HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-02 - Orange Coast PilotI
T U t ', lJ I\ Y l l H..i ~ .> 1 •111 1
.. ,. .........
First Lady Nancy Reagan talks with Barbara Walters
about her husband's shooting on an interview program ainng tonight.
Dad jailed
Wedding bells
---· • mute witness
EVERETT. Wash. (AP> -A '""bllln accused or killing his
grandmother with an ax has
knocked apart the prosecution's
case by marrying the chief wit·
ness against him, prosecutors
say.
_,{
Police arrest
third suspect
in safe heist
Police have arrested what
they say is the third and last sus-
pect in the theft of a 300-pound
safe filled with valuables from
Newport Auto Works in Costa
Mesa.
Costa Mesa investigator David
Walker, working the $2 .055
burglary since early March,
said he arrested Daryl A. Crum
of 20072 Lawson Lane, Hunt·
ington Beach. Monday.
Working on a tip, Walker said,
he spotted Crum's auto on
Placentia Avenue, pulled the
suspect over al Wilson Street
and made the arrest.
Walker had arrested Tody
Weiss, a former Newport Auto
Works employee. on May 13 at
Los Angeles County Jail. Weiss
was field by Los Angeles
authorities for suspicion of
armed robbery, Walker said.
Arrested May 25 was
Raymond M. Carrillo, 22, who
had lived at 1662 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, with Weiss, Walker
said.
Carrillo also is charged with
the Manhattan Beach robbery In
which an 80-year-old man was
robbed in his home at kni!epoinl,
Walker said.
Burglars smashed in the door
to the Costa Mesa auto repair
shop on March 10, rolJing out the
hu1e safe and haulin1 it off in a
car, Walker said.
The dismantled sale was re·
covered the next day near the
swlmmin1 pool at Newport
Harbor High School, Newport
Beach.
Walker said police hate re·
covered only about S50 worth of
'\ costume jewelry that had been
\
kept in the aale. Still missing, he
said, are silver Mexican coins,
• 1 eotd Jewelry and slx guns.
t
' Trouble brUin1
NoJM., jmt raccoon
The woman who called
La1una Beacb POllce to rep0rt a
· bur oa a ael1bbor'1 rooftop
abould b:ave taken~ clONr look. • An Qffteer dlt tcbed to the
~ouM OD Tempe HUia Drive
llOIMlaJ ~ llnd1D1 On17 ·a
flCCOClll OD tbe rOof, A r9Uillr
lar1e rec...-. &o be aure. but a
raccoon norMtMlfla, Polle• Mid.
Because wives can't be rorced
to testify against their htUbanch,
the marriage "totally takes us
out. of the case," prosecutor
Russ Juckett said. "She was the
key witness. This is a very
frustrating case."
. The jud~e has asked for an in·
vestigation into the public def·
ender's role in arranging the
marriage.
Vickie Norris, Snohomish
County deputy prosecutor, said
Monday that the wedding of
John Ray Johnson, 30, of
Everett and Linda Orlon of
Kirkland -Johnson's room·
male when his grandmother was
killed -probably would force
the prosecution lo drop the case.
"Without the testimony of Ms .
Orton, there's insufficient
evid'ence," she said.
Ms. Orton and Johnson were
living together when Johnson's
grandmother was found slain.
No motive has been suggested
by police.
Superior Court Judge Paul
Hansen was asked whether the
case was unusual. "You bet your
bottom dolJar." he replied,
"because I've never been faced
with this kind or thing before."
Hansen said he had asked Ms.
Norris lo investigate the
circumstances surrounding the
wedding, which took place
Thursday in the county jail.
"I believe in fair play," Ms.
Norris said. "I believe in notice
<See AX, Page A2>
'OLICY NOMi.D -Al· torney General William
Prench Slillth ••Y• he will
work for a "deflniUve .. im·
ml1ratloa policy a1 he
toured tbe San Ysidro
bord• ~on Monday.
Bananas help . .
Nancy skep
• NEW YORK (AP > -First Hinckley from gettine a iun.
lady Nancy Reagan says she's "The answer la enforcing the
had trouble sleepinc since the laws that are already there,
assusination attempt on her which I don't th.ink we are. Mak·
husband two months ago and ing the punishment swift, sure,
sometimes .gets up at ntght and, which I don't think we do," Mrs.
eats bananas. Reagan said.
"You have a kind of delayed "I aeree with the death penal·
reaction. You bold yourself ty. I think that people would be
together for a long time because alive today if there were a death
you have to. And·tben the tears penalty," she said.
come easily," Mrs. Reagan said Mrs. Reagan said her husband
in a White House interview with still has some numbness but no
Barbara Walters to be broadcast pain.
tonight at 10 on ABC, Channel 7. She said thatJWhen she arrived
She said she doesn't eat apples at the hospital after the March
late at night because "crunch, 30 shooting, she was put in a lit·
crunch. That would wake him tie room.
(her husband) up." "All I could think of was, 1
Mrs. Reagan said she feels have to hold on and not get in
sorry for the parents of John anybody's way, cause there was
Hinckley, ·the man .accused of so much contusion and so much
trying to klll the president, and noise," Mrs. Reagan said.
has not changed her opposition "Finally they let me in to see
to gun control since the attempt Ronnie and that was when he
on her husband's life. said, 'Hooey, 1 forgot to duck.'
'·After all, as parents you try But he had the thing on his nose
to do the best job you can, and and I could see the blood on his
sometimes-lt doesn't always lips, and everything."
turn out," Mrs. Reagan said. On another matter, the first
She said gun-control laws lady said the swiftness and size
would not have prevented <See NANCY, Pal(e A2)
.,. ...........
OFF TO AUSTRALIA -Gerry Spiess, 41, of Minnesota, sails
out of Alamitos Bay in his 10-foot sailboat Yankee Girl.
Spiess plans to sail singlehandedly to Sydney. Australia,
after conquering the Atlantic in 54 days,
try to sell baby • ID
I ....., ...... ,......,...., • .....-
Approximately 700 people !qUeezed into the audftorfum at Newport Harbor High School to participate
in public forum on erpamion of John Wayne Airport.
Airport plan assailed
Newport leaders cheered as they attack expansion
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ule Delly Niii IWI
Newport Beach city leaders
brought nearly 700 people to
their feet cheering Monday after
taking turns blasting the county
and Its plans to expand John
Wayne Airport.
The public airport expansion
hearing at Newport Harbor Hip
School -billed as "The facts,
the figures and the fight for the
future" -was staged as an
educational forum.
But many in the packed school
auditorium compared the meet·
ing to a pep rally and said they
hope their anti-expansion
message gets through to county
supervisors, who control the
airport.
Newport Councilman Don
Strauss brought the first roar of
approval when he said the coun·
Freeway speeders
facing crackdown
The Callfornia Hi1hway
Patrol wlll be stepping up
patrols of the San Dieco
Freeway-from San Clemente to
Santa Ana aa part of a statewide
program to increase compliance
with the 55-mile-per-hour speed
limit.
More than l,COO houri of ov'er·
time will be ln effect alon1 the
freeway corridor beilnnlnt thla
month through Nov. 30, accord·
int to Capt. Chuck Chase, com·
mander of the CHP'a Capistrano
area dlv'iaion ln Laiu,na Hilla.
Cb ... laid tbe CH.P bu been
awardid a $1.5 million 1ranl
• from the Federal Office of Ttaf ·
ftc safety to beef up eillorce-
meat oUhe naUOGal apee:d lmh,
ln r•ponae to the 1t.ady ln•
creat• lo Calllornla traffic
fataUU. since 1174,
'·Recent accident studiea have
indicated that the incidence of
ratal accidents lnvolvinl com·
pact can and 1peeda in excess
, of 55 mph have a direct relfl·
tlonsblp," Chue aaid. "Lut year there were 5,4i81
lives lost on California
roadwaya. Al apeeda increase,
the fatality ratea t,ake a
drasqatlc jump.'•
Tb• .,.i ol the entprcement
pro•ram la to increaae com-
pliance ol the 55 mp~ Umll by 10 percen~ Cbue 1a1d ..
Two •P••d·monltorlnt
sesalonl ualq rMlar wen CGD·
dt1et.d'ln 11~ .oa the San Dlqo
Frffway to 'detitrmlne aver11e
travel lpeedl on tM l"Mdway.
Eada mmatli I.be fl"Oll'aal Al 1ll
etfec:t, 8ddl...,al nn971 will be
lair.en to pituur'9 bow mucb tOmP~ hu laeiUMd.
ty's airport master plan "is
more of a disaster plan."
A Beckman Instruments Inc.
executive, Strauss said "lf my
company went about its business
like the county does, we'd be in
terrible shape."
Strauss said the master plan,
which would allow for increased
daily takeoffs as noise is
decreased, is "an enormous
gamble."
Clarence Turner, president of
the Mariners Community As·
sociatioo and one of slx speakers
at the hearine, said the. county
and Its airport plans bas created
"an atmosphere of fear" in
~Newport.
"The supervisors remind me
of the cross-eyed discu1 thrower
wbo couldn't throw very well,
never Ht any record.a but sure
scared the .hell out of bla spec·
tators."
He said more Jet departures
from the airport' would lead to a
"mole·like exist ence" for
homeowners.
Others speakers included
mayor Jadtie Heather, Coun·
cUman John Cox, Newport City
Attorney Huch Coffin and P*'ce
O'Donnell, an attorney from tbe
Lot Anples law firm rep,.....t·
inl NewPOrt tn lts latest lawsul\
a11illlt the county. •'Your council la determined
to ftPt .. IOftl .. lt lakes to cet Jull and equitable treatment for
Newport Beach,·' attorney
O'OOlinilU 11ld. "N"-"'" a.acla II ...._
tbat WO.. What It waata 81111 In·
tend1 to l9l lt, '' tbe 1M Agelee
, ... amau. ••-Al)
Police
seeking
mom, 15
A 6-week-old baby girl whose
father allegedly tried to sell her
Monday was in protective
custody today awaiting a court
hearing on her future.
The infant, Kathleen Wilson,
"continues to be In good health,"
said Bill Steiner, director of the
county-run Albert Sitton Home
in Orange.
The baby girl was taken to the
home for abused and battered
children Monday after Orange
County Sheriff's deputies arrest-
ed her father, Randy Gordon
Wilson, 29, about l a .m. at an
all·night coffee shop in Mission
Viejo where witnesses said he
allegedly tried to sell them the
child.
Sheriff's deputies said he tried
to give the baby away wheo
patrons refused his offer.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said
restaurant customers called in·
vestigators ...to report the inci·
dent.
Steiner said a court hearing
will be held Wednesday to ·de·
termine whether the baby girl
will be kept In protective
custody at the home.
Wilson was arrested on suspi·
cion of cruelty to a child and
booked into Orange County Jail
in lieu of SS.000 bail. He was still
in jail this morning.
Steiner said the baby's
mother , who the father
described to wjtnesses as a 15-
year-old, was not in custody to-
day.
Hart said the mother hasn't
been located yet, although
"We're working on it."
DRlllil CUil lllTllR ,
Night and moinin1 low
clouds with sll1ht chance
of morning drtz.zle Wednes·
day. Partial clearing In
afternoon. Lowa tonltbl
alone the coast 55, inland
65. Highs Wednesday mld
to upper 601 at the
beaches, lower 70I Inland.
llllDl•Y
The lure of hot doQ•, pmo
and nn> frlndl tMQJ ol 13·
111ar-okl SovNI e.ftk WoUtr Polovchalc. H'-,.,.._ to ,.. '""' "*" ,... porne. .. &Mfr homeland 1au PtfdliUolcd on
i"ttrnotionol ·'tug-o/·wor.
Pag1 Al.
11111
..
U • • • • • • Or1nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, 'June 2, 1981
..........
TOP THATI -Cheryl Wilson (left) and Beth Herriford are
nearly covered by their collection of 812,392 bottle caps
amassed by them and their eighth grade classmates in Lex-
ington, Ky. The idea was to try and visualize a million of
anything, and though they didn 't quite make that figure,
they "have a better concept of it," according to their
teacher.
J11ry analyzes
housing woes .
By GLENN SCOTf
Of Ille Delly ~ti .. IWf
More investment money and less speculation have been pre·
scribed by the Orange County
Grand Jury to remedy the coun·
ty's affordable housing woes.
But in their diagnosis of a
complex problem, grand jury
members were hesitant Monday
to claim that any practical solu·
lion is available to help more re1
sidents afford their own homes.
"Given the realities of land
costs, financing co,ts, labor ~d
material costs, plus delays, af·
fordable housing is an elusive
.;oal." grand jury members con·
eluded in their 13-page report.
It is the fifth report issued by
the busy grand jury in the last 15
days. The 19-member group has
issued 13 reports since last July.
Among recommendations for
the County Board of Supervisors
Boxer held
in slaying
of coach
ATHENS, Ga. <AP) -A 2D·
vear-old boxer has been charged
with murder in th&. slaying of
Louise Carson, 4'T. a boxing
coach who was round beaten to
death at her Athens apartment
last weekend, police said.
Jerome Clark was arrested
Monday night and was being
held in the Clarke County jail
Tuesday, authorities said.
The body of Mrs. Carson, a
former nurse who established
the Athens Boxing Club, was
found by Clarke County officers
Saturday night after a scream-
ing woman called police and
asked for help but gave only a
partial address, according to of·
ficials.
Police said an autopsy
performed Sunday indicated she
died of head injuries inflicted
with a blunt object.
Jurors queried
NEW YORK <AP> -A lawyer
for Mark Chapman. the man ac-
cused of killing ex-Bealle John'
Lennon, has asked a judge to let
him question prospective jurors
out of the earshot of the public
so they could be "comfortable In
revealin1 their prejudices."
Jury selection for Chapman's
murder trial 11 scheduled ror
June 22.
ORANGI COAIT
llllyPlll
ThOtnn P Haley ~ -°"91 btcWoe~
Rober1 N Weed ..........
M ThOmlS Keev1I .....
~P.Harvev ........ ~
L. K9Y 8cf\ultl ...... ~
~Mttl N. Godcllld Jt ~DncllOt ~Mu,__
8errwrd lc"ul!N,. a.....
~
\ was that more mor'\gage money
needs to be created through in-
vestments, more rental housing
should be built and that ad-
ministrators of affordable hous-
ing programs must get tougher
to curb speculation.
Grand jury members said
state legislation could be creat-
ed to give private investors the
privilege of selling bonds for af.
fordable housing mortgagee un-
der the same tax exempt s\atus
as governments have. '
Members said owners of ..._,.
m~sses and industries also could
get tax incentives to finance or
build housing for their
employees. The grand jury objected to the
fact that buyers of affordable
units can own other property,
under guidelines of 'the Orange
County lnclusionary housing
program.
They added that. the county
s hould control cases where
speculators sign agreements to
own and occupy a unit, then rent
it anyway.
Members also objected to a
procedure where builders can
trade or selJ credits to build af·
fordable units. "These credits
have no value limit and are
worth whatever the market for
them will allow." members said
in the report.
Under the county's affordable
housing program, builders are
required to include so-called af-
fordable units in 25 percent of all
developments of five or more
units. The units must be pri~ed
so lenders will qualiry buyers
who make up to 120 percent of
the county's median income.
The median currently is about
S24,500 a year, according to the
grand jury.
F. W. Olson, manager oC the
county's Information and Hous-in~Development Office, said to-
day that county procedures do
control most of the grand jury's
concerns.
· Olson said some buyers com-
ing from outside Southern
California couldn't make a down
payment without using other
property as equity, atthougb he
added: "Obviously we're con-
cerned if somebody wlllks in and
already has a home." .
He also added that allowing
builders to barter credits for af.
fordable units hasn't proved lo
be a problem. let alone an
abuse. He said the practice
gives bu1lders nexlbillty to de-
si 1n amaller developments
wltbo~t rta.id requirements.
Seeks break with leadership and sponsoring of bipartisan measure
W ASHJNGTON <AP> -The
Rea1an admlnilt.ralion,
chaaUsed as "bubblln1. ef-
fervescent with smugness" over
its insistence on a multiyear,
across-the-board tax cut, is try.
in& to persuade a key Democrat
to break with the leadership and
sponsor a bipartisan measure.
President Reagan and
Democratic leaders failed Mon-
day to reach a consensus on a
bill, but Rep. Dan Rostenkowski,
chairman of the tax-writing
House Ways and Means Com-
mlttee, said he would try to In·
fluence metnbert of his commit·
tet to coropromlae. He lodlcal·
ed, however, that he wants to
see more concessions o n
Reagan's side.
Administration officials, who
asked not to be identified, told
The Associated Press that Reagan~s strategists have
focused on Rostenkowskl as a
potential leader in a move to
di:att a consensus tax bill,
despite objections by House
Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr.
Reagan, meanwhlle, was
meeting today with RepublicaJll
to assess the prospect• for the
pared-down plan that be has em·
braced.
After the Oval Office bargain·
ine session with Reagan, O'NelU
said he found the president's
position was set "pretty well in
cement" and there seemed little
purpose in further· talks. The
Massachusetts Democrat said
he found the president and his
men "bubbling, effervescent
with smuiness."
He charged that the pre•l·
dent's plan, despite modlnca·
lions adopted to make it more
palatable, was a "windfall to the
rich'' and promised to produce a
Democratic, alternative. that
would be guided toward those
earning between $20,000 and
$50,000 a year.
But Rostenkowski said:. ''I
didn 'l recognize any door clos·
Ing."
Stockman: stand by budget
One administration aide said
privately that there ha.s been an
intensive effort the past two
weeks to persuade Rostenkowski
to break with the leadership and
develop h.ls own compromise.
Treasury Secretary Donald
Regan has met with the Illinois
De mocrat at least three times
recently, and the source said the
two had· sought lo identify ele-
ments or a tax cut that
Rostenkowski considers essen·
lial and Regan could accept.
RestQring of cuts would break faith with public
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan's budget director
has said Congress would be
breaking faith with the public lf
il tried to restore billions of
dollars in budget cuts called for
in a 1982 spending blueprint
enacted last month.
Budget director David A.
Stockman said Congress would
be guilty of "deliberate
•sabotage" if it doesn't stand by
the federal spending cuts.
However. House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr .. reiterat-
ed that he would press for a
series of votes on the'House floor
aimed at protecting social pro·
grams due to be slashed.
The $695.4 billion blueprint
adopted last month requires
House and Senate committees to
revise or eliminate programs
From Page A1
AX •••
to both sides for events that af.
feet one side or the other. I'm
appalled that I didn't receive
notice on this."
Johnson was charged in
February with first-degree
murder ln the March 1980 killing
of Madeline Johnson, 75, whose
body was found in the bedroom
of her home near Lake Stickney.
The cause of death was de-
termined to be a blow in the
head with the blunt end of an ax.
JohnsOh's trial was set for June
15.
Court documents indicate that
Johnson told police be was with
Ms. Orton at the time of the k.ill·
ing, but a prosecution aHidavit
claims he left their residence for
several hoqrs after the couple
had an a rgument .
Prosecutors refused lo dis·
close other possible evidence
against Johnson, but officials
said testimony from Ms . Orton
was considered crucial. Ms.
Orton could not be reached for
comment.
The body was discovered by
Johnson's father, Raymond
.Johnson, a former police officer
who told authorities he believed
the scene of the killing had been
arranged to look as though rob-
bery was the motive for the kill·
ing.
From Page A1
CHEERS •••
attorney added.
The lawsuit, the fifth the city
has filed challenging airport
matters, seeks to invalidate the
airport master plan on grounds
that it is environmentally defi-
cient.
Mayor Heather proclaimed that the public forum, ad·
vertised in newspapers and in ci-
ty water bills, ·'should serve
notice to the county that we are
united."
Sensing, perhaps, that the
mood was right. Newport resi-
dent Tom Williams stood in the
auditorium lobby passing out
signup sheets for a class acYon
lawsuit he's promised lo unleash
against the county.
Williams claimed more than
1,900 persons have agreed to be
named as plaintiffs In the so-
called emotional damage suit.
He said he's looking for 3,000
plaintiffs.
He said tiis idea is to "finan·
cially cripple the county." He
addect "Tb.ls h all-out war."
Jet crashes ·
. on dry lake
'
--
within their jurisdictions to cut
about SSS billion for next year.
Stockman, director of the Of· fie~ of Management and Budget,
said C9ngress is obligated to
stand t>y the cuts. He told re-
porters that any deviation from
those cuts "must be considered
a deliberate sabotage of the ex-
pressed will of Congress and the
people.''
Stockman said budget policy
already has been settled, and
Congress should simply imple-
ment it. not try to change that
policy.
Reprimand issued
after ocean crash
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Navy has announced "punltive
letters of reprimand" have been
issued to the skipper and a deck
oU~cer for failures• in the col-
lision of their nuclear-powered
su-bmarine with a Japanese
freighter.
The sinking of the freighter
Nissho Maru on April 9 with the
loss or two crew members trig·
gered strong public reaction in
Japan and strained relations
between Washington and Tokyo.
In an unusual action. Navy
moves to punish Cmdr. Robert
D. Woehl. 41. captain of the mis-
Espionage
caseuuvers
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Justice Department is in-
vestigating whether an Air
Force missile officer's three al-
leged unauthorized visits to the
Soviet Embassy involved es·
pionage, but a department
source says there are mixed
feelings about the probe.
Tbe source, who asked to re-
main anonymous, said Monday
that officials aren't certain
whether a major case will be de·
veloped against 2nd Lt .
Christopher M . Cooke or
whether the probe will lead
simply to a rec~. endation that he be separat 'from the
Air Force.
Cooke bas been in pretrial con-
finement at McConnell Air
Force Base near Wichita, Kan.
since Friday. He was charged
with three counts of violating an
Air Force regulation against un-
authorized con ta cl with
representatives or a communist
country.
Transit idled
CHICAGO <AP) -As some
47,000 commuters scrambled to-
day to find ways to get to work,
little legislative progress was re-
ported in finding a way to bail
out the Regional Transportation
Authority, starved for cash as il
awaits the delivery of about Sl20
million in sales tax receipts
later this month.
site s ubmarine G eo rge
Washington at the time of the
collision, and Lt. R.D. Hampton.
28, who was deck officer, were
disclosed by the U.S. Embassy
in Tokyo before the Navy an-
nouncement Monday.
In most cases, punitive letters
of reprimand severely damage a
naval ofricer's career and have
been known to bar promotions.
Woehl , a veteran of nearly 20
ye a r s· service, received a
reprimand because of "his
failure to take appropriate ac·
tion to ascertain the status and
safety of Nissho Maru after the
collision between the two ships,"
the Navy said.
Hampton's letter stemmed
from "his failure lo conduct a
more thorough periscope search
prior to the collision." according
to the Navy statement.
The letters were issued by
Vice Adm. Carlisle Trost. com·
mander of the U.S. 7th Fleet.
The Navy also said non-
punitive ''letters of caution"
were handed lo three crewmen
of the 6.800 -lon George
Washington. The Navy refused
to identify these crewmen or to
explain the reasons for the ac-
tion.
M eanwhile, Woehl wa s
permanently relieved as com-
manding officer of the sub. He
bad already been temporarily
removed and is now assigned to
the staff of a missile submarine
squadron on Guam.
Sexy dentist
sent to prison
NEW YORK (AP) -A dentist
videotaped in the act of hugging
and squeezing a woman patient
i::i his office has surrendered to
begin a four-month prison sen-
tence for sexual abuse.
Dr. Marvin Teicher, 56, was
convicted June 21, 1978, follow-
ing an 11-day, non-jury trial
before Justice Dorothy A. Crop·
per In stale Supreme Court in
Manhattan.
Two appeals of the conviction
were un successful, and
Teicher's license to practice
dentistry was revoked.
Annlversay rings, of course .
Because don't you love her
more now than you did even .
Rostenkowski, a product of the
political machine in Chicago,
was noticeably more con·
ciliatory than O'Neill in hi s
public remarks, but he gave no
indication he would break with
the party.
House Majority Leader Jim
Wright, D-Texas, who said he
had offered his own three-year
tax cut pl an to "meet the presi·
dent exactly halfway," said he
still saw a remote chance for
compromise.
Wright said two White House
aides. whom he declined to iden·
tify , approached him and
Rostenkowski at the conclusion
of the meeting and gave the im·
pression there was a possibility
the admirustration "could scale
down " its across·the-board
personal tax cut
Wright, on NBC-TV's "Today"
s how, said there was "no
c hance" Rostenkowski would
break with the leadership.
"We're going to stick together,"
he said. "The leadership isn't
going ~o break apart." .
At the White House meeting.
Reagan for the first time
personally confirmed he would
accept less than the 30 percent
reduction he endorsed during his
campaign last year. The new
plan already· has the support of
Dole and at least some members
or the group of conservative
House Democrats who allied
themselves with Reagan to give
him victory on a budget-cutting
blueprint.
From Page A1
NANCY • • •
of her husband's victory in No-
vember surprised her.
"I believed everything that I
had read in the papers and
heard on TV . that it was going to
be a very close election," she
sai.d. "l was prepared to stay up
un(il three o'clock in the morn·
ing . . . waiting for returns."
Mrs. Reagan said she had just
gotten out of the bathtub and her
husband was still in the shower
when she learned the televisiori
networks were beginning to pro·
ject that he had been elected.
"There we were. standing in
the bedroom with towel s
wra pped around us, dripping
wet, hearing that he'd been
elected .. and I said to him, 'I
don't think this is the way it's
s upposed to be,' .. she said.
"And with that, the phone rang
and it was Jimmy Carter
conceding the election."
then? All set In 14 karat yellow
gold. A. $825. B. $2,425. C. $425.
0 . 1626. , I ,
SLAVICK'§
......... SW.ltt'I
....._ ......_ Newpott Cftttn, Nfwpon hKh. 114M6·1ll0
W........,. I...,._.*'' .....on Vlloj6fNonllOr.,.I1llit City ... c...... .... ,..
Mll9~ a..A ..... /SM °"lo 1 l.M v..-• .. _ .. ....,... •• _..... ........... ~ ........ VSA.W-0... MlwlM,..,,,..,. c • .w
..---. -. . . . . . .::,__ -
Af' ...... 'Bl
Margaret Trudeau, estranged wife of Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, takes arm of new
man in her life as' they Leave performance at Na-
tional Arts Centre in Ottawa. He's Jimmy Johnston
of G.H. Johnston Furniture Ltd.
Bminea booma
forbuden
Business is booming for
butlers, thanks to an era of
prosperity that has swelled
the ranks of American
millionaires, says a butler
who has worked for a variety
of Hollywood celebrities.
'·A butler is the ultimate
status symbol," David Lynch
said in Denver. "People get
all the diamonds they want
-and then they get a
butler."
Lynch, 34, who works for a
wealthy Denver family, has
in the past been employed by
such celebrities as Ann·
Margret, Charlton Heaton,
Charles Sltouraa Jr., James
Stewart and Darryl Zanuck.
"You can't be temperamen-
tal," Lynch, 34, says of a
butler's duties· as head of the
household staff. "You may
have to deal with a tem·
peramental cook or a tem-
peramental employer. and it
pays to keep your cool. You
have to be flexible and pa·
tient."
Canadian opera star
Maureen Forrester sees
nothing wrong with someone
of her training performing at
the Royal York Hotel's Im·
periaJ Room -a posb sup-
per-club whose recent acts
have included Tlaa Turner,
Suzanne Somers and Hal
Linden.
"It's not a question of my
giving up my past life," says
the contralto who on Monday
was beginning a 12 -day
engagement at the club in
Toronto. "It's just variety.
"I 'm a singer and it
doesn't matter what I'm
singing, whether I'm singing
a Nell Diamond song or a
Cole Porter or whether I'm
singing the Mahler Second
Symphony," she says.
Miss Forrester soon will
star in a Canada-wide tour of
the musical "Mame," dis-
misses notions that opera is
for musically knowledgeable
audiences.
The Secret Service agent
who stepped in front of Prest·
dent Reagan and took a
bullet fired by a would-be as-
sassin says the service did
''an excellent job . . . the
best job we could" in protect·
ing Reagan.
·'I think we did all we
could ,'' says Timothy
McCarthy. "But we'll have to
wait and see. There are a
number of investigations still
eoing on. But it's bard to say
if we would have done any-
thing different."
M cCartby. 31, was in
Boston recently lo be made a
member of The Charitable
Irish Society of Boston and to
receive a resolution from the
House of Representatives
declaring him a "genuine
hero."
"I thought the luck of the
Irish would hold up 1l little
longer, but I was hit,''
Thunder cracks
)tlCCa~ aa.lcl ol the bullet'
that hlt blm.
"I wu aware of the coo·
ruslon and waa in quite a bit
or pain," be aaid. "I read In a
report that the 1h.11 would
have blt either the president
or Jefl')' Parr the aaent ln
ch1r1e, if I hadn't moved
toward the funman."
Tell.llelMe Ende Fwd Hid
bJs visit to Fort Jones wu
"<1ne of the happiest times
I've ever had" as he paaaed
out awards to graduatln1
seniors at Fort Jones, Calif.
Hl1h School.
The hl1h school, which
graduated a class or 18 over
the weekend, had been una·
ble to attract a dl1n1tary to
Its graduation until senior
Tammie Barrtl, tbe student
body president, wrote a let-
ter to a few newspapen ap-
pea ling for a celebrity to
hand out awards at aradua-
tion.
The letter was seen by
Ford, Rep. Pete McCloakey
or Palo Alto, and B. T.
Collins, bead of the
California Conservation
Corps, aJl of whom were at
the graduation ceremonies
along with most of the 525 res-
idents of Fort Jones. .
California Secretary of
State March Fong Eu and
singer Michelle Pltllllpa,
formerly ol the Mamas ud
Papas, will be in the small
town near the Oregon border
ror additional cer~monies
Thursday.
Lauren Bacall says
"The Fan," her new
film, "is much more
violent than when I read
the script." She is more
upset at suggestions the
movie is a dramatiza·
tion of the murder of
John Lennon.
• ID East
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueed1y, June 2, 1981
PSJ\: wants more flights '
Airline contends it should get eight da~ departures
8y GLENN SCOTT day to the supervisor•\ PSA county otnclals said later that
of .. o.etr,.......,. President Paul Bar1teley the noise difference ii much
Offlclall for Pacific Southwest claimed the request tor et1ht less.
Airlines contended Monday that daily departures is consistent PSA offlciaJa say the proposed
they should eel eltht lnatead of with rederuJ law intended to access plan would reward ln·
two fi11hta a day from John stimulate competition. cum bent airlines for not ualnt
Wayne Airport und'r a new Barkley urged the supervisors quieter jell because reductions
•lrport access plan. to drop it.a "protectionist, anti· In noise • aUow tor more dally
The remarks were aimed at competitive policies or the past" Hl&hts to be added at the
penuadin1 tbe Oranie County by &ivin& PSA mor~ nt1hta. airport. PSA would be prime
Board rA Supervisors to modify PSA officials have tried to candidate to get those fiitbt.t.
a propoeed access plan before play up the fact that they
takln1 final action on it Wednes-already have in their fleet
day. several or the so-called "quiet"
The plan as currently pro-new Jet.a wt)ich reduce takeoff
posed would 1ive newcomer noise over airport communities.
PSA the two daily de7artures At a preas conference Mondar.
while preserving moat o the dai· in Costa Mesa, Dennis O'Del,
ly fllibta operated by lncwn· PSA's assistant vice president
bents AlrCal and Republic for legal affairs, refused to rule
Airllnea. out a lawsuit il the board doesn't
AirCaJ would 1et 23.5 flights comply with PSA's request.
per day instead of its current 25. He saJd orlicials will decide on
Republic would get 11.5 flights a course of action after Wednes-
instead or 12. day's board decision.
All of the AirCal and Republic O'Dell claimed lhal PSA, with
flights would be preserved for its quiet jets, could operate its
the three years of the access eight daily flights from John
plan, while PSA would be depen-Wayne within noise constraints
dent on reductions in overall proposed in the access plan.
airport noise to earn a chance to He said the new jets emit only
bid for mote fihthU. a quarter as much noise as most
In a letter filled with legal of the commercial jets now in
references and delivered Mon-use at the airport. However,
"Given tbia circumstance,
there ls obviously no incentive
for incumbents to become
quiet," O'Dell said, addloa that
AlrCal has a monopoly on
service between Orange County
and the San Francisco Bay
Area.
However , an aide to
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
Monday that incumbent• still
know they must reduce noise if
they hope to eventually achleve
their own extra flight.a.
He noted that the number of
permitted daUy flights actually
would go down from 41 to 31 if
noise reduction isn't achieved
according to guidelines In the
county's master plan for John
Wayne Airport.
Capital advice from solon
Badham provides tr~vel tips to residents I'
By 0. C. HUSTINGS Of .. Deltr,......,.
If you are planning a trip to
Washington D.C. this summer, let
Congresaman Bob Badham help.
Badham says his Washington
or Newport Beach offices "will
be more than happy to aasisl" in
arranging tours of the White
House, the Capitol, the FBI, the
State Department, KenneCiv
Center and the Supreme Court.
However, Badham adds, be
advised that there are a limited
number or tickets available for
each tour, so try to give him as
much notice as possible.
For exampre, each con-
gressman is allotted only 10
tickets per week for While
House tours, the Newport Beach
Republican notes and, therefore,
be can't always 1uarantee that
tickell wlll be available. He
notes there is an escellent public
tour of the White HouaeTueaday
throueh Saturday.
Some other travel tips rrom
Congreama.d Ba~am :
-Plan at least one day to visit
the various Smithsonian
museums. U your time la limit-
ed, the Air and Space Huaeum
and the recenUy opened east
wlne of the National Art
Museum shouldn't be missed.
-Monticello, Thomas Jef-
ferson's home, is about 80 miles
weal of Washington D.C. and is a
nice, one-day outing.
-Williamsburg is a three-hour
commute by car or train, so set
aside two daya. for your visit
there.
checking out hotel availability in
northern Virginia or in
Maryland.
-In the city, the best means
of getting around are by taxi, or
the Metro. Rental cars are
available and convenient,
Badham says, but traffic is ter-
rible and the parking situation is
worse.
Badham "ibvites residents of
the 4oth Congressional District
to drop by his office in
Washington for tour informa·
tion, or "just to beat the heat
and rest your feet.·'
Airport council
names director8
Three naw directors have
been named to Orange County's
Community Airport Council, a
business group that supports im·
proved aviation service in the
county. Added to the board
of directors are
Robert Volk, president of Martin
Aviation and a Palos Verdes
resident; Louise Pomeroy, presi-
dent or Abigail Abbott Personnel
Services and a La Habra resi·
dent and Jerry Sherman, chief
pilot for Smith International and
a Mission Viejo resident.
<Allege off en
imlk to fitnea
While there are many ways to.
fitness, Orange Coast College is
offering an unusual, slow -paced
way to fitness: walking.
The college is offering the
walking to fitness class Monday
and Wednesday evenings begin-ning June 15.
Fires in drought-stricken Everglades contained -Although closer to most
points of Interest, botela in
Washinitoo D.C. proper are ex-
pensive. Badbam su11ests
COLLEGE HONORS -
Charles R. Able of Corona
del Mar has received a dist-
inguished alumnus award
from the Universitr of
Colorado. He was president
and chief executive officer
of the McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics Company in'
Huntington Beach before re-
tirement.
There Is no charge for this
class and registration will be
conducted on the track at the
first meeting.
Wa&tal forecast
Ll9111 v•rl•bl• wl11d~ mor11l111 '*'" bec:oml111 IOUlhwffl • to 1S •110t1 wlltl 1 to > toot wllld w•w• T.,.Ml•Y .....,_, 2 to) -wester· l't awell lllr0U9ll TuHd•Y 1119111.
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For more information about
the class, call <714> 556-5880.
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It Fin3lly Arrived. ~JCJ
We're referring to our late thtpment oi boys' Lacoste Alligator shirts.
B> the d.nw you read this ad, Storekeeper Doug Root will ~ve them au C:hedced in and on the shelf.
I
---~---...._ ... ~ '\. ·~~ ...
. s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981
GOD'S HAND -Ronnie
C:rues of Gallup, N.M ., says
be felt the hand of God when
the tanker he was recently
filling with propane ex-
ploded when hit by lightn·
m g, knocking him 16 feet.
rues suffered only shock.
Hurricane forecasters leery
60 million live in vulnerable areas; in past, most ignored warnings
CORAL GABLF.S, Fla. <AP>
-From horizon to horizon,
thousands of hi&h·rise hotel!,
' condominiums and sumptuous
houses line the sun-drenched
Florida coast from Pensacola to
Key West to Jacksonville.
The same scene exists alona
the barrier islands of Texas,
Alabama, Mississippi and along
the Atlantic Coast from Maine to
Georgia -where more than 60
million people have been drawn
to the good life by th~ sea.
Neil Frank enjoys peaceful
beach strolls along the coast, but
the homes, hotels and high-rises
be passes give him nightmares
of hurricane destruction.
Frank, director of the Na·
tional Hurricane Center, has
become something of a latter·
day Paul Revere, delivering
more than 100 speeches and lee·
tures each year warning people
about hurricanes and pleading
with local officials to make
pre parations before a big storm
strikes.
Much of tht Um•, people
simply refuse to U1teo1 Frank ·
said in an lntervle'!N on the ,vt
of the June l·Nov. 30 Atlantic
hurricane aea1on.
They don't believe a hurricane
might actually barrel aahore
with 200-mph winds that would
collapse homes like hou1es or
cards and puah ashore hu1e
wave~ that could destroy the
roundtUorus or beachtront con· dos.
"When you have a rare event
like a hurricane, ll's the natural
tendency of human beln1a to de·
ny the danger," Frank Uld.
"They say: 'It's Just not 1oin1 lo
hltme.'''
Even before the official be&in·
nlng of the 1981 hurricane
season, Tropical Storm Arlene
was born in the Caribbean and
s pread torrential rains over
Jamaica , Cuba and the
Bahamas.
On average, six Atlantic hur·
ricanes develop each year. Dur·
ing 1980, there were 11 named
1torm1, nlne ot which became
hurricanea.
James P. Walsh, actln1 ad·
mlnlatrator of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad·
mlnlatratlon, Hid lhu country ta
''In the moet vulnerable position
In hlatory,'' should a major bur·
flc&nealrlke.
"We Just don't have the
knowlec:tae to predict what this
season will brfnai" Frank said.
"But lf you're 10 ne to bet, you
can bet a1ainat a hurricane hit·
Una the aoutheut Florida coast.
The oddl are one In aeven in any
one year.''
"lt'1 that one chance in seven
Ulat worries Frank and civil de·
tense offlclals alon1 the Atlantic
and Gulf coasts. They say people
U vine In the most vulnerable
areas never have experienced
the fury of a major storm.
When Hurricane David came
within a rew miles of the heavily
populated Florida Gold Coast in
1979, hardware and erocery
stores were packed with frantic
people, whlle \boulandi of elder·
ly rttldenll on Miami Beacb
fled tbelr apartmenll lo a
chaotic evacuaUon that revealed
elarlna deficiencies In Dade
County's dilaater plan.
''The disaster plan was a diJ.
aster," said Miami Beach Flre·
Rescue Lt. Jack Narren shortly
after David brushed the area.
After that false alarm, many
Miami Beach residents vowed to
never •lain leave their homes in
the face of a huni~ane.
"I'm staying home no matter
what," Stella Miller aald. "I
don't care if the water nows
over my head. U I drown, J
drown. But 1 would never 10
a1ain to a shelter -never.••
Because that attitude atlll pre-
v ails in Miami Beach and other
oceanfront cities, Frank fears
that when a bil storm does
make landfall here, the death
toll could exceed the U.S. record
or 6,000 deaths set when a bur·
ricane roared into Galveston,
Texas, in 1900.
VITAL -An arms treaty
with the Soviet Union is
"vital for the continuation of
civilization," . former U.S.
Ambassador to Moscow
Thomas J . Watson said in a
Tufts University commence· ment address.
Anti-court attitudes seen as danger
"I know of only four plans on
total evacuation in the entire
United States," Frank said.
"They have plans for the Tampa
Bay area, Lee County, Fla., the
lower Florida Keys and
Army tells
why Sobie
lost me~ WA S HI NGTO N (AP )
Conservatives in Congress are
pus hing to strip federal judges
of Jurisdiction ove r abortion.
school busing a nd school prayer
m a classic confrontation that
some warn could cause a serious
erosion 1n the balance of power
among the three branches of
government ·
.. It is a radical assault on the
independence of the federal
courts and a back -door attack on
the Bill of Rights." said John
S hattuck , h e ad of the
Wa s hington office of the
American Civil Liberties Union.
Groups as di verse as the-
ACLU, the Baptist Joint Com·
mittee on Public Affairs, Com·
mon Cause and the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights .have
been aroused to jointly oppose a
dozen congressional proposals
that would limit or eliminate the
role of the federal courts on
various issues.
Senate conservatives such as
Jesse Helms, R·N.C., and Orrin momentum in their campaign Galveston Bay in Texas.
Hatch , R ·Utah, argue that against the federal judiciary's "So I ask what's going to hap·
federal judge11 and the Supreme jurisdiction. pen if a hurricane hits Norfolk,
Court have gone far beyond the Critics of the drive, including or New Orleans or the Jersey
wishes of most Americans in some otherwise conservative coast? The whole Jersey coast is WASHINGTON (AP) -The
their constitutional interpret&· constitutional scholars, say tak· a series of barrier islands. On Army bas decided not to award
lions or social issues. SO, in addi· ing federal jud1es off cases weekends, there are hundreds of Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic Jr. a
lion to direct legislative attacks, could lead to so different ln· thousands of people on those com mend a lion medal being
conservatives hope to remove terprelations of a law in as islands." given to other Army personnel
federal judges fl'om any role tn • many states. taken hostage in Iran.
handling cases on those sub-One dissenting voice in Subic "did not behave under
jects testimony late last month before * * * s l r e s s t h e w a y o o n ·
On issues such as abortion, a a Senate Judiciary aubcommil· commissioned officers are ex·
direct appeal from state courts tee on separation of powers was B•nt wanN-f pected to act," the Army said
to the U.S. Supreme Court would that of John Noonan Jr., a law • ~ •~ Monday after it was announced
Llamas enjoy life
as farm 'worke-rs'
be pe rmitted. In others, the professor al UC Berkeley.. that the other 20 U.S. military
federal judiciary role would be He said there is a "pattem of StOrm 1lDl1le personnel taken hostage were
eliminated completely. abusive, indeed outrageous given the Defense Meritorious
In practical terms, approval partisanship" among federal OR lis• tinu Service Medal.
or such legislation would mean a judges, whose numbers were • ~ Subic, 24 , appeared in an Ira·
woman denied an abortion or a shjirply increased while Jimmy nian film released shortly after
student In a school where the Carter was president. MIAMI (AP> -Forecasters he and the other hostages were
day opened with a prayer, would Noonan -and many who do began identifying hurricanes seized. Jn an Iranian film re·
...
VA NCOUVER. British Colum·
bia <AP > Jane and Brian
P inkerton have taken their own
backs out of backpacking and
shifted most of the burden to a
pair of llamas.
Mrs. Pinkerton says the small,
wooll y, long-necked beasts of
burden from Peru are as happy
i n North Ame rica a s the
Pinkertons are lo have them
h e r e Llamas a re cute and
friendly and easier on the en·
\'lrOnment than horses. she
adds
.. They eat less. and they don't
trample undergrowth the way a
ho rse will," she said. "The
Start loalng
~eight today
Beo•n •os1no we1Qht 1mme~111tty w•t~ mn1mum s11eno1n s.,., Of.
rin11 reduc1n9 tabtels and Ootl
Plan It ta~es o•t• wnere your w.n
oower Juves ott A 11ovt1nmtnt
aopo1n1td oantl ol medoc11111d m
enhloc open\ nH 1ev1ewtil 111f
clon1cal tests 01 1ne maumum SlrtllQtn 1n11red-tnt 1n s..,., Of.
"''"· and nu Jermtd •I sale and tttt<h~t lor aopelote contro4 and
weogM IOH ,,., s.,., Of1111t1 to
~r lo IOM Wlltl ~loat a• ,11111111u. lry Ofrtloll
O*lftll •S tht rthtl Yo1J wanl du11n11 tile pre menstrual cyclt It •S a
natur~ wait• p.+t Ind 11 100 •S
SOIO witn a money back ouar anttt
Rtld and toUow '" PICU~ PltcllU hons car elM!ty
~@'!:) L. L •• t -" ___ ... ;
W9.nt-to tr~·inon A new«' ~l?
Use a Daily Piiot
Penny Pincher Ad
to sell items under
$100.
3 lines for 2 days
only $1 .50 a day.
~. Sorry, no com-
mercial ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny
Pincher
Ad or use your
Visa or Master
Card.
Call Classlfled
Advertising at
6.42-5678 to
ptace,your ad.
be prohibited from filing suit in not necessarily think it wise to with a phonetic alphabet system leased several weeks after his
horse will ruin the back c<>un· a federal court. do so -say the Constitution in 1950, calling them Able, capture at the U.S. Embassy in
try.'' Instead, the legal battle would gives Congress the right to "or· Bak-er, Charlie and so forth. In Teheran on Nov. 4, 1979, Subic is
Mrs. Pinkerton said she and have to be waged in a state dain and establish" courts below 1953· tfiey began using female shown saying he and a defense
her husband first encountered court, where judges frequently the Supreme Court. That means names, and male names were altache al the embassy were
llamas on a trip to Peru in 1965. are elected and where Constitu-Congress can decide what tssues addedjp 1979. CIA spies.
Two months ago, they bought tional issues are rarely fought. should be handled by federal The first name on this year's Subic bas said that he never
10-month·old Misti and 18· Only once before has the courts, they say. • list was Arlene, but that was saw the film and believes it
month-old Cholo from a dentist Senate approved a similar pro· One of the critics of the taken by a rare early May probably was doctored. He said
who· bad purchased them from posal. Thal was when Helms legislation, Harvard Law School tropical storm that dumped tor· he was beaten and threatened by
the Alberta Game Farm near pushed through a bill denying constitutional specialist rential rains over Jamaica, his captors, but told them
Edmonton. federal court jurisdiction over Laurence Tribe, says early Cuba and the Bahamas. nothing they did not already
Each should be able to carry s chool prayer cases in 1979. Supreme Court decisions, main-Arlene, a depression that know.
as much as 100 pounds. Most of> However, the legislation died in ly Marbury versus Madison in became a tropical storm when Subic, who previously Uved in
the time, however, Misti and the House. 1803, ga\te all of the federal its sustained winds reached 39 Bowling Green, Ohio, said be
Cholo enjpy the easy life al a But the swing to the right in courts sole authority to interpret mph, never achieved the had asked to be discharged on
farm in suburban Langley, with Congress and the election of a not only the Constitution but to minimum sustained surface July l so that he could resume
a horse and a donkey for com· Republican-controlled Senate rule on laws passed by winds of 74 mph to be classified government studies al George
pa_n_Y_·~~~~~~~~~~~~h_a_v_e-"'g_iv_e_n~c_on_s_e_r_v_a_ti_v_es~n_e_w---.;;;C~o~n~g~ress;;;;;;=·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;a;s;a;h•urn;;;;;;;•·c;an;;;;;e;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;W=a=s=hin=·=gt;;;;;;on;;;;;;U;ru;·;v;e;rs;i;ty;.;;;;;;;;;;~
When Weight WatcMn mN•. cnenoe. It's progr ... um you cen
count on.
Now with ow uotllng new tood plan,
your chancel of~•• better
then ever. '
BEFORE JUNE 20, 1981
..
-..
THERE'S A CLASS NEAR YOU
CALL 835-5505 TODAYI
\
LOWER BACK PAINS
"SUPPED DISC"
LEI PAINS
If you suffer back or leg pain from a '"slipped disc" or
spinal muscle strain, a chiropractic examination should
be performed ~ A proper examination and diagnosis of this
condition usually results in successful treatment without
drugs or surgery and with mi.nimum loss of work time.
According to a recent Issue of Medical World News, over
50 million Americans used chiropractic services last year
for the re!ief of these and similar health problems. The
primary reason is because CHIROPRACTIC WO RKSI
Chiropractic seeks to correct the cause of back "8nd leg
problems and not just treat symptoms.
Our staff of well-trained personnel and chiropractic
doctors study the symptoms of back disorders, which
often Include leg pain. tingling, numbness, and cramping
in the calf, thigh, and buttocks. If chiropractic care Is In-
dicated, we initiate corrective treatment to minimize pain
and encourage health recovery. Whether your back pro-
blem is a result of an accident. recent stress or a lingering
condition, or even if you have tried other types of
treatment. do not content yourself with partial results or
prolonged periods of losa of work or bedrest.
Information concerning chiropractic care and your
problem may be obtained by calling the Yarwood
Chiropractic Office. Also, information regard Ing
chiropractic coverage under WORKMAN 'S
COMPENSATION, AUTOMOBILE INJURY INSURANCE,
GROUP HEAL TH INSURANCE, and other programs It
evalfable.
-
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday, June 2. 1981
t
I
. Gay cops.· gaining acceptance
Conflict 'minimal' on San Francisco force, but numbers remain small
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In
a city where the •·gay" life i1
chfonlcled In conmct, the men
and women of the San Francisco
Police Department are pound\ng
a beat towaro togetherness with
ao awkward step.
The force of 1,802 ofricers has
been coming to terms with the
issue of "gay cops" for six
months under a "non-
dlscimiJlation" policy endorsed
In January by Chief Cornelius
Mur:phy.
It's a policy that's beina
watched by other departments
llround the nation tncreaslntlY
confronted by gays demandlnl a
role ln law enforcement.
Sgt. Al Benner. In charge of
recruitment, asserts that the de.
partment does not recruit gays,
but is determined to accom-
modate them, a process most
believe Is worklna well.
"Sometimes we aet other de-
partmenU that chuckle at the
sltuaUon as they perceive it in
San Fs:anclsco," Benner said.
"We say, 'Hey -you may be
chuck.line today, but you may be
calling us for advice on how to
handle the situation tomor-
row!"'
Northern Cali/Omia
gas prices boosted
Interviews with gay cops tend
to support the official view that
there is a minimum of conflict
between gay and straight or-
fi ce r s, but the number of
homosexual officers remains
s mall, ~specially for a city
where an estimated one in seven
people is gay.
Les Morgan, head of Gay
Outreach, an organization sup·
porting gay objectives in this
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
G asoline prices j umped an
average of 1.5 cents last month
in Nevada and Northern
California, the second laraest
1981 increase since federal con-
trols were lifted, a survey
shows.
price of a gallon of gasoline bas city of650.000, said 39 known gays
risen 15 cents -or 11 percent --about two percent of the force
since President Reagan de--have joined the department
regulated the oil industry ln late sin ce November 1979, when it
January. More than half the began hiring after a period of
total increase came immediate-several years.
ly after the controls were lifted. The force has 127 women, in ·
The auto club found that eluding 58 non-whites. a nd 149
Northern California and Nevada non-white males.
Gays In San Francisco, one of
the most militant groups in the
nation, have complained in re·
cent years they are sometimes
discriminated against in police
services, contending officers do
not respo nd quickly whe n
homosexuals are attacked or on
~ther complaints.
Murphy. while s lopping short
of saytna he would recruit aays,
publicly a vowed a policy of non-
discrimination over sexual prer-
erence, a gesture preceded by a
1979 lawsuit settled out of court
alleging police discrimination In
hirin g racial minorities and
women. While the suit did not
s pecifically involve gays, it re-
s ulted in voluntary establis h-
ment of a unit to monitor
sensitive issues in the depart·
ment
Most gays interviewed believe
they are known to straight of·
ficers. but declined to permit
their names to be used . They
said negative reac tion is
minimal and does not interfere
wiUi their work or prevent them
from enjoying it. The Ca lifornia State
Automobile Association reported
Monday that a survey of 700 sta-
tions in Nevada and Northern
California revealed m otorists
were paying from 1.1 to 2 cents
more for fuel in May than April.
The findings confirm tha t the
consumers were paying an Henry Friedlander. police
average $1.39 a gallon for leaded public relations oHicer, said the
gasoline in May, up 1.1 cents assimilation of gays is helping
over the months before, and police relations with the gay
$1.46 for unleaded regular fuel, a community, making It possible
two cent increase over April's to defuse issues through new ties
price_.____ _ ______ with gay_ organiz_at_io_n_s_. ___ _
"They <s tr aig ht men l
speculate about whether you're
gay automatically if you're a
woman. They wonder why
you're on the force. They either
think you're a slut or they think
you're a dyke."
A,WI,.._
ON CLOUD 9 -Astronauts Margaret Seddon and Lt. Cmdr.-
Robert Lee Gibson leave the church in Murfrees boro,
Tenn., after their weekend wedding, as Paslor John Marl<
Williams looks on. The groom's parents. Mr and Mrs . Paul
Gibson, live in Westminster.
Open To All In June
'John Doe' Hits Jackpot
In Monthly Oil 'Lottery'
ONTARIO, CALIF.
(Special) -Hundred• of
average citizens will win
oil lease rights in upcom-
ing public drawings con-
ducted by the State of
Wyoming. Some may
achieve overnight wealth
by selling their rights to
oil companie1 and retain-
ing lifelong royalties on
any oil or gas production.
Incredibly, moat will risk
no more than $40, tax de-
ductible, to enter the lit·
tJe-known program that
offer1 every American the
opportunity to compete
on an equal basis with
giant oil companies for
lea.ea of public lands.
W onnation and entry
details are available from
The H. Kirk Sanden Co.,
Public Landa Div., 2032
E. Caroline, Ontario,
Calif. 91761. Pleaae en-
close $1 for postage and
handlin1.
Official entry cards will
be rushed to meet the
nert filing deadline.
'jhlt~i-
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-State Contractors Ucense f241927-
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e ~ -16'0 SUl'ERIOA AVE. COSTA MESA
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r::JJenta/ Hea/t~,~~1 L~·
By GERALD WINKLER, 0.0 .S. ~ ~/ J '°"
WORLD'S MOST PREVALENT 1 /
DISEASE
What ls the world's Tooth decay can start
m 0 s t p r e v a 1 e n t in less than 15 minutes
disease? If your answer afler eating. All that is
is the common cold n e 'e d c d a re three
you're wrong~ Tooth ingredients: a tooth. d ecay Is the most bacteria t indental
universal disease in the plaque> and sugar.
world. Only a minute When the bacteria and
fraction ol the world's sugar meet. acid is
1 r r 't formed. When tbe acid peop e are ree 0 1 · and tooth meet . lhe'acid Only 2 percent of the American population starts etching a hole in
ha s been spared . thetooth. Earliest cavities show Today's diets, high in
I ht rt · renned sugars and up r g a er pnmary carboh'ydrates. are te e th erupt. The average 13-year -old conducive to decay. But
already has at least five careful and PROMPT caviti~s in permanent o r a I h Y i I e n e teeth. Girls seem to get procedur~ after eattn1
more cavities than ~ill reduce , If not
boys; but then. girls e I I m i n • t e • t b e
1et their teeth BOOner. d e c • Y · Prod u c 1 n i
A caVity ls a hole ln a activity ot the modern
tooth caused by decay diet. which Is produced by Gerald Wlnlcler, O.D.S. ·
the combination or and ASIOClates
pl aq ~ a nd acid. It 1411 Av~clo. Sulu 505.
doesl\1l take a few days Newport leach
ror troubJe to develop Pllone: 141 ... lto
----
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I
I
.. . .
A bill by Rep. Dan L,UDi~I;
of Long Beach would, lf g
congressional approval watd off
the possibility that California
taxpayers would have to ~n
tribute up to $75 million oyer tho
next three years in assistqce lo
refugees located in the state.
Full federal support for
refugees-who have been Ip the
country for thn!e years ended
April 1. Under present funding
formulas, the federal govern-
ment pitb up only half the cost
of refugee assistan~e. leaving the
balance up to states and counties.
"l'hls, says Lungren, could cosl-C~ia $75 million for the
cared refugees who have not yet
become self -supporting and who
still qualify for various forms of
welfare aid under state eligibility
rules.
Lungren's bill, which would
reinstate full federal funding, has
the support of tHe California con-
gressional delegation and
representatives of other states
heavily i~act'cl by refugee re·
settWrilent, notably Florida.
The measure is of special
concern to California, which now
has between 30 and 40 percent of
Tb8 ·~ralists~ who are 4olng
so ~~Washibgton, are. out in forq4J lit cram~o with a whole
series bills clµrly designed to
cas\ a shadow of immorality, if
not CrimflJaiity, on.•bortion. ~ Los Angeles Police
Chilf Sell. Ed Davis has in -
troduced one th1t has especially
inf9rt•ted th~ Jnedical pro-
f esslan.. ,
tt would require a ~ll~
report ~ the state Department of He~lh Sel'vices on every abor-
tion: pdformed, including date,
locatfen, '•name of doctor, race,
marltal IQtus and medical bis·
tory or lhe mother' and e\i'en
leniftb. ~weight of the "aborted
child',. and ''signs of life." ~ PllYsict.-. contend this wodld cle'arly violate doctor-
pati,nt-eonfidentiality while serv-
ing _no·:JXarp<>se but to provide an-
ti-a~ts with a conveolent
list ofl*lctors, hospitals and cllni0$l~ could be targeted for
har~. Failure to report could result
in a fine and/or jail sentence for
a doctor. The Health Depart·
p~ ...rugees in the country -al•J.JO Orange County which,
wltb. percent of tot~ U.S.
pol*Sation, has almost 10 percent
of the refugees.
This, of course, is because
many migrate here from other
areas, seeking a more agreeable
climate or the company of
friends and relatives. And under
the Constitution, no person legally
admitted to the country can be
restricted in movement among the
states.
While most refugees even-
tually find their way in the new
society. there still are about
100,000 in California r~ceiving
some sort of cash or medical as-
sistance from government pro-
grams.
The federal government
made the decision to admit the
refugees. It is patently unfair to
expect a handful of states and
counties to bear the burden of
their resettlement while other
states contribute nothing.
Reinstatement of full federal as-
sistance for a reasonable period
would distribute the responsibili·
ty more equitably.
.
merit, which also O.Pposes the bill,
estimates processmg the reports
could oost the state in excess of
$200"'000 annually.
Another measure by Seo.
John Schmitz would require un-
married minors who do not have
parental consent for an abortion
to wait and get a court order -
which of course would involve
their parents.
A bill by Sen. Joseph 1 Mon-toya would require a phys1c1an to
inform a woman seeking an abor-
tion -0f the current "anatomical
and physiological charac-
teristics" of the fetus. Another
mea~ would require the filing
of a death certificate ln 8JlY abor-
tion · ~ this would do little more
than contribute to the anguish of
an alrea.Qy distressed woman by
implying that any abortion is in
fact the murder of a child.
It is unfortunate that propo-
nents of less 1overnment seem
united in their effort to get more
government into the most private
and sensitive aspects of our lives.
The til t to the W e st
Arguments over the ac-
curacy of the 1980 census are far
from ov~r, with most of the fuss-
ing coming from the Northeast
and upper Mldwest states that
stand to lose both Congressional
representation and a share of
f ede~al funds because of declin-
ing population.
New York could lose as many
as five seats in the House. At the
opposite end of the scale, Florida
with the top growth rate -41
percent over the past decade -
stands to gain four seats.
Texas follows with a gain of
three, then California with two .
The rest of the population growth
has been entirely in the West,
with Wa~hington, Oregon,
Nev~da, Utah, Colorado, Arizona
and ~ew Mexico each apparently
gainiJlg one congressional seat.
Likely to lose two seats
apiece are Illinois, Ohio and
Pennsylvania. South Dakota, Mis-
souri, Indiana, Ma~achuselt.s and
New Jersey could each lose one
seat.'
•
PopUlation changes in the re-
maining states were not suffi-
cient to change their representa·
lion.
The census figures already
are facing a number of court
challenges. Some cities charge
t}vlt blacks and Hispanics were
undercounted. others complain
that the census should not have
counted either legal or illegal
aliens , though the Census
Bureau, charged with counting·.
''all persons,'' does not distinguish
bet ween citizens and non-
citizens.
Because of the court cases, it
is quite possible that redistricting
may be set aside in SQme states
until the exact number of
representatives bas been
esiablished.
But whatev•r the ultimate re-
sult, the pattern is clear -the
population trend in the United
States is away from the frost belt
and toward the sun belt, with
heavy growth emphasis in the
West. i
Opinions expressed In the spece •bove ant those of the O.lly Piiot. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are thoSe of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The 0.lly Piiot, P.O. Bole 15601 Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhoM (71•>
642-4321.
. , r ' LM. Boyd I PNon
lnJatet In the North Dakote State
Pen1t..,Uary at Bismarck manuf&c·
urt their own Janitorial producta. 1My're not for sale commerdall.J. au·~itleY're said to be quite •ood.
And tftet.r names are suitable. too:
drain cleaner called Breakout. A wn remover called ~rilk. A tollet
ORANGE COAST Illy Pilat
\
. "
What sn1all business needs
WASHINGTON -Before the first
asphalt went down on Wall Street, a
love affair began to blossom between
Big Government and Big Business. Yet
the nation would be better served if the
government would listen to the en·
treaties of a worthier suitor: the in·
dividuaJ entrepreneur who has his·
torically been the backbone of the free
enterprise system.
In the best American tradition of
worshiping financial success, many of-
ficials of the Reagan administration
have made it their first priority to al·
tend to the needs of the corporate
giants. The American small busi·
nessman, meanwhile, could become an
endangered species. He is reeling from
the after-blast of skyrocketing Inflation
and Interest rates while being battered
by abusive tax Jaws and government
regulations.
What small businessmen need is a
Bill of Rights that wijl give them a
fighting chance to coexist with the big
guns. Here, then, is my own suggestion
for a Small Business Bill or Rights:
1. RIGHT TO COMPETE. Individual
initiative and enterprise must be en·
couraged, not discouraged. Anti-trust
laws may need to be tightened to keep
the big boys from selling below cost to
drive smaller competitors out of busi-
ness. Given half a chance. the pioneer
traits of risk-taking and Yankee in-
cenulty will rise again.
2. RIGHT TO BE HEARD. There are
14 miWoo small and independent busi-
nesses In the United Stales, which
employ 58 percent of all private-sector
jobs and support 100 million people. Yet
their voices are a barely audible
whisper in the halls of Congress, com·
pared to the cacophony of Big Business
and Big Labor lobbyists.
3. RIGIIT TO INHERIT. One of the
strongest motivations for starting a
business is the hope that it can be
~ACI 11111111
passed on from one generation to the
next. But estate and girt taxes have
reached a confiscatory level that
threatens the survival of family busi-
nesses and promotes sellouts to con-
glomerates.
4 . RIGHT TO REASONABLE
REGULATION. Many a beleaguered
small businessman spends most or his
time filling out government forms and
complying with government regula·
lions. The thousands of regulatory laws
are written with Big Business in mind ;
it's unreasonable to expect General
Motors and Mike's Garage to meet the
same government standards and re-
porting requirements.
5. RIGHT TO FAIR TAXATION. The
'tax laW$ are full of loopholes that favor
lbe big corporations. The small busi·
nessman who files as an individual or
partnership is socked with double taxa·
lion of dividendS and inadequate invest·
ment tax credit.a. I( he manages to show
a profit or break even in s1>4te of these handicaps, Inflation alone wih push him
into a higher tax bracket.
6. RIGHT TO AFFORDABLE WAGE
SCALES. Though organized labor will
raise bowls of protest. it makes sense to
give small businesses relief from
minimum wage regulations. Workers
will be better off if small firms are tree
to create new jobs.
7. RIGHT TO EiiUAL INTEREST
RATES. Discrimination against small
business borrowers must st.op. Bankers
justify charging s mall businesses two or
more points above the so-called prime
rate, while giving big borrowers rates
three or four points below the prime.
The argument is that the little guys are
bigger risks. But small businesses have
no monopoly on failure -as Lockheed
and Chrysler have demonstrated.
8. RIGHT TO GOVERNMENT CON·
TRACT'S. The record shows that small
businesses are 24 times more efficient
i n c reating new products and
technologies. Yet only a paltry 3.4 per-
cent of the federal government's con-
tracts for research and development go
to small companies. All told, they
manage to get only about 20 percent of
"ovemment contracts.
Small can be beautiful. But if
America's small businesses aren't
given a chance to survive, future
generations may never be able to see
just how beautiful they were.
Vidal can tes t Brown 's v erbal skills
Earl Watera u on vocation. Thil column ii bJ1 hil cwociate Phil Jordan.
The sleep Gov. Jerry Brown is losing
these days may be caused by the ac·
Uvities of novelist Gore Vidal. The
brilliant, waspish novelist Is at the mo·
ment, like Brown, an aJl-but-announced
candidate for the U.S. Senate.
While Brown says he won't announce
"for a very long time'' bis own ac-
tivities in naming an "exploratory com·
mittee" and raising $3 to $4 million
dollars for the campaign makes it
almost certain he will run. It will be his
seventh major campaign in a little
more than a do1en years.
Currently viewed as the front-runner
for the Democratic nomination, bis
nomination is by no means a lead pipe
cinch even without Vidal as an oppo·
nent. San Francisco Assemblyman Leo
McCarthy, former Speaker of the As·
sembly and former ally of the governor,
is most serious about making a bid for
the office. Senator Al AJquist of San
Jose is determined to run too if it ap-
pears that la the only way to spike
Brown's ambitions.
OTHERS IN THE WINGS include
John Tunney who lost the seat to Sam
Haya.kawa the last time around. Also,
although he still maintains an alllance
with Brown, Tom Hayden could well
spill with him and enter the race
himself. The recent victories in city
elections of candidates backed by
Hayden's political organization seem·
lnf IY bas encoura~ed such an action.
.,,~ .
I -•• -l -Wl-Tl-RS--9
ln such a field Vidal's possible can·
didacy should be no more than a faint
cloud on the horizon. His candidacy
might even be taken as a joke consider-
ing be was embarrassingly swamped in
his only other try for public office in
New York state a couple of decades
back. By his own admission he hasn't
voted siDce 1964. Now duly registered 81
a California Democrat, be is not only
acting like a candidate but is scurrying
around the . state telling everybody be
can win. What's more his pot shots at
Jerry Brown are aiding him in gather-
ing UP, Support for the race.
SO UTl'LE CLOUDS can grow into
big storms. Vidal's candidacy is re·
portedly being encouraged by some
Southern California liberals of the kind
with big bucks who are dislUusloned by
Brown's insincerity as evidenced by his
wavering back and forth bet ween
liberalism and conservatism.
Whether Vidal could win or not, his
candidacy would provide Brown with an
opponent of the type he bas not yet
faced. In both or his gubernatorial races
Brown was matched against candidates
so low key as to be completely dull. In a
debate with Vidal the governor, not
always a fast thinker and lacking a
sense o! humor when he is on the re·
ceivlng end, would be reduced to a
laughing stock and, with his short
temper, an obviously angry one ..
In the meantime Vidal is warmin1 up.
During a recent San Francisco ap·
pean.nce he honed his admitted wit at
the governor's expense first com-
plimenting him as ··an expert cam·
paigner" then, alter a well timed pause,
adding sweetly, "It's only after he gets
.e.Jecled that things get vague.··
Remarking on Brown's quick position
change on Proposition 13 be pointed out
the governor's vigorous opposition to
the measure and his turnabout to
become "Howard Jarvis· best friend."
A CERTIFIED LJBERAL, Vidal ls
tailoring his campaign to woo the
liberals Brown has alienated. He'll sock
it lo big business, the oil industry in
particular and the rentagon as well.
The Moral Majority he terms "an Im·
moral minority, which comes swingin1
down from the trees." As for religious
organization.~ he would end all federal
tax exemptions now granted churches.
Vidal's candidacy would indeed pre-
sent Brown with a dilemma. lf be tri~
to ignor~ rum be will be perceived as
unable to answer the clever accusa-
tions. lf he answers them he'll increase
·the attention they receive. Either way,
if Vidal does enter the race, Brown will
be forced to defend his record aaa.lnat a
skilled archer with a full quiver.
Detroit dinosaurs still seeking the culprit
Once aaain the cry of the wounded
dino1aur 11 beard tbrou•bout th• land.
Thi• time lt •J»eak• in the voice or Rocer
8 . Smttlat Qaalrman of the Board of
GeMral Motors.
ln a speech several day1 a10 at the a»·
auaJ GM 1tockholder1 meetl.q, Mr.
Smltb load 1tlll another Ylllaln to
bl am• for tilt dlamal I aUure OI DIU'olt
to ~om,ete 1ucee11lully tn tbe ............. ,,.., Um• tM blame.,..
t.e Amltlcaa worlten wllD eara too ••• 80, , ... tbe ..... Dlb'ilti! ..
para4e U.. 1ae1.-a .._~......,._
tbe~,tlMWken, ';z;••· ....... Nadll', u.e .......... I UM
1afet1 ...... oa.1act Dua.
.l''rom my own eersonaJ experience,
I know that Detroit executives have ll·
nored the obvtoUI for more than 30 y.eara.
Los Ancelea County ls one o! the bluest
sin*le automobile markets in the nation ancf, lot' years, one of the mott Important
local pollUclan1, SupervilOI' Kenneth
HaJlo, baa been wrtuna Detroit bonthOI.
Why? He wu be1~n• tbem'to build a
fuel-efftclent, aafe, 1mo1-tree car.
I have seen Supervisor Hahn's ftle oo
lbi1 ~pondance and, I cu tell YoU
that, forthefintlOor15yeJn, Detroltex-
ecuUvea ra"ly 1ave Hahn the courtety of
a rePly. When they did, theii' arrosance
fairly ooaed off the pa1e.
AS A aatJLT, forelJn import.I bisan
to dominate ftnt the Loi An1•l• market
ud1 tMD. tbe CallfonUa marktt, but
~ l,..oncl It uaW the trend aprud
eoait to eoaat. Tia••· tbe Detrolt Dlnoeaun becan Polntln• UM flnrer at •nryane ...... the culprtt. Of ~1 at
DO Ume woWd M7 QUarteM·a·DUlllOD
dollar a ,ear car n...U" admit l#Jat U..
problem might be him or hia incompetent
buddies.
We actually have a lealOll about lhll
from millioosof yearaa10. Tbedinouun
back then had the am'1l,eat bralnl ol UJ
animal ~t alze 'and tHWY became extlnct
because of it. la history repeatJn1 ltae~? ·
\
..
In Ute "..,od old daya" wbela bUUiM' •a
oaly 10 ~ a Pound, i ...... Uf9 U·
putucy ••• ~-oddJean. llllJM tbat•a _, " tldalr them u tM .. '*old .,.. .. b .M. :·n·!., ........................ = ................. S JI ..... ,.. ....... ... .... ,...
I-
I
Mi8sing
~elderly
a worry
CHICAGO (AP> -
Police say a arowin1
number of elderly peo-
ple are dlsappearln1
from nursinl homes, re·
tirement hotels and
housing projects, and ef-
forts to fJn4 them are
hindered by federal law.
Almost 2,500 people
aged 6S and over have
been reported missine
· the put two years, ac-
cordina to Guy Neubert,
a police officer who
specializes in such
cases.
''They disappear at an
alarming rate," said
Neubert in a recent In·
tervlew. "They vanish tn a cloud of loneli-
ness, depression, senlll·
ty and frustration, They
need out. They need a
respite from their
lives."
Neubert said they
usually return in leas
than a week. But, be
added, some don't, and police are hampered in
their attempts to find
them because the
federal Privacy Act
limits access to Social
Security information.
Officials cite the case
of Ge0rge Donahue, 70,
who disappear~ earlier
this year without clue.
TIMELINKS •
IN 194±9, MAo·TS~·TUN<S !
PROCLAIMED ~E' f
PEoPLE1S REPUBLIC ~
. OF C~IN,A ... I
···ANC> RUDOLPH iUE
REC>· NOSEC>
REINDEER ARRIVED.
China publishes
paper in English
PEKING (AP> -China's first
national English-language
newspaper, the China Daily, has
hit the streets and Premier Zhao
Ziy ang sald it would promote in-
ternational understanding.
The newspaper. intended for
foreign residents and tourists, is
published by the Communist Party newpaper, The People's
Daily, but has a separate staff.
It first appeared here on Mon·
day.
'Ninth' perso.n
a burglar?
MARTINEZ (AP) -A woman who was sen-
tenced tO five years on felony probation for a
aeries ol burglaries says that her body harbon 13
personalities, and that it was the ninth that waa
responsible for the crime.
Diane Goldman, 28, sentenced recenUy in Con-
tra Costa County. Superior Court to probation for
so-called "loctbox burelaries," wu also ordered
to repay $12,600 to her victims.
Ms. Goldman bad pleaded guilty to six
burglaries in Contra Costa County. and she baa
aho pleaded guilty to a burglary in Alameda
County.
The crimes Lnvolved breatln1 into the
loctboxes attached to the doorknobs ol bouaes up
for sale. The Joctboxes contain bouae teya that are
placed there to allow real estate a1enta to enter
the homes to show them to potential buyers.
Ma. Goldman'• attorney, Frank Lane. aaid hla
client might have won a plea. of not IUilty by
reason of insanity, but that she wu not well
enough to stand trial.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Orange Ooaat DAILY PILOTfTUHdav. June 2, 1111
Jury instructions
revised f o:c clarity
W ASIUNGTON (AP> -The
probabWty 11 hi1b that many
jury verdlcta reflect mlaun·
deratandlne of the law becauae
the avera1e Juror may com·
prehend only about half the le1al
lnstructiom 1lven by a judee. a
federally financed study bas
f9und.
The two-year, $228,000 re-
search project calla for a •weep-
101 ov,rbaul of traditional Jury
inatructtona and sets out a de-
tailed manual on how to rewrite
them in simple Entllsh.
Funded by tbe National
Instutute of Men~l Health and
the Justice Department's Na-
tional Institute of Justice, the
study was conducted by the
University of Nebraska'•
psychology department using
-1,000 volunteer jurors, all
representative ot tbe regular
Omaha jury panels.
In one instance, 34 volunteer
test jurors were read the in·
structlons from a trial for at· tempted murder in Nevada.
Only one could explain the dif·
ference between the most and
least severe charges against the
defendant.
Panels of volunteers were shown a viedotape or a judge
reading instructions in the
Nevada case, which was con·
sidered by researchers to be
relatively complex because it in·
volved two lesser offenses and
alternative possible verdicts of
"not guilty," and "not guilty by
reason of insanity."
Tested on writt.en question-
Just because you can
expect rain in Seattle,
doesn't mean you have
to get soaked when you
fly there.
TakeAirCal. We'lljetyou
to Seattle/Tacoma Inter-
national Airport for as low
as $110. Direct from
Ontario or Orange County.
You see. saving you money
is part of our style.
Service, too is part of
the AirCal style. You'll love
the attention. From take
off to touchdown. In fact,
once you've flown AirCal.
you 'll keep on flying with
us. Again and a9ain. And
it's easy to fly A1rCal when
,
nalrea, the Jurors wbo beard the
instructions showed an averaee
comprehension rate of 51 per·
cent.
The inatructiona were then
rewritten to clart/y areas of mil·
underatandin1. A second teat
showed comprehension roee to
86 percent,
A second rewrite and third
test broueht eomprehenalon to
80 percent.
lo another teat, the volunteer
panels were read a simpler set
of inatructl~ from a Florida
burglary case. They scored 65
percent comprehension after
h'earine the original instructions
and 80 percent after they were
rewritten once.
"We believe that the questio~
which resulted 1n the highest im-
provement in comprehension did
contain some of the most crucial
points of law for our two trials,"
the researchers said.
The study found that jurora
age 60 and older had a much
lower comprehension level than
younger jurors.
The researchers also found
that jurors with more education
had greater comprehension and
that males and females had the
same comprehension rates.
"I have always thought that
jury instructions were written
more for the eye of the appellate
judges than for the ears of the
jurors," said Robert F .
Peckham of San Francisco,
chief judge of the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District
of California.
you puf'l:hase your tickets
with an American Express--
Card. Plus, through the
end of June, we'll
treat you to free
beverages
evervtime you
fly AitCal.
So next
AS
LOW AS
Voyager
LIMOU'SINE SERVICE
673-2641
No other newspapeY brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
school and college districts and county
government than the Daily Pilat
time you're headed to
Seattle/Tacoma remem -
ber three things. Your
umbrella. The American
Express Card. And AirCal.
For reser-
vations call
AlrCal or your
ltavel Agent.
The convenient way
to pay.
Traveling 1s easy when
you carry the American
Express Card. Use it to pay
for your AirCal tickets, car
rentals, hotels. meals, shop-
ping -and almost anything
else When you're on a trip.
There is a worldwide net-
work of Travel Service
Offices of American Express
Company, its subsidianes
and representatives, where
you can purchase American
Express Travelers Cheoues
and even can cash vour
personal check if -you run
low on funds (subject to
cash availabllitv>.
DIRECT OEPARTURESTOSEATI'LE
orange countv If you haven't got a · '
Card, pick up an application
wherever the Card is wel-
comed. Or call American Express toll-free <800)
528-8000.
7:00 A 7:1.0k. 12:«1' S!W>
The American Express
ca~. d-.Don't leave home wltt)out it ..
•
\.
,
'
I
I
s
I
e
1
l
0
q
9
~
I
..
"Wanna try something new, Mommy? It's a
"Potato chip sandwich." "I want to be sure they're here where you left them"
M.\RM:\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson .. 80E'.\~IS THE MENi\CE Hank Ketchum
. I
E
'1 .. I
I
,k. I ,' • .'If•.
~·
I
\ . t ...
"Marmaduke's having trouble convincing
Snyder that he loves him." "I didn't say 'ain't' I said ·am not.'
That's RIGHT, ain't it?"
G \Rt'IEl.D
MOON.Ml'LLINS
. '/~s
I ~AN IT
IN1EN
SEcoNt>S,
l<AYo.
48 Strange: VII.
50 Inner: Pref.
51 YW'a record
53 Iranian Turli
65 FWdlatlon
doe.unit
56Ttnant
81 Atrican nller ;.M~
82 Of perlee11on liAI~
8-4 OI
85 Ntrvout
MHIWW9"9
17 .....
88Acthe
89 Grldltlon
YOO CAN &AATCH M'Y CMAIR,
VOO CAN INSOL"f M'I MOTMER,
YOO CAN eEAT OP MV POG,
ANO VOU CAN PLAY WrTM
MV RueeER M0051E ...
ONL.Y LAST
MONTH YolJ
SAID YA ONCE
DlDiH~ Joo
Y~l>S IN
ELEVEN
5ECoNt>S.
., .. __ _
........
by Jim Davis
eoT VOO OON'T
EA"f MY FOOO
ANO VOO OON'T euu IN llN eED
(
DOVES REPRESENT
CVT~J~IN&, SWEET, OOY IMIN' 15 OM,
SO MICE LOVE !
•
TtM8LE1'EED8
OH1E:\IMYONE f:LSE PeCOAA"T?:S
THflR 1'1PIS W11H SltvlPL.E
SY'MIJOl.S OF nit:IR PfEPS. v
GORDO
DO YOU MIND IF
IASK~
SOMETHING-?
t,l'NK 't' •INKERBE.tN
DON'T YOU THINK
YOU'D LOOK
BETTER WITH
YOUR HAIR
BRUSHED BACK?
•-z ~
by Tom K. Ryan
by Gus Amela
by Tom Bat1uk
Fill in the correct The student who A. he
· answer: studies hard is __ _ B. h im
DRi\BBLE
ooowwww!!
DR.SMOCK
!
I
I ! ..
C. an overachiever
AMA'Z.ING MAN/ PRE!SCRIPllON
NOSIRIL..S/
"
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've heard for years
that it's a good idea to drink a glass of warm
milk ii you have trouble going to sleep at
night. ls there any scient.ific basis for this
solution to insomnia?
P.S., Irvine
lnteresllngly, th11 old folk remedy for
1leeplessness does have some 1clentlflc
basis. In a study, reported by the Food and
Drug Administration, one of the amino acids
found In milk was given In la{ie doses lo
volunteers and was found lo have a 1edallve
effect. In another experiment, when persona
were deprived of two other amino aclu that
occur In high protein foods, tlaere waa a drop
In the amount of rapid eye movement <REM>
sleep during which people dream.
On the other band, Insomniacs would be
wise to avoid beverages conta1D1n1 caffeine,
s uch as coffee, tea and colas, because they
act as stimulants In most people. Sdlokers
should note that nicotine also Is a stimulant
and that many ex·smokers have reported lm·
proved sleep after quitting.
Alcohol, In that old standy nl1htcap,
may not always work to lDdace aleep ellher
because it, too, can be a stJmalant. ID addJ·
tlon, some alcobollca report lhat their prob-
lem began with bedtime drinkini. Ther~ also ls evidence showing that at some dosage
levels alcohol reduced REM sleep.
lmpo8ter8 hit taxpayers
DEAR READERS: Taxpayers beware!
Individuals have been known to impersonate
Internal Revenue Service employees for tbe
• purpose of Illegally collecting money. Tbe
IRS says Imposters may attempt lo tell tax·
payers they owe money for UllPaid taxes.
In almost every instance, taxpayers wbo
owe money receive written notlflcatloa
before being contacted In person by an IRS
employee. A person claiming lo represent tbe
Internal Revenue Service shoald be asked lo
show identification, the IRS cautions.
All employees who make pubUc contact
cany dlstlnctjve ldenllflcatlon, and these
employees are required t-0 show their creden·
tials when conducting official business.
Taxpayers who doubt &be vaUdlty of the
credentials offered can verify the person's
employment by Immediately contactlnl their
nearest IRS office by phoning 835-8211.
• "Got a problem? Then write to Pill \..l Dunn. Pot will CUI red tape, ,,.ttillg
.., the o~• and odion JIOU nHd to
•
aoh~ inequUU!s in gowmment and n bu.8Wss. Mall your qw.tiolu to Pat
Dunn. At Your Sntnce, Orange CO<Ut
Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Co1ta Meaa. CA 92626 . ..U
many letters as pouible will be aMWeTed, but phoned
inquines or Letters not including the reader'• full
name. oddre1S and bu.rineu houra' phone number
cannot be conaideTed. Thu column appeara dail11 n -
cept Sunday• "
Soviet teen
fears return
CHICAGO (AP> -Walter Polovchak likes
pizza, hot dogs and American music. But bis fond·
ness for this country's lifestyle is tempered by the
, fear that he will be forced to return to the land of
his birth -the Soviet Union.
The 13-year·old Soviet boy, who was granted
political asylum last year, fears his parents will
win their biller legal struggle and he will be forced
to return with them to their nati\te Soviet Ukraine,
according to Julian Kulas, the youth's attorney.
Thal fear, Kulas said, has been slmmerint
since last summer, when Walter ran away from
home after the Polovchaks, arowing disenchanted
after only a few months of American We, decided
to return to their homeland with their children.
The Cook County Juvenile Court made Walter
a ward or the state.
But now Walter's future is in the bands or the
Illinois Appellate Court. On Wednesday the court
will hear arguments on his parents' appeal of a
lower court decision that took Walter away from
them.
The Soviet Foreign Ministry on Monday pro-
tested to the U.S. Embassy about the "court
farce,'' the Soviet news agency Tass reported.
·'Although they expllcttly wish to return to
their home country, the Polovchaks cannot 'do so
because their elder children continue to be forcibly
kept away from them," Tass quoted the protest
note as saying.
A U.S. Embassy official in Moscow said it was
the third protest about the matter since last
August.
' Kulas believes that accordine to Soviet law,
Walter has committed treason and if be returns to
his homeland, he won't be prosecuted but be will
be deprived of his fights. ,
t Attorneys for the Polovchaks say Watter never
has been a problem chtld and the state has no rltbt
• to Intervene ln family affain.
: While the le1at proceedings drq on, Watter
; lives with Ukranlan fost~r parents. Kulas says the
, boy is comfortable lo h1-new home. 1 "He has adjusted very well," Kulu said. "In f fact, be hu many friends. And bla laniua1e ablll· ) iY bu improved tremendously."
1 Kulas said be speaks with Walter eJ,T,l few
{ wee!Cs and said the teen-a1er "likes to like i an avera1e American kid does. He likes bot clop.
He likes ~a pies. He likes >\merlcan muatc. He'•
i•an American u far as bla llf..tyle 1a co.cemecl."
; 'noqb Walter vtalta hta parenta resuJarlr,
, Kulaa said he rematna appnbenslve about spend.
Hna btl Ufe m the Soviet Union.
When wan. ran awa1. the Soviet l:mbuly
aid ... IMid been kkkaapped, IDd the ~ ~
llDCJ. !hli aN Watter bad bMa brt.._, Willa a pro~ of a bteyde And a car. ~ .... ol .._ ~. Kulu Mid Waltlr lnltlil ............. from Mis ........ aid.,.,...,
••• AOt ree.tww a bllher tducaUOft ll be r«urm tMUltlalm.; •
8'll llamy Ol'Ollman, ID Am.Seu CIYil
J,.lbe1tl•• UDtoa attorney wbo r..,,_tntl ti••
Poloyehab. •d Wil\er'• Nfetj Wo.14 not bt Jeop~ ti Ille l"tt1lnl9 bome.
... -·----.. . .... . . -. ~ --~ ---"""'" --:-. -~--,,. ....... ~ -~ -
'\
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, June 2, 1981
Vietnam raps 'depraved' culture
HANOI, Vietnam <AP> -Six montbl after In·
ltlatin& liberal ecobomlc reforma, tbe eommunilt
eovernment here hat launched a two·pron1ed
campalan a1alnst bureaucratic corruption and
"depraved" culture, lnch1dln1 boob and "noxious
music."
Some Western diplomata said the campaians,
wblcb underline 1 debate in the Vietnamese
hierarchy on the limits of economic and penonal
freedom, may be the belinnlnl ot a concerted',
harsher drive to ensure party control.
The economic reform• 1ave local production
manaaen 1reater freedom from central iovem·
ment control, but also created the opportunity for
more graft, said Western diplomats, who asked not
to be identified.
Another factor ls infiatlon. the diplomats said.
The salaries of mana1en at 1tate·run enterprises
have rllen only 20 percent ln the last slx montt\J
while inflation has tncrea.aed the price of food by
nearl1 40 percent in W s Southeast Asian nation of
'6 mlWon people.
Tbe Communist Party daily Nhan Dan kicked
off the campaian a11lnst corruption on May 12
with an article headlined: "Let Us Stop Collective
Em beutement. ·'
The article said workers at st.ate-run en·
terprises al\d cooperatives ln 15 provlnclal towns
bad stolen nearly 303 milli,on donf ($21 million by
the official exchange rate, but only $10 million on
the free market> worth of coocts in the third
quarter of 1980.
As an example, Nhan Dan said, several en-
terprbes had refused to raise their prices as or-
dered by the aovernment and continued to sell
goods to their employees at out-dated prices. The
employees 1ot such basic Items u bicycle chaln1,
wool, cloth, su1ar and electric fans.
Subsequent articles, appearing every few
days, have lilted otrlcials sentenced from one to 15
years for various corrupt practices.
''ForelOt Minister Nguyen Co Thach has been
quoted as sayln& that corruption ls a big problem.
This may be preparing the ground for harsher
measures," said one diplomat.
"The anti-corruption move has come from
security people, who are traditionally bardllne,"
said one diplomat.
Another commented that the corruption was
confined to lower·level managers.
'
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, .June 2, 1981
'A nyihing' delightfu~ delicious, de-lovely
8yTOM11TU8
0( .. ...., ..........
If you've been followin1 the fortunes of South Coast Repertory
throuah any or all of lts first ts yeal'S, the lHt thlna you'd probably
expect to flnd there ia a 1930s musical followed, at curtain call, by
a pitch for season tickets.
But that's just what's goinC on at the Costa Mesa company, a
decidedly un-SCR like revival Of Cole Po.ter's "Anything Goet,"
the sort of fare aenerally reserved ror the dinner theaters. Who
knows, maybe NeiJ Simon will make it to the Fourth Step next
season.
But lest you imagine the repertory troupe is Ullin& a bit
toward the commercial bent, It must be added that "Anythtna
Goes," corny and creaky as it is, aets first cabln attention from a
superlative cast and artistic stair. It only follows that, when SCR
begins to do an old musical comedy, it's done In dynamite fashion.
John-David Keller, SCR's resident musl~al specialist, has put
to1ether a revival that's appealing to the eye and ear, a slick and
smooth resurrection of the theatrical era when story remained
subservient to song. Busby Berkeley would get misty eyed at this
one.
Richard Doyle f/rom left), Art KotUtik, Ellni Travolta.
Top honors In characterization 10 to Don Tuche as the stuffy
but likeable British nobleman squiring Doyle's lady love (Patti Ap-
pel) and her mother <Martha McFarland> across the waters. In-
stead or optmg for the cllched stiff-upper-Up Briton Tuche adds
some human comic dimension to the role which pla1ys splendidly.
Somehow, it took four authors to stifch together the trappings
on the Porter package, but it's certainly not the plot you'll cherish
from · · Anythlne Goes." The show Ls virtually a ·•Best of Cole
Porter" album including two of bis standards tacked on in the 1962
revival ("Friendship" and "It's De-Lovely"), not to mention
''You're the Top," "I Get a Kick Out of You" and tbe title tune.
Others contributing effectively to the ensemble are ,Steve
DeNau.t as Doyle's blinded broker boss, choreographer Ctifton and
ROJ? Michaelson as. a pair of egregiously stereotyped Chinese, John
Ellington as the ship's purser and Hal Landon Jr. doing double du·
for Reno Sweeney, the red not mama and part-time evangeUlt. ty as a bishop and the ship's capta1n.
Tops in the choreoaraphlc department. however, la Cathy Mark Donnelly's scenic design is both richly authentic and
Even more arresting than Porter's melodies, however, ls the
choreography of Keith Clifton In the SCR production. Ensemble ex-
cellence glitters particularly In the "Heaven Hop" number of the
first act and the brassy "Blow, Gabriel, Blow" in the second.
Susan Pyles as the qulnte1sent1al dumb blonde gun moll whose smoothly convertible, encompassing every available inch of the
treatment of "Heaven Hop" and ''Let's Step Out" la ~othina less Fourth Step stage on many levels. Jerry Frohmader wields a
than electrtfylne. To borrow a phrase from the composer. you'll form.alive b!lton bac~ "iQsi~e" the ship where his efforts are ap-
get a kick out of her. prec1ated without bemg visibly distraclina.
The latter segment showcases the talents or Ellen Travolta,
the nominal star or the show in the role indelibly etched by Ethel
Merman. Miss Travolta may be no Merman (but who, in tact, is?).
but she radiates exub~rance and polish. two essential lngredients
Richard Doyle takes on a familiar characterization in the male ~nee you become accustomed to South Coast Repertory doing
lead or Billy Crocker, the ruaiUve from Wall Street stowing away musical comedy <and old musical comedy at that). you'll find
on a luxury liner to London. Doyle, Miss Travolta and the ru11edly "Anyt~ng Goes" a delightful, delicious and de-lovely package of
comicaj Art Koustik as Public Enemy Number 13 make a splendid enterta1~ment. It plays through July 5 as the season finale pn the
trio In the classic threesome number "Friendship." SCR mamstage. 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. ~lir. ... ~~~riiiii9"Wiii;;pipp;;;;;;p::;;::;--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Doors tribute rocks 'Bear'
By JEFF PARKER
Of tlle D.llfy fl'llet Slltft
~eople just can't seem to get enough of their
pop idols, especially after the star s are dead or de-
funct. In spite or the massive and detailed legacies
that big performers leave behind them on record
and film, the thirst to see those singers "live"
again seems to be heightened when the artist dies :
they become canonized, not just idolized.
Strange Daze, a four-piece band which plays
music by the Doors, came to the Golden Bear Fri-
day for two votive performances -it was the
second time in as many months that the group bas
packed the Bear, and many of the fans were there
for the second time.
The band takes its name from the Doors'
second al bum <"Strange Days"> and is led by
Randy Baker, who resembles Jim Morrison both
physically and vocally. He was backed by one
guitarist, a drummer, and a keyboard player who,
like the Doors' Ray Manzarek, carried the bass
lines with the organ.
Jim Morrison was a gutsy, intimidating and
underrated singer, and as Baker growled the open-
ing lines or· the first song, "L' America," it was
clear from his slightly ocr timing and ocr key de-
livery <Morrison never hit a flat note -at least on
record) that vocally, they are no match.
"L'America" wasn't bad, in fact it was a close
copy of the Doors' original, but the very closeness
of it was what made It so conspicuously flawed.
THE COMEDY SENSATION!
"A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY
about pomeous fa the rs and youthful
seduction. -N...:yScott,SFEXAMINER ~
llA•-'111t1U VKn>• -...1u.r --u•ovr -:. _
·~ONE WILD MOMENT -·4--....
FRENCH MOVIE A~TED (A)
NOW PLAYING
It's not an easy song to sing anyway, and as the
evenins progressed and Baker's voice re~ched its
ruJI strength, lt was clear that he'd opened with the
show 's weakest tune.
Strange Daze glean~-fil\8 selection of Doors
songs for the perform ance, among them "Love
Street" and "My Eyes Have Seen You," which
came off quite well, and "People are Strange,"
''Changeling," "Whiskey Bar," "Waiting for the
Sun," "Back Door Man," "When the Music's
Over" and the encore, ''Light My Fire." Baker
can't hit those high, tuneful growls that Morrison
knocked us out with; looking back on the selections
it's clear that he chose the lower songs for the
show, rather than some of the more demanding
ones for which the crowd was yelling -"L,A.
Woman," "Soul Kitchen" and "Crystal Ship."
Done by the Doors, Morrison's music· is pre-
cise, carnival-llke. spooky, but the Strange Daze
band couldn't manage much drama because of
their uneasiness. The music wasn't sloppy, but it
wasn't tight either -with a few botched guitar
licks and the organist losing his way once or twice,
you find yourself bracing yourself against the next
mistake rather than enjoying what isn't going
wrong. That's the trouble with "tributes" that
aspire to verisimilutude: there's no room for error
because it's all aimed at re-creating something
we've heard before. It's an imposing task for any
band.
The Private Moments Tim • El.VII IPGI .._..,
1:00 ~:1,~ 10:29
I Carol lurnett At.n Aide 1"I POUR ..,.._IPGI 1t1ow. •t e:oo 1:1s 10:20
I I AnthoTilEQulnn MOVIE RATINGS ~~ows ~ FOR PARENTS AND a:oo
YOUNG PEOPLE
Ille ""'9C-"' ... ,....,. • 10 -___ ,,__4!Mlyfl/ ,,., .. _'°' __ ""_~
ri=iJ AU AGO ADMITTED ~ a.-..--
AL-L a m AHO ti 'II.MS llECEIVI
TttE SEAL Of THE MOTIOH l'ICT\JAE ~ OI' SE~ lllotiu.TIOff
If lt'sgot wheels,
you'll move
It faster In a
Daily Piiot
ctassffled
ad.call
642-5678 and a
f rlendty ao. vlser wm
help you
turn.your
whlelsJnto
cash.
N•il 0 18mond .MZZ _,. IPGI
IHOWI AT 1:00 1:20 10:30
Mr.--.,. ---·--. .._,_
HtGH "'"' 11111 ,.., .... __ ....__
~==,-Nrv.w Ml. Al 11 , ...
'"TAKE THJS JOB AND
SHOVE fr' (PG)
--·CMOL~ "THE FOU" SEASONS" f PG) ••·ti•·•:t1·1::•· •Ml .,., ... ... __ .... _ ·--"DEATH HUNT" flt) 11::•.-=-. ~. ,. ..... 1':11 '·--... ----~ _"_"'_ '"TAKE TMft JOI ANO
SHOW IT" 1'901 , .... 1 ......... .....
HIOtt IUIK ("I --··' ... ,. _____ _
. .-----.......... , .. -..,.,.,.. ... __ _, .... __ .. _
~L!OENOOf'
THE LOME~<NI
80f'IO!"LINE I~
-----.... --.. u. OUTUNDl"I "U9
CAOOYIHACK llt)
I No AM CM lleclie WIU.leftlll.., Ac~-J •1111 y_.Owft AM
"POPEYE" "'-1191N1 "Al,.PLAN~"
"EXCAL!~"~ .... ,,,,_
''HIGH ....... ,,,., __ ,_
"DEATH HUNT' NII ..
"~l'DAY
TO •"
.... ... • . . -----= ---=---..-" ·..,....... -___.::.__ -~-~
-EVENNG-..-------
l:OO ID. Nl!WI ~WOMAH
Wonder Wom111 goH
l«lth of the border to
rlCOllW a top MCr9t for·
mule 1tollll by the Nula.
I TIC TN; DOUGH
M"A"l"H
Whlll on 111\19 In T otlyo,
Henry ~ lnlatuetld
w4Ut • _. young thing
lrlltl trorn thl Slltll e GOOOTIMD INTERVIEW -Katharine Hepbur n
Thee-i.m11y 111tra1c1 (above) will be interviewed on "The
they may .,. •t•no doo Barbara Walters Special" along with =~n~~J: Lauren Bacall and Nancy Reagan
OOUfM for d1n111r. tonight at 10 on Cha nnel 7.
•• IE1.ECTNC eotll'AHV (A) cauee. him to lou Ill or I highlight• of the FM!all
I caa HEwa 111e ,_. 1mpwaonator1 w : • 111111
..,., ~~ wtU> I = ~u!':. '.:!::.'."' hobol
WILCOtffaACK, • w•A•t•H I 'AMILYFEUD KO'TTER 8.J. wrlt11 homl to hie wife 1HA NA NA
It'• the llrat day back at r~lng KIJnolr'• llC4IPI OUllte: Thi cWrll 811tera.
acnooi and Gabl 11 ,,... 1tt1mp11 and one of 8 HOU.YWOOO
voualy -lltlng lelhet· Fr.,,.·1 goof-up9. 1QUAM8
hOod.(P.-t 1) • ITMETIOf'SAH I 'AIJET'HEMUIC
• llJeNY HILL FAANCl800 ALL .. THE 'AMll Y
Benny P°'tfl)'8 1 pupil In The police era l1ICld with 1 Gloria tuapeell the WOl'9t
the Th-School Of Dr•· bizarre kldflll)plllg wnen after Mlk•'• onoe-.. Wllk
ma. an entw1 jury II held by • job of tutortne • cutvll c:cl-
• l(CET NEW88EAT dlngeroua, •ftalutlonery llgl cutll tuma Into 1 ID STUDtO I& I "family." (Part t) iwa-.....-job, It hlr
"Cobbllr'' (R) 9 OVER EASY epartment.
(I) NEWS I GU11te: Janet Gaynor. Or. • MACHEL I LEHRER 9 1AANEY MILLEA Ephrllm Engleman. (R) flEJIORT
The QUllllon of who la ere-Ci) MACNEl / LEH~ I» NEWS
lie -cornN up wt1111 Wojo (I) TIC TAC DOUGH An UI~ auto work·
.,.. 10 '*' till o6d 111111\. • Q HNlf1't ~YI
,01111• gell I bl•
t004MOM Md II ~
fot9ld IO ..... I del\tllt,
i; ,,. MJN '°" nmRLNll
JoMny Minn Nll'f'atll 1he
plight of I~ rW-pe In ScwMlla.
• IJ.M.WGAJINI
A "°"" CeroMne twm
UMd ... .,,...,.... '°'
endlnOl'9d bit Ca11; 111'1 1Mue1 air ,_ from Vel\
Huye to~ ...
Herrtl ....... 1M ~
''Outlend": ~ Bllllf on
erowtno p1en11 wttf!Out
IOll: Cept. Cerrot on hOw
10 09' I t111 without wrlnk· .MCWll • * "Plnlc In Tiie Wtldlr• _ .. (1875) A~,_,
brlll'll blttw cold ll'ld I
klller be« on the looll In •
Ollperete Mltdl for hie
loet etepflther.
• Mat/A
"The Doctore Of HlgeN"
A denng Nlgwllln coelMlon
of doctort both In Whl1•
c:oeta and In tribe! robll
.,, trying to IOIW the
countty'a hlllth problem&.
; MY8TPY
"Rumpole Of The e.lley:
Aumpoje And The Honour·
•bl• Member.. Hor1c:1
Rumpole (L«> Md<em). •
Nmpled end aomewtlat
quixotic blrrllter, defend•
• Labor Pl"Y polltlc:lan
ch8fged with repe. (R)
._(I) THI IAXTEM
"Hooked"
l:IO 8 0 LAVERNE a
~
'--ne and Shirley peck
their blOI and mo..,. to
Hollywood. (R)
• CAAC>l. IUANETT
AHDFNENDe
G-U: ~Reddy, John
~Movie * "Sgt. ~·· Lonely HNtts Club Band" (1978)
Peter Frampton, the Bee
Gell. A group of young
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981
I TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ I) 8:00 -"They Run for Their
Lives." Johnny Mann narrates a
documentar y filmed in Somalian re-
fugee camps along the border with
Ethiopia.
KCET @ 8:00 a nd KOCE 9 9 :00 -
"The Doctors of Nigeria." Doctors try to
solve problems caused by poor sanita-
tion and hygiene in Ni"eria.
CBS 9 9:00 -"First Yo~ Cry." Mary
Tyler Moore, Anthony Perkins and
Richard Crenna star in a drama based
on Betty Rollin's experience with a
mastectomy.
they .,. dating the -Qlrl. (R) D -.LYGMHAM
CflUeADI
• MIRV<IM'nt
Gullta: Olnlt LOllobrlglda,
Jllnnlnl llumllr, Miii ...
Sandi, Robin Morgan.
• MYITIRV
"Rumoole Of The ~:
Rumpole And The Honouf •
able MM!blr" Horace
Rumpole (Leo Mct<em), 1
rumpled and IOn\IWtlet
quixotic barrlater. dlllnd1
• Labor patty polltldan
charged with rllj)I. (R)
GD NOVA
"The ~tort Of Nigeria"
A daring Nigerian COlllllon
of doctor• both In wt11t1
coata and In trlbll robll '
.,. trying lo· IOIYI thl
c:ountry'1 hMlth problltns
IR)Q_ I t-.ao~CLOSf FOR
I Henry and Muriel'• annl-
llWlltY dlnnlr)l lnlerrupt·
Id wflln Sari and I MW
I
trllnd .,. thrown In Jiii (R)
10:00 D HERO WOlFE
Niro and Archie -ch for
the mutermlnd behind 1
compln cnmln.i plot ··~
• "8IHTa
"T11tro De t.a Genii (Thi
PIOS)ll'I Thlltrel" Thia
program '-on two
ll'oupl: LIM Vll6u' El
T lllrO Camj)lllno and El
C111tro Cultural d• la
Gent1, a ll'CIUP bllld Ill
San Joaa, Clllfornla. 10'..10. NEWS
• INDENNOefT
NETWON< Nl!WI
• VIC llAAOEN'8
Tf.NNll FOR THE FUTUM
"SlnglM Stratagy II" Vic
Bredlrl lhowl you hOw,
wt*1 and wtlerl 10 mike
your 1t1ok11 wortc '°' you
In • alnglll match. GD THE CHAlll\AHS
"The Conqu11t 01 Soula"
Bamber G11colgn1
di-the con-.lon
to Chrlatlanlty of Mexican
lndlan1 WhO worahlppld •
multllud1 of god• and the 10f1 of Cathollc1 to thl
Reformation
11:008DD(l)0 NEWS 8 8TAATREK
A tranaler of bodlll lmprl-
aona Kirk In • !email body
while thl woman llk11
-Klrtt'a.
.19tN't .....
lenny ~ • beery ...... who-·· lie Mllld Nolt • DIC* CAVWTT
OUHll JNQ_.e '"'
CMt'Clt)her 0 ~
(!wt 2 of IJ
1 t:ao. (I) OANNOH
A Jl,tdol'• daugh1w diMp.
P1111 wNll Ill 11 In the
mlddll °' Ill lrnC)Onelll tn.
II lnVOfMQ IM 'Yftdlce ..
; TONIGHT
au.I hc>M: Dlvld 9renllll'
Ou1111• H1l111 Ourley
~. Oeofte Hlt'lllllOll. • 0 111//C Niwa
NIGH'l'\.N
I ~ MNCa A OIA.L
HOGAH'IHPOU
A German officer dlacov·
.,. Hogen'• llPIOnaoe
activity
• IAMTTA "Thi N\11)8"
•• CAPTIOHID MO
Nl!WI
12:00. MOVtl * * ~ "Fright" ( 1972)
Su11n 01org1, Honor
Blackman. A baby lltter
Ind her chltge 1r1 lhtlll•
lrlld by the Chlld'I lnNnl
tathlr. 8 9 MOYIE
•'h "Wonder Of It All"
( 1974) Docutn111tary A
tour of 1111 animal world II
pr-led. 0 MAWA!Ct<
• MllllOH:
IMPCllllBU
12:30 D TOMOMOW
Guella: Ch11ch end
Chong; Arnold SchWll·
ZlnlOOI'; the rocil group
Thi 0.-tigl
• CINI STEP llEYOHO
"Ellrthquek1" Thi gr11t
$111 Fr1nci1CO elr1hqu1k1
ot 1eoe la -through lhl
eyes of• P~ Hotel bell·
boy
12:40 I) (I) THE SMIT
Simon. lntrlgYed by the
sight of • nun In high hlll1,
lollo-her end .... her
111emp1 10 kldn-i> • young woman
._ ..............
--~· • MICMI
• • 14 "Goocf Day 'Ot A H~"I" ( 1tHI ''" .,_HM11rre~. liiteoole
Heyel. ...... .....,.
~NIWI 1:111 NIWI 1:.tO MICMI
•• ''Thi~ Hend''
( 1131) Jloll Ml.llhlll, Au
L--. .MCMI • * * ''The UOll" OM2l Wllllenl Holden, CtpllClne.
1:801 NIWI l:OO NIWI
1:10 N1W1
~ IDfTONAL
l:H MCMI
···~ ''The ... ...... tlOll Butllu" (1Nt) ~
Reid, 011111 111109.
2:40. MOYIE ** "TM Tingler" (195t)
Vincent Ptloa, Judith E .....
lyn 2:161 NEWS S:OO MOYIE * * "Angel On Thi Ame-zon" ( 11M8) George Brent,
Vera R1t11on
4:00·=
**~"A Game Of Dllth"
(1948) JOhn Loder. Audrey
Long
•:468 MOVIE
• • "l(entuc:lty Jubllla"
( t 951) Jerry Colonna. "'-1
POtler.
M'Pdne•daw'•
Bayt inte /tlo11le•
-MC>RhWtG-
11:00G) **"Spy Ch•-•"
(1965) Hunt% Hall, LIO
Gorcey
11:ao D • • "RNet Lady"
(t~I Yvonne De Cano,
Dan Duryea
-AFTERNOON-.,2:00 Q) * * * * "Goodbye
Again" ( 1961) lngrld a.re-
man, Vv1a Montend.
people try to .. ..,. their I town .,,om the ,.,..,, Mr. • WALTEN SPECIAL
81rb8f1 Waltera lntlf'Ylew1
lier ,. the cope or the pub-I REPORT (I) 11'.M. MAO.AZ.WE
lntlmld1111 1 euepect 111 MEAV OAIFF1N er who midi 1 OOUlltry 1:1111 EDfTONAL I GU11t1: Gina Lotlobrlglde, record about hie prldlcl· 7:00 ~ NEWt . Jeannine Burnllr, Miii... m111t: 1 North Carolina
0 NEW\. VWED GAME
Q) M•A•&•H
H1Wk1y1 end Hot Up1
come under heavy artlllery
fire In 1n1my terrlt0<y, with
HIWl!lyl rec.lvlng I Ilg
wound. (Part 21
1:000 PIYCHIC
PHENOMENA. THE
WORLD BEYOND
"Pelt Liie Regr111lon"
Hoats Damien Slmpaon.
Stacy Hunl GUNll Robert
and loY young dllc:ual
regrlllllon llChniqUll and
II) ••• "Tomorrow II
For-" ( 11148) Claudelle
Colbert, Orton W'"'8 Mu1t8fd. .
t:009 MOYIE
,_NEWS Sanda. farm Ulld 11 • pr-e HAll'f'Y DAVI AGAIN 7:ae> 8 2 ON THE TOWN '°'~big cata.
Ralph tempt• rate after 1 Hosts· St-Edward•. t:OO II PALMEWTOWN
doct°' hypnotlz.11 him and Melody ~ A 1oo1t 11 Wlddlt Brown le forced to
*** "Flrl1 Vou Cry"
( 1978) Mery Tyler Moore,
Anthony PlfttlM. The true
atory of ~ Betty
Rollin'• lxpl(~ with
br ... t Clncl( end Ill
etllct on her life II drwne-
tlzld. (R)
------------the-,,;poid!l--..._d..,•"'ys.._.of;...;.;;rld;.;;l;.;;o:..· put hlr lltlt rlll ,_
CHANNEL LISTINGS
I) KNXT tCBS) Los Angele'>
D KNBC \NBC> Loi. Angeles U KTLA t1nCJ ) Los Anqetes 1J KABC· TV I ABCI Los Angeles
C1J "FMB 1CBS1 San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (In CJ I L IJS An ietes
@) KCST (ABCl San D11•go
Q) KTIV (11'\CJ I Los A,nqt>lt?">
«I) KCOP TV \Ind 1 Los Angeles ff> KCET· TV tPBSl Los Angeles
CD KOCE·TV1PBS1 Hun11ngton Beach
on hOld when ,._,
thr11ten to put her 1t11i.
out of ~ 111\d hlr In
Jail D L080
LobO °'dlrl Plfttln1 to
poee u • mall oenterlold
Ind bafl It Ill 11 pan of an
ln..,..tlgatlon Into the mot·
dlt of -· """ mod-•(A) 8 MOYIE
*** "Incident In San I Franclaco" (1970) Richard ,
Kiley, Chrla Conllelly, A
man II held rllC)Ol 111b411 for
• youth.. dlllh wfllr\ hi
D Hill. STREET 8UJU
Captain Furlllo 1w11t1
word of Illa promotion. and
l.aAul Md Wuhlngton
MMk ...... ~of
an llllglt°' Into the city'•
-mystem u It It being IMpletld. (R) .
8 111 nwn
COfJIJNl't
Jlrlll 11* to k~ Jade
Md Lltry from ftndlng out
Hypnotists object to 'Angels'
depiction as control device
By MICHAEL DOUGAN
OUIMOMIJ~ ... SUft
Some people are rather sensitive about how
their professions are portrayed in the media. Peo-
ple who give massages for a living -the
legitimate. therapeutic kind don't like being
portrayed as Times
Squa re hookers . Even
more touchy are the hyp· TELEVIEWS notists whose incomes are
derived by assisting peo·
pie in losing weight, quit·
ting cigarettes and improving concentration.
Particularly galling to these people are movie
and television programs that port.ray hypnotism as a
control technique, in which evil, bearded men use to
bend innocent victims to their will. It's an old
dramatic theme (Moriarty even used hypnotism
against Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes> and one
which hypnotists say is completely false. Not only
does this hackneyed gi mmick embarass the hyp-
notists, but it hits them hard in the pocketbook b)\
scaring away customers.
That's why a crowd of Southern California
hypnotists, including several from Orange County.
plan to picket ABC's Los Angeles offices tonight in
protest over an upcoming "Charlie's Angels"
episode.
The show, tilled ··Attack Angels," is desribed
in the Daily Pilot's television guide like this:
"Julie is caught up in a scheme by a hired killer
who hypnotically programs women into becoming
executioners in the executive suites of large com-
panies."
That, says Costa Mesa hypnotist Bill Harvey,
is impossible. "You can't use hypnotism to force
somebody to do anything that is against his moral
beliefs,•· he claimed.
The protest, organized by Frank Genco of
Long Beach, is expected to draw between 35 and 60
hypnotists and people in related~ofusions Uke
marriage and family counseling, G co said.
''They're really tired of that k' of treatment,··
be added. He said the purpose orthe demonstration is
"not to get the program off the air. but just to protest
usin& that kind or violence in connection with hyp-
notism." Genco, a professional hypnotist for 30 years,
sajd the "Angels" episode "would detinitely affect
the clienlele." '
He s tressed that the protesters will not
represent any particular organJzation, but added,
"Our local union is going lo try to call the station
to g~t (the show> olftheair. ''
tet •1 111'llHHlf,t
liiiiE1Eiiil
lf that doesn't work -and it won't -Genco
said the hypnoti11t's union would contact the ac-
tor's union for assistance.
Far more burning issues have broueht more
strident protests from more sensilive pressure
groups inevitably without success. r•
"Charlie's Angels" producer Aaron Spelling
could not be reached for comme n t. Don
DeMeskit.a, Spelling's publicist, said the producer
is "not shy about making comments" but didn't
know enough about the protest to respond. "This is
probably the first he's heard of it," said
DeMeskila.
He added that the protest was "perfectly
legitimate" and "everybody's got a right to do
whatever."
The episode, to air Wednesday, is one of four
remaining "Charlies Angels" programs to be seen
before the show goes off the air permanently.
Two issues are Involved in this controversy.
First, and most timely, is the network's right
to a ir what it wants, however irresponsible. In this
time of Moral Majority tyranny, all networks are
becoming increasingly nervous about citizens' pro-
tests over the contents of their programs.
Second, and equally important, is the
television industry's ethical responsibility to pre·
sent information that adheres in some fashion to
the truth.
This week's "Cha rlie's Angels" episode, if ll
lives up to advance billing, is a prime example of
the abdication of that responsibility.
Foolish as it may be, people believe what they
see on television. ll',.a powerful medium.
What they will see Wednesday nJgbt ls a lie.
The hypnotists' sense of outrage is well-justified.
Wrong notes hit
JACKSON, Mias. (AP) -It bun't been lover-
ly at 1!11 for Jackson television viewers who tried to
watch the musical "My Fair Lady" last month.
The sweet tones in Elba Doolittle'• aoncs put a
whammy on the computer of a pay television com-
pany, causing it to cut the fllm off and fill the
screen with printed loformaUon about the movie
channel, Home Box Office officials said.
"It was one of tboee freak thin11 that nobody
expects or really mows what to do about,·~ sald
Wade Tucker, director of procrammin1 for HBO
in Jack.son. "One minute the abow wu 1otn1 alODJ
just fine. Another second, it wu 1oae. ''
Nancy Reagan. Lauren
Blcall and Kathltlnl Hep-
burn
JOHN DARLING
"THIS 15 JOHN DARLING COMING-
10 '<OU Ll\IE F'~ ll-iE DOG SMOW !
NEW ANCHOR -John Beard will join Tritia
Toyota on the S p.m . edition of the KNBC
NewsCenter 4 beginning next month. His past
four years were spent anchoring newscasts in
Buffalo, N.Y.
Exdusfve Showing!
,._,
MARCELLO MASTROIANNI •C...-•-...... , ............ ,..,
TODAY -U .00 -ALL DAYI
-OaltJMet1n"1
2!G0-4:30-7:00...JO
"first rate ttwlllet. hst n.w movie
of th9 ~season." _,..,,.y LyOl'IJ, ces ~od1o
a;30 O • • • "Otley" 11Me1
Tom Courtenay, Romy
Schneidlr.
by Armstrong & Batiuk
11-115 15
PR00ABL.Y "TH"E
ONL'< CONTES!
WHERE YOU CAN BE A 'TEN .••
Time-Life TV
still in business
NEW YORK (AP> -"The report of my death
was' an exaggeration," Mark Twain advised a
newspaper reporter more than a century ago. Nan·
cy Dockry might extend that sentiment to Time·
Life Television.
"I think a lot of people assumed we had l>een
shuttered up,'' said Ms. Dockry, vice president for
network TV for Time-Life Television. "I think
what happened was the big announcement came
out in February that we were closing our doors
and selling out to Fox. •
"The Fo:t thing fell through," she said ... and
mana~ement ~ound it wasn't as easy as closing
up shop."
In ract, Time, Inc., did eliminate its Time-Life
Films division, of which Time-UJe TV once was a
part, early this spring, after a difficult run at the I
box office. Time-Life Films produced mQvles, like
the current "Fort Apache, The Bronx."
Time-Life TV still is on the block -Columbia
Television appears a likely buyer -but Ms.
Dockry said her division has 75 scripts in various l
stages of production. all of them funded by the
commercial networks.
Should Columbia, or anyone else. buy Time·
Life TV, the prod~tion unit presumably would
merely assume new management. rather than dis-
integrate entirely.
Time-Life Television is perhaps best known by
viewers for its co-production of all o f
Shakespeare's plays, with the British Broadcast·
ing Corp. Co-productions. like that one and the re·
cent "Shock of the New" series on modern art, for
public TV, are not Ms. Dockry's responsib1llty.
Why would four guys risk their lives
for a weekend in Colombia?
We can give you 5,000,000 reasons -
all in cash!
'I 'ftrf',1 M' •
~
,. --------------------~6~------------~~-· •
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981
APW .........
HI MOM! -Billy Skupa, 5, peers-through his diploma and
waves to parents who were watching graduation
ceremonies at a nursery school in Las Vegas. Nev. ---
Airport sets record
·Atlanta field busiest first 4 months
ATLANTA (AP> Hartsfield with 12,267,502 at O'Hare.
International Airport became
the world's busiest during the.
first four months or the year.
edging out Chicago's bustling
O'Hare International by more
than 10,000 passengers, accord-
ing to figures compiled by the
"I don 't thank we 'll get too ex-
cited about it yet. We'll wait un-
til the year ends," said Atlanta
Aviation Commissioner George
Berry
Atlanta handled 40.18 million
passengers in 1980, a 3.6 percent
drop from 1979. O'Hare's 43 65
million in 1980 was 8 8 percent
less than its 1979 level.
airports.
Hartsfleld's new terminal.
which opened last fall, look in
12,278,635 passengers, compared
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graded by NCR
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> The nation's 70 licensed
nuclear plants are being graded by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission for the Industry's first collective
"report card," to be issued this summer
Spurred by the 1979 accident at the Three Mlle Island
nuclear power plant, the NRC has been collectine data, in-
terviewing ulUlty managers and studying plant mishaps to
detercnine how the -plants rate in comparison with one
another.
"This program is one of the outcomes of the Three
Mlle Island reviews and studies,'' Dick Wessman, a senior
NRC staffer, said. "Many people thought that TMI was a
relatively well managed utility and facility , but we didn't
have a basis for thinking that."
The TMI accident, considered the worst in the history
of U.S. commercial nuclear power. underlined the need for
more information about Pll\,tlt operations, Wessman said.
"We determined it would be right and appropriate that
we have some methodical approach of looking at power
plant performance, and telling utilities and the public how
these plants stack up against each other." he said.
The program, called Systematic Assessment of
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utility performance and locate problem plants. The result,
due in mid-summer, should be a list of plants rated either
above average, average or below average
Wessman said factors in the SALP evaluations will in-
clude productivity, Inspection reports, violations, meetings
with management, and Licensee event reports the
memos filed when something goes wrong
But utilities and some consumer groups believe the
program may mislead the public.
"We have discovered that our criteria are quite im,-
perfect." Wessman acknowledged. "Next time around.
things are going to look a.tot better as far as a uniform ap·
praisal."
One problem, tte said. is that there are different
technical requirements for plants built and licensed at dif·
ferent times For example, he said. Tennessee's Sequoia
pl ant was licensed very recently, while the Maine Yankee
plant is eight lo 10 years old.
In addition. Wessman said, most of the people making
the evaluations are confined to particular regions. "There
clearly would be elements of subjectivity," he said.
That subjectivity could lead to misinterpretation and
public misunderstanding, said Jack Kearney, senior vice
pres ident of the Edison Electnr Institute. the utility trade
association
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I
Daily Pilai
TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1981
FEATURES
BUSINESS
STOCKS
82
BS
67
Children get head start
by learning the basics
of computers . . . B5
'fJEhais stri~ing Out against thousands of bats
' .
Boy holds small bat . Larger wing spans reach more than 5 feet . Bats sleep inverted in trees during days, forage for fruit at night.
By KAY BARTLETT
RUMSON, N.J . <AP> -His
Diners Club credit card lists his
name and his game: "James
Randi, Profeasional Charlatan.''
Tb' door on bis Tudor home
opens on the wrong side after a
reco.-ded Wizard of Oz warns of
the perils in seeing the wizard.
But the wizard comes to the
door, as he always does, and al-
lows as how he's on the phone,
· as he almost always is
IN THE LIVING room. one
finds a large gold and blue
macaw that squawks, "Hello,
\
OFFERS $10,000 DARE
Amazing James Randi
what's doing?", a smaller green
parrot, this one uncaged . a larger-tban·lit~ green statue of a
pharaoh wearing a black cape
and top hat, a skull ahd
crossbones perch.ed atop a clock
with the numbers one hour late,
a. buttertly cbllection on the
inanUe, a few swords and sabers
leatiing casually a1ainst a wall,
a plaster mask of rock star AUce
Cooper's head, various chess
aets, the latest in electronic
pdgetry, telescopes and a book
c•se filled with such titles as
"Houdini," "Ghosts and PhotO*
traph•" and "Psychic
Surgery."
· The fresh daCCodlls are re-
usurin1.
Enter the wizard, short as
wllards go and quite bald, but
•e<!rtlng a magnificent bu.shy
white beard and blue eyes bunt-
ia1 wUh chicanery beneath ~ally buahy 4'-hite ~yebrows.
BB 18 llASTE& ma1lclan aDd
•eape artist "The Amazln1
liadi," a man who t-=ly tllta at tbt P9Y.Chlc , fortune tellers, meta al
.,, benders, dowters, ESP
"ac~. housewives who .
iilalm tb•J can help solve
6iarder J'~ Uld to on c1'»wn tie lilt#...,...
Be "'9 ~-.,:~ ell fuh Of
'1...U ,..., aild lie cafrlit I
... ..,.. --Cbeck to baclt
t
up that chaJlenge.
Randi, 52, says he will gladly
turn it over to the first person
who can make one -just one
accurate but not obvious predic·
lion, anyone who can m ove
anything by psychic powers or
find one missing chitd.
BE FOREWARNED that Ran-
di himself can make a great de-
al move around this house of in-
dete rm i nale gables, a do-it·
yo u rs elf TV s tudio and a
refrigerator containing human
blood -all the better for the
psychic surgery he's willing to
perform, and then debunk, on
stage, screen or live TV studio.
And if you're not up for that,
he will gladly stop watches,
bend keys, make pencils move
without touching them -all
··miracles of a semi-religious
nature" as he entertainingly
calls them. or "feats of clay,"
i.e .. that good old-fashioned
magic he performed under his
mentor, magi c ian Harry
Blackstone.
Randi's $10,000 lure has been
out there for over 15 years and
some 600 have tried for it. Only
60 passed preliminary tests to
demonstrate any remote pro-
bability they could collect and
none of those even came close.
Meanwhile, Randi gleefully
notes. he pays the mortgage on
his house with the interest the
money earns.
"THE MONEY has never
been safer." he observes ,
although the number of psychics
ls proliferating. Randi has 11
ground rules governing the bet,
all of which he will mail to you
fully notarized.
Among other things, the
claims must be outltoed in ad-
vance, the odds must be fairly
long and judging will depend up-
on the nature or the claim.
For lnstan-ce, astral projec-
lion lsts claim they can send
the~r consciousness out of their
bo<llea to dis'-ant ptaces -
Jupiter seems increasln1ly
popular ..:.. and then report back
on what they saw.
Rand I just asks them to
transmit upstairs in his 12-room
house and tell what object ls on
the table in the loc~ed room.
Nobody has succeeded.
HE SAYS THERE'S a dlf·
ference between those who teal-1 y think they have paycblc
powers and those that are just
out and out fakers.
lo that latter cateaory he in·
eludes the motl famous, people
like Uri Geller, Jeanne Dixon,
Peter Hurkos of Bolton
atrNJer. fame, ~· of courte,
Tamara Rand.
Randi u11 peopl• who believe
they are ptychtc often 11t 10
carrfed away by near mllMI
lhey start r1tiaealtaa1 tboM u
htu.
Buddhist monk shows a dead bat to c~ildren who stay at mon<utery in province sooth
of Bangkok. Bats are protected on temple grou~ but damage fruit farms.
,,, .....
Bats, by the thousands,
have virtually taken over
the grounds of Wat Pom Wa
Ha in Chon Buri province in
southern Thailand.
They feed in the fruit
farms that surround the
area. The neighboring'
farmers leave out poison
bait and try to shoot the
pests, but they are not al-
lowed to take any action on
the grounds of the wat, or
temple.
The bats cause no ap-
parent problem for the
monks who live in the large
, compound, except when they
pass under the trees.
One must be aware of bat
droppings, which contain a
high level of acidic s4b-
stances that destroy leaves
and foliage on the ground.
The bats sleep during the
day and leave the wat
around 6 p.m. when· they fly
off to attack and feed. They
are gone all night, returning
about 5 a.m.
While an occasional bat
will fly through the temple,
none has taken up residence
inside, which is astonishing
when one considers that the
number of the s mall inhabi-
tants has been estimated at
between 2,000 and 4,000.
M11riad bats hang alonglide socred statues on
grou~ of Wat Pom Wa Ha in Ch<Jn Buri.
\
Or1nge Co1at O~ILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981 • •
Shed~
light on law
NAKED TaUTH DEPI'. -Costa Mesa civic leaders,
who have long campaigned for community virtue, have prob·
ably btakAtn out in a case of profuse pera~iratlon today
after tfae Supr~me Court's decision saymt 'Nay" to Mt.
Ephraim, New Jersey. Well you certainly mi1bt uk what in
the world does Mt. Ephraim, New Jeney have that would
cause a heavy sweat in Mesatown, here oa our very own
pranae Cout? Nak~eas, that's whal. ~ Coat._ Mesa has ·a fong
eritaae of battlin& against the · • .,_
•Ina ol ,lbooe mlaaultled ....... ~
wlao WCN)d abed all Uaeir gar· Jll ---111 r, •nts for ,.-olessioilal pin. .._. •
I
llT. EPIUlAIM, popula·
tion 5,625, below Camden, near the cros1roadl of routes 130,
295 and 28, also bas civic leaders equally outraged by the pro·
fesslonally unclothed. Thus it wu that the eopa ol that New
Je~ey borough slapped an &rrelt on one Juliette Ann DiLu·
ciano aqd her alleged accomplice for offerin1 live nude danc· in& at a 1pOt called the Six Thirteen Club.
~·was, the \!ase got appealed <if' you'll pardon the
4'S1>ressicm) all the way up to the Supreme Court..ot the United
States. And the trQuble with that wu that the Nalteda won on
a 7 to2 vote.
"'lbe boroutb totally excludes .all live entertainment, in·
eluding non-obscene nude danctn1," wrote Justice Byron R.
''Wh~' White, la the DYJority opinion.
NON.OBSCENE NUDE dancing? Costa Mesa city brass
probably paled, trembled and fainted upon reading that com·
bination of words . They always figured the word& nude and ob-
"Ke~.U clean now! We'r• /lJling owr CoJla Meia ... "
scene just naturally went together. Like peaches and cream.
So long as you don't peel the peaches, that is.
But Mr. Justice White continued to conclude, "Nudity
alone does not place otherwise protected material outside the
mantle of the First Amendment ... "
Protected material? Now the Mesa civic lights ought to be
puzzled by that one. They don't figure anything is protected
when people run around in the All-together, not body nor soul.
DESPITE TIOS LATF.SI' Supreme Court surprise, it's
doubtful that Costa Mesa will fmd the local saloons abruptly
importing dancing girls ..
Time was, of course, when Mesatown was indeed invaded
by a watering spot on Harbor Boulevard known as Baby
Doll's. It was widely rumored that within its cement block
. walls, fem ale dancers performed wearing little more than a
!;mile.
Then Poppa Joe's and the Firehouse shocked the central
business district with \gqd signs proclaiming that their danc-
ing ladies were nude, nude, nude. And that iot Costa Mesa's
finest vice cops busy, busy, busy. One bust followed another.
MAYJIE THAT OUGRI' to be re-phrased. 'Yes. They ar·
r~sted a lot of dancers who. wt;ren't carrying any identification
at the time. That•s better.
Since then, things have quieted on Costa Mesa's unclothed
front. Oh well, there have been a couple of modeling studios
and a dancehall to keep the vice cops in business but most of
the local starkers have been kiddies in wading pools.
SWl, the Supreme Court may have given .Mesa's City Hall
some new jitters. Don't go visiting there now and abruptly
fling· off your overcoat. ~
JOGB COURT OBSERVEBS, however, have suggested
that the new ruling on protes11ional nakedness probably means
that the New Jersey town just bad a loosely written anti-buff
law. ·
That should ease Costa Mesars worry about virtue. Costa
Mesa writes ordinances so tight that they squeak.
Even the birds and the bees watch it around Mesatown.
GOURMET
MARKET
(
I
----~----------~---------~---.-----------------------------------,...----------Clean Upper Bay .vowed F.arnwrs
Inventor claims device, new methods foolproof · mndtet
OtUe "Andy" Andrews bu spent nlne years
and $1.2,000 out or bJs own poeket P.unuin1 hit 1ell·
cleanin1 harbor invention which he claim• would
rid the Upper Newport Bay of ill silt once and for
all.
Andrews, a retired truck driver who llvea lo
Anaheim, hu hauled workinl modell or hla inven-
tion all over the country in hopes aomeont mi&bt
become interested.
He's been to Washinstoo, D.C., to Sacramento
three times and to the offices of every lawmaker
who would let him in the front door.
Most. recently, he spent $1,100 aend1n& 1urvey1
to 20,000 Newport residents, trying to wln interest
ln his self·cleanin1 harbor Idea.
He claims 1,8'8 peotle have responded to hla
survey and that 97 percent of the persons favor bis
approach to cleanln1 out tbe mud·choked bay.
Next Sunday, for tht first Ume, Andrews will
show off models of hiJ Invention to Newport City
Council members at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
He's euited. He says be feels like he's finally on the move.
"This ls the only possible way you'll ever get
the back bay cleaned out and keep it cl111ned out,"
be boasts. •
"That idea to do some dredging la just a waste
ortaxpayer's money," be adds.
His invention, which he says must be seen to'
be appreciated, works on the theory of hamessln1
tidal action to scrub out the bay.
Tidal gates would direct water movement
clockwise around the bay, he says. Movement of
the water, which he estimates would reach speeds
up to 13 miles per hour at some points, would clean
out the sand and silt.
To get the full power ol tidal action, a partial
channel would be cut through the Balboa
Peninsula, he explains.
To keep water flowing around the bay, a series
of "water fences" would be set up iQ the middle of
the bay.
The main criticism of the plan bas been that
the water current would erode places like Dover
Shores and Sbellmaker Island.
Andrews says he has a cure for that. He
claims if an area starts eroding, a new water fence
would be erected to hold back the water flow.
"It would be just like nature in tip-top form,"
Andrews speeulates.
Deity,.. ........
at Mesa~
( Ill
Plana for a pro1ram
that would brio& frttll
produce directly frdl
Southern California
farms to Oranae Coalt
cons umers are bebl;e
diseuaaed by grotre.ls
and Orange County Filr
officials. • 1
A Farmers Mar~'~t
operatJoo on a portior{~r
the fairgrounds Ptl
lot in Costa Mesa
been suggested by
Orange County F
Bureau, said Ken
Fulk, fair manae,er. •
Fulk said bur
representatives are
inc the fairgrounds 1
lion for a cert.if
Farmers Market slm
to one now opera
Long Beach'. "Prod
is sold directly to
consumer,'' he s
Anaheim relident Ottie Andrews 1howa off ' "Th ere is no m
de·"'-... _ ··"'" 1.-1 l l nd d dleman; the farmer . vM.;e rte: 10111 WIU uc p to c eon ai t a son a little better price
from Upper Newport Bay. He will demon8tr<Ue so does lhe consumff..
plan Sunday. Such a market. Fulk
He says since childhood he's been interested in
tidal currents and cleaning up rivers and bays.
When he was young, he says, he came up with
an Invention that lowered the depth of a
Massachusetts river from 4 feel to 9 inches.
He claims he simply dammed up the river and
when enough water had built up, knocked down the
dam. The rush of water, ,he recalls, not only
lowered the river but washed out a yacht club
dock.
"The folks back there were a little amazed,"
he says. "They wouldn't let me do it again."
He claims his Upper Newport Bay plan is free
of such risks and says he plans to keep pushing it
until someone listens.
said, probably would not
get under way until
after July's annual
Orange County Fair pd
that details would have
to be wqrked out.
"I don't know what
they (the Farm Bureau>
plan to offer, but it WOfl't
be a big income
generator for the fair,"
he said. "It'll mostly be
a community services
effort by the fair ·
grounds.''
Goat top
'mo'la!r'
PINOLE (AP> -The
city of Pinole may soon
be in the goat rental
business.
Inmates' booze legal
The idea, says Fire
Chief Alex Clark, would
be to rent the goats to
property owners whose
yards are overgrown
with weeds. The goats
would munch the weeds
and reduce the fire
hazards associated with
overgrown grass and
brush, according to
· Clark.
Pinole is taking the
idea from anot.her East
Bay town, Albany ,
where privately owned
goats are rented to resi-
dents with the city's
blessing.
State vehicles to use ethanol from prison still
o(
furnish about 80 percent of i}le
energy needed to produce the
fuel. The farm at Vienna PfO·
CHICAGO <A~) -Although that not only is the still "one of
illegal stills have flourished in · the few high.technology projects
prisons since antiquity to cheer ever to be attempted by a cor-
hapless inmates, the still .being rectionaJ industries department
built at the state prison in anywhere in the country,'' but
southern Illinois is quite legal, that it would save a lot of
and the prisoners won't be money.
drinking the produd. Skolnik said the state can save
Their spirits may be perked, about $250,000 a year by blend-
tbou gb, because one of the Ing 10-percent alcohol, with 90-
benefits of the first ethanol-percent gasoline to produce 5
producing plant legally operat· million gallons of gasohoh about
ing on prison grounds will be the amount the state now buys.
training, which is to lead to col-The prison·produced alcohol
lege associate of arts degrees in will cost about 50 cents a gallon
alcohol fuel production. less than the market price.
If the Vienna Correctional In addition, proceeds from the
duces enough corn to operat~e~ plant for 100 days a year and e
rest will be bought or receiv in
trade for animal feed, Skol ·
said. ~
A high.protein animal feed lor
the correctional facility's caile
herd will be among ~e
byproducts. "'
"I'm excited about the v·n·
lure," Skolnik said. "With l!f:Ck
it wm only be the beginnln~of
meaningful training at&d
employment opportunities for
inmates." ;: Center project works, and 11· operation will be used to sub-
linois Corrections Department sidize other prison industries
officials believe it will, the plant operating in the._red. Skolnik El Mon-o School, ~· .
will put out 500,000 gallons or said. ' ' ~ ~ _ J -• Sees more of ethanol a year starting Southeastern Illinois • College ..J_....a 111USic ~est ·.' ~ Jan. 1. in Harrisburg is under contract JIU-""' P
That's enough gasohol for tl\e to provide vocational and col-Jazz and popular show t~ new peace state of Illinois' entire fleet of lege-level training to Vienna in-will be performed by students 4t
gasohol-powered vehicles. And mates, and the idea for the El Morro Elementary Sc~I
CAIRO, Egypt <AP) another 40,000 gallons will be prison still began there. Tuesday at 7 :30 p.m. •
-Despite verb a I used each y~ar as pqre alcohol In lit~e more than a year, Featured in the program wt)t
clashes over J erusalem, fuel in Department of Correc· commitments and grants from be the 48-plece El Mo~rio
President Anwar Sadat lions vehicles on the grounds of state and federal agencies for Orchestra and the 180·volqe
has told visiting Israeli department facilities. the project have totaled $700,000. chorus, along with several So~
legislators that there Howard Skolnik, correctional Skolnik said the prison's out-performances. The public is iil·
would be no turning industries superintendent. said sized, coal.fired boiler would vited to attend. I ba c k "und e r any ___ _;..: __ _.L...;._;....;_;..;.;;...;;;..;;..;;..;..;;.:._=..;;;......----=------------
circumstances'' from
the Egyplian.Jsraell
peace pact.
Sadat made the com·
ment as he and Israeli
Prime Minister
Menachem Begin pre·
pared for a s ummit
meeting Thursday to
discuss Israeli troop
withdrawals from the
Sinai Peninsula and the
lsraeli·Syrian missile
crisis.
It I
XZ006S
$105
I
!
I
I J
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Jmey W•~rmelon ............ t5c lb.
Loc:al aa-11 FreM Spinach .... 4 bu.a. 1.to
Loc:al CS.... Clle11m6en . . . . . . . . 5 for l.to
Sweet Plllk Grapefnlt ............ 3 for I.to
8o. AJaerleaa BallUIS , , .... , • • .3 lbe. 1, .. I
. DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR '
O.l•IM'f'• Prln&e Label Cllampaame (750 mll1
2. 75 ea. or D ... "' cate
... ~ .._,_. a.-la BlMC (711 aU) .. a.• tt.
8il.,....V_ n.TIU&er> ................ 11.11ea. le•••'g .... mo mll> .................... Llha.
(()nf ... ) ...................................... .
All liquor and wine pl1a1 tax.
._.....,.M,a111ds..lla1
-,..~ mftl., Ne....,. aue•
673-5520 '
For your graduate! . .
Theres a perfect Pulsar Quartz· watch
· at a perfect price. ~
What could be o ben.r way to soy how much you core than with o Pulsar Quartz watch?
They're so accurate they approach perfect timekeeping. And sp convenient, they never need
winding. And they're all such greot values. tney·ll please ¥s:!!J just os much.
Everyone will low a nf!IW Pulsar Quartz watch. There ore alarm chronographs and calculator
alorm watches. And slim dress and sports models for special people who apprac;iote
dependable, coraftee service. great t1mekeep1ng ond beouhful 0F¥>90ronce.
Pulsar• Qvortz
~a beat beyond. In technology. In value.
~fat~ ~·
• • community pea
~'KFAR BElT, Lebanon (AP> -
olltical groups and warrine
illtip are not welcome ln this
pocket or peace where Christian
cand Moslem villa1es exist side·
"91-side, relatively unscathed by
ltJebiuM>n's sectarian violence.
tlt•''We are an example to the
tWJaole of Lebanon. We live in
alliace and we are the real
i )t.e b a non , · · s a l d G h a s s a n
1Himleh. 25, a graduate of the
University of Missouri who Uves
1~· the Shiite Moslem vlllage or
ar Hltta. ~1 1 arthtr up the hill in southern
I•' I
•II . ' , . . , ' ..
JI
, :
s5ts
Clllc"-• . ... .,....
Siled -a..d ,..__
Lebanbn is the Ch.rlstian village
of Kfar Shalal, where the Rev.
Tanious Assam, a Maronite
priest, said "in the 65 years of
my ure. there has been no fieht·
ing between us in this area. The
people here do not want outside
Interference.''
Seven villages -four Chris·
tian and three Moslem -are
near Klar Beit, a Palestinian·
owned farm that covers 320
acres or land where citrus.
olives, erapes, tomatoes and
almonds are grown. The farm Is
the area's ma ·or industr .
employina ·some 100 villacersl ing the Syrian efforts to contain
. And its owner sometimes settl" Moslem-Christian civil war. And village disputes. • laat year, a Syrian Jet crashed
About 27 miles south of Beiru on the rarm. No resfdents were
and six miles inland from tbe injured.
Mediterranean coast, the ''There is a united agreement
peaceful enclave ls just north of among all the people here that
the "red line•• -south of whlcb we will not a11ow any political
Israel has warned lt will not ~I· 1 party or movement lo come to
low Syrian peacekeeping troop6. this ~ommunity." said Sohall
Even here. the war can't be~ Hamieh, 40, a Kfar Hitta land·
~~r!o~e~e~~ri:~~&n~lM1~~~e:, ~~~~r.s~~sa'!rp P!~Y wf1~ ~~:
Palestinian supply port. Io 1976, ~1 them out. We want to remain
two stray rockets struck Klarr. brbthers. ''
Hltta. klllln two villa era dur· A committee of 10 villaee
iL .:_ ~.,,-,~
L__::;;···· .. :-. f;~·•111~
ombrero Street
Restaurant & Cantina ·s4so
ltOOW.I ..... ....61).140!
W111ntr of Sii C•l•f R1S111ur11nl Wnttr's Award 1979 11nd '80
IOAM tol PM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY
BUFFET BRUNCH
r--------------. ~~ MEW I 719 N. MAIN ST.
SANTA ANA
leadeB r• enUnc the a1'ff'1
three ma.tor sects -Maronlte,
Greek Catholic and Shia led'
rlfle·totlng delegation of
(armers that expelled cu.omen
who tried lo set up a checkpoint
near Krar Hitta last month, real·
dents said.
Villagers cross religiou1 lines
for school -young chil4lren ,_\.
tend classes in the Christian
village of Mjaidel and Kfar Hit·
ta's high 1chool has Moslem and
Christian students -and for
social activities -Moslem and
Christian housewives meet for
coffee, and reli1tou11 hot~r• are celebrated by nearl}'
e er)'one.
,'I ri I
UCSD po~t filled
BOSTON <AP), -After 19
monttwt in office, ,Dr. R4>lftrt G. fet~rsdorf, 55, hu reaiped lis
preatdent of tt,e Ha~yard·
affiUat.ed Bri1ham and Women's
Hospitals to becotne dean and
v l ce chance~lor of health
services at the UC M&dlcal
SeKool in San Dleco.
~11. : SUMMER HOURS I
111 1 Breakfast-pancakes. waffles, I Al ! omelettes ------------------
,~ Lunch-delectable sandwiches. I daily specials I June
Crack inco a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. Try a generous serving
of our new spiced cold boiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcorn~ shrimp.
And then do it again!
It 's all you can eat. Every day of the week. I o;f '
-l 1J Dinner-Chef's Gourmet Oinnet"S I
~~ti,~ THE COOKERY UST AURAMT. 11 30 lot W. c..t .. pw.,, Me...,t IMdl
h II ..,..._ .... ..,a. I
l" • 646-6tot I
I DAILY 6 A.M. ·I P.M. I.
I 1••n•._ J. --------------
2~ ,,
DARLENE '*OYI
9pni&11pm '
June BILL
3rd-4th MIDLaY
June IN CONcftT
l Oth-11 .~,.. 1';;:1•htly
June BOBBY
7th-Ith HA TfllLD
IN CONCERT
OM show nlghtly ~ .... _...,_28th-29th '
GREG TOPPER June 14th .•
Each special is served with your choi~e of a crisp tossed salad or
cole slaw. baked potato or rice pilaf, and another favorite, sourdough bread.
All you can eat. All week long.
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can eat . . . . ". . . . . . . . ~ 11.95
,PopconiShrimp
All you can eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .'7.50
News iced Cold Boiled Shrim
All you ':an eat ............. '8.95 p
NICK BELL Bedfobsfer· ..
June 21 -22
rri:---rr.------.. ,.,.-.,~-----------, 1:$:.• ·~ :~-LO!!_~~ .. ~~~s ! )'i_~'C ChrisGaffneyBand I ~~ ..,,,..,,_., I 1~a ~~ FREE C.er Charge =~~~=·· I
831·2331 '1000ff Weekends I 421E.17th ll Cmta ..._ 1 --·-..._1ill"'"___ --f#llf/ltlJ N"il• tiff·---.,.._ ___ --
The Palm Springe area'• neweet luxury reeort at only '32.00 per dly.•
Much lower than our normal tummer rates.
Spend a day In the 1un. Relax, unwind and enjoy the reeort'a aparkllng
poot•, 25 champfonahlp tennla courta, 27 hotel of gotf, btcycl ... game
room, gift ahop and much more.
UncompUcated? You betl Rancho Laa
Palmu A..ort II the Ptace for
Your Oay In the Sun.
Advance A•INltlone AeQuftd 8PeOe /if_; ..........
Cll7t~Ot
TOI AM IOOl22MnO
Call 642-5678.
Put • few words
to work tor you.
ORN~ Inns of Arnenca, 1981
I
For the seafood lover in you: it
7801 Beach Blvd .. Buena Park. 994-1241
1681 I Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach. 848· 1956
11· 30 a m -10:00 p.m Sun ·Thurs
11 30 a m.-11-00 pm. Fn & Sat fl
• . •
•
• ..
Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOTffueaday, June 2. 1981
Spotliglii on a,ssemblywoman
87 llAaY JANE SCA&C&LLO .................
Auemba,woman Marlu ...,.... wu la
the apotll&ht when the Mai'dan C-. ol Educa-
tional Therapy honored her at the StiUtb Coaat
Pla .. Hotel. ,.
About D> guests paid 1125 each to attend
the dlMer to benefit the center'• worll with
children from k1nder1arten throulb bt1h school.
Dinner be1an with a white wine course of
lilet ot sole. continued throuih a veal dilh and
ended with Strawberries Romanoff, but the
folfowlng program was the "piece de re·
slatance."
Former Assemblyman Denni• Manaera was
Joined by Kathy Bode, F1')'e· Wilton and Ted
Johnson for a musical salute to M1n1era'
torroer colleaaue. They sang ("with apolotles to Cole
Potter") customized lyrics to such son1s as
"You're Delovely" and "You're the Top."
Mangers, who served ror four years in the
state legiltature wl.lb.._ Mrs. Beraeson, was
trained as a classical tiiimi and serenaded her
with "Nights are long since l've been away, my
budd ." rThe Democrat, who was defeated at the
last election. joked, "Marian a nd I both
represented Republican districts.'')
Although Mangers-was master of
ceremonie~t' Peter Kremer of the Irvine Com·
pany was mnner chairman, and be was assisted
by Daniel Aldrich or UCI, Hancock Bannin1 111,
Walter Gerken of Pacific Mutual, Supervisor
Thomas Riley and Henry Segerstrom.
Aldrich, Riley and Segerstrom are all past
reci,ients of the award.
More serious parts of the program included
a six-minute audio-visual presentation showing
the work done at the school with students who
have average or above intelligence but learning
problems.
A Mardan "success story," Marty Brenner,
told about arriving at the school in eighth grade
but doing school work at second-to-fourth grade
level.
"I wouldn't have gotten through high school
without the help 1 received at Mar<11n." he said,
noting that he soon will complete work for a col·
lege degree in economics with a minor in audio
engineering.
Finally, Joanne Hanson, president of the
school's board of directors, presented a wood
sculpture to Mrs. Bergeson for her contributions
to education (she served on the Newport-Mesa
School Board> and the community.
Mrs. Bergeson, who attended with her
husband Garth, thanked everyone "for the OP·
portuQlty to demonstrate support for thole wbo
make •M•~nce in ao many Uvet."
Amonc the local elected oltlclall ln atten·
dance WeN .Jackie Heather, Newport Beach
mayor, and her buaband Loren; Arleoe Schafer,
Costa Mesa mayor and her buaband Jim;
Norma Hertso1. Colla Meta Councilwoman;
Evelyn Hart, Newport Beach mayor pro.tem:
and John Cox, Newport Beach councUman and
hls wife Diane.
Other guests were Mr. a nd Mra. Glen
Stillwell, Mn. Richard Spooner, Mr. and Mn.
Tom Wilek, Mr. and Mrs. Marty Brower, Mr.
and Mn. Harry Bubb and Amen Wardy.
REAL ESTATE a1enta rubbed elbows
with sur1eons and banken chatted with atore
managers when the Newport Center Alaoclatlon
and American State Bank cohosted a May Wine
Festival.
Association members and auuts enjoyed
wine, cheese and hors d'oeuvrea at the bank ln a
late-afternoon 1et toaether.
Among the busy business people who found
time to relax and chat were Ray Haas, John
Cox, Hal Pinchin, Bob McCUrdy, Lucille Kuehn,
Bob Heyn, Dave Dmohowak:i, Dick Marowlts
a nd Earline Loop.
Others wue Susan Laza with husband
Bruce Guyette, Doug and Jean Liechty, Har-
riette Witmer, Bernard Schnelder (president of
the association), Rudy and Suale Baron, Phil
Rowe and Dave Denault.
The National Multiple Sclerosis Society
of Orange County will host a gala black-tie din·
ner next Monday evening at the La Strada
Restaurant in Corona del Mar.
Billed as "A Jewel of an Evening," the par-
ty will include a sparkling fashion show by
Neiman-Marcus.
The restaurant will be closed to the public
for the evening so that benefit guests, at $150
per person, can be seated and treated to the
best.
Mrs. Sherry Colbert of Huntington Beach is
dinner chairman, and Kitty ·Leslie of Neiman-
M arc us has promised a fashion show to put a
sparkle in everyone's eye.
Information is available at the Oranae
County Chapter's headquarters by calling
891-4608.
HAPPENINGS
Bernard Schneider
(left) with Frederick
Firerton and Ro.y H008
at the Newport CenteT
Association's May Wine
"estival. ·
'
Ga1'th and Marian
Bergeson f le/t) chat
with Tom and Emma
Jane Riley at the din-
ner honoring Mrs.
Bergeson.
She wants to get rid of wimp Aquarius: Use moderation
DEAR ANN LANDERS: For years I have
been married to a weak, sissified wimp. I am
almost sure he is bisexual, but 1 have no proof.
This lily-livered twerp can't make a decision and
won't stand up for himself. He is such a coward he embarrasses me. _
My marriage becomes more intolerable every
day. I would love to get a divorce but this is the
situation: I am In my early 40s, no children. My
111 lAlllll
parents are dead. Although I am not a career
woman, I worked as a secretary before marriage,
and I suppose I could do it again if I bad to: 1 have
a small inheritance c which I have kept privately>
and with some investment counseling I mjght be
able to live orr that. .
Is it too late for me lo unload this miserable
creep. move to another city and make a decent lire
for myself? -HESITATING IN TORONTO
Dear Toronto: Conslderlng how you feel about
your husband, I can Imagine how you treat hlm.
For bis stile as well as you.rs, I hope yoa wW put
an end lo the mockery. The bell you describe could
hardly be called a marriage.
DEAR ANN: This is a letter to "Waitin · for
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
S.•efr-1,•MllCJellt
I '22 HAHOa ILVD.
COSTA MISA -S4S.1 IH
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
M2-M78
BEDWETTER
LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED
no. .. -.. ,...-..... ---.... -..... -. • ........ _ .. __ ......_, _____ _
-.... .. -·" --·~ .. , ........... ,.... -· ... ·-·-·"" .. ----....--·-... ..--...... ---....... -trw ..._, • ._,. __ W1 M--.... T•l..-11". o _.., ______ ......,..
"Equally Effective for Adults~'
~,. I ,.-M:::,7;;;.;.~~.;,~;=:T;.;;:~TD.
I 311 Arst SlrMt I ~OON. WI 64457
~ I PARENTS' NAME : I
ADDRESS ----------• • CtTY ____ ._ STAT!--ZIP __ :
PHONE--~.,......,.--_..;..-AGE--I • ~~i lnletnal-' Ltd 1171 IAeM 4 • to) :
~\' I ; 1 f ' f ~.1' I ' ' I ' ' ,, '
U s e a D a i I y Pi Io t
Penny Pincher Ad to
sell items under
$100 .
3 lines for 2 days on-
ly $1.50 a day. Sorry,
no commercial ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny Pincher
Ad or use your Visa
or Master Card.
Ca II Clas'-sit ied Ad-
vertising a't 642-5678
to place your ad.
·-__ ___,..,.
the Axe to Fall." Please tell her the axe WILL fa ..
eventually and she should insist that her husband
engage an attorney immediately and get himself
out of the mess of not paying his income taxes.
The same thing happened to me several years
ago, only it was my father. He was sell-employed
for years and paid no taxes. Daddy died very
young (44) from a heart attack. I always felt if be
hadn't had so much stress created by his
dishonesty he would have lived longer.
Not only that, but out of an estate of $180,000
my mother ended up with nothing. I got $10,000.
What the IRS didn't take, the lawyers did. In fact,
the IRS got the smallest chunk. Cit took seven
years to get the mess untangled and the legal bills
would have made your eyes pop.>
If your husband loves bis family, he will come
forward and face the music. He won't take a
chance and leave a mess for his family to clean up
later. -MADE THAT SCENE IN MD.
Dear Md.: I hope even peraoa who sees
himself will take your advice. It woald ••rely
reduce tbe pressure that comes wt~la lyla1 a .. UH!
fear of belng caught. U c09ld abo save UH! family
from shame aad aaxle&y wbea lite ase falls.
Ann Landers ctucualiifttn~ drinking -it•
myths. its realitiea. Learn the fad• bu reatflng "Boou
and Yoo -For Teen-Ag~• Only," bu Ann Landffl.
Send 50 wnt• and a long, ttlf-addreaud, •tamped
envelope £0 Ann Lander•, P.O. Boz u•s. Chicago, IU.
60611.
weanesaay, June 3, 1981
By SYDNEYOMARB
ARIES <March 21 -April 19): Get accounting,
take invenlo'ry, improve security measures.
Cancer native figures prominently. You now can
reach creative, constructive understanding with
parent or older individual.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focus on
alternatives, a variety of choices, ability to be
selective. Trips and messages dominate active
scenario. Celebration is on agenda.
GEMINI (May 21 -June.20): Money comes
from surprise source. Emphasis on payments, col-
lectldfP, budgets and income potential. Aquarian
aids ~shoring up lines of communication.
CEB (June 21-July 22>: You·re free to
write, travel, make decisions regarding members
of op~ite sex: Cycle high and your judgment is
accur.ate. Sense of perceotion is heh~htened. LBo (July 23-Aug. 22): Ride with tide; avoid
attempting lo force Issues. Focus on glamour,
specia\ productions, behind-scenes maneuvers and
unique displays or plaques, awards. commenda-
tions.
VlaGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You encountPr en·
thusla,tic. optimistic individual who buoys your
spirits. Wish comes frue, but not in manner
ori1ina.lly anticipated. You learn more about
money and bow it gets that way.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Focus on business.
professional aspirations. civic duties, prestige and
honor You encounter Capricorn native who has
knack for obtaining what 1s needed
SCORPIO cOct 23·Nov. 21> · Sense of percep·
tion comes into focus. Long.range objectives are
clarified. Emphasis on Journeys. comprehension or
potential and realization that much more can and
should be learned •
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Emotional
involvement need not result in financial shambles
Ke~ 1s to dra" line between whispered "sweet
HOROSCOPE
no.things" anct reaht~ Delve beneath surface 1n·
di cations .
CAPRICORN c Dec. 22-Jan 19). Evaluate pros-
pects, survey files and conserve assets. Family
memher could make "unreasonable" request. Go
slow. absorb information and spar for time
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 Feb. 18): Obtain valuable
hint by studying Leo message Moderation should
be highlighted. Practice techniques aimed at wirt·
ning friends and influencing people through
diplomacy. Play waiting game
PISCES I Feb. 19-March 201 · Emphasis on ex-
citement or speculation. affair of heart, changct.
variety and constructive outlet for creative en-
deavors. Roadblock to progress is removed. '
WOOD LIGHTING INDUSTRIES
• Lighting: Interior And Architectural:
• A Factory/Showroom/Dlatrlbutlon
Faclllty Featuring Popul•r Lighting
Fixtures Prom More Th•n 30
Lighting Companies: '
• Complete Conaultlng, Cuatom
Dealgn And Manuf•cturlng Services:
• The Moat Faahlon•ble Line
Of ~able And Floor Lamp•
In Orange County:
• C~blllty In The L•teat Energy
Conaerv•tlon Technique•.
=·
..
..
Wood Lighting's Showroom
Remodeling wlll be finished
on June 5th and you· are
Invited to stop In and see the
mo•t complete llne of llghtlng
fixtures In South·ern CallfornJa .
~ ou'll see llghtlng fixtures In
roomllke aettlngs ... Interior
and exterior llghtlng, table and
floor lamps, anCt a dlsplay of
fan lights.
,.
I
t
/
..
moo~~~~~~
,, .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981
Inflation letting up
Recent developments point toward brigh ter outlook
By CHET CURRIER
NEW YORK (AP) -Day by day, the U.S. ln·
nation outlook appears to be brightenin1. •
The runaway rise in the price of oil has 1lven
way to spotty declines. Home prices, after years of
double-digit increases, have levelled otf ln the past
r year and a half.
I Late last week, the Department of Agriculture
I reported that farm prices declined In May for the
fifth consecutive month. That news, while hardly
cheering to farmers, did prompt USDA economists
to lower their projections of the increase ln retail
food prices this year.
An lndex of commodity futures prices com·
piled by the Commodity Research Bureau Inc. bas
been in a steady decline since last November, fall·
• Ing abo'ut 14 percent in six months.
The dollar, meanwhile, has climbed in value
against most leading foreign currencies. In theory
f
'Demand for real
resources ... will
increase more than
the public is willing
to curtail its consumption'
• at least, that means downward pressure on prices
of goods from abroad. '
The effects of all these developments have
begun to show up in the consumer price index,
which rose at single-digit annual rates in both
March and April. A growing number of economists
forecast more t>f the same in the months ahead.
Hopes have even begun to spring up that the
decline of the inflation rate might gather momen-
tum as it proceeds downhill. Whatever the faults of
the consumer price index as a measure of infla·
lion. analysts point out, it is importaht simply
..,. because it is so widely recognized.
Lower reported increases in the index, it is
said, could well lead to a reduction of inflationary
expectations, which are themselves an important
contributor to the problem.
On a tangible level, Smaller Increases in the
index would mean smaller cost-of-living lncreases
in wages and benefits for many workers and
pension i;eciRients whose checks are pegged to the
index.
The further one goes through the litany. the
better and more persuasive it sounds. But a vocal
group of skeptics cautions that it is a dubious, and
maybe even dangerous, proposition to swallow
whole just yet.
The roots of the inflation problem have had
many years to grow, they point out. And even if
this troublesome weed could be pulled up easily, I .
COLLECTORS CORNER
R•r• Coln• & Stampe
GOLD & SIL VER
Date 6-1·11 C ... WS.• SllvwCI. 111.D ..., ....
MmJS MMJS ..,.... .... ,, ::::: :=:: ..,,,., '21.,., ,,_.,___ .. COll._c_.,...
(1'1 4) 55e-ll50
South Coa•t Plan VIiiage .............. (Ac __ .... e-_,
Se-l'IM:e Ttme St«tt at VOVt Door tCMI s ... e-nl YOtll NHI
ccm ..... M1-1289 , .. ..__
···-~95-0401 -c-c:..--
(hA °""'" ~ ....... ,,.,,, I
DAILY PH.Of
CLASSIFIED ADS
-r 842•5878-
-EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Or., Suite 14
N EWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
;$50,000 to $500,000
0
1NCOME.PROPERTY SECONDS
• ···-··· only .. ,,...t ··-•eo-adal ·•-weet1a1
• w-lllv co••lhMllt• ... _ ... " ........
••-d.eto 3 ,,..n
•9-tlMmlCallf .......
CuntKI our
•-• l.tonNtlo• H rwke,
fur vour l1"6ncing nt'ecls
I (714) 759-1515 I
AMU ltCAN HOfllE MOflTOME I
230 Newpo<t Center Ot1v• . Design Plaza
Newp<K1 INcl't t Ca11torn1a
92MO
the act of doing so mleht Inflict a lot of dama1el
lbe surroundinc 1arden.
One of Wall Street's most Influent
economists, Albert Wojnllower of First Bot
Corp., argues that the nation must tackle a se
of other basic problems successfully before lasti
stability of prices can become a real possJblllty.
The revitalization of the military -one of
Issues President Reagan campalaned hardest
-wlll require a ~eavy commitment of our
sources. So will the much-discussed rebuilding
lndustrial America.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve is t.111·
der great pressure to rein in the growth of the
money supply to head oCf new surges in inflation.
Said Wojnilower in a recent seeech to a
management symposium in Swttzerland :
"Demand for real resources from the military apd
capital lnvestment sector:s will increase more than
the public is willing to curtail its consumption-and,
even more Importantly. more than can be
financed under the monetary growth ceiling."
Thus, he argues, the conditions that lead to in·
nation -the desire to squeeze more benefits out of
the econom.)'than its real resources can supply -
persist. The so-called "supply side" tactic of cut·
ting taxes advocated by Reagan and his advisers,
he contends, would not resolve that problem and
could well make it worse.
Though Wojnilower Is known as a pessjmist.
his view is not entirely bleak.
"If we can avoid simplistic but self-defeating
'solutions' to the various inte~nal conflicts that
have been mentioned, " he concluded, ''bne may
visualize a time not many years off when, to a
significant extent, we will have rationalized gov-
ernment spending, wut no longer be subject to
blackmail through withholding of oil supplies or
outrageous price increases, and might be ap-
proaching a crest in military'outlay . . . 1
"At that juncture, sizeable and sustained ID·
creases in our civilian living standard will become
actiieveable. That will open opportunities for dis·
inflation and financial stabilization that simply do
not exist today." -
Volvo salesman
wins 01ernbership
Don Stout of Earle Ike Volvo, 1966 Harbor
Blvd., Costa Mesa, has earned membership in the
Volvo Gold Sales League by selling 250 new
Volvos. Higher levels in the career recognition
program include the Diamond Sales League at 500
sales and the Volvo Hall of Fame for 1,000 or more
lifetime Volvo sales.
Stout was a member of Volvo's National Top
Car Salesmen Club In 1980 and 1981.-
..
I
..
D911'f ........... ,...
Eight-yeor--0ld Doma Colmnby of Laguna Beach works on math skill! on a minicomputer, udeT the
watchful eyes of Binary School headmaster Stephen DeWitt.
Compute rs taug h t in classroom
By STEVE MITCHELL the pupil, and often there is humor in the answer. OI tM o.lty '11M Si.If Children enrolled in Stephen DeWitt's com-When a student makes a mathematical error,
puter courses will have a leg up on the future. the the computer most likely will tell him so in no un-~-year-old headmaster says . certain terms.
DeWitt, form er owner or the Tyna Elementary "No. no. no. no, no," reads one computer
School in Laguna Canyon, has opened 'the Binary res ponse. "Am I repeating myself," the computer
Tree t'omputer school on Forest Avenue which then asks . specializes in teaching youngsters how to use the DeWitt says the response adds a human touch.
complex gadgetry, Many of hi s programs include the student's name
·His 1,000-square-foot "classroom" in the Lum-in the r~ponse. he said.
beryard Mall contains eight computer stations, In the first of the three-week programs .
and you can generally find children from 8 to 12 youngsters are introduced to the computer. By the
years of age on a weekday afternoon. playing second week. students learn how lo make com·
educational games or doing their homework on the pulers s ing, animate, write stories and answer
minicomputer i.creens questions.
The emphasis. DeWitt says, is learning com· We~k thre~. e.nti~~ed "T~.king ~ontr~I.'' in·
puter language and exploring problem-solving eludes mstructaon 1~ LOGO, a children s c~mtechniques. puter lan~uage which explores problem-solvmg
Children learn how to operate a computer, techniques . . learn progra mmmg and the correct order, or syn· The fees for each one-week session 1s $75.
tax necessary to correctly instruct a computer on Adult!> can get m the game too. DeWitt says.
what it is to do He's organizing a class called ··computer
DeWitt also teaches youngsters how not to "of·
fend" a computer by feeding it the wrong informa-
tion, or an out-of-sequence instruction.
But it's not all work and no play.
Most programs give an immediate response to
Cowards." to demystify computer programming.
There's also a reward for students who catch
on fast.
DeWitt sets aside Saturday mornings al the
second level shop for computer games.
J
("'
N'T G1vt.SHALLowANsw£RS To DEEP QJESTIONS.
..
When faced with unconventional
PIOblems, a routine "no'' Is the easiest · ~l But at Heritage Bank, we don't gtve
easy answers to tougt\quesdons. Instead.
we take the time antt trouble to look
below the surface and come up with fresh,
Innovative solutions to your business
probtems. Solution5 that could keep a
PfOnislng bustness from going under. O r
we may ~lop Innovative banking
./
pollcles that might raise some eye·
brows .. VJe may be unconvendonaJ, but
you can bank on our sound, professlonaJ
flnanclaJ_pollcles. 'We're businessmen as well
as ~rs. So where you may have found
unbending rules you'H ftnd us ~Ing over
backwaids to say '"Jes" more often than
"no." Herttage Bank. Unconventk>NI
because shallow answers are part of
the problem, not the sok.atlon.
I J
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 2. 1981
..
Al'W.,.,.....
MAGNETIC FIELD MICE -Shary Morna mov-ecutives to answer questions posed by a com·
es electronic "mice" over a1.1 electronic puter as they design graphs or charts on Ex·
board to guide an a rrowlike indicator on a ecuchart. a color computer graphics system
TV-type screen. The procedure ~lows ex_--~ade by Comshare in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Oxy purchase
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Occidental Petroleum
Corp. has agreed to acqui re the nation's biggest
t>eef processor , Iowa Beef Processors lnc ... i_n a
stock transaction valued at more than $800 mtlhon.
The announcement said the boards of directors
of the two companies approved the merger. under
which Occidental will issue common and preferred
shares valued al $77 for each Iowa Beer share
There are approximately 10.5 million Iowa Beef
shares outstandmg.
Occidental is the 13th largest oil company and
20th largest industrial company in the nation, with
m ajor interests in coal, chemicals and agricultural
products as well as oil and gas.
Iowa Beef. which operates 10 beef plants and
one pork plant in seven states, reported earnings
of S53.2 million. or SS.17 a share. in 1980 on
revenues of $4.64 billion.
The announcement said that Los Angeles·
financier David H. Murdock. who csmtrols about 19
percent of stock in Iowa Beer. said he will vote for
the merger . rr completed, Iowa Beef would
operate as a separate subsidiary of Occidental un-
der current management with its headquarters re-
maining in Dakota City, Neb.
Under the proposed merger, each Iowa Beef
common share would be exchanged for 1.328 com·
mon shares of Occidental, plus 0.385 share of a
new series of preferred stock. The new preferred
shares would pay an annuaJ dividend of Sl4 and
have a liquidation value of SlOO.
College award
Golden West College in Huntington Beach has
received an award of excellence in business educa-
tion from the California Business Education As·
soc a a lion
Joelene Mack, secretarial and office ad-
ministration instructor , accepted the award at the
association's community college southern section
conference May 16 in Long Beach.
The honor recognized the college for ex-
cellence in instruction. student performance, stu-
dent recruitment, initiation of interdisciplinary
courses and evaluation or curricuJum.
Golden West offers 20 certificate programs in
bus iness and secret a rial-office administration
fields
Majors' g as prof it less
LOS ANGELES <AP> In a break from past
trends. brand·name gasoline dealers apparently
are bowing to market pressures and accepting
smaller profit margins on every gallon sold . ac-
cording to a national survey by oil industry
analyst Dan Lundberg .
The May 22 survey published in the analyst's
weekly Lundberg Letter revealed an average pro-
fit or 4.95 cents per gallon or regular gas for brand·
name dealers Nonmajors, according to the sur-
vey. had margins 0.3 cents higher. at 5.25 cents per gaJlon.
J '. ::.~~.:::~:
Radio Shack Makes
Computing Colorful!
... rl
Hoflu 11 hereby 91ven 111•1 Ille
1 Board Of Trul1M1 of tM cout Gom·
mvnlly Cot1999 Ol1trk t of Or..,91
County, C.llfoNll•, wlll rK•I,.. ... ..., I
bldl up to 2:00 pm, ThurlNy, J...., 11,
1 .. 1 •I IN Pur<JIMl119 ~I of
Mid uueoe di1trKI tout.o •• u10
Ad•ms ... ...,. .. , C•I• MeM, CA, ••
11rnlc11 time wld bid> •Ill be ...-.1c1y
opened •nd ,..ad for. PURCHASE OF
TELEVISION PRODUCTION
EQUIPMENT, KOCE·TV, 1110 ... -
CHARACT£R GENERATOR; BIO"'
-VIDEOTAPE RECORDERS; 810
1000 -EDITOR, BIO 1001 -
SWITCHER.
· The TRS-80 • Color
Computer is Exciting
Electronic Fun the
Whole Family Can Enjoy
Video Receiver Extra
• Plug In a Program-
Pak ·• for Instant
Fun and Games -
In Vivid Color
• A True Computer
You can Program
in BASIC
• Attachea to Any TV or
ute the $399 TRS-80
Video Receiver (shown)
• Eatlly Expandable
nad1e/haek
For advanced color graph·
ics, get the TRS-80 Color
Computer with More Mem-
ory and Extended BASIC.
Only S599.
Program-Pak• sold Hperately.
'SEE IT AT YOUR .NEAREST
RADIO SHACK
COMPUTER CENTER , STORE ,
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
81·62
All bids.,.. 10 lie In a((OrdafK• •Ill\
I ... Bid Form IMtr~llons •nd Concll-
tlon1 •fld S.-C:lllc•tlons wNch .,,.. ,.....
on Ille end may lie M<llf'ad In t,,. office
of Ill• P11<cl\Hl119 Agem of Mid cotteoe
dl11rtc1.
Each lllclclltr mutt wbrnll •ill1 Ills
bid • CH!liw't CftKll, Uf"11flH Cllec:ll,
or bldcltf't l>oncl ,,._ ,,..y.i>le .. 1119
order of the CMst Community Coll ...
District lo•rd Of Tnl&IHI In *" •movnt not tna ltlM five ~cent U%)
or tlM sum bid u • oarant" 1"-t tM bld-
dtr 11rllt enterln101MpropoMC1Conlr«I
11 Ille nme I• ewaroeca to lltm. tn Ille
event ol fallU<e loenter Into well• c-
tra«, Ule pr-of Ille c'-ll will be
forfeited, or In llltC•teol ·-·,,,.full
tvm thereof wlll be forfelled lo Nld col· , ... district.
Ho blclclltr may withdrew 1111 bid tor
• period of lorty·fl\'9 CU I H,s •11er
,,,. .,.,. Mt !or'"*°""'"' thereof.
The Board of Trutl ... reMrvH the
prMf4t99 of reJectlne any ~ •II bids
or lo wel,,. wiy IN9911l•rillH or tn-
lorm•llll., In any bid or In I"* blclcllftt.
Sitned: HORMAN£. WAnc>N
S.Crewy, llO*rdof Trvstffs
Coast Community Coll ... Oi"°
trlCI
Pvblllhed 0raft98 Coest O.lly Pilot,
M•y 26 & June 2, "" l~H1
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE TO AOIEMTI
ANO MANUlfACTUlta ltl
CAU.IMO JIOtt alOS
Fovnl•ln V•ll•Y School 0 111rtu,
5-21·11, •1 L.19'1tllOUM LAne, P .O. Bo•
ISIO, F-U.ln V•ltev. CA '270t.
l'ROJECT IDENTIFICATION: lld
'"'" Room llllfltlno 111111""·
HllCf S MAY VARV 4T INOllllOUAL STOAEISIAINIO~O~E~Al!(!~A~S~~~~~!!!=~~ 810 OEAOl.INE: ,,_II,""· 2:00 _....:.1•!1!11!!1!!!!1!!1!1 P·;';ECIFICATIONS on"'* and PIK•
of bid recel\'C• Pwct..lne O.pt. ••
•bove locltklft.
HAVE YOU ..
A pabllsher'• f'dllorlal repreaentatl•e •Ill be
la&.enlewl•C •~•I 1uthor1 In a quest for flnlsbed
mHIQC'rtpts auJtable lor book pubUutloa by Carlton
Preaa. lac., well-known Ntw \'ork ablldy p•bll•hlng
ftrm. All subjects wlll be considered lnclocll1'C flctlotl
aed IMt'l·ft<floa~ poetry. drama, ret11kln. pbliotoPhy, ee.e. .
He .. U be ln Santa Ala• In latr .l•Jy.
11 1• hHe c:ompltted a boots·lm&tfl ma1u1~cr11>t (or
HHIY so) .. Hy IJubJett, Hd ••••• like •
,,..,...._ .. appralHI <,.llboat co.ft tr obll1atloa ),
...... wrtte lm"*91ately dncr1Mn• yeur work. S.•t~ ftldl ptlrt of tbtt clay (I.Id. or p .... ) fOlt woeald prefn
,_ u lfPOla&IMtlt Hd klaclly mtnttoe 1•r l)llone •••· v .. wlU rtt~ln a coollrmatM by maU tor a ..,._.ti• •ad plaef'.
A•IWI wltll c:o•pl~ted •~rtpt.t u able lO ...,._ ••Y ~ &Item dlrtttly to the •ddre11 ~low
fW • rree red l•I H d en .. ..._ AtlU.W1 wlJoM ~ ftrtl.l art •• m la , .... ~ .... , •llO write.
Use a Daily Pilot
Penny Pincher Ad
to sell items under
$100.
Oo\'erni1199oard
INrry P\11111#11,
""....,.' Sup!,. 8\ISIMllNtvkH
Pvllll..,_. Or._ GM9t o.lty l'llot.
.M.y 26, J-1, ltll 241MI
PICTfT10UI a u11N•
MAM& ITAT•Ma M
TM 1o11-1ne penon1
WslnMIM!
SH 11' TO SHO"E aO~T &
HOUSIECt..EANIMG, ms Ml~
W•y, COll.AMIM,CA•».
Jte• AmoHI, JM Av«aclo St., COtl4
Mew,CAmD,
at:ethy "-• ms Mlnvt-Wy.,
C:otte MeN, CA~
Tiiis IMdlMH It GoncllKIM by t
.. nerat~
J-AnlOfele
Tlllt ......_. -lllW •llft 1l1e Govnty Clerk• Orlllllt t:owltr •Mey
u .1 .. 1. ,, ...
l'vbU....., Orente CMJI O.lty "1~,
,.,..., It, 2',J-2,t.1"1 "'9-tl
PUBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUI auitMaU
NAMlltTAT .... NT r ... i.!Mwlfte ~ ..... •r• .. ,,..
............ 1
MtT ~ .. ll:l"TIMO AllOCIATH, n ......... Or,, CMM. tA 1f7W.
Mr.llMMrl ~C·'*'"-• ,.,,.,..... Dr., trlltM, CA "714. , ............. , ...... -. .. ~
flvl•11•t 111111••111111 1111111 w ll•
~I. °""'" c. .i.i...
TMt...._._ ........ ..
ce-tY °"'.,Or ... C-.y ... Met
U,tWI. ~ ~ ...... Gr .... C...Olt!Y ......
Mly "· "-"-t. '· ttfl .....
..
'
DILOG names sales manager
Dennis Edwarda has moved to Oistribut·
ed Logic Corp. (DI LOG ) as natlonaJ sales
manager. OILOG, which manufactures bard
disk and magnetic tape controllers compati-
ble with OEC-11 computers, is located in
Garden Grove. • • • Arch B. Hidy has been appointed leasing
manager for The Irvine Company's property
management division. Hidy will be responsi·
ble for all leasing activities for the com-
pany's existing office buildings and shopping
centers ln the cities or Newport Beach and
Irvine. • • • Michael Fickes has joined Jansen As·
sociates Inc .. Irvine, as copywriter. Fickes is
responsible ror working on concepts and copy
for campaigns, and writing both ads and
brochures. He lives in Santa Ana . • • *
Sharon L. Merriam bas joined Bozell &
acobs Pacific as an administrative assis·
tant and account
<!oordinator in the ad·
vertising division. Mer-
riam had worked for
Smith Tool, a division of
Smith International Inc.,
Irvine, where sh~ was the
public relations/market-
ing assistant. * • •
Bill Childs has been
M•HtAM promoted to vice president
and.assistant branch manager of El Cam ino
Bank's main office in Anaheim. A resident of
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
Orange County for the past 16 _years, CbilCls'
new duties will be expanded to include opera·
lions supervision and customer relations ac·
ti vi ties. • • * Jpseph A. Devine has been elected vice
resldent-Trea urer of ARC America Corp ..
Irvi ne. He has been serving
as treasurer for the past
two years . • * •
Vernon D. Heins has
been named quality as-
surance manager for the
Fountain Valley operation
of ITT Cannon Efectric. He
will be responsible for
quality assurance in the
oev1M£ rectangular and circular
departments. • • • John Fletcher has been appointed prod·
uct marketing manager for Genisco Com ·
puters Corp., Newport Beach. He will be
responsible for all product marketing ac-
tivities for Genisco's complete product line.
The compan y m anuracturers computer
graphics terminals and systems. • • • Antonio F. Rodriques, director of Fan·
tasy Tours and Magic Travel agency in
Orange, has been named vice president and
chi ef operating officer or Industry and Com -
merce Inc .. a membership association based
in Washington. D.C . that assists companies
in doing business with the government
Rodriques lives in Santa Ana
:M\lt JS HenrdF 2'\it 1~ ~l!;liM lol'h u ~-... ~,, I~ ISIJ> :· · :~ ~:o~~ 1~~ .~ °"~.r~~ ?1~; ~1?tt ... ~~l~~o t ;i: NASDAQ SUMMARY , .... 114 HorlzRs 6-¥1 714 Ott.erTP ..,,. • ·~ " r,,x~·:~7' ~ ~, .. ~~:srn1 m: ::~ ~:".!~· :~ t~ ._1, 11•16 1nlr•lnd ~ '"°' f'<G•R 21~ 2211o StertSI ~ JV. • .,,. •tt. lnl•I .civ. ~ il"•vleyP 14\li is ~lr•wCI J2\lt ,,.. HEW YORK CAP) -The lollollrlno 1111 '""' IM lnlrcEnr ., IJll> f>•ylSCI 20Yt ~ ubani ~ ~-·~ '"~·-1 11 17'111 tntmtG1 10'4 IO'h P"rMI 1 S..~rEI I V. ••• UIOwt Ille ..,..., • u~ • ....,_,er u 33V. 1nBkWt11 m .. IJl'o Pen•Ent :~ .... l~ ~~m~~ ~ .Ji"" ~:,:<~0:;"' ..:;.,.~, J::.=i9J:: ::
It ltv. 1••SoUI *' 2l Pen..,lr JOIM ZOYs T•nclem percent of <...,. "l!Mdl•H of volume 31"" ~ J.,.,sby 1' 2'\lo Petri! s •IJt. 421.• I~ 10.14 lot Mondey.
2V. ) Jerico s 27V. 27'11> Pettibon 11\4 17 .. TecllmP " " No M<wlUes trading be._ U •r• lftcf. ISi'> 1"61 JlffyFd S-14 "" Pllll•N•t ~ ~ TelcmA Jiii> uded. Net end _.cen{-<'~•re IN UV. 31 Jo.lynM ,,__ .c)\lo PlerceSS 11141 111'1 It! lie-tM I 1~...., ~ 12._ kelt.St Pl 1~ ltvt Plflkrtn u '4\.'> Ten•nt I 21\lo 21 a eren<.e prev OllS < ~ ... ·~ JO\lt K•tvar 2 1-16 ,_ PlonHIB ., .... -Tlpr••r 2714 21 bid price -IOdlly·, IH I bid P<i« 1~ 1 '1i~ ~=ri~i: 4~ 4J',. ~::!l~M 7~ ~ ~~!~J ::,t'o J~ Ul"S
11 11'111 tee::lfe1 ~YIU PresGM ~ 17'1< TroyGld II ~ ~ H-LH l Cha P~
l J"' l(lmMll *'" 10Yt PtsSteyn JS\4 » TysonFd 17 1711. I Geot.. ~ + I~ Up UA 2 "" Klnotnt JV. ""' l'r«19l'p I... 21'a UnM<Gll 1114 2214 2 ClllnaT WI 2\'o + \It Up 30,I ~ «* KtoolG 11 Jl\lt PtlSvNC 11'-11" US Enr If 11V. l SOBrw: wt 2'A + YI Up JU = tz: ~~:.v J~Vt ~ ~~'kBafl ~..,, ~~ ~~ t;~. ~v. ~ ; i~1 ~v. ! l11. ~= ~ M'A 16\lt KvllOe U ZM Ouallr~ 1614 ''°"' UV•BJll ~ JS'!' 6 OptelCp 11\lo + 2 Up 21.6
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--1tllt uneeo • ..,. 11'111 R•ymnd 27 27\lt V•IBkAr 40\lt 401'> t AHomShd '"" + "" Up 16.7 i 11'1' 12\lt Llll'!VS lA 241'a RffveC 52.\lo Sl\4 VanOo.11 ltV. 19Jt. 10 HCA s ~ + 1111 Up 16.7 , ! 21"" 21\lt LtctStor 1.._ 17 RNCll!• U\o'J 45.\lo Varco 2' 2'\lt 11 HP•rag J\lt _. V. Up 16.7 ,
.,_ 10 Ltnaut ll ll\lt :OtlOMy 4~1'1 ';.v, ~~f::sf 1~t': llV. g V.-;.:.P ; : 1~ ~= ltl · l 1·7~ 1111L ~Wt" ~ ~ R:U~°" ll'Jt Ul4 VllMoCp U Ul4 U Heldlw 7 + t\ Up IU '
... '" ,.,.. R 1$t 1~ ~4 •• wY•1~!n"'r 1121~ ',!.~ 11~ FltlMTr "" Siio + " Up li.t · • ~ ~~ MGF gE• :~ ... :M s!itte~v ·-... """' -• ., • Monotrm A + I Up 1.6 :
S"'° 5111 Ma911Pt 1014 1~ Safeco .J'lft 40 Welcltrn 4"°' •tt 11 RpAir llwt I... + l.V. Up 11.S t 1~ I~ M•9f'IP "'" 4A'l6 StHelGd 3114 • WellG• 47'1'1 4t II C-11 4\4 + V. Up 11.l t 14 MaJrRt SIP•vl ..... 47 WllOref 12\lt 1314 It CmptU19 414 + YI Up 13.1
to'.'\ 1.,_. , S.16 4 7.1 Sc.no 21Jt 2 >-1' =~I ::~ :~"" 2021 Brtsteo •~ + .. Up 11.s IM 1,.t M•lllM I :M .... :Miit ~rlPC>H 60 M ,L OltcHY '""°' + SV. Up 12..S :All 21'1 Marton a 10 10\lt nSOr 4'• '3 WtnMlll 4.,. 411'> 22 EMl'll.. 211t + 14 Up 11.J ~ • MavlLP .,, ,..... vcM•r 12t'o II wmorC 2'14 2'\lt 2l FlglltTr llV. • 114 Up IU -llll'I J2'16 .M.yPt J2\4 ~ Svcmll ~ 4AV. WoodLol 271!4 2tllt 24 Media 11'"' + 2 Up 12.l ~ ~ MaYflOll 11"" UV. Svcm wl !!\It ~ r~~::v ;:: ~~ 2S Flgto11"r un 1~. + 1\lt ~ 12.2
.,,_ .. Mt~m 20V1 SllMM ---'"'-' • DI'> a. Mc:F•rl u Ullt Sllwmut • U Ul'a ~.• • Nol appt!Gllbl• 'liowN•
l6 l,11'1 Mc:Qua'I 16\Ai 16\lt SC.IW1r 1014 1011> H.,,,. lAst Cha
5"' Slo'i Mev-r ._ JIYt 1 M•r<llRs 61'> -6~ tH• 21\lt MldllfW 16-¥1 171'> , PrymeEn 4 -2""
Pel. Ott 50.0
Off JU Off JI.I
Off u.o ~ = =:'J:'i:: i:i!'1 ~~6 UPS ANO DOWNS J BuES"" ~ -'"' ..... 9"' MlcltBks 12\lo J2V. ; AmM'llEa ~~ = n:
14 14\lo MllllPI' 17~ J7-I 6 ~r.~' )\It -I Jiiii 11\o'i MIHVIG IS\lt 16 NEW YORK (AP) -Most «11\'9 0\'9r 7 MiMtll 1 12\lt -,.,.. JV> ~ Molu t 4'14 50 l?le<oun• 11«111 ~._ by NASO. t !,111
11
P1
1
M
1
wty 4\lo -'Ill
°'' 1'.l I Ott 22.J
Off a.o Off IS.0 I Off 1U , •
Off lt.t ' Off 1U I
lt U MoflfCol ~ 4,., N•me VOh#M 8ld Alli.CS Olg. t ,. (J 2~ -"
2C* ljllt Mon\ICJ> 11\lo llV. XCOR n. •• IDt.500 ._ • ._ · · · · • 10 Gr""Eap o s ~ -\It 41 4 11'1 MMrePcl ~ :MV. DnamFn • •7',«IO 11'At 1114 + 16 11 St.5¥1111 6--1 21" ti ~Ill• )\Ii 4 MCIC • • •• 414,100 U'lli tllli -ll'a 12 HISIDy "°' 2\lt -S-14 2N i.'4t Morsntn 11141 1114 TelelMn 3UA002 zt..32 2 J1..s2 +1-32 1J A•ncMdo • ._ -" t• 10~ MolClub 2\lt 2_., MIMlll t .. Ul,000 12\lt 121'1 -41,\ 14 l<eldOll h IS -2 1•11'> u Mu.lier JIN '1\lt "'91.C . . m.-,,.,.. 33'A . •• • • u vJ~ ~ -\It
M ~ H•rTllCP ' u.... Ul'I c-•< 222 .200 114 11'1 -1-16 " GnEngy 32\o'J 411t 11 1lllt NOt• I 2'1'a ~ £11lt1v . . . 19',lOO I~ 15-Vo -IA 17 Tyrex 2 IS-16 -:._ " 6Vi ) MJHGH 1M U\'I Comel•I 114,700 ~ 1 ••• :. 11 Pellnd 16 -2 11"° I Nl<llOG s 2211t 22\11 Bas ES 1.. 113,200 JV. l"" -1\'o It Orbit wt ll'a -I
62111 M Nerlet Dll'I 22" 20 AllntOll 1211. -l\lt Jt n N sn A ... "'"" Ad..,.nc.O •n 21 B09"1 2.,.. -111 ~ H lsn • Gl'I 43\'o DKllMd . . . . .. . . • .. • .,. n H•lldl'et 4" -\It 20\l HoC•rGs 12" IN unc11anoect ....... ... .... •. '·"' u unvEne 13 -1111 6.... 1 No!11rO s It 20 Tot.I 11-1 . . . . . • . ••••.... . J,150 24 Am•re• 22111 -21'1 11'!ti 11'4 NwtN01 lot\ ""'° Hew Ill.,_ . . . . • • • • . .. • .. . • 19' 1S Oe<•En ~ .Y. ~ ,. .... H11r&tPS ...... 1•\lt H-tows ................. ·. 69 26 611CelEn 6~ 'Ill = 24 ~~::.~ g 14 li: Tol•I Ml• .................... ».767.AOO 27 US Etcar 41'1 -VI
S\llt S\lt HIKrD wt IS\'> 1614
~ lN . t Off II.I
8U ll:: · I
0tt 1u I Off 11.1 : Off 11.o I
Ott 10.t • I Off 10.S Off 10.)
Off 10.J Ott 10.1 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesdey, June 2, 1981
,,.------------------------------~------~--~------~.--------------. OMPO ITE T RAN ACTI ONS
QUOT ATIOll\ IN(LUDe UIAOU ON'"" flllW YO•"· MIOWUf, ,A(IPI( ..... 10\TOfll. 01 UOlf ANO (lfll(lfll ... ,, noc•
11( .. AHGIS.AlfO llf"OltTIO IT THI ltA$0 ANO lltSTINIT,
U you're typical of millions of America's
managers of 1m*1l· to medium-sized businoaa,
you're throwln1 away mUUona of doUart ln 1981 tand
every year> on keepln1 outdated record•
You're wasUnt espenaive apace ,bY ualna It tQ
store business recordt much, mucb lonaer than an1
government or legal requlrernenu demand. You're
losing the producUvlty of valuable workers in lhe
maintenance of theH unnecessary records on a
hapbaiard basis. '
With an up-to-date formal retel\Uon plan, you
mlsht delete an estimated one-third of tbeae docu·
ments. In some cases, you could eliminate an
estimated two-
t h Ir ds or all 0 your retained
papers! Jn fact, a _.._________ ~ .:C
• t u d y b y IA •IJ ~-c o o Pe r s & IJll r• fl ~ Z Lybrand, one or - -
the world 's
largest accounting firms, reveals that ln some com·
panies, approximately 90 percent of all records based
solely on business requirements are needed ror less
than six months. Even. more startling, 99 percent of
all records are needed for less than one year.
Just about every tctivity connected with runninl
a business creates records -correspondence, gov·
ernment regulations, taxes. insurance. financial
transactions, banking. The list is endless. All these
records are important when they are put together.
But how many must you keep and for how long?
There are no strict standards for determining
how long you must keep how many types or cf asses of
records. The complexities and contradictions cannot
help but baffle you unless you are an accountant with
special training in this field 9ut there are general
guidelines.
As the manager of a business <without special
training in record-keeping>. try this short Q&A to test
how much you know:
How long should you keep :
Petty cash vouchers? A. Three years. A journal
showing cash disbursement.S? A. Permanently.
Canceled checks covering general expenditures?
A. Three years. Canceled checks relating to income
taxes? A. Permanently.
Employee expense reports? A. Three years.
Employee payroll records <W-2, W-4, annual earn·
ings records. the like>? A. For four years after
termination of the employment.
Payroll tax returns? A. Four years. All other rec·
ords concerning taxes -such as tax returns and
canceled checks covering payment of federal, state,
local taxes; sales and use tax returns; pension/·
profit-sharing informational returns? A.
Permanently.
ACIUflUCI
OKllMCI Un<llafl99d Total I~ New 111"'5
NH• lows
Todey '22 .,,
m , ...
111 17
p,..,,,
ci;z,
261
1'2 t11 ff 14
~: rnornlnefl•ff19~1 u , ...,u.ot
L..._: -"tr-lhOfl9 $4U.ts, llP M.00 ,., .. : .,..,._, 11.11"9 un.1 •• up i 10.te. ,, ... ""', ..-.111 ...... ,.33.
l•t1Cll: .. ,. fl•lllt MG.00 bid, up M.00 • ...... oo-...
K•••r a Kar111••: ofll'.I' e1a11., •1101• MU.ts,...,M.00. ....... ........ , ... ., .... , ..... '411.J~ ..... ......
,.....,.., ..,,., dally _.. fabrt(.at.CI ............. ,._
/
. ..
.
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT{TuHday, June 2, ~981
O n May 5, 1981, the Federal
Trade Commission
released its "new" 1981 report
on cigarette tar levels.
Urifortunately, the new
FTC report is really quite old.
Old because it is based on
1979 cigarette brands.
Old because much has
happened in cigarette develop-
ment during the year and a
haifthat it took to complete
the study.
Old because it d0esn't tell
tar-conscious smokers what
they want to know today.
Even the FTC concedes
that its report is out of date.
And thefact tS consumers do
not have the latest statistics on
comparative tar levels in ultra
low tar cigarettes.
lf you 're a smoker, what
,
•
does all this mean to you?
Now cigarettes are the
Ultra Lowest Tar TM cigarettes
available. No matter what the
style, there is no cigarette lower
in tar than todays Now.
These are the facts.
The 1981 FTC renort
is based on measurements of
1979 P-roducts. Here are the
actual 1981jjgures on lowest
tar ctgarette levels.
.... , • ' ......... ttNt<• t•
NUMBERS DON'T LIE.
NO CIGARETTE, IN ANY SIZE,
IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW.
$0'sbo.K 85's::f1c lOO'sbo.K lOO's~
NOW Le:.s Chan Les~ tha n
O.O l mg 1 tngt O.Olrn 2mg
!Ass than CARLTON O.Olmg lmg• lmg 5mg
CAMBRIDGE O.lmg lmg 4mg
BARCLAY lmg lmg 3mg
All tar numbers are av. per cigarette by FTC method. except the one asterisked (•)
which is av. per cigarette by FTC Report May '81.
..
.-
/
Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, jUNE_1, 1'81
GOLF C3
CLASSIFIED C4
~ .... I
, The life and times
of Billy Martin
go on,. and on,
and on . .-. See C2
Snider's second career
' Ex-Dodger loves his job, as Montreal, announcer
By HOWARD IJANDY °' .. ~,.... .....
When he was in his prime as the center fielder ror the
Brooklyn Dodgers and later for a brief spell In Los
Angeles his fluid motion in the outfield and his rhythmic
swing w~re the envy or all who watched him play.
He was rewarded by being voted into the baseball Hall
of Fame, an honor rew felt should be denied him for his ac-
complishments on the fie ld.
Edwin "Duke" Snider is now well-e mbarked on a
second career as a broadcaster. but he is the first to say
he 's no Vince Scully.
Ironically, he is making between two
and three times the salary as a broad -
caster for the Montreal ExPos that he
made as a player for the Dodgers. And a
lot of his rappQrt on the a ir has come from
a long and friendly association with the
man he says is No. l in the h,roadcasting
field Scully.
"WHEN WE WERE IN BROOKLYN
and trained at Vero Beach in the early
spring," Snider recalls, "I would play
four, five or six innings, get to bat two or
three t.imes and then I was out or the
game.
") went up with Vinnie and J erry
(Doggett) a couple of limes and did an in-
ning or so and had a lot of fun doing it. l've
also been on a lot of pre-game and pQst
game shows which aiso helped.
"When we came to LA, I had knee
problems and I would be out or a ball
game sometimes after pinch-hitting or
when someone else would be out there for
defense. I would be driving home and I
would listen to Vince ·every chance I got -
and listen to the ball game. too. or course. Duke Sntder
.. Just listening to him has to help you 11 you ever have
any ideas of becoming a broadcaster because he's the
best."
SCULLY GAVE SNIDER one bit of advice on his new
career .
"He just lold me one thing which I've always tried to
use. Just be yourself, don't try to be me or don't try to be
Mel Allen or Red Barber or anybody else just be
yourself. So that's what I've tried to do.
''I'm a low key person and I just go out there and do
the broadcast. U a great play happens. J get excited and I
show my excitement over the air . But if a routine play
happens, I des.cribe that play.
"Some people say that I might not be as exciting as I
should be. I think that I have gained the respect of the
listening audience where they know that if I say it's a good
play, it is a good play and if it 's a bad play. well. I'JI a lso
talk about that."
WITH A GROWING NUMBER of ex-players turning to
the radio and television booths, does he
think there is a precedent being set in this
respect?
"I don't think there's any standard or
precedent to be set there," he says. "l
broadcast with a very knowledgeable
man, Dave Van Horn. and he knows the
game well. ,
"He really hasn't played the game to
where he might know or experience the
thinl(s that I have experienced. so when I
com e in. I'll give the t echnicalities. I have
a better insight into what is going on in a player·~ mind or actually what's going on
on the fi eld .
"I think Vince probably does it better
than anybody but he still hasn't played the
game and there are some areas to where l
know he uses others to help. He was with
Bob Gibson on the radio during a World
Series one year and he's had Sparky An·
derson with him He uses them very well
and gets into the technical parts of the
game with them doing the talking."
SEVEQAL YEARS AGO the Dodgers
were looking for a lh1rd man in the booth
a nd eventuall y Ross Porter was hired for the JOb. Snider
was also in the running.
"Yes, I was lookang at the job and, in fact, it narrowed
down to either Ross or me. Vince hadn't decided yet just
exactly what he was going to do. I had heard that he was
just going to do TV And I was looking for a full-lime job.
not just a road job.
"When the club would come home, Vince would be
there to do seven innings on the air and rightfully so So
there would be only two innings a nd J erry and I would
(See SNIDER. Page C2l O.lly .. , ... St.IH .._
Antony Emerson leads Corona del Mar against Miraleste.
· Valenzuela
on track
again,~2
Sea Kings eye seventh straight crown
,.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Long
be.fore Monday night's game
agai.ns t the Atlanta Braves.
Dodger pitching coach Ron Per-
r an os k i huddled with th e
Dod ger s ' youn g pitchin g
phenom, Fernando Valenzuela.
catcher Mike Scioscia and fellow
coach Manny Mota who acted
as interpreter.
The subject of the English-
Spanish translation was the pre-
vious three starts by Valenzuela.
all of them sub-par after he had
won his first eight decisions.
"WE WANTED HIM throwing
his rast fall a 'little bit more.
especially on the first pitch.
rather than the screwball:· said
Perranoski.
It's about the only thing
anyone has had to tell the 20·
year-old rookie lefthander, and
the meeting proved beneficial as
Valenzuela effectively scattered
seven hits as the Dbdgers beat'
the Braves 5-2.
Valenzuela, 9·2, became major
league bas eball's rlrst nine
game winner. he struck out 11
giving him 90 for the season to
regain the National League
strikeout lead and the com·
plete game was his eighth.
"I mouGHT HE w~s more
hittable toni,,.dlt than the last Ume
we saw him," said Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox, referring
to the game five days ago in
Atlanta when the Braves
knocked Valenzuela out in a 7·
run fourth inning.
"My fastball was faster, and I
was using it more in the middle
innings," Valenzuela said. "I
was usine my screwball in the
later innings.
"I wasn't concerned with my
last three games. I t.hlnk tonight
1 pitched about the same as I did
then."
THE DODGE ll STADIUM
crowd of 49,138 was ihe 11th
straight home sellout for the
Dod1era. The fact Vale'nzuell}
waa pitching was the reason Cot
the big crowd, but the so-called
"Fernandom ania' · that had
been raaini in each or his pre·
viou1 home start.a was not as
evident.
• • 1 think tonilht. he had an op.
portunlty to ·t.blnk a little more
about tb• 1•me.'' Hid Rla
Moaday.
It wa Monday who stalled
. ValeUuela to an lmmedlate 2-0
lead Wida a two-run bomer In the
ftnt ..... atf Atlanta 9i.ter
TommJ -.., l·.I. Ule loaiaPlt ,Ucll• :la -o.e , .. ,.. •.
Emerson, Hayward, Gerken, Jimenez key to CdM's tennis chances against J'v!iraleste
By ROGER CARL~ON
Of Ille o.i1y l'tlel Staff
When you are the all·time juggernaut
for Southern California high. school ten-
nis it would appear within reason there
is danger of compl acency. Six straight
CIF 4-A crowns would put anyone in the
clouds.
Anet when you e n ter the final s
Wednesday-(2 o'clock) already possess-
ing an 18-10 victory over your foe. upset
possibilities mount. compQunded by the
opponent's quest for a payback.
But Corona de l Mar Sea Kings Coach
Dave Heffern , a t eachin g pro at
Newport Beach Tennis Club. says
chances for overlooking Miraleste High
are non-existent.
The reasons are simple and Heffern
tick's off several:
in the nation in the 14s this year and the
Ojai Winner in the 16s this year . beating
Laguna Beach's Rick Leach.
'80 outfit which posted an unbeaten rec-
ord in ma king it six straight crowns
for the Sea Kings.
"First. Miraleste didn't have its No. 2
player, John Letts , when we played
them He was the No. 1 seed at the Cl F
individuals.
"We played very well that day and
MiraJeste did not. I t hink we'll play
very well again. but I think Mlraleste
will, too.
"Craig Johnson is a highly ranked
player and Miraleste also has Rafael
Osuna, a sophomore who is the son of
Mexico's Rafael Osuna And. it's their
ho m e match <La Casa de Vita in
Rancho Palos Verdes).
It's led by senior Antony Emerson ..
unbeaten in singles and doubles this
year in pacing the Sea Kings to a 22·1
record and the Ojai singles champ.
The son of Auslrahan legend Roy
Emerson and headed for USC. Antony
gives the Sea Kings a double·edged at-
tack with his versatility. able to pro.
duce winning results in either singles or
doubles. ,
"They'll have the crowd suppQrt.
.. And there is Jor ge Lozano. the
Davis Cup player from Mexico to con-
tend with. And there is Matt Frooman.
who was ranked No. 1 in the l6s this
year. Then there is Eric Amend. No. 1
It's almos t enough information to give
you the impression that the Sea Kings
carry underdog status Into the match.
But this is no ordinary team In fact
Heffern labels it a better unit than the
"I say we're better this year simpl)l
because we have so m any players back
<See CdM, Page C2>
F oi-sch becoming the force
Angels ' ace rides two homers for third shutout, 3-0
TORONTO CAPJ -When Ken
Forsch discovered he was facing
T oronto's Dave Stieb for the
second time in five days, he
knew he would be in for a
pitching duel.
On Monday night, Forsch
evened lhe score by limiting the
Blue Jay~ lo three s ingles as the
Angels downed Toronto 3-0.
Stieb and the Blue Jays look
the first round last Wednesday
night in Anaheim 3-l as the
Toronto pitcher fashioned a five·
hitter.
"When I knew I was going
to go against Stieb, l knew it
was going to be tough," said
Forsch. ··we had never beaten
him before ~Stieb was 2-0
against the Angels).
"We've been in a bit of a hit-
ting slump and before the game
1 t~ought we would come out of
it and score some runs. But
against Stieb I felt I had to pitch
a low-run game," Forsch said.
The Angels took a l·O lead lnlo
the ninth inning when they
added two runs on Dan Ford's
10th homer and a run-scoring
bloop double by Butch Hobson,
who homered in the third for the
first A.nael run.
"The thina was be made a
couple of mistakes out there and
they hit 'em for home rune,"
said Forsch "l made a couple of
mistakes and they popped 'em
up."
Manager Gene Mauch bad
praise rOf' his pl_tcher.
"We were htld to three runs
tonl1ht bot Forsch made It stand
up," said Mauch. ·•we haven't
been able to do tbat too man1
times this aeaaon. Forsch
pitched a powerful 1ame when
he lost 3·1. TOOitht he w.s even
better.
Forsch, 7·3. Umlted UM Blue
Jays to singles by Barry Bonnell
in the first in ning, Damaso
Garcia in the fifth and Alfredo
Griffin in the eighth Il e struck
out six and walked three in hurl·
ing his thir d shutout of the
season
The Angels got the only run
Forsch needed in the fifth inning
when Hobson slammed his third
hom e run of the season over the
left field fence. After Ford con·
nected in the ninth, Ed Ott
singled and was forced by Larry
Harlow. who scored on Hobson's
double.
Stieb, 4-6. limited the Angels
to seven hits but once again was
victimized by lack of suppQrt~
The Blue J ays failed lo score a
run for the 23-year·old right·
hander for 2J consecutive in:
nings at the start of the season
when he went 0·3. He a lso lost a
1-0 decision to Cleveland on May
17.
The Blue Jays' best s coring
opportunity came in the fourtti
inning when t hey loaded the
bases with two out on two walks
and an error by Forsch. Tb~
34-year·old right-hander then go~
Ken Macha to fl y out on a 3·a
pitch.
U.S. picks Magee
UC I star set for World Games
All-American center Kevln
Magee of UC Irvine has been
one or 12 players
select.cl to represent the
United S.ates in this sum·
mer 's World Games in
Europe.
Matee, a 6-8 postman, was
among the top five baaket· ball players in the nation In
three dlfferenl offensive
c~ories during tbe recent
1981 season. He was third
ln the nation in scoring at
:n.5, No. 2 tn shootln1 percen·
ta1e al ~l and No. ' In re-
bouaclf'I at 12 s.
Maeee will be Joined on the
team by Derek Smith or
LoulsvUJe, Howard Carter of LSU, Kevin Boyle or Iowa,
noy Henson o( ftut1er1 and
John Baaley or Boston
Colleae.
' '
./'
'
...
Brett, QulNnbtrry a winning combo
· Oeortt Ire&& trHttd rtlltvtr Ill lltut &11'111 with an • RBI tin•lt ln tbt tlthth lDftlDI &o llft K111111 City to
• l ·I Amtrtoan Le11Ut vtotory over
ltaUlt stvlnt tht 101111 \btlr ftfth wtn ln tbtlr laat 1tx 1tart1. D11 Q1l1Hbtrr1 1ot hl•
ninth llVt. IX·M•t•r Dtt Hllh •tar DH ... ,.,.
trt_pltd for Stattlt . . . ltekl o..a and Dave
Wlahtld bomtrtd and DODI llrd upped hl1 ma·
Man bets $55,000
(854,000 to show)
From AP d11pakbe1
BALTIMORE -Officials m al Pimlico Race Course had an idea
the man meant business when be
Jor leaaue wtnnina streak to
11 aames as the New York
Yankees defeated Cleveland,
5·3 . . . Lynn JonH' 12·innina
single scored Mick Kelleher
with the wlnnina run as
Detroit stopped Milwaukee,
4-3 ... In the National League
Garry Templeton drove in
two runs and scored another,
and rookie left-bander .fobn
• . • •
asked that a security guard accompany him to
the window. 1
And when the man known only as "The
Brldgejumper'' laid down SSS.000 on a single
race Saturday, they knew he did.
The unidentified man's complete trust in
lady luck paid off -lo the tune of $3,400.
In the confines· of a secluded room unddr
protection or track security, the man watchid
as bis horse Victory Song -finished first by
two lengths.
Brett Martin and 8ruce Sutter
comlned on a five-hitter to give St. Louis a 4-2
victory over Montreal . . . Garry Maddox's
leadoff home run and pinch-hitter Geor1e
Vakovlcll'1 single accounted for two eighth·
inning runs and rallied Philadelphia past the
New York Mets, 5·4 ... Cincinnati scored lour
runs in the njnth inning behind Dave Concep·
clon'• run-sooring double to lie and Ray
Knlgbt's RBI single to lead in an 8·5 victory at
San Francisco.
The man, described as abQut 60 years old
with gray hair and glasses, hadbet $500 to wir;t,
$500 to place and the rest of his money to show.
"Bridgejumper " is track parlance for
someone who places a big wager.
Templeton denies trade request
Winning jockey Mario Pino said someone
yelled over the fence as he was warming up the
horse and told him about the large bet.
ST. LOUIS St. Louis Cardinal a shortstop Garry Templeton Monday
denied telling a newspaper reporter
that he had asked to be traded.
"My heart was pounding," Pino said. "But
he (Victory Song> was a cinch."
Bill Ramsay, agent in charge of the
Thoroughbred Racing and Protective Bureau al
PimJico, sajd the man had contacted him short-
ly before the race and had requested assistance
in making the bet.
"The trouble with the press is that if you
don't talk to them they get on your case, and if
you do talk to them you are either misquoted, or
misunderstood, or exaggerated," Templeton
said in a statement given to reporters before
"We sent an agent with him to the window,"
Ramsay said.
He said that the man was the same one who
bet $80,000 to show last fall on Dave's Friend in
a race at Laurel Race Course. From that bet, he
netted $4,000.
Ironically, Victory Song was nearly
scratched as the race was switched from one
mile to 11/16 miles.
Monday night's game with
Montreal.
However, the stewards did not allow the
scratch.
In its Monday editions,
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
reported that Templeton, a
product of Santa Ana Valley
High, had asked to be traded,
preferably to a West Coast
team. Templeton was quoted
as suggested he be traded
with center fielder Tony
Scott to San Diego for Ozzie
Tt:mpleton Smith and Gene Richards.
Victory Song paid $3.80. $3 and $2.10 as the
4·5 favorite.
Although Templeton's remarks were greet·
ed with laughter by those standing near him in
the lockerroom in Philadelphia. the All-star
shortstop insisted he was serious.
As a result of the large bet, the race had a
minus betting pool of more than $6.000.
Quote of the day
"I raced wide open during the first part
of the rac~. but about halfway through l
knew I had to have a little luck running
with me, too." -Bobby Unser, moments
after winning his third fnd y 500 . or so
he thought.
In Montreal, where the Cardinals lost three
straight, Temple"ton had complained to
Manager Whitey Herzog about being dropped
from the leadorr position in the balling order to
third. Templeton said that St. Louis had been
winning with him batting first and Scott hitting
second.
Herzog indicated he would keep second
baseman Tommy Herr in the leadoff position.
FJom Page C1
SNIDER~S SECOND CAREER
have been the two guys. So you
do two interviews one night and
you're done. Then the next night
you do two innings on radio and
you're done.
"I wasn't really interested in
that even though it would have
been a lot closer to home. I
wanted a full .time job. so f
stayed with the Expos.h I bowed
out of the race between Ross and
royselC. This doesn't mean that I
would have won out anyway. but
I bowed out and he got the job.
He does a real good job and he 1s
very stat conscious and keeps
iou right in the game.:·
COMPARING FERNANDO
Valenzuela , the current
9odger phenom. and the great
}Jail of Fame southpaw of
another Dodger era. Sandy
Hou fax. Snider has thjs to say:
• ·'I don't think you can com·
J)'are anybody with another
person. rt 's just like trying to
comP-are me with Mantle, Mays
or DiMaggio.
'·Fernando started when he
was 15 years old playing pro ball
down in Mdico and he's got
three, make that four, quality
pitches. You can talk about the
two off-speed screwballs. a
fastball and a curv~. Sandy only
had two quality pitches.
'·But if I were to choose
between ~ 20 -year -old
Valenzuela or a 20-year-old
Koufax, I'd certainly take a 20·
year-old Koufax. I don't care
what Valenzuela's done." said
Snider.
"Fernando is a phenomenal
pitcher, there's no question
about it. ft took a long time for
Sandy to get his feet on the
ground. But Valenzu~la has had
five years of pro ball counting
his Mexican Leaeue experience.
Heck, he pltcbed against grown
men when be was a baby. He
fought and scraped and finally
bad to throw strikes and bad to
gel good location on his
pitches."
'WREN SNlDEa and Drysdale
were with the Dod1ers,
Drysdale med to pttcb battmc
practice every once in awblle
and Snider hated the tbougbl or ractn1 him, but he aaya
v,1.,...a·would be ao ~
lem. ··rn blttla& praCUce, yea. In a
aarne, maybe not," Snider said
about Valen&uela. "He bas lt all
toaeth« at a very youns a1e
He'• I~. very early ln hl•
life. ~ woU1 knock )'OU
down lD batiln1 practice ..,_
thoup you were IOOd frien.. It ,. .. dtllurbbai. lle'd knock >'°"
ioW9 md tMa S.ap at JOU.
"I remember me ttm• wbea b•• ~~-uted to ••lk Freak RODlmClll on rour pltchn wtth
nn1 Nie open and two out 10 be cotal4I pitch to lb• next .,..... •
0oD gkl, 'wtiy Wiile fout!' lo
....
he hit Frank m the ribs with the
first one ...
Snider says he has no aspira·
lions about getting back on the
field as a coach or a manager.
'"No, 1 don't want that any
more. Take a game the other
night. The Expos had a 6·4 lead
going into the bottom or the
ninth inning. 1 went down to do a
post-game show. I was going to
have Gary Carter on the show
and all of a sudden Chris Speier
makes an e rror and I'm
watching Dick Williams (Expos
manager> and he's a nervous
wreck.
"There was no question about
it, the way the game was going,
you could just see what was go-
ing to happen. The Dodgers lie it
and I start.back upstatrs. I'm on
the way up the escalator and I
hear the crowd roar. There is no
way you can ever mistake a
home run because it's always
the same by fan reaction.
"The first thing you get is a
loud roar. Now you wait for
either an ob or a loud cheer.
There is always a pause in
between the first loud roar and
the second reaction. The fans
really tell you whether it is a
home run or not. When l heard
the cheer, I knew th~ game was
over even with my back toward
the field and halfway up the
escalator.
"The Dodgers won the game
but I slept very well (hat night.
II I were the manager. I would
not have slept well and the ulcer
would start acting up if I bad
one. And I would have one if I
was a manager."
SNIDER HAS HAD other of·
fers In the broadcasting field tn:
eluding ones from NBC and
ABC.
"I don't want to make this
sound like I'm a great broad-
caster because I'm not. I have a
lot to learn. But I s~ned a four-
year contract wlth Montreal last
January with a two-year option.
"At the time, J was ne1otiat·
ing with the Mets and decided
•1alnst that for several realOnl.
One wu jUlt the city it.self. And
tht other wu the condlilona and
the team. The Expos have 1 ft.ne
young team and they are 1olng
to be up near the top for qwte a
few 1ean -and Montreal II a
lovely city in wblc.h to ti••·
"So I Welshed more mc>aey
agalntt tbat and decided a1a1nst
the Meta or • network job.
Ory1dale told me that ABC la no
picnic and I've bea told NBC i•
no picnic, either. And you're not
lff ute tlJere. "So I 1i.-t a lnlthy C!OG· tract wlth lloo&nal. Alter ua. I
l&arWd my Prof.-lonal buebell
Hrwt' bJ 1tlftlq a Montreal
Roy al contnit wflb t.be DocSaer
or1aalnUon. SO why not RDlab
my broedcuUn1 career la Moat·
real.too?"
Duke Snider in 1959
From Page C1
CdM .•.
from that team and they have
obviously improved.
'·Emerson 's first serve is
tougher and his volleys aren't
just to the cor.ners. but on the
line."
While Emerson is obviously
Corona del Ma r's premier
player. Heffern ls unable to
separate Greg Hayward, David
Gerken and Jorge Jimenez.
And when you get past that
point he finds himself in a
quarry again between Jamie
Paul, Carlos Garza, Brian
Sulllvan, Jeff Ewing and Scott
Brownsberger. "That's why we kill every-
body," says Heffem.
The CdM coa~b says he ex·
peels to see Miraleste counter
with a stron,er first doubles than it used tn the non-league
match, which means the singles
unit he employs must rise to the
occasion.
Corona del Mar's only loss this
year was a 1'·1• tie with Beverly
Hilla, which the latter won with
.total games, In a match Just
prior to the Miraleste duel.
"We were practlcin1 for
Miraleste and Just looklna
ahead." explains Heffern. "We
should have beaten Beverly
HUis, and if we bad been more
aware or the level or their
players in relation to our
players, we would have."
When Corona del Mar banded
Mlraleste lta only IOH of tM
•••son Jt waa evident early ln
the match u Hayward knocked
off Losano 10.I ln lbe Ue· breaker
and Jimenes stopped Osuna, ~2.'
to pace a S·l 1ln,._ adnntqe In lb• nnt i'Oiund.
CombUMd With an anticipated
IWetp ln Mbl•. ll WU OVeT
qulckly. Wednuday'a match
n1ures to take '°"-l•r to deCtde
n1ardlel8 al tM wllmer.
B11eb1ll today
On th11 dat• ln bu1ball ln 19'1:
Lou Ottu11, tht Ntw York Yan.ktff'
famed "Iron Hortt" ftrat butman. dltd of ' .
amyothroptc lataral 1clerott1 at tht a11 of '1J ST.
On thl• date ln 1na: -
Gthril replaced. Wally Pipp at flr•t bait
for the YanJcett, be1lnn!n1 bl• record
streak of 2,130 con1tcuUv11amt1 played.
Toda.y 's Birthday:
New York Yankees manager Gene
Michael ls 43.
Nothing new with baseball talks .
NEW YORJ< -Marvin Miller, •
execut\ve director ot the Major
League Players Association, and Ray
Grebey, chief representative for mana&ement,
agreed on one thing after the latest negotiations
in baseball's lingering labor crisis over the
degree of free agent compensation.
Both said no progress was made in more
than three hours of talks Monday.
After their previous negotiating session last
week had lasted only seven minutes, there was
some speculation that the long meeting might
indicate some movement. But Grebey denied
that.
"It indicates nothing other than that we
talked about compensation and there was no
progress," Grebey said. · ·Nothjng really new was discussed today ...
concurred Miller
Ongais ready to shift to Hoag?
Costa Mesa race car driver Dan-• ny Oogals continues to improve and
there is talk of moving him to Hoag
Hospital In Newport Beach to convalesce'.'-
Ongais was seriously injured at the Indianapolis
500 and his condition is now listed as "fair and improving daily.. . Skin-graft surgery was
performed on auto racer RJck Mears Monday.
who was burned in an accident in Pit Row at the
Indy 500 ... Herb Brooks, who guided the U.S.
Olympic hockey team to a gold medal. has re-
portedly agreed lo contract terms to coach the
New 'Vork Rangers of the NHL Luis
Fernando, a striker who scored 28 goals in 28
games for the Los Angeles Aztecs of the North
American Soccer League in 1980, was traded to
Tampa Bay for four-time NASL all·star wing
Steve Wegerle ... CBS has announced that it
will show all weeknight gamei< or the 1982 Na-
tional Basketball Association championship
series live and in prime lime, thus elimin ating
the tape-delay telecasts of the last few years
. A Dayton newspape r has it that the Ci ncin·
nati Reds are a dissension-ridden team with dis·
content and frustratio n rampant in the
clubhouse. Dave Collins says it has been ··blown
out of proportion.
Television. radio
TV : No events scheduled
RADIO: Baseball Angels at Toronto. 4: 30
p.m ., KMPC (710>: Atlanta at Dodgers. 7:30
p m., KABC <790 >
Is it· loo tough?
.or too soft?
Suspension draws opinions
NEW fV.ORK IAPl American League Presi·
dent Lee MacPhail's decision to suspend Billy
Martin one week for bumping umpire Terry
Cooney has sparked opposing opinions from two
sides. Martin thinks It's too hard and the umpires
think it's too soft.
Martin, the Oa~land manager, planned to ap-
peal. which would allow him·to appear in uniform
tonight in Chicago when the A's meet the White
Sox. His lawyer , Ed Sap1r, said Monday he had ap-
pealed the suspension. although the American
League office had not received any notification by
Monday night.
"I have made an appeal with Mr MacPhall,"'
said Sap1r from New Orleans. · ·n e will make the
hearing dale Up 'tit now, Billy Martin's side has
not been heard from.··
MARTIN, PUNI II ED for bumping Cooney
with his chest during a game 10 Taronlo Friday
night. told WBBM ·TV in Chi cago Tuesday ··If I
hit him that hard, then r·m in the wrong business ...
He said he would hl' managing tonight and ac
cused Cooney of triggering the incident by ··bait-ing" him.
Richie Philhpl>, counsel to the Major League
Umpires Association, said he would probably de·
cide today whether lo st art a t"IVil action against
Marlin and-or ask Canadian officials to begin
criminal proceedingl> <igainst him
Phillips says h(''s not after Martin's scalp. he
just wants to make s ure that nobody declares open
season on the umpires and makes them the
·scapegoats for frustration::. ovN the threatened
players· strike and th<il old bottom line syndrome
losing
That"s why Ph11l1ps 1s co ncerned that the
punishment handed down Mondav bv MacPhail is
too lenient to deter otht•rs from using umpires as
verbal and physical punchin£ bags
··1 DON'T THINK a seven day suspension and
a $1,000 fine is a suffi cient d(•tcrrent."" Phillips
said. "I don 't think 1t"s a suffi t•1cnl penalty to deter
other managers who are of this ilk ··
Phillips named. as an example. Balt1more·s
Earl Weaver. who was suspendt•d for three games
and fined an undisclosed amount last season bv
MacPhail for brushing umpire Rich Garcia's eye
with his cap
Phillips compan.•d ~tartan ·., runnmg bump on
Cooney Friday night in Toronto with last ) ear's in -
cident. in which Pittsburgh third baseman Bill
Madlock Jabbed umpire Gcrr) Cra.,.,ford in the
face with his glove
··They were both acb of \.1olent aggression
directed at an umpire,'" he ll;ml '"Martin. as the
manager. is in a position of responsibility He sets
the tempo for be ha v1or of the learn I thmk the
Martin i.ituat1on should he dealt \It llh severe!\. as
Mad lock was · · ·
Two Y auks left at French Open
Connors, McEnroe survivors through four rounds
PARIS <AP l Prospects of
the first victory by an American
man at the French Open tennis
championships in a quarter of a
century rest with Jimmy Con-
nors and John McEnroe.
The two left-handers reached
the quarterfinals with straight
set victories Monday. the sole
survivors among the seven
seeded U.S. players at the clay
court tournament.
But the two Americans must
contend with Swedish superstar
Bjorn Borg, who has yet to lose
a set in his quest fbr a sixth
French Open title.
Four American w-0men made
it to the quarterfinals that began
today at Rtoland Garros
Stadium. Although no American
man has won the title since Tony
Trabert ·did in 1955, defending
American champion Chris Evert
~loyd is favored to win the
women's crown for a fifth time.
Borg, the men's favorite, met
Hungary·s Balazs Taroczy today
in the quarterfinals Local
favorite Yannick Noah,
France's top ranked player. look
on unseeded Victor Pecci. the
towering Paraguayan, in the on-
ly other men's quarterfinal of
the day.
Noah, a French Cameroon
native who is the No. 11 seed.
needed only 15 minutes Monday
to complete hi s 6·4, 6-3. 5-7. 6-4
upset over No. 6 seed Guillermo
Vilas of Argentina. the 1977 tille
winner. Their match had been
halted by darkness Sunday.
Connors, 28. had to battle
three hours for his 6-4, 6-3, 7-6
victory over Mel Purcell. a 21 ·
yea r -old American. Second-
seeded Connors was trailing 5·6
and down 15-40 in the third set
before he regained his concen-
tration and fought back to take
the game and the tie-breaker
7-2.
"I tried hard because l didn't
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 31 20 .608
Chicago 26 17 .605 1
Texas 26 19 .578 2
An1els 24 27 .471 7
Kansas City 16 25 .390 10
Seattle 17 31 .354 121;';i
Minnesota 14 32 .304 141;';i
East Division
Baltimore 28 16 .636
Milwaukee J 27 20 .574 2'r'.i
New York 26 20 .565 3
Cleveland 23 18 .561 3'r'.i
Boston 25 21 .543 4
Detroit 24 24 .soo 6
Toronto 16 33 .327 14'r'.i
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 34 15 .694
Cincinnati 28 20 .583 512
Houston 24 24 .500 912
San Francisco 25 26 .490 10
Atlanta 22 24 .478 101<.z
San Di ego 19 29 .396 141 "2
East Division
Philadelphia 28 19 .596
St. Louis 24 17 .SSS 1
Montreal 26 20 .565 11'2
Pittsburgh 20 20 .500 4111
New York 15 28 .349 11
Chicago 10 33 .233 16 -
"an l lo go lo a fourth l>l'l. Con-
nors llaid
After a da~ of rest, Connors
will meet Argentinian Josc·Luis
Clerc \.\'edne!>da\. The No. 7
seed :\rgcnl1n<' ·bettered un
seeded Carlos Kirma yr of
Bralll Monday. 6·4. 2·6. 7 5. 7-5.
Mc Enroe. thC' No 3 favorite.
had little difficulty turning back
R1<'ardo Yca1a of Ecuador 6-3.
6-3. 6 4. but the 21 -year-old New
Yorker pla~ed with wrist ban·
dages he said he needed for a
tendQfl problem
McEnroe next takes on Ivan
Le ndl of Czechoslovakia. who
advanced Monday with a 6·2, 4-6,
7-6. 7-6 victorv over Australian
Peter McNamara
In the women's quart('rftnals
today, Lloyd played Romanian
Virginia Ruzici, the No. 5 seed
who has lost to the American in
each of their previous 18
matches
~ • • t I .. .
AMERICAN LEAGU£
Af\991• 3, Blue Jey• o
CALtflOAICIA TOltONTO
.,.,11111 Mlllllll
Grlcll, tti J o 2 o Griffin, u • 0 I 0
811rlHcH1, u 3 o o o W-•· If • o o o
Cerew, lb 4 0 0 0 Bonnell, d 4 0 I 0
••,.1or, di 4 O I O Mayb<y, lb l 0 0 0
Ford, rt 4 I I I ""41Ml>y, rt 4 0 0 0 Ott, C 4 0 I 0 VtlH, di\ 2 0 0 0
Harl-, If 4 I 0 0 Maclll,.. 4 0 0 0
HoOton,.. • I 2 2 Gard•, 2b ' 0 I 0 8tr1lquet, Cf 4 0 0 0 Wlllll, c 2 0 0 0
Totals :M > 1 J Totals JO o J O
Sc_ .. , .......
Ct llfornl• 000 010 0024
T wonro ooo ooo 000-0
t:-G ... cMI, ForKll. OP TO<'Onto I. LOll-
Cellfornl• 6, Teronto 7. 1a-obSon, HR-
H-13), Ford (10). S.-Wllltt.
Cal ....... • If' H R ER •• $0 ,_,. lw, 7..J) • J o o ) • , ......
5Cltb IL • ._., ' 1 3 l
8•111-Stleo. T-2.03. A-U,2'1.
... , ... J, Marl-• 2
S.•ttle 002 000 OC»-2 10 0
K•nu• City 000 001 11x-J • o
AbDoll, L Ander..., 171, R•wley Cll -
8111lln9, Spllllortf, Q111wnberry I'> •nd
W•ll••n W Sc>llltorfl, 2·4. L-L. AnO.rMn,
1.J S-0..ltenberry Ill A 21,41'.
Tl-14,.,_nJ
Mllwluk.. Oil 100 000 000-J 11 I
OtlrOil 003 000 000 001-4 11 O
Lercll, c1e-.11nd II II 1nd Moor•; Wllco•,
ToOlk I•>. S...Cler Ill, Ro1tm• 111) Ind
P•rrlih. w Ro.ttml, ,_. L Clev•IAnd, , I
Hit-Mii-... Simmon• Ill A-U,4'S.
YMk .. •S, IMl•M>
New York 020 120 OOC>-S 14 O
Cltvtllnd IOI 010 000-l II l
Bird, R O•vis 161, Gou•oe ttl and
Cerone, Gerl-u co U), Slanlon UI encl
H .... , w Bird, ~ L Cilr•-. i.s. ~ Gon•oe (U I HR•-N•• Yorlt, 0.nl 161.
Winfield UI. Clevel•nd, Ort• ()).A-JO, 1'1
NATIONAL. LEAGUE
Dodgers 5, BravH 2
ATLANTA Mrlllli
Royster,., • 0 O O HerjMtr, rt 3 0 I 0
Lln•rH, II • 0 1 0
Murplly. crf • 1 1 O
CllmOI•. lb • 1 1 1 HubOrd, 21) • O 0 0
•tnee11ct, c • O l o R•mlrer, u 3 O 0 O 80901. p , 0 0 0 Nllrdn,,"" I 0 I I Monlthc, p O O O O
LOS UIGllLIS
Mr II IN
Tllomu, lb J 1 2 3
Moncl..,, rt 4 I I 2
8eker, II 4 0 0 0 c;.,v.,, lb • 0 0 0
Co . JI> • O 1 o
Guerrero. cl • I I o
Sc loS<l1,c J I l 0
Frlu, u 2 1 1 o Velnll•.P l o o o
Totel• 33 2 1 2 Tol•I• JO s I s
ken-.,1-1.,..
Allente 000 000 ~2
Lo• Anoe1es 200 010 20s-' LOB-All•nte •• Los Ano•I•• • 2&-Lln•rt•, MDnlMY. C:.y. HR Mondly (S) ~ V1ltn111ela. SF TllOml\
AU.IOU IP' H R ER •I SO Booos IL, 1-t) 6 4 3 l 0 6
Montefusco 2 • l 1 o O
LMA ........
VllefUWI• (W, t·2) t 1 l 2 2 II HIJP-l>y 8099• (Fries ) R -2.ot. .......
f'Mlllfts:-.4
New Yori. 100 101 010-4 t I
PlllleO.lpf'll• 200 000 lb-5 U 2
Z•cllry, Allen Ill end Ste•rna ,
Cllrlstellson, Lyle Cll McGrew It) end
Boone W LYll. •·1. L Allen, J.J S-
McGrew (S) HR•-Nn• York, KlnQMen
(121. Pllll-lpnia, M•cldO• (21 A 27,lol1
c...-.......... _..,
MontrHI 000 010 001 2 S O
51 LOUIS 100 010 IOll 4 t I
LH , Fry....,, (7). Sow (I I •nd Carle<
Martin, Stutter Ill end Brummer W
M•rlln. 2·1 L -LH, •·1 s !>utl•r ltl. HR-MonlrHI, CMler 161 A 14,224
R-1.0llllUS
Clt><lnMll 210 100 004-t IS 0
Sin FrMCIKO 010 021 100 S II 0
Berenyl, Mo•ltau 161. Hurne 1•1 and
Nol•n, O'Btrry (II, 0 Ale-r, Mottlll
ISi, Ml"ton (7), UV.lie (ti lf\d M1y. W-
HYrl'M, ~1 L-Minton. 2·3 HR-Cln<lnnell,
Fotter 1121 Sen Francisco, 0 . Ev-171
A-4,620
Top 10
, ...... , ...... t•l
AMIRICAIC LUCWll
OA•RMl'd. Remy, tloAon U W JS 4' .2511
ll1191tton, ... !\more 4l ISi 20 U .W lenslOl'd, IOlton Sii 117 JI M .Ml
Roenlcllt, a.tt1"*'9 ~ 110 11 l1 .136
Almon, CNcaoo •l 15' 2' s2 .m tv.ns, &ollon 4' 1 n 3' S7 sit
01:ver. Tellti •S Ito JO ~2 JM
Heno..son. o.i.1-so 192 40 '2 .m
Wlnflekl, New Yor'I< 4' 111 U U m
Peclorek. SHllle 4S '" 1S SJ .JU "-·-Evens, Boaton. 11; Thom•. MllWMk ...
U; AnNIS, Oellilnd, II, ,..,.., ......... M;
Gre,,, S.•lllt, 10.
R-htWI•
Even•, ao.ton. JS; Arma•, O•kl•nd, :t.S;
Slnoletori. a.111,,_., ~I. M11r9'1y, 0.ltl-. ll. Oollvlt, Mllw-... JO; Wlnfltld, Neor
Yor•. JO, ..... Teus, JO
.......... 16Decltl-.I
Cl•••, lloSlon. Hl; Martinez. hlllrnore,
~1; Bly-. Clevel-. ~2. V11<1tovkl'I, \
Mllw•ullH, 6·2. Keouoll, Oeklend, 6·2;
McGr-. 81111rnon, S.1. lurM, Clllc-.
S.1.
NATIONAL LIAOUll
0 A• • " .-Ct. Howe, H-ton 4S tao 21 n .•t
Yo.in91>10oc1, ..... York ,. IZ2 u .. ·'"
MMlodl, PllUCJurOll J4 120 12 41 .aCJ
l!•sler, l"lttMurflll 31 1M 2• 41 m
Met ...... Plll ... lllNW 156 n » ..m
Per111111. SM OMeo 40 12' 11 o .m
•roollt, N-Yori! 43 14' 11 4' .at
"o ... Pllll-lpNa •7 1t0 n " .121 OHf',_,., ~ •S 16J 24 U .Jt1
Collins, Cll!ClnNtl 4' 114 • St :121 .._._
S<llmklt, f'Nl-.ipflla, 14; 0..WMft, Mont·
rNI, 12; Kl.....-, H-Yor'I<, 12; FOIW,
ClnclM•ll, n. car, .,...,..... •; ow,,..,.., i>Meen.•. ._._,.
l'oster, Cl11clnn•ll, Jt; Scllmlft,
Ptlll ... l!lllle, a ; CMKepcl_,, CIMIMetl, a ; ......,, .,....,.., *61 lk1d1ner, CM<e90,
11.
f'ltdlllle " O.CltlMll Carltofl. 1'911JadeltlNa, M ; RllMtft, l"li.
llWefl, H ; ....... ~ M ; ~.
Allen I•, S·l ; Seever, Clnclnnell, J·I;
Vale•a•ela, 0•-t•n , t·J ; R11t11ve11,
Pll114Jdelllfll,t,M .
Colleg.t World S•rlH ._... .. , ........... ... ~ . .............
Te11 .. 6, Mklll""' S IMldll• tllmlMt•I
M•IM .... '°""' C«ollnt lltld .. rtlll 'r...., .• o-.. lelfttl CMaflM 144-'41 vt. ,.._1'18 IJMJ> (iotWel~
MLUI ..... IUile t•U> Yf Ari-stM.e
UMU. .... . ,. . ._
Oll.,.,,. ....._ <•tS> YI. Ml-I, ..... ,
John McEnroe returns
Los Alamitos
/ MONOAY'SRESULTS
llf11telt1 .... ~ .. -· .. ) First ••<• Nocon•• Clleroltee
!Cltrluel, L611, l 611, J.20. Gollk•vand" a... (F loro), 1l 10, s to, Dolla r Sclloler
(TrtHure), 3 40, '2 .. act• 12·11 p•lcl "'° 00. S.cond rece Llllle Oupe CTrus11rt),
6.20, l IO. 100. Sill Lift !Oomlnow11, uo.
l 60, At-IAdelrl, • 00.
Tlllrd rkt C..t N Run ll"r'(dly). 160
• 20, 3 40, Bls.lloP &rec (AOelrl. •.00, J 10,
Any Time !Ad'! IOtlverl. UO
Fo11rlh race 5'>111 Tiie Be•M IMylts),
10 00, 4 611, 4,00; R11.11 N RtlclY IH•Y9SI, S.611,
4 40, Full Time Cool IC...clOll), l IO. S2 tx·
ecte (•·11 pekl '46 00
Fl 1111 race o..e.n For C.."1 i GarOou I,
2.to, 1 40, l.20, Eleni.._ IMllcllell), J.00.
1 . .0, Ruby 8t (Mylftl, UO.
si.111 race G•llOPlno Domino 10.lom
oe I, ll 40, S 40, 4 20, I n\tenl Rew•rd
(C•rdou), S 40. • 20. Dell• Mttn IH4'r9tl.
U 10, U eucu IH I paid t4-20
S.ventll re• Oestro'r9r IH•rt). 1.00. • oo. l 40; S.lectme (Mltcnellt. 7.611, • 40,
Loom Son !Ch.Ivel), l.00; U oaci. 12-0
1Nld $111.IO.
El911tll rec• Miu Tripi• 0111 IC.,Oolll,
1.40, J .40, 2.60, Celli• Can (Citrin•>. l 40,
160, TrlllOl IWOoe lllr"-•l, ''°· S2 eucw
( 1-10) peld $21 00
U Plett Six (~1-7) SNkl $2,Ml.40 wllll 17
wlnnlnQ tick~• Isla hOr•sl; U Pkll Sia
conso11tlon 1Nld "4S.20 wllll 1" wlnnlroo tklt•IS lffve ,__,
.. Intl\ rK• Joe c Oul<l IAOlirJ. 1 Jll.
4.20, 2.60; ToP Ml Not (Mllcllelll, IAll. ~40.
011 My Ref> (ClerlSMI, 2.10, U euct. IM I
o•ld '61.IO. Alt.-.e 6,tJO.
Los Alamitos Standings
(""-Ill J-11
Jech' Oennv C.dou
Ket1nttll """ Sieve Tr-re
Jolln Cr•-r
O•nn,. Mitchell
Kenneth Clerlsw
L•rr .. Clwve1 "Ober\ A<lelr
Oon•hl OeL.oml>ot
JIM Ir-.
T,.IMr
&lent Scllv.,,.•tldl C W Cetclo
Si.tve Roth1M11m
c111r1es 81-ulSI
Ru•MllHerrls
Jolln coos-r
L•wrence Britt~
J .. N Meioon..do KtllllColl~o
E M•r1• W.kll
Slt Ill 1 ... JN
llS 37 " ,. ,,. ,. lS ,.
IU ll 11 JO
IJO 11 1S 11
ls.I II 2t U
121 IS IS 16 ,. u 10 11
120 12 17 JO
st 12 I I
IC!' 10 ll 11
Sii l•t U. 1r11
123 10 II 11 21 II • s
10 10 • 10 .. ' u • so I • 7
7' 1 .. 10 ,. 1 7 1
31 I 2 I
17 7 , • 41 • • •
-(__ > .
NBA Free Agents
Foll-Ina ••• ll•t of lll•Y•• --· Vtler.n ,,.. ....... "et the <OMC>letlon of.,,.
1-..1 N8A -Hn. grouped ec'ordlnQ to
their former teems:
All•nta: Steve H•-•·
Boston: Terr,, OuerOd.
Clllc990 ac.y Wiikerson
Clev•I-; Mick C.lvin, Don Ford, KHn
Huo11e1. Elmore Smllll, Rlcll•rd
WHlllnoton.
0.1 .. s; Marty Byrne1.
O.nver: Alea Enollih, Kenny Hloos. Biiiy McKinney.
a.troll. Ron LH, P•ul -••Ill Go,_ State. Joe H•utlL Jann L-.
Cllttor-d Ille,,.
Ho;iston: Calvin Murplly, Biiiy P•u1t2.
Indi ana: Tom Abernellly, J emu
t:dwercb, Jerry Slcllllno.
K•nsH City Olis 8 1rdsonv, Jo. c.
Merlweatller. Frenltl• S.nderJ, Lloyd
W•llon, Scott w.clmMI
l.01 Anf91t\: N-. Mllw ....... :N-.
New Jer .. y: 9oO Elliott.
.. •• Vor11: Mlll• Glenn, Rey Wlllltnls.
Pl\liec191pN• ......
""°8nla: Joel ICr.,...r.
Pwtltftd: N-.
S.n Antonio: N-.
S.n oi.eo· Ron O.vls, O•r HHrd, fltlll Smllll,~Wllll-..S.
... nit: Oerwlls Awt.-.,, Vinni• Jollnton,
P'elllWetliilMI.
Ulell: Mel lennttt, W•Y"9 ~. Jeff. WllklM,
WHl\l119l0fl: kbl>Y Oendrlc19t, Kevin
0Nv.y, Ml\Cll IC!lpC .......
N8A AJl-leagu• team
,.RITTIAM
F-L•,.., fl'Vlllt, f'Nl"°910lli• 1a
"-UN'J Slnl, 9"IOll 12"
C-Kereem Alldllt.J..-.r, l.M Anoelff UI O-O•rwe~. SM Anttftlo ., o-o.noii • ...._. "'-'• ..
AO*D T•AM ,.-Mar.-'*"-, MllWllllQ9 J4
t'-A4ri.t Olilltley, Ultll '1
C-M-~.~ .,
0-0.lt ll,...,,.. K-Cit" a 0-Nete~N. loQll ..
,.,. ... .,., .....,, -.. eftele,,. ft ..
r.c-. • ., ....,.., .a Mia. a .,.1i.w\ll1. 1
,,_llM!t, UO rne<lleref, •
DAMA WAR,. .. enoien. IU ....... u
WJ'K\111111, 1Df •tt., t ll.tllllwl, 6 fKll tltll. mme<ur.t
OCIAMMM -1h ...... ". ut ._.., ta Ultu ...... Pl MM -...... I MllM • ,.., ... ,"_-....!.
•AM Ot••O CHa M U11•l•1. fll•ll•
., ........ I ......... , -16 •lllltr•; 1
r•ll•t111. ,. ce11<a MM, 1• ..,r.c-." r«ll 11.-, l llne c.-
1.Dlf • llA.CH 1 .. 1_. f'lwl -al
•ftfltr'I 16.S NM ..... 14 UllCO --.. It llOnlto, n -recwe co...•• ....,..> -10
.,.. .. ,.. 'yallowtall, 4't cellco ...... JI...,._
r•cllde, t111111n110, • Miid NM, )t recll. 11111.
H AI. •UCM -n eneltn: Ito (8(11 c•
214 NM i..s, II Uliea MM, 14 MUKwM, 4 M llllul, t ,,_..,.,, H llllftlta.
IAN f'I OltO (Doll M. L.eM1119 I -J7 •nQlers tu catk• .,.,, 1J .. ,,.. be». 4
INrr•cvoe, 4IO llllnlto. ,....,.. O' Catll -.. •nv1tn: 2 Mllti.it. 1 Mncl beu, * c•lko
bets. 71.INrrKude, 1 ,..llow\All.
AVILA SAY l ..... SINll.Ml -1'•ft91en:
4 11"9 Ced. to red roclt Ced, M reel flttl
001.ITA •UCM -JO •llller'I 10 rodl cod ... recl~,a.Jllntcod,tcowcod.
SANTA .... ARA 11 •nolen: 1S ce.llco
1>.u, 11 rock ti"'. VSICTURA -4l .,..ien: S ,,_llbul, 61
rock cod, 11 celko MU, 21 rock flPI
OXNA•D -.. tf'l)le(l; IS c•lko ....... 1S
blue IMlu, 3 1\1110..t, 721 rock cOd, s lino coct,
2S cow cod.
.. ORT HUENIMll (Amerlcu) -JI
tr111leU JOO nKll ~. 1 C-cod, I l'IOllbuC,
11 calico !>Ms, 11 rock ""· 40 M8<ktrel
MALtau -2t •nolon: 11 IWlll-. ,.
calico bM\, 10 ~ l>IU, IV mackerel. 20
bonito, 1 bllrrecudl, 1S rocll COd.
f'ARAOlil cov• -'4 •noien; 2u rocil
cod, >O c-coo, ISJ cellco bass, I 'Mid bet6.
U bonito, J benecude, I ntllbul
MA•INA OIL Rl!Y -II M>Qltrt 1 ow-
rec1!411, to bonito, 65 Cellco NH. 11 -DHS, 175 ""8<ltrel, 1 llelfbllt.
RIDOHDO -"•no••fl: 219 celko --..
15 bonito, 21 wracudl, 120 rock "'" ..,.. -II anoien: llO ,,_..,.,, n1 llOnlto, 1
.,..,, .. ...,.,to roe:• 11\h
Thi• w••k'a trout plant•
LOI AMOILllS -8-Wt CMl't'Oft Cr-. CHiii< Lelle, c,.,st•I Lett•. Llltte Roell
1111...,VOlr, ~-L.Atte, Sell 0 ......
Reservoir, 5MI GM>rlel Rl"'lr IE"t -Nortll F.U).
SA• •ERNAROllCO -Cuc•mono•
CrHlt, .....,.., Uke, Mill Cr .. k, Slive,_
ReNrvalr.
lt1VIR$10E -Fulmor Uke, H._,
L•llt.
vaMTURA -C-lta• !Aile, ·-Veltty
L••n. R..,., Cr-. Se-Crtelt IU-S.CUon).
SAIC DllGO -Doena Uke.
British Amateur
l•tSt.~k_._I
"RST ROUND
Andrea C-U., Italy, def GrMmt "-·
Scoll•no. 2 and I.
Pn1llp W•llon, Ireland, def Kent Winton, us. f.up(11)
Rlcllerd Kreu, U S , def. Rlcllercl Lvon.
Soulll AlrlU. H.IO.
Duncan Ev•n•. W•lo , def R•JllHv
""'"'•· '"""· l·up Al•n 8. Fotter, u s .. def. T. w-.. Stout, ,.. ...
ZHl•nd, 6 Mid 5. Rl<llltr Von Nier-erk, Soull\ Alrlc•. def.
Andy Rote, Scotl-, 1 up
O•vld G Tllornu U S., del Merli
MOul•nd, Eno•-. I up
M•rco Our<1nte, lt•ly, del. 8r11<e C,,.IM, u s .• J •nd 1 Paul Bt.,d. Au,trell•. oef. Al•n Sym,
Scotland, J.up Jolln Huve•n. 5coll•nd, def Dick
Sldero..t, U.S., l...., 2
G•r'f 8r-t. Enol•nd, def H.,court
Kemp, U.S., 3...., 2.
Frencol• lllCM.11, France, def Lnll•
W•lller, Enel-. I-up
St111 Thonlc>Mln Jr , U S , oat. Mttr-Loi·
llloUM, Enot-.J-l
J Fr•nltlln ROM, u.s . def Mlcl'IMI
Bon1ll•cl1, E,.i.nd, l·uP.
Mertln Wiid, Envt-. Ott. Wnl•Y -· U.S .lencll
Ger•rd Power. Au•tr•ll•, def Ian
H111~"-'.SC-. I.up
CIF lndlvldual chamolonthlp•
(et I-try Hllist
11 Tom Breltfellff, Indio.
12 -CMy VOUler, lnctio.
7• Tony Perino, Wutl•lte, O•vld
Miiier, RloMttJ, 8oO LeJken, SI Paul; C#Y
Synnes•-. Pelrndele. (Perino llnl•....,
llllrd, Miiier tourtll, Ualltrl llttll •nd SY!l-
nestvtd1 •hrlh In lll•volll.
1S -5'lln R~pf'I, S..n Marcos
7' Erk "'"4<1. A-1-; Kiri! O'Keete,
St Jo~. Scott TurNy, Foottllll, RI~
C rou, 8""'9rltl.
11 Mllrltell Taylor, Ecll!lon; Mlrll Oen
dt<lttr, Sen1• _,,<•; JONI Ericson, P•lo!
Verde•. Gery Hlcllolt, Soulll Hllli, Jtf'
Rlcllerd-., AOO'I<•
NASL
WasTIRN OIVISION W L O,.OA .......
S.n cL I 4 22 IS II 60
S.n Jote • 1 17 n 1' S2
LOI AnQtlft 6 6 U 20 tJ 47 5wn 5 1 12 II 12 42
NORTMW5ST OIVISION
Vonco;iver I • 14 11 21 " Sffttl• 1 6 JO 14 u '5
Por t11nc1 6 S It 14 I SI
Edmonton 4 7 16 2' 14 •
C..l91r,, J ' 12 " 11 " IASTIRN OIVl$toN
Co&tnos
WHlll119t«1
MontrNI
Toronto
''"""a I 4 2l 17 It '3
s • " " 11 • 4 • 11 27 1.1 41
SOUTH5RIC DIVISION
For1 Ll~t I S 19 14 ~ "
Atle11le 6 5 20 17 10 5'
Tern1M 8ey 5 I 1t 2t 17 4S
Jacltlonvlllt S 1 13 11 12 40
cun••L DIVISION
Cllk-OO • 3 2' 14 13 n
T11IM 6 5 II 1S IS 4'
MlnMsot• 6 5 1• 21 1' 4'
O•llH 2 11 ' JI I II Sia POlnl• ere ....,..,.dtd for e reQUletlon or
ov•rllme v~y. F041r points for • .,_._
vlctary. One -u• point for every ooel
scored wlltl • rntlllmlln\Jll lllr• per ..-.
No lbeflln ootnt Is ew1rM'llbr owrtlrne or u.oo1 ... t p is.. ....... ._
No oame• Kllfdllltcl
T ........ tO-
T•ronto et At.IMU
HfW Yori! et MoftlrMI
Misc .
Orange Coast DAILY PtLdr/Tuesday, June 2. 1981
No club, but want a 11andicap.
County association provides many services to golfers
8y HOWARD L. llANDV °' .. ~ .......... Are you llred of playine in tournament•
without an establlsbed handicap?
Do you wlsh the calloway system had never
been invented?
l( the answer to elther or botlt of these ques-
tions ls yes, then you should look into the Orange
County Golfers Association.
It ls now pos$ible to have an established
Southern California Gol! Association handicap
without joinina a country club or men's club.
The OCGA, under the direction of Dennis
Chase, conducts mini-tournaments at several
Orange County golC courses along with other tours
and trips designed for the golfer.
l"WE A.RE DESIGNED to provide services to
gol,..promoting and developing eolf as a means
of healthful recreation and physical fitness."
Chase says. •
AMual dues for an individual are $2S with a
Longlwrm win,
oust Michigan
OMAHA (AP> -Mark Reynolds lined a lWO·
run double with two out in the ninth inning to give
Texas a 6-5 victory over Michigan in College World
Series Monday night, ousting the Wolverines from
the double-elimination tournament.
The second game between South Carolina.
44·14, and Maine, 32-13, was postponed until today
because of a l'r'4·hour rain delay that halted action
after seven innings of the Texas-Michigan game.
Michigan led the Longhorns 5·2 prior lo the
rain delay. Texas. 59-10·1, came back with one run
in the top of the eighth when Reynolds singled and
was forced at second by Chris Campbell. Campbell
then scored on a double by Tracy Dophied
Bryan Burrows led off the Texas' ninth with a
walk, but was forced at second on Spike Owens·
grounder. Owens scored the fourth Texas run
when Larry Long doubled to right on a play which
saw Michigan right.fielder Jim Paciorek slid past
the ball on the wet outfield. .
With Long on second base, Michigan awarded
an intentional walk to catcher Burk Goldthorn.
Reynolds' later followed with his game·winning
double lo left center.
Michigan threatened in the bottom of the ninth
as Jeff Jacobson drew a leadoff walk. Greg
Schulte doubled to left center. but Jacobson was
thrown out at the plate trying to score from first.
Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson then brought in
1
Longhorn pitching ace Tony Arnold. who got Davt
Stober to ground out for the second out.
Arnold then intentionally walked Paciorek. but
got catcher Gerry Hool to ground out to end the
game.
Michigan concluded its season al 40·20.
Meanwhile , at Marietta, Ohio, Steve Riley's
12th-inning sinele knocked into two runs to lift
Mariella to a 14·12 victory over Ithaca, (N .Y .) in
the championship game of the NCAA Division 1JI
baseball World Series.
The triumph gave the Pioneers, runner·up to
Ithaca last year and second-place finishers
three times, their first national baseball crown.
"We won this one just like we've been winning
all season -by fighting back from adversity,"
said Pioneer Coach Don Schaly, who lost his
second regular in the tournament when starting
first baseman Jim Pancher awoke with the Ou.
Rich Riley was chosen as the replacement and re-
warded the veteran coach with a 4-for-6 batting
performance and six RBI.
"This team has been playing this way all
season, so it was only fitting that we should win it
this way," Schaly said. His squad closed with a
59·5 record.
Youth (o otball signups set
The final day of registration for the Newport
Beach Jr. All·American Football League is Satur·
day al Corona del r.far and Newport Harrk>r high
schools.
The time of registration at both locations is 10
a .m . until noon. A $15 registration tee is required,
.along with a birth certificate for new players.
Grunion
to run
Thursday
There are those wbo
feel a grunion run is
much like a snipe bunt
but for the avid Cish-
ermen and connoisseur
of the silvery fish, tak·
ing or the grunion is no
joke.
The next run of the
sllppery gru nion on
Southern California
be a c h es is set for
Thursday through Sun·
day nights. Thursday
night the run ls slated
from 11: 18 to 1: 18, ac-
cording to the Depart·
ment of Fiah and Game.
T he r un gets pro·
greasively taler each
night, startin1 at 12:07
Frlday; 1:03 Saturday
(early Sun day>; and
2 :12 Sunday. In all
cases. the time la in the a.m . .hours but refers to
the day before .
The 1runloa apawn
alon1 sandy beaches In
Southern CaUf ornla and
come uhore to spawn
durlnt periods wben lhe
flab may be takeD. Tbl1
occurs ooe to two days
alter a new or full mooa
11 hl•h Udet beiln to re· ced e . Tbe e1s• are w albtd fl"M ol the HM
Into tbl oeean to beteb
on lM next 11rlea or
tld11 U or 14 daya later.
Grun ion •••r •1•
bflweea live and thr.
...... la a.,tli aDcl '" lood to •• , -... , to ,repare.
married couple at $40, a family ot four at ~ a
cori><>rate memberships at $100 tflve people).
The membership includes computerhed
handicaps <.SCGA>. monthly t.ournamenll, a Fore
magazine subscription, a newsletter. 1roup
purchasing benefits and an opportunity t
parttclpate in tours and travel packages.
For membership applications and further de-
tails call 95Hi053 or write to OCGA, 3198 F Alrpor
Loop, Costa ~esa. 92626. • • • NATIONAL GOLF WEEK will be celebrated
June 22·28 with Southern California PGA pros hop
ing to repeat as the top section In the coun~ry I
money pledged to the junior golf program.
Roger Belaneer, a resident of Laguna Nlgue1
COLF l!IJ
and former head pro at Mission VieJo, is now at In1
dustry Jiills apd spearheaded the drive last year.
Bel'knger is again presenting the West Coast
Merchandise show at Industry HUis t.t.is year
A golf seminar will be held at Singing Hill
Country Club June 22·2£ for teachers, coaches an
pros. It is a flv e·day national seminar that in-.
cl';!des instruction in all facets of the g~m~ ~longf
with learning to present group and md1v1duaJ
lessons. • • • ~ i
CHIP SHOTS -The 10th annual SCPGA
stroke play championships will be hosted by Art
Scbilllng at Mesa Verde Country Club June 15. The,
event will be a 36-hole affair ... The LPGA tough
luck award for the year has to go lo second-year{
pro Gall Hirata who eagled the final hole in a re-
cent tournament to fire a 68 and take the first·
round lead. But she was disqualified because i
her excitement, s he forgot to sign her scorecar
. . Are you still game for a run round of golf that
may end before you finish 18 boles? If so, the Com
modores Club con.am team scramble is for you. It
will be t)eld June 22 at Irvine Coast CC in conjunc
lion with Lrrelevant Week under the direction
Paul Salata with a 5 o'clock shotgun blast to en
the day's play (if anyone adheres to a Sal at·
whim). Call 641-0610 for further details of the zany
event ...
One of the biggest e\ ents of the year at Hunt·1
ington Seacliff CC was the 13th annual member·
guest tournament with 53 two-man teams
participating over 36 holes. Low gross honors went
to Ray Bertotti and guest AJ Nunes of Rio Hondo
with a 228. They were followed by Leroy Gay and
Paul Moro of Phoenix at 230 and Jim Cnwford
with Len Peverler of Costa Mesa at 236. Ad•m
Moro and Fred Letterman of Old Ranch won low
net in a playoff with George DptU and Leo Zovac
of Mountain Gale at 196.
GROUP
g ~IF,
LESSONS -.
ST ARTS JUNE 16th
8 WEEKS-s25oo
Registration start• Jun•·1at
ONE HOUR WEEl<L Y
INCLUDES
GOLF BALLS & INSTRUCTIONS
LESSON HOURS
Tues., Wed., Thurs.
9 A.M. or 6 P.M.
Sat. At I P.M.
COS!A MESA GOLF& COUNTRY CLUE
170 I GOLF COURSE DR.
COST A MESA • 540.7500
' j
,_
11
I••
11
Ir.
~
' t
l
I I•
II
~
I . ~
11 . , . )
.,
I ..
I
j
~
i
I
~
I
·\
·J
I
/'
l
¢.-.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/fueaday, June 2, 1981
PlJILIC NOTICE
L.9~•mce ••• .. •• cou•TY"lii';"eiiio. lfOttC8 W AVAIU .. LIT'r 01' ~H
-
"*UM. ••lll'OtlT lfATe Of' CAUlllOtlltlA k DI NeUO la .... .,_ .... tM ttwm ,_OM C:..... Dfiw.... llMI Jtflcl C.\I .,._'AIH•M!Wet lltMtt tt IM .......... ~... Ctll ... Ol•ltt .
AllttfOl'l lllW....., ........ M1911,, • lflLAl-.Tllfl~ OUTM•CC>An .. ~~~ ... • .,
~1., ... ,_..... .......... .,.., ..... MAlllNI INOUITlll••. INC .. •••n ,, ... •tc•l1tt Office •• ~"'-Jt, 1• 11 .,. ....... •t .. •OH llT M•TJ l"llrtMtlft9 AIM(. INl'left lflt<flll. 111t ,....,....Mft'I '""' ... lffk• •• ·~ o .. 1.NOANT1 IOUTM COAn At•m• Ave1111e COit• M•u .-<tltlltM'lne~ ....... -" •OAT YA•o. INC., llllCMll•L C•llt.rrll•9"• • • ..,..... •1• ••"" .. J•oo "'"'' 'V '"I' DAVl&.ttt.el 1treJectNe,..1 cltltftl .... ,....a1 II wllfllfl llO ;.ya TIM" 0 a A" Y It• 0TICT111 I 8ltl NO loo.A Al, CtndHIMll\9 after dete ff llllt t*k•IHll TN OaDllt 11 f I '1 I t I C '""""1 .... 'tprl~lpeleHICelt_.. Ula1WM11ea11 .. t1 eme t ' llV fOllmtl'I e tllter,
.. UI H.,.. llNM °''" .......,, T• O•l•n•enu IOUTH COAn Oren .. OMtl Ctl ..... C•141 MtN.
8HCll, C1llf.,ftle, Tl'9 JtlHl_.I IOAT YA•O, INC lflf MICHAIL Cell:.'."':. lOO.• _ ... ,_,lllO En
ffttM9tt l1f tr. ...,._lltft It .ltMt M OAVll Mt tft\' Mlltf 1*''4111t c-vll'.,11'1\tlllll Ceftltl', ~ ...... c .. n
A ... •-r <er"" wlU\ tr Mvillt I...,..\ 11'1, IN Cell ... C.141 MtM. c.llfofflla ~I.,.. Or.,. C..t1 o.11)1 lflllt\, 111' " • .,...._ llMwll "' '°"TH "'"; Avlll .... lrorrr Olfl« ef lrM .1-t, 1"1 t,,,...I COAST 80AT YAllO, INC., i.etef et OlrKttf "'ytkll ,t<llllJK "'-11\t. -~:~.!~'::"'::W..~"""9" ...... CN•I ~lllly'Cotleoe Oltlrlcl, PUBLIC NOTICE IT llO•OtlllD· mo Adll'llt Ave1111•. C•tll Mu•, I -0.1~ IOUTH COAIT IOAT Cflltorllle, 114/W.S707.
MOTIC:•OPAf'f'UCATtOH "'°" YAllO, IHC, Ml MICHA•L. OA\lll HOTICI II Hl"IHY OIVl!H 1 ... 1 CHANOa IN OW•l•tHtP 0' 11\111 Mt Ir_,.,, INNC1ly or lflflrec .. lllt IM-"4mtcl lctiool 0161fkt ol ALCO~tc••v•"··· UCIMH • .,. •nw lllltrttt Ill lllt 't'"''Y 0r""9 Ctullt't, Cellfo<l'lle, e<11"8 lly .. ...., dittcr,._ It fll,jlW\ All f11 tlM •tNlt IMI lllr~ Ila ~nt11l111 INrcl,
PUBLIC NOTICE l .. ~,...
NOTICE Of' DEATH OF
MARY S. ASKEW AND OF PETntott TO AD·
MINISTER ESTATI! NO. A-101151.
To a..fl heirs
beneficiaries, creditor!
1nd contingent creditors 01
Mary S . Askew ano
persons who may be
otherwise interested In the
wlll and/or estate:
To Who>l'll llllMy Con(..... .. IN IMf1M .... ·-•lfttcenfll(I II• re I"' let , • It, r •d ••• I ............. , ISMIT PIPIC IJ -4Ylflt te tM ef at tt1' ~ llWO N....,.rt "OllTlllCT", wlll re(elw _,.le, but 0.P.,tlMl'tl of Alcollolk ..... ,... ..ec:h. Gliltonll .. c~My k-Ml ltlff I'*' lllt --•t."'4 lllM,
A petition has been flleo
by Donald E. Askew In the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Donald E. Askew be ao-
p o Int e d as personal
representative to ad·
minister the estate of
Mary S . Askew, Costa
Mesa, Ca. (under the In·
dependent Administration
of Estates Act). The petl·
tlon Is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive West, Santa
'Abrasive'
tonttol tor "•1" OH SAi.it ••Ill 8t SOUTH COAST toAT YAllO lffled tidtf9t h •••rd Of• ~ltlCI
ANO WINIE Cl'Ult.IC IEATINO IT ti 'UltTHlll 01101 ... 0 t!Yt ftrtht_ll_endlllec:e PLACEl, loM41 •kohollc bewr ... ul thlt o..-............ "° lef"c.8 Cit •lft<l TlltN wlll .... Jl0.00 ""911 ,. ,., I!. 11th SlrMI, $1111• IS. c .. 1. H t• eny ..._ny .,.., ... , ,,,.,_ qulNO 111 M<ll ..... bid dOCu~tt to
AMM, C•tl!Ot·N• ..v lly plel11tlffl ,. Ill elly •...nt ., .. , Ju-91Mr8111W "" rwt11m lll900d COlldlllon • priest Pulllltlled Or.,,.e <:oer1 Delly ltllOt, 1y '· 1t11. wltllll'I llw IYy• •II..-Ult bid Ol>tfllno
J11M l , 1•1 un..e.t D•t••: Mlty "· "" H~•~,,. bid mutt conform •no .,. f9~~·af:::J~~~n June 11, ~H.O'"" ·•
fired PUBLIC NOTICE Jlldle" Ille re1141011 ... W IO Ille cont tee: I dO<lll'llel'lla. ~ ... c-t h<ll bid IMll be ec:compenled lly
MITCNIU .-o NUITON tlM aecutltv rtlerr .. to In'"' '°"ltec;I
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you Should either appear
at the hearlng and state
you r objections or flle
written objections w ith the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
In person or by your at·
torney.
,...111D ••-n•ww documtfltt _.,,the 1111 of PfGPOMO
MOTICI 0' SALi O' Ut .. ......, Ql..w °" •uk..,trenen.
SAN DIEGO <AP>
Supporters say the Rev.
Carmello Gosioco de·
fiantly says Mass
although he has been
fired and repltted by
Roman Catholic orficials
in the San Diego Diocese.
AIANDOM•O l'l•IONAL ...._.. w, TlleDISTIUCTt--ltwr'-tto PttOf>l•'tY ...._. .,.-. ~ ,.., reJ4Kt any or oil bids ot to wel ... any
Holk• 11 ""*I' tlWll 11111 ~ C7t41 ,........ lffe9Ul.,.ltltt Of lntonne1111 .. In '"Y
-,,.,,_, 10 Section 1M .i w. A"-r..., ....,._ bl~~ :;'1~•~'":., otltell'ltd ftom ;:1:.:.~!" ~~:: ,:::.::~1:~ Pullll .... OrMOI Col•I Ot lly Pilot, the Director of "" DetNrt-nl Of 11'1·
MICHAIL MAOltlD whose lltl 80· JllM I, 1"1 IS»otl dll1trlt1 lltle11on~ ltll llfttftl prevell·
dre11 •U 1St11 Mllll Clr<lt, l"f ret. Of pot Clltl'll Wegtt Ill the Wtttm1111..,., Clllforftl• '261:J will Ille PUBIJC NOTICE loc•llly In wlllcll this w0tk Is to lie
solo •I llUllll< -u .... '141 lolM PVIOtl'llell for •Kii '"" 0( type of Av•-· Wtflll'llMIM, Cllllor'l'tl• t.a ......... 811 -lo tlltCUI• t/11 ,.,,..
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont·
ingent c reditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
claim with the court or
present it to the personal
representative appointed
by the court within four
months from the date of
first Issuance of letters as
provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing claims w ill not ex·
plre prior to four months
from the date of the hear·
Ing noticed above.
Some or the Filipino
Americans lo whom the
Jesuit priest was as·
signed said omcials dis·
missed him in January
on racial grounds and
)Vithout a hearing.
Oft JUN IS, 1 .. 1'410.000'CIOcll e.m. NDTtta TOCONT•ACTO•S erect. 0.Krll!Clonofpr--1p. INVITING llDS. T"' 1 ... '91>1"1 Kl'leelule of .... 01.,,.
Olnlftt I.Miit -Cheirs, boollc-. Fountoln Velley Sc!lool OIUfkl weoea .,. on Ille •I the Otfk• of ttwi
cof ... ,... 9!ld ....... l!NdMetd, •I L~ i.-. P.4 .... ""· Olrec:tor "'1nl«I Ftclllllft ~.,.,.1.,., 1'111 II ...... II. '"I I Foun14111'1Vellep,C.ll!Wftl•n1tl Coest Coml'llUlllly Coll ... Ol1ttl<t 01:!~ -. '· OU "u .. I PllOJECT IOENTl,.CATIOH: Bid COPIH _,lie -.1 .. d on reci .. n. A
Delee! INS ltlll °' Ol Mia "" ...... SondOIHtlrllJ of Co•, MolOI•, .,.,, Ctpp ol ..... rMe• •hell .,. polled .. Aft w ...... ~rnlk~ fOr Ntwlend Scl'IOols tr. Job site.
"I couldn't allow him
lo continue lo work
here ," said the Most
Rev . Leo T . Maher ,
bishop of the diocese.
"He d~sn't serve the
people. He manipulates
them."
W.1tml111t0t Self s1 ... eee Bl 0 OEADLINE: June 10, ltll, 2tJO Th• loregol ... Kl'leclul• of -01-
Publllllld 0r-. C:O.lt Delly PllOt, p,;'PECIFICATIOHS OH FILIE: ;.:rise~~=~•,:~!."'.:.:,:~
June2,t, l"t U31Ml Mel11 1tne11c1 end Purcll•sln11 ellcl ovenl-work "'811 lie •t lust
A spokesman for lbe
340,000-member diocese
said that the priest
preached abrasively on
the subject of racism.
Fish aid
salvo rs
-----0.Ptrlmenl """ ·no-11 PUBLIC NOTICE ,LACE OF BID •ECEIPT II Shell .. ~°'"_..,,. CON· Purcl'lesl"O °""· Go¥er1111111 Boord fllACTOA to whom U.. c.ontrect i.
B.,,.., Pulllum •••r-. --•l'IY sutlconlre<lor AUISIMll Supt., Wider "'"'· lo PO l'IOI IMS ....... '"' BuslNU Servlc11 H id se>e<lllOCI tel" 10 ell *Orllrnel'I Publlthed Or-Cotti 0.lly Piiot, el'llployed by them 11'1 lhe .,.ecutlon of
"CTITIOUS IUllNaU NAMllTAT•MaNT The followl1111 petsons ero •oln11 busli..uea;
OUA .. OIAH AOVISOllY COUN·
CIL, 6tO N9wpot'I c.tltH" Otl.,., No. w .... Wf)Ot'I .. -. Clllf ... nl• •MtO A-V. OlbNn, t 11 .. CenNS, Nt111P0t1 lffch, Colllor11la f2MO
Mly2',J1a11t2, 1"1 2414-fl IM contrec:t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOWel'd I(, a..1-. SI Montec:llo "CTITIOUS IUSINISS Otlve, c ... one Ciel Mtt, Celll0tl'lle N.AMIE STAT•MIMT mu TM 1o11owlflll --•• 0011111 1>us1 This l>uslneu 11 conoue11c1 by • ""' es ge,,.rel _,..nlllp, EXPllESSIONS UNLIMITl!D, JOU AOC.rt V. Gll•son Tl'lutln •B101, C.1-tMeM, CA ftW.
Thi• s-1 w-. filed with "" Oebor•h Elelrl• Johnson, tots COlll'llY C*ll "'°'-County Ol'll\llo'f Tl'ourll'I. BlOI, Coste Mtw, CA'2U7.
17, ltll. This butlnus ts conoucltcl 11., • "Oii "' V. OllSOM, ISO. lll'lllteo per1,,.rsnlp.
"'N""-1 C..... Dr., Ne, W oetlOtan E JdlMoll
Hew,.n ..... ~ .... Thi.I ····-· -~ flied Wiii\ '"' f'tUtae Co..nly Cieri< of Or-c ..... ty on Mey
Publllhlcl Orengt Coest Delly PllOI, 15, 1tll
No blddtt mer wltlldrew his bid tor
• period ol Forty·Flve <•SI deys •It•• fl'le date Ml !Of' 1111 -nil'lf of bids, A IMY"""I bond el'ld a perfonl'lel'ICe
llOncl will lie required prlot' to slglllno
of IM ContrAC1 The pey,._1 bond"'"
performenc• bond -fl lie 11'1 u.. f0tm Mt t ... 111 In ttw Con1rec:1 Do<uments
0o ... m1no &oerd By Honnen E. W•hon
S.Cretery,
Boel'cl ol Trust"' Publlthld 0rMIQI Coest O•lly Pilot, Jun• 2. 9, 1911 2Sl4-fl
PUBUC NOTICE
JuM 2, t, 1•. U, 1"1 2~1 '"JU7 SUl'ElllOA CCW•T 0' CAU,O••llA p O R T S M O U T H , -Publfs-Orenge Coe.st D•llY PllOI, COUNTY 0' OllAHGI
England <AP> -'British PUBLIC NOTICE Mo "·26·J-2·'· 1911 22117 .. 1 1•=~•~""
scientists have recruited ---------PUBLIC NOTICE in,.. the merrleoe of Peun-t.
h A • 1 b HS.7"14 JANICE M. STOUT -lt~nt. c eap s1an a or to NOTtC•D,SALIOf' BEANAADG.STOUT
help ttlem Salvage a 16th A I A N D 0 NIE D "I! II s 0 NA L "CTITIOUS IUSINISI CASIE MUM••• D·llM1t
t h · th P•OPl•TY HAMI STATIMIHT SUMMOHSIMA•"IAOll cen ury wars lp, e Notl<• is ""9b't 01.,... '"'' uno.r The tooow;no pe,._. 110o1nt111111. NOTICIEI Y• ,..,.. --. ne M a r y Rose, in the a11c1 1111,_1 10 Section 1• o1 ttwi '"" •s· '""_, flKW., ...... , YM wltllloot
English Channel, Lon· ce111orn1e c1v11c-tn.pr--1y110. T c MORSE AESTOllAT10Hs. ,..., ....._ ~ -.. .,... ,.........
tel llelow i.41....0 to lie ----l>Y 3'011> W Bey SI., Cosle Meso, CA wltllla » .. '"° ...... W-llt'" don newspapers r e · A.COUTURE-••teddreuwastttn 111e-.
portd UUJ Br-l'lursl Street, Ho. ue, Tl'IOmes c. Morw. JtOll> w Bey St , AVISOI u... • '* HM••• ... Wtstml1111et, Clllfot'llle t:lll:J, wlll lie CotleMew,CA9»27. l!I .,._..,_.-WV< .... • ut.
The "workers'' -20 sold ot pu1111< •uc:'l•on ,, t7o eo1w T111s IMlllneu ts c-.icwo by on ,,.. • ... i.ci. • -•• u .. ._ Japanese carp COStiDg Ave11ue, Wutl'lllllSltr, Cellforl'lll dlvleluel ..... lril a» fltt. LH It .........
•1.50 each -w1' ll Uve 1'n '261J, on Jwne U, ltll •I 10: o'ctoc:ll TllOmts c. Morw cl• .-1199. • e.m. This '"""""' w" lllecl will\ the 1. To 1111 R~t tanks. with wooden Ob• 0.Krlptlon of property: County Cltl'1t of Or-County on Mey •· The llellllolltf' hes llled e pet).
j ts. ed f L.tOOer, sew, lltlmet, ctutci.s. one IS. ltll tloro concemll'IO yout 1N1rrl9111. You eC f'eeOVer rom the (1) boa ol mhcelle11uu1 llems. "unt mer lilt a written~ whlllfl JO
wreck and awaiting con· IL.oceteo In un11 •11•1 Pubu.-Or-ea.at o.11, PllOt, uys of IN Utt u..1 1111s summons is
servation, the press re· Detef tlba11oeyo1 Mey,"" Mey"· 2'. J""" 2. '· "'' ,,...1 ttr...aon "°" A.rt W. ,._.,,,....., fw II II you lell lo Ille • wrllllll
ports said. The carp eat WHtml~ 5e11 SUr-oe PUBIJC NOTICE t_ .. w11111n """ 11-. vout -.
organisms that might Pv1111-0r...,. eoes1 °"'' Pltot, leu11 "'•'.,. ..... .,..., '"" the ,..,,, Juno 2, t , 1911 2S»fl "WY enter • I........,. contell'lll'lll 11'1· breed in the water and -"CTmous 1u11M1ss Juncu.,. ... ot'-< .,...,. con<tr11"'9 all~ k th t ' be PUBLIC NOTICE NAMl ITAT•MENT dlvl,lon of l"-r1y, spouul 1_., ~c e Im rs. Tl'lt ta11ow1.,. "''°" 1s ooi1111 busl· child custody, clllld _.,, e1tomey's
"CTITIOUS IUSINISS
DEATH NOT C NAMI STATIMINT I ES ...!:!:,°'•-11'111 .,.._ 1. "°'"II 1111•1·
MOBI LE MAR I NE
-----------MAINTENANCE, 1"401 Pec:lll< Coen BUZAN Hl911wey, Suite >, Sunaet Buch,
Colllofnlt t07<12
BRANKO ~1 SUZAN, re· 0ou111• A ove. '"'" M1ar11 .. u,..,
s ldent of La1tuna Beach. Hul'lttnotonBMcl'l,C.lllorllletl!M>t,
born Sept 15, 19,19 in o1:1"c:!.':"'NM tuon0u<tec1b., on in.
Yugoslavia. He worked for 0oue 0y,
Mr Donnell Douglas for Thi• s1ei-t was 1111e1 with ""
man) vears Survived by his coul'ltY c1111o. 01 Or111oe '°""''Y on
( h · . April U, 1"1. at er Frank Suzan. two ..... 11,
brothers Boris and Bogdan PubtW.O 0r..,.. coe11 Dally Piiot.
Buza Services will be Mon· jl!Uy "· 2'. June 2. •. "" tllt .. t
PUBLIC NOTICE
MU H : ..... <Mll, -SUC/I otNr rtlltf ti ECONC>-CAR OF AHAHl!IM, U1 rn•r be ll"Mlecl l>Y the court, which W l(et•ll• Avenue, Aneholm, could rttllll 111 the 9or"nlsl'l"'*"I of
Cellloml• '2I02 we .. s, tellll'lll fll mono"' pr-rty, °' lloe.rt M. Luster, 2 Plkt, lrvlM, oth.r rttlel.
Cellfornl• ml4 c. If pw wls .. " -• -•ce"' This Minis> 1$ c-led by an In-111 lttlney ltl tllls ""1W, ,._ .-tf Olvld11tl. dit M ,......y • -.t .,_ wrft"8
!toe.rt M. Lus1er ""-"· H My, .... , M Ill• .. 11-.
This stet-I wn lllecl with 1111 Deted """" 27, 1t7' County cien. d 0ra11111 COumy on Mor L" A B•encl'I, ~~· c-,. .. .,, Gel Splooro,
Pullllthld 0r"'lll Cotsl Delly Piiot, Otputy
Moy 12, It, 2',J1111'1t2, ltll 2232 .. 1 ••UC• IE. O•UIAUOH
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTlJICIUS 8USIMIU ..... STATIMINT TIM lollowl"O 111rt1011 Is dolnt llUll·
"'""'
Atltl'Mr et L8w
Utllf"tWllMINA-, ..... ,., ee nm
11141.,....
l'lllllllNcl Oronot Coell Delly Piiot,
J-2, •, ... u. , .. , u.1 .. 1
PUBIJC NOTICE
day evening at 7 p.m at Ray
Pamlly Laguna Beach
\fortuary 494· 1535. TACO NACHO, lltl Herllot t1vo .• "CTITIOUS IUSINISS Cotle Meto, C.lllomle '2627
NAM• STATIEMIENT M•tll'lo Oonl•IH. ,.,. Wellec•.
HAllOI LAWl4-MT. OLIVE
Mortucll'f •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gosier Ave
Cosra Me sa
540-5554
"llCI t•OTHllS
HU. .. OADWAY
MOHUAU
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642 9150
T lie 1o11-1no wson Is cl01119 t>usl· Cotl • """" C•llfwnl• t»V ""' •s: Thi• buslneu Is conducted by •n In· (1) COMPU.QUOTI! (2) SPOAT·A· Olvlduel. THON, Ille» lflelmeno Clt<le, Fouft, MM1N Gon.rele1
141111 Yelle¥. Ctllfornle t110I '"1rt7 Ml tlem Ann Fer11um, 11106 PllllllsNcl Or.,_ eo.11 Delly Pu ... ~l::!:!'.!J~I•, Founleln V•ll•y, Mer 12, 1t, ». J-1. 1"1 21~1
Thi• llusllll• Is Conducted by '" ,,.. Olviduet, PUBLIC NOTICE
Mlrt•m A. l"erll\ltll Tll" stM-111 WM fllecl with tllt f'ICTITIOUS 8UllM•H County Clff1& Of OrMlll COi.iniy 011 Mey lfAMa IT•TIM•MT 29, t911. Tl'lt. followlno 1>traon1 •rt doll'l9
'16altl IMltlMH •: Pullll.,_. Or ..... Cotti Delly Pilot C U S T 0 M D II A P I! A Y
J-2,t, 16,U, t•t 24.St-fi T•l!ATMl!NlS, 201tl Ctown 11 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
LeM, HUlltlnt' ... &etch, C•llfo•nl• .,...
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINall NAMa ITATIMINT Tl!• followll'lll P•raons .,, doing buSlllHSH·
GALLl!AIA 11, l200 Bristol SlrMt,
Sult• .... C.lo Mete, Clllfoml• flll» Del'llel W. DoNllW, 1t0l Yechl Coll11l•, He~ Beech, CellfOrllle ., ...
Jemes Alder'°" tH West tut
Sir"'· SW... Ana, C.tllt°""• Wot
T_._ L. khrlblf,.., S.nck ... tit, cor-0.1 Mlat. c.111om1e t2MO
Jeck o. Jen1111, m• Pwt eer1111e Pl•ce, N•wport Buell, Celllotnl• ., ...
Wllllem J . l('""'ry· Jr .. 611 Aldtft Piece, Newport Buch, Celllorl'll•
'2MJ
P•trlCJI S.. Donlhlle, IU\'t Opel, BelllM I~ Cellforllle t1WO
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are Interested In the
estate, you may file a re·
Quest with the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac·
cou nt s and report s
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
Henry Friedman, At·
torney at Law, 11611 San
Vicente Blvd., Suite 120
Los Angeles, CA 90049;
tel: (213) 820-6701.
Published Orange Coasl
Daily Pilot, May 26, 27
June 2, 1981 2389·8
PUBIJC NOTICE
MOTICIE °' TRUSTl•'S IAt.• LOAN N0.11..W
T 0 Sl:AVICE COMPANY ea o.ilY ,_.,,...., Tnnt .. ~ IN lollowlnt
deKrlllld-.Oof INSI WILL SELi.AT PU Bl. IC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BIDDl!lt '°R CA$H (peyeble •I time of Nit Ill ltwl\ll ,,_y of the Ul'llled Sto••> ell r'91'11, lllle -lnlw"1 c...
v•r•O IO --.. .., by It ....... Nici D••• ol Ttusl 111 .... ptopttty
"'"'"."" *t(r~: TRUSTOA HERBERT M. SHACI(, • Slntl• 1n111. IEHl!FICIAAY PATTY LUMBER
CO., • Cetlfomle ,..._ .. loft.
Ae<Ofdld Ot-U, 1f17 es l11ur. No. I SAM In lloOll 1241) ..._ I 057 of Of•
II< l•I Records 11'1 '"' Ofll~• of '"' •ecoreltr of Or-c-ty, MIO deed of truJI cletctllles 1111 toll-Int pro-perty.
Lot ll of Trect 69•>, County of Or•neo, S&.tt• o1 Cotllonwo, n pet "'• recordtcl 111 ~ ta, P•oe• 14, 2S •l'ld
2', ol MIKeli-..t "'-• In IN off la of I"' C_.,ty At<order of Seki Counly EXCEPTING ltllrefnlm.tll oll, ~.
l'lydrou.--l'IC" -l'llh•r•ls In, on -"'*"Nici._,""' wltholll '"' rl9ht Of entry on u.. wneco"' Mid ••no.,. In -to IN IUbturfkO th9re1of to • clellV> of 500 1"'4 from "" wrfec• ,.,. "" ,..,,.... "' ••J>lortne tor, .sr111
l"f, "°'"" 1Nf'k.il1111 Cit .._1.,. Mid sullStencft, " Ml for9I 111 811 Instru-ment rec~ July 12. lt11 111 ...., 1021t, P ... 612 Offklel II-& AO. OltlESS tAOOt C.trnwt Ortw, II T ... e, Celllornle .
"Ill• street eddr.u °'common cit·
•illn•llon la s,_n •-· no wlf'ronty Is 9lve1'1 u lo II• C'OMPle-H Cit Ctr r.ctneu)."
Th• lleNfkltry undlr Hid Deed of Trull, by -.. ll<MCll ... CMl•11ll ll'I "" ollll11ellon1 secured thereby,
l'lere1o1 .... •-.<uttd -O.llWl'tf to u.. llllOl"'9ned • written O.Cletellon
of O.feull -Demend lor Sele, -wrltt'" l'IOCke of tlrMcll tnCI of ete< tlon le ctlllt IN llftdllnltllOd to sell NI
pr-rty IONlllly Mldotll ... tlone, '"" U..r•oltor the lll'IOer llflMO c.tuted MIO MCiee ef IWM<tl ond of tlect IOI! to lie t
corWd ftMtnlery S, ltll •• ll'tttr. No.
6'0l il'I llOI* INt peoe 1U4 of Hid Of• llclllA-. Sold ... , wtll oe "*"• but wllllolA 'own•nt • _,..,,,, ••pres• °' Im. pllecl, ......... lltlo, peellUIOll, Of' ....
CllmlM'811C ... to pey Vie re-1111119 prl
IAL n & IHGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLIFf CHAPIL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
V•ltrl• Jean O•ll•tller. 201tl c-.wn ....., WM, Hunlll'lfton 9"<h, f'ICT1'10US IMlllMllU c;.llfor"'• ..... ~ATeMtlln 0.Mll 0 •11et"9r, 201tJ Crowl'I TIM IOfliWriiO •ton It doill9 lllUtl· ltHI l811e, Hul'ltll'IOIOl'I hl<h,
''"'Min\ ol"' -_.,,... _, ...
0... IJf Tl'VI(, wllfl lnw.tt et 11'1 M note prOYio.., ..,,,_.., If lflf, ~
lllt 14frnw ol teld o.t flf TN11, ..... J-0 . °""8n, 100 S. Or...... clllr .. t end ·--IJf IN Trv .... erove A-, Po"'9M, Clllltr11I• W!41oflMINltlcrwttflly .... Oeecl
•ttos 11'ru11
-.. , C.llfOf'lll• ..... SOUTH COAST SEClltl'AltlAL., This llllSllltM It cOl'tCllKlecl tly en 11'1· 1001 Wflt ..-. U!>lt No .•• S.111e dMO\lel. . Al'lt, CellfWIN"'°7 Velerlt.J. GtlllllNr
Cr11thl• I.. lleclfa, tool WHI Tiii• .......,.., -llltd Will\ lllt ltnent, Ul'llt No. m , hilt• AN Ceultl'll CJtr11 "' 0r.,... c-y Oft
Tllll IMltll'leU II COl'lduCIN lly • Sold ..... wlllblNldWIWeclntlMy,
..,,.,., ~. JllM 14, 11111 et tl;OO •.m. •t IM 8ffk•
T,..,,.. I.. kMlller of T.D, tervlce CotllPl!ly, 11111! ti Tiiis 1ttt-t w" 111.0 with the Amerlc• T-, Slllte 1110, OM City
Countr Cltrtl of 0r8flQI COUftly Ol'I Moy llolllt¥trOW..t.0r.,...,c..11*'1111.
t, '" · Al I"' tllM l1f Ille klltlel pWtic.11411
c.11"'""'9tDl7 jl!Uy "· 11111. Tllla ...... I& Centllef .. .., WI
flVltllel.
1'161tll f/f Hiii ...Cke, .. ICIUI _, of lflt lfllUIM l'llblltillld Or-.,... Coetl 0.lly Piiot. 1111,11d ll•ltl'I<• ol the ... 11111la11
fl'Wll"*' 0r..,.. CMll Delly Pllol, Mii'( 12, It, B, JI.Ille 2, ttll 212141 W<.,,... lly IN ...... o.tc ........... ..
'"""" L. kockt Tllff ........ w• fllet wlltl c-ty (WI .. 0r .... eo.av.,, M8 PlJBLIC NOTICE
Juno 2, f, 14, u. t'll 2•~t -trusi endeetlmetlf ctltl•.,.,..., -
6
4
2
•
D
A
I
L
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p
I
L
0
T
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L
A
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I
F
I
E
D
PIHCI IAOTHH5
SMITHS' WOIT\l.t.aY
627 Main St
Huntonaton Beach
536·6539
PACIAC Y•W
~AlPMl
c.mttery Moriuart
Chapel-CremttOty
3500 Pec111c View Drive
Newp0r1 BHch
f>.44.2700 -c
JI0, 1"1. ,.
Pl*IJl!ld Or.,_ Coest Dlttly f'llO\I !-•.•. 16, :ia. "" U4M
PlJBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
edVWK• II •10,.GOlA, Tp ""9MllllO
Ille ~ lllt, Y'Oll mey cell ow .,, ......
081M: M/ay It, tt•1 •
T.D.llf'¥tee~, T,_.
ly;~T ..... ............. .......,
O..aty ...... o..r:::-:: ,. ... I .... 0r-.. ClMll ~., ,..,
JUN2,t,i..1t11 MJNt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
6
4
,2
Mlcoa..ar MOITUAlllS
l.aciun• OH.eh
494441$
laQun• Hills
768-0933
S.n Juan C.1>•ttr•no
495·1779 c PUBUC NOTICE
•
5
6
7
8
A.ttlwNM•meMa (er,_
lical 'u&'f"•• l.oot 6 touftd
P"non.atl• S..1•IC'lwt..• Tn•tl•
S£1YICES
"'wtf~tf'• Otrfftot)
IU llllt IOOl IOlt 11111 1• ... 1031 ·-... .... ... lllllO
ICU ,., , ..
IOlt 1m lllilll
11194 tc• 1• 1100
IJW !JOO •»> ....
llQO JIOO !1UD IM
llfilO -Ill»
23IJO ID -Wit
WO -"" --
£M~OYMENT &
PREPAHTION
~ IM,nN'U06 '""•nlf11• Hflpll•M ... 1116 t
MERCHANDISE ............. ~pplo·~ ..
AWbOll =~t:J',; M1t•"1ll C1muu • Eqwpm•nt c. .. ~· "'"'."" tl.l'M .... G..r•at \.a.It -HouM'ftoW f;ooct,
Jr.t4f')' l.nf'MW\
NKft•Mr)' Mliottll•ftlt(liw;• MlMcUaneou.1 "•Med M~•I lntlnttMnO
Off Kt f'"Ufft 6 .. ;4wip ..... C!'::~~~~~ Sllort••• <o-. Slote. Ru\avnnt au ~·r_..o.H1f"; Slttff
...... Illa
ll(JJ
.XO "°" IOU -----~ ---IOU -..,,.
"'11 -... .., -.... -l{All --.,,. -BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMEJH
'°" ---lllOO -9010 --
"" ... .. ,. ... ...
"'° ""' ,.. -Miu tiAI ----IOlll --
-
'''" -•11 ••l •11 --., = w;ia .~--= llfl ---•1 . ---"" .,.
. USITHI
DAILY PILOT
"PAIT
llSULT9'
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Reau.lt
Service Call
642·1671
.... 111
Publisher'• MoHce:
All real estate ud·
vert 1se d In thi s
newspaper is subJect to
the Federal Fair llous ·
Ina Act of 1008 which
mukes 1t 1llC'&t1I to ad
vc:rtlse "11ny tH·eft'ren<:e,
!lmltKlio n . o r d1a
c rimlnatton b1111t>d o n
race, color, r e l1 g1on ,
11ex, or national l)rigin,
or un intention to make
any such p r tdert:n ce,
ltm1tation , 0 1 dl11 ·
crimmullon "
This ne wspaµt•r will not
knowtngly &l·reµt 11ny
advertising Co1 real
estate whic h is an viola
lion of the law
ERRORS: .Advertisera
~check their adt
dolly and report er-
rors IMtMdlat.ly. The
DAILY PILOT auumes
lloblllty for • ....._ fJrst
Incorrect Insertion
only.
Houses for Sat. •••••••••••••••••••••••
CHMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUNDECK HAS
CHANNEL VIEW
Only S209.900' ChJrm m~
Newport BeaC'h 4 Bilrm,
features wood bur n1n~
(treplate Hu~e O\t'r
:.1zed lot wrth rea1 ('U\
ered patio 0\\ nt'r 1s
motivated and willing lo
help finance! U u1>t lis tecJ
Call now. 673·8550
THE REAL ESTATE RS
DECOR.ATOR
CONDOS 119,900
Windtng greenbelts lt>ad
to bright Sinl(ll• !>tory
t•ondo Exqu1:.1tel} di.'
<•orat e d with t•ui.tom
wallpal)t'r and tabint'lr}
thruoul Fo1 mJI cJ1n mg
room too' O"m't will
t•ooµerate "1th I 1n,rnl'
inf( Won 'l la:.t Jl th1:.
pnte. so r<ill no\li
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990 ---
DECORATOR
NEEDED
IN <.:AMEO S HOHES'
Bnng paint. r.i1 pt't, and
ideas ror lh11> hiilr a
m11l1on dollar r1xer It s
the lowest price lee 1>1m
pie on thf' market by
$125.000. Be clt>ve1. then
enjoy your profits!
Great assumable li.l TD.
Ho .... 1 for Sole ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gttteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX
POTENTIAL
<:osta Mesa. remodeled
4 Bdrm 2 bath l>orm· on
G,000 sq ft. R 2 lot !-;.is}
converswn to duplex
Cvpper plumbed !
F l r eµloce! Larg ..
storaae s h ed. Onl)'
1112,0001 644.7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
FIN.AMC ING OK
Sharp 6 year old Corona
del Mar duµlex
Spacious .ind woodsy
Super loratwn $320.000
only $70,000do-.n
A 01\ '"ion ol
11.rrbor lme ... tm .. nt Co
NEW CONDOS
13' .,•, 50', SOI.IJ
N 1-:W 16!'>0 S{l VT
2&3Bd1m t'ONUOS
l't>m .. nt dr1~e . dbl
gctrJgt· \\ opcnt'l'S.
mkro:., l1 J h <·om :. Jlf
cond1lwnin1¢. wJlk m:..
pool & Jat•u111 's •,. hlork
to all shopp1111( & th .. ater
"·Next to p1.11 k
WILSOMP.ARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380 W Wilson, t' ~t
01~n LO 5
t>:H 5055
l'Rfo;ATI\ 1-: 1-1~.\:'\
CING 131 1'. 1.t•a,,., up.
Lion po:.s1l)ll1ly \'ery
finest new CON DO buy
ln llarbor urea 2 & 3
l:WH M 3 liA 1650 sq fl
lncompJr;iblc amt'nlllt's
milreJ \\eha\l'D\\1Wr
Investors \\ho -.111 lea1>e
'41Lh option lo pun-hJi.e
lo \\ell qu.ihlwc..I Buyers
Don't m1i.s tham·t-for
I u t u r c d 1 " c· o u n t
uwners h1p.
WILSOMPARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380 W \\'11'.on. (' \I
Oµen 10 5
631 5055
BUY THE BEACH
Right on the tanal m
Newparl Shores A huge
3 Bdrm 3 Ba family
hume 111 1mmuculate
cond1l1un t\ supl>r loc.i
Lion onl~ sll'p:. to the
beach <\ ll1 at· ti\ t' u" nt·r
fananl'tnl( J\ a1lable A
s uper bu} at SU0,000
Balboa Island Rlty
673-8700
Call today before •l's ----------
sold. 673·8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
DUPLEX
3 bdrm. 2 bath eaeh unit.
Fireplace. buJlt ms Ex
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay $285.000
642.2253 eves
associated
aqo..:ERS· REAL TORS
Jll}', W Botb, o h ' t Jb6 I
NEWPORT
BARGAIN
Picturesque baC'k bay 3
Bdrm 2 bath. prrdc or
ownership home with 11
rountry feeling' Luriie
kitehen, very private
yard. Bargain µriced al
$168,500 Call to see'
646 7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCEAMFROHT
2 Bdrms. 2 ba. unrurn.
New S8SO yrly
B.AYFRONT
3 Bdrm. 1 ba. unfurn.
Mint rond. S8SO yrly
CHANNEL FRONT
3 Bdrm. 2 ba, unfi.irn.
S750yrly
associated
BROKER'> RE Al TORS
lQJ" 'If 8 otb (•0 b 'l ib6 1
SUNSET
WATCHING
IS AFFORD\Bl.£ 1n
Cameo H1iihlilnds' ~ltn1
mansion 15 µrir('rl lo sell
at $349.000 1.Jrl(e us
sum able 1st. plus o-. ner
will carry $100,000 2nd
TD. Spectac ular ocean
views from livin~. d in·
ing and m11ster bdrm
Huge lol with beautiful
grounds Don't hesitate,
call 673·8550
THE REAL ESTATE RS
CLASSIC llEGANCE I* WATER
••r• Ashley .p.op•rs & ocunta pl•1
••lflctnt ........ &. ••'9L Two story wfth prtv• _..,. wh, o tot.I ...-,
notphen I• ..... 4 b•d. ..... ~
f .............. .._. .. , .. of wood IMittd ...... s.::.· tor.al ..,.. .... , ...
potto + ~ a SOft. bo41t. $1,400,000 he. Ul-1400. o....,. aop ••Mlt ,,.1ce .. ..,,,. ...... ,
LIDO ISLE (SUBMIT LEASE/OPT)
lt:ftltt _, churM J •tor; • 41' let. New
,.., ...... ~ ........ 4 .......
""" 2 frpk1, 1-.y ,..... $471,000. u 1·1400.
EASTBLUFF VIEW HOME
L•• 11.-wf Wa1td1i'M ~ ..... ,. .... ..,.,
•cor ••::•· Wieti ' ...... CNWW ....... .. • ......... J ~ ...,
r••• -4 fonael 4111a.9 ,.... Mee. SJ4t,OOG.
WATERFRONT HOMES, ~c
MAL l!ST A TE ~. ltt111tl PfotNrtv M.1~"'1
HM W Co.ti Hwy 315 MM,..,. ,.,.,. ,,...,.,., htch 8elbol lellnd
Ul-1411 '7MM
·'
I •
Homn For S. ..._...hr S. ..._..,... 54* Home• Fors. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2. 1981 Cf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~••er• 1002 awr• IOOJ .... ,.. 1002 ••••• 1002 .._..,For S. HMMs Fer S. ......_ ,_ s. .._..,For S. Ho.Mt fiOr 5di ···•·•···••••········•· ..........•....••..•••• ······················· ••·······•······••····· ·•••············•••···· ••............••••..... ··········-············ ............................................... .. fi1•r• I 002 •••r• I 002 del Mor I 022 '"'" I 044 ,,....,. I 044' LINDA ISLI r
Wide chunnel view from spectacular
architectural designed 4 bdrm, s bath,
oool home . Slip for 2 large boats.
Sl,495,000. Summer occupancy.
• LIDO ISLE HOMES fo'ea~u,red on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional sp acious, custom 3 bdr m, 3
bath hQme . newlv decorated. Priced to sen <)jllckly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly rem~deled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus Jg~ ~ecreat1on room & 2 patios. Beam ce1 h~JtS . Gre at for ente r taining $420,000. Best price for the money. ·
•
\'-I . s I I· 'r ~
TAYLOR CO.
Hl-:Al.TOHs ·.i11tt' Ut·H;
G~GIN4 COLONIAL MANSION
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SPANISH OH LIDO ISLI
Breakfast on t his patio is like being on
vacation everyday. 5 bedrooms, extra
large lot, near tennis courts and
clubhouse. A drea m hous e at $650,000,
fee.
2·3 IDIM UNITS
Only 7 yurs old with
ocean view, spa, 4 """
1araae. open beam cell
in11 Built by Warm ·
ln (ton Gre at buy .al
1375.000. o..,.ner wants
quick ~scrow. <.:u 11 J Im
Davis, 76().1743
I R&'Mfl}(
f(I-'\I t11f(<.,
$ZOOK ot I 21/2o/o
FINANCING
Dalebouf
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COMI WITH US ••. TO WOODIRIDGE.
GREAT FAMILY HOM E .. FfVE BEDROOMS,
F O RMAL D I N I NG A ND FA MI LY
ROOMS .. NEAR WOODBRIDGE LAKE ANO
CLU BHOUSE .. NUM E R OUS A M!Nl1'1ES AND UPGRADES .$2~.ooo .
•
PEN•NSULA POINT IEACHFRONT
P a n oramic bay & ocean view a t
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 b a th custom home. 3700 sq. ft.
featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
OH llG CANYON GOLF COUISI
A creation of e legance & top quality
workma nship b y Newport s finest
builder and s ituated on the choice
vie w lot of Big Canyon Country Club.
Priva t e court yard e ntrance,
breathtakingcharm in the approach
to the stately 2·story Colonial columns
ac centing tt1 e in viting d oorway.
I mport e d white m arble foye r ,
impressive circula r stairway, central
air -con d .. i mp or t e d c r ys tal
c ha ndeliers & sconces, 3 wet bars &
6\12 baths. Beaut. master suite plus 4
additional bedrms with private baths,
banquet size dining rm. richly pane led
family rm + p aneled billiard rm,
r e frigerated wine rm. By appt.
$2,150.QOO.
CDMCOTIAGE 1617 WISTCUff DR, M.I . 6ll·7300
PLUSINCOME ~ •
or 3 Br 2 ba home with
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm , d e n , s pacious P lan 8 ,
immaculate. Low priced at $215,000. •
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J.11 8"Y''d" (),,.,, N !l () ,., 61(,1
REALTORS
675-SS 11
ASSUMA.ILE LOAN: Lo~ CdM dllplex
with good f'anancittcJ. Each unit l ldrm 2 la.
family rm + utllity room. CloH to
•••rythinc). A.skin9 $429,500. .
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
25 15 E. Coast Hwy., Corona ct.I M ..
675-5511
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS
211 I San Joaquin Hiiis Rood
NEWPORT CENTER, N.I . 644-49 I 0
owe 1st
4 Bdrm 2 Ba located in
Mesn de! Mar near
Schools and s hopping.
OWC 1st T.D. 3•·~ below
current interest rates
Full price $132,900
MORTHGATE
C M . Nort h , near
Fa11·v1ew and Paularino.
Clean. co mrort;1ble, con-
ven 1e n l See lo ap·
prec111te this 4 Bdrm
fumily hom e m move·in
condition. $127,000.
642-5200
j PETE J BARRETT
··· REALTY
I 8 o I a t e d m a s t e r Costa Met0 I 024 Coda Mesa I 024
bdrm/parent retreat or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• in-law quarters + 2 b1 REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Eut Cout Hjtfiway, CoroM del Nu
WE HNE 47 OF THE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN cottage Any way you
Jescribe 1t • 1t 's charm·
EXQUISITE l'UJ>IOll'I interior HKJO ,,q
MESA VERDI fl. 3 br, 2 ba,skylite~. 1,11
CITY LIGHTS
BARGAIN
Popular hidden 2 story.
C-0vered entry, pri vale
living . Huge fa m ily
room . fireplace, country
kitchen. Formal dining
room, 4 Bdrms 3 baths,
full deck in rear or h.ome
for a beautiful view.
Man y ext ras . Only
$225,000. Call 546·2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
SECLUDED
EA.STSIOE
Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm
plus pool Waterfall and
bonus room here too! 4
kmg sized bdrms. huge
country kitchen. Financ-
mg, up to date and
beautifully decor-a ted
Priced at $280,000 with GREAT TERMS very SJ)ttial financing
Charming Easts Ide CA.LL FOR DETAILS home with vaulted wood
EXECUTIVE HOME IO!. L~t' JS~UITI SI llS.500 •
Lota of oak L11 re ~ 645 4567
miHter & kitche n Solar OWNER W /FINANCE :
heating Pool & J.ic As 3 Bil 2•, ba l \\nh~··
su.m able loan 4 Bd rm w lge l'dt lo. iJhl ~.ir
with all the ex tra~ pool $I l 5.ooo J<utlt .
Broker 957-lS68 I.auric, Bkr 0.a4; 1;JH0
beam ceilln1s and large ~4·7211 bri c k f ire pl a c e . 3
Bdr ms, 2 Ba, corner lot, •
covered patio a nd much I ---------1 more. O wn e r w i 11 ~~~~~~~~ OWNER FINANCED EASTSIDE
Cinanc~ at a low interest DESIRE EXCH ... uGE Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath rate with 20'h down Full 5 A" h o m e , b e a u t i f u I
pnce $149,500 T o P . ~ f SPY g I a .s s · wallpapers thruout. Cul
rflagn1f1cent ocean view. de sac street. Owner will
Pndeor owner-.h111. ;j Bl.·
2 lla, f pll'. bl 1n ~
\\'o&dland Sl'hool <lhi
i:ur. w1o penl'r Sl4!'.1 •• ltl0
AKI. 646 4380
TR\DI TIC )\.,\1.
~I ,\I TY
631-7370
Nantuc ket m dl. 5 Br , 3 carry AITD for 7 year.s
Ba P l'efl!r traue for at 13.5'"~ interest. For an ALL OFFE HS II 1·:1\ n D
smaller on Spygla.ss appointme nt to see , call Shurp 2 bedroom rnndu ~~~i A~t. 644·5!122 540·1151 Decora te d wl th r i1· h
ON GOL F COURSE
SANTA ANA CO CLUB
BEAUT IFUL3 BDR M.
Owner 540 5010
Sale. option or trade . Best
buy 1n Spyg la ss.
Outs tanding 3 Br 2 Ba +
-~ » HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
~eµ. m law qtrs Pool. ~~~~~~--· s pa, mtn vu. l\ssumable -
loan. crea tive rmancmg 2 Br condo 1Mont1l'1tllnl
by Owner. 75!1-0069 S91,500. Webb Rily
JASMINE CREEK 493-0761
p a n e I i 11 J.\ .1 n d
wallp11pcl's 1.01·ai.·cl
c lost· t u s h11ps and
fre ew ays S~t>.::.uu
T 1\RB E l.I.
HEALTORS !Ji!I 2:1!1U
H..ti11gton l.ach I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PRIME AREA ing IS great Large as --------• 3 Bdrm. 2', ba PLAN 6
\'1ew property $450,000. .... EWPORT HGHTS ;;;;;;;;;ii s um able 1s t TD and 631 2242 " I o wner wi ll he lp wi t h • % ~ De l ux e t o wnho u se o · JI ~ rest. on t watt Ca />, ~,..
SSOOODOWH a Bdrm condo $934 m o
moves you 1n No qual
Prine only Agt 545 1061
3br. 2ba. f1 pie, 12 13'.
financing
B E L 0 W \' ,\ L L I·. duplex. 3 bdrm fam ily, 631.6990 .., vuv
212 b a lh each un i t REAL ESTATE 644·6397 By Owner Two 2 Rd1m
SI 16,000
Let'& Deal 12131 530 5l5!1
decks & patio~ Park 75 .. 1111 EASTBLUFF, just listed. Assumable ll'i lst TI> OCEAN \'I E\\
ASSUME LARGE
9%LOAN
f'rplcs. a ll bu11l ins. ...,. ·-@ ------houses oo l lot SIJ0.000
like )a n d sca p 1n g Be rirsttoseeth1s JBR OWC2nd 640·7•64 Thou Shalt Not SELLER WILL HE LP G RO p .• ba Lusk home. On Steal FfNANCE $295,000' A EN HOME SEA COVE fee land . Premium ca· SI 0.000 DOWH
Eastside CM $129,500 t>y
owner 3br R ·2 644 608!-I
SAl'RIFll't-:
11, IJlk~ to IJch. ~IOI IOU ...
\ 11.'W, n t'W 2)00 ,,q II
homl>, all bltns. Jat·ur11
A !ilea I a I $250 Ill}() \ ..
~umable hi.in Must ~ell
by 6 1 IH 960 3211 or
<2131 592-2845
on this excellent \'atue ~
Bdrms, large pool, ga1>
f1rep1t. new curpeti. On
ly $95,500. C<.111 97!1 5370
(loday
liul there's a little devil lalboa lay Prop. IEAUTY PROPERTIES nyon location . $315,000.
in all of us Call for in· R•offors S pacious s ur rounded 71~·631 ·6990 O W C, De,in & <.:o .
format ion on our owner 675 7060 by garde ns . Lovely • 1---------642-6368 financed units. For ex·r--·*--·--·*--1 private 1•o rncr lot 3 ---------EXECUTIVIHOME ----E/Side CM duplex 2 <'Ute
am PI e. Prid e o r -------Bdrm, 3 bath. s ing le BEAUTIFULLY Mesa Verd e West. 4 Cotta Meta I 024 l B R . SI 0 \I. 5 o Cl
owne r ship H ntg Bch 2 UNITS rumily h o m e . Large REFURllSHEO Bdrm & p ool . X ln• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qwnr/agl. 640 78 1•1,
ALLSTATE
dplx , It ·s a ste al at room b, ror mul dming 4 bdrm home in good > 963 7600
$147,500. $94,900 and family room. Buy location with a com financing. s2os.ooo. O /C . $9,000 DOWM !!!
T 0 U c....H STONE Super invest ment! T wo s ubject to existing 9'i'r pletel y remodeled 675-1771 wnerw arry MESA DELMAR
R EALT Y 2 Bdrm units, 011~ wit h loan. Branu new on the kitchen, new pa int, new htTD
Rt>aut. Jbclrm. 2ba fam1
ly home. c lo!W tCJ l'\l'l'
yth1ng. llurry, won't last
long! Ag l n.u;.;,:.i; 1
631 2336
REALTORS --~086_7 ___ fireplace ! Current m· market o rre r ed at car pets a nd d ra pes. MESA VERDE
come -$740mo. Financ $239,000 Owner financ ing ava ila· POOL HOME
If you've waited tor-J
dream come true. tht!. 1s
it ! A touch of mal(ll' ha:.
ma d e this Lhe m ost RCTaylorCo
6 40-990 0
VILLAGE WALK CONDO
IHVESTOR'S DBJGHT
High assumable loan. This 3 B.R.
112 Bath condo highly upgraded
in a great area. Call for details.
$99,900.
CE
810181 BLlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
OUTSTAHOIMG IAYFaONT HOME
Lovely Custo m-Built Home On
P rom ontory Bay . Living Room ,
Formal Dining Room. Den /Library.
Spa c i ou s Ma s t e r B e dro o m
Overlookmg Bay Has Fireplace &
Luxuriously Appointed Bath. Three
Other Bedrooms & Maid 's Room &
Bath. Pier & Slip For Large Yacht.
$1,850.000.
' EXPANOEO ''E" PLAN
Lovely Turf Court yard Entrance.
End Unit. Three Bedrooms Plus
Large Family Room. Eating Area
In Kitchen . Mas te r Suite With
Extra Closets. Three Patios For
I ndoor -Outdoor Living . Storage
Galore. Great Financing. Large
Ass umable Lo an . N e w Pric e ,
$249 .500. A "J oy Or Newport" Lis ting.
·--..............
L AMNUA I I' I* I I I
~-M_R_t;...,,...E_B.--11 J' I r I t .
......... •_A....,R_N_l---il J I' I' I I .!
My brother I• •n advance
men for a burotar alarm oom-,.n,,. No, h•'• noc a H teem.n, ________ ,,.., ,,,. _
...... ..__._..-....._.~1. ,.,..... .... ~ .. .-cl
~f"""9 lft lfle ........ -.................... __ ....... _,,,..., .... "-.... ...., ......
ing!Oneyearhomepro· 759·1616 ble. $132,500. Call now Just in time for sum.
mer! This charm ing 4
Bdrm home features
huge fa mily room with
bar , s k y lights and
slamed glass windows
overlooking beautiful
solar heated pool a nd
spa . And, for the avid
photogra pher , a com.
plete dark room with
custom cabmets , sink.
separate water heater,
light sealed and veolilat·
tectio n plan i n c ld . ---------979-5370. bea uli Cu I home w no 1-·w-A•H-T•A-H•O-M•E•?-
equal in this area Ex
THE REAL ESTATERS
~gi.;}tthis won't last! EM~:::f.M? A LLSTA 'J;E
It would be o ur pleasure REAL TORS Caplstr-a..o leach I 011
a m ine 3 Bdrm 2 Ba liut don't think you C••n
beauty for Its flawle~s. afford ll Golden \\'"'"1
innovative design a nd Realtors has <l <'Sl!lnt'<l a
appearance Al $131,900 Program thut hus a l
and VA terms 1l won't lowed many peopl~ Lo
last. 751·3191 enjoy home o" lllr!-1111µ
to s how you this 4 br. ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa \'e rde beauty.
THIHKING
TOWHHOME?
CaJI the specialists at
the condominium 1n
formation center
l'ouchstone Realty
963·0867
UMIVERSITY
PARK
3 Bd rm + bonus room,
highly upgraded with
s k ylight. greenbe lt
loca tion . $16.5,000.
QJ
New crpt 1s high lighted
by lvly tile nooring in
s pacious F R . D R &
kitchen areas 545.9491
~Walker I lae
REAL ESTAT E
LIDO ISLE
WILL TRADE
S uper s harp 3 Hd r m
w spa. completely re
modeled und rec1e corat
eu Will tra d e fo r
s ma lle r home, income
property or rlxer·upper
01· sell ror 15', down.
Asking $525,000
AESIOENTIA. Rf Al cs IAll Sll~Vtcrs
SOUTH IA YFROHT DUPLEX
A p e rfec t comb i nation o f
prestigious li ving & rental write-off.
Very spacious 2 BR. + den owner's
unit with breathtaking views of
harbor & pavillion. Roof top sun
deck. Entertainers patio. Exclusive
listing at $1,300,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
THEILUffS
Finest or igina l a rea.
Superb greenbelt settmg
offe r ing "M a ~s 1 ve "
view. Spacious 3 bdrm
e nd unit, tota lly r e ·
decorated townhome a t
$265,000. Agt, 640-5560.
SUMMER SPECIAL
Would you enjoy relax·
ing in the spa after R
hard day? Th is s uper
clean home a rfords you
that option. Xlra lge
mstr bd r m . 545-94!11.
~Walallae
REAL ESTATE
Beaul 180 degree sweep
mg ocean vu. added 2nd
level & enJOY rare 36-0
de~ \'leW 3 BR 2 Ba,
pnvacy. walk lo beach
$209 ,000 O wnr
l ·677. 6.533
GJo;t::AT STARTER JN
T HE PALISA DES
This 3 Bedroom home on
a large lot would m ake
an e xcellent invest ment
for a first time buyer.
$118,000 493·8812
C::. <1f-I f ( 1 -t-' PH< )I>( f~ 11( C,
that ne\er thou~ht th<'}
could C;ill now for mun
detail~
Gold~n W.st Rltr.
<7 l4 I 848 ·llSKtl
ed. Beautiful wallpapers S9000 will buy large ram1 an~ levelo!'S thruoul: A ly home in great area P1"'JL'IC PAR \l>ISL' unique k itc h e n With . ''-r r
cedar skylight a nd re· Assume 583.000 OWl dtf No qualify Js~umahlc
cessed lig hting. This ference. 4 Br, 13• Ba, fi xed loan. Ownl'1 will
custom lied home is a Cam rm, frplc. shake curry 2nd 3Hr. :!' i Ba
must to see. Offered at roof. P nn unly SIOJ.000 I', blk~ to bd1, nl'" '.!! oo
$199,900 For an appoint-Devin & <.:o 642·6368 sq ft hnml' w \ ll'" \II
mentlosee,call 540-ll51 Condo fol s ale 1125,000 . o f (e r~ l•cJn •.icll•r l·d
, . ! :~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
2Br, 2Ba Gd fin<IO l'lllJ.: !ltiO ~211 ur <2 131 5!-12 2815
a\•a1I. 902 Hollowbrook, 2 BR 2 Ba. adull .p!lol.
CM 556·5388. jac, sec. Walk to be ach
$124,900 Ownr 6·11 IW.l4
$1,175 '"ine 1044 WOULD YOU
IELIEVE
7°/o
You read it right Seller
1s extremely motivated
New int/ext paint Make
pymts on exist VA loan.
$245 P .l.T.1 545-9491.
. $35,000 ON Lingo Easts1de 3 Bdrm 2 bath,
•.i&••n large yard. Spa. Owner
wi ll help finance 10',
pr m o. moves you into ••••• •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •
this 3 Bd 2 Ba home neur **BEST BUY So. Coas t Plaza Owne r
c a rr ies Ownr A.l(l
63H 266 or 546·ti70G
C ... _. IOl" assu mable. $127,900. .. ~~~~-=~!'!" ....... ~ 645-9161 R&'Mfl}(
in <.:ollel(e Park J lliJt111 + den. S} racu!>l' md l ·
l.q~ ram1h · k1tl'hen,
Slt'PS to cnm m fJOUI .111d purk Prict•d lo ..,,.IJ ..it
lh o u ~u n ds unclt·1
market :\1 ake u .... in of
ler
~ ..... a.
REAL ESTATE
Spectacular Lake Ar·
ruwhead No Shore 88'
lakefront Posh 4Br 3ba, OPEN HOUSE I\~ \I Tl tf{<.,
ram rm $975,000 with $85,000 DOWN
ms.ooodn. CAN IUY THIS
REAL TY /
/? CJ/ ~ EXQ UIS ITE M E SA ~ti/ Y #tlt:P ~~ ---------VE R"D E E xec u t 1 v c REAL ESTATE 644·6397 37 ASSUM LOAM home Lots of o ak Lar~e e-RANCH
Hf •'\L TY
r,~, 1 2000
R.E. INVESTOR
Always wanted to inveat
In Real Estate but 4on 't
th ink you c a n 1 Let
Golden West Realto rs
show you how to invest
with little cash & no "T e-COM DUPLEX
nant Problems". Ca ll Excellent Financing
now for more details. Fine location P ride of
No qua lifying , s m a ll ma s t er s uit e an d -
down pa yments, low in· kitchen. So lar heating Orange Tree Condo. 1•1 •• n
terest rates, no loan Pool & jac. Assumable 5, 2 br 1 ba S103,500 l'all
polnts ( 2. 3 & 4BDR M loan. 4 Bdrm with all the 552 7552 after 7pm
Houses & Townhomes. extras. Broker 957·1568 --Golden W.st Rltr. owne rship No vacan-
(714) 848·8588 cles. 644-4026 or 760-0140, All In good a reas of llave somelhin.I( to st•ll?
Orange C-Ounty. l"ln• I 044 Classified ad!! do ii well '~~~~~~~' A&t. -Golden Weit Rltr ••••• •••••••••••••••••• CdM INVESTMENT ( 71( 848-8588 2TRIPLEXES
Right in the heart of the
P e nins u la. Side by
e a ch -buy both for
$530,000 or Ju.st one for
half. Try $50,000 down &
seller will carry.
Duplex with great In-~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;; come. Aakina S290,000. •
$4S.OOO down and financ-
ing a\ 18"k. Won't last.
Call J im Davis, 76().1743
JACOBS REAL TY
615-6670
MOLE
C G P 0 G R A T G I E C R E P I C 0 E
S I A B 0 C R Y L A A T R 0 Y H A J H
E A C Y R E T N H H N T R A P A P Y P
A I V A 0 I U W C R A T T R C E T I I
N C T 0 V P 8 0 0 M R V E P 0 k l A V
P E T A H E E A N S A 0 T l Y P T C "
R A C 0 P G l N E L V S " P A U P k C
C E P T 0 R N K L H t 0 M £ N A E A E
E R Y E S 0 P E N I' GT H S A V R R Y T R I R G Y S R T E 0 E I T R A H W R A H R W T l A A W L L R M G N L C 0
C C U J l £ U N V 0 T R R E X L N R
T 8 V U 0 Y M R I M P W 0 £ E Y V l
U R C k I C A R E C U N N l 0 E l U
P R L E 0 I 0 k r 0 0 t I A R L 0 D W
MESA VERDE
EHTlttTAIHERS'
DB.IGHT
Lovely <& Bdrm 3 bath
home. Beautiful park·
like yard with pool an<f
spa for your summer en·
tertainln1. Lar1e family
room, Mexican tile en·
t.ry, very ll1ht and a iry.
Aakln g $273,500. For
more detai11, c all
$40-llSl
~. HERITAGE
FH All ORS
6 PUX/IASTSIOI
1•.toH21,ooo With 1152,000 In aasuma·
bit loen• ran1ln1 from •"-~ to llC-.Ch '27,450
IJ"OU ln~ome annua lly Well kept •Intl• story
U'9ll• wlth 4 1•ra1ea
PLUS off·•trttt parllln1 Oll tO'dOO' lot.
644-721 I
. -~ WOOOllUD'il 'LUS!
2BR home ideal for entertaining or
jus t rel axi n g . Located in
Woodbridge Estates & complete
w/a beautiful spa in large back
yard for your enjoyment . Appt.
only. $185,000. Natalie Benjamin
752·1414. (K68)
COVIN&TOH
ACIOSS lllOM THI LAICI
Immac ulate 2 BR hom e located
rig ht acr oss f ro m the lake,
overlo9king greenbe lt. Hig hly
upar aded. Parquet wood e ntry,
plush carpeting and quality dra~.
Light and itiry. Central Air. Thia la
the home for ttie most d iscerning
buyers. $179,900. o u n g Pasik
M1·8700. <K89>
..
'
OtlM • .., ~ u fwwtl t.c1 He.ff u.tw-.d "-"• u...w~ •""'"" FwaJ.Md OraOQ!Co1st 0A1lY Pll!OTffueaday, June 2, 1981 ••••• ~................. ••••••••~•••••~••••••• ••••••••••••• .... •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... . ...._~---·~ ......_. _ _......._ .. _._ "--•~ a.:..-•...a... u........-sPerS. °"C•";J. JJ02 ....,l:tgfMa.ecta 3240 MewportlHch lZ6t wporileadt 176'
r....-. ~ ... ........ r'Wll"'" ,._. .._... r"WI"" __. .,._.. IA 11 oa •• •• • •• • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• • •• ••• ••• • ••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••••••• ••••• •• •• • "' • ,.. h Vlll u .. 8 r I oi..a THI w ·n• FRO ..... T
'... ·-· h 10•1 .... -w-rtleoch 1069 .... _... ___ .. 106t······················• ... acArtur 111e.1uat·••••r ... •rpc, ... A c~· ..... " " 1044 __,...e 4HIC "" ~ r-... ew,.....__... Jot a F tend Ir buv ed enirance l DR, bUt fence, 11ra1e. NI) G~at view or boat•" liiA" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• n r I 0 I. ten l s•ss ,,eta 1t8ll eush•rd St b 8 k ' I I I Jo'\.lrnlJhed 3 Br. 2 B•
C'?uapnleaxl lln hoNu·~·w Prroo rmt :..S ~-n '. . 1725./mo + $T25 S. D. r:tm ~vcauat1~· u::~l with ofllct', 2 car iaraac THltOUMG THI s.tAkU • 642 7743• r 9 t... 0 1 .,00~ w1 th auto o P• o er • TOWHHOMl7 W ••the red ~ "d•,. Beach 1~ sq rt each l"-d 3106 ~~ mon ,... n Y • Wuher " Dryer lncld
Calt the speclatlata at sJuike., th•t 15 tom 1·38r SB• I 38r 2Bu •••••••••••••••• .. •• .. • sbr, 2ba. fenced. nlc~ TH~ K ~Al l''STAT~HS Av 11 now . Weekly
th• condominium in· d SJ&ned 3 bdrm, f..am n B. ~ Corner ll)cat1on 8 YC:lllrl Charmin& lslund Yam. ''ond, cite 1chool1/11hp1. 673 855o • TSl, MGMT 1142·1603
formilioncenter rm, 2 baths . .:ittfntlve I o l d . Walk to Lido hse 4 bdrm. fpc, 3 bu 1675/mo. lst/lastl dep
Touchatone ne11lty use of wood a lau & • tlU/J'f"'I' tJac Villa&• 832 9110 or Enclo ed patio No pets 968 34115 IAYSHOAES
963-*7 ctramlc tile. Oum cell 639·0291 11000 mo 673 0686 ........ -----C:harmm1: 2 Bdrm 1 b.i IA YFROMT CONDO
EXLCUSIVI •na. r~fi~~1!~~·~11 tncOMt rro,.rty 2000 c°'°"a def MM 3222 ..c:t;' · 3242 house w rr.,1c irnd ~~~ ~1~1!~ f~:! ~~{~>' ,~n; COLO~y 1714)484·0731 0. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• brick p.1tio \to tu fumu1hed 1 bdrm, 2 buth " I -"'LEV ALLEY 4 Bdrm. bonu¥ rm w pool llunt1nt1too Hrbt' 2 story S1IOO 75!! 1550 & den condu S.:curlty Lr1 family home ft"ltur ALMOST ltEADYl CtU.11& l'On Near new 4 Plcx, 2 tble, 11 bkyu1'd w/pool Townhouse. Exclusive THE BLUFFS
Ing
4
Bdrrn,
2\11 Bu In Beuutirul new cu~tom bdrm; 2 bath euch unit Sl400 p~r mo 631 4&18. location nr water 38r .i bdrm.s. 2 baths, su~r
Irvine'• Colony Club. home In xclustve atE'4i with ireplace, enclosed Ask for Greg 21., ba, 2 frplcs Unique clean Yearly least· Rt·l !111 I I ~~ H~ .d:y
1;-;-:; I ::1111
WalktocommPQol,ten ti dbl "a -----mo~ern de:.ign niacourti,•chools.•hop· Quality tmoui;houl Kx "'"1·s 5000 Sq. Ft,· Home sits on Linda p11 o. ou e .. rage SPVGLASSCAPECOI.> $950. mo Agt.ti73·53M · p i 11 cellent views. 3 Rdrm, "1 $195,000. Bill Grundy, w1areenhou11e windows
pina. rcedtl)se Call z•2 ba,2(rplcs 1425,000. lsle.AprivateguardedCommunityin Rltr,675-6161. 5 Bdrms, 4 '~ ba. rom Adjrl to tennis c rts, Ocean\uhme.w •l1pool1~~~~~~~~~
rordet.alls. the heart of Newport Beach. Boat ------rm, bonus rm, 2 frplc5 , 3 pool, sp11, sauna & gym &.patios 4 BK 21~ ba. 21
LOCJ'9"17Vltllo4J9761 lt.E slips Cor (3) SS'·70' Yachts. For Sale or car gor, c ul-de sar $975/mo. + as1>u<" dues IJ)lc, pluith nt-w' tl~ro1 ..,.._._.,-.a.. 49
• NEWPORT BEACH $1975/mo A\all June 15 Call Ehot s 50 ~ ~" ... "" Trade. 11• 962 77811 or [)a, itl thall July IS 17 mo Uttfwftltt..d L Se 0 --'lon • 'rly l!>e Adib w xl111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fa Y' MOVE RIGll1' l N 846·8559 J LAGUNA We are developers so submit land or Prime Prooerties 3 Br. 21,~ ba, J asn11ne refs only 1'492 1166 Gl'fttrd 3802
Whilewall"r vu, Sl'ller other Real Estate to owner Jim TRIPLEXE{ In CdM Creek condo Plan 6 lnlne 32'441·---------1·••••••••••••••••••••••
_ _ will 1:re<lit buyer on pay Orean side of hwy Sl6001mo ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• BaycNst 3 lr/D•n AftTMTS FOR RENT **MUST SELL! menti. SI0,000 option Thompson. Threetochoosefrom 644-6397LaVeraBurns 2br, 2ba, The Terrace. Ht'inude letl and rt• ..
540 3666 rise to pool & ;;hopping If B , N B , Costa mesa Great financing on th1:1 3
B r 2 la B a 1 r v i n e
townhome w / attached
garage Ownc1 will at.·
sil;t with financ·rng. SpQt
less! Must i.ell NOW'
Call for det<11li.
$147.900
~ldbrldgc
Rea tr"
551·3000
192t8arranu Pk•).lr\.ln ..
*•STEAL IT!
Super J)rice on this n1tw
ly back on the mar·ket 2
Br + den atta<'hed homt·
m Woo<lbndgl' Esl;iles
Hurry !
$165.000
Wo,ldbrtdgc
Ru Ilg
551·3000
lt%0 Rarrant'a Pkl4'v,l r\'lnP
**PARK PLACE
Not Monopoly IJut a
b ea utiful 3 Bd 1m
Northwood home with
~re<tl available finarw
mg C;ill for de ta tis
$171,000
\\\l\ldbrldgc
Reilrg
551·3000
19?08arranu Pkl4'•,lr"lnl'
Woodbrid~ Estatu Washrn~ton Mdl 4 Br 2·1•
ba, 2200 i.q ft Assume
SI 15,000 1st. By owner
$189,000. Ph: 559 5778
WOODBRIDGE
LANDING
PETERS-PLAN 5
lfere It IS l.oads or
('harm Delii:hlfully dt•
curated & landscaped
$359.000 12••'. assuma
ble 11 SunrtH'• Owner
551-1534.
NORTHWOOD
IEAUTY
Immaculate 3 Bdrm
home on quiet <'Ul de i.a<
Plush carpels and
c u s tom draperies
thruout Huge patio with
soothing spa :\!any ex
tras plus, low tnle~sl
assumable l o an
$167,000
don osen
r • .1 ! !'jr~
17Tll AT PROSPl-:CT
TUSTIN. 731 ·3111
Whelan Real Estate
C7141121-1210 '2131591-IUJ DUPLEXJo;S on Balboa
Peninsula Two t o
t•hoose from.
S&O mo 551·23-'0 dero1 ated like new Tl'r Something for E'eryune Lrg J asmsne C:rk condo. 3 11Cir patio w l(uq.:eou" Barh to 4 Br Unfurn
Br. 31' Ba. qUll'l, on Woodbridge Condo 3br, pool, i.pa, BBQ and flll' Apts Certuin lul·allons 11001 J52-J710 grnblt,ava1I 6120 SI050. 21 ~ba,snsi mo Isl last. ring.$1500/mo. offer : Pool . s pa , 644·2~ frJ)k,ac.M4-4646cvei. hreplace. laun room .
LCICJU"CIHhJuel 1052 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ DUPU~X on thl'
with boat dock water C-taM 3224 beamed cell 1 n~s. .. '!: ...• ~~~ ............ WILLOWS 4 Br 2 B;i gurages. ull built ins. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Fox glove model 1n Lake MEWPORT ISLAND
P11rk 2 bt. den. 2 1>11. $315,000 • OWC
\ Jultctl < eihng French S 190,000 at I 00/o
door::.. Asi.ume at 10:... fee simple, 3 txtr, den, 2
$154.000. Owner ba, patio deck, 30 ie !15
831·763t. 759·2465 lot Single story By appt
Mission Viefo I 067 714-675·3971
•••••• •• • •• • ••• • ••• • •• • 2 Br 2 Ba condo. 2 rur ga1,
Tres Vistas Custom low interes t rate, as
5br , 4ba 1n cxdu~1vc sumable loan. Prin. on
neighborhood 24 h1· ly 714 1523·1391 eves.
guarded ~ate, lake. 714 760 3675
3400+ sq fl. ale. guest
h se. l11ndscaped .
$47!1.000 Sky \'1cw Real·
l),H31·3000
OPEN HOUSE
Fabulous new 5 Bdrm on
I year new Bluffs condo.
~nd unit, "G" plan
3bdrm ~ land. 13••,
VI R, 30 year financmg.
Owner Agt . 760 8816
the lake \1u:st see to ap· 3 br. fa~ . 525.000 under
J)rel·1ale SI .350,000 mkt Call for facts
Ov. ner v.1 II <·arq $117,000 PP.645·1496
sooo.ooo 27641 C:hap;la HARBOR RIDGE OpenSat1Sun 1·5 2 Choire Offenngs
•3 br condo, t:.z term:.
•Engl Tudor t ustom
home, OWC lge Isl TD.
Agt.Sle~~· 752-1920
J{,\RBOR RIDGE t:state
home Ocean & light mrm==o1~:m1m11 view Xlnt hnanring. 831·0655. Broker
Duplexes, oceanfront, f'·OuR Pl.EX in Jo'oun MEW 21R W /FRPLC
beautiful ocean view. lain Valley Bu11l ms .. Adulti., no
Perfec t locallon New pets 642·0835 S650 Mo
d ro A"t 673 7300 All large assumablc con 11 n. .. . . --l oa n s All owneri. 3 Rr I Ba House, 11ew
DISTRESS SALE mottvaled For detailed paint ini.ide & out. ot'can
Newport Con ti o . 111fo l'all view yard. Adults 011ly.
Desperate owner must C/21 Newport Cntr. S650 + ut1ls 645 3000,
sell this week. Far below 640-5357 760.6767 548·9849
market. $102.000. All as· 1·---------13bd 2ba frpl ram rm. din s umabte. 634·1655, ---
937·1144ask rorTed. MAl(E AM OFFER! rm. l1 v rm , gardnet·
rurn Fenced yd nr
sthools & boyi. dub $725
556 1737 alt <lpm or
wkends.
'OOLHOMJ
JUST Ltsn:o. lovely 5
BR 31 i ba + den v.1th
wetbar +ram rm, and
delightful kitchen over·
looking pool and jacuzzi.
M ai.Jer & g uei.t u r
mother-in law bdrms
with own baths. 3 car
gar Agt. 646-4380 I
Ro..-Opportu.tlty
On Lido Isle
SS0,000 reduction on a 4
bdr:m. newly furnished
home. Spacious living in
traditional elegance.
Seerng is believing
ReJh d I 0-~ Rc.1lty
1;-;:{ -;:w11
I
5 lnromt' Propert1t•:.
Easts1de Costa Mesu
20', down Owner ~ 111
carry Pr1ted to :.ell!
~ c.on11~rw roc
714 641-0763
2925 College Ave
Coi.ta Mesa . CA
OCEANFRONT
DUftLEX
Beautiful 4 Br 2 Ha
Upstairs . 3 Br. 2 Ba
duwnstuirs Fireplaces,
garage, laundry room
Xlnl loc
TSL INVSTMT 642·1603 .._._ rt 1 h 1069 HARBOR RIDGE .-wpo ~ac Beaut decorated up -----FOUR.PLEX
BY OWN EH
Patio Rm , fenced yard , Garden & Townhouse
dbl garage $650 mo dei:.1gn NO FEE
644 1480&830·5050exl81. _TS_LM~MT 642..!._60~
Woodbridge leai.c Built •n.,• Bal>oa Island 3806
by Peters Threl' •••••••••••••••••••••••
b1tdroom~. two bathi.. Hluffscondo,JHr 2'~lkt. WATERFRONTAPT
Singlt• i.lor y home 111 2 Bdrm unfurnis hed
Woodb11dge $1000 pnnwlwckb;i~ \il'''·111.: w1lh big patio Lot'ated
month Owner l'Jn ~l\ e µalio, upgrndl•ll St30o on the Grand Canal ltttle
thr1te year leasl•. ti4·l ·035o 1 b I a n d Y e a r I Y
Includes rerrige1 at0t 40' IOAT SLIP leai.e .a\all\lble in July
washei·, dryer and I or 2 persons, must ht.> .. 3br, 2•,ha t'O:"DO . I bl th f c rehi·e·•tiun fa•·ili'ti'o., re ia e w1 re ererH· b
, u , '~ hcaul1lully tll'l'orat!'t! ,. 11 "73 9388
J oan BirdsalJ. ARent. S1200 mo Yl•<tr I) ... a u -5/MOMTH
640.8927or631·7300 6i5-tii75 $47
Woodbridge, 4br, many
upgradei., no pet:..
$900 Mo 760 0.15t
3 Dr. I ba ·~ ga1-. sun
San Juon det•k Yrly S650 mu
Capistrano 3278 Isl last ~l'l' dep
••• •• •• •• •• • • • • • • •••• • • 675 ~Sl
••••••••••••••••••••••• graded & expanded SanCt.mente I 076
Wot.rfrom Dupl4tx Lautrcmont mdl in the •••••••••••11••••••••1•
Witt. Boat Dock estates w1full ocean & l80dcg ocean panoramic
Xlnt 1-'inanclng '
$310,000
675·0073, (114 >345 4123
tain1ng. family rm . L:irge wood & gins~ 3 b1
large fenced yard. play 2• 2 ba, famtl} rm. 2 ca1
-€ould 1>c Newport's r1t) lights view Seller vu. $490,000. Open May
lowest priced waterfront will assist w finltncing 28·30, 1·7. 219 S. La
home with income unit forquahfled buyer. Wm Esperanza 1·498 5538
t oo' Call ror info. Michae ls C:o Rltr. COop.
Broker. 963 8182 831·3126 ---
OCEANFRONT
$450.000
This first time offering
ts an estate sale. One of
Newt>Ort Beach's finest
\'tews. 3 bdrms home
with guest apt or 2 um,ts.
Realonom1cs 675·6700
VERSAILLES 2BH. ol'n
Vll'W , low dwn. no quah
fying Sl2!1K 730 2270
ofr 642·2682 home
ON THE BEACH
Prime front row location
Brand new 2 bdrm. 2'" tn Cyprus Shore Private
ba condo Dbl ga1 . bear h, park, t ennis
frplc. built-ins $120,000' courts. pool & spll in
13 75": financing due in 4 gua1ded·gute comm 3
yrs plw. Price $150,000 Br w1sep 8.i Beautiful
Ownt agt, 645·3986. inside & out
BY OWNER
BAY CREST BEAUTY 5 Also In Cyprus Shore
Br f'am1ly Rm $200,000 whitewater view 3 Br 3
assumable Isl. Owner Ba ~·orm Din Hm.
may c11rry SI00.000 2nd. Family Rm Gourmet
l year $435,000 Call Kitchen 3 car gar. Pri\'.
lledda Maroi,i Agent ctyd Manyamenitles. WHITEWATER VIEW 646· 1044. To see & i.ell ! Thomsen Rily 492·2967 90' to beach. 10'; assum ----
loan May take note on Lr.: low mterest.c1ssuma Santa Ana I 010
your prop as down 4 BR ble 1st 11.75',. ocean •••••••••••••••••••••"
2 Ba. recently upgraded, \I I e w N pt l' 0 n d 0 By Owner. owe al 13', 3
w poSi>tble in·luw qtrs $245,000. 540-3666 Br. 1:1.. Ba , frpk, dbl
Under $290,000 1nc lds gar New paint & carpel.
house. ga rdner incl garage, orean canyon
<.: M E 1S1d1t 4·plex, pos1
ca:.h flov.. $325.000
'l7 7'. dn. owe bal. at
13'i,. 13 !IX gr Prrn. on·
ly 640·0997 (Jim )
Quiet <'Ul·de i.at· Le:ise view. No pets SI025. mo
S790 979·8727 S 1 err a M gm t Co RVM~ -----641 1324. eves & wknds 2br, 2ba N.B Penthouse
Condo Adults unly·sec
2br. den, 21iba. view. g uard. pool. sauna .
4 Br ~ew paint, carpet & 494-0H7
drapes Gardening
Sl'r Vt <'e S7501 mu
546 9!150
Industrial/ Nice E1Side 2 br. 2 ba.
Property 2100 gar. frplc. Avail. June I ••••••••••••••••••••••• $650 548·3561
LAGUNA BEACH -- -
C:anyon industrial bldg Nice ~>Side 3 br. 2 ba, dbl
near town & art festtvul gar A\·atl Jurtl' I
grounds 9600 sq ft fully $725 mo 548·3561
leased. Gross annual in·
come $54,000.
Realonom1cs 675·6700
Nearly new 10 Unit In·
dustrial Bldg In Costa
Mesa. 15.000 i.q ft 25',
down. Owner will carry
l~t TD at 13'4 interest
for 3 years Phil Sullivan
Realtor 548-2103. ----
3 Br. I ba. lg enc yd SSS!
leai.e 376 E 18th St 1111
rearl Drive by then t•all
673·0884
$500 mo 2 br. I ba. IJ:
yard , peti. kidi. uk
631 -2246
flt Al Tl IHS
po o I, pr 1 v .: a l e gym. $750t mo 645-0230
$9001Mo t714 1955 1055 - . --2Brlba,2slory.pool.
University Park condo. deck . adlls , no pets LOCJli9'G Hills 3250 3bdrm. 2'ibu , bun us Lcase™5 ti73 0473
••••••••••••••••••••••• room Great lor All --'
Lease 2 Hr condo. all amen1til'S . Sl!OO m u Step& to Ocean Most
amenities, pvt yrd, en1: 760-8816. <'harming bCCtion ul old
gar 551 0255 en~!> Corona 2 Br 2 Ba .
_ Prime Newport Condo, frpll'. t'O\ ered ga1 age, LogunaNlcJuel 3252 walking d11>tan<'e to ul'ean \'rew from det·k 11••••••••••••••••••• .. beal'h Pool. spa, sauna. s750 Call Anthony
Lice4brhomeinnewde rec·rm Lg lbdrm SS50 ~eekdays 642 5757.
'e lop men t. M od ern Todd (213 I 240·9077 wknds & eves 6'14 ·81189 kitc hen 1ncludin ).' ---
m 1r ruwa ve & bar b Townhouse 3525 3br. 2ba. bright. cheerrul.
q u e r a n g e R et Unfurnished upper dpl> .. burlt ins.
facihtiei. a\'atl No pe\,:t ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• storage a\a1I 711 S750 S9001mo Avail JulJ • _ Newport Glen Twnhmc 640 6110'
540 8300 days. 836 9784 2br & den, 2 + ba, pool,
e\ es1wknd:. sauna. Jac, $650 mo sta Mesa 3824
lsl/last, avail 7/1 81 ••••••••••••••••••••••• land Move fast ! 752·6499 --~--751·804~ NRealt ""' ~11 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PJanGRrr. ... T BUY J_ Real~ ~r1'a.~.eH.~o._::!°,.~...... ~~e~~~:s~~o~~.
LotsforSale 2200
3 BR . 2 ba. I.: back)d
Frplc Cul·de sac. Avl.
now $725 mo. 631·7089
2 Br. wlstove & refr1ge,
enclsd garage. Adults,
no pets. $475. 773 W.
Wilson. 631-4889.
N•wport leach 3269 549-7052 or 540 3185 Spacious 3 Br Duplex
•••• •••• • •••••• ••••• •• • --S42S Pool & laundry fac SPYGLASS LEASE S.A. Hgts, 2 br + den. 3
'""' ......,., ..... 7141492·8320. 645·2781 Sharp 2 Br + den, frplc. For Sale 1100 ---- -
3 Rd. formal dining, fam ba. wet bar, frplc, pool. 548·9556
rm. lrg yard. 2 frplcs, jac, 2 r ar g11r $700 mo. NEWl y DECOR.
$1600/mo Bob & Dov it• (2131615 3415, 823·5021 I Br gas pd, encl gar
patio & spa Try 10.20'"~ 114' IAYFttOMT •••••••••••11••••••••.. RANCHOS Loe Tio~ dwn. Assume low in· in Dover Shores,.~ sq <.:osta M"sa 1 Br trlr I & 2 acres, zoned for IS A "" teres t rates . Patrick rt of top quality con· home wtcabana, l5x30. horses Paved streets
Eastside Townhouse 2 Br
112 Ba . Garage, patio.
$465 mo . No pets
675°8133.
Koop. Agt. 631·1266 d ,washer, pool Adults
3 Itr. 212--e;-<:o~do . Apartments F11mished 642 5073.
IMPORTANT? Tenore 631·1266 struct1on This 5 bdrm Adults. xlnl $6900. withwater.5405010
You bet it is! So settle Medil. style residence is 673·3826 -INVESTORS! Del Mar
Ocean \'tew $725 mo B•-::_:•:p••••:••uf••••3••7•07 2 br. l ' 2 ba, no r h1ldren.
Ask for Ron. 752·5111. UR1V9 "'"' a mall do" OK ..... 610
your family into Cam· the best of locations and ---------••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s f') • .rtMJ.
pus View 3 bdrm. 2 ba.. has thebeslofflnancing ESTATE SALE duplex/condo lots w/o-Npt Hgls Gorgeous Jbr,
212ba CONDO. frplc,
ram rm. lndry gar. $725.
646·0329
SANTIAGO DR. Bach Full kit. conve Joann St. 642 7344
formal din. rm CIObe to available. $1,225.000 at 1966 Majestic located m cean views. Ready to Beautiful house avail ment toe S32S yrly incl 3 Ir Townhouse
now m elegant area. ~ util Quiet non-s mkr Newly detor gas pd .. i.hopping and r ecrca only 9'~ lnt. Full pnce Laguna Beach Park. build NOW F r om
tron. Very attractive -525 OOODOW.... ln ctuding the land near ocean Week days $67,000 ea. Buy one or
$175 000 • " 11;750,000 Owner will 759.4 175 more w $uper sub
Br 3 Ba Dining Rm. 673·5580 encl gar .. pool. dswh1
Living Rm. " Family Co ta M•sa 3724 Adults 642 5073 lerms · · J · £ t b I r r C 11 l'.:xc us1\'e as u carry St.000.000. a ----ordinated financing
Townhouse 4 Br 3 Ba. DanBibbforappt. CerneteryLots/ -Details 1·755·4667.
$275,000. Owner anxious. ROGER'S RE.ALTY Crypts 1500 J.7$64556.
E. Side 2br, 11'2ba CON·
DO, frplc, s unken Jiv rm,
patio.
Rm New wallpape1 . s •
cozy kitchen & many ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 2 Ir. I la Apt
many xtras. Children & SUS CASITAS Newly decor das pd
Make offer Owner-675-2311 •••••••••••••••• .. •••••
Pr 1 n rip a Is o n I Y · i---------~2 r pm et er y lo l s. Outof Co•ty Eastside sharp 2 Br. til1•
978·0423. Westmrnsler Memorial Pro,.rty 2550 Ba Range, oven .
gar S600 646·0329 pels OK 759·8974 Furn l br apt $325 & encl gar , pool, dfhwr
up. Encl gar Adults. no Adults . 642·5073 BIG CANYON LEASE pets. 2110 Newport Bl ---
-----Park Good section · ••••••••••••••••••••••• dshwsr. frplc, vaulted 3 Bdr 3 Ba. formal dtn 548·4968 btwn 8 & 5PM Lrg 2 Br I Ba. great
ml(, pool. hot tub, vu, -rt I h 3769 E side location. $4751mo LIDO ISLE worth $760 each. asking 110+ ac"1 ceiling. Adults. 1500/Mo. NEWPORT CREST Spanish Elegance at its $1200 for both. 714 / consisting of 31 lot5. 381 Hamilton very sharp. $2000 mo. "'PO •ac yrly lse. No pets. Call Bob & Dovie Koop Agt •••••••••••••••··~··•••
't523 C'AMPU5 Dt: IRVINE
best..4 years new at the 642-9136eves . Prime Area -ready for --• -----
T•rriflc Plan I. p~aceful west end of Commercial -development. $800,000. Fo.tam Vahy 3234 6311266 Decorator furnished Lloyd, 675'667~
Townhouses. $8!l5
2 bedroom. 2 beth with Lido Is le community Terms available. ••••••••••••••••11•11•• THE BLUFFS
assumable $79K 1st 'I'D beach at e~·ch end of the Property 1600 Edith W. Messick 4 br, 3 ba exec. tri·level. 3 Bdrm condo w \'ie~
Priced for quick sale, street, 4 bedrooms, 3a. ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• R.altor fam rm, 2 frpks, encl Remodeled, lrke new
IRHttor's '"• 1165,000. baths. gourm\!l kitchen. 18051466•0500 patio Gardener incl. I with gourmet kitchen. 1
2 Bdrm 1
1
2 Ba Ash mdl, *' " I walled patio with foun· VACA.HT yr l ease . No pets. yr leas e . SIOOO, mo. nu carpel. freshly patnt CotEt Rea ty ta in . S uper f amily -62l~X292"• zoned tor of Estate S925/mo. 963·3344 aft. 7609678.
ed. A/(', high assumuble & Investment entertainemenl home. rice building. $200,000. Ri! ..__ ZIOO 6:30. 962·7501 d~
loan. $116.500. 640-5777 Owner c re a t i v e Roy Mc:Ca•. Rltr. c.._..,. -Nwpt Shore 4 bt'. 3 ba.
Town It Co.try submit. $625,000 · 54a.7729 ••••• .. ••••••••••• .. ••• SELL idle items with a canalfront, nwly decor,
Realtors 552· I IOO !~~~~~~~~~ D .M. Marshall RJtr Our 4br near Newport Dally Pilot Classified pool. tennis, 2 bl ks ocea'l'I
Want Ad Results 642-5678 644°99'0 528 ~.~~ S~~ r c~u°n~; _A_d_. _ Sl,100. 962-6683. Woodbri"-Esta.. ---IDEAL RETAIL SPACE
A"ams pla;;"fBdrni. 2i 2 ••lll!•l,l~--1-1-1-.-...... Plaza Newport, 1000 ~~S:.~Condo. 831·0611 11"¥•e 3244 trvlH
Ba, ottractive financlnJ!. ,. Bristol St. N .. Ste. 20, at ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-•••••••••••••••••• ll SlM,900 or lease Jamboree. 1078 sq Ct
$1100, m o A k for Lynn Sl.20 sq tt. Beaulifully
Noah. (tecorat ed. W l o W T°'"' & Coe.try carpet. Im med oc-••ors SU-1800 c u pency 851 ·5188,
WILL TR.ADE
New condo lo Palm
Desert for sportClsher or
trawler
1·340.3036 l ,344·7726
**125M!
End unit 2 Br condo on
secluded quiet •t· Ownt'r wUJ help finance.
833-3998 5 unit& at beach. Long
Airport locaUon l98 x 300 Beach, to trade for
ft. Potential ofc bJdg/ house. 892·8162 Bltr.
condo~ slt.e. e45·1103
sw.ooo
lf~)]ii
UHIVlllsrrt P Altl( LIASI
''Rutgers" model 3 bedrooms,
2Va baths, formal dining area -two
story townhou e situated across
from park. Close to schools and
shopping. Community pool end
tennis courts. Ready for occupancy.
$795 .00 Donna Godshall 644·8200 CK67 )
TOU1. .... 'l'OUl. l&IJllMlm,
760-9117
2 Br 2 Ra Condo
Completely arcesoriz.ed.
Just turn the key. Short
term avail $1000/Mo
61~2543 or 673·5261
YEAR-ROUND l'UN:
Social AotlvltlH 01 r.CIOt • FrH Sunday
BrllllCh • BCJQ'a •
Parti.. • PIUI more
QR!Af AECMATIONi
Ttnnle• ~ L-.ont (pro ,, pro tnop) • a
.Heelth Clubm • Seuna
• HyClromHHQe •
Swimming • Goll
OrlVlng Range
llAU1VUL A'TS·
s1ng111, , & a Bed·
room• • 'urnlahec:I • """""6aNc:I • MaJIC
Ltvln; • No Peta •
Model• Open Oelly
• 10.
Oakwood Ollfden ApeftfMftta
... .,pcwt heotl N. uo ,,..... , .. ltV\)
(114) 645-1104 ... ~ ....... 1100 I St C0.••1 el lfltl)
"'" M2.f113
lmtMd.Occup.
2 Br 1 Ba Apl. Beam
ceiling, lndry rm, pool
Adults only. no pets No
last Mo, rent. $360·$365.
TSL MGMT 642·1603
2 bdrm l ba attached encl
garage, nu pnt, crpts,
drps. adlts only. no pets.
279 W. Wilson $425
645 1819
2 BR, encl' gar, patio.
D /W, lndry rm, adlt.a, no
pets, avail July 4. $400
mo. 548·9084 or 540..M46
2br. lba. Utlls pd, epts,
drps, refrlge, atove.
pool. Quiet adults, fl()
pets, next to K·M•rt
$42.S/mo. 548·7689
Ute·brl&ht airy & brand
new 2br. 2ba, micro. dbl
gar , pool , Jae .
waterfalls. $700971 e
2Br. crpt.1, drps, bl\nt,
aar. adultt only, nQ pets .
Victoria/Canyon erea
$'30/m o . 831·HU aft
Spm -~
z llt. I IA.
Pool, crpt1, drpt, I al
for COl.IPI• + ~·l Roommatt or M r· ln·La•. No ptll A .. D. 111.-.M.t-OST.
/
' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Tuesday, June 2. 1981
Cash in on 7 or,11......__H•r•'•••w.lhfnt tor OrangeCountyedv•l'UNrt-
•• There are two ways to win with a Dally Pilot High Roller Ad
Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat
Private Parties only -no commerciaa businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate.
Apataot"h u.tw.. Apat11Htth u..tw.. ~nts FW'Rl1hed Rentals to ShaN 4300 Office Rttttol 4400 Butlnest Lott & Fowtd 5300 '~"onalt 5350 Hetp W•ted 7100
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Un .... lihed 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OpporMUty 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••• • •••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Co1ta Meta 3124 Huntift ... on IHch 3840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 1 , A d d · 1617 w l ·1·rr N n w t •• ••••••••••••••••••• •• REW •RD ASSEMBLER/ •••. • •• •••••••••• • • • .,. ov ng . vol epos1ts es c 1 . . an ~ • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• EA W I M D & cot llvin& expenses! financial 1n11t 7000s.f ~xecutlve suites & Lobl smlill .male Ulllck FANTASY EUCTROMICS ~e5~~lif~l BTow1n1hou;e Unfu1 n 2 Br Apt s . VILLAGE Profusionally since lsl floor. Agent 541 ·5032 secretarial service 101 dog, part lab, has cancer * I mmedlale openan1s
F epl Sr· \, 1~ · Adults on!.) No pet&. 1971. CdM 1 S c; bale Established bUbl 640 m1 <G~y > with gwwing comvany &1~0 6~~~.,,.,!vage ' e 960 267~ New 1&2 bdrm luxury HOUSEMATES De uxe ultes, A·. ness Xlnt location, i~ -*STUDIO* '1echan1cal asst'mbly ~ adult apls in 14 plaos 832·4134 ampl pkg, util pd" 2855 mile O.C Airport Call Lost German short ha11 wiring, soldering Small
Very larce 2 Story, 3 Br 3br, 21,b11 , walk•in closet. from $440, 2 bdrm Crom E Csl Hwy. 675-6000 l714)962·8311 or w 1 ite female Answers to leautlful l'ompan> utmosphere,
212 Ba Mesa del Mar lndry rm, den, d1shwshr, ssoo + pools. tennis, M/F to share 4 bedroom MEWPORT IEACH PRT Associates, 18988 Kaya Lasl seen Sate\(' good benefits 6mo~ e'
are", enclsd "araae. cp t •d1·11pell , encl waterfalls, ponds! Gas apt.Steps to beach NP Mt Demeter. l''ountain \'1t·40thSt.NBunOeat·h PrivateRoomt per11:ntl' pccre11t:d .. ,,. ., S 00 .,,., ,,,,., Conve nient Pen1n1.ulu 64cc 3632 S525t mo c;111l 751 .9905,1v pat101&11r. 6 ~·"""2 for cooking & heating $250 by mo 1·• utll. Valley,92708 642~4 .,. paid f'rom San Diego 631-2270 location across from <.:1 The lie a ch uea ·i. do1>ei.t m~aae l br, l ba condo. adult F d . N h ---ly Hall. Executive style & most exoltc readin .. 1•---------rwy rive ort on offi"es w/f·•tl serv1"ev 1'A X R EL I L' ..... 1\b 1 •• l I k .. •sSEMBLERS 2 Br, 1 ba. adwts, $42S, lsl comm u n 1 t y n ve r 4 O. Beach lo Mc fo'adde n VW mechanic 28 seek mg ~ u ~ " c r ,-.,.,st ge tu rt e w bro en :.tud111. 8125 Bois a A,.. ""
& last $l50 dep gar. ldry Golf, tennis, PQOI Patio. then We!St on McFadden hse or apt to shr avail. From 215 :.q ft P R E C I A T I 0 N :.hell, vk of 400 <:u~la Midway (.'1ly (2 block~ w CM.548_5861 . \\'JD $425 5J6·6021 to Seawind Village 545.9407 an~ up No lease re W . MGMT $28,000 :\ll'i.aSl 548·1989 E. ol' Beur h behind Ii
------<7141893·5198 . quired Call673·3002 INVESTM ENT SO', quorston•J Open lOam
SCPlu 2Br2bll Pauo. Nice 2Br. lli Ba, pool. --Male share Newport -BRACKET. 18K Ll>SS Lo:.tCockerSpamelpup 3amda1lyex,·eptSun
pool, Jae. ss25, 833.2462, i:ar, laundry, patio. Rooms 4000 Beach Apt •, blk lo ;PECTACULAR fo'IRSTYEAR lllGIH:R l'Y Muy3l 543-9243
Loe. Mission \'u.~JO t:o
net'd1> Ai.!.emblt>rs w 2
yrs t'XJJ Candld.alci.
mul>t ha' l' gd manual
de, tent>. Rd csei-.1gh1.
neat 10 appeal ,1nl'l' & de
!Jt'lllluhlt' \\'m k Ill IO life 631.7278 S495 mo l 630·0350 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. $2SO lsl last + H RBOR B R A c K · E T Y o l' 548·6065
754 <MJll Laguna Beach Motor Inn. security Bruce 673-0654 A I::STIMATE Shepherd, mixed. nia I~.
SPAC l BR ADULT 985 No. Pacific Coast ---VIEWS WARD l~VESTM ENT ~ Open beam ceilings, 2Br, Condo 2 cur gar. Hwy, La&una Beach. Fem shr 2br. 2ba. xlnt CO tJn & blk Hlk lab
f':.) chic Keader :\J, 11>01 \Upport med 1<.:al elec
l'a:.t. Pre:.ent & Futu1e Lro111<:b Gd hl•nefil:.
Lo\e. Ma111age. llealth. Onl) 1 ci.p11ns1hl\.'
(.'ha1 Jl'lt'I" & liU!tllll'S!> j)('ISUll~ !>eekllll( pcrm11
Cater to Parties. Card & ncnt emplymt nced ap
Tea Leaf Hl'adings It ply Call Mr11 Pa1l'lh.
berving bar, lots of wood l'tnered patio. i, mile to Daily. Weekly, Kitchen loc. Non smkr. $2001 mo. 440 to 4000 Sq. A. 714·642-2000 mtxl'd. female, mix, brn
thruout, newly redec. ~ach Al'Cebs lo pool & uvailable Low winter 963·6216 Pre1Heje Peninsulo hlk male Irish !it>lter,
$345/mo. 2260 Maple St. t:ourl:. S57S II 8 rates.4945294. ---Location. nvestme1tt malt". 3 lt'gs. k1ttt"n ,
548_7356,673.8803 2 1 3 112 5 4 7 9 6 ---Roommate wantet.1 to OpDOrtunity 5015 grey, male. Te1ner.
714 675 4002 LAKE FOREST share 3 Br house in Plutcj. Gora<Je •••••~••••••••••••••• mix, blk & brn male
Large 3 BR 2 Ba, upper, All privileges incl club & Hunt. Sch. 2 m Iles Very Flexible Tenns. 1,666 shares of llentafi(e Springer spaniel. liver &
l" u n not :. o l v e L 1 I t· 1.58•1_:l8•3•0 ______ _
Problt.'ml> on your own,
l'Onsult u:. lur lnlor & a11
poml 1714 l 646-4013
nr So. C:oast Plaza. no 2 HR. 1•, bu 1\\'all June util. S260 lst & last. beach. Female prefer By Appointment Only. Bank Stock SlO pt•r whitt', male 644-3656
pet:. $470 641-8657 12 $475 !:1622575 586-4038 $191 /Mo 964-4724afl6. t7 I 4J675-8662 ~~~:i Cull Frun Fuuncl fem11le lynx
Lovable 1 bdrm, encl Furn r ooms, good Profwomanwanlstoshr i>omt, 1kd<1wed. 6 mo SOOTlllNtiMASS.\lil-:
gar . ad Its. no pets Deluxe poolside xtra neighborhood West house W/!tltme Corona DR's ofc m Uwnlwn llU 760 0527. 557 7~3 rw UISlTlmmatin~ rrll'O
l'all i'l'tCt 494 41171 Refrig&elecsto\'e.s325 lJr~e 2br, 2ba. bltn!>. CM Call 548·6892 aft del Mar S365 m o 2.000sq fl Sl2001M• Rl'd Mort~ges, Trust
2035 l''ullerton C M dbwhr I '~ m1lei. beat·h 6PM 494-70157 20am eves Carpet.8931351 De~ds 5035 642 5964 Adil!>. nu Vt.'lll $450 mu. •••. ••• ••• •• •••• •••• ••• ~ 8362 Christian home. beach, Fem rmmte net'dt'd, pre Small l man offtt·e m t'X Sattler MtCJ. Co.
Newport Heps M, stra1qht, free long fer nn·llmk1 for <tpt n1 ecuttve suite mo mo 1 t'n • All type:.-of rt>ul ei.Lutt•
2 or 3 &drms 1 ba 1 S500 Lar.:e 2 Br 2 Ba dist phone, kit pnv So Coai.t Pluza . Lal Laguna llil h imestmentsstrwcl9-l!l
s tory, o wn e~·s un'it Bl•s t <irt'a. Nl•a1 beach. $250&ulll.4!192286 pool/laundry facil I $225 mo.951 GOOI SpecialilinCJin
fenced yd. rt pc. $500 No pet:. 833 3307 Room in lge house. CM. F' $187.50 + util 545 3380 I 2nd TDs
549 92711 Irvine 3844 pref, 1 mi from OCC. M, F, nonsmoker. $160 t-Corpor:i~~ PIG1a 642-2171 545-0611
2 Br I Ba. $3!15 Pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $210/mo 957 3955 1• utils. nr So Coast 3 offices w rcrt•pl1011,
Adults no pets. Avail Beautitul 3 Br garden Uf ·t t & Plaza 5S7 9640uft 6 ocean \·iew 759 15SO ' '• . ,. home. t·omm pool. ten· n urn. r!Jl . P' ~n · 1~med Savage \\1lde & mi. Call Hill \\'edmore patio, quiet Mor F . non·
Co 642 4470 '-Lingo R E 644 7020 smoker. S22S 548-3227
Rmmate wanted in plush
Newport hou~e. 2 blk!> fr
beach Pool & tenn1ll
$350, lst & la!>I Paul.
760-7024
Large I Br Pool. Adults,
no pets $340 646 7319.
673-0884
Orangetree 2 Br. Iba Air
cond On -.tream. up-
stairs Adults only Sub
mil on peti. $595 Mury
644 7211
...
Eastside Costa Mesa
Nice large room w frplc
and own enu y. College
gal pref. $300 mo Call Garaqes
after 5 pm 646·3375 for ltent 4350
Ho"-1 M "-I 4 I 00 •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
L B. presllg1ou!> ofr -.u1tl'
xlnt d"' nt wn loc \ C.
870' + <194·8335
Business Rental 4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For store & ofrl('l' :-.J>Jl"l'
at reasonable ratei.
500 to 2700 Sq A .
Want tn\t'Stor fur Npt
bc1yfront homt> GI\ c
well :.e<:ured Isl or 2nd
T D Agl. 675 6161
WE PAY THE MOST
For your T D ·s & Nolei.
at Dennison A:.,nt
673 7311
\\'I DOW has money for
T D.'s $10.000 upi NO
FOC:\lJ :\tale Hlk <;1c}
!.l11pcd ra t. '11
Kat hertnt' Way C ~I 1 ell
l"OilJI 646 1098
SCRAM·LETS
ANSWER
Alumna Ember
Brain Negate
BliRGLAB
:\1 \ brother 1s an Jt.1
,.;nt:e man for a uurglJ1
alJrm cumpany :-.lo,
he'~ not a salesmun. he'>
tht' HlJKGL.\R
Found rcmale i\l~h11n.
'll Fountain \'a Ile>
!163 3976
l Br Sto\'e, pool. carport.
laundry . gas paid.
Adults, ref's $305 Mo.
646 8727
lb r apl S t ove &
Till:: Lake!> 2 br 2 ba n: 1• onr s SING E ' R · ·· · d ••••••••••••••••••••••• L <.:A garage. twnhoml' Upgra es. SEA LARK CM, storage only. $50 waler \ 11.•w. :-.pa far·s. per mo. 546 7214 aft GPM
MESA VERDEbR
PLAZA
1525 Mesa Verdl' E. C :\1
545-4123
l'H IWJT ., No µnit> Personals 5350
Call a~t. Eileen. 673 7311 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Refrigerator W . Side
Ref's $250 Call Answer
Ad 11501 642-4300
,\,·I 7 I. S695 nw. Laura, MOTEL 637 7333 dyll . 544.9904 Office Rental 4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2br. 2b11, twnhse. E S~de, LOCJlll'CI leach 3848
3 yrs old S500 l ·998· XJOO •• • •• • • •• • •• • • • • • ••• • • •
days ask for Dirk. !Bdrm w gar, wlk to
640 2426 eves wknds l wn bch S4SO 4!1!1 5022
•Weekly rentals now
avail •$98 and up
•Color TV *Phones in
rooms
2274 Newport Blvd C.M.
646.7445
E Side ideal loc nr 17th BIG BEAR Lakefront
St 2br. S415 Mewport Beach 3869 Motel, kitchens. 2 peo
646·0329 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pie. S30 1-866-4161
RETAIL Ofc Space 700
sq ft. WE'stcllrr area
$13,SOO earnll $4650
in ll months "'1th llrn •
Trust Deed Bkr i()ij O'J22
NB 759·1550 •--·-h / ---~cemen
Mm1 Mall now Laking ren Personals/
lal applicat1oni. for sml Lost & Found businesses. 22 nr spaces •••••••••••••••••••••••
a'ail al lo"' rate!! Announcemenh 5100
DownlotA'n Costa Mesu •••••••••••••••••••••••
Fur appt cull John THE .ADVERTISING
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Party Dancers. * 972-1345 *
MC & VISA An•epted
COVER GIRL
• OUTCALL *
!.153-077!1 Ml' \'IS I\
b tlwtt• J \\Jrm. :.hm di
l1 at•t1\l' lall\ out the1 l"
\\ho Y.anb t;1 he IU\t'd &
lll"l'fll•d & 1:. wdhn.,: tu
~l\l' ttw :-.ame 111 rl'lurn
with J l!IXld look1111(. ti".
170111 wl·ure 50 yr old
with all 111 hill hair It su
plt>a~l· t:all Uill <il
730 li2ii aft 6P.\1 or
Jnyt 1 me weekends
Tu thl' Beautiful lirunelle
"'ho b.lld 'hello .. tu mt•
JI S\\ t'nsen ':. Ill l'd.\I
~ a l n 1 l e .\I a ~ 2 J
WU\\ ''' Lo\ e lo mf•ct
yo u ,,~,11n JI S\\ eni>l'n ~
Jn) SJt at 9pm ~I 1kt·
11 ·111 lhl' hlun1ll' \\Ith
gla:.sl·S l
Personal Services 5360 . ......•.......•.......
AMWAY PRODUCTS
Kathy, 960..5646
Emoloyment &
Preparation ••••••.•.••............
Schools &
Instruction 7005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
STU:-.iNING. lg. 2 & 3 Bl~. Oceanfront for Winter
2 bu garden apt Pool. Rentals . Furnished & $4lS & 5445 710 W. lSth unrurn. Broker. 675·4912.
Yearly R ooms
Kitchenette & bath $280 + $280 Security deposit
2306 W Oceanfr ont.
673-4154
COMMERCE
PLAZA
MAKES
NEWPORT
BEACH
AFFORDABLE C:asulas 957 161 1 o r CONSULTANTS i---------· Sw1m m111g lt'i.Mms. R<'d
642-9909 Now you clin reap thl' * FOXY LADY • cros!> l'crl Beg t11 111kr
St
U.STSIDE
C~dorWood
NO FEE! Apt & Condo
rentals Vi lla Rentals.
675·4912 Broker s..nm.r Rentals 4200
475 to 3360 Sq. A. * Janitorial Service &
Utilities Included
GALLERY with skylight
stut.110 Prest11<e Coast
Hwy location 497 ·2288
Industrial Rental 4500
benefit:. of high cost ad OUTCALLONLY P\t & group Mommy &
vert1smg for your com VISA MC :\1e Beg July 6, Fc1un
pany! Lei Thl' Advert1i. * 972-11 38 * lam \"ulle) homl' pool
mg Consultants set u11 963 2810 aft 6pm.
you.r own ,m b,ouse art
ASS'T CO~'l'HOLLl':H
Uynam1t ~l'Y.puat
Ueal·h 1cal l•:.tale lll\l'St
ment & loan 111 okt·1 a~e
t:om1>any ha' upt:nmg
lor J~:. l l·unll ullt'I
"'audit <'<l ta' l'\
pcr1enn· 111 pulilic 01
Pll\ate 1ndu,11y l l'al
l':.tatc cmph,t'i:. pa 1:
ft·11cd SJlary
$16.000 S20 000 l'all
Kalie fu1 uppt tl-IO·H3SO
Babys1ltt'1 w~1ntl'tl Full
time Sun11nl•r Job .\1 ~
home Studl•nt Oh.
&46 13112 Evl.•:. & Wknd:.
Babys1ttl·1, lull 11111t•
:.umme1 . pNf 1111 l't1l
lel(e 'tudt•nt '\N·1kd 101
med li44 11071
t'\C~ wknd-.
Babys 1tte1 ".irllt•d m m)
home. Costa Mc,.,1 are~
H45 6681
HI\ II vs1rrF I{
Fm 2 :v1 old J!ll I. F 1
G:ll I 13i aft !'>
Ba hy'>1l tt'1 :\1 ollll'1 ";int
ed with otht>r th1lah t n lo
l'art' for my l y1 old full
unw Mun lhru 1-n .\ftt 1
1640~
Bank mg
SENIOR TELLER
nuna P1m1t ofl1t'<' ~ct•h
e x µ · J tc• I I ~· r ~ o nll'
k n u "' I l' d ..: l' o I
I HA Kl'ogh Ill d l"I 1 t•d
Call :\fautel'n al -1!-l•l li131
P111\ 11lt'nl Fl'dt'• ,11
Sa\ tnJ(:-.
2 Ur l Ba Adullll, no
pets $450 Mo. 329
Uni\ Hs1ty Dr Mgr:.
l=:ve!> 548·0648
PARK NEWPORT ....•......•.......••..
LIDO ISLE r harming 3
bdrm. 2 bath. playroom.
Just remodeled Mon-
thly rental Bill Grundy.
675·6161.
• Adjacent to Airport
& Restaurant Row
• Acceu to 3 major
fwys.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
$675 Apµrox 2265 In
dus'l Office 18101
Re.dondo Cr "'T ' llunt
Bch 842-2834
EUfo~ M 1-· II vertistngagency Pll·ase SW T S Jobs WC111ted, 7075
t·ull Mr Crosson for in EE HEART •.--••••••••••••••••••• ----------formation •ESCORTS• DependJble English lad~
COUNTRY CLUI
LIVIMG
QUIET LIVING StnRlcs, 1&2 bedroo.m
Large Bach. 1 or 2 Br. apts & townhouses
/\µts <.:ulhedral cell· From $510 64.'.!_-l~
in~s. prv ba I cony o r O
patio, dishwasher. frplc. CEAMFRONT
pool. Lndry & bbq. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Duplex. 2 car
Adults over 25. No pets. g a r a g e wit h a u to
$375 & up. Mesa Pines. opener. Yearly. Must
2650 Harlu. 549·2447. see lo appreciate!
mealiBAB
Ar ARTME.MTS
Beautifu l landscaped
garden apts Patios or
decks. Pool & Spa. Heal
paid. covered parking.
Adults. no ~s
2BR 2BA. $490
~ W Wilson, 631-5583
2BR lBA. $485
2250 Vanguard. 540"9626 -----
D..aPoint 3826 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TSL MG MT 641-1603
Exclusive Hach. Pen·
thousc. total security,
vacant $400. 978 0423
V ILL.A IALBO.A
Brand new 2 Br. 2 Ba. +
Den eondo. Ocean view.
sky lights. xtra lrg patio,
washer/dryer hook-up.
Wont last long! S950/mo.
TSL MGMT 642·1603
OCEANFROMT
3 Bdrm 2 Ba, dbl gar.
new carpet. yea rly
$1250/mo
833-8813
759-0652 24 llOURS would hke Lo c lean your
\1!>a Ml' 972.9773 ho u ~ c II r "' a g e b
•NW PT OC:EANrRONT
& Lido Isle bayfront, sm
boats & dock Wkly
673-SURF
WATERFRONT
Three bedrooms Two
and one half baths
Prime lime still availa-
ble. $1000 per week Call
Berta Farr, Agl .
760·0189 or 631 7300
PLAZA
EXECUTIVE SUITES
"There 1s a difference"'
MESA
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
Roommate Service
LOWEST PHICES' I
fo'ree gilt 1f you haH' a
ph1ce Pac1f1c Room
mates. Call 558·8608, 7
days, 12·8pm
714-752-0234
2082 Michelson •212 711 W . 17th St. SH.ARE A PLACE PLENTY AVAILABLE
AIR,ORT .AREA Costa Mesa, Calif. For 1111 types of people
Furnished or u o 642·4463 Only S30 fee GuJran
rurnished Executl\•e teed results Pat·1f1t·
Swtes in Irvine. walking 1980 sq ft. Unit :nail Registry, 558·8608 ;
dtStance to Airport All Ma Y ls t Car Pet!>. days from 12·8pm.
services a Ya ii 2082 drapes wet bar. •336 34•
Michelson. Suite 212. sq. ft. •Leasing ofCice HOUSEMATES
114·752-0234 hrs. Mon Lhru Fri 8·4. AVAILABLE
SHE
nl'got1able Call Lynn
a ftcr S P \t 646 8786
LIVE-IN
fo. ~ l' 0 R T S
MODELING
835-9199
& Available J uly·Aug
Part lime rest or year.
Xlnt refs
THE
Girlfriends
•ESCORTS•
HOtM/ Office /Hotel * 972-9772 *
2411rs . Now Hmng
Male i''emalc Escort
MC VISA
731 2648, 7 AM besl
Help Wanted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ACCOUNTING
CLERK
Typis t learn bkkp~
machine PtT 24 hrs wk
Wed, Fri, Sat. Country
l'lub in C.M 549·0377
Mrs. Myer -----
Npl Bch pier area, 2 Br
JI, Ba, sips 8. 1 ~ blk to
beach. Avail 61Z7·7/ll .
$350 pr wk. 8/29 9112 $400
pr wk. Families only.
Dys 957·0534 . eves
675·4947
RE Invest. Sal. l0·2· 18-80, all types. Share
8, 700 sq. fl. ofrll.'t' + your space & t:OSIS $30
ProfeHlonals warehouse Irvine In fee Cheaper than ad ----------1
S p a c e a v a 1 I i n dustrial J5' Lriple net. vertising w1th no hassle cooperative real estate fo'ree 2 for I dinner book
.ACCOUNTANT F/C
Newport Beach property
mgmt firm. l'areer opp-
Ly for bright mdn with
prior F C exper Call.
640 0123
OCEANFRONT home 2 execu sle Prime Call 646·l04<i or inquire for June members
bdrm + den. sleeps 6. Au-port location Many M!rosi Co. 16753 Noyes Paci r i c Reg 111t1 y,
Avail. Aug & Sept. Agl. amenities. 752·5111 957·9266 Brkr Coop m 5S8 8608 7 days, t2·8pm
675-8170 _v1_te_d_ _ _ ---OFFICE Lost & Found 530 ••••••••••••••••••••••
Preventative & Slres!.
Reducing Massage b)
Dons ''Intro·· S~lt'c1al'
5480407
Great Company
BEAUTICIAN
To 1 un small :.hop. Thi•
lla}1 Barn fiOO \\' J91h
St (; M 646 ll4RO S..16 I HS
Beautician
Balboa Bay Club
Is now hiring
Hal"tyllst
Preferably w follow1nR
Xlnt work1n~ cocci ·
Please call Tues-SisL
642 0092 Ask for Joy(·e
BKKR/SCTRY
1-:xpcncnccd f'~ull time.
full chu rge position fnr I
person office In flower
shop Group h1·u lth plan
a\'ailabll' Call lor appt
641 2'.r.KJ. as k for Kent
Clark Kennl'd~ Flon:-1
Oookkeepe1. exµ"d ,\ I'
P H. G L. pa1t11mt'.
nonsmnk.e1 I a' 111t·
751·7020
One Bdrm. one Ba. All
ulll pd. $360.
831-l873
JACOIS RE.ALTY
675-66f0 Escorts ACCOUNT .AMT IOOICICE£PER
July 15th lh ru 30th. 525 sq fl. Carpet. panel Airport location Lease
Be au ti f u 11 y furn . ing, parking Newport & light Industrial Space ----------i
Newport 2~drms with Bay Shop Center. 2052 1300' up. 549-4066. -. -----Versailles Lux ury 2
Lge studio, prkg & lndry, bdrm, 2 ba. Country
$300/ mo. Dys 768·6261. c I u b I i v i n g . s 8 o o .
evs 498·0318 ( 213 )4 79 8091. (213 )
pool & jacuu1. Peaceful Newp o r t Blvd . C:M StonM.Je 4550
view of hills . $600 per wk 556-•181or644·2228_. __ ••••••••• ••••• •• ••• ••• •
2 Bdrm, 2 ba, djshwasher
& alove S475 & $500. l
8c1rm., stove. di!,.
hwasher, $395. 661-1192
453·2158 eves.
lbdrm, tba. close to
beach. $450. Properly
House. 642·3850. 642·1010.
or $900 for 2 wks. 640·6626 Storag f t
eves. 225 sq rt + storage use & e garage or ren . On Balboa Pen. next to ----common area. NB Bus run zone uoa2nxzoi1 ru
Npt Bch apt, $450 wk, sips area. 752-~99 673·2943; 673-3980
6, 3 Br 2 Ba. l bJk to • --
water. 5110 Neptune. NEWPORT IEACH
lower unit. Agt/Ownr Full ser vice exec. or-a.MneH/lnn1t/
$I 00 FREI RIHT Bachelor umt. close to G ll.S . 2 I 3 / 9 6 6 • l 7 1 l fices from $397. . ·on AnanC• 2 Br. 1 Ba . private paUo F T f ed Call" exec. offices from ••••••••••••••••••••••• & garage Lots of grass. ~ach 13~~" Pro2perty aml ies pre err · SlOS. lncldll. secretarial, t.Nss
$475. 33552 Blue Lantern. ouse, 642'_,.,, 64 -lOlO. Lido Isle 2 Bdrm, furn. phone ans., word pro· Opportunity 5005
496·9230 or 496·3354 or VILLABALBOA June, July & Aug . cessing,Telex,qwip. •••••••••••••••••••••••
_4_98-_5907 _______ , 2 Br. 2 Ba . new condo for $2000/mo. 673·8717 THE HEADQUARTE RS Service Station, Ora nae
rent. Nice amenities. Voc.-.uon R--A-AI .. JSO COMPANIES County. $112,000 net, net, t•tlftgtOllh~h 3140 S700.Sandy&42.6149.. an "'"'' "' 714/851·0681 n et. (Documented)
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Great loc·over 20'/gal
Vena Illes 1 br penthouse, Lux u r Y oceanfro nt Approx. UOIJ ft. •th fir• proft. Baek room-hlgh
'"' A[llJL T _:t ~ l IVINI,
near ocean. lease w/op· ~aanapall Bch. condo ln walerfmnt bldg, NB. profit margin. A&k for
tton. $550. 968·5133 Maui. alps 5, av all U22 642 4644 Steve 831-1540 to 8/5. Daya 832·4204, ext ---------
IA YFRONT 10. Newport Beach, z ofllca • I & 1811 '•llO Aiiis
• 0.SllH SIWI> & 880 \
• llOGI & AK AOOM
• G••IMft U,..\C.t0"'9
• Jot •• e..c11 ' $"00t .. ~
'•I A t N v 1 1~' Jr~ 11.H "'T
I' ·•f'.V' ' •.II' ....
N 0 I a 8 2 B In exec. 1ulle11 Pvt e n· ew px r. a. KAU"'Lux2/2onPoipu Spa, 11r., bit tns. lndry, n-h""si ,,, P l/ trance. Sec/r ecept ' frplc._ SllOO 811'' W. ~ · P8v vtpoo ten-law library av1ll.
Bay. 1141675 0629 or n i • SS 9 5 I w k · ltnmed. occupancy.
21314411 •s21. (7106'73·1M79 SSOO/Mo. Sara. 811-8141
Lee 3br, 2ba, Crplc. fam Meiclco·8aJamar. Golt, a prime unobstructed
rm, dbl aar, deck, 165() awlm, tennl11 . 2bdrm, ocean vu rull aervke ex·
adults/no pet• Npt Hts turn , P v t hom e • ec. auites avail. 145,180
THIWHIFfl.ITIH-'NIO-Ul88 (714)~·6493ev~1. aMO (w/wetbar> a/f .
Lwtvry Adult ualta at 1r. 1 Br atvdlo penthouae, NEWPORT 3 8r. l houae Sl~letaclJolnln&. ~xcel
fordable IMn1 1.2 le 3 ocean ""· tu'"' ""CUPID· from ocean. Nlce furn. prk •· Dealao Plua • "' "" i..: I Ii .,.,. •7 F Ill h I o n 1 e I. A . J Rr. Well decorated. cy 8115. P . Ftnnerty. ,..c · neu.vu»v 75 Properties. 751 9038
Olympk ahe pool, ll•bt 752-7W bet.1:30 5:30 •~ ~ •""--.. JOO·'-.;...;.:_..;__---...-"---.. eel tcnnll court, lac•zt, - -_... "' B ti( I HI p!J.Tk lllle landacapln1 Jl76 ....................... eau u ne'lf 0 ce
Mcitt b4lautltul bkli. rn * se..rit4 u,.... ;r:,ce available in one or
Ha. <.:oenMlorl to pertemally buewpolld 1"n'11nn~t °/}'c~· From san. Nl·Olll Mlect your compaUble • Ir • • rmmte to nil your alrpOrt. aG0-900 with or
Uf .. tyle.lblnd·LMn1. wlUlOllt HUet1rlal m Dover Dr$vlte 11 NB aervlce1 Call for de·
llMIOl talai ID-OMO
WEHHD
.A WHOLISALEI
in the fast arowin& elec
tronlc security bu11lness. Thls ls a recession proof
business. 10 X 10 space
required. We have a de·
aler a111t1ted prosrn m
that can't be beat!' In
vutmenl r e quired
129,820.00 secured by ln·
ventory Earnlns Pottn·
tlal S'I0.000 00 + fi rst
)'Cllr C• 11 colltct.
1-C100t649-4641
ASIC FOtt
Ml.WOODS
•UAIDIAH
B.ICTIOMICS
STSTIMS
318a V1Ua1t Ceftler Rd
Wtttlake Vllla1e
Calif tl.181
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5678
FOUND: Fem German
S h ortha i r , v1c .
Bu s h ard Adami\
962-6323
FOUND: Mini Bike vie.
Back bay
' 644-9622
Lost: Blk cat w/wht bib,
vie. Corona Hlahlands.
$100 Reward 760·0830
Answers to "Sylvia"
Lc»t: shortho1re<I or•n1te
male Cat, "Frud "
494-4915 , 494 ·7171.
4~1642.
241trs. 641·0180 Rapidly expa nd ing 1-'oll charge. $:rent opp·
Cash/Checks Newport/Irvine invest· ty wlfh busy Laguna
• u EXP/MC/VI menl firm has an open· Reach contractor Must
ave construtt1on exper •~,_,..~~~~~~'·a~l ing for an entry level ac· h · counta nt Degr eed or 494-6525
soon lo be degreed in ac· ----------counlinft is req'd Pos
will entail a wide scope
of accountmg functions
Co offers excell. fringe
benefits & advancement
opporluntly Pis. call:
Personnel. 752-0070
EOE
BOOKKEEPING
PJ11me Apply at
Crown Hardware . 1024
Irvine <Westcllrr Plata>.
NB
BOOKK Ef;p ER Full
Lonely but secure. at·
~ractlve single male. 39.
seeks single woman or
financial independence
in her 30s who is attrac·
live. short <under 5.
fecl·5> with nice figure.
intelligent. liberal·
minded yel si ncere.~~~~~~~~~~
sportsmlnded (likes ten·
nls, golf> & without
c hildren. Prefer so·
meone In Laguna Beach,
south coast area who hos
pJenty o( time to share in
late arternoon. early
e\lening tennis. beach
w•Jks. etc. No pros or
phonies. Please write to
P 0 Boi< 836, C 0 Dally
Pilot, P 0 Box 1560.
Coat• Mesa, Ca. 92626
charge lhru f'I
Mature. exp~r ill ·
divldual lo handle nil
phases or acclg few R.F.
·Develop. Firm. R. E. cit·
Administrative
SECRET .ARIAL
Marlltffn9/Display
Positions must be filfed.
SlOOO/mo. t o sta rt
+ben efits . No ex·
pen ence needed. Sum·
mer or career! MUllt
have transporta lion & be
well aroomed. Call
10am·3PO"I weekdays
847-2422
per. helprul. 2 person
ore. Salary based on ex
per. Now located In C~t
ritos movina to Dana Pt
ofc /Sept Call
714 /621 8M2 or send re·
1ume; 13919 Struikmon
Rd Cerritos. 90701.
LOST. Fem Oobermani----------b I k /tan , vie .
~•Ch/Adams H.D. 5/2S,
REWARD. 900-'1185
ASSEMBLER
to work with chassis W'I r· Ins. P.C. boards, Ii pro
totypes Must speak &
read cn(hah. 2 yn;. expr.
minimum tUO to $6 hr
South S»nta Aiu
Rookkeeplng
ACCOUNTING
Rapidly op•ntt I\
stoclc brokcra11t~anv . .-. : m •nl rlrm hos an ope.
Ina for 11 BoCJlt ·
keep4U //\('cOunllng Clk .
10.kc)' by touch, lll.e tu· t
Ina <CRT up • pJ~ ••
knowi.csic of /\IP, bHk
depQ it• & reconclll1.
Ilona " payroll .xper.
nee. Salary comm wnh
exper Call: Pertot1nt~
540.0823
TR·OOTO £.0.£
1J
.I
Mont wi ll bobylJf ~Pool Dt u and PaUos, FormicaCountertoP.S
chtldr.n H yu. ht my MuonrY, .Siiort C6urts, CU1tom bum as lnstalled,
horn Bla food. yd" Tennll tovrU . Lie:. letest tok>n • deal1n1.
Childproof bouu. 374067.8Sl·l"6,847-'10'7S n-eeest.846..u?l
He .. c ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
0 ME REPAIRS . Want a REALLY CLEAN ~!ov1n1T Th.t Starvln& Interior plant dc1i1n 4r LOCA.L SAN DD LA.S'r BJt
Rernodel1, Bulldlna. Ex· llOUSE" Call Gln•ham Colleae Studenta Movina maintenance ro1 lwm11 Lie, Ins. reas o Jub too
p'd, Rellable. 494·3781 Olrl ft'rttesl.MS·SW Co. b.11 grown, Inured or omce. Plant lt! bl&l•~ll.8'0700'J
RICH ------same 1ood 11 ervice. SS1·2894. ROBlN'SCLEANINO #Tl24 436 L icen u-. ------Sandblutlnc. Hc.i;, ('OJn I•--------Aoorco .. ""9 Service-1thorou1hly. Ml-1427 fllClftw/R_,alr m'I & Industrial Dust l'l111hn eo.cret.,..._ortl ....................... ....................... cleanhouse 540-0857 ,-1, ••••••••••••••••••••••• free, 1are1Cas1 Ben
Dayna, 142•93&4
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ori · I CRPT·LINO WOOD HOME IM PROVEMENT --.,. Neat patches at textures 546·5745 D • D I I...._ veway•. patt<>t, t:: Installed/re aired. Ltc. ReQlodelin&-Odd jobs n 0 US EC LE A N IN C · ••••••• • •• ••••••••••• • •
D '1 .,.' • C t d(oeucnkdsa't',!..n•jclen•twaallekd•·. #389260 ~e14W-51'2 28yrsex""r. 979·2265 LOW RATE S. Own •STEVENS PAINTJNG frfftst. 193·1439 S.C,..._..alServlces e s &n.,ra · U om un .. ""' II u · It Int/ext. Free it"'m1'9 ed S E G ••• homes 3T yrs exp Jt'in I.Jc #1800334. Free est. ~-0 trans ca "'aria a "' .. ED'S PLA T RIN •••••••••••••••• •••• avall Charles <714) 11cr ut Co -•0oor,. .. n Roofln&, plum bin&, SPM est.Neot,Quallty work All Types Int/Ext Sldlled St.arr ror .lll Se<
898·31'1Al <714)9633433 " acme rp. •••••••••• .. •••••••••••carpentry, pa lnllna. I 646·7698 832·3208,546·4561 645·8258 f'REE EST. lr'l/WP Jobs The llead -----<7l4l634-4141 SPRlNGS/RARDWARE Ooora, repair/remodel. quarte rs Cornpun1 e11 ,..--:.., t .., • A t O d Fine painting by R1 chal'd -rft1f u o penen·new oors Free est. 968·2056 art. 5. ~ !Ml... Sinoi· Lie. ins 13 yrs or PLASTER PATCHING 851 0681 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C___. .. Tit.:.. Lie. Bob's :M8·3667 ous.1........ Int/e xt 30 yrs exp
A c ...._ .,.. REPAIR/REMODEL •••••••••••••••••••••• happy N B customers c....a..a.a.." All Arounv arpenter. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._...._II . · Neat work Paul 545.2977 .,..-Finish & Rouah Free __ .... , All typea or repairs, free ewport Buswess exec Thank you. 631·4410 .............. • ...... ..
Est. John 77S.80fl2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eat. work guar. 631·l187 will housesit In Nwpt, ll'tumblftCJ SPRINKLEHS Cit SOU -------LAMIHTTILI CLEAN-UPS/LAWN ans. Laguna area. Xlnt refs. ~Ll!:GE STUDENT·. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tree removal UIG IT
All 1'YlM191temechtln1° • Kltc'tleos, bathrooms, Mai.ntenance·Lndscp Call Paul 7~'1024 p, intlex, any job for PLUM BING new ron· Landscape. 6-lti 7070 ~~~~!"'~~~-! RepalriJ. top quaUty, 17 entries.L.1c'd 978·0320 Fr-eee.st. 542-9907 JoclaofAITrodn s• Alex 851 9371. strucllon, rem odeling,
---yrs m a rQa . Llc'd. Call Jack. 675·3014 DON'T BE EMPTY. -~l _ r epai rs, r est a u ra n t. Stock lrokers ~ccountflHJ Mr. Palo bi>. 962·8314 :hlld Con Gardenlng, landscaping, Hwdwood Floon TmRSTV OR LON EL y PAPER HANGING electronic leak detec· •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••tree trimrnlng & re· Wesllyourhowie.plants 2Syrsexp.f'ree est. tion.TopHa tPlumbmg Stocks, mon~y 11111rkt'l,
P/C BKKPG SERVlCES arpetServlce LIC'DD VCARE moval, major clean·up, ••••••••••••••••••••••• & pets. Security Plus Fllst,neat,rehable 636·2030 ta x i.hellerh Slc\c
All Taxes-Costa Mesa •••••••••••••••••••••• A free est. 752·1349 HARDWOOD FLOORS 631·7587 -Johnston, Call 646 1596/645·9589 hamf)OQ & steam clean My C.M. home, ages 1·4• Cleaned & Waxed _£,roll & up. 645·64~ f Holleman Plumbing 644·2442
Co'or brighteners, wht PT/FT. 6'&2·4036 GARDEN MAINT. Anytime, 832-4881 S.A. Ex P 'd co u P le· non 1 DAVE'S PAlNTING Sales·Servi<:e Repair11 rl1... ln1werl"g Service crpts lQ niln. bleach Contractor Yd Clean-up. Tree trim· smokers, Reliable. Care '. Serv. satis hed cust 9 Free estimutes 552 71113 """ ....................... 11 11 1 d' Sl5 mlna. 548-8709, 4·8pm. M• ... g or pets /pla nts Refs --••••••••••••••••••••••• Proresslonal Start. <.:om a · iv · m. rms · ....................... • ...................... 842 2678 yrs Qual.·integraty ro,...+y MonO¥ment TILi-; INST1\J.l.EU
avg rm S7.SO. couch $10; Construction-AU types EXPERT LAWN CARE H Reas. ms. he. 760-730_1 •••••••••••••••••••••• II k d puter Assisted Sy:.tem chr s:;. Guar. e hm. pet ... , aul. cl .. nup, concrete A in i., guarant .. e1I
The lleadq.u artera Co m I odor Crpt repair. 15 yrs Ll~i'~~f.· Fre~e:~73 Mon-.uy service . Trees removal. Dump truck. MCtSOflrY INT/EXT PAINTING ' Prof. Property Mgmt refs. John. t19:J 16GT
- --548 2049 r PM C 9 Custom Ceranlll' Till• ~once Repair 'Ref3 531·0101 Carpentry. Additions & · DUMP JOBS BRICKWO RK S m a l l Free est S4ll·S684 ices · 0 • 51~ New Remo<M Rcpa11
panleS. 8SJ -0081. exp Do work myselt. & c I ea nu p s . M i k e Quick aerv. 6'&2· 7638 ••••••••• •••• ••••••• ••• Lo rates. Prompt . neat. rA· pts, houses, condos, of·
••••••••••••••••••••••• WeCareCarpet Cleaners Small1obs 2Syrsexp. MOW & EDGE·lOrk dis SmallMovinaJobs J obs. Newport, Co:.ta --;\GAP E FORCE -efinlshlrtCJ • Frt!i!est Chut•k,t;-10·821111
Guar.Used refrig Steam clean & uphols. ,!-ic.3091~ _548·2719 count, ~2 price winter C.UMIKE646·1391 Mesa, Irvi ne, Refs PAINTINGCOM'PANY· ••••••••••••••••••••••
Good cond. Sales & W 0 r k g u a r . Tr u r k rates. 955·1328 675·3175 3 Generations of J .D Horn Refinishing rutorin9
St!rvice 642·7754 mount unil. 645 3716 CALlF. GARDEN Hau1inc & Dump Jobs. BRICK ARTISTRY Painting Excellence. Antiques, kit cabinets •••••••••••• ••• •••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Dnvewayb, parking lot
repairs . sealcoat iQ.&
S&S Asphall 631 ·4199
L1r·d
NoSteamrNoShampoo
Stain &peciulist Fast
dry. Free est. ~-1582
J 'i.STEAM CLEAN
2rms Sl2.S015rm11 $29,95 ca~t dying. 974-6228 --.......,..--
Ask for Randy 939.5851 1-·me paintin_g 645-0664 II sub1ectr.. h) l'red Dryw~llSpeciaJist Tree trim, clean.ups, ce· 641.6427 Pool & s p a copin gs, elementary & lt·urnml(
Qual. & prod. New & re· ment work. 646.4g55 brick pavings, block & RENTALS PA INTED llooflnq hand1cappe<l '-l'l'c1ah!.I
mod. #389944. 532·5549 HAULING -Student has brick walls. 960.7421 Int / e x l p r 0mP1 ••••h••••••••••••••••• You r h ome m in l'
col ----Clean -Ups . Hauling, large truck. Lowest 8 Seaside Paintmg, Greg. QUALITY ROO FING 640.6386aft4
•••••••••••••••••••••• Trimming. Mowing, rate, promjl\. 759·1976 rick,Block·Stone 536-.. '"" __ All types, free e:.t yplnn Se-i·c ... Ed g s · Th h Very reas. Lie, bonded """" Vi MC .. 71 , • .. LECTRICI,AN-prlced • gk1n • weepi ng . ankyou,Jo n Bob548·2753/536·9906 n .. l,..IOWP"'l,..Tl,..G i.a, 5415930 ••••••••••••••••••••••
AS PH ALT R !':PAIRING
Sealcoating & Stn pinf(
Comm re:.1d Free e&t
right. free estimate on Chuc 548·6530 f\A,.. "',.. ,.. HARBOR ROOFING I PROF. T'a l'IN<;
largeorsm"llJ'o'-. ClealHp Yo.1r Act W"nted ·. Small Jobs Exts lnts , custom. " u" TREES W I t 1 " Free Es• 642 9614 HO RIZO,.. On I BM Sclel·tnc. <l11 C ·11 A ti Lrc. 11396621 673·0359 e c ean ou garages. B k & bl k Lo h 1 •· " ee "9· cous c -Topped/removed, clean ton truck. $25. 548·4769 n c oc w r y W "''LP .... ERl,..G ROOFING. CO. taphone. stati,llcal. ll
•••A••••••t.••C· .. I~•••••••• Exco•affon ups, lawn renov. 751·3476 TREE/SHRUB TRIM rate 499-1226 aft. 6 ,,_ AT ,.. For roorin l( at its bei.I ~rt!>. etc_~rnl-1155 too~ IC ei mgs + ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pro( installed , first roll Lie #389425 548 JGO'J Wi do C'-• lutomoti•e c:ustomhandtexturing an Fukunoto Yard Garage & yard clean·"'4o•llHJ hungfree.1·639 1429 '" w tWaning
Lie. 11397362 645·111111
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie 389944 532-:»49 DIUMdP l ru c k , shkip Maint. & Clean-Ups. ~Free esl.557·8271 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----OrangeCoast RoormgAll •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ala ., L u •toto C· -----oa e r , b ac k · oe OLYMPIC PAINTl''G "L0 t Th0 Su11sh1111•ln ns ux ry" l ar C t/C t. s e r v ires Aft 5pM Tree trimming, sma ll li.t-.---le ..._ --., typesofroofmg Rt>µairs ~ ~ · Care Wuxmg, polish mg. emen one... 642_0239 ' · landscaping. 645.~ 1:=::; •• ~::? ••••••••• ABC MO VING. Ex per Int ext. Frce est & additions 646 Fa~t. re Call Sunshml' \\ in<lo''
int Home1ofr 536-4151 •••••••·~··•••••••~·.••• prof, low r11tes, quick Good quality work li able. hone~t. Free est l'lt>anmg, Ltd. 518-111:153
Foundations, R.etamrn~ careful service. 552·0410 Low rates 554·1903 ''all Dav" 548.1733 Wa lls . Hillside Restora· Have you read today's People who need people SHIP TO SHORE -----" "' ui CALL Jt:l.IO'S
Ma ke y our s hopping
easier by ~mg the Daily
Pilot Classified Ads.
t 1on, !lla~!f, P 'tios . Classified Ads? If not, shouldalwayscheckthe Boat&HouseCleaning "MOVIN M AN" RALPll'SPAINTING Chris640·2389 For all your houst &
Blocl< & Brtct'. Lt<' d you're missing the best Service Directory ID the I Reliable·Exp.·Bonded 1s careful, courteoui. & L1t"d Int ext Neat, ~ 1 n do w c· I ~<• n 1 n I.!
642·8387 eves/9G0-0539 bargains in town! DATLY P ILOT . Est. 646·2342, 545-9789 cheap. Pis call 642·1329 Prompt. 004·5566 Classified Ads 642-5678 645·5689
Help Wanted 7100 Hetp W.ted 7100 Help Wanhd 7100 Hefp W.ted 7100 Help Want.d 7100 Help Wonted 7 100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wa~ 7 I 00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BookPastewp 1---••••---l<:as hier thostess. PIT CLEllKS Offtol Fntt Ofc. DRIVER ' P Time Mon. 1 30PM to
GPM. Tues 10:30.\M lo
6 PM . N o expcr
necessary. ,\pply Pcn
ncySaver 1660 P lacentia
1he C.:M
HUS DRIVERS fo r sl'ho<>I
bus posit ion!. a\•a1I. Will
tram if ne<· Fountain
Valley, 962 3312
CARPENTER
63l 2004
Carpet Installer
He lpe r needed Wil l
tr.un M 1ss1o n Vie JO
-are:i. 18 yr!. & older
83l 9070, leave name &
phone no will return all
calls
t:arr .us
CASHIERS
UTDTEM
MARK ETS
For 2nd & Jrd Shifts
We promote to manage
menl & s upen ·is1on from
WllhUl
WANT A CAREER?
Costa Mesa
111 Del Mar
631·9421
Laguna Beach
494.9233
llunhngton Beach
962·9116
Heglster Newspaper has 1----------1mmed. openings for ar cashier
temoon auto carriers m QfflCE CASHIER Laguna Beach & Laguna . ·
Niguel. Must be over 18 Enjoy workin g in
years old & have on Slav1ck 's J e we le r s .
e('onom1('dl t•a r Work Duties include venrymg
3 30 5:30pm weeltday!!, sales balances, domg
5 7am weekends. Eurn daily banking transac·
SSOO·S600 monthly. Ca ll tions. disbursinf funds &
Mr Ensley 951 7113 other related duties. Ex-c e 11 Co . b e n e fits
CASHIER
eves. Apply in person
Two Guys From lla ly.
2267 Fairview Rd, CM.
Sm ore. in NB nds. gd
typlllt. $80().$850 w/mer1t
increase. Free!
Pedo, non·sm o ker ,
Fashion Island. 644--0611.
Irvine Personnel Agy.
CASHIER WANTED 488 E 17th, Costa Mesa DEHT AL ASS'T
Must have gd dnvmg
record. Local p1ck·ups &
deliveries-some heavy
lifting required -will
a lso be tra ine d 1n
mer hanical assembly
wurx
t'/T call Barbara for Suite22' 6'&2-1470 Need sharp RDA w1X·
appt. 540-3280 ray be. for Npt Ctr G.P.
----i COCKTAIL WAITRESS 4 dys wk, pleasant at·
•·hild 1·are.(;dM Summer Part time. Call Newport mosphere. Exp. essen -" "' B h R · I I Only t hose seekin u June 15t h o n 3 .5 eac es ta urant t1a . s a ary ope n . ..
M u permanent em ployment days wk 8AM ·5:30PM _67_S._2_46_1. ______ , argaret 760-~ ... on· need apply
lor l rh1ld need car, wlk COMMERCIALS films ~Th~urs~~~~~~~~I
t o bc h . good wage. models . extras'. SCASI ·
673 4565, 759·9570 need 8 new fa c e 5 DEHT AL •Vacatt0ns & hohdayi.
957-0282 ASSIST AMT paid
Clen cal1Gen. Office
Must be good w/num·
bers. Pleasant office en·
vironment No typing.
Call 1710 771-4750
Companion Nurs e for
woman. Live·ln 5/day11.
Pleasant surroundings.
Must drive. 494·4457.
Modern progressive ·Co paidpronts harmg •Medical-Life Ins practice s-eeks ex· Mission Viejo ureu
perienced chairside as· Call : Mrs. Pare Iii
sistant. Meaningful 581·3830
career opportumty for 1-~~~~!""~!""-~ an individual who is I
looklng for personal re·
cognition and excep·
tional financial rewards.
We are team oriented
and caring, offering
many Cringe beneflta in·
eluding medic al in·
surance and percentage
Escrow Officer
Immedi a te op e ni ng .
loan exp. P al 543·8381
*FACTORY
TRAINEE•
or production. 4 day -
4 day-40/hr week
Call Mark 979·7660
week. 11200 a month if 1'~emale R&B m exchange
Qu a l ified . Founta in ror 4 hr day cleaning &
Valley 963·6702 cooking 6 day wk. Non
D~TAI. RECIEPT. smoking non drmkU'lg,
Full time position art 4pm or wkends
a v a i I a b 1 e l n _556 __ ·1_737 _____ _
GENERAL OFFICE
P time No exp nee Ap
ply btwn 9AM & Noon
Ch arlie's Chili, 3001
Redhill . Bldg •2. Ste
11226CM
G I R L F r 1 d a y . i. e tr llc11r Stylist ~t .in1l·u11-.1
stdrter. e xcell typ1i.t. for <:osta ~ll'-..1 & '111
gd telephone personah· Rl'l1 Jrl'a 548 ~:J i 1
ty, non·smkr . $175 wk. to ~larl Call lor mlen·iew· Hardware Sak~. F 111111
556 6981 . 3195 "O " 1>os m retail hanl\'o al•·
i\irport L,oop Dr . CM ~ton• Sec \I 1kt• John"111
GENERAL OFFICE - ---11 " Wnghl < <+ • ll!•· Rochl•::.lt'r', (.' \I Are you in earnesl? Can GRINDER-
you think? Are you as CEHTERLESS HARD\\' All 1-; s \I.ES
ser t1ve? Are you a Man.igcmenl 1101.-11i1al perfectionist? Are you Top wages, benefits. Apply in per~tlll ('1ow11
rar eer oriented ? Are overtime fo r exper 'd Hard ware, 3107 1-: c 'o.i;,t
t , (' upcrator. Must be ;ible you ma ure. an you llwy . CdM takeover an engrg,mfg lo set up for <·lose
ore whereyour workre toleranl'e work CM. HOSPITAL AOMIH.
ally matters' Really ? Dell romr. 545·0413 Nee<ll'tl ror 9fi hec' S:" I
Well then. l would like lo r~c d 1ty Mu;,t l>c tit'
talk lo you Pis send •---------1 ditated to l!OO<I patient your resume lo Tom Guards care Stroni: ll'<llll'l'!>hq
Tompson. P.O Box 2951. HOW HIRING qua.11t1ei. Xlnt h1·n{·l1t-.
Npt Brh .. 92663 Apply IH5 Supl'n1t1 Armed & Unarmed N n
General Office
~e wpo rt Bea c h in
su rance ro. has the
following pos 1t1o n s
available :
BILUNG CLE RK
Typmg JOwpm S4 15 per
hr Exper. helpful.
l'OM M ERCIAL
BANKERS LIFE
1401 Dove St . Ste SSO
Newport Beach
E.0 .E. M/F
Openings in
Costa Mesa. Irvine.
El Toro.
•$4.00 Per hr & up
•Uniforms·cleaning free
•Ma tu re pe r s ons
welcome
•Semi·ret1red OK
BEKINS
PROTECTION
SERVICES
HOUSECLEANING
Lile laundr) \\ tcJ..1)
Small resuknn· l'lnl
art'a Ref 1 t'q U a~
614·4613
HOUSEKEEPER
Mun Fr 1 . r u 11 t 1 m ,,
7.3 30pm M u~I ~pe,1k
Engh:.h :'llew1>ort \'1 ll;i
642 5861
Part lime. Apply ; The
Earl's Plumbing, 1526
Newport A \'e . Costa
Mesa 7141641 1289.
package. Contact: Mr.
M c Derm o tt ,
714·644· 1380.
51.AVICl('S
Fashion lsland
Westminster dental of·
rice . Require s
knowledge or front ofrice
procedures, some dental
exper. preferred, 4 dy
wk. GoOd salary, xlnt
benefits. Apply Contract
Starring Of Americ a.
17601 E. 17th St, Tustin
or call 714/838-8000. EOE
FULL Time. p time . ---------
2601 W. Ball Rd
Anaheim, Ca .
1714t761·4831
E.O.E. .•.•••..•• M/F
llousekeepers wanted
Searhff Mott>I 16(>1 S
Coast Hwy, L:1gun11 Bl'h
494.9717
DEHT AL FRMT OFC
HELP!!
Min typing req'd. Ans
serv. No exp. nee. Call·
631-0140 EOE
GENERAL OFFICE
Experience helpful .
good typing ability. pro·
flclency with figures.
lO·key by touch. Op·
portunity for advance
menl Exc~llent com ·
pany benefits. Jnfqrma l
office. C.M. Call Miiiie
aner9am al645·5800.
General
LooklftCJ for
Swnmer Work?
Variety or temporary as·
signmenls a vail Worlt
when you wa nt , top pay,
no fee. We need:
Stenos Ty pis ts
Data Enl Opp f actory
f'ile Clerks Assemblers
Laborers Whse Wkrs
GUARDS
Full & part time All
areas. Umforms rum'd
Ages 21 or O\'er. retired
welcome . No e x per. nee.
i\pply : Uni ve r sal
Protection Servire. 1226
W !Ith St . Santa Ana
lnten·1ew h~ 9·12 & 1·4.
Mon·Fri.
Classifi ed Ads, your one·
stop shopping cent~r
Housekeeper l'ompanmn
Li ve m or oul.
833·200!I
HOUSE&ROOM
ATTENDANTS
The Surf & Sand Hotel in
Lag Sch hai. 1st & 2nd
shift . Cull & p time open
1n gs Call M s
M cC ull o u g h
Housekeeping, 497.4477
'
I
I ,_
~W..e.4 7100 W-tH 7100 He•W..eM 7100He•W...W 7100 w.AiiW..eM •too O ..................... , ......................... T ................ , ..... J, .......... .,,.,10 9;;T, ............. ~.... ranp1 Co11t OAIL.Y ,ll.OT/TUlld1y1 June2, 1181 ff
.. IUUNCI MIDICAL '•YIOLLCL•ll llCM1'IOMllT IALll ttmw--.... ' I . M Undtrwrlter with com· TIANIClll• 'nleJ0UyR01erlnc. an Front oh. n er . C1teh tblt opJMmtulit leeTu _,_ 1llO~W.-. 710CIC ~~ •• ,..... 1011-m'I. •uto experience. Work It home, top Pl)'. ••t1bJ11htd rtttaurant rrltndly 1tmo1p~ert, ••tOO/day. Youn1 .,:. ................. ... ................... ~r.:;.. 1010 ..... , ................ .
IOwpm. 10·1lty, tom• JhClulru m i nimum ch1ln, hH an opentn1 Ut.et)'Plnl • 10.key. Lota blU01a1 crew bu room IH W...,.u/W....,. 11
•• • .. ,., •• , .... , ... Oa.na• Bale, I 1nuq ..
r1lln1. Biler)' open.£". &/yr1 acute hoepttal tx· for an uperlenced olbtntfttl here. Nr. O.C. for more, Tralnln1 • I,,... • .,. IQerltnctd, ror lndlan l'ftkon Uma> HIMrA w. a atat•k ''"''· C:ou •
ctll.worklnacondlUon1• perltn0tlnallph11t1of payroUclulltoworkln Airport. Call: Ruaty tranapo provldld: TIAINM ruuurant, ltnlll '--lM1.wldetAfl•6 f'16 . tn1 btCltprHd,
Ntw of1., mpvtna to medloal dlctauon. C1ll • 4 perton dept. Ability P•llcan, Corporate Oto. 54().'TWaftllAM lutll. co. bentttu. Tlier. ING w. Pictnc soom + more, •l for 110. Stereo conaolt,tUO.
MIDICAL
llCOIDI
!! .. v~1t In Au1u1t . 'TIMIOOforlnttrvlew. to bOdlt uten1lvt f:!•Hll, IHI McOaw, laltt l&tady work. IM mutt COUtHw ,N.B.Ml-llOI IUO.U0·8'71 Mttchlnl record ,___, P~n• oom~unlc1t1on1 rv. JOIN be tOocl wtth numbtrt. Catt IOH cabinet 1160 1oxaa aold ~ ut l~k~ l •~ )'to~~bm ~ fttotptlonltt/T)'pllt front A WlNNlNO T~M CM , Dtluonlo, Nl-0'11 WAllHOUll ., .................... , ru1, tia. Pot•' pan a.
INIUUMCI
Busy Hrvice t•tr of auto
Ins a.:y. ha11 ()pcnln&11
for Ole following J>OSI
tlotU:
•General Otc Ans In·
comm& calls & gen or<'
duties
TIAMSClllll R~ulrea 80wpm typln1,
knowledge or dictuphone
& medical termtnoloey.
Oraamzatlon, ultt•ntlon
to detail & follow up 11re
very lmpc.>rt1mt Wt of
fer ell.cellent ._,nviron
ment. Capistrano by the
Sea hosp 496·5102
men1uutt with
0
. olc lun·Thur. Pvt ooun· Total ca ... , a lHdtr In PMIOM H1m1l1y1.n, fem. 11/mo. m!ec. 117 N1111u Rd.
perlenet. Appl' In tryclub.M ·MO. Cuptt Cltanln1 ntld It ITATIOMAIY lxperltnce prtft.rrtd. Beaut.Ital Pt. CFA, H · C.M.Ma·aaaG.
per1on btlwHn tm·
1
•--• now IHklnl ltctnttff, lton In CdM nttdt 10ttrtln1 P•>' "·SJ/hr. cept . for brt1dln1. M111t H .. w •--...t... 806 Spin at· ff.,........ Vtl\t I /Eq I t tn 11l11pet1on r t tlmt, 5 l)'I only, Mon· Fri. Hll. M7·U'T5. o•o..... _.. 5
THE jOf.LY ROGF.R Our Cost. Mesa otllce 1 c,• I "1 + rt • d1y1. Xlnt worldn1 con· Xlnt btntflta. L11un1 ....._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• INC has Immediate openlna .~ 1 n c u • d · N 1 t di. E•peclally fine cllen· Hilla. Call Bob: 110·1815. ~ 1040 Wool blankets. 2 down
17042 Glllette Ave Irv for a receptloni~t at en· · 5 • ooo m 0 · Ca ll telti. Phone 1144.7432 for ---•••••••••••••••••••••• quilts $10 ea King u m
05460331
· · try level.Mu tbeableto 968·9659 app't WAltEHOUSI K~.ESHONO Pups AKC . custom gold spread &t
---handle busy phonea and £am SSO/dlY Citll aft Champ alre. M/F. Pt't & d~t rurne $100. 548-9892
Pest control technlcion enjoy people contact. Sales llAM 540·7652 s h o w . P v t pt y . ---
needed . Exper. pre-Light typlna. Xlnt com-IOrOSITIOMS STUDENTS 213/697·1.345aft6pm. Office Rerriee. 6.0 cu fl f e r re d b u t n 0 t pany benehts. And a Open for motivated pe" Weekend Supervisor• 1100 Exec desk $66-0
•Renewal Dept -Quote
& lollow·up on renewali1
lhy Bulo ral111g exp
pref'd 1--------•I •Accountin g Dept
COn
· I I i h 1 " R 4AM ·noon Sat/Sun 16 Bookcase SlOO. 2 Con nec!~ar_y Call 546-9339 gema environment. p e, e t er n sales or de· eglster today for local iot 1 h p AAA HOME DOG 371~ hr week, Mon-Fri. livery. 951·2642. ttimporary assi1nments. 8 rs. rlmary Job ls TRAINING 7r~~m_1 .. ~e0 chairs Sl50each
rEST CONTROL Call Ann Marshall 557 0045 bemg certain adult auto -....
Invoicing, customer re
luods & deposits
MEDICAL
ASSIST AMT
Orange Co mfg eo hai.
an 1mmed need for 11n
NA/LVN to assist an the
Personnel ore Will be
responsible for Jo~1rst·
Aid, group Insurance &
workmen 's compensu
lion Candidate should
have a min. of 1·2 yrs.
exper. Quolified t•un
d1dates are in\ tlt'd to
rontact.
Person salar y open 541 2641 ' Sales-Students 16 & up. • carrier picks up papers In your home-obedience 641·6930 need summer jobs or on time &t monitor & de &problem solvina Jewelry 8010
P t time year round ,-n.L1n:_ hver complaints calJed 638·9265 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Salary comm wnh exp
Pd. «·o benefits Jo'or
appt • call Linda at FGS.
714'-549-8161
Photographic Printer: work. Cull Mr. Jones U \ 11 1n by cus tomers PLAT. 3 dlamont.I wed
E x p e r i e n c e d 541-4118. n~ POISOHNH sr1Mcu SlOO mo expense check dan1 ring grade VV 2
bl
___ ___ __ LARGE Ooa house with S12SO appraisal Sacrlrlrt>
ack1wh1te Printer for Sales 3723 llrch Street $3.50 hr to start. Must be removable roof$30. $85075!1 1643
Photography Studio N•wport l•och 21 orov~r Valid dl'iver's.. 646.9076
1-'ull time 645-Jll.40. _,ll~~ THE IUCK l;, he & insurance Call -1 44 Ct Ru By A p
lm•estment Jo'1rm build
mg Real Estate Sales
fo'orce Licensee!> invited
tocall 64 1·0763.
Equ!!_Oppty EmplrCo. ST •RTS HERE OE. 540-3007 11AM·2PM. Ask FrM to YCMI 1045 praised at $2900, will sell PICTURE-FRAMER ""I forBobo1 Lee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rorS700,640-8688
Gallery sales. 1-~1T posi Restaurant person with The Los Angeles Times -~ ---Kl tion ror eneroetic. good background. Din <.:1rculotlonDept islook TEACHER XRAY-rERSON ... ~tens free to good 01o~mond in-g-223 t " 1n° rot well groomed, en Kmdergarten full t1m nume r · c s, creative person Some mg room, continental • '' • e, Person exp'd an xray "'•8 ,..,...,,., yelJow gold Tiff n 1
rood & · lhusiastlc people to earn starting Sept. Creden· .,., '"""" a Y se exper pref. Art/design wines. Willing to · 1 techniques with some -------- -ti'ng, .,,JVV\ 751 4293 JANITORIAL
Stock & delivery peri.on,
7am·4pm shift, Sundav
lhru Thuri.day. Xtn't
benefits . Apply i1 person, Hi-Time Liquor
495 E 17th St <.: M
Master SpecfaHles
1640 Monrovi11, <.: M k up lo ••o •en pe d r t..~a,ed . Benefits. Pvt I bk "' '"""""' hkgd helpful. Lag. Nlg. wor as 11ss1stant to food .., ._., r ay or a now how or willing rree to gd home 1 M. 1 ----a few hou S k school, Harbor area u--h1--807 831 5983, 770·2897 eve~ operations manager r wor as ness to learn needed for 1-'em Dachshund. Gentle -.. -ry 8 ~ p a r l t 1 m e s a I e Send resume to Box 669, b App I y to Gener a 1 -s u.sy medical pracuce & quiet. 546-"'203 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Kennel help net>ded. 1"1T.
Mon Fri, J une Isl-June
14th Pu rt or f<' T during
summer Some
weekends No exp
necei.sary Apply 111
per:.on: 125 Mesa Ur
C.M. 631 1030
KEYPUNCH
Exper1enred key
punch/tab equipmt>nt
operntor Exc·ellt>rll
company bent>f1ls, m-
forma 1 oCfice, C . .M . (;a II
Millie after !lam at
6'15·5800
64.2 2427 EOI!: M F H
MESSENGER
6 morning!. a week,
Mon . 5:30AM to l!AM
Tuei.. thru Sal 6:30AM
to !!AM Excell drh mg
rt'c req'd Apply Pen
ny:.aver, 1660 Pla<·entia Ave ,C:M
MNGMNT POSITION
Fu1Jr1t• chum. C.M &
Anaheim Xlnt oppt 'y
Gen 646·4040
MOTH ER'S Helper want·
ed Resp high school
girl fut i.umme1 JOb
starting approx June
15lh 8 mos old baby L B
afl 6PM C.:mdy 497 2297
POST OFFICE
SUB STAT I ON
Weekdays l n •1ne
551-4343
PRESSMAN
Exp'd for AB D1<'k 360,
770·6355 or 898·5249
rrinti1t9
P time , pl11te room
helper Mon 3PM to ap·
prox· 8PM, Tue. 2PM to
approx 7PM. No exper
nece!>sary. Apply Pen
qcySavcr 1660 Placentia
1\\e CM
Printing
OffsetP~ssperson
Expt>r 'd 2nd
Pressperson Goss Com
LANDSCAPE Newspaper d ell ver y m unity 4 unit Apply
INSTALLER . person. 18 or over 1660Pl11t·ent1uA,·e .CM
Looking fo( dependable. I Driver'i. license. in Production
hard WIS'fking person surance, eco~omy car Full time Pt'r:.on for
wt m 1n l yr expei· Npt Brh·lrv Costa Mesa od D Installing trees. shrubs, a_rea 7 dys pr wk Mon pr · epl Pal•king & Jo' handling hosiery header board & sod ri , 2·5PM Sal Sun l'rystal Creations Ap·
l;iwni. Starting pay 4-7 :30AM. Approx. parel.6315414.
$8-1200 mo. Pd holidays S500 mo. C. all 540 3007 -
& vacation. hosp Joi. bet llA~I 5PM A:.k tor QC REct:l\'ING Jnspec
avail Interviews by Lee or Bob tor Trainee Must bt'
appl only, call 646-7441 , self·sl11 rler & able to
Llo_yds Nur_sery NIGHT AUDITOR drh e fork lift 540·6300
LEGAL RCrTIONIST /R.E
Type SO wpm, exp pref
represe t l. H Costa Mesa 92627 " Man ager . w
1
.11 e 11 a 1ves. ours Call 9!17 ·3830 ask for ------Al n COMP R ESSO n.
Classified Ad 11814, Daily are from 4pm·9pm. and Suzanne 8 wk old puppy,. found Portable 220 & 4 hp, lwn
Pilot, P .0 Box 1560. traintng will be pro· TELE,HONE abandoned on Big Sur cyl, 125PS1, hkc ne" C v1ded. Your earnmgs as YARDMAN Hwy, to loving home, S39S.645·!1182
_osta Mesll, Ca . ~2626. 11 Times Sales Represen-PEO,LE Tool rentals . Neat ap has <'heck up & shots. MJ :;-1 -
Restaur!lnt tative will be based on To St't appointments No pearance. gd handwrit 644·8684 aft 4 1ce1 CIMOUS 8080
MNGMT TRAlo..JEE guaranteed hourly wage s e 111 n g S 4 hr + ing Benefits, will train ------••••••••••••••••••••••• " of$3.SO+generouscom S4 i appt +bonus Cureeropportunlty Ap· Freetogood home,blackGAME SHOW PRIZE.
ASSISTANT missions. Call now for 5:30·9 ·30PM We need ply 1930 Newport Blvd femalekilten · SIL V ER G r FT
Trainee opening offers more information about steady, mature people (; M . or 22600 Lam' 631-5797 CERTIFICATE worth
good s tarling wage, this great opportunity CM 545·4!141 ask for bert -1203. El Toro. -$1000. Will sell at $750
health plan ror you & (714)957 2361. ext. 1204. Mikeo1· Marsh111l.:.._ KITTENS, very pretty. 546·9215
your family. p11id vaca· Weaned. Free to gd
lion Must be 18 yrs or Secretary Telephone Sales office Mff'ChoftdfH home 646-7596 · older Cont;ict Bob Red P/T. S needs experienced sales ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----_ _ _
Me·n Ed's Pizza, t377 i ECRETARY help. Easily earn up to AnHqws 8005 Funiitwe 8050
Newhope St , Garden 1 girl office. Approx $91hr Call 4!17 4198 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Grove or call 530-0312 3 hrs daily for furniture --W "'MTED TO IUY rep 557·5389or549-0528 "' SOFA! E.O K I buy o Id gu n s 9 fl h ----TI h ·<'resents ape ar1ti·
Restaurant CatennglSecrelary'Re<'ept1011ist e (&R~TSUMMER diamonds, ivory, jade & que gold velvet Ex·
firm has opening for 1 for. ex~c search farm nr collecubles. Call (7141 c e II en 1 c 0 n di t 1 0 n ! d Ot: airport . Approx JOIS 972·4926&askforDane. $19500 Also, two dark
respon. a ult to operate 30 hr wk r 1 ex i b I e 5 immediate op'·n1'ngs brow · I b I I Hobart auto. slicer & schedu,le M. t h d ... H d d M n wmg pu v ny learn portion ,control . us ave g talking on our telephone. an carve ahogany chairs LIKE NEW! $65
Exp.preLbutwilltrain lyp1n~ skills Xlnl deep \01ces preferred 1"ireplaceMantfe5'XS' eachCall(714)97l·7352
!>alary N D nf d Mon·Fn, 5 9pm. Come $1000 $4/$4.50 per hr 9:30am 7!')2.8321 · a or by 1180 North Coast 645-9709 **I BUY** to 6pm Mon lhru Thur. Hwy. Laguna Beach
6am to lpm Sun 979·0747 weekdays after 2pm 1st
for appt. Lori's Kitchen Secretary come. Isl hired.
SALES SEC'Y
Oak Roll lop desk. S
Curve, $1800 OBO. Good
eond. PP 957 0907;
962 0019
Good used Furniture &
Appliances OR I wi II
sell or SELL for You
MASTERS AUCTION
646-8686, 833·9625
I IUY FURNITURE
Phone.Mate Telephone
Answering Machine
wllh warranty S79 With
remote Sl49 750 3791
All year Bubble Poul
Enclosure, 30 x 55 Xlnl
S75<1 offor 642-9666
Love Balloons
llelium Houquets de
livered Perfect Co1
every Ol't'as1on 673·441!1
6 rt redwood picnic table
Brand new $7S 646-988.'i
anytime
Couch $75 , Hondo
Acouslll' guitar $65, Mal
tl box spnngs. $15 Call
848·3915
RN, rehef charge nurse,
llpm 7am, Fri & Sal ,
NOCS, 80 bed ECF, gd.
~alary & fringe benefits.
Mesa Verde Con\'
Hosp . 661 Center St.,
C.M 548·5585
TELEPHONE
OrEttATORS
Answering Service.
various shifts, rull &
PT 362 3rd St, ll"C",
Laguna Bench
Antique Show, St. Fr an
cis C hurch, Palos
Verdes Blvd Les 957·8133 BEARCAT Pohce St·an
----
P V.E.June 2,3,4 llam.
Admission $3. dsk w/exec chr S1500. 2 gst chrs 1200 ea, file c11b
ner good cond. best offer
631·5800
SECRETARY
Probate experience
Permanent parl·t1me
Newport Beach area.
673·7120
FRONT UESK CLERK
For small Laguna
Beach hott'I Full ur
P T Experience with
NC:R 250 preferred
Hotel San Maarten
Ask for Bill. Bkr Owner Sall maker Seamstress.
979·5370 <Male or Femalei F T
Good typing &
shorthand. pleasant on
phones , neat ap
pearance All company
paid benefits & pleasant
surroundmgs. Call Lm·
da Beck at Christy Food
Service for appt .
751·5743.
TELEPHONE Surveyor
& Girl Friday Earn up
lo $7 .50 per hr. Call:
675-6344
3 pc bdrm set, armo1re, $400
grandfather clock,
cedar chest, hall tree 645 6923
Herculon curved green
couch set, $80. Tiffany ...
membership, S200 H1·f1
stand, $20 646-3388 494·9436. . RECErTIONIST
1---------•I Experienced recpt. for LIFEGUARDS 1-rapidaly expandin g
ARC Cert. Also tramces •MITE CHEF/ Newport Beach l aw
for summer positioni. IROILER MAM* firm Some typing; lite
968·0311. Full or p time derical duties Front of·
TOP WAGES PAID flee appearance. good
Liquor Cl.rte P /T Apply in person. The d1ctwn. mature judge· 1525 Mesa Verde Dr menl required Please Village Inn, 127 Marine. send resume 1 0 .
LIQUOR CLERK with Balboa Island. Class1f1ed AD !!!!l l,
knowledge of Wines Ualiy Pilot. P 0 . Box
wanted Spigot Liquor. OFFICE HELP 1560. Costa Mesa !12626
1802 S Coast Hwy. Part time, 2 days per Lag•ma Beach. 494-1533. week for growing <'Om· RECErT /SEC'Y
L 1 pany Typmg4Swpm,fil· Immediate position 1quor C erk, P. T nights a\·ailable m legal acctg Ask for Steve mg & phones. Newport olfice for respons1· ble Bea eh 851 ·9222. 548·8410 i.elf·starter. fo'ront office
LVN Medical Assi!.l PARTTIME appearunce Pleasant
B k To deli\'er Dail> Pilot phone manner ; or ac office, fullt1me gan1Led & basic·
days ~57 6300 auto route m Newport ·" · Beach se<'retarial skills req
MAID HOURS Mon thru Fri Salary commt'nsurate
642-3030 a p p r 0 x 3 3 op m 1 0 w 1 t h e x p e r 1 e n c e 5.30pm New p <>rt He a ch .
MAID WANTED HOURS : Sat & Sun 640·0080
Don Qui,xote Motel 5am·7am --------
2100 Newport Bl. CM Earnings approx s350 RECEPTIONIST per month. Growing S.A Co. has
ManCHJer-Tralftee Call 642.4321 for Bryan opening for receptionist
P/T SALES Holland or Sheldon with pleasant phone
Career opportunities for Harte. Equal Oppor personallity. Typing E 1 skills 55WPM manager trainees with _mp oyer Responsibilities include
one of the fa stest grow
1ng clothin g retail Part-time help. 3.4 hrs typing or orders w1lh
chains. Xlnt oppty. ror per day for typing & fit-some lite correspon·
the highly motivated, ing Len-Mar Rentals dence etc Competitive
goal·or1ented individual 540.3195 entry level salary with Retail or management ---periodic reviews. For
exp helpful p/l morning Part-time personal interview con
sates positions abo Ambitious couple want-tact Cy Simpson at
a v a i I a b I e . X 1 n t ed lo assist an manage. 558-2603
employee benefits. app· ment & expansion or
ly at Miller's Outpost small business. P11rt· *RECEPTIONIST
Mesa Center 211 E. 17th time. 848-6995. Small d1vis1on or leading
Architect ural firm
needs mature, dependa
ble Gal Friday with
sharp front orrice ap·
pearance & pleasant
phone personaltity for
varied duties. Fast, ac
curate typist. Ex«llent
benefits. No smoking.
Costa Mesa or S <:
Plaza 3333 Bristol Costa
Mesa
MATURE PER SOM
Interviewing, phones &
lite typing. 9·5. Sun. thru
Thurs Npt Bch toe Will
train. 642·9955
l'ARTTIME
FLEX.HOURS
P T employees needed
for general pest control
work in South L.A. &
Orange Co Will tram.
Must have own
transportation. Phone
(213)978-8269 Wm L. Pe,.. Ira
Associates
PART TIME MacArthur Blvd & Ford
Earn full time pay In Newport Beach
Your spur e time! (7141644·0620 EOE
Exp pref 631·5950
Sales
Assistant Manager
For Nautical Girt 'Store
Full Time. Experience
Preferred. Call Charlies
Locker 675-6230
Sales
Auditioft for Avon
Partlime career. Meet
new people. Earn S6 or
more per hour 966·0522.
SECRETARY
A front office secretary
for small Newport
Beach manufacturing
firm. One person with
typing & secretarial
skills to also perform
bookkeeping, posting
Call 548·9818 for app't.
SECRETARY-LEGAL
2 career oriented pos1
Sales lions open in Irvine. 2·5
$36•000 + yrs. legal experience
Xlnl benefits & working
BEVERLY H ILLS conditions. Call Fran
Health & Nulnlion Corp. 1_833 __ ·36_2_2 __ _
setting up operations in ii---------• 0 .C Need key people tor
Supervision & Tr111n1ng.
Full or Part Time. Will
train. Xlnt career or
supplement Call 9-5pm,
Mr. Zucherbrod at
973-8443.
Sales * IRIDA.L
CONSULT ANT •
SECRET ARY R.E.
Secretarial position in
active Newport <.:enter
Realtor's office Front
office position requires
good telephone voice,
typing & appearance.
SH & real estate ex
perience helpful but not
essential. Prefer local
resident. For interview
call Mrs. Duhl. Wesley
N. Taylor Co. 644·4910. Will train-part to
F t time. Pref retail
cloth mg sales exp. C.M.
546-1821 556 93331--------·
SALES CLEltK rT
3 hrs daily·S3 50/hr.
Duties include typing,
filing, assembling
mailers & phone cov-
erage. Call Cathy
Lester: 642·9470.
Sa .. sDIY Rep.
Part time. Sales exper
deaUng with businesses.
Sal & comm Position is
with Calli. largest
Management consult.
firm. Send resume to
23771 Mariner Dr. 12·207.
Laguna Niguel 92677
Sales, experienced, part
lime. Ladles speciality
shop, Fashion lsland.
Flexible hrs. Call Mimi
759·9951.
•SECRET ARY *
Qualified candidate
sho uld ha ve proven
secretarial skills includ
mg accurate typing,
pleasant com munica
lion skills and the ability
lo handle all duties con
sistent with the position
of a secretory.
We oiler an excellent
sa l ary and com
p rehensive benefits
package including
Medical, Dental, paid
vacation, retirement
and more.
For immediate con·
slderatlon please call:
Personnel Dept. (714 I
76()..6()()()
644·9400 Elegant modem dm i.el
Travel Agent for busy .a. ••••. u --Wal tbl, 2 Ives 6 off wht
Commercial Agency an ...,.,...oncH 8010 uphl chrs w1chrome 100 yds dean used sha..:
cpl green S2 'yd Twin
velour swivel rocker"
rust $75 ea. 675 2172
I . ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Lk rvane. Must have Sabre WASHER & DRYER egs. new 552·8530
exper, ~at least 2Yrs ex· Xlnt cond $250 ea 7' .camel sofa & lo,ei.eat,
per ~ith large com· 644-0381 · like new, $525 Alex merc1al acrts. Xlnl ---------salary & ben Call Tom-HARBOR AREA 552·023~1 937.!_ H 0 Train layout 5·xa
mie833·2977 APPLIANCE SERVICE Danash Bench Seal for complete and read) tu w b demon~trate Incl
'fRAV EL AG ENT for e uy used appliances two. S7S Walnut buffet e n g I n e s . t w I n
busy Irvine agency. a~ ~~sell recond, guar $50 Ph: 494 3793 transformer. bldg~.
Mmimum 2 yrs recent P aances 549·3077 NEVER USED: I l~ndscape, etc, must
exper. Computer exper. I IUY ArPLIANCES Bunk beds S200, dmette s~e. •
pref. Qualified only Les 957·8133 Sl30, sofa & lo\'eseat a49 1484
957·2700 S31S. sofa bed Sl70. Qn Dryer, gas, clean, works bdrm $540, Maltt box
good, S75. 548·8513, s prings : twin $75, full
6' REDWOOD Picnic Ta·
ble w benches. brund
new TRAVB. AGENT
'Looking for a change or
pace? Experienced
vacation agent is needed
for a large multi branch
agency in Irvine. Xlnt
salary & ben Opp for
advancement. Call Tom-
mie 833·2977
TYPIST
Newport Beach. Min. 45
wpm . Just Bikinis,
'752-6771.
548-4485 ____ S85. Qzn :125
MORE!!
$75 646.9885
Washer, clean. works
good, $85. 548 8513,
54a·4485
n0-0901 Sturdy lumber rack w 4
-------tool box attachment
Rust sofa & 2. matching SI 75 64S·5749 SP M lOP M
Freezer. uprighl, clean chairs $150. 5 Seascape ----
works good, SlOO oil painting $75 2 T1f· University Athletic <:Jub
548·8513, 548·4485 rany lamps $25 each or. !\1embersh1p $500
f1ce desk & chair $75 548·3289
REFRIGERATOR Drafting c hair $25
16.9 cu ft Frigidaire 640·1968 Cake surprise unique w11cemaker, $450 1----------1 navoredcakesdelivered
644·0381 Din. set, fruit wood fin.. for any occasion 548-4364
TYftlST · drop Ir, 6 chrs, good to -----
Xlnl position for xlnt GE refrtg, side· by-side. exc. $250. 545-8951 5' Deli Produce Case. new
typist. Lots or work in a 2112 cu ft, avocado, 3 compressor $250, 6 ll.P
busy office· lovely Irvine yrs, $400 494·4881 Chana Cabinet, maple, shredder $200 646 6705 ~~~b:r~~7i.~~· Call GE washer & dryer, 9 Sl
75
· 631·3796. MINl ·REFR IG mos old, white, warran· 36" high, walnut fm1 sh,
TYPIST
Varied gen ofc duties, in·
cl support for president
of leading stereo mrgr in
Irvi ne area . Type
50 wpm fr om
transcriber, gd
secretarial exposure &
g rowth o pp or
(714 )556-6193 ----
TYrlST /RECPT
ty, $450 both. 494·4881 Sofa, qn sz hide a bed, perfect for bar or sgl white naug. Fine cond. room. like new. sacr.
14 cu ft upright coldspot $150, 536-1275 1275 OBO 494·8744
freezer very gd cond. ---------1 $95. 646·6714 New cott()n Sofa 6 love Atari video game w. 5
. seat. Earth tones. 111 ~ cartridges & all paddl• ,
Electric range, Portable $300640..5093;&42-7Jll -~ bestoverSl00.645·5432
dishwasher. Washer & ---~
dryerS125 each. 646-5848 AJI wood 7 pc king bdrm Vacuum. pump 1 tn set, antique beige, $500. dustrial type>. vacuum
64.2·1034,645-5432 table, bell Jar 251 Refng, frost free, works
fine, excellent, S250
548-8513, 5-48-4485 K.JNG SZ Waterbed Good C.ond. new heater S200
Camellia Ln CM Evet.
aft 6
FIT position avail with land developer firm in Kenmore Duo power UP·
Irvine. Pleasant phone riaht vacuum · heavy
manner & good typing/· duty, like new $75/ofr.
grammar skills a must. allo Hoover compact
Salary comm with exp. vac w/attachments SlO,
840-4.04.3 Newport Beach Tennis
Club membership a\'Wll
Moved ·must selJ
(415)728-3846.
KIN G SZ Boxspring,
Mattress & Frame. Xlnl
C.ond. $90/080675·2513
. Call Liz Hartzog 549·2691 960·1963 p AT r o Fu r nit u re,
TY'IST/RECEPT KENMORE Apt. Sz Dis· Tropit one lounges &
MATURE ;ERSON
needed to help operate a
lea garden In CdM,
Sat/Sun only, 9:30AM to
3PM. Apply In person,
Sat le Sun .. 10AM-2PM,
Sherman Gardens, 2647
E. Coast Hwy., CdM
S250-S400/ wk is yours,
guaranteed as a consul RECEPTIONIST Sales E:ftcJMHr tant tor lmport•Co . For F IT position in Musthaveexperiencein '
Oei1ire for bigSS! Call Chiropractor's oWce. setting up seminars. and
BANK
OF
NEWPORT
Advertlsine agency hwasberS11S chairs, l yr old. Very lit·
seek ing Typlst/Rtcep-673·9212 Ue use must aee lo ap-
tionlst, 50wpm, lite book· pr-eciate, call 169·02.58
KENMORE Portable <ta
hwasher $50. Dinette tbl
& 6 chrs $35. Lge. dog
house w I re movea1'le
roo< sao. 646·9076
M Do.._. .a.•o before3PQ1 -675·5299 Must be dependable, ef· t r ain ing personnel in
C "~ 'S ficient & have good of· seminar presentation.
of s. ca.mtnte Pa1te11P fice skills. Non·Sn'loker Pay on shares, comm.
<Under New Ownenblp> Full time position Full preferred Call 631·5690. ex~ted 60M . Call for Is now accepting ap-company benefits. Ex· appt. 675·90t2 10am·l2 &.._ ________ _
plicatlons tor day & ~r or w/train. Appl:,·,l•--------..i 2-4on Mon&Tues. r
nl&ht positions. Please PENNEYSAVER 1660 RECEftTIOHIST --------1
Equal Opp Empty M/F
•SICRIT ARllS *
CONSULTANT
keeping . Fun a t · KENMOREPort.able IK•IMtCMIS m 0 5 Ph ere, 0 8 n a : dishwasher $S0 OOnvert. Sofa $75. Twin W_..d IOI I
549· 1757. 646·90'76 be4 S2S. Tbl & 4 ch rs 120. •••• ••••• ••• ••. •••••.,.
TYPIST llcyd.. 1020 Or Bsl Ofr 543•1642 W AMTED
Mature. Type Invoices, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dbl bf!d, compJ,$75. Twin Blue short slee\f~d
ftaure aptllude, lO·key, Schwinn Tandem 5 spd bed. compf, $30. Antique security ruard shi
40hrs. c.M. 979..asoo 1275, Punch Moped . nds cofrK table. $SO. Stereo Size 15to15\', medluria.
rpr S75. call 159-119S an etand. 115. Dy 979-4680; 646·9 I 00 apply ln pet"Son between ~lacenUa Ave.CM. SECRETARY SN.ES. 'mature part time
9·lam & 2·5pm wkdys al --. --Fast growtna Npt. Bch. Sun, Mon +, Sal + $pm. ev615"4598
r Eap11ndAn1 aaaln! Exp.~--------
ln pro£esaion. Abo need TYPIST McDonald • s, 6 so royroll/P.nOllMI ad an. seeks tndlv. with comm. WICKER RAT·
AvemdaPico,San Clem Ce.ril top lyplng 1killl . TANOECOR.839·7239 Receptionist, l}'pe 50, Accurate typlnf & fd.
ourotrice Fun! FUn! reception 1kills for
MEDICAL COURIER
Mu st b•ve own
t ransporbllon • be ramill1r with CalU
freeway 1yatem. Mon
FH. 8·5pm. 768 &:'100.
Medical
FIOMTOHICI
Mature, expert need lo
OB ·GYN, h~avy
teleptaonu, Send re.
•11me1 to Boa 17&2 C/O
Daily Pilot P 0. BOX
l.HO , Coeta Mesa <.:A ...
M81CAL CLAIMS
PIOCBIOI
M111t tN uperienod. PIT, a.II (or Beth:
CTltlMO-l1lL
Telephones plus a varle-
Sturtina Salary to: tl' of reaponslbllllles & SALISPIMLI
$1168/mo. Ol)pOrtunltles. Call Bob, Home Improvement. 644-7644 SlK week draw poHible
LliReinders Agy, Inc. 'Pleasant F.xecullve
4020 Birch Eat '&4 EO£ Sultei Hta. 11:30AM to
Newport/833.8190/Free 5 p M , 4 0 r 5 d a Y •
Governmental agency is!~~~~~~~~~~ ror ngbl experience. seeklni sh1irp person lo Call Chet 494·~. SECURJTY
process computerlied "1,~11.,wph1a1!_C>'0111u. 1111,•1-~ ... ln Salet Pt:RSONNEL
payivll lt 11sl1t In busy , "' .. cu.-. Frr PIT · hl"' peraonnelofflce. Payroll -Prof. S•.,.apl1 or ,1utu non
duti take about 10~ of ~ ly. Cati or apply in
your lime RequlretlYP· Marketln1 Repe lo Hll poraoo, llOll'I San
lot at 45wpm 6 t year flJ I.I I~ • product that Ls wanttd M • art en· L •I u n •
payroll/bookktcplna ex· M ~111911 at n..ded by everyone. S.ach. 41M 943&,
peri nee Full time posi· 11.a 1 EarnlnapotenUal · -~-s,,.,,, .. ,
lion with excellent .,_ M0.000·"50,000 p T M
benefill which lncludea ft.... • Co. Tralnlna / • a.ta "" •re1 a 3 day weekend every -1 Plllt • Qualified Le1d1 J u d • le bk Id n ec ·
other wHlt. Apply. • HJ1h Income ~~-----------
' Personnel Otfirel ll-VISOI Lt ...... ......, Shlpplaa, ~ecehhlf, 6 toe.. !Ill.IA~. I,._. WerUouatCltrllneedC'd Foun\·.,Y:~:.o moe &42-5171 ....._A ..... J.;...: l;.;;.14.;,.·lms;;;;;;:::..:·· 1o1 ""°;.;:.."';.;.:;:n:.....1 lea A.dbellvn 1111. p&ant
E.O E M/F Eap pref .• Dol nte. W1 Want Ail Rtlp! IO·.w?I _M_onro __ v_la...;,_N_._e.~--
11•· 752.0234
VITHINAIY
HOSPITAL
Hat PQSlUona In Irvine &
NB.
11-3. c N pt cur
tfle•lrt)
w.-.fVI .....
Apply btwa 9AM "
Nooa. Curll•'• C"lll, _.. RtdbUI, 8 ... 1. iti,
6tt llMCM
NEW 23" Scl\Unel
l01peed $100
I
,......... & Power 9040 C~rt, S./ fNCU fS60 ,...... 1011... •• • •• ••• • • ••• • ••• • •• lt.t.t 9 120 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••• 33• ~w ENs &Rro sir ••••••••••••••••••••••• s 1 I
I,! M M o d e l • C • w/Newport Sllp, n•w C1bover Camper compl pee 0 ,,~,.~rlter $2SO cruuder1, trana & pro Mil cont. Sips •4 Incl Pwcha1e!!
956·1827 pa Radar. pilot, ball &250 Jacks. Prlc rom· Low Mle.agel
<.;l".A.'1 accountanta & tan~~l~~i~e ayatern, pl le $500 673-2593 after 1910 4 $pcl. CNMI 5 apd.
vkes. 0£C 310 com· $37. 5pm. Dem. rick Up'•
lflw with LA180 pnnltr 17' aluminum canoe Motoriaed IU..a t 140 Treme11dou1
fi cUent acct 'Ing syatem with uccessories ••••••••••••••••••••••• S I Ill
Mttware. In operation. S350960·368'f 761·9030 • '79 Motobecane MOPF.D Ma¥ llCJI
ltb,too. 752"5615· 260 SEARA Y Sundaancer $400 • cfow•
,. 1017 wtahl), '111 lo hn. auto Ht ... 76' mtdwtt.lypoyMtftfa
•••••••••••• • ••••• ••• •• pilot, alcohol ~lee stove, Motorcyce.a/
Burmese Python $150/bst retria. dock 111de pwr & Scooters t 150
or r Red ta 11 Bo a c~araer, fathomeler tfsh •••••••• • ••• • •••••••• •• l100 bst. About l ''I yrs finder, apelco radio , • "2-t694 telephoae radio dl~e Fantaatlc buy . 77 750 . • Honda, less than GK mi.
F.UJ,.LV Tame. yng. hal• lion finder. full eanv1u. lmmac ·extras. ONLY
Noon parrot w /caae 641·8251 or!>64·3.S~-$1495. Must see. 673 4068
$100 556.(994
..W.01 & Or9c1111 1090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WURLITZER. spinette
mbdel 4410, two 44-note
allyboards. 13 pedal
o~es, auto tone control.
·phone Jack. solid ma
i w/matching bench.
cash or $450 de ll red. 547 1845
'69 Hondaa 750 Runs.
needs m1nOT repair.
some spare parts. $900
firm. 673 8133 days. only
before5pm
BARWICK DATSUN
'HJn Ju :.J" ( nµ1'1.h aflit.1
831-3311
•CHEV.HU '81
I TOH STAKE
12 h modC!l with 1tngatt>.
du1tls, ulr cond • H O
11p1·m11s. pwr steel'i11g.
1tux tank & m o re!
Workhorse l'Om pll'te !
(3$1)
OHL Y S 12,498
HOW ARD Ch.vrolet
Dove Quuil Sts
NEWPORT BEACH
8 33-0555
1975 FORD lnut Burl grand ,
on. C1880, Germany
OBO PP 957 O'J07 ,
()()(9
'81 PENN YAN 33' 650 KAWASAKI lo m1, COURIERPICICUP
Sporths her s how demo, clean. makeocrer
twin dte>el $84.900 642·9684
rs S1lvertone Solid Call: 213-592·285!1 -
0 •. ---'80 Harley "Wide Glide" te rgan. upper "' 23' CHRISCRAF'T C:I s · 80 C 1. ex "Ond, oil cool. er keyboards. Xln 't ,. It sic ~ d except needs tun· F 1i.h1ng Skiff. ull in leath sad bags. Must
$JOO 646 4140 after board A gre.il &tlirte1 see aft6. 993·3843
boat $3500 <"all ---1· 12131592·2859 Honda 350C, sacrifice.
Or nd Plano, beaut1ru1 -runs good, needs paint.
Automatic trani..
e ui.tom interior &
l'Us tom s tr1pt>s
<011946 )
ONLY S2695
Theodore Robins
F·ord
2060 II arbor Bl . (" ~I
642-00 I 0
e, teacher sells reas locrts, Reftt/ $290. 645·3406 e~
I o Kimball l"oni.ole, Chari•r 9050 '76 Ford flatbed trud.
.._•W...eitd .HH A9t01,~arW • ..._,l•••hd ~.Ulff .UM4 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED! Ce,ri '711 ao•1toya 97H , ... ,.., • 990I ...._ ttn
L61tc model T<>)'<>t•• and •• ••• • •••••••••••••• ••• • ••• •• • •••••••••••••••• ••••• ••• •••• • •••• ••• •••
Vu I v o 1 C a 11 u 1 i4 Capri Z6, xln\ cond, 1981 Sliver Cloud, white. IRADLIY GT II
TODAV l '! S6K ml, a uto, am/Im aood cond 121,500 '80 ahow car . w/many *
Top Dollar
Paid
1''01· YourC r !
JOHMSOM & SOt4
Uncolft.Mercury
2620 Hai bor Rlvd
<:ost11 Mesa 540 5630
We Pay
OVER
llw look
Foi YourGood
\'W, Porsche or Audi
•. ;. , 4' ' '
VW PORSCllE AUDI
445 E Coast lliway
a l 91tys1de Drive
Newport llea<'h 673 ()(JOO
' Pn:mium pricett
paid fo1· Jny ui.ed c:ar
lfore1)(n or domesl1t· I
in good cond1t1on.
See Us fo'iri;t !
:!888 I IUI bor Hl\d
I ·o .. t a :\lt·~a ~O 0330
cHI, mustttlll 5'8-03UI OwnerS..0.4999 extras. 7,000ml Mu1t 1ell
--below CMctory coat. 0..... t720 S.. f 760 Owner. 497-102
•:••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Well --9t I 0
LEASE •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 PU wt camper sh~ll
$2600
DIRECT!
1911 SAAi
TURI01
IEACH IMPORTS
1148 Dove Stteet
NEWPORT BEAC:ll
752·0900 -----
lt77 IUICK
llGAL
II cyl • auto trans • tilt.
cruise, AM I FM stereo,
pwr. 1eats & window&,
vinyl top. CWltom wheeh1
& more! 000414)
ONLY $3595
1'Modon lobifts
Ford
I I
MEW 1981
CORVETTES
THREE
4 SPEEDS
TO CHOOSE FaOM
COltMllR.OeLILLO
CHIVROLn CO.
(714, 147-6017
* 492·~9 uft 6PM 2060 Harbor Bl.. C M
642-0010 -W>orv 9762 '68 T·Top 427 390 hp, 4
'280Z '78 2+2 51pd stick, ••••••••••••••••••••••• s pd. l owner 15800
11lver, blk 111t. xlnt cond. '80 Subaru Brat, really •77 ltlick Regal 673-3635
$6995640·6244 shitrp. Has camper shell 38,000 ml. l owner, xlnt ---------
• j.t c amtfm cast. 1142·1743 condJtlon $3,500, · 7 9 S 1 I ver T Top .
73 240Z, $4000 T-- -(714) 495·2547 p1Mtr1pei.. dual exhau>t
Auto. at e, new &ho<'lu £i oyota 9765 --SlO ooo 645·5528 lirt>s 557-9359 ••••••• •• •••• •••••• • • •• Cadiloc 9 9 15 -• ---
'711 Celle a GT L1ftback. ••••••••• •••• • ••••••••• Dodge 9935
'77 ~210 2·dr. low ml, nu Blk. c lean, loitded' COMTEMPLATIHG •••••••••••••••••••••••
paint. good mileage $6495 831-7634 , 759·2465 c•DILL•C? '1968 Dart. 6 cyl S650 or
AM FM.PP 759·0988 ~ --""' ~ f R k d --'77SR5hftback 1t tc,5spd. We specialize in leases 0 fer Ask for ic .iy HOf'da 971.7 R &r H luggage rack for .the busine_ss ex· 493-1322 E\e661928J
••••••••••••••••••••••• $34951151·1853 ecutive&pro!essional '7JDartSport,6cyl,auto.
VISIT YOUR ----L.-,e Selection u <'. xlnt mech l'ond. ORANGE COAST '80 C:ehca, 5 spd, am rm Of Hew 1911 n ~ w lire & • Io m •.
stereo, 22.000 m1 . xlnt Cadillacs $1500 •080 752·6992 pp HONDA cond,S5500.S42·54011 Mow In Stocki Ford 9t40
HEADQUARTERS '79 Supra, L'k nu, lo1tded. NA~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
TOD ~YI II LO mi AC. am fm tape ·111 i''1esla, ttood cond.
UNIVERSITY ~~~54 & more $7950. CAD LLA ,, ~S~;i. $2500 !°>52·1511.
SALES & SERVICL" lti<X> tt.111"" Blowe• "' Triumph 9767 c'"'·'......,...,,..,40<11
OLDSMOllLE • ••••••• •••••• ••• •• ••••
HONDA '80 TR7 Conv. 6500 ma. all
GMC TRUCKS extrui.. Spec paint. fun
68 Ford Galaxy 500. con
\ert Runs xlnt $800
ORO Sus11n. 857-1447
s. 963·8840 •••••••••••••••••••••••Motor Hom.s, Sale/ hydruul1c· lifti;:a1e nu
Samarang. 2 masted 70' Rent/Storoge 9160 tarci. transmis!>mn Mui.t Aut I r+ d "CJ Goods 8094 schooner . SI p s 6. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sell 964 5628 os, mpo e
2850 Harbor Blvd car. $7750. 759-1336
COSTA MESA
540-9640 V oltaWCHJeft 9 77 0
79 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE
DIESEL
C:ruase, wire wheel cov·
ers, leather int . stereo.
tth. air cond, 1008YBDI
l!J76 Ford Torino, $1 ,200.
or best orrl't l'all dfl
3PM, 642·8680
••• ••••••••••••••••••• children we ll·ome. 2 WE CAN SELL ••••••••••••••••••9••7•0•5•
C plete set or Lynx Golf headl>, full galley, main Vons 9570 Alfa Romeo 01!1 ACCOHU 4dr, auto.
am/fm. xlnt rond. Best
offer 955-1100 1131·8105
•••••••••••••••••••••••
79 VWRAlllT Ford. 73 Galaxy 500, 4 dr,
high mil but good l·ond
Hadao. AC . good t1rl!i.
Asktng Sl.000 A93 48l!J
a(t61'~1
:t bs. 3·P\\1 Irons 1·5 Salon. aux. deiseL Ava il YOUR R.V. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ods. ApJ)rox. Sl50 for Churter (7 14 1 5591304 '73 DOUGI-: Tradesman LEASE DIESEL
9295 or 645 0792 642·4848 or PO Bo'( 8381 . 200 ram pe 1 i. pt>l' I a I '
Nwpt Bch. 92660 Hent 23 Lux mtr home. m~rny extra:.. I> ~. p h, DIRECT' Mercedes Benz 9740
5 speed, AC . AMt FM
stereo c asi; • steel
rad1a li.. whitewalls. tint·
ed glass. low miles
Black w /black \'elour
(544XJR)
$9495 ~i':W K2 24~·s with fully self cont, S.'>5 dy, a l'.S2500ffum li-16·5~JH •
omon 626 bindings & •IMMAC28'-34 ' BOATS 500free m1 548·094!.l t'vt.'l>
••••••••••••••••••••••• "4ercwy 9950
11 of Lang NLl boot!> 6112mo plans prepaid -
all 751 9227 rrom $18!.l mo including Wan l t o r e nt GM C Autos Wanted 95901
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
....•..............•...
-.-slip, lessons 714 964·59!*4 Motor h o me . J u n e ••••••f•••••••••••••••• I TV.Radio, - - -l9·29th L<>cal 7590900 WEPAYTOl'OllLLAll
Onty S6695
ORANGE l'OUN"TY'S
FINEST
LINC<.lLN MERCURY
DEALERSHlP m.wtUowmd
VOUCSWAGfN IHC
MiFi, S~reo 8098 Boats, Sall 9060 .--ror t o p u sl•d c:ai·i. BEACH IMPORTS •• ;i •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Traden, TraYel 9170 rore1~n . domt'lo lll'!> Ill 848 Do\'t' Street
Bt1Ullful Colot T\', 2 yr Hobie Cal trailer. 14'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• clasSll's 11 your cat l!>t ;q·:WPORT Ut-:Al'll
w nty. Free dell\t>rY like new. $2700 rost Sell Mint trailer · c·ompacl e xtrd cleJn. see u:. 752-0900 I 8 6-16-17116 $1495 Eves 640·6681 car. Kitch, awning. port FIHST ! Al'THORIZED
MERCEDES-BENZ
DEALER
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove '7 3 Cadillac Sedan
Deville. A 1 cond1t1on,
~,,.~.
LINCOLN M ERCU liY
16 18 Auto Center Dr
SD l'"wy.t.k Forest exit
IRVlNE
830-7000
45 'ft'att Panasonic stereo
rf'C:e1ver & ampt1r1er,
m atching 26"'
Phaselinea r spedke1 i.'
Almost new MIG quaht}
:.ound . $4 50 A)ex .
552-0231.1151 9371 ---
19"COLOR TV
Philco. $200. Alex.
552·0231. 851·9371
s· Panasonic T\'. 1 yr old ,
remote contri>I. S1600
cash 645·2456
ZENITH Chromacolor 11.
21 " screen oak cabin el
retail S900 must :.ell $450
631·6233 --;-
26' Sailboat & Mooring
S20,000 OBO
8241498bdore3Pl\I
'75 CATALINA Sailboat.
w boat slip on Balboa
a potty $1500, 548·2497
Trailen, Utility 9 I 80 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Encl. lrh 4· X 7 Hry
clean, $275 OBO
!160 5398
Island Fully equipped, Auto Service, Parts
inboard gas eng $31,000 & Acceuories 9400
675-4456, 760·8359 •••••••••••••••••••••••
-.--New P1relhs 5.50 13 $40
14 Hobie w tra1h:r. best Dual zenith manifold
offl.>1 Bill Wuhi. and tin k a ~e S 100
1135-3833 days 64 5-4796
FOH SAIL-Sporty 12' '59CHEVY PU less bed. Sailboat w 1tra1ler $500 $300
857·1601e,es
26" Islander '69. $6500
492·8604
498 1007. 498 OtH3
960.3687 827 6170
4 Porsche Alloys w. new
tires. must sell, $800
OBO 645-5374, 642·6Hl9 RCA 25·· color T\'
AM l'"M phono. walnut
i:on:.ole, nds a llllle '81Hobie14 Set wire wheels w locks,
work. $110 firm. 751-306!1 with trailer & extras. fi t any r ad iliac $250.
----$2600 Eves and Wkends 5S7·7883 l rene559-5804 Blaupunkt am rm cass call 847 0646
i.l~reo. l\l odel CR2000. 2 ---Turbo sys tem Alra
spkrs. still in l'Jrton. locrtsD ,kSlips/ 9070 Romeo c om p I e t e
$185, 960-6377 OC s wtwaste gate sacrifice
•••• ••• • •• •• •• • •• •• • •• • 1895 st 11800. 893·0225
it 1 R a t e d T o w e r 60' MOORING co
SPEAKERS XI n t 18' boJt. Sl!l.900 firm Autos for Sale
sOUhd. Orig $900 ~II S50 cash 631 ·4286 •••••••••. • •••••••• ••• • 51'>2·9047 Scott · ---Dock Heed Paint? IM PORTA NT
Boats & Marine Reas rates 675 9720 evs NOTIC t: TO
Equipment ----READERSA.ND
••••••••••••••••••••••• T ti ADVEHTISERS
General 90 IO .~:i:'.s!.4:~.?~••••••••• The price of items
••••••••••••••••••••••• S advertised by vehicle
N r. ~rs ate/ dealers in the vehicle on-pro 1t org nds your Rent ' 9120 bo I classified advertising
L bat. Pl atne, dcadr . te.tc ••••••••••••••••••••••• columns does not Ill· a era ax tt uc ion advantage, 213/654·2341 1969 RV 101'11 ft camper elude any applicuble
Two 15' wooden dorys
Xlht cobd. $300 ea.
675-5208
for P .U. truck. Fully laxes, license. trans fer
el e c & s e If cont rees. finance charges.
$1000 bst 848 4815 aft fees for atr pollution con-
4pm trol device certifications
or dealer documentary
Kayak. Tad, 4.2 meter, 10•, Camper rour Star preparation charges Un·
bn>ak·down paddle & w'refr1gerator & sto"e less otherwise spec1f1ed
encl stor3ge. $375 Port a -potty All bytheadvert1ser
&7~·1350 Butane. queen size bed
It is in good condition & AnH.-1/
Boats, Marine
lquipment 9030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
15 tf .P Johnson '76, $575
~5400 weekdays -~----
'1' British Seagull ideal
i Avon $175 hurry .
2810 aft 7, 751-6789'
s leeps 6 $1500 call Cla11lc1 9520
bet lo d 5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ween am an pm ETTIEST
631-7657 PR
'60 Ford .l• T. with full
camper. lo mi $2200.
675-4568
Sell things fast with Daily
Pilot Want Ads. ------·
'57 T-llRD
IHTOWH!
BEST OFFER!
t005UKZ)
THEODORE
9040 locrta, Powtr 9040 ROBINS
FORD
J(,o(J tHllHIOR Bl V 0
(0'>1A Ml~A 6•l2 OOIO
'29 Model A Town Sedan,
4 dr. restored. Ideal for
student. $10,500. ALSO
'46 F ord W oodle,
restored. 113.500.
'64 Cadillac Convertible.
Xlnt cond. Navy. New
while top.· Beautiful.
673-21111, 631·0133.
HUDSON
#I 111 Or_,. C~
2925 Harbor Al\'d
COST i\ ~1 ESA
979-2500
WANTED!!
Clean Imports
Top Dollar
Paid!!
Call J im Hogan or
Mike Lat&e
CreYier Motors
835-3171
We'll Buy
Or Sell
Your Cleon
Import On
ConT>iqnmrnt'''
Call Our
U\ed Cor
Ma naqer
TODAY'!'
831 -2040 495.4949
Saddlebactc BMW
Minion Viejo
WE BUY
CLEAMCARS
AHDTRUCKS
CONNELL
C HEVROLET
'.~11.trlMq flhd
I I~ I \ \1 ~-~ \
541>-1200
HIGH IUYER
Top dollars fo1 Sport:.
Cars, Bugs. CamJ)ers.
914's, Audi'6
Ask for U <:MGR
JIM MARINO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEA CH
842-2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAN
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
'78 /\Ira Spider 20K mi.
mint t·ond, on .: owner
$7500 546 2352
Audi 9707 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Atadi I 00
$500 673-1732
'72 Audi I 00
S500 6 73 1732
·74 Audi 100 LS. ne\lo eng ..
snrl. air $1950
4!)4·4816
IMW 9712 ......••....•..........
Fo1 The Bes t
Buy Or Lease Deal
In Orange County .
Corne See Us Today~
$
SADDLEBACK
BMW
28402 l\1 a rguente Pkwy
~I 1ssion V1eJO
Avery Pkwy. ex at
torr 5 Freeway)
831-2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
CREVIER
$I ST lo llOAOWAY
UHTA AHA
835·3171
fH! ULTIMATE DAIVIHQ MACHIN£
•USED BMWs•
'76 2002 4spd (0603)
'79320i S, R (5894>
·79 S28i s IR (1076 )
'8J 320tA t0115l
~losed Sundoys
The Most Exciting
Part Of Y otn'"
IMW Punhase Or
Lease Could le
McLaren BMW!!
8.ry Or ~ease
By Our Phone Plan!
17 I 4t 522-5333
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
&
'6(). '65 VW left & right fully equip $1900
door. '73 left door. $50 640 8629 831 17-10 ~95· 1700
'72 250C
2 dr sport coupe Im
maculate $8200 To m
675 9797. 673 6210
each. Western style whl . -
rims for Super Beetle 79 Sevi lle. Elegante. 1979 MERCURY $20ea 548·9744 s harp, lo m1 s_n rf \,.
----Loaded Sll.900. Eves. IOICAT
'66 VW. compl restored, l714J 642·8874. da 1213 ) 4 <'YI. manual tram.,
·72 Mercedes 250 Sdn. wht
w beige int, a uto. AL'.
AM FM . ~lnl l'O nd
$7000 646 7093 d ys
964 1836 eves
Porsche eng & paint 681·2613 power steering, l>QWt'r Ev~rything new Mint Camaro 991 7 ~~~ s & mor e '
~;~291See to opp rec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OML y $3395
1980 CHEVROLET Theodo,.. Robins
'68 vw lug
Xlnl cond. 675-4529 CAM ARO Ford
6 cyl., auto trans . pwr 2060 Harbor 81., C M 78 300D. Icon gold,
1mmac. sunrf. PP
496 4344 '74 VW <1112 Wgn. 1 owner.
silver blue. lo m1 .
steering & brakes. air 642•0010 cond., AM I FM stereo 8 _ _ ____ _
"76450SLC. dark metallic a m I r m s t ere o .
blue Alloys. full ser\'ic·e S2500/0B0545·8407
records $20.500 645-2375
~5 8638
·73 2KOC beaut cond.
loaded. mus t se ll
$7500 OBO
752 2404
'5!J Mercedes 300 SL
Hdstr wht. rd int. xlnl
cond $35,000 548-6611
'79 Rabbit Diesel 5 spd.
AC, AM I FM radio Only
6500 m1, ong owner.
$6600, call bt wn 8·5,
645-1515
'71 VW Bug 61000 Miles
Original owner Looks &
runs new. Ca ll 963·4881
(eves> For appointment
lo see and drive $2500
'70 280S. 4K on rblt eng . new shocki./tires, xlnl '66 VW Sundial Camper,
<'Ond. S5950963 6583 needs work. $1350080
·79 4~L Maple Yellow.
hke new, call after 6PM
644·6173 -·61uos
640·2382
"69 VW Bug r e built.
Amt F M cassette. Gd.
cond $2200. 497-5277
3000 mi on new eng. New '73 Bu&, xlnt cond 4 spd,
brakes. new tires. xlnt AM/FM cassette, $2700.
cond. Best orrer 494·1475 675·5020 ---------
'80 Diesel RABBIT, cstm.
4dr, Desert Tan, 45M PG,
18K mi, $6500 642·9750
·57 190 Sedan Classic
4Dr. radio, heater, gd
runnin'g cond. S1400.
642·0098 '71 BEETLE rare like
track. rallye wheels &
more! (548313>.
OMLY $6495
Theodo,.. Robins
Ford
2060 Harbor Bl , C.M
642-0010
'67 Camero. raxer upper
$425/offer· 642-7222. 8·5.
ask for Walt
'73 Camaro. 51.000 orig
m1 , V8 . auto. clean.
$2500 obo 962-0781
ChHrolet 9920 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1975 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
8 cyl., auto trans . air
cond .. pwr. steering &
brakes, t ilt wheel &
more! 1147723).
ONLY Sl795
Theodo,.. Robins
ford
2060 Harbor Bl , C M.
642-0010
SEE US FIRST! new cond, must see, lo GI 9744 mi, 497·1597 $2400 We have a good selection
••••••••••••••••••••••• o f NEW & USED ·77 MGB. orig. owner '69 VW BUG rblt eng, Chevrolets!
perr. cond. 21.ooomi good cond. $1700/0BO
$5000 642·5334 642-4769 548·5932 CONNELL
C HEVROLET -------PfllCjeOt 9741 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
'71 VW Fstbk, 1600 fuel
inj, $1 600 /0 BO .
213/823·4016, 714/546·3888
,,. II.or 1.,, fl, ,1
••l'-1\\1~'-\
S46-l 200
'68 Bug, xlnl gas mi. re· '70 El Camino 350 eng. 300
cently tuned, $1850 or ht p, nds little work,
best orrer. 673·3957 make offer. 960· 7353
'75 Cottgar
$1200. 631-5656
1977 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS
10 pass, wagon 8 cyl .
auto trans .. cruise. till.
pwr i.plit bench seal &
d1 locks. AM FM stereo
8 track & more '
t50F222J.
ONLY S3795
Theodore Robins
Ford
20f.0 Harbor Bl . C M
642-0010
Mustang 9 9 5 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1965 FORD
MUSTANG GT
In good c,ondit 1on '
Automatic trans. & disc
brakes. Make offer. Call
642·9924; if no answer.
.!LEASE keep lr)'ing 1
·12 MACH I
Beautifully Restored
SJOOO/OBO 962-6824
'66 Mustang. auto .
stylish. rehable transp
Clean, New brakei..
batt .. carb. $2500
494 2136
'70 Mustang T top convt
this car has at all !
Am Fm stereo tape,
8/C, P 'S. p b, lo m1
641·8458
:>ldsmoblte 9955 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1981 PEUGEOT TURBOs '77 Rabbit, 2 dr, 4 spd. '77 Caprice Classic. 4 dr .. 76 Olds Starr.re, P s.
amt fm cass. Blaupunkt, loaded, lo mi. pvt ply. p b. lilt whl, am rm
radials, fuel IOJ , perf Best offer 644·2242 I t h s pd BEACH IMPORTS citss, new cu c • s 848 Dove Street cond. $3295. 640-5234 '76 Malibu Classic wgn, V6, 644·45!14, 536-7~
NEWPORT BEACH '77 VW COMV loaded w/extras, lo ma, PlymcMlth 9960
752 0900 18,000 m i. Like new Ask $2500. 640-0076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales-Ser\'ice-Leasmg • ..,..,,., OBO • ..... a ~ Chryse.r 9925 1977 PLYMvvTH Roy Caner,lnc. onche 9750 _964_·_509_3 ______ ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLARE WAGON.
Rolls rtoyce BMW •••••••••••••• ••••••••• "ol 9772 6 I t t Y •o 1971 CHRYSLER cy .. au o. rans .• pwr
t540 Jamboree • • '73 914. Xlnt body, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORDOIA COUPE steering-& brakes, air
21 SO H...-ll•cl. Newport Beach 640-6444 mec h . Many xtras *I VOLVO DEALER cond ., AM/FM stereo & .. ___.._ u~-645 5700 ... 095 49'7·1597 'TT' 8 cyl., auto. trans . pwr. more'. (467941). ---• 1972 BMW Bavaria, xlnt ..,, . IN ORANGE COUNTY! split bench seal, pwr. OMLY 52795 WEMEED cond.4 s pd,air,$3400or '75914, Blk . app. group, sid e win dows , Ult. -. __ ....__1 _LL
1 YOUREXOTIC bestorrer.536·4822. alloys,air,$8700.Denlse SALES.SERVICE cru ise. vinyl top, ·-~ -
& .RITISH C •RS 835-4333. 1:30to7 PM. AHD LEASING AM /FM stereo 8 track & Ford
A '76 2002 lo m1, anrf. 1 •10~2301 """'" H rbo Bl c ~ OVERSEAS DELIVERY more. ' '" · ~""" a r ., .m am/rm.phone '76911 S EXP ERTS OHLY$41t5 642-0010
640.1812 5 spd. A/C, stereo, al· T'ModoN Robins
·72 2002 4spd, a/c, am/fm Joys, Clifford ala~. IARLlllCE _ __. Perfect cond. 645-6508' """' cass, radials, xlnt thru-VOLVO 2060 Harbor Bl., C.M.
oulS4200673-2'150 '7U 924 P orsche. Take 1966Harbor81vd. 642-0010
'53 CLASSIC I w mll 1~~645~B~.['5~906~T~f~:~~~E~~~~~E~I· ~ ·n s:rpcwo
5 spd, cus wheels. 27
mg, xlnt cond.
968.6438 '52 MG 'TD' replica VW
powered. new • red
w/wht top, tan int, $8500
1 .. 92.5019
'59 PORSCHE 356 'A'
Cpe, muat sell -tou11ly
restored. ahow c1r black
lacqu er P•lnt. (714)
SM-8258 wkd.an alt 6PM
lrweekenda
wt.ton." 9550
"14 BLAZER 4X 4. xlnt
cond w/many ~xtna,
hard/1olt top. 131100
Dl-OS1T
95'0
3100\V Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
6'2·9405
Tor$ DOLLARS
For Clean lJscd
Cars & Truck~
We pay cash on the spot!
Contact buyer at
DeS9ftfft
Chnrolet
San Clemente
ll 1·0110 492.alOO
•68 l600, good body/In· over lse pymts. O On, COSTA MESA
terior, lood rnecb. needs Call Gary at 676·5736 9 to 646-9J0l 540.'46 7
little minor work. $2200. 5•676-2912 aft_&_p_m_. __ 494.147~ ---"17 924 PORSCHE anrf. otlAHGI COUHTY VOLVO ,70.2002 ate, alloya, blauplunkt stereo, all xtraa ! Sl0,000 Largest Volvo Dealer
Xlnl cood. rebuilt eng, 499.9519 in Oranae County! • u n r 0 0 r. A M I F M BUY or LEASE
caautte. New paint. ''6 912 Portche DIRECT
Sheepskin covers. ~00 Totally restored inside, lac ... lnly Volvo
or offer ou\.,Askln1 $7500. 1145-6098 964.&093
BMW 820i '79, a te, ste~o.
casa, 2$K ml, $11 ,000 Or
best offer 646·5686 An 6
orwknda.
----•••ye• tJH •••••••••••••••••••••• *1DEAL£R IN U.S.A.
(H\.\N1,f I (\l ;~~TY
VOLVO
We buy c.t t111 CARS II TRCICkS ...................... . ID>~~ tOt 20 Garden Grove Bl
Garden Grove ~30-9190
· 7lCAPlt TOP, $$$$$$ V641pd, AM ' FM atereo, llt-17t0 alrcond.clean.
84e·MIS
_lf\\ ___ ::'9Nctl SEU; kli. It.ma with a
Dall)' Pilot Cla11lfled
Ad.
eo...t 9927 ........ ~ •••••••••••••• ~Ollffoc 9965 '63 Co ... •. • •••••••••••••••••••••• 22MPo:·s~:~ ens. •top. 1910 r<>KYIAC
496·5526 SUMlllD
If It's got WhftlS
you'll move It
faster Ina
Dally Piiot
c tasslf lecl
ad.CAii
M2·5'71Hd
a frteridly
ad-visor wtll
help you tum
r.owwhlels ntocallt.
4 cyl.. manual trans .• pwr. 1tHrln1, a'1 cond
& morel (552308),
OMLY$41tl
Thea•"loWM ,.....
2060 HarbOr 81'2 C.111.
••2·001•
'78TRANSAM
tOO en1, 4 apd, tTK m l.
'8250.~099'1
••••••••••••••••••••••• 'a T·bU'd Rblt .... Ml
pwr.$1300,
Ml·Yll
J
,
.I
• • ·'* • •
T lJ E SD A Y JU N E. :1 1 • IH 1 OR ANGE COUN TY . C A LH cm NIA 2~ CENTS
Huntington st81·ts
. l affordable ho1ne fund • ,,.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .. Deity ,... Swt
The Huntington Beach City
Council has agreed to set aside
$700,000 to start a fund to
establish a mobile home park to
create affordable housing and to
provide space for evicted
trailer park tenants.
In related action, city officials
also said an ordinance protect·
ing mobile home park tenants
from abrupt, costly evictions
would be drafted by next month
and heard in rublic hearing.
The counci action came alter
appeals Monday from several
tenants o( Huntington Shores
Mobile Home ~ark for an or·
dinance protecting evicted te·
nants. Renters at the ·43-trailer
park, off of Pacific Coast
Highway and Huntington Street,
were served eviction notices last
month.
Councilman Ron Pattinson
s uggested the city spend the
... ~
First Lady Nancy Reagan talks with Barbara Walters about her
husband'1 shooting on an interview program airing tonigh1.
First lady says
tears come easily
NEW YORK !AP l First
lady Nancy Reagan says she·s
had trouble sleeping since the
assassination attempt on her
hu sband two months ago and
sometimes gets up at night and
eats bananas.
.. You have a kind of delayed
reaction. You hold yourself
together for a long time because
you have to. And then the tears
come easily," Mrs. Reagan said
in a White House interview with
Barbara Walters to be broadcast
tonight al 10 on ABC . Channel 7.
She said she doesn't eat apples
late at night because "crunch.
crunch. That would wake him
I her husband J up." ·
Mrs. Reagan said she feels
sorry for the parents of John
Hinckley, the man accused of
trying to kill the president, and
has not changed her opposition
lo gun control since the attempt
on her husband's life.
"After all, as parents you try
to do the best job you can, and
sometimes it doesn't always
turn out." Mrs. Reagan said.
She said gun-control laws
would not have preventE;d
Hinckley from gelling a gun.
·'The answer is enforcing the
ORlllH COAST lllTHIR
Night and morning low
clouds with slight chance
of morning drizzle Wednes-
day. Partial clearin~ In
afternoon. Lows tom1ht
along the coast 55, inJand
laws that are already there.
which I don't think we are. Mak·
ing the punishment swift, sure,
which I don 't think we do," Mrs.
Reagan said.
"I agree with the death penal -
ty. I think that people would be
alive today i( there were a death
penalty," she said.
Mrs. Reagan said her husband
still has some numbness but no
pain.
She said that when she arrived
a~ the hospital arter the March
30 shooting, she was put in a lit·
tie room.
"A II I could think of was, I
have to hold on and not get in
anybody's way, cause there was
so much con fusion and so much
noise," Mrs . Reagan said.
··Finally they let me in to see
Ronnie and that was when he
said, 'Honey, I forgot to duck.'
But he had the thing on his nose
and I could see the blood on his
lips, and everything."
On another matter, the first
lady said the swiftness and size
•of her hu.c;band's victory in No·
vem ber surprised her.
"I believed everything that I
had read in the papers and
heard on TV, that it was going to
be a very close election," she
said. "I was prepared to stay up
until three o'clock in the morn-
ing . . . waiting for returns."
Mrs . Reagan said she had just
gotten out of the bathtub and her
husband was still in the shower
when she learned the television
networks were beginning to pro-
. <See NANCY, Pue AZ>
$700,000 of federal Housing and
Community Development
<HCD ) funds earmarked for af·
fordable housing to buy a parcel
of land for mobile homes.
Mayor Ruth FinJey said today
that the HCD cash could be put
together with money from de·
velopers to establish a mobile
home park in a "joint effort."
The concept was unanimous)).
approved by the City Council
and was turned over to city of·
ficials in charge of the HCD
funds.
"This could be money le
stimulate development of a ne"
mobile . home park," Mayor
Finley said. "It's the sort of ln·
novative thing we've been look·
ing for to solve some of the pro·
blems posed by mobile home
park conversions.''
The mayor also said the pro·
posed mobile home conversion
ordinance could require
Tax cut hall
to Democrats
WASHINGTON <AP ) -
Republican congressional
leaders said today after confer-
ring with President Reagan that
Democrats must make the next
move if a compromise on cutting
taxes is going to be struck.
"We don 't like to have to
negotiate with a fragment of the
Democratic Party," said Rep.
Barber Conable of New York,
ranking Republican on the tax-
writing House Ways and Means
Committee, after Reagan and
Democratic leaders failed to
reach a consensus on a tax-cut
bill Monday.
Sen. Robert Dole, chairman of
the Senate Finance Committee,
said Reagan was still open Lo a
compromi se with the
Democratic leadership, but
"there are a number of groups
on the other side. The next move
must be theirs."
In keeping with an apparent
GOP effort to drive a wedge
among the Democrats by
portraying them as divided over
Ule iS6ue, Dole accused HO\&Se-
Speal:er Thomas P. O'Nelff Jr.
of being "so out of touch that he
does n't want the American peo-
ple to have tax cuts. He'd rather
have the government keep the
money."
Dole said he believed Rep.
Dan Ros tcnkowski, D-111.,
chairman of the Ways and
Means Committee, "would very
much ·like to negotiate some
agreement. Whether he can do
that -the speaker Indicating
otherwise .. ··
Administration strategists are
trying to persuade Rostenkowski
to break with his party's
leadership and sponsor a
bipartisan tax-c ut measure.
Rostenkowski said he would try
to get his committee's members
to support a compromise, but in-
dicated he would prefer further
concessions from Reagan's side.
Conable said the Democrats
appeared to be in too much dis-
array to compromise. "I think to
expect the president to com-
promise at this point simply
because he can't tell which part
of the Democratic Party to
negotiate with as long as they're
i&•ucb diaarray is Lo expect Uae
pUsUlent to negotiate wHh
himself." he said.
landlords to reloc:ai. evicted ten·
an ta within the city.
Gordon O'Rourke, a lertanl of
Beach View MobUe Home Park,
said tenants there are concerned
they would be evicted without
protection from financial loss.
•·As long as our (mobile>
homes are taxed as real estate.
we feel we should have the same
.protection as those homeowners
pushed off their property by
eminent domain or whatever
reason," O' Roarke said.
Tenants ot nearby Hunllnltob
Shores park were gl ven until
November, 1982, to relocate. The
land is Lo be used for a 1hoppjng
center or restaurant.
There currently are 19 mobile
home parks in the city with 3,384
spaces. lo the city's prime
coastal area, there are five
parks with 1,089 spaces, the
largest being Huntington By the
Sea, with more than 460 spaces,
according to city officials.
,.,....._...
OFF TO AUSTRALIA -Gerry Spiess. 41, of Mil)nesota, sails
out of Alamitos Bay in bis lO·foot sailf>oat Yankee Girl. ~~:ttu~•lf.l~ay~~ s Y. A · •
-...ill --... -Rita HaywOrth saiH 'senile'
'Love Goddess' of 40' s unable to care for self, lawyer says
CALLED SENILE
Rita Hayworth -------
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Rita
Hayworth, the fiery "Love God-
dess" movie superstar of the
1930s and '40s, has lapsed into
senility and is unable to care for
herself, a court petition filed by
her aftorney-business manager
says.
Business manager Leonard
Moor~ said in the petition filed
Monday that the 62-year-old
former actress is suffering from
Alzheimer's disease, or senile
dementia, and is unable to care
for herself.
Monroe is asking to become
conservator over her medical
and personal care as well as her
property, which is valued at
more than $250.000. A July t}.7
hearing date has been set.
Mon roe. in court today.
says Miss Hayworth is able to
appear in court, but unwilling to
appear. although she does not
oppose his appointment.
She bes two daughters,
Yasmin ~Y Khan of New York
City and Rebecca Welles of Seat-
tle, the petition notes.
The red-haired, screen siren
born in 1918 in Brooklyn as
Margarita Carmen Cansino,
broke hearts all over the world
during her film career. She was
the most famous pinup girl of
World War II.
Her five marriages started
with her wedding to oilman Ed
Judson In 1937.
Her second was a stormy un-
ion with boy-genius Orson
Welles that ended in 1948 after
five years , one c:bild. and
Suh officers reprimanded
Failure to ensure Japanese ship's safety cited
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
Navy has announced "punitive
letters of reprimand" have been
issued to the skipper and a deck
omcer for failures in the col·
lision of their nuclear-powered
s ubmarine with a Japanese
freighter.
The sinking of the freighter
Nissho Maru on April 9 with the
loss of two crew members trig-
gered strong public reaction in
Japan and strained relations
between Washington and Tokyo .
In an unusual action, Navy
moves to punish Cmdr. Robert
D. Woehl, 4t, captain of the mis·
si te submarine George
Washington at the time of the
collision, and Lt. R.D. Hampton,
28, who was deck officer, were
disclosed by the U.S. Embassy.
in Tokyo before the Navy an -
nouncement Monday.
In most cases, punitive letters
of reprimand severely damagej_a
naval officer's career and have
been known to bar promotions.
to the Navy statement.
The letters were Issued by
Vice Adm. Carlisle Trost, com-
mander of the U.S. 7th Fleet.
The Navy also said non·
punitive ''letters of caution"
were handed to three crewmen
of the 6 ,800-ton George
Washlf\iton. The Navy refused
Lo Identify these crewmen or to
explain the reasons for the ac-
tion.
M eaowbile, Woehl was
permanently relieved as com·
mandlng officer of the sub.
numerous breakups and recon·
ciliations.
But no sooner than her mar-
riage Lo Welles was over, Miss
Hayworth became caught up tn
an affair with married Arab
Prince Aly Khan that scan-
dalized Hollywood.
She traveled with him to Mex·
ico, Cuba, Switzerland and the
Riviera despite outcries against
her "indecent" behavior.
He soon divorced. Miss
Hayworth was married to him in
a French civil ceremony and in
Moslem religious rites in 19'9.
But the union did not last long.
She walked out on him two years
later and was formally divorced
from him in 1953. entering a
period of dispute ·over their
daughter Yasmin Aly Khan that
lasted until the prince died in a
car crash in 1960.
Her fourth marriage to 1lnger
Dick Haymes broke up in 1955.
Her fifth and final marria1e
was to producer James Hill , who
directed her first dramatic film.
"Separate Tables," for which
(See RITA, Page AZ)
·65. Highs Wednesday mid
to upper 60s at. the
beaches. lower 70s in'8nd.
llllDf TIUY
The lur1 of hot dog1, ptuo
and new frWnds tug1 at 13·
11ear-old Soviet erile Walter
Polovchak. Hu reftual to re-
turn With hil pormt• to thdr
homeland ho.I precipitated an
international tug-of-war.
Page Al.
Dad tries to sell
6-week-old baby
Woehl, a veteran of nearly 20
years' service, received a
reprimand because of "his
failure to take appropriate ac-
tion to ucertain the status and
safety of Nlssbo Maru after the
collision between the two ships,"
the Navy said.
Hampton'• letter stemmed
from "bis failure to conduct a
more thorough periscope search
prlor to the colllslon," according
Military p~y
pinpointed
11111
A &-week-old baby cirl whose
rather allegedly tried to tell her
Monday was ln protective
custody today awaltlnc a court
hearing on her future.
The infant, Kathleen Wilson,
"continues to be in aood health,"
said Blll Stelner. director of the
county-run Albert Sitton Home
hi Oraqe.
The baby alrt wu talien to the
home tor abuHd and battered
children llCl9day an.r Oranae
County Sherifr'• depuU.. #nit·
~d her fath•r, Randy O«don
Wil1on, 29, abOut 1 1.m. at an
•ll·llleht can.. lbop la llfllton
Viejo Where wkM••" aald be
allegedly tried to sell them the
cbUd. ,
Sheriff's depuUe1 said he tried
to give the baby away when
patrons refused hls offer.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said
re1taurant cuttomers called In·
vesti1ators to report the ind·
dent.
Steinet' said 1 court heU'lnl
wlll be held Wednesday to de·
termlne whether the baby it.rt
wUl be kept in protective
cu1todf al tM home.
WtllOIJ wu arrested on '"'Pl· clon OI ci'uelty to a cbUd _a.nc1
booked lQt.O Oranie Countv Jail
<lee MBY, Pace AU
ThiUble brUUat
N_ope, ju.I mocoon·
The woman who called
L11una Beach police to report a
bear on a n.t1hbor'1 roOftop
alHMdd bne taltea a tlOMI' IOOlr.
, Aa cilftm' dtlpatched to the hone OD ~emple' HUit Drtft
Mond_, ~ed fliMUq oelr.1
raccoon cm U.. ftelf. A ,..._.
lar11 rattOGD, to be .,., * •
raceoon DoMUMl ... , Pollee Uhl.
WASIDNGTON (AP) -A pro-
vision of a mllitary spendinl bill
DOW before the House Wlll J(ive
. the armed forces aufftclent nex-
lbillt)'. to retain the manpower
tbe1 want, eoqr.., Us beea •
told. Army MaJ Gen. R. O.an Tlce,
deputy 111lltant defense
aecretary f« .,.,...... •• policy,
mad• t.bat 1l1teanent la nspoue
ta • 1q1Wticlll tllat • tarpr perHllllge ~ the ,., boGlt be
tar1~ for crltlcallJ Dteded
aklO. aid rankl.
Pn1td.t R•• ... ~IJ 90lilAt a s.a..,.._t bOOlt •ec·
Un IUlr l Ind~ lfl jllfteet
..,. OD Oct. l .
I
' I
Orange Cout OAIL.Y PILOT/T'uHday, June 2, 1981
First effort to shdot down air-to-aii missile fizzles ... 'don't know why'
"" .......... TOP THAT! -Cheryl Wilson (left) and Beth Herriford are
nearly covered by their collectiod of 812,39'l bottle caps
amassed by them and their eighth grade classmates in Lex-
ington. Ky. The idea was to try and visualize a million of
anything, and though they didn't quite make that figure,
they "have a better concept of it," according to their
teacher.
Freeway speeders
facing crackdown
The Californi a Highway
Patrol will be stepping up
patrols of the San Diego
Freeway rrom San Clemente to
Santa Ana as part of a statewide
program to increase compliance
with the 55-mile-per-hour speed
limit.
More than 1,400 hours of over-
time will be in effect along the
freeway corridor beginning tti!s
mqnth. th.rough Npv. 90, accorQ-
ing Q1iCdpt. Chuc"t'Chase, Mtft.
mander of the CHP's Capistrano
area division in Laguha Hills.
Chase said the CHl' has been
awaroed a Sl.5 million grant
from the Federal olfice of Traf-
fic Safety lo beef up enforce-
ment of the national speed limit,
in response to the steady in-
crease in California traffic
fatalfCies since 1974.
.. Recent accident studies have
indicated that the incidence of
fatal accidents involving com-
pact cars and speeds in excess
of 55 mph have a direct rela-
tionship," Chase said.
··Last year there were 5,489
lives lost on California
roadways. As speeds increase,
the fatality rates take a
dramatic jump."
The goal of the enforcement
•rogratn ls to increase com-
pliance of the 55 mph limit by 10
percent, Chase said.
Tw 1peed-monitorku
-sessions using radar were con-
ducted in May on the San Diego
Freeway to determine aver age
travel speeds on the roadway.
Each month the program is in
etrect, additional surveys will be
taken to measure how much
compliance bas increased.
High court to rule
on Iranian lausuiu
. .
WASlllNGTON tAP) -The
first Supreme Court challenge to
the president's authority to
block lawsuits aimed at Iranian
assets has been filed here.
Lawyers for Electronic Data
Systems Corporation-Iran told
the court that speedy action was
needed to protect a $20-milllon
fede ral court award it won
against Iran earlier this year.
Boat people
hit Florida
MICCO , Fla. <AP> -A
wooden boat carrying 38 men, 14
women' and seven children
landed at a public beach here
after more than two weeks at
sea, officials said. They had
lived the past eight days on sug-ar and water stored in plastic
milk botUes, a spokesman for
the group said.
Speaking through an In-
terpreter, the Haitians gave COO·
flicting reports on how long they
ltad been sailing in their two-
rnasted, weatherbeaten, 60-foot
boat. One said 17 days, another,
31.
Tbe vessel was spotted Sunday
nit hl by a tanker. and the Coast
Guard escorted it ashore Mon·
day as the state park and U.S.
lm miiratlon omclala waited.
EDS-Iran is a subsidiary of
the U.S.-based Electronic Data
Systems Corp . lls lawsuit
against Iran is among some 450
court actions filed in more than
a dozen states against Iranian
assets frozen by President
Carter in response to the seizllt'e
of 52 American hostages.
"The executive branch, under
the tremendous pressure of the
Iranian hostage crisis, has com-
mitted itself lo a course which Is
irreconcilable with the constitu-
tional principle of separation Qf
powers," EDS lawyers told the
justices.
· As pa.rt of his agreement with
Iran last January that led to the
release of the hostages, Carter
nullifed all suits filed by
American rtrms against Iran.
President Reagan has said he
will honor Carter's presidential
order.
Under the agreement, some U
billion will be transferred lo an
international arbitration panel
by July 19. U.S. firms will have
to decide by then whether to file
a claim with the panel or cling
to their lawsuits in the federal
courts. The EDS appeal said that
Carter had unlawfully stripped
federal courts of their authority
to hear lawsuits Involving lra·
nlan !'1*'e)' still in the United
States.
CIHlltlld •ett111nt 71CIM2·Mn ~· otMlir:lllpen,,."'9 Mt-4121 •
W ASHJNGTON (A~> -The
Air Force tailed in Its first effort
to shoot down a s uperfast air-to-
air missile wtth a high-intensity
laser light beam shot from an
airplane, a spokesman s_aid to-
day.
"The test failed and we don't
know why,•• said Col. Bob
O'Brien, spokesman for the Air
From Page A1
RITA ...
she won good reviews. She was
divorced from Hill in 1961.
Miss Hayworth remained
beaullful aod youthful looking in
her 50s, but by 1977 the world
was shocked by pictures of the
ravaged woman who had al-
legedly become a chronic
alcoholic.
She was committed lo a
Newport Be1tch Hospital, and a
judge appointed a temporary
conservator to handle her
estate. But two months later. the
judge dismissed a petition for
county officials to take perma-
nent control.
From Page A1
NANCY • • •
ject that-tle had been elected.
·'There we were, standing in
the bedroom with t o wels
wrapped around us, dripping
wet, hearing that he'd been
elected ... and I said to him, ·1
don't think this is the way it's
supposed lo be.' " she said.
"And with that, the phone rang
and it was Jimmy Carter
conceding the election."
American held
in Charles,
fiancee threat
LONDON <API -An un-
employed American living in
Britain appeared in a London
magistrate's court today on
charges of threatening to kill
Prfnce Charles and Ns1.Ciancee.
Lady Diana Spencer.
Ronald Zen. 42, was arrested Monday night, Scotland Yard
said. He also was charged with
sending a "hoax device" to
Queen Elizabeth II and with
threatening to destroy a number
of banks.
As r equ ested by Scotland
Yard's anti-terrorist squad, Zen
was held in custody until June 9.
He made-no application for bail
and did not speak during the
brief appearance A police
spokesman said Zen was not
believed to belong to any ter-
rorist organization.
Zen's hometown in the United
States was not immediately
available. His address was given
as Elgin Crescent in the cos-
mopolitan west London district
of Notting Hill Gate.
The police spokesman sata
neither the device sent to the
queen nor the death threats to
Cha rles and Lady Diana, who
are to be married July 29. was
"handled or seen by the people
they were addressed to." He
declined lo elaborate on their
contents.
The tabloid Sun said the de·
vice sent to the queen was dis-
covered May 5, and the threats
made to Prince Charles in the
next few days. The paper said
Charles and Lady Diana were
heavily guarded when they at-
tended a ball in the financial dis-
trict of London Monday night.
Boxer held
in slaying
of coach
ATHENS, Ga. <AP> -A 20·
vear-old boxer has been charged
with murder in the slaying of
Louise Carson, 47, a boxing
coach who was found beaten to
death at her Athens apartment
last weekend, police said.
Jerome Clark was arrested
Monday night and was being
held in the Clarke County jail
Tuesday, ·authorities said.
The body of Mrs. Carson, a
former nurse who established
tJrfJrrthens Boxlng Cl"-b, was
(ound by Clarke County officers
Saturday night after a scream-
ing woman called police a nd
asked for help but gave only a
partial address, according to of·
flclala.
Record bOOty:
DENVER CAP> -Federal
aa.nts today were uarehlftl for
a Purolator Armored' Inc.
employee HIS*t.ed of wa.lkinC
a•aY wUb ball tuJ1 of IQOMY in
what eould be UM lara"t cuh
llaeft n•lai Denvn, autbOrit.l•
aald ..... ~OP-'!>,_.....,..,...
'
.Force Systems Command.
It had been cemmon
knowledste for davs that the test was Imminent, but there was no
public announcement in ad-
vance. The failure in Mondar,'s
test over the Chlna Lake, Calif.,
ranee was acknowledged ln
response to a quesllon.
The test. if successful, would
hav~ marked a major milestooe
In development of a laser
weapon.
The Soviets are known to be
working hard toward developing
high-energy laser weaponry,
and there are varied opinions as
to where the two countries stand
in the race for the next genera·
lion of potentially dominant ,
arms,
U.S. laser test devices, based
on the ground, have knocked
down pilotless drone aircraft,
drone helicopters and an anti-
tank missile, but hlih-eneray
lasers never before have been
\Ased In an attempt to destroy an
air-to-air missile from an air
platform.
Stockman: stand by budget
Restoring of cuts would break faith with public
WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi-
dent Reagan's budget director
has said Congress would be
breaking faith with the public if
it tried to restore billions of
dollars in budget cuts called for
in a 1982 spending blueprint
enacted last month.
Budget director David A.
Stockman said Congress would
be guilt y of "delibe rate
sabotage'' if it doesn't stand by
the federal spendini cuts
However , House Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., reiterat-
ed that he would press for a
series of votes on the House floor
aimed at protecting social pro·
grams due lo be slashed.
The $695.4 billion blueprint
adopted last month requires
House and Senate committees to
revise or eliminate programs
within their jurisdictions to cut
about $35 billion for next year.
Stockman. director of the Of-
Three more banks
loUJer prime rates
NEW YORK (A P > The
trend toward a lower prime
lending rate resumed today as
three leading banks cut their
rate a· half percentage-point to
20 percent.
Citibank, the nation's second-
largest bank, became the fourth
among the top 10 financial in-
s tit u llons to cut its prime.
Northern Trust Co. or Chicago.
No. 33, and Europe an American
Bank and Trus t Co. of New
York, No. 46, also cut their
prime rate .
Several leading banks lowered
their prime lending rates Mon-
day morning, but when the
Federal Reserve then unexpec·
tedly announced it would drain
some money from the nation's
banking system no other bank
cuts its prime. Analysts said,
however, that they expected the
trend to lower interest rates to
resume.
Analysts expected a general
decline in interest rates to begin
Monday, largely because the
Fed reported Friday that the na-
tion 's money s upply had
declined $2 2 billion in the latest
reporting week . That was
viewed as an indicator that the
Fed had money supply growth
unde r control as a defense
against inflation and would not
further lighten credit.
Bani-Sadr aide
arrested in Iran
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -An
aide lo Ir anian President
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr has been
arrested on charges of bribery,
misuse of office and collaborat·
ing with agents of the late shah's
regime, Tehran Radio said to-
day.
Dentist given
prison term
NEW YORK (AP> -A dentist
videotaped in the act of bugging
and squeezing a woman patient
in hJs office has surrendered to
begin a four-month prison sen-
tence for sexual abuse.
Dr. Marvin Teicher. 56, was
convicted June 21 , 1978, follow-
ing an 11-day, non-jury trial
before Justice Dorothy A. Crop-
per in state Supreme Court in
Manhattan.
Two appeals of the conviction
were un success ful . and
Teicher's license to practice
dentistry was revoked
Manouchehr Massoudi, a legal
adviser to the president. was ar-
rested Sunday by Te hran's rev-
olutionary prosecutor, accord-
ing to the broadcast monitored
in Beirut.
Iran·s official Pars news agen·
cy also reported the arrest and
ad ditional c harg es t h at
Massoudi had coll aborated with
an "extensive network for il·
legal export of foreign ex-
change" 8Jld "extortion from rel-
atives of counter-revolutionary prisoners and collusion for lhe1r
release."
Pars said Massoud! was ac-
cused of laking "enormous
bribes for channeling contracts
of various ministries to special
people or counterrevolu-
tionaries."
The news agency said 15 other
people were arrested in connec-
tion with the bribes, including
two "imposter clergymen."
On Monday, Bani-Sadr was ac-
cused of violating revolutionary
leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho-
meini's ban on provocative
s tatements in Iran's power
struggle between moderates and
clerical fundamentalists.
Anniversay rings, of course.
Because don't you love her
more now than you did even
then? All set in 14 karat yellow
gold. A. $825. B. $2,-425. C. $425. ""'
D. $625.
. J
fice of Management and Budget,
said Congress is obligated to
stand by the cuts. He told re-
porters that any deviation from
those cuts "must be considered
a deliberate sabotage of lhe ex-
pressed will of Congress an~
people''
Stockman said budget policy
already has been settled, and
Congress should simply imple-
ment it, not try to change that
policy
Army tells
why Sobie
lost medal
WASHINGTON <AP> The
Army has decided not to award
Staff Sgt. Joseph Subic Jr a
commendation medal being
given to other Army personnel
taken hostage in Iran.
• Subic "did not behave under
s tr ess th e way non -
commissioned officers are ex-
pected to act," the Army said
Monday after it was announced
that the other 20 U.S. military
personnel taken hostage were
given the Defense Meritorious
Service Medal.
Subic, 24, appeared in an Ira-
nian film released shortly after
he and the other hostages were
seized. In an Iranian film re-
leased several weeks after his
capture at the U.S. Embassy in
Teheran on Nov. 4, 1979, Subic is
shown saying he and a defense
attache at the e mbassy were
CIA spies.
Subic has said that he never
saw the film and believes it
probably was doctored. He said
he was beaten and threatened by
hi s captors, but told them
nothing they did nol alreadv
know.
Subic, who previously lived in
Bowling Green, Ohio, said he
had asked to be discharged on
July l so that he could resume
government studies at George
Washmgton University
From Page A1
BABY ...
in lieu of $5,000 bail. He was still
in jail this morning.
Steiner said the baby's
m o ther , who the father
described to witnesses as a 15·
year-old. was not .in custody to."
day.
Hart said the mother hasn't
been located yet , although
"We're working on it."
Honor graduate
Pamela Johnson, daughter of
Mr. and·Mrs. Wayne Johnson of
17325 Palm St , Fountain Valley,
has graduated cum htude from
Westmont C.:>llege in Santa
Barbara.
I •
1
·----
APWll.1 ...
Margaret Trudeau, estranged wife of Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, is seen with new
man in her life as they leave performance at Na-
tional Arts Centre in Ottawa. He's Jimmy Johnston
of G.H. Johnston Furniture Ltd.
Bruinea booma
for buden
Business is booming for
butlers, thanks to an era of
prosperity that has swelled
the ranks of American
millionaires, says a butler
who bas worked for a variety
of Hollywood celebrities.
"A butler is the ultimate
status symbol," David Lynch
said in Denver. "People get
all the diamonds they want
-and then they get a
butler."
Lynch, 34, who works for a
wealthy Denver family, has
ib the past been employed by
such celebrities as ~an
Mariret, Charlton He1~n,
Charles Skouraa Jr., James
Stewart and Darryl Zaaack.
"You can't be temperamen-
tal," Lynch, 34, says of a
butler's duties' as head of the
household staff. "You may
have to deal with a tem-
peramental cook or a tem-
peramental employer, and it
pays to keep your cool. You
have to be flexible and pa-
tient."
Canadian opera star
Maureen Forrester sees
nothing wrong with someone
of her training performing at
the Royal York Hotel's Im-
perial Room -a posh sup·
per-club whose recent acts
have included Tlaa Tarner,
Susanne Somera and Hal
Linden.
"It's not a question of my
giving up my past life," says
the contralto who on M"onday
was beeinning a 12·day
engagement at the club in
Toronto. "It's just variety.
"I 'm a singer and it
doesn't matter what I 'm
singing, whether I'm singing
a Nell Diamond song or a
Cole Porter or whether I'm
singing the Mahler Second
Symphony," she says.
Miss Forrester soon will
star in a Canada-wide tour of
the musical "Mame," dis·
misses notions that opera is
for musically knowledgeable
audiences.
The Secret Service agent
who stepped-in front of Presi-
dent Reagan ~nd took a
bullet fired by a would-be as-
sassin says the service did
"an excellent job . . . the
best job we could" in protect-
ing Reagan.
"I think we did all we
could,'' says Timot hy
McCarthy. "But we'll have to
wait and see. There are a
number Of investigations still
going on. But it's hard to say
if we would have done any-
thing. different.··
M cCartb7, 31, waa in
Boston recently to be made a
member of The Charitable
Irish Society of Boston and to
receive a resolution from tbe
House of Representatives
declaring him a "genuine
hero."
"I thought the luck of the
Irish would hold up a little
longer, but I was bit,''
McCarthy aald of th• bullet' tha..t hll blm.
''l was aware of tbe con·
futlon and wu in quite a b!t
of paln." be aaid. "I read ln a
report that tbe 1lu1 would
have hit either the president
or ''"" Pan. the a1ent ln ebar1e, lf I badn•t moved
toward the sunman."
Teuieaee Erale l'ord aald
his viait to Fort Jones was
"one of. the bappieat times
I've ever had" u b' puaed
out awards to 1raduatln1
aenJora at Fort Jones, Callf.
High School. .
The hleh school. which
1raduated a clua of 18 over
the weekend, had been una·
ble to attract a dJpl&ary to
its 1raduation until aenlor
Tammie Bania, the student
body president, wrote a let-
ter to a few newspapers ap-
pealing for a celebrity to
hand out awards at 1radua-tion.
The letter was seen by
Ford, Rep. Pete McCloekey
of Palo Alto, and B. T .
Coll1D1, bead of the
California Conservation
Corps, all of whom were at
the graduation ceremonies
along with most of the 525 res-
idents of Fort Jones.
California Secretary of
State March Fong Eu and
singer Mlc:llelle Plallllp1,
formerly of the Mamaa ud
Papaa, will be in the small
town near the Oregon border
for additional ceremonies
Thursday.
Lauren Bacall says
'~The Fan,,. hh netb
film, ''is much more
violent than when I read
the script." She is even
more upset at suggestions
the movie is a dramatiz.a-
tion of the murder of
John Lennon.
Storms sing east U.S.
Winds scrape croplands in Plai ns; hail,. r ai n f all
Gxutal f orecast
Mostly t*-'Y tlv'cMql '*'19" wlUI
-_,Y morning «tale ,....1bM. Partly -y WllGnftdlly al-.
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3 a s e a a c c o ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2. 1881 H/F
PSA Wants ·more flights
Airline contends it should get eight daily departures
lb GLENN 8COTT
0( ................
Offtclala for Pacific Southwest
Airlines contended Monday that
they should get el&ht iutead of
two ru1bta a day ~from John
Wayne Airport under a new
airport acceaa plan.
The remark.a were aimed at
per1uadin1 the Orange County
Board ot Supervisors to modify
a proposed access plan before
taJdn& ftnaJ action on it Wednes-
day.
The plan aa currently pro·
posed would give newcomer
PSA the two dally departures
-..bil~ preservin1 most of the dai-
ly fllgbta operated by lncum-
ben U AirCal and Republic
Airlines.
AirCaJ would get 23.5 fllghts
per day instead of its current 25.
Republic would get 11.5 fllghts
Instead of 12.
All of the AirCal and Republic
flights would be preserved for
the three years of the access
plan, while PSA would be depen-
dent on reductions in overall
airport noise to eam a chance to
bid for more flilhts.
In a letter filled with legal
references and delivered Mon-
day to the supervisor•~ PSA President Paul Bar1teley
claimed the request for ellht
daily departures la conslatent
with federul law intended to
stimulate competJUon.
Barkley urged the supervtaora
to drop it.a "protectionist, antJ-
competiUve policies of the put"
by 1iving PSA more fligbta.
PSA officials have tried to
play up the fact that they
already have in their fleet
several of the so-called "qulet"
new jets which reduce takeoff
nolae over airport communities.
At a press conference Monday
in Costa Mesa, Dennis O'Dell,
PSA 's assistant vice president
for legal affairs, refused to rule
out a lawsuit if the board doesn't
comply with PSA's request.
He said officials wiU decide on
a course of action after Wednes-
day's board decision. o· Dell claimed that PSA, with
Its quiet jets, could operate its
eight daily flights from John
Wayne within noise constraints
proposed in the access plan.
He said the new jets emit only
a quarter as much noise as most
of the commercial jets now in
use at the airport. However,
county offtciala said later that
the noise difference is much
less.
PSA officials say the proposed
acceaa plan would reward ln·
cumbent airlines for not using
quieter jets because reductions
in noise allow for more dally
flights to be added at the
airport. PSA would be prime
candidate to 1et those filgbta.
..;;G iven this circumstance,
there is obviously no incentive
for in~umbenta to become
quiet," O'Dell said, addlne that
AirCal has a monopoly on
service between Orange County
and the San Francilco Bay
Area.
However , an aide to
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
Monday that incumbents still
know they must reduce nolae if
they hope to eventually achieve
their own extra flights.
He noted that the number of
permitted daily flighll actually
would go down from 41 to 31 if noise reduction Isn't achieved
according to guidelines in the
county's master plan for John
Wayne Airport.
Capital advice from solon
Badham provides travel tips to resid ents
By 0. C. HUSTINGS
Of .. Oeltr ...........
If you are planning a trip to
Washington D.C. thissummer, let
Congressman Bob Badham help.
Bad.ham says his Washington
or Newport Beach offices "w\11
be more than happy to assist" in
arranging tours of the White
House, the Capitol, the FBI, the
State Department, Kennedy
Center and the Supreme Court.
However, Badham adds, be
advised that there are a, limited
number of tickets available for
each tour, so try to give him as
much notice as possible.
For example, each con -
gressman ls allotted only 10
tickets per week for White
House tours, the Newport Beach
Republican notes and, therefore,
be can't always guarantee that
tickets will be available. He
notes there is an excellent public
tour of the White House Tuesday
through Saturday.
Some other travel Uos from
College off en
u:alh to fitnea
While there are many ways to
fitness, Orange Coast College is
offering an unusual, slow-paced
way to fitness : walking.
The coJlege is offering the
walking to fitness class Monday
and Wednesday evenlngs begin-
ning June l.S.
There ls no charge for this
class and registration will be
conducted on the track at the
first meeting.
For more information about
the class, call (714) 556-5880.
Congressman Badham:
-Plan at least one day to visit
the various Smiths onian
museums. lf your time is limit·
ed. the Air and Space Museum
and the recently opened east
wing of the National Art
Museum shouldn't be missed.
-Monticello, Thom as Jef-
COL LEGE HONORS -
Charles R. Able of Corona
del Mar has received a dist·
inguished alumnus award
from the University of
Colorado. He was president
and chief executive officer
of the McDonnell Douglas
Astronautics Co. in Hunt-
ington Beach before retire·
ment.
ferson's home, is about 80 miles
west of Washington D.C. and is a
nice, one-day outing.
-Williamsburg is a three·hour
commute by car or train. so sel
aside two days for your visit
there.
-Although closer to most
points of interest, hotels in
Washington D.C. proper are ex·
pensiye. Badham suggests
checking out hotel availabiltty in
n o rthern Virg inia or in
Maryland.
-In the city, the best means
of getting around are by taxi, or
the Metro. Rental cars are
available and convenient,
Badham says, but traffic is ter·
rible and the parking situation is
worse.
Badham invites residents of
the 40t.h Congressional District
to drop b y hi s office in
Washington for tour informa-
\lQp, or "juat to ~-t lb~ ~at and rest your feet."
Air p ort council
names director8
Three new directors ha ve
been named to Orange County's
Community Airport Council. a
business group that supports im-
proved aviation service in the
county. Added to the board
of dir e ctors are
Robert Volk, president of Martin
Aviation and a Palos Verdes
resident; Louise Pomeroy, presi-
dent of Abigail Abbott Personnel
Services and a La Habra resi-
dent and Jerry Sherman. chief
pilot for Smlth lntematlonal and
·a Mission Viejo resident.
It Finally Arrived . ~jg
We're referring to our late shipment ol boys' Laccste Alligator shirts.
B> tht time you read thil ad, Storebeper Doug Root will ~ve them
all checbd In and on the shelf •
I
H /F Oraoge C6ast OAIL Y PILOT truaaday, Jun• 2. 1981
mm~~oorn
~~Teamsten assail JIJ I •
~dia for 'abuse'
or
IOI L A S V E G A S ( A P ) -
Delegates to the Teamsters con-~it:lmtlon are closing ranks behind
battled President Roy Lee· lliarn~ and have approved re-
. trndlngly a "resolUUon of re-
-' ke" ot the news media.
Mkhigan pri&on
convicU riot
MUSKEGON, Mich. CAP) -
The M,uskegon Correctional
Facility was calm after a brawl
that lnjured 17 inmates and one
guard, but prison officials said
they were conce rned about
• The resolution assailed news ., Jganiz&tit>ns for "chronic, ex-
1 ssive, arrogant abuse of
' ivilege. '' It elicited an emo·
ion al response Monday from del·
• ates just hours after a defiant
" Hliams J>romised to continue
i s quest for a full five-year ,@rm at the helm of the nation's ~ ftrgest union. despite bis indict-
f!\,ent on conspiracy charges.
ll O Two other top union omcer.s 1 'llggested lo the convention that
"lby move away from Williams
because of his difficulties with
the Justice Department and a
Senate inves tigative commiltet!
would be tantamouat to allowing
the government to determine
1,rrho is lheir next leader.
t~ Mine"'' president ~,igat}wring support r . '•~Y T he Associated Press
l•• As United Mine Workers
Pres ident Sam Church stumps
the coalfields lo drum up sup-
port for a contract proposal, he
is findmg miners friendlier than
in March, when the union mem·
bers hip r ej ected an earlier
agreement by a 2-1 margin.
wrnrnarn
(utµre flareups. q
Sunday night 's fight at M~$k~gon was the fifth incident
of violence at a Michigan state
prison in 10 days.
Five die in Denver
murder.suicik pact
TUCSON <AP> A Denver
couple, their two small children
and a teen-age girl have been
found shot to death in a motel
room apparentl y afte r a
murder-suicide pact was made.
authorities said.
The victims were identified as
Bruce McKinley, 28 ; hi ... ife,
Mary Jo, 25; their daughter,
Jennifer Ann, 3; their son, Marc
Dana, l , and Dana E. Greenup.
15, of Seattle. All were shot with
a .22 -caliber weapon. A .22·
caliber rine was found in the
room, offic ials s aid Miss
Greenup was not related to the
family but apparently had lived
with them for about a year ,
police said.
Rebel connnander
slain in Bangladesh
VACCA, Bangladesh <AP> -
Government troops ki lied the reb-
el army 1teneral whose m en as-
o; ass in a ted Pres ident Ziaur
Rahman, the Bangladesh gov-
e rnment's Dacca Radio an-
nounced today.
Maj. Gen. Muhammad Abdul
M anzur's attempt to take over
the government was put down
Monday. 48 hours after the
tart losing
weight today
ko•11 losing we11111t immee1tattl't
with mairimum·stre119th S.,tt CM·
rl1u 11duc1no t1blt1s and Otet
Plan It llkts ovtr where YOlll w1H p0wr1 ltaves oH A govtrnmtlll
ac>potllltd Pinet of rntdlcal lftCI SCI
tn!lllc eaperis llu reYttwed the cllnicat tesls ot the maa1mum
strength 1nortd1ent '" S1111tr CM·
riM1. and has termed n sale and
elttctrve to• appehie C0111tol and wetQht loss Try Su11t1 0•1lnt1 to· ~y
want to tr~·inon tA neWM" ~I?
U se a Daily Pilot
Penny Pincher Ad
to sell items under
$100.
3 lines for 2 days
only $1 . .50 a day.
Sorry, no com-
mercial ads
allowed. Charge
your Penny
Pincher
Ad or use your
Visa or Master
Card.
C1 Classified
Advert,sing at
6.C2·S678 to
ptace your .ct.
murder of Ziaur and seven aides
in the port city or Chittagong.
140 miles southeast or Dacca.
The jovernment radio said
Manzur was slain by soldiers an-
gry over the assassination of
Ziaur, a military hero of
Bangladesh's war of independ·
ence and th e c ountry 's
strongman for more than five of
its nlne years as a nation.
When Weight WW:tlen mek• I
change, It's progr .. thet YoU p
count on.
Now with our exciting new fOOd sQn,
your chlnce1 crf aucoees ire better
t"*1 ft'IW.
" .............
Shellings hike
Leh&non aead
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Lebanese Christians· and leftist
Moslema ordered a halt today to
random ahelllng that baa left at
least 37 Lebanese dead and 400
wounded ln three days, but fiaht·
inR between the Christian milltla and Syrian soldiers
raged into It.a third month.
tsraell warplanes, meanwhile,
attacked Palestinian guerrilla
camps in southern Lebanon. A
communique Issued by the
Israeli command satd it.a Jets bit
tar1et.a near the port city of
Tyre, and all the warplanes re·
turned safely lo base.
The artillery bombardment of
Beirut's beaches and residential
areas that began late Saturday
had tapered off in the capital by
midday today. but sniping con-
tinued across the dJviding line
separating Christian and
Moslem sectors of the battered
capital.
And 30 miles to the east ln the
Christian city of Zable, under
siege from Syrian soldiers since
April, some 1,500 artillery and
rocket rounds exploded over-
night, kilUng seven inhabitants
and woundin~ 13. the Christian
Voice of Lebanon radio said.
Syrian casualties, as usual, were
not reported.
Most of the 200,000 inhabitants
of the Christian city of Zahle
huddled in undercround wine
cellars and bomb shelters after
hovy fighting broke out at sun-
set. There were no Immediate
reports of casualties there.
Syrian troops in Moalem West
Beirut shelled four Christian
neighborhoods In the eastern
part of the city with mortars,
cannon and rockets. Observers
said the Syrians were firing one
shell everY eight seconds al one
point ln the fightlQi.
Christian militias or the
Phalange Party replied with
artillery shells.
Several shells hit the presiden·
tial palace In a Christian suburb
east of the city. and eight others
landed in the grounds of U.S.
Ambassador John Gunther
Dean's residence nearby. The
Phalange radio station said
Dean was at the palace confe~·
ring with President Elias Sarkis
at the~
Nurse Donna Lucas wheeled from nursing home with minor gunshot
wounds
Baby taken amzy
Gorilla mama loses newborn
Gunman subdued
at nursing home
STONEHAM, Mass. (AP> -Gigi did her best -atten-
tively watching videotapes on childbearing and dutifully
cuddling a crying, fur-covered doll in preparation for
motherhood. But the 220-pound lowland gorilla won't get a
chance to care for her new 6:Y•·pound son.
After several hours of labor. Gigi ~ave birth late Mon·
day at Stoneham Zoo, delivering the first baby gorilla ever
born in the Boston area. Zoo Director Richard Naegeli said
both mother and child were in extremely good health. NEW HAVEN, Conn (AP>
A gunman who police said had
been diagnosed as "suicidal"
took over two floors of a nursing
home, where about 120 elderly
patients live, but was subdued
this morning 7'h hours later,
authorities said.
One nurse was injured at 3.40
a m . PDT, when two shots rang
out at the 195-bed, New Fairview
Hall Convalescent Home.
The gunman, identified by
police as Dominic Giordano, 59,
of New Haven, was wh~ked
from the home on a stretcher to
an a mbulance.
Yale-New Haven Hospital of·
ficials said Giordano was treat·
e d and r eleased into police
c us tody but not charged im-
mediately. He apparently was
struck in the head during a
~truggle with police.
l. The head nurse on the shift,
vonna Lucas. was iniured bv a
ricocheting_ P.ellet when the
sunman's 12-gauge single-barrel
sho'8uJl discharged as he was
subdued, authorities said. She
was in fair condition with a
wound to the shoulder and skin
injuries on the head and neck,
said .Hospital of St. Raphael
spokesman Kelly Anthony.
Naegeli said, however, the baby will be reared by a
human, even though Gigi underwent 3112 months of instruc·
lion onchildrearing.
"After careful observation by medical , curatorial and
behavioral staff, the infant was placed in an incubator to in·
sure its health and will eventually be hand-reared by a
qualified constant caretaker," Naegeli said.
The incident ended when the
gunman demanded to be allowed
down to the first floor to talk
with his daughter, police said.
As he moved down a staircase,
allegedly pointing weapons at
three nurses in front of him, Sgt.
Stephen Tiddei knocked the
shotgun upward, police said. It
discharged and apparently hit
Ms. Lucas.
''Infant gorillas are much like human infants, they re-
quire around the clock care. Rearing the infant in a con-
stantly controlled environment is highly desirable, plus the
opportunity to develop a trusting relationship with one
caretaker is essential."
Gigi, 8, and her 11-year-old mate, Sam, were raised by
humans at the Cincinnati Zoo.
Dr. Deborah Schild.kraut, a behavioral psychologist,
said 90 percent of the gorillas who have their babies in cap-
tivity are unable to care for them because apes normally
learn motherhood from watching other mother gorillas in
the wild.
LOWER BACK PAINS
,.,SUPPED DISC''
LEG PAINS
If you suffer back or leg pain from a "slipped disc" or
spinal muscle strain, a chiropractic examination should
be performed. A proper examination and diagnosis of this
condition usually results in successful treatment without
drugs or surgery and with minimum loss of work time.
According to a recent issue of Medical World News. over
$0 million Americans used chiropractic services last year
for the relief of these and similar health problems. The
primary reason is because CHIROPRACTIC WORKSI
Chiropractic seeks to correct the cause of back and leg
problems and not JUSt treat symptoms.
Our staff of well-trained personnel and chiropractic
doctors study the symptoms of back disorders. which
often Include leg pain, tingling, numbness, and cramping
In the calf. thigh, and buttocks. If chiropractic care Is In-
dicated, we Initiate corrective treatment to minimize pain
and encourage health recovery. Whether your back pro-
blem Is a result of an accident, recent stress or a lingering
condition, or even if you have tried other . types of
treatment, do not content yourself with partial results or
prolonged periods of loss of work or bedrest.
lnformation concerning chiropractic care and your
prol51em may be obtained by calling the Yarwood
Chiropractic Office. Also, information regarding
c hiropractic coverage under WOR KMAN 'S
COMPENSATION, AUTOMOBILE INJURY INSURANCE,
GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE, and ·other programs fs
available.
..
t I
~rourn ·
.,,.. A.ssf!mbly pWlses
$70 million bill
I
SACRAMENTO CAP> -OU
companies could not tue $70
mlllion ln state tax deducUons
for thelr federal windfall oil prof·
Its lax, under a bill that narrow-
ly made it through the state As-
sembly.
Juron read too
The lower house voted 41-31
Monday night to send AB746 to
the Senate, where it will have a
difficult time wfnning passage
from the more pro-business
senators.
The biU declares that the tax,
enacted last year by Congress to
tax the huge profits made when
petroleum prices soared, is an
Income tax and not an excise
tax.
Records produced
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ross
Fields, also known as boxing
promoter Harold Smith, who is
the target of a Grand Jury probe
into a $21.3 million Wells Fargo
Bank embezzlement, produced
records Monday that he said
prove be had a $12 million line or
credit with the bank.
He showed the records to re-
porters outside the U.S. District
Court where sentencing was
postponed for Fields' conviction
on charges of passport falsifica-
tion.
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
Judie in atate Sen. Alan Rob-
bins' sex crime11 trial says be
. wants jurors who are "totally
unacquaJnted" with the highly
publicized case. If he means it,
he's probably out of luck.
All 12 members of the first
panel of potential Jurors ques-
tioned MQnday. the first day of
jury selection, indicated t11at
they had heard or read about the
case.
Turnout, 'amal.l'
LOS ANGELES CAP> -City
Clerk Rex E. Layton predicted
just 25 percent to 30 percent or
Los Angeles' 1.27 million reg-
istered voters will cast ballots
in today's municipal election,
despite a hard-fought city at-
torney's race a nd a ballot pro-
posal to use a tax increase to
boost the'police force to 8,500 of-
ficers.
The city attorney's race, bitter
in the primary but subdued dur-
ing the seven weeks of cam-
paigning since then, pits Con-
troller Ira Reiner , the favorite,
against underdog City Coun-
cilman Bob Ronka. ------------------------
Ad .. ,,__ -------Open To All In June
'John Doe' Hits Jackpot
In Monthly Oil 'Lottery'
ONTARIO, CAUF.
(Special) -Hundreds of
average citizena will win
oil le&1e right.a in upcom·
ing public drawing• con·
-.ducted by the State of
Wyoming. Some may
achieve ovemich' wealth
by selling their right.a to
oil companies and retain·
ing lifelong royalties on
any oil or gaa production.
Incredibly, moat will riak
no more than $40, tax de-
ductible, to enter the lit·
tJe-lmown program that
off era every American the
opportunity to compete
on an equal buia with
giant oil companiea for
Leases of public Janda.
Information and entry
details are available from
The H. Kirk Sanders Co.,
Public Landa Div., 2032
E. Caroline, Ontario,
Calif. 91761. Plea.e en·
close $1 for postage and
handlin1.
Official entry cards will
be ruahed to meet the
next filing deadline.
~~i-
PLUMBING & HEATING
SERVICE & REPAIR
MODERNIZATION
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RESIDENTIAL-COMMERCIAL
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Do-It-Yourself Supplies,
-State Contractors Ucenae 1241gi1-
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.~ t
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646-6154
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e ~ • COSTAMHA
~eff<S On ®' r~~)
<=Dental HealtJif~\ r~'
By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.S. ~J WORLD'S MOST PREVALENT / DISEASE What is the world's !ooth decay can. start
m 0 s t p r e v 8 1 e n t m less t~an 15 minutes
disease? u your answer after eating. All lhat ts
Is the common cold !1 e e d ~ d a re t h re e
you're wrong ~ Tooth 1ngred1ents:. a tooth.
decay is the most bacteria t 1ndental
universal disease In the plaque> and sugar.
world. Only a minute When the bacteria and
fraction of the world 's !!o!.1.&ar meet. acid is
peoplf' are rree or It l'Cftlflaed. When the acid
Only 2 percent of th~ and tooth meet. the ac!d
Am erican population starts etching a hole in
h a s been 11 pa re 4 . the toot~. Earllest cavities show Today s diets, high In
up right after primary ref ined suears and t ee th erupt . The carbo~ydrates, are aver age ta-year-old conducive to decay. But
already has at least five careful and PROMPT
cavities in permanent o r a I h Y g i e ~ e teeth. Girls seem to get procedures after eating
more cavities than will reduce, If not
boys: but then, a ir la e I I m I n a t e . t h e
&el their teeth aooner. d e c ~ Y • P r od u c I n I A cav1ty la a hole In 1 actlvtt)' of lbe modern
tooth caused by decay diet. which la produced by Gerald Winkler. D.D.8. '
the combination of a.nd Auodates plaque and acid. It 14tl Avotaclo, Suite 505.
doesn't take a rew days Nf'wpor1 Beach
for trouble to dtvelop. Phoee: '*41 ..
Orangt Co11t OAIL Y PILOTfTuelday, June 2, 1981 H/F Al
Asseinhly increas,es
Brown's l)udget bid
.... ~
STRIKE CONTINUES -Vietnam veterans sit outside
Wadsworth VA Hos.,ital in West Los Angeles on Monday as
they continue their hunger strike that began May 20. The vets
vow to continue the strike until their demands, one of which is
to meet with President Reagan, are met.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Warning that "the larcett fiscal
crlsls in modem Callfornla hia~
t-0ry" ls looming, the Assembly's
fiscal panel bas endorsed a
budget that tops the governor's
plan by more than a billion
dollars.
The $25. 7 blllion proposal
would eo into effect durin1 the
fiscal year that starts July 1.
Also Monday, the Ways and
Mean s Committee approved
three budget companion bills to
hike funds by 7.2 percent to com-
munity colleges, 9.2 percent to
welrare recipients, and 9 percent
to schools. •
In an 18-3 vote sending the
budget plan to the Assembly
floor, the panel adopted the rec·
ommendations of its four fiscal
subcommittees without major
changes.
M eanwhile, the Senate
Finance Committee trimmed
about $100 million out of its pro-
posed budget, hoping for a final
committee vote today on a
separate draft that is expected
to be closer to $25 billion.
The Finance Committee,
despite o bjections from
educators, voted to cut school
aid from the proposed 9 percent
to 7 .2 percent, a drop of about
$137.4 million, and decided to
eive pay hikes of 6 percent to
220.000 state emplp~es, costUl&
a bout $252 m illlorr'.'
The Senate panel also re-
versed a subcommittee's •l·
tempt to abolish the state Com-
m ission on the Status of Women,
votine to reinstate $375,000 of its
$407 ,000 budget.
Efforts to elim inate S38
million for abortions for Medt-
Cal recipients were narrowly de·
feated by both panels.
The Ways and Means plan ls
scheduled to go to the Assembly
floor early Wednesday, while the
Senate Finance version is ex·
peeled to go to a full Senate vote
on Thursday.
The proposals will then go to a
confer ence committee ne1tt
week to work out disputes
between the two houses.
'30 kids' get weHare bilker 16 months
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A
28-year-old Pomona woman who
created 30 fictitious children and
eight bogus names in order to
collect more than $105,000 in
welfare benefits was sentenced
to 16 months In state prison.
Superior Court Judge Everett
Ricks sentenced Yvonne Miller
Monday on six counts of forging
welfare warrants, committing
perjury on welfare applications
and fraudulently obtaining aid
for needy ch.ildren .
Ms. Miller, for merly a clerk at
TRW in El Segundo, pleaded
guilty to the charges April 14.
Deputy District Atlornev Judv
Gray said Ms. Miller began
opening phony welfare claims in
March 1978. She used eight
bogus names and 11 phony ad-
dresses to open 11 different
welfare cases.
To increase her benefits,
Miller created 30 fictitious
r hildren and submitted phony
Starting June 1, you can get BankAmerica Travelers Cheques
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they 're yours for the asking~
But our cheques are more than just free .
They 're easy.
Because BankAmerica Travelers Cheques are welcome in over
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And if your cheques are lost or stolen, you can get refund service at more
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So make this year's summei: vacation free and easy. With
BankAmerica Travelers Cheques, you're off to a very good start.
birth certificates to back her
claims, the prosecutor said.
Ms. Miller's c laims were
terminated in August of 1979
when the County Department of
Public Social Services un·
covered her scheme after she
had bilked the county out or
$105,687.
>
~ERICATRAVELERS CHEQUES
~make~ feel good allovec
"Offer aoodJunt I, l981 to July IS.1981 at S.nlr of Amwc1 oonmrtQn\y.
>
I
1
I •
.. ii'" A bill by Rep. Dan Lunaren
ol Long Beach would, it it wins
cpngressional approval. ward off
t~e possibility that California
taxpayers would have to con·
tribute up to $75 million over the
next three years in assistance to
refugees located in the state.
all the refugees in the country -
and to Orange County which,
witb 1 percent of total U.S.
population, has almost 10 percent
of the refugees.
4 .
Full federal s upport for
refugees who have been in the
country for three years ended
April 1. Under present funding
formulas, the federal govern-
ment picks up only half the cost
of refugee assistance, leaving the
balance up to states and counties.
This, says Lungren,· could
cost California $75 million for the
c:are of refUf.ees who have not yet
become sel -supporting and who
still qualify for various forms of
welfare aid under state eligibility
rules.
Lungren's bill, which would
reinstate full federal funding, bas
the support of the California con·
gressional dele1ation and
representatives of other states
heavily impacted by refugee re·
settlement, notably Florida.
The measure is of special
concern to California, which now
has between 30 and 40 percent of
This, of course, is because
many migrate here from other
areas, seeking a more agreeable
climate or the company of
friends and relatives. And under
the Constitution, no person legally
admitted to the country can be
restricted in movement among the
states.
While most refugees even•
tually find their way in the new
socie.ty, there still are about
100,000 in California receiving
some sort of cash or medical as·
sistance from government pro-
grams.
The federal government
made the decision to admit the
refugees. It is patently unfair to
expect a handful of states and
counties td bear the burden of
their resettlement while other
states contribute nothing.
Reinstatement of f uU federal as-
sistance for a reasonable period
would distribute the responsibili-
ty more equitably.
Moralists mobilizing
The moralists, who are doing
so well in Washington, are out in
force in Sacramento with a whole
series of bUls clearly designed to
cast a shadow of immorality, if
not criminality, on abortion.
Former Los Angeles Police
Chief Sen. Ed Davis has in-
troduced one that has especially
infuriated the medical pro-
fession.
It would require a detailed
report to the state Department of
Health Services on every abor·
tion performed, including date,
location, name of doctor, race,
marital status and medical his·
tory of the mother, and even
length ~d weig. ht of the "aborted
chifd" and "signs of life."
The physicians contend this
would cl.,arly violate doctor-
patient confidentiality while serv-
ing no purpose but to provide an-
ti-abortionists with a convenient
list of doctors , hospitals and
clinics that could be targeted for
harassment.
Failure to report could result
in a flne and/or jail sentence for
a doctor. The Health Depart·
ment, whic}\ also opposes the bill,
estimates processing the reports
could cost the state in excess of
$200,000 annually.
Another measure by Sen.
John Schmitz would require un·
married minors who do not have
parental consent for an abortion
to wait and get a court order -
which of course would involve
their parents.
A bill by Sen. Joseph Mon-toya would require a phys1c1an to
inform a woman seeking an abor·
tion of the current "anatomical
and physiological cbarac·
terUUC$" of the fetus. Another
mea~ure would require the filing
of a death certificate in any abor·
ti on.
All this would do little more
than contribute to the anguish of
an al.ready distressed woman by
implying that any abortion is in
fact the murder of a child.
It is unfortunate that propo-
nents d less government seem
united in their effort to get more
government into the most private
and sensitive aspects of our lives.
The tilt to the West
Arguments over the ac-
curacy of the 1980 census are far
from over, with most of the fuss-
ing coming from the Northeal}t
and upper Midwest states thit
stand to lose both Congressional
representation and a share of
federal funds because of declin·
ing population.
New York could lose as many
as five seats in the House. At the
opposite end of the scale, Florida
with the top growth rate -41
percent over the past decade -
stands to gain four seats.
Texas follows with a gain of
three, then California with two.
The rest of the population growth
has been entirely in the West,
with Washington, Oregon,
Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona
and New Mexico each apparenUy
gaining one congressional seat.
Likely to lose two seats
apiece are Illinois, Ohio and
Pennsylvania. South Dakota, Mis·
souri, Indiana, Massachusetts and
New Jersey could each lose one
seat.
•
Population changes in the re·
maining states were not suffi.
cient to change their represent&·
tion.
The census figures already
are facing a number of court
challenges. Some cities charge
that blacks and Hispanics were
undercounted. Others complain
that the census should not have
counted either legal or illegal
aliens, though the Census
Bureau, charged with CO\IDting'.
"all persons," does not distinguish
between citizens and non-
citizens.
Because of the court cases, it
is quite possible that redistricting
may be set aside in some states
until the e.xact number of
representatives bas been
established.
But whatever the ultimate re·
suit, the pattern is clear -the
population trend in the United
States is away from the frost belt
and toward the sun belt, with
heavy growth emphasis in the
West.
Opinions expressed In the space above arfl those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92624. Phone (714) .. 2-4321.
LM. Boyd I Pmon entrepreneur.a
Inmate. ln the North Dakota State Pe.nltentiary at Bllmarck manufac-
ture tbe1r own Janitorial product&.
they're not for aale commerdally.
But they're aaid to be quit. tood.
And tbelr names are suitable, too: A
draln cleaner called Breakout. A wax remover called Frtak. A tollet
ORANGE COAST
lllJPillt
bowl cleaner. called Con-John. ADd a
acourtq powder called Shakedown.
Q. How many ptOple In thll COUil·
tt1 die every day ba falll? I mun
..... "' alrp ....... otl of ......
d\'tr. rellel' lkat.e, •bat.verT
A. Approxlinatet.)r 55.
What sn1all business needs
W ASHlNGTON -Before the first
asphalt went down on Wall Street. a
lov~ affair began to blossom between
Big Government and Big Business. Yet
the natioo would be better served if the
government would listen to the en-
treaties of a worthier suitor: the in-
dividual entrepreneur who has bis·
torically ~n the backbone of the rree
enterprise system.
In the best A~erican tradition of
worshiping financfui success, many of-
ficials of the Reagan administration
have made it the~· first priority lo at-
tend lo the nee of the corporate
giants. The Am rican small busi-
nessman, meanwie, could ~me an endangered speci . He is reeling from
the after-blast of yrocketing inflation
and interest rates twhile being battered
by abusive tax laws and government
regulations.
What small businessmen need is a
Bill or RJgbts that will give them a
fighting chance to coexist with the big
guns. Here, then, is my own suggestion
for a Small Business Bill or Rights:
1. RJGIFI' TO COMPETE. Individual
initiative and enterprise must be en-
couraged, not discouraged. Anti-trust
laws may need to be tightened to keep
the big boys from selling below cost lo
drive smaller co~pelitors out of busi·
ness. Given half a chance, the pioneer
traits of risk-taking and Yankee in·
genuity will rise a'ain. '
2. RIGHT TO Bf: HEARD. There are
14 million small d independent busi-
nesses in the U ited States. which
employ 58 percent of all private-sector
jobs and support 100 million people. Yet
their voices are a barely audible
whisper in the halls of Congress. com-
pared to the cacophony of Big Business
and Big Labor lobbyists.
3. RIGHT TO INHERIT. One of the
strongest motivations for starting a
business is the hope that it can be
Q
-J1-c1-11-1-111_1_1 -~·4'
passed on from one generation to the
next. But estate and girt taxes have
reached a confiscatory level that
threatens the survival of family busi-
nesses and promotes sellouts to con ·
glomerales.
4 . RIGHT TO REASONABLE
REGULATION. Many a beleaguered
small businessman spends most of his
time filling out government Corms and
complying with government regula-
tions. The thousands of regulatory laws
are written with Big Business in mind ;
it's unreasonable to expect General
Motors and Mike's Garage to meet the
same government standards and re·
porting requirements.
5. RIGHT TO FAIR TAXATION. The
'tax laws are full of loopholes that favor
the big corporations. The small busi-
nessman who files as an individual or
partnership is socked with double taxa-
lion of dividends and inadequate invest-
ment lax credits. If he manages to show
a profit or break even in spite of these
handicaps, inflation alone will push him
into a higher tax bracket.
6. RIGHT TO AFFORDABLE WAGE
SCALES. Though organized labor will
raise howls or protest, it makes sense to
give smalJ businesses relief from
minimum wage regulations. Workers
will be better off if small firms are free
to create new jobs.
7. RIGHT TO EQUAL INTEREST
llATES. Discrimination against small
business borrowers must stop. Bankers
justify charging small businesses two or
more points above the so-called prime
rate, while giving big borrowers rates
three or four points below the prime.
The argument is that the little guys are
bigger risks. But small businesses have
no monopoly on failure -as Lockheed
and Chrysler have demonstrated.
8. RIGHT TO GOVERNMENT CON-
TRACTS. The record shows that small
businesses are 24 times more efficient
in creating new products and
technologies Yet only a paJtry 3.4 per·
cent of the federal government's con·
tracts for research and development go
to small companies. All told, they
manage to get only about 20 percent of
tovernment contracts.
Small can be beautiful. But if
America's small businesses aren't
given a chance to survive. future
generations may never be able to see
just how beautiful they were.
Vidal! can test Brown's verbal skills ·
Earl Waters u on location. ThU column ii
by his a1sociate Phil Jordan.
The sleep Gov. Jerry Brown Is losing
these days may be caused by the ac·
tivities of novelist Gore· Vidal. The
brilliant, waspish novelist is al the mo-
ment, like Brown, an all-but-anno\.lnced
candidate for the U.S. Senate.
While Brown says be won't announce
"for a very long time'' his own ac·
tivities in naming an •·exploratory com-
mittee" and raising $3 to $4 milUon
dollars for the campaign makes it
almost certain he will run. It will be his
seventh major campaign in a little
more than a dozen years.
CurrenUy viewed as the front-runner
for the Democratic nomination, his
nomination is by no means a lead pipe
cinch even without Vidal as an oppo-
nent. San Francisco Assemblyman Leo
McCarthy, former Speaker of the As·
sembly and former ally of the governor,
ls most serious about making a bld for
the office. Senator Al Alquist of San
Jose is determined to run too if it ap.
pears that ia the only way to spike
Brown's ambitions.
OTHERS IN THE WINGS include
John Tunney who lost the seat to Sam
Hayakawa the last time around. AJso,
although he still maintains an alliance
with Brown, Tom Hayden could well
split with him and enter the race
himself. The recent victories in city
elections of candidates backed by
Hayden's political organization seem-
lnilY has encoura~ed such an action.
I -11-l l-IT-IR-S -e
1n such a field ·Vidal's possible can·
didacy should be no more than a faint
cloud on the horizon. His candidacy
might even be taken as a joke consider-
ing he was embarrassingly swamped In
his only other try for pubUc office in
New York state a couple of decades
back. By his own admission he ha&n't
voted since 1964. Now duly registered All
a CaWornia Democrat, he is not only
acting like a candidate but is scurrying
around the state telling everybody he
can win. What's more his pot shots at
Jerry Brown are aiding him in gather·
ing up support for the race
SO Ll'ITLE CLOUDS can grow Into
big .storms. Vidal's candidacy is re·
portedly being encouraged by some
Southern Califom1a liberals of the kind
with big bucks who are disillusioned by
Brown's lnsincerlty as evidenced by his
wavering back and forth .between
liberalism and conservatism.
Whether Vidal could win 01: not, his
candidacy would provide Brown with an
opponent or the type he t\as not yet
faced. In both or his gubernatoriaJ races
Brown was matched against candidates
so low key as to be completely dull. In a
debate with Vidal tbe sovernor, not
always a fast thinker and lackin1 a
sense of humor when he is on the re-
ceiving end, would be reduced to a
laughing stock and, with his short
temper, an obviously angry one.
In the meantime Vidal is warming up.
During a recent San Francisco ap-
pear!l.Dce he honed his admitted wit al
the governor's expense first com-
plimenting him as "an expert cam-
paigner" then, after a well timed pause,
adding sweetly, ''It's only after he gets
elected that things get vague."
Remarking on Brown's quick position
change on Proposition 13 he pointed out
the governor's vigorous opposition to
the measure and his turnabout to
become "Howard Jarvis' best friend ...
A CERTIFIED LIBERAL, Vidal is
tailoring his campaign lo woo the
liberals Brown has alienated. He'll sock
it to big business, the oil industry in
particular and the £'entagon as well.
The Moral Majority he terms "an im-
moral minority. which comes swinging
down from the trees." As for religious
organization1 he would end all federal
tax exemptions now granted churches.
Vidal's candidacy would indeed pre·
sent Brown with a dilemma. U he tries
to ignore him he will be perceived as
unable to answer the clever accusa-
tions. If he answers them he'll increase
the attention they receive. 'Either way,
if Vidal does enter the race, Brown will
be forced lo defend his record against a
skiUed archer with a full quiver.
Detroit dino~aurs still seeking the culprit
Once acatn the cry of the wounded
dl.nosaur la beard throu1bout the land.
Thia tJme it apeab in the voice or Roger
B. Smltb, Chairman of the Board ol
General Moton.
In a speech several daya 110 at the an-
t'rom my own eersonat experience,
I know that Detroit executive1 have ii·
nored the obvious for more than 30 yean.
Los Anaeles County ls one of the bi11est
11n1le·automobile marketa in the nation
ancJ, for years, one of the moat lm1>0rtant
local poUtJcJans, Supervilor Kenneth
Halli\, llal been writing D~ boocbos.
Why? He was begltin« them to build a
fuel-etnctent, safe, 1mo1·free car.
I have seen Supervisor Halm'1 fll• on
thia correspondence and, I can tell you
that, fortbefint lOor U yean, Detroit ex·
ecutJves rarely cave Hahn the courtay of
a reply. When they did, their anocance
f alrb' Ooaed off the pace.
AS A &aULT, foHllD lmporta be1an
to domlD8te ftiat tbe Loi Ancel• market
and, tbia, lbe CUlfonata marUt. llul 0etrmt llDCJljd It UaUt tM treQd ,,,_
coalt to eoaat. Tbta, the Detroit
Dl.IMMur1t belan polnUn1 the ,..,.. Ill n•f'J'CIM elM u tbe cw•rlt. Of coane~ no um. WOUid u1 41uarter-of·a-m011m1
dollar a1nrcarueeuUve Admlt UallttM
problem mi&ht be him or bla incompetent
buddies.
We actually have a leuoo about tbll
fro~ millionaofyearaago. Tbedinoaaun
back then had the amalleat brainl of any
animal thatslJe and they became extinct
because of It. Ia b.latory repeatJn1
itself?
ta U.e .. IOOd old days" wben buUer wu
GialJ 10 ~ a pound, ........ life U ·
P.ectADCJ WU 40·ocld , .. n. Maybe
tba't'a WbJ we think o tbtm u tbe ... oOd Old days. II , D.11. _ ............................. = .................... ,,, ..... ... .............
Bedtime milk
aid to sleep
DEAR PAT DUNN : I've beard for years
that it's a good ldea to drink a glass of warm
milk if you have trouble going to sleep at
night. Is thert; any scientific basis ror this
solullon to insomnia?
P.S .. h:vine
Interestingly, this old folk remedy for
sleeplessneas does have some sclenUflc
bas ls. fn a study, reported by tbe Food and
Dru& Admlnlstntlon, one of the amino acids
found ln mJlk was given ln lar1e doses to
volunteeQ and was-iound to have a sedative
effect. In another experiment, when persona
were depnved or two other amino acids that
occur In high protein foods, there was a drop
in the amount of rapid eye movement <REM>
sleep during which people dream.
On the other band, Insomniacs would be
wise to avoid beverages contalnin& caffeine,
such as coffee, tea and colas, because they
act as stimulants In most people. Smokers
should note that nicotine also is a stimulant
and that many ex·smokers have reported Im ·
proved sleep after qultUng.
Alcohol, In that old atandy nightcap,
m•y not always work to .Jpduce sleep either
because It, too, can be a~Umulaat. In adcU·
tlon, some alcoboJlcs report that tbelr prob·
lem began with bedtime drlnkln1. Tbere
also Is evidence showing that at some dosage
levels alcohol reduced REM sleep.
Imposters hit taxpayers
DEAR READERS: Taxpayers beware!
Individuals have been known to Impersonate
Internal Revenue Service employees for the
purpose of Illegally collecUng money. Tbe
IRS says Imposters may attfmpt to tell tn·
payers they owe money for unpald taxes.
In almost every Instance, taxpayers who
owe money-receive written notification
before being coatacted In person by aa IRS
e111pl01ee. A peraoa claiming to represent Uae
Internal Revenue Service shoald be asked to
show Identification, the IRS cautions.
All employees who make public contact
carry distlnctJve Identification, aad these
employees-are requJred to show their crede•·
tlals when conductlng official business.
Taxpayers •ho doubt tbe vaU,dJty of the
credentials offered can verify the penoa's
employment by immediately co•tadlnl their
nearest IRS office by phoning 835·8211.
A "Got a problma? Then write to Pal
•
W' Dunn. Pat wiU cut red tape, oetting
the an.t10en and action you Med to
1olve iMquit~• in govemmnt and n bu.lme11. Mail JIOUT quelticml to Pal
D\inn, At Your Servsce, Orange Cocut
Daily Pilot, P.O Boz 1560. Co1ta Mesa, CA 92626. As
many letters C13 ptmible will ~ an.noeTed, but phoMd
inquariea cw letters not including the reodn-'1 fWl
name. oddTeu and bu.riM.u houri' phOne number
cannot be considered. Thia column appeora dail11 ez.
• cept Sundays."
Soviet teen
\fears return
CHJCAGO CAP> -Walter Polovchak likes
c pizza, hot dogs and Americanlfllusic. But bis fond· l ness for this country's lifestyle is tempered by the
, fear that be will be forced to return lo the land of
< his blrth -the Soviet Union.
• t he 13-year-old Soviet boy, who was eranted
•political asylum last year, fears his parents will
• win their bitter legal struggle and he will be forced
to return with them to their native Soviet Ukraine,
• according to Julian Kulas, the youth's attorney.
: That fear , Kulas said, has been simmering
since last summer, when Walter ran away from
home after the Polovchaks, growing disenchanted
after only a few months of American life, decided
to return to their homeland with their children.
The Cook County Juvenile Court made Walter
: a ward of the state.
; But now Walter's future is in the bands of the
Illinois Appellate Court. On Wednesday the court
will hear arguments on his parents' appeal of a
lower court decision that t~k Walter away from
them .
The Soviet Foreign Ministry on Monday pro-
tested to the U.S. Embassy about the "court
farce," the Soviet news agency Tass reported.
''Although they explicitly wish to return to
their home country, the · Polovcbaks cannot do ao
because their elder children continue to be forcibly
kept away from them," Tass quoted the protest
note as saying.
A U.S. Embassy offfoial in Moscow said it was
• the third protest about the matter since last
August.
Kulas believes that according to Soviet law.
I Walter bas committed treason and if be return1 to
his homeland, be won't be prosecuted but he will
be deprived of hls rights.
Attorneys for the Polovchaks say Walter never
has been a problem child and the state bas no neht
to intervene ln family affaln.
While the leaal proceedings dra1 on, Walter
lives with Ukranian toster parenu. Kulas says the
boy ls comfortable in his new bome.
"He bu adjukted very well," Kulu said. ''In
fact, he baa many friends. And hls lan1ua1e abUi· t ty hu improved tremendoull)'. • • l · Kulu taid be speaks with Walter every few t • ":eeks and aaid the teen·a1er •'likes to think Uke
t an average American kld does. ~ likes bot do11. i He Uk• plua pla. He Ukes American music. He's
• an American u tar aa bis IUestyki is mncemed."
L '11M*ih WaUer vlSltl his Par9Dta replarb,
1
1 Kul11 Nld he remains apprebenltve about spend·
tn1 bl1 llte m the SC>vlet UnJon. '
,When Walter ran away, the Soviet lmbaaay ! said be bad bHn kidnapped, and t.be SoYiet aewt
1 a1eney hill laid Walter bad bee bribed wtOt a ! promiM of 1 bleyele llMt a ear. ,,..._ ot tMI llGlilrttb', ~.._ •Ud waiw mlOt le .....,a'*I from ldl..,..... and,,. ... ,
woild not ..-. .. a til1h•r edUcatiOft ll be retuma
toU.UkralDI. , aut 1111,...y Groaaman, an Amenean Clril
Liberti• Union attorney •bo reprnntt the t PolOi~m. ii.Id Wafter'• ~f wcMald aot be • J~ 1f be r'itUf'DI Mme.
................. ., ...
Orange Coast DAILY Plt..OTfTuetday. June 2, 1981
Vietpam ra~ 'depraved' culture .
HANOI, Vietnam <AP> -Sl.x months after ln·
ltlatlnc liberal economic relorma, the communist
19vemment here bu launched a two-pronatd
campalp aaainat bureaucratic corruption and
"depraved" culture, lncludln1 boob and ·•noxious
music." '
Some Western diplomata sai~ the campatpt,
which underline a debate ln the Vietnamese
hierarchy on the llmltl of economic and penonal
freedom, may be the be1t,nnln1 ol a CQDcerted,
harsher drive to ensure party control.
The economic reforms ·save local production
manaeen iireater freedom from central aovern·
ment control, but also cre•ted the opportunity for
more &raft, said Western diplomata, who asked not
to be identified.
Another factor la lnnatton, the dlplomatl said.
The salaries of manaeers at state·run enterprises
have rilen only 20 percent ln the last six months
whJle lnflaUon bat locreued the price of food by
nearly 40 percent in thla Soutbeul Asian natlon ol
48 mllllon people.
The Communist Party dally Nban Dan kicked
off the, campaign against corruption on ~ay 12
with an article headlln4ld: "Let Us Stop Collective
Em beulement. ··
The article said workers at state.run en·
terprises and cooperatives in 15 provincial towns
had stolen nearly 303 million done ($21 million by
the official exchan&e rate, but only SlO million on
the free market> worth of goods In the third
quarter of 1880.
Id an example, Nhan Dan said, several en·
lerprises had refused to raise their prices as or·
dere(i by tho government and continued to seit
1ood1 to their employees at out-dated prices. The
employees eot such basic llenu aa bicycle chains.
wool, cloth, suiar and electrtc fans.
Subsequent articles, appearin) every few
days, have llsled officials sentenced from one to 15
years for various corrupt practices.
u l'oretan Minister Nguy en Co Thach hat been
qu.oted as saying that corruption la a big problem.
This may be preparing the iround for harsher
measures," said one diplomat.
"The anli·corruption move has come from
security people, who a.re traditionally hardllne."
said one diplomat.
Another commented that the corruption was
confined to lower-level managers.
deral
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I
• ...
" Orange Cout OAILY PILOTfTuHdly, June 2, 1981
'Anything Goes' delightfu~ .delicious, de-lovely
1 TGM1TtlJ8
... OIMy .........
If you've been Collowlng the fortunes of South Coaat Repertoey
hrouah any or all or lta first 15 yean, the last thin& you'd probably
xpect to rmd there ls a 19308 musical rollowed, at curtain call, by
pitch for season ticket.a.
But that's just what's goina on at the Costa Mesa company, a
ecldedly un-SCR like revival of Cole Porter'• "Anythlnl Goes,''
he sort of fare generally reserved tor the dinner theaters. Who
nows, maybe Nell Simon will make It to tbe Fourth Step nexl
ea son.
But lest you lmaglne the repertory troupe is tlltln1 a blt
oward the commercial bent, it must be added that "Anything
oes," corny and creaky as it is, 1eta first cabin attention from a
uperlative cast and artistic stall. It only follows that, when SCR
elins to do an old musical comedy, It's done ln dynamite fashion.
John-David Keller, SCR's resident musical specialist, has put
ogether a revival that's appeallna to the eye and ear, a slick and
mooth resurrection of the theatrical era when story remained
ubservient to song. Busby Berkeley would get misty eyed at thls
ne.
Top honors ln characterization go to Don Tuche 11 the stuffy
but likeable ~ritish nobleman squiring Doyle's lady love <Patti Ap-
pel) and her mother (Martha McFarland> across the waters. In-
stead or optmg for the cllched stiff-upper-Up Briton, Tuche adds
some human comic dimension to the role which plays splendidly.
Somehow, it took four authors to stitch together the trappings
n the PoJ1er package, but it's certainly not the plot you'll cherish
rom "Anythln& Goes." The show is virtually a "Best or Cole
orter" album Including two of his standards tacked on in the 1962
Richard Doyle rfrom Left), Art KOUltik, Ellen TravoUa.
Others contributing effectively l-0 the ensemble are Steve
DeNaut as Doyle's blinded broker boss, choreograeher Clifton and
Ron Michaelson as a pair of egregiously stereotyped Chinese, John
Ellington as the ship's purser and Hal Landon Jr. doing double du·
ty as a bishop and the ship's captain.
evlval ("Friendship" and "It's De-Lovely''), not to mention .._
·You're the Top," ''I Get a Kick Out or You" and the title tune.
Even more arresting than Porter's melodies, however, Is the
horeography or Keith Clifton in the SCR production. Ensemble ex-
ellence glitters particularly in the "Heaven Hop" number or the
irst act and the brassy "Blow, Gabriel, Blow" in the second.
for Reno Sweeney, the red hot mama and f.•rt·Ume evangelist. Tops in the choreographic de~artmen , however, is Cathy
Susan Pyles as the quintessential dumb blonde gun moll whose
treatment of "Heaven Hop" and "Let's Step Out'' is nothing less
than electrifying. To borrow a phrase from the composer,' you'll
get a kick out of her.
Richard Doyle takes on a familiar characterization in the male
lead of Billy Crocker, the fugjtive from Wall Street stowing away
on a luxury liner lo London. Doyle, Miss Travolta and the ruggedly
comical Art Koustik as Public Enemy Number 13 make a splendid
trio in the classic threesome num!>er "Friend.ship."
Mark DoMelly's scenic design is both richly authentic and
smoothly convertible, encompassin1 every available inch of the
Fourth Step stage on many levels. Jerry Frohmader wields a
formative baton back "Inside" the ship where his efforts are ap-
preciated without being visibly distracting.
Once you become accustomed lo South Coast Repertory doing
musical comedy (and old musical comedy al that), you'll find
"Anything Goes" a delightful, delicious and de-lovely package of
entertainment. It plays through July 5 as the season finale on the
SCR mainstage. 655 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa.
The latter segment showcases the talents of Ellen Travolta,
he nominal star of the show in the role indelibly etched by Ethel
erman. Miss Travolta may be no Merman (but who, ln fact, is?).
ut she radiates exuberance and polish, two essential ingredients
..
'!Joors tribute rocks 'Bear'
Ly JEFF PARKER J>t tlle Deily ,.... 5Uft
• People just can't seem to gel enough of their ~P idols, especially after the stars are dead or de·
net. In spite of the massive and detailed legacies
al big performers leave behind them on record
d Cilm. the thirst to see those singers "live"
gain seems to be heightened when the artist dies:
cy become canonized, not just idolized.
t
Strange Daze, a four-piece band which plays
usic by the Doors, came to the Golden Bear Fri·
ay for two votive performances -it was the
econd time in as many months that the group has
acked the Bear, and many of the rans were there
r the second lime.
The band takes its name from the Doors'
iecond album ("Strange Days") and is led by
f
andy Baker, who resembles Jim Morrison both
hysically and vocally. He was backed by one
uitarist, a drummer, and a lleyboard player who,
ke the Doors' Ray Manzarek. carried the bass
nes with the organ.
Jim Morrison was a gutsy, intimidating and
llnderrated singer, and as Baker growled the i»>en·
tng lines or the first song, "L'America," it was
tear from his slightly off timing and off key de·
ivery (Morrison never hit a flat note -at least on
r ecord > that vocally, they are no match.
"L'America" wasn't bad, in fact it was a close
copy of the Doors' original. but the very closeness
of it was what made it so conspicuously flawed.
THE COMEDY SENSATION!
"A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY
about pomeous fathers and youthful
seduction.. -NancySoaft.SFEXAMIHER ~
llA•-11'111t1U' YICTOlt -..a1uu u•cw1 -:._
-~ON£ WILD MOM£HT ......... .._4~ ......
FRENCH MOYIE
RATED (A)
NOW PLAYING
-·--·,,...
fM!
It's not an easy song to sing anyway, and as the
evening progressed and Baker's voice reached fts
full strength, it was clear that he'd opened with the
show's weakest tune.
Strange Daze gleaned a fine selection of Doors
songs for the performance, among them "Love
Street" and "My Eyes Have Seen You," which
came off quite well, and "People are Strange."
''Changeling," "Whiskey Bar," "Waiting for the
Sun," "Back Door Man," "When the Music's
Over" and the encore. "Light My Fire.'' Balcer
can 'l hit those high, tuneful growls that Morrison
knocked us out with : looking back on the selections
It's clear that he chose the lower songs for the
show, rather than some or the more demanding
ones for which the crowd was yelling -"L.A.
Woman," "Soul Kitchen" and "Crystal Ship."
Done by the Doors, Morrison's music· is pre-
cise, cam1val-like, spooky, but the Strange Daze
band couldn't manage much drama because of
their uneasiness. The music wasn't sloppy, but it
wasn't light either -with a few botched guitar
licks and the organist losing his way once or twice.
you find yourself bracing yourself against the next
mistake rather than enjoying what isn't going
wrong.. That's the trouble with "tributes" that
aspire to verisimilutude: there's no room for error
because it's all aimed at re-creating something
we've heard before. It's an imposing task for any
band.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR MRBfl'S.AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
® NO ONE UND£11 H AOWTTtD , ....... _, ...... ... _ ......
.-u. am NtO 111,,.,, AECEIVE
fliE IEN.. OF lWE MOTION l'ICTl.lllE
COOi. OF IEIJ' llEOUU TIOfj
If lt'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
·it faster In a
Dally Piiot
ctasslfied
ad.call
642-56?8 and a
frlendlya6
vlserwtll
help you
turn your
wheetslnto
cash.
'
TM Private Momentt nm•nv• IPG> lho-·· 8:00~:10 10:" "ii
John Boorman'•
EXCM.JmM I RI ~&rf:fsT
NeiiDiiimond MZZ_..IPG)
IHOWSAT 1:001120 10:30
• ~flrycw A~CRI
MW! Way 11 U• CR)
I ~-'=IMft'I ~PCR)
TIMIO.•e.tUU --~ I............_"
--·~...n "THE FOUR IEAIONS" IPQ) ···-·t.•·1:1t·•~ ...... ,.. ... __ ..... _ ·--"DEATH HUNT" Ill)
,t:ll • ~ • 4oilll • 1111 • t.a • U:11 .... _ .. ""------MMITWt'D-"TAKE TIH JOB AND
SHOVI IT" 111'01 ••·•tt·-·-·-
HIGH "IU l"I _,,,., ... , M T, _____ _
' .. _,_,_ .... ,.. ...... , .. -."I'll.•• .. ---------TiiE LEOfNO Of
TME LO.. MNOH {PG) -llORDE1'UNf (ll'G)
T ....... ~-----THE LEQIND Of
THE LONE~ (ll'Q)
BO"DDn.INf (ll'G)
~~ :i ORN«i COAST
RELY ON the 1111 flll
''HIGH "'"" ""'-.-"DPTHHUNT" -· "HAPPY8'DAY
"LA CAO.AUX
FOUEI PART 2" fR) .. ,...,....,,
''IXCALJ8Uft'' ---... -·
..
HUITllliTlil lllCH I f 1111111 lllllY
..
TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1981
FEATURES 82
BUSINESS BS
STOCKS B7
Children get head start
by learning the basics
of computers . . . 85
Biggest · county trari~it budget OK'~
The largest budget ever for
tbe Orange County Transit Dis·
trict more than $100 million -
was approved Monday by dis-
trict directors.
OCTD officials said today the
final total could reach about $106
million, but this won't be de·
termined until later.
At a meeting a month ago, the-
directors reviewed a n $80
million budget for the 1981·82 fis ·
cal year. The figure was in-
c reased after more than $20
million in federal erants became
available.
The grants are for construe·
lion or a new maintenance yard
in Anaheim and an unspecified
number of new vehicles, an ------
OCTD spokesman said.
The additional erants didn't
change earlier proposals for a
$71.6 millfon operations budget,
which ls $16 million more than
projected for this fiscal year.
The increase Is in line with the
district's continued growth pat-
tern . Almost 38 million
passengers are projected to.. rid~
OCTO buses in the 1981-82 hsca1
year compared to 29.4 milllon
who rode this year despite a
str ike by bus drivers and
mechanics which · stopped
service for most of February.
In other action, the board o(
directors agreed to seek a con·
tlnued subsidy from the county
government for discount bus
fares for senior citizens.
A $936,300 subsidy granted lut
September is expected to laat
untll April 1982. Monday's de·
cision was to seek an extension.
With the subsitty, seniors can
ride for 50 cents during busy,
rush hour periods and a dime
during slack times at middays.
eveninlS and weekends.
WithO\Jt the subsidy. seniOn
would be charged the replar
75 -cent fue during peak
ridership periods, aaid James
Reichert, C>CTD general
manager. State law requires
transit districts to provide dis-
count fares during slack times.
-Gl..ENN SCOTf
-·Mike Curb raps Brown 's .,
'bankrupting' policies
......, ............. llkllltrltK ........
Booster Club President John Hoefler sets fire to la.st IOU for Fountain V.alley High School band's trip to
Washington, D.C. Princ!fal David Hagen, and band director Frank Barnes watch.
Ocean View's
kids capture
fair honors
IOUs up in smoke
Valley school clears band's debt
Fountain Valley High School
Students in the Ocean View has paid off the last of $81,000 in
School District in Huntington d«:bts for the . marching band's
Beach have won 44 of ;i possible ·-trip to Washmgto~, D.C .. last
88 awards for entries in the January to play m President
junior high school division of the Reagan's inauguration parade.
Orange County Science Fair. Many members of the 134-
Cecily Farquhar, the district's member band cheered !l.nd .ap-
science fair coordinator said plauded Monday as Principal
that Marine View School h~d the David Hagen set the last of the
most awards, 28. IOUs ablaze in front of the cam·
Other schools whose students pus.
won awards are Circle View, The school had been notlfie~ of
Harbour View, Mesa View and its selection as one of the~ high
Village View. i;chool bands to march m the
Winners from Marine View In-parade on Dec. 5, and had raised
elude: all but $21,000 or the flight and
TI m Wu er f u l . Nancy room costs by the Jan. 19 de·
Kawasaki Julia Bond Terri parture date. They borrowed the
Doltan, Robert Mann,' Kathy r~st from the school's associated
Fogg, Anthony Eden, James student body treasury. .
Matlnas, Kristine Albert, Liz "It's been very heartwarmmg
Carey, Douglas Anderson, Den· that so many people c!ontinued.to
nls Hubbard, Paul Bong, Jeffrey support . the .. ba~d art~r the m·
Scott, Sharon Oangl, Curtis augurali<.m. said .Evie Be.lgen,
Fowler, Renee Tilley, Cary s chool information off1 c~r.
Nakama and Donald Dunbar. "We're all just sort or breathing
Circle1 View winners : Greg a slg~ of relief." .
Raffetto, Guy Riessen, Julian Principal Hagen said the
Cumings, and Ltt;a Mangum. mo~er was raised. through l,_025
Harbour View: Ettie Ben-Individual donations rangmg
Sb o s h an , Thom as I v e y . from Sl to $5,000. Kathleen Ward. The 4-day trip to Washington,
D.C. included tours of tbe White
House. the S mi thsonian
Institution, Lincoln Memorial,
W asbington Monument, Mount
Vernon, and Arlington
Cemetery, he said.
He said the high point of the
journey was marching in th.e
parade just moments after it
had been announced that the
American hostages held in Iran
had been released.
School officials say the band
received a rousing, emotional
reception from thousands or
spectators when they played the
Civil War tune, "When Johnny
Comes Marching Home."
"We not only tour ed American
history, but we participated in
history," Hagen said.
The band was cbosen by the
inauguration committee out of
400 high school applications na-
tionwide.
Ms. Belgen credited requests
for donations that city officials
included with the water bills for
putting the students over the top
and allowing the students to pay
off the debt by the June 1 dead·
line they had set.
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .... Dell• ~ ........
Unless the state turns away
from the ''less is better. small is
beautiful" policies of Gov. Jerry
Brown's administration,
Califo r nia's future will be
bankrupt.
That's the me~sage Lt. Gov.
Mike Curb had for more than 400
members of the Building In·
dustry Association's Orange
County chapter Monday night at
tbe Alrporter Inn in Irvine.
Curb's speech was frequently
interrupted by loud applause as
he called for reductions in busi·
ness regulations, an end to the
Coastal Commission, mor e
freeway construction, harsher
penalties for crimes and a re·
turn or capital punishment.
And Curb left little doubt who
he thought should be sitting in
the governor's office when
Brown's term expires in 1982.
"What you need is a new gov·
ernor," Curb said. grinning
broadly.
Repeating President Reagan's
"return to basics" theme, Curb
said the size of the state's gov-
ernment must be drastically re·
duced.
''We must start to rid
ourselves of the bureaucratic ob-
stacles that stand in the path of
growth in our society," Curb
said. "We have reached the
paint where if we don't change
the counter-productive policies
of the past few years, we will
bankrupt our future.''
The lieutenant governor also
criticized the state Coastal Com-
mision. He said the state must
get out of land use management
and return that power to local
governments.
Huntingto n
• ice cream
shop robbe d
Ao ice cream shop in Hunt-
ington Beach was robbed of $400
Monday night by an armed sus·
peel who threatened to shoot
through a looked door into a
room with four employees,
police reported.
The suspect entered the rear
door of Farrell's Ice Cream
Parlour on Beach Boulevard
near Edinger Avenue, at 2 a.m.
after the restaurant had closed
and pointed a handgun at a male
e mployee, police said.
The employee knocked the gun
aside and ran into the next room
with other employees, locking
the door behind him. The gun-
man threatened to fire through
the door unless they opened up
and eave him the night's re-
ceipts.
Described as a male black,
about 23, 5 feet 7 inches, 140
pounds, the s uspect took the
money and fled on foot out the
back door, police said.
Dally Ptlet ..........
'REDUCE GOVERNMENT'
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb
"The Coastal Commission has
gone far beyond its ori&lnal
maadate, a.nd is to a laree
degree responsible for our cur·
rent housing shortage and high
costs to everyone," be said.
Curb described the high costs
for housing as a "supply and de·
mand problem." He said the
supply of affordable housing is
down because state agencies
like the Coastal Commissi.on
have over-regulated the building
industry.
Curb garnered the loudest ap·
plause when be called for the re·
turn of the death penalty. "It
would partly solve the problem •
of overcrowded prisons," he
said with a laugh.
He advocated life sentences
for habitual offenders and said
tougher judges are needed. "We
need judges who will place the
victim first, not the criminal,"
Curb said. "When Ronald
Reagan was governor that's the
way it was done."
Curb s h arply c r iticized
Caltrans director Adriana Gian-
turco, who, he said, caused the
state to lose millions or dollars
in federal aid for road construc-
tion.
He said California's highway
system is falling apart, and that
Miss Gianturco and the gov-
ernor are using abusive tactics
to get the public lo use public
transportation.
·'They think that if they don't
build any more roads people will
leave their cars in the driveway
and ta.Ice the bus," Curb said.
"The result has been a great
hardship on Calirornia com·
routers and the deterioration on
our highway system."
Curb urged a return to what
be called the "business en·
terprise" system, with higher
profits for businesses which
would In turn spur more invest·
ment and growth.
He aJso satd legislation should
be passed to exempt taxes on all
savings directed, at the housing
market.
·'The priorities of 1981 are
very clear," Curb said. "We
must e nd t h e idea that
California is an unhealthy place
to do business, and we can do
'that by supporting President
Reagan and getting government
orr our backs ...
3 county inmates'
escape bid f aUs
Three inmates -including
two men convicted or kidnap-
ping a Huntington Beach coin
dealer's family -have made an
unsuccessful attempt to escape
from Orange County J ail, an of·
ficial said.
Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Hart said
today his department would
seek complaints of attempted
escape and destruction or county
property against inmates
Wesley E. Tucker , 30, Lawrence
B. Bennetto. 33, a nd Anthony
Carl Marek, 19.
Botb Tucker and Bennetto
were convicted by an Orange
County Superior Court jury in
mid-May of kidnapping and
other felony charges in the at·
tempted robbery of a HuntingtOn
Beach coin dealer whose family
was held hostage at gunpoint
last September.
They face sentencing proceed-
ings on June 15.
Hart said he didn't know on
what charges Mack was being
held.
The three attempted to break
out of the Santa 'Ana jail facility
early Sunday.
It is alleged they destroyed a
grated light fixture in their cell
and crawled into a plumbing
tunnel that runs between cells.
Hart said a deputy heard sus-
picious noises and alerted other
jail security personnel, who cor·
doned off the fourth-floor. high
security area and opened the
tunnel where the inmates were
hiding.
The atteJDpted escape was the
second in recent months in
which inmates crawled Into the
plum bing tunnel seeking a way
out of the jail.
Mesa View: Caryn Ursich,
'trlsha Takldo.
.Village View : Dou1las
Hinesley.
• llra. Farquhar a nd Mary
Sebu'9sler were the teacher-
coaches or the Marine View stu-
tent.a.
Super 80 jet ·JQakes its debut
In the first incident, three in·
mates also were found to be in
the tunnel, which eventually
links up with air conditioning
ducts that lead to the jail ro0f.
BB teen h eld
in ra}>e of The Ocean View School Dls-
trlot has 23 schools, iftcludlng 10
D)tddle achools, with 11,000 stu-
denta from Huntington Beach,
Westminster, Fountain VaUey,
and Midway City.
By F•EDERICK SCROEMEID..
0( 1M o.lly ...... SWf
There she was, the new pride
of the AirCal fleet, a $22 million
state-of·the-art airplane, slltlnl
on the apron at John Wayne
Airport with a bad Ure.
Not flat, mind you, but in ba~
enough shape to worry the
around crews that wanted every-
thinR to be just ri&ht on Mon·
day's maiden journey of Air
Cal's first DC·9 Super 80.
AirCal took delivery of the
first of four Super SOI In mid·
May. The plane is no'lt' betn•
used ln regularly scheduled
fllshts between Oran1• County
and San Francl1co Ba1·1rH
locaUona. "It'• a new aircr1ft .•. they
want to make 1ure they •et, ft
rlsht." a p111en1er service representative explalDed over
the Intercom to lb• lbMI
packld into tbe bOa..., area at
th• airport.
The reapoaH came in tba .. . .
fo~m of nervous smlles. snide
comments and exasperated
stares.
The scheduled 8:30 a.m. de-
parture of the plane -touted as
a partial solutlon to the Jet noiae
problem at the airport -wu
delayed 44 minutes. Even as
passen1era strode lo \be Plane,
workers were still busy with
wrenches and vease on the two
front whee~.
The alrline that prides illelf
on havlnl the belt on·llme rec-
ord of a_a)' alrllae OD the Welt
Coa1t found UtUe to be happy
wlth on Uill overcut mo~.
:rbe pilot. Capt. Larry
ler11ard, wu apOla,etic. He an·
nounced there'd be free
cocktalb tot the 1• puaeqen.
Durinf the ftljlat to Su Fran·
cllco from Oran•• CountJ,
84i1'98rd tWIN told .........
YI• Ille plilW• lmtl"tO• IMI&' ...
C'O ........ ~ ....... a ••ti1eeutlf9l 1alrpl ......
"TW. .,. all kinda Of OOID-!
puters up here to play wlth,"
Bernard said. Most of the trip,
he 1aid, was flown under
automatic pilot. However, the
landtn1 was conducted by
Bernard.
·"(l's tremendous .•. I think
it's a areat alrplane," comment·
ed Capt. Stewart Moore foUow-
lnS the return fil&ht to Oran1e
County Monday niSht.
Llke other AJrCal pUots who
will fly the Suptr 80 Moore, a
Corou del Mar reatdent, 1pent
·12 days at IJ'(>und 1cbool 8nd
nurneroUI other• in almulator
tralnin& to learn how to ny UM
new aircraft.
Both nt•bts were 1m00th. And
the reduoed amount Ol MMi pro-
duced, by t.M planes to fUHlafe·
mounted Jet enjtnes wat cl•rly
detff~ble.
""' tbole accustomed to ft1-
ln1 AlrCal'• ""' of Boelal Tlta, rtdbll In the Super • II IODlltbial of a treat. &xoept fOr
o:bt UUa. If I•• room wH aoa·
existent in the Boeing 737, it's
even worse in the Super 80.
If the person sitUn1 in front. of
you decides to recline hls 1eat,
plan on being nose-to-nose with
the package of peanuts and
drink sitting on, your \ray table.
Another flaw -ontl a
stewardeas sald "I 'll fix next
k, ii l have anythlne to say
at>out lt'' -ls that seat numbers
are virtually impos1lble to read.
The numbers are located above
the windows, fld' out or the Hne
of view ot pusen1ers walklnS
down tht aille.
The Su~r IO utlU1e1 a 2·3 aeauaa arraa1ement -two
seat1 on tM left 1ld• of the
plane, thrM on tbe rl1bt, 11
compand to tbe 1·3 arrante-
ment c:a tbe m.
One ruet atteadant1 1andwtetied ween a uat ana t1•• drink cart, t!Ommented :
"We'w aot to l•t 1m1Uer dri.ftil
carta for tbll plane."
4
:woman, 19
Hunttnaton Beach paUce b.ave
arrested a 17-year~ld youth oa
cbar1es that .be raped a 19·year-
old woman from Oranae who
cave him a ride home from t.tiii
beach early &mday morninl.
The suapectt whose Identity la
belna wtthbelo because be'• UD·
der 18, a lleaedly uuulted
lhe woman in ber ear and a1lo at
hla Huntlncton BHcb bome •
before II~ ta.r back Ml'. k.,..
and ~ ber fO, police Mid.
Tti• fMdl nportedlJ -• il4le holnl from the woman a
J:IO 1.m. llfttil' a bMeb pliitJ' .,,. .... ,...,...,~ ..............
da1. ~ Wttla rape .ad..._
releaMd ·lo u. c•~ el 11111
paHID, Pollee 1ald.
..
H/L/C/N Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/fuelday, June 2. 1981 ..,,. __ .._ ______ ..._.iiiiiiii'!IP;
Sheddhlg
ligJit on law
NAKED TRU111 DBPT. -Cotta Mesa clvtc leaden,
who have 1001 campaigned for communlty vlrtue, have prob-
ably broken out ln a cue of profuse penpiration today'
•fter the Supreme Court'• deciaioo Hying "Nay" to, Mt.
Ephraim, New Jener_. Well you eertalnly ml&ht uk what in
the world does Mt. Ephraim, New Jeney bave that would
1 cause a heavy sweat in Metatown, here on our veey own
Oran1e Coast?
Costa Mesa baa a Iona · Nakedness, th't's what'. <m
berita1e al battlin& qatmt the · • •
1181 of tllele mislulded IOull ' ~\ ..
who would shed all their ear· TUI IUIPlllll ~If menta for professional eain. • ~·~, . .
llT. EPBBAJll, popula·
lion 5,825, below Camden near the crouroada of routes 130,
295 and 28, also baa civic leaders equally outraged by the pro·
f essionally unclothed. Thus it was that the cope ol that New
Jersey }Jorough slapped an arreat on one Juliette Ann DiLu·
ciano and her alleged accomplice for offering 11 ve nude danc-
ing at a spot called the Si>t Thirteen Club.
Trouble was, the cue eot appealed (if you'll pardon the
expression} all the way up to the Supreme Court of the United
States. And the trouble with that was that the Nakeds won on
a 7 to 2vote.
"1be borough totally excludes all live entertainment, in·
eluding non-obscene nude dancing," wrote Justice Byron R.
"Whizzer" White, in the majority opinion.
NON·OBSCENE NUDE dancing? Costa Mesa city brass
probably paled, trembled and fainted upon reading that com-
bination of words. They always figured the words nude and'ob-
"Keep tt clean now! We'n /lfling over Co.ta Me1<1 .....
scene just naturally went together. Like peaches and cream.
So long as you don't peel the peaches, that is.
But Mr. Justice White continued to conclude, "Nudity
alone does not place otherwise protected material outside the
mantle of the First Amendment. .. "
Protected material? Now the Mesa civic lights ought to be
puzzled by that one. They don't figure anything is protected
when people run around in the All-together, not body DOI' soul.
DESPITE TJDS LATEST Supreme Court surprise, it's
doubtful that Costa Mesa will ftnd the local saloons abrupUy
importing dancing girls.
Time was, of course, when Mesatown was indeed invaded
by a watering spot on Harbor Boulevard known as Baby
Doll's. It was widely rumored that within its cement block
walls, female dancers performed wearing little more than a
smile.
Then Poppa Joe's and the Firehouse shocked the central
business district with loud signs proclaiming that their danc-
ing ladies were nude, nude, nude. And that ~ot Costa Mesa's
fin est vice cops busy, busy, busy. One bust followed another.
MAYBE THAT OUGtrr to be re-phrased. Yes. They ar-
rested a lot·of dancers wbO weren't carrying any identification
at the time. That's better. .
Since then, things have quieted on Costa Mesa's unclothed
f root. Oh well, there have been a couple of modeling studios
and a dance¥" to keep the vice cops in buaineu but most of
the local stariers have been kiddies in wadin1 pools.
Still, the Supreme Court may have given Mesa's City Hall
some new jitters. Don't go vtsiting there now and abruptly
fling off your overcoat.
IDGB COURT OBSERVERS, however, have suggested
that the new ruling on prof enlonal nakedness probably means
that the New Jersey town just bad a loosely written anti-buff
law.
That should ease Costa Mesa's worry about virtue. Costa
Mesa writes ordinances so tight that they squeak.
Even the bir<bl and the bees watch it around Mesatown.
-
Glean ·Upper Bay vowed Farnwr
Inventor claims device, new methods foolproof market ~
Ottie "AIMIY" Andrew• hu •pent nine year• at Mesa .. ~
and $12,000 out of bis own pocket pW'1ulna hi• 1tlt· • ~
cleaninc harbor lnvenUon which be claima would Plans for a pro&racn(f ~1 the Upper Newport Bay ot lta •lit once and for that would bring fresh
Andrews, a retired truck driver who lives in ~roduce directly fro.fa"
Anaheim, baa hauled workln. models of hia ioveo-outhern Californ ~~
lo aU h ... farms to Orange Cout1 t n over t e country ln hopes eomeone ml1bt conaumera are beil)•i
become interested. d " 0 e'a been to Wa11 .. ln1ton, D.C., to Sacra-ento lscuned by 1rowe,;t. ·~ '' .... and Orange County ~atr'. three times and to the offices of every lawmaker omctals.
who would let him in the front door. '' Most recently, he spent $1,1001endln1 aurveya
to 20,000 Newport realdentJ, tryln& to win interest
lo hls 1elf·cleanin1 harbor idea.
He claims 1,848 people have responded to hi.a
survey and that 97 percent ol the penoos favor bit
approach to cleaninc out the mud·choked bay .
A Farmers Markel
operation on a portion
the fairgrounds park
lot In Costa Mesa h
been suggested by t
Orange County Far
Bureau, said Kenne
Fulk. fair manager. Next Sunday, for the fint time, Andrews will
11how off models of bls invention t.o Newport City
Council member• at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. Fulk said bure
representatives are ·
Inc the fairgrounds l
lion for a certlfit
Farmers Market simil
He's excited. He says he feels like he's finally
on the move.
"Tbls ls the only poaalble way you'll ever get
·the back bay cleaned out and keep lt cleaned out,"
he bouts. to one now operated
Long Beach. "Produ
is sold directly to t ·
consumer." he sai
"That idea to do some dredclng la Just a waste
of taxpayer's money," be adds.
His invention, which be aays must be seen to
be appreciated, works on the theory of harnessin1
tidal action to scrub out the bay.
INMY ...... Mlff .....
Anaheim resident Ottie Andrew• 1hows off
device he says will help to clean silt and sand
from Upper Newport Bay. He will demonnrate
plan Sunday.
• "There is no ml
dleman; the farmer Tidal gates would direct water movement
clockwise around the bay, he says. Movement of
the water, which he estimates would reach speeds
up to 13 miles pe-r hour at some points, would clean
out the sand and silt.
a little better price and
so does the consumer.··
. Such a market, Fulk
. said, probably would not He says smce childhood he'll been interested in get under way untjl
To get the full power of tidal action, a partial
channel would be cut through the Balboa
Peninsula, he explains.
tidal currents and cleanln1 up rivers and bays. . after Ju J y · s an n u.-,1
When he wu young, he says, he came up with Orange County Fair and
an invention that lowered the depth or a that details would have Massachusetts river from 4 feet to 9 inches. to be worked out. To keep water flowing around the bay, a series
of "water fences" would be set up ln the middle or
the bay.
He claims he simply dammed up the river and
when enough water had built up, knocked down the
dam. The rush of water. he recalls, not onJy
lowered the river but washed out a yacht club
"I don 'l know what
they (the Farm Bureau>
plan to offer, but it won't
b e a big incom e
generator for the fair,"
he said. "It'll mostly be
a community services
e ffort by the fair ·
grounds."
The main criticism or the plan bas been that
the water CWTent would erode places like Dover
Shores and Shellmaker Island. dock.
Andrews says be bas a cure for . that. He
claims if an area starts eroding, a new water fence
would be erected to bold back the water now.
"The folks back there were a little amazed."
he says. "They wouldn't let me do it again."
He claims his Upper Newport 8ay plan is free
of such risks and says he plans to keep pushing it "It would be just like nature in tip-top form,"
Andrews speculates. until someone listens.
Goat top
'~r'
PINOLE (AP) -The
clty of Pinole may soon
be In the goat rental
business.
The Idea, says Fire
Chief Alex Clark, would
be to rent the goats to
property owners whose
yards are overgrown
with weeds. The goats
would munch the weeds
and reduce the fire
hazards associated with
overgrown grass and
brush, according to
Clark.
Pinole is taking the
idea from another East
Bay town, Albany,
where privately owned
goats are rented to resi-
dents with the city's
blessing.
Sheriff
• quits post
BAKERSFIELD <AP)
-Kem County Sheriff
Al Loustalot announced
today that be will retire
when his current term
ends in January 1983.
Loustalot, M, noted
that he will have served
more than 3S years with
the department at the
end of his second term.
He was a captain before
being elected sheriff in
1974 when Charles
Dodge retired.
Loustalot was appoint-
ed to the state Board of
Corrections by Gov.
Brown in urn.
Cuba refugees die violently
.. : Miami reports 90 slain since early '80 arrivals
MIAMI (AP ) -At a rate five times higher
than for the general population, Cubans who fled to
Florida ln last year's "Freedom Flotilla" are end·
ing up the victims of homicide, authorities say.
Ninety of the Cubans, dubbed "Mariels" for
their port of departure to distinguish them from
thousands of other CUban exiles here, have been
slain since tbe'first of them arrived in April 1980.
According to the FBI, that's more people than
were slain in all of 1980 in Fort Lauderdale, Orlan-
do and St. Peteraburg combined.
A total of 62.l percent of the new refugee
deaths bas been homicides. five times the rate in the
general popUlation.
"It's mind-boggling. An astronomical
number," said Dade Chief Medical Examiner Dr.
Joseph Davia. ,,,
Many of the estimated 90,000 Mariel refugees
now ln South fi1orida have 11ettled in Miami, where
most of the slayings occur. Miami homicide Sgt.
Ernie Vivian said that 36 of the city's 113 slaying
victims so far this year were MarieJ refugees.
Ms . Penton was bit 10 times. Fuentes, wiio
came to fi1orida after being released from a CubGl..
prison, was hit six times. 1
Mental health officials believe frustrati~.
Idleness and cultural confusion -particular!>'
among the refugees released from prisons. -miY
be at the root of the homicides. ,;
·•Dealing with freedom and choices is n(jt
easy. especially for those who have lived throuth
long periods or conrinement," said Maria Vaid¥·
Beola, a psychologist who counsels refugees at Uie
Miami Mental Health Center. "The level ~f
frustration is high when they are seeing overab .
dance in which they don't participate."
Tryihg to solve the crimes can be like workiQI
ln a vacuum. There are few frtenda and relativls
t-0 help police. Often even identifying the body c~n
take days , and at least one Mariel homicide victipt
still is classified as "unknown remains.'' ,«
When police can identify the victims and ~
prehend a suspect, they often still cannot de-
termine the motive for the slaying. Although il-
legal drug activity is a major problem in SoU.lb
Florida, police say drug disputes account for ret-
ati vely fewoflhe Cuban refugee slayings.
In the Mariel cases in which atrests have been
made, Vivian said the defendants usually are
Mariel refugees also. Twenty-four refugees have
been arrested this year in connection with 18
Miami slayings .
"Mariela kill each other," Vivian said. "If we 01--IB see'---1--lay didn't have them, our murder rate would be down lr.f.. "'3 lie
by one-third."
"Let's face lt, the s udden upsurge of • 9 d • •i --J _ homicides in this community is not within the lR • lD'1. ~
native population," Davis said. e ,...
The' kilUngs refiect no pattern beyond the W ASJUNGTON (AP) -Sayinl the costs anCl ·
famlllar factors of alcohol, guns and domestic dis· benefits of the nine·digit z.ip COde have not ~
turbances. The typical Mariel homicide victim is demonstrated, tbe Rea1an adm.lniatration bu
a slender male in bis 20s or early 305. He dies bf asked the Postal Service to pc»tpooe ita June 1 im-
m ultiple gunshot wounds, stripped of bis few plementatioo date.
beloniiogs. The request was made this week tr:>
The bloodiest period since the boatlift began Postmaster General William F . BOlaer by the Of·
was last week, on March ZT. Two friends who lice of Management and Budget, which said Posl41
came to Miami aboard a boat from Mariel -Service studies did not satisfy President ReagMl)
Jorge Rodriguez and Jose Balles -were each shot Feb. 17 order that any new regulaUons be assessed
in the neck as they sat on barstools in a Miami for their impact on business.
lounge. Assistant Postmaster General Walt Duka said
Twenty-two blocks away, Fernando Fuentes a reply should be ready by the end of the week.
and Maria Esther Penton were ridinc in a car The Postal Service says the proposed system will
together when a man with a submachine gun save labor c<>1ts by allowing more mail to be sort-
puJled up alongside them and fired into the car. ed meq,anically . . ~--------------------------------------
.School's top scholar age 7
GOURMET
MARKET
Roll call brief affair; Donnie's solitary pupil
FRENCHGLEN, Ore. (AP)-·
Donnie F.dwards, 7, la the atu·
dent body in the French1len
school district -the one and
only body in the one and Qnly
aehool.
On rare occaaiona, teacbel'
Sue Gross takes roll call of ber
lone charge. ·
"Yeah, I do that every now
and then for a joke," abe aald.
Donnie recently attended a
party on tbe lut day of 1chool
when he araduated from the
aecond IJ'•de. He was outnum·
bered 7-1 by adulta.
Miu Oro.a, 27, bad a ~ ol
two, untll late •Prine wbea Mu· cb Wroten moved awa1, leajble
Donald a betoae pupil.
"We have more people OD our
tcbool bOUd than we do la OUf clMarooln ... lbe tald.
Tbl1 1outbeaatern Ore1on
eommuAlty OD a bl1b duert
Jtlateau wbeff the telephonff
.......... IO dead Wbeo lt raADI
jalMI talerillall doeln't ?Heb Ua •=-:°'*· oltbe ......... ~~ e•~=-~i ...... ·a ............. ,....
... t.o '••hl"" die .. , ... ,_11llmll'llloulit...._.
........ a .......... ... .,.. ... ..... .. ,..,... •• ., ..... *
ID ,......., ._..) D&a ... ar
Fields,·• says Merlin Rupp, a
cowboy who has a dau1hter who
will t!!lter the one-room school
next fall. "It's too far." •
Rupp, who sporta a waxed
handlebar mustache, is a
member of the five-member
achpol board. He concedes the
bolrd may eventually laave to
lace the iaaue of buain1. "But
not yet," be says.
The school board meets once a
month and IJ'Qples with a year-
ly budpt ot about 115,000. Much
of that 1oe1 for Mlaa Groea'
aalary -'12,IOO ' yeu -and
providJna ber wlth a mobile
bome near the aehoal.
Witt GroH la aot only a
teacher. In addJtloa to answer·
iDI mall addnlHd to tbe f •.
ball eoacb, IM ii auperlnteWent
of the 1Cbool dlltrtct Md prtn.
dpal of tbe school.
The achool bat no athleUc
teama, but Ml11 Oro11 also
Hrv• u a 1urro1ate eo.cla ol
ION.
"We ao out and aboot ...... s .... ••DoMJe•
I •km f.Oletltier. ''
Al aii'lltmal, wlMll tlM .. trtct bad two 1tadtat1, the
aebOol put•• u~ lllaY,
wUla laelp~·1from pre·11lto0l
ftll4tnD "'° ... .,.. ~· DoalMllllllilil•-.= ., ................. ....
all for It.
"He learns a lot more," says
Andrea Edwards. "He's doing
real rioo<l. He's learning a lot
more than he dld lo California."
M isl Grou, who is quallfled to
teach first through etchth
grades, aareed the personal ln-
•truction ia beneficial. .
"Tbey can work at their own
speed," she said. A glrl she
taught in kindergarten la way
ahead of her claasmatea at
another school.
"She may be· to hi1b school
when ahe'a 10 or U . . . , " she
said.
When Mias Gron toolt tbe job
in 1979, she bad eilbt atadenta in
abt dlfterent sradet. Nen 1ear,
tbe acbOol plant to have about
two or three atudenta.
But Miii GroM won't be tbei'e.
Sh•'• movtna on afttr_ two yean
at tbe aeboOl dlttriet, 1'oklnl for work in the more populoua
Wlllamette Valley of wfft.erD
Orel•·
P.l•nn;n. eyed
•
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
Fresh Fish Is now plentiful. Come In af)d select a fresh
Ush or your choice from our showcase1 We will 1ladly
fllet, steak and package it for you at no extra charge.
Fresh Fllet of Northern Seabasa .... Z.98 lb.
Fresh FUet of Sole ............ , ..... 3.98 lb.
Direct From 'Delaney's Kitchen (please
ask for a samptei Cevlcbe •...•. , .. : .. 1.18 p&.
MEAT DEPARTM1ENT
Prime and top choice beef •led at least 30 d1y1 to the
peak ot Jier{ectJon.
Leu Groud Claack <Ground Hourly 1 •• 1.49 lb.
Tlakli cat t.doe Broll
IGreatto Barbecue> .................. Z.t8 lb. R••· CUt .••••••••••.•..•••••...•. I •• Z.18 lb. Bolleleu ltolled llou&a 1 Great on the
TUtSD OF ftAFftC IAMB!
CALL DSLANSY'I •o• ra11 HO•I • D&LIVEaY 1sav1cs. Tova oaoa• 11 VNDU OOllPLStS a&PlllGDATION no•
Olla no.a TO YeVa DOOll: c .. ~11• ft.&AIS>.
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Juicy Wa&ermelon ......... ~ .. 15t l~.
Local Ranch Fresh Spinach . . . . 4 bun. 1.
Local Grown cucumbers . . . . . . . . 5 for 1.
Sweet Pblk Grapefruit:--........... 3 for 1.fO
So. Amertcan~anuas .......... a lbl.1.• 1 • •
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR f.
DelHf'Y'• Prlnte Label Champape 1750 mil>
Z,TS ea. er SI ... ~r Htfl
Bel An. Ville)' ..... C'llelllll 111.Mt CT• •U> .. a.•~ •.
Smlrtld'fVo6a(l.75lkerl .................. 11."ea.
Ster_., fkil&d (750 mil) .................... I.II ea.
<One OW> .•.••...••••...••........••••.•... t.•ea.
All liquor 1nd wine pl"9 lH.
-. .....
•
----.. -· ...... . . . . .. .
'
HI F
1f you •re typical or mllllone of Amerlca '•
mana1ers of small· to medium·tlted buainentt,
you're throwin. away mWJoos of dollar1ln1981 (and
every year) on keepln1 outdated recor-ds
You're wastln• expensive space by u1lng lt to
store business recordl much, much lonaer than any
1ovemment or le1al requlrementl demand. You're
losing the productivity of valuable workers in the
maintenance of these unnecessary records on a
haphazard basis.
Wlt.b an up-to-date formaJ retention pl.n. you
miaht delet-e an est1matetd one-third of these docu·
ments. tn some cases. you could eliminate an
estimated two-
-
t h 1 r ds of all 0 your retained
papers!
In fact, a ------~~-~, J • t u d y b y y•I IA Pl C·o o P e r s & I LI ITfl Lybrand, one of
the world 's
largest accounting firms, reveals that in some com·
panies. a pproximately 90 percent of all records based
solely on business requirements are needed for less
than six months. Even more startling, 99 percent of
all records are needed Cor less than one year.
Just about every activity connected with rurining
a bus iness creates records -correspondence, gov·
ernment regulations. taxes, insurance. financial
transactions, banking. The list is endless. All these
records are important when they are put to1ether.
But how'Jnany must you keep and for how long?
There are no strict standards for determinine
how long you must keep how many types or classes of
records. The complexities and contradictions cannot
help but baffle you unless you are an accountant with
special training in this field. But there are eeneral
guidelines.
As the manager of a business (without special
training in record-keeping), try this short Q&A lo test
how much you know:
How long should you keep:
Petty cash vouchers? A. Three years. A journal
showing cash disbursements? A. Permanently.
Canceled checks covering general expenditures?
A. Three years. Canceled checks relating to income
laxes? A. Permanently.
Employee expense reports? A. Three years.
Employee payroll records <W·2, W-4, annual earn-
ings records, the like)? A. For four years after
termination or the employment. Payroll lax returns? A. Four years. All other rec·
ords concerning taxes such as tax returns and
canceled checks covering payment or federal. state,
local taxes; sales and use tax returns; pension/·
profit-s haring informational retu r ns ? A.
Permanently.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JQNES AVERAGES
Hl!W YORK IAP> -s.in price Md ftM ,:,:J.y~~Wt Fl,..I 0ow-.1-••9L ~1t..-oe of the flt-most Ktllfe Hew Yoril STOCKS
Stock l!X"*'Oa 1-, treCll"I Mtlonelly JO 1114 ~01 ~A ~1 ~'r:+ ~
at"'°"' tllaft SI. 20 Tm 417.SO 4'1.•2 4a.17 UD.'2-• 11 SJ.......... 1,n1,200 "' _,"' u Utl 101 a IOIAl IOU• 107.U-0.14 ltal'11\Pw 1.1a,JOO 13'111 + Ill 6S Slk -.. 3'1lA 311'7 ... .._ O IS 18M 1,199,200 tOV. +1'°' INUI . •... .. .. .. . . .• 5,0:U-Softy ~ 656,400 2~ • '-Tr en .. ••. •• . . . . 1,tq,100 •rr & 63',000 t -l:t UlllS ...... ........ .... t,oJt,.ao ~l=EI ;::: *°'°' : '-U Slk . . . . . . . . . .. . . . • l ,Ott,G
Slmp Pet S41,700 ll'-+ Yt WHAT STOCK~ DID ~!? ~l= ~ =~ HEW YORK IAPI Y-2 Wiit""-452.JCIQ. SVt + \'a Moeptrf l .uo;lOO 144 -Ht
O<cktem Pwt 411,400 n -• A•tnaLle G ,100 l7"'
AMERICAN LEADERS
. "' _,._
.. \lo +"" -N
+ "" .. \It + I' -Jllo _._
Adve11ee<1
OKllned UllClt.,.O
Tolel 1-
H•w ltl!IN ..... _.
-AT AMU OIO
To~
m m 1"41 17)
37
HEW YORIC IAPI J-?' Prev .
METALS
Todey
J43 -'" MO .. 1
.. al,
261
'" 111 " u
c...-tJ .... <ents• POUnd. U.S. dtlUM
'*'" 1.eM J741 Uftll • poultd. lhoc 4'14 cents• poultd. oeovereo.
Tl11 16.S* -•s WMll composite lb.
Al-'-1MIO <eftH• _,nd, H.Y, M«cwy M».00 per llnll.
Pletl-MM.00 troy or., H. Y
SILVER
Ill•., JIO.IOO ~ lrOV ounce. ~•nclY &
lierme" only delly ciuot•
GOLD QUOTATIONS
......._, momlllQ flxlno MJ>.50, Off St.IS..
L..,._: ef..,,_ 11•1"1 M74.QO, off 9'.U.
f'.n.: etW-~11111nouaw,offto.1t. ,.,....,., Mn.oi ....... ,,.
z.rkll: l..otte fllll"I "'71.00 bid, Off JllM, ..,uo ..... tl•••Y & M•r-11: only dally quot• M74.00, Off Jt.15 .
• ......,., only delly Quot• M14.ot;·""
$t.U .
• .......,, only delly QUOt• tatw~i.cs
$492. '6, ofHU1
SYMBOLS
---------~----~----~~~---------------------~-.-.__.--·.-.----···-----~·-·~·~·----~~~-"'.""' ............. _.... __ ~·.-·-·-·-··~·~·~·~·~:~· ..... "'11 ,,
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(TuHday. Jone 2, ~981
O n May 5, 1981, the Federal
Trade Commission
released its "new" 1981 report
on cigarette tar levels.
Urifortunately, the new
FTC report is really quite old.
Old because it is based on
1979 cigarette brands.
Old because much has
happened in cigarette develop-
ment during the year and a
half that it took to complete
the study.
Old because it doesn't tell
tar-conscious smokers what
they want to know today.
Even the FTC concedes
that its report is out Qf date.
And thef act is consumers do
not have the latest statistics on
comparative tar levels in ultra
low tar cigarettes.
if you 're a smoker, what
,
•
does all this mean to you?
Now cigarettes are the
Ultra Lowest Tar™cigarettes
available. No matter what the
1 style, there ts no cigarette lower
in tar than today's Now.
These are thefacts.
The 1981 FTC rep_ort
ts based on measurements of
1979 P-roducts. Here are the
actual 1981.fjgures ori lowest
tar cigarette levels.
NUMBERS DON'T LIE.
NO CIGARETTE, IN ANY SIZE,
IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW.
BO's boK 85's:O.~~ lOO'sboK lOO's:O.~
NOW Less than Less than
O.Olmg lmgt O.Olmg 2mg
Less than
CARLTON O.Olmg lmg• lmg 5mg
CAMBRIDGE 0.lmg lmg -4mg
BARCLAY lmg lmg -3mg .
All tar numbers are av. per cigarette by FTC method. except the one asterisked 1•1
which is av. per cigarette by FTC Report May '81.
... ,,,
'
. ..
tAvail1ble soon at your favorite r1t1il store.
7 eox. BOX 100·1 Liii 11*1 O.Of mg. "tar", 0.001 mg. lllCO'Wll. SOFT PACK 85'1 FILTER. MENTHOL 1 mg ..... ,,.. 0.1 mg. nicotine. .
SOFT PACK 100'1 FILTER, MENTHOlr.2 mg. "tlf", 0.2 mg. ll!COtint. tv. l>ir cig1r1n1 bY FTC method. .
t
• t ~ '· • " "' •
.. ·~ . . . .....
-·· ·a t z« r + 'i: •z f'«
Daily Pilat H' F
TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1981
CLASSI Fl ED C4
Snider's second career
Ex-Dodger loves his job. as Montreal, announcer
By HOWARD HANDY
Of .. D1MY Nil IWI
When he was in his prime as the center fielder for the
Brooklyn Dodgers a nd later ror a brier s~ell in Lc?s
Angeles, his fluid motion in the out!ield and his rhythm1c
swing were the envy of all who watched him play.
He was rewarded by being voted into the baseball Hall
or Fame, an honor few felt should be denied him for his ac·
complishments on the field.
Edwin ··Duke" Snider is now well-embarked on a
second career as a broadcaster. but he is the first to say
he's no Vince Scully.
Ironically, he is making between two
and three times the salary as a broad·
caster for the Montreal Expos that he
made as a player ror the Dodgers. And a
lot or his rapport on the air has come from
a long and friendly association with the
man he says is No . 1 in the broadcasting
field -Scully.
"WHEN WE WERE IN BROOKLYN
and trained at Vero Beach in the early
spring," Snider recalls, "I would play
four, five or six innings, get to bat two or
three times and then I was out of the
game.
"I went up with Vinnie and Jerry
(Doggett> a couple of times and did an in·
ning or so and had a lot of run doing it. I've
also been on a lot of pre-game and post·
game shows which aiso helped.
"When we came to LA , I had knee
problems and I would be out of a ball
game someti~s after pinch-bitting or
when someone else would be out there for
defense. I would be driving home and I
would listen to Vince every chance I got -
and listen to the ball game, too, of course. Duke Snider
"Just listening to him has to help you if you ever have
any ideas of becoming a broadcaster because he's the
best."
SCULLY GAVE SNIDER one bit of advice on his new
career.
"He jus t told me one thing which I've always tried to
use. Just be yourself, don't try to be me or don't try to be
Mel Allen or Red Barber or anybody else -just be
yourself. So that's what I've tried to do.
"I'm a low key person and I just go out there a.nd do
the broadcast. If a great play happens, I get excited and I
show my excitement over the air. But if a routine play
happens, I describe that play.
"Some people say that I might not be as exciting as I
should be. I think that I have gained the respect of the
lister.Ing audience where they know that if I say it's a good
play. it is a good play and if it's a bad play, well, I'll also
talk about that."
WITH A GROWING NUMBER of ex-players turning to
the radio and television booths, does be
think there is a precedent being set in·this
respect?
"l don't think there's any standard or
precedent to be set there," he says. "I
broadcast with a very knowledgeable
man, Dave Van Horn, and he knows the
game well.
"He really hasn't played the game to
where he might know or experience the
things that I hate experienced, so when I
come in, I'll give the technicalities. I have
a' better insight into what is going on in a
player's mind or actually what's going on
on the field.
"I think Vince probably does it better
than anybody but he still hasn't played the
game and there are some areas to where I
know he uses others to help. He was with
Bob Gibson on the radio during a World
Series one year and he's had Sparky An -
derson with him. He uses them very well
and gets into the technical parts of the
game with them doing the talking."
SEVERAL YEARS AGO the Dodgers
were looking for a third man in the booth
and eventually Ross Porter was hired for the job. Snider
was also in the running.
··ves, I was looking at the job and, in fact, it narrowed
down to either Ross or me. Vince hadn't decided yet just
exactly what he was going to do. I had heard that he was
just going to do TV. And I was looking for a full-time job,
not just a road job.
"When the club would come home, Vince would be
there to do seven innings on the air -and rightfully so. So
there would be only two innings and Jerry and I would
<See SNIDER, Page C2)
.
I
I
The life and times
of Billy Brawl
go on,.and on ,
and on ... See C2.
O.lly ,._Staff,._
Antony Emerson Leads Corona del Mar against Mirateste
\ '
Valenzuela
OIJ track
again, 5-2
Sea Kings eye sev~nth straight crown
LUS ANGELES (AP l Long
before Monday night's game
against the Atlanta Braves,
Dodger pitching coach Ron Per·
ranoski huddled wi t h the
Dodgers ' young pitching
phenom, Fernando Valenzuela,
catcher Mike Scioscia and fellow
coach Manny Mota -who acted
as interpreter.
The subject of the English·
Spanish translation was the pre·
vious three starts by Valenzuela,
all of them sub-par after he had
won his first eight decisions.
"WE WANTED' HIM throwing
his fast fall a little bit more.
especially on t he first pitch.
rather than the screwball," said
Perranoskl. 1
It's about the only thing
anyone has had to tell the 20·
year-old rookie leflbander, and
the meeting proved beneficial as
Valenzuela effectively scattered
seven hits as the Dodgers beat
the Braves 5·2.
Valenzuela, 9·2, became major
league baseball's first nine
game winner, be struck out 11
giving him 90 for the season to
regain the National League
strikeout lead and the com·
plete game was bis eiJ(hth.
... THOUGHT HE WAS more
hittable toO.i..(ht than the last time
we saw him," said Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox, referring
to the game five days ago in
Atlanta when the Braves
knocked Valenzuela out ln a 7·
run fourth inning.
"My fastball was faster, and I
was using it more in the middle
innings," Valenzuela said. "I
was using my screwball In the
later lMinas.
·'I wasn't concerned with my
last three games. I think toniaht
I pitched about the same as Ldld
then."
THE DODGER STADIUM
crowd or •9,136 wu the 11th
strai1ht home sellout for the
Dod1ers. The fact Valenzuela
was pltcbin1 was the reaeon for
the bll crowd, but the 10-called
'' Fernandornania'' that had
been r--1nf In each of h11 pre-
vtou1 home sta.rta w a1 not u
t vldent.
•'I tblO \oftlahl, be bad an op-•
portumty to tblU a little more
1bout the 111ne, •• 11ld Rick
Mooday.
It wu lloaday who staked v ......... w • lm....U ... a.o
lHd wtlll •aw.run bomer bi IM
ftnt ~ oll AUaata starts Tommr lcGI~ 1·1, the loitJllllt
pitcher 1n ~o.e leatue ..
Emerson, HayUXlrd, Gerken, Jimenez key to CdM's tennis chances against.Miraleste
By ROGER CAR~ON
Of -o.ity ...... Staff
When you are the all-lime juggernaut
for Southern California high school ten·
nis it would appear within reason there
is danger '>f complacency. Six straight
CI F 4·A crowns would put anyone in the
clouds.
And when you enter the finals
Wednesday (2 o'clock) already possess·
ing an 18·\0 victory over your foe, upset
possibilities mount, compounded by the
opponent's quest for a payback.
But Corona del Mar Sea Kings Coach
Dave Heffern, a teaching pro at
Newport Beach Tennis Club, says
chances for overlooking Miraleste High
are non-existent.
The reasons are simple and Heffern
ticks off several:
in the nation in the 14s this year and the
Ojai Winner in the 16s this year, beating
Laguna Beach's Rick Leach.
'80 outfit which posted an unbeaten rec·
ord in making it six straight crowns
for the Sea Kingi..
"First, Miraleste didn't have its No. 2
player, John Letts, when we played
them He was the No. 1 seed at the Cl F
individuals.
"We played very well that day and
Miraleste did not. I think we'll play
very well again, but I think Miraleste
will, too.
"Craig Johnson is a highly ranked
player and Miralesle also has Rafael
Osuna, a sophomore who is the son of
Mexico's Rafael Osuna. And, it's their
home match (La Casa de Vita in
Rancho Palos Verdes).
It's led by senior Antony Emerson,
unbeaten in singles and doubles this
year in pacing the Sea Kings to a 22·1
record and the Ojai singles champ.
The son of Australian legend Roy
!Emerson and headed for USC, Antony
gives the Sea Kings a double-edged at·
tack with his versatility, able to pro-
duce winning results in either singles or
doubles.
"They'll have the crowd support.
"And there is Jorge Lozano, the
Davis Cup player rrom Mexico to con·
tend with. And there is Matt Frooman,
who was ranked No. 1 in the 16s this
year. Then there is Eric Amend. No. 1
It's almost enough information to give
you the impression that the Sea Kings
carry underdog status into the match.
But this is no ordinary team -in fact
Heffern labels it a better unit than the
''I say we're better this year simply
because we have so many players back
(See CdM, Pa«e C2>
Forsch becoming the force
Angels ' ace rides two homers for third shutout, 3-0
TORONTO <A P > -When Ken
Forsch discovered he was facing
Toronto's Dave Stieb for the
second time in five days, he
knew he would be in for a
pitching duel.
On Monday night, Forsch
evened the score by limiting the
Blue Jays to three singles as the
Angels downed Toronto 3·0.
Stieb and the Blue J ays took
the first round last Wednesday
night in Anaheim 3·1 as the
Toronto pitcher fashioned a five·
hitter.
"When I knew I was going
to go against Stieb, I knew it
was going to be tough," said
Forsch. "We had never beaten
hlm before (S{ie~ was 2·0
against the Angels).
"We've been in a bit or a hit·
tina slump and before the game
I thought we would come out of
it and score some runs. But
against Stieb I felt I had to pitch
a low-run Rame," Forsch said.
The Aneels took a l·O lead lnto
the nlnth inning when they
added two runs on Dan Ford's
10th homer and a run·1corin1
bloop double by Butch Hoblon,
who homered in the third for the
flrat Angel run.
"The thing was he made a
couple C'A m istakes out there and
they hit 'em for home ru.na,"
uld Forsch. "l made a cou9le of
mtatak• and they poppea 'em
up."
ll'ana1er Gene Mauch had
pralae for hi• pitcher. ·•we we ... held to three runa
tonl1ht but Forsch made it stand
up," said Mauch. "We haven't
been able to do that too m1.ny
tlmH tblt Haton. Forsch
pitched a powerful 1•m• when
be lost 3·1. TOril1bt he wa1 even
bttter. ,
Foflch, 14, Umlttd the Bha~
Jays to singles by Barry Bonnell
in the first inning, Damaso
Garcia in the fifth and Alfredo
Griffin in the eighth He struck
out six and walked three in hurl·
ing his third s hutout of the
season
T he Angels got the only run
Forsch needed in the firth inning
when Hobson slammed his third
home run of the season over the
left field fence. After Ford con·
nected in the ninth, Ed Ott
singled and was forced by Larry
Harlow, who scored on Hobson's
double.
Stieb, 4~. limited the Angels
to seven hits but once again was
victimized by lack of support.
The Blue Jays failed to score a
run for the 23-year-old right·
hander for 23 consecutive in-
nings at the start of the season
when he went 0·3. He also lost a
l·O decision to Cleveland on May
17.
The Blue Jays' best scoring
opportunity came In the fourth
inning when they loaded the
bases wi th two out on two walks
and an error by Forsch. The
34-year-old right-hander then got
Ken Macha to fly out on a J..~
pitch.
U.S •. picks Magee
UCI star set for World Games
All-American center Kevin
Ma1ee of UC Irvine has been
one or 12 play ers
aelec\ed to represent the
United States in this sum·
mer's World Games l n
lurope.
Magee, a 6-8 postman, was
among the top five basket·
ball players In the nation in
three differe nt offensive
cate,.,Oes durinlf the recent
1980·81 aeason. He was third
tn the nation in scortna at
21.5, No. 2 ln shootlna percen·
ta1e at .871 and No. 4 In re·
boundin.c at 12.5.
M11ee will be Jolned on the
tUID by Derek Smith of
LOul1ville, Howard Carter of
LSU, Kevin 80yle of lo:u8d ROy .HerilOG of~.llut.11 ..
John Bacley o('TB01ton
Collete.
a
Man bets $55,000
(SS4,000 to show)
•'l'om AP dltpatches
BALTIMORE Officials ~ at PimUco Race Course had an Idea
the man meant business when he
asked lbat a security guard accompany him to
the window.
And when the man known only as "The
Bridgejumper" laid down $55,000 on a single
race Saturday, they knew he did.
Th~ unidentified man's complete trust in
1.-dy luck paid off -to the tune of $3,400.
• In the confines of a secluded room under
protection of track security, the man watched
us his horse -Victory Song -finished first by
two lengths.
Brett, Quisenberry a w inning combo
Geor1e Breu sreeted re11ever • Shane Rawley with an RBI single ln
the eight)) .lflnina to lift Kansas City to
a 3·2 American Leacue victory over
Seattle aivlng the Royal• their fifth win In thelr
last six starts. Du Q•l•eaberry &Ol his
ninth save. Ex-Mater Del HJ1h Jtar DH Meyers
trlplNI ror Seattle . . . Bucky l>fft and Dave ,
WlnfleJd homered and Dou' Bird upped hie ma·
jor leaeue winning streak to
11 games as the New York
Yankees defeated Cleveland,
5·3 . . . Lynn Jones' 12·hmlng
single scored Mick Kelleher
with the winning run as
Detrolt stopped Milwaukee,
4·3 ... In the National League
~arry Templeton drove in
two runs and scored another,
and rookie left-hander John
Brett Martin and Brace Sutter
comlned on a five-hitter to give St. Louis a 4·2
victory over Montreal . . . Garry Maddox's
leadoff home run and pinc)l-hitter Geor1e
Vultovlcb'• single accounted for two eighth·
inning runs and rallied Philadelphia past the
New York Mets, 5·4 ... Cincinnati scored four
runs In the ninth inning behind Dave Concep·
clon's run·scorfo~ double to tle and Ray
Knight's RBI s ingle to lead in an 8·5 victory at
San Francisco.
The man, described as aboi.it 60 years old
with gray hair and glasses, had bet $500 to win,
$500 to place and the rest or h.is money to show.
"Bridgejumper" is track parlance for
someone who places a big wager.
Templeton denies trade request
Winning jockey Mario Pino said someone
yelled over the fence as he was warmi-ng up the
horse and told him about the large bet.
ST. LOUIS -St. Louis Cardinal • shortstop Garry Templeton Mon•y
denied telling a newspaper reporter
that he had asked to be traded.
''My heart was pounding," Pino said. "But
he <Victory Song) was a cinch."
Bill Ramsay, agent in charge of the
Thoroughbred Racing and Protective Bureau at
PimJico. said the man had contacted him short-
ly before the rac~ and had requested assistance
In making the bet.
"The trouble with the press is lhat if you
don't talk to them they get on your case. and if
you do talk to them you are either misquoted, or
misunderstood, or exaggerated," Templeton
said in a statement given to reporters before
"We sent an agent with him lo the window,"
Ramsay said.
He said that the man was the same one who
bet $80,000 to show last ra11 on Dave's Friend in
a race at Laurel Race Course. From that bet. he
netted $4,000.
Ironically, Victory Song was nearly
scratched as the race was switched from one
mile lo 11/16 miles.
Monday night's game with
Montreal.
However, the stewards did not allow the
scratch.
lo its Monday editions,
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
reported that Templeton, a
product of Santa Ana Valley
High, had asked to be traded.
preferably to a West Coast
team. Templeton was quoted
as suggested he be traded
with center fielder Tony
Scott to San Diego for Ozzie
Templeton Smith and Gene Richards.
Victory Song paid $3.80, S3 and S2.10 as the
4·5 favorite.
· As a result or the large bet. the race bad a
minus betting pool or more than $6,000.
Quote of the day
Although Templeton's remarks were greet-
ed with laughter by those standing near him in
the lockerroom in Philadelphia, ttie AU-star
shortstop insisted he was serious.
"I raced wide open during lhe first part
of the ract!. but about halfway through I
knew I had to have a little luck running
with me. too." -Bobby Unser, moments
after winning bis third Indy 500 ... or so
he thought.
In Montreal, where the Cardinals lost three
straight, Templeton had complained to
Manager Whiley Herzog about being ·dropped
from lhe leadoff position in the batting order to
third. Templeton said that St. Louis had been
winning with him batting first and Scott hitting
second.
Herzog indicated he would keep second
baseman Tommy Herr in lhe leadoff position.
rrom Page C1
" SNIDER'S SECOND CAREER
'ave been the two guys. So you 40 two interviews one night and
tou·re done. Then the next nigbt ~ou do two innings on radio and
.you· re done.
• "l wasn't reall y inter,.sted an
that even though it wodd have
t$een a lot closer to home. I
•anted a full-time job. so I
~ayed with the Expos. I bowed
4Cllt or the race between Ross and
qi yselr. This doesn't mean that I
would have won out anyway, but
' bowed out and he got the job.
8e does a real good job and he is
l#ery stat conscious and keeps
1ou right in the game."
: COMPARING FERNANDO ~alenzuela , the current ~odger phenom. and the great
A:all of Fame southpaw of
another Dodger era, Sandy
¥oufax, Snider has this to say:
··1 don't think you can com·
•are anybody with another
t>erson. It's just like trying to
compare me with Mantle, Mays
or DiMaggio.
"Fernando started when he
was 15 years old playing pro ball
down in Mexico and he's got
three. make that four, quality
pitches. You can talk about the
two off·speed screwballs. a
fastball and a curve. Sandy only
had two quality pitches.
··But if I were to choose
between a 20 -year -o ld
Va l enzuela or a 20-year ·old
Kourax, I'd certainly take a 20-
year-old Koufax. I don't care
what Valenzuela's done." said
Snider.
·•Fernando is a phenomenal
pitcher, there's no question
about it. It took a long time for
Sandy to get his reel on the
ground. But Valenzuela has had
five years of pro ball counting
his Mexican League experience.
Heok, he pitched against grown
men when be was a baby. He
fought and scraped and finally
had to throw slrikel and had to
get good location on bls
pitches."
WREN SNIDER and Drysdale
were wltb the D'odceu ,
Drysdale used to pitch battinl
practice every once In awhile
and Sahler bated the thou.cbt ot
ratln1 btm , but be aaya
Valeimllla would be no p.._
lem. "Jn IMIU1al practt~. yes. In a
came, maybe not,'1 Snider 1tld
about :VallftlUela. ··He has it all
to1etber 8t • very you,. ap.
He'•= very early la hLt
Hfe.t nuld knock you
doWD 18 '""'"• practice even tboalb ,_ wen IDOd lriendl. It
.. .,. ... He'd noek you "* .tWa.jbalJGU. ............ Um•When
.. .. athd to walk Frank JloM-OD foW llilebte wttb ftnt MM open Md fn oot 1U he tcMlld pl&dl to the next bat&«.
.,.. .......... fCMarf' So
• he hit Frank in the ribs with the
firs t one."
Snider says he has no aspira·
tions about getting back on the
field as a coach or a manager.
"No. I don't want that any
more. Take a game the other
night. The Expos had a 6·4 lead
going into the bottom of the
ninth inning. I went down to do a
post-game show. I was going to
have Gary Carter on the show
and all of a sudden Chris Speier
makes an error and I 'm
watching Dick Williams (Expos
manager> and he's a nervous
wreck.
"There was no question about
it, the way the game was going.
you could just see what was go-
ing to happen. The Dodgers tie it
and I start back upstairs. I'm on
the way up the escalator and l
hear the crowd roar. There is no
way you can ever mistake a
home run because it's always
the same by Can reaction.
·'The first thing you get is a
loud roar. Now you wait -for
either an oh or a loud cheer.
There is always a pause in
between the first loud roar and
the second reaction. The fans
rea Uy tell you whether it is a
home run or not. When I heard
the cheer, I knew the game was
over even with my back toward
the field and halfway up the
escalator.
''The Dodgers won the game
but I slept very well that night.
IC I were the manager, I would
not have slept well and the ulcer
would start acting up if I had
one. And I would have one lf J
was a manager."
SNIDER HAS HAD other of·
rers in the broadcasting field in-
cluding ones from NBC and
ABC.
"I don't want to make this
sound like I'm a great broad-
caster because I'm not. 1 have a
lot to learn. But I signed a four-
year contract with Montreal last
January with a two-year optlon.
"At the lime, I was negotlat·
Inc with the Mets and decided
•l•inlt that for 1ever,l reuona.
One wat Juat the city tself. And
the otbes' wu the coodJUont and
the team. The Expos have a fine
younc team and they are cotng
to be up near the top for quite a f tw yean -and Montreal is a
lovely dtY in whJch to Uve.
"So I welabed more money
.... Nil that Ud decld.cl aaainat
the Meta or a network Job.
Drytd&l• told me that ABC a. no
picnic and I've been told NBC lt
no ptcrilc. either. And you're nol
lttllN tbere . •-so I liOed a leniUU' COG· treet with llantreat. An.r an, r
•tan.cl my pro( .. lonal bueball
lCANel' bJ stplq a Moatreal
RoJll CGIW'Mt with u.e DOdc•r or111111UUon. So wby not flnllb
my broildcutilll career In Mont·
real, too'"
Duke Snider in 195~
From Page C1
CdM .••
from that team and they have
obviously improved.
.-. Emerson's first serve is
tougher and his volleys aren't
just to the corners, but on the
line.··
While Emerson i• obviously
Corona del Mar's premier
player, Heffern is unable lo
separate Greg Hayward, David
Gerken and Jorge Jimenez.
And when you get past that
point be Clods himself in a
quarry again between Jamie
Paul, Carlos Garza, Brian
Sullivan, Je(f Ewing and Scott
Brownsberger. ·'That's why we kill -every·
body." says Heffern.
The CdM coach says he ex·
peels to see Miraleste counter
with a stronaer first doubles
than it used in the non-league
match, which means the singles
unit he employs must rise to the
occasion.
Corona del Mar's only loss this
year was a 14·14 tie with Beverly
Hills, which the latter won with
total games, in a match just
prior to the Miraleste duel.
"We were practicing for
Mlraleale and Just lookin1
ahead," explains Heffern. "We
should have beaten Beverly
Hills, and if we had been more
aware of tbe level of their
players in relation to our
playert, we would have."
When Corona del Mar banded
Mlraleate itl only loss ol I.be
aeason it wu evident early ln
the match u Hayward knocked
oil Louno M>-1 In the Ue-breaker
and Jimenes stopped Oauna, &-l,
to pace a 3-1 •lntln advantqe
In tbt flrlt round.
Comb6ned with an anticipated
sweep ln doubles. It we, OV«
quickly. Wednesday'• match
rt1urea to tile lOl\Jer to dlclde
rt'l•i'dleu ot the winner.
Baseball today
Oo this date In baseball In 1941 :
Lou Gehrig, the New York Yankees'
famed "Iron Horse" first baseman, died of
amyothropic lateral sclerosis at the a1e of
37 .
On this date In 1925:
Gehrig replaced Wally Pipp at tlrst base
ror the Yankees, beainnin& his record
streak of 2,130 consecutive games played.
Today'• Birthday:
New York Yankees manager Gene
Michael Is 43.
Nothing new with baseball talks
NEW YORK -Marvin Miller, Ill executive director of the Major
League Players Association, and Ray
Grebey, chief representative for management,
agreed on one thing after the latest negotiations
in baseball's llogering labor crisis over the
degree of free agent compensation.
Both said no progress was made in more
than three hours of talks Monday.
After their previous negotiating session last
week had lasted only seven minutes, there was
some speculation that the long meeting might
indicate some movement. But Grebey denied
that.
·~t indicates nothing other than that we
tallffd about compensation and there was no
progress." Grebey said.
"Nothing really new was discussed today,"
concurred Miller.
Ongais ready to shift to Hoag?
Costa Mesa race car driver Dan· II ny Ongals continues to improve and
there is talk of moving him to Hoag
Hospital in Newport Beach lo convalesce.
Ongais was seriously injured at the Indianapolis
500 and his condition is now listed as "fair and
improving daily" ... Skin-graft s uri<ery was
performed on auto racer Rick Mears Monday,
who was burned in an accident in Pit Row at the
Indy 500 . . Herb Brooks, who guided the U.S.
Olympic hockey team to a gold medal. has re-
portedly agreed to contract terms to coach the
New York Rangers of the NHL . . Luis
Fernando, a striker who scored 28 goals in 28
games for the Los Angeles Aztecs of the North
American Soccer League in 1980, was traded to
Tampa·Bay for four-time NASL all·star wing
Steve Wegerle ... CBS has announced that it
will show all weeknight games or the 1982 Na·
tional Basketball Association championship
series live and in prime lime. thus eliminating
the lape·delay telecasts or the last few years
. . A Dayton newspaper has it that the Cincin·
nali Reds are a dissension·ndden team with dis-
content and frustration rampant in the
clubhouse. Dave Collins says it has been .. blown
out of proportion."
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Angels at Toronto, 4 :30
p.m .. KMPC (710); Atlanta at Dodgers. 7:30
p.m .. KABC C790 l.
Is it too tough·····
or too soft?
Martin aweals suspension
NEW YORK <APJ -American Le1gue Presi·
dent Lee MacPhail's decision to suspend Billy
Martin one week for bumping umpire Terry
Cooney has sparked opposing opinions from two
sides. Martin thinks it's too hard and the umpires
think it's too soft.
Martin, the Oaklend manager, appealed the
suspension, which allows him to appear In uniform
tonight In Chicago when the A's meet the White
Sox. HJs lawyer, Ed Sapir, sa1d Monday he had ap-
pealed lhe suspension, allhoueh the American
League office had not received any notification by
Monday night.
"I have made an appeal with Mr MacPhail."
said Sapir from New Orleans. "He will make the
hearing date. Up 'til now , BiUy Martin's side has
not been heard from."
MARTIN, PUNISHED for bumping Cooney
with his chest during a game in To1·ontQ Friday
night, told WBBM ·TV in Chicago Tuesday: "H I
hit him that hard, then I'm in the wrong business."
He said he would be managing tonight and ac
cused Cooney or triggering the incident by .. bail-
ing" him
Richie Phillips. counsel to the MaJor League
Umpires Association, said he would probably de-
cide today whether to start a civil action against
Marlin and·or ask Canadian officials to begin
criminal proceedings against him
Phillips says he's not after Martin's scalp. he
just wants lo make sure that nobody declares open
season on the umpires and makes them the
scapegoats for frustrations over the threatened
players' strike and that old bollom·hne syndrome
losing.
That's why Phillips is concerned that the
punishment handed down Monda) by MacPhail is
too lenient to deter others from using umpires as
verbal and physical punching bags
••J DON 'T THINK a seven-day suspension and
a $1 ,000 fine is a sufficient deterrent." Phillips
said. ··1 don't think it's a sufficient penalty to deter
other managers who are of this ilk ..
Phillips named, as an example. Baltimore's
Earl Weaver. who was suspended for three games
and fined an undisclosed amount last season by
MacPhail for brushing umpire Rich Garcia's eye
with his cap
Ph1lhps compared Martin's running oump on
Cooney Friday night in Toronto with last years in-
cident. in which Pittsburgh third baseman Bill
Madlock Jabbed umpire Gerry Crawford in the
face with his glove.
"They were both acts of violent aggression
directed at an umpire:· he said .. Martin, as the
m anager. is in a position of responsibility. He sets
the tempo for behavior of the team 1 think the
Martin situation should be dealt with severely. as
Mad lock was · ·
Borg, Lloyd, Jaeger advance
Rinaldi beaten by Mandlikova in today's quarterfinals
PARIS (AP> -Bjorn Borg of
Sweden slammed his way past
Balasz Taroczy , the tall
Hunganan, 6-3. 6-3, 6·2. today
and stayed on course for has
sixth French Open tennis title.
It was the Swede's firth
slraight·sets victory of the
tournament and carried him into
the semifinals.
Chris Evert Lloyd and Andrea
Jaeger, both of the United
States, reached the women's
semifinals. But Kathy Rinaldi,
the 14·year-old American prod-
igy. hadherdreamended.
Lloyd, favored to win the
women's title for the fifth time.
edged No. 5-seed Virginia Ru.zici
of Romania, 6-4, 6-4. Jaeger
overcame No. 7-seed Mirna
Jausovec of Yugoslavia, 4·6. 6-2,
6·0. No. 4·Seed Hana Mandhkova.
the Czechoslovakian star.
stopped Rinaldi, 6-1, 6·3.
The youngster. who had upset
two seeded players and become
the personality of the tourna·
ment. was all smiles afterward
and said. "it has been a lot or
run."
The slow clay courts al Roland
Garros Stadium lived up to their
reputation. Lloyd's patient vic-
tory over Ruzici took her two
hours. seven minutes almost
the same time Borg look to dis-
patch Tarcozy.
Borg, the top seed , won the big
points against Taroczy, but
many games went lo deuce. "l
·really had to fight for the
match," the Swede said.
Lloyd defeated Ruzici for the
19th time in 19 meetings, but had
to work for her points. Often lhe
rallies went on for 20 and 30
strokes. The American's greater
coolness and stamina gradually
gave her the edge.
She came from 2-4 in the first
set a nd won the next four
games. The baseline duel re·
mained close until 2-2 in thP
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 31 20 .608
Chicago 26 17 .605 1
Texas 26 19 .578 2
~ngela 24 27 .471 7
kansas City 16 25 .390 10
Seattle 17 31 .354 12"4.i
Minnesota 14 32 .304 14"4.i
East Division
Baltimore 28 16 .636
Milwaukee 27 20 .574 21~
New York 26 20 .565 3
Cleveland 23 18 .561 31h
Boston 25 21 .543 4
Detroit 24 24 .500 6
Toronto 16 33 .327 J4'At
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 34 15 .694
Cincinnati • 28 20 .583 5112
Houston 24 24 .500 91 2
San Francisco 25 26 .490 10
Atlanta 22 24 .478 l01h
San Diego 19 29 .396 141-2
East Division
Philadelphia 28 19 .596
St. Louis 24 17 . SSS 1
Montreal 26 20 .565 11;
Pittsburgh 20 20 .500 41..;
New York 15 28 .349 11
Chicago 10 33 .233 16
' second set. and then the it~ma·
nian began lo look tired.
Lloyd went quickly to 5-2 but
then dropped two games before
clinching the match
Mandlikova. 19. and an ex-
perienced player compared with
Rinaldi, tore into her young op·
ponent from the start and ran
away with the first set
Rinaldi settled down later but
looked less impressive than in
previous rounds . Mandlikova
will meet Lloyd in the
semifinals.
·•1t would have been a lot or
fun for me if I could have played
Chris," Rinaldi said after the.
loss. "But I'm not at all upset I
lost. I just wish I could have
played better "
Mandlikova. 19 , said s he
thought Rinaldi ·s weakest point
was her age: "She's just 14.
s he's very young. But I think she
can become a great player."
•
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A•• 3, Blue J•ya 0
CALll'OllMIA TOllOffTO
Orlcll, bl ~ ~ 112 ~ Griffin, H ~ 11o.1
\ ~ ~~(, u : : : : ::!:i1'.1d : : ~:
.. ylOr,.. 4 0 I 0 Meybr(, lb J 0 0 0
l'ord, rt 4 I I I Moteby, rt 4 0 0 0
Ott, C 4 0 I 0 Vele&, ell\ 1 0 0 0
H•rlow, II • I 0 0 M•<ll•, Jo • 0 0 0
Hobson, Jo • I 2 2 Gere le, Jb i o 1 O
1.,,1que1, cf • O 0 0 Whl11, c 2 o o o
Totelt )4 J 1 J Totel~ lO 0 3 0 .. -~·--C•lllofnl• 000 010 002-;J
Toronto ooo 000 eoo-o
E-V~ ... forlCh OP-Toronto I L09-
Colllorni. •. Toronto 1 2&-HoOJOn Hll-
Hol>tOfl til, l'ord (10). S-Wllltt.
C4llfwlllo IP M II llll II SO "°'"" cw. ,.,,, t J 0 0 J • To ....
Sii.OiL,.._.) t 1 J J
Belk-511911 T 2 OJ. A-n.ue
lleyelt J, Mori..n 2 s .. 111• 002 ooo ooo 1 10 o
Kensu City 000 001 lla-J t O
Abbott, L. Anderwn (I), Rawley Ill ...i
llullln9; Spllllorll, Oulwnbtrry It) and
W•ll•on W Sollllortt. 2 ... L L. Anoerwn,
1-l 5-0ultanbtrry 11) A-1t.<lt
Tltitrt 4, 9'~ J
Mllweull• 011 100 000 000-J II I
0.lroll 00J 000 000 001 4 II 0
Lerch, Clevtf-(Ill end MOort; Wllcoa,
Toblk (4), S.UCltr Ill. Roitm• (11) end
Parrish. W-Aoiema, l-4. L-Clevtland, 2·1
HA-Mllw..,k•, Sim-(I) A 14.ftt
Y-•tS,fMleMJ
New York 020 1:10 000-S 14 O
Cleveland 101 010 000-J 11 1
Bird, A Devil 16), Gouaee (t) •nd
Cerone. Gerl-, uco ISi, Slenlon.UI end
Ktuay. W-81rd, Hl L-Gerl-. l-.S. S-(;(lua911 llfl HRs-New York, Otnl 16),
Wlnfltld ISi. Cleftian4. Orlt Ill. A J0, 191.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dodgere 5, 8rave1 2
ATU.NTA LOS ANOILllS ....... .. .....
Royster. 30 • O O o Tl>omei, 2b J 1 2 3
Herper, rt J t 1 0 Monday, r1 4 1 I 1
Llneres, If • 0 I 0 Baker, II 4 0 0 O ~.:'~:; ~~ ! : : ~ G.,vey, lb • O O O
H11bClrd, 211 • 0 0 0 Cey, lb • 4 0 I 0
ltf\edlcl, c • o 2 o Guerrero, <I 4 I I 0
Remlrtl, » J o O o Sc lose le, c J I 2 0
8099-s, p 2 0 0 0 F rlu , H 1 I I 0
=~:T~ ~ g ~ ~ ve1ru••.P , o o o
Tolel• lJ 1 1 1 Tol•I• JO s I s k-"''"''-AU•n•• 000 000 100-2 Los Anotles 200 010 :JOll-S
LOB-Allenla 6, Lot An9eltt 4, 18-
Llnares, Mond.,., C.y. HA-Monday (S) S-
Yel.,.rutla SF-Thomas.
Alla-IP H II E• II SO 8o99S IL. 1.fl 6 4 l l 0 6
Montel-.o 2 4 1 1 0 0
Lat A. ...... va1en1utl• cw, •·1) 9 1 1 1 2 11 HtlP-by 801111• (Frias) R-2 Ot
A-49,1>6.
Pllllli.t s, -4 Ne .. York 100 IOI 010-4 t I
Plllledtlpfllt 100 000 lb-S IS 1
Zacllry, Allen Ill and SlttrnJ,
c11rlste11ton, L,le Ill, McGraw (9) end
eoont. w Lyle, 4·1 L-Allen, J·l 5-
McGraw Ul HRl-Ntw York, Kl119man cm. P1111ec1e1p1111, MeddO• m A 21,431
Ce-h 4, Es:pet 1
Montreal 000 010 001 l S 0
St. LOllh 100 020 10• 4 9 1
L••· Fryman 171, So.a Ill and Carter. Mertln, Slllltt (t ) end Brummer W-
M•rlin, 2·1 L I.ff, •·2. S-Sull•r (tJ. HA-
Monlrt•l. Ce<ter 16) A-U,224.
·-··Giants I
Cine lnneu 110 100 00'-.t IS o S.n Frencltco 010 021 100 S 11 0
Berenyl, Moo,e11 161, Hume Ill end
Nolen, O'Berry (t). D. Atelltftder. -ln
UI. Minion Ill, l.Ovelle '" -M•Y w-Hum•. ).J L Minion, 1.) HR -ClllClnnall.
Foster (11) S.. Frenclsco, D. Evens (11
A-4,620
Top 10
l ..... •IMetMbl
AMIUICA.N LUGUE
OAI • M ~ Atmy, 8o6ton ll IJ1 1S '9 .J:ll
Sl119leloll, a.ltlmore 4l ISf 20 SS U1
U..sford, a.1°" 56 117 31 M .Ml
A°""IC11t, 8elllmore 40 110 11 J7 .U.
Almon.~ •l U• 2• n .m
!YMll, Bolton 4t 171 1' S7 .37'1
Oliver, Taus 45 ltO JO '2 126
Hel\denon, Oellltnd so 1'1 40 62 .m
Wlnfteld. lffw York • 111 u s.s .m
Pe<lortk, $Hiiie 45 ,.. IS s.J .JU .._._
Evant, lollon, 12; T'llomM, Mllw...-.
12; Armes, 0.1-. 11; ...,., A-h. te;
Gray, Seetlle, 10.
"""slatted I• Evens, Boslon, lS; Armes, Oeklend, lS; ·
Slngteton, 11tn1more, JI; Murphy, o.•1-.
JI; C>vllvle, Mllweull•, JO; Winfield, ~
York, JO; a.11, Texas, JO
PlklNI 16 DK..._)
CIHr. a.toft, 1-4, -.Urt1 .. 1. l•lllmort,
,,_,; llyle...,,, Clewland, "''· Vuckovkll.
Mllweuk .. , •·2; Keou911, Otklend, •·1:
M<Grt90f', a.ltlmore, S-2; Burns, Cl\lc-.
S-2.
John McEnroe returns .
LOI AlamllOI
MOflDAY'S llHULTS
lUttlelt1-4ate~M Mffll .. l
Fl"I rec• -Noconet Clleroke•
(Clerlnel. UO, UO, J 20, GollU•-Y BM
(FloruJ, II.to. s 60, Doller Sclloler
CTrtHurtl, l.40, U euClt U-11 paid
S1JO 00 Second rte• -Little D,_ CTrees11re),
6.20, J.111, J.OO; Ski Liii <OOmlnvue1.l, uo,
J . .O; AIUCMO (MMllr), 4.00
Third rKt -Cul H Aun (Frydey), 1.00.
4 20, J.«I; 81"'°!> Bret <Meir), 4.00, J.10,
Any Time I.Ody (Ollvtrl, S .0
F011rtll rte• -Sc>•ll Tiit a.en• (My!H),
10.00, .... 6.00, Rusi N Reedy IHtytSI, s . .o,
4 tO, Full Tlmt COo4 IC....dOUl. l.IO, S2 t•·
ecle ( .. I) peld $4&.00.
Flllll rK• -Qllffn For Cesll IC•rdOlel, J.IO, 2.tO, UO; Elans Home (Mltcl'lell), J.00,
2 .O; Ruby 8e (Myl<K), UO
Slalh race -Gelloplf19 Domino 10.lom-
be), IJ 40. S . ..O. • 20, lnsttnl Re .. ard
ICerdOH ), S 40, 4 20. Delle Man (He'l'tl),
14 20, U euc:UI If.JI peld ..... 20 Sewnth rec• -Deslroyer <Hen), l.00.
6.00, J «I, Sel«tmt IMlt<lltll). 1AO, t.40.
Loom Son l0..¥el), s 00, u HKUI (2-4)
.,.1d s1n .111. Elolllh race -Miu Trlplt 01•1 ICerdOlel, t.40, l.40, UO; Cellle Can (Cterluel. J.40,
UO, TrlPOI Midge (l.-1), 6 IO; S2 euc:lt
11-101 pe1c1 ua.oo.
IJ Pleil Six Cs++J.7) peld U.ltl.40 wllll 17
wlnnlne lkUls (tb l'lor-); U Piel SI•
conselelion paid W 20 ,.1111 216 w1Mlft9
1kkell (fl¥e 1'10r-). Hlntll rKe -Joe C Quick (Adelr), 1.00,
4.20, 2 .0, Top Me Not (MltCllellJ, I.Ill, J.40;
011 My Rtb IClerfuel, 2.20; u HKUI , .... ,
oelo Ml.Ill.
All...-e -6,9'°.
Loa Alamitos standing•
1...-..J-11
Jeckty
Denny CerdOle Kennelh Harl
Steve Tre-.irt
Jolin Creeger
Dehn'' M•tchtll
KenMlh Clerlsw
Lerry Clla¥e1
Robert Adelr
Oonatd0.1..-
J lm e r-•
Trel_.
Bl•n• Scllv-veld1 cw C•KIO
Sieve AotNll"'"
c11er1 .. e._ulst
Russell Htrrlt
JohnC-
LtwreMe 8rltt6.
Jttse M.9ldOnado
Ktllh Colleto
E Merk Welch
Sb ltl 2ftlf Jlrlll 1as ,, n ,.
136 26 2S !I
ISl 2l ,. JO
UO .21 IS 11
IS4 II 2t 13
IU IS IS 1'
•• 13 10 11
120 12 II 10
59 12 I I
lO't 10 u 12
Sit ISt t ... Jlrlll
.,, ?O 11 " 21 II 4 S
1010 4 10
.. t 14 I
SO I I 1
,. 1 " 10
1' I 7 I
31 1 2 I
21 7 2 4 ., 6 • •
NBA fr•• agent•
FoHowlne Is • llst of Pl•v•n wl\o -..
veleran trw ..,.nts et tl'le C:Gml>lellon of !tie
....... NBA -Min. e<OUIMCI eccordln9 IO
ll'lelrl-INml:
Atlenla; SI.,,. HeWtl.
eouon. T ... ry OU.rod.
Chlcego: 8o0by Wllk ... son. t
Cleveland: Meck Celvln, Don Ford, Kim
Hu9llet, Elmore Smllll, Alcherd
WeSlll"91on.
Oellet. Marty 8yrntt
Dell.., Alta Enelllh, K-y HlllQS, lilly
McKinney.
O.troll: Aon Lee, Peul Mo4'itllll.
Golden SC.It: Jot Heuett. JOlln Llitet,
Clifford Roy.
Houtlon: Cel\lln Murplly, Biiiy Peu1u.
I nolene: Tom Abernetlly, J emu
EdwerdS, Jer'r( Skl'l\lft9.
Kensu City: Otis Birdsong, Joe C.
Merl•••tller, Frenklt Senders, Lloyil
Wotton, kon ~.
LoaA....,:None.
Mll,.-•:N-.
Hew-y: 8obElllotl.
Ht• York: Mike Glenn, Aey WllllamL Pl\llffttpNe: ,._,
Plloenlx: Joel Kr-.
Pertltnll: None.
Sen Antonie: None.
S..n Oleof: lton Oovll. G., He.,d, l'MI
Stllllll, ,,_ -lttlWed
Setttloi Denni. Awtr.y, Vinni• Joiw-,
PtulwtslliN!.
Utoll: M91 a.-tt. Wayne~. Jeff
Wllklns. w .. 11lneton: 8411by Dolldrl•, Kevin Grewy, Mflcl\ ICl4ldlafl,
N8A AIW .. 9ue tHm
PtalTTIAM l'-1.ffoY ~Mng, ll'tllledelClflla ,.
1"-t..erry lltd. e.ttll 1 M
C-K•r..,,, Mdlll..,..,._,, les Angelel 11t ~ Oenllfl, S.... Antonio " 0-0eMI• Jdlnlel\, ..._.. ..
HCOMDTIAM l'-Me,.....--,, Mll .. M.. S4
"-AMIM o.MJrr. Utall 11
C-"'-MllMM, *'**' 6a 0-0tla ........ "-t City •
G-Neto ArtllllielO, 9el(f11 44
10..,.Ya WC._> -.M ~ D ..,_
rec:llM, Mt !MnlM, di llMt. I yet~ll. I
llallllklt, IJO m«ll.,el, DANA..._... "englert: Jtl .. , .. U
MrrKIMM, .. llenllo, t llellbllt, • reO fltl\,
•ll\tcll«'9t oc•AMMoa -m .,...." ue Mllltl. .. celke ..... JI Wlllt ..... t .._,llM. .. .... 11111.,,, _..., ..
••• Dt••o CM&M Lo•••·•· .......
er111ee'I ~·· 1.-l -1• eftll•n I 'l'tllllWtlO, .. colkt ..... 1 ... M HKllM; ti
ro<k tltll. I lll'f Cod.
LOMO l•ACM Cltl"'fft l'ltrl -al engler11 W MM tien, u celko NH, It
IMN!llo, 1' llerrec:llM ,......,. Wl!Mfl -7t •"9••· • yetlow\tll, '11 cellco ...-. It W • rMllM, 211-.i. te, t .-...... recll ......
HA&. llACH-n lftlltr.: 1• reo Nld. tu Wftf llliUa. II ullc:o IM•. t• ....,MllM, 4 l\ellbllt. t ,,_...,.., 22 llOnllo.
IAN PllDllO (llllf k L.IMllllllll -17
oneltn:' IU COiie• blltt. 12 sand MJI, 4
krrecllde. • llOl!lto. I...,.. 0' COlll -t4 •nelen: t f\ellllwt, • MllCI lltis, 204 collco NU, 7t lllONKllM, I yell...Wll.
A.VII.A IAY C"-1*-...... ,_16 .,._,...
4 11119 COO, t0 red r«t UICI, M ro<li. flSll
001.•TA IUCM -lJO .,.i.n: 10 rocll cod,.,,..~.all"t<Olf,tc-cocL
SANTA aA•UllA -11 enele": U collce
IMIH, 17 r«k flill.
VllNTUltA -., enolen: s llellllut. ,,
rock cod, 11 ettlco llMi, 21 r<Kll ""'· OXNAllD -94 enolen: u calico .... 7S
blue 11JeM. J r..1111111. 71t to(.k <90, J 1"'9 COd,
Uc-cod.
POllT MUIMUH IA"'•rlcHI -JI
e119lert: a rock cod, 2 c-ced, 1 !Mllbul..
SI cellco *' 11 rock fltll, 40 mecllerel.
MAl.llU -2t e11910rs: 31 llellbUt, 34
c•lico -s. 10 •end oeu, 127 mMkertl, to
bonito, 1 berracude, IS rocll cod.
PAllADIH cove -... ..,...,.., 21) rock
cod, 30 c-cod, I SJ cenco b05'. t .-~
Is bonito, l Mf'roci.N, t M llbvl
MAlllM D•L •IY -11 Meiers 1 --re<1141o, tO oontto, U utlc.o bOu, JI t...i
best, 11S mackerel, J Mllbut.
lllDONOO -., _,.,.. 21' celk o belt.
ts borllto, 27 bOlre<ude, 120 rock fish . ....,.
-• •nelen: 1111 mecktr•I. W oonllo, 2 wrrecl.lde, tO rock lltl'I.
Thia week'• trout pl•nt1
LOI ANOllLlll -._... CenYoft er-.
Culelc L.ell•, Crvst•I Lek•. Llt11e ··-lletenrolr. PYlllll"tAeN Lell•, Sefl oim.
lleservolr, Sen Gel>rlel Rlwr Cl!est end
Hortll Forllt).
SAN lllllNAllDINO -c uumonge
cr .. k, Jenks Lell.e, Miii Cr-. $11ver-..ood
A ... rvotr.
111v•11s1D• -Fulmor uu. H-1
1..eu.
Vl•TUllA. -C.~ l.Olul, ·-Velley Lekft, ..._ Cnell. S.1'19 CrMll 1u-s.ct1on>.
SAM OlllGO Ooene Leke.
8rltl1h Amateur
(et St....._, k.U.Ml
PlllST llOUNO
AndrN c-tu, Italy, clef. Gr-.....
Scotlend, 1 -I Plllllp Welton, Ireland, Ott. Ktnl Winton.
V.S.,H11P l21J.
Rlcllerd Krtu, U.S .. o1tl. R1cMrd Lyon,
Solllh Alrlce, •·uo.
Duncan Even1, Wele1, oet. Rejheev
MolllA, lndla, 1-<llP
Alen 8. Fos'8<, U S • Ott T M. SIO<lt, N-
ZHlend, • -S Rl<lllff Van Nie<k ... k, South Alrlce, def.
Andy Rote, Scoll...i, I UCI·
Oevld G. Tllomes, V.S, d•' Merk
Mo11land, Enolend, l·up
Merco Durante, ttely, Otf. e ruct CMI•,
U.S.,Send2.
Ptlll BHrd, Austrt ll•, def. Alan Sym,
Scotlend, 2~.
John Hu99en, Scollend, dtl Olcll
Sldtrowf, U S., J ...i 1.
Gery ltoedllenl, Enolend, Ott. Herc-1
Kemp, U.S., J and 1.
Frencoh 11101.11, Fr•nce, def L••ll•
Welker, E1\91Md. l·UCI· Sien ~ Jr, U.S .. de4. Mark Loi·
lllOUM, E"lllend, J •nd 2.
J Frtnltlln Rose. U.S .. def. Ml<llHI
lon•llKlt, Enelend, I-up. M.trtln Wiid, E,.._, *f. -y Mtllltr,
us .. 2-1 Gerard Po,.er, AuUralle, def. Ian
Hulen-. ScOClend, '-·
CIF lndlvldu•I champlonahlp1
latl..-..,..,Mllitl
II -Tom Breltleller, lndlo.
72 -Cery Vo.al«, lllCllo.
14 -Tony Perino, Wu ti eke, OevlCI
Miiier, AIQ!Wttl. 8ob leA.,,, St P ... I. cort
Syn11t1t-. PelmcMll•. (Perino finis...,
llllrd, Miiie< '-111, LAven flttll end $Yf"
ne~tv•dt sl1C111 In pl•voffl.
7S -s..n Ael\dDtpl\, Sen Marcos. 16 -Erk MHtlt, Rowlend; Kirk O'KMfe,
SI. JOWPI\; Scott Tur .. Y. Footlllll; ... ~
Cross,e-
77 -MorU41 Teylor, Edlton; Mark Den
Otcler. Sant• Monie•. J-ErkJOn, P•lo!
V•rdtl, Gery Nlcl!Ols. Sou111 MJJJ•; ~
Alcller-• .--r•
NASL
WUTlllM DIVISION
W L GI' GA IP Pb
• 4221511.0
• 717 221'52
6 614201JD
s 712111242
NOllTMWEIT DIVISION
vencouW< t • 24 12 21 ff
Seott!• , • 30 ,. u '5
t'"" PorU.nd • ' ,, ,. • S4
l EdmonlGI> • 1 16 2' U •
c eieerr J t 12 It It 2t
IASTlllN DIVISION
CotmOS
WH111ft910n Montreal
Toron10
• 4JS112tll
I 4U l71t6J s 6 to ,. 11 ..
•111tll,141 IOUTHllllN DIVISION
Fort LeUdltrdelt I S It 14 16 5t
Allente 6 S 20 11 20 St
Tempe 8ty s I It II II 6S
Jockllonvllle S 1 U 11 12 40
CllNTllAL DIVISION
Cl\lt1190 t l 2t U U n
T11lw • S II 1S IS '9
Mlnnuote • S It 21 1• 46 Oellu 2 H t at I tt
SI• potms ere _.,dtd tor • regultllon or
overtJme vletcwy. Fouf points for•~
victory, OM bonus pelnt for ewry ... ,
Kored wtlll a moalmum of tit•• per game.
Ho ~ point It o-..-IOr _,-time or
•l'IWtout pl-. _,.,,.o-
Ho oemet KNHluled
T ....... 10-.
Toronto et Atlente
Hew YorkotMont,..1
Misc .
• • • • • • • •r
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2, 1981
•
No club, but wan t a handicap?:
County association provides many services to golfers
81 flOWAftO L HANDY
Of .................
Are you tlred of playlna ln tournaments
without an established handicap?
Do you wish the calloway system had never
been lnvent.ed?
If the answer to either or both or these ques-
tions ls yes, then you should look into the Orange
County GoUers Association.
It ls now pe>ssible to have an established
Southern California Golf Association handicap
without joining a country club or men's club.
The OCGA. under the direction of Dennis
Chase, conducts mini-tournaments at several
Orange County golf courses along with other tours
and trips designed for the golfer.
"WE ARE DESIGNED to provide services to
golfers, promotine and developing goll as a mean~
of healthful recreation and physical fitness,"
Chase says.
Annual dues for an individual are $25 with a
Longlwrns win,
oust Michigan
OMAHA CAP> -Mark Reynolds lined a two·
run double with two out in the ninth inning to give
Texas a 6-5 victory over Michigan in College World
Series Monday night, ousting the Wolverines from
the double-elimination tournament. I
The seeond game between South Carolina.
44-14, and Maine. 32·13, was postponed until today
because of' H'4·bour rain delay that halted action
after seven UUlings of the Texas-Michigan game.
Michigan led the Longhorns 5-2 prior to the
rain delay. Texas, 59·10-1, came back with one run
in the top of the eighth when Reynolds singled and
was forced at second by Ctuis Campbell. Campbell
then scored on a double by Tracy Dophied.
Bryan Burrows led off the Texas' ninth with a
walk, but was forced at second on Spike Owens' r
ground~r Owens sool'ed the fourth Tex.as run
when Larry Long doubled to right on a play which
saw Michigan right-fielder Jim Paciorek slid past
the ball on the wet outfield.
With Long on second base, Michigan awarded
an intentional walk to catcher Burk Goldthorn.
Reynolds' later followed with his game-winning
double to left center.
Michigan threatened in the bottom of the ninth
as J eff Jacobson drew a leadoff walk. Greg
Schulte doubled to left center. but Jacobson was
thrown out at the plate trying to score from first.
Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson then brought in
Longhorn pitching ace Tony Arnold. who got Dave
Stober to ground out for the second out.
Arnold then intentionally walked Paciorek, but
got catcher Gerry Hool to ground out to end the
game.
Michigan concluded its season at 40-20.
-Meanwhile, at Marietta, Ohio. Steve Riley's
12th-inning single knocked into two runs to lift
Marietta to a 14·12 victory over Ithaca, <N.Y.> in
the championship game of the NCAA Division Ill
baseball World Series.
The triumph gave tbe Pioneers. runner.up to
Ithaca last year and second·place finishers
three times, their first national baseball crown.
"We won this one just like we've been winning
all season -by righting back from adversity ...
said Pioneer Coach Don Schaly. who lost his
second regular in the tournament when starting
first baseman Jim Pancher awoke with the flu.
Rich Ril ey was chosen as the replacement and re·
warded the veteran coach with ~ 4-for-6 batting
performance and six RBI.
"This team has been playing this way all
season. so it was only fitting that we should win it
this way," Schaly said. His squad closed with a
59·5 record.
Youth foot ball signups set
The final day of registration for the Newport
Beach Jr. All-American Football League is Satur-
day at Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor high
schools.
The time...of registration at both locations is 10
a.m. until noon. A $15 registration fee is required.
along with a birth certificate for new players.
Grunio n
to r u n
Thursday
There are those who
reel a grunion run is
much like a snipe hunt
but for the avid fish-
ermen and connoisseur
of the silvery rtsh, tak-
ing of the grunion is no
joke.
The next run or the
s lippe ry grunion on
Southern California
beaches is set for
Thursday through Sun-
day nights. Thursday
night the run ls slated
Crom 11 :18 to 1:18, ac-
cording to the Depart-
ment Of Fish and Game.
The run gets pro·
eresatvely later each
nl&ht, starting at 12 :07
Friday; 1:03 Saturday
(early Sunday); and
2 :12 Sunday. ln all
cases, the time la in the
a.m. hours but refers to
the day before.
The 1runlon apawn
alOnlf sandy beaches ln
Southern Callfomla and
come aahore to spawn
durtn1 periods when the
fish may be laken. Tbla
oecun one to two daya
after a M1f or full toooo
as hl1h tJdes bealn to rt·
cede. Tbe e11s are
wa1tied free Of the sand
lnt.O tlli9 ocean to tiatcb
oa the next Hrlt1 ~f
tldH 1J « 14 CS.ys later.
Grunion aver11e
between nve aud all
lfteltes In len,U. and are food to eat and e111 tO
i>r•pare.
.
married couple at $40, a family of four at ISO and
corporate memberships at $100 <five people>.
The membership includes computerlied
handicaps <SCGA>. monthly tournaments, a Fore
magazine subscription, a newsletter. group
purchasing benefits and an opportunity ti>
partlctpat.e in tours and travel packa1es. ,
For membership applications and further de-~
tails call 957.0053 or write to OCGA, 3198 F Alrpe>rf,
Loop, Coeta Mesa, 92626. • * •
NATIONAL GOLF WEEK wtll be celebrated '
June 2'l·28 with Southern California PGA pros hop
ing to repeat as the top section in the country lf\
money pledged to the junior golf program.
Ro~er Belanger. a resident of Laguna Ni1uel
~LF
a nd former head pro at Mission Viejo, is now at In·
dustry HJUs and spearheaded the drive last year. : Belanger i& again presenting the West Coast•
Merchandise show at Industry Hills this year. •
A golf seminar will be held at Singing Hillf
Country Club June 22·26 for teachers. coaches and.
pros. lt is a five-day national seminar that In•
eludes instruction in all facets of the game along.
with learning to present group and individual;
lessons. • • • CHIP SHOTS -The 10th annual SCPGA:
stroke play championships will be hosted by Art(
Schilling at Mesa Verde Country Club June 15. The:
event will be a 36·hole affair ... The LPGA tough!
luck award for the year has to go to second-year!
pro GaU Hirata who eagled the final hole in a re·;
cent tournament to fire a 68 and take the first.!
round lead. But she was disqualified because in:
her excitement, she forgot to sign her scorecard'
... Are you still game for a run round of golf that
may end before you finish 18 holes? H so, the Com~i
modores Club con·am team scramble is for you. ltt
will be held June 22 at Irvine Coast CC in conjunc1
tion with Irrelevant Week under the direction o~r.
Paul Salata with a 5 o'clock shotgun blast to en
the day's play (if anyone adheres to a Salat·
whim). Call 641-0610 for further details of the zan1
event ...
One of the biggest events of the year at Hunt-,.
ington Seacliff CC was the 13th annual member-
guest tourname nt with 53 two·man teams
participating over 36 holes. Low g_ross honors went
lo Ray Bertotti and guest AJ Nunes of Rio Hond
with a 228. They were foOowed by Leroy Gay an
Paul Moro of Phoenix at 2JO and Jim Cnwfor
with Len Peverier of Costa Mesa at 236. Adam
Moro and Fred Letlerman of Old Ranch won lo"
net in a playoff with George Dot.ti and Leo Zova
of Mountain Gale at 196.
G ROUP
g GfjlF,
LESSONS
ST ARTS JUNE 16th
8 WEEKS for s25oo
Registration starts June 1st
ONE HOUR WEEKLY
INCLUOIS
GOLF BALLS & INSTRUCTIONS
LESSON HOURS
Tues., Wed., lllurs.
9 A .M. or 6 P.M.
Sat. At I P.M.
OSTA MESA GOLF& COUNTRY CLU
170 I GOLF COURSE DR.
COSTA MESA • 540-7 500
Carry chis card m you r wallet. It'll
cell you who to call co cash in on a
Commercial Credit Homeowner
Loan. When you need cash, you'll
have Commercial C redit right in
your hip pocket.
l
, ..
c
·1 ..
I
'
Orange Cout DAtLY PILOTJJuesday, June 2. 1981
PlflLIC NOTICE
o•~··· COtl .. TY IV••••O• •Oflc• fOU*HACTOtll couaT CAU.t ... ll"Otl eiot
H.eke:::=-.::.":: .... ~,.. ,::~~~==· kllOol Dhtrltt C.tt C-111\ily
,,..'"' 1• 5,"-" .. Ille ._ Mll.C......... Cal .... Dlwkt A ..... ,.._..,. ....__ • l"LAINTll'I"• SOUTH COAST II• DMclllnt : IO. a.M~ ..___ _. -· .._....., • -. •• .lllM "· , .. , Ptlw•~""'*'""'-UltlMr..-, MAllllH IHOUSTRllS, INC,, l"lace al II• 1tec:el11tt: Office ef ~ tt, ._,._,. ,,,...._ 6t Ole ltOICltT HC'rt . l'wCllMlftl ._.... Mllr!M ,........,. IJ70
flewlM•'I ~· tftke I• Ill> OU'INOAHT: IOUTH COAST Adema Awefl.;t Cute M• u
'
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,_
NOTICE OF DEATH OP
MARY S. ASK'W AND
OF PeTITION TO AD·
MINISTER ESTATI! NO.
A·1011S1.
1PMtlon~,..._.lllllllMl•Mwn IOAT YARD, INC., MICHA8L CellfO""•"'M ' • ' ' from t ;OO •·"" t• a·oo p.m. •II any OJIVll, M. ••· l"ro)ec:t ,..,,...1 cltl19'1 .,_~It wllllffl t• CllYl TIM "0 It A a V .. It OT IC TI VI 114 Ha i-. _Air CMll!ftf!H\I
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, creditor!
and contingent creditors ol
Mary S . Askew anc
P t,.ons who may b t
otherwise Interested In thE
wlll and/or estate:
after date flf 1111• IMIMlc.atlOfl. Tiii otlDllt a d I •· I · 119 ,...,ndetlon'• p,lntlNI Off~ It IOc~ CAM "UMlla ., .. ., •mo • • .,,,, ronmtnlel Cuter.
•t "' .. .,. l•lafld OrMI, N........ Tt D•fHUM• SOUTH COAIT g!r.=.,.;--·· c:.ll .... C:.UI MIM, '""'· c.111.,~. TM pr111c1,.1 IOAT YARO, INC •1111 MIC:HAIL ••• .... ... " tteflflt. I ~roftllt.....,..tl0ft la.19"44M OAVll.,.,. '"' M~ ,.,._ ,_ wfrenlfttttt., c:.iitor Q;."99 c ''. Ale...,. cer11e11 _..,., MVlftt l....,n1 111, 1111 Coll• c:.ta ""-' C•llfamla ou
l"\ll>llsNd or.,.. c:Mfl o.lly .............. ....,_ WWII .. SOUTH "''"' Awallallle f;.,,.· Otrlo Of "" J-l, ,., 252 ... t COAST IOAT YARD, INC .. la<tltd et Director ""vtlc.I l'e<llltl .. Pf I -.....__ U19 He"""*1 11¥0., H-rt lffcll, -1\9. C.11,.rnl• .. It--· CMll COMMllfllty Coll... Olatrl<t,
IT "o~~RIOt U70 •••m• AYtllllt, COii• Mtt•, Otftndlnll $0UTli COAIT IOAT Callforn ... 71~'101. NOTfUOl'A~UCATION l'O• VAao, INC. eM MICHACL DAVll NOTICI IS HIR81Y OIVIN 11111 C:NAMOC 1• OWNIUJtt• 0" wll Mt tr_,... dlrectl'I' or lndlrtc" IM allew NmM klll!ol Dlttrl<t el
PUBLIC NOTICE
ALCOMOUC ••v•••o• LICIMH Ir ....... lflt•r•;t In tllt ,, ... ,.y Oten .. C-IY, C.llfo.>nle, e<llnt .., ••••l!l••••lllii••I .,..., -.r+'-4 • folltwt: All fll lllt •utlt •n• lllrwtfl •16 O.wer11lno INro, To~ll'MyConcWft: f!lllltm••ll'tOO.lytttoeh,.c~. ~•rtln •f!•r rtlerreo to •• ISMET •El'IC It ~lfle to the ect at tt10 ~ 11.... HewllOrt DISTRICT'. Wiii l-l1t9 W. to, W
Oeper1ment of Atcol>tllc .. were,. hecll. c:.llfomlt, conwn0iw'I' k/lowfl 1191 ltter "*' flt .._."''" llmt, Control tor "41" ON SALE BIER M SOUTH COAST llOAT YARD ... led Ill* fO< ti.. tWtrG Oft contr.ct
A petition has been rneo
by Donald E. Askew In the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Donald E. Askew be 10,
pointed as personal
representative to ad-
minister the estate of
Mary S . Askew, Costa
Mesa. (:a. <under the In·
dependent Administration
of Estates Act). The peti-
tion Is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive West, Santa
Ana, CA 92701 on June 17,
1981 at 9:30 AM.
'Ahrflsive'
• pnest
fired
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Supporters say the Rev.
Carmello Gosioco de-
fiantly says Mass
although he bas been
fired and replaced by
Roman Catholk officials
in the San Diego Diocese.
Some or the Filipino
Americans to whom the
Jes uit priest was as-
signed said officials dis·
missed him in January
on racial grounds and
without a bearing.
"I couldn't allow him
to continue to work
h e re," said the Mos t
Rev. Leo T. Moher,
bis hop of the diocese.
"H e doesn't serve the
people. He manipulates
them."
A spokesman for the
340,000-member diocese
said that the priest
preached abrasively on
the s ubject of racism.
ANO WINE (PUILIC EATING IT IS l'UATHIA OltDIRI O thel torui.to.tet!IM-plf't
PLACE>. to Nl.,.l<ohollc oewrllOH •I 11111 order,,. .. hew nt tore• or ttltct Tlltrt Wiii 119 • SIMD .. _11 •• J4t E. 11111 $1rMI, ~It• u. Coste ,.,.,. eny preotrty etwr ltwy 1,.,_ 1111lr•• 111 ff(h "'of 11141 _u,,_tt t•
111e ... Calltorttl• .. ,, by plelnlln. oor 111 •nr event •'"' Jor t 1141rantet , .. ,.turn 'noood ~ondlllon PllOllltlld OHllOI CMll Delly l"llOt, ,., 1, 1MI. :~::In five • ., •• ,.., lllO Olcl Ol»lllno
Juot 2.. ltll uu•1 DtlNt May 29, "" E~cll ••• mu11 cenform •Ill .,. j'.:' :ti:' .. " ,.._,91.,. to Ille contrect doe1tment1.
s..p.,1or ~ E11<11 blo IMll be eccom-IN 0y MITc;Nau. MD HUSTON .... tKllt'lly re•r.i lo In Ille contr11<1 ·~1..U All_.,....... doe.""*'" -by ,,,. 1111 of PfoPOMd
NOTIC• Of' SAL• 0" I It N.,.,.t C.-Ori Wbeontrklort. A a A N D 0 N a D I" a a SON A L ~ t• we, TM OISTlllCT r-t Ille r1otrt to
l'.Ol'altTY ,._..,. lk, CM...,...•-reJect .,., or •II llkh or to welw ..,Y Notice 11 -.Oy t lven IMt undlr (114) 7 ... Utt lrrt9111 ... ltlet Of lntonn•lllles 111 tny
•ncl IHI'"*'' 10 Section IM of IM Pu1111.,.. Of.,.. CMtt Delly Piiot blel• or In I.Ila llffkllno, Ctlltornla CMI Code the prC1119f1y lltt· Jurw 2, 1'11 2,,._.j Tiie DISTRICT lltt oCllalned from tel below bfll....O w llt ebtindoned lly llM Director ol tilt De91r1,,.n1 of In· MICHAIL MADRID WllOM .... •Cl· cklltcl•I Rtl•llon11tw tentr•I prevell·
oreu wu 1U71 Miiia Clrcle, PUBLIC NOTICE 1119 r•M of P9' diam w41911 111 the WH1mln&'9r, C..lllornl• ,,.., Wiii .,. IOC•llty In Wiile" '"I• woril 11 to be told al Pl*k _.11on 91 t741 llolM performeel fO< .. ," crtft or lype ot Ave/lue, WHtrnlnot•r, C.llfwnl• tttl3 NOTICETOCONTRACTOllS -rkman -10 Hecute , .. con·
on June u, 1•• •• IO•OOo'clocil •.m INVITING BID$. lrect.
PUBL;fC NOTICE IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objection s w ith the
c ourt before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
In person or by your at·
torney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a c ont·
ingent creditor of the de· OescrlpOonofpr-r1y; Founlaln V•ll•Y Sc,_. 011111<1 Tr.. loreo-ino Kl>edul• of per diem D1n1ntU1111t.,,.c11tlN, _, ... , •t L~ ~. P.o ao11 as10, weges •r• °"Ill••• u.e Office o1 ,,,. ceased, you must f ile your
, 0,, .. ,.,.., • ..., tebl•. llNclboart. ,..,.ni.1nve1i.,,c.t11orn1emoe Director PllY'llc•I Fec11111" Plannlnt, claim with the court or mlscell-• -.. IL..ocaled In Ulllt PROJECT IOENTIFICATIOH. 110 Co.at Community ~11999 District. present It t th I 01%4) II·••. S•ncltll•ttlnt ol Co•. Molol•, •I'll CoPlff mey.,. Obtel...., on req ... st A I 0 e persona oe1ec1111111•1110tyotMey, 1te1 H•wt•ndS<'-••· copy 01111111rato1N111>e POtted.•t repr esentative appointed ArtW,,...,...,,,.....,,., 81DOEAOLINE:JUM10,1Ml,21JO thelo'""" by the court w ithin four
wu1m1 .. 1er s.11 Storeoe Pm. T"• toreoolnt Klleelute of per diem th f th f Pullll&lled Or.,,.. coast Delly Piiot, SPECIFICATIONS ON Fl Le· ••oes Is lleMCI ""'°" • workl119 dty ot ~on s rom e date 0
.iunet.t,itet J.S».tl M••n••n•nce •n• Purc.,ulne •lot11111110wt. The r•t• tor i.o110ty first issuance of letters as
-----o.~~~n;n• OF a•o ,.ECE•PT ~'::.!='~~ .. ""'11 be •t •ust provided in Section 700 of
PtJBUC NOTICE Purchttino Dept. Governl119 lloer• It "'911 .. -..or, -Ille CON· the pr 0 bate c 0 de 0 f
Berry PulllU1n TRACTOR to""°"' the contr.:t 11 California. The time for
,.1CT1nous au11NHS Antai.n15uc>t . •••rdeel, -_. •nr w11<ontrec10r filing c laims w ill nof ex· NAM•ITATaMENT BuslnenS.rYkff under lllm, to PIY not Ins than the pire prior to four months T"• followlno p.,.tons ••• dolno Publlt-Or-Coa•t O•lly Piiot. wld specified r•I•• to •II worttmen 11u1lneu•: M•r1',J'!"9t.1wi uu.e1 employed 11w them In,,,. uecullon ot from the date of the hear.
GUARDIAN ADVISORY COUH· lheconlrecL Ing noticed above.
CIL, 660 Newport center Drive, No. Ho bldOer ,..., withdrew"'' bid lo• YOU MA y EXAMINE W , "'•-' 8eecll, C.llfornl• tMO PUBLIC NOTICE • period Of For-ly·Flv• 14J) c»ys •lier Rot1tr1 v. GlllSan,' Rue eennes, 111eoe1eN1torthe...,.ntntof1110s. the file kept by the court.
N•wPOn llHdl, c..111o<nl• t2* fflCTITIOUs ausiNHS A s>eyrMnt bond•"" • pertorm•nc• If you are Interested In the How...ci I( a.r10W, Jt Montecuo ·~STATEMENT bond w111 .,. requl....s prior to sl!ln•nt estate you may file a re· Drive, Corona de t Ml>r, C•llfort1le Of Ille Contrec'I TN pey....,,t bonO -' • .,,25 r11e '°''°"'"' .,...._, ,, 0oeno 11wt1. ~M\&1.1 111 1o __..,..,.. quest with l~Qurt to re·
Tiffi business Is con ... cted by e nerx~~ESSION$-U-;;LIMI TEO, JOlS Ml fOf'tll In the Contr.ct OocumenlL ~elve Special notice Of the
oener•t-1nenfllp. T"ur1n •B201,eos1eMew.cAn621• ~,..;1noa:-~ 11 inventory of estate assets
DEATH NOTICES T Robel'1 V. GI-Debor•" Eltlne Jollntoft, lOH s!,.,.":;' . • an a nd Of the petitions aC· Cou~1,·~:..~;:. ~~;"!~M~ Tllurln U20l. Cost• Mew, CA '1'27. 8otrd0f Trust .. , c 0 u n ts and rep~ rt s
-21, Itel. 11~1~!~ ~~~~~!~ conducted t>y • Pu1111s1we1 Oranoe eo.11 O•llv Piiot, described In Section 1200
ROIERT 11• O•ISON, ESQ. O.Dorat1 E Jon"'°" June 2• '· itei ?»Mt of the California Probate DA VlS ... N_,.,. CtMw ~ ...... sas Thlt ,,.,_, Wti llled wit" the Code.
DL'ANE DAVIS. pasi.ed New_..IMO,eet'"""'•'*;.1'2* Coun1r ct..-11dl0r~eo....1vonMey PUBLIC NOTICE Henry Friedman At·
'" &) June l in Orange lie Publl~ 0r.,... eo.11 Ot11r P1io1 IS, •tee ,.,.12:11 torney at Law, 1161 i San
wai. a resident or :'llewporl June 2• •. ''-23• "" 1U4-ti Pu111111wc1 Orenoe coa11Delly 1>11ot, auioa•=~~~~C:::.~~;o""'A Vicente Blvd., Suite 820
Bearh Born in Los Angeles. -M•y tt,1',Junet.t, ttet t:1t1•1 7•cMcc.MlfOl1wewest. Los Angeles, CA 90049;
September 14. 1958 Survived PUBLIC NOTICE S.UAM,c.~ tel: (213) 820-6701.
b} his mother. Mrs Creela PUBLIC NOTICE 1n r• 111e merriaoe of Petlllontr: Published Orange Coast 8
1°r•.s 1°r Ne;-po~i 7,euc~. ..oT1C:'o1n!L•oF ~~"'.t·~:R~G~~~;"" R•SCIO'ldent: Daily Pilot, May 26, 27
an< SIS ers. ree a arns A. A" 0 0 N. D .. I. s 0" AL PIC:TITIOUS IUSINESS CAH NUMllll 0•1*11 June 2, 1981 2389·8 or CarlORa Park. Natal} n l"ltOl"aRTY ffAMI STAT&MENT SUMMONSIMARltlAOE>
B er i, o u g nan of L ag u n a Holk• Is l\a<etty 01...,, ,,,., _, Th• lotk>wlnt .-rson Is dolno 11us1-NOT1c•1 Y• ...... .._ ..._ TIM
Beach. Donna Kisk1la of •nd Pllr-\1 10 s.cuon ,,. Of the ,....... <ewt"'9ytle<l*,._.i•t.,.wttMwt PUBLIC NOTICE
H C.lll0'111•Glvll C-tne Pt-"lY llst• T. C MORSE RESTORATIONS .,_, ...... _,. IMleA ye• .........
emel. Emma Ruth Judkins ed.,.,_ bfll....O '°be_...., by no1-1 w 8•v St .. cost• Me ... CA .,... • .. , .. a...i ... ...._...u... NOTICllOflTltUSTaa·suLa or Redlands. J USllOe Da \'IS R. COO TV RE Whole l•t e«lress w•s '1621 ....... LOAN HO. 17~
or \·1rginta. Eileen Anderson UUl lrook.,urst Sirwet, No. Ua, Tt>om• C. M«a. ~ W. 9•y Sf , AYISOI U ..... M .,_ -...... T D SERVICE COMPANY es Ouly f :\I " · v· Westmlnalk, C.lllOrnl• tMl, will be Coste-CA'2621. El WI-I_. -.ci.w-. u-. eppolntect Tl'\l(t .. -the lollowlnt O · 1ss1on vU?JO 1s1tallon tot• et Pll&Jjlc auction•• t1•1 11o1 .. T1111;;fn•nlte-1et1rt.,,1n-.-..._i.•--IH......_.. 0eterlbelld9eelottn.ts1WILLSELLAT Wtll be Wednesday noon till Avenue, Wtttrnlnster, Callfornlt dlvldu•I. .. ffllttrt 8 • 9iaL LH 19 I~ PVILICAUCTl()HTOTHE HIGHEST
S. al the Baltz Bergeron-'26U, on J..,. u , 1•1 •t 10; o•c1oo ThOmas c. Morse c1 .. .,....,.. BIODIR f'OR CASH CPtY•ble et time S th d T h II M , •.m. T"I• >ltlemtnt was lllN wit" u.e I. To, .. R._...,.nt Of Nie lft lewful money of t1w unlteo · m 1 an . ul 1 ortuar~ O•scrtptlon of PfoPer1y: County Clertt of Orengie County on Mey •· TM petitioner hes llled • pell. Stet••> 111 right, tlll• -Interest <Oft-Ser\'lces will be Thursday L•toer, -· helmet, crvtc,.s, -u , 1te1 lion COfteemlne ,_ marrteoe. You voeel to-,... held.,., 11..,... ....
I. 30. at Christ Lutheran Ill bo• ol mlsce11eneou1 ltem1 "'um mey Ille• -111en '"'*"" wlthltl ao Oeeo ol Tru1t In '"• property
Churrh Orange Ca \\ llh tLouttclln UnllA11tJ PubllllWO Or.,,.. C0.11 Delly Piiot, day1 ot.,. Oet• ~this""'""'°"''' lltrelnelltf-.nbed:
P •8 d S • f Otleel .... IHl...,ofMty,1•1 Mey tt,26,J.-2,t ,1•1 129-11 ter ..... on,ou. TRUSTOll HE"BERTM.SHACK.
as tor r a llenstra o · AttW. F-'tr'T\41ller..,. 11. 11 'rOU fell •• me • written • •11'191•....,
rk1atmg Interment to folio\\' w.s1m1,.i.rSt11 Stor... P UBLIC NOTICE ,._,,,.. wttMn -..c" ume, '°"' ci.. BENEFICIARY: PATTY LUMBER
at p acific \'ie.... :\femoraa I Pvbtl.,,.., 0r-. Cota ot11y Piiot, l•ull ,...Y i. ent-•"" .,,. c ... n co .. • Ctllfornl•corporetlof\. · . June 2 t 1"1 ~I m•y enw • futorMnt c-.1n1no lft. Rec~ Octooer u , tm •• Instr. Park Baltz Bergeron Smith _ ' ' l'tCT1nousaustNISS Jww:uve or olh..-orders cOftC•nlno He. IS.In-tl4ta~1057ot Ot·
and Tuthill Mortuarv. direr· PUBLIC NOTIC"' N~ STATE.MINT division of _,,y, waou•., '"""°"· llcl•I RecOf'ts In ,,,. office of the tors r. Tiit fOllowlne .,.-. la dol119 11U11. '"llO cutlody, c"lld-.1. ettomer's Recorder o1 Orange County, .... ct.eel
R nest H : '"'· cost., -tu<:h other rellef H of trutt des<rlbn Ille fotlowlno pro-VE DUGO l'ICTITIOUS BUSINHS ECOHO<AR OF AHAH&IM, UI may be tr911ed by , .. c:oul'1, wlllcll per1y;
ELSA VERDUGO. passed NAME STATEMENT w . 1<•1•11• Avenue. An•"•lm, cou10 result rn tlle eernlltlment ot Lot U of Tr11<t 690, Cou11ty of ;&\\a~ May. 31. in Santa Ana . ...!:~~followlnt l'e'ton 11 dolno Mi. ca1i:~~Lwi .... 2 Pike, lrvlne, :.::S;.'t:,'~ofmoneyorpr.-ny,or ~-=-~~c.~~~~::-'u":.:
Born Mesilla, New Mexico M 0 a 1 LE M" 11 1 .., E ce111orn1em1• c.lfJMwtMl•.-... -..1<• .. 2',01MIKete-~1n-o111ce
August 21. 1915 A resident of MAINTENAHCE. IMOI Peclflc Coast This Minns •• <oneluct .. by •n In· ... •""'-Y "' .. l'Mttw,.,.. ....... Of.,.,. c~ .._...,Of M141 '-'ly.
Sanla Ana for s vears She Hlo,,wo. Sull• >. SunHt Buc11, 01v10 ... 1. .. .. ,,...,..., .. --.,,....... l!XCIEPTING therefrom •II o11 .....
was .a manager o{ Verdugo's C•lllornl• to1a. •~ M. L-"-· "•Y. -•.,. , ...... ttn11. hytroc•111on -.ice1 enc1 mine•••• Douol• "-Dye, ""' M<trtln Lane, Tiits --• .., .. 111 .. with U. O•t .. April 21. lt1' In. on end und9f wlcl land, but wttllout ~fex1can Restaurant She is Huntington leech, C•lltornl• t21Mt. Coun1y C..,_fllDf-..eo..nty on M<ty L• A.''*""' ,,,. r10111 ohntry on ttw .. rtec• of..,,.,
survn•ed by Mary llelen Thl•-'""6lac-.,cte<111yen1n. '·'"'· c1er11 lancl0f'ln -1ot11t..-urlec1t1wre01
Gomez of Laguna llills and oivtoo••;___ ""'• l'Hl11t G.i Splcurd. to• cteptll of JOO rwi '""" ttie Mirfec•
.,....,, -y Publll/ltcl Or .... CO.ft Delly Pllof, ~y I" lor Ille -of elqlforlflV fO< Orlll Richard Avalos of Mission This tiei-1 wes 111ec1w1111111e M•yt2,1t,26,June2,1•1 1222-a1 a11uc:aa.0RUIAUON 1r19,l>Of'lnt~lnvor,_1,;.....;
VI e JO. S ister. S) I v an a County Clerk ot Or1n99 County on ilUM,...y 9t Law ~bsllln<ft, •s Mt _., In en lnstrv-
De ri gar an or Glendale AP'llll,1•1. PUBUC NOTICE UIWettWl•reA-n11nt reconled J!My 11, ltn In ....
Brother Ma~ue.1 Verdugo of Put>llwo °'.,... coesu>eu~1tr.:. r :'1~tK11 ~~':s:.T.~ C:~ C::,r:-1!'!:
L a g u 0 a N I g u e I t 3 Mey ''· 1', J-2. '· 1•1 m1•1 l'ICTITIOUS BUSI NIU Pui.tlsNcl Or .... Coast Delly Pl'°'· C..llfornje.
grandchlldreo and 7 great· HAMS STATSMllNT JUM 2,t, 1 .. u .1•1 U41•1 "W ltt••-•u Of' Ulmmon ...
g d hlld V. t ti · PUBUC NOTICE TIM followlnt ,,.,._, 11 Oolnt Wt1-sl9t1tllon Issi-Hove, no w.,rent ran c ren. I St a on IS ,..11 ••= PUBLIC NOT C Is given at to Its,_ .. ,_.. or COi'· all day today. Rosary \\ill be TACO NA040, "" H•rtlor """" I E rectnettl:'
Tuesday at 6 o'clock at the '~~~~1:~:.':::S cos1•Mau..c.111om1e"'21 -----TIM t1erwf1c1.,., -r u1c1 o..<:t o1
Balta: Bergeron·Smlth and TIM IOllOWlnt t*llOft 11 Clolnt bus!· coat~=.=::!'~"; W•ll•ce, "~~~!:~~·:::s Ttust,by,_of~"°"*feultln
Tuthill Morj.yary Mass or -· n : Tiii• bonlfttas ls c-ted llY en In· T"• IOllOWl"9 1>4rtons are dolno :.:· ~··110n• secur•• t"•••llY. the resurrection will be Wed-111 COMPU-OUOTE 121 5PORT·A· 01v1 .... 1. businesses: •• • •101Cut..:1 end delivered 10
fHON, 19* Piltl'nello Clrcla, ,_. "-··•· GAL Ea llw undtnltNd • -111en Oecterotlon nesday at io ·oo. at St. celnV•l•-.c.iiwni.'21tl MlftN_,_,.., L "1A 11.J200 •r1st111si.-. tt0ef•U1t.,,00en*'d1ors.1e.enc1
Joachim Catholic Church Mlrnm A11n Fernum, 1110. Pui.tltNc10rMoec.ntOt1•~'::~ Sult~~i:.?:~:·,;,::•~=• w.l1tennot1ceotw-11enc101e1.ctton
with Father Joseph MCE · '"••m•tto Ctrcle, Fount•ln V•11••· IMY 12, lt, M."-2. 1"1 116U1 CoHnle, HeWIM>r1 .. 6<,,, C.llter"I• te u~1o"'!'-.. 1~~ lo Mii .... CelHoml•tVlll n... -··Y ..... , _ _.._.,'°"afld
neany lntel'ment to follow TN• IMlneu 11 coneuceect 11y en In· t .. •••'*.,.. ......,.,._. Uwec1 ... at llarb>r Lawn Memorial cJMd<iel. PUBUC NOTICE .iemes Al .. rson t>t WHt 1111 llllllc•of1WMC11end0f•t.ctlon1e•,.. Slrffl, Slll'Ca Ant, C.lltomle tt706 cwdeel ~ s, 1"1 es INtr. No. Park 1n C:O.ta Mesa. (n lieu Mlrleno A .... ,..,.. Tllomea L Sc11t111er, m s.ne1cas-uoe in ......... 1-~ 1 ••• ~ .......... r 'I d l . l th Thll st~ WH , .... Wllll Int "ICTITIOUS IUSINau II c ~, ~-,._ If -.,..,. ........ ---..,, 11 o~ers. ona ions • e CountyC1trko40r1n91Coun1YonM4lw NAMISf,4TIMINT •. °"--..,.,,.....,, omlet:iwo llcl••"-•·
"'" American Diabetic Auoc. or it, 1te1. Tl!• I01lowl11t PMtons •r• oolne Jtldl o. Jen""· 2226 "°" Ceflblt S.14 Ml• w111 oe "*"· but w1111ou1 t Jude. s HOS pit a I in .. , ... , llvtlntH .. I :;~·· Newport ... c ... C•llfor11I• <OWMnt or-·--· ._.Of Im
Fullerton. Baltz B.ergeron· JU:~~~.~~ Coett OeltY2fs':i TREiT~:~T~.~1~1 Ac:o:ne :.:, w111i.,.,. J. 1<..._,.,, Jr .. •11 Alden ~:!:'.;,'::;:.'::.!~~'.:',.;.~..,
Sm 1th nnrl Tuthill. d1rt'clor' --------Lene, Huntlnglon 11eec,,, c.11torn11 ~·· Ntwpon ••ec"· C•lllornl• <1.,.t """<II.,. note -UIWd '' ulCI
HAHOlt LAW~MT. OLIVl
Mo<tuary • Ceme1~rv
Crema1orv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
5-40-5554
"llCl llOTHllS
• llU HOAOWAT
MOITUAU
I 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
ULTt I lllGUO"
SMt'fM I TU'fHtll
WISTCUFf: CHAPI\
•27 E 1,lh St
Cos1a Mesa
646-9371
rtllCI qoJMHS
SMITHS' MOITUA.IY
621 M••n St
HuntinQIOO BUCh
536-6539
PUBLIC NOTICE 92646 P•lrlc• s.. °""9flul, IJM Opel, Deed of Trwt, wltll '-est es 1" Nld Vellrl• Jeen G•llaoMr, 2tttt 9 1...._ 111 ,._ 1 noete ,...,,..,.., tdYlllC•, II any, under Crow" Rief .....,., Huntlneton lffc.,, • "j" ":' ~~!!.1"°s. Or 1111 tertnt ol MIO o.CI of Trwt, !Ma, fflCTfT'IOUI MISINaSS tellfot111• f'IM6 -• ...,.._,. ·-llftOI'-c-lltr .. s .,,0 •Jlll9Nff et tlw T~ NAMSITATIMIMT Dennis Gtll19ll9r, JOtt1 Crown .,.we A-. P•Mdtnt, C.lltort1le •nel•HllOINIU<,...tedbysaldl>eed
TM ,.._,,. _...,., I• Clolet !lull· Reef Lane, Hu11t1n1ton l••<h, 911~ lTrval. ,.. .. n : C.llfo.-nle .,._ Tiiis butlneu 11 conouct" by • Seid .. ,, Wiii.,. llOl<t on Wednttdey
SOUTH COAST SECllETARIAL, Thi• Minns •• c-uc•ect by en In· ..... r•l-1nenlllp. J-2 .. ,., et 11:00 •.m. •tu. otflce 100t WM ..... Unit No. 203, Santi Ohlldu.i ' """"-L. Sdirlber •Of T.O. iwvlce C-'J', IMll of AM, C:al1Mtftl•""7 ..,,, ........ Gelleolltr Tiiis .... .,,,.... w•• flled wltll Ult A,.,...lc• T-. Suite 1110, One Clt'I'
c;ynt11I• L. ltet••, 1001 Wtt Tiii• ai.1-t WM 111111 w1111 ,,. cou,.tfCtertiofOr1n91eo-tyonMey 1ou1ev...ciw..t.0r-..c.111om1 •. Slew_ent1 Ulllt He JOI, ltfll• AM C.Unty c:.llfll of Dfll'te COUl'lly Ot1 I, ltl . Al tllt time of tlw lnltlal MflcetlGll
C:.U __ ..,., MeyJt, t•l. l'Ull:U of lflll nttlc.e, W. t-1-t of tlM
TM• .... ,. c-.Cf .. by M .. ,..... Pllt>I ..... or.,,.. Coe1t Delly Pl ... UllPllO btl•nc• of IM .., .... 11. Olvlduel. P\11111.,.. Ot .... Cotst Delly Pliot. May 12, 1t, :i.. J-2, 1"1 U2Ml MCllrM ~ lN -delCrltlecl .... ..
~L.IUc*a J.,,,.1,t,16,U,t•t 24_,...I -lnntMClettlfMttldcoatse-.,aftd
Tiii• ,....._.. •• 111 .. wit" t PUBLIC NOTICE NV_, I• SI0,005 • .0. To .....,....._ eounty~lfDf1111tc.utl!YonMa 1111 9'*\lno llkf,,.., mt'I' call OHi
20, 1•1. PUBLIC NOTICE m.-.. ,., l'ICTIT10UI 1u11•1u Oet .. 1 Meyn, ltll'
Put141"*' Orenot Coatt Deily flllot1 l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNIU NAMtl ITATllMINT T.O. s.rvtwC....-W)o
J.,,,.J,t, l .. ta. ttet , 2MM1 •AM•ITATIM•NT Tiie fOllowlnt perton• •rt dolno T,....
Th f I llVtlneu•: ly1QrtoT ..... PUBUC NOTICE Ml!.,';•1119 ,.,_ •• ,. •0119 ELAIHl'S Gll'TI, •ACIFIC ...... IK....,
_ SUNHT AQUATIC Al'.ARIN• l'la1tMAU..fttMalflSV..t,..i1e1, OMCltJ ..... .... CE Ta• r 2'0 .. ...___ Hvn~IMCll.CellfWnl•HMI or..e.ca. ... "M:T'ITIOU.IMllf•I• N "'L D., t ........_., Hti1r1t-.J!ltlnt A. ..,_,,..,, J0101 9-11 {"4) .....
Tiie ~..:"~~ dot-1119~11:::" ACallfonll~u, •=. .. 111•111 ....... s-. ~u. Hunllfl9Cet1 .. ecll, l'lllllltNd Or'.,..,.c-t DllllY l'llot. _,,....r:-, . ..,, Gr-., IM.,• ,..,.,... c.arwratllfl, c.tltoml•,_. .1-2.t,»,1111 J'104f, ;,.. HOt .,. I I W l'tlnll VMrllllt, 20701 9"<" H•~,.:._~c~·(a.~'· Ctl......,.'::J 11111 111ten •n"· 11vo .• s-. 1'•. H11nt1nttott ••ecll, PUBLIC NOTICE
,,,., • • • Tllll IMlllfteJJ It uMll<t.. 11'1' • CellM!lla '2to4I
... y .. H ... INtrke M. TIKW llmltN ~. ""~~ ~1;.·,:~ 11 conducltd "" "'CTITIOUUUllHSS-'"' i . lteltfa Slrttt, ""'41MI"'• ..,_ "4lltltk llelfll A...,_.,.. NAMalTATaMJNT •
c.llftitlN-' -~ ONlll, IM. Tl'tl• .....,_. WM Ill .. WIU\ tM T"::''"'"' ,,.,_art OOlnt Ml• .!::...--•It~., M.... =...., ~ Ceurity C"'11 .. 0r91ttc.writyon Mey TOCO A$90CIATH, W ,.__.,,
INltlca M. Tuell« 1'1111 ........ -fllt9 wltfl lllt I, "''· l'MtfM Ct1tttr Of'IW, Sul .. I .. , Nt_,.r1
flll1 ......... -,. ....... ~yCtwtt"Or .. ~et1lMy .......... Or ..... CMtto.llyl>IM(, a-11.~-.o
c:-.tr C*tltlfOr-.(.wllr•~ It, ltet. Mey U, It, it.J-J, "" 21~ "".!..=-.. • ... ~~!" teer. a , ttlt. tt•OD•I. •INOALL a MA a --.... _,.,...,_,_.u
tl""91 ..... ,.. ltaltlll C.. Wlfll_!:Odtt ttot YK"I
.._,_.. Or .... teett 11My ....... a "'" Id I ' i... 0.... Viet I-, ,.._,, RIKll, c.llfw11la .1-1.•,,._.,,.. u.Ht ..... , ---·...._"' PVBUC NOTICt:o "* ....,., ..... CA..... • •ntry Aleodelft -M, lt-11
•PUBUC N~C• .. .-.-= ....... "'-·1~'~ Kr""· ..,., .. ""'*'• ms •11ca1111 va111 .:. .---....... .,.. • ........ PICTIT'ICIUllUM•IJI l'ltct,..__1Mcll,Clll1-fllt.,._1, J-t, t, 16, It,: ,,..., MAMa ITATC.MIMT Tlll1 Ml•• I• ~eMIKlld tly e Tiit ......... ,.,_ I• ............. ,.1,.,..,., _ .. : .laMC.w.11•
NAT ION AL HOU SI NO a.-c.wtMr-• 01\IELOl'M• .. T, Ifft .Wttttrll' "-ffl(,_ •••••cec l .. DUl'fRIAL lllOneaOl>&""'-'Clln• l'ln• ..... tt1, ....... ,1 ••nll, -••rt"'-Ml:lfttS
IUtLOt .. :..Ql9fl~ .... TOHU.MCOMOUCMYtl-..H ~--' Tlllt ............ -"'" wltfl ltlt ............. ' .... ..... . .. .. '-· .. .,.._......... ya...lf0r...,c:-, ... Mey ".-rt J. ~-. ... ...... ,..c:i...i. c: ....... Cel......... ti.I"'· raMI, ............ llNcfl, ~ GONe~ ......... WtY .. latlle Tlltl ....... lt~liYlftll!-a..-~ .... .....,. ...... ~· .... '* ..,.....,. O..aOWMr
Cllll ... tlr.:"'41" OH MLa ea1• & .... ...,
w1111a C"11l.IC IATING P'U<•I .. TMI .......... -..... """ -........ CllMwo.M NII elcaMllC ...... r.~ et MU C-'YOltftltlfOr--.CM!ty91tMer :.0.1"1 ..
Wartltf ·-· .._ .. ,.,._ e.Mfl, .. "'1 ~C. ...... cat...,,...., .......
l'W41.., or-. c..-°""• ,,...., ,... ..... or .... c:-. o.i1t--.
.1-.1. ,... '4"'4n .... , "· "' Jwwt..... "'~
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SERVICES
\rr\l•t• 1'>1tt'd0f)
EMPLOYMENT &
Pa£PAUTION
'<'IWlotl '""''""''°" J~w.,.,...,.. lfflpw. ......... .
MERCHANDISE
Anl"l-~IJP••Mf'' .... ~ tfd,~ M••t"•b C•mtr•• a [Qw,.l'MnJ C•b
Uoc• .""'-'to..
•"\;rtlltWf' t,; 11 .... s.1 .. -... ~....UC,,OQdt Jt•tlr) LllnWC~
Ne<l\tMt> ~ttttlt•rM"Wt
Mlte•lltMCMJ, ~ •"'"' "'tw1.lul lnMr"m'fth Olf1<11 f'llf• t t:q~op Peu t:=~~~~~~ Spono"' GotMh Stott ~f"lkttf't S..r ~T.., ... u.r • .r.."*"' -
BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT
AUTOS, NEW (;_,..,
U..Wral AUTOS, usm
AM\; .... ._
C.dtU... &~ l.llrf.,., . i:.-~-·· etlf ~·· ~·
, ...
11111 IOO'I
1011 ·-•• ·-·-ICD< ... .... ... ·-lllU ""' , . IOH IOH
}f: u• llllill '"'
llllll '* ·~ llOO llllO , .. IM la.ti lflOll -JIOI uoo llDO ----mio
llOO -
....... ... o
llJI) ---llO» -llM$ --......,
""" .... am --IOll Ml -fll)l1
llOOO ...., ----
!0010 -llOJO ---IOIO -IOIO
tllt ... Silt .... ... ... .. ,.
tltll MOO
Wllu -IOJll -.. -... --
-
Ml -. .. •11 9'11 .. -.., --• tu) -·-ftftP9rl1tl • ifMl LlftfOlo •• 111<,1 ~ .... ,,("k '"7 Mm~l'l' -··::1. -~ It -... _, ... ,_Uo --·· -~ ..... , .,.
v ••• 11914
'"'•hOol~
USITHI
DAILY PILOT
"PAST
llSULT ..
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642·1671
...Hl
Mllshtr'• Moffet:
All rt>1.1l u tall' ad·
ver lis e d I n th is
nrw1paper 18 1ul1Jecl to
lht• F edPral ~·uu llous. ma Act of lllCiS wh1C'h
makes It 1lle11ul tu Jd
vertiae "any prclcrencl'.
limllat1un, o r d111
cr1m1nat1on bu11cd o n
rac11. color, rel1a1on,
sex. or national or111in.
or an intention to mukt•
any !IUl'h pll'll'lt'O('U,
l 1 m 1 t ll l ion • u 1 11111
cr1m111atwn '
Thu, newi.papt'I "Ill not
knowingly at'tl'pl an}
adverl 1s1ng ror real
estate which 111 1n '1ola
lion ot thl' law
ERRORS: Advertlsen
1hoc.ild check their ads
dally and report er-
ron lmrMdlately. The
DAILY PILOT assumea
llablllty for the first
Incorrect Insertion
only.
Houses for Sale
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Getterol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUMDECk HAS
CHAMMEL VIEW
Only $209.900' <:hJt mmi.:
Ne" Port Reach I Ud1 m .
reatu1 es \\ l><x.I 1>u1 rung
fircplat·e llUJ.:l' O\l'I
'>lll'U 1111 "''h ll'<ll C''I\
e1t'd patio O"rll'r ''
moll\ atetJ and w11l111.: to
help I tnance' J q:,l llSll'd
Cull now. 673 1!550
THE REAL ESTATERS
DECORATOR
CONDOS I 19,900
W1mltng gret:nlt.,.lt., leacl
to llright sin.1itle ltlltry
rnndo Exqu1~1tel) de
curated with t·u.,lom
wallpapt•1 dlld l .ibmt•lr}
lhruuut Fm mal timing
room too' ()y, nt.'1 w1 II
tooperate w11h lmanl·
lll!l Won·1 la~I JI lht'
p l'll'P, '" t·all nuw
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
DECORATOR
MEED ED
IN l' \MEO SllOHES'
Bnn~ pdinl. t•aqx:l and
1deai. for th1!> hJlf a
mslhon clollar ilxt·1 It .,
the lowest pncl' let' '>tnl I
pie on thr market b~
$125.000 He dt•Vt'I'. tht.'n
enjoy your pn1f1h'
Great assumahle ti.I TD
'
Homes for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
Gwrol IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLEX
POTENTIAL
<:osta Mean. remod~led
4 lidrm 2 bath hume on
6,000 sq rt R 2 lot ~aby
conver sion t o duplex
C O.Qjl> c r p I u m b e d !
l''i f e pla ce' Laqp·
s torage ¥heel Only
1112.000• 646·717t
THE REAL ESTATERS
FIMAHCIMG OK
Sharp 6 yea1 uld Curona
del Mut duplt>x
SpdC..-IOU~ and wood~y
Super lul'Jtw11 S320 000
only 570,000 down
A l>I\ '"on or
llurbor ln'l.''lment Co
MEWCOMDOS
13' J.', 50', SOLD
Nl-:W lfi50S() FT
2 & J lid1 m vo-. uo~
l'l'Olt.'11t ti I I\ l' d hi
Ral ax1• " 111H•lll'l l>
m1rro!>, It ,1,h 1·11m ,., au
t•ontJ11wn1111: .... ,tlk m ...
puul & JJ1·u111 '!>. ', hlul'k
to all s hopp1111: & lhl•atl•r
!> Next lu µatk
·WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380 \\ \\ t 1'>1111 l' \I
01>1.·11 to " li:ll 511.15
l' H L\ 1 I \ ~. F I :\ A :\
Cll\G 131 ,•, '"""l. op
lll>n pui.i.tl11 l1t:-\'er.v
lmt.'!>l nt'W l'ONUO huv
111 llJt bor aH·a 2 & J
HUH \I.~ BA 1650 '>IJ fl
lnromparahlt· amt'nlltl.'S
m areJ \\ (' hJ' l' O" nl't
Im t.'Slorlt "hu "1 ll leJ..,l'
with upllon lo pun·h;ii.e
to '"-t'll 4uJlll1l'CI ISu~ers
Don't 1111~~ 1·hunt·t• for
I u t u 1 l' ti 1 s 1• o u n t
owner::.htp
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380\\ \\ llwn t • \I
01wn to;,
li31 505.'i
BUY THE BEACH
Right on the t·irnal m
Newport bhores 1\ huge
3 Bdrm 3 Ila lamely
homt-tn 1mmac·ulate
1;ond1tt011 \ '>UJll't ·Iota
lion uni~ 'll'll'> to the
lwach \ltlJl'll\t' 1mnc..-r
f111anc1n.: J\ .itlJbll.' ,\
:-uper buy al $2110.000
Balboa Island Rlty
673-8700
Call today befot t.' 11 ·i. ----------sold 673·8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
DUPLEX
3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit
1'~1replare. built·ms Ex
cellent rental area Near
beach & bay $235.000 .
642·22S3eves.
associated
&ROKERS--RlAlTORS
l02'. I/II Solboo 61 • lb& I
NEWPORT
BARG AIM
Picturesque back bay 3
Bdrm 2 balh, pnde or
ownership home with a
rountry feeling' Large
kitchen. very pri\ ute
yard. Bargain priced at
SJ68,SOO. Call to see•
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCEANFRONT
2 Bdrmi.. 2 ba. unlurn
New. S850 yrl~
IAYFRONT
3 Bdrm. I ba. unlurn
Mmlt'ond SllSOyaly
CHANNEL FRONT
3 Bdrm. 2 ba, unfurn.
S750yrly.
associated
BROKERS Rf Al TORS
JO]', ..,_ Botbr-,o t-'' 1 bb'
SUM SET
WATCHING
IS AFFORDABLE 1n
Cameo Highlands' ~lini
manswn 1s priced to sell
at $349,000 Large els
sumable lsl. plus owner
will carry Sl00.000 2nd
TD. Spectuculur oc·ean
ne'"S frurn ''' ing, din·
mg and nrni.ter bdrm
Huge lot with beuuuful
grounds Don't he::.1tate.
call 673·8SSO
THE REAL ESTATE RS
CLASSIC ELEGANCE ON WATER
aura Ashley-papers & acctnh plus
magnificent ........ Ir ct.slCJl. Two story
with prf•ah ,.....,. Mitt, a total ... tty
ahH1ph..-. In thl1 4 bed. wlt91 1.-
f.,..nn. wfth 1Rg11h Pub of wood It~
C)lass. Separ..te fo,.,... ..,.__ l...tfM
patio + dock fw a 50ft. boat. SI ,400.000
fn. 631-1400. OWMr say• MMlt price .. .,.... ...... ,
UDO ISLE (SUBMIT LEASE/OPT)
lrf9't ed u..rM 2 story °" 45' lot. M.w ,.w, walp•er ......... 4 ...... diWltCj
'"'·· 2 frpka, SUftftJ.. patio. $475,000.
631·1400.
EASTBLUFF VIEW HOME
Lib "ewl WClftdffN ·-=~ ..... wltlii HW tMcor Hw~. W flMn, croww
...Wing ................ J ..... ...,.,
reoM •d fonaol dlRla9 rOOM ...... Sl4t,opo.
WATERFRONT HOMES, IN • REAL ESTATf
Seit•.~'"'*· p'-'"' ~-
tU6 w C°"'I Hwy ~ •• ,...,,.,. ,,,,..,.
Ntwpcirt ltll!h WIOl lllMd
llt·t• 67WMI
.. = -,..
~
Orange County phmners, con·
cerned that development plans
for the south county Irvine Coast
area may be headed for trouble,
are asking stale coastal com·
missioners to d~lay this week's
bearing on the plan.
Comptlssioners are scheduled
to begin Wednesday in San Fran·
-clsco of the plan for nearly 11,000
acres between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach.
Helene Kornblatt, a com·
mission planner, said she expect·
ed commissioners will honor the
county's request for a contin·
uance but likely will open the
publlc hearing to accommodate
persons who have traveled to $an
Francisco for the session.
County planners, who prepared
the Local Coastal Plan document
in conjunction with the Irvine
Cor;n pany -owners of the coastal
MPillt
TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1981
FEATURES 82
BUSINESS BS
STOCKS 87
acrea1e,aresee1t1nsmoretirne~
·•fine-tune'· their plan.
In particwar, officials claim,
the county wants time to rewrite a
dedication program spelled out in
the plan.
As the development plan now
reads, the Irvine Company would
dedicate 2,650 acres of vacant land to the county as open space
but not unW it gets 90 percent of
its needed build.log permits.
Laguna mulls extension
Sycamore Hills sale still under consideration
Laguna Beach City Manager:
Ken Frank will ask city council
members tonight for yet another
extension of a negotiating agree·
ment with a development firm
seeking to buy a portion of
Sycamore Hills.
And a councilman who warned
last month there would be no
more extensions said today he'll
go with the city manager's rec·
om mendation, adding that the
land buy agreement is ··a fait
accompli."
Laguna Beach purchased the
522-acre Sycamore Hills proper-
ty between Laguna Canyon and
El Toro roads more than two
years ago for S6.4 million to end
a raft of lawsuits between the Ci·
ty and the former owners,
Rancho Palos Verdes Corp.
By the end of June; the city
will owe Rancho a principal of
S5.4 million and interest in the
amount of $1.4 million.
The city has been negotiating
with the Baywood Development
Group of Newport Beach for
more than a year for sale of
about 62 acres in Sycamore Hills
to the company for $5.4 million.
Negotiations became snaeged
earlier this year when the city
refused to take a subordinated
note should Baywood be unsuc-
cessful in its venture to build 300
townhouses on the land.
And when attorneys for·
Rancho said they would not ac-
cept the risk should . Baywood
fail, negotiations broke orr.
Rancho has since agreed to as·
sume the risk, but details of the
land buy still need to be
finalized before final agreement
is reached.
City Manager Frank will tell
council members tonight that
agreement "is likely," but will
require at least four weeks to
settle a few disagreements and
write up the final negotiating
agreement.
Tonight's meeting begins at 6
in council chambers, 505 Forest
Ave.
The key to Baywood's latest
offer is that the firm will pay all
accrued interest as of the date of
closing (approximately $1.5
million) plus a Principal amount
of $3.9 million.
That would leave the city with
a debt to Rancho of Sl.5 million.
Frank said the city will still
have approximately 460 acres in
Sycamore Hills with which to
raise the remaining funds.
Councilman Howard Dawson,
who reluctantly supported an ex·
tension last month, told the
council at that lime that .. if it
doesn't go June 2 <tonight), it
will go no further.'·
He says the city has other op·
lions, other than Baywood, for
paying off the debt to Rancho.
But the councilman said today
he is confident negotiations are
entering the final lap and an
agreement is imminent.
"It has been accomplished in
princlple," the stock brokerage
manager said. "AJl that remains
is to couch the agreement in the
proper legal terms which satisfy
the city attorney and attorneys
for Rancho and Baywood."
o.ley ........ ,...
Look, up fn the sky, it's AirCal's new $22 million Super 80. The so-called "quiet jet" made its maiden
passenger flight from John Wayne Airport Monday.
$22 million DC-9 jet debuts
Bad tire delays Super 80 flight from Orange County
By FREDERICK SCROEMEHL
Of .. o.lty ...........
There she was, the new pride
of the AirCal fleet, a $22 million
state-of-the·art airplane, sitting
on the apron at John Wayne
Airport with a bad tire.
Not Oat, mind you , but in bad
enough shape to worry the
grounCl crews that wanted every·
thing to be just right on Mon·
day's maiden journey of Air
Cal's first DC-9 Super 80.
Coast found little to -be... happy
with on this overcast morning.
The pilot, Ca pt. Larry
Bernard, was apologetic. He an·
nounced there 'd be free
cocktails for the 160 passengers.
During the flight to San Fran·
cisco from Orange County,
Bernard twice told passengers
via the plane's intercom that he
considered the Super 80 to be a
"beautiful airplane."
If the person sitting in front of
you decides to recline his seat,
plan on being nose-to-nose with
the package of peanuts and
driAk sitting on your tray table.
Another flaw -one a
stewardess said "I'll fix next
week if I have anything to say
about it" -is that seat numbers
are virtually impossible to read.
The numbers are located above
the windows, far out of the line
of view of passengers walking
down the aisle.
State planners contend this
means that it could be up to 30
years before the acreaae Is put in
the public's hands.
A better plan, they suggest,
would be for the Irvine Company
to dedicate land before any build·
Ing starts.
The building permits would aJ.
low the Irvine Company to build
up to 2,000 homes, several multi·
story hotels, offic~ bulldiois and
tworoada.
Commission planners claim
putting open land Into the public's
hands will ease the burden of de·
velopment.
The state planners also have
been critical ol the Irvine Com·
paoy's propoeal that it be allowed
to develop 500 motel rooms and
50,000 square feet of commercial
space near the newly created
Crystal Cove State Park.
A second public hearing on tbe
so-called downcoast plan la
cioheduled to be heard on June 18
in Los Angeles.
With the requested delay, com·
mission planners claim It is likely
that most of the public testimony
on the plan will be taken at that
time.
O.lly f'llet ...... Illy O.wy A....,_
Approximately 100 people squeezed into the auditorium at Newport Harbor High School to participate
in public forum on expansion of John Wayne Airport.
Airport plan assailed
Newport leaders cheered as they attack expansion
By STEVE MAKhLE
Of .... Deify 1'11111 ltltff
Newport Beach city leaders
brought nearly 700 people to
their feet cheering Monday after
taking turns blasting the county
and its plans to expand John
Wayne Airport.
The public airport expansion
hearing at Newport Harbor High
School 1 billed as "The facts,
the figures and the fight for the
future" -was staged as an
educational forum.
But many in the packed school
auditorium compared the meet·
Ing to a pep rally and said they
hope their anti-expansion
message gets through to county
supervisors, who control the
airport.
Newport Councilman Don
Strauss brought the first roar of
approval when he said the coun-
ty's airport master plan "is
more of a disaster plan ...
A Beckman Instruments lnc.
executive, Strauss said "if my
company went about its business
like the county does, we'd be in
terrible shape."
Strauss said the master plan,
which would aJlow for increased
dally takeoffs as noise is
decreased, ls "an enormous
gamble.··
Clarence Turner, president or
the Mariners Community· As·
sociation and one of six speakers
at the hearing, said the county
and its airport plans has created
"an atmosphere of fear" in Newport.
"The supervisors remind me
of the cross-eyed discus thrower
who couldn't throw very well,
never set any records but sure
scared the hell out of bis spec·
tators."
He said more jet departures
from the airport would lead to a
"mole-like existence" for
homeowners.
Others speakers included
m ayo~ Jackie Heather, Coun·
cllman John Cox, Newport City
Attorney Hugh Coffin and Pierce
0 ·Donnell, an attorney from the
Los Angeles law firm represent·
ing Newport in its latest lawsuit
against.. the county.
.. Your council is determined
to fight as long as it takes to get
just and equitable treatment for
Newport Beach,·· attorney
O'Donnell said.
Curb flays BrO'Wll's
'bankrupt' ·policies
By IOllN NEEDHAM
0( .... D4llfy ...... ....,
Unless the state turns away
from the "less is better, small is
heautiful" policies of Gov. Jerry
Brown 's administration ,
California's future will be
bankrµpt.
That's the message Lt. Gov.
Mike Curb had for more than 400
members of the Building In·
dustry Association 's Orange
County chapter Monday night at
the Airporter Inn in Irvine.
Curb's speech was frequently
interrupted by loud applause as
he called for reductions in busi·
ness regulations, an end to the
Coastal Commission, more
freeway construction, harsher
penalties for crimes aod a ~
turn of capital punishment. t
And Curb left little doubt wno
he thought should be sitting in
the governor's office when
Brown's term expires in 1982.
"What you need is a new gov-
ernor," Curb said, g1:if19ing
broadly.
Repeating President Reagan's
"return to basics" theme, Curb
said the size of the state's gov·
ernment must be drastically re·
duced.
''We must start to rid
ourselves of the bureaucratic ob·
stacles that stand in the path of
growth in our society," Curb
said. "We have reached the
point where if we don't change
the counter-productive policies
of the past few years. we will
bankrupt our future.··
The lieutenant governor also
criticized the slate Coastal Com·
mision. He said the stale must
get out of land use management
and return that power to local
governments.
"The Coastal Commission has·
gone far beyond its original
mandate. and is to a large
· degree responsible for our cur-
rent housing shortage and high
costs to everyone." he said.
Curb described the high costs
.for housing as a '·supply and de·
mend problem." He said the
supply of affordable housing is
down because state agencies
like the Coastal Commission
have o\>er -regulated the building
industry.
Curb garnered the loudest ap-
plause when he called for the re·
turn of the death penalty. "It
would partly solve the problem
of overcrowded prisons." he
said with a laugh. AirCal took delivery of the
t\rst of four Super 80s in mid·
May. The plane is now being
used in regularly scheduled
flights between Orange County
and San Francisco Fay-area
locations. •
"There are all kinds of com·
puters up here to play with,"
Bernard said. Most of the trip,
he said, wu flown under
automatic pilot. However, the
landing was conducted by
Bernard. Ot;TD. record budget approved
Curb sharply criticized
Caltrans director Adriana Gian·
turco, who, he said, caused the
state to lose!.. millions of dollars
in rederal aia for road construe·
tion,
He said California's highway "It's a new aircraft ... they
want to make sure they get it
right," a passenger service
representative explained over
the intercom to the throng
packed into the boarding area at
the airport.
"It's tremendous ... I think
it's a great airplane," comment·
ed Capt. Stewart Moore follow-
ing the return flight to Orange
County Monday night. •
Officials say final total could reach $106 million ~:::mdsa~~~~~~ a::~\~~d ~::~
The response came in the
form of nervous smiles, snide.
'comments and exasperated
stares.
The scbedUJed 8:30 a.m. de·
parture of the plane -touted as
a partial solution to the jet noiH
problem at the aJrport -was
delayed '4 minutes Eveo u
passen1ers ~e to the plAAe,
worken werf atlll busy with
wrenct. ud 1reaH on Ute two front. Wheela. ·
The airline Lbal prtdet1 ltAlf
oa bavbll tlM best ... um•,..
OiN ot 11111 ....... U..:..Welt
Like other AirCal pilots who
wlll ny the Super 80, Moore, a
Corona del Mar resident, spent
12 days at ground school and
numerous others In simulator
training lo leam how lo ny the
new aircraft.
Both nights were smooth. And
tbe reduced amount of nolae pro-
duced by the planes to fusela1e·
mounted jet en1inet was clearly
detectable.
For thoee accustomed to 0)'·
Ins AlrCal'• fleet of Boeln•
7371. ridlni tn UM au.,.,. • ii
aomelhlns, ot a treat.. Except for
one thins. Jf let roOln was 'DOft·
ex.latent in tbe Botbta 771, ll'a
t\feD W'Dl"M lD tbit ""*' •.
#
The taraeat budget ever fot
the Orange County Transit Dis·
trlct -more than SlOO million ......
was approved Monday by di•·
trict dlrectors.
OCTD officials aatd today the
fiaal total eou.ld reach about 1106
mllllon, but thia won't be de-
termined until latel".
At a meeUn1 1 month a10, the
directou reviewed an $80
million tliuqet for tbe 1111·8' fll.
C§l year .. 'l'be ft1ure wu tn·
creaaed after more than $30
111UU• in federal trutl became
available. .
in Anabelm and an unspecified
number of new vehicles, an
OCTD spokesman said.
The additional grants didn't
chan1e earlier prop0sals for a
S71.8 milllon operations bud-et,
wllleb ts $18 million more than
projected for this fiscal year.
The increase ls lo line with the
district'• continued 1rowth pat·
terll . AJmo.st 88 million
passenaen U'e pro,Jected to rkM
OCTD Mel in the 1981·82 rtle.t
year compAncl to 29.4 mlllion
who roM um year d•ptte a
strike by baa drhen aod
mecbanle1 which stopped
aervtte tor motl of February.
In odler .~. the board 0.
Cllrectora uriti4 to Mi a ffn· •
ernor are usin1 abusive tactics
_ ~to get the publlc to use public
ttnued subsidy from the co y transJ>()rtation.
government for discount b s
fares for senior citizens. 'E'';;.·JLJ-~..::. A $938,300 subsidy granted Jut r.UlftUl.IHVen
September ls expected to last
untll April 1982. Monday's de· ~la al j1al'k
etalon was to seek an extension.
With tbe aubetdy, seniors can.
ride fOf' ~ centa durlnc busy,
ruah hour per1od1 and a dime
Wl"°'8l Ult aabsldy, sen.1o·rs
wouJ4 be tkted the replar
U ·cent fare dudna peak
rl~ pertodl, said Jame•
Relcbert, OCTD 1eneral
mana11r. State law requires
tranatt d.lttrlcta to provlct. di.a·
count f art1 dWinl Slack u-.
-GUNN IOC1l'1'
The Laguna Folkdancera will
celebrate the be1lnnJn1 of aum
· mer Wednesday ..-ith an evening
ol ducifte at the Main Beach
Park OQidoof buketball cowta
The sroup ot J5 to 40 daneen
-tome In costume -wUl
perform dancea from man1
par11Ofthe1lobe.
Spedaton aa4 -" atroUen
are lavtted to watd 'lM 7 to I
p.m. feil\Mtlet.
•
-= §
•9'••~ .. •=••• coessouoscco ••••••• as a ssssccoc 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 o o o o a c 04 t'
D H/L/CIN
NAKED TRUTH DEPr. -Coeta Mesa civic leaden,
wbo have lone campaiped for community virtue, have prob·
ably broken out ln a cue of profuse pen~lraUon today
after the Supreme Court's decision saying 'Na.y" to Mt.
Ephraim, New Jeney. Well you ~Y m11ht uk what ln tb~ world does Mt. Ephraim, New Jeney have that would
ca\lle a heavy sweat tn llesatown, here on our very own
Ora~ie Co*lt?
Nakedness, that's what. · ~·
Costa )f eaa bas a Ion• , ,
heritage ol battllnl a1alnat th~ ·· . • •
aim of ~ mis~ded IOult ~~ .. == p::~sto!a'ft:m~ar-Jll 1111'1111 &f9'11
MT. EPIUlAIM, popul&·
Uon 5,625, below Camden, near tbe crossroada of routes 130,
295 and 28, al*<> bu civic leadert equally outraced by the pro-
f esaionally unclothed. 'lbus it wu that the cops ot that New
Jeney borough slapped an arrest on one Juliette A.DD DtLu-
ciano and her alleaed accomplice for offering live nude danc-
ing at a spot called the Six TtilrtMn Chlb.
Troubl was, the cue l'Ot ae(if yoa'll pardon the
explleSlkm) ..iJ tbe way U\) to Uae e Court Of the United
States. And tbe trouble with thM wu . at the Nakeda won on
a 7 to z vote.
'"!'he borough totally excludes all live entertainment, in· Cludina noa-oblcene nude cllndn&i'' wrote Justice Byron R. "'Whiner" White, in the JQJortty opinion.
NON-OBSCENE NUDE dancing? Costa Mesa city brass
probably paled, trembled and fainted upon reading that com-
binaUon of words. They always figured the words nude and ob-
"Keep i1 clean now! We're flying owr Ctnta Meaa ... ·•
scene just naturally went together. Like peaches and cream.
So long as you don't peel the peaches, that is.
But Mr. Justice White continued to conclude, "Nudity
alone does not place otherwise protected material outside the
mantle of the First Amendment ... "
Protected material? Now the Mesa civic lights ought to be
puzzled by that·one. They don't figure anything is protected
when people run around in the All-together, not body nor soul.
DESPITE TIDS 'LATDT Supreme Court surprise, it's
doubtful that Costa Mesa will fmd the local saloons abruptly
importing dancing ctrls.
Time was, of course, when Mesatown was indeed invaded
by a watering spot on Harbor Boulevard known aa Baby
Doll's. It was widely rumored that within its cement block
walls, female dancen performed wearing little more than a
smile.
Then Poppa Joe's and the Firehouse shocked the central
business district with loud signs proclaiming that their danc-
ing ladies were nude, nude, nude. And that iot Costa Mesa's
finest vice cops busy, busy, busy. One bust followed another.
MAYBE THAT OUGJll' to be re-phrased. Yes. They ar·
rested a lot of dancers who weren't carrying any identification
at the time. That's betteri
Since then, things have quieted on Costa Mesa's unclothed
tront. Oh well, there have been a couple of modeling studios
and a dancehall to keep the vice cops in business but most of
the local starken bav«' been kiddies in wading pools.
Still, the Supreme Court may have given Mesa's City Hall
some new jitters. Don't go visiting there now and abruptly
fling off your overcoat.
HIGH COURT OMDVBBS, however, have suggested
that the new ruling on professional nakedness probably means
that the New Jersey town just h'cad a loosely writte:l anti-buff
law.
'lbat should ease Costa Mesa's worry about virtue. Costa
Mesa writes ordinances so tight that they squeak.
Even the birds and the bees watch it around Mesatown. .
Clean Upper Ray vowed Fanrwr's
Inventor claims device, new method& foolproof "':0-~1 .
OtUe "Andy;. Andrews bu •pent olne YtlJ'I at Mesa?
and $12,000 out ol bt1 own pocket puraulnc ht. aelf·
cleanln1 harbor toventtoo wblch he claim• would
rid the Upper Newport Bay ol ltl allt once and for
all.
Andrews, a retired truck driver who Jlvea ln
Anaheim, bu hauled worklnt model• of hit lnven·
tton all over the country ln bopet someone mltbt
become lntereated.
He's been to Waahlnaton. D.C., to Sacramento
three times and to the offices of every lawmaker
who would let htm in the Iron~ door.
MQet recently, be spent Sl,100 aendln1 •urveya
to 20,000 Newport residents, tryin& to win lntereat
ln his aelf-cleantna harbor idea.
He claims 1,8'8 people have responded to b!s
survey and that 97 percent of the persons favor bis
approach to cleaning out the mud-choked bay.
Next Sunday, for the flnt time, Andrews will
abow off models of bis invention to Newport City
Council members at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
He's excited. He says be feels like he'a fl.Dally
on the move.
"Th.is is the only possible way you'll ever 1et
the back bay cleaned out and keep if cleaned out,"'
he boasts.
"Tbat idea to do some dred1ing ls Juat a waate of taxpayer's money," be adds.
t
Plans for a Pto1ram
that would brine fresh
produce directly from
Southern California
farms to Oran1e Coast t
consumers are being •
sllscussed by 1rower~ ~
and Orange County Falt,
official•. ·
A Farmers Market"
operation on a portion of
the fairarounda parkin1~
lot In Costa Mesa ha~
been suggested by tht:.
Orange County Farm~
Bureau, said Kenoetti
Fulk, fair manager. · ·= ·~ Fulk said bureact.,
representatives are ey-·:
ing the fairgrounds loca; ·)
tlon for a certifiecl
Farmers Market similat ·
to one now operated i
Lona Beach. · · Produc.r,. •
is sold directly to th
.....,~......... consurner," he said:· His invention, which he says must be aeen to
be appreciated, works on the theory of hameaain1
tidal action to scrub out the bay. Anaheim resident Ottie Andrew• 1how1 off • ·There is no mid~
"'-""-.. _ •• .;11 .. _1 , , nd dleman; the farmer ge~: Tidal gates would direct water movement
clockwtae around the bay, he says. Movement of
the water, which he estimates would reach speeds
up to 13 miles per hour at some points, would clean
out the sand and silt.
'ucw~e nc says WJK ,~ p to c.ean •!·t a sand a little better price ancl
rom UJ>'l)er Newport Bay. He unU demo1'l$trate so does the consumer.""
plan Sunday. . Such a market, Fulk
He says since childhood he's been interested in
tidal currents and cleaning up rivers and !>ays.
said, probably would not
get under way until
a fter July's annual
Orange County Fair ani
that details would hav~
to be worked out.
To get the full power of tidal action, a partial
channel would be cut through the Balboa
Peninsula, he explains.
When he was young, he says, he came up with
an invention that lowered the depth of a
Massachusetts river from 4 feet to 9 inches. To keep water flowing around the bay, a series
of •'water fences•' would be set up in the middle of
the bay.
He claims he simply dammed up the river and
when enough water bad built up, knocked down the
dam. The rush of water, be recalls, not only
IQwered the river but washed out a yacht club
dock.
"I don't know what
they (the Farm Bureau)
plan to offer, but it won 't
be a big inco me
generator for the fair,"
he said. "It'll mostly be
a community services
effo rt by the fair ·
grounds."
The main criticism of the plan has been that
the water current would erode places like Dover
Shores and Shellmaker Island.
Andrews says be has a cure for that. He
claims if an area starts erodi.Qg, a new water fence
would be erected to bold back the water flow.
"The folks back there were a little amazed,"
he says. "They wouldn't let me do it again."
He claims bis Upper Newport Bay plan is free
of such risks and says he plans to keep pushing It
until someone listeps.
"It would be just like nature in lip·top form,"
Andrews speculates.
Goat top
'motmr'
PINOLE (AP) -The
city of Pinole may soon
be in the goat rental
business.
The idea, says Fire
Chief Alex Clark, would
be to rent the goats to
property owners whose
yards are overgrown
with weeds. The goats
would munch the weeds
and reduce the fire
hazards associated with
overgrown grass and
brush, according to
Clark.
Pinole is taking the
idea from another East
Ba y town, Albany,
where privately owned
goats are rented to resi-
dents with the city's
blessing.
Sheriff
Cuba refugees die violently
Miami reports 90 slain since early '80 arrivals
MIAMI (AP> -At a rate five times higher
than for the general populati<a, Cubans who fled to
Florida in last year's "Freedom FloWla" are end-
ing up the victims of homicide, authorities say.
Ninety of the Cubans, dubbed "'Mariels" for
their port of departure to distinguish them from
thousands of other Cuban exiles here, have been
slain since the"first of them arrived-in April 1980.
According to the FBI, that's more people than
were slain in all of 1980 in Fort Lauderdale, Orlan-
do and St. Pet.eraburg combined.
A total of 62. l percent of the new refugee
deaths bu been homicides, five times the rate in the
general population.
''It's mind-bo1glin1. An astronomical
number," sald Dade Chief Medical Examiner Dr.
Joseph Davis.
Many of the ¥timated 90,000 Mariel refugees
now in South F1orida have setUed in Miami, where
most of the slaylngs occur. Miami homicide Sgt.
Ernie Vivian said that 36 of the city's 113 slaying
victims so far this year were Mariel refugees.
lo the Mariel cases in which arrests have been
made, Vivian said the defendants usually are
Mariel refugees also. Twenty-four refugees have
been arrested this year ln connection with 18
Ms. Penton was hit 10 times. Fuentes. who
came to Florida alter being released from a Cubril
prison. was hit six iti mes .
Mental health officials believe frustratiob,
Idleness anct cultural confusion -particularly
among the refugees released from prisons -m9
be at the root of the homicides. ·
''Dealing with freedom and choices is nci
easy, especially for those who have lived throu;h
long periods of confinement," said Maria Valdet·
Beola, a psychologist who counsels refugees at tbe
Miami Mental Health Center. "The level of
frustration is high when they are seeing overabua· dance in which they don't participate."
Trying to solve the crimes can be like workilfg
in a vacuum. There ad few friends and relatives
to help police. Oft.en even identifying the body can
take days, and at least one Mariel homicide victilJI
still is classified as "unknown remains."
When police can identify the victims and ap-
prehend a suspect. they oft.en still cannot de-
termine the motive for the slaying. Although ff.
legal drug activity Is a major problem in South
Florida, police say drug disputes account for rel·
atively few of the Cuban refugee slayings.
• Miami slayings. qmts post. "Marlels kill each other,"' Vivian said. "U we 01•1B see'--J-lay didn't have them, our murder rate would be down LF.i. lf1J lie
BAKERSFIELD <AP) by one-third."
_ Kem County Sheriff "Let's face it,. the sudden upsurge of ;R 9 d; uit .-.-. J.-AI Loustalot announced homicides in this community is not within the ., • .,e., u.lf..re
today that be will retire native population,'' Davis said. ,
when bis current term The killings renect no pattern beyond the WASHINGTON (AP) -Saying the costs ant
ends in January 1983. familiar factors of alcohol, guns and domestic dis· benefits of the nine-digit zip code have not been.
Loustalot, 54, noted turbances. The typlcaJ Mariel bomlclde'vtctim is demonstrated, the Rea1an administration has
that he will have served a slender male in bis 20s or early 30s. He dies of asked the PQltal Service to postpone ill June 1 im.·
more than 35 years with multiple gunshot wounds, stripped of bis few plementatioo date.
the department at the belonginp. The request was made this week to
end of his se«>nd term. . The bloodiest period since the boatlllt began Postmaster General William F. BOlger by the Of·
He was a captain before , was last week, on March 27. Two friends who fice of Management and Budget, which said Post_.
being elected sheriff in came to Miami aboard a boat from Mariel -Service studies did not satisfy President Reagan'11
1974 when Ch a rl es Jorge Rodri1Uei and Jose BaUes -were each sbol Feb. 17 order that any new regulations be Ulffleji
Dodge retired. in the neck as they sat on barstoola in a Miami for their impact on buainen.
lounge. Assistant Postmaster General Walt Duka said Louatalot was appoint-T t t bl i... F d F l bould be d b th d of th i.. ed to the state Board of wen Y· wo oc-away, ernan o ueot.es a rep y s rea y y e en e weea.
Corrections by Gov. and Maria Esther Penton were ridlne in a car The Poslal Service says the proposed system will
Brown in urn. together when a man with a submachine gun save labor costs by allowine more mall to be sort·
pulled up alongside them and fU"ed into the car. ed mectianically. · •--'-~~-'-~_..;;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~
School's top scholar age 7
GOURMET
MARKET
Roll call brief affair; Donnie's-solitary pupil . .
Fields," says Merlin· Rupp, a
cowboy who has a daughter who
will enter the one·room school
nest fall. "It's too far."
Rupp, who sporia a waxed
handlebar mustache, 11 a
member ol the five-member
school board. He coneedea tbe
board may eventually have t.o taee tbe issue at bu.lia1. ''But
not 1et," be says.
The acbool board meet.a once a
montb and srapplea With a 7ear-
l7 budlet ol about '85,000. Much
of that 1oea for Mt11 Groe1'
aalary -$12,800 a year -and
r VldJn1 her wttb a moblle
e near the school. IN Gro11 ti not only a
teecber. la addJttoa to Ulwet•
lfnf 1Dail ~ to tM ~ ball coaeb, abe la auperlatendeDl
of U.. tcbool dlltrlct and pr\D-
elpal ol tbe ICbool.
Tbe school bu no athletic
teams, but 11!11 Oro•• 1110
aervn u a IUl'TOl•t• coach ol aorta.
••We 10 out and a boot
In * r.Y''Doilial• IDd ,, .
' Ille ... nt.u~..s two , ..... ta. &II•
HllOol .. -..... ..., ilaJ wlUa lie_lp . fro• pre-aelaooi • tldll1riD ................. lkilftlallllliit·-~· 'Ylllllal1c..._ • ._ ....
allWL
"He learns a lot more," says
Andrea Edwards. "He's doing
real 8ood. He's leamlng a lot
more than be did in California."
Miu Grou, who la qualified to
teach firat tbrou1h eighth
1rede1, agreed the personal in·
structloo is beneficial.
•'They can work at their own
apeed," she aald. A 1lrl she
ta\11ht in kindergarten la way
ahead of her elauroates at
another acbool.
"Sbe may be la hillh acbool
when she's 10 or 11 . . . , " she
aald.
When MiJ&I Gross took the job
ln 19?.J. she had eiaht students in aia amerent iracte•. Next year.
lb• aebool plana to bave abOUt two or three students. ,
8ut M1M Grou won 'l be there.
She's moviftl on after two years at the ac:bool dl1trld., looklna for
work tn the more fDopulou1
Willamette Valley o •••*'1
Ore1on.
Plannm, eyed
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD ·
Fresh Flsh ls now plentllul. Come In and select a fresh fish or your choice from our showcase. We wlll 1ladly
met. steak and packa1e It for you at no extra charge.
Fresh Fllet of Nortbena Seabau .... 2.t8 lb.
Frea Fllet of Sole .................. 3.98 lb.
Direct From Dela.ey's Ucbea <please
aak ror a aample> Cevlelae ............. I.ti pt.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top chl>lce beef a1 at leatt 30 days to the
peak ot perfecUon.
Leaa Groud Cll11cll <Orotand ~rly> •• 1.'9 lb.
Tlllell c.t Loacloa Broll
<<1 ... at to Barbecue) •..•.••••....•.•.. Z.t8 lb.
Re1, Cut .......................... , •. I.ta lb.
Boaeleu ROiied ltoasta 1Gr~at on the
aou-i•) ................. : ........ ·1 • ••• l. ... .
ftUD OF ftAl'ftC JAlllT
CAL&; DSLANIY'I roa raas BOME . DSLIVS&Y 1aav1cs. YOUI OID&• II
l1NDD COllPL&'n l&n.IODA'l'ION no• 0&1a ..... :IG YOVa DOOa. t•M lllNlll11•
ft.SAIS> •
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Jaky Watermelon ............ 15e lb. t
Local ltucll Fresh Sj)lucb .... 4 b•. 1.tt ,
Local Grown C.cumMn . . . . . . . . 5 for I.to
Sweet Pink Grapefndt:"' ........... 3 for l.•
So. Amerteu Buaau .......... a lh9. t.• ,
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAll · 1
Oelaff7'• PTlnte La~I Clilampa-t7SO mlh
2.'fS U . er U ... ptr Hie
8el A,._ VllMJ.,. Cllftt. llue (751 •II) .• UI ea.
8mlrllloftVoAa (1.75llter> .. ,, ........ , .... u.ttea.
........, ~(TSO mll) .............. , ..... l.8 ea.
• f One (It.er) ..................................... ea.
/JI liquor and WIM plus tu.
omplete c:atertna aervit'e, from a alt-down hHMr 1
party to petty traya delivered to your hom•. CaU
Delaney'• Catfftn1 Department, alll for Tom llarUn.
SUre lloVI .... aa.M ..;...,
Im Newport Blft., Ne..,.rt 8eHll
673-5520
llllJ Pllit
"TUESDAY·, JUNE 2, 1981
FEATURES
BUSINESS
STOCKS
82
BS
87
Children get head start
by learning the basics
of computers . 85
County seeks delay for coast project
Orange County planners, eon·
cerned that development plaruJ
for the south county Irvine Coast
area may be beaded ror trouble,
are asking state coastal com·
missioners to delay this week's
he11 J,'ing on the plan.
Commissioners are scheduled
to begin Wednesday in San Fran-
cl&co or the plan for nearly 11,000
acres between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach
Helene Kornblatt, a com·
mission planner, said she expect-
ed commissioners will honor the
county's request for a conlin·
uance but likely will open the
public hearing to accommodate
persons who have traveled to San
Francisco for the session.
County planners, who prepared
the Local Coastal Plan document
in col'\junction with the Irvine
Company -owners of the coastal
acreage, are seeking moretlmeto
"fine-tune" their plan.
In particular, officials claim,
the county wants time to rewrit.e a
dedication program spelled out in
the plan. ......
As the development plan now
reads, the Irvine Company would
dedicate 2,650 acres of vacant
land to the county as open space
but not until it gets 90 percent oC
its needed building permits.
o.lty ........ ~
Look, up in the sky, it's AirCal's new $22 million Super-80. The so-called "quiet jet" made its maiden
pauenger flight from John Wayne Airport Monday.
$22 million DC-9 jet debuts
Bad tire delays Super 80 flight from Orange County
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tM o.lly ...... S!Mf
There she was. the new pride
of the AirCal fleet, a $22 million
stale-Of-the-art airplane. sitting
on the apron at John Wayne
Airport with a bad tire.
Not flat. mind you. but m bad
enough s hape to worry the
ground crews that wanted every.
thin~ to be just right on ~on
day 's maiden journey of Air-
Cal's first DC-9 Super 80.
AirCal took delivery of the
first of four Super 80s in mid·
May. The plane is now being
used in regularly scheduled
flights between Orange County
and San Francisco Bay-area
locations.
"It's a new aircraft ... they
want to make sure they get it
right.'' a passenger service
representative explained over
County airport
expansion assailed
By STEVE MARBLE
Of Ille D.llfy ...._.Sa.ti
Newport Beach· city leaders
brought nearly 700 people lo
their feet cheering Monday after
taking turns blasting the county
and its plans to expand John
Wayne AirJ>Orl.
The public airport expansion
hearing at Newport Harbor High
School billed as "The facts.
the figures and the fight for the ·
future" -was staged as an
educational fdrum.
But many in the packed school
auditorium compared the meet-
ing to a pep rally and said they
hope their abti -expanslon
message gets through to county
supervisors, who control the
airport.·
Newport Councilman Pon
Strauss brought the first roar of
approval when he said the coun·
ty'a airport master plan "is
more or a disaster plan ...
A Beckman Instruments Inc.
executive, Strauss sald "if my
company went about Its business
like the county does, we'd be in
te.r.Mble shape.·· !•!t .
Strauss said the master plan,
which would allow for increased dai~akeoffs as noise is
decre ed, is "an enormous
gamble.
Clarence Turner, president of
the Mariners Community As·
sociation and one of six speakers
at the hearing, said the county
and its a1rport plans has created
.. an atmosphere or fear" in
Newport.
"The supervisors remind me
of the cross-eyed discus thrower
who couldn't throw very well,
never set any records but sure
scared the hell out or bis spec·
talors."
He said more jet departures
from the ttirport would lead to a
.. mole-like existence" for
homeowners.
Others speakers included
mayor Jackie Heather, Coun·
cilman John Cox, Newport City
Attorney Hugh Coffin and Pierce
O'DoMell, an attorney rrom the
Loa Angeles Jaw firm represent-
ing Newport in its latest lawsuit
against the county.
the intercom to the throng
packed into the boarding area al
the airport.
The response came in the
form of nervous smiles, snide
com men ts and exasperated
stares.
The scheduled 8:30 a .m. de-
parture of the plane -touted as
a partial solution to the jet noise
problem at the airport was
delayed 44 m'inutes. Even as
passengers strode to the plane,
workers were still busy with
wrenches and grease on the two
front wheels.
The airline that prides itself
on havine the best on-time rec·
ord of any airline on the West
Coast found little to be happy
with on this overcast morning.
The pilot. Capt. Larry
Bernard, was apologetic. He an·
nounced there'd be free
cocktails for the 160 passengers.
During the flight to San Fran-
cis co from Orange County,
Bernard twice told passengers
via the plane's intercom that he
considered the Super 80 to be a
"beautiful airplane."
''There are all kinds of com-
puters up here to play with,"
Bernard said. Most of the trip,
he said, was flown under
\ automatic pilot. However. the
landing was conducted by
Bernard.
"It's tremendous ... I think
it's a great airplane," comment·
ed Capt. Stewart Moore follow-
ing the return flight to Orange
Coubty Monday night.
Like other AirCal pilots who
will fiy the Super 80, Moore, a
Corona del Mar resident, spent
12 days at ground school and
numerous others in simulator
trainjng to learn how to fly the
new aircraft.
lJ CI upset over 'naked truth'
Editor's 'playmate' pose provok·es staffers
ay IODI CADENHEAD ... ....,,........,
UC lrvlne student editor
B.arnabu Sokol bu found that
layrna out the bare fact.a lln't
ilwaya such a 1ood idea.
nte 23-year·old editor of the New University new1p1per ap-
s-rentty thought be wu beln1
funny when he posed nude and
publllhed a tew vul1ar Jokes in a
liapplement titled, "Play ant.''
; Hi• 1Hociate1 were not amUMd. About 10,000 ce>ples of
tll• lnMrt _.,. ~eated Mon· w Won the paper wu dis· lillut«t on camput.
ft• 1upplemtnt f Htured a ~ pqt wttlt Sokol Ill tlMi bUff
.. aaoUatr lDllde Piie wttb
llql ~ UDattlfed •top a
.... NOID dlllr.
'1'h •• a lot leu rneaU.fta
,
than what you see In numerous
publications';'' said media bual·
neas manager Eileen. Simon. "I
feel sorry fol' him.'"
M1. Slmon aaid Sokol la taklna
full responslblllt.y today for U\e
"humorous" ~bllcaUon, lnelucl·
Loa Jokes considered by some to
be tasteless.
Under a headline titled
•1vu11ar Jotrea•• there were
1ome refeHOee1 m1dt to the
Atlant• child murdtrt, teuSt pliY~l' BUUe Jean Kint and the
1bootln1 of presidential praa
1ecretary Jamet Brady.
Newt of the tnsert lt1ktd «at
•hen about $0 to 100 coplet ~
~. papen •ere 1tolen priOr to
dlltrtbudoa, Hid 111. Simon.
f'oaaowtlll IOIH protest by "11·
dent.I C"CMerlliD& the 'PubUcauon
a decision was made by all New
Univenity editors W rip out the
supplement.
Ms. Slmon aaJd that Sokol aup-
Ported the decision to dllpenae
wltb the ll'Llert. She slid U.. eott
WHSDe.83.
"It really WIS an untortunate
lncUltnt," 1he alld. "It wu reat-
IJ blown out of proportion."
Slnce publllblq be1an in 198'7
the last 119ue of every New
Onlvenlty publication bu in·
eluded a "humorous lnHrt.''
Two yeara: :aco oumeroua atu·
dtnta ~picture• of• wet
T-ebtn cont .. t.
Altbou1b Sokol'• tdltorahlp
explftl July t. hi hu sud he 11
wll.UllC to reslp QPW. Ua1Ytnk1
offtelall havt not ttten any dll·
clpllnary ac:tioci a1alnlt him.
State planners contend this
means that it couJd be up to 30
years before the acreage is put In
the public'shands.
A better plan, they suggest,
would be for the Ir\rine Company
to dedicate land before any build-
ing starts. •
The building permits wouJd al-
low the Irvine Company to build
up to 2,000 homes. several multi·
story hotels, office buildln&s and
two roads.
Commission planners claim
putting open land into the public's
bands wtU ease the burden of de-
velopment.
The state planners also have
been critical of the Irvine Com-
pany's proposal that it be allowed
to develop 500 motel rooms and
50,000 square feet of commercial
space near the newly created
Crystal Cove State Park.
A second public bearing on the
so-called downcoast plan lg
scbeduJed to be beard on June 18
in Los Angeles.
With the requested delay, com·
mission planners claim it Is likely
that most of the public testimony
on the plan will be taken at that
time.
Pupil bus fare adopted'
Irvine district OKs fees to meet budget pinch
Trustees for the Irvine Unified
School District have unanimous-
ly adopted a plan to charge
par~nts up to $100 a year per
child ror school busing.
The board deadlocked earlier
Monday, with members Fred
Gahm and T. John Nakaoka op-
posing the fee schedule until the
board agreed to provide free
busing for families with incomes
or over $12,000 and less than
$14,000
Originally the plan called for
free busing to be provided only
for families earning less than
$12,000.
The plan now adopted by the
board calls for families with in·
. comes of mQre than $18.000 lo
pay $100 annually for the first
and second child, $50 for the
third and nothing for tbe fourth.
Families with incomes over
$16,000 and less than $18,000 will
be asked to pay $100 for the first
child. S50 for the second. $25 for
the ~hird and nothing for the
fourth.
Those earning more than
$14,000 and less than $16,000 will
pay $75 for the first child. $50 for
the second and nothing for any
others.
Faced with a $3.5 million def-
icit. board members are look·
ing for ways to trim the budget.
Deputy Superintendent Ron Up·
ton estimates that the ree-for-Mde
program will cost the district on-
ly $254.000 next year. compared
to $678,000 for the free program
this year.
Upton predicted that even if
the current ridership of 7,000
drops, the district will still bE
able to save money by elimin11l·
ing unnecessary buses.
Many of the children are
bused for safety and conven-
ience reasons, said Upton. The
average distance tra•eled 1s 2.5
miles to three miles, he said
* * *
None of the parents speaking
at Monday's meeting opPQ ed
the fee-for-busing plan.· Board
member Elizabeth Sicoli was
absent.
School bus fees also have been
approved 1n the Capistrano,
Laguna Be ach and Newport·
Mesa Unified school dis tricts.
* * *
After-school sports
to get Irvine fee?
Free after-school sporting ac-
tivities may be the next casualty
in the Irvine Unified School Dis·
·trict 's budget cutting game.
Minutes after passing a fee for
busing Monday night, school
trustees agreed to consider a
plan to charge for extracur-
ricular activities. They'll take
up the matter at their June 15
meeting.
"It is clear cut that there will
be charges for those activities
nex l year," said board president
Frank Hurd.
Irvine Higb School Principal
Dean Waldfoyel presented the
board with three poss!~' fee
plans for sports.
Under the first plan students
would pay $75 for the first sport
they participate in, $70 for the
second and S65 for tne third.
A second plan charges stu-
dents in accordance with the
sport they play. Under the pre-
liminarv olan football. basket-
ball. softball and baseball would
run $75.
' Sports such as golf. volleyball.
wrestling. field hockey and gym-
nastics would cost $65. Soccer,
swimming and water polo would
cost $50.
Becau s e most s tudents
participate in more than one
sport, a plan charging one Oat
fee would be preferred. said
Waldfoyel. The principal sug-
gested a $140 fee.
By using any of t he three
plans hii h schools could expect
to collect $65,000 in sporting
fees. he said.
The board directed staff to
prepare a fee schedule ror re-
view by the June 15 meeting.
Curb criticizes bureaucracy
State's,growing problems laid at Gov. Brown's feet
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of tile Delly ...... S\tff
Unless the state turns away
from the ''less is better, small is ·
beautiful" policies of Gov. Jerry
Brown 's administration ,
California's future will be
bankrupt.
That's the message Lt. Gov.
Mike Curb had for more than 400
members of the Building In·
dustry Association's Orange
County chapter Monday night at
tbe Airporter Inn in Irvine~
Curb's speech was frequently
interrupted by loud applause as
he called for reductions in busi·
ness regulations. an end to the
Coastal Commiss ion, more
freeway construction, harsher
penalties for crimes and a re·
turn of capital punishment.
And Curb left little doubt who
he thought should be sitting in
the governor's office when
Brown's term expires in 1982.
"What you need is a new gov-
ernor," Curb said, grinning
broadly.
Repeating President Reagan's
"return to basics" theme, Curb
said the size of the state's gov-
ernment must be drastically re-
duced,
"We must start to rid
ourselves of the bureaucratic ob-
stacles that stand in the path of
growth ln our society," Curb
•said. "We have reached the
point where lf we don't change
the counter-productive policies
of the past few years, we will
bankrupt our futlire. ·'
The Ueutenant governor also
criticized the state Coastal Com·
mlalon. HQ said the state must
get out of land use management
and return that power to local
governmenta.
o.11,~, ........ ,....
'REDUCE GOVERNMENT'
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb
"The Coastal Commission has
gone far beyond its original
mandate, and is to a large
degree respq_nsible for our cur-
rent housing shortage and hJgh
costs to everyone," he said.
Curb described the high costs
for housln& as a •'supply and de·
mand problem." He said the
supply of affordable housi11,1 is
down because state agencies
like the Coastal Commission
have over-regulated the buildlna
industry. ,
Curb garnered the loudest ap-
plause when he called for the re·
turn of the death penalty. ''It
would partly solve the problem
of overcrowded prisons ." he
said with a laugh.
He advocated life sentences
for habitual offenders and said
tougher judges are needed. "We
need judges who will place the
victim first, not the criminal,".
Curb said. "When Ronald
Reagan was governor that's the
way it was done."
Curb s harply criticized
Caltran& director Adriana Gian-
turco. who, he said, caused the
state to lose milJions of dollars
in federal aid for road construc-
tion.
He s aid California's highway
system is falling apart, and that
Miss Gianturco and the gov-
ernor are using abusive tactics
to get the public to use public
transportation.
"They think that if they don't
build any more roads people will
leave their cars in the driv~way
and take the bus,'' Curb said.
·'The reS\lll has been a great
hardship on California com-
muters and the deterioration on
our highway system."
Curb urged a return to what
he called the "business en-
terprise" system. with higher
profits for businesses which
would In turn spur more Invest·
ment and growth.
He also said legislation should
be passed to exempt taxes on all
savlnp direeted at the housln1
market.
•'the priorities of 1981 are
very clear," Curb said. "We
must end the idea that
CalifornJa Is an unhealthy place
to do business, and we can do
•that by supporting President
R,,a1an and eett.ing government
off our backs,•'
.tJf:TD recor.d builget appr.oved
Officials say final total. could reach $106 million
'l'be tar1est bud1et ever for
the Oranse County :Transit Ola·
trict -more than $100 mllllon -
WH approved Mond•Y by dll·
trtet df~ton.
OCTD officials Hld toda,y Ult
final total could re.eh about SJ.08
mlnlOQ, but th1I won't be d•·
termlned until later .
Al • meeun.1 • month •· tM director. revl•••cl ia llO
million budpt fOI" t.M t•t .. n.
NAKED TBUTB DEPT. -Costa Mesa civic leaden.
who have long campaigned for community virtue. have prob·
ably broken out in a case of prof use peraf.lr•tion today
after the Supreme Court's decillon saying 'Nay'' to Mt.
Epbral~\ fl{ew Jerael_. ~ell you eertainly milbt uk what iD
the wor1a doe9 Mt. EPfU'aim, New Jersey have that would
cause a heavy sweat in Mesatown. here oo our very own
Orange Coast!
Nakedlfess, that's what. ~ Costa Kesa has a long · ·
beritqe Qt battlln& a1ainst the • •
•lu cl tlllole mial\lided soull ~' ...
who Would abed all their gar· Tll llRPllll ~if . menta for professional lain. ~
MT. EPDAJ•, popula·
tJon 5,625. below Camdeq ne• Ule croaroads of routes 130,
295 and a. also baa civic leaden equally outraged by tbe pro·
f eaaionally unclothed. Thus It wu tbat tbe copa of that New
Jersey borough sJapped an arrest on one Juliette Ann DILu-
ciano and het alleged accomplice tor offerin& live nude danc·
ing at a spot called the Six Thirteen Club. '
Trouble was, the case pt appeaJed <lf you •u pardon tbe
expression) all tbe way up to the &apreme Court ol the United
States. And the trouble with that was that the Nakeds won on
a 7 to2 vote.
· "The borough totally excludes all live entertainment, in·
eluding non-obscene nude dancing," wrote Justice Byron R.
"Wbizzer" White, in tbe majority opinion.
NON-OBSCENE NUDE dancing? Costa Mesa city brass
probably paled, trembled and fainted upon reading that com-
bination of words. They always figured tbe words nude and ob-
"Keep it clean now! We're flJllng over Coate Me1a ... "
scene just naturally went together. Like peaches and cream.
So long as you don't peel the peaches, that is.
But Mr. Justice White continued to conclude, "Nudity
alone does not place otherwise protected material outside the
mantle of the First Amendment ... "
Protected material? Now the Mesa civic lights ought to be puzzled by that one. They don't figure anything is protected
when people run around in the All·together, not body nor soul .
DESPITE THIS LATEST Supreme Court surprise, it's
doubtful that Costa Mesa will find the local saloons abruptly
importing dancing girls.
Time was, of course, when Mesatown was indeed invaded
by a watering spot on Harbor Boulevard known as Baby
Doll's. It was widely rumored that within its cement block
walls, female dancers performed wearing little more than a
:mile.
1'1en Poppa Joe's and the ·Firehouse shocked the'central
business district with loud signs proclaiming that their danc·
ing ladies were nude, nude, nude. And that J{Ot Costa Mesa's
Cinest vice cops busy, busy, busy. One bust followed another.
MAYBE THAT OUGRI' to be re-pbrued. Yes. They ar·
rested a lot of dancers who weren't carrying any identification
at the time. That's ·better.
Since then, things have quieted on Costa Mesa's unclothed
front. Ob well, there have been a couple of modeling studios
and a dancehall to keep the vice cops in business but most of
the local starters have been kiddies in wading pooll.
Still, the Supreme Court may have given Mesa'• City Hall
some new jitters. Don't go visiting there now and abruptly
fling off your overcoat. "
~
IOGB COtJl\'C <mSERVERS, however, have suggested
that the new ruling on professional nakedness probably meant
that the New Jersey town just bad a loosely written anti-buff
law. ,
'lb.at should ease Costa Mesa's worry about virtue. Costa
Mesa writes ordinances so tight that they squeak.
Even the birds and the bees watch it around Mesatown.
~·MARKET
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
..)
Clean Upper Bay ·vowed Fanne
Inventor claims device, new methods foolproof market ,~
OtUe "Andy" Andrews bu spent nine yean at Mesa·,.
and $12.000 out or bis own pocket punulq bla 1tll· .. :
cleanlf\I harbor inventJon which he claim• would Plana ror a proarahl
rid the Upper Newport Bay of its •lit once and tor that would brine treth
all. dr ~a produce directly tt6tn An ewa, a rcured truck driver who llvet ln Southern Caltfornla
Anabelm, bu hauled worklna modela of b1a lnven· farms to oranie c=t tlon all over the country ln bopes aomeone mlsht consumers are b .. become Interested. • He's been to Washineton, D.C., to Sacramento discusaed by 1rower1
three times and to the offices of every lawmaker and Orange County li'~lr
who would let him ln the front door. officials. "
Most recently, he spent ll,100 aendln& 1urvey1 A Farmers Mar tq 20,000 Newport residents, try1n1 to wln Interest operation on a portl
in his self-cleaning harbor Idea. the fairgrounds par
He Claims 1,848 people have responded to his lot in Costa Mesa
survey and that 9'7 percent o! the persona favor bis been suggested by
approach to cleanin& out the mud-choked bay. Oranee County F
Next Sunday, for the flnt lime, Andrews wlll Bureau1 said Ken
show off models of his invention to Newport City Fulk, fair mana1er.
Council members at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. ·
He's excited. He says be feela like he's finally
on the move.
"This is the only possible way you'll ever eet
the back bay cleaned out and keep It cleaned out,"
he boasts.
"That Idea to do some dredelnl ls Just a waste
of taxpayer's money," be adds.
Fulk said bur
representatives are
ing the fairgrounds I
lion for a certlf
Farmers Market sim
to one now operatect::
H1.s invention, which be says must be seen to
be appreciated, works on the theory of harnesalng Detf, ...............
Lone Beach. "Prod
is sold direcUy to
cons umer," be s
tidal action to scrub out the bay. Anaheim resident Ottie Andrews 1h.ows off
device he says will help to clean silt and sand
from Upper Newport Bay. He will demonltrate
plan Sunday.
··The re is no m
dleman; the farmer iieb
a little better price and
so does the consumer."
Such a market, FuJk
said, probably would not
ge t under way uotil
afte r July 's annOal
Oranee County Fair and
that details would hf ve
to be worked out.
Tidal gates would direct water movement
clockwise around the bay, he says. Movement of
the water, which be estimates would reach speeds
up to 13 miles per hour at some points, wouJd clean
He says since childhood he's been interested in
tidal currents and cleaning up rivers and bays.
out the sand and slit.
To get the full power of tidal action, a partial
channeJ would b~ c ut through the Balboa When be was young, he says, he came up with
an invention that lowered the depth of a
Massachusetts river from 4 feet to 9 inches.
Peninsula, he explains.
To keep water flowing around the bay, a series
of "water fences" wouJd be set up ln the middle of He claims he simply dammed up the river and
when enough water had built up, knocked down the
dam. The rush of water,' he recalls, not only
lowered the river but washed out a yacht club
,
the bay.
The main criticism of the plan has been that
lhe water current would erode places like Dover
"I don't know ·wbat
they (the Farm Bureau>
plan to offer, but it won't
be a big in c om e
generator for the fair,"
he said. "It'll mostly be
a co mmunity services
effo rt by th e fair·
grounds."
Shores and Shellmaker Island. dock. .
Andrews says he has a cure for that. He
claims iJ an area starts eroding, a new water fence
would be erected to hold back the water flow.
''The folks back there were a little amazed,"
he says. "They wouldn't let me do it again."
He claims his Upper Newport Bay pJan is free
of such risks and says be plans to keep pushinc it
until someone listens.
"It would be just llke nature in tip-top form,"
Andrews speculates.
Goat top
'111U1mr'
PINOLE <AP) -The
city of Pinole may soon
be In the goat rental
business.
The idea, s a ys Fire
Chief Alex Clark, would
be to rent the goats to
property owners whose
yards are overgrown
with weeds. The goats
wouJd munch the weeds
and reduc e the fire•
hazards associated with
overgrown 1rass and
brus h , according to
Clark.
Pinole is taking the
idea from another East
Bay town, AJbany ,
where privately owned
goats are rented to resi-
dents with the city's
blessing.
Inmates' booze legal
State vehicles to use ethanol from prison still ,
CHICAGO CAP> -Although that not only is the still "one of
illegal stills have flourished in the few high-technology projects
prisons since antiquity to cheer ever to be attempted by a cor·
hapless inmates , the still being rectional industries department
built at the state prison in anywhere in the country," but
southern Illinois ls quite legal, that it would save a lot of
and the prisoners won't be money.
drinking the product. Skolnik said the state can save
Their spirits may be perked, about $250,000 a year by blend·
though, because one of the ing 10-perce.nt aJcobol, with 90-
benefits of the first ethanol· percent gasoline to produce s
producing plant leeally operat· million gallons of gasohoh about
ing on prison grounds will be the amount the state now buys.
training, which is to lead to col· The prison-produced alcohol
lege associate of arts degrees in will cost about 50 cents a gallon
alcohol fuel production. less than the market price.
If the Vienna Correctional In addition, proceeds from the
Center project works, and II· operation will be used to sub·
linois Corrections Department sidize other prison industries
officials believe it will. the plant operating in the red, Skolnik
furnish about 80 percent ofje
energy needed to produce e
fuel. The farm at Vienna O·
duces enough com to operate1Ee plant for 100 days a year and, e
rest will be bought or receiv in
trade for animal feed, Sito ik
said. 1
A high-protein animal feed~or the correctional facility's c le
herd w i ll be among e
by products. f "I'm excited about the · n·
ture ," Skolnik said. "With l ck
It will only be the beginnin of
m e aningful training d
employment opportunities or
inmates."
will put out 500,000 gallons or said.
Sadat Sees more of ethanol a year starting Southeastern Illinois College
Jan. 1. in Harrisburg is under contract
El Morro School,
plans Tn1Uic /est ,
That's enough gasohol for the to provide vocational and col· Jazz and popular show tunes J1eW peace state of Illinois' entire Oeel of lege-level training to Vienna in· will be performed by student; at -
gasohol-powered vehicles. And mates, and the idea for the El Morro Elementary Scbo(>I
CAIRO, Egypt CAP> another 40,000 gallons will be prison still began there. Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ...
-De s pite verb a 1 used each year as pure alcohol In uu;e more than a year, Featured in the program Mil
clashes over Jerusalem, fuel in Department of Corree· commitments and grants from be the 48·piece El Mo~o
Presjdent Anwar Sadat lions vehicles on the grounds of state and federal agencies for Orchestra and the 180-voi e
has to~ visiting Israeli department facilities. the project have totaled $700,000. chorus, along with several o
legislators that therl' Howard Skolnik, correctional Skolnilc sald the prison's out· performances. The public is i ·
would be no turning industries superintendent, said sized , coaJ-fired boiler would vited to attend. I b a ck " under any .-----.-:...;.;.. ___ ...:._ ____ __._ __________ _
circumstances" from
the Egyptian-Israeli
peace pact.
Sadat made the com·
ment as he and IsraelJ
Prime M i nister
Menacbem Begin pre·
pared for a s ummit
mee ting Thurs day to
discuss Israe li troop
withdrawals from the
Sinai Peninsula and the
I sraeli-Syrian missile
crisis.
I .
J
Fresh Flab ls now plentif'-l· Come in and 1elect a freah fish of your choice from our shawcue. We wUI 1ladly
tilet, steak and packa1e It for you at oo extra charfe.
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Freab Fllet of Nortlaen Seaba• .... Z.tl lb.
Fre1b Fllet of Sole .................. 3.ta lb.
Dlred From Delue1'1 Ucllela (pleue
ask for a sample> Cevldte ............ I.tip&.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top choi~ beef •Jed at least 30 days to the
peak of perfection. •
Leaa G...,... CllMk ,of'dlnd HourlY1 •• 1.41 lb.
Tlatek on LcMMJoe Bnll
<Great to Barbecue> .................. t.18 lb.
Rec. t'\at ••• , •••••••••••• ' ••••. ~ ••• , •• I.II I~. Be•el• ............ ((lttat on the
Sw• Jaley Watermelon ...... ~ ..... 15c lb.
Local Rudi Flftll Splaacb .... 4 bu. 1.00
Local Growa Cftuaben . . . . . . . . 5 for l.M
Sweet Pink Gra~nah ............ J for I.to
So. Amerteu 8aau11 .......... J lbe. l.M
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
.,. •• ..,. •• Private Lakl a ... ,.,. 1750 mil>
t .75 ea.• SS ... (tH taM
Bel Attliee V..., ... ClteaJa 81111C <'* •U) •• I.• ea.
S•lr...,,VoAa (1.7111ter) ............. , .... n ."ea. k••t lelkll ('7IO IDD> •.••......•..•.... ·.Ml ... , <OMDWl. ...................................... .
J~7
$89.50 For your gniduate! .
Theres a perfect Pulsar Quartz watch
at a perfect price.
What covld be o better woy to soy how much you core than with a Pulsar Quartz wo1ch?
They're so accutote they approach perfect timekeeping. And so convenient. they never need
winding. And they're oll such great values. they'll pleose Y.QU just os much.
Everyone will love o new Pulsar Ovortz woKh. There ore olor":' chronogropt')s and QO.lculator
olorm wo1ches. And slim dress and sports models for speclOI people whO apprec10te
·dependable, carefree seNice, great timekeeping and beOuttful appearance.
Pulsar• Quam
Always a becit beyond. In technology. In valve.
IL~.ft-t~ ~·
Diiiy Piiat
TU ESOAY, JUNE 2, 1981
FEATURES B2
IRllGI Cllll BUSINESS BS
STOCKS B7
-.. -.. -~--
Children get head start
by learning the basics
of computers ... B5
County ·seeks delay .fo~ ·coast project
Orange County planners, con·
cerned that development plans
for the south county Irvine Coast
area may be headed for trouble,
are asking state coastal com·
missioners to delay this week's
hearing on the plan,
Commissioners are scheduled
to begin talks Wednesday in San
Francisco or the plan for nearly
11,000 acres between Corona del
Mar and Laguna Beach.
Helene Kornblatt, a com·
mission planner, said she expect·
ed commissioners will honor the
county's request for a contin·
uance but likely will open the
public bearing to accommodate
persons who have traveled to San
Francisco for the session.
CQU.nty planners, who prepared
the Local Coastal Plan document
in conjunction with the Irvine
Company -owners of the coastal
acreage, are seeking more time to
I' liae•tune t t their plan.
In particular, officials claim,
Ute county wants time to rewrite a
dedication program spelled out in
the plan.
As the development plan now
reads, the Irvine Company would
dedicate 2.~ acres of vacant
land to the count+' as open space
but not until It gets 90 percent of
its needed building permits.
Airport plan assailed
Newport leaders cheered as they attac·k expansion
By STEVE MARBLE Of .... o.11, Pl ... ,...,
Newport Beach city leaders
brought nearly 700 people to
their feet cheering Monday after
taking turns blasting the county
and its plans lo expand John
Wayne Airport.
The public airport expansion
hearing at Newport Harbor High
School -billed as "The facts.
the figures and the fight for the ·
future" was staged as an
educational forum.
But many in the packed school
auditorium compared the meet·
ing to a pep rally and said they
hope the ir anti -expan s ion
message gets through to county
supervisors. who control the
airport.
Newport Councilman Don
Strauss brought the first roar of
approval when he said the coun·
ty's airport m aster plan "is
more of a disaster plan "
A Beckman Instruments Inc.
executive. Strauss said "if my
company went about its business
like the county does, we'd be in
terrible shape.·•
Strauss said the master plan.
which would allow for increased
dail y t akeoffs as noise is
decreased, is •·an e normous
gamble."
Clarence Turner, president or
the Mariners Community As-
sociation and one .or six speakers
at the hearing, said t'he county
and its airport plans has created
.. an atmosphere of fear" in
Newport..
"The supervisors remind me
of the cross-eyed discus thrower
who couldn't throw very well.
never set any re('ords but s ure
scared the hell out of his spec-
tators."
He said more jet departures
from the airport would lead to a
··m ole-like existence" for
homeowners.
Others speakers included
mayor Jackie Heather, Coun-
cilman John Cox. Newport City
Police arrest third
safe theft • man1n
P olice have arrested what
they say is the third and last sus·
pect in the theft or a ao<>-pound
safe filled with valuables from
Newport. Auto Works in Costa
Mesa.
Costa Mesa investigator David
Walker. working the $2.055
burglary s ince early March.
said he arrested Daryl A. Crum
of 20072 Lawson Lane. Hunt·
ington Beach, Monday.
Working on a tip, Walker said,
he s potted Crum 's a uto on
Placentia Avenue, pulled the
suspect over at Wilson Street
and made ~he arrest.
Walker had arrested Tody
Weiss, a former Newport Auto
Wor ks employee. on May 13 at
Los Angeles County Jail. Weiss
was he ld by Los Angel es
a u thorities for s us p1c1on of
a rmed robbery, Walker said.
Arrested May 25 wa s
Raymond M. Carrillo, 22, who
had lived at 1662 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. with Weiss, Walker
said.
Carrillo also is charged with
the Manha+.tan Beach robbery in
which an 80-year-0ld man was
robbed in his home at knifepoint,
Walker said.
Burglars smashed in the door
to the Costa Mesa auto repair
shop on March 10, rolling out the
huge safe and hauling it off In a
car , Walker said.
The dismantled safe was re·
covered the next day near the
s wimming pool al Newport
Harbor High School. Newport
Beach.
Attorney Hugh Coffin and Pierce
O'Donnell, an attorney from the
Los Angeles law firm represent·
ing Newport in its latest lawsuit
against the couoty.
'"Newport Beach is a client
that knows what it wants and in·
tends to get it," the Los Angeles.
attorney added.
The lawsuit, the fifth the city
has Ciled c hallen ging airport
matters, seeks to invalidate the
airport master plan on grounds
that it is environmentally defi-
cient.
Mayor Heather proclauned
tha t the public forum, ad·
vertised in newspapers and in ci·
ty water bills. "should serve
notice to the county that we are
united."
Sensing, perhaps. that the
mood was · right, Newport resi·
dent Tom Williams stood in the
auditorium lobby passing out
s1gnup sheets for a class action
lawsuit he's promised to unleash
against the county.
~y~IWI .....
'REDUCE GOVERNMENT'
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb
OCTD record budget approved
'J'he largest budget ever for lh~ Orange County Transit Dis·
trict -more than $100 million -
was approved Monday by dis ·
, trict directors.
~ OCTD officials said today the
•final total could reach about $106
•million, but this won't be de·
•termined until later.
At a meeting a month ago, the
directors rev iewed an $80
miJUon budget for the 1981·82 fis·
cal year. The figure was in·
creased after more than $20
million in federal grants became
available.
The grants are for construe·
tion or a new maintenance yard
in Anaheim and an unspecified
'number of new vehicl~s. an
OCTD spokesman said .
The additional grants didn't
change earlier propos als for a
$71.6 million operations budl(et.
which is $16 million more than
projected for this fiscal year.
The increase is in line with the
district's continued growth pat-
tern . Almos t 38 ·million
passengers are projected to ride
OCTD buses in the 1981·82 Ciscal
yP.ar compared to 29.4 million
who rode this year despite a
strike by bus drivers and
mechanics which s t o pped
service for most of February.
State planners contend this
means that it could be up to ao
years before the acreage is put in
the public's hands.
A better plan, they suggest,
would be for the Irvine Company
to dedic~te land before any build·
ingstarts.
The buildlng permits would al-
low the Irvine Company to build
up to 2,000 homes. several multi·
stor y hotels, office buHdlngs and
two roads.
Commlsaion planners claim
putting open land into the public's
hands will ease the burden or de·
velopment.
The state planners also have
been critical of the Irvine Com·
pany's proposal that it be allowed
to develop 500 ·mote l rooms and
50.000 square feel or commerciaJ
space near the newly cremd
Crystal Cove State Park.
A second public hearing on the
so·called downcoast plan is
'!cheduled to be heard on June 18
in Los Angeles.
With the requested delay. com-
mission planners claim it is likely
that most or the public testimony
on the plan will be taken at ~
time.
Delly f'li.t ...... "' Garr A,,.._
Approximately 700 people squeezed into the auditorium at Newport Harbor High School to participate
in public forum on expansion of John Wayne Airport. ------------
Curb criticizes bureaucracy
State's growing problems laid at Gov. Brown's feet
~
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of u.. Oaltr ...... , .. "
Unless the state turns away
from the "less is better, small is
beautiful" policies of Gov. Jerry
Brown 's administration ,
Californi a's future will be
bankrupt.
That's the message Lt. Gov.
Mike Curb had for more than 400
m embers of the Building In·
dustry Association's Orange
County chapter Monday night at
the Airport.er Inn in iQe.
Curb's speech freq uently
interrupted by ud applause as
be called for reduction~ in busi·
ness regulations, an end to the
Coas tal Commission, m or e
freeway construction, harsher
penalties for crimes and a re·
turn of capital punishment.
And Curb left little doubt who
he thought should be sitting in
the governor's office when
Brown's term expires in 1982.
"What you need is a new gov-
ernor,'! Curb said, grinning
broadly.
Repeating President Reagan's
"return to basics" theme, Curb
said the size of the state's gov·
ernment must be drastically re·
duced.
"We must s tart t o rid
ourselves of the bureaucratic ob-
stacles that stand in the path or
growth in our society," Curb
said . "We have reached the
point where if we don't change
the counter-productive policies
of the past few years. we will
bankrupt our future "
The Lieutenant governor also
criticized the stale Coastal Com·
mision. He said the state must
get out of land use management
and return that power to local
governments.
"The Coastal Commission bas
gone far beyond its original
mandate. and is to a large
degree responsible for our ('Ur-
rent housing shortage and high
costs to everyone." he said .
Curb described the high costs
for housing as a ·'supply and de-
mand problem "
Mesa Council OKs
record city budgei
A record $30.65 million city
budget for 1981·82 has been ap·
proved by Costa Mesa's City
Council with the only public com·
ftlent coming from one-time
mayor Alvin Pinkley.
Pinkley praised the council and
City Manager Fred Sorsabal for a
businesslike job Monday and in-
dicated city government is in
good hands
Sorsabal. who noted the budget
is up about 14. 7 percent over this
year 's adjusted expenditures.
said the new spending level is
possible primarily because of in-
creased sales lax revenues -ex·
pected to be up about 22 percent
next year
He warned council membet's
that state legislators whittle away
at property tax allocations to
California cities and that they
m ust guard against any attempu
to decrease Costa Mesa's l per·
cent portion of the 6 percent state
sales tax.
The new budget provides for
hiring 17 new city employees.
most of them ror the police and
fire departments. Sorsabal said
It also funds construction or a
new Orange Cou nty Library
building in the downtown area
and a new City Ha ll addition to
house a fire station and com·
munications center.
A bid by Wimbledon Village and
west Costa Mesa homeowners to
secure funding for park develop·
menl in their neighborhoods
railed to develop as predicted
Monday.
Land is available for park con·
struction, Sorsabal told council
members last month, but new
parks will add a burden to the ex·
tsting maintenance funds, he
warned.
$22 million DC-9 jet debuts
' Bad tire delays Super 80 flight from Orange County
~ By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
OftlleDefly ...... S'8ff
There she was, the new pride
of the AirCal fleet, a $22 million
state-of-the-art alrplane, sitting
on the apron at John Wayne
Airport with a bad tire.
Not Oat, mind you, but In bad
enough shape to worry the
1round crews that wanted every·
thini to be just rtght on Mon·
day'a maiden journey of Air-'
Cal's first DC-9 Super 80.
AlrCal took delivery of the
Cirst of four Super 80s In mid·
May. Th• plane ls now beinl
used tn re1ularly scheduled
CUgbts between Orange County
and San Francisco Bay.area
locations.
"It'• a new aircraft •.• they
want to make sure they let tt
ri1bt1" a pa11en1er aervlce
representaUve explained over
the 111&erC!om to tb• tbron1
packed tDto u.. boatdlnc area at
the a~rport. •
Tb• r••PonH came In the
form ol Mf'YOUI 1mlle1. mid
comments and exasperated
stares.
The scheduled 8:30 a .m. de-
parture of the plane -touted as
a partial solution to the jet noise
problem at the airport -was
delayed 44 minutes. Even as
passengers strode to the plane,
workers were still busy with
wrenches and grease on the two
front wheels.
The airline that prides Itself
on havinl the beat oii·bme rte·
ord of any airijne on the West
Coast found little to be happy
with oo this overcaal morning.
The pilot. Capt. Larry
Bernard, was apolocetlc. Re an·
noun~ea U•ete'd be Cree
coc;ktaill for tile 180 pa11enaera.
D9:r1nl the nttbt to tin Fran· cluo from Onn1• County, Benard twice told .,.,....,..,.
vSa the plane'• Intercom that he
con1tdered t.he SUper 80 to be a
"beautllul airplane."
"There are all kinds 1>t tom·
.puters up here to play with,"
Bernard said. Most of the trip,
he said, was flown under
automatic pilot. However, the
I an(ling was condu cted by
Bernard.
Like other A1'rCal pilots who
will fiy the Super 80, Moore, a
Corona del Mar resident, spent
12 da)'! at ground school and
numerous others in slmuJator tralnlftc to 1earn how to n,, the
new aircraft.
"It's tremendous ... I think U's a ereat airplane," comment·
ed Capt. Stewart Moore toJlow·
Lng the return rtlCht to Oran1e
County Monday n1&1\t.
The Super 80 . utUbes • 2-3
seating arran1emeat -two
seat.a on the IC'ft aide or the
plane. three on the .n1bt, u
compared to the 3·3 arran1e·
ment on tbe 731.
One flitbt aueadant,
aandwictMcl between a ... t and
the drink cart, commeat~:
"We've aot to l•l smaller drink
cart.I f Ot' t.b1J plane."
'
H/L/C/N Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tue•day, June 2, 1981
Sheu~ ·Clean Upper Bfty vowed Fannert
light OD law Inventor claims device, new methods foolproof market '~
NAKED TRUTH DEPI'. -~t• Mesa civic leaden,
who have Iona campaigned for coqimunlty virtue, have prob·
ably broken out in a case of profuse pers~lrallon today
after the Supreme Court's decis1on saymg 'Nay" to Mt.
Ephraim, New Jersey. Well you certainly m1&bt uk what lD
the world does Mt. Ephraim, New Jeney have that would
cause a heavy sweat in Me.atown, here oo our very own
Orange Coast? ..
Nakedness, that'f ~hat. ~ Costa Mesa haY a long
herlta1e of battlina •flJmt the · • r-• alhs of those mlsguiCled souls ;:.._\ _
who would shed all their gar· Jll IUIPllll ~I/ ments for professional gain. . ,
MT. EPRBAIM, popula-.
tion 5.~. below Camden, near iie crossroads of routes 130,
295 and 2.8, also bas civic leaders equally outraaed by the pro·
fessionally unclothed. 11\us it was that the COPI al that New
Jersey borough slapped an arrest oo one Juliette Ann DiLu-
ciano and her alleged accomplice for offering live nude danc-
ing at a spot called the Six Thirteen Club.
Trouble was, the case got appealed (If you'll pardon the
expression) all the way up to tbe Supreme Court of tbe United
States. And the trouble with that wu that the Nakeda won on
a 7 to2 vote. ..
"The borough totally excludes all live entertainment, in·
eluding non-obscene nude dancing," wrote Justice Byron R.
• 'Whizzer" White, in the majority opinion.
NON-OBSCENE NUDE dancing? Costa Mesa city brass
probably paled, trembled and fainted upon reading that com-
bination of words. They always ftgured the words nude and ob·
··Keep U c~n now! We're /lying o~ Colla Meia ... "
scene just naturally went together. Like peaches and cream.
So long as you don't peel the peaches, that is.
But Mr. Justice White continued to conclude, "Nudity
alone does not place otherwise protected material outside the
mantle of the First Amendment. .. ··
Protected material? Now the Mesa civic lights ought to be
puzzled by that one. They don't figure anything is protected
when people run around in the All-together, not body nor soul.
DESPITE TIOS LATEST Supreme Court surprise, it's
doubtful that Costa Mesa will find the local saloons abruptly
importing dancing girls.
Time was, of course, when Mesatown was indeed invaded
by a watering spot on Harbor Boulevard known as Baby
Doll's. It was widely rumored that within its cement block
walls, female dancers performed wearing Utile more than a
smile.
Then Pop~a Joe's and the Firehouse shocked the central
business district with loud signs proclaiming that their danc-
ing ladies were nude, nude, nude. And that JlOt Costa Mesa's
finest vice cops busy, busy, busy. One bust followed another.
MAYBE THAT OUGHr to be re-phrased. Yes. They ar·
rested a lot of dancers who weren't carrying any identification
at the time. That's better.
Since then, things have quieted on Costa Mesa's unclothed
front. Ob well, there have been a couple of modeling studios
and a dancehall to keep the vice cops in business but most of .
the local starkers have been kiddies in wading pools.
SWl, the Supreme Court mar. have given Mesa'5 City Hall
some new jitters. Don't go visiting there now and abruptly
fling off your overcoat.
MGR COURT OBSERVERS, however, have suggested
that tbe new ruling on professional nakedness probably means
that the New Jersey town just bad a loosely written anti-buff
law.
That should ease Costa Mesa's worry about virtue. Costa
Mesa writes ordinances so tight that they squeak.
Even the birds and the bees watch it around Mesatown.
OtUe "Andy" Andrews hu spent nine yeart at Mesa.
and $12,000 out of bla own pocket punulna hia tell·
cleaning harbor invention which be cJaJma would
rld the Upper Newport Bay of Ill allt once and for
all.
Andrews, a retired truck driver who lives in
Anaheim, has hauled wortina model• of hla inven·
tlon all over the country in hopes someone rni1ht
become interested.
He's been to Washington, D.C., to Sacramento
three times and to the offices of every la\Vmaker
who would let him in the front door.
MOBt recenUy. be spent $1,100 aendlna aurveya
to 20 ,000 Newport residents, trying to wln interest
In bis self-cleaning harbor idea.
He claims 1,848 people have responded to his
survey and that 9'1 nt of the pe~ons favor bis
approach to cle · out the mud-choked bay.
Next Sund , for the fl.rst time, Andrews wiU
show off models of his invention to Newport City
Council members at the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
He's excited. He says he feels like he's finally
on the move.
"This is the only possible way you 'll ever get
the bact bay cleaned out and keep it cleaned out,"
be boasts.
''That idea to do some dredging is just a w11le
of taxpayer's money," he adds.
Oeff., ...............
Plans for a pro,ram
that would bring resb
produce directly from
Southern California
farms to Orange ist consumers are be 8
discussed by gro ~rs
and Orange County F)fr
officials.
A Fl\rmers Mar
operation on a porti
the fairgrounds par
lot In Costa Mesa
been .s!Jggested by
Orange County F
Bureau, said Ken
Fulk. fair manager. :...~~
Fulk s aid bur '1
representatives are .,.
ing the fairgrounds 1<¥•·
lion for a ce rliftttd
Farmers Market simkar
to one now operat~.:Jn
Long Beach. "Prod~
is sold directly to Jle
consumer." he s ~. His invention, wbkh he says must be seeo to
be appreciated, works on the theory of harnessing
tidal action to scrub out the bay.
Tidal gates would direct water rhovement
clockwise around the bay, he says. Movement of
the water, which he estimates would reach speeds
up to 13 miles per hour at some points, would clean
Anaheim resident Ottie Andrews shows off
device he says will help to clean sHt and sand
from Upper Newport Bay. He will demonstrate
plan Sunday.
· ' Th e r e is no in.tit ·
dleman; the farmer g4!ts
a little better price and
so does the consumer."
· Such a market, Fulk
said, probably woul4"1ot
get under way \A8til
aft e r July 's a nnual
Orange County Fair and
that details would have
lo be worked out.
out the sand and silt. . He says since childhood he's been interested in
tidal currents and cl~aning up rivers and bays. To get the full power of tidal action, a partial
channel would be cut through the B1lboa
Peninsula, he explains.
When be was young, be says, he came up with
an invention that lowered the , depth of a
Massachusetts river from 4 feet to 9 inches. To keep water flowing around the bay. a series
of "water fences" would be set up in lhe middle of
the bay.
He claims he simply dammed up the river and
when enough water had built up, knocked down the
dam . The rush of water, he recalls, not only
lowered the river but washed out a yacht club
dock.·
"I don't know what
they (the Farm Bureau)
plan to offer, but it wop't
be a big income
generator for the fair."
he said. "It'll mostly be
a community services
effort by th e fair·
grounds."
The main criticism of the plan has been that
the water current would erode places like Dover
Shores and Shellmaker Island.
Andrews says be has a cure for that. He
claims if an area starts eroding, a new water fence
would be erected to bold back the water flow .
"The folks back there were a litlle amazed,"
he says. "They wouldn't let me de it again."
He claims his Upper Newport Bay plan is free
of such risks and says he plans to keep pushing it
until someone listens.
"It woUld be just like nature ln tip-top form."
Andrews speculates.
Goat tnp
'~r'
PINOLE CAP) -The
city or Pinole may soon
be in the goal rental
business.
The idea, says Fire
Chief AJex Clark, would
be to rent the goats to
property owners whose
yards are overgrown
with weeds. The goals
would munch the weeds
and reduce the fire
hazards associated with
overgrown grass and
brush. according to
Clark.
Pinole is taking the
idea from another East
Bay town. Albany ,
where privately owned
goats are rented to resi·
dents with the city's
blessing.
Sheriff
• quits post
BAKERSFIELD CAP)
-Kem County Sheriff
Al Loustalot announced
today that he will retire
when his current term
ends ln January 1983.
Loustalot, 54, noted
that he will have served
more than 35 years with
the department at the
end of his second term.
He was a captain before
being elected sheriff in
1974 whe n Charles
:.Dodge retired.
Loustalot was appoint·
ed to the state Board of
Corrections by Gov.
Brown in im.
.
Cuba refugees die violently
Miami reports 90 slain since early '80 arrivals ··-
MlAMI <AP> -At a rate five times higher
than for the general population, Cubans who fled to
Florida in last year'1 "Freedom Flotilla" are end·
ing up the victims of homicide, authorities say.
Ninety of the Cubans, dubbed "Mariels" for
their port of departure to distinguish them from
thousands of other Cuban exiles here, have been
slain since the'first of them arrived in April 1980.
According to the FBI, that's more people than
were slain in all of 1980 ln Fort Lauderdale, Orlan·
do and St. Petersbura combined. A total of 62.1 percent of the new refugee
deaths has been homicides, five times the rate in the
general population.
"It's mind-boggling. >;n astronomical
number,'' said Dade Chief Medical Examiner Dr.
Joseph Davis.
Many of the estimated 90,000 Mari~l refugees
now in South Florida have settled in Miami. where
most of the slayings occur. Miami homicide Sgt.
Ernie Vivian said that 36 of the city's 113 slaying
victims So far this year were Mariel refugees.
.
Ms. Penton was hit 10 times. Fuentes, who
cam e to Florida after being released from a Culan
prison, was hit six times. ..
Mental health officials believe frustratfun,
idleness and cultural confusion -particularly
among the refugees released from prisons -niay
be at the root of the homicides. · :
"Dealing with freedom and choices is tot
easy. especially for those who have lived throagb
long periodS' of confinement." said Maria Valcfes-
Beola. a psychologist who counsels refugees at the
Miami Mental Health Center. "The level: of
frustration is high when they are seeing overabtln·
dance in which they don't participate " :
Trying to solve the crimes can be like working
in a vacuum. There are few friends and relatiyes
to help police. Often even identifying the body ~an
take days, and at least one Mariel homicide victim
still is classified as "unknown remains." •
When police can identify the victims ancl ap·
prehend a suspect, they often still cannot de·
termine the motive for the slaying. AJthough ii·
legal drug activity is a major problem in South
Florida, police say drug disputes account for rel·
ati vely few of the Cuban refugee s l ayings.
In the Mariel cases in which arrests have been
made, Vivian said the defendants usually are
Mariel refugees also. Twenty-four refugees have
been arrested this year in connection with 18
Miami slayings .
"Mariela kill each other," Vivian said. "If we 0',.,..B seeks delay didn't have them. our murder rate would be down ir.i
by one· third.•'
"Let's face it, the sudden upsurge of • 9 d • •i code bomicldes in this community is not within the lll • igi
native population," Davis said.
The killings reflect no pattern beyond the WASIDNGTON (AP> -Saytng the costs and
familiar factors of alcohol, guns and domestic dis· benefits of the nine-digii zip code have not been.
turbances. The typical Mariel homicide victim is demonstrated, the Reagan administration bas
a slender male in his 20s or early 30s. He dies of asked the Postal Service to postpone its June 1 im·
multiple gunshot wounds, stripped of bis few plement.ation date.
belongings. The request was made this week to
The bloodiest period since the boatlift began Postmaster General William F. Bolger by the Of·
was last week, on March Z7 . Two friends who fice or Management and'Budget, which said Postal
came to Miami aboard a boat from Mariel -Service studies did not satisfy President Re•tan's
Jorge Rodriguez and Jose BaUes -were each shot Feb. 17 order that any new regulations be assessed
in the neck as they sat on barstools in a Miami for their impact on business.
lounge. Assistant Postmaster General Walt Duka said
Twenty-two blocks away, Fernando Fuentes a reply should be ready by the end of the week.
and Maria Esther Penton were riding in a car The Postal Service says the proposed system will
together when a man with a submachine gun save labor costs by allowing more mall to be sort·
pulled up alongside them and fired into the car. ed mectianically . . -~~-'-~_..;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
School's top scholar age 7
Roll call brief affair; Donnie's solitary pupil
FRENCHGLEN, Ore. (AP> -
Donnie F.clwards, 7, ls the stu·
dent body in the Frencbglen
school district -the one and
only bod)' in the one and only
school..
On rare occasions, teacher
Sue Gron takes roll call ol her
lone charge.
•"Yeah, I do that every now
and lben for a Joke," she said.
Donnie recently attended a
party on tbe lut day of school
when he traduated from the
second trade. He waa outnum·
bered 7·1 by adulta.
111.H Grota, Z7, had 1 clan CJ(
lwo, watil late 1princ when Mm·
dy Wroten moved awa1. lea.inc
Donald u her one pupU.
"We have more people on our
school board than we do ln our tlusroom," abe aald.
Thi• touthe .. tern Oreaon
commulu on a hlcb deaert
plateau Where the lel~bonel
t0mltlmea ao dead wtMn tt ralna ud teleYt8lon ~·t rucb bu a~oltlx. ol U. ..._ an llOtt1t UUlimill.r•ta•aM,daUdu.a. ........... ~wonera, ........... ,... .........
dlllto...W•tlll .. ,... ..
... .._. Mat•t111 IMteliiid ii ..... , .......... ....
MH ..... ldliool.
•n1MMmy61 • c...., .._, Dlamoed w
'
Fields," says Merlin Rupp, a
cowbOy who has a daughter who
will enter the olle-room school
next fall. "It's too far."
Rupp, who sports a waxed
handlebar mustache, Is a
member of the five.member
school board. He concedes the
board may eventually have to
face tbe issue of, bualn1. ''But
not yet," be say1.
The sebool board meets once a
month and srapplea with a year·
ly budlet ot about $35,000. Kuch
of that goea for Mi11 Gross'
aalary -$12,800 a year -and
pto\'idlns her with a mobile
home near tM acboOI. Miu Groll 11 aol only a
teacher. In addition to anawer·
Ina mall addrelled to the foot·
ball ~cb, abe la taperlnteDdent
of the ICbool dl1trlct and prin· ~ipal of tbe 1ebool.
The school h11 no athletic
team•, but MIH Grote alao
1ena u a •urrocat• coach ol
aorta.
"Wt 10 out aad aliloot ........ Mid. ''DOaale and
I •boat ....... IGCetbftr.''
At ClirbUDliil. ..... tbe dll-
trlet laacl two 1"'41eat1. tb•
tebloJ # • a .-aft'1 DIU, wltla Ml,.:fro• pre·acllool
dllNnilwM....,.. .....
Domle la llleilt·a. liiil~ftallt1. OIJm iiduCatiali, tiat bll mou..-11
lllfortt.
"He learns a lot more," says
Andrea Edwards. "He's doing
real good. He'• learning a lot
more than be did in California."
Mfss Gross, who ls qualified to
teach first throu1h eighth
aradet, aareed the personal in·
struct.lorl is beneficlaJ.
"They can work at thelr own
speed," she said. A girl she
. tauibt in kindergarten is way
ahead of ber classmates at
another school.
"She may be tn hl1b school
when she's 10 or 11 ... ," sbe
said.
Wh.en Ml11 Ol'Oll took the job
In im. she bad eicht atudeau ln
ab different srades. Next Yetr, the achool plans to have about
two or tbree students.
But Mila Graaa wOll'l be there.
Sbe'• rnovtnc on after two years.
at the school dlat.rlettf looklni for
work ln the more populou1
Wiilamette Vattey of westem
Or econ
Plannin,8 eyed
WARSAW, Poland (AP) ._
Tia• hillllJ_ PlHnla1 1ocMtJ
••11 tllilN II IA 0 GH•th zlr
bed'' ~ ol HmlrH .....
la Polaad aad eall•ll fer "•iiifii liiiDOl'tl.'' .... tlllelal ...,.....,PAP~
~·MARKET ·
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD ·
Fresh Flab is now plentiful. Come ln and aeleci. a fresh
fish or your choice from our showcase We will gladly
met. •leak' and ii•ckage It for you al DO extra charge.
Freab FUet ot Nortbena Seabasa .... i.t81b.
Frella FUet of Sole .................. 3.98 lb.
Direct From Deluey'11Utcbea 1ptease
ask for• sample> Ce•lcbe ............ 1.98 pt.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top cht>lc~ bfff •led at least 30 days to the
pe.k of perfection.
Leaa Groud Cback <Ground Hourly > .. 1.49 lb.
Tblck en i... Broll
CO real to Barbecue> • ,.., •.•••••......•• t.M lb.
Re• CUt. ..•••••.....••.••.•• , ••• 1 •• t.M lb.
Boneleu 8Glled lloaeu 'Great on UM
llotlalei1•> • .. . . . • • . . .. . . . . . ... .. • .. . . . . . . • .z.• ... .
nm OP TUFnc .r.&Jllt CALL DSLA.NllY'I r.oa ..... •o•• · o&LIYll&Y 111av1cs. Youa oaosa 11 vPton m.....,.. asruGDATION no• ova noas TO YOU• DOOL <•• lllMWU• PL&&IS>. •
'NI .ct tffttUve Wed .. I IJ throup T'* • f l t
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE •
Sweet .Jalcy Watermelon ............ tsc Jb.
Local Ranch Fresh Spinach .... 4 bu. ~to
Local Grown Cucamben . . . . . . . . 5 for ~" Sweet PIAk Grapefruit':'-........... 3 for ~M
So. American Buanae .......... 3 lbt. t ... ' I
r
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR • ·I
Del11tf'y's P'ttvate L•belC••mPl&H C7SO mUI j z.nea. or u ... ,.., caff 1
Bel Art.M VIMf•rda ClaeaJll Blue (TM •U> .. s.11 ...
SmlrllaGaVodlla (1.Tlllter> . .. ........ lUha.
1c ...... 1...-momll> ····················'·"••· <OMllW) ......•..•..•. ·················: ..... ••·
All liquor ahd wine plus tax.
r -+-•• • v • v o • o o o o • a s c c e 0 "1
Orange Coast OAILY PILaT"(Tuelday, June 2. 1981 ---------------!"'--~~~---~---~-------------:--, N 117
NYSE OMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
euOUflC*t INCLl#OI T•Al:ll\ON , .. , NUI YO••. M•o••~. ~AC.,IC:, ~··· eotTCHf, OIT•Olf ••o CINCINNATI ITOC-11 IXCMANOltAND llt~•TtO I Y TMI MAIO ANO IN$tlNIT
Dow Jones Final
DOWN '10.7
~~" ~~--c .._,~ Keep files
up to date
If you're typical of millions• of America's
managers of small-to medium-sized businesses.
you're throwing away millions of dollars in 1981 (and
every year> on keeping outdated records . .
You're wasting expensive space by uslDg 1t to
store business records much. much longer than any
government or legal requirements demand. You're
losing the productivity of valuable workers in the
maintenance of these unnecessary records on a
haphazard basis.
With an up-to-date formal retention plan, you
might delete an estimated one-third of these docu·
ments. lo some cases. you could eliminate an
estimated two-
th i rds o f all 0 your retained
papers!
In fact, a ~~~:/rsb l SY --lV_IA_P_ORT_l_R-~7
Lybrand. one of -
the world 's
largest accounting firms. reveals that in some com-
panies, approximately 90 percent of all records based
solely on business requirements ar.e needed for less .
than six months. Even more startling, 99 percent of
all records are needed for less than one year. .
Just about every activity connected with running
a business creates records corresponden~e . g«?~·
ernment regulations, taxes, insurance. financial
transactions, banking. The list is endless. All these
records are important when they are put together.
But how many must you keep and for how long? ..
There are no strict standards for determmmg
how long you must keep_ bow many type_s ~r classes of
records. The complexities and contradictions can~ot
help but baffle you unless you are an accountant with
special training in this field. But there are general
guidelines .
As the manager of a business <without special
training in record-keeping). try this short Q&A to test
how much you know:
How long should you keep: .
Petty cash vouchers? A. Three years. A Journal
showing cash disbursements? A. Permanently.
Canceled checks covering general expenditures?
A. Three years. Canceled checks relating to income
taxes? A. Permanently.
Employee expense reports? A. Three years.
Employee payroll records (W-2, W-4, annual earn·
ings records. the lik-e )? A. For four years after
termination of the employment.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
Neme 1 Ideal Toy 2 Tllorn Ind ,....,._
4 WlllQPlt ._ s MMltt llld
' UnlleYT Ud 1 M< Grfflll pf I £11xlr Ind
t EmrsAacl 10 .4mww plA n CnPw 7.7"'4 12 SJuena.1" .l!~nt u Vero•~
" ....... F•Y 17 EmpOE pf8 ,._
1 M .. d Gerti 2 ~Allnf'ln J Atlltc:ll Jpl , • HarlndJtl a s A(fen lllty
'~~':g .. ,,. t!11l~U:. 10 8eltaPt~ a 'l Mof'.n~ng " ls~.' " ;;;;.; rn:c 1? Parkl'Drtl I
. iJ t:t;:T,.:
~I. Up 11.6 Up 11A Up 10.S
Up Ml.I Up 9.) Up t.O
Up U Up LS Up l.S Up l.l Up 7.J ~= a Up 1.1
8: ~: VP 6.7
.-CL OH 11.2 OH 11.1 OH ICl.O OH t.6 ~ t.1 ...
t.,
Off .0 Off 1.1
OH 1.J Off 1.S Off ) .. OH 1.A °" 1.1 gi; ::: OH ._,
GOLD COINS NIW YOlllK IAf') -Pfkff i.tt l•Jt 114'1·
... ., Of ... colllt, """""'"•1111 TflWtM'('•
IW~ 1 tl'6'1' Ol., aJOS,00, off U,00
M--4e !Mf, I 116'1' Ol., ...,7,00, oft P 00. M4JI~ ., ..... 1.t troy oa., ..-.JO. efl
p .to, ~··· A11tl1IMI Ml C/9Wll, M2 lrO'I' oi.., -·• .., ett $1,1J Sewc9: 09a.,..,., •.
NIW~IN'I-~ ,,_,.., __ ,...
~ al "'" .... ,,_, .Cit .. ·--.,.. ~ -1f-.o lllllOOftelly ol ,..,,.. -
11. "· Hueh801111 27J, 100 21... • -
'"" &nllnol HI, 100 •" • ,,. HovOllTr 720,000 2•'1j, • ...
METALS
c~~cent•• povnci, u.s. c1e111,....
Uonl.
Lue 17 .. unts• pound
lltK .. ""'<Anti• pound, deliver~
Tl• '6.J* Metals w..-composlle lb.
Ai-i-7 .... c.e!llU PoUnd, NY.
~""J'45.00-fl•tll. ~letl-s.ut.00 ll"OY OI .• N Y
SILVER
Sllv ... ,10.IOO Pet" lroy oun<•, Handy ..
'H•rman only dally ftUOI•·
GOLD QUOTATIONS
..
O n May 5, 1981, the Federal
Trade Commission
released its "new" 1981 report
on cigarette tar level.s.
Urif ortunately, the new
FTC report is really quite old.
Old because it is based on
1979 cigarette brands.
Old because much has
happened in ctga.rette develop-
ment during the year and a
half that it took to complete
the study.
Old because it doesn't tell
tar-conscious smokers what
they want to know today.
0 •••••••••• sec 000 eoos ceossosss 0$500000
Even the FTC concedes
that its report is out of date.
And thefact is consumers do
not have the latest statistics on
comparative tar level.s in ultra
low tar cigar~ttes.
if you 're a smok er, what
,
•
does all this mean to you?
Now cigarettes are the
Ultra Lowest Tar™cigarettes
available. No matter what the
style, there is no cigDirette lower
in tar than todays Now.
These are the facts.
The 1981 FTC reJ2.ort
is based on measurements of
1979 products. Here are the
actual 1981JJ.gures on lowest
tar cigarette level.s.
NUMBERS DON'T LIE.
NO CIGARETTE, IN ANY SIZE,
IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW.
BO'sbox 85' •Qft Spac1c lOO's box lOO's~
NOW uss than Less than
O.Olmg lmgt O.Olmg_ 2mg
I
ussthan ~ CARLTON O.Olmg lmg• Smg
) / -
CAMBRIDGE O.lmg\ ~ 1mi -..., -4mg
BARCLAY lmg lmg -3mg
All tar numbers are av. per cigarette by FTC method. except the one asterisked (•)
which is av. per cigarette' by-FTC Report May '81.
•
J
tAvailable soon at your favorite retail store.
BOX. BOX 100'1· llu illn 0.01 mg. "t 0.001 mg, rwcotint, SOFT PACK &S's FILTER. MENTHOU l mg. "ti(', 0.1 mg. nicoone.
SOfT PACK 10()'1 Fllltll M£~HOL 2 fTll; "t11". 0 2 lft9. NCOtint. IV. per cigmtte by FTC methcld
• •