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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-29 - Orange Coast Pilot.... ,. -. DUICI ClllT FR IDAY Mf\Y /·1 1<};)1 Dallyltl ... M.IH~ Huntington Beach marathon skater Damion Ray rela:&es in hil home town en route from Oregon to Tijuana. The worst, he 1ay1, is behind him. $2.3 billion worth of oil bids told By GLENN SCOTT .... ~ ...... , ..... At a form a l b id o pe ning cer e m ony T hurs da y at the Anaheim Conve ntion Center, U.S. Bureau of Land Manage- ment offi cials accepted a total $2.3 billion worth of high bids from oil companies seeking to drill offs hore oil wells in 111 tracts In the Santa Maria Basin off Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. The largest single bid was $333 .6 million to lease a 5,000- $14,588 furs found u n d er trash b in A collection of mink, rabbit a nd marm ot furs valued at $14,588 that was reported mjss- ing from Robinson's department store in Newport Beach was dis- covered Thursday under a trash dumps ter near the Fashion Island store. The fu rs. 24 in all , had been moved to the s tor e's loading dock earlier in the week to be s hipped for c leaning, police were told. B ut when a tr uc k driver showed up to transport the rurs, whic h had all been sold to customers, the collection could not be found. Police said a store security person later spotted the rurs stas he d un de r the tras h dumpster. Officers said it Is un- clear how the furs got there. acre tract at the southern edge of the basin off Point Arguello in Santa Barbara County. The fiJUre bolls down to about $15 million per acre. But offic i a ls fo r a 50-50 partnership of Chevron U.S.A. and Phillips Petroleum Corp. said they think they've got a large supply of untapped crude oil under lhe sea noor. They must know something. Their bids for sever a l tracts we re more than $100 million higher than bids by their com- petitors. Cl a ir Gh y li n , Ch ev r on's gene ral manager for its western region land department. said the two firms jointly drilled weUs in 1979 just south of the Santa Maria Basin and based their bid- ding on those findings. "You can tell what we think of it by the amount of money we r isked." he said. The $333 .6 m illio n is the highest bid ever submitted to ,lease an offshore tract in U.S. waters. said bureau or land management officials. Th e C h ev r o n -Phillips partnership was the big bidder at Thursday's ceremony, offer- ing more than Sl billion to lease t wo separate four-tract areas. The partnership was high bid· der In a total of 24 bids . Chevron USA claitned fo ur other tracts on its own. Ghylin was reluc tant to estimate the size or the oll beds his researchers believe are wait- ing in offshore tracts, but he said U.r:y suspect It is part or oU reserves underneath Santa Marla. He called the area "one <See LEASES, Pa1e A2> Judge eyes artistic e I questions on coast Is lavender legal in Laeuna? Who has the power over the red towe,.. in Costa Mesa ? Those are questions that Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald ls pondering. f'ltzeerald ia putting a lol of miles on his car while preparina to lasue rullnas on the colorful cues. Jn UM l.a9'lfta Buch cue, the JMI• will decide ii the eity hu the rlaht to o r d a r Druacllla Tysen to mute tbt lavtoder dt· cor on tier Str.awberry lllor&cake boutique. The faad1e 11)'1 h•'ll Coaat HIJbway business before Issuing a ruline. Lacuna Bea~h filed suit aaalnsti Miss Tysen after she re· sfsted the e rtorts or her neighbors and the city's Design Review Board to chance the col· or of her shop. The judge alao mutt rule ln a lawsuit ru.s by the City or Colta Meu aaatnat metal 1hop owner and 1edlpter All Routban, who Is b1tt11._, to keep three tall ICU= he el'ffled ln front of bl• --. Avenue 1hop. J'lbfil!rald ••fl he's already driven by 8Gulhan'1 red metal scu.lptuna r. prep1ratlon for 11· auin1 a rulloc. He 1e .. o1t.tane law Ind mo- tion J"9,.. who are tHIPf!d such c.-._. TM f1ct that be ,... celw ... ~ .colQrful c.,.. tM result of lmPertlal 1cheduliq on the toul't e8Jendll', ICC«~ Lou.........,., WlltlDt executJH ~cer. .. • * * • • • • -YOUR HDMITDWI llllY PAPll O R ANGE COUN TY CA LIF O H l~I A 25 CENT S Rolling along dow n t h e coast Huntington skater battles weather, truckers in trek from Oregon • By PIUL SNEIDERMAN "The first day out I came to a Dt-DaHy ..... u.... . place called Crescent Hill," he F ou.r days o f ra tn , s ome recalls ... Every body said I homicidal truckers and a few couldn't make the hill. They said treach~rous mountain ~urves even bicycle riders had to walk ha ven t s topped Hunt10gton their bikes up " Beach roller skater Damion Ray · from continuing his coas ta l Ray says he took the steep ma r athon. four-mile incline in 30 minutes. Ray rolled into Peter's Land-"fl blew them away." he says. ing Thursday and prepared for ··The mayor proclaimed 'Da· the last leg of Ms attempt to m1on Ray Day.· He couldn't s kate the e n tir e coast or believe it." California, from Oregon to Mex-Ray began his trip May 10 and ico, in two weeks. encountered steady rain that He expected to wheel into Ti· caused his skate wheels to skid. jua na late today. A greater problem in the early In an interview, Ray claimed going, he says, was caused by that the worst was behind him. some ti:uck drivers. "When I was outside Eureka. a t rucker pulled ahead of me." t Ray says. "He got out with a crowbar and took a swing at my head." Ray says he tried to evade the trucker and began removing his s k a t es so he could defend himself "Just as he got lo me. I threw one of my skates at him," he says. "Then I tackled him with one skate on and one skate off.·· Ray says he eventually was able to subdue the trucker with the help of others who witnessed the attack. According lo Ray, the trucker growled, "I don't want no skater on my mountain!" The 29-year -old Huntineton Beach athlete claims he became a tar get of othe r Northern California truckers who used CB sets to r adio his locaUon. He says l he truc ke rs played "chicken" by trying to see how close they could come to him. R~y says he had many close calls and once had to throw himself off the road to evade a truck The skater had to do portions Of his journey along Highway 101, a freeway. (See SKATER, Page AZ> Vallejo recruiting police officers in Orange County 60 apply for jobs up north By STEVE MARBLE Dt t .. o.llJ ~ ... Stlllf Boasting good pay, clean air and an "all American" image. a Northern California town recent· ly set up a recruiting center in Orange County looking for police officers. O fficials f ro m Vallejo, a m edium-sized c ity in Contra Costa County near Oakland, said t h ey c ame s outh because they're having trouble finding good police material up north. Using ne wspape r ads, the three-man recruitin~ team wh ich inc luded the ValleJo police chief -took in more than 60 applications, nearly half from experienced, already-employed policemen. The effort wasn't so unusual. Earli er this year. police recruit- ing teams from Dallas and Chicago moved into Or ange County In search of qualified of- ficers Some policl' officials call the process ··ra1dmg." It's officially known as the l ateral entry system. It's common with police departments Jn Orange County. The lateral transfer is simply CSee COPS, Page A2) Beglin innocent of wife rape By DAVID KUTZMANN Of UM Dally l'I ... S\aff Nine months and two trials after first being accused of rap- ing bis wife. John Beglin stood outside a Santa An a courtroom Thursday a free man. Only m inutes ea rl ier , a n Or a nge County Superior Court jury had acquitted Beglin. an automobile restorer. of charges that he forci bl y raped his spouse in the bedroom of the couple's Cypress home last September . It was Orange County's first s uch case and believed to be on- ly the second in California since passage more than a year a~o of a s pousal r ape law by the Legislature "This has been a very difficult nine months," Beglin said quiet- ............ IOMITHINQ fllHV -Shella Hamon lH1ht> and RhOnda Suits 1hoW off the filh theJ eauaht by band ln the ltreeta of Greenwoodk~~· when heavy railll cauaed I creek to over· now.~ on'• carp meuured M inches and weiahed ln at 29 pnds, l ly as his attorney. R. Stephen Hostetler of Newport Reach. stood nearby. "I've virtually been a pnsoner ... I've endured two trials and enormous legal fees <to prove my innocence l " The defendant's first trial had en ded without a decision in February when a Jury reported it was "hopelessly deadlocked" two votes shy of acquittal -10 to 2 A unanimous verdict is necesar~ in a criminal proceed- ing But prosecutor Alphonsus C. Novick decided to push ahead with a second trial on the basis of claims by Beglin's wife, Paula, that her husband tied her to a bed, took nude photographs <See FREE. Page A2) County b u s far e hike set Monday The cost to r ide one of Orange County's public buses will go up Monday. A ride on one of the Orange County Tra nsit District's 52 local bus routes will increase from 50 cents to 75 cents during weekday rush hours and 60 cenLc: during slack times -middays, evenings and weekends. Transfers will remain free. Senior citizen fares will be 50 cents during busy commuting hours and 10 cents otherwise. Handicapped riders will pay 75 cents during peak hours and 35 cents at slack limes. The rush hours are 6 to 8: 30 a .m . and 3:30 to 6 p.m. during the first two weeks in June. Then, when OCTD officials make internal s hifts, the houn will be extended a half-hour each period. Thus, as of June 14, the tJmes ror hilher fares will be 6 lo 8 a.m. and 3 to 6 p.m. ~lhly puses aJso wllJ cost more begiMing Monday. A local pass will go up Crom $17.50 to Shutdo wn nears CHICAGO CAP) -Bualnen es chartered bUfft and or1anl1ed carpoola, suburban bus driven faced layoff• and le1tslalors quarreled over a rescue plan aa Chicaco·area mau turult lurched toward lnaolvenc)'. A 1huldown of lht clly'1 IYIWU could C9flle aesoon 11Junee. The RT A rlh out of money for 1ub· sldletWedn~v. S2 1.50. Passes for students, seniors and the handicapped will cost $18. Riders who take daily express routes will pay $1.50 instead of $1.25 per ride. Their passes will go up from $43.75 to $56..50 per month. The fare increases were ap- proved by the OCTD Board of Directors in March. Members said the price hikes were needed to bring in more local revenue and to counter inflating costs. ORAIGf CIAIT lflTlll Low night and mornina clouds, otherwise fair throu1h Saturday. Low ~onl1ht alon1 the co11t IO, inland 65. HJ1h4 Saturday 68 to 72 at the beaches, 78 to 84 Inland. ' llllDf TllAY Dancer• oJ tit• ueot11 f orm•d Colt ornfo Coo II Solid TMoJn-debut SotMr• da11 night hi Chopmu Coll•gt Aadttonum.,,. DI. Jllfl M .,_....,,.. 111 ......... ,.. ....... •1-1 c........ .. ~· .. g ===-.. a= .,: ........ ..... ,... u ! , ... "" .. 1-. IUD 0 ' . . ..... . • • • • • • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /f=rlday, May 29, 1981 AP..._... CARDINAL'S FUNERAL -Thousands of Poles· gather in the rain outsicle the Warsaw residence of the late Cardinal Stefan Wyszyns ki as his coffin is carried to a church to lie in stale The leader of the Polish church since 1948 died Thurs- dav of cancer at 79 <s tory Pa~e A4>. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- From page A1 CO P SSO UGIIT • • • the process of an ex perienced of· ficer going from one city to another while retainin g his seniority and earning compara· ble pay Orange County police officials agree that pay and environment have much to do with raiding. Orange County. where police salaries are gener ally lower than big c ities such as Los Angeles. recruits on the premise that it's a nicer place to live I n Newport Beach, Police Chief Charles Gross says lateral trans fers from other cities have s aved the day .. If we didn·t get the transfers we·d be 1n serious s hape." the 'l ewport Chief suggests He says his department s teered away from going after experienced of· fic crs from other cities for years hut changed direction 1n 1980. In part, Gross blames Proposi· twn 13 for the lack of qualifi ed applicants He suggests poten- tial policemen go into other lines of work. usually in the private sector F1 ve years ago. Gross says his department could expect to find 25 qualified persons out or 200 applicants. Now he e xpects to get six out of every 200. Huntington Beach police Capt. Grover Payne says some of the applicants they get "are so un· qualified it's amazin~ some are prnt1c•ally illiterate ·· Puynt' s ays Huntington Beach begun recruiting officers from other cities in the early 1960s be,,uuse the beach ar ea was growing so rapidly. ·we've always drawn a lot from Los Angeles." he says. 'Huntington Beach is just a nicer place for an officer to live and it gets him out of the big ci - ty mess." In Laguna Beach. police of· ficials tried the newspaper ad recruiting method this year and drew applicants from all over the state. "We put together a get-away· from-the-big-city-hook·em-and· book-em.syndrome ad," ex- plains Neil Purcell, Laguna's acting police chief. He says Laguna shied away from s uch recruiting methods in past years becauRe "we were seeing a lot of bad apples from one city looking for a new basket to land in." Purcell agrees that the quality of applicants has dropped in re- cent years. Newport's Chier Gross says in past limes there used to be "a gentleman's rule that 'thou shalt not raid from another city'.'' He says because of the lack of ORANGE COAIT qualified applicants. ~at rule has been abandoned. He claims the pressure is now on a city to keep police salaries and benefits competitive to a void raids. Also. he points out, it is finan- cially smart to get a n ex - perienced officer who already has acad e my training. He calculates that recrufting an ex- perienced officer saves Newport $7 ,000. Lt. Robert Lennert in Irvine says the same thing. He claims a r ookie officer must put in roughly six months of academy training before he's ready for street work. He says in Irvine the city once got up to 1,500 applicants when a police pos ition opened up. Now. he s ays, t he city averages around 30 applicants. ·'It's 2etting harder and h,Jrder to find recruit <inexperienced) level officers," he adds. Chief Gross, though, warns that recruiting experienced policemen has its drawbacks. ·'It definitely shouldn't be the pr1 m a ry source for getting personnel." he says. "A depart- ment needs new blood, it needs the younger individuals that represent the changing value of lime " A problem along the Orange Coas t. particularly in Newport. 1s housing Gross says his de- partment has hired experienced officers who've had to turn down the job because they couldn't find a house they could afford. Gross estimates that !ewer than 5 percent of his policemen live in Newport Beach. Me mbe r s of t he Vallejo recruiting team say that when they came to Orange County. they tried to use the housing situa tion to their advantage. "We told them that Vallejo was a place they could afford to live." explain ed Capt. Roy Conway. "And the truth of the matter is that many or the appli- cants were more worried about that than anything else." Change8 possible WASHINGTON (AP> - Reagan admlnlltration orrlctals say they are willing to recon1lder Social Security proposals that would reduce benefit.I for people who reUre early. They allO say the president ml&ht consider re-duc~a the annual cott-<>f·Uvlni Increases for those drewlnt pensions. Dilly Piiat MAIN Mf'ICI Thomaa P. Haley ~·· °" ... £~ ... °"'"' Robert N Weed ,........ M. Thomaa Keevll .... M1chMI p. Hervey _..,.~ L. l<l.Y Schultz. ca.-•~ i<.nneth N. Goddatd Jr. CIPMlllM~ Thomel A . Murphlne ........... hi'MtO Schulman ~ ' <>*teii H Loot .................. U0 Wttl .. ., It., C..te MtM, _tA Mail,..-... ... , •• G• .. *'41,CA, ,_. Israelis Faid1 Lebanon Seagoing commandos, air strikes hit Palestinian bases BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) - Seaborne Israeli commandos madt •brief raid south ot Beirut durln1 the ntaht after a aeriea of e arlier air strikes In which l1rael claimed destruction of four Libyan missile batteries at Palestinian bases on th e Lebanese coast. The Palestlnians said the air strikes killed 25 people. includ- Catalina air dead identified Three people killed when an airplane crashed Thursday In about 200 feet of water off Santa Catalina Island have been iden- ti(ied by the Los Angeles County Sherirr's Department. The two passengers were list· ed as Gary Lourenco, 24. of Tulare and Coleen Knight. 23, also believed to be from the Tulare area. The pilot of the plane has been identified as Stephen Stoneroad, 30, of Tulare. The spokesman said a fourth person may have been on the plane, but that has not been confirmed. The plane cras hed and sank 300 yards off the is land. A Los Angeles Count y Sher iff's divi ng team had to call off a search for the wreckage of the twin-engine plane, operated by a Visalia-based taxi service, bec ause of the de pth of the water. The s heriff's spokesman said a private salvage company would be called in to retrieve the wreckage. believed to be resting in from 200 to 250 feet of water. Witnesses to the crash said there was a puff of smoke from the low-flying plane's right engine just before it rolled over on its left wing and hit the water . By the t ime nearby boats reached the crash s ite only debris and an oil s lick could be seen, the spokesman said. Reportedly the plane landed on Catalina Island at about 3 p.m . and left a half hour later with the passengers. The plane was described as a Beechcra!t Baron oper ated by Shann of Visalia From Page A1 SKATER • • • Ray says he was stopped eight times by California Highw ay Patrol officers and ticketed twice as a freeway hazard. The Huntington Beach man embarked on the ma rathon skate as a benefit for the Multi· pie Sclerosis Society He has picked up corporate sponsors such as 7-Up. Foretravel Motor Homes of Irvine provided whom with a mobile residence for the ex· curs ion. He had been accompanied on the trip by his manager, Chuck Canizzaro, and his fiance Amber Ray. One r egre ·~..t hat the Northern California m ountain route p roved unsuitable for Ray's plan to break his previous speed record of 57 miles per hour. Still. Ray says he aver aged 10 to 20 mph on the trip, often cruising downhill at 45 to 50 mph. Also, the rain slowed Ray in the ear ly going, so that the full coast.al trip will take 15 rather than 14 days. Aside from the truckers. Ray says he was treated well ~Y peo· ple in each town he visited. Though bis feet have a few calluses, Ray says his muscles and lungs held up. He's pre- pared to try a similar marathon across Texas in a rew week.a. From Page A1 FREE. • • or her and then sexually assault- ed her. The defendant had maintained ln both his trtals that his sales manager wile consented to hav- ing sex with blm that eventns even lhoQgb the two were about to separate and dJvorce. After their sexual actlvlty, be testifted his wife told him, "You k now, this doesn't chan1e a lblna. I'm still 1otna to file for divorce." Be1lln had testified be wu aurprlled by lbe 1t.atement and retorted that he would tHll allinony payments beeauae she earned more money than he did. The threat .an1ued bl. wife. he uld, and she storm.ct fr'Om their houM yellln1, "I'll ... '°" ln hell." Asked Tbunday bow hi fth toward bis former 1pouae, Wida wbom be la ttlll lffked la divorce proceedln11. 8 e1UD r•PGDdlid that be ..... bltter." AIMl ot IU trial, bi Hid~ ·'I cannot look •l W• OP· timltUUlly or wttlaoul blU. 1 llnew OI nay lnnoffnc• ,u 11.._,, ft WU 1JUi\'tbat l couldn't pt0¥e wbatrbew:• r ln1 l8 civUianJ and seven tuer rlllaa, and the commando raid left 'wo more 1uerrilla1 d ad. Tho auernlla leadership vowed revenge A communiqu e from the Palestine Liberation Organlta· lion said A squad of Is raeli com· mandos came ashore in landing craft just before m idnight Thursday at Khalde, destroyed a truck and clashed with guer· rlllas before withdrawing 20 m inutes later . Israeli military authorities confirmed the raid. saying a guerrilla base was attacked and a vehicle destroyed. They said all the raiders returned safely Earlier Thursday, Israeli iets made three attacks on Palestln· Ian mountain strongholds in the Damour area, about 1~ miles aouth ol Belr-ut, and a fourth against Palestinian positions 1n the foothills of Mount Hermon in southeast Lebanon , Beirut Radio said. The PLO reported a fifth strike at Naameh, 21h miles north of Damour Meanwhile, saying the results of U.S. peace efforts have been .. miraculous" so far, President Reagan today in Washington, D.C. asked his s pecial Mideast envoy. Philip Habib, to continue his atte mpts to avoid war between Israel and Syria in the Lebanese missile crisis. "At the president's instruc- lion, my mission is continuing and I will be returning lo the area sometime next week," Habib told reporters following a 50-minute meeting wi th Reagan at the White House. But If Habib and Reagan de· cided on a new approach In the three-week effort to defuse the cr isis . Habib offered no clue as to what it was. He said no clue as has set any deadlines for his ef- forts, however, and that the in- tensive U.S. peace effort is ap preciated in the area. Habib expressed optimism there would be a favorable out come to the efforts , saying "a peaceful resolution to the im- mediate issue is achievable." Wildcatters missing 500 turn out for opening of off shore oil lease bids Sometime between the 'old get- rich-quick days when Texas land- ow n ers would bathe themselves in gushe rs and modern times when oil men bid for offshore oil tracts. the in· dustry changed its appearance. Example. more than 500 peo- ple tu rned out Thursday in Anaheim for the opening of bids to lease 111 offshore tracts along the Central Coast. and not a one looked like a wildcatter There were. to be sure, a few cigars sticking out of shirt pockets and a few sets of cowboy boots. But for the most part, the group would have looked out of place at the quietest country and western bar in Orange County. around. a convention of bankers . There was an incredulous wave of murmurs after Grant announced that a partnership of Chevron U.S.A and Phillips Petroleum Corp. had bid $333.6 million to lease one tract for five years Scattered applause broke out as if to reward the bidders for their courage. The Chevron-Phillips team got all the glory. Their corporate heads were surrounded by re· porters and television cameras when the ceremony finished. Grant, noting that the Chevron bids always seemed to be last a nd largest finallv drew a nervous laugh from the crowd by Joking: ''Chevron's bids are so heavy, they always Call to the bottom." ff zeroes have weight, then the. From P1age A 1 envelopes would have seemed heavy. 011 companies were or- dered to include with each bid a bank draft fo r 20 percent of the total bid. That means Chevron- Phillips submitted checks for more than $200 million. The Anaheim Convention Center seemed like an odd loca- tion to host a meeting concern· in g th e Centra l Coast. But Michael Fergus, public affairs ')lficer for the bureau of land 111anagement, said large meet· ing places in Los An geles weren't avai lable on s hort notice. He said officials chose to hold the meeting i n Southern Californja rat her than along the Centra l Coast to cut down tra vet. -GLENN SCOTT It was an attentive. three- piece suited crowd that bowed its head in unison to scribble down a new number each ti me William Grant. manager of the £ederal Bureau of Land Manage- ment ·s Outer Continental Shelf Office recited another figure. They looked like a sea of re- entry students taking college en- trance exams. or maybe a con- vention of accountants Better vet cons idering the multi· miliion dollar bids floatinJ( LE AS ES BID ON OIL • • • Oil imports hike U.S. trade d e ficit WASHINGTON <AP> With oil imports returning to a typical level , the nation's foreign merchandise trade deficit is ris- ing again. Commerce Department fi gures released Thursday showed im- ported oil flowing into the United States at a daily average of 6.8 million barrels in April. about 24 percent faster than the surprising 5.5 million average reported for March. The apparent surge helped in· crease the deficit for the month to $3.46 billion, a much more typical figure for recent months than was the $451 million recorded in March Commerce analyst s said April's fi gures weren't as bad as they looked, nor were March's as good -a situation blamed on ex- ceptionally heavy oil deli veries so late in March that the1v ended uo being counted in Aprl . But even ignoring that prob· lem. the fig_ures for the first third of the year should prod private ex- porters and the g6vernment into :ic tion, Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge said. of California's oldest oil areas." The fact that the bids were so much higher than any others d1dn 't seem to bother the smil- ing cadre of Chevron officials who sat in the first two rows in a crowd of more than 500 attend- ees. ''The main purpose is to win.·' exp I ained L W Funkhouser, vice president for exploration and production. "We obviously thought pretty highly or these tracts." Ghylin said exploratory drili· mg will take place during the next six months. Drilling plat- forms probably won't go up over the federally administered prop- erty three miles from shore for another fi ve years. he added. Although bids were opened for all 11 tracts. the status of 32 of the most northerly tracts off the San Luis Obispo County coast re- mains uncertain. A preliminary injunction was issued Wednesday in Los Angeles by U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer to prevent the federal agency from leasing those environmentally sensitive sections. The injunction was sought by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr .. whose lawyers ar gued that the Pay hike delayed WASHI NGTON (AP > - Despite his call for higher militar y pay, President Reagan will put off a July l across-the- board salary increase for the armed forces. oi l drilling activities for those tracts would conflict with the state's Coastal Act Brown, several environmental groups and many local cities have sought to halt drilling along the coast -especially the region from Morro Bay south to Pismo Beach -because of potential damage from oil spills. The rocky shoreline is a breed- ing ground for endangered sea otters a nd is along the mi- gratory route of California gray whales Cycl ist rides into trouble MERCED <AP> A Fresno man learned there are faster ways to flee from a bank rob- bery than pedaling off on a bicy- cle. The looal branch or United California Bank was robbed of $3,084 Wednesday by a man armed with a .38-caliber pistol. Police Chief Har old Kulbeth said. The bandit put t he money in a knapsack, left the bank and rode away on a bicycle, the chief added. Policemen driving to the holdup scene spotted the bicycle i •1:i blocks away. The cyclist saw the police cars too. Apparently panicking, he crashed the bicycle into the curb, fell off and s truck his head on the pavement, Kulbeth said. SPECIAL PURCHASE BERVEN CARPETS "Radiant Point" Limited Quantity Left in Stock !! UL TRON NYLON: including padding & installation A MOST RECOGNI ZED AND RESPECTED SYMBQL OF QUALITY IN 1lE INDUSTRY. , •ANTI STATIC • RESISTS SOILING • RETAINS A.OPEARANa yd. yd. .. .. " " •, !· .. . .. .. . . . . ' . ., ..... ............ ' . .. :':"· ....... ., .. . . . . .... ... .. . . .. _ .... ............. Sculptor Logan Fleming puts finishing touches to wax bust of veteran entertainer Bob Hope. The bust will be enshrined in Orlando, Florida's Hall of Fame a.s Hope celebrates his 18th birthday today . Hometown remembering Nearly a year after the idea came up, the city where the BeaUes were discovered more than two. decades ago, Liverpool, England has moved a step closer to nam· ing streets after the Fab Four. The City Council's Highway Committee voted 10·9 this week in favor of naming streets after Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, slain ex· Beatie John Lennon and the Beatles· late manager, Brian Epstein. The proposal, to be voted on next month by the f~ 99-member council . also would name a sixth street Beatles Way. Epstein, who died of a drug overdose in 1967, discovered the Beatles in 1961 at The Cavern , a Liverpool nightclub which since has been razed. Biily Carter's once-famous service station in Plains, Ga. will be going on the auction block next month after the brother of former President Carter pulls up stakes and moves to Alabama for a new job. Carter has announced he is relocating to Haleyville, Ala. to accept a public relations job with Tidwell Industries. which manufactures mobile homes. Besides the service station in downtown Plains, also be· jng sold is the baseball diamond where the president played softball while in of. fice. The Inte rnal Re venue Service and the First Federal Savings and Loan Association or Columbus have threatened to foreclose on the Buena Vista home to force Carter to pay off a $105,000 IRS debt from 1978 and the remainder of the $100,000 mortgage the bank bolds on the property. Six fln1tli1ta have been named to compete for the $12,000 lint-prlie lo the Vu Cllblll'D JnternaUonal Plano CompeUUon, to be awarded in a nationally televised ceremony Sunday night ln Ft. Worth. Texas. They include J e ffrey Kabane, 24, Venice, Calif.: Panayla Lyru, 27, New York; Cbrlatopber O'Rlley, 2,, Jamaica Plain, Mass.; Santiago Rodrl1uea, 28, Washincton, D.C.; Andre· Michel Schub, 28, New York: and Zhu Da Ming, 29, Pek· ing. Singer Ella Fitzgerald has filed a $1 million lawsuit against MCA Re co rds charging breach of contract and fraud in r egard to her earninqs. Army Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic Jr., who reportedly may be denied an Army medal because of a ll eged col· laboration with his Iranian captors while he was a hostage rn Tehran, said the charges against him have been "blown out of propor- tion." Sublc, 24 , who said he had been "a good boy who did what everyone e lse did," said the Army has not in· formed him that he will not receive a medal. "Personally, if I don't re- ceive a medal, there's no heartbreak," he said from his home in Detroit. Rains drench Colorado I Hailstorm batters crop fields , flood watch in effect U>astal forecast 1.lthl ••rlelll• wind• be<omlnt -•• to -• 10 to "knots 111 ... •-. t to J fool W9St to tOVth-1 1-11 lllC,_lnt tOlllgfll. 1.-<IOUdl "'°"'1"9 hows be<.Omlnt ,,_11, ,.,... nyln•f.,_, Nmional A cold front -'*' 11'1wldeo1orm1 Imo Ille central GrHt Pleln1 stetH Tllursday, drenclllnt H<tl0111 ol eallern Colorado, Ka nsas and 04ll•l>oma. In OtlOf-Sfwlntll. Colo., 1.U ,,.. clles of rain fell 111 lhr• "°"'"" lore· '"' wai.n of....,..., Sand er.-to -tllr°""" a -le llome per11 alld wa111 a urr -lb two occ-11 oH tlleroa4. Re1cue --." 1111111 ,_s and a laelcler rm«'*' llW 1tr-,_ .. and t>rou111t tllem to safety , autllorltlft Hid. f'armers In Colorado's MO•tan County -stock ol -•t -<Gift flelds, flatl-4 WednHdaY nlflll .,..., a '° • """"of 11e11 Ntt ... ed u.. nortllealt 1«114111 of IN ttMe. 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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT,t=rlday, May 29, 1981 s A3 J11ror prospects picked Drat.Ding due to determine members of county Grand Jury Tblrty people from the five supervisorlal d.lstrlcts ln Orante County have been nominated to serve on the 1981·82 county Grand Jury. A drawing to determine the 19 who will serve on the Jury will be held at 12:30 p.m . Wednesday In Department 5 of Oran1e County Superior Court, located at 700 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. Names of the nominee•, thelr cities of residence, and the superior court judge who nominated them are as follows: F l RST SU PERVISORIAL DISTRICT -Rochelle Barnes, 42, Santa Ana, Judge Edward Wallin; Eleanor Bendall, 41, W estmlnster, Judge Robert Rickles: Keith BoiUot, 63, Santa Ana, Judge Robert Rickles: John W. Donnelly, 61 , Fountain Valley, Judge Luis Cardenas; Dorothy Lake, 66, Garden Grove, Judge Richard Beacom; Philip Toffler, 76, Santa Ana, Judge James Judge. SECOND SUPERVISORJAL DISTRICT -Georce Hender, no age &lven, Garden Grove, Judie Byron Mc Mill an : Robert Hou1eal Jr., 58, Huntington Beach, Judge Betty Lou Lamoreaux; Phyllis Journ11an, 57, Huntington Beach, Judge Harmon Scoville; France• Park, 60, Huntington Beach, Judie Lloyd Btanpled Jr.: Armando Pere•, S7, Garden Grove, Judge James Perez ; Sonja Richardson , ,3, Huntington Beach , Judge Frank Domeninchini. THIRD SUPERVISORIAL DISTRICT -Kathleen Barrish, 39, Villa Park, Judge William Thomson; William Braz, 60 , Yorba Linda, Judge Walter Charamza; Frederick Brown, 64, Fullerton, Judge James Smith; Dolores Chmel, 57, La Habra, Judge James Perez: Elizabeth Graham, SO, La Habra, Judge Jerrold Oliver; Frank Howarth, 62, La Habra, Judge Jerrold Oliver . FOURTH SU PERVISO RIAI. DISTRICT Charlotte Cleary 47, Villa Park, Judge Philip Schwab: Rodney Coulson, 74. Anaheim , Jud ge Rober t Rickles; Jerome He rsch, 65 Anaheim , Judge Harm o11 Scoville; Leonard Lahtinen. 47. Anaheim , Jud ge Robe r t Fitzgerald; Beverly Payne, 44 Buena Park. Judge Jame :- Jackman; Bert Williams, 66 ·orange, Judge Everett Dickey FIFTH SU PERVISO RIAI DISTRICT Robert Brown, 63 Newport Beach. Judge J ame~ Cook: Alicia Eppinger. 40. Tustin, Judge Wilham Murray Howard Loudon. 66, Lagunn Niguel, Judge Robert Ri ckie!'. Kent Moore. 41 , Corona dcl Mar Judge James Turner, Marlh:1 Newkirt, 44 , Newport Beach Judge Walte r C h a r a m za Eugenie Wenke, 52, Corona dt>I Mar, Judge Robert Rickles The new grand Jury. wh1l'11 will serve a one year term .. .ill be sworn in July I Human rights f es ti val topic More than 30 county organizations to participate By 0. C. HUSTINGS OI U. Deify ...... MMt Human rights will be the topic of a "Freedom Festival" at UC Irvine SWlday from 1 to S p.m . in the Gateway Plaza. Representatives from more than 3() county organizations in· volved in human rights issues will participate in the event, which begins with a Guatemalan music group at 1. Mic Bell, formerly with the Fifth Dimension, wiH sing at 1:30 p.m. The continuous music and speaker line-up also will in· elude Karen Peters, California s tate coorslinator for the Na· tional Organization of Women at 3. County organizations participating include the Amnes· ty International Chapter 178, the United Nations, Planned Paren- thood, the ACLU, and the Gay Center or Orange County. AL BOILfNl)EN, chairman of the Orange County Transporta· lion Commission, will discuss widening of Pacific Coast Highway at a June 18 meeting oC the Orange County Coast As · sociatioo. The meeting is scheduled at the Best West Huntington Beach Inn , 21112 Pacific Coast Highway at 11 :30 a.m. * * • SEN. J OHN SCHMITZ, R· Corona del Mar, has become a grandfather for the first time. Joseph William Schmitz was born May 25 at the Camp Pendleton Marin e Base Hospital. He is the son or U.S Navy Lt. j.g. Joseph E. Schmitz and wife Millie. * * * A PUBLIC FORUM on reap· portionment will be held tonight at 7 : 30 at Republic Federal Sav- ings, 2400 E . 17th St .. Santa Ana. Speakers include Dr. Charles BeH of Cal State Fullerton, Dr. Bruce Caine of Cal Tech and Dr. Walter Zelman, California director of Common Cause. * * * SHIRLEY RALSTON , of Orange, bas been appointed pre· cinct chairman of the Republican Central Committee of Orange Count} She will be res ponsible for coordinatini Republican voter registration acllv1tu.·~ • • • A CARNIVAL NIGHT at tlit• Balboa fun zone rs scheduli•tl June 4 by the Marian Bergesor1 for 74lh Assembly Or stnct < 'on1 mittee. A celebrity kissm~ hooth I' .. slated. Participants an· said 1 .. include O r a n g P C ou nt • Supervisors Thomas E Rilt· and Bruce Ne s t and e a n •J ~Newport Bea('h Mayor J:1ck11 Heather and City Council mem' bers Evelyn llart anti P hil Maurer • • CALIFORNIA LT. GOV. Miki- Curb will address a June I mN'I in g of the Orange Count ' Chapter of the Buildin~ lndustn As sociation of So ut h e r n California The meeting. to be held at thl Airport.er Inn in Newport Beaeh will begin with a social period ;ii 6:30 p.m. Dinner will folio" at 7:30 p.m. U'dCPenney Garden Clearance Sale. Our low prices wi II fit all your landscaping plans. Saturday and Sunday, May 30 and 31. .. Fashion Island Store Only Landscape specials! Assorted houseplants Sale 1.99 reg. 3.49 Sale 99' reg. 1.99 1 gal. Assorted Tams Sale 3.99 6" pot 'Sale 99' reg. 1.59 4" pot African Violet Sale gge reg. 1.99 1 gal. Aralla Sieboldla reg. 5.99 5 gal. Juniper Sale 55c reg. 1.99 4" pot Assorted Houseplants Sale 5.99 reg. $11 .99 Aabblt Ferns Sale 19.99 reg. 29.99 Dtvarf Bonanza Peach Sale '2.99 reg. 3.99 Rose varieties 2 gal. patented and non-patented varieties ITOftl HOURS: Mon.-frt. 10 • . .ft. to 9 p.m ~v 10 •·"' • p.m. S..y 12 N°"to 5 p.m. ·~-------------~-....---------~~--~-----------------· ·--···----~-·-.... ·-------··--· .. ,... ...... ,-; A4 . s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ~rlday, May 29, 1981 Members of the "Wheelman," a Boston club devoted to the bikes, celebrate its looth year with a tour. ............ Atlanta killer 'very. sti-ong'_ · ATLANTA (AP) -The stran1ulation of lncreaain1ly older blacks since a baffling string of slayings began here may indicate that their killer was ''very strong" or had ''some kind of special training" in as- sault techniques, a medical ex- aminer has said. Ir at least some of the 28 slay- ings of young blacks since July 19'79 are related, said Dr. Joseph Burton, medJcal examiner for DeKalb and Cobb counties, then the killer "obviously is confident or what he's doing. The size doesn't make any dirterence to him now." Nathaniel Cater, whose strangled body was pulled from the Chattahoochee River on Sun· day, measured 5-feet-10 and weighed 150 pounds. The 27· year-old was the oldest and largest or the youths whose slay- ings are being investigated by a special police task force. He was at least the 17th to be asphyxiated. "If we assume these killlnis are related and that he (tht killer) has turned to larger peo- ple, I assume he's either very strong or has received some kind of special training," Burton said Thursday. Burton speculated that a killer may have received training in the military or in a school where self-defense martial arts techni- ques are taught. Meanwhile, the director of the Governor's Office of Consumer Affairs said he has asked the state attorney general and the Fulton County sohctor tc, prosecute members of the Com- mittee To Stop Children's Murders on charges of violating Georgia's charitable solicita- tions statute. ------- City haunted by Jordan shooting FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP> - When black civil rights leader Vernon E. Jordan Jr. was gunned down a year ago today, this industrial city and its race problems were catapulted into the national SPOtli~ht. Jordan's health apparently has returned , but this nortbea..tern Indiana city of 175,000 won't recover fully until a suspect is arrested, city of- ficials and black leaders say. violence," said Robert E. Williams Jr., president of the Fort Wayne Urban League. Jordan, 45, president or the National Urban League, came to Indiana's second largest city to speak al a local league banquet. He was shot about 2 a .m . May 29, 1980, wfule stepping from a car driven by Martha C. Coleman, a white woman and Urban League member. Mrs. Coleman told officials she and Jordan went lo her home for coffee after the ban- quet and then she drove him to the Marriott Inn where be was slaying. When he got out of the car, a sniper fired a .30-06 hunt· ing rifle from a nearby hill, blowing a bole in Jordan's back. 37, a three-time dj vorcee. But the FBI said a lie detector test about 10 days after the shooting "absolutely eliminated" her in· volvement. Now, neither Mrs. Co leman nor Jordan -who nearly died from his wound -will discuss the shootlng. "How much are you going to pay me?" a bitter Mrs. Coleman asked one reporter who tried to interview her at her home. "Vernon doesn't want to bring it all up again. He's just trying to forget it,'' said James Williams, an Urban League spokesman in New York City. called "A City Remembers - the Vernon Jordan Shooting" will be televised locally tonight. "l hit the wall with my fist when I found out about the shooting. I thought, 'What did they do to my man now?'" says Mark Russell, a 17-year-old Northrop High School junior and a participant in the planned dis- cussion. The shooting, be said. raised the consciousness or the city's black youths. "We now know that those willing to speak out take certain dangers on themselves . . . It got more youth resolved against racism. There is a subtle racism here. Now more youth are aware of it." "I was totally unprepared for the assassination attempt on Vernon," said Robert Williams, who maintains the shooting has created "a security-conscious black population" ih Fort Wayne. Mayor Winfield Moses says he thinks the shooting affected Fort Wayne in positive ways. "For instance, 1 meet regularly now to discuss the budget or school closings with black leaders, many of whom I didn't even know before the shooting." But he adds, "The biggest negative is not being able to identify a suspect in the case. The frustration is apparent at our neighborhood get-togethers or town meeting's. It's always the first question that comes up do police have a suspect? It's caused everyone here to ques- tion the ability of local, state and federal authorities." TRYING TO FORGET Vernon Jordan "Individual acts of violence against blacks in the last year have supported a sense of paranoia that exists in the local black community. Because Vernon was shot here, there is a tendency to associate what formerly wa s see n as hooliganism between blacks and whites with larger racial Officials said at first the shoot- ing might be part or a domestic dispute involving Mrs. Coleman, But Fort Wayne, with a 14 per- cent black population, can't quit asking why the shooting hap- pened here, and can't quit ex- amining its effects. A discussion ------. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii AIU Y ASSUMAILE IMTHEST OHL Y 2nd TRUST DEEDS 0 WHER /HOHOWMER OCCUPIED Call Wiiham B Mitchell Call today lor quo1e • No obhgatlon (714) 975-1128 trans nollOnOI funding trans notionot funding trans nolionol funding trans nolionol lundtng' • Fun Fashions • Swimsuits • Hendaya Eapadrllles • Accessories PAN~CHE R e sort Wear 673-1810 Formerly H.M.S. Pinafore 1M,...M1r&w..._. 221 MAllNIAVI. IAUOA ISl.:Ne. CA '26'2 .,..b ................... .... 46 I •tt••r• l•cll coollf11t ••rf•ce, 40,000 ITU. •92~0 1459value Our company neeJfs to purchase 25,000 class rings to fill our annual quota. We desperately need to fill this quota as soon as possible, so for the coming 4 days, National Gold and Silver wi II be offering a SPECIAL PREMIUM on all Gold Class Rings ... from High Schools, Colleges, Armed Services, Fraternities, Sororities. Technlcal Institutes, Organizations ... all class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HIGH PRICE these 4 days. PAYING UP TO $200 ALL CASH If,• ' . ARMED SECURITY ON DUTY .;,.~.. .~ ~ • -t_,• •TCE MJ. .OU WATCHll Ate POCl.IT WATCMIS ' 25,000 CLASS RINGS NEEDED ALSO"CASH F09' OLD l~SEIALL CARDS 1cmami .... . ., 3131 llS'fl. Aft. 4 DAYS OMLY THURSD•Y & FRIDAY 12 NOON TO 8 P.M • SATURDAY II SUMDAY 10 A.~ TO 6 P.M. , .... .. ,. -· 1•t-•t1. • .. C&lSft.W( t 1 l ( ....... . "" . ' .. . . . . . l Caltrans director 'hanging in there' SACRAMENTO (AP) - Here's a atate government of· rtclal who bas been cutting waste, paring down the depart- ment program, decreasing the number of ~mployees -while working to save enerey and pro- tect the environment. Fiscally co nservative Republicans and envlronmen· tallst Democrats l n the Leeislature both should love that administrator, right? Wrong. That's because Adriana Gian· turco's job is director of the Transportation Department, and almost all 120 legislators want mor1 money spent for more highways in their districts. mess with her s alary. Brown can pay her -as he is now - from cont.lngency funds. She believes much of the legislators' distress stems from speci!ic highways tbey want built in their districts when the state has little money, And she tries to maintain her cool and her sense of humor after a l egislative committee bas grilled her. "I've been eating a lot." she said, laughing, during an in· terview in her office across the street from the Capitol. "In past periods or my life, I've been too thin. When I was under stress. I lost my appetite and couldn't eat." ENDORSED -Carol Hallett, Assembfy' minority leader, has been endorsed by Lt. Gov. Mike Curb for lieut~ nant governor when he seeks the governor's job. Curb said, "I think the two of us would make a good team." Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,t:rtday, May 29, 1981 s Injustice also • a crime Victims lose out , but don't qualify for state. aid SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -To Executive Director Gary some, it oUen money as some CALIFORNIA FOCUS Longbolm said the board ap-solace for their losa at the hands proves about 64 percent of the of violent criminals. But to 8,500 claims tJled so far in the others, the Victims of Violent 1981 fiscal year. He said claims Crimes Pro1ram seems only clash with the law, members of are up 30 percent. The average another irtjustice. Its Board of Control have Jobe award ls $2,200. that are among the toughest ln Those who are rejected may Emilia Evan1elista's 2S·year· the state. have suffered as much as those old son was killed in a robbery Pelkofer, a former worken' who qualify. at the service station where be c o m pen s a t i o n l a w y er , One by one the tales of suffer· worked, but there will be no represents the state controller Ing come before the board: state money for bis $2 ,000 on the board. Other members -A child gets a pareot's gun funeral. The state rejected the are state General Services and shoots another child, caus· claim because only California Director David Janssen and ing paralysis. Officials say it residents are eligible and he was Edwin Beach, a former Finance was an accident and won't here on a tourist visa from the Department official who is the prosecute. The board sym· Philippines. "public" member. pathizei. but if there was no ••No care, no concern for poor The program pays victims or crime, there is no compensation. p e op 1 e . . . , • · sai d Mr s their survivors for medical ex· -An old man says be was Evangelista, displaying pictures penses, los t wages or job mugged, but told police he fell of her son, bis wife and two retraining, up to $23,000, and al· off a motorcycle because he was children. "I understand the legal lots up to $2,275 for funeral half-delirious from injuries. He problems, but don't you think we costs . There is no compensation limps in with a cane. tells the are all human beings to be treat· for the loss of a loved one, the board he hasn 't driven a ed right?" pain or injury OF a shattered "motor" in years . The board de· Peter Pelkofer, a deputy state career, although a new law pro· lays a ruling, saying he needs controller who ls on the three· vides compensation for mental more evidence. member Board of Control which trauma. A 9-year-old boy watches as reviews claims, said , "I must Sometimes sympathy appears a neighbor fatally shoots the Tbe '1-year-old Caltrans chief's musical name has been taken in vain in the Legislature more than any other in Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. 's administra- tion. She says she discusses a com· mittee ordeal with associates in her department and tries "to put it in perspective and not get too upset ... It's not pleasant. that's ror sure ... admit that on a few occasions to outweigh a fine-point of law, boy's dog. and the family wants Pay b o o st a sked I've gone out afterward and had as in the case or Mary Vincent, money for psychiatric expenses. a few drinks" after denying the teen-ager whose arms were But the incident occurred before Several lawmake rs ·have almost made careers of insult· ing her and accusing her or everything from being anti· freeway or incompetent to hav· ing a disagreeable personality. Indeed, she th.inks anyone who took the job in 1976 as she did would have bad simiJ ar troubles. SACRAMENTO CAP> -As-benefits. "But I don't think I've hacked off by a rapist. Her prob· the law was enacted to com- sembly Speaker Willie Brown spent a lot of agonizing time. lem, too. was residency. Her pensate for mental damage, and has introouced a bill that would Not like a judge who has to sen· parents lived in Nevada. and the board doubts it can help. It A Senate Finance subcommit- tee this month voted to strike her $51 ,000 salary from Lhe C~ltrans budget. It's the fourth year the Legislature has t.ried to "No doubt about it. I came in at the tail end of what had been a major crisis for the depart· ment that started in about 1972,'' she said. give lawmakers a 10 percent tence somebody to"die.'' although she had left home to puts off a decision. salary raise at the end of 1982. The Victims of Violent Crimes s tay with a grandfather in To qualify for a id, a pplicants The bill, AB2240, would in· Program has distribut ed $34 California before the assault, to the Victims or Violent Crimes crease a ssemblymen's a nd million to victims or their there was little evidence she Program must show they were senators' salaries from $28,111 re I at iv es since it was planned to stay. harmed by a violent crime, that '"By the time I got here, the s.ituation-was.~aUy de&perate," she recalled. to $30,921 on Dec. 6, 1982, the established in 1965, when it was The board decided s he they did not contribute to the start of the next two-ye-ar the first sueh pregnm in the na-~ualified, and th~ amount i11 ~-crime and that they cooperated session. tion. Because sympathy may ing worked out. with police. ____________________ _;_ ____ _;__;_;_;..:._....::.._:...:..;.;:._.:..:.:..:..:.._ __ __::: ______ -.:.:..:__ ______________ ...:..:.:..:_::.:..:.:.:.:.:. ____ ___ SS guarding empty house LOS ANGELES (AP) -Neither President Reagan oor his wife Nancy has been to the couple's $1.9 million Pacific Palisades home since it went on sale in January, but taxpayers still pay for round-the-clock Secret Service surveillance. "There is a Secret Service agent on the Pacific Palisades property 24 hours a day," said Secret Service spokesman Dick Hartwig in Washington. ''It's a tempora ry detaU that will be there until we feel there Is no occasion that the president will go tbere." Meanwhile, the real estate firm that has the listing for the home says it bas been taking prospective buyers through at the rate or about one a day. ··Last week we had six showings ," said J oe Peterson of doldwell Banker. ''That's kind of typical. There are a lot of times we can't show the home because the housekeeper isn't there." He said the president and Mrs. Reagan have not visited there since tbey moved o~. but "some of their furniture is still in there. "And as far as the protection is concerned, I think it's Wid of easy to understand. We get a lot of phone calls from people who are ;~st curiosity seekers and the house has to be under protection by somebody from people who might try to break in ... Se~ret Ser~ice officials decline to saY. how much 1t costs to station guards In a trailer at the lop of the hillside home's steep flriveway and house the agents at the luxurious Century Plaza Hotel when they're off duty. But they say they don't believe it will exceed the $10,000 limit set by law for security at a presi· dent 's home other than his main private residence -In Reagan's case. his ranch in Santa Barbara. Victims of fire still recovering SAN BERNARDINO <AP) -It took only bours for the flames to sweep down the foothills ind wipe out or damage 284 homes on tbe northwestern fringes of this desert city, but six months later the families afflic(ed are still re· toverlng from the devastation. Some, like Betty and Charles Johnston, have re built their homes only to find that the horror or ihe arson·caused blaze persists. "It's going to take an awful long time to get pver the shock, and the experience," said Mrs. IJohnston, who since the Nov. 24 , 1980, fire has suf· rered nightmares and a 45-pound weight loss. s The Johnstons, both 50, recently moved into ~ir rebuilt home which bas a sprinlcler system talled on the asphalt roof. If fire threatens, ee water jets with a range of 70 feet can be ac· ated to wet down the roof. The decision to rebulld tbe home they bad ed ln since 1987 was made after considerable u~t. / "I didn't want to~ulld," Mn. Jobn.stoc re-- ailed. "I bad no intention of ever 1otn1 back. The ast thine I remember of the bouse -the fire - 'm trylnc to block out what I've aeen." ltS Aaron Brothers 1~ Fra01e Sale! Buy One Frame at the Your wall can be a gallery too. Here's how our frames can work for you. Regular Price, Get a Second Frame That Costs the Same or Less for One Centi Choose a fra me, and we've got plenty, The second one will cost a penny. J ust be sure the second frame Is priced below or costs the same. So make your good cents work for you. Buy a frame and take home two. The second's just a penny more At any Aaron Brothers store! A n anniversary r'a celebration, A splash of color r'a for your wall, A greeting or a salutation. A photo grouping for your hall. A poem or article r'a you wrote, A famous presidential quote. A four leaf clover imagination.) ( \. · .. ·.,. . . · .. · . Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT !Friday, May 29, 1981 Customer the victim in gas rwzzle furor Orange County reports that have been made public recently indicate that some motorists have been fleeced in the pocket· book by those new anti-smog gasoline nozzles now required at your friendly corner service sta- tion. You may have tangled wilh these nozzles yourself when you self-served at the station. They are heavy, bulky and unwieldy because of a double hose and a special outer sleeve on the nozzle that is supposed to form a seal so that fumes can't escape into the atmosphere. The second hose is the one that is supposed to capture all the vapors as you fill your tank and recycle that vapor back into the station's underground tanks. All of this is calculated to eliminate smog-producing hydrocarbons from the air. And we're all for that. Everybody is in favor of pure air. Disq u ieting reports , however, have been produced by the new-fangled gas nozzle. One Newport Beach motorist pumped 16.1 gallons into his car 'before he realized his tank only holds 12 gallons. Another Huntington Beach man rang up 29.l gallons when his car tank only holds 16. The Orange County Depart· ment of Weights and Measures says it gets 35 complaints a month about gasoline ripoffs at· tributed to the anti-smog nozzles. About 20 of these complaints are confirmed . The complaint number used to be double before the requirement was added that the complainant had to file a written report. What apparently has been happening is that the gas line that is supJ)osed to recycle only fumes is, in some instanc~s. form· ing a syphon and actually pump· ing gas back out of your tank and returning it to the underground station storage. But the dollar meter keeps running -and the motorist pays. One model of the gas nozzle, known as the OPW 7-V, has been singled out as the major culprit. Legislation has been introduced to outlaw the nozzle and a class- actlon lawsuit bas been filed on behalf of California motorists. Now, apologists for the troublesome nozzle have quickly surfaced. Some have charac- terized the hassle as simply a battle between environmentalists (the good guys ) and service sla· lion interests (the villains). Others shrug and suggest that a few gallons of $1.47 fuel more or less is a small price to pay in the clean air battleground. The apologists miss the mark. They are forgetting the victim who is. once again, the hapless motorist. It's the con- sumer who is getting ripped off again. Amid all the furor and shout- ing, wouldn't it be nice if for once somebody worried about the citiz1ens who are paying the freight? Maybe somebody could suggest that those little recycling hoses must be of transparent plastic material so all of us amateur gasoline pumpers could lpok right at it and see if we are pumping the gas we paid for right back into the station's tank. That solved, the powers·that- be might launch a probe into the allegations that the new nozzles are actually dangerous. Some critics suggest they've built up pressure and actually split open gasoline tanks. Other reports have charged t.qat the nozzles have built up pressure in the customer's tank and blown back gasoline , drenching the unsus pecting pumping person. Clearly, since the great gas nozzle debate is now in full swing, perhaps our lawmakers could launch a concerted in- vestigation in a true effort to pro- tect the consumers as well as the air. No choice for the poor Only days after the attack on Pope John Paul II, Italians re· J soundingly rejected a church- backed attempt to outlaw free abortions unless a woman's life is in danger. Voters in the 90 percent Catholic countrr came out 2 to 1 in favor of retaining the relative- ly liberal three-year-old abortion law which the Pope had sought to overturn. That same week the United States Senate, bowing to the con- servative bloc led by Sen. Jesse Helms, voted 52 to 43 to limit Medicaid funds for abortions to cases in which the mother's life is endangered. The rider to an appropriation measure, already approved in the House, bars Medicaid pay- ments for abortions for poor women who have become preg- nant as a result of rape or incest. ' Such payments are permitted un- der current law. OpPonents of the measure estimate thousands of women whose pregnancies result from rape could be affected by the reetriction. Of course those who can afford to pay for abortions need not be concerned. But another measure being pushed by Helms and bis moralists, a ''human life" bill that would declare life begins at the moment of conception, could • pave the way for state laws abolishing all abortions. A parade of legal scholars has testified that this would be unconstitutional under the 1973 Supreme Court decision, but the zealots show no sign of backing down. 'Small wonder Republican Sen. Bob Packwood of Oregon stepped into the debate to decry the attempt to ''impose on the country a Cotton Mather mentali· ty" -referring to the Puritan preacher who took part in the Salem witch trials. The hypocrisy of the moraliz- ing lawmakers is blatant. They would have no responsibility for bringing up the unwanted children or caring for the unwill· ing qlothers who have been vie· timized by rape. An'd of course if a wo(nan in one of their families shouJd become such an un- fortunate victim, they would have 1110 need of federal help to rescue her from her miserable predicament. There's a certain irony in the fact that Catholic Italy where democracy is relatively new, should give 30 million citizens - the number voting in the last elecUqn -a cbance to speak on this cOnt.roversial issue, while a handful of Senators, all male1 can decide it for the women 01 the United States. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Otner 11lews ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit-ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. 80JC 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <7W 6~2-021. I i:~-~~~~~.~:~!'::!::.:.-r: tru.. But few Japanese over there the 'ol\Jme tbat brln1• on t he ••• eoms-lain of banioven. TboM ot han1ont. AlmOtt all A•iana who J•paneee aneeltr)' ln thla CCNDtry do drlok dot to ii\ • meuured manner ladeed aet han10Yer1, bowenr. r~1ard.Jeu ot how much they put. Num.,. 1cholan who llud1 IUCh IWI)'. I matters C\OQltnue to lnaiat lb~ \ unaower I• more ment•l t han Q. DO • )Cit ol people die from dlemlc&l. Ma,be ao, don't know. But musbroOm pol1CW1JID.1 lD this country? lhere an thoH. too, wbo contend ll'• A. Maybe llx a year. as eescca usu 3 ca 0 ass a ax a a 0 Americans changing goals NEWYORK-''l'mhavingserious second thoughts about the whole thing," said the vi ce president of one of the city's better-known financial houses. "If I can put together a little slash, I 'm just going lo quit the firm. I want to walk away from the whole thing." You hear it eve ry day. At least I do. This time -I wasn't there myself - it was said by a woman at a small lunch of heavy-duty ladies. One, an executive of one of the country·s most important companies, said s he had already de· cided to quit and take some lime off to think. THE DIRECTOR of •a do-gooding foundation said s he would like to do the same thihg. A public official -one of the most important elected woman of- fi cials in the United Stat,es -said she knew exactly what the others were talk· ing about. The fifth woman, who bad been an elected official, had already done it, had already left an important job to try to figure out what it all meant. "What about the men al your place~" someone asked the financial vice presi· dent. "They aU feel the sarpe way," she a nswered. "They don't nave the pres· sure to have childre n. but thef just want to get together enough money to live for a while. The work is just too boring." ' Most Americans, of course, can't af· ford either expensive lunches or the tux· ury of talking that way. They have to work lo eat. But. even with Detroit's --~ RICHARD RllVIS 1'i -., automobile production way off, when you talk with autoworkers these days, many of them still say the thing they most want is control over whether or not they can be forced to work over· time. Even in these hard times. many men and women now want some things more than they want more money. AROUND BOSTON and San J ose, Calif .. you occasionally run into a new breed of itinerant worker . Computer pro· gramniers, highly trained and skilled. work for a few months at one of the high· technology firms that help support those two cities and then, when they have a lit· tie cash, take off for a few months con· templating life or something in New Mex· ico or northern California. People are not acting the way they are supposed to in America. Everybody wants som e "F-· you money'' - enough of a stas h to tell the company t.o ... Well, one or the things making money these days is a song and movie called "Take This J ob and Shove It!" And. on the same day last week, two bureaucrats and a n Army general re- signed in protest quit on principle. You may not agree with their prin· ciples. but Dr. Stephen Joseph and Eugene Babb left good jobs at the Agen· <:y for International Develo pment because they wanted to publicize their objection1 to the United States govern- ment's opposition to an international code regul ataog the marketing of infant formulas Gen . Volney Warner retired after 32 years because he didn't agree with the Defense Department's plans for command procedures involving a Rapid Deployment Force. THE\' WERE NOT team players. those fellows. Americans usua lly are. T his country has almost no tradition of resignation and protec;t. In the past, principled resigners have been isolated as dangers to the syste m, to the re· public and sometimes to themselves. The classic case is William Jennings Bryan. whose sanity was questioned when he resigned as secretary of state in 1915 because he felt that President Woodrow Wi lson was talking peace and preparing for war. Something. is happening. Ambition, that marvelous American virus, is being redefined in many m inds a nd places. I'm having serious second thoughts myself about a book I laughed at in 1970 -re· member "The Greening of America?" Who knows? Maybe American get-up and-go is gelling up and going. IRS doesn't hunt refund recipients W ASHlNGTON This ia the lime or year when the Internal Revenue Service rolls up its sleeves, s harpens its pe ncils and tracks down the deadbeats who cheated on thelr income taxes. IRS auditors go after the tax chiselers with commendable enthusiasm and fair suc· cess. But the revenooers show le5s zeal - and less success -in their efforts to track down the thousands of taxpayers whose refund checks go undelivered because of inadequate or outdated ad- dresses. THE NUMBER of these taxpayers is astonishing: As of last December, the I RS was holding 87 . 760 refund checks that nad been returned stamped "ad· dressee unknown." The total value of these checks Is $24.5 million. Rep. Benjamrn Rosenthal, 0 -N.Y .. told my associate Lucette Lagnado be is convinced that many of t~e people owed money by the government are low- lncome women and f;}derly Americans who badly need their refunds. The IRS has no statistics to prove or disprove this theory. A cco rding t o IRS co mpu te r breakdowns of the undelivered refund G -JA-1:1-11-D-IR-SD-I -~, checks, most of them are for amounts between $100 and Sl,000. But many are worth up to $10,000 and some are for even larger amounts. To its credit, the IRS does make an attempt to locate the individuals it owes money to. It provides new1'papers across the country with lists of those who have refund checks coming -on the chance that editors will publish them and that the taxpayers will spot their names. Falling that, the JRS can wait until the following year and identify its re- fund targets by their next income tax returns. But il the taxpayer has retired or otherwise left the job market. there will obviously be no subsequent tax re· turn to feed into the IRS computer fer c hecking ' THIS IS A less aggressive process than the pursuit of tax violators. arid many taxpayers never collect their re· funds. This raises the suspicion that many of the uncashed checks bt!long to either elderly· people or women who ar~ not s teadily employed. The IRS has tried for years to pry Up· to.date address lists from the Social Security Administration. but has been refused on grounds that such c0opera· lion would violate the Privacy Act. This summer, at long last. Social Security wUI do a limited compute r match-up of nam es on its rolls and those on the IRS refund list. What is the attitude of the IRS? A hint can be found in an internal 1979 memo which noted tha t while "milliOM of clollars of taxpayer refund checks go un· claimed or uncashed. ·• the amount is s mall compared to the taxes that are legally owed the gove rnment but are never collected. The president open~ new vistas in sport . Mr. Reagan can hardly wait t-0 fly 3,000 mJ.les from Washinst.on to cbop wood and clear brush on his Southern California ranch j1.&1t over the mountain fro'm here. "Thi• ls where." be 1ay1, "I restore myself." -.1,-.,-PPl---j 4 after his redwood tree fell on bis wife, Miranda. Buzz said thi.s was definitely "a bad call" and Beasley will certainly not wln the Good Chopper Award. Brush clearing each afternoon wu even more exhilarating. Glynda and I would' collapse into bed every ntaht tborOUJhly exhausted. Never have .. we had ao much fun. And talk about beint restored! We are even more painfully s unburned, incredibly poor and qonJ1· ln&IY sUtt than after a week's tennl1. Glynd• wants to come 1111D next ytar. But I want to see whit exdlhlJ sport Mr. Rea1an wlll ute up nut. M rar as l tt:now, he hasn't even tried dltcb , dl1tln1. ·' .. .• l !· ,I l II j II I a . J s r a: 1 'i 0 ~ I' n c lJ' d a '~\ s " v St c a . . . ... . '... . . . . .... • •• ,. ~, t • • • • • • • • • • •• ~~~\ ~,,,~ Beef ' electrified DEAR PAT DUNN: Someone told me Australtan beef is tenderised by electric shock. If this is true, how is it done, and why? H. E., Costa Mesa Aus&rallan beef carcaases receive 90 .econds of low·volta1e electrlctty before tbey are cbilled and •&ed. This shock treatment can reduce the force neceuary to chew beef by more than hall. The electric atlmalatlon nearly prevenll ''cold shorten.Ing" -meat abrlnkage and tou1hen.ln1 due to mucle con· traction -which takes •lace when the animal la cbtlled. Studies abow a toagll mas· cle wW coatrac& Jut l.Z percent when treated with electric shock, compared wttb zt.4 per· cent when unaltocked. Times have changed DEAR PAT DUNN: My husband still thinks he should make the major decisions in our family. I believe times have changed enough to allow women to share in choices that affect the whole family. Has anyone ever done a survey on this? E.T .. Costa Mesa A 1962 survey of 1,000 women by tbe University of Michigan resulted ln two out of three women saying that bu.bands should have the last word. A 1980 survey on who should make the family's major decl1lons clearly Indicated a change bas taken place. Fewer than three in 10 women Interviewed last year sttll felt the man of the house should make family decisions. StanLlnrtU delayed DEAR READERS: The Department of Energy <DOE> bas decided not to issue Da· tlonal energy efficiency standards for major household appliances until It studies further the need for such standards. Last June DOE proposed energy efficieo- c y standards to be met by appliance m anufacturera for eight types of major household appliances to Improve energy effi· ciency as mandated by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act, as 11meoded. The act provides, however, that staad· ards do not have to be prescribed ti DOE finds they would not result ID significant en ergy conservation (or would ool be technologically feasible or economically justified). During the comment period, many of the 1,800 responding questioned the various aspects of the proposed standards. In particular, the Department of Justice aad the Regulatory Analysis Review Group were con- cerned about the analysis supporting the pro· posal and t.be adverse Impact on small busi- ness. Because of these comments, DOE wants more time for assessment. DOE's decision on appliance energy effl· clency standards does not affect the Federal Trade Commission's appliance labellog rules which went into effect May 19 for several ma- jor appUaoces. Consumers already are see- ing eaer11 efficiency rattn11 based oa stand· ardhed teat procedures which simply measure the energy efficiency (or lnefflclen- c y) of refrigerators and refrigerator· freezers, water beaters, room air condl· tloners, dishwashers and clothes washers. Labeling requirements for central air condl· tioners and beat pumps wUI be lssued soon. • "Col a problem' Then wnle lo Pat '-l Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting • lhe an8wers and action you need to • solve inequities m government and ,.., business Mait your questwns to Pat -Dunn, Al Your Service. Orange CO<l81 Daily Pilot, P.O Box 156-0, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. A8 many letters as po8Stble will be a1Uwered, but phoned inquines or letters not including the reader's full name. addre!s and business hours' phone number cannot be conndered This column appears daily ex· cept Sundays " ~ · .. Crinte prevention, r~ I not prison urged C( " SACRAMENTO <AP) th " -A coalition of re- m ligious g r oups and •:•prisoners· -rights or- sa g a n I z at ions s a y s pr ·i California's war on Ac 1 crime is a flop, and is proposing less imprison- ba __ ment and more preven- wc lion. br With about 65,000 ov adulls and youths locked up, the state already lm· mi prisons more people, for ly, '.) longer sentences, than res '<' virtually any othtr state Co .,j or nation, and there ls yo · ' no evidence of any effect the on the crime rate, the rec r groups said at a news th1 111 conference this week. pul .,.>< "We arrf!9t more peo-dl~ lirt pie, lock up mor~ people .._11 and spend more money cor t i to do so, and we feel Jess •nJ and leu safe." the coall-~-,,..,. tion said in a statement. naj ~a• •' Prbona are merely • ~A 1raduate schools for c r 1h1 crtme, with the tax- re payer plckln,. up a er~ , minimum tab o $13,000 ly per year." 10 Th• coalition .includes fn 1uch 1roup1 •• tbe tbl Friends Committee on ml Lttlatatlon, United Church of Cbri•t. Com· -mitt" on Social JU1Uce of the Arcbdloctte of San P'raacl1co , -PrltOMn UaJoa, Com· ,tt miUH A1a1n1t More Prisons and Committee to Re -involve Ex · Orf enders. They recommended a ·'citizens' l)nli-crime package " as an alternative lo Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr.'s pro· posed sales tax increase to fund new prison and jail construction, and to numerous pending bills to further increase sen- tences. The proposal in· eludes: -Repealing criminal penalties for •'victim- less" crhpes, such as drug abuse, drunken- ness and prostitution. -Reducing overall prison sentences, re- pealing mandatory sen- tencing laws, and strengthening such pro· grams as work furlough anjf restitution as alternatives to imprison· ment. -lmprovin1 condl· lions ~t prisons and Jalla, and 1lvin1 prlsoner1 more acceas to their famlllea and community 1roups. -Emphaalztn1 "the prevention of crime tbrouah aocial and aeonomic Juattce," In· cludlft1 the reduction of unemployment and an lncreued pr'OHCudoa of wh,te-collar crime. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT~riday. May 29, 1981 State budget cuts harder to find SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Senate budget- writers, draeged by their leaders back through the budget in search of $700 million in new cuts, have found little they are able or willing to trim. A program-by-program review of the $24.6 billion spending plan for fiscaJ 1981-82 at Senate Finance subcommittees this week produced few of the cuts that Senate leaders say are needed for a balanced budget. Instead, closed·door discussions centered on bigger cuts in local pr9grams -etate aid to schools , cities and counties Senate Democratic leaders have bee,n circulat· ing proposals to finance 1enera1 school funding by cutting some speciaJ programs, notabJy the $150 million School Improvement Program that brings aides and volunteers Into the classrooms and sets up planning counctls, including parents, at each school. ' But that program has strong support among some local parent groups, Assembly leaders and state school Superintendent Wilson Riles. Some of the largest state savings proposed by the Senate subcommittees would come not from program cuts, but from $22 million in additional fees charged to students at the University of California end the California State University and Colleges. The fees would rise by about $100 a year at UC to an average of $900, and by S36 at CSUC to $246. A $10-a-year fee at the community colleges. whicll would raise $13 million, was rejected. The subcommittees of both the Senate Finance and Assembly Ways and Means committees, which have been working on stale agencies' pro· grams for months, are scheduled to make their final reports to the full committees Monday. The committees plan to send their recom· mended budi;(ets to the Senate and Assembly floors later Monday for votes Then. the two differing versions will go to a six-member, two-house con- ference committee lo work ou\ a final budeet. ., Senate Finance Committee Chairman Alfred Alqulst, D-San Jose , tallied what bis subcommlt· tees had done so far and concluded this week that the budget would be $717 million out of balance. He and Senate President Pro Tem David Robe~, D-Los Angeles, propose making up the difference by cutting school aid increases from 9 percent to 7.2 percent, savlng $250 million, and by using $470 million of the money the state gets Crom leasing tidelands oil fields. But. since subcommittees have rejected those plans, Alquist sent them back to work to find places to cut. Sen John Holmdahl, D-Castro Valley, chairman of a subcommittee on which Alquist stts, complained that al least two other subcommittee chairmen were going to go over proposed cuts "very lighUy and make no reductions." "Thal is not .my intention at all," Alquist said. "We've got $700 million to cut out of this budget as it stands now. We have some very difficult de- cisions, some tough cuts that have to be made." Another subcommittee met ror only an hour and made no important cuts. But another one proposed about $140 million in higher education budget cuts, including the stu· dent fee increases. The new fees would raise $13 million at UC and $9 million at CSUC. The total savings recom- mended were $38.9 million ror UC and $50.S million for CSUC. The subcommittee also wants a $50 million cut for the comumunity college system, but heeded the request of Chancellor Gerald Hayward not to pro- pose a $10-a-year student fee. "For most poor people in this state, the com- munity colleges are the means of higher educa· Uon." Hayward said. Instead, he agreed to make most of the aav- ings by trimming a separate $105 million, 9 percent community college funding bill, by 2.7 per- cent. Another education subcommittee sidestepped the question of what to do with more than $20 million that formerly was required for court- ordered busing for integration in Los Angeles. Recent court rulings have abolished the man- datory busing program, but Los Angeles school of· ficials say the money is needed for other de· segregation efforts, and question the $20 million figure. Holmdahl's subcommittee voted to eliminate the $74.317 Cons umer Advisory Council and cut out $409,629 ror a program to combat brush fires. It also cut $90.000 to help Indians with housing. But subcommittee members rejected a pro- posal to strip a S2 5 million housing grant program ror farm workers And they decided not to cut $50 million to $100 million from a program to build rental. housing for the poor * * * * * * Curb panel saved SACRAMENTO (AP) A Senate budget sub· committee has decided not to abolish a com- mission that Lt. Gov. 'Mike Curb heads -it was told it was one of the few jobs the Heutenant gov- ernor has. The subcommittee, looking this week for ways to cut state agencies further next year , considered abolishing the $325,621 commission for Economic Development, which the Republican lieutenant governor heads . SALE ST ARTS SATURDA y I M 9:30 A.M. SHARP!! HURRY!! SALE STARTS SAT. 9:30 a.m. SHARP! 1'\\S \S \1\\ ACCLAIMED AS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL-FUN- PARTY STORES IN AMERICA I I . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 Presenting the q_ew Audi "Coupe." A hiah performance machine designed using the technology developed for the Audi 4000 and 5000 series automobiles-taken one step further. The styling is an aerodynamic tour de force. Its ride is invigorating, with outstanding agility and tracking. Even standing still it looks fast. And, with its S cylinder engine coupled to a S speed transmission, it is. Yet, with all this exhilarating perform!V'Ce comes excellent fuel etonomy. The new Audi Coupe. Come by and experience it today. BRAND NEW 1981 DATSUN 200SX HARDTOP DELUXE INCLUDES ALL STANDARD FACTORY OPTIONS. 56658 FOR :.:~NI OTHER SPECIALLY MARKED VEHICLES IN STOCKI Sele end• Sunday, May 31, 1981. All prlcM plua tax, llcenM, documentary '" & dHl•r IMtalled OpCloN. 90 dey dellvery, order bal1 only. Offer IUbject to fectory price lncre .... Oneonty. · . . .. • . . . . ' , ........ . •••••• • t •• ••••••• ••t •• •\~· ••••••••••••••• ~.~.~.~-~ •• ~.~.~.~.~--~.~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . . . ... . .. "" . } Daily Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 FEATURES OBITUARIES 64 66 Almost half of American families are growing vegetables ... B7 D 0 Will an unbreakable computer code protect our privacy in the future? And if it does. will our national security be threatened? -Computer code question---security or privacy? WASHINGTON !AP> -Work· ing quietly, a university re· searcher develops a brilliant abstract theory that might re· suit in a vi rtuaJly unbreakable computer code. Such a code wouJd mean vast· l y improved protection of priva cy for millions of Americans whose records are ' stored in computers and whose everyday tlransaclions are handled by oemputer. But an American intelligence agency steps in, arguing that publication of the theory could threaten national security. Should the government pre- vent publication? Does it have • the right? 1 These aren't hypothetical questions. They are the crux or a growing conrtict between the sup'!r·secret National Security Agency a nd academic re - searchers invoking freedom or research and the First Amend· ment. The Implications are vast ~ There may not be a •·supercode" yet, but researchers are working on theories that could lead to s uch protection 9t information stor ed in computers and the messages trans m itted from computer to computer. This conflict has already pro· duced an unusual result: the agreement by a group of re· sea r e hers to a system o f voluntary censorship of their re· search in an esoter ic rield called cryptography, the study of codes and code breaking. The researchers have agreed to give the National Security Agency a peek al resear ch papers in cryptography before they are published, with the NSA reserving the right to ask for censorshlp of the papers. The deal has sent shivers through the academic com- munity. "It smacks of prior restraint," says Philip Handler. outgoing p resident o f the Nation al Academy of Soieoces. The syste m _!is voluntar y, based on self-reittraint, but some worry that it i• a step toward broader government control over research. "You s tart out with sub· mission of lbe D.,era voluntarl· ly.'' says Stevtn Unger, pro· Cessor of computer science at Columbia University. "Then, you' II be required to submit them and the third step is you're required to do what they say. At that point, you've got pre- publication censorship. It's a disaster." But offi cials or tile intelligence community -wben they'll say anythin1 for t~fJ record -are equally empbat>s 1n ar1uin1 that reaearch ln ~ .. area couJd hurt national securitf. • 'Tbere ls a very real and crlllcal dan1er that un - restrained pubUc discussion of cryptolo1tc matters wlll serious· ly damaa• t h• ablllty of this 1overnment to conduct slpals lntelUaence arsd the ability of tb11 1ovemment to carry out Its mi11lon of protlct1n1 national tc11rlty intotmatlon from bottUe exploltatJon," said Adm. 8.Jl. lnmn, tbaft clirector of the NSA, ln an unprecedented public I PHCb ln llarth 1979. Thi• dllpui. ba4 been 1oln1 on ever •*•· l'or ttte NSA, it COM &o lbe llHrt ol ta funcUon. Ju Job I• -U.S. 1ovena· men& eo eaUona from eavesdroppers while trying lo eavesdrop on other govern men ts. The debate over non governmental cryptography. now largely confined to the academic and intelligence com· munities. is likely to widen More and more personal in· formation about Americans is stored in compaters. And much or it is being shuttled back and ro rt h bet ween computers through telephone lanes. microwave links or satellite channels. Bank accou nts. money transfers, credit card charges. mental and physical health re- cords -to mention a rew are routinely stored on computers and are thus vulnerable to tam· pering, illegal disclosure and misuse. Cryptography holds one key lo protecting the data. By scrambl ing or "encoding" the tn f ormation. the would be eavesdropper is prevented from reading it. "The public need 1s tremendous," says Michael Dertouzous, director of the MIT Laboratory for Comput er Science. "A day will come when the interconnected <computer> systems wiU be a giant 'play- ground' where you go and play And if you"re malevolent. you can do a lot of mischief.·· Geor ge Davida, a professor at Georgia Tech. was the only member of the academic study group to vote against the voluntary censorship system. He argued it would hamstring ef· forts to develop codes to protect person al and fina ncial in· form ation without significant 'benefit to national security · He says the group agreeing to submission of papers. set up un· de r the \\mg of the A mencan Council on Educatton, was "'not expert in data security and lhey have no grasp of lhl• magnitude of the probll'm We need an ef- fort indepl'ndlmt uf government lo protect pravac·y." Says David Kahn. author of "The Codebreakers." a historv o f cryptography "The advantage of having good codes is so great that you have to \\ e1gh 1t agains t the small potential for harm ·· This fight over public crypto· graphy is JUSI the latest in a ment can or s hould prevent scientific information privately developed from being published. The Fir s t Amend · m ent, guaranteeing freedom of press and s peech, is invoked here. Prior restraint of publication was vetoed by the U S. Supreme Court in the Pentagon Papers case, whereas in the instance of the Progressive Magazine. which wanted to run an article on making H·bombs. a federal court held that the Atomic Energy Act permitted govern· 'A day will come when the computer systems will be a giant playground . .. if you're malevolent, you can do a lot of mischief.' series of l'lashes between the NSA and researl'hers the past four y ears On several oc· casions. NSA moved to prevent individual researchers or in· ventors from putting their cryptogr aphic ideas to work in public. Davida was one re· searcher hit by NSA's effort Meantime, private companies working in cryptography are trying to agree on similar limits on their commercial research. And earlier this year, presi· dents or fi ve major universities complained to the federal gov- ernment that export regulations were being absurdly applied to university activities in an effort to restrict research in non- classified areas Al issue is whether the govern- ment restrictions on such in- formation. whether privately de· veloped or not. No such act governs crypto- graphy. But Robert Bork, former U S. solicitor general and now a Yale professor, says. "It isn't as though we were talking about tn· formation that's valuable lo the people m governing or in picking or judging their officials. This ts near weaponry " The NSA argues that some re- search can hurt national securi· ty in two ways; First. it could inadvertently expose a weakness in a code system now used by the U.S. government. A foreign power could use the finding to read secret U.S messages. Di•Wte owr computtnud eavesdropping ha. bten going on for two year$ ' . • I e Second. the research could give a foreign government a bet· ter coding system than it is now usi ng, m aking it harder . perhaps impossible, for NSA lo decipher that government's codes. Some find these argument s less than convincing · · u somebody can thtnk of som ethtng like this. isn't tl bet· ter for it lo be out than to have a false sense of security about 1t ·•· asks Mary Cheh, professor at the National Law Center of George Washington University and an expert on government at tempts lo control information. Som e r esear c hers say the second argument is simply an attempt by the NSA to make its own job easier . After a period of debatl', the American Council on Education agreed lo establish a committee. the Public Cryptography Study Group, to work thmgs out The committee. made up of educators. and Daniel Schwartz. NSA general counsel, decided that The NSA will notify the re· searchers of its interest tn re- viewing papers dealing with cryptography. defining as pre cisely as possible what kinds of papers it wants to see. When papers are submitted. t he NSA will r eview them promptly and notify the author of any changes the NSA would like. If the author disagrees with the proposed changes. the mat· ter would be referred to a board consisting of two mem bers from the NSA and three from outside the NSA. They would hear NSA 's arguments a nd recommend action to the author and the NSA director. The authors' subm1ss1ons of papers and agreements lo changes would ht· \11lunt;ir~ .. Todav lht·n· ,.., lhl' n·alatv thal ther~ an• IH'n\lllH.' rt•qutre· mcnts for natwnal <.,1·turtl) ... says llandlc•r. of llw '\atmnal Academv or Sct!'IH'CI. "We s hould Z> 0 l·c to 11 that \ll' do minimal in1ur1 to 'tt'H·nt1fic freedom ·· .. Thi!> agn·en1l•nt 1s the only thing pos!>1hlc· sa:-... Dr Hobert Gluckstt·rn. rhanc·t•llor of the L'n1\'ers1t1 11f Mat\.lJnd 'A voluntar) ~)'>ll•m ,., the only one the acadl'ma t· t·ornmunal\ would rand acceptabll· · Th e ~ 1 ... I l' m " :,, u <.' r t· s s o r failure ma) dt•pl'lld tn large part on how well tht• NS/\ d(•al" with authors. · ·ff l he NS A isn't :1 ct in g sensibly. tht:-. 1sn t going to work. It will if lhP1r twhav111r as rea- sonable,· ~a1 s Ira Michael Heyman, co r0 ha1rman of the committee and chJncl•llor of CC Bcrkelc\ One of the re!->carcht'r' on the American Coum·tl of 1-:ducatton panel. Marlin llcllman, :-.ays his position on dealing with tht' 'SA has changed thl· past ft•\\ ) ears. "Scvl'ral years :.q~o. I would have voted agaani;t thii-pro- poi,al. The NS/\ 11 a~ not intcrl'Sl cd in dealing ''1th nw on an in- tcl lagenl ba!->IS ..,..,.., Ill•llman. a professor at Sta11fo1 d ··Sinee then lhl') have become morl' n •a-.on,1hle That's how I came to m1 part 1n this ... Hellman. \~ho has rt'l'Ctvcd an NSA grant for t'I') 11111~1 aphtc re- search. isn't -..11rl' how many others will eompl) .. At first, it will lw .i fraction, a substantial frat·twn. not more than 50 pcr('ent.' lw "'·'' 'If it works reasonuhl\. 11 th<' NSA contin ues to mak1· f11end ly noises, I think mort• "ill 1oan ·· Whether \llluntar1 com· pliance with NSA rl'qt11.rcrncnts will work is another matlt>1· For one thin~. thr ACE can only recommend but not impose the agreement on the t•olleges. universities und araclt'mic groups that comµrisc· It For another. n•s tril'lwns on research and 1ls d1s-..cm rnation may fail because> of inhl·renl dif ficulties in ltm1ttng information where free e>.changt' 1s lht· custom and an a world of easy, rapid communications It's aJso diCCtcult to dt't ermme precisely the kind of research that deaJs with cryptof!raphy. A new mathematical theory could drasticall y change crypto- graphic methods though only a (ew people might recognize it& application . "As a mathematician. I routinely publish In Germ an and Japanese journals," says Larry Goldstein, a professor at the University of Ma ryland. "It is a very internaUonal field " He notes that the prestigious "Journal of Number Theory" has several Russians on Its editorial board. ' Besides. researchers in tht fleld constantly talk to each other about developments Iona before they are published In a Journal. In ravor of the plan Is an at- titude expressed by David Kahn. ·'No one want to hurl the country," he say . "The NSA asked mt to delete three th.Inga Crom 'The Co<ltbreakers.' Even thou1h I'm a atron believer in t.he Fi~t Amendment. r went aJona." • '. , •• ..., • ., ........... ___ ·-·--. " ... --llf•• ··-· ·--~~~~~"""'~--------.......... ------..... ----......... ....... ........... o •• 4W>.tS9J sas s a 2s s s: as esac ;a s 22 u au~ ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 -Kidit-.---,e-y_e_s--~--------------------------C--la_s_s_e_s~~4t-,~~ s PARDON OUR TllEES DEPT. -Every time you get con· vinced nothing ever ~banges in our Orange Coast region, guess what? Something does. The Irvine Company. our great coastal ranch of yesteryear, proved to be a case in point this weeJc. What happened was, in harkening back to their heritage, certain agriculturists who remain in the company's employ went out to a ranch site east of ~ El Toro Marine Corps Air Sla- tion 8;Jld started planting 2\6 • ~ acres m orange trees. /.'&\ Time was, around our re.\ ~ gion, when the orange . ~as TOM MURPHllE ~I/ king, that such an activity '- would have drawn notice in the · ', press on either the agricultural s~ction or maybe the finance page. ' NO DOU BT THE NEW planting~ would have been viewed as another economic step forward in\ Orange County's steady march inµ> agricultural progress. \ Well, the new orange grove going in did ineed g,et press notice here in 1981 . 'that much didn't change. But hark! You 1 might be surprised at the kind of notice. Part of those new tree plantings, on eight acres, drew a heady protest. CERTAIN ARCHAEOLOGISTS complained publicly that the Irvine ranchers were disturbing an ancient site where it is believed the Indians had a major trading \post and political center. Better grab your tweezers and !J)lil. buster. This location, the scientists asserted, dated back at least 6,000 years. Informed of the complaint, what do you suppose Irvine Company spokesmen did? Why,· they apologized to the archaeologists, that's what. TERRIBLY SORRY, they said. ''An unfortunate over- sight." Shouldn't have been out there with graders and plan- ters and other citrus grove equipment, mucking around where there might be some archaeology. Well, this may give you some notion of how far the orange has rolled downhill since the days it was king of the agricultural mountain in Orange County. It doesn't seem so many years ago when citrus was the monarch of crops in our re~ion. You could maybe get shot for trying to filch an orange from somebody's grove. Get caught, and you were surely due to get hauled before some steely-eyed justice of the peace at the very least. IF ONE OF OUR OLD·TIME citrus ranchers was told that he was disturbing ground that might be more important than what he was planting at the moment, you could get yourself a free ticket to the funny farm. In those days, it would be difficult to imagine what would happen to some scientific type who wanted to halt the planting of an orange grove so he could get out there and sift around with a pair of tweezers and some other delicate instruments. For sure, the archaeologists wouldn't have drawn any kind of apology. Instead, they might have needed to be pretty fleet of foot when the citrus rancher fired up bis bulldozer. You guess it must be conceded. that in a few rare in· stances, times do change. E A&E Systems® Inc. Durable awning that's easy on the budget! · I sPECtAL 54a·aoo · ...... d . PRICE NOM ..,y-~ .:r-~.~~~~·00 Coll us ond see ~ot we meoi. Free lnstollotion ot ~ home. ~sites ond prices ovoiloble. • Personalized. professional service • Serving Colifon-io RV porks since I ens. • We're Mobt1e! • .-JI WC)(\ quoronteed! SM ua for woven woods. enctoeur9e, atorege Pod•. and iev.Ung aystems. . 15998 Mariner Drive Huntington Beach, . 213-592-2193 714-847-0424 and ears in business examined at HB school Free screening for speech or hearing de- fects in pre-school a1e children will be offered Saturday at College View Elementary School in Huntington Beach. Sponsored by the California Speech and Hearing Association and the Huntington Beach Kiwanis Club, the tests and referral service will be administered from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. at 6582 Lennox Drive , near Edwards Street and Ed· ·inger Avenue. To make reservations. or for further ln!orma· lion, call 848·1020. IF~U have a serv to orrer or goods to s , ace an ad In the Dally Pilot Classified Section . . Phone 642-5678 FASHIONABLE FAME -Terrie Goldade, 14, and Teresa Wilson, 17, of Fountain Valley model their homemade out- fits after winning top honors in the 4-H Dress Revue fashion show at the 4-H Spring Fair. The girls, members of the Fountain Valley Cloverdales 4-H. will exhibit their ensembles at the Orange County Fair, July 10·19. Reetstration has be1un for 1ix· week summer business clalaes offered by the Huntington Beach Adult School. . The adult a ool's business skills center at. ~1 Yo.rk\own Ave. will offer truction r. ac· counting, busl as Eoatlsh. word proces~ IL typtils, shorthand, buai a macblne1 com puter-orieot accountlni and other topid. The courses are free, and stu- dents may select their own da.sa hours and work al thell' own speed. The center will be open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Monday through Friday from 5:30 to &:30 p.m . Electric typewriters and electronic calculators are available (or stu· dents'use. Summer classes will run Jrom J uoe 15 through July 24 •• for registration in!~ation, v._ the business.skills l sch<>ol4fice or call 964·6855. · ~ .. '( Sale good through~ this week-end only! LAST THREE DAYS! SALE HIS. DAILY9-7 ~ OPENING DAY ..... Fri, Sat, Sun UPTO r._RICIS IUIJICf TO STOCK ON HANO I EYERTIHING REDUCED AT LEAST 20% OUI SILICTIOl IS ....-..nnses• SAU YOl WOl'T WAin 10 ... IOlll Of OUI •HBT UllAl8 IYll. NOW SALE LASTS ONLY3 MORE DAYS • EVEITIHING ISON SALE . I ' ' t ' .-l ... . .. . ~~ l .... . . ~ . . FEnlll~lll T~I CHIMICALii11 POTTEIYI-~ W1m1v~1 \ Gln51 ~.:: CEUMICS ;i M~CIAMEl.!i' n TUAIY(. STIPP! n~.~I TDl-O·Ym J..\ LMIUID fllTIUlll '5.!!0N RfG. $9,98 : . -AP W ........ A REAL SWINGER -Flossie Burr, 81, takes Day.· After learning of governor's proclama- firm grip and rediscovers joy of swinging as ti on, F1ossie decided to celebrate. she participSites in Dallas Senior Citizens ____________ _ !~ c First i('s duck, now goose Pierced by arrow, fowl flies, swims, eludes net MILWAUKEE (AP) -First it was a duck in Las Vegas. Now it's a goose in Milwaukee. Game wardens say a Canada goose with a 20· inch-long section of broken arrow protruding f~ugh a thigh has eluded their efforts to capture ner. , The goose, accompanied by a mate and named G".trtrude tij Natural Resources Department walrdens, n~ away from a farm pond in suburban Menontinef lf~lls after a futile effort to net her Wednesday. Wardens Jeff Labudda and Doug Hoskins said the goose showed no sign of suffering, nor did the home, a pond on the 13th fairway of the Sahara Country Club golf course. Richard Kloster, owner of the Menominee Falls farm where Gertrude showed up Wednesday, said he thought of having police shoot her to end her predicament. However, John A. Nelson of the Natural Resources Department said anyone shooting her faces state fines as well as federal fines because Canada geese are migratory birds. "It is sort of a hideous thing to see." Kloster said. "I am a hunter, but I can't see how someone can get their kicks out of something like this." ~ ~~;' seem ito interfere with her flight and swim· ; \~~ She has reported on ponds in several west I t suburbs · e last few days, they said. · -.. They like their pursuit to that of officials in Hoskins said alternatives to net capture in· elude using drugged food , tranquilizer darts and bright lights at night to blind her. Authorities have appealed to suburbanites to watch for Gertrude so she can be placed in the care of a department bird specialist. . . I • tiaa Vegas, who tried for weeks to capture a duck "')Wt!l an arrow ;through her breast. The duck, Aimed Donna, was captured thls week after dining !..:clQ•drugged bait, and the arrow was removed. ;.~~. She is recovering nicely, and Nevada Humane t;-110Ciety chairman Dart Anthony said that Donna Pilot •• · .ould be flown by helicopter Saturday back to her 1..__ __________ __,K------' PARK NEW T Your private world ~ ol p/easure ) jn the f11iddle of Newpo'rt Beach. IJ Life at Park Newport is a com- bination of privacy when you want it. social goings-on when you·n~ in the mood, and exhil- arating recreation when you feel rusty. Here Is the ultimate in care- free N,ewport Beach living sur- rounded by every convenienoe. Park Newport residents have a gourmet mari<et. a beauty shop and dry cleaner Just steps away from their apartment. There are 8 lighted tennis courts, 7 pools and a $ 750.000 Spa and athletic club. Fashion Island's fabulous shops are Just across the way. New- port's year-round attractions. sandy beaches. pleasure boat- ing. deep sea fishing, plus theaters. museums and hundreds of fine reetaurants. ALL right here. 0 Right here beside Park Newport. Why don't you visit our I Rental Office and see If all this Isn't Just what you've peen looking for. On Jamboree at San Joaquin Hilla Road. Tele- . phone (714) 644·1900. APARTMENTS & TOWNHOMES FROM ·s ~o.oo TO •1000.00 Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJf=riday, May 29, 1981 MEED HELP! •INt- DHt·YMSttt St•t ... ''Let the experts make beautiful hair happen'' Wt! sper11hz.e m beautiful. n11tural-lookmg hair d€'~1g11~ Cuu. rolur. perms. ;,tyll'i. We al1.10 apec1ahz.e in 111111 - wh11t ynu want and how you want lo look. And whl!n 1t rom~s to perms. 1< I' use only the finl'st-7.otu,; Salon P'rms A rurrenl favorite 1s Zot08 Warm and Gentle, for IUPfrb conditioning and long-lu ting body and lustre Call today. Let us make beautiful things happen to your hair. Al lffn this month in iswts of CoonopoliW\, G~mour & Vop ~lion this .. •nd -fivt l<>'A> OFF ANY SERVICE (for Ntw Cuttomtn Only) 16SZJ Mqnol~ Westminster (714) 142-6777-....a-0744 WAUC-INS WUCOM( NOW ln IRYIM HERITAGE HOME CENTER • TeWwtelon . Veouu• c ... ,..,. ..... "' M.chlnet WINOWHAVIA Malor Appliance .Repair Service • WASRiRS • DRYERS • REFRIBERATORS • ETC. "IRVINE T.V. COi.Di SPECIALISTS SERVICE SPECIAL· (THIS OFFER OOOD THRU MAY 31 , 1981) T.V. SERVICE CALL ANTIQUES OF THE WORLD STEVEN-THOMAS ANTIQUES B3 OVERSTOCKED SALE ON ALL MERCHANDISE . OVER $1,000,000 IN STOCK SLASHED 20% 40% WE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR INCOMING MERCHANDISE 3 DAYS ONLY FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY MA y 2 9 I 3 0 I 3 I l ·O A.M. • 6 P.M. PRICES BROW WHOLESALE AND AUCTION DEALERS AND DESIGNERS WRCOME .. .... Antiques Of The World -Steven-Thomas Antiaues 533 W. 19th (At Harbor Blvd.) Costa Me~l-3339, seb191 For complete ad copy and art services advertisers all along the Orange Coast rely on • • I \ ·-------------· .... ·---::--1 ..... ..._.. •• ~.~· ...... ·~-............ ~.~._.. •• ~.~= ... "•""""""'•.-~• ... c,.... ................................ ~•~• ... •s,..s•c~s•s~s11mi1 .. •aJ ... a~a .. aJ"'t•t ... ta .. s .. tlS•&11111111s111;12112 .. 1s111112 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 Your wedding picture Martinez.. Freemcm Sarah C. Freeman of Lake Forest, lli. and Carlos A. Martinez of Costa Mesa were married recently at the Church of the Holy Spirit, Lake Forest. Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Freeman of Lake Forest are the parents of the bride, a graduate of California College of Art and Crafts. Oakland. The bridegroorre son of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos H. Martinez of Costa Mesa, was graduated from Costa Mesa High School and Orange Coast College. Re is employed by Western Airlines. The couple will make their home in Honolulu. Mr. and Mrs. Otton Ot,ton-Hill Dr. William G. Otton, director of the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, and Diana Hill of Corpus Christi, Texas, were married at St. Mary 's Episcopal Church in Laguna Beach on May 15. The Rev. Robert Cornelison officiated. Otton was formerly associate professor of art and dlrector of Weil Gallery at Corpus Christi State Universilly. · The new Mrs. Olton was reared In Twin Lakes, Michigan. Club Calendar rum each Wemw.0011 in the Doil11 Pilot and contaim noUcea of women'• and urvice club meeting• and e~nt• opm to the public for the fol&owtno ~de. Snd notice• to Club ~r, Daill/ Pilot, P.O. Boz 15«>, Coata Meeo, CA nos. lnclt«U 11our name and pllone number. Notice• muat be in our handa three weeka in advance of on ewnt. Pictvrn OTe limited to major fund·roiaera open to the public. To reqwat a picture. write or coll the F'eature Departmemt, 642-4321, between 2 and 5 p.m. Photo reque1t1 are honored on a apace auailable boaU. 'RUFFELL'S UPHOLmRY ~·tr-......... 1'21 HAllOl ILVD. COSTA MISA -141·1116 JOHN MULFLUR M.D. Diplomat of the American Board of Family Prxtice is pleased To Annouce the Relocation of His Office to the Mar1uerite Mlllcal Plaza 2171 Puerta Rial #1&0 Mission Viejo, CA 92891 Day er NiPt (714) 495-9353 Practice Includes Nlwlllm Care, Pediatrics. llllnal M1llci11, Dfflcl Cy11c11111 Glrtltrtcs.' Mrs. Segretta Segretti,.Lmaon Liza Lawson and Donald Segretti of Newport Beach exchanged wedding vows on May 16 in St. James Episcopal Church. The Rev. John P . Ashey II officiated. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beasley Lawson of Newport Beach, was graduated from Girls Collegiate School and Pomona College, Claremont. The bridegroom, son of Mr. Andrew Henry Segrettl and the late Mrs. Segretti, is a graduate of USC : Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley. He is an attorney in Newport Beach. The couple plan to live in Newport Beach. • Mrs. Robertson Robertso~Anderson Kim Anderson of Huntington Beach and John Robertson of Playa del Rey exchanged wedding vows in St. James Presbyterian Church of Tarzana on May 16. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Anderson of Huntington Harbour, was graduated from Marina High School and USC. She is employed by the Los Angeles Unified School District. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Forbes Robertson of Woodland Hills, is a graduate from Taft High School and USC. Arter a wedding trip to the Caribbean, the couple plan ton vein Playadel Rey. Guidance center gets new president A Newport Beach resident, Mrs. B.C. Brown, has been elected president of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County which provides psychiatric services for families. Elected first vice president during the cen· ter's annual meeting in Costa Mesa recently was Mrs. Richard Agnew. also of Newport Beach. Nathan L. Reade of Costa Mesa was named second vice president, and Gregory Darakjian of Garden Grove was selected as third vice presi- dent. • Clyde Thompson of Corona del Mar was named treasurer and Mrs. G. David Riggs of Costa Mesa. secretary. Announced as newly elected members of the board were Frank Bianchini, Kenneth Fowler and Fashion tea set at Forster School A fashion tea and beauty seminar featuring Shirley Johnson, a beauty consultant and model, will be held from 3 to S p.m. Sunday at Marco Forster Junior High School. San Juan Capistrano. The event, a S5·per·person fund-raiser for the Church of Religious Science, Capistrano Valley, building fund is designed for women who are mov· ing in the direction of personal freedom, Ms. Johnson explajned. In her commentary, Ms. Johnson said she plans to include hjnts on make-up, style and poise. . Mrs. Mark Hansen, all of Costa Mesa; ·oon Butts of Santa Ana ; Burton Grant of Corona del Mar, and Mr. and Mrs. John Landis of Newport Beach. The Child Guidance Center is a non.profit agency supported by a mental health services con- tract with the County of Orange and the State of California, United Way and public contnbutions. Patients are charged fees based on their families' ability to pay. About 350 children are in treatment at one time in three center locations in Costa Mesa, Hun- tington Beach a!ld Laguna Hills. Fashions will be provided by the Miss Muffet Shop, San Juan Capistrano; Janette's Dresses and Sports Wear, San Juan Capistrano, and Affairs to Remember, Mi ssion Viejo. CARL EKERN ... to host bike inspection Wooters-Simpson Holly Ann Simpson and Gerrard Jos~ph Wooters, both of Newport Beach. were married re· cently in Chris t Church by the Sea, Newp9rt Beach The bride, daughter of Mrs. Patricia L. Simpson and Mr. Harold E Simpson of Newport Beach, graduated from Harbor High and San Diego State University. • The bridegroom, so.of Mr. and Mrs. Ger6ird Wooters of Newport Beach. was graduated fPOm Newport Harbor High School and Cal Poly San Luis ObisPO Myers-Miller Denise Kristel Miller and Douglas Paul Myers of Costa Mesa were recently married in The Ha- cienda. Santa Ana. · The bride, daughter of Mavis Miller of Costa Mesa. graduated from Estancia High School. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Myers of Sun City, was graduated from Sunny Hills Hig h School and Fullerton Com munity College. The couple spe nt their honeymoon in Sun Valley, Idaho and plan to live in Costa Mesa. Longley-Rood Jay R. Longley, M.D .. of Newport Beach. and Gloria Duzyk Rood of Irvine were married May 13 at Rancho Santa Fe Inn, Santa Fe Springs They will make their home in Newport Beach. J.1ahakis..Beam Kim Vlahakis of Costa Mesi dd Michael James Beam of Newport Beach e1tchanged wed· ding vows in St. Luke's Lutheran ChUt"ch of Long Beach on May 16. A reception followed at the Cotta Mesa Coun· try Club Bike i nspections slate d Saturday Ram linebacker Carl Ekern will host a bike· out at the Orange Coast College Adams Street parking lot from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m . Saturday. . The bike-riding public is invited to bring bicycles to be tested by a safety tesling unit. Costa Mesa and Newport Bead police depart- ments will offer bicycle licenses. WOOD LIGHTING INDUSTRllS • Lighting: Interior And Architectural: • A Factory/Showroom/Distribution Faclllty Featuring Popular Lighting Fixtures From More Than 30 LlghUng Companies: • Complete Consulting, Custom Design And Manufacturing Services: • The Moat Fashionable Line Of Table And Floor Lamps In Orange County: • Capablllty In The Latest Energy Conservation Techniques. Wood Lighting's Showroom Remodeling wlll be finished on June 5th and you are Invited to stop In and see the most qomplete llne of llghtlng fixtures In ·southern Callfornla. You ll see llghtlng fixtures In roomllke settings •.. Interior and exterior llghtlng, table and floor lamps, and a dlsplay of fan llghts. ··~ ····--..... -· ·· --~-----_".,·-· --.... ·----.-i-.• ....... s .. o~:,..s•t •••11: ••11s .. s111e"'o"s•c112 .. s .. a11111s11011•s•s10•t ••:•t•••••-. ... 91111'-1!1~!111!1~1!11!!~"'~ .. . . . . .. . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,1=nday, May 29, 1981 • •• tr-~~~~~~~~~~~-t-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- 1 Nd me hange doesn't always promise success DEAR ANN LANDE : Somethln1 baa come \.Q> tn our family, a would like to know bow you feel about It. W re ln our 708 . Our son. an attorney In bis • y 308, has set bls 5ights on a career or public rvice. We have always had close relationship with our chlldren. This bo as been on his own since college. Last week e received a letter saying he never liked his e and bu changed It , not only his first na but his middle and las t names, too. This has upset my hu d and me. We are shocked and hurt and don know what to say to him. We feel as if our so as disowned us. Do yo u h ave any expla lion for ·this? - PUZZLED JN MIAMI Dear Miami: I'm name becaute It tdentlft speclflc minority group. that bis ldenUflcaUon w be b H such little connd Edward Levi, S d you s igned your ou as a member of a vtomly your IOD felt a handicap. Too bad 1111 LAll ll l Goldberg and Abe Rlblcoff did all rt•ht without changing thelr names. DEAR ANN LANDERS: What do you say to an executive who earns $60,000 a year and wears the same pair of pants 25 days i.n a row, ties that are 15 years old and so soiled it's pathetic? H.is shirts are frayed and nothing (its right. He is at least 50 pounds overweight. This man has a wife al home, yet be goes for five days with a split i.n his pant.s that doesn 't get mended. She could at least mention it to him and take the trousers to a tailor lf she doesn't want to do it herself. No one knows how lo approach the subject. Taurus: iming right on target ~.Salurday , May 30, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21 ril 19): Roadblock to financial gain is remov ; you could be on way to . riches! More people ecome aware of your abilities, talents and tential. Leo, Sagittarius 'and another Aries fig prominently. Investment pays! ' TAURUS (April 20 ay 20): Lunar cycle high; ~ou'll be al right place crucial moment. Timing. HOROSC OPE 1ntu1llon are o n t et Personal appeal is highlighted you ge hat you want in surprising manner Cancer , Cap com , Aquarius natives play important roles. GEMINI CMay -June 20) · Be fl~xible, but tvoid scattering yo efforts. Emphasis on what occurs behind scene You are on brink of major discover y. Separate ct from illusion. Shake off secret fears, doub Sagittarius and another Gemini figure promi ntly. CANCER (June -July 22): A delay is actual· ly beneficial. A "v important person" is on brink of decision in ur favor. Focus on fulfill· ment, wishes that co true and financial gain as result of business ent prise. Celebrate! LEO (July 23·A 22): Scintilla ling contacts aid in elevating care Avoid satirical comments. You'll be dealing wi sensitive people. Analyze prospects. Exercise iscrelion, but get views across. Dilemma will resolved. Relief! VIRGO (Aug. ept. 22) Family member discusses travel planl Open mind lo new vistas. • Domestic adjustment is necessary -know it and act accordingly. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio natives figure in scenario. Special correspondence aids in clarifying ultimate objectives. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>. lndivi,dual with "murky" views may attempt to intimidate you. Maintain balance, sense or fitness, humor and self. esteem. Foc us on financial prospects, credit rat- ings, loans a nd payments. Member of opposite sex is likely to break app0intment. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go slow, lie low. Legal mane uvers involve money, authority and "ownership." Emphas is on partnership, public re- lations, s pecial documents and marital status. Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo natives play significant roles SAGITTARJUS <Nov 22-Dec. 21) Surge of ap- proval comes from peers. Emphasis on employ· ment. basic needs. health problems and solutions. Aries. Leo and a nother Sag1ttarian figure prom- inently You'll f1msh major project. Cupid's arrow strikes home! CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Love dominates scenar1o. You come in contact with a new "heart throb " Focus on greater freedom , in- dependence and c hance to express views in dynamic. creative manner Protect self in emo· tional clinches. Swoon with eyes open! AQUARIUS <J a n 20-Feb 18): Be aware of sources check material, get direct quotes. Highlight security, long-range prospects. Follow through on hunch You are proceeding in right direction. Know it. don't be intimidated by one who lacks faith. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Financial op· portunity that appears to "slip by" should not be considered a Joss A boomerang effect is in offing. Call, message or letter aids in clarifying situation. Reach beyond current expectations. You'll gel it! 1031 ! .. FM II . 1er IOI llll'IS I R E L VALU E S Wooden racks simplify housework Homemakers in Finland and Sweden first dis- covered how bandy wooden racks can be. Now you sec them in home magazines. They're nat- ural, attrac tive, strong and Inexpe nsive. Pier l bas a drainer rack fo r drying dishes - and for s howing off those with pretty patterns. A utensil rack ends s earches for kJtchen tools. Storage racks save cabinet space. Hang one over the s tove for s pices and one on the bath- room wall for soaps, lotions and toothpaste. Wooden dtBh rac k .................... 8 99 ANAHEIM -509 Katella Avenue, 772-2472 COSTA MESA -2110 Harbor Boulevard, &40·133'1 MISSION VIEJO -308 Mission Viejo Mall, 49~8582 ms from applesauce to zippers I .1 p·IDt are advertised every day in the II J I • We have lned subtle and even nol·SO·subUe hints. but nothing happens. We keep thinkin& a colleague might mention 1l to him but there is no evidence that anyone has. Can it be that the man doesn't have a mirror at home? Please, Ann, help us aet the word out to him or his wile, We are GROs.5ED OUT AT CGW IN NEW YORK Dear Grossed Out: I am Groued Out lD Chic.go after matchlnr my bwacb with tbe postmark on your envelope. "CGW In New York" bas got to be Corn.Ins Gla11 Works, where the world's finest -Steuben -II pro- duced. It ls bard to believe that an organization world famous for Us exquisite quaU&y products would tolerate an executJve who fits your description. I am printlng your letter on the oulllde chance that such a cre ature emu, but I choose to believe ll was written by an out.of.favor typist with a Uve tmarlnatJoo and a pollOD pen. DEAR ANN LANDERS My heart went out to the girl from Mass achusetts whose parenta were splitlmg. My parents went through an ugly, hateful divorce and planted us kids squarely in the mid· dJe. They never came right out and said It, but the message was clear CHOOSE! Alt.bough I was older than the girl who wrote, I lacked the maturity to handle it and il still hurts to re· member. Your advice was good. The girl and her brother must insist REPEATEDLY that they will not take sides, nor get involved. I hope they listen to you. SAME SHOES Dear Shoes: So do I. Thank• for wrttta1. /& alcoholmn rwnmg your life? Know t~ ~ signals and what to do Read the bookltl. .. Al.cohol1811l -Hape and Help," bl/ Ann LantU11. Enclose SO cents with your re~1t and a long, stamped. self-addreued enwlope to Ann Landn-1, P 0 Box 11995. Chicago, JU 60611 There is cure for feet odors By J OHN D. ROSEN, M .D. Dear Dr. Rosen, Believe It or not I am incredibly Jealous of peo· pie who can sit down at a pa rty and casually sUp off their shoes. If I were to do that the room would empty in seconds. My feet smell so bad that I am afraid of marriage! I s hower e very morning but It does no good . Will anything help? -D.A., TUSTIN. permeates the shoes, the closet. t he bedroom, and sometimes the entire house! But don't start get· ting down the suitcases and looking in the yellow pages for moving companies . Help is on the way! The miracle cure 1s none other than Jergen's lotion. J don't know how it works or why it works ASK THE DOCTOR ANSWER: I love the commercial that was on TV awhile back where the man takes orr his shoes and his dog passes out! l don't remember the pro- duct that was being advertised but the busines or making people smell better is a multi-billion dollar industry. Although the commercial was meant to be funny. the problem or foot odor is no laughing matter. It is a little known fact that sweat by itself is virtually odorless Foot odor is produced because the s weat mixes with bits of dead skin and germs which are present on the normal foot. These ingre· dients differ in types and amounts from person to person and hence the difference in the severity of the problem. but the job it does is truly amazing. I found out about it from a patient of mine several years ago. He suffered from incurable athlete's foot and started rubbing his wife's lotion into his feet each mght to cover up the smell. Within two weeks not only did his foot odor disappear but his seemingly incurable skin infection was totally gone. From time to lime the problem would start lo come back and he would use the same routine with the same s uccess each time Infections such as athlete's foot make the s ituation even worse The offensive odor Dr John D Rosen, a proctitWMr 1n Newport Beach, welcomes yaur questions. Mou re~at1 to A1k the Doc- tor. P 0 Bo:i 1560. Costa M eia, 92626 WIN:ATRIPTO HAWAII FOR TWQ REGIS0lfRATANY ONE Of THESE DEAJ,ER$ Camarlllo HunU~on leach Orange Sano~ \Ian Nuya App11arn:e D1scoun1 Home les & Ser\' Builders Emportum Kilchen sign Cir Bu11oera Emporium Cenler '7242 a .. c,., Bl•d 13'3 E Kalella 2~S El Caion Blvd S960 Sepul•eda Blvd 878 Las Posas Ro l• Habra Panorama City San Oabrlel Waad1 Apphance Canoe• Parll 8 & H Tl/ & Appl ATA Slores Howards Tl/ & Appl 16919 Sherman W•v Baker & Wells 13s1 J S e .. cn Blvd 8330 Van Nuys Blvd JOO E Valley Bl\ld WHUalle VIiiage '1429 Sharman Way Don Paoe Home P11aoena S1n11 Fe Sr.rings Warehov .. Cenyon Covntl) Service Donaottues Home Pertgon Sa ea Discount C.n1e1 Howard & PhllS !>Sii W WM lier Blvd Appllance 11823 E Slauson 31368 V11 CohnH 19034 So1t01d Howar<l& l\/ & APPi 32 S Pasadena Ave Avenue 148 • 108 Canyon !IOI E Imper;~! Hwy Perr~ & Ttiompsof1 S1nt1 Monica Yorba Linda Coeta M111 L°"9 I H Gh 641 LA~e Ave BlJ ClllH Appl Yorl>I Linda Appl Builders Em£011um Bran'1en Conti $ply Snyder Diamond I 2 S•"'' Mon~a 488S Main StrHt 2e11 e mtt ''"' 10M H11rbor ,t.vtnue Discount Plbg & Blvd oowner Loa Angel11 =••nc• Snydef 01amof1d Ou1t11butor Tebber 's Home E Colcwlldo D11count Plbg & En11n1"'men1 cu Builders Empo11um 61vo ,t.ppllt MI Cal Wtetllr" 01'1 46SO W Pico Blvd Co 8130 F1testont Blvd sg;ros Redondo llHCh 13911 Olympic Blvd 1 •400 00Wf1er. Ave Fuller Ion 4 I W Pico Blvd R9dondo T•ld1ng Simi V1lley Downey, Call 0tnla Marvlna TV & Appl Manhtllan l t Kll 611 N PIClllC Coaat Ap~ Showroom 11U2W S B:fi A~pllance Highway <I• Industrial St Commonwtalttt 321 an lllJln Ian Cernen:ttno llanton 8""" Qrovt 9t1eh Bhld 8ull4ttS E"mp0t1um Penn Pte>t ~ liuPPly lldtn OIO"t Appl HOtM'I Hollywood 111)0 £ HIQhland 11121 0.lt '""' 13191 l11rb01 81vO Sny4t• D11mond Aven11e TOtfl~ HechtlMle Ht ltflt1 011count Plbg ' Culltc\s TV ' Appl ~11c s.1 .. $0'tllrall1 A=rn;t &1$ httll~ Wuh1ngton 1231 I HtCttn<JA I VlnO-n SI Avtnut ''"° ~lllf<ll (•It-,_,,,_, "" .. • ~- ,. -- 'I I I .. -~ ·----------" • SSll&#$0 4 c t SS 5 Ct 03 i3 5 sass a 1 a a 1 2 1 2 !Q)~ I ii ....... . . . ~ ... " .... . . .. Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Friday. May 29. 1981 Failed panda lover stranded No free ride for Chia-Chia W ASH INGTON <AP> -When he was a bud · ding lothario, Chi a -Chia. the London Zoo's slant p a nda. had no trouble getting a free n1aht to W ash ington to w oo Ling-Ling, unloved ludy panda a l t h e National Zoo. But as a failed lover. nobody wiants to give him a free ride h o m e . "No o n e h as volunteer.ed free passuge." says R o b ert H oage, s p ecial assistant to the National Zoo's dir ector. "It looks gnm for that type of pro· motion a l fligh t back ·' H oage was referring to Chia-Chia 's hoopla fille d arrival in M arch on a British Airways plane to ~ndezvous with Lang Ling as a s u bstitute tor H sin g -Hsing, the National Zoo's unroman tic and disinterested resident mnle panda J ohn Lampl, a British Airways spokesman. said the 1tirline never intended to fly Chia-C h ia back to London . where zoo officials want h i m as a tourist lu r e th is summ er. National Zoo ofricials. disappQinted that all Ling -Ling got from her English suitor was p awing and biting, say they are t r ying lo work out a deal with t w o US airlines which operate c argo fligh ts to London. Neith er Pan Am n o r Flying Tigers. however, are t alking freebie "W e 'r e in business lo make money, th at's w h y ," said a Pan Am official who asked that his n a m e not be used. "The zoo has a contin gent r eser vatio n with us for June l. I under stand they're shop pin g around for the best deal." Pan A m 's p rice is $1,062.50, or $1 .25 a poun d for C h ia C h ia a n d his 600-pound crate T he zoo is dickering with Flying Tigers for a reduced rate. "We should decide sometime this week," said spokeswoman Vivian Scerbo Compromise Amtrak aid? WAS HINGTON (APl Amtrak President Ala n Boyd says he expects a con gression al b u dget com promise to provide the passenger-railroad e n o u g h m oney to continue operatin g some o f its long-distance trains H e told A mtrak directors this week he is op· t t mislic because of approval by the House E n er gy a nd Commerce Committee o f a $725 million ap· p r o p rlation for fiscal 1982, which begins Oct . 1. Tha t is $112 m illion more than p roposed by th e Reagan a dminis tration a nd expect ed to b e a utho r ized b y t h e Sen a te . The lo w e r a m ount would ll m lt Amt rak's operatio ns to the N ortheast cor ridor a n d eJiminate all lo ng-dis t a nce routes, according to Boyd. "The r e will b e some compromises (betw een \he H ouse and Senate). a n d 1 believe the com· promises will allow;is to continue to operate a na· tio n al system," Boyd said. addmg t hat even the H o u se version is about $245 million below what A mtrak needs for fiscal 1982. He did n ot say what routes might be curtailed o r elimin ated. P U BLIC NOTIC E P U BLIC NOTIC E PtC'TtTtOUt auu..... l'ICTtnou• 8UtlNHt NAllMl'TATUMUn' ~ ITANMe•' TM 1911 ... nt _... It .. lllt ..... Tiie t.i1.,.,1,.. --••• ...... _ .. , ~ ........ 0 It IOIJNO, IOtt' ICullul l..aN, HWI CHllll$TINA'$ CA .... -latl 1'111 tint*' IMC.fl, CA ..._ 11r .. 1, Cale-.., Cellfotftle ""11 Or ...... II. llllWI. 101'2 ICullUI 1-a... A"*., e 1i-~'-· Int .....,, HIHlll,....,, ..._,.,CA '21Wt. I ••I lrl•tal, •SO. la11te A11a, Tlll1 ..........,. It~ rt.,. I~ C..lli.tnle ft1Q1 dl•..._.1 llllr..., Milla lk,.,, tnt ~ htl °"9Wr II. II-8rltlel, • ......... A,.., C.ll!Wftla Tiii• ,...._ w• llMd wltlt -'2'1'1 Cev111y Clen ef o..,.. C-y aft May Tlllt ~ 11 ~--. 1>y ,,.. IJ, ltll dtwldualL 1'161* _..., llll•ll 0...-.r.,. l'\llJll.,,... Or ..... C.0.11 o.lly ~Mot. Tiii• --t WM 111• wllll Ille May U, 22 "· J-S. "" "'2 .. 1 County c...-ttl 0r.,.. C-IY e11 May P U BLIC NOTICE IJ, 1''1 fl'IN197 l'uMI.,_. Or-. COHI Dally l'llot, -----Ma, U, ti, Jt, J'8"W S, 1tl1 J1ft.4t llOTICll lllVITINO HAL•O l"ll~CllOll 11011 THI CC*ITllUCTIOH OP A 1 .. INCM INVllllt lD lll'HOll AllD " II INCll lllCLAIMIO WATllll U NI l'Olt THI A.LllO WATllll MANAOllMllNT Al•NCY/ •OUTH COAIT COUNTY WATlll OllTltlc;T NOTICf IS HEllEIY GIVEN 11\al IM loard ot Olr9<tort ot ••Id A-y 'ln•llH end wlll receive M•led pro- r>o .. h I lllOt I 1iP to Uw r~ir ol I 0 00 " M Oii tllt t2Yld Cley ot J..,,., '"'· ror IM rurnloN1'9 lo Mid A09nc:y 01 ell 1ran1jl0rlallon, labor, m.tfflal1, too". 1qulpmenl, "'•'<••. permlh, ullllllH, ind olh•r Item• nKeuary to con1lr11<t ••IO wor-Al Mid lime, Mid propotal' •Ill t>e OllQllcly _....,end read • ._ 11 Ille OlllUI o4 Ille MoullOft·Nlguet N•l•r oi .. rkl. tllOO lA Pu Road. ~•1111n1 N1...,.1. Calllornla 92•71 Ilda 'Tl•Y IM ,...,..., Or dellwred to Ille "''° w a1tr Ma111"m1n1 A~ncy, 1~11 c-·-· S..11• 20t. LltuM Hiiia, CA'2U> Bldt tlle ll co11torrn to and 01 rea.pont•Ye to ttw c:ontr-.t doCunMnh •or Ille _,. Coplet Of 1111 contrac1 ~um1nt1 •rt on r111 end may be n •mined 111 Ille office ot Ille Aterocy ano ·II Ille otllcl Of NHll, Brudlll & St-lncorporllld, 1°'20 Vie Frontera, San 01100, CA '212t. Copl11 mo bf Ol>l•I,,.., •• N• •I•. Brudln ' s•-lncorPO<aled tor. non-r1tullO•bt• IM ol iso.oo per Ml. In .o ~ltlon lo which • U 00 IM wllt lie cllarged tor Hell Ml ma lled A prtDld <onler9"Ce Wiii De MIO ac>- pro•lmllllY -w .. k prior 10 IM bto >llenlng Tiie Cleta !Ima and loullon wlll 1>• Hiil 10 all Pl.wl hOIOtrt l>y _.._ Oum E•<ll 11<0 •NII De w11m11111c1 011 • PUBLIC NOTIC E P1CT1nous au11Na11 ...... ITATIMl!tT Tiie foll-I ... -tonJ a re Oii ... lbv1tneu •• H I' LOAN S llVICINO, Uffl Et Tffa Ad., II Toto, CA t26ao T 0 ""'blkelklft•. Inc • a o.taware Corporatloll, 2m1 El Toro lld . El hte, CA ti.JD. Tlllt _,...,. II tonc:llKIM by • <or porallan T 0 Puot lut1on1, Int RalPll J, Tet'tlla ............. Tnl• 114"-I ..... !Ilea wltll 11>1 Count" c...-ot Or-County on May IJ, ltll. fl'1UI" PublllllleCI Or ..... Cwlt Oally Piiot, May IS, U , 1t, J""9 S, '"' 2261 .. 1 P U BLIC NOTIC E ,ICTITIOUS IUllNIH MAME STATEMENT Tiie totlowlnv .,.,...,.. 11 oolng oust nene1 THE GOLDTOOTH FACTORY, Jm7 Blrcll St., Suite 1~. Newport llMcll, CA ttMO. Jull1 L .. Oa•lt . 23W Ortl\ld Hiii Pl . Sant• Ane Hh, CA 92/07 flll• lllltlMU I' c-u<l9d 11, "" Ill dlvldual Jull1 L Davit Tnl• •talt men1 wet 111ec1 with 111e County C .. rll of Oren9f c.ounty 011 Ma1 •• t"I "".,;J Publlllled Or-Coa•I 011iy Pl .. 1, Mo•. u. n. n. '"' ,. .... , P U BLIC NOTIC E form hlfnl'1>1G •• oart ot tilt contre<t I documenb. -mu1t lie eccompenllOd l>y • Cllllllr'• CheO, a <ertlli.o <111<11., or e bidder t bond In a11 1mount not NOTICE INVITING a 101 '"'than '°"' ot IN amount ot ,,.. t>ld, Notice h lllf•bY etv1t1 111•1 Ille m1d1 pey•bt• to llM orO.r of or tor tllt Board ol Trvit•t ol .,,. Coa•I Com· l>enelll of CM Aoen<Y Ea<ll bid •ll•ll munlty Coll-Olatrlct ot Orange lie walod .,d O.llvertld to Ille AQtllC y 1 1,.. locallon .,.,1~1"" 1 thlt notice Co11nty, c..111or111a, will re<elv• lffl•O • •·-n l>IOt 111> to It 00 • m .. f-Y. Jvne for int Ol*ll"ll ol prcipow l1 al or IMlore t• '"' al the Purcl\a\lftf o.p.rt,,,.,,1 1,.,. time In tlllt notk:e provl-. Tiit <14' .. 10 '°''-ol1trlct localed II 1170 <ll•Oorbonchllalllleglw nasguerenl• Ad a m t AVllllll Coll• M 1 1na1111e bt-• •111.wller l11toa contrac1 Callfornta. at wfllcll 'ume u ld l>IO: wT1i wlllltlleA0tn<y•ndlurnl111tlltrequlred lie pul>llCly--' end read tor; p1ymtnl and perfor....nce -Md PURCHASE OF VELLUM cerlltlut" ot lnwranu -,_,... p A P E R I HS T R U C T I 0 N A L mtnll II •w1r0tcl tllt wor-. lf'O •Ill lie MATEAIALsCENTER lle<l1re~llttfellecllllllebidderr1fu .. 1to All btch ere lo lie In 1<<-• wllll :::~~Yq~7:=,1:'~~~~~:::~11~11 IN Bid Form lnlttuct1on1 and Conell· 'ura .. u1n0endo•.......,lllflll1bldl1a<· ll<Wlt -*<lllcatlon• •111<11 are now on Ill• and m.y lie ~..,.., In Ille offk• upteo of Ille Purc,...lnv A91tf'1 of uld co1t-Tll1 Boero a4 01rec10-. llfi OOlalned dlttrkt lrom the 011'9<tor Of Ille Callfarnla Eecll bicldltr muJt tut>mll wllll Ill• O•oartrnent t14 IACNttrlal R•l•tlont • llld 1 , .. ,,..,.,er.ck, ci rtlli.d clltck, oettrmlnetlon Of u.. -r•I Pt•••ll· or l>IOOtr't -m.-peyeble IO Ille 11111 rtlt '14 per diem ,._, •no IM order of ttw Cou t Commi.nlly C.llege 11•ner11 11t1valll119 rate tor 19991 hell· I 01,lrlct eoard 01 Trlltlfft '" an day end -•time work In ,,,. locellty 1 amount ,,...1 ... 1...,, llw perUlf'll IS%) 111 wnl<ll Mid worti Is to lie performed I ot Ille ,.,,,, bicl •• • gu1relll• 11\al tlle tor tac II cr•tt, claullkallon, or type ol blckMr wlll ..,1., Into Ille pr_.i worh r Med9d Nol IH S !...,, ,,,. Cle· Contre<I If the -It •••r-to I '•rmlned ratH illell be oald lo all 1 Mm. In 11'9 ,..,,, ol lalluu to enter,,,. work•rt employed In Ille pertormaM1 10 &ll<ll concracl, IN proc-ot 11'9 ot Ille concract Suell rate1 of ·-• chick wlll lie lortelled or In Ille c.aw ••• on Ill• wllll Ille l>tpert,,...,,I o4 In· of • -. 11'9 lull '""; llltreof wlll l>e Ou1trl•I AllllloM -111 ,,,. olllu 01 !Orlt llld to uttl c.ollege dlstrkt. Ille ""nc:y -are •••llabll lo"'' In· No bidder m.y .. 1111c1raw 1111 bid tor ltrHllO per1y upon r-st • perloO a4 torty.flw 1451 day' allllt • Tiit 8oani ot Dlrecto" ot 11>1 Agen '"'oat1Mtfo<lllt-lnothereol 1 cy ruerwtt tllt rlQlll to HI.Cl IN Tiit 8-d ot Trwtt9" ,_,, .. thl I Klledule (s) ....,... wtllc.h IN bids are prlvll-of re)ecllnO .,,y and •II bklt to bl compereo •nO contrac I 10 or 10 wal .. lltl' trr.qutarllln 0, In P U BLIC NOTIC E "IC'l'ITIOUI 8UlltlllllS NAMI ITATllMllNT TM tolltwlne pe.-11 llOlng OUSI· ........ MOTIVATIDHAL MAltKITINO, l T vlaM lld . 0..11 Maw . CA tl•M Oerwlll M. aoltln .. r, 110 Tul-lld . CMta Meta, CA '2•» Tiii• _,,.., 11 c..,cluOtd -Y"' In· .i•llluel ,......,,., & wltel Ortwtn M .. 1t1nee1 1111• ... _, wn llled •1111 tlle C-IY Ctertl .,r Of.,,_ (0""4y on Mey ...... 1'111 .. l"ubH.,... Or-C:oe•I Oally l'llot, Maye, U, H, 2t '"' Jl~I P U BLIC NOTIC E P U BLIC NOTICE -r-P U BLIC N O TIC£_ P U BLIC NOTIC E llOTIC• Ofl' fl'ILlll•O' l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNIU Cl'1'411' A""-ICATION ~ I .. ~ ITATllMIMT NOTICIOfl'T•U1T•1•1t•t.• P8•Mtll.H)•ITOaSOHl•MATI Tiie toll-lnQ oartont ••• llng T.t.. .... ,,11/.,__ll A8UlllCH0fll'ICI b•"'"•"" 011 Jun• It., .. , II 1000 a.m , ANO NOMI 01' .. ICI OIOITltOHIX, m1 Blrcll i.et IU(Kl'l'I AICONVIYANCi COM· f"I• It 10 lntorm U. ll"bllt 11\.t, un Suitt 110, Hewpon lleacll, CA t2a, • PANY.1C..Hlotnla<orPOrllloll,u Ouly ... lecllon S4J •S " IN ...... , '"" •uNt.IOHT INlllSTMEN1 )M •-'nled Tr\IM• uncllr ""'PUrP.JI 11 .. ut11._ ..., ""' 11.-e1 k•'""'I PANV "'' llr<ll Mrwt. Sllttoo. t• 0.1<1 _. T""' dated o.urnw aN L..,, SYtl-, fta<lflt ,_., s.,,. Newpor1 -..C:h, C.A '2MO 1'7t, r~Jltluary i.. '*·••I 1,,., and~ Au atlellen, !lat llleel TA W COlll'ORATION.ttt N• 1)tS4,ln-IMM,-IU4,0IOt· aft e•tuu .. wllfl .... ,._rel H-•1"11 ,,, .. ,, '""' 110 Ne•fl r1<111 Ae< ... O&lft tfleOffl09fllWC-•y ~oan • .,. IMttl tar llOfflllU IM la IH<ll,C:AtliMO lte<order Of Or-c-ty. $late of Ill r-.1~ lh ••l.Clng -o4 Tlll1 l>Wl~o '' conou<ltO r • Ctllf~nlt WILL SELL AT l'Ul t.IC Ike,·-· ..... IOI NOfUI. \!Ifft,,_ Qlntrll pertN,..,..p AUCTIOHTOMIGMIST 8100Cll 11011 •er .......... C.llfarnla, ••• ~-II Of SUNLIGH I CASH IPer•l>fe •I lll'ne of Mle In l•wf11t llce, allO 121 ,_.._,. Ille eah11"9 \unllQflt ln•e'1Merlt C.om111y mo~, of llW U111teo S11t .. l 11 the fref'C br•11<ll 9'11o. IOUleCI at tM Eu l 1/111 J-E lftldl, OuhlO• entrenu ot Ille Conllnenr.I SllM I, Coote ,.,.. ... C•llfornl•. a• Ill l're&loem Home Lo... ouOOlnQ. '«•'"' ., UI s llOme ofll<• Tl'll• •l•t-1 W•\ llltd "'""" Euclid, Anellelm, Celltornl1 t»o:J, 111 Any-m.y wrllt In ta 1r0t or pro~t County Cieri. Of Orat\99 County ""•Y •lg!ll, llllt-llllerett <onY1yeCI to ano of Ille •PClllullon Your comment\ to,'"' now ll•kl Ill' 11 ~"to °"4 o4 Trutt NOTICl~T•UtT•l'llAl.ll mt y dlK\111. but .,. not llmlt•d lo, I... ..,., In Ill• p.--ny '""''""In ••Id County T.l. .... Mn appllcanl" -· of ptrlorma11<1 In ll'ubll•lled OrMOt CW•I Delly Ill, andStat•Oetcrlbtdit NOTICI II Hl•1 8 V OIVEN _1 _, llt lp11111 to ....t the credit -· ol lh Me, 12, tt, J._,. S U '"' 21191 Perctl t Unit No J •• \hOwn *'° Frltl•Y. J-"· '"'· e1 t :oo •'<IO<li IO<•I <~II•• ,._ Gopl .. mu&I -d•Krlbtcl 111 tllt C.-lnluM Plan •• a.rn of Niki clay, M Ille .,,,r.,,u to'"" lie rec1tY9d llY '-•IM•Y Aoent, P U BLIC NOT ICE corded In 8-1ti7'. °"' •J» of 01 0,, I c •• 0 f • I A L f s TA T f ,....,.,., -L-.. n_ .... rd ot llClll ltKorOt SICu•ITtlS Sl•¥1CI, .. ...,,,, Sen Fr-I.co, tOO Callloo-nle Str .. 1, -Pert11 2 Ni -Mo.a I/Hiii If>. l r9etlwey ......... In INCll'tef S.n\a Potl Otllo lo• 7"4t. S... Fr-li<o. NOTICE 011 TAUITl1'11Al.I ternl "e 1-.11n <ommon In Ille, .. Ana , County of Oren .. , Stilt ol C1lllOr111a t411D, byJ-U,1''1 T S ...... 1) lt1t1rett1n1notOlhl<~•reOILOI Call,.,fttla. .. n 100llltf\al 10daya to "'Dmll com NOTICE IS HEAEIY GIYEN, n I ol Trett No .... ~ W<h term I• 0.· N•Wl'OltT IOUITY l'UN01, 1NC .a mtnh m.y be *-1"90, P<Olrl-w<ll on Frlelel', J..,,. ll, t .. 1, •t t 00 O'<tti t1neo In 1111 Ml<l .. enlllled O.llnltlon• Ca111.,.,.1a c.r-4"klft, •tdulY -'nl· reque11 It r1<ejY9d In •rlll"ll by tne 1 m Of Mkl "*Y •I lllt •nlrM>Ce lol or th1 0.CIH•tll)ll Of C_..,11, CotlOt'. M TrontM _ pw_,l teU.. Po-• OI S..Por•l-V Ao9n1 by J..,,. U, '"' o I I IC I' 0 r '4 EA I. EST A ( lion• •rid RH 1rte11•1' re<orOeo In eoot. Mle cWerrMI In lflot ce"6111 09ed Of AnyON -111(1 1 '"°'1 ... 1i.1 protott SECURITIES SERVICE. 2020 NO\ 11,.I, ~ ns ot Ottlelal lle<ord& end Tr11sl U l(llled by WILLIAM C ma y r-1.,, O<al lrQllmtnl on IN Bro.owe,, S..lte *.In Ille City of$. an,i mff\4)mtllttllltrtl0 WARMINGTON, Ill, en unm1rrlad 1ppllullon ea .. t rorth In St<tlon 1• An1, County Of Or-, Slelel P1rt•IJ Non~•<lvtl .. HH•nenll men, anoll ,_or_ ,.....,., H, 1'71, 111 ,.J.2111 For• protnt lo lie <onalder.., C• lllornl•, HEW POAT E QU P lor ullllllH ec'"" 1norni.. 9QreM. •II• ._ 1•tt ttl Oftk t.1 llacare Of Mlcl tulutantlal, 11 muit lie wrttt•n. r• FUN OS, INC , • C1lltornta <O•Po• <ro.c11,.,...1. OrelneQe, •uppc>rt •no tor C-ty, .. _.... tJOa. llac..-'t lnttrv-celv•d Oii ,.,.,,., t llO conllln at l .. ll Ille llon. a1 cl\lly IPl!Olnted Tru1IH Und Ollltr purpo..-.allHclellned lnlfltArll· MelllNO.~,l>'(rMtor10fa t>rNC.nor •ollowlno. (IJ • tummary ot 11\a re-•nd purwa11t lo h powtr ot Mii c cit of Ille 0e<1arat1on enlllltld "E.eM ci.fe111t In pay....,,. Ot oerlonn.,,u of 1uont tor Ille prot"'· 12> Ille "'9(1flc l•rreo In Ulat certain OWd ot Tru~t e menh lloe obllflel ...... HC-tlltntOy,ln<IUO. me tlertOblkled lolntlle-llcatlon l<ul•d by WILt.IA M c EXE CUTED BY HARRY N ,.,. 111•1 ten.In bftaell ar ... , ... 11, or Ill lhl •PjlliCllll'• community WARMINGTON, Ill, 1n unm1rrl•8ROOMAl.l ano IOA M 8R00MALt., Notice Of wNd1w .. racor..,. F.-y Mrvlce ,_d, UI I«••. 1nc11.olng man, •no nKor-Fe1>r111ry 21, 1t71h11101001nowilt tJ. t•t 111 eo. t,,.... .. Oftklel Recor<ll ony relewnt _,,c or fll'lnc:lai In· In Book IJO«lof Otll<l•I Re<.oro• ot w t. Th• •lrwt-eu andotr.er common of MIO C:-'r, el....,. U.O, •ec•nlw't lorm•tlorl, Wflkll _, tfte prc1Cftl;. Counll', .t -924, Ae<or.,._.•, 1n,1r.,..,1gnlflon, 11 iny of Ille reel property ln•tru-No. 17142, WILL SEt.L AT •ncl (4) end MverN tftech Oii 'fOUf or mtnt No Jt .... b' , .. _,ot. btMCll °'ttKrlbtcl -It PUrPQl'llO to lie , PUI LIC AUCTIOH TO THE HIGHEST .. ,,lt tllon or '°"""""''Y wfli<h mo dtl•ull In pevment or pef1orm1n<e ~errlt.,., lr•lne, Calllorn1itJ1tS llOOEA l'Oll CASH. lewtul "'°""Y Of r"111t frOlfl 4!0PrO¥at Of llW •PPI~· Ille obll04"1oftuecllrtd U..rel>Y. lroc1...,,_ TM .....,.,,1.,,.., Trutl• dltcli llflt IN Uftl• ai.... all .,.,.._., et u. llon 1n9 tnll urtlln breech or dttoull, flY ll•l>lllly 1,.. •n lnc:orrectneu 01 tl'll time .. Mlt, all,..,.., tlt,. -lntHeM You m.y look •I lht •P9l1t1t10n '"° Nollu ot Wl\kll •H recor-F11>r111ry Intl lddrtt• -olller tommon Git now ... kllwll.a. Tn.AM, In .,,.,tolhal Ill comment& 111.0 •I Ille F-r•I IJ, !tit In Book tJt•I of Olflclll gnatlon,llanv,._nllereln rH I ~ytlbMt. ln MkfCounty and Homo L_, 114t>flof San Fra11<ltco, "n Recorot ot w kl Count" •I -IUt 5-IO WI• •Ill lie...._, but wllllOut StolO.-rieaooMfoll~. lt u 1ny """ malerlal1 1rt ••tmOI DY llecorder t lntlrument NO llUI veni nl or w1trtnty ... Pttu or Im. ALHMlloMI E•Yl•lnendlo ... rrom PUO!lt OIKIOM.Or• II YOU hOI WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO ltO, ,.Qerdlngllll•.--••on. or.,,. l'AllCl l.1: LoU7o4TrectNo.UJO, 1ny quetllon\ conurnt1>9 thew pro-THE HIGHEST Bl DOER FOR CASH, mbrantH, loi>aytlW remalnlngptifl,< llllM CltyOf_,,_,a..c11,c-y o4 C•d11ru . cont1<1 1111 S11p.,vl1ory llwtul ...-y ot Ille United Stal ... ell t.al iumotthenote (IJ .a<urlOdl>y ~ Oranee. Mete of C.lttornta. H per map Agent al I,_ F-t1I Homo Loen Ba11-payat>le I I I ... time of"'•· I ll right, II· '4d of lr111t wltll lnlerul tl\ar-.. recor-111 lloOll J.M ....... 10 lo 1), In· Of San FrlltlCIKO. II• Ind lnlffHI now lleld Dy "· •• PVldeO In ~10 nol1(1) fKIYanc.; If cluttve, Of MIKell-. Mept, In u. PublllhlO Or-Co.ti Dally Pilot, TrutlM, In -lo 11\et r•al property •, unO.r ,,.. l1tmt ot' uld o..i-., offk• of "" l -ly _0,..., ol .. i. M1y it. June S, ''" 2C2Mt lllue te In \lid County 1no Sl•t•. Tat, l••,c,,.roe••nd••pen•uolffllt county ducr1...a"ro11ow1 TttM•rwlolthetr"'"" .. ''°DY'"6 l"AltCf t. 1; "".,...rt.._t, ,_. A Lu wnoto .. 1a11111 Ind to ~., Trutl 111cl1111 .. -I tor 1"9fKS -PUBLIC NOTIC E PAltCIL t : II tolal 1mounl or tho unpe" .. ,.. .. !fir...,_ L.ol IJ ot TrKI No LolllotTract~o -.S,IHllownona ~ClollntOCMl~llonH<urlOl>ylN .no, ••per""-',__ In -245, Map re<w-ln 8-lM. POOH• 1010. pr•rty to be •OIO •nd •Hun1bl• , .... 10 I• IJ, ln<lutl¥e, of Ml1-1 011 .. ICIAL l"llOCllOINOS 01' THI ln<tu .. w, of MIKellaneou• -Pl, ro-HlllleCICO>h upenu••nd•dvenc .. cell•-""-· Ill Ille office el Ille IOA ltD 0 1' IUl"E llYISOllS 0 1' cordlOhtldO.-County el I tlmt ot lllt lnlllll put>ll<etlon of cOUMy -oftalOcounty,t--r OltANOI COUNTY, CALll'OllNIA l'AllCILJ I lllt>lluolS.le"PS.JIJ M wltll H-lot M4IPOf'I -Ntlle Sent• A,.., Celllornt• All •PPllrt.,..,,I .-.•ulu•lve •••o-T Dtlllfl<lery u.-r Hid Deed of mtnl .,,.... .. Id Pare.el No I ed)elM A rogul., '""11"9 of IN llolro of men! ror 1"9'"• •nd 99rK1 llllOllQ!IOUI l ru ner1101ore .. ecultd 1nd O•· Lot l1ofMlcl Tracl -t099U-wllh SuPervho" or Oreng1 Co11nty, LotUotfrectNo .eti,a•\llOwnon•~llv•• to tM unOe"'9ned • wr111.., HMm eMt tor .... , or oftrllan09, Celltornl1, etto 1111"'9 u ,,,. Go""" IYl•P re<orci.Clln llooll 1"4. PevH•to 10 01<1.i1on01 O.l•ull -o.m.,,o tor wl'l*re WCllM,...•rtcor11Uwclecllna< Ing Boan! of Ille Olalrkb go .. rneo by 1"'111" ... ot Ml1<ell1neOlit Mal», , .. S•••r>11a wrll111nNotlceolO.f..,1telld coroanc• with -'l<Mll1 munlc lpel or· tilt Boero Of Supervlao" WH held M•Y cord• of wldOt-County E l•<on 10 S.11 Tiit under •IQn•d Olnanco -111 1ppurtena111, non· 1t, 1tt1, 11 t JO A.M Tiit lollOwlng Tiie ttr•t .,.,rH • or ot,,.r comrno c•ull Miid Nollet o4 Ott1ull ano Ela<· .. c1111tw r1Qh11011M1Nlacllltletl0Cal· n1m1d nwml>en bel"ll PrtN<ll Br11u dtilgnetlo•'. II iny, ol tht real P•09ff1Y llonr:ll lo be recorded In,,,. county telontaldl.ollJ. N•tl•nde, Vk•Cllelrm.,,; llot>er1 R llerelnet>ow dn<rlbed '' purporteo I Wiit 11rNIProptrtylllouted TM 1tr•I --or other common s1a111on, Ha1r"'11 M w1ec1.,, Thom" De no vi"• Tru<lla, Newpcrt BH cll, De -yl, 1911 ••lenatlOn, II tny .. a.. rMI ~y F All1y 1n0 tr. Cler•. AbMnt. R•lpfl C•llfornlt BuO•Y• Recon••v•nuCo ...,.,,..bow'*"''''*' It PUfpor'lfd lo B. Cltrll IO "'"'1 In Sacr1,,,.,,10 on Tiit .,,_&lgnod OIM:lllml .,,y ind ••NldTru'1 .. lie "'Vltta Gr..-, He•PO<I 8M<ll, pendlr111 ltQ1114"1on •11 llablllly for,,,. lncotrct<lneuof HI 4)1S. E11<llO, Calllornta. AHFPAor-nt '"' Sleter Aven ... 1tr1t1 _, ... ,or otner common Cit A.nllltlm.CA92toJ Thi ............ cllKl•lm• ... y .no wllh CllY of Founlaln V•ll•Y I• ao-•111n•llon '"""' 7C)J2 •llllablll"lw thllnc:orre<tneuot .. ld prov1d Agree mtlll for FMWA S11d Ml•wlll llem-wllhOU1cow1 IYo.tlcM18on llr .. I -... or o-«om,,_ -Emeroency u llet of Mergwerlle "•Ill or watr.,,ty, eapnu or lmplleO, Pu-Orenoe Co .. t Dally Pilot, ,..,..,i.n Pa r•••Y " -owo Tn"t Avr• regerdlng tltle. "°'"°"'°"·or encum Mty1 ... J..,,.S "" JJIMI S.kl Mia wlll i. ,_ wtl'-1 ,0 •• ment tor HICO VIiie LI Joli• Section t bra nc ... to tall•'• tne prlnclpal ------- N ftl or wwrenty, ._. w lmplled, new c-tructlon '' •PC>roved ln•ll• balance°' llW Nate or ollltr Ol>ll91t IJBLIC NOTICE ,. ... rdlng tltla, ---'°"·or tnell"" tlon to -to pertlcloat• In Ille ··1n -.<ureo 11¥ wld 0..0 ot Tru•I, with In l>r•nc••. l<IMtltlyllltP"ln<lpel lie"""• ltrn•ll-I Mutl< Olympto· 11 0 • ll•H l H pro.JdlO 1n w1<1 Nott or otr.. • ------et -NCM or olMr otlllgetlol\ wcwed tended S.19 Bolling WMk It pre>-obllgatlon. p1u,ac1V1nctt, 1f •ny,under NllCI OP TllUITE•'1 SALi I>'( w ltl 0..0 flf Tndl, wltll llltt1'91t as cl1lm1d 1no Ille us Cou t Guerd Ille"'"" ot Slld 0..0 ot Tru•I -•n· T.t. He. Jlt7S Pl"O•lcl9d 111 MIO Note or other obll ... AwMlll•rv -Lelle Foo-elt 11 Sun & ltrHI on .,,y •uc:ll IOYancK, •M plu NOC£ tS HEREBY GIVEN, '"°' Oon; pl"' aOvanc:H, II MY, under tf'll $•11 Club ere commended Certain l1t1, cl\er911 •no oi>ento of Ill• on f"Oay, June If. l'tl, II t .00 19'Mto4....,09edOfTrvtt-lft\a1'911 County c0Mtr11<tlon <ontrect• are Ml Tru•IM •nd ot '"" lrusb UMltld by o·c10.a.m ol •eld day, at Ille tn- Oll any well ---.. and plut , .. ,, for bid, •warOed ano completed. Sul> u ld D•eel of Tnnt Tiit total amount ot trandrl Illa otflC:tl o4 REAL ESTATIE cl\arge1-•-oftM Trus1etano min ion ot -''""°"for funds forl,,. 1H ld oblloet1on. ln<1Udl119 prlnclpal, •<· SECflTllES SE RY ICE, 1020 NOr\11 o4 tilt lr..U crMteO by HIO Deed of Jam" A Mu>IO Feclllty Ma•l•r Pl•n 1<ru9d lnl.,.ett, ollltr amounts thin a .... 8roe1e,, Suite *' In llM City ol Trut l. TN toe.al """'"'' ol Mold ObtlQe· h a11l~orl1tO M,.rlllg 11 HI lor •l>O rH ..,,,.bty Hllmettd l•tt, charQe S.nl4ne, Courlty ot Or-. St1te ot tlon. lncllldlng prlnc:lpel, °'"'*"In· tran1ter a4 ••rMl llQhl• from •1rl01Jt andeapen-oftheTrullM,lll.,.11me C:a llrnla. NEWPORT EQUITY tere11, ~r -b ltwn d.,., -, .. o11trl<b and 11nnn•llon to• llllflllftll ot lnllltl Pllblk•tlon ot lhl1 Notlo , It FUNI, INC., • Calllornl• co"'°'•· ·--•bly .11.--· CMrll!H -dlllrlct Summit Rel<llno _,,,, ,, •1• • ..o °' llon,1 duly _."'"' Trwt .. II""' ••Pt-9fl"9Trv.tte,11t.,.tlmeotln· procl1lrnltd A,,,,.ullon• toOCL.AL.AO D•llO Mt,n, t•1 '"° rtlll"1 lo Irle -.rot ••• c• Illa! Pullllcatlon ot 1111, HOiio " Zone ' -Zone 1 er• •ppro-R•-NEWPORT EQUITY ,.,r;n u..t <fft•ln °"" ot Tl"Ull ri-m .011 4" • procirllllon of OrUQ At>u• lunch Is·~ FUNDS, INC ecut 11¥ HARRY lllOON.ALL and 0•11<1 Meytt, ltll proved Snort·OoYla pl1n tor Oruo • Calt+ornl• coriiorelloll, IOAI BROOMALL, llu,t>end •nd NEWPORT EQUITY Abu .. w•k., 11 -oved AelOlu "Trutl .. , wllotnd re<orOllO ""-" U, ,._,, In l'UNOS, INC.. tlon rtQer-Oing , ... Trltl-tallon '" By RH I Ellllt '°"""'IS of Ottklal llac.ard' Of MIO ••T-tM, tern1I S.NIO Funo '' -tlOd. A~ Stcurllle\S.r•lce. Cour, II _.,.. RKorder't lnstru IY REAL ESTATE pllcallon enO plen r°' tmple,,,.,,tallon I c.llfo<nll CO<Por•llon, menlo 1~. by, .. _, a4 bf"ta<ll or SECURITIES SEllVICE 01 H CO SCAG Bonu> 1nd COBG lbAgenl "''"'In Ol...-t or perlormence ef • Calllornl• <ort>Or1t1on ' Funai ere --Verlout AB I <SEAL) By OJ Morger, flle flOllloM M<u....O thereby, ,,,. •ward.a, to re)e<I any •nd all bid,, lormatll,.. In .,,Y l>ld or In Ille bkldl"9 ------------and lo wal .. any -111 lrr-vularlty NORMAN E WATSON In any t>IO. S.Crfll.,..,, 1ra Aetnt D• I• r ml n•ll on• .,, 1pproveo lb PrHldent clu" 11111 uirtaln brMCn or 0.1 ... 11. By. tSEALI O J Mor99r, I R.-.•11ue s.n.tlng fund' tor lht So\1111 *'' N0<1" Br-•••· Nott wu rct<or-February U. '"' PUBLIC NOTIC E ... ,.,.. "CTITIOU18USINE11 ltAM• STATEMEltT TM lolto.1"9 pe,._, I' d0f"9 11o;,1 ,. .... MAHILOW MUSIC, 1151 Dove .., .. 1. 5'1jte JAO, H..,.PG+1 &Hell, CA ""'° larry llMftllow, It OOrSMy tourl, Nhport 8M<J\, CA 9*l. Tlllt IMllWH ll <ondU<llOd ~y an In ... , ..... , 9-ryManllow flllt 011-1 was llled wltll Ille Countr CIH~ o4 0 •*'99 County on ACWll U, 1t•1 .. , .. ," l'ublltNcl 0r.,,.. COH t Dally Piiot, ~y U, n, 1t, J-S. 1'et 21'1 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI 8USINIU ._..... ITATHUllt'T Tiii I01IOWl1>9 pertof\1 ere doing ....,,_M .. : CUSTOM CAA COVERS, 7• Hudtorl Aft., C..W Mnl, CA 92&» lrltn W, c..l""*"-1• H-...... , COlta Meta, CA n..M. Mlh ••fl091, 1N Hlldton Ave , tat.ta Meta, CA '2dl. •anoy l'0<11t, , .. Huctton An c .. 11 ~CA .,._ .. Tllll llllllnotl It GOnductad by • fHler•I ~. P U BLIC NOTIC E NOTICE 0 " PUaLIC H•AlllNO Purs"""t to order Of IN Callfornl• Cou111 Commlu ton, Soulll Coast Aeglonal Conwnlulon .... E. Ouen Bl•O • Suite Jt01, p 0 . lo• 1450, ~ l u cll, C..lltornla, notl<• ol public 11terl119 tt Nfeoy 111....,,. s.l<I ~k .... ,1n9 fl IC,,..,.,,led on lfle J-I 1•1 Agenda tor -'k•llon to< _..,11, number P-11 7MI H 1ubmllled by Soulll C••I C-y W1t1r Olttrkt. Tll• subject req.iu t Is to permit Conur .. ctlen of • reclalmff water trutment p1.,,1, 1 1>11mplnv 11.atlens, 21,JOO lee! flt pipell!ll •"" • 1.s mllllon 9allon II ... •IM-rHlrYolr from Allio Cr ... to Ntow• Aottl, Soutll Laguna and Laguna Nlouel. Sato Ag1nd1 public lleerlno• wit! com· menu flt 11.00 • m NI J-e. '"' al M11nt1ng1on llNcll City Co<lncll Cflam· be", 100 Main SlrMI, Huntington 8eac11, c.tltomla Ourlnv Wflk ll time all 1)9rlOlll •l!Mr '•-"'9 .... ~"9 Ille appllce llon wlll b• llearo T••tlmony -i. ret.ttcl to •-•Odrt•-..., ,,_ c.tlf«nla Coallal Act of tt7• .,., wtlttlfl co,..-· dtnc• •-Ging IN t POllc•llon "'°""' IM direct.II to lllh offkl prior lo u.. lltarlllll ••t•. All lnterttlt O Ill· d1¥1dual• wtoo wtlfl Mt:lltl-l lnformt· tlon may <entacl 11111 olfl<• Publlllwcl Ortftllil CMll O•lly Piiot, Mn '7. M. 7', 1"1 2427 .. 1 P U BLIC NOTIC E BY THE ORDER OF THE BOARD 806rdOfTr11tl-. 01" OIRECTORS OF THE ALISO Con!Gornmulllty WATER MANAGEMEHT AGENCY Coil-01\Vkl Daleo: ~'~i.::~ H Sublllk Publllhld Or-COH I 0.11, Piiot, Publlshed Or1n99 eoa11 Dally Piiot, May" -J ..,. S, "'' 1r1 "'"IOtm Co•' I R • p., Io r y · • Sum m • r Sult• A, 111 e. tJMI o4 Offlclal Re<ords of 117 North8roadWo Con .. r•alory Progr..n •l>O 1111 City ot Santa Ana, CA 92701 Hl ..... IY, 11 ~ ISS1, Re<ordlt"• s..tl•A . L111un1 S.IKll lmp•owmenh IO Ill• 111419Sl-~ lntllnenl No t113' WILL SELL AT s.nt.AneCAn101 1Veteren1 Memorle l Community Put>l"hedOr-Co11t011iyPllot. P\JllC AUCTIO N TO T HE ftl OW;»HM Canlar are 1~ro-Proc:1ou,..1 !Or M•yJ9,J...,.S,t2,ltll 24»41 HICESl 8100 ER "Olt CASH, the Lll OllltY c1a lm1 s.111-1 Com ••• money ot tlle UnlllO Sleto1. -'' 2a..1 May n , n. '"t 2-..1 Publl..-o..,,.. C:O.•I oaoy Piiot, mlltee •re ,,..,.._ City of LI Pelm• P U BLJC NOTIC E P•YI• •I 1111 time of ..... •II rlQM, -----__ Maylt,J-S,t21tlt 201.-1 Roolullon aulhorlllng wltlldr•••I of 1111..., lnterMt now r.10 11, 11," tn1 Yo.I Paro• from tl'lt Cypreu Tru•, In Ind • that ••al pr~rtv P U BLIC NOTIC E P U BLIC NOTIC E Hlghw1y LIQMlng Olttrkt Is recalvlOd AMa,MJ '""° In U IO County I nd Sl•I• -------P U BLIC N OTICE Tract m.n•rs .,. _.,.,.., Trttlk NOTICI Ol'TllUIT••'S U LI O.Mled9lloltowt NS7U15 N~,..., Comm111 .. MlllulU are 1pproveo .,,. l!IO . ~ PA!f;L I NOTICE OF DE •TH OF NOTtC• 0" IAl.E 011 !>olld WM1e Pr09'em lnlt11I r._-t '' TI. No _, U "°' es ,,..,_ on 11111 cenaln °' NOTICI OP TllU1TIE'S lALE 1ppro¥1d Concept Report on Ille On J,_ t i .. t ai tt OO AM Tiiie Cormlnlum Pl.,, re<or-Augu~t pH y LLI S L . DUC LON, lllAL l"llO~•ATY AT T t. He Jlt7t SlltrlfftFlre Trelnl"IJ A<-.nr 11 re ln•u,.nce .,;., T""t Comoany ·, 0 1 11, S In looll lt .. t, Page lltJ ol Qt. ak• PHYLLIS DUCLON fl'll lVAT• SAL• NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. tl\al cel•tld Rte-1lon1"" 11 ... nc:. ·-•nted Tru11 .. -· .,,., .;:, ... :n'i llct.ltKoreb, -•• defined In 11\oM AND OF PETITION To 1,.1 .. ~.:!':,.. .. ttw on Frld1y, June 1', ltll, al t 00 1"11 IM Pl-TrtlCu<o 1r.,,1port1Uon 10 o .. o ot Tr1Al rtcorcloO February l, cern 0.Clarallon• o4 CoYln•nh, _.,_ o'Cloc-• m o4 Hid O.y, 11 1111 .,, leclllllH i re epprowo Tu m•n •,. lt7t ., 1,,.1 No IOjl In -•>022 Conlont ano llH1rlcllonl re<ordtd A OM IN I STER EST ATE 1~"' Catlfef'llla, '" Htl.., tren<1 to tN Oflkn of REAL ESTATE •rt 1ppro.,.., certain trawl req.,.111 Pl~ 112 of Ottlclel A.'.cordt In Ille o4: In Ok 11.tM, P-X1t ot Ofllclel NO. A·1orJ14. 111 llleU.:.~=':: ~~•l•I• of SECURITIES SERVICE. 1020 North ere 1ppr0¥10. Cartaln HICO AgrM• lie• o4 tllt County Ae<or0tr ot Orenge AtQI• T I I h . a roadw•y, S..11• *·In the City ot S.n-menh ere 1pproved •nd 1men0eo. County Celllornle PAIEL 1 0 a e I r S , ANTHONY JOHN GALLINA aka la Ane, Count, Of Orenge, Sl•t• Of Agru mt nl tor Allcl1 Parkwly u -WILL SELL AT.PUBLIC AUCTION Alndlvl-llstul lnt1re11 In Lotl. b enef iciar ies, c reditors lONV BALLINERO,dtc.HNd Callfor111e. NEWPORT EQUITY t•nllon ,, -0-UM Of •mPloY-TO HIGHEST BIOOEA FO~ CASH Ot Tel No. I07J. .. lllown On . Map a nd contlnQe nt credit o r s o f Mollo ,, lllnby gl•llfl 1"411 Ille Un• FUNDS. INC .• C.lllornla corpora· menl •9f"Cltl tor r.ierral ot •PPll· CASHIER'S CHICK OA C(llTIFIEO reccao '"Bo<* 321, p-I -t o4 P HYL LIS L . DUC L O N , dertlgnad wlll .. 11 at prlvala sale, IO lion,•• out, ~lnttcl Tru•I• under c•nh h 1ut110rt110. Pllotooreplly CHECK, (peytOt• 11 time 01 Ml• In Mhllan1oul M•P•. record• of aka P u Y L LIS OUCLON c'':,1~~!"!:i:.nai::~~~0,.~~11~ •ncl P•lt•'*lltoU..POWffef Hlt con· permn r ... Ecluc•lloNI Motion Pl<· t•wtul,,_OlllltUnllecl Slat .. l •I •••Cowlly,Callrornl•,,""""'n ....,. n .._ f•rred In h i certalll Deed ot Trial ea tur" 11 IPClf'O¥ed Appllutlon tor Ille 1"9 Soulll front •ntranct to Ille Old 11• H Common Area on Ille •llO••. and persons who may be or '"" tlle >rd N Y o4 J..,,., '"'· •t • < u 1 • o 11 y w 1 LL 1 A M c City or LA H•br• •or Rew.,... Shiring Or•nae Coolantv court-1oca1tc1 In m•-c_,,,1111um Pl•n a11d th I I t ted I th Ill• olllce o4 DEL.ANCY, HUNT ' WA RMI NO TON. 111, In u11marrlt0 rund• ''•Pl>">-°""rterly rePOr1 ol ltlle 200 Bl«ll ot Watt S...la AM BIW. DKlltlon 0 e rw se n e res n e FENSTEAMAKE A.UO Newport man and nKOr-N lie JO lt71 m-l•,...,Ottllrecll¥eClbylN Counf'y ltormefll' Watt •lh Si l Santa Ana Etopll"9 lllerelrom a ll oll, 011 W I II a nd/Or estate; Center Ori••. Sulla 211, Newport In i-1:r.u o4 0:.':.':1 ~c.,,.clt OI It re<el"'° Pr-tlon o.oartmenl Is C•lltor,,ia Ill rlQM, 111·1~ ano lntereti r 1911 m1nerall, miner al rto1111, A petit ion has been filed BHcll, C°""'' 01 Oran ... State of t.1ld C.,..,ty, at PtQIO 1to Re<orotr'• 1ut11orl19d to accept non·monelery con•oed to -now lleld by 11 ~ ., .. , gu rlglltt, and 01111r b y DAV I 0 W. O UCLON In C•lllornl1, t ll lllt rlgM, 1111• •nd In· ll'ltlrurntnl Ho .om. by rM-. of • gll11 Minute Order rt91rdlnQ IN UCI Hid OtlO ol Tnnt In tr. 1>'-"Y llydr•rbon• by -•ltoe .. r n1ma ttr .. t 01 Mid Otc.e•Md, In and 10 111 lilt brtac II or dal11111 In o••m•nt or Contracll1 a009lllcl Cert.1111 PUtCl\l.M'I It t d I 10 c s --!let ""Y lie wllllln or under ,,,. t he S upe rio r Court o f Clrlaln ,..., CW-rty •11111•• In, ... pe rforma nce of 111• Ol>llgotlons are aulllor•!IO "II'""''"' lor the !.~~1:.0.'!" Oullly • ..., 1•1• peroof ·-Nrtln-... a..crlbeCI, O range County reques ting County 01 °'-· Statt ot C•lllornla, M<urtd 1r.reov, 1nc:1uolng 11\at cert•ln Cypren '''""" Str .. i. 11 approved 1.01 s.., Trl!C1 No 102, '" tlle City of '-"" with the i-rpe11111 rlgllt Of thf t OAV I D W. OUCLON ~:;,1111cul1rty oescrlt>td •• follow•. bru cll or Oitltult Nolk• Of which wa• Bud~! Tr.,,tfen ire •~WO. LHM Nl •PO•I BeKh. county of Or1t1ge, drlltlj, mining, ••Plorlng, a nd be appointed as ,...r sonal OllClttl'?IOH r•cordol<I February ll, ltlt In -· for Ille Audllor·Controller 111p,,,,,.,e41, State ot Celllornla, H per map ,.. opera~ 1111-.tor -llorlnQ In --,,. ... of Offklal Aecorch Of .. Id Coun· Time I• ein.neltd ror lht Nortll Tustin cor-In a-m p_, '6 to '° In· ••rno"1 IN -rrom u ld land or repr esentati v e t o ad· I. Counly of Ore nge, Stele of ty, at Pt119 U.11. Ae<o,..,.r't l111tru-Specific Pl.,, LH .. hol-r tor tlla clusl1re ot mlac•ll-OIA m•Pt· In IN from r other land, ln<tudl"ll IN mi n ist e r the estate Of Calllornla, LOI t In Block O Townlllt man! No 11140 WILL SELL AT La P•lma Fire Station It authorl11<f, otllCI or tilt County Ae<orCS.r o4 talO rlgllltflipatoc•ordlre<tlonallydrlll pH y L L I S L OU C LO N ol "ull1r1on, City 01 Fullerton, St.tit ol I' u 8 L 1 c A u c T 1 o N To T H E LHM IW>ldOYoff lot IN Coirot• Canyon County ano ml ff om lands otlltr ,....,, lllOM lr1en ca.i...,._, fllh •lat-' w• 111.0 wltll 1"-"CTITIOU5 I UllN•H CO\lllly C ...... If Or .. C:-ty Oft May NAMI STA.TIMI NT lrvln •• ,,.._, (u.nder t h e In: C•lllo•n••· •• -Map racorcltO In HIGHEST llODE• FOR CASH, Landfill II ...u.orlLtcl. Alloc:tl~ Of l!JIUPI ... 00, Oii rlglth, mlneralt, lle r•lnt •• Ollcrllled. oll o r llH \JG Book 22, P90I J..S ol Mltc•ll•neou• 1awf11I money Of tlle United Sl1tH, all COBG lundl In r-to ltl'Pt It mlner11 r19111-. natut1I OH r'911ts -••lls, "-'•...., tfltftl Into, lhrougll d e pendent Adminis tration M•ll•. In 1"' Olllca of Ille County payable '" tllt time of .. 1e. •II rlQtlt, co11t1nuec1. N-Oallon ol AQI'_...,,, .,,.,., 11yoroc•rbon• by wllello•ver or ac!~l!" •-rl~ o4 ,,,. leftd of Estate s Act). The petl· Recorder o4 Mid County, and •Ito 1111• ano lntff"t now lltld by 11, •• lor E u t c 111pma n A¥1nue '' na me a-lhalmay bewlllllnor..,,.. llerel._ -r1--•o bottom IJ. lttl Tll• lollo,..lng perwn1 e11 doing tlon Is "''"'t for he•ri'n~ In linewn •• 110 W.st Tretlow, Fuller.,,, Trust ... 111 and to that r••I pr-ny a utllorlu o AgrH menu fer SB·Jt oar u ld tend toQether wltll Ill• •ucll wtt10UH or dlrecllaftally .... .. Orange c-.,., Celllomfl 11111•1• In .. Id County •nO Stele, Orin-Ing Orl¥1r P"'9f"ll'l\f ere ••· perpetual rlQlll ~ drllllng, mlnlno, •II· Orlll.O ... tunnetJ and 11\ettt 11'*" P1UttJ bu•lnenH Dept. No. 3 a t 700 c v ie 1. Coullly ol Oran~. St•I• 01 dttcrl-••IOl!otn n•weo Con1ull1nl u r•ICt\ lor plorlng --ratlnt tllertolor •"" .,,., ~ ... lleyond IN ••tfflot Center Orlvt W est , Santa Calltornl•, LOI • 111 Block 0 of 1111 A LHMllOld lnlet'etl In -to· H s A I c 0 n I,. (I s . r y I<. t • r . 1torl119"' -nmo•lnQ lllt....,. ''°"' llmlh ...... .,.., IO redrRI, •etu-4, A fowna ll• ol P'ulle rton, City ol l"AllCll.I. •utllor l reo Contr1 ct tor MIO lanclor .,,yothtrl1nd,lnc:ludlftoeQulp, ,.,._,n, ,....,,, CIMMl'I ..-cl n •, CA 92701 on J une 24, Fullt r1on. SIAll• o4 C•lllornt•, •• per LOI "°' fracl NO .no ... -.. on OSA/Tr.w1aport1tlon 01¥1tlon .. In· Ille rlgM to wfllpolock or dlrectlotlalty o~r•t• r llKll ••"• or mine•. 1981 at 9:30 a .m . Map reconltcl In 8°'* 12, -· i , 4, a Map re<~ 111 lloS JO, PtgK 10 Crt•-Purcflaaa order tor Gllllert drlll I nd m!N from ,_, olller u.tf1 wllhOUI, _...,..,, tM fltM to orlll, P .. bllllltd Or ..... C6fft 0.lly l"llot TOCO ASSOCIATU. * Newoon May U,n,",J-S t•I 12.U_.j.,Ctnter Orin, S..lta 1.00, Newp0rl • 8H cll, Calllornl1 t-.o John C Wells, IU4 Senti Key, \ Corona Ott M.ar, C..lllornla mu ,,.------------Raio~ C Wlnlrod•, 2009 Yeclll r McC OIMICI MOlTUAltlfS" Vlgllant, Newport .. a<ll, Callfor"I• I F YOU OBJEC T to the •nd Sol Mltcell-• M•l>t In tllt Of· to ll, ln<luslve, 01 Ml1ee111neo111 s 1r .. 1 resurfacing I• •ulllo•lud tlloM llt,..lnabove dffcrlbeCI, 011 orit" mint, llf, u pltr• e lld oporat• Or anting Of tht petit ion, flee ti Ille C-l't RacorOtf ol Said Map1, rK.Ol"Olol "ldOrangeC-ty, Propo-.d uta of Re¥enue Sft•rlng -111, tunnel•-11\efU 11110, tllrOU911 lllr~PI ~act or 11\e -r D ... County, and •Ito known •• "' Eat! PAllCSL r lund& ror ln•rvke completed main· or a<r-,,,. tubtllrfec• ot t11a land te11 ot lte111tturf1<• et '"' IOnd YOU Should t ither appear Tro low, Full1r1on. Orenge County, An •ppur1-nl ,.,....aclutlve .. ,. len•nct pro)ech 11 continued. Sollclla · llertlnabow cletcrlbeCI and to bottom llartlnl~rlbeCI, H r-ved 111 at the hfarlnQ and State C•lllornla, m •nl for lng r ett a nd egreu lion Of.,._..,, tor ll'lt rnklenllll tuCll wlllP11fo<UO or dlrtctlo11ally Ille 0..0 •t.aa .. lrom Ille lr•lne Laquna Beac" tt~tr, Auocl•tt• M. •u•"" 494 941 !> K•UM, oentral jltlrtner, 1$11 l'ltcallll Laguna I t11ls P11u , t..ao-h Kll, c.111orn1a •:i.11 168 0933 Tlllt 1>u1ln1u la <onduct•d bY a YOU r O~tC tlOnS Or fl le 3. COll<llY o4 °'""Ge• City ol Senta tllrouglloul LOI 12 ol Tre<I No. OJO, H Orug progr""' I' 1ulharlHd. ,._,_, drlll9d Wills. tu,.,,.11 tno tllelt• .,,,.,.r Company,.,.._ SepltmCler I, 1'7' ,..,.., SIM• Of Celllornla, cla.crlbed ., 1i-n on • Mel> n1cordl0 In 8-US, matttrt are apj>rowel. ,.,, .. re It lilted and btNatll or w.-ow H lerlor In •-II\ P-OJ of Offklll w ritte n Jtctlons with the 1011ow1: Panel I; Unll .,. •• tllOwn 1'•11 .. to 10 u , troc1u1I¥•, or Ml•· <WI • A .. 1 l tllt• 01v111on ~r. umlt• tlltreot, -10 reor111. ,.11111,..,, Rtcord1. court before the h e arll\il. a1111 dlllned on 111a1 ceriat11 C•n· u 11aneo11s M•P•. r•cordt ot Hid EMA '' eu111or11ec110 •••l•t In •••luat-fMlulp, malnt•tn, r-•r • .,...,." •ftd PARCEi. s San Juan Cap•«i;1t.i11o o,,..,., Pff1nert11tp, 9L JoM C, Wellt 4 ;, 1776 ltllpfl C WlntrOcle Y our appearance may be doml11l11m "' ... re<°'*" "•tinMry "· 0••"91' C-ty, lovetflar Wllll ..... ,,. fltll -'*'"''"and to 1pPly tor OPtr•l• a11y •ucll ••II• or mtnu Non·••OI•• (aume111 tor In ..... rson o r b y your •t-'* 111 looll 1as1t , P• .a. 01 Otttc••• m•nh tor •u-rt •nd u ttl•m•nl •n upclalOcl permll Mortgage " ro-wllllollt _,..r Ille rlQtlt 10 drill· u111111 ... "<IJ. ••••· Eg,..u., En· ---AuSMll ICruw .... .. ltecoros et Or.Ml .. CO\lnly •1141 It wMrt MIO ~arc.I I edjolnt L.ot ll ol IMMO. s.n-.a1 Cawley ••· c-mine, ttore, .~plore I nd ope rat~ <roecllment,.....,, - for o-r H.UIOl LAW'K-MT O LIYI Moftuary • Cemetrry Crematory 1625 Gosier Av(' Co5la Me-.c1 540 5554 P'IHCI lltOTHIU HU. llOAOWAY MOltfUAIY t 10 Broadway Cos1e Mesa 642 9150 IALnHIGflOH SMn'H & TUTHILL WHTCUff CHAP'IL 427 E t 7tn St Costa Mau 6416-9371 PfHCI llOTMIH SMfTMS' MOITUAllY 627 M11n St Huntington Beacn S36 8539 tor Entry AHoclat" Tllll Jiil-i wH lllld wllfl 1111 County Clerll el Or~ Count\' on "'-Y u .1•1 "'· ....... K,.. .. .... _. -'ClvicllOr .... ,.,. * N•--1 CMtw on ... ~.o. ,.,, ... N•wpon a..dl, Call-• t1IMJ .... II» PubllalwCI Or .... CM tl O.lly PllOI, May It, i., June 29, '"' U2totl DEATH NOTICES torney. •tnaflOH by en ,,...,,_, ncer...., self Trt(t -l ... tMr wllll ••M· ty Of Or..,.. It atllMrlHCI HMrlt\Q I• tllrOUQll 1119 -1ec• or IN _, toO PU•llOMa. "'' tllOwn -*"""'In I F y 0 U A R E A "'-Ya. "'°·In a-1M02,.,.... JtS of men1• tot .. _ o. ~ •• ,,.,. Ht '"' con«Hmnatlon of Lem lie rt IHI ol '"" """""'"'"°' MIO l•nd as thoM etl'tlllllctarMlon a4 c--·· t RE 01 TOR Or • Cont• Olllclal Atcetctt Of Orant9 COUflly, 1u<f'I .... , a re c0111lr11<tH In •<· ltNO Tlw llot<dMJoolrNd In ...-Y rntrwo Ill ... cleecl 1'9<or-April t COtldlll_.,.._,lctlon1r..-111 c a11ftt11la , a lt o ll11awn as To" c0f'd•11<• "'"" -•katil1 Mlll'lklj!al ~MergamO.-y 1911 In '°'* •o.» p-•ss Olllct.i B-114'4,l'• .. OfOfflclat Ae<arft, lnglf'lt c reditor of the de· Cn tll•• l"er11 D••••· Senta A11•. °"0111a11COt -.,, ,,......_,, ,_ !SEAL> R•cord• · •M•"•~tllef ... cea sed, y ou must flle your Calllarnta, U <l11ti ... t1fllll .. ., .. Ille fa<lllllH JUHi ALEXANOIElt r • .,. ...... -~ -r. CHRIST f l'HI '""' .. _ ... otlltt (on\mlf\ Cl -Im w ith the court or l'arc•• 1, ... -""-1171111 In-leulad ... oeitl Lat a Clff1itf!Mlklerd 0 PIYKOl'I' ANO fl'LOAENCE c ..... 11 ... t1•1.w ......... ,..,p.....,... . .. teretl Ill llld IO tlle ,_ ..... -,,.. .. , ... _.._ ., otflff ,_ "'._..,,"°" ... y ICOll" 1111 ... no •nd •II• .. ty ,,.,.~,,beet It purpor'led prese nt It t o the person11 Int LOI 2 of TrK t ,,..,,..r 105'0, .. dltlen•tlon. If ..... ., H , ... -· Ol'l'ICIAL l'ltOC••OtltOI 0, TH• Joint r.Nn4. . Ir lie: 9!J ... .-.c.w WHI, ....... ,, r e prestntetlve a~polnted IMwn on •,..., rtc.or..,. tn ._ .... tv ...,..,_ d!Hc••-•• -.onH 10A1tD OI' 1u~••v1101t1 OI' r ..... ,.... ...._ • ..., ot11er c-· N c11,ee1"""' by tht court wit In four ,.. .. ....., 111<11111 .. of MtKell•-• 10 11e: 40J ¥Itta Or•nd•. N.,•oort 01ti,NOIC04INTY,CALll'Otl1t1A "'°" clHfgnetlOn 11 .,,Y of '"" ,..1 Tiie llfldtolet t111<11tm• any .,,., Mo•. re<or•• ol Orange County, llNCll, CltlMt!lla, S.111• AM, Calltornl• ,.,...,.rty _,1tiM • .,. ... 1, purpor1tct 111 llel>lllty tOitlt lnc0trectMU of monthl from the date Of Catuoml11, l ... !Nr wllll all l'"Cll"O"• Tha ..,_....,... Clltclalmt anr -A f9911lar "*tint of the Boal"cl of to llt· II PD!nt lOlfla Hewpon h4Kll MIO ttrfft edOiil or ether CO!Tlf'llOll flrlt IU UlnCt Of ltt1trS IS menlt tllt,_, .. <91111111 tlltr9from, •II llHllllY for IN ln<Of_t,... ef Sllp•rvh ort ot O•tnll• Cou111.,, Call~rnle ' 'cletl9natlet1. I rrovldtd In Stctlon 700 of COll<IMllflllilM 11nlb t ""9uOfl 11, !ft. wkl •lrwt ...._.or .. ,,., common Calllornla, alto •lntne u 1 ... ~owr11-TIM ~ dltct••m• $ekl ..,. wtll ir-wltl'IOUt co- In •• , ..... (Of'tAll'I llOft .. Ulllsl•e S.kl ....• w .. m.-wlltoavt co-the ... ,,, "' ...... v ......... MIO Ma, tlle ··-..,_ -•111tr COl'nrn4HI , .. a ... "' tltla, •• or •nc- Ca llfornla . T he time for .... -for acuM, .,.,.,..., •-· 11ent or -""''· • ._ .. or '""'""· IO, '"'· •• •:JD A.M .. n.. lollowlftll •••en•tttn 11.,., •!!own ...,.,,. 11ra nu1. t• •• , tM ,rtMlft•I filing c l1lm s Ill t • llM, .,.~ ............ tft<r.M ... , ......... "'title,...-. ..... "' --nal'Mtl .......,.,. ~ ,,......,. llalflfl lekl w1e'w111 ~ -11111 .·11,_1 belanGe .. .,. •IN• ...... , .... h. Prob.t. Cod. Of cl111lv•. ""9tRI...,_, 0.11..,.tton. ,,.,. •Ml'dof the Olttrk b .. YoffnM llY any llablallty ..., any l11torf9ctl'IOtt Of nant or warr-~rets w lmplltll, W no JC• mefll, .......,,_ mal-•. r•Plll"• llranu1, le ttllsry Illa pr Inc l••I a. Clerll. Cl\el.......,,, •-• A. ktn· <•-l'lt ot war..,ty, .~ ....... or lll'I· -urM by M1t1 o1 T111tt, wltll I~ NOE plrt prior tO four montf'IS and tar fllfw,_..,....., ....... <h1tl ... M l ... Uflf .... HettOf •.,,... ...... tlon ta n, Harrl•ll M. Wletl.,, l r11ct p!IM ....... title -MMIOll.., t.,nt 11......,,..,.aldNo.-..we- from the datt of the ht•r· •-IM!ltt ...,,.._. .. Htll unit IW 19'11•.0 "'..._Oiled o1 '""t• w1111 ,,,.. M••talldl, "*-II A119y .,... ,.,. t ncu'mtir_.n ta ;.Y 1,.. 1111,.1t1 e1111 .. 11on, "'"' r;:. 11 eny . .., -JOSEPH MANUEL NOE, Ing noticed above. 11• alltl '"~'.., llJOl ... .,.k.,,Y • ..,.. .... ~111 ..wHo11t0t c1et11. -.i.roc•.,.,. ;.., _......,""...., •r ttw -.. o..t1., T,... of Newp.>rt Beach, paned YOU MAY EX•MINE ~!", .. -~,c.,....n,11 ,~~~ ..i1e111a11. ,i1a ....,_,If .,,,, ,_ °*"" zc ""· HarUI T...ct11 Deed "''""'-e.wtt •ltS.SS?M. ~ •nt1 !ft..,...."' -11 •-•· 8 MIY 23 I ..... b " ,....,__.,.. -..... II ........... -ttM ltrme ol .... 0... .. T ..... II ....... ~· .... ma .. ""~""".,,....... ,II Mid ,_ .. M · andplut ,...,~ ..... -.. way •Y • •urv V.v y tht fllt kept by tM court. -.mlftlllf'I ,..... '" ""' ~lar«IM ,.. •nd '"-.. .,,, -II enanc•, atleftlM ..... Icy '"'-tine• .... -·-.... ...., ~ , ... ..,_ .. Ml4 , ... ,,_ Mt trv• CrMl9tl moth er Mary R. Noe o f Loi If you lrt lnter•sttd In the ctN!ecl tn..., 1M11, ,... "° " Ot> llM ''"'...., ,,..,._. •fld ••llOllM• l ltfltll v..,. 11ec.a O•-AltPlk atlOn o.m *' T....t. ,... u.e-_ ... 11y "'t1 ~ • 1111. Tfle 1 ... , An 1eles, fa ther J oeeph Noe 11c1e 1 "K•rt11 •' O••ne• ca11111,, .uw T"""'9.,.."' t11e 1rv1tt ,,... .,, ..._... • .,. NWI ..,._tt ,. <'M' .-ntlff of .,. T~ .,..·:;i,,. tt 11 ame11nt " ...., _.Mil. 1Mllltl'"9 Sr .• a slater Mary M•nrl· e1t1t•r you may fll• a r• C•lllarnla ., ... ti """ •' Trutt, Tl'lt tal• m•ntlM, Antllelm lntl•jHntlenCI• crN t .. llywltl 0...0f Trwt llf prlrtClftal, a<u~·.,,,.r .. t, ., ... , qUtlt With the COUrt to l"e• Tt•Ms .,r Wit tetll lft INflll _, ~I flf Nici ... 19elten. lnc:lllll li'arll -~tr C»llw Is ,_ ' 1mt 11l'lll ll'lell m l'aate11alllr q u e1 of Mexico, sitter Ctlvt spec:lll notice of th a1111eut11 ... Met•111c11111rme110n .t ••l11cl•••. K cru•• 1111erot, at!IO me11t1••· AnaMlm ,,.,..,.11•e11c1a Tr~':=t'!.':!:':::'c:':t1ume1 .. ....,c .,.. .......... J ean e tte Quiro s ol Coat• lnvtntn,:of eitate llMtl u 11, •• ,.,, u111 and ••l•"o a1M1111h !Mn due. Mtl raa-1111 Park •1141 ~ty Glllttr .. ,..,.. 11_ "IN _..;:._ 1 a.,,.,.; o1 ,,.. r.-... . .,.,. ., 1N1i.1 M eaa , a la tor .... araare t d of 11 n 1onut1 11'1' nete t1<11,.d ,.,. attlm•• ..... c~• ane-. t ••tu111•. a.iiu Ana A<.11.,. ...,. o.craratllll .. DlfAlllt _, ......__~ PllO!k •tltflottlllt ,,,..,.,.,..,, IA an pft t Gnl, 8C· ~wTr111to.M .. u.~r-.. a.~ at._ time of lnltle (11111 IM .... w .. .._ ~·· _._.... OalH . Meyn,•~ G a m1, Simi Vellc7. CA. count• ind reports 1, .. ..w.r111..,cen1 o1...-1lllf ,.a41U11MllfU111NM1eo,r.•-. ... ,.. •lld c..,...tit111 ..... ....,111t.,.,..1+ 1•' ••11• "'ti• wr1tte11 Netlu 01 HP l'Otl' 1rv l'UNos, Servlcee w ill be Frida", .... 1~ I •~ti 1100 ..... ..,... .... , .. ..._ 0et•1M1trtt,.tt11 .,..1 ttAl'•1t:,u~•10t1,111t111tie o.r ... 11 ••i.ct•11t 1e1i.n.-111<, M 1 uwlCr ._, ft ..-on II# .,. ....,.. ..... Ill Wf'ltiftt .,_. N~ IDUITY li'IM SI' .. ,..,., ................ c-. denll!IM <aw• Netk• ef DrfHll a c.atlfWnla ~Mton. •1 29 a t UAM at V•l•1ry of tM Clllfoml1 Problt• w111 .. ,...,... .. ._..,.,.... ... el'lla NNOl.tPK.. -nr~...,. .. ,.,.c-i...., •11Kt1M•t111 •u• ,......111 .. rl'IMee, tCem etery Mau1olltum La c-.... ••=· ,._ .,._.,.. t1r1tr:r,rutr. ·~~·-. '' o. ...... n~utr.t• •• ••· tlW<elllltY ....,., h ,...1 ..,..,,., 1• .., •I AL a fll Whitt' CA M C l .._. ........._ .. T ., tece ... ; ~.,.""' ~tlllt l e r , c Orm c k Ill_ .... , ..., '-"ft ,..o..M-:..-~ .. -·,.., : =.. ~-··"1 ·---~~ .... ! TITL8 INIUUMC• ANO .. ~=-""'~· M ortua17.. WhtW«r, d11'ff· a ••ltr. y : Aleft 1 . Alfr K.;;;_;;1.11..-,. =.~. ,~1111:,,;;;;;.;. .:=,.~. •• u uar COM~A•v. • Ntttl\ -.ti\ ~ .. ......,_ -... ~~!·n•:,~-c:n~~r;,i:·::: r·•"=er~.......,~ ~iu.-uuw 't=. ~---~'i::.F-.. ~ r~.:,;.~ tnet. ~ ...... JoHph '• Cburcb, 2Ct Sant.. .::.: •1•, L.1112-..., =:,..,,IN... :.~o..J . .......,, ~~ ~TM...,.. '"1e1ft-..., St., Loe Anael • CAIOOll . CA t00t1 tel: (IUI T11W1att._..o.u... 111_..-.-y, 1tlA&..I Trlllt~ .,,...,.,..,..,.... 277.... ........ 'UN8A ... )WllOH atie .. T,,,_. '""'A ~.J C•11,~~ra;,~~ord• I Publl•he.d 0fl"99 Coe1t ~":'!.'.::"''·'... =~""" =-.~:,.. :~-;::.wi~=:.,. ~~~ 10 woiti '°'you. Dilly Pit~, May 29, 301 """41tftM 0r .... c.... Del•v ,, ... 1 ...,..,,... or ... c..t o.it~ "' """41.,.. o..... e.-Ot11, ~. ...,..,.,. a.... c.... o ait• ,.,._, ,.,, .. ,...,Or.,.. o-Delly ~•-. ___________ Ju S~ 1911 UQ .. l MetU,A "5t urM .._, .. ,,,_.t.U."5' Meyn,tttt 1141.-t ~• .. tt.tt,Utl t1lMI Ml'l'"·,,_._u, MMl ... .. . . ' ..... • ' 0 • 0 0 a • 0 0 5 4 a a a 0 0 0 ,, 4 a a a 0 0 3 3 a as a 2 a Lt& t a 1 a Ci 12 QC~ ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOTJ1=nday, May 29, 1981 llf [ , ~ IBffirnrn~m ~[(JIB ~Banner year' expected by home gardeners By LOVlSE COOK ._ ..... "'-Wrtlw America's thumb is turning green. Almost half of all families are expected to try their hand at growing vegetables this summer, producing a backyard harvest estimated at up· wards of $10 billion "It looks like wt>'rc gc»ng to have a banner year," said Robert Kozlowski of the New York State College or Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University. Supermarket News, a trade publication, says retailers in several areaa of the country report sales of seeds are strong James Shockley, pro· duce merchandising manager for the Los Angeles division of Safeway Stores, was quoted as saying that seed sales were running ahead of last year. .. And last year, he said, was an "exceptionally good" year to begin with The backyard garden -a staple during World War 11 became popular again in the early 1970s when food prices started to rise sharply By 1975, Kozlowski said, a record 49 percent or all households were growing at least some or their own vegetables. The number of vegetable growers slipped slightly for a few years. but is beginnina to rise again. Kozlowski said a survey by a Vermont or· ganizalion called "Gardens for All" shows 43 per· cent of the families in the United Stales had home vegetable gardens last year and he predicted an even bigger harvest for 1981. The amount of money you save by growing your own produce varies widely, depending on the price you normally would pay for vegetables, the cost of supplies and on bow successful a gardener you are 1 ( Kozlowski said typical gardeners spend from two to four hours a week tending their crops, "If people enjoy spending their time in the garden and find it relaxing, then the time is well spent." A community garden is one way to enjoy the fun and food of gardening without making a com- mitment or time and energy that you can't -or won't -keep. Participants share knowledge and costs and orten rotate work schedules. You often can choose from a bigger variety of fruits and vegetables than you could manage single· handedly. Check the phone book for the Cooperative Extension Service in your area. ' Gardening experts say many factors con· tribute to a successful harvest Arnone the things to coni;1der · Before you plant anything -or even buy the seeds make a list of your family's likes and dislikes An abundant crop of radishes Is worthless if no one in your house will eat them. When buying seeds, look for the words .. packed for 1981" on the label to make sure you are getting the freshest possible product Beware of gimmicks. "IC you're interested 1n growing plants, learn the basic principles and use your head," advise the speci11Lists at Cornell University. "You need light. nutrients. supporting m edia, water and optimum temperature, and no gadget or gardening miracle can substitute for the real thing." Architectural judging starts Newport Beach landscape architect Keith French is one or two judges currently assessing en· tries in the annual California Landscape Contrac· tors Assn. Beautification Awards contest. Along with John Hourian of Orange, French will be judging entries today through Sunday, a total or $15 million in commercial, residential and maintenance projects. Winners will be announced at the CLCA 's an· nual awards banquet Thursday, June 25, at the M arnott Hotel in Newport Beach. Garden club to meet The Garden Grove Fuchsia Society will meet Thursday al 6:30 p.m. in the Garden Grove Com- munity Center for a program by Ida Drapkin, president of the National Fuchsia Society. "Getting Your Fuchsias Ready for Show" will be the topic or the program. and a potluck dinner will be served For more information on the fuchsia Society. call 827-8605 er, member of Costa Mesa Fuchsia Society, Mayor Arlene Schafer and Steve Hollister get ready for festival. Fuchsiµ Festival is planned More than 100 valelles of the dashing Fuchsia will be displayed 1 the fifth annual Fuchsia Festival set for June5 and 7 at Hollisters Nursery in Costa Mesa. :· Members of the sta Mesa-Bay Cities branch ef the National Fu sia Society will offer dem· onstrations on potti . pruning and propagation of the colorful plants as well as bring hundreds or tbeir own specimens r show and sale. "We're big beli ers in the Fuchsia," said Steve Hollister. "Th 're a very rewarding plant to grow The blooms are fascinating to look at and the hobbyists who grow them do some wonderful things. Cost.a Mesa Mayor Arlene Schafer has lent her s upport lo the Fuchsia. Festival. since the Fuchsia has been the official city nower since the early 1950s . The special demonstrations are scheduled for 11 a .m ., noon, 1, 2, and 3 p.m. each day. For more information call 546·5525. Bank robbers u s ing garden for getaway BOISE, Idaho <AP) Cordula Blessin says she's getting so tired of bank robbers using her garden for a getaway path that she's thinking of putting up a sign, "No More Bank Robbers." The 75-year-old woman lives next door to a I bank. She was picking lettuce recently when a bank robber ran through her freshly tilled garden. It was the second such garden getaway in two months, and neither bandit has been round. ~ CLOSID ,',6:Z._ ...., o.-TUISOA T a eoim Property Being Sold NURSERY Liquidation Sale All Specials Subiect to Supply on Hand ~':~l:.,~':::~~~~;ven Ortho to sponsor 4-H contest SAVE UPTO 70°/o '• up the outdoor Ii g area with pots full of blooming geraniu , petunias. marguerites or any other favorites hich are available at your local nursery. • If you have ~ackberries. cut off the old canes now that bo fruit this year and loosely twine new growth to the trellis. This will help prevent a messy angle or brambles as they grow. • Be sure to c ck your hanging baskets fre· quenlly during summer months. You will have to water m e often to offset the fast dry· ing effects of win and warm temperatures. • For qui garden color, plant a marguerite or t or three. They'll liven up the yard in an insta SAN FRANCISCO -The Orlho Products has announced that. for the sixth consecutive year, it wi ll sponsor the annual "4·H Gardening Awards" competition. Last year more than 400,000 young people. ranging in age from 9 to 19, participated in the pro- gram In the process these youthful gardeners ex· plored virtually every aspect of both vegetable and ornamental gardening. Announcement of Ortho 's continued sponsorship of the 4·H gardening project was made here by Dan Hogan, vice president and general manager or the Consumer Products Division of Chevron Chemical Company . In the 4-H gardening competition, winners are selected at county. state, sectional and national levels by cooperative extension service pro· fessionaJs . Awards are made on the basis of out· standing achievement in gardening projects in· corporating leadership development, personal -I I , ~-.... LLOl'D•s gardPn shop llROU S BEGONIAS IDEAL FOR SUMMER COLOR -· ~.eg. t1c How69C. ............. ........ ................ ,.., ... , ... Now I". ,,.., ... ,,. Now3~ '-• ••• u1° Now 125':' Ulllm• .... 911MIW ......... .... .._ OUTDOC>a Pl.AMTIHG> MIX Growing lnuran~ Acid Planting Mix For Western Solla Gazebos • See our top quality s>rMeb • ~ Available In 8ft • 8 ft • fO ft. & 12 ft a11 ... • Llttlce or lhlngle rooft * Deck and tatttc. panelt 91.o . ...,.. .. W:::t: NOW 589500 growth. civic responsibility and contributions the community. Contest winners at the state level receive $75 Savings Bonds. National winners selected by the Cooperative Extension Service will receive a trip to the National 4-H Congress (being held this year at Chicago's Conrad Hilton Hotel. November 29· December 3,) where they will also be presented with lndjvidual $1,000 scholarships .S••S••S••S••S••S••S••Se : ARE YOU PAYIHG : • TOO MUCH FOR : :HEALTHIHSURAHCE?• • $1 .000.000 : : GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL e . :c.n F«Qttot.640-6075: •S••S••S••S••S••S••S••S-1 WHISKEY BARRELS ~ Auto & Homeown&rs -~ ,'(--• Ouotes By Ptlone fAIMOS lmtAla ., 54 .. 1114 • IJ5-J4J7 ••••~-c .... .,.... If lt 'soot wheels, you'll move It faster In a Dally Piiot classlfled ad.Call M2·5678 and a f rlendly act. vlserwlll help you turn your wheels Into cash. lT' DEEP 24" DIAMETER REG. 17.98 13.97 Solid oak, steel-banded half· barrels. Heavy-duty planters. THREE JASMINES All fragrant• All beautiful STAR, NIGHT BLOOMING AND ARABIAN JASMINE White flowering, shlny- leated evergreen shrubs. lGAL REG. 3.98 2.47 each Florut Special "lm)e buds." 2. 98 doz. R ES Since 1141 Hal lisles Nursery • Florist ~840 Harbor llvd., Costa M11a NJ qood ~ ~ ,2. "" ...... ..,.,.., lath -· t • ., ................... ; ..... ;.·~~~~~-.. ~. ~. ~ -~-~~. :~ .. ~:~~.~ .. ~.·~.~. ~¥.~·.~.q~•~>.~•:~.P~~~~~~.~· •~.;~;;~;p~;~z~xz~;~;s~: ~s.~as~s~s~a~s~s~ts~:t~2~1~;;~;~2~t~~-~;~2~22~2 ~a~::~&~~:~ -Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 STCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY 'S SHOE SERVICE BANK OF AMERICA CHARLES BARR JEWELERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERNO'J SPORTSWEAR DR. LOU ELDER optometrist HAIRHANDLERS SALOf\J HALLIDAY'S MEN'S CLOTHING HICKORY FARMS specialty food items HUMPTY DUMPTY children's clothing JEAN DAHL designer and better sportswear LA GALLERIA elegance in fashion MARKET BASKET t~ES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts and stationers SAV-ON DRUGS STOREKEEPER traditional sportswear VET A'S INTIMATE APPAREL WESTCLIFF CLEANERS WESTCLIFF CORNERS gourmet ware and collectibles WESTCLIFF SHOES XAVIER 'S FLORIST Daily Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 FOR THE RECORD C6 There's good news . and bad news for CdM, Artists. C2 . Fregosi's firing • com.es as no s111J>nse .. •• .. .... •• ti I •• I; .. . ~ ' It was really only a matter of time before Mauch took over By JOHN SEVANO Of .. Deity ...... , .... It really came as no surprise. Not to Jim Fregosi. Not to Gene Mauch. Not to Gene Autry. Not lo Buzzie Bavasi. And certainly not to the Angel players. Actually, the writing was on the wall the minute the Angels hired Mauch as the team's Director of Player Personnel last winter. Trans lated, it read: "Fregosi, either you produce a winner or . . . " Well. after 47 games of the 1981 season the Angels looked like anything but a win· ner and, as a result, Fregosi was replaced as the team's manager by Mauch in a not· so-shockmg turn of event.a Thursday. Fregosi's dismissal, especially in lieu of the team's recent poor performances, was imminent Actually, he was rumored to be out on the Angels' last home stand, but a s udden and brief -resurgence by the players prolonged Fregosi's exit another 21 days. The Angels' recent six-game homestand, however, was the final straw. The Chicago Wh ite Sox battered the Angels for three games and then the lowly Toronto Blue Jays came in to lake two-of-three, leavinl the Angels with an embarrassing 9-17 re· cord this se,son in front of the home folks. Owner Gene Autry. not able t-0 withstand the pain any longer, finally asked Mauch to join him during the first inning of Wed· nesday's game Said Autry: "Gene, we're going to make a change. I know you 've turned down several job offers since you've left Min· nesota, and I know you've turned down two offers this season. Would you be in· terested in managing the Angels?" Retorted Mauch: "Are you sure you're going to make a change ?" Autry: "Definitely." Mauch: "OK, then. Let's talk." So, essentially. Fregosi was already replaced during his final game as the Angels' manager. "When you have been through as many jobs and changes as I have, nothing really surprises you," said Mauch from bis Palm Springs home Thursday as he attempted to pack in time for the Angels' departure to· day to Chicago, where the team opens a four-game series with the White Sox. "I have always lived my life by what I feel at a particular lime. When I decided to leave Minnesota, I thought that was the best move for me at the time. And, when it was brought up last night that I take \he. Angels, I also felt it was in my best in· terest. "That's the way I'll manage, too. If I think it's in our best interest to bunt tomorrow night, I'll bunt. If not, then I won't. I've lived by the seat of my pants all my life. But, of course, I've worn out a few of those seats, too.·· Mauch h as formerly managed the Philadelphia Phillies, the Montreal Expos and the Minnesota Twins. His record, in 21 !leasons as a manager, is l ,52A·l ,708 for a .471 winning percentage. He's never won a pennant or a divisional championship (See ANGELS, Pase Cl) Jim FregoSt ~~~...;;._~~~~~~~~ Butler breezes fa in Masters meet Uni' s Plumer sets Cl F record By ROGER CARLSON and JACK MINTER Of the Delly ...... ·- NORWALK -Edison High's Jon Butler breezed to an 8:53.96 in the 3,200 meters and Universi· ty High's Polly Plumer set a Cl F Southern Section r ecord in the women's 1,600 meters Thurs· day night to highlight Orange Coast area athletes' activities at the Masters Meet on the Cerri~ College campus. The meet qualifies five for the state orelims. which be~in June 5 at the same site and in all the area will send four to the men's division and a half dozen to the women's section. Butler shelved the 1,600 in or· dtlr to place all his abilities in his specialty, and although be was the runaway winner , It was a disappointment, too. He was going for a good time -a nd Butler's idea of a good time is in the 8:40s -but he couldn't do it. He went out in 4:28.2 and came in with a 4:25.7 the last 1,600 meters, doing it all on his own without serious, pushing competition. myself Eight laps is a long way." Despite Butler's "disappointJ ment" he enters the state me•t as the one to beat m the 3,200. Plumer hooked up in a duel with Alemany High's Vickie Cook in the 1,600 and it took an of the University High junior's strength to hold off the 3,200 champ. Plumer took the lead at 800 meters with a 2:22.5 split, hold· ing a slight lead throughout and brushing away a challenge by Cook in the final 100 meters, snapping her own record with a 4: 45.06 clock mg. "After the first lap I just took it." explained Plumer. "I rllq hard the third lap. I didn't k:nOlll she (Cook) was so close to mCI coming down the stretch until saw her.head next to me and thought, 'you've got to get to finish line as fast as you can." It was a night which featur a national record by Full Hi g h sopho m ore Natal Kaaiwahia io the s hot p <52-4 1~) and six other CIF cords. Detty ,.... ....... .., l'etrtal O'~ Orange Coast's Reggie Montgomery f 36 J is safe at third during a four-run. seventh-inning rally against LA Harbor. "Next week I'm changing my strategy," said Butler. "I'm go- ing to try to salvage a win and just forget about the time. "I just didn't feel right tonight leading the whole r ace by And it was a night in whi Ocean View High sprinter R Brown and Corona del Ma Shawn Gallagher qualified b also a time in which Ne Harbor shot putter Kevin J feries and University High d" lance star Brad Meyer failed. Baseball strike off -for now NEW YORK CAP> -It could be for just a week, but America today still had major league baseball to cheer, boo and argue over, thanks to a last-minute deal and a federal judge who quotes Abbott and Costello. The threat of the sport's third strike in nine years evaporated for now when representatives of the players and the club owners agreed to extend the deadline beyond today when the players were to strike over the free agent compensation issue. While 119t issuing a no-strike order. U.S. District Judge Henry Werker allowed the delay to take effect, and set a hearing for next Wednesday In Rochester, N.Y .• on a National Labor Relations Board request for a preliminary injunction. At a meeting of Its executive board Thunday ni&ht, the Major Learue Player• Association made it official: No strike, at least until Werker rules on the NLR8'1 htjuncUon request. •'There will be no strike unUl we 11e what the court does,'• said Baltimore Orioles \bird baseman Dous Oeeinces, ~ American Leaaue player representative. "One• they rule, we'll 1ee if the outcoine is positive or necetive ror tit• anoclation. ''If U:s positive. It lookt ll-e we won't have a atrllte. tr lt'1 nesatl,e, we could co out. And ll there'A oo movement. there wUI bt•iUtke." Philldelphia Phllllot catcher Bob Booae. the National WfU• play .. ,._rep, aald t.ltere. •• "no •Y~ ttlUn1" tr tb eotlre ...... .OWd tie played. . \ Harbor's late rally stuns Orange Coast And it was a night in whi University's Laura Mills a freshman Annelle Rogers, al with Laguna Beach junior R nie Durand, Fountain Valle An n abe lle Vi lla nueva a Irvine's Lynnda Kelley qualifi for the stale. Pirates come back twice but lose in state tournament play By CURT SEED EN Of U.e O.lly l"llM S\aft LONG BEACH -When LA Harbor pitcher Mark DeLaTorre is given a three· run lead by his hard-hitting teammates, he generally makes it stand up. A four-run 4 lead with DeLatorre pitching is money in the bank. But Thursday night, the crafty left· hander watched Coach Mike Mayne's Orange Coast College squad battle back from those deficits in typical Pirate style. However, in typical Seahawk style, Harbor scored three more times -this time In the top of the ninth and DeLaTorre made them stand up in a 10-7 victory over the Bucs in the second round of the state community college baseball tournament at Blair Field. DeLaTorre, Harbor Coach Jtm O'Brien's "sink oc swim" hope, turned ln one of the more impressive seven·run. 10-hit victories. ''Our defense let blm down a few time• tonight. A lot of euy1 would have folded after that, but not DeLaTorre. That had to be one of the gutsiest performances I've ever seen," admitted O'Brien The victory left the Seahawks, along with College of the Canyons, as the only undefeated teams In the tournament. They'll square off tonight at 7 at Blair Field, and the winner of the contest could wrap up the state championship with I victory Saturday night at Blair, also at 7. 1. For OCC, the defeat was a big blow to th e Pirates' hopes for a r e peat performance of last year's state cham- pionship effort. And the defeat didn't dim the hopes of Mayne, whose team lost for just the seventh time in 40 outings this year. "We're still capable of winning it all. LA Harbor might have to play us again," Mayne said. For that to happen. the Pirates muat win their remaining games in the tourney. Their first step was to win two early con- testa today -one against Laney Collep and the other against the loser of a bout between LA Valley and Fresno, both one- time loeera like the Pirates. Should occ win both of today's tames, the Pirates would play the loser of tonight's Harbor-College of the Canyons match Saturday at 1 p.m. at Blair Field. How close would the Pirates be to another state championship if they won those three games? They'd still have to beat the one remaining undefeated team -either Harbo.r or Canyons -Saturday night and again Sunday afternoon. Thursday eveninl{, Harbor erupted for three first-inning runs on the strength of a walk. a double by Eric Bullock. an error and a single by catcher Mike Duitsman off OCC starter Mike Hogan. DeLaTorre ·made the lead hold up for two innings, allowing a harmless leadoff sin1tle by Rich Amaral In the first, but the Pirates struck back in the third u Renie Montgomery ripped a bases-loaded double inside third-base to clear the bases. Harbor countered in the fourth, and once agaib It waa Bullock who put the Seahawb ahead. The talented freshman l~fHielder 1trolted an RBI stn1le to score Scotl Ferauaon and 1ive Harbor a 4-3 lead. The Seahawlu 1upplied what looked like <See OCC, Pace Cl> Brown, a junior, was fifth the 100 (10.79) and fourth in 200 (21.68). ·'The competition and start have been the key to success," said Brown. "I'm <See MASTERS, Pace Cl) MIUER JOINS 11IE DAILY Pl Dick Miller . who bas spent years In the sports world cov ing the Dodgers, Angels USC football, joins the Da Pilot sports team with a twi weekly column beginning day. Miller bas spent the 'put years with the Herald Exam· aa a columnlat and writer cov in1 the Angels and USC rootb Perr.y chalks one to experience o:vier Valenzuela ATLANTA <AP> -Veteran Gaylord Perry chalked one up for experience Thursday nlght, bestln1 rookie senaa· tlon Fernando Valeruuela u the Allan· le Braves downed the Lot An1eles DodsersM. "It took a few same• t.o fet lbat one," u ld Perry, wbo recorded bt1 2t3rd llletlmt victory after fatllng to do so ln thrH PNviQUt start.I. ' The -Gyur..old pitcher alt0 delivered a ke7 htt lD the same, a two-run •lnll• that IHt UM Bravet a 3.0 lead durln• a Hvtn·n.m rally that cbued Valensuela in the fourth IMlnc. "TM ball wu .ap where 1 toWd bu· die it dd It wu a ro~," rn 1ald of hla u,.. to ce11ter ne1d:1, ,. pitched many yeara. He's a 1ood hitter, too," The Braves aent 12 batten to the plate ln t.he rourth and ICOl'9d their aeven l"UDI on alx bJU. two walks a.ad a hit batter. Valenzuela, a.a, 114ted ooly 3% In· ntnc• and was cbar1ect wltb HVH urned runJ, llftlq bl• .. .,,eel nan avera1eJrom l .M to l.ie. ll ma"-1 lbe first time that Valenluela fi.lled to pitch at least HTeG lul=Wa HUOG ud w11bl•Mc:Oftd1ttal t defeat, wrapped around• a rocky , l1lon outial at Chacinnad lut Saturday. Dlih lllur»l\1 1~ abe HY9RiofUll foul'th wUh 1 lll\fle and Cllrlt CbambU.11 followtd .ith inOtbir baH \ n bit. Glenn Hubbard walked, loading buea and the Braves broke tbe sco . lesa tie when Bruce Benedict beat an inrleld bit. Perry lined hl1 two-run alncte center and Rufino LiOareJ deliver run·•cortns bJt to center. Valemu then bit 8lft Pocoroba to load the ba ataln and waa replaced by Te Forster, who immediately forced run by walldnt Terry = on f pitches. Dale M~y cl 6t ln the bmlnt with a two-r ...... Perry, •bo allowed nlne hlti and the Podl*' l'\lDI In •tcbt lJudno w cettini reU f help from Rick 'Camp th 'ninth. ( --, . . ..... a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 29. 1981 == .· .. · . --:· .. ·= . · .· -. • •. Kle in testifies, t hen has h e art a ttack From AP dl1patcbea LOS ANGELES Eugene V [I] Klein, the millionaire businessman 4 t who went from movie theater ty· c:oon to football team owner. has been hospitalized in intensive care after sufferina a major heart attack moments after leavln, the witness stand in a football antitrust trial. The 60-year·old Klein, president and prln· cipal owner or the San Dieto Charaers, was re· ported in satisfactory condluon at Queen of Angels Hospital Thursday. He was rushed there after he complained of chest pams and nearly collapsed in a hallway of the federal courthouse here Pete Rozelle, the National Football League Commissioner who was on the witness stand when word came of Klein's seizure, rushed to the hospital along with Los Angeles Rams owner Georgia Frontiere and her husband, Dominic. Quote of the day "This is something they're going to re· member for a long, long time. I'm sure the re's going to be someone go l-for-4, but by the time they're my age it's going to be 4-for·4." Corona del Mar High baseball coach Tom Trager alluding to his team's CIF 2-A finals game at Anaheim Stadium this afternoon Bench fractures left ankle Cincinnati first baseman Jolm.ny Ii Bench fractured his left ankle while sliding into second base Thursday in a J(ame against the San Francisco Giants and will wear a cast for at least three weeks and be disabled for about eight weeks. San Francisco reliever Gary Lavelle's wild pickoff throw let in the tying run and ignited a five-run eighth-inning as the Reds beat the Giants, 7·4 ... In another National League game, a base·clearing double by Dale Berra capped a five-run fifth inning to power Eddie Solomon and Pittsburgh to a 9·4 victory over the Chicago Cubs . . In the American League. Leon Roberts smashed a three-run homer in the bottom of the eighth in· Bench ning to cap a four·run Texas rally that broke a 2·2 tie and gave the Rangers a 6·2 victory over Minnesota .. In the only other American League game, Milwaukee pounded Detroit, 7-1 with Roy Rowell and Ted Slmmou getting home runs. Southpaw Mlke Walkdwell picked up the win. Baseball today On WI date In baHball ln 1'77: Larty Parrt1h of Montreal hit thrtt bomtrt in 1 11m1, markinl t.bt 11cond tlm• ln four Wfflu that a member of the Expoe bad 1ccompl11btd the feat. (Gary Carter had 1 thret·homer 11m1 Aprtl JO). On th.la date In 1956. Gus Bell of the CinclnnaU Reda enjoyed u tbree·homer game !or the second time in less than a year. Today's birthday New York Mets pitcher Dyar Miller is 35 . Newton. Cook lead Kemper Australian Jack Newton says he has finally rid hlmsetr or a golfer's elbow through pills and an ointment n for horses. John Cook says he's no longer tired. The two fired opening round 65s, five-under-par, to lead tl.4" Kemper Open at Congressional c;ountry Club In Bethesda. Md. Thursday. Mark O' Mura of Laguna Niguel had a 68 and Alan Tapie, also of Laguna Niguel, fired an open- ing round 72 Pat Bradley and Janet Alu, who shot a hole-in-one, shared the first-round lead in an LPGA event at Greenwich, Conn. as both fired three und er·par rounds of 69 Graham Marsh of Australia shot a four- under·µar 68 for a share of the first-round lead in the Dunlop Masters tournament at Woburn, England . Richard Zokol of Brigham Young, made flVe straight birdies en reoute to a five.- under·par 66 and teammate Rick Fehr had a 69 as the Cougars took the team lead in the NCAA golf championships at Stanford. Allison 's condition has improved A s pokesman for Charlotte • Memorial Hospital s ays that stock car driver Donnie Alllson may be re-. leased from the hospital as early as next week after his crash in the Charlotte 600 Sunday . The Seattle SuperSonics have taken a deep plunge into the free agent pool, reaching agree- ment with guard Gus WlWama on a five-year contract and also coming to terms with Cree agents Alu English of Denver and S&eve Hawe• of Atlanta An independent investigation has disclosed recruiting violations at the University of Wisconsin that wiU be passed on to both the NCAA and Big 10 conference Hopes for a long-awaited American vlctory al the French Open tennis tournament have darkened with the re.emerging brilliance of Bjorn Borg. t'lay was cut short Tnursday oy rains shortly after Borg won his first match Former U.S . surfing champion Chris O'Rourke has died in a hospital after a four· year battle with Hodgkins Disease. He was 22 . Linebacker Ray Costld, who became a free agent after spending last season on the New England Patriots' injured reserve list, has signed a three·year contract with the NFL team ... The Houston Oilers waived three-time Pro Bowl defensive back Jack Tatum and signed wide receiver Mike Renfro lo a multiyear con· tract. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled RADIO: Baseball Angels at Chicago, 5: 30 p.m., KMPC <710). Cincinnati at Dodgers, 7:30 p. m .. KABC <790) MG8 & lln'B THAN IYa SAT., MAY 30-SUN., MAY 31 BUY -SELL -TRADE 250 TRADE TABLES Featuring Guns -Ant1Que & Modern Ammo -War Relics & Surplus Indian Artifacts -Rugs & Jewelry -Coins Admission $3.50 ·-Wll~ "'" AOulll HOUIS: SAT .. SUH., t .. I OtiMM COUMTY ,_.,. MOUNDS NIW PIOOUCTS 'AYIUOM. IL.M. 10 .......... J.A.,..,... Dr~ c..te Mne ,.,. l tctc 494 llrf.: 17141 '"·7'87 Sea Kings gain CIF finals Laguna Beach upset in tennts semts by Rtverside Poly Corona del Mar breezed to th• flnala of the CIF •·A tennta championships with a 251.A.1·2'-' victory over host Palos Verdes High Thursday afternoon but Laguna Beach was stopped by Riverside Poly in 3·A semifinal action. Laguna· Beach and Poly bat tled lo a 14-14 tie but the visitors from Riverside won in the lie- bre<tker where games won are counted, 102·99, and will ad vance to the finals against Palm Springs Coach Dave Heffren's CdM squad was awesome tn stopping Palos Verdes Antony Emerson, the No 1 singles player for CdM and son of pro Roy Emerson, started the team on the nght foot wttb a pair of~ vlctorte1 lJ1 hla flrtt two match ... ''When he play• llke that, lt l1 an inspiration to the other mem bers of the team and they do the same trung," Heffren said "We didn 't have much trouble today. In addition to Antony, I thought Greg Hayward and David Gerken played well for ua in singJes. Jorge Jimenez was playing his first CJ F playoff match and he'll get better " He ffren was hoping to get another shot at the only team to defeat the 22 · 1 Sea Kings , B~verly Hills But they lost to M1raleste, 2011'i·7V, in the other 4·A semifinal Beverly Hills and CdM tied. 14·14 but Beverly Hills \\On on games earlier this year Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 30 18 .625 Chicago 24 16 600 2 Texas 25 17 595 2 Angels 22 25 .468 7 ~ Kansas City 13 24 .351 11 ~ Seattle 15 29 .341 13 Minnesota 13 30 302 14 1h East Division Baltimore 27 14 .659 Cleveland 22 15 595 3 Milwaukee 25 18 581 3 Boston 24 19 558 4 New York 23 19 548 412 Detroit 21 23 477 71/2 Toronto 14 31 .311 15 .,_...,..tc_ Mllw-• 7, Detroit 1 Tun•. Ml,_MllA 2 Only~ ac:-.1eo TwtM'•-...... (z..tln j,.JI •I CIM._ !Trout ._ti O•kl-tK_,.. ... ,, at Toronte CCl...cy2·ll Detroit CS<Mh86e• 2 21 at lalllrnore 10 . MartlMI j,.21 '""'•-• 1St .. on >->l •t eo.ton no ... ., •11 H ... Yon I Alpill 1.01 •t Ctewl-CW•lts .. ll Kanwa Cltv CO.I• J.JI .i Mlnnooca !Arr• M l Seattle ICl-2.01 el hu1 (M81180 ).JI MATIONAL LEAGUE West Dlvlsloo W L Pct. GS Dodgen 31 14 .689 Cincinnati 26 18 591 41,<a Houston 23 22 .511 8 Atlanta 21 21 .500 8112 San Francisco 23 24 489 9 San Diego 17 28 378 14 East Division St. Louis 22 15 595 Philadelphia 25 18 .581 Montreal 24 18 .571 ~ Pittsburgh 19 18 514 J New York 13 26 333 10 Chicago 9 31 225 141'2 T!lwW'('ale-. Allani.t.~4 Cln<l,_11 7,S... Fr...clac:o • Pit~ t, Oll<890 • 0n1~ Oll"'ltl ac:-.1eo r.......-10-Cln<INW11(L.co.s2-4) at~ (-II M l Pl~ llltltl't H I .t -.lrMI (~ •·21 Clllugo llM<U H I 81 New Y-lkott 1-4) SI LOUii IForttll •·t) •t Pllll•d•lplll• l E "''now l..Jl Atl ... IA IP Hlellrol-l ) •t S.n 01-IWl•l.J) HOU-10ft (SIA ..... ).j) •I S.n Fr8ft(lt(.O 111 .. ... ,, In L11una Beach'• 1urprt.eln1 1011 to RJvenldt Poly, the de· ftndln1 3·A champions were lac· Ing a team that gave them a lot of trouble a year <tgo in an early match First s ingles player Ricki Leach wa!> the only one to win all of his matches for the Artists. Sean Leslie and Bill Capoblan· l'O split their doubles matches, leading coach Art Wahl to com- ment "We did about the way we expected lo do in doubles but had some disappointments in singles "I have a feeling this match -;hould ha ve been the finals of the 3 A d1v1i.1on but it wasn't and "'e lost · Sile of the final matches will be determined today Champion c want to tr~·inon Ji t'leWl!>r No~ N6~ NT~ NB~ 7 N9Y, NJOY, NJOY4, Spark Plugs . ~7.r'.~_r'. ~: ea . ~I? Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sell items under $100. 3 tines for 2 days only $1.SO a day. Sorry, no com- merclal ads allowed. 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Coast Hitbway • 646-9363 , ,. ............... ...-. ..........--------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 29, 1981 From Page C1 occ ... Volleyball match of the year! Fresno nips Saddleback in ninth, 2-1 the finish.Ina touches to a victory with a three-run uprisina in the seventh. After Bullock colJectes his third hit of the night, Hoaan h.lt Tom Hentila with a pitch. David Combs sacrlflced the runners to second and third, and Duitsman brought one run home with an in· field single. Americans to face highly-rated Brazilian team June 5 at Golden West Wayne Just! replaced Hogan, and he was &reeled by a two-run double oU the bat of Rodney Davis. Once again, DeLaTorre had a comfortable lead , but once again OCC battled back for a com· fortable tied ball game. In the bottom of the seventh, both John Melbon and Dan Dix got on base safely thanks to two Seabawk errors. Rich Amaral followed with a walk to load the bases. Larry Lee then brought home one run with a sacrifice fly. Mike Vanderburg, who was hitless and who had just one hit in four at-bats Wednesday night. then stroked a two-run double to pull the Pirates to within one. By CURT SE EDEN Of .. IMll\' ......... Last Friday's CIF volleyball cham- pionship match between Laguna Beach and San Clemente high schools gave the sport an obvious boost in an area where it is already appreciated by knowledgeable supporters. And next week, some of the top amateur players in the country will converge on Orange County -at Golden West College to be exact -when the U S. volleyball team meets the Brazilian national team in an exhibition match. The match, set for Friday, June 5 at 7: 30, is one of 30 scheduled across the country featuring the top amateur players Crom the U.S. against international com- petition. It's being sponsored by the GWC Volleyball Club. Tickets are on sale at the college for $3, and will be sold at the door for $4. "T h is is probably the premiere volleyball match to be played in Orange County this year," says GWC volleyball coach Lou Ann Terheggen, herself a top amateur competitor in the '70s. THE AMERICAN TEAM features some familiar names such as Dusty Dvorak and Crail( Buck. Both are Laguna ~each resi· Cyprus Cove. A private, walled, gated and guarded residential community. On the ocean bluffs in San Clemente, With a pri- vate Swim and Racquet Club for residents a9d guests only. A limited number of homesites now available. Most with never-to-be-obstructed sweeping dents. Dvorak, along with Tim Hovland and Pat Powers represent USC, runner-up to UCLA m this year's NCAA finals. Buck plays for Pepperdine. The U.S. team also gets a boost from Karch Kiraly and Randy Stoklos. both members of the UCLA championship squad .. Brazil, meanwhile, has won every South American volleyball title since the early 1950s. In the 1980 Moscow Olympics, the Brazilian team lost a hotly-contested match with bronze medalist Rumania, narrowly missing a medal. • • • ONE OF THE MOST entertaining games in the first round of the state com- munity college baseball tournament was the opener at Blair Field Wednesday bet ween LA Harbor and Fresno CC. Harbor blew a 7-0 lead, only to win it 8·7 in the ninth. The winning run was scored by a youngster named Eric Bullock. without a doubt one or the most exciting community college players in the state. Bullock singled and scored, tripled In a run and scored and then walked in the ninth. stole second, moved to third on an errant throw and scored the winning tally on a base hit. • A 5-10, 180-pounder Crom South Gate High. Bullock ran circles around Golden West in a Southern Cal Conference playoff game just over a week ago. Besides rip- ping four hits, he picked up three stolen bases against the Rustlers As for Fresno CC, the Rams would just as soon not see Harbor again. It was the Seahawks that eliminated Fresno Crom the 1978 slate tournament with, ironically enough, an 8-7 victory. Coach Len Bourdet's Fresno squad is in quest of its fifth state championship. The Rams won it in 1961, '62, '63 and '72. This is the 14th time Fresno has advanced to the state tournament under Bourdet. * • • AROUND THE SOUTHLAND -Lots of coaching changes going on. Don Sneddon will take over as head baseball coach next year at Santa Ana, replacing Jim Reach. Sneddon spent six years as an assistant to Reach and the two are credited with tum· ing the Dons ' baseball program around. Reach, alter seven years as the Santa Ana coach, will step down, but he will remain as the school's women's softball coach. He compiled a 130-81 ·1 overall record NORWALK Saddlebac~ College's baseball season ended on a sour note Thursday after· noon as Fresno City Colle1e handed the Gaucho• tb~ir second straight defeat In the Califorma community college tournament at Cerritos College here, 2-1. Freshman patcher Brad Kin· ney limited Fresno to four hits but was touched for a run in the first inning, then the winnins marker in the bottom of thf ninth Saddleback tied the count io the top of the final inning wheo R:ck Irwin opened with a single. Paul LaJoie then batted for Mike Breslin and forced Irwin at second. Terry Madden then raft for LaJoie and scored a few mo- men ts later on a three-base throwing error by Fresno for the lone Gaucho run. Fresno's winning marker was sent home m the bottom of the i11ning on a double by Jeff Rutledge . s. white water views. The very essence of what California coastal living is all about. The surf at your front door. A breathtaking mountain panorama at the back. Cyprus Cove. Without que tion, one of the world's most precious commodities. From $250 ,000 Final Release of Wt 30 Lots! 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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ~rlday, May 29, 1981 Edison: It's been a \ rocky road to the CIF finals The numbers apeaJl for tbemaelve1 -18 tlralaht victories, a 25·4 record, 43-10 over a two· ~Hr 1pan, a 1.3.0 record at ni&bt thia year. : And at first look , some aren't too aurprued at ~l•oo Hiah'a riae to the CIF 4-A bueball flna.lt at .\nahelm Stadium tonl1ht (8), where they tan1le •Ith Sunset Lea1ue champion Weatminlter (23·4). · After all, the Char1er1 were Sunaet Lea1ue champions a year a10 and were blessed by so many returntn1 starters. aome were aittin1 on the ~nch waltin1 their tum. ·. THERE WAS SUNSET MVP Rich Sorenson and other stars, such aa aecood baaeman Ron Morello. catcher Steve Morello. pitcher Robb Munson, abort.stop Tom Ou11an and outfielders Mike De Benon and John Bellea amon1 other1. That's more than any coach deserves to work with. But Edison Coach Ron LaRuffa saw one pro· l>lem after another threaten to ruin the dreams and it's been no breezy path to the finals. First it was Ron Morello breaking his leg In a loss to Westminster -the bl1 blow. "I told the kids we had no excuaea." says LaRuffa. "But In the back of m~ mind l felt It would ultimately be the difference ln reaching the (jnals. "He's an All-CIF caliber player and one of our leaders " So what happened? Sophomore Todd Mabe stepped in and became a second team all·league player. THERE HAVE BEEN other pitfalls and as LaRuffa says, "It's the worst I've ever ex· perienced. "A year ago we had the same lineup from start to finl.ah. Thia year It's chanted almOlt every time out, but 1l haa been preUy steady these put 13 games." CaU:her Steve Morello wu out for 12 1ames with tenoonlua ln his throwln1 arm and la still touch·and·ao . So what happened? Tony Linsuard, a junior. stepped In and the Char1ers won every lime he played. John Emma haa ~en out with a sprained ankle on one occasion and a twisted knee on another. BACKUP SHOaTSTOP Peter Urquba had 22 stitches ln his fln1er and is 1UU out. Joe Kwolek missed Tuesday'• 1ame with a hl1h fever and la questionable ror tonl1ht's game. Mike Caroiza and Mike Powell have been out with sprained ankles and Sorenson, the ble atop· per, wu plagued with a prolon1ed nu and cold, a key to his below normal performance this year. Despite the problems, It's hardly been a nigbtmare for LaRuffa. "When I got a call at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday about Joe (Kwolek) it jwst rolled off my back because I knew how tbia club would react. They don't get up· set and they don't rattle," says LaRurta. Tonight's game In the Immense surroundings or Anaheim Stadium can lake a toll on players get· ting a first look and LaRuffa says despite bit team's record at nleht <they are 19-0 at night In a two.year span at Mlle Square Park), It's definitely a factor. ·'It's huge and there la a circus-type al· mosphere," says LaRurfa. "We 've got lo try not to get caught up in things. Getting there Is only half the battle." Eme r so n, Paws at face top seeds HighUghted by the Saturday Corona del Mar High, and pairing or high school stars An· Pawsat. or Foothill (Tustin), are tony Emerson and Tim Pawsat rated among the top high school a1ainst top-seeded professionals players in the nation. They are Jerry Van Linge and Tom seeded seventh. Leonard, the 20th annual Adop· Semifinals will be conducted tion Guild tennis tournament Saturday (the Van Linge· moves to the Newport Beach Leonard, Emerson-Pawsat Tennis Club this weekend. match is sch eduled for 4:30 Defending champions in the p.m.) with finals slated for Sun· Men's Open division , Van Linge day. Matcbes start at 9 a.m. and Leonard have won the event both days. the past four years. Emerson. o~ Admission Is S2 Saturday and Mid-Summer Dou SJ Sunday with proms donated to the non-sectarian Holy Fami· ly Services based in Santa Ana and serving all or Orange County. The Adoption Guild tourna- ment is reportedly the largest single eli mination charity tournament in the United States. More than 570 teams s tarted competition in the 17 divisions over the Mem o ri a l Day weekend. Getting there has been a Iona battle and Lions) have talked a lot about the poHlbWty for LaRuffa, who hH finally put the Char1era lnto of an all·Sunset Lea1ue finals:· saya LaRuffa. the flnah after six years. "Everyone knew our lea1ue wu atroo1 tbls year, but when you go from 32 to two. It's amazln1." "WE FEEL WE'RE RESPECTED aa one or It's a far cry from a year a10 when the Sunset the better clubs In Southern California," aaya League was humbled In the first round by LaRuffa. ''But we've never gone a lon1 way in the Westmln8ter's 6-0 loss to Lakewood, Marina's 13-4 playoffs and that aoes a long way toward respect " setback to Pasadena and Edison's aecood·round LaJtuffa, once a player under Westminster 3·0 defeat by Loara Coach Rick Hayes when the latter was an aaalstant As a result not one Sunset player was 1lven at Loni Beach State, says be thinks his club will All·CI F status. face rt1ht·hander David Harris on the mound, .. Whatever happena we've both had 1ood while the Char1era are •till dwellln1 on either seasons," continues La Ruff a "There la a lot of Munson or Sorenson. mutuaJ respect involved." To capsulize It, tonl1ht'a batUe la mt>re like ' In the 3·A showdown at 5 o'clock it'll be 16·11 Sunset League All-star game aa 11 of the leaeue·a El Dorado agaiflllt 24.3 Covina. The 2·A title 1ame top 18 players are wrapped up by these two clubs. between Corona del Mar and Santa Fe beJan at 2. "We CLaRuffa and Hayet and the Char1era -By Ro1er Carlaoe ~~~~--.-;;;;;...;;~;;...;;~ GROUP g ~IF, LESSONS STARTS JUNE 16th 8 WEEKSfor 525°0 Regletratlon ewrta June 1 at ONE HOUR WEEKLY INCLUDIS GOLF BALLS & INSTRUCTIONS LESSON HOURS Tues., Wed., TIH.rs. 9 A .M. or 6 P.M. Sat. At I P.M. OSTA MESA GOLF& COUNTR Y CLU 170 I GOLF COURSE DI. COSTA MESA • 540-7500 $125,000 DERBY Saturday Night Sql Peppel Fe!ilUll' l!>lll'l.lPO ((I b1• onp of th.-(JP' tly f rtl#f '~ 11 P Nation's Finest Sophomo re Quarter Horses in 28th Annual Derby Post Tim e 7 :45 Los Alamitos HOM• 01" CALll"ORNIA'• RICH•aT HOR•• RAC• •l8b' KATE:LL A AVE 05 ALAMITOS • '1..J 43' Jli1 • 171oll "195 123 l In Palm Sprtnga, The Tennla Club 11 aervlng up a pair of mixed doublH thl• aummer that can't be beat. The fl rat match is $150: • any 5 nlghta/6 <Says acc:Ommodatlons • 175 pe< person based on double occupancy plus tax WHAT'S THE BESF • free tennis during your entire 11ay, based on avaJlabUlty • compllmentery cocktalls from 4 to 6 p m The next set la $35: • OYemlghter/any day of lhe wee+< • 117.50 per person based on double occupancy plua tax • tennis al $4 a day, based on avallabltlty • complimentary cocktails from 4 to 6 p.m. So If tennla 11 your recket, start courting at The Tennis Club Hotel. Both packages effective June 1 ·August 28, 1981, except 4th of July weekend. 701 West Barlsto Road, Palm Springs, CA 92262 Telephone (714) 325·1441 • Los Angeles (213) 271·2995 Prestigious Newport- Santa Ana Area Office Space ' 0 'f>,,;f ao-t • 1 • Bent a luxury a.trlum omoe 1n Orangewood Bus1neee Oenter, one or the lT\08t suooeutul new oompl8X81 ln the boomlnB Newpo~ Irvine-Santa An& arM, JU1t ten tnJ.nutell t.o Orange County &trport.I 'n\e ooet? A tantutlo 76• per foot . Cu.Romlze your Mee» tram l,640 t.o 33,000 equare reet wtth abundant park· s:n,. a.tr oonc11t.1onlng, night U4htJ.ng. menace and a oho10e or either beaut1tul atrlum dl8lgn ... or "~door" ~· O&UtDdQat C'M)Jll M 11or ('fM) .. ,..,.. tor dNJ.11 about the 8PBOlA.L BONUS MOVING PLAN, or j vi.ti tlw OranCewood turni&hed model. NTOBUY A TOYOTATRUCK? ''Ml' EAGEI'' What's more 1mpor· tant than that. I ask you? My Toyota truck saves me money every day II has a fuel-eff1c1ent 2 4 hter engine And I've ~t the poNer I need for the toughest iobs '1 That's a good feehng Now. if someone has a better reason to buy a TC¥>ta truck. I'd hke to hear about 11. «J f PA I \I HIQ!lwAy MPG 6:l\i' PA Eal MPG Af'ffif•mt><•• (.'"''"''"·ll11~05l•mitll•IQHf'PA E11om111to MPG cito11•" f'<lf ~\ ''"' n1~v Q91 O•ll .. t'fll ollllfdQe \l@p<tnOtnq on"°"''·"' f,., "''•" ...ea•hf'< .::onootion~ •nO b P '-"Ill" Ac1ua1 '"<>"""'Y ......... , .. •1><..n.nivt>e"'HllM< lhefPA HoQnw•;E"'"''"1• ''PRICE!" (WHAT DOES !:if KNOW ANYWAY?) This tough Toy· ota truck for $6148? It gives me a good feeling every time I think about 11 You get so much good stuff standard. $6148 1sa & real bargain. JW Things hke pcmer-ass1sted front disc brakes. a 4-speed transmission. and a welded unitized cab Savin' money? I kncm a thing or two about 1t myselt Mr Machol ~ ..... e t<;QOelled 191al pnce 4 ll*!d Mand WO beO ONi« 1 ecl..a' 191alpnce !NY.-V P,.:e CIOKnoo onc"«le !&" -..e ~"'" ~ -oCJl-Ot oegoOt>elly ~ __.. THEY MAY NOT AGREE ON THE REASON. BUT THEY AG11R ON THIS TOUGH TOIOTA TRUCK. ~AT FEE~G TOYOTA ' • • • . ... ····-· .. _ _...,.. -..---• 0 0 a: ; s a so s e s s a a a c a a aws4 s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT fl=nday, May 29, 1981 # 1 ____________________________________________________________________________ __:;__ ______________ ...;.;......;;.._.;.... __________________ .:,:~~ Angel garrws top TV schedule Kemper Open golf tourney.also set live this weekend Saturday's TV. radio TELEVISION 9 a.m. (5) TENNIS -John McEnroe vs. Vl- jay Amrilraj in the finals or lho WCT Cballen1e Cuo. taped In Montreal. 10 a.m . (4 ) -BASEBALL WARM·UP. 10:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -Tbe Oakland A's vs. lbe Blue Jays at Toronto's Exhibition Stadium. 11 a .m . (5) -ANGElS BASEBALL -The Angels vs. the White Sox in Chicago. l p.m . (4) -BASEBALL -The Houston A&tros take on lbe Gilmts in San Francisco. 3 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Third round play In the Ke mper Open. taped al Bethesda, Md. 1 3:30 p.m . (7) -PRO BOWLING -The finals of the City of Roses Open. taped at Portland. Ore. (34 ) FUTBOL -Corea del Norte vs. China. 4 p.m. C2l -SPORTS SATUllDAV -Cov- erage of the men's competition in the cham· pionships of the U.S.A. gymnastics meet, taped at Lincoln Neb. 5 p.m. C7l -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS - Cornelius Boza-Edwards (30·2) defends his WBC junior lightweight title against Bobby Chacon (43·5·1) In a scheduled 15·round bout taped in Las Vegas. Also: The Women's National Motocross championship, taped at Carlsbad. (28) -SOC· CER. RADW Baseball Angels at Chicago. 11 : 15 a.m .. KM PC 1710!. Cincmnati al Dodgers. 7 p.m .. KABC (790). Sunday's TV, radio TELEVISION 10 a.m. (SOJ -SPORTS AMERICA -The na- tion's outstanding collegiate champions compete in lhe Milwaukee tennis classic. 10:~ a .m . (5J -ANGElS BASEBALL -The Angels meet the White Sox in the first game or a dou ble·header in Chicago 11 a.m . (2) -SPORTS SUNDAY -Ml.Jee Rossman (40-6·3) takes on Dwight Braxton (13-1·1> in a lO·round light heavywelChl bout telecast live from Atlantic City. Alao: Four·Ume U.S. opeo champioo St.eve Mlzerak is amone lbe players In an elght·ball competition and rescheduled from an earlier date: the men's world team surfing cham· pionships, taped at Ehukai Beach in Hawaii. 11 a .m . (50) -SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY. Noon (11) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL. l p.m. (2) -GOLF -Flnal round plav in the Kemper Open from Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md. 2 p .m . C7 > -GREATEST S PORTS LEGENDS. 3 :~ p.m. (4) ~ SPORTS AnELD -The habits of Wyoming's bighorn sheep and a look at antique fishing lures. Also: lbe story of an outward bound survival class for women. (7) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -Formula One drive rs race through the streets of the Mediterranean prin· cipaLity or Monaco in same·day coverage of the Grand Prix of Monaco. Also: The world invitational high diving championship, taped at San Diego. 4 p.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD -From San Re mo, Italy : Johnny Bumphus (7-0) vs. Arsenea Green ( 11-t> in a scheduled eight·round iunior welterweight bout a nd Davey Moore 15·0> vs. Josef fltsubugea (15·2) in a scheduled eight·round welterweight fight. Also: Coverage of the Jumbo Elliott lnvitalional,.track meet. taped at Villanova. Pa. 7 p.m. (28) -TENNIS FOR THE FUTURE - Coach Vic Braden shows how to make your strokes work for you during singles matches. RADIO Baseball Angels at Chicago (double· header>. 10:30 a .m .. KMPC (710>; Cincinnati at Dodgers. 1 p.m ., KABC 1790). (The Daily Piiot is not responsible for late changes.> AYSO signups ·set Regions 5, 120 ready for '81 season American Youth Soccer Organiza· lion signups for regions 5 and 120 will be held this weekend. on registration day. New players to the Costa Mesa re· g io n s hould bring their birth certiricates. Wok set to defend points lead Betty Cook of Newport Beach will defend her narrow points lead in the 1981 national offshore powerboat racln& campaign Saturday in the new Sutphen ln· ternational race out of Cape Coral, Fla. After three races. Cook leads Jerry Kilpatrick, 653·625. She has won one race and finished second in t he other two. Ordinarily the favorites for the 216·mile Sutphen race would be Bill Elswick, Fort Lauderdale, Fla .. defending world champion Michel Meynard and Cook. But the fourth race of the circuit is not shaping up into an ordinary sea war. After Meynard won the season opener at New Orleans, he returned home and found he had Hodgkimlll.isease and may be out for the s11son. Rookies have been m aking a surprising showing in this year's campaign . A sleeper in Saturday's race could be the new Cougar.designed, Philippines- built 38-foot catamaran, Ames on·Borg Warner Drive, built for Howard Arneson of San Rafael. San Francisco's Tony Garcia will be the driver. A new woman driver has been added to the sport in the modified lass in the person of former airline stewardess Paula Akin, of Huntington Be ach She is leading the class with 700 points. Region S, serving the Costa Mesa area. will have signups from 10 a.m. to 2 p m. Saturday and next Satur- day, June 6. In Region 120, basicaJly the same conditions apply except signups will be held Sunday for returning families and the following Sunday, June 7, for new ramilies. Prices Ufecdye Through Wednesd.ly, June 3 , 1981 Unser uxints reversa Give my race back , he pleads INDIANAPOLIS CAP J Bob by Unser wants the victory he celt'brated in t he 1981 In· d1 anapolis SOO victory back and he wants a public hearine on the appeal or the historic rulinK that declared Mario Andretti as the winner "Give me my race back, don't take my vi('lory away," pleaded Unser before the riling Thursday of a formal appeal of the ruling that penahzed him ope lap for pas sing other c ars during a yellow caut10n light was filed The penalty, announced Mon- d ay, stripped the 47 -year old Uns er of his third Indy 500 triumph and awarded Andrett1 his second victory in the gem of auto racing Roger McClus key, the U S Auto Club's Director of Competi· lion, received two appeals late Thursday night by lawyers representing Roger Penske, the owner of Unser's car. One ap· peal claimed that Unser's vie· tory was unjustly taken away from him and asked USAC to declare him the winner. The second appeal claimed Andretti also had committed the same vi olation for which Uns er had been penalized. And Unser also asked USAC to have a rederal Judge appQint a panel to hear the appeals and to have them open to the public. "An impartial hearing, tMt"s all we want," said Unser. "T he second thing that we ask 1s that it be open to the press. We want this so that ('vt·rybody ha• chance lo know what goes und what 1s said " The appe-als wtll ~ presen to USAC President Dick Klng day, McCluskey said. USA rules require King to appoint panel of three persons and schedule a hearing McClusk s;ud the hearing had to srheduled within 30 days, b that he anticipated King wo at't quickly "I think Dirk plans to ge things going as :.oon as poss bl e." Mt•C lus key s aid. "I' sure he doec;n 't want this thin to drag on " l'nser said lie "a:. confident fa ir hearing would clear and restore the Vl<'tor y, but b s aid he was determined to ta the issut.> into a civil ''ourt if th beca01e nl•t•(.•'\sary "None of us "ant this to g any further. but I plan to tak this thing as far as necessary he said. Kelley qualifies UC Irvine's Michelle Kelle qualified for the rmals tn long jump Thursday with a le of 19-0 at the AIA W Nation track and field championships the Uni vers ity o f Texas Austin. Kelley stood eighth among t 12 qualifiers going into today' final. ,,.,.,,.. ~~") ....... • ...,....,, """"""'10'..,..., •"'· Signups will be held at Balearic School (corner of Mesa Verde West and Adams) and the cost of register· mg a child 1s $30 for one. $25 for a second child, a nd $20 for each addi· tional member of the same family. The ree will be $30 for each youngster Cages 5·18) and parents are asked to attend to sign insurance papers. Newcomers are asked to br- ing a birth certificate and they will also undergo a skills evaluation test. WE'RE HELPING YO DO IT RIGHT The l eague is o p en to a ll youngsters through the ages of 5·16. Signups for Region 120 (serving the Fountain Valley and Westminster communities) will be held at Mc· Garvin Junior High School from 10 a .m.-4 p.m . Sunday and Noon to 3 p .m . June 7. Youths returning to the Region 120 program will receive registration forms in the mail. They should com- plete the forms and bring them on the registration d ays. New players will go through a field evaluation test Neep SOM~ ~UlvK CA6H? A Penny Pincher Ad will do the trick. Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sell items under $100. 3 lines for 2 days only $1 .50 a day. Sorry, no com- m ercial ads allowed. Charge your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Visa or M aster Card. Ca ll Classified Advertising at 642-5678 to place yQUr ad. Daily Pilat AUTOMOTIVE USTOIATIOHS ANDR•AIRS 710 W. 17~ ST .. 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Who else could be betterqual- lfled to'" that lt remains that way7 I~: --·1~ SUPER I~~ r--; ~~RUSH . PrestoneD FLUSH~ FILL KIT W/AM-FM RADIO AJtu. c.uette • 3 763 or 8-Tr.adl •J767 8-DACX-ln-da.sh type design. Dial on door and sllde·bar switch type. Compact design. CASSlnt-rreclslon head align· ment. Fast forward and eject button. ;:~;nsltM~.54 88 choice ~ North Vcmon H~S1ttt f 0<mo\l Ammun (.Mi •4050 1~2 nJRTI..lWAX POLYSHll ONE STEP 6~' KASCO 60-MONTH MAINTENANCE fR£E BAT I ERIES thl' l>IM<)I INI IMft ~· cl ..,.. N-. Mfl<I> -•l'f ~ rotr~·l!ft re<mlNlt Men .,_.,.. power fOf mosl YB f'll<n~ _...,,. .. 60-Monm · l 15cc AMl"(•ZUMf-60). 36~CH 6Q-Monlti • 410« AM1'!•14Mf-«) °' #l4fMf-60~ l6Scc Mil'(,42Mf-¢0~ 4218 390cxAMP(#71Mf-60) £XCH l»Mondl • 4IS<.c AMI"(• 2 7MF-40 or 112~)48CkcAMP(OlMf-60)or4618 410t( AMP(#74Ml-60) £XCH UM mo fO. DAY WAaaANn ~ 90·0.,W#t""tt«WI ..... ,., ·-trl<411 ..... o<· '""' -.... ...,, .. ~ i.i ........ -... \4)C>fl ltlllm, ,,,,,.... • ~ o/ (IWtt ... -00 d¥ ol !Ml-UrNw>d w"''""'Y•"-•90~-.. ,.,_.,..,..~.""'~· ..... bol,.ry With• -IMnery. c IWl'!ll Ol'lf1 lot tfW p«rloel ol ~hip ..o.n ~ cNflt • _..,,,,.,,.. i. -llW1f II\' ...... ri. ,.lllW Wilna pltte •r dw ...... of IM -In•"*"' .. Ille ,_,.,., "'~ ~ 597 for Mc»< C~G (lx<l'pl C~) 1955·1076 8 Cylndef (2.83· 307-321·150 £.n!UM) Oodg.-Plymouth 1959,10"11 & c~ r Of Motl f Of'Cb 1960-1914 6 C~ (lxcept V-6) l'Ofd·MefCUI)' 1965·1978 8· Cy41nder (289 w41t1 ~Iron holdlr1s #.cl 302· 151 tnglnel Fcrd·Men::ury 1961-1971 8 C)lnder (l~l-390-416-428) 19!! 25~ for M~t r.ust'f1s•• CA<s C11l'voo~1 o (yt 11101 !.!_?4 ~ !_SOI ford O Cyl 19<>0 JCJ ~1~001 Ch')"I•• v 8 • 96l Jot 360 lll 383 400 «OI (hryMP• V 8 1967 70 (273 Jlfi 326 34<1) Oldvr1obllto V 8 l<:lo'> lr:. 1HO 3S0.400 425 4SSI BVIC~ V 8 1967 16 t'°° 410 4S,S) Chl'"'°"'t V 8 196S 11> t JQ6 400. 421 454 4S51 Clll'vook'I V 8 19S~ 70t26S.18l.107 327 lSO 400) ford V 8 1902 76 Ill I Z()() 180 30Z 151 Wln<i"'°' l'ontidc V ti 1901 76(326, 350,400 ~28 455) MANO NlW • NOT IUUllT MASTU- For Most Chevrolets (U<ept C~) 8 C)'41ndef 1959·1977 (283·301·30"1·305·350 [nglne lxcept E..trty 1966 ~LA~ 1~7 Chevelle) For Most Cheovrolets 6 Cyttnder 1963-1977 •LaMlr..._ or-.. •s-.AM 150ll ~ 1100 N Tutdn <• .,,..'M61 I (Auou tn:wn •,....... ~ Poll Oflke WIOAldef .......... 711·J000 9'1-917S ....... . IO.Ol~Avc (714~1 ... 260' S. &tWol St (onc~S of WAllYIJ A11t } 1'4-:14)1 ·s...aa~ 1)01L17tl'ISt .,,..., .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Frid.!Y· May 29, 1981 ..... ------------------------------~~ ~~------------------------------------------------- ~ . ' .,, " NATIONAL LIAQUll 1Stave1 I , Oodo-r• 4 LOI AJtOU.81 ATLMl1A ...... .. .... TllomH 1'I J 0 0 0 LIM r•a, H J I J J ~=~·~·cf : : : ~ l"tol•rll, » ) I I I S..tClllf•. p 1 I I I H•r .. r • rt I t t I G•r•o. Ill • I J • Mur,,.y C1 • I , , -.y, 11 • O I O CM\1111, 111 • O I O G .. r,.r, Ill 4 0 I 0 H~. l'9 ) I I 0 S<ICK<l•,c • o 2 O •-•ct.c • l J 1 lluUell, U 1 0 0 0 llleMI,,, u • I t 0 J ..... tlOl'I, If 1 O O O ,..,ry, p J t 1 I Yel•"11e, P I 0 0 0 c .... ,. ' t t 0 0 Forsl ... p 0 0 0 0 l'erttll,.,. 0 I 0 0 l'rlH ,U 21 1 0 Toteh M 4 10 • h leh JJ ' II ' le_..,,...,.. LotAnee... -•1 ... 4 Allenle ... '10 00. ' E -LIMr" OP AllMle I LOe L• Aneel•t S, Al...,,te • Je Le--· Hiii Gervey 161 S Poe..-,,..,,,, f~ let A...... t~ H ll all t• 10 Yelen1.,.l• ll t tl 1.-. I I I I J Fo,.ler 1\1 I 1 J I J Sulc 1111• J o O o II o Alleltle Perry I w • J) • • • • I Cemp I 0 O O HIP llY Vel9N ... le (Pocll'04N) T 1 J1 A 26,,., 111-1.oi. .. • S•n FrMCIK O 100 011 001 ~ , I Clnc lnnell 100 000 OjA I 11 1 Wlllbon, llrOlnl"Q t•l. L•••ll• ti) Mln19" Cl ) end Mey, Ber..,yl, Prlt• Ill Hume , .. •no o· ... ,.., w PTtce, ~ uu ... 11 •• o-i. Hll-S.n Frencl"o· Cieri\ 1'1 A 10.0>I l"lr-•,c-• PlllttkirQll 001 01 OI~• 12 I Clllc~ 000 110 001 • 11 l Solo,_ -~ C...0111, M<Glo- UI, Cac>lll• m. E•'1wl<k "'· ~1111 Ctl -tl•0-11 W-~. ).J L-<-11, I~ Hlh Clll<eoo • ......,.,._ I•). DlllerO (II A-1 ... American league ......... 7,Tleenl O.trOll 010 000 000-1 I o MlhHUkee 000 «JO Clla-7 10 0 Perty -P•rrllll, C.lowetl, Flneen 111 •ncl Sim,_. W-CelOW.11, ~ L-l'ie<IY. , .• S-Flno•rt '" Hlls -Mllw•ukH How•ll (II, Simmons 1'1 A U,'43 111..,..n•. Twllt1J MlnMMll 000 020 000 J 1 I h••• 001 100 oca-. 10 o Erlckton, Cooper CU e nd Bui•••. M-ycutl-S-.g W Honeycutt, 6-1 L Erick...,, IS Hit Tues, 11-rh 121. 4-U,t-04 MtrlOW Burleson Cerew Ford Downing Hobt.on Lrnn 011 GrlCll Angel average• •Ant NG A• It H Hit lttl ~ 17 • • 0 0 .lS) 193 11 60 , 11 .309 llO JO S4 , .. JOO IS'I 14 4f I lJ 113 ,,. 19 )I, • 17 211 121 13 ~, .. ,.. IM U 3' S JI .W I II t 17 0 I .211 ll7 19 JJ s 21 Ut Pate~ H•rrl\ Cem pe,..r11 8en1Quu Bolor 17 I 0 1 2lS tt ) 1 1207 11 4 0 J Ill St 10 0 I I .. 1 .. I• H 1 1• 1 .. To1a11 l,S41 196 ,.. ., llO "' PITCH I NO ·~ H •• SO W·L lllA .... 2.111> 10 I " H> 0.'7 Forsell ,. 11 u :n ... ) 2 .. Sencll<ll JO'> JI • I 0-1 ,,,. ltenao .,.~ ., .. ,. ).) HO lelln .. 71 ,, ,. H Ul Wiii Sit , ., If 11 )-4 , .. Jeller<On .. .. 11 IS 1 1 J,. Hauler ~ 11 ,. 17 2 I • II Tr•ver\ ..... " s 1).1 ... Rau 10 • .. J .. , 1 11 O'ACQl ... ,10 1•'-1 ,. 11 I 0-4 10.71 Tol•ls O S '21 '" 171 11·2S JM Top 10 1 ............ , AMlllllCAN LaAOUll 0 •• Ill " Pct. llem r. Bolton JO IU U .. .17• Slnol•ton, Belllrnore 40 144 II SJ .M lloenlckt. 8alllrnor• JI 103 11 M .uo EvaM, Botton 0 161 JI M .:M6 L•nslord, eo.1on o 1n JO " .M.S Almon. Clll<eoo 40 ltl " "' .m Peclo,..k, Seatt,. 42 IM u '1 .m H•ncler10n, o.t11eno 47 llO a. ii .m SQulrH, ClllU.OO M 1°' 17 lS .JZI Wlnfl•ld, New York 42 l.W n .. ,, .. -·-Tttom•. W lw.......,, 12; Evan•, lol:tar., II, ArMM, 0.-1...0, II; Gr•y, S..ettle, IO; s1no1eton, 11e1t1mor•, • • .....,, "-"· •. •-aettMI• Arma&, OMiand, U, llwent, llollon, 12, s1no1et0<1, llenlmou, JI, a.11. T••••. JO, Ogllvle. Milweul<•, 1' ""1c .... ,. o.ci.i..1 (IH r. llo9'on, ~. K_,.., O.kl•ncl, ... I. McGr._, 8elllmo<e, ~1. TrOU\, Clllt,900, .._,, H-!"vlt, Teus, .. 1. Norris, O.kl....,. 7 1, lllyl-. Ctevel-. W • NATIOflAL LIAOUI GA• It N ~ Howe, "-ton « 1"9 JI ii -.S Yovngbl-. HY )4 111 .. 44 .JM Eetler, Pitt~ M 117 lJ 0 .-. ••ncll. Clntklnetl tt " I l4 .>d llr-1, New Yor11 1' 1• 11 41 )II Dewaon, _,..., a 14 l7 .. .SM P•r1111'11, s Ot-JI 117 II ,. .m MeclloO, Plttbt'911 JI 110 11 ~ .127 llelnet, -r••I 41 15' 2' SI .JV Her"41on, s.n Fran 11 1.. u so .JU H-111-kllmlcll, Pt.II~•. l•, oe•aon. Mor>- 1•••1, II, l(i,,...._, New Vork, •, Fos .. r, Clncln""'I; • Cey, ~. t. ._...._, .. Garvey, O••t•ra, U ; Sc llmldl, Plllleci.1.,..e, a., Conc911<lon, Cln(lnnatl, M; l"Ofttr, Clncl_,I, n, Crur, HwsllOfl, tt;c:.v.~,2'. ""'""" "DeclUeMt Cerlltll, l'llll•delpllla, 1 o, H••tM, DHlt•ra, 7 ... 1 llllOOen, l'ltt111>11r111, S-0; I(,,.,._,, "°""9f!, M , ~. AU.,ta, ).I, leaver, Cl11clnnet1, J•I, Vel•••••le Oeolewa. •a. ' Community college STAT• TO\llU•AMaNT c:Mllllll ... ~---.... LA~ II. OrMlt GMet 7 LA HarDer JOO 100 M-11 U OreneeCAlett C* 000 --I 10 J 0.LAtorre _.., ~lltmall; H<19e11, .1 .. 11 171, llltl-U ltl Md 011 W-0.LetorN L.-Jusll 19-avtleu., H•fltlle IHI, VM-llerllurt, Monteemery, Sllwl111111. 0 1• COCCI n-o.w11 IHI.°'°" IOCCI ~· .,. ... s.c.. " .... ..._ .. ......_ .. , lllM 11111eo ....... 1 IHlllllNCll 000 .. Olt-1 , 1 llretM tlO 000 Oll-t • I IClllM'Y -lrw111, Kevil .... Ill, Ol-en4 Cl\aele 1C.-ltllt ..... ,,,,_, C*9rk- LAIWY J, a.r!WNflto CC J l'-cr~ CC ellml~I ( .. I .. tf C..,._ 1 l. LA Yelltt J T ... 'l'tM ....... I WI,_ ti# Or~ C-.M.~Ny n . wl&- ,.., of Fr.,....U Velt.v let 11 .. r l"lelOI. lolll .. ,,,.. at II tt111 """~ , -<:.it ..... c-.-'" I.A .. .,.,., (II\ llelrl Kemper Open ,., a..-. MJI.) Ja<k Newton Jotln COOi& Howerd TWlttv Y.,'9 Hteflwf Cra11 SleOI.,. 0.1111y lf-oa MerkD'MMrt Mlh 11•14 D A. W•lbr'lng Tom WtltU•ll Tom P11ruor o....o 1-1 Mlkt o-td k oll Hoell JI m $1 mont Jim Htll- O." P91W ... u • ....,, L ... Hlllll .. O.ve letr J otln$c,,,....r ...... ,,..,_....,. T9"\mVV-I"" 111<111•-lllMNW<l>.olla Tl"" Merrit 0-99Cedi• lll•J ,IOTCI Mlh MorleJ ,..., l(lle AMJ Nor111 0..-Lt~ln Mlh .... 1-Ckty McCord 0.•ld 1-r• w.,.,. l••I I ru<t , lei"'°' o... ....... Jal\n -y IOOllHt- Ci..rlle 01"'°" fOMW•llCltl Jc s- C•w• S.... MerrhHet•allv J ey H•et Mike IMCUllO\lgll L-•rd~ Mel• lrwln O••Y Koch TllOMHGr•y AIO,_ l •rrylffllCltl Je rtJ H...,d Alen Teple GeMLlltl .. R••Met-J1meoor... U...99 8uma Clll Clll .._. .... , w_., Flti"'411 !loll si.- BObbyWllHI Jim O.nl Mlkellr- Alle11Mll• MlkeSulllven ltlCkMe~I· M•rk Pfau SteveMeln'(lt G•r-, H•llllefcO MarkM<Cumc.r L•rr, Zlevler P•ILl-y Jim Co1bff1 00\lg J.,,.,,...., lllllCell• Skip Dunewey L•nny W-ln• Dene Ol.tl04•Y Brvo Oougl .. s LH EIO.r Merk lye GlllOy Gllbff1 Geor99Arc11e< 8oO lly,,,., Tim SI~ Tom Storey LPGA tournament Cet G-wkJI, Ce!M.I J •Ml Alex Pal llrecltey JNl'IJo'(Ce Amy Alcott Kerolyn KertvnM M•r1-FloW C•llly ltrt!IOldl Oellt>MMeMey S.lly Lltu• AMell•~ ktsy Klnv s.tld,. PIKt Jo4M Wasllem rr ...... Hes11ew1 M•rl•neHep J-llt.lock K•llly -nln L•ura~ Jen St•pNn9on lletll Dani .. KelllyWlll_,11 b~ b~l ,.. ... s+.»-41 ,......., U.12-t1 JS-~ »·U-41 ,._..._.,. U·~ ~ »-....... JI ....... u.,....... ,......., ~ ,~ ,,....... J~U-IO ,......,. ,...,.._,. S>-ll -10 .,.,,_,. ,,.,,. ,. U.»-10 ,...,. 10 U.37-10 ,..,._,. '7·1>-10 .w ,._,. ·-1'0 ,,._,. U -»-11 lt-12-71 ,~,.._,, •»-11 ,..,, 11 u-... 11 U-Jt " »-U-71 U ·Jt-11 •u-11 »-U--11 ll·:M-11 >~a.-11 >~»-II »-U-11 )7·-11 )7-11 U-»-71 1'-U-11 ,.,._,, ,..,.._,, U-Jt-.n lW7-72 ,.,._,, •-n ,..,,.._n ,..,.._,, JW7-n n u-n u.11-n •»-n JIJS-n •»-n 11.is..-n l11$-n 11-u-n M-»-n U -lt-11 •u-n 31.,.._n )6.J7-7) •»-11 l7»-7J JS·-73 )6.J7-ll JT·»-11 i.-11 73 •»-n )6.ll-ll 1~73 17·»-ll 11..,._n l7·--ll ,,.,,._,, )1---71 11-»-n )~,._... •ll-1>17-1'0 JS.U-IO '1·11-10 1~15-1'0 U-U-10 ~I U.1'-11 J1.u-n ,...._,, 21-u-n ,...._,, u.n-n Jt.»-n >W1-n l7·»-7l n-»-n U ·-ll lS-11-11 ,..,,_,, PGA tour quellfylng WISTllltN ll•OtohAL Catll-lleMlr ... 1 Nrt1•..,..u•" 204 -Crelg McCl•ll•n (Scothdele, Arl1 I 206 -M<lrli WI-( EKonGIOOI 101 -Cherin Ll.o CT•lpel, Taiwan),• toe -Louis it.-n CLe& V911ell; Jeff TllomMn IE99le, I.,_), ?Of Tom Telurn (Tuuon); J on l'ledl•r IC.mulllol , O.vld Vfncenl (Albvquer-1 JIO -Mllcll Moont y IAI0114uer4u•I. Butcll ~.., IR•no) I Tl'>t '°" l1 IJl•y•rs q ... 111y for IM nell-1 PGA q ... llfylng lourneMelll June 10·11 In Lne B-Vl>le, Fie.I NCAA ch:!::e!~nahlk• ,.. l Rick Del-, Pw-. 6,..._121 Jay Oon ·-· Ulall St. 71>*-IJt s1 ... n Smith. T-1w.-u1 RIO l'etlr, 9'..,..,, Y-,,,.._,., Joe lle..n, Orel Roe..1J ... ,,,_t•t lllcMnl Zdld, 8rltflem Y-. 7..,.._14 £d L~. Ft-St. 7,...__IC ller1 C-, Tnn A&M 7•~t4 Tommy.........,... New Mexl<o '1·11-10 KlrkJ-.~ 7,..._10 Don Hun.tr,,....Mewlco 7Mt-WI wrltflt W.-.il, o--ti• 7>~14 LAW•efl<• Fleld. Teu1 J,..._10 Oe11F-,Art-M 7J·71-IO ROii c-. USC 71-7>-Ma • .., Twn, Ok191*N St. n.~l.Q Denny •'191t. Texas A&M 7>-11-1 .. lllldwirclC-il, Te ... AloM n.11-1 .. Keith c....-. avu 1•11-1 .. Ray llMr, ....._. 7M>-t44 Jim K-. Or81 "'*9rt1 7>-11-144 <>or-. Krail\. use IH>-144 THm INdlr'I -arlpm Yount, S7•; Tun A&M, S7'; Orel lllobOrla, SIO; H11111to•" •;Ari-St,. 111; TeH'-.a; New Me1d<.01 •; ColoreclO, il7; Ten-. W7; Pw,.... #Id Georol•. •; Olll•llOm• St. •ncl USC, st:!; Aleaem., Sfl; Freano St S ... 1..o• Alamltoe TMUUOAY'laUULTI CJ:IMllO...._ ____ __ "l•ot ,.. 0..111'• ~ ,....,,,, '.W, I.II. 2 ... Tr•111 (DtlemMj, ... , ..... centa T,..... IM.,...,,, •• u_ .. c~ ..ieaas• ~9M rec. -My Holwyt alillfty IW ..... ), 17 •. t .. ._.; J_.,• _,..CT_,.!, 4.tt. >•. T•~"'*''"~'·*• Tlllr9r-o+4.i...Ml•c• .. llNl,t .. , a at, 2.•. °""""'''"' tCA ... r l, uo, sa. 1 H , ,,..... tllewlN ), ) W OH-0...-r ... flnt, "•wrtl'I rece MIH 111•0.el Wlt<lt , ... Vllltl ••••• llAO, 6 W, H.-y T-y IC•H•••I ..... , 4 OI, My l'Htllt l'IM (Meltl,• • SJeQ(ta Ct.41 .. ld ll4i.• P'll111 r«e Oreit II (,,._.;), UO, 4.JO. J 60. 0..W 0o ...... IW•""I• .,.,, UO, My s.ic,-1,. .. 11,,.1,4 60. llMtll rue DH·Me19 Wiie lll1bel IMllcllelll, UO, 1.40, UO; OH·1rll.N'nlllW!t Warrior cc;re ... rt. 6.40, 1 . .0, $,.0' MJ lll•m•n lprlnt ICUd•HI, 4.20. OH- 0eac111 .. 1 win. t2 nlCte t .. ) Mid U..w. $1 neci. C"ll ,.ldUUO. lev•nlll r--Kite lellt CTtM&uret. S.40, a ... t IO, A Utt•• Uk• "" (Adair), uo. 4.00; Jel ltt<k l!ety ICl\e.,.11, 6,00, U euue 0 10lpelcl'3060 •'"''"race """Nell .. lllun 11"11"-lon). tS 0., h .DO, 1 IO, Ature T• L.-. ca roolul, 4 •.I 40, C:..-I'm '•Ir IA491rl, • 20 u.,....,,..,1,.1c1un t0. U ~10 ti• 111.f+it .. 7~1 Nie 11..J)IM with 26 •llvllnt ll<k.U w ... '-••I U "lea Sia <011 .............. tl4.t0 wllll ,. WIMfnt ll<kelt ,.._,, --· · U ~1<11 Sb t<r•l<ll eot>-aolellon lleld llU loO wltll ll'lr• w llllllnt llcaeh II,,,_.__, -scraldll. Nlntll r.U AHi Pltrle<l ICleflU•I. 4 loO, >IO. J ... Mloflty c.. .... IPeullne), ..... S ... l'I., -Alt«-IAGeirJ, J 20. p ue<tll 11 •I H ldt'2.CI All•noen<e •.Jll French Open (et ~erlal -·· l'lnt "-........ Eddi• DI~ o.f 8 ru<t ""°nson, M , ... 1. • 1, Pel•• McN•me•e ditl. Gtoro-s Ooven, • J,. I, s 7 Metl't I«-·-....... P•ul Torr• def Ano-I GI-Ml, ._.l, M , • J, Bjorn Borg def Ceulo Mole, .. ,. 1-6, •·O, Woll ... Flt>ek Clef. F•r,...ndo Lu,..., M , '" 10 ·-··---·-$! ...... Han• M<lndl"ove Clei. Roal• c.s.11. ... 2. t I, Virginie llu1lcl Clef Ne,..IH Sc....ne, 1 S, •·1. Pit.,. Yesquei Clef Kim J-s, .. 1, 1 S P•m Cew,. del .,..,. o.111e ...... l. . , Adootlon Guild tournament tat '"'-1 llN<ll T-h Cl•ll lo\TUADAY'l laMIP'IMAI.. PAlaUtOI MM'•O... Noon -sw ... Mmon<vn C-.,. Dkk Mlller·lloe> '-llt-r 4 JO 4nt0fly Emer..,..Tlm P•-vs. J trry y., LI,.. Tom L-rd. ._.. ... • • m G<tll 019-w·S<nan Wel11tld.,. Oor"n lrll(l-Tlne MocllllUILI 10 JO Jiii JOllMton-Fren< .. °'9M "' Ellen Bryenl·He .. n WelMr. MllllM°'"" 1 JO p m Glasoow·L•o~erd •• Moclllalllll-Martln Ero 1 -J ollnelOt\·Mlk• Gercle n . Hll•ty Moor 0 1 .. aon ........ n. ,.._,,,, . ., 10 lO •.m. 0.•• Helfern-llruc• Murdy •l. Dl<k Oor.,,..Oennlt ltlllllnl. 1 JO lrVl"Q Gol-•O-Olck -ltffr n . 8 111 Ro_..r·Sleve -yeroon. Mell'a htll« Y9'en"9 10 . lO a.m Klno umben·Ed Ke.-r vs. L•nny LINlllOrlt'JIM """'· • IO -Bob P••H·Ro ..... r H . Geor" Verd10--i1m Helton, Mia., kAlen vet ... •• • •.m Henc:v ~r•tton·H•I Stretton vs. C.,01 M•rtln·Oon Merlin. N,,..n -P.i McC"..,be-Jlm C..ldllrw-Yi. winners of Slrellon·Slr•llon vi. Mertln- M•rlln J Merilyn Slrew·Dlck Oorua n . Svnny Ellloll·.........,, ""'·~ High achool U.-. ... \ M, Al_.. "91y 14 1111....nWt .... y --....-. "'""' ........ LH Cll IU oei. a.rr..m, ... , ...... Ma.Kerl, ... 1. oef si. .. Metullt, M : oef. Kl"IL M ; trumfleld (LI l•I I ... ~7 • ._., _, ... I; Plu lclllMI IU IOll ........ w. -... 1. S<llenll Ill lootN, 1".-... J.6-2. 0..- 1.Ull•·(ApOC>lenco Ill splll wllll S<oct Melllllt-Otclier '"4, I•. "'Ill wltll R- Jollnsrud. ~7. 7-S. 0.•1-Jung<I• IU 1os11•. w , _, l·S, ,_. Cer-WI MM U'h, ~-VHelft Wt 11 .... EMeraon ICdMJ Clef CMl<len, M , Olf. Turne clllf, M . dtf SoMr,.,.,., ... 2; dti. Wllllems, ._.l; Jlmene1 ICdMI loet 2• • ..., ... 2, ~ ... ,, Heyward CCdMI, WOii '"4, ... 1, • 2 •... I;~ IGOMI -.. 1. 1·S, ._I, .. ,. 0..- Ewl,..Sulll•en ICdMI lpllt wllll VOWftlto Holl, M , '-4, oef. Mont..,..,,...v·Pllkln, M , H ; Peul· .. sller CC<IMI WOii ... ,, ... J; M , W. CIF pl•yona HMll'INAU 4-A Corone del Me< U 'h, P•IOI Y•r-2'h Mlr1l .. t• 20Vt, 11e...,1v Hlllt 7 .... >-A lll lv•rsld• Poly 14. Leoun• •••ell H (Rlv•rtlde Poly WIM on gemes, 102·tl Pelm Scl<lnot ltl ..... S... C,.,....,t• 1 .... 1-A Calebe-1'YJ, khurT '"" Le Mlbrl IJV., Sen hrNl'dlno 12 .... l·A TllacMr 11, Lo~ol• 10 C••o•nter•• 16, C...I 11 WCWNn " .... ~ a,......_...,.. , .. CWl'ttlM ~) .... ................ IN -I . .i.t\lltefl IOero), 11 .... I Wiiia~ L..9 Jwe.ftl, 11 "• J ·--CC..lefll. II•; • _,_ IMui<l, 11 ti, L ....... ,~1.1a.1a. 2" -I J•llllHll IOer•YI. U 1$, I Wllll-1Velle¥ OWlftlelll, 14.41; J """"" (Mollrl, MA. 4. try...t IMwlrl, 24.il, S WIMI-ILa Jere.ft), l4 .. ; It• ......... -•. ·---(U.--"''· ....... -I , Mc(I-lo-NI, U .lt, 2. Le"' IC.,,. .. Olt), M.ll, I. Aftltur IS--1. 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Al..., (lenton C.-tlftt •IMI 111 a.r1noal, P IM c ... a, 111•-C••••, 110111111111 Cree•, lhc• CrtO I ••ralllte ea.,. t• Tem'• ••ec•. Tom's l'le<e u,..,._ 19 lte<IL Cr-I.AUi, llle<k C'"k l..alie, lt"811 Crwk. IMnwlll Cr-. Sliver UM, S'#M19"' Cr9". Twin La .... an~ 1u,i,......., 1..-l. tw111 l.- tMem,.,...,.1, Vlralftl• o--. W•llw 1111- (Cllf'lt FMll C:.,..rMW W ~of Wet•. L.HVlt1 ~ C .... --le ...,_. ar1c1991. Misc. ... , OCC's Landson tops track field ·· NORWALK -A trio of Oranae Coaat College distance runners hope to leave their marks hiah up on the board Saturday when the state's top community coUece track and field finishers eet together at Cerritos College. Action begins at 5:30 p.m. with the long jump, and running events get under way at 6. Saddleback and Golden West, meanwhile, hope to make their pres ence known in the dJscua, shot put and javeUn throws, with G WC's Mike Scarlett own1n1 the Southern California cham· pionship in the javelin with a 209 -10 effort last week at M i.raCosta College . OCC ALSO boasts a Southern Cal champ in Mike Laosdon who raced to a 10,000 title in last week's finals. Lansdon's best mark in the 10,000 is 30: 19, and the former Edison star figures to get his toughest challenge Saturday from El Camino's Alfredo Rosas. Rosas was a fourth -place finisher last week, but he was just ge tting over an illness. He's also the defending state champ in the event. The Pirates also boast the Southern California champ in the 5,000 in former Costa Mesa High s tandout John Gerhardt. Gerhardt owns a 14 :19 in that event. His closest competition should come from Citrus' Mark Ruelas . THE CLOSEST challenger from the north in the 5,000 is West Valley's Ken Halladay with a 14 : 44.00to his credit. That's the same time as OCC's Brian Harold who finished third in the Southern Cal finals and is also qualified for Saturday's action. G WC's S.c,arlett took ttie Southern Car with a 209-0~. his fourth best javelin throw of the year. His best is a 224·10. second in the nation among community col- From Page C1 le1e javelin throwers and best in lhestate. His binest challen1e mat come from Paul Kulak fro!$ Pierce, but Kulak managed onlyf. fourth-place finish with a 204-0 e .. fort. SCARLE1T HAS also qualif!ecl in the discus with a fifih·place 149·1 effort, but he'll be hatd· pressed to stop Saddlebact ') talented duo of Jim Doehring anp Thad Binley. Doehring fin1sbed second with a 167·3, while Binley was fourth at 150-5 Doehring and teammate Mar~ Strange are also among the state TRACK finall.5ts In the shot put. Ooehrine won the Southern Cal with e 57-111,Aa heave while Strange waii third atS2·10. In the women's competition, OCC presents a challenge for the team title with 3,000-meter s pe c i a Ii st s Lis a Go n za l efl (10 : 11 .00) and Barbie Ludovise ( 10 : 10.00) capable of scoring well. Ludovlse equaled her best ef- fort at last week's Southern Cal meet, and it was good enough for third place. IN ADDITION, OCC ha~ LeeAnna Delgado in the 400 hurdles Cl :03.4) and long jumpers Monique Von Lutzow Cl8·ll~•) and Cyndy Morr1s"on ( 18-911.~ who finished third and sixth. respectively, last week. Dale Sprin.k was second in tht 800 with a 2: 15.39 clocking, while OCC's Vaness a Dennison wa~ second in the 100 at 12. l . The Pirate women were third in Southern California behind Santa Monica and Cerritos which tie0 for the tHle. -By Curt Seede~ ANGELS FIRE FREGOSI. • • although the Phillies finished as high as second in 1964. It was in '64, however, that the Phillies also squandered a 10 game lead in the last three weeks of the season. In taking over the Angels, Mau ch finds himself with a team loaded in offensive talent - although it has shown its poten- tial only in spurts up to now - and thin in the pitchin, depart· ment. Their record is 22·25 and they trail the Western Div~ion leading Oakland A's by 7'1'l games. "What this team needs is for every player to play to bis poten· tial," analyzed Mauch of the Angels ... There will be no dramatic 'changes right now. Nothing drastic or radical." Mauch says he has some ideas on what the Angels need, but he'll reserve final judgment for later. "It's really hard to say what's best for a team until you've Ii ved with them for a while," said Mauch. "I have some idea.s. but I worivt know until I live with them." Asked if that meant Mauch had a timetable, be said no. ''I'm a fast learner ... or I'd like lo think I am," he said. Then he added, "I'd better be. "I have no pressure. The only pressure I've ever had in my life has been sell·imposed and, if you know what you·re doing, then there's no pressure." The pressure was evident on Fregosl, though. Autry has spent millions ln the free-agent market tryin1 to buy some of baseball's best players. In doing so, though, he created a From Page C1 "win or else" situation. Fregosi, unfortunately, fell wi der the "or else" category. : "Jimmy has been a friend <)f mine for years," Autry said Thursday. "However. we have lo think of the best interest.I of the club and for this reason, ~ think a change is necessary." i - Fregosi was hired in June 4f 1978 and, in '79, he guided the Angels to their first-ever cham· pionsbip. The Angels saeged miserably last year, thougtt, winning only 65 of 160 games. . ''I'm thankful for the op- portunity that Gene and Buzzle Bavasi gave me to manage over the last three years. I just wish the team had played belt.er I think they're an outstanding group of men and I wish all of them the best of luck the rest of the season," said Fregosi in a prepared statement. Mauch, in also hoping the team plays better, said he ex- pects nothing more from ttie An1els than he does from himself. "All I ask is that you go at it as hard as you can every day.'' Mauch said. "And if you can't do that, tell me before the game starts. "I'm very excited about ~ job. If I wasn't, I wouldn't haft ta.ken It." · Fregosi was excited, too at the beginning. "I don't know where Jim ls and I don't really expect hiQ) to come home for a while," •ail Fre1osi's wife Janet from lbelr home in Santa Ana. •'I think f1e juat wants to get away frol)l everything for a while. : "I think he just wants lo forg't about what happened." • I . MASTERS TRACK MEET. ~ e tident I can make it into the state finals." Gallagher ran a lifetJme best of 9: 00.23 in the 3,200, while Meyer finished in a non · qualifying sixth!._ despite his personal best of 9: w.58. "Butler's pace really helped Shawn <Gallagher>," aald Cd.M Coach Brian Hunsaker. ''That'a when he run1 his ~t. la a futer tempo." Jefferies, who quallfled at. Valencia Hlch Wednesday foe the state meet ln bl• favorite event, the discus <178•1), failed to make the final cut In the shot, hJ1 ~t of thrM pull cmb' 56-7~. Mn.l.1 added the 100-meter low hurdles a_nd blth Jump to the dla-c:ua f Of' her at.ate meet •veota, flftlahlJll tecond ln the burdl• (H.32) to !':latnore't Zona Cbandltr, who tot~ etrl)' lud •• Milla clipped a buf'41le wllb her lead le1 after at.a.rt.lat. poor. ly, Cbandler wtnnta1 ln H.a · " "111 1oal1 were almpa:y, to quallf'y arid I Cftd," Hid VW., .. So lrm happy." JIUls dffNd H to earn 1 1pot 1n the hi.lb Jump fteld. Durand pu&btd Doftna emu. of Culftf Ctt7 to a CIF riCon1 2:06.01 with a a 2:06.42. off h. lifetime best of 2:05.7. . St>e pulled to within an eyel; of Curtis ln the final 100 mete , but could not catch the fleei Curtis. "I feel totally dcaln I've never fell thls way alter • cace," said Durand. ; Durand 1lnd CurUs ca'!l.1 throu.th ln 58.3 for the rirst «f met~ra. • Villanueva finished fourth ~ the 3,200 wlth her 10 :38.'°• Ro1•ra sped to a 12.12 ln tbe 1~ and Kelley waa fifth In the ton• Jump at 17·n~. > Despite t.belr failure to eari 1tate bertbl, HVtra.1 other are athletet turned in oullt.ndln tfforu -but came awa · without c.b.4* 10111. ; JS.bind M~er lo t.M 3,200 •at Fountain Valley Junior Bot Erle~ la a 8: 13.9$ and lbt Batont' 1,IOO relay team cl Steve Dtel•y <O.I> t Emu• Rury (48.1), Todd Andrtwt (4t.7) ud Rod Enaery (4J'.ll turned • b.l1hl1 reapect~btt 3:11.tl. R01en J.t milled ln t.bt with a at.• (llx\h) and M.H1'1 Vldch KeUtJ 1'U lb ln the • (1:11.11). ..... ,..-------------------------------------------------------------O-r1_n~g-•_c_o•_•_to_A_1L_v_P_1L_OT~f-rld_•~Y·_M~1~y~29~._19~8_1 _______________ C1_, I ~ THE f-'MILt' CIRCtl by 811 Keane 11Thot man said on X-roted word." by Brad Anderson "After this, wait untll he's out of his dog- house before you tell him to roll overl" . Jl'DGE PARkt:R G\Rt'U :l,O J1M CRAZY ,ABolJT LORD , ', PLUSHBonoM, MYNA··HS1S ~ · So KIND AND CONSIDfR,A T~. AC~SS 57 BefOft UNITED F11turt Syndlcalt \ ' 1 Splct 59 Cut "'11dly Thurtd1y'1 Puzzle SOIVed • ' , 8 Accompllah-81 Niter111 ' ment 64 Pletot • ,.,o Young 11th 87 Oppoaed , 14 Spilt 88 GOYtmlMlll ~~~~;...:~~ 15 Girt'• name report· • 18 PIMlt ttrlUI 2 word• 17 Olutlonout 70 Trim 19 Roca· Scot 71 1-92 .hip 20 Pr• 1935 tren 72 Lowly epot1 ·~ 21 Llbtfllecl 73 Priotnlci.n .. p en.,. c11y ·• 25 Turf 7• Kilt wttr• I 2t Al1empl 75 NOi emw1 27-Wttl i• .29 OflllC lltterl DOWN ., .J 1 CMer 1 Yleld .~~3 Lib« CWO· 2 ~ #• 3A Weapon 8 Alnk 24 C4o0'1 coueln 48 lmpttMed 38 AciOtf 4 P'*I 27 Canine name 5 t OfenctlN 1 ~ Time of "'1 I~ 21 "Thttt ought &4 Negallw . 2 - -"" 8 °'*" to bt -oontrectlon ;. ~Lall 70trmanttvet _,.. 55Pounctaor ; ~4 Aodentt I Mount.t\ 30 Found Qtl\Ot 1 45 ¢onfMe: ~ 32 Pronoun H -Predelh' BIGGt:ORGE by V1rg11 Partch (VI P) "C1n't you get 1ny more speed out of this clunker? Ht'• getting aw1y." DE~'\IS THE '9t~:\ \('E Hank Ketchum r ----<.... ::> --I c: > - '\, '(..-~ ; 29 Then THEY put it 1n a BIGGER piggy bank by Harold Le Ooux ,.------- ! l 1 1 .. by Jim Davis TELL ME iHA1'5 NOT A TRAFFIC COP'S HAI YOU'RE WEARI~&, OKAY, IT'S NOT A TRAFFIC COP'S HAT GARFIELD ' 2 wordl t ZlcMry -35 'ert• lndlen ..... ~ f7 Cenllle 10 ...... ,. 37 8-dly formed 58 $1t of YalUel ...,.,._.,._......., ' '9 Pronoun 11 i....ntng· 38 Aeclltltlon IO htn - do -end """· 39 ,.,eolltt 82 Location Dolrcf J.2 Nol'!*! 41 Giit 13 ~ Pref ·62 • .,... 13 ~ '3 04tft 15 c.n.. pert '3 lriOi t• c.. nldlnemt .. Of lrtllnd 14 l coL 22 DutCfl '-' 4t Lode ~ II Mlkt llCt PEA\l'TS ~ Jf SHOE '\'\(''' I'M SURPRISING AUNT FRITZI WITH THIS BIRTHDAY CAKE 60RDO i ' · l ... ___ t.J ! BRABBLE Ill, lllE.14tN \ I CAME. OVf.ll fo ~I( ~oo 'fo r~"'"f. ~ Bft01\l£.l,~h\AN. I \1£0S ~tA.-4 Otfll£ SSW eicA~t~'~E MAt' ~'( 141 ~t DR.SMOCK C'OC,-OR ! we'R" <91!1..,..,.. I N <9 NO MO"fOR ~l!!'SF'ONSE!S fl "'lO M -rl-i 9 PA..,-1 l!!N,.. ! TMANK VOV .. l1M 6LAD VOU LIKE IT HOW MANY CANDLES ARE YOU USING!> M£ ~E~ AW. ~'i.lfW I <M'r ~ eu~t M£ lllOM'f UT AMO 111~ ~ ~c, so l.O.JOI AMO 1\lt ~~~~ ll' IMO t!E. CA"5l 11£ n.•-. S fil.UE $ ~QR~:~ ~l.~E ~ 14\W'f t.Of.l'11. S-1'1 C• .. ~ ...... s~1e 1ne FOR BETTER 011 ··oa •o R8t: YARR'/ J! YRWXJJ0° ScPDOL'6 ALMOSf OJER! $'·l9 SO l'LU~£ MAKE t:R Wl'fM 1-hM 6£.lA~E. ME.0S Qf{1'4it-l& l)'S lLl. Cft~;z." ~ by Charles M Schulz 6UT 'r'OU CAN STOP SHOUTIN6, I "COME MCK.~ANE!' by Tom K Ryan ... , .. ,..., ... ,' '" by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushmiller ···SHE WONT rELL HER AGE by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk FAIR 15 ABOUT A5 GOOD A5 ffV.J LIFE E.VER (£r5 ! by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont -,'S IGH:- MORe ANeS'T'HE!"f'IC , Pt,eAse by Lynn Johnston -- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 Instead of counting sheep, come see our mattress and box spring prices and count the dollars you'll save. Our prices are so low you'll probably be wondering how we can do it. Not only that, but we have a selection that wi 11 open your eyes. King size, Queen size, doubles, twins. Ajreloom mattresses are famous for their ffne construction and carefully- crafted quality. So if you've been lying awoke nights on a bad mattress, come see our Aireloom Mattresses. Our fine mattresses will let you rest easier. So will our prices . . ' . I • ' Your favorite Designer wi II be happy 1o assist you. • • Pr.ofessi.on al Interior Designers 22.1 s Har.bor Blvd. Costa Mesa 646-0275 Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fri. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. " ; . ---.... _.......,. .................... -~----------------------- Daily Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 INTERMISSION 03 CLASSICAL MUSIC 07 TELEVIEWS 08 A bemused look at the new Lone Ranger ... D6 . - '1 New· ballet troupe is on its toes } More than • 1ust tutus, toe shoes By MARY JANE SCARCELLO OltMo.H-,l"IWMeft Dancers of the newly formed California Coast Ballet Theatre h ave been on t h eir t oes - literally since February for t hei r Saturday n ig h t performance. "We began with rehearsals about two times a week, and we're up to fi ve d ays a week, plus iodividaJ practice," said a me m ber of the ballet company . It will get off the ground with an inaugural performance at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Chapman College Auditorium. Ticket prices range from $3.50 to $6.50 hnd a re available at Ticketron outlets. More informa- tion is available by calling 993-4760. Tim Hill, the company's ad- ministrative director , and Tricia Coran , artistic director , have d anced together for more than 15 years, and or iginated the new group. "Our tryouts wer e open to everyone, and we're not affiliat- ed with any studio," Ms. Coran said dur ing a rehearsal in Fullerton She spoke while keeping an eye on dancers wor king through last-minute details in routines. ·'Right now we're funded by individuals, but we've gotten our non-profit status and hope to pay dancers by the week inst ead of for each performance," she said. The company has been given costu m es by owners. o r a ballet school, is adding to the supply for the performance and depends heavily on volunteers, she added. Staging for the show will in- clude creati ve lighting by Mother Duck Productions which will s ubstitute for e xpe nsive scenery and props. This is especially t rue in "Dark Star," a ballet described by Ms . Coran as being "the future as seen in the 1950s, not as we see it now. It's more like the bullet-sha ped rockelships from Buck Rogers than the sleek mod els of Star T rek.'' The company also will dance selections from "Sleeping Beau. ty." the only pieces in the pro- gram not choreographed by Ms. Coran. Her interpretations of Haiku poetry, as danced to contem· porary music, are included in a mixture of dr ama and comedy. A French dance, performed by two men and a wom an in courtly The head-krwcker turns toe-tapper By JOEL C. DON Of -D .. ly ,.,,.. St.tft H is hulkin g fra m e stands 6 foot 4. He taps the soales at 225 pounds. For nine years, he cracked plenty a head and torpedoed m any an ill-fated chest as a tight end and linebacker for the Min- n esota Vi kings and la ter the New Orleans Saints. ALTHOUGH JOHN Beasley hasn't received a pass or carried lhe ball professionally for Cive years, he still carries his weiJbt like a Sherman tank nuzzling through rush hour traffic on the Santa A.na Freeway. So you can expect that he'll be in the best of shape for his first t a p -dance recital at La guna Beac h's Irvine Bowl Saturday nieht. A little soft shoe and some fan· cy footwork will be ln the lineup, aa Beasley joins some \00 other students from Brenda's Dance Studio in Laguna Beach for "Tap Spectacular '81." Somewhere amid the tiny tap- pers and the older foot stompers you'll find the towering Beasley 1lldin.a 00 the dance noor 81 11 he were born with taps rather than n.abber clea~ on hia feet. A nED ASTAJaE be'• not, but then Astaire never bad tbe opportunity to have hil l.nnardl knocked about 1n a Super Bowl 1ame. But at leaat Fred A1talre would have kaoft bet~r than to b•v• broa&bt aloQa a pair ot f ootbtlll cleata to hli nnt dance lefson. Dance ln1tructor Brenda ltalatlill WM not amuted. "SIM threw me out beeause I wu mMtna r:narkl on tbe dance floor," Btuley lauahed. "I bad ·to ,o out and buy 1ome tap 'abOel." II J~:_rp Ullnk about a Jot• ......... .,...,ww..-. d a n c ing bi g bruiser rrom Laguna Beach, don't waste your time. He's heard them all. And he's told a few himself. · 'l knew sooner or later some- one was going to ask me if I knew how to tap dao.ce," he s aid. "I knew I'd have to push it out." BEASLEY, WHO works for a Texas-based steel import-export company, has had m any an op- portunity to "push it out" for the · disbelievers. He once launched into a soft s hoe break while waiting to see a Fluor Corp. executive about a loan. He recalls the secretary rac- ing into the omce exclaJmine "He 's doing ll; he's doing it right here." Beasley isn't s ure if his im- promptu lobby performance helped, but he knows he walked away with the loan. The folks back in Texas have gl ven a mixed resp6nJe. "I really 1et some weird reac- tions ," he aaJd. "Now you have t o understand the intelllgence of Tex ans. They think of us <Calllomlans) u granola: fruits and nuts. costumes, is a tongue-in-c heek poke at ballet taking itself too seriously. T he first time through, the dancers are prim and proper . But the second time, the dainty dance becomes a comedy of er- rors as the trio battles with ballet as the weapon In a more serious presentation ''lt'I a &,reat WI)' to I~ ln condition.'' He know• some football pJ11er1 hl\'e taken up ball•. But for a nwnber of rtatodl -f some unprintable -you woa•t ever ftnd John BeuJey ln a palt of U1htt. "Ballet 11 tot.ally out, I doe't Ute t.bt form," be uaerted. And for a IUf wbo aav• up Monday ·1110t football a "u aco to 8tteld l.llf dance 1..,.., with a Spanish fl avor, a couple dan ces in the spotlight which cast s a s hadow on a screen behind them . At the end of the d a n ce, the "sh adow" shows 1tsell to be another couple Most innovative of the dances presented Saturday will be "The Harpooner," which opens with a na rration by Bill Lawenda and be ha• to be serious about lt. ''The 111ore 1erlou1 be becomes, the crazier they <W-1• neaa usodatet) .t.hln.k be ii." 1ald llla.J{alataea, ''I Just say ll'• due to a de- lay• reaction concuulon," added Beasley. "I i..11 tbtm 'One too manr Cl'ONlnJ patternl bJ Beatley. "If notbln1 else," he con· duded.I "lt'• f areat convena· tion piece." Debra Winston and Tim Hill dance as goldfish (left) and Nadia Ansari (below J is dramatically costumed as Queen of the Ether Creatures in the ballet "Dark Star" for the California Coast Ballet Theatre's premiere per/ ormance. is danced by Tim Hill to music m ingled with t he recorded sounds of whales "I created the character right out of the old Yankee whaling ships," said l.awenda, who has been a writer and actor for 29 years ··[t's an exc1line marriage of the arts.·· he added "Spoken word, dance move- ment and even sounds are an un- usual combination," Ms. Coran admitted. '"We've stayed with traditional dance ste ps , but we're not offering JUSt 'classical' ballet "We hope to offer something for everyone, not JUSl the usual toe shoes and tutus " Best bets for the weekend FACE OF AN ARTIST -This "Self-Portrait" by artist Jack Beal is among the exhibit "Inside/Out: SeU Beyond Likeness " no~ hanging at the Ne wport Harbor Art M'uaeum. The exhibit will be on display through July 22. See story 0 5. JOSE FELICIANO wlll appear at Dis- ney land Saturday as part of the theme park's "Latin Night." He wlll perform on the Rivers of America stage In Frontlerland at 1:30 and 10: 30 p.m. Playing elsewhere In the park wilt be Cella Crut, Guato Sliva and Albtrtlco Perez. "PETER AND THE WOLi'" wlll bt performed by the Irvine Symphony Orchestra at 2 p.m . Sunday, May 31, In the Turtle Rock community centtr on Sunnyt'IUI Road off Turtte Rock Drive In trvlne. Also on the eoerMSa are a. Jamin Britten's "Slnfontetta, Op. 1" end Aarpn Coptancfs "Mualc fOf' the :rhMter." Tick.ts are $3 general admission, $2 wntors end stu. dents. Children under 12 ere free with 1 payfnO 4dutt. . 02 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29. 1981 -PLAYS------ "ANYTHING GOES'' Is on the boards at South Coast Repertory In Costa Mesa. (See Best Bets on the Weekender cover for details) "THE HOT L BALTIMORE" opens tonight at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. The Lanford Wiison drama plays Fridays and S.turdays at 1 p.m ., Sundays at 2 p.m ., through June 21. Call 675-3143 for tickets. "UNCOMMON WOMEN AND OTHERS," a look into the lives and loves of a group of seniors at a prestigious Eastern women's college, plays tonight and Saturday at Orange Coast College's Orama Lab Theater. Curtain time at 8 p.m . Tickets, at $3, are available at the door. Call S56-SS27. "RUNAWAYS," a new play by Jay Christopher, will appear from Wednesday, June 3, through Saturday, June 6, at 8 p.m . In the Artists Theater, 62S Park Ave., Laguna Beach. "AN EVENING WITH WILLIAM Needles and William Stlakespeue" will be presented tonight at 8 by the UC Irvine Theater Gulld In the university's Fine Arts Concert H•U. Needles, a well-known classical actor, wtll perform selected sollloquJes. For Information, Cjt II 833-6617 or 833-6614. "THE ROBBER BRIDEGROOM," a musical comedy by Alfred Uhry, and Robert Waldman, wlU be performed Tuesday, June 2, through Saturday, June6,at8p.m . lnthe UC Irvine Fine Arts Little Theatre. Presented by the school's Music Theater Workshop. Call 833-6617 for de- tails. "ALL DRESSED UP ••• " by San Diego p1a7wright and UC Irvine graduate Tom Siiber wll play Saturday and Sunday, June 6-7 at 8:30 p.m. In the Irvine Cultural Center, 17302-A Daimler St., I rvlne. For reservations call 979-1 S82 or 979-317 6. "CHEVALIEaE" plays· nightly except Mon· days at 8:l0 and weekends at 3 p.m . through June 7 at South Coast Repertory's Second • Stage Theater, 655 Town Center Or., Costa Mesa. Call 957--4033 for tkket lnform~tlon. "WAIT UNTIL DARK," a suspense drama, contlnes through June 13 on Friday and Satur· day evenings at 8 In the Saddleback Valley Community Theater, 2S141-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. Reservations are being taken at 49s-6SS9. "GOOD NEWS" plays two more weekends at Golden West College In Huntington Beach. The revival of a Roaring '20s musical wlll be on- stage Fridays and Saturdays at 8:l0 p.m . Call 894-9885 for tickets. "STORY THEATER" Is on at the Newport -.OAll>S T °""' & Coun1ry ond 0 Zo,,. ~d" CustQl'ns Avooloble ~ ~ w.,u. WAX-25 *"" u..d bcoQ,-bes• pnce1 Restaurant &t Cantina Wmntr of So C1/1f l{tfl111r1nl Wnltr'I Ar..,.rd 1979 '"' '80 10 AM to 2 PM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BUFFET BRUNCH • Cht( Carved ROM4 Oft(• MNt Loe(• Bwgundy o( 'Btt( • Egga • S.uaget • Cftpet • Bllnua • Potaton • Pana.kw • Enchlladu • RJc:. • Taquitoe • Bunutloe • QuaadJU. • PMtriet • Fmh Fruit • Ownpegn• • Much Mott 719N. MAIN ST. ~--- SANTAANA 1 blk. So. of 8uffuml ·~(714) 547-0921 .. _ ... ___ CA't"UIM# illliiliii Harbor Acton Theater, 390 Monte Vista St., Costa MeM. The lmprovlutlonal show run.a three more wHkends, playing ThursdaY"t through Saturdays at 8 p.m ., Sund4ty May 31, at 2:30 p.m. C.1163l·.S110 tor reservations. "EQUUS," • straf\99 detitctlve thriller and psychologlcal my1tery, continues tonight through Sunday In Full•rton Coll999's Studio Theatre. Tickets •v•ll•ble at the door. "SHENANDOAH," a musical eboUt a Virginia famlly caught up In the maelstrom of the Civil Wart continues at the Laguna Moulton Playnouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Shows on Tuesdays throuoh Saturdays at 8 p.m. until June 6. For reservations call 494-0743. "CAROUSEL," Rodgers and Hammerstelns' well-known muslclllJ wraps It up this weekend at the Plummer Aualtorlum, Lemon and Chap. man Streets In Fullerton. Performed by the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company, the show plays tonight and S.turday at 8:l0 p.m., Sunday at 2:l0 p.m . "DAMES AT S•A," a send-up of HollyWOOd musicals, continues at the Gem Theater, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove. Performances on Wednesday through Sund4ty evenings at 8:l0. Closes June 13. For reHrvatlons, call 636-7213 Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. "THE WIZ" Is on the boards all summer at the HarlecM'ln Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. Performances of the black mu1lca4 version of "The Wizard of Oz" are nightly except Mondays at varying curtain times. tall 979-5511. "THE MAX FACTOR," a comedy starring Cesar Romero, continues at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave Pico, San Clemente. Performances nightly except Mon- days through June 13. "A MIDSUMMER ' NIGHT'S DREAM" con- ch1des Its run at the Westminster Community Thea~ 7272 Maple St., Westminster, this week . The Shakespearean comedy plays tonight and Saturday at 8:l0 p.m. Call 99s-4113. "GUYS AND DOLLS/' the popular musical by Frank Loesser, Is on at Elizabeth Howard's Curtain tall Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real, Tustin. Curt.In times vary. Call 838-1S40. -CLASSICAL MUSIC----< ORANGE COAST COLLEGE'S 80-volce AU- Cotlege Choir and 40-member trombone choir wlll perform In concert tonight at 8 In the OCC Auditorium. The show wlll feature the vocal choir singing songs of Americana and the trombone choir, called Bones West, presenting Mort Stephens' "Vineyards." Both choirs will combine for Louis Blerne's "The Solemn Mass" as well as selections by Bach and Edwin Earle Fergusen. Tickets, at $1 .50, are available at the door. Call S56-SS27 for Information. "EVENING CONCERT of Classical Works" will be presented Saturday at 8 p.m. at The Orange County Master Chorale Proudly Announces Guest Artists: The Limeliters in 2 exclusive Oranee Count y appearances SaturdaI, June 6 Plummer udltorlum Lemon & Chapman Full~on 8:00 p.m . } . Sunday, June 7 Irvine Bowl Laguna Canyon Rd. Laouna Beach 4:00p.m. UNIVERSITY OF CllFOllA, IRYINE COMMITTEE FOR ARTS presents LE CAMEMBERT • Traditional Music of France: BourrMe, Polku, Marches, branles, and FotklOnga Saturday, May 30, 1981 - 8p.m. -VIiiage Theatre General $5, UCI Fac./Swtf/Alumnl, Sen. Cit. and Othef Stu· dentt 14. end UCI Studenta $3. Tickets avalla- t»e at AMJa 8ox Office Mon.-Frl. 9:30am· 4pm. For tun'* Info call 833«rT8. 0 0 • • oz Le Camembert : French music at UCJ University High Scttool's Little Theater by the school's Classical Music Club. The concert wilt Include classical pieces from medieval to con- temporary times. Admission Is free and dona· tlons accepted. For reservations, call SS2-186S. THE IRVINE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA will present Prokeflev's "Peter and the Wolf" In the Turtle Rock Community Center Sunday at 2 p.m . See Best Bets on Weekender cover for de- tails. GABRIEL FAURE'S "REQUIEM" will be performed by the Orange Coast College Master Chorus on Sunday, May 31, at 4 p.m. In the OCC Auditorium. The ~voice chorus, con- ducted by Justin Colyar, will also present "Songs of Love and Spring" during the second half of the concert. Tickets are $2 at the door. Call S56-SS27 for information. -DANCE------ ETHNIC DANCES from Hawaii, Tonga, Fiji, moa, Tahiti, the Phllllplnes, China, Japan, Siam, Arabia, India and the Caribbean wlll be performed by Orange County students whose families come from those countries at 2 p.m . Sunday, May 31 , in th' Donald R. Wash Memorial Auditorium of Garden Grove High School. Tickets, available at the door, are $3.50 for adults, $3 for children under 12. CABARET AND FOLKLORIC danus of the Middle East will be featur9d at a student re- cital at 8 p.m . Thursday, June 4, In the Orange Coast College Gymnasium Dance Studio. Free to the public. s o a a a a sac -GALLERIES----- ARTISTS PROM ISRAEL, Europe and America wUI be featured In "The Stm of the Artt " an auction at 7:30 p.m. Saturday In the oas(s C•nt•!i. Sth and Narcissus Avenues, Corone del Mer. TM auction, SC*lsored by Temple Bat Yahm, will allO Include a number of condominiums, vacation homes and dlMers. For Information and reservations, cell Alta Teller at 644-9223. "THE ART OF FRANK INTeRLANDI," political cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times and some 150 other newspapers, Is on display at the Museum Shop, 27S4 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, through June 30. Open from 10 a.m . to S:30 p.m . dally except Sundays and Mondays. For Information, call S40..()808 or 644-~SAS. SIX SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA artists-Mike Nichols, Tom Wooldrlge, Al Porter, Don Hen- dricks, Mary Gibb and Betty Weis -are ex- hibiting their watercolors In the Designs Recycled Gallery, 619 N. Harbor Blvd., Fullerton, from Wednesday, June 3, througl'I J une 29. For Information, call 879-1391. THE LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM of Art will hold an all-media membership show beginning Friday, June S and r unning through June 19. The museum, at 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach, Is open from 11 :30 a.m . to .t:lO p.m . dally ex- cept Tuesdays and holidays. Admission Is free. Call .C9US31. -ETC.------ cH•1sT1AN SINGER AMY GRANT, along with the OeGarmo and Key Band, will appear at 7:l0 p.m. Saturday In the Melodyland Chris- tian Center In Anaheim. Tickets are $7 at the door. LE CAMEMB~T, a group that specializes In the traditional music of France -bourrees, marches, polkas and branles -will perform at 8 p.m . in UC I rvlne's Fine Arts VIiiage Theatre. Show also includes Frenctt dancing. Tickets are $S general admission, $3 for UCI students and $.t for other students, senior citizens and UCI staff, faculty and Alumni As- sociation members. For information, phone 833-6378. SINGER-GUITARIST JOSE FELICIANO will appear at Disneyland Saturday night. See Best Bets, Weekender cover, for details. JOHNNY TILLOTSON, one of the first singers to achieve popularity both In country and pop music circles, w ill play In Knott's Berry Farm's Good Time Theatre at 7:30, 9 and 10:30 p.m . Saturday. AMERICA'S JEWISH ARISTOCRACY will be discussed In a lecture by Stephen Birmlnham, author of "Our Crowd" and "California Rich," at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 31 , in the Santa Ana High School Auditorium. Sponsored by the Jewish Community Forum. Tickets, at $6, are available at the door beginning at 6:30 p.m . J . ,:. .. :: < .· .. ~ :; .. :; .. .. .. .. .. .. ., Orange Coast DAILY PILOT~rtday, May 29, 1981 A Family Shopping/Dining & Entertainment Center Stuck together in the 'Golden Gooae' segment of tory Theater' at the Newport Har'bor Actor& Theater are (from left) Wayne May Patricia Gilchrist, Tom Brent, Robbi Schoonover, David Natkin, Denise Dale, ert Knapp, Ale:randra Robertson, Albertson's • Bank of America • Biibo Baggins • Coco's/Reuben's • Command Performance Oolphln Hair Fashions • Edwards Cinema • Fash'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades Mesa Verde Florlst • Mesa Verde Travel • Mione's • Music Market • Photography by Jelfrey Southern California Optlcal •Spa Lady• Swensen's • V1ck1's Sunshine Factory Elizabeth Tierney and John David Cruz. A f ahled success tNHAT By TOM 1Tl1JS Of ... _., ........... It may, indeed, be "kid stuff," but the Newport Harbor Actors Theater's production of "Story Theater" la a colledion ol well-told tales that should appeal to all ages. Originated by Chicago's famed Seeond City Improvisational company and adapted for the sta1e by Paul Sills, "Story Theater" takes a sprightly look at some age-old fables you probably remember reading or bearing as children. And the NHAT ensemble, un-1-NT-ER_Y_SSl_Q_,N der the direction of l'fll Michael Lewis, renders-------these nine segments splendidly palatable. A company of 10 well-drilled performers func- tions as a smoothly interlocking unit in the produc· tion at Costa Mesa's Back Bay High School, each bringing his or her individualism into the con- tinually shifting spotlight. It's a pure family de· light with only one skit ("The Robber Bride· gr m," a bit heavy on the violence) that might no it weU with the younger ltlda. robably the most realized of the scenes ia the se on the bill, "The Bremen Town Muai· cia " wherein the performers take on animal trai <donkey, rooster, cat, dog, etc.) with hila WI alacrity. Also in that vein ia the familiar "H y Penny" -which fmda the fowl troupe ef· fee ely outfoxed. wo other impressive segmenta are "The Lad Wh. Went to the North Wind," in which a rulllble yo proves that the third time's no charm, and th ale, "The Colden Goose." The latter in- vo s the entire company in a rib-tickling exam- pl r togetherness. ach performer gets ample opportunity to ta stage, and selecting a favorite is an especial- ly fficult task. Most memorable from this view- po t are Robert Knapp's "Robber Bridegroom," T Brent's "Master Thief" and the hilarious c eo by Robbi Schoonover in "The Fisherman His Wife" in which she enacts, beautifully, the of a fish. John Cruz also delights as the witless woodcut- t in "The Golden Goose," as does Patricia G hrist in the title role of "Henny Penny." ise Dale excels as the intended victim in "Rob- Bridegroom," with Elizabeth Tierney con- t uting an indelible bit as the nasty fellow's vic- t' Wayne Mayberry's "Little Peasant" gels the ning off to a rousing start and David Natkin s a nice bit in the same sequence. ee FABLED, Page5) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~----- ~-=-THE .,.-. Beal Dtll7Wd H iclwry Smobd Riba Yo11'iie Er>er E414tn! -·-<.. tt\B RAC}( · • . .... ... Y'all Come Down MONDAY TALENT NIGHTS Stan Orlow MC & LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE EVENING C•ll for sign-ups now! Tuesday -Saturday Longhorn Saloon Features: Live Country Mu1ic & Dancing Ula Marperl&e Pkwy• •t11loa Now Appearing "Haywire'' Tues.-Sat. To Place your .. Fast Result" Service Directory ad ... Call Now 642-5678 ht. JU FIEE al.ASS Al.MADIN WIMI WITH THESE Dl,._S ....... IJb DiNm' s5tS Chiem.ct Rib.,.._.. Stied ---Potato s4so ltoOW ....... Fl .. ... Slwf ... ..... Cole Slaw and French Fries 1Md1'7J..140I Charbroiled and topped wtth a delicious tertyald Q)au, this skewertd combl:naUon of thick. tender steak and plump shrimp Is Mrwd \11/lth your choice of OW' Steatnh'IQ Oa m ChoWdu, Soup of the Day or Chilled Mixed Green Salpd. plus Rice Pilaf, Frah Plneepple and a half.loaf of Wann Brad and Butter. 2701 Harbor Blvd. • (Harbor & Adams) Costa Mesa, CA ·CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH· Start With a glass of dellclous tickllng champagne (complimentary. of course) to companion your select entree-lt makes a Sunday effervescent. Please join us for many choices In a uniquely ·prepared French Brunch ftom 10 AM to 4 PM. It's not fancy-It's bubbtyl 03 .. • 1 a a a ca r ··~ ------·-----~--~--------------·-1.~~~~--~\~-·-·-··--·--·-·~~~~ .•. IM Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday. May 29, 1981 Regional dinner theaters display their good taste By NOaMAN STANLEY °' .. ..., ...... rllllM T~ cue, perhaps, from all tbOH lmpeodiD1 June w 111 the local dinner theater clrcult bu come up with somelbln1 old and aomelhinl new to give us two of the season'• belt abowa. The flnt of these la Frank Loeaaer's venerable "Guye and Dolls" at Elisabeth Howard's Curtain Call Dlnner Theatre ln Tustin. Even ll you've seen lt a dozen times ln the past, don't miss lh1a exuberant pro-OUT 'N ABOUT duction of a Broadway claaalc. Then make a similar effort to catch the world premiere of the new play on sta1e at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse ln San Clemente. It's "The Max Factor ," a remarkably witty comedy of ~olden ~~~s~; ~~ ;;;;;;;, agon ·-_,._. GENUINE CHINESE MAHOARtN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A lo C.Orte Dishes Lunch Dinner Da11v • Food To Take Out 4711 C ...... • oaANGI JOU H..-. 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Stealin1 tht show as they do, a1ainst some pretty heavy odds, each calls masterfully on the triple-threat resource' ofslnlini, dancing and comedic acUn1 abillUea. A1t.h0ugh a little wooden with their apeaklfll Unes, Vicki Davis as Sister Sarah Brown and Mark Elliott as Sky Masterson triumph when it comes to (See DINNER, Page DC> r--------------. I NEW I I SUMMER HOURS I 1 1 Breakfaat-1)ancakes. waffles. 1 1 ome1e11es I Lunch-<ielectable sandwiches. I I daily specials I I Dinner-Chef's Gourmet Olnn8r$ I I THE COOKERY RESTAURANT. I I 500 W. Coast H19tway, tWWPCN'i l.ach I I ecro11 fro. Wltoe hy ct. I I 646-6909 I I DAILY 6 A.M. • 8 P.M. I 7 DAYS A W1B · , ______________ J FOR THE HOTTEST ENTERTAINMENT IN ORANGE COUNTY Go to the Mey 29-30 Mey 31 Afternoon •LIVE JIVE June 1-2 s T A G • JAMES HARMON CHINESE CASINO Ju~~OA THE MOON 111 21atPL. Newport leoct. OIUole l-tHO 2406 NEWPORT BLVD. "'-'0 Ml~ .. o~-.. w.::::".,..u..t11 1:oo ..,.... 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Thru Frt. 4:00-e:OO p.m. Well Drink• .IO Draft Beer .50 FrH Cannery Clam Chowder LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Nlghtty and Sunday Aft.,.noon FOR YOUR DINING & ENTEBTAINMENT PL~ASURE QAftRllON I 8AICIR Tue. thrU Sat. "DANCING lJT0<eM.ol-- l f , .... Slt·stlO 1S.WI ................. a.-. llMT7'I • _,_ I -~-~ 1 "UA MOVIES .l The comedy for everyone ' who's had tt up to here. PWl(R) ''QOODOUYI WEAReLACK" Al.AN ALDA "THE FOUR EAIONS" (PQ) ..... ,,., ... _ .. , .... , ...... _ ,_..,_ J l.AU'lt" M CAl.L MAUllHN tTAll\.ITOIO MICTOa ILllOtlOO THE FAN II .... ....,..'"'*""" ~ "HAPPY BIRTHDAY II """" """' Ill ''TAK! THIS JOB AND 8HOY! IT" '"' NII .. -----~-~ • • a o peas s psst 5 c s a ta Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,f=nday. May 29, 1981 DI Newport hosts an art exhibit that stares back You don 't look at the new Newport Harbor Art Museum exhibit -it look• at you. Portraits done by S6 contem- porary American artists have been collected for "lnaide/Out : \ Self BeyOGd Llkeneas," wh.lcb refiecta a rebirth of intere5t tn figurative art. It's a bold, hauntlna and at times compaaslonate collection of human subjects, seen t.brou&h the eyes of the contemporary artist. ·•Portraiture goes back to the Rom ans and ancient Egyp· Uans ," said exhlbit co-curator Victoria Kogan. "But for a long time it wasn't in vogue in the world of art. America is at a point in its history when we have to evaluate our personal and social roles. I see this exhibit as us taking a second look at ourselves." That second look is made up of paintings, drawings, sculpture photographs and video presenta- tions. There are a few startling- ly realistic efforts. such as Rebecca Davenport's "Bill and Jamie," and a few works so ob- scure the subjects are all but ob- literated by style, such as Kit Sch wartz's ''Neuro logical Portrait of Ed Paschke." For the most part, the portraits of· fere d in "Ins ide /Out : Self Beyond Likeness" reflect a bold, contemporary approach to the '~ge-old art: the portraits tell ~u as much about the artist as they do about the subject. Joan Brau.m 's · Bicentennial Champion' part of a portraiture exhibit at Newport Harbor Art Museum. form in Colonial times, and sur- vived through the 18th Century as status symbols for the rich. With the rise of a prosperous midcfle class in the early 19th Century , l he demand for portrall painting increased. Late in the lfK>O's, portraiture began to decline as artists took a liking to lhe avant-garde styles of Europe and sitters began to want photog r aphs o f themselves. Gamwell says that portr aiture declined rapidly in the early 20th Century as artists flocked to work in abstract forms and the mass market was taken over by photographers with greatly Improved cameras. Gamwell p oints to th e tumultuous events or the '60s and '70s -assasinations, the Vi etnam War, the corruption or the Nixon administration -as events which forced Americans to once again take a bard look at themselves to find out who they were. "This exhibit shows the effort to get the human presence back into art," said Kogan. ''In each or these works . three presences actually emerge: tbe sitter. the artist and that third party. the creation itself. You can read a person's life by their face. You can get a pretty good idea of who they are, what they 've done and what they want to do ·'This is expressionistic work. It's passionate and revealing - not corporate art by any means Can you imagine some or these things hanging in a corpora· lion's headquarters? It's bold. disturbing work " George Segal. When asked about their work. the artists responded with a variety of ans~ers . Sculptor Robert Arneson said "The self- portrait is a portrait of the mind ... fragments of my mind at various stages." Eleanor Antin, who put on a beard lo become Charles I of England for her "portrait." said that her more "recent" version of Charles I is "more powerful than the gossip or history ... Luis Cruz Azaceta said "I am a potential murderer and also a potential comedian, and my paintings are the result or these potentialities." Don Bachardy said "I am not sure t hat such a thing -a portrait -really exists I no longer really believe in a like· ness. The face is capable of so much. so many moods." J oan Brown said "My art la a by-product of myself." Juan Gonzales aald "The aym· bots in my work are entirely personal Their meantn1s are of tittle significance to anyone but myself" Peter Liashkov said "My portraits were inspired by Genca~t's portrait.a of the in-S8fe ... On a more helpful and less pretentious note, photogrl"l)ber Richard Avedoo simply said "My photographs don't go below the surface. They don't go below anything. They're readings of what's on the surface. I have good faith in surfaces. A good one is full of clues." Those surfaces will be on db· play at NHAM through July 22, before heading to the Portland Art Museum in September. -JEFF PARKER • • . Fabled success (From Page 03) Alexandra Robertson provides the ominous atmosphere as the n arrator of the "Fisherman" skit. "Story Theater" is notable in that there is no weak link in the ensemble, a credit to the work of director Lewis Scenic transi- tions are smoothly effected with the aid of appropriate theme mus ic Costa Mesa. It's something dif· ferent, and delightful. • CALLBOARD Speaking of Kogan and co-curator Lynn Gamwell have de liberately chosen three or the exhibit's strongest works -Luis Cruz Azaceta's "Self-Portrait: Door, King for Five Minutes," and Frank Holmes' "Dusk Call" and "Rudy" to intercept visitors in the NHAM lobby : the paintings are eerily personal -you get the feeling you've mtruded on traditions of American art and Among the artists represented The fam1l v show runs for three more weekends, playing Thursday through Saturday at 8 with a matin ee this Sunday al 2 ·30 in the Ba c k Bay auditorium, 390 Monte Vista St .. "Story Theater," auditions for both that show and the comedy · '6 Rms Riv Vu" will be held June 15 at Go ld e n West CollegP .tryouts tor .. Story Theater" are set for l to 5 p.m. in the Playbox Theater with Stephen Schwartz directing, While Robin Huber will hold readings for "6 Rms" from 7 to 11 p m . call the theater of- fice at 892-7711 for more details. the people in them. in the particular social, political, in "Inside/Out : Self Beyond In an introductory essay in the moral and psychological climate Likeness" are Andy Warhol, exhibit catalogue. Gamwell says of the last decade." Don Bachardy, Richard Avedon. "the reasons for the current re-According to Gamwell , Eleanor Antin, Arlene Gottfried, vival of portraiture in the United portraiture was an "overwhelm· J ack Mims, Dennis Nechvatal. States a re foun'd deep in the ingly dominant" American art Leo Robinson. Gay Block and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~--~~~ Rolllng Stone: "TM deftntttve ftlm biography of the King.• -DaveManh.. llollngM9M VIiiage Voice: "Th• ftlm not only depicts an Amer1can phenomenoni It la on• aa well." -J. NOll9'mou, v.oee v•• Newaweek: "Anyone who f ... tlmmuneto th• chartama of llVll Presley I ahould Immediately see 'Thi• 11 Elvis.'" -Ocnrld AllMtl, .... _ .... New Yortc Times: "'Thl1 l1flv/1'11 fa1clnatlng ... and mHmertzlng." -JOMt McNln, New YCNtr Tim .. AIC·TV: "A heart-breaking and superb piece of ftlmmaklng." -9IMI lotchotof, Ate· TV THISISBVIS E-.vlMProdlJat Mm L ~ .... bt ... IW19't SDW#I ~ .BWf SOfUMG 111111 .a fSl'(X)/70 ~. ProdtJc«J n1 {)lttcffd by MJMW sou n1 MN.InM L8) 61 ~outland' is what most people mean when they talk about good escapist entertainment. A movie of unexpected pleasures." -Vincent Canby, Mew York Times ''First rote thriller. Best new movie of the spring-summer ,, SeQSOn. -Jeffrey Lyons, COS Radio SEAN CONNERY in "OUTLAND" PETER BOYLE FRANCES STERNHAGEN JAMES B. SIKKING KIKA MARKHAM P.roduced by RICH~RD A. ROTH . Executiv~ Producer STANLEY O'TOOLE Music by JERRY ~OLl3SMITH Written and Directed by PETER HYAMS PANAVISION ® TECHNICOLOR® 1 [][;)( DOLBYSIEABJ t'"'. A LADD COMPANY RELEASE MSTIUCTID I IN Ml.ICTED THEAT"H . THRU WMN1R MOS. m B 11111:11~~".ftJt~u':':r:" I l\EAO THEWAf\!4£"DOOK I copyrt~~~~~~=s•=·•~ •NH 1101. ltECOROI UD TAPH ,. I I ------•-""'0'"'•--· .. .,.-:',:~ ~ -• 1 . ... ~~---• q • ,, ... ---·--· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday. May 29, 1981 'Lone Ranger' is campy fun .I I t ' l I . By JEFF PARKER Ot"91)Mfy ........... "The Leaend of the Lone Ranger" la a nam· boya.nt tall tale of a movie -it uplres to corn, gets It and plays it up for all it's worth. Director William Fraker bas blown the "le1end" up to heroic proportions. placin& the masked man beside such grandiose myths as John Henry and Paul Bunyan. It's a violent, beautifully shot movie and it's funny too, a ~ mm comic strip on mm. Because Fraker is plumbing a legend and not 1tartln1 from scratch, he's got a lot or help: audiences wait at the edges of their seats for the first "HI-yo, Silver," "yes. Kimosabe" and ''Who was that masked man?" According to "The Legend of the Lone Ranger.'' the masked man ls one John Reed (Kiln· ton Spilabury), a mild-mannered lawyer who goes to Texas to set up hla pracllce and visit his brother, one of the Texas Ranaers. Reed falls tor a youne journalist, and when her uncle ls lynched by an ouUaw army led by Butch (short for butcher) Cavendish <Christopher LJoyd). be 1otns nis brother and the Rangers as they ride after the killer. Only Reed survives the clever trap set by Cavendlsb -his brother and the rest or the raneers (the last of the rangers, as It turns out) are slaughtered. Shot, bleeding and Jert for dead, Reed is found and nursed back to health by Tonto, an old Indian friend whose life he once saved. Together, they swear reven~e on Cavendish and his army. • • • Dinner theaters (From Page DO their vocal chores. There's not a better number In the show, in fact, than their duet of the hauntingly beautilul ·'I've Never Been in Love Before.·· Noteworthy contributions are also made to the proceedings by Al Whitehead as Nathan Detroit and Gene Collens as Big Julie. Both actors have a com- manding stage presence and races so expressive you want to start snapping a camera record for posterity. Executive chef Joe Barnes never fails with his excellent bill of fare either. One always has difficulty picking the finalist among three tempting enlrees on the completely waiter-served meal. ''GUYS AND DOLLS" plays nightly. Tuesday through SWlday, and there's a Sunday matinee performance. Prices for the show and dinner range from Sll.95toS19.95. The Curtain Call Dinner Theatre is located at690 El Camino Real,justa stone's throw off both the San- ta Ana and Newport Freeways. lnlormation and re· serv ations telephone: 838-1540. • Moving on to San Clemente you'll find the ever- dashing Cesar Romero delightfully playing himself for the most part in tbe persona of Frederick Howard, a one-time Hollywood star now down on his uppers due to the mismanagement or his finances by his business agent. It Is the latter recenUy deceased when the plays opens -who accounts for the title. The depart- ed accountant-investor Max is the factor, you see, prompting flat broke Howard to move in with a young actress named Kelly (played with great vitali- ty and feeling by Ann Wilkinson) who is young enough to be his daughter. This sets up the crux of the play, the develop- ment and complications of a relationship wherein appearance to others is at odds with reality. The others in this instance rounding out the total cast of THE COMEDY SENSATION! "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY about pomeous fat hers and youthful seduction. -NlltlCyScott,SFEXAMINER _J_ llA111-r 1nu YICTOll M.UllW l AlfOUX • -':::ONE WILD MOMENT ... ..._ .... ""'--' ........ FRENCH MOVIE RATED (R) NOW PLAYING Rvsh Cot1ceri J-14 H-• Show 'ti J•e I 0-14 four -are Kelly's boyfriend, George, and Howard's ex-but-still-loving-wife, Joanna. Dinner this lime out proved no Jess tasty and pleasurable than it always has at Sebastian's. Mov- ing along the buffet (feast, actually) bar we managed to take at least a sampling of six different salads before turning to an equally impressive array of vegetables and three hot entrees. At Sebastian's West you can take in the show or bulfet only, but I can't imagine anyone being willing to settle for half. Prices for the full package range from $13 to $22.SO. Time varies for cocktail, dinner and show hours so inquire for the specifi cs when you make your re· servations at 140 Avenida Pico, just off the Coast Highway in the north end of San Clemente. Telephone: 492-9950. ·'The Max Factor'· ts scheduled to run nightly, except Mondays, through June 14. Then, on June 16, it will move to Sebastian's Dinner Playhouse at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim for another six-week engagement. lliE ~A Of lW IUVAlS WHO ClASH AS ENEMJESANDTRIUMPH AS HEROES. I A S £ D Q N A ,T It U E S T 0 It Y. ' .. .... ...... ,I Pilot Logbook -I ·1 p·1 ' Candu1 commentanes exclu.Tively in the II Y I DI MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,. ...-o-"',,.. ,,,,,... • 10 "'""" ,..,_ • .,.,.., ,,.. ·~"°""""' ........ -""....__°" __ All 0 l!JJ AHO (II Fii.Mi AlCEIVf n1( I~ O' ™E MOTION l"ICTUfl( COO( Ol ML' l!lO~llOH TOO RUDE ... TOO LEWD ... TOO CRUDE ••• AND NOW .•• THEY'RE TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONEI DAN AYKROf D THE BLUES BROTHERS Reed masks himself ror his revenge (we're not sure why), tames a wlld horse be names Silver, and rides off wilh Tonto to enlorce "true justice" on the frontier. Visually, "The Legend of the Lone Ranger" revels in western eenre style, but the bloody shootout& and brutal pillaJinas done by Caven- diah 's army are all kept at a dialqce from us. There's a slow, muted eCfeot to the camera work so that the graphic killlngs strike U5 less as nightmares than as inspired daydreams. There's a robust, wholesome glow to the rilm so the murders can't revolt us: they're made chaste by style. At the same time, Merle Haggard mterupts the story occasionally to fill ln the gaps with silly, rhyming couplets (for example he tells us or "how the Indians take him ln/ and teach him the way or the wind"> Haggard's casual drawl has a Roger Milleresque, "Kini of the Road" tone of nonsense to it -it primes us for more and more leg-pulling as the story moves on. You can sense from his assured tone of voice that he doesn't believe a word of what he's saying. "THE LEGEND OF the Lone Ranger" starts out as a genre western and ends up as a funny fairy tale. Both Klinton Spilsbury and Michael Horse, who plays Tonto, are humorously cast against western hero type: Spilsbury, who looks like a young Warren Beatty, appears ineffectual in his Lone Ranger garb -he's scrawny, almost ef- feminate and brings almost no physical grace to the part We keep waiting for bis spindly legs to buckle when the action gets heavy. He handles his six-guns without style or conviction -we know this guy must be blessed because he looks so damned helpless. As Tonto, Michael Horse looks out of shape and over-civilized, he's got no physical edge to him. In one scene, repealed twice for its campy high-humor, the feeble duo ride neck and neck across the desert, their undernourished torsos bouncing 1n perfect unison above their racing mounts. There's a parodic, Village People look to the two they're not heroes -they're spoofs or heroes. * The Private Moments T"IS ~ELVIS (PG) SHOWS AT 6:00 8:10 10:20 John Boorman's EXCALIBUR (R) SHOWS AT 7:00 9:45 Carol Burnett THE FOUR SEASOllS (PG) SHOWS AT 6:00 8:15 10:20 The Private Moments THIS IS ELVIS (PG) And The Wanderers (PG) Richard P~or IUSTlll' LOOSE (R) Which Way Is Up (R) John Doorman's EXCALIBUR (R) The Gauntlet (R) Anthont Quinn uo•OFTHE ~R~~) 8·00 19 Qel'iy §meo HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME (R) SHOWS AT 6:00 8:15 10:20 Neil Diamond JA12Sl•GER (PG) SHO WS AT 6:00 8:20 10:30 K11ell1 Near STADIUM POPEYE (PG) AIRPLANE (PG) R1chardJ!'i._Or STIR CRAZY (R) Caveman (PGl THE BLUES BROTHERS (R} Cheech & Chong s Next Movie (RI DRIVE INS Of'EN 7.30 NIGHTLY * Child. on Uncior 12 FREE unl .. 1 npltd I K1dd10 l'l1yqround 5 --.. ... -...... - Advertising campaign stresses video nostalgia Fraker falls back on the T V program cliches for hts climax, and because that's where he's been heading all along, we're ready for them In spite of the explosions that make up the final ac· lion scenes < Reed and Tonto dynamite Cavendish's stronghold >. they're purified. we never see the Lone Ranger shoot to kill , he only aims for the gun-hands or the crooks. He's the ultimate good guy, and the matter-Of· fact bloodshed that marks the first half of .. The Legend of the Lone Ranger" has no place in Reed's pa<'tric world It's the same world we watched in the original "Lone Ranger" serial almos t 30 years ago, but it's shot in color This movie doesn't expand on the story or the Lone Ranger really 1t regresses to it S46 2711 1111!>1111 Al ~u .. flO""'ll! KUY 11• Ml• F¥ I lo C.-,..,.. "'9111,. ,,...... f rtdlly' s.ew• * MIDNIGHT MOVIES * ' ... t ., ........ ' .. lWLmlllH 4-Track Stereo! Tnr·SQM~·ID1AlMS-Tnt·SAHt Ralph Bak.shl'I animated comedy FRITZ THE CAT FELLINI CITY Of WO!v\f:N 2:00-4:30 7:00-9:30 Adam & the Ant• In JUBILEE 3:30-7:45 THE DECLINE ,,, __ 12:00-2:00..:00 6:00-8:00-10:00 Why would fou r guys risk their lives for a weekend in Colombia? We can give you 5,000,000 reasons - all in cash ! MRI.Ill MllOO lllll · llMISAY WAGHffl 11111 OlAVll DIX I .wlS-ffllS1 1 Ml Lllltl VflfM ~ ClllUll b.J Ii Rim o. lllt IOOO UM CIJlllMll n D frl!lfllm ,._ti 1 .mffll mSllW.a Wrtl llll 1111 ll!r · J Qll IU4 "*-1mi1t !Im 1111 ft*d 918 INIU Ill iMUllll ...... SllW WRJ .A11MIUDN,_ 11l1ftNl,I MAI I ~ ~ t .. -~-~...,...,•r---•---._._... ..... .._._,_... ................................................................................ ~ ........... a ..................... ~ .. ~1111 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT J1=r1day. May 29. 1981 07 Irvine Chorale scores again with Samuel Barber tribute Young playwright presents new work on Irvine stage By ROBEAT FISHER ._ ................... Oran,e County muaic fans bad a chance to via- It the mother lode last Saturday night at the Irvine Master Chorale's final performance or the season. The concert, titled "A Tribute to Samuel Barber," featured more than the choral works of this American giant. It was a tribute to music, and Barber woul<t have been proud -even honored - by the intense musical purpose that pervaded the hall in his memory. . . The first half of the program featured two re- hg1ous choral works by Mozart: the "Vesperae'' and "Exsultate. Jubilate." DisreRardlnll the usual overture-opening syndrome, chorale director John Alexander presented a Mach JI, neck -snapping ac· celeratlon that within minutes locked the audience and even performers into high orbit for the next two hours. talent she 1s bringing to the New York City Opera. Barber's a cappella choral works and th.e oft performed "Adagio (For Strings)" comprised the program's second half Alexander announced the s ix songs in groups or two. Short pieces even by Mozart-starndards, these little vignettes of human drive, foibles, love and war pack a lot or power. Their performance was splendid. ThJs was no root-for-the home-team time. Wh at has dist inguished Alexander and the Irvine Master Chorale in European capitals, settled on the hearts and ears of us locals. T he delicacies of sounds bitting the water with oars and war ("To Be Sung On The Water•· and "A Stopwatch and an Ordinance Map"), and love and memorial <"The Coollni" and "The Virgin Martyrs" and ··Anthony O'Daly") made a king's delight For young playwright Thomas S1 l ber, every production is one more rung up an orten unsteady ladder. one more page in his quest for a C'areer as a dramatist. "ft 's like groundwork." ex- µl ained the 25 -year-old UC Irvine graduate "You never know what 1~ actually going to mJke your muve up but you aet a hrm base " Silber adds one more peg to his career when the South Coast Cultural ServiC'e League debuts '1\11 Dressed Up " allslic to abs urd This la as absurd ab I t•an get · · Silber's most recent produc- tion suCl'l'l>S had a bit more touch or reality and he hopes the work. titltd ·s imply a Formali- ty" will open doors lo a full-time prof ess1onal t· ureer ··Formality" was produced by San Francisco 's American Conservatory Theater Works in Pro~re~b senes In November 1979. Silber and Kryczko travelt•d to New York for an ort- oH Broad'>' ay production of Sil ber·s "La Soup1ere " Accompanied by the Pacific Symphony Orc~estra, the show presented four exceptional The concert concluded with Barber's "Adagio" which has had, thus far, three lives : in a string quartet. a chamber orchestra, and finally as an Agnus Oei for acappella choir. I'm waiting for the rock version. l'he one-act play opens tomor- rm" mght at the league's home. I h1• Irvine Cultural Center It continue!> on May 31 ;.ind June 6 .ind 7 · Playwright Thomas Silber ·You nl•ver know when someone 1s go ing to see som ethini{ or what's going to happen to lhe play," Silber said. "It'!. very important as far ai; pubhc1ty to have your work pro- duced · soloists all or national and international pro- minence that come from or live in Southern California They were Carol Vaness, soprano; Beverly Benso, contralto; William Smith, tenor and Michael Gallup, bass-baritone. Under Alexander's Clawless conducting, the ensemble threaded the needles of angels and wove a tapestry of prayer . As I was walking out of the auditorium, I over heard another voice -from an enlivened m ember of the audience. She said to her friend, "Better get used to this type of music. because If Beverly sticks to the piano, this is the type of music st.e's going to learn " l>irectcd b} longtime friend a nd league aeting instructor Thctddeus Kryc1ko, the drama 1s ~ct in a ~urreal atmosphere One character 1s strapped to a '>'all , an eldt•rly woman is pre- l' J r i o u s l y p l' r ~ h e d 1 n a wht•ekhair alop a box Hoth havt• nowhere to go a <'U<' from the play's title and plenty of time tu hash out the problems of st•lf discovery Movement IS s tymied save for the entrance of the arbiter character known simply as lhf.' Visitor. "It was an exercise for me," Si I ber said or ·'All Dressed Up " "It was an attempt lo develop my s kills to develop dialogue around minimal movement. .. My work is varied," he con tinued. "( ~o from bein.z very re The play will feature Randy Corley .is the suspended Hank, DC'bbic Gates as Grandma and UC I student Kevin Carr as the V1s1tor Set design 1s by Jack and Suse Rcrtram for t1ck<·t information, call 979 3176 Vaness. soloist in the "Exsultate," was absolutely marvelous and showed the awesome Beverly. for all of us, practice every day THE UNTOLD STORY OF THE MAN BEHIND THE MASK AND THE LEGEND BEHIND THE MAN. U>RDGRADE 1ndJAfK WRATH ER Pt.ton! A MARTlt-1 STARGt:R Pnid11<11on 'THE LEGEND Of' THE LONE RANGER" mnc KLINTON SPILSBt;RY MICHAEL HORSE CHRl!>'TllPHfR WIYD tlld JASO\ ROBARDS at PR£SIOlNT lLYSSl:S:, CRA \T [...,.u,. Prodwtr MARTlNSTARCER ""-npllY 11)' IVAN GOPr l 8£~ lll)BERTh and ICU HAfL KASE and \lo ILLIAM ROBERTh Adaptal""' lly JERRY OERIJlSHO\ Ouciral ICut>< e, JUH\ BARR) Ot.....w. o(Phol.arnph, LASZLO KIJ\M'<i Ac; l Procfll<tdb)'"'ALTERf118l£~Z ll1~b)'llll l.IAICA fkAKtR -·-. n •· "~ ~ "''' ._..,,.,.,, • ,.,, .,.,, ..... ,. .• TlltMtn•nlh•M.,l Swt1lrr'4llU.llllo!A.ARll , •··~·,...~-,. fiJGf~Ai. ...... amlltl~ C)r11•n•l"""'n4tr•,~A•11L1b••on \tlA MM'ord• '" 1,n1i.Lo •mm1*•i1t0 ~-,.....·~~~~ ...._.;;.;.;;..;;.;.,;,;c......;....;..;...;;.;.._, __ 1_1_1_~_~_1_1_1_i_~~-o~~ _J~lmm ~'~1' ·1.2~~-·.· ... "."':~l'f!Ri.-I ........... LAGUNA ~s. coan·:~· ... Dally MetlMeS 2:0CM:IO 1:ap-•:• A MARTIN BREGMAN Production ''THE FOUR SEASONS" ALAN ALDA • CAROL BURNElT • LEN CARIOU • SANDY DENNI S RITA MORENO •JACK WESTON • BESS ARMSTRONG Written and [hrectecl 11\ At.AN AWA • Ex1·rut1H' Produrt'r LOU IS A. STKOLLER Pr11d11tt·d h\ \1ARTIN BREGMA~ ·A ll"llVERSAL PICTURE ... 1111!.l Ir \11.lN\ • "PG 'AID1AI. GUIWCl SUlll!Sno C> " •.. THE SWEEPING POWER OF DAVID LllAN'S SPECTACLE, "LAWRENCE OF ARABIA." -K1ttt .. en C•noll N Y OAll 'f Hf W'i 11 ••• A apr•wllng uga" -Ge,,. S~olll !ODAY 5HOW •1 ••• Spect.cul•r'' -David Denby NlW YORK MAOAlll<t .,... .. ,.....,.. ... -en • ...,,.. .... -0-~ .... W£Sl COASl PREMIERE ENCACEMfNT NOW SHOWING •Of~ CINIDOMI Cotto Mesa CINEMA CINTIR 6M•HIS t79 ... 14'1 DollV 1.00 PM DoMv 7 00 • 10 00 PM So14un lrOO • AlO • 100 PM So1·5'.fl 100 • •OO • H>O l 1000 PM WHll'll lltOVll OOINO II A .. IVIHt• PACIFIC'&~'DOME• SunHI n111 Vint. Hollywood • 2iti'66•S4'01 • fijj~ .,.._, J' Oo11y 12.lO • H6 • 100 a 10 \6 PM -------IOXO#Cll OHHt 11 00 AM-------., 0011m °" we tttl!OUlt!WIJM!tt RM M 11161 PAtl eWQIMA!!Cll I -Joel C Don t • MOfll nMU U t 'Ttl 1• Ht U. Mir.ct• f...C COM'-0' POa f'Vll'TOM wMC> I -IAAGAIH 'lltCI iiii..,.. l"MfllU IU f ., ... ·--.... •m,•;~'Q m LA MJ,..,. 1 CHU:CH AHO CHONG s ~ 1 1· i •I llo_,_,, NEXT MOYIE (I'> ,,._. • .. o• 4 -•••••-L 99•·2~ . THE BLUES BROTHERS 1"1 J ....... ..-.. tlON fHAU I AT T~ I ti '1111 •lllON '"""'U UY "fll t• N n. ...... ..,, .................. --. THE LEGENO OF THE LONE RANGER " .................. , .. a....-•M.OA ·C:~..__ ... n THE FOUR SEASONS (PG) ' .. , ......•. , .... a.utGAIW "'1CI ti .. MC)til TMltU I.At -,, I .. Hll F.c.vtty C ... M t..Ct Mt0111tl0" • Lii llN'tN a\ CAncMewood AfitO'I Dtc.tMtoN 1u1SJ1 •seo DEATH HUNT (A) ,, JO . 1 ....... , ••••• " ,. HIGH RISK (Al ~,,. .,, LU 9""1• ••.1•,t• lt• ' ... a .. """u '"'' flL , .. , .. LU IUN 'ltl .... N ............ ....., ................ -6.- THE LEGEHO OF THE LONE RANGE" (l"O) ~ llOAOEALIHIE (.-01 ,AClf'IC THl.ATIIH -~ fWU m1'n ITilnCll TOUll 9UClll -_,., TMI DAT AT MAlleOll Oii,., ....... ~ llllllft.fM t Ml TO l •• IA~T a_,..,., AIU ,Mii_ ll*OAU AT A-IT~ Mofl~ I 15, loll, ..... HalllMyo I 00 ~ SIMt I 45 IMPORllNf NOTICl' CHILOR£N UNDlR 17 fRH' , .. _,..........,,Of,...... ,,.._ THE UGEHOOF THE LONE AAHGIE" (.-0) ...... 80R0£ALIHE (P'O) • -, Orange CoU1 OAJL Y PILOT /f=rlday, May 29, 1981 l·Rll>AY -EVB9tG .._;.,,. e:oo 8 D 8 NEWS -~WOMAN W'*1 the economy ot A.-rlca le j4K>pardlad by • 1r11ch1rout Nell tchWnl. Wonder Wom&n ruthMIOll>er91CUe ii TIC TN; OOUOH tD M•A'l'H Th• personn1t ol th• 4077lh .,. besltged b)' • lont anlper who t>eti.vta ,...., llrtno on u S H .. d. quanw. HIGH NOTES -Robert Klein hugs his wife, opera star Brenda Boozer, in a scene from "The Robert Klein Show" tonight at 10 o'clock on Channel 4. ., 0000 TIME.S Flotlda It uked to be ll>e 1•vtalon apok .. woman tor • ,_ ,....,,h tonic fD Gi) ELECTIUC COMPAHY(A) Cl) C88NEWS @A8C N~ UC> 8 JOt<M'S WILD «D wtLCOME BACK. KOTTER WUhlngton·a aucQeU Ha dl•C jockey UOUHI je•louty among the s-•hog• ., BENNY HILL Benny po<tr•ys Tex Cym· bel. tr... GOiden Boy ot Pop fD KCET NEWSBIEA T '1i) 8TV<>t0 SEE "K•y•k" Kid k1yakers run tl>e white w•ter, two cob- bler9 leech kids to make tl>elr"-(R) Cl) NEWS 9 8AAHEY MILLEA A depet1ment ttOle owner Is kldn1pped 1nd his cep- tort dem•nd lh•t hl1 mer· ch•ndlse be gi_, away to the public (Pert 2) 9:116 9 EDITOA&AL 7:00 9 C8S NEWS D N8CNEW8 8 HAPf"Y DAYS AGAIN The "4Hghborl are as up .. I u IM lither ol the bttdl when tl>e Cunningh1m1 ln"1te ~ black couple to be mMr.S In their home U ABCNEWS CHANNEL LISTINGS l1J IUU..SEYE «D M'A'&•H While Col Potter writ" home, Frri llld Hot Lipe heve 1 wood carving mid• tor him tnd R•d•r reacu .. 1horM m 8TAEET8 ~ 8AH FMHCdlCO A blthop It tatelly thol while kneeling In praye<. le1v1ng no 111nglbll ~ tor Stone 10 purs.,. fI!) O~EMV Guoall actreH Glori• Swanaon, N1wawe1k '1 lln1nclll cOlumnlat J&ne Bryenl Quinn (R)O '1i) MACNEJL I LEHRER REPOlll'T CJ) TIC T Ac. OOUBH 9 MERV OAIFFlH Gu .. 11 M1rletle Harti.y J-Cl•vell 7:30 IJ 2 ON TME TOWN Hott• Steve EOwardt Melody Rogers Trlvel to Nao<>YI. Japan and "1111 with a group of Ame<tctn• now llvlng lllere, visit I lripi..ttered gotl driving range Ind ,,_, apend some time with James C••· V911. authof ol "Sl>ogun ·· D TMIS WAB AMERICA 'F-Of Amet'lcl" A IOok 11 the Immigrant• who 1ucc111fully lntegreled Into the Amertcan "tnelllng pot" and those who did not 0 SHANANA Gueel L .. he GOia 1J KNXT CBSt L05 A.ng.;-11>-. D KNBC NBC Lo'> Anaeies u I( 1LA 1 lno I L , ... A11gpte~ 0 K.ABC TV1 ABC1 Los Anqe11·~ (T "FMB 1CB'>I S.tn D ego 0 KHJ TV I lt1d 1 lo.., An !PIP.., 1G' "CST 1ABC1 ".in 011•gn Cl) "-TI\ t lrlCl l L . Arqelt> Cl) KCOP TV Ir• 1 Lu~ AnQt"•' fD KCE T TV PB<;1 Lo<. Anq .. ti , m KOCE rv 1PH >I H11nt n itun BP.IC 11 U TELETOHE ii FA~ THE MUSIC «D AU. IN THE FAMILY Edith relu-lo atop Mr votunlM< worl< It th• home for Ille IQad despite Arctoll't Older• EID MACNEIL I LEHfW' REPORT ~ 8USINE88 EXCHAHOf .. The Agrlbullnesa' Farm· en. proc•uors and rel1ller1 gather to dlscuas the growing problem of 1 meeting tl>e wor1d·1 tood neadt CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE A Miami m•n wno u- snlk• venom to mak• • drug uMO by some MS and 1rthrlt11 sufferer•: a IOOk at the OUBE two-way cable TV system 8:00 IJ CJ) TME INCRE.OtBLE HUU< 88111'181 bee~ 1n lnno- CCN\I vlellm of en old feud and elmOll IOMt hi• 11141 (R) D HA.APER VAL.LEY PTA Bol>by T1ylor tella tne Reil- ly women th•t Stelle liked him away for 1 romanttc weekend (RI 0 MOVIE *.'A "The HIQfl Comml1- 1ioner" (1~) Rod T•ytor. Chrlatopher Plum,,._ An Australiln policeman encounters 1n1tigue and murd81 whole on 19&1Q'1· menl on London U ®l 8EH80H The 11111 lllrn that a for· tune may h1v1 .,_. hid· den In the governOl'a rTltn· ston 100 years Ntfle< (R) l1J MOVIE **'" ••young Wlllaton ( 19721 Simon W11d. Anne Bancrott The career of Winaton CllUrclllll is traced from hi• achool days unlll his first lecllon 10 ll'le HouM ol Commons Q) P.M MAGAZINE A Miami man wt>O u ... anlk• \llnom to mike 1 drug ueed by tome MS and lf1Mtltl auH-a, • IOoli et the OU8[ two-wey uoll TV •ve•em. hel1bu1 CftOWdet, CIC)I c.r.01 "-- ,_ 1ntonna1IOI\ on eoo• ..loel'I Embery looti • at WW me! denllll'l ewov. * *\>\ 'Hunlet1 Of The Wiid" I 1974) Oooumentwy A wlllle m111. Stuart Prln· gle, cMvOIM nMfly 20 ~· ol Illa llfe 10 M on- locl1IOI\ •tudy Of 18NllO<lel Altice. • L08 ANOfLU W&)( IHNMEW HOit: Cleta Rot>erta ID MAOHIJL I LEHRER REPOftT l:.IO D IWWON> Aller Fred eprucee lhloO• ..,p for 1 vlllt trom Cal a mom. •he ., rlvea 91\d •efv-to 111y under the Ml!W roof with him 8 9 l'MAIMOGIN. NOW OIMA'I bMt frlencl'a hu• baM mek• • p-., her (Rl «D AFAMILYOf WINNEl\9 Unable to cope with 11111 lncrNeed emouonal at••11• when hla lllble wor!O COi lapue around him, • h19 9dlool ~ c"--'"' clde u 1111 only MC&P4I fl3 ~ WA/JHINOTOH WEEK IH REVIEW 9:00 IJ Cl) TME DUKES OF HAZZARD D 8TEV£ ALLEN eot.tEDY HOUR GueAll 9ilty Cryst1t Boo •nd RA~ U MOVIE • * "Thieve•" ( 19771 Mer lo Thom11. Charles Gro- din An unuaual couple try lo rllCllPture tt\elr Inno- cence In New Vorl< City l) Cl) MERV GRIFFIN Guetll Mltletla Hartley J1me1 Ct1vett Malacllt Martin fli) WALL STREET WEEK •' Tel•communlcat ions Long·011tanca Prohts? Guest Bred Perry v!Ge pr&Sldenl P11ne Webber Mllclletl Hutchins, Inc ~ VOTER'S PIPELINE "Sacram11nto Dateline" Jim Cooper lr•vela to S&C ramenlo to lnlerv11w Orenge County LeQllll · tors tnd to upd1te on 1uoes and legtallllon thal cen atlect Orange County ®J MOVIE • • * "Winning" ( t969) Paul Newman, Jo1nna Woodward A ch•mpton race cer drlv81 beset with oll-trectt mettlll problems 11 det81mlned 10 win lhe tndlanapolla SOO 8-.30 fli) SACRAMENTO WEEI< INREVIEW Host Murray Fromson \0:00 0 Cl) DALLAS Bobby s .-n1ng change 1r1 peraon1111y tlnce tlk•ng over EWlno Oii ceuMS both Pamela ind J R for entirely dlffer<N\t reasons to be concerned (RI D R08ERT KLEIN 8PEQAL Judd Hlrtcll •nd the Char lie O.ntela Bind Join Rob ert Klein for an hOur ot comedy Ind mualc G l1J CD NEWS • • a s TUBE TOPPERS KHJ 0 8 00 "Young Winston " Anne Ban"roft, Robert Shaw and Simon Ward star in a movie. about Winston Chur chill's early years ABC D 9 00 "Thieves." A crazy couple try lo recapture innoc.-nre in New York in this movie starrin~ Marlo Thomas and Charles Grodm. NBC ID 9:00 "Steve Allen Comedy Hour " The comedy team of Bob and Ray join BlHy Crystal and Steve in an hour of humor and music. ID~ THEA~ FtaTIVAL Of FAVORITES "Th• Golden Bowl' Baatt<l ori a novel by Henry J1me1 Chartolla anct Amerigo manage to Slop away from • p1111y et the Castlede1n·1 I nd apet•tl the r .. t Of th• day., • VII· legttM (Part•llRt:.) ~ BILL MOYEM' JOURNAL 'A Conv1r1et1on W1tr1 Jacobo llmerm1n Arger• 11ne newtpaper puOh~tw • Jacooo T merrn• dlscosaes lh• pain end anou11h 01 Ill• 1mp,.~•.m ment !10 101 turo 1'18 sul lerll<l tor tpelklng out egaiMt repr .. ~on on "" country to·so m HEWS lJ) INOEPENOEHT NElWOf\K NEWS 11:00 t> D o (J) n"QJ NEWS I) STARTREK Inmates take c.on1101 ot ll galuy·s Hylum •nel pteri •o take O'lftt' lhtt ""'"~'w l1J NEWL YWEO GAME CD M 'A'S'H Angered by ttll• wa~ cov•I oan doctors atalesldii aro prol1t1ng !tom lhe war Hawkeye p•esenls the Army wllh a blll lor h1I med~ .. rvotH Cl) BENNVHILl A relurn Vllll ,, P••d to th!' Hotel So•d•d• w11t1 Benny In cllarga ol room serv•'8 tl) OICt< CAVETT GuMt author Ma1v S Cal oerone '1!) SNEAK PRfVIEWS Roget Ebert artd G- S11i.el look It Iha bell 1 .. ttue lllml produt..U by tne n-breed of Am1>r1<.11n 1t1t1ependen1 lllmm1ker1 !RI 11 30 fJ ((' THE. NIGHT STAL.KER Several young women are murcJ•rtld and Carl KOi rhak l111u• 11 11 tho work 01 I he t90•md111ry J1\d1 lht1 Rippe< 0 TONIGHT H011 JUhtlU) ( tH\l'1r. Gufl'!la Evd•• Gorm1 /lt•11 tond Joan Root 0 11}) ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE l1J LET·s MAKE A DEAL CD MOVIE • *',,. l'le Undergr<JoutJ Man t 197•) Pele< G•l•OS Jack Klugm~n lfltP""" by a chl!actar lrom 1 no•el by Rou McOonelcJ Delee t1ve Lew Arch tu II ""ea ,,, locate a m1s~1ng hu1ban11 lJ) DANCE FEVER C.lebrlty )Udge• Rip Tay· lor I •nda Fr1t11nne Lyle W1ggon111 Gue!ll Th8 Temp1111on1 fli) m CAPTIONED A8C NEWS 12000 MOVIE * * Black r 11day 119401 Boris Karlott 81111 Lugosi In • despo<•tl! altPmpt to save flll lrlend 8 dOCIOI l)f!rlorma a d811Cllfl brain opara 11011. only 1 o lronalorm Iha plllent 11110 a kilter O ®J FRIDAYS -' a 0 OUHIMOt<E A y~ Cl'ln•l(;t m1k81 " contr1c1. upon ret111• lfom ptlM>tl to 11111 • man l>e hll--.., BAAETTA .. All That Shalt811 ID l'Hlt.~ \2 IO D THE ICTV CCME>Y Nf'TWOM 12 40 I) () l MOVlf • Gotoan Ne11cll11• 119741Jc>tl °"' 811ktor •• ,, a~h Aahllly A yt>u•IQ wun1an 1111.,. • wtJt., 01 fortuna lo Obla1n "" 11nc1"n1 C..tlinHa atlllu• which 1upp0Md1y 111\1(1" the Merat to yciulh an<.1 I 00 aor NVCHIC PHEHOMENA. THE WOAU> IEYONO Tt•• Art 01 Bemg Psy- chic Hott• 01m1en Somp ton 1nd Stacy Munl du•· cu" how to dlKOve< tools to 9'\nance your P•y~h•< <enSlllvlly w1t'I guest> Ju» ·•nd Anu Arm1trNf1 CD MOVIE • '\ War Qt 11\to Mo" 1ter1· ( t966) 1(01•rn ••on go Kyo~o Enam1 Gd"' mera ano Elarugon wrfl.i• t111voc 1n Japan until 1"41y dre clftlroyed Cl) tNOEP£HOENT NETWORK HEWS 1 10 U VIDEO WEST (I~ AOAM-12 Mulloy and Rtted r .. ~ue two men hom • t1<>rnong nou.e brae~ "" • rn•19h l>OrhOOd ltouO 8flc'.I l<K•~ lc>f • ltOlftf'I t;ttf I 30 0 MOVIE * * * W<1kt< l•l<Hltl t 111421 Bt1an Oorohtvy, noo Ori Prn•lon Oro Wak" l!land cturong World War II 1118 M a11ne Corps 01\pla1~ trem1;ndou1 cour1199 Cl) MOVIE • * 0<1all1 <,m1IH 011 A MurdM41t I t'H"I) Ew.1 Auhr1 Klau• ~·nsa.1 A young mun I JmP'"' w•tll I hft ~hlPfH ,.,,hJ' .ti ttnrt allempt• to '"alorto hlB to lhedHCI 140 0 MOVIE • • , Tne Peopt" t 1<11 tt Kim Darby Oen O H11rt111y 2000 HEWS 2.400 NEWS 2 45CI) MOVIE * Catman 01 Pans t 19461 Carl r1mono Ac'.111t• Mara 265 0 HEWS 3000 MOVIE • • Who l"lillld T <'dcly Baer? t t <It.Ill Jull•t Prowse ">•I M"'"" a a s Cl) M0\111! Vamp1ta s>eople" 1111 fll All'leha Fvetll" llonllld Remt 3 10 0 lOfTORIAL 1 t&O MOVIE * * 't NfO"t And Oef ( tll4tl c.rv Gr1111 Ell• Ar<l"" 430'1.) NEWS 4 419 NEWS 460 0 MOVIE • • Myatery JUflC.llon t 19!> IJ Bat bar a Murrey, Sodn.o~ Telle< SATl 1HDA \' -MORNt«;- • oo D M.AENOll'fT'Y 0 IJTARTRll< D OOMMUNIT\' FE£08Aa< HOii FernartdO 0.1 Rio Cl) VIEWPOINT OH Nl/TRITION J SUMMER SEME.8T£R t I& Cl) FILMS THAT TIACH t 30 0 SUMMER SEME.STl!A D THAT'SCAT 0 n~ JT'S YOUR BUSINESS l1J OAVEY ANO GOt.IATH Qt SPIEAKOUT Cl) ROMPER ROOM Eli) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS I VOICEOF AGRICULTURE 1 oo o ousTY·s TREEHOUSE 0 THE FLINTSTONES 0 PACESmEAS H,.,., l .trr-y McCutmt<.k 0 10, SUPERFl'\IEN08 0 HOTFUOOE Cl) TURNABOUT €D LANGUAGE t TV.a LOOKS AT LEARNING 7 30 0 MARLO ANO THE MAGIC MOVIE MACHINE 0 Bl() BLUE MAABLE 0 GIGGLESNORT HOTEL CD ELEMENTARY NEWS Cl) GmlN'OVER Eli) VEGETABLE SOUP I K108WORLO II 00 0 J TOM ANO JERRY 0 GODZILLA 0 THE RIFLEMAN 0 THUNOARR THl 8AR8ARIAN l1J UFO Cl) MOVIE • • "' t t• Pt•y~ With r ·•• •9S8 Jtotlo Ha..,..1n1 Arl•or 04hl An 81M>r> If••" lii,ll•Ot moe11 up wttt 11 t11.,•••y t .. male '''"Uug Cl) SPECIAL PEOPLE fB REBOPIR) lO PLASTICMAN I BABY PLAS JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk HELLO, I'M 0AENDA H-4.RPY WrTH A CHANNEL O N E NEW50AEAK! ~ERE WA? A SPECTACULA~ iH~EE·CA~ ACCIDENT ON "THE E'XPQESSWAV l'Ht5 EVENING.' ~..--- She's climbing out of oblivion Filming begins on BBC's 'Nancy' project By MICHAEL DOUGAN Of -Deify ,.. ... St.ff Stephanie Edwards 1s a tall, vivacious television personality whose nam e, in network circles, is spelled M-U·D. At least, that's the way it's been since she bolted from the TELEVIEWS Ooundering "AM America" pro- tram six years ago after only five months on the show. "I DROPPED into absolute oblivion, from which I am still ~limbi ng out,·' said Miu Edwards during a visit Tuesday to the KOCE television s tudio on the Golden West College cam · pus. Miss Edwards described her ~rief stint on the early morning bttervie w program as "the lighest possible profile with the least possible undergirding and I flas no more prepared for the af- termath (of her resignation) tba n I was for the s how itself." "AM America" wu a sort of tpin-off from the Los Angeles rogram "Ralph Story's AM," hicb Miss Edwards co·hosted 6>r three years plus. The con- 4ept was picked up by the ltetwork a nd a national show lroadcast from the Big Apple. "IN DIE TRANSITION from .A. to New York, the mold got roken, '' explained Miu &dwarda. Her aln, then, was to abandon network program. "You just on't do that," she said. But do lt she did, and the re- rcuulons are sUll ln evidence. 111 Edwards was Ju1t removed m a ayndJcated aeries under evelopmeot c,.a lled "The eople'1 Court," in which a enuloe amall clalm1 court. ud1e handles actual case. oo Stephanie Edward& som e programmers' mlnd1 Is distressing," 1he said with an ironic smile. M1111 Edwarcb' travail• can In no way be attributed t o lack of talent, as a nyone who has watched her on KOCE'a re1ular money·rallln1 fntlval1 over t.be past year can attnt. Her brilht wit, fluent delivery and penl.a- tent ener1Y have crtated the lm- po11lble -a tund-ralter that'• fun to watch But Ml.a• Edward• will soon return co the tiny acreen. Her conalderabJe abllltles bave been reco1nlied by, of all people, 1chloek csar Chuck Banll, who brou1bt u.a abomlnaUoDI like "The Ooa1 Show " ••Ttte Datlna Game" and ''The Newbwed 01m1." Thia time, thoutb, Banta •P- pe1r119 be eulUvat1n1 a·new lm· a11. 1 atr. Altbou'1> bi• declaionl re not t11ally blndto1. tbe UaanUI a,ree in 1dvance CO TBS lllOW WILL be can.d bide by tbem. "l.Aaft It to th• Women" and •·1 wd t.be reporter on tM "ht lnailtl it ls 1 tboroqbbr cene, wbo aald here'• the JudJe, rtt~bl and, wt hope, ater- 1re'1 the toUJtroom, thtM are lllJWJC etrort lo dilc\lll burn1nf t cdel, .. 1be tald. But, after lUUM I« WOIDeD1" tald Mill bootJD.1 two pUot e»llodn, Klu Edwudl. tdwarda #U told by ber acmt Oii tbe Mow, MW Edwardl at t.bethOW'• producer wam.d will bOlt • paa.1 of thrH bWDped became ol th• ''AM wom-, UIU.l11 celebritla, wbo mtrica" mdct.llt. ., .will ~*" • ruut lo a "bot, 1 "J<.nowlnJ that bavln1 qult •Ht. Topia wW ran1e from 'AM j,lneJ'lca" 1b1Jean aco ta ,the Moral M1Jor1t1 lo mud, «htq t.bat ltl Unie;n lit T IWrestliae and MS IUITOI• .... By TOM JORY "-la•~·"'- NEW YORK -A production team from lhe British Broad· casting Corp. is at work in Virgini a on a project that might be described as "Masterpiece Theater" ·in-reverse. Shooting began in Charlot- tesville today on exterior scenes for "Nancy," a BBC-Time-Life Television co-production on the life o f Nancy Astor, the audacious American who became the first wom an member of Britain's Parlia- ment. "NANCY" WILL be broadcast first in England, perhaps as early as next spring, a nd in this country later in 1982 as a Mobil Sho wcase Network presenta- tion. Filmjng began in England 'I think this is only tile second tzme the BRC hos <lone it this way. fz lmmg the ertenor scenes m fills coun try ... · about a month a~o. and the c:n lire produc·t1on will tak(' abou t a year A British actress, Lisa fl ar row. whose most notable recent appearanc·(' in this country \lo as 1n a publi<.• TV broadcast of "Or. Jeckyl und Mr Hyde," plays Nancy Astor BBC productions have been a s taple o f public TV 's "M asterp1ece Theater" for a decade now, and invariably the filming h as been done In England or on the Continent. "I think this is only the second time the BBC has done 1t this way. filming the exterior scenes m th1:-. ('ountry. · said Ton~ Virgu, th1• prncluct1on superv1-;or for "Nanc·y " V1r1<0 &p llkl' h } lcll•phon1• rrom H1rhmoncl "I BEi.iE\'• lht•\ riad snnll' filming for ·op1wnhl'1mer' in C'olnrntlu," hf' stud, rl'ft•rrin~ lo a ~ <1 v f' n p a r I d r J m a l 1 z l' d documentary sch(•dulcd to hf• a part of public lelcv1s1on's up com 1ng "Playhouse" series Virgo recenlly completed work on another BBC Time-Life co·production for the Showcase Network. "The Borgias," which involved com1iderable location filming in Italy "That was in credibly complex compared \I, 11 h n11... tw .... 11J Thi'\ h<tVt' h1°l'n so t•uop1•r<1lt\ l' ht•rt' :. lht· B11r.:1as· also 1s -.dwd11l1·cl ''" hro<td<"usl here 1n 1!18l Tlw i.:rn111td\loork ld1d h) Vtr~o and hi .; "'"1stants for the film 111g 1r1 \ trj!tnla 1s :i r a se studv u1 ll'lt '1s11111 pr 11du1 l10n \'ari;:o s.11<1 1h1 111111• p,1rt m1n1 ... ·rws 1s ht•mJ.! .. tt111 r11 'I on film , and 1•\.i·nt11.ill.' \lolil 111• transforred Io I ;qw Tltl· h1 gg1·..,1 thin..: 111 <"harlot lCS\llle.·· h(' s aid. 1s M1rador. the fam1h hunll', "h1ch sllll ex 1sts The prolilem is. Wt' can't u se 11 lt'!ooo not qult4" ri"ht archilec turallv it's had things don~ to It · <tnd 1t 's near a (reewo) · Th t• pro h I • · m w 11 h the freeway," h1• 11.11d 'l"I one J don't think Anw111·;m" hove Satellite will double dnchy's audience By ROBERT WEILAARD ._ ..... ~ ...... LUXEMBO URG Luxem- bourg's commercial broadcast company RTL is expected to s tart satellite tele vision pro- gramming In a f~w years -a move that will do uble ita au- dience in countries that border the tiny Grand Duchy of 350,000 people. "TODAY, OUR televllion pro- German and uutch in an area with a r adius or 125 miles a round Luxembourg City cable will buy the special rooftop disc antennn!f needed to receive the signal. 'rhe antennas can rost as much as SSOO This fall, the board of d1rec· tors of lhe Compagnle Luxem bourgolse de Teledlffu1ion CLT, the offi cial name of RTL. is ex· pected to Rive the go-a head for the project lhal requl~s an In· vestment of up to $300 million over the next 10 years or about S26 m1lllor1 in 1980, has bt"cn nt.•jCotwtinj( with th~ West German n1•w11paper publ11hera feder al.Jon (O (1nuncc 25 percent of the coau To date. two·thirch of tht> federot1on·11 mtmMnhip has 11poken out in fuvor or thl1. grams are watched by between __ _ th"e~fu~~llioo~~··---------~11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---•••••••••••• It could thus reach 1nt.o the southern tip of the Netherlands and penelrate more deeply into West Germany covering the en- tire industrial Ruhr area. The success of the satellite project wi11 la rgely depend on how quickly viewers in France, W• Germany and the Nelherla.ncb -where RTL UI not carried by RTL, fihJch made a net profit The LuxtmbourR aattlllte <·ou ld ~ launrht d In 1985 and RTl, a)ready ha1 option• on a U.S . Spaet Shuttle night 11 well u a fll61ht on the E uropean Sµacc A1ency't1 Ariane rocket aayt Nick Weber , RTL'1 1poke1m1n. "WJtb a satellite, we could reach el&ht mUllon people." lo p11t decadea, RTL hH biased a remarkably 1ucceaafUI trail tn a conttnent where aov· ernmental and polltlcal control heavily lntluence naUonaJ radio and TV. And the pro1pect ot RTL beamlna IUI pro,ramt -• bland mlxt.ure ol news and en- tertainment frequently lnter· n.apted by commerclals -from space to lncreue iUI audience and earnln,. hu 1pan9d ap- pre h enalon amon1 Luxtm· bour1•1 oeipbon. RTL eurreotly broadcaatl only in French. It.a pro1ram1 are beamed ftom a hilltop tr1111mtt· ter into northeu~m Prance and carried by c1bl1 tbrouab Bet,ium, where mon Ftenc.b· 1~akin1 vtewen watch RTL than Bel1tum'1 own French· lanp11e network. SATELLITE paoGaAM· mlnt WOUid ma .. RT• to Pl'O- v l de pro1 ~1m1 In French, • • • • • • UNCLAIMED GOODS PUBLIC AUCTION OF AUTHENTIC HANDMADE ORIENT AL RUGS LIQUIDATING ENTIRE ENVENTORY of accunwtetld u~meo gooda, ptu• oth•r• from oua STORMI WAllHOUSI tnL.ol~ltt =====~•Varlou1 rvg1 and ca11>4tta of fine Ptv from Iran. P•kt111n, tndta, Afgh1n11tan, Turk•>' Aomll'lta. Auetla and China 'Mdl Vlriety of 11111 Ind OOIOtl A Certltlcttt Of Authe Tum your unusables into · usable caSh.Clll Dally P.llot ctasslfled ~2-5678. .. • tlclty lllllff bl*'* tor t.IGh pUtChlM I YOUI CONYltl•tC~ T .. AUCTION WILL TAii ' PLACI: SUNDAY, MAY 31 AT 2 PM HOLIDAY IMN 25205 La Paz Road, Laguna Hiiis 't • - Daily Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 STOCKS CLASSIFIED E3 ES ustry 11rged to p Seminar speakers cite need · for organized county effort By PATDUMN Of .. Mtr ......... Oran1e 0DQn\,Y business and industry took the first step toward cooidinated effort in the complex rttld of disaster pre- paredness at a seminar which attracted D> participants. The idea for / the meetine ,held Wednesday, at Anaheim Con- vention Center, originated with a group of Orange County busi- ness executives concerned abou~ the need t.o improve plans for coping with major disasters in the county. Fluor Corp., which has its own disaster preparedness plan, spearheaded organization of the seminar together with the Orange County Chamber of Commerce and the Greater Irvine Industrial League. Ri chard Holmgren, chairman of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, told the gatberinf; agency was created "amid :remendous turf hassles" by pooling a number of autonomous agencies to coordinate federal responsibility for disasters rang- ing from earthquakes to ter- rorism. "It was somewhat like making lasagna out of zucchini,'' he quipped. "We also help areas prepare for disaster. I believe preparedness is not an event. It's an inclined plane a series of events with deli berate tradeoffs of insufficient assets to reach a systematized plan." Giuffrida said, "There are no federal programs which will solve all your problems. There is very little program money available, and none at all which can legally be applied directly to industrial preparedness. In· dustries and government agen- cies need to find a true dialogue to work effectively in the high stress situation created by a ma- jor disaster. "Whether the political elite like it or not, some hard prep· aration must be made in ad· vance of a disaster," he said. "If I accomplish nothing else by my trip from Washington, D.C., to speak to you today, I want to as- sure you there's no mystery or magic to preparedness. It taltes conscious decisions based on credible threat assessment." ow do bad bosses et that way? One man thinks he knows . . . E2 Giuffrida noted that, while scientists consider Southern California the most likely locale of a large earthquake in the United States. there are parts or 39 states which are at major or moderate risk of a tremor. About 35 percent of Americans live in these areas, he reported. disaster have bu.nness Leaders planning ahead. the purpose. of the meeting was to take the necessary steps to prepare fot major disasters. natural or mai»made. J . Robert .Fluor, chairman of the board Of Fluor Corp., said. "Present signals convince us of the need to prepare for disaster. Orange County is between the Newport-Inglewood and the San Andreas faults where earth· ' 1 quakes can be expected to reach 8 or higher on the Richter scale. I've lived through a major quake. You shake like hell and the damage can be severe." Fluor noted that his corpora- tion Is "workin1 hard to protect the health and safety of our employees. I feel a particular urgency in meeting this objec- tive. The harcti truth is that busi- nesses are Ultely to have to de- pend on their .own efforts after a major disutrar. Let's not wait for someth*il to happen. Let's start plannJq today," he urged. Explaini._ the federal role in disaster preparedness, Louis Giuffrida, director of the Federal Emergency Manage- ment Agency < FEMA>, said this ''Enough basic seism ic knowledge has now been de· veloped so that we can move in a cooperative effort from a pure- ly research phase to some prac- tical survival steps," he said. '' FEMA now serves as a focal point for cooperation with the state of California in the de- velopment of an earthquake pre· paredness program ... Giuffrida pointed out that earthquake preparedness plans are easily transferable to a nuclear war situation. "Forget the 'short war' mindset," he ad- vised. "In case of a major con- flict, relocation is now favored instead of building shelters. We don't want to factor in fear. but any disaster preparedness plan should be tested, criticized and refined for all possible calamities.'' He also called attention to the increasing potential or actual threat to American communities of technological hazards, such as chemical spills, radiological incidents and transportation or industrial accidents. The FEMA director urged in- dustry officials to take such practical steps to minimize dls· aster e ffects as the pre· designation of successors to key officials. creation of less tive is the Federal Home Loan Bank Board's April 22 decision to allow members to authorize adjustable rate mortgaies. Said Shane, "In creating federal lending regulations, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board hu acted U. re· co1nltlon of the needs of the American people, while in CaUfornla the lending en- vironment for state· chartered usociatlons bas, to a large decree, been pollt.iched. ''The federal refutations off er a wider and e11 con- t ro•ertial opportunity to participate lo national uc0Ddar1 rnarketa for bome loam, thereby brlnatn1 addltlonaf capital lo Calllomla and authorb:lnt a varlet)' ol loan lnatrurneDtl, whlcb c• be tailored to tM nffda " cllff eront borrowert and bu.yen. ''Be(aUM we beUeve con· HfllOD wtll tnJ\IDC• our abWt1 to 1erve ~ ueocta· Upe'a prtmary mbllon u a credit 10.aru for home OWlltr'lldf;, .. Wlltff it ,, DOt oGIY .... ·.tM bell kltelwt ol O\IS', ~ bctflOWftl, but alto m u. bllt mtere1t ot the· vulnerable alternate head- quarters, sperial protection for r e cords and duplicate sets, training of employees and join· ing together with other in· duslries and with government for mutual protection against hazards. William W Whitson. chairman of the emergency task force on earthquake prepared· ness with the the governor's of· fice. compared the potential devastation of a major earth- quake to the Korean or Vietnam war "talting place in a couple of minutes." . He said. "Preparing for a ma- J Or earthquake is difficult because we have no acceptable precedent. State geologists say a major quake could kill 60,000 people in two or three minutes ; ~00 ,000 could be critically in· JUred : 400.000 left homeless; and damage loss could reach $200 billion. l "t FEMA White House Rep and state geologists con· cur t a major earthquake is almH a certainty Jn our lifetle." Whitson warn~d. "We are tt prepared and have been tulle into security because we'\ done so well handling m od;ate disasters. The fact is that.he public must mobilize itseljn the first 72 hours after an aihquake before adequate gov.-iment assistance can be expcted." Wltson explained that the Soutem California Earthquake Pre~edness Project is a state tas)force composed of 33 com- mis.ons -each expert in a spelfi c disaster relief field. · 'Tt task force is focusing on a bo~m-up 'do-it-yourself' ap· proeh and hopes to involve the priite sector on an advisory ba!f," he said. 'fie h ave developed six 'tbJat scenarios' dealinj( with different earthquake situations, and we are setting up an emergency public information center to help coordinate in· formation," he explained. "We urge counties to establish their own task forces that will report to the state. Communities also should negotiate with industry for financial help with their dis· aster preparedness programs." Whitson advised. '·Everyone has budget prob lems today and we urge in dustry to join us in our efforts but it's important that you jou; together here. Rediscover how much we can do without govern- ment assistance," he concluded. Ben Colamarino. program coordinator for the Orange County Office of Emergency Services, also noted the need for self-help in view of limited funds from government sources. "We rely on the mutual aid system Unincorporated county areas t and the <.'it1<:'> l'oorcJinate their efforts "'hen dl'iaster oct·urs, he said "We at lhP eountv level are hap p} t o .. -. ... i~t · sch ools, hospitals and industrv with di s aster preparec1ness ·plans We a lso work with m1h lan units and state and federal agencies At the local level Wt' have a syst em to a ll•rt the g eneral public to immanent chsaster, as w e ll as p rovid ing written materials and information pro gram!>·· Colamanno echoed the call for self-help "We don·t have all the answers and all our <:ities and unincorporated areas are trymg to improve their disaster pre· paredncss programs There's no need for anyon(• to work an a vacuum trs important to de· velop a close contact with local officials and consider 1mnt plan· !See DISASTER. Pagt> f:2l Economists confident of inflation control Consumer Price In<ex Survey supports forecasters' optimism WASHINGTON (AP) -After peaking al nearly 15 percent in the spring of 1980, irtflation has declined slowly but steadily over the past year and many economists are convinced the double-digit crunch upon con- sumers is finally at an end. atockholden of the a11ocla· tton." The appllcatJoo la expect.eel to be filed within a few days and the u1ociatlon set a coai of completion of the con· veraloo by mldau.mmer. Mercury Jolna uveu other atate-charte.red S6LI aeekln& conversion lncludiJlC Financial Federal, home Gibraltar Federal and Ore1 Western. Ot~!~ board actloDJ an nounceo 1 at the meetlial ln eluded thi adoption of tbe 11 IOclatioll'I tricbtJoaal I t percent ttock dl'1dend har~ct.rl ol.iretord J 'm increasingly optimistic w ave turned the corner on in-n on.'' said Allen Sinai, vice p ident and senior economist a ata Resources Inc .. Lex· i on, Mass .. one of the nation's l ing economic forecasting fi s . 1, payable by July 10, or u 1000 thereafter u practical. The board of directora vot. ed to omit the usociaUon'• , reautar quarterl{ caah dJvldend ''~aua1 o the un-certainties of interest rates and the economy. pendin• our abtUly to 1au1e a rt· aum_pUoo of normal Hminl levell. We want to a1M11 the effecllveneu of the ad· mliJ1trattoa'• antl·lnfl•tlon pollcl•, t.M Uminl of tbe re- duetloa ln lnteNlt rat" ln the marketplace and the adopUGD by t.be CoD.sr.., of one or more of the tax· \aeeathe pro1raau for HYtn,'' accOrdJ.Dc to 8h1H. A survey of inflation figures shows that after more than two years of rates in the teens, in· creases in the Consumer Price Index are on the verge of mov- ing into the single-digit range. The trend should continue. say private economists. They cite, among other factors, a strong dollar, a worldwide oil surplus, favorable weather in the Midwest grain-producing areas and government policies to re- duce the federal budget and con- trol inflation. Other economists caution, however, that it will be difficult to reduce inflation sharply without solving the sticky prob- lem or spiraling wage in- creases and low product1v1ty growth. Even the most hopeful believe lt wlll still be several years before the "inflation bear" can be whipped into insignilicance, however. Reagan administration of-~iclals have sought to play down any meaningful long·term decline in inflation, saying their policies need to be implemented to assure a permanent reduc- tion. But .. I think long t<•rm infla· lion rates h<J \'C' peaked," said Michael K. Ev:ms. president of Evans E con omic!> I nc. a Washington-bas<'d forl'<·aster. Backing up the N'ono mists' optimism ts lhl' CPI A survey was made of changes 1n the CPI on a year-to·year basis. starling in January 1979 Looking at the changes between. for example, May 1979 and May 19fl0, irons out any bul ges or dips that may show up in a month-lo month as· sessment. The CPI is a measure of the average change in prices over time in a fi xed market basket of goods and services. The survey found that con- sumer prices reached a high in March and April or 1980. when the CPI soared 14.7 percent. Inflation started declining last May, dipping· lo 14.4 percent. It held at 12.6 percent In October and November and inched down to 12.4 percent In December The slide quick•.med in the first four months of this year. In April, the CPI went up 10 per· cent, marking the lowest ~ear­ to-year change since the 9.9 per- cent rise of February 1979. Wickes $6 .3 million loss an iniprovernent Wlckea Col. tnc., the pa.rent company cruted when . th• Wicka Corp. acqul,.S Gamble- Sko1rno tnc. in Auauat, told tu annual meetmi of atockholdera that the eompUlJ reported an lmprovem.nt in operatlnl re· 1ult1 ln the ftnt quarter ol llstaJ 1912 over the combined pro (orma ret\&IU of the Wickes Corp. and Gambit-Jfmo ln the Hit period tut year. A 1ou trom conttnuilaJ opera- tlona ot ... 3 mllllon, OJ' 48 cenu per ~moo lbare, LI 1 41 per· cent l~Pl'OYUIJ." onr UM '10.1 mllllon loss. or 82 cents per com· mdn share, for the flnt 13 weeks offiacal 1981 . Chalrman E. L . McNeely 1ald, "The most •lanlficant. reason for the flrat.quarter loss is a con· linu1llon of the unprecedented pattern of hlth intereat rates Thia hurta our bulldlns·related operations beeauae of 1bullden' lnabillty to nnance new projfftl and 'prohlbiUve mortiate ratet Uiat frustrate consumer demand, ··one of th• count.rY'• moet "°1· damental obUtaUon1 ti lo ueure • that ltl cilJn• are properl1 hOuaed." • I J . --"" Orange Coast DAI PILOT ~rlday, May 29, 1981 Executives fl e bosses Theory cites 'experience gap' in 11\aking of bad manage SY JOHN CUNNIFF .,, ........... NEW YORK -A 1lul of canclldat.a for the ~orporata executive autte la 1.bowbl1 up these days wttb a terrible career defect: They have not learned to work their w1y lhrouth 1 tou1h 1ltu1· tlon and a bad boss. That aase11ment comea from Profe11or Eusene Jennin11, pioneer in exeeuttve moblllty 1tudlea 101111 back lo the early 1NOa and whose pioneer book, "Tbe Mobile'Man11er,'' dttallt the routes to corporate succeu. The effect Qf not learnln1 to •'work t.hrourh'' a bad bola, uid I.be professor, who t.achet sradu1te mana1ement at Mlcbt1an State t.Jnlvenlty and advises corporaUona and ex· ecuUvea, is you become one yourself. cu•1u"" Jennin&s learned th1t candidates for executive ranks today find lt more expeditious to nee rather than adapt to bad bosse1 and tough altuattons. In Oeeing, he says, they fail to learn tact and pa- tience. This e•perience gap, however, fails to show on resumes. ··success travels better than failure," said Jennings. "Even good candidates may appear better on paper than they are. Defects are often missed." It wasn't always that easy to nee. ln the 1950s and 1980s executives knew that one in four bosses on the route to the lop would be impossible to deal with. They learned to make the beat of It. reaulta·O~ted world executives know th aa they near dlvlalon level ot rapom!blllty ou of career e 11 the treat•t of penalUes," ex· plalned A 1ubo~ate can work three or four yea for a bed bola Olly to dlacover the bad boll b no power to 1upp01', the 1ub'1 promoUon. Or, at if the bou la p1'moted, he faill to take ub with b.im. Faced with the_, po11ibllltiea, those 1ee to move awtftly tbrout~lbe executive ranb dee to leverace, or Jump to uother company. And d Jen.ninp, the new comtany often doesn't ask b- ln1 questJona. ' It couldn't be done dvln1the19SOI and 19801, when, he aald, to "Cnove bec:aUM of boas waan't an acceptable uplanatton. No m how bad be wu, ''you bad to have supervisor'• ble11ln1." In hla role as corporat. a4vlaer Jennln&• the consequences of the eaaler standards tan't pleased. The failure to team the arts of and patience, be feels, is a hu1e, 1eU-perpetu defect. ''When such a person lnherita a rebellloua ordinate he is apt to show similar impatience lack of understanding," he declares. "Ha failed to learn how to deal with a bad boss becomes one." Tbe profeasor indicated be can't really bl those who avoid the unpleasant experience of I· Ing with such a boas, especially when the ll· perience can delay an executive'• adv e through the ranks. In fact, he su11ests tba e long-sulferlne soul who accepta a bad bo11 y after day is probably without career opport. es elsewhere. But from a broader perapective, be feels la an unwelcome development that reduces the 11· ty of management. That is why he calla it "a ri· The rules are different today. "Either the cor· poration removes the bad boss or the subordinate leaves " said Jennings, adding: "In either cue the s~b fails to learn the art of tougbinc it throu&h.'' __ T=h.:.ey"-=b:.:a:..v:..;e::....;;th;.;.e:::.:i;.;.r_r;_e::.;a::.;s:..;o;.;:na..;:._f:..;o_r_l-'e-'a_v_ln_,g=-._"_In_tbi_. -'-.. ----ble defect." IRS .RULES' IN YOUR IFAVDR! TAX SHELTER ~EMINAA MAMIOTTHOTEL(F911h6on ..a.nd), NEWPORT BEACH 1:30 PM to 4:30 PM Tlwl"ld9y. June 4, 1981 Gain valuabte knowledge from prominent C.P.A.'a. AttorMya, Bn:*9ra. and General Partne,. about Tax Sheltered lrwHtmentL How to Identity worthwNle 8helt.,. • Tax Conaidefatlona • Legal Pltfatla • Rlska/Rewerda • Investment Timing • Economic Merita • and more ... Designed for beginning and experlenoed lnvestOl'I • • • • • • • • Daily Pilot classifieds work for you.Call 642-5678 for quick cash sa·les . who wwit to pr ... rw and Increase e11pltal. REGISTRATION FEE: $75-SPACE LIMITED 8ponl0Nd by the in.tttut. f0t Bulfneea Eduolitton (18!), •C.llfomle Nonproflt~lc Benefit~ ~EXECUTIVE SUIT!$ RESERVATIONS/MORE INFORMATION CALL (714) 851 ·9063 JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr., Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 714 -631-3651 Mone• IMYITIMO llDS I .. TH• 1UP••10tt COU•T OP NOTICE. 15 HEREBY GIVEN INI TM• STAT• OP CAL"'O•MIA IN .., J-•. 1•1. et IN'*" Of 1:00 AND PO• TM• COUNTY 0 p.m . Ill 1M City Clerll't Office ioc.... OllAlfO• PtJBUC NOTICE el 17200 J_... -..er._ lrvlM, IN THE MATTER OF THI! AP·------------ CellfOmle..,. City ol lrvlM Wiii -PLICATION OF PAMILA $TONE STAT .... lfT o .. AIAllDOMM•MT 1114• kw tlll llUlllketlGn ol '"' leg91 FOR CHAHGf OF NAMI!. 0" UH or notlcea ol IN City of lrvlM durlno IN CAI• llO. A·~ "'CTITIOUI IUSIN•U MAM• flKel y-1-1-1"2. 0•09• TO SNOW CAUi• TIM toll-lno per-i..11e ..,_.. All Oldt lf\etl lie cont.i-111 lffled ICCP Sktlea llPI "-cl , ...... of !fie llctlllOUI buM ..... t1111e~---Oll Ille Ollllkle 111 the WHEREAS, PAMELA STONE, ...... Nme I-•• 1...._,.~, ll011er • .._ 11._ e PwtltlOfl •1111 u. s T I v It l It , a R o w N • "llDS l'DR PUILICATION 01' ClerkotlllltCourtforeriOfOtrcl\e ltUTHEltFORD. IUILDEltS, 11711 LEGAL NOTICES CLOSING DATE 1119 Pttflloner't -from PAMELA Tullpwooel Cir., Hunll119I011 a .. cll, JUNf, 4, lttl, 2:00 P.M." Tiie bid1 STONE lo PAMEl..A $HVLAMITE c.111. '2646. ... e ll ~"' ,,.. loO-fno lllfonM. STONE. TIM l'kllU-Buslnet.I Neme ... llM IT 1$ OltDEltED lfWtt e ll -111· ltrr• 10 -w .. flled 111 Or .... I. 11111"'-,_per ieoe1 ed te•ntecl Ill u. ....,_.ltled ft\etw C-ty °" ll·a«I. 2 ltete per COIU""' IMh beyOll<I e ... er before IN• Couf1 •I 10;» •.m. ,._ .. Ewrtn lllulhtnord, ,,, N. minimum.. °" July I, 1'11, 111 Oeperlment Numoer Cembtlclgt, 0r-... C.111. t2W. l . Re1e Pet C01umt1 l11<h lor ..a.. l , ol tht ~Jtl..S C-t. •oceted Olrerd s. •-· ff71 Abttlwm St., qW111 r-. et 100 0Ylc Cenlef 0r1 ... W.U, Senu Cypreu. C.llf. t0610. • O.•W. r_.,.., IOt" Mw copy Ane,Celllon!N,--c-lfeny, Clle flu Alftn Steurer, 11711 ..... C-..llal...... why , .. fl"9tl'*' "" °*'le of "-Tullpwood Clrc ... H""U""°" hech, ~. ArMt ol <lr<ult llon lettecll _,, .-1c1 llOC lie tr-Celll. 91M. tllowlnoe1M1olclrculetlolll. IT IS FVltTHE• ORDEltl!D -· • Tiiis 11u11 ..... wet"""""'"' bY • •· Number 01 peld 1ubKrlpll011t COjly or lllb Orett lo 5l'fW C.-be generel perlMf"Mlp. wlllll11lrvlMCllyUmll1etnoum. publlahed ffl 111• Delly Piiot, e "-'*111l.Rutllerlof'd 1 Fr..-y of pwl1llce11on._ ntw1peper of ,.,..,., clrculetloft Thia a~ wM flled with ,,. I. N~ ol (8'lln dl1trl11U19CI .,. prl1111ed Ill 0r.,.. CowitY. C.lllwllle, ~Y Clerll o1 Orenoe C-y on Mey .... 1 .... -~ Irvine City Llmlb el ... OtK• e ... lot '-141 WUHll,,. •• ,.,. <eat. wffkt prior to Ille Nit .. 1 for ,_erl119 "1 ... t. Dete ol ..S)udketlon H -~· on lhe Pftltlon. Publltlleel Or8119t Coeat Delly Piiot, of ..... rel clrculeti.o wllhf11 the eo...... RONALD H. PRENNI!• May I, U, 22. tt, 1'11 20t1-tl ty of Orenoe -• 11ttetNn1111et .. 1c1 J""9fofU. Mjucll<Atlen It cwrenlly 111 full force ~-Court •ftd ertect Md hA not..._.. 11ecetN.,. eOWA•D H. ITOW• PUBUC NOTICE Ml elide. A....., .. Law Al tht lime find for re<elYl"f ~. ., ........ c-onw "'C'TITIOUS eu11M•H llley Wiil be IM*fkly ~. uomlned .......... ._ ... ~ ...... ITAT•MSMT .,,. declered. Th• llldl Wiii lie .. _,_.lleedt,CA9'Mt The fol~,.. per-It Oolne butl· cel<ul--IN,._, el u. rKullt 11141 ...... """ ea: el IN .,....... -IN C.OICUYlleM of PUlll..,_, 0rM9t Ceet4 Delly lll'lleC, PA l It IC I A ' • I HT a Ill I 0 It IN lllclt wtll ... r_.... le , .. City Moy tt, ,., J-s. n. "'' JJl2>41 DISION, •• l•lf'Mflt•. 1rv111e, CA c-11 • 11a r-1er _1,.. o1 J-"'" D, t•t. lll'Al!UCIA ANN SAMAltD, '9 lhe CitY C-11 ,_,.,,.. ... rltM PtJBUC NOTICE ... mef!M, In-Ille, CA mi. le reject.,.., -ell Illa If II c-IOtn Tftk 11oA1MU It <endwclM lly en In· II la -y le eo M lot ,,_ .... k 411•1-.iel. ..... Tiii CJty C-11 elN -"'CTITIOUS 9UMM•Ja PlllllCle NW1 ..,,..... Iller ...... It_. IN 111c1 on Ille~ NAMllTAT ... aNT T .... -WM fllell wllll IN Of ,.., • ....,.MIOll -· -_..Iller or The fol~ ...,_ 11 ilolnt C..,ftlf Clertl el Onnge Gwtlty .., PUBLIC NOTICI l'ICTITIOUS •UllMU MAMt ITAHMllMT Tiit lollowl119 peraon1 •fdol110 butlMnes: BEACH STATIONERIOU2 Mllclltll, lrvlne, Collfomle t2J Jec.O Gorcle E111.erPrl'"11<., • Celllorllle ~etlOll, 22752 l.nert, 1:1 Toro,Cofll-e~ Tlllt llulltlna 11 conctuc19CI ~ ~or· partllOft. J-Ger<la Emef11rltn, Inc. JecOll 0-"•· ,.....ldllnt Tlllt •-I we• 111911 ... llw Cwnty Clerll ol Or-CouMy May 19~~:111-....., 0r-. eo.11 oeu~:i~ Mey n. 1t. June!, 11, "" )'J...1 ----------1- PtJBUC NOTICi PICTITIOUS •UllM•M "AM• ITAT•M•llT Tiie lollowlnt peraons ere 1111 butlMH .. : TlllDANT ASSOCIATES, UI A11e11ld• 0. Le Corlote, S..I IO, Lf91111e Hiiia. Ctllfomle •3'5:1 Arthur ""· ........ ,,. ,, .. , w• L•11e, H""ll"1llOll 8H<h, Cell le .,_ lr1K8 W. _.., 2"01 "u Peer, L...-Nl.,.1, Ctllfwllle Oonelcl M. Scttt, , .... ~ mtrOll, "ounlelll Velley, Cell t270I T"I• llvalneu II COllCIUclltCI e ttMrel 1*1,,.,...IP ~M.A.,._y Thlt .,_. w• flled WI Ceuntr Clet1I ol 0r.,.. c-ity.., y it,'"' Mt MKll..., nwr lie ... lowetC bid--ceo·~P""" IVITSMS. '" IGflW A"""·'"'· ...... u. ...... ~111• lllctOH. -· "' "1....a ""Ill"'*' Or-. GoHI Delly De..,.: Mey a, '"1 ltoed, c.t.e MitM, C.f...,,,.t ta». lll'utlllNll 0r.,.. c.ett O.lly Pllet, Mey n. "· J,_ s. 12. "" • .,, tt, "· J-s. 12, ,., '*"' NMKY C. ltOW\AllD J •met A He..-er .. 11, II, It Qty°"' '8Mfe ,_..... c;.tlAI Melo, <AfW.... City• I....... ~I•..,.._ 11 c~ lly M lfl. PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE Pultlllhed Ore11oe Caul Delly dl11leuol. Pie.I, #My 22,Jt, 1•1 2Jl1>41 J-A. -·• -· 11 "ICTITIOUI itultN•ll "ICTITIOUI •USIMllA Tllll --"'-wlUI llAMa lfATtMllMT .. ..._ ITAT .... MT PtJBUC NOTICE Cw11h CIHll ef Or .... Gwtlt., T ... 181MWlfte ....,_ .. Wi"I -I· Tiie felMwlne ...,_ It °""9 Aptll tt, ltl1, Mlt e1: Mlt H : " THI "l.OttAL lll'ANTAIY, .... 1 CALIPOltNIA INVISTM• , MTG llrYITI ... ••DI PlllHI ..... Or .... C-M O•Oy ....... lllmriterw .... °""'· ~ llNCll, "'" ... .,.,.,.. Clrclt, llllt• K, Irv IMY 12, 2', J-S, 12, '"' Q1H1 c.lllw"'8 taMa Cellltrlllt '2714 lltllct I• ,..,..., tlwn '"et UM Cffttlllo LM MCLOM, .... 1 .._... Mer11 Ger-.............. a.N • T~ • h C... C-. mer•elll C.Uft, Mew...,t •••Oi, Orl11e, ~ llMtl\ CAI~ •u '""""Y Cell ... Ot.trtct ef Ortf181t PtJBUC NOTICE c;.ell~,... Tlllt......._lt~lllYe.t C..y Clllflllnlio, 1'lll ,_.,,,.. -... Tlllt ...,_ i. ~ .. Ill' M Ill-•Iv._,.., ....... 11 ......... ~y.J-lf, "'lwO..L .... , t l!Nt1LAMttllt "" ..... ~ ~.. ~ICTITICM1t•u1t••11 .. ·--Ill ··-n•~ .... aoMi ~ -.1e1 ~ et 1'11 NAM91TATtMlllfT ~e I.. Mcu.N ' __,, - -w • .., A•e111t A11t11vt, c .. tt Mt••, Tiit i.IMwlfle ,_,_ •t• •1111 Tlllt ..,.,..,. -,...,_ WHfl ... c:-tyQef11tfOu•1t1t~., ... c.i ........... llNCll 1 ........... wftl ...,_, •• c-1• °""' "°' .... ~ -....,, ». ""· ..__.ldy ...... Ml,....fw; M•W"°"T HllOHTI •1CYCL8 », , .. ,. "Mllft ~ OrM81 Olll9I o.tl~ _, t1N He. 9ft -PllllNTINO "ALL IHOlt, t11 OI• N•wHn •Iv•., "'*l.,..Or-c.MO.lly ... ltll, ,_.'tb,2',J-Jdl.1"' "'' ICMIDULa or 111$T"UCTIOM, H-pott lleKfl.i CA~ _._ OCC • "•llert L, .. .,.,.NII, 1t2t Cnr1 Me-tt2,lt,Jwwf,tt,ttel UIMt ··-----------t 81• Ne. tt1 -P'llMTlllO A_,......,llMOl.CA...... ------------OOLOIN WIST ~LIOI l'"L&· Caf.ilM M. .. _MllLl'91 c-t ltl1 CUlllllCHIOULt A-• .....,.,. 9Mcll, 11;A ....._, All ... .,.. .... lfteccerMl!t•--Tltla ..._ It ~ .,., Ill- -_.,.....,.I~ ...... c..N> 111¥......_C ....... & WIN), ....... 9'1Klfk.atlMt Wllkll-.. aw.NM M. ..,,.,.... .. , ............ llC'WM It! ... eMce ...._, &.. .....,_ ..... lllW dtell • ........ ........ TJlit ............ - , .... """ fllt ...net. c...., (Jlwtl" 0r-.. c.-..; ... ...., .. ...., ................. "'"'· .We ~tCllKll.~~ ........ 'All ...... i.., .... C-. • ._,., .... -....,.... • ...... DftwlL ... t, .......... ._.,CA .,..., et .. C.. C1Me•1•tv c...._ ....._ efl(--. Oletrlct ._.. ef TrwttMt , .. .-._... ............. .,.. ti ....... u ~ o. .. c..t .,...., ,... .-uM> ,, .. ....,._ •• ..., ..... "'°' t. t!. ~ ... ,.. ho.et .......................... ~~~!.:-.,'::.':= ' ftJBUC NOTICE 1 ............ ,.__ .... -,_..;,----~=~,----~ c...-............ ., .... '-...... "=t.=.:5:-.:m-•• STAT--:..e:..•••t .. A••·-----·MT ,..~...,..:... ...... ,., ,.cm.,......,.._•NM PUBLIC NOTICE Pt18UC NOTICE .................. , ............. , .. ...._...,_ ..... .._ ............ ....... ..... ... _., .. ,.........._., ____________ , """ ...... n.-.. --.. -.,.... llCU ... ....,.... .. -..,.......,,._.., .... ._ n, ... .._,..~,l.A.._ P9CTI,... ... ,, • • ...... 111 a, .... " ... C.::-...:· ...._ '-..;;::.-::...~ .... ...,... PUBLIC NOTICE •"OW•• ' I Ad group elects presiden't0 :· lack Mealer of Mealer & Emerson Inc. In Costa Mesa hu been elected president of the Oranie County Advertising Federation for ita 1981·82 yur, beginninc July 1. • • • Tamar Brower of Corona del Mar has Joined Bozell & Jacobs Public Relations as account coordinator In the Newport Beach of· flee .. Since movtnai to Orante uounty m 11173, she bu worked with Fluor Corp .. UCI, AM lnternaUonal and Penlll-BUu Communica lions. • • * Arcble W. Da.nbam, formerly president of DoucJas Oil Co. of California, has been elected vice president, logistics and downstream planning, petroleum products for Conoco Inc. Douglas ls a subsidiary or Conoco. Dunham had been located al Douglas' headquarters in Costa Mesa • • * Saaan Scarp\ has been named manager From Page E1 • of the Santa Ana branch of Allstate Savlngg , and LOan Asaoclahon . . "' . Flekher C. Larson has been i'r"amed aa- sociate manager of the Newpoll't Centel'. Agency or Pacific Mutual Ufe Insurance Co. I He lives in Irvine. ·' * * * I Paige V. Simpson, president o~ Citizen.-· Bank or Costa Mesa. was appolnteti a direc- tor of the California Bankers AIS(>Ciation at , lhe organlzaUon's 90th annual converAion. • * • :.! Brian Taggart has been a1>1>olnte4 '! branch manager of lhe Newport Beach office : at Western Federal S1vings and, Lo'n A .. : socialion. He lives in Westminster. : 1 * • • Frank J . Retnb1rt is vice president, engineering, of Irvine·based Mlcrodata Corp, Prior to assuming his new position, he was • vice president, systems and software. : DISASTER PREPAREDNESS URGED . • • ning and preparedness ex· ercises." When asked how Orange Coun· ty would approach a relocation or evacuation situation. Colamarino said, "I won't touch the subject of crisis relocation In Orange County with a 20-fool pole." He added that nine county jurisdictions will meet next week to examine an approach to OVER THE COUNTER the problems that would occur In an emergency relocation effort. George M Chitty, executive director of the Orange County Red Cross, said, "All of us should talk about the specific things we are going to do in case a major disaster occurs. The JOb of the Red Cross is lo get some organization into the total con· fusion that occurs for a week NASO LISTINGS after a major disaster." . Chitty noted that a mlJor earthquake is not the only tbrepl faced by Orange County. He spoke of the recent Jandslidea at Bluebird Canyon in Latuna Beach, brush fires throuahopt the county and the concert> ltlt by 80,000 countians who ~live within the 10-m1le radius of the San Onofre nucijtar pawer oladt. t r lo .. l ~--= ...... ,.,........ .....::, ....... , ....... 't.:.r ,_...... _. M JAV .. le l.-Yll,"'1111, tU JCllNTt•t~ 1&111 UY· "--'--elk llf a.Y,LC.-..l9tl1• t,"-Tlllllll,-.&C----. ~~ClllMlwlM-• ~"* ace '!Sf;tt~.... -~...,.... ...... ._,._,..._, .............. _-. ~ ...... ""' ~-............ 4 ~ CIGl'PI ... ---. .._ .. CA...._ C...._~... -............... ... ft11t -......... e ... -. ........ .. .. .. .,.,,.,.., Jelll W.1 ,.,,, LI .. ........ ........ ...... ,......~- ......... ~... ............ ..___ ... 2 "L ........... _ ...... _ .. _...._ ....... ,..._.._,... __ c.-. .................... m.°"*• .... c.iatf•Mlllr CllMBlfClrflrll~c..,--. .. ""· " ""' ,,_ ..... _...... ....... .... Cllilj ... ~ ........ -....Cllillie ............. '-----.:.:.;:;.;;...~= ........... ~............... ... .. " ........ ,. ... ~ ...... ,.. ... ..... ( a a a c 5 ·" -• 0 _ ~ as co us;z:_ t • a a s •.t _ II c a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,frlday, May 29, 1981 s Ea NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS CWOtAllQt!S UICLUDI f•AOIS 011 TMI HI• YO .. C, MtDWI" PA(U1tC ,. ••• IOUON. Olt•01T AllD (tll(llOUlfl "°'" lllCIJIAllOH AllD •l"O•TIO IY TIJll llAaO 6110 lllUllllT The paradoxea beg for cluiflcaUon. The hotel/motel trade I.a holding firm , the restaurant business 11 mixed but no worse than that; travel, though, is a disaster. The contrut.s are clear. We, ramed the globe over ais a naUon ot wanderers, are relaxln1 and play. log as hard as ever. But we are staying cloaer to home than in many years, and saving in other ways. The peak holiday months are directly ahead. Here are your rules for ruel ·uving and dollar·cuttin1 vacations. You can't help but win wltb them 1. Go early or late, Choose what's left in May or go in JWJe -or wait until September-October. Avoid the peak July-August period Try aoing south in sum mer, north in winter. Timing alone can slash ~ your expenses 20 percent to 40 percent. It's i::a...:..,-;.Z "in " to go off. , s e a s 0 n 0 r IYlVll PDITIR shoulder - season. 2. Stagger your travel days or even hours to save 30 percent to 40 percent off "prime-time" fares. Take fullest advantage of weekend and fiy-by·night air travel prices. 3. Seek out the o!f-beat. Avoid the newest hotel In lhe latest hot spot. Pick the outskirts and often gave 25 percent to 40 percent off midcity or center area places. Use the interstate highway system and freeways to bypass the maln action scenes. 4. Search for the new cut.rate airlines and less fancy resorts. You will have to fly smaller, slower planes from out-0f·the·way airport.a, forfeit frills. even pay for on-board food. But your net savings on these cut-rate lines can run 30 percent to 75 percent off regular fa res. 5. Become your own travel expert by reading travel publications. Thoroughly investigate tour packages. You may not be able to book many of the most attractive tours on your own. But a travel agent can do the job for you -at no expense to you. 6. Look into the rapidly spreading "Bed 'N Breakfast" places. They may be just rooms and baths in private homes, bul they can be exceedingly attractive as well as inexpensive. "B&B " organiza lions list names of members, addresses and prices. You make arrangements directly. B&B groups range from "Urban Ventures," through which you can get rooms in homes and apartments in Manhattan and Brooklyn, to "Bed & Breakfast Hawaii," which features seaside cottages throughout the island chain. Bed & Breakfast International. at Kensington , Calif., and the Bed & Breakfast League, Princeton , N J .. have members from coast to coast 7. If you like the sea, the success of "bareboat" luxury yacht charters at resorts has spawned lower cost, rent-a-boat imitators at small, local marinas. Call local yacht clubs or boat yards, or check the magazines in the field You'll find an affordable vessel. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES Nl\.W YOlllK(AP) fl'IMIOOW~--•"'t~ ~oc:~r.o..,. ,,,., •. AMERICAN LEADERS ~ !Ltd ~ .. :ii:t..1 :.r-i f..ie:rs. r;, Tm .,, 7• 433. 47.'7 + 1 06 VII m:ri IOI~ 106 I 107.,.._ O 04 Stk .... Jtl.SS »6. lt •.u + 0 ll I r>dut .. • • .. . 4, 120,'°° Tr•n 2,13•,600 Utllt S.1,000 U St• 1 ... 1.200 WHAT STOCKS DID H!W YOllll( IAP) Me' 11 Adw•nc.o r...,.J, 0.CllMd UI ync11.n9"1 170 H::• ~r~:• \"},' NtW 1-1 11 WHAi AMO DO NEW YORI( IAPI Mey 11 A<lv•n<-cl OKllntd Un<ll•n0td fCllet I••.,.• ..... 111(1111 NtW lowt METALS Tllwr.O.y Prew ~~ $11 no .. ,. 126 ,. Pret1 0;1. i.o· l'OS 121 .. I C:....-~1c...U• pound, u .S.ckolu,.. lltllf L.., a.... cents•.....-. Ilk .. v. ,.,,lt • "°"""· dellv.....S. Tl• s.AMI NWl.el' Weeil compotlte Ill Al•,..._ 1...0,.ntu !*Ind. H. '(, Marc...., .-u.oo "' llas•. f'latl-$o419.00troyor .. H V SILVER Tllurldar Sliver SIO.UO par troy ouno, Ha"Cly & Herrnen ontr oelly C1UOW GOLD QUOTATIONS Tll""4AY L_...: ,,,_,,.,.11~1 .. M7t.OO, up $JU L••fo111 ollernoon ll•lnt M1t 00, uP SIUt. l'arll: c.....i ror llOlldey l'r.....-.: ClotH I .. llOllOOy 1~111 c..-!of' llOlldey MeHf & H-1 Conly deity •-I .. ,. ....... 1us I ....... ! (Olll' deity Olltlltl M1t.OO, .. 912.ts • ........ , (en4y deity ..-> l•brl<Ated ..... 16, .. 111.U SYMBOLS PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "tcTnlout •utt•llU UMalTAT•M•T T ... N419Wlft9 --· at• .. llMI _, __ : NEW~T MAIN, UI •. .._ S.., c;.i. .... CA ftUJ. 111-'1 w. o.-. llfit ,_.,.,. Arcll. S-,,,_, CA '1"'5. 1119M'1 Ill. ZlefNr, UI e. 20lfl M .• CMta~CA..U. Tt1l 1 itwlne11 11 conducted i., • .. nerel..,....llllp, ~111.Z- . Tlllt ..._ -llltif --C:_t, Cten flf Orantit c:-, on,_., I, 1 .. 1. ................. ,..,..,.,.. 0r.,,.. C..tt Deity ~ .. , •. "· u. ... ttl1 11»41 PUBUC NOTICE "IC'TtnOUI avt1•U1 ........ ITATUlllMT TM ,........_ ..,_ 11 Wlflt w.i- lleMH: THE 9UY AMIEllllCMI AG .. •CY, tnt ~WI SI., ~te A"•• CA tt101. .... m, w..,.. ._.. UJt .......,,.11., S...te A-CA ftl07. Tlllt .....,_II canM-b' Oft I.,_ ............ ""''"'w.111-Tlll1 llMllMM -flied #1111 Ille Cw11ly ClaR et OrMet c-ty on -.,u.1 ... "'""' ~llllM Or .... CMtt Delly~- .. , IS, 22, Jt, J-S, 1'11 120.01 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ....... . . . Orange Coatt DAIL y P1LOT ~rlday. May 29. 1981 Pt.JaUC NOTICE rvauc NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 5 6 7 8 D A I L y Te rt.. Yter M, Cal 642-5678 MOUSU FOi SALE ~1-"' ..,_ .... .. ..._ ...... _.. (•po141aM .. M• ('"'-"'""' c-. ""• °"""-IDT ... ,_.,. v.ii., ........ ,,_.... ... f._, C:.':.. ht:h t::::~~ ... . ·-~ .. .. =t::n. .. .::• .S.• J.._..,. C'•pt•tr•~ S....AA4 S.ol lloe<h -hi.., .... •t'IJ(.•tMlH .................... RUllSTATE Arrt•lt tot kN AW1:fbitftU (Of Silt' :::.:.:r.~, u ... ,.,,l Loh < ,.,..,, ~~n::,~:~'ro:', (Npku• l PIHt ~lfl' ....... t•beMo~tf . ..._..,,....,, l"6•ttu1 tt-foPt"n)' lM• '°' -.. .. Mr~'-Urne frlr .,,11,, Mf)il#nln (iin .. rt "'""'' '"•'!f' t o Prop r::., ~~~:~" K•..c'.M• • .,.,.., f1tO\f' ..... , .... .u ~:u•·"• .. lhaJ .... ,.,,. •• "\" RENTALS ~ ..... .._.,...., ~l•fYJnuJM4 Houe.n ""'a ~ I ft/ Coedono1uvnu t 11tft (OftdomU'WUfM \ ftf To.•hou.Mia f\;rn Tv-"'*'.w9 \ nt Oupa.t>-." "' ,.. ~•ttlnf Alib t'\ttfll Auh l rtlw1t'I Aph .. \lrnw l ,., ........ ~-• tloord tkMh'fOl.t"i• G~tU~1o """"',,_, Rrmab \ Nal.nn R•nl•h M•nlah tu '1'l•tt• G•r••n fUf Rtnl OlhC"• hental s..~•rtn• ... ,.. .. t JMw\lrtel R1rtwt•I :::.1: ~.rulld Ml\t ft•r.t•I' BUSINESS, INVEST MCifl. FlllAllCE ::::;: ~::.~· :~:::::::: ~P.':.,~) MOM) lo L,,wn MCW>) •antfd• Mt'W\••C" TO• AMllOUllCCMEllTS. PERSONALS & LOST & fOUllD 4~tnwn4• '•r J'r'61 t .. c•I NtA1rn t.ott . ttNnd rtoonah • ~ •••• , li..t&• 1,.,,.t• SERVICES "''"'r• 1-..rt"Mtllft CMPLOYMCllT & nEPAIATIOll Vhouh ll'l.•lr..,..tM'H\ JOO W •Aliff• Uf'lll ~•n4f'O '1 &., ~ MEJCHANOISE ... llUll .., 1011 um , .. ·-um , .. , .. , ... ... ·-,., lotl , .. "'" IO'l'I ·-, .. ,. ·-llGI --... -------........ C-ol ...... ~ ......... ~.~.,. .. r,..." ............ ~M• Rtnt t~h.rltt ..... "'" -.11 .... O<n• =~:,..· T1Wrotm1011 ""''"" (•"'""'~" ... t'Jec1nc r.n =-~ .. -... · ~ll~lt••• lr .. Wt Tr•1'otl TnOH• l'OUO .WOIH•.-lllE {,'f:Mf'•I "-.......... ~tt Rt:l'rUltU.\ 'V•U::t;11 ~~,':;,~~-= • y,-_.,i.. 1-Aw4uLA•••ft11o A~Wanlt•J AUTOl IMPolTlO "'"""''"•' A.,• K.,,,_.., A...,, \111••·• .... 1. HMW l.•P11 civ-U>ll O.i-~Vrl' .,.,,.,. ~ •• l -· J .. .:u•I J~~"A ~:!.::ta.~!· M..td• Jibtu•~"\ ~•1 Ml. l&GH •IPr• P.ni«"t• p.,.. .... .. Ohl ... k..n ... u Moth filotnr ftO\f'' ,,. .. !llU s...irurv Tv1eu fr1wmpft \u4••Wfl«M Voh•J .. , ........ ""' bW(l AUTOS, NEW AUTOS, USED l •d11f•C' t..•m•,.. t tw-.,..,. ... \.hrt•l•t \.'...,mr\ t:'!~'•+ l".vw.c•r ?::.f' 1m..-r111 t..nrv4n Mot:t1tk &hrr.U) !~.:t ... ""·"'" Yl)RWNl.9 Punl••r. rri!.6.W.tbtrd \·~· -~ .......... ... = -.. - WIO .... --·= -= '"o . '""' a: .... 9110 = .... -1'lliw -· -- p I L 0 T For an Ad In WOMtf'I Wtrtd Call Sue 642-H7ef lxt. 130 C Cool, Slimming L lE A s s I F I E D 9239 • SIZES M-41 Bell 11111 Cl\Ull(hltll "1e. Punttd P1tt11n 9239 Wont· en'l Sua .,. lA nch bust w1lll 40.111"1 hill). 36 (40 bust. 42 1119~ 31 (42 bull. •' l\1p), 40 ('4 bllit1 U ll1p). •2 (46 bu!*.. .. ll1p), ... (48 Ml 50 111p). .. ~ bt$l S2 ll1p) 41 (~ llult. ~· "·~ .. El ••••• ooz • •••• - 1g s, r. ri I II - ' ' • y r • Orange Coast DAJLY PILOT~rlday, May 29, 1981 llilyPllat • ~·~~~:ad -~.~.~ ........ ~.~~ ........ ~.~~ ....... ~~.5.~ ........ ~::.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~:.~~ ........ ~~.~ ....... "'"e r t I 1 e d I n t h 1 s G.....e I 002 '"-"• I 002 Gt•r• I 002 GHer• I 002 Ge .. r<ll I 002 Gt•r• I 002 GtMf'GI I 002 GMtr.t I 002 newrec.r ls 1ubject lo ·••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• • ••••••••••••• • ••••• •• • • • • ••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •• •••••• •• • • ••••••••••• • • • •• • • • • • • •••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• :!_::\t~:1~a:~r ~~ ARST TIME unME BUYERS ~......---D~l-.:a..bo-....ut~~ LINDA ISLI nu Q e Wide channel view from spectacular r;~~tea·~ro~~::re:~:: SPONSORSHIP PROGRAM architectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, e<rlmlnation based on B B ch POOi home. Slip for 2 large boats. 'race, color. religion. Rrst Time ay & ea $1,495,000. Summer occupancy. sex. or nauonal origin. Sponsors LIDO ISLE HO" .. RS o.r an intention lo make Home Buyers Real Estate ..... any such preference Featured on Homes Tour this lovely • All opportunity to get a • The 1atl1t·-1on or 11 m It a lion. or d 1 s -""'' traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3 cnmlnatioo." :.=.:w~~.=~~01 ~:~1r~.~=~ REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE1949 b:ifi hQ~Y· newlv decorated. Priced to ·Thia newspaper will not '• HALI' th• down a'nd •Lucrative linanclal COME WITH US •.• TO NEWPORT se quic .Y at $475,000. Must see. knowinfly accept any ~themthly pymts •nd tu benefit.. HEIGHTS. CUSTOM BUILT THREE N l od l d bdrm •dvert sing for real ew Y rem e e 3 , 2 bath plus estate which Is in viola-CoH M.--&. J--BEDROOM HOME .. FORM AL DINING ROOM lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ~1.o _... ........ AND DEN .. AIR FILTERING ·1· G t f t t · · \ northelaw. .. 631·0771 SYSTEM .. I,.OVELY VIEW .. PROPERTY IN eel mgs. rea or en er ammg. TOP CONDlTlON .• OWNER WlLL CARRY $4.20,000. Best price rorthe money. ERRORS: Adv ..... Mn ahoMld chKk their och dally -nport ·~ ron l"""'dlahly. The for .. H IROCHUI COMPLETE FINANCING .. OPEN DAJLY 1-5. SnLERS! ~':'':."::~ 421 SAM IHNARDINO •••••• $330,000 1617 WISTCUFF, N.I. ........ Hl-7300 1670 S.... ._A•• .. S.. I, c..te' ....... CA. t26J7 DAIL y PILOT CISMMI i---------·-------11111 GOLFERS lot,llty few the flnt Incorrect l11sertlo11 0ttly. UPPER BAY Light and c heery 4 Bdrm , 3 bath ramlly VIEW! INVESTORS --------•I home. Large covered Gordener'1D'""' Sharp 3 Bdrm on lrg lot with lots of trees & plants, greenhouse, cov- ered patlo. $185.000. $22,000 dwn. Mesa Verde's fmest! l story home! Elegant covered entry. formal living and dining room, brick fireplace. large country kitchen. 4 state· ly bdrms, 2 baths, 3 car garage. A fantastic view of golf course. $292,500. Owner extremely anx· ioua. Cal1 546-23L3 3 houses on R 2 lot Easts1de. Owner will help rinance Only $179.900 645-9161 patio. $213.000. Roy Mee.cit, llr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 541-7729 !~!!'! .......... !~.~~.~~~~~~~~~ DEPRESSED AGEMY ··DISTRAUGHT WIFE DESPERATE OWHR Make an offer-<>wner transferred. Great neighborhood to raise Children. New int text .Pamt, lge rear yrd for entertaining. Exist VA at 7'N. 1245 PITI. Sub· m 1l ! S45·9491 WALKER& LEER E. ---- • ASSUMEVA With $20,000 down, you can assume this 1ork loan or $69,SOOand owner will carry the balance. 999,500 IS ruJI price for this 3 Br 112 Ba pool borne. Don't miss this iremendOWI opportuni- ty. 556-2660 ··~ 2 UNITS SECLUDED EASTSIDE Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm plus pool Waterfall and bonus room here too! 4 king sized bdnns. huge country kitchen. Fmanc- mg 1s great. Large as· sumable 1st TD and owner will help with res t Don't watt Call 631 ·6990 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 SAILIOAT WATCHERS Thia Cameo Highlands beauty is priced lo sell ! $339,000. Owner 10% down with owners as· sistance' One level 3 $94 900 Bdrm plus huge yard. 1 Hurry! 673-8550 Super investment! Two -· drm Wllts, one with • place! Current ln- me-$740 mo. Financ· I One year home pro• tectton plan incld . Hurry, this won't last! 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS owe 1sr BACK OM MARKET Oldie but Goodie . Laguna beach cottage, fixer upper. Walk to the beach Sll0,000. Call 752-1700 THE REAL ESTATERS MO DOWN PAYMENT Pay closing costs only' Buy your own home' Spacious 4 Bdrm, quiet, prime location' lf you can afford Sl.215 mon- thly payment. but don't have the down pay· menl -discover T l.C.K .E .T HOME PURCHASE PLAN. Call today Cor more Informa- tion. Offered at $112,900 963-8787 THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATE RS DUPLEX 3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit. Fireplace, built-ins. Ex- cellent rental area. Near beach & bay. $285,000 642-2253 eves. associated BP O ~fll '> IHllLHJllS 'II' Ii/tr lf,1ltJ o •~ f, ' It-(; I $10,500 DOWN! . OPEN HOUSt REALTY / ~Walker I laa REAL ESTATf: WOULD YOU IBJEYE 7% You read it right Seller is extremely motivated New mt/ext paint Make pymt.s on exist VA loan, 1245 P.l.T.l 545·9491 . Costa Mesa charmer at a bargain ! Large ~Walksllaa cathedral ceilinged 11 v-ing room, COWltry style REALESTATE kitchen overk>ok.s· large __ s_u_pira--5-H-... -R-P-.• - yard . 3 delightrul ~ ~ bdrms, 1\lt baths, re-If you're looking for a modeled and upgraded good bur. w /a great loan thruout. Owner will that 1s in terrific shape carry S90,000 AITD, -Look No Further! SJ 100 per mo. A rare op-This ls the one for you port unity, call 54.6-2313 Call now!! 5'5-9491. THE REAL ESTATERS REAL ESTATE TJIE REAL ESTATERS 4 Bdrm 2 Ba located in Mesa del Mar near schools and shopping. -========:_1·--------1--------• owc 1st T.D. 3% below SUPY DUPY NEWPOWT HGHTS LAGUNA CHARM DECORATOI current Interest rates. Deluxe townhouse Visualize a cottage Full prlce$132,900 Beautiful. immaculate. duplex. 3 bdrm family, painted white , with n icely landscaped 4 2.,., bath each unit. white picket fence. En PEHtNSULA POINT IEAC ... OMT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. $1,385,000. NEWPORT CREST COHDO 2 bdrm , den , spaciou s Plan 8, immaculate. Low priced at $215,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1-ll fl11r·d· [J1•v• NI~ t.l'J 61 6 1 ~ PETE J BARRETT ... REALTY JACOBS REALTY 675-4670 NEWPORT BARGAIN GREAT BUY Assume this 10.625% fixed loan, payments $736. PJTI on s&S 9 yr old 4 Bdrm home In Garden Grove. ~3666 Whelan Real Estate ROMANTIC IN OLD CdM Two terrific bedroo~. plus sitting room, two fireplaces, 21h baths, French doors, three patios, wet bar, Redwood ceilings, formal dining, and country kitchen. Very specjal at $324.000. REALTORS, 675-6000 24'3 Eut Cout Hishwey. Coe-OtUI del Mer WE HNE ~OF niE BEST AGENTS IN "((MIN o/ newporl REALTORS 675-551 I ILUFFS IEST IUY: Lo-..t priced E ,._ oa lovely gre-.ff with MD•t• vi.w. ) .... frpk. 21/J ....... 0....-wtl help fincMc•. $259,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy., Cot"OM det Mar 675-5511 WE'LL TAKE IT! On lease or l.se opt. Nwpt Bch or No Tustin. 1 story 3 or 4 bdrm, ram rm w /frplc, jac & yard. View, sunken baths, maid's qrtrs optional. Spec1f1c properties only. 759-1600 THEILUFFS Finest original area. A HOUSE few YOU Clftd INCOME TOO! 2 houses on l lol in a very deslreable area. Owner will carry lsL No quali- fying. 2 Bdrms each On· ly $159.900. CaU today 979·5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS Superb greenbelt setting ·-------- ofl er in g "Massive " WATERFRONT view Spacious 3 bdrm end unit, totally re-CONDOS decorated townbome at $265.000. Agt, 64_~_5560__ HUNTINGTON HRBR MOVE· IN NOW ! 2 story 2 Purchase with 5'k down on fa n tastic terms. Bdrm townhome ·steps Brand new, cpl'd • from assoc pool New d r a p e d . o N TH E c pts, drapes, freshly WATER. Guarded gate painted, central air & entry, views. 2 car gar. more Won't last Only Pool and tennis 2 & a S95,900 BR 'S AVAIL IMMED. Town & CCMolttry From $299,000. RHlton 552-1800 __ c_a_11_11_4_f.>56-_9600 __ _ I CONDO SI 19,900 !. Winding areenbelUI lead 1e bright single story condo. Exquisitely de- pra ted with custom llpaper and cabmetry TR\DI TIO\.\I l~I .\I I ' 631-7370 bdrm home on cul-de-joy the warm homey m sac. Spacious rooms Frplcs. all built-ins. terior with wood beamed View or golf course from decks & patios. Park· ceilings, wood puneled property. Owner will 11 k e 1 ands ca Ping · walls and wood floors help on fm.ancing Only SELLER WILL HELP Of course. a wood burn $139,500. Call now FINANCE.$295,000' Ing brick (ireplace. En- 979-5370 lalHHI loy Prop. joy the quiet solitude or Picturesque back buy 3 Bdrm 2 bath, pride of ownership home with a country ftthng ! Large kitchen, very private yard Bargain pnced al $168,500. Call to see! 646-7171 MOYEIHNOW This larae 5 Bdrm 3 Ba home la in immaculate condition with new carpet. drapes & paint. Wa lk to shoppin g & schools. Assume lrg loan and owner will help rmance. Only $176,000 •-------•I DOVER SHotlH OWHER WIU 114· of bay frontage ~ hruout. Formal dining : ptn too! Owner will ~perate with rinanc- g. Won't last at this ice. so call now @ SEA COVE • PROPERTIES I ?i 714-631-6990 :~·· orrORTUNITY · tH CAMEO SHORIS ~west priced ree slm- e available! Great as- mable 1st TD. Enjoy afternoon swi and views from wood deck. 3 ..b.eautiful private beaches. Only 1549,000! Call today! 873-&550 THE REAL ESTATERS '· UNIV. PARK • bedroom 2~ bath •w /frplc and balcony orr 3 tk>droom1. $140,000 Beat buy on the market ,but needs a Uttle paint. ti 751·3191 • ~·.11. ~11.11·••' OCIAHPIOMT /. Bdr~~l 2 ba. wif W'D. Ji(ew. ~)'l'ly. IAYPIOMT Bdrm. 1 ~. \IDf\lm Mint cond. •yrty . ..-CHA ...... OMT 1 Bdrm. 2 ba, wurn. sno yrb'. zssocia tcd --------- A Reolton 1t.s rear yard or walk lo LLS'rA TE ~~·~67~5-~706~0•~~ beach. Only $199,750. SUMMER _ , ,. r= 642·5200 SPLASH! REAL TORS THIHIOHG POOL HOME! Quiet --------~ TOWHHOME1 A PETE BARRETI ~.~~~ :::; ~~~ 1r::;,e; LOW DOWN Call the specialists at r 0 0 m . beaut l r u I P•~t Starter the condominium in-.. REALTY ra m ily /kitchen area Unbelievable, 1padoua 3 formation center. ove rlooks sparkling Bdrm home, huge yard Touchstone RHlty pool. 3 Bdrm 2 baths, Only Sl0,650 down, take ___ 963-__ 0867 ___ _ GR EAT FINANCING! over $711,250 loan at 14,..,o. Own e r want 1 o ut. No qualifying. Offered 1$10~.ooo . Act now, al 1811,900. Owner will M6·2313 help finance. 863-6767 THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATE RS WATERFRONT II' _. achelor pad, very private, master. ·te w /view & spa. Lrg sit din., wet r. grt sun decks. Price '525,000. cell. terms. Bob & Dovie Koop. _ 631-1266 llALTOIS DOM1" .. SS T .. 51 A Sale You can make even in these times. The largest "1650 sq. ft." Condo for sale in area. Cement drives, air conditioning, micro-wave ovens, trash compactors, pools, parkside & all shopping locaUons. Qwner will consider local exchanges. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS llOW.W._ C....Mete.CA 714/6114011 THE REAL ESTATERS CARRY AJTD 5600 sq ft of quality c0«> Adult occupied home strucllon. This S bdna featuring, low main-Medlt style residence qi tenance yard. hardwood the best of locallon1 if noors and large master o rcered w /the be1\- bdrm Close lo Rr1vate fi n a n c In I av a I U. family club. For an ap· Sl,250,000 al 9% interest. pointmenl t.o see. call Price Sl.750,000 Incl "* WHITEWAnR VllW Outstandin g 4 Bdrm home on the ocean aide of Coast Hlahway In North Laauna. Split level, spacious room5, high ceilings, a large lot for expansion . Steps from the beach . MM.000. 540-1151 land Owner will cart')' I 3.7 /8°/o $1.000.000. Call Dan Bibb $14,000 DOWN. forappt. Liquldallng a pride of ROGY'S UALn l ownership home! Light 67'92311 :f earlhtone living area, 1~~~~~~~~~1 --------j~. family room, 3 Bdnns, 2 baths. Brick fireplace. _,,,,,.,,_...;;;;::~-....: open fsmily kitchen area. Private rear yard with spark ling spa $14 ,000 down, priced $135,400. Circle this ad a nd phone Mght now! 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS CE llDUI ILlllS aa. OVER 67 YEARS OF SERVICE ILUffS Very Desirable Three Bedroom, Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Upgraded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul·de·Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second. Call To See & Submit All Offers. 759·9100. HAllC>a VllW t&U ( ~':-~~JT:w1~rn~;~=~': Plus Family Room On A C.omer Lot. Beautifully Maintained. Ownera Are Being Transferred. Good Ftiaancln1. Price 1325,000. TllMS-.,.. Juat Llated Newport Sborea. 3 Bedroom 2 Bath, Sbarp Home . Walk To Beach. Community Pool It Tennis Court. A.uumable lit Trual Deed. Owner Will Cirey Paper. Prlc:id at ti•,500. l NEWPORT CUSTOM-tARGE s,.ca.. 2bd.. 2 be. -............ . Qlll • IGC. ,..., NOii\ ntN ... lef "*" fw pool, c•to. blllt fw .......... OWMrS. My la..w.d. Mmy a • ltlea. $249,500 .... ky ..... BETWEEN BAY .& IM:EAN ___ ..__. -~--__ .. ~·-----------...... ..-.--,,,..-. ... -----~-----...--------------.................. -Oranu-Cout OAIL Y PILOT ,frlday, May 29, 1981 ......._ ._,. '* .....-... aa.t-We H .... 1 Pof' W. ......_ Fw W. For S. ....................... ······················· ........................ , ......................................... 944.~ ...___ ....._. Fw.. 11MMt ,_We ......_,_,.We C.• M... 1024 H•tlatt•leect. 1040 ... • 1044 w.-• lt9d I 041 Mewport .._,. tOH"• ~....... . .................................................................................................................. ~ .....•................. ....................... •••.•.......•.•..•..... ..........•............ . ... ~ .... ,.. I 00! ........ I 001 Ceplttrw ..... I 0 .. Cost. M... I 024 £/Side CM duplex 2 c"1e uer •cff cmA,.E" TUITUROCK cl 0 .. I u n 0b1 l t b h 115,000 DM ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••• ••••••••• .. ••••• 1 B R , S l o 9 , S 0 0 . DU a Oarden Home by Bren Bcb /Viti vlewa Spa, Condo with vtew in Vt Owor t act. U0·'78l4; Charmln1, we.11 lctpt a S}Jr ,Ubnry,famllyrm, aolar, 9 db. "95. PP Balboa A.uume loant. 'OT9n1AL +I 6 PLIX,wAmlDI 993-7900 Bdrm, trO!cL COnMr lot Corm al d1nla1 rm. 2 494·7931: 418-8561 11'7 .500. Rae Rodaen Palllad• bomt wlth 2 llO to -21 000 L•"'SI _..AU Owner w{ll tlnallN. Alie Crph:a. over 2500 aq. t\ OP.._. HOUSI 131-1218 p•vt pat•-, .... dee'" •-• -• .,... _.-""" forChrla A"".,.,....,,,.. Auumable loan at 11 ~ .'I DETACH.ED-·GUEST Wit~ •152.000in uauma· Beautiful new condo . ' ••· .---... T/tf'/e or new loan at~ S JIUH \ \ I . ~ ... I I Y ,\i TAYLOR CO. COTTACE. ~ le bl• loana ran1ba1Jrom Italian tile. double '"'" 1044 U Sllverfert\ 851·9099 20~~S.I!!, lth YOW' ·~dv at~ II~.,_ to ll % ,4:50 1 a r •I e . 941 . 19111 : ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open Houae Sat /Sun Lovely OCMn • hlllalde miu:n. fr..r:i1' k~~~;~n~~.; 831-4381att. THMIHG 10.8 vlewa 11..e tutu~ In RVM* Hl 't\l.llJHS •.11u ·1· l ~Ht; CALL FORDETA1LS unlta wltb 4 iaratet CLOSE TO PLAZA . TOWM-40Ml7 thla 3 bdrm. 2 bath ...... PLUS off·tlrfft parkln1. Spaclou.s two-atory con· Call the apeclallata at * *WOODBRIDGE home. Larae lot Sellen &MAMT "VllSAIUIS"-IXCLUSfVI l'I \I (11(('> OM llG CAMYOM GOU COUISI Spectacular Deane Homes ''Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf course view! Professionall y landscaped yard w/mature trees in a private park·like setting including a lovely large pool & huge spa + an attractive gazebo. Gated front courtyard entry with fountain . Marble floor i n roy er with g Ii ttering chandelier. 4 Bdrms, den, formal dining room & 4112 baths. Priced right at $895,000. Call !or appointment,. ,... . .-.~ 64 .... 7211 1 formatlon center. ho B 1n1 $395,000. llA A I a On 80'X300· 1ot. do. 3 bedrooms. 2VI the condominium in· Beautiful Carmel plon may help With fln11nc ~ ..,.. batba. Formal din na Touchstone Realty colla&e me 3 r. 2V. OPEN HOUSE EB IAI E room. Atrfum. Picture 963-ml67 Ba Good assum11ble s•111o..1 1•5 /Jn Nlf,11 2 C AMIO SH ORIS OCIAMVllWS .) W25.000' *9,000 ) STARNES COMPANY TWO LONGS --J)tlrfectt $134,750 AU of· loan. Lowest priced 5,.5'::._ ...... __ fen beard. TARBELL. Oranae Tree Condo. Plan Carmel on the market. .. .,...__.,.-llilll I ' ~ l\11<1LJl I/\ 11 5 673· n61, 7(1().1397 REALTORS. 540-1720 5, 2 br l ba 1103.500. Call Must sell. Call fol' de Live in the arand man 552·7552arter7pm. tolls . Iler. S weepln& white 498-1040 t93-0202 --.. ~ W at.rfroM DuplH WISLIY H. TA YLOI CO.. UAL TOIS 1111 S•J~HllsRMd MIWPOIT CIHTH. M.I. 644-49 I 0 . ~--------- Dalebout Bay&Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US ••• TO WESTCLlff. FOUR BEDROOMS, FAM ILY AND DINING ROO MS .. Fl REPLACE .. GENEROUS CA BIN ETRY. POOL SIZE YARD WITH GAZEBO .. FOUR SECLUDED PARKING SPACES .. MOTIVATED SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE .. $525,000. 1617 WHTCLIFF DRIVE Ul-7300 Corona def Mor 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TlttPLIX Three unlla with fireplaces, on a 4:5' Corona del Mar lot, for the price of a duplex IUSIHISS OPPTY Eatablhhed well locat.ed beauty aalon ln prime location. Submit on terms. Touchstone Realty, Inc. 1168-IM7 Favorable assumable 4br, l~ba, hardwood l.sl loan, seller w /carry floors , new paint , 2nd Priced at $322,000, carpel drapes plumb· down payment Sll0.000 · ' 000 0w' ill By Owner/Bkr-wlll mg 1115. ner.w cooperate. 67S.3l4l help with financing. Open house Sat/Sun 10.6PM 683 ~ale St. BY OWNER s-48-1731 or 831·9878 DESIRE EXCHANGE Top of Spyglass· ma1n1ficenl ocean view. Nantucket mdl, 5 Br, 3 Ba. Prefer trade for smaller on Spyglass Ownr I A Gt. 644-5922 CUSTOM DUPLEX 4 bdrm, family rm, 2 fireplaces, plus 3 bdrm rear unit with fireplace & beam celling. Close to beach. Good financing potential, 1495.000. MAURY STAUFHR SEA LIOH UAL TY 67]..5354 HO OUALJFYING New 2 BR condo, aeller will finance at 13% for 3 years. 641-1991: 631-4361 agt. 2 Br condo (Monticello ) S91 ,SOO. Webb Rlty. 493-0761 SSOOODOWM 3 Bdrm condo. ~34 /mo. moves you ln. No qual. Prine only. Ait /54:5-1061 By Owner. Two 2 Bdrm houaea on l lot. $130,000. Assumable 11rk 1st TD. o we 2nd s.o. 7464 ~ will buy laree faml· ly home in ereat area. Aaaume 983,0000WC dlt ference. 4 Br, 1~ Ba. fam rm. frplc, shake roof. Prin only. $103,000 Devin & Co. 64.2-6368 41DIM&DEN $120,000 2Ba. insulated, paneled thru-out, copper plumb- ine, new roof. covered patio & Gas BBQ. Tree Shaded "HugeComer" OLDEN TIMES FIMAHCIHG. 645·2319 I Owner) Condo for sale. Sl2S.OOO. 2Br, 2Ba. Gd financing avail. 902 Hollowbrook. CM 556·5~. HALECREST By owne r . Three bedroom l~ ba. Beau yard , concrete drive. new floors Close to everything. Fin Avail w 120 per cent d n . $129,000. Open Sat.Sun 11-4 1261 Conway.557·3811 COLLEGE PAIK AREA $126,900 SAHDDOIJ.ARS lalboa Isa.ct I 006 This 3 Bdrm 2 Bdrm • ••• • ••• •••••••••••••••l~~~~~~~~~I duplex presenta a great CHARMING2StoryCape Super nice home on cul· de·aac street. 3 Br+fam rm . FRESHLY P AlNT ED in & out Two beautiful fireplaces. paneling Mot1 vated seller •Investment opportunity Cod, 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, 1 In West Newport The bdrm unit + guest with location of this property biilh, laund nn, 2 car (only 2 lots from the gar Lge fixed assuma· ocean and at.eps to the ble + o we $.575,000 bay> coupled with the 673-0188 unbelievable financ·an" make thtS offerin~ re aliltlc and smart Ask Ing only $2165.000 lalboa ltlaltd Rlty 67]..8700 PEARL AVENUE. 1 sty home & 2 BR apt over dbl gar Ownr may carry part. Bill Hardes· ty. R ltr. _67_S._2.866 ___ _ •JASMINE CREEK• An extremely!leasanl & hard to fin Plan 4 Featuring 3 brs "an ex· panded fmly rm, gourmet kitchen & every imaginable upgrade in· eluding A/C & custom firepit. $419,000. 7S9· 1501 or752·7373 O'EHSAT 1·5 275 L 16th St, C.M. 3 bdrm. family room, re· modeled on large R-2 lot. Assumable loans Owner will help finan ce. 1165,000. Cheshire Realty 7S9· l877 $I, 175 pr mo. moves you into this 3 Bd 2 Ba home near So. Coast Plaza. Owner carries. Ownr /Agt . 631 ·1266 or S46-6706 R6'Mft}( H ~ .\I 1 1 ti<'> ISLAND CHARM . Updat· ~WalL-1 •-a ed 3 Bdrm 2 ba with loft, .... ID I~~~~~~~~ ---·R--V•l•e•w--frplc. 2 car gar. laundry REAL ESTATE Dana Point MAURY STAUFFER SEA LIOH RE.ALTY 67]..5354 1026 HA IOR rm. View & steps to the ---------1 MESA Vl!RDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blue aky. blue water. ci bay. Lge fixed assuma-i---------4 Lg 4B r + den tri·level owner w i 11 ca r ry ty lighta. sparkling pool ble + owe. S475,000 PARTNERSHIP home St9o,ooo Agt beautiful ocean·harbor and mu.ch more go with Call 673·0188 DUPLEX 979.5099 view home w/3br, 2''• thla lovely 3 bedroom b t .,.39 500 home. This one ls for you WILL BUILD TO SUIT, $160,000 ,.,.unit SHAll,COHDO 4~-3~~· e c. .. . . Cuny buyers. Offered at T he Perf ect d u a I 3 bd 2 bath pool $345,000 lge a pt w /permanent ownership property With nea/S'o. Coast .Plaza: e Toro 1032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• D.M • .._._L-• Rffr ba Y view Plus 750 sq ft 2 nearly equal 2 Bdrm, 2 S 1 l 5 . 0 0 0 . B r o k e r . ~ commer cia l Bill b 't Ith t 6 ... 9990 a uni a w mas er 644•0134 ...... Hardesty, Rltr 67S·2866 suites, st.one fireplaces llllC A 'IN BLEMISH C R 0 I H M C S S A H K I A 0 T R S N s 1 Tli L EH I s Hie o L P A I c L T C A U L M 0 N B I E I P B T R T E E I 8 S M E A S I H P S A H E L H L R Y P H A E U I H R S G L W I R I U 0 V E A T G B R S A H R G U I A A L H R B R E L G S L T V A P M R 8 T U 0 0 E L U T A R H C 0 C M I A K A S H H E P 0 L R R E D R C T G Y H R X C 0 I I R I U T 0 A A I A W I 0 H S l H E H T 0 P S Y N L Y M H X T I T D S P J 0 S A N H 0 T C J S I J S D J I Y U 8 R 0 C D L R S M I R C H Y V D 0 R E B W E H E E P S E K I H D Z H Z Y 0 U N L 0 B R B U I S 0 H I 0 L A U S B P I E H C J K S llltNCUont: Hlddtrt WOfdl ti.low ~ fonwwd, bldl· ..-cl, up, down or dlegoNlly, Find Mdl end box It In ... " •ot lllln =nju • loll ltt,ne R j .,_. lmlrdl D e "°' Temllll 01111"* 'f llnt Dwb llvr Tomorrow: Rlllt and wood beamed cell· ings on an oversize lot with private patios and decks. $320,000. l~ int f1J1anctng. CALL MOW 644-7211 /Jn Nll1l l rrnn 1 v & "SSUl IMfS OWNER AMXIOUS TWO LOVELY COM DUPLIXES Good location and aa· sumable loans. Need to sell both propertlea now as owner hu purchased a nother home out of area. Call Barbara Glau. C/21 Sandpiper Rily. 64().4950or85l·954l Sa le, option or trade. Best ISuy i n Spyg l a11 Outstanding 3 Br 2 Ba + sep. in-law qtn. Pool, apa, mtn vu. Asaumable loan, creative nnanclng by Owner. '758-0969 IRVIME Tl:RRACI owe.custom Home 3br, pool, steam room, many exlraa ! 645-2816 /0wner· Bkr. S'YGUSS Beautiful nlabt U1ht1 and ocean view. 5 Bdrm home. S7:5,000 down and owe 1574,000 AITD at 12~% Int. 964-7622 or 160·8158 JASMMCam J Bdrm, 2~ ba. PLAN t . View proptrty. ~.ooo. ~<r-. & ... , IUl UTAH 144·1311 Beautiful new condo, 3 Bdrm. 1500 sq ft. 212 baths Double car earage w/elec opener Draped . never been li ve d an Seller w /finance at 13~ for 3 years 641-1991 ; 631·4361 TERMS Spotleu 4 Br Femwood home. Only 1181.000. Patrick Tenore. 631-1266 RVM~ I<~ \I 11111" agt. Fountain V•y I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSIDE C.M. 3Br . 21,.;ea. bonus room. Owner will help to lg lot. gd fin . $199.500. finance. RVr's delight. 3 Open house Sat tSun. Bd, 2 Ba, L R, F R, 2 Call WGl851·3851 frpk . work s hop 14 x 24. fruit trees. Compl. re· HU1ttlnCJfoft hach I 040 mod. kitchen & bath. Nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpet• & drapea, auto O C E A N V l E W apr lnklers. Auto gar. SACRIFICE opener. 540-4319 l"" blka to bch, glorious lOK buya •..; Interest In 4 view• new 2100 sq ft Br. single family house. home, all bltna, Jacuzzi. A steal at $250,000. A,.. Good location . CM sumable loan. Must selJ w /2:5K equity. Owner by 6·1·81. 960·3211 or pays all bills. Will split (213) 592·2.84S lax write-off and profit --------- aHe r l2mo. 847·6545, PRIME AREA. 3 bdrm, 2 646·6187 ba.. fprlc, 12-13% fin. EX9UISITE MESAVHDI EXECUTIVE HOME Lota of oak. Larae maater & kitchen. Solar heallna. Pool & Jae. As· BELOW VALUE . $116,000. Collec t : 213-530-Sl.58 MARINERS COVE 2 BR. 2 Ba. Pool, Jae, ICC. Sl24.900. 644·1094 aumable loan 4 Qdrm 1---------·1 with all the extr as. Broker 957-1588 MISAVaDI llSTVALUE Sharp 2 Story, 4 Br. 2 Ba. new c arpet, redwood apa, eaay care yard . SU:5,000. D. Bour k e Rea I tor 546-9950. H•Rnnc1 4 ,' 1 , "" 1 r t I f ~· ' , SPAHISH HACIENDA 4 bdrm, pool home. So. H.B. corner lot. Owner wlll sell AITD or con· tract. Great investment. Submit o n terms Nll,SOO. l<1'IIl11 I I°'~ I\(·. th\' I, 1.; , : ;1 II I UL..-"b d water view & Catalina --~I """" rl ue s u n s e ls fr 0 m t h I s UNIV. PARK Realty custom bulll executive With loot Dock Could be Newport '• lowest priced waterfront home with Income unit too! Cal l for info Broker, 963-8182 Lrg 4 Bdnn 2~ Ba home 551.3000 home tn the preallglous In pre1t11loua Univ •tt0B1rrenca Pkw,.lrvlnl' North End Very Park, steps from pool & _ __ spaclou11 for ele&unt en ~reenbell Auumuble tertainlna. '795.000 ~s~cing Call for de * * lOM DOWN! A ~U~~~ ~0~5~2:Jith Great one year old 2·sty, ocean view plus 1 bdrm 3 Br attached home in Ulcome wut Loc11ted In Woodbridge. Low in· the North End Spic & terest assumable loans span with fresh paint & Try lease option unul new carpets with 11 Oct charming kitchen Walk VIEWRXER CA.MIO HIGHLAHDS 1359,000, ree land STARNESCOMPANY TWO LONGS 673 7761, 76().1397 --;. 1u1rwtt n HI /II l't' ~ .,1, 1 .'()()() \\budbrldge to the beach Seller frnancing. $260,000 DUPLEX an WATER Dock for 30' loot Woodbrtdat &tat.a Waahlngtoo Mdl 4 Br 2~. ba, 2200 sq ft. Assume $11:5,000 lit By owner Sl.811,000. Ph: 559·5778 Really $arrM'r 551·3000 ~ 'I 3 & 2 Bdnns, 2 frple.. decks and patio 4t?t8errann Pk•).lrvb11• :\~M! ltf6:,,_ C /21 M.wport Cntr 640.5357 La~A1...,.ablt 9~• '7t loan and priced un· der m erket for quick sale . Spacious 4 Bdrm, 21 '.I ba, 2 story in The 17141494.1177 HARIOR VIEW HOMES WOOOIRIDGE End Unit Condo 3 Br. 21 i Bo. 1601 sq. ft. Danbury Model. Assumable low Interest loan. Attached garage, nicely decorat· ed & l andscaped $166,950. Colony, lf2 blk from pool, Laguna HIU1 I 050 tennis courts & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two Somersets and 11 Monte go. STARNESCOMPANt TWO LONGS 673·7761: 7(1().1397 clubh o use . Asking •L•ia..,.Wortd• $161,000, by owner. Open s I ff Q II 1 Condo 3 Br. 2li Ba. 1446 sq. ft. Aircond Assum&· ble loan Many com munily privileges $149,500 house Sat/Sun 1·5. 14171 e ect 0 enng. ua ty story 2 bdnn condo. xlnt OC EAHFRONT ·•·•· Klee. 559.7404 location. Picture win $450,000 LatU1ta leach I 048 dows + skylights & ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio Many xtras. A11k This first tame offering as an estate sale One of Newport Beach's findl \ 1ews 3 bdrms hom~ with gutst apt or 2 unllS' Call 752·1282 THE SHAKES Weathered cedar shakes. that Is. Custom designed 3 bdrm. fam rm. 2 baths Extensive ang $79.500 Charles Woll Realty 768·9111 --- Laguna NkJuel I 052 Realonomacs 675·6700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTUROCk Detached 4 Br 21 2 Ba. 2000 sq ft Formal Din· mg area, den, fireplace. much more 1140.000 an ass um able financing Open House Sun. 5 31·81 l SPM $289,990 Call 752·1282 use of wood glass & 1---------1 ceramic Ille Beam ceil-IMMACULATE PeninMlla Poillt :~·· ..... S BR. "59.000 ···: PICTURE PERFECT ing, frpk $165,000. M isslon Realty (714)494-0731. YOU CAN AFFORD this ocean view custom an an executive area. Large view decks- beaut1ful home 3 Br 21"1 ba, den Only 315,00 La9una Village R.E 497-1 761 ALMOST READY! Beautiful new custom home in exclusive area OCEA.MVIEW SEA TF.RRACE II 3Br home Huge ma&ter Bdrm with frplc & ocean view Tennis c11s. pool. s pa, pvt beach access M UC H MORE " $210.000 ....... •• ~Rr:c:ae1•aR~i BB REAL ••eaaAIE --... 493-0202 4118·1040 Spyglau Grwat VJe~:;~; ~.000 . STARNES COMPANY TWO LONGS 673-7761 . 76().1397 VERSAILLES 2BR. ocn view, low dwn, no quali· fying S134K . 730·2270 ore 642·2682 home. SUPERB! Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 story Patio Home in the heart of Deerfield. on a cul de sac street. Close to park, pool and schools. Lots of upgrades note add1· lion a I cou nte r and storage space m kitchen. Beautifully panelled walls. Patio and plan· ters and generous p11tio cover Owner offer ing generous terms lo help Quality trhoughol.!t. Ex----------1 cellenl views. 3 l\.drm. 5 Bdrm, entertainer's dehghl Seller will listw to all creative financing proposals. Sommersel model on fee land. 2~11 ba, 2 frplcs. $425,000. LOCJuna Vlttag. R.E 497-1761 you purchase 1---------1 -.sz3 CAMPUSJ>l·IRVt~E OUTSTAMDIMG FINANCING Beautifully upgraded. nearly new Shadyhollow 2 Bdrm home, in lovely area. Low down pay· ment needed lo take over high balance loan. $143,500. don osen r '· ,, It,. 1 ... CLASSIC CUSTOM 180 deg La¥una & coas tal vie w 2 rrieplaces. formal drn· mg rm. spa & deck off master bdrm. Super financing $365.000. SUPER 4 IDRM. l story family home located on pool size lot. Features fireplace in liv· Ing rm. oak cabinets in kitchen . Seller has purchased another pro- perty. 497.5494 17TH AT PROSPECT TUSTIN, 731·3111 l"ln• 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RCTaylorCo 640-9900 SPYGLASS SOUTHPORT Lovely 5 bedroom Southport located on a quiet cul de sac. Pool & jacuzzi. Submit on fln&J'!Cing. $539,500. RCTaylorCo 6 40-9900 IX9UtslTIL Y DISIGHIDI 48R. 2~ bath residence enhanced by dramatic celling elevations and atrium views. Terrific assumable loans. $250,000 Incl. land. Verdeen Weiner 551-8700 <Kl2> WOOOlltDGI CIOISIMGI Eleaant detached "Camden" Plan with 38RS, Wood entry, sunken living rm formal dining. rm. family rm wtltreplace. cathedral celllnga, central-air. Enjoyable private, prof easJonally landscaped yard, paUol and enclosed ttoraie area. A model perfect home. Must see! $20',500. P.at Oakaon 752·1414 CK.13) Fox glove model ln Lake • RED r& ... ~ _ Park 2 br, den, 2 ba, ~~ • . vaulted ceiling f'rench . 754-1202 doors. Assume al 10~. ~~~~~~~~~ $154.900 Owner 7S9·Z465 5Br. 3Ba. view 10'1 down 12~'l-1248.ooo owe 673-2493 Ponoramlc Vus Pool & Jae . 3 Brdm. 2 Ba, formal dining rm 1215,000 540.3666 Whelan Real Estate WHITEWATER VIEW 90' lo beach, 10'7r assum loan May take note on your prop. as down 4 BR 2 Ba. recently upgrad~ w /possible in-law qtn. Under $290,000 melds land Move fast 1 752·64~ Plan lll Realty 1 year new Bluffs condo. End unit, "G" plan. 3bdrm. Fee land 13':~ VIR. 30 year fananc11\i, Owner /Agt. 76().8816 OCEANFRONT ~ PrilM Location. · · By Owner 3 Br. Room for addition owe GOOD ASSUMABLE 5598,000. 6408 Ocean~ LOANS front, West Newport This lovely 2 bedroom Beach. patio home with ex· ------ pensive views or the Ouple~es. oceanfr~r!l · Saddleback Mountains beautiful ocean vie~.,. and valley below also Perfect location N~ features an extra large condition. Altl. 673 7300 lot with spa Sl42.900. By ownr Choice Npl. loc'.'"·· 495-1720 3br. 2ba $189,000 Prln.-.. ebLQ.go Mlsalon V5-fo I 067 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TrH Vista C•fotn 5br, 4ba In exclusl1e nel1h borhood 24 br auarded gate, ldt, 3400+ sq rt, a /c, guest hae, landscapfd . $''79,900. Sky View Rtal· ty, 831·3000. Newport hoch 1069 ....................... SPYCiLASS lllDOI Superb 4 Bdrm family home. Prime con4ltlon and location. P•rllal ocean" city U1ht.View. Com -puterlied seo1rlty 1y1tem th ro u,oout. Some financlna atvaJla· ble. $549,000. C/JI ... wporte:..tr. 640.1357 7606767 only owe 548-9739 DISTRESS SALE Newport Condo . Desperate owner muet sell this week. Far below market $102,000 All as- s um ab 1 e 634-165 ."" 937·1144 ask for Ted. ·:3 ~-~ 3 br, fam . S2S.OOO under• mkt Call for facl~--> $177.000 PP,645·1496 ILUFFS COHDO PllCID TO SELL ASSUME $100,000 1st at 101/40/o Large end unit condo ln · prestigious a rea on· greenbelt with beautiful wrar·around patio. M In mum down re-- quired. Owner will car,Y larre 2nd. or AITO,, Open Sat/Sun J.:5, 400 Vlata Quinta. By Owner': 760-6028. - WESTCLIFF. really blf bouae 5 BR, 31,o; ba. Pl~! ownel'. 84&-1111 ··~ Ll"Ql llll I.MOON Well dealled •BR traditional on comer loc Ion w/bay on two aides! Circular alrcaae. marble fplc, f amlly rm and upstatn play room. Slip ror t..i> 55' boat.a. APit. only. $1,850,000 leasehold . Cathy Schwelcke 942·8235 CKll) --·-~-·..,._._........--------_........., -~ ~---·-.---..---_.. __... ..... __ _... ~~--......... --· # .,.........~ ... . . ' ~.~~ ....... r:.~~ ....... ~!~.~ ...... ~~~~-~!~~...... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT,Friday, May 211, 1981 t:T • .............. 106' ......... '°" M.ftlt"-t ............... , zooo H1•H ..... , ... "••HU•ha b111d M111HUwtuil•.t ,c_........ v ••• • ••• • ••••••••••••••• •••• •••• ••••••••••••••• ,_ S. I I 00 ••••• •• • ••••••••••••••• •• ••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••·-· ... ••-•• U.fw a.d 34ZI U.ft I 11e4 ....................... o c 1 • N '• o MT eo......... JZ24 c. ... w... . ._1224 ...... .._.. 324• ............................ ~.~! ............ . ;. VA IUYIRS D&ft.IX •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ••••••••• .. •••••-.••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 STO•Y ,..,...OUSI i---------· Call1&1tod&Ylor f11tand Beautlf"' ~Br 2 Ba <"'" ~~tw~ 2Br.2Ba.t..cdeck,ocean Panoramic ocean, WI-CU" THI FINHT IH THI YaSAILLll eaayfin.onVAloan.e. Upttat~~ a Br 2 ea' --~----~ -----view. Frplc. 11000/mo mountain Ir ci~ U~bu 2 bdrm. r 2 ruu ttath9 uble views of harbor and ocean. DISCOUNT down.staii-. n~place•' MESA urnnr Call arts. 2l3/47~1.990 vlew. 2 Br. 2 a en, with brick flr•plact, aclous 3 Bedroom. 2 baths with MOB=MES a•r•••· la~ room' HAUi. LI.-•.,....,. JZSJ ~:!c1• sroOO'.'' lived In. bar. bit. ln kltchenJ::;'· acious fireplace, two separale Xlnt loc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alto 2 Br 2 Ba. ocean• carpeta 6 clrapee alk· tlos -batconies. Large assumable. FAMl.YNTN TSL.INVSTMT &U-1603 & L&• 4br borM 111 new d~ city Uahta view Frum ~:a~spdo~:.t,ro~.c :hdp~ m t e at •399 000 F Low apace ~nt, local l• velopment. Modern '8$0. I d k .. 95 ...... us s e • • · or area, alncle wide ....,.= '1CUf.JC/'1 kitchen lncludtna 6?~·911Ur6759132. ~~t~nACt~~n~ ..-· a ppointment.call : · w /la r .. upando . rro 21 00 microwave Ir bu·b · ---~ UMITID llOKHS ILUI IULL <EX485e> ••••••••••••••••••••••• q u • I r a o a e Rec lochetor COIMlo 1714l 673-4400 RIALTOIS 719-0120 DlSCOUNT LA~UHAllACH MV 's finest, immaculate borne in faclllt1e1 avail. No peu. For leaae. Irvine. S395 czut Ul-HH • Th.ls 5000 Sq. Ft; Home slts on Linda lsJe. A private euarded Community in the heart of Newport. Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. We are developers so submit land or oOter Real Estate lo owner Jim 'Mlompson. 17141121-1210 l21JJ 5tl-IJ6J CIOOJ JSZ.3710 MOBILE HOMES c '· d t 1 1 bid Costa Mesa's Premi'er N""'dbborbood. '900/mo Avail July lat. per mo pool &r Tennl11 ~ anyon ul U1 r a 11 ~.. ~0·8300 day1, 836 9784 675·7737 HARBOR near town Ir 111 featlval Large 4br, 2ba, frplc, den with bar, evea/wk.ndl. AcreogeforS. 1200 fe"ound1.9S001q.tt.fully new paint, e lectric garage door -& --3br,1~ba.1ec.condo .2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~. Oroea annual In· private patio with Jacuzzi off master MlttlOft V•fo 3267 btka to So Coast Plaza "'CRIS,_ -y ..!<>me $54,000. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ~75 mo + sec dep ---.......-... ' I . Healonomk.a 675-6700 suite. 2400'. Ultra quiet safe street -HOM F. FOR RENT Pace R E 894-0682 \ DI\ •~ton ol ~ J~~e~~~~r~~ ~i'°So almost no traffic! Xlnt Public/Private 3 Bdrm. asoo. Fenced 11:11hor lrl\t''tnwn1 <'11 North Countv Ex· STOPR-• ... G Schools, & Parks nearby. Bike 3 miles yard le 1arage. Kids" Beaut tr1.1evel 3br. 2ba.,~~~~~~~~~ ' ..,... ''" be h l Ri Tr ·1 pets welcome. 964·~ pool, i.pa, dbl aar, xlnt 1-: perlenced owner lndu1trlal condo• for lo ac Va ver 8J . or973-297l.Agt .. nofee S.A. loc. nr SC Plazw CiJ•Mrol H02 w /spearhead the pro· sale. 1000 to 3000 sq. ft. S 1 •00/MO. 5 .. " 1626 •aco lsl /last _.. 8 ... Ject. Huntlnatoo Beach &r 6 •V"'A ... wportleec.h 3269 M~2960eves " ~~ · •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Hl9"'-d v..a-. Fountain Valley. Call -----------••••••••••••••••••••••• -----APTMTS FOllt RIMT ...... , tlW'W>..&ft.4..naxa<C.JLWA..C.X.a.nax.a M 8 AC, view borneslte. PaulS4S.6CXS7,Agt. SPYOLASSLF,ASE WOODBRIDGEava1l1m H B .N.8 .,ColtA eta Very iientle slope quiet liltoa ltlMd 1206 Fowltoln V.., 1214 3 Bd, formal dlnlng, (am med 2sty, 2br, l ~tba, Something for Everrione country atmo1phere. Nearly new 10 Unlt ln· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, Ira yard, 2 frplcs. rrplt', 11 1c. mirrore Bach~ 4Br 1unJm Surrounded by rolllna dustr:lel Bldg In Coela 2 BR. yrly lease. AvaU 4 br, 3 ba exec. trl·level, $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie wardrobes. $625tmo Afls erttin loca ona hills of youns avocado M l"' 000 n ... ,... June 1. Fplc patio 1ar. ram rm 2 frplc1 .. ncl. Koop. Agt. 631·1266 857·0155 o I er . oo • 8 P 8 ' grovea. SJ.15,000. Aak for eta. "· llQ • ~ "' • • · • • • ~ ----------fireplace, laun. room . Art Steed, Vilbllle Real· down Owner wlll carry 673•0727 patJo. Gardener Incl. 1 3 Br 21-lt Ba Condo Lge 2br, lba nr s c; Plaza b e um e d c e 11 In a a . tyl-489·0403 lat TD at 13'k Interest CoronadetMlr 3222 y r le11e00r:34fettt. Ocean view. S800 tmo S525 tmo &elec. garaaes. all built Ina. C Loh Cor 3 yeara. Phil Sullivan ••••••••••••••••••••••• :'!~.1:;:1501 d s a · Ask for Ron. 752-~111 556.0238 art 5pM Garden & Townhou1e -c:;;:r / ISOO RealtorS48-2l03. \g~mti ~1;5a~ :~:::: . ' Y . SANTIAGO DR. 2br, 2ba NBPenthouse ~t'r.~G~?/EE.642-1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $UOO 631 4888 H_..tfolt leach 3240 Beautiful house avail Condo Adults only·aec lalbo-11-;_... 3106 2 c em el er y Io ts . Loh for S. 2200 Aak rofGrre mll o. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• now in elegant area. 4 guard , pool. sa una , a - Weatm lnater Me morial ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME FOR l\ENT Br 3 Ba Din in& Rm, $750 645-0230 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Park. Good aectlon · R·I WWhw...,.Vt1 Laeupperdplx.2br,2ba, 4 Bdrm. t62S. Fenced Living Rm & Family gym, Imo 2 BR apt, rum orunr. yr· worth S760each, asking Greattenns.subord frplc , stove, refrig, pvt yard & garage. Kids & Rm. New wallpaper, University Park condo ly lse AvaalJunel UUI $1200 for both 714 / 714/492·8320,64~2781 p11t 1o , no pets. 1650. pets welcome. 964-2566 cozy kitchen & many 3bdrm. 21"lba, bonub pd 642·9136 eves. 631-1456 ~3-2971. Ai\., no fee many xtraa Children & room Great loc All _ ~07.E_ __ Co.......-dal Pro,_rty --Capistrano Beach R·2 pets OK 759-8974. amen1L1es $900 /m u CoO"Ofta det Mer 1122 1600 ()('ean view lot, plans, 2 br , available now SHARP· 38r 2Ba, crpta, HARBOR RIDGE Ocenn 760-8816. ••••••••••••••••••••••• permits approved. Some '600/mo. lat & last 4 blka drps, bltn, frplc, lrg .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• construction slllrled. beach 833·7812 o r fencedyrd,walkt.oBch View Lux. 3 Br 3 Ba Townhouse Spect4culurocean&clty l•--------•I $100,000 661 2871 640.63.58 '640/mo 964-4984 Lge Master suite. den, Unfuntlshed 1525 lights view from every ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ VA.CANT --------wet bara, ( p., tennis. ••••••••••••••••••••••• room Lar fe 1.:r. :!. ' . 62h X292"'2 zoned for of Ca~ttrano leach Costa MftCI 3224 5br , 2'2ba, fam rm. 2 sty, pool, jac , $1900/mo Newport Glen Twnhme $16-00/mo. Cal Ant ny GREAT BUY San C•INflh I 076 rice building. $200,000. R·2 Ocean View lot. •i>••••••••••••••••••••• tBSOtmo. 675 4078, 54119009 2br & den. 2 + ba, pool. wkdys 642 5757 eves & wknds 644-8889. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roy McCanle, Rltr. Plans, perm1u.. an con· NEW 21R W JFRPLC 846-:!901 sauna, jac, $650 /mo Sbarp 2 Br + den, frplc, pUio & spa. Try 10.20'/? dwn . Assume low m terest rates . Patrick Tenore . 631-1.266 180 deg. ocean panoramic 54._7729 s t ruc tion $100 , 000 Bullt ·inw Adults no ON GOLF COURSE lst /las t , avail 1 l l 11U 2 BH 1 •., Ba, fplc. patio, vu $490,000. Open May 661-2871 Eve ___ pets 642 ~. tBSOtMo • • "' 4 Br 2 Ba frplc. View 3 Br 3 Ba +Oen & 549 7052or54().3185 pool Util hkup 416 28 30, 1·7 219 s La!~~~~~~~~~-! blk rence, garage No Bar. $1100 645 7605 or Espt>ranza I 498 5538 IDEAL RETAILS PAC E untoln, o ... rt, 3bd 2ba Crpl ram rm, dm pets 19811 Bushard St. 646·1713. SA. Hgti., 2 br + den, 3 ~~a;1~rd Rd · SSllS, Coop P laza Newport, 1000 Resort 2400 rm, liv rm, gardner $725/mo + $725 SD. ba, wet bar, rrplc, pool, · __ _ R6'M~ Brislol St N.,Ste.20,at •••••••••••••••••••••••i furn . Fenced yd nr 6427743 BIGCANYONLEASE 1ac,2 cargar 1700mo Old CdM ,2blkstobch.2 Santa Anca 1080 G R h 1 & bo I b $7-K 3 Bdr 3 Ba, formal dm C213l615·341.5,823-5021 br, 2 ba, din . r m , ••••••••••••••••••••••• J1tmboree. 1078 sq fl II IEA I sc 00 s ys c u ,.... Adult Condominium . 1 g ool hot l b II t ,\I r t 111-. By Owner. OWC at IJ'7. 3 SI 20 sq ft. Beautifully LAKEFRONT 556 1737 aft 4 pm or Maraner's Cove Thu> 2 :er'y psha'rp. S2~,,;;~· DupleH1 i.Jftfwft 3600 fireplace. garage. Gr~t Br 1a-4 Ba Crplc dbl decorated , W to W Don't miss this chance! wkends __ ___ Br 1~2 ba beauty securi· Bob •. Dovie Kooi> Agt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ovcean view Ava1l 6 / . ' ·· ' "arpet lmmed o" L0 e lakefront home in "' " I) I I b ht $900 mo 6758370 gar New paint & carpet ' ' 0 Beautiful Exe" home nr ty system, sauna, pool & 631 J""" up ex arge ac e or · $25 OOODOWH · "upan "y sc1 "188, Fawnskm,theNo.Shore " '""' t t t I • 7"1 8045 ~ ~ " " s c Pl J tennis Ava1'I 1'mmed. new carrv> · pam · u 1 • Exclusive Eostblufr -~ · __ ---833.3998 or Blu Bear Beaut. cstm o st aza · poo ~ e 1· . I . S7"c /mo No pe'" Agl THE BLUFFS appliances $395 41 7 Townhouse. 4 Br. 3 Ba 1i----------4 -----design home, over 1700' w Jacuzzi, poo service. ""' "' Ali b ~0277 SZ'l6.000 Owner anxious "'SSUM"'•LE LO"'... Ducxes/ Vaulted ceilings, oak g1trdener 5bd 3ba 3 car 548·1168 3 Bdrm condo w view a ama__ - Make offer Owner • -an nu.1 ~·....... 180 cabinets, rock frplc , lge garg $2000 mo 5MH737 ----Remodeled . like new ApartmenhFumlthed o...10 "'U ... 'FYl ... G n ~ 3br, 2ba , fenced. nite · h k' h pt' inc 1pa1 s 0 n 1 y " ~ AW " ••••••••••••••••••••••• wooden decks, bit · in ap art 4pm or wkends wat gourmeL 1tc en l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 978 0423 Freshly painted, sharp 4 r & ch ----cond, else schoolslshpg, y r lease s1 000 mo lalbo Island 3706 -· ----Bdrm 2 bath. large yard, I year old, dbl lol, Ira P lances, spa, mu 3 ldnn 2 la $675 mo 1st /last/dep 760-9678 o .-&EACH CO'M'AGE new d rivt\Way . Brick owners unit, T~o 2bdrm, more 1 A prime toe that 968_3495 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fire place, ~ years new. 2ba units. Prmc. Only is sure not to last at F /p, D /w, Yd, Blt·ma, -------BLUFFS 3 Bdrm, 3 ha, Little Balboa Is land TwobdrmSpanish slyle. Owneranxious.Movein 760·0734,63l·4402. $2911,000.Formoreinfo Adlts,NoPet.s.642·0835. llRHOUSES6ZS ramrm.formaldmrm, lbdrm compl furn f'rpk, gar, pvt patio & Town &Shore Prop 1700 per mo. Owners apt Leaving for yard, Good location co nditi o n Ask i ng lncom.Prope..+y 200 644 ·1795 wkdays or ------963-t97o $1050 mo 644·2300 summer months l'vt. Steps to beach Only $129,900. For an appoint· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-866·2046 wknds Easl Side Duplex. 2Br. quiet, parking 675-6549 Sl7.4,SOO. Owner financ mentlosee.call 540.11Sl "'PPLEV"'LLEY -----lBa frplc, lg yrd, gar H.tlngtoft Nwpt Shore 4 br, 3 ba, fordetaals • "' Land m June Lake area, $575/mo673-2077 HartMiw 3242 canallronl, nwly decor. 1n g OK ! Call now' Near new 4-Plex , 2 sale or joint venture ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool,tenms.2blksocean 1>45-7221 Agt. bdrm, 2 bath each urut zoned for 35 condos Quiet East.side 3 br, 1 ba, Huntington Hrbr 2 story $1,100. 962-6683. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHtaMna 3724 ' I ~· HERITAGE •IA.YFllONT• LANDA ISLE, NWPT BCH with fireplace. enclosed . : wood burning frplc, Townhouse. Exclu1ive C"'S"'DEORO Patio, double garage Xlnt view, l mi. from ska I ou THEW"'TE.111 ,.. ,.. $165,000. Btll Grundy, area Call o wner, garage. refrig. ~mo. ocal1on nr water. 3Br " • ..,.. ALL UTILITIES PAil> 714 164s.-s314 Wayne,Agt..646-8816. 2i..a ba, 2 (rpfcs. Unique Great vtew of boats & OHL y 2 LEFT! Rltr. 675·6181. _ ---------m o d e r n d es i g n bay Brick fplc. ramily Out of c-_... MESA VERDE. Im mac. w /greenhouse windows. room Available 1mmed Com pa re before you * 13°/o * l•--------•I ~"' Xt I ll f t d ' rE>nl Custom d esign C u s tom homes 3 Property 2550 rage vrm or en er· A JCt lo tennis crts, for 9montlui. Only 11995 reatures . Pool, BBQ, NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• tainlng, family rm, pool, spa, sauna & gym. mo . d ~~r~~-f~I~~~ !~~ :;~: . . CROWS NEST la rge fenced yard, play 1975/mo. +assoc. dues. THE REAL ESTATERS ~~~nrdela.;ftghe,ptuu:h cstm drapes, built m Pnme PronartieS Beautiful ultra c~t.om house, aardner incl Avail June 15 Call Eliot 6738550 landscaping. Adult hv range /oven, d11· TRIPLEXUln CdM. lfe 3 BR 3 Ba hme. Qu1et culde-aac. Lease. ~.~~~~·7788 or David -IA.YSHORES mgalitsbest.Nopets hwaaher. Loll or beaut. Ocean aide of hwy slt~ated on 3 ACRES. f190. 979·8727 Cherming 2 Bdrm I ba Bach fumiahed S370 . • REALTORS Attractive Ir!( Br, ba, k1Ll·hen Liv rm w frplc, patio deck, upstairs le 1 Br, bu , kitchenette downs la 1rs Storage & laund $950 combmed or $650 /$350 Avail 6/3, 675·6611 STEPS TO BEACH 2Br 2ba +. den Jo'ront unit w lp\'l pat to $795/mo A~k for Uarrell Pash 631 1266 R6'M~ II ~ :\I ·11 tit'- 2 Br l ba, 2 story, pool, deck. adltb. no pets Lease SS45, 673-0473 2 Br I Ba deck, carport. $540. AduJts, no pets. Lease. 673-0473 Nothing down and as· aum our position on this presttcloua 58r, sea 3 sRp home in Newport Beach. Most des1reable area. We are \ooking for a hlah income owner WHO needa a tax write off fo5 the best deal on the b~. We are ownerS, not brokers. Call Darle ne 1714 )828·1280 direct or collect Office open 9·5 Mon-Fri. cabinets,3cargar,fncd Threetochooeefrom S uit able ror avos. 4Br Newpaint,carpet & 3br, 2ba, ramily rm . house w/frplc and lge 2Brfumished~ yard, land.scpd. 1775 s/f Breathtaking views ! drapes Ga rd e n I na t975/mo Call Lmda, brick palm. Mo to mo . 36.5 W Wilson. 642·1971 SLeps t o Ocean Most of li ving apace. Muslsee DUPLEXES on Balboa 52<'5,000. Villaae Realty. e le S750/mo AGT.846-1371 S000.759·1.SSO charming section or old ror other fine features. Pe n insula. Two to 1·745·5252;489·0400 s r v e . · -----533.S tmo Deluxe Mobile Corona 2 Br 2 Ba .. All this only Sl31 ,SOO. choose rrom R•ol Est-"--546·9950· --lrYln• 3244 Lido Sands yearly lease 1 llom e Mature adults. no frplc. covered garige, • Owner will subsidize • unr B c 11 p k •••••••••••••••• ••••••• blk from Bch $1000 mo pets Quiel, secure. 1991 ocean view from deck for l yr at l.3t:I DUPLEX h Exce.c..g. 2100 3 r . o eae a r . R-"''S 2Br + Den 2Ba Fam rm Newport B_lv_d . 646·8373 $750 C a II Anthony on le water ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kida/DogsOK.1675 /mo. .. .... ,,... Opeft s..day 12·5 with boat dock. 1st. last + deposit 3 br 2 ba. SlZ>O Furn OR c ove red patio H&lfttiriCJtolt leoch 3740 11. eek d a yi. 642 5757. 417 Mo. Coooer, SA hchcmtgt Hawaii 556·6516 4 br. 2h ba l900 w I j a c ut z 1 M any ••••••••••••••••••••••• wknds & e' es 644 11889 NEWPORT CREST T.0Propertaes~~293 FOURPLEX m Foun For ... e~l-ch 4br 3ba 1950 features, near park Call H.B.'sFl..,.EST CostaMHO 31'4 tam Valley. " -NPT.Hgla.2br,l ba,new forappnt642·312S " " 111tln 1090 3 Kon a ropertles. cpts, drp& 370 LaPerle Spanii.hEstateL1vin1t ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Terrffk:PlcMI. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All large assumable waterfront & view!!, Ln 1575 760-0759 THEIWFfS Beautiful park lake :our MESA VERDE home al· 2 bedroom, 2 bath wilh IN FORECLOSURE l oa n s. All owners $585K. Principles only. 4 bdrms, 2 baths, super round1ngs Tcrratcd mosphere 2 &3dhcapts. anumable S79K Isl TO. motivated. For detailed Call Newell or Gill. EASTSIDI clean. Yearly lease pool. Sunken gas bbq, No pets. 546 1034 Priced for quack sale rRICEREDUCEO infocall 2BR l Ba,yard lr pat10 1950 mo.Agt.,673-53.s4 sparkling rounta an s $165,000 With Sl0,000 cash take C /2 I ....__. Cftfr. $S25, 1st & last 631 ·5661 -----S P a c Io us room i; , over vacant home a nd r--' ---Npt Terrace 2 Bdr 2 Ba Separate dinm..: area. *Cote Realty encumbrances. Sl09,SOO. 640-5357 760..6767 New 2 bdnn condo, dbl condo. pool /jac, en cl. W a I k 1 n c Io set~, & Investment Approx. market vu lue gar gar . elec opener, gar, $1625/mo. u of 6/1, homelike k1Lche n & $209,000 for Tustin area l~~~~~~~~~~I MIW'I 2000 M Pl b t w lk t H l 1./j"'S777 M "'KE "'u -1!!.11!.ll!RI _.,.,, eyer ace "'SZ' C ......... ,11i.. .. tnvw11: aaaoc ree incl. 646-3942 ca 1ne s. a o un V9"r pool home Call Les. "' "'" vrrs • 631.4361; 64l·1991, agt. · ,. ~ """rv I"' """'so ---ington Center. VIEW· AXER Lar11e lot on Kings Road with duplex. Reduced to almost lot value Sub- rnU. $399 .SOO. - WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 NEWPORT ISLAND SJIS,ooo-owe JltO,OOOat 100/o Fe• almple1 a bdr, den. 2 ba, patio aeck, 30 x 95 lot. Slnaleatory. By appl 7M·675·3971 •OCEANFRONT• Triplex & dplx, xltlt le. PP, 673-7877, 673-7673 Owner I Agt. M9-9400 or Our 4br near Newport Why buy when you can 1 Bedroom rum, $440 559-0769.Pnnc.only 5 Income Properties Ba c kbay ro r your 2 Br Garage, fenced University Park Forlse rent a $250,000homein 2Bedroomfum,$510 $8500DOWM T.,nhm 28r, 2Ba. $50,000 finst at l212"'r. owe bat. 1881 Mitchell 1182. 832·0264 Open Sat/Sun. OPIN SUNDAY I ·4 14'21 It• .... Rel TUSTIN MEADOWS Larae assumable V.A loan. 3 Bdrm, new paint, cptl ,drapea. SUS,500. Cal S1tndy. 631-2242. Eastside Costa Mesa $200,000 +So. County yard. No leads. Pet OK. S900/mo. Cul d e .sac, Newport Beach for Adults.nopets 20'# down. Owner will homeorCondo.831·0611 $450.546-7~ Green bell , frp lc , Sl200/mo 3br,2baCrplc, Utilities free• carry Prtcedt.oaell! or496-8682 -----1kyUghl, air cond. 48r, patios brick work etc. ----Santa Ana Heights 3 Br all appliances mcl. No Some rum avail If nee. LA QUINTA HERMOSA 714/e-41-0763 292S College Ave Costa Meu, CA WIU TR.ADI. dbr gar1ae. large yard. peta, l teenaier OK. Im· Near Schools Newport 16211 Parkside Ln, 1 blk New condo In Pa Im Clean. SSOO. lat & last + peccable house. 759.060() Center Shoppina. Quick W. or Beach. 3 blks S of Desert for sportfisher or S200 cleaning deposit. 1 ll F.dlntier trawler . .,.8 ... ...,. mom ng1. occupancy. ca owner 847.5441 ""' .... .,, ------• 752·1830or~ ----1·340-30061 ,346-7726 Woodbridge Condo 3b. r, .,._ port •---.h 3769 East.aide 2 Br. l Ba. Yard ..... w --5 unit• at beach, Long &r garaae. Nice 5485. 2~ba. 1775/mo. lat/last. Harbor Vu Home 4 Br. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach. t o trade for Eves. 842·5281, Days frplc, a /c,&44...w6evea Ba. Mont.e10. No peta. houte 892·8162Bkr. 7"'2·2282. "W db Id .. 3b Gardener . S107S/mo. ----------•-"--------oo r ae r + Avail.6·20.497·4046 den, 3be, atrium. mwit REIM~ tee: Rec fac. no pets SB25. 642·4164. 9118-0696 WILLOWS 4 Br. 2 Ba. PaUo Rm .• renced yard, dbl aarage. '550/mo. THllLUFfS Exec 3 Br. 2 Ba. Near pool. Hlahly upgraded. 1 level. Sl<l'iOmo. V1cant. SIAVllW 3 Br. 2i,; Ba. Family Rm Pool, tennis, view. '$12" m o. Avail. July l. Aaent 759 1092 Super Condo 2 Br 2"'a Ba., frplc, patio, pool. Adulta. fTM>, 673-2181. • ft ...... THE "GOOD LIFE" YIAA•"°'*° $1\111: SOClll ActMU.. OI· rector • FrM Svndey Bru"oh • 880'1 • P1rt1 .. • Plue '"°" OMAT "rc:MATION: Tennll • FrN L.eMone (pto &. pro ehOp) • 2 HMltti Clube • Sevllt • HydromHHV•. Swimming • Qoll Orlvl"ll Range llAUTW&. UH: Sl"lllH, 1 a. 2 Bed· room• • Fur"l•h•d 6 lJnfumllhed. Adult 1.IYl"ll • No Ptle • Model1 Ope" Dilly t to e Oekwood GMden~ ..... ,....~ ... MO UVIM 111 1ttht (71 4) 844-1104 •:er ...... l'TOO t St. (Oo-et 1tlltl (71•)MH11t Spacious 3 Br Uuplex $425 Pool & laundry Cac, 548 9556 MEWL Y DECOR. Br gas pd, encl gar d washer. pool. Adults 642 5073 2 br. 11 • ba. no children, ~mu ll dog OK, S425. &10 Joann St 642-7344 NEWPORT I APARTMENTS I 2 IHdr . avail. $270. mQ. Plus utils, No chlldrel}, no pets, no waterbed1. I ;:450 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa 31rTowwho•• Newly decor gas pd., encl gar., pool, dawhr. Adults. 642·~3. _· _,_ 2 Ir. I loADf Newly decor. C:as pcl. encl aar.. pool, dahwr. Adult.a 642·~3. Lra 2 Br 1 Ba, gre•t E .•lde locaUoo, $475/"10 yrly lse. No pet.s. Call Lloyd,675-667_0~~-- Beautiful 2 Br Adult Con· do. S.C. Plau. SSSO/mo . ~ 0686. Beautiful Townhouae. $525. 2 Br. l ~ Ba. Fireplace. Savaao Wiide "Co. 875-8005, -----IMIMCI.~ 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Beam cemn1. lndJ')' f'1'\'\, ~ Adult.I only, no peta. laat Mo. rent. -.aes . TSL. MGMT 84.2>1 l Br, USO, utll p4, ca11>0rt, quiet adulta, DO pttl. HI W. Ba)'. SU.951B . ' l Orange Coaat DAIL y PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 "\ l Daily P.ilat r'tles only -no comnierclal busfnes~s please. Any c;'lasslflcatlon. t I 2 Br Drapes & carpets, dshwar 0)0/mo ~-S393 Lite·bright airy & brand new 2br. 2ba, m icro. dbl SEA ENVIRONMENT % 17 •lA~ll TON HR '#bl ·1~00 g a r , po o I . J a l' , Avail. now 2 Br 2 Ba. waterfalls, S700979 3376 Apts. Garages 1 child -OK, no pets. Water / We:utfleld FAMILY Af'TS. trash paid. $460 964-2566 or 973·2971 Agt . no fee 2 Br 1 Ba. d&hwlihr, nr beach upper $175 536-8312 Brand new beaullrul lrg apt, ror ram1lies with 1 or 2 children Near park Heal paid. No pets CONDO 2 BR l \• BA $480 3 Br. 11-.i ba. ~50 plus 2 BR 2 BA SSOO util 19933 Derbyshire 398 W Wilson, 631 SS83 960·5994 Kennebunkport? Okin t 'he win the Monaco Grand Prix in 7~ .. . . --. VILLA IALIOA Brand new 2 Br. 2 Bu + Den Condo. Ocean view, sky lights, xtra lrg patio. washer /dryer hook·up. Wont last long ! 1950/mo. TSL MG MT 642 1603 OC EAHFttOHT 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. dbl gar. new carpet, yearly Sl.250 /mo JACOIS REALTY 67~6670 1980 sq I\. Unit avail May 1st. Carpets, drapes wet bar. •336-34" sq rt. • Leuing orrice hrs Mon thru Fri 8·4. Sal 10·2 Sl3,500eams $4650 in 11 months with this Trust Deed. Bkr768-0922 Found Small Male Collie. Vic. Edwards/Slater. Black collar 848·6541 Found. Dalmatian male, vie. Adams & Main, H.B. 5/26Al 960-6698. Found. Lhasa Apso type male. Blond w/cham· pa&ne Edin&er and Spr- ingdale HB 846·0351 LOST Fem Doberman blk /tan. VIC . Beach I Adams H.B. 5 /25, REWARD. 960-7195 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found 5f'ZI: Siamese M Anflo•c.,....... 5100 Sealpoint, Balboa Isle, ••• ••• • • ••••••••••••••• Injured. 64()..27311 THE ADVMTISIHG COHSULTAMTS Now you can reap the benefits ol hi11h cost ad· vertlsln& for your com· pany! Let 'The Advertls· In& Conautanl!I set up your own in·house ad· vertisin& asency. Please call for information. 759-0652 Found yowig male un· cropped Dobie. Vic 55 Fwy at MacArthur. 661·6431 SCRAM4.ETS ANSWERS Humble -Tafry - Favor -Typ!Jt - FLATTIRE There'll an old proverb that goes like this: ·'The journey of a thousand miles begins with a *FANTASY *STUDIO* l.aMtiM Prlvah Room1 The Beach area's closest & most exotic reading studio 81.25 Boise Av . Midway City (2 blocks E or Beach behind h quor store) Open lOam Jam daily except Sun 543-9243 Psychic Reader Advisor Past. Present & Future Love. Marriage, Health. Char11cter & Bu1iness Cater to Parties, Card & Tea Leaf Readings. H ca nn ot solve Life Problems on your own. consult us ror lnfor & ap pomt <714) 63l·S588 SOOTHING MASSAGE for D1scnmmattng men Call Peter 494-4871 t.,one ly but secure, at tractive single male. 39. seeks smgle woman ol rinancia I mdependence in her 30s who la attrac ti ve. short (under 5 feet·5> with nice (lgure. intelligent, liberal minded yet sincere. sportsmmded (ltkes ten n1s , golf) & without· ch1ldrtn Prefer so meone m Laguna Beach. south coast area who has plenty or time to s hare In late afternoon, early evening tennis, beach walks, etc No pros or phonies. Please write to P .O. Box 838, C/0 Daily Pilot, P.0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa, C1. 92626 FLAT TIRE." 1-------- FOUND: Cocker Sparpl mix, male. Vic. B k Bay, N .B. 875-3590 AFTERNOON •DELIGHTS• HOtM /Offtc• fttot-1 * 529-4631 * 24 Hrs. Now Hiring MC VISA FOUND: Au1tralfan Shepherd mix, Lab New· roundland mix, ~ker mix, Chlh u allua , Schnauier mix, V,lzata I~~~~~~~~~!' mlx, Pit.bull, also c1ta fr kltten1. lrvlne mal Care Cent.er '764-17 FOUND~Fem 8 mo1 old? le . Hell /Edwardt 5128/81 W-80'70 •• SPIRITUAL READINGS lOam·lOpm. Fully Llc'd 492·72" or 492.90.14 1815 S. Camino Real, San Clem ., (165669) (656437) (053109) (011456) (051822) (014974) (01&090) (026156) (026188) 1981 TOYOTACOROLLA Sedan. 4 apeed tranlmlNion. FULLY FACTORY EqUIPPED 1981 TOYOTA COROLLA 3 speed automatic. power lteering. AM-FM MPX, pitHtripes. ~welt moldings. 2 DR. LIFTIACK DELUXE I 981 TOYOTA CELICA Air conditioning, power steering, trim rings & AM-FM MPX 4 1e>eaker stereo. ST 5 SPEED COUPE 1981 TOYOTA CELICA 4 speed autometlc trans. ~th overdrive. leather packaige and morel SUPRA -rrs LOADED! 1981 TOYOTA CELICA EQuipped with 4 speed autometlc overdrive. factory air cond . pwr. steering, AM-FM MPX ltereo & undercoat. ST SPORT COUPE 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP 4 speed trans.. one touch tailgate panel and fully factory equipped. STANDARD BED 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP 5 speed trans .. one touch tailgate panel and ~ndow package. STANDARD BED 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP 4 speed trans .. one touch tailgate panel. chrome bumper & Ultra mirrors. l/4 TON LONGBED 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP AM-FM, one touch tailgate panel. chrome bumper and Ultra mirrors. LOMGBED 5 SPEED DELUXE 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP 4 speed automatic trana. \1114th overdrive. undercoat. wtndow pkg .• Ultra mirrors. letc> buf'llP9I' & tailgate panel. LONGIB> DELUXE I . 1977 DATSUN 710 . 2 Door Sedan. 4 cyt. engine, 4 IPeed tranamlulon, air conditioning. s3399 AM·FM tt9reo 8 track, ,._ n.dial tlrel & morel (311ZCX). 1975 TOYOTA <BICA Gl I .,...... __ :"'T"~--·-----..-------.. _____ ......,.._ MAMUPACTUIM'I SUfflSlW> llT All. USTPllCI IKE'SPRICE 55319~ 57959~ 512,86792 s ·s7074oo s 57526~ 4 cyl .. 4 1peed trana .. factory s7299 l\lnroof. AM-FM atereo CUMtte. tinted alau & morel Collector'• Item! 488NVS). 1971 VOLVO 145 WAGON J J I --·--.,--. --~ •! , . I f ( .. Ot'8nge Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 29, 1981 642-5678 HtfpW..ted 7100 lpW..ted 7100HelpW..tecl 7100H..tpW..tecl 11oott.lpW..e.d 7100HelpWClllted 7100HelpW..ted 7100HelpWGflhd 71 00HelpWonted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUNTING Rapidly expanding stock broker11e /in vest ment firm has an open· ina for a B ook · keeper I Accounllng Clk. ·10-key by touch, lite lyp- i.n& <CRT exp. a plwi). knowledae or A/P, bank _deposits & reconcilia· tloos & payroll exper. nee. Salary comm. with exper. Call. Penionnel, ,752.0070. E.O.E. ACCCQmHG CLEAICS Laguna Beach elec tronlcs mfg r has two tmmed. openings ; Acco_,.r~: AS.S'T CONTROLLER Dynamic Newport Beach real estate invest- IOOKJ<EIPIHG CLER)( Posllnll clerk for ac· counta receivable, pre· fer knowledge of pasting & balancing accounts 10 key & typing at 40wpm req. Xlnt com · pany btmefits. Contact Donna 645-3632. IOOl<JCEIPING Part·time bookkeeper needed for small com pan y . Call Mon F11 , 8· 4 '30 898-0300 IOOKl<&PSl Full charge, great opp- ty with busy Laguna Beach contractor Must have construction ex per 494-6525 ment & loan bro~erage IOOKKHPER / company has opening OFFICEMAHA~ER CABINET SHOP Trainees for mill work and assembly. S40-5Sl~ CARPEHTER 631 ·2004 Carriers Chouff.w & other duties. Male col lege student Non smoker, dark suit req 25·35 hrs per week Day or ev('nlnR dnving 640·S335 Register Newspaper has 1---------•1 immed openings for af- ternoon auto carriers in Laguna Beach & Laguna Niguel. Must be over 18 years old & have an economical car. Work 3.30·5:30pm weekdays, 5 7am weekends Earn SS00-1600 monthly. Call Mr. Ensley 951-7113 CLERICAL Irvine distributor has 1mmed open1n~ for Clerk Typist lo answer telephone & do ieenerol ofr work 10 key by touch & some A R exp a plus Cd co benefits 1salary to S800 mo Call 7S4 1931 Cashier !hostess, P T •--------eves. Apply m person Two Guys From Ital} 2267 Fairview Rd, CM CASHIElt WAHTIED F IT call Barbara for appl 540.3280 Clerical Office C .. ril & PIX ap.rator COOK Experienced See Chef Jack at Irvine Coast Country Club. 644·9550 ----- COSMETlClAN Exper In skin care analysis, facials & wax- ing Will al'!o cover front desk. The Hair Handlers 642·8484 C OUMTElt HELP DRJVER Meyerhof's, pr1mu1) suppl.Jer of good food:. to the lrvlne co rporate community nel.'di. a responsible & fll.'x1lilt' person lo do food preµ & back·up deliveries Mon Fri, 8·3pm Good driving record necesi;ary Sti11ts al Sl.45. Call Susw 111 557-6232 Wanted p/t for food deli Dry cleaner, fullµ time call between 9AM -1'' 1 co unter girl Y(•i. 752-5401 L ll•aners, Brookhur!>I & -Adams, H 8. C OUMTElt HELP Flexible hours, day or ni&bl P /T. between 30-40 1hrs per week Ap pl y at Der Wienerschnitz.el, 250 S Bristol. C.M Ask for Rick EXEC. SEC 'Y For f ast m o \lnl! New port Beach offtt·c Good typing & shorthand skills, salary commensurable on ex per1ence Contact Lin da : ( 714 >640.1633 GENER.AL OFC U1ver:.1f1ed offi ce skills required Hea,·y phones, Sea Coast Securlly 642 3490 GIEHERAL OFFICE l .. uokmg for a very in lerl'slm~ part time job in pleasant c)ff1 ce? Clerical, for mature person Location P.C JI . N pt Bch Ex per a must AcC'urate typmg. no s horthand 20 hr week includes Sat & Sun Call 646 7431 GENERAL OfftCE I n 1ne firm has 1m mediate opening for bright. self.s tarter person to perform a var1et~ or office duties mclud1nie xerox111g, in- tc1 ·office deh"ery, Iii· ing, elr Contact Bever ly,641 8820 Req's. 2 or more yrs solid acctg. exper. with gd. backg round 1n payables Will be resp for .:ntire A JP funcl1on Payroll: fo r ass't controller Beauty Npt Bch law fi r m has w /a ud1t & tax ex -Salon Assistants. also lmmed opening for peraeoce lo public or full time makeup artist qua I 'd book keeper private Industr y real Lic'd only Training pro w /some leaal back estate e mphasis pre· gram Robert & Taylor. ground Typing & word CASHIER Our office is seeking an ind1\'1dual who 1s ac curate with figures & ha~ hte typmg ~kills Ex cell co benefits mdude pd vacations & holidays, company dis· count prt\'tleges, 1n surance program. profit sharing & pension 1>lan Apply rn person Oehcatessan help. P /T, includes Sat & Sun Will tra10. See Terry or Peggy, Hi-Time Liquor, 49S E . 17th St.CM FASTFOOOS Cook & Cashier Exper nee 504 Pacific <.:oast 1--------- Req 's. min 1 yr. ac· countln& exper includ· f e r red . Sa I a r y 646-7197. processing exp an as Part lime. Appl} . The Earl's Plumbing, 1526 Newport Ave., Costa Mesa. 714 /641-1289. Hwy H B SJ6.444SE,·e~ r, ' ln& 6 mos. of payroll ex- ~er . Job also entails some cost a('C'tg duties EDP exper for either CASHIERS UTDTEM ~~~ J.C. PENNEY $16 000 •"o ooo Call set Potential lo become Katiero~:7>J>i.640.9350 llLUtilGCLERK office manager. Call: 1---------For expanding C.M. im· Beth, 552·~ Delivery men over 18 for LA Times to homes in C .M 3.am -6a m . economy car required, no co ll ecti n g . S400-$4SO/mo. + bonus. 646-0637 or 646-5844. Female R&B m exchani:e for 4 hr day cleamni: & cooking 6 day wk Non smoking non drinkin1c art 4pm o r wkends Babysitter needed !or 2 port Co. Good typing We offer excell. pay & adorable children In skills req. Some phone B 0 0 K K E E P I N G benefitaplusa COM, 2 days week. exp. a+. Xlnt salary P t tlme . Apply at : 4 DAY WORK WEEK 760·1390 benefits & growth poten· Crown Hardware, 1024 ---------• lial. 540-6955. Irvine (WestclHf Plaza), Company Is 2 mi. from Babysitter wanted in my NB Coast Hwy. & 8 m i. from home, Colta Mesa area Bookkeeper, Cull charae -------- 4CX'.> Is 5 Frwys. ~l 20hrs per wk. Child care l•--------•I avail. Call Carol 642·9990 IOOl<KEIPER F /C Please call for appt. BABYSl'ITER F11hlon Island Invest· TeloolcBerkeley For2yroldglrl. Flf IOOKKWEA/ ment firm. Excell. op· 7l4-4~-~IDe~.'O.E 1 ___ s3_1_-1_m_a_ft_s__ ASSISTANT portunlly. Exper & P tr. hours flexible AC· matutlty required. Call position will be a plus . BankLnc counts payable. com-714·640-0123 SEHIOlt TBLER puter mput, bank rec. ~~~~~~~~~ AccounUn1 Dana Point ...1c.ce seeks Laguna Beach location a~~1. ·~ A .. CLal( uui Ca 11 for i nterview -..-1• exp 'd teller. Some (714)499.4571. P/Tlme Mon, l : PM to MARKETS For 2nd &3n1 Shirts We promote to manage- ment & supervtSion from within. WANT A CA REER? Cost.a Mesa 111 Del Mar 631·9421 Laaun• Beach 494-9233 24 Fashion Island, NB E.O.E. M/F CLERK Plessey Semiconductors 1s looking for an Ac· countln~ Clerk to h&ndle comm issions, sales journal. cash receipts postings & some Accts Rec Applicants should DELIVERY F If time for local de· liveries. Xlnt driving re· cord req . Phone for A::>pt. 557-9212 Ask for Mr. Emmons. Newport Stalloners Inc. have some accounlln& ---------1 556-1737 F ULL Time, p/t1me Mm. typmg req'd Ans serv. No exp. nee Call. 631-0140 EOF. F ULL Time, P /time Ans. serv No exp nee Call : 833-3333 EOE GENERAL OFFICIE With some bookkeeping skills. 631-2004 bkgrnd . not necessarily DENTAL .ASS"T Need sharp RDA w fX· GENERAL OfftCE Rapidly 1rowln1 In· It n o w I e d a e o r ---------&PM, Tues. 10:30AM to ternalional co. seek• lRA/Keoih preferred. Bookkeeper, exp'd A/P, 6 P M . No ex per Huntington Beach responsible individual Call Maureen at 496-6133 p /R, G /L, parttlme. necessary. Apply Pen· 962·9116 1n these areas Must operate 10-key adding mach by touch & type M·40wpm Excell start· ing salary & benefits packaae Apply In ray Uc. for Npt Ctr G.P Jewels by Joseph look • d k 1 t l inc for reliable person to .. ya w ' e_ieasan a · handle various ofhce mosphere. Exp. essen· lia l . salary open. dutleJ.540.9066 Mar1arel 76().60'24 Mon-GENERAL OFFICE for our Accounta Paya· ProvldeotFederal noo11noker. Irvine. nevSaver 1660 Placentia"'!!!!~~~!!~!!'!!~~ ble Dept. General Sa •-" c r: t.oowled,. °'bookkeep-EOEYM'Jiu 761-7020 Ave. .M. person : PLESSEY SEMICONDUCTORS 1841 Kaller Ave., Jtv. .T!!!!h!!!!u!!!!ra~~~~~~~ Interior J.tndacaplna co. ~ nff<U penon to do \yp. lnl Ii IOtn9 AIP exper. ''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ rtq 'd . Sal arr co m· 1-;; m.ot\arat. wkti abtlity, --••••lllliillillilllll O\lut•ndina btoeflu 1n a pleualll wontn1 eo· vtronment. Contact: Pat MU11. 1f you would enJo>' work· inl ln pll&lb IWTOund- lnP It 't at our ~port C.nw omef an4 can meet our raquinment.1. why not 11ve 1.&1 e-call? We are currentlf in· tervlewinJ candidate. with a m1nlmum of a mos. previoua t~retarlal n 11trJenc., eueUenl tmn1 akllll (SO to SS wpm) and t.he ablllt)' to C.'C)ftU'l\\WUtl effectively. KnO'tJledi• ot IBM Memory Typewriter ~ulrtd. Caabier Dent.I Aulatan\. Ing Ii anawet buay c...-~~~~!!!~~!!!!!!~ Cballen1ln1 eicluslve pbone11 t/t, mon·frl with Full Time CLlll mtST /CIT r:~g:~,:~~\,5;e!!: co. ::'enta. ~8429 Take advaotace of tbll Experienced' CRT paneled dut1e1 ability. GadllM.OFFICI opp0rtunttytojolnonec>l Operator. ~ut...aaood 644·6611 Experience helpful, the ~111Uona leadlnf auto typina, 10.key adder,• ---------1 gobd typl.na ablJJty, pro- J)Jrta retaileni. I you knowfed1e of otnce pn>-DIHTALASST ficlency wtth tlaurea, enjoy meeUng the public cedure1. Eitcellent corq· OrthodontlC! omce ,In 10·key by, touch. Op· •nd &ervlnathelrneed1. pan y be"ellt1. Call Laiuna e.ach looking portunity ror advance- thil ta for you! w, orrtt •Mill It alter eam at tor experienced RDA. ment . Eiccellent co,m-aood pay and a benetlt1 _6'_5_·_5800_. ______ 1 De b b le . I U. H 58 , pany benefl\I. Informal• P.acka1e that Includes CLElt~STf 497-2.464. omce. C.M. Call Miilie itlscounts, paid vaca· ---------• after9amat64.5-~00. t1on1 , bonuses. medical REC CHIS DENTAL Assistant . and life ins., penaion and Eleclronlc partf dist.. p /tlme. Proareulve, more! Fountain Valley, haa new ore. In Laauna LET'S GET openlnaa ror Individual NialMl. X·TaY Uc. req 'd . AQUAINTED! with 1ood typln1 • Mlcl\elle, 714·-.az2 Apply in penon at: aenera I omce 1kllls. Key c,unch & aonw accowat· DENTAL Hyglenl1t PEP BOYS eo'nt:~r~:~othe:g~~t llOlclilt l1tSt. _97_9_0U3_. ----• S.ta~Ca. Eq"al Opportwalty Employ«Mff General iv1cK1 HESTONI & AssocMat.1 Spec1ahzing in Tern porary Clerical Personnel 540-0400 ---- G ENERAL OfflCE Are you in earnest 7 Can you think? Are you as· sertt ve? Are you a· perfecliorusl? A~ you career oriented? Are you mature? Can you lake over an engq(/mfg ofc where your ~ork re· ally matters?, Really" Well then. I wo\lld Uketo talk lo you Pis. send your resume lo Tom Tompson. P .O Box 2951. Npt Bch ,92663 ___ _ General Office New port Beach tn · 1ur1nce co. haa tbe followlnl po1ltions avallab&.: BILLING CLERK Typlne 30wprn. t(.15 per hr. Exper. helpful. CL.ERK TYPIST Typtna ~w-pm, Ceneral ore. d uUee. Exper. helpful. Hra. SAM 4:15PM tl.~per hr. 'lLEROOM COORDINATOR Responsible. mature person to take charae of policy file rm No cyping req'd Muat el\JOy detail " have helpful attitude. Duties Include b4lck·UP ror mall room E11per pref'd but will train right penon. 31~ hr WffJt. Call for a.ntervlew appt. btwn 8 30 & 11 :aoAM . 893-8450 COMMERCIAL B~NKERSLlF£ 1401 Dove St., St.SIG Newport Beach E.O.E MIF •J ~.,.!.~ ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... ?!!~ ~;.~~ ..... !!.~ ~~.~:.~ ..... ?!.~ ~¥.~~ ..... ?!~~ Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 29. 1981 Gl•LNJC>AY Local manufacturln' bu.alness ~ girl tr1· day. Duties varied, exp mandatory. 11lary com· men111rate with ex· perlence. Please apply In penon 1922 Placentia C.M. New:O~~une.'ry out• ~:~~:D 2 :~z~~ !=!r~" ~!t:t~~~ra. bartc:n ~'!.!.~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... !!~1 ~. ~~ ..... ?!~ M •>' !O, Sam.&« __ ·5921 9-& Appty: 1660 Platen d e re s • . • • coo k • • Sale• sa•-1 SC TaY/L--.a.L -Advertrsina S1le1 thaAve .C.M walttu1e1. w11tera AIMlllffCMforA. ., '" _ _.._ LI f EGUARD S Rep~aentalive. Career 675· 1094 between Hpm~ Parttlme career. •:'!et I 0 POSITIONS Mid 11:te N po~ Beath "' l 0 Llr 11le1 opPQrtunlty with a PIST CONTROL Realaurant. Catering new peopl6l Earn .s or Open tor motivated peo· law firm i1 looluoa ror ll , .. ewpor unH e multl·dlvJalonal national Person salary opon firm h11 o .... nln& ror more perbo.ur. 1166-0522. ple, either in Ill~ or de· actry with 1 to2yn te1al euard lJ'YOutf Ma!L 30th company We wlU lraln 641 6930 .... --livery. "1·3642 exfr J.1aa 11 upr aho Sam Ntiwport 8cw;h 18 )'OU to control l on l tn· respon adult to operate SalH he pful Beautiful Bl "over only. Call6'4·5921 terviews with bull· PICTURE FRAMER Hobart auto 1llcer " * llJDA.L SALES PERSON needed mosph-=r• and opport GIRL FRIDAY In com---L-~ c .. ~,-/T--tle11men " pro C1tllerysa1e11 Ftrposl· IF.earn portion cllolntrol. COHSULTH·-· lmmed Laguna Nl1uel tor ad1v1ncement Cull fortable t.aaWla &each wor "' (ttslonall We wurk by liun for ener&etic. ,xp pref. bulw train. "'"' retail outlet tor tine In· 714 /833-0730 atmosphere. tlexlble lS Mesa Verde~ app't. only, ofll'rina u c1eallve pen.on Some Ml$C.SO pc:r hr 9:30am tenor rumllhma• Hr. SOUIER hrs, pay commensurate.._ ________ _. unique & valuable exper pref Art des19n lo llpm ldon. thru Thur Will tr•ln·r•rl to flexible Salary nee lh 1• &amtolpmSun.m-0747 F /t1me Pre retail M ... _bond"'l wt exper. Call Chet M•CHIMIS.,HELP•• service that b.enef1ts bk&d helpful Laa. Ni" r • · ust.,... a., e Call. "' , , 1Wft bo .. .. or appt. Lori s Kitchen clothing aal"" exp C M M i 494·4604. Full time Must read th buslnessei;; & con· 831 S983;770.2897eves. ~6.1821 "'" sS6.'9333 arc a. 831-<~23, eves vemler11micrQmeters 6 aumers. PRESSM RETAIL Clerk. Costa 66_'_1_9457 Gl.IHOB min ex per. Laakmann We offer complete In AH Mesa Stationers. 270 E. Sale1 D•• R.,. CEMTllLIS S Eleclro·Opllcs, Inc . suranc;:, packa1e. e~ ~~~~~£~~~5~~~k 360. 17th St., CM. F1t1me ap· Part time Sales exper Sandwich Salesperson E.O.E. San Juim Capo pednse mU1es, rapt ___ __ _ ply 1n pereoo l0.12only ' dealing wtth businesses. Mon· Fri. 7 am 1 pm Top wa1ea. benefits, (714 ) 493-f.624 a vancement. We work -._ Sal & comm Position Is Must have own trans. overtime for exper'd ~~~~~~~~~"t on 8 commisuon basis PrWtna REWARDIMG with Calif lar1est RAC,C M.642-1900 operator. M~t be ablel-with the average ac-P lime, plafe room POSITION Manaaement consult to set up for c lose MA.IDWA.HTEO count executive enmlng helper Mon 3PM to ap F I T Housekeeper-hrm . Send resume to SECUfA.RY Legal. Xlnt skills. One man omce. Salary neg. Nwpt Bch. 673-9201 tolerance work. CM. Don Quixote Motel 135,000·$40,000 annuallr. prox 8PM. Tue, 2PM lo Waitress for sm1tll re· 23771 Mariner Or. 12·207. ~De~lt~ro~n~l~c~. 545~~·04~13~~~1 _21_oo_N_e_w_po_rt_ Bl_. C_M_ ~~ ~~~:~~~t ty~r~~~ ~~~!~:a;:.MAp~~ e~~r tiremenl facility. Hours La&una Nl&uel 92677 ;;: MCNt_,.T,...... newly opened west coast neySaver 1660 Placentia 7 3PM Weekdays, con· -T'· orflce. We offerthe most AH C M. ta c l Mrs Co 11 i ns . Salts Engineer GUARDS ------ Full & part time. All areas. Uniforms fum 'd . Ages 21 ~rover. retired welcome. No exper nee Apply : Un ive rsal Protection Service. 1226 W. 5th Sl.. Santa Ana Interview h.rs 9-12 & 1 4. Mon·Fr1. GUY FRIDAY Conscientious persun needed for a very diversified position with advancement palenlrnl in a small, friendly & proeessive nutritional office Call Dr Henry. 641·5977 Hardware Sales, F /time pos. in retail hardware store See M 1ke Johnson, ll.W. Wright Co, 126 RochHter, CM. HARDWARESAU:S Management potential Apply in pel"SQn · Crown Hardware. 3107 E. Coast Hwy., CdM HOSPITAL A.DMIM. Needed for 96 bed SN F facility Must be de d1cated to good patient care. Strong le1tdersh1p qualities Xlnl benefit!> Apply 1445 Super101. N.B. Housekeepers wanted Seacurr Motel 1661 s Coast Hwy, Laguna Bch 494.9717 Housekeeper wanted for working llunt Harbou1 couple I J0.6 JO, Mon Fri Cook eve meal. hle housekeepmg, $125 /wk Call Rita: 8461476, Mon Fn.9am·2pm Housekeeper /Com panfon Live in or out 833-2000 & Salts PNM recognized complete 494.9453 Mual have experience in FULL &PART'tlME training pi-ugram in the Pnntmg ------selling up seminars, and Looking Coran exciting industry, with extensive Offs•t ,.,...,,."°" RN. relief charge nurse. tratning personnel In c areer in the retail personal attention Ex Per . d 2 nd llpm 7am, Fri & Sat. seminar presentation clothing field? This pa ked b r di p 0 C NOCS, 80 bed ECF, gd. Pay on share1, comm rap1dlu uxpand1nf r"l"il it r y rien y ret1sperson oss om I •· f b r expected 60M C0 ll for J " "' .. group competition munity 4 unit. Apply. :sa ary"' nnge ene its. .. cloth1ngchainis ooking CallChris Campbellfor 1660 PlacenliaAvt>,CM Mesa Verde Conv . appt.67S-90i\210am·12& for bright motivated re· interview at 646-990G !I 9 -Hosp., 661 Center St.. 2·4 on_M_o_n_&_T_ue_s_._ liable. people to fill the Sunday thru Wednes PROPERTY MGMT C M.548·S585 p<1sit1 o n or Munager day. LAKE ----Sales: Find out about trainee & Sales full or Supt:rintendent Resp. Sa1lmaker·Seamstreu. HerbalHe'i. exciting Part Time . XlntNewspaper delive r y for overall m~mt. of (Male orFemale).F/r. financial opportunity SECRETA.JtY employee hen incl person, 111 or over . homeowner 's assoc Exp. pref 631-5950. Work inyoursparelime. merchandise discounts Driver 's license, in 0 1 C.:'''&R -----Ms Herbert 964·3lS8 -- Apply at uues me " en· S11 les I •• -;...;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..1•~~~:':~~~~~ Puibl cRMtloft1 Fast-paced. growing Oranae Co. Aifl>Ort area firm seeks person with excellent secretarial " organlzaUonal skills Light bookkeeping, heavy typing required For 1mmed1ale cun slderat1on call Jae queline Schaar As sociate~.540-296Y surance. economy car rorcemenl, {'unttact 1• MILLERS OUTPOST Npt Bch·lrv.coste Me~a supvsn . lake mu int. & Assistant MmOCJ9r Sales * * SECRETA.IUES• * So, Coast Plala area 7 dys pr wk Mon. safety laision to Lake For ~autical Girt Store Shtl00/roVP$1.8,000 3333Bristo1.CM F' 1 2 SPM S S · Full Time Expedence PEP BOYS Sh80/FashlslSlJ,600 E.O E'" r · · al un Board Salar) nel( Lake Preferred. Call Charlies TS.S!OurOf'cSl0,800 4 7 .30AM Approx Assoc. Lake Forest II, Locker6756230 PR CRTtAnahS14.400 Mana~Tralnee ssoo1mo can 540 3001 951-47i2 --Manny,. Moe ActgCtktropJobS11.4oo P S •LES bet. 11AM·5PM Ask for Sales Ex pd. Consultant Ours "' l o Bob QC RECEIVING lnspt:c Career opportunit1e:. for ..ee r tor Trainee Must be GREAT HOURS and Jack Liz Reinders Agy , Inc. manaaer trainees with NIGHT AUDITOR selr s tarter & able lo 4020 Birch Est 'IW EOE one of the faste:.l grow FRONT OF.SK CLERK dnve fork hft 5406300 fA.M-2PM WE'RE LOOKING _N_e_w_po_rtJ833. __ 8_190_ Free_ ing c lothing retail For sma ll Lal(unn or FORTHEBEST! chains Xlnt 01>ply. for Beach hotel Full orl•--------4PM-9"M the highly motivated, p T . Experience with PartTfnM goal onented md1ndual NCR 250 prefer• ed J oin the Los Angeles ~time Retail or management Hotel San Maurtcn. Times <.:irculaitcn Team Jr you are bnght. am exp helpful p t morning 94 9 36 & ad a pl your work b1t1ous and self mot1vat sale!> posilioni. also 1 · 4 · schedule to your ed. PEP BOYS is your a\ a 1 I ab I e X 1 n t NURSERY SA.LES lifestvle Work 5 /hrs . kind of place We're pro employee benefits. app· Looking for personable, day in a Times C1rcula· ud of our growth. stabili· ly at Miller's Outpast neat. energetic per:.on lion sales office near ty and professional en· Mesa Center 211 E. 17th able to grow with a well your home & have mure v1ronmenl. H joining Costa Mesa or SC established company RECEPTIONIST time for your family , this winning team Plaza 3333 Bristol Costa Minimum l year n•tail stud tel> or leisurely sounds interesting to •t~s 11 . Top wages tu mature I t · t d -' " a nurser~ !.e 1 n g ex periods We pay hourlv. you, e s get acquam e MASTER C abinet Maker Sl8,000 per yr ~I u s t h a \ e 1 O y r s furniture making exper Will des ign cabinets for electronic & elel·tncal audio & \ 1de<> l'ompo- nenls ullbzin~ drafting d F II per!>on Appl~ 2 4PM. A I perience require u \Ion thru SJl . 2406 \\ages & comm1ss1ons PP Y in person al . lime starting salnr Y Newport Blvd .. N 13 PEP BOYS $1000·$1400permo Paid LOSANGELESTIMES holidays & \acalloni. ----------1375 Sunflower Ave 120East lltSt. llo:.p1lalizatwn IO !> RECEPT /SEC'Y CM Saitta A.no, Ca. ;nail Part lime posi I mmediate pos1t1on 54~0301 2 3 811 SToroRd. lions also i.l\3ll In a\allablc m le~al accll( E ten 1ews hv, appl only ff' f 1 "',qua I Opportunity I Toro, Ca. o ice or re1-1mns1b c ... E n-.-..... Call646·7441 Mon·Fn self ,tarter "'ront offin Employer qual-,.,.....-.ity LLOYDSNLRSERY appearance Plea:..int -Empio~M/f table & draftin!( Lools. NURSE'S Al D 1-;, ll de\ elop p r ototype hskpg, live in or out. no cabinet model using smoke.NH 642·3481 phone manner . or SALES. mature part time ---------• g an' zed & b a:.' c Sun , Mon +. Sal + --- secretarial :.kills req comm. WICKER RAT· Sales Salar) commensurate TAN DEC0!!.8~ 7239 _ THE BUCK hand tools Tak~ ad to MURSIMG neares~ State Emplo} Need Rn or LVN for pm ment ~erv1ce Office in shift in con val. ho!>p Org C.:oWlly DOT 660. Xlnl salary & bener.ts 280 010 Ad paid for by D1fferenllal paid for employer weekends Apply Be\t!r· ly Manor, 43340 Victor 1a. MATURE PERSON CM with e '< pe 1 1 e n c e Sa les~rson needed for ST ARTS HERE N e" Po r l He a ch · growing med equip. co. The Los Angeles Times 64IH>OtiO. O.C area. 714 /524 6800 Circulation Dept. is look RECEPTIONIST Kathie Ing for well groomed. en· Ne~ de d New p 0 r l - -thusiastic people to earn Beach Boat type bus1 Sales up to S40.S50 per day ror S Prof. S.s-..i.. a few hours work as ness 41days week. un· r---..-P a r l . t i me s a I e 5 Wed . 8 :30 5.30pm Only t t' H S4 50/hr Hea\'y phones Marketing Reps lo sell represen a 1ves. ours & l> ping expe11ence a product that 1s wanted are from 4pm·9pm, and Call 645·7100 & needed by everyone. training will be pro * * * Ir you would enjoy work ing in plush surroundings 1l 's al our Newport Center office and can meet our re· quirements, why not give us a call ? We a1e currently in· terv1ewing candidates with a minimum of 6 mos previ o u s secretarial experience. excellent typing s kills <60 to 65 wpm) and the ability to communicate eHecli\'ely Knowledge of IBM Mem ory Typewriter required Exc·e llent st11 1t1ng salary anq benefits For more information. please call: KeYln Terry 714-640-9321 S1•r.@ IU! SECRETARY pa rt time, flexible hour11 , lite bookkeeping 751-33!0 S EC RffA.RY A front office secretary ror small Newport Beach m11nuhctur1ng tirm. One person with t)•p1n& & secretarial skills to also perform bookkeepm&. posting Call 548~l8 for ~P 't SECRET A.RY PIT, for manufacturer's represent.alive. 557 ·5389 ----- SECRET A.RY ·LIGA.L 2 career onent~d pas1 t1ons open m Irvine 2 5 yrs. legal experience Xlnt benefits & workinl( condltions Call Fran 833 3622 SECRETARIES Register today for loc·al tern pora ry ass1gnmenli. 557-0045 Cf\-Lff\:. lfl\M'04IAll'I P'fltSONNll SflMCfS 3723 lln:h StrHt MewDOri leach tOE SECURITY PERSONNEL FT or P 'f. n1te shift on ly Call or apply 1n person. Hotel San Maarten. La guna Beach, 494 9436 SEC'Y SUMMER f'"/r, June l5·Sept 11 Fast, accurate typing, transcribing. gen. offcc Will consider qualified college student One person offke Busy work sched Interesting pro 1ects Send :.hort letter l n o phone calls/ w1qualifications & ex per to llerb Mttclfell. 234 E 17th. 11200. Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Sec 'y-Syno«JOfJW • .p 'T Costa Mesa area J.u d a 1 c b k g ct n e c· ~·3652 Service Slatton Attendant wanted full lime. Garn 2 30pm shlft Part·l1me eves & wkends Xlnl working conds Exper req. Mac's Texaco Service, Beach & Ellis. 968 6505. R11orous tralnlna. long hours , good pay. benefits. cash llonus. money for colle&e. physical and mental chall\loges. t~am work and experieoce. These and more are otrered If you qu1thly for the US. Army Call your Army Recruiter today: Costa MesaM0.1026 11 untmaton Bch 1162-8821 La&una Hills 768·52U. Santa Ana 642-4763 ... ARMY. BE ALL- YOU CAN BE. STATIONERY Store 1n CdM n eeds salesperson Flhme. S days Xlnt workmg con ds. Espec-1all> fine cllen tele Phone 641 7482 for app't STUDENTS Job opportunity 1n sports promotion & sales P rr. sun1mer & year round work Call Mr Adams 541 4J17 Student Jobs $1000 /MO TO STA.RT SUMMERORCAREER Due to expansion company needs many secretarial, marketing & wuehouse p()Sttions Will be filled 1mmed11Jte ly Must be lB & hA-\·e transportation & be Well groomed. Call l"am·3pm 171 41847-2422 TEACHBRS & EDUCATORS wa~ed P T . lo manage i.m bus1· n ess Mr Murra ) 846-11559 TEA.CHER Experience for paid P rr church school JJOSltion Sundays only Ca ll 49'J·30l!ll moms TEA.CHER Kindergarten. full time. starting Sept Creden ttaled Benerltll Pvl school. Harbor area Send resume to Box 66!:1 Costa Mesa !nA>2'1 Tea<'hc1 La~una Beach Summer school S..h' math. grade!! 9·12 6 15 81 1 24 81 Sl<Fhr Requires valid Calif credentials E 0 E 494 8~6 . INSPECTOR RECEIVING Electronics co. In Laguna Beach needs an eleclro-mechamcal tn· spector ror our Rece1v ing Dept. lnspection of variety or components. assemblies. machined parts, plating. etc. Must be able lo work rndepen denlly, have al least 3 yrs. exper. & full work ing knowledge of various measuring/test equip ment in c luding O'scopes. micrometers. calipers, component testers. etc Will also have other Receiving Dept. duties lnten 1ewing. phones & lite typing 9·5. Sun thru Thurs Npt Bch loc Will train. 642·9955 MA. TURE PBtSOM needed to help operate a tea garden 1n Cd M, Sat/Sun only, 9:30AM lo 3PM. Apply m ~rson, Sat & Sun .. lOAM 2PM. Sherman Gardeni.. 2647 E Coast Hw~ . CdM OFFICE MA.MA.GER Sm consulting firm, Newport Ctr Ad m1nistrative & secretarial duties. Start mg $13,500 Call. Mr Carter. 759 1356 Earning potential. vided. Your earnings as Recept Sm ad agency. $40.000.SSO,OOO a Times Sales Represen-SHIPPIMG DEPT. Accurate typist. 60wpm * Co. Tnining tative will be based on WELLS FARGO BANK TEC HMICA.H-LA.I Should he femlhar with rubber testing. C'Om · pounding. molding, eh' Med1l•al benefits. vuca t1 on. profit sharing Star11nic salar) S3601wk Con ta ct Don D a v it> . L'Garde. Inc 6454880. We orrer excell pay & benefits plus a 4 DA. Y WOR.K WEEK Company is 2 mi from Coast Hwy. & 8 mi. from 405 & 5 f'wys Please call for appt Telonic Berkeley Personnel Dept. 714-494·9401 E.O E. IMSURAMCE Underwriter with com- m 'I. auto experience. 50wpm, 10.key, some rating. Salary open. Ex· cell. working conditions. New ofc .. moving to I rvine In August. 759·040l - -- PA.RT TIME I To deliver Daily Pilot auto route in Newport Beach. llOURS Mon thru Fri -approx 3 30pm t o MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESSOR Must be ex~nenced F 1T. ask for Beth . 1714 )540·1711. MEDICAL RECORDS TRANSCRIBER Requires 60wpm typing, knowledge or d1ctaph<me & medical terminology Organization. attention to detail & follow up are very Important. We of· fer exc-ellent environ· ment Capistrano by the Sea hosp 496-5702 MEDICAL FRONT OF FJ CE. F I T NB lmmed opening Ex per1enced 644·8'722. MEDICAL & Insurance Secretary Ex per'd. Busy Npt Ctr . Ophthalmologist. Gd ref's 11 must. Excell. benefits. Computer knowledge helpful Salary open 7598921 MISSIHGE• S:JOpm H OU RS Sat & Sun Sam 7am Earnings appro). $350 per month Call 642 4321 for Bryan Holland or Sheldon Harte. Equal Oppor Employer PART TIME Demonstrators. Fri & Sat Work m your area C ar nee $4 hr. 714 ·541 ·0718 or 213 877-113.5 --- PA.RTTIME FLEX.HOURS PIT employees needed for general pest control work in South L.A. & Orange Co Will tram Must have own transportation. Phone (21J)97S.8269. PART·TIME SUMMElt DOUARS A.MD FUN Pacific Casting is in· tervlewing for all types ror extras in major mo- tion picture. Also clean cut M /F, 21-30 with good smile for commercial audition. Dependability fJ transportation a must 558·8608 Cor app'l, Mon· Sat, 12.&pm. Sharp w pleasant phone * Quabtled Leads guaranteed hourly wage TR.AIMEE personality Grow th * Ht&h Income or SJ.SO+ generous com-660 Newport Center Dr Excell. co benerat:. potentuil No smokinl{. Ll..ui""-&.,,_, missions. Call now for Newport Beach Steady work She mu1>l please G45-0340 ., -r~ "'7' more information about Equa l Opp Em ply be good with numbers Systems this 1reat opportunity. M/F/H <;M. Deltronic,545 ~13 Rec·ept1onist with a c Al. 754·~.545-6793 (714)957·2381,ext.1204. ~~~~~~~~~!l·-~~~-~~--i A..wto1, Hew HOO A..wtos, M•w tlOOA.Mtot,Hew HOO A..wto1, Mew HOO curate typmic :.k1lls & good with riRurei. Nwpt Bch ofc. Ftr Starting sala1 y WOO + Ben Call ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Am} for appl 675 5262 *RECEPTIONIST Small division or leading Architectural firm needs mature. depends ble Gal Friday with sharp front offi«e ap pearance & pleasant phone personaltity for varied duties Fast, ac curate typist Excellent benefits. Nosmokmg. WmLPerelra A ssoclah1 MacArthur Blvd & Ford NewPort Beach (714)64-4-0620 EOE RECEPTIONIST For F ,T position in Chiropractor's office Must be dependable, ef Ciclent & have good or rice skills. Non-smoker preferred. Call63l·S690 ------ RECEl'T ;TYPIST Real Estate investment company, attractive of· rice nr Redhill/Bristol Some Hnancial back ground desirable. Xlnt com pany benerlls Salary commensurate w llh experience $40-1105. YOU MAY .BE PAYING TOOMUCHI CHECK YOUR CLOSEST DEAtER LISTED HERE. Gn THEIR PRICE IN WRITING. THIN COMI SEE THE VOL~MI DISCOUNT TOYOTA DEALER - 6 mornings a week. Mon : s ·30AM to SAM, Tues. thru Sat: 6:30AM to 9AM. Excell. driving rec. req'd. Apply: Pen· nysave~i. 1660 Placentia ----------·Ave .. CM P•.._ IECWTIONIST Full time pogili.on. Full SICUTAllY ------~---MHGM"1' POSITIOH Fabric chain, C.M. & Anaheim. Xlnt oppl'y. Geri 646-4060. company benefit.. Ex-I Faat growin& N~ Bch. per or w /train. Apply · ' PENNEYSAVER 1660 ad agy. teeksln v. with top t yping akille Placentia Ave. C.M. Telephones plua 1 varle ty of rt!$poMlbllit~s & opportunities. Call Bob, 644-7644 Receptlonilt /fypJJl front ofc Sun•Thur. Pvt eoun· lry club. Mf ~ ...... '°'°'' MIL&ll ""°'' ,AIAl9M '°""' IOMllTTOTOrA '°"'°""°'' YQMnn'OfA Wl 10YOtA -fOYOlf• UW ..... 10't0fA ""'""°' '°'°'' ~'°'°'. , .... '°'°'. -'°'°'1 I I .. '°""' ...... , .. ," WMmmY '°'°'' A.IJUMllA fOYOtA CAii ""°'' MAMHA TOTOfA MtlMt.ANt .. '°""' 10TOIA CtM'Uf. ''"'"' TO'tOfA • IUIUNl motA WIST VMUT 10YOfA CMION 10T'OfA ..._'°'°'. •'"''°'°"' N. MOUTWOOI fOTOfA ........'°'°'' w. allWM ,.,,.... ......... anlmvta I I p I i ' .. • t ... ..,.__ --• ·-.. --~----..... --...-----.. ....... --.._ 1'4 O.,.nge Cou t DAILY PILOT ~rlday, May 29, 1981 Deft 1040 IHO ..... S. IOll Mhc1l•11• IOlt Offlc• , ... , 6 ....................... ....................... ....................... .......•............... ·~······ ... . Hlfl;WllllllN 71N W..... 71ff......... IMl~•l•H• 1010 KEESHOND Pul)dl. AKC. Sola 7' PU.lowback wht IPamllyGaraaeSale All yur Bubble Pool ..................... .. •••U•••••••H••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Champ 1tre. N/F. Pet 6: w /bllM • aPl"ic:ct flowen Amar. oak anthaue1, Encloaw-., ao x 55 Xlnl. I B M M o d o I ' C ' Ta.MOMI TYPISTAtlC..,. WAHTIDTOIUY w .. ber, clean. worlill 1how . Pvt pty . newll50,(2lm1nlbllod• Enfl. antlquH, al10 P!O/otferCIGMGe Typerwnterl250 ormATOIS Advert11fnf tll•MY t buy old •iaa1 , aood. su. 541·8513, 213/tt'M:MSaftfpm. 45"wldeX70"kJOa.olf be•· dreuera, eod L9 1---..-. ~_1127_· __ _ ,..~nawerlnt Service, 1Hkln1 'fypllt/Recep-dlamorida. Jvory\jade • 548 "85 wht mtea 13Hl111 tablet, dftk: Scbwlnn •• -,... 1087 t a rloui ihlfla, hdl • Uonllt, 50wpm, Ute book• colluUblel. ca I (710 -AAA HOME DOG 1lrl'1 bike. 11S5 Sandcu· Hell um Bouquel1 de· P(f. aa 3rd Q , #"C'', keeplnr. ••un al· m-49281rHklorDane. FtHur. upriaht, clean-TRAINING Camel tan. V\nyl Olvan tie, CdM. Fr1·Sat-Sun livered Perfect for ••••••••••••••••••••••• i..auna acb mo 1 p he re Dan a : work 1 1 ood. U 00. In yo"r ..._ __ -~•-..... Bed + beddin1. Incl e1ec lM. every occuk>n. 873-4419 Tame Pearl Cock1tJel · 549-l1S7. WAHT• TO IUY 541·&Sl:t, MH48S .. •ouu....,.......,,.u..... bin kt. like new. s. w tcaae It 1.111, Sl.50 or TELEPHONE Siarveyor I b u y 0 I cl 1 u n 1 • •problem IOlvlna. 146<8714 Gara1e Sale, lob or do-It· New mini bl.indl 40 In x 45 bell S48·8417 afl 8 . • Gll'I Friday. Earn up TYPIST. Perrnan~t. pl dlamondt, Ivory Jade Ir REFRIGERATOR &a-ttlG younell od<a •n endl ln '25. Marble cotree la· plefto Is"'"--lotO to ST.SO per hr. Call: /time. Sm con1ulUn1 coUectlblel cah <714) 11.9 cu ft fo'rl1ldalre E1e1ant modem din 1el tow bar. mite. ltemi'. ble 125; KJrt>y vacuum ••••• ~ ••• :::r::: ••••.•• l7S-tM• firm,NewponCtr.CaU · 9'12·•928ftullfor0ane. w /lcemater. 1450. WaltbJ,21va.8otfwht Fri.·Sat.-Sun. '60 Abbie ~.Woven wood 1hade WURLITZER. •Pinette Mr.Carter,76'-1356 &U·O•t r....toY.. 1041 uphl chn w/chrome Way,C.M. 48hu841nl20:Hana1n1 model 4410, two 44·note T•t.ruM .. _Mas.. WESTMINSTER GE ti , .. _b Id ••••••••••••••••••••••• leaa.Lknew552-8S30 lamp$2.584&-7603 keyboards, 13 pedal VITI04AIY BBE;u re r a. I....,. Y·I e, free to .Jood bomo 7mo ' l .-1 "-I Saturday, May 30th. 1.5302 I A ,A Zl ~ cu ft, avocado, 3 old F/Golden Retrh11r 7 came -a• oveaeat. and 15!122TouralneWay. Girl• clolhet ih:e 12·4, note., auto tone contro, :~P~~~':.'r.C-HatPo~=~lne& ~~"f:~:!f11;. yra,1400.49'·•1 needalove&1pace art ll~e~•:S1 :525· Alex The Ranch. Irvine. some new, under~. ~i:P~~~1~'h~:0':;!~h: nmmtr campalan. N.B.f/llncludlnawknds CIOHdTUNday GE wa1her & dryer, 9 W /kld1,leavtn1are~. ~ • 1• · 371 8am·2pm. Breyer Honts Coltec· $400 caah or 1450 de· Eam 11lary + comm. m uat like bathlna. 11751 Wt1tmlnaterAve. mot old, white, warran· 851'1'19' Ka 11 Waterbed. brand Garaae Sale-l606 Anita lion S2 + S3 648-7603 livered. S4_7·_1845 ___ _ Wort ln alrcond.,com· bru1hlna ll cleaning. Garden Orove 554·8103 ty,'45()bolh.'96-4881 FREEl<J'ITENS newba1.aoodcond,S75. Lane N.B. to raise Couch $75 , Hondo fbrtable ofc. Mon·Frl Minimum aae 18 yn. Oranae. 2 male, l AFt4,98().0'l:l8 money forkldltocamp. Acoustlcgultarl85,Mat-IVERSlsPOHD -ve1. 16 hr wk. Be1ln 8-lt. Apply Mon·Thun ll·S. Kenmore Duo power up-Cema'•. 7 .... -.. a . ·~1 . ..,... (KTC) Sunday 5 ,.1/81 l /box sprlno•. $15. Call Stud lo Spinet X Int Call: 9:S7·2602 1333 Avocado N.B. (Npt Early 1950 Coe1 Cola riaht · Mavy duty, like • .. ~ ... .,._ Osnl1h Bench Seat for '" 848_3915 -cond. Sl200 In Coata Cntrbehlndt.heatn) machine, upri1ht, 8500 new S75, Hoover com· evi. two. S7&. Walnut buffet OldWl•=•ADh Mesa, will Deli ver TIU MAH or bett otter. 50-2478 pact with attachment1 Darllna kitten.a, 6 weekl ~. Ph: 4"·3'7'3 BEING DEMOLISEIED BEARCAT Police Scan <7 14~338·3'1Sl No experience Re1tauranl Ealey Pump Orran, $10,960-1963 old,toaoodhome.Have .... 1vauiR ..... , Everylhlna 1oe11. Apt ner&oodcond,be1torrer Walnut Burl grand. necea11ry. Newport Tire W ·-n f ....1 .. 1. l.lt shots. $40-8581 " -furnlahlnp, linens, lots 831 5800 G G Center, 3000 Cout Hwy, ""'~ S reswred, f150/0r belt of· 1• cu l. u.-&aA•t coldlpot Bunk Mda l200. dinette of real old etutf, boob, -icon Cl880, ~rmany CdM.844-G2. Ideal 1chedule. Excell. fer. 'Also Oak lee Box, freeier very ad cond Kitlena USO, 1ofa It love1eat doon. old nnura, etc, TREES & Buahes 1n S39000RO PP 957-0907 ; co. knefib include pd. titted for TV $300 •s. 841·1'114 To lovlna home. S.'U5, iota bed 1170. Qn etc. elc. llU E. Balboa. Wlnebarrels··muat sell, 962·0049 __ _ vacatlona • bollday1, 848-6935. 645-l!IC» bdrm $540, M 1tl /box 1~ mou hangmg baskets company dl1count Wa1her/Dryer1ood cond 1pr1n11: twin '75. full HEREUNTILSOLD! buy 1 or entire patio S. 0 2 prlvlle1e1, ln1urance Hand carved Maho1any $300. Refrigerator S200 .s. Qz.n ;125. 6'H>S83 wlltcJ MochMH I 9 pro1ram. profit 1har1D1 Fireplace Mantles· X 5• 759·1580 ,_..._.. 1010 MOii ii Dlnlnl aet, blue couch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'penalon plan Apply in $1000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 770-0901 china closet, dbl bed, Herculon curved green Singer tndl.Litrtal, new, person· 645-9700 REFRIG, 191 Whirlpool SOFA! head boa rd tr ram e, couch set, tflO Tlffanys zig za&. t600/0BO 424 J .C • ......., ilde·bY aide, frostrree. 9 ft. ere.en\ ahape anll· RUil eofa "2 matchlna book•. 1ames, mi1c. membenihlp, S200 Hi ft 15th St, HB. ___ _ 24 Faahk>n l1land, NB Oak Roll top de1k, S-S27:S. MO-o&t9evea. que gold velvet. Ex· chalr1 '150. S' Seucape Gothud It Hell, HB. stand. $20. 648-3388 Store, R..._,_., TUIM& wadln1 local pest con· trol company needs Route Technician for 1teady job. Level entry poslllon. We train · no experience neceuary Call Tim. Mon. 9-l2pm 9'79·6021. TRAMSCRllER / E 0.E. M/t' Curve. SJ.800 OBO. Good Electric ranae. Portable cellenl conditlon ! 011 pulntln1 S7:1. 2 Tlf· 1B792 Rhone La S t --------lar 1095 1111!!~~~~~~~~~1 cond. PP 957 ·0907 ; dlshw11her. Washer & $195.00. Al.lo. two dark fany lamP1 t25 each or. only. 848·9047 ne. a Gaffer & Sauler Gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962·00.9 dryer tu:seach. 846-S848 brown win&/pub vlJ\yl flee de1k • chair S7S 1tove, 4 yrs old. xlnt Store Fhctw.t TYPIST For Technlcitl Law Fi.rm, Newport Beach. 86/hr week. Salary com· (Uensurate wilh ability ~ exl>!'~lence. 8Sl·ilall. _ WAUHOUSE Pa SON Experience preferred. Starling pay S4·~/hr Days only, Mon·Fr i. Xlnt beneflls. Laguna Hilla. Call Bob: 770-1675 Tl\AVEL AGENT for Weekend Supervisor. busy Irvine agency. 4AM-noon, Sat/Sun. 16 Oflnlmum 2 yrs recent total hn. Primary job is el!per. Computer exper. beine cel'Uln adult auto pref. Qualified only carrier picks up papers !!7·2700. on time 4s monitor & de· •• TRUCK DRIVER hver complalnta called ~ad, deliver & unload ..... oi:b'.!. c u s lo me r s . bl H lift o ~xpense check. nets. eavy ing S3 50hrtosta.rt.Mustbe SM $40.5515 21 or over Vahd driver's TYPIST he & Insurance. Call JJnt position for xlnt $40-300'7 llAM·2PM Ask \fpist. Lota of work in a for Bob or Lee tipsy office-lovely Irvine t-urroundin gs Coll WOODWORKER Jarbara 8S7·1204 Experienl'(!d Call Tom at 642·6183 Wf1QU£S chairs. LIKE NEW• '65 Draflln1 c hair '25 Garage Sale. Beacon cond.1150 631·7<XM llfn llcyclea 1020 each. Call (714) 971·7~2. S4CH968 Bay. Lota o( 1ood1es. Sat 100 yds clean uaed shag Mlrron, "'""· show OF THE WORLD ••••••• •••••••••••••••• 8-3, 13 Beacon Bay.NB. cases, hangtn, racks, cpl green 12/yd Twin h I h I Schwinn Tandem :; spd * * I BUY * * G•roge S-. 1055 North lo Alaska. Not just velour swivel rockers I • ••I' c a ra' AND ~r5~~~~~1 ~~~~95 nu~ Good used Fumlture 4s ••••••••••••••••••••••• our tr·a1h. our treasures rust S7:S1ea 675-2172 •acuum, .tc. Lott day, Appliances-OR I will SURPLUSSCHOOI. too. They all go . -------May 30. 675-1030. STEVEUJHOMAS ~pm . aell or SELL for You tqUIPMIHT SALi (714>89s.3304 Mc Lane 20" front throw 3641 E. Coost Hwy. ft" NEW 23" Sentinel MA STIRS AUCTION MAY JOlh ~12:00 ----I awn mower with CDM ANTIQUES 10.peed 1100 646-1616, lll-9625 NEW PORT HARBOR Patio Furn, wicker ch rs catcher SlOO call 7S2·2248 20-40% OFF AU Mft"ChmdiM 3 Days Only FRJ.SAT·SUN May29th -31st l0amto6pm S33 W.19U1St,C M. 548·3339 or 548·0191 575.4114 675-7348 HIGH!CHOOL 4s eofa. Game tbl w/4 BR l CKS 168 cement 4 Show cases for Bric (old bu. aaraa• area> chrs, Lathe, misc. 390 bricks lOc eal·h or all ror Brock. 6rt long. good I IUY FYRHfTUU l.&ld1R9Materlalt1025 Les 957-8133 F i S t S G ••••• •••••••••• •••••••• r . , a .. un. ara1e Redwood 2 by 8'1, xlnt W a I n u l d res s e r Sale. Quality kitchen decking. 8 lo 20' long w /bookshelf, matchln1 ulenaill, t.dles clot.ha, New load Just arrived. desk & chr. Gd. cond. girl• & •m•ll k id• Save at 55' per ft . 846.3895 clothe1. furn., bUnd1, 846-988S anytime. shadn. curtains, miac. ----"------1----------1 20091 Bayview, Santa Wrouaht Iron Fenclng, 4' t 9 f\ sofa for sale, needs Ana HelahlJI 5'9-9743 hi, 1ate, 60ft lenath Sl.25, some uphollterln&, 642·0435 hardwood frame, gold SAT /SUN. 9·4, furn , suede cloth $45. 6 metal toy1, household ware1. Santa babel, C.M. sis. 646.7603 co.2d. 1115 East Balbo~ _ 2338 Mln'uteman Way, Sears Craftsman 10 .. TV, Radio, COila Mesa, <Monticello Radial Ann Sa ncld HIFI, Steno 1098 Townhouses) Off w, 1 s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Van1uard. Appliances, metal stand & manual. Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr Washer, Refri&e. aofa . Alcond $3>5. 552·74 13 wrnty Free delivery loveaeal, wood dining Chinook SM PU <.:itmper. $148 646 1786 ___ _ room 1et, deluxe Rickenbacker Bass Sell waterbed, plants, ever· or trade 548-0383 ythtnc. ---'---------Kang Sned Pool Shde S25 Bronze Mi rror 8' high 12 I '2 ' Wide $100 642·02J9 Catt 10l5 bridge chairs, need re· bike, etc 10132 Cynthia ••••••••••••••••••••••• painting, SlS. May be ~r tNr .8ookhur1t 4s ln· Solid oak editor's desk, Burmese Stud Service. d "-) HB ~: TYPIST ,..ucn f./l' position avail with ... nd developer firm ln \mne. Pleuant phone 11111anner & good typm& I· (ram mar skills a must. Salary comm with exp. 0.11 Liz Hartzog 549·2691 S1 OBO aeeo nights till 7 PM or tanapc>...,. • Work early summer SO/ · CFA re&ialered eves. & wkends P /T. 844·1033 964·601.8art2PM. weekends. Call 551·4435 GA RAG E SALE 12F-'lv Garage sale, Saturday only Something for everyone. Sea Blufr Ca· nyon. S of Victoria, E of Brookhurst. W. of Monrovia Costa Mesa. 631·5751 Alexander Dolls , mint, in box 4 <.:&R doll'I. d1sc:on linued 536-1587 45 watt Panasonic stereo receiver & amplifier, matching 26 "" Phase linear speakers! Almost new BIG qualit> sou n d $4 so A I e x . SS2 0231. 8Sl·9371 19"COLORTV Philco. S200 Alex. 552·0231, 8SI 9371 Welcom e re 'd ts (Irvine). Furniture, 1porlin1 en w 51 en Collector's item : 1901 Siamese Kittens Female ood J Hospllal1ty Hostess Hoffman Water Heater, 12) Seul ........ t """le" gbo ds, 9.is ohnson obult· needs a few good people. xlnt cond. $800 /0BO. ~·,,::: .. Cherrywood Bdrm set ar • P ng pong ta e, C11r & typewriter 846.1124 .....,.......,.. _ $350. Pecan Din rm set bunkbeds,l2gaugeLC. Yard Sale, many misc. For Sale : Oak dt\ 1der, metal s hehing , rireplace. butcher block, counter top. 494 3337 needed 547-3005 • pl . 80 O D04JS 8040 $150. Lmps, $25. Lawn !~~l~o~ a~~':,'·J~.t t: ---------1 WRrT~s "'' ancn I ••••••••••••••••••••••• mowers SlOea. 548-1931 c... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sunday 8·4. 281 Costa nftlST Exper 1n com posing WASHER&DRYER AKC Golden Retrvr pup· dsk w/exec chr $1500: 2 MesaSt.nearSantaAna Items. 17962 Santa Two color TV's, 19" & 21 ". need tubes. $75. 640 7~1 Mariana St. F V Sal H.0 Tram layout 5'x1r only. complete and ready to 5 · Panasoruc TV, l yr old, -..:.....-------1 demonstrate Inc l remote control, $1600 Furniture, check protec· cai.h 645·2456 engine s, twin Accurate typing & gd. 11alu seminars, com · Xlnt cond, C!SOeo . py. Male, 10 wks old, gst chrs $200ea : file cab & 19th close to the Mesa ~eceptlon s kills for mercia ls or r elated 844.0381 $125. 544.4077 li'OO. Theatre. Ole as ant Executive fields. Pay on shares ex· Suites. Hrs. 8:30AM to peeled 60M. Call rorappt HARBOR AREA Sii. HUSKY PUPS ~p M . 4 or 5 d ays 10-12 & 2·4 on Mon & APPLIANCE SERVICE Beaut. puppies, mixed ll4·752·0234 Tues.675-9042 Webuyusedappliances w /Malamule, 3 wks, J(1 lime to plan for that ncaUoa trip. For extra ;uh. why not sell aome Of those items you don't need with a Clusllied ad? 6'2·S6'78. XIAY.PYSOH Person exp'd in xray ··we sell recond, guar. lookina for great homes. appliances. 549-30'17 Mother fully papered. techniques with some I IUY ArPLIAHCES lab know how or wilUng-Lea 1157-8133 Chec k prices at pet stores. $75. 83 I ·8307 Hurry! ness to learn needed for busy medical practice Dryer, gas, clean, works BLACK LAB PUPS <.:a ll 997·3830 ask for good, S7S S48 ·8S13, FourAKCRea.Males Suzanne 548·4485 848-0168 -----------~---------! 64:>-6923 tor, golf clubs. tools, transformer. bldgii. ---------F u ·r n . access . girls 3·spd Stingray landscape, etc, must 4S" round walnut table, 1 k Itch en ware , I BM bike. polaroid cameras, see leaf 24", 4 chairs, 1125. Nonseleclric. Sat May starter drum set, metal 646·5482 30. 206 Emerald, Bal desk . Jewelry, shoes. 549-1484 Otn iset, frultwood fin .. Island l~. no presale. clothes. heavy duty '75 Layton 21" S,C xlnt drop If, 6 chrs, good to _c_a_s_h____ pc>wer mower. electric cond Roll up awning ....,.,,. ca """'l heaters, bar stools. $3300846·3593 exc ........ .....,......... Garage Sale-4 ramllJes louvered windows, beer ---Cbtna Cabinet, maple, Beda. refrte. di.shes. etc signs, wood shutters and 6' REDWOOD Picnic Ta $175 Sat. " Sun 15961 Ca1Tle lot.a more! Sat May 30, ble w benches, brand . 831·3798. Ln, H.B. 9·4. 32S Ealher St., C.M new ZENITH Chromacolor 11 . 21 ·· screen oak cabinet rela1I 1000 must sell $450 631 6233 loats&~ Eqwptnent ••••••••••••••••••••••• GetMral 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMtos, UMCI AMtos. Used ._..., UMCI Mtot,UHd A.wtot,UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAT May 30. 8:30hll 2·30 (2 blks So of 2<lh, just S7S646-988S 3126 Kerry Lan.e, CM East of Santa Ana Sls I. Sturdy lumber rack w 4 Furniture, drapes & 646·7908 tool box attachment Non profit org nds your boat, plane. car. etc Libera I tax deduction advantage 213 '654·2341 _c_lo_th_l_ng~·-----Houff hold Goods I065 $175 54:;.5749 5PM IOPM loat1, MariM Eq.nptnent 9030 Garage Sale· Sat only ••••••••••••••••••••••• Universlt Athletic Club ••••••••••••••••••••••• May 30th. 9·5PM 19871 2 Persian Rugs (Herez) Membe~hipSSOO 1---------Watubury Ln HB 1·12 x 9 11600. 1-11 x 8 548-3289 2 ·7 'DIMGHY'1 (Magnoha/Yorktown> 12000. Will trade or best ---Goodcondilion ofCer. 7 14~1·8989, Like New drapes for SlSOea. 673-7724 GIANT ear. aale. Furn, sale-ltnen 17'~' + 4· 1--~~~~~~~ cars, gamea, clothes. Wool blankets, 2 down 80" high. 675-0558 1- lOyrs of treasurea It quills SlO ea. King sz ---- traah S38 9788 custom gold spread &' Oel Mar Turf Club 7.5 HP GarndfsMr · · · dust rume 1100. 548·9892 COLLEt.,.ORS Good rwmer. $150. Garaae Sale May 29 & 30. 1• ._. 8070 Colorful Scarf·Souvenir 673-7724 853 Senate St. C.M. -•• .. , from "Opening Doy"I~~~~~~~~~ Collectable1 ol 1lau, ••••••••••••••••••••••• July 3rd, 1937. Attrac china books cad&elJI & PLAT. ~ diamond wed· lively framed. For den/· l·--------misc ' ding rmg grade VVS2 bar. 848.4236 3 HP 5-GCJlll · $1250 appraisal Sacrifice Long shaft. xlilt cond: HUGE Sale: Baby furn. 1850759·1843 POOL TABLE. Xlnt $200.673-7724 Toys. clot.hes. S..S S"8un l.H Ct. RUBY. Ap-cond. Slate. 960() or ofr I-~~~~~~~~ 2375 Notre Dame Rd praised at $2800, will sell 494.3793 15 H.P Johnson '76, SS75 C. M for S700, 84().8888 540-MOO ST AIHEO GLASS n8 •• YARD SALE: Freeier, MachlHty 1078 WlndowsandSkylltes weekdays 1love, clothin1. dllhu, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Add Beauty /Warmth to '78 British Seagull ideal ) toola, mlac Sc-$200. 1« Al R COMPRESSOR. homes · Free eat. for Avon Sl75 hurry: Cecil Place. Colla Mesa. Portable zzo" 4 hp. twn 548·«91 673-2810 aft 7, 751-6789 Antiq~• prlmlUve rum cyl, 125PSI, like new. Ml.ua-.w loah p 9040 hn1. la~p. clock, diahes: 139:;, 645-9182 W..ted IOI I ••••• ; •• ~~•••••••••• plcturu. ml1c. 2307 Mltc•I••-1080 ....................... lnflataiblt loat FranclicoOr.,N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED MoclelS400Avoowlth25 lst.teS. Phone-Mate Telephone Blue short 1leeved Hr. J ohnson engine. In 28036 Rid I D Aniwerln1 Machine security 11.n1rd 1hlrts excellent condition ! Call La una NI 1!,j Sa~,.:-with warranty "79. With Siu 1Stol5YJ medium. Mark at 645·2038 or 30 't·Spm Luquea, .: remote S1A9, 750-3791. 646-9100 631-7170. lf no answer, pUance1, bookl, craf\1, , PLEASE keep trying! rum Redwood 2x8 1, idnt deck-Mmlcol . 101. 8 to 20' 1on1. New ,,.,.,._.... IOU 33' OWENS BRIG S /F \ Heal·A·l.aler with venta load Juat arttved. Save •••••••••••••••••••••.. w /Newport Slip, new le mantle piece. table at 55' per It. 848·9885 CONN Dlrec.tortrombone cruaaden, trans & pro· u w, c lothee. n ick· anytime. ' with C4se. £xcellenl pa. Radar. aSllol. ball ! nacka u1ed brick• condlllon 1100 675-8052 tank. Halon fire 1y1lem .• blke1;, f!rtl· antl.qu~ a n rectwoodpiCl}lctable. after8PM. · 137,500 6*7246 .. coal bum I awve. 1733 Bryta~d new. S75. 846-9885 VIOLIN (lit.) 16' L1p1lake, 35 HP • Lake St. Hunt. Deb. an me EvlnnadeAttlraller. ISSO. • Sat/Sun. 538-()0&9. Uke new cond. S2:50 or • • Evl~ a-51. beatoffer.~1040 847·5038. 8PM. Gara1e Hle 15 yn ac· • ..,.. • 1 min c"-1 t'-5 hp ahred Mer•tt fo cea boal Offlc• ,.,... •• Is 17 • u wncanoe d;;:upiu;'bin1• electric: muutacturer to ll· .... ,....... IOll wllbacceuoriM •· •I• s ·-quJdate. Kill• aavln11 ••••••···· .. •••••••••••• $350~3687'781·9030 too ... an ... UiM. at. .... tl h d 19th Hun~Beach. on pneuma c an Royal sao otttce Ille u·a .... w..... tool.I, U1bl machinery. Typewriter. Xlnt cond. Trailer, molor ahot . • Sat. 157 F.atber, bet wn Obu1la .. , shop 6 office GOO. Reo\ln~ office 19th• 20th. Cou.etlblet, equlpmeat. fUmlture, manual Typewriter szs. lll00.175-7584,644·5433 aoodJunk. boat h•rdwart, un· 561·5$38. _,.SEARA'/ .... _ ... _"'ctr : ----.....;...-1 flnl1t,ed b,y, c.r .. IH r, -eunu ... m ile. Items. Sat. May ao ADLER Elect.rte ZlC Ta· w /1llp, '79 Jo b.n. •uto • Sun. May n Dulfteld ble model Excell. conet. pilot, alcohol elee 1tovt. , Yu ht1, feO W. 11th, Recent overhaul. -refrfl, docll side ~r • C.M. Pia. call~ &65-2142 charier . fathomettt nth • finder. apelco ta dlo ~•Phone, redlo dine· ' lion finder. full canva1, Ml·'25l or914·»U •; IUZZ ELLS\¥0RTH ........ 24. •-r.tw ... WT ....... Loada ol utraa laclude ahJJI to ahore It depth ft.oder. Lot. of teall, •'-4, dual e*tric •JStem. lq "Top COodlUODr. lhe la perffft for ba1 crullln1 or Catalina wetltendal Located ln • buuUtul tlJp at Lldo Ancbon.p. C .. Mwy.._ ... '71-ffll 72 VWCAMPll TNlltn. Trawl 9.170 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 201t(l HARBOR RIVO CO~ltlMl~A 6410010 Spec la I PwchaM!! LowM&aeepl 19104.,.S.•Sapd. D..._Pld&Up't Dynamite We1Ualla ••••••••••••••••••••••• poptop. Fresh en1lne '76 Golden Falcon 23' Very 1harp. (897GlU) frav. trlr, xlnt cond, ful· • $1995 ly SC, a /c, awnlna, new Tnlftlftdoul SaYillal!!! M•C.0,.,.. JIM MAAIHO tires, alps 6, w. or w.o. VOutSWAGIH '76 Chevy Suburban 11711 .. ___ .. Bl d Tl'lllerlng Special, a /c, ........,, v . new tires. 552--1256 aft. 14z.2000 6pm. ------- ...... Peww 9040 lo.h, Poww 9040 ·······················i······················· a.cl IHOblNJ' ,.,.. ... BARWICK DATSUN \-i,. )Lu" ( r"Jf-'1'f l ~(l 831-33 11 •CMIV.MU'll I TOMSTAICI l2 ft. model with Uf\aate, dual•. air cond., H.D. 1prtn11. pwr. steerlna. aux. t.ank as more I Workhone complete I (3961). ONLY $12.491 HOWADCM•l'Otet Dove/~11 Sta. Nl:WPOl\T BEACH IU.0111 '74 Datawt P.U., P /8, radio, auto, xlnt cond. Sll00/080. W.2176 • • •• w • ( Orange Cout DAILY PILOT~rlday, May 29, 1981 MODIL ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's RABBIT 7460 137800 S6055 s5399 RABBIT 6988 100847 S6750 S5919 RABBIT 6834 073409 S7400 S6466 RABBIT 6716 056305 S7645 S6649 RABBIT llESll 7000 142738 S7635 S6998 RABBIT DIESEL 6888 080048 S8360 S7686 RABBIT DIESR 7002 144492 s7459 S6790 RABBIT DIESEL 7082 118693 s7595 s5977 RABBIT DIESEL 6886 079259 S8250 s7583 JUTA 2 DR. 7341 287534 $8480 S]285 JffiA 2 DR. 7342 291>60 sg545 s7442 JITTl 2 DR. 7403 293597 S7622 JITTA 4 DR . 7430 311>53 S87Q0 s7555 JffiA 4 OR. 7131 322481 S8960 S7822 CONVERTIBLE 7412 . 011765 SlQ,395 S9064 CONVERTIBLE 7 493 013537 S}Q,290 S8976 CONVERTIBLE 7485 013778 SlQ,290 S8876 coNvEmeu 7446 009341 s10,1s5 $9448 7'1 AUDI POX IDoar• ....... •------llGTCM '656 1831 s934 '996 '637 '674 '669 '718 '667 'I 195 'I I 03 'I 143 'I 144 'I 138 s 1331 'I 314 'I 414 'I 307 74 HONDA CIVIC 71 IAlllT .......... -....... ~.O#'lf ..,_ ...... _.OHJ INCUI..,,.... • ...... _.. ... ...._..._CM PICKUP 6968 104499 S7860 S6765 PICKUP 6892 077131 S7870 S6646 PICKUP 7069 126621 SJ715 S6695 SCI ROCCO 7194 020835 S9265 S7884 PICKUP DIESEL 7373 086151 S8078 s7593 PICKUP DIESEL 7 435 128026 S8035 SJ695 SCIROCCO 7465 022692 S9780 sg577 SCI ROCCO 7309 020478 S9885 S8572 SCIROCCO "S" 7216 007677 s9535 S8237 VAHAGON 7345 077637 Sll,140 S9596 DASHER DIESEL 7339 910293 S IQ,555 S9289 DASHER DIESEL 7154 910912 SlQ,715 s9395 DASHER DIESEL 6910 901448 SlQ,610 s9459 VANAGON 7348 042578 Sll ,675SlQ,lQ4 YANAGON 7375 085774 Sll,140 S9712 VANAGON 7350 0577 49 sn, 70()$10, l 44 VANAGON "L" 7138 077379 Sll,70()$10,195 VANAGON "L" 7350 057749 Sll ,70()$10,283 VANAGON "L" 7361 077371 S ll, 700S l 0,098 71 AUDI POX WfiN 77 HONDA ACCOID 79M•''l .. CONVT ··---·A lllMI Miiie '""°"""' ........... °""' 21,000 ....... 4Q3VTY) ' t-4 .. radio, onr1 H .000 mllff, ,...,. ........ (111TNJ 74 V.W. THING . .,..,....._..,,... ........ ~ ....... 1911J(Wl • ljlMd, 11911111\, drl• .. f<HI, ••cellenl aonclkioft. ... .... 4flOWl'C) "71DATSUN 510 ..................... llroond .. AM~--. --·~ •77 V.W. WISTflAl.IA ......, ,,_ OOndttiOfl, • ePCI With arftlrn & a.II. """-(111TOI) 79 V.W. IUS ,........,._, .......... _,_ ....... '---....... ~, p =--".O 'I 095: I s 1224'. 'I 020 '34Q '481. 'I 381 'I 203 'I 31 J '129, s 115 ~ 'I 26, 'I 320 'I 54~ 'I 57 ~ '1428 'I 556 'ISO~ s 14 lri '160 ---i~ --------.----~ ... ------.-. ,...,.,. ....... ---._...------~----·----·----.---.... ----'tp'-.... • • • = •• :p 0 0 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 ....._...., • ..w A11tn,a.,12W ....._t•p1rtM ..._,l•r111M .'~a.,,..w "'~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......, .., • ..w ....._ ,.,.,._ ...... ..,........ · ...... 1., • ..w ..._. 9121 ~ t7M Mere ... .._ 9740 "••• na _..._ .,. ........•............. .................•.•••. ........•.............. . .....................................................................................................•........... ···················--·- IMW t7t2 c.,,.a '711 Dett.· t72e Dehea t7ZO VISITYOUI 19 O ·ax1. annlverury ·u 190, n•w radial•, 74PIU6IOT 7tVWIAll" .. ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORAMGI CO ... ST f'dlt .• mint cor>ct 5 1pc1, bra1ce1. etc. Xlnt cond. Dll•I Dll• · .. CREVIER •USEDIMW1• '"18200'Haod ( 0803 > '"19320i s tft (58$4) '79 5281 S/R (1C178) '81320IA <OlU) CloMdS.... 761MW2002 4 speed. Very clean local car. 023RKL> $5141 JIMMAllHO VOLICSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd 142-1000 '11Caprl,nw1ood. 710ATSUM lt71DATSUH " 1unrf, AC, 1tereo Sll00.&40-7mi SCM aunrool beauty. AU 5 apeed, AC, AM/FM Mwt MU. 1210.X JIOZCOUPI HONDA w/tape, new MlcbeUna '702808 4kontbttmir 1trvlce record• atereo cue .• a t eel 550 875-"'2 Very abarp. Sunroof. 5 ape~d trana., alr oond., HIADnll•RTIRS Ut.3231 or415-ee73 new •bocktltlret, xt~t <059LFF> radial.a, whJtewalla, lb)&. '7IC pri va <UZLGN) AM /P'M caffe\te" a 1 ~""' cond ~-6583 PHI ed 1lauJ.. low mll'-· AM /Fldatle~ Pttl owner local car TODAY!!! Merc .. tleftl t740 JIMMAIUMO Black w1ulack velour 11000 759•8001 JIM MARINO (7MWP I). (Stk. 1495). UNIVERSITY ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 4~L Maplie Yellow, VOU(SWA•.. (S«XJR> YOLICSWACHH Thla weekend SALES6 SERVICE •HIW 'I I Mil• like new, call after 8PM 11711 Beacb Blvd. o.t, SUtl Colt '717 187UBuchBlvd OHLY S74t0 OLDSMOllLI 240D·3000 +SD 644·8173 14Z..2000 @tfflWl lif~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 142~2000 HIWPOIT DATSUH H~ .a. HUGI DISCOUNTS '81 300SD Turbo Diesel. vouCIWA(JtN. INC I '71 DODGI 888 Dove Street --"' Earle Ike's M Id n 11 ht BI u e , Pone.._ t750 COLTJDOOI 71DATSUHJIOZ NEWPORTBEACH GMCTaUCICS TRANSPORTATION Palomino lthr, snrf. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IM-4100 •.;"> Would you believe only Dynamite 1old coupe • _ 133-1300 28$0Harbor81vd. CONSULTANTS Brand new $36,000. lt76PC)aSCHI 13731 Har~- 30,102 mu .. on thll car? a peed, Top condition COSTA MESA 645-4211 Ga 759·1550 pp 914 Court Garden GroVe Like NEW! (919UJX). (839UDD> '78 PU w/camper shell 540.9640 5 epeed trana .. AM/F M 1-------- ( St k . 1327). Thia S6t91 $2e00 '78 MBZ ~L. yellow, 1tereo8 track, m111, a 79VWDASHIA 1' weekend JIM MAIUHO 492·38.W at\ 8PM '79 Accord, 4 dr, auto, ' immac. cond, ski racks, st ro n I run°' r. one Hatchback automatic. ·2 OHLYS17t9 VOL"'SW•'--mu am/fm,extramoldlnas. etc.51,000mi.Pvtowner ()wner & 1por ly! door . Ve r y clear\ HIWPOITDATSUH " "'.,.... SHOUR Ukenew.7~0S58PP movlna East. $23,850. (124POR> (903WRM) 88JDoveStreet ia7nBeacb Bl vd. t/4PAGIAD ·77 Civic, Auto. New Call646·«94. Offeraoodthru8/1/81 S4ttS· NEWPORT DATSUN t 4z..2ooo OH THI FOUR paint, snrf, stlereo. Gd MG 9742 HOW OM.Y $7477 JIM MARIHO 13J..ll00 DIAL•IMPOIT cond. 53200, 641·0777 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIMMONS VOLKSWAGIH Want Adi PAGllH Laura MUST SELL' VOLICSWAGIH 18711 Beach Blvd.; TOD •y'S•••tR AUTHORIZED • 39•0Cher~Ave 1.o1•zooO "' "'"'"' Ace-~ lmmoc uERCEDES BENZ 1969 claulc 6 cyl. MGC LONG B CH .,,.,. 135.44j0 7l0.0tl4 '" DEALER •"CEE") GT 2+2 (OPENSUNDAYS> HIWPOITDATSUH 8311740 49H 700 Coupe. Only built ror a C7l 4 llJl-IJOI 8880oveStreet KarrnCW1Ghia 9734 limited time! ONLY ---------• NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12995! Call M7-0901 or 75 POISCHt llJ..1300 '66 Ghia, ext. &i lnt like '71 ZSOC 495·0507 Dynamite 5 •Pffd coupe ia:.;,,;;;;;;i;iii;ii;i;;i;;iiiiiiiii;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiii:ll' -; ---new. Good nmnlnl ena 2 dr sport coupe Im 1979 M'--MID~ET with air Xtra sharp "' 280Z 78 2+2 Sspd stick, Almost new radio Price maculate. $8200 Tom • • Red /Black. (85SNCJ> silver, blk mt xlnt cond. neaoUable. 962-5648 675·9797, 673-62l0 4 speed trans., AM /FM iu.ztS 1976DATSUH 12102DOOR Coupe A lcitial cu with low . low miles (036PUV) (Slk 15001 This weebnd OHLY SZt4S NEWPORT DATSUN M88 Dove Street NEW PORT 8 EACH 831-1300 16995 640-6244 stereo cassette le ONLY ---Lotus t737 78 3000. lcon aold, 16,000 miles! 006ZBC > JIM MARINO '73240Z, MOOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ammac.sunrf. PP OHLY $4395 YOU<SWAGEH Auto. a /c, new shocks &i 69 LOTUS 496-4344 MIRACLE MAIDA 18711 Beach Blvd. Urea 557 93.S9 Europa coupe. Near 2150Harbor Blvd. 14Z..2000 mint. All service re· '77 lOOD, lmmac cond COSTA MESA 1979 Datsun 210 4 dr th t I / h '73 914 Xl t bod cords. C2KG246) r uou ' vory w pare . 64~5700 • * . n y, 40,000mi $3795080 55995 ment int .. 30MPG. P.P. mech. Many xtr as 847-~ JIM MARIHO 951·9530113.~. MGI 9744 ~.095. 497.1597 '80 Datsun ~X. beau, VOLICSWAGEH '77 300D. lmmac. cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1975 914 2 liter must sell see to appreciate, m ust 18711 Beach Blvd. thruout. ivory w /parch· ·7e MG B, ori' ad u lt good condition. PM: sacrlrtce f7000. 840·4853 842•2000 ment int .. 30MPG, P.P. owner 39000 ma. Whlle, eves 499.48:58 951 .~530 Sl3,500. always gar musEt vse&e '78 8210 Hatchback. Sspd, F.rrorl 9723 M d 9738 ---$4,000. 552·8087 '75 914, Blk, app. group, am /Im stereo cass, lo ~··•••••••••••••••••••• •• ~!.~••••••••••••••••• '72 250C, 68K mi, xlnt Wkends. alloy1, air, 18700. Denise ml.aoodMPG,497·~ 73 246GT COUPE, ,77 Ma•da /GLC lowner cond.17800. • t 97,.1 835·4333.1:30to7PM. ---Sllver/Blklnt 26Km1 .. · • 5595542 .-e.o .,, 1911 DATSUN 833·8~. 700,0527 ' 22,000 ml. 5 spd, xlnt · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ZIO'ZX COUPE cond. 492-8538 ·75 450 SLC, dark metallJc 5 speed trans. AM /FM Rot 9725 . · · blue Alloys. full service lt . . d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 79 RX·7, limrted edition records S20..,... ,,.5 2375 casse e, aar con ., Lo d d s r .-1"" "" custom pa mt & lots of 197 5 FtA TX I /9 11 e · Wll'OO 675 8638 extras! (253214). <Stk. 4 apeed lrans., AM /FM __ 673-4743 _ 1498). This weekend on· stere~ tape, mags & like Little is Big!! Classified '73 280C beaut cond. ly,callfor NEW . 1186NLY> I ads are really small loaded , must se ll , LEASE DIRECT! 1981 PEUGEOT TURIOs '76 911 5 5 spd, A/C, stereo, al· loys. Clifford alarm Perfect cond 645·6508 • Por '79 911 SC Taraa. only 13M, beige/tan. am mac Fully equip + xtras 125 ,500 '60-'65 VW left " right door. '73 left door ISO each. West.em style wbl rim• for Super 8fftle 120 ea. 541-9744 '70 bua, movin1. xlnt cond, Rune perf . clean mt S2'50 OBO. 645-8880 '68 VW van, bed. crpt. curtains, stereo, tv, oven, heater, ice box. Mech. new, xlnt cond. $1800. 673-9725 '86 VW. comp). restored, Porsche ena & paint. Everythln& new. Mint cond. See to app~c. 941·1291 • '68 VW BUG dependibJe, runs 1ood. $1500 call 963-7810 aft 4PM '75 VW BUS Blue /Wbite. lo miles, qual tires, ri,ns perfect! $3800494·9572 '76 VW BUG. Only 41 ,000 ma, itlnt cond, orig owner, must see. S3800. SS6·7974 SPECIAi. PRICE! ONLY $3995 I "people to people" sales 17500/0BO NEWPORT DATSUN MIRACLE MAZDA calls with big readership 752-2A04 (714)499-202S. '78 Convert, dnt cond. IEACH IMPORTS 888 Dove Street 2150 Harbor Blvd and big results! To place NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MESA your classified ad, call 83J..l 300 64>5700 loday 64.2-5678. '59 Mercedes 300 SL Rdstr wht, rd int xlnt cond 135.000548·6611 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 R_o_h_l_o_v_ce----9-7-5-16 Mich rad, dyno sound 1 sys Red·blk. Must H.11. •••••••••••••••••••,••• Sac 17700 hrm Judy •1DEAURINU.S.A. 497·5224art5:30 • ~~·.~:.": ....... !~~~1~ ... ~ ... ": ....... !!~~ ~~ .. ~ ... ": ....... !~.~~ ~~ .. ~ ... ": ....... !!.~~ ~~ .. ~ ... "! ••••••• !!~~ ~~ .. ~ ... ": ....... !~.~~ ~~ .. ~ ... "! ••••••• !~~~ ~~~VER 'H vw t.g ROLLS·ROYCC Xlnt cond. 67HS29 - lt74P•k Yellow, Lo-Miieage (RXO ID) 138,000 lt7J Fe11•I r:r Rop~l ~laitr,trfc -oto,r,tr, Itb. 1970 Mercedes lea 210 SL Dark Blue Convertibl•2 Top Serial 80 M8003 122,250 1979 Forwlal ............. 1979 Astoft U• ll1t Black -2 Door. LaGonde Vlntagt (355WZN) 158,000 1974 Ponce.. C•••• 91 IS Red -Sunroof (S31VZE) Model Italia, White-Black Trim (9768e) '19,500 Black (81C007) s 15,250 ~ 19,000 1967 J .... 420 s..... Sliver (321·PUY) 15,500 1954 A1tro Vette Bleck (CV013) '17,500 1966 J....,. J.OSI Sliver & eTack (CV012) 18,000 1975 IMW 3.0SI Blu.-4 Door (Yf009) '7.500 .,,,, ...... , .. , Red -2 Door (81P012) '6,750 •1, 1 so Shift 197JMerc ... lelll JOO SIL 4.5 Gold. All options (CV 007) '9,350 1967 J_,.. XICE 4.2 2 door. 'f'et1ow (UTL618) '7,250 1977 Ponce.. 924 T.tto Red -all option• (1 BQX388) 17,650 . If 71 Pone .. f24 GrH n -2 door (9248200'a4> '8,750 1970 Mere ... '-210SL Convertible -Light Blue (6598YY) s 18,250 197J Mere ... '-450 SL Red -Convertible 2 TOPS (573JJM) 1 16,250 197 4 Mere ... lelll 210 • door -all option• (478XNV) GREEN '7,250 1976 IMW 5301 Automatic and Loaded, (21518) Blue 17,750 • 1MIJamw" 69 VW Bug, rblt eng, xlnt ::::;' .. ec11 cond. $1.750. OBO. Must \---~ sell. 855·8462 CLOSIO SUNDAYS Black '79 VW conv Soab 9760 Ab1olutley beautirul ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACC. xtras, none riher LEASE _64_2_.18_2_0. ___ _ DIRECT! 1911 SAAB TUUOs BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 79SAA.1 Dynamite GLE sunroof loaded with xtru Lo miles. Sharp original. (997YSM) S6ttS JIMMAllHO VOLKSWAG&I '74 VW 4112Wgn. towner, silver b lue, lo ma . am t rm stereo , l2SOO 10 BO 545-3407 '79 Rabbit Diesel. 5 sj>d. AC, AM /FM radio. Otlly 6500 ma. orig owner $6600, call btwn 8·5, 645·1515 ·11 vw Bua 61000 Miles Or11lnal owner. Looks & runs new Call 963-4881 (eves). For appointment to see and drive S2500 '66 VW Sundial Camper, needs work. SllSOOBO 846.2382 187 11 Beach Blvd. '78 Scirocco S Edition, 4 142·2000 spd, a /c, xlnt <'ond, T 97,5 ~900/080. 644-1033 oyota ,. -••••••••••••••••••••••• Vol•o 9172 1979"'2 Supra Exec. car. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18K ori1 m i. Loaded. #I VOLVO DEii.LO '8500 or take over lse for JN ORANOECOUNTY' SSOO . 547 ·5625 da. 644·0997 eve '79 Celica GT Liftback. B lk, clean, loaded! 16495. 831-7634, 759·2•65. '77 SR~ Uflback a /c, 5spd, R &i H lu11age rack 13495 8Sl-18S3 '80 Celica, 5 spd, am.rm stereo, 22,000 ml, xlnt cond, $5500. 642·54'5 '74 Toyota COROLLA. 2dr, 1ood transportation &1000 $45-1202 '77 Corolla LB, stereo, air, like new, 35 mpa. 13550.848-7171 Tri ... pll 9767 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES, SEAVICI AHD LEASING . OVERSEASDEUV~ EXPERTS ' · Jlle.• EARLlllCE •• VOLVO l!le6 Harbor Blvd. ' COSTA MESA 646·fl0l 540.9467 75YOLVO Dynamite 245 4 door wa1on. 4 speed with air. 64,000 miles . It 's absolutely beautiful. (012201) S4ttS JIMMARJHO VOU<SWA•B4 18711 Beach Blvd . 142-2000 ORAH .. COUNTY VOLVO Laraest Volvo Dealer ln Oranre County I BUYorLEASE DIRECT bce.IYtlyV•o ()~~f\l\Ji 11 I I II I~; r i VOLV O a VOLVO NEEDIWORK .... ,,..,., ., 1 ~ I I ' 1 , Mto1, UMd A.t.t, U~ Mtot, Ua.ct Alfto1, Us.cl Mtoi, UHd Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /f=nday, May 29, 1981 F7 .._ ••........•.••.•••.....•••.•......•••.....••.•••.............................••...........•.•••...........•...... ~~ ......... : ... !!.~~ ~~ ... , ...... !!.1.! ~c::~ ......... !!.~! ~~~ .......... !!.~~ ~~~ ......... !!.~~ ~~·.~::: ....... !~.~!l~!·.~:.~ ........ !~.~~l~.-::.~:.~ ....... !~.~~I~"!.~~·.~::: ....... !~.~~ '78 E1tat• w.,91\, full 'l5 Camaro. l>ronH, •uto, '77 Corvette T-T~p t'IHI)' 1965 FORD '79 S1pporo Power,•.!!:,!7!0 AM /FM'"A~.PIS.P /O, cbasaey. lfyoure look· MUST•i.aGGT s apd, cust wheeb, 27 ._..____..___..---•_· -...:.-~• P /W. r 1fk1 . U200. lnl ror the ~t, tht. t'ar "'" ma. dntrond . , 771~1..,... 431-7070 look•. runt Is 1m•ll1 lo l<>od condltlon' 968'8431 · -..,,.. newJ Color dark blue Automatic tr&J\t. & dlac -------- *·000 ml, 1 owner, xlnt Chenolet 992 yellow atripes on top'. braket. Mab 6ffer CaU PCHttlac 9965 ~dltlon. ~· •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Only 20K ml, has ever· 842·9924 ; lf no answer, • •••• •••••••••••••••••• 7141 2547 SEE US'FIRST! ythlng, bHtl In 1tora1e PLEASEkeeptrying! TRANS-AMS! '75REGAL Wehaveagoodaelectlon past 3 yra. Sells new to '87 Mustang, xlnt paint, Large selection! Take ~ Xlntcond, $l3SO o f N f! W & US E D day $18,SOO..can be yours &d intenor. runs great your cholct! from '77 o,)( '• ~13 ChevroJeta! for h price. 1}250 call Call B'64-6TIS to'8I 's (484TEL> Some for Info. (714)772·2811 hard to find models 11t Coctllec 99 IS days ext 1474 ask for '72 MACH I bargain prires ••••••••••••••••••••••• H•I Eves (213>592·3191 Beautiful)) R£'8tored a magnon i;.;-.OH-......-... -..G S3000tOBO 962·6824 ... ~ ,_._"" '68 T·Top 4.2'1·390 bp 4 - -1 CADILL.AC7 spd, l owner.158()() ' '85 Mu.stana V8 auto, ate We apeclaUae in leases 67&-36M h/r, p/1, nu tires nice In p nt' 00 1 .Jor the buall'leu ex· •10 El Camino asoena. 300 &out $2750. 648·1762 0 13C 549-43 ·e.cotive ~professional. b/p, nd1 llttle wqrk, '79 Corvette loaded' -. -:1 L~r-t...-a.t~ makeol'fer ~7353 White 7K ml assum IJe. 78 MUJtang, VS. auto.,.. 2480Hurbor81.·at Faar l ~'-· ..,"" t ' 67 f 27 000 Costa Me&a w 191 I t .....,., mo.+ tax. 5-3981 am m, ate, . m1 , C~ ·79 Chevy C~ rice Classic $3600 536-7681 173 Ventur11 hatchback -• 2 door, spli pwr seata, CotlCJClr 9933 · Mow a. Stocki sunroof Am /Fm tape ••• •••• ••••••••••••• ••• OlcilmobHe 9955 all ace· Sl,OOO mt Sl300 N ' · ' •77 COUGAR XR 7 _,,,.. 644·1341 Eves. wire wheel, tilt & cruase, · _.."" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----- t I pwr locks "windows, re· all xtras. P/P. 79 Diesel Cutlai.i. Calais, SUMllRDS! arwlndowderogger AC 549-1414 16,000tnl,likenew Most Looklna for a bargain' l ·~ l Factory lnatalled' CB - -'6SCOUGAR extrua. Assume lse for Real value? Come 1n 1 • •· CJOOH.ut>91 Bfv<I radio alarm system $1,000 or buy ror $6800 and see the buys we C~t.1 Ml"' S40 C)100 16 000 in1 752-0055 l owner. good cond 548·6646. 642·~ have ' We're offerin& the ......!.... • __ $1500 84().0217 -- -• lowest pnt'ell e\.eron our 77C..._ '78 Caprice Classic 4 dr, Ford -9940 ·~~CutlassSupreme.Xl~t entire inventory' loaded, lo m1, pvt ply ••••••••••••••••••••••• p nBd. 1;-andau LOp, P 1S. a mainon C~ DeYI• 13950, 644·2242 •79 F-•-roont 4.d eda I . air Am/Fm stereo This beautiful car has -----. ---..., r. • "· $3,000.497 4774 1 1-atber interior. tilt, '78 Caprice Classic 4 dr 8000 actual mllea. AC. -- cruise, Am /Fm stereo, 2-tone-, am /fm stero: :h:~:o:.: rle~td~Jo: '76 Olds Starfire, P i., pont1·ac 54 •300 wire wheel covers, and a /c, alt. pb, ps, $'140 SS79978 pe p /b. tilt whl, am /fm -. I •BARU. POtlftAC MEW 1981 Statloll Wagon Inexpensive and built to stay that wayl ("°6496) 55944 a. magnon 1stbaru 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair, Costa Mesa 549-1457 NEW 1980 Sunbird Automatic. POwer steering. electric clock. fully factory equipped (577929) S4688 a. magnon pontiac 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair. Costa Mesa 549-4300 low miles! (l8J,f'831) 968·5230 lpm-7pm • __ cass. new clutch. 5spd, 248oHarborBI. al Fair '56 Ford Pick-up very V6, 844·4594, 536 7134 Costa Mesa , ......................................................................... .. '67 EL Camino, fixer up· I II V8 -oo - ----- ----per. $425/offer. 642·7222, c ean, srua _, Pinto 9957 Thunct.rtMrd 9970 8 S k, W It Best offer Gerry 631-3721 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. aa or a --••••••••••••••••••••••• C-~1.-_..... --·73 Torino: Runs great. '76 Pinto Runabout '63 T-blrd Rblt eng. full un•111wnn1111 9930 $lOOO Pr"v t P· l Craig stereo, mags, lo $l300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 a e ar y. ma. Sl800firm 675-1020 pwr. · •5c 4 d 'bl 497 19<>5 __ _ ~·6611 "· · r con vertt e. - ---_...._, . ~aut drk red. only 72K 066 Ford Convt mech 73 Squire wgn, auto. air mi. must sell $5500. good, needs some body cond, very good cond. m.9554 wo rk . l7MPG. $750 si5oo~45·44<» Corv.+te 9932 675·4357. 645·7632 '74 Panto Runabout mags. '78 T Bard Whl w blue \l'lour mt AC. Am F'm s tereo, ltnled windowi.. Xlnt cond one owner $3800 080. 642· 1707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73-G -T-. W -60 watt stereo, new vinyl --------ran onno gn r 1 f · '73CacllacSedatt 75S11MGRAY Loaded must see lop, ue pump. ronl l~O Thunderbird. ht-au SOMETHING DIFFERENT! .. .. Deville, A·l condition. CORVETTE Sl.35010Bo900-169'l . brakes. lo mi. mint t•ond must liell. see to ap u...suat Can, Classics, Antiques, Race, & One of a kind! N~~~~~-A~o.lraM .. ~nrw~· ~ ~~5 0BO~l~ _ p1 ec1ate~~~-~ l~~-~~~~~~~~~~ ... ~~~~~~llll~-~~~~~ ... ~~ ... ~-646-8629 dows sunroof AM /FM Maverick 9947 - --1• radio'. leather' ant., 1u·. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alftoa, Hew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Auto1, New 9IOO IAuto1, New 9100 Avtos, Hew 9100 '79 FLEETWOOD gaae rack. C313ND~) '74 Mav. air, stereo, auto. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Lo ml, loaded, $10,000 You must see thas fan 68,000 m1, xlnt cond. 675·7119, 67S.6778 taslic looking car S'llOO. 968-~ll '71 Seville, Mint cond. a magnon Mercury 9950 k>aded. lo mi SB,900/080 • •• ••• • • •••••••••• • • ••• ·9t0·1692 ' ORANGE COUNTY'S .· FINEST ~4!'!'.~':! •••••••••• !!.'.~ pont1ac 549-4300 LINg~~~f~~JI~RY 1971 CHEVIOLET Z·28CAMARO 2480HarborBl·atFa1r ~ ?&.~. Automatic trani.. air Costa Mesa ~Qnd., pwr. windows, tilt wheel, cruise control & under 20,000 miles ! (60122). ONLY $5995 MIRAClE MAZDA 21SO Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 64>5700 · 1979 CHEVROLET CAMARO full power, AM FM ..stereo & a one owner car with ONLV23,000miles! (131WFX>. Offer good thru 6/1 /81 HOW OHL Y $5577 TIMMOHS , · VOU<SWAGIH 3940 Cherry Ave. LONG BEACH ·<OPEN SUNDAYS) 17141121-1301 ·73 Camaro, 51,000 orig. m1, V8, auto, clean, $2500/obo. 962-0781 TelUn1 the rno.t people ,,,ROssible is lmPortant to .. : l h e succeu of any .. 1ira1e 1ale. Make sure ~~ura ii listed i n thuifled, phone ~2-5678. . .btos. Ua.cl ~~~-.-~ ...•.•.......... 1910 CADIUAC I. COUP'I DI VIW (604ZBJ) ." 511,995 I flO CADILLAC PLUTWOOD ·r r llOU•HAM C32aZRWJ ·· ·s 12,995 * II NEW~981 CORVETIES THREE 4 SPEEDS TO CHOOSE FROM C ORMIEtl-DeLILLO CHEVROt..ET CO. 17141847-6087 * LINC'OL~ MEflCURY 16· 18 Auto Center Dr SD Fw) Lk Forest ex1l IRVINE 83~7000 ------Mus tong 99 52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '61 Mustang. auto. stylish, reliable trani.p Clean New brakes. ball., ca rb $2500 494 2136 Just starting up in a bus1· ness of your own' A good way to tell people about It is with a low- c o s l Classified ad. Phone 642-5678. Mtol,UHd Alltoa.Uaed ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trucks, Vans & 4X4s We're your Ram TO\fl Tnx:k Center! '79 DODGE RAMCHARGER ~ ,.., ....... , 1'116141 s7997 79 CHEVY LUY 4X4 P/U. .71UlD> '6596 79 PLYMOUTH ILDUSTER WAGO S6997 7f CHEYY ""SURFH" V AM , .... ....,._ ,, ... ,.ei '6997 '17 CHIVY P'ICKUP v..... I 7'GMC JIMMY 4s4 (1t10Clt I au~~r. stereo. 4 CY• l-) roof rack. ( '71 V7 ., •• s '7 CHEV aa•UIU WON ..... (400960) V8. auto. air' p.s .• TH • rsat~ .a ~\\\\\~e-1\0P • c~r~~~reo. cu~· \II, auto. t "'inten· t()(C'I wheels, cus(~26ll7l or a. exterior. • U WAGON MAUI Ir cond. va. auto trans .• !o) pwr strnQ. (4009 m.. 2370 2919 SERVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY UNDER THE SAME OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT WITH FANTASTIC SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF OUR DEALERSHIP. 2747 2781 2786 2716 01n OSSO 0520 n I I ( --------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ~rlday, May 29, 1981 BRAND NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH HORIZON Equipment includes economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission, left remote mirror. max. cooling. bench seat, body side moldings. white sidewall glass belted radial tires and more I (145687). Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans .. bucket seats with fold down rear seat, tinted glass. elec clock. body side moldings. max. cooling. glass belted radial tires and more! (108773). Equ ipment 1 nc I udes VS , auto ma tic transmission. power steering, power brakes. bucket seats. body side & deck stripes, white sidewall glass belted radial tires and morel (136529). \ll~ 4 \ S\\ ll\.lS 1981 IMPERIAL DEMONSTRATOR SPECIAL $1800 FACTORY REBATE (LAST OfffR) SPECIAL $2 ODO DISCOUNT Loaded Inc. auto. trans .. air cond .. pwr. st.·brakes·w1ndows·sp11t leather seats, AM·FM stereo wtth tape. 1111, cruise, custom 'Nheela. wsw steel belted radial tires and much, much morel (111•36) THIS . WEEK'S USED CAR SPECIALS 1974 PlYMOUTH CUSTOM SUBURBAN WAGON Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr. steering & brakes, radio. 3 seata, wsw tires & morel (041KOB) 1 77 YMOUTH YO LARE WAGON Automatic trans .• air cond .. pwr. ateerlng & brakn, radio, luggage rack. waw tires & morel (023TOH). 52595 · 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPE Loaded Inc •• auto. trana., tlr cond., pwr. st.·brekea·aplit Hat·wlnctows--dr. locka, AM·FM 8 track, vlnvl t~. tilt, crUIM & morel (417UCn s JOI FLEIT SA·LIS & i. I AS 1' INFOIMA TIOM, CALL •ININA .. O 546-1934 NEED CASH??? .•. ,., ......... _._ ....... .... ~ ... c.. ....................... .. ........... .,...,......, .... ....,m 1978 CHRYSLER LeBARON COUPE NEW 19 PLYMllTH HORIZON TC3 HATCllACK Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 IPMd trana .• cuatom Interior, two-tone paint. AM·FM rlldlo, maga & morel (222552~ s .. SERVICE HOURS: Moncllry...,.. ~ 7:30 a.a to 5:30 p.a. Seta duJ 1:06 ..,.. to 5:00 ,.... SH OUR SEAVICE DEPARTMIHT AIOUT RENTING A 'I I C .. YSLIR OR PLYMOUTH. 1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 COOPE Loeded inc. auto. trans.. air cond., pwr at ·brakn·wlndowa. till, AM·FM 8 track. padded top, maga & much morel (•26RXP). 52995 ___ ... I . I f 11 I .. FRIOA't . MA Y ~'9 l(Hil Delly Nie ..... ".....,.__ Huntington Beach marathon skater Damion Ray relo.u• m ht. home town en route from Oregon to Tijuana. The wont, he 1ay1, ii behind him. Skater on last lap I Marathon to end today By PHIL SNEIDER MAN Of .. o.lly ...... IWI Four days of rain, some homicidal truckers and a few treacherous mountain curvd haven't stopped Hunlin1tTt Beach roller skater Damion R from continuing his cout I marathon. Ray rolled into Peter's Ladd- ing Thursday and prepared iOr the last leg of his attempt to skate the entire coast or California, from Oregon to Mex- ico, in two weeks. He expected to wheel into Ti· juana late today. Jn an interview. Ray claimed that the worst was behind him. $14,588 furs found unde r trash b in A collection or mink, rabbit and marmot furs valued at $14.588 that was reported miss· Ing from Robil\.50n's department s tore in Newport Beach was dil· covered Thursday under a traah dumps~er near the Fashion Island st.ore. The fun, 24 i(l all, had been moved to the store's loadlne dock earlier in the week to be shipped for cleaning, police were told. But when a truck driver showed up to transport tbe furs, which had all been sold to customers. the collection could not be found. Police said a store security person later &potted the furs &lashed under the traah dumpster. Officers aaid 1t ia un· clear how the furs got there. ''The first day out I came to a place called Crescent Hill." he recalls. "Everybody said I couldn't maJte tbe bill. They 1aid even bicycle riders had to walk their bikes up." · Ray says he took the steep rour-mlle incline ln 30 minutes.. "It blew tbem away," he says. "The mayor proclaimed 'Da· mion Ray Day.' He couldn't believe it." Ray began his trip May 10 and encountered steady rain that caused his skate wheels to skid. A greater problem in the early going, he says, was caused by some truck drivers. "When I was outside Eureka, a trucker pulled ahead of me." Ray says. "He got out with a crowbar and took a swing at my head." Ray says he tried to evade the trucker and began removing his skates so he could defend himself. "Just as he got to me, I threw one or my skates at him." he says. "Then I tackled him with one skate on and one skate off.·· Ray says he eventually was able to subdue the trucker with the help of others who witnessed the attack. According to Ray. the trucker growled, "I don't want no ska~r on my mountain!" The 29-year-old Huntington Beach athlete claims he became a target of other Northern California truckers who uaed CB sets to radio his location. He says the truckers played "chicken" by trylnc to see how cloae they could come to him. Ray 1ays he bad many close calls and once had to throw himself off the road to evade a truck. (See SKAT£•, Pase AZ> ------ • • • • • Ylll 111111111 llllY PIPll ORANGE COUNTY . C ALlr OR NIA :.!5 CENTS Shopkeeper slain • ID holdup One of three suspects serious with bullet wounds ; two others held Carl os Braga put up a desperate fight before be died of 19 stab wounds durine an ap- parent robbery at his Garden Grove liquor stor e. police in· dicated today. They believe Braga, 33, of Brea, fired at least three shots at his assailant with a handgun he kept on a shelf below his cash register.- That premise, police say, eventually led to the arrest Thursday night or three SUS· pee ts. One or the three, Larry Rodri· quez Martinez. 32, of Stanton was in serious condition today at the UC Irvine Medical Center's jail ward with three bullet wounds. Also arrested and booked Into Orange County Jail were Cyn- thia Diann Martinez. 26, his wife, and Delio Mugica, 47, in whose apartment police found a knife they believe was the murder weapon. Police Sgt. Bruce Beauchamp said today that about $100 was taken from the Wine Cellar, the Gilbert Street store owned by Braga and his father. The handgun also was miss- ing, and Beauchamp said in· vestigators concluded that It might have been fired. although no one heard shots. However. one person told police he saw a large blue car leaving the parking lot soon after the 9:30 a.m. robbery. Detectives contacted local hospitals and discovered that Larry Martinez had been ad- mitted at Anaheim Memorial Hospital af te r h e was transferred from Midwood Hospital in Stanton. Beauchamp said Martinez had driven himself to Midwood and a large blue car still was in the parking lot. Mrs Martinez was arrested when she later approached the car. Beauchamp said. Arter q ueshoning her. investleators obtained a search warrant. en- tered Mugica's apartment and found a knift, he said. Larry Martinez was transferred to the medical center. Both he and bis wife were arrested on sl.llpicion of murder and robbery. Mugica is suspected of being an accessory to the crimes. Beauchamp said. The $100 was not recovered, he added. Neither was the missing handgun. Ar~a police officers target of out-of-town recruiters By STEVE MARBLE Of Ille o.llr ...... IWf Boasting good pay. clean air and an "all American" image, a Northern California town recent· ly set up a recruiting center in Orange County looking for police officers. Officials from Vallejo, a medium-sized city in Contra Costa County near Oakland, said they cam e south because they're having trouble finding good police material up north. Using newspape r ads, the three-man recrultina team - which lpcluded the' Vallejo police chief -took lo more than 60 applications, nearly half from experi~nced, already-employed policemen. T e effort wasn't so unusual. Earlier tbi5 year, police recruit- in1 teams from Dallas and Chicago moved into Orange County in search of qualified of- ficers. Some police official!' call tbe process "raidlng." It's offictally known as the lateral entry system. It's common with police departments In Oran1e County. The lateral transfer ls simply the process of an experienced of- ficer going from one city to another while retaining bis seniority and earning compara- ble pay. Orange County pollce officials a~ree that pay and ehvironment have much to do with raidJn1. Orao1e County, where police salaries are 1enerally lower than big cities such u Los Aneeles, recruits on the premise that it's a nicer place to live. In Newport Beach, Police Chief Charles Gross says lateral transfers from other cities have saved the day. ''If we didn't get the transfers we'd be In serious shape," the Newport Chief suggests. He says his department steered away from going after experienced of· flcers from other ciUes for years but changed direction In 1980. In part, Gross blames Proposi· tion 13 for the lack of qualified apf Ucants. He suggests poten- tia policemen go Into other lines of work. usually in the private sector. Five years ago, Gross says hJs department could expect to find 25 qualified persons out of 200 applicants. Now he expects to get six out or every 200. Huntington Beach police Capt. Grover Payne says some of the applicants they get "are so un- qualified it's amazing -some are pratlcally illiterate." Payne says Huntington Beach began recruiting officers from other cities in the early 1960s bera use the beach area was growing so rapidly "We've always drawn a lot from Los Angeles ," he says. ··Huntington Beach is just a nicer place for an officer to live and it gets him out of the big ci· ty m ess." In Laguna Beach. police of· riclals tried the newspaper ad recruiting method this year and drew applicants from all over the state. "We put together a get-away- from-the·big-city-hook-em-and- book -e m ·syndrome ad.•' ex- plains Neil Purcell, Laguna's <See COPS, Pace AZ) $2.3 billion in stat'e oil lease bids told Largest single bid $333.6 million for tract off Santa Barbara coastline By GLENN SCOTr Of .... Delly ........... Al a formal bid opening ceremony Thursday at the Anaheim Convention Center, U.S. Bureau of Land Manage- ment officials accepted a total $2.3 billion worth of high bids from oil companies seet1ng to drill offshore oil wells in 111 tracts In the Santa Maria Basin off Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. The largest single bid was $333.6 million to lease a 5.000- acre tract at the southern edge of the basln off Point Areuello In Santa Barbara County. The fi&Ure boils down to about $15 mUllon ])er acre. • But offlciftls for a 50·50 partnership or Chevron U.S.A. and Phillips Petroleum Corp. said they think they've eot a large supply of untapped crude oil under the sea noor. They must know something. Their bida for several tracts were more than $100 million ding on those findings. "You can tell what we think of it by the amount of money we risked," he said The $333.6 million is the highest bid ever s ubmitted to lease an offshore tract ln U.S. waters. said bureau of land 'You can tell what we think of it by the amount of money we risked.' higher than bids by their com- petitors. 1 Clair Ghylin , Chevron's general manager for its western re1lon land department, said the two tlrm1 jointly drilled wella in 1979 Juat south of the Santa Maria Basin and based their bid· * * * manaeement officials. The Chevton -Phlllips partnership was the big bidder at Thursday's ceremony. offer- ing more than $1 billion to lease two separate four-tract areas. The partnership was hi~h bid· der In a total of 24 bids. Chevron * * * WilJcatters missing in oil lease meet USA claimed four other tracts on its own. Ghylin was r~lu ctant to estimate the size of the oil beds his researchers believe are wait· ing in offshore tracts. but he said they suspect it is part of oil reserves underneath Santa Maria. He called the area "one of Calllomia's oldest oil areas." The fact that the bids were so much higher than any others didn't seem to bother the smll· ing cadre of Chevron officials who sat In the Clrst two rows in a crowd of more than 500 attend· ees. "The main purpose ls to win," explained L. W. Funkhouser, vice president for uploration <See LEASES, Pa1e AU tRllCI CIAIT 1111111 Low niabt and momln1 clouds, otberwlae fair tbrquab Saturday. Low ton1sbt ale>ni the coast eo, Inland ts. Hl&ha Saturday 68 to T2 at ~e beaches, 78 to 14 Inland. 11111111111 Donctrt of Cht "''°'W /ormtd Coli/or"fo CH1C Bcli.t Theattr ckbt;t lam'· dau "''"' "' Claop"'o" CoU.gt A~. PQflf DJ. 11111 ' • ~ 't .. •••• au 0 •• wee au 0 cc suscuusousscs a • * • • • Orangt Cout DAtL Y PILOTA'rtday, Mey 29, 1881 Seagoing commandos, night air strikes slam Palestinian bases .. ~ .......... SOMETHING FISHY -Shella Hanson (right) and Rhonda Suits show oC! the fish they caught by hand in the streets of Greenwood. Ind., when heavy rains caused a creek to _over- fl ow. Mrs. Hanson's carp measured 34 inches and weighed in at 29 pounds. ___ _ From Page A1 COPS SOUGIIT ... acting police chief. He says Laguna shied away from such recruiting methods in past years becaui;e "we were seeing a lot of bad apples from one city looking for a new basket to land in." Purcell agrees that the quality of applicants has dropped in re· cent years. Newport's Chief Gross say1 In past times there used to be "a gentleman's rule that 'thou shall not raid from another city'." He s ays because of I he lack of qualified applicants. that rule has been abandoned. He claims the preHure is now on a city to keep police salaries and benefits competitive to avoid raids. Also. he romts out. it is finan- ci a 11 y smart to get an ex· perienced officer who already has academy training. He calculates that recruiting an ex· pcrienced officer saves Newport $7 ,000 Lt Robert Lennert in Irvi ne From Page A1 SKATER • • • The skater had to do portions of his journey along Highway 101 . a freeway. Ray says he was stopped eight times by California Highway Patrol officers and ticketed twice as a freeway hazard. The Huntington Beach man embarked on the marathon skate as a benefit for the Multi· pie Sclerosis Society. He has picked up corporate sponsors such as 7-Up. Foretravel Motor Homes of Irvine provided him with a mobile residence for the ex- cursion. He had been accompanied on the trip by his manager . Chuck Canizzaro. and his nancee Amber Ray. One reeret is that the Northern California mountain route proved unsuitable for Ray's plan to break his previous speed record of 57 miles per hour. Still, Ray says he averaged 10 to 20 mph on the trip, often cruising downhill at 45 to 50 mph. Also, the rain slowed Ray In the early goin1, 10 that the Cull coastal trip will take 15 rather than 14 days. Aside from the truckers, Ray says he wa• treated well ~r peo- ple In each town he viJlted. Thouab hit fnt have a few calluses, Ray 11y1 ht. muscles and lun1s held up. says the same thing. He claims a 'rookie officer must put in roughly six months of academy training before he's ready for street work He says In Irvine.the city once got up to 1,500 applicants when a police position opened up. Now, he says, the city averages around 30 applicants. "lt'1 1letUnc harder and barder to find recruit <I nexperienced> level officers." he adds. Chief Gross, though, warns that recruiting experienced policemen has its drawbacks. ··It definitely shouldn 'l be the primary soqrce for 1etlin1 personnel," he says. ·~A depart- ment needs new blood, it needs the younger individuals that represent the changing value of time." A problem along the Orange Coast. particularly in Newport. 1s housing. Gross says his de· partment has hired experienced officers who've had to turn down the job because they couldn't find a house they could atrord. Gross estimates that fewer than 5 percent of his policemen live In NewPort Beach. Members o r the Vallejo recruiting team say that when they came to Orange County, they tried to use the housing situation to their advantage. "We told them that Vallejo was a place they could afford to live ... explained Capt. Roy Conway. "And the truth of the matter is that many of the appll- cants were more worried about that than anything else." Cyclist rides inlo trouble MERCED <AP) -A Fresno man learned there are faster ways to flee from a bank rob- bery than pedaling off on a bicy· cle The looal branch of United California Bank was robbed of $3,084 Wednesday by a man armed with a .38-caUber pistol, Police Chief Harold Kulbeth said. The bandit put the m o1Jey tn a knapsack, left the bank and rode away on a bicycle, the chief added. Policemen drivint to the holdup scene spotted the bicycle 1 \-'J blocks away. The cycllat i aw the police can too. Apparently panlckln1, he crashed the bicycle lnto the curb, tell off and struck hll head on the pavement, Kulbetb utd. BEUtUT, Lebanon <AP) - Seaborne Israeli commandos made a brief raid south of Beirut du"n& the nltht after a aeries of earller air strikes In which Israel cla1med destruction of four Llb,Yan missile batteries at P a l estin ian bases on the Lebanese coast. The Palestinians said the air strikes killed 25 people, includ· Ing 18 civilians and seven guer- rillas, and the commando raid left two more guerrillas dead. The euerrllla leadership vowed revenge. A commun ique from the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion said a squad of Israeli com- mandos came ashore In landing craft just before midnight Thursday at Khalde. destroyed a truck and clashed with guer· rlllas before withdrawing 20 minutes later. Israeli military authorities confirmed the raid. saying a guerrilla base was attacked and a vehicle destroyed They said Catalina air dead identified Three people killed when an airplane crashed Thursday in about 200 feet of water off Santa Catalina Island have been iden- tified by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. The two passengers were list· ed as Gary Lourenco, 24. of Tulare and Coleen Knight, 23. also believed to be from the Tulare area. The pilot of the plane has been identified as Stephen Stoneroad, 30, of Tulare. The spokesman said a fourth person may have been on the plane, but that has not been confirmed. Tl)e plane crashed and sank 300 yards off the island. A Los Angele s County Sheriff's diving team had to call off a search for the wreckage of ttie twln·englne plane, operated by a Visalia-based taxi service. because of the depth of the water. The sheriff's 11pokesman said a private salvage company would be called in to retrieve the wreckage, believed to be resting in from 200 to 250 feet of water. Witnesses to the crash said there was a puff of smoke Crom t he low-flying plane's rl1ht engine just before it rolled over on its left wing a nd hit t~e water. By the tame nearby boats reached the crash site only debris and an oil slick could be seen. the spokesman said. Reportedly the plane landed on Catalina Island at about 3 p.m. and left a half hour later with the passengers the plane was described as a Beechcraft Baron operated by Shann of Visalia. Cracks seen in wing of Douglas DC-9 all the raiders returned safely. Earlier Thursday, laraell lets made three attacks on PaleaUn· Ian mountain 1tron1hold.s ln the Damour area, about 15 miles south of Beirut, and a fourth against Palesllnlan posltiona in the foothills of Mount Hermon ln southeast Lebanon, Beirut Radio said. The PLO reported a fifth s trike at Naameh. 2'h mlles north of Damour. Meanwhile. saying the results of U.S. peace efforts have been "mlr1culou1J" eo far , President Rea1an today In Washln1ton. O.C. asked his apecial Mideast onvoy, Pbillp Habib, to continue his attempts to avoid war between Israel and Syria In the Lebanese ml1Slle crisis. "At the president's lo1truc· Uon, my mission 1s conunuin1 And 1 will be returning to the area sometime next week." Habib told reporters followlne a SO·mlnute meeting with Reagan at tbe White House But 1( Habib and Reagan de- rided on a new approach in the three-week erfort to defuse the crisis. Habib offered no clue as lo what It was. He aaid no clue as has set any deadhnes for his ef· forts. however, and that the In- tensive U.S. peace effort 1s ap preclated in the area. Habib expressed optimism there would be a favorable out come to the efforts. saying "a peaceful resolution to the 1m mediate issue is achievable." Dissident promised aid Imprisoned Russian's wife pleads with Reagan WASHJNGTON <AP > The wife of imprisoned Soviet dlssi· dent Antoly Shcharansky says President Reagan "promised lo work hard for my husband's re· lease." Mrs Shcharansky said at a news conference Thursday that Reagan told her he would act on her husband s imprisonment but did not indicate specific actions he might take · · 1 leave this to the president. l didn't ask him, but I think he un· derstands the emergency situa· lion. He understands my husband's m danger, and he's very sympathetic," she said . Assistant White House press secretary Larry Speakes said From Page A1 after a half·hour meeting in the Oval Office that Reagan prom- ised Mrs . Schcharansky to "do all in his power to help alleviate the situation.·' Speakes a lso refused to divulge what actions Reagan might take, saying, "It's a ques· lion we put In the area or quiet diplomacy." He said he did not think Mrs. Shcharansky asked for anything specifi c. Shcharansky, a leading figure in the Soviet Jewish em igration movement. was convicted In Ju· ly 1978 or treason and anti-Soviet agitation and sentenced to three years In prison and an additional 10 years in a labor camp. The Kremlin charged today LEASES BID ON OIL • • • and production. ··w e obviously t hought pretty highly of these tracts.'' Ghylin said exploratory drili mg will take place during the next six months. Drilling plat forms probably won't go up over the federally administered prop· erly three miles from shore for another five years. he added. Although bids were opened for all 11 tracts, the status of 32 of the most northerly tracts off the San Luis Obispo County coast re· mains uncertain. A preliminary injunction was issued Wedn esday in Los Angeles by U S D1stnct Judge Mariana Pfaelzer to prevent the federal agency from leasing those environmentally sensitive sections fhe injunction was sought by Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr .. whose lawyers argued that the oil drilling activities for those tracts would conflict with the state's Coast al Act Brown, several environmental groups and many local cities h ave sought to halt drilling along the coast especially the Nuke device detonated LAS VECAS <A P > A nuclear weapon with a yield of less than 20,000 tons of high ex- plosive was detonated today at the Nevada Test Site, the Department or Energy said. The weapons-related test. code-named "Aligote," was con· ducted at 9 a.m .. 1.050 feet beneath Yucca Flat some 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas. said DOE spokes m 11n J ack Campbell. region from Morro Bay south to Pismo Beech because or potential damage from oil spills The rocky shoreline is a breed ing ground for endangered sc.a otters and is along the m1 gratory route of California gray whales * * From Page A1 BIDS ... * years. Scattered applause broke out as if to reward the bidders for their courage. The Chevron-Phillips team got all the glory. Their corporate heads were surrounded by re· porters and television cameras whef) the ceremony finished. Gr'ant, noting that the Chevron bids always seemed to be last and largest finally drew a nervous laugh from the crowd by joking: "Chevron ·s bids are so heavy, they always fall to the bottom." Jf zeroes have weight. then the envelopes would have seemed heavy. Oil companies were or- dered to Include with each bid a bank draft for 20 percent or the total bid. That means Chevron· Phillips submitted checks for more than S200 million. The Anaheim Convention Center seemed like an odd loca- l ion to host a meeting concern ing the Central Coast. But Michael Fergus, public affairs '>fficer for the bureau of land management. said large meet· ing places in Los Angeles weren't available o n s hort notice. He said ofricials chose to hold th e m eeting In Southern California rather than along the Central Coast to cul down travel. -GLENN SCOTT that Reagan had given "the green light lo terrorists and ad venturers" by meeting with Mrs Shcharansk y and losif Men delevich, a Soviet emigre and former prisoner who accom panied her to the White House. The official Soviet news agen cy, Tass. called 1t "as· tonis hmg" that the two should be received by ··the very people in Wa shington who have recently proclaimed so loudly their de· termination to 'combat ter rorism· " "The president not only found time to receive them. but in dulged in anti-Soviet standers with them." Tass reported. say ing the pair are used by "Zionist circles" to spread "absurd anll Soviet inventions ·' Tass characterized Mrs Sh charansky as a n · · adven turess" who emigrated to Israel in 1973 and is now "posing as the wife of Shc haransk y" while working for his release. ll described Mendelevich as a "criminal terrorist" convicted in 1970 of plotting to hijack a Soviet jetliner to the West. He was allowed to emigrate early this year after serving a lengthy prison term Oil imports hike U.S. trade deficit WASHINGTON CAP> With oil imports retumang to a typical level , the nation 's foreign merchandise trade deficit is ris· ing again. Commerce Department figures released Thursday showed im ported oil flowing into the United States at a daily average of 6.8 million barrels in April. about 24 percent faster than the surprising 5.5 million average for March. The apparent surge helped in· crease the deficit for the month lo $3 .46 billion, a much more typical figure for recent months than was the $451 million recorded 10 March. Commerce a n alysts said April's figures weren't as bad as they looked. nor were March's as good -a situation blamed on ex ceptionally heavy oil deliveries so late in March that thev ended uo being counted in April. But even ignoring that prob lem, the fig,ures for the first thud of the year should prod private ex· Porters and the government into 3ction. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldridge said. The deficit for the January· April period was about $12.5 billion, just over one-third of the $36.4 billion defi cit for last year. SPECIAL PURCHASE ' BERVEN ·cAR·PETS "Radiant Point" Limited Quantity Left in Stockll ULTRON NnON: including ~ding& installation A MOST RECOGNIZED AND RESPECTED SYMBOL OF QUALITY IN M INDUSTRY. • ANTI STATIC • RESlm SOIUNG • RETAINS AP~ANa . 1 .. '· .. •' Arw1.......,.. Bob Hope, 78 today, doesn't count the candles any more but he can still blow them out. The cake was presented Thursday night as Hope was given UCLA's Chaplin Award for excellence in film. Beat/a remembered Nearly a year after the idea came up, the city where the Beatles were discovered more tban two decades ago, Liverpool, En1land has moved a step closer to nam- ing streets after the Fab Four. The Ci t y Council 's Highway Committee voted 10·9 this week in favor or naming streetF after Pa.ti McCartney, Rta10 Starr, George Harrison, slain ex- Beatle Jobn Lennon and the Beatles' late manager, Brian Epstein. The proposal, to be voted on next month by the full 99-member council, also would name a sixth street Beatles Way. Epstein, who died or a drug overdose in 1967, discovered the ~atles in 1961 at The Cavern, a Liverpool nightclvb which since, bas been rued. Bllly Carter's once-famous ser vice station in Plains, Ga. will be going on the auction block next month after the brother of former President Carter pulJs up stakes and moves to Alabama for a new job. Carter has announced he is relocating to Haleyville, Ala. to accept a public relations job with Tidwell Industries, which manufactures mobile homes. Besides the service station in downtown Plains, also be- ing sold is the baseball diamond where the president played softball while in of- fice. The Internal Revenue Service and the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Columbus have threatened to foreclose on the Bueni Vista home to force Carter to pay off a $105,000 IRS debt from 1978 and the remainder of the $100,000 mortgage the bank holds on the<property. Sta ftnaU1t1 b1v1 bttD named to compete for tbe S12,000 ft.rat prtu 1n the Vu Cllbara International Piano Competition, to be awarded In a natlooally televised ceremony Sunday ni1ht in Ft. Worth, Texu. They inc:lude Jeffrey Kalilane, 24, Venice, Cali!.; Panayla Lyru, 27 , New York; Cbrtstopber O'Blley, 24, J amaica Plain, Mass.; Sant1a10 Rodrigues, 28, Was hington, D.C.; Andre· Michel Sclnab, 28, New York; and Zhu D• Mlag, 29, Pek-ing. Army Staff Sgt. Joseph Sublc Jr., who reportedly may be denied an Army medal because or alleged col- laboration with his Iranian captor s while he was a hostage in Tehran, said the charges against him have been "blown out of propor- tion '' Subic, 24, who said he had been "a good boy who did what everyone else did," said the Army has not in·· formed him that he will not receive a medal. "Personally. if I doo"t re- ceive a medal, there 's no heartbreak," he said from his home in Detroit. Singer Ella Fitzgerald has filed a $1 million lawsuit against MCA Records c harging breach of contract and fraud in regard to her earninqs. Tornadoes lash Texas Thunderstorms rumble across U.S . to East Coast wastal forecast Low nlgflt ...., _,,.,118 <kHldt, 94,,.rwl• 1.ir ~ s.tuni.y. CMllol -loni.tll to, llltll S.lur· cloy .. lo n. W.lff M 1ni.nc1 low lonl9'tl 'I. lllGfle 5ol11r doy 11 loM. Eluwllor•, WHI lo 'OlllllWtll wlndt 19 lo II knols 10ftl9M wlltl > IOOI we.ten~ 1wet1. o,,.rnlOftt ,._,. neu ovff OVC•r w•leo. be<<imlne mo111y wnny S.tlWdoy. National HH•Y tlllindt'1lOt"mt lodey O\'er Ille to11lh<enlr1I 1lolet pr0d11Ud lor,e ... 11 _ ol _, ............... . lncllldl119 ol i-t llw In TuH. 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U .JS Onterlo 12 64 .01 rolm 5"rll9 fl M ,....... 11 .ff '-" eerrwcMno n ff S...Jotl ,, " .Ji SMta Alll 7J •I .20 Seftl• CNI ' 11 S1 To-Volley .. ll 1• .. .,A1 ............ :: n 6' .. S1 .. 11 ... 1.10 PAM AMaltlCAH At-ko •o-8ermllda C11uuo FrMperl 0 ..-..101•• GUUOlupe Kl ........ _-.0 .. Y Mol•llOI) MeMI Monterrey SI Kitts T90u<lgolpe Trlnlt!Od Vero CNI Colgory eo-• Otta•• WIMI .... CANADIAN t1 •t 10 .. 12 10 M .. .. n n .. 7t 14 ., • 11 12 7S to u . " tO 11 • 54 15 .. 104 75 .. 7S " " .... • n '° n .., 4t u .u .. " 71 S2 Orang• Coatt DAILY PILOT ,t:r1day, May 29, 1981 H/F a Juror prospects picked Drawing due to determine members of county Grand Jury Thirty people from the five s upervllorial diltrlcta 1D Oranae County have been nomlnated to serve on the 1981·82 county Grand Jury. A drawin& to determine the 19 who will serve on the jury will be beld al 12:_, p.m. Wednesday in Department 5 of Orao&e County Superior Court, located at 700 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. Names of the nominees. their cities of residence, and the s uperior court Judie who nominated them are as follows : FIRST SUPERVISORIAL DISTRJCT -Rochelle Barnes, 42, Santa Ana, Judae Edward Wallin; Eleanor Bendall, u . Westminster , Judie Robert Rickles; Keith Boillot, 63. Santa Ana, Judge Robert Rickles; John W . Donnelly, 61, F ountain Valley, J udie Lula Cardenas; Dorothy Lake, 66, Garden Grove, Judge Richard Beacom; Philip Tomer , 76, Santa Ana, Judge James Judge. SECOND SUPERVISORIAL DISTRICT-Geor1e Hender, no aie liven, Garden Grove, Judie By ron Mc Millan ; Robert Houseal Jr., 58, Huntlnaton B each , Judge Betty Lou Lamoruux; Pbyllll Journlgan, 51, Huntington Beach, Judae Harmon Scovill•~ Frances Park, 60, Huntington Beach, Judge Lloyd Blanpied Jr.; Armando Perez, 57, Garden Grove, Judge James Per ez; Sonja Richardson, 43 , Huntin1ton B eac h , Judge Frank Domenincbini. THIRD SUPERVISORIAL DISTRICT -Kalbleen Barrish, 39, Villa Park, Judge William Thomson; Willia m Braz, 60, Yorba Linda, Judee Walter Charamza: Frederick Brown , 64, Fullerton, Judie James Smith; D<>lores Cbmel. 57, La Habra, Judge James Perez; Elizabeth Graham, so , La Habra, Judge Jerrold Oliver; Frank Howarth, 62, La Habra, Judge Jerrold Oliver FOURTH SUPERVISORIA I~ OISTRlCT Charlotte Clear). 47. Villa Park. Judge Phih~ Schwab; Rodney Coulson, 74, Anaheim, Jud ge R ob ert Rickles; Jerome Hersch, 6!i. Anaheim , Jud ge Harmo11 ScovUle; Leonard Lahtinen, 47. Anaheim , Judge Rober t Fitzeerald; Beverly Payne, 44, Buena Park, Judee Jamer; Jackman; Bert Williams, 66, Orange, Judge Everett Dickey. F IFTH SUPERVISORIAL DISTRICT Robert Brown, 63 NewPorl Beach. Judge Jame;. Cook ; Alicia Eppinger, 411 Tustin, Judge William Murra) Howard Loudon, 66. Lagun • Niguel, Judge Robert R1cklt'" Kent Moore. 41 , Corona del Mar Judge James Turner; Marth ' Newk1rt, 44 , Newport Beach Judge Walter Charamzu Eugenie Wenke, 52, Corona de-I Mar, Judge Robert Rickles The new grand Jury. "h•d1 will serve a one year term .. 1111 be sworn in July l Human rights f es ti val topic More than 30 county organizations to participate By 0. C. HUSTINGS Of, .. Oelly"611t ..... Human rights will be the topic of a ''Freedom Festival" at UC Irvine Sunday from 1 to S p.m. in the Gateway Plaza. Representatives from more than ~ county organizations in- volved in hurpan rights w ues will participate in the event, which begins with a Guatemalan music group at 1. Mic Bell, formerly with the Fifth Dimension, will sing at l : 30 p.m. The continuous music and speaker line·up also will in- clude Karen Peters, California state coordinator for the Na- tional Organization of Women at 3. County orga n izations participating include the Amnes- ty International Chapter 178, the United Nations, Planned Paren· thood, the ACLU, and the Gay Center of Orange County. AL HOLI.JNl>~N. chairman of the Orange Co'lfltY Tr,_naporta· tion Commission, will discuss widening of Pacific Coast Highway at a June 18 meeting of the Orange County Coast As- sociation. The meeting is scheduled at the Best West Huntington Beach Inn , 21112 Pacific Coast Highway at 11 :30 a.m. * * * SEN. JOHN SCHMITZ, R· Corona del Mar, has become a grandfather for the first time. Joseph William Schmitz was born May 25 at the Camp Pendleton Marine Base Hospital. He is the son of U.S. Navy Lt. j .g. Joseph E. Schmitz and wife Millie. * * * A PUBLIC FORUM on reap- portionment will be held tonight at 7: 30 at Republic Federal Sav- ings, 2400 E. 17th St., Santa Ana. Speakers include Dr. Charles · Bell of Cal State Fullerton, Dr. Bruce Caine of Cal Tech and Dr. Wa lter Zelman, California director or Common Cause. * • • SHIRLEY RALSTON, of Orange, has been appointed pre- ci n c t chairman o r the Republican Central Committee of Orange County She will be r ei.pons11Jlt' foi coordinating Republican vott· registration act1 v1tics d .•• A ~RNIVAL NIGHT at tit• Balboa fun zone 1s schedulf'1 June 4 by the Marian Berges1 1: for 74th Assembl~ District Con mittee A celebrity kissing hooth 1 slated Participants are "aid l• include Orange Count Superv1sori. Thomas E Rill' and Bruce Nestande, and Newport Beach Mayor Jack11 Heather and City Coun cil mem bers Evelyn Hart and Phil Maurer • • • CALIFORNIA LT. GOV. Miki Curb will address u June I 1ncc1 Ing or the Orange Count' Chapter of the Building lndu.,tn Association of So uth er11 California. The meeting. to be held at llw Airporter Inn in Newport Reach will begin with a social period <1! 6 30 p.m. Dinner will follow a 7 30 pm Penney Garden Clearance Sale. Our low prices wi II fit all your landscaping plans. Saturday and Sunday, ~ay 30 and 31. Fashion Island Store Only Landscape specials! Assorted Tams Sale 99~ reg. 1.59 Sale 99c reg. 1.99 1 gal. Sale 3.99 reg. 6.99 5 gal. Juniper Assorted houseplants Sale 1.99 reg . 3.49 6" pot Sale 55e reg. 1.99 4" pot Assorted Houseplants 4" pot African Violet . Sale ggc I reg. 1.99 1 gal. Aralla Sleboldla Sale 5.99 reg. $11.99 Rabbit Ferns Sale 19.99 reg. 29.99 Dwarf Bonanza Peach 1 . ,o I ----------... ~~.. o 04 o o au a au u e e H/F Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 Carrier's dead· returned . One of Nimitz victims: 'I love you too, Dad' Coal miners reach NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -The aircraft carrier USS Nh11it.z, in port alter a jet crash that left. 62 crewmen dead or injured and about $100 million in damaie. may be cleaned up and ready to resume its tralnln1 cruise by Saturday, Navy officials say. . tentative accord WASHINGTON (AP) - Representalive11 of striking miners and the soft.coal In· dustry announced tentative agreement on a new contract earlv today. The announcement was made jointly by United Mine Workers President Sam Church and Bob· by Brown, chief negotiator for the Bituminous Coal Operators Association. Smiling. they e m e rged from the s ame downtown Washington hotel suite where the two sides have been bargaining intensively the last several days . T(JJJk·force eyes Tekx murder TULSA (AP> -An ll·man police task force is attemplini to determine whether the gunman who shot Telex Corp. Chairman Roger Wheeler was trying to rob or kidnap him, or whether the gunman was a professional killer, authorities say. Wheeler, shot once in the head Wednesday in the parking lot of the exclusl9e Southern Hills Country Club, was to be burled today IMPROVING -White House press secretary James Brady is responding to an· tibiotic treatment for pneumonia in his left lWlg. His temperature had risen as high as 105. The Nimitz sailed into its home port Thursday, returning damaged aircraft and the bodies of 13 of the 14 crewmen killed in the crash of the Marine EA·6B and its fiery aftermath. The body of Marine 1st Lt. Laurence Cragun, the plane's electronics officer, still had not been found by today. Twenty·one of the injured crewmen were nown to hospitala in Florida and Texas atter Tuesday's accident off the Florida coast The other Z7 in· jured crewmen were treated in sick bay. The Nimitz carried about 3.000 sailors and 2,500 airmen. Soldier wounded in Belfast shooting Cardinal's funeral Sunday The wreckage of four planes -the EA·6B Prowler that crashed and three F·l4 Tomcats -was discarded overboard. Seven other aircraft s uffered major damage and were sent off for repairs. Minor damage to another nine planes had been re· paired. There was no ofCicial value WARSAW, Poland (AP) -placed on the damage, but "100 Hundreds of grieving Poles million would not be a bad prayed through the nigtit at the estimate," said Vice Adm. Gus bier or Cardinal Stefan Wys-Kinnear, commaoder Naval Air BELFAST (A P > Gunmen In a car shot and wounded a member or the British army's Ulster Defense Regiment today, and another jailed Iris h Republican Army guerrilla began a hunger strike, officials said. The soldier was wounded in the left arm as he stood waiting for a ride in Strabane, in County Tyrone. Police said several shots were fired from a car that pulled up beside him The new hunger striker, Martin Hurso n , r e fu sed breakfast at the Maze Prison, joining three other Inmates fast- ing for political status, Britain's Northern Ireland Office said. zynski as the government joined Forces Atlantic. Viral outbreak churcn teaaers an preparations On Thursday. Dale Stewart. a for the fun eral of the man who 19·year·old airman apprentice. Stirs comment I e d the R om an Cat ho 1 i c had a bandage around his frac- Church's struggle lo survive un-tured knuckles. stitches up hi s MOSCOW (AP> Tass claims der communism in Poland. chin and a missing tooth. He a viral epidemic in Spain ma.r The body of the 79-year-old was on the night deck under a have been caused by stockpiled primate was to lie m slate at the plane Tuesday night before the biological weapons al lbe U.S. seminary church on Krakowski crash. military base near Madrid. Przedmlescie until the funeral "I got clear and then grabbed Sunday. a firehose," he said. ''There was Spanish health authorities W ys zynski. leader of the just one big boom. All you could have reported 18 deaths from an Polish church since 1948, died see was fl ying pieces of aircraft. unidentified type of pneumonia Thursday after a six-week battle The A-6 jU6t got loo close to the that appeared a month ago at with cancer. island. It was hitting one Torrejon de Ardoz. in suburban After a Requiem Mass at the airplane after another in a chain Madrid, and spread around the church Sunday, there will be an reaction ... country. There is a U.S. Air q pe n-a ir service in Victory Capt. Jack Baltzer. the skip- Force base in Torrejon, but no S(\uaf'e. "'Where Pope John Paul per, was on the bridge when. he cases of the disease have been II celebrated Mass during his said. the plane came in on "a reported there. homecoming visit in 1978. fairly standard approach." But ........... Navy Tomcat F-14A , one of 19 planes involved in fiery carrier crash , hoisted from Nimitz at Norfolk. he said il seemed the pilot was too high and would land too far up the ship. The plane drifted ri~ht. away from the safely angled left side , "hit three A· 7s parked right of the bow line .. .impacted with the first F-14," Bather said. The official explanation will await a Navy investigation. .. It came in and clipped a heli copter , a nd then turned across a tractor and decapitated the person in it," said Petty Of· fleer 3rd Class Kevin O'Brien, who turned out on deck to fight King heads home MOSCOW (A P > -King Hussein of Jordan left for home today following a four·day official visit to the Soviet Union. the So· viet news agency Tass r~ported. the fires. The damaged planes wen: lined up on the night deck when the Nimitz sailed in Thursday. A couple had their tops sliced off. An F·l4's nose was torn open, wires and electronics expo5ed An EA-68 in perfect condition was off to one side The father of one of the vie· tims 21·year-old Navy firefighter Dennis Driscoll - said he'll a lways recall the tender moments. "I used to kiss him and tell him, ·1 love you Dennis'," said Robert Driscoll, 51, of Irvington, N.J . "He'd reach down and kiss me on my bald spot and say. 'I love you too, dad." The elder Driscoll said the family was informed of the young man's death Wednesd~y night. -:;:;;;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiia ~~--~~~~~~~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii RIU Y ASSUMAILE IMTHEST OHL Y 2nd TRUSI •EDS 0 WMER /MOMOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B Mitchell Call loday !or quore •No obligation (714) 975-1128 trons nollOnal funding trans noOOnol llxOlQ Irons notional funding Irons nofionol funding• • Fun Fashions • Swimsuits • Hend•Y• Eap.cjtllles • Accessories . PANA.CHE Re8ort Wear 673-1810 Forl'l*ty H.M.S. Plnefore 1w,.....,aw1' , 221 M.._AVI. IALIOA Ill~ CA '2'62 ' .,... ....... . 461 ..... , • 40,000 ITU. ... 0 ............. lecll co011r119 ••rf•c•. #9240 Our company needs to purchase 25,000 class rings to fill our annual quota. We desperately need to fill this quota as soon as possible, so for the con\thg 4 days, National Gold arid Silver will be offering a SPECIAL PR'EMIUM on all Gold Class Rings ... from High Schools. Colleges. Armed Services, Fraternities, Sororities, Technical Institutes. Organiz&tions ... all class rings will be bringing an EXTRA HIGH PRICE these 4 days. ARMED SECURITY ON DUTY PAYING UP TO $200 ~LL CASH //te". • .-, ... p·•· , 25,000 CLASS RINGS NEEDED •' _...__________ ~-_ _._ ------ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ~rlday, May 29. 1981 H/F ~· Repeal sought Credit card fraud probed in 3 cities • in tax breaks ' LOS ANGELES (AP> -In· vesllaators lo three cities jlr~try· lne t-0 link a series of credit eard s c be mes l n which ,t b e perpetrators used the names or stars aucb as Bernadette Peters and Tommy Smothers for ~Y purchues. "There are some startling similarities in casea 3,000 miles apart," Set. Russell Meluer of the Los Angeles Police Depart· menl bunco-forgery detall said Thursday. A uthorlties in Los Angeles. New York and San Diego are look· ing at cases with similarities that include: -ReaJ names and genuine credit card num hers were used on s ales s lips for nonexistent purchases. Those names Included Miss Peters, Smothers and Joan Embrey, a San Diego Zoo specialist who frequently appears on J ohnny Carson's "Tonight Show." -Those people under in· vestigation in aJI three cities are Israeli nationals. -Jewelry stores were used as "fronts'' to bilk banks operating credit card systems. Investigators believe the SUS· pects obtained the names and card numbers by fishln1 in the trash of stores for carbon paper and tissue used in credit card slips. ''Those carbons will 1ive you a perfectly clear name and number," said Brian Rotner, a New York City prosecutor who is handling the investigation for the Manhattan district attornh's of· ftc:e. Rosner said the next step for the schemers would be t'o obtain plastic and laminating equipment to make up phony cards using the real names and numbers. In all three cities, the perpetrators set up jewelry busi- nesses and opened commercial bank accounts for those busi· nesses. Meltzer said. In San Diego last week. Eli Bachar was charged with credit card forgery in a case that Deputy District Attorney William Holman said is similar to one in New York. Holman said Bachar, who also uses the name Majid Nadami. came to San Diego about two months ago, set up a business called M. Nadami J ewelers and opened several bank accounts. AP..,..._ VICTORY TURNS SOUR -Black Panther leader Huey Newton flashes a victory sign.as his attorney, Michael Ken· nedy, addressed the bench during a hearing in Alameda County Court Thursday. It was short-lived, however, as Judge Joseph Karesb ruled that Newton must go to state prison for up to three years for being an ex-felon in possession or hand guns. SACRAMENTO (AP> -Slate senators looking ror ways to save money are taking aim on $46 million in tax breaks ror low· Income and disabled homeowners, and householders who In.stall thermal devices. But a Senate budaet subcom· mittee rejected another propQSal Thursday that would have re· pealed S71 million in tax credits to middle · and upper·lncome renters. The actions were part or a budget·CUlting effort Ordered this week by Senate leaders who say their current version or the slate's 1981·82 spending plan 1s more than $700 million in the red. Senate Finance subcommil· tees found more than $500 million in proposed savings, mostly by recommending elimination of construction projects and school repairs But most or the proposals, in· eluding the tax items voted on by one subcommillee Thursday, are a long way from a consensus in the Legislature. Some are also opposed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr , who particularly dislikes a plan to move more than $300 million in tidelands oil revenues into the state's general fund. Brown wants the money reserved for construction. energy pro1ects and other special pro1rams, saying the state shouldn't de· pend on it for current opera· tions. In another budget·relaled de- velopment. Assembly leaders from both parties announced agreement Thursday on a plan they said would cul Medi-Cal costs by $ll0 million. It would include charging low-income persons a small amount ror many currently subsidized medical treaments. One of the tax cut programs recommended for repeal by the Senate subcommittee is a S21 mlllion property tax subsidy for low·income elderly and disabled homeowners. The repeal was proposed by Legis lative Analyst William Hamm. who noted that many or the same homeowners can legal· ly defer paying property laxes until they die The vote was 2·1, with Finance Committee Chairman Alfred Al· quist. 0 -San Jose, and Sen. Marz Garcia, R-Menlo Park, s upport- ing the repeal, and Sen. John Holmdahl. D-Castro Valley, op- posing it. The sen.ators acknowledged that eliminating the $21 m11Jion subsidy might not repeal the program as long as the state law that authorizes the tax break stays on the books Robbim trial • • action pnvate SACRAMENTO <AP ) -St.ate Sen. AJan Rob· bins' much publicized sex·crimes trial is in its fourth day today. but the only action thus far has been in the judge's chambers and the courthouse ltS Aaron Brothers lt FraDle Sale! hallways. ~ Superior Court Judge John Sapunor said Thursday he expects jury selection to begin Mon· day. Robbins' chief attorney, Michael Sands. says ,the private meetings are needed to ensure that !Robbins will receive a fair trial, and Sapunor says ehe has the right to keep the press and public out. e That has Limited the public's view or the pro· :ceedings lo scenes of Robbins outside the fcourtroom clutching h\s lO·year·old son's hand or ftrying to discredit the prosecution's star witness. I 1 lnnocem pl.ea planned l SANTA CRUZ (AP> -Convicted rapist David ~. Carpenter, accused in two trailside slayings. plans lo plead innocent to all tharges, accordina to is lawyer. : Attorney Larry Biggam m•de that statement f Thursday outside Santa ~fuz Municipal Court . after a court session al which the prosecutor al· ;leged that Carpenter. 51, raped a young co·worker tHeather Scaggs, 20, before shooUpg her to death. ! Marin County authorities •ay Carpenter is illnked by ballistics tests to at least five of seven .murders along mountainside and seashore trails !over the past 21 months. !Threal to Reagan kin? i RANCHO SANTA FE <AP> -A 62-year-old iLithuanian woman is being held on $10,200 bail :after allegedly threatenin1 President Reagan's re· jtired brother Neil, authorities said Thursday. l Sherifrs deputies identified the woman as )Raisa Borisoba , an unemployed playwright from j Los Angeles. ~Kiner son hearing due [ PALM SPRINQS (AP) -Scott Kiner, 26-year· ~Id son of former baseball star Ralph Kiner. faces [8 preliminary hearing June 4 on felony drug tcharges of selling cocaine, ha11hish and marijuana Ho narcotics agents. ! A free·lance radio sports reporter. Kiner was arrested March 27 in his Palm Desert home after allegedly selling small quantities of narcotics to undercover Palm Springs police. Wat,er •pill ~ported SACRAMENTO <AP> -Six thousand gallops :of non-radioactive water have spilled into a sump ·at the Rancho Seco nuclear power plant, officials ;report. The Sacramento Municipal Utility District said Thursday the cause of the Incident was a 'gasket on a steam generati.ng pump . . Striking vets rap Reagan response Buy One Frame at the Your wall can be a gallery too. Here's how our frames can work for you. Regular Price, Get a Second Frame That Costs the Same or Le• for One Centi Choose a frame, and we've got plenty, The second one will cost a penny. Just be sure the second frame Is priced below or costs the same. So make your good cents work for you. Buy a frame and take home two. The second's just a penny more At any Aaron Brothers store! A n anniversary ra ·~lebration, A splash of color r-. for your wall, A greeting or a salutation. A photo grouping for your hall. A poem or article r-.. you wrote, A famous presidential quote. " . : Oranca-Cout DAILY PlLOf /Friday, May 29, 1981 Customer the victim in g as nozzle furor Orange County reports that have been made public recently indicate that some motorists have been fleeced ln the pocket· book by those new anti•smog gasoline nozzles now required at your friendly corner service sta· ti on. You may have tangled with these nozzles yourself when you self-served at the station. They are heavy, bulky and unwieldy because of a double hose and a special outer sleeve on the nozzle that is supposed to form a seal so that fumes can't escape into the atmosphere. The second hose is the one that is supposed to capture all the vapors as you fill your tank and recycle that vapor back into the station's underground tanks. All of this is calculated to el i-minate smog · producing hydrocarbons from the air. And we're all for that. Everybody is in favor of pure air. Disquieting reports, however, have been produced by the new-fangled gas nozzle. One Newport Beach motorist pumped 16.1 gallons into his car before he realized his tank only holds 12 gatlons. Another Huntington Beach man rang up 29.l gallons when his car tank only holds 16. The Orange County Depart· ment of Weights and Measures s ays it gets 35 complaints a month about gasoline ripoffs at· tributed to the anti-smog nozzles. About 20 of these complaints are confirmed . The complaint number used to be double before the requirement was added that the complainant had to file a written report. What apparently has been happening is that the gas line that is supJ)osed to recycle only fumes is, in some instances, form· ing a syphon and actually pump· ing gas~ 6ack out of your tank and returning it to the underground station storage. But the dollar meter keeps running -and the motorist pays. One model of the gas nozzle, known as the OPW 7-V, has been singled out as the major culprit. Legislation has been introduced to outlaw the nozzle and a cla.ss- action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of California motorists. Now, ap~logists for the troublesome nozzle have quickly surfaced. Some have charac- terized the hassle as simply a battle between environmentalists (the good guys) and service sta- tion interests (the villains). Others shrug and s uggest that a few gallons of $1.47 fuel more or less is a small price to pay in the clean air battleground. The apologists miss the mark. They are forgetting the victim who is, once again, the hapless motorist. It's the con- sumer who is getting ripped off again. Amid all the furor and shout· ing, wouldn't it be . nice if for once, somebody warned about the citizegs who are paying the freight? Maybe somebody could suggest that those little recycling hoses must be of transparent plastic material so all of us amateur gasoline pumpers could look right at it and see if we are pumping the gas we paid for right back into the station's tank. That solved, the powers-that· be mJght launch a probe into the allegations that the new nozzles are actuaJly dangerous. Some crities suggest th,y've built up pressure and ·actually split open gasoline tanks. Other reports have charged that the notzles have built up pressure in the customer's tank and blown back gasoline , drenching the unsuspecting pumping person. Clearly, since the great gas nozzle debate is now in full swing, perhaps our lawmakers could launch a concerted in· vestigation in a true effort to pro- tect the consumers as well as the air. NO choice for the pp or Only days after the attack on Pope John Paul II, Italians re· soundingly rejected a church· backed atte111pt to ouUaw free abortions unless a woman"'s life is in danger. Voters in the 90 percent Catholic count~ came out 2 to 1 in favor of re taming the relative· ly liberal three-year-old abortion law which the Pop~ bad sought to , overturn. That same week the United States Senate, bowing to the con· servative bloc led by Sen. Jesse Helms, voted 52 to 43 to limit Medicaid funds for abortions to cases in which the mother's lite is endangered. The rider to an appropriation measure, already approved in • the House, bars Medicaid pay· ments for abortions for poor women who have become preg- nant as a result of rape or incest. Such payments are permitted un- der current law. Opponents of the measure. estimate thou.sands of women whose pregnancies result from rape could be affected by the restriction. Of course those who can afford to pay tor abortiODJ need not be concerned. But another measure beihe pushed by Helms and hh moralists, a "human life" blll tbat would declare life begins at the moment of conception, could • pave the way for state laws abolishing all abortions. A par,de of legal scholars has testified that this would be unconstitutional under the lsr73 Supreme Court 1leeision, but· the zealots show no sign of backing down. Small wonder Republican Sen. Bob Packwood of Oregon stepped into the debate to decry the attempt to "impose on the country a Cotton Mather mentali· ty" -referring to the Puritan preacher who took part in the Salem witch trials. The hypocrisy of the moraliz· ing lawmakers is blatant. They would have no responsibility for bringing up the unwanted children or caring for the unwill· ing mothers who have been vie· timized by rape. And of course if a woman in one of their families should become such an un· fortunate victim. they would have no need of federal help to rescue her from her miserable predicament. There's a certain irony in the fact that Catholic Italy where democracy is relatively new, should give 30 million citizens - -the Qumbet voting in the last eleetton --a chance to speak on this controversial issue, while a handful of Senators, all male can .decide it lor the women of the lJDtted States. Opinions expressed In th• space above .ue tho$e of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· pressfd Of'I this .,.ge are those of tftW ,authors and artists. Ruder comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address Th• Dally Piiot, P.O. Bo)C 15'0, Costa Mua, CA 92626. Phone (7U) 642-4371. Americans changing goals NEW YORK-"I'm having serious second thoughts about the whole thing," said the vice president or one or the city's better·known financial houses. "Ir I can put together a little stash, I'm just going to quit the firm. I want to walk away Crom the whole thing." You hear it every day. At least I do. This Ume -I wasn't there myself - it was said by a woman at a smaU lunch or heavy-duty ladies. One, an executive or one of the country's most important companies. said she had already de· cided to quit and take some time off to think. T-ff'E DIRECTOR of a do·goodlng foundation said she would like to do the same tblng. A public official -one of the most important elected woman of· ficiatls in the United States -said she knew exactly what the others were talk· iog about. The fifth woman. who had been an elected official, had already done it, had already left an important job to try to figure out what It all meant. "What about the men at your place:>" someone asked the financial vice presi· dent. "They aU feel the same way," she answered. "They don't have the pres· sure to have children, but the~ Just want to get together enough money to live for a while. The work is just too boring." M9s~ Americans, of course. can't af· ford either expensive lunches or the lux· ury of talking that way. They have to work to eat. But, even with Detroit's ~ ------------~1 RICHARD RllVIS 1'i -,. automobUe production way off, when you talk with a utoworkers these days. many of them still say the thing they most want is control over whether or not they can be forced to work over· time. Even in these hard times, many men and women now want some things more than they want more money. AROUND BOSTON and San Jose, Calif .. you occasionally run into a new breed of itinerant worker. Computer pro· grammers, highly trained and skilled, work for a few months al one of the high- technology firms that help support those two cities and then. when they have a lit· tle cash, take oU (or a few months con· templatlng life or something in New Mex· ico or northern California. People are not acting the way they are supposed to in America. Everybody wants some ''F-· you money" - enough,.of a slash to tell the company lo . . . We11. one of the things making money these days is a song and movie called "TakeThisJobandShoveJt!" And. on the same day last week. two bureaucrats and an Army general re· signed in protest quit on principl;. You may not agree with their pri·· ciples, but Dr. Stephen Joseph aqd Eugene Babb left good jobs at the Ageb· cy for International Developmeot because they wanted to publicize their objections to the United States govern· menrs opposition to an intemation~l code regulating the marketing of infapt formulas. Gen. Volney Warner retir'd after 32 years because he didn't agree with the Defense Department's plaits for command procedures involving 1 a Rapid Deployment Force. THEY WERE NOT team playerts, those fellows . Americans usually ane. This country has almost no tradition of r esignation and protest. In the pa~t. principled resigners have been isolattd as dangers to the system, to the ~· public and sometimes to themselves. The classic case is William Jennin~s Bryan, whose sanity was questiontd when be resigned as secretary of st~e in 1915 becaU.se he felt that Presidetll Woodrow Wilson was talking peace a'd preparing for war. ' Something, is happening. Ambiti~n , that marvelous American virus, is be. g redefined in many minds and places. I m having serious second thoughts mys If about a book I laughed al in llr{O te· member "The Greening of Anfe.ricaf" Who knows? Maybe American get-~p and-go is getting up and going. ! IRS doesn't h 1J.i11t refund recipien t s WASHINGTON -This is the time of year \fben the Internal Revenue Service rolls llp its sleeves. s harpens its peiacils and ~cks down the deadbeats who cheat on their income taxes. IRS audito go after the tax chiselers with COl'QQlfndable enthusiasm and fair suc- cess. But the revenooers show less teal - and less success -in their efforta to track down the thousands of taxpayers whose refund checks go undelivered because of inadequate or outdated ad· dresses. THE NUMBER of these taxpayers is astontshlns: As or last December, the IRS was holding 87,760 refund checks that bad been returned stamped .. ad· dressee unknown." The total value of these checks is $24.5 million. Rep. Benjamjn Rosenthal, 0 -N. Y .• told my associate Lucette Lagnado he is convinced that many of the people owed money by the eovernment are low· Income women and elderly Americans who badly need their refunds. The IRS has no stamtics to prove or disprove this theory. According to IRS computer breakdowns of the undelivered refund Q -aA-Cl-11-D-fll_D_I -~, checks, most of them are for amounts between $100 and $1,000. But many are worth up to $10.000 and some are for even larger amount.s. To it.s credit, the IRS does make an attempt lo locate the individuals lt owes money to. It provides newspapers across the country with lists of those who have refund checks coming -on the chance that editors will publish them and that the taxpayers will spot their names. Falling that, the IRS can wail until the following year and identify Its re· fund tareets by their next income tax returns. But if the taxpayer has retired . or otherwise left the job market. there will obviously be no s ubsequent tax ~­ turn to feed into the IRS computer tbr checking. ! THIS IS A less aggressive procJ.s than the pursuit or tax violators, aiid many taxpayers never collect their 'e· funds. This raises the suspicion U$it many of the uncashed checks belong ~o either elderly people or women who ·~ not steadily employed . : The IRS has tried for years to pry up· to-date address lists from the Social Security Adminis tration, but has been refused on grounds that such coopera· lion would violate the Privacy Act. This summer, at long last, Social Security will do a limited computer match·up or names on its rolls and those on the IRS refund list. What is the attitude of the IRS? A hint can be round in an internal 1979 memo which noted that while •·millions of dollars of taxpayer refund checks go un· claimed or uncashed," the amount is small compared to the taxes that are legally owed the government but are never collected. Th~ president opens new vistas in sport Mr. 1 ileaaan can hardly wait to fiy 3,000 mllos from Washington to chop wood arld clear brush on hia SQuthem California ranch Just over the mountain from here. "Thia Is where," be aay1, "I restore my sell." after his redwood tree fell on hla wife, Miranda. Buzz said this wu definitely .. a bad call" and Beasley will certainly not win the Good Chopper Award. Brush clearing each aftemooa was even more exhilarating. Glynda and I would collapse into bed every nl&ht thoroupJy exhausted. Never have .. we had so much fun. And talk about.J>eln1 rutored! We are even more painfully sunburned, incredibly poor and aaonl1· inti)' stiff \han after a week'• tennis. Glynda want.a to come qain next year. But I want to 1ee what exclUn1 sport Mr. Reatan wlll take up next. A• far as l know, be hasn't even tried dll~b diHlnf. ......... -·--""" ......... '"" ..--............. , .. ··~·._..··--.--..... --. ........ ~~.._ •• ••vco = w es a a a cs c:o a ca a a a z a a a a e ea ca as a JJ t as c z t t t s OJ QJt)(!Cit LttCJt CJ. Dally Piiat F R IDAY, MAY 29, 1981 FEATURES 84 OBITUARIES 86 Almost half of American families are growing vegetables ... 87 0 ~ a ·J111ry clears Beglin· of spousal rape By DAVID KVTZMANN °' tJle o.i1, "-llMf Nine months and two trials afte r first being accused of rap- ing his wife, John Beglin stood outs ide a Santa l\na courtroom Thursday a free man. O n ly minutes earlier, an OJ'a nge County Superior Court jury had acquitted Beglin, an a utomobile restoi:er. of charges that he forcibly rJU>ed his spouse ln the bedroom 6( the couple's &ypress home 1¥l September. It was Orantf/ County's first s uch case and <bjlleved to be on· ly the second tn California since passage more' than a year a~o of a s pousal oape law by the Legislature. "This has been a very difficuJt nine months," Beglln said quiet· ly as his attorney, R Stephen Hostetle r of Ne wport Beach, stood nearby. "I've virtually been a prisoner ... I've endured two trials and enormous legal fees (to prove my innocence> " The defendant's first trial had ended wi thout a decis ion in F ebruary when a jury reported it was "hopelessly deadlocked'" two votes shy of acquittal 10 to 2. A unanimous verdict is necesary in a criminal proceed· ing. But prosecutor Alphonsus C. Novick decided to oush ahead l Police property With a Second tr ial On the basis r e t orted tha t he WOUid Seek of claim s by Beglin 's wife. alimony payments because she Paula, that her husband tied her earnedmore money thanhe dld. lo a bed. took nude photographs The threat angered his wife, of her a nd then sexuall y assault-he said, and she stormed from ed her their house yelling, "I 'll see you T he defrndant had maintained in hell." in both his trials that his sales Asked Thursda y how he felt m anager wi fe consented to hav-toward his former spouse, with ing sex wi th him that evening whom he is s ti ll loc ked in even though the two were about d ivor ce proc eedin gs. Beglin lo separate and divor ce res ponded that he was "bitter ·· And of his trial, he sa id After their sexual act1v1ty, he .. 1 cannot look al this op- testif1ed his wife tol-0 him. "You timislically or wit hout . bias. J kno w, this does n 't change a thing I'm still going to file for knew of my innocence a ll along. divorcl'.. Il was just that I couldn't prove wh11t I knew." Beglin had lesl1f1ed he was surprist•d by the statement and A Juror said be fore Beilin ----- $1 m illion a cade m y opens at GWC I , Administrator& get 360-degree views from faceted office windows in I .................... ~ $1 million Criminal Justice Training Center. t · Her e's pr~inary proof that police academ y cour are finally houted under one roof at Gol West College. For furth~ vide nce of the adaptability of the lnteri<lt f the $1 million Criminal Justice Traifdpg Center on the Huntington Beach campc.&a the public is invited to an open house OD June S that will coincide with the officers' graduation. •· From 10 a.m . to 1 p.m . there will be dis- plays and demons tr ations in the four lar ge classrooms. administrative offices and train- ing a reas designed to handle five basic academies, two reserve academies, two ex- tended format courses and three courses each for sergeants, field training officers and public safety aides. Noting that law e nforcement classes were scattered illA' the administration, cos- metology and fine,.rts buildings in previous years, Gary Spe6g, academy coordinator. described the nef.. central location as "a 1reat improve~t." He added Uiiitt the staff and visiting in- 1 structors can "'-accordion walls to partition off smaller rocnna for simulating handUn1 of "real l,ife" codfTc>ntatlons such aa family dis· I turbances or traffic s tops . Most GWC law e n- forcement st!bdents a re sponsored by city police departments. Presumatbly the situations won't 1et too bot . To keep Within the building bud1et, air · conditioning was eliminated. But the win- dows and exhaust f~ are operable. Sleek corridor is lined with Loe/ens that hold field training o/fk:eri' equipment used in l.ab- oriented claa1Tooms of police academy that will be open /or public lnapection June 5. emerged from Superior Court Judge Kenneth E Lae's courtroom that the panel relt the re was not evidence beyond a reasonable doubt to convict the Cypress m an. ·' l feel there was reasonable dou bl," the juror said Hosteller told r eporters that California 's spousal rape law. while deserving of a place m the law, "can be a very dangerous code ·· The defense lawyer s111d the law, passed m 1980, requin.•s no independent corroborution of a wife's allegations of r ape Prosecutor Novick det•llned comment uft(•r the Vl'rd1cl No hazard seen in mud dump By PATRICK KENNE DY Of tM o.llJ "IM Sutt Sl ate health 'officials say a 38·acre mud dump across the street from Edjson High School in Huntington Beact, poses no ha zurd in its prese nt for m Mill er Cha m bers , r egional supervisor for the State Depart· ment of Health Services, said soil tests taken at a depth of two feet last February failed to show any sig~of hazardous material. He said if toxic chem icals are buried deeper al the site. they wouldn't pose a hazard to air quality and wouldn't affect the u n dergr o und wate r s upply beca use the water under the dump is too saline to be drinka- ble a nyway. Although the latest samples didn't s how an y h azardous chemicals. Roy Thielking, assis· t a n l wa s t e ma n ag e m e nt engineer for the health depart· ment, said the .. jury is still out wh e ther t h e r e a r e t oxic che micaJs buried at the site ... The health department took surface tests of the site last year after ne arby res ide nts com · plained of odors allegedly com - ing fro m the dump ne ar Hamilton and Magnolia streets The initial tests las t year s h owed t r a ces of perchlorethylene, an industrial cleaning solvent, and toluene, a toxic hydr ocarbon . But the deeper samples taken this year didn't contain these substances. Cha m bers said. "The trace elements wc found las t year co uld h ave been dumped on the s urface recent· ly," Cham bers said "We didn't find any hat11rdous waste un derground or any in dicat1ons th11t there's anything buried there that shouldn't be .. County orfi eials, however. have included the 38·acre site. now used fo r inert m aterials such as concrete, on a list of dumps that contain huzardous matenaJs Identified by the cit)' as the Steverson Brothers dump and by the county as the As-Con site. the dump was used for 011 drill· ing muds from 1950 until 1970. according to state hc ulth of- ficials. Jim Barncs. a cit} planner. said 1f any dcve lopmt•nt 1s p lanned for the site. the cit y would require deepe r. more ex tensive soil sa mpllng. ··They didn't take any deep boring so wc can probably con elude that 1r s still an unknown," Barnes said "We just don't havt> a lot of information ·· B a rnes s aid he r cct•1ved sever al calls from concerned citizens after 1t wils rcported earlier this year that a nother former d ump in Huntington Beilch. t he Bouche r Lundfill. containe d v11rio us tox ic che m icals. That d ump . n ear Warner Avenue and BoJsa Chita Street, is being excavated under the s uperv1s1on of s t11te health of fi cia ls School lease seen CCC may open Peterson 'campus' Peterson School in Huntington Beac h m a y s oo n be com e Coastline Community College's fifth "mini-cam pus.·· Coast Community College Dis- trict trustees have a pproved plans to negotiate a lease with t he Huntington Beac h City (eleme ntary) District, which wi 11 disc ontinue c l a sses at P eterson at the end of the cur- rent term. T he trustees also ha ve ap· proved a parking s tud y to de- term me whether additional vehi- cle space will be needed if Peterson is leased. Coastlin e s pokesm an Jack Two from Valley Ch apman grad s Two Fountain Valley residents were May araduales of Chap· man Colle1e in Orange. Isabel Goll Gibson received a master of arts degree In de· velopmental psychology Shu Shiuan Yuan received a master of science degree in business ad- minlstratlon. Chappell sa id the cullegt' wants to use Peterson for day and evening classes and as a new s ite for its /\rea 3 administrative offi ces I Area 3 includes f'oun lain Vall ey and pa rt of Hunt· mgton Beath I If the negotiations are com· pleted. Pelt'rson will become the fifth closed t>lementary school leased by Coastlim• The others are Bay View in Santa Ana Heights. Mesa Verde in Costa Mesa. Robinwood m lluntmgton B eac h , and Finl ey 1n Westminster All five sites have been closed because of declining enrollment Chappell sai d th e college traditionally h11s allowed play· in~ fi elds to remain ooen for public use at the schools 1t has leased The Coastline spokes man said elementary schools are desired by the college because of t heir proximity to a resident111I com· munity 1md because they are de· signed s pecifically for educa· lional purposes. He adde d , h o wever . tha t despite the leas ing of elemen· tary schools, Coastline still 1s of. ferlng courses at 150 sites w1thfo the college district County bus fare hike set Monday The coit to ride one of Oran1e County's public buses wUJ 10 up Monday. A ride on one of the Oran1e County Transit Dlatrlcl'• 52 loc•I bus routes will lncreue from so centl to 75 centl durinl weekday ruth houn '"d eo centl durlni alack Umes -mlddaya, evenlnp and weekend•. TrAA1fe ra wtll remain f~. Senior clt.ben fares will be 50 cenu durtni buy commuttni tioun and 10 ctnta otherwlM. Handl:a nckn wllJ pa7 'IS cent.I peat hour• aDd • centa at •1•c tlmea. The ruh boun are e to t:ao a.m. and J:JO to I p.m. durtaC tbe flnt two Wffkl ln Jue. Tben. when OCTD offlctaJ1 make ..,.. Ulftl, &IM boun I • • I : • • • -~ .. "" :v=:: • ¥J cy • s •a o s ass so a o a a s 2 2 3 JS 3 25 033323!&&3$ 22!41 , • 'ii• ~ ....... -.. _, ... -• -• • --•• -.. -................ ' ,.... •• - -............. ,.. •• • •• • .. •• .. • • • • ••••• -,. ••••• , • • • ••• , '..... •• • • • s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, May 29. 1981 ~-------------------------------------~---------------t ..... ,--.....:;..-.~ ~' ~ Downfall of the orange PARDON OUR T REES DEPT. -Every time you get con- vinced nothing ever changes in our Orange Coast region, guess what? Something does. The Irvine Company, our great coastal ranch of yesteryear, proved to be a case in point this week. What happened was, in harkening back to their heritage, certain agriculturists who remain in the company's employ went out to a ranch site east of ~ El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta- tion and started planting 246 acres in orange trees. ~~ Time was, around our re-~/". ~~~~: tli~~n 5~~~ 0::n::~1:f~; ~011 MORPHINE_}& / would have drawn notice m the press on either the agricultural section or maybe the finance page. NO DOUBT THE NEW plantings would have been viewed as another economic step forward in Orange County's steady march into agricultural progress. Well, the new orange grove Joing ln did ineed get press notice here in 1981. That much didn't change. But hark ! You might be surprised at the kind of notice. Part of thos~ new tree plantings, on eight acres, drew a heady protest. - CERTAIN ARCHAEOLOGISTS complained publicly that the Irvine ranchers were disturbing an ancient site where it is believed the Indians had a major trading post and political center. Bettn grab your tweeur1 and 8J)Ut , btutn. This location, the scientists asserted, dated back at least 6,000 years. Informed or the complaint, what do you suppose Irvine Company spokesmen did? Why , they apologized to the archaeologists, that's what. TERRIBLY SORRY, they said. "An unfortunate over- sight." Shouldn't have been out there with graders and plan· ters and other citrus grove equipment, mucking around where there might be some archaeology. Well, this may give you some notion or how Car the orange bas rolled downhill since the days it was king or the agricultural mountain in Orange County. It doesn't seem so many years ago when citrus was the monarch or crops in our region. You could maybe get shot for trying to filch an orange from somebody's grove. Get caught, and you were surely due to get hauled before some steely·eyed justice of the peace at the very least. IF ONE OF OUR OLD·TIME citrus ranchers was told that he was disturbing ground that might be more important than what he was planting at the moment, you could get yourself a free ticket to the runny farm. In those days, it would be difficult to imagine what would happen to some scientific type who wanted to halt the planting or an orange grove so he could get out there and sift around with a pair of tweezers and some other delicate instruments. For sure, the archaeoloeists wouldn't have drawn any kind of apology . Instead, they might have needed to be pretty fleet of foot when the citrus rancher fired up his bulldozer. You guess it must be conceded that in a few rare in · stances, tiPles do change . ee A&E Systems lne. Durable awning that' 1 easy on the budget! I SPECIAL $-~800 ._..,d · · PRICE ROM ~7' !!":r.~~~~J»o C.oll 111 ond , .. whot we mean. FT .. iMtallotion at yQ4JI home. M sizft ond ~·' avoilabl.. • P•tondited, profeHtonol ~ • Serliiw;a California RV porb since 1975. • We'r• Mobile! • ...n ~ quoronteed l SH ut foi woven woO"dt. •ncl<Jlulw. "°'89• PoOt, and levellng IYtt*ml 15998 Mariner Drive Huntington Bach, 21 3-59~2 I 93 714-847-0424 Kidtt' eyes Class 8 set and ears in bu exami~d a tH Free screenlna for speech or hearlni de· fects ln pre-school age chlldren wilJ be offered Saturday at Colleae Vi ew Elementary School In Huntineton Beach. Sponsored by the Callfornia Speech and Hearing Association and the Huntlnaton Beach Kiwanis Club, the tests and referral service will be administered from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 6582 Lennox Drive, near Edwards Street and Ed· Inger Avenue. To make reservations. or for further Inform&· lion, call 848·1020. IFYOU have a service to offer or goods to sell, place an ad an the Dall r Pilot Classified Section . Phone 642·5678 FASHIONABLE FAME -Terrie Goldade, 14, and Teresa Wilson, 17, of Fountain Valley model their homemade out· fits after winning top honors in the 4-H Dress Revue fashion show at the 4-H Spring Fair. The girls, members or the Fountain VaHey Cloverdales 4-H, will exhibit their ensembles at the Orange County Fair, July 10·19. Regist.ratl hat be1un for •Ix· week summ biaineas claMes offered by ilDtington Bea.eh Adult School. The adult cilool's bua1-s skills center at 10251 Y~ ' Ave. will oCfet instructioa la ec· counting, busl~ss Enallah. word proces$ g, typln1 , shorthand, busln ss macldnea, computer-orienteCI accountlbg and other topics. The courses are free, and ltU· dents may select their own ofus hours and work at thelr ewn speed. The center will be ~en weekdays from 9 a.m to 1 .m. and Monday through Friday rom 5 :30 to 8:30 p.m . Electttc typewriter s and e lectropJ c calculators are available for ttu· dents'use. Summer classes will run Clim June 15 throu,July 24 . roe registration inf atlon, v~lhe business skills It schocat ce or call 964·685S. · .; Sale good through~ this week-end only! SALE HIS. DAILY 9.7 cm= OPINllJIG DAY Fri, Sat\ Sun LAST THREE DAYS! UPTO EVERnHING REDUCED ATLEAST20% OUI SIUCTIOl a INOIMOUI. 1111 IS Oii SAU YOU WOl'Y WAllT .. _ ...... .. ..... ...... Ml. • ;1' ·' I , '' I Ill 1, ... 1 L JI, EVDTIHING ISON ,. SA Le:· . t Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,ifridey, May 29. 1981 H /F NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 0VOTATI01i11 IMCLUDI l•AOl,OM TMI lllW YO•I(. MIDWl•t l'AlClfllC fl•W, •OtlOM O•l•OIT AND (llf(lllllATI UO(• la~MAMOllAMO AIPOllTID av TMI Na\0 AlfD IMUINIT ~~"' ~'~~ •'-~ '1 Save money • on vacations The panel.oxes bea for clarlflcalion The hotel/motel traae is holding firm. the restaurant business is mixed but no worse than that: travel, though, is a disaster. The contrasts are clear. We, famed the globe over as a nation of wanderers, are relaxing and play- mg as hard as ever. But we are staying closer to home than m many years, and savmg in other ways. The peak holiday months are directly ahead. Here are your rules for fuel-saving and dollar-cutting vacations You can't help but win with them. l Go early or late. Choose what's left in May or go in June or wait until September October Avoid the peaJc July August period. Try going south in sum- mer, north 1n winter. Timing alone can sla~h ~ you r expenses 20 percent to 40 percent It's "in" to go off·s -,-l-Vl_A_P_O_R_T_IR-i:-z se ason or shoulder season. 2. Stagger your travel days or even hours to save 30 percent to 40 percent off "prime-time" rares Take fullest advantage of weekend and fly-by -night alr travel prices 3. Seek out the off-beat. Avoid the newest hotel in the latest hot spot. Pick the outskirts and often save 25 percent to 40 percent off midcity or center area places. Use the interstate highway system and freeways to bypass the main action scenes. 4. Search for the ne w cut-rate airlines and less fancy resorts You will have to fly smaller, slower planes from out-of-the-way airports, forfeit frills, even pay for on-board food . But your net savings on these cut-rate lines can run 30 percent to 75 percent off reg u I ar fares 5. Become your own travel expert by reading travel publications. Thoroughly investigate tour packages. You may not be able to book many of the most attractive tours on your own. But a travel agent can do the job for you -at no expense to you . 6. Look into the rapidly spreading "Bed 'N Breakfast" places. They may be JUSt rooms and baths in private homes, but they can be exceedingl y attractive as well as inexpensive. "B&B " organiza lions list names of members, addresses and prices. You make arrangements directly. B&B groups range from "Urban Ventures," through which you can get rooms in homes and apartments in Manhattan and Brooklyn, to "Bed & Breakfast Hawaii." which features seaside cottages throughout the island chain. Bed & Breakfast International, at Kensington. Calif .. and the Bed & Breakfast League. Princeton, N .J., have members from coast to coast. 7. If you like the sea, the success of "bareboat" luxury yacht charters at resorts has spawned lower cost, rent-a-boat imitators at small, local marinas Call local yacht clubs or boat yards, or check the magazines in the field You'll rind an affordable vessel. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORK(AP) Fl,...IDOw:JOM> ••9• tor TllurM11y, ,,.Y 21 I TOCKS AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS HEW YORK (AP) T ... fol-1119 llll thOWt IM H-Yorio. SIO<k Eacll1not r::~o:~,:·=' ,~:.,~~~·ir~ ~g perc•nt ol '"-,....,., ... , of volume 1W Thursday. No HC:Urlti.s trading Del-52 ... ln<I "°9<f, Net end 119fC~ Cllal>gff are I~ ditt.rtnu •-lht "'9Y!Ous closlne price end Tht.lnM'Y'J~ m. price Nam• LAii cno P<I l !'SHH 2.l!fl' '3 • 0.... Up 160 0 2 $0uAllnFln .... + 1' Up 11.7 I a.niey P!>O Allll + " Up 1•. I 4 UALln< pf IO'l'J + 4 Up U.l S WnllNetl l tt\l:t + 3..... Up 13.S • MoclulCmS-..• n 1~ • l"M Up 12.• 1 Ainer"• ~ 2AV. + 2Vt Up 11.J I Wyly 13"' + 1"-Up 11 1 • Pltl' R-dl I • "i Up 10 J 10 OliltGE pl .._ + '-Up 10 0 II NtMln.SY 1''4 + ,_, Up • • 12 Pono.rota 14" + l\lt Up •.i 11 r:ION~I J> ?'Ill Up •.I IA KoOn q mlt ,... Up ' 1 iJ emon 9 ~ "6 Up 1.7 1• ~mW•tr pl8 '"" '4 Up U 11 l 41119Pnl PfC J1 A\'i Ull I.• II """''" d a Yt • a Up I S tt Sl!al .. r GIOb 11111 + ~ U11 1.2 10 Wlfl'9r.IK'"" .... • l'I Up I.a i l unat Gu 11111 • '"' VII l~j ... ~~.~ ~ : .~ ~= Valley 11\d U'l't + l'AI )'.II CllYllll.. ~I+ '-vii 7.7 ; I.Mt Chtl ~~-·~ 2i-. 114 ·~ ..... .... "" :m -Jtl 11r'=n: ::--~ 1r -1 .. ~~~ -... -m .i Ind °f:';' .. :tr"., ~ .. f..~ • ~'" 20 Tm QI 34 441 7• 433 4) W .91 • 1.,. IS Utl 107,71 IOI >J 10. II 107 St. 0 04 U Stll -.. l'I SS 3'4 1' -U • 011 I""" I 4. 110,.00 Tran 2.~ .00 Ullls S0,000 U Stk 7 ••7.100 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK CAP) ~y 11 AOvetW:.O O.clln.O UMll ... ~ 'to411 IUU9' New 1119'>• He• IO•l WHAT AMU 0!0 Today '°1 ~1 }70 ,.,. ,.. 11 NEW YOH1< IAl>J ~y 21 METALS TOOly 3'J uo lOS m •• II Pre-. ~~ 527 )70 ·~ ,,. " c-as.97 ~"" • _,.,, u s .... u .... !Ions. I.• .. ,.. t fl'h. pound %lllC ...... '"'". PO<lftd. del1¥e<ed Tift $6 ton Melelt WHk <Ornc>O>lle lb Al1tm1-1..a c..-11 e pound, N Y Merc11ry MH 00 .,., flask Pl•llllVm MJ9 00 lroy 01 , N Y SILVER Sll"9r SlO UO per troy ounu, H•MY & Marm•• only dally q-• GOLD QUOTATIONS ~' mornlnv 11•1"9 M11.7S, uP IO" ~:el-.-ll•lno M7' U, uP SQ.U Perts:.,..,,_ fl•lno un,. ,.,. ... ._,.,M1''1 %11rkll: Lale 1t11no $47' 00 Old, "411 GO •tiled ""'•' a H•rma11. only •!Illy 4UOI• $4Tt.2.S, up IO.U ............ : O!llY dally ""°'9 $-4,.,n, WP tO.U. • ........,., only dally _ .. l•brl<•"" .... 4l,upto2' SYMBOLS .. ~. r::· u o • us a e 0 6 • 0 0 • 0. ·-. • .. H /F Orange Coast DAit Y Pt LOT n:rtday. May 29, 198 t PUBUC NOTICI PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICS -PUBLiN<>TIC"B j · IW'nH 10 caaDtTOU ·::.::::::....::-f'llmTt_ ___ ..: ~'i':J.-=~ CCllMIUCHD NOTIC•• Nauc ......... f'ICT'lftout •liltltUI l> PUBUC NOTICE Pum.IC NOTIC& , ........ .__._ -.,. ...... ......n.u••llT T ........ u:ioetOUC ltOTtcaor,..,M.K1taA••... hWk ....... WIM ..... w.. MWITATU•••T .,. -.......... .,.....__ ......_ --fe --llllll> P~ YUll,..,.. Ci191e ..... ,._.... Cenwftl .... 84 The ...... ....,_ 11 ..... ~ ....._.,. ,.;.-.-:------ana .... uc111... WIJ'Ail.MIM•T ltle Cltt.'::;-!: ~-OtM, Cme11 --~ ....... COAITA&. ~-0~11mu. ltfltOT MO CMA•t•• NllVIC&, ... (~~.-... "~. HOTIC8 II H••••v OIV8N..... ..... • •:• ""'' .. .. M"'. I... IL. c T. 0 NI cs I ... ,,~, IMM, CA fVIJ, "'°"' ce.. ..._ ..._.. __ ,. -.... k ....,.. Wiit ...... W IM OtY -" .......... .,.,_..., • IP8CIAt.ltTI, Vtt A11•ll•I"' "" ltl'~ M, .._., .. , t ... ,,.,,., IDI W, ~-... IMtke I• .......... el-t"8t a Will Cev11cll af , ... CllJ el Hlllltlf191911 N\I .. _ .. '1ifl, _,., ............. c:.Ma llllleM,CA--. 4 1,,,IM,CAtlJll. a.ec:t1,CAtmila.~ ntl w ..... lrantl•t. l11c1ve1119 ... t lCHallc e-11, Ill .. C..lt ~ ............. u•• •; Clltllltjlllar M. lrew11, IOI CllefileLc:r.MM.•".......-. .. :.:--~._...c.. ...... -.Wt ................. ,,.... CIVkC:.. ...................... '· 0•11•r•I f'l•ll AnlellllfftHIANMl"'a..cea'8MioM,CA ..... . ~~.:-'~.,._ • ., 8 TMt ...... l•~WMlfloo :'...!.":~=.~~=-: -.raf1:to._ •• _...,..,., O~·•HA l•r Oa•I• O. Cle O , fllle....._.IHtMl<-byMlft. -.. -... ...._ .......... lecetW ..... wel!IUI A-, ..... .. ,........ "'.....,, ....... , f/I ewtllHltall ... Ill af ttejlMll A. 111¥1111181. • ...,..._.. -;_ .. _;;;;..., Je\IW. 0..-"0", Cll'f ti IMfle. c-.ty .t Oflfltlt, .i-. lt91, ............... k .... ldlMl!t, _.. .. C... M9M "-'flt Olm.,_ 2 Tlli. .-.,. _ 1.._ ...... Tll• ......... -, .................. '81.......... .... ......... OtJ ....... fl ... C•MMIHltfl, .. 0 .... I ... , f9' TMt ~ w .. 11..-wttll t .. C-... a..11fl0r .... C-.,MMff c-tJC)wtif/IClr .... Ciwllty•Mrf N•-flTrMlll#w,"'-, MClal eel y-..., .... -.. -fl ""'" ............... ~ ---C-CyC)9nelC)r .... QounlyOllM9 ' • , .. ·r1 11. t•t. -wlty _.., Mf ~ ..,_ 0.Mtet ..._ IMtllla ftlMI M ........ fl .....n.. •Mt L It. ... t1, '"'· "' f'MatM _, ..... ~ ..,_.,_ .... ....._ ..... .,,.. l"IUt ~ta .,.. MA!tl( M. L•VIN, -.C. !«. .... c:e.i-• ....... lfNMty ..._.,.,.. ........,.. Mii tt ~ ....,...,,,. ~I-Or .... CMlt Delly f'l19C, ........... Or .... c-&Oeilyf'tMll ""4141-Clr .... CMAOelly ..-. Ul U ·ilti, 11 111.lll••r. lr¥1"•• w.u.Me .... City Clwll'• 0Hlc9, -'flt-~-..... , • ..._,.. llllUYH,.tw.S.lt.19,1"1 tA11.., _., IS D. ft ..._ S. t•t 110_.j ¥ey U, ft. H, '-'•'"' ZUNI Ce1119mle"114 -..... -"" llll#k l.llor...,, tw """"'" lec.elM ~ ... _ • • Hem•• -.....,_ ..., .... '"' -..... PVBUC NOTICE ..-..rr_,_1"'~,._~-.. "11 hl .. rt A,,._, t11e 0'•"-._UN ..... ...,..,,.. ue.,.. PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITICIVI au11fl•t1 .... ., • .,,Mii .. , Tiie llJl-""9 patMnl •t• 0.1"4 ....,_"· HIWl>OftT MAIN, UI •. »Ill SI , c.ca-.,CA'2611 11 ... rt w Oe•-· lltSJ Matllfa Arch, ...,..,.,,.,CAfJ?ti II_,, 11. Dtmtr. tM ~ JOel St., C-Mt• ""'-4 CA "'17. This .....,,__. II CtftllwetM •Y • .... r .. __..... ._...,,II Z- • Thlt ........... -llled Wlttl ... C...,,ly Cle'1l of Or .... C:-IY Oft May •.1•1. ........... ," ... ........ .-Or ...... c .... Oelly PllOt, Mey t, U, 11, 19, Itel 21»-tl PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITICIVI •UllNlll MAMll IT AftMllNT TIM ,......,,. --I• ..... lluU- M .. al THE MIY AMElllCAH AGINCV. UJI f' ... IUI SI .. S...I• A,.., CA tf1t1. •r•• AllTll! ••VANO, ••• , • .,.. uw...,AMell, ·--~~ Tw•lllA-....... DW-Ufoll w 111lama11uro, Oran ... C•llfarnl• '""'·ti.~ llrwl U.W\' -., IVMU ._. • ....,. ~ •-• f'ICTITIOUl•UllNIU tl .. 7. ALI JAVANMAllO, UUI HS Malll ltraat eM the a8lllllfll tN Cltf el C..-.. ...... af I,.. fllCTITIOUllVllNHI NAMm ITATIMINT G•fttva, Yll'I"' Hiiia, Callto111la ::: • ....,,..., ,,.,.,,.., .. , 9-Mt :V"::·-~~~ .... ~-= !!: N.uq ITATIM•NT • TM followlflt ,.,_ la ctolnt -nu>. Tiie ,.,......... 0.-81 l'lllW ~ S.ftt• ANI A-. l llv"-t•t Tiie fotlOw\llt PffMll la dolftt .,.,_ ,,. .. at: htel t-llltHtklfl IO lie ,.id~ ti. 1 ou• --1 TO.. __...... "---~-I ........ ...._I .._.,~ MM as ITUAllT, JaflFlllEI .. Al·.,,...,,, 419Krllled, Ill ........... •II • -..-' ·-... _ -"' -"m -.... ,__.,,. __ .. lafl, " ,· I IOCIATll. 111' o...-, ... ·--··-~1n .... ,.~_ .. _ .. _ ......... •av• .... IMlllll .. .-~ ... 1.0-.. ,... ........... 0NI·• ... , . ICAI ··!" T co,Ml"ANYM. ---,,... " A-• .._.,.._"_ llAll"l••t1,.a.-far~wtlaf, tw ••c"""9 A. Va Ver11.a, ~ ..... •<•11 • ~•• • ••I• ue, 9-lt,CA'Mll. OMcl Wiii ...-•1111hlk-11 •Ml ., ... fer ...... ,. CN1t•Kll ... 111 leralltlk l'llMWlalt, ~at. C.lll~~~'I ... ,._ Gary s. IMNM, JH ~ Cl .. ..,,.. •• Gtaflt. .., ~Ille c.u ..... "'-l"t Clefn. r!WA _,_ • I ·-· w • .....,.1 UtwM llMcll, CA fM,SI I """-' ~II, tJ•OO. > -All ,........, ..,_.,,, Nl•llM. ,,.1 • ...,., ~.O. a.a i•, tw _..,.1..._, M .. e. Callferllla ta» Tltla .....,,..., 11 <•IMIU<lff •Y • O.mand ,..._ lo ...... KM .-, cat11 atteM .... _..., .,..,, ... Wfl-lo am.M ti. ltN -........... af Tiii• ......_, ll t_ ... Dy Ml I llmltff ,..,,_.,..., t1tt..,111 '"'•"'· u 1 ,no.oe t -.,_. •el-..,_. alll. .,....,.. '"""' _.... .. ""., ..... Mrwt ctMclYal. Gervl -O.ma,.. NM la lie r~ Dy..,. r•t•r•lne , ... entire f'lsce l VHt ,,.... ,..,,. ..,._,.,ta_., com-E,,..tSoollMll Tith -wM tl!M wl\11 lite 1umptlltft et eahllnt a•ll .. tl•n•, i•1..a ........ -<l•I, -.. t-leff •llWMtlw Tllll •-•• Ill.a wltlt IN c-tv Clff11 •Or.,... C-Y °" M9y IJJ,000.00.. I -· kwlty •-,.,.,,..., llllf.,metltft m•Y 11e .._ -•flt ... ....,., ,..,. a"'9Nmfftb C-ty ,..,. .,. 0r.,.. C-v °" ~ 6• 1911 -llt t. ~I l'l-lflt .._.,_In tal .... 1 ....... Office ... I ... C.lly Clerll 1., pr-'Y Mce'-il •t ,_ ltkeol U , "" I '"MM t•v., fJf Ml• PO IOO a -0 141 •m>. Sttwt, ....,. ..,_.,._ Awe-M141 ""~ Pu1>11.-0r.,.. c-1 o.lly "'*· Kl"" of ,iu;.. h. 11e .,.,.,..,,.,.Md o.-.. IMy ». "'' the 1811.,11 Ttrmlnvt .,. llandolllf\ f'wo11.-Orane-Coall Dolly Pll91,I May I , IS, n, 2', Itel tlU.t llllnlMt -: On-Sat. ... , .... WIM CITY OP ttUNTl ... TCM ••ACM A••nw•. ,,.,,,,..._l•I •t•tmlne· M•Y 2', J-S, It, "· Itel 1'11-tl Llten .. · •1·111$5. .., Allda M. ._._, tlon: N...,UW O.CIM .. Mll. ' TIM uie -t,.,..,.., wlll 119 C-CltJ Qiwtl J. z-elCQlllt.1911 """" Ui-tl-IOI 1umm•lecl al 10:00 A.M on°' att.r tlte '"llMIMed Or11191 ce.11 Oellf Piiot. •net tt11tetlv• par<al M9p S-tl·.1'2 IUPllllDI' COUltT 01" TMI IOlll d•Y of J..,., Itel, et Ille •tcrow INiy tt, '"' 1•1-tl. ,., M 0 J-~y, lncorppr•tecl, STATIOl"CALlf'OltNIA d9PU lment of PROFESSIONAL •Ylllorlnd •t•nt for Nluw• l"ICTITIOUl•UIU••ll f'Olt TMICOUNTYOf'OUflGI ESCllOW SlllVICfS, tt11 Nortll PUBLIC NOTICE Pro,..fli.t, 1ncorpotetact, C/O C&A NAMl lTAT•MINT .... A-taUat T111ll11 A-CPloalOtflca 8oa llW), E11tar11rl1u, HOOi crown V•ll•Y TM too_,,..,.,_. I• clolnt 1"aSI NOTIU OI" INT9NTIOfl Sent• Ana, Calltornl• tVll Partiw•y, ~ H ..... , fw uiftCtl· MU••· TO llU. ltlAL ll>•o~• All OtMr ...... ,. .. -· ..... 00. l"lc:TtnOUtMlllN•ll tltll•I .... •""' ,., .,, offk• c-• A II 0 c A s E c II Ii: TAR I A ATf'•IVATllAUlltTY Clt'•lMl llMll by Ifie Tr..ut.,.., wlllllll NAM91TATIMINT llemlnl""' Mtfl • -IMC9 '1> •II-• SEllVICES, 11'1• hl••11lle Cir . Eslate of tlM 114111 llV• ,_.,.sot.,•• 1• I<-TIMf .. lowl"t...,..,laOOlntlloill!WU tltlrcl ,..,.,, -• ..-rui ...... lot • Fountelft Vel...,, CA '21tl Hl!LEN w NY•E•G lo tlM T,_.., ..... Same. •• • ..... , .~ ........ loc•IM .... , ,,.,.. II Nyquht. II~ Syl•Mlll 0.CHUd • ' TIM-11ff••Nl1Mt-ld9r•· OESIONlllS SHOWCASI!, 11111 •ak•r su..t. Ill • CL -l!ft11lr-Cir., F.....cel11Vall..,,CA'210I I HOT I Ca IS HUIE•Y GIVEN tt.at 114111 for tflt ,,_,., of tlte ..... ,.., .. eel! 91¥d., """11"9ton 9N<ll. CA mental .. ttrmlMll...,.. N .. •11•• Tiiis -.. 11 '°"""lad Dy ell 1111 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE • 5 6 7 8 l'tllll"W-119111, IUI ,...._SI, Mllta AM, CA '27'7. Tlli. ...,_.Is, __ • ., tft In. dl•lctuol. PNllfiW. llolll • .,.lact 9 ,.,,,,1,....11oft of .,,. •Do,..'. •NI Illa 1ic-••co • pelcl etw ti. ftM1 O.ClantlOf'I. c11,,..., .. •llllll•cl SU,..rlor Covr1 Wllltlll tlM O•P••t-111 of Ale-lie .. .,., • .,. T..i -ct. tns -.. Verde E.. 4. z-eacw41on permit ZC!-tMOt, ,,_ v N't'Qllltl I D th•M ••lowM tly ·-· ... • ........ ~. fr:~::. .... ._._ u.. ,..__ Coste,,,....,CAt»». lantell"9 ""-.. Tract T-IUJI, Mtcl ,.. Tiii• __ , ••• flied wltlt ... H Aclml11l1tr•t•I• of llW Hlete of O•lacl AA-. JI Itel T1tl1 .....i...ta la <-lee! by.,. i... ,_ ... ltlafl 11-tl•, IClf' 11 .... Kllor, Coull1r Clerll of Oranet County°" Ma'I' H•I ... w. NVbe<'I, ~ Wiii .. 11 ..._., • . dl•ICIYal. • .......... , ......... ,.,. Al ... J. O..Ssln, 11. 1•1. I Tiiis AMernenl wM lllacl wttlt IN c ... 111, ,..,.. .. ~ ..... C:-y .. May U, '"'· PtUlll l"vllMIWwcl Orane-C:-1 Dolly f'lleC, ,,,._, IS. 22, 19, J-s, t tet nu.1 at prl,,.te .... IO 1119 N;Nlt and beat ~.::.~LEVIN TaclHow.,cl 117 IHI llkllf-, Drane-, far • ,.. P1'1ftt Mt blctclltr on,,_'•""• Mid ,0,.,1\JoN ARTIE aAllANO Tllll It~ w•• Ill.ct wltlt ti. ,_ lnwn 112 to IU, • c~t..,..I.,. Pub11.-Orenoit Coot Dally Piiot, A IMr•IMfter .......U-•II rlgllt, tllle ALI JAYANMAllO Countf Clerll of Oranet c:--.ty 011 M9y ,..rmll tor a l°"""'t condomlnlUITI II'• ,,,.., JI, J..,. S. 12, It, Itel ~I and 1,, .. ,..1 of,._..,, w. Hybe,., .._ Tr.,,...,_ n,ttlt. lecl wltll varlanua to •acH cl -T--1 c-cl. et IN lime of lier dNtll, Mlcl Publl.,,... Or-cout O.hy Piiot ~ .•• 1.~ Or-,.. •• ~ ,.._11~1!.2!!', :::::::a.,. i.: 1::"' ~~ =~ PUBLIC NO'flC~~ ell rlollt. title tlld lnlarfft tltet t... • rv-.,._ ....-.. ..., , ....... "1 Ht•••..., acciutrect In edditloll 10 lflet May,., ltll 2'6MI Mey?t,J .... s. II. 1', Itel "'"'' -let "*"vltlefl. IOcalecl •, .. ...ct - --of O.CMMt at ... clNtlt, 111 Ille ,..I -------791 Wffl , .. SCreet, In.,. •11-. E,.. 1"\191.IC lllOTIC• prape rtr iocalact In tlM County ol PUBLIC NOTICE B OTICE 11lron...-.1 -tnlnatlon ,....ti.,. NOTIU INlllTI ... •10s I Ora,.... SUte.,. C.llfoml•, -r•-PU LIC N DKl•r•llOft. RECEIPT OF PllOf'O$ALS .... ..., ., followl. ____ S A putollc llaarlft9 to conalder .,._..i, wlll be •«•I-Dot ltle City o4 t I e k of E ... ,.... al!Hllatl,,. .....,., 1>1an polklet re-of lrwlne. °""9r ol ... --.. In.,_ of. f'ICTlnovs•UllNIU L ' II IOC • Ht New~... IUN••-COU•TO'"' 1u,"T!T"•'~C,~"1!!! .. "",.· ...... n. llM ........ 11 ... Of c.ou11ty lko of ... Cl ... ci.r-. ioc•ao .. 11100 ....... ITATIMaNT par maci~ recor-111 a-J, -,. ~ ..,.._ .. ,._ 111_, __ IM led ., M!.~ •. , • ._.... --It ..... llull· "fc. '~, ... ~~""::' ~n..:: ,. C-::.C"'C:~::.~ ro• THI OCMIN::.:: =~:·.,,. ., ... wltlllll .: cl~..:.,.~°': ~,';',~9!. ,"::::..: :"!.~·.:::~~°:~1~ TWO GUY$ fltOM ITALY. 1'1" ly lalrloAM,~tll'9t Ap .. llcatlonof ::nu. ln•lron-•I dtt.,.mlno· IClf' llM -lion of dral ..... lm- H•rDor •1¥d., FOUllt•ln ll•ll•Y. CA Mor• Commonly ..,._ " no West Pl•lllllfl. MAHllCXJ POUllZANJANI ,..;,. c;::: =::loll Oft.,.. ..... ~~r:..~=i:-~ci.v·~.:::t WOI. t••" l'rOllt, ••Ibo•. Callfornl• JANA MAHLlll, a mlftOr, by -tor Cha .... fJf Neme pptlcetlont, ...._...... Jj4.Sl4S or ull OfSC•IPT OH OF WOii'~ ll Gr•oorlo •ullOll, tlCM W. Palm, .... tllrowoll l"EllllY MAH LE II •nd .... Al-.S I IN office of llw Plennlng Oellert· " 1 " ""°,,. 0r ... .,. CA.,..., TuA..._...P.,calNo.CMl-023-0S. KATHLl!IN MAHLER, lier Guar· o •ot11tTOIHOWCAUll m.n1, 11---100.n FelrOrlW,C:OSto •nG ••plac• Pee curbs,,...,.,., Tiii• b.,ai,... ••• · c-..Ctlt<I by ... .... TIM ...... aubjoet IO ........ ,.., cllan•" Utltft . w H f II f A s M A H " 0 u -... c.tlffKftl•. tPa""'•" -,,_ 9'1fllan, Construct cllvlctYel l•I C.IWt Wllldl •re• 11911 nol Vat 0.tenctent. POUllZAHJAHI, Petlll-..... Iliad Publl-Or-CMll O•lly Piiot Type 1 catclt llelln -''°"" Clreln Or.oorlO•ullon y•ble, includlllt levlff tot -.e<l•I fOWAllO VINCE GRIJALVA, •P•tltlonwllllti.Clerllollflls c-t M•Yll Itel J'42-tl' lyttem ENGINEER'S ESTIMATE Tlllt ...,._1 "'" lllecl with IN tMU-cllllrkta,C-llU,Goncll· RODOLFO GRIJALVA, MR$. tor •n ord<tr C ... '1111"11 1191111-r'a • Ml,000.00. C-'Y o.R of Or-Co<#lty.,, ,,,._,~Iona, rHtrlctl0111, rHerv•tlona, llOOOLl'O GIUJALVA. MARILYN nem. ,,.,,, MAHllCXJ POUllZAHJANI ------OPENING Of' PROPOSALS: TM I •• ltll. lgtlla, r .... 1ofw•y, ...a ............ of SUfi MEllEOITH, DOES I lllrOugll x , to MAHllCXJSAllA NlllllA. PUBLIC NOTICE --·· wlll ... pUOll<ly _....,•!Id ,., ...... f'l'1W Korcl. Tiie Pl'°'*1Y 1110 ... Miid.,,.. lllCIUl lWI IT IS OllOfllEO IN! ... per-.... , .. d ., , 00 p.m . on J-IO. '"'· Ill ........., ar-.. CMtll Dlllty f'llet. '•• 11" Della, .. c.i" lo title. ,.~ M.IMMONI ••r•11ec1 "" Ille -...ntlllacl matlltr ------'c:;,.:,bove menll-4 ottlu tf , ... I ... , • " ..... "'' .... , ••a• or often ... Nlvlted ,.., llM• --n.~ _., ....,. this c-i al 10 JO A.M. r1CT1n-·1 •USIN•ll • • -_rt, Mel "'''" be ... wrhlno -NOTICll V• .. ,,. -..... Tiie -•n. t•1. '" ~ , Mfor• ...... 0. TA I NI NG c 0 N T RA c T Ill De •K•'"" •I tlte ofllCH Of C-' ...., ........... .,... ~ llM H-*-llOHALO H. PllEN· NAMlllTATIM9NT DOCUMENTS Tlte -lllcat'°"s ... wrwlll, llem•r. Mac0011a ld ~ ,_ ..... _.. .._.,.. .......... NE 11 e l 011 ANGE COUNT v The 1011-1"11 ,.,.on• ••• doing •nllllact, · GOf'l•ltuctlon of 0r41,.... eaela, A ,.,.ofeulonlll ~allOll ....... a •JL ·-.. ._,....._ SUl"ElllOlll COU!tT, 10ll Clvk Ceftlltr lloitllWUff; Project Con•l1tl119 Gener••l' •I llfK,..YI lor ,.let Admllllitr•ltla, •t ....... Drl"9, city II s.ita AM, -tv fJf OUALITY DETAILING, '°' lUI Y•riGu• Olrtl ancl o.itlltr ll9Ploc-t N...,.,, c.n1er Ori,,., Suite u". If you -10 -u. .,,,In o1 ., O••noe • .-.c Celll-•. -•ltow H-P9'1 llNdl, CA '2663 S.Ctlont -1r· S4orm o.e111 -CIP f'ICTITIOUI •USIN•U H•wport 9-11, C:.lllomla nwo. or •ttorMv ... 1111• men .... yow "*'kl ... UUM, II My .... , I ... ,..tltlOll for MICllN I F l"rlu, •07 lilt 51 • SJl>.tS .. "'---·••cat•-. ...0 "AMI ITATIM•NT ., be !Had will\ IN Clerll. of ,..d .. prolft911, 10 tlMlt your wrltte11 cha,... of,..,.."'°""' -M OrMlad. N-pot1 llMcll, CA '1663 •II centract lllK..,.,_h may M • Tll• lollowlnt P9FIOftl are clolno s..,.rlor Court at •llY time •IC.t llrst ,....,, .. ,lf.,..y,,,.,.y"9tlledontlme. IT IS FUllTHall OllOlllEOJMI e G••HO•Y Price, '07 lhl St • lel...O from l"9 O.,..ntNnt of P\.mlk butlMUat: -·bllc•tlon of, ••• ~1--·-· -1-. AVllOI v.... ..... ._...... oft ...... ~ ·---N•wpot111Hclt,CA'1Ml. Worh, Cltyof l"'IM, tnooJ .......... ,._ "' ·~ -"" --. <9'>Y ~• •--t --Tllla !Mlllllft• ll to"4utlact by • llo•d, ltvlne, Celllornla. A non· SEOUOIA HOMES, JOU S.E . m •1Llno .. 1c1..... II ........ --~ -· u .. IM'bllllled"' h "Or ..... eo.11 Delly _, •• ,..,,,..nhlp. r•fund•bl• , •• of 120.00 Wl11 ~. lrlt tol, Sult• 20l, S..te All•, CA '2707. Tiie "'°""' wlll be told on tlW U. • ...._.. • -,... IH.. ,....... Piiot" • -of..,.,., cl cul ..,..._ v S.q11ol• H-... CAllfOtlll• cor. loll-I""·--·. c .. 11 -~-•••• ·-· ................. LH .. ......_ lo I I l Or , • Mk-• F. Prk• char..., tor Meh Mt of clocunwnt1 . • .., ..,,.,. --,...., • -" --I 11 pr ntacl n lie all9' County, Tiiis tla'*'-1 wu. 111.0 wllll Ille Pl•n• -~111••tlon1 w111 ---"~ _..iion, ml S.E. •rlttol, Sarll• An•. part tracllt, ti. lwmt of well cr•lt to , ... ,... ...... C.llforN•, once a -tor tout wc-....---,,_,_ Cellfornle '1107. be accepUD!e co 1119 ..-11onec1 -SI ust•-Mikltot et c-)o * <"''"• -"• ptlor '° .,. data at for eo.HllY Ci...tl of Oranoe County"" M9y 10< •11 addltlonal tl\ar99 of '5.00 Thi• ............ tOl\dUCtecl by. tfK• 10 Ill• Superior Court, • minimum .... ..,.._ ....... ....,..,, ... , •• 1Marl ... ontN1petlllon. 21. Itel PltOPOSAL GUAllANTEE· EKll por•tlon m°""t IO oc~y IN! offer. Ille ll•urlo lmmecll•l•m•nle, eta eat• D•t.ct. Mey-. Itel. P1'Jft7 ..,_., -• be ace-I.a DJ • ...,...H_ IMl...C•lo-1 Wlloofllle ·-'* ,,,_,., "'r-18 HCrlla, " ... y MAltTIN ... ••AMO Pul>ll_Or_ Coal! 0.lly Piiot certlll.OClf't-.i..'aclleOO<Dldllond T.., Wllll..,l, ~ .... -to be P•lcl lort!IWIUI UCIOf'I c-ilrrnatloll •l.-a, ..,.. -r ... 11'a4a a tlempo Altlrwy at Law M9y ?'I, J..,. S. 12, It, ltll JA».al In IM .,,_of 10 perc911t of IN IOIAl Thia u-t w .. riled wltll Ula ofule.DolflOfwtlltll-llbepalclDy I. TO THE Oll'ENOANT: A clvll •M*-1C-o.t,,. ---------Dlcl11<kepeyeC11eloti.C1tyofl,,,IM C9'111IY ci..11 of ~ .. 99 C:.O..nty on certlli.ct dwell -payable IO l.. C.,,,Plalnl -Ileen lllecl b'l 1"9 11i.1,.. llllte 1111 •• • 11'*'-.,., ... -· If 1111 Aprll 1. t•1 Ettel• .. -w Nyberg, -,.. 1111 _ .... -II '°" ...... def-~ ..... CA.... PUBLIC NOTICE _ .... O<CepUd, Wiii pramptly ... l'llo -l'Utl .. Nl•11ce IO be pelcl ""'°""' escrow 1111• ........ t. '°" ...... \, "'""'" JI ... ,.. 1714) ..... KUI• .,.. Corlttoct, _..,.. N Y"*'' of l"vbll...., Or-Coast Delly Piiot, within llllrty CIOI Nt'f •tt.r COf'lflrm•· aft., lllh -11 urvecl on YOY. PIAllllMd 0r.,.. Coast 0.11, PllOt Worker's ~nutloft •ns11r •nc•, M9y •• "· 22. 2', ,., Jl .... I lion Of .... ..., .,.. Cour1. llmtall, to•-Ill• wllll INI c;ourt. wrltltfl -M9y ,., J .... s. 11. "· 1•1 u1wi MOTICI INVITINO ••ot •nd lurlllall • Ull•IKIOty Falllllul ... ,.,..,._ of -r•llon •nd main-IO t!W ~t. Ulllau '°" dO 14, -------o::•llt•..::, ;:,:' ot;•; i;-1 llM Perlorrnana Bond In IN • ._ fJf 1 .... ,.0 • -.,,....,11.,.,,. of ln...,an<• your dllf..,.t wlll be enl....,. Oii -•11 V r I Hvnt· IOO perc..,. of tflt IOtal bid ptlt• Of'l4I a PUBLIC NOTICE KC•Ptellle to IN pure-• 111811 be P1k•tlonof .. P1elnllfl,-t1111cour1 PUBLIC NOTICE lntton flM<1I Wiii r«elw -IN.,.,.. L•bor •lld M91erlall Bond lrt tlM 1.., of -ctal of di of mey ..,.., • jYllgmerll -oelrtst yow !of _ ____ '°' llM ~I of ... ._ to IMtell 0 1 .. arnollflt of 100 P9rttflt of IN ~ llld ------r:;r:::.,.:: •. Buyer .... .'~; u"::... ::1:~·~ -:,,."" .:.~.=~'::i NOTIC•TOLf' T..._•u.~T.,'!..•.·1 11t.L• :~~=kc:.':.'~:.~-:.~~.=:~ "'~·GE RA TES: Al r911ulr•d 11\'.S.C· NOTICE OF DEATH OF IMIY•r'• c:Ml'IH contllllnt ot ,.cord· w9991, taking of ,,,...y.,. proper1y or • • ~ Ill• tu11neu 0111<•. Dea.., VI•• lion 117> of ttw C:.1110<111• Labor Colla, PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE I L y p I L 0 T • ¥4704 ·-·· ,,,..., ....... c .. 642·5678 MOISlS FOi SAU .._ .. """"" 1.i .... ..... ._.J. t ... o11-1 .. c• c.: ........ ., C~lhu C.0..0 l'•M Cl1er. P'-....v.ii.) HMM••• .. ••~ ,,.,,,. l....-.......... W.-Hll.lt ......... 111, .. 1 M-V••Je ~;r.::n.-:~ ~ ~I\ J~.-C.'•pnttaM .. ,.. An1 ~.,to. •. ~ "i.M.f\l.•CMM • .. ,rt\U\•Hf .............. ,.,. am mm ~'"*'"'• ,_... AP6(1.-rwAI• (Ott'•'• ........ ..,.,,. ""''-1""'-' .,,...,...,,. t •""'"'' LA• t '' .,e• : :·.~~~.t:m:1) C~-.n l~•h"'•'• Kol~, ......... , .... lfV"OfTMo ,,,....,\j hwlw-.t"•' .,,•it#•h , ...... ,.,. l'ttllf>U.e tlrM 1rlt .,,~ "910..Alft IJ.1io•f\ k•"Wt • tlr'an,. t • "•uv ~~~:~i:~w R•fW h..\ • •t M4 ........... .._ Mrel •.-1~ .. ~uh•"• .. Kut t.1lalf Y. •AlH ICNTALS ...... ~ t' "' llHfll;hecf How~ l Alw1"0Md ftclut.f' hHh1ot I nJ ll~IN1tm\f-ti,1tt'I t Oftefltf'l'UfttWft.) l n! 1'c.MAhcN""" rwr-n T~""""'"" I t1f '~··· ,,,,,. ""'PH:•nl11tf "'" ~\tn Atllll•l llllfW" \..,ii\ •• ,,,o, I "' M_, fl"°*' • ""J.9'41 l .. tlrh Ml•A•h t.w~t H11mt• lrwn-1m.r ktntt•h \ ..... '°"' M,nteh ... t•hl\ ,,, ~.(ft ti•r•10 hH" fC•nt Ofh~ R~nt•I ""'''nf'O RtM•I lnd_,.trt1I Mtn\•I ~.::.~: 'A •lttf'd .. I\ ...... n4•h BUSINESS. INYEST M£NT, FINANCE ::: ... :: ~~-:.~· 11111,.-t.ltrwftl C!ffllill , lnvt~fNIM .. •Mrd MOfWl lo I.AMI' Mt#W~ "-•nt•r llllllt•t&•IU 11>' ANNOUNCEMENTS. PUSONALS & LOST & FOUND Armo..;nctm~"'' C •' Pt.IOt V1•I '°"'""' l.ua1 a. Jownd '··~··· ....,,., •• C11i1t..• TnHI• SERVICES W ttf"t 0.t"1ot) CMPt.OYMENT & HlPAHTION """-"'"' ltt'lr~lt'W\ '''°'*•"'•"'· ...... '*'•ftlf'(i '4 •• M£1CHANOISE .... 111111 ,.., "" ... ... ·-... ..... .... '""' . ... IW '°"' ,.., ·-lt1' •Ill• ... ... ... ..... 11• ""lO t<)N ...... 1100 UIO .... :;'Z I mo "Ill u:.o llOll •l.lll ..... IUI \ -~<of . "'•"""' ....... , ........ ""'" rft• r:.<iw' .... -i~~t;: ~-· ..., ...... , ~'l"•H•r1 11W•oo ltATS & MAl1N£ fQUIPMEMf t:ik~ -. ..... • Mia• ,....,., .. -... •t t::! fA11 I ~ .. \Or "'"" "''*" =::ar.::.:~· TtANSPOITA TION 4Htt•,. ~MfM C"•" = f ... .,.°"'",. tlf!iMI M• \aJf M•M Tr .. ""1 Tr.ul !~~!~'!''i•n• AUTOMOtlU ,1 ........ 1 ~IH• llo•h• k«,,i6t~ \ fl'hu I•• ~h It••• H1•h • ~,.1 lhi\4'11 ,, ... v.._ .\U1ol.-10Jttf \"l .. W4itU.it 'a.nos. IMPOIHD ~~':U~w :=~~-~.1 .. , tilH ~ ..... , ~ ..... II••·~ .. ,,.,. ..... • ...... 1. , ... ., .. , ...... ~ "-•tm..An t.,t'tt4 i..mt.orai.1 ... .w., ... ... ....... fr-.....,.", 111.o 111;11 ,,..., .,.'""''" l'~ua•vl 11\lfntlr '41't;•wll Kulh th»'• flO\t'( ...... liilMU ~0..fu T-• '""""..,. \"'-'-''*•"tn \oh"' AUTOS, NEW t_.. .. M,al AUTOS. USED ,..,.,"' .... 0U1i. tiw~ • l •d•ll•• l'•"'·~ ( twUf l hi J\lt,'\ :-"' ... "::" ....... 1 \°M""'• .......... , ~· lmp.1r-..1 i.._,, ........... ,. .. ,,.,. .. ='.:t. .. ........ Pl>l!lllN41' Punt••' rtwft<tffntt~ v.". 'Phl'tM- For an Ad In WowJ1 Worid Cml S..e 642·'671, &t. 330 f .. -----... ---... -----~ -------- ..... -llOJD -'0.1111 -M'IO --.... ••• ... ... ... .... . .,. ,. .. -,,,,. ""'-" ...... ~ -•:.Ill \GJu -- "litH ., ... IM •M .,., rTI> .. ,. "" "141> llD ,;:;. •I.fl .. ... llM 'ff» . .,. ... ., ... ,,., ,, ... ,, ... ,.,., 'J1 .. .,,., ,, .. y;~ '11\i '4;:tiu '"" "1'"1 ,, ... _r.17 ,n., 11>.! ..... ..... W0.6 'l'lhJ ..... ~Ill ~ .,,::, Mil ~ .,,., ..... .,., -_, ... , -l ,.,,., _, •JIM il61 -· ~ H1o ....,, D 0 R 0 T H Y A N N E 1"11 ol conwy...ce -I'> of escrow Olller relllJI t9Q .. llM 111 IM c.,,,. AMERICAN TITL.E COMPANY •• Sc-Olllrl<t .. I~• St'"4, Hunt· Ille O...ner het determined tlW 99,,_ral c11er091. Seli.. wlll NY"""' .. 11era plallll. DATED J..,. JS tm duly • .,..,,.,.., Trull .. uncter Illa l,..ton eeec11. CA .,..,, up to -no preva111119 , .... of w ... 1 In Ille l<lt.all· BRADY, AKA DOROTHY t llaroe• t-lstlng of tll1t l11111ranc:e I.MA a 11 ' ,.,1-lngcleKr!OeddeadoftrustWILL lat.,tMrl2.00pm.onJ-IS,1tel•l ty In wlllclt tll• work I• to be A 8 R A D y A K A policy,,,.,...,., l•u• encl...., of escr-a.n · r...c SEL.L. AT PU•LIC AUCTION TO THE sucll 11-Ille ptci.,oul• •Ill be --performed. CGples of Mid w ... ••le C I Cool, Slimming Oil Delights! Do.RO BR D' cl•••t•• Eacrow •11•11 be opened lyGels.ikll•d HIGHEST llOOEll FOii CASH anclrNcl. aeterm....U-.,emalntolned•tllle THY A Y AND rortllwltlt •II•• confirm•tlon ol tlle o..iuty (peyable at time Of ..,. In tawlul lftlt•ll•llon Speclllull0111 er• offl<n tJtl Ille Owner tlld .,. av•ltellle OF PETITION TO AD· .... •nd IMll c-wllllNI llllr1y 1:101 ICIMllQRSANDLAKrtln _, fJf Ille United SlMftj •II rltlM, a11all-• at t .. ou ... View k-upon •*IW•I , ... COll1ra<tOI tflall MINISTER ESTATE NO. NU of IN OM• of confirmation of ltlllVl~ ... ·~~tt'~ ~141•~11~ .. c~'_!MclTr·~ OlllrlCI •11aln•u Office, 16'40 e -l•toPYtlluiclCIOCll"Mtll elHC;ll A 10ltl4 Mle S.llH -II ""11lJll lloiyer • , .. ,.. ----.,. v• --"'..._.,"' -.., St,..t, Hw!U"lllOI> llHcll. CA f21.0. I<* site Tlte Contracto< Mid any -. • ctarcl C.llfoml• Und lllle AUOCl•tlon • 11111 , ....... , .. proper1y ,.,...,.....,_,.lied: TIW DISTRICT ·~ ... rlgllt to c-lla<IClf' -him ...... NY"°' Int T 0 a I I h e I r s • "°'''' PullMI-Or ... Coast Delly Piiot T II us T 0 II • J E Ff II E y w rt'9<1 .. , or ... DICh., IO ......... y than ,,,. _If ... ,.. ..... 11,,. ·-of beneficiaries, cred itors Tiie -slonad ,_,,,.. 11te •leht M9ytt,J .... s, 12, "· 1., u1 ... ; ~~!_..SOH-~,.~. uY L JAMESON, ,,,..,.,.,,t ... or 1.......,.111i.. 111 .,, ...... 10 •11 _..,._9"'1Plo't'9<1 t .. .,.. and contl,.._nt creditors of to ••lvM toacteOt •11Y-. ·--... Diel• or In u. l*tdlno .. acirtion of,,. c.oritract. ·....-DATED Mey 1', ttel •fNEl'ICIAllY CALIFOllNIA TIM DISTRICT llM ClllCel-trom PlllOJECT ADMINISTRATION; All Dorothy Anne Brady, aka 1tNr1oti.HrbereHo11ma11 •us1NESS l'INAHC•AL, 1Hc .. • tlM D•...:t•.,..,. ~of 1 ... 11.,. .. ._ ,..1 .. 1,,. '° W• ll'OI«' prtor LIB A Dorothy A . Brady aka Ac1m11111tr•t•h•ottti. PUBLIC NOTICE c .111orn1a,.,,_a11on. oua:1r1a111 .. •1onsww.....,.1pr•vall· ,01 ... _1119 of111c1ss11ell bedlr.ctec1 Dorothy Brad 'and E.iec.of Racorc111c1~11·'*••111-1111 ra1e•-•m•-1111tw1oe•11·to1 ... o111<aofNProiac1~ y l'Mt.nW.NYllerV llr. NO. 21MOI l11Dooll UJft, ~ ''°' h In wlllcll lltla •orll 11 to I>• Atlellllon. Jof111 OIF-. te.__ per sons who may be Oece...ct • NOTICIOf'INTINDIDT•ANlf'I• .. Offklel Raconn Ill -Offko of ... ""°'"'",.., N<ll er.it ... ,,,.. Of ,,, •• »ti) ---,-- o therwise Interested In the Hwwlb,•-NOTIC• II HC!lll•V GIVEN lllet lltcor-ofOr ..... Cwnly; NlcldeH -km .. ,...., to ... c:..-llW ,.,_ OWN ER'S ltlGHTS llESERlllO. wlll •nd/orestate: Mace>...ca,_... R•ml10IMl!l,wi-tM1a1,,.......,eu of tru11 -.cr1-. , ... t011ow1no PF• trKt. "'""rat•.,.°" Ill• •t.,,. T ... 0w .... ,..,,,...1i.r1911itore1oc1 A ,..titian .. _, been filed AA!!!!!.~ .. ~l_C..Ww .a.. I• IS7' N .. ,.,, .. u1everc1. Cotta "rty: District Office et lttC •St,...., Hunt .,., o• •II bid&. lo w•I,,. •nY lnform•ll· ""' ·~ ·--·· ... Me .. ,Clllforllie,lf'lttndltetr.,...,tit Tiie land r •l•rr•cl to In 1111• lftQt9"11NCll,c.lltornel t21M1. tylnabkl,-IOtnak••••ntl lntlW by Margare t Anne Brady we N._t c-on... Olne9r o. SI,,...., ..._ llullMU N-..,.,en tee •• .i1uetec1 "' , ... s.... of m•v be.....,,... on ,_.. A copy of 1111.,.,1 of.,. Owner and Martha Ann Don ltllto .... clrna •• c:/O Wlllleln c. Hlt<llt«ll., A Callfornl•, '-"'' .. ~ane-.... ·-, .......... be --•1 -DATED/My 11, : .. , ovan ......,, .... ~.... .. ...... 1 .... 1 Corpor•tlOll, 116S I . des<rllleclulol-.. •"•· CITYOFlllVINE In the SUperlor Court of m 417...., ' c:.MI H.......,, s..ite •. c:.r-_. f'A•CEL 1. unn 1, •• ~ • ..., TN ,.._.,.. tclteclul• o1 -d...,_ Pv1>1i.-0r...., CN•t Dolly "9•ot. Orange county requesting f'ul>ll-Or-Coelt Dolly Pllol, ,,,..,, c.i ........ '216U, tlw lollowlftt ctn<rlbad ... .,.. Coftdomlrli..m PIM ............... -• _.. ..... , ,,,.., ,. J .... ) Itel 2"5-al that H -t A. 8 d llllaytJ n" ltll ~I P-'V-lo<MM .. IP•,......,, r-ecardeclonMeyJI, tf7'111boOll IJffJ, ...... Ill""""· Tiie r ... '°' llollela • • nnergare "'-nne ra Y • • • ...,,.,,.,ct, Caal• """•· ce11rona1a ...., ... to 01 111<1u,1.,.. Offk1e1 Ml4I _..... ..-.,..11 ... .i 1oa ---- and Martha Ann Donovan .,.,,. llK•rctsotu1ctc-.,. 11 _ _.__,, P UBLIC NOTICE ~ par':';~t::ua:e ~~sc:':~ PUBLI~C .... N.,OTI,. CE ,:~~.'=.'=.'::r"":i·,: ll~A~~:.i...~· .::.::::.-: ::.!ttttt; T~~'t:~ :-=".:'°" u::~~ ------- 1 I t f .. of tMI urt.tln DYii""' kno-•• umlftCN'I In .,,. fee ,....,., In -t• •wer...._ Met -My "*°""ec Cl'f' 4114 m n s er the estate 0 NOTICl°'TltUIT••·nAL• ltAMIS KA•o• lllSTAURAHT, .... ,_ -,,, Loi. of Trect ..,,.,., lllm, lo,..., ........ !Mn t llOTICIOl"TrtUnl•'IUL• Dorothy Anne Br•dY, aka T.L .... "'...,. .... , lec•IM .. 1576 ..._. ........ -. ~ ............. lllM In tlOOll 422, ... d •Plldrlad rat• lo •II ---T,$. Ne. IU1 Dorothy A . Brady, aka 011 J-12, net, at 10:00 e.m., C•t•MtM,c.i...,.,...nu7. .,..., 1to1 lnckdlw, Mlta111-emplo'l'ed bf 11wm 111111e HKirt•on Trwalef: llCJOO,J-•114"-....., 00 th B d ( nd t .. _ BUCKEYE REOONVl!VAl'ICE COM-TIW .,....., ol N """"'la•• llllept, r-cla of ukl c~ty. as welt tNC.Oftlrect. I On Jlin. 12, 19tl, •I 9: U •1m .. rO Y ra V U er ,,. 'ANV, a C.lllonW• c:cwperallon, at OU. tact to Section '1M af I.lie C:.lllon\I• l•rm la clMINcl NI t1w Ar11cle tfttlllM No D1c1c1er rnay wll--lllt !lid for' R E L I A 8 L I! C 0 H \I E Y A N'C,. Independent Admlnlstra· Ir •PPOllll•ct Tr1.1t1H wnd•r ,11, c.tntMtClelGode. "0.11"11'-" •ti. OKleretlon., •period of Ullrty c•> .,,..,., •ft•r Ille co11PORAT10N, •• dw•y •ppolllt.acl tlon of Estates Act). The pun .. a nt • o..ct of Trwt. dated Jiiiy w 1tiw11 -fM" 1-.t ,..i, M f« cev•n•M•, CeMltlolla •no llHtrlc· ctac. .. t ,.,. t1w ~ ol 1118. Tru1IM uncter -pun.,.11110 ~of petition Is set for hearlnn JI,'"°·,..,,...., A ....... II,, .. " •• kllaWn •• tll• Wllcl.,•ltn•cl tltll• r---In ..... 1"'7. 118911 '"· O.W"""89oercl '"""· claled OecenMler II, tm~ ... ln • llltt Na. IS1Jt 111 11ee11 "'" .,... tr•n••-. Mr· •"" Mn. ltaml• Offklel ~ (.,. "O.CIMetloft") Mallwell s..IM-cor-l>«ambtr u , 1m, ••Inst No. Dept. No. 3 •t 700 Civic 1n4,1J10fflc1e1'•"*"""'"1119.;,Qof 0111•111, tt-r..-. 11e ... .,....,.. wa11y••••••11t1Nrwto. cterti 20201, 111'**1)0!,.,... ••. 01- Center Drive, West, In the Ill• ce1111ty ••urhr 01 O••no• ..,_, NIMM _ ... ..._ .,CCI" TH.l•lfl.c>M .,, .,,, .... .....,.,,_Drane-ee.1t °"''' Pliot, 11c1e1 A--. in IN olflca of 111e Covn· c lty of Santa Ana cownty, Stet• of c:.111or111e, WILL TM,,.....,..., W11111a ,_ "'1,,.re••.,,. etlMr llyctrec•r...,,,, M9yH,J-s.1•1 ,_., ,1y.1R11~-.... of0r...,.coun1y,St4f-•I C •llfornla on June 2A 1981 llLL AT •u•L•C AUCTION TC ...... m.-....... J-"' •• , .............. -feet, .. _ tM - t 9•30AM. • HIGHfST 8100fll 1'011 CAS" tMafflaf/l,~clattntfcw..._......, ri911taf--111U""1y M~I" WILLSELLATPU9LIC AUCTION • • • ( .. , ...... 11"'9 " Wl9 Ill ........ fllff Wltll: Wiii'-c. MttcllC•• ..... tNJNftb.c--.' PUBLIC NOTICE TO HIGHEST •100111 FOii CASH IF YOU OBJECT to the _, ., .. u..1c.c sc.t .. 1 • ttw Atl•tllty at Lew., l'6S I . '"'' ~A•C•L a: ._..." ut fetal lpay•D•• at time of .. ,. In 1.w1u1 nrantl,.,, of the DAtitl On ltMll ~ e11tra11ce of IN GOf'ltlftM. HltflWeJ, MW ... OW-dot M9r, 111 IM_..,. alltltltcl "c:.rtelll f-moner fJf Ille Ulllled StelM) •I I ... • ,._ .,.-, tel H-~ llYl141"9 toutee .. Q4 C:lll..,.. "'2t. Tiie latt ..._ IW Ill-....ttts few Owlwn'' tN ""-' Sit4> 1111714 lrOlll •"lret1a to Ille Old°''"" C-· you Should either appe•r a. l..c:llct, AMMlm. CalllOf'lll•, •II Mt clellM.., ...... tM ,,.,...,_I• tlt!Mnl -'"',__, .. of .,. NOTIC• °" PILI ... 0 1" IV c ... ..-. IOI( ..... .,, Sent• All• at the ~ring and state , ...... tltte .... 1111.-t C-eyM IO J-... ,.,. Artkl• ........ ._.... of .... • Al'PUCATION llO• 9111d., .... _ Sy~ ,,,. .. - bj ti fl I aM -MIO Dot It~ .. let Deed Of OATIO: IMJ •• 1"1 O.Cle~ • PllUlllluaoll TO l•TAaLlltt lroactw•y, S..to Alla, CAlll0<11la, •II yo~r o ec ons or • Trwt 1,,.,. ......,ty 11-..., 111 ..., ..,... •• ......, •l'•lll,,......,,1,,,IM,CellNtfli• ANAMC:Mor••~• r10111, t111e -1111eres1 c.,,.,.~ co wrttten obJectlons w ith the Collnty _, suu c1etcr'MIN .. 1 .,......,... .. 111 • .,. ....,_.,. -.,.. T111a •• • 1n1wM tN ,...it lftM, -•nct -IWfct. by 11-... d o..c1 of court before the hearing. L.ottotOf TrJ1Ct ....... 111111ec1tv ,._.,.,...()-.,. ce.tto.11y f'liet. ,..,.., ... , • .,_....,, • .-wcw,.,.., , Sac:tllft w .1•.,, tN Rulel end Tr111i 111 111e property .. ..,.,.,. In s.eld Your •ppearance may be • ,,,,,,., ee..Mr ., 0r.,..., .... " *' n , 11a1 ...,...,, .. ••-.... ita ~~-« c:er· • ..,,....,_ .. 1t1e ,._.., s. ... 1,,.. cov111., -St.a•• clM<rllled u : In ...,.._.. or by your •t C•llltrllla, ...... -rte...., In ----------lrec:tnfta)," n.-....klwy....., ... llflcl .._ ~-. Coest ,....., .. S.v· Loi "of Trocl ,,, •• In tlte City of -·-· .. • • ..., ~.,..." 1o • lflelwtf,.. Of PUBUC NOTlCE O...•n-.-,.,.,,__.•lw'M<llW •ne• '"" .._ ASMCIMltll, ass Soutll 1rv111e, County of or.,,oe, Stat•., torney. Mite .. ,_~. 111 IN offtu .. ...,.,,n 111 .._ ...... t..,_. sac:wrM Hiii 11 .. LAe ...,,......_ c.111wn1a,.,.. c.111orn1a, as INWll on•,,... tt1ereo1 IF YOU ARE A 111ec_.,,._.,_...,.Ceunt.,. ------------•!Mr...,,.......,•-'*'.,..*" filed a11..,.,.kAltlefl wlUI IN l'~a• r.cor-111a-,..,,....__._,,, CREDITOR or • cont· •xecutaoav: rtoalt•TILOON Plc:T1Tlout•lltfNIU .. .., .... -......... "'""" H•m• L••fl ••11k eurcl lor MltullanHul Mapa,,.,.,,. 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CAtrltt • ....... ._,CA_ ... _air .... ..._ , ... ,. .. ...,.., .._, .... ~ 11~...... ll ,..= 0rentt eoe.. I~ forquldl =z=--:=:.:::::n.._.._._. ::0::,-''·IUrMw. CMlfY tet ' May ~..111 ,.....:::.;;;;.'&:..Dllllt,...; • C•lltlllft. ~ ... ,,_-,._~....,.•= ,......ar-.c.w.o.iw,.._ ..... -..~c...o.ttv ;,,.,... .. ,' 6.,._...l .................. .....\--_______ ...;... __ ..... r -,_, *'"·--a..• ...,.. ,,,.., . ...," ... -..... --· 5 __. 6 7 9239 • SIZES~ Bell this usu.I O! wear lret Punted Pattetn 9239 Woftl. en s S11ts 111 34 (38·111Cll bull with 40 inch htp), 36 (CO bust. 0 hip). 38 (42 bllSI. 44 hip). 40 (44 bust, 46 hip). 42 (46 b11st. U 111p). '' (41 b11st SO hip), 4& (50 bu11. b2 hip~ 48 (S2 bust. ~ i11p) • r ... 111111 CllST Dally Piiat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 FEATURES OBITUARIES Mesans eye routing 8y JERRY Cl.AUSt;N Of .... o.lly ........ public meeting called by Cattrans to air the newest ahgn· ment propos al for Route 55 through the heart of downtown Costa Mesa raised about as many questions Thursday as it answered. Many ol the 200 Costa Mesans attending the session at City Hall also questioned plans for rerouting busy Route 55 traffic along residential streets for up to four years ir still another alignment through the area is selected ----------- One crlt1c of local govern· me nt, Sid Soffer. urged citizens to petition the City Council for an election t o dete rmine whether Costa Mesans even want a freeway-like expansion or Newport Boulevard in their city He challenged state stallstics indicating that by 1995 an estimated 110,000 to 125,000 vehicles will use Roule 55 daily between Newport Beach and the Costa Mesa Freeway now nar· rowing into Newport Boulevard near Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. Bruce Mattern. Costa Me11a public services director. noted Thursday that between 48.000 and 80,000 vehicles already ply the busy route daily. Ile s aid capacity is 80.000veh1cles a day The Cost a Mesa Freeway originally was planned to link up with Pacific Coast Freeway in N~wport Beach P lani. for the coastal freeway were abandoned in the mid 1970s when Newporters obJected to it al about the same time state highway runds began to dwindle The Co:,ta Mesa Freeway was never carried :,outh or Bristol 84 86 Almost half of American families are growing vegetables ... 87 0 D freeway tneet • ID Street along Newport Boulevard despite state acquisttion of right of.way to Bay Street. Pressure from local officials and state legislat:brs resurrected the Route SS study two years ago. Nine proposaJs for cutting through Costa Mesa subsequent- ly have been narrowed to five . The fifth plan, suggested by c1 Ly officials, is called the Easter ly Alignment and would carry a freeway-like extension south along existing Newport Boulevard. At 19th Street. the lanes would s wing east o f New p ort Boulevard to run in a ditch or as a viaduct JUSl behind the bus1 nesses fronting the boulevard's east side The Easterly Alignment would rejoin Newport Boulevard al about 17th Street Area resident:, que:,t1oned what would happen to the value of pr opert y l eft nex t to a freeway m that area Court Burrell , Caltrans route IHOJCCl manager. called the newest alignment proposal a '"t•om promise " The Easterl) Alignment, Bur rell c:-timall'd. <·ould rnst up to $84 milhon <1nd could rt•move 81 homes and 49 IJusint'so;e:-. The approvt'd frt'eWdY alignment would 1·0:-.t about $164 million a11d rc·nH>\l up to 607 homt•s anti l:Jli hu.,;int'sl>l'S Tht• :'\c\-\ ,,.irt Bou It•\ <•1CI route would cost S7 I 111illu111 ;it most. d1i.pl<1emg about 10111 h1111w:, Jnd '>t•ven bus1nt•s'>t''> Hul lht• prupo..,t·d lou1 ''ear eonstruct1on pt•11ml <1lcm~ the Newpo1I l!oule\ard rvutt'. do" nto" n hu..,1m·ss "" nt r'> t•on lt'nd, "<Hild nun llH·1r bus1n1•ss Workmen pull radioactive sand from San Onofre Station beach .............. .,...,......_ Area noted in upper left hand corner is where radioactive sand was difcovered on beach in front of San Onofre Nuclear Generating Statton. NB fugitive pimp recaptured in north A Newport Beach m an facing a three·year state prison term for pimping and pandering has bee n r ecaptured in a small Northern California town after all egedly jumping bail in Orange County two months ago. Deputy District Attorney Manuel Ramirez. who prosecut· ed Tommy Liotta. said Thurs d ay the defendant was taken in· to custody by Grass Valley police who discovered there was a warrant out for his arrest Police arrested Liotta last week after an in vestigation deal· ing with an abandoned car reg- istered to him. The defendant had been found guilty in Orange County Superior Court in January of two counts each or pimping and pan dering. Liotta was operator or Tom· my 's or Newport. an escort service Before fleeing. the Newport m an had been ientenced by Superior Court Judge Frank Domenichin1 to three years in state prison But the judge allowed Liotta to remain free on $10,000 bail while he appealed his con viction. Ramirez had sought to revoke bail in March when he said he obtained information that Liotta was still operating a n escort service against the judge's or de rs The defendant railed to appear for a hearing on the matter and he was believed to have fled to Northern California or Mexico Ramirez said Liotta. who is back rn Orange County J ail, will go before a superior j udge Mon day in Santa Ana • Workmen are removing about :100 cubic yards or sand in front of the San Onofre Nuclea r Gt•nerating Station a fte r low level radioact1v1ty was dis covered on the beach A company spokesman said the radioactivity was discovered around an abandoned yard pipe, which had been sealed orf five years ago. Dave Barron, a spokesman for the Southern California Edison Co which owns about 80 percent of the plant three miles south of San Cl(•mente. said the level of radiation in the sand is "very. NB suspect held again on drug rap A 28·year-old Newport Beach man. recently released from Orange County J<til where he'd ser ved time for operating an 11 legal drug laboratory, was ar- rested this week on drug-selling charges. police report Aaron Burcham and 24 year old Vicki Greaney were arrested W('dnesday at 7406 W. Ocean· front on charges of possession of cocaine for sale and operation or a drug laboratory The lab. police claim. was be ing used to m anufacture am· phelamincs Detectives said t hey seized S25.000 worth or drugs as well as six guns. a :,tolen television set and $8,000 in r ash Burcham . Ne" port Reach narcotic detectives claim. was arrested at the same address m 1978 on charges or operating a l11 boratory for processing co ca1ne. Authorities said the Newport man served time at Chino State Prison on a separate conviction s tem ming from an arrest in Costa Mesa on drug selling c harges and later served time at the county jail on the Newport char~es. Ball for Burcham and Ms Greaney has been set at Sl0,000 each Beglininnocentofwiferape Jury acquits him in first such case in Orange County By DAVID KVTZMANN _,. , ... .,.,, ........... Nine months and two trials after first being accused of rap· lng his wile, John Beglin stood outside a Santa Ana courtroom Thursday a free man. Only minutes earlier. an Orange County Superior Court Jury had acquitted Bealin, an automobile restorer, or charses that he forelbly raped hls spouse In the bedroom of the couple's Cypress home last September. It was Orange County's firat aucb case and believed to be on· ly the 1econd ln California slnce puaace more than a year ago of a 1pou11l rape law by the Legislature. Melt'I HiP. aitagen pan~~ conoert · Coata M•H Hiib School'• ebolr aad Madrt11l1 1tn&1n1 ,.,,.., WUJ pawent their POPI '81 coaeert June 2, 3 aDd • at 7 p.bl. ...... ._,. l.yc:eum. Tlek•. available at th• door, are IUD fGr ichaJta and • for ••••••· a&lcl Id Brabam1.' i&fffl.Clt'. f'• fwther lnforma- lioe, all~. "This has been a very difficult nine months," Beglin said quiet· ly as his attorney. R Stephen Hostetler of Ne wport Beach, stood nearby "I've virtually been a prisoner .. I've endured two trials and enormous legal fees (to prove my innocence)." The defendant's first trial had ended without a decision ln February when a jury reported lt was "hopelessly deadlocked" two votes shy of acqulUal -10 to 2. A unanimous verdict is neceaary in a criminal proceed· Ina. But progecutor Alphonaus C. Novick decided to push ahead with a second trial on the baals or claims by Betlln'11 wife, Paula, that her husband Ued her to a bed, took nude pboto1rapb or her and then sexually as1ault· ed her. The defendant had malnt&laed ln both h11 trials that tus 1aJ manaaer wlte consented to bav· lnl tox with hlm that evemn1 even thouah the two wtre about to Hparete ud divorce. Alter thetrheauaJ acUvlly, he luttflfd bia Mfe \OJd him, "~ou kqow, uua doean't ch•n•• • tbln1. I'm tUU '°'1'1 to ftl• foe cUvo~." Beglln had testified he was surprised by the statem ent and r etorted that he would St'ek alimony payments because she earned more money than he did. The threat angered bis wile. he said. and she stormed from their house yelling. "I 'll see you in hell." Asked Thursday how he felt toward his former spouse, with whom he is still locked In divorce proceedings, Bettin responded that he was "bitter." Talk sl~e~ for singlt\s. Dr. Pt(JU' Shows or the UC Irvine Student Health Service, will •peak at tonl1ht'1 Q>tta Meu meetJnt of Wt Care, a aupportivt sinala 1roup. She will talk on ''Your Mind Can Mue You Well" at tM 7:30 p m. 1ts1lon at Meu Verde United Met.hodl1t Church, ltol W. Baker St. We Care la • oon·proftt, nan· tee anan aroup tor tM ,.,at· ect, (ttvoffi!d, wtcloWH and fw ose Who have never married. low and considered m s1gnifi cant " But, he said, the company 1s removing about 300 yards or the s tuff, transporting 1t lo a li censed disposal site in the state of Washington He said regulations reqUJre the sand be removed "You can 't just leave 1t there:· Barron said The radioactivity was d is- covered on the beach or Unit One a t the sprawling nuclear gener ating station. Barron said the area is "occasionally used by fishermen." adding surfers prefer an area about a half mile north of the abandoned pipe. Th e pipe o nc e ear ri e d washdown water and ram water from the plant to the beach. Bar· ron said it was abandoned and sealed off about fi ve year s ago when plant oper ators began col- lecting excess water m a sump and pumping it out to sea. Company orficials s tressed that no radiation above·a normal background level was detected on the sand surface. and "low- level " radiation counts were round about four feet below the :,urface during excavation. Background radiation at :,ea Judge eyes artistic questions on coast ls lavender legal 1n Laguna? Who ha:, the power over the red towers in Costa Mesa ? Those are questions that Orange County Superior CQuri Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald is pondering Fitzgerald is putting a lot of miles on his car while preparing to iss ue rulings on the colorful cases. ln the Laguna Beach case. the judge will decide if the city has the right to o r d e r Dru sc illa Ty se n to mut e the lavender de· cor on he r S trawbe r ry Shortcake boutique. l'ITXOlllALD The judge says lie 'll drive by the Coast Hi ghway business before issuing a ruling Laguna Beach filed s uit against Miss Tysen after she re· slsled the e fforts o r her neighbors and the c 1 ty ., Design Review Board to change the col· or of her shop. The judge also must rule in a lawsuit filed by the City or Costa Mesa against metal shop owner and sculptor Ali Roushan. who is hatlling to keep three tall sculptures he erected in front or hi s Superior Avenue shop Fitzgerald says he's already driven by Roushan's red metal sculptures in preparation for is· suing a ruling. He 1s one or three la" and mo- tion judges who a re assigned such cases The fact that he re ceived both colorful cases is the result of impartial scheduling on the court calendar. according lo Lou Rrizzolara. assistant court executive offi cer OC budget panel raps jury remarks Those responsible for the preparation or Orange County government's budget aren't im· pressed with a county Grand Jury report assailing their way of do· ing business . -rne jury, which leaves office July t. issued a report Thursday 1n which it r ecommend ed. among other things. that countr officials develop "a more bus1· ness -oriented approac h to budgeting." Proposition 13. the property tax· cutting measure approved by voters in 1978. on the countv budget. · It was suggested rn the report that county budget pla nners have taken too narrow a view or Proposition 13 , believing that less and less property tax rev· enue would be available to the county when. in fact. just the op· posite will be true. The jury said that within a few short years the county will be reaping the same amount or property lax revenue as it did before the proposition was passed. level 1s ahout IOO mill111•111s 1>er vear. Uarron '>..tid llc said ht> did not have ,1 µrec1sl' reading for the afforkd a1 ca But health phySl('lsls ror lhe plant said a µerson "ould haH· to eat 200 1}ound:, of the .1Hcl'tt•d sand to surpas.., o;afel) 11 mil.., for radioactl\e mJtenals The company has alrt:;,id~ re moved about 100 cut>1r ~ ard'> or the sand , and <'XPl'l'l s to tran:,port anolht•1 2110 euh1t· yards lo the disposal -,1at1on next week Barron ... aid thl· an·a ,.., µ11slecl a nd markecl "Off l.un1h" 1111111 the lr;ini.for 1.., l·umpll'll'd CoWlty bus fares going up Monday The cost lo rifle mH' of Orange County's puhlr<· buses "ill ~o up Monday, A ride on llrlt' or lhl' Orange Count \' Transit D1slril'l'.s 52 local bus ro11tc•s will increase from 50 <'ents to 75 cent'> during "eekdCJV rush hour.., amt no ('Cnts during slat·k llffil'" middays. evenings CJnd wcckt•nds Transfers " 111 rl'ma1n free Senior t1l1ll·n farl's wtll ht• 50 cents durrng hus ' l'Ommutmg hours and 10 et>11ls other" 1se. lland1rapped rnll·r.., "111 pa) 75 cenll> during peak hours CJn<I '.\5 C'ents al slack timl's The rush hours arl' Ii to !! 30 ;i m and :1 311 to 6 p rn during lht• first l\H1 \H•t·ks 111 .lune Thc.•n . wh en OCTD officials makl' internal shirts the hours will bl' C'Xtt•ndl·rl a hair hour each pt'nod Thus. as or .l un1· 14 . tht: limes ror high<'r fal'l's "ill ht• 0 to 9 a m ancl 3 to Ii p m Monthl) µasses also will c•o:,t more Ix-ginning :\1onda\ \local pass will go up from Sl7 50 to S2 l 50 Pass1•s for ... tudents. sentors and tht· hand1capp~d will cost $18 Riders" ho take da1lv express routes will p,1)' SI 50 instead of SI 25 p<'r ndl' Tht'll J>J'>St•s \\ 111 go up from S<1:1 75 Io S51l 50 Students seeking low-cost housing Stude n ts enrolled in UC Irvine's English as u Second Language Program offered by the University Extens ion are seektng low pnct>cl hou:.rng Anyone interested m offering affordable room a nd board is urged to call Ms RaJ at 833-5991. The 19·member panel said budget planners and members o f the county Board or Supervisors should b ase the county budget on availabl!! in- come instead or coming up with a lont list or expenditures and then trying to find the money to pay for them. Mnla Bastanchury. a county Admlnistrallve Office bud1et analyst. expressed surprise at that recommendation. "That's exactly what we do," s he said ln rererence lo the jury's idea of ln come-bued budgetinj. "Leaally. we mUJt have a balanced bud.cet." Publisher Sutton seUs three papers The jury's report tecbnJcally Wa.J an analyals of the effects of Speakers available on retarded needs Newport Beach publisher Herb Sutton today announced the sale of all thret-Sutton News Group-owned weeklies. The Newport Ensi1n. Jrvlne Today and the Costa Meaa News were sold to a Culver City baaed pubH1hln1 firm which owns 10 Loa A.olelet ar ~ weeklla. ac- cordlnc to Sutt<>n. Dttallt ol the Hie to Coast Medla News lnc. were not made publlc. • "lt .,., • vuy dlfficun. c:h:· tl1lon to make," aald Sutton. "8ul we dttkttd it waa bee\ to conceat.rate our 1Mriie1 aa tbe other .,... of°""' bUIJn-.:• hU. Mid dM DtftJ)apen •c:· <'oua\td for tDlr s "9ff•t ot Sut· ton lnduttrt..,evenues •nent· ed by Ampress Printing, Targel Marke ting Commu01cations, a maillng operation and the Pen nyaaver from El Toro to San Diego. / The 52-ye;,r old businessman bou1tbt the Newport Ensirin in 1978 ftom Arvo Haapa, wbp had published the weekly for ab0ill 3S yeara. Sutton tarted lrvl" ay and U.. Costa MHa NeW's ln lb 1prln1 ot 1978 S\lllon aaid th•t employee. paper and prinUna co u mue the newspaper industry a "toup buailMIN" to Ht tAto. • · 1 UWik we Milrneid a ICitJ uld JMUll ol h I pubU1hll\,\.; tu re. "J Ualak wo d1cl'a tot of lb at~ never b9en done bfforef I ...... www .... :ws • .. • ..... .... ..._. ............ --... -------·--.... _ ·--___ ._,..__,,... ..... ._..,,,,.._ __ _ l* Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ,it=rlday, May 29, 1981 PARDON OUR TBEIES DEPT. -Every time you gel con· vinced nothing ever changes in our Orange Coast region, guess what? Something does. The Irvine Company, our great coastal ranch of yesteryear, proved to be a cue in point this week. What. happened was, in barkening back to their heritage, certain agriculturists who remain in the company's employ went out to a ranch site east of ~ El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta- tion and started planting 246 4 (!&. acres in orange trees. r.'\ Time was, around our re· ~-~ glon, when the orange . ~as TOM MURPHINI ~ / king, that such an activity '' would have drawn notice in the · press on either the agricultural section or maybe the finance page. NO DOUBT THE NEW plantings would have been viewed as another economic step forward in Orange County's steady march into agricultural progress. Well, the new orange grove going in did indeed get press notice here in 1981. That much didn't change. But hark! You might be surprised at the kind of notice. Part of those new tree plantings, on eight acres, drew a heady protest. CERTAIN ARCHAEOLOGISTS complained publicly that the Irvine ranchers were disturbing an ancient site where it is believed the Indians had a major trading post and political center. Better grab your tweeun and .µlit, bunn. This location, the scientists asserted, dated back at least 6,000 years. Informed of the complaint, what do you suppose Irvine Company spokesmen did? Why, they apologized to the archaeologists, that's what. TERRIBLY SORRY, they said. "An unfortunate over· sight." Shouldn't have been out there with graders and planters and other citrus grove equipment, mucking around where there might be some archaeology. Well, this may give you some notion of how far the orange bas rolled downhill since the days it was king of the agricultural mountain in Orange County. It doesn't seem so many years ago when citrus was the monarch of crops in our region. You could maybe get shot for trying lo filch an orange from somebody's grove. Get caught, and you were surely due to get hauled before some steely-eyed justice of the peace at the very least. IF ONE OF OUR OLD-TIME citrus ranchers was told that he was disturbing ground that might be more important than what he was planting at the moment, you could get yourself a free ticket to the funny farm. In those days, it would be difficult to imagine what would happen to some scientific type who wanted to halt the planting or an orange grove so he could get out there and sift around with a pair of tweezers and some other delicate instruments. For sure, the archaeologists wouldn't have drawn any kind of apology. Instead, they might have needed to be pretty fleet of foot when the citrus rancher fired up his bulldozer. You ~uess it must be conceded that in a few rare in· stances, times do change. ' Who's cutest baby? Mothers ot more than 40 babies believed the "cutest" In Costa MeH have sitned up for the annual baby contest this year. The event Is scheduled for 2 p.m . June 7 at Veterans Memorial Hall, 96S W. 18th St., as a major part of the 36th annual weekend Fish Fry centered at Lions Park, t8th Street and Park Avenue. In past years, the baby contest has drawn up to 185 entries, said Darlene Maguire , chairwoman for the sponsoring Costa Mesa· Newport Harbor Lions Club's Baby Committee. Entries will be held to 125 this year, she said, and contestants will compete in two age groups. Trophies and ribbons will be offered by judges to infants in the six months to one year old category and in the 13 months to two years bracket. Awards, based on "beauty. cuteness and personality" will be pre· sented at the park's stage at 3 .JO p.m. the day or the judging, Ms . Maguire announced. Mothers who would like to e nter their children m the contests before the 5 p m ., June 4 deadline are asked to s ign up at C al 's Cam eras , Inc . 1770 Newport Blvd The annual Fish Fry raises thousands or dollars for charitable or· ganizalions each year and features such enter· tainment as the Miss Costa Mesa beauty pageant, a parade, a carnival, prize drawmgs and fish dinners. This year's three·day. weekend Fish Fr y begins Friday, June 5 Seniors can gel lax info Information on prop· erty tax and renters' assistance programs will be available to Laguna Beach senior citizens during the months or June, July and August. The meetings will be held on the second and fourth Mondays or each month beginning June 8 from 9 a.m. until noon. Meetings will be held In the City Council cham· bers, 505 Forest Ave. The service Is availa- ble on a first·come, first· served basis. Seniors are requested to bring their 1980 Income Tax form . For more In· formation, call 497·2«1. New contract gives I Oo/o SVC raise StOOents can double credits The Saddleback Community College District's 472 non· teaching employees will receive 10 percent raises betlnning July 1 under terms or a contract ap- proved by the district trustees. The board or trustees voted in favor of the pact, ne1otlated by a team of district administrators with representatives of the California School Employees M · soclation <CSEA) chapter at Sad· die back. The disaenting votea were cut by Trustees Eu1ene C. McKnltht and Robert L. Price, who had aoueht additional time to consider the term• of the con· tract. The 10 percent/ay hlke for the 302 full-tJme an 170 part-time claHlfied employees wlll cott 'the diltrlct about *775,000 dwin1 the 1811-G fbcaJ year, accordln1 to Roy N. Barletta, a11latant superintendent In cbar1e of busl· ne11. Tbe new cla11lfltd contract also provides for free start park· iDI in the lar1e park:ln1 Jot at the lower level ot lM maln cam· pus ln MlnSoll Viejo. PreYloully, .. employeea had to purcbaat parkln1 permJt1 for UO a lelnttter. BffauN tM fr• parttn1 aru is 1 10 &o i.mlnute wallr from IQID• emoloY.. wor-ltatioal, lbe 1dmfnlltraUon •INM to prondl ~r 1butOe Hl'Vlce lD UM ........ Ud ,....,. ..,. ...... .,,,...t. boun. ~·~ ot tbl COD· ---~· tM emfl.,.. Jrie•anee Pl"O- ••dare, permhUa1 "'at 11 called "optional advisory arbitration." Under the old system, the process required the employee to first t~e a grievance appeal to the Board or Trustees and then to a hearing officer if the board re· Jectedtheclaim. The new procedure allows the person with a grievance to flrtt go to a hearing officer and then to the trustees, who would then either accept or reject the find· lngs of the impartial hearing or- rtcer. The new contract for non- t each l n 1 employees also modifies the longevity 1yatem. which rewarda Joni service with salary increues after a number of years of employment. The old method provided for Increases alter ttve. aeven, 12, 17 and 22 yean of aervlet, while the new contract makea pay ralee intervals every two yean, 1tartlnJ alter the firth year of aervlce. North state tour set for student8 The Sout.b O)Ut COmm\inld11 J•wlab Ctot.r la Lapna Beach a. plminlfll a lo:ciaJ trip for hlCb 1cbool 1tudtnta In Northern Callfomla tblll summer. TIM tour lncludel vllltt to llJt colle11 ca~pua••· 811t Pran· elffo, Mair Woodl, Heam ca.. tie and lb• •tat• Capltol la Surammto. ror lilormaUon, c:all lb• :lewl1b C•Slltr at 417 • .,.,, ~ ' Beginning in September, Laeuna Beach High School 1tu· denta will be able to get a Jump on their college courses while still ln high school. Under a proaram approved this week between Saddleback Colleee and the Laguna Beach --Onifled School District, juniors and seniors may take advanced courses for credit towarch blah school graduatJon or college. The program comes on the heels of recent cutbacks lo fourth-year Spanish, c>lculu.., phy1lct and other colle1e core classes at the hllh school. •'These types of couraet are not required for entrance to the Cal State or UC 1y1tems," 1aJd BUI Barnes, dJrector of ~ea· tJonal services at the Lacuna Beach achool dhtrlct. Bamea Hid about 15 counes, lncludln1 art, antbropolol)' and environmental 1tudlea will be available to the Juniors and aenlon. . All t.be ClUHI wW be taupt at Lasuna kacb RJ1h School in the late afternoon and ••en!DP bt lnatruclOn from tbe Bed· dleback Community eou ... Dla-hict. ••Tb• PfQIJ'am ll IO beMftclaJ to Ute..,_.. Nea .. t1M1J ca eled '° ,.. •• ..,.. ......... ud tOU ... mdlt bJ ...om., .. tbtl• CGUl'MI," .......... . He 8ddld Uaat ....... ~ rwelw &bablAt cndlt at tM .... Kbool Inti beHUM tbt e.11111 Intl ..,.. wtJJ CO"l9I' • ,.., •• wof'UI of hl"9 HMG1 mat.U& la OM ........ ti ' Deity ............. Postal of/letal& say they'll make improvements to post office in Laguna Niguel that ha.I been deacribed QI "]U3t plain ugly." 'Ugly duckling' postal building due upgrading By JOHN NEEDHAM Of Tiie Deity ...... Heft U.S. postal a uthorities will be making some visual improve- ments to the two-month·old Laguna Niguel post ofrice that once was described as an "architectural abomination" by Rep. Robert E. Badham. R· Newport Beach. ln a letter to Badham and com munity representatives, postal official William McEnery said improvements will be made to the landscaping around the building. In addition. McEnery said mulli·colored roor shingles will be tinted so they blend better. He said the poor appearance of the roof was caused by improper installation of the shingles by the contractor. Work t o upgrade the ap· pearance or the post office, located at Niguel Road and Alicia Parkway. comes after numerous complaints by local residents. At a meeting with Badham and postal officials April 13, the residents said they were glad to TOPS -Sacha Hason, 8, of 157 Port Chelsea, Newport Beach, has been voted the Harbor Area Boys Club's member of the month. He's the son of Joe and Rosie Hason. have a new post office, but that the building was "just plain ugly." Residents also complained they were not notified of the building's construction until it was nearly completed. People living near lhe large, cinder block structure have complained or loud noise coming from the loading dock area late at night. In his letter, McEnery said previous to construction the de- sign or the post office was re· viewed by representatives or AV· co Community developers, former owners of the land where the post office was built. "We assumed from the guidance that we received from Avco during the design process that they were representing the concerns or the community," the letter said. It also said a request was made for notification by all com· munity organizations and local agencies for input during the de· sign stage, but no responses were forthcoming. On the complaints of noise, Mc Enery, regional director of the Postal Services' real estate and buildings department, said operational proeedures tn the loading dock area have been re· vised, which should substantial ly reduce the problem. He said additional steps are also planned, i ncluding modifications to dock loading equipment, to further reduce noise. McEnery's letter says a re· medial landscape plan has been approved to provide a better ex· terior appearance. "We would also like to note that we have improved the exist· ing landscaping by removing the unsightly growth or weeds and we have a landscape main· tenance contract to insure that it will be properly maintained in the future," the letter says. And while most or the rest· dents' concerns apparenUy will be met, It seems they will be stuck with the dark-brown color of the building. Mc Enery said though the color is darker than the earth tones or other buildings in the area. it blends well with the landscaping and is "entirely satisfactory." Mesa jeweler gets boost on facelift J .C Humphries. downtown Costa Mesa jeweler, has gajned initial approval to refurbish the front of one of several stores he owns along Newport Boulevard. The Planning Commission re- commended approval on Tuesday for the racelirting at 1809 Newport Blvd. The proposal goes next to the city's Redevelopment Agency. The agency, actually the City Council silting as a separate board, put Humphries' plan to renovate three buildings on ice for 90 days re<:ently. Agency members told Hum· phrles he would have to wait un· tit city staff members put together a downtown architec· tural control proaram before he could spent $50,000 to put a new "contemporary Mediterranean" facade oo the structures. Humphries' buildings rest next to the so·called ··Fidelity Block" purchased by the agency for eventual construction or a .,ew downtown s pecialty shopl)ing mall to be constructed by Pacific Federal Savings and Loan Association. Buildings in the blpck bordered by Harbor and Newport boulevards, P1lrk A venue and 19th Street wiJj be razed to make way ror the Spanish·style center. . Agency board members say they want to be sure the ~der buildings left in the bloc1 are compatible with the new shop· ping center in a move to ren· ovate the downtown area. Humphries, critical or the agency for holding up bu plans for reconstruction, then sub· milted plans to rejuvenate1 one or the several structute11 he owns in the area. ' Saddleback mulls plan to centralize services Saddleback Community College District trustees have endorsed the first 1tep ln a pro· posed administrative re· oraanlzation plan intended to streamline operation of the dis· trict'a two campuses. The trustees voted 6· l Tuesday in favor of a "1in1le colleee. multl·campua" district, which admlnlltraton say will provide for better uae ol collece raclllties and avoid unnece11ary duplica· Uon of services at the two c&m· pu11ltea. The nor1anJsatJon plan betnt studied would create an ad· mlnlst.raUve 1tructurt dlftereat from 1uch multl~1mpua com· munlb' coUece dlstricll u Coast or North Orance. Tb .. cUltricta have virtu.lly autonomolll campuses 'with dupllc1te admlnlatratlona at eaeblMI. • ne 111aA 1ublilltt.d to tbe W · dleMck. ~ b)' lupertnten· cleat ...-.n A. ~berdi •UC· IHh mo•I•• dlltrtct ad· mlotstratora off tbe main cam~ ID 'MJlaloD :Vlt)o. l They would move to a central location between Mission Viejo and the district's north campus In Jrvlne. Two c hief ad· ministrative position• would then be created to act as a Ualson at lt)e two 1cbools. Saddleback public information otricer Bill Schreiber said the two new po1ltiona probably would be nlled with exlltl.oJ ad· mlnl1traUve 1taff who would be a1111ned new dutlee, rather than blrlnt more penonnel. However, be aald there would be an additional ouUay of money Teen volwaleen ~ht in Dana Otficlal.s at the Dana Nlpel library are leekinC youn .. tera to perform in the third annual teea vOlunteer melodrama. Aleo nMdld are artist.a to de·· sip ~..J.. a 1ta1e crew and pro=. TM petformanc. la scb wed for JUly. a at 1 p.m. To volu:nM!et, call tbe Ubrvy at 411·5111. • • • initially to hlre 1upport 'staff such u 1ecretarfe1 f(· ad· ministrators move to an1 off· campus site. In cutin1 bJs lone dl114*iUn1 vote on the propoud flan, Trustee Larry Taylor said he la uncertain that money u ayaila· ble ln the district budaet \0 ac· commodate the admlnilttaUve chan1es. Lombardi 1aid that • bud1etary constrlinta w major 1tumbllna block the plan '1 adoptJon, but that lon1· term aavtn11 would ju the initial ouUay of funds. Tbe Impetus behind mlnl1tr1tlve reabufnt111 reapooae t.6 aoarln1 enroll Lombardi ••YI· Tb• Irvin pus bu Jr'Own from few 1,500 studenll OD openiDI 1171tomoretban1,000 tod The Saddleback dlat et'• m aln cam])m ln Mlaloa VS.Jo aervea moN than JO, 1tu· den ta. Complet.lon of Ute ne plan wt= until 1w1 1•. " 11 en by UM ttuat"' 1' ucb step of the a~i.I • • • • .. , ...,~ ................. . DRAIGI COAST Dally Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1981 FEATURES OBITUAR I ES •I 84 86 Almost half of American families are grounng vegetables ... B7 0 0 Mesans eye routing in freeway Dleet By JERRY CLAUSEN O(_Ottf, ......... " A public meeting called by Caltrans to air the newest align- ment proposal for Route 55 through the heart of downtown Costa Mesa raised about af> many queshons Thursday as it answered. Many of the 200 Costa Mesans attending the session at Ci ty Hall also questioned plans for rerouting busy Route 55 traffic along residential streets for up to four years 1f still another alignment through the area is selected. One critic ur local govern ment, Sid Sorter, urged citizens to petition the City Council for an elttction to determine whether Costa Mesans even want a freeway-like expansion of Newport Boulevard in their city. He challenged state statistics 1ndicatlng that by 1995 an estimated 110.000 to 125,000 vehicles will use Route 55 daily between Newport Beach and the Costa Mesa Freeway now nar rowing into Newport Boulevard near Bristol Street 1n Costa Mesa Hruc.•e Mattern, Costa Mesa public services director. noted Thursday that between 48,000 and 80,000 vehicles already ply the bu&> routedaily. lle10aid capacity is 80,000 vehicles a day. The l 'osta Mesa Preeway originall> v. as planned to hnk up with Pacific Coast Freeway in N1•wport Beach Plans for the coastal freeway were abandoned in the mid 1970s when Ncwporters obJected to it at about the saml' time state h1gh\H.1) funds be~an to dwindle The Costa Mt•sa Freeway was nl'Vt·r <.'iHTl(•d :.uulh of Bristol Street along Newport Boulevard despite state acquisition of righl- of·way to Bay Street Pressure from local officials and st1.1te legislators resurreclt'd the ltoute 55 study l wo years ago Nine proposals for cutting through Costa Mesa subsequent ly have been narrowed to five The r1flh plan. suggested b) Cl ty officials, 1s called the EaMer I} Alignment and v.ould carry a freeway-like extension south along. ex1st1ng Newport Boulevard At 19th Street, the lanes would sw111~ east of Newport Boulevard to 1·ui1 111 a ditch or as a viaduct just behind the busi ncsi>es fronting the boulevard's east side. The Easterly Alignment would rejoin Newport Boulevard at about 17th Street Area res idents questioned what would happen lo tht• value uf proµerly lert next to a freeway in that area Court Burrell, Caltrans roule project manager. ealll'd the nl.'west alignment proposal a "t'Omprom1se ·· The Easll'rly Alignment. Bur rell l'St1matt•d, c·ould tost UJ> to $84 m1lhon and c•ould rcmovt• ffl homes and 49 1Jus1nes ... <.•s The approved freeway ulignnwnt would <·ost about $164 million <1ncl n·mon· uµ to 607 homes and 136 busin1•sses Thl' "lit·w1.)()rl 1111111.-\'urd rout<· would <·osl S7 I mJlhon :.il most d1splating about rout h1111H's und seven husint•ss1•:- But the propos t•d four yeur eonslrul"l10n 1w11od along th<.· \;ewµ111t Hoult•\O trd rout<', dow ntuwn hus 1 n1•ss owners t•o n lt>nd w()Uld ruin lhl'll hus•nPss Workmen pull radioactive sand from San Onofre Station beach r' ... DllMJ .... "-t 99..., _ Area tioted in upper le/ t hand corn.er is where radioactive .sand was discovered on beach in front of San Ono/ re Nuclear Genetating Station ----l NB fugitive pimp recaptured in north /\ rttwport Beal'h man facing a thrte-year state prison term for p~ping and pandering has been recaptured in a small Northl!rn California town after all eged ly Jumping ball i n Orunle County two months ago Der>uty Distri ct Attorney Man~I Ramirez. who prosecut· ed Tommy Liotta. said Thurs· dav tbe defendant was taken in- t o· c qstody by Grass Valley policEI who discovered there was a wan-ant out for his arrest. Po6ce arrested Liotta last week iafter an investigation deal- ing "'9th an abandoned car reg· ister~ to him. The defendant had been found guil t y 1n Orange County Supe~or Court in January of two coun~ each of pimping and pan cf er ink Liotta was operator of Tom my's of Newport. an escort service Before fleeing, the Newport man had been sentenced by Superi9r Court Judge Frank Domenich1ni to three years in state prison. But the judge.• allowed Liotta lo remmn free on $10,000 bail while he appealed his conviction Ramirez had sought to revoke bail in March v. hen he said he obtained information that Liotta was still operating an escort ser vice against the judge·s <>r de rs The defendant failed to appear for a hearing on the matter and he was believed to have fled to Northern California or Mexico Ramirez said Liotta, who 1s back in Orang<' County Jail. will go before a superior Judge Mon day in Santa Ana • Workmt•11 arE' n:mo\•ing about 300 cubit• yards of ... and in front of lhl' San Onofre Nuclear G1•n<·rut111J,t Station after low It•\ l'I rad1t1.i1·ll\ 1t \ wa' dts t·ov1•red on thE' bt•ad1 A company ... poktsman said tht• 1 adwat'llv1t~ was diseovered around an abandoned yard pipe, which hud heen sealed orr five veurs a~o · Dun• lfarron. a '>POkesman for llw South1•rn California Edison Co \\h1eh owns about 80 percent of the plant three nules south of San Clem<.·nle. said thl' lt•vel of rad1<1tion in tht• 'and 1s "very NB suspect held again on drug .rap A 28-yeur old Newport Beach man. recently released from Orange Count) Jail where he'd served lime for operating an ii· legal drug laboratory, was ar· n•st1•d this week on drug sellinj( t•hu rges. police reµort Aaron Burcham and 24 year old Vicki Greaney were arrested Wednesday at 7406 W Ocean front on charges of possession of cocaine for sale ancl operation of a drug laboratory The lab. pullee C'laim. was be mg used to manufacture am phetam1nt•s Detectives said they scizc•d $25.000 worth of drugs as v.cll as s ix guns. a stolen teh•v1s1on '('l and $8,000 m cash Burcham. Newport Heach narcotic dete<·t1vcs claim. was arrt•s ted at the same address in 1978 on ('harges of operating a laborator~ for processing co- caine Aulhoril1es stud lhe Newport man served time al Chino Stale Prison on a separate conviction stem ming from an arn•st in Costa Mesa on drug selling charges and later served time al th<.• count~ jail on the Newport charges. Bail for Rurcham and Ms Grcane_\ has been '>Ct at Sl0.000 each Heglin innocent of wife rape Jury acquits him in first such case in Orange County By D~ VID KUTZ MANN Of uw Deify ...... M9ff • Nlr(e months and two trials after first being accused of rap- ing ~s wife, J ohn Beglin stood outside a Santa Ana courtroom Thur~•Y a free man. On,y minutes earlier. an Oranf.e County Su rior Court Jury had acquitter Bealin, an eutor:nobile restorer , ot <ebarges that tie forcibly raped his sPouse ln thl bedroom 6f the couple's Cypr bome last September. It u Orange County's first aucb ase and believed lo be on- ly lh Hcond in California since PHI e more than a year ago of a 1 usal rape law by the Lt• ature. "This has been a very difficult nine months." Be~lin said quiet- ly as his attorney, R Stephen Hostetler of Newport Beach, stood nearby "I've virtually been a prisoner .. " I've endured two trials and enormous legal fees <to prove my innocence>." The detendant's fi rst trial had ended without a decision In Februar y when a jury reported lt was "hopelessly deadlocked" two votes shy or 1cqulltal -10 to 2. A unantmou~ verd,ct is neceury in a criminal proceed· ing. But prosecutor Ah>hon1u.s C. Novick decided to push abead wllh a secood tr\al on the buis or claims by Beglin' wife, Paula, that her husband tied her to a bed, took nude photoarapha of her and then sexually uaault· ed ber. The defendant had malntall\Cd ln both h1.a trials th1t h1.t tales manaaer Ue consented to bav· int 1u with hlm that evenln• oven thou&h lbe two wer~ about to Hpar.t. and divorce. Altei tMlr: 1eicuat actMly. he lfflif'9d bis wire told hlm, ''You know, tbta dotan'l chana • thln1 l'm 1&W 1oln1 to Ole for dl.woreoe." Beglin had testified he was surprised by the statement and retorted that he would st-ek Alimony payments because ~he earned more money lb an he did. The threat a ngered his wife, he said, and s he stormed from their house yelling, "I 'll see you in hell." As ed Thursday how he felt toward his former spouse, with whom he is still locked in divort'e proceedings, Beglin responded that he was ''biller." Talk slated for singles Or. Pegzy Sbo of the UC lrvlne Student Health Service, wlll speak at tonight'• Costa Mesa me tlna o! We Care, a aupportlvc 1lnale1 croup. She will talk on "Your Mind Can Make You WeU " at the 7:30 p.m. aeuton 1t Meu Verde United Melhodllt Church, 1701 W. Beker t. We Care 11 a non·proftl1 nor\· ectarilUl 11:oup for the aeparat· ed, divorced, widow.cl and for thou *ho bav. never m1rried. low and considered ins1gn1f1 eanl " Bul. he s<.11d. the eompany 1s removing about 300 yards of the ... 1urr. trans porting 1t to a lt('ensed disposal s ite 1n the state of Washington Jle said regulations r equire the sand be removl'd .. You can·t JUSl leave it then• · Barron said The rad1oact1vtty was dis covered on lht! beach of Unit One at the sprawling nuclear generating station Barron said the <1rea is "oceas1onally used by fishermen," adding surfers prefer an area about a half mile nort h of th<.• abandoned pipe. The pipe once carried \\ ashdown water and rain water from the plant to the beach. Bar- ron said 1l was abandoned and sealed off about five years ago when plant operators began col· lecting excess water in a sump and pumping it out lo sea. Company officials stressed that no radiation above a normal background level \\as detecteci on lhe sand surface. and "low· level" radiation counts were round about four feel below the surface during excavation Background radiation at sea Judge eyes artistic • questions on coast Is lavender legal in Laguna'' Who has the power over the ' red towers in Costa Mesa., Those are questions that Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert R. Pitzgerald is pondering. Fitzgerald 1s putting a lot of miles on his car whil<' preparing to issue rulings on the colorful cases In the Laguna Ilcach case. the Judge will decide if thl' city has the right to o r d c r Dru s cilla T\S('n lO m ·ute the lavender de- cor on ht•r Stra"' bl.'rrv Shortcake boutique ll'ITZGlllALO The judge says He• II drive b\ the Coast Highway business b<'fore issuing a ruling. Laguna Beach filed s uit against Miss Tysen after she re s 1s led the efforts of h er neighbors and the city's Design Review Board to change the col or of her s hop. The Judge also must rule in a lawsuit filed by the Cit;. or Costa Mesa against metal shop owner and sculptor Ali Roushan. who is battling to keep three tall sc u I ptures he erected tn front of his Superior A' enue shop Fitzgerald says he's already driven by Roushan's red metal sculptures in preparation for 1::. s uing a ruhng. lie 1s one or thrl'c law und mo lion judges who are assigned s uch cases The fact that he r e ee1ved both colorful cases 1s the n•sult of 1mpartiul scheduling on the court calendar, according to Lou Rriuolara. assistant court exe{'Uttv<' officer OC budget panel raps jury remarks Thos<' r<'sponsible for the prepan1tion of Orange County government's budget aren't im- pressed with a county Grand Jury report assailing their way of do· ing business 'The Jury. which leaves office July 1, issued a report Thursday in wh ich it recommended, among other things. that countr officials develop "a more bus1· ness-oriented approach to budgeting.·· Proposition 13 . the property tax cutting measure approved by voters in 1978. on the count} budget. fl was suggested in the report that county budget planners have taken too narrow a view of Proposition 13. believing that less and less property lax rev- enue would be available to the county when. in facl. just the op posite will be true The jury said that within a few short years the county will be reaping the same amount of property tax revenue as it did b e fore lhe proposition was passed. levl'I 1s .ibout 1110 m1lltrt•m s pt-r vear. Barron said lie said lw did nol havt.· a prec1s(• reading for the affe«l•..'d <.1rea Rut health phys1nsls for the plant said a person would have to eat 200 pounds of lh<' affeNNI s and to surµass safel~ l1m1ts for radioactive matenals The company has already rl' moved about 100 cub1<.' 'ards of the sand , and t'XJ'l'l'ls to transport unother :mo cubtC' yards lo thl' dis posal ..,talion next week B<lrron :-aul lht.• etn·a 1.., po'>tt•cl and marked orr L1m1ts · until the transfl'1 1s n>mpll•ll'd County bus fares going up Monday The cost to ride om• of Orange County's pubhl' buses will go up Monday. A ride on rme of the Orange County Transit Di s trict's 52 local bus rout<•.., will increase from 50 cents to 75 n•nts during ~eekdav rush hours and 60 cents during s lal'k limes middays, evenings and v. eckends Transfers \\Ill remain free Senior ell1n•n far<'s will be 50 cents during busy tommut1ng hours and 10 cl.'nls other"' 1se lland1capped riders "'111 pa) 75 cents during p<.'ak hours and JS C'ents at slack times Tht.• rush hours an· 6 to >I 30 a m and 3.30 to 6 pm during the first two we1•ks in .Junt' Th e n. when OCTD off1t1als make internal shifts. the hnurs will he extendl'cl a half hour cac·h pt•riod Thus as of .lune 11. the limes for higher ran·s will be 6 to 9 a m <ind 3 to Ii p m Monthl) µas'l'S abo will cosl mort• beginning Monda\ A local pass will ~o up from $17 50 to S21 50 PassC's fM ... 1udents, sen10r::. and th1• handicapped will cost $18. Riders who take daily express routes will pa) $1.50 instead of Sl.25 per rick ThC'ir passt•s will go up from $43. 75 to S56 50 Students seeking low-cost housing Students enrol l ed in UC Irvine's Enli(lish as a Second Language Pr ogram ofrered by the University Extension are seeking low priced housing Anyone interested in offering affordable room and board is urged to call Ms RaJ al 833·5991 . The 19-member panel said budget planners and members o f the coun t y Board of Supe r visor s s hould base the county budget on av.aila ble ~n­ come, instead of coming up wtth a long list of expenditures and then trying to find the money lo pay for them. Maria Baslanchury. a county Administrative Office budget analyst, expressed surprise at that recommendation. "That's exactly what we do," she uid in reference to the jury'1 idea of inoome ·bas~d budaeting. "LegaUy, we must have a balanctd budget." Publisher Sutton seUs three papers The jury'1 rePort technically wu an anaJysi1 of the dfecta of S,,eakers available on retarded needs PubUc aw&Nnffl of the de· velopmenlllty dlubled and tbelr apeclal needr la beln1 COiter~ by apeaJttn avallable from f"almew St•t• HotpU•I ln Cotta MllL Speaker• are available for community aroup• by celllai Jean t.al'Mi, 151·5105. Newport Beach publisher Herb Sutton tod•Y announced the sate of all three Sutton News Group.owned weeklies. The Newport Ensign. Irvine Today and the Costa MHI Newt were sold to a Culver City haled pubU hln& firm wbtch owns 10 Los An1eles ar a weeklies. ac- cordina to Sutton. Dot.all• of the sale to Coast Medf a Ne Inc. were not made public. "It WU I v•r;r diCflcult de· rl1lon to make,' Hid Sutton ·•But we decided ll wu bat to concentrat. our en.rtt on th other IMM OI ~ bualHtl. h Suuon Mid the a.w1papen ac· coun~ f« Ooly 5 percent ot &it· ton lndUlt.Hes revenues 1...-.t. • . ~ .. I •••• • • .......... ~· ....... ,.. 'i'-".. • .... ,,,.ti .... L * Orange Coast OA.ILY PILOT /Friday, May 29, 1981 PARDON OUR TREES DEPT. -Every Ume you get con· vinced nothing ever changes in our Orange Coast region, guess what? Something doesi The Irvine Company, our great coastal ranch of yesteryear, proved to be a case in point this week. What happened was, in harkening back to their heritage, certain agriculturists who remain in the company's employ went out to a ranch site east of ~ El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· lion and started planting 246 ,. *'" acres in orange trees. I'-\ Time was. around our re· ~r gion. when the orange . was TOM MURPHINf -~ I' king, that s u c h an activity ~ would have drawn notice in the press on either the agricultural section or maybe the finance page. NO DOUBT THE NEW plantings would have been viewed as another economic step forward in Orange County's steady march into agricultural progress. Well, th~ new orange grove ~oin,g in did indeed get press notice here m 1981. That much didn t change. But hark! You might be surprised at the kind of notice. Part of those new tree plantings, on eight acres, drew a heady protest. CERTAIN ARCHAEOLOGISTS complained publicly that the Irvine ranchers were disturbing an ancient site where it is believed the Indians had a major trading post and politica l center . Better grab your tweezers and .split. buner This location, the scientists asserted, dated back at least 6,000 years. Informed of the complaint, what do you s uppose Irvine Co mpany spokesmen did? Why, they apologized to the archaeologists. that's what. TERRIBLY SORRY, they said. "An unfortunate over· sight." Shouldn't have been out there with graders and planters and other citrus grove equipment, mucking around where there might be some archaeology. Well, this may give you some notion of how far t he orange has roll ed downhill since the days it was king of the agricultural mountain in Orange County. It doesn't seem so many years ago when citrus was the monarch of crops in our re,l!ion . You could m aybe get shot for trying to filch an or ange from somebody's grove. Get caught , and you were surely due to get hauled before some steely·eyed justice of the peace at the very least. IF ONE OF OUR OLD· TIME citrus ranchers was told that he was disturbing ground that might be more important than what he was planting at the moment, you could get yourself a free ticket to the funny farm. In those days, it would be difficult to imagine what would happen to some scientific type who wanted to halt the planting of an orange grove so he could get out there and sift around with a pair of tweezers and some other delicate instruments. For sure. the a r chaeologists wouldn't have drawn any kind of apology. Instead. they might have needed to be pretty fleet of foot when the citrus rancher fired up his bulldozer. You guess it must be conceded that in a few rare in· stances. times do change. New contract gives IOo/o SVC raise The Saddleback Community College District's 472 non · teaching employees will receive 10 percent raises beginning July 1 under terms of a contract ap· proved by the district trustees. The board of trustees voted In favor of the pact, negotiated by a team of district administrators ' with representatives of. the California School Employees As· aoclaUon (CSEA) chapter at Sad· die back. The dissenting votes were cast by Trustees Eugene C . McKnl&ht and Robert L. Price, who had sought additional Ume to consider the terms of the con· tract. The 10 percent pay bike for the 302 full·U me and 170 !)art·time claullled employees wlll coat the dUtric:t about S775,000 durt.n1 lbe 1181-82 fllcaJ year, accordln1 to Roy N. Barletta, aa1l1tant avperintendmt ln cbar1e of bull· Dell. Tb• new clualfttd contract alao provida ror free 1talf park· ln1 ln the lar1• parktn1 tot 1t lbe lcrww level of UM m1ln cam· pua in Mlulon Viejo. PrevkNlly, employHa bad to purch1ae parkln1 permlll for $10 a Hmett.f. Became Lbe frw parkln1 area .. a 10 to 15-mlnut. wall from 1om• employ" work atatklnl, UI• adalfalitratlOD a1rMd to pron.ti retalar lbuWe ..me. 1.n · Ute mornlqt ..... .. ....... lilld .,.._. appropna&e bCM&nl. Aliollllll" · pnma~ of UM con· U'9lt .... -~-lD tH emp~ lrlH&DCI Pf'07 cedar•, permiUl•I wbat l• calle d "optional advisory arbitration.·· Under the old s ystem. the process required the employee to first take a grievance appeal to the Board of Trustees and then to a hearing officer If the board re- jected the claim. The new procedure allows the person with a grievance to flrat go to a hearing officer and lben to the trustees, who would then either accept or reject the find · ings of the Impartial hearing of· Cicer. The new contract for non· teaching e mployees also modifies the longevity system, wbtch rtwards lolli service lritb salary increases after a number of yean of employment. The old method provided for lncreues after five, ae•en, 12, 17 and 22 years of service, while the new contract makes pay ratee l~ervall ever)' two 7ean, 1t1rtln1' aft.er the fifth year of service. North state tour eet for students The South Cout Commumd• Jewllh c.nt.er ln Lal'IJI• Beadl la plannlnl a lCHlay \rip few blib school atudenu ln NorttMrn Callfonla tbil IUDHDet'. Tbl tour lnCludlli null IO llx colle11 cam,_.., 8•• Fran· tlaeo. llmr Woodi, HUnt CM· tie a•d Uae 1tat• Capltol la SaeraiiMllto. For lllifonnadoo, ull tbe Jewlab Center al ttT·llnO. Who's cutest baby? Mothers or more than 40 babies believed the "cutest" In Costa Mesa h• ve signed up for the annual baby contest this year. The event Is scheduled tor 2 p.m. June 7 at Veterans Memorial Hall, 965 W. 18th St .. as a major part of the 36th annual weekend Fish FrJ centered at Lions Park. 18th Street and Park Avenue. In past years. the baby contest has drawn up to 185 entries, said Darlen e Maguire , c:h airwoman for the s ponsoring Costa Mesa· Newport Harbor Lions Club's Baby Committee. Entries will be held to 125 this year. she said, and contestants will compe t e in two age groups Trophies and ribbons will be offered by judges lo infants in the six months to one year old category and in the 13 months to two years bracket. Awards, bas ed on .. beauty. cuteness and personality'" will be pre· sented at t he park's stage at 3·30 p.m . the day of the judging, Ms. Magufre announced. Mothers who would lak e to e nte r t h eir children an the contests before the 5 p.m .. June 4 deadline a re asked lo s ign up at C al 's C am e ras. Inc ., 1770 Newport Blvd The annual fish Fry rai ses thousand s of dollars for charitable or· g anizations each year and features such enter· t ainment as the Miss Co s ta Mesa beauty page ant, a parade, a carnival, prize drawings and rish dinners. This year's three·day- w e ek e nd fish Fry begins Friday, June 5. Seniors can get tax info Information on prop· e rty tax and renters' ass is tance programs will be available to Laguna Beach s enior citizens during the months or June. July and August. The meetings will be held on the second and fourth Mondays of each month beginning June 8 from 9 a.m. until noon. Meetings will be held in the City Council cham· bers. 505 Forest Ave. The service is availa· ble on a first·come, first· s er ved basis. Seniors are requested to bring their 1980 Income Tax form . Fo r mor e in· formation, call 497·2441. Students can double credits Beginning In September, Laguna Beach Hi gh School stu· de nts will be able to get a jump on their college courses while still In high school. Under a program npproved this week between Saddleback College and the Laguna Beach Unltled School District, juniors and seniors may take advanced courses for credit towards high school graduation or college. The prorram comes on the heels of recent cutbacks in fourth·year Spanish, calculus, phy1lcs and other college core clusea at the hl&h school. ·'These type1 or couraes are not required for entrance to the Cal State or UC systems," aald BUI Barnes, dlrector of educa· UonaJ services at the Lacuna Beach school dt.trtct. Barnet aald about 1~ cOUJ'Ml1 lnclu&ni Ut, antbrowlol)' and environmental studies will be available to the Juniors and aenion. All the CIUHI wm be taqbt at Lal'lfta Beach Hlab Schoof ln lb• Lite an.moon and ev~• b7 l.U-uctora from \be Sad· dleback Community eou.,. Dlt· triet. "The PfOIJ'811\ ii 10 beaeftdal to lb• ltlidmta .... tM1 cu eltd IO rettitve bolla Miia lebool ud collele Cndlt b7 earollbal bl u.... OOUl'MI," ....... 1.W. H• ...... ~••..u~ recet" double credit at tM..,.. 1chool lriel beca'*9 tM col .... ..... taUl'M will CO'Nr • ,.. •• worth cl. blib ecbOOI ma'41rial la ODe MftMlt«, ' . ..... -~ . "" ........... ~-.. . ... ,, . . . .. . . . . . ... . .. o.tly ,,_ ·-,_ Postal o/fi,ctaU say they'll make improvements to post office in Laguna Niguel that has been deacrib«l as "1ust plain ugly." 'Ugly duckling' postal building due upgrading By JOHN NEEDHAM Of Tiie o.lly ...... S- U .S. postal authorities will be making some visual Improve· ments to the two·month-old Laguna Niguel post office that once was described as an "architectural abomination" by Rep Robert E. Badham. R· Newport Beach. In a letter to Badham and com munily representatives, postal official William McEnery said improvements will be made to the landscaping around the building. In addition, McEnery said multi-colored roof shingles will be tinted so they blend better. He said the poor appearance of the roof was caused by improper installation of the shingles by the contractor. Work to upgrade the ap· pearance or the post office. located at Niguel Road and Alicia Parkway , comes after numerous complaints by local r esidents. At a meeting with Badham and postal officials April 13. the residents said they were glad to TOPS -Sacha Hason, 8, of 157 Port Chelsea, Newport Beach, has been voted the Harbor Area Boys Club's member of the month. He's the son of Joe and Rosie Hason. have a new post office, but that the building was "just plain ugly.·· Residents also complained they were not notified of the building's construction until it was nearly completed. People Ii ving near the large, cinder block structure have complained or loud noise coming from the loading dock area late at night. In his letter, McEnery said previous to construction the de· sign of the post office was re- viewed by representatives of Av· co Community developers, former owners of the land where the post office was built. "We assumed from the guidance that we received from Avco during the design process that they were representing the concerns of the community," the letter said. It also said a request was made for notification by all com· munity organizations and local agencies for input during the de· sign stage, but no responses were forthcoming. On the complaints or noise, McEnery, regional director or the Postal Ser vices' real estate and buildings department, aaid operational procedures in the loading dock area have been re· vised. whi ch should substantial ly reduce the problem. He said additional s(eps are al so planne d , i ncluding modifications to dock loading equipment, to further reduce noise McEnery's letter says a re· medial landscape plan has been approved to provide a better ex· terior appearance . "We would also like to note that we have improved the exist· ing landscaping by removing the unsightly growth of weeds and we have a landscape main· lenance contract to insure that it will be properly maintained in the future,·' the letter says. And while most of the res1· dents' concerns apparently will be met, it seems they will be stuck with the dark-brown rolor or the building. McEnery said though the rolor 1s darker than the earth tones of other buildings in the area. it blends well with the landscaping and is "entirely satisfactory." Mesa jeweler gets boost on facelift J .C. Humphries. downtown Costa Mesa jeweler. has gained initial approval to refurbish the front of one of several stores he owns along Newport Boulevard. The Planning Commission re· com mended approval on Tuesday for the facelifting at 1809 Newport Blvd. The proposal goes next to the city's Redevelopment Agency. The agency, actually the City Council sitting as a separate board, put Humphries' plan to renovate three buildings on ice for 90 days recently. Agency members told Hum· phries be would have to wait un· til city staff members put together a downtown architec· tural control program before he could spent $50,000 to put a new ••contemporary Mediterranean'' facade on the structures. Humphries' buildings rest next to the so-called "Fidelity Block '' purchased by the agency for eventual construction of a new downtown s pecialty shopping m a ll to be constructed by Pacific Federal Savings and Loan Association. Buildings in t h e block bordered by Harbo r ~nd Newport boulevards, Park A venue and 19th Street will be razed to make way tor the Spanish·style center. Agency board members say they want to be sure the older buildings left in the block are compatible with the new shop· ping center in a move to ren· ovate the downtown area. Humphries, critical of the agency for holding up his plans fo r reconstruction, then sub· milted plans to rejuvenate one of the several structures he owns in the area Sa ddleback mulls plan to centralize services Saddleback Co mmunity College District trustees have endorsed the first step in a pro· pose d administrative re· organization plan Intended to streamline operation of the dis· trict's two campuses. The trustees voted S·l Tuesday ln favor of a "1lD1le coUeee, multi-campus" di1trtct, which admlnlltraton H)' will provtde for t>tuer uae ol colleae f 11clUtJes and avoid UMeceuary dupUca· tlon of services at the two cam· puJ silel, The N!Ol'laniutlon plan beln1 atudltd would create an ad· mlnlltl'aUve at.ructuN dllfennt rrorn 1uch mulU·campu1 ~m· muntty coll•I• dl.atrlct.a aa Cout or North Oranse. Tb .. cilatrtctl llavt virtually autonomov1 campuata wltb duplicate admlnl1tratlon1 at HC.btMe. TM )IUd nbmttt.d to tM W · ·dl.e.ack :bwMll by ............ dnt RoMit A. Lombardi IUC· IHla movtn1 Clltt rlct ad· 1nlal1tratora off tb• ma'n umpu1 lD Mlalloa Viejo. They would move to a central location between Mi1111ion Viejo and the district's north campus in Irvine. Two c hief ad· ministr..a tive positions would then be created to act as a liaison at the two schools. Saddleback public information omcer BUI Schreiber said the two new positions probably would be ruled with exlstlna ad· mlnistratlve stair wb.o would be assigned new duties, rather than hirlng mMe personnel. However, he eald there would be an additional outlay of money Teen volunUen .aught in Dana Ofllclals 1t the Dana Nl•uel UbrarJ are aeeklnt r.oun1aters to perfonn In the th rd ann'-&al tffD vohant.eer melodrama. Alto needed are artlltl to de-· 1ICD IC!IMl"1 • t l .. e CNW ud prompt.en. Th~1 performanee lJ acbeduleet for July t2 al 7 p.m. :To •olunteer. call lb• Ubr&rY at •M·$Sl1. inltlally to hire support staff s u c h as secretar ies U ad· mlnlstrators move to an off· campus site. In cuUn1 hi.a lone disseoting vote on the proposed plan, Trustee Larry Taylor said Jte is uncertain that money la a'laila- ble ln the district bud1et t9 ac· commodate the adminiatJ'JUve chan1ea. Lombardi said that on otni bud1etary constl'alnt.s will be a m1jor 1tumblinl block t the plan'• adoption, but that OIOI· term aavlnp would Jvatift the lnltlal outlay of fund.I. The lmpetUI behind thl!:d· minlauatlve re1hulfiln1 s In responae to 1oartnc enroU ta. Lombardi says. 'lbe lrvtn~e cam· pua bu arown from few than i ,soo stud•ta on opentna in une to more than s,ooo tocli: The Saddleback dl1t ct'• maln cam..-lo Mla&Aoe aerve• more tbu IO, •tu· dent.a. Com}lletlon cl. \.be new Pl• wlll take unw .Jwy 1891, It lJ endol'Md bt' tbe uwa.M a udl atep ol t.be approYal lliftli.-11.~' .. ............................ --....------~---...,,..-------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 29, 1981 N Ea NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOTA TIOfll\ l"Cl.UOI T•AOIS OH TNI 11111111 VOlllC. MtOW&U, PACt"C PIW 10.TOH, OITllOIT AND CIN(llllHAfl UO<W lllCMANOU AMO llPOITIO IV TMI ltA\0 AHO IHUINlf Dow Jones Final DOWN 2.51 CLOSING FIGURE 991 .74 .. ... ~~" . ..i•\~ ~ ... ~ " Save money • on vacations The paradoxes beg for c-larification. The hotl'l/motel trade is holding firm ; the restaurant busine:-is is mixed but no worse than that: lruvel, though, is a djsaster. The contrasts are clear We, famed the globe over as a nation of wanderers, are relaxing and play· ing as hard us ever. But we are staying closer to home than in many years. and saving in other ways. The peak holiday months are directly ahead. Here are your rules for fu el·saving and dollar·cultlng vucations. You can't help but win with them. 1. Go early or late. Choose what's left in May or go in June or wait until September-October. Avoid the peak J uly August period. Try going south in sum· mer, north in winter. Timing alone can slash your expenses 20 percent to 40 per cent. It's "in " lo go off s easo n or shou ld l:'r season. -"-~ SYlVIA PDRTIR ~'z 2 Stagger your travel days or even hours to save 30 percent to 40 percent off "prime-time" fares. Take fullest advantage or weekend and Oy-by-njgbt air tru vel prices 3 Seek out the off beat. Avoid the newest hotel in the I a lest hot spot Pick the outskirts and often save 25 percent to 40 percent off midcity or center area places. Use thf• interstate highw ay system and frcl•ways lo bypass the main action scenes . 4 Search for the new cut·rate airlines and less fant·y resorts You will have to fl y s maller, slower planes from oul·of·the-way airports. forfeit frills, even pay for on·board food But your net savings on these ('Ut·n1te lines cun run 30 p<.'rcent to 75 percent off regular fares 5 Becoml' your own travel expert by reading travel publications Thoroughly investigate tour packages. You may not be able to book many or the most attractive tours on your own. But a travel agent can do lhe job for you at no expense Lo you 6. Look into the rapidly spreading "Bed 'N Breakfast" places They may be JUSt rooms and baths in private homes, but they can be exceedingly attractive as well as inexpensive. "B&B" organiza· lions list names of members, addresses and prices. You make arrangements directly. B& B groups range from "Urban Ventures." through which you can get rooms in hom es and apartments in Manhattan and Hrooklyn, to .. Bed & Brdkfast Hawaii." which features st•aside cottages throughout the island c·ha in. Bed & Breakfast International. at Kensington, Calif., and the Bed & Breakfast League, Princeton, N I h »vto mtomh.,.rc:: (rnm rn::ic::t tn rn::i<;f STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT UPS AND DOWNS Name I Helltrlnl pl 1 Purulnd pt > GtMKO Inc A WHllH•l pt ) M< LOVlh Sil l Ntl Honwt 1 ModMtn;h I Sl•nleyW-• t Sh•ltr 1.«Jpt 10 Al• p •. 160! 11 G•lcoCp 12 Purulnd 13 Purltn F••h 14 Ou•nu • U Wal18ut F ' 16 LLCCo<p 11 Nt•prllA• 11 Pl•n ~lfl'1 19 PS Incl A.J2pt 20 US Mom. 11 Pl!lllP$ Ind n OuqLI Ulpr p Acme Cle• ,; &f.~f~~ Namt 1 Greco• C:.O J H•J<K.C:p ) impOE P'" 4 1.1-1 CorP S M•UPlrl I t Mur1111~1 '~xr.,,t~ t Tm.CO 10 YWO Inc JI Wel1*:0 .,,,~~ 14 wor10 Al'lf IS O•ltOi pf . "~'"'"' 0 Smt11lntl 11 u llGll l: ~ow~ I,,.. 1! ~!M' i°eni1 h rrC:,~J&. }j ==CP .'."61,. ' l h ' 4-lli . " v. I ... ,., I '"" , 1:\4 • 1'4 I J~ 1-. v. ' I\\ •11 v, "'" "" ~ 1"" ..... """"' .... Pct Usi 11 A UP 10 0 Up 'I Up 9 J Up IS VP IJ Up l .J Up I 1 Up 1A Up 1J Up 7.l Up 7,1 Up •.t Up •.I VP •I Up U Up 6,4 Up •.J VP U VP U Up •.2 Up •. 1 Up U Up S.t H AMERICAN LEADERS Hl:W YOl'lK IN'J -s ... , noon Pf•at.,..,,.. ~ « U. 1~ mott ac:-1•"• A"'9nt8f' S•ocJ" ~ ........ lf.O•nQ n•t.onetl~ •I r'l'Oe t,._,, Hou01ITr 1116,000 1''4 • "" A•nQorOll 11M,400 ,,,,.. ''-::1~\~t:-:.1 ·:u~ !!: ; : 01•rk Alt 8',IOO 1111, 'It AlrE•PrM> I0,/00 I'"" •I~ AmMottnn I0,600 11•1. • t:W. rto•v~n• n.ooo 40 " ConO.f Cp 10.100 n • 1v. Al•\k• Alrl •l.,.400 1 _... • 1-'W METALS C•P,..r IS"7 <•nl• • pound, U S d4!'\llM lion• Lud :i.-a cenll • pound lift< 46''• c•nh I PoUnd. Otfl¥ered Tl• .. .on Mtl•h w .. k compotll• lb Aluml,,_.. 7•.eo <•nh f PO.ind, H v Mercury MJ~.00 per 11••- Pl•llllum Ml'I 00 lfOy O• • N y SILVER 511••• '10 &lO per lror oun<t, N•NY a H•rmo only <14111Y quot. GOLD QUOTATIONS 1.-; mo1n1no li•tno Mii H, up .o.u L•-; •Htr.-n tla1no Mlt J\, up IO )) Ptrlt . •lttrnoon ll•lllO U21.H Pr•nktun' ~It '1 ZYrltll: LAI" li••no Mii.GO 1110 Mel 00 O~td M.,uly I Htrm•• onl, Oelfv Quote "'" n, uplO n a~twwtl: on1r dol•lv quot• M1' n . I.IP toU l"t•INrtl· ""'Y llA•lv avot• l•D•lt•teo "'" 41,..,, $0 ,. ___ ------~---~ .............................. IF"' .... ----,·~·-......... ""'! .... -....... -.................... ,. ..... ""!,,. ...... !"" .............. ~ ......... ,. ................. ,1111.111&11110111111111a~s•s•o .. 1s•s1111•1111z•c••••s•1t••••211~ HI F Ora~e Coast DAIL V PILOT tprfday. May 29. 1981 C:: PUBLlC NOTICE ~ ___._._ ___ _ PUBUC NOTICB •..:-~-~;.~-D•~ _Pl!BUC NOTICB _ ruwc NOTICE ,,. PVlllJC NOTICE I 'tc'n"'°"' auet•• • .._.,._ .. -· .. Of' MUC TllMt••• cooe••CT•D llOTIU) PUM.tC ........... ,fCTtTtOUt ..,....... 6 ....... tTATIUllaw1 .. _., __ .,... ANOOf'tllTlllTl,_TO ~ n. ... ._.,_ --IN .. ,.... ...... ITAn ... ll'T TctANUla A~ •c ltOTIC8 Of' llVM.IC ..... ,... ,.,!!*le ........ .,tll ....... .., llw MAM9 STATaM&~ __ ...._. ...., ,..... ... 1'1111 ......... -It.......... ..u. _.._.. l'llCA'. YIAa ..... -·MIU "-W"9 ~--II ,._. ......... --It ...... llllll -•1. _ .. : .. •MaUCllll• MUtttelf!A&.9UMCT tM CjfY "911, 11,..... Dfhoe, c.w-.. , IJlallA CO.UT~ ~··Tl•t. KllOT ~ CHA•H• 11•v1c1. Clea. •ltW• u.c.c. NDTIC• II Mllll•V OIVIN -...... ~ ...... "'· w •• M"' ll 1... • L. c T • 0 N I c 1 Me"-j '~tl11t. _.... ... .... , .... ,C)Mll) ~-1111-111 ....... .-c,,., .-M .....,_.. .. ,..hit ... -... lll'ICIAJ.llU. lflt Allel\911'n n , a1et1-H. '"'• t M1war,., ::c:·CAMc:Mll 14wY .. ...._.,. N.tk• ii._,...., ti...,. INt •Wik Cffll<ll., U. Clt't .. H1111tlt1e10ft 4ilt'tJ_t. ........... ~ .......... c.t•....._CA.a. 4 '"'c~.,m~ ................ ~~. ,.,'w•i..OewN. tttt w. ~"k ~· ... "1'~·1.!~ .. h•.•11•11~!.!~·~·~ e..c11.••~u~f/lt11e ,,..,..lc.ltMN, c11r•••••t1•r "'· •r•w ... u1 --.,.,,,__ ..._ ......,,llNdl ....a, -..,,.. _. ---"-ClwkC...;.HwM ..... IMCll.tt._ Oeurel l'lea Alfte11•,,.e111 AfttNilftM .. C:.UMIM,CAt26it ..,,._....._,(A ... 1, ~-... ,CA ef tNt tM.tta r.i\6vr..,t IMltl...._ Nwtf7i• .M..et•-lllffllfttt Ol'•l 1•1A fir Oewlf 0 CIUll, T111i. .._. .. ~ .... y M ~ , Tlillt 11WoMeu It ~IH Illy e .. i:..---le,.._....., M ~ •-" .. Q.AlllCAL eUllOl•S, ..,_. M ......... M ......,, 9"' tlll..., el •llttllrlHf ... llt er lt•9Mll A •w""411. ....., ... ...,.._ " • w ••t" • .. w .. owt A-. 1u11e "'-· •••·..,.,...,......, telk!1'111 1c:111tt111,.,,. ... c.te -.. ,.wlllt 0wi. .,_ 2 •. H,..... #f '...._ "0", City Ill ll'VIM, Coul\t'f ef Or ... , llllOfk 1,..a .. Ille City ...... tw , ... C•"'llllUI.,_, ... 0 . ••• llot, fer Tiiie .U""'9flt WM fl""' wlUI II• Tiiis .....,... -ti .... ,.. ... TI!lt ............ t!IW wllll Ult St.v ot Callfonll-. u l .,_ .., ...... .,. IM .... _, .,,,.,....,. • ~ .. ,...,. -.. C:-h Clef' ff Or..., e-ty.., -y ~ya.rt.tlOr .. CNllY..,MAy C-ty°""•Or .... C:-t'f..,""-1 Ntl'nt•Tl'Mtt-,t!C41-.~lal 0.11.,•I ·-IMrlllt f\IMI H llltNtllllf/1~1 .. M l .lt..,_ tJ.1•1. ll,t•l. 11,1#1. Mt\lrlty~....,.,_..,. .. ..._ ..,, .. INll........ ltr"tff'IMl.wM~.....ity.-. 1'16'9 1'161tta l't6t114 •re; MA•K M.. LIVIN, $ec SK. -C-'" ti .. .,...IM!Mry ..._, .,. ..._.Ill _.. • ~ .. _.....,,,. ~Ill~ Or ..... C.... o.11, Piiat,, .......... OrMlltCIMttDlllY ,. ....... ~~=·c:: o.lty~ Stl·U ·JIU, ti Olp,.,, lol11e, tY•I~ .... C1tY ewtl't OfflQ, Mlllllt ............... •••IMlll-Mt'Ytt,-'-S, U,1', t•t i.n•1 • Mir U, ti, ... ,,_ S. ltlt IMMt ~. • • .,, CelllOflN tr114 -Mt111 tu.\ die 11M11tk '-*.,..,• ltr ~lill _..... .. ._ .... ---------PUBUC NOTICE ..::.ome;,::.=:,:-:;, ~.!:: ~:~t'= A:::.."::,::,~= ~::-== !: .:: P\JBUC NOTICE • PlJBUC NOTICE • 1 •, A•' 1 • 1 Av•" o. '• • 1 i tr .. t, u... MAI"..,_, u11r.., -·· '"'"" hit ., ..,... ,.,.. A-"" 'ICTITtout IUSlllllS 1MM1 ITATllMlllT , ............. ,., .......... ,.._ ......._ .. : HllWfilOl'T MAIH, tfl I IOlll It., G•I• MIU, CA t».21. , "•llet1 W. 0.WNll, llHJ MA,_.. Atell. S.. AN. CA ft11S. •e!Mf1 •. ~. HI E .... IL, (•le"'-'~t'MD. Tiii• llulllltN It <otlctllc:IM Illy • ...., .. ...,_.,.. "*'! " ZletMr . Tiiis ........... -llltd •ltll tile C-ly Cleftl M Ol'Mtt c.unty.,, Ml'f ..... 1. l'lle .... ,16 ... f'ubll-Or ..... c-Dally "'""' Mey t. IS. t2, 29, 1tl1 tlSWI PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTIT10UI •UMll•U llAMlllTATtMlllT TM.......,.,__, ....... ~ ...... , THI IU't AMERICAN AGENCY, U21 1'...-Ut It., l •11t• Ana, CA "101. Wllll.,,UIMlft , 01•111•. Calltofftl• IU "'''" "'"' .... llle .lftlllllt .. city • ~ ............. 1... l'ICTl110UI eu11111u •1CTtnou1 eu11NaU nu1; ALI JAVAHMA"O· UU1 AW-UlwW'\' -.... I ....., .... "-....,...,.: -.. ._ "" ........ IT .......... , llAMI ITATaMlllT Ge11eye, w-• Miii•, Ct lllor,.le A-MIM t ... """ "'-_. OrMIA.... -"'' _. TIM ........... ,.... I•_.,. l>WI-SI. Tiie ......... OelwrM ~ ....... ""te AM A-. aftvl-~I Tiie .......... --It Clelftf llUtl ....... , Totel<-ldtrtC ... tellePtkllOfl .. it .. ,.....,.., TM.,..,._ Ol!>fftl ..._.,..INlllll ........ ~doUMMlell. _ .. $TU A" T, J 11 r I'" I IE S • AS pf'OPtrly dnUI ... , In .,.._ .. , u ell ..... ,.119 INllfll l'llflll 9\!0tet ... t. o-.. 9'tn ---It OMI·• " t . CAllHIT COM, ANY, l010 IOCIATES,. O?t GltMetre, LA.-atoclllnti'ed9,lllll-S.eciwl,.,...nt-""'lleMltl,~terc ...... •outlay, fer "k '-' A. v• "'""'-· •lltMfllM ~.~~:,:::1:,.:,u . Cu .. Meu llffc0 II, CAs.~!.:. ~· "--~ OOOd wltl ~fief •1111 tlw llUMlt I• tf\f tt06.• tw tenl•r• Outr .. Cll •n1 ler•Mtk INIW(l.tt, ,_,..rat-1 •• :t '"." .... 1·1 .... 1 _ ,._,_ .,., ........ v. .... ...._..... Ct., $1),000.00. OrtWIL " Md ... C.te-.. "'-"" c-. ...... _._ . ' -· ~ .. --- lffUMI ~ .... "",._,, I I -Plff-' <M<ll. sue.• , -All .......... .,._ •1• ............... ·.'*'· ... 0 .... 111111, tor ""9'1H l9' Me, .... ,.~~ .... -~ .. I flll• ..,, t\eU • <•""o.K eel toy • Dem•ftO ...._lo lie ,....KM W c.Mfl elteftd ..W ....,,..._ -'* wrltlel lit • .....,. ..,. t..w -...._...., ff • --1 < ""' Y .,. 11 ""''_--1N,..,,. 111r•119h etuew, U1 ,150.ot. I -tf1f etel ~..,. ,.., ~ ....-ftY ~et 1ftO lnUlll .,,_ dlvlfooal GtryS.Mooww De"'•llCI -lo• r..,iec.ad 111, ... ,.,.,.,,.. tlle •11llrt 'ho1 YH t ,,..... ,._.. ....,..,,, 1e ...,....i ,_ a ..... 1Sout11tll Tiii• _..._. ., .. 111911 wllll Ille u1mptlon of u l•llng 01111 .. 11011•. t•1.ei 9ui1111t. 111erclal, "'° tt c-ici.r tl..,.Mtlve Tiii• tW""*ll w•• 111911 wllll;lle County Clertl of Or.,.. County°" Ma, 1.u,ooo.oo. 1 _ -·· s.c ... 11., A••-,uither lflform•lle11 "''' .,. .,.. tOftlt\t -..,., .. P'-" •~no CCM1nty Clerll of Or..., eo..n1, on Me 6• Hll , .. menl • UCCI l'IMllClftg St•t-1 In telMCI ,,,.... U-Otfk• ef Ille City Cieri! l•r ,,_ny llUIM •t 2a •rl9'°1 21, 1'11 "'1-l••or Of Milter, '20.GOO.OO -11141 -.JttJ. l11MI, '61JO ....... ,,. A ... NM •NI " 1'11tolltlw0 0r-. Coest D•llY Pllel, KINI of 11-10119 Ir ......... -D•ted ........... , , ....... _ ,.,"'111 .. of A ..... IPll ""4>!11Nd 0r-. Cout 0.11, Pliot, Mey e, IS, Z2, 29, 1•1 Jiu.ti num ... 1 -Oft.Sele &Mr W WIM CITY Of' .. UllTl ... TOll laAC.. Ao1111e. l!ftYltml~lel Clelarmlna Me, 29. J.-S, 11, 1', '"1 2•11_,t PVBUC NOTICE IUPl .. ICNI COU•T OP TMI ITATa DI' CAlll'OaMIA •D• TMI ~llTY or D•AllOA ........ ....,. llOTlca DP ltrTINllON TO HU. •IAL l'•Dl'l•TY AT l'alVATll SAU IE1l1te of lka"•· '1·n1U •y: AlkM M. .....,., lltll H1911lw DKleretNll - Tiie .... -1, ...... , will ... (-(lty~ J z-ellU'410ft jWfmlt ll!•l-lot PUBLIC NOTICE •ummeled•l I0,00 A.M. on Of' tlt•1 IM l'\111111.,... Or ..... OMll Dally l'llOI, •11d tentttlve Ptt<el Map S·'1·Mt JOll• dO of June, '"'· al Ille •~row May n. ttll 24'1'41. '"'MO J-OW-Y. tncorppralad, depenmenl ol PAOl'ESSIO NAL •11tllorlud •t•nl for NIUwe .. CTITIOUllUllNIH l!SCAOW SIE "VICl!S. tt21 No1111 PlJBUC NOTICE ,.,0,.11 ... , 1nc~.cec1. CJO C&A llAMa ITATaMINT T111tln A-'"'"' Oltk• Bo• llSl1l. • .. t•r11rlM•, MOOI CtO•ft Va lley Tiie '°'_."' .,.,_, .. OOlnt """ Sant• AN, c.lllornle '2711. l'•rllwey, ~ H~, fer <-I nau •• All otr.r bu•lneu n-t aftd .0. f'ICTITIOUlaUlllllll U...I -,_l'lllt ,_ eft oftlu ,.,.. 8 A" 0 CA SEC A E TA A I A cit __ .., Ille T,.n1leror wllllln llAMllTATIMlllT dOlftlnhrn Wltll e YetlatKe ID •II-• SERVICES, 1141• SYl .. nlle Cir Ille PHI Chr• yeerl 10 let u I• known TllelOllowl"9pe,.....ltdOlnQDutlM•• U.lrd tWY, -a -ul ,,..., tor a Fountain V•lle,, CA t77ot. to Ille ,,.,,,,., .. ••• S.me. H : one-lot sl#Wlwl•I .. , loctl-4 •I Ml Irena v Hyqul•t, 114M Sylvanll ~~::.,w. NYl~"G. Tiie -119• --IMI tlM con1tct.ra· OIESIONl!llS SHOWCAIE, 1,171 ••ker Stretit, In e Cl -· l!nvlron· Cir ,"°""""" Vallrt, CA t710I ~ NOTICE IS Hli"IE•v GIVEN -· llOfl for -lranJlt• of Ille .... ., ... " ... c1. ltlvd .. .....,,.,...Oft IHC:ll, CA "''""' .. t.rmlMllllOft Htt•ll•• Tiii• Mlfteta •• conduc19CI .. , •n In 5 6 7 8 Plllllp...,... tteeJI, 1511 ,...._It., .... te AN. CA '21'1. Tlllt .....,_.I• ceftd\lc-Illy eo1 ..,_ .......... PNl .. W, •oUi • and Illa h<AI.,.. It lo De paid •'"' IN _,, O.Clar...., dlvldual "*IK1 lo corllrmatlon fJlf tM .... ,,. Oeparl,.,,.nl of Ale-lie .. ,,.r_ Ted ~ 211S IMWI Verele E.. • z-n<atlllen .,.nnll ZIE•t·lot, ,,_ v Nyquist I D •ftlllled "41erl« Court, wllllln Ille COfllro1 11a1 -offO the fH --CoA•~CA'21l.Jt. tentall,,. WI# of Trtcl T-IU21. and•• Tlllt •la~ w•• filed wllll Ille 11"" ••-bf•-."" ~.itMct. tra1111.,. Tlllt """,_.I• <.eftCIUCted toy en !fl--petltlOft A•t•, fcw lloy Klier. County Clef11 of Ore1191 County on Mal'i u Admlnlstratrl• of Illa tJl•I• of Oeled Mr! 21 '"' dlvldual. •utl!Orlnd _.,. fcw Al., J, Guuln, 27, '"" . ' H•lon w. Hy.,.,.., OK .. -. w111 Mii MARK M lEV1H Tec!Howwd tt7 e .. 1 Alcllltlld, 0r.,.... * • re-•itn Tlllt l&Mlll'llllt wa lllecl •lttl 1111 Cavftt't Cleft! ef Or .... Gellllly .,.. Mey 1J,1"1. """" l'vllll.i.cl Or .... c-t O.lly Pit«, Mey u. Z2, ... J-s. '"' tt ... 1 el prlveta .... lo Ult lll9ftetl -Dell T•-•0. l-frOM A2 11 •J • c-ltloftal Ml Ill_ on Ula 1.,.,.,, -conditions AATIE BAVAHO Tiii• t1.._I wa• lllecl wltll IN • .,.. PublltMcl o..,. (:OHt Dally Pllol, A llerelM'-_._ell •14111. title .ll J .. U .. M~•'"o c ... ,.,, Clattlof Or-C-y OftMIY permit tor • !6-wnlt '9ndomlttlwrn II'• Mey 2t, J-s. 12.1t, 1w 1 2~1 ,. """"'""'"' 21 Itel l•ct wllll we rl•"<•• to ••<••d •IW ,,.._. °' Heleft W Nyl>l<1!, de Tt.....,_ ' 1'161tn ,.rMlt.., ~ .. ..,.. -te permit P UBLIC NOTICE CH Md, et IN time of Mt de•lll, a,,. Pybll"*1 Or-Coatl Dally Piiot l'"lolltMd Or-C-•1 Dally Plle4, --1119 I." Ille lroM MU>tO. eft4I A ell rl9/lt, tltle -lnt.,...I lllel Ult Mey2t '"' J4'M; ~.w-.J•-S,lt ''·'"' 2.i••i _.IOI IO.ediYlllorl, *ti.cl eit 119 and Hlale lies tcqulrecl In ~lion lo lhal ' "" • •• --• ...., 1•1 ~ I -... I ... "" 1 ...... ,..., ".,, ..,, '-· e,,. l'Ueuc llOTICI I of dee-et IN ... , ... '" Ille ,... ---vltoft......ut dlrWmlMtlOft. Na....... HOTICI lllVITIHG llDI properl' localed In Illa County ot P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE OKl•ratlon. lll!Cl!IPT 0,. PAOPOSAlS; S..lff ~::~••of C.lltornla, -••toed s A l'UC>ll< llearlftl to C:Olltlcter p,.,.._.., trill .,.,.., .. _..., u. Cll'r fllCTITIOlll •UtlttlH lot" In lloelll of !Ml N••ll0'1. •• ..,,.... IUl'•••a.t couu o• THI :~':~7:~1r.: P~f' ~klH , .. of'"''"'· OWnerfl/f.,,. Won., In.,. of. PUBUC NOTICE ..• ~.,, .. ,.MlllT per mep lllereof rec:ordeo In ~ J. "'".'°" C:OU•T 01' ITAT• o• CALll'O•lltA , •• ~. ~o1~ ~ ... ·t~o .. nty fke of ... CJty Clerk, located., 17200 L -"' COUNT'tOl'O"Attoa ~•·--,_ ""'"'"°"~' -coun-Jem.,.rM lloed, ,,.,,,.., C•llfornla Tiie ... 1ow1 ... --•• doing bull· ~ 11 of Mltull-• ~. in -PO• TNI COUllT't Ofl o•AllOI " .,.. •• wmlin h city'• IPM•• °' ..... -11· .. ~.,, 00 J 10 I MUH. oHlu ol IN c-.1, Recorder ol , .. d 1•Clvtcc.Mwonvew.-lnl .. Matterofu.. luenu. l!nvlron"'ental ctel•rmlna-•• ·""' · p.m.,on -• "1, TWO GVYS l'llOM l'TALY, l6tJS CCMlnly. .__,Cal....,,.etn1 AflPllCtllOftOf llOfl: G-•lpla11 Elll for 11\9 conetructlon of dr•lneoe Im· Har .... llvd., F01111lel11 Velley. CA Mo•• commonly --a• 120 Wtlt PlelnUH MAHAOU POUllZANJAHI For,.,..,,.. , ......... tlon on, ........ P•0••m•nU.. Pnljael --...... ,.•I 927111. cean ''Dftl, laltooa, Ca l1lornl• JANA MAHll!A, e minor, by eftd for Clle .... of Ha-appHcel'-, ......._ 1~S2AJ or cell varlou• 1-loN In ltwClly of lrvlne. G,...., •• IWllOft, "°' w P•'"'· .. , , 111ro111h PEAllY MAHLI!" •nd .... ,,._, •1 lhe offlcA of, .. Pl-lno ~·· OESClllPTIOHO,WOAI( A-... 1 y ~an .. ,CAf2MI.. H A_.t Perul No -.OU.OS KATHLEEN 1'JIAHLER, liar c;..,, o•o." TO SHOW CAUlll lneftl, A_.,, JOO, n Felr Orlw, Co&ta end ••tHKe P.C.C curbt, t ultert, Tiii• ........... 11 , __ llY ., ,,... Tiie wile 11 -jtcl lo -·• aftd di ens u Utem W H E II E A S #o A H II 0 U ,,,.. .. , CaOfomle 1pal>drel1 4IM er-vut'9rs Con1truct dl"•~·•I. 119<lal taan wtlk ll are• llen nol yet 0.l~nl. POU"ZAHJANI "91111-r has 111911 Type 1 t.el<ll batln al>d tlorm drain -EOWA"O VINCE GAIJAlVA, • • PulllllhedOra119tGOHIO.llyPllot IYSl•M l!NGINEEA'S EITIMATE I Tllll :::,1~:111 ... wltll ... Y•.~::,...:~~:.~b'.~::n!:.~~· AOOOlFO GRIJALVA, M .. S. ~.:'9!'~'':.:!"::~i::;~-::~~~ M•tZ•,1"1 , .. , .. ,:"~~·:.·NG OF PAOPOs··s. , •• I C-IY Cletti of OrefllA """"'°"Mey Ion•, rutrlcllOft•. ruervellons, ::;~~'{AoEg.~~J.~VE~ t ~~~';. "':. ,,.10 ~H''A'"'ouM!' .. HllllA~l~AZANJANI -•• wtu lie publkly ~ .;;., •. 1"1 f!Olltt. •lgftts of ••r . ...i .... ,.,.,, .. 0• ..._. _,, .... " -PUBLIC NOTICE ........ 1'16'611 rKord nw .... _,., ltlOM Mid on ... l1Kl11tlw IT IS OllOEAEO \Nit ... ..,_..... , • ., •1 J ID pm. on J-10. IWI, •I ... "::.'::.a;~ CM• Delly~ ··:::~:::~ri~~~·S1:~ ~~ llOTIC~.,:.:::!:2!.... TIM 1 :.:~r. ~~~E"'..::::~~E: l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHHS ~~~:.:~::-: :·~c; "·::~I Ill b• rec ......... , Ille olllcu ol ,_MAY -19 ...... , -wl1-t Ill• H-tbte AOHAlO H PAEN· llAM• ITATIMl!NT OOCUMENTS: Tiie -lllce1lollt .,. PUBLIC NOTICE ur•ll•. Remer, Mac Oona Id • ,.,., ...._...,.. -.,..., ,....,._ HE" •I 0 RANGE COU NTY Tiie lollowlno pertona ••• doing enlllled, "Conttruclton of Or•lnage I -· A ProfeHlonal Corpo ... 11on ......... .,., ........ ......__ SUl'IEAI°" COUAT. 100 Cl•k Canter IKll lnHIM ProJe<I COftthlln9 Generally •• --------t1otMYI for Mid Admlnlttratrla, ., ...... Or1"9, city"' s.m.a AM. ~ty of QUALITY OETAllllolG, •01 1111 V••lou•Curlo-GutiarAeplec-t N-pott Glnt9f' Drive Suite ISU If '°" wbll to ..... u. 911vlu of an Or•nee. •teta of CAlltwftle, -,_ Hewpon IM<h, CA '7.U. Se<llont -11'' Storm Drain -Cl P l'ICTITIOUS •UllMllS Newport Btecll. C.lllcN'nia .,,...,, ,.; •lton .. y lft ""' .-. ........ ·-Id ... UllM , II any wtly , .. petlllOft for MICl!ffl ,. Pr Ice, •07 Jhl SI . JJO.n:· "'---llkttl ... al>d llAllll ITAT•MlllT may lie flled wllll tlle Clerk of ulCI 10 pro"'plly 10 tllal yo111 w1IUe11 <hef\9e of...,.. illould not ... grentad. NewPor1 9e«ll, CA ft~ all contrecl CIO<-b mey De -Tll• followlng partor1t ••• doln9 s-rlor Court •I any time alter llr1I re-•· II a11y, ""' 119 111911 on ltma. 1 T IS FUllTHli" OllOIE .. EO thet a G re99ory Pr let, •01 l1 U St,, fained fl'Of'll Ille 0."9rl_,,I of p.,tolk ...,., ... ,. H : publketloft of 11111 notice and .,.fort AVllOI U-.. lie .,_ 'llemnl1 f1. cop, 01 1111, .,._ to 11\oW ,_ .,. Newpor1 BHcll, CA '2"1. Workt, City of Irvine, 11100 JembOrM SEQUOIA HOMES, 200 S.IE. metll"INld-Ill tr*-4 ....... _._. .,_,,, VIL pVlll l.-In l"9 "Or-C-tl Dally Tllh bullnan Is cond11t ted by • lloed, lrvlne, Calllornlt A non· 81lt10t, s.rite Jll, Santa M a, CA '7107 The Pf'-'Y wlll .,. >old on Ille t1a ,...._..a --U& ,._. Pliot" • -., o-Mrtl c lrcula-ganar•l --•tlllp retwndetole I•• ol U O 00 wlll lie Sequoia _._ a Callloml• cor· loti.wl,,. ,,...,,... ,..,_.,. e>ert ca•ll and N ....,.. * a """ i... " ......,_.111on prlnled In tlle Oranoe c-rtr, Mk'-1 F Prk• <ller..,i for Mell u4 OI doe .. ....,, .. ..,., ..... tOl2 $ E Brlttol. Santa ""4. pert cr..Sll. tlw ._,,..of wch ettdH 10 ci.. _ ..._. Calltornle. .,,,.. • -" for tour ,.,.. Tiii• --w•• fllad with Ille Pl•nt •nd fllkfllullan• wlll De malled c.tllomt. 92701 ... KC.,..... to tM uncle<'Mgftad •ftd SI Ulled-MlllCllN •• c ...... )o Cle (HJI•• -· ........ to ... Mte ... tor CCMlnly Oerll of~ ... eoun1, Oft ,,,.,, tor ... addllllonel <.11¥99 of ..s 00 Tlll1 .....,_,It ~'9d l>Y • cor· lo Ille S..,.rlor Cewt. a minimum 1111 ·~.,.Hie awnlo, -•la llearlftlOtllllUpetltlon 17.1 .. t. PllOl'OSAL GUARANTEE. Eecll Polallon. ...,0..,.1 10 ec:c.._,. Ille off Ille ll•cerlo lmrnedl•tamtftle, o. HI• Oatad May 21 1•1 PtU'27 P•-•I .,,.II .,. e<compenlecl by • ~ Homas ... lance loeqi,el 1°"-J ... a....::.;t bid ............. ·-·· H<rll•, II llay • MAaT1N "·All.AMO PulllltMcl Or-C-tl 0.11, Piiot, certlflecl<W CMl!ler't clle<ll or t>ld OONI T-wtll....,,1, Pretlclllnt 10 .,. P•ld lot1tlwilll UllOfl CClftflrmallon a._. ~ -,._,..,_,. • tlempo. A..,_., .. Ltw Mey 2', J-S, If, It, ltll 2..,,..1 '" Ille •"'°""4 of 10 Porcenl of IM 1- Thlt ,__ wtl 111911 with "'°' of wile, -of whlcll tNll be pelcl by I. TO THE OIEFIENOAHT· A clvll 611 __. c;....., Drift ----bid tH"lce pey.ote lo UW City of lrvltw c ...... , ci.r11 .. 0r ..... Caunly on urtllled dl«ll -pay-.. Ille COMptelnl ... been filed .... u.. plel~ ..... IHI ... ~--......... II his A.prll I, 1"1 Estel• OI -w NYDert. -1118 lift -wt.,.., II you "'4tll to,,.._ N-1 BMm CA ftMe PUBLIC NOTICE _., h K<~. wlll ll'omptly H · 1'1'9 lie."'",., .,.,.,.0 to lie PAld throuefl et.crow 11111 laWM!lt, YW """'· wttllift •MY• l1MI ..,.... KYie Illa cantrec:t. -ure pey....,.I ot Putolltlwd 0r.,,.. Coalt Dally Piiot, wltlll" llllrty (JOI 49,. after confirm•· .it•• lN• -It_,,.., on you, PublltMd Or-CN•t Delly Piiot Work.,'• Compeniellon lnturence, Mer I, IS, n. 2'. 1'11 11.,.1 11.,, 01 wile toy the Court. lltntel•, tu· Ill• wltll tlllt <owl• written ,_ May 2, J...,. S U, It,'"' UJS.~; NOTJC& lllVITIHO BIOi and •u•nltll • .. 11.tactorv Falllllul I H , .. __ of -•••'-and main· lo Ille complaint UfllHI you c111 '°· • ' NOii<• I• lleteby elven 111•1 IM Perform.,... 8-111 1'19 a..-nl ot p I L 0 T .I " HNULS t~fwrnn~ tt4'1\ft l ftt¥1nnhrG )tou.5n •wrntH lnf ( O"don11n1unh •vtn fundomtnh1tr.• ' nt Too.l'\Nki1t9'\ • Uf,, To-~'"'t nf ~ ....... ""' °".,. .. _., l "' Aph •llrn A.(1ifi.1oln'w" A•'lll• htttt!Al nt """"'· Moom • ko1u1 HfA.•I• ~ulf'I• Cu~•t II.om.' ~mnwr k@f~hl' \ff-4.~Rrtthl ""'*•h to"-•••• G ....... fut fbA1 (lff10• ....... , k.l1M••.Mrt1l•I lndultt1•l tl•nt•I ~~·-~: v.,nlll"d \e1,1 Hrnt•h BUSINESS. INYESl MENT. FINANCE aw_"'JH;' ~'°n • l\u\IMU "'•.nlr0 '""',...'""""'~~\' lnYOlrMM "1n·t·d •ont~ to ...... " M&.iftf') ••ftlf"ld• M•wt&•&H Tn t. AHNOUNCEMCNTS, n.RSONALS & LOST & FOUND Aww..,10 .. nwn1' (&1 Pout l..rcel '(It•••' ............... p .. ,~ ... !!iort•l 4 tyt.• T'e\o•t• SERVICES !w'"" hir"'1ur) EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION '!iehoi10 ''"lt..,tl ~ JuO"•fth• I• tftlp '4 •r.lrft \I 6 .. MERCHANDISl """ IQ 19117 101• MIO ... l-ltllt IUt ..... 1044 ... ·-,., ,,,., ·-lent ""' '°"' IQM ..... ..... lll!O hrfNlf•I 4-......... l i•UU. • t&4'tlhtt'Oft \t.hnlu '-'•tth "·~· "'••h 1WhH1Urn.-l1vtt.• \1 .. ,.,. "+;lut if1htll' \1;41,_w.anu•d AUTOS, IMrGIHO ,4 ...... "'• 14vnw-\. \~Ji A~,,.,. Hf'•lr b'4W L•11r1 e:t;-u.,.,.,. ....... .,.1 Uvn-J. '•• "•' J•A•cn ~"'~;:·4 lC.utt. M•t•ir'h U..111 ....(, ..... ~ ...... p,,,\!t'•• v ..... ~ f11Jfft"4' ~~n•wl1 Kuth fiu>'' R'J\•r ~ ~"-'" Tutu4• fhwMiotft \i.11 ...... ,.,, \1.11,11 \ohtf•I A'4( AUTOS, NEW AUTOS, USED "'-•\ L•tfill11111 l•M•lu '-"-\rtdrt \.h• •••• , \..•m•• t ilfio&HWfill•I ~U''"'h """""'•' Uu.1,. .. ·\M·I '"'I••••' l101•Jlll °lt•hfh~ M•r "'' !~:-.:':b I• t••-"'O t"l)trM.llr\ h~t+.e1 l,...nt)flrbtr·I ... , .. ..... , .... Ma PUBUC NOTICE IH\ence, and ,,._,_ of ln...,•nu your 9faull wlll De tftleted on ap-0c. .. n V.._ kNol Ollt•kl of Hllfll· 100 perc9ftl of the'°"'' bid prk • -• accepta• to 11w -clltwr INll 119 plk atlofl of tht pt.,fttltl, and thh court PUBLIC NOTICE 1,.i .... IMtcll wlll rece1w -led lllcb Labor and Mater1 a11 8ond In IM pror•tH ~.,,_Ml• OI rec:..,.dlno of ;:',;:':' ~! ~=.,::: :~,::,:: ~1'~.';'..::_n~,:~ :=1 of 100 Por<enl al Ille lo1al bid l For an Ad in Wor:.n't Wortd conveyance. au,., wlll pey u•ual Wllkll , ..... rnull In gaml........., of llDTICI o• T•UITll'llALI '"the Oftlll"kt. Bio. wlll ....... vec1 ... WAGE RATES. A~ •eciulrea toy S.C:· 1 Call Su~ 642·5678, bt. 330 NOTICE OF DEATH OF ~9;;\~y-.~°"::!:1~: =~ .,-..., 1t111ng01 "'°"'Y°' ..-0pertyor T.s...._ """'a t11e '"''n•n 01110, Oce•" v1 .. "°"on of 1 .. ea111cN'nla lA-c-. D 0 R 0 T H Y a H H E .... olller rellef ieq ... ttotd In Illa com· AMERICAN TITllE COMPANY •• Sc-I Olstrld et ltNO I StrMt, Hunt· Ille Ow,..,'-determlMd Ille-•• .. <ha•OH S..Nw wUI pey .,_, Wiier'• plaint. DATllO June JS "" duly •PCIOlnted TrutlM u"der Ille l111t.., -..11, CA n.47, \If> i. lliut no ptevalllng rates of w-• '" 1 .. locall-Cool, Slimming 8RAOY, AKA DOROTHY ,.,., .. , ~stfnll o11111e 1n..,.e1Ke u.A.er..c:ll • fof-lftldltt<rllleddMdof1r.,.1w1ll totert'-2·•,_m onJ-u,1w1 a1 ,, 1n w111c11 111e ,..0,~ I• to b• c A . 8 R A D y A K A Polley, Ir...,_..,_, -II'> of •t<•ow °"'-SIEll AT PUlllC AUCTIOff TO THE well u .... o. -'' wlll .,. _.ntd per1orrnect Cot>let of Wiid w ... ••le I DOROTHY IRAbY AND <ll••tes Escrow tll•ll be ope119d Byo.45-i<Urd HIGHEST BIOOIEll FO" CASH end rMCI, delermlnat-.... ,...1111.,MO •ltlw OF P T 0 T lorlfl•ltll alter t0ftflrmat1on of IM Deputy INyatote •I lime of •••• In lawful lntlellatlon Speclll<-1llon• a re oHkH of 1 .. Owrci end.,, avellat>te ~ E ITI N 0 AD· Ml• and 1twll <'-w1tllln llllrty IJOI IOMMl!•IANOLA••tn _,of U. UnltM SCetetl •II rf9N, evelleb4e et tfle 0c .... View Sc-I upon requeil Tiie Conlra<:tor •11•11 1 MINISTER ESTATE NO. dao OI uw det.e of conflrm111oft ol 1-..v-• • ...._ klta Int llU• and lnlertat ,_..,ed to-now Ohltlcl Butlneu Office, "'•o 8 POJI •copy oi .. Id ooc..,...n1 at eecll . A 10893' Hie. ~,.., ""811 furn•tll buyer• •tan· ....... ea~"'*' lleld toy It undH wild OMO of Tr111t In SlrMt, H"'"'lngton 1141ach, CA,, .. , 1011 sit• The Contrec:IOr -enr ...... L T • dard C.,llONll• Und Tiiie AStoclalt"" UlJ) 1...._, Ille pr~y ,.,.,,..,._, det<•I-: Tiie OIST"ICT ·~ , .. •11111 lo contrec:lor unoer him ,,,.11 Pllf nol ••u ~ 0 a I I h e I r s I polky P11011-Oranoe eo.11 Dally Piiot T .. us T 0 A; J E F,. A E y w rei.<t ... y Of ... lll4ta .. lo -··· ... , than tlle ICIKlfled ........ 111,. ....... beneficiaries, c reditors T11e _..,.. ,_.. ... u. •1911• Mar2t • .J-s,11.1t.1"1 ,., .... i ~~~-~SA. lLY L JAMIESON, '"""1ar11i..., •nfonnt11t ... '" .,., ••oe•t••"_,._,,_1oyec1,,..,,. l and cont I ngent creditors of 1o •••u• to~.,,., blch. "--_.. told• or 1" n. .........,._ uecutlOfl., 1 .. c_,ec:t. Dorothy Anne Brady, aka -jorltHyt>ertHottm•n PUBLIC NOTICE 1us1HESS ,.INANC•AL, 1Hc , a 11w 01rec10r fllf.,. Det>trtme<1t o1 1 ... q.,..1._ ,. ... ,,,. '° 1111, preJKt P•lor -OATIEO· Mt\11 .. "" IEHIEl'ICIAllY CALIFORNIA Tiie OISTlllCT .... •ta•-''°"' P .. OJIECT AOMINl5T•ATION. Alli A Dorothy A. Brady aka Adlftlnlstra1••• of IM Gallforftla_,.,,etion.. du•trl•I "-1.CloM llM o-rai ..,.,, .... to 1.,. °'*''"'of bldt ,.,.11 .. dlrec1ed D t h B d , d e .... of "e<orclfd ...,...,..., 11, ,., " •~ 1,.. rata"' -diem.,... In u.. lo<.•11· to tlM ottk• ot .,. Projec:t M•-• 0 r 0 y r a Y an Heler!W. N'tbe<I 1tr. No 2'«11In bootl 111.,, ~ 11Q,I ly I" wlllCh 11111 wor-Is lo be AttAllllOft .-, OlFr-. tel.,,.._ p e r s 0 n s w h 0 m a v be o.ca-NOTICI °' lllTlllDID ,......... of Offklal A_ .. In .... oflke of ,.. .. ...... ,,..., for ""' <tell or ,,,. °' 714.JttO, • o therwise Interested In the .. _IQ,._ NOTIGE IS HE•l!IY GIVEN tMI .. __ of Or ..... Collflty, Uldeleed •«-..... .....,,...lo ... Kuta Ille (Oft-OWNIEll'S RIGHTS AIESE•VEO. s w lll and/or estate : MM~&~ "•"'l•a-1,...._..louel....,..,•, °' tiu.i dftc•lloK tlle tol-lnjl "'°' ltKt ,,,._ ret" -"'111• •tu.. T11aOwnerr•MinOHU.r11Mtoreie<tl A ....tltl A l"nh , w • Ctr1!"etlell It U16 .._POrt 9ouloere, CMlt perty Oltlrlct Ofllu 41t 1..-e Street, Hllft!· anv 0, all....,.. '°-al-•• , i~o-all· i .,..,, Of'lhaSbeen filed A--Y•tCIAw IMM,Caliloml•,l ....... totrentMr• Tiie l•nd r eferred lo In t111t l1191one.iocll,CallforNl t)M7 Copl tyl,.ebldWIO';,.et~-;;...;;j,'1".;'111e by Mar;aret Anne Brady ...... __.CllMar on... 01,.... G. Sll'*ll, -.... 1 ........ 011•1•11•• •• lltutled In Ille St ... of .... , lie otlUl!Md Oii requHt. A (Of)y Of lnt•re•t of.the 0-. and Martha Ann Donovan 1411 .. 11., d,...• •• c10 wt111a1t1 c . Hlt<~oc:k, " C•llter111e, c-ty of 0r.,... end 11 ,,. .. '"" -11 ... -""'at,.,. 1 DATED""'' n . :,.1 · s I th c,......,,1 .. ..,..,._.Call..,..•.,.._ l'roteulort•I Corporetlon, 2MJ I!. cie.<rltoedHlotloM. tlte. CITYOl'tllVIHI! n e _. or Court of OWi 71Mft1 • Cotti H ...... Y. Suite -· eor-•• l'A•CEL t; Unit t, .. tMwn •NI Tiie ....... ~ of -d PulolltlWd Or-C-at Dally ""'°' Orange County requesting ""*"-0r-. CM•• o.i1y P11ot, ,,_.,, c.t""1N ~ • .,.. tot-me ctHcrl.., 1n .,. c.Mom1n1..,., l'iM • ._.. is ...., -• _,...,. O&y ---· that ""'·~-t Anne B ... Mey u u.,. ,., ~1 ,,,..,.", -......,. et 1"' ~ recorWc1 .. ,,,,.., a1, 1m"' -1J1M1. •ltM 111 i..n. nw , .... '°' 11o114e Ma' :rt, J...,. :a.,., t4'.Mt ,.... '"' rovy ' ' ••ulevet•, CMla Mau, Calllorftle -· .0 ta •1t ln<l11slve, Otfk tel end overtime WW'11 -II lie et l•••t -------- and Ma ha Ann Donovan · U ----mn· 1ttt0rd•tfwildc:-.ty. u ..... ,..._...11. P lJBUC NOTICE I be appointed as personal PUB C NOTICE All 111e 1toc-'" •••· '"""111re. fl•· PARCEL t : An unc11vkied -'"'•· 11 -11 • _, -u. coH representative to ad · , ....... ._,, OOodWl11 "'° ,,.,.. 11rs1 <11s1tt1 1..e«est •• • te111111 1n TAACTOfl • .._. ... C011trec:1 11 I I t th t 1" Cl"I' tlU of lll•t <.e<Uln bull"•" _,,.w,. " common In tN ,.. lftlarett '" -l• ••••clll<I. tlld WOf1 any .illufttr•Oo ~P w• m n s er e es ate 0 llOTICID"T"UIT•l'SSAll .. AMIS KAIOI •ESTAU .. ANT, t ... ce,,,,_ -.. LOI 4 ol Trec:t -I"'"" IO ... , not .... """ I HOTICICWT•U1T••·11Al• Dorothy Anne Brady, aka T.a.. .... ,...,_, '"•lad .i 1P•--' ........ ., •• em, •• -"""'111ec1 '" .,... 422. Mid '"°n.. ,.._ •••II --.-T.1.. .... 1u1 Dorothy A . Brady, •k• On J-12 • .,.1, •• 10.00 • m .. C•• ""'9N. Callfot"4U111.V. ..... I ta 1 lnclutlW, MllCll'-t •rftlllOyH.., ....... In, .. •11e<lllloll TrvRtr: IKJOO, ,_... ..... F Dorothy Brady (Uhder the •uck&YIE •ECONVIYANCIE COM-Tiie .,..,...., fllf..,. ~ •• •-Melt•.'-*°' aakl c-ty, .. tuc:ll u.c ... tre(t. 1 On June u 1"'· at • 1s •·"'·· I d nd t A I .. ANY' • GelltOml• cwporellon, •• di/> je(I IO SectiOll ·-of .,. Clllfeml• ,., ............. Ill "" Artlele ... 1111ae1 Ho ..... l'MJ Wlllldr-1111 lllcl tor' R I! L I A. l i! c 0 H v I! v A H c E n epe en dm nlstre• ly •11•ol1111d TruttH u"der and Con11nerct.IC-. "0.llnltlenl" ef t .. 0e<1a11t10fl Of e period ef tlll"Y 1101 cit"'.,..,,,,. CO .. POAATION, n ctuly ~nted tlon of Estates Act). The ..,, .... 111 1o o.... ., '""'· tl9ted Jw1, w1t111 .. """ ~ , ... PMt. " ,.,. co"'•"'"''· c-1t1o111 .,.. 1tH111c. .. .... , .., a.~., bl4lt Tr1111" lllldlr.,.. .,.,, ....... to o.M of rntltlon Is set for hearlnQ 21, "·· ---· AUl!lnt II,'"°· .... knocn ,. lllt "'" .. rtlOll•d 114111 ,_...,"' .... ,,..,, .... '"· o.wntlflt ...,. ,,.. ... deltd ~I II, 1m, ,. I "-t No l t 700 Cl I •~t Ho. U12t, 111 Mell ,,..., ....-tr•"•ltrM , Ml •net "'" "•"''' Offl<lal ....,.,. 1 .. "O.Clltetioft"I MellWtll ....._ ,..,._ o.c.mter u, 1m. •• !t\11 110 .., .. ., • • • "C 1n •.etotflc1et "-onit•n t11eoHk •of on"''· t1_,.,.,,, .,.,,. -.,. Mlf•n,_...,,..,ttlMl'fto. Clertl 20201, '" bootl t*44, ..,._••.Of Of. Center Drive, West, In the 111• county "•u•d•r of 01•"e• -_.,.. ,..._., ....,_ l!XCEl'T THIE•E'flOM a11 e11, .... l'utotl...., 0r.,.. CMat o.11, PllOI, t1ci.1 11-lft 111e office Of 111e Coull· c It y 0 f Sant. An. COWftly, Sf•I• Of Ullfornla, WILL Tiie ·-,,_,., wlll ... ,_ ... 1nerel1 tfMI ..... , llydroc:arfloftt, May tt.J-s, 1•1 2 ..... 1 ,., Rae.,., olOt'lnQeC.-IY. Stet••• Callfotnla on June 2A 198l Slll AT PUellC AUCTION T( tutnl'n•ttd Oft tr tllM J11M ''· 1t11 at M40. •~of .. f .. t, •rtllellt ,.. C•lllorni.. • H IGHEST 81001!A FOR CAS" tlle41fflct•, .,..,..,,,....,...._."'•Y rltlll of -1ec• ...,.,, .., rnerwcl 111 -WILL S8ll AT PUBLIC AUCTION E at 9 :30A.M. <,.t •ble et 11,.,. °' ••I• '" l•wflll .,. flled wltl'I: Win...,. c. Hltc"'9ck, '""''""''lb.,,_,., P\JBUC NOTICE TO HIGHEST e100£" 1'011 CASH IF YOU OBJECT to the_, et .,. Un1i.c1 s1e1a1 •t , .. Atter"•Y •I L•• .• 21u •· C•••• 'A"Cll J; I!-'•""'•-1111ye111e " •Ifft• of Nie '" 1nrtu1 granting of the petition ''°"' CMlttldlt ..,t•l'K• of,.. ContlMft Mltftw•'· Mtt •· c.r-Ml MM, 111 u. ....u.. ..iuet "c.rteho a-money • IN un11e11 Stet•> et 111e .o...-.. 1 ' \All "-LoM .......... NKalad et qo Cel~ ~ T1'e I ....... l9r flt. "'9fltJ tw OWNn'' Md "~ tet. _,M fr'1't entr-t 19 IN old~ .. COUii· YOU ..,....,Id tither appear S. lu<lld. MaNlm, Cal .. orftla, ell lftf Clt lll'll fw ..... ef tlw ''-'-It 11-t -E11eroecl\INl!t" .. 1111 llOTICI Ofl "Ull9 01' IY Courtlloutot, IOCeted on Senle Ma 1t the t.arlno and state rltM. u11e ""' Inter~• unvtYecl to J-If,""· Artkl• -•tied "h-••" fllf ,,. .,.,..,.CArtOll ..,. ••v• .• ..,._ S•c.MMr• strHt .,.. D your o~tctlons or flte •ncl -11e111~ 11.,....., .. 1c1Deed01 DATED: 1My• 1"1 0e<1tr.i1en. , ,. • ._MIOll TOltTAe1.11M 11r0Hw•y • ..,,.. AM, c.111or"11, •11 It J I Truat In U. ,.,..rt, tltwalecl In .. Id ......... .,_, 4 l'tlll1'19L.Nf1 lrv!M,Ctllfotftl• ANA*HOflPICI rltllt, Ude -lftt.,..tl ,..,.,,.Yed to wr ten ect ons with the c-1y and se.i. Ott<nbael •a: ,,....,.. .. 111 , ..,_ ...,,_., ,_... ,., .. 1t .. .......,.."" ,..k ""'· -•lld 11-lltld llY 1111Mtr .. Id DMct of court before the hearing. Lee I04of , ..... 1 ... ""'" 1111 CHY ,....,.,.,.., 0r-c...tt 0et1y "''"-•1tM•1o1111 ...,._....,.,,... • ..,,..,., .., a.c:"9fl ws.w • w. itui.. ,,.. Tr..-1 '".,,. -rty tou.i .. '" ui.i Your ..,._.r1nce may be of ,,,,,,.., c-.ty of 0r..,... stet• " Mey"·"" ,,.....,, •• 11...,. • .. "'~ ....... w "'' .. ..,, .. ._ .., ... .,... ...... ,,.. ~' n st.1• *'<rl1oec1 ••· In penon °' bv your at· C.llternl•, .. -"*' reurdtf In rec:tMMI.'' TM ....,.flclery unci.r .... •1111 LeM ..,.,,.,.., c:.e.1 ....., .. s..... lot 11 of Trtd 1116, 111 "" City of ., holl UJ,..,... Jlt to 41 lfKlllllw.. p•,_LIC NOTfCD o..f .. Tnitt,llY,_IC.•lltNUI• lllft end~ AM«letlt11, &H $941111 lrYl11e, C.-y of Oren111t. Stele of tornw. Mltc.•11•-"""'-In the •fftu of "u 11:1 ct•filllt In 1.,. .., .... , .. 11, tecurH Hill St ...... ,.....,.._ Callfefnl•, ..... ea111orftle, u .,_ °"' • "'• lhereot IF YOU ARE Atlle CIUlllY"-dlfofMlllCOUlltr 1119,....,,......_. •• _.....ef\ll., t1it.1•11-'1C•\lfflw1tt11Nl'Mltfe1 recOl"dHl11 ... n.t.11eeet> .. lldJ1, .CREDITOR or • cont· ll.lllCUTEO•Y· 1toe11•T•LOON l'tCTfTIOUteu111tau .. _ .... tllt -ti911M • ., ...... H•M• L••11 .... , ••••• f er' Mlu:•llHHIO M•••· ••Corllt of NOLT -SOM.IA MA•GA"IT AHN llAMelTATl ... llT o.ci.r•'-' ., OtfMt Mf ~ ...,,.. • ....., .. ..._., ... t IWMdl efflc.e Or•llle °"'""' •noem creditor of the de-HOLT • ......_......... n • ........,,. __ .. ....._~ .., .... ,... ....... "°'"'., ..,_ ... • l9Qlllf-.., ....... ~ T.,. .. ,_ -... .,.. ""'' <-· c.eaMd, you must fll• your ,.,. ..,.... ....._. ..,,, o1.,., -... .,., •• 'e1ec:ue11 •• u.,.. u.e ,.,_. •klft•_. 111 •.. ...._ .. .._ " H--. "'°" ..,...11 ... 11 .,,,, of "" ,..., cl4tlm with tne court or -.,......., "MY ... "" ,.., ••,.N•ca•aow111Nt••,.•1sat. ••r•ltllM •• "'' .... .,....rty .. ••u••.,.,• ·~ '"" 1tr•.t. c.tt• .,._."Y °"'''"'° .... ,,. ,, flili'"'"' ,,_,,YY~ ...,.,,_,._..., '7t~wo •• c. .. -...c.-.--. .~1 .• , ...... .., .... .._. ..... __..._ .......... --1110r-.c:.ilf9rftl•, to 111·-. 1tec11t11e A...,...,.,,,., .... , pr...nt It to thl personal t• h : m1 Cl•r•moftt 1;;.;;; ~ flley °"'· '21 Croe"9 Cl•" ;;; ; .... ~~ ';;"Mi';;u;'; ·~-Wf-irt_., .,. .... , Celltornl• T•Pr•MntetlVt tppolnted ll•r11 .. tl7tf ' ' c:.t1MMl,CA.... llt'ffell ,,,, ., .-ctletl i. M ~ec:.,... tf Ille _.le.ti.,, v-um111111b lite Ulllltt1'IJNcl Trvtlff fltel41lrne Dy tM C'OUf't Within four Tiie ..,,.,.....,. T ........ """ .. "'' Tlllt ....... ~.,, ... Ill-'*"'IV •. "" ... ,. ...... ,,..Ill ~ydlt(UM,llM--111111..-... 1 ... •"Y ........ IY,., ~'"'-"'"'of ~ f t....,, ""• Y ll•llty '°' My w ... ~ ...... If .. .,....... ..... 1*4. .... k lflt't rtcilN .. ,.,...,,_. Ill tlle ·~ ...,..., eM et1* '°"'"*' monuo rom •--te of flt'Mt ...,_ ""..._ ,_ "'"*-'·C-........ wOl lllt ""'*• IM witMut .......... -W c.,. ""* .. 1ta llHltMfJM, H ..,,, .,_,. llH'ell\. ffflt lauence of letters es 11t11, If.,,.,,~...... r111t ........... •• tllef wlVI u.. ~., _,....,, ...,_., •• IMM ~ ,_,. <-"" mwe 5-lf .... """" 111 l'M*, t>ut •""'*'' ~ovldld In Section 700 4lf ....... , M IMfl, ...... ..,. c.il•C*'•Or .... ~ ... .., ,. .............. ~ .... rec .... ., .. ~ ,......, ~ ... _,...,,, ·---., ..... h p b t C d ~.,..,,.,.,, ,...,.., ..,... "·"''· 111<""'11t-..; .. •r tM '~"' ,.., .. ...,..._.,..,,~,,-••IH. ,....,...,,. 1111e, potMultll, or e ro •Tt 1o e Of PilH, ,.....,... t111e: ,._..ltll,., llt._ llJl'IM .... Mn".._ lltltltl _,,.,,.. d~1-Qll .......... ,_.Ofl1Cle tll<W'llW'""'-10 fMIY llw r~llllft9 Callfornla, he t me for -""*-.... • ,., .,... ,_..,."" .., ..... o.. .. r,. wfttl •1Mrw4 • 1u ,,., a-•,e11e._, Cal"'"" p1111c1oe1 -et 111e 1111t•<e1 N(- "11-Cf..a-Wiii not ex .,fllclltlel Mn et Ille -.111 eec-,....,,,_ Ol'Bl9t C-. OlllY l"I•, 111 .... ..._ _......... ---. If_,,, IW' ., ~ IL Met. All ......... IW teMI Clef of TrUl4, Witt! lllt- ' . ._ .!:"to fOut m th• "' Wf 0..-.. ffWI. ~ I'*'"' MeyH,J.,...f, tt. .. ,"" MIMI __, --~ 0... .. Trwc. a..,. .. --......... _., lie ttlet'-, M ~ I• N141 lltleh). 6 4' 2· p r• Pl'-on s ..,..., ............ "' .... MttC•), -...... c,.. ....... ....-. .. .. ........ __ ,....It,.. wwe11c-. " ..,, .,,,,., , ... WIM If front tN .... of tht hMr· -..... II .,,, _..,, ._ ._ " PUBUC NOTICE trw• .. ,,, .. lt\MI c_... llY ut• Ill -.... "' .. ....,......,., .. ,. °""" '"""-'"'· dla,.... ff • ·~ .... c.d allOW. .. .. DMll" ,.,.. ..... ~ ... .... P9Mf/I rrwt. ...... .., '--'" ,.,, ..,.._ ., ... .,~ .... Of t Ou u.a.y EXA&AINE .,.._.ti .. ,,,.. ... .,.. If IN -~--= "'-... Mlt •...., _,. ......,, M.-. ...... ......-..~ tr11llltc,....•UY&lHOIMettrvt1, ....,. .... llVetlC ....... IW•MOIM .. Tnat ":.:::'-~., .... .i-n ..... •ttil!.:';.;.;' .. eMct """=·:r ............ ffl• tol•I -·et,,.. ........ f,'9~ .... urne:.::d f:'J!t T!:. e.:' -~ ·::.~: M.CllllLICT:-:,u::, ~ =; ._ it( :..·c: =~~f), ::.:,,.....':':. ~ ... te;:': ::::c-..!t., -::::. -:.=.:: 9Stete,,., Ny ftJe. reo t41~::~-::;·::: Mltlt MUUI -· VH I .... OrM19, c.MffW'llM --~:.:..--:::..:.: =~~'':, c1:· •• :::~ w:: .. r.; .,.. .... , ... C9Uft tote-•~n 11 U1e llMt .. tile lllltlll V&.AMIUI-=-~ a. ............... ,...... ..... ~ U e _.. fA .. ,.. ,_,l<MWI ti IN .... _, Of tile K ... -... .... _...... fllllCe Of ·-., .. MMlce ............... •.uc.-nt ~ • --·.................... -....... 111 ........... .. ,_,,....., .. ~ "* •I C* w,a Nia 6 IN8 I '••141 ~ Ill tM .......... ..... •IA 9li •iu.e. f'; -....Clefy __,MIC OtM If l'!_.~-!'Yilf~~~ !:.. .... ;.,~~ ... ~~ ... • =·~·==--.......................... r II•.._ ... lc8'1t'1 c-.e•ltY Trtttt lltfMM9f• •1194114941 Mf 411t• nJ'{ef .... -·••--. -•• --...., ............. _ _... ~-................. ,.............. ,_./ ............... M~ ...... ~-..1ft"!rltle" counts end reports • .. = • ••*" -------.._.. 11 ... -.a. .. T•:• .... .--• f1M1Mte1 •• o.c•.,..." Dtftlilf·.., DeflWIM Ill • \,':llllft 1*,. 11r-. fl Ml o.... .::::--.-___ _... ..,... .. _....., ... ...,call .. ,......,...,..._... .. ~ fer tel• tM •'"'ti"" NeUc• ef ~ I o.J tele, .-f eft"9ll ..... .. -,,._ C114>....... 41 _., _,. ..._.. • ..,_ .,. OlfeuH eM lleUlell .. tfli, ,.,_ -Of Ceff • ~ ............ Tiii.. ~flO..,IL .......... • ........ ., ..._.. 1N9 t;:lMf <tllM• ••If lltllU •I C9dt. I, , ....... ~ .... !Mttsa .. AlllelltlCAff llTI.& COM• .................. ., .. ....... ... '""'"" ..... , .... , .. ;:;.1 .. A; O..•i At· DlflWt•--•-• .. ,. ,,,_., ••· cllNM .._ .. _...y.._..._,.... ..... ,. ,,. .. .. ...,... .... . .... .,..... ., ...... ~ ...... -.,..,.,.., ........ . er •f ._ Df't¥e ~ ., T.O. H•VICI COM-eft 11•1 Ulll ;';i -·~· 0... .... ..... •• ~•.rf O...• .._,..,, '--....... ,. • ...,,_ ,......C111a; uec::eir. • ft_:. -.. -==......... . ... ,,... ..... ; .... ---==-: :-::i: ;.-.Ji'.. =='T:fi•· -OlltCllf.,.,...., ,,..,.._..._,,_, IMPY me ~COlllt rne ::.:.:--~~,..,., ...... .,... tr:.._..,. • ...._ 'Met ;'=-':f .....::.s.:.:.41J!..:..,..,...... ......Olwet ~ .. , ..... "!',-==......... ,__--=.. CWt .... ._ ....... ............... ~ ..... ::.J"'-__ ......, __ ..... _.;..... ___ ~..,~"·....... ... ............ _ .... ,..... _., 9239 SIZES~ Belt th11 usual 111 ~tar ''" Punted P1ttern 9239 Wom· en s S11t1 111 l4 (3'~nc11 bm •lib 40 inch lup~ 36 (40 bust 42 lup~ JI (42 bust, U hip). 40 (U bu&l, 46 hip~ 42 (46 bust. 48 hip), 44 (48 bust, riG hip~ 46 (50 bllSt. 52 hip), 41 (~2 buit. l>4 hip) Doll Delights! '°'. -----Wlq --