Although att endance has been sparse, the t roupe has taken a foothold on the Orange Coast and , hopefully. will build its following next s um· mer . Performances of the short·but sweet "Black Comedy" continue Thursday through Sunday's clos· ing night at 8 p.m. with a 2 :30 matinee Saturday in t he auditor ium of Laguna Beach Hig h S~hool. 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. • CASTING HAS been an· nounced for the Westmmster Commwlity Theater's next pro· du ction , the Japanese d rama "Rashomon," which opens Sept. 5 for a fi ve.weekend run under t he d irection of Art Winslow. Heading the cast are William Ghent as lhe bandit, Mary Ben· ton a s the wife and Marc LeBlanc as the husband. Others in t he Westminster company are Bob McLoughlin, Steve Chakos. Bill Malkin, Wayne Mayberry, Flor en ce Ehl ers and Tis ha Huntley. Pe rformances of · • Rashomon' · will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Oct 4 at the theater , 7272 Maple St., Westminster. Advance reser va- tions are being taken at 893-8626. Martial Arts Mogul Hailed LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hong Kong movie· m aker Raymond Chow, credited with introduc- ing the public to the genre of martial arts films, has been given the "International Showman of Ute Year" award by the National Associatioq of Theater Owners. Chow, president of Golden Harvest Produc- tions, is best known for the movie "Enter the Dragon" starring Bruce Lee, and completed a series of martial arts films with Lee and Jackie Chan. Stars Take Their Talents on Road NEW YORK (AP) -The big names of Hollywood have taken to little theaters across the nation thia summer for performances in repertory companies and traveling shows. The Theater Festival in Williamstown. Mass .• boasts a slate or plays featuring Frank Langella as Cyrano de Bergerac, Richard Dreyfuss in "Whose Lile Is It Anyway?" and Christopher Reeve in "The Front Page." Meanwhile, Joe Namath. the pro quarterback turned actor. has been cast as Ll'I Abner in a tra veling show or the same name. According to the current Issue of People magazine, Namath, who does not have a steady girlfriend, wishes he had a Daisy Mae -Ll'l Abner's sweetheart -in his real life. "It would be great to find a lady who feels the way Daisy Mae does about Abner, but knowing me. it'll be difficult," Namath said. The martial arts films have been "one of the most lucrative film genres," s aid association President A. Alan Friedderg, noting "Enter the Dragon," has grossed $100 million worldwide. This year Chow turned to adventure films and produced "Cannon ball Run," starring_ Burt Reynolds and Farr.ah F awcett, and "Death Hunt," starring Charles Bronson, Lee Mar vine·and Angie Dickinson. The award will be presented at the associa· tion 's annual convention in New Orleans on Oct. 22. The association represents 8,000 movie theaters \n the United States. Between strangers everything is po1511>le. CLAIR DE FEMME YVI-'S MONTANO ROMY SCHNflDER \flt" ., COSTA.CAVJWi ALSO-IETWEDI SHOWINGS Every Saturday Night At 9 PM THE PORT THEATRE Wiii Proudly Present Opera & Broadway Musical Tenor JIM MARSHALL ~OPH!~TIC4TED PROORAMMINO .. "AIRPLANE" .,., I "XANADU .. (PO) r-====::i I ... ILUES BROTHERS" Ill IMOllY & THI ....., rMTRINI B~ulilul ~IBrBo Ma~i{!­ NBw~ Marine Wealh 12r- ~loek Markel Reporl~ Con~umer Reporl~ 1!9J~ NOW PlAYING OWAllOI' lllllTOl 5.tnu AM S40 744' lDWAllOI' llUllTlllOTOll Hunbngtoft &Nth ... O:u& IOUlll COAST lotgun~ 8 ... t h 494 I~ 14 STdlUM OAIWl·1• Otanqt 639 8710 CllllDOMf OtanQi! 6.J.t 2~'.IJ .... ·1 uun.ua 8ru ~29 ~339 LOWHOI' YtfJO TWI• t.l 1U>OI\ Yll)O 830 6990 llt·WU JI Olllfl·lll WtSt""nster 891·3693 •KUUICC4PfU r•, ... ..,....., NOW PLAYING IO'•IAROS CINllO WlSl Iii tllllM& MISSIOM DIUYl·I• It ,. 'I • ( r\~ ~!"U ~40 0)94 • • ·,.. ' I " 1 ~ I ' PAClllCS NICUH INUIRI IOWIROS U OOUIACK SU OIUM ORIYl·IN I .. .-•ir t f.o •• , ~J °'•''Vt ~J!I ~110 .. "•UU cctHll t• l•J OC ... t llltn * edwards cinemas WHERE THE BEST PICTURES PLAY -lf:OOU ,.,.. ........ l'\,in(O) -· lllOOlllSTlaC I ''THE HUNTER" ,LUl(l'O) "FINAL COUNTDOWN" "AIRPLANE" OAIU 1 0 l >ti. • U Cl'OI 7 .... -.•0JS "FAME" I . I '1 'l'laree's a Croted Travis Pedroza, 9 months, right, shows his displeasure with the seating arrange- ments in bis stroller after his,., mother. Karen Pedroza, of lndianapalls, picked up two visiting tots at the Incfiana State Fair recently. I ~ Recycled C' ' 1.abel for '.)Oil Eyed t WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The Federal Trade 1 Commission is propos- ing that sellers of re· • refined oil call their prod- , uct "recycled" rather titan "used" oil. The conunWlion said it is respondina to a peti· lion from the Associa- tion of Petroleum Re· Refiners, whose oil is primarily used i n automobiles. The as- sociation said the phrase "made from used oil " which appears on 1at>e'1s of r e-refined oil, makes the lubricant seem in- ferior. t . - The commission said the phrase "recycled oil product" adequately in· forms eemtua•N U.at the oil hu been uaed before. I r The FI'C is asking for public comm e nt s throup Sept. 18. The rule would take effect 30 days later unless com- ments persuade the com· mission otherwise. Ad Claims Jfit~awn WASHINGTON CAP)- A oompany that ad· vertiaed bodybuilding courses in comic books has agreed to stop say- ing the course would "double or triple your 1tren1th in record time." Universal Bodybuild- ing Inc. of Redford, Mich., signed a consent order with the Federal I, Trade Commission , a1reein1 not to make unsupported claims in the future, the FTC said. • I Another claim ques- tioned by the FTC was .. F atT Fat wtll dlsap· • pear -r eplaced by IJ!USclea." Pbotoeraphs OIJ muscular men were "f minent In the ads. Irvine Man Commissioned ,Navy Enaip John ff. Mercer, IOD of Charles W. and Virginla Mercer of 94 Bockview Drive, Irvine, bu been com· I miuloned an emien in tlM Naval Reserve upon I . completing the 1round ... 1 school traininC pbaae at l ' • -t1ae Naval Aviation f ~ ScbooJ, Pensacola, Fl•. I :ff~. a traduate of , Owtet LUU.en School1 7IO Vlctorlei Co.ti Mete. ldmlta 1tUdent1 of any 'tlCe, color, n1tlonal 1nd = origin to all the ' prTwll9991, pro· orang and actlwltlH ....,_.., accorded or llldl .-.1able to ttu· ......... IChool, It dDea not .-..en"""* on .. bllll ol rece. color. ""1on11 and e thnic ~ In _,..nilllr•lon of Ila educetlonal ....... ldlOlarahlp Ind ...._ progr1m1, •nd Mt•IO Md OU.~ "'~ •• ~ .... ,ttf'tl Gila Bend Takes Heat And Business Thrives G ILA RE ND, Arli I AP> Televl1 on wuthermen often gav e Gila 84-nd th bualne. 1 about being cme of the nallon '~ hottest com munlll , but 1mme loc 1&I merchants a&y that 'll &ood for buslncH TemJ)eratur~li jlcnerally range over 90 dur na every month of the year and ln Aul.lust , the average dal· I)' hl"h I• 107 1'hf're's so little ra m that the otnclw town ram gauge is often covered wllh cobwe bs. "SURE, IT GETS hot here," said Biii Henry. a resident for 30 years a nd owner of an automobile radiator shop "Business has been good. .. Our reputation as the hottest place has been good advertising, .. he said "But tt hasn't been as hot as it used to be I reme mber a lot of con- secuti v,e 120-degree days, but not anymore " Gila Bend. a town of about l,700 located midway between Tucson and Yuma OJ\ Interstate 8. has taken more than its share of ridicule over the years. "I've got calls rrom people around the country who say, 'My God. how can you people live down there"!" said H.K. Conrad, a police dispatcher who documents the official dally tem. perature for the National Weather Service. EAqt DAY AT 4 p.m., Conrad walks out the back door of the tiny police station to a small, white box and reads the mercury. Then he checks a rain gauge, which on a recent day was bone dry and covered with cobwebs. "I know there ain't no use In doing this, but it's part of the job," he said. On Sunday, the high was 108 and the low was 68. Ken Crockett, a bank manager, moved to Gi la Bend eight months ago and immediately was made presi· dent of the. Gila Bend Cbam~r of Commerce. "I TWNK BASICALL V, people het e ignore the town's reputation of being the nation's hottest place," Crockett said . "It's the people who make the town. I enjoy going to the post office and knowing everyone there." Crockett's father recently visited Gila Bend. A s mile formed on Crockett's lips as he recalled the visit. ··My father's fan belt broke while he was here," he said. Syinbol Is Owl Right MARLTON. N.J. (AP) -R obert Schell believes that Americans would give more of a hoot about America if t he national symbol were an owl. So he Is proposing that Patriotic W. Owl -a six ·foot bird costume done up in white, black, red and yellow -be adopted as garb for a national mascot. "We're not trying to unseat the American eagle," said Schell. a postman. "But we think t.}lat America in the 1980s needs a n ew philosophicaJ approach to dealing with foreign countries. And the owl's S AVE TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS ON YOl 'R PALl PERlvlANENT WAVE • R<:gul:trl\' sc,5. 1111" S-40, our pt 1111.111l 111 w:n l.' t'\ L'll induc.ks ha1n •11 ...,. 1 r1 rlw '-l'.1'-tln \\llh :1 new -.h.1111p11u. l 1111d11111111n~ .111d 11ni..h for J 1111.111\ llt''' 11;11h. rl1;11 "1m 'c will, n<:t'd' fl•,"'<-' '·" t'' lmH· .111d l.tM!:>. For all .11'11• •11111111·111 • tll I l.111 work~ (-1 11 ·.:;·J I.! 11 l \I 2C>0 B~ llOC~5 WI l)~ I Rb · just the thing." NEWPORT BEACH 83 Fashion Island 759-1211. "You talce the owl. It Mon -Thurs F11 10 9 fulls Wed Sat to 6. Sun 12 · 5 s its up in a tree r;::=:==. __ -=- peacefully until a ro-( ) dent, a varmint, passes I.. '1. llOH> by. Then it attacks. But :::::=======::::::: what does it do then? It ( · ) goes back into the tree.Ji\CI( AN UER:-\01' That's wisdom." Informs and Reveals Warn ing : The Surgeon General Has Determin ed That Cigarette Smoking Is Dan gerous to Your Health. ·. r leklaas i'aees Unknown Foe Compete• Against Unborn Future Generations ., .. UISN ----AK&ON, Olalo -.la~lll ~=-.r::.: ......................... ......................... wUI ..., .. all .. ~ ........ H • COMPSTING ..... • • .. wteo. u yet. may .. ..... Mm ban. u .. wtntably t.be ....... glayer ol Ida dine and bo&dlr ol • reeord U..t la)"I ... ii tM sreaa.t of all time. Nick.la• DOW Al competlq a1aiDlt the unborn 1eneratlona of tbe ruture. 1 -· And Nicklaus will lOH that fipt. Perhaps not in bis lifetime.. "But I can malle lt very, very dilftcult. And that'• what I'm trJUal to do. l want to win u maay .,.... u poeeible." Ho alreedy bu won more· tJau ....,... tbouebt WU poul· ble. Ill NCCll'd ii ao far beyond Uaat of any other man who baa played tbe came that it la dif. ftcult to malle compariaooa. He bu won 17 major pro- f eaalonal cbamplombipe, plus two naUonal amateur tltlea. "ALL I CAN DO ii make Prior to Nicklaus, Walter Ha.en those l'9COl'dl u dllftcult to beat held tbe reeord for major pro u I can. titles with U . Bob Jones won 13 "But they'll be beaten. tournameatl, lnclud.lng a total of Sometime. By somebody." alx U.S. and Britilb Amateun, He paUMd Just a moment. 1 that w_..ccmaldered majon. "I can't m.alle them lmpaeai· ble to bnall." SOME OIREB leading totals A smile IOfteDed the lroa de-from the Mastera, U.S. and termination behind the cold Britlab Opena and the PGA : blue eyes. Ben Hotan nine, Gary Player JACK NACKL.AU8 SCANS A F.-.&AR SITUATION. Twins Roll Orioles, Yankees Next for Ange/,s • BLOOMINGTON, Kinn. <AP) 1-Tbe lltrmeMta TwiDI made bud won ol an N triumph over tbe ADllll Monda)'. but naeetbe- ... came away with their third ltrailllt Yldory ~ a ,...., Uaat ptrMpe tbere ii aometblq 1« to "-aalvaied from a pn- dom1ulltly dilmal HUOD. ''Wben a team ii u far out ctf 1ccmt.adan u ours ll, it'1 lmpoa · tut to bave sometbtn1 to miYe fol'.'' 1aid reli•••r Dou1 Qora..ut, who -tbe ftul out wtUa die ...... lollded to nail down the victory for Fernando AttoJo. month, aCONCI 22 nau in tbe final three cam• .,atnat tbe An••ll to map a ....... bttUq alump . Ron Jackloa and JOH MoraMI eacb bad three blta, wblle .Jolla Ca1tlno and Bombo Rivera alammed home nmt to hlOtlllM a 15·b.lt attack a•alut tbne California pltebert. ''TUY VBUAUY eat UI up," said M•nneeota maaqer 0.. llaucb of tbe Anlell. "We fomd our lbare ol Ides toda)' wttla lea• tban autllorttativo •"'8P. but you have to pt that c.ee la • wblle." In the first lDDln1, Cuttno tripled and tbeD leond ..... llorU.. tripled off tbe ~ of rilbt·fteldet Dan l"iiii, • )eared a little run·•by ... neared tbe fClu1 DOie. P.te llwlnfn·tOuowocl dla a routine ......_. to abort. bllt Bert Ca ........... eJeeWd to 10 to llnt .... -tM ~. ndllr GU~~­..... nr'1....._to._. u..-r....•.-..nm. 11 ..... a __.for .... man tll the lomtla. Rinn tlDd 0 ................ .... ··~~ .,, ..... 99 .. .. ~-;. --c.::r. :::a ...... nr.:r. ~ ~1'1 ........... .. ............. ~c.w .• bd Md 0. raH'aaw--.trc ....... r.d ............ .. lwttM1811a ...... ....., Orte•da .. 1 ...... tlle ... ' fta&lrm. nine, Arnold Palmer aeveo, Gene Sarasen seven, Sam Snead sevell, Byron Nellon ftve, Lee TreYiDo five. Nicklaus bu won more than Hogan and Snead combined; more than Palmer and Player combined; more than Trevino and Tom Watson and Hale Irwin and Seve Ballesteros and Tom Welakopf and Johnny Miller combloed. It'• u ii he'd bit more bome runa than Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig combined: 1,207. Perhaps, someday, someone will bit l,208 home runs. Perhaps, someday, someone wlll win l8 major profeaaloaal golf titles. It ls not an unfair com· parison. IT IS UNFAlll only in that the records of Ruth and Gehrig are complete. Nicklaus' is not. At aae 40, be bas a keen eye on the future, on future triumphs, on an expansion of bis record. He bas macle com· ments that indicate be plans to compete well into the mid·'80I, perhaps beyond. And th1a is from a m·an who, only a couple of months ago, bad been written off u a baa· been., an over-the-bill relic, a thing of tongue-clucking pity, a once-proud champion now at the end of the strtn1. a. former. great v~ a~mptin1 to re- captllre the glory of a )'OUlb that was gone. At times it was embarassing. Nicklaus was a non-winner few two long yean. The ne1atives mounted at an inflationary nte. He didn't ma.ke the Ryder Cup team. He didn't qualify for the Tournament of Champion.a. He dido 't qualify for tbe World Series of Golf. Hla money- winninp were tbe lowest of bia career. It wu the lowest of this and the poorest of that, a failure to qualify here, not IOOd enouab to make tbe lle1cl there. · EVEN NICKLAUS re· cognired that be may be at the end. He talked o~enly. ud publldJ ol tM ...... _ of ,.. tlremeat tt la1a ....,.,_...,. didn't l~erove. His eolftng obituary WU writ· ten and rewritten. But tbrouab it all, throulb thoee two loal. lean years, t&e man who must rant with the moat accomplished figures in the bi.story of all sports stayed at it. He brou1bt to bear everything be bad: intellllmee, skill, maturity, experience and- most importantly-desire. He analysed bis game, iaolat· ed the faulta and worked to cor· rect them. Be found a flaw in his •wtnc and 1P1Dt two yean working it out. He went back to bla long-time teacher. Jack Grout. He sought new help from veteran pro Pbil Rodgers, who helped him develop a abort 1azu he'd never had before. REWOUEDATn. He worked harder than he'd ever worked before. He rearranged bis schedule. And be rearranged bis priorities. "Before, I'd go to the office (Golden Bear, Inc., to loot after bis myriad business interest) and then IO to the goltcoune if I bad the time left over and the de- alre. "All of a sudden, golf was fun again. I wanted to play golf. It was exciting. There was a challenge. I bad something to wort oo, something to try to achieve. "I started going to the golf course and then. ii there was I ean't •ake 11te111 f•posnfJle to break. But I ean •ake ii 1'erff. eery dftlfeult. time left over, I'd go to the of· flee." He cut hi8 schedule to a dozen tournaments a year. "I was second-guessed about that. I second·guesseci myself," be said. · But, as there always ls in the plans ol this methodical, patient man, there wai a reason for it. "THERE WAS NOTHING left for me to prove in the week·to- weet tournaments," he said. "I couldn't get up, eet excited, for the routine tournament. I found mnelf IOinl tbrou&h the mo- tions. ' "You can't play golf that way. "I like golf. I like to play. I like the competition. And on the 1cbedule I WU on, I WU near· lng the end. On that schedule, I dido 't have much time left. "So I cut back. "== I'm playtnc four · -the Kut.en, U.S. and British Opens and the PG A and a few others to get ready for thoeefour." u a11 pldcl o11 at u.. u.a. o,.. laa.llUlrol.Mdr•-----a record seore. t-waa ·one of the great comeback.a in the history of aporta. And Nicklaus toolll a lODI· range view of it. "Penoaal.ly, it's very pleu- ing. But it's also good for golf. It adda adtement to the 1ame. It'a load for reeorda to be tied and broken. Think of all the ex· citement there was when Maris was closing in on Ruth's reco~ (of 60 home runs in one season), when Aaron wu cloainl 1n on Rutb11total(ol714 career home runs);"' And, of course, he was right. Nicklaus' winni.Dg added (See NICKLAUS, Pa1e 83) ts •• Meanwhile, Arnie Gets Rare Will EDMONTON, Alberta <AP> - For golf legend Arnold Palmer, life begins again at 50. After winning bis first tourna· ment in five years on S"unday, be is looking ahead to other challenges. . "It was great to win, fantutic, but that's not to mean if I don't win every week I'll be unhap- py," be said after bis triump'b in the Canadian Professional Golfers' Association cbam· plonship. "Winning isn't all there is in life." Despite bis five-year drought, Palmer says be bas elljoyed the eame and bas no intention of leaving it for a long time. "alGllT NOW I enjoy working with both myself (joggine) ·and my golf game. I'd sooner do that than sit around a bar room and drink." And be isn't letting any grass grow under his feet. This week -he's off again -to Berlin for the German Open. Palmer recalled that before he had bis fll'St tournament -victory -the Canadian open in Toronto in August, 1955, almost 2S years ago to the day of his Edmonton triumph -some critics said he would not last a year in the game. "Some old drug-store pros, guys who bad been around; were quoted in newspapers as saying that with my swing, with my rough shot approach, I'd never make ltoa ~tour. "l'VE REMEMBERED that these last few years when 1 haven't been winning, I kept re minding myself that I wasn'tsup posed to last a year. And I remem· bered that today. This one is im· portant to me. It's 2S years anc I'm still around.•• · Written off as over the bill b) mo s t expe rts, Palm e1 scrambled to a one-stroke vie tory over Japan's Isao Aokl alter losing all but a shot of i commanding four-stroke lea< with a double hoaey late in Suo day's final round. He said his troubles were i combination of being "rusty' and hi8 life-long inability to pJa: ecmMrftU'N -"· "l....,leu't,"M...._'~ know I lbould have tried tA move the ahota to the side ol tJJ. greens a little bit and use a littl• leu club. But I bad to 10 for &bi bole." Looking back again, be said: "When you've played golf a: long as I have (26 years on th1 tour) and peopl~ start bittinf you with 'Do you t.b1ok you'l ever win again?' ... well, yee you do start wondering if yo. will. Brett As Busy Off the Field As at Plate ARLINGTON, Texas CAP) - George Brett isn't answering the phone in bis hotel room any more. "I bad calla today from South Carolina, South Dakota, California, you name it," the bot-bitting Kansas City third baseman said. "They all say the same thing. Do I have time to talk wttb them a few minutes for a story? I told them, 'No. I don't. Come to the park and I'll talk to you.' To be boneat, I've been upeet a few times becauae I haven't been able to have any privacy in the locker room before OI' after tbe 1ame." Kan1u City llana,er Jim Frey aaya the 1warm ol writers who delcend upon Brett -lite the dosm or more wbo besieged him after the Royals' 8-3 victory over Texu Monday Di1ht - doesn't 1urprlae him a blt. "Wbo elae would you ~ with, when you've sot a man bit· tl.n1 over .400 and 1eWnc two or ..lhr:ee.h1tl eveey.Jlipt?-He!e bav, ins a tremencloul year,.. Frey laid. Brett ltna1ed bil ftnt thne times up and lcored eacb time to te1 tbe Royall' sixth atr..._t victory and pad tbelr lead ln the American Lea•ue Weat to 14~··amel· a...-. 1-for.s m1bt ~ b1a club record h.ltUna a to IO IUIMI, OM abort of lllD· aoaota •a Ito a Laadreaeaa't streak earlier In tbe HUGIL It allo JUbed 1lil battiftl •venae to .... OYer tbe put JO 1a.mea, Brett la blWal .41T wltb l'I tdtl, .,.. ......... Tlae 1Mt time a major ...... aHraced .400 or more ta a 1euon wu llU. "111 teaq1maw are (MllUaa ,.. ... ..., ...... Mti,uj l'm ...... 1117nartopte.., bit I~ It lt'a not *•use ot tbe 1troat or the avera1e. Tbere~....,.. preuuro _..._ ( ... 8'Jl\',Pqe U) , A c.,1 .... R1111ft ''°"'IM Wottd of apo"• Soviet "port Publication Ripa It& Bask tball T am ,,.•AP .. akMe M08COW The Soritt Un"-''• ma\n 1por\.t m dally Md t.he mn'1 blahtball t .. m to ta1k Mon day for tamn1 to do better than win • bc:cmlt tl\'411 at \M Marco S\llftmet' G•m• The cnUd1m ln Soviet Sport WU In eontratt to tfM dilly dltl ot u tr1v111nt pralae and Hll·con1ratulatloftl on lhe Soviet Unlon'• producUon ot lM Olympk• lhat tM R1&11lan media hu been aervln1 alnt-t the Oam .. ended AUi 4 "We wen falr ln boplna that ou.r men'• baaketballen would win iiold medal•." the paper aald In an article by Coach Ser1el Buhkln 811t tt\e Ruutaoa loel Lo lh• 1tron1 Yu&oelava. who came In flrat. •nd Lo lh• ltallana. who won silver "In the op\nlon of 1peclaU1ta. ou r team played alJnUicantly below ll3 real potential. b11ln1 lta 1ame ln1uffl rfentl)'. by mudf'rn tandard1. on lhe movement.I of the tall centel'I Either lt wa1 UM tnepl leaderahtp of th• ltam. or It wa• overconfidence Pot1lbly It wa1 both. In addition. th• team's aame wa1 too nervous." -----,,_,,. ol •lw Da11 ------, · · t rif(urc we· r~ on the way to the Su pet' Bowl," MlnneS-Otu wide receiver Ahmad R1thad after the Vlk lng11 defeated San Dleao '27 17 In their first NFL pr•· 1e1t11on same. 4'rlttlP# ,,,,..p l 'p OH '1111kc•t•11 M'lfh , ..... Al Bumbry, ltlch Dauer and Maril Betaacer • drovt In two runs apiece and Baltimore held o(f an ehthth Inning rally to Mcore a 6·~ vlctory over the Nt'w York Yankees Monday nJght In American League ba:Jeball action. The victory moved the Orioles to within 2\.IJ games of the Yankees In the Eaatern Dlvlalon with 51 528 m attendance , Geor1e Brett conllnued his torrid hitting. stretchlntt his consecutlve·aamt streak to 30 with / three sin1tles In fi ve at·bats as Kansas City defeated Texas, 6·-:4. Brett's averaae soared-to .404. Jo"ormer Cotla Mesa Hlch ond Orange Coaft Colle1e star. Da• Qul1enMny, picked up hls 26th save oC the 1eason tU.rht·hander Lea Barller hurled 1.1 thrce·hltter and posted a career· hlJ(h 12 strikt'Ouls a.s Cleveland beat the Chil'ntto White Solt 4·2 In the nrst 1ame of n double-header. Ke'VlD ~u·a thtff·run homer In the niRhtnp gave the Wh ite Solt " "r.2 \•ictory nnd a split o( the twin·bUI uuH0111 Gorm1n Thomu ~lted a bases· loadti d homt>r und Ben 01llvle added a solo shot as Milwaukee defeated DNrolt, 12·~ with the aid of three Ti1er nrors ... Tl'd Simmons had four hit.s. lncludlnt two home runs . as St. Louis buril'd Cincmnall. 1().1, in National League action. The Jtllffil' W8!'1 C'a\\ed fa\l0'6in& I Stt<>nd rain de\a,y after 6~ Innings It "as Ult> ooly Nallonal u1gue game scheduled -------..... ,...,. T•li•• -------. On this date m baseball m 1..95'1 Hor•~ Stooeb.am ~ that the board oC dittc· tors ol the Ne•· York Gtaats bad voted t-1 in favcr at movi.nc the team to San f'Jmdsco. nw lone "no" vote was easy by M. Donald Grant, wbo would later become board chairman of the New York Mets. On this date in 1951 ; : Eddie Gaedel -all lbree feet, seven inches of him - pinch hit and walked for maverick owner Bill Veeek's St. Louis Browns in a 6·210$5 to Detroit. On this date in 1903: The Philadelphia Phillies were rained out for the 10th consecutive day ... a major league record. Today's Birthdays Former New York Yankee infielder Bobby Richardson is 45. St. Louis Cardinals infielder Mike Phillips is 30. ftfu1111 Cau Gra.,elk-., .Sl.r Otlwn · Tbe U>6 Angeles Rams cut veteran offensive EiJ tackle Gordon Gravelle and six other players Mon-• 9 • day and put two players on lhe injured reserve list. Gravelle a seven.year National Football ~iue veteran waived by the New York Giants and signed by tbe Rams last year. started three 1ames for Los Angeles last seuon becaute of injuries to regulan. . . Tbe Rams alao cut aix free aaenll, includ.ina veteran linebacker Stewart O'Dell. Rookies dropped were wide re-ceiver Kurt Sohn of Fordham and Wyatt Henderson of Fresno State. runninR back Stanley How~ll of 111.asluippi State, place-kicker Kevin Shea ol St. Mary s and punter Ken Hartley ol Catawba. Rookie offensive tackle Bob Gruber, a loth round draft pick out ol Pittsburgh, and rookie wide receiver G~1e Farmer. a ninth round choice from Southern Unlvennty. were placed on the Injured reserve list. i Boyd (,'fleeb Ou• of Snutlaern Cnl LOS t\,NGELES -Bob Boyd, who bad served m as 111oclate athletic director at Southern Cal 1lnce re1l1nln1 as basketball coach Jut year, announced Monday he was leaving the university to enter prlvat.e business . Boyd who quit the coachinc job In March of 1979 alter 13 years at the Trojans' helm, said he wu 1oin1 lnto the. real estate bullnesa. Ke had a 216-131 overall record u Southern Cal basketball coach. lncludint a 20-9 mark bis final year. ('nrd1f G H .'Jaw dat• 1\x f'allbag 1• Oalbone, fired u aeneral man.a1er of • the stumblinl St. Louis Cardinali after 22 months on the job saya he saw it comtns. "Al you look back al ~ fact the team is doinl poorly and tbe club ls losing pretty bl& sums of money,. you can see the sips " Claiborne said. "My only sadness 11 that I failed to i.el a 1pennanUorJ.he St..Lo.uia {an.a '' ---ln.anotber._wa_ve ol penalties a1ainst the Univentty ot Oregon, three fo<>tball players tncludint the backup quarterback, w~re declared lll· eligible 'to play lhe upcominl seuon. Sopb QB, AIMlrew Pal,., 1Lartinl wide receiver Rlds Wa... and Junaor backup de· fenaive tackle Gerald 8a)'lte9 were auapended for acceptinc free airline Ucketa . . . Weli.rwetpt hlar aa, IMurd 1houldn't have to pay Canadian taxe• oo t&e 13.5 mllllon he earned for fiahUn..LJl•berH_D9fU.Jn ~o.rl!I. utle ~ JunJ 20 nfa lawyers araueOMOnCJay. Tb•Y clalm tneQue I!"b. nue department \saued a written ru1inC prior \0 tu •-, t exemptlnc Leonard from provincial tu•· Canadian otnd~ are claimint more than a mlllloo ln taxes from Leonard • take ol $3.5 mUUon . . • Joclleey PMI Greve became th• IOtb rider ln raclnl blatory to record 2,SOO caner wiDI wben he won the elabth race at Tlmonham ... Wltll two rac• '°be 1a1led i.,.. ......,, of Plymou&b, llua. appean tbe likely wlnntr ol the World Women'• SalllD• Cba'if;bll> at Cooenha1en, Deomark. Jewell, 1a1Uq a Luer Y• l• a tolld leader arter live racea . !' ................ .. n: No~ acheclullcl. • UDIO: 8uebaU -t>oqen 11t MClldrlil. •:• ..... liUBC (19) ~ BalUmote at A.nc•. t :• p .m ., KKfC (Tiil. , Turner's Troubles <A>ntinue NEWPORT. IU. (AP> -Ted Turner and hl• trouble·placued Coun1eoua crtlw Ump lnLo f\tlal tn•l• today wlth the wort\ rte· ord •o far of the three U.S. ya chh vytna to defend tbe Amerla'a Cup On Moncht)', Coura1eou1'1 bow •, wH damaaed in• collision with RuaHll Lonll'• Clipper durin1 a praf'tlce se111lon. The mishap wa 1 only lhe latest for Cour6l(lec>UJ th.18 summer. "WE HAVE HAD all the bad luck but the vtbea are Jood now We're 1oln1 out there to do the very beat we can." Tumer aald llun: officials saJd he would be \he odd man out today when trlal11 be(lln. givina him Ume to repair the damage. Turner . the America's Cup de· ft•rHJt>r in 1977, has a record of 11lx wins Wld 20 losses. San Diego skipper Dennis Con· ncr ond foreedom were leadlng t "" \J.S. field with a 31 ·2 record while Clipper stood at 8·23 going Into rlnal trials under the eye of thc.i 11!'>00sorlng New York Yacht (;luh. The four foreign challenge <'ttndidutes tod1:1y continue their sem I final tx-st-0f·seven series off Newport. The favored ya cht Australia be at Sweden's Sverige Monday bv 2 minutes 59 seconds. and Frttn<'e 3 defeated England's Lionheart by l :36 in moderate 10 knot winds on Rhode Island Sound. THE SCORECARD so far reads Australia 2·0. France 2· l: L1onheart 1 ·2. and Sverige 0·2. The two victors will meet in a best -of-seven ser ies starting ' Au((. 29 to decide which yacht will try to break the U.S. grip on sailing's most coveted prize. The defender and challenger will meet in a best·of-seven ·series beginning Sept. 16. Turner . who complained last mont h that Conner·s crew had more prartice time and better suils. has had some bad luck si nce defe nder competition began in mid·June. During July obser vation trials on Rhode lsland Sound, the six· year.old Courageous cracked a boom . then broke a mast a few days later. Last week, Clipper hit Courageous' stern during a practice start. bending the mast and rendering it useless. C lipper agreed to allow Turner use of the 12·meter's spare mast. but the Courageous crew had only two days to tune the s par before the start of final trials. BUSY ..• me putting added pressure on myself," Brett said. "I'm doing everything I can because l want Kansas City to have the best record in baseball. That's lhe incentive I have. I want to win lhe World Series and walk down lhe street wearin1 a big diamond ring with green emeralds in it," Brett said. Brett aingled an~ scored . on Darrell Porter's double to 11ve Kansu City the lead in lbe fU"St innina. In the third, Hal McRae doubled, Brett sintled, and Porter's sacrifice fly boosted KC 's lead. -Willie Ailcem' 14lh homer made it 4-0 and doomed Ed Flperoa to his fourth loas in as many appearances since Tex· as obtained him from the Yankees this summer. McRae and Brett singled in the fourth, and Aikens delivered a two-run single off knuckleball reliever Charlie Housh that wrapped up the Royall' scortna for the evenlnl. Rich Gale, 12·7, had a three· hit shutout 1oln1 into the sixth, but Mickey Rivera walked and Buddy BelJ homered. Pat Put· nam added a solo blaat in the seventh for the Ran1er1. Gale, who had late relief help from Jeff Twltty and Dan Qulsen· berry, picked up his 26th save. Safety Course For U-unters A bunt.er'• safety course will be held Aue . 23 at Linc Raahau1e'1 Pbeuant Hunttnc Club in nearby Corona. Tb• courae II under the dlrecUoll ol California lice Hd aafety tnltrQ"'4f'rlb proVlcJ .. llioM who are in...,.ested lD bec:omlq shooten an opportunitJ to net only learn bow toaboOt ud handle • IUD for aalety. but allo lDcl.._.· in the m&&ne la •\rip .._to tbe fteld where Uve IUdl are nleaHd '* tboa• partlclpanu lD the pro- P'•m. The one-day event I• open to • Umited number ol hunten and tbrou•b the paat few years 11,ndredl ol Soutblanden bave • learned to shoot thro~cb ta.. clab'a lftol1a. For more lafclnna· • -......... ,. .. ,, ..... pltoae •aaltau1H •l (JU) ,..~. ""Wl'""9IO MIAMI'S BOB ORl!SE (LEFT) ABSORBS THE IMPACT OF ROBERT HARDY· NFL Exhibitions Dolphim, Chiefs, Redskins Triumph From AP Dispatches SEATILE -Guy Benjamin scored on a one.yard rollout to snap a 7.7 tie early in the fourth quarter as the Miami Dolphins de· feated the Seattle Seahawks 24·7 in a National Football League ex· hibition game Monday ~ght. The Dolphins. 2·0 in preseason play, scored their go.ahead touchdown.. after Glenn Blackwood intercepted a Dave Krieg pass late in the third quarter. Miami then marched 87 yards in eight plays, including a 3(). yard pass from Benjamin to Jimmy Cefalo. Rookie quarterback Dave WoodJey directed the Dolphins to thj!ir third touchdown or the night after Ron Hill recovered a fum· ble by Seattle's Gary Carr on the Seahawks 33. Woodley teamed with Elmer Bailey on a 29-yard pass completion. and Bob Torrey scored on a four.yard run with 4:04 gone in the final quarter. In other NFL exhibitions : llft&ld•• 12., ........ 3 CLEVELAND -Mark MOMley kicked four field goals and Joe Tbeismann completed 10 of 21 puaes for 113 yards as the W asbingtoo Redskins posted a 12·3 victory over Cleveland. Moseley booted three·pointers of 21, 32, 28 and 39 yards as the Redskins boosted their preseasori record to 2..0. The Brovms are 0·2. Two of the scores followed Browns fumbles early in the third quarter. Larry Collins dropped lhe seeond·half k~ckoff at his o~ 21. leaCJinJ[ Moseley's 32.yarder. and Cleo Miiler fumbled 11l the next series. with Moseley's 28-yarder following. Moseley added a 39·yard boot with 1:34 left in the game. The ki ck foUowed a 12·play, 48·yard drive. Chief• 2-1, ¥ild11p l 0 KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Reserve quarterback Bill Kenn.ey tossed two third.quarter touchdown passes and the Kansa~ ~ity Chiefs held Minnesota to 49 yards rushing to defeat the Vlltings 24-10. Kenney, a second/ear pro from Northern Colorado, ente~ed the game in the secon hal( after starter Steve Fuller had rallied Kansas City to a 1().10 tie. . Four plays after Cecil Youngblood recovered a blocked Mm· nesota punt at the Vikings' 19, Kenney drilled a five.yard scoring pass to runnin& back Ben Norman with 10: 11 lefl for a 17·10 Kansas City lead. . d · Two possessions later, Kenney marched the Chiefs S8 yar s !n six plays before throwing a seven·y~rd touch~own pass lo rookie receiver Tom Donovan with 2:44 left m the penod. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Wes& Dtvlllon NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division Malcontents: Add Dorsett To NFL List PITTSBURGH CAP> -Run- ning back Tony Dorsett ol the Dallas Cowboys 1s unhappy with his contract and wants to be traded unless the National Foot·°' ball League team bolsters his paychecks. The former University of Pitts· burgh All ·Ameri cao was telephoned at the Cowboys' training camp in Thousand Oats, and reportedly said he was displeased with the five- year. six.figure contract be signed in J.m. "This is a very touchy sub- ject," Dorsett said. "I'm going to wait and see what happens. I hope it can be worked out. but if it iso 't, I'll def. initely have to consider the alternatives." The alternatives were spelled out by Stephan Sokol, a Pitts· burgh attorney who started representin1 Dorsett a month ago, along with Kellen McClen- don. ''I've asked the Cowboys to trade him if they don't want to pay him," Sokol was quoted as saying. ". . .I told them they could look around to find another place for him to play. There are other teams that would be will· ing to pay him." Conceding the Cowboys would be unlikely to trade Dorsett, Sokol aaid his client might be forced to an "act of protest." ''The next step is going to be a difCicult step," Sokol said. "I don't want them to th.Ink we're trying to back them into a co1 .. ner , but we've indicated Tony is ready to do what is best for his interests.'' W L Pct. GB 76 42 .644 W L Pct. GB K~naasCity Oakland Texas Minnesota Chicago An1el1 Seattle 62 57 .521 141h 57 60 .487 18\h 52 66 .441 24 49 66 .426 25 \h 48 68 .414 '27 42 75 .359 33 1h Eaat Dlvlalon New York 71 46 .rm Baltimore 68 48 .586 2'h Milwaukee 66 54 .550 6'h Boston 60 54 .526 91ti Detroit 59 56 .513 11 Cleveland 59 57 .509 11 lh Toronto 48 68 .414 221ti ,,....,. •• k_ MIMetotal,AllfttsJ 8alllmor• •· H-YOtlt. S Cleveland •2. CNc.-oo N MllwMlkM 12. OeVOllJ K•11wtC1tv•. TeusJ OlltYW""ft'~"' T•y•so- ~l".,..,.. (~ 1 ..... ) et A ..... t l~IMI ~ii::...__ fGf'lmsley J.21 •I Chic. ... I~ ... ),II -1. .••. Detroit 1.-M l •t Mllw.-ill• IH .. i , ... , ... K.-City CC.-f'll IA .. ) •I Te .. , (MMIKI< ••>.n fo,.... (TOddCMll •I MlnNtot• (J«lr-J.J), II 9ntet1 tTOff91 Mt) •I Oelll•llf (IC-.., 1~,u.11 Now YOrll (Underwood t.t ) at SHiii• (.._.~ .. Ul,11 Houston 64 53 .547 Cincinnati 64 55 .538 1 Dodgers 62 SS .530 2 San Francisco 58 60 .492 61h Atlanta 55 62 .470 9 San Diego so 69 .420 15 East Division Pittsburgh 67 51 .568 Montreal 65 53 .551 2 Philadelphia 62 53 .539 31h New York 56 62 .475 11 St. Louis 52 64 .448 14 Chicago 49 67 .422 17 Mo!Mtay't sc-St, Louis CO, Cincinnati I 16V. lnnl1l9s. ralnl Only ....... sc-.ted T•Y'IOlllnet OM9tn (Hoolon 10-SI •I MonlrHI C LH •·SI, n Sall Oleoo (Slllrley 4·11 al Ptllladelpllll 1Rutllv.,.1CM), n Ollup> 11.MnP 10-'I et Atl ... te \P. Mi.tlrc»> .._m,n S.n Fr.nclsco tK_. a.1•1 •I H-Yo<lc <Zachry M l. n St. Louk (MeftiNIA-'I •IClnclftMll ( Y<»ls .... n Pl"--IC-l•rl•~t21 at Hoonton (RyMI 141,11 TEST DRIVE DATSUN OF YOUR CHOICE IARWICK WILi: G>IVI YOU THI SHIRT OFF HIS IACK DON'T MISS BARWICK'S SPECIALS! '91" • l'MIM TODAY •• Come In for Y<AJr free T-Shirt & Demo Ride ~ I I i • 1 'I ___ 4' ___ ,_~-----·· " _ _, ..... -· -···--··--·--··· ···-----·······- FOOTBALL I OOLF TUl!lday,August19, 1980 DAILY .,.LOT Oklahoma Down? Don't Bet $ on It TM Best "J ._, dl6M "'ll'bt aa po-.:rful a football team. TM del •l\'e ~ ol our tHm woo'l allow it. 1'1'Vt Md more ed teama, but It's re- laUve to Who you 1 ," added Swllaer, whoee ..... ,.., Oklahoma lJ 73·7·2. •·1 1ald tM '1t ._. wun't a c u ·11· and It wasn't. FOOl'IULL PREnEJJ' But U.. '11 team wu 11-1 and woo the Orange Bowl Md wm the Bll El1ht title." Al~ tbey've loat Sima, perhaps the ,,..a._,_. lD Oll:laboma'1 illualrioua gridiron lalatoey, U.. Soaaen return an experienced, proven q.aan.back la aepior J . C. Watta along with run-U., becU Darid Overstreet and Stanley Wilson. Jarvis Keclwtne lops a swarm of talented NebrMb naWDI backs. "OUr runaln1 back situation ls probably as IOOd •any year I can remember, and that goes &ack 11 yean," Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne aaid. Is It Nicklaus? 8y llOWA&D L RANDY Of -Deley ""',.... How much of a controversy if there goiJll to be over the Colfer of the year for 1980? AJ.re.dy tbe PGA Tour proe are divided in their opinions. When Jack Nicklaus won the PG A championship to go with his victory in the U.S. Open and givin1 him 19 major titles, IOllle said he abould be the golfer ol the year. Not so, accordiDe to PGA pro Andy Bean. . "l'om Wataon. No question, deserves the honor," ~an said. "Jack ~Y have won two ma- jon, but that just means be beat the best collen in the world twice. Watson has won aht toU"Damenta, and that means he's beaten them six tJmu." The debate will continue for the balance of the year but ii Nicklaus wins another tourna- ment or two, it could put Watson out of contention. • • • SmaLEY ENGLEBO&N bu announced the dates of ber school ol I01f for Nov. SH4 at Pala Men Retort in Fallbroolt. "The basic purpose of the school," Enl)ebom aaya, "ii to develop a aound •wine aod the cooaiatency in ita application that produces eoafldence and a poettive mental aWtude on the course in any situation." The school ls not for beatnnen but hip handicappers as well as those close to scratch could lain major improvement in skills from the concentrated five-day school. Aiding her in teaching will be Shirley Sport, Diane Keppen, Micki MacDonald, Sally Dodge and Maree Brady. Thia will give the staff a rauo of one pro- fessional (or every five or six golfers. For more information, write to: The Sh·arley l!;ngefborn School of Golf, 2252 Caminit.o Preciosa Sur; La Jolla, Calif. 920.17 or call (714) ·210.aao. * * * TBE SOUTHE&N California Section ol the PGA will conduct ill annual hole-in-one contest on theweetendofSept.6-7. Each club is asked to des- i&uate a bole that meuures no lest.than 140 yards.for men and l~ lor women as its deaipated bole. Participants will donate $1 for each chance they take with tba money go in I to the beMTOlent and relief fund of the SCPGA and to junior golf ln Southern California. The man, woman, junior boy aJad junior girl from each cbapter with the closest to the pln will represent that chapter in the finals at Industry Hilla S.pt. 16. ' Incidentally, U you are looking for your club pro Sept. lS-19 for1et it. The chances are he'll be at Industry Hills for the West Coast 1olf conference and merchandiae abOW. While tbe event la not open to the public, it will attract most of the club pros in the area for at leaat a ·portion of the week. * • * THEY SAID IT: JoAnne Carner, when uked what she said to Pat BradJey throUahout , II the final round of tbe Peter Jackton Clault ln Toronto: "I said, 'nice putt, Dice ahot, nice putt, nice shot' ... Lb" Archer, 17, caddied for her dad George during the summer months on the PGA Tour and abe admita there are times when ahe ... w ......... learned not to mue ber pres-If .... lfu lfftld ence too apparent. "One time Dad had a real bad Chicago Cubs pitcher Mike bole on a round wba I ftnt Krukow jokes about the fact atarted. When be came oil the he was hit in the forehead by green, I said, 'Dad,. I Jove you,' a ball hit by St. Louis' Garry and I tbiak be didn't know whai Templeton Saturday night. to do. Sometimes tbe •0lf .. like He was complaining about to get mad, and be couldn't. seeing white spots, but later Now, I doll't sa1 too mucb to wa• pronounced OK. him durtq the round. Tbat'a tbe __ ..... _________ _ beat way." * * * IT 8'ftLL ISN'T too late to sign up for the pltcb, putt and drive tournament at the Newport Beach Golf Course for youngsters nine throu1b 18. Deadline for relbtration ls Moo· day with the com"tition to be staged Thursday, Aug. 28 at 2 o'clock. For further information, coo- tact the course at 751-UM. But do it before Monda1 eveni.DC. The event la free to participants and· adults and others are invit· ed to witness the competitJoo with no charge. Romar ·(58) Leads Tustin Loren&o Romar scored a lea1ue record 51 points but it wasn't eaou1b as bia Tustin team dropped a !MS-153 declaioo to Miuion Viejo in California Cout Leape basketball action at University High Monday niabt. The leque ls wtod1a.c down the summer schedule with playoffs involvint the top four teams bestantn1 Friday nllbt. The four lea.ml to be involved in the pla.yofta and their ~ are: New~rt Beach (10-2) i Irvine (t-5); Santa Ana (8-4); and Fountal.D Valley (6-7). ,.,.... ... p.J Boating Bill Still Pending The Vessel Documentation Act (HR 1196) passed by the House of Representatives last year is currently pending in the Senate Commerce Committee accord· ing to Legi.alative Ledger, an of· ficial boating publication for pleasure boats. The intent of the bill is to im· prove the laws relating to vessels. It is specifically impor· tant to the recreational boat owner because it provides for the federal documentation op· ' tion for pleasure boats. The Departm e nt or Transportation attempted to eliminate the option for "budgetary purposes" during the 9Cth Congress. HR 1196 ap- parently satisfies the DOT ob- jectlona by providing for the charging of a reasonable fee for the service in the c a se of pleuure boats. PleuW"e boat documentation provides several benefits to the pleasure boater. It serves to pro- tect the vessel when operating in foreign or international waters; simplifies U.S. Customs pro- cedures upon return, and serves aa the best available insurance of a clear title. NICKLAUS MAKING IT TOUGH • • • aa fxdtement to the game that bad be9ll mialinl. Only monthl .,o a central theme of writers and commentators waa the decline ol interest ta iou. 1 Witb Nlcklaua whmln•, there warno1Jatl"far 1ueb a thelDI. - Tben. IMt week. be woa .. ain. 'fttil time It waa in the PGA, by • record 1DU'lia. ta eacb vldGI')', be mate.bed =-~~t revered ac· -.. OPSN TUU•PB WU .... fMlftb. It tied tbe neord bel4 by Joa•, WUlle Aadenoa aad .... •Ill PGA victory waa Im ftftll., It Ued .... recorcf .. la ., .., ..... •et tbe ~ .. ..... rih lala mu.. . And be fUlly lntetlda to add to ·'So my . next objective it. is to win a fifth U.S. Open at "After what went on for Merion next year. And then I'll the two years before, tbil aeuon try to win a sixth PGA. baa been ab9olutely fantutlc." .. What's the record in the said~-. who usually it British,'' he asked. "Six? very cautioul about tbe UH of auperlatives. "Tb.it baa lino 'WEU. THAT WILL TAKE a me the eaaftdence to 10 oa and few more years." play. probably play weU, for Since he's won three, that some yun to come. would take a minimum of three 1·~~ ::r •:-...::~":' = mi{:~~-::· every indication· he more lbotl ID 1111 Ne dlaa I've fwJy expected to be playing, bad bllon. I'm more mature, in playtnc well, and winning, for at UM .... of Dowtlal mr pane leut that ti.me. wlaat I am do. wbat llM 1ame oi .. "Wben J can no tonier win, IOlf reqm• in. to c1o. tia. J'Ve wben I can DO tonier play well tie.aw_.. eaouah to win, I will be the first • to tno.," be aaid. "When that ..... DI am.a lllAPS. Ume comes, J will reU~. 1 wUl ,.,._...,, ..._, Mft .._ta a not play jult to be playt.n1. Wbea _, dim; ...,._ ...._, u..t I cauot play well enoup to ..w. ,,_.II • ....... I e•'t .ua,· wlMD t cannot wto, J will ....... ...,........ not play, 11MJ pll _..me ..... I "I wW be the flnt to know •••t to w1a a1 mur major wben that Ume com11." titlel • ,....... I ., ..... to But u.at time ls somewhere ln .... a ._,. 0,. _. a Mb tba tutar-e. It ls DOt now . POA tllll ,..,.. I acellQpllllled Aa 10 oftea happens. Lee tlull. ... J'Oll t19 a neon1. t1M Trevnao 1ald lt belt: Dnt ._ .. di 11 lnM It. 1'Tbe Bear la back.•• Mi.aaouri finished 7-5 last year, including a 2•·l4 triumph over South Carolina in the H..U of Fame Bowl, and welcomes back 15 starters. Tbe Tigers' hopes are bolstered this year by the pre- sence of senior quarterback PhH Bradley, who will llkely beco(Jle the Big Eight's all-time offensive leader this season. Bradley alS9 could become the first player in history to lead the league in total offense three years in a row. "When he's on," Switzer said of Bradley, "they can beat anybody." The return to his sophomore form of running back James Wilder could be critical to MissourPs success. Wilder gained 645 yards last year in nine games and Tiger Coach Warren Powers noted, "You don't realize how much you miss him until he's out for a while." Fambrough's Jayhawks are coming off what might be one of the finest recruiting years in Kansas history. But the folksy, philosophical head coach is badly in need or a quarterback since last year 's starter, Kevin Clint.on, has decided to forego football and concentrate on a baseball career. "Last year I kept bragging about his strong arm, ·SO he decided to become a pitcher," said Pi tt!lt·h it-run Sheff Makes Big A Debut Chris Sheff. a nine-year-old resident of Laguna Hills, will be among 12 youngsters making their major league debut next Tuesday at Anaheim Stadium. Chris, the son of Daily Pilot sports editor Craig Sheff. will be competing ill the division finals of the Pitch , Hit and Run ~ompeution after demonstrating his baseball skills at the first two levels of the action. He is one of 132 youngsters nationwide to reach the division competition and he'll be vying for a chance to compete .. in the national finals at Abner Doubleday Field in Coope~t.own. N.Y. in Sep- tember. ONLY 12 YOUNGStERS from across the country will make it to Cooperstown, two in each age group. In the divisional competition. there are 22 in each age bracket including youngsters from eight through 13. Sheff is one of two Orange County youngsters competing at Anaheim Stadium. The other is eight-year-old Joha.nnes Willemse or Cypress. Boasting one of the top marks in district com- petition for his age group ln the country (360). Sheff will face Ethan Pintard of Carpinteria. THE FINALISTS for Cooperstown wm be de· termined on a point basis through a computer. On· ly the top two in each age group from all divisions will go to Cooperstown. The youngsters making the trip to New York in September will be accom- panied by both parents. Each youth participating in the diviaioaal competitioo at Anaheim la from ooe of the western st.ates of Wyoming, Hawali, Colorado, California and Arizona. Each youngster will wear an Antel uniform and will complete the competition before the Angel· Boston game that night. Fambrough with a wry smile. The top candidates are junior Steve Smith, senior Blll Lillia and freshman Frank Seurer, a prep star from Edison Hieh in Huntington Beach. Other Edison products are running back Kerwin Bell and linebacker Bill Malavui. Befittina Colorado's lowly paaitioo in the pre-seasoo poll wu this comment from bead Coach Chuck Fairbanks: "We'll be more dependent on 1 young players than a good major College football team should be. It will probably be a very difficult year for u8." A big surprise -for the second year in a row -could be Oklahoma State. The Cowboys 1 launched Jimmy Johnson's head coaching can~er with a 7--4 record, and now that they're off proba- tion and returning 16 starters the Pokes might be 1 ready to challenge for the top spot. If they stay healthy, the Cowboys might have ' the toughest defense in the Big Eight. Nine • starters are back on defense, including all-star types in tackle Curtis Boone, linebacker Ricky Young, arid safety Gregory Johnson. "If we can keep our top players on the field, we'll be a factor in the Big Eight," predicts Johnson. Look who's joined the Republic Velma Tim.moo.a. One of Southern Califo rnia's most professional loan brokers. For a second trust deed loan of Sl0.000 . to $1.000,000 on your home or Income property.join the people who've joined the Republic. Ask for Velma JOIN THE REPUBLIC Republic Home Loan 19772 MacArthur Blvd.. Irvine. CA 92715 (714) 851-0991 Ucenscd Broker• Offices al.so In Encino and Covina IBM vs. Remington Rand "The QTM Challenge" Dealing with today's economy means making some deals. So we're ready to deal on every business machine at OTM Remington Rand element typewriters and copiers, Canon calculators. 01tvett1 electronic typewriters and word processors. OK? 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(I• It I (-.. t 01 I ,.,lfl• II ' t 0 t ~ ... ..,.,.~-· • ' 1 0 ' 0 I I) A Hew Vo<> 000 100 OJO S • I B•llimoft 000 llD 00• • t 0 GulOrv. R Mlly UI R 0 .. li i.1 •nd Ct•Ollt, P•I-• f ~nine/ "' SloOOerO 1•1 a nO O.mi>..e• W P•lmtr, U·• L G<liclry, 12 t St•I Stodd•rO l tll Hll ~"" York, G•mt>I• c•1 A ~' u• l'lllST GAME 1..0l•n> t , Wllllt So• 1 c1 .. e1•nd ocn 010 010 • 11 o C111ce90 000 000 001 1 3 0 B•••tr ano 01•• Burn\. Procv Ill end IClmm W l!M~tr u 8 l 8um1, 10-11 HR Cl-IANI HM•6n I'! SECOHOGAME Wlllle \oa 1, I nOoin> I Cll'Vtl •nd 00'/ 000 000 , • 0 Cnlu90 000 600 10• 1 11 o G••lfnO. S1en1on l•I MO~ 161 V Cru1 rtl •nd 01•• Troul •nO Bor?m•n W Troul. 1·11 L G•rl•nO. H HR - Clllce90, IC Bell Ill • l•.110 e..-,. U. 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Tomtno••, •·2, •-3, Soendv COllll\S dtl. flfl\'f Stove, :1-t, •·• •·•: Rtt1IN Mlfsll\ove O•I l•e11n• Madruo•. •·•. 1·5: Terrv Holl•CIO def LH ll• Allen, .... l·S, •·1; Sylvie H'Pnl ... dtt YvOllllf Ver,,...ll ... ,, •·t; httlfla flUllQe 6'>1 $111'11ft WllSll. H . • t. t ' ~-" ...... Tr•cy AUllln Off flt"y N'"9f1Mn, t O W 0 111\ftt l'rOttlllofU Otf HIN ilollm. , ..... ). .. , Atlante Open IMAllMtel ...,... ...... ~ (11•1• Mt't'Vttt Off lticl (OJ ..... , .... ~. Terry -clef Gi.nn PwtrovlC, M , .. J; Tom Ollllkll.toon -PllUI l(ron~. 1 ...... .... Ven wr111w.y •f &rid or...,llt. •• I·• •·'. Onny P•rvn "'' Tf frV Roc .... 11 ..... .. 1, .. 7; R11twll $Im.,_ clef l!•I< FromM p S, ._. ~ >· CellfomNI Coaet LHgue .................... ) MONOAY'S •HULTI Mlnltn Vlelo t•. 'tudlll '" 1'9UMtlft 111111-V IH, lrvlnt I II l ...... lc.,..,.. • ~ ,....,., IT, Ila..,. r.C0<dli _._,,,, Kiffitfl IMV) kott M,.....-"Vt· • ltl<ll .,_,,. IMVI 1'-0.Mlt SM' • lf'V),,. -Ml Wier lfl &..ult I,_. (ltv I : U Merwin OtlPll IMVI C0<k• IWtlMn IMVI, 1111 Crow ITI 11-Autll,. 5'.ll!Hfl CMVI tt Otfyt "-' (Ir¥ l - W\. OHl81TIOH ~"' 11, •'own1 J .... ltf_,_,. wn1111•t_. C•••oH..,. 1 0 • 0 I O • II Cl I w.. t Q -lel 11 Cl• ~6Co.V(>!l JO Illies '0-•Y1' W•• ~.-1oa •.. ,(._,,, .. . "' .. ,.,...,_,U_n •u!.HIHO w .. 111n91on ftr•• I" Hemm_ I .... H•'"'"""'" I It (1tw•l...O r lllllltr II» M l'uHU In c Wfl'ltl )I """"'"'" wn111nu1on l11•••m•nn •O t i 0 11• oMOullh " ) I 0 l• K•ut Hk l M I) Cw .. 1-\tps 4 14 I M Mt Doll.Id I I) I 10. llECEIVIH<; w .. ntnlJlfl" Mc041n1ol > 0 0..l<Wt ).U H••mon l U Cw .. l•nd J !.mltll, S1 Ruoot 1 '1 ~ •• ,II•• 1 14 Ct\left 24. Viking• 10 k.-••O..."*" MlnN\Otf 1 ) 0 9 10 K•n\al Clly 0 10 U 0 H Min 8r°""'lrutt CO.t1mt1er •10 I rte Sml111 ~ INU 1rorn Fullt • tlow••Y l!l<U Min FG Oenmet•r U rtC FGLo-t'•ll ICC Ho•mtn 1 oeo lrom K*nnev ISttntruCI kl<kl I(( OOtlo••n I ,,. .. lroM Ktn,..• IStoneruCI lll<kl A Jt,1711 ,,....,,_.Ct.e-r> RUS"41NG Ml.,,..>Ot•. H•rrtll l IS, For rHt l ·I, Pt.cf\411 •·I Ken• .. City H•clnot 7 n. Reed •·13, McKnlont 1 17 P"SSING MlnntlOll, tCran>tr l·•~·k. llvlnv•ton t;).J3-7·11S IC&ntn City, Fuller ... U-0.10., K-y •12 1·103 RECEIVING MlnnetoC•, L•Count 1 ?'I 8rowt1 J.11. Tucu r I U. l(anU\ City Smllll J.Mo, OoNw•n J.41, Norman J..:M, Cu"'" 1 lf Dolphin• 24, S.ahewka 7 Score"' o..er1en Ml•ml I 0 0 11-h Suttlt 1 0 O 0-I Mii Hardy 3 P9U from Gr ltw Cvon Scn.mann l!i<kl St• -T Bent•mln 1 run (Morr••• klO I Ml• -G lltnl•mln I run Cvon Scn.menn klOI Ml• Torro • •u" Ivon Scn.m•nn l!lckl Ml• FG von ScNlmenn 1' A -St,SSO ............ Le ..... llUSMCHG Mleml. Ho well 10 •• Wllllems .,_ St•lll•, T Ben f•mln t-JJ. Moo<oWI PASSING M1.,..1. WOOdlev ... -0-1, G BeftJ•mln ~I~. Gr~ ~4.0-46 S .. tllt. Ktleo t-1).1.1•. Miiin• •1•+st RECEIVING -Ml.,,,I. Let 4 :M, Cet•lo 1·• St•lll•. T lllntamln •·JO C1rr • 11 NFL EXHllll'ION STANOCHGS ~k ... Cell~eM• E11t w L l I'<\. "" .. ~ Ml•mi , 0 0 I 000 8alllmort I I 0 soo Ntw Enqltnd I I 0 soo 8uttalo 0 1 0 000 ce..i ... ~tburQI> , 0 0 I 000 r!C'lnnau ' I 0 .soo Houston 1 I 0 .!00 Cltvtl•nd 0 ' 0 000 . .., 1<ant .. City ' 0 0 !CIOO 0.-l•nd I I 0 .!00 Denver ' I 0 soo Suttle ' l 0 soo S.nOI-0 ' ' "' ... , ..... ,c-...... ·-l'llCledel""'• , 0 0 1.00o O.lles , 0 0 1.000 W•Jlll"9'°" , 0 0 1.000 St. Lout' ' I 0 .soo N Y Gl-1 I ' 0 . soo c-trel Minnesota I ' 0 soo l •mi>a Bay I I 0 soo Oetroit I ' 0 soo C.ftlc•QCI I I 0 soo Gr1ttn S.y 0 2 ' 161 ... , S.n Franc:1K:o ' 0 0 '000 New Ortit'1""S t I 0 SOii Rarru 0 , 0 000 All•nCe 0 1 0 000 ~y',Sc:Of'·ft Wolllnolon 11, C"ve1encs 3 IC an .. , City 1•. Mlnnr.ota 10 Mloml 2•. SuHI• I F-y·•GM"t New Yor' Ga.nu et 8alllmoro, n ~v'•Ge- 1111•'* •I 0.nvt•. n Gre91\ l!Ay •I 811tte10. n New Y<lf'k Jets el Plltsburoll, n Clnclt1Nll a1Tama.8ey, n Cleveland at Cl\lc4J90, n 1t1n .. 1 City al SI Loul•, n O•lll•nd •I WHIW"91on, n Minnesota •I Mlaml. n. New Orleans al Oeltotl n Atlanta .i ~ 01-. n Houston al 0.llH . n Statlle •I Sin F'•l'ICISCO, n ~, .• o.,... Pllll-IOf>C• at How Er>Ql•nd HATtOHAL COH,E lll!NC£ £••Mn10h l• .... ,, .. 10 ,. ... ~' 72 ~ 30 ,. 71 10 11 • l Sf .. 10 0 ., 1l tS 1• }I .:JI .. SJ 21 • JO u • ,.. ,, • " 31 ., JS 11 JI }I ,. )0 II }I so 2t ,.. ll •1 ~ ,. 31 • Co,mos v..,n1noton Toron1o Rocn•ster W L 01' GA II' l'tt 11 • 11 40 u i.s IS IS &S st 51 147 13 II •S st cl tit 11 1• ,, loC) 31 '°' O•llO MIMe'IOI• TylH Atlanta Cefttrll Olvl•IMI II " Sl 1' IS .,a 14 Cl Sf 6 ,. 30 Wfttent OfrltlMI SJ •S U1 u •• 10 ~ ., 131 11 ,. ... •·SH llle 2S 6 13 78 Mo l'06 Los AnQel•S ,. I c SI .. so IM V l'lCOVVt r 16 14 SO 42 ~I 111 Porll•nd U 11 •• •t 31 116 AMalttCAH COH,•tt••c• l.• ... OMtlell Tempe 6•v For1 LaudtnSalt Nt w Enql- Pllll.O.Cpl\le W L Of' OA If' l'U 11 12 5e ... SI ISt 17 U SS SO SO ISJ 11 11 n n 44 t .. 10 11 "° .. ,. .. .. c11lc•110 HCMl\lort Detroit MtmPllls C-•IOM t lell ,, 10 II U 11 SS lJ " .. " 11 'l .....,,.OMtlelo krl u .... S-Oleon It IS SI E-ton U U W San JOM 1 n ., 1 -Glll't'*f division tlll• 41 St Its U U12' so ., ,,0 )t ~ 111 t6 W I .. .. •11• JO Q Ila 64 JI H $1• Polnta --•reltd fOr • •In, •nd -l>oftus jlOIM IClf every llOfl tC.O'ed wllll a mulmu"' o4 tllfM oer 9•mt Ho boftu.t PolM 11 ew•rdecl tor o..rtlme"' ~-out oo.tlt ---··•Sc.9f• MltlnHO\<I 6, 111111 .. lpl\I• t T-.y·•~ NO Ot"'ft KllHUMICI .......... Gari\" Toronto.c T-&.Y." Cotmot at O.lltt. " lOl 0Ar199CM •I Pot lllftd. '1 Stn JOM •I San OltOO, n Ntw fllQCMICI at Wtslli119lon 11 AIL ...... U(A• COfilf'aillaNCI W I, TMOf' OA ep "9 S.C '•tMMo II 14 2 M )S at tO centoHll• 10 11 1 aa t0 ao a Miami • u J 14 .. JI 12 GolOen o.tt • 12 S )I IO » 10 NATIONA'-C!Ofll'lallfC8 l'eftllaylw..,la 11 • • 46 U It 11) New Yon: U 10 t • 2' J4 " Cotum-..s 11 t a ~ ,. n tt Cltvtl•nd • u ' u .. " • MOTi! ~w tltll'lll .,_ awttre.d fOf • •111, 11" lw e Ur. IN -MfWt "'"' let H CI\ .... t(llrtf 118 tf 8 ,,...I"""" ., -·· ...... ,.,,.. UM At•miCOI MOlllDAY'' •HUL ft .... , ....... ~ ........... . ""ti ••• ~Ch to Oo ICr•-fl UO, , .. 140 A"""' Cl\erQitr IMll<llelll, UO. 1.0. Ml .. Lllltrty ltuCer 1l'rn1., .. Hu H i e I) •t i-ldUO .0 h c.•IOd ••<• llllly C•ll•' 8tt• "' .. •"••I, 1•00. s.o. , ... Alnh ·~ti. '.0 • 00. '~Ace CMllclMlll , .. llllrll ra• "•" fM t;oy l'ftee>ll'"•I. 11 .. ~ ...... Ooln My Humllt• I W•rdt • )0 l ... "'91a (hor99r 1 .. CllarOl,• llO ,oullll r•• H6C,.,. 8e'9 CPaulllWI, t ... t 00. ) ... AllCHIW• v.,,1 ICff'doHl JO IO I IO C'l•n Mutll•rlAdlllrl ~ 10 \h• Ml• Cttl P401d\l .. IO l'lllft •ac• ""'"-o....oon I .. •di. 1 llO I .0 •GO Got Ille Ca•ll 1Her11 14 00 1 4111 toA-le• Hip PocUI IC•rOOl•I, •ID Shi" •ec~ Coat! I\ ci .. , 1Har11 • 20. ) .. 1.0 ,..,,.. Pemc t IW••OI, s ... JIO BotO ~ow c ''"""•' '00 l1 ... eta 11~1 P<OICI \tt 20 ~•vtnlll r•• PIHti"lj T'-'9111 l"Yrll ) 40 l 40 l 10 Geor91e S..1M I P•ullM I ... 1 .o ""'" •1eoi.11 1c .. do .. 1., eo E1911111 ,... Lots. ~c (Harll. 1.0, )00 1 40 Ve-ro ITrt .. ur•I, J OO 1 40 S.,mplr• J""'l)lt1 IW••OI. 1 . .0 \t 1'10 Slw U .. 10-7 1.i N ici V t13 10 wllll M•tn wlnnlr>q llO•h \\la -M~I '1 Pl<~ Sh <on>OCatloll i>elO \17' IO wltll Ut wl,.,,1"11 11< ••" ltlw ,..,,,..,. Hlntll ••n Gui!~ CC•e~rl •«I, l .O. 1 .0. ~' "-"""' FHtYre IC19r")el l .O.) 00, Tol•CIY Hot (H•r11.'. " •• ..,ta 16 SI P•I0\1370 Ttnlll ••o Cl•""'" Sleet Ou•I (!» l'nlf\Ouatl, 1 lO, 3 .0. l .IO Bed An An9fl CP•ullntl. e.oo. s to. Nullvlll• H .. ,. IWt•dl l «I, Ue•acU 11·'1 P•ldMol 10. All1ndenee •,110 Del Mar MONDAY'S lll!SULTS ( 14111of4Mlo ..._i,11reel m .. 11.,.1 f l"t r.ct .t.\lllo•d Ct\lle CH1wtol. s 20, 3 lO. 7 40 New<Om"10fl IMCC•rronl, ~ 00 ) 40, l'lowCnq Frft' C Oelallou•wvtl. • fO S1<0M , .. , Slarnle C<:;r•-•11.11 .11 oo. • oo. • loO, Mlljor Pll•<• I Plnuy>. ) lO. J lO. E•ento IM<Cerronl ) 00 U dally doublt c•-11 o•ld "3 lO TllirO ••• J an\ Litt \Oe\lllou• .... I. 6 lO, • 00. l .O. Oo<I Gebrlei. CV•l•nruel•I s fO 3 10. Ftnoet I MC Carron I 2 to Fourth r.U 8...0IP (Llptlaml 21.AO t lO, 1 loO. Tr•wht1' Ja.n C"Torol. • 00 l 70. Promlnart l&.lla1•rl, 4 90 HOW Time Flies • llnlt---but Oli<iu•llfl@d l t\CI Pl•<A<I tourtll Ffflll r~e Sweel·IC•N•llna (R•mltf'll, lO .o. ti lO 110 Le'(lo l •nCll"ll CH•wlt•I • 60. • 10. Arc~ AMOO cocivuHI J IO U er•< la (1•1 P••d lASt 00 Sl•tll •Kt SNlnOllp CM<Carron>. 11 40 • .O. • .0 Ge<lllefl\4'n'• Lu<k IV•ltniuet•I 3 .o.' IO J•nny't O••IO CPln<ayl,. lO Seve ntll ••<• Solt ndld Sprue• (Sllotm•krrl, S 10. • 00. 2 60. O•o•n I PlerUI q 19, S 10. L-Live IM IC•nQ CPlnuyl. 2 IO U .. •<la 16 SI Paid \I" SO n Plci. SI• 11·3 11 l·•~I D•ld , ...... 00 wit!• 111 wtnnlnO llCktli jllve llorVll '1 Pick SI• con"°'allon a.10 \1llO oo w1111 •1'1 w1nnlng 1to.i• llour horsul E l glllll ••<t O a ncy n T im (Otl•llOUUO•I 8 •0 • •0 J 60 81U 1ng1lor>Q IOllvar"I 13.40, 1 00 Vortaule• c Tor1>1 , 1 00 Ninth ••c.• Silent Code (B•ll•t••>. ?b loO, 8 00, SOCI' Wllllt Sprite IMCC.,ronl. J 40, l 10. T v O.-<ree !Llpt.1ml, 7 40 Uer. •<I• 11 11 NICI use 00 ldltnd&n<• 11 Ill Misc . Monct.y'1 Trenaaetlon1 IASl!IALL MalleNllL- CH IC•GO CUBS lleca llt d MIU 0 '8trrv. UIClle• lrom MIO\and ot tn. ln•• Lteo.,. Placed B••rv Foot• otc,,.r on,,.. IS dlV OIWlbll'CI 11\I IASKETflillll Hati..al lnlr-11 A•-1111.., OENVE R NUGGETS Stoned ICt n HtOQ\ ou•rd 10 • munl v••,.. contr•tt FOOTIALL NetloftaC ,_NII LU9W ATLANTA Fl\LCONS Cul RIO St•ro pla<t·klcu r . Bill Elltnboqen, ou••d Ll!WI\ GIC~rt. tiolll tnd, Will lam Adamt kl<k•r, Oevld Ape>leby, ovnter: Rlndy Bulitr .... 1.,. r•c.eh •r , Glen K•ller. <enter . Jerttmv Mtlnellln. deler1slvo tackle· •nd J •mts Mollnl, dtrt.nslve end. CHICAGO SEARS Acquired Henry Wllll•m•, comorlM!d, rrom Ille Oaltlan<I ll•ldtf\ tor 11n undliCIOIOd lu1ure drell <hOlct Cl.II 1111'1<..,t Allon end OwlQlll Ford, runnl119 bath. L•rry Jame.on, II MIMIC-er. SI••• McKtnlle, 1601•. and quar1ortwM;k Ml~t Wrf91\I CIHCI HNAT\ BENGALS -CYI J im 8•0•"'"· Wftrly; O•n B•n . l•Ole. G't 0 Oonal\ua, llntDetU•. Ftat1ltlln KlnQ, mldcll• guard. -Stan Mllcllell, ru,.,,lno o•o GllEENBAY PACKERS CulJolln Mtn· dtnll•ll Otfef'~W llMm•n. Jo. Robin'°" •l'<I Tom Bell. O.,.•ds Paul Columbl• llCllll end. Lonnlt G,...,. OtlonSlvt ono. ~'<'• En9le\, punter tnd Wiii l•~•l. runnlno D.tO LOS ANGELES A14MS Cul Gonion Gt1•ollt. ot1ent1ve l•<'C• Sttw•f'I 0·~11 llneb•<ll:er K"rt Sotln •no w~att H•n df'f10n wldt ...-CtlVt'f'" Sti1nlev HoweH f'Un n1nq o.tc• ICo•ln S~I pla<•·kt<ktr tn<I l(en H•r1i.v, punter Pl•<•d Boo <;ru~r o< f..nslve 1a<kl• •no GeorQit' F •rmtr w jdft '• <«'"''.on tht tnlu..-"9 u~~rve H\t NEW Oii LEANS SAINlS Pieced LtSCer 8oyO. 1tnet>KU1 IArw Br•tll~" 1•<11'11 •nd •net Ted GrAbtnhOf'\t, 1.-ca:1~ on tn. In 1urf>O rt~'"t 1'\t NEW YORK GIANIS Cut Ken JoMson tultt>a<k St•v~ ooon\ "'''" r •turrwr SttVft 8ernht'! '1nc:I Wtynr H•rT'lllton, d ef.-"-''"' tr"O~ M.t\rYI" ("'•\t••n runnlnQ b•<k ~Of'Of Frankfln, iiNtdfl rMf!lv•r St,ve GM non and J«lic W•lll•tn\, llfWbMktri. LO•lrd M<Cruury, llon• f!nd CH•r Murplly. punter. ptCt Plltr•. 9u1rd Placeo Alan Coldwell, drlon,1vo back , Pllll C•n<lll, IC ervln Wy•ll eno Stev• Cunnlnonem, llnebockef\, Sl~ve Spencer. O.ltn~lv• end. •nd N•I Ttrry. CO'IWrbtlcl<. on Ille lnturod , ... , •• Cl\t NEW YORIC JETS Cul Guy .•lllM,,,.-e. cornorbaclt, Le.,.r1r1ce Colt end S<ott Collon. t•lellu. 81n 8ollofl• and ./ell 01lerr'I. llnebe<llt•\ Rlcll Cumm1n• ...., Terry Mel1ny, ou•rOs, Mike GAY, IA(Olf, EO MC<ilauon, cenl•r, Nell Gretfl, ruMltlQ boo , Tony Meref\dlno. qu•rlorb~ k JOI! Pettrt ... nd Torn P l•r•o•, dt"te n~t vr lf O lf\, C-L-. Pl•<•·kl<U r. 8oO °" 11 Puent~. ount,.r lloqer Ft.rm•r e nd Cllatllf Cl-wide •ectlv•" •nO Bob R l b.I. tloM tnd PHILAOELPHll' EAGLES Cut Lff JukH , wlOt rKllvtr. Slln Jolln(on O.· le1ulvt tl'ld. Oan Ortscoll and Ft1ntl\ CIMtlt Y. llntOe<~trs, P•I IClnq, p .... , •• Incl Vinet T...,,,_,,, IUlllMl<k. P ITTSBURGH STEELERS Pieced AIO MOtef. """''119 *"·on,,,. In lured•• ,., .. 11,1 SAM OIEGO CHllRGERS Cul Curll' Slrmol\t\, Otte<11lvo IMICll. Ancsr• teen. Jim Lt ltv enel Howard SludO••O, wld• re. olvtrt, --"' P•I Collln\, 119111 tnd PIKtd Fred o...,, 0tfen1lve end, on ltw •twrvt 11•1 Pt•<ed uirrv Burlon. w10<> •tcfCv~•. Mlll t lllomu. rvnnln9 b•ck •nd Jim Nlcl>OIM>n, oll.,.•lv<• t•O"' on "'" infurt<I rt1\•rv* Utt HOCKIY Hal,....1 Hochy L• ..... WIHNIPEG JETS Slon•d M•u•I<• Monlllf •nd Glt n Ostlr, oet•n•tmt n. Mvr r•r Evb, center. •M Tom Glbton. rlQlll wing (OU •• 0 1 ARIZONA STATE -Hamed 8•11 "41nt• en aul.ienl b6 .. 1>611 coec:ll. SOUfHERN CJttLIFOAN IA AMOU!>COCI 1111 rt1l911tllon ol eoo eovo. euocltlt atllltllc dlr<1<to< Offp ... P:letllne Hl'Wl'OlllT I Arl't 1,e11tl11tl -ti enoac1n 1 DerrKllM, 11X1 llOfllte, UIO llnl. MO 1"116Clterel. 10 roe II ti"" I OllWY't Lee-) 1~ ~· U -rllC\IN, P • 1111<1lto, U4 NH. u flltk CM. I ........... no ..... o.rtl OA•A WMA•I' ,.. eftft.ft td NM. 41t -Ila, i ,__ 11\11 SU ~lltAI. PVBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I UtlNIH NAMI UATeMIHT tlle ltltOwCf\4 P«''°"' •'• OOlllQ bu•lnt>\n •A•ttVIEW I IM\I L O 1'1•1 11 .. < .. 111..0 Hutlllnoton BHCll C• 91.,a1 HPCTOA MAA,14t H IMC 11 (•lllO•"'• corpo.<111on1 ••1'1 8ea<" 81 YO H""tcl'qlon 0.a< 11 ( /4 '1•41 [NA O EVl lO P NI ENT rOR"OltA! IOH I• C•Ctlornce tot C>Or•llOl\I P 0 8o• 1IO) l tUCldl• CA t10'• thll bu\tM\\ i\ <onducled by • C1m1led p.111,..r \11111 HECTOll MAR~A(I< IHC $Amuel Cuhf••. l'llor,.y !or (orp Tiii\ \ltl-nt Wt\ lllfO Wltll Ill• Covntv Clttk of O"•noe County on July 1S 1•10 \AMUEL CUIE TE ltterney•l~w •n Sletet Avt., S1111e 10 Hwftll!lflon .. 1<11. Cf tlMI Publl~....0 Or•nQe Coa\I Delly P1101 July 1' Aug S, U 19 19'0 )103 10 PUBLIC NOTICE ,,CTl~IOUS 1us1•111 •AMI! lT AT•MI NT r 11• 1•11-lno ptrwt11 art ootn11 bu•'""" tt H£WPOIH I Nl(R ~T ATE PROPfltTCES l CO<PO••Ce PIH •. Swll• JOI N-' a .. , .. CA., ... Rl(l\frd J LO<tt!at 1110 Tl<on· 11<1•00• El To<o. CA tt..O Ml<hHI Joyce 10061 "•-view Ot1n . ~l• /4ne CA 9110\ llo~rt Bovi.. ldS SO OarMfY S•nle """ CA '1101 r.o ,., .. "'.'' ,,.,,.n4 ••• StftCl(aStlt O<•v~ Co.Of\• 0.1 ~·· CA t7NO Thi\ bU\IM\\ I\ conOufttd bY • 9<1n•rfl Dlf11Wr\lllP 111cn.•d J loren•r General P•f'lne• Tnlt >IAl•,..,.nC w•• lllt<I wttn Ill• County Cieri 01 Orer1oe Count. on JulvH.t* ,.._ PuDll\""O Or•nQt' COo\\C O•ICV Piiot July Jt, AUQ s. I?, 19 c• Jtot·to PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS, IU"Nl!U HAMI! STATIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTIT10US MlllftH NAMt tTAT•MalfT fllt lot-• ... ,.,_I t r• .. , ... 11u11,,.., ... LA JOU.A 01" COMflANY, ,.,., Grffnvlew i.-. H""ll......, .. act., CA'1 .... Or-E Af11*1tM, 16111 or ..... Vltw L•N. 14Uflll"tlllfl fl .. (11, C:A ., .... RIV ...... $1•-•· 47' S.0 ... _ ... Co•I"• CA t17U CtyOt It SttUl"4! . .UI W HlllCrefl, AAC>nrowla. CA t1016 Oennh It waro, ,. .. M<I"'-• Hunun,-flHCll, CA .,.., tl-r\ A Heflry, Jr , 10• E ..... ntll SI , Gl...,1, CA tl1.0 Ool\eld Melltl. '°I' Counl•Y•-· H•Cler\1141 Hti91¥1•. CA tllO W llll-o.nnu ... 1101 Victoria SI" Unit I C4'16 t.Ae ... CA "1617 .... ,,. l Wlllle, U U I Pebblt e .. c11. ~ Hlouel, CA.,.,, Carl F G••-. 3'01 ~e<Arlllu• 8Cwd • 101. Hewpon 8HCll, CA n..o This ouslMU Ct COJldU(ltO bV • Qtnet•C pert,.r~p. Grant E A•oe11<l9ht Tiii• IW\-t was lllOCI wllll llW County CC•rk 01 Ora1191 Cownly on FOR THE RECORD PV8LIC NOTICE n a Tl•WT Of' ANlf ... Mf •T 011'\IMOfl FICTIT10Ut IUSl•IM Iii AM a Tt•• ~ ..... ""'"'" ... ._ ...... '"• wu tf tllt Fl~lllldU' lutl,.ns H•-· KRUIOI• ill .. 0 ASSOCIA_iar-- illOINCV. _,. Wfft•IT .. , -6 111 HfW"'1 .. Mii, C. ....... TM 'IClltlowt l wtl""t N•-rt lttrff It ...,.. •ft lli.rr 1,. Or.,... C~ntv.,.J-•yU,lteo ./ O•r(yN 1(,. .... ,. ,.. c .. rc11., ··I " Cett• ~ (• "611 llll• ~-.. ••• c8ftdll<I"' •v •• IMlvld.,.I Oarty.,.tcr.,...r Tllll ,._...,_., w•t Ill .. wltto '"" Ceuntv Ct••~ ol 0••• c-ty Otl AU9Y•l l, 1tl0 .. ,.,.,. l'u-11•-°'-C•ul 01Cly ,.1101 Auo . \, u. ''· ''· 1• JIU>tO PUBLIC NOTICS PUBLIC NOTICE 1 llt lotlowl"I! °"""" h dolno 11u1I· Awtu•l I, 1• NOTICE Off DEATH 0' RUTH SWO~I AND Off ~ETITION TO AD · MINISTER lfSTATe NO. "0111 a 10s• ... "CTITIOVS eu11MUS ntU ., NAM( Sl'ATENIEHT FALLEN TI M8ER PROoucn. PllbllsNd Or-Cof•I O•lly "'lot ~· _, • Auo n. "· i.. s.111 1. '"° ,,,,.., T o a I I h e I r s , r ... IOllOWOtlQ Pt•\Otl\ ... dolnQ ,,, Wnl 17111 s1 ..... 1 Unit "F."' Cott• Ou\ln~'' as M•••. CA '1•27 ----beneficiaries, c reditors and contlnoent creditors of Ruth Swope of Costa VISTA OEl MAR I llMITEO IC••ln 0•1• Price. 7211 Vl\IA lol•7 Be.ell 81•d Hunlt'"!lon e .. c11 HoO•r, H---1 8oa<ll CA 97MO P UBLIC NOTICE (•lllorntl 97MI Tftl> bu>l,_\t I\ C-Clfd Oy fn lt1 Httlor Mer ... cl\ In< 1• C•lllornt• dlvlou1C NOTICE OF OEATM OF Mesa. Californ ia, and HELEN w. NYBERG persons who may be AND OF PETITION TO otherwise Interested In the ADMINISTER ESTATE wlll and/qrestate: <O<Po,•llonl l•IU 8td<n Blvd Hunt Kevin Prtce 11\Qlon B•Kh. CA 91 .... 1 fllf\ Slaltmelll we\ llleel wflll 11\e E NA 0.v.IOl>f1\tnl COfPC)r•tlOll C-IV (ltr\ ot °'•not C-ly on July 11 C•htOfn<• corpordhonl P 0 BoA 1'. 1* HOJ Lt u<acsla CA 9101• ,.t411U NO. A·10.S521. A petition has been flled T o a 1 1 h e i r s • by John A . Hughes In the beneficiaries. creditors Superior Court of Orange and contingent creditors of County reQuestlng th et H elen w . Nyberg o f John A. Hughes bt ap- Bal boa, California, and poi nted a s per sonal p er sons who may be representative to ad· otherwise interested In the minister the estate of Ruth will and/or estate: Sw ope <under the lndepen- TIU\ 1>u11,..u ,. conouned py • Pubh\'*I Or-Cout 01lty P iiot ltmlled 1)¥1nt•Sll•D AUQ ,. ,. Se1>I , • 1..0 l-...0 HECTOR MARS/4CH INC ~tor Mar\aCI\ Pr~IOtnt Tiii\ \tat-tit WIS llled With llW COl•nty Clerk o< O•anoe County on July 1S, lttO PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I USIHESS NAM( STATEMEHT Tht foUow1nQ per\.On\ 4'rr doing bullnn~•• SAMUEL CUIETE Al1WMYllLIW toll SCatet A- S111le 10 Hu11llA9'on .. ..,.,,CA ttMI Publl\'*I Or-Ca.>I O•••Y Piiot Jutv ?•. •uo. s. 12. "· 1"90 JI01·IO PUBLIC NOTICE ""17SIO FICTITIOUS IUSIH IESS NAME STATEMENT R J INVESTMENlS. CHOI> Ml CllllwOOd Clr<I¥ Fountain VIII••, CA 97108 Rlcl\ard R Slttllon. 11.io. Ml, Cllll· wood Clrclt, Fount•lt1 Velle y, C.I' d1IOI J•me. E 8•rton, 114116 Mt Clllt ••OOd Clr<le. Fountain V•llfV, CA 92108 flll• busln<n I\ conduCleO by a 9aneral oartn.r\ftlo A petition has been flled dent Admlnlslratlon of by Marjorie Nyberg Hof-~states Act). The petition fman in the Superior Court 1s set for hearing In Dept. of Orange County reQuest -No. 3 at 700 Civic Center ing that Marjorie Nyberg Drive, West, In the City of Hoffman be apl)Ointed as Santa Ana, California on personal representative to September 12. 1980 at administer the estate of 10:00 a.m . Helen W. Nyberg (under IF YOU OBJECT to the the Independent Ad· granting of the petition, min istration of Estates you should either appear Act>. The petition is set for at the hearing and state hearing in Dept. No. 3 at your objections or f ile 700 Civic Center D r ive written objections with the West, in the City of Santa court before the hearing. Ana, California on Sep-Your appearance may be tember 12, 1980 at tO :OO In person or by your a!· Tnt followfnq o-tr~ons. •'• do•no bu\ln•n ~s PARTY PLE .. lEPS )011 H•rl>or BlvO . (~la /ksa. CA '16?6 Mo You. 7SS77 EC ContJo L•QUM Hiiis, CA 916SJ In Soo~ You. 1ssn El Cont lo l •quna Hills. CA '1'16SJ Thi\ """~'Is <onducl•d ov en un ir-.corooratf'd 4'~\0('i'1tton ot~r Otttn • PMIMr\1110 Ho You In 'ioo" You T111s scatt.._t was l1lf'd wllll 1111 Countv Cit•• ot O••n<ie County on Julv )0 , ... ,uin• Sl"VICE ESCROWCOMl'AHY CEurow -SLGI Po. e ea 111 .,,..,,.,,..,, ... c• 91"3 Published OrllnQt COf\I o •••• Pilot Auo s. 11 1• 26 1'90 3,.1 to PUBLIC NOTICE SUPEAIOll COUllT 01' THE STATEOl',.CALCFORHIA FOii THE COU NTY OF ORAHGIE Ho A·10s:l14 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE l'Olt CHAHGE OF HAMES en 111~ Maller ol Ille lloollc<1110~ of NOPM/>N R SLOBOOKIN AUOPf'Y B SlOBOOltlN Ci>N OACf LEE' 5L08001<1N •nd l />CEE STAP SL0800tCIN. F<1r (h&"ll• ol N6"'°' flle appllralton OI NORMl'N R SI 0800KH; A U O R EV 8 SL0800i<IN CllNO .. r E LE'E SLOBOOKIN ano LACEE S'T•R SL08001CIN lor ChltnQf' OI ... mf\ t'l•v1no bHn fll~ In Court and •t -'P otarln9 from ••Id •Po1tu 11on 111•1 HOAMAH R SL0800KIN AUOllEY 8 SLOBOOKIN, C/4N 0/4CE LEE SL08001<1N •nO LACEE ST/411 Sl08001CIN nave llled an application P•OOOSl"9 ,,,., ,,._., narnes IX' CllatlQtd l o R ICHARD N0 RM/4N KINE AUDREY 8ETH IC INE !>TARlEE Ci>NOll'"= ICttlE And L 14 CEE SA8AINJ. 'INE Now '""'rl"'foo • 11 '' ""''f'bV O"'d .. r~O ano d•ft<tf"O '""'•II ~rt.On~ tf'terf''\t flld In t,.81d ~\tfr do &POPA' bPfor~ '"'"' <our t 1n 0.Nrfmtnt 3 nn tnr tbt" d.av <'' S•o•tmatr 1Q90 a1 ,, 00 o tlO<• A M O' Witd da'I to \t\OW <-&v~ why \UCh aPolif&t•Of'I inr rnt\nOf" nt ".,_"'"' \hould not bft orantf'd H I' turt~r orde'rf'f) ltittt i8 COQy ot lhl• Ord!>r f o Show Cavlf' IX' ouoi.s11~0 1n 111,. ORANGE COAST OACl Y PILOT a rirw\o•Pf'r o f Qtnr.r•I r1rcuta"on. pr1n1K1 In \.etld <OVrHY "' lrast onu• ~!!ct\ wffk for four \ut CP\\tve wt"f!ln prior to th,, dAV ot \atd n•••l"q Oal•d tnl\ "" oav oc Auqus1 1q90 MARI< /I SOOEN J UOQf' ol <11id Superior Courl JOSEPH PAUL IREGMAH 16U3 Vtnlufa lloVl4v•rO ..... Encino, CA '1tl6 Pvo1ls!'lf<I Ora~ Coa•I Dally Pilot Auq S 11. iq 2b 1'!80 311b 90 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS MAME STllTEMEHT Tll• IOllow•no "'""'" I\ OOtn9 Ou•• ne\\ ., PACIFIC FISH F RESH t'OJI l<omt\IMd I.JI Hunll"lllon Steen CA ttlM6 Sl•••n W Tt mo>Cllu~ ••031 HomHltld lt1 Hynllr191on 8•A(ll CA ., .... Tf'tls buslnf"\\ h condu<t•d by "" II"' d1v1duaf SltVPn W r 1rno\( nu• I ni. \I•'"""'' .,., lllf'CI wttll tllt County Cl•"' m OrAnQI' County on Jul• l UIO 1'14011' Puollshod Orolt\O" Ca.•t Olllly PlloC lluo It l•. 5"1>1 1 ~ 1'90 1•11-eo PUBLIC NOTICE H·_, F ICllTIOUS llUSCNESS NAME SlillTEMl!HT Alcll.,d II S1oncon Tiii\ \Catl!mllnl ... , CtleO Will\ I"" County C•tr~ ol O••"<lt Coun!Y on Julr lS, Hto "HOOIS, KEHOALL & HAlllllHGTOH A l'ref"tl ... 11 U w Owp em M1<Ar1!\lw lloul4Yt rd S..llt ,., Hew..., IH<ll. c... •- FIUOM P11bll>lled 0.MQt c ... .i Oauy PolOI July H . AUQ s 11 1' 1..0 11~·80 PUBLIC NOTICE sul'E,.1011 cou"~ 0, CALtl'OltMIA COUHlY 01' ORANGE CASI! NUMflEll illlt12:U OllOEA TO SHOW CAUSE 1'011 CHANGE 01' NAM( '" Ill• Malle• ol tllt •1>1>Hu 11on 01 LARRV ROV G14ACIA. lor <II•~ ol n•mt 8AR8AR/4 K Sl l'll CIC L14NO, Altornl''f •t L•w h•\ tiltd • C>f'1Ulon In thl\ <Ourt for 1n order •Howlnq peohl• 1on"r to thanqf' ht~f~r na~ ffom l 14RRV ROY GARCIA 10 LAllRY Ml'NUEI GARCIA GRIEGO 11 1s rwrf'b~ oroered that •II cwrsons '"'~'"'t"d 1n the m•tler •forfs•10 appear brtor• ,,,,, court 1n Oep.artrrwnt No 3 di 100 Clvl< Centtr Orlv• Wt\!, §.tnla Ana, c .. 11rornra, on S•pttmbtr 1, 1'180 et II o'< 100 a m , and tlltn 111><1 Cl>Pre \lloW uu>e. Cl any 1hr y na ve wf'l'f \•Id p~tltlon tor <"'"Oto• nemrt \haul<! not t>e 9r an\tO. II " lur1""• oroereo th•t • coov ol 1111\ 01 ~· 10 ....... Cb\l\t Dt publl\llt<I In ,~, Orllft9t Co.SI O•lly Pllol, • nt•\O•~r ot oenef•I CirCulahon. publl\hed ,,, lhl~ c.ounty •• ltt•st one•• Wf'I~ tor tour c~uhv~ """"'pr.or to tllt dey ol .. Id llHrlr>Q O•led July 11, "'° MARKA SOOEH .Judge ... 'llt SUl>t'lor Cour1 IAlllAllA K. STRICKLAHO llll H.1 ......... •Y 5.11~11 AM,CA Ttl: C1141 .. H14J P uD"'l'lf(I 0rd"9" Cwst Daily Ptlol Jul~ n AUQ I 8 IS 1q l'llO ~-IO P UBLIC NOTICE HOTCCE CHVITCHG •cos Mottet '' here:bv qtv~n lh•f lf'tf' 8 0.,0 ol Trust ... • ol IM (fHll Com· mu~ltv Coll~ Ol\tr1c.I ot Or•nqp Count¥' C-'Jllforf\ia. wlll re<ie1ve s••lf'd bCO• up lo Sepl.,...ber 3, \'!80; l 00 o.m ., ., '"" PurcNlslnQ Ot>pertment ol \•Id lCllOOI Olslrl<I tooled ., 1310 AO•m• A vonve. Cost• M esa Calllornll, al wlllcll lime Wld bldt will be ouotcccy OPfntd •nd read tor Uniform R•"'"'· CW•I Community Coll~ Ol•lrtct All blos •r• to ~ tn eccor041n<t wlll\ ,,,. Bid Form Instruction• •nd Condi llons •nd Soe<lllullon• wlll<ll are now on Ille 1no -Y be secureo In Ille olllce of II•• PurcM \1"11 Avtnl ot w 10 scllOol district E•<ll b!OcltPr must submit wit" 111$ oco • <•Slller't <llOO. corlllled ell.ch or bidder's ooncs m-pay•oi. to Ille oroor OI ,,,. COi\! Comm..n11, Coll~ Olst•lct &•rO oc Tru""' en an emoun1 nol tn\ lh•n five puce r11 U., I ol Ille wm blcl M • Q1Mrentw 11111 tllt bidder wm tnltr Cnlo ,,.. propa..cs Contract If the wme 1' •w•rded to t\tm In ttw •vff'lt OI tA\l\l,.. to.,.,., ln 10 tVCft C""trKI. ""' orocffCI• OI .... C n.<-Wiii ~ lor1tlted. Of In tllt Can ol • bond tM lull "'"' '"""" •Ill e» torlelleo to w ld ,.,._, 0111•1<1 No OC-r -· wlll>Orew 1111 bid ler • oerlod ol IOrly·llvt 1•51 ons •II•• ,,_. dllt >ti IO• CIW ot>fnlno 111trool '"" Board ot fru\ttte\ "''-'""' ttw prlVllllOP ot tflKClr>q •nY •nd •II Old• or to w•t¥f' 1tny trr@Ov••rfU~• °' lft~ lorm11llll•• '" •ny bid or In Ille bldell"I! NORMAN E WATSON St<f"flt•ry, B<>e•d 01 r ruste<'\ Publl\'*I Or•-Co•nt O•llY Pilot, A1>ou•I " , •• l'llO 33'0-IO PUBLIC NOTICE MUHCCCPAL couiil __ _ CEHTRALOllAHGECOUHTV JUDICIAL OISTllCCT 1f\t fO"OWinQ ()M\nn\ ar,. dOll'O n•J\in"''' '" Statt ot C•llffnll• Pi FCE'> OF f ICoH1, 11811 \nA\I a.m . torney. IF YOU OBJ ECT to the I F Y 0 U A R E A granting of the petition, CREDI TOR or a cont- you should either appear lngent creditor of the de- at the hearing and state ceased, you must file your your objections or file c laim ~Ith the court or written objections w ith the present 1t to the personal court before the hearing. representative appoi nted Your appearance may be by the court within four in person or by your at-months from the date of torney. f irst Issuance of letters as I F Y O u A R E A provided In Section 700 of CREDITOR or a cont· the Probate Code of ingent creditor of the de· California. The time for ceased. you must file your filing clalms will not ex- claim with t:'"' cr urt or plre prior to four months present It to t• .~ ,..ier sonal !rom the date of the hear· representative appointed 1ng noticed above. by the court within four YOU MAY EXAMINE months from the date of the file kept by the court. first issuance of letters as If you are Interested in the provided in Section 700 of es tate. you may file a re- t he Probate Code of quest wlt11 the court to re· .California. The ti m~for ceive SPKial notice of the f iling claim s will not ex-Inventory of ,estate assets plre prior to four months and of the petitions, ac- from the date of the hear-c o u n ts a n d r •ports Ing noticed above. described In Section '700 YOU MAY EXAMINE of the C.llfornla Probate the f ile kept by the court. If Code you are Interested in the estate. you may file a re· auest with the court to re- ceive special notice of the inventory of estate assets and of the petitions, ac- cou nt s and repo r ts described in Section 1200 of the California Probate Code. Donald w. Porkal, At· torney at Law, 615 Civic Center Drive WHt, Santa Ana, California 92702, 135-3953 Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot. Aug. 19, 20, 26, 1980 3396-80 PVBUC NOTICE Hurwiti, Remer, Mac· NOTICE OF DEATH OF Oon.ild and Meade, At· ARTHUR T. ALTSCHUL torn e y s a t Law ' a AND O~ PETITION TO Professional corporation, ADMINISTER ESTATE 660 Newport Center Drive, Suite 1555, Newport NO. A-105443. Beach, California 92660, T ~ a I I h e I r s • (714) 759-4711 beneficiaries. creditors Published Orange Coast and contlnQeftt creditors of Daily Pilot Aug 19 20 26 Arthur T . Altschul of 19803395-aO · • ' • Costa MeH and perso.ns who may be otherwise in- PUBLIC NOTIC£ NOTIU TO CONTltACTOH CALLl•e l'O• 1101 110 'lJ Sc""°I Ohtrlel C.,.•t Communlly Coll-Ohlti<I 8 10 0..0tlN 10 00 a cl<I<• 1 "' of ,,,. IO!ft CM!• Of S.Pl•rn4W• .... Pl.ct 01 flld ll•olpt Offlu 01 Ille Pu!CllU lftO A .. nc M••laf\ .. ,,,c ... CoHt C°""" Co•C-01,1rlct, 1110 AO•ms AW C•I• Me .. CA .,.la ProJ•cC ld•t1ll!Cce llol\ Hamt Robtnwooo Sc-I Pa<i.C"O Prei.<t Pie<• P1..,, .,. on Ill• Offl<• oi Ille Olrector. Pl\rstut Fec11111 .. PC-lf\O Co••I Comm11nlly Coll-Ol'1rl<I . UIO Adem1 A•e Tt•ll•r l'nlllly, Coste Mete NOTICE IS HEREBY' GIVEH 1,..1 tllt 6b0-med S<-1 Ol1lrlcl DI Or•not County, Celllornle, •<ting oy 1no lllrouon Its Governing floarCI. ne••l nal t r r ••tr ••O to 11 "OISlAICT."' will r.celve up to, llul not liter tNn C,,. abovt·•Ltled llmt. seeltO lll<lt for 111t •w•rd al a iontr..:t lor !tit IOoW orOj@< I 810t sn.11 be r•colvecl In Ille pif<t l<lentlli.ct a-. and Shall Ot 01Mned enO pybllcl\I r..O 11ouo •' lllt lbovt· tta\td II'"'! and plec• terested In the will and/or estate: A petition has been filed by John A. Altschul in the Superior Court at Or1nge County requesting that John A. Altschul be ap- p o I n t ed a s personal representati ve to ad- m i nster the estate of Arthur T. Altschul (under the Independent Ad· ministration of Estates Act). The petition Is set for hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive. West in the City of Santa Ana, Callfornla on Sept. 2, 1980 al 10 :00 a.m. 1<1qnw•v SpM• "!n t •auM A•·•< h 101 IOI Clvk Cttllw Ort .. WHI Senti AM, CA '1701 Tn,,. will Dt no Otpo•ll •-'!Ulrtd for u cll HI ot 1>1dCIOCumtnt1109u•r•ntM lllt ••tum Ill OOoO c-ltlon wllllln 10 Cleys •«•• \l\t bCd openlnQ Oele. IF YOU OBJECT to the orantlng of the petition, you should either appear at the hearing and state your objections or file written objections with the court before the hearing. Your appearance may be In person or by your at· torney. c. Q?bl? Jnv<• U krop1nft 111t Vl\tA t Mflttn N.-wuort ArM h ('4 ~?Ma() JtJrtr•y A'"""'" U() Cj (ollt'Or />v• (IM""'O'll (II q1111 JAn l' A,.ndson l•&" P•aullo OaM Potnt C• '767'1 B•h• 61<1109 1•••1 ~un<'I Soult l •OV"a Ct tt•ll Srntt (•taw•ll tUO weyn~ A"'*""~ South P'1\f\6"nA CA ~ 10)0 \ ""'"' Mf-lflif\dr~l ••>~ N Floutroa tO<AM<OI•• C11 ~I 8 t11V J•an llAf.,.~ 3~l0 P&d\IA Ave Clnrernont c .. •1111 H L C•I0-11 7111 O<ut1 81v0 Coron• <!ti M,., ('a .,,n Thi\"""',.''., conouc''"° rt.., 4t*" "" 1nco,oorAtfd t1\\0C1~tt0n t"tMr uu1n " pArtMr"'IC> Jowo ll~rooln• Tnl\ sllll....,,nt w11• lll~CI wllll ti.. C'ovnty Clerk OI Oranot Countv on July lO '"° '""" PuolhN'CI °'""o-Co.st O.llv Piiot A\IQ S 11 Ct 16 1q*1 311$ to Wont to buy t ime shore i nterval ownership of o con- dominium, own-your- own apartment or recreotlonol property? find it fast in the new classification 2450 of the DAILY PILOT 8'2-5178 ____ ._ " PLAINTIFF MEOENT. CHC A CotortOO CorPC>•f llon OE FENOANT SA LLY SANTMYER, 00• BUCK HENRY'S DOES I lllrougll X, Cn<IVSivt SUMMONS CASE HUMlalt; 111161 MOTIC•t Y• ... ,,. --'. T ... ~4Hlr1 "''' _ ...... 111•\ ., ... wl- Y4HI' .......... _. \IMttt V.,. '~ •1111111 • ,.ys. • ..,. IM lftle.matlall ... , __ AYISOI Utt .. Ila II* .............. Et 1r1-.-1 _.. ,_,..,. c·-• u•. •111•11414Rtl•a--U•.r-.... 11tre .. • ..... LH II ,.,..,,.,.,. clfllCI• .... II YOU whll 10 -· '"' Mlvk• ol <In •llorMy In 1111\ m•ll•r, \'OU tllOUld do •a prOMpll' 10 tn.t vour written r.\ponst.11 •nv. m•Y be llll'CI on lime SC Utltel dtwa >Ollcllar t i COii Mio IM un ·~ en este •\unto. debtrl• ll•Cl•lo lnm•Oletamt'lte. d• ot• maMra, \II f-t• t Krll•. \I llay 11oun1. Ollf'dP tar '"'''''•CUI • tctMllO. TO lHE oe FENOANT A CIVIi <omillllM ,,., l>Hfl Tiiter by fllt Pltlll• Ill 1911"'1 YOU II YOll wl"' to clal•lld 11111 l•wwn. vou "'"''· wllllln Jt o•vs •lltr 1111• wmmon• II Ur'\ltO 011 yO\I, 1111 wllll 1111• court a wrlnen rn"°"""' to IM comc>lalnl V11l1n you Oo '°• your llel1111ll wCll I» llftlertel on •P. 1>llcollon °' '"" 111111111", '"" 11111 covrt mn •llltt • IUOOIMflt eg1lflu you IQ• tllt retltl dtrn.t'\ded It lllt c.omot•lrlt, wlllcll could rHVll '" oernttll-nl 61 WIMI. ltlilnQ of,_., Of P•CIClfftY or O\lltr rt llfl r.Oue•ted Ill tllt O"' Pl•l~I OA TEO ~11(111, '"° EOW•rd W fl~•l, Clerk Jlllle K~Y. 0.Cl\llY ltOOt • T. MUltli'tfY .,.......,,.,"'-• ... .. ,., .......,---.ca ..... Tt4. 0 141-IM Pwbll•fltd Orenot Co.t~\ Oally Pli.t AuO It It SeOI 2 t ,.. ..... E1<ll bid mull coMo•m e11CI Ot rupoMIW 10 tlll ton!••<• dOCU'"df\tl E •<II bid "'•" Dt accompanied oy lht MCurlly '"'"'"lo'" Ille CoMtt<t do<umtnb -b\I tl\t llsl Of orooovel •ubC ont•KION.. 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Ill~ l"Ot ltSI 11\an Ille UICI \jltl(Hltd rltti IO •II -~"*' tf'tl, ..... ll'f """' '" ... ••treutlell of Ille contrtd. No~ may whMtew 1111 lllCI w • Pt•ICICI ef leny.flw Id ) N Y' atttr ,,,. ..... "" ....... -1 ... Of ... ~ A INYl'lltnl llef'll •"" • .. rlOfll\llll<f llOM Wiii bt ._1 ..... _,,.. It Ht<lr lltfl of Ille ~Gflll'ilCI. Tiii ,..,,.. ...... ~II " lfl W. tw'lll Ml ~ In llW t Olllrtcl CIK"'""°"I ~ .... o lv-•W•i-jec...-,, ~tATNtM' PW!I.,_. OrtNt CM" o.11, l'ltof A .... It, 1', t• IM14' I - IF YOU ARE A C REOITOR or a cont- ingent creditor of the de- ceased. you must flle your claim with the court or present It to the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of first lssuance'of letters as provided In Section 700 of the Probate Code of California. The time for tlllng Claims will not ex· plrt prior to four months from the date of the hear· Ing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE the me kept by the court . If you are lnt.,..sted In the estate, you may flit • re- quest with the court to re· celve SPKlal notice Of the lnvent«v of estate asstts and of tht petitions, ac· co unts and reports described In Section 1200 of the Callfornla Probate Code. JoMt At Albe ... t, IM .• 411 S. leverty Dr., lever· ,, HIUI, Callforl'lla, At· torl'ltY for ~ltleMr, '" Pro ...... Publlshtd Oranoe Coast Oally Pilot, AUQutt 12,. 1~1 1~1~ 3~~ -,., .,. '.. . I ..... -- •Erm• Bombeclc •Cla111tled Tueec:tay. Augu11 19. 1980 Featuring_._ •• ___ .5 oally Pllel Pl\oto' by ltl<Nl'd k.,... .. , Quicksteppers Harry and Beverly Ostrou in a round dance dunng one of the group 's weekly sessions . ..... Sweet Reward t • I ' Some hobby, keeping bees. The little bug- gers are likely to sting you at any provoca- tion. And you get your hands all sticky with honey. But there are pleasures and rewards, too. Here is a treatise on some of them. I I I J By JOE WING PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y. <AP> -If you're tired of fighting weeds, if the wind's been taken out of your sails, if golf palls, and you've developed a tennis elbow, consider a spectator sport that's hard to beat: beekeeping. It's a winner for cocktail party conversation. The crowd that yawns over the agonies of long distance runners or golf links liars is apt to come alive as soon as you mention, with due modesty, that you keep bees. And the questions pour in. "Are you sure you 're not keeping some killer bees?" No chance. Those African bees, which escaped after be- ing imported into South America for research, are a long way from the United States. Besides, they aren't really all that dangerous -African natives have been taking honey lt from them for centuries. : ! "Don't you get stung a lot?" Not that often. You learn bow to handle the little bug- 1 . gars. When you've been stung as often as I have, it doesn't ~· , · hurt much. I just scrape the stingers out of my skin. Of I. course, if allergic to bee stings, stay away. t Ii · "HOW DO YOU KEEP from getting stung more often • than you do?" ' I try to handle bees gently. without jerking or jarring. I l'tn no lonaer afraid, and that helps. Before opening the [ hive on a sunny day, I puff smoke inside to make them think I · Uleir house ~on fire and start them guzzling honey, which t makes them gentle. I wear a veil and, being an amateur. I 11 wear gloves. Professional beekeepers would think me a si~sy. . "I suppose the bees ·~ to know you too." No, they don't recogmze me, and woufdn't care it they did. U one ot thelr slsterrgrowt old and-falls sick, they drag ber out of the hive to die without glving it a second thought. "What mates you think they have thoughts?" '.) · 'l1ley do some pretty smart things. Their wax cells are !• eo uniform ln si&e that they once were proposed u a unit of . euurement. They find their way home from Rower .. ' tebel a mile away, and inform their slaters where those ,,. en are. Without fuu they dlvtde chores like cleaning •. •d air candttionin1 the house, caring for the brood, bring· ~·. lnl In ~ and p01len, gual'ding the front door and creat· '<. ln1 new queens. -and Drawbacks - ~~ ., . . ~ Joe vVing ar his beekeeping chores ·•Her sisters? Isn't she a different kind of insect altogether?" · Yes and ·no. She has a different kind of stinger, and mature sexual organs instead of atrophied ones. But she was hatched from the same kind of egg as the workers. The previous generation, wanting a. new queen because of over· crowding in the hive or because the old queen was failing or dead, gave her an outsize cell in which to develop, and fed her a richer diet, with a lot of royal jelly made in speeial glands. ' "When the new queen is born, what happens to the old one?" First, the old/queen tries to sting the new one to death. That's the only Ume she tries to sting. Unlike w9rkers, she can do it without sacrificing her life. If she fails to commit regicide, she gathers about lialf the workers and sets off in a swarm to find a new home. . •'A swarm of bees like that must be pretty dangeroua.'' No. Before swarming they fill their crops with hon_,y to give them a new start in life, so they are good·natured and 'entle. Grab Your Partner They call themselves the Quicksteppers, and that's just what they do. Thursday from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m. the Quicksteppers gather at the Costa Mesa Recreation Center to dance, either square or round. Besides dancing for their own pleasure, the Quicksteppers perform at hospitals. convalescent and re· tir.ement homes, senior citizens' clubs, mobile home parks, the Fairview State Hospital and the county fair. They are, in fact, registered as 'a performing group in a book used by agents. They don't !)ave a theme song, but they do have a theme: "You're never too old." Interested couples who agree can learn more by call- ing 545-5669. These swinging seniors also perform tor hospitals, old retirement and convalescent homes and other places to prove ·you 're never too old. · Ella Johnson and Herb Anderson, left, face Harry Ostrou in a rythmic maneuver. _) of Beekeeping "How do they find another place to live?" THEY USUALLY SEND scouts to find a likely hollow tree or bird house or space behind the siding of a home. They may wait for an hour or two or three days before de· ciding to move. Then in minutes they leave and make a bee line for the most promising place their s~outs have located. "Do drones do some of the heavy work around a hive?" Drones do no work. They guzzle honey and roam from hive to hive, hoping for a chance in a million to mate with a virgin queen -and die. ''When do they begin to gather new honey?" They gather nectar, which they transform to honey by evaporation and by adding acid from special glands. Also pollen, rich in protein, which they store to feed grubs. It begins with the first blooms, like pussy willow. Fruit tree blossoms give them their first important honey flow but in much of the country clover in June provides th~ main crop. "HOW SOON do you harvest the honey?" As soon as the bees have cured it and capped it over. In these parts, they have capped most of the honey by August. "What does your share amount to?" . That depends on where the hives are and how good l am. More than 400 pounds have been taken from a single hive. lfl get 75, I feel lucky. "How do you go about getting your share?" Each hive or "super" -a duplicate hive on top of the bottom one -contains nine or 10 frames. A frame is four- sided, nearly as long and deep as the hive but only an inch wide. The frames are constructed to hang down in the hive like the leaves of a book on edge. Before putting the frames in the hive. you affix in each a sheet of wax foundation. Each sheet is stamped with the outline of bee cells. It gives them a head start on making the honeycomb, saves them work, and helps insure that they will construct uniform cells suitable for incubating workers or storing honey. / THE QUEEN BEE lays eggs in the hive body and perhaps in the first two supers above it, though some frames in that area contain honey only. Ordinarily honey is taken only from supers piled on top of the hive body and lower sui>ers and separated from them by a special screen that keeps the queen from laying eggs where you want only honey. "Don't the bees get mad when you take their honey ?" Usually not, if you work quietly. ''Why go to all that trouble for a little honey when you can buy it?" Sure, but nothing boqght in a supermarket tastes as '.good as stuff you harvest yourself. Harvesting isn't the all, or even most important. Watching the bees and figuring how to outsmart them has a fascination all its own. Bees probably have been studied more than any other insect, but even after tending them for years I sometimes watch by the half ·hour as they Ry in, laden with honey and pollen from mysterious expeditions. and zoom off again. It's a special kind of pleasure. I . c I • ~ I • • 1 f ~ ' I I I I ' .J I -ONLY fltLOl HARRIET WIEDER Women Honored Three Orange County women have been honored by Bullock's for their Individual achievement and community service. · Oretta Ferri Sears, Elaine M. Redfield and Harriett M. Wieder were selected, along with 29 other women from Arizona and Southern California, to receive hand-cut Waterford crystal bowls as tokens of their success. The awards were presented by Los Angeles Mayor Torn Bradley and Bruce Schwaegler, president of Bullock 's. Oretta Sears, a former countess and roller skating champion from Italy, was elected to the Orange County Superior Court in 1979. She graduated from UCLA and has been a trial at- torney for the U. S. Department of Justice. Mrs. Wieder, a Huntington Beach resident, was the first woman to be elected to the Orange County Board of Supervisors and she currently serves as vice chairman. She was an executive assistant lO Mayor Sam Yorty in Los Angeles and has been in- volved in many public service activities. Elaine Redfield, a Fullerton resident, is chairman of the board of directors of the Orange County Music Center. She helped found the Fullerton Committee for the Orange County Philharmonic Society and has been active in many arts causes. She is an interior designer. ELAINE REDFIELD ORETTA SEARS ,· Culling Courses 'The trouble with me is I've never had a lifetime ~oal. My goals last for about 15 min - ates /whenever I get !J&lngry . . . whichever comes first. A few years ago. I promised myself that e\tery September l would enroll in something lo im- prove myself. Last year it was Dread Baking I and Slimnastics. {Which pro- ved cowiterproductive.) However, my interest ll informal classes rought to my mailbox n avalanch e of rochures and schedules uarant eed t o ehallenge my interests, barpen my skills and uke me a legend in my wn time." SEX AND ruTRffiON: ls it true rbat they s a y about ysters? A frank look at lale /female rela- 1a&hiP6 with emphasis • energies. Bring a otebook, pen tnd floor usbioo. Six weeks : $8. LIGIITING A TORCH 'O R BU RNED -OUT 'ARENTS: Children !riving you up the wall? .earn bow to deal with eelings and pressures. acludes lectures, group nteraction and stress elease. Babysitting pro- i ded. Six Thursdays : ao. VENTRILOQUISM ~OR THE BEGJ NN- iER: It's easier than RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY w .... , .. w .. ........ 1'22 ..... lt•d. C..teMtw-l41-llH PAINTERS PANTS SPECIAL OFFER su.oo r AUC.lSTHtoSEPT JS1li you think. Learn the basics from handling your dummy to develop· i n g m aterial, s tage presence and projection . Dummy or hand puppet provided. Classes by ar- rangement. $20. SUCCESS FOR THE NO -NONSENSE WOMAN : Do you panic in a social s ituation? Maybe it's because you are insecure about your s peech, your d ress , makeup, hairstyle, con- versation, or personali- ty. Learn how to handle important meetings, parties and interviews . The first s ession will be on walking. Wear com- fortable s hoes. Mon - days : $15. FIGHT S TRES S WITH BATON · TW lRLING: A basic course for beginners that teaches eye, hand and body coordination. Relaxation for the entire family. Tennis shoes, stretch shorts or leotard required. Hair should be tied back. Six sessions : $20. READING THE FINE PRINT CAN SA VE YOU MONEY : A co m - monsense approach to stocks, bonds and an- nuities. Instructor offers imaginative tax shelters. Your outdated insurance program reviewed without charge. Fee : S200. GO U RMET COOK I NG AU NATUREL: Discover an exciting world of foods. he rbs and spices. Learn what fo o d s h ave m e dicinal value <s ee Sex and Nutrition>. Al the end of each class. enJOY your cr eation . Wea r loose-fi tti n g clothes. Fee: $30. I don·t know. After looking through a couple of hundred of these courses, maybe I'll go back to my original goa Is : World peace and fi ve pounds lighter by Christmas. Oasses Set . l;teunion Dates Graduates from Los Angeles. San Clemente and Santa Ana high schools are planning reu- nions. The Santa Ana class of 1930, joined by the classes of 1929 and 1931, will hold its 50th reu· nion at the Santa Ana EUcs Club Sept. 10. Dinner will be $12.50. For more details or to mate reaervations call Joe McKee at 846-6233 or Aileen Crawford at 544-7389. The Los Angeles class of 1955 will gather September 26 at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. For reservations, call (213) 275·1595 or write to the Class of Summer '55 Re~on, 3008 Cavandish Dr., Los Angeles, CaU f., 90064. Today is the last day to reserve tickets for San Clemente Hi gh School Class of 1970's 10- year reunion. The event is set for Aug. 23 at the Laguna Hills Holiday Inn with tickets priced at $17.50 per person. For reservations, call Vicki Vedder Sweet at 496-0820 or Monica Hutchens Weatherholt at 496-1631. BEEFSTICK ® SALE For Muscular Dystrophy FrctT' now thru Seotember 1st. for every 001•nd of BEEF STICK Summer Saueaoe sold Hickory Farms of Ohio will contribute 25' to the Muscular Ovstrol)hy Associatfon. SAVE 30c -off the reg. lb. price. any cut piece of beef stick SAVE soc -off the Reg. lb. price. on whole beef stick ~'~~©f1 ,~,m~·~~l(I ~· ...... ... ..,.. ..... 64040JO .. FEATURING Sweet Now Sour DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been •tarlQI lnto apace for ao mlnl.MI, tryln1 to word my rroblem 10 you can prin tt. I tuen tbe beat wa1 UI to come ri&bt out udtayit .. My husband la 52. Our sex lite -which waa once very aood -baa turned sour. Almost every attempt in the lut et1ht months ha• ended in failure. He cannot eet an erectloa. At first I thouaht he w 11 aeeina another woman , but I was wroa1. Laat week, we dlacuaaed it frankly. He has no idea what is wrone with him. AO he k.nowa ia it'a frustrating and bumiliatlne. The readtac I have done bu led me to believe that un· leas a man is on medlcaUob for diabetes or bJih blood pressure, male impotency Is caused by emotional problems. My husband saya be wlll 10 for counseling if you sug- 1e1t it. Please plde ua. -NEED HELP IN CLEVELAND DEAa N.H.: lJatU re· cemUy moet male I•· ,_.Me wu eouldered .. p1ycllolotllcal," bat re· ceat re1earclt at Bananl Medical Sellool by Dr. atcltard Spark baa Uuowa MW Upt oe &Illa Nlbjed. 0.e-ddrd of dae IH· aally lmpeC•t males be exama.ed Hffered from a llHdalar disorder. After treatmeat, almoet M pefte9& were able to resame 1esaaJ activity. So If a pby1lcal H · aml•atloa reveals •o preblem, yoa.r bnbaad aboald aeek coa•ael· ln1. . (P.S. to all latett1&ed plty1ldau: Tiie al•••· alar problem affected the level of t.estoeteroae, a ies hormone). D E A R A N N LANDERS: It's too late to help the young guy who was sure he didn't father "Rosie's" child, but maybe the incident I Horoscope J WEDNESDAY, A\JG. it By SYDNEY OMARll AIUES {March 21-April 19): You "absorb" knowledge. Publicity, timing dominate scenario. Accent on joume.y, publi.shinl, com· munication, dealing with "established" persons. Cancer, Capricorn natives figure prominently. You get what you want, but in in- directmanner. You'll see! TAUllUS (April 20·May 20): You go places, meet people, mate snap decisions and couJd fall "madly in love." Gemini, Sagittarius natives figure prominently. Spotlight on financial status of one close to you, including partner or mate. You get involved in situation that smacks of the occult. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): G<> slow, accept some restrictions as necessary. perhaps beneficial. Aquarius, Scorpio natives play key -roles. Accent on cooperative efforts . partnerships, contracts, marital status. Defer to judgment of individual with proven "track record." CANCER {June 21-July 22): Obtain hint from Gemini message. Go slow, attend to basics. be aware of budget, pets and depen- dents. Keep medical or dental appointments. Chanees occur, special messaees are received -member of oppoeite ses says you are 1rand. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Excitement of speculation is featured -you get to heart of matters, you learn where you stand with member of opposite sex. Another Leo figures prominently. You remodel, improve comfort at home; family member makes major con- cession. vi.GO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Define mean- ings, see as is, avoid sell-deception. Capricorn, Pisces and another Virgo figure prominently. Get professional opinion on land, home values. Do something constructive about security, ob- taining quality material. LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Relative who in· sists on living in past should not be permitted to sway you from ultimate goal. Stand firm for beliefs. principles. Short jour ney could be featured. Debt is repaid. You benefit from "apecialconference." SCO&PIO {Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Past efforts bear fruit. Accent on payments, collections, finishing project which had been a financial drain. Aries, lJbra persons figure prominently . AUresalve associate will • 'aee things your way.'' You locate item that bad been misplaced. SAGIT'JARWS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): New avenues of ex.pression, opportunity become available. Leo, Aquarius penon.s play important roles. You'll be more independent, chance to put ideas to use will highJigbt scenario. Timing is right -take initiative. Mate fresh start in new direction. CAPalCOaN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your "inner voice" spew truth -you will know what to do and when to do It. Secret meeting works to your advantage. Know it, cast aside fears, doubts. Someone "very important" is working in your beball -behind the scenes. AQVABIVS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Flurry of calla, trips, social activities dominate scenario. Gemini, Sagittarius persons play key roles. Early dispute could be transformed into a "grand alliance." Humor, versatility, relief of pressure will be accented. PISCES {Feb. 19-March 20): You get new deal, fresh chance to prove ability. Expect more r esponsibility. greater reward or profit poten- tial. Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo natives figure prominently. Your position is stronger than originally anticipated. Ann Landers am about to relate will advice. You caa alt la be of value lO others. my cbalr any day. About 30 years ago in DEAR ANN : I'm 16 our sleepy little village, and have been going a girl who bad a reputa· with a guy 20. My folks lion for sleeping around have been on my case became pregnant. She because they don't like named the sucker of her him . choice, bit him with a Joe Jost his job and re· paternity suit and it fuses to look for another was the talk of the. one . He has a new car town. a nd new clothes and Prior to the court won't tell me wher he date, at least 15 acquain· gets his' money. lances told Bill, "l>Qn't night he ve me real worry, we will be in gold watcH "th ubies court with the rest of the in it. My mother says I guys testifying for you shouW call the police. I because any one of us couldn't do that. Please could have been nailed help me. -DONNA the way you were." On DEAR DONNA: Give the day of the court pro-tbe watch back and stop ceedings not one of his seeing Joe before tbe pals showed up. police call you. He's bad Any young man who is news, IDd you know It. i n thi s kind o f -------- s pot s h ou ld li s t the names of all the guys who say they've been there, too, along with the approximate dates. He should have a good lawyer obtain signed statements from the pals and have them all subpoenaed -which m e ans they MUST testify. You, as a woman, probably sympathize with the dame. If con· traceptives weren't so re- CORDUROY SKIRTS & SLACKS IN STOCK LADIES DEPT adily available, l would, __ ...,. loo. Because I live in a m one-horse town. this let-~~~l!ftiilJY ter wj ll l'}ave to tie -r ANONYMOUS D EA R AN 0 N · -......... Y M 0 VS : G o o d I028i ........ ,..._,,a..ch c..wo,,...92rlfl() WEDDING? 0,0.-'/0$ ~hl.O #ftOO•"Q 1nv1t1hOl\'t ftom P1f ' HaflfT'liW" Sr'C>D We~ • O•lhnctrve atrlY a-eereo by Amenc:a' h~1 STUDIO A•T •WHITE LACE• HG~CY ALSO: A MUl TJTUDE OF WtDDIMG GIFTS! ,.... PATS HALLMARK SHOP -.U\4\t.tl."1•-•·-P'AT H~D•lt I ._.,.._ c· IA~ tu.•o•• MOl!eC)"r C. M. GALUTIA, D.O.S. ~· Dentillry For Childem " \ · and Teetu. ~ • • ~ •{' SAN CLEMENTE MEDICAL PLAZA SUITE 245 657 CAMINO de LOS MARES (714) 496-5001 SAN CLEMENTE ocro11 from Son Clemente G•-11 """'"'" MON. -FRI. 9om-8pm SAT. . I / BE AN ICE SKATING ~ at an ,, , ' ICE CAPADES CHALET • NEW CLASSES STARTING • REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Capades Chalet Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your life, one of these classes is tor you. • BEGINNERS WELCOMB • -------------..--------------------- 2701 HARBOR BLVD. SAVEff SS OFF COSTA MESA. CA. l7l-lllO FOR BEGINNERS ._ Present thl1 coupon for 8:5""' HOTUNI l _ --- your dlacount. 17 .... 1 , Vold After Oct. 19, 1980 -;--.. .: .\ ... ,,._, ... ~ .. ~ ... ---.. ... '-" . . . ' I 0 a ) . . .. . ... L I I I. r I f '· ""' j ' • l" '1 d l • CONSUMER NEWS FEATURES ••• Bl. snaron nra\o\ n UI told thu. ls hf•r mo~t 8lrlk1na re l~rc Ma or Tt-"l Open Juvenile Trials Lootn By THOM S D. ELIAS It's one of the oldest disputes between judge!"> aad JOUMl8U!tls should trial.s of JUveruJes be open '° the public" Many news m~d1a spokesmen have said the public's right to know demalfds romplete open· ness. that the community has lhe right to know w hich young people present a danger to It and what's being done about juvenile crime. The court system has argued for rehabilita- tion. favorin~ closed -door proceedings in the belief that publicity would brand youngsters as criminals forever and preclude their ever being r efor med. THAT THINKING HAS LEO TO secret j uvenile trials. with defendants' names and the de- tails of their offenses never being publicly linked. Juvenile trials also are less formal than their adult counterparts and almost never involve juries. But the ~yjitem i s due for a change next winter. with a (est coming for journalists' claims that they 'll be responsible. • A law signed last month by Gov. Brown w1U SOUTHERN CALIFORNJA FOC U allow public and press in- to juvenile courtrooms when cases involv e murder,· arson, robbery with a dangerou s weapon , forcible rape with threat of bodily harm, kidnapping for ransom, assault with intent to commit murder and shooting into an occupied building. The change stems from recent st eep increases in juvenile crime, an epidemic which has filled som e juvenile detention center s beyond capacity. with youths sentenced to confinement there sometines sent home to await vacanices, THE LAW, SPONSORED BY Republican As· sembl)'man Gerald Felando of San Pedro, stem s from a the<>ry that's the reverse of the old juvenile court thinlcing: the contention that publicity can have a deterrent effect. No one wants to be branded a criminal for life, t.be lbeory goes, so the threat of publicity in major trials will motivate juveniles to keep their noses clean. But there's a major naw in this thinking. Studies in the last 15 years demonstrate consistently that one of the largest m otivating factors of violent criminals is a desire for notoriety. Many murderers have killed for publicity and many a hostage situa- tion has been solely for the benefit of the m edia. If adults ar e pushed toward crime by the possibility of wide coverage, why should teen- agers be expected to be more mature? THAT'S WHY THE CALIFORNIA law will be viewed b y newspeople and lawmen elsewhere as a major test of whether an open juvenile court system can work . For the l a w provides op- portunities for constructive work and for harm. Whether il works will depend largely on how the news media handle t he trials to which they'll suddenly gain access. If papers and television screens are filled with lurid details of teen-agers attacking their parents or senior citiz~ns. chances are the new openness will not only produce no re· duction in juvenile crime. but also an increase. But if the m edia handle their new privileges constructively, using the testimony and evidence in some cases to analyze causes of j uvenile crime. they'll at least Increase understanding while creat- ing a mimmum of negatively-oriented young heroes. IT'S ALSO UKEL Y THAT if television, radio and newspapers show themselves as irresponsible In handling the newly-opened j uvenile trials, their campaign for gr eater openness in court proceed· ings of all types will lose much of its legitimacy . But if lhe media show themselves r esponsible in handling this opportunity. they'll have a much more powerful argument to use in that battle and the public will be the beneficiary, because of its in· cr eased access to the court system. 1 Elias is a columni.Yt ba!ed in Sonia Monica /. Snake Lover Wanted SAO PAULO. Brazil <AP) -"Wanted - Snake· loving Chauffeur.'' State Congressman Jlhei Noda is having trou- ble keeping a ch auffeur because of his hobby - collecting snakes. Noda's third driver quit after a poisonous coral snake slithered orer the dash · boardofthepolitician'scar . The driver leaped from the parked vehicle screaminf for help, and was not soothed by Noda's eicplanaUon that the reptile was only a pet. 'GClt a prt>bltm ., 1'ht'11 u•ntr tu l'ol Dunn Pal will C'UI rt'cl fuµr flt•llmu th,. ar1sw.'r11 and action you Med Ill •ulltf' irlt'r1u1t1e.s m U01.Jl'rnmcr1t and busintu Moil 11,uur Q~•twna IU Put Uunn, Ar Your Scrruice, 01'0n9t ( CXl~I l>u•/11 1'1tol I' (J llo.l 15'i0, C:t>:ita Mraa, C.4 92826 A~ m<l"Y lrttrr& as paa11blc will ~ an&'UWr('(l. hut r>hunt'fi 111(/"'""·f or lrllrn 11(11 md udmg the rt'Odf'r ·~ full 11<m1t' uddrl'lllt a11d ~ruus houri' phone nunihnrnruwl ht' unslder.-d fhasrolumnappeandm 111 1• r1 ''Jll Surwluy~ ""rid ('up·# fffuagh .ft"ilJug U(';i\I{ f';\'I l.ui>t J:..nuary I sent free World L uv ~·ou~n from 1.1 Jar of dccarrem ated coffee to lhl' Ncbll • l'o When nothing arrived , I sent anoth1·r l'OUpon m Muy . and enclosed a letter to lhe s.;lc~ mJnJgt'r using the Watertown, Mass • addn.!:.!> that "m. 1m the coupon l still haven 'l re· ~ca \It'll u11yth111g I know ther e was no money in· vol \led but lh 11> 1:. not e1 good business practice. H. V .• Costa M esa Two free cups are being maiJed to you by tbe fulrlllment house in Stanford, Conn. Other readers who have not recelnd premium orren from the Neslle Co. may phone (2t3) 348·9"9 coUed. Be sure w have order Information bandy when you call. Tbe Nestle Co. says U was flooded wl&b orders for the cup you requested, and phoned complaints arc being handled as quickly as possible. Sfmw ·.-.hour"· Un rtMing DEAR READERS: Johnson Wax is recalling some recently manufactured 19-ounce aerosol "Shout" laundry soil and stain r emover due to pro· duct seepage through a faulty side seam . The re· call was issued because seepage may increase possible consumer exposure t.o ingestion, eye con- tact and flammability as cauUoned on the label. Cans involved began appearlng in stores in June t980. These cans have a smaU drawing or a "crown" printed at the left end of the blue stripe that Is pan of the package's front label design. They also have an inch-wide, notched, vertical side seam. Johnson Wax recommends that con sumers having such a container dispose of It. carefully•Ob· serving label cautions. To contact Johnsbn Wax for product replacem eo.t or further inlormation, call the tolJ-free "Shout'' consumer line (800) 558-5790, or write to Carol Hansen, S.C. Johnson & Son lnc., 1525 Howe St., Racine, Wis. 53403. HJ10 Stolt1 th .. Gt•nt•rfltor? . DEAR PAT: The Exchange Club of Hunt- ington Beach opened a Fourth of July fireworks stand al Beach and Atlanta, Huntington Beach with all proceeds donated to the Boys Club of Hun'. t ington Beach. On the afternoon of. July 2, p erson (s) unknown stole the gas-o p erated generator which was on loan to us. We have to pay for_ this generator and it i s costin g close to $500, which takes a huge chunk out of our profits. We are offering a $100 reward for the return of the gener ator or for information leading to the ar- rest of the person(s) who stol e it. Please ask your readers who have any information to contact the Huntington Beach Police Department or to call me. Lew Szallay , vice president of the Exchange Club, at 846-1393 between 9 a.m . and 6 p .m . Thanks. L.S., Huntington Beach A VS urges reader s wllo can help to respond to L.S. Worried .UHuU Wood Stot•_.'! DEAR PAT· We bought a house that has an old -fashioned wood stove in the family room . How can we be sure the original installation of the stove and the stovepipe wer e safe? S.C., Costa Mesa Underwriters Laboratories Inc. advises you to check the st.ove for broken parts or cracks before using it. The stove should be placed on a noncom- bustible floor or approved floor protection. The stovepipe should be 22 or 24 gauge steel pipe and its diameter should not decrease between the stove and the chimney flue. The total length of the stovepipe should be less than 10 feet or as short as possible. Also be sure there is al least an 18-incb space between the top of the stovepipe and the cell- ing or other combusUble material. The pipe should be sloped upward toward the chimney so that It enters the chimney at a point higher than the outlet of the s'4>ve firebox. The pipe sbouJd not project beyond the chimney flue lining into the chimney and It should not pass through a floor, wall, closet or concealed space, nor should It enter the chimney through the attic. ,Heeling Topic11 Scre~ned DEAR READERS: If you'r e planning a fall m eeting that features safety lo the home or out- doors. the Consumer Product Safety Commission can help you. Sound moUoo pidur1' rums and sUde presenlatiODB 011 a host or consumer topics are available on free loan, and return postage ls pro- vided by the goveramen&. Among subjects covered by CPSC films and slides are fire hazards In the home, lawn mower safety, avoldlng mishaps on stairs, tubs and wllh glass doors, toy safety. and safety packaging on medicines and t.odc product.a around the home. For lnlormatk>n, write to "Catalogs," CPSC, 5401 Westbard Ave., Washington, D.C . 202t'1. A pamphlet Ulltlag all commission materials wlU be provided, enabling you to choose the appropriate film for your meeting. Request.a for specific CPSC rums sboaJd be sent to F\lm Scheduling Center, Modern Tallda1 Picture Service, 5800 Park St. N., St. Petenburi. Fla. 33709. AU request.a for CPSC rums aad slides should be sent at least a month prior t.o your scheduled meeting. --------------------------1 ------------ CORRECTION tn tlM SNrs S.Ctlon Wtllcft ran August 17, 1h•re Wilt ID 1dvtrtiument for 861•1 9twt fflle. TIM c.opJ Mt lncornct. It Ml 2 dnwws. P~H '" If tor you,...lf at yeur nearest Star\ ttort. Wt slnc.r•IY retm fttt1 .,ror. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITlOUS •USINl!SS NAMI STATEMENT Tll• lollowlllQ 1"f\On\ ••• Oolno bll11119H •s ABllEHE PA ATNEIU 111P LIMIT EO. J Coroor•tt PIAH, Sult~ )01, N twpOrt lkftll. G4. 92MC) NEWP ORT INTEllSTATE IHVESTOAS INC. I• C•lllOrl'I• cor· t>Orat1on1, 1 Co-oor•lt ,,., •. Sull• 201, Nt-1 ~Mh, CA '76'0 Thi• b11s1,,.n f\ COl\duc.ted b~ • llmlt•d 11<1rtner\llio. NEWPORT INTERST•ff! INllEStOflS Rl~,,.rcl J L.Ol'tn•t, a.Mr•I P•r1Nr Tlllt ttat-nt Wt' IHl!d wltll '"" Ctuntv Cltr• 01 Or•noe County on Jllfyn 1..0 P\JBUC NOTICE ..... )11 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME STATl!MINT Tiie lollowlno P<trsons t •t ooln9 l>uslntnH CENTURY LI MOUSINE SERI/ICE SSO N•wPOrl Ctnler Drlv•, Svlfe 'Of N-1 Buch, C•lltornl11 t2t60 SOulhPOrl 0..,.1-nl CO•PDrt lion fl C•lllornla corwrttlonl, HO Ne""port C•l\lt• Orlvt. Ntwt>Orl Btlltll, Cll '7MO Tllh bllSIMH 11 con11vrltd by " tor POUi/on SOOTH PORT OEVE'lOPMl!NT CORP fly· John R Wtra. l'f'e\IO.nt Tiii~ \lellHl'tlll WI\ llltd ""1111 lllt Covllty ~of Ot-C-ly nn .,1111y PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTIT10US I USINUS HAid STAT•MENT Tiie 1011-1n9 personi •r• doing blislneuts. LA COST.t. \/ILUS LIMITED, 1~1'1 8elkh 81...S., Hun1tng1on 8uc11 CA .,647 HECTOR MAllSACl1, INC (a Celllornl• COf'Por•tlonl, 1t1•7 Buch Bl vcl., Hlltlll"!llon &Hell, CA '7647 ENA OEllE L.O PM EHT CORPORATION (t c111rornl• cor PO••llDt\I. P 0 80• 7S0l, Leuu1dl• CA.:101' Tllh bvSIMU Is (Oflducttd by • llmlltd pi1""9nhto HECTOR MARSACH, INC. Slll'llUlll CUDtlt, AllomtY fOf Corp Tiii' ttti.t'Nnt .,., med with thf County C,.rk ol Or.no-County Ofl July Tueeday,Auguat 19, 1980 PUBLIC NOTICE __ \_ PUBLJC NOTICE "ICTITIOU$ IUSINIU "ICTITIOUS •USINHS NAM1' \T&TeMlltT ltAM9 U&l1tM•1tT 111• IOO.,.l"O pt•Wlft '' ctoino l>v•I Th• 10110,.1"9 ~''°"' ••• dolno n,eu ., tH.i\l"e\\ I\ f'OITCIUPlollCS, 1 ('h•rloton C•£5TVll!W LIMITED, ,.,., lr•llle CA '71U 8uch 81¥<1 . HunllftQIO" e .. ch, C1' S I u • r I R 0 n • I 0 H • I 0 ' 7 '264/ (he•l••I"" lrVl"9,CA'1114 HECfOR MARSACH INC I• Tf\" ~ ..... ,I\ COl'clVC.led by •n In Celllornl• l tfPGl'•llOt\I "1'1 8t>.oth o,.•Ou•' Bh•d Huntlnql"" 114oA<h. o .,._.1 ....... ,, ll••dy l!NA Oew1oome111 Catpor•llon I• r11 .. ····•-Ill -·· flied wllh ·~ C•ll lorn•• (Qtpor•llOftl p 0 60A Counly Cl•r• 01 Or~ C-•• on July UOJ lttuc:.ocll•. CA '7014 l\ l'ltO 1 hi\ bv11,,.u I• <onducleO by • "IO~MI •mllttdP•rlrers/llt> PuOll•hfcl Or•~ Co•ll 0•1ly Plfol HECTOR MARSACH INC July 1'I Auq S 11 If 1'90 :!OAS 90 S..muel Cu~te. I Atlot""y '°'" C..,-p P ,8 le l nh \t.t•n~t w•i ft led .,,.,, '"-tt l L NOTICE County Cle•' OIOrdno-Counly on July l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATfiMl NT Tll~ lollowlno ""'~ '' 001110 bu•t l'lf~'-., fASfEE FREE/ OF cosr• MESll 1"'6 8rl\IOI (0$1~ M•~t. Cd RICM•O tlll\t)n $361 M•l•lwOOO { ., w .. ttmln\lfr c 4 Thi\ b\/ll""'' I\ (.DnOul.c\t:CI O• •n In (Ov1du•I AlcMrd E'llll<>n Tn1~ 1t•trrm•nt ~tti lltt"d with '"" c ounly Ct~rt• 01 O••nOf' Coun1y on 0.UQ\l\I I l<teel "141440 Publl\hed Or•nor '°"" 0•11~ Pllol ..... \ 11 ·~ ,. ,., ltl).te) PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIO\JS llUSINE U NAME STATEMENT Tn .. fOflOWtnQ Ot'r\On t\ dotnQ b\l\t n.-s~ itS CHONG S MAINTENANCE COM PllNY l'MI Mrye< Pld<e CCKlf M~\41 CA '1617 Chonq 1<1 Mono 1qu Mtv•• Pl•<• Co.r• Mt>d C• 97611 Tn•~ bv'\f,...~, "conctuc lt"d by •n 1n Olvldual (l>Onq I' 1 Honq 1 h •\ 'ttttf'tTWnl w•' fllt"d wltn ft\ft- Countv C"'lttrlt 01 Or4H'Of County on AUCIU\I I l'MO ,,,.,.,. Publhr.ed O•MQ(' (CM\l Dally Piiot AuQ S 17 lq 76 1'19() )161 90 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIO\IS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT fP\~ fQJle>wln~ ()ttr\on~ '"f" do1nQ bU\lnt'\\ as CLASSIC Of5 1GNIN6 l T 0 f~AO' Stavl'IN Lan.. Hunl1noton Beach CA 9?64'1 Juoy "" Ta91m~•~• t~7H 8•rrtool Cr t'iUl"lt1noton R,.bt n CA 9764' Andrtil F1lll't. t~1 Sf.tv1f'w L•~ HuntfnOIOll &oot<n Cll 9?6'1' Th1\ bu\fr'W\\ I\ condut.\t"O by • Qf'~tcll partf"tf'r~n1p JutlY NI hCll""'V~' H , l'ltO 'SAMUSL. CUBlTE Attorney •I uw M71 Sl•ter .,,...,. Suite us Hu11ll"9qn ... <II, Ca . tt'-17 1'10044 PvOll\'*I Ort119t Co.t\l Dally PllOI Juty 19. Avg S. 1,. 19 l'l90 30..., 80 PUBLJC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS •USINEU N-E STATEMENT The lollowll\9 ""''°"' ••• doln9 OVSlneu •'$ 8ROOICSIOE II APARTMENTS, UOO O••noelho•t>•. L• P••m• C•tllornle 90tll HUNT ING TOH Hl)M80L OT, '"U M•cAr111ur lll•d Sulle •DO Irvine. CA "21\S · This bu>lneu Is conou<ted O• • l•ma1,a ,,.,.,"'''-"'P l•~mt•n H Aresn Gfnt'r•t P•nne-r Thi\ •lal..,.,.nl wu hied wllh '"" Count y Clerk of Or•nge Covlllv OI' A119usl • 14'0 TMOM&S IWEL.L.S ,.-.,.-u.. S111tetlt lt•w~ 1'1-lal P"11U He Ne~ c..Mtr Orin N•w~ loft<ll, C.11..,.,.I• tl6'0 l'Uf7U Publllhtd Or-C.,.>I O•llV Pllol ~" ?4, Seot 1, l'llO JJ7HIO PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NIIMI! STATEMENT l hp followlnq C>il"fjOn) "r t! dolnQ bUtlnf\\-a1 THE ACACIAN. Dl?I fra1k Avtn"4! Garclfn Grow. CA 9?1>4J ErMI Rl•oor, Hll E El.,•na Way. Anaheim, CA 9'290S Boris Rlmens~•9t• 1113 C•a•Q C< Fulle'1°" CA 9?6JS Thi\ bU\•,,ts' 1\ conducted by A llmll•d PA,,,..,,,.,I> Ernsl Rlt!CI~• ~••1Par1Mr Thi\ \lAff'""H'lt ••s lllf'CI w 1tn ttw County Cler~ OI O•&nQt Countv on Ju1v JI,.., Ft017• Thi\ \f4th~mt!t'\t was fll#d w ith tM County (lpr• ot OranQf' Countv on Jvt., THOMAS WELLS FU1t>4 An-y .. LA,. 7S. t'lllO PuOh\i..o °' -C04\l O••f'f P"o' Svlt• .,. July 7• AVG ~ 1?. " '* 1101 1t••"41,, Fl-lal Pier• M N•w...,, c....wr Or1•tt P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATfiMENT T"" folfow •nQ ~r$0n Is dOinQ bu\t M\\ a\ RANKEM OEllELOPMENT 4)10 Cam1>u• Ori•• Nrw1>orl Bt•<h (,,llfornla 9166() John w Ko<>Qh 1711 Wt\I Co.tSI HIQhWh. D'S14. NtwP0'1 Beech CA '>'1"63 TM• bu\lnt\\ IS conducl~ by •n In alvldu•I JoM W l<~n Thi• stat•""'"' w•• lll•d with lh~ CounlV Cl~<~ ol Orang.-Counly on New~ ha<ll. Ca '11-Publhhed Or-CCMSI Oilly PtlOI 11uq n . 1', 7•. s.p1 1. ,.., 1nwp_ PU BLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •V~INESS NAME STATEMENT fhe •ollowlno Pt"r\On\ are dolno bu\int\\ e' CAROi Fl' OIL COM PAN V . 167'1 Gr"" VI-lAner Huntington Be•cn. C• •1•4• Grant C ArQab•IQltl, 1671 I cr .. en \llew Lent1, Huftlln91on Buch, Cll ., ... Sieve B<tlley end Pau~tt• Balley, S8S8 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, CA '°°2t Auoust 1, •-l'IOOI Jamn LA"Qston, 1760 Monrovia, Publi\""" Or~n9l' ,...,., 0 .. 11y Piiot Unit 84. Cost• Me .. , C• 9?411 Au9 s. 17 .. 16 I-I 3714 IO This~ ...... ,. Conduclecl l>y Grll\t E ••C)6brlght PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT Ol'USE OF FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME Tnt fottowlnq Pf'""' ha\ al>.\nooned lh• uu ol lhe Flclltious eu,tneu Nam~ ICAREFR TEMPS, 407' WtSltrly Pl , : 111 Newport llHCh, C• '1660 The Flctl\lous 8u~neu H•-rt lerr..o to -wes tll.ci In OranQt! Counly on July t ,.,, Oi1rhnr-Kr~orr 16• C•brlUo "8 " Cosla ~UI Ca '7677 This buS1nn1 was conoucl~ bY an 1ndlvtdua1 0d,.t¥nt Krurf'9"' Thi\ slatt,.....I ... , l1lfcl f'lln t~ County Cler~ ol Or•nor County on Au<ju\I I 14'0 ,,,.., ........ " K••P• you on top of the loc•I This >t•lt,,...,1 was flleO "''th !ht County Cler~ DI Oranoe Counlv on A'uqu11 1 l'llO PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSlltlrH ltAMl!U&T1'MlltT I he IOllowlt19 0.''~"'' ••• 001119 OVtln•u es Ill NEWPORT OFFICE BUILOINCS, • • • U) NEWPORT OFFICES ,4111 New.-1 Blvd , Coot. M•»•. C.A .,.,. Rowmoftd H•ll 10i ( ••nlllQ Star Ntwpar I e ... ch CA '16'0 Or lllch••O Compton 10 1 l!I Ml r ..ior Or P•wdoeNI CA .. IOJ Th" bU\lneH ,, (OnduCl•d by • ~M,A\ Partl'W-f\roo RV H•ll Tnis 1t•l*fT'lef't ••~ 111-0 ••'"' tnf County Cl•r1' OI Or•no-CCMH1ty on July 1S. t9t() fl U20t0 Publlllwd °'d"ll<' CD•\I D•llY Piiot Jul• 1•, "UCI ~ ll 1q l'ltQ 7"1l l!O PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC'TlllO\JS tUStNU•S NAME ST&TIMl!NT The toflowtno per\on\ •r• dolnQ t>uslnen •s THE' JAV GAOU" 1118 5•nd l(ty Cor·ona °"' MAr CA.,.,~ Ha•olO S J.sper 1711 S•rtO K•v C.Orona <lei Mar. CA '74?S H•rrlel s JHl>C'r, 1111 SAnd ICty Coron• ci.1 Ma< Cll "1•7S Thll bu11nen I• conou<ltO ov • r,iener•l PArtne"hlp Harald S Ja'""' Thh •t.1-t wo tll.O wllll lht County Clerk ol Or•na-Counly on •uou•• 1, ,., 1'1•11 .. Publhhed Or-Co .. t D•llY Pllol AUQ t!. " 76 SePI 7 1'80 3311 IO PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUsii;Ess NA"'E STATEMENT . The f0How1no Qf'r\Of" i\. ctOlnQ bU\I np\\.l\ TM DESIGNS JI~ l()(U" laoun41 Buen '" 9?~~1 R Tho"'~' MIJ~!l~r )II LOCu\I l AQUM 11<' .. ch (~ '16SI Tn ... OU\tOlll'i' I\ COf\ductNf by •n '" d1v1dual P Thom•\ M~Uttr Tn1\ \l~lf"tt¥f't wa\ flffl'd w lln '"" Couf\Jy (ttr• Of Oran~ Cou"h on ... ugu<I 1 l'MO PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Th• IOllow•nq ~·\On " d01nq bu\I n~\~ A\ JOVCE EN1ERPRISES 104 Ouu••ll• Pf Cos•• MO•, Cll .,.,. L.ol\ Joyce 8erolord, 145• Ouuvtlt~ Pl . Cosra M~\a. CA •1426 T h1\ bvS1N"n ii <Of\duc tNf b'tl .,,, 1n dlv1dua1 Lois J Ber•\ford Tl\I\ \lalt<N'"t "'"' 111..0 '""' lhe County Clor~ ol 0•.,noe (ountv on Au9u\I t. 1"81:1 (11141"7 P\lbll\/lto Ofet19t CIMl\t O•llY Piiot J11ly 7', A119, S. 17, It, t• JIOt to '°·'* -~ fJ141216 U,1'90 ,.,. .. ,' 1cene ... everyd•y In the Call 142-H7t. Pul • rew word1 10 wortc for ou. llULO .. -.-><°", IUIUtl I ~ICITT•letc IOflOI *41 MK.,._ llW, .. _ 9Mcll,(& .,... PW!ftfltel DfM>Of' Co•"' Otlllf Piiot Auq s. It. It,,. ,.., 1•....0 fAMUSLCUISTE ,..,......,atu• ..,, . .._,._ ... .. 10 M•U ...... -..Cll, CA nt47 ~u&ll1-0..IW!Ot Co'"' 0.lly ltllol JwlyU,Auo s. n. "· "'° ~1t1«1 .. .... .. .. -..... DAILY PILOT 87 PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USINUS l "&Ml.,,.,..,,,.,,.,, T ... lol'-lllQ --IS Oolnt bli\I ""' ., t W0 008A IOG OE NlAl GllOU .. 4UO B•rr-c• P•r••o . ! ,,..,,.., CA '12114 I A*'1 II M(l •Chl•ll 1'1lil Don 8~Ln Pelm~n.(A'7,.0 Tllh lkniMH I> <ondu<l9cl Oy "" 1r1 I olvlou•• AOtlofr1 R M<l t cn1en llll• ,,.,..,,.,,,, .... fli.ct wllh .... COllMY Cttrk 01 Or•noe Counly on A\19U\l I. t• l'HlTTI Publl\i..cl Or-c .... t O•lfy P1lo• A\19 17 1' 7t, S.PI 1 l'ltO J,...__, PUBLIC NOTICE "C'l'ITIOUS 8USINE5S N~SSTATSMl!ltT Tfir tollowlnq P!'\.Of' I\ dolnQ bu.•1 Of\\ d\ E .IC ECUTl\IE RECRUITING. MO E I/th Slrttt. S.nl6 ""~ C• MIC ll..,I p Reddt'n .lee <l<t1lll<IO wo c ... 1. ,.,..,. t • f t\i\ bV\if"W'S\ i\ COf\OVC-f~d b't' fin In dtvtdUAI fllllt ""I P Recl°"n fnl\ \f4iftt'f\tnt W., flted With fhf' Coul"IV Cltrh of Or•H'cte Covntv Cf\ •u9u,11 neo F1000 Publl1tloo<l °'""Of' Coa\I D•••v P1lo1 Auo ) 17 " 76 19'0 l11>4·IO PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ... Th• Blgge1t M•rketplece on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED A ·Ds You Can Sell It, Find tt, ( 842 5 8?S J Trade It With • Want Ad • One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ~-~ ............ ~!~ .. ::'!:':..":'!'!. ...... . .... ,.. 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... hr S. HeMMI fOf' S. HoelHI For S• HcNIHI For Sde H For 5* ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ew..... IOOJ •wr.t 1002 ........ 1002 G1Mr.. 1002 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• W l<S Ll:Y N HEW ASSUMAILE LOAN C"hannin~ 2 bdrm beach condo with double car Houte1 for SaN ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Cor'OM .. Mot 1022 ColteM.to 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• JASMINICaH« t.; Plan 2'1, 2 Bdrms. 2 bath.a, 2 rlreplaces, 2 patios each. One with very pnvate patio, one on the greenbelt W\lh f>.SIDE DUPLEX Two l Ir. Units $142,SOO fUU.U aEA.L TY 546-0114 ocean view $278,SOO J UST LJSTF.D, quid each Easls1de acrosi. from PL.Ai'<l 111. 3 Bdrm 2 balh, formal dining room. on pnvate comer Decked patio. automatic sprinklers $285,000 IARRETI' REALTY REGISTER 642-5200 park 4 BR 2 Ua. nt>"' carpets. Devin & ~o 642·6368 IMMACULATE Jbr. 2ba. din rm. nr S t' Plata. Hurry. won 'l la11l $125,000 Prine Onlr ~-4900 Bkr TAYLOR CO. I { l·: I\ I . ·1 · ( ) I\ s ~.1 1111· l!Hfi garage. End unit. Single !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!111'!9 story. Offered at $88,900. NO MONEY UOWN Open daily 12-.i 2:Wll ---- $95,000 AILL NICI 104Yo DO'WH LIVE IN Waterman Way. Custom IEAUTIFUL CDM 3 bd, 2 ba. fam 1-den. .=--i1••:....MJ11tla· • 1'MI utate advcnlatd ,_ TfH" ur"l ~~, • '""'"'-'* NEAi SANTA ANA COUMTaY CLUI 2 Bedroom home on 63' wide Jot. Room to add. No, this ad is not a mistake. The onJy mistake you can make is not to call now. Be early -not sorry. Enjoy 3 pr1vule bcuchcs. etc, etc U:.e t!(I in )our ocean view, 3 bdrm home home us dn pay mt l'rire l~~~~~~~~~~I \i.1lh separate family rm $165,000 Agl. 642·5140. ) l ~ 41 ' • I I i I I . I j ' i. Ulla ncw11pa(M.lt t. 1oub-*' w tbe t'~eral F11r Nou1l n1 A<'t of ltcllf '~ make~ 1l 1ll\!1at to 1 adverl1h~ '"' pn feh nce.,. h rl'lll1&t1on. or dilerimln1hon based on n~. color. rella10n. i.ex. ct national onam. or an intention lo m11ke any sucb preferenc\!. hm1t1· tlon. or d1scn minauon " This newspaper "'111 oot llnowlnfl.> a CCC Pl Un) advert ising for real estate which 1s m viola tlonolthelaw aRORS: AdverliHn lhomld check their ods cNily Clftd reporl er- ron lmmedfotely. The DAILY PILOT OHUMU ,hbilty for ttte flnt i1t- cornct lnserllon only. ~for Sot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEAT &CLEAN Sharp 3 Bedroom 2 bath Ul prime neighbomood. Features include bwlt· ins~ fireplace and a big fenced yard Seller needs quick sale to take advan· tage of new investment oppor lunll)' Priced below market at St 12.000. ~ ESTATl:RS ~ITYISTA HOMI $19,900 nus S Bdrm iAlr cooch uoned ~ 1s on a large lot, ne1teled 10 a tall tree lined cul lh sac neighborhood £nJOYU\& ocean breeies First ume ..dvert1sed. 646-1171 Ol'fN 1•1 9• •ISl<JloilOllf .. ~f [91111 &~ NEWPORT CREST Marvelous N e wport home w /3 Bdrm. Crplc. wet bar, & 2 sundecks Only $189,500. 644-9990 JUST LISTED Hard to fmd W BAY AVE Charming 3 bdrm + family rm residence. Private master s uite w /retreat & sundeck . Secluded lush patio + 2 Br rental unit! $375.000! BoMtoa lay Prop. Reolton •675-7060• OM ~.O DR.. IN IAYCHSTI Beautifully developed family home: 6 bedrooms: Back Bay view; pool and spa ; 3 fireplaces amid a n eclectic blend of beam . bricks. stained glass and hand painted tiles. Presented at $520.000 U,_.l()UI: ti ~-=~ REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 Enl Cout Highway. Coroo• del Mu WE H~Vl 41 Of THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN IALIOA ISLAHD- 30 I APOLl!MA One .of a kind. old world design & quality of this new authentic French Normandy home. 4 Bdrm. 3 bath c u sto m h ome w it h f i n est crafts m a nship & a menities. Now available. $585.000. Call for app't . IAYFltOMT We have sever al fin e homes with pier & s\ip. a TOIO HOISi COUMftY 4 Bd rm., 3 baths; ra n c h style, m ini·eslate in orange groves. $240,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 \ Bo y~llfr 011v1· N 8 675 6161 WESlEY M. TA YLOI CO .. llALTOIS ZI 11 S. JH' kl ... load HE""'WPOll_,...ITrr C8'Tll, N.I. 644-49 I 0 REALTORS 675-5511 SAM CLEMENTE: A "stcrter .. IMnt.Mwt blly; w.tl located .... ,.. ...... two ........ Ill eadt -tt: OWMt" WI ... to ft~ "Ur-. $152,500. COLE OF HEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy •• CoroM dlf Mer 675-55 I I s.H Employed? Horne apd business in one. Clean ~ Bdrm 2 Ba Wilh O\'er -10 commercial uses apprO\'ed Prime Costa Mesa location Op porlunity knocks. Call now. S40-3666 OCEANFtlONT HOME PLUS UNIT Specta<:ular architect:. dream. View, view , \ 1ew With 2 Bdrm guest quarters or renlal Newport's best $950.000 Call64&7171 call 751-3191 C:SELECT I PROPERTIES BEACH TERRACE IAYSHORES • ta"--1-POSSIBLE LSE OPT! WWI ICIC'ln Pnvale community Uv Real Estate mg, guarded gate and -------- 4 ... >''f'J '(~ • '• • , f [®d~!Utl NO DOWN VA $87,900 Great sta r ter ho m e. Located on oversized lot. Trailer access. 3txl6' patio. Just listed. Hurry on lhi.s one! Cal 1963·6767 ")PftJ '" Q . '\ ~ ,, I H ,,. • f ~'llfilH1I 2 yrs new, 3 bdrm patio home. clean as a pin. As· sume $66.700 at.. 93/•'f in· terest. Take a dvantage! Call 962-9311. ALLSTATE T~';'~~1~Y~! :\lesa Verde's finest ___ R_E_A_L_T_O_R_S_~ estate! 4 giant bdrms. 2 baths. family room , •----•r._.-1_....J,...,..,.. __ ,.-• stooe fireplace. country ~· kitchen. Utility room. Boy & Beach Huge private comer lot. Real Estate f:!~~ 7050. Call now! ()PfN II/ Q •II S l lJI< IObl '' I c.M.COTIAGI Cute 3 bedroom home with huge stone fireplace and formal dining. Good location near the beach. IA YCREST Assume existing low in An a ssemblage of terest loan F\.111 price elegant realures in this [~lfi!ltl sm.soo. Call5S6-2660 lovely four bedroom W-'--~ .. --..1. H-home. For mal dining -~•V'ftl" ...... _ • SELECT room. library and family 5 BR. 4 Ba. custom room Three full baths. water f r o n l home PROPERTIES Creal master s uite. W/17x38' p vt dock Sparkling pool. $335,000. Pr i c e d S l . 3 9 4 . 0 0 O $1,000,000 YIEW 631·7300 ,' H.I . Builder w I trade for mV"P IO""T D,..,.., ' Palm Springs Estate "" '• "" ~ For details on this home Under $500,000. SS0.000 d t II down. Owner will carry ---------1 an a ppt o see. ca ~~~~7 qualifying. SMALL YARD CarolHoff, agt. 631·0094 OHN rn 9." s IUN ro ei Nl(t' Sharp Monte go Plan in IREA THT AKIHG THE REAL l ESTATERS I -----~ ABNORMAL Harbor View Homes. 4 Bd.rms +family rm wilh a smaH (but nice) low maintenance ya r d. An exceptional buy at $234,900. l714t 673-4400 IJ Ill 621·2121 HARBOR A Dn·ision of YIEW!!! Choice Corona del Mar location . Newl ~ re modeled home wit h st ained glass entry. 4 Bdrms, huge fam ily room & formal dming. Only $365,000. ~ ocean~ pri vale beach es . 4 V"" Bdr ms, warm wood "' AIMORMAL pan e I i n g th r u o u t . MO DOWN Separate upstairs dorm $82,800 This properly has the room to grow In fact the sales 1>r1ce includes plani. for a new 2 unit home l•> be pul on this 45x85 (abnormal > pro· perty Localed only 4 doors from the island"!> So. Bayfront. A r are find. Act fast-this won'l lasl "'exlble terms. $595.000. for childr en. private we have only one! 3 master suite and retreat Bdrms. 2 baths. kitchen open lo secluded flower •family area Builtin ap covered atrium . Fee pliances. forced air, 2 land.Call6738S50 car garage ll 's a Ol'IN '" o · • \•vi. •..;t1" 1 bargain. $82,800 Call !eiN&ltll tilfiiifl 420KIHGS RD BALBOA l SLAND REALTY 673-8700 NEWPORT SELL uiJe 1lems w1lh a f'ind whal \OU want m 3000 sq. ft 4 Bdrm pool. Daily Pilot Classified Ad Dally Pilot Classifieds fixer Assumi! Sl75.000 al l~.% with S70.000 down. OWC balance. Asking $350,000. 646·1514. NEWPORT DUPLEX 2 Units on fee land Across Crom park. Near beach. bay. & s hopping. Priced at $205,000. Eves 642·22S3 DOORS TO IEACH 2·2 Dup l ex . Owner motivated. Open lo c reati ve financing. P06slbly lillle or no cash. Will trade property · boat cu · or ? ? $249.000. Eves 548·0715 associated BROKERS RFAL TORS loil W Boltioo ft,\ lbtd NEW EXCLUSIVE! CANALFRONT BEAUTY Lonfy 2-story 4 bedroOM cOftlPhtilfy ~orahd ht ...... ••tMWL Two fireplaces fncluchcj OM ht ........ suffe. LarcJe cMc1c & patio with spa. P.mct for lmlMClate mo•e-hl. $249,000. Fwalitun crtoH-.... 631 -1400. ON WATER--OPEN SPACE VU Lo•ilfy redecorot.d 4 Md ..... 2..tory wfttt chcs1n, INMd C)kK1, ~·-tie. .... hinq rOCMR with patio & .......,. Md, dedt.. Walt to pool, .....,, & bNch. SZ56,500. 631-1400. This property has the room to grow. In fact the sales price includes plans for a new 2 unil home lo be pul on this 45x85 <abnormal> pro· perty Located only 4 doors from the island's So Bayfront A rare rind. Act fast this won't ' Jasl Flexible terms . $595.000. II arbor ln,·estment Co 1::~~~, S©\\~lA-ltt.~s· W ATERFRONT HOMES.INC REAL ESTATE !.M.-" f(, nMJ\ PH'Pf'f I\' M...,, tt')Pmen1 BALBOA ISLAND REALTY ln:l-A700 USI THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Ser vice Call 642 .. 5678 ht. 122 St.op'.'. Take lime lo relax and shop at home. It's simple with Dally Pilot Classified Ads. And 11 you ha,·e something le. sell. call a friendly Classified Ad· VI er at 642·5678 EASTSIDE BARGAIN! SllS,000. 3 Bdr m + large master suite. 2 balhs. cozy kitchen w lbar. Brick fireplace. 2 car at- tached garage. Super sharp bargain! 546-2313 Ol'IN lit 0 •II S 'UN 10 bf NI((' [llJIRllt\I_ ASSUME VA LOAN Big 4 bedr oom 2-slory. all built·ins. patio. Full price $83,SOO . Agt . 751·3191 t""VES TORS ' 15 Units in Cost a Mesa. Large two a nd one be droo m apartments. Garaszes a nd car port s. Center rourt~~rd with BBQ s. Near scbooJs and snoppln f[. Askin!{ price S&S0.000. RCT<lylorCo _,. • .i() . l' ·,ou 14lto4 ..., QA Y I POUAN O ReortOf\99 leHe11 al Ille lou• te•o,..bled "'°'d' be- low to l01m '""' 1•mple ...,.d, SAWLEE I I I I I' I r . I ANEKO I I' I I t t I P L EEO ,. ! .~ One thing 1bo111 1he . I r I I . . economy. Todey, being ~ S I A A L S 1 empl':;!. la now considered I 11 I' I I 0 C-plete tile clivc~I• qvoted _ • _ • • • by f1ll•no "' •he """'"O ...,.d ..__....__._.......,,__.,__~_, you d...,•loP Ir-.rep No 3 be..,.. 2430 IA' Cl),)\I H ... \ JIS Ma11rw A~'P N~wpo11 Be<>t h B..100.1 1~1.,ntf 631-1400 '71-4900 macnab I irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY -----FAMILY SIZE COHDOMIHIUM! SBRS (4 & bonus r m ) home in the Bluffs over 2400 sq. ft. on lovely greenbelt . Walk to school. park & shops. 5197.500 leasehold . Jeanne Newman 752-1414. <C·57 l ----------75Z-1414 Hl-1700 (ompu\ '/~ (9'119' Woocbtdqe (enll! 642-1231 644-4200 901 Dover o.;.., Horbot y,..., ,.,, ... Best price m area Fee Dana Point I 026 land. Only $288,500. Call •••••• •• ••• •• • ••. •• •••• Agent• Ocean Pacihc OPLXSUPFRSll·\l'F Real Estate , ' : 1714>759·1616 Owner occupied 1!3 yrs $135,000. 193 9381 . -l93 04h7 9 IRON TO IU.CH Large exec. hm, 4 BR. 2'.Aa Ba , Be part of Newport Beach rom- munity. $179,500 <.:all ~.ownr/agt 2Br & !Br, by o wner Huntirtqton~och 1040 S2.50,000 675-3063 wkndh. ••••••• ••••. • • ••••••••• Slsmn Are you a pro'' 679-9667 eve!> MO QUALIFYING Eam hke a pro We have Irvine T e rrace 3 Br Land!Tklrk's largest 5 Br • openings make 90'. Views Make offer w pool & :..1rn K3~1 S20 per mo desk fee. in clds ans :.er Call us. °"'11er financing Open Huri.lwl•ll Dr. Sl9'J !'ilHl 645-6080 House Tues. thru S;.t 1 5 Owner Agent 961:1 0838 •~~~~~~~~~! 642 Romona 644 9666 ___ ___ ---- -B) owner. Agl S'nl.!IOO ---------1 Sacnf1ct• prin! N1l·e :1 hr DUPLEX l + I Excellent income Top CdM location. $28!>,000 PAUL MARTIN REAL ESTATE 644-7383 CORO MA HIGHLAMDS 568 Seaward ;\1 m1 ocn view, lg lol. 2Hr. makt< 2 :.tory & haH' ..1 l~I deg rel· uc·n \ lt'W + p\t bch Pnced lo "'II Lg a:.:.uma blc S275.000 HURRY WO:-.! T L.\!:iT' 752 6955 • _________ 1 costo Mesa ·•·········•··········· 1024 ORANGETREE End uml condo in ln'lne I Br. lba, comm. pool & t e nnis Owner savs "sell'" Under market.iil $70 ,000 F antastic E:A.STSIDE. SlS,000 under comparables 2.600 !>(I rt .\ BR. Fam Rm. study. formal dining. Devin & O> 642·6368 creative financing. ---------2 MASTER IDRMS Three years new. 2 8<1rrns. 2'-'J balh condo, 2 fireplaces All bu1lllns. double garage w1lh pool and jacuzzi Offered al S92,500 Call 540 1151 OCEAMVIEW 2 Br. 2' • bath. Former rmdel with a fantast1r VJeW Must see this de- t•orator 's delight Be~t cond o in Costa Mesa Reduced by $10,000 Wiii sell fast HORSE PROPERTY Act now!' This property ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS 1s in foreclos ure. Needs --------- TLC. "" acre 2 Br. 1 ba + in-law qrtrs & out bwldings Newport Mesa Sehl Dist. $179.900 ,.3, RED CARPET ·-754-1202 LOYEME NEW CONDOS 2& 3 BEDROOMS • Slartmg at SlOl,000 On Victoria btwn Newport & Harbor Blvd 548-3559 Eves 646·6093 LOVE MY ATRIUM Gorgeous 3 Bdrm home --------- townhou~e ~~ IJ6J:I GOOD LOCATION Nitc 4 bdrm with large famll} room nevr ll11n1 1ngton Center anti F1 "\ a cc es~ Fu 11 pr 1 l' 1• Sll9.800 Park Pl;.cc Inc 842-711.i I GREAT FAMILY HOME 4Br. 2Ba. hghl & •. m y l blk lo !>Chi & park. 112 m1 \Obch Only Sl 18,!JOO • Mettdith Gardens S h ·• r p c1 n d d e a n 1 lldrmi., 3 baths SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 • 11 t::DL'C F.D •Owner c..i n ht.'Iµ with down '. Ltl\'l•ly 5br. Jha, ram' tn. d111 rm, wet bar, 111,1· end patio rm. nr hl!h ,'(, i.c hools. $162'.'ll \<~T 530 60!!6, 5311 HIJ:! I SWING A MOP SAVE A LOT! Fantastic bari;:ain lol'al ed near Murdy P a rk on large cul-de·sac lot. Cov ered patio for those qwet evenings All t erm:; a\'ailabl1• SI05.000 .>1.5 !»91 with a beautiful atnum. HOUSE study & comm pool. As OM THE HILL OOL p 0 surnable low ml. lo.in Largl' tri level. featunnJ: C 0 L Pnced at SlZi.~ Call l Bdrms. J baths and Plus Spa Garden now979 5370 separate family room paradise w fanla!>t1t· -t ALLSTATE REALTORS SUPERB! SUPERB! Huge secluded cul de sat.: Br. 2 Sty. clll>tom dcl' lot 3 car garage and home Open Sal Sun I 5 close lo Mesa Verde Sl99.SOO. Agt, 1·~11th1,1 CDuntry Club. Sl89,900 968 083!!. _ Por an appointment to lrviM I 044 see. call 540· 1151 ••••• ••. •• •••••• ••• •• •• ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS Open, spacious & cheery hom e with 3 bdrms. study, fam rm. 2 frplcs, s pa & comm . pool ~~~~~~~~~! $219,000. Call 979.5370 lo-day Mesa Dal Mar. 3bd. ram Turth.-!rock Glen Garden Homt>. L ark s pur 11 model. 3 811 2 Ra, Fil. parquet floors. custom decor beaut co\''d paltu. loaded w tcust fealurl's Owner I bkr. 955 OfiOS : 835-3535. ask for Ntl"k Vracin rm. den. air. 1 ~ block lo ALLSTATE tennis, TeW1nkle Park _ 111 Only Sl24.900 Ca ll REAL TORS 5S1-1247 Bkr lolboo 1$1Clftd 1006 ....................... IDEAL FAMILY HOME: 2 slory. 3 bdrm and guest quarter s Large patio. S355.000. LOU IRECHTEL & Assoc. 675-3331 -------- OPEN DAILY 1·5 P.M. New 4 bedroom home $185,000. 216 Ruby On water 4 bedroom Sl.100.000 8 Collins Isl~ Call 673·6900 for details WATt:RFRONT HOMES RE-'L ESTATE 631-1400 -------MESA VERDE ON GOLF COURSE 3 Bdrm 21 2 balh custom home. private courtyard entry. large lol. 3 pa11os. electronic :.ec urit~ system. smoke and fire alarms. wood paneled den. VanLu1t wall cover mgs, custom hardw~>d parquet and Italian tiled floors. numerous other amenilie!> An outstand ing home S350,000 3 BEDROOM Double garage, li0xl20' lot Quiel location. but close to shopp111g New roof. copper plumbing. hardwood floors, plaster walls. good condil 1011 Sl l0.000 with an ai;suma ble loan. Roy McCardle, Rltr 548-7729 LEASE OPTIOM °" the lob in Irvine, lbr, 2 1hba, D<Mlble c ar CJOr" horM. $20,000 down, S 14 00 /mo. I year t ~rm . A g t : 640.9350. BY OWNER TIIE HANCll 4Br + f.im rm Completely remod. new cpl. pa111l . wallpaper l.11\'el\' yartl Ko• Pond J\usum In Sl45.900. 55l·5K:l3 TOWNHOUSE IH la~ PNinwla I 007 Have somethin-g;:ou -;:a'n\ THE LAKES :\1agmficenl 2 6drm l' ~ Ba t11wnhom e compll'll' h upg raded thruout Ideally locate<I with com plele prl\ a<'~ yN 111 t'lo:.t- prox1m1ty to l)IKll. SllJ sauna. ten111~ .bk111i.i S118.SOO Open llo1h\' Sat Sun 1 2:; =7 Lakepines ••••••••••••• ••••• •• • • • to sell? Cla~s1fied ads do ~ RANCH ~ REALTY ~ 551 2000 ON THE POIHT ::U.~!. Call NOW. Close to bay and beach. 10 .... This story boolt house of lrvlfte "'"' gables. dormer windows •••••••• ••• ••• •• ••• •• • • and 5 Bdrms is ready Cor you. Please call for up· Polntment -owners are ready to move. 1 l.ARRm REALTY REG)STER 642-5200 C«OftO del Mor 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ) macnab I irvine realty A.. SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY WOODIRIDGE CONDO LEASE! 3BR . l'h bath ''Elm Villaf!er" w/k\tchen, family combo. Private decked rear yard . I m ma('ulate condition. $625/ mo . Submit on childr en no pets. Sandie Fix 644 -6200. (C·58l Hl.t700 Wocxb>dqe Cente< 644-4200 Hotbot v-Cen1e- • ................. , ........ -. .. . .. ' .. ( ... U!WV PL I BR. llt\.OOU a.am Rull> &b, $Sl.11QO. IMYUTOttS • • "-ttlu6•mm1t tMUl:lt! lD the l •k •• al NclrGwood fo.r thou.ands blaow market lbr. lb•. loft, V¥/pr1v patio on l&MI Central •Ir. tenotl, eool. 6 Jae Perfect Cotld.. ooly 6 me» old AB 1um S71,SOO at ll '": 112.190 Owner ma ~ car ry Need11 quic k ~rvw. 838-17'26 POPULAR Plan 4 ln Orange Tree O:>adoe. l bdrm. 1 ba + lof t. Decor ated 1n earthtones. Outslandin& recreational facilities. l\t9f 1!f SHOWP&.14.CL .. ... in "N o r t hwood Meadows" So many ame nities In cluding warm wood panehn g, brickwo rk. decorator wallpape rs wit h co- ordinate d d rap eries. Dramatic 3 br home with very pr ivate fa mily room, formal dining & all In a lo vely settin g . $172,SOO. 559-1111 DICOIATOltS DBJGHT • Beautifully upgraded 3 ~ 8dnn home. It features e x tens iv e u se o f wallpape r and wood . Ceramic tile ln kitchen Md bath. Shows like a model. Offe r ed fo r SU2,000. Call 540-~l.51 ~ .,. HERITAGE RE ALTO RS Laflllie ..... 1041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • DRIAM ' I IY THI SU .Breathtakin& ocean view . ] from this exciting 2 Bd rm , d en h o m e . • Features: s p arkling I • swim ming pool a nd , &1owinl puquet noors. Short walk to private • beach and tennis. Owner ti wlU ftnance. $419,000. ,. • ! I d on osen \\ .11'1 •• • ... 1213 N. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 497-4848 l 1MEOMLYWAY J TOGO I 3 Bdrm floor plan, ocean I v ie w d e ck s , l aq:e f enclosed brick patio. • Priced for immediate sale at Sl.38 000. fl MISSION REALT Y .• 494-0731 3br bse, S o La guna, l8 0 /d e1 ocean v u . SlH,000. 15% d wn. M0.1441. PRIVATE lrBEAUTIF1JL 2 bdrm, i ba home with formal din rm, den & kitchen eat in1 area . Swimmin 1 pool . lge p•tioa, pr l v gate In cuarded commu nity. 1291.SOO. RON WILLIAMS REALTY Ul-'440 a..,-...... IOIJ ....................... l...S Owner f.'ttrcmelY lllW CNI and J111C'td LO lflll lit $3.lS, Call •hl>w uo ~li1nbl• tffTIU .. -.. .................. , -. .._ .. . .. ·-· ... C*c1r .... ...... •• ...... ........ Uef!lawl h• T1*diW. Aug1ttt 111, tteo DAILY PU..Ol -••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._,,,,,,., 200G "'-"Pw.ltlte4 c.eteM.te lJJ4 ..._..U.tw•1•1• Hu1t1U•fwr'lhd Af .._ ... ,..... ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pr1• £1Jde lrtpfex, •• Ml..-rtleoclc 11'9 ...... leaclt JUa leedc J U t Me.,.tleedt 17'9 IUlnl 10' Loan o1 ll 20K •••• ·:;;;-••• ••. • •• ••• • • •• Si~ly Stunnin12Br ••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••• •• • • ••••••. •• •••• •••• ••• ••• Or lnc SlS.720 pr yr ONTllE BEAClf w~c'::~~rr:.~i2:r 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba. F am . Rm. 34' Slip. Super 3 Br twnhse SHORTT ERM tnx> Inn. 9850. 7Br . D Kil h a Frplc, I car p.-. View. W. Nwpt. Nr bch. S900 RENTA1.S .... _ I 1... .... ......... ream c en many '72Smo. 497-1051. 841).4919evea. Weekly & Winter --lllJ!!I!!~---~---... 4D11, nq ..., "•· ""Hn Ul.rU $4001 (5489) fee A1ent 675·8170 MIWUSTIM4a f'ront·Aua 23 Sept. 5 or RENTl MES 631·'5.55 Avail by Se pt 1. IM · DIStGMllt DICOI I NOUSIS OtilLOT ::t:p3:8Jlf~y:ve. or MACULAT E.4bdrm.2 s:i00 28drm&garage YRLY, UNF/f'N 3br, New Condo. 2 Bdrm. 2~ ba , plus rumpus r m. All m1jor appliances 2ba Steps to bch. S695mo Newly "'°Cutblal\ed Near LIDO ISU ba 2 level. f"rplc. S8SO aardener S72S/mo. Nr Spacious yd(6733) Ce~ l L + s ec An a 1 e. ~l/ ~r•1· In fA1u1dc Walle to be.ch . tennt. ti Call963-2205 Westmont school Ir s hop-R£N'TIMES 631-4~ 673-9312. 1~i:,Te~.e7~Q"ul:UL~Anel~~L~J'r tBrlu~~~A A1\tractiv~S ~ 3br, lba, '600/mo. ~· I.Ill. last, sec. de· S.CJe..t• 3276 2 B-r-.-y-r-ly-.-u_p_pe_r_S4_2S_+_ Sl'1 _ ,..v · 2 Ull. · v1t · AUi. l 2car1ar, _.t. Ca I 848·Z'724. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ut1l No garage or pet.s. ·Sept3rd $150<>. 648-5636. 2 bd rm . 2 ba. North 2br. lba. fireplace. wlk to Avail. 9/l5 675·7048 Remodelt:d 3 Br. den, 2 DaM 'ohlt 322' Laa un a Beach hom e. ocn & down twn. no pets. Spacious beal!b rental ., _.CE 81. Weekly or monthly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seve,.J decks. 2 block.a $450/mo Incl util. uvail Sept l4 lhru June l""..,illl Avail. AUi 23rd. Bill 2 Bdrm. Prime location. from beach. $750 mo. E. Paul Johnson 14, winter rental. Ideal •••o •••••••••-••••••• NOfttllTIIS"' G~y. Rltr, 675 5151 Lease or rent. 1600. Yearly. 714/49'-8'714. t~~6~ft· for college student See ,,. ..... S-., l~fUilO ,.M.I OcH11FrOftf 66l·27~Afl 6PM. ~eanvlew. 2 br +den, 4 ----<All.22 39th St.JltB. S_11n-,,., .... s•1 Winter rental, Sbdrm. DANACREST:Cool wlth dedta,leaae,$700. Beac hfront del uxe 2 daysonly,between l &4. D bdrm. 2 ba . New Condo. -o,-uftV1twa Home~ )tut aarrtflce tl1 i. TalPll llLSHDI Jba. Sl,000/mo. Ca ll ocean breeie and lovely ave,644-7211 1650.2131332.2~ Winter Rental i l>_dr m Ou.rSprcialty t·h11rmin ~ 2 bedroom $128,SOO 873-MlO. view. ~!Jte to .befCI\ 1md L.efma....... USJ · ---Steps lo beach. Garage ..... Seclt & A..oc. h u m " 1 n CJ u 1 e t <.:CUU)I Mull. anuus WNEWPORT-'Wfnter lbr, Marina (rom this new ••••••••••••••••••••••• parking. $450 incld util. 14.._9121 n•t thb-OrllooCI Priced S1l,700 1y r Expe nses den, ear. yard . ulil paid. 3Br. ram rm1k1tch, din-3 bdrm. 2 ha, view, nr Fun In The Sun! Walk 673-3958. 544-6899 below markt1t , th~ h1 the S2\5631y r Own~r will l400tmoB3l·7793 ing area and 2 baths. park, acbool, .shoppinJ. to the beach from a UYPOINT CONDOS ~~m!Pf:ie':'t~r ~~.' he I> finance w S4S,OOO New landscai;>lne with IOOO/mo. Thornton Real· Sunny 38r. J U!l S425! ly, • ....._..._1 ve>tori. As kins uni) dfl~L';:~1011t'tdtor Ho.NsU.fwnfalwd spnnkl~rs.1atn!'m. l bklk ty,831-0300. RENTK.idsOK! <4922>fee Two i 8drm. 2~ ba con -8.~ Call now and i.ee to sc oo s • par ........ &~ "'-'-1267 IM ES 631-4555 ... ., ..._,, • ~ !99 •••••···~.~~··•••••••• S725/mo yrly. 645-1171. ,.._ .. ,..,.. VERSAILLES S pacious, e legant 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, patio View. pool. exercise room. secu r ity gate. do$ loc•tt'd 1n upper uau Ot\e """ ore 1t s gone ...._I_ 3206 ~5844 or days 637.4658• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.. ,-. O.rk Bay area Hrand ~1720. PKR 4-ple)., S1ulta Ana, fixer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ask for Jack. HOMES FOR RENT ~trofto 3278 flt'w, d1r~ from bwlder TA.RllLL &rosli $19.200. $175,000 CHARMING 2 bdrm 2 ba 3 bdrm. homes priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sltll time lo sel~ct cwrpet ---II Richard New. CPA ur 1 bdrm . l ba. 306 Coral Fabulous Ocean View 2br rrom SS2S . fenced yards 3br. frplc. encl yrd. 2 car ~~~~~~~~!!!!!~ Agent 646-3255 color Standard r~atures ~tom Hme Cnyn View. Realtor 541 ·4o.s4 Ave. 2131557·3535. Condo, tenms, pool, etc. & gar ages. F amilies ear, nr Marina & beach. include air cond . 5298.000 Redhill Riiy. .......___ p~z __ .,0 3207 mcl washer/dryer AGT please. Ki ds & pets $550/mo. Call arter 7pm. ~.ts prage door open~r and Judy,552.7500 10°' INTEREST -'"""-$~$625/mo welcome. 7141964·2566 or 646-6972. UnfwftisMd much more. /o ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2971 Agent, no fee. •• ••••• • ••• ••••••••• ••• fleXJble 80 & 90'; ftnanc Othtt-R_ffll Estate Seller to car ry AITD 40 J. 2Bdrm. 2 Ba. Winter f.cMMtClitt Vala.y 323-4 Sunshine and Charm lolaoo Island 3806 1na available Pneed al ........ -.............. UNITS: Z1 (2) bdrms & Rentals. Sept.15th lhr u ....................... Mewport .. och 3269 S479forthisnew2Br ..................... .. Sl59,900 e1tch. 1-'ur de ......._..._ H--s ll (l) bdrm Al.SO 16 un· June l5lh. $415 mo. Call Adull Condo. 2br 1"'1 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brick f'rplc included Is I C ,_ -675 o,.,. UDO ISLE y I p vt Fabulous Bayfrnt Little tai ·~ca I a rorl Hore. agt For Sal. 1100 1L~ In excel rental loca-· >U< pool, gar. l.St&last $375 r Y · r · Kids OK, Gar (4927 J fee Isl. Boat slip, 28r. 3 stry, P .. cesette Homes ••••••••••••• •••••••••• 11on. Agent 644-9513 2 Bd S l be h aft 6968-7437 sm patio Behl end of streets. 3 Br, RENTIMES 631-4555 f 1• rep 1 ace. yr 1 Y 1 s e 631 ·7164or631-0094 rm. teps o ac · · den, 2 ba . Near cts & ----------1 Sales office open dajly San J uan Capo. SSS.000. 2 I~ ll5 26th. St. Adults, no ......... °"leach 3240 club. So patio. Owner T..ti1t 3290 675-3067 12·6PM. Closed Fridays. Br, 2 Ba, 1480 sq. rt. &yrs 2100 pets. Avail Sept. 15. $M>O ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76()..1328 Agts. OK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----Irvin~ Ave .• & University old.Agt541-5032. ••••••••••••••••••••••• m>.675·3148 Avail now. Near t he , Coi yCountry Coltage Bayfronl. 3Br. 2Ba. yrly. Drive. "---Of Ttt. •-st' -----beach. ( Delaware/Spr· NO FEE. ~pt. & Condo 2 Bdrm & Garage $350 Avail. Sept. 13.11200/mo. ForSaleSmall25'Mobile ""Jiii' '"' Capistranoleach3218 m gfield> 2 s tor y 3 1 rent als . Villa Rentals Kidswiilenjoy Vard l bi5-7009or675·8405. , __________ Home Xlnt Cond. On t4 Unit industrial proper ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm 3 b~. Exec Ho'me 1 675-4912 Bkr. Close lo AllC5317I ree 1 1 VIEW LISTING space in C.M. Park Reas tyl cent,rally located 1 Enticing 3Br Nr Bch ! with f am. rm. frplc. Panoram1'c Ocean v1·ew RENTIM ES 631 4555 &y Front comp ete Y re· Rent $6,500645-9534 b ock rom downtown Kids/Pets OK! Garage dsh h ti di k decorated. 3 bdrm 2 ba. Spbt level 2BR 28A & Laguna. Owner asking And More Just $490! & ~I r. pa 0• SWI ec Magnificent 4 br, Ca m Condomimwns fireplace Great view of -the . 1 t F' $&5,0002BR,2BA.den SS75,000.Call Hu rry• co•""'> fee garage w /elec nn beam ceil huge wet· 1L...&.-11L-..a 3425 b ( 1 . .,., r-in-aw uni ee in 5• Adult Pk. CM Realonom1cs 675 6700 . .,_.,. garage door opener. 2 or . rde Su. . bl r -...--~ a y rom arge patio. land. Ki ngs Rd. Own 'II r 645 862 RENTIMES 631-4555 3 Children OK, no pets. ~· glia . "& c ita j or •••··~··00••··~··••••••• Beach at your front door IALI0/4.-NEWPORT wi m ·l Lots for Sole 2200 Corona def M 3222 <Small pet considered) am. vmg orma en· lbr. C N · a ults only' Avail Sept 15 Yearly D....a... 475_,170 Ar--forS• 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ar S725 per mo + S700 de· ter tainment Ha rbor All amenities, lease lease. SllOO mo 673_3466 ......,.,, --~ ••••••••••••••••••• •••• """II Call 71•-""• '"'""or View Area. $1750 per mo. r>r><:/mo Call 7M-l20'.! CM 644 ,323 •••••••••• •••••• ••• •• • • HWl"-aton Bch R 2 lot ,..... • """ """""' ...,.,., or '"'•' · . · U N S U R P A S S E D 97., """'l Agent. No fee. 752-0142 ---.• on Warner Ave . also PANORAMIC OCEAN & .r=• t Bdrm. all adult rool ---------5 ACRES, custom home site in beautiful s mog Cree La Cresta, Rancho Calif. paved streets. elec water already paid for Prestige area. terms Must sell. Only $54,900. Pbone 714-677-5611 Bkr Lovely & secluded '-'•AC. 3Br. 2Ba. fam rm, spa, deck. $169.000. 645·1.i96 15,000 sq fl near Civic (408) 996-0S6l collect · Corona def Mar 3822 BAY VIEW 2br. fam rm HOMES FOR RENT tennis. J3C. $395 Agt Center 645·9272 · •• ••• •• • ••• •• • •• • •• • •• • +breakfast rm. wet bar. 3 & 4 bdrm. from ssso. Bay Front large 2 bdrm 2 754.J..202 I 11 Via Ithaca l ido Isle Light. spacious, elegant, aU new. 4Br. 2"'.IBa. din· ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., mg rm. 45' lot. $595,000. P /P. (714 > 673-16 10, 5 ACRES - 1>'73-0316 HO DOW MP /4. Y"T Cop Spyglass.,, acre Panoramic View! 640-0954 OCEANFRONT LOT Near Albuquerque. N. Large lot in exclusive MUST SH TO IELIEVE Mexico. $61 Month -Three Arc h Bay. So. 0 L 0 W 0 R L D 8o/4o/c interest. Call Roy Laguna .. Secu~ly gate SPANISH HACIENDA collect <602> 947-8011 community with pvt. OH IA.CIC 114.Y streets. beach, tennis & c lub hous e Airpor t . 4 bdrm. + Maids room, •och Property 1350 yachting, a nd fishing pool, hot tub, voUeybaU ••••••••••••••••••••••• minutes away. Owner court.. ,S499t~· Creative Coronado Cays ha s bui It his hom e fi nancing · Make offer. Coronado P eninsula nearby. Very rare 011. Hedda MarosiAgent 3 bdr m . 2 ba . Chanel port unity Lot price 646-1044. front home with 40' L s l . 4 9 5 . o O O . P h shaped dock for 2 boats. 2 1 3 / 6 2 8 . l 3 o o o r S2SK dn. Assume payts of Hi 11 lbe d Ill ......,A nx>. For clean lg. 5 g ame ce ngs, 714/499-3070 wknds. .,_,., atrium, fireplace, wet ----.------B d home . P a l r i ck bar & private patio on Momt•, D•Mt'f, Tenc>n!. 631·1266 Agt. the chanel. Gre.at home RHOrt 2400 __ 11 .. BLOCK for living & entertaining. ••••••••••••••••••••••• maids quarters. 6 ba, fenced yards. gar ages. ba. Condo in NewPort T -----12br. 1 ba. $490, deck. pool 3 gar e.. 9""'/mo Ba T v 1 .. oW'llhouse carports. built·ms. no . ca r ..... ,,., FarTUIJes please Kids & Y owers. ery u.. Uwfw1'illwd 3525 646-6.595 or 291-5913 P e l 5 w e 1 c 0 m e urious. Security bldg pets! Adults. 673-0473 71.,,,., .... ,.,., 973 2971 Possible boat slip. ••••••••••••••••··~··•• JASMINECR..EEIC '""""_.......,or -Large lbdnn.Duplex .l Want t o s u b lease 3 Bdrm 2~ Ba . com-A&ent. No ree. house from ocean. S7SO Townh ouse 1n N B munity~l.jac.,Lenn1s, 2 BR, 2 BA. nr beach. mo . on yearly basis $545 /mo. 2br, 2ba panoramic ocean vu, security gat e pool S15-"80lS · 644-5800 ei&t 7417 or SPYGLASS View. pool. 4br. 2'r'l ba, d in rm . fam rm . $1900 /mo 644-1968 or 64J.1030 ~31;11~~t;r~if-~;. & Jacu1.Z1, tennis.' volley 1 Blk to bch , 3Br. 2Ba -542--643- 1 ----- ball courts Call Dee hom e , pool, tennis 6 _._.., Fundshed Costa Mffa 3824 Jasmine Creek new, 2 962·4142orKenS46-0996. k' S7 ...,..-... -••••••••••••••••••••••• story, ocean veiw, 3 Br. 3 . courts, pvt pa r mg. SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba.Fam r m .pool&spa. Exeeut1ve Home 4bdrm. mo . 645-36 15 eves. IGllOCIPtttiltMlo 3707 3 Br. Townhouse, newly 2'700sq ftSlSOO/mo.2131 3ba.2story.Nearbeach. 873-6210 dys. ••••••••••••••••••••••• decor. gas pd. encls d 446-~ · Nope t s (n c ludln1 2 & 3Br . ..., blk to ocn, ear Adlts.pool.642-5073 • · Ga rde n e r S900 mo. 2Br, 2Ba. 2 car garage, winter & yrly OIN ner 2 Br 1 bath Apt Newly H""RIOR VIEW 5J6.0<l25. frplc..,!auna, j acuzzi, 675-5710, 675-1546 d . G d . I d ,,,_ pool, -s mo. 673-6610 ecor . as p . enc s 3 Be droom Sausali to WHALER COVE, 2 story, NEW PORT SHOR ES· 2br, 2ba, yrly . SSS01mo. gar. pool. Adlts. 642-5073. model home. Beautifully 3br, 3ba + xt.ras. $750. Avai l im med iat ely. care d fo r,.. Beam ed 848·9544 or846-78lS. 3Br, 2Ba, ch armina. 548-93.tl 646 2848 l Br.Newly decor.gas pd, cathedral ceilings. Sll.50/ pool, tennis . $685 -mo. ' · · encl gar. Ad lts . pool. pr ·mo. R.C. Taylor Co. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Condo: $475 673-6210 C.....cWMar 3722 642·5073 . 640-9900. mo. Children OK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------- Gorgeous 28dnn Home! 842-8953 Big Canyon Condo-Adlls, lBr. BACHELOR apt. 2 ~Br, ~en , ~Ba . pool, blks from Big Corona 4 Br 2 Ba. F .R. Lg Vrd. JaCUUI. tennis, no pets_ Uti l. Pd . S4 50 t m o BRAND NEW APTS. 28r 28a. $430 3Br2Ba S550 I I ~ 1 I ! . ., ~· c; Owner213/391-3606 3 2 Bdrm. Houses ---------1 FOi LEASE TI7·723 lrvine Ave. Btwn C-rcW New 2 bedroom 2 bath Holly Lo & u urel Pl. Property 1400 home. Mission Lakes l200,000 Terms. Drive ••••••••••••••••••••••• Country Club. Golf· Gourmet Kitchen and Plush Crpts ! All new. Appliances!JuatSSOO Call today (8463) fee RENTIM ES 631-4555 Llke new. Near park. S975 mo. 833·3349 673-1.W 16SO. 213/434-4980 ---------1 ---------14Br, Blufr.& Condo, 2...,Ba, ea.ta W... 3724 Inviting 2Bdrm Home W /Huge chefs kitchen Garage $400 Kids OK! 2 car aar. priv. patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• fr p lc xtra s h a rp . CASADEOllO Spacious new Unit, pvt. -L patio, close to shoppina. Ad ults . 1982 Maple, :>48-2408. by, dont d isturb ·Occ. tennis-pool. Beautifully OWC.675·77880wner .-wPOIT(6 UMnS landscaped. no main-Coda Mesa 3224 SBSO/mo. 640-7647 ALL UTlLITJES P A10 Upper 3 bdrm. 2 ba. with INVESTORS $1,000 Tahs it! 3Br. 21.,ea. assume loans o( Sl.59.000. owe balance w ino monthly pymts . 5194.500 . 642-6991. 6454462. In -heart o New port tena.nce yard. Beach. Located in com· ~Clubhouse Rd. mercial area. Can be Desert Hot Springs used for business, re· 213-378-2572 sidential or ? ? ? S425 .000. I'.!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~~ SUBMIT EXCHANGES. G o L F C O U R S E CANYON LAKE. 3bdrm. t5SO sq ft, only $104.950. Call 557-1.247. Bkr. lftAI I TOWu. 4Br, 3Ba . ca nal frnl, garage $425 No pets, l M5n M "r jacua:i,deck,commpool Compa re before you child Call aft e r 4. GETTING FED UP · Ca 1 00 rent. Custom des ign Extraordinary 3 Bdrm & tenrus. 217 na . SU features; Pool, BBQ. S48·01J3. REHTIMES W/Fnclosed yd• Frplc nx>. 67S-7450 cov',rd g a r age, ne w _L_g_e_2_b_r--l-l.;--b-a ICES MOVING Kids & Pets OK s.525! furniture. surrounded · MA ... IRE-£ Must see (6389>fee ON WA.TEil with plush landscaping. townhouse. laundry . "' 1565 RENTlMES 631-45SS Adult living at its bes\. patio, $395. 675-0500 CAJI Beautiful bayfront home 631 4555 ~°" with 5 bdrms, frml din N?~m furnished 5400 SJ'UNNfNG large 3 Br. 2 STA.RT ;14.QCIHG tWbow 1242 rm. lge patio, pier & slip. 2 bdrm furnished 5480 Ba. Garden Apl. Pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must see (8916) fee RENTI MES 631-4555 WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631·1400 THE ILUFFS ~~~~~~~~~I Get Away! Beautiful new = -l Bdrm Spanish home on Front row. upper bay l4th fairway. Apply ----------i ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3,000/mo. Lease, 365 W. Wilson. 642·1971 Rec area. $435. 710 W. Mesa Verde 3 Br. 2 Ba . WATERFRONT W .. erlrCN1tH0991 18th. St. Fence d ya rd. 2 car Priv. SO' dock, 3Br . 2Ba, IRc. 631-1400 ........... och 3740 -------- view. 2-bdrm, 2 bath, + L.14.GUMA COM'L Valley Golf Course. l formal d i n i n g r m , garage. Natural wood si:m lease. Near beach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• E·Side 2Br Garden apt. floors & trim , French 213 59'l·3l77. Larae Victorian Beach H.1'1 FINEST ;},gar . adllss no pets. beamed cellinfs.OCfered Store on PCH + 6 unit acre . Sel l or t rade by ori1ina owner. apt.$425,000.0WC. $199.900.Call 675-8418 doors .. Lmmac. '9()0 mo. New Las Fuentes Condo. 2 House. 4 Bdr m 2 Ba S825 Spani$h Estate Llvmg ! 5. 160 21st. t. 548-2127 . tils 8610 th S Beautiful park·Uke sur· + u -979-Agent. Bdrm. 3 Ba. Security Mo yearly. 123-28 t. roundings. Terraced 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sundeclt. $425. $229,000. Agent. 640-5560 R e o I E 1 t o t • Out of Stole P,.,._.MOIMlh P,...,..-ty 2600 3br, 2ba , fam rm, no pets, gated, poolside, frplc, 55'7-l616Avail. lmmed. pool. Sunken gas bbq. Avail approx_ Sept. lst. OC£""... I ""Y 963~377. ••••••••••••• •••••••••• '""""" • ,,,_ 5 Acres beaut Colville WA no singles. kids OK. 1392 dbl gar. Intercom. S1150 BAY 4'0CEANVIEW sparkling fou ntains. 548-8675 days, 760-1418 Ga lway L n . $625 . nx>.840-1441. 3br, 2ba, frplc. Ir vine S pa cio u s r ooms Eves&Wknds. VIEW COHDO Partial timber Gd Road Security bldg. w /pool, 2 --Proparty 2000 Owner (509) 684·5165 ".u 1836 T •l200/ ~parate dining area ....... · I~-1144 e r ra ce. • mo. Walk-ln closets, home· Townhouse 2 Br. n; Ba . Bdrms. 2 ba. Boal Slip ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1---------- Avai l. Broker /own er. Looting for Mr. or Mrs. a.chH. F..s, Priced lo sell $330,000. F.dge. Gro•n 2700 New 2 story house. 2 Br, ••••••••••••.••••••••••• · 67S-L54l, 7&0-Im . like kitchen & cabinets. Gar. Adlts no pels, pali 1"'1 Ba B alcon y, Turtlerock R1d1eCanyon VI EW Bluff condo on Walk to Hunt1ngto S400.S40.5446or548-9084 S.C-oven, DW, W /D, View. 3 ~r. 2" ba, 3 car Back Bay_ 2 master brs, ~ntef'. OWC. 675-1898. Shown by ••••••••••••••••••••••• appt.only. *AGENT* frplc. gar . $500 mo. gar. Avail Sept . 979-2560. fam rm, 2~ ba, frplc, lBedroom·unlum. S400 Mature adults, no pets. 8Sl-06lO, 551·1494 newly decorated, 2 car l Bedroom furn fro VlEW, 2 BR 1 Ba. $425, l sl. last. sec. Adults. Avail 1m med. Ca ll David, agt 646-3255 AVOCADO CiROVE 5430 34' Slip. Super 3 Br twnhse Work with the young, W. Nwpt Nr. bch seasoned. aggressive & m>.000 Owner / Broker motivated. 106% com· 640-4919 eves. mission • l s t c I ass 121 acres in f'illmore. 53 642-T125. Woodbridge 3 Br l "'• Ba. 1ar. 2200 sq. rt. SllOO mo. 2 Bedroom furn S500 · Condo. $575. No pets. IW0-9991. T h e nf r r acres planted, mostly 3 Br. 2~ Ba condo. all. 2 2131498_6090 E vea wn s -u~ n . ro Haas. Magnificent home car garage, + m any Wlcnds 2Br. den, 2Ba, frplc, 2 car dul E. SIDE upper front 2Br, site. Property can be xtras, $675tmo. 642-8325 · · 1ar, many upcrades, A ts. no pets. l ~'JBa w /balconies. new d. ided E d' Utilities Free! VIEW VIEW nus executive 4 Bdrm 21.Aa bath, formal dining room. family room, coun t r y kit chen, Pale rmo mode l is lastefully done for your Uvine pleas ures. Only rm.ooo. Call 64s-9161 uPt N HOU~t ~t Al TY / New p or t B eac h (Airport) office. Call Bill for interview Ml-1666 v.!:mni ra:~;;a:~t~n!!fi $&50 2 Br. 2 Ba. Adults on-Woodbrtd1e. 4 Bdrm. 2~ t650mo. (213> 43H756 :i~= mo. 646·0100 a nd drip irr igation ty. No pets. 333 E. 21st. ~ ~n~~c:'31cond. S700. MewportC,..1tCoMo1 ~~~:Si~~rn~?:i~ system. Qualiries for in· St.645-8103. . ' t750 to $8SO,view. W.olBeach,3 blksS of PIN E BLUFFAPTS 40 UMITS vestment tax credit Mesa del Mar 3 bdrm. 2 TUltnl IOQ( Agt. 645-0295 F.dinger. Spac 2 Br. 2 Ba. Adult Xlnt Garden GroveLoca-WATER f ll 0 t4 l ba . S650. Family. Ref s SBr . 3Ba, 3car gar. NEWPORT BAYFRONT, 847-5441 Complex. Patio, view, lion. Low, low main · HOMES req.540-lS42,546_9460 Q -99J·l.2434,ext.N l4. I luxurious •br, 2ba, jac, frplc. encl gar ., gas tena nce. lOX gross. IMC. 611-1400 -~--"---'------. -13bdnn 2ba + overs!·_. beach shower. private L.acJllllaleach 3748 stove. dish whr, jac. Own ill 'th 2br 2'"'b f I dts • &CU ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.v1'"" F $450 er w carry w1 ~~~~~~~~~I . y• a ,gll:r• rp c, -1ameroom.Univ.Park. b e ach . boat s l i p . LAGUNA BEACH MTR " ..... ,rm. rom . 29% down. Full price -... estate hwasher, micro, adults . Avail early Sept. N SUOO/mo. Avail immed. INN. Maid ser v .. colo SPMC 631-6107 $1.400,ZOOOO U ... ITS ••• w •• ~•••••••••••••2•9••0•0• No pe t s · l y r o ld · pets . S825. 644-7124 67~.675·0597. 'IV, heated pool. Ulil. Westside 2 Br. l Ba . "" $550/mo. 6Jl-J926. owner/agt. Im.mac. E. Bluffs Hme, (714)494-5294. 985 No. Encl~ garage, carpets Bread & butter units in Mother /Daughter want New t.ownhouse.,3 Br, 2~ Jbr, 2ba, ram rm, w•L t.o Coast Hwy· & dra pes. Refrige. No good Orange location. u . r· ba .. '\.25 "82 IRVlur1 ,.. IOX gross. Owner will 3-4 BT ...,e. i:xer-upper. · attaciL gar . l... * * ""· QlM H.S. lmmed. Avail. ·Newport leKh 3769 pets. $375, 1st & last + carry with 29% down. No Agt. 774.5792 Eld990'7en. ~6°25 77M20o. yrly. 3 Bdrm condo in e x· No Pets! Le ase S985. '•••••••••••••••'••••••• S75."770.5629 F\dJprice ~39.000 ...,.._,, 494-or ·• · elusive WoodbridJe. E•· Owner/Agt6'4-71.24 --------- ' U ... ITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 1 1 &Side 3 Br 2 Ba. Built· I "" MESA VERDE eel ent Y ocate near Lovely 3Br. 2Ba bome. ms. Jn Tri-plex, SS.50 mo. Located in Costa Mesa . ..._... ,_.shecl Super deal 3 Br. 2 Ba. parka, pools, ~nn~, etc-lblk from Jr. High &r Nopet.s. 645·0108 Eves. OWC with ~ odown. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many reatures. Avail. all Included! Avauable ..... , -I-...... _ 3 107 N •· ~""5 at S800/pr mo on 1 yr mati. Newport Heights. ~U price SS00,000. AU ewwwa-now o pe...,, -· mo Yr ly lease· S7SO /m o ·. I 2 STOIY YIU.A Tm ovw low lntereat ~en tbis outatandina 3 b*m. l"' ba&h, loft • oe.u v iew. Louted clou to c lubhouse ln 1•ard ed a•t• com-ilullt1 ... Sll5,000 are 2 Bdrm. 9~X gross. ••••••••• ••• ••••• •••• •• 546-3e3'7 · · · · lease. 13 others t.o choolt · · s-c:a.-• 1076 Thia property has spen-Channing 5 bdrm, 3 bath · from. We're the ones to _640-__ 2390_. _____ _, .. ••••••••••••••••••••• dable. bayfront with 38' boat Eastside dupl~ both UO· call! Lux Twnbm, new 3br. l Br. carpet , drapes. bit- ins, refrigerator . garage. Adutt.s, no pets. 645-9857, 548-4291, S32S ........ :.\u ---.NM ICUITOll CONDOS mlDJllLLllURIT DR. ~ l,_ZIDO 941 ft, ~!~1 frpla., law>' appl. IJOOI • .,.i au amenltlea. Nlilt oc Uliled _.ltlioe =a~. I* +'IM) 4D.eN5 CYPIUS SHOttH 8 UMITS noat. Sepe •• July. s1200 its avail. 2 BR w 1 apple: 2'r'tba. frplc, patio, 2 car ac..tleeicll•.... Good S•ntaAnalocalion. rm. Yrly Sl600 mo. BUI S500 ; w /yard $450 . ii ,.,, pool /s p a /ten nis. YEAR•ROUNO l'UN: New, prestl1lous re· All I Bdrm units. owe Grundy,675.6161. OUkiren or pets OK. Isl ~I ~brlclge Newport/Mesa. sao_ ~~::.~::!'~~~~ .w.nte. ~c. l •le, U · large 2nd. Priced t.o sell Winter rental, 3br. l~ba. lslu t +sec. 497•5402 Reah1 • &t4-4192. 646-321.5. Brunch • BBO'a • c I u 1 I v e b e a c h Ii fast. 1225.000 Ir Ii vin1 rm Is klt ch, CharmiJla Cabinlike l-2~r SSl ·3'80 JBr, 2Ba. can•I front P1ttle1 • Plu1 more cJubhouae, Every rm a 4..PW frplc, patio, located on cottages $215·$400 uhl •m "'"' rtiwy,l rvlH w/amaU boat dock S8:iO GMATMCMATION: NEW DE L UX E 2 BR CONDO. Pool, s~. ten- nis, u m. 2balconles, blt. i.ns. $490. Nr. So. Co. Plu.. 525·1708 . malOlflcent vu. Comer Costa Mesa location. 3 W. Bay. Oya : 549-5711. !:;, ~~"e 631-5H6 o r mo ...... S7J.62JO Tennll•Freel.Mlont ~ • .cl.I to former Nixon Br. 2 Ba . Owner will ni\es: 833·7161. -~ ,,... (pro & pro •hop)• 2 $370. J bdrm. 1 ba. Apt, n t•te. By •Pti· only. t 10% i 4 llKTALS Bi br lndry 2S' H..itllCluoe•~ne Adults onJy. Flrepla~. $1= 1·12 ·8828 & ;rooOdo"t\.~Up~':~C:.W .. M• llJJ ColonlalCottage ~ 2Br.28a ...... '7C)().$ b~:. if~·/m o Y tl/~ ;~~~~~1111!1~~1~ laundryrm,Atl built·lnS: 1· sz:ao;ooo. Yearly Income ~··•-;;;•••;;••••••1•h All Utilities pai ! t 3Br. 2Ba ............ 9112·.SH Driving Ainge TSL M1mt. 642-9412 8 R 0 ADM 0 0 R 121,*· Tena nts P•Y m. Sorm.,PCousfef ~tso Ruaelcd yard<S461 ) ee 38r.21,;Ba ..•• $'150-$ llOOM.YllW IUUTW'ULAPTt: Bd b bo l.lllit.Jes cuport. · o · •• RobertAJt.631-4555 48r +B2~S. .•.... S 2 rm, 2 •· patio 4' KOME-Sl60.000 A ve • mo. No peta. Avail Sept W--Vlt ....__ Ingle•. 1 a 2 Bed· 1.ra1e. S480mo. Ian Clt m.enlt Hl1h~ f1€\TIG€ thnaJune.675·29'2. Paulonat.eN Pla yfuJ ~ w..-i ~~~~~~ 675-0562 "'•"!:!·~ .. ~· aba, --HOPI€~..... 1144 ~v~_!!!...,Colt taae, :r2~:.8v.1t~·~~m~ Living . No Ptt•. r .. •eR 28A It -· _._,. r'«uuv _, App C tennl1, """), No pets. Modei• Open Dally .. '" • • upper un • Real Estate lov•tmenll .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Redecor•t.ed. Nu crpta siuo nu>.-w /Gardener. e 10 e encl aar. Nicely dee. ~,,..,, 1 1071 amW.CoutHwy,NB 3br. 2be1 ~e><>J , fully Klda!Peta0lt (&4af)fee Ava.Uf.15. Eves. Wk nds. O•kwood Meu de l Mu . 1450. Q •t 64•-.a.646 ruml1heo OllH . Doa . .rs1.•"u Vlc .. I Aaent .._ -7"1·-, Iv me•••a• ·--·• .. ••••••••••• --CDalmllll•n> for rent for .... -• _,,,..., a.deft Aper1"'9ftt9 " _,., ... "' Qoedo, llla1ion VU~ DarliDa lhwle• lyear. '750. 551·1282. Cloee toSouUI Coast STOPU Newport 1wt1 N. Larae 1 Bdrm upper 128$. =-~·~ .Jl -r.o2Bdnnunka t1ulnt Lep.leects 1141 Plua.Roomy 28r"45 Take Ume \0 rtlu •ftd MOlrvlnt te1111111 Quiet bulldln s wltb ,._:4D-l500,4tS-74192. rental u u of Hu nt·••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Dbl1•r,Open paUo •513CutM~tav. •hoo•thome.ll'a almpM 1714l 846-11°" be1Ut Uul lancbc apln1. ~ Beadt SU5,000. Ocunlront cllx fumithed Bring Kids(S.)fee w H b D a Uy PH o t *"'°" ...._ S. ADUl.TS OVER 3$. No t.,,. ,__draw ln the Ceolur')'ZJ.Surf mobUe .home. tbdroa, la RENTllU~ 6Sl·~ORAN ___ O_ET_R_E_E_CO_N_oo--t·Clualfied Ada. Alld tr t700~~~1i'~:;1'13'1111 pets, Lt:EW~RD APrS. All•lllll'81t W•L • ·• Dally Pilot m.150 MC park •/healed~ 'fr* your old stulf fOf' 2Br. IBI. p.eUo, MO mo ::'i .~~·u~~~:d~ -------•I 3l:IO Fullerto n Ave., u a..uleclM.CaUToct.y a.... .... tldna \0 tell? C;.11'~·r'r.'e . .:00. new a oodlea w llh a 957·1100 dy•, SS1 SU Clauilled Ad-Vlaor •t blk E.ofNewport Ave .• --. a..llled .. dOlt well. S.Jt415, "1.a 1e. a ualllechd. eu-wra ~ eoS11'11 Wut Ad Helpf ea 5178 1 blkSo. ol Bay). IS1--03t'7 • '! I l I - Offla • .,...., 4400 Stor9'f 4HO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MoMytoLo• 5025 ~..,.nt, 5100 P411"10M1t UI~ .... W..t.4 1100 ······················· ·······}··············· ...........................••..•....•.•••••••. ....._ lAfct uh......_ ta .,....... 4 200 lll'1 W4!1tC'IHt N 8 W11nl Stor11ae G•r1111e11 for rt•nt ·-e•e-•-e•ee eeeeeeeee•e•e••••e•ee-••••••••••••••••••••••• hn1nclDI lnsl 700Ull ( on OulbO• ren111.ula ..... •14 ~.._.. J141 0.. Uw beach la NtwPQrt bl floor A.ienlS41 MXJ2 n.-xl lo Pun Zone to~·" •e•••••••••••••• •••e••••••••••••••••••e Wkly or Moolhl) i Br 0t .,'Unuahod offlrt-Bonk 111 201 1' 673 ~3. 073 3930 l BR, alal 0«111 '-• J Br Kirk Ltmb 1111 OIOO Co.II \tt•Mi PIHll ll'U ........ W ... H 4600 vwrv~) u h h ''h TOUCHACLASS ...... .,0 ,... S{I a B1or yt m " an. E.SCOaTS ADYllTlllM6 wflnd lhedays when you a. HRS 752-0817 AGIMCY HOMEOWNERS 0.. Doy Approl1ol Usr your l'tlwt) for b1lli.. home add lions. vara lions. etc i\ny amount. .iny reason Cr11d1t or Job not neccS."idf) l'u1npun- 1.1ur cui.ls 24 hrs & wetikends 1'hould u1>e caution ¥nd needs mat11re pe.,.... to the d11y1 when Its safe to l'WI atJt camera 6 ,art ~h lt":L: ~~ pnl. t.a 1 r1e 811 Bit.Ir t.:11bln p1•r mo No lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• 010 0 Mt at . c~• dt11I kw•l1on for rl•htna . ~ !llOO Wuntod In Costo Me.,il 11r bd hllcma ur 1u1t l"llln1 Irvine area. 2 or 3 8R. ·i.hoot the moon" Send FfRST L •DY files. Exper . preferred tor your personal cum II' but not n ee . Call putl!r analyied J20 day Escort• Mo4.ft ~. u lc tor Carol I r•. a be q ul t ..:! H•IA\ Wtind \Jr wk 1 ~ .\h'CJ1t•1tl ulfwl' 2' d)' pr huu i. t> pr l'f t• r r 1·d 3 Kuhlde * "' 1ar•1e. DU.li .,_ lBlt :tBt\ s r •I u i. v • 11 1., H 1 wk allJ111·t•11t to llo •a .\dulti. Xlnt r1•f1•rem•ei; 01ortwU1m chart. only $3 • PsfyO~ • h llW ,>-car~. add1ln>nal * 972•1345 * Aide ,.,, dttk, ~ mu, no · • • r 11(),rn\al 1w:t 1310 11 1 3 ~ 7 O I ~ \' c !\ & Pf(.l,l3l·lON I hrh ftftr"' fpk 6 P•tm ~ tlilltl ,.. "'t't!ken<b Har!> S41 Print your M. i·•·V11aAcce..ted l n.ime. btrthda.> and da~ ""' r • Matu.re woman \o ass a\ -t'O 11r. u w 1mnk" Yee..._ • ...._.. 4U O Newpun. tw.ith Wcatchfl 1 8t 11-, S. "°"'!\house, •l•rm Id l•tU hk•l ••• •••• •• ••. ••• ••. ••... "r"1a Ul1lll I\!• po&1d. 1i11r 'bk "'6 111r, patio, Ir pr fur roomnuat ~ .\A.Illa Multu O•!iunar Nl'"' 1 .. 111d , 1111 hmllt' re~Ulrl'd ~ ~ tl.17 6'1\ U htlrnt' lull 111· 011) W••l!k I &2 L:W or Month M6 •14»3 t '1&11 2 Bdrm 1.,. •. opto t>.:am lt,.wohll IAr ftf'lh!at C'Cllifll. p.allu, ~ar•.-~o W \ir l J•~uul • now kW. $.&~mu :un ~l1wr \IGr•' ~ t "i ,...., .....,.., te Sh... 4300 Sl M'l .U79 Rt:NTl\I tJa ~ •••"•••••••••••••••••• l..I B;l'h unll refrl I ~ ...._ --mo Mu .. 101" ,\vuhl,d~vu 1111 ~ Av•il v 3 \.'t<'t0f1 !\t •••••• ••. ••. ••• ••• •••.. cut 11 v I ti II ~ iq1.-nar11 ~rm lllITT •h; • l frol'IJ attle em ~f!'Ulonu ll) 11lnl't< u -.... r.... ,,.,_., " m,.ru1.ale :'litl "M>l> HO•UC. IS ~---~ ~r-..l • ,._..e..l . ~1 Vl<'lori., St $t00mo le! N• ~ "32 •134 -~ l:k>7 Aflt>rl L.et-e....... llSJ Wh) WOll' llmt• 11nd ""50 mo 2br lbM. Mt a ••••••••••••••••••••••• mont") luuklnll lu1 a Vt.'rdt-,ava1l tn~\dulb t'\ClNCGOl.FCO KS~ tuommatl'• L1•l u a ~pet•.5.)9 t\l2l •1t~nt l.o"~' c..indo 2 br 2 t>a h>\'lllt'. "ret•n .ind 111 - -Wt•!>l S 111t Or L<1\ l'I,>-to-rv1ew fur you Tolct> thr Maa Verde 2br lb" ~nd .i1t• 8110). "ahr dr> ~r l'onlu...100 Oul ot 1"1nd11w car bl floor OI ~pl .. x p.1llO, 2 ('Mr llllr .\UtO op t;uod ltoominates Av111I St-pl IU t2 \dull. nr \dull& n11 P.'l' S.\50 Nopt'ls ~ S45 4083 Im TIO.l~ .. Hnd l~\)\ L\ '4lll 'XlllV IBr. bwlt ms gar, open leKh 1169 I 1964 nahe1m \pl ·c · ~322ll 2 Bdrm Delu'Ce \pl ~ew drapes. dean-room>. quiet ~hlure adult1o 1375 Secure\} SlOO Cleaning fee $150 646--0016. PAii NEWPORT COUNTRY CLUI LIVING Singles. 1&2 bedroom apt.S. & townhOulit!S. From $429 644 1900 .l roomnw It' :111•1 ch UK) 752·511 I MATURE f'crrullc rurn'll 2 br 2' ~ ba twntu•e Npl Hits S2.50 mo 642 1470 & IW6·7M.5 3Br, 2'78a. forrTUtl dinini.t Versa1llelli Penthouse 2 room. breakflls t nook. Br 2 Bo Ocean view. townhouse. encl pu11v. 2 ~c $72.5 mo 644·0452 car gar. pool, closl! lo So e es Cst Plaza. 11c('es!> to trwys. SS75. 549 0476 Roommate. M . yng. J l:Jr townhouse. beuut furn. pvt area 75\J·O'~ Female wanted to s hurt· 2 bedroom . 2 bn\h in Newport Bca('h Call ~8765 for details. West side lBr . stove, re/rig .. adults. no pets S290 717 West 18th o &as-1926. Ent1c1ng C1l~ L1gh1s S290 Enjo} this 1 Bdrm W All maj applc16451 • fee # RENTIMES 631 .t555 Devas\alliu I Br S200 AH new carpets Drp-; Dream Kitchen <77261 (pe _631·4SS5 Be!!1 ,\gt 3 Bdrm lownhou!>e. ahmsl new Pool S650 rm ,\gt 754-1202 ..._.inejton Beach 3840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uively all adult. no pets. 1.2&3 Br apts. 6200 Ed· inger. h b. 1146.()61\J HUMTIHGTON LAKES SPARKLING STREAMS CASCA DING WATERFALLS TOWERING PINES •New spacious lakeside , adlllt apt. . .Z-3 Bdrm. 2-3 baths · ·~egant fireplaces ,..Private lakeside patios ~ J>alconies •Heated pool & whirlpool spa •4 miles from beach 842-1160 7562 Ellis Ave 11. B 13 blks W of Beach Blvd I '2br. 2ba. crpls. drps, dis· hwasher. encl gar Btween Elhs & Garfield, off Beach. $400. Avail Sept l. 842·8032. Lovely 2 & 3 Bdrm Townhouses, garage. patio, laundry fac. S425 & ss25: Call 213/596·121Yl, 114/960-7347. TIME RUNNIMG OUT? CALL REMTIMES lOO'SOFVACANCIES PREE COUNSELING 631·4555 ree Female. Ocean view Con do Pool Large room Pnvale bath Dana Pt S200 + ~2 Util 496·5436 :'llew beachfronl 2br. 2ba. Female wanted. mid 2-0s. gar. spa. blln.S 9l 1 W share 3 bdrm. 2 ba CdM Bay. 968 37i2 700.9573 V1ck1e or Vic Nr nu dlx 2Br 1~2Ba UP· per. nr Lido. FIP. deck. crp\/ drps. S6SO Adlts 675·0007 e rsa1lles. l Br Condo. xlnt location, lull secun· LY & amen1t1es $590/mo 491.3506 tori a Very clean l\t :ile or Female. 25 to 35 to share beaut Dana Pl Condo S325 incl all Ref's 951-3825 24 ans. ser Responsible, non·s mkr seeking to s hare w same. your lge house or C'Ondo. N B or CdM Olt LIDO ISLE Lge LR. fplc. redecor 3Br 2Ba • Adults. n o area 700.81S8_. __ _ ~~·yrly f' Non Smoker to s hare ~6187 (714 )753·07l9 2Bdrm Garden Apart. -----JenmrerS57·4396 Sparkling clean large 3 Bdrm. Duplex Near ocean. Dramatic beams & frplc $725 yrly 833-~7. 675·6196. Condo 2bdrm. 2ba Bay view. enclsd garage. auto. opener. S7SO year· ly. TSL Mgmt. M2·1603 . Working girl seeks sume to shr 38r. 2Ba apt. Irv $240 mo Sonju for details aCt5 .30PM 559.0719 Wanted female rm mate lo shre 3 bdrm Condp S150 rm. 847·3509 am, 842·6519 pm.Carol F.astblutf. S625 2br 2•"J ba Prof. man over 40. s hare 2 car Encl. gar . Private 3BR condo. HB $300 mo +Comm. Pool. 640.5296 _968-_9238 __ . ___ _ 1, block to beach great Office Rental 4400 I Lo I .bd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocauon ve y 2 rm. SS.SO/mo. 968·8263. :-.lew Duplex. 1 2 blk from beach. Avail. ·9.15, Up 3 Br. l Ba. S675. Down 2 Br 1 12 Ba . $625 . <2131335-8035 Eves. YEARLY. lrg 3br. 2ba duplx. De c k , view . S750Jmo. 675·3504. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 'hblk tobch. 963-8818. 968·2238 WESTCLIFF BLDG. NEWPORl BEACH <..otuer W•\I' ,11 l'''"" .tnJ ''''"'•A•• ~All C_i4_,.. .,c-..-.-1o1 ./.-../a.. .... ,/,.,.. __ ..t --./ .,,,,,,. ,... ..... Call Mr Howard 6 45 . 6101 450 sq. ft. for $425 per mo. 4001 Birch St. N.B. Agent 541-5032. A.._IOft Dodore! Unh111t frt•l· 111un(l111.: weU uppvlnll'<J 11wd11·al Wcht • IQCJl1cl! iJl hlWl'.1 of II tJ 6 II ul m1·1H rmi.. x ttu~ rm, bu1ol11t•N:1 otflni. liic rt!ccpllun 1111 , II' t uW1•t1 ure.1 \\•tul :0,{•pl I <.'all l•JtlH ~ ror .i ppl lo "t't' 1n;u t ' \Jtt•t-:T 11'13 1351 I. Nt•Wporl l.Wud1 11fftt·c1>. fomtsht-<I Sl:>O & s:too tj4,2 13.lS i':lCl'\'Ull\ t' ~UlH• Ir\ tnl' W 1 'l'l'\lt t·onl rm :\t•rtl\ 111.1 II 1n flt'"'' 1t11rde11 lilt.lg t \111 ~\ 1021 1100 'Cl H 3 oU.tel>. w:ul &nl( roum, Xerox, Curo ur unfurn Way under murk<'l lh'~ept1on1st Amµle parlunl( t..ocaled m Costa Me!>U 011 R<'dhill & P~ula1 1 n o 7141957·0.'122. SUITE DEAL 3000 Sa. Ft. •Will Bw Id i-o Suit • I mo free Rent L1du Manna Village (7141675-8662 --- WATERFRONT & PENTHOUSE SUITES 280 to 3000 Sq. ft. Sl·S2 Sq. Ft. Oeeon Views Wei Ian • 1714) 675-8662 pnvate room m pro- fessional s uite avail $150 mo 494 9751 11 sq fl. 3 office!>. waiting rm. xerox. furn. or un- fum 00-, Reccpt10111s1 ~ Loe 1n C M on Hcdh1ll & Paulanno 957 :0322 lwtness Rental 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For store & office spa cl' at reasonable rates. 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. '.\-fESA VERDI-: DR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M 545-4123 7SOSQ. FT 17Lh St r eel ·s bus1e:-.t ~hopping center. Costa ~tesa Healunomtt ~. 6i5 6700 DAN.\ POINT \'1olet Lantern & Del Prado soo· & 1100 at 64t \fl5·1120 PRIME new A C bldg 6.000fl or part IS' 'fl NewPort Blvd 646·3524 ()(rice & Retail Space Fountain Valle.' Garden Grove Orange San Clemente Stanton From 50' per s q. ft l.S. Properties 968·3701 . I Pr l Ba condo, use or pool. sauna. $400/mo. 846·3675 New 2 bdrm 2 ba Garage. 8400 mo. Ask for Rosema ry Gruen 848·2262 or 963·8710 Dover Vlllage Condo. 2 br . 21 2 ba. frplc, dbl garage, pool & clubhouse. Adults. $615 mo. Agt, 675·5200 BEST RATE ln NEWPORT BEACH io:inw1• rcial aetttab 4475 ATTRACTIVE 2Br. 2Ba. den. frplc, g11rage. no children. 962.-7788 Ask for Mack AVAJLABLE NOW' Cute 2 BR. lots of xtras . pvt patto. 2 kids ok. HcCs re 11'd. S365 mo 17401 R. Keelson. 848·~65 lil:GE 3 BR 2 Ba. lots of xtras, 3 children ok. Avail Sept I $.125. lSl & last. 17401 B Keelson Ln. Oc:e11n view Penthouse. 2br, 2ba. rrplc. pool, club house. securi ty . Sub parking , S695 mo 955 1120. 2BEDROOMS 3505 BALBOA BLVD. Yearly lse. Starting 9·L5. SSOO mo. in els ulils . Gus. 213-966·1111 Agt. By the"Beautiful Sea S335 For a Sunny lBr W lf'enced yard 16405 I fee 631-4MS Belly Agent San ci.m.nte 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dehae Office Spoce 400 to 5000 Sq. Ft. •J anst.orial Service & UtHities Included e Adjacent to Airport & Restaurant Row •Access lo 3 M a1or f'wys 833-8813 KOLLCEMTH &18·5465 ---------3Br . golf cou rse apt. MlWPORT Elegant executive s wtes in prestige toe Jnclds secretarial services. re· ceptionist, t elephone answering & more. f rom S27S per m o THE HE ADQUARTERS COMPANIES: A pro fessional environment •VERY LARGE Nr nu ocean view. walk to 3BR 1480 & 2BR $395. beach & tennis. To share. Garages , new cpl & $1&5/mo. 499·4002. paint Nr . Beach & Ed· ~llh FunUth.d inger Kids OK. no pets. Of' .,..,.,..shed ltOO 714/851-()681 7911 Holt 847 ·4803. owner Near Huntington Harbour 2bdrm Apt. 846·4360 Unbelievable! 2Bdrm S250 ~ Kids & Pets OK f'ncd lot. Bnck lrplc &cmore: t8469 > fee RENTIMES 631·4M.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 250 sq. f\ 2 room suite Seawtnd Vi-8 Ground noor. Sl65 mo. New l&2 bdrm \u.xucy 779 W. 19th St. C.M. Tom adult apls In 14 plaos1-95_7_·l_900 ______ _ Cr om $415. 2 bdrm <X!ice s pace avail. FUii townhouses rrom SS3S + service executive suites pools, ten.nil. waterfall&, avail for lease In Center IJ(>Ods! Gu. for cooking 1i· Pointe. Located near OC ~aUng paid. From San Airport. For leasing IO· Die10 Frwy drive North . on Beach to McFadden fonnauon call /DeeDK nus 2Bdrm wont ha1\ ~ then Weal on McF adden Huff: 955·2288. Closeto thebeach lo Seawind Vlllage. Md' 1/D t l fHMO S350Call now tS38il ree (114)893-5198. .;6 1~~ fl. el~ 8N. Cost~ RENTIMES 631~ ltOOMI 1 4000 Mesa. Ground noor. tully ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5800Sq. Ft of commercial space on Newport Blvd. C M. Reasonable rates. 645-4414 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER! RENTAL RATE REDUCED! Mesa Industrial Park 711 W. 17th. St. Costa Mesa, Ca. 642-4'463 • 0.. 7500 sq. ft. unit ovoll. for lllHMdlote occupo1tcy. • Car· peh. .... , IWft bor. • 30< sq. ft. Offer ex· ptrH •·26 .. 0. • Of. flu hn. M·F. 7:30°4 . XLNT BUSINESS PARK LOCATION In• ll44 11••••••••••••••••••••• equipped Private patio, ••it•••••••••••••••u•11 Room with Kitchen p riy. e t c . S543 f mo T om MESA l Bdrm. COl\do In The Near bus & sfio pplng 957·1900. Lakes. Northwoods. 6 center. Adulteonly. Eves -Prof--E-x_e_c_or_c_Su_lt-es-INDUSTRIAL rno. new. $475. Call 6-9:30orwknds . 962·7520. • •RK David 979.3953 or P1:g at New Fu 11 Serve Bldg, H 8 ..-,,,_ •9 .20()0 Room tor rent. Female, 3 ore Suite ~9~ non·amoker . pool. Own/Ajt <714 >847·S338 711 W. 17th. St. Rihcho San Joaqllin. 2Br, 545·2510. C u-·-2Ba, den. fully .. p1r•ded. --------• 3000 Sq. Ft. o rtice apace. otto ~ UIO de1ree 10U course Roomw/priv. entrancenr Newpor t Blvd , C.M. 642-4463 W!wl900mo.5ll8·4641 Bl& Corona Bch. Call Reasonable rates . •Two t .17014'-ft.~ L...-IMd ll4I ~'=1 a.m. after 7pm. _645-_+'_J_t_. _____ , lh ptlll, fOf' ._ .... .. _ .. e................ IUvt tomelhin1 yO\l wan\ ec11.1ncy. •C..,.h. \OU wis h churt to ~lurt tn various duties io ac· 644-1923, 846-5567 M11h· ruurn mute wanh.od 10 11hur" aµt. t·11111lu. or house with man.1)(1•r n· l:l.'l\\ly Lransferr\•rl from ~1dwe~L t:ast ur West 111de or Mt!sa Verll1• areu, l" M or Muanol111 , Adam.:. afcl6 uC 11 li 11rc lo•rn·d !17!1 1:1~9 1·vc~ & wkcnds d1l<1 llllill lo. Biorh)'thm ---------tive reurement home. Churl, 5800 Polani. Ct, COVER GIRL Hours: 5·11 :30. Good denta l & medical REALESTATELOAMS MiraLorna.ca9t752 O C benefits. Newport Villa. SW,000 lo $250,000 with up Lost & Fouftd 5300 * UT ALL * 642·6861. \O \5 years to repu} ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9S3-0778 MC/VISA -------- Loan secured by a rom ---------1-~~~~~~~~IAMUSEM ENT CENTBR b1nalion of Heal & ATTENDENT over 20 Personal property . FOUND ADS ESCORTS yrs. Must like people , ·\A Prune Fmunc111l •951-4473 * Mechanical /electronic Ser vices Always open knowledge helpful. Refs, lte11po11sl lile w(lrk 1ng par l) w1lh rdcrenc.ci. want:. lo renl I :t bedroom hou~c vr 11purtment w lurgc Mn!llt' or 2 i:ar gar age "'a1rgrounds OCl' areu 'lo kid s or pcl~ Uuys eves C'all li:il 0148 7 14· 527-3477 ARE FREE ~i~SAGESlOW AO Bondable. For Intervie w Call·. ~YSTlC MASSAGE 4!'9-..il7. 494.4727 -LARGE 2MD Tb'' AVAILABLE $100,000to2M1111011 s~ !1993 Wei.ts1de Rlty. lni: SS6·4ti56 Santa Ana A1tl1ROI 642-5678 Profesi.1onal Therapeullc UcenH l1tsptdon massage L1c'd.NB ,\ppt City o f Huntington tJOly, Steve 548·281'7 Beach is taxing applica- ---------Lost or round a pet? Call -----t1ons for Animal License TOMMY'S OF NEWPORT ESCORTS 752·9368 Inspectors . Will work Sept ·April. Flexible hours, 20·40 per week Apply Animal License Office. Hunti ngton Beach Civic Center. !I00-8882. E O.E. --MOHlY AVAILABLE Animal Assistance It esp o 11 s I b I e . 1 m 2nd TD's Lea~ue 537 2273. no fee m11culalc. quiet Business Lady nttds 3 bdrm Co11 RB>UC ED RA TES Lot.l \\ale black cal with do or house w garage SonffaCJO la~ while puws. answer!> to bt:for~ school starts Will 7 I 4 ··832·5200 J ~ R_t'~~~ s.u! 9'J82 l'ons1ller winter rental Ask for Linda t-1y1111 01 Prefer CllM or In tnt' Karen Linn area Kathy 644·2260 or1---------• -193·8658 Lost Male pupp1e, S pr 1nger Spaniel, durk brown & white. lost in ---- 17 25 lbs in 6 wks No :.hots. no drugs. no con- L r a c Ls Kathleen or Robin 673·01 l I ----- -----Mort~9H, Trust Rm w pnv bu & ktl, pnv Offdt 5035 ANIMAL HOSPITAL Full time permanent Position mn. bathing , Gt-eat Compony cleaning & some front. San Juan Creek area. ---------t'ull Jody: 661-6787 hm. ESCORTS Mon-Sal. Min. age 18 for working l'ph• l\ton ••••••••••••• •••••••••• f-'r-1, vie Sl Simon & Jude Call collect 17\41 78.'.l-2688. lusinessflnvest / F;nonce ...•.............•..... Sottfer MtCJ. Co. All types of real l!Slate investments since l!M!I Specioll1lnq in 2ndTOs 642-2171 545·06 l I Business Widow hus cno1wy for 2nd Opportunity 5005 T.D ·s N" C'rcd1t check, ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pnlly For aclmn call ROUTE SALES I SERVICE Eam Sl0-30.000 your I st year in a job that '°"9tS close to owniftCJ y~n business. See our ad under "Su les Help Wa.n\ed" 1-800.352-5430 Sates·Dlstributo rsh1ps for Nutritional Program ~r. Booth \7 M I 760 1037 . \gt 673 7311 11oyt1 me 41 °0 YIElO. S37.000. 6 mo , 15': TO 1111 20-ac parcel .it V1~lJ 111 final e11gmeen11g ~1 \l J pprsl S18.SOO per ac now und $59.000 per at· l'Omplld Only S6.927 per ac ahead Price S32,!lJO 751 48 26 , 756 3059 , 493 1153 I 5'12°0 INT 2ND TO No Prepayment Penah) 15 yrs S1n~le fam1b Lido Newport CompJn~ ROOFING 673 7595 24 hri. ,\II T_ypes. repairs. m TD FOR SAi E p •t . l s u I a t 1 o n . F r e l' ' , ' µur ~ Estimates. Ca ll Bob S20.000 & $13,700 <il 548·0769 12' 2· • 111t lnl onl~ du1• :1.5 ~ Make ofr. pr1n on Mc>My to loan S025 I.' 631·2'J23 ......•.•.•.•.......... Announcenw nh I Penonols/ Lost & FoUnd .....•....•..•......... 100 5764 wk. R ~WARD yr s Laguna Niguel ltt-:WARD lost Spnnger 24 Hrs 64l·Ol80 1131·8700 Spaniel puppy vie Cash/Checks --------- Trllrock 8·14 851·0718 aft Am Exp/MC/Visa Apl Assistant Manager ti durweek ---------1 Trainees Will t rain LOST: mole Doberman red collar. bll< & rust REWARD! 63l 4229 Found Puppy 6mo <a1.1- prox1 P Golden Hl't vi e Adams & :'11 agnoha llli !HI 717H (,()ST Long h<1.1red ~ruy male 1·.11. ~ Side <1.rea 1114 Heward 645·233S LOST Fem Cal Lan gry blk brwn w collar Vic Bolsa Ch1cu & Edmger Sl6-7S30 F'ree Spa Tuh needs repa1r5 548 4666 I.OST E Bluff Mea. Nfl Fem Poodle 811¥-.gry c·hin. Blk s \one collar w blue tag, Unclipped. deaf. on med Family Heartbroken'. LARGE REW ARD! No Ques. pleose call 75 2 -881 I ·offi ce 24hrs. 759-0456 lost on 8/9 /80. LITTLl AMMIES ESCORTS all major credit cards accepted 53()..4723 •FOXY LADY• OUTCALLONLY • 972-1138. • Are )OU making what rou're worth? If not call '.\tr Booth !714) 760-7037 P~ Snvius 5360 ...•..•...........•..•. FREE Prec)ftancy Testinq ABORTION •GeMrol IAslffp) or Local Anesthesia •Low ~ lftclude~ Lab Tests, Counwti1t9, Surc)ery, MNlcotl0tts a Post-Op hem •CounseflftCJ & Ref•r· ral <.:ouples. Paper wor k & maintenenace. 64.2-5073 Assembler·l l g h t in g manufacturer look ing for 3 people to assemble custom lighting fixtures. Must be hard workers & dependable. OpPortunity for advancement. Must speak English. 546-2901, Randy. ASSEMBLERS We will train . Apply 7AM MacGregor Yachts, 1631 Placentia, CM. .1 i\.SS1S'l'ANT MANAGER. Draper's Laguna Hills store Must b e ex · persenced 1n better women's ready-to-wear and SPortswear. Apply in person lo Manager Mable A ustin, 23621 Moult.on Parkway Plaza or call 768-6622 for ap- pointmeol. Automatic Trans R & R man. F IT , exp p re - ferred. 548·2288. /NEED I MONEY Announunwnh 5100 LOST '.\'Ian·:-. gold watch •M•di -Cal & lnsuranc• Accep~d. •Coftfidefttiol & Pen.onal Co". AUTOMOTIVE PARTS COUMTERPHSOH Roy Carver Rolls·Royce has an immediate full· tune position available. Dealership or Coreign car experience required. call Glen for an appoint• ment. •••• •• • • • • • • • • •• • •• • •• • nr on an Alpha Beta (17th • CREDIT NO PROBLEM 2nd & 3rd TD loans 978-6531 Arranged by Coost Homr Loons A Mortgage Broker A Flctlllou1 Bu1lne11 N11m• Slalament lllad with lhe County Clerk la velld for live yearl alter which llme continuing bualnetMa muat refile Publication la naceuary only II th ere are changes. Call lhe legal Department a1 lhe DAILY PILOT lor informat i on and neceaaary lorma 642-4321 Eirt. 332 Now You Can Sell More v. ith Oath l1 il11t PE~~\' Pl~('ll t:tt \US Still onl~ '2 :1 lint·~ r111 2 dJ\, uni\ ~I J du\ :1.1c-,, lllll' . ,\(l\('f'lht' 11nt• (II' 111111·1· 1lt·m~ \'alul•d up lo "\011 E:n•h udd II 1orwl lint· 1,. onl\' 1l<1<· fur 1111' f\\11 d a ·,~ l'iorr\'. n11 c• o in rn t• r c· 1 u ·, a di. ullo\\t'li <.'h.11'~1· \'our Penn\ l'tnchl'r Ad ur u'c \Our H;111k Amen1·~rtl \'1,a w ~h.1:-.tcrrdrcl For mon· 1nform.il111n and 10 plare )our <1d r.ill 642-5678 Who Will a~if'/our ca 5 ~~\jOLJ.'f~~ #'e ~remw~? U se Anlwll At/ service wh en placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number wilt appear in your ad we tak e your messages 2 4 hours a day ... you cal I in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $10 per w eek . For more information and to place your ad call 642~5678. DAILY PILOT st 1 REWARD ~ 645·7149 Lo!>t : Female kitten. 4 mos. white. l blue & l brown e~e . Needs medication \dams & Brookhurst. HB 963-0468 LOST Wht & grey mu le S1ame!>e \'u: H.lrbor \'u lltlls. CJ.\1 Re v. ard ' IN4 0905 llRTH COMTROL STYILIU TIOH For iftfot lftOtion or I• mediate oppol1thmnt, call: CALIFORMIA PREGMANCY COUMSELIMG SERVICE.IMC. APCARE SCRAM-LETS NEWPORT ANSWERS BEACH Weasel Oaken -752-0053 Elope Assail -SANT A AMA SEASONAL One thing about lhe 972-3104 economy. Today. being ....... £..--..I employed is now con-Hau11amos -..--. sidered SEASONAL SoclalClubs 5400 work. ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'ow1d ma le blond puppy. comer Ham11lon1Meyer. 645·7624 FOUND. Westhighland Terner. wht fem. Poodle Blk Male. Cocker Mix Blk Wht Male. Hus ky Have a perfect match through a fast, pnv intro or a fun get-to·ge\her al our beaut party house. Men & couples 636-7572. Women join fr ee . 636-nl.~ Perfect Match Dating Service Mix Brwn Whl male ~yn.llt & N PT BC H ANIM A L Preparation SHELTER 644·3656 •••.,••••••••••••••••••• FOLiND 2 Pitbull PUPS. ~l ·Brtnd l e. F Brown, Hunl. Cntr 847·2442 --------- Found. Kitten. 2040 block of Maple St., Costa Mesa. Beverly 641·882Q Jobs WClfttH, 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Recep t1on1st T y pist. 50wpm wants P T morn- rn g JOb South Coast Plaza area Cil ll Dorothy: 556·2248. ---------He4pWont d 7100 FOUND: ? puppies. v1c •••••••••••e•••••••••••• Santa Ana & 201.h , CM· Accounting C I e rk . 631·5043 Payroll background. Personals 5350 FUU lime San Clemenlti ••• •• ••. • •. •• •• •••••• •• area. Call for appt: Mrs. PRE LAW student needs Presley: 714·492·6103. SiZ!>.000. Will do anything p able Legal. Confidential Accounts oy DVM. P .0 Box 324 2. Clertt N.B. 92663. lrvlne division of In· -------1 lernational Corporation Mlt'SAGE has immediate opening ~ for Accounts Payable Be pampered with a Clerk. Previous Ac· persona l relaxing counts Paya ble ex- massage by 12 or the pre-pertence required. Ex- tt1est girls In Southern perience w I Accoun ts California Jacuzzi. Payable data processing sauna etc Open i oam· syste m ext r e m e ly 4am. 7 days a week. Vis-helpful. Xlnt. benefits & a M C. Atlantis Health pay P lease a pply in Spa, 2112 Harbor Blvd. person to Personne l, Costa Mesa. 645-3433 Br· 1641 Kaiser Ave. Irvine. in g t his ad (or your _540-__ 997_9_. ------ special gift. $2.17 per DAY That'll ALL you pay for a JO day ad in the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DllECTOIY ACCOUNTS RICllVAILI Person needed for dlve~e duties In a c· counllna tor dyn1mic growlna me dical com- pany. Pleasant Newport Beach environment. To $13.200. C1ll 631-18$5 tor appt. ACCOUNTI ... P /f Hours 8am-5pm, with aome overtime. Muat be able to operate 10.key addln1 mach in•. Wiii train. Call ror appolnt· ment. ROY CAflVH ROLLS.ROYCE 640.6444 .\UTOMOTIVE AUTO CASHIER Immediate opening. Ex· perience required in automotive cashering. Good salary &c company benefits. Contact Mrs . Hauser at CONNELL CHEVROLET ;<,.,,11.<rl••I I\ ' I ' " I \ \1 ~ ·-\ 546-1 200 AtrrOMOTIVE LOTPHSOH Compa ny benefits, re- asonable hours. Apply in person between 10 A.M. & 2 P .M. to C huck Murphy. NO phone calls. IU•H--.rll•& c ......... e " u ... ou.,, U0.907 AUTOMOTlVE MICHAHICS o I We need two Cull-time. qualified m echanics. Call Service Manager at ROY CARVll ROLLS.ROYCE &IMW 640.6444 AUTOMOTIVE SOOTH J:OAST DODGE IN COSTA MESA OUNGI couMTY·s MIWIST DIALlll We need experienced people u follows: l. Mechanics 2. Part& Depart m ent Personnel 3 . Switchboard Operators 4.Cathlen 5. Office Personnel & SALISf'IOPl.1 cantact Scott Ma&nuaon at 140-flOO AJ#.o T\&ne Up Techolclanl wanted. Call 492-7630.'< Eves call 492·8850. BABYSITTER, perma-nent. mature, a cl)'I wk. In 1\\1 home for 6 mo. oki boy. R4ft. 4N.S'102 BABYSlTl'ER needed for, Church Nunery In eo.ta M ... area. CallSM-7787. ~N\l l ''" s.Wl mo Sell with EASEi to ..U! ClHtlned ada do ... & wef IMr. *' \'rl)' lt'u BREEZE It well -Call NOW, ~ efflce .,...: C1-11\ed AdlM2·58'11 805871. ..... 7:f0 te 4. 00 IT NOW! 642·5'11 t.rl'Ol'EM MAltlCETS M2·7'102 S.by1ltter wahted. My home. M. 111.r . 1 child, no cltantna. 171/wk. Sept lo O.C. 154,._ ...................................... _,_ .. _,. !i • I . -. .. - Ledlcapi"' P..wifPop«f'iftCJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._..,./R•polr MtrO C ona1ru el1o n .,,~ El.J.o.:< 'T H. IC' I A Ill l'rlN.·<I n1bt tr .. c.11m.u1 .. 011 h&l'&e or •m•ll )Obi! Ur •3..11~ +17:1 O!i."I~ ......_... ~~.~~ ....... . ...... '1ef •l111 ~mt.100 6 ltHm dun El• t'l r 1 c 111 n 1.1 1 ·-.. ••••••••••••••••• l~ol(lr 'bnalit•nlln, whl •U3t01l l'tu Sm job11 ;··•111111111111111111!1••••-•I cpt1 10 min bltarl'I mamtt-11.inrr & rt<111111r; -...111151'COHIULT nun llv. din rm. h•ll :1<411 5200 ~OCllAltGE SU A\I rm S7 5Cl. t'OU<.'b t:iertnrl•rt. ,mull Jolu. -lqalproWee 110. cht IS 01ta.r ltm b111 Job• wn~11m .. ..._.•bl• r..,. pd odor Cpt r~piur. 1.5 llcer\M & '~'un-d Work T.,...Ntpl1ble )ra upr Oo w ork • Yrt law upentn~ n\) eU Rtri. UJ OtiJt Cluat•ntet.'d 8J8 ll'JHO A"yCarlton <'114) 9111 <M93 OMJt Hw.), So Lal 8C'h C-•/C.u.h ••••••••••••••••••••••• WCTllCIAH Reµ.111 or 1 e1nodt>l1111t Dal~ W Ph1t11..-Cement No JOb loo ~m in cl M&O Cnnlr;arl111.: nlli(lnl'), L1c " bonded 11'73 ll300 ....................... ~-2162 .._.I 6 Room Addi QilW C_.. ~ Exp'd, Xlnt Ref's •••••••••••••••••••••• • Call Ooua 131.()663 F.xpr'd Ired l'h lld ci.r~ Academic. recre .. 11onal ······················· bpertC~s Tr~s topped remo\•cd :-lew lawn~ 751 3476 c.,.wtau W11rm loving environ •••-•••••••••••••••••• menl M7 9640 Exp Gardner , l'Omp yard ClJ~'TOM INTERIOR matnt. cleanup & trl't' CARPENTRY Ex elem teacher will trimming Frt.'e 1·st By Jay 6"U·8'09 ca.re for' your child ages Pete 64 1 1096 Home Improvements In· 2·S wkl~ ~6 1815 . t/·ext, Char Reno\•atina C t t ----<. le.rnups. lawns, lrl'e ..,_ · •• •~• serv1ci:. land:.c .qil', l>o&vls Tr~ Tn mm111.i & All urouncl hauling I.e t u s s o I v e Yo u r Tu 1> I> 111 11 2 l h r l T truck l''r\~ \'Sl L•ndsc:itpc: needs, ex em 1• r 11 1• 11 r > t o rm s.tH ~"' l·cllent local rt-rert'11ces. 111t·i vici· t'l cuu uµ & free estimates Call h 11 u1 11111 1-· r 1." c ~ l ll,1uhn1t $20 d load. no an~ tirne. 675 3101 .l-18 s;w lonal'l l' Call Ouvid Maciel Service •'o IO·yr~ ufter 4µm 545·8C>16 " ~ Lund t llPlllll. 1 r.. .. 111m c·x1ier In pruning. clean 1111111( c lt'<1ll UI>~ f"n·.. 2 \ o u n I( m c· n w I uµ & landscape Free t'll Avllt·~ ll th 11-17' r<'spons1b1ll11r:. havr ·~.T t•!!t Cull MS 1865 ~WU T r uck Yard & • C...._41p1/H.af1tq I 11 w 11 s er\ 1 1· 1·, t.,111111>1'0111· 1-'r t'e i-;l!l '~'.llltn ········•····•···•····· J1 n.ili-r; l>d tl Joh tl GH Tru,·k Will T r .i\1•1 \111W rt•t1• lt'llCt'' & 01U\ 111.: \11 ~w 1•r µhunt! IW7 !JSl3 ·····••····••·•········ Trt.~· 1ruwil i•quip. Cau U>mplete Landscape de· do 11 ny 1 h 1 11 i,; ' <·a 11 sign at reus pn l'es Lie 548 0020 eontraclor 55ti· 75ij.5 Houwclt011lng MMoftrf ······•·•··•··••···•··• ....................••• Wj nt itKEALLY C:Ll!:AN Brickwork. s mall Jobi. Ou . Newport, Costa Mesu & 11 sfo.:? Call <:mgham Irvine. 675·3175 eve:. Girl l"tt•e est D4~·5123 ROB I N S HO SE CLEANlNG SEl\VICI-: For a thorough!} cll•un hse 540.06Si Bnck. stone. block work. Ille flri.. roncrtole vatuh. wlk.-.. tlr1vewa\:. Hers Free est John 846 1583 :\l:i"lfll) S.1 so per :.q r1 Call for dela1t-. llvm,· 1mvrvc.-me11t . 25 <a;NEk .\I,.. lloust>clt.>an )r::. t'"'l.H'r ~·en c·1ng rng . rt'f s , rel1uble l>t'Pt'lldubll· 1;:n 121~ ~ ~10 l'all art -4P:'>l l'utpc11U> mJ .. 0 111\ rool111g l·cr,1m1l till' llr) \O Ull !l,1\ l!l'J l!Hi!l ~alit> re~1dentrnl rentul µrop µlumb111i.: h.l.ind service::.. S Ill 028tl HaulilM) ....................... • H EI.I t\ BI. E & 1-: F I-' I C I 1-: ~ T W 0 M 1-: 'I ( :uarantcc Sat 1s fact um · \fter 6pm Call 963 i23i ~sitting •..•...••.••••........• Prof fir wrk. tile, wood. parquet. stnpprng. wax rng. buffr11g, steam <.'pt uphol 751 8951, 838 5;i43 675·4~4 --Paintinq/Papflinq ••••••••••••••••••••••• PETERS P l'.'/Tl~G Jo:xvr d R cJ:. Hal e~ fr ci: ~;~t Cull Gc11t' S..;2 ~1~ Prur 1>01n1in1; i-:xt & Int Low rates :::lfl0CH5 r"ree l'Sl 531)..1383 :\H. \'l!>U DJvc ~ PJ111t111r.;. 'crvml-( ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rainbow Pntti Stucco & p111(1er Patch, • no job too am qwck & ~xt Int 8 yrs ~ ( dcan6454203.G45 4199 Exp Lo west Prices ----- Neat & Clean 4 yr ~ftCJ guarantee Fr~e Ei.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Ad Sitter 11257, l,luahty res1denl1al/renlal 642-4:m 2A hrs prop plumbing. Island Painting & Papenng Serv_i_1:e_s.:. ~ 0288 • •••••••••••••••••••••• H.:tl"9011 a.och Tile Co. Let us ·up11rade thal i.hower, tub, dram board or enlr} way Ceramic tile improves a ppear & value ul any home or co mm bldg .it a re:is l'OSl Free est & sugges· llUll~ (714 I 842·3020 Profes~ional work Quality res1dc11l1al /rental Rsnbl Steve 547 -12111 property µlumhing <.:all T....e Service floe ext int painting by Island Services, S.18·0288. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Htrhard Sinor ~t li e. Roofinq T H E !-: U ES l G ~ Ins. Try me S36·5555, 2'l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ornamental pruning . hr:i Rc""lr •-Re roor i\ll Sculpturing, topping, .... IX thinn111g. removal. gen Wallp a pe rin g b) Le P:.1µ1er Custom quality work Pre ·Chris tmci s scheduling. 536·2350 types s hing les rock l'lean uµ 641i t845 shake~ comPo·tar fo'ree --- est 541·5930 Fin. Avail ·rrec & Shrub Pruning & Painting Re:.. Comm I. State Lie, Insur l'ele 839 1886 ur -199 2901 HOOFS FOR LESS All tyµc'>. hot cQmp tilt•, s hake. hl·d bonded 111~ f'r ee est call 960·8778 -Social Services • Painhng int ext. re as ••••••••••••••••••••••. ratei., prompt 111.'at PHOBLl-.::\I S Nl•rcl 10 ::. er,. 1 ,. e 'I I l Y & talk., Free C'Ou11st•hni: workman~h1p guaran AH C II EL I' LINE ll'l'<l fi-16 78 l<t t;.15 2222 l'a1nling lnl i-;xll'r . lo Stucco rat~ free est M48~5fl84 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • or 1;~ 714!1 ClISTU:'>I STl:C.:l'U PAl\'Tl ~G · 12 )rs exp in " II & Cd:\I areas I'm Small. m> JJnC-e~ Tile H~PAIH. HM UN ERi<.: 530 Ultiti <•rt ~mall ' tl73 ti--1't7 Hon ••••••• •••• •• •••• • • • • •• H1•mova l, Yard Clean uµs Jljul1n g , J im 751 23:!2, 84ti· 14l3 ------- Window Cleaninq ......•...•...........• Let the ~un~hme In .. CJll Sunshrne Windo-.-. Cle<1n111g, Ltd ~·8115J .. ~. :1:. I -_j l ...... rv1 ce. 6'.S-3149 •••••••••. ••. ••••• ••• • • k 1 h I srp1n ers. uu 1111-: ~model t repair. qu<thly Ii craftsmanship, 17 yrs in area. L ic'd Mr. Palombo 962-8314 Room add il ions. re-~5~7'bl7 Hauling & l'll·.rn1n~ & tn•e lnmmm.I( & vu111t 1n~ Ile'> Comm·1 Hu.~ '164 ·1276 Janitorial ,1rea 9 ~ f!>. mu:.\ ri:..cs Patios c;er.im1t• llll• st'n 11:e~. rree l'!>l 19-1 :1~117 1)1 r :1.\)I ur all tiP )1 l'hu1•k dauified Ads mode l pl an George Pllmer & Son . Lic 'd 557'6932 642-5678 Want Ad Results 642·5678 Yr tls·ell'd llUJJ~ law11 ~ complete \ :.r rd rnJ 1 n tenance. tree tr1111m111i.: 835·7221 l'll'.111up-. tr1mm1ng. hJuhng Free c:.t 1 ma lt.'S ;;;,; 1!271 •.••.•••.•.•..•..•..... F l ':'JES T I N JANlTORl:\L (',\In; l'omm Ind , lh-s Eio. l)ertl!-ol' li45·1HO l11~ured. he'd 5116 IH25 •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ES SIAM l'!otm µa1ntin11 . lo rates Free es t :I \ r ~uar !Jt.\2 I-Ii i!, ti:J:J !JKl7 aft 5 1':.1110-. d1·ek~. tnmwork. 11U .cl1 l y p c r.!>On <1l1 zerl Tnutt-yuur uld ..,lUI ( l'tlr -.crv1ct', work guarcin ncv. i.:11uilit·~ v.11h a tt't'tl LJrl) 837 i 758 ('las~1f1etl ;111 1;.i2 51178 642-4321 EXT. 332 H141t W..e.4 7100 Help W-.hcl 7100 H9tp Wllftt•d 7 I 00 ~~~·~.~ ..... ~!?.~ ~!.~~.~·~~ ..... ~!?.~ ~!.~~~.~ ..... ~!?.~ Hefp Wanted 7100 Hefp Wcmted 7100 ~Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Conslrucl1011 oriented DE:-IT.\L .\SSIST \:'liT 1·· .. ELEC TECH •................................•...............................•..• BABYSl'M'ER own trans,l•--------•cashier Experiell(·ed mature. E /Side CM. BANKING .\'lust have basil· JJhOlu Days: SS7·0045, eves. knowledge Pho1ogr.1phy 6'2·MCI u k ror Rita TELLERS Unhrruted. 16889 Heiic•h Blvd . H B 847·Jlj6.I IAIYSITill STARTING M i d September, for 3 boys, approx 3 hrs. per day. afternoons. your home. COX SCHOOL I Fountain Vallex_). Please c all Mary 642·4321 ext 218 dys or 968-0234 eves atl 7PM. FUii and part time _open· (' ASHIB-R . House w:.re!o mp are available m our sales apply in person beaut iful Newp.on · · Beach offi ce A Crown Hardware. 3107 minl\num or six months E Coast Hwy, Cd~t SlcL or co mmercial bankin1 experience is preferred. These posi- tions offer: sales per'>on ror r u:.rnm N~WPURT Bl-: \('fl Opportu~1 t \ to· work cabinet :.hop Xlnt eom Looking . n e u r h e 3 c h Tl'-. t . m1ss1on opportun1l~ for • for ad\'anc:nwnl' tro ubleshoot, & re1JJ1r aggressive per~o11 Exp t::stabhshe<l Endix:lontll' quality ma rme power with cw.lorn builders & ore needs ex per s uppli es. baltcq .\rchitecturul plan..: nee cha1i's1de as~l. \O Ith oul charger!>, & rnverters cessan San Clement ~ o 1 n g r r 1 c n d I} EJ<per in marrnl' clee Cabine ts . Call Gene. persooaltl) A .pro tromcs or power ~up 492 566l or 831 8361 fe ssional approach lo plies .i plu!> Call 645 3632 dentistry desired RO,\ for aµµ1 F'ull or P T J anitur~ d~ or night s.i SO hr 1)75·2101 GARDENER GMeral office P fT Clerk T > µ1:.t no Sil II rs !I lP'.\I :\IJture wo man J ob luc :\lewport lk>.i ch 6-16·i-131 Hotel Night Auditor. ex· pene11ccd. ).)crm pos1 11011 al Aliso Creek hln. 31 lOG l'oast Hwy, So 1.a~un~ 499 2271 for ---------• aµpt GENERAL OFFICE S900 TO ST A RT )10RE S WlTll EXPERI F:NCF: Five Girl Office Vaned Ar11v1l1c~ We Will Tram Company Paid Benelili. APPLY BETWEEN 8 & llOUSECLEANERS up lo $.5 per hr Car 645·5123 Houl>ecleaners. Hunl · mgion Beach area i 14 ·960·3766 Bl.nkin& • f'ree parking •Paid career apparel •Top salaries CASHIER Exper·d Hours Tue::. & Thurs 12·9. S.it 9 JO Ii. Sun 9 5 · 30 Appl) ill per!:.o n , Kerm Rima Hardware . 2666 llarbor Bf.. C.:'11. Cuok, P T. Pres1·hool fJle cooking & clean up duties C leanliness A mu s t C h ildcare benefits Irv 552 7331. Tuslin 544 1467 preferretl but not re qwred. Top pa~. fnngc be n e r its ~I e d 1 ca I Ins urance. n1m :.moker t>W-0595 Escrow Se"etory Experie nced. Growing independent co. lrvme Bonnie. 552 4662 t\ill time d ay position available for reliable person with knowledge of plants & landscaping Should have a current dn\ er·~ hl' . l'llJO~ t'Xl'Cl company henef1tl> 1n eluding a free meal per !ih1ft Apply in person !l .\M :\oon, )1on · F'ri Personnel I lA:-.1 llou:.ekeeper· Live in & Newport Harbor Na· tional Bank ;,iccepting applic1lio ns various positions. Experienced benkina personnel only. Cal I 76().3000 Dis patcher expenenred, COOK f\111 time or part wa nted for a large MARRIOTT HOTEL 000 Newport Ctr. OR. 853 Production Place < 'ompan1on in Newport '.'lewport Beach Beach Must be able to Please call 6'2·4000 for ---------•I lime. Call VW 1Porsche•Aud1 agen ESCROW SECRETARY Newport Beach Equal Opp Emplyr '.\! F '!_•_•-·--~~~·-----•drive No s m oking. 642-7263 until 3PM. 640.0099 Banllina lln interview appoint ment, or apply on. Tues· day, August 19 at: FIDILITY HOii.AL C~HIERS UTDTIM 559·85~_!1___ C}. For interview. call COOKS Mr. Kra use al Chick Short order will tram. Iverson VW , Po rsche F' T, Waitresses P IT . _A_ud_i_67_3_·0900 ______ _ Call 24 hrs 6-12·4300 ::31 GIRL FRIDAY Stock Brokerage . P 'time. Beaut Fashion GENERAL OfFICE Island ore Ca ll: Beth. HOUSEKHPH Exp'd Pre ferred. FV area 968.3707. $3.50/hr MIW 4CCOUMTS COUMSILOI 1.Sl.S Westcbfr Drive. Cat Dover> Newport Beach ~1ARKETS f or Znd & 3rd Shifts Counter help wanted. P IT Sandwi c h man wan ted , F T exp. Gary's Oeh. 675 2193 District Manager Pos1 I.Ion open with local Title Co. We are seeking only self motivated & Pos1llve person for L B. a rea Commission only r'or interview call Stephanie 661 -0826 or 973-1440 Our beaullful Bayside oHlce m Newport Beach has an 1mmed1alc op· portun1ty ror an ~crow Seerelary A m1n1m um or six monlhs escrow secretarial experienc·e and typing of SO wpm are reqwred This pos1 t1on orrers an excellent salary and outstandrng benefits including: F T duties include 64-t·-t623 mounl1ng x ·r ays , ---- general ofhce work. & Hairdresser w follow Housekeeper Live.in . 2 some recepl duties. Den· mg lo 70'' & ull ra days wk off. taJ background 1s helpful modern ~alon 1n Cd:\1 962·0439 For our South Coast Plaza Off ice . E x · perience preferred. though not necessary 6i3·25.52 ----- An F.qual Oppty Emplyr Good typin& 1kil11 re· Beautician Wa nted lop quired. Call Ralph Kin· salary Irvine area . ~L5f~·R N 1 A 551·2611 da ys, eves We promole to manage ment & superv1s1on rrom within. WANT A CAREER? Call 1714 ) 496-9071) 551.ono FEDERAL •----------•Childcare for I child age SAVINGS & LOAN Bookkeeping Assistant 6. 2:30 till 9:30. Mon.f'r1 895 Town Center Dr w s l r o n & A / P ex . Reliable CdM Chnsune Costa Mesa CA 92626 penence. & secretar ial 644-4139 Equal Opportunity skills. for urban design Employer firm , Irvine. Salary Cleaning Perso n Apt commens urate w , ex. Bldg. Full time Co~1a Bankin& Mesa. Ne wport De:ich Barclays-Bank, Coslll perience. benefits. Send area. Vehicle needed Meta branch has the resumes to: PBR. 18012 TSL M&mt. 642-1603. followin1 f IT openinas. Skypark Circle, Irvine. drive up teller, min 6 92714. Clencal mi>. exper, vault teller & Bookkeeper·AIR. A P . SECRETARIES inl'I teller. min 1 yr ex· cash receipts & dispers· Employment avail rn per.Barc lays Bankisan me nt. lit e t y ping , multi s urround in gs affirmati ve action Competitive pay. 111 employer M /f , Viel· phones. H.B. S56-lB34. terview & hire. f or man, ERA Veterans & lodd&Hpinq/Cl.rta more info call T Qd handicapped en Joull time, exper. helpful Services couraaed to apply Con· but not nee. Many co. 979·8900 tact Miche le Green benefits Apply at 16601----------1 Counter Help HONEY IAKED HAM Counter help & a full tim e ham processor wanted. No exper nee Will train Call Stan for appt Tues Sat 673-9000 COUNTER HELP Part time . Kusler s Cleaner~. 186 £ 16th St ~'8 .t2.43 U>urt Director & Recep l1on1st , need friendly, s harp, hard working female. Sports back ground µreferred Must work weekends & some eves. Call J a nel or Sue at John Wayne Tennis Club. 644·6900. CREDIT ASSISTA NT : DRAFTSMAN NEEDED J yrs exp. Laguna Bch office. Type 5. 497.3374 Dnver. must be 18 } rs of .ige. have \•ahd l':.rhr drivers I 1eense f T Wain::. Boats L.ockcr. Inc .. 2A31 W Coast llwy, NB DRIVERS wanted for hte delJvenes in Npt. llbr area Neat appearanl·e. gd driving rec. fo'ull tune. :vlon Fri. Master. 234 F isc h e r . C.: 1\1 540--1174 ---------- •Profit shann~ •Paid medical denlJI •Loan discounts Pleas~ cont act Juck1e Skarstedt at 1;.i5 11111 for mire rnforma lion FIDELITY FEOERAL Savin9s and Loe11t Assn. An Equal Opply Emplyr - EXEC. SECHETARY lo general mgr of resort DRIVER neeeded to de · holel Eipcr n •q 'd . liver & ma1ot rent:.rl Shorthand a mus t equi p mt SJ 80 hr Outstanding loc & work 642 1186 atmosphere Apply to 631-lSJJ Placentia. Costa Mesa. Jmmed1ate opening in our Cred11 Dept for ex· Ci.rical penenced Credit Assis-Driver Bookk ed f Marketing/Sales tanl with heav' phone Deln•er\ \-dn Good Mrs Chick, Surf & Sand Hotel. Laguna Beach 497.4477 Bankin& eeper want or F'as hion Is lnd invei.t ~ driving -rerurd full marine hardware co ex perien ce Good TELLERS Xlnl. benefits, room for Firm. Expanding. Xlnt clen cal s kills nece:isary time. Orange County. ----------1 ad A 1 career oppty m act1\ c Xlnt company benefits LA area t;:Jl 3290 · bee Sec'y to SI ,250 The Laauna Niauel vancement PP Y rn sales envir. Will handle front office appearance branch is seekin g person: 900 W Coast lile acctg. functions & Forappl call Personnel DRYWALL Hanger Must l}pe 75wpm . St a r l 1 n g Sa l S700·S800 mo Apply HAIRSTYLISTS WITH ORANGE COAST DEN· FOLLOWING. 60°0 TAL. X RAY LAB 125 + 8 0 N U S , Baker.Ste ~OOCM -LUCRATIVE SHOP IH General Office Clerk GOOD LOCATION. T.>ping slolls 50wpm. APPLY: UNIVERSITY ma1or stock brokerage PARK COIFFURES, near OC airport. Hrs ;.J Ca ll Mr s Eck e rt 18052 CULVER , A0-8121 IRVINE. 552-8080. GENERAL OFFICE to SI 2000 Light bkkp'g expr 111 el ud 111 g 1\ H & .\ I' knowledge 10 ke.1 h~ touch. accur ate l ) µ1st, gd w figure s. l1gh1 µhones. In Tuslm call 832·7300. GENERAL OFFICE D~nam1c ;'lie wporl Beach Stock Brokerage 1s looking for sharp m d1v1duals lo fill 1m mediate openings. llmrSt\ list The ialboa Boy Club is now hirin9: Ha1rst~ h~t w ro llowrng Xlnt working c•ond 642.(XJ92 Ask for Joy ct· llAHDW:\RE Sr\l.ES Apply 10 1>crson H lllll Hardware 1024 In 1ne Ave I West cliff Plata> NB. H,\RDWA Hf: SALES Apply '" person Crown Hardware. 310i E Coast Hw.>.Cd:'>I H,\RDWORKING In HOlJSEPAHENTS )-fature M F couple to reside in group home & supervise 6 DID adults. Alternate wee kends free Exper. preferred. s~oo mo & benerils. linited Cerebral Palsy r\.!>~oc , S46·5i60 flOUSEWIVES·Are your children going back to schl. are \'OU bored or need eiclr~ money? If you're fr1t'ndl~. cons t 1ent1ous & dependable we want you for a de· l1gh1fu l & q uaint restaurant ror a vanet~ I)( duties avail. No exper nee. W~ tram. Positions .rre now a \'ai l f or weekdys 8 4.. rull·l1me Please apply 111 pe rson: Stone :\1111 Terrace. 2915 Redhill. C M. ----- Indoor planl m ai n tanance F tT & PIT ..1va1lable 497·5424. GENERAL OFflC E WITH TYPING RECEPTIONIST Call Gail. 714-752-0070 d1v1dual nel•ded ' 1-'or permanent full t 1 me Insurance qulifled applicants for ·Hwy, N B .. &45-1711 li censing ass1gri. Non· 549 "83-1 __ _ paper. electrician 3n 100wpm shorthd Prerer part time teller posi· s moker pre f Ca ll. C u stodial, "adman dor plumber .\lust be s omeone fam1l1ar G I Off. tions. We need responsl· Bookkeeper Ne wport "•"Ol23 ,_,,. .d ud d enera ice ro-l rr· _ _._ .....,.. w sunorvi:.orv. l!X""r All exper . 631·200t W a 11 epl Call \'1ck1. plumbing trade, v.111 \ccount Ass 1slanl lo tram. mu!.l have o ... n Employee Benefit Ex· truck (;d mune\ 8 to 5 crut1ve w insura nce 495-1465 • ' brokerage firm. includ· ble perso n s w il h 6 ""'o er 0 ice ne.....,. exp ,,.. ... ~ --------540-605S. Coastal Person ~d sh-lady months experience in Bookkeeper for A P · s h 1 fts hour 1> X 1 n t nel /\gene~. 2790 llarbor C]fl'ttl -· r" f bankin& or related field. A R. GL, T /R. Com · CLERICAL benefits 546·61182 ElecELtroEnCicTRO ... IC Bl . CM or eman or Li&ht typin& and &ood puter exp preferred but Customer Servit'e " NE\.ER A n :i-: small plumbin9 ri&ure aptitude a must. not req. Call Linda afler Register today for local Represenlall\'e :\lu!.1 TECHNICIAN contr. Lt. typinn, Must be able to work s ror app. &44·4460. Needed 1mmed1ately in =. ~ __ -::..., ~ Saturdays. Exce llent --~:;.__ ______ , tempora ry assignments have good phone contact our rapidly expandrn~ ~~ Bookkeepin9, er· -----mi: sec relarial duties, llOUSEKEl-:PER Ll\'E musl have exp 1n group l:'ol. childcare It (·ook1ng. hfe & health insurance Entt spking prcrcrrC'd. 1nclud1ng marketing rers re<1 L:.rjluna :-.:1gucl xtm N U loca11on. For 64248JO cl)'>. 831 !llUi appo1nlment c all l'ves 714 1)41Vi522. benefits and career ap-BOOKKEEPER. Approx. 557 n045 wlpublic Good l)pisl & fr \'ine ba s ed firm Exec Sec'y to Sl ,400 d H parel provided. Salary JOhrs /wk . Apply in '11 knowledgeof generalof Challe ngi ng posit ion Top NB R."E.dev'mt co ran S . eavy Hostess. F'T. day:., exp INSURANCE t'Qmmens urate with ex-person: Rion Hardware, rice duties. N B. com· performing various as-seeks person w R E. or p h 0 n e S & preferred Apply 111 SECRETARY perience. Please contact 1024 Irvine, <Westcllrr r-n..•LfM.~':. pany Xlnt benefits signmenls in support or finance bkRrd Shrlhd responsibility. person Beach ll•lUse l'omm'I property & EllieWri&htforanappt. Plaza)N.B. U \ I \ Starti ng · S900 S!ISO engineering researc h&.: 11ec. Ternr1c bcnl"!> 1ll C.M. 557.2278 Rest aurant, 619 Sleepy l1ab tl11 y expe r nee. 714-495·2880 l 833·3313. ____ development. Minimum future llollow Ln. Lai,:una ~lu s t ha ve d y na mic HOM. FIDH "'L IOOtCICHPI UMPOl!ARY PERSONNEL SUl\llCE~ Del' I 2 yrs exper. lO digital & free to Apphcunl axt. -+400. Beach. persona Ill .~. Work in "' ACCNT S PA YABLE. I hep. part time. ex· I . I . "" Tt S•Vl ..... S •· d S d h analog e ect.r on1C's rvinePersonnclAgenc·y ---a!(y a s c u stome r "' " • c.onstruction expr. pref. 3723 llrch Str.et penence an w1c es. )1icro·processors ex .&811 E 17th. Costa )'lcsa GE:-< ER AL O F f I<: E llOST ESS CASlll ER 8 e r \'Ire rep . c 8 11 LOAN Ml. Davis. 54G-0500 Mewport hoch dell very · etc· Cd :\1 . perience desirable Ex Suite 224 642 1~70 Newport Beach stock Appl~ in person JP~! to 768 ~SS. ask ror Lynne 30131 Town Cent~r Dr. •---------~~~~~~~~~~1 -67_5_135_3 __ ___ c e 11 e n t comp a n y i.....-... ............. 1111111111.,,,....__..._..~ markel advisory firm. If sr~ P lime or F umc ---sw'te 1~" = Del' S d benefits. pleasant work ------.'ou c·an ... l''""· handl•· Da}S or C\'eS ltusly Insurance Personal Lines ...., IOC*ICIB'll F/C CLERK for counter & I an w1ch Store in ,. E t e Se t f J .. ~ ' r ••una Niiuel Ca ,.,...,1 d F' T •. P T mg environment ... on xecu iv ere ary or tele .. hones. do lite buok Pelican. 2i35 Par Coa~l girl needed run time for ._ • fashion Island invest· phone sales. of drafl· '-"·' nee s "' ' p I Pres Real Estate Co "' 1 ()pportlll\Jt)' h 1 E d lact ersonne : keeping & you wJnl to Hwy. NB loral well established loy•r mfr h ment firm. Excellent OP· iog/art business. Full e P xp prefer r e Sci•ntifi, Cd M T } PI n g & --I ~ t nit• Ex p e r •-Over 18 ppllca11ons to ~ Sh d S leum about the stock HOSTESS/W •tTRESS agene~ Sa ary open. -maturity reql.l.ired. Call; 234 Fischer Ave , c M Gallo·s Deli, 3900 E Drilli!'j Controls w ii 11 am E Doud market & data entr}' · Oays. eves. flexible. Cor '"''' 10 'd No. -,74, oa1·1,. i~iiiiiiiiiiiiii:::;I por u .i · · "' time. Mon -Fri Master. orthan alary open " ~end full resume & ex- 640-0l23 Coast Hwy, Cd~! 92625 180Jl :'111lchell South .,...1.,1600 call 540·9237 r ho N rter 1 ,,-. " , 8AN'IQNG 1~~~~~~~~~~,-~ __ 931_a______ h lrvine.557·905lEOE .,,... ee s p. ewpo nn Pilot . PO Box 1560. • TELLERS r: or p one e\'es a t :;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: GENERALOFACE/ Cull J anel for appt <.:ostaMe:.a.CA9262'i Buaboys n eeded . Fu 11 Cl.Elk HHDID 641·9399 EXECUTIVE Secretar)'. RRrEPTIO... s.w 1700. exl 11559 __ _ lor ca rpet c lean ing ----------Real Estate. Sl.000 mo. '"""' " o c ii-da"S. Exnorie"'ce D I 0 . r Sm"ll compan~ nuar Host•ss/Cash'1•.r lnlenor ecoratoFr oSm· """ " ... -'' estab lpm Spm Mon e •very rive r or Rerept1on1s1. phones. ... · " "' "' r eq1&i r ed. Appl y in. · · · · Pl I ocean n eeds mature In rrussions only. or an Our beautiful Laiuna person. Beach House Fri. Possibly retired iotograph) S tud o. ESCROW l)pmg. Org Ct~ Airport person w1m1n a•·rs. gen'I Apply dally, llA:\1 L', Clemente area. 2 wanl· • .. II' b i pe--u" 6367 F 1' position 645 3840 area 833·22J7 , person )f 1Casa, 200 ,. 11 1 •en O ice •• m· Rettaurant, 619 Sleepy ·~·· .,..,,. OFFICER ---office exper Accurate 17th St .CM. ed 1 for fu l me =d~,l~e::.~~:n~t~=~ Kollow L.ane, Laguna CLlllC·lllTAIL DELklVERY Driver for Expenenced clerk typist. l}pisl. s Owpm Front lm-lliiiiiiiliiiiiii_m _________ r h_ar_ge_646_·_85_23_. __ _ _.orS6Lexperlence _ee_a_c_h_. _______ ,Cost• Meso Sta· wor inautopurts~tore needed for insurance desk tclepho111• recep liolel J .\N l TORlr\l. work. Must have vaJid Culir. Outstanding growth up ~sency 1o Newp o rt lion. XJnl. i:u benefits a req.,... I« our full ca.rpent.t.rs, "°"rnoyman, ~ 270 I. 17 St. driver's lie. gd. dnving portunity w1th-leaffing Beach Sa I a ry open , Call Elly: 645.:1632. •CaShl.lr Im med. open mg ror re· ~al-.nlta •'•"p'e':..!nndca111x5 & Apprentice. F.11 thM. Apply In record. be ovt•r 18 & savings and loan for Of li able person for hie -,..'"' 611 2004 I OAM H k ricer wilh two years ex· send resume lo Ad. No. General Agency seek ing M Tl ... /Doyt ofc cleaning. 8:30 lo -..ct for r•rt t ime 1-----·--·----1 ,..-son. • oon ,nnwl c.5M. i\pplly at Hu2b0 perience. Duties will in· 774. Oa1ly Pilot. PO Box energetic person for new l2 :30, Mon -Fri. Gd . PMltioftt, Al Optnln11 ear washer: Full time °"'Y· "u 0 u PP Y · 21 elude process. trace and 1560, Costa Mesa. CA office position Rapid •PM HOUS&keeper aa I a r y + be n e r It s . .,_an ht•I ~~~k ... en· tor exchl1ivt Newport Cl-...:k_T_•_p_l _t_SOW __ p_n_l_"_C Hakroor rCBll. dCM. 6 16·2A64 resale escrow. Typing or _92627 _________ advancement. Paid co. 1r..•Ti-/E••s Marsha.644·mO =awatl 'as> .-ann, ............ ~-u •hop. Must er } 5 • • " as or au c 00 wpm and calculator c II s 11 ""' ,,,_ _ _.. 01 and paid _. ..-n ~ " c urate. trainee OK .....;.____ k'lls · _ _. w FACTORY WORK benefits . a ·a Y · We are seeking reliable _,.. be l8 w Ith a v a II d Small compan" with .,d Uental Jleceptionist for s · t · are reqwr.,.., e 848 6264 ..,.._ ..,_rel. Please n....a Li 751 lJ?O ~ • establl h d ffl E otrer an excellent saJ3 ry Machine operators, in· · people-oriented persons. eall 0.• Frisella at unvtrt c. • . benefits. Call for ap . s e o ce. X· and ·benefits and good spcctors, pOwder mixer General Enjoy exl•ellent com ... ~ror morr In car Rental Co. need• polntn'lent. &.a2·9363. ask pericnced , ma ture career potential. rte:ise &I Press setup re<fd. for The lalboe lay Chlb pany benefits Including .,_,_ mechanic tor eenenl ror Ann. _54S-__ 4SS3_. ______ s ubmit resume w ith Ille mfg. Call af\. 9A M. . hln n rre~ ml•al per shih car maintenance • light ,....__ .. , ·x-rlen"ed Cult· Dentru. . salary history 1n con 897·2529, Hunt Bch ii now 1t9: ,\ppl) In pe rson 9A l\1 '-"""' " ~ "' rid Hosts tltostuses. part Nuon. Mon fi'ri Person rtpalrs. Mi·lil\ 49'7·4481. Ask for Rick or 2 ~ •lions. front' b~ck ence to : f'ront de1k girl ror op· urnc. must ~ available nd Caihlcr nffdtd. Karl. Partner's Bistro. 0"1"e ror n<'w arowmg Box 11004, Daily P\lot. tomclr1st ofrlce, P T weekerids. Please call MARRIOTT HOTa Part ti~ _Lal--''-un-•_Be_ac_h_. ____ 1 ~~:.~l l~:lp;~l. 1~kl~:~ P .O. Box 1560, Costa Npt Be 646 4502. Ask for an appt : 64S·73S8. 900Newport Ctr or For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot ~VISOR 642·5&71 - ___ m_-8599__,.-----11"'1---in......i Ads, !\our one· Ann at M2·833'J a ft 3PM Mesa, Ca . 92626 for Karen. Mon. Fri. 8:30·5. Newport 8e1H'h ......... ""' 1 i-4u41I Opply Employer Equal Opp 1':mpl)'r M If ~~~~ ~-~ s~~~~~n~. ~~ dl~p· ~~~a~~~~~~~~~~W~a~n~t1~\~~;·~C~a1~1;~~2~~;7~8~a~a~u~ln~~~A~d~s=~~~2~·~~~8~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~ .. l r ,, .. tJJJ lltlAICH AllOCIATI lattrtt1l111 po1Hto• .,........ ~ In bk» ~ o.w 8'o. .,. Chem . bac k1ro.in d ,...... Pidw-e 1111er, P /T , ....._ To w .a. Call -.. A.rt Wwld ~.m ... Gl·18forappt 1\'WKIWS• •,.om CoHl Hwy, LAS ••AS II-CCI ....... ~~~-1105. PIOMOTtOM r--_. ,_ Ir am ~ .._. m.11as11mo llC9"110MllT C.P '1rm loca~ In Newpon C•ftltt. Mu1t --. .. front otrln •P· ,..,...,C9 • be able to .... di• bUI)' phonH. 'l')pe tO wpm. Pl•Hanl •'1,.melll wtth v1r1ed cM.Jel. '150 ,... mo. de· ~ oo Hperience. C.U WU at 1S-0741. UC:~OMIST 'or CPA flrm. Wiii train. Irvine N 8. ar.-. 9IO to '700/m o W.9062 llC.., ,,. E1u:•p&lon1l pertun•U· l)' -lront ofc. Muat have t)'plJll eiper 6 handle 20-30 Une PBX Call Vicki. 54M05$, Coula.I Pet'IOl\MI A&ency, :nao Harbor Bl .. CM NEVER A FEE =~~U~~-~ta~ ,_.. ..W s~ r.h1ft deferwnllal ror .-11w f\IU or 'lltlme. W.,...,-4 ,_. 1wln1 . • 1 O':\ tor ~1eve.1. Guarao&M Slaff J:f•' for at\lt• =•rd. City of H11nt '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'! •1157 or S4S-•l ~~1J atu':.iv.~:l. Ora. inll IOl'e.P~:C1::~. '9AL SICltlT Al'f Mmt, type Uwpm. muat Orowl111 Real Estate -shaft dtlferenual pua bac:ktl"OUPCI aecuri· Lhls-Uon Firm In •New payratti ty check• be a~le t.o Newp01t Cotr. seek.a es •HeaJtll lnautaoce Work aU lhilta. Apply lo p • d , e If i c 1 en t . 6 •Bonus referral plan .,.,.onnel dept. 2000 eneraetlc leaal sec'y •'NUon relmbune CIC•· Main St. H.B. 92648 . S~Dlctar.:ie 11 Xlnt -ll.000.000 malp. lu. 714·53S-s.91. E.O.E. T en. II t ' ,...._, 111, "OU 'll like 1.1a" l')'PI II ~· s a mus · u 3 J PRESCH OOL AID E · MC.,..OMIST Au,....1¥e, aell·•tarter wan~ !or entry level &talt poaltlon with tom· porary em ploy ment &«Vice. Ability to work under pretsure ¥ muat Call for appt. Victor Temponry Servl<·e, ~ XJnt Sal. dependina up-KrJ MUISE$ ~uaJificatioos 6 exp. ~ " • ltWae, uper preferred. Benefits. &40-8960 7$4-6791 _s.sz._7_494_. _____ ,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~! tJ4ht office & retail sales 1500 W. Ada1111, C.M. P R 0 D U C T I 0 N in Pilot supply store Ui Member ol C.A.N.S. TRAINEE Rubber ho1e Orance Co. Airport v1c. products. Muat pass co. FullUme. S4G·7SIW Orrice. Lite ty pinf. physical incl. back X· Telephone . order pro· ray. Taklna applications Loan Re presentative. cessing, near Karbor " b t w n I . 1 o on I y . Rapl~ly arowln1. ag· Wamer.S57-3B30. Str a t o(l ex, 17671 lft:Ulve Mortafe, Bank· Armltronf Ave., Irvine. inl firm needs Loan Rep Office A11istant wanted EOE. A Kendavia Ind., Coe Orange County ter· for Law firm. Hours C.O. rlt.ory. Opportunity for flexible up to F /T . ---------• high paying career in $3.2S /hr + mileage , Prod worker/hood sails. Real Estate Lending for lMG-5650. SaU cutter, 40 hr wk. eqer hard working in· Mon·Thurs. 14.00 hr. dividual. Contact Mr. <rn~ Work & Manage· 548·3464 Poster 73l·S844. me nt, Food" Worker, . k f/ . Seasonal 8 mos Senior p/Ume wor . time car. MAIDS 642-3030 Ma.oater ass'l for fabric chain. Retail or fabric ex p pref Ca ll Marguerite. 646.4040, Citiz.ena ~elco~ to app-Qualify (o:-a new ~ord I>' CalJ960-8Ull. Ltd your full trm e ' pleasure. Eam SlO hr. Day or eves. Choose OfFICE your houn. Hometown location. AvaUable in· 'Jbe Daily Piklt bu an ternational skin care Immediate openlnl for full·time, permanent company provides free Manager /Leasing Agt. poailion in our Claasified training for t he tight for business park. FUil Department. Must be person. Call N u ry time. 6 days a week. able to type 35-40 wpm 496-4312 between 9-12 & llC.,,OMIST Ad A1ency needs In· teWcent. mature recep· llonfst to handle busy ptionea & overflow typ· Ing. Buie typinr skills <50wpm accurate I. er-ror less proof reading, neat fro nt ofc. ap· pearance, pleasant pro· feulonal phone voice a muat. Minimal exper . req'd. Call for appt. SS6-<W60. Kelly. Restaurant HOSTESS pos itions avail. f\IU or part time. Warehouse Restaurant 673-4700. Restaurant Executive chef. Top F1ight Private Country Club. Send resum e to Mary Jane: IH Big Ca· nyon D r . Ne wpo rt Beach, 92660. With experience and re· <typing test will be ad· 4-8. rerences required. Call ministered to all appli· --.-:i=--/T-Vi:--,.---i Restaurant ,7141549_2988. cants 1, 10 key adder HOSTor.•s ---------• helpful, answer phones, Bully a es o ice. Typ-~ M•cmiat learn computer and ina : SS·60wpm. Exp. CASHIER Newport Beach's most m.her general duties. Op. req. XlnJ. ben. Newport Apply between 2-5. Mon· prestigious salon, the portunlty for advance · Center oHice. E .O.E . Fri. No ex pe r ience Richard Ouellette Salon. ment and excellent com · Call 644·74.54. necessary . Good pay has immed openings for pany benefits. Salary dnt benefits. Ham manicurist. 200 Newport commensurate with ex· 1 _ _. ................ burger Hamlet, 154! Center Dr. perience. For interview -.-Adams, Costa Mesa . please caU 642-4321 ext Need Real Eatate Sales Manufacturin11. U&htlna m . penon. Xlnt opportuni· ROOFERS·HOT· Wanted maaulacturer needs ~C.-ty.JackScot.t. lor21arseproje«s .Must penona exp in manufaC· ..... SCon IW.n have at least S yrs U · turi.nc. raw meterialt. 330 yStreet lll W St... ~ence. A~~\. ai;-~neral knowled1e of Cotta Mesa, CA ll6-71U ~ .. cCoatiom .. c7222 00 • power equip needed. F.qualopporemployer .... ·642 · M~han ica I abilities a 1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I SAIL LOFT must. Must be willing tol~ RECEIVING Pos. open b · f leam.546-2901.Harry. ORTHODONTIC OF· Coran a mbitious person h!sn3 ~e0n:k~~s 0~ ---------i F'ICE n~s Secretary. with a aente of organi:ra· seamstresses. Will train. MATMIAL COM'f'ROL Cl..llK Growinf Orange County based co. has an op· portunlty for a quick learner. energetic, en· thuslaslic person. Will be w o rk ing co m · puterized system. H.P . aper. a plus. Duties in· elude: inventory control. data-entry. typin& or shipment.a & general of· flee duties . Good benefits. Apply in person or call: Bookkeeper , full time. tion. FUil time. Mon · ca Be h 4 d Ank for Barba...._ .. ""'.21•1 po ac area. ay "" ~ ..,., • FM. Master.~ Fischer. week. 496-4852. or~ C.M. Sf0.9373 1---------~--------1 SALIS PART TIME Babysitter RECEPTIONIST /BACK Growth 0 r i en t e d needed 2 morn In as a OFC, for dr's ofc, P tr, week . Only loving, exper helpful. but not e::t'!:'1!'ric!::mJ::f. CHlLD O RIENTED nee. Mu.t be efficient, needssalespersonto sell Woman need apply. like work.inc wtpeople. u Western atates. In· F.ast Bluff Area 6"-0897 lllUll Muat type weU. Gd eluding Food Chains & PART·TIME salary. Ftin1e benefits M f i . c 0 mp an i es . AUTHOllUTIOM 6 worldne cood s . Premium Items, non· 6G-4S32 food supplies, (carton OPllATOlt cutters, marking de· Master Charge/Visa REC EPTIONIST I vices, etc.). Salary + center in Irvine bas SECRETARY, It typin&, commission. Send re· ~·thne day openinp call~OOIO sumeto: P.O. Box #1~ wn 10AM-6PM. 7 dys ...,,,.ST Costa Mesa, CA 92627 wk. Start 13.70 hr. Will I• • s.lel lnttltance · Ne~ 3 kt)' people to train & motivate nt!w hiru ''Top Pay" Mr Ho-Olh (714) 100 7037 SALISMAt4 Equ.ala 124,000. Tired or pl'Olpecilni&? We 1upply leadl. Join the moi1t s uc· *IM team in Amerlc• m1tr1tetin~ a very unique cone pt. Send resume to 1800 Dove St , 1329, N 8 92188() ~~~.~ ..... ~!~! ~-~~ ..... ~!~! ~!!~ .... !.!~!*!!: ••..••..••.•. ~~~~-·I Secretiary /Office· Ad ~ I T I I I M A I Y Kl:ESHOND "'"· AKC. • m1n~tr1nor. t>oeltlon req S£CUITY NOIPITAL a.mp a1re. MI F. P.t fr a mln of 60wpm typlni" Ptr back or lniat P.M. •bo w • Pvt Pt r · 3'5ynproare.sivcoffke f\llltlme~sltionavaJla· F/t avaH. b1thJn1 6 lll/ .. MlM.5aJ\Cpm. oxp. Shorthand not req ble ror reliable pert0n clun1n1. AUpoeltk>na In· Med. Female Poodle blk bul dt•11lreablt', pluae able to work tlexlble cl. wknda. Min. aae 18 h 1 1 •di • call for •PP 540-84o.t ask houn. A knowtedae of YfS· apply Mon.Fri. 11-2 ~ =~1~· r en Y 1 for Klilhy Bol!htve In secunty or law enforce· 1383 Avocado , NB --·------- tt'mllUQrtlll 3100 Airpc>t'\ rne11t preferred. Enjoy Newport Center (behind AKC Gkln Re\l'Vr P'll» • excellent compan y theatre) ' Loop Dr. C.M bencnt11. Ap~lr 9AM to x.lnt peta, •how, hunten. SECRETARY Nooo. Mon Fri Person VW MEC HANIC·Mon · wtr dofs. Out1tandln1 nel Fri w /ea per In all pedigree. cleared hlpei lO work tor Oranl(c C..:oun F · h ••1 ty developer in ~leasHnl MARRIOTI HOTB. ore11n cars. Muat ave --------- office, expenence 1n co11 900Newport Ctr. Dr own t~ol.s. Enslne " Qua I 1 t y Germ a n struction Industry re· NewportBeach transmisaion work. We S hephe r d Puppies quired, s o wpm , EquaJOppEmpl,yrM/F ac«!ptSpanlsh speaklng. w/papers. Must sell. shorthand not reqwred For appt. 64S·l982 ~1631 Start 1mmed. Salary Secy/Bkpr, 30 hrs wk, W-"' w-1.11...... ---------l \ t $900 ...,.,. • ......-.H Muat Sell. Bea ut. AKC s ar ing 11 mo SlOOO/mo •tart R E exp. f rt I 97!)..3.1'16 " or P vate country c ub. Cairn Terrier female 8 · · Resume Box 561 CdM ~.75 per hr to ala.rt. No wk s , A 11 5 h 0 t 5 • &Jes Secretary for Ani.werin~ ~-_ Ups Call Wed & Thurs wormed. $200 Dys "'-'-•• • ...a... Service Operator to work St!c'y to wine & ltuuor con· for Interview. 644·5404 75'·l033, ev 7Sl·l9S9 _.. -• varioui. sh1(ll1, I'' T & .. We lltt k>oklnf for l am· P/r 228 ~'orei1t, l.tu(unu s ultant Small ofc Corona Waitresses apply between ""toy.., 1045 bltlous 1ahtjperson to Beach del Mar Mu!lt have 1iood 9am·12pm. Charles Chili ••••••••••••••••••••••• aeU Re.der Ad advert111 shorthand, typing & bk· Corp, 3001 RedhlU. Bldg 2 Puppies. 7 wits, Springer ln& tu lotal bu.~inesscs In Secretary 111•cdl·d for kpg knowledge 673 5912 Sle2211. CM Lab mix, after 7PM Newport/lrvlne area Psychtutn:.t's ofrtcc r\i: - - ------------• M&-2689 or 673·257S. We olft:r blllll' + comm , ruratc tyimig. riling, m Service station attendant, •WAITRESSES • A""\: excel to lw 11t1Cils, & i. u r a 11 cc , LI 1 1 11 n g . run or part time. art er full lime, part lime, l'l'ee Fill Dart bonus µroicranl.. (nil pegboard & t)ollkk cc1>1t)g noons & evenings. Neal split shift Call 2·4pm. You Haul Mn '"'" 11\ Thi· 11~·n dc•srred. Need muaure llppearunce & hand writ Monday·Frtday 751·4433 S48·4666 n y II II II. r r II r u I) I>' . . U)jt Apply 2590 Newport 8d-IJUI 11t11ble 11cri.u11 S11lary Blvd.Costa ~esa Waitresses. Over 18 yrs. TOP SOIL 11cgotwhlt' f',44 8810 old Apply In person: 10 yds. 1779 West- Service Slatton Allen 1768Newport Blvd. C.M. minster, C.M. ~46.58. da11l!>. Mor F. CdM area SALIPlaSOM Lollldtu'11 ff111hh11111 l':.11111•r onl,y 1173 3211 or 117~ lil2U, llllk forA11ll 11 SAJ..11.:SPtmsoN tor 111111 que •tore. W1•1•k1•11<IN IH'C' 3305 LMtiUllU ( 01.111)1011 ..... 1..-a lkh Sales R~tail F:xclu.'!lve l11d11"11 11lorc. mature exp Hcnef1111, comm t\Jll or P tr John Hogon. 111 t·ash1un 141and, 644 7100. ~ - S.>t·relury I' T, flex hri., 111111 :mlokcr. vur11•ty 1 ((\'lll>Oll!>llilllly , V (j l'hy, l'M area, G-t:t Klllli Sl'I'' 1·l 111·y W1111dc rf u I Or1ota1111· l'ook l.a~u11.i llo·ul'l1, 1!)9 5683 SECRETARY To Sll,000 A P, 1\1 R kn11wlcd1¢c. ac rur11te typist. HI kev by IOU<'h. vaned duties Nonsmoker In T11st111 c;i 11 832 7 :JOO SALES REP Secretary Sharp, a ttr actt\lc Staff SecretaQ Typist saleslady to rcpresctll M in i mum S 0 wpm mfr or auto ai:cessorlcs Knowledge of general of to Ute auto rndustry Ex-ru:e duties N B com cellenl oppt'y growth pany. Xlnt benefits unlimited. Call 646·1234 Starting. S80U $1150 for appt. 833-331~-- ---------1SECRETARY Wanted for ROUTE SALES/ SERVICE fmft $20.10,000 your 1st ,._. lft a job that cents close to owninc) yow own bvtlneu The job you 've been waiting for The one lhal puts you much on your own·in position to earn high dollar ini:ome·is of fered by widely accepted sales and service com pany serving the meat mdustry. With this market leader, yo u 'll s t a rt with established customers on an established route . with established repeat business And there's plenty of opportunity lo increase your customer list.and income law ofc located nr OC airport No pnor legal exper required Substantial bookkeeping duties, mus t tyve ap prox 70wpm Sturt at S900 per mo. 955-0'JSO Sl'X'Y /COOR UINATOR Dynamic sales/servt('l' organ1zauon t Nat ·1 Company> Lookmi.t for a person willing lo al'l'ept respon ~1btltt) Xlnt verbal ~kills w clcnC':JI. secretarial. & gootl or gan11.auona I abt litle;. Dill Linda Oevorktn <ll Safeguard DcntaJ 11rac· ticeSystems !15i·l121 SECRETARY IPM to5:30PM lnterestmg poi.ttlon for Seeretary with xlnt skills in typing < 75 +wpm 1. spelling & grammar No SH nee. Call 752 0234 for da~ or evcntn~ appt or send resume to Plaza. 2082 Mli:h rlsnn ::212. lnvne. 92715 You'll need a van, wht rh SE<.:HETAHY Full tllTlt', you can lease or bu~ • to make yo ur round s between customerl. and regional center What typrn~. fthng, li.i:ht book k~ping, vhunc Small ul fire TSL Mgmt 1>42 1603 --------- you'll need most or all. to ---------make it big, is willing. ••SECRETARIES•• ness to work hard. It 's T'70 Sh1001AnahSl2.600 like being 1n business for Stat Typ1sts12.ooo yourself. With excelle11t Exec Sec'y Sh80 SH.400 earnings and full com GenOf'c FUn/TSSSI0.800 pany.paid benerils Lit Reinders Agency 4020 Birch, Estab '64 Call loll·free within Ne'"""'rt '833·8190/f'ree Calif. -..... I .a00.352.5430 Cor 213-691-1737 I An equal opportunity employer M/F SECRETARY/ S4 start + commlSblOn Wanted· Pizza Cook FREE to good home. 644 !>CX>4 FUii & P /1' avail. Puppies, small. 67HS56 336· 1622 !'>!Ol'K Clerk lor retail -m&nnc hardwi.re i.tore WARE H 0 USE MA N Keeshond "Teddy" great Fu 11 t 1 me, ex per n ec needed for electronic dis· family dog, give to lov· Ciood ('O benefits. Cal utor.Gd.salary&co. eable hme . Papers. Ualboa Manne, 549-967I enehts . Call 8 to s. 644-9902 £ 0 L · M L' 11 Mon. Fri Mr Tracy ---------. 'r~. 1 I .-I S49·09M "'"'"-• 1050 SUPERVISOR POSITION 1-'\Jll time, swing shirt Wtlhng to tr&rn Apply MM·SPM. Mon.-1-·ri. at Superior A nswer1 ni;c Service. 250 £ 17th St Ste 11 I C M As k for Eileen --..•...........•........ WAREHOUSEMAt4 ASSEMILBS PACl(AGllS lmmed. need for 35 peo· pie in Irvine area. CALL THOMAS 641-1144 **I IUY ** Good used Furniture " Appliances-OR I will sell or SELL for You MASTllS AUCTION ........ , .. IJJ.'625 _E_O_E __ . ____ M_l_F Complete fumilhlnp of Te.tcher :;, Pres chool WELDER small home. Ide al for YT. FT Must have rental unit. Call eves for some Early Childhood ~lacGregor Yachts 1631 info. 213-288-1327'. Educat1on background & Placentia. Costa Mesa Rivera Sofa Bed, Sofa fl Love Seat. Pecan Coffee 41 2 end Tables. Euro- pean Dannette Hutch, Marrantz AM /FM Stereo w /cassette $300. 25'' C.olor Console Ir 19'' Port. Desianer Lamps, all in Mint Cond. 957.5747 or exp. 1 rv: 552· 7331. Tustin: 544-1467 We n~ you lo earn up to -SlSO() per mo. p/t , con. T~ Sollcffon prod. 536-2403. 3-Spm for SJ.75 hr plus bonuses to _a_ppt _______ _ start No exper necess. ~M No selhng. Across Crom ••••••••••••••••••••• •• OC Airport 2·9pm call ~ 1005 Sue, 641-0169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OU coffee table, 4-drwr WESTMINSTER credenza w /lrg. storage ABBEY area & sectional sofa. ANTIQUE MALL All in xlnt. cond. Call: Daily 10-6, f'r1 10.9 752-1194 days. Closed Tuesday 11751 Westminster Ave. Model furniture sale/The TELEPHONE WORK RESPONSIBLE? EARN UPTO S1 00 PER HR Garden Grove 554·6103 Akins Co. Sat. Aug. 23rd, • • ~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~ 12-SPM. Al 17 Rainbow :\Int working cond. -== Ridge, Irvine. Pa rt t i m e e v en in g AppliancH 80 I 0 751 2411 •••••• •••• • •• ••• •••• ••• 1llornasviUe Dinmg Rm -T~LEns ---17 c.tf yellow refrig. No Thi w/6 chairs, 2 wrng ~ " deliver y poss $250 c hrs, l ib r ary tbl. Perm, ft (511 day Wk) Ev 'wlmds 951-3530 chi.ldren's bdrm desks & .I\ PP Ii ca n ts w 1 l h chest s . 640·2497 eves supervisory potential de· Comm! site washer & ~9930days. sired. 'l;ype 40wpm. xlnt dryer, A·l cond, pr '350. benefits & advancement GE refrig $50. 00-llJTI Antique Oak Dresser potential Call 979·3600 w/mirror newly finished EOE. Sears portable d is · Oak /mirror e nd tb\, hwasher. Older model. round Llama /Alpaca Great condition SJS. Call rug, Seascape painting. AdllD. 642-4300 24hrs. Blk & Wht t. v. 760-8054 TELLER PttmanentP/T Pos1t1on avail 1n our South Coast Plaza office Exp preferred, including Sat hour' Call Kathy Ambur~n 540·4006 California Federal Savi~&Loon 005 Town Center Dr .. Costa Mesa. Ca 92626~ E.O.E TILE MAN NEEDED in Trabuco Canyon a rea. Ceramic to roofing. Rererences. 548·2917. 581·5577 Refng, Frost·Free. S /S, $200 84G-2932 keep trying! Natura l Ha itian collon sofa & love seal. Match.rng Washer & Gas Pec an /glass coffee Ory e r X I n t Con d . tables. Queen siz.e bed + $100/ea or $180/both, box s prings : unused 557-0946 _894-_?:1_29_. _____ _ WESTING HOUSE Elec. Trundle Bed with mat· Range 220 volts. 6 mos. tressea, Good condition. Co mbo. Sl 9 S I 0 B 0 $7S. Call 951-2551 aft 6 4r 842·0259 weekends. ~-------~ lkydn 1020 Queen sz bed, rattan ••••••••••••••••••••••• hdbrd, coffe~ tbl. bed Be.ach Crwser, Blue. side tbl, wood slereo like new cabinet, tbl lamp. S48·540'1 751·3702 alt 7PM Tobacco Shop Clerk: Part c..nn & 1 couch, 1 coffee table, 1 t ime .. Retail exper 1030 helpful. Senior Ciuzen ~....... • end table. Best offer. ScleMtflc ~C..trols 18011 Matchell South Irvine, SS7-90Sl EOE train on video dlaplay Needed for Np\ Bch la.od Sales uni ti. Applications ac· d e v e Io per I bu 11 de r CW... Cry1Mt Sales woman for rash ion cepted Mon·Frl 8:30AM · 60wpm typing, d ie· 9Ml•tfh Island. Wo mans wear RECEPTIONIST •P le11 sa nl. mature person reqwred to han die all telephone calls & messages. OK SO'.)()ke Shack, 495 E. ••••••••••••••••••••• • SS9-0835. KOWA SUPER 66 2..,...x.21/• 17th. St. C.M. SLR and 3 lens filters. Medical Ass't , front & back, non·s moker , 4:30PM . T i me Share taphooe exp .. good co. Mature , expe r 'd . store. Age 25·35 We ll Transaction Servicea, beneflta oflered. Call salesperson, lull time. groomed w /enthus . Inc. 2482 Dupont Or., Lyno at Taylor Woodrow Grafton Street. For appt. personality 64().9483 TOPLESS MODELS New, in original box. S75 DAY PA1DDAILY Plu s H oney w e ll He.Ip yourself to a Heaping selection of Qualified Hopefuls in the DAILY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS ex per., t yplnf. salary ITV.E.O.E. M/F /H Homes752-7363 cootadAnneatS49-S277 ~-------~ Sales •Fast & accurate typing required no exp. nee. 826·2583 Slrobonar model 6.5C. All for $400. 7S9-0060. _ope_n._&46_·_5UM ____ P A I T T I M I llC.,.OMIST / Sales Clerk for Marine We need sales people to CL•ICA&. Hardware, order desk sell a wiique marketing •Vaned duties require dependable & efficient self·starter. TRUC K DRIVER, Cull ... --------------·· time, must have good MEDICAL Receptionist DllVIR I r v t n e • G . P . n e w Sat & Sun Mornings to pleasant ofc w/good Dr. d 1· o ll Pll Atback ofcstaff.Must .. _ e aver • Y ot Near O.C. Colleae, ideal sales, exp necessary. concept to businessmen. forstodent, S hrs/day, F /T , all company Earnings far above S3.75/hr.S49·8871 beneflll. Call Balboa average Call. Mr uc bundles to carriers. Re· Marine, 549-9671. E.O.E. North: 714·9644408. Hun M /F /ff. tmgton Beai:h CA exper'd .• typin&" in· quire. van or larae Rec eptionlat ; Ir& aurance. Salary open. wagon and a aood driv· New p 0 r l e e a c b SSl-5508 Inf r ecord. Phone lmurance Afency needs SALES Clerk ror retail SAVINGS MEDICAL Asst., part 642·4321• ask for Don person to type, llJe, lit marine hardware store. tlnae. no exper. nee. Wportilll~r EEq"i!I OP· answer bus y phon es. N.8 . loc. Part time. ex· ACCOUNTS 8adt ofc. Matu.re person Y mp yer. Good boun lit benefits. per nee. Call Balboa COUNSELOR Jlftf'd. Npt Bch surgeon, C.ll Diane B: 833-9550. Marine, 549·9671. E.O.E. PtnnalHlftt p /T ,Mtt-0851 Pst Timi E.O.E. M/F/H Position avail rn our Messenger ( • RIC9'T ;rtptST Salea Sooth Coast Plaza omce Radiology ollice in '8111111! forcompanywbowlllbe Deslper/J ewelry Fifm Exppreferred,includmg 'IWUn needs messen1er Become a ti&l;d sales relc>Qtina to Orule Co. 1ookinf for profeaaioanal Sat hours. Call Kathy from l ·S:30pm. M·F . counsek>r (over 21) wit.b airport area in October. qu.allty Sales Rep. Xlnt. Amburgy: S40-4066. Must have own tbe Jim Lotia 6: A•· 1tuiat have aood typlnf pay + comm ission. Calfornla Fe•ral •'TWX exper an asset. •Non·smoker Exc ellent salary & benefits Mission Viejo area Ca ll Mr i. drivmg record. Call from S.SPM, 646-1696 1'yp1sl. part tr me. 80 wpm, immediate opening Call 752·0098. fYPIST /GIRL FRIDAY l~~~~~~~~~·I lmmed opening, rapidly growing co Must type 65WPM accurately & be Super secretarial optm detail or iented . self· 1ng with leading Newport starter, S900 mo. Call Beach real estate office Fredde Hendley at The Very divers ified posi· Bolt Corp. 499.4571 Campbell. 581·3830 SECRETARY lion. Lots of opportunit> Patience and personality Typist. 40 hr wk, accuracy a plus . Call Geoff a mu s t Many co . 759·1501 E.O.E. benefits . Jewels by tranaportallon lit basic aociates Acency to dilla. Pleaae aend re· Some travel possible. SavilMK & Loan clericalskllls.544-8512. 1upervileandc:haperone awm to P.O Box 1522. Full or part time . ""'ST ··'7-:C t 0 SECRETARY DAILY PILOT carrier Lquna Beach, Ca 92652 ef·2ll.5. "" own en er r Sec'y wanted for busy Joseph. So Coast Plaia. Ask for Betty. , Modelln1. commercials. boys and &Iris on a one· a...-'onl.at, file clerk, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 sales offtce. Job entails Typist. general office, no films, ex\raa. Need new oo-<>ne basil. evea.lnp 6 --""'l"M SALES · Hi·Fl Compo· E.O.E. typing contracts, light exper. necessary, H.S. fee••· All ages/typea, to tPM. We Med con· :e t1:' •: La~ of. nenta. Exp. pref., salary. SICRET ARY bookkeeping. phones. grad., good benefits & nU5'1-G20'1. cerne'd , inn o vative ce. enU Thate. CMarea.EOEM/F.Call A 1 bl etc.Mustbeenthusiastic promotional o p · rnooa 1 who1 are loolttilnl Newport Center. M0-8201 Mr. Pau.laen bet. llAM & ,:::i:c ~1;1 fJd'!~~=~ & experienced. Salary portunitles. Fa rmers Need penon. to manaae ~·orl~'_!C.r!}hoveurpatort•···"!,.•, RECEPTIONIST/ ER· 2Pllonly.213·68S.SS43. typing skills+ It. book· commensurate with ex Insuran ce Gr oup. aaaall butlneu p /l . ._. --.. 1 . 1 penence. Call Juck or 540-4100. E.O.E . Jamar Associatea . II H2·021 ut 250 RAND GIRL f o r k~ingfor an eectncu PaulatSS6·876S. •i.as between 2 and &PM. Aak New p 0 rt 8 e. ch Sales enjll\Mr nrm. Oraoge1---------1--------- for Lori Develo1>4tt. Part time . County Airport area.1---------Typist N e w I n t e r I o r ~C.... l~. 5 daya per week. lllTEl llff SHOP Looking lot ofc. manage· SECRET ARY FARMHS IHS. CO. 0.ilft/Gourmd Store ,.. MUlt have lood phone rnent ability' starting With Real Estate license We have Immediate full a.. ~.c. Plata .__ .. ln1 for -fl 1 •• __. voice. n-c>nt otnee •P· People-oriented. reliable $5.50 lo S6.2S per hr. Hrs. s u I a r y p I u s com "'co --.-vn peraon needed to wortt 32-40 hr per wk. Ask for time position: aJaarp, creative. sales Cotta Mua. CA pearance and have a de· nlahta and weekend• Debbie 557.9671, Start missions Ja<'k Scott. Type50WPM .._.. people. Full • i;q..i 0ppor Employer ,..._a.car. f1M725. be1llutln1 atl 3p M. Sept Lat. part·time train· SCOn REALTY No Exper. Nee. P/f.potltk>nt avail earl)'.·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l•-v...a.t for 11_ .. tlna st**1 be aalea oriented b\i. 315 3rd St. HI High School Grad. '-· Contact Maureen 1; ·-···-... and able to operate ca.th -"'---------• 536·7533 Starting salary depend· 111.-a. Pl~ Operator tor manafacharer. auaat ....-.. Enjoy ucellet'lt Sec retary. Challenging ~~~~~~~~~ ing on exper . Salary re· telephone ao•wtripl twlvt lllni _,. ap • ~ beoefh.a. Appl)i arowth opportunity fort.: vuc every 6 mos. Rapid ,.._: ll.N. ...W:., day 6: evenlnt IDUlt type well. ltsp in ln 1>4traon tAM·Noon, outatandln& person, to•--------Promo t Ion a I o P · C»a.aa lll6fta open. Will train. .....,., letten,fonnt a -.rr1. Penouel sia,ooo. Reply In con· •Secntcry/lxec• portuniUes. We oHer ex· 0.:.:: DO call. ntt., 1e1.-. IDUlt. &oa. •~• MdltottHOTa 11dence: Collins Assoc. Penonnel/Advertt Mktg. eel benefits. aucb as fro· or H.B .• ,.a. p ., S T C du&.ia. 141-•a.. O..UU-. toeNewportCU'. Or. 517San Nicolas Dr. N.,B. Oepta. have! openings per r0i!e 1a.hnsaurrin3gn,ce~~naslon' OUTPA1'9n' "" . o " t r 0 I Neiwpon Beach expansion-Np\. Bch 1 "' ..-• t•t•Y s.nlcemanoeeded. ............ l'.qualOppBmpbrM/F S.Cretsy tin. avces. firm. Oood plan. It int erested .. "'~ s.t...., 1»e -.pm, 10-key ad· C<HI 1lrl om ce. Must t.ypine. shthnd. skills, ex· pleate call: 71A.US-850S. 71MOIU6. ...~ ...... .C:. ~ :.:Jatlltl.Ut~e:. I N~n~ n-oRa&N ...... \1'Pe 6S + • e~oy work· per. ~·d. Non·1moker ex~4:{~~~rEmplyr r-u •••er. Co1ta llleu .;q.,.z.;.:.ta ~k~~~\:i~i :i~~l~prel~!!·C.!!!!!~1:~64!!0.!!0!!!'!123!!!!!~!!f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! T IME IS MONEY oo blby -W-taK8~ reG ~twor-k ? Use lllllwet It/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad we take your mes s ages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad . . . this service Is only $10 per week . For more information and to place your ad call 642-5678. DAILY PILOT black • • priDttr. CPA ftna. C.U Karen: wttllaCl...uladAd onl)', Call Mr Roberta llllllllli.&i~il.!!l~:i:::Ql:O.:~..._.~::::.=:~:::::::::::=:::!~JM.!!il1"8!!!!!!!.!1!!!:~2:::::~==~:::::Cell::=t41:::!:.,.~"'=:::::?::~~f75.~~:::S:~M~~~~~·~~a~m~·•=P~m-.~a-us~rn~ed-A-d-s~_:-64=.=-2=·56'71l~~w=an==t=Ad==R=es:u:l~~~6'2==·5678~~~~~-~~-~~~§§~§~~~~··~~~r~~~:2~ .. .. ... -.. --~ ·---....... --......... "' ...... ,._ .... ,.,. . .._.,.. -. ._ --·· " ,._ ............. --...... __ I .. NII .., , • .,... to•• ~..,. s• ..._. w..tH •••o .._, ..,.rtet1 ~... .............. 1111 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Tuaacs.y, August 19, 1980 DAILY PILOT 8 f :J -.'!Ill· -·-.............. •. El..ICTlllC BOAT IMPORTANT T• ......... c.lt 9717 Alltoa, ••port.d 4-tot, l.,orhtd Alltoa, u .. d .,. __ e9IA. taa. QJllllll .,....._ tra•••M ,._,,bait, .. ~ NOTICE TO wp _.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!!!!!!__-__ ••ll• dH. ...n ... t ... MC»4l$0 READERS AN D &.:.I '?6 (,'QLT 4dr, llUlO, orig. MG 9742 YollswClpft 9770 a....-oa.t 9920 IK'i~19!,.,a C h n tnloa llOI. 11SIOl2 --ADVERTISERS ,..._ 31M ml, ne w tires & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.;:.;,..,,... r1 Otte ' ""-IPM U ' S lnp.)1tck Opt!n The p r \i:e of ltema For Y®tC1trl shocks etc u pkt atereo _..a ft •&ooli ltl --Cr111wr, lwlb lo1d ed •dvtrllll'd b> vehicle JOHNSO.. & SO.. + cass days 963·5647, '76 MG MIDGET S..5·1914 '72 VW Squareback, de '7$ MALI BU Cl.ASSJC ,,.._ -DeU ~1 lAutw11. "8tld. Diii l?O HP Votvot, Uke dealera In the vthlt'le U.C-.Wtrcwy 114().4959 eves ....... -· .... ellw. I,..., '-U • ..,. w1U. trlr •11 000 cl1111fh1d 1dv"rl11ln1 lvd --------Ptugtot ·9741 cent cond, reblt ~f\g or XJnt Cond . Must Sell! fer ~ 1416. S2200 Ong Own 962-7940 •• ... *"•"•,.•••-••........ • Ma. N". a Zl .. r Ca II •rt • r ~ p, p ' culumn1 doci not In ,._ 21826t u Harbor B~~A ~...,, Dattm '720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,...,,,,_ .. _l_ •-.-' "" ... I d I' bl \,AJ9 • l'Qtta """'~tl'UitN ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... timi S•\ ._,. __ ._...r I ... n Dl-Jd Ull. c u e llnY I PP 1t'a o --- Must Sell! '71 VW BU,$. '62 CORVi\IR runs good, .._. .._,,_ ,... flllt ro•plete •1•11 -tu . IJctrut. &ram1fer -We Pav--$4000 REIATE! .__. u... • a"""• .. OMO Call lfH Re.lull Z4 Ca t in '""'· lln•nc:e c bars... -~ on en Y b rs n d new Sacn(ice Sl400/080 S2SO 19th & Ohv~ llB 759-0862 a fter 6pm 675-0163 _.!.fler 6~m ' • ' a rt 1 . ao p M (7 14 1 <.'TU.er IOO hr. &ove. ree11 tot air pollution OVER Peugeot 604 .... fa• )'Ud aa le m..wl •latl toilet. ltt bolt, cuul.l'Ol dev1r1a cer\lfk a· .... loek '64 VW Sq uareba c k '7ll Vega . 95.000 miles __. j11nll rHI eohta -- -alHP' IJ Radio, com Uona or dcalor di>C'umtn f or Your Good i fll, 1111. 11&4 4171 Norly new ppla ue p1111 , depth aound~r . t 1tr )' P r~ Va r u l I o n VW, l'orache or Audi 1910 5051 IG .. & Dl•wll HERENOWm European Variant "S' Ru n s S750 Eves. Model. Rbll motor. d ual G7S.892S ~H.l U 1&l l a r , S uftbu r a tande m trailer JV~OO c h •r1 1:11 unlr1 ' o.t_p, '144 olftt l'•ll m "91or414.? 9WU utherwlH apec1fled by ....... 1060 Paul 1 t t'1S·U SO o lh4udvcrthuir •-• .. •0 ••uun•n• l?).lla II no aru.~r. WEt.l.C:RAt'"I' Nova 25', Alltt .. •t/ = okl ~nu lr..ep lF)'lDI w trlr, 181 twma. SS pru CMtlca t!UO • m&ra. liMJO. 0 ---I'S· Vllf' St1tep 114,600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 141-lM.3. •AMAHA amp ,.,, r«t Offer " Ult 645 2H3, v e r b N • ,. U l l 7~ 0687 ...... , 1010 '7$.lD>, 8l3 2"1\J -·---················· ---...... s.M 9060 •DIM£D1AT£ CASH• Clar\nfl, wood a<>Od f ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·54 Ml•rcury MONTER Y All On1 6lM nu le•, Xlnl Cond No Ru•t 914 1800 rr For Gold . Slive r . tlClO )C_,., band ~tu ·-l,udM-l" ........ u•m -. • ..,,., u -· • '57 C H EVY t:AMINO VW PORSCHE-AUDI 4e E. Coast Riway 11t Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 TOPS PAID FOR IMPORT & SPORTS C ltS 848·7100 BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Streel '71 280'l 2+2. 4-tlpd, elec. NEWPORT BEACH snrf, A M /FM cass . 752·0900 A/C, 53K m i, S8500 p--t..--9-7-5-0 6161· 7074 ------...................... . '76 PORSCHE carb s, Bosch ign c:.tiMfttol 9930 Headers . 1500cc 1700 •••• ••••••• •••••• ••• ••• Sonny 536--9116 '65 VW BUS, super cln. many xtras, m ust sell Call 631·2778 after 2pm 'fll vw Sqbk. body good . eng froze. Make orrer 2072 Newport Blvd Apt G. C:M. '72 Lincoln <I dr, mini. S2250 /b e s t orfcr. 541·40M, 644-0782 eves 9932 •.•••.•••......•....... 1978 CORVETIE Silver Anniversary ed1 lion with ONL V 14.000 miles' $9,000. C:all Pl•\1niacn Any kl ad, deal mo. 7)4 75.29. bu II , s II V 1 n N 8 . tond., asnuun& 0 11\lal OHke ;;-.... -;;;;-;& b u u l d 111 S4 o o o le.JG5S ~..... 1015 ~9UlO 1..9 Carat Pear slla ped •• •• •• •• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • LI DO l 4 11 191 o comp Diamond pendant, 14 EXEC DES K. excellent w trlr . sails. cover & cua& chain• mountlna cond , '320 . 67S t230 rac ing &ellf many pickup must see to •P AMtos. lmporied prec1ale Call weekdys ••••••••••••••••••••••• berore 3 001' M or MfoloRwo 9705 wcekend$.a31 4919 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 Datsun King Cab p k up, auto, air. stereo. $4,000 or oCfer . 549-9611 •75 280Z 2+2, a /C, am rm. great cond ! SS000/080 840.2932 912E Sspd , w /air. Only 47,000 Mi (910PRY l. IOI McLAREN INC. 850 N. Beach Blvd. (5M1. No of SA Fwy.) La Habra 522·533.1 '611 VW Sqbk, new ever ything, St500tbest orrer John 559·0719 aft 5 JOPM 497-1810 lf no answer. plea:.e keep tr~ ing -- D .$00 20 1ram1 solid 8'f3..?712 nras, $1,500. 840 300S 1old nuaae\ from Alaska. SSSO. Set of File Cabs. 5 dwr lltt'I. Sant ana 20 'Andastar" Frank Un mint sterling $400, paper s hredder · Fu 11 r ll e e r 1 a g ed silver Presidents, $.500. '400. ~-1889 ____ $7500 OBO. Call Paul for 67~3316 or 642-~. Ms 1017 appt: 646-0102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :I>' MORGAN SI '78 .5 2 Marq . Cara l SHERRV'S PET CARE . ~p, • Diamond E color ap· Bo d' & . Stdsl, roller furlmg. & pniled $&283 wm' take ar 1n1 groom in g Dodier. knot log. wheel ll850 S40 · with love , free pk up. w/pods. Better than new · -4208 Poodle Pups for sale. d Mllcd•1... 1010 Tea Cup studs, 2S yrs . con . S32,000. Newport exp. 546-2848 Yacht Exch 675-1800. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUGGAGE TAGS AFGHAN Hound from y o u r bus in ess A.KC REG. Sl75. card. Send one c ard for SS9·l300. 5:30 PRI NDLE Ca t 18' w / trailer. Model 79. $MOO 544.4937 eadl la& plus one spare. s,ortilMJ Gooch 1094 loats. SUps/ We return permanently ••••••••••••••••••••••• Docks 9070 sealell attractive ta1 & ••••••• • • •• •• ••• •• • •• • • 46 F or d W oodie , restur~ Sl3,000 675-6161 4 WN.t Drives 9550 ..•.....•....•......•.. '76 CJ 7 JEEP Lo mt many eltlras, must sell lea ving are11. aft -&pm 731-6728 '71 Cherokt!e Adult toy Most outrageous. com plcte. beautiful. luxury 4x4 on the road. <.:hevy <\54 w iturbo 400 racing trans. Incredible p11int. Fantastic s tereo Full power. And more Over $18,0 00 investe d Sacrifice-m a ke offer 6:1>· 1712 or 67 5·3222. strap, meetln1 airline TIAMPOLIME 2 Side Ties ava il 25' 9560 l.D. requirements. Pre· 7 ft. by 14 ft. webbed fibergla ss sailboats. Tnldts vent loss & theft! For a mat on r olle rs. LIKE Mark a t 28th St. Manna ••••••••••••••••••••••• penonaliud lag enclose NEW! Has a cover t oo! G73-6606 wallpa per. fabric o r ~or best offer.Call --------- "Day Glo" pa~r & we 731-8216 wW back 6: tnm your ---------1 tap. Or try two cards TV, Rocio, back to back. HIA, Steno 1098 Caunpcn, Sale/ P RIC ES: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reftt 9120 12 ea or 3/$S KEF Sprkr prices are go-·~··••••••••••••••··~·· 4/5 tap 11.60 ea. ing up Sept 1. Bu.y or or· 8 Cabover camper . Nice 6/9 tap $1.SO ea. der now to bea t i nc. rond. lOor more $1.40 ea. AUantic Music. 646-8895 645-8295 Sales Tax Included . . NO CARD? Beautiful RCA 2S" color 8 Camper , new pamt. mt Draw your own or send iv, 2 yr wmty, free de· r econd. $250/best o fr name. address, phone &: livery. Sl24. 646-1786 498-3895. we'll make one card per ---------tac.~ 25< each. 21" Color T .V. G E T .V '70 Ford camper VS bub· s.d check or money or-Xln\. Call Mack ble top van, runs good. der to: 962· 7788. $275. best offer S.Sl·S371. PILOT PllMTIMG Lloyds Am /Fm/8 track MotoriHd likes 9140 P.O. Box lS60 receiver $80. RCA B /W ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cost.a M.-a, Ca. 92626 1V 950 Lisa 631-7442 MOPED WANTED used F bri R S I but in good cond. Call a ~.:SmA°:~4 a e, SUPH SPEAKHS Marc at 554-3117 even· '68 Dodge 2 Ton· 16' new metal bed , lilt cab New Rubber Asking $5500 64S·lQU '16 Chev 111 T on: 6 cyl. & Ca m per S h ell Gas saver. 645-t691 '74 GMC ~Ton Sier ra Gr ande, new eng, lire n ms, Sl800. 960-7235 '75 DODGE Club cab "1 to n , g d , co nd . Automa tic. 646-4072 & 5'16-6567 78 Datsun King Cab pkup, auto, air , stereo, $4,000 or olr. 549-9611 '75 Chevy Luv, brown, needs a liltle wo rk. SU>O. 644-5129. • ThW"I AUi 21 l 2 " 8 as e S2 2 5 I Bo . 1_ings _________ 1 lllJ>roduction P lace ~ ......_.__i-'-·/ 78 Chevy half-ton pickup, ,__,,. ~ 24,900/m i. all po we r . N.8 . 64S·l.395. .... A w.t• Sea a trs 9150 radial, A/C, shell, au x. ........... ....................... k c 8 s 000 Na~h. C::!_ fa~ 7-l~) •••••u••unu••• .... • '76 7SO Ronda ma tic Low la n ' . 4 ' . ~,.,.~ _...,or st 0 · ..... M9W mi with xtras, must sell. _7_68-_SGSO_. _____ _ fer . .,_1724. ........ '°30 leaving are a . 731·6728 v-9570 tlll ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aller 4pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ...,. New wa-n u tailln '77 Chevy van, 40K mi, Plae 1rt• k iln. with ... ent se g '75 HONDA air , AM /FM, c ruise, l d 8 l ff Winches. Two. 32'S, s &D • e 1 o e r . CBSOO'I'. Faring • sad-mag whls, cstm paint, M).95811 Sl155 /e a . Two 23's • S373/e a . One zo S290. dlebags . S1350 0 8 0 . a ll carpe led S4400 New skill & waterbed Eijht handles ~716 64.S-l467 until lO pm ~-34.93 or 5'8·0881 w/beadboard ti mirror ........ Power 9040 '79 Honda_ C ~X. m1ol G MC Van. Xlnt cond. 642·1352 alter 4PM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ond. Win dJ am m er CU.St. in ter. Will seat 8. MONTAGUE DAWSON 1971 SCAlil Fajring +other xtras. New ball. MIHl247, S6000. 9icned artist's proof. Twin 330's, 150 hours. S3900. P .P. 544•5744· ..,_ Want.d 9590 "DAYS OF ADVEN· loaded. Pri. pty. Make '78 Honda 7SOK 5 000 mi ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURE" offer,. Need lo sell im· xlnl cond. Sl'.sSo. Cali WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Published 1957, ex-medaaiely ... moving out 5J6.8792 after4pm. for t op u s ed car s · quisitely r ramed to of area. Call 546-1200 foreign, do m estics or museum s tandards . CMon .-Fri. days); OH Road Hodaka S275, classics. If your car is ~400• CaJI : 208-854·0173 731·8216 (evenings & Kawasaki KDlOOM S375, e xtra c lea n , see us Game table, 4 chairs : sm. Moped: S275. 491-9138 eves. Irvine Coast Co untry C ub Membership. 11300 +SliOO transfer. 645-1315 Lifetime Member of Tif· fany's Private C lub sell· in& "Gold Card". oo mo. d u e s . S 1 o O O Ron ... 756-1129 CERAMIC T'ILl .. S9UI 6x6". Z5t per piece. Pai.al 4c ~Ml your own Wei. Good for ceramic ' .... or printe parties to Wae your artistic ·~· 534-1533 • Rdf. 22'' blk /wht wood 1 COOIOle, MS. phone mate ~S50. Mapua elec. ehclld orpn S50. 642-6338 Belll L Sofa. Chrome & Ga.ii coffee tbl, wht 17 cu' nit. 875-31.11 B~c le uo. Antique Cl k lUO (woode n · m ) 131-9794 tNck nast WRIU-llQUIS· Gd lbape. .M/ynl. Evet: weekends). A s k fo r Tra iler $175. 675·1949 FIRST! Jerry. _ __.;... ______ Motor Ho.a, S•/ •2S' Apollo . '77, single a..f/Stor-cMp 9160 eng, VKF, RDF. falho. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sea tent, canvas , trim 1971 25 FT. tabs, xlnt cond. 3 to l"ACE AllOW choose from IUl,000. MODEL C Nwpt Y acht Ex c h . Seeps6lo8ooGaucho 675-UM>O. beds, fully s elf con· '78 Boston Whaler. 17' lained. roof a ir cond.. Mo ntauk , 70 h o r se ge n e r ator . AM /FM Evinrude with trlr. Mint s t ereo c assette, C. 8 . d $8 0 0 B 0 radio & o nly 33 .200 c 0 n · 4 O / miles. Must sell! (Ser . 4119-4789 morninas. --------'----! lfll8). 36' SEA RAY Express '79 (714t 55'·1304 Xln t. cond. Fully , equlp'd . Ma ny xtras. Rent motorhome, 22'h Best ofr. over $80,000. sell contained. S2SO per 675·3895, 645-6739 & we ek + 6< a mile . ~6408 64.5-2283. ~. • #I Ill o,_,. C-.ty 2925 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 979-2500 WEIUY Q.EAN CARS AND TRUCKS COHHEll CHEVROLET ·it'>< 11 ... l• ,, '"'. d ' I r:'> I ' ,, ~" \ S46-I 200 For R ent 20' Mot or ----~---- REDUCED • Home, very clean. Call DRASTICALLY 642·4:ll0 #290. 40' Marine Trader. '71 twn d s ls , lOKW ge n , raHen. Travel 9170 many options. Must sell. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now $85,000. Nwpt Yacht '14 Traveleze, 8X35 w /ex- Exch 675-1800. pando, 2 s heds, low re nt. ----------4 adult pa rk. S12,000 or REDUCED best olfer. 646-5432. 29' California S /F, &wn . . fWC Cbryslers. lo hn, 2 As as Airstream. A good 1tatlo1U, encl head dea l. $2200 /080. w /bo ldln1. S22,250. 6t6-051. #DUl8'79 WOlt't Last! Nwpt Yacht .......... Utility 9110 m:.cb. 8'7~1800. • •••••••••••••••••••••• •' 1SLAND GYPSY •78 g · w ide. 3 2 ' Ion 1 . um daa.. AC. s ~tat~ Sl20C>/OBO. wllh or w to nm. 9* pitot, radar. space. 646-•lSl. ICK5875 At our docks Slt,500. AM Seniu, P.ts Nwpt Yacht Exch. 8 & AccestOriet '400 mia. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'T2 ll' Tri·bull. Walk lbroqla. Volvo I 10 . , ....,mru. Tr lr. Xlnl. eo.d. ...... ITJ.1208. TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAN USED CARS! 21 ...... ltnl c.-...... 645-5700 WAMTED! Late model Toyotas and Volvos . C a ll u s TODAY!!! $2000 REIATE! on any L979 . Coupes, Sedans & Convertjbles. ·n 280Z, wh ite w /saddle ml. 39,000 m1, auto. air, mag whls. show room cond A ft er 6pm SS7·4476. ·72 911 T Targa: Clean, Mags. Pirellis,. A /C, 'TI SCIROCCO, nu cng . Dodge 99 35 a c, snrf. m1chs. fm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt. 962-8160 SOUTH COAST 'Ill VW Pop Top Camper DODGE Runs great Good s hape. It's coming soon! Watch Aft 5 661-7064. -----for our grand opening! ' ' 1980 SPIDERS HERE NOW!!! AM t fo'M, Bra & Cover 557 2810 ·n Datsun 280Z. met1111ic -----1 '74 Super Beetle. Clean m Blue. 4Spd, am,fm cass, 70 914·6 Restored Classic & out. New engine, new 2888 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA IEACH IMPORTS air. S6600. 661·8648 P7s, SC rims, Recaro, brakes llave receipts 8480oveStreel many xtras . Sl 2.SOO. $2750831·0929 ·~ Dodge P olara One owner. 58K on g miles. comp ma int history avail (;REAT SHAPE !!~ $1,2.50 ur best offer 675 1230, 673-3068. 1)73 Z7l2 NEWPORTBEACH '75 280Z 4s p d A 1C:. 492-8119,496·5922exl.60 ·68 VW Bus. 1mmac mt, runs xlnt, needs paint JOb, baja whls $2000 963-3834, 752-0900 am/fm/8trk. snrf, $5400 - bes rf """ 3178 Porsche 1965. 3S6S<.:, Con .... ....-9707 or lo e_r, ,..,.,_. __ -cours. condition orig ••••••••••••••••••••••• to&onda 9727 owner. $16,500. See to SUPER BUY! 1971 AUDI 5000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• apprec, Call for app VW Diesel Rabi.tit, t97i, 2 dr, tan, Becker am dm 32.000mi. perf l'ond S6.450 P r 11.1 fl73·8624 Tan w /t an inlen o r Automatic t rans .. air cond. & alloys. 0752). $6595 ROY CARVER IMW 1540 Jamboree Road NEWPORT BEACH 640-6444 IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CREVIER VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST HONDA HliD9UARTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVICE OLDSMOllLE HOMDA GMC TRUCKS 2850 Harbor Blvd. COST A MESA 540-9640 &I Sf 6 U OADWAY SANTA AHA 835·3 I 71 '77, am /fm cass. I owner, f>4,f ULTIMATE DA!VIHG MACHINE 59. 000 m i. m us l s e II •USED IMWs * S2900. 213.592.5451 '72 2002 Tii wj S t R ,,_,,.,. 9730 (2061) ••••••••••••••••••••••• '733.0CS c pe, m int(0559) JAGUAR Supe rb X l 5 '74 2000 Tii S /R <0032> "i.>" $27,000 under 8000 644·6340. '77 9115 Porche Xlnt Sl7.000/besl All extras 486-3615, 499.4754 '65 356.5C. w 911 mags. beaut & dependable S7000 OBO Call for a pp 631 3329 Asap '74 914 1.8 App Grp. All new mech Xlnt car $5400 631·3329. '71 VW Bus. xl11t 1·und Rebll eng. fm r•ai.i. $3100 960.3979 1978 Uodgc Coll Ex i:ellenl c:ond1uon 2 door Sedan, maroo n low mil e ag e . i :11pet•d transm1ss1011 . FM '>ll'r~1 cassette SJ.550 Fl IUI 5.51 4435 In me · 5 7 Karm an G h 1 a ·77 ,\spell full~ loaded w Porsche power plant Silv Burgund> 18.229 Reasonable Call :1 55, mile!> s:noo a rt 5 846-8979 642-4300 24 hrs 9940 WAHTEO •••.••..•...•......••.. Sacrifice. m ust se~I. VW '79Bus.stk.lo m1or '18 FIESTA S PORT Special Limited Ed1uon, ne w 714 675 0316 aft 30mpg, l o m1 . \Cry 1979 1YM lmmac., m ust 5PM clean. S3JOO 551-4566 see to appreciate Call - ------- Ga r y 0 r pa m y I a ·73 VW Camper Van New '6.S FORD F'25(), 300 cu in 646-3432 or 540·061 l pa ml. tires. shocki.. etc ch. run!> \'er~ gd S1 .200. -----Reblt eng Xlnt cond 962·1<127 aft 5PM '67 Porsche 912. Absolute· 640-~18 -9,5() ly beauti f ul & xlnt. M«cwy lhroughoul ~ust sell. Volvo • 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• m ake me an offe r .••••••••••••••••••••••• ORA!'llGECOUNTY'S 846-473.5. VOLVO FINEST '75 2002A (003SI Heart Broken must sell .77 Porsche 924. $1900. '75S30iA w /S.R. 0483> 080 499-4757 1-785·4648 SALES. SHVICE AMD LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALERSHIP '76 2002 S /R 4 s p .I( Ghl 9734 (2371578) .,..,.. a Rolls R 9756 '71 630c.s1· (456SXG > •••••••• • •• •• ••• • •• • •• • oyce ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78320! 4 sp, a ir (4228) '69 Convertible, good '78320iA. air (6005) cond. s te r eo, moving "'l DEALER IN U.S.A. '78 S:lliA loaded (S468) east must sell. Kathy '79 528iA S /R (2615) _7_5&-_129_1 _____ _ ROY CARVER EARLE IKE VOLVO 1966 Har bor Blvd. RAY FLADEBOE LI NCOLN-MERCURY 16-18 Auto Center Or SDF'wy-Lake Forest exit IRVINE 830·7000 9737 OtlAMGE COUNTY'S OLDEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROllS·ROYCl CJosecl S•daya Loe. COSTA MESA 646-9303 540-946 7 '72 Colon) Park 9 pass -.•gn Lo aded Onginal owner $1000 675·6161 $ Mltstmte) 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOTUS ESPIRIT S2 ::-=~" Metallic blue . 23,000 \'-----.--.... miles. $17,000 or beat ofr. OOSED WNDA'fS 2 13 /94S ·3608 o r ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMral 990 I '68 Mustang. SACRIFICE 213/IBS·Unl 1967 Rolls, immaculate, ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR HONE YMOON $! ....._..a.. 9731· $21,950. SZ.000/0BO • 640-0980, Sales-Service-Leasing ,__ 6'S-9272 NOTHING OVH 83J-l.2160. Rov C rver Inc... ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4995 -----Rolls koyc~ • BMW '79 Mazda RX-7, xlnl 1971 Corniche Conve rti· 66 Mustang. needs work, l.540Jamboree cond, all xtras . S77SO. ble, bea utiful white AskmgS600 Newport Beach 640-6444 645-2281 d ys. 528·S436 w/deep re d inte rio r. NABERS 644-4219 ---'--------1 _e_ves_._______ Completely restored to AUTO C&ITER IOI McLAREH's & 850 N. Beach Blvd. LA HABRA CS Mi. No. of SA Fwy) 1714J522-5ll3 Sunday by Appl. ~s lea 9740 fresh cond . 1 yr. ago 1425 Baker Street S pecial Wood Grain . COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 Ml% 250C COUPE Automatic t rans . & air c ond. V e r y ni ce! (949HSG). 0..LY $5991 HOWARD Chevro&.t Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BE ACH 133-0555 pri ced at $75.000 540_9202 759-1913 or 640· 1963 9760 luidc 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1980 SAAi TURIOs HERE NOW! EXCELLENT SELECTIOM! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Buick Riviera Runs iJ)Od, looks good! See to appreciate ! S9751obo. A s k for Davi d at 975-0113. '79 M ustang .)Turbo i\m Cm. air . TRX Had1a Is 40,000 miles Good cond. SSOOO or best Qill 752· 7855, ext. 392. Cherry '67 $250010 80 496· 7709 or ·193·6213 '68 Mus tang $1800 very good cond. rebll e ng. & others 640-4092. 673-1091 '79 IMW 633CSI COMPARE! 1980 IUICt< '65 COU PE nu e ng .. SKYLARK needs light work. BEACH IMPORTS S li ver with blac k Selec ti o n , tra de-in leather. Executive Car. creative finance plans IOI McLAREN Inc:. and usuaJ price 850N. Beach Blvd. HOUSE OF IMPORTS <5 Mi. No. of SA Fwy.> DIAL MER-CEDES l..a Habra 522·533.1 637 .2377 75 BMW S30i. 4dr, auto, 1UY YOUl MICEDts7 s /r. a/c, Xtras. 640-8590 MHCIDES? or 835-7001 We are buying all pam· pered Me r cedes Benz. Top dolla r for all m>dels. Call Peter Kay now! HOUSE OF IMPORTS DIAL MEil-CEDES 637.2377 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 Toyoto 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 018 Toyota SR5 lift bk. 5 spd, ra d ials, silver , 3t .OOO m i, S4000/ofr_ 493'12A9 eves S...nwr Special For rent '68 Toyota $49.mo 631·2697 Front wheel drive, 4 SS9·16.'lS cyl., a utomatic trans . l'W.L.-bjl-air cond . & would you __..., ~ 9955 believe less than 4,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miles? <574YBBI. ·73 Cullass. 1mmac. SOK $6888 m I . S I 2 0 0 0 B 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD '2060 HAR60R 6lVO, cosrA MESA 64'2 0010 714 ·557-8999 art 7PM wkdys '79 Cutlass Sup reme· 8.000 m1 Perfect cond. P S. Air. i\ulu .. Crwse cont rol. amtfm . $6 100 498·0172 '73 Regal ·79 Cutlass Supr eme ·16CORO LL/\SR5.5spd, SlOOO B r ougham Fu ll y st\ belted rad tir es. 675·8475 equipped. Assume lease AM /FM stereo cass. Caclloc 9915 Call Will: 714-832·3952 SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS hat i•t rec.incl a large HIKtlOft of clean. $3.100. 759-1191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dys, or call Bob. 548·5710 '79 450 SL eves. '78 SEVlLLE Sliver, 21M eves MEWIMW'S alao 15 Pll-OWMEO IMW'S To choose from '74 thru i 9 200'l's-320i's·saoi 's For the best deal in Orange County ... Come see us today' SADDLllACIC VAU.IYIMPORTS 28402 MU1uerite Pkwy. Miation Viejo lll·Z040 4'S.4,4t •712002 &ood cood. MUST SELL! 541·11S'7 Black , HK mil es Tri..... 9767 mi,like new, 9957 <986XM~l.soo ~······················ 640-1u2 ~~~ •••••••••••••••••• JIM SLIMOHS 74 TR6. Restored com· '75 Coupe d e Ville . '73 Ford Pinto Runabout pletely. $5000 or best ofr · loaded. sha rp $2650. Call in very good cond. Fair· IMPORTS SS2·4033 Mack al 962-7788 ly new tires. Auto, radio. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. w-... 9770 Must sell. $995. 497·4347. COSTAMESA T-.Woget1 '77 C ad . Sevil le . 631-1276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• White /red interior. Ex. '74 Pinto WAGON 2S mpg , new clutch & brakes. am rm c ass s t e reo. needs body work, mech sound. $1 l7S 496-1858 I '7' MHCIOIS llH'l 240D Has all the "toys" in· cludint a power sunroof 6: power windows . This one is In EXCELLENT condiUon ! Aak ror Casey QJnnell when you call 546-1200 or&ry Ht·OU6 Havin& trouble selling your car? Try us! Paid for or not ! As k for Tom Aikin. JIM MARINO VOUCSWAGEM 117 It llACH IL VD. ................. •41-2000 cond. 45.000 m i l es. 714-645-1395 or ~-9781 . C.-ro '917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 6cyl, 2Smpg, m a gs am/fm t a pe, l o ok s P'lymotfth 9960 ••••••••••••••••••••••• shal'l>. $1600. 598-0787 '76 PLYMOUTH Ar row. ,..-..._-..... ...;._.----9-9-2-0-4 S200 rebate . price SJ.100. _... Must see al Exxon s ta • •••••••••••••••••••••• SEE US FIRST! We have a &ood selec· lion of NEW 6: USF.D O\evrolet.s ! C ONNELL CHEVRO LET • •. ~ ll.11\ .. ,· I 1 , t, I \ \,I \ !>4b-I 200 '55 Chevy Sedan V8, auto trans. ndlo, orl1lna l '72,000 ml, 2 owner stock 53,000/bl\ ofr 846·4519 lion , Mc F adden & Edwards. He. '17 Sta Wgn Vola re. l' owner, AC. PB. P S. x lnl cond. 52950. 545·4496 ---Pontiac 9965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 068 F1 reblrd. mus t sell. $1,000 or best offer 98(). 792.1. ·n Trans Am. looks like jus\ drove off show room floor Fully loaded, u steal :tl S4950. Must see 751 1417. v-. H74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 Ve11a. looks fine, ruoi1 Veal. 32mpg. $600/0 8 0 833-0MI. Sell things fu l with Dally Pllcit Want Ads ( e J l •• 0 't h It s. ~ )() te ion :30 in re- ity )lll' ies be ia ioo n's t i t ... -----.; -... .. , I I I Above all It's a Sa, · lem. ----------·= -~· =~~~ ~__.:_ .. . ..... \ •. ... a. '1111.. ~ ... ...:. •• :>~ __.,.._ --.. , Huntington Beaeh Foa•taln V!1~0~Y I \'our Hometown Dally Newspaper -~ .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS l Meadowlark Zoned for Mobile HoIDes t.utamount to attOf'dabJe hoal· au . Mo.t or the pecked bowie....,... plauded the d~ k>n. althouah • l ffUoe ol the cl"OWd Oppoeed the mobile home concept, clalmlnll it wouJd lower 1urroundlna property value, coat tbe city mo11ey to provide 1ervicea qd create lnlffic coneeat:Jon. Airport owner Dick Nerio. faced with rillne costs maintain· ing· l.be private airport, said he expeeta to have lbe 200 1mall plane• that board there out w.llll1D one }'ear. _ Councllmen Ron Pattinson and Jack. Kelly diasented. favor· inc the planning commission recommendat.i4Na for mixed bous- ln1 with a sectJoa of the parcel set aside for mobile homes. Pattinson, a realtor, said a mixture of commercial build- in es. condominiums and de- tached housing would provide a beUer tu base for the city. A revised estimate by city staff members projects it will cost tbe city $644,800 to provide services for the mobile home site over a 10-year period, com· pared to only $192, 700 for low- d ens ity condominiums and $270,000 for single family homes. Councilman Don MacAlllster seemed to express the majority opinioo wben he spoke in favor of tbe Nerios' property rights to place a mobile home park on the site. He also disputed the city's estimates of cost to provide city services to the park. MacAJUster said the private streets or the park would result in fewer police patrols and upkeep costaforthecity. "It's time to let the private sector do something rather than always turning to Uncle Sam," MacAJlister said, contending the mobile homes would meet federal giUdelines for low-cost housing. The airport, -located near the intersection of Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica Road, has been the center of controversy for the past decade, urban sprawl has pushed homes, apartments and commercial buildings around its borders. But the politics of the situation made allies of Nerio and the <See AIRPORT. Page AZ> Planner Bollle Sale · Forced· FV Man's Trial Sex or Death Tak Rebutted l•Bespital . . ' Actor James Stewart, 72, is ] being treated in the cor-· r onary care unit of St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, ~ but a spokesman says he bas not suffered a heart attack · and there is no cause for ·~ t alarm. . 8 ~Columnist • m 'Anguished' }{Over Plot A teen-age girl who lives in J.,eotis Heater's Fountain Valley home testified Monday she never beard Heater threaten to hurt or kill a hitchhiker who claims the ex-convict held him against bis will last May as a "sex slave." Wand a Rainey, 17. told an Oran~e County Superior Court jury lD Judge James Turner's court.oom that contrary to his testimony, Jonathan Leonski, 18, appeared to be enJoyini himself during the two days he spent at Heater's residence on Goldeneye Avenue. Heater ia standing trial on charges be forced Leonski to stay at his bonie after picking him up last May R and then tbreatA!ni.ng the Nortb Carolina native unless he bad sex with both him and Mias Rainey. The girl, her hair braided in Bo Derek fashion and wearing a white dress, said she never saw Heater, a previously convicted sex offender, strike Leonski with a bell or threaten to kill him if be did not cooperate. Leooski testified that the de- fendant bad threatened him several times and struck him with a black cane and tied him up. Misa Rainey, under question- ing by defense attorney John Flood, told the seven-man, five- woman jury tl\Jl. she did see Heater put a bell around Leooslti's neck so be could walk like a dog. But sbe said lbe 18-year-old hitchhiker consented to doing this. Leonski had testified be was forced into it. Mias Rainey said she never <See SEX, Page AZ> . June Fuel Use l)rops SACRAMENTO CAP) - Gasoline consumption dropped sipificanily in June, sa.ya the Callfol'llia Board ol F.qualiutlon. Board Chairman Richard Nevins said the 914,827,049 gallons dis· tributed in June were fewer than since February and the least for any June since 19'15. • That wu 3. 74 percent leas than ln June 19'19 and 10.80 percent lesa than in June UJ78. .. • Business Loans Unpaid. By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of -o.lty ~ .... St.ff The hall-million-dollar Hunt- ington Beach home or Orange County Planning Commission •' chairman Richard J . Footner will go on the auction block Sept. "'22 to pay off business loans Footner is alleged to have ob- tained by exploiting his public positioo. Footner said Monday he would make no comment on the published reports which indicat- ed he used bis position as leverage with lenders to help secure business loans totaling about $600,000. Supervisor Harriett Wieder. wbo appointed Footner to the planning body, asked the county counad's office Monday to in· vestlpte the charges. Court records indicate the businessman-planning com- missioner's home at 16551 Carousel Lane, which be bought in 1971. will be offered at s · sheriff's aud:ioo next moatb to Deltf ... ..._.,,...~ pay olf debts resulting in part Be's Got Yo• c:orJered If you see this man pointing this at you, you'd better give up and drop your speed. Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of bis de· partment's hand-held radar units. which look a bit other worldly. Traffic officers say although ·the units have been in use for three years, with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun pointed their way. Relax. It'll only hurt in the wallet. HB Power Play Oiarged 'lhomas Blasts Mayor's Charter Move Tempers flared Monday nigbt as Huntington Beach City Coun· cilman John Thomas accused Mayor Ruth Bailey of trying to take away the power of the city attorney's office. . Thomas said the mayor's mo- tion to form a committee of former mayors to consider re- visions in the city cbarter was a "thinly disguised move to change the structure of city gov- ernment." "It's a power play to make all power concentrated in the baDdl of lbe City Council by attempt· ing to make the city attorney ap- pointed instead of elected," tbe councilman said, readlnf from a prepared statement. Mayol' Balley denied that the move was aimed directly at City Attorney Gail Hutton. "I don't feel thia is a political situation,'' Mayor Bailey said, "and it needs to be taken out of that arena.'' "The committee is for the purpose of reviewing the charter to clear up inconsistencies. We've bad a lot of problems in the put over interpretations of the charter and it has bogged down the C<Mmcil," she said. "I feel this is a positive step to clear up the questions once and for all." But aoe of the major charter controvenies in the recent past baa been which office controls the city's le,al business -the city council or the city attorney. Last month the council asked attorneys for tbe League of California Cities to interpret this section of the city charter, but the league backed away after Mn. Hutton wrote that it wu a local political issue and aboulct not be CCIDSidered by the league. "Some council members sim- ply don't accept any de~ee of ob- jectivity by the city attorney," Mrs. Hutton said today. "~v want to control the opinion of the office." Mrs. Hutton also criticized the makeup of the mayor's commit· tee, which was approved 6 to 1, saying it should contain former elected city attorneys. "They are loading the com- mittee witb former city legislators who have the same attitude against the balance of power provided by an elected ci· ty attomey," Mn. Hutton said. "I have a responsibility to the citizens to provide objective, ethical opi.njons." One major bone of contention between the two elected offices is Mrs. Hutton's charter in· terpetation that City Cowrcil cannot hire outside attorneys to wort on city business without her coneent. from bis involvement with California Filter Corp. The company declared itself bankrupt last year in U.S. ~ trict Court. According to court records. California Filter Corp. executed a promissory note for a $50,000 loan in Aug. 1979. Though some (See AUcrtON. Page AZ> FV Clinic Offers Shots A low-cost rabies vaccination clinic is scheduled for 7 to 8:30 tonight at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center. Vaccinations, which are re- quired by state, county and city ordinances, are $3 per dog four months and older. Upon presentation or a rabies certificate, dog licensing will be available at the clinic. Southern California Veterinary Medical Association and Fountain Valley Woman's Club will conduct the clinic. Coast Weather Mostly sunny Wednes· day afternoc>n followin&. night md IDOl'lliq cloudi· ness. Lows toaiibt D at lbe beaches to 87 inland. i • Highs Wednesday 70 to 74 · ;,;. along tbe coast, 78 to 80 In· · l'l land. Job Agency'~ Key Man Gone? INSIDE TODAY It geU tougher ftJn'fl datl for a bank, Wee .W'lfDne elu, to mclM a profU on 1ervices. To eate the aqMett:e, many bmlb Ott tTv· ;ng to tTeae out the mcitei mad dime CICCOllftta while irl- ttUuting broader teroicea 1and higlwr' chargnJ for the f~ but more profitable ac· courdt •e1noifmeg. SH ~ 81 PAftlCK &BNNsDY .. ...., ....... Local a.a.bor'Wea eu't ftnd Robert L, QMEel11pm, former president of the--~ CCII'· poratJcm that onee ran Hunt- lqtGll Beech'• federal jobl pro-sram. CamdJIOam, Who bu lived in Oran,. CGuntJ lince the ee.rlY m'OI, bma't been located In re-- cent•= by offlciala. Be flestena tnatttule ol Careen, Inc.. a DOD·Dl'oftt c:orpondma that band.Jed lbmt· iaatoa a.acb'• p .1 million federally hmded Job procram. 1 Western wu dlamantled lat FebnlarX bf the Or•• County llaapower Commi11lon amid cbucea ol fund mtause and after a preliminary audit by the county. It was aUe1ed that Cun- ntn1bam bad obtained a St•.ooo loan ol federal money that w .. unautboriMld. AIDCl8I the varlOul chuiee ol ·mhuH of Comprebenalve Employm~nt Tralnlna Act <CCTA.> money, moat autbortUH HY Cannlnpam, wbo atped all Weltern lranNc• torney'1 CJffiee ls Studyiq the lions, ii the Irey fl.lure. ca.~ew. e __ , ... "~ to~ __..__ What Onmtapam bu to say wvwu u.1H1 1U1UW ._.., ii an,.e'• IW· · be ii," commmted H~ Beacb pollee detec:Uve Randy No one clalma to have 1eea or Tobunn. "We've pt our feelen beard from t.be man since be .._.. _._. 11 • ._._ tlped a Jetter Ol ,.tpatioa on out .,.. ~a 1 we n not --· Feb. ". 1 lnl for him_... tbe dlstrid at· • torneJ deeidel to ftle ~. ,, No fc:nnal char•" ever have Toburen led tbe police ln· been lod•ed a11la1l Cun-natt•ation into We1ten ac- nlqbam. llvitles lut Januar1 and B u t C 1u a n I n I b a m ' s dbco'ered 1 coafualn1 and al· wbereabout1 could quickly " letedl)' inappropriate system of become a important lllue. The financial trauaetlom in which Ora11•• County Dl1tr1ct At-<See .10111, Paa• Al> t A1. ....,_.....,.Cl a,_~a L.M...,. "' ......... ~ .. a...... CM CllMcl ,.. CUN Ml M °'.:C*-M . "' ............. ........ CH ...,_,... Cl ... 0 • C8AIOURG. ,..,nee <AP> Slnklna French fiahermen dffkled todaJ to lift tJMtr '*>tkade ot Ult northtm coaat port until micMlaht as a humanlt.ariu ,.ature toward nearly 1.000 Britltb lrawlen. many ol them ~ and chJldren. atnnded bYlM~ . NI and Brttilb Mrnn abo a.nnoaatect • 1peclal : Par•......_ ,.,. ol • Ill an ilffort to htlp vacatJoMn wltb iferry bt tlekcta Cf't homt' ; Tbe lt.rUtl' has spnad to other port.a ot1 t•rance'1 Atlantic ·Cout and ln lhe Medil~rraneu Vtbere Sete, a m-.)or harbor 'WMl ol Maneme wlt1' heavy tralra<' to north Africa. wu ci01ed :in th.e moml.na. P'lWrmen on lht' Island ot Corsica. who struck ln soUdar1tv wllh t.ba1r fellow wori~n \n Normandy Mond~ ended the\r ac ;Uon aft.tr a da,>•, ~rmllUni shipt; to aall to and from Nice and :::other malnland ports. .. ~tilw llft/I Pri.w .. Ce•• I J.23 Pne~•• . . :· • NEW YORK <AP> -Chase Manhattan Bank today raued .: Ii. prime l~ndi:ng rate by one-quarter percentage polnt to 11.25 •: percent ln respons.., to recent sharp Increases ln its cost of ;.funds. :. Thl' prevaiUng prime nallonwtde 15 11 percent. but Wall . Street analysts are pred1cllllg other banks wUI follow Chase's lead to produce the first general increase ln lbe prime rate since early April when it peaked at JO percent. W Kiiied 111 Pol•nfl TraUu Collision WARSAW. Poland (AP> -A freight train passed a red warning light and slammed bead-0n into a passenger tram out· side Torun in northern Poland today. killing 62 passengers and in iurina "many others." lbe official news agency PAP said. The PAP i>aid the engineer "probably was asleep" and :missed a red warning light. The crash occurred at a boul4 a. m. Stock ltlarlcft Slrttfl~ tor Gaba 1 •• NEW YORK CAP> -The stock mairkel struggled for a gain · today amid gloomy economic news and continued signs interest ' rates are turning higher. · After three hours of trading the Dow Jones Average of 30 in- ... ,du$trials was off 4.01 points to 944.62. AUCTION • • interest was paid back, the prin· cipal and additional interest re· maind~ American Stale Bank, which granted lbe loan. filed a com· plain t for damages against Footner because. as president of the firm, he had guaranteed in writing the payment of the money. The bank then sought his home to pay off the debt. Walter Schroetler. assistant vice president of the bank. said an court documents that he was the loan officer who handled the California Filter Cor-P~ transac· lion and that if Footner bad not signed a "continuing guaranty" ,ip which be cited his community ... dial. a.mane other tblnp, ~ _ lom .. not bave been made. ·~The comp1ny. formed in ·August. 1978. was to manufac· t1,1re and distribute air filters ;lnd oil fl.lt.ers. Foot.ner claims in the court records that he was president of .California Filter Corp. for only a .(ew days and that he was never a stockholder al any time. He said he received no compensation as pl"esident and did not benefit from 'flleloan. · · · Shroetter described Foot.ner t1I a bus ineuman who •ac- quires and invtsta in companies which have been in serious Hnancial dlflicullies, r e - capilalhea them, and then pro- ·Peeda to make them profitable." . : Footner o n ce listed his personal useta as toppini $2 l'IJUUon but, accordine to court r:~cords, h1s annual income of $131,000 has shrunk to bia plan· .oing commissioner s alary or $9,600. . ';rhough Footner declined com- .inent Monday. Supervisor Wieder said in a me·mo l o County Counsel Adrian Kuyper that she wanted to know of any legal problems that could arise from the allecaUona in a Los Angeles Times article. ··Based on the allegations COO· tained in tb1s article. would you ~eaH advise as to any lelal ,amiflcations of the acUvilies teportec:t. as they m ight reflect bn this comml11ioner's con- tinued service to the county.•· tbe uked Kuyper. "'" DAILY PILOT I :=.~..:T.. ~...:._ ,..h ... ,;.:::.,. ~" ~ ~ 9'•-c-c ~ ~· s...r ... .. ,,_ -----·· ,..,....,, ,., .... : IW c;.,.lo -Ht-I lkKll, Hunt.._ • 8t•c.ft1Fe\U\t •ln Y•U•y. Hv1ne. l •tvn• • llff<lll-11 , ... , 4 •119• ···~· "'"-" • pullll __ ,,Myt_-.U·~-- 1 -•1'11•"1 ...... ,, .. -....... , "-'·,. 0. ' ... 15'0. l:A ........ (.otllof"'• .,.i. .. -"\ ..... ..... ---·- Rapes Linked ToSwpect lnHBAttack By PIOL SNEIDERMAN Of ... DMly Hee,._.. A Westminster man arrested by Huntington Beach police last week att~r he allegedly attempt· ed to kidnap a woman al Hunt· ington Center has been linked to two local rapes during the past nine months. Kirk Rex Cluff. 27. was ar· raigned Monday on 10 criminal counts in the three incidents, in· eluding kidnapping, rape, rob- bery and burglary. Huntington Beach police Sgt. L ui~ Ocboa said physical evjclace, includiu ftqerprtnq, and a almilar metllod ot·abduc· tlon linked Cluff to all three inci· dent&. In the first attack. a woman returned lO her van at 4: 15 p.m. on Dec. 4. 1979 after shopping at Huntington Center. Police said Cluff was waiting inside the van and threatened the woman with a ~nife when she got in. The suspect allegedly put a rope around her neck. forced her to drive lO a commercial area on Lorge Circle, tied her up, raped her and stole $20 from her before leaving. The woman told police her as· sailant wore a stocking over his face ln this incident. Cluff also has been linked to a similar shopping center abduc· lion that occurred at 7 p.m .. July 23 in the parking lot al Springdale Street and Edinger Avenue. That time, the suspect was wailing in the woman's pick-up truck when she returned and forced htr to drive to Los Palos Drive and Warner Avenue, where be raped her and stole her vehicle. In the most recent incident. again al Huntington Center. a man ldeollfled as Cluff broke in- to a parked van at 6:40 p.m., Aug. 13 and surprt.sed a 25-year· old woman returning to the vehl· cle. Th ls woman, however. refused to drive in the direction the sus- pect demanded. The two fought for control or the wheel until the woman slammed on lbe brakes and leaned on the born, causing the suspect to flee the van. After a description of the sus· peel was broadcast, Cluff was a rrest ed at the corner o f Gothar d Street and Edinger Avenue . APWl~O Sal11ti ng \lets H.e puhlican pres ident 1al candidate Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy wa ve lo a Chicago c rowd following Reagan's address to the n ational convention of Ve te rans of Foreign Wa rs . NeW" Parks Director Backing Beach Plan Newly appointed state Parks and Reereation Department Director Pete Dangermond Jr. has taken a more optlmlslic stance than his predecessor on negotiations to transfer eight miles of state beach to the con· trol of the city of Huntington Beach. Dangennond, who took over the department June 23, said the state may partially subsidize the city for operating the Bolsa Chica a nd Huntington State beaches. His predecessor. Russell Cahill. however , was adamantly opposed to the subsidy concept, contending it would set a bad precedent for the department. Cahill has since quit the depart· ment and moved to Alaska. The cit y 's Commu nity Services Director. Vince Moorhouse. bu sent a takeover propoeaf to ~cramento, 'which states a partial subsidy must be made for the city .to lake over the stretch of state beach. Moorhouse contends that a city takeover would allow better law enforceme nt and litte r cleanup on the state beaches. City officials recently have complained about an alarming increase in crime and violence on the state sands. which since 1975 have been patrolled by state park rangers rather than city police. Moorehouse said that even- tually the state beaches can be made to pay for themselves by concessions revenue. increased Fro• Pag~ A I SEX •.. perceived there was force being used on Leooski to have him engage in sexual acts with her or Heater. She testified that the young drifter evenfoally asked her to go away with him and marry him. Questioned by prosecutor Dave Himelson, the girl said she . was a frequent visitor to Heater's home before moving in last May. She said she bad known Heater for a year. meeting him through a mutual friend. .Miss Rainey said she doesn't pay Heat.er any room or board a nd that the defendant sometimes gives her presents such aa marijuana. She said that a lthough Heater sometimes bas' fits of temper. he has never hurl her . Final arguments in the sex perversion case were expected to g.et Wider way today with the jury b~ginning de liberations eitber tOd.ay or Wednesday. parking fees and development of a recreational vehicle 'camp· ground. The one·mile long city beach. south of the municipal pier. currently pays for itself by these methods. he said. A meeting with city officials and Assemblyman Dennis Mangers will be scheduled next month. Dangermond said. The initial takeover talks began last December at the request of the former stale director Cahill . The state annually loses large sums of money maintaining the two beaches. "I don't care which depart· m e nl runs th e beaches ... Dangermond said today from Sacramento. "The main thing is lo provide the best service for the public. If that means a city takeover, maybe that's the way to go." Dangermond said an initial state subsidy to the city Is a possibility, suggesting such pay ments be phased out as the r ity's proposal takes effect and begins generating revenue It is estimated that about four milhon people visit the two state beaches annually. Bois a Chica State Beach runs from Warner A venue lO the municipal pier. while the Huntington State Beach is lbe strand south of the city beach lo the Santa Ana River. Moorhouse estimates first year cost to the city would amount to $3.8 million if city ad· ministrative costs are included. Kevenue fr om va ri ous sources, he said. are estimated at $2.6 million. Moorhouse said a state sub- sidy would sti II cost the state less than if it continued to operate the two state beaches. <e . CON CO Rn QUARTZ r • Fl' A an•ents Council Gets Relltal Plan Fountain Valley's large apart· ment complex owners could seU four or more unita plecemeal lo s maU investors under the t.enm 'Of a new ordinance lbat comes before the City Council tonight. Under lhi.s ordinance. owners would be required to obtain ap- proval from lbe Planning Com· mission before any subdivision lakes place. The enabling ordinance. already approved by the Plan· ning Commission, bas been pro- posed as a means for small in- vestors to enter the local market as owners of rental woperty . Alt.bough blocks of apartments within the same complex might be owned by different people. a rentral management organ.iza· tion would be required ror main· tenanceorthecommon area. Fountain Valley has a com· paratively s mall number of rental units ((ewer than 3.000 apartments). and most of lbese are located in eight large com· plexes. according to city planner Don Contraman. A letter provided to the council outlines one businessman's plan to purchase the Park Pacific apartment complex. subdivide the property into 117 fourplexes and two duplexes, and then sell these blocks to individual in· vestors. lndivid·ual units would be main· ta ined as rental properly. the let- ter s aid Contraman explained that as individual blocks of apartments are sold. their property value would be reassessed probably upward under the terms of Proposition 13. He also indicated that in- dividual apartment rents pro- bably would rise as a result of a subdivision move. The city planner added. however. that passage of the enabling ordinance does not necessarily mean the Planning Co!Dmission or the Caty Council actually will permit such sub- divisions. He said the proposed ordinance only sets up guidelines for such proposals and gives the Planning Com missio n the po wer to AIRPORT • • residents who have been fighting his efforts to keep lhe airport, one of only three private airports in the county that allow space for small planes to board "We've kept the airport going lhrou~h ~ood and bad times.'' ::.a id Nerio. whose family has owned the landing site since 1952. ·'But the area has become so saturated with development that. as some people say. it's a little dangerous to be flying in and out of there." The crowd of some 200 people rocke d the chambers with applause. After the decision Nerio ad- mitted it was a different situa· tion for him to be applauded by c itizens who live near the airport. "It felt good," tie said, "but I've been booed some, too." Development of the park is estimated to cost $6 million and specific plans must go before the city's board of zoning adjust- ments for approval. evaluate subdivision plans and to ' decide whether to grant the re· quired permit. The City Council meet& today at 7 p.m. in City Hall, one hour earlierlban usual. The additional Ume will consist of a study session regarding lbe city's Agency for Community Development budget for 1980-81. Youth Eruls <Ar Chase lnHBJail An 1S.year-0ld man who al· legedly led police on a high speed chase through Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa and Foun· lain VaUey was in Huntington Beach Jail today facing charges that he assaulted a police officer with a vehirle The suspect. Dan L. Hawes of Huntington Beach. also is being held on suspicion or burglary and auto theft. police said Huntington Beach Police Lt Merle Schneblin said the chase began at about 9:30 p .m. last Saturday. when Hawes sped off after an officer tried to halt him for a traffic violation near the· comer of Beach Boulevard and Yorktown Avenue Eventua lly. two Huntington Beach police motorcycles and two patrol cars joined m thC' pursuit as it sp~d into Costa Mes a . Schneblin said c hase s peeds reached 100 mph as the s uspect fled through a Costa Mesa residential tract. 1 Costa Mesa police joined in the pursuit and attempted to block Hawes' vehicle as it sped north on Harbor Boulevard. In the course of the pursuit. Hawes rammed a Costa Mesa - patrol car and one Huntington Re ach car three times Schneblin said. As the suspect's auto crossed the center dJvider. it lost a l.lrc. The driver attempted to con· tmue riding on the rim alone, 1>0lice said, but the car finally came to a hall at the Euclid on- ramp to the San Diego Freeway an Fountain Valley. Schneblin said police de- termined that the Cadillac Hawes was driving had been stolen from a Huntington Beach home Aug. 6 while its owners were away on vacation. lie said the local home also had been burglarized at the time the car was stolen. resulting in the loss of fo ur necklaces. two strings of pearls and two gold bracelets. Police are probing Hawes' possible involvement in this break-in. . Back Review Panel LOS ANGELES (AP) -A citizen's group says the district attorney's handling of the Cornelius Tatum shooting by three oCficers is further proof of the need for ao independent police review board. Jurors ac· quitted two of the officers on felony a ssault cha rges last week. but deadlocked on the third. -·-·°'""' VIO,.~nl-0.-.. ~ ,,.. •• r~AJ ,._,._ ...... ~ .... --~-·119 Eo11or c-11 ..... --......tEofitot -==£ .... -~·11 .. .-0Moe I .... ~ ........... _...,._ .. , PO 90¥1'0 "'4 omc.. ~ IN(ll *I ... C..•l J!!""*•Y --••t1••··-"' JOBS FIGURE GONE • • • ap•aJ'tlltbt Cmmi.nlbam both re- quested and awroved of federal hm6 for Westera1 •aapower auditors, who befan tbe audit In January, are still kmlai bao tbe practice ol ba•Jn1 a Santa Ana-baaed prlva~ Job Pl'Oll'•m operator ad•._ mcmey to W•tem to pa1lta"'111. Tbe Gpll'llt.Of' Oraq• County ComanmttJ Development Youth ~~~i waa later reimbursed uuvqa crl'A ,_.., Accordlq to Tobva, Cun· ninl~am appean to be tbe ma. Jor 1nanatol'Y on both the request for the funda and the request to the city to pay back the Youth Corps with CETA funds. A city employee u director or the Huntlnaton Beach CETA proaram from 1174 until 1171. Cunnlncham quit his cJty job lD October ol that year and became prealdent ot Western wblch took over the city's Job procram reaponalbillties. Cunni~am 1ot a aalary ln- CNue from the umual SZl,'100 be m.cle u a dty tlQP\o"9 to 141,500 yearly u president ol Weatem. (/31dl </Ua/J14 <J/1wf;p4/ 35 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 644·2 .. 9 .. ~- lrribe ~our llomt•Co•·n Dail~· Nt~•·~pap~r VOL. 73, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, l8 PAGES ORANG COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Be's Got You Covered U you see this man pointing this at you. you'd better gjve up and drop your speed. Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of his de· partment's hand-held radar units. which look a bit other worldly. Traffic officers say although the units have been in use for ~nree years, with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun pointed their way. Relax. It'll only hurt in the wallet ColuDlilist Clailll8 Irvine Sclwol Umcli Prices Will Go Up He 'Exposed' Plot CHICAGO (AP) -Syndicated eolumnia Jact Anderson says be reached the "an1uisbing" de· cision to disclose the details of an alleced U.S. plan to invade Iran because be is convinced the mission would fail. "Because or the political nature ol this plan, because it almost certainly would not suc· ceed , I decided to expose it," be said in a speech Monday night. Anderson has rel)')rted that President Carter is planning a military operation aimed at freeing the U.S. hostages in mid· October, timed for maximum advantage of his re-election campaign against Ronald Reagan and Johri B. Anderson. The White House and Defense Secretary Harold Brown have natty denied the allegation. and the White House labeled the story "grotesq\le" and "ir· respon sible .'' Several newspapers that normally carry Anderson's column, including tbe Washington Post. the New Yort Daily News and the Allan· ta Constitution, did not run the column Monday. In his s peech, Anderson claimed Carter ordered last April's rescue attempt of the American hostages in Tehran because his ratings had slipped in the public-opinion polls. That effort was aborted because or bellcopter failure. and eight soldiers died in an aircraft col· li1lon during the withdrawal from tbe Iranian desert. Orange Coast \\'eatbe r The columnist noted that Carter's standing in the polls has dropped again and said the president has ordered plans be prepared for the ''limited in· vasion" because "it just comes naturally to him to react politically.·· However. Anderson said un· identified experts believe the plan -which he did not describe in detail during his speech -would fail. He said It was only because these experts believe the plan is flawed and that Carter's motivation is political that he and his starr were able to learn details of the alleged mission. "We would have a very dif· ficult time carrying this (mis· sion ) out," and for that reason. he said. he decided to publish his findings . "I can assure you It was an anguishing decision," Anderson added. "I don't think news men s hould pry into military secr e t s except in special circumstances." Anderson said that while Carter has not actually "or- dered" the invasion. "he has started preparations for a limit- ed invasion of Iran" and that one "'control point" in the opera- tion already has passed. Parents of Irvine ..Unified School District students will be forced to fork over more lunch money this year. That's because the school trustee5 decided Monday to in· crease hmcb prices for elemen- tary students from 55 to 75 cents, for junior high school students from 60 to 80 cents and for high school students from 70 to 90 cents. The price or one-half pint or milk increases from a dime to 15 cents The price hikes are necessary, s aid food services d irector Susan Decious, because of sub· stantial increase in food costs during the 1979-80 school year. She said the food services de· partment ended last year with its first net loss -$75,000 - which was covered by money left over from net profits in pre· vious years. More students than ever are buying their lunches at school, according to a staff report given to the school trustees. Last school year 48.3 percent of elementary school children bought their lunches at school compared to 45.3 percent in 1978·79 and 44.6 percent in the 1977-78 school year . Jailed Mob Kings Released for Sex? also is focusing on allegations, that some female correction of· ficers engaged in "paid sex" with organized crime figures, th e News reported . Silence Is Sodden 'Quiet' Jet Too Heavy for OC It would take a $2 million grooming job of the John Wayne Airport runway to regularly ac- commodate the new "quiet" ~et that one airline is hoping to in- troduce early next year. Airport manager Raul Regalado said there are other ways around the problem, but he stressed that the bottbm line is that the new DC-9 super 80 ex- ceeds the weight the runway was built to withstand. He said the runway is de- signed to serve jets up to 95,000 pounds. The super 80. with ianks filled. weighs in at 140,000 pounds. Air California officials, who hope to begin using the super 80 out of John Wayne by February, said they'll trim the weight down to 124.000 pounds by carry· ing less fuel. Regalado said it will be up to the Board of Supervisors and the Federal Aviation Administration to make a decision on the super 80s . "If· the board decides to ac- commodate the super 80, we can do it but over the long period there will be some conse- quences." he said . F6r one, he said, the 20,year life or the runway would be s hortened. The runway is roughly lOyearsold. The other alternative, he said, would be to reduce the number of annual departures {fom John Wayne . This would accom· modate the new jet by trimming down the amount of weight that touches down on the runway during the course of a year. ·'There are trade-offs any way you approach it and, certainly, one of them is holding oH on the Super 80 until the runway is strengthened,·' said Regalado. He said the $2 million figure is what airport consultants VTN Consolidated or Irvine estimate it would cost to bolster the runway and its b1xiway. VTN is under county contract to provide an airport master pl an and noise a nd land use study. The final report won't be mad e publi c until mid· September. The super 80, billed as the quietest and most fuel-efficient commercial jet yet built, has been ordered by 12 different airlines including Air California. During a landing and takeoff demonstration at John Wayne Airport last week. sound read- ings indicated the super 80 generates an average or 7.5 rlecibels less than the Boeing 737. GW Boosts Mortgages To 13.5o/o BEVERLY HILLS (AP> Citing a continued slowdown in savings, combined with strong loan demand, Great Western Savings & Loan Association boosted its prime mortgage rate today 0.5 percent to 13.5 percent. The nation's second largest thrift, with $9.6 billion in assets and a unit or Great Western Financial Corp .. said the new rate is the lowest on owner· occupied, single-family home loans Great Western is the first thrift to post a 13.5 percent rate since mortgage interest rates began climbing again in June. following a substantial drop from their peak of about 17.5 percent last March. 1 D•1ty Pilot Sutt Pnoto JOHN PETERSON PUTS WEATHER STRIPPING ON GL0BE. People Are Supposed to Meditate Inside of It Think Tank ' Meditatio1i Globe at UCI By RICHARD GREEN 01 llw Dally l"li.t Slot" In search or a heightened meditative state. a UC Irvine fine arts graduate student 1s building an 18-foot high wooden globe on campus near the Mesa Court Residence Hall John Peterson, 27, can be seen most afternoons adding weather stripping to the almost-completed project He also plans to build a couple of short chambers leading into the globe. "TIUS KJND OF SHAPE ALLOWS a person to ex· perience positive vibrations wh1le inside," he said. ·1 plan to do a number of tests involving those vibrations once it's comp~. I also want to put a s tereo in it." The UCI administration has given Peterson permission lo keep the globe on campus ror one year "I don't know what J'll do with it after that." he said "I'm just not sure " PETERSON SAID HE WAS RELUCTANT to talk too much about the art project. since it's not yet completed "I don 't want to boast about it or make all kinds of predictions,'' he said. "I just think it's a good project and will be useful for me ." He said he has been building it with his own money but hopes to get some university fundiog to improve the insid£ of the globe. Bank Van Robbed KILLINGLY, Conn. <AP> - Three a rmed men robbed a Purolator Security Inc. armored truck today and escaped with $450 ,000 worth of gold and $36.400 in cash. state police said No shots were fired tn the rob· bery. The three hooded bandits, two armed with shotguns and one armed with a handgun. held up the truck while it was pulled to the side of the road so one or the Purolator guards could urinate, state Poli(e said. The heist occurred about 11 :30 a.m. The gold was in the form or gold salt, which is used in medicine, photography and to decorate glass and porcelain, and the cash was mostly in coins, state police spokesman Adam BerJuti said. No one was injured in the rob· bery, which occurred just four davs after St 85 million in cash was s tolen from a Brink's armored van in San Francisco A Brink's guard. George Manuel Bosque. is being sought on federal charges in that theft one or the largest cash thefts in U.S. history. c Related photo. A5l . In April. 1979. three Purolator security guards w~re killed in a robbery of Sl.8 m1lhon in cash and valuables at an armored car depot Two men and two women a re awaiting trial in the case. Most of the loot was recovered Pact Rejected LOS ANGELES CAP> Citv Department or Water and Powe·r workers have voted overwhelm· ingly to reject a 9 percent city wage hike offer and authorize a strike which could c ripple the city 's power supply Mostly sunny Wednes- day . a fternoon followin1 Dl1bt and morning cloudi· aees. Unn tonight 83 at tbe beaches to 67 inland. fflital Wednesday 70 to 74 alont the cout, 76 to 80 in- land. NEW YORK <AP) -Jailed organized crime kingpins have been operating a "pay for play" operation that allows them to leave Attica and Green Haven state prisons for sexual trYsts, according to today's editions of the Daily News. After making a few "well· placed payoffs,'· top crime figures jailed for offenses rang. ing from narcotics to murder have buih up t.be power to have a prison lifestyle that allows them to walk out and get aex on demand whenever they please, a News investigation revealed. Job Agency's Key Man Gone? INSIDE TODAY II gee. touglwr wtl'JI do11 for o· bank. like everyont tiff. to rnoM o pro/it on ,,,U.Cft. To talt tht .....-. manr banks ore fry· .., to ,,.,.., oed the nickel .-cfhnt OCCOWll• wlrile ift. ltil•lhtt broader teroic•• c• ,,,,,.,, charge1J for the = bid more profUabW OC• • mnmnmo. ~, Po0e '· •••• ..... ....,. ., ••• •u .. ,..........,, .. M ...._ Ata.11 ... ,, ..... p..-•• Al ............ M =="' .... ~~ °'·......,._"' ......... "'' t......._ All .,....... Alt-fl .,._ M .._,.._ M The copyright story quoted both underworld aources and law efJforcement officials in- vestigating corruption in the state PrilOn system. T•o Green Haven prison guards already have pleaded 1ullty to cbariea 1temmln1 from a "pay for play" investiga- tion conducted by a Dutcheta County IJ'and jury and the state lnv•U1ation CoalmlHk>n. The Daily Newt said law en· forcemeat offidall were eapect· eel to file new charsea today a1alnst another correctJoa of. ncer and a prison lieutenant. At least a dOlen eottecU90 otnclal1 are tar1eu ol the inquiry, ac· cordiq to the News. The official investieatlon j By PATRICK K ENNEDY Of 1119 Deity l'li.t Staff Local authorities can't find Robert L. Cunningham, former president of the now-defunct cor· poration that once ran Hunt- in1ton Beach's federal jobs pro- gram . Cunningham, who baa lived in Orance County stnce the early 1970., hasn't been located in re- cent attempts by officials. He headed Western l nsUtute or Careers, Inc., a aon-proflt corporali~ that handled Qunt· lneton Beach's $2 .6 million federally funded job pro1ram . Western wu cUsmantled lut February by the Oran1e County Manpower Commi11lon amid· char1es ol fund mlsuae and after a preUmloary audit by t~e county. It •H alleged that Cun· nlngham bad obt,ined a •SUl.000 ' loan of federal money that was unauthorized. Among the various charg~ of misuse of Comprehensive Employment Trainin1 Act <CETA> money, most authorities say Cunningham, who signed all Westero transac- tions. is the key fieure . What Cunningham has to aay is anyone's guesa. No one clahna )'o have seen or heard from the man since be signed a letter of reslpallon on Feb. 4 . No formal charges ever have been lodged a1aan1t Cun · nln1h1m. But C unnln1ham 's whtreabouta could quickly become an lmportant laaue. Tbe Onnge County District Al· torney's office is studylnt the cue . ' "We would Like to know where he is," commented Huntington Beach police detective Randy Toburen. "We've got our feelers out but olficially we're not look· ine for him unless the district at· torney decides to file charges." Toburen led the police in· vestigation into Western ac· tlvllies last January a nd discovered a confusing and al· le1edly inappropriate system of financial tnnaacllons in which apparenUy Cunnin1ham both re- quested and approved of federal funds for Western. Manpower auditors, who be1an the audit in January, are still looking into the practice ot having a Santa Ana .based private job program operator advance money to Western to pay its bills. The operator, Orange County ; - Community Development Youth Corps, was later r eimbursed through CETA funds. According · to Toburen, Cun· ningham appears to be the ma- jor signatory on both the request for the funds and the request to the city to pay back the Youth Corps with CETA funds. A city employee as director of the Huntington Beach CETA program from 1974 until 1979, Cunningham quit his city job in October of that year and became president of Western, which took over the city's job program respooslbillUes. Cunningham got a salary in- crease from the annual $29,700 he made aa a city employee to $43.500 yearly as· president or Western ' ' ... ,..... ..... ~ .................. lftl ................ PUC Allows 'Charge For Extra 411 Use . AN FRANCISCO tAP> Parifi t Telephone t'V1lomu1 wbo mah mor. than 20 loc:al dJr«lory aaal1tanct call• ptr month wlll bf char1ed ror the e:.tn calla, the 1tate Public UllU· ty CommiNion Nied today Ttl~ u.ers wUI be aUoYred 20 fru calla within th .. lr home ar.a, but w l1 hav• to pay 15 c~nla for uch extra call CurrenUy, euatomen do not pay tor d lr«tory a11iltanctt calla. Sylvta Sle11el, a me mber ol T URN Toward UUlll)' Ralt.1 NormahuUon said the PUC's dt t'1 Ion wH "another hidden way or increas1n1 rtvenut' " T•r~••• l'I.-. "1118 2 TARZANA tAP> -An elderly couple died 1n a fire today In their lhird·fioor condonun1um Los Ana If' city fir• spokn man Ted Aquaro said the mMJor blue broke out lUSt before f a m at the Encino Spa Adult Con domlnums and was broqht under control about 25 minutes later by t2 nre companies. The dead were identified as Jack and Cecilia Shoen, both 77 Cause or the rire was under investieaUon, Aquaro said. Olmrf! llP" Prf.w •••e •• I 1.25 Per~ne• NEW YORK <AP> -Chase Manhattan Bank today raised its prime lending rate by one.quarter percentage point to 11.25 percent in response to recent sharp increases in its cost of runds . The prevailing prim• nationwide is 11 percent, but Wall Street analysts are predicting other banks will follow Chase's lead to produce the firs t general increase in the prime r ate since early April when 1t peaked at 20 percent. 62 Killed In Poland Train Collbion WARSAW, Poland <AP> -A freight train passed _a red warning light and slammed head-0n into ~ passenger tram out· side Torun in northern Poland today, kilhng 62 pusengers and iniurin~ "many others." the official news agency PAP sai~; The PAP said the engineer "probably was asleep and :missedaredwarning light. Thecrashoccurredalabout4a.m . Stock Mark4!t Struggla for Gain NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market struggled for a gain today amid gloomy economic news and continued signs interest rates a re turning higher. After five hours of traCiing the Dow J ones Average or 30 in· du~•rials was off 2.98 points to 945.65. Irvine to Create Program for Gifted A special all-day class for 90 to 15-0 talented a nd gifted youngsters should be established Sept. 3 in the Irvine Unified School District even if Superin· tendent Stan Corey doesn't like tbe idea, the school trustees de· cided Monday. Trustees Frank Hurd. Fred J Gahm and Gordon GetcheJ 11up- I ::·ported the cJua and Truatee I ~beth Sicoli oppoeed it. , •1 bave 'IDOl'e than a dou:n let· ten from parents who say their k~~s ~ave not been served by the dutr1ct," Getche l s aid this morning~ "There's no doubt that it will cost money to run the fa~ility but we need to serve the talented and gifted kids." Corey said today that the special class for elementary scb~I children could end up c0stmg up t-0 $150,000 in teacher salaries and other expenses. "l wish we would have had more time on this thing ·' he said. "I recommended that the special clus begin next school year." lo s maJI groups of students in each class that the teacher iden- tifies as talented and gifted . Improvements in the school district 's education of talented a nd g ifted s tud e nts we r e prompted by st ate legislation calling for a broadening of the Mentally Gifted Minor program. &uthqualoo Hits Ecuador GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP> -"It was like a pile driver at first and then the buildings began to sway." Egbert T . Scott, a bookstore owner, was describing the earth· quake thatshqok this Ecuadorean Pacific port Monday, sending people fleeing into the streets in panic and causing widespread damage . There was no official casualty toll. but radio reports said at least eight people we re killed and dozens injured. .... Billy Warned On ·Libya WAStnNOTON !AP> Billy Carter'• partner told Senate In· v_,1t11atort that Billy obtained a '220.000 loan and the two sou1ht an oil duJ with Libya after be· ln1 warned the Libyan• might ht> trytq lo use them "to in· nuence lJ S poU cy " The partner, Henry "Randy" <.:uleman, testtfied he and Billy dl1re1arded the State Depart· me nt wam!na because they con· wldered their relations with the Libyans as '"nothina POlitical. "It was JWlt good old Southern hospitality," Coleman told a special Senate judiciary sub· committee. Philip W Tone. the subcom· mittee's special counsel. dis· closed that the State Depart· ment warned the two in a letter Dec. 12, Un8. that Libyan or- ricials were "establishing coo· tacts outside Wu hingtoo. "Th.e Libyans hope to use such contacts to influence U.S. policy toward their country and the Arab world." the letter said. The letter , written by a State Department Libya desk officer, said that Ahmed S bahati, head or the Libyan Foreign Liaison Bureau and the man Billy Carter was dealing with, was one or the Libyan officials mak· ing such contacts. But Coleman s aid he and Carter continued the ir Libya dealings and arranged the loan for Billy and tried to set up the oil deal through Shahili a nd other Li· by an officials. Coleman said he picked up the $220,000 in <.'hecks from the Lib· yan embassy in Was hington for the loan to the preside nt's brol'her. . . He said the $220,000 1s part of a $500.000 loan and said the rest is still comfog to Carte r later so rar as he knows. The partner said a mem ber or the widely-political Libyan del- eg ation tha t Billy hosted in Georgia in J anuary 1978 made the first offer of a business deal with Carter . Coleman said the mc•m ber of the delegation told Carter the Libyans realized he had financial problems and asked "if we had any commodities to sel I '· Later, Colem an said , he and Bi lly settled on a commodity. "And what was that?" Tone asked. "Oil," Ca rter replied. Coleman said the Charter Oil Co. did make an agreement to pay Carter up to 55 cents for every barrel or Libyan oil he could supply, but Libya has not agreed to supply the oil. Meanwhile, the head of the Senate investigat ion of Billy Carter·s ti e~ with Libya says that so f ar , h e ~ccs n o born bshe l ls a nd no ··m ajor brea ch of public trust" by Presi· dent Carter or his advisers . But Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd .. s aid Monday his investigating committee will probably find ca ses "where Judgment can be questioned." He s aid evidence will be followed wherever it leads. "We will make a j14dgment whether there is a major mis· deed or a minor myste ry," Bayh told reporters 'l'here are no entrance require· ments for students who want to participate in the special talent· ed and lifted class the location of whic h hasn't been set. However. in order to stJy in the class the student must evidence p~rformance two to thrff grade levels ahead of his own. Transsexual Sailor i· ! I I I ' School district administrator Bruce Givner said this aspect of the class mi1ht provf' troublesome for 11\udents. "There ia the possibility that parents will pull their kid out of his elementary school t o varticipate in the special class and then they'd have to have him change schools again if he didn't make it in the special class." he said. In addition to the special claaa, the school district will or- rer special education in the rall ORA NOE COAST DAILY PILOT ff\# 01"'1' (H~I 0.11y tt1fOI •+tr. •f\•t" •\ (0""0'""° ,,_ Ht •l Pftt\ '' lkolbfl\fWf Ch VW Ot•IWJ• (Ot\I P'*1\f\1ng (tmHn¥ S#H, ... , edlllOf\\ .,. OWIHf\N4 MonO•w. '"'OVQh "'•d•w fOf' (Otte Mlt\• Nt•OO•t h«f'I H~ti"'t·on 8 t•<" l"ownt••n \l•H•• lr•1nt L•4v"'• 8t•<fl Sowth (N\I A '°'"'Off tf'tt6,,.I f"Cltt.ott '" CM'Oh\flllitO s.fvtN'#' •"Cl SuNl•w\ ~ Ol1"'<.1N I O\IOh\f'h"t .,.,., I\ •• uo W-\1 8•• 'S4,..,, ,. 0 l o• tW (9'1• ~,. (•ht0tnt• th)t. 11-rfN-P'f'UOtf\I 41\d •vbh""'°t JKl II "'"" V*<t l",.,._-,.1 •M C.,,,.al M.INO"" n.,.,,, • ...., ... (d• ... .,._ ... ._ _..ftO'lift'I l •t .. c-lo•M.i.-. """IMll IM-J1141 fdll .. 0 I M11•~-• ......,. ,,_\MCI• ....... ........ Sues in Discharge LOS ANGELES (AP> -A former Navy chief petty orficer who s ays the militar y "maliciously tried to destroy me" is suing the federal govern· ment for bootinl her out of the military following her male-to· female sex chan1e s urgery. Joanna Michelle Cl ark, formerly Michael F. Clark, riled the complaint Monday in the U .S . Court o r Claims in Washington D.C. Ms. Clark,• 42, of San Juan Capistrano, alleges In her lawsuit that her dismissal from the Navy and later the Army re· serves violated her ri1hts to privacy, a fair bearin1 and equal protection under the Jaw. "They created a living hell for me, and now they're doin1 the same for the Norton Sound Eight," she told a news con- ference here Monday. Eitht women sailors were ac- cused ol bomoeexual misconduct aboard the U~ Norton Sound. So far two have been acquJtt.ed and one found 1uilty. <Story Pase A3.) Neither Army nor Navy puDUC af(aln officen in Waahintton were aware ol the auil and said lbe complaint would have t.o be reviewed before a atatement could be made. The American Civil Libert.lea Union here flled UM complaint on behalf of Ma. Clark who noMd "not oae cent" of military hmda went toward ber Medl.c.l·paid 1ur1ery or follow.up tnatmtnt. 111. Clark. wbo waa di•· ca.ar14"l from tb• Nn1 ud later Md her enliMDMDt vo6dld bf tM U.S. ArmJ .... ,._,II ---------- seeking an unspecified amount of back wages and retirement benefits. She had served 17 years of ac· live and reserve duty with the Na vy when she had pre-surgery sc r e ening a t the Stanford University Medic al Center Gender Identity Clinic in 1974, Ms. Clark said. She then received an honora· ble discharge when she had the operation in June 1975 in Oklahoma City and Ms . Clark said she later learned her rec· ords ahd been changed, classi· fy ing her as a ho mos exual "when they knew fully well I was not." Two months later, she was ap- proached by an Army recruiter and enlisted in the reserve, Ms. Clark said, adding that her pre- vious dischar1e. her resume and full dlaclosure of her sex re· assignment were forwarded t.o Army officials. She also passed a pre-enlistment physical, she said . ffarve&t Fe8tival Space A vailahle Booth space ror food, sames, arta and craft.a and services la available at the sixth annual Irvine Harvest 'Featlfal in Herltqe Park Oct. 3-5. Tboee lntereat.ed ln malllnc booth re1ervatlon1 or buyba• Ucketa for the Oct. 3 Harvell Moon Ball •t the Re1l•trr Hotel alloald call 111·315.S. I Muat Sell Dome Debts Pinch. oc Planner .... ....,_ In ffo•pitul Actor James Stewart, 72, is being treated in the cor- onary care unit of St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, but a spokesman S4"YS he has not suffered a heart attack a nd there is no cause for alarm. By DAVID KUTZMANN OI • DMIY .. .._ H.t" The hatr-million-dollar Hunt· ington Beach home of Orange County Planning Commission chairman Richard J . Footner will go on the auction block Sept. 22 to pay oH business loans Footner is alleged to have ob· tained by exploiting his public position. Footner said Monday he would make no comm e nt on the published reports which indicat· e d h e used his p osition as leverage with lenders to help secure business loans totaling about $800,000. Supervisor Harriett Wi eder, who appointed Footner to the planning body, asked the county counsel's office Monday to in· vestigale the charges . Court records indicate the businessman-pla nning com- Anderson Courting Democrat· Support BOSTON (AP) Seeking lo pick up the support of discon · tented Democrats and worried that he will be excluded from the first presidential debates this fall, John 8 . Anderson abruptly canceled part of his campaign schedule today and was to re· turn to Washington. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and s e r ved a s Wi scons in s t at e coordinator for the senator's un· s uccessful campaign for the De m oc r atic pres ide nti a l nom ination. In addition, campaign sources said Ander son a nd Mitchell Rogovin, the campaign lawyer, a nd st r ategist David Garth would seek new ways to assure Anderson 's admission to the first televised debate Sept. 18 in Baltimore His participation is considered critical by senior campaign aides The independent presidential candidate sc'1,eduled meetings U) Wasbingtorf with two prominent congressional De mocrats , Les Aspin or Wi scons in a nd Shirley Chis holm of New York. It was not clear if either would announce their support-for An derson's sagging independent er fort to ch a ll en ge P r es ident Ca rter and Ronald Reagan_ The League of Women Voters, which 1s sponsoring the debate. has srud Anderson must have a 15 percent average among the major public opinion polls to be invited r Aspin was. a firm supporter of What Holdup? Depositor Not a Robber James Arnold Kniep told Newport Beach police Mon· day afternoon that if he was a bank robber. someone forgot to te ll him about 1t. THE 26· YEAR-OLD Garden Grove man entered the Home Savings and Loan in Newport Center al about noon. planning to make a deposit. That's when his da y took a tum for the worse Kmep filled out a deposit slip at a customer counter. failing to notice that someone had scrawled a "stick up" message on the back or the s lip. THE FIRST CLUE that something was amiss came when the teller shoved a bundle of bills in his direction, ac· tivating a silent alarm at the same moment. Kniep protested. police said later , and pushed the pile of bills back at the teller . reminding her that he was mak· ing a deposit not a withdrawal. At this point . the telle r s howtd the confused customer the robbery message . He expressed surprise . M EANWIOLE, POLICE c harged into the Newport Center savings and loan looking for the bandit. They found Knie p instead. Investigators said they seized the robbery note as evidence , cleared up the misunderstanding and let Kniep get on with making his deposit. <e CONCORD. QUARTZ missioner 's ho m e at 16551 Carousel Lane, which he bou1ht in 1971 , will be offered at s sherifrs auction next month to pay otr debts resulting in part from his involve ment with California Filter Corp. The company declared itself bankrupt last year in U.S. Dis· trict Court. According to court records , California Filter Corp. executed a promissory note for a $50,000 loan in Aug. 1979. Though some interest was paid back, the prin· cipal and additional interest re- main dut> American State Bank. which granted the loan. filed a com. pl a int for dam a ges against. Footner be<:ause, as president of the nrm. he had guaranteed in writing the payment of the money. The bank then s ought his home to pay off the debt. Walter Schroetter . assistant vice president of the bank, said in court documents that he was the loan offi cer who handled the Ca lifornia Filter Corp. tr ansac· tion and that if Footner had not signed a "continuing guaranty" in which he cited his community s tanding, among other things , the loan would not have been made . The co mpan y . form ed in August, 1978. was to manufac· ture and distribute air filters and oil filters. Footner claims in the court records that he was president of California Filter Corp. for only a few days and that he was never a st.oc kholder at any time . He said he received no compensation as president andi!id not benefit from the loan. Shroetter described Footner a s a businessm a n who ·ac· quires and invests in companies which ha ve been in serious fi n a n c i al d iffi c ulti es, r e · capitalizes them, a nd then pro· ceeds to make them profitable." Power Out For Hour in Irvine Area The southwestern section of the Irvine Industrial Complex near John Wayne Airport suf- fered a power outage from 8: 11 a .m . t o 9 :15 a .m . today , Southe rn California Edis on Opera tions Manager L.J . Ritter s aid The airport itself was not af· fected by the power loss, which le ft 1.100 Ed is on c ustome rs wi thout electricity and forced police to begin directing traffic in the area. R i tt e r s a id a bl o wn transformer somewhere was probably to blame for the outage in the section of the industrial complex bounded by the San Die go Freeway on the north, Campus Drive on the s outh, MacArthur Boulevard on the west and Von Karman Avenue on the east. Ritter said he was unaware of any major industrial businesses whose operations were affected. but said Gulliver's Restaurant and the Casa Maria Restaurant were without power this mom· ing. \f3,1e/I <ll!a/ie,1 <J/ewfitJJ/ JS FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 644-2494 /S811th Coast ED IT ION ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1980 on "our Hom .. lott'n Dally NewNpaper TWENTY-FIVE CENTS , Trial Eluded GUSD Work Capture 8 Years To~ghened . ;.. ........ . • :Actor James Stewart, 72, is I treated in the cor- care unit of St. Jolm's taJ in Santa Monica, spokesman says he has DOt suffered a heart attack Md there is no cause for alarm. i2 More File lJn Clemente I f~uncil Race Two more candidates for the 'Nov. 4 City Council election in San Clemente have filed ~inatiOD papers, bringing to -.1bt tbe number of names that '9alify for the ballot. • Bualneuman Gary L. Fuller nd former planning com· mission chairman Al Wulfeck ~ve joined aix other candidates retuning papers containing sipatures of 20 registered· Clemente voters. then who have returned japen include Thomas O'Keele : Md Patrick Lae, both appoint· :..s council members; clock •aker Blll Wainer; busi· •o-eaaman Jay Durkin ; lbmemaker Melanie Vamell, l Od Newport Beach busi· I ....... Alu Konen. __.,. other candidates bave ~ __ ...... papen but ~ =,....... tbem to City Malllq. Tbe7 have unW . at S p.m. to do so. Following a nine-month study by parents, students, teachers and administrators. trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District have unanimously ap-proved tougher graduation re- quirements for the district. The new requirements will af. feet students who will graduate in 1982. ... ...,., Delly ...... SUff - Included will be additional reading in the freshman year. an extra year of English and math, a five-unit course in consumer education and ·ro . more units of course work for adult education participants. The Impetus behind passage or the tougher requirements was a poor showing by district high school students in reading, English and math scores for the California Assessment Pro· gram, the Standard Achieve- ment Test and the Subject A ex· am forcollegefresbmen. BRUCE GREGORY STANDS IN THE DOORWAY OF HIS NEW BLUEBIRD KNOLLS HOME Slide Victim See• $51,000 Moduler HouM Dropped Into Piece Monday Trustee George White argued that tbe decision should be de- layed until district residents af. fected by the changes bad a chance to give their opinion. But board President Robert Bacbelor Mid, "We know what the answer will be. They wouldn't like going to the dentist and they won't like the touaber requiremea&a. Bacbeklr Aid the trustees' de- cision OD the matter must weigh heavily OD the response of those surveyed in the initial study. The task force appointed to conduct the study interviewed several graduates of district high schools who have been out of school for five years. The majority of those sur· veyed said more and better classes were needed. They also said they felt they were left \Dl· prepared for college when they graduated from district high schools. Street Set For Revamp Camino San Clemente bas been patched, repaved and re- paired so many times in past years that San Clemente of· ficials say it's time to have the whole street reconstructed. San Clemente City Council members bave authorized city officials to seek bids for re- construction of the roadway to 1,800 feet east of El Camino Real. An eDliDeeMI nrm estimated cost of the construction at $110,00G, SC Weiglu Business Promotion It's a bit unusual for busi· nessmen to ask a city to double their bminess license tu, but a group of 70 downtown San Clemente merchants are doing Just that. In exchange, the merchants want tbe city to set up a business promotion district, funded by the additional surcharge that would see the Chamber of Com· merce actively promote shop- ping in the downtown area. Wednesday night council m'embers will consider establishing a business improve· ment area along A venida Del Mar. The boundaries of the pro- posed district will include Del Mar from Calle Seville to El Camino Real, and along El Camino Real from Avenida Granada to Avenida Cabrillo. Chamber or Commerce of· ficials, who have been promot- ing the special di.strict, estimate that between 18,000 and $10,000 could be raised each year from the surcharge on downtown merchants. Those revenues would go to promote business activity in the downtown area , such as sidewalk sales, dollar days, back-to-school sales, entertain· ment events and di.splays. All retail and wholesale busi· nesses in the proposed improve- ment area would be levied two times the regular business license tax. Professional offices, such aa those operated by. doctors. <See Dl8TUCT, Pase AZ> What Bold-..p? Depositor Not a Robber June1"Amold Kalep told Newport Beach police Mon- day afterDooD tbat if be wu a but robber, aomeane foqet to tell blm aboal it. TD •YBO-OLD Guden Gnne man eDtend tbe Home Snlllp md Lou iD Newport CtDte1' at about nooa. pt ...... .., ...... depolit. TW'• ... llil ~ toclk a tmn far tbe wane. Kllllp flDld oat e depaUt dp at a emtomel' eoaMel'; fallbal to.Dllltiee tMt IO...., bed ac:rawled a .. .uct up' m ..... •IM..Uoltlllallp. ~ TD ,..... a.us II.-.. 11'11'11 ... amill came ................... ..-.o111W11D .......... M- tlYe=a:~=-attlll ___ _ LJJOllMuld..._,_......_.&MpOe ol blUI .......... f' ........ tllit tie ... mU• ..................... At till....., the ..U. allOwed tbe eoafUMd cllltoaMr tbe aelbblrJ •••.,.,lie upr .. ed aurpdH. .. Torn Bluebird Plot Sprouts Fast Home Bruce Gregory surveyed bis new modular Blueblrcl Canycn home, a structure which bad ex- isted in parts just hours before. The crane and workmen bad gone, and the house was in· stalled. part ol a quickly cle- ve~. Victims ol tbe October, 19'18. landslide that destroyed 24 homes in Bluebird Knolls, the Gregorys are veterans of bureaucratic battles to rebuild the hillside. After their lot was bulldozed back into place, the Gregorys purchased a $58,000 modular home to go on their 60-by-100- foot lot. "We weren't interested in bulldi.ng, and we've had enough moving. I'm movin& again this weehnd. We wanteda to get back," be said "Some nere are going to pay $30,000, but they are getting free labor.•' "Some are going to pay over $90,000, .. be added. The 1,296-square-loot home, which came in three parts to the Gregory site at 903 Meadowlark Lane, bas three bedrooms and two baths. as did their original home. "Our other house was a little larger, but we bad added on to it," he said. The rebuilt lot is about 12 feet lQWJtl' Jlm.J# original pad, but the G~ atill bave a view. By bepins the cost down to $58,000, the Gregorys will have a limited financial obligation above their $55,000 maximum Small Business Administration Joan. .. Almost everybody building had a budget figure in mind, and found they had to knock out something in their plan," he said. The modular home was put together in less than three hours Monday. Dry wall taping, spray- ing, and painting must still be completed, and trim and doors and carpeting must be installed. That procedure is expected to take one to two weeks. The Gregorys are looting forward to landscaping their lot, and are hoping that some funds raised for the landslide victims will be used for trees in the neighborhood. Coast Resident Transsexual Sues Over Navy Ouster LOS ANGELES (AP). -A former Navy chief petty officer ·who says the military .. maliciously tried to destroy me" JI auial tbe federal .,._,.. meat for bMtinl her out ol tbe military foUowiDI her male-to- female aa cbal• •Ul'l•r'Y · .Joanna Michelle Clark, formed)' lllcbael F. Clark, flied tbe .complaint Monday in tbe U .S". Court of Claims ta Wu ......... D.C. Ma. a.t, a, of San Juan Capistrano, alle1ea in her lanalt tblt IMI' dlamllaal from Ute Nft'T• ........ Arm1,.. ..,. .. ~ .... risMr to priYacJ. a falr Marial 84 equ~--U..law. • .,._ eNlt.ed e ......... fm' me, md _. tM7'N -. tllllt ...... fer tlM ttoftom ..... Et1bt,'' abe toN e ..... ..._,. ,..,.... ......... ,~ . .... ... Allon ..... ee- c...a o1111 • ••• ···~ aboard .... um Nca"tma aa-1. So ,. two baft ..... aeq .... Hd OM foud pUtr. (91atr , ... Al.). Ndbar Arm:/ nor N&YJ pulille aftaln aflloen ID • ......._ ....... o1 .......... Ald tM',a .. • •• ..... Mft to .. ml .... Won a e&atelMDl CCNNl9t .... . The American Civil Liberties Union here filed the complaint OD behalf ol Ms. Clark Who noted "not One cent" of mWtary funds went toWud her llecli-Cal·paid surpry or follow.up treatment. Mt. Clark, who waa dl•· cbar1ed from tM Navy and later Uc! her .,ulhnent voided by tbe U.S. ArmJ Renne, ii ......... -wpeelfled amomt ol beck ..... and reUnmd bmeftU. Siie .... Mned 17 Jan alee- tln 8lld neene dut7 witll tbe NeYJ.._abebad~ 1creeata1 at tile Sleaford UnlYeHltJ lledteal Cater o.dal' MLNll1 CllDle iD Jl'1C. 11a.a...-.. Slle-HlllM•.._• ble .. ~ ........ laad tbe ~frattoa n lbe 19H ID ~-::t .. c::r.. :.:---.. ~ ....... elm& ....... friDI lier H a llomoHs•al ·~ 8-lm9w fullJ wall I ...... Two .. -............... prwl:r.:i -Arm7 iWi .. ... .. .. ,. ....... . adald. .... tUt .... ... ...................... Ml dllcll n o1 ·w -.. .............. fol•••• .. Arm1ollelak. -4 - A m a n who remained a fugitive for eight years foU9wtq " the multi-million dollar "MiSsion Impossible" break-in at the Monarch Bay branch of United California Bank went on trial on bank burglary charges today in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Harry James Barber. 38, is among six people who were in· dieted in connection with the world's largest bank burglary over the weekend of March 24-27. 1972. Barber, however, was not ar- rested until last May 12 when Federal Bureau of Investigation agents located him living under an assumed name in Brookville, Pa . Five other dJ!fendaots, arrest- ed at locations in California and Ohio shortly after the burglary, are serving sentences following the ir convictions in federal court. The bank suffered a cash loss in the burglary of only $45,256. But losses to safety deposit box holders were conservatively estimated at between $4 and $6 million. Negotiable bonds, cash, Jewels and rare coins were among valuables taken after the boxes were aystematically forced open. The burglary team -which went as far as renting a Laguna Niguel condominium as a base of operations -:--used large drills ud apeda1 explosives to gain entry to the vault from u aUic area where tbey could wort without being seen. The first arrest in the case oc· c urred in June, 1972, when Charles A. Mulligan, then 38, of Youngstown, Ohio, returned to Orange County to dispose of a getaway car outfitted with false compartments. Two Positions May Me~ge , The Laguna Beach City Coun· c iJ will consider tonight e liminating a deputy city treasurer position it created just nine months ago. The CCM.mcil at its 6 p .m. meet· ing will consider a recommend•· lion to combine the jobs of the elected city treasurer and the appointed deputy city treasurer. The move would give City Treasurer Fran Englehardt, elected in April, the total wortt load of the department, and add $730.50 per month to the city treasurer's current $1SO salary. for an SBllO.SO per moo th total. Coast Weather MosUy sunny Wednes- day afternoon following ni&bt md IDDl'DiDI eloudi- nesa. I.owl tGailht a at the be9cbea to 11 inland. ffilha Wedneeday 70 to TC alOlll the cout, Tl to IO in· land. INSIDE TO•~~ '' gds ~..,.,, .. . for o baM, Ub ~ elle, to mab a P'f'Offl Oii terofce•. To eote the .,..,., ,,... ...... ,,,. mtg to ,,.... Old ,,.. tdcbl ad ..... occoml• .,,..,. ... emata., broacN1' Hnricn tad 1"'1lrn dllargea) tor tM ,..,., ,,., fltON~#fol* oc- ~ N:sou'1d:M. S.. Pa(le A1 • • To Help Travelers CHERBOURG, Fra.N (AP> -Strlk~t f'reod1 hahermen dffkled &oda.y to MA tMlf blod• ol lhll1 non.taem cout port uaW nUclni&bt u • h9muitariu cestu.re tow.rd nurl)' e.ooo BriUlb tranlert, mu.y ol t.Mm women and children, stranded by the dillM . · Aar Frant"t' ad Bri~ Ainrrayt alto •nnounced • 1peclal Pari•·London fare ol tsa )n llll effort to help vac1tlonen with ·ferry bott tJckets • bome. '1"M at.rib bu qnad to o&MI" port.I on France'• Atlantic Cout and bl die Mediterraneu where Sele. a m~r harbor west ol ManeWe .rttb heavy tr.me to north Africa, w., clOMd aathemoniq. Fishermtn on lM island ol Conlee. who 1truck ln s0Ud11ritv wllh their ftllow workers In Normen~ Moodar ended lhelr ac· tion ant-r a day, pttmlttln1 $hJps to aaJI to and from Nace ~d other mainland porb 0•• 11,.. Prf.w •••• io I J.U P~i NEW YORK <AP> -Chase Manhattan Bank today raised It.I pnme lendina rat.e by one-quarter percent.age point to 11.25 percent In reaponse to recent sharp increases in its cost or funds. The prevwling prime nallonwide is 11 percent, but W•ll Street analysts are predicUn1 other banks will follow Chase's . lead to produce the first gener.i increaae in the prime rate since . early April when it peaked at 20 perceot. 82 Killed ia Pol•ad Trallu c.18 ..... WARSAW, Poland <AP> -A freiabt train passed a red warning light and slammed head-on into a passenger train out· side Tonm in northern Poland today. killing 62 pbsengers and iniurin~ "many others." the official news agency PAP said. The PAP said the engineer "probably was asleep" and :missedaredwaminglight. Thecrashoccurredatabout4a.m. Sled: /tlerket St~ lor Gai• NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market struggled ror a gain today amid gloomy economic news and continued signs interest rates are turning higher. ' After three hours or trading the Dow Jones Average of 30 in- dustrials was ofr 4.01 points to 944.62. Dial a Ride, lift Programs tO Merge By GLENN SCOTT Ofttleo.llyl"lletSUfl The Dial·A·Ride and DiaJ·A· Lift transpor tation syste ms probably will be combined. mem· bers of the Orange County Transit District board has announced. The members are studying ways to improve lhe co\1Dtywide system that picks up passengers at their homes. They said merg- ing the two similar systems would be the best way tosa ve money. The l)ial-A-Ult system serves people in wheelchairs ~ on C(Utcbea: Tbe Df•l-~;]Ude system serves Othen, such as the elderly and the blind. The combined system would serve anyone, whether they are disabled or not. However, transit ~irectors won't make a final de- cision until their Sept. 4 meeting. The new alternative would establish 34 zones within the coun- 't)' Those who aren 'l handicapped E'ro• Page A J DISTRICT •• lawyers and dentists, would be charged the regular business liceuetax. Professionals would be charged less because lhe effect of promotion on their businesaes would not be as great. And while merchants appear enthusiastic about the new dis- trict. a similar proposal 14 years ago was overwhelmingly pro- tested by downtown busi- nessmen. At that time, 71 percent of the affected businessmen said they did not want to finance such a district. If approved, the promotional activity would be carried out by lhe Chamber of Commerce. The only cost to the city would be an initial $2,000 to $3.000 for time spent by city employees in set- ting up the speci-1 district. Council members will take up the propoeal Wedneaday at 7 p.m . in cowicil cbambers, 100 Ave. Presidio. DAILY PILOT ' ,, ' would be required to transfer to other vehicles al zone boundaries. Handicapped people would re- main on board. Cost of the new service would be St to travel inside a zone and a nother dollar for transfers. Seniors and handicapped riders wouldpayhaHfare. The combined service would be in use as early as Ort. 20 in the district's region four. which in· eludes HunUngton Beach, Seal Beach, Fountain Valley. Costa Mesa, Newport ):Jeacb and Santa Ana. The entire syst.em for the coun- ty would be modified by Dec. 1. s aid Patrick H. Butters. diredor or transit services for the transit district. Butters told directors the cur· rent system with 28 Dial-A-Lift vans is expecte<l to lose about $120.000 this fiscal year. He said combiningthetwoserviceswould cut the district's losses. The DiaJ.A-Lift service earned about 1.6percentof its$1.5 million cost through fares, Butters said. The combined service would make about 14 percent of an estimated$5.7millioncost. A half dozen people who were blind or in wheelchairs attended Monday's hearing. Jane Kemna of Laguna Hills said handicapped riders oppose the often difficult and confusing process of transfer- ring vehicles. San Clemente Eyes Plans For Revamp San Clemente 's Neighborhood Preservation Committee will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. to hear proposals for low cost hous· ing and rehabilitation. The city is applying for federal Housing •nd Community Development funds with which to spruce up a large portion o( the ci· ty westoltbeSan Diego Freeway. Projects such u creating low· cost rental units, rebab ... tatioQ of older units and programs for the elderly or bandic.pped milbt be eligible for government funds . Am.taut Ck)' Planner Susan Tebo said those who have projects in mind should attend TbUnday's meetlq to present tbelr pro- posals. San Clemente'• Nel1bborbood Pre9enatioD Area ll bouDded on · the north by Avenlda Pico and the south by Tralalfar Canyoa, TM eaatenl border of tbe ... il·tbe S..1*8D Freeway ud tbeoeeea iatbe.-...Dbomdary. Pt$ttl auuld baclade =·· pards8H al Iota or ba .. _11111111 .. wUldatbe .. fClr~• .. IOw-cmta 'els, Or ............. Jd.lq ... ta.. area eoukl applJ for low·lDMrwt loam to ref\arbbb plumbiu or eleotrical problem• on Uaelr propdel. Tbe meettn1 wW be beld iD tbe multi...,.. nom of tbe Com· m..., Olata", at ti.. coner of A••alda Del Mar and Calle smu. For more information, call SUlan Tebo at -.stOl, nt4mklD m. WASHINGTON <AP> -Billy Carter'• partner told Senat.e in· veatl1aton lhat Bllly obtained a SZ20.000 loan and the two aou&ht an oU deal with Uby• after be· lna warned the Libyans might be tr)1.na to UM lhem "to in· n'*'ce u.s. policy." The partner. Henry • 'Randy'' Coleman. teautl..S be and Billy dlare1arded the Stai. Depart- ment warnlnt beeauae they con- sidered their rel•tiona with the Llbya.na u "nothi.Dtt political. ·'It was juat good old Southern hospitality.'· Coleman told a speclal Senate judiciary sub· committee. · Phllir, W. Tone. the subcom- mittees speclal counsel, .dis · closed that the State Deput· ment warned the two in a letter Dec. 12, 19711, lhat Ubyan of- ficials were "establishing coo- tacu outside Washington . "The Ubyana hope to use such contacts to lnfluence U.S. policy toward their country and the Arab world." the letter said. The letter. wrilt.en by a State Department Llbya desk officer. said that Ahmed Shahati, head or the Ubyan Foreip Liaison Bureau and the man Billy Carter was dealing with, was one of the Ubyan officials male· Ing such contacts. But Coleman said he and Carter continued their Libya dealings and arranged l;he loan for Billy and tried to set up the oU deal through Sbahiti and other Li- byan officials. Coleman said he picked up the $220,000 in checks from the Ub- yan embassy in Washington for the loan to the president's brother. He said the $220.000 is part. or a $500,000 loan and said th~ rest is still coming to Carter later so far as he knows. The partner said a mem ber or the widely-political Libyan del· egation that Billy hasted in Georgia in January 1978 made the first offer or a business deal with Carter Columnist Tells Anguish On Iran 'Plot' CHICAGO (AP)·-Syndicated columnist Jac.k Anderson says be reached the "ang\Wlbing" de- cision to disclose the details or an alleged U.S. plan to invade Iran because he is convinced the mission would fail. ··Because of the political nature of this plan, be<:ause it almost certainly would not suc- ceed, I decided to expose it." be said in a speech Monday llight. Anderson has reported that President Carter is planning a military operation aimed at freeing the U.S. hostages in mid- October, timed for m aximum advantage of his re-election camjriign against Ron•ld Reagan and John B. Anderson. The While House and Defense Secretary Harold Brown have flatly denied the allegation, and the White House labeled the s tory .. grotesque" and "ir - r esp on s i bl e ." Several newspapers that normally carry Anderson's column, including the Washington Post, the New York Daily Newa and the AUan- ta Constitution, did not run the column Monday. In his speech, Anderson claimed Carter ordered last April's rescue attempt of the American hostages in Tehran because his ratings bad slipped in the public-opinion polls. That effort was aborted because of helicopter failure. and eight soldiers died in an aircraft col· lision during the withdrawal from the Iranian desert. . The columnist noted tb•t Carter's ataodi.n1 in the polls has dropped again and said the president bas ordered plans be prepared for the "limited in· vasion'' because "lt just eomea naturally to him to react politically." However, Ande.noa said un- lde.ntified experts believe the plan -which be d id not describe in detail during his speech -would fall. He said lt wa1 only because these ~ believe the plan ls flawed and that Carter'• motivation i1 political that be and bis ~ were able to learn details of the alle1ed milaion. f'..anadi•n'8 Auto . . Looted in Laguna Tbe auto ol a Caaadlan Ylaitor to Lqma Beacb waa ....... and u.m nlued at WM wwe taken, police reported. Offlcen aald a window ol the car, owned by Micbael WQM Relley of Reclna, Sadatdaewb, ... Plied Ol*l. mad a ......._, raCHo, st.no, -............ , .......... swa.. ,,.. cm' ... parbcl at Vacatm VUlale Mot.el, ecT S. Coast lltlnraJ. Be's Got You Cfn'ered If you see this man pointing this at you. you'd better give up and drop your speed Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of his de- partment's hand-held radar units. which look a bit other worldly. Traffic officers say although the units have been in use for .nree years. with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back.'' motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun Pointed their way. Relax. lt'll only hurt in the wallet Firm Will Design Laguna Bus Stop An architectual firm from Santa Ana was chosen Monday to design improvements for Laguna Beach's central bus stop. Grillias Plrc Rosier Alves was the firm selected by the Orange County Transit District's Board of Dir~tors to design the pro· posed Lagun a B e ach Transportation Center. The firm's b1d or $12,672 was the lowest or four submitted. Laguna Beach is the only city in Orange County that operates its own regularly scheduled bus service. Jl will share the im· proved terminal with the transit district. Preliminary sketches s how that buses will enter the 1.6-acre center from Broadway and then leave either on Broadway or by drivmg through the complex. over a drainage canal and then onto Ocean A venue Two open air s helters with roofs will house people wrutmg ror the buses T h e s ite t s next to a Greyhound Bus Terminal The OCTD board, the South Coast Regional Coasta l Com· m>ssion and the Laguna Beach City Council must approve the final plans before construction can begin. lfichael Mack, engineenng manager for the transit distnct, s aid he expects rinal designs to be approved by February, 1981. and the facility to be completed by January, 1982. The total cost for the project is s.100,000, he said. Highrspeed Chase Ends in Rollover A high-speed chase involving t he U.S. Border Patrol, San Clemente Police and a car driven by a suspected smuggler of illegal aliens e nded when the car careened off the Santa Ana Freeway and rolled over early this morning. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol said the chase began at about 2:30 a.m. on the freeway just north of the Ave. Palizada exit in San Clemente. The spokesman said a 1957 Chevrolet driven by Mario Perez Estrada, 23, of Chula Vista, was being pursued at high speeds up <e CO NCO RU QUARTZ the freeway by the border patrol and San Clemente police. Reportedly Estrada was dnv- ing at about 95 miles per hour without bis Lights on when he struck the center divider and rolled over several times in the roadway. Estrada as reported to have been carrying a male passenger in the front seat and a woman and four men in the trunk of the car when the accident occurred. All the passengers received moderate injuries in the crash and were trea ted at San Clemente General Hospital where they are being held for observation. Clemente Sued Over Slope Slip A San Clemente couple have ft led a $275.000 cla1m against the city. saying a slope racing their property gave way due to negligence on the part of San Clemente inspectors. Mr. and Mrs. W.D. Lanier, who Live at 235 La Esperanza, seek $200,000 for loss of value to their house and $75,000 for re- pair of a slope last February on the northwest facing s lope or their property. The couple said grading oo the property was too steep and was not properly compacted when the work was inspected by the city. They claim the damage to the s lope was the result or improper grading. excavation and com· paction. approved and inspected by the City of San Clemente. The property 1s near the site of a landslide two months ago m which two homes were heavily damaged a nd three others threatened. Senate Approves Wilderness Bill WASJUNGTON CAP) -After three years of argument and d~ lay. the Senate voted over- whe lmingly today for an Alaska wilderness bill so big it would double America's major con .. servat1on holdings. ' The bill, passed 78 to 14, now' returns to the House. which has, passed a ve rsion with even- tougher restrictions on develop- ment in a state which combines spectacular scenery with forbid· ding frozen reaches. 'i3A1ll <lf!a/h1J <Jt1wj;PAI 35 FASHION ISLAND• NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNtA 92660 TELEPHONE C71•> 644·2'9.C · VOL. 73, NO. 232, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T,UESOAY, AUGUST 19, 1980 l' our Hom(lltown Dally ew~paper C TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Mesa OrQps Suit Against Fair 9)'1D&YCLA1J8&N .............. AD out-of.court aettlement alcned llonday Qlpt in C4lta M .. a Clt.y Hall ~pares the way for new Oranae Cow:ll.y Fair- croundl de¥elopment and probe- b le completion of •n am- pllllhea&erlbere by next nm mer. In a specially called joint aesaton, eo.ta Mesa City Council members and Oran1e County Fair Board members unanimous- ly endorsed an •1reement by Bingo OK Sought In Mesa Costa Mesa's Veterans of Foreign Wars post is seeking a change in the city's ordinance that prohibits bingo play. The request, referred Monday night to City Attorney Tom Wood by the City Council, was submitted last month by VFW Post 3538 commander Arthur H. Rock Sr. Rock said he had been asked to circulate a petition to change the ordinance but that he has re· fused until "I have had the op- portunity to consult with you (Mayor Arlene Schafer) and other members of the City Coun- cil . . . " Rock forwarded a set of rules used by VFW Post 9756 in Westminster i"n sec uring permission from that city to operate binco games. He su11e1ted that similar rules would be used in a VFW- spomorecl game i.o Costa Mesa. Roc k, who noted that he formerly was commander of the Westminster post, said bingo proceeds were used there to as- sist needy veterans and their families . senio r c itize ns, paramedics, the police depart- ment and city youth activities and to provide scholarships. He suggested that about 80 percent of all bingo profits in Costa Mesa would be used in the same manner. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said the city's anti-bingo or- dinance was d rafted in the mid-19705 when the state offered cities the option of authorizing such activity. Subsequently, he said , the council has been asked at least Cive times to change the Jaw to allow games in the city. The last unsuccessful attempt, he said, was submitted last fall by members of St. Joachim Catholic Church of Costa Mesa. Strikers Jailed which lhe dty dro~ Ila lawsuit aaainlt the board ln return, the Fair Board agreed to <.'omply with noise standards set by the county and state. improve streets fronting on the fairgrounds when required, install traffic signals and comply with city ordinances in any future commercial development on the state-owned land. The agreement was negotiat«I 1 by Richard Witte, attorney for the N ederlander Corp. of Los Angeles which plans to construct a $7 mllllon amphitheater on the arounds across Fair Drive from City Hall. City olficials, concerned about traffic and noise expected lo be generated by f alr1round facilities expansion, sued the Fair Board in Aueust 19'79 in an attempt to make the· state aaency route its plans through the city planning system. The Fair Board's s tance, that the fairgrounds belongs to the state and isn't under city jurisdic· lion. wasupheldinOrangeCounty Be's Got Yo• C'oft!red Superior Court. The city took the case to the Fourth District Court of Appeal where it bas remained awaiting judgment. Subsequent to riling that ap- peal, City Attorney Tom Wood, fair officials and attorney Witte had been meeting in an attempt to work out an agreement between the two battling government en- tities. Their work resulted In the agreement signed in the joint session by Mayor Arlene Schafer If you see this man pointing this at you, you'd better give up and drop your speed. Newport Beach Police Motorcycle Officer Gary Bruton demonstrates use of his de- partment's hand-held radar units. which look a bit other worldly. Traffic officers say although the units have been in use for ~nree years, with the advent of movies "Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," motorists have been ducking and flinching when they see the radar gun pointed their way. Relax. It'll only hurt in the wallet. Columnist 'Anguished' JackAmkrson Tel/,s Why He 'Exposed' Plot CHICAGO (AP) -Syndicated columnist Jack Anderson says he reached the "anguishing" de- cision to disclose the details of an alleged U.S. plan to invade Iran because he is convinced the mission would fail. "Because of the political nature of this plan, because it almost certainly would not suc- ceed, I decided to expose it," he said in a speech Monday night. The While House and Defense Secretary Harold Brown have flatly denied the allegation, and the White House labeled the story "grotesque" and "ir· responsible ." Seve r al newspapers that normally carry Anderson's column, including the Washington Post, the New York Daily News and the Allan· la Constitution, did not run the column Monday. a final decision whether to carry out the plan will not be made un· til two more "control points" are passed. Anderson said one thing that would make another rescue at· tempt very difficult is that many of the hostages were removed from the occupied U.S. Embassy and taken to other locations in Iran as a result of the aborted mission last April. and F'air Board President Ken J ohnson. In addition to the 8,000-seat am- p hi theater, the Fair Board's master plan calls for construction of a science and industry museum at Fairview Road and Arlington Drive, a hotel at Fair Drive and Newport Boulevard and other commercial ent erprises at Fairview Road and Fair Drive. The Fair Board agreed to con- struct a new access to the fair· grounds al Fairview Road and Merrimac Way to ease future S2 MilHon .Job traffic congestion . Mayor Schafer admitted that nothing has been resolved bet ween the l wo factions regard- ing future disagreements beyond those spelled out in Monday's document. But she was optim1st1c. "This is the first time we've really said we would work together, and 1t 's on paper, .. she pointed out The alternative, she admitted, would be resorting again to the courts. Revamp Costly For 'Quiet Jet' It would fake a $2 million grooming job of the John Wayne Airport runway to regularly ac- commodate the new "quiet" jet that one airline is hoping to tn· lroduce early next year. Airpo rt manager Raul Regalado said there are other ways around the problem. but he stressed that the bottom line is that the new DC-9 super 80 ex- ceeds the weight the runway was built to withstand. He said the runway is de· signed to serve jets up to 95.000 J!Ounds . The super 80, with tanks filled, weighs in at 140,000 pounds. Air California officials , who hope to begin using the super 80 out of John Wayne by February, said they'll trim the weight down to 124,000 pounds by carry- ing less fuel. Regalado said It will be up to the Board of Supervisors and the Federal Aviation Administration to make a decision on the super 80s. "If the board decides lo ac- <.'ommodate the super 80, we can do it but over the long period there will be some conse quences," he said. For one, he said, the :?j)-year life of the runway would be s ho rtened. The runway 1s roughly 10 years old. The other alternative. he said. would be to reduce the number of annual departures from John Wayne. This would accom- modate the new jet by trimming down the amount of weight that touches down on the runway during the course of a year. "There are trade-offs any way you approach it and, certainly. one of them is holding off on the Super 80 until the runway is strengthened," said Re~alado. He said the S2 million figure is what airport consultants VTN Consolidated of Irvine estimate it would cost to bols ter the runway and its taxiway Plan1ier Forced to Sell Home By DAV10 K UTZMANN OI Ille O•llY I'll-' St.aff The half·million-dollar Hunt· ington Beach home of Orange County Planning Commission chairman Richard J . Footner will go on the auction block Sept. 22 to pay off business loans Footner is alleged to have ob- tained by exploiting his public position · Footner said Monday he would make no comment on the published reports which indicat- ed he used his position as leverage with lenders to help secure bus iness loans totaling about $600,000 Supervisor Harnett Wieder, who appointed Footner to the planning body, asked the county counsel's office Monday to in· vestigate the charges. Court records indicate the bu sinessman-planning com- mi ssioner's home at 16551 Carousel Lane, which he bought in 1971 , will be offered al & sheriff's auction next month to pay off debts resulting in part from his involvement with , California Piller Corp. The company declared itself bankrupt last year in U.S. Dis· trict Court. According to court records, California Fllter Corp. executed a promissory note for a SS0.000 loan in Aug. 1979. Though some interest was paid back, the prin· cipal and additional interest re-main duP American State Bank, which granted the loan, filed a com- plaint for damages against Footner because. as president of the firm. he had guaranteed in GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. CAP) -The oreside nt of Grand Rapids ' striking munic ipal workers' union and three other people were arrested today as police officers broke through a picket line at the city's sewer plant. Tbe union leaders will be charged either with disregard- ing a police orficer's order or pedestrian interference. police said. Anderson has reported that President Carter is planning a military operation aimed at freeing the U . .$. hostages in mid· October, timed for maximum advantage of bis re-election campaign against Ronald Reagan and John B. Anderson. In his speech, Anderson claimed Carter ordered last April's rescue attempt of the American hostages in Tehran because bis ralines had slipped ia the public-opinion polls. That effort was aborted because of helicopter failure, and eight soldiers died in an aircraft col- lision during the withdrawal from the Iranian desert. Mesa OKs MoVe <See AUCTION, Page A2) What Bold•p? Depositor Not a Robber James Arnold Kniep told NeWl>Ort Beach police Mon· day afternoon that lf he was a bank robber, someone forgot • to tell him about lt. THE • YEA&.OLD Garden Grove man entered the Home S.rinlt md Loan lo Newport Cuter at about nooa, planniftl to make a depoelt. That'• wbm bil day took a turn for the worse. Kniep lllled out a depoelt 1Up at a cuatomer counter, fallinl to noUce lhat 10meaae bad acrawled a "atick up" meuqe oa the back of the slip. 'ID na8T CUJS t.bal somethlna wu amill came Wbea tbl t.IJer lboftd a bundle of blJll ill bll direction, ac· tlvatlq a lilmt alarm at llle same moment. Knlep pnt1Nd, ll0ltee Hid~. wl pmbed the pile of bWI beelll: at tile .. 11 •• mnindlq ber tbat be was mat. ma a delloait not • wWMtra..r. At tMI polM. tb9 wo.r lbowld tbe eoaf\lled C'Ult.omer tbe robbll r ....... He npr•ld •Ul'JlliM. • The. columnist noted that Carter's stand\ng in the polls has dropped again and said the president has ordered plans be prepared for the "limited in- vasion" because "it just comes naturally lo· him to react • politically." However, Anderson said un- identified experts believe the plan -which be did not describe in detail during bh speech -would fail. He said it was only because these ex~ believe the plan is flawed and that Carter 's motivation ls political that be and hil ataff were able to learn details of the alle1ed mluion. "We would have a very dif- ficult. lime carryina Ulil ( mia- 1lon) out," and for that reUGD, be Hid, he decided to publiab bll flndlnp. ''I can uaure you It wu an Ul\ll1bln1 decialoa," Andenon added. "I don't think newamen 1hould pry into mllitary aecret1 except in 1pedal cittumatancet.'' AnderlOn uld that while Carter bu not actually 1'or· dtred" tM lnvuloa, "he bu •tarted pnparatioGI foe a limit-ed lnv..._ of lraa'' and that oae "coatrol point'' ln lhe opera· lion already flu pass~. He aaid By Station Owner It's expected to 'cost him about $106,000 but Harry Adessian gained Costa Mesa City Council approval Monday night to move bis ARCO service station to Harbor Boulevard a nd Fair Drive. Adessian's current station, at 19th and Newport Boulevard, is in the way of 19th Street wtden- in1. city officials note, and he'll have to go. To keep the 100,000-gallon gasoline allocation allowed by ARCO and the state, Adeuian said, be must move bis buslnesa somewhere elae inside Coeta Meaa. He spott.ed an abandoned Shell station at Harbor and Fair and ne10Uated for Its lease whUe still paytnc ttnl to the city on bis condemned ARCO station downtown. But city offlcial1 noted that the abandoned Shfll station doesn't meet cureent city or· dlnance quallftcatlont for Mr¥1ce ltaUona. Late last month, the council apeed to lla• a t0-7ear UH permit f~ a stat.ton oa tbe aben- doned property. sun up i.o the air at that Ume, thou1h. wu a variance to waive clty lan re· quiring elaborate landscaping and building setbacks . Monday night, the council agreed to a 10-year variance , noting that while more stringent landscaping requirements will be waived, Adessian must make some improvements. Adessian's lawyer argued that the city was forcing the service station operator's move and that all landscaping require ments should be waiffd. Pump, tank and building repair costs will cost about $76,000 as it is. he argued. The council passed over a more elaborate staff recommen- dation calling for total expend- itures of $180,000 in optinl for the one clOHr to $100,000. ln parallel action Monday, the council voted unanimously to condemn the entire parcel where Adeulan'a current •ta- lion atandl. The city took about 5,000 square feet -juat enOUCh to broaden ltt.b Street -in an earlier condemnation actioa. OwMn of lhe property' lhe llacDcmald Min, noted that lhe city left them witb an t,,...War piece ol land meuunna about 12,000 square (eel. , Oran:Q,Coast '==· ~ \\'ea th er Mostly s unny Wednes-d~y afternoon following night and morning cloudi- ness. Lows tonight 63 at the beaches to 67 inland Highs Wednesday 70 to 14 along the coast, 76 to 80 in· land. INSIDE TODA '1 It gets tougher every day for a bank, like everyone else. to make a prof it on 1erv1ce1. To ea1e the squeeze, many banks are try- ing to freeze oul the nickel and dime account.s while in- 1tituting broader services 1 and higher charges) for the /ewer but more profitable ac- counts remaining. See Page A7. latlex ' PlJC Allma Charge For Extra 411 UBe SAN FRAN ISCO <AP> -Padfic Telephone custome"5 who make more lhaa IO foul directory 111lat1nu u J11 per month will bt cbaratid for the ••tr• ulls. the state PubUc Vtlll· ty Comm! *' rua.d today Te&~ llMrt will be a.Uowed 20 free calla within tht1 lr bomt ar.a, but ..,lll bave to pay 15 c nll for each eJCtra call CWTC'Dtly. cUJtom rs do not pay fOt' directory as11Ultance c:•lll. SyMa Si•1~l1 a membtt of TURN Toward UUUty R4Ut Normallaldon -Hid the P C's detltlon wH "another hidden way ol lncreuinc revenue." Tim'••• ...... "" .. 2 TARZANA IAP> An f'lderly couple dle-d 1n 1 fare today In their third noor eondomantum la Ana t city fi re spokesman 1'ed Aquuo said the maJor blaze broke out )ust ht-fore 8 a m at the Encino Spa AduJt Con domanums 1od was broUjhl under control about 2S minutes later by 12 fire companies The dead were identified as Jack and Cecilla Shoen both 77 Caust' o( the fire 'tUS under 1nvesUgat1on, Aquaro s~1d CJtaN' IJpt1 Priaw Rafe te I I.ZS Pttt"rttf NEW YOHK <AP> Chase Manhattan Bank today raised its prime lending rate by one-quarter percentage point to 11 25 pe(cent in response to recent sharp increases in its cost of funds The prevailing prime nationwide 1s 11 percent. but Wall Street analysts are predieling other banks will follow Chase's lead to produce the fi rst general increase in the prime rate since early April when it peaked at 20 percent. 62 Killed in Poland Train Collbion WARSAW , Poland <AP) -A freight train passed a red warning light and slammed he~d-on into a passenger train out- side Torun in northern Poland today, killing 62 passengers and iniurini? "manv others." the offictal news agency PAP said. The PAP s aid the engineer "probably was asleep" and :missed a red warning light. Thecrashoccurred atabout4 a .m . SlfH..•k Markel SI rllflgln for Goin NEW YORK <AP> The stock market struggled for a gain today amid gloomy economic news and continued signs interest rates are turning hi gher. After five hours of trading the Dow Jones Average of 30 in· dul>• rials.was off 2.98 points to 945.65. f'ro•P~AI AUCTION ORDERED • • • writing the payment of the money. The bank then sought his home to pay off the debt. Walter Schroette r , assistant vice president o( the bank, said in court documents that he was the loan officer who handled the California Filter Corp. transac- tion and that if Footner had not signed a ·~continuins guaranty" in which be cited bis community • standing, among other things, the loan would not have been made. The compaQy, formed in Aqu.t, 11'11, wu to manufac· ture and d.i.atribute air filters and oil mters. Economy~s 9o/o Plunge Near Record WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's economy plunged at an annual rate of 9 percent from April through June, nearly the worst quarterly drop in history, t~e government said today. Tbe Commerce Department a lso reported that corporate profits fell precipitously during the second quarter. as the na· lion's economy felt the full force ofthe recession. Footner claims in the court records that he was president or California Filter Corp. for only a few days and that he was never a stockholder at any time. He said he received no compensation as president and did not benefit from the loan. Shroetter descrit>ed Footner as a businessman who 'ac- quires and invests in companies which have been in serious financial d i Hic ulti es, r e · capitalizes them, and then pro· ceeds to make them profitable." "Alao, ·• she saJd, .. wouJd you include in your analysis dis· cussion of whether there is any i_mpropriety in listing 'planning co mmissioner' and the income therefrom on an application for personaJ or business loans." In an interview, Mrs . Wieder said s he felt .. very badly" for Footner because she didn't know he was having financial prob· lems . She said she would reserve judgment until she knew more of the situation and spoke to her a ppointee. The Times article claimed Foolner had arranged financing for two companies with which he was involved by telling loan of. ricers he was a good credit risk because he served on the plan- ning commission. The article also claimed the planning commissioner over· stated his annual income to lenders to help secure financing for business ventures. Billy Warned On Libya W ASHJNGTON <AP) -Billy Carter's partner told Senate in· veatl1aton1 that Billy obtained a $220,000 loan ~d the two sought an oil deaJ with Llbya after be· In& wllJ'Jled the LJbyans might be trytn1 to use them "to in· nuence U.S. policy.·· The partner. Henry "Randy" Coleman. testified he and Billy dl1re1arded the State Depart· mtlnt warning because they con· sldered their relations with the Libyans as "nothinK political. "It was just good old Southern hos pitality," Coleman told a special Senate judiciary sub· committee Philip W. Tone, the s ubcom- mittee's s pecial counsel, dis- closed that the State Depart· ment warned the two in a letter Dec 12. 1978. that Libyan of· hcials were "establishing con- tacts outside Washington. "The Libyans hope to use such contacts to influence U.S. policy toward their country a nd the Arab world," the letter said. The letter, written by a State Department Libya desk officer, said that Ahmed Shahati, head of t he Libyan Foreign Liaison Bureau and the man Billy Car ter was dea ling with, was one of the Libyan officials mak- ing such contacts. But Coleman said he and Carter continued their Libya dealings and arranged the loan for Billy and tried lo set up the oil deal through Shahiti and other Li- byan oCficials Coleman said he picked up the $220,000 in checks from the Lib· yan embassy in Washington for the loan to the president's 1'5rolller - -- He said the $220,000 is part of a $500,000 loan and said the rest is st ill coming to Carter later so far as he knows . ..... ,_ In llo11pi1t1I Actor James Stewart, 72, is being treated in the cor · onary care unit of St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, but a s pokesman says he has not suffered a heart attack and there is no cause for alarm. FV Man's Trial sex or Death Tale Rebutted ' A teeo·age girl who lives in Leotis Heater's Fountain Valley home testiried Monday she never heard Heater threaten to hurt or kill a hitchhike r who claims the ex·convict held him against his will last May as a "sex slave." Wanda Rainey, 17, told an 9ran~e County S uperior Court JUry m Judge James Turner's courtoom that contrary to rus testimony, Jonathan Leonski, 18, appeared to be enjoying himself during the two days he spent at Heater's residence on Goldeneye Avenue Heater is standing trial on arges he forced Leonski to s~ at his home after picking h1 up last May 6 and then thre ·ng the North Carolina native unless he .had sex with both rum and Miss Rainey The girl, her hair braided in Bo Derek fashion and wea.ring a wh,te dress, said she never saw Heater, a previously convicted sex offender. strike Leonski with a belt or threaten to kilJ him if he did not cooperate. Leon.ski testified th.at the de· Ce ndant had threatened him St:veraJ times and struck him with a black cane and tied him Up. . Miss Rainey, under question- ing by defense attorney John Flood, told the seven-man five- woman jury that s he did see Heater put a belt ar°"'nd Leonski's neck so he could walk lake a dog. But she said the 18·year-old h1!chhiker c~nsented to doing this . Leonsk1 had testified he was forced into it. Injured Baby Held In Protective Care Miss Rainey said she never perceived there was force being used on Leonski to have him engage in sexual acts with her or Heater. ~he testified that the young drafter eventually asked her to go away with him and marry him. Question ed by prosecutor Dave Himelson , the girl said she wa s a frequent visitor to PLACENTIA <AP) The 2-month·old son of Anita Brown, the Jehovah's Witness who died or cancer shortly after giving birth to the child, 1s being kept in protective custody after being admitted to a hospital last week with severe injuries. However. police said Monday they will seek no c riminal charges against Tom Brown. who said his infant son C regory suffer~ '!_fractured ~k ull_._ ~i broken ribs and ear damage in an accidental tumble from a µarked car Gregory, who was admitted to Esperanza In tercom m unity Hospital Ft-iday. was reported in fair condition at the University Heater's home before moving in of California -Irvine Medical last May. Center, where he will remain She said s he had known pending a juvenile co urt de· Heater for a year. meeting him c 1sion on whether he should be through a mutual friend. removed permanently from has Mi ss Ramey said she doesn't father's care pay Heater any room or board In an mterviev. Saturday. the a nd that the defendant baby's father said Gregory was !>Omet1mes gives her presents tnJured when "I was doing some s uch as marijuana. She said that errands a nd forgot that he although Heater sometimes has wasn't strapped into his ca,r fits of temper, he has never hurt sea\~auiund QPSAed..tha. -~· -------··--·-·---"" door. and puJled the baby seat inal arguments in the sex out , and he flew out onto the perversion case were expected sidewalk. to get under way today with the "He screamed and cried a lot. JU ry beginning deli berations but he didn't seem to be really either today or Wednesday. hurt. APWl ....... to Drug Suspect Tries Suicide In Mesa Jail An Orange reside nt who Costa Mesa police said apparently at- tempted suicide in their jail Monday has been transferred to a UC I Medical Cente r psychiatric ward. A Mesa jailer said William Michael Zuber. 26, was found un· conscious in his cell by a jail trusty at about 5 p.m. Monday. lie was revived by offi cers who <;aid he apparently had tied his long sleeved shirt about his own neck J ailer Richard June reported that Zuber. who had been arrest· ed in north Costa Mesa at 1:30 a .m .. had been placed in the safely restraint cell after of- fi cers found it impossible to book the suspect. Turn Right at 17th Century Zuber was arrested for suspi · c1on or being under the influence of drugs in public at a north Costa Mesa market. June said Zuber was held ts hours before he finally was booked. He said the suspect's "irrational behavior" included screaming and banging on tus cell door. Plymouth, Mass ., patrolman Bi ll y O'Meara Cleft) gives directions to Miles Standish lookalike Richard Talbot. The costumed Talbot is part of "Plymouth Progress." an event on Fridays during August in Plymouth. The 9 percent decline in infla- tion ·adjusted Gross National Product the total value of goods and s ervices -was only slightly better than the 9.1 pre· liminary figure released last month. The worst quarterly fall ever occurred during the depths of the last recession when GNP plummeted a record 9.1 percent. Coast Car Chase Lands Man in Jail ~ A Commerce Departme nt economist called Tuesday's re- vision "insignificant." ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT ·-H-,.,.,,,.,..,_, •"Cf Putlif1V.t J-c•• C-y Y*f"• .. tt••nl •f"Mt 0.fllitr•.t W~t Tt.Mft•I k"•t4 f dl10t Tll•-·• .. _ M•f\•41~ tttitor ~"~· A\\t\tfof'tt ..,.•Ot"4 la1t0t CoetaMeaeOMoe M111 ... .,l!:~::• :•Jitl:.~w ,,.,. OfffcH M~;:..::!:c~O~~~~ 1'::c~ ~ .. -:~~d Te~ne(7,4)~ a......_. Advertl8'ntlOoM7t • C•y•t -a.: c .... 1'v4111w:s, 0-. ::1 .. , •r-=v::r. .. ~:\':'',_'~~ '"•~= '••'t•tit<t• •tlMvt '""l•I HtMntt.-. •t ~---r=...~~.:-~s:.::.~-:: ~::· ~~~y:..-=:. .. ~=..~: It -.... An i8-year-old man who al- legedly led police on a high s peed chase through Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa and Foun· lain Valley was in Huntineton Beach Jail today facing charges that he assaulted a police officer with a vehicle. The suspect, Dan L . Hawes of Huntington Beach, aJso is being held on suspicion of burglary and auto theft, police said. Huntington Be1ch Police Lt. Merle Schneblin said the chase began at about 9:30 p.m . la.st Saturday, when Hawes sped off after an officer tried to hall him (or a traffic violation near the comer of Beach Boulevard and Yorktown Avenue. Eventually, lwo Huntington Beach police motorcycles and two patrol cars joined ln the pursuit as it sped into Costa Mesa. Scbneblin said chase speeds reached 100 mph as the suspect fied throu1h a Costa Mesa residential tract. Costa Mesa police joined in the punuit and attempted to block Hawes' vehicle as it sped north on Harbor Boulevard. In the course of tbe punwt, Hawes rammect a Costa Mesa patrol car and oae Hwlt.i.ncton Beach car three times SchaebUD Niel • Al tbe IUIPld'I auto Crouecl tbe c-. divider, lt lost a Un. Tbe drtYer attempted to eoa- Uaue ridlaa an tlae rtm alaae, police said, but the car finally cam e to a halt at the Euclid on· ramp to the San Diego Freeway in Fountain Valley. Schneblin said police de· termined that the Cad illac Hawes was driving had been s tolen from a Huntington Beach home Aug. 6 while its owners were away on vacation. He said the local home also had been burglarized at the time the car was stolen. resulling in the loss of four necklaces, two s trings or pearls and two gold bracelets. Police are probing Hawes' possible involvement in this break·in. Qty Worker Said Aged Man's Killer HARTFORD CAP) -A city weff are worker accused or kill· ing a 67-year-old welfare rei:iP· lent was admitted to Mount Sinai Hospital today with in- juries suffered ln a beatin1 by the dead man's family following the shooting. Stanley DuFault, 39, of Manchester, a former Hartlord pol.iceman wbo t. now a welfare c••• lavettJcator, WH under poUce l\IAl'd at the hotpital. 1be reuoa 1cr tbe 11aoot1n1 wu not lmm~cJear. CONCORD. QUARTZ Concord Delirium· ' '13t11ll <lf!a/JeJ 9/1wf;pJ/ 35 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORN IA 92660 TELEPHONE (714) 644·249<4 Business ~. Auguat 19, 1tl0 DAILY ALOT -- oftgage Rates 'Threat' H fHllJilw l ndmtry Recovery CouM Stall CALL TOM MARSTON ABOUT A SECOND TRUST DEED LOAN · UP TO 5500,000 Newpor~.~5.~~t,Y.0!,~~~~2nc A . -714 I l{:[){:[X:JJ RHOW'ffl Inc.. • LeslQl\Qll, Mua., economic fCN"ffutiQI firm. • '11.M receukln b., a loq ways to 10. 1t eurely wtll st.rek'h out to the end" ot the year. ll not furthtt," he Hld. • • Proepecta tor a rapid st.art to an economic re· covery, If anythln1. are ak>omler now," added andra Shaber, aenlor economist of Chase Econometrk• A.uoclates of Bala Cynwyd, Pa. The Commerce Department reported Yooday thal hoUsina startl lncreued h'om an annual ute of 1,208 mill.loo units in June to 1,281 mUUon in July BUILDING PE&lllTS -F&EQVENTL'Y a harbinger ot future activity -increased 15 per· cent to an annual rate of 1.24 million. the depart· ment said. Until June, the bouslng industry was in a tailspin, l~adlng the economy into a severe re· cession. ,Housing starts had fallen to an annual rate of 906,000 units. Despite the recent improvement. the pace of starts still is far below the 1.75 million total last year. Economists believe the industry must build 2 miUion housing units a year to meet .demand. During the first seven months of this year. 659,700 housing units were started, compared with 1,031,800 for the same period in 1919. a decrease of 36 percent. "WE'RE PLEASED BY JULY'S increase, but unless the recent rises in mortgage rates stop, re· covery will be nipped in the bud," said Michael Sumichrast, chief economist of the National As· sociation or Home Builders. "We anticipate a slow, arduous recovery - far different from the housing upturn after the last recession," said Ken Ketin. an economist for the National Association of Realtors. Mortgage rates, after falling to as low as 11.S percent, have gone up in recent weeks to 13 to 13.S percent. A JO.year, $60.000 mortgage at 11 .S percent in· terest means monthly principal and interest costs of $594, but at 13 percent, the costs reach $663.60. Sizzling Joh Foundry worker pours moulton bronze from electronic furnace into ladle at .Rockwell International's Uniontown, Pa .. plant. Bronze is used to make castings for water meters, which Rockwell has made for 100 years. Ol.rysler Vehicle Parts Offer Rapped DETROIT (AP> -Chrysler Corp. plan.a to of. fer owners ot defective 1918-tO Om.nil and HorilOOI free replacement parts, but the automaker aays it won't pay for the labor oo can with expired war· ranties. A leading auto consumer group head said that Chrysler's offer doesn't g9 far enough and predict· ed at least seven class-action lawsuits will be brought over potential defects in the front-wheel· drive aubcompaets. CHll'YSLE& SAID ITSOFFEll applies ''in the event of a problem not due to misuse or abuse" in· volving front wheel bearings, automatic iransax- les, ignition distributors and engine oil pumps. About 750,000 of the cars have been built since their introduction in the 1978 model year. Chrysler s aid owners whose one-year or 12,000.rnile warranties have nQt. expired can have their cars fixed at no cost. But people with can that are older wlll have to pay for the labor. Chrysler said. The No. 3 automaker said it reached its de· cision after noticing problems on company-owned vehicles. Company orricials also confirmed that some owners who compJamed about the problems have been paid for the parts. but declined to say how many cases there have been. CLAllENCE DITLOW, DIRECl'OR OF the Washington-based Center for Auto Safety, said Chrysler should be liable for both parts and labor. "It's our feeling that since there is a defect. Chrysler ought to pick up all the costs -including the labor ... said Dillow. "Chrysler has taken a step in the right direction. But unfortunately, they should have taken two steps.'' Dillow said he has reeeived more than 100 complaints about the cars' automatic transaxle, the combination transmission-drive axles used on front-wheel-drive cars. Ovt·r rrh ~ (~ountt~r NASO listinqs ~·~~§l~~~~~~~2=======~~~L--SumichrasteSti~ated th~~~~ld ~ut ho~---lkC~>rptJr/0:.S 'ltlt?r.f/iTlt' · ~n~ S:~e~y1~.'= i~~~l~ remainder of this year v,.. and Doacns ~n'!JCrlitXC!J JIC ll \otp0rute l'luu ·Sulk 201 $50 000 t $500 000 ~l'"J><•l'l C•:ni..-r ·Newpon lkach.CA 9'.!660 9 0 9 FREE SEMINAR INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS THE TEXAS MARKET THE TEXAS MARKaPLACE OFFEAS TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITIES FOR APPRECIATION AND TAX SAYINGS ON YOUR INVESTED SS. LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO BUV A~O SELL TI:XAS PROPERTY ANO RECEIVE THAT NEiDED TAX RELIEF. • How to Save Tax Dollars * How Real Estate Puts Inflation to work for you • How to Own Real Estate with ~ small amount of cash invested • Depreciation. Leverage & Group Investing • How to Generate Dollars for Investing * The Texas Market 7:30 P.M. 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY • August 20 THU~SDA Y • August 21 Mariott Hotel Anehe1m sher•ton Hotel Feahlon ttiand 1015 West·B•ft Rd. Newport a.acn (Adjacent to Dlsney11nd) ~****** RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED ******* CALL 17141 644-0390 • l nlerest only INYllMftl • lft<o•• • Cota•ucial • R .. id-tial "We bought this place by getting a 2nd T.D. from Santiago Banlc at a reduced rate. Jan's folks took equity out of their house the same way." ONLY 15112%* interest! can tDday to see how you can use second trust •ed ftnandJ11 to buy a new home or to make allhawllable from the home VoU are living in now. .................... ,,0,, ORANGE 99MllO ,, • w-111v co_,._,. • fliloa .. l v ,_... .... • 6 -tll• to l ,,..... • SoetMnt CalifonlN <.:''"'•'< f nur ICN1n iaforaMion Mn1ke Ir n vour hnanc •Ill,! nv•-d' (714) 759-1515 AMfAtCAN HOME MORTGAGE 230 Newporr Cen101 Onvo Design Plata Newpo11 Beacn Ca1t101n1a 92660 ~ have investment in· ~ormatioo worth S200. It's jYOurs oo a money back guarantee. Call Robert Miller 17 I 4t 552-6107 •typingtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles* golf carts*model trains*bikes *pianos*cars refrigerators *skates•••••• If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster In a Daily Pilot classified ad.ca11 M2-S6?8 a nd a f rlendly ad· vlserwlll help you turn your wheels into cash. 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AMl¥te NEW YORK -"We don't feel we've been ml81ead1nc in the past,'' said a Treasury Department official in a,n. nounch\g_that U.S. Savings Bonds no longer will bepromot«l as a good mvestment. Is that so? So it wun'l misleading to tell people that "Savings Bonds make a comfortable retirement almost a cert~ty." And It wasn't misleading to usure parents that bQnd!I would buy a college education? oa TO RECRUIT SOME OF the most successful busi· ~essmen in the country to encourage workers to buy Sav- ings Bonds when, if they had any rinanciaJ sense at all those businessmen scorned bonds for themselves! · Apparently It wasn't misleading either to advertise that bonds paid interest of 6.5 ,percent or 7 percent when in order to obtain that measly rate, the buyer had to hold the bonds for 11 long years. During which lime ., the same federal gov. NEJJ;;S ,f N:f l YSIS ernment ran up enormous debts that .... ~ helped spread an infla. -------------"' tion that, at current rates. would halve the buying power of those bonds, even after payment of dividends. In August 1978, when Savings Bonds were paying 6 percent. a Treasury oHicial was asked to defend the pro- gram. If $75 were put into Savings Bonds, he responded, the owner would have $100.80 \lfter five years. IN REALITY, OF COURSE, THE buyer won't have $100.80 or anything close to it in comparable dollars a con. sequence of raging inflation. He 'll be lucky if he h'as half that much in purchasing power. But Uncle Sam didn't let that dampen his enthusiasm -only his sense or fair play. The same sort of reasoning was used in projections that claimed to show how you could save for retirement or the education of a child. Nothing whatever was said about the erosion of inflation. An oversight? lt requires great naivete to believe that a department that handles the world's biggest (inane· ing job simply forgot about inflation when making projections of school and retirement expenses. No. it wasn't an oversight. Not • w.h.ej! tlte sy_bj~~..c.Q.Mi."1ent.ly~ 'I!~ lef( unmentioned at a time when infla· lion was on everyone's mind. NOt when ~ in the "Build for the Future" brochure cuNNIFF the word was n't mentioned once although any projection of buying power must deal with it: INSTEAD, THE SUGGESTION THROUGHOUT was that "they'll continue to increase in value." and they'll put "personal savings goals within reach," and "here's how· your dollars for education grow." Many people saw through the promotion and sold their bonds. some of them to go into bank certificates that or. fered them hiJ(her annual rates for six months than the Treasury offered over an ll-year period. Among the angriest were retirees who believed Uncle Sam's promise that bonds "can make the difference ~wee!' ~tir~ment that's barely adequate and an old age with digruty. They know what dignity is. The Gray Panthers, an organization of older Americans. complained to the Federal Trade Commission !ast_year that the government's promotions were mislead- mg rnvestors by claiming bonds were a good investment. . THE FTC DISAGREED, SA YING that private iostitu- t~on.s, such as banks, do not warn of the hazards of infla. t1o_n. M~ybe so. bu~ that only confirms a deceit rather than raises 1t to an ethical standard. Besides, doesn't one ex- pect more from Un cle Sam, the nation's father figure? DoarJ011.-11.·\ .-rrap• NEW YOlllC (API -FIMI ~ eYOS IOI' N<on . Aug 18 Olleft Hoqfl L-CIOW Chg JO Ind. ~.S7 .._, ~ ~ .. -~II• 20 Trn. 3"~ ;s,1.11 JU "2 317 l9-3 9t Is Ull 110 IS II 1 )1 '°' ,. 110.lO-o.n 7"' I 6S SI~ 3'15.30 30 .CI )II.JO J.12.U-U• • • Indus • • • . .. • . • • •• • ••• J.A42,/\'0 i"' Tran"' ... .. .•... • .••.... ..s.e : Ullh • • ....................... 100 :,,,. 6SSlocks. . . . ....... •,627-'00 . '"' ' '. ,.,,, ti, , ... v, NEW YO~K (API Auq. 18 TOd<ly ?f>Q 1m 101 11110 JI ? WHAT AMElt 010 NEW YC>Alt IAPI A\19 19 Due to late transmission today's listing will not appea'r in the Daily Pilot.