Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-03 - Orange Coast Pilot... ,. ..... --- • . . .... . ·' 111111 ClllT YIUI 11111111 llllY PIPll OH ANGECOUN T) CALlfOHNIA 2~ CEN TS Rousted Uncle Miltie fans sue club DENVER (AP) -A couple who went to see Milton Berle at a ni1htch.lb here allege that they were draned from their seals, hustled out and left bruised and bleedinJ by nl1htclub employees after the woman interjected a few one-liners into Berle's act, according to testimony at a trial here. Donna Vercbota, 42, testified about her evening four years a,10 at the Turn of the Century club as the trial got under wa) Tuesday in Denver District Cpurt. Mrs. Vercllota and her husband James, '6, have filed a $250,000 laws uit a&alnst the nightclub, its employees and a policeman, claimin1 they were injured during the incident. The Verchotas, who own a self·service car wash, said they went to Turn of the Century the night of May 7, 1977 to bear Berle's last performance there. According to Mrs. Vercbota's testimony, the couple tipped a waiter $10 to be seated in front seats with friends. . Berle, wbo routinely ribs the audience as part of his act, re· portedly told one patron: '•II you weren't such a cheapskate, .you could pay $50 and alt down front." . Mrs. Verchota, who said she had downed two drinks. shot back, ''It didn't cost me $50 - only $10." Berle then apparently re· ferred to Mrs. Verchota and a female companion as "Laverne and Shirley," two tele vision com ediennes, and described PUT •b. UP ....... Robin, an English bulldog al the Monterey County SPCA in Salinas, doesn't intimidate Tiger, the kitten, who lays AP ......... a left hook on the dog, then rears up in a box- er's stance daring the mutt to try something. Israelis shell Lebanon Gunboats hit Palestinian camp in nor thern section April 1979, and the last time Israel struck that far north in Lebanon was in an air attack the following month. Prime Minister Menacbem Begin said Tuesday he would not hall Israeli raids on Palestinian bases In Lebanon despite Syria's demand for an end to llraell military operations on the ter- ritory of ill IJC)rthem nel1bbor.'"' The Cbrhllan Voice of Lebanon station said au Israeli F-4 Pbantoma deatroyed the tbree·story headquarters ol the regional command of Al Fat.ah, the largest cuerrtlla group in the Palestine Liberation Oreaniaa· lion. Begin, in an interview witb CBS, said he told U.S. envoy ANGELS: TIME FOR A CR4NGEt Wbat .. tbe An,.aa' W1 prot>- lni't • . Accordln1 to D a lly Pilot •PCHU cohmuallt Dick llWer' mOlt ol tbe ~· ''bum cte. cllloDI".,... t'9,..,. hn• "'8 thfaullifowner~A'!V1. ID ~I~ ieeUon (0 1), llUltr H)'I WMt tfte A.qell run; Mild la llO& a maaqartal e~. IJiiaAi*•IDU..friilt .. . Philip Habib ''an uncountable num her of times that we are go- i n 1 to continue preventive operations aeainst PLO ter· rorists." The prime mlnister said be saw "nothing in common'' bel,,een Habib's miaaion to pre- vent a new war between Israel and Syria and tbe Israeli attacks on Palestinian bases tn Lebanon. However, the Syrian govern· ment newapaper Tilhrin said T uesday tf Habib's abuttle diplomacy la to succeed, the U.S. government must recoplze t h at Lebanon must not be .. .,.netrat.d, attacked, violated or be the scene of any practice ol aoverelpty by outlidera." It demanded that the United States end Israeli reconnawance fll1ht1 over Emt and end Israeli attaeu oo Paleltin.lan baea. It aald tbe UDli.d States and lsrMl must alto accept Syria 'a ript to deploy all the troops ana weapona ltoeedatokeeppeaceln Lebanoa. their evening wear as vintaee UM8. Mrs. Verchota said she was standing up applaudine when two employees came up behind her and started ''dragging" her off the stage. She said she thoueht it was part of the show until she allegedly was shoved. kicked and told she bad "ruined the show." Her husband began arguing with the employees, and Mrs. Verchota contended that they punched him in the face. She said they left the nightclub bruiaed and beaten, later arrlv· ing at the hospital for treatment of their bruises. Nitbtclub attorney Clayton Russell said the couple had con· sumed several drinks during the evening, ,became rowdy and were warned several times. Russell contended that Mrs. Verchota's Interchanges with Berle were disrupting the performance and that employees became concerned when she would not sit down. "There was no alternative but to remove her," he said. Russell said Mrs. Verchota was not struck by anyone and added that her husband look the first swine before he was r.es trained. Neither suffered any serious injuries, he told the jury. Alan Dill. an attorney for the employees, explained that Berle would give a signal if he wanted a patron ejected Crom the show. ''He signaled after he took all he could," Olli said. "He's not used to being heckled." r- Education tax credits hacked WASHINGTON CAP) -The Reagan administration endorsed tax credits to help offset the cost of private education today but urged Congress to delay such legislation until the president's tax.cut plan is enacted. J ohn E. Chapoton. assistant treasury secretary for tax policy. told the Senate Finance subcommittee on taxation that such credits are preferable to other types of federal aid to education. which involve cum- bersome red tape for govem- ment and families alike. ''Tuition tax credits offer a simpler means lo fund private education by permitting families to keep the money they have earned and to spend that money f o r t h e e du catio n they themselves select," he said. Although President Reagan's economic program must take priority, Chapoton said that "tuition tax credits will be at the top of our agenda at the ap· propriate time." Tuition tax credits have been proposed in the past but always have run in to t r ouble in Congress from those who fear they conflict with the Constitu- tion's requirement for separa- tion of church and state. and from those concerned that such aid would come only at the ex· pense of public schools. A bill sponsored by Sen. Bob Packwood, R·Ore .. chairman of the subcommittee, a nd Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D· N. Y .. eventually would allow a person to subtract up to $500 from his or her tax bill to help offset costs of education at a private elementary or secon· dary schooL or at a pri'vate or public r.olleite. The tax credit would start at a maximum $250 during the 12 months beginning August. 1982, and rise to a limit or $.500 after that. The credit would become available Aug . 1, 1984, for gr aduate and part·time students. For families whose incomes are so low that they owe no tax- es, the bill would allow the gov· ernment to provide a check of up to $500 for education expenses. The measure would cost $2. 7 billion in 1983 and nearly S7 billion a year by 1986. CHP e y e s Charges uncertain $S ,OOO clue in baby sale case after crash The twisted remain& of a turbocharged Porsche and $5,000 in $50 bills are the clues California Highway Patrol of· ficers were left with following a high-speed crash this week on the border of Newport Beach. Officers claim the 6:30 p.m. collision Monday at the Coast Highway bridge over the Santa Ana River bas them puzzled. The car's dr i ver and passenger, spotted by several witnesses, reportedly ran from the wreckage and took the keys with them. The money. says CHP in· vestigator Howard Whitmore, was found in the car 's glove compartment. One witness told investigators that one of the men shouted, "It's hot" as he ran. H e could ha ve meant he thought the car was about to burst into flames. but Whitmore says he believes the. fleeing man meant the car was stolen. A Louisiana man who was ar· rested after patrons of a Mission Viejo restaurant said he orrered to sell them his baby daughter was to be arraigned today lf the district attorney can find a suitable section in the criminal code lo cover the case. an Orange County sheriff's officer said. Randy Gordon Wilson, 29, was taken into custody about 3 a.m. .Monday and the 6-week·old, blonde, blue-eyed baby which he said was his daughter, was taken to the Albert Sitton Home, a facillty for the car e of neglect· ed or abused children. A juvenile court bearing is scheduled to determine whether the baby will be placed with relatives of her parents or in a foster home in Orange County. The baby's 15-year-old mother was staying with a church group, said Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Ha rt. She told Investigators that she and Wilson were married. but Wilson told the deputies who arrested him that he was not married to the child's mother. Hart said the couple had been traveling back and forth from Winnsboro, La .. and Orange County since October. 1980. Hart s aid that in October, a 4·year.old and a 6-year-old boy who were Wilson's sons by a previous mar· riage were taken from him and placed into the custody of their natural mother, who lives somewhere in the southwest. Wilson. a heavy equipment operator, is unemployed, Hart said . The couple's home town is about 200 miles northwest of New Orleans and has a popula· tion of about 7 .000. Wilson was booked for in· vestigation of willful cruelty to a child. but there was no evidence that the child had been abused, and there was a legal question about whether an offer to sell the baby constituted an overt act of child·selling, Hart said. The Porsche was first spoUed traveling at speeds estimated at 100 mph through Huntington Beach on Pacific Coast Highway. Whitmore claims the speeding car struck a guard rail on the bridge, angled across four lanes of traffic and plowed into some Stanton approves beefed-up tax plan rock near a trailer park alter Stant.on voters have approved cutting through some brush. a tax override during city elec- One witness told officers that lions to beef up police and fire the passenger suffered what ap-protection for two years . peared to be facial lacerations. Of the 21 percent voter Policebelievebellkelyhassought turnout, 1,431 -or 67.8 percent medicaltreatmentbutthey'reun· -voted in favor of the tax Tues· surewbere. day and 878 opposed the Whltmore claitns bis office measure. The override needed a bas been unable to contact the two·thlrds vote to pass. owner of the car, but bas In other local elections Tues· learned that the car apparently day. Anaheim voters elected to had been loaned to a friend. sell $92 million in bonds to buy He says the car could have an additional 1.5 perc e nt been stolen. The money? Whlt· ownership of twin reactors at more aaya be bas no idea where the San Onofre Nuclear General· it came from. • in1 Station, and a Tustin annex· ation measure faJled. Mistrial d eclare d in killing case LOS ANGELES (AP) A mlatrtal waa declared in the aeven-mqnth murder trlal of Salvatore Narinot aOA of reput· ed San Jose Mafia kio1pln An1elo MariDO, after the jury dellMi'iited for more than 11¥ weeka without a1reeln1 oa a verdict. Jn Anaheim, 4,477 people voted for the bond sale and 1,781 voters opposed It. Anaheim already owns 1.'8 percent in· terest in the plant. Anaheim VQlen al•o paned a second meaaure to allow the city to refinance already a pproved bond sales. In 1\llUn, 188 residents of a ~·acre section of unlncorporat· td land voted a1alnsl annexinl into the clly and 35 voted tor M- nexalloo. T be unincorporated land Is toutb ol Jriiile Boulevard, Dortb or Beyao ~venue and MIDI ilclal ioth ., .. Ol .... HUI Avenue; Under SlUCOD'a tax ovemdi, police and fire protection. Stan· ton is the first Orange County ci· ty to pass such a tax increase since passage of Proposition 13. DRllll CBAST WIATIHR Sunny, warmer Thurs· day. Lows tonight low 60s along the coast, upper 60s inland. Highs Thursday 72 to 78 at the beaches, 85 to 92 inland. INllllTIUY 'SmiUra' Jaclc' ha• lost aome hair orad weori glaHet, but hal "° complamt1 obotd retlre,,.ent. Th• cartoo" oototor iJ recoUfd bv Mt creator, Zoclc Moti.11. Set alof'JI, photo, PO(lf AU. 11111 Tht mla\rlaJ nalinl WU mlde T\lHday bf Superior Court Ju4•• KatblMn Parker when tM Jury 1aid lt wu deadlocktid t to a on u.e mu.rder, attem&*d murder Md fa.lH lapriaoamnt cbara• aaalDtl tb• 10-.er Marin.. reald1nt1 in 11111 ... famU1 ....... wlU "' SM a year for Mded ,:'liliillliiiilllliiillllliliiiiiiiiiiliiliiilliiia~ I l • • • • • •Oran~ Coast DAILY PILOT/W.OnHday, June 3, 1981 :Agents "refuse' lOJtrip LOS ANGELES (AP> -It -.. • cue ol undercover qeata un4er tap macb cover, the owner ol a mate strip Jolnt told a hear· Liie lM9 alle1aUon1 of aex dia· crimlnation at the club. Steve BaMrjee aatd be told a1enta fro~ the Alcohol Control Board tbeJ could enter Cblppen· 4ale's ii ~Y had beeft wLWna to C!onform to the dress code for men durln1 the floor abow ! &lack trouen, cults, collars and IM>w tie but no abirt. The sam~ outllt is wom by waiters at the West Side tilgbtapot featurto1 "male exotic dncers" who peel to G-1trtnga. "We have to create some kind of atmosphere in there for a show. ana the minute you let tenUemeo in, that inbiblts the tvomen aftd they can't act the way they would if there's women only," Banerjee told Ad - miniltrative Law Judge Milford A. Mp-oa. "'l'IUI is a social thing, the way they were raised," he added. ''They act certain ways In front or men." · ABC apnt Arthur Munro gave a sU1hUy different version of the visit be and fellow agent Henry J . Davis paid to the club Nov. 19 tt investigate a complaint by a man who aaid be was denied ad- tilisslon. Munro said that while he wait- ed across the street, Davis tried to enter the club as a private citizen and was refused ad- miHion. Munro then joined Ojlvis anti the two men iden- tffied themselves as ABC agents. Banerjee told them they bad to·-conform to the dress code, but Monro said be described it as "a white T-shirt, a pair of cutoffs, cowboy boQts and a black vest and tie." The hearing was continued by Maron until July 24 because the ABC bad failed to give Baner· jee's lawyer, Ralph B . Saltaman, a copy of the com- plaint that triggered the in- vestigation. The club's alcohol license could be either suspended or re- voked It a sex discrimination filtding is made. Two victims £robl crash identified " AVALO~ (AP> -Two people Wik> died in a small airplane :Ct'lsh off of Santa Catalina . bland have been identified after ·their bodies were retrieved from the•ater. Identified Tuesday were Stephen Charles Stoneroad, 30, the pilot, and Gary Lourenco, 24, of T11lare, a passenger, said Los Angeles County Sb'eriff's Depu- ty Jim Platus. A second ..-enger was identified Moo- d.,. as Colleen Knight, 25, also of «'ulare. l'be twin-engine plane crashed last Thursday after taking off from Avalon, the only ton on thls island located off Ute coast •ar Los Angeles. Witnesses said the plane, «fperated by Shann Air, an air talli service based in Visalia, bad smoke coming from its right eogine before the craft bit the water. ,.,...,.... AT BENEFIT -Jk>b lJope and Princess Grace of Monaco are shown entertna a benefit dinner in Whippany, N .J .• for the Overlook Hospital of Summit, N .J. The gala raised more than $100,000 for the hospital's new Center for Community Health. Fish fry begins Friday in Mesa Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club officials expect more than 50,000 people to attend their 36th annual Fish Fry. a three- d a y carnival in Costa Mesa beginning Friday. This year's event at Lions Park will feature the usual $3.50 fish dinner, carnival rides and game booths. The fund-raiser will also feature a parade, bands and cfancers, baby and beauty con- tests and drawings for a new Ford Escort, color television and other prizes. According to Jim Ferryman, publicity chairman for the event. the Lions Club expects to raise about $55,000 wbich it wilJ donate to 25 local charities, in- cluding the UCl Lions Eye Banlt, Boys Club and Girls Club. In the past 35 yean, the Fish Fry bas '1'aiaed more than $600,000 ror.\local charities, Fer- ryman sajd. The event, which started in 1945, was the idea of two Lions Club members, according to Ferryman. Bob Sidles, a carnival man, got the idea and with the help of Heinz Kaiser's fish batter, the event became a reality. On Friday, the carnival rides and game booths open at 6 p.m. At 7:30 p.m., Band X will enter· tain. The first drawing will be at 9p.m . . On Saturday, the parade, with Lt. Gov. Mike Curb as grand · marshal, begins at 10:30 a.m. on Harbor Boulevard at Wilson Street. At noon, fish dinners go on sale. Also scheduled for Saturday are the parade awards at 2 p.m., a drawing at 3:15 p.m . and the Arlee Higbee Dancers at 4:15 p.m. Then at 6 p.m., there will be another drawing and, at 7 p.m ., the Plaza Rhythm Band will perform . The color television drawing will be at 9 .,.m. On Sunday, the festival will conclude with the annual beauty contest at 2 p.m . and a baby con· test at 3:30 p.m. A drawing is set for 5:30 p.m., the Dorothy Jo Dancers will perform at 6:15 p.m. and the drawing for a 1981 Ford Escort will be at 8 p.m. Liquor license case debated NASHVILLE. Tenn. CAP) -A U.S. District Court jury, under instructions to base its verdict on the difference between patronage and payoffs, today began deliberating liquor license payoff charges against former Gov. Ray Blanton and two of bis one-lime assistants. Blanton, the first former gov- ernor of Tennessee to face criminal charges in court, went on trial April 20 along with bis former special assistant, Clyde Edd Hood Jr., and his 1974 cam.: paign manager, James Allen, on charges or extortion, conspiracy and mail fraud. Anti-snwg gear issue advances SACRAMENTO-(AP) -The Assembly Transportatfon Com· mittee has approved on a 9-1 vote a bill to eliminate a five- y ear warranty imposed on automobile anti-smog equip· ment by the state Air Resources Board. The bill is sponsored by the Service Station Council, which fears that requiring car owners to take their cars to dealers for service for five years will cut in· dependent garages' business. Federal court opens in SA ~toil rights, personal in jury c~es mark first I or county •1 DAVID KUTZMANN .... ..., ....... • With the selection of two juries to bear a civil rtgbta case and a personal Injury case, federal tourt convened for the first Ume 1'1aelday in Oraage County. Wltb other court offtcials and peats looking on, U.S. District Oourt Judge William P. Gray in- ·eusurated court hearinp ln San· la A~a'1 Oran1e County Courthouse, a culmination of a lO-~ar effort., local attorneys •and ~ivic leaden wbo felt On.qe County deserved ita own federal ~hand for Tuesday'• -Of court were Chief Juclae A. An· drew Hauk oft.be U.S. court'• Ce· traJ Dlatrictof Calilomla; Pr9id- ing Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert E. Rickles, and U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Kelleher, who was chairman of the Santa Ana court committee. Judge Gray, a silver-haired jurlat who bas served on the federal court· bench ln Los Angeles for 15 years, said after Tuesday's proceedings that lt wu sWl undecided how many federal judees would be needed ln Santa Ana. "A lot depends on need," Gray said. "'lbe fact we are here may cause cases to be filed." For the Ume being, tbe federal court will operate out of empty ~ourtroom space in the Orane• County ~-Judees ?rill CtH ...... lldwMI..,. 114"142-1171 Alt .. .., ............... lotl-4l21 be sent as needed from LOS Angeles. This will be done, officials said, until facilities in downtown Santa Ana can,be leased. The long-term ouUook ls for permanent space to be available in a new courthouse building planned for Santa Ana ~ the nextlOto lS years. The holding of federal court proceedings in Orange County was made possible bv con- gressional approval of a bill des· ignatinl Santa Ana as a place of holdlne court in the u .s. District Court's central district. That district ta.kes in San Luis Obispo. Santa Barbara, Ventura, Loa Angeles1 Orange, San Bernardino ana Riverside coun· ties. ' Caaes heard in Santa Ana 1enerally will cover 01an1e. Riverside and San . Bernardino countlea. .. In the put, federaJ court mat- ters ln Oranc• County were beard ln Lot An1eles. Until permanent facilities are leued, catea will aUll have to M ftltd with the clerk of the federal court lo LOI Antelel ••wedon'tknowwbatwe'Uneed untlJ " do eome busl.,... down here," Grayaaid. Tbe federal cowU only badle c .... ID area wMre vloladonl of ,., ....... .,..., ....... Al~ to Oran1t CoWltJ'a sa,.nor Court et YU c ... MCklllC 01 tuee to roar ,ean, Gra7 _aitd It now .. , td• nve llMllltU,.. fliterilcuetocometolttal. • WASHINGTON CAP> -Houle O.mocrata, pre11ured by tbe Rea1an admlniltratlon •nd con· aervaUv 1Dthtlro.-n party, are movlna reluctanUy toward a two· year tax-cut plan but atilJ lnaist on extra relief for lower-and mlddle- lncome Americans. "I hope we can fashion a pro- 1ram that can be enjoyed by all Democrats ," Rep . Dan Rosten.kowski. D-lll., chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Mtan.s Committee, said Tues· day after a t~hour mfftln1 ol panel Democrats. "We're taJkln1 about the po-1fblltty of a multlyea.rtHbill ... However, Rostenkowski said, "There were no votes, no con- clusions." He said Democrat.a "still are very concerned with worklna Americana aod how we can tar1et dollars" from a tax cut on those earnlne between $20,000 and $50,000 a year. Deputy White House press Bus fares hiked; tickets sell fast Fares to ride Orange County's public buses went up this week and so did the demand for monthly passes. ·Several of the 119 distributors who sell the passes for the Orange County Transit District reported that they have run out of them, a district spokesman said. "We've never bad this happen before," said Madeleine Bickert, community relations officer, who said OCTD has averaged about 11,000 pass sales per month. Bus riders began paying 75 cents rather than 50 cents Mon· day for a one-way local ride dur- i.ng commuting hours. The fare Pair explain suicide pact TUCSON. Ariz. <AP> -A couple who died with their two small children and a teen-age girl in an apparent suicide pact left a note saying they decided to end their lives because they were tired of running from the la!• police said. Kay t:nright, djrector of the Colorado Bureau of Investiga- tion, said Tuesday that Bruce McKinley, 28, was wanted on a 1978 felony warrant in Arapahoe County on a drug-related charge. Mary Jo McKinley. 25. was sought by Denver police in 1979 on drug-related charges of possession and stealing narcotjcs, he said. Authorili~s said it appeared that the McKinleys, their daughter Jennifer, 3, and their son Marc Dana, 1, each had been shot in the head by a .22· caliber rifle. ciuring middays, evenings and weekends increased to 60 cents. ReguJar monthly bus puses also went up from 117.SO to $21.SO, but that didn't seem to bother bus riders who reportedly had many of the distributors running out of the wallet-sized cards by last weekend. Businesses such as J.C. Pen- ney's , Albertson's, Gemco and Laguna Federal Savings & Loan Association sell the passes for OCT'D as a public service. Ms. Bickert said OCTD of- ficials won't know the effects of increased fares on ridership UD· til later this week. District officials say that purchase of monthly passes is less expensive than paying daily fares. "' Tooth surgery fatal t~ girl FORT WORTH, Texas (P) - Shonia Crumpton was anxious to have her wisdom teeth pulled before she entered a college preparatory program this week. On Tuesday she died, nearly a week after lapsing into a coma when her oxygen supply was in· terrupted during the surgery. An autopsy was to be performed today on the 17-year- old high school student, accord· ing to officials at the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's of- fice. She had been ln critical condi- tion since the surgery at Harrls Hospital, showing no reflex signs and no brain activity, said' her mother, Mattie Crumpton, a registered nurse in the hospital's surgical recovery unit. secretary Larry Speakes declined comment today on the DemocratJc search for a com- promise. "The president aUU tbin.ka it should be a three-year propoeal," Speakes aaid, but would be "will- ing to listen" to anythl.ne the Democt'ata might sud est. Apparently n ot enou1b Democrats are committed to any plan to assure its puaage in the House. There are at leut three factions: -Rostenkowskl, the key fleure in the House on tax matters, is try- in1 to arriv&at a compromise but not the three-year, 25 percent version endorsed by the White House. -Moel House liberals oppose a multiyear tax cut. Many talk privately against compromise, hoping that would force a vote on Reagan's original proposal. Such & vote, by most counts. would go against the president. -A group of 47 conservatives mainly Southerners, who gav~ Reagan the margin of victory in a crucial budget vote earlier this year, tried unsuccessfully Tues- day to reach a consens us. Fallbrook voters nix city hood FALLBROOK (APl -A move to incorporate Fallbrook, mak· ing it San Diego County's 17th ci- ty, has been rejected by a 4·lo· l margin. The defeat Tuesday marked the first time since the 1979 passage of Proposition 13, the state tax-cutting initiative, that a San Diego County commWlity voted against incorporation. The fanal but unofficial results had 4,878, or 78.3, opposing the proposal while 1,355, or 21.7, favored it. J amses Hong, who led the fight against incorporation, said the defeat "represented exactly how the people in this communi· ty feel. The y do not want another layer of government which was. going to cost them more in tax dollars." . The 41-square mile communi· ty of 19,000 is located 52 miles north of downtown San Diego. The incorporation debate cen- tered on whether this was the right lime to become a city and whether the new city would have enough money to keep accounts in the black. Summe~ Sale Starts June 1 st Step in now for a wonderful selection of quality furniture all at sale prices! You will feel like a "BARON" using this Oesk- Exquisitely crafted \ ..... Caroline Kennedy, daughter of Late President John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Onassis, arrives at New York theater for recent film premie-re of ''Supennan II," starring Christopher Reeve and .Gene Hackman. U.S. altitude on vet changes The American public is finally recognizing its obliga· tion to Vietnam veterans who were "ignored and neglect- ed·' when they returned from battle, says retired Army Gen. Wllllam Westmoreland. ·'Thank God the old, worn, tired attitudes are now his· tory," Westmoreland, who comma nd ed Ame rican troops in Vietnam, told a gathering at Winter Haven, Fla. in observance of Viet- nam Veterans Month. "The truth is overshadowing perception, facts· are over- coming emotion.·· Westmoreland s aid he agreed with President Ronald Reagan that the war was a "noble cause." And, he said, the war was not lost in the battlefields in Viet· nam. but in the streets at home. "America was not defeated militarily," he said. "It was defeated l?Y propaganda in· voJving lies and exaggeration here at home." He said plans for construc- tion of a memorial to Viet- n am veterans in Washington is evidence that public at- titudes are changing. "We have, in the last dee ade , destroyed our taJ. towers: Duty, honor, coun· try," he said. ''The Vietnam memorial is the beginning ol the rebuilding of thost towers." Former President. Jlmm1 Carter took a break fron trout fishing to sample tht. delicacies of a fast-food restaurant and -ever the politician -kiss a voter. Carter has visited this Huntingdon County, Pa. com- munity of Franklinville eight times in the past two years to relax and fish. On Monday morning, he stopped at a restaurant with his wife, Rosalynn, and daughter, Am y , j u st north of Secretary of State Alex- ander Haig has taken his first time off since taking office by paying a visit to his son, Army Capt. Brian Haig at Fort Carson near Colorado Springs, Colo. \ WUliamaport, about 75 mll• away. ••1 wasn't nervoua untll after be left,'' aald Saudra Selamldt of Cotan StaUon, a waltreu. Arter a customer pointed out the former r.reatdent, who wu dteaaed n a nylon jacket and Jean•, Carter came to the counter and ahook band• with the waltreaaea, she saJd. LaVera Gelu o a of Willlamaport, a customer, said the former president klased her after she told him she voted twice fot him. "I'm not going to wash my face for a week." Mrs. Gehron said with a lauih. A former magazine d11· trlbutor bu been awarded more than '82,000 in HoUJtoo for Ubel, ahmder and assault damages Inflicted upon him by Hustler publisher Larry FlyJI&, bis brother and his Ohio-based publishing com- pany. R. Gary St. Marie con- tended that Flynt and his brother, Jimmy, defamed his character and had two men knock him unconscious at a 1977 convention in Cbical(o. St. Marie, who filed the suit after his Gulf & Southern News Inc., distributorship folded, also accused the brothers of spreading word through the industry that he was unreliable in paying his debts. St. Marie contends the as- sault resulted from a $37 ,800 debt for which he was not responsible. But the Flynts argued that St. Marie had a bad reputation and provoked the assault. A federal jury ruled this week Flynt Distributing Co., Inc ., of Columbus, Ohio, was liable for $59,201 in libel and a ssault damages. Larry Flynt was held responsible for $18,001 in libel and slander damages and his brother $5,063 for assault. Glena Mowless and Mike Gollehon gave each other a lot of static during their courtship, but say they were happy to get married only six ·months after meeting. Both are police dispatchers and say they became ac- quainted over the radio. Hand.Ung emergencies on the alr each day did not fully prepare her for the ceremonies, however. "I'm so nervous. I'm glad I don •l do this every day," she said this week, dressed in a long pink gown waiting for the wedding party to arrive. Mrs. Gollehon, 33, works for the Clovis, N. M. Police Department. Gollehon, also in his 30s, mans a console for the New Mexico State Police. The GoJlebons said they would live in Portales and expect to continue their careers. Hail pounds Oklaholna Overcast covers most of nation's skies, including Southland wastal f orecaJJt; Oller outtt wettrs lnc:rtHl119 _,,,_ wtlldt bKoml"CI 10 10 20 •-wilt! 4 to 7 fOGt c~ '"' lflreUOll """'Clht· ...... ,_ ..,...... Wffttrly 10 to It ~ wltfl J to 4 loot wlllCI ••vet w..-r1y .-12 to J feet. U.S. summary We'Te Listening ••• What do you like about \he Daily PUot? What don't you llke? Call the number below and your mesaaie wl.11 be recorded, traaarrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour 1nawertn1 1etviee may be used to record leUera to the editor Oft any t<>plc. Mallboic contributon muat lacl&.14'e tbe1r name and telephone number for verlllcaUoo, No circulation calls, pleue. Tell ua wh•l'• on your mind. Odif omia National tenqM ...... 1f .. • • .... .. . ,. .. .. 11 .. . " " .. ,. llJm•r<k 70 " ltltt 72 5' .... " 54 8l'OWftlYllt " • 811ff•le ti SI C11trl1trlSC • fl• Clltl11t11WV .. u Cllt~ 74 41 Clll~t90 11 41 CIMIMMI a u Clt¥tltnd • S1 COlvnlboa • u Dtl·FtWUI .. .. o.iw.r 73 fO 0.1MolN1 a ., Detroit ,. SI OWlllUI S6 0 ....... '*' 52 • Ht'1fenl ., sa Hte-7' 41 HOl!Oh1lu • n 'H-1ell • 11 llldfttP41• I 12 M JtekMY11t '2 71 J-to 41 1Ct ll9 City 11 '5 LUY: .. n Little .. 1'0 LAl*.tllt IS .. ~ .. 7a MIM\I a n Mllw.._ 71 S4 ::=-: 7S S7 ., .. "-~ " 7a .... v ... '5 .. ...,..... .. .. ~1ac1-. as u OfftlM 14 .. ~ '2 11 ..._. ....... .. • ......... ,. 1J ~~ 1' • Ptlllftll,Mt ., ... PtltMl,Oro .. 12 lltt*I City .. ... II-1' .. llkllmtM 11 .. Seltl..tllt 1' • lffttte " Sl It L.oul• -• ... ltll'>T ...... " " ltMitMttte 7a .. ---JI • Tllltt .. n Welfllfltlll 7a .. Srm, moon, tide8 TODAY ,.,... ... S:tle."'· •t.1 "''"'""' Uta1t.A ... , ----•11t•·"'· t,1 14111 .. ,,. ""'·· ,.. ...... ........ a.."" , Mee!l-.1;17-.m.,,.._....., .,..,.""' Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Wednffday, June 3, 1981 8 Relief fund hailed out . Supervisors order program revamp to contain costs / For th~ fourth tlm• tbb year , tbe Oranae County Board of Supervilora bu dipped into re- serves to baJI out the flnanc1aUy troubled 1eneral relief prosram. Supervisors Tuesday all'ffd to tramfer an additional SU0,000 to keep the pro1ram solvent •throuch June 30, the end ol the Clsc al year. In approving _tbe transfer, the board ordered a revamping of the 1eneraJ relief pro1ram -a move officials believe wlll help contain costs in the future. General relief is cash aa- alstance for persona who are not eligible for or are awaiting other types of welfare usistance. For reasons that have yet to be fully explained, the demand for assistance skyrocketed lo March. That situation, coupled with the fact the fund was nearly exhausted, forced supervisors on three occaalona to approve budget transfer so payment• could continue. About $2 million ln general re- lief asalltance will be paid by the end ol the fiscal year, ac- cording to county officials. Unlike other types of welfare, the county receives no subeldy from the state or federal govem- mellf.IJ for the general relief pro- 1ram. Under new 1uidellnea ap· proved by t.he board, all efforts wlll be made to avoid giving direct cash payments to re- cipients. Instead, third party checks will be issued for such itema as rent and food. Also, able-bodied recipients who refuse to report f:0r work oo county-sponsored projects will be required to forfeit benefits for 90 days. At the behest of Supervisor Bruce Nestande, the' board of 1upefVilort declared that any person who applies for 1eneral relief muat have resided tn the county for at least IO da11. However, provl1lon1 will be made to provide benefits to persona who don't meet tbe residency requirements, but OD· ly in emergency altuatlona. "l'he board WU told lhf' COUil· ty's Human Services Apacy, tn conjunction with tbe county Aud1tor-Controller'1 Office, hat prepared an "early warnlns system" to monitor the outflow of general relief fund• to avoid a repeat of what occurred in March. In a related action, t~e board also added $161,200 i CO\i,Dty funds to the Aid to Fam Ilea with Dependent Children Pr 1ram. It ls funded largely with federal and state funds. -FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Hou.sing sales drop sharply Apr il figures show annual ad justed rate of 441,000 ~ WASHINGTON (AP> -Sales of new single-family houses plunged 13.5 percent in April, the biggest drop in a year, u rising mortgage interest rates continued to plague the housing industry. government officials reported. A housing industry spokesman said sales may have fallen eveq more in May when interest rates "re ally took off. " The new report by the depart- ments of Commerce and Hous- ing and Urban Development put April's new-house sales at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 441,000, lbe lowest since the 353,000 of April 19fM>. averaged 15.53 percent in April, according to the Federal Home Loan Ban.It Board. Lenders have indicated that rates have con-· tioued to rise since then, The new Commerce-HUD re- port said the median sales price for new single-family houses rose to a record $69,300 in April. But that figure ls just $800 higher than the $68,SOO median of seven months earlier in an in· dustry known not long aeo for rapidly rising prices. Sheehan said it is bard to pre- dict what future government re- ports will show, since houaln& statistics tend to be highly volatile from month to month. Open house slated The public will have its first look at Orange County's new $1 million dollar criminal justice center at Golden West College, June 5, during an open house starting at 10 a .m. cies and the Coast Community ColJege District. Thal April 1980 figure, the housing-sales low point of laat year:s recession, was a 25· percent drop from the previous .._ T h e f a c i 1 i t y c o n t a i n s month. classrooms, crime and photo The Criminal Jwitice Traininl Center, which will serve as a central facility for the county, was jointly funded by a $379,635 grant from the Law Enforce- ment Assistance Administration through the Orange County Justice Training Council. The Coast District contributed the campus site, $500,000 and a $120,000 loan to be repaid through fees . Bob Sheehan, an economist with the National Association ot Home Builders, said May sales figures, which won't be released until June 29, could show further declines. Typical mortgage interest on fixed-rate. fixed-term loans for new single-family houses labs, critical incident simula- tion, advanced officer labs, a physical training area, _.Rl edia center and administratlVe of- fices. The event will mark the of· ficial opening of the joint project of the county's 23 chiefs of police, state and federal agen- The keynote speaker will be Rodney Blonian, special usia- tant to state Atty. Gen. George~ Deukemejian. u ....... PMOTEST -The Reagan administration's proposed cuts in health care ·were protested by the Community for Creative Non-violence, led by activist and "baby doctor" Benjamin Spock (center with beard). The group knelt on the White House driveway until removed by police and Secret Service agents . Gem Talk ByJ.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gemol-Ogi1t, ACS ntEPEAJDOT ... a m111te111 lt(me According to legend, the first perldot (pronounced perrydo~h> was found by a pirate band on an laland in the Red Sea. Later, the Egyptians found the island, named lt Serpent Isle, and mined the beautitul, pale ireen st~nes. It ls said that, so jealously did they guard the laland, anyone who set an unauthorised root on Serpent Isle wu immediately put to death. Peridot became known u a maalcal gem that would protect the wearer from I evU. The E&ypUana sent the stones to Franee to be cut They were worn by tbe pbaraoba ud were uaed aa decoration• tn their palaces. Tbe7 attributed medicinal qualltf H to t be peridot, bellevlns that any medicine drunk for a perldot cballce would h••• extra heaUn1 strenctb. Specimens ot perldot are 1tl11 mined on • Serpent Jale, and ln South Af rlca Burma South Amtrtca and the 1out'bweattrn U.S. Perldot II puttcularly btauWu.l when tel In •Old Jt.elry. ' ' j I OMEGA CLASSICS FOR GRADUATION J. C.JJ~6 J.-L~ @ 1 l , l ~ ~ f 0 d ii 0 . Orange Coat DAILY Ptl!.Ot/WednHday, :June 3, 1981 mffiU~OOQJ Heawen awaits June 28 ·;Tucson sect, divested of earthly goods, lifts eyes !: TUCSON (AP> -John 1 Vicken sold bla home. Dr. '1,James McCullogb donated a 1, Porsche. Former award-wi.nninl bodybuilder Bert Seelm•n cut hllJ training. I '1 They are among $t) members 11 of a Tucson reli1lou1 1roup who say they expect to be physically "• urtecl to Heaven to be with God ., on June28. ,_,, "Ooooo, glory, I get bllsa jU9l -.. thinking about it," said Bill 1 Maupin, spiritual leader of the t; fundamentalist Lighthouse •1 Gospel Tract FoundaUon. Maupin and others -said Bible '" study has convif\,Ced iw.m that ~l the second coming of Christ ~. will take place in 1988. They, .., however, said they believe they , already wtll be in Heaven. "We're not just going to some ~ mountain hideaway; we're leav· H ing the Earth,'' Maupin said. "Thia ta known aa rapture. And when rapture takes place, the people not saved will be able to see "" beinr saved. There'• no such thlng u a secret rapture," Maupin said. In preparation for the event, the 50 members have qu.it their jobs and dlaposed of some of their property. Vickers, 32, quit hls job as a commerCial 1lass worker and la living off the money from the sale ol his home. He and other members of the group said they have donated their remainin1 money to the group to spread its wotd. "My main concern. Is for otben, and I would like to be able to give that to them," Vickers asaid. "I've never known such peace, ~:Bubble. bursting? .,, . r. Frothy baths worry FDA .,: WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Ad· 1 ministration says p~ple should be informed that too· 1 frequent or prolonged bubble baths may cause health r problems, but it says it isn't sure warning labels are the I .J best way to do it. c• Dr. Arthur Hull Hays Jr., FDA commissioner, said Monday the FDA will delay the Aug. 9 effective date of a proposed rule requiring label warnings that bubble baths can cause irritation to. the skin and urinary tract. "It is clear that people, especially parents, need to know that remaining in bubble baths for prolonged periods or time, or using bubble baths excessively, can cause health problems," be said. "But we need to examine carefully whether a caution statement on the label is the most effective and appropriate way to bring this probl~m to parents' attention," Hayes said. "We also need to reconsider whether the cautionary , statement is needed on bubble baths intended only for use by adults." He said the FDA is urging manufacturers to develop ' alternative approaches. ~ ' • aucb Joy," sald McCullou&h, a Noaales doctor who was brou1ht lnto the group by Seelman, who said be la cuttinl his trainlna to save his atrenitb for the llft1Dg of spirits. Ualna' biblical references to events expected to precede the rapture, Maupin predicts that, after a war in the Mideast, the world will be dominated by a multinational power headed by an American "anti-Cbirlst" unW Christ returns in May 1988. But before then, Maupin said, believers will be transported to Heaven. According to Maupin, those re- maining on Earth after June 28 will have lo decide between go- ing into league with the devil - thereby assuring their eternal damnation -or professing faith ln Jesus. But you don't have to believe lo the June 28 dale to experience the rapture, Maupin said. True believers lo Christ. including the dead, are au eligible, he said. And what ii the group isn't lift· ed lnto Heaven on June 28? "I can't even answer a ques· lion like that," said Maupin. ''Come back and see us on June 29 and we'll talk about it." ''We're ready for the rap. tu re," said laborer Bub Bowman. "My little one sort of wants a three·wheeler before it happens, but we're ready to go." Not all of the 50 are so fully convinced. Jerry Walker, co. owner of a Tucson want-ad newspaper, said he hopes the others are right and that his un- certainty probably stems from "my own inability to interpret the Bible." "I do believe its going to hap- pen sometime -I just don't know when," Walker added. "ln fact, I'm Just about to go into another business deal. Jr it's time to go, we'll go. If it's not. I still have a life to live." ~S uperwoman s queeze linge r s ::JNumber of American women seeking jobs soaring (j WASIDNGTON <AP) -The number of American women seeking jobs is soaring but most still face the "superwoman squeeze" -responsibllity for home chores as well as a paying Job -according to a hew study issued Monday. More than half of women aged 16 and over now hold jobs, ac· cording to the report published by the Population Reference Bureau. a non-profit research group. "Virtually no aspect of American society baa been left tfbtouched by the rush of women into the labor market since the mid-point of the 20th century," wrote Linda J . WaJte of the Rand Corp.. in Santa Monica, author c:A the study. C uts _c~ncerning g over~ors, mayors WASIDNGTON (AP> -Cut· ting federal aid to the states by 25 percent without lifting restric- tions from the remaining money would IJ)ean deep cuts lo local services, a group of 1ovemors and mayors warned after meet- i n~ with President Reagan. ·'If the 25-percent cuts go through -parli.t.uJarly ln our health and social welfare pro- grams -we absolutel1 have to h"ll ve the freedom I from the r ederal catego1:tcal erant restrictions, reel rape and re· porting requirements," aald. Missouri's Republican Gov. Christopher Bond. "Otherwise, we're 1oin1 to have lo have susbstanUal cuts in services to our ciUzens who need it," Bond said after be and 11 other state and local officials met with Reagan, Vice Prest· dent George Bush and budtet director David Stockman at..a.be While House. Reagan has propoted cutting the money available under M narrowly defined federal pro- rrams from the $15.S bllllon pro- posed by former President C6l'ter to $11.2 billion, accordin1 to the National Governors Al· sociatloo. To make the cuts easier to swallow, Reagan bas proposed that the money for the health, education and social services programs be handed to tbe states to spend as ~they wisb, ~th few limits. Republican Gov. Bob Orr ol Indiana called the proposal "a very necessary and dramatic change in tbe way our country fuactiooa . . . Block irants will make a huge difference in th' abllity to deliver services at the local level." ·Tbe National Governors Ar.· sociation bas supported the block gtanta concept, arpin1 that local officials are in a better ~Uon to determine needs than Wa1b.lngtoo officials. Com ~ up to the Topi ON YOUR FM RADIO DIAL ''From child-rearing to politics to marketing products for lbe American consumer, all are different because so many women now bold a paid job out· side the home or are looking for one," she added. But, among full -time workers, abe noted , women with bachelor's and advanced college degrees still average less in· come ($14,735) than male high school dropouts ($14,806). And, "most working wives and mothers still face tbe superwoman squeeze -jugg,llng home and family chores for which they are still primarily responsible in addition to their ., reapomibillties on the job," ·She added. Among working people, both men and women averaged a lit· tle over eight and one-half hours on tbe Job dally. However, wom en worked an additional two hours and 23 minutes a day on housework, compared to 2S minutes a day for married men. As of 1!8>, Ms. Waite noted 45 mlllioo wom~n either held a paid job or were looking for ooe, up from 18 million in 1950. While delayed marriage, separation and divorce have bad some effect oo the number of working women, she reported that "married women living with their husbands have been in the vanguard of women's rusb into the paid labor force." Thia sienals a marted shift in attitudes about a "woman's place," she said, with fewer women dropping out of the workforce while their children are young .. A shortage of day care faclllties is a major problem for working women, she reported. cwuJ! .. ·~-........ Me~bers of lighthouse Gorpel, having sold properties and quit jobs, spend full time reading Bible while atooiting ascen.rion.. Road 1J?Ork bids rigged Highway con structors say practice is common By the Asaoclated Presa Highway contractors convtcl· ed or rigging bids on road proj- ects in North Carolina say the practice is common nationwide. And federal investigators say figures appear to back them up. More than 228 individuals and companies have been indicted as a result of investigations by state and federal prosecutors in at least 11 states into collusion on highway bids. "I don't know if there's ever been an enforcement program in one industry that resulted in this much prosecutorial activity," said Richard Favretto of the U.S. Justice Department. North Carolina Transportatiqn Secretary Thomas Bradshaw said most bid rigging on highway projects involves com· plementary bii:is, in wbjch a con· tractor gets others to agree lo submit higher bids on a project he wants. Later, the winning contractor will repay in kind. Indicted company executives contend the practice was a gentlemen's agreement that didn't hurt anyone. Stale prose· cutors disagree, saying bid· rigging resulted in astronomical increases lo the price of asphalt and overpayment or millions of dollars for paving projects. ,.Robert Bloch, a trial attorney for the Justice Department, said bid rigging appears to have been "fairly extensive." He said the department has investigations in progress 1n North Carolina, Virginia , South Carolina, Georgia and several other stales. Federal and state indictments have been returned in bid· rigging cases in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Ten- nessese, Illinois, Georgia and Kansas. lnvestigatiqns also are under way in Montana , Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas. No high-level officials have been indicted, although Gene Blanton, brother of former Ten· nessee Gov. Ray Blanton. is fac· ing trial on federal charges and his uncle, Jake Blanton, has pleaded guilty. In North Carolina, a paving company executive who recently bids, told his trial earlier this year of a road-paving industry in North Carolina that for many years accepted collusion on con· tracts as "a way or life." Since the inquiry began, North Carolina has struck deals with paving companies allowing them to get back on the state's bidding list after paying restitu· ti on. So far. more than $3.8 million has been paid to the state In Georgia, three companies pleaded guilty to bid-rigging N th C l . charges last year, said Robert OT aro ina , Stubbs. executive assistant at· h · h b torney general. W tC egan tn -Indictments were returned in t · t · th November by a Fulton County v es i g a in g e grand jury against five com· Pa v iing iindUStTy panies. However, a judge ruled " " ea rlier that Georgia 's bid· last Year, has a rigging statute is unconstitu· tional because it is vague and he ad St a T t On ambiguous. The state's appeal is before the Georgia Supreme th t t Court. 0 eT S a e S. A federal grand jury convened March 4 in Baton Rouge, La., to investigate alleged bid rigging finished a prison term for rig and price fixing on paving con· ging bids alleged that his firm tracts. U.S. Attorney Donald did $9,600 worth of work for Lt. Beckner said that was part of a Gov. Jimmy Green at no cost to multistate investigation in the him. Greeo d~nied any wrongdo South into allegations or rigged ing, and an investigation is un bids for paving materials. So far, der way. no indictments have been re· North Carolina, which began turned. investigating the paving in· Thirteen inclictments naming dustry last year, bas a head more than 30 people have start on other slates. So far. at charged bid rigging on highway least 29 executives of paving contracts in Illinois since 1972. companies that operate in the Six defendants were acquitted, slate have pleaded guilty to but one company was rined $3.25 federal charges, and several million. Tom Genovese, chief of companies have been fined. the slate's antitrust division, Charles Wuertenberger, who said he expects to collect alme>St was convicted by a federal court ") $4 million when the remaining jury on two counts or rigging cases are completed. Super ·Special Prices \ .. r----------1 I COUPON I ss.aa I $5.00 off purchase of I . 1 Timex Watches 1 I Selected mod•I• I ·----------.. B!¥.~!~!~.\J:1!§~~Qf 17141760-0111 •• Pu,.,,.,ora 61 Oldltme ~INN'' ft, fQ· l. iiat i: ot •al Bl on le ro- be It ID er or rn ll· i~ an D· yl >• •• l· d y d Q d r 0 d tl 0 Religious sect de-Ries land grab MODESTO (AP) -Former mecbers ol the Word of We Fellowsbip, a fundamentalist re- Uatoua IJ"OUP that believes the collap11e ol society is at band! say the IJ'OUP i1 buyln• laod ano 1tockpllln1 auns. accordlnc to a copyrtlbt story 1n the Modesto Bee. Tbe paper quoted an unideo· titled real estate aaent ln Tuolumne County as aaytna that the Word ol IJfe Fellowship bu purchased hundreds of acre. of land in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. Eiabt years a10, the Redwood City-based group moved to Mi- Wuk ,Vlllaae, SO miles northeast of Modesto, and it now bas some 300 members in Tuolumne Coun· ty, accordina to Jacqueline Thomshaw, its 63-year-old leader. Ballot try for stiffer terms OK'd SACRAMENTO CAP) -A Sylmar man has the green light to campaign for a ballot in- itiative to increase prison terms for persons who attempt or com- mit robbery or burglary. Secretary of State March Fong Eu said that Alexander Bookston needs 346,119 signatures of registered voters to place the Robbery and Burglary Punishment Initiative Statute proposal on the June 1982 ballot. The initiative would specify prison terms ranging from 5 to 20 years, and provide that "pro. bation shall not be granted nor execution or imposition of sen- tences be suspended for any person" convicted of attempted or actual robbery and burglary. DAILY PllDT CLASSIFIED ADS M2•M78 NAME EUROPEAN SEPARATES. SAVE ONE-THIRD She denied charaes that the aroup 11 stockpllin1 cuns or is en1a1ed in an orchestrated ef. fort to purchue ta.nd in the area. Those charges were made by Ed Abrahamson, a former mem her ol the aroup, who said that Ms. Tbomahaw bas uraed her followers to purchase aum to defend themselves, and bu said she would strap on pistols to protect any members of the group who find themselves without food and shelter in the coming economic collapse. Abrahamson, who said be was with the group for five years, said Ms. Thomabaw caused the breakup of his family. Dr. Lowell Strelker, a Burl-· ingame counselor who has worked with members of the Peoples Temple and with Word of Life dropouts, said Ms. Thomsbaw is "an extremely strong-willed woman who rules her sect with an iron hand." "She thinks she is a prophet and the only possessor of the truth," Streiker said, adding that he doesn't believe the group is a threat to the Mi-Wult Village community. Ms. Tbomsbaw said the charges being leveled at the group were "all lies." "We bad good relationships with people around here until some of them dropped out and started· talking to newspapers and television stations," she said. She said members of the aroup were buytng land, but de- nied that there waa any or- ganized campaign by the group to buy land. Word of Ufe members are not stockpiling guns, Ms. Thomshaw said, but she did say they are stockpiling food because the Bi- ble demands it. • Word of Life is putting the finishing touches on a 15,000· square-foot, 600-seat chapel in Mi-Wult Village. Some of the town's 1,500 residents have ex- pressed apprehension over the growth of the group, but they say its members have not caused any trouble in the small vacation community. Bnghl ftorll , jlcMt by °"' d P!: 1Mrt91 ..... Chai fnln Gill ... .. al ytlow/jldt Ml...,,,., IDblCCO/ Strlwblrr)', 1,; Of blll:k!Vllllt. ~. 8-18. Or1a; 1182, ULI ..... Allartld pukn •• * .... •11. Orig. 174, ...... ~ . Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 s "' ............. Feds offer LA anti-crime aid LOS ANGELES CAP) -The U .S . attorney general's task foT'ce on· violent crime came to Los Angeles to get testimony from California officials on what the federal government can do about violent crime. Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., Mayor Tom ~T'adley and former state Attorney General Evelle Younger were scheduled to testify. ''The task force is not interest- ed in the sociological causes of crime," said Jeffrey Harris, ex- ecutive director of the commit- tee staff. "We're ~rested in giving advice to the nation's top 1aw enforcement officer on what be can do about it." rent laws. The second report. due in Auguat, will cover recom· mendationa for new legialaticm .. The ~chairmen of the tut force are Griffin B. Bell, tbt former U.S. attorney •eoeral, and Gov. James Thompton ol ll· linois. Thompson was not scheduled to be present. Committee members. are to examine and vote on recommeo· dations for the lint report. Some of the ideas before the panel include U5e of the military -particularly the Navy -Ul drue enforcement, use of the federal prisons to ease over- crowding on the local level and other federal aid to narcotics en- forcement. LOW OVERHEAD -Screenwriters Michael Goldfinger (left) and Michael Pasternak work on screenplay in their "office" on Santa Monica beach. As actors giving screenwriting a try, they want to keep costs down. The panel is coUecting data for two reports to U.S. Attorney General William French Smith. The first report, due June 17, will deal w\th steps the federal governmentlean take under cur- * * * Harris said the principal problems being examined aa causes of crime include prison over -crowding , juvenile violence, narcotics and the pro- blem or repeat offenders. Tuesday's meeting was the third session of the task force. It had met previously in Washington and Atlanta. Other hearings are scheduled for Chicago, Detroit, Miami, New York and a final session ia Washington. Panel OKs refund plan by PacTel SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Pacific Telephone's plan to re- fund $20.9 million in overcharges bas been approved by the state Public Utilities Commission. The company said the refund, to subscribers with Zone Usage Measureme nt service, would amount to about $4 for each of the 3.4 million Pacific Telephone subscribers affected in the Los Angeles area and 1.6 million in the San Francisco Bay area. ZUM service charges involve in- ter-area calls and r'placed measure d local and multi- message unit charees. The refUnds will include in- terest on the basic amount over· collected from Jan. 8, 1980 to March 22, 1980. They will be reflected as credit on bills to those customers receiving service under the ZUM plan on March 20, 1981. The PUC said the overcollec- Uon actually was $21.6 million, less $700,000 in setUements with General Telephone Co. Brown describes tax, CCC ideas LOS ANGELES CAP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. told a federal task force that the Reagan administration can fight crime by funding state.run yo uth programs like the ,Galifornia Conservation Corps. The task force, looking into ac- tions the federal government can take against violent crime, got a sales pitch from the Democratic governor on two of his state programs -a proposed sales tax increase to fund prison construction, and the CCC. The CCC sends unemployed youngsters to remote areas to learn job training skills and do sucb work as planting trees and fighting floods. In a prepared statement, Brown said such programs, if funded by the federal govern- ment in other states, would re- duce youth crime. •'The youngster returns to the streets with less propensity to commit violence and re-enters the world with a new sense or self-esteem," he said. Plague warning given SACRAMENTO (AP> -The bubonic plague among small animals is expected to be higher than normal through much of California this year, the Depart- ment of Health Services re- ported. ground squirrels, chipmunks or small carnivores in 11 counties: Alpine. El Dorado. Humboldt, Lassen, Modoc, Monterey, Plumas, Siskiyou. Kern, Los Angeles and Santa Barbara. Today's second day will in· clude testimony from Georee Deukmejian, California's cur· rent attorney general; John Van de Kamp, the Los Angeles Coun- ty distnct attorney, and Daryl F . Gates, chief of the Los Angeles Police Department. 42 receive scholarships Forty-two college scholarships bave been awarded by Retail Clerks Union Local 324, head- quartered in Buena Park. Awarded $350 scbolarsbips were Steven Wagner of Hunt- ington Beach; George Gibbs and Mark Young of Irvine; Geoffrey Baum of Seal Beach and Michae l Krumme and Brian Lewandowski or Westminster. It said no buman cases have been recorded so far in 1981, but the disease has appeared among It warned vacationers that flea bites are the most common means of transmission. Dale Wels b of Irvine and Pamela Cox of Westminster w e re recipients of $500 scholarships. Dina Nunez and Gina Simonian of Lacuna Nicuet each were given $650 scholarshi . Here 's a sampling of the remarkable values you'll find at BW Newport Beach. Many items reduced from one-third to one-half. THE SALON SUITS, OAY AND COCKTAIL DRESSES. EVENING GOWNS SAVE ONE-THIRD TO ONE-HALF From our American COiiections. names like Adele Simpson. Helga, Oscar de la Renta. and Trtgere. Plus. gowns by Jill Richards. From our European collections. sufts by Chanel, Chloe, and Louis Feraud. THE SIGNATURE ROOM DESIGNER DRESSES AND EVENING SEPARATES SAVE ONE-FOURTH TO ONE-THIRD From designer collections of Albert Nlpon. Kasper, Frank Massandrea and many more. FUR SALON Assortment of coats and jackets by designers who understand the glamour of line furs. Natural or dyed mink, Reg. $4650-$10,500, SALE $3700.$8500. Contemporary styles In beaver, opossum, rabbit. Orig. $750·$3000, SALE H00-$2400. TOWNLEIGH COAT AND SUIT ASSORTMENT SAVE ONE·THIRD TO ONE-HALF Rmrslble WOOi travel coats and all·weather coats In light, Clll1omla weights and col0t1. Ortg. S39.90·S290.oo. fALE 111.1&-1111.eo. Two and ttiree piece suit and costume assortment In spnng and summer f1br1catlons. Orig. $142·$215, SALE Slt.1M1•.t0. WYN SHIRE DAYTIME ANO EVENING DRESSES SAVE ONE· THIRD Choose from a spring and ·summer assortment of styles and colors. COAT AND DRESS COSTUMES, Orig . $125, SALE $13.20. STANLEY SHERMAN LINEN BLEND SEPARATES SAVE ONE-THIRD A luxurious linen/rayon blend In Jackets, skirts , tops, camisoles, and pants In an array of cool, coordinating colors . Orig. $42·$155. SALE S27.10.S103.20. MS. WILSHIRE SHOES NAME WALKING SHOES AND SANDALS SAVE ONE· THIRD TO ONE·HALF Names like Amalfl, Bernardo, Ecllsse, Michael. and Pellzzlo fashioned In s11mmer styles and colors. ·BW NOWI LINEN BLAZERS SAVE ONE-THIRD Pure crisp linen unconstructtd blazers by Larry Levine In son. summer pasttls. Orig. $68, aw Ma.to. Linen-textured blendt Of rolyeater I rayon are atao avdable a a savtngs rn red, wh••. or navy. Orig. $82, IALE 111.IO. CALVIN KLEIN TEE SHIRTS SAVE ONE·THIAD Pure cotton crew·necl<, cap-sleM tees In all your favorite wann·wtathtr pastels Ind brights. Orto. $20, IALE 111.IO. DESIGNER PRINT DRESSES SAVE lWENTY·FIVE PERCENT t -=-.. pnnta, Somllhort llaeved, • • :::.•a---· Ortg. $134 . ..... Dr.-. ,, ......... _ .... _ ....................... ,.. ....... , ...... ·--c.._...,.. ...... 1n1..,..-... _,..,,.._ ... Nf.~T 8EACH. 83 FuniOn ISlind 798.1211, Moil·Thufl·Ffl 10•9, 1-·Wed·Sat to 6, Sun 12·6 ,~ Orange Coaet DAIL y PILOT /WednHday. June 3, 1981 TIMILINKSe l ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) China will "firmly support" fakistan's "struggle to oppose foreign aggression," Foreiin Jiltoister Zhao Zi-yang has said. He spoke at a banquet recent· f>' after his first round of talks ith Pakistani President obammed Zia ul-Haq. Agent Orange hill hacked by House WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbt House bu unulmoualy puHd a bill djreetln1 the Veteram Ad· minlatraUoo to provide bolpital care and medical attention to Vletnam veterana wboae heaJth problems may be due to the herbicide Atent Oranae. The lelialaUoo repreaentl the first formal flodint by Coniress that veterana' health may bave been impaired by contact with the berblclde, which contains dioxin, considered one of the world's moat dan1erous chemicals. The VA bas maintained that no scientific evidence exists to show that contact with Agent Orange damaged the health of Gls in Vietoitm. But the VA says it provides medical care t.o any veteran needing it, re11arcUess of the cause of thelr problems. The measure was approved 388-0 and sent to the Senate. In an accompanying report, the House Veterans Affairs Committee said the bill's purpose ls to indicate clearly "that until the scientific com· munity bas been able to make a determination as to the possible cause-and-effect relationship or the toxic herbicides utilized u defoliants in the Republic of Vietnam during the Vietnam conflict, the Vete rans Ad · ministration should do every· thing possible" for veterans who may have been affected. a, aoa ftlOIU.8 HOU.YWOOD (AP> -J~ Wambauah wbo hu 1pent much of bl• ad~t Ute ln poUce' •ta· Uona, belt-Hller ll1t1 and law ol· fleet, baa produced hla alxtb book. lt wu written, be admita, In purer.,e. '11 started the book with only one premiH," he 1ay1 of "Tbe Glitter Dome." "The bead of a movie 1tudlo waa 1oto1 to be murdered." Moat novellata have a love· bate relatlonablp with Hollywood. With Wambau1h, lt'a all bate. He detested what Columbla did to "The New Ceo· turlons.'' He sued Robert Aldrich over "The Choirboys." Only the TV movie of "The Blue Knight" won his grud1toa approval. Three yean a10, Wambaulb bought back the film rlgb~ to "The Onion Field" from Colwn· bia. He embarked on a perilous course: producing the movie on bis own savings and the invest· ment of friends. The venture seemed successful and he tried the same thing with "The Black Marble." The result? "I'm suing Avco Embassy (the distributor ) for $10 million," said Wam baugb grimly. When I last saw Joe, he was slnglog the praises for his studio partner. What happened? "We fell out of love," he ex· plained. "They released the movie and It got great reviews. HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Merca.ry Savings Now Offers NEW "Repo Plans. 11* . -;t:~ We have several "fwlds"• c•renlly -t~-~ available for our ~tomers ~'Y ~FOR CURRENT RATES ... Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. :~ MERCURY s~y~~ .. ~ •tiltten Beadl Lake Forest Tustit 7812 Edinger 23021 Lake Center Or. 1095 Irvine Blvd. Hnt. Beh., CA. 92647 . El Toro. CA.. 92630 Tustin, CA.. 92680 (714) 842-9 (714) no-2601 (714) 832·7701 la HallralF•rton Anaeitn Hills Bien a 1001 E. Imperial Hwy. SII77 E. La Palma 8955 Valley View La Habra. CA. 90631 Anaheim. CA. 92807 Buena Park. CA. 90620 (714) 87().8700 (714) 779-7047 (714) 82HIOOO *This obligation is not a savings account or deposit and is nof Insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor ration. Designer Jewelry on Sale! 50% to 55% Off Original Prices. • Elegant. sparlclins ned<laces of all lengt,hs; pendants, too. .. ea"ings, pierced and clip. i Alt18K gold electroplate, some with rhinestones, some with simulated pearls, some with colored stones. By a famous Parisian couture name. Originally •20 to •361); now '9 to '179. Find signHicant values now, in Fashion Jewelry Collections-where we are all the things you are No other newspaper brings you more of your 'ity, council, planning commission, school and college districts and county gover,nnientthanthe Then they l&tve up. 1'nere were lar1e part.I oft.be country where lt waa never aeen. •'With 1uch a . poor releaae record, 'Blat:k Marble' can't even make a tale to the TV networka. They aay, 'Why 1hould we buy .It when it bombed In theaten?"' W ambau1b uid that "The On,on Field" wi 11 be1ln to repay it.I inveaton when It appean oo ABC Television thl• fall. But he 'I felt I hod to get it finished, to get rid of the poisons.' feara the backer1 or the S3.3 mUllon "Black Marble" may have to wall for the outcome of his lawsuit, which he expectl to take four years. He added: "Meanwhile I have to Uve with the guilt. Theae are my friends, people who bad faJth in me. I can't face tham." The 14-year member of the Los Angeles Police Department aguin drew from hiu detective life for the new book. ".Aside from the premise, I started with no idea of where I was going," he recalled. "The ra1e just poured out of me. I worked at a furious pace, as if I • were eJorcl1tn1 all llllndt of devila. Perhape ft would be soOd for my Uterary output to have a oervoua breakdown every t.-o years, or at leut w=r betweed 1anlty and ma . That'• bow I felt writlo1 "Glitter Dome." ''It wu tbt fa1i.ttJ>ook I ever wrote -two month• for the ftnt draft. t felt I had to 1et lt flollhe4, to l•t rid of the pol1on1. i' "The OUtttr Dome <the name of a bar hanaout for cope> otf era rauncb)' portrait• of tbr" paJr1 of homicide dttecUvH and Wambau1h expect.I the book to be deplored by LAPO bureaucratt. 11 But thtn, they didn't lib 'Th• Choirboy•' either,'' ht 1ald. "'fher ... don't reallu that Jack Webb ll ion•." Deapite 111 ~ If.fill, Wam· bau1h, 1 formtr rnlcttnl DI Udo 1111. la proud ot hl• record u 1 movie producer. "We produced two bt1 movitl wlth important l)roducUon valutt MUdn UJ month# fw • total coll ot .. mllllon everyone could do that, but th• people wht> run the indu.try art mor• In tereated In , perf.etuaUn• u,. system of 1pend 01 more •nd more money." ANGRY AUTHOR. Jouph Wombaugh "And I'll probably have tc 1l1n an affidavit that I won'I •u• .. Wam~u1h, who H)'I he bJU "1lven more depotltlon• than Mickey Rooney and Ellzabeth Taylor in all their divorces." said that he would sell • 'OUtter Dome" outright to a movlt buyer. • Dally Pilot e classifieds wort< for • you~ can • 642-5671 e forquick e cash sales. Now you can bank almost any time you want. VERSATELLER™ automated teller machines are open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Saturdays and Sundays, too. You can bank 011 your way to work. Bank oh your way home. Bank at your convenience, not ours. .. ~to use. VERSATEL., banking is as easy as making a call on a pushbutton phone. Insert your VERSATEL card, enter your confidential ID Code and fo llow the instructions on the dis- play screen. In seconds you can withdraw cash, make a deposit, make Bank of America credit card or loan · payments, transfer funds between checkingflnd Regular Savings, c heck your account balan~. If yo'1 need help, each VERSATELLER machine has its own phone to put you in touch with the VERSATEL Center where a representative will assist you. m,y to ~ere are pus~bulTon VER~ATEllfR macliines at 36 Bank of America branches in the San Fernando Valley and O range County. Come to one near you and ask for a demonstration. In minutes, you'll be an expert. Want a card application o r a list of locations? Ca ll toll-free 1-800-362-7152 or stop by any Bank of AmericaJlranch in that area. . fusflbutton Banking~ Another money convenience r~r~k=:;:MERICA Bl \ ---... ---- ... 0 9 Prelidrtd'• eye1 (top photo) diwrl«I bll IOUnd of •hot . An inltant later, agent Parr ii lhkldtng IUm f*lhlno him int<> auto. R e a{!an agent 1W macho man WASHINGTON CAP) -Within three aeconda after the gunfire began, Jerry S. Parr thrust Ronald Reagan into the l,imousine and covered the president's body with his own. As always, bis first instinct was to protect. Outwardly low,tey, b1s face and wry humor a sorter version of Walter Matthau'•, bia eyes crlnkl· Ing with kindness and a slight melancholy, Parr contradicts every stereotype of the macho Secret Service agent. He quotes philosophers and scripture. He raises chickens and vegetables on his two-acre spread in Travilah, Md. He visits the sick and the dying in what j,a akin to a lay minlatry. And Parr, the head of Reagan's Secret Service detail, can tell you why a man with a penchant for cosmic, pbllosopblcal thought would select a pro- f essioo in which it is b1s duty to place bis body between a bullet and its intended victim. "It's a reflex action, but I'm sure that it•s basically a nurturint personality," be said in an interview at his desk in t.tie Old Executive Office . Building across a drive from the White House. "I think people who think about life and maybe the preciousness of it have an instinct to protect. I think that any mother, father, parent, friend would have that instinct to protect." So it happened that on March 30, Jerry Parr was behind the president when the shots were fired . outside t)le Hilton Hotel. He didn't know it at the Ume, but b1a wife, Carolyn, a lawyer who works across the street from the hotel, was watching in terror. Sbe beard the IUJlfire and saw the president's limousine speed off, leavine. three men lyin1 wounded oe tbe sidewalk. "I really thought one of them had to be Jerry," she says now. "I -went screaming across the street to see who was oo the sidewalk. I really was kind of hysterical. I ju.st could not atop cry- ing." Actually, Parr bad narrowly escaped injury and was in the presidential limousine, which be or- dered detoured to the hoaplt.al when be saw blood on Reaian's mouth and realized be had been in· jured. Docton who worked on the president credit· ed that decision with saving Reagan's life. • "It's bard to believe, but there wasn't any time to reflect on fear or what possibly would.hap· pen," he said. "There's been plenty of time to think about it afterward. I personally feel the bafid of the Lord was on that whole event. It could have ended up ao much worse.,•, The 50-ye8J'--Old agent bad come close to death before, when be worked as a Unemaa for the Florida Power and Litht Co., and the U.S. Air Force. So his reaction to lbe attempt on the preai· dent's life was more philosophical than emotional. "I think that moment sums up the whole story of man. Of good and evil anCJ violence and protec· lion. It's a very profound moment. You have someone who's trying to destroy and the other one's trying to preserve." Afterward, Parr won· dered whether he could have done more. "This is a very common self-search," be said. ''And after some thought, considerable thought, I have come to the conclusion tbtt not much more could have been done. By myself or by anyone else." All the agents involved sat down to "talk it through to1ether. We all ju.st sat around and told what we knew. What we saw. We listened so we all gained what I call the collective truth." . Parr's instinct to comfort and protect ls perhaps moet evident when• he speaks of visiting 4 • '". ... 0 0 0 a 0 0 a a 0 0 0 s a • a 5 0 5 a a 3 ¥ 5 3 3 a a a 6 a a 5 5 a 3 a 3 a 3 3 3 a 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 .. • Orange Coast DAILY PflOT~nnday. June 3, 1981 ML Y ASSUMAlll IMTHIST OMLY .. W IR•T DEEDS OWHI R/HOHO'MB OCCUPllD Call William 8. Mitchell Call today for quote • No ob110-1ton Irons notlonOI f\xldlng (714} 975-1128 === We're ~oving to South Coast Plaza and Celebrating with Great Savings in all Departments -for Men, Ladies, Boys, and Girls! ) ,. bis mother, who is Ul in a Qall'Sinl home. • "I would say that moet people in nursing homes 1et vel')' good physical care but their emo· tional needs are seldom met," be said. "All they want is somebody to talk to them and bold their band." 0 lll!!!~~~~~~~~JDo~tfu~d~shppatour Big Mesa Center store for an even greater selection of styles, sizes, and colors for·the whole family. 0 I ..... y-_, • .., DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I find some "aqua dynamics" exerclses to do in a swimming pool? I've heard this form of ex· ercise Is effective and fairly easy. P.L .. Costa Mesa A booklet from the Presldeilt'• Coucll oa Physical Fttne11 and Sports pves a detailed pro1ram of pbysleal concUUoetDI tlarC*Cb water exerclsea. For a copy of .. Aqua Dynamics," send $1 to Consumer lnlorma· lion Center, Dept. J43J, Pueblo, Colo. 81 .... Exercise In water I• easier because you'll feel as tr you weJgh only 10 percent of your total body weight, so you're a1lle and delicate -no matter bow clumsy you ml1bt feel on land. And, people with painful joints or weak leg mwicles wlll feel more comfort•· ble movlng lft the water. The lighter "eight makes it easier to do twists and bounces, H well as bobbing up and down. Another bookl~t from the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports ls especially designed for the older person who's startJng an exercise program. "The Fitness Challenge ln the later years," can be ordered for $1. 75 from Consumer lnlormatlon Center, 145J, Pueblo, Colo. 81oet. IRS guards identity DEAR PAT DUNN: What steps does the Internal Revenue Service take to prevent someone else from obtaining information from my tax records? G.J .. Huntington Beach The Internal Revenue Service bas de· signed an extensive security program to pre- vent unwarranted disclosure or taxpayer ln· formation. IRS representatives must follow stringent procedures devised to verily the Iden· tlty or each taxpayer with whom they deal. Taxpayert visiting an IRS office are not given confidential tax information unless they have an IRS notice or bill, a copy of their return or ba ve otherwise properly Identified themselves. Taxpayers who phone the IRS must likewise identify themselves before any confidential tax informa&ion Is dist'ussed. • "'Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat \..l Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting "' the answers and action you need to solve inequit~s in govemm~t and r1 business. Mad your questaon.s to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily Pilot , P.O. Boz 1560, Costa Me64, CA 92626. As many Leffn3 al possill~ wiU be an.noered, but phoned inquiries or ~tters not including the reoder'1 full name, addren and bu.fin.ea& hours' phoM number cannot be considered. Thu column appears daily er· cept Sundays.·· THE HEAT' NII BE COOL AND DRY THIS SUMMER ON MOTORSHEEP GENUINE SHEEPSKIN SEATCOVERS NEW!! SUPERB VALUEI •STREAMLINED •STRAPLESS •SHIFT-FREE FORM FIT COVER NOW AVAIL.ABLE • 24 Month Warranty •Free Installation ~-~ --~~~~-MT ASHEEP SAHTA AMA,ITUSTIH , .. , l ""' $> s--(114) 54N117 C:OSTA MISA/HEWPORT HACH ion.._. : ~ sei::.'°;!_ rn•, 542-3955 64&6 ComplexSt.. tk11te 200 f7 u J 5 o. s 111 ~ Mdnday th~ay 9-5:30 -._ ~ Saturde)' 10-4 NEW YORK <AP> -A llttle-pubUclaed au IW'Vt)' of 47 Americ.AQ married women of tbe late l800t found tbat, unlike the ate.reotyple~al ima1e ot the Victorian era, they "approaebed tex wltb 1u1to," accordin1 to a report in American Rent.ace ma1azine. "This survey, thou1h very small, appears to be the earliest systematic 1tudy of the sexual habit.a and attitudes of American women. includ· Ing information on sexual desire, frequency ot ln· tercourse, and orgasms," accordin1 to Kathryn All111ong Jacob, an assistant historian at the U.S. Senate Historical Office. The study, begun ln 1892 by researcher and physician Clelia Duel Mosher, wu diacovered ln 1974 ln the Stanford University Archives by his· torlan Carl Deeter. Ms. Jacob notes that unlike studies by Alfred Kinsey and Shere Hite, which dealt with women born in the 20th century. the study by Ms. Mosher dealt ''almost exclusively" with women born around the tJme of the Civil War, three quarters of them born before 1870. The respondents, mostly upper-middle class Rabbi uses sex . . ·, issue in vote TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Ra bbl Melr Kahane, the American·bom Jewish militant. is campailJling in Israel's national election on a pledge to outlaw sex between 1entiles and Jewish women. Altboµgh Kahane's campailJl advertiaementa mention U.N. troops and immierant workers, they concentrate on sexual contact between Jewish women and Arabs. No mention is made of sex between non· Jewish women and Jewish men. A possible reason is that according to rabbinical law, a child's re· ligion is determined only by his mother, and the child of Jewish man and a non-Jewish woman is not considered a Jew. Also, Arab women are so sheltered that there ls little chance of a marriage between an Arab woman and a Jewish man. Kabane is seen as having virtually no chance of election to one of the 120 seats in Parliament June 30. But his campaign bu aroused protest from some Israeli liberals, who say it reminds them of Nazi literature. ·'This is a daughter of Israel, maybe your sis· ter, your daughter or your granddaughter," saya Kahane's ad, published in the mass-circulation dailies Maariv and Yediot Aharonotb over the weekend. "Can you be sure she'll marry a Jew?" the ad asks. "You are invited to see the Arabs loitering in Jewish towns, courting the daughters of Israel, their pockets stuffed with money.'' Some 150 Jewish women in Israel are known to be married to Arab men. The. ad goes on to propose that a five.year mandatory prison sentence be imposed "on any non-Jew who has sexual relations with a Jewish female." MEDICATED SKIN CREAM THE BEAUTY CREAM FOR .• FRECKLES • BROWN AGE SPOTS • SKIN DISCOLORATIONS Freckles, brown age spots and other skin discolorations can sometimes rob you of your naturally attractive appearance. FAYO Medicated Skin Cream works fast to grad· ually dim, "Cently fadeout skin dlscolora· ~~~~ o!~:tyt~Y;v~ .3 7 9 you a lighter, cleaner, clearer complexion. 2 oz. SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK! 9:00 AM TO t :lO ,.M MON SAT 9:00 AM TO 7-00 "Ill SUNDAY Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to s e.11 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 Maste r Ca rd. Call Classified Ad- vertising at 642-5678 to place you~ ad. • llyPilt and educated women. said they enta1ed in aex ''with neither reluctance nor dJstute," and many acknowled1ed sex wu not only a1reeable but also "usually quite deUghttu.1." u one woman was quoted as saytne. In addition, althoueb the majority believed reproducUqn was the primary purpose of in· tercourse, 24 women said "that the pleasure ex· chan1e was a worthy purpose in itaell," Jacob writes. At least 30 women also said they used some form of birth control, most often citin1 douching as the common form. Withdrawal and "timin1" were also cited. Miss Mosher's work ''is important because it is the only such survey known to exist," Ms. Jacob writes. "Cert.ain1y her subject.a do not represent a statlallcally significant tample of Victorian women. B"'t their responses are often quite de· talled and thwt abed li1ht on the question of bow one 1roup of women, in the face ol confllct!QJ and repreulve notions about female sexuality, actual· ly thou&ht and acted." Miss Mosher used a nine-pa1e quesUonnalre she said she designed while a junior at the University of Wisconsin when she wu asked to discuss the "marital relation" before a Mothen Club. She continued the survey sporadically for 30 years, adding to it the responses of women from her private practice and Stanford. Miss r&osher devoted her life to contestin1 tbe notions ol' physical inferiority that bad plagued women, Ms. Jacob said. SUMMERTIME DAUG 111 v~· AND SUNDRY CALADRYL LOTION The llch Rrllever For qu1c~ coolmg -.001h1ng relief of 11ch' PRICES PREVAIL: 6oz. 2.89 WE DNESDAY. JUNE 3rd THRU SATURDAY. JUNE 6th ALLBEE C-800 or ALLBEE C-800 WITH IRON Hoqt p, ler 1 V•taminc, w1lh 800 mg V1tam1n C TENDER'S AFTER BITE Z-BEC WIPES or APPLICATOR HIGH POTENCY FORMULA FOR ADtllTS Fro~I lll!l llt'<ltmenl !1)1 lll~l'CI 1>•1t'S' F.i!>I r··lwl f11J111 pd111 & 1tch1ng l u1c & V1t,\m1n E plu'> 600 mg Volamm C & B Com plex V1tam1ns 60 TAILETS 6.49 APPLICATOR or 2 49 PAK OF 12 WIPES • EA. TEETHING PAIN? BAevORAGEL For on·the·spol quick relief of 1ee1h1ng pa111 1/2 oz. SIZE 2.15 PRETTY FEET & HANDS LOTION FOR SUMMER SMOOTHNESS Hemoves rough dry ch.1pped sk111 tr om feel and 11anos NESTLE EGYPTIAN HENNA • HENNA SHAMPOO (8 oz.) • PRE-Mli CONDITIONER (8 oz.) • INTENSIVE CONDITIONER (2 PkTS., l oz. ea.) • HENNA HOT 01L TREATMENT (1/2 oz.) • HENNA HAIR COLOR BLACK DARK BROWN MEDIUM BROWN (8 oz.) Allbee C800 . __ , . -..... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wtdnelday, June 3, 1981 Modern troubadour spins tall tales across the nation PARKER S~URG , bedldsavehimselfonce So there are 1toriea wbo set out to aav. tbe doaeaa ol retellin11, lhe with bis v~e, aervlnl 1torle1. Storytelllo&, etoryteilln1 after apend- W. Va. CAP> -Gamble by usin& several copies a bout the • • J e 1 al world. detalll ln each story are as punctuatl for each once a common form of Ing what he described 11 Ro1ers la a wandering to rend off a bwldo1. beaver" in a seersucker "I put the 1torles paln1taklnaly exact. yam. "Some the beat entertalnme.nt, bas all rive respectabJe years storyteller, a walking "Sometimes the belt suit with five "Hermann toaetber oo my feet ln And ln every word lurks stories are told to but disappeared and as an architect. At library of tales and tall stories are llee, but they Hesse novels ln one front of audlencH1' • a amlle or a joke. music," Rogen said. thousands of tales have nt1bt, be sana and told stories whose roou may be t.be most pretty hand and a bowl of Ro1en said. "Audiences "They all come out of As he moves around been I01t, he said. stories ln bars, and stretch back to thingsyou'veheard,"be 1ranolalntbeother,"or for me are like experience -but they the country, telling "Partofmyjobisto finally decided that he America'sbeginnings. said. ''So, I'm teary oft he country laboratories, I 1au1e takealoattime." stories at colleges, collectstoriesand1ong1 wantedtodoitallo(the ·'My stories are often researchJn• things in schoolteacher who found their readlon1; usin1 Each story ls set to c 1 u b s. or country that have mean1ne ftom time. celebrations or Acardian case I f1.nd out they are a snake in her desk, and them like soundings." Ro1ers' auttar and the festivals, Rogers said he the old times," he aald. "I couldn't keep away lifestyle, truck drivers not true." the backwoods preacher Carefully cratted over music rises and falls also hunts out old folk Rol(ers said he took up from it." and fishermen, because ·_:.:..:..::.....:..:..:=-~~~~~~-=-:....::.::.:..:~:..:...:.:...::;.:_.:...:_.:_---~~~---..:;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~......;.::.:..:....~.:::...:..:.:..:;....;.:..:....:....:..::.~~------~~~~~- those are often my au- diences," Rogers &aid on a stopover in West Virgini a . "I 'm a troubadour." Rogers eases peoples' cares and tickles their souls with stories about country bumpkins, small town sheriffs and the salesman who saved himself from the jaws of a bulldog witb a blow from a ~-pound naugahyde "Bible com- plete with colored pie· tures , maps of the Holy Land and a complete concordance. "It's telling stories is the hardest work I know of. I'm like a monkey al a typewriter trying to write 'Macbeth.' But every one is worth it to me," Rogers said. A tall man with a wry smile, Rogers t1raws his stories from the small ironies and quiet humor of life. His first job was as a Bible salesman, he claims, and though he doesn't remember sell- ing many books. he said Sex case settled for$8,000 SACRAMENTO (AP> -An automobile dealer has been ordered to pay a former employee more than $8,000 to set- tle what the state says is the first sexual harass- ment case that's gone as far as a formal ruling. Hubacher Cadillac bas agreed to pay Catherine Kendall $8,040 after the ruling by the state Fair Employment and Hous- ing Commission. The commission found that Kendall had been il- 1egal1 y fir ed by Hu b a c h e-r g en e r a 1 service manager Roy Banister for refusing his sexual overtures. George Macias, dis- trict administrator of the Department of Fair Employment and Hous- ing, said the decision was the first time the commission has formal- ly ruled on a sexual harassme nt issue in California. Hubacber attorney N. Paul Shanley said he would not comment on the commiss ion de - cision. Nuke test planned LAS VEGAS (AP) A nuclear weapon with a yield of up to 150,000 tons of high explosive will be detonated under- ground Thursday at the Nevada Test Site, the Department of Energy has announced. The weapons-related te s t , cod e -named "Harzer," will be con- ducted at 7 a.m. PST. The device is buried 2 ,090 feet beneath Pahute Mesa about 90 miles northwest of here, said Energy Depart- ment spokesman Dave Miller. Miller warned managers of high-rise buildings in Las Vegas -where shock waves from large tests fre- quently are felt -not to have employees in pre- carious working posi· lions at the Ume of the shot. Record wheat harvest seen ROME (AP) -The world b headin1 for a record wheat harvest tbls year unless 1ood 1rowln1 weather turns bad very quickly, ac· cordtn1 to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Oraanlaa· t•on. "Since most Nortbena Hemisphere winter •lln t ta very close to ban~ the dan1er of weather damaae baa been reducea aad proepeete are faYorable for a 1111 wheat crop tbal wlU 1urpa11 tbe lt7t record of 441 .. Ullaa ... I SAVE50 ¢ SAVE 8 4.00 Ml. COF'FtE ~ 10.CUP' iiiillCOFFEE- l J'J . -~~~~~oM• • \ N• mes~v clean11os ~ -~_.23.88 SAVE 8 3.00 IEMINGTC* SMOOTH & §Jh~lD RAZOR for a close laster more comlortable shave ·wu~ 21 ·.95 SAVE 8 4.00 WARING 14 SP'UD HLUIE BLENDOR ·o,...,~'"' with 5 cup neat resistant • Power Pitcher otass lar ~~ 25.95 SAVE 2oc /~·········· ... . .. . . . . ············ (------:::-' •... : ....... ~ . . . . ............................... !) POPSICU GOOD N' faVDDIN Real puddtnO frozen on ll she• rn t FLAVORS •110f AVM.AIU AT AU STOHS rMOf I 1.09 SAVE 8 1.1 1 VIDAL SASSOON "P'IOftSSICMW." CURLING IRON Dual heal control w1tn 3 po"S•llon sw1lch ·~101 8.81 SAVE •t .50 VIDAL SASSOON "PROf'[SSIOIW." STYLER DRYER 1200 walls ot powet 3 neat • 2 speed shdr sw1lch 13.49 SAVE•t.00 Feathei L1gnt Holds R1gn1 ....... Fo1 Oral Hygiene 1•canutD ~1.11 AD PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3rd THRU SATURDAY, JUNE 6th ROYALSTONEIRONSTONE DINNERWARE 20 PIECE SET FUNCTIONAL DINNERWARE IN CASUAL PAITTRNS FOR YOUR TABLE all COlllSISTS Of: 4UCN :~er.) •SOUP' IOWLS (11 ez.) •DI_. P't.ATES (1014") •SAUD P'UTtS (1Y.'') ANCHDlt HOCKING COltMG Wiil 18 P'IEcE BEVERAGE sn llCIOWAVl MENU-ETTE "' "ROSES" PAmH Thrtt httte pieces lhat will do brg lobs tn your kitchen • 14'\. ~ ...... rte,. • 1\ot ,,_ i..,. ,. • 1¥." c.-.. --..n. "- r WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT! -~ ~ L-=:_j , SAVE'l.06 SOFT & ORI ...,.._STING ANTl.flEISNAMT Assorted Formulas laLlm 2.19 u. SPECIAL! SILKIENCE SllAllPOO w COMDITIONU 11-. llZI 1.89u. HOUSE PLANTS IN 6" CONTUIEIS Nur~rry Fresh Bo~lon ftrn and many olhrr to ;=:.============:::::::: LIQUOR Specials COUNT VASYA VODKA ~7~T. 6.99 MACKINNON 'S SCOTCH ~17~,. 8.99 A•~ 12.99 ,_.,, 15.99 !!~!GNE • ,_ • DI\' • CIDUI HCO KITCHEN TOOLS ~50 ._ 1.99 Camion contOll•ed handles make them easy 10.11p • u. TUllml I I • llllll.l ~ •uno.,.. • ..,........ u. PALMOLIVE UQUtD W e.t A~ l.M WTW ..,..,.. __ .... In Clear Ptasttc Bottle Our llllT Of hiO!lly lfllfltel I PfOfttalOMJI Wiii ,,-' • give vou Int • ~ 1nl0tmatl011 you f llltd to llnow •bOlll '· p111etlption If ~ ... ;.~-4_ ~etcttpllon druv• SAVE soe RAVE SOfTPUll IO'l.l Gtntle even for color trMltd llalr 2.39 .. SAVE•4.00 ~) j .: llATTn 'S NtWl 11 Vt" ~ WESTERN lJ...J., ~· -~.~!~!~.DOU ~ '.\· ~. ner autograph and a b•O wonk 9.95 SAVE 50 ¢ assomo4w' FIGURINES Hand painted ceram1t t1ourones b11no a special beautv 10 your detor 1.49 u. SAVE•2.ao MAGNETIC PHOTO ALBUM JO sh~Pts 1ha1 PIOl«I all p/lofO$ up In 8 x 10 SAVE 8 1.06 SERGEANT'S SENTRY V FUA & TICI< ------. COLLARS 1 ~lt FOR DOGS llnd CATS F lei & T di Col1at •t 0.00 REBATE KODAK COLORBURST 250 INSTANT CAllEIA with Bu1lt·on Electron•c Ftasn llODM INSTANT COLOR FILM 7.19 I udiciary fuiiding emains unsolved In what has become something of an annual event, Ralph Cfark, chairman of the ·Oran4e County Board of Supel'Vl.SOrs, once again is com- plaining about the state not foot· inf the bill for tbe county's 1Uperior court judges. Clark's stance is well known: He thinks the state should pay tbe entire cost of the judicial posts. He argues that it is unfair for the state to pay only $60,000 toward the cost of a judgeship Y1hen the real cost -when courtroom space, clerks and bailiffs are ta.ken into acOOo.nt - is something like three times that figure. Financially, Clark is prob- ably right. But a fact remains - more judges are needed to han- dle an ever-increasing workload. A recent study conducted by the state judicial council found two things : Orange Coun~y judges work harder than their counterparts throughout the.. state. And yet the county still needs additional Judtcla.l posi- tions at the superior court level. There currently are 51 poeitiona. Supervisors recently balked at asking the state Legislature to add nine positions aft.er Clark de- manded an accounting of what the real costs would be. A report on that subject is due to be re- leased within 10 days. Short of charging user fees for the courts (of questionable legality) or license fees to at- torneys (even more questiona- ble), it's difficult to find another way of fmancing the high cost of the judiciary. Short of the state modifyin& its current reimbursement formula, it's up to county govern- ment -like it or not -to fmd the additional money to maintain a judiciary adequate for the workload it must handle. Vote too hasty Jn one of its typical voting $crambles last month, the As- sembly approved 28 bills in 40 minutes . In that period , lawmakers spent exactly one minute on a 74-2 vote that repeals the current requirement for newspaper publication of delin- quent tax lists. While the position may ap- pear self-serving, we think that's a bad idea for the taxpayer. Proponents of the bill simply said it would save money. Given its requirements, that's unlikely, ~pecially in larger counties. At present, delinquent prop- erty taxpayers receive four malled notices. Due to the recent postal rate increase, that already costs 12 cents per taxpayer more tjian last year. The bill approved Y{ould require the mailing of a flftb notice, at an additional 18 cents per taxpayer, in lieu of publication of delinquency lists. So the saving is doubtful. It is hardly likely that a tax- payer who has ignored four mailed warnings will suddenly be isispired to respond to a fifth mailing. But it is reasonable to as- sume that at least some pro- crastinators would rather pay than have their names published. That's been the point of the publication requirement. Additionally, publication of the lists enables taxpayers to compare their tax bite with those of others and to determine how fairly or unfairly taxes are being assessed. It also focuses attention on the standard ploy of developers who deliberately let property tax- es ride on newly constructed homes until a buyer comes along to pick up the tab. Obviously, delinquent tax- payers would pref er not to have their names in the paper. Equal- ly obviously, if they choose to ig- nore their tax obligation they de- serve more attention than a form letter in the mailbox. The Assembly bill, AB 1282, has yet to be considered by the Senate. The upper house should pay a little more attention to its true significance than the hurried Assembly members. )ledicaid plan unfai~ Io addition to attracting larger numbers of refugees than apy other state, California plays bost to an increasing number of elderly and less affluent citizens seeking a more comfortable en- ronment. As a result, California 'bas been' receiving about on~ghth of all the federal Medicaid funds distributed in the country each year. U plans of the Reagan ad-til inistr a tion and the Senate Finance Committee go through, that will change in a hurry. California and half a dozen or more affluent states would be on the receiving end of major •edicaid cutbacks -$679 million next year -with California ex- pected to absorb just over 50 per- cent of the cuts. The problem is twofold. The Beaean economic package pro- poses a 5 percent ca~ in in- creases ln Medicaid fun<1ing. But ·callfomia anticipates a 15 per- dent growth in demand for diedical aid for the elderly and ~ Senate Finance Commit- tee now wants to reduce the ~ ••• minimum federal matching fund grant for Medicaid from the cur- rent 50 percent to 40 percent. This bas meant that even the richer states, like California, were guaranteed at least 50 per- cent of matching funds . The new formula would require the richer states to foot 60 percent of their Medicaid bill, while states with a lower per-capita income still would qualify for a higher pro- portion of help. I Jt's a nice, neat way of cut- ting federal costs. But by basing allocations solely on per capita income, rather than including un- employment rates, the number of elderly and the numbers of ref- uge~s and others eligible for welfare, the formula arbitrarily shifts the burden dispropor- tionately onto local taxpayers. The members of the Senate Finance Committee -none from California -aP.parently see nothing wrong with this. 'it\ndt it may be too much to hope thatthe Senate as a whole will disagree with it, since the most seriously aff ecd!d states are definitely in the minority. ob1n1ons exprHSed In the spece aboYe are those of the Delly Pltot. Other views ••· pfHMd on this page are those of their authors and artlstl. Reader comment Is lnvlt-ef, Address The O.lly Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA '2626. Phone (714) .642.....a21. . .M. Boyd I Beat marriage bet? I Tb at prof•alonal woman leut Ullely to remain unmarried LI tM hbme 8CGMllDIC9 teadaer.-..., ol 19atrtlli0alal 1tatlatic1 ,...._.., abowa Uaat. In fad, 1.t'• 1prttaear lm- posalble to ftnd a .....,._~ botn• eC! teacher uymare. Wb1 ti not clear. Tbat elel"!!i la boine M ... not neeuaarll1:~ Pod cooklq, aewinl. boullUld ptaaalq, lmaea \ once known to be bl8hlY appeall.n8 to men lD March of matrimonial mates. lt'I t.W tbat fftf bome M ~ ban_, more orilinal flair for tbe kitchen artl tbaD a cootie cutter. Anyone wbo eata thJ'ff mull a day 1hould underataod why cookboolra Outaell ... boob tllree to Behind the formul~ debate WASHINGTON -Like handgun con- trol and abortion, the marketing of in· fant formula has become an emotional issue characterized by rhetorical ex- cesses on both sides. Inevitably, the facts surrounding the controversy have become hopelessly obscured. But confidential memos and Stiate Department cables help to unravel the story of how the United States came to be the only nation to vote against the World Health Organization's code. The nearly unanimous vote puts more na· lions on rerord against the aggressive marketing of baby formula in backward countries, where its mixture with im- pure water can be dangerous. IN LATE APRIL, Elliott Abrams, the assistant secretary of state for interna- tional organization&, was dispatched to Geneva to pei:suade Halfdarl Mahler. direct.or general of the health organiza- tion, to accept two concessions: The in- fant formula code would be defmed as strictly voluntary, and it would be made clear that it applied only to formula , not other baby food. Abrams had been told by Deputy Secretary of State William Clark, who was acting secretary in Alexander Halg's absence, that if these two con- cessions were granted, the United States would abstain instead of voting against the cOde . According lo State Department cables seen by my associate Vicki Warren, the Abrams-Mahler meetings went well. "Mahler was visibly relieved lo learn that the U.S. now is in a position to avoid voting against the code," Abrams cabled Washington. •·we are confident that we will have his cooperalion In creating the conditions necessary to enable the U.S. to abstain." BUT THERE was a hitch. Clark had not cleared the U.S. position with pres- ldenllal counselor Ed' Meese. For some reason, €lark didn't want to report the State Department negotiations by telephone. At the bottom of a coofiden- JACI ANDIRSDI z tlal memo. he wrote: "Please send a copy of this memo to EM and R<ichard) Allen," the president's national security adviser. On May 1, Meese, Allen and two other members of Reagan's inner circle, Lyn Nofziger and Martin Anderson, sat down to discuss the developments in Geneva. Foggy Bottom officials learned from a National Security Council staffer that the four White House aides "have met and concluded that the U.S. should cast a negative vote on the WHO infant formula code'" and that they ''are not prepared to abstain even iC the two con- ditions are met.'' What had happe n ed was that American formula makers like Bristol- M ye r s. Abbott Laboratories and American Home Products Corp. had lobbied the administration against the code They were Joined by the Grocery M anufacturer!I of Amertca, which feared the code ml(ht be appUed lo other baby food de.pi~ usurances to the contrary THE PRE8HlJKE frr>m the com panies apparently 11wayf'd tbe White House U S off1cHtl~ m G~a were put on hold Lengthy mem<JS went from foggy Bottom lo the White HoUM, warn.inc ot the diplomatic black eye the Umled States would get by voting aga!Nt t.be code. HeaJth professional.a, members of Congress and several high-level govern· ment officials added their pleas against a negative vote. But the administration evidently bought the arguments put forth by busi- ness lobbyists Essentially. these were Cl) that the code's adoption would give ammunition to critics of Big Business, whereas a U.S. rejection would dis- credit the code, (2) that adoption would set a precedent whkh might lead to ac- tion in ot h er fields like pharmaceuticals, and (3 ) that the infant formula industry represented a S2 billion international market that was growing. The White House also found legaJ and constitutional arguments, even though lhe Justice Department's antitrust division at one time saw no objedion to a voluntary code. And when the United States wound up alone in its vote against the code, a White House spokesman insisted: "We did gain by voting 'No.' We gained what you get for standing for a principle." Brown forgets old titxes never die Despite the showmanship of Gov. Jerry Brown's presentation of his pro- gram to deaJ wit.b crime delivered via a specially staged television address to the public, his call for an Increase in the sales tax was Just another political decep- tion. In fact lt bas become a standard prac- tice of politicians, confronted with public clamor for action in dealing with any problem of magnitude, to hem and haw and fmally come up with a pro· posal for a new tax. This, they think, convinces the public that something is now going to be done to solve or eliminate the bothersome problem. IN THE FIRST place Brown's representation that the added 14 cent sales tax would be only temporary, to automatically end after 10 years, is a deceit. The history of the sales tax, or any other tax for that matter, is ample evidence that no tax is temporary. Levied at 2~ percent in 1933, as a tem- porary measure to meet needs caused by the Depression, the tax grew to 3 per- cent by 1935 and eventually reached the current •~ cents plus an additional 114 cents for the benefit ortoc al government. Not even during the boom years of WW n when the state treasury was nverflowing was the tax removed although it was temporarily reduced to the original 2\1:1 percent. BUT THE PRETENSE of the pro- posed tax being temporary is nothing to the false ·premise for which it is ad· vanced that of aiding law enforce,nent In tbe ~ttle against crime. For the fundamental purpose of gov- ernment is to provide for the heaJth and I -11-l W-AT-IR-S -~ safety of the citizens, the protecti9n of life and property. That being the case the revenues re- ceived by government must be ex- pended first for those purposes, other needs taking a lesser priority, and if anything ls then left, for programs which may be desirable but not essen- tial. Not even Gov. Brown suggests that in a $25 billion budget Chere is not ample funds for police and fire protection ll all other things are !!tripped bare. The same can be said for city and county budgets. Given top priority they have adequate money for those essential services. What has happ~ned, of course, is that money for the basic services has been diverted to countless other programs, many desirable but non- essential, and a good many which are. unwanted by the majority. Furthermore, in most of the pro- gra rns. essential, desirable. or j ust "nice to have," there has grown an In· tolerable amount of waste. INSTEAD OF taking to heart the message of Proposition 13 and compel- ling local governments to trim their sails, Brown and the Legislature gleefully jumped into the roll ot Santa Claus and handed the excess billions of dollars over to local government and the schools and university. • Now confronted with a dwlndlln1 treasury Brown and the Legislature are up against the wall. Either serious trim- ming must be done at the state and local levels and by the schools or more taxes must be ralsed. Er10, the public's concern with crime provtdes t.be excuse to raise more taxes on the pretense that It ls needed to do the fundamental taalt of government. Anybody that believes that would buy the Brooklyn Bridge. '~al' doesn't necessarily niean the sftllle It really riles me when aomebody who should know better perpetrates (and perpetuates) a gross illiteracy. Like the political writer for a bit-city Wbat the phrase means, of course, ts that ln this new Republic, all men were lo become equal before the law and •ould be b'~•ted eqllally u human be· Inga. That It is the social ayatem, not the Creator, that mates amtocrataland peasant.a, land-owners and ae?f 1, who in every other country were treated quite differently by J,beir 1overnmenta, ac· cordtnc to their rank and wealth '.aDd background.. ALL MEN AaE equally enUtled to Ute, llberf:1. and the purault of happl· ne11. In tbls sense, and tn tbil HnH only, are they "equal." In all other reaped• the)' m., be u unequal •• chalk and chelet. In tM Old World_, It "*' almOll lm-pc>altale t.o elMDI• your bOn atawa. lD Ult new nats6a;·-aliltb diStlnetJom went by llHt board; wtill WU Im~~ pr.ctiiit1 tntedlpaN, tktlla, JuikaMilt, e.,ertmce llftd diltfeter. 1'W ·n ls OiJilJ wben au m. are U-.•tti tiquaUy that the .. natural dltf enae. have a chance to sort tbem..W• out, with lb• real cream rlitDI \o the top. Tb• old w11 proteded the lDcom· _ ' petenl from their sins and errors. The DeclaraUon offered everyone an equal abate, ao that 1enuine superiorltles cciuld manliest t.bemselves. The proper end of democracy la not to rotate offtcea between the mailman and the mechanic, but to give all a voice in cboosinC the most qualified, no matter what b1I orilin or occupation, ........ --...................... .. ~ .................... , f ..... .. ....... ..._, ... o.lly....... ' ~ t I v t v i c d i: () e ' ' ' ' I ( " . t I Zack Moaley, right, retired eight uear• ago along with Smilm' Jack, tM com· U: strip aviator. Coflli:c strip aviator 'Smilin' Jack' recalled STUART.Fla. <AP) -"SmUln' Jack" isn't dead. He's lost a 1ood deal of bis hair and wears glasses now, but, other than that, he has no complaints about retirement in Florida. That's the latest word from Zack Mosley, who retired eight years aeo along with the comic strip aviator be made famous. "The big public doesn't have a romantic interest in flying anymore," said Mosley, 74, to ex· plain why "Smilin' Jack" last ap· peared in newspapers April 1, 1973. ''There's a thrillJ'n flying, for sure, but it is sim ly a means or transportation now." "Smilin' Jack" began in 1933 and was a highly pdpular, true-to-life The women in 'Smilin' Jack's' life tended to be well- endowed beauties who were obviously braless. aviation reature during an era Mosley calls "the golden age or com· ics." Also called "funnies" in t.boae days, comics were so popular that former New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia read them on the radio durine a newspaper strike in the mid-19405. Those days are gone forever, said Mosley with a touch of nostalgia, and the culprit is television. ''Television can use uP. an entire story in a 00-minute program," he explained. "But in those days, a single,..story script could last six weeks or so in a comic strip." However, Mosley does praise some or today's comics. ''Fortunately, there are some well established, day-to-day humor strips that keep us entertained in the morn- ing after reading the horrible news on Page 1." His favori~ include "Peanuts," "Blondie," "Dick Tracy" and "Doonesbury." The latter, he said is not a true comic. "but is politically dynamic." "Smilln' Jack" flourished in the , days when aviation -Mosley's first love -was also in its golden years. "Smilln' Jack' doesn't fit into the space age. Re's from the days when a pilot put on a helmet and goggles and flew into a storm and if he got in trouble he'd put the plane down in a pasture," said Mosley, born in Hickory, Indian Territory, a year before it became Oklahoma. Mosley bepn tatin1 flyin1 lessoo.a in 1935, two years after his strip wu syndicated by the Chicago Tribune· New York News Syndicate, and re- . ceived his license a year later. He's proud of his role in belpin1 found the Civil Air Patrol ctw;q the eve of World War JI. Aa a CiVlliaa pilot with the volunteer organisation, which later became an auxiliary to the U.S. Air Force, be received the Air Medal for flying more than 300 hours of anti-submarine patrol off the Atlantic Coast during the flnt 11 months of the war. He's logged more than 3,000 houri .. as a pilot, but has f)owft 1.S. mlllioD miles around the world pthering material for "Smilln' Jadt," which once had a combined circulation of 25 million readers in the United States, Canada and Latin America. For the fans who followed bis strip over the yearf, Mosley ii now willinl to answer the three most uked quea· lions about "Smilln• Jack." 1. Wby wasn't the face of "Downwind Jaxon" ever shown? "Downwind" first appeared in Mosley's strip in 1938. He epitomized the colorful pilots or those days and, in real life, was Wally "Downwind" Jackson, the man who'taught Mosley to fly. Jackson later became an airline pilot and crashed to bis death during World War II while Oyine a U.S. Anny plane. · "I planned to t.hint up a face for 'Downwind,' but after a rew weeks I still couldn't come up with one." By that time, hundreds of letters bad been received from readers asking about the character's face. Because or the reader interest, Mosley de· cided never lo draw one. 2. Who was "Fat Stuff" in real life? When Mosley needed a South Sea island native in the late 1930s to help "Smilln' Jact~· out of one ol bis ad- ventures, "I remembered when J was a kid there was one really fat Indian in Oklahoma named 'Richmond BU· ly ' whose belly was so fat the buttons would pop off his shirt. He became 'Fat Stuff."' 3. Where did you find so many sexy women to portray in your comic? Mosley was way before his time in drawing provocative females in a comic strip. The women in "Smilln' Jack's" life tendejl to be well· endowed beauties who were obvioua· ly braless. Mosley calls them "de· icers," the name for devices used to melt ice forming on aircraft wings. His answer is simple. "ll toot a hell o f a lot of personal research and a good memory " P .S. "Smilln' Jack" and Mosley, who are working oo their memoirs,· .both say they would love to bear from their old friends. I • beg Ina THURSDAY, JUNE 4th .. fAIDAY AND SATUllDAY , LOTS OF SPORTSWEAR 33°/o to 75°/o Of F 3 32 . . ,, , . . . " .. ----------- Orange Cout DAILY PU.OT/Wednelday, June 3, 1981 We sell first quality and discontinued merchandise from Sears Retail and Catalog Distribution. - . . PRINTING CALCULATOR ett.cdwe flM1 15 FOOT EXTENSION CORD WU2.99 AL!LPURPO• ELECTRICAL REPAIR KIT· waa48.99 NOW I 31.99 SMALL FAYER II waa2•.99 NOW I 15.99 NOW 1.49 &GALLON WET-N-DAY VAC was 59.99 NOW 39.99 10 INCH TABLE SAW was 10.99 . . NOW 6.49 DELUXE 10-CUP OFFEE MAKER was 31.99 NOW 19.99 (tall sizes) were 8.99 was 480 .00 329.88 BOYS SH IRTS NOW 6.97 (S onfy) ~}·NOW ··11:::1!W~-· 3. 49 STORE HOtfis'· •-.·MM:-:• a-.11•:-:• ..... ,u:-:• Ask about ~ars crt'dit pJani. . NOW MONEY MARKET RATES • INSURED . ON YOURJ\CHECKING DOLLARS Ne~ort Balboa Money avlngs COMPARE WHAT YOU GET: Market Money Market Fund PROFIT CHECK Account Interest Earnings tied to the money market YES YES C heck writing ability YES YES ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FSLIC up to Sl00,000 no YES Earn today's near record interest rates for six months no YES Long weekday business hours no YES Saturday bus~ss hours no YES Free safe deposit boxes no YES Free travelers cheques no YES Free use of Co~munity Room no YES Free photo copying no YES Your money l_cept_in the U .S.A. no YES right here in California The Money Market PROFIT CHECK Account is backed by an Overdraft Cenificate rate. At the end of each six month period. the interest rstc Account 1eeurcd by a six month Money Market Cenificate. When a check may change upon renewal of the Money Marker Cenificate . la written In exccsa of \\j.I amount In the PROFIT CHECK Account, money Deposits to ~he PROFIT CHECK Account arc automatka.lly used to la automatically advanced from an Overdraft Account to cover the check. pay back any loans In foroe at the time of the deposit up to the deposit Advances are made in multiples of SS00.00, up to 90% ol the Money Market amount: 110,000 mlnnnum deposit required to open the account. Federal CcnUicatc. Interest is charaed on the dally outJUndlna bllance of the; Rqulations prohibit the compounding of inteTCSt durina the term ol the Overdn.tt Accoun1 at the daily periodic rate '"over the Money Market Certificate. CALL FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION. ' r . .NEWPORT BALBOA Savings Coming Soon To Corona del Mar Wtltcli££ Plaza, HOO Jrvinc(.Avenuc, Newpon Be~ch, CA 92665 (714) 645·6505 9-f> Monday thN Thunday, 9-6 Friday, 9-1 Saturday. Orenge Cout DAil V PtlOT/Wedneeday, Jun• 31 1981 ,., ......... WL WEATHER - A mother hen provides otective covering for one of ber offspring ring a rain shower at Knott's Berry Farm Buena Park. ew smugglers f coke jailed MIAMI (AP> -On a pitted, makeshift runway c t into ranchland deep in a Bolivian jungle, ft chie Fiano watched nervously as peasants lo_.aded $9 million worth or cocaine aboard his afrplane. Fiano and three other Americans were sur· .Ji•nded by dozens or Bolivians loyal to Roberto 96-;.rez, reputed kingpin of Bolivia's biggest drug stbuggllng eang. •'I'll tell you what scared me ... They thought ~~ were legitimate drug dealers. So I was think· idg: 'What's to stop them from ripping us off or from holding us hostage?" ' "What's gonna happen if all of a sudden they tdlrt coming out of the fields and they say, 'You'd £Ritter teU Miami to release the $9 million or you're al} dead?"' Fiano and reUow U.S. Drut Enforcement Ad- rqinlstration agents, posing as lieutenants or an or- dnlzed crime family. went on to pull off the bit- •sf cocaine sting in U.S. history -a haul the, QEA estimates at more than $107 million on the t&(eet. But like many undercover agents trying to crack the spiraling cocaine import business, Fiano risks his life and spends hundreds of hours on an investigation only to be frustrated later. In the case that sent Fiano to the Bolivian j~gle, only one person was t.aken into custody - Alfredo Guiterrez, owner of an air taxi serrice in S•nta Cruz, Bolivia, and alleged "money man" for Suarez' organization. Guiterrez was indicted in Miami on multiple drug conspiracy counts. But his son soon arrived ,.-itb cashier's checks and paid the Sl million bail. Guiterrez fled lo Bolivia, out of the 1rasp of U.S. icials. "What bothers me more than anything is here m with the biggest case in history -854 pounds hat bothers me more an anything is here I am ith the biggest case in his- ry ~ 854 pounds of dope and no bodies to put on . l , a. dope -and no bodies to put on trial," Fiano d. "Nobody is paying for it and these guys are ck in business ... " Few cocaine smugglers go to jail because ny never go to trial. Some, like Guiterrez and eged Colombian cocaine gang leader Martha Gaviria-Montoya, skip bond. There are an mated 2,700 drug fugitives -700 more than the mber of. DEA agents. Raising bail ls no problem for those in the rative cocaine trade. The DEA'• Coo I>Qugberty ya: "these guys come up wttb their bond money ht out of their pockets ... When trials are possible, the judicial system oves slowly. Most anests have been in the utheastem United States, overloadin1 dockets ere. U.S. Attorney Atlee Wampler said the cklot in southern Florida ii SO' severe that if his lee stopped openins new cases today, it would ke 91h years to clear it. ~re have been some major drul seizures, d some convictlom: ~ A federal jury took ju.st over 20 minutes to nvict Isaac Kattan-Kauin ol po1saalon with lo- t to distribute some 20 kilocrams of cocaine. -Two leaders of the Black Tuna tant re- ived Ions prison terms and heavy flnea after be· 1 round guilty on various drut counts. The 1'1 alle1ed Colombian rlncleader, Raul Davila- mlnO, also known ., ''Black Tuna," wu never rebended. In February, DEA aeenta aebed 831 pound• cocaine and arrested two men, includln1 the tor of a (ederally funded youth proer-am in ml. Char1es lat•r were dropped a1alnst the rector. who baa realened. but are pendlnt um the second man. -AD ..U.ated lal pCMIDdl ot eoaalM were -tM ~ .... In ~doll OrOUper, ~ EA-Cout Guard effort that brou-"t aom• 1JO ar-lf. ~ -On May 11, a1enta in Hawali conftacated JO •11D4lll ol cocaine that had beels 1mu11led ln from th America. -Qlltoma aaenta in Miami eoolllcated m ndl ol cocaine 1n two era• that arrived on a mmerdal nttht &om Ecuador thil month. No ..Uw•emade. •1 ... A..aa&M...... • Amfrica ha• developed a tut.e for wine. ln blnl1 two moetha, wtDI ahlpmeata ln th• United Stat.I have almoet tripWd and per·caplta conaumpdon bu more than doubled. Marvin R. ShankH, edit« and publisher of "Impact, 11 a new1letter on wine and dlstllled 1plrlta, aald the fHteat·ire>wtn• 1e1ment of the market 11 white wine. "There are more occulona to drink whit• wine because it'• al10 u1ed 11 a cocktall beverase," be aald. "It'• refreahln1. It'• cold. It's 1i1bt. People like the taste .. And it's certainly fubionable. 11 Wine ahipmenta tn the United Stat.ea In lteO totaled 183 million tallons, the equlvalent pf IHI than one tallon per person. Lut year, Sbanken ,. 11ld, eblpmenta totaled an etttmated •75.8 million 1atlo1W, equal to Jual o .. r two tallou per penon. Two dee9det a10, 1' percent ol the table wine sold la the United ~tat.ea wu red; 17 percent wa1 wbite and t percent wu roee. ID 1980, wblte wtne accounted for 54 percent of the market, compared lo 28 percent for red and 20 percent for TOM. ln the last ,10 year1 alone, wblte wine sermenta have in- creased 1lxfold. Table wines -generally dry and relaUve1y low In calories and alcohol -have erown in popularity at the exeenae ot sweet dessert wines. "In 1970, de11ert wine held 21 percent of the market," Shanken 8aid. "Lut year, it beld only 9.5 percent. TbJa 1cenarlo reOecta the cbangin1 American taste preference ... 11 Why the switch? "A more aoplmtlcated palate It pays high interest: appreciates a drier wine, 11 Shan.ken •aid. He 1aid a recent study by National FamU, Oplnlon Inc. of Toledo, Ohio, lald tbe blHfft wine consumer ii a woman •led 30 to at, Uvlna In the W ut with a household income ol as.~ oc more. She drinkJ wine mostly at home, wttb dinner. Shanken said consumers do not have to apead a lot of money on wine. "You can find much-more· than-adequate everyday wines for S2 to $5 a bot· tie, II be laid. The ainete blgaeat source ol wine IOld ln the United States Is CaUtomia, althouth the 1late'1 1bare of the market has fiuctuated sllthtly over the lut 10 years. In 1970, California produced 71 percent of the table wine shipped in the United States. In 1978, bQwever, only tf percent of the la· ble wtne shipped in this C0\8ltry was Calif ornlan. This new investment opportunity pays high interest. like a T-bill. The current annual rate ls guaranteed tor the full term when funds are held to maturity The Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund is not a savings account. so it's not insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Instead. your investment 14.50%* is backed by U.S. Government or Federal Agency securities. Plus you pay no brokerage fee. No service charge. The tam is 30 days. The Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund allows you to invest tor as short a time as 30 days. As long as 89 days. Or any number of days in between. It gives you high earnings with almost as much liquidity as money market funds. Plus the flexib111ty to choose your own term. There's never been an investment opportunity quite like it before. You can open a Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund with as little as $1,000. That's a tar cry from the high $10,000 mini- mums on T-bills and makes high earnings possible tor many more people. Assets over $1.6 bUUon. •current annual rate. Rate subject to change. Available to CallCornla residents only. omc.e to Mn'e J'OU throughout UM stat.. tA SoutJaem Cclldomio ..• Glendale • Azusa/G&endora • BellfloWer • &everty Hills • Big Bear Lak8 • Blue Jay • Buena Park • Costa Mesa • CUlver City • F\lllerton • Irvine • Laguna Beach • Lake Forest • Long Beach East • Long Beach • Newport Beach/Bayside • Newport Beoch~ • North Hollywood • Northridge • Pklcenua • San~. santa Ana • SeCl1 Beach • Sherman 0cm ·Stanton • 'Ibmmce •van Nuys • Welt ltol1'WOOd • w..'LCI Angjtei • llcnr GP.a ta Na DeMlt. OpeDlDCJ IOOD .la AIOCdcl ad lcm ClablW. ' . The Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund automatically qualities you tor the Grand Award, our complete package ot banking services, including a service-charge tree 5Y4% interest checking account. So stop into the Fidelity Federal omce nearest you. We think th!$ new Saver's Fund is a creative,· innovative opportunity that will allow many more people to earn high interest. We're looking forward to helping you save. ' i l f Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 ENTERTAINMENT OBITUARIES BUSINESS 86 88 89 254 (£ .S.A £¢.2_$J. 6 How does Ronald Reagan get. aUXJy unth attacking Wall Street? See P.age 89. V ~lunt e~rs gi:ve third. ~ to ~e~che~ . EDITOR'S NOTE: Teoclwn and student• an the central characters in Ammca's cla.uroom•, but o MW actor ho.a taken a role -the volun. teer. In the firit of a three-part seriea, AP Writer Tamara Jonei look• at the scope of the cumtance. By TAMARA JONES NEW YORK (AP> -An airline fli&ht attendant firmly ig· nores the flirtations of a teen· ager with the persistence of Don Juan mlnus the style. lo a quiet corner, a woman with a lilting German accent tries to teach conversational English to a Puerto Rican girl with purple fingernails. The perturbed businessman in the front row glances at his watch for the fourth Ume, await· ing an appointment long since canceled without notice. And Mamie Steyer puts her yellow sneakers in idle for the first time all morning and drapes an arm around a hulking boy. They are an odd couple, yet a perfect pair, this hyperactive grandma and city-toughened teen-ager. Rober t Lee Long hunkers down over the too-s mall desk, pencil locked in a death grip over a worksheet grimy with eraser smears. "l can't pass math and I want to graduate," Robert, 19, ex· plains. "Don't know what my problem is, I always good in . math but I don't take it no more and now I gots to get out and can't flunk again.'' Again would be the third time. The people in this room are here to see that again never ar· rives. They offer the individual attention so difficult to find elsewhere at Park West High School, a gray vocational school Robert Lee Long and 3,000 other youngsters attend in a rundown New York City neighborhood known as Hell's Kitchen. There are an estimated 2 million volunteers in the nation's public school system today, and about.-4 million students are reapini the benefits of this un· sung work force. Established 25 years ago in New York City, the National School Volunteer Program bas grown into a vast network of learning. The volunteers give thousands of hours, and thousands or skills, which schools could never af{ord . \ ' provide free transportation. Children in Oakland are enter· -tained by a sin•ing policeman who t.ells them "cops are people, too," and similar appearances across America have introduced children to astronauts, pup- . peteers, bankers, musicians and scores of other professlonall. Mothers volunteer for a varie- ty or tasks -refereeing play- ground warfare, screening kin- d e r gar ten e rs for bear ing problems, helping slow learners overcome reading dilficulti•. "When a teacher needs three ./ arms to bug three children and only has two, a volunteer could be that third arm," says Marty Woodard of the National Educa- tion Association. North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt campaigned on a "reading plat- form " to boost the below- average basic skills of the state's high school students.· Now he leaves the governor's mansion every Monday morning to spend an hour at a nearby high school tutoring a refugee child In reading and math. "It's not a new concept," Hunt said in a recent interview. "It's a very old one -people relying on each other instead of the gov- ernment. I think that God ex· peels us to do this kind of work, with our hearts and with our hands." Hunt says addition al in- dividual attention bas reduced the failure rate for the state competency exam to 2 perceol -from up to 15 percent -and a lso cut the dropout rate. Caroline Kaufman, of National School Volunteer Program in New York, tutors Vietnamese youths i n English. Volunteers receive as welt. High s c hool social studies teacher Harry Groner was frustrated when he had to retire two years ago due to his ag&. Now he spends six hours a w~k tutoring Park West High stlt· on their own, says Elizabeth Purcell, a Northern California teacher who spent two years helping direct the NSVP from its modest headquarters in Alexan- dria, Va. "It's important to realize that vo lunteers don 't replace teachers, they reinforce them," Ms. Purcell stresses. But no one denies that the program is becoming more vital with the , Reagan administration's caJI on the private sector to ease the burden on government. The NSVP estimates it costs less than Sl a student for 5,000 volunteers to contribute more than 200,000 hours a year to a prototypical school district of S0,000 students found in cities s uch as Columbus . Oh ic, Milwaukee and Topeka, Kan. At Park West Hjgh, Principal Edward Morris is grateful for the 60 volunteers backing up his 160-teacher facility. "Tbey really do a mammoth job," he saia. "I wish I bad seven times as many. Many ol our youngsters are substantially below the nationa.i average in reading, writing and math. They need the relationship of one-on-one. They've oever had that. and it does as much as ac· tual instruction." About 150 students are tutored at Park West. Three years ago, when Park West first opened and the NSVP there was launched, 90 percent of the students were at least two grade levels below the national average in basic skills , Morris says. Now, only 60 percent are below. Teachers don't feel threatened by the unpaid help, Morris says, "because it a youngster can read and understand what's going oo ln class, he's less of a discipline problem." The spacious room where Mamie Steyer and Robert Lee Long struggle together over a tough math problem is a calm oasis. Concentration is deep enough to drown out the thllllder of stampeding reet in the gym- nasium above. The races in this room a re as varied a s the NSVP itsetr. Ac r oss the country . eighth graders are tutoring first· graders, while executives offer t career counseling to high school seniors and retired artists share their talent with children or all ages. At East Bradford Elementary School in West Chester, Pa .. volunteers spend an hour a week with a child, simply being an adult friend -an understanding ear for a child torn by bis parents' divorce or excluded from a classmate's birthday party. Third· and fourth-graders in Antrim, N .H., learned to use a saw, hammer, tri-square and rule in a woodworking class taught by an 84-year-old man. Elsewhere, corporations give employees work-release time to tutor school children in the com· munlty. Some companies even dents in reading. _ Still, volunteerism is not for everyone, says Ms. Purcell. The dropout rate can go as high as 25 percent. But she quickly points to volunteers who came for a semester and stayed 15 years. And that kind of enthusiasm- recruits additional volunteers, coordinators say. "We're like the Red Cross of education," she says. "It may be the last great hope for public education to get the community involved," she adds.- "Teachers just can't do it alone any more, no matter how dedicated they are." Classroom shortc uts block shunned students By TIM PETl'IT HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - The four s tudents were the teacher's brightest. She referred to them as her "shining lights." When a discussion was held, only they were involved. The other 30 childr e n s at and watched. "l asked her about the class, and she said she felt it had gone well. In fact. I s aw she had writ· ten off a good number of stu- dents," Kermit Leitner, ass ls· tant principal at the Harrisburg Middle School, said after observ- ing the teacher. "I asked her how many stu- dents s h e thought had participated, and she said about half. She was surprised when I ' said there had been only four in 40 minutes." The phenomenon is one found in any school, educators say. It's one in which teachers, often unwittingly, ignore stu· dents considered to be low achievers. Ten years ago, education con· soltant Sam Kerman developed a program to train teachers to recognize bow they might be shunning students because of the way t.bey dress, their reputa· tions, the color of their skin and even the way they write. Since 1974, more lhan 1,800 teachers and administrators from as far away as Australia have gone through the program, which is run , through the Los Angeles County superintendent of schools in Downey. "The fi1ares s how that teachers have 700 to 1.000 con- tacts with students each day." says Steve Fisher, a Pen°'ylva~ nla Education Oepartment employee who ii providJng Keuman'• pro1ram to 15 Pennsylvania tehool di1tricta. •'Teachers develop patterns to survive that many contacts: they take lbortcuta. A• a result, student.I are charact.eriztd," he Hys. Studies have shown. for tHm· ple, lbal children labeled u low acbltv"" •et leu pralH than 1tudent1 considered brl1bt, t't1ber.-,y1. A cbiJd tagtid u a poor stu- dent may not -..... • nod of Uae beact wfae11 b• or 1b1 Nepondi to I question. , J ··rn our worktbop1, we tell teachers to 1tve Uie low acbleveu time to answer. rephrpe the que9tlon or 1lve UMai 1 clu.," Fisher aay1. I~ ....... do It With the hl1b achievers, bffauM when 1 ~lib achiever 1tn1 a wron1 answer, the teacher WOrrlea tbat be or she's dotn1 aometlalnt wrong. They sa)', 'The kid IDUlt know the answer, l must have pbrued the quisti«kl the wrona way."' 1a11m111111111111111111111111l'ln Deborah Weaver, another Hariilburl tMcbet whO baa at· teadeid Aeb worUboPI, HYI aht aaw ctw\pl ln her wachlbi and lta raulta afterward. "I have nadln1 labl for SJ children, eltht or nine at a Ume, I . teachers paid as much attention to low achievers as the rest of their students. The results , Kerman says, were "statistically significant•: improvements in reading and reading comprehension scores. ·'The high achievers and low achievers showed even greater academic gains, so apparently there wasn't a problem of slow- ing down everyone e lse," Kerman says. "The sad thing about the low achievers is that they become aware of shunning as early as kindergarten," says Kerman, a ' former social studies teacher. "If they sense it, by the time they reach the upper grades,. they're not listening as much as the other students," be says. A key part or the training has teachers observe participating colleagues in classrooms and 1 chart contacts between teacher and student. "We don't try to change at- titudes," says Kerman. "One of the thinp we'll tell teachers is just to call on low achievers more, rather than tell them to have a more ~lthe attitude." Frances Quinto ol the N atiooal Education AlsoclaUQI\ says the problem of teachen' expecta- tion• of low achievers ls not a new concept. ' "I don't think teachers are aetting colle1e tralnin1 ln a situation where they can un· derstand the problem," she says. · Kerman afTeea. "Sure, it's dJ1cuued in colle1ea, but actual· Jy puttln1 tt Into practice ls. aomethlnl else," he says. "They (eel they CID lntellectuallie about it, teach it out of a book.·• The tralnina teachers receive ' in volvea once-a -month worlrabopl ror fin months. Dur· lna that time, tbey 1110 ar, trained to observe fellow. teachen in the ~laasroom In or- der to chart their contactl wWa ....... Lut year, Kumlt ilDd bit •••U be an ttaJnla~ ~ • --profit;• un.a, .... tbt to tMlr telaoal ~ to rm u..tr on -~ .. t I " ' . " . \ . , • • -Grunion r un a groan G&EAT GOOSE CHASES DEn. -HunlJ')' cttlHU aloq our best of all possible coasts can hardly wait oow for tomor· row night when tood considered a great delicacy be1lna to wash upon our shorelines. The Great Grunion Runs belin Thursday. In event you are among the uninitiated, grunion are little , silver ftsh, about alx inches long, that bealn running up on our beaches to spawn in March. That means th~y lay eggs in the sand. These eggs then get washed around and soon make new little grwilons. . The small ·fish are allowed ~ to go about their business un-· · molested for. the firs~ couple of ";..~ months ot ws spawning. m• MURPHlll ~It , Btrr NOW, IT BEOOM~ , IW '~ open season and you can go out · · · after the new moon, wait for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for dinn~r ... Isn't that simple? No, it isn't. Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum- ,. mer camp and all the veteran campers from summers past :· dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They gave you a pnny t· sack and instructed you to go out after midni&ht with the bag f and a flashlight and capture snipes from the treetops. ; Or maybe they simply sent you over to the next camp : down the line to borrow a left-handed monkey wrench. : It's like that with grunion hunts. You may go out on the , . ''If you·~ o gnmion. sir, I'm really nottntereited ... " beach and wait patiently for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. D~PITE TIDS. marine biological savants seem to keep issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday ,. night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches between 11:18 p.m. and 1:18 a.m. Friday. See how precise that is? Trouble is, nobody ever tells the grunion about it. The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that are uncrowded at the darkeqed ends. This might include the •. Huntington Beach city or state beaches, the Newport-Balboa . Peninsula, Big Corona, Lagwia's Main Beach, Victoria in : Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. . •. Please note that this said might be. Not wilt be. >· Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would-be grunion .... hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in • • favor of the grunion going in. r-. !" FIRST, IF YOU are more than 16 years of age, you must ~ have a valid California sportsfishing license to take grunion. ~ Otherwise, you may be having an expensive chat with th~ fish ~ and game warden who has also been known to be wandering ) around out in the sqrf wash in the dark. • Further, it's a no-no to try grabbing grunion with anything ; but your bare ha"nds . There will be no nets. There will be no t buckets. There will be no hooks. ;. ~ . .. This probably means there 'will also be no grunion. Grunion are slippery little devils that wiggle a lot. Captur· ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ice cubes in running water. ALL T HESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer the • perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might . take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2: 12to4:12 a.m. , Don't blame me if you don't catch anything but a cold . .. .. ~~ falcons pose threat io city's pigeons ., • PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Pigeons 'ave been ruling the roost here for ~ars, but they will soon be faced trith unwelcome company. Peregrine g'.klcon.s. among the fastest birds on (artb, are returning to town. ~The falcons, which swoop down on elr prey at an estimated 180 mph, ast on pigeons and small rodents . ~ They used to roost in a number of cities, including Philadelphia, but a decade ago they nearly disappeared from lbe United States because of pesticides, most notably DDT. Two years before the pe1ticide was outlawed in 1972, the Peregrine Fund was established at Cornell Univeni· ty. Since then the non-profit or- ganization bas raised and released 270 peregrines in the East. Because your home la as unique . t fl SAN MARTIN PINOT CHAIDONNAY R9Q.S8.49 760ml GILBEY GIN 80 Proof 1.75 Liter SUTTER HOME c.c. TE ZINFANDll CHAMPAGNE $339 -1b-$199 '~~"' ~, ... - SHAmAMI FIENCH COLOJllARD & HEllN 11.ANC I ! i • • j DONOR -Actor Alan Alda bu contributed s.11,000 to help purchase and pre- a erve the Seneca Falls, N.Y. home of Elizabeth Cady Stan- ton, 19th century women's suffrage pioneer. Opening of land vowed OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -One billion acres of federal land will be opened for petroleum development during the next five years, U.S. Energy Secretary James B. Edwards bas said. He said that figure compared with only 40 million acres of federal land developed in the past 28 years. "It ia something of a miracle we have aur· vi ved our own energy problems this long, given what we've done to ourselves," Edwards said. He said 86 percent of the country's entire energy resources hav~ been locked up in about 34 percent of federal lands. •'Thia ls like starving to death in a kitchen with a pantry full of food that's locked up," be said tbia week. Ellwarda, speaking at dedication of the world'• largest drilling rig, said some of the federal land to be opened would be offshore and 100 million acres would be on-shore in Alaska for develop- ment of oil and natural gas exploration. He said the Reaaan adminiatration's goal ls to let individuala keep more of their own funds and to give business the capital and incentive to invest. IBM CtJJJe e neanng conclusion NEW YORK <AP> - After 12 years, lawyers finally have rested their case in the govern· ment's antitrust suit against International Busineaa Machines Corp. But both aides, aided by a federal judge, ltlll are worlti.na behind the scenes tryin& to reach a settlement. The law clerk to U.S. District Judie David Edelstein said a lawyer for IBM accepted an of· fer of help from Edel· lteiD to reach a settle· ment. If no settlement ii forthcomin1 ln the gov- ernment'• bid to have IBM broken up into separate companies on 1round1 it has monopollaed the com· put er industry, the Judie set Dec. 29 for a return cou.rt date. Employee transfers 'frozen' ••••••• •••••••• MIN'S & UDIES' NYLON WARM-UP SUITS REG. 19.99 1499 Shiny surface . brushedlln· Ing. Stripes on 14191 & sleevet Sizes XS to XL I SAVE $2 I COLORFUL lADIES' ROMPERS REG. 6.99 499 04¢0¢000¥4040540240 566 29$$$4$02 s ea Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 32-GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN LOCI-TIGHT LID REG. 12.49 J99 Rugged construcllon Wtlh lid & metol lock 1ng handles. IOYAl LlllDAM ClUI IUIOPUN STEMWARE BOX OF 6 FOR 7 99 roullllYSOU> ~sn 20"x24" PUB MIRRORS 9'9 UL UN CAT FOOD MWTIMEOI mnmw 13·cn. cona. Stade \~ ot ow price I SUPER PllCI SllACI&.' PAm CUClllS SUS 5 6 • •:/ .. ' . I ) ., f ji ) • Orange Co.st DAILY PILOT/Wednetdey, June 3, 1981 f SUl!D -. Country ,singer Ge0t1e Jones ' Js the subject of a $10 .1 inllllon suit by James and Stellle ~yan, owners of a routbem Ohio music ~ark. They contend ~~e singer damaged !t~helr reputations by ailing to eppear at a 1May 24 concert. l'ICTITICWt au....... l'ICTIT10US IWMN•U l'IC'ttnout evtt••• Crackdown ·planned PUBUC NOTICE MAM!llTA'HMa•T NAMlllTAT8 ... NT MAIMITAT ... NT Tiii fel......,._ "'Nl'I •t• Mlllf TIM ,...._~ l*tMt •t• ...... TIM l .. lowlllt ,_,...,_ •t• Mlllt ~-lllutl,..._& ,.._ WMMM • CHPunits added to Interstate 210 PA:S~DENA (AP) -The CaUforma fflCbway Patrol bu besun a craetclowD on 1pMd.Ln1 Ncml new lnterttate 210, a 43-mll• atreteb ot hl1hwey tbat leadl conveftJenUy into the San rerna.ndo Valley and ap- parentl7 bu been~mpUng motorlata to lay a heavy root on the ac- celentor. The CHP beran addiol 10 more unita lo thole already uaipecl to patrol the area. The project will UM additional patrol car1, motorcycles and heUcopten, flaid Officer Manny Padllla. CL8N~N•H ""°"•TIH, t• l •I HIWP>OltT HOMI L04N, I•> HSWl'OttT HOM8 l.OAHj .... "We·.e been monltorina the traffic "•••Y ~v•nv•, C•r•11• "' Met, INC ...... U9; ,_, HIWl'OftT HOM• UI; •• , N8WP>OltT HOM• LOAN, OD ID·-· ... ~ 210 dotn11 ·--aur C..lf.,..,.. ftm l.OAN, IHC. .... Ut; tc) NOll"OttT H•. m ; (ti HIWfl'OftT HOMI LOAlll ---• ~ . ,.,.,.... 0.--.•"""'"-~OM• LOAN ..... to. (di LOAN, ... ua, (di NIW,,Olllf YtYI uUlillDI radar -and ooe thlnc ... ,.,.,.. .. ~ _. ,.,_.. NIWP>Ofrr HOME L~ LOAN, .... HOME l...OiAN, .... 11'; I•> .... '°.T we cu ..,. for IW'e Is that there ii c....._ ,..,,.,,y Tn.M , ...... ltMe Ml: ,,, NEWl'OttT HOMI LOAN, .... HOMI LOAN, .... US; (f ) N•w'°•T definitely • --compliance •. .ttb the ... 0.Clettt• .. TNllll ..... on.Mr tAa; If) N«WflOftT HOM• LOAN, .... H 0 M I L 0 AN. N.. t J.: (.I """'" WI II, t•I, UI ,,.,..,_.A-. C--24; ltl N .. l"OttT HOMI LOAN. NaWl"OttT HOME LO.AN, -. UI; ~ mpb •peed limit," be said. "You •• .-.... ~ftt*' N•. tu; Cll) HEW,,OlllT HOMI (lllNEW"'OttTHOMaLOAH,Me.Sll, see, it 'a a very -'ce, very conv.enlent ou111• c:1M4le11e11, .,. "•HY LOAN, .... MS. " ,.,. .. ,ieu, •1 CK,.,..,. ..._, Hewl*'1 .. .qi. iu Av-, c.-dtl MM, C..llllN'nle Hew,ort IMc:ll, CellfOl'lllt nwe C::.11 .. tllle tllMO freeway.'' ttW NIWl'OltT HOMI LOAN ING.,. NEWl'OltT HOME LOAN, INC.,. Allen ClenC1t11en, UO ... ,,., Cell!Wftl•--.11--, C:.tltornluM",.ratilNI The freeway DOW stretches from =~· c..... •• Met, C..llflN"nl• NllWl"OltT HOME LOAN, Naw,,OltT HOMI LOAN, • Laverne northeast almost to T1111 butl•u ,, c0fldv<11e1 ,., • 1"'c. owtKteU, •Ne:. Car11C10M, Newball. Prior to April 10 the .-.n1~ ,.,....,.. ............. freeway bad 1topped tn Sunland. T111t :=.:;. c::-m:. ••111 IN ~ '=. ~ ".::!. Padilla •·'d that the CHP b .. • re-c_1.,cte1110f0r.,...c9\llltyonMey ''"' ttat...-••Iii.cl w1111 ,,. T1111......,.. -llled wttll IN ai -~.· ',"•'•· c. a•a---o County CleR o10r.,.. c-.ty on--.., c-ty c.. flf 0reneo c.wMy 911 Me~ ceived a $250,000 federal grant for the ... -----11• '"'· 11. n•1. A......., .. '--....... l'ltt• six-month projecL ..,._"' Pu111111wc1 0r-. eo.n 0.11., "'lot 1>u.i11Md 0r-. c.ast o.111 ~tot. lii:--:---------;-------;--;;::::--------------------------------------(tecwlty.......... Mey II,».. tJ, J-J. ltl1 ns..1 Mey IS,», 27, J-1, 1"1 ttU-91 -........... C:..-IMW . TODl'S SCORESBY VODKA SCOTCH 1.7~ 1.75-UTER 659 1009 CASE OF 6 39.54 CASE OF 6 60.54 BOTll.E CASE RETAIL RETAIL LIQUEURS Southern Comfort, 750-ML ............. 5.74 63.72 Jagenneister, 750-ML .................. 11 .45 127 .20 Fr"ngeUco, 750-ML ........................... 11 .92 129.95 Irish Velvet. 750-ML .. . ................... 11.89 132.08 Yukon Jack, 750-ML ......................... 6.46 71. 73 Kamora, 750-ML . ... . ........ ........... . . 6.41 71.15 Drambuie, 750-ML . .... ........ ... . . .•...... 1335 148.24 Galllano, 750-ML .............................. 14.08 156.46 Greensleeves, 750-ML. ................... 10.53 116.95 BOURBONS Ancient Age, 1.75-UTER ................. 12.20 66.50 Cabin Still, 1.75-UTER ..................... 10.35 57 .50 Eady limes, 1.75-UTER .................... 11.62 64.56 Ten High, 1 75-UTER ...... . ............... 10.91 60.50 l.W. Harper, LITER ............................. 7.80 86.60 Jack Daniels, LITER .... . ................ 10. 71 118.97 Jim Beam, l.7>UTER ... . .. . ... . . .. . 11.92 66.15 Old Charter 7 Year, 1.75-LITER ........ 15.03 83.48 Old Crow, 11>UTER ....................... 12.42 69.00 CANADIANS Black Velvet, t.75-UTER ............. v ..... 11 .43 63.49 Canada House, 1.1>UTER ............... 11.74 65.19 Canadian Club. 1.15-LITER ............... 17.41 96.90 Canadian Mist, 1.1~ ............. 11 A5 63.18 Seagram's V.0., 1.15-UTER ............ .16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.75-UTER .1~.05 66.95 Seagram~s Crown Royal, LITER ... 15.62 173.55 Windsor Canadian, 1.15-UTER ......... 12.59 69.90 RCJMS Appleton, 750-ML . ...... . .... . . . ..... 829 92.07 Bacardi Gold Reserve, 750-ML ........ 9.61 l 06.58 Mt. Gay Eclipse, 750-ML .................... 831 92.22 BacardJ U. or Dk., LITER ... ... .......... 6.64 73.58 Bacardi 151 Pf., LITER ................. .1129 125.34 Castillo Lt. or Dk., 1.1>UTER ... ....... 9.01 50.00 Mysers's Jamaican, t.7>LITER ....... 17.14 95.21 Ron Rico Lt. or Dk., 1.75-LITER ....... 1132 62.89 TEQUILA Cuervo Qold, 1.1~ ................... .14.72 81.76 Cuervo White, 1.75-UTER .................. 1328 73.74 CuervoQold 1800, 1~ ............ .10.06111.75 Montezuma w. and a .. 1.75-UTER .11.17 62.01 Montemma W. end a .• UTER ......... 6.20 68.85 Pepe Loper(lold 1.15-UTER ........... .13.04 72.44 Puerto Valarta W. and 0., 750-ML .. 4.61 5) .20 Don Einllo W. and Q., l.7,.LJTER ..... 9.73 54.06 Don EmJBo W. and Q,, LITER ..•....• 5.56 61.79 S.t.iu White, UTER.. ............................ 7.60 84A8 Sauza Qold, UTER ............................. 8.48 94.16 TWo fingers White, LITER ................ 8.29 92.07 'Twq fingers Qokl, LITER .................. 9.14101.!50 Heri'm1dur11 Anejo, 75().ML ............ .l 4AO 160.00 296 BLACK VELVET CANADIAN 1.75-UTER 1035 CASEOF662.10 CHAMPAGNES ANDRE 239 75().ML CASE 26.01 JACQUES BONET 247 750-ML CASE 26.92 LEDOMAINE 333 750-ML CASE .36.30 COOKS 296 750-ML CASE 32.29 CHANDON 883 750-ML CASE 96.25 KORBEL NATURAL 816 750-1'\l. CASE 89.00 CHRISTIAN BROS. 4s1 7»ML CASE !SO.JO MUMM& EX·DRv: 1430 750~CASf 1&6.00 GILBEY'S DON GIN EMILIO 1.75-LITER WH. (, GOLD. LITER 969 490 CASE OF 6 58.14 CASE OF 12 58.80 B01TLE CASE ST. M.ICHEu..E RETAIL RETAIL Cabernet Sauvtgnon, 750 ... ...... 6.24 White RJesUng. 750 ................... 5.25 Gewurztramlner, 750 ................. :. 4.23 Merlot, 750 ........ ....... ............... 4.65 Chenfn Blanc, 750 ........................ 3.49 Rose of Cabernet, 150 ............... 3.30 Grenache Rose, 150 ... ~.............. 3.65 Johannlsberg Riesling, 150 ...... 4.64 ES~WJNES Chenln Blanc, 750 . . ................ 3.43 Johannisberg Riesling, 750 .... 4.44 Zinfandel, 750... .. . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 .04 Chardonnay, 750 .. ........... 6 .87 Zlnfandel Rose, 1so .. .......... . ... 3.43 Muscat CaneW, 750 .. ......... ...... 5.65 Cabernet Sauvignon, 750 ... ....... 7 .06 Fume Blanc, 750 .................... 4.84 ANGELO PAPAGINI AHcante Boushet 750-ML. ......... :. Chen in Blanc 750-ML . .. . . .. . . ...... . Madera Rose 750-ML ............... : ...... . 4.35 3.54 .3.J 2 Muscat Alexandria 750-ML .......... . 3.54 Muscato D'Angelo 750-ML ............. .4.15 BERINGER WINES Chablis 750-ML .................................... 2.39 Chen in Blanc 750-ML .... . . .. ... ..... 3.03 Cabernet Sauvlgnon 750-ML. ........... .4.5.0 Gamay Beaujolais 750-ML. ......... 3.34 Johannlsberg Riesling 750-ML .. 4.50 Grey Riesling 750-ML . ...... . ...... 2.67 Chardonnay 750-ML. ................. . 5.41 Pinot Nolr 750-ML ........................... .4.50 Zinfandel 750-ML ... . ............. 3.34 JOSEF HAUPT WINES· Zellar Schwartz Katz 750-ML .......... .2. 79 Pies porter Mk:helsberg 750ML ..... .2. 79 Uebfraumikh 750-ML ....................... 2.07 S<:hatzl 750-ML ...................... -............ 1.69 BRISA 68.00 57.20 46.00 50.60 38.00 36.00 39.60 50.60 37.40 48.40 44.00 74.80 37.40 61.60 77.00 52.80 47.30 38.50 34.00 38.50 45.10 26.00 33.00 49.00 36.30 49.00 29.00 59.00 49.00 36.30 30.45 30.45 22.50 18.50 12-0Z. 6 Pt<S. 12-0Z.-6 PACK 199 11s _, CASEOF2A CASEOF24 WARJI\ 6.60 WARM 7.60 SIMI WINES Chenln B&lnc 7!»ML ......................... 4.84 Qewurztramlner1~ ................... .5.65 Johannlsberg Rledng ~ ....... 4.84 Plnot Chardonnay~ ................ 8 .07 Burauncty 750-ML ................................ 2.82 ~7!)().ML •• , •••••• ,, ••••••••••• , ••••••• .5.64 Plnot Nair 7~ ............................... 6.35 c.bilrnet Sauvlgnon ~ .......... 7 .26 <lliNiY leMljc>Wa 7~ ............... .3.83 Roee of Cilbemeh'°""'-............. 3 .93 53.24 61.53 52.80 87.95 30.69 61.55 69.25 79.15 41.75 42.85 PRICES • mecTIY! JCN4 THRU JUftE 17 1981 HOCJtS 10 AA TOI PM ~,,_.$1.T. 10 N4 TO 7 PM ~y ........,.._.,CA..... ------1'161111 ,..,..,.,_, Orent19 C:.Ut Deity l"llot. Mel'll, .. 17,J-J.IWI !UUI PUBLIC NOTICE .. OTtCa OP ll'U.&.IC N•A1tlN• OJI A "ae>POHD ZONI CMAHOI NOTICI IS NEltE8Y GIVEN tNt llM o,.,... COlinty Plannl"' Com· mlHlon wlll llOlcl e ~le Merlnt le c.en11dtr r•-•ne"' • 2.1 ecrw -ul ef lend IOCeteCI generelly lletwHn lrlllol encl lenllll Aw-. Htl el l•tvct Ave11Ut '" th• Saftte Ana Heltllts .,... Oele of "-Int: J-IS, ltll Tl-of ....-1ne: 1.JO """··or •• -.,,.,....., .. .,. ...... LoceUon: H•ll ol AOmlnlllretlOn ~Int ltoon\ 10 Ch11t c:en...-P,.u Otl<t•, '-'le AM. c.lllornle t2702 f'r.,...1: Ollnee of Z-Cu. No. ZC •2A Pf'OPOMCI to <twinge cer· leln preperty from Ille RI ISRI •·sintl•·Famlly Ruloenu (Sit" lt .. tr1C1 .... I" Olllrl<t to ... PA ISRI "Profeul-1 encl Adlnlftlstroflve Of· fke IS1911 Rettrkllotll" Ollltlct. Co,.lence wltll tllt C.tlfornle Eftvl,....,.,_tal O...llty Act: tt wes e1et1rmlnte1 tllet •lthou911 tllt pr_.o project coute lleve e tlrlflcent effect on tN envlronmenl, Ulere wlN not be e tltnlllcenl efMCI In tlllt <•M 1>9cauH ,.,. mlt1oet1on meeaurt1 Cleacrl1>9CI In N•o•tlvt O•CluetlOfl • I0/0600S hevt llteft eddeCI to,,. project All~ eitl>ff 1•-1"9 Of'-· 1119 tlllt -• ••• Invited lo pteaont their views before Ille Pl-tne eom. 111hslon For I~ lnfonnetlon, ..,_ere Invited to e.il Ille Zonlnt S.CtlOn et U.-55<&7 o; c-Into Ule Office louted •• .ao a.tic een...-Orlw W.•, R°°"' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE a I SOLUTION HO. 11•11 ltHOt.UTION 01' TN a aoAltO 01' DtltaCTotlS 01' TMa MOUt.TC* ... UOUIL WATalll OIST•ICT ot1a.A•1 ... ITS l .. TINTION TOMflelJC "llOf'l•TY TO IM,,•CWUlllNT OllT•ICT HO. IA ISIW••I WHEREAS, It la IN .. .,. of lllt a-11 Of Olnclerl of Ult ,...,_N..,.. Wettr Olstrld IMHWO) lo aflNlt c..teln _.,, es dlncrlllecl kl la"1~ "A" .. lflls ~. wtllcll eltlllllll 11 et~...,...._,, tly U.la ,....r-...ce lltrelft 1--ettd, tt lmpro"""'°"t DI.irk I No. IA IS.-) of MNWO; WM! WHEREAS, IN ... tCIOf Olrftton 11-lllet tllt.,,..Nllonof Mid '""'1\1 lo 1111~ Dts1tlct No. IA (Sewer> Of MHWOwlll ......it wdlllAPWtY. Md WHllllEA$, It I• tllt desire of tllt 8oetCI Of Olredon IO c-t • llWO!k 11Hrl1t9 at wfllcll "''°'' m•y •.....--119 NWCI reletlw •IN pr_...s-Mutloft ol letrltory lo IMIW'Owtfteftl Olstrkt Na IA IS.-1 of -WD; HOW, THEREFORE, IN INrCI of DltKton Of MNWO DOE$ NEREaY ltl$0LVE, OIETERMINE AHO OROEll •1 lollowt. ~ 1. TIMtl II It IN Intention Of t"9 lkMrCI Of Olrec10rl Of MMWO 10 -• cert•ln lefflloty lo lrn.,tOWfMfll District No. IA 1s.-1 of MHWD. lee.._ I. TIWrl em• .-ino IN ..,,,,lot........., ... Of U. te«ll«Y to M -llld. wftlcfl mee> shell eowrn f« ell dlt\ellt et lo U. eldont of IN er• to be •nM.MCI, I• on Ill• wlUI ... s.<retery Of MHWD •1"41 I• •v•ll•llt9 fCN' ln..,.C• tlOt'l lly eny ,.,_"' ,.,..ons lnttrHteCI. ...... I. ThM .,,. territory IO lie --to ''""'°-Olsttk t No. IA CS.werl of MHWO 11\elt 119 .._ .. wit'-! tenna ...0 COftClll'-s.. tKti. '-Thet es-men11 tor cerrylnQ out eny _...,..Of ul<I l'"Of'O.,.. menl Dlstrkt No. JA cs.-1, lncludlf\!I pey"*" of princlpel of •1"41 1nc ..... 1 on .,.,. llOflClll or werrents ...Ut...oltlt "'911 lie levlecl uct\OSl...iy -Ult IMdl kl .. .., lmpo..,,,.,.. Ol~rkt. lnc"'°1ft9 \lie terr~ --uwreto. tKt• L ThM • pullllc llurlnt llt end the .. _ ,....., II celled on Ult ci-. tlon of Ille -ulloft Of cttUln .. ""°'" to tmcwo-m Olllfl<1 Ho. SA IS.wt<') ...0 eny otllef" melter r•l•tlnt 10 .,,Y Of "'9 10A90int to llt Nici .. 1 :JO p.m , W .. --.efttr H 11 prec:l~t el IN Offl<e ef MNWO, l1JOO Le Per ltNCI, Leeuna Nl.,.i, Ca. •Hn, on J-"· , ••• -111et et selCI 11 .... end plec. provldtcl lor .. 111 l)Ul)lk Nerlnt ..,,. ""°"' lnlerelMd. lnc:IYdlno perlOM _.,,.1411141 wltlll" lllt ere• to lie -..o to I~,....., Ollttkl No JA IS4twerl, me., -end M Nenl. S.CU. t. TIMIC U. SeCl"etMy ot MHWO lie -"",,_,_,...,It di,_ to UllM • U1f11 ol tfll• R"°""'°" to be pulllllMCI •ncl ~ In Ule m._ ,... qulrH lly Settlon 3M14 el Ille Water C:... of "'9 State of C.llfonlle .. ADOPTED, SIGHED AHO APPi.OVEOWs 21~Cley0f Mey, ltl1. MOUL T~IGUEL WATER DISTRICT Donw. SmlUI, Vice Prn ...... t Melenle L Twtlltkl. Auhttnt Setretary STATE OF CALIFORNIA) llS. S.nte AM. CA '2702. ~ reltr COUNTY OF ORAHOI! to ZC Ho. •24. I, MELANIE L. TURTURICI, AHISteftl Setre!My Of 11W 8oercl Of Olrecton PulllltlWCI Or-.. to.st o.lly Pllol, ef llM MOULTC>t4 NIGUEL WATER OllTlllCT, cit llerfty eMUly -t1w JUM 2.1•1 u 11•1 ...-....norelOlutlon WMCluly .........,.., ... eo.roof DlnctonOI aelCI Dllltlcl --------et• r99U1¥ ,,_tlflo of,..., Boerd "9141"" the 211C Cley of M.ey, lttl, MCI !Mt ii PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' Ti.USTEE'$ SALi T.$. Ne.J1 ... ... so .-.itec1 .., II• tot-•no volt: 1AYE5: u rry ... u ....... H. Le• .. _s, 0.. w Smltll, Dw1t111 A. Wllll.,.,_., Rk,,.nl S Flore, aryen $. Hell, MCI Getetcl E. Bu<k. NOES: OlltECTORS: ..... ABSTAIN: OlltECTOflS: NOIW. A.SENT: DlltECTORS: -,.._.....L Tvrtuntl, Asll9'enl Secreter; Of Ille NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. lllet on Wedrletdel', J-14, 1•1. t i ' 00 O'cloO e.m. Of MICI CS.y, ., uw -trence tothtofflctttllf'RE.AL ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, 2020 Nor111 Broedw..,. Suite 106, In IN City Of S.n· le Ane, C:-.Cy of O< ...... Stet• Of Cl lllotnla. HEWPOi.T EQUITY - l'UHOS, tHC •• a Celllornla corporetl· on. H duly -'"ltd TrUSM vncler MOULTON NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT of 111e illolM"d of olrec*" u.r.i PulllltlWCI Or ..... Coeet Delly PllOC, J-J. 10, t•I -------~~1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE •1"41 pU-1 ...... _., .... ,_ ------------ ••rid In lhet cenetn Deed of Trust ta· •alOt.UTION HO. 11·M ecut..r .., HARRY BROOMALL encl ~ IOA M. BROOMALL, llusbencl encl •ESOl.UTION 01' THE MA•D 01' DllllCTotll 01' TMI MOULTOtMelOU•L WATI• OtST•&CT wife, -recordtel Mey 1•· lt90, In OllCLAlllNO tn INTINTION TOANNIJC ,,.OH•TY 8-IJ609 ol Offklel Rec:-of UICI TO IMl'ttOVQllaNT OllTlllCT HO. IA (S8Wlltl County, •• -.... llecorWer's IMlrunMftl Ho. 17112. lly WHllllEAS. " It '"' .. ,,. of tht 8-41 of Olrec10n ol Ille Moullon-HIQ"91 W•ler District IMHWOI to -• certeln ,.,_-ty, M dtKrlbeCI lft Eallllllt r-ef • -11 "' Clef.," In P8Y· "A" to tNt llemMloll, -tell Hllllllt I• att.ectwCI ,,.,_ eftel I• tly 0.K r""9nce rnent .,.. --n-ol .,. OllMI..-llef'tlll l~etN. IO lm.,ro...,,,..,t Oltb"lct Ho. IA IS.WI of MNwD; - lloM MCureCI ttwnlly, IMluCllne !NI WM8REAS,t1W8MrC1ofOlrector9.llnclUh .. lN_,...loftofuld~ ctrteln .,,_., °' .., .. ,t. Notice Of .. Im,.,._,.... o+ttrkt Ho. IA CS.-1 ol MHWO wlll lleneflt-" ~ wllkll WU r--FtllNerY 2A. t•t, end lft Booti 11'9 of Offlelel RecorCll Of WHEREAS, It It IN deslre of the 8-CI of Olrectan to concNc:t e l!Ublk ,..., C-y. et -1325, lleconitr't .. _ I I I I a---' lnatrument Ho. va. WILL SELL AT ..,.•tnt•twllcllper10Mmeyeppeer_M_dreetw 10lN,..__..- p u 8 LI c Au c T' 0 N T 0 THE MUllon of territory to lmcwoftmttlt Olttrk1 Ho I.A IS.W.tl of MNWO; NIGHEST llOOER l'Olt CASH, NOW, THEREFOltE, IN INrd of Olrecton of MHWD DOES HEltEaY ltESOLVE, DETERMINE AND OROEll es lollowt lewful money of IN Unll9cl Stain, •II leel._ I. TIMtt It It Ille lnttntlon of Ille BoerCI Of Direction Of MNWO to-• peyellt• ., tlw ti-of ..... •II •lollt, <•11•1n ......... .,to lmswo ....... nt Olstrlcl Ho. IA IS.-1 of MNWO. 11111 WM! 1n1ern1 ,_ 11e1d lly 11, .. ~a. TNt • meci smwlno u. ....,lot -""of .,,. t•rr1torJ 1o ... TNtt .. , In -llo INt reel pr-rty •-nd. wflkl\ ..,_ "'9ll QDVWfl for ell dltteils at 10 "'9 tlltenl of t1w ar .. to tltu•I• lft U ICI County •ncl St•te, be anM-, Is on llM with Ille Secr.te,., of MHWO end It evellMlle f« 1""'9(· CletcrllleCI ... ~~~T "A" Uon lly eny pe,_, or penons lnleres\ed. PADCEL 1. • ....,_I. Tr.et UW ltr-'tory to lie..,,,._ to liiCiiO••n•nt Olwkt Ho. IA ~ (s.w.t'I of MHWO sl>all be -•eel wltllout..,..,.. encl ceMltloM. U"lt ., u .-on thet cetUln secu. 4. TMt u..-nts 1or carryl119 out any --of u lCI ,,.....,.. C-mlnlym Plen reconteel Avousl ment Olstrlel Ho. IA 1s.-r1, lncluCll"9 IMY"*" of prln<~I 01 end Int•,..., on 12. 1'1S kl 8oo11 ,,.,, P ... 1163 of Of· eny "°"°'or waNents OU111endlf\!I wll lie levlecl u cl\OS!vely -IN lencll In fklel Record\, -M def Intel In l-.. Id I~ Olatrlct. lncluellfto Ille lerTltory --ttwreto. urtel" Oeclarellon1 of Cownenu, s.ctt. s. TIMtt • pU!lllc 11tenne 11e -,,. _,,........., 11 c.ileel °"a.. - C-llloftt encl RntrlcllOM tetorcleel lion of lN onne .. tlon Of certeln ttrrltor; to lmpro•-t OIMrlCt Ho. IA In looll 11 ... P ... JOt of Offlclel 15-wef'I encl.,,., ohf' metter rel9'1"9 to any Of Ille,.,,....,... to lie llelcl et t :• ltecorda. p.111., or .. .,_, -Nftet es It prectic-, et t1w Offk• of MNWO, V• Le PAllCEL 2: Pu •oec1. ~ N}9uel, Ce. mn. on J-19, ••1, ...0 tfMt ............ -An Ut!Cllvkled II.MUI lftC..-..t In Loi pie<• provided tot Mid pullllc ,..,1119 any Ptrtonl lnl!We11ed, lnchldlne 2 of Ttec:t Ho. 8073, es snown Ot'I • Mep JMtlGfll ownlnt lend within the eree to lie -eel to ,,,..,."""'°"' 0 1.Ulct He. recorded kl 8ooll »7. P ... 1 I encl t Of IA cs.->. mey .,...., encl M N•r-0. M lacell•neovs Mep1, rectrCls of I«'*., TNt uw Se<r.t.,., ol M"""O lie ...o tlW .-,......,., 11 Cllrect.41 lo Or•nee Gourlly, Cellforftle, tlloWfl eno ceuw •copy Of 11111 RffOlutlOfl to llt jlutllllhtel and post.eel In Ille m-,... O.llMCI ••Common A,.. on tN ellove qvlrecl 11y SKtJon :IM14 of Ille W•ltr Codt Of "'9 Stet• of C.llf..-111•. menlloMCI Conoomlnlum "len anCI AOOPTt!O, SIGHED AND APPROVED ltlls 2111 Ciel' o1Mey.1•1. Otcleretlon. MOULTOH-NIGUEL WATEll DISTRICT Eauptl"O tllertfr•m •II oll, oll Don w. Smith, VIC• Presldtflt rltllll, mlnerel•. mln•r•I rlollls, _.,, .. L. Turtutkl, Aulstent Secretary neturel OH r lgllll, e n Cl other STATE 01' CALtFORHJAJ J llyClrocetllOM i.y w11ei-W!' fteme ) u. known 1"-1 mey Ille wltlllnw Uftdtr 1"9 COUNTY Of' ORANGE I petttl ol 1...0 twrelnelloW dMctl-. I, MELANIE L TUllTURIC:I, Anlatenl Setretery Of lN IMnl Of Olrecton loettNt with tlle perpetuel tight of of Ille MOULTON NIGUEL WATEll DISTRICT, do IWnt>y c.rtlty tMI ... drllllnt, rnlnl119, ••Pl•tlllt. end ,.,....nQNIOIUllonwescNty ~ llyttw loenlef 04..-..SOf ..._ Olstrkt opwetlne ,......_ Md •torlftt In -.. • f99U1er nwellne Of Mlcl IMrCI ,...., on ti. 2111cs.yofMey,1•1,.,.. ttwtl 11 r_1,. Ille .. ,.,. tram Mid lend IN' was .. ~.., ttw fottowlno vote: lt'om eny otlltr lend, 1nc1uc11no Ille AYES: Urry R. Llmttt, N. ~ Ranuntn, Don w. rltflt to ~ll or Cllrectlonelly Clrlll Smltll. Ow1tf11 A. Wiiii.nu.., ltkNrCI S Flore, eftd 1111N frcim lendl °"'"' tt\en thou .,.,.,, $. Hell, end o.relcl E. Bu<ll. lltrelnellOve detcrllleel. oll or OH 1 NOES: OIRECT~S: Hone. .. 111, tlftWll encl tlMtfU Into, ltlrouoll AaSTAIN: OlltECTOllS: Hone. or ecr-"'9 ~Ke of "'9 lend ABSENT: OIRECTOftS: Hone. !Mf<elftel:lo¥a dHuflltcl end lo llOttom M91enle L Tw1wkl, 111cll wlllPStO<lltd or Cllrectlonally AMIAMI Sect.tert Of Ille dtllllCI Wllll10 tunnels encl .ii.fb unc1tr MOULTON NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT el'ICI lie-Ill o; flt'l'Ol'ICI ti. elllerlor ol IN ,..rel of Ol..-Cters lllereof 111111t1 .,.,._,, eno 1e redrlN, rei..nn.t. P>vMllMll Or..,.. Coest Dally ~11ot. J-s. 10, 1•1 ~, ...... nWllUln, ,.....,,, ....... end -1 ---- ..,,.,.t. •nY '"'" ••11• or min .. , PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE wltllOll\, ~. tfle tltfll to Clrlll, llllfte, ttwe, ••Plore elMI o,_r•tt ----------- ~ .. -1PCe w tM ~r '°° •llO&.UTION ll0.1141 fffl Of IN wffllrlece of IM laftCI ltalOLUTION 01' TM• 90.\ltO OP Ot•aCTOllll ...... IN!low CIMCrlbe4, .. -"" In 01' T"I MOULTON-tU.UIL WATII• CHST•ICT \lie Deed « ~ "'°"' U. lrvlne Dea.AalN TMa UIT•NTIOH lO ~ACM ll"ttOPStrn eem~. ---~, •. 1t1• ..... tflilf'tt0¥•M•NT OIST•ICT NO. IA cs•n•1 In ..... n• ...... 4$1 of Offltlet WH•1tl!A5, It I• .. dftj" .. the ... d of ~ ol .,. -...... .. ..... lt~~IL s· W•tet ()ljtrlC1 CMHWDI to clMKll cen.ln ~. dtlCt*-41 Ill ...... "A'' H•n·l11ci111lv• leu111enl fer •lltl• • .....,....,wM<llHlllMt l•ett.eclwCl..,_ ..... tlllt,..,_lai. UtllltlH, Ac-, ...... 1.-1 E1t-~ .... lllfW\, I,_ l"'!lf-l Ol*1tt Ne. IA tt.wl ef MMWDi 11141 ~ ~ eftCf '°' ~titer WtflltlAI, ltle ...... Ill Dl'9cton flf MNWO f!MI tNt IN dtteclwMllt ef ....,_.,, ai1 •...Mt _.defined Ill MN ~ '""' ,,,..._...,., Olttrlct Ho. IA fle;wl et MHWO wtM =.~°".::~::: -:.:~=::~:.,. .. Ult ... dflf~flfMftW0•~1 torcled Ill .,. 1t4'4 ~ * Of Of. "'*'k 11Nr1111 .t Wllkll ._ may .,.._ .,. N ..,_. ree.tlw • tN Pl"9' flclel "-'°'*' -;;," ~nu ............ 1 ... "-,,,.,O .. mtftt Ol ... lct .... IA IS.WI: tllerete NOW, TH81tEFOlta, tht loenl of~ ef MHWO DOU Ha1taay TIM;.,_.--w otMr c-ltllOt.Vll. OETERMINI AHO OltOl!lt ..... ._.: daltnltllft. H .,,.y, of tM reel Pf'Dlltt· tec1llee 1. TIMtt It 11 tlle lnleftllen et ltw ilMnl flf Oll"Kton of MNWO le ... " ller•IMllollot dtletllltcl 11 llWPWIH *" Citnelft temtory frwm I"""'.,.,...,.... Olltr~IA ,.._, .. MNWO. ~ ·~=c---~ --==~:."":.~ -:r ~::.,.-:--.... :~~':':.:'!:: TM ·_..,....:. ~lofm• ""~ Md Ille~ I•'" fllt wlltl.,,. Se«etery flf MNWO 9"' " • .,,.....,. •-..c> I of llen by MY~ w.--lllWetlM. Ill I *"" .., tM Inc•~--..... a. Tilet ... ...,.,.,_, "" ICUmlllltlled wltNul t -... caMloo Nie tlt'911 .... Ot otMr Commotl tlelll. K ... sat"!: .................. (..... ~ .. TMt .. -~ -t«fYltll .... ...,,.,..... .. ,,._ Miit lff' -r~ ~., l"'Pll... ,_. Dlltrlct-. IA Ca.-1, ll'lclllllna l'IYINMI el ,n..ci..t el_. IM-t ,...,., ... llV. -e-.1111 W e11ewni: 4lfl .._, ... IW werreMI ..,.......,, INll Ml .. ~ .......... t. , •ruu1 .. ••ll•fY 111e" '"'"''"' -•-.. •--tra'll.-fwlfttfle~~..._..Adof , ................. rltwy.......... . Mteo<• ... ....... ............ ..... .. T'Mt• ..... ~ ......... _._,,Cl,._ .......... :::.-:.i:.:=..°':'.:.T::1~i;.:;; 11• •• 11\.,et" -........... n I•~ lfttfltflfftc• et MHWO, 17• .......... ,._.. .-. " --Loe,,., .... L.191N. ~.ca....,,,.,,_ 11. ltl'I, .................... w tt1t .W-tf t* OM o1 Trwt IM t'leot fir Mid ~ llMrlftl 911Y ..,_. ~ IM._.,. ...,_ .... '"..,_. 911 .,.,, well --" --IW wttMll lie erw .. M ...._ ... ff'Ofll 111_.e-.:11 Oltlll'lcl Ne. IA ..1 ,....,,,!Ny...., ......... ,.. tM plutMa. CfWtit&eNll ......... ... .. ,.... .. ......,.,.,,_..WOlle•tN---lt ...... .. T~ W of .. ll'Wll -'"' ... --......... •r tel• OMd of Trwt, T• 19'41 ~._,., Ill 1 ........... _w_...tfl,..Mel!W_.. ..,,._.. ............... lfl<lullftl ., ...... llCtlel!IMMef•W.W~., .......... ~. ~l..CINI ect'llM I~ ....... ADOll'TaD, SIOMtlO 4NO ~~..OVeD 11111 llllt..., f/I Mty, "'1 • __... M ,_... ........... llllOl.lt..TOM-41..Ue&;WATlllOllTilllCT ............................ o.tW ........ VICefllftt ...... ef .. T~ 1111 .. lllM 11 Wiiiet .......... T...,.l,AMllWlllec,....., ... llUUH 'et llllt Nettce, 11 ITATfOf"~l"°"NIA) ! .....,...... , .. ..... .., .. -COUtlTV Of' OMNOe ) ........... lft lt.!19L.ANll '-> TU•TUltlCI, ........ _,....,, ..... ._,. .. ........ "'Niii.'*--If-Wa:..MCMleL: •A1'11t ... TllllCT,•----... .. ~-., ...._. ---............................... ----. :.,..,...,-................................ ,, ............. ""·---~ 1f1·1111A&.1ttAft .... iru.,, .......... -.C Mcu•tTl•MttVtCe. AY 1 LMfY "° ~--1•'-°"' W, I ·~-... --..... ~A. ltle,_.S.""" ....... ....& ........ ' C .. _.,,,D • -..-.i0t• :._, • ........-.--· AflTA"ll Dt•ICl'CMlti ,._, '""""'.,.....,. AIMMT1 Otltlt'r'OMI ..... ... ~ ' .... l..TW.-.CI, ..... -~... .......~ .... '91i frMI..... ,..._TON .. IOUIL WATU Dlt'nfCT ,,...... .... c.. ..... "" ' ......... °"""""' ..... .-ea..te.o.• ..,..; ,,.......or....c...Det"~f-'-1'.• . i I i -=, • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, June 3, 1981 ..--------------------.:~~Pondering princely presents < .. _'. J j What to give a couple who will .have ever.ything ,, . !Y .. !!l.G!."· ~f!.LLIGAN tlJWGAN'S STEW Bucldqham Palace branch of _,__ • -the Sore Lolen Club, I gather, la R IDGEFJ ELD, Conn. -not all that anxious to let "He never learned to turn pages." 1 SUmmer time for burglars WASHINGTON (AP) -Bicycles, beaches and baseball are central parts of summertime, but so are burglaries, warns the Insurance Information Institute. Summer is a peak season for housebreaking, say the experts, since many people are away from home on vacation. In addition, schools are out, providing free time to the people most often ar· rested for burglary, school-age young people. According to FBI statistics, more burglaries occur during the daytime than at night, and in nearly half of the cases the burglar enters through an unlocked door or window. The insurance institute has a list of precau- tions that may help you foil thieves. These ln· Decl1loN, declaloos. byaonee be by1ones. I have been wondertn1 wbat to Japan .. photo1nphlc expedi· I wonder If Harrod'• bu Lady ~---~~~~:!!JI 1lve Prince Charles and Lady tlon at Loch Neas planned to Di's pattern on dl1play ln the Diana for a wedc:Una present. give her and that honey chap chlna department? We might N'ot knowinl them all that well, abe married a framed picture ol mana1e to sprinr for a napkin I supPOlfe we will only be invited the monster u a weddinC pres-ring or a toothpick bolder or a to the church and not the recep-ent. I Wonder what they ever &herkln for.It, provided the set la Uon. Still, noble111e obllae. boot did with it. Prol>ably up ln the not ln 24 karat cold or band soitetc. . attic somewhere like the pinll painted by Her Majesty's .;As a matter of fact, I don't plastic punch bowl with the minion.a at the Crown crockery know Lady Diana at all, but I bamboo servin.8 apoon we re· work.a in Staffordlbire. i · Auto & Homeown&,.. met His Royal Ht1hne11 the ceived from my boas. I was Perhaps Fortnum & Muon's ;~· Quotes By Phone Prlnce of Wales when be came teacbina school then and rela· are doln& <as the British aay> to address our American Cor· lions wlth the comman" atruc-elft certificates for a really ripe f-.S INSIHIG respondents Association a few ture were somewhat strained. · old wheel of Stilton or some of •r years back at the Savoy Hotel in No1tal1lcally relevant, I those oak smoked kippers that ua.5H4erlJl-J4J7 London. wonder lf the Prince and Lady the British seem to love even 1 ~="~'4=...,..==·=C="=t.=M=•= .. ::!J He told us a couple ol jokes, Di would have any use for a more than warm beer, Comish 1- one of which, being a Britbh macrame owl. Life shed . pasties and the other traditional joke, I just got the other day and Pristine condition. Never bung. treats that. contribute 10 much to found it rather am usln1. Or a foodu pot? We seem to have the high incidence of dyspepsia Something about a cricketeer four of them around somewhere. In that other Eden. crossin& the road at tea break to Havine spent most of my lite I suppoee someone will give get out of the shade of the eatin& in the kltcben, I never the throne-bound (someday ) pavllion. A spin-off on "mad bave become a fondu fan nor of youna loven a Moroccan-bound dogs and Englishmen." Anyhow, anything else bubbling up right set of the collected novels of it was better than that one he atthetable.ltwouldbenotrou· Barbara Cartland, step. told at colonial Williamsburg ble at all breaking up a set. grandmum of the bride. The old 'Telllnc the moet people possible la important to the success of any garage sale. Make sure you rs la listed In C lassified, phone 6'2·5678. about being a Redcoat. Speaking of anniversaries, dear has written more than 200 If Prince Charles is going to Lenox cblna -amon1 the belt royal romances under such titles !;.:"=====----::;:;----"" go in for this sort of stand-up here in the New World and fre-as "Little White Doves of Love," comedy, perhaps be would like queot purveyors of crockery to "A Nightingale Sang," "The the Collected Jokes and Stortea the White House -now bas on Prince and the Pekingese,'' of Myron Cohen, although they sale at a greaUy reduced price "The Prude and the Prodigal" might be a bit Borscht Belt for the band.some "Patriots Bowl" and "Bride to the King." iimirwm British tastes. they put out for the American Had this sort of reading been I recall that when his mother Bicentennial celebration a few available in the waiting room for the queen was married, while years back. Queen Victoria's first born son, still, a princess royal, someone The heir-apparent and bis Edward VII might have been a here in the colonies sent her a spouse, however , probably little less bored as Prince of dozen pair of nylons. That, of would not enjoy looking across Wales. Nothing like a good book course, was just after the war, the breakfast table every mom· when a chap is out of sorts and when such fmery was rarer than ing at Patrick Henry, Thomas champing at the bit. blood opals, which by the way Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Personally speaking, I wish I are considered bad luck as a John Adams and George could bring myself to part with wedding present. Washington, who were at the my treasured copy of "The Moet When Charles' sister Anne got bottom of all that trouble for the of P .G. Wodehouse" as a wed· married, not all that long ago, a Crown way back .. then. The ding gift. ALL MAKES! · 833-0555 Ask for Roy, lWE SflECIAUST at HOWARD Chevrotet c-o10o..-a.....a .. NE'M'ORT BE-"'CH elude: ., -Lock (loors and windows, including your a~ 1--;;===================::========~====:::=:.::::==::~~=:;:::::~~~~~~~~~ tic, basement and garage. Deadbolt or double· -/; cylinder locks a re best for doors, and there are several good window locks OD the market. -e c -Don't bide keys outside the home, burglars know where to look. -When on vacation keep your home looking lived-in. Have someone mow the lawn, and ask a M. f N S S T 0 • E S dependable neighbor to collect your maU and 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH, C..XLIFORNIA 92663 newspapers instead of stopping delivery. The fewer people who know you're gone, the better. NEXT TO THE LIDO THEATER -Get automatic timers for some of your lights. -Keep ladders out..of sight and locked up. -Don't advertise y"bur vacation ln newspaper society or community news columns. -Permanently mark your Social Security number on items such as stereos and television sets. Some police department! will loan you an electric engraving pen for this purpose. · IT IS WITH DEEP REGRET THAT WE HAVE TO CLOSE OUR STORE AT NEWPORT BEACH . WE HANK ALL OUR CUSTOMERS FOR THEIR SUPPORT THE PAST SEVEN YEARS BUT ECONOMIC CONDITIONS MAKE THIS MOVE NECESSARY . OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN! OUR ENTIRE $400,000 '• MUshrooms may be taintef}, WASIDNGTON (AP) -People with four· ounce cans of mushroom stems and pieces sitting on their pantry shelves are being warned to check the lids for codes that signal possible contamina· ti on. ~:) INVENTORY IS DRAST,ICALLY REDUCED FROM 20°/o TO 60 °/o. OUR RACKS AND FIXTURES ARE FOR SALE . NOTHING BROUGHT IN -ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK .. :·.ii . • .J The Food and Drug Administration bu said Ox.ford Royal Mushroom Products Inc. was ex· tending a recall announced last week of cans that could contain botulinum toxin, which can cause botulism, a sometimes-fatal form of food poison· ing. No cases of illness or death from Oxford Royal's mushrooms have been reported, the FDA said. FDA spokesman Wayne Pines said cans af. fected by the extended recall all bad two-line codes on one lid, the first line startinl with one of the letters A through L, followed by the letter K in all instances and ending with a tbree-dicit number. The second line consists of the letten P or LP followed by the numeral I or 2. Anyone with such a can should return it to the store where it was bought and should not eat the contents or even o,P40 it, Pines said. Last week's recall covered about 5 million cans ln 30 brands distributed ln about 30 states. The expamion covers 45 brands and eight "no brand" store labels and is "probably nationwide in scope," Pines said. He said he did not have a list of states affected or the number of cans covered. Here are the brands, according to Pines, that should be cheeked: Aunt Nellie's, Bell's, Brandywine, Camellia, Chatham, Cost Cutter, Early Dawn, First Mate, Fisher's, Food Club, Giant, Good Value; Grand Union, Heritage House, Holleb'a, Hudson Farms, Keystone, Kingston, Kroger, Luco, Lady Lee, Meadow Dale, MiddleseXr Monarch, National, Okonomy, Oxford Royal, Yantry Pride, Pulaski, Quaker State, Royal Treat, Savory, Seaway, Shurfine. Spartan, Super A, Tborofare, Thrift King, 'lbrifty Farm, Tbritty Kaid, Topmost, Vik· lng, White Rose, White Villa and Why Pay More. In addition, the codes might be round on "no brand" pies:es and stems, sold under the AFD and Baaic Labels and store labels of the Jewel, Leacarbour., Surefioe, West.em Grocers, Sunlreeb and·Value Time, Pines said. Release of unborn child petitioned WAUKEGAN, Jll. <AP)-A lawyer for a prei· nant womu Jailed on a 1bopllft.ing cbar1e aaya be will uk the llJinoil Sdpfeme Court to order the "release" ol the woman'• unborn child. Lawyer Qaarlea Willon'• request for a writ of habeas corpus on bebatf of the unbom cblld of Carol HMbeni, IO, who WU ft" moat.bl preput when ....... Jailed •• , U, WU denled ·-... by • lAU c.-t,y QriUlt Court 1::t·· ftil .... WalUT .... JUl'aftll'llte . failed to~ ln eourt on the abop11ftlq char~ .WUIOii IWa. Siie coUld not poet 1 $b,OOO boDd WH held f« trial June 22. WlbGD'1 petition uhd Jidie WlWam Bloa to rule that a Jail ll •·no ptaee for u...,.. elaild'' becaUM "It dldll't do ~ ....., ... Bil 8loell ruled IM de1 'llM ol a etullla dla ag1Mlle'r'Jf:' tt1htl ha not IMn determlDed by the eouna. • UIO aot.s tbe baby alre.ady wu "lncarceraa.d" -~tbewomb. t-------------------------------------------.r-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1 SPORT COATS MEN'S SLACKS KINGSRIDGE -STANLEY BLACKER CHAMPION -ASHER LANVIN -DAKS -MARK HALL THOMPSON -HARRIS REG . $125 NOW $79 REG. $24.00 NOW $16.88 REG. $135 NOW $89 REG. $37.50 NOW $26.88 REG . $150 NOW $99 REG . $45.00 N.OW $32 .88 REG. $200 NOW $129 REG. $55.00 NOW $34.88 cmtal '*llML.Y NeCD OTKOS llMIWL Y "'ICED SPORT SHIRTS SWEATERS JOEL -SPIRE -PENDLETON LORD JEFF -ST. CROIX REG. $27.50 NOW $17.11 REG. $20 NOW $12.18 REG. $24 NOW $15.88 REG . $26 NOW $16.88 REG. $30 NOW $19.88 REG. $38.50 NOW $24.11 REG. $49.50 NOW $22.18 REG. $75.00 MOW $49.U mtallMUILY,_. OAKS & BOTANY SUITS Reg. '165 to $235 CHAPS SUITS·iradltlonal R~g . to •215 SPORT COATS Reg . •110 to •125 SLACKS-HARRIS-Jean Cut Reg. •26 SeDRT SHIRTS·Shol1 Sleeve Reg . •24 to •2s MANY MORE ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION d .. '· \) f) Orang9 Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, June 3, 1981 Samh Bernhardt kgend enhanced by pla-ywright 81 MUY JANE 8CA•CEU.O Uny mlnlna town• in out-of-the-way!.laces -act· ., .. ....,,..... ins only in French," Mrt. Wolff aal . "In 1plte of "In Sorolt Bn'flhordt11 uokc tMr'• woa more than the fact that few could understand ber, 1he played gold: ,,..,_ "'°' tllul'ldn and Ug~; thne '°°' year after year to 1tandlna·room-only crowds." Htcwtfl and Heu." Sarah demanded and received payment' for -L111ton Straclaq acting in 1old but seemed always in need of "EftoUM w couldn't taUc, ErtQUth •lw cONldn't pro-money, perbape one of her re&IODI for retunllna t.o noun«, but boll could•"-count m EnglWtl" America on repeated t.oura. Eventually, 1be was -Lee Schubert dubbed "Sarah Barnum" for her relentle11 self· promotion, and each of her Jut aeveral t.oura were Her detractor• called her vain, even her billed as "Farewell Tours." friend.I admitted she was eecentric, but everyone "But her interest in heraeU was natural in one a1reed: Sarah Bernhardt was an actresa above all so sifted," Mn. WoUf 1&ys. "She worked from the others. inside of her gut as an actress and allowed no "She wu extraordinary and blessed with a secrets t.o go unexplored. 1eruua wtlllte any other," says Ruth WoUf, who "Contemporary critics described her as 'ex· wrote "Sarah in America," airlnl toni1ht at 9 on pandin1 the world for her audiences,' and she went Channell 28 and 50. beyond what other humans understood." She previously wrote the screenplay for "The Mrs. Wolff attributed Sarah's well-known ob-Incredible Sarah," which starred Glenda Jacbon seasion with death as a part of that exploration of as Sarah. secrets. "I've written about Sarah again in a play form "People talk about her sleeping in a coffin as a because there was so much information I didn't later-We eccentricity or affectation," she said, use in the movie,'.' she said In a telephone in· "but what they don't realize is that she asked her tervlew from her home in New York. "I wanted to mother to buy her a coffin when she was only eight get deeper into her character and tell about her re· years old. She was obsessed with dying, perhaps lationshlp to America." because her We as an illegitimate child made her In fact, Sarah made nine tours of lhll country. feel less loved. beginntne in 1880 at the age of 36 and endln1 in "Certainly she specialized in acting out death 1918 when she was an elderly, Ill woman. scenes." .... ·•The incredible thing about her it that she Mn. Wolff's first choice for the demanding • .. m Palmer 08 Sarah Bernhardt. toured almost everywhere in thl• country -even <See SARAH, Pa1e 87) ~~~~=================r===================1=: Why would four guys risk their lives . for a weekend in Colombia? . The comedy tor everyone t who's had it up to here ... \· -~UIY CllCIAI -CllCIMA -Cllt--- The Print.• Moments Tit9 a El.VIS IPG) 1 :30 3:40 6:00 8:10 10:20 John Boorman'• ECICAL ..... lRl SHOWS AT 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:45 -·A4-att Cerol lwMn Alan Alda ,,_ flOUR-..-IPOI 1 :30 3:46 8:00 8:16 10:20 Neil D•mond .MZZ_..IPO) 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:4110:00 We can give you 5,000,000 reaSons - all in cash! ~~ IOP ~' Sunme's almOlt hift and~ has tt. f\.-. to PKM t. Come on and ic*l ch! talert at~ kl!> d the datl 16 a ceW:aatm! ~In,,.. Rdllf lllwr lle.w: KOOL & THE CiANC Ul&-1030~ P~ormina throu1'1out the Parlt beclnnlns at fr.JO PM SHAl.AMAR neutA PAPA 000 RUN RUN .. , ..... _ .. --·--·~,·-HIGH "'"' I"> ,_.., __ ...__ cOJ1';SC,:,.,. ""SVJIW IAT. AT 11 , ... "TAKE THIS J09 AND SHOVE IT" (PG) __ _, _____ _ THE &iGeND Of' THE LONI! :!,HGl!rt (N) IM>N>UUNE {N) ) .. , ..... ...-.WOMAN Wondfi WOfftan join• for-wtCh • frtandl)' ..... '° iw-t ttle ~ of h world. (fllwt I) G TIC TNJ DOUllH • M"A"l•H Hawtt• II~ lowf1911 Md ... with wiyone for • • --....,.. '° ---,,... ...... ~--""· ., .... ........-.. M....,._ .... ._..... • .. ,...... __, Aof>. ... aTtlllM--WflO .... --ttwoup Mllnll l'4• I -· Ctlllf , ......... ..,.. .. °' W.-.. ,ior .. "The ~·-"'"Df'M": ~....,_, ...... .,. ......_tor ...... ... ........ u ........ .. (1'17) ....... v.. ..._...,._w ..... l!IY bladaalh1tlOl,11 ...... ~al--Yn Qty. • 'TN90NLYMa. .. 10WN Mu11ooto911t Abra"' CMelne aulft!Me tM --~ .... _... --plll'lo .....,.... .... -... """" ...,... ~"wtdllaul- ........... lnclludll\g ---~ .IOlll Olaft.. Illy, plll'lo ooaoll ~ 91*!1 and ..... _,.. needed -pair °' boo4I. • GOOD,,_ Jame• 1u1pec:11 tllet ....... --"*' mMU ltle • wNrl WI old boy- hood friend .,.,.. • 'IWI. •• IUCTNC COMMNY(1') KEEP ON -Deborah Raffm stars as a waitress who wants to' be a truck driver in "Willa" tonight at 9 on Channel 2 .. ... ~°"' Unooln ~ and o.'611 "°'" **· (l)THI~ !I== ... .IOICIR'I WIU> -~Ma(, IUJT1'l9' Oaoe 11M 1111 hllnd9 1\111 ...... Jule ..._.. twine.. (P.,2) • ....v ...... ~ II Iha llUbjlcl of e '"TNI .. v-Ute .. eag.. mant. ·KCllT~T • STUDIOll!! ··Samclllr" St. LCMlll kldl operate • pizza parlor; Chi- cago Girt 9c:outa play with 1111 EatUlbel. (A) Cll -- 0 aMNIV -.a.a Fl1h 11 expoHd 10 ulrwnerttll t.nptetlon ...,.. ._.,. .... with • plldletic ho6dup men. ,..I c:.NIWI 19CNRWI HAPfl'Y DA.YI A4NH Fonzie oom. to Al'• ,_ cue ........ -lloodl tty lo mulda In on hie om.- In. ·= • M"A"l"H The 40771tl ,..,_ two CHANNEL LISTINGS bottllll ol ecotdl for --~ llw1 a IMll IO _.. off enlpar9. • l11IBTS °'IAN MtJ08CO The pollce ett.npt to IOM the kidnapping of WI entire jury "'°'9 WI)' of Iha ytc. tlrN .. lr.llad. (Pert 2) • OY8'1MY OU.11: llnget Johnny Deamond, Or. Abrem Secfllt. handyman AJ CW· r .... (A)Q • MAO&./~ ?EPOftT (I) TIC TAC 00UGH OMBW~ "Top Aacordlng At1iltl" Ou .. la: Kel Rudm1n, Nlcolatt9 l.erlon, Aup9r1 HolmM. AJ Sl9Wett, Shot In The Dartc. 7:IO 9 2 ON TME TOWN Hoell: 91-Echwerda, Melody Aov-· VWt ,.,.... c:apa lllllnd In Iha Santa Bert>era Chennlt; • IOot el Hollywood premier•• . ttvough the ~ exam- ine IN pllgtll of IN kldl on SlddRow. I 'Nl&.Y FIUD IHANANA au.I: L.ole FIMna.. • HOU.YWOOO ~RD • ~AC:.,.... MUl9C 9 KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBCJ Los Angeles D KTLA (Ind t Los Angeles G KABC· TV (ABC> Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ·TV (Ind> Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind> Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles • KCET-TV tPBSI Los Angeles Gl> KOCE TV (PBS) Hun11ng1on Beach • ALL .. THE '11111'-Y AteNe end Mike 1oCt1 llOrnl -Iha eoon-10-• bom !Miiiy StMe't r9llgk)n -or leak of It. • MAOmL / l.84MR MPOftT evMCLaM INTIRNA'ROMN. fltAHO COIAfi Iii ION The cllmectJe .-ti °' the WOttd'• "'°" ptelll- glollll ""'* _. -~ Milted from Fort Worth, TUM. ou1m1net1r10 In the nerNng °' the wlnflW who .... r90llve • 12,000 end • oonmrt tow wlCh eoma of Iha worid'I IMdlng l)'m- phon)' ~ C1J .-.M.MWZJNa Alt lntaMew with~ ...... Ing nG¥1111t H1rold Aob- blnl; • r-_..who found -lllrougll ealllng Tuppei-.. l:OO. THI Wt4"W IHADOW Co.di ,__ ,.._ lO New Yorti for 1111 lllgtl ld'OOI reunion. (Plr11) (A) 8 RIA.l. NOPU FMfw'ed: a _.. who ._ In • 1..-: • tr9*1g -.IOl'I for vacuum cllM- • ~; •~ol •••n·•11•d, p1repleglc ~Suzy OMllrtip. '"' .MCMI • • • ''Tiie Appllooae" (111M} Mer1on ltrWldo, Altjanene C-. A ,_ Po")' .. etolen flrom • cow- boy end llldden In Mexico. • o CHAN.11"1 ANGIL.I A dlabok8I llhd 119- llndl a ..,,. to PfOO'"" ~-endtum O*'llntO~ • MOYll * * ~ ''The U11l11ttlbltecl" (1"1) ...... ...,_., .,,_ W-.. Atw en .,,.,, ....,, -,.ouno men. l:IO. CMOL ... tin' NIG,.... Guell: Jim Nebota. ~ ...... ~ HDeCll MCMI * * "Wiiie" ( 1911) Debofllll Aafftn, Cklfle '--""'8n. A young -en .-two llNll dlldr9n to IUPPCW1 qult9 '* ... -Job to beColM. tNdl dtMr.~ • Clllf"Wf ITwm Wiii .... In low for ... llrlt UIM. (R) Q ea Q;•ICAH DMAM • .-VQMlftN .. Top Aecordlng We" OuHtl: Kil Rudman. Nloo6ICte uir-. Rupen ~. AJ ~. Shot In The Dartc. Ctwl9ly ~. JoM O'Ben6on, Randy Crwtord. ••••mw C9fT8 TONGIHT ''Serif\ In Anwnce'' In • -~. Liii ......._ "-the lllgllllg11t1 of Suell Bernll1rdt'1 numerou1 1ou11 acro11 Am«le• .,.._ 1N0and 1919. t:ao e THI MCTa °'LR T OOCle ltlel lo g111 _,,. et1entiofl by IP' eadWIG IN llcwy "* Mrs. OerTWl1 .. WI llooflcllc. (A) 10:00. QUICV A thlll and a Had - cr1flWlll ---• 10rtww In llolen geine ttvough Loe .,,.... Arpcwt In • --;·; ..... •o 'l98AI Den relue1entty join• tclr'09I wlltl a ~ ID follow .. ...,_ ,,.. -·~...,_ • CHAMOTBeA vu.rv°'~ A IOot et the dael expert- Archie B~ker's best pan began series as hostile cop ,. By JERRY BUCK AJT....._ ...... LOS ANGELES -Allan Melvin has played Archie Bunker's best friend since 1972, but it didn't start off as a chummy relationship. The very first time Melvin appeared on "All in the Family," it was not u Barney Hefner, best friend, but as Sgt. Pete Pulaski of New York City's finest. "The fun of that episode was that Archie came down to the police station and was mating re- marks about the Polish," he recalled. "Somebody says, 'Ob, yeah, tell that to Sgt. Pulaski' -and I throw Archie into the can." It was a few months after that that Melvin was reincarnated as Barney Hefner. He remained with the CBS show when lt was chan1ed to "Archie Bunker's Place," and only Carroll O'Connor, as ,_, MARCEUO MASTROIANNI .. ~,_....._, ......... ,.,.., ~ "First tOt• dvHl9'. O.St new movie of the sptlng.SUf'TWMf season." -~ • .,Lyon.. cas '-odlo the irrepressible Atchlf', bu been with the aeries longer. Melvin, who got his start as a stand-up comic and mimic and then played on Broadway in "Sfalag 17," has bad a long and profitable career in elevision as the foil to the leadinl man. A lot of that time wu spent in uniform. On "The Phil Silvera Show" he was Cpl. Hembaw, who was Sgt. BUko's partner in his attempt.a to bilk the other soldiers. He wu Dick Van Dyke's old Anny buddy on his show and Sgt. Hacker on "Gomer Pyle." He also bad recurrtn1 roles on "The Joey Bishop Show" and on "The Andy Grif- fith Show." Melvin is also }Yell known u Al the Plumber, a character he has played for 14 yean on the Liquid Plumber commercials. BREAKER MORANt ,...,..1 .. ATLANTIC CITY 1:»1:41 Fn.LINI CITYOflWOllEN .-..:»NMlll N..L a 111 """ 111,u. 111cc"'' ™€.HM. al nil MOTION l'ICTUM C0De OI' IU.f MOUL.A 'l'lOM. Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTtw.dneec:t.y, June 3, 1981 TUBE TOPPERS KOCE • :r:ao -"The" Sixth Annual C Van CUOuni Internat1onal Plano Com- petition ... Declalve momenta from the Texas competition with prise9 of $12.000 and a concert tour. KOCE A and QI 9:00 -"Sarah in America... U1ll Palmer atan a1 the legendary Sarah Bernhardt in her American toun. (See story and photos page B6,) KCET.910:00 -.. Characten: A Varie- ty of VISions." Special look at the deaf experience from the perspective of two deaf brothers. --"°"' .. perlpla4IV9 °' two dlel broCMn.: "°«* ~. • motorcyde rneaMnlc and Herry Wll-11•111•. en ertlel wllo otlOCIMI to he¥ll llttte Inf· "° wMtl the WOfid °' ... '-""' • CHML.mM. ICHUU...TO ==1 R a.. ... 8chl.lll. CN9lor °' ... """°"' oomlc ltttp ··~.M ~- ... ....,,.._. and "'* NldonlNp to 1111 wortl. (9') ....... •lll .. BNBlllllDD-INTIT NITWOM .... . ,..,.. The~of~ ..... F~ .. 11-o from 1111 rOOtl In Dbdlllnd to 1111 pr-.t ..._•lop toun.t attraction °' the 11•=-~a .... eerMTMK Spock ... die of~ unleM KJrti end McCoy C9I\ perwede enochlr to lft91*n, • NIW\.YWmGMm ........ " tll&ICMll QMe RoN1i .....,,,_ to ttie .on111 10 updMe ~ Ww oondJ. llonl. (Pw11) ........ HLL Benny lrtM to lflOW ttl8' Helflh Sentcel fftOfa the rtcf\. • matQAWTT Guell:....._ Tandy. 11:m. (I) MCMI ··~ ...... °'*eon. ..,.,.. (1171) ...... Vint, K-.n CMlon. A Holl)o- ~ ---NUnl 10 1111 flOmeeown to ~ .,,...of~end deoelt. • 1'0NlllHf Ouale hOet: ~ LAtter· """-OUeMe: aw. Oro- cln, TlNTumer,Joear... doft. •OMC .... ~ • Lin IMICll A DIAL .HOtWl'I .... Hogan end .. -muet ..... 11na1a • o.,m.,, ... MMTTA "Under The City'. ··~MC .... -....aHT- 12::00. MCMI "The i.-°' Her'CUIM'' ( 1"4) Jayne Menafleld. Mk*9Y~. •O LOYS90AT • ......_ TNngle" Con- nie 9~ "EJ Kid" Rob- _, Urtdl, .....,. Men- l:IM; ''The UM Hundtwd ..... ~Collman. Rue McC&enlNn. (R) G MAYIM* A~ wtdow ""- JOHN DARLING ..,, .. ..,__ hlr "°"' .. ._ ....... • '•llOtt ..ell • TlleWll.._....._. ....................... .... ~-...,._ ... ~ -· 1'0MQMOW ~ ......... °' .. rocfl ffO\IP U•2. Ille WOfid'• ...... ~. • C-.9TWl'..voND • .,,. Open WlndOW'' Com--a1• .,.... Anttlofty Mardi ....... wtltl ,. model end precUoeJly lllrowl lier cM .. window. 1:00• NnHC ,..101 .... THI WOM.D llYC*D • • ....,.. Aldleolog)' In EoYPt" Hoell: Damleft llf'npeon, lteey H\lnt. cau-t .,..,._, lwAl1I dlteut... 1118 UM OI ~lnll~ dlga. • MOYll * * "TM UM lltdlrllg'' (1Me) Vlln .lcltlNOfl, Ot1* Ycwtl. Dwtr'8 WOl1d W11 ll'•a.tlleolh ... • ~ ..... and 1111 band of Mboteur1 lntlltr•I• Aiied troopa. ...... ..,,. NITWOM .... 1:10e MCMI * * "Wll II.._,, at;t.•• (1M7)....,., K.Mton, Mer· ltle Hyer. Two Amertesn POW• -=..,e wlCh pli1rll for en lnvMIOn. but can't ~ lln)'Onl °' their llllNnttclly. 1•• MOYll • ·~ "Tiie Bleck Orchid .. ( 1951) Sophi• Loren, ~°"*"'·A .__ abiding ~ end Ille ~ wtdow °' • Oll'C>-..., ,.. In low . 1M•tewe 1•1--.. NIW8 MCMI * * ••Lom Tr-.. Of The ~· (1Ne) Alen SIMI, MMo P9VI. A 1'1111'1 eecur.. llllip from • lo)'lll lr1lnd 10 .._. .. '*"-If of INK· ., end rwtore lwmony ~IMIMM . 1:11. IDfTONAl 1:11• MCMI * * ~ "8endcHllH" (t172J aonni. 8edella. Jan-aMc:nesl Vincent. A man'• gflOll relW'lll 10 mall• _. for • pteyj.. OUI eel of .,..,.,,. end ,... In low with.~ muelclen ... lllCMI •• '"TN (1MI) '--'Y ~ O...lntllie1 ~ ..... -.... llld .. ~ ..... .,. ......... ~~ ...... .. , .... ...... .. lllCMI • '"Wl!Me Poftllo" Nclletd ,,..., • Wrtlen, Hunter'I Oii. ~ ""OUlh IN -°"°'''.,. ... MCMI • .... "Hidden ( 1Ht) QtlNJlll ....,_ K.ennedy. In • .,...,. tOOI ... gwn In NI hand COUlln ~ dalld '*"· • """" .... ~ .. 1murdarW. 4:IO. MCM1 I ' ** .. ~.,,.­CherlM Sterrett."' Peoe-' NOW THIS 16 AN UNUSUAL 00<7! WHAi ~IND 15 ~us~ ... Sarah Bernhardt <From Pase Bl> role of Sarah was Lilli Palmer, wbo performs toni1ht. "It's bard to rmd someone to accept such a cballqe;• Mra. Wolff admitted, "but I wanted someone continental like Lilli. Also, she paint.a and writes as well as actin1, and Sarah wu a writer and sculptor, too." Many of Mrs. Wolff's layt have been about THE COMEDY SENSATION! "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY •bout porn~• fathers and youthful aeductlon.1 -Nwy .... 1f1£XA1•U ~ ~ mlcl'ir . ·:=ONE WILD MOMENT -.. 4o-......... . FRENCH MOYIE RATID(R) NOW PLAYING women in history, such as "'Eleanor of Aq "Empress of Chlna" and "George and Fr about George Sand and Frederic Chopin. Her play "The Abdication," about C Sweden, was given its premiere by the 8 Vic and made into a movie starring Liv and Peter Finch. "I 'm writing ideas and stories. I love ual and can say things without words." Wehandcu our fish fillets everY.<faY.. ... dip them In batter made &es every hour and serve them wt plenty of golden &yes. '-4~__.. .... __ _L_ ~ Fl·RST -L os Orange Cout OAl(Y PILOT/Wtdne1day1 Juf'lt 3, 1981 J-llBLIC NOTICE ltOTka w IMllO&.VTI.. o•o•• TO ..... CAllM ll'Otl Ol'H.fttlll"'"I" ~IWUIQ l"l*llC ... la .......... , Ill .... MltW ........... itll .. Jtflll 0.vlf 14Mt1N .... llleyMeM OAVIO HllUIMN f'lltOVSICV l'W Cerl vw.c; ..,...,,.,. .. .,. ~.,...,_ -......, • fie .... flrM ~ CAN .............. W lty .. "' II .... ..........., al 11'1 OAVIO HllUAAH f'llCOVSltV Mt Among the 100 senion L 0r111111. Uoll\ .. CHv •..,... ,,_, 111 .. • • .._ "'• '-' .... .,,.,. d d hi h c-ty ti Ot.,., -. .. ti Qllf9nlle, llff •llewlfle .,......,_ " cllellee Ill• 1ra uate t a moot 4'N•the•mi•yetM11r<11,1 .. 1,111y ne111• "•"' 0Av10 HlttMAN f r 0 m s 0 u t h • r n M11h1el , ....... ,. ... 1,,. IM Ult .... OVltC't .. Oo\VIO AUSTJN. Callfornl. Collele lo ..,,_..,..,~•1rrt1 .. 111,..,..,..., .. \M\ett,.,..... lltfl• • lllll'Wf't ........... lllM,.Nlll Ill tlle l'IWllt•r efWtMi8 ... Cost a Meta, 17 are s.i. --.111-. ,.,.._ *'11•,..,....,..t,..,~111 ~" 0 Co t Id l <eftllllc• .. ~ Cell VlllCMl, IM. J _. M CMt o.Mtf Otlw w.tl, r&nte as res en I, wlll wlll NY eH jtla<lltret ell IMte Mi, G141Mr\Oie, "'Jiiiy U, 1•1. lhe school report~. 11.-111u.. • ..... ., '"' 11rm e11t ... •t 111ao .. ,,.,, • '11111 eiN _,.,, w. B a ch el or of a rt 1 <•1,,. .. , ,.,..... ........ •"" "'"'-<•-· ""'' .._, '-'· wtlV M1t1 "'" l'W._, .... It flHWV t i-Ille\ ~ ,_ Clllllft ti -"-14 Mt lie degrees are conferred 111e wlWltf""• w111•11e ,......=: 1ra111•. · by the four-year Chris~ .... ,,_ ""' • • .., MY • 11 I• fW"'9r .,.. iMt • <•Y ., ..... In(..,... .,, lt•.-M Cert v 1111• .,.., ....... ,_ ... "*""" tian liberal arts lnsUtU· Ullt/1111• .,.,.... ... ,. Ill Ill• tWll Ill tM OeOy f'llM, • ,. • .,..,., .. lion at .... Fair Drive lllfn•., 111"" llllM., """'"'· ttMr•I c1rt111..-. 1MMlt11M 111 ™' -' OAflOlllltll'Vl..,tf~ll. l•I. t lllfllY et .._t ~• e Well -fwr Orange Coast rest· ,...,_...V"'<•' ""*'"'1w..u.,~•ti.t1tiyot dents graduating aum· Jtflll._... .. 1d 11111r1,., ma Cum I au de ... ere "'*1"'"0t111tt CM•t o.11y "'I«. oetedJ-1, 1•1 .. J-a, ltll U»tl 111.w141 H, f'r-J u Ji a Anne Baker, ----Jlldlt91tM T i m o t h y L y n n PUBLIC NOTICE s. o•u='':.~ Cederblom and J almee 1111 ••"'" •r -. ... v Defense slices eyed WASHINGTON (AP> -A senior White House official soys President Reagan's goal of balanc ing the budget by 1984 may require reductioM in spendint by the Pen· tagon, which 10 far has escaped Reagan 's budget-cutting. The ·official, who asked not to be iden· tified, said efforts are being made at the top levels of the administra· • lion to reduce defense ~geles lawyer Sam IJlams has been ected the first ack president of the S;t a t e B a r o f Clallfornia. J K -'off all of Costa l'1nmout•US1M1u w"wt .. ,u-. • Oi..t • 111AM1 ITATIMIMT Tels C7'4) ....... M es a • and Thom as Ti. ,.....,..,.. ~ 11 .... wll· ""'°''.,... o.-.,. Goe•• o.11y l'11e1, Kavanaugh Brower of "''' .. : J1111t a. 10, 11, M, "" tm..f1 Fountain Valley. SOUTH COAST l'ltlClllOH, MJ _ ----------l'ltrll*ll Orlw, C.~ Mete, CA tttM. Graduatlnt main• o .. A1.0H.HNCk,soPi..._1 PUBUC NOTICE I .,. ""* s pending by as much as Two Soviet women wait for proapective buyers for puppies they brought to $10 million in fiscal 1983, pet market. Behind them, man check& pedigree pictures of dog he'1 con$ider· which begins Oct 1. ing. 1982, and a like amount the following year. ; ~~liege rfeJeClS t*avilion h Drl1rt, C:.t. MtM, CA tttM. cum laude weNt T om as n11 ....._.1, ~'" •Y M 111-p Arthur Linley and Dana t11v1t111e1. l'1CT111ou1 au11Mess I S. botb f Oefeld H. lleMAI MAMa ITAHMIMT I e t Denise impsoo, 0 Tiii• ... ._, W•• "'" wltll Ille Tiie totlowllll --la ..... Ml· Huntt.n. gton Beach C011111, c .... • .. °' .... C-ty .., ,.. .... : . J-1, 1•1. (e) WCUTlllN l'llllNTING & Cum laude honors .,,61141 1..1TH0011A,.HY· Cb> wUTllllN were bestowed on P11M1.,,...0r-.0otsto.11,,.11o1 PttlNTE111s a. dTHOOttAPHUtS: propaganda The official predicted the effort will cause he ated debate within Reagan's cabinet when military budgets for 1983 and beyond are re- viewed later this year M adelm. e Franco Bower J-'·" 11. ,., 1•t uJWi •1111 cc> wUTl!ttN l'll1NT1No, eo1 w. ' 8ellw 5trMt, Suite .t.. CO.hi Mete, CA and Casey Glenn Giffen PUBLIC NOTICE m». f C t M dB I JAMIS f. II.OM, INC., e Muscovites going to the dogs at market I . tNOXVJLLE, Tenn. (A.'P> -University of 1eneuee officials have l'eJected plans to use the *1.t.S million American pa,vllion for laboratories and offices after the 1982 WTrld's Fair closes. , 'Given the current blems with state re· nues, especially Ital outlay funds, we l that UT simply can· Jl afford these con· ~aion costs at this (i e," said university aident Ed Bellng. ederal officials look· la for office space also e turned down the of the pavilion -a plex billed as ex· eraplifying energy effi· ancy, but which con· asionaJ investigators r may become an eebarrassing white eJtphant. fl'be theme or the •Ftd's Fair, the first in the Southeast, is energy. rt l is scheduled to run ft~m May to October ~tyear. 1' study by university officials estiQlated ren· '>~ations would cost at1out $5 million, said u•iversity vice presi· clehl Joe Johnson. however, the uni· ~ehity, which borders the world's Fair site, is interested in working with fair promoters, ft:.~eral officials and of},er iroups to find a die for the pavilion, Bol· iJat said. ltoling released a stitemenl after a dosed-door meeting where university of· ficlals gave their de· d1lon to fair pro111oters Kooxvllle International ltoero Exposition, Inc. The General Account· i Ir Office, a COD · QHSlonal watchdog a,aency, estimated it could cost $8 million to Mllld offices in the . slx- 1tory pavilion, which will house energy leebnolon exhibits. o os a esa an r an -c.111~111• ,.,_.t1on, '°' w. aow Keith Wright oC Foun· 1'1CT1nou1 au11M11& sir"'· 51111• A. c:.i. rMM, CA m». lain Valley. ...,... STATIMaNT T111111u11""' 11 <tnlNc!H by."'· Tiie ltll-1111 P9flOlll ere delflt ~•llOll -• MOSCOW <AP) -Animals by the thousands change h ands every weekend al Moscow's free-enterprise pet market. 0 l hers rec e iv in I 111111111•••: J-1'. l10n1.1 .... diplomas were John P. ""l. cmu l'INcE co .. 1100 J-'· a1ont, A .. mJ A-, 001, C.lt-.._ CA Pr•ldllnt Arana. Denise McNutt "'2t. T1111 .wt-• w• '"• wu11 ,,. Animal-lovers have been complain· ing about it since the 19th century, but the vibrant trade in everything from cats and dogs to rat-like nutria seems W\Stoppable. Heinrichs, Karen 1101111tT 11 . Mccov . 111 cou111yc1en1910r.,...c-tyonMey felrwlllClt L.1119, Cett• Mt••· CA 21. 1 .. 1. Almeta Hyson, Robert mK. 11'1•2'17 Kelly Oster and Linda 111..1. w. JINKINS, 11u <=Aw•. ""bl1111ec1 0r.,.. eo.111>e11y l'ltot, Sue Rarey. all of Costa • o. cot••,,...., CA m•. J""' J, 10. 11. u. 1te1 usu1 Tllll busl11t11 h C-4KIM by e Mesa. e-••I perWnNp. PUBLIC NOTICE Despite reports of cruelty and prof· iteering, Soviet authorities tolerate the m arket to satisfy Muscovites' passion for dogs, cats and other domestic pets. Also, Ronald Steven Tiii• .~~r.1 •• 1"' u. Backlund and Susan c ... 111y ci... of 0r-. '°""'Y ... Ann Thompson, both of Jww 1· Itel. ~ ,.,..,,. Huntington Beach, and PlibllSlltd 0r.,,.. eo.11 o.11y PllOI, Michael C. Murphy of J->.io,11,u,ite1 2-..1 Newport Beach were graduated. PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNllSS NAMa STA"nM•MT Tiie fOll-11111 ""'°"' ••• doing OU.llMSs•: AMERICAN ASSET ""ANAOIEMENT NO. I, "7 Del Met, L.etllM llttd\, Cellfoml• ti.s2 llotlert F. ,_.,.,, geM,.I pert...,., "7 Del MM, 1....-llH<h, Celltornl• "4JI Tltls llu•I-II c-vctecl by • lmltfd~. Rolleft I". Mlryer. ~f1Pfl1Nr Tiiis .....,,_, w• llltd wltll ti• ::ou111y Clff'll of Orfll99 County Oii '""''·'"'· • l'tUtn PublllNd Or .. Cotll Delly f'l191, J-), 10, 11, 2•, !WI 2.a.41 PtJBUC NOTICE •anm "ICTtT10US •UllM.U MAMll STATUWMT TIM IOll•fll ..-ao111 ere Clolfll :1Utl11tS1•: TASTl(I( l"aEUE 01" CYP"ESS, S1U 1111 lloecl, c.,,,..... Celltemle Wen Chl"ll Cllleng. 501 S. Cliepet '"'-· Alllllmltr•. Cellfenll• ... , "''" Miii C11111111. ., s. CNclel ,..,.,, ... Allwnlln, Celllornl• tllOI Tlllt bulinKI 11 <.Ollduclecl by I~ :IM4N•I• C......., end wllel. W• Chl"ll Cl>lflll Hiiu Min Clllfllll Tllll tlal-t Wft tlltd Willi tlle ly Oen°' Or .... c;ew,1y Oii Mey ,ltl1. ... ..,, .. PublltNCI Or .... CO.II Delly PIN4. J-3, 10, 17, 2A. ltlll U61 .. 1 DEATH NOTICES PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTl110US IUSIN•U NAMI ITAT•MINT Tiie follOWlllO '"''°"' ere dol119 llual-u: TO W•R & ASSOCIATES ADVERTISING, 211 VlclOf'le. Colle l'MM, Cellfonlle nu7 Cerol Hlglltower. 411 Nortll RooteYelt, l"ullerloll, C.lllotl!le ~ l'ICTITIOUSIUllN•U Robert Decker, HJ Nortll NAM9 SATATIM9t1T II-Wit. l"ulltfton. Celllomle n.JZ Tiie IOllOWI .. ~ II doll\9 bual· Tllll IMlllllHS II COfldUCtecl by • MUH' 1 11flltrtl~, AARDVARK PAINTING CON·' ~ H..,.._.. TRACTORS, Jt07 Eld911 AWll.,., Cotti 11111 It.I-Wll flltd wllll IM Me,., Celltomle ,.2'1 Co11nly Clerk of ~'"91 Coullty on lllcllwCI Errw'1 ~. 2'°7 Elditn JUM I, 1•1. The Soviet capital has a few state· run pet.shops, and pedigreed animals can be purchased through official breeding clubs. But these facilities are insufficient to meet demands of a city or nearly eight million humans. Every weekend. Russians crowd ,.,...,..., c:.1.11 Mine, c:.tlfON1I• n.v l'IUta ' e11J~!.~::::::_::by"'1"· J::;.1~1~~,c-·1 0.";.;~;: TV reporters Tllll IWl-t WH llltd •1111 ,.. PUBLIC NOTICE f ' ~=~~1~rk of Orenoe County on nose or news l'tt.n• l'ICTIT10US •UllMeSS PubllllWCI Or ..... Coell Delly Piiot, MAMa STAT•MIMT f u k J-J.10,17,2A,1•1 2"1 .. 1. Tll• , .. '-I"',__,.,. •I"' 1 0 ows smo e IMttlllftSn: PUBLIC NOTICE CllOOMOR INTERNATIONAL.. 1 U2 Ceraon Stffet, Coll• MH•. , NOT'ICaO..SAUOI' c.n;;-;:..,n:ll-~llS2C«MWI NARBERTH. Pa. (AP) -For A v1SML VM.uao AT s1.-.. 1, eo.te Mae. c.111orn1. "'*' most reporters, the taste of acrid MOit• THAN... CAf'i. II. llledr ...... nn C..-... k · d f . N01k• 11 MnW •-__ , .. su .. i.c.i.MtM,Cellfonll•"'*' smo e 1s reserve or occasions ae<t1C1111 •. '°'· sou • ., enc1 •of Thi• ..,.1 ..... 11 co11•1.1ct•d •Y when their work calls them to a burn· tlle H•-.. NeYIOellon Codt of IN llUlbendMlllwlte. ing building. Stele of Cllllfomle, U.. lr!Mw ..... : C.-._....,_1 DE ANZA aAvs10E v11..uoE w111 Tiii• _....,. _ 111• •'"' 111e But not television newsman Walt .. 11 •• llUlllk eucll011, •1 • e. c..st cou11ty clfnl " 0r.,... c-ty on Hunter, who knows what it's Jike to Hwy.,NewplrlllMc;fl.CAft..oett:OO J-1.1"1. • .. ~. b th d d • ib'l" •·"'· ..... ZIN*" o1 J-. 1t11, uw ..,61w grope 4.ID ..,..g e · · ea zero v1s 1 •· to11ew1,. *"'"""' "°"'"Y· 1D wit: P11blllhed 0r..,.. Coelt O.lly Piiot. ty" of a smoke-filled hallway. VeM Of btl4. IMS; Mellt °' boet, U.S. Ju11t J, 10, 17, M, "ll U_.1 Nny s11111 to Sher•; Motor /I d. Hunter, who pounds the streets of CFOOHD. s.1d .... 1a 1or t,. PWPGM of""• PUBLIC NOTICE Philadelphia for television station 1y1119 11tn • ""~.,...,.,moor-K YW , has been a volunteer fireman :::.~~ .'t~11 ':!.:::°:;!~:.,~: . P1CTmouuu1tN1u since moving to this Main Line sub· .. ,. .. _°' .. "· MAM•ITAHMINT urb soon after graduating from the Delecl llll•IMI deY '4 ¥er,'"'· Tiie ffli.wt111 __, I• c1ot111 Dull· U · 't f p I · · 1971 s.mnn1Fn tnnn. ,,.""' m vers1 yo ennsy vama m . MeNoer wo1..F ENTERP111su. ms w .. 1 "People often ask me how I got PubllSlltd 0r-. co.11 o.11y Piiot, MecAt11"'' aou1entd, suit• Cott• started in news, and I say I really J-1, 1 .. 1 ~1 Me ... Cellfoml• ... Jo1111 c11u1 song, 2u• Elene wanted to be a fireman." Hunter said Av•-· WMt COYIM, CA111or111e •1m in a recent interview. di!i~ei"'."'""' 1' conc1uc1M by., 1"' ··If I were to win the million-dollar NOTICE OF DEATH OF Jo11nC11u1 Sone lottery tomorrow, I'd quit reporting, FOSTER M . FRYMAN Tlll• 118'-' ... lli..t "'1"' 1111 b t I'd be · ht b k h ANO OF PETITION TO Co1111ty C•-of Dl"9f9 '°""'Y Oii u ng ac ere . ADMINISTER ESTATE J1111tt,1•1. ,.,..,,66 "ll'sahelluvafeeling,tobeonthat PUBLIC NOTICE NO A109001 Pllbll""" 0r.,. eeeu o.11y ,...... first truck, and to know that someone DAVIS T 0 a , · 1 h e 1 r s , J-i. 10, 11, 2A. "" J»1 .. 1. m ay be inside a burning house. that DUANE DAVIS. passed beneficiaries, creditors PUBUC NOTICE it's your responsibility." away June 1 in Orange. He and contingent creditors of "There's an excitement to it - was a resident or Newport Foster M . Fryman and running into a building where ev· Beach. Born In Los An&eles. persons who m1y be l'ICTmousauSIHU et'joneelseisrunningout.'' MAM&ITATalMMT September 14.1958. Survived otherwl~ Interested Jn 1he Tll• 1011ow111g Ptr10111 ,,. c1o1119 Hunter spoke with the fresh by his mother. Mrs. Creela wilt and/or estate: IMltl-•· f t k d h 8 D · r N 8 h be f'led •aNE· ... s c0 ...... ,.v , •7•17 memory o a recen wee en w en, av1s o ewport eac . A petition has en 1 " " "''"" ' • # I ped 'th · k h · and 6 sisters. Creela Harris by Steven Fryman and Pwn• -.1, Ml•klft vi.to. ee11ton11• equ P Wl . an air pac . e was lll or Canol'a Park. Natalyn Christine Schwable In the ,,~•m•• T. o1_.., au1 l>utrt• the jump seat headed lo a house Bergougnan or Laguna Superior Court of ora!'lge "'"·Ml-*'Vltto,c.111om11..,, where an 82-year-old invalid was Beach. Donna Klsklla of County requesting that llNl~:i't:.:;,~i!:'(!'..1==· trapped inside. ...._ Hemet, Emma Ruth Judkins Steven Fryman and Merli J . .....-.. 215'1 ""'rt• Other volunteers in the 50-member or Redlands. Justine Davia Christine Schwable be ap· 11u1,M1..ianv111o,CeJ1fonll1t...a company arrived by car first and ·-jililili;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;:-.l'1or Virginia. Eileen Anderson po Int ed as person a I ~:!1 :,':.':.'!.: CMM1uctec1 "" • saved the man, he said. .Neptune Society or Mission Viejo Visitation representative to ad-a.nyM..i-Hunter admits that sometimes his ~IMATIDM 1u111ALAtsu will be Wednesday noon till minister the estate of T1111 ,....,.,_. -"'" wlltl ti. lli onfll l 1'' 646-7431 5. at the Baltz Bergeron· Foster M. Fryman (under CfUfltyClet11ofOrMttC-YonMly ca ngs c c · l'l""'~-.n".-,..._ Smith and Tuthill Mortuary. tl\e Independent Ad· a.ittt. .,, .... 1 "Th~ ironic part is that sometimes,• ....., .... ._.. ... _ • .,.., Services will be Thursday ministration of Estates · Publl$IWll 0r.,. c.ast o.11., "''°'· you're out tbere making news and you •---~--*-1:30. al Christ Lutheran Act). Thepetltlonlssetfor J-J.1t.i7.M.1t11 u.wi. can'ttellanyoneaboutit,"hesaid. Church. Orange Ca. with hearing In Dept. No. 3 at PUBLIC NOTICE "I've been known to hand a dime to ":=:=;;;::;;:::;;;;;;::;;;;;=;;;~Pastor Brad Stlenstra of· 700 Civic Center Drive, somebody and tell them, 'Hey call · nciatlng. lnterment to Follow West, In the City of Santa ittnmous cw11M1u the station and tell them we've got at Pacific View Memorial An1, Callfornla on July 1, MAMmlTAT•M ... T somefireoutbere'.'' Park Baltz Beraeron·Smlth 1981 at 9:30 a .m. Tll• , ..... 1111 .-r-• ••• t1e1111 and Tuthill Mortuary. dlrec· IF YOU OBJECT to the _._.i But his firefighting has helped him tors. granting of the petition, tatt "C:~=~~=T~: as a reporter. In 1976, when be VEJlDVGO :fuths:o"~r~the:n:'Tt:~ '91Nwllle"'" 1 worked for WCAU radio, he won an ELSA VERD.UGO. passed your x~ectlons or flle 0ri!~;:~==.r a~ard for his coverage of a Gulf re-M 3 s t A ..,_ L OMe/I, n• ""1tl *-f 1 n e r y bl a z e l n w h l ch e ii ht away ay 1• in an a na. wrltte jectlons with the Ill• or1w, ........ , """· ce11torn11 firefighters died Born Mesllla, New Mexico court before the hearing. 70210 ' • August 21. 1915. A resldent of Your' apt>Nrance may be n11..,_11<MN;...,i.v111111. the open-air bazaar to haggle with private vendors over puppies. kit· tens, hams te r s. furry nutria . parakeets, tropical fis h and other animals. Sellers pay an entry fee of about~ cents, but sales aren't taxed Dogs bark and strain agains t leashes, rabbits cower in pape r cartons. caged bicds chatter and fish dart around aquariums as strollers price the pets displayed in stalls and on the muddy ground. One woman coaxes two angora kit· tens from under her overcoat. "They are gentle, kind and smart. with fur soft as silk," she confides. "You can teach them to use a reg. ular toilet. Only S29 each ·' The market. a series of fen ced yardR the area of two football fields, is located amid high-rise apartment blocks two miles east of the Kremlin. "People come here in a holiday mood. Couples bring their children. And they end up smashed in a crowd . Can't the market be expanded. or can 'l it be moved to another. larger ar e a ?'' on e Mus c ovite . K . Parkhilevsky, wrote in a recent let- ter to the newspaper Nedelya Another Nedelya re ader, A. Fedulova, branded the pet market "a hotbed of immoral, mercenary at· titudes toward dogs, cats and other a nimals" and demanded its im- mediate clos ure. Amtrak mulls cutbacks WASHING TON (AP l Amtrak has yet to a nalyze which trains will be cut or if any of its long-distance routes can be saved under a House committee's pro· posed budget for the na· llon a l rail passenger service. But. Alan Boyd. Am trak 's president, said that 85 percent of its system could be con tinued under a proposed $725 millio n budget passed recently by the House Energy and Com merce Committee. A $613 million pro· posal endorsed by the Reagan administration and moving toward ap· proval in the Sen at e would limit Amtrak to the Northeast corrido r and eliminate all long- d is tance lines. Boy d said. Criticism of the market is not new. Russian author Anton Chekhov Ancient described it in the late 19th century 4 as "that little bit of Moscow where b d animals are so tenderly ~oved and ones eye where they are so tortured. ' Today, ma!ly of the market ven-SALONICA. Greece do rs look hke they could have c A p J Parts of two stepped out of a Ch~khov s~ort ~tory · h u m a n s k e 1 e t 0 n s An elder~y man an a gnmy Jacket beliaved to be 800.000 squats bes~de two wood~n cr~tes of years old have been furry nutn a, quoting hi_s pnces to found in a cave in the passersby -$36 for the bag gray ones Halk idiki P e nins ul a and $21 dollars for the smaller brown near here. archeologists ones. . have reported . Nu_tna, f!1USkrats and other fur-The bon es w e r e be armg animals sold a~ the market spotted in the same cave a re usually fatt~ned in suburban where human bones pens and then skmned to m:1ke fur believed to be 700.000 caps. Some .buyers _or nutria hold years old were found 15 them up. agamst t~eir fur coat col· years ago. lars. lt;Sllng to see if they will ~ake p r 0 f ess 0 r A r i s matchmg hats of an appropriate Poulianos. presfdent of color. t h e G r e e k A n · . Dogs seem to draw the most atlen· thropological Society• hon. . who made the announce· An e1ght·month-~ld St: Bernard m en t . s a i d 0 t h er was the most expensive am~ar a~ the evidence s uggests the ~arkel at $4~. He ~ags his tail as cave was inhabited by his owner parades him through the humans as far back as crowd. . one million years. Great Dane puppies, co cker spaniels. Pekinese, collies. German s hepherds and various mongrels were among the SC"ores of dogs on display. As proof of ancestry. some vendors held up pictures of. lhe...PUP· pies' parents, medals from dog shows or displayed their slate breeders' licenses. Keeping a dog in Moscow is no easy task. There is no canned or dried dog food and owners have to buy meat scraps from a, meager selection at state butcher shops or high-priced farmers' markets to feed their pets. City authorities refuse to divulge the number of dogs or other pets ·in the city. Viet seeks a,sylum TOKYO <AP> -A Vietnamese official has asked for political asylum in the United States, Kyodo News Service has reported. 110 Broadwav CoslaMesa &42·9150 Santa AM for~ years. S~e In person or by your at· flVMlllel • ...._ •• 0•1111 : was a ~anager of Verdugo a torney ni11 ~ _ tlltd w1tt1 1i. Mexlcan Resauranl. She la I ,: ' y 0 U A R e A ~Y CIMll tf Or .... CeuMy • survived by Mary Helen CREDITOR or a cont• J-1.tttt. ""'* Gomez of Lafcuna Hill• and lngent creditor Qf the de· .....,..,... 0r.,. eont o.11y Pltot, Artist picky about time Dang Hoan Za. a member or the technical committee of the Viet· nam Communist Party's Ce n tral Committee, asked the U.S. Embassy here for political asylum, the news agen-_ . cy said. Za, 37, was in J apan as a trainee or the U.N. Regional Development Center, Kyodo reported Richard Ava oc of Mlaslon ceased, you musflll• your J111111.1e.11;14, 1•1 25'M1. CHICAGO (AP) _ When David Viejo. Slater, S1ylvana claim with the court or zeveober11en picks up a toothpick, Declaaran, of G endate. present It to the person•I PUBUC NOTICE • Brother Manlfel Verdu10 of representative aPPOlnttd it's not to spear an hors d'oeuvre. La I u n a NI & u el. 13 by the court within four PM:Ttnout.,..... The Sibley, Iowa, teen bu more grandctlildren and. 1 1reat· months from the <Sate ot ..,.ITAftil91f'f timely Ideal for hi• toothpicb. arandchildr.n. VIAitatlon I• flr1t luuanc• of letters as The ,.......,. ,.,_ 9" •1119 Z.venber1en juat spent II montb:t, all day today. R~ary wlll b9 provided In ~tle>f' 700 of 111111~t'h HOMH, 'm• Me111 tll and U,000 toothpicks bullcllnl • Tuesdayateoclock attlwt tr'• Probate Code of ......._,,,,..,Clllt'W"'9..,,. f t It df th I kt at Balt1 Ber1eron·Smllb ancl Callfornla. The time for ~'"-H • .,.._, "" Me111 ·<t· OOl· a fran a er C oe Tuthill Mortuary. ,M••w• _'!.r flllng cl•ms wlll not ex· --::1 i=-~~ .. ..., • kffPIOne~~toup~~. na•;Mally rec-!:':.'de!~~;t~. ~t s:: fi''e pr1ar to tour "'°"ths '""1'"'.,.='.:.t"---oen1.d ~the ;,;-.;it.be~ °' Wbo'• Joachim Catholic Cburc" 1 ro~~c.ed~ the hMr· n11 --""" """-. WbO AJnolal. American H1'b ScbOOI with Father Joseph McE· '\ou MAY IXAMINI! ~~., °'.,... c-e, • StUdenll, .%eVtDberl" llrA tot in· neuy. lnt•rmtt1t C.O rollow the file~ .... tM court. "'""' volved in b1I unuaual bobby when he al Harbor Lawn Memorial .. .,. ,...._ .._ c:..i Oelly "'""-Park In Cotta Mn• tn ne., ~ou ere t,.sted In the ,_.," 11,·.., *' 1MM11. / wu in the eltblb frade. rn:1.';.W:,:~\'~,::.: t~ ~~'J:::i::: ~ P\IJUC NOTICB bui~v:° ~b!~:l~~ :~::"!:l'at~ St . .ludt't Ho1ptUI In f:== = :..... tM ~w_..... coHtruoted ,rltb 150 tootbplckl Fullerton Balis Ber1•ron· HCI , of tM petltlont K ... ".,._... diYlded la Ulf. . Smith andTuthtll.cUreeton. counts in• re par ta,.::.,...-.~ .. ...,...., ••J really wu fa1cl.nated.by all lbe ~Iii llCtllri t-.S TWD ........ .,....,"._ Wqa you coWd do with tootbplc:lti ••• ( 141•4121 ) ~ , ... Cllflillla·-,., ..... =-••Cll!IP--~ h ............. -· CGll. ,_...._......_ -...._ Hit flldllatton tUl'IMd .. mod.a- M•• • .. ••C11911--.~-Uon after a replica b• mlde OI t.M ~·· It••• -=-~· __...,. • mffel ,..._. won IWla bl• ltbboD ' arm ..... -.... It .. Oiceola n.,, ~lJ , • _._ • ._ Fair ..W be wu a rNAm1n. o.... Coell ., · Once tilt new-found 1kUI wa1 JUnl(•, 10. ,... .... or-.c:e111~ I eatabll•hed, he 1ou,bt 1omethln1 L----------1''1 2S7S-t1 J-J>•U,a..'1'111 . "more cballen11D1." ike bulldlfta a DAI l Y PILOT working grandfather clock. "l copied one from a picture and worked out all my own dimensions lo reproduce it with toothpicks," the teen related. He began with 20 boxes ol picks and some glue in April 1979. Hi• first setback came during that aummer. The warm we•ther and ac· companying humJdity forced him out or hls basement workshop when a panel warped and had to be redone. '"I really eot tired of lt at that point," Zevenbergen recalls. "and I 1topped workint on it for three monlbl "Then suddenly l wanted to flnlah tt and became determined to prove to myaell that lt couJd be done." Zevenber1en 1aJd bl• frtenm and femlly were encourl.llnc. but be ke.,t tbe project under wrape, After addtn1 the clock worka, the pendUlul!'t a &lu1 panel toJr'Otect th• lllffftlHrJ and a toat cJHt laequer. the teea·a1er'1 ~.01n11 betame a reatttt ta June d9. BUY SELL TRADE •••• THE DAILY PILOT CLASS"'8D SICT10t4 le th PEOPLE'S MumPlAC£ • • M proud as I wu of the clock " Z.vtntier1en now aaya. "I WH pretly reU vedwbenltwaactone." _________ ,. ... I ! t r . , ______ ----------------·------------ H e had nothirig to lose Threat to economic plan prompts Wall Street blast By JOHN CUNNIFF· ........... ~Yl'I NEW YORK -It has long been a relatively sale thing for a U.S. president to attack "Wall Street." In President Reagan's case it was a very safe thing to do, and he surely must have known It. Sale because Reagan is a Republican seekine passage of a tax cut that critics say favors the rich. To attack a symbol o( both Republicanism and wealth, therefore, would seem to earn him popular support. Moreover, his question of Wall Street's un· derstanding of economics -''I have never found Wall Street a source of good economic advice" - suggests that opposition Democrats and bankers tend to think alike. But regardless of these factors, Wall Street Is an easy mark Nobody really knows what it 'me ans, but when it is used in a certain context almost everyone thinks it stands for power and selfish, vested interest. cu .... ., .. Boston a nd America. In its most limited deflni· lion, Wall Street is the name of the street on which the New York Stock Exchange resides, but by extension it also means LaS alle St reet in Chic ago, Montgomery Street in Sa n Fra ncisco , State S treet in financial s treets everywher.e an It means s tock and bond houses. brokers, bankers, analysts, letter wnters. economists, and portfolio m anagers for pension funds, mutual funds and private trusts In short. those who in· nuence investments. And it me ans a segment of the public that trades regularly, and whose members read the fin ancial pages and in general derive their view of the economy from the incessant opinionating of "the street." Janis named president of Cal,if ornia Federal LOS ANGELES ( BW > -Jay Janis has become president of California Federal Savings & Loan Association, America's largest federally chartered savings and loan. J anis succeeds Frederick T Burrill, 65. who retired on May 30 after 26 years of service. Both will continue as directors of California Feder'al. Janis, 48. joined California Federal in January u president-elect. Previously he was chairman of the F ederal Home Loan Bank Board and served as chief regulator of the S&L industry. Prior t~ that, in 1977 he was appointed undersecretary of the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Develop· ment. Janis was born in Los Angeles and attended Yale University, where he gr aduated with high honors in 1954. PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE ~llNll Or11n91 Coetl Oally PllOI, 1Mr11,J-a.10, 11, "" 2G>o11 P UBLIC NOTICE PVBlJC NOTICE w Ronald Reagan. "/have never found Wall Street a source of good economic advice " It 1s "the market .. Whether 1t 1s a market that represents public opinion is debata ble, because trading today is hard!) the random buying and selling of individuals Instead . it is the concentrat ed power of 1nstHut1ons. such as pension funds. When the president cnllc1zed Wall Street in re marks last week to state and local officials. It seems likely he was addressing the relatively few people who have lhis concentrated investment power. While ge nera lly ha ppy about the overall Reagan program. which repeatedly they say is headed in the n ght d irection, those who make in· vestment decisions have expressed reservations about the president's tax-cut plan, fearing it could add to budget deficits and inflation. P erhaps because of this fear. they have often been timid to invest a nd ner vous about remaining invested. The conflict in viewpoints is demonstrated almost every day. Treasury Secretary Donald Regan. once a Wall Streeter. and Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige IJ\Sist that interest rates are headed lower But Henry Kaufman. chief economist for Salomon Brothers, an invest menl firm, holds firm to bis forecast that the over· all direction is s till higher No wonder President Reagan let go a blast at Wall Street. With Wall Street 's reservations threatening his entire economic program he had 'nothing to lose by seeking the help of others in giv ing it a shove PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE I --~~---~----._ ... ..,,.. .. ._._.,_ ... ._.., ..... ._ ................................ ._ .... ...,,... ... __ _ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneldmy, June 3, 1981 Wheeler recalled Telex chief had temper TULSA, Okla. CAP) -Roeer Wheeler ls remembered as a man with a stron1 will to succeed, to hit the tof and stay there, and a 1 fiery. temperamenta nature and agc.reaalve business manner that enabled him to act on that fierce determination to get ahead . He was a man wiJling lo fight a nd scratch to reallze his dreams, colleaeues re- call. Those qualities helped him take a strug- gling -?learlng-aid and home-entertainment company and tum it into an electronics and computer firm worth millions, they say. Wheeler, 55, chairman ol Tel~ ,Qorp., was gWUled down recentl)' in tbe pirfldb J.ot of the Southern Hills Country Club ln Tulsa after a weekly golf gam e with colleaeues. There have been no arrest.a in the pua- zling murder case, and police say they are In· vestigating several possible motives includ- ing assassination, kidnapping and robbery. Tulsa police are seeking two men -the gunman and a getaway driver -and blve asked the FBI to join in the lnvestiaatlon to look into Wheeler's business dealings. Besides a description of the men .nd the vehicle, police had a handful of UJllpent cartridges from a .38· or .357-caliber handgun found m Wheeler's car. They said the bullets may have fallen from a revolver c:y).inder during a struggle 01:1 may ba~ltffn a ., "sig nature" left by a professional killer. In addition to Telex, the •llrotltcs-• .• computer company that was his bast! for 16 years, Wheeler's enterprises included an oil and gas compa ny, a realty company, a fami· ly trust valued at $50 million to S60 million, a private holding company that financed other enterprises and several firms in the elec· tronics industry. A controversial holding was W.-ld Jai· Alai Inc . a pari-mutuel gambling qperation tbat operated jai alal f'rontllfts id' Miami, Tampa, Ocala , a nd Fort Pierce, Fla. Wheeler bought the company in 1979 for S50 mil hon. He also held a half-interest in a training fronton in Guernica. Spain, and had owned a fronton in Connecticut that was sold. Last year. pari-mutuel wagering at the Florida frontons and the since-sold fronton at Hartford. Conn .. totaled $243 million, netting World Jai-Alai $29.6 million ~ its 12-percent c ut p e rmit ted by la w, said Mar t y Fleischman, corporate director ot public re· lations The Daily Oklahoman repprted last week th at Connecticut gaming authorities ex- pressed concern last year when Wheeler's jai alai company formed a partnership agree· ment with an admitted as1U>Ciate of alleaed underworld figure Meyer Lansky. The partnership acquired a Florida ken- nel club to convert its facilities and gambling permit for jai alal. Wheeler fended off the Connecticut objection by selling the Hartford fronton, the newspaper said. Fleischman said Wheeler seldom visited the frontons, viewing them as "strtcUy an In· v~tme~. I He was. ·by the acccSunts of busiQ a legal associates, an explosive man n Police. ore searching for two men m connection wit/t the shooting death of electronics manufaf·. tu+lfto millionair' Roger Wheeler • l t # 1 outbuttt.s ol temper. He also is remembered as ,.,.di entrepreneur with a golden touch for ~tliess. One associate said Wheeler " • "nfver did anything that wasn't successful " Born the son of a_ Reading, Mass., printer for tbe Chrtat!an St!lence Monitor, Wheeler began learning the ways of business as a young boy when be published his own neighborhood newspaper , ran a vegetable •" stand and operated a stamp.collecting · 1 service. He a~ded Massachusetts Institute of c,-ech9oloi)' before moving to Notre Dame in ·a It.A. Nav)I r e ae r ve program He tralllft!rttd again, to Rice University in Houston, where be graduated in 1946 with a degree in chemical and electrical engineer ing. After a few years with Gulf Oil Co. and Standard Oil Co. of Ohio, Wheeler moved to Tulsa as a corrosion engineer with OoweU 1 Co. and became an expert in cor rosion- prevention met.bods used for pipeline-and oil field equipment. He put tda expertise to use m 1949. or- ganising Standard Magnesium & Chemical Co., which produced magnesium anodes for pipeline companies . The venture netted him his first million and put him on road to the financial gold strike that was to follow "I Wheeler sold the company in 1964 and 1 aine t¥~tha later used the money he'd eaJ"11tiS lfc>m tlle sale to buy a IO-percent in· ttres~ in Telex Corp., which was to prove the first in a long line of big financial successes. Wheeler worked for his success. One as· soclate described him as a workaholic who ofteu put in 1'-and ts-hour days. In an interview last year. he told a re· porter tor Rice Uni vers ity's alumni n~peper that bis motivation for business •~was "the t'halhfllge of it, working to pr~-~~ . . . ~AN ~· OF AMERICA _ _.._...._,,,~ --~---..,,,.---+ ..... ~•-·...,.. ..... _... __ ....,......,. w + • -~~ ............ .,........_~~ .... -.. -,. ...... ~-.~ .. • 00 • • = •• • a• o a o a o cs o ····1 ••• Orange Cout DAILY ~ILOT/Wednnday, June 3, 1981 IDLE A88E•L Y LINE -A Volkswagen <0! America staff member walka along the idle U · sembly line Monday afternoon at the West German automaker'• aaaembly plant in west.em Pennsylvania. VW shut down the plant Monday for one week. blaming the nation's general economic conditions and high interest rates. About s. 700 work en were laid off. CON~UCfION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Residential/ • Commttcia1 Bui.ldinp: Takeout Commitment requind alona with leaea. • Land laa.N up to one year 50% appraiaal. CONTACT: •Tom Wilcher- Anaheim Office (714) 851-4126 • JdfJohrvon- lrvine Office (714)851-4050 lliEUNCONVENTIONALBANK. l::lerit~e B~~s • • • • • • Daily Piiot classifieds work for you.Call 642·5678 for quick cash sales . -·-CTORS CORNER "are Colna & lt8mpa OOU> & SILVER O.te ~i .. 1 .... a.. tot.Al --C.t. .,.,. ...... .......... :::.:::: ..,. ...,,. ~---~...-.. .. ._.--... Cel--..- (714) 5151 •so So"'" Cont ptau Ylff•g• .............. , __ .._c:--.., ~EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or., Suite 1 • NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE "'*" l'ICITIOUS eus.•au lllAMll ITATaJMlfT Ti. .......... ...-1a--.~ -••: PIUNTaO PROOUCT, '14 a. 1"91 SV.t. c.t.e Mna. cal~ nu7 • .,. T ...... 6551 09ll Gf9"9 Cir· cl•, Hu..Cl,..Oft .. ecll, C.lltw11I• ~1 Tilfl tlwl"-II COf111Yc11od by M !ft. ........... llel!T ..... Tllla ~ -lllelll wilt\ IN c~, a.."" Or-C-.t'f °"-.,. '·'"'· PUBUC NOTICE ••111• l'ICTITIOUS e"Sntall lfAMa ITA TaMa•T TIM hlllowlnt --la dolnt IMnl· rH1•1: AlllPOl'IT CENTl!ll PlllNTING, 2'1J.C 1119191111 AV9., Colt. llMM, CA '2U6. LEON A . PAWI NSKI, IOU llltdlelllllS, ~ Del lley, CA tOltl. T11t1 """'-'• cellductltd 11y M !ft. dM.,..1. ~ .......... , Tltl1 ~ wa lllell wltll Ille c-1y Clel1L"" 0r ... c-tr ... ,._., IS, 1 .. 1. Options open to sellers Investors ~ve several,alternatives in writing calls 81 LO&IAN PETaY If y lut column foeUMd oo tbe rilu and re- wards tnvolwd In buyln1 opdom. Tbe alternatlvt open to the more couervaUve Investor ii wrtt1n1 (Hlllq) optlou, T6e typical call writer (teller) ll Htklnl two enda ~ addltsonal income from bll ollo and poaaibly tome downaide protec· tton .,almt ita decllne. For ex• ample, let'a uaume that ln May an inveator purcha1e1 or already OWDI 100 abaret of XYZ at a price of 50. To 1enerate ad· dltlonal income from those aharu and/or to hed1e asalmt poa1ible decline, he decidet to writh call at a price of 50, nm· nine for a aht-month time period, for which be receives $50(). PHllY The $500 he receives at tbe time he writes the option ta hard caah dollars which be keeps whether bia stock la eventually sold or not. Hi.a only obll1a- tion durlnt this period la to sell 100 abarn of stock to the call buyer at a price of SO if the call buyer decides to exercise his option. Thia la bow the option would be quoted in the financial pages of the newspaper. XYZ Aug. Nov. Feb. so 21'\ s 8 Stock Close 50 Once the option baa been sold, the writer baa several alternatives. First, he can simply let the option run its course. What happena will depend on the price movement of XYZ common stock. If XYZ la selling above 50 at the expiration tlme of the option, the option will be exercised. If the ·stock is selling above SO before the expiration date, the buyer ol the option may choose to exercise before tlle expiration, although exercising early ia very unusual. In either case, the writer will then sell his stock at a.price of SO. If the •tock bas risen to 80, &S or 10 in the interim, the writer's obligation re- mains the same -to sell the stock for $50 a share. That D).ipt sound like a bad deal. Certainly, moat investors would feel a twln1e of regret at having sold the-call in the first place. But ii such an out· come would seriously disturb you -and if you are likely to forget that your ori~al objectives were OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUND addlUooal Income and downalde ... ect.loG -then you mllht do better to avo6d wr1tlnt optlou. However, ll you can admit to yOW'Mll that you ml1ht well have told XYZ at a price of 5' or 55 1001 before it reached eo, SS or 10, you may bave the riibt attitude for wriUn1 opt.lona. But, lettl.na the option nan. ill coune la only one alternative. Beca\lle the llated optiooa ez. chan1ee conduct conUnuoua tradlnc. the option writer can otfaet bia 01tll1ation at any time prlor to ita expiration or exercise, simply by buyLn1 back the option. [..noldo1 back at our previoua example, let's assume that one month after the call writer told his optJon, XYZ Corp. announced favorable cor- porate developmenta tbat could have cauaed the stock to rlae appreciably. The oPtloo writer can re· move hi.a obUtation to sell atock at 50 by purchaa- inl an option identical to the one be wrote. If the stock riaes before the writer buya the option back, be may have to pay more for the option be buya than he received for writini it, thereby incurrtn1 an out.of-pocket loss. Some of that loss could be offset by writin1 another option at a hither •lrikinl price and/or a longer expiration date than the oriitnal call. There la no beat solution for what. if anythint, an option writer should do when the stock on which a call has been written start.a to rise appreciably in price. However, the secondary lilted options market afforda the option writer the Oexibillty of offsetting bis obli1at1on, if he chooses to do 10. Up unW now, I've been talking about the un· derlylng stock rising in price. However, ex- perienced investors know that equities also carry donwaide risks. And that's when writing call op- tions can provide additional benefits -bard cub premiums to offset or hedge the loss of value ln the common stock. Let's look at the same example. As we said, for assuming the obligation of selling stock at a price of 50 for a fixed period of time, the investor received $500 additional income whether the stock price remains the same, falls or rues. But, if the stock declines in price, that $500 will absorb the first full S points of depreciation on 100 shares. So, if the stock declines to 45, the option writer will be even on his position. In effect, in this example, this ia what the op- tion writ.er does. He forfeit& any appreciation in the price of XYZ above a price of SS, and protects llimsell against a loss in bis position down to 45. .a:.. . .-. + .. +,.. + '" + .. + I +M + II. + II. + 1"-+ II. + '"' + II. + "' + .. + II. + 1 + .. + 1'4 + II. + "' + .. + II. + .. Orana• Co11t DAIL y PILOT' NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS QUOtAflOfilS INCi.VOi T••OHOll TMI HIW vo•c ... 1ow1n. "•C•"C l'lw, aono• OIHOlf o\110 CllllCINllATI ITO<IC 1acHANOU tMO •• "OHIO,.,'"' l'IASD ANO'"'""'' •'\'''\\ ~ Casio's map U.S. shines • ID John J . McDonald ls a "born·asaln" but•· nessman -thanks to the remarkable Japane: e com· pany, Cu1o. After he airaduated from Brooklyn Coller• 1n 1954, McDonald Joined Remington Rand. an oldUD company that combined with another oldUne com pany, Sperry, to form the company we now know as Sperry Corp., one ot the naUon's 100 largest com panies with 1980 sales in excess of SS billion. Sperry, whlch hired the late Gen. Douglas MacArthur as chairman after he was brou•ht hOmt from tbe Pacific, was never regarded in anyone's book as an exciting company. It was the company. that reluctantly brought in the people who develop~: the first ·working computer, Eniact forerunner °'· Remington ~arui's Unjvac. and then watched lB.-t: run away with the market. " But that was home to John McDonald for 21 years. He rose through the sales rank• -not a pro- pitious place to rise from in o company dominated by engineers who ~ ·thought sales lt.. and advertising ~~ o people were l 1 some kind or 4 , .f low life. The r:•-:;m .. _.-_______ _ ~i:~e~:"\rfe~i! lllTll llSllWITZ was three years in London, 1969 to 1972, when he was general sa1"4f manager of Remington Rand's Brilisb company. 1 Transferred back to Blue Bell. Pa., where Univac headquarters bad been placed, McDonald re alized one day that be might be in the wrong core. pany when a colleague gazed out a window at a blacktop that had once been a farm rield and com mented, "Beats London. doesn't it, John->"' McDonald was ready then when one of thl• Kashio brothers approached him about opening an of fice ror their company, Casio, in Europe McDonald jumped at the offer, returning to Lon don in 1975 as head of Casio-Europe. In 1978, he wa:i; asked to come home to become president of Casio's U.S. company, which is 40 percent·owned by a Japanese trading company, Toyomenka. Casio Inc i" headquartered in Fairfield, N.J ., not far from New York City. It's strictly a sates omce, selJing th.- products (calculators, watches, musical keyboard in strumenls) made in four Japanese factories. Casio is a shooting star in the electromcs iri- dustry. It was the company that in 1972 broke the SIOO price barrier on calculators, turning it into a mass market. Today, the worldwide market for calculators · is 70 million units -and Casio sells 30 m1lhon of those. Is John McDonald happy working for a Japanese company? You bet be is. He 'll cite you any number or reasons: Casio is a tiger about quaJity control : Casic1 thinks in worldwide terms. not. just one t'ountry . -"' -19 -IV. -1\'t -Ya _, .. -n• NEW VOfllC (API J.., 1 ~rr::i u~~ Totel ls_. N-""lgM .... low. Wi1A T AM fll OIO HEW VORIC IAPJ J.., 1 .. , . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 SALMON PROTEST -Fishermen surround freighter under Golden Gate .Bridge in pro- test of federal order cutting short their .,, ......... salmon season. Coast Guard vessels cleared a path as about 100 small boa~ joined in the Tuesday protest. Xir Force officer cQDfined E spionage suspect once 'scornful' of U.S. military RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -As an under- graduate at Old Dominion University, Christopher M . Cooke frequently made jokes and scornful com- ments about the U.S. military, friends recall. ~s a graduate student at the College of Willfam & Mary, he seemed happy to be going into military service and proposed that the United States be the first to use tactical nuclear weapons In tbe event of a conflict with the Soviet Union, ac- cording to his academic adviser. Now the Air Force second lieutenant is con- fined at McConnell Air Force Base near Wichita, Kan., accused of making unauthorized visits to the Soviet Embassy in Washington and under in- vestigation for espionage. Cooke is accused of violating an Air Force regulation against unauthorized contact with representatives of a communist country. The Justice Department opened an espionage in- vestigatio~onday. Family members and former teachers said they were shocked that the 25-year-old Cooke, a Titan missile control launching officer, could have been charged with such a breach of Air Force regulations. At William & Macy, his master's thesis ad- viser remembers Coote as a person "who was very happy to be going' into the military to do the ICind of thing he had been promised he could do - work in strategic thinking and in weapons. "l know of nothing to suggest that he would enga&e in any aberrant behavior," said Dr. Alan J. Ward. But he recalled that Cooke "could be ckijng thioJi aQd not contemplate the consequences. •Chris was the type of penon who could have walked into the Soviet Embassy and not recognize that the Air Force has regulations against It." Cooke cQmpleted bis master's program in less than a year, wrilinl a 74·pa1e thesis tiUed "United States Tactical Nuclear Doctrine: Developing a Capability." It' recommended the Utilted States adopt the doctrine of usin& tactical weapons before the Sov- iet Union in the event of a conflict. But the "notion of winning seems obsolete when measured against the losses which would be incurred in a nuclear ex- change,'' Cooke wrote. "You got the definite impression Cbria was one of the less military persons you'd ever meet on the face ol the earth,·• said Dr. Martin Sheffer, as- sistant professor of political acleoce at Old Domil\ion. He said Cooke had frequenUy joked with other students, some of them service veterans, that the military was made up of ~·regimental , unthinking people." Cooke's parents s ay it is unbelievable he would have visited the Sovie\ Embassy openly bad he been a spy. Cooke's father, Richard C. Cooke, an elec· trical engineer in Henrico County, also said his son had talked of making the military a career. Drought threaten1 PEKING (AP) -Residents ol Pettn1 a.re be- ing urged to cooaerve water beeau.se of a two-year drouet that imperils farm lrri1attoa. -Ask Call ourne'w CON UMER LOAN DIVISION unckr I.lcl\'fl l h1· in our home offi ce. telephone (714) 494-7541. for i nformatio~ ahn.11 t secured and/or unsecured installm1?nt loans for PERSONAL. FAMILY. and llOtTSEHOLD Pl'RPOSES including loans for AUTOMOBILES. MOBILE HOMES, SWIMMING POOLS. SOLAR WATER HEATI~G SYSTEMS. and OTHER HOME IMPROVEMENTS. Now, the place to go for ALL your financial requirements i~ YOUR COMMUNITY FINANCIAL CENTF:R 9AL.OA BRANCH 600 EMt B1lbo1 Boulevard, Balboa , CA 92661 (714) 673-3701 Additional offices in Laguna Beach ... 494-75-41 • Laguna Hills .... 586-5100 • Belmont Shore .. (213) 438-942 1 San Clemente ... 492-1195 • Lake Elsinore •.. 674-2191 • Mu m eta............. 677-5632 Llguna Niguel ... 496-1ro1 • Olive/Orange ... 998-8400 • Balboa Island ......... 675-3212 Glen Avon ••.•.. 881-0111 ·Less than 0.1 mg tar ! l DlilyPilat W~DNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 SPECIAL DIETS C2 USING HERBS C6 SLIM GOURMET CS SUPERMARKETSHOPPER C9 Getting ready for the Early California Fiesta at Bowers Museum are Necip 'Nej' Simer fleft), waiter Michael Slaven and Helen Ray. lesta By SANDIE JOY Of ... Dlltly ""' ..... It's time for summer partles with cool, fros· ty beverages. One special summer party coming up June 20 is a $100-per.person black·tie fund-raiser, themed "Early California Fiesta,·' at Bowers Museum, Santa Ana. In keeping with the party's theme, Richard Berryman of the Ultimate Feast, a Los Angeles catering firm, has designed a South·of-the· border-style menu which is, indeed, a feast. The party will start off with hors d'oeuvres including Huevos Catalan (that's made with peppers, onions and eggs in a golden crust with cumin), Bacalao Frita with All-oli (that's puffs of soft cod with garlic and bread), Califlor en Salsa Pimento (translated it's cauliflower in a light egg batter, deep fried and served with pep· per sauce), Seta con Cborizo (mushrooms stuffed with cborizo and spinach), Tomate anchoa (cherry tomatoes stuffed with anchovy mayonnaise) and Alcacbofa con Camaron (artichoke hearts stuffed with shrimp mixture). The starter for the meal will be Chilled Gazpacho with Crisp Cheese Straws. Most of the soups being served al large dinners these days are of the chilled variety to avoid the problem of having a soup that's suppose to be bot arriv· ing cold al the table. Then, there'll be Temera de Limon (veal scallops, sauteed in Spanish olive oil, lemon juice, white wine and Spanish olives, layered with zucchini), Patata~ en Salsa Verde (potatoes in parsley, garlic and onions), Tomate con Hongos (tomatoes fllled with sherried mushrooms), Zanahorias Estragon (julienne of carrots, sauteed in brown sugar, wine and fresh tarragon) and Pan con Safron. The salad course will consist of butter let· tuce with raspberry vlnegar and walnut oil dressing topped with chopped walnuts. And dessert will be vanilla ice cream topped with fiambed fruit spears. Beverages for the fiesta, at which actor- singer FA Ames will be master of ceremonies and singer Trini Lopez will perform, will in· elude ~but of a 1980 Calllornia Chenin Blanc from the Lawrence Winery. Also to be served will be two distinctive fiesta-type drinks created by tbe Ultimate Feast: Santa Ana Sunrise and Manana Mar1uerlle. Recipes for both beveraces appear below alon8 with RHestioas for 1Jx other fiesta-type .. l?evera1e1 offered by Helen 1\ay, who is b.IQdliJ1I publicity for the June 20 party. Actor·ainter Ed Ames will be muter of ceremoniet for the fe1Uve evenlnc at which singer TriDl Lopes will be headllDe entertalur. Thin allc> wUl be llnlcm dndn1 •taced by the R111•nJ:tl cltl Clelo BeUlt J'oltlorteo. 11ckeU caa ~ tJaroqb the Bowen . Museum POUDdatiaD otftce at• ... ; Moisten cocktail &lass rim with fruit rind; •iUa rim In talt. Shake cracked ice. Strain into . ctau. Sip ovw salted rim. SPA.NUB WELLS l omace lisht rum I CllUDOll Sauteme 1~ ._ca lime Juice I omeet pineapple Juice ' . Luscious drinks made with cream of coconut include Tropical Daiquiri ~ and Sloe Gin Fizz ... CS ' . • Shake with crushed lee. Strain and serve lo cocktell 11aaa. Garnish with cherry. EL PRESIDBNTE 1 ounce Curacao 1 ounce dry vermouth s ouac.. tolden nm 1 dub srenadine Shake mixture vl1ol"OUl11 in. a coclrtatl shaker which bat been balf.ttJled 1wlth ice. Serve in coc:ktail aiua. MNGUA 2 Jl11en Clar'M 2 Ji.,.. jllMapple JUiee l daab.,!:7°cJ:lce lteal trHll HUI ftU a bilbball 11.., With eruabecl ice. Po1ll' ID1xture ewer lee; ltli thoroqbly and IUl cJa11 With IOCla water. ' . OllANGE BLOSSOM 2 ounces orange Juice 4ounces cin ~ounce Cointreau 4 Shake the mixture vt1oroualy lo a cocktall shaker half.filled wlth ice. Serve in cocktail clus. C.UltDIABLE Preheat with bot water a allver •&•Del la· die. Add 2 cupt of warm copac, t h.lmpt •u•ar, 4 clovee and~ oran1e rind ud ~lemon rind. Removta.c ladle, put I •ucar lumP1 Into tu li· !"'41 ID4 tbeia ··1a1te tbe eopac In tb• ladle. ft4plaee tbe ledle · wttb ~ eopac Ja&o .~:fl..= la :n:.fe~~":& c:f~ coaaae II n.!fnc. When ~~ toe1 out, terve Cafe Dtable in deml·tuM cup1. • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. June 3, 1981 ·a1W1Na acrre 3~ teupoons iuar bowl the brown and S D ETS 14 cup satnower oll are tender but still 1 eae, beaten lmrnedlately. Makes 2 Hlah ftber foodt have 1um white rice Oour, suaar, PECIAL I 1 cup dry lentils maintain their shape. \4 c uP" Ir a ted 1ervinp u a main dlsh, , beta credited wtth lm· 3 cup nonfat dry 1uar pm, dry milk and 1 tablespoon tomato Saute the onion, sarllc Parmesan dleeae 4 aervln,. u a side dish~ pr'ovl1111 intestinal milk salt. Add yeast mixture; paste and mushrooms in the Juiceotllemon health, but now research 1 ~teaspoons salt blend well. Add shorten· pan. Let rise until dough 2 tablespoons oil for s minutes. Add \4 c up c h Q pp e d June Rcflh u the author ._as dllclosed that tlber 2 e11s in1 I water mixture ; ls sli1hUy above top of ground oat flour the cooked lentils, nour, parsley o/ twenty-fliM cookboob, it also able to lower Stlr tofether 2 teas· blend well. Add ens. pan. Bakeat400de1ree1 :Y. cup vegetable broth, tomato paste and y. c up toasted including "Salt·fru blood cholesterol levels poo.,. su1ar and~ cup Mix at high speed of for 10 minutes. Place broth soy sauce . Simmer groundaesameseeds Cooktl'l(I With Herb• and as well. of the water. Sprinkle mixer for 2 minutes. foil over bread and bake 2 teaspoons soy several minutes. but lit teaspoon pepper Spicea." If you have o ThiJ altoald be 1ood yeast over top; set aside Pour doufh into a 50 minutes more. sauce don't boil. Serve over Place cooked brown ipeciol diet ~•Uon, you news lcr those who deal for 10 minutes. Combine greased bow . Let rise in LENTIL STROGANOFF 1 cup low-fat plain cooked whole-wheat rice into a saucepan. can write to June Roth, clo with stubborn ·hi1h In a saucepan the re· a warm place until 'It c up onion . yogurt noodles or cooked brown Stir tosether e1g, Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, levels ol blood maintn& l 'lt cups water doubledUtol~hours>. chopped Combine lentils with rice. Makes 4 to 6 Parmesan eheese. Co1ta Mesa. CA . 92621. cllolesterol that do not and shortening; heat un· Beat aeain in mixing 1 small clove garUc, 2~ cups water. Bring to servings. lemon juice, parsley. PI ease encl o, e a •....,_torespondwellto tit 1bortenin1 melts, bowlfor3minutes.Pour chopped a boil; turn heat down PARMESANRICE ses ame seeds a nd aet/-addreued .tamped medication and the then cool to lukewarm. doueb intotwo small or ~po und lresh and simmer about 45 ' 2cupscookedbrown pepper.Stirandsimmer envelope /or a per1onal lowered animal fat re· Combine in a mixing one large greased loa( mushrooms, sUced minutes until the lentils r ice s minutes . Serve reply. &imen. .~~~~~~~~--~~~-----'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....,.,.~---.~.,.-~~~~~~~~~~-'-...;_~~~~~~- I NHntly dJacuHed ~·-~atudles wttb Dr. ~ Bland, a nutrl· til*hemiltry pro. It the University u1et Sound and the Bellevue· d Medical . Del a ne• book, "~ur Health Under 16ete: U1ln1 Nutrltlon to Ficht Baell," reports aaajor breakthrouaha in tftetiaf blood 1er'um .-.ai•ol with the use el fnalt Ded1n and 1uar tum wlded to the diet. !\. "Most recently it has been found that there ate several dllterent f.nea of dletar)' tlber available, all ol whlcb have sU1bUy different infiuences on Ntdudq blood cholestero.!J." Bland explained. "·1·ne type ol fiber usually con· sidered by people t.ryin1 J enrich their diet witb ha' ls wheat bran. cona an or rite bran ... • WbUe these are eood 1. for bowel heaJlb. more success bas been ex· perlenced with adding ~tin and suar gum to juices. soups. or tasseroles. Xanthan gllfl or a product called ·agar -a1ar is com· rcially available in t health food st.ores. erally 3 to S teas· poems a day, mixed into food, hu been found to have good results. Bland's book also bu an interesting guar gum bread that is made with nee flour rather than -"*flour, and several · «Mr recipes that would ._&e or lnterest to anyone who bad to awid wheat flow due to malat>sorp-' UM or allergy, besides t>eenc belplul in a low cbelesterOI 4liet. Here are tedpes from •'Your Health Under Sleae" ~bllabed by Stephen (i(IMM Press>. UVAll O:V• B&EAD , OP ll&OWN AND WlllTI! aICE ftelapeom su1ar t~water , 1JNlckacedry4cUve yuat . ~ cap sborteninc l' cup brown rice flour • 2 CUJ)I IODl·lf\•lD •bite rt• OoUr \4 ~naar i.: <.1C .'29* GFOCE'R¥ ~9?/I GROCER'r' . 44~ PF. {1XICE . lti:it uROCERY .29~ De:.. I 79.1t GRfl~ERY i . 4::'4 lo :1. • .l3i.S @ • 15/ LB FR(jf'tU~ 1 "/I J.. in'B iF. 491' Le ·. ' · GRJJC2RY GF.OC£~' /JF.OC~R'r' GEii i-!05£ GP1J::£RY G/;1Jf7~'r' GPI) t £P.'r' uF.oc:~..,, p.;-i_m,_1c£ GR1x :-•·v GP·XEi:"r' GP.tJC~R'r' j , ~i..3@ .29/ LB F?.·JWC£ TOT1-:L ,_. P.:8 T£11D 4~" . :u·,. 43.,. .. :r T>-. . 6 -:': .,..j.. ?; T.» :1.. l:°l!·;.. ..... ~/. I!.. 1. as· 3 4~ T,' ,-.. , ., .. . , . 4~ ~4 USDA GRADE 'A'·WHOLE BODY FRYER LEOS WHOLE ~ CHIO\El'i FRYER WINOS FRESH CA!.F CHICKEN DRUM- STICKS FR£SH ~ CHICKEl1 8 ~~~~!!!!!!!~~~!!!!! U'VT" 2 (Purchase <:Net limit-reg. price LB .. 65) COMBO PACK c~uta ~~de ~M::'~1ow. . ~i:o,..,....., pc:i.ru Ir-. IDIPC) u;ss ac Oii 8ttf Rump Roast CVl'IU • l"llUH POl'k Loin Chops Lal 98 LA 298 La 259 la 239 la }98 La 199 SERVICE SEAFOOD FROZLN FOODS , I SAVE .17 ':' LIQUOR 17"UIO SmlmoffVOdka \ • ~U.<IOU> Joae Cuervo Tequila <r.Uc;~hll~c ~•On Rhine Cut'8 999 6 99 279 299 HEAL TH & BEAUTY ~~tr'~~ roueme skin Cram ' VONS L AKERY ~'*"f.ATOllSUNC F~r.lsln Braid B~~io~=:t. ~~fn'M:lt\ns ' FLATWARE ELEGANT STAINLDS AT lllG 8AVING81 ITEM OF THE WEEK SOOP SPOONS ~~~ PtECZ Of' I f'l.AlWME LA.::.49 COMPLETEft PIECESALIO AVAIL- ABU: AT VOrts LOW PtaCE8 I I Orange Coast D•ILV PILOT/We®Mday, June 3, 1981 • prod lice meal fish *249... flwlet ~ .... 1 .. ... ... *49• •. 69• ... rump roast .... .• "'.,,. ... .*279.. . . *279... halhut fllet ___ *491 •. 79• ... road • ""' •lu ..... tip roast •. ,.. .... ... "... ...... llac011 *14'•· crah legs L....nL·rries 59t ...... ,,..... . "''"• ~ ... ...... al.la.,, ·. ~· '-179 .1....-.L fl• rlptlM ---:-... ,.... ., p,..,..; . ~ ... ;-rltof · honev elew ...._ 39•... .. ..... ,,.,. .. .... .• ,..,. ........ " ..., Int perk 1111 • "'" •W• ti ~..t •~•rM ela111 ............. , texasonio• 9 .... t100 ,,... ,. .... ,.. summer lflUash 39• •. :i.':ia oranges S .... *100 •lanak crackers s ••. 69• ::.:i heel .... s.49 :~ *49'•· -. -... ,.. ........ II II ... .e~-apple huller · $289 •••• ,,. • ., ·· .... u• 1111 hMrtl cheese"'·'·".:· *349•. ~ ............... \ iM tea Wight -*119~ 9Ma 11lami .... ts.4' •· t449 · bakery spro .. 7 grain ...................... ' ......... . • • v1lam1ns .... "•• .. 11 •• ..... ,. ... ,., .. ,. ...... ............ trail 11111 . ... ..., "I· l.4t .. f 179 · 9 Nan 111&• ... ,,. ... ., $1lt •• ule•n ti•· . hot~-··.,. ... *1'' *129 ... ,. ... ,... .......... 99• or coW ••• · • • *249 . . I .... Prod1ace . fresh from • the fields dally l . I Orange Coast OAJL.Y PICOT/Wednetday, June 3, 1981 • ice cream Though malt 11hop1 ~ cup 1u1ar Spoon 1 tablespoon pear Bartlett pears may be more prevat nt V• cup apricot pre· mixture ln bottom of 11, cup honey on lelevlslon than on tbt serves each of 4 1last1es (10 to '°" cup ca n n e d str'eets whne you Jiy , 2 teaspoons ciD· 12 ounce capacity>. Add chocolate syrup you can stlll sip a tall, namon 1 scoop ice cream to 1 pint vanilla ice ex otic milkshake or 1 pint vanilla ice each and stir to blend. cream soda loaded with rre h cream Top each wtth 1 tables· ~ cup club soda Bartlett pears on your 1 (12-ounce) coo-poon pear mixture, add Pare, core and rinely own back porch this tainer cream soda a setond scoop lee dice pears to measure 3 summer. Pare, core and finely cream, then remalnine cups. Combine with The Caribbean Shhk.o dice pears to measure 3 pi! a r mixture. Fl 11 honey and brlng to a boil is so outstanding you cups. Combine with sua· glasses with cream over medium heat. Sim- may want to serve it in ar. apricot preserves soda. Makes 4 sodas. mer 5 minutes or until wine glasses for (jessert. and cinnamon. Simmer For richer soda use a consistency of jam. Mix· Fresh pear m eets about S'minutes or until little more lee cream. ture should measure 1 t'hocolate ice cream, mixture ls consistency UONEY·OF·A·PEAB c up . Cool. Place 1 milk, light rum and cof. or jam and measures a SWIRL tablespoon chocolate ounce> &Jaasea. Stlr cooled pear mixture li&hlly with lee cream. Spoon halt the mixture Into &lasses over chocolate syrup, divld· ing evenly amon1 the glasses. Add a second tablespoon chocolate syrup to each and top with remaining pear-Ice cream mixture. Add about 2 tablespo0ns soda to each glass and serve at once. ltfakes 4 serv· tngs. For richer soda, use a little more lee cream. fee in your blender and scan t 1 \is cups. Cool. 2 1 a r g e fresh syrup in each or 4 (12· the synth~sis is pure .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....;:;'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ poetry. • Malt shop concoc· tions go exotic with fresh Bartlett pears. _J Perhaps you've never tasted a soda. Gone are the staid days when a s oda implied either ' chocolate or strawberry. Now you can create a SpJced Pear Soda at home with Bartlett pea rs, a pricot pre· ser ves, cinnamon and LOWER PRICES OVERALL BACKED BY.MARKET BASKET'S t<'e cream. Or. ror a soda a little mor e like n s undae. make Honey-of-a-Pear Swirl. The fresh pears, t"ook with honey to a jim t·ons istency. then com- bine with Ice cream and s wirl with chocolate srrup. Gingerly pou'r the sooa in last and enjoy Make sodas on trot s um mer nights or on weekend afternoons when you're driven by thirst and a sweet tooth l o h i g h e r c u l~ n a r y planes Or be a vant garde and Serve these classy drinks for dessert al a dinner partv De li cate fr es h California Bartlett pears .... 111 Jazz up any menu so don't hes itate to buy them. Just in case you've forgotten how to ripen Bartletts. the California pear growers advise you to· -Place your fresh Hartletts together at room temperatur:e in a loosely closed paper bag or ripening bowl. -Wait until the skins a re unif<>f'mly yellow and yield to gentle palm pressure -this means that they're ripe. Store beautifully ripened fresh California Barlett pears in the refrigerator and eat -.lightly chilled. S ummertime is no tim e to fret over food. Eal fresh and light. eat fresh Bartlett pears lf these remarkable pear dessert drinks bave <;pa wned your interest in fresh fruit cookery, send for ··A Taste of the Rain· bow," a colo rful t"ook booklet ofrering nt•arly 100 interesting reci pes for fre s h California Bartlett pears, plums, nectarines and peaches. Send $1 to: "A Taste or the Rainbow," P.O .• Box 255627 , Sacramento~. CARIBBEAN SHAKE l large rr es h Bartlett pear (9 to 10 ou nces) 12 teaspoon instant toffee granules :i" cup milk 1 cup chocolate i.ce cream 2 tablespoons light rum 1 tablespoon •sugar or honey t /16 teaspoon san. Pare, core and dice \ pear to measure l "ii cups. Turn into blender • Jar. Dissolve coffee iD milk. Add lo blender, along with all remaining i.n gredlt'nt.s and blend until smooth and, creamy.' Makes 2 (9· ou nce> servings. ...i SPICED PEAR 8011A 2 large ,rres b Bartlett pears 'Tempting trio made with milk T1;ipleThe Diffe re nee . s2.oo OFF ALL PARTY TRAYS FOR JUNE GRADUATION PARTIES OFFE.R GOOD ONLY ON TRAYS FOR 12 OR MORE AT STORES WITH HOT FOODS DELI .. All OIJANTIH AIG141S RESEAYEO NO SALE 10 OU lUS 011fOll11£SAl I 011 COMMUCIAl usr I ~Y&caoos 5 .. S 1 *~fl\l_ll_s -~~l-· _6 9---J 11111aa • ~Squash ... 25 Traput ffi1Mangos u .69 M1ttkt1 luut .. ,..ar 11.,,.. 1-l·OT•l'•<k H! Potato Chips ::: . 99 ..... ""'" fl! Jell-0 Gelatin l·•l 32 •••• -.-SAVE WITH OUN--- •4.99 LIQUOR SALE! IG rtMI litlldH WlliOll 4.99 Seagram 's 7 750 • ;:orh!1i 4.99 acardi Rum 1~ "" 750 4.99 "" 750 4.99 • Mau1an1 & Cllnn .35 !ff Kraft Dinner I· If •·•I pkq Martt! IMlotl .69 ~Cream Cheese .... , •kq ~llV1k1•t 1.49 Ht Cinnamon Rolls 10-.l pk~ GfH• Gla•I C.I .43 ~Green Beans ,, .. , un SAVE UP TO 30°/o WITH OST CUTTER PRODUCTS! .37 .45 .19 .39 Triple-The-Difference- [ '"'"""'""9~~.".'.!J.'~~.~ ..... ., P•tCI \ '"'' Wft• n-. '"' '""''' f... ' ..... f 1 .. 11111 I .. -.i .... 111-.a ·d~ ........ , I .., ... ',, ... O• • ., .. '•¥ tJ w ........ , •• f ..... . (Qlilll,la S 1t 1 .. f1W I 1&~ 111110.-BM.-. ., ., 'HI /ti ¥&11h P IA$4(l f •f(.1\ftJ tart a-. '"t f ... p1 ' 110 ""' I lrf&"'•I Pl •I &lilf'*t *•tt •hl'f\ull-Pfl"t01tttAf" t llll CAIH ARKETBASK SMOKED WHOLE BONELESS HAM $ 69 Royal B! Pink Salmon ~~.i~~id·e ft! c~·~i wili P OllM- !ff•Fruit Cocktail P111~f SIHftl1V£ wro JUHi J '~~u IUES IUH£ 9 l~HI 15· 117·0/ 1.89 "" 17·0/ .63 can ... , .83 Cln 11 ., .60 un MEATFAMILYPACK~­ AEDUCED s• PER L ... ~FAMILY PACK. F1y1n1 Clltckln WI Rt11 C191 1 39 m' Country Pride Breasts 111 • FAMILY PACK. a.t D!Cube Steaks ·' lb 2. 63 r.cz. FAMILY PACK .... tlhlllan11tu '!-'!'Spencer Steak lb 3. 73 ~ FAMILY PACK. C.U•t•y "Ill• F1y1n• Cft•tl•" 1 09 m' Drumsticks Oi Thighs • • . S·7 ll. AVG. GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN m f>~'~k.ch~j;;'"'0 lb 1. 29 Whole Frying Chicken •b • 59 '~ sii~~d .. e~con lb 1. 09 ~ F~1~1~ttRed Snapper .o 1 . 89 Lower Prices Overall Guaranteed! ,_f!(l/J!l!n - - - --:'\ -~ WOllOtl 11 Cl ,Iii IU•llU •OllfAllllO• I "' "-A8TIC I I QLAaMa I SAVE $5 43 J:fftfi --~--'. -----, • ~ CATTl.DGI'• . I Sf-·l'Uf • I ,., •rcul•• o• ••O'!' I I 111 coNC.MTRA no I WITH RED·X COUPONS 1 ·.;;,•AReEQU.SAUC•· I l'ABAl~SOl'TDEAI I ·:.~~ .091 l••v• u•• • 1H• ..... -I ~40 "" -"" 1-f lmCl~IW ""-·••1111 -· -~ ...... -I "~. ,~,.eg I I •::t1 1 .15 I I ~v8• ""'' 11 01 '" ,,.. _ Ort! I l••va 11•11" .. ~ 111 l'f• (111111111 I ~_. ~,..,..,., l"1t1m.M1 ~14 Oii! ._ "' 1-t lllfflllll JUltlu...,.ll"s Ju11 • 1w1 •• I -'::. -11-.1111' .,.,,,I ----·COUllOle------·~--• --~ ,. _____ , •• ----I"' I ·At• , ,.. ... CAMATURAL •• I'" ~.=~:i~.. I ,., •c 1 APPU .IUIC• 1 WAl'PL•s I ~.J.9 I 1 =··· I I NV• , ... , ... Ito/ CA~"' c-I .... VII 11110 ""' Ito/ ,... "' ttlflltt I .1 e .. C"-,. ...... , 1""'"' .a• ""' c..,,... ,... ···~· '"fC'"" I ~ :,~ -'••tun ,,,. ~'I 1 1·· ~~ '""' J ,...., w1 -.•.I .__ ...... OOWOll•fit# .__._..O.... __ ' • • I I .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 .. ·Drinks with tropical flair Those aame wavln1 c 0 v e r I c 0 m b l n e Garn ls b . a& a k e. 2 servings. coconut palm• wblch ln1recllent1 and shake aervin&•· ' COCONUT ·CITRUS "' i f tb 11 ~-·1-d l b FIZZ LOPEZ PUNCH COCONUT evo~e ma1e1 o a we . -=-aua an llU'D • · f 11, cup lemonade SUNSIUNE COOLER Caribbean are also the Yleldsaaervlnis. 1 ~ cup cream 0 1 12 -ounce can aource for the special in· coconut flavor drink mix gredient ln exotic drinks TROPICAL DAIQUIRI 3 ounces sloe gin 2 cups cold water carrot Juice from the islands. The 1 medium banana, 2 tablespoons re· 1 lS-Ounce can cream o/• cup cream or lat ln ed1 t t f sllced constituted lime juice or coconut coconut cruc gr en s, o l bed i 1quart 11'me sherbet l tablespoon re· C 0 U r I e • C r • 1 m 0 f cup crus ce Club soda ., •L r 1 32 b ttl constituted lemon juice coconut, made from the n cup cream o Crushed lee -ounce o e sweet white meat of the coconut In blender container, lemon-lime carbonated l egg 1 c 3 otmces lict>t rum combine all ingredients soda, chilled 1 cup crushed ice coco pa m ' o co• 1 t bl _, d In large punch bowl. In blender container. nucifna. a espoo.. r e · except club soda an Think of all the co~sUtutedlemonjuice ice; blend until smooth. combine drink m i x, combine ingredients ; 1 · d f hi 11 Jn blender container, Stir in c:lub soda. Serve wat•r and cream of blrend until s moo~h . soda. Makes 21t\ quarts. Luscious and refreshing drinks are made with cream of c oc onut including P u erto Ri c an Gra s shopper , Tropi<..· :il Daiquiri and Sloe Gin Fizz . usc1ous an reres n. coc"nut. Al servi'ng G a.r nish Makes 4 drinks which can be combine ingredients, over lee. Garnish as t1'me"'. add sherbet and . made with it -some .~b~le~n~d~u~n ~tl~i__!.•~m~o~o~t~h~.~d~e~s~i~r.!e~d~.~M~a~k~e~s~2~~~~~~::_::::.:_:::.:.....:.se:~r~v~in=g~s~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. with s pirits, some without -drinks that can be served at patio parties, on the back porch on a aultr)' eve· ning or for a punch par· ty in the parlor. The choices include a Puerto Rican Grasshopper, a· Coconut-Citrus Punch, a Sloe Gin Fizz Lopez, Coconut Sunshine Cooler or a Tropical Daiquiri, amon1 others. For many years , cream of coconut was available only in the Caribbean, but in the 1950s in Puerto Rico an ent e rpr ising Senor Lopez developed a process which blended the real coconut meat with n atura l suga r under the co rrec t temperature and press ure -all to produce homogenized cream. Naturally, he called it Coco Lopez. Now this cream of coconut is sold in cans on supermarket shelves in the United States, in the beverage mix and specialty foods section. One can wlll produce '°any refreshing drinks, as only a small amount of the cream of coconut usually is needed to 1ive your summer drinks that tropical touch. PUERTO RICAN GRASSHOPPER 3 otmces cream of coconut 1 ounce creme de men the 2 ounces cream de cacao 1 cup crushed ice In cocktail shaker or jar with tight-fitting . . • Trio <From Pase C4) cream and garnished with chocolate shavings. CHOCOLATE EGGNOG ... light, frothy , refreshing a nd nourishing 1 cup milk 1 egg 1 tablespoon instant sweetened cocoa Dash salt 2 ice cubes, cracked Co mbine all ingredients in electric blender. Whir until s mooth a nd froth y. Makes 2 cups. CHOCOLATE MILK ON COFFEE ROCKS ... u se dairy chocolate drink for this if you prefer 3 tablespoons instant coffee• 3 tablespoons sugar 2Yl cups boiling water 3 cups milk Y.i cup chocolate syrup 'I.a teaspoon pure vanilla extract • or·use 2 tablespoons freeze dried coffee Dissolve coffee p ow der and 2 tablespoons sugar in bolling water. Pour into ice cube tray. Freeze. Combine milk, syrup, vanilla and 1 tablespoon s u1 ar in shaker or electric blender. Shake unlll blended and frothy. Place 3 tee cubes in tall glasses. Pour milk mixture over. Makes 4 servlnp. MOCHA MILK SllAl[E . . . chocolate, coffee and cinnamon &Ive deltcious mocba flavor 2 tablespoons freeze drled colfee• 2 cup1 bo1llnC •ater 211.t cups milk 2 t"bleapoona chocolate ayrup ~ cupsuaar Few daabea clMamoG Vanilla Lee ~am CbOcolate sbavlnsa •or 3 table1poon1 lnatant cotree Dluolve coffee ln boill .. water. Cbtll. ComblDe with milk, ·11rup, 1 u1ar an d cinnamon. For eaeb senlal, wblr ••t l cup 1nUll: mhrtUH in electric binder untll fhalfJ. P9ur lato tall 11-. AM MODP ol tH cnam. lprlnld• wltb elactcola te . Mates • 1erYla1• <about 1 qurt) . • WI ACCl•T ALL cowo•• FllOM OTHD IU .. •MAnn1 LIMIT lllGtfTS U~IMO NO SAllS TO OfAUU fHIS AO OHlY URCTM AT HUGHES fl RANCHO 4"'° HUGttfS UDO NICf5 ffRGTM 7 DAYS l'HUlt$. JVNf 4 TlllU WW • JUHf 10, 1911 ummer WHOLE WATERMELON SWEET AND RIPE GOLDE APRIC10TS • · SWEET & JUICY S C ~~9.C LB. ~ LB . CUT Mil.OHS 1 O' LI. SWEET PLUMS JUICY .4ftc ·~ 17.B. COUPON RULES 5 le SWEET PEACHES YELLOW MEAT WASHINGTON APPLES Yo ... o•o 1 Gallon Con I SOY SAUCE GOLDEN 29 ~ Shwolul.vl101Co• • .. •s tlttl or Ch<ken, 3 01 loQ YEE FU MEIN RAMEN .21 1 ST OF THE SEASON . ~ockled"-' l o•... JUICY 79~ f()f)CS fJf' rttr fJ~£~ IN O\il NU" .. OOUCI ot~t 12·or , "' BAMBOO TIPS DILICIOUS LB. ~·;;:~;~~ .59 . lllCO 2.25 TAKUWAN 1.29'"'· MIYAKO AKAUMEZUKE 1.05 "' ~YS~ER .. S~~CE .• 95 NECTARINESLB ' Sliced 1 ·lb. HOF FY BACON ..... .. ............ PKG. • 98 Fresh G1ode A Cht<ken·Hond Cut FRYER WINGS LB • 59 fresh U SD A Grode A CHICKEN LIVERS LS. 1.29 SPENCER ROAST CHOICE IEEF All CUT ...3.99 FRYER BR'EASTS FRESH-HAND CUT I 0 9. FRYING CHICKEN . -L •• Chucit Cut U S D A Choice Seel LS 1.69 Our ()wn M1ldo1 Hot 1.49 O·BONE ROAST IT .A.LIAN STYLE SAUSAGE l8 U S D A Choice Beef Chuck 8oneleu l8 2 .49 Our Own Seosoned Par• 1.49 SHOULDER CLOD BRATWURST l8 l!!on Dor\ Not Eaceed 12 ..... fol l8 2.19 Co orse Gt1nd Not To hcted 30°0 fot GROUND BEEF Built or Po uies C HILi GRIND BEEF l8 1.59 leonut Does Nol Exceed l ~o.o fot Pln•n or &•~oded Cubed 8onelr\\ 5 .99 GROUND BEEFa..1~o•Choo.,.dS100• l8 2 .49 VEAL CUTLETS Milk Fed LB MOUNTAIN GR•::>WN, 12.20-oz. AVG CLEAR SPRINGS FRESH RAINBOW 'rROUT LB.I 2 9 Fresh Pon Reody RIX IOU .......................... Le. 2. 99 Lorge Size ... Frozen Defrosted FROG LIGS ..................... L1. 2.89 Coolled & Peeled .. Frozen, o.frosted COCKTAIL IH•IMP ....... ls. 4.99 fresh Fillets TH•AIHI• SHA•K ... ts. 2.49 COTT AGE CHEESE HUGHf!S •LOW lfAT • FAR M,ERS PINT CA'RTON Mople Flavor 24 o z 8tl AUNT JEMIMA SYRU P , ... l .151 Four Kind1l I 8·oz Pkg Oo•..,•ol llo"'" C '"" Ch•o MOTHER COOKIES ~~ l~::ci. 1 •. 69 Hefty Toil P1t9 cif 30 KITCHEN BAGS.. . ...... 1 .35 Ooritos 8 oz P1t9 TORTILLA CHIPS Mooed Vegetoble~ 16·oz Con \- LARSEN'S VfG·All .. .99 .45 Sl.oppy Premium 1 A·oz Con\ DOG FOOD.~ 1'""' 5""' ,,.. I~""·' Aunt Jemimo Complete PANCAKE 2 L8 PKG Reg.• Diet• Light 2·Lll'ER PEPSI ............................. . Ouncon Hines ... 23-oz. Plig. BROWNIE MIX Snock Cra cker\ ... 8..01 Plig. No1urot s .. o~• RYKRISP ... S.o•o•ed 3 .'I .09 1.39 1.53 . .83 Soft N!Jturol l ·lb Ctn AUTUMN MARGARINE ......... ~ ... 93 Coffee Credmer 16 o z BORDEN'S CREMORA ..... APPLITIME APPLE JUICE li're<tOV• •• I 2·oe .. llAlllL'LA 8Al.U ...... I . 98 U S D A Choice s..,1 1!1b Cu• SPENCER STEAK U S D A Choice Beef Chvck 7-BONE ROAST .. LB 4.79 .. l8. 1.39 Round Cut of Milk Fed Veol GROUND VEAL ROUND .. . . LS. 2. 99 LOIN " ROUND c.-r BONELESS VEAL SLICED FOR SCALLOPINI, PARMESAN~ W1ENERSCHNITZEl LB.6.99 , 75().MI, ANDRE' 19 CIUlMPAGNI Ploln Lobel, U-oi. Cons Lmo•••G. ....................... : .... 1.38 London Ory, 1.75-Ui. GO•DOll'I .......................................... • ' • ~ Orange Cout DAJLY PILOT/Wedneaday, June 3, 19\'1 I . and Serve home4lrewed her bal beer.s • wmes BJ )lrl'ZIE~ELLEB action were called bottle, without dama1· 'USING HERBS Strain; add to the liquor Simmer all ln1re· Ceremonies were con· ~I you would like to "1ooseberrles," mean· ln1 them. Sprinkleau1ar tbe remalnln1 water, dlent1 other than yeast ducted under a larae surprise your 1uest.s by 101 "big-mouths." So, and mint over. FUI with 1in1er root ; boll 20 30" minutes. When cool, oall tree for 1ood luck. ln1lass or gelaUne Raisins Ca1k with tl&btly· flttln1 lid aervin1 them unusual 1ooaeberry botUes are Madeira or sherry. Cap minutes. Strain; stir In stir ln yeast. A'er 24 That was the 1peclal refreshments which ones with wide moutbl. for 2 weeks. mlnt. Strew over cher· su1ar. When lukewarm, boura, strain; bottae. tree of Zeu1, 1upnmt Soak nowers in cold water 2 hours. Drain. Boll 1 1allon water, 1u1· ar 15 minutes. Pour over nowen. Allow to cool. Add lemon-juice, yeast. Cover with heavy cloth for 3 daya. perhap1 they never STRAW 8 ER a Y CHERRY BBANDY -rles. Fill up with bran· add yeast. Let lt fer· Dandelion Wlne was a cod of Greek mytboloty. before have enjoyed, CORDIAL-llll 1111 dy. 'rte a bladder (cap) ment24houra; bottle. wlnte"r health toqie for DANDELION WINE - Hrve herbal wines or l gallon 1ooseberry 11allon gooseberry overilor2weeka. GINGERBEEB -1880 famillea. Ila annual lite been. bottle bottle HOP BEEB-lltt 2 ounces 1tron1. brewin1 wu an 91xcuae (I MONTH8) Since you can't 18 large atrawber· 2 pounds finest l&quartacoldwater powderedgl.n1erroot for everyone ln the 1 quart frt1h dan purchase such rles, hulled (Morella) cherries 6 ounces hops ...., ounce cream of ·munlty to 1ather for a dellon flower htad1 beverages in stores. Ht mint leaves, 1...., pounds sugar (healt.b stores) tartar picnic and square danc· <only) you'llhavetobrewthem crushed l2mlntleavea 4 .ounces bruised 2 lar1e le mons, lng. Flower bedecked t1allonwator Line bottom of wooden c11k with ralslna. Carefully 1traln in ll· quid. Add lnaln1la11 or ••laUne. Seal tt1hUy for a monlb.I. Bottle. at home. 3 tablespoons su1ar Fine brandy singer root, fresh sliced horses pulled waaouful 3 poundl 1u1ar If such a suggestion Madeira wine or Prick each cleaned 4 pounds su1ar 2 pounds suear• of eAulpmenl and flappy, Juice or J l•r1t casts visions of Federal fine sherry cherry with a new ned· l pint yeast 2 1allon.s water sin1ln1 people to the lomon Revenue agents pound· Put the c 1 ea n dle; drop cherries into Boil 5 quarts water l tablespoon beat meetinl place -a dan· ~ tablapoon >'•••t in1 on your door de· strawberries into the bottle. Pound sugar with with the bops 3 ho1.1ts. yeast dellon-covered mtJtdow. Plnch ot melt.ct In• manding that you close ·....:;.:~.;.;..::.=-.;...;;..:..;;.....;---------.......;;...;;..:..~~~~.;;.z.;;;.;.__.;..----=:.=-..=;;;....~;;.;:;.c.::.....::......;:~~~-"-=:.::;.:_ __________________ __;~:;.;.;;;....:.;;....;..:.:...;:..::....;;:.:.;;:.:;.:;..;..;.;.~~--- YOUr "home-brewery," don't entertain such thou1hts. I checked with 1peclalists at the Food •nd Drug Adminlstra· tion, and the Regulatory Enforcement Bureau of the Treasury pepart· ment. • Executives at both agencies assured me that it now is permissi· ble to prepare su c h wines or beers at home without a permit -if you neither advertise nor sell them. Most wines and beers can .be prepared quick· ly, requiring only over· night or two weeks for aging; one requires six. months. You'll need a wooden cask to make Dandelion Wine, but only bottles for the others. A gooseberry bottle is specified for two. In days of yore, stern chaperones who accom- panied unmarried couples on dates to ob· serve and report every .. . When time js short ••• When time is in short supply, tum to eggs as an easy way to prepare nutritious , satisfying family main dJshes . Eggs can be tr anslormed into a variety or tempting entrees for lunch and supper as well as breakfast. Among the quickest to whip up are skillet scrambles. They lit4:ral· ly take just minutes, and the variety of scrambles is practically limitless because so many fJ>Ods can be combined with eggs. Almost any cheese, herbs, canned, cooked or fresh vegetables, cooked meats and poultry are just a sam· piing ol the possibilities. Adding fresh carrots and mint or tarragon is an unus ual way to create a tasty scramble. Shred the carrots first, then cook them briefly, drain and combine with the eggs. For brunch or lunch, the scramble is delicious served with toasted English muffins and a fresh fruit com· pote. For supper, serve it with fresh, crusty French bread and a leafy tossed salad. FRESH CARROT rot SCRAMBLE 'h cup shredded car· 'Al cup water · ...., teaspoon dried mint or tarragon leaves 4 eggs 14 cup milk 2 teaspoons instant minced onion 14 teaspoon salt 14 teaspoon dry mustard Dash pepper 1 to 2 tablespoons butter Combine carrot, water and mint or tarragon in 8·lncb skillet. Cover and cook over medium heat until carrots are tender, about 5 minutes. Drain thoroughly. Beat together eggs, milk, and seasonings wltb a forll, mixing thoroughly for uniform yellow, or just 1Ughtly for white and yellow atreab. Stir in carrots. Heat butter lo same •klllet over medium heat until Just hot enou1b to slule • drop of water. Pour ill e11 mixture. A1 mixture be1ln1 to set, with • pancake tumer 1ently draw completely acroa1 the bottom ol the pan formi•I lar1e 1oft curdl. Cook unW e10 are thlct•••d tbroqliDUl but IDolat.• Do NOT .l&k eoaltUUY. MaU.llervillp. •u 11 lliUer to nmove ecrambled •aa from pea wbea tier are alilbtly ........ JIHt refalned m:·..., com· pleta tM eoakln1. ~ ...... Quality and ·Value ••• that•s Ralphs! L1mll One Item Per Menutacturen' Coupon and LllNt 3 Double Coupou Pet Cuetomer Coupon lflec:ttft June 4 t1wu June 10, 1H 1 USDA Choice-Beef Chuck Blade cut· Chuck Steak Limit 4 Steaks per customer per lb. • Frozen-New Zealand Leg O Lamb Dubuque-Delicious Ham Patties Pr-11n111 CO\ll>O'I ek>ng wllh eny -Man11leo1u1er1' "C....11-ofl • CO..Pon .,,,1 g .. dou~ Ille U Vl"ijl Wilen Vou pulClleM 1"-lltm N04 to lllClud• ·~ •• ,, .. Of "9'-Y pu1c,,_· OOUpoN or -tilt •-o1 lht lltl!I bCl\IClte llQUO<, '"-M41 IMd mill! p<OCluC II Limit One Item p., Manureotw.n' Coupon and Lindt 3 Double CGUPOM ,., CuttCNMf C~ 1"9ot1Ye June 4 ttwu ,,..... 10, 1M1 USDA Choice-Beef C:huck Blarney Brand-Point C ut Light Chunk-In 0 11 or Water 7-Bone Chuck Steak 29 per lb. 169 18 oz.198 ca1n Corned Beef Star-Kist Tuna Brisket (Flat Cut-1.59 per lb.) per lb. 3 ·9 sw .. tJulcy • 81/2 oz. can• Yellow f ,P~aches 12 oz. Cans ~ PLAINWRA2 Beer 6 pack Ralpha-Chllled-100% Pure Orange Ju,ce Cold Duck-Pink or A d re Champag"e 37 112 gal.129 ctn. 750 ml. btl . 209 Golden Premium-Auorted Flavors 112 9111.19 8 Introducing ~WRIPM a1111m1s .-----"?Mi>------#4';5 RalpJls Ice C~m Ralphs-Blueberry, Corn or Bran Mullins · A..orted Blends Hansen's Juice ctn. 18oz. 69· btl .• save ·Up to 201/o over National Brands :::k .55 c:~n $4.88 Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined Thal Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health Frltet king llgh1s· 14 mg bY flC Method ........ ,....,, .......... FREE Pack of 20 Cigarettes With coupon and p111cll•M of tnt ca1ten of btonded ~"'"'- 11111111 lllTI PUINWRAP. a111m11 1 Limit One Co...,." II'« Cuetel'Mf l cou...., lfltctl ... ,,_ .""""-'°· , ... , ..... __ ,, __ _ L ____ ( ----~ ... I - Orange Coaat OAJLY P1LOT/Wednaday, June 3, 1981 Healing powers among old claims for cordials Potablet known aa or straight, these 11· tpea for Ulese exotic ll· Mtx well wtth tee. Add D RAMBVIE RVST.l' highball clua wttb lee. Drambuie ~ cup or muc cocktail 1Jau <tor a '8 cordials or liqueurs queun are palatable queurs. an ounce of aparkUn1 NAIL Add 1~ ounce Dram· of freshly perked coffee. variation, substitute have 1001 been known to and pleasant. CHERRY COLA soda and serve tn a Half rut a rocks 1lus bule. Fill with your Add c~am or top with Courvoiaier Cocnac for 0l man. Liqueurs may not be 1 ounce Peter lfeer· frosted cooler class. with lee. Add 1 ounce fa v or l t e o al u r a 11 Y whip~ cream. rum >· ' Since they emeraed the Wondrous love in& BLACK RVSSIAN TIA 'N MILK quite accident.ally, from potlona hoped for by Cola ... claims for their t'VM,,,,.,. of 1.-azm· g spr•ad far and wide , but ~Tia Maria 1 Tia Maria t h e a l c b e in l s t ' 1 medieval romanticists Lime r---· uc: " "' vodka 2 milk crucibles lo the Middle but their great versatiU· Add cola to taste and the more discerning found they could create ingenious recipes Serve over lee and stir Serve cold over ice. '· Ages they have been ty, beneficial sweetness add a wedge of lime. that would make one stronger, calmer, gentler and wiser -gently In glus of your DANISH SNOWBALL d heralded as eveeythln1 and dellciou.s taste have Serve in a tall glass with among other things. choice. To mix a White A festive treat with a from love potions to made them not only t.he plenty o/ lce. Russian, add milk and saucy secret ingredient. q cure-alls not to mention mainstays of a well· SVNSmNE SPECIAL shake with lee. Combine a wine glass of 1' their primacy purpose stocked liquor cabinet 1 owtce Peter Heer· RED RUSSIAN Drambuie and 1 ounce sparkling mineral TIA RUMBA P e ter Heerlng wltb ( which ls to delight t.he but a welcome gourmet Ing l part Peter Heering scotch. Stir. water. Stir. Add a wedge ~Tia Marla ·drained dark sweet •c palate. helper as well. 1 ounce orange juice 2 parts vodka SPARKLING DRAM· of lime. ~rum c herries. Pour over a It was in their quest to Here are some addi· 1 ounce lemon juice Serve on t.he rocks in BUIE DaAMBUIE BOSTON Stir genUy. Chill brief· large scoop of vanilla ; obtain gold from base tlonal interestina rec-l teaspoon sugar an old fashlon glass. Part la 11 y ft 11 a Pour 1 '1'i ounces 1 Y and serve in a ice cream. metals and experimen· --------------~--"'---------..;:;_.. ________ .;..._ _______ ~----_;_----------------'' talion witb life · prolonging elixirs that the scientists of their day stumbled upon the secret of making Ii· queurs. Initially, claims for their power o( healine spread far and wide, but the more discerning found that they could create ingenious recipes that would make one stronger , c•lmer, gentler and wiser - among other tb.iJ'lgs. Actually, what are Ii· queura and w)\at are cordials? The t~ms are synonymou~. w'tb the former said to apply more to European products and the latter to American. By either name they are alcoholic beverages pre part j by mixing or r e ·distllling various spirits {brandy, whisky • .rum. gin, etc.) with cer· lain flavoring materials such as fruits, herbs, flowers and berries. There are two main classifications of Ii· queurs -Genetic, which are produced and marketed by most cor· dial makers and include flavored brandies, sloe gin, creme de menthe and cream de cacao; and proprietary liqueurs produced exclusively by one firm from secret formulae. Among the world famous proprietary Ii· queurs are Tia Maria, made from mountain grown coffee beans, Drambuie, a secret blend rA Scotch whisky, heather hooey and herbs, and Peter ·Heer· ing, produced from the rich Da.msb cherry and other ingredients. The popularity of li· queurs has dramatically increased in recent years . The liquo,r cabinet has taken on ~ oew dimension for the lady of the house as sh~ bas learned to borrow from it to add exotic flavor and depth to her meats, appetizers, en· trees, fish dishes, soups, gr a vies and desserts. Traditional standbys such as Drambuie, Peter Heering and Tia Maria can enrich any meal. An hor d'oeuvre tray can serve celery filled with Peter Heering flavored cream cheese. A main dish of Tia Marla Ham steaks is absolutely delicious. And what helter climax to a beautiful meal than by flambeing a dessert of fruit, ice cream or cake with Drambuie? All the hostess has to do is warm the liqueur, warm the pouring utensil and light with a taper. Tia Maria and coffee adds a grande fmaie to any meal and is easy to prepare. 'Just pour two ounces of the Jiqueur in· t<l hot black coffee and top with wblpped..cream. More and more persons are turning to li· queurs at cocktail time where Drambuie, Tia Maria and Peter Heer· Jng provide an air of elegance. On the rocks a !"OSCAR MAYER 159 i~!!ETY P~2~,~~ Square or Round BLADE CUT 88 ~l!.SK ROASTLA. GROUND BEEF 3 99 PATTIES Fn>ren. 15 PlttleS Hblag DOes Not Exeeed 3°" Fat BONELESS 178 !C?u~~.!TEAK lb CHRIS & PITTS BBO SAUCE Regular or HICllCM'V. n oz 1tt1 .99:n. ! DEL MONTE 89 CATSUP noz.1rte Eveqjdag IOu1 price.s I p ur storewide low prices will reduce your total week ly food bill. f l'f'e+marfred uems . ~ dlM:oiintetl . Lwlty'I Oiecoant Priciq ,.lie)' apph to II lletftl I•"' teort. nftl thaw lhet •R pre-marked ~ Uw 1NnUfatu1rer. Onct1n1 caictt. rM,iliMa. ,..., ... , •M ochf'r Pff- trinll -. are euteMaticaly diKcM.tnted •• IM ehecba.and. So JOU tofltl"uc to take home IMocr prkcs owralll !"CELESTE 117 & 2~UXE Pl~""~ CROSS RIB ROAST .. 197 Boneless 90nolcl Beef Chuck LADY LEE 12s SLICED BACf;>!4""~ RIB EYE STEAK Sc>enc•. IOntlfts llOnOed Beef .. 298 ANDRE CHAMPACNE RtQIMr, Pink or Cold Dua. 750 ... ltt !VIVAPAPER 63 TOWELS Decorltld. AstOrteO or ~ ISSF1tole f"VELVEETA 286 0 £~!.~SE nouow I PUREX LIQUID 63 BLEACH Glllt1.. . Single price policy lnstetd of confusina you wi&h multiple, pricina. our sinale Item pricina policy 1imply assures you the same price per item as the shopptr who buy1 more of that samc itcm . e I I • !CHICKEN OF -159 THE SEATYNA Chui* Light Mnt. a. 12v. 0z.. can or Water Pact f"CRISCO 209 i VEGETABLE 4~!~u CROUND BEEF 5 LA Pt~ or More Doll Not EXCl«I 50'6 Fat • TOP SIRLOIN STEAK llOneilsS londld 8"f I.Din BONELESS TIP STEAK londlCI '"' Round COLDEN NECTARINES YELLOW PEACHES L9'gt. OrdllrCI Swtet, IA .49:na u97 PORK SHOULDER98 ROAST Ptcnlc Style U> e ~'P The larger size ls always the better buy. We guarantee the larger size of any canned. b ottled or packaged item to ~198 be the better buy. Even when we lower the price of a smaller-sized item \i° reflect a manufacturers' allow nee. we automatically reduce the larger size, too. DELICIOUS WHOLE PLUMS WATERMELON ~"'·~lb A9<1. Ripe. lCut. 12 Lbi Lb -.69:-.. 10 :n~ LAROE HONEYDEW APRICOTS MELONS ~Ind SWMC. Lb. wonderfUI llttng. lb .69~ .39r- I h ~: .. '· I :J , • l OI Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednttday, June 3, 1981 Diet diary aids weight-loss by noting calories 8y8ARBARAGIBBONS value of keepln1 a diet 11 a ~-ounce). II the product that's nutrl-items are needlessly ln -television set? Are you The 1lncle mo1t diary. caloriecountiaknownor s•·1M GOURMET tlonally labeled, use ~he rlating your calorie ln· drinklo& half your sandwich "•lead of bolOIJla? helpful tool tor lniUat.ing, a v a 1 lab le on t be la manufacturer's lnforma-take. Are you consuming calories ... in the form contlnuin& or resumlnt -WRITE down not on-packafe, list the calories tlon for that particular more bread or butter of beer or soda? Are ln-Whot'• 11our "Calort•· weight 1061 ls the dlet ly the rood, but alao the as wel . -IC you can't find brand, even lf it dis-than you should? Are gredients like salad Quotient?" Do 11ou ltrw>w diary, an on1oln1 dally amount, and be u ac-Make an appoint· calorie information on 8 agrees with standard re-your meat portions too dresslng, cooking oil or how mG1lJI ccloriea 0 daJI record of every Item of curate as possible. Don't ment with yourseU every _,articular food , avoid ferences. large? Could you trim shortening need,lessly 11ou con eot to arrive ot tM food eaten, its calorie 1uess. Use measurln& day to sit down and look eating it unUI you can -Al the end of the day, calories painlessly by fahenine up your cook· we1ght JIOC.I want tot.? Send count and the end-of-the· spoons and cups or weigh up the calorie lnforma· find accurate inform a· add up yo~ calorie in-eliminating the sugar in ing? Are you surprised a atomped, aelf.addre,.ed day tally. the Item. Check packa1· llon you need to com· Uon. lake. your coffee -or coffee a.t the differ,enc.e. e11wlope cmd 50 cmt• to Keeping a diet diary lng for helpCUl informa· plete your record. You -When references dis- -Review your eating breaks? between french fries and s i I M c o u R ME T can help you lose 10 lion (if a ~-poun d may need to use more ~~::b'er.use the higher and cooking habits for Do you consume an in· baked potatoes? How RECIPES FOR SLIM· pounds or 100. It also can packaae of cheese con· than one reference to calorie leakage. Ask ordinate a mount of many calories could you MI NG , P .O. Boz U4, move you off a diet tains l6 slices,eachsllce flndthecountsyouneed. -IFVOUhaveeatena yourself what item or calories in front of the save by eating a ham Sparta,N.J.07171 . plateeu or short-circuit .~;;.;.;.;..-----------------=---------------------------------------""-----_.;..-------- creeping wei&hl galn. As a weigbt·loss aid, a diet diary ml&bt be even more important than a diet. A diet tells you what you should eat while the diary tells you what you did eat and where you went wrong. Here's bow a diet dlary helps you get -or slay -slim: It makes you con- scious of quantities. It eliminates or minimizes nibbling and snacking. It leads you to make less.fattening choices. Most important, it forces you to educate yourself on the calorie content of all your favorite foods . This education proceeds at a manageable pace. You don't waste time learn- ing about obscure or un- familiar foods, only those that are part of your menu. You absorb this information as you need it, a few facts at a time. As a diet diarist, , you never have to give up a favorite food entire- ly. Losing weight the diet diary way puts Y.OU in control. HOW TO KEEP A DIET DIARY -The equipment you'll need includes a notebook, food or postal YOU MWAYS SAVEi ..... PRICll ffflC 7-FUU DAYS JUllE 4--to ttlt LlnLl JUAN 1t-Ol au••ITOS STATER IAOl. lllCfO •OZ LU-HMIATS HO,,Y ·~ POUNOIRS 1 .. 0Z ••AllKS HORMll1.0Z WllAlleLl•S HOMtlL ~ 1.Alll I.OZ a&.ICID•ACH --------...... ~ iJlllf(( Of \11\AI tro ' 'J"' LI t •O"" •' • r.1~llA.,,t(l.O t0 tr~tA!\f f(N ~ •OU-. ¥C)Ht\' .,,, 11 •t <i.ttM'\l"l.Lf •11..,...f,ICh u59c IA ••• IA• 17• u•1•• IA., .. WITll ITATIR IROI. llJll.lOW /llllUI/ KRUSE 8ACON •••• LB 49c IUF IU.Df CUl •11• CHUCKSTIAK LI IU,IOflllN •17• •OU•DSTIAK LI Hlf LAROE ENO ., .. •t•SDAK LI IU' M>llND IOfllUU ll•2•• TlltSftAIC IHF Ll •2•• CU•ISftAK llmOIHU IHF CHUCK ROAST •ou ...... ALEX ....-g • ..., .. _..,,., COLI SLAW . LI 39c ll • 12• HU CHUCK • 1 •• 7·•••••0AST LI .. ALU CLAllEMONT •• C SALAD .L1 IEEF LAROE [NO • • •••• ••••OAST ~ SI.ICED TO ORDER • 1 39 PAST•AMI LI HU AOIJND IOHE IN • • • •UMP •OAST LI I lllCHS SLICED TO OllDEA Lil • 1 59 TU•KIY .. IAST IEEF CHUC« IOflfLES.S • 1 •• SHOULD•• •OAST LI FllEa.1 CUI LONOHOAN Lil• 1 •• CHllSI sw1n1 IROW)I & HllVE I oz u 'I" lllCHS 1• OZ OllOUND EA• 13 • SA USA el TU•KIY AOAR 12.0Z EA • 12• lllCHS Ll'2" HAMltATTllS TU•KIYHA.M STATlll lllOS COflNfD IU,. •••• RICHS TUllKEV L.•22• ••ISKIT LI ltAST•AMI H~" 11.()Z EA • 12• lllCHSllO •2•• a&.ICID•ACO• TU•KIY aalAST LI lflf IONELllS ll'I" RICHS 11£0 •2•• STIWMIAT TUllKIY .. IAST ll scale, measuring cups Ti~====:!!!!'lllli.. and spoons and several II reliable calorie guides. A calculator speeds the math involved. -Choose a notebook small fnough to fit in pocket or purse so it's always with you. Don't attempt to keep your re- cords on slips of paper that you might lose. Keeping the notebook with you means that you can keep your record up- to-lhe-minute, and will be able to refer to calorie counts you have already looked up. -Make a pledge to write down every bit of food you eat, as soon as it's eaten ... every last crumb, nibble, sip and bite. If a single grape or jellybean isn't worth writing down, don't eat it! That's one of the Angel food teams with toffee The delicious flavor of that favorite English confection -toffee - and the wonderful light- ness of that truly American cake -angel food -team up in a refreshing frozen dessert, Angel Toffee Dessert. The cake, made from white angel food cake mix, is tom into pieces and tossed with a mlx- t u re of cr ushed chocolate-covered toffee candy and whipped cream. Press the mix- ture into a baking pan, sprinkle wlth more crush ed candy and freeze for a deliciously cool ending to a spring meal. ANGEL TOFFEE DESSERT 1 package ( 15 or 16 ounces> white angel food cake mix 6 bars < % ounce each) chocolate-covered toffee candy 2 cups chtlled whip- ping cream \4 cup suaar Bake and cool cake as directed on package. Refrigerate candy bars until chilled. Tear cake into about 1-inch plecet. Crush or finely cho.R candy bars; re1erve Y.a cup. Beat whippln1 cream and sugar in chilled bowl until sUff; fold in remttinina cruabed candy. Mix cake p1ecea and whipped cream mixture. Preas mixture LllbtJy In uncreased rectaa1u9ar pan1 13xtx2 inch•, wttb bacs ol spoon~ ,...... •ltb rnerved cnaahed cendy. Freeae until flrm. abOUt l~ •un. Ji'reeae any remalnbaf d•aert. About II HrV· tnp. • f I All VEOETA8LE I CRISCO OIL ... I INSTANT I-OZ AT 12.58 OR llESTEA ........ 41-0Z $227 .2·0Z • 1 •• • REGULAR COFFEE $7 70 w YUBAll : . . .. . ......... 41-0Z I iisiliscliio1cE ~oz s473 tiiiilfs ............... . .. 1·ROLL78C I SEMI SWEET •20• •STU MORSELS.12.oz I iif Z CRACKERS 1~z $1 13 I STATER BROS. SLICED WRAPPED •16. CHEESE FOOD . . . .. 12.oz I BANANA, CH,OLATE OR LEMON CREAM •• c . MOR 011 PIES ..... 14-0Z NESTLE BUTTE PllCOTCH MORSELS l 12oz• 1 •a TOOOl.ER OtAPEAI PAMPERS • .. ~T •7•• • CHOCll F\lll OF HUTS AU METHOO Gllll!O All-OZ 'I 23 OR COFFEE ··~z•2 1 • QI.AU CLEANER Rl!Fll.l 64.0Z Al 11~ C!_I\ GLASS PLUS •32-0199• BtER Ir WINE SPECIALS OtSINFECTANT ClEA'i!'A PINE POWER .• •227 .iooz I AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES EXCEPT LOMA LJNO~ MIWI .................. _ ...................... 2.oz 11.78 ILlllDEI ~}IW~~:~~·~~ ............... ·' ~ 12.71 ..... , ~flll~~ ........................... ,k 11.28 STATER BROS CLEANER KLEEN KING ~a":J~TAINLEIS PAllTY SHIELDS CAREFREE MAXI SHIELDS SURU NA!URAL I HI C DRllf MIX H 4'R STATER BROS DIP JfJ'z!f~ tt O-Ol~ CHEESE NIPS Ct.~~ I ·~oz age DOD DAD SNACKS NA11sco f •oz 93c NABISCO OREOS ~~.:E ·~z $1.57 DOUBLE STUFF OREOS NAllSCOl~Ol$1.34 I SEVEN s~~UH GOOOESS DRESSllM' IUTTEAMll.K RECIPE 01'1 "9 CREAMY IACON aoz 79c ORANGE JUICE Vll4' PAK -&4-0l $1.83 REDDI WHIP TOPPING "~" 97~ $1.09 MARGARINE :~RIAl - STATER BROS DIP "~~=~ 9 ~oz 56c OCEAN SPRAY Jt~:£'"~ I .. Ol 5117 LEMON JUICE VllAPW I KING COLA REOORSLIM t ll120l $1.29 O&C ONIONS ~(~~,R•EO I CATSUP K~RHS I ::~~58:~~~~, R!OPK s7 .89 GRAVY MIX :~~s m.oz31r CHILI W/ BEANS J~~~~v· ,~z &r •t~z 65'·. GROCERS CHOICE l~~ SH•~· COFFEE MAlflfll IUfolO l'IOUUlfl ."'W$;>:.W&,.'.<««<>'"*'::;_::«>'.'-*>:"',:(:0W.·~:::(.('.':~?,';;:<,'>.z,.,,;;f•qx ->::.>>SS9{(>;;., ......... ~~-... ..... yJ0~7,; .;<>;, • .-u ••.• r.-::,u.;-;.; ..... .r~:.~~ tLES APRICOTS ·~ WASHI 0 Rio ;i-IC•OUS l 6AllOE9'""'c""' I ll ~ ECIARINES I ~--r-.. TM F,,,_CY l.AAOE SWEET ft ··~ PREMIUM OUAUTY HOUSE Pl.ANT BROMELIADE Cllf STE ClllSE rtm llllCFOID WlflTE llWI ._FOii ml WllAT REM • &G·•• WEflllSEllVl llitflllOHllO LIMIT 0111 R&FUSF IAllS TO tOMMlllCIAL l>tAlllll Ofl HOlUAUllS I .... s2.48 I , "s1.69 I , . ,u87' I ·~·· s2.09 I Sl.07 I I ~~ 99' .. o• sl.73 I • Mailbox to mailbox Manufacturers tell why refunds take so long By MARTIN SLOANE "Why does lt take so long for me to receive my refunds?" This is a question that refunders ask again and again. So, I decided to get the answer straight from the fulfillment houses. "A consumer's refund request usually takes about a week lo reach us," said an ex· ecutive of one of the major fulfillment houses. "After we receive it, we try to have the refund in the mail within three weeks. "We often do it faster, but sometimes • wh en materials su pplied by the manufacturer (such as coupons) don't arrive on time. everything has to be held up until they are received. "CONSUMERS should also realize that when we mail a refund third class, it may take two or three more weeks before 1t ar- rives. ln a recent mailing, we found that it took as long as 44 days for our envelopes to get to certaifl parts of the country.'' If my addition is correct, this sounds like a fulfillment time of at least seven weeks from mailbox to mailbox. How long should you wait before com- plaining about a refund that has not been re- ceived? Most of the fulfillment-house representatives advise wailing JO weeks before firing off your complaint letter. "WHO DECIDES whether or not my re- fund request should be rejected?" This is another question that is asked fre- quently, usually with a trace of suspicion Many refunders think that their refund re- quests are rejected because of the speed with which they must be processed. One of the fulfillment-house spokesmen explained the rejection procedure: "When the worker who initially checks a refund re- quest finds that it does not meet the manufacturer's requirements. it is designat- ed as a ·non-compliance' request and sent for a second check to our non·compliance depart- ment. "Since we don't mark the envelopes with the reason they were initially rejected, our non-compliance people must take a fresh look at each refund request and decide for themselves whether or not it should be reject· ed. We believe that this procedure ensures that rejections are handled with proper care." I recently received this letter from an en- terprising reader: DEAR SUPERMARKET SHOPPER - Some or tbe s mall _groceries in my area don't accept coupons. They say that it would be too much of a bother to send in the few coupons that people ask them to take. I was wondering whether I could start a coupon clearinghouse to help these grocers process their coupons. -Margo S. from Memphis, Tenn. DEAR MARGO -About 80 retail coupon clearinghouses have been certified by the major manufacturers to process their coupons for retailers. It is difficult to obtain this certification beca.u_se manufacturers want to ensure that clearinghouses will not become involved in the misredemption of their coupons. BEFORE ybu could be certifi ed, the manufacturers would ask you for financial s tatements. They would also want to inspect you r "facility" and your computer to be sure that your organization could do the job properly. Unfortunately. this kind of business can no longer be started at the kitchen table with a pocket calculator. REFUND OF THE DAY Write to the following address to obtain the form required by this $1.25 offer from Johnson and Johnson: First Aid Kit Offer, P 0 . Box 14813. Baltimore. Md. 21268. Send for this form by Oct l, 1981 -------------------------------------· CLIP 'N' FILE REFUNDS _ .. ~. ~• Send the requl.W refYnd form, the 1-1 POr11oni Cllp out 1111• ttle and kHP II wllll slmller c-.df contelnlnt.lh• "Poppln Fre"'" symt>ol f nd coupcNIS --•91' niund often wllll --'Piiis-• neme lrOfl\ lour IO-bi1<11lt <M S ol couPOn•. for .... mple Siert collec:tlno the -Pillsbury '9<mllk cw Country Style Blaclliu -proola Of pur<lwll• while 100llln9 lor Ille req.,lncl r• IM Uni,...... Product Code lrom one 1»Clul9t of fund '°'""'et the wper!Nlrkel, In ,...._. -Perkey Mar911rlne querte1'. E•plrH Aug. JI, IMl1. m•oezlnn, -wl'teft tre<llno wllll lrlendL Offen THE l>ILLSllURY CO. Receive a JI refund 5"nd m•y not lie av•lleble In •II er"• of IN cOl.Wllrv. Al-Ille Required refund form, -llo,.....nd-w~n low 10 ...-. to recel,,. eacll refv(>d symbol with ""' welpl Uatement lrom Kreft Tiie l•ll••l•f. ellers are wertll • let.I et Natur•I 5'\Mp °" New Yont E111r• ~ C-r JU.ts. T1'ls _.a lbtiloll ,....,.. JD.II i. -,. Cllffw. OM IMlel from any Oscar Meyer -l~s rK f11IHI Mten. a .. 1 Fr-• - -label from an •-• can (Of JOHHSTON'S·REOOl·WHI P Refund Oller. lwo l•llela from 4-0llnce <an•I Of Plllabury Cretcent Receive• Jl refund. Send""' required relund form, Rolls. E•l>lret S.pt. 30, 1,.1. Ille lo<k tab lrom •nY Reddl·Wlllp ToPPf"ll -the ROYAL OE.SSERTS -Of Veluet Recipe lloolt. Universal ProOu<t Code lrom the llectl P"N4 ot ten-Receive • rec..,_ -with ~.'5 -rtll ol <- SIH J-·· R-y.C.~L Explrn Qec: JI, '"' and refunds. 5"nd ""' r~l.W relund lwm, -'9111 OLO LOHOON Mellle R-.cta •fld (r_,. 0... Roy•I ~ Pk"-9e-tl contalnt"O UnlWf'sat Refund Offff. Receive• ll refUfld. 5"nd the reqwlred Proct11<t C... and U cent• lcw postaoe -..-1. refund form, two -taps lrOfl\ •ny comblMdOft of lno. E•plnt1 Oct. 31, 1•1. llevora Of Old Lonclotl Melbll Rounds - -I-SWISS MISS PUOOING JI CM/I Refwncl Offer. 1'C:,~~p:;l=--F:::~'1~ Mufflr. JI i~~I"':.~ ~I~;:::: ~=~vSw~ Ofter. Recelw •JI rotund. 5-ftd lN reqult'9CI .-.flllld Miu PllCllllfte PK"-9es. Eiqojres AYO-JI.'"'· form Md Ille P«ka91flap 11111119 lnored-b from WASA. Reulw a SI refund 5"nd tftlt required r• tour P•<k•OH ol a'1.y Pep,..rldte '•rm Old flUICI fot'f!I -.,. net--lpt '"'"'menb f""'" •ny Feth I-""'HIM. E.11plres Merell II. 19':1. lhrff paclleQH of Waw CrltP BrHCI. E•plres OK. PILLSBUAY·PAllKAY. Receive $1 In ,_._ JI, 1 .. 1. _____________________________________ J ff~ ~ 'The Pavroll l'savirigs Plan • is one of the easiest. <1afest '' U) s to jfc;t Marted on the 1111\ ing hubit. E\en if so' ing has aJ" U} !> 'lCemcd • t'"' difficult in past seasons. A little is automaticall} tuken out of each po) check tu\\ ard the purdms.: nf l ·.s. Sa' ings Hond~. \i1u'll :· nc,er miss it. so )ou'll nc,er spend it. It just 1.cer' gro,, mg for-8C1me cominjl spring. or mar~ u "urm 'ucutiott during u cold " inkr. It's 11 Jllan for all kusons. For ull Seafood Market Sea Bass SJ95 SUNDAY SPECIAL "'-TM Pedfk Morttt-.t W. llM FrmH*t S59i JUNE 7 ONLY From Ow WiM C.._.. Calamalone S2H Callaway Chenil Blanc r ..... Ub......_ Wiie Of ne Mindi 1979 s499 14450 "D" Culnr 9-6 1 Days HeritO«Je Pl~"ln. 552-3442 __ __, ___ ,. .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 Cool off uith .buttermilk drinks Warm weather ac- 'tivltiea call for coollna, tbirat.quenchlng drinks . Buttermilk Coolers and No11 satisfy th.is need while addtnc wholesome, economical nutrition. Lower in calories and cost than re•ular milk~ cultured buttermilk supplies needed calcium, protein and rtbofiavin. Strawberry Friu and Banana Blitz are easy to whirl up for quick breakfasts or fast ener1y boosters anytime on a warm summer day. Keef buttermilk c hit ed in the relrtgerat.or -on the re- ady -along with jukes and fresh summer fruits so each family member can concoct a favorite combin4tion in a jiffy. Buttermilk as a tasty and refreshing drink goes back many cen- turies. having evolved from butter making. However, today's but- termilk is made by bac- terial action which de- velops lactic acid. FRUITY COOLERS Blend equal parts of buttermilk and orange, pineapple, apricot or ap- ple juice. VEGGIE COOLERS Blend equal parts of buttermilk and tomato or vegetable juice coc ktail. Season with Worchestershire sauce, hot pepper sauce, salt and pepper. Di ced cucumber, carrot, green pepper or onion may be added for extra nutrition and variety. STRAWBERRY FRIZZ 2 cups buttermilk 1 package < 10 Strawberry Frizz or Banana Blitz make pleasant summer party drinks. o unc es) froz en strawberries, partially thawed 2 tablespoons orange juice concentrate 2 eggs Whirl in blender until smooth. Makes 2 to a servings. BANANA BLITZ l 1'°Z cups buttermilk 2 eggs l banana 2 tablespoons honey 1 tablespoon wheat germ Whirl in blender until smooth. • t ~ c 1981 Thi Pfocler & ~ CompMy ------------------------------IMJ02SC I I I I I I I I •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 THE f'r\MILl' CIBCt:8 by Bil Keane BIG GEORGE t f r by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Is it easier now, Daddy? I moved the stick to "Well , It's not the ol' suspension bridge I remem· 'P' for 'Push!' " berl" by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum ' ~ .. ..;. ·~· .~ C'·) e•·-,-·.,._.., ~ "The city dump wants you to put everything back In one big heap again!" 1 @ ._ ~ "Aw, Joey, It cant hurt THAT much. It's called a SOFTBALL! Jl'DGE PARKER IB•~EllmliiJi1rfHruWM~iMfl JAOON, I WANT 10 ~k )OU A . GARt'IELD JIM~~ ~3 '900N MI: LLI NH °™E ONE AND LY,~F. BU~ .. 'ti QUE5T10N AeovT ~' YOU WEi;:l Hl5 A&e-15'TMll .' YOU t\NEW HIM A~ WEL.L A~ AN'l'ONE ! 00 "l'lW THl lllK HI~ C'EATH WAp ACCIOEN'TAL ? by Jim Davis UNLESS IT'S 6£1Nei GIVEN TO SOMEONE. EL.C:,E by Ferd & Tom Johnson SUMM~R ri Fl<&l.JRES oN f!f-l~P<i~Y I BiLL,100. I ----~ ~~,, i ~r l PEANt:TS Ml.AM.~ CARDS WILL 8E COMIN6 OUT THIS FRJD;W, Rl6MT? Tl' MBLE" EEDS :\.\'.\(',. AUNT FRITZ!-·· MAY 1 USE SOME OF YOUR BEAUTY MUD? GORDO 15 -rnERE ANVTMIN6 I M16MT DO TO 6ET A SETTER GRADE ? ! - l NANCY···HOW IS YOUR FACE COMING A LONG? ....------~ A TMOUSAND WC>iD ESSA\' ON HERMAN MELVILLE? SCRIJJt.E S(.~f~L..E !ltlUHLE by Charles M. Schulz WEU. AcTUAu.'r'; Wl-IAT I l-IA17 IN MIND WAS MA'Y8E EMPTVIN6 A FEW WA5TEBASKET5 ... by Tom K. Ryan l 51"~MPJ:P~ ~!_~ i;5CAllG01' "'"" • I by Ernie Bushm11ter IT1S MY SHAPE THAT COULD USE SOME IMPROVEMENT by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk Fill in the correct answer: Iam ___ _ A. sbe BRABBLE 'fo 1'ME M0S"1'Al ~&OT I A 9" ~'"'-Ot4 M'I NOSt ! IUN£.ttr 'fOO "~~o °" SOO'f" AtM~~.i ICIU.tft &t£S ~ OR.SMOCK 1·3 B. her C. sick and tired of these stupid grammar t.ests ! by Kevin Fagan SOU1'~ ~ICAN -CtU.E~ eEf,$ '? MA\ "A\ ~1'~1(1<, t\:>N'1' 6£ ~ILL ... I llA ! \IA\ !IA! 00'1' ~ W.A6tAA'flON 1. 'full IW\.4! 1(1Ll.ER SEES ... 50 WHA-reveR e>ESCAMES OF PRO Fess IONAL, P8CORUM, GANG?/ by George Lemont '/OU HAVE lfiE. T IME TO MAKE FRIEND&. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. June 3, 1981 ~·· God ·bless you, Herman, wherever you are I am stck of bearing there an no more heroes or heroines left in thil world. They're here all riaht. We Just never take the time to acknowledge and to appreciate them. There isn't a day coes by that I don't kneel In my kitchen and cive thanks to those courageous men and women of vision wbo have provided me with better living lhrouah push buttons. Thank you, Marie Engle Penninaton, who plon~ research that later contributed to frozen foods. God bless you, Eleanor Roosevelt, who publicly stated that she never gave more than 15 minut.es a day to keeplng house. · Yang to introduce his latest. deSign Textile designer Jay Yang will introduce his latest design for WamsuUa from 1to2 p.m. June 8 at Robinson's Fashion Island store. Yang is known for his fabric desiens whicb are traditional and yet are updated through use of col· or1tnd proportion. His newest design, called Ming, includes sheets, pillow cases, dust ruffles, shams and com· forters produced in a subtle array of delicate Oorals to capture the flavor of the East. Yang's other designs include Growing Pop· pies. a bright cluster of orange and yellow poppies on a white background; Colefax, a flowery garden of blue, yellow, pink and green on a white-back- ground, and Imperial Flowers in peach &JJd ireen wltb an ecru background, reflect the beauty and To Inca Marshall 1oe1 our undying gratitude for being the fint mother to diacover that if you took the bean out of a wblaUe, the child could no longer blow lt In your ear and make you sterile. OW' thanks to Ma Bell, who baa brou1ht families together through a common sharinc of "FINAL NOTICE OF PAYMENT BEFORE YOUR PHONE.JS DISCONNECTED." Let us not overlook Letitia Armstron1, who :i':'n~.ony that have become hallmarks of his de-J A y y ANG ... Introduce• daign Texas Tech alumni to meet· , . TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY ex-students meets for party Saturday in the home of Vicki and Gene CLUB CALENDAR MiUer in Huntington Beach. For more information call 968-7877. LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMEN'S Club meets Friday at 11 :4S a.m. in Republic Federal Savings and Loan, 30212 Cro.wn Valley Partway, Laguna Niguel. For more information call 4~. LAGUNA B~ACH BRANCH of the American M · sociation of University Women meets Saturday in CJubhouse 5 of Leisure World, at ll:30 a.m. For more information call 951·72a>. Corona del Mar, at 1 p.m. For more information call 997-3555. LA WYEa•s WIVES of Orange County meets Mon· day at 11:30 a.m. in the Saddleback Inn of Santa Ana. For more information call 533-1820. GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY of Callfornta. Oranie County Chapter, meets Saturday at 10 a .m . 1n the Huntington Beach Library, 7lll Talbert Ave., Hun- tington Beach. For more intormaUon call 541·2049. ORANGE COUNTY WEST Chapter or ORT meets Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in t.be Jewish Federation Council headquarters, 12181 Buaro St., Garden Grove. For more information call 894·5S08. ECKANKAR: A Way of I.Jfe meets Monday at 7:30 p.m. In Allstate Savtn1s and Loan, 1 Corporate UCLA IAW ALUMNI Association meets at 11 :•5 Plaza Drive, Newport Beach. For more lnforma· · a.m. Tuesday in the Newport Marriott Hotel. For lion call 5'7-9734. more lnforma,lion call (213) 825-70(9. O&ANGE COUNTY Trojan Club meets Sunday at IRVINE TOASTMISTRESS CLUB meets at 11 :30 1 p.m . in the Llnda Isle Clubhouse. For more in-a.m. Monday in Little Joe's Restaurant in formation call 830·3158. Newport Beach. For more information call 960.2087, l&VINE CBAPTE& or the 'American Bualneas Women's A.ssoeiaUoa meeta Tudday for Bou SOUTH COAST AUDUBON SOCIETY meets al Night at the Newport Marriott Hotel. For more in· 6:tt<l p.m. Thursday, in the Ole Hanson Room of the formation call 6'2-8637. San Clemente Community Clubhouse. For more in· formation call 496·6886. POUSB NATIONAL ~CE of Orante Coun· ty meeta for Polish Festival Sonday at noon at the OBANGE COUNTY HERB Society meets Sunday Alpine Village in Torrance. For more lnlormalion in Sherman Gardens, 2619 E. Coast Highway, call 974-1184. Pen wo01en set writing OOnfere~ Art Seidenbaum, boot review editor of the Los Angeles Times, will be the principal speaker for the fourth biennial lwo·day writers' conlerence sponsored by the Laguna Beach Branch of American Pen Women. Seidenbaum will speak on "What's Wronc with the Word?" at the Friday eveniq prolJ'am, June 26, at the Neighborhood Congregational Church in L,guna Beach at 7:30. MENSA 10Ciety to meet Orange County MENSA, the high IQ society, wW meet June 18, in the Qty of Orange ~ublic Library, 101 N. Center St., at 8 p.m. The spealcer will be Richard Forrester Ill, of tbe Fluor Corp., who will discuss synthetic fuels. Admission lo the meeting ls Sl.50. For more in· formation call 978-6882. The Friday evening p.qnm will follow a day of talb and \vorlclbops coadueted by authorities in t.be writing and publisbln& world. All sessions are open to tbe public, and information may be ob· taiDed from tbe &>@ women's local President, Marperite Atche90ll, pbone 499-2418. Joeepb Bell, writer and professor at UCI, will initiate tbe conference Friday morning at ·9 o'clock. Bell, whose work bas appeared lo Good Housekeeping, Reader's Dl1eat and Saturday Review, will discuss and conduct a queation- answer period on article writing. The second Friday mornin1 seaalon will feature a panel of publishers, editors, aeenta, and pboto-journallst.s On a panel dlscuuioo, followed by a question-answer period. The two main afternoon aesai<lm will be pven bI novelist Joan Taylor, wboee novel .. A.sldnt For It'' bu beeD lold for a televia.lan JQOTSe and to a torched a llJ'dld factory in 1962 and b belnl con· sldered for canonisation. Ab, bow IOOD you for a et the leaenda who brou1bt us self·cleanin1 ovens, balr colorin1, electric broema, the overblou.se and twin bed.I. When we tired of pu.sblnt the iron back and forth, we raorted to 1trate1Y and cunnin1. ''Are you 1oln1 to take your coat off today?" Or • 'Giv• me a break. Roll up your sleeves Ju.at tbls once!" But the man I would like to honor today la Herman Goldstein, a chemist wtth Sun Chemical Company in South Can>lina who, ln 1962, made a breakthrough that waa to cban1e the lives of women everywhere . . . when be discovered a formula for permanent preu. Then came Mr. Goldstein and It wu &ood· , bye at.eam iron. Goodbye scorch markl. Good· bye pleated skirt bllndoeu. Goodbye mildew and laundry stored 1n the .retriaerator. Goodbye brown Lroninl cloths. We were free at lut. You all remember wrinkles. They were handed down from ceneratioo to 1eneraUon like a recipe for Apple Brown Betty. Every Monday every woman ln America washed and every Tuesday abe ironed. And Wednesday. And Thursday. And Friday. I think we should erect a &iant ironing board memorial to Mr. Goldstein where every June 3, women would make a pilcrtma1e and place a cold iron on It, markin1 the day we real· ly became liberated. I have said this to only one man before ln my life. I love you, Herman Goldstein. She has no place to run DEAR ANN: I've been running away from home since I waa 13. I am 17 now and a junior ln high school with an 85 average. I've got something to say about the iov· ernment-sponsored programs for kids like me. They stink. I have gone to child-abuse counselort and runaway crash pads. I've tried to call the runaway hotline and other switchboards that are supposed to help. They are always busy. It seems everywhere I go people tum their backs on me. I am not wanted at home and have been told lo clear out for good. Al 13 I got raped and had no one to talk to. I've tr:ied lo commit suicide twice because I find no reason to live. Right now I'm sleeping on roofs, in subways -any place that looks safe. Please tell parents to give their kids some love and understanding. I only wish I had had it. - LONELY AND UNLOVED Dear Friend: You've llad a very rou1h time and I 'm aor/y for yoa, but sympathy won't do you any good. Please read the advice la the ae:st letter. U yoa are aertou aboat setting help, It'• U.ere for yoa. Bat you mut want to get your act together badJy enouch to work at It. It's easy to blame U.e goveromeat, society and your pareata. Bow about acceptlq some reaponalbWty for yoaraell! DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please elaborate on your frequent answer, "There are excellent counseling facilities in your area." Tell us. step by s tep, how to begin. Does one flip through the yellow pages as if looking for a piece of merchan· dise and hope to get a good one? Does one dial the phone and ask the receptionist. "Whal do you charge to save a marriage?" If I were looking for a plumber or a decorator or an accountant, I would ask my friends or call the Beller Business Bureau. But I can't say to a neighbor, "By the way, my marriage is lousy. Do you know a good therapist?" I can't imagine ap· proachinc a stranger. It would be too humiliating. Our minister is a cold fish. Our doctor is im- personal. Our friends th.ink we have a beautiful marriage. Yet, every day, I die a little and I don't know where to tum. . The knowledge that we need help and aeWna it are two different things. I suspect a lot or your readers would also like to know bow to close that gap. -A REGULAR READER Dear Reader: You CAN'T be a .. re1alar." I have virtually beat tlUa sabjed to death. Maybe your paper ls cuttl•t my colama. Repeatedly I have advbed: LOOK IN YOU& PHONE BOOK UNDER MENTAL HEALTH AND 111 lAlllRI COUNSEUNG. Aho, the Salvation Army and tlae Family Service Assa. ID some cities the CaU.oUc Cbarttlel, the Jewish Federadoa, the LaU.erH Family Service and tbe YMCA have excelleat co11ase:Uq aenlees. I have prta&ed U.e addresses of the American Paycblatrlc Ann. aad the Amertcae Psycbologlcal Aun. ••merou tlmea. <Your llbrary baa the m.) I have uged readers t.e talk to their clergymen. U yoms ls "a cold ft.U," 10 to aaotaer one. I have aa11est.ed nmeroa• sell· help P'OllPI that do a remarkable job for people who need to talk ab9ut their troubles. Help Ls available for people wbo wut It. I ••· peel your major problem ls, ''What will Uae neighbors &hlak?" BelJeve me, the ael1hbora couldn't care less, dearte. Thee u a bag di/!eTence bdween cold and coot. Arm Landen $/Iowa you how to play it cool without freezbtg people out in he booklet. "Teen-Age Sn-Ten Wa11• to Cool It." Send 50 cents and a long, ael/-<Jddreued, stamped envelope to Ann Landns, P.O. Boz 11995, Chicago, IU . 69611 . Chinese food filled with salt By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. Dear Dr. Rosen, I )Is& loud oat ~at my cMlel&enl la too lltp. My wtfe ud I love Cblnese food. 8bace t1m c ... a.e ase• very UWe meat and a lot of vecetaWes wW It laelp my problem! S.P. SANTA A.NA ANSWER: I like your thinking as far 811 restricting meat is concerned. The American diet is too high in meat. That's a fact. There is, however, one drawback to your idea of increasing the amount of Cbine8e food in your eating habits. All oriental dishes are prepared with copious amounts of soy sauce. Soy sauce con- tains large amounts of salt, and if your cholesterol problem is compounded by elevated blood pres· sure the added salt could get you into trouble. Too much salt can create or aggravate high blood pressure. I often see patients who have an unaccustomed elevated blood pressure reading and find out that they dined on oriental food the night before. You could ask the chef to leave out the soy ASK THE DOCTOR sauce, but I'm afraid you would miss the flavor. Curiously, orientals seem to have some sort of immunity lo their high salt intake. ll seems to have little or no effect on their blood pressure. Dr. John D. Rosen, a practUioMt m N~ Beach, welcomu llO'Ur '1"4!•tlonl. Mail requ.est. Co A•k the De» tor, P.O.Boz 1560, Costa Mesa,~. P~rsonality types subject of seminar PEaSONAUTY TYP ES will be the subject of a seminar tiUed "Loving, Leadership and Learning: More on Myers-Brigas" at 7:30 p.m. Friday ,in Tustin. For more information on the diacuaaion, sponsored by t.be Counaelln& Associates for Human Development, call 832-1020. FAMILY THERAPIST Sandra Harvey will lead...a discussion on "Letting Go and Accepting Love" for singles and couples at 7:30 p.m. Friday in f'lewport Beach. For information on the free lee· lure, call 759-118'. WE CAllE Formerly Marrieds will bear UC Irvine behavioral therapist Dr. Johanna Shapiro speak on "The Relationship of Family and Illness" at 7:30 p.m . Friday in El Toro. For information, call 8'2·11Z7 SINGLES CALENDAR OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a day hilte to Saa Jacinto Mountain Saturday. On Sunday, tbe croup will go to brunch and have a bike ride in Ne~ Beach. For information, call 54-4-8276. Wwboy party •lated . papetbaclt pul>ll1her, and Brandon P'rencb in u;_; Q.-!-.,,.,, •---L CLIM cb...,. of 1ertpt development at Columbia Plt· m-, .. ~ "' ~ 1C8 PEOPLE SAMPLER social led by Emily Coleman ' will be held Saturday at 8 p.m. in Anaheim. For 1ft,. formation, call (213) 828-89'9. ORANGE COAST 81NGLES will have a patio pic- nic at 4 p.m. Saturday 1D Santa Ana. For lnforma~ tlon, call 751-0291. The Newport Harbor Chapter of the City of Ho,.e will cohost a cowboy party June 17 at the J . W. Cowboys in Anaheim. , Admission Lt $1.99 and includes live entertain· ment by top country and wutem banda. Tbe public Ls invited, and all proceeds go toward the City of Hope's work in diagnosis and treatment of catutropbic diseases. Call 156-1410 or 759-19'.3 for more information. tures. B• subject la "Film and Te1evilioo Script.I A drawin1 and paJntint dau taught by lllmt -Wbo Ls Bu1tn& What?" Sharon Stein wll1 be offered by the Newport Beach Saturday mornln& at 9 o'clock, Patrick Parks, Beach and Recreation Department June 16 rr====::;:::::=:;::;:::::;===::;;;:::::::;::;:=:;;::;;;;=~ O'Brien will talk about the pleasure of wrltlnl for through Aug.'· &.M. Boyd in/ 1 .onrmtheB I . 1·1y ,,., younc readers and will answer questions from tbe The ei&bt·week class Is desiped for both audience. becinninl and advanced students. For more in· Followtnc the mid·momiQI aolfee break Nan-liii;ifa.o;.rmiiiiiiaiitioniiiiiciialiilii6'0iiiii·ii22'1fi:l.~------------'-,.. ---------_ -_ -----_ -----_ --:_ --;. -; -; -; -;, -; -;. -~ 7'-----..-._ -._ ------------~~ ~-Z cy Kuriloft. a wrltinl COlll'*-t, wUl talk about her subject "The Fear of WJitfnl." IJapricom: Written &gtf:'em.enl coming ThrlUy, , .... 1111 •1 IYDNEY OllAll& -_____ ,,_.,o ••••h••D<•O!UCOOQOUUZIUSSS:ll :essssc ; S!SSS:IJ5&JE!I 1 ~ • • , , alt,., , 'ad' gy-, , -..... _.iii,~" ,,..,. ' .. ~. ~lt.-1 . ··~~ ~tlj "1i . ~qQ • . '1t'1e That's exadly w.hat · '1eclq Crown Hardware is doing. • Being able to supply you wffh exceptional merchandise and service has always been our aim. . Whether it is tools,· hardware or any other home improvement need we will continue to offer you a choice . seledion of quality material, with the aid Of our helpful and , knowledgeable staff . . ,. (fotmerly Imperial) • 1614 San Miguel Dr., Newport Beach -. • . 64~·8570 [ . . .... Daily Pilot WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 The Fat Man, Baron, resume an old feud CLASSI Fl ED 04 at Belmont . . . See D2 DICKMJUER Angels' prohleni: Autry Wearing an impeccably tailored western suit with alligator skin boots, lbe one-lime cowboy movie star strode toward the podium in the Anaheim Stadium press lounee the rught of Sept. 28, 1968. Gene Autry had made a fortune singing, "I'm Back in the Saddle Again." The owner of the Angels had learned a new lWle and he didn't like it: "I'm Back in the CeUar Again." A man who owned a horse named, if you can stand the irony. "Champion," did'n't like what was happen· ing to his team. So he began what was to become an all too familiar habit: he fired Fred Haney as general manager and hired Dick Walsh. And 39 games into the '69 season Walsh fired Bill Rjgoey as the field manager. Bul barely two years into his five-year contract Autry fired Walsh and Harry Perry's • ·magic • continues LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Lo~ Angeles Dodgers, who have not defeated Gaylord Perry in three years, probably wish the wily veteran of the Atlanta Braves would finally call it quits . But there's no telling when that's going to happen. The Dodgers s uffered their second loss to Perry this season Tuesday night, bowing to the Braves 3·1in10 innings. Dalton became the third general manaeer in three years. a record that was to make Charlie Finley envious. In hiring Walsh, Autry had said. "Dick 1s 45 years old. We wanted someone we could bwld with for the future." The future turned out to be 333 games and see you later. In all the finger pointing and accusations over the pralf~JI by the Millionaire's Club and the-firing of Jim Fregosi, Autry again has escaped the blame. After all, the Chairman of the Board is an authentic American folk hero. He is a decent man. Gene Autry is as clean as hls image. And maybe it's about time for someon~ to tell the truth: Gene Autry is the Angels' problem. Through five winning (but barely) and now 16 losing seasons there has been only one constant : Autry making the final de· cision on hirings or firings. It has been denied, but lt was Autry 's de- cision In the first place to hire Fregosl and not General Manager Buzzle Bavasl's, And it was Autry's decision to can Fregosi only one season and 49 games after he led the Angels to the only division UUe in their history. Autry has a history or bum decisions. Seventy-four games into the 1974 season he decided to get rkl of anol.the field leader, Bobby Winkles, and Whitey erzog was named the interl m manae while Autry was trying to hire Dick Wil · ms. / ·'I would have signed Whitey, Autry said taler. "but I needed a name on the marque." Whal Autry didn't know was that <See MILLER, Page DZ> Frost gets arwther big Toronto memory TORONTO <AP) -Dave Frost has had a few memorable exp e rienc~s at Ex hibition Stadium and Tuesday night was no exception. The first time be faced the Blue Jays in Toronto was Aug. 25, 1979. when he had a 22-run lead for the first time in his pitching career in an Angel 24·2 slaughter. Last year on June 2, he beat Louis Leal and the Jays 6·3 for hls fina l victory of the Am erican League baseball season before undergoing sur- gery on his right elbow. 80 was as far as be bad gone in Salt Lake at any time. "WE" SENT HIM down to Salt Lake to get him physically sound. He had already proved he was a big-league pitcher." Nobody , including Frost himself, expected such a spec· tacular performance. "It just doesn't make any sense to me, but I'll take it any day," said the 28-year-old right· hander. "I just wanted to go out and pitch better here than I did in Triple A where I was hideous. "GAYLORD GETS you mad," said Bob Welch, who battled Perry for eight innings. "l want· ed to beat hiq,i and I'm sure he wanted to beaf me. Mike Sodden FROST CO MPLETED his comeback Tuesday night by downing Leal again as the Angels blanked the Jays 3--0 for the second night in a row. On Monday, Ken Forsch pitched a three-hit, 3-0 shutout. "I just don't understand it. l was down there with Chris Knapp and Fred Martinez and all of us had two or three starts and looked bad." "He knows how to pitch, that's for sure. Most guys would be glad to be knocking on 200 wins and heFe he's knocking on 300." Perry's last viCtory, bis fifth IA, eight decisions th.is year, was No. 294 of hls 20-year big league career. Perry gave up only five bits in nine inninl(s and the only run he allowed came in the sixth in- ning . The Dodgers scored despite getting the baU out of the infield. Sodders' hoDie run helps ASU OMAHA, (AP> -Arizona State called on relief pitcher Kevin Dukes to hold off Mis- sissippi Stale 4-3 in a College World Series winner·s bracket contest Tuesday night. Frost, recaJled from Salt Lake City of the Pacific Coast Leque on May 24, limited the Jays to four singles over 61At innings. He was relieved by Andy Hauler who no-bit Toronto the re· mainder of the game. He was lifted with one out in the seventh inning after Barry Bonnell collected an infield single. Hassler held the Jays hit- less the rest of the game to pick up his fourth save. In Triple A, Frost was 1-2 with an 8.60 earned-run average. Before the Angels get too high over consecutive shutouts, they should consider the opposition. THE JAYS HAVE not scored a run in 22 innings and have been blanked seven times in their last 21 games and nine times over the sea.son. For the second night In a row they wasted a fine pitching performance. Dave Stieb gave up just seven hits against Forsch Monday and Leal limited the Angels to five hits while log· ging seven strikeouts. t " , ''They expect me to keep them in the game for seven, eight in· nings," said the 42 -year-old Perry. ·'Any starting pitcher should do that. With the bullpens teams have today. that should be enough to get the job done. Dukes, who threw 31h innings of no-hlt ball in Tuesday's first· round 11·2 win over Texas, re· lieved SWl Devils starter Randy Newman in the third with Mis- sissippi State leading 3· l . "T here wasn't any reason why J pulled him." said Manager Gene Mauch. "He had thrown right around 80 pitches. 79 and Tonight, Geoff Zahn (5-6) faces Toronto right-hander Jim Clancy (3-3). EddieCareykey3UCl'1relayhope1atNCAA/iooll: ...., ............ "Against the Dodgers, you know before the game you're go- ing to be in for a big job. You have to be extra sharp and, fortunately, tonight I had pretty tood control." PERRY WALKED only one batter, and that one inten· tionally. The Braves scored twice in the top or the 10th inning to break a 1-1 tie, with pinch bitter Bill Nabarodny doubling borne the tie-breaking run. "Gaylord pitched a great game and I was glad I was able to help out," said Nabarodny. "I was trying to hit a home run. I went up there swinging as bard as I could." Bruce Benedict, who doubled home Atlanta's first run In the fifth inning, led off the lot.b with an infield single off reliever Dave Stewart, 3-1. the eventual loser. Rafael Ramirez sacrificed and Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda brought in Steve Howe to face Naharodny. who was bat- ting for pinch hitter B ~ff Pocoroba. Naharodny then cracked his double down the left field line that scored Benedict. Jerry Royster followed with another run-scoring double. "PINCH BITTING,'' said Nabarodny, "is pretty tough. ~ut I am hittint .333 as a pinch bitter so maybe it's not that tough." The Dodgers got their run t when Welch reached finl on an lnfield aingle to lead otr the alxth. Derrel Thomas aacriflced but Percy's throw to aecond wu 1 wHd, allowina Welch to take I \b.lrd, &om where he acored on , Rltk Monday'a grounder to aecood. When Welch 1ot bia ... nfield 1in1le, the play at flnl bue wu extremely close..t. and Atlanta )(ana1er Bobby \;OX ar1ued the play aDd wound up beinl ejected by umpire Fr• Pulll. Ala in· CliQI before Pull rettned a call on balk. Flrat, he ruled tbat Welch bad balked, but chaqed hl• declalon wJa ... W.&cb •P· pealed tbat be WU Dot OD the pitcll1DI nabber. In tile CGDcludtn; 11me fA the ~ ...... Hri• t.omibt. PbU NM*ro, W, WW ltart for Atlanta •1*1.Dat Burt Hootoia, 1.1. The senior left-hander shut the door on the 46-16 Bulldogs the rest of the way. He set down ll straight. until giving up a walk to Steve D' Ercole in the bottom of the s'eventh. A walk to Mark Gillaspie in the eighth represent· ed the only other Mississippi State baserunner against Dukes in 6~ Innings of relief. He's cmTying the load for UCI track team 400-meter star shelves event in order to be fresh for. a team eff of::t in relay 1 · Arizona State rallied for three runs in the bottom of the fourth. Ricky Nelson led off with a single and stole second. After Al Davis walked. Stan Holmes singled In Nelson. Kevin Romine fo llowed with a fielder's choice to load the bases with one out. Then Bert Martinez laced a single to score two runs. No. 1-r anked Arizona State had scored first in the game when AU-American Mike Sod· ders, a product of Westminster High and Orange Coast College, drilled his 22nd home run of the year in the second inn1ng. The loss matches Mississippi State against Texas at 8: 10 p.m. Thursday night. Arizona State, now 52·12, moves to Friday's win- ner~s bracket final against the winner of tonight's Oklahoma State-Miami contest. In a Tuesday a(lern oon elimination game , South Carolina rallied to oust Maine, 12-7. By JOHN SEVANO Of Ule Deity l"I• Staff There are varying degrees of decision. Some. obviously, are easier to make than others. Eddie Carey. one of UC Irvine's pre· miere sprinters, had a decision to make. His wasn't an easy one. though. Carey had to decide which event be was going to participate in during Thursday's opening heats of the NCAA Track and Field Championships in Baton Rouge, La. Having qualified in both the 400-meter and mile relay events, Carey originally thought be would run in both. THE CHOICE seemed logical. Carey'1 45.35 last month in the Pepsi meet at UCLA not only qualified him for the H · tionals, but gave the junior the flfth best 400-m eter clocking in the world this season -fourth best among collegians. And, as the anchor to UCI's mile relay squad, Carey helped the quartet to a con· ference record lo the PCAA cham- pionships by running a 45.5 leg, living the team a 3:08.48 finish. So, as far as Carey was concerned, there was no decision to make. He'd participate in both events and let bis efforts dictate the outcome. Unfortunately, Carey's coach -Kevin McNair -bad other plans; plans which affected Carey's original decision a nd would force him lo make another one. McNAlll, A VETERAN or NCAA com- petition, felt his ace sprinter would ex- haust himself if he competed in both events. or course, McNair's reason.Ing bad logic, too. First, there was the balmy, sweltertne heat of Baton Rouge to consider.. . . and UC/REPORT forecasts for the end of the week predicted nothing but the same humid cond1Uona. That meant that if Carey were to reach the finals 1n both events, he'd have to run a total of slx quarters. McNair's concern was that hla sprinter just wouldn't have what It takes on the final day to be effective; not only to hhµaelf but to the mile relay squadl too. Finall)', McNalr told Carey he'd nave to choose c:ioe event. · "There were hearts and minds to con- sider aa welt as bodies,'' explained MoNail' .• "I\ was a humanitarian decision, if that's not too heavy a word." The· flnaJ verdict? Carey would run in the mile relay. "I ASKED RIM to aacrlfice that (the 400) to ao with the team concept," said McNair. "I thought it would be better to com e back with four medals Instead of one. ·'This way they can all come back AlJ. Americans and he <Carey> still has another year left. Plus, he'll still get the glory. I thought this was better for the overall program." McNair's decision wasn't a hasty one. The fact Carey -and Bill Dorvall (who forfeited running in the 400 intermediate hurdles) could participate in a later TAC meet in Sacramento, the Baton Rouee beat, plus the fact two seniors compile half the mile quartet, cushioned the weight of the coach's choice. . "It was the only way to go becallae that's a world class meet,'' analy1~ McNair. "When you have a group ~t works that long and that hard . . . ''If I wasn't completely sold on the fact they were sold on the idea . . . " McNAIR DIDN'T 'complete either thought, adding the final decision wu made last Friday, after spending more than a month wrestling with the declaloo of which way to go. "The .five of us -decided together," e~· plained McNair, "and Carey's openin1 re· mark at the meeting was, 'I'm dropplni the quarter for the mile relay."' Carey admitted be made the atatement. (See CAllEY. Pa1e DI) . Sweden's lce(Borg) i;olls into French semifinal$ PARIS (AP) -The odds are with Bjorn Bor1 to accompllah yet another' Jirat in tb6 history of lennls. The SwediJb auperal.ar is the only player to reach the aemi-finala of the French Open tennis tournament Without loaio1 a set. He posted his fifth 1t.rai1ht· sets victory Tueaday ln ouaUn1 No. 15 aeeded 8alua Taroc1y of Huni1r1. e-a, 6·3, 6-2, in tbe quan.rflnala. Bor1, a mllltonalre who turna 25 Saturday, 11 favored to Win the pre- •li•loua tournament for 1 record sixth Ume. Two of h1I molt dangeToua rivall - Amtricana Jrmmy Connon and JObD McEnroe -play their qHrttrflnal matches &oday. Connon, tbe Ho. I lied, taco ... eatb-leedecl JOle Udl Clerc, an At&c!ntinian"'whom be baa defeated ln their three prevloua matdtel. Mclbroe, the No. 3 aeed, plays hu IAiDdl of Ciecboelovakia, seeded ftft.b. Tbe 21· year-old ,New Yorker bolds • M eaiffr edge over Lendl. Connon has loat two aeu lD UM Mr matchea that brou1ht blm~• quarterflnall. P\aytni with • ·.~.,..--~, lnl •mount ot patience, UM --~ American bu woa 13 of ldl m .·am. for a M percent wtn NCON.: -,,:y ·1 · .Mtl!aroe baa done aUibll.J •..._, la hi• four matcbel, he bu . ldit illr one aet and bu won T' of hla -~. • 10 pertent. . But t.be incncUb!e 8orW ... "9 .._ record. U. baa won ll1fll•--ID ftv1 matcha for 1 n perent ~ r Orange Coast DAil. Y PILOT /Wednesday, June 3, 1981 r-------------------~· ~------------------------------------------..... ----------------------------------------------------, Bre tt takes it out with a ttack on toilets Brett may soon be getting a bill fro1n • KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Geor1t a the Minnesota Twins for repairs to a restroom he damaged wtth bis bat last Friday night. After grounding out with runhers on baH, Kansas.City's all-star thJrd bueman went Into a restroom behind the visitors dueout and used bis bat to break two toilets and a sink. Before Monday night's game against· Seattle, Brett was angered to learn the restroom incident had been reported. "I don't think it's anybody's business." he said. "It's already written, so why should I discuss it?•· Tom Mee, Minnesota's director of public relations, Brett said William S. Robertson, the team's vice president for stadium opera- tions, would examine the restroom and forward a bill to the Royals, who can either pay the charges or ask Brett to do so. "It would be up to them who paid for it," Mee said. "I'm sure we'd go for cost to have it fixed. It was in the Royals' bathroom, so they're responsible." Quote of the day ··1 always thought that's why hotels are built with a back set of stairs. I figure what I don't know won't hurt me." -San Diego Padres Manager Frank Howard, ex· plaining why he doesn't believe in curfews for his players. Thomas upe horner mark to i 4 0....u TIMmaa knocked in four • run1 with two bomera, 1lvlna him aa Americu Lea1'*leadln1 1' tor the season, and lltke Caldwell and Rollie Fla1en combined on a five·hitter to 1lve Milwaukee a S·Z vlctory over Detroit Tuesday . • . Dwtpt Evau hit bll 13th homer and doubled ln a run to pace Boston to a 4.0 win over Cleveland. OeuJ1 Eekeraley spun a four-hitter . . . Dav~ Reverln1'1 tint homer ln a Yankee uniform In the bottom of the 11th in· nlni led New York to a 5-3 win over Baltimore ... Sbooty BabJtt'1 Lwo-run trl· pie capped a five-run first in· nine to lead Oakland to a 6-2 triumph over the Chicago White Sox ... ·Seattle stopped Kansas City, 4-3, Thoma. behind Jim Allder.oa'1 dou· ble and two singles . . . Al OUver and Buddy Bell delivered run-scoring sinales ln the ei&blh inning to lift Texas to a 5·2 win over Minnesota . . . Ben OgJJvle was ejected from Milwaukee's game al Detroit when he charged Detroit pitcher George Cappu11ello after a thlrd·inning beaning that cleared both bepches ... Boston's Dwlgllt Evan1 and Mark Clear were named the Amel'ican League Player and Pitcher of the mooth. .J Four Kings on NHL All-stars MONTREAL -Goalie Mike Llut o( th~ St. Louis Blues and center W c. vne Gretzky of the Edmonton . Iii Oilers were the top 'Vote-getters on the 1980·81 National Hockey League AU -star team, an· nounced by the league today. Liut, who sparked the Blues to the NHL's second-best regular-season record, edged Gretzky, the league's top scorer with a record 164 POints. Joining them on the first team were two members of the Stanley Cup-champion New York [slanders. defenseman Denis Potvin with 194 points and right wing Mike Bossy with 299; left wing Charlie Simmer of the Los Angeles Kings, 284, and dereoseman Randy Carlyle of the Pittsburgh Penguins, 168. Simmers· mates on the Kings' "Triple Crown" line. center Marcel Dionne. 157, and right wing Dave Taylor, 85, were named to the second-team All-star squad, along with Los Angeles goalie Mario Lessard, 114. Rosewithinnine of Musial's mark Pete ROM banged out two triplet • and a single and drove in three runs aa PhlladelpbJa defeated the New York Meta, 9-7, Tuesday. The three hilt by Rose raised bJs career total to 3,621, nine behind &an Ma1lal'1 all·Ume National Leaaue record . . . Rookie Tim RalDH bases-loaded tri· pie capped a six-run Montreal third inning as St. LoUfs fell, 8-1 ... Steve Nicosia drove in a career-high four runs and Dave Parker, BUI Madlock and Mlke Easler added three RBI each to lead a 19·hit as-• sault that gave Pittsburgh a 16·3 victory over the hapless Chicago Cubs. While six Chicaao pitchers were tak1ng a pounding, Eddie Solomon, 4-3, ea,rned ltte victory with a six-hitter in a contest played Roae despite a strike by ushers, ticket takers and maintenance workers at Three Rivers Stadium. It was the 34th defeat in 44 games for the Cubs ... Craig Reynolds lined a two-out, run-scoring triple to cap a two-run ninth inning to give Houston a 2·1 victory over San Diego ... Jerry Martin hit a grand slam homer in a nine-run fourth inning which led San Francisco to a 15·7 rout of Cincinnati. Baseball strike talks grind on ROCHESTER , N .Y. - Baseball's lingering labor mess moved into U.S. District Court today, with Judge Henry Werker scheduled to begin hearings on the National Labor Relations Board's request for a preliminary injunction against the sport. If granted in the language requested, the in· junction would force management to rescind its controversial free-agent compensation plan for one year. an action that would delay any player strike at least that long Should Werker deny the NLRB petition, the players would be free to walk out within 48 hours of the decision. So, by arguing against the NLRB in court, the owners are in effect forcing the issue and in- viting an immediate strike over the compensa- tion question. That would be the result if at- torneys for management win the caee. If they lose, then the matter is placed on hold and baseball faces another re-entry draft this Nov· ember without compensation for ranking free agents signing with new teams Baseball today On this dato tn baseball In 1978: Dave Johnson of the Philadelphia Phillies became the first man in baseball history to hit two pinch·bit arand slam home runs In one se'\son, as hla nlntb· inning blast gave the Phils a 5-1 victory over the Dodgers. On this date in 1932 . Lou Gehrig belted four home runs as the New York Yankees routed the Philadelphia A's, 20·13 at Shi be Park. Meanwhile, John McGraw retired alter 28 years as New York Giant manager, hand· ing the reins over to first baseman BUI Terry. Murphy takes Fullerton reins Cal State Fullerton has named II football coach Gene Murphy as in- terim athletic di.rector pending a search by a lO·member committee for a perma- nent replacement for Mike MullalJy, who re- signed to accept a similar post at Boise State University Bob Berry, who resigned as head coach of the Los Angeles Kings last month, is expected to be named to the same position with the Montreal Canadiens of tb~ Na tional Hockey Leag~e today . . Brian Oldfield tossed the shot put 70· 10 Tuesday at an interna· tional track and field meet in Yugoslavia ... Heisman Trophy winner George Rogers or South Carolina was in Montreal Tuesday to check out the site of the Montreal Alouettes training camp. Rogers has been involved in con· tract talks with the New Orleans Saints for the past month but no agreement has been reached after Rogers reportedly rejected two offers The National Basketball Association has adopt· ed a rule prohibiting teams from contacting un· dergraduates before they declare their intention to turn pro ... Mark Anderson of UCLA has taken the early lead on the first day's compet1· tion in the NCAA decathlon championship at Baton Rouge. Television. radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball Angels at Toronto. 4.30 p.m . KMPC <710 1. Atlanta at Dodgers. 7:30 p.m . KABC <790 > from Page 01 MILLERS'S C:OLUMN. Fat Man, Baron o n co llisio n c o urse • • Williams was a great man· ager with veteran teams and an impatient martinet with young players. such as filled the California roster at the time. Under Williams, the Angels finished the season in sixth (and last place), were sixth again in 1975 and Williams was let go after the Angels got off to a 39-57 start in 1976. And what happened to Whitey Henog? ' He became the Kansas City Royals' manager in 1976 and won three consecutive division titles. . It was Autry's decision, with a h>t of help from Bavasi. to can Dave Garcia and replace him with t 'regosi. Garcia now manages Cleveland an,· the In· di ans are only 3'h games out in the American League East stand· ings. Tbe Rams' front office is a model or stability compared to the way Autry runs his fiefdom. Sxcept for Fregosi, not a single ~kipper has lasted more than one full season since 1971. The State of California could save taxpayers money by open· iP8 a branch office of its !2mployment Development '.Department at the Big A. • Maybe what the Angels really need is a shakeup in the front of- fice. Autry is 73, the same age as his assistant, Red Patterson. Bavasi is 66 and so is another vice president, Frank Leary. Their collective ages make the Politburo look like Whiz Kids. A few hours after Fregosi's dismissal Bavasi tried, like any good executive would, to take the heal off his boss. "I should take the responsibility and I will g I adly." said the general manager. "Eventually, this team will have to play up to its potential. Maybe Gene Mauch won't be any better than Jim Fregosr, but maybe he will be luckier." Maybe. From Page 01 CA REY • • • But he also added bis first choice was to run in the quarter-not the mile. A little pesuasin by McNair changed Carey's thinking. "It was an extremely difficult decision," Carey emphasized. "I was primarily concentrating on the 400 and not the mile relay. Coach told me it was too much of a risk to run both, so I decided I'd like to run .the quarter. "He told me he wanted to stay witb the team concept, I.hough, and he wanted me to stick with that." WHAT THE DECISION has. obviously done is left the door wide open for a lot of second guessing. If the mile relay team doesn't pan out, like McNair hopes. Carey admits the thought or what ~ould have been will be there. Base ba ll sta ndings f. AMERICAN LEAGUE • West Dlvtnon ~ W L Oekland 32 20 ellicago 26 18 iea. 25 27 nsas City 16 26 attle 18 31 Pct.GB .615 - .591 2 .587 2 .481 7 .381 11 .367 12'h Exas 27 19 Minnesota 14 33 .298 15~ ., East Dlvlaloa ~tlmore 28 17 .622 - waukee 28 20 .583 1 ~ w York 27 20 .574 2 ~stoo 26 21 .553 3 eveland 23 19 .548 3"' etrolt 24 25 . 490 6 ronto 16 34 .320 14\Al ~·"­........ T ....... ...... ~. ~~ .. Ynso::::-• J (11 ~I 'btla....... I ................ CltyJ ,.._s,--....i )jll ....... S. Oehll I • T....,.,._ ....-tz.. .. , ee ,_.. cci-, N>, 11 ...._ CT~,_11 .. C.......,_tWal • ...,, .. • ••ltl,,.,. (0, MMttlln .. II et ..._ Y-. .,.~I~ Ml .. ~ t..,_ •• ....... (CWk WI ......... City IGale ~. 11 ':T-C~ 4"11 llt ....... I~ ... ......... , ....... J.1) .. o.t..it tllllleme ,.., NATIONAL LEAGUE West Dlva.toa W L Pct. GB Dodgen 34 16 .680 - Cincinnati 28 21 .571 5Ya Houston 25 24 .510 8~ San Francisco 26 26 .500 9 Atlanta 23 24 .489 9Ya San Diego 19 30 .388 14Ya E11t DlvialOD Philadelphia 29 19 -~ - Montreal 27 20 .574 1~ St. Louis 24 18 .571 2 Pittsburgh 21 20 .512 4Ya New York 1$ 29 .341 12 Cblcago 10 34 .2Z7 17 Belmont Stakes features some wild characters -and they've been around By WILL GRI MSLEY A"S.-CIMC.11111 •111 NEW YORK -The "Fat Man" is puffed up like a balloon so confident that he'll be saddling horse racing's 12th Triple Crown winner in the Belmont Stakes Saturday, but he better beware of the "Baron." "Johnny Campo -he brags too much," warned Horatio Duro in his Spanish ac- cent. "[ don't think he is Superman. 1 don't think he can make miracles. "You can tell the Fat Man we will be coming after him Saturday.'' The brassy, lo · qua cious Campo is trajner of Pleasant Colony, the pock· · skinned speedster who Grimaley won both the Kentucky Derby and Preak· ness and is favored lo complete the magic sweep in the testing l'h·mile final classic. Luro, an 80-year-old Argentine a ristocrat whose father was a cattle baron, is readying Tap Shoes, a strong. handsome bay, tor a possible upset. You can't <liscount Horatio. Horse. have been in his blood since be was a tyke grow- Ongais in Laguna ing up among the gauchos . of the family's five sprawling ranches and a 5,000-acre private is land outside Buenos Aires. "My father -he wanted me lo be a cal· tleman as he was, go to Paris and sell meat to all of Europe but that life bored me," Luro said. "I always wanted only to be near horses '· Campo and Luro try their trade l t ~ week a few barns apart in the stable area at Belmont Park. They are a study in con trast. For a man of four-score years, Luro is a phenomenon a robust, active six-footer who drives to the stable in a foreign sports - car, wears a r akish cap and cashmere jacket and can't remember when he didn't gel up before daylight Reared on a South American version of Scarlett O'Hara's Tara. he reeks of the landed gentry, poised and polished. who is equally at home with bot walkers and sla· ble boys as with dukes and earls • He came to the United States more than 40 years ago, became a friend of Bing Crosby, did the Hollywood scene with such stars as Loretta Young, Wendy Barrie and Madeline Carroll, finally starting a lhoroughbred stable of his own with a $3,500 stake and a couple of bargain base· ment horses. Clearing $100,000 the rirst year, he never looked back He once sold a horse to actor Joe E. Brown for S25.500. He has trained with the best. He won the Kentucky Derby with Decidedly in 1962 and Northern Dancer in 1965 He even once won a duel, which has become a legend around the tracks. "It wasn't over a woman," Luro ex· plained, a twinkle in his eye. "It was an argument with a Frenchman over the price of some polo ponies . He grabbed me by the lapels. This was an insult. I slappe~ him across the face. .. Fourteen hours later. a representative of the Frenchman -he was a Marquis - came to my office and handed me a card, saying the Marquis wanted satisfaction. "It was never decided who provoked the incident. so we flipped a coin for choice of weapons. I won 1 chose swords. although I never handled a sword in my life "Desperate, I went to an instructor at the Jockev Club and told him I had this an- gry. hot Frenchman who had chaJlenged me. He asked. 'ls he tall?' I replied, 'No. he is s mall.· ·You have long arms,' the in· s tructor said. 'Take a foil and just keep it stuck out in front of vou.' INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ..... Dan- ny Ongais, injured when bis In- terscope racer hit the third-tum wall in the lndlanapolis 500, was flown Tuesday to Laguna Beach, where he will be treated by his private physician. Ongais, surrounded by medical personnel, was taken to the Indianapolis International Airport by ambulance -IF YOU DON'T CALLUS, WE'LL CALL YOU! SEVEN or OUR FULL TIME STAFF MAKE AN AVERAGE OF 500 OUTOOINO CALLS every day Inviting our members to play In tennis matches. This Is In addition to nmng members' Incoming requests. finding the right match takes more than just hard work. It's tough. Here at the Joh n Wayne Tennis Club, our ,Staff of seven does It from the 10 dassltlca· tlons In our Player Compatibility (P.C.) Call t be *l lla nked Clu b la C.llfornla or come bJ ror ....,a.erablp lftlorllllitloa ••• system (instead of the normal A, B. C, and D). We will get you better matches from a wealth of players at every level. whether you've been playing a few months or a lifetime. And for your con- venience, there are free phones, refrigerated drinking fountains, and T.V. monitors with every court. If your club doesn't offer this, why not c.hoose the one that does?I \ I I I I l l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. June 3, 1981 D ROGER CARLSON For CdM it's too· early to think about '82 l Rlncl Rlnct Thomal ~· o//fcc, home o/ Uw lNJ CIF 2·A baacboU c~. MU:ld ~. Eh, yea, it TT ln? 0.W momnl ~. I'll ... tf lw'1 toldnQ colll. Hello Tom, Dall1 Pilot callln1. l can tell by the volume ol your backpound mu.ale your headache mutt be cleared up. Take me out to the ball 1ame la catchy but can you turn it down a bit?. Tba:Dki Tom, now, what about next year? How are th~rona del Mar Hilb Sea Ktn1s going to defend lbat title? "WeU, eh, fl"Z, can't .,ou ~I~ o while ~l~e a.ldng that? Well, Tom, we know you've iota bunch of re· turning starten comlo1 back -lilte Gordon Moat, Brent Melbon, Chris White, Dave Rohde and Mike Heat. And we've heard there are aome more nu11et.s stashed over there -Uke Kurt Peterson, Gren Wynn, Jim Murphy and Scott Looi. •lammer ...... •lammer, (just like the other time we called, aak1n1 for the secret to the Sea Klnp' success as they were on their way to big thin1s>. i ALMON LOCK.4BEY l Hurrieane i of laughter ~ Bermuda authorities take their safe boatine regulations very seriously -if a news brief out of the Bermuda Islands can be believed. Deciding it was hieh time to start enforcing the safety standards set for small boat.s a sailor aboard a Windsurfer was hauled before a magistrate in Hamilton, Bermuda, on charges that he was riding his Windsurfer, which is, of course equipped with a small sail and a wishbone rig, without paddles, bilge pump and anchor and chain. The "bust" created a hurricane of laughter among the thousands of windsurfers (board sailors) throughout the world because: The Windsurfer is a surftt>ard about 10 feet loni with a mast stepped in a universal joint and a B0.47JNG m small wishbone ri1. The board is sailed with the operator standing up. He maneuvers the craft (tackine and jibing) by walking around the mast carrying the rig with him. In the event of a miscue (or misstep) the operator merely lets the rig fall in the water until he can· regain bis balance and haul it back and start sailing again. Beine a fi at board, the craft has no bilges. So where would bilge pumps be stowed -or for what would they be u.aed? Anchor and chain? Boa.nl sailors learn quickly that 11 the rills in the water and can't be retrieved all he bu to do is slt down oo the board -unhook the rig if necessary -and paddle ashore with hi• hands. Sailboards have been granted Olympic status for the l9M Games, but It is highly unlikely that all that "safety gear" will be ttquired. Else, where will the operator stand? The Windsurfer was created and patented by Hoyle Schweitzer of Torrance in the late 1960s and has grown to be the most popular sailing craft ln the world. Young, athletic types sail them off the beach and through some of the roughest surf in the world. On moet weekends -winter or summer -a dozen Wind.surfers can be spotted ln Newport Harbor -sans paddles, bilge pumps, anchor and chain. SORC officials vow to tighten up In the wake of the ratings and rules ir· re1ularities in the 1981 series, officials of the Southern Ocean Racing Conference in Florida have vowed to Ughten activities to ensure com- pliance with the racing and measurement rules during the 1982 series. Rating irregularities in the 1981 aeries created a near scandal that caused three yachts to be re· scored and two to be eliminated from the U.S. team in the Admiral's Cup this summer. Yachts eliminated from the Admiral's Cup team were Williwaw and Acadia. At the SORC annual meeting ln Miami, Robert H. Symonette wu elected chairman and Peter Grimm vice chairman. "It is a neceaaary part of our plans to take a more active role In rule enforcement,'' said Symonette after bis elecUoo. . "The SORC intends to 1treo1lhen Its activities to enaure compliance with the racin1 and measurement rules durln1 the 1982 series," he added. "New procedures are being developed and our race offlcen will take a more active role lo the f\ature." Long Beach hosts Prindle Cat 01eet The Prindle Cat AuodaUoo bu cbolen Loni Beach u the site of lta HCODd Pri.DdJe Cat-18 na· tlonal c.bamplonablp, Aui. U-21. SurfalM, Ille., bullMn ol tbe famed line of Prladle catamarana, HJd lhe Loq B .. cb tlte was ehOMD because of tb• comtlteq of w1adl durlRJ tbe 1WDmei-month.a. Rae. bMdquarten wW be ~Q.-lfary. &adna wlU be t..ld ta the outer harbor where eoadltloDI an almUar to the open OHaD ucept tbat tbe oullktit bnakwat« keep1 the •••111 re· laU•81JliaWl. ......,_, ot the area for catamaraa rattn1 wa1 pro¥m el ta.. Callfonla 8tatel ~atta WbJcb IJ Alft11 Mid U.. aDd mmuallJ drin apwardi Of 100 bo.al -IOIM 'ol lbem from M far &Wa)' U Florida. A Umlted aumtier of ::'we race-4q_a1pped ~di will be made a• bJ hrfllu to tMle WbO come troiD too far away to tniler or lldf tMlf OWD boatl. You know, TT. I've been tell1n1 you for weeta this wu the bll year. You still haven't admitted how smart I am to know all these thin1s. The payoff came ln the seventh innin.t 11 the host South Torrance team, down 3-0 to Edison, ap- peared to try to 1oad Edison into a brawl with first a brushback pitch while the batter was in the on- deck area, then throwing one over the batter's bead on the first legal pitch. ·•wiru. m11 HCOlld bcHmOft doitlft't '! 11ou're IUCh 0 OftliUI." Gee Tom, didn't you tell Chris I left m out of the story prior to your championship 1ame so he'd 1et all stoked up? We fieured such a move would . produce at least one RBI and he'd knock himself out defensively (whJch he nearly did). When Edison Coach Ron LaRuffa, who had been in hassles the entire game, asked the umpire lo restore some order he was thrown out. Sony, I don't mMmbn' °"SI tueh deal. Hmmm, that's gratJtude. I suppose I won't even eet my "C" you were promising. Said La Ruff a ~ "This ia exactly why we should have semifinal games at neutral sites." ''What /or? Our principal, Dennil Evan•, hat been grading you out al C /OT aeoeral ytan." It doesn't appear to be an isolated case. J bear Millikan High's visit to South Torrance ignited into a full-scale fight. I suppose the CIF wa.sn't there, either. Just wondering ... Oh. . . .. When is someone from the CIF Southern Sec· lion office going to venture out to see what's aoing on? * * * TiUe IX's demands that girls be given equal treatment becomes a bit absurd at this weekend's state track and field finals at Cerritos College. If they did, they might find scenes such as the one at South Torrance High, where the Cl F ap· proved baseball site was a lesson in bow homer pits can turn a game Into a war. Although there are three pit.s for girls and boys long jump and boys triple jump, onl y two will be used. JACK ERRION South coach Speed.socce r unhe ate ns vie In a rematch of last season's championship finale two un- beaten teams clash Saturday night at Los Ca balleros Speedsoccer Stadium as the Costa Mesa Cowboys duel the Huntington Beach Dolphins. Each is 4-0 at this point in the American Speedsoccer Associa· ti on and it begins at 7. Costa Mesa is coached by A 1 fredo rtaran, a former Newport Harbor High coach. while the Dolphins are guided by ex-Cal State Fullerton coach Steve McKay. "Huntington Beach is on a hot streak at the moment," says Maran. Costa Mesa was extended by Fountain Valley last weekend before capturing an 8·6 verdict behind the three-goal e ffort of Tavio Zambrano. Guessing game e a sy with South's ros t e r North coach (Walker) tight-lipped By ROGER CARLSON Of .. Dlill\' ...... SUilf Guess who is tbe favorite for the 16th Orange County All -star basketball game at Fountain Valley High June 13? With 6-8 Wayne Carlander or Ocean View High and La Quinta High's 6·9 John Rogers, along with an assortment of other talent, including All-Cl F selec- tions by the handful on the South squad, it's not too difficult to im· agine. The South has been tabbed to win by 11 points by Orange County sportswriters al Mon· day's game lunc heon al t he Costa Mesa Community Center. The Southern girls are tabbed to win, too. by nine points. Guess who's taking this all· star conflict so seriously you would think be was girding for the Angelus League c ha m - pionship showdown -lo such an extent his comments to the crowd were, "No comment. I've coached against Jack Errion before in the Angelus League a nd whatever might be said may be used against me, turned around." That's right -North Coach Larry Walker of Servile High, a former Westminster High and Orange Coast College athlete, didn't have much to say to the gathering honoring the game's players from both sides, for boys and girls. While the Nort,h does n't figure to stack up against the South too well in terms or height, board strength and credentials. it may have the edge in s peed and Walker allowed that he'd use t hat weapon. "We'll push ll up the floor, we won 't be bashful.'' says Walker Errion, who coached Corona del Mar H.igh to its second CIF 3-A crown in fi ve years this past season. finds himselr fi ght ing the setup syndrome and ad· dressed Walker: ''Slow it down a little so we can keep up with you." said Er· rion. Walker pointed to the fact Er· rion could have chosen as many as nine players from the South for his team with size of 6-7 or better. but it'll be the South's backcourt that takes the pres· sure or an 11-point favorite. Among th e So uth 's playma kers are Capistrano Valley's Wayne Call , El Toro's Tom O'Brien and Newport Harbor's Mal Durkee. T he balance o f the South squad is a virtual all-front line squad, with such standouts as Santa Ana Valley's Tony Neal (6·6), Fountain Valley's 6-3 Jeff Christensen. Corona del Mar's 6·6 Mark Spinn and 6 -5 Jeff Pries, Tustin's 6·7 Mark Lewis, West m i n ster 's 6 ·6 Mick DeLavallade and Mission Vie· jo's 6-5 Randy Sherwood. "I saw ability that is amaz· ing," said Errion regarding one or his team's first workouts at Corona del Mar. "It was so sur· prising to see that kind of ability s how up so quickly in practice." Although Errion's background goes back 27 years in Southern California 122 years at St. An· thony with nine titles and 15 playoff berths and five years at CdM. which includes four league titles). this is his first venture as an all-star coach. ___________________ ,, Four are a y ouths in fina ls AUTOMOTIVE RESTORATIONS AND REPAIRS Four area youngsters have earned berths in the Jesse Owens Games Aug. 1 at UCLA, follow- ing regional track and 771 W. 17tll ST., COSTA EA (114) 151-0232 fie Id competition 1 ast I ;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiii~~ weekend at Cal State Ii Los Angeles. GROUP Seems the girls don't want to use lhe third pit (which is actually a better pit because of the lae~ of cross winds>. opting to abare the boys pit t guarantee "equality." • The only thing this will prove ls that track pre1 lims and finals can easily be dragged out eve longer than usual by the long jumpers. Sometimes equality seems more like s tupidityl Just wondering .. * • • . What happened to Costa Mesa's Paul Knipp o the All·CIF volleyball selections? Twenty-fou athletes were singled out. but none from Cost Mesa. Three were produced by Santa Monica, jusC another three-set loser to Laguna Beach, and by IC much more convincing score than in the Lagunc Beach-Costa Mesa malchup. Just wondering ... ~· * * * Newport Harbor High baseball faithful ar still trying to figure out what happened to th scouts and college recruiters. They didn't see an~ and, apparently none of the aforementioned sa much of the Sailors. Maybe someone 1ust missed the boat. J us wondering c * * * • NOTES AND THINGS Former Edison Hig.J star Wayne PaUca has signed a pro baseball co~l tract with the Oakland A's system .... Cr edid football stars Dennis Ray and Joe Donohue for4 helping the CH P apprehend a dangerous suspectJ A female officer was losing the battle with a largd male suspect when Donohue, formerly of Mate~ De1 High, and Ray arrived through three lanes o freeway traffic to help subdue the suspect . . . Th discus continues to be the orphan of track an field. The state finals are at Excelsior High Frida~ and Saturday before an anticipated crowd of 12 while the rest of the meet begins later at Cerrito College before 10,000. Since the competition i earlier than the rest it's difficult to understand th danger factor. Among the entries is Newpor Harbor High's Kevin Jefferies . . Corona de Mar standout.. Shawn Gallagher (distance runner) is headed for Oregon State. Newport Harbo basketball star Mal Durkee will attend Uc cidental and water polo player Mark Hansen is s for USC . Marina High's water polo team got a $1.500 lift from a Tread·a·lhon (treading water2' highlighted by Darryl Denney's 24-hour effort <with a five-minute break per hour). "/' ·' I. Top b icyclists vie .': a t Missi on Vie jo j ~ission Viejo has become one of 10 stops on the Lowenbrau Grand Prix. a bicycling series whicb includes many of the world's top cycle stars. The Mission Viejo stop is Saturday with the races beginning JUSt north of Lake Mission Viejo on O'Neill Road, turning south on Alicia Parkw~ and continuing al Marguente Parkway back to O'Neill Road. The men's race is for a distance of 50 mil~. the women go for 30 miles, beginning at noon. ·' Among the malt entries expected t<J participate 1s the Lowenbrau National team of Tom Douihly, Leonard H. Nitz, Wayne Stetina and Paul Deem. : Riders from other clubs are expected to in~ elude Olympic Games speed skating gold medalist• Eric Heiden. current world champion Danny• Clark, Roger Young, Danny Van Haute and th' 1980 Lowenbrau Grand Champion, Steve Bauer. ,,, Women 's competition includes the Lowenbrau team of Rebecca Twigg, Jacque Bradley, Lesli'f Nitz and Pamela Deemm. ,, Current world sprint champ Susan Novaraj Reber and Connie Carpenter , as well as Sariw Docter and Karen Strong-Hearth are also expect~q to compete. In the boys' 12·13 division, Keith Winokur of Huntington Beach won the bronze medal in the long jump with a best of 16-3\h. The win· ning jump, by Seal Beac h 's Gary Cov- g ~IF, 11TE1a.m ... ington, wa.a 16-9. In the girls' 14·15 ca tegory , Karin Jurkovic of Newport Beach was third in the long jump with a best of U-2~. The wlnnine Jump WU 15-S'h. In the 10· 11 age bracket. Paul MacDavtd of Fountain Valley and Mlke Ziaco of Hunt· lncton Beach flnlabed first and tbJrd In the boy a' lone jump. Mac· David h ad a bett of 13/3~ while Zlsco11 top mark was 13-2. In t.M Cirls' 10·11 lone Jump, Newport Beach'• Je n ny Eva n 1 waa second wtth a mark of 12·1 ~. • Gr a y honore d LESSONS ST ARTS JUNE 16th 8 WEBCS ... s25oo Reglatratton etlN1a JUM 1 It 1 ONE HOUR WEIKL Y IMCWDIS GOLF BAU.S & INSTRUCTIONS LESSON HOURS .T•s.,Wecl..1111n. 9 A.M. or 6 P.M. Sat. At I PX Kim Gray, a student at Rotary H!lh School ta ~~::::::::::::::::::::::~~===~~~~~~ l"\llltrtoa and a raldent ol Fountain V alle1, wu n a med most valuabJe p la7er ln the Sunrlae lA•cue ln aottbaJJ Wa ltUCID. Gray Md a 1·1 WOD· toet nc:ard wttb only two earned runt •cored a1atmt ..... lD Lbe tllbt deelalom. Raied#l In treadwear! Versus Goodyear Custom Poly· • steel. Firestone 721 end Michelin ~ XWW based on a comparison of proiections lrom manufacturer s 1readwear rahngs under the new 3ovefnmen1 Umt0<m lire Quality Grading System a.Dt te.,. at a 'rice t'• te te hat. I j I • Orange Co--' DAILY PILOT /Wednetday, June 3, 1981 ~ . . .. .. AMERICAN LEAGUE Aflfl9l• 3, Blue Jaye 0 CALll"OtlNIA TOllOMTO ....... ..,11111 C.rew, lb • 0 I 0 G•ltfln, • J o o G l\H'I_,, U I 0 0 0 Wooch, 11 • 0 1 0 f'0td, rt J 0 • 0 Downl1111. 11 • o • 0 lollnell, ti ) 0 I O HeCllOll,. • 0 I 0 Moyl>tY. lb J 0 0 0 8aylor,<lll s 1 o o MoNCIY,rl J 0 1 0 Grich, ail • ' ' I \lelH,. J 0 0 0 Herlow, ct J o o o #llA«ho, a > O 0 O Ott, c • I I 2 Alf>Oe, a 0 0 0 0 ••rdo, 2'b J 0 I 0 Whitt,< t 0 0 0 l0t9, ph 0 0 0 0 Total• :u J S J Tol•tt 27 O • 0 iC_.,, ..... C.lllornl• 010 cmo Oll2-4 T 0tonto 000 000 000-0 E -~ 2 OP -Collforlllo J. L.Oll - CalUotllla I, T0tGl'llo 2 HR -Ott I II I. S8 -. 8oytot, eorew. o.ni.. s -'"' .. ..,,.· o.. F0td. Call ....... Frost IW, 1-0) Hauler cs. fl , ........ IP ,...., J\') M R II II $0 4 0 0 I I 0 0 0 ' , L.Hl CL.,Wl t S J J J 1 H8P -Clot LH1 (lklrietoft). WP -LHI T t ·U.A-12,617, ... , ........ _. eostOll ooo 001 012_. 10 o Cleveland 000 000 -...0 4 0 Eckersley and GedrtW111; 11, .. ,,.,. - H•tMY; w-Ecllenley, ~. l -etyle-. .. , HR-BoltGl'I, Evant l lJJ. A4,JU. ~•.Reyolal SHttle 002 020 ~ I I Konws City 000 000 210-1 11 1 " llOMl~t••. Rawley 111. or.., Ill -H.,ro11, IM<•nouer, Mortin ts), 0u1..,.,. berry (tl -Grote, Watl>Oft 191 W-F 8•nn11ter, ~s L ~-·· 0-4 S-Oraoo Ill A-U,•71 ll-..n S, TWltH J TUH 002 100 020-s 1 0 Minnesota 100 020 000-J 1 I 0• rwln, c omer Il l ond s1111d1Nro; Koosm.,, '-r Ill -Wyneoor. W- O•r•ln, M L.-Koot.mon, ).7. s-c- (51 HR-TeJCA, Elll1 ti). A-J,6SS. ~ Ir-. S, T .... t I • Mll•auk• 400 000 001-S 1 J • Detroit 200 000 000-J S O Caldwell, Fino-rs It! 011cl SlmmCW11; • Petry, c:_.uetto (JI, L-r Ul and Por- rltl\. w~1. M l -Pwtry, 2.s. S-- Flnoers l!Ol. HR-Mll•auk•, TllOmos 1 114). A-14.07'. Y-S,Or ..... J 8alllm0te 000 000 120 00-2 S 1 Hew Yont 100 100 001 02-S 10 0 f'la"'"90", Sloddon:I Il l, T. Mor1JIWI Ill. Stewart It) -DemPwy; G111<1rv. ~ It) and Cerone. W-Gon•o•. l·I L- Stewort, 2·2 HR H-Y~k. Wlnflelcl ('!. Balllmore, M11rray l'l. Aeverlno Cl>. A 1.S,057. A't6,WMt.SUI OO lancl SOO 000 001-"' t 0 Clll<aoo 000 200 *-2 7 > Mcc atty -ite .. 11. Ba11moone11. L.omp (11, Faf'fn« 161 -Fiii!. W-McCAtty, ~ L. -,_,.,_, J.S A -.c>,CMS. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brave• 3, Dodaere 1 A Tl.A.NT A tos ANO a us .. ,... .. .... Rooter, lb s o 1 1 ThomH, 20 2 o o c AU.ISlll,rf l 0 0 0 ~y,rl J 0 I I Harper, rf 1 O O 0 8411ler, 11 • o o c llnortt, II S 0 1 0 Gafvey lb • o 1 c ChmM•. lb • o 1 o coy a ' • o o r Mvrphy, c1 J o o o c;w~,.,., c1 • 0 0 , ==~/': ! : ; ~ Howe, p 0 0 0 o Ramlr11:u 1O1 O c .. 11110,p 0 0 0 0 Perty, p t o o o SclOKlo, c • OJ c PourN, ptl O O o O A11uell, pr 0 0 0 O Hhrdny, pfl 1 O I I Frloa, u J O 0 0 Pwter, pr 0 I 0 0 Sn\ltll, pf! 1 0 0 0 Comp, p O O O O -1<11, p 2 1 1 o JohMln, ptl I 0 1 0 Sl-•r1, p o O O o larldru, ct I o o o Tot••• M a ' 1 Total• S) I • 1 k-...,, ...... AllOlllO 000 010 000 2 -J LMAnot,_ 000 001 000 0 -1 E Petry, T!loma. OP -Atlanta 1, lM A119eles 2. l08 -Atlanta ,, Lot Aneelft S. 111 -Ramlru, Be11Hllet, Nalloroctny, Roy1ler. S T~ 2, Mllt'PhY. Pefry, Ramlret. ....... M• ••so Petry <W>U C.m•IS,6' "'" " • J 1 I t 0 I I I • 0 0 t u......_ Welcll I 6 1 2 Se.w.n CL>H 11/t I O o Howe 0 2 I 0 Ca1t1110 11\00 O o O H-pik-to J Nlterl lft IN IOU\ T - 1 SAA -37 ..... ........ 1 .. ~I Chkooo 000 IQO 001>-J 6 O PllUbllf911 >01 .ell U•-16 It O CalOCllll, Kr-IJI, EMtwl<ll C4l, c.pillo U >. Le.Smltll 171, McGlotllen 111 Mel llackwell; Solomoft and MICHi•. w-~.~L~ll,1-S.._.A7 ....... C..-...t MonlrHI 10. IOO ........ II St. loult 000 0. 001-t 4 0 811rrlt -tartar, R-Ill ; SNrtey, Lilt.II m, OtWI l•I, $.,._ (7) 1M .,_ mer, SOMhe1 C6l. W-811rrla, a-•. l - Shlrtey, •2. HR-MonlrMI, 0..-111). A-U,"'7. .-.-~ ...... t ... llllOft 000 M OOl-2 4 I s... 01e9o toe • .._t • o c......,., ~ Ill, IMMI .. ltl Md PllJ.11, lloWftJ 16); W.1111, ArlMlr-. (t), 0 . 9-ltl 1M T. ICOMHy, W-~. ).1. l -Weltll, 2-4 A-,471. ~ .......... , New Y.._ 220 010 0.._7 t I Phll ... lpNo J01 2IO !Oii-11 I M. Scott, LY'l'Ch W , SwOll CS>, Mlllff C1), Alllll (I) -SIMma; ~ ...... , UI, Lyle I•>. R..i 11) -a. 8-. w_,.,..,, 24. L-L'l'ICI\ t4. ~-m. H"-Yorll, Wll-(1). A-U.-,. ..... ,. ..• , CIMl-11 .. OSI llO-7 t O ~ l'r011Cl9ca OGQ ... ..,_IS ts t Loc:o.s. ... , 141, C..... l•I, ""Ice II) olMI Neleft, -..... ._...,_ !ti Md Mrf, W-WllttNf\. U \.-YCeb, , ... $-Mt!IMI 141. H"-491 Pil'Mtlec•, Mwolfl II), Mattlll m: ClllClllMtl, o.tlltf 111. 4-lt,097, Top10 , ............. 1 MIW!ttCMI La.NV• •M." l'llL ........_....._.. .. , ... ,. .... .__.,..... at IQ U •a ~ ........ , "' ... .. ... -..... 0 171 ... .. ••-.Ok.191 0 t• • .. .. w·1111--. .... v.ni "' m n S1 .-~.T-• ......... --k•, .....,_. 41 tH II 11 M ~............. • 171 u Sf .. ..__, •• ~ St "' 4t U .Jt1 ........ ~MllWC .. ,Wo.__,.....,.., ...... ~,,,~ ....... -....,, ......... ......... . ............. ,..-......~ .. .,,... ... ,. o=•;~--y---b J 11 ........... .._..at, Metr_,, o......;1t~ '--"· .__ ........... CIJNr, ...... 741 --.,....._., ••1 v--• •• -~ ~ ~~,_'\•.t: ~...-,. ........ ---., .. ~ ....... ... . .. .. ,........_ ........ ... YI 81 I, .......... tf .. a ...... 2 ..... " ... ...a;~ .... " ... ••• 41 ,.,. •• a I -:: ... . ... . .. .. ., -... -. -" ... ......... ,. l'euer, Cl,.ch111ell, O i lchmlllll, PllllMll.-... », c;.,,c-1-, C1"4!MllCI, •: .,,.,.., ~ •1 lk•O.-. ~ at. ,....,.Ole ...... C•tllOll, .................. M : "11M941, ..... ~ ..... .._, o.lillltn. 7·11 c:....... Alle1111 J.t; IH •er. Cl 11cll1n•ll. )·1: ltal•••••la, D•llltan, t •l l "lllh••ll, llfll~,M College World Seri .. ~ ........... Cat OIMINI Twelllay._11 .... b Arla-it.ate~ Mlttlul#I State J , So11tll Caroll11e 11. Mal11e 7 I Mah•• ellmlNlitd) T ...... •0-()111.._ Matt U•U> IA. Miami .. 14) "'--r'• O.m• Mlulu4M SU..• 1•ttl vs. Tua• U .. 1.U ,.,..,.,oame Arlr-StoN 02·1') .... totllol'I'• wl ..... , Br1Uth amateur (ot51."'*-.ketl-I Pl"lR .... Onie! wu ... (It-> d. Cherlel Harrl- CAtlOlllal, JOlll -; Joel Hln<:h IOll< ... l d. T,._.. ........,,._ IW. 04<,...,,yl, 2 oftd I, R-1<1 c;.lwr Jr (81rmlnghom, Alo.) cl. W. WHtner CS. Atrlcel, 2 and I; Gee,... Malnet .Jr. IMerlCWI, Pa.I d. s. Potter (Brl· talllOJ 4 and J; OoMlcl Ovbols IGl...,O. Catlf.) d. N. Tow llrltalnl. J and t; Fr- CH <• Piermarini l ltalyl cl 8enlamln 0-.y (lllnn....,..,... Ala.I,• Mel J, ~ call MllKl'llft (llrli.lnl d. Jimmy ,..,_. 11..lnestr•, S.C.l, J -J; GeOt9e OUMllln (8rltalnl d. $W"9 OW... (HelNI Cll'f, Flo.), t otld 2; ,.,.......,,Pirie (8rltoln) d. Rof!IH1 H119he1 IFon M.,.n, Fla.I, s -•. Gl'n M<HOCI (Britain) d MIU SIOll !Pott,_, On.). Hit•• Rowla11d ( 8tlt•ln) cl WayM Playen IS. Alric.a>. •-; Colin M<L..Klliell (S<otJOfld) d. Ronan Aoflerty (lrelOIWll, 1-vp· JOhll McK•Y C8ovntot1 a.och, f'la.) d. P. Campfwr IS. Atrlul, s ana J ; Jim O'Moro !Old Gr-1<11. C..11.l d M. ..._ ptw•'I' CBr"olnl. •-; w1111 .... Gffber Ill CH•mll-. N.Y l d. H. RO<lle 18rltoill), t end I ; ~ ROl\dOlpfl CShMOfl "9'11f1U, C61fl.l d. H. Frayssl-(France) 4 -2; AOllHl ~ CO.lies) d Y Cou,.,._ (Swltarl-l, • - J; M .. L.owrenu (8rl· talnl d. ~ llolCIWlft I.._ YOtk), l·""-tec..i R .... c..otf Godwin t8rltoln) Cl Rl<hen:I K,.. IVS.), S -l ; Al., Foster CSyrocuw. N.Y ) d. °"""on E•OM CWalH), I-; It, •Oii Hl ... e'1< IS Alrlu) cl. Oavlcl T-. IV.5.1, J -I ; Franklin Ro .. IT..,,...., Kan.Id. Sien T.,,..,.,_, CV.S I. lt\11 llOle. Stet• amtteur c• la,.,.,._ o.tt ea.Ml OUAUPYIMO LIADIH .... c-w ........ 61 -O'Nelt H-1 (Riviera); 1111 c ..... trot I El HIOllell; Edello Cllff IStMdlusl). .. -Trecy HaUUlll C Riviera), o.AfY W•l-1 CCfl-• Park!, O.n .. I Fi..ci !Palos V......,, J«lfl Pote 181rnom WooC; Jim•-CRl\l\ara). Aneo.flflffoa 71 -SW,... Hewtotl !Mii• Square), Milo 81vm (Old Ranchi. 11 -Jim PltWnOI\ IMeH \llnMl s.....c-w ........ " -MkNel T-r CSetlvl•.0•11 10 -Plltfkll ...,_. C\llo \le,..,. I 11 -MIU Miia Cl.OS Al.,,.llOI). cro19 Dnlt Cl'Wler\lalley). 72 -Alft o.ivon ( RonchO Porto.I, -DllM9A" (lll<torlo); Joy Avella (StMdllsU. .... QMtfften 72 -Todd MeeNI I lrvlne CMs t) 15 -"'°"' U-.Y IMHo Verdel 1• -llrM 0.... IM.IWOfl \llojol, R-1 Hadley CEI HIQUell, Poul O'SllM ls.Mo AM). PGA atatlttlca I T'llnolilll MO f >II ICORU•O L.aADaRS 1. lruo l.leUU, 70.02. 2 Toni Kite, 10.04 J. ll•Y FIO'td, 10.07 • Tom Waltoll, 70.tt. s JolWl!ly Miiiar. 10.25 AVallAGI DllVING DllTANCI I. Dan PIOlll -0.N Oulgley, 275.9. 3 f'red Coo.cllet. V S.• •. FllUV Zoeller, VU S. T-""'11.,, m • DtllVIMG PIEICaNTAGa lllll'AIRWAY 1. Colvin,......, IOO. 1. Miile Reid, 7.0. l l orry '"4.IClft, .752. •. 8111 Roeers. 1'1, S Joc•R-•. 1u. oa11NS '" lllGUL.ATIOlll I, 8NC9 UetlU, .121. J. Jollnl\y Miiier, .111. ). JOO Nkll!WI and Scott WetllJ"' .10t. S. Tom Kite, ,JCQ. AVllUIOI ~TI'S Pall aOUMD 1. Ton\ Wlllollf\. ..... L Ton\m'I' Mrerl, ft.'5. J. Altn Taple, 2t.1t. •• Biid AJlln, 19.'7. S. G4ry Mc~ 2t. '2. Pa RCllll'TAOI 01' SU•f'ARMOL.H t. T-w.c-•• m. L BrlKe Lletllt• • .Z:St J Jerry P.wlo, 221 •. Roy Floyd, 215. s M dy ·-· .llO. IAOLIE LIEAOalS 1. 9,..,.,. Uetr.tro, t . 2. i..-rd T~ 8r11<• Oouel•H •IWI Keith Fer9ut, 1. $. 8oi. •Y W•IHI, 8111 Kr .. Hrt, Mot'k Hoytt, Jim Simon•. Geor99 Areller •IWI ._, Cl.-""· '· . llRDll L.1.ADIRS I, lr..a Uetrto, 2 ... t . Maril O'MMra. n1. a. 8eft Creftlhew, n.. •· urrv Helselll, 214. s. Tom Wa!Joft and Roy f'loycl, 212. Coaet area re1ultt L.MUNA 81.t.CH MIN c•cau-.. o.-c-...1 ~ .... T_"''"' l"lltllt A-t. ~,_ K_,rm..,, IO-U-4&1 Flight a -1, t:ugeno lrond, IO·t1-61; fllleflt C -1. ltlll Weyne Sf'llltll, --~I l.)'1111 CatftUtt, ... 21....-; W•lter PrlU, ... 11-41; Eett QYltley, tOG-4il; Plltllt 0 -1, Ill•> "ldWd Jonwtt. ~; g.,. vr-... •~; "'" Retll. •2~; ,,.,. .,,._,.., tl•U....; ......... -1. Gii ,.,_ .... f7.Jt.-... COITA MISA WOMeN ~QI: ........ Ck* ~: Har'-•-•: ~ NM.; .... Wf'lla. A l'lltllC l~l -W'l'OwlMYl IHetl - 1, Qe1111ie ...._. .. ; 2, Mor .. ""'ten911. I f'llellt COrw91 -lally G41ftya; (Natl -I. Nori• Orlld'l'I 2. Ir-.. ell. C Plltfll (o..t) -J8Clli. HI•: C ... tl -t. l'°rltlle ~; 2. J•u NIJI 0 f'llel\I (~) -Leflefe W~«ll; (Net) -1, _,.., ~;t.Ort•J-orlll. IMYA AMA coUNT•Y c~u• -.i'ta.tttM ........ Clue ~; (-.ft ICIMlel --.. 1 Litt......,. Ct<l11ti. wllle tltle fer tllftll 11-.1 NASL WUTIRlll OIVISIDlll W l Of' OA IP,.._ • • 22 1S , • .., • 7 17 22 14 u •6U201341 s 1 12 11 11 4 MORTMWHT DIVISION \l ... couvw I 4 2A 12 JI 6' s .. 111. 1 ' JO U 25 '5 PMtlano • s It 1• 11 SA Edmolllon • 1 It 2' If • C••oorv l 9 11 " 11 Jt IASTaRN DIVISIOtf CMn'OS Watlllnoton MOlltrHI T0tonto 10 • l7 ,. JO '° • • u 17 " u s 7tt201t .. A tltJJlt'3 SOUTMIERN DIVISIC* AllOllta 1 s 2' " tJ '6 f'I L•-.1• I S It U 1' ff Tampa 8oy s I It 2t 11 o Jocksonvllle S 1 U I 1 11 .0 ClllC•OO Tulw Mlnnewto 0.11 .. CIENTlltAL DIVISIOM 9 3 1'I • s " • s " 2 I I t u tJ 11 " 1S ft JI " .. JI • ,. SI• POinb on •war-lor • regulatlon or overtime vktory. ,_, POinu tor • lftootolll victor.,. One bOl'tU$ point lor ..... , -· KOtecl wllll 0 rnul""'""' of tllr• per 00"'1 No llonu• point IJ •••r-fOr over1lme 0t lllOOtOUIOl»IS T.....,-stc• .. Atl0111a6, TOtCIPll02 C.,.,...,.1, Montt ... 1 (oO T--•0- Son DioOD et CAl...V Tampa 8oy at SHtll• Ml~atPortl­ JoclUonvllleel L.ocA,,..les TtllnMy'•O- OallaJet Tlll.Y Deep Ma flthlng llllWl'OttT C..,.a ~l -12 Oftllen. I I tlarrac11cla, U tlonllo, I u l>au, J ,.11-1a11. 1De...,-t L.ecUrl -a ......,., •t NrrOCIOIM, W bonito, W MU, 10 rock flth, J MllllUI,.., .._ ...... OCIAlllSIDI -114 ono•era: 10S bonito, 2SA colko .... ._ 1t .-besa, .. rock 11111, JG moct.e..t. SAlll DllOO CM&M \.aedl•t, Pia._ ••M••'•, Pelee \.eMo) 101 onglert: • yellowtall, J -Ito, 211 ca lleo NH, J ll•llbu~. au llerracuoa. J:JI rO<ll ""'· 1 11119 coct. Misc. PUBLIC NOTICE ~~-PUBLIC NOTICE ~ PICTITIOUt aua11111u -PICTITIOUS eu'iiitUI l'IC'TITIOUS IUllNllS ~ ITATtMllllT lllNM l'fATl...-•T NAMl ITATIM&MT T~ letlWlnf --· ere .. , Tho IOll9W!nl --II 9111111 ..,.i. he fOllOllfllll ~-It dOlnt -tl-91111""9•1 MU H -H. JOll DIVIL.O~MINJ COM CALll'ORHIA IHDUST"IAI. I M I M A L 0 I S l E ~ANY, .. ,., Tfr• ...... 1111'9 nt ••IOURCIS, UOI s .... , sir..-. OISTIUIVTO"t Ot SAN 01eoo. PUIUC NOTICE PtJauc NOTICE ------------- l'ICTITIOUI MIANHI MAM• l'r'ATUtllNT T•• .., ... , ... ,.., ... ,. •• ,. 001111 DVllMtUe: 11\I' AAV, C/o I ••Y C...aWVC.tlOft (empany, ..... 11tll ltrett, Coe.ta MHe, Ceolllor• tltD •IT-. OtlllarM•nNO ""'· JAP, Selrt• Ana, C:.lllwnl• '2104 aoo Wlnllltor c t., Cott• ¥•••· ................ o Cel"-"lo <et JtM M.t1I St-l••· SIOI I IMr C.11~ "'21 terat1011, UIU laacll Re •d Mreet.Ate ,.P,SMiaAlle,c:.Jl......,e Oavllll Stew•rt Wat .. n. )410 C•l9'r-.._.,, (Olll.,IN tiu. '27M Wll!Chot Ct • C.to -... C•11'9rllla "•' Oewloipmeot, llllL.. • C..lllotN• torporallOll, t• IEaU 1'111 SlrHI, Cotl• MoM. Colltomla t1'%7 Jemt.t H. llcltld••· Inc • Tiii• "'*"*" ,, <°"4111<Wd •Y ... Ill ffl2' Collferftlo ~·l""'•llon. ,, ... WI lllMdllal. Tiii• bull-. I• <onctlKtM CIY on '" 'ran~ I' ..,,..,., ..S ~y Cl11ll ,.. .... LM., II TOf' a C.lltOfnle Jtfll\M. StOM•tl• cll•lclval . --Tiii• ~t Wti llled with lhe David 5 Wei.loll Dr., Cott• Met4 CA tM». f'rMll P eorwo ".A.H. l11t"'9fMtlll, • Celll0tnl Cavftty Clertl of 0r"'91 C-y Oii May Tiiis .._ .. _, ... Ill• WIUI IN <WMr•tlefl. '1J06 M1MY lltllll Clrdt, I, 1t11 Covtity C._... Ill Or._ County on Moy •• , 0. .......... 1. lftC, llo-~.Ray ml,.,.., caltMnllo t.a l'ltttll I, 1911 Tllla lllltlntts It <Ofldvctld •Y Pvbllttlecl Or.,. CM.II Oelly Pl~ 1'16t• AMI \Ike l"r'ft This ~..-...n-t wat llleO with .,,_ Couftty Ci.<11 Of Or._ C-ty Oii May "· , .. ,. -•I """11>ertl'llt May IJ, 20, 21, J.,,.. a, t .. I Jl .... I Pvblbtoecl OrM\09 C:0.11 O.lly Plto!, Mtei 10\lllkt, "kllorcl J _ ---j May U, 20, J7. JllM I, 1'11 tMIMtt l'IHUS ""ltll"'9cl Or ... Cofft 0•11)' Pll04, ·~~ wu 111_. w1111 ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE Covllt'f Clar\ of Orent11 C.Vnty on PUBLIC NOTICE J-1.1•1 May to, n, J-s, 10, "" u.2-t1 -Pt~t Notlc& INVITING alDS PllOI ..... er.,. Cee•I Oally PllOI, ..'!~'~ ~~":·:. ~·~.::~= J-I , IO, 17, 14, '"' 2S.Wl mwnlly Coll-Dlttrl'1 of Orange PUBLIC NOTICE c-ty, Callf0tftl•, wlll rK•I"' Molod Md• VP to 2.00 p.m. Th"'1dty, J ..... It, ttll at Ille PlltcNalnt l>epetttMlll Of aolcl ~leoit dlstr.c:t touted al 1110 PICTITIOUS 8USINIU ._am• AYelllll, Gott• ---· Golll MAMI ITATIMllllT jor111o, •I _., time Ml<I ll>lcla wlll tie Tho fOllM"9 per_, It dolfto l>lltl· pvbll<IY-*' end rffd l0t: -. .. , 8 VS TAANS POR TAT I O H eu•NA VISTA COHDOMIHIVM SIER\llCE FOR TH! P!RIOO JVLY OWNlll'S ASSOCIATION, 1412 81HN I, ltll THROUGH J VHE IO, lttt Vltta, S.. Clomellto, C.lllor'nla t»75 WITH UP TO FOUR CO O"IOHAL I JeM O. 8ro11Uerd, Ult' a-YEAR RENEWALS Vino, '°" c ...... nte. Collloml• t»1S All ....... to be In o<<onMllc• Wltll ThlS ~J 16 t Dnllho<IOCI by Oft 1#1· lhl elel ,._m lllWIKtleM and c.ondl· 1"4Wtor..., asto<latloll Ol"'f 111011 • U..t and topeclfkoti-Wftldl ••• -~•· Oii Ill• -rney w --In the office . John c. lro11turd, ottlle Piirer-lnoAeelltof..Wcoll..,. .._.... dl•trlct Tlllt __ , wM 111.0 wllll the Eoc11 _, "'"" Wllmlt w1111 1111 C..,nly Clerk ol Or.,99 Covnty on bid • '•VIier• <heek, certified <lle<ll, J-I, 1te1. ., .,_,., --,.,Olll• '° - l'ICTtTIOUS aUllMISS MAMI STAT•MaNT Tll• tollD*lng pertons ere c101no buslneuos s AND s. 190'1 Suva c~cle. Cost• Mew, CollfOrfll• ta» M•t11n Ernest Str-, tto2 Sliva Clrcle, C... Meta, c.llfomla ti.2' Lorry G. SteNlnos. JIU1 E NIM Ori••, L.ovllN Hlowl. Calllornl• 9»17 T 1111 llvslNM II conductecl Cly 011 ..... lncorpOtated ouoclatlon ..,..., lllOn • P•rtnerslllo, ~nE Strand Tiii• 1tat-1 •• llleo with -County Ctel1l of 0r.,. C...,,ty 011 Moy 11, 1911. P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•U HAMI STATaMINT TM loll0wl119 per1411 It dolno ~I· MU•s WESTCUf'F REALTORS, 17tJ Wntc llll Drive, Newpol't leach, Callfornl• 9M60 Danial HOme• WallHlllM, tie.ti Margene Clrcle, Irvine, Calllornl• '2714 Thlt _,,,.., Is cendtucle<I ti!' on lft• dMdlual Doniel H WallelltlN Tlllt •lat-'*" tlled •1111 -County Clerk ol Orange C-.ty °"May l,ltll PUBLIC NOTICE 1'1'Jtll Otder ol Ille C...JI Comm1111lty Coll099 T OU 1st .......... Oronoe COOS! Dally Piiot, Dhtrlct Boercl Of Trvtteu In en l'~c,.,:.~ ST!:~:.·: .. , ,ICTITIOUS IUSIM•U JllllO '· tO, 17, JA. 1'11 2~1 amovnt not .... thotl ,,,,. percent u Tne 1041-1119 per-. ,, CIOlno llv•I NAM• STATIMaNY percent) ol IN wm bid at• ov-n11IH nan u . Th• lollowlng persons are doing PUBLIC NOTICE \NI tfle tllddlof wlll en1er Into the pro IHTERCATIOH COMPANY, Ulll butlneu as. -"Contract II the Mme Is ••er-Paumont °'Ive, HunU"91011 hac"-MAOAAll J'l HAIR Pl.ACE, 1W to him 111 IN _,,. ol toll.,,. to .,,t., C•lllorlll• ~ 1---\lerdll Otive Eo•, NO. IJ:J, Cotto lllCTITIOUS au111111u Into W<h contract,,,.. proceeds ol tne R-Y. T Yell, U01 Pec:-1 ---· q11-. t1'21t T NAMa ITAJIMaNT ~1'9:~'.:. =!~*.!· ,c;:.::s:,~.·= Ori••. Hlllltlnglon Beacll, C•lltornl• 1 Pnllip • ~ J -11• \/Incant, UI h• 10110.•lng ,.,_,, ••• CIOlno fOl'felle<ltowldcoH-dl"rkt. n-Avoc ado Street, Co•t• Meu, WSIMM at .,.. Thia -11\Hl ll conclll<tad by on In-, Calllornla ~ · No~,..., withdraw hit bid tor T•I • 1 1 d 1 d b BARON """ O. CO., S21 Superior 0 perlOCI Of fort.,..lve 1411 .S.ys alter ~lvldval " 1 vlll neu • con vc • y ="'· "--1 e.och, Calllotnlo Ille date Ml for Ille _.,1119 U.teol Tiiis ~em!,, T .::"111.a wllll Ille hv.-.=:;'.~Vincent The 8-cl of Tr11tl ... .-.-Ves lhe Thi •·t 111~ Ith \lalerle R Goodbody, 720prlvlleoeolrelo<Ungonyolldall blcls CountyCler11ol0rOfl99 CO<.nly onMay •, ... _,was -w tne Mor .... d, eor-clef Mor, Callforllia °' to •al"9 ony lrreovlafltlet °' In •. 1911. t County Cter11 of Ot°"91 CollMy on Mo' '2W rormallt191 In any blcl or In tllt bldcllno "'""' 11• 1911· Kendall A. Wemel, 121 Ond Street, NORMAN E WATSON Publltlled Orat!Ot CoOlt Delly Piiot, 1 f'1'tl17 N-pot1 9M<h, CalllOtllla tMO Secrelory Board ot Moy 13, 20, 11, Jvne J, 1''1 n-1 Pvbllslled Or-Co.st Dally Piiot, Wllllom Hodo ... oo C•brlllo, Trust.en CMll I May U,J0,17,JuneJ.1911 1211 .. 1 Cotlo IMM, CAlllOtru .-v ~lty COii-Olstrt<t PUBLIC NOTICE Tllh blnlNU Is conduct.a ti' • PvDll-0r.,,.. Coe\! Dally Piiot PUBLIC NOTICE .,._., ~~~-Wamel J llllO, -10• 1911 HlO-tl FICTITID'-'S •USINIUI This llatenwnl wes llled •Ith the r NAME STATEMENT c ... 111y Cieri. ol Or.,ge County on PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie foll-Ing Pf''°" Is CIOlng bl.IM· l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS lllAMI! STATIMINT J-1, 1'111. ,. ... OS Th• 1o11ow1ne s>e,_, 1s dolno tivsl MHa' "1U11J WAYNE MICHAELS, S1SI Ellnora Publl"'9d OrOl\9lf Coast Dolly Pilot, "~CZ!~~!:~=:~ Lane, CYl>'Ut Colllcrnlo~ J,_ J, 10. 11. 14, Itel w1 .. 1 Tllo loltOWing periotl 11 dolno bvsl-Mic natl W wr10111, n s1 Ellnora -------11 ... •• l ane, Cypr•"· Colllorn10 ~ UL ASSOCIATES, 1511 FIOtlclo, Sulla A, Hvnltnglon Beoch, Collforllla '12'4 PUBLIC NOTICE KAMCO, 102•2 S.Hllell Clrcle, Tiiis -lnen "conclll<lecl by an 111· Huntlnotot1 Bffcll, Callforllle 92M6 dlvl<1ual L.eo J L.oCoscle Jr , 1511 Florido, Suite A, Hunllnglot1 e.oc11. CollfOrnl• .,_ ----llC•U••••n A M•m••"· 202•2 MtchMI w Wrl9ht PUl\.IC NOTICI SeHhlll Cl<ele , Hunt111Qtot1 Beacll, Tiii• ,,.,..,.,.,,, w•• Ill.a wllll lllt lhh -lneu It <otduClecl Dy _, Ill dlvldllal ltOTICa INVITING llDS C•lllotnla ,,_ County Cle,_ ol Ot.,QR C°""IY on Mey RECEIPT OF PROPOSAU. Sealed Tlllt bus1neu Is condUCted by an In· 1', IMI P'DPOUI• wllt w rec.al....t 1'Y .. City dlYIClual • L.ao~laJr ef lrvlrw. Owner of the-· 111 the of. Kallllffll A Mam.Ill flee fll IN City Ctefll, locatecl at 17200 TlllJ 11411.,.,...,,I was 111• with Ille Jaml>OrM Rood, lrvlno, Calllornla r o11nly Clerk of Ore11ge County Ofl '21~. _,, J:OO p.m., on J .... 10, 1•1. May 11, 1911 fw !tie ~tlOll of drol ..... Im-11161- l't'24U Publlslled Orange Coest Dally Pllol. May 10, 11, JllM l, 10, 1991 230J..I ' PUBLIC NOTICE Thll st .. _, was 111.0 wllll tne County C._... of Cl!'-C-ty on May 11, l .. I. ,.,., .. Pubtl.-0r.,. Coast Dolly PllO(, Moy IJ, 20, 11, JllM l, ltll 119141 _,,_.... Prolo<t --tiles Me al P11DllSMG Or-Coast O.ily PllOI, """-!otMlonl In the City ol lrvlne. Moy l3, 10. 21, June J, l9ll 21.._,1 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH I OISCRIPTION OF WORK. Remove -- ------NAME iTATIMINT P UBLIC NOTICE nd Pl pc c bt vtto Tiit lollowlno persont ere doing ~,,;'.,,0:.. ,;oi. ~:n.'c!.s1r~i PUBLIC NOTICE bullneu ... l'ICTITIOUS IUSINHI Type 1 c.tch wstn, and 11om1 drain --THE ANAHEIM AHTIOUE SHOW N""'W STATIMINT l'fllem. ENGINEER'S ESTIMATE ~.~~~~i.:.a Wffl Katello, Ano,,_.m, ... ~~,:..~ol.!owing per14n1 ere doing "'&::·:NG OF PROPOS.At.S. T~ ,~C~~~!:~:.·::~ J-pll 0Nn GrltnH, lW Cheryl SAHOPE88L.ES, 1"21 Valley Cir ~ wOl 111 publlely _....•NI Tiie lollO*fl\g perloOnt ere c101no Way, ltl\oersldt, Calll0tnl•'1.SOO lcle, Ho D, Hvntlngton 8eocll, IM .~~nii-d ottlc~ Of the STRICTL.V SAFES, 1"'5 Sky Perk W•r. Rl .. nlclt, Colitornl• '"°' 8ulrlc• Ann Colema11, 1H21 ,..... et t·• p"' Ofl .-10 1t11 al bllslneu H · I Belly• Sevol• Grlmet, JW Cheryl Calltor11la f2IM6 OwMr. Clrcle, SVlteC, lrvlne, CA '12714. Thll DVslnass h concl11elecl by • \I alley Clrcle, Ho D. H11nt111glon oaTAIH ING CO N T-A CT B11d GlflorCI, .. , •• Alo ltr• SI oenualpe,,,,.,.,,lp 8•ocll,C.Clfom1•9- DOCUMIHTS Tiie wieclfkatloftt ...... HonhrlOge, CA t1m JOMfll o. ... GtltnH This ~ Is condYUad by ... ln- e11tltl... "COtlslnoetlotl of Oralll099 H-y Anni GlllOtd, 111M A191ers Tiiis tlOl.,.,....t was lllecl •1111 llw Cll•ldllel ,.roj ecl (onahtlftg Ge11erolly of SL, Hor\Jlr!Oge, CA tl:n4 County Clerk of Or.,9' County °" 84otric• AM Colln\Oll VonwtOlrtlOlldGvner Rectl«-' Tllh buslneu "conducted by Aprll JO, "" I Tiiis lta...,_. wn fllad with the leclleM ..... 1r· Storm Orol11 -CIP h11Sl>Olld -..... f'HllU County Cle'11"' o.-. Cownty on Moy SJO.tS." ,.._ --llkatlont and BuCIGltford Pubfl$ftecl Orano-CoHI Oolly Piiot, 21, '"'· all contract ~ts moy tie ao. Tiii• statement ••• lllad wnn ,.,. ""•' ll, 20. 11, Jvne >. 1911 m1 .. 1 f'1•27M lal ..... from the °"9rt"*'I o1 Publl< CO<lllly Clerk of Or°"91 C-ty Oft May P11blllhld Or-CMll Dally Pilot, Werll1, City of 1rv1ne, 17200 J.,,..,... "· 1911 P UBLIC NOTICE M•y 27 Jvne 3. 10. 27. 1911 242MI Road, lrvlne, Calllor11I• A non-'"Htl ,., ........ ,. '" of U0.00 wlll IN Publlsheel 0r.,. CoeSI Dolly PllOI -- cllot8" for Mell Mt of doclHMnb. MtY 20, 27 J-J, 10, 1911 1308 11 1 "CTITIOUS IUSIHIU PUBLIC NOTICE l'IMI• OIWl-llkatlOftt •Ill be malled NAME STATEMINT w•.-tJonolchOtgeotts.00. PUBLIC NOTICE ~~."· •• •ollowlng pe,_. •• dolno bull· l'ICTITIOUSIVSIMIESS PRDl'OS.Al GUARANTEE: Each ·-· NAMIESTATIEMIENT llf ..... I "'911 be occompeni.d by • t Mc COHHELL. ~COMPANY, AJt Tiie IOll°'*lng perloOn• e re doing COf11flelllorc ........ check or bid bOtld l'ICTITIOUS SUSIN•H Abbi• Way, Cos•• l'MllO, C•lllOtlllO -•nos• .. lnt11ot-ef t0perc .... 1ol-totol NAMESTATUUMT t2'U CUSTOM TOWING SERVICE. bid iwtc. ...,_..to the City ol lrvl!W Th• lollowlno per1oOns are dolno Carl Clo"lft<• M<Connell, A1t ~ 1111 Beker, 51111• o . Cosio Mesa, ., • .,..,. __ -the...-. 11 Ills llvslneu.u. Die Way, C.ta MHO, CAlltornl• t»2' I Calllornlati.H ,,,....11tacuptect, wlll promptly••· NEW DAWN, 1571 MyMl•wOOcl This business ls concluctecl by •11 In· WerrentWlnslon C0tporatlCW1 a Kuta lN contract, MC.,,. pey-t of SlrHI, Cosio MKa, Calllornlo t2lt2' Cllvlclllolr --C ~'-~I Calllornle c0<porall011, I 117 Bek.er, Worttor 1 Con\penutlo11 lnavronce, La..,.enc• Herman ROOlftson, IS71 .__, ...,..,__,.,.. Sull• o . ea.to Me~ Callforllla ._,. .. htni!MI • Mtl•fKIOf'Y Faltlltvl Myrtle-. Co5IO MIM, C.lllornla '"'' ""'-.... 111.0 "''"' -Tiii\ -h conduet.CI Cly. COt· ,..,.._.,..._ a-111 -•-• Of '1416 County Clef\ of 0r.,. Cownty on Moy POt•l•on t• .. rceM ol.,,. total bid price -• w L. H-• ..,,, w ?'2nd SI•••. 11. 191l Warren/Winston Corp. Labor •ftd Moterlalt &ond In the No. F•, Tor-ranee, Collfornl• tOSOS "'"'" Wlnstoft """""°" .,_,of 100 percent of.,,. total bid Thh bl.lslneu h conovcted by •I Pvl>lllhld Oronve Coatl Oelly Pllot, 1 Pretl•nt pr~. oeMr•• portners/llp Moy IS, 20, 21, June J, 19ll ,,., .. , Tiii• 1tale..-1 ... lllacl •1111 ,,.. WAOIE RATES: ~ requlrtt lllY Sec· W l . H..-------Counly Cter11 of °'M91 c-ty °"Moy tklll f17> fll IN C.lllomlo Ubor Codt, Thlt Ital-I w•• 111.0 with lM PUBLIC NOTICE II, 1911 IM 0-W Mt.....,,,,,_ \Ill 9"'ffol Cov11ty c 1er11 ol OrO>JO-c~ on_, f'161'10 Publltlled Or-Cool! Dally Piiot, -vellifoe , .... Of ••• In llW loull-I, 1t11 tr 111 whlcll the worll h I• b• 1'1'11M ~-(Aples of eald ..... .... Publlshed Or .. Coal! Dolly Piiot, ,._,mlMti-••• molnlalll9d ot ti• Mov U ,20, 27,June), Itel 21...,1 offkft ol llw OWNr -are •v•ll•bllt -._a, The Coftlro<104' shall poll o ~ of tolcl doc-I at M<h jeO Mia. TN Colllreccw olld any ~ c...u.ctw-hlm llWll ,.., llOI lesa PUBLIC NOTICE than llW -llled 11"¥0111119 ,_of "CTITIOUS IUSIMIU ........ 11_.._ ....... rMlllthe NAMIESTATIM•NT owac11tle110ftN-•ecl. TM 1o11-1no per1411 Is doing 11v11 PROJICT ADMINISTRATION: All neu at , 11""1 .... 191otlve .. Wlb -Je<t prior 0 G FINANCIAL SERVICES ... IS I• tN ~of bids t hell • ~ HIQhtlnooie A .. , F-t•l11 Valley, O te IN lffb ef h Prol«t ~ '2709 A .... lleft: JeM Olft,_, ._.......,. OOtl H H-. 9'15 HIOl\llftll*le, 1~ FOV11talll Valley, CA .,70I OWN•-·s RIGHTS RISERVlO: This tiuslftess I• tonCIUClad Cly on In· Ttw OW-,..,_ u. right to ,..Ject dMclva1. a11y or all bldlo. i. .,..,.. .,,, 11\fonnoll· Don H. Hlldiotl ty Ill a ll6CI,. and to molle _.,.. 111 Ille Thll Jtot-l ••• 111.0 •1111 the IMH'e ..... ~. C°""l'I' Ctef1< ol Orange c--, Oii Ma~ OATeOMey 27, 1"1 19, '"' CITYOf'IR\llNE ~ltfl9d Or ..... CooSI Dally Piiot, Moy tt, J-J. , .. , t-.Ht Pt1BUC NOTICE f'IU414 Publl"'9cl Oranoe CoatJ Dally Piiot, Mar 20, 27, J-1, 10, 1911 230141 PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IUSINaSS MAMI STATIEMaMT Moy U , JO, 11, JllM J, 1911 222M1 Tiie lollowlno SM'1011S ore Clolno • PUBLIC NOTICE llllllNUAI PREMIER P LVM81HG, 20311 ---,.--- Meander L.one, Huntington Beach,, PICTITIOU$ SUSI MISS Calllo"'la ,._ MAMIE STATEllUNT Raymond J°""" GaQM, 20•1 T111 followlng ...,._, It dolflo butl· Meander Una, Hu11tlngton Beech, neu •• Calllotllla.,... S PA SERVICE ' REPAIR, 1202 Troy Francis Kinsey, 13211 Slattr •I, Hvnllnolon 8uch, CA Snowbird, Huntl,.Oton 8eaell, ,,.,., Calllorlllo.,._ Greo -1.-i.w1cr. no2 Slater •I, Thi• lktslnes• " conc111<tee by • >iunt1ngt0118M<ll, CA '2M1 oeneral ~Ip Tiiis _,.,." It <ondlKtecl by on Ill· a......-J. G...-dMdual TrO'f '· Kln .. y Gr19Wojtklew1Cz This rtalef'IWl11 WU lllad '*"" .... Thll •l•temelll ... Ill.a •Ith Ille County Clef1< of Or-C°""ty on Moy County Cler• ol Orono-Co4lftt'f Of' 12, 1911. Mor It, 1911 .. ,. 1'91 f'IU4 U Publl""" Or-Cootl 0.llY Pll04., Pubtltlled Or .. Coast Dolly PllOI, Moy U, 10, 21, J-J. 1'111 n~1 M•' 20, 11. June J, 10, 1~~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -~-------- aaSOLUTIOM N0.11·• ••SOLUTION 01' THI IOAllDOft DIRaCTOas 01' TNI MOULTott--.tOUIL WAT&R DISTillCT IMICURIMO ITS INTINTION TO ANNIX .. ltOl"IRT'f TO IMPllOVIMINT DISTRICT No.. I CWATaRI WHEREAS, 111• Ille dlll•• of'"' Board of Directors Of the Molllblll·Hlguel Water Olttnc:t CMHWO) to -• certolfl _.iy, as -.Crl..., In Eldlllllt "A" lo ttllt RlltOl\lllell, wMch Hlllbll ls ettoc ............ lftd b l>ot lllls ~· -1111 lllC-atoO, to lmpro-t District-J (Weier) ol MNWO; - WHEREAS, the Board .. Dlrect0t• nll<h 11\M tllt _ .. ., .. Mid llfCllP*'l't '°Im.,,..__. Olllrkt Ho. J IW.ter) ol MHWO wlll ~Ill -II ,,..-rfY, -WHEREAS, It Is ... -··· of Ille 8-d Of Olrecters .. cOlllll«I .. p\11111( hearl119 et Wlllcll penans may....., and be lie-re1.otl"9te h iw...-- neullOll ol territory to Improvement Dlstrkt -I IW•rl of MNWO; HOW, THEAEFOAE, tllt lloerd ef Dlrwd0rt Of MNWD DOCS HIERIEIY 111501.\IE, oeTERMINIE AHO ORDER .......... , lecil• t. That 11 ls IN Intent loll of the ~ ef Dlrec:ton ef MNWO te -• <Htal1111111_., to '"* o,..m..,t District Ne. J 1w ..... 1 fll MNWO. s.cu. J. Thet • mop ·-•no tlle eirterlor llovnclorlat Of Ille ten-1..,., " • onnoxecl, Wlllcfl mop IMll oowrn tor all detolla •ti> Ill eirtent Of DW trw i. be .,,,_ ..... It Oii iiie wltll the ~r .. ory of MHWO aNI It ovell09le let IMllK· tlOll lly .,Y penon or..,..,, lnl..,...ed.. IKtMol a. Tllet 1N ttrr1twv lo lie --tio ,.,.,.._.,, Dlatrld '"-J (Waterl ef MHWD Wll --· .. Wit'-" ....... Mlllc.8ftdllleftt.. Se<t• 4. Tlwl ~ ... (~ .... °"' ,.,,_ ............ .... me11t Olllrk'I NO.> (Wefftl, 1111;1•1111,..,,.... .. tll'W;lptl .. ....i lllt ... I 911 .,., llOndl • wwrMt•-••11dlno 11to1111e 1eYlelll e11<11111...c,...., tlll IMllll 111 told ,,.,..,.._.. Olltrkt, lllClllClll\e U. t'"lt..., __ llWl'e46. Se< .... t. 1'11111 e _.k lleerlnt .. Olld H .... ...,...., la H llelilefllM .,_ ''-' .... -.a.Mloft Of ,.., ... ''""erf .. '$' Dlllrkt .... , cwat ... , .,......, .., ~ retttlne .. .,.,..... ...,...._ .. 1:• f,m., ••-._.....,at I• pracl~." _...._ M..wo, 1'•w Pu Rllld, l....-Nl9'flll, CA t'K7,, on J-ti. ,.,, .... tNt et Miii tll'M Miii Pl-,,....._ far Mllll fllbllc: hHrlng O"'f ,..,_. Ill~ llltlWlfll ,__...,... 19nlf wltlllll tlW MM to __ _. .. ,.,...._ Dt .. rlc:I..., S IWator), Me'I .... aflll .. ,_.,.. lee._ t. lllM H ~etory of MNWO .. Miii tM ...,.. Mf'ff'I' It llllnc1elll le ~•Ol/fflftftllll" ........ '° .................. "' .. _ ... l!UlrH "'1 ....... aw\4 Of tM W•w ~--M811 ti Cal ........ . AOOPTID, SIONlO A .. D APPROYIO '"-tt1t•Yef llM'f, ltlt. MOULTOM-HIGUI\. ware.-OllTlllCT Otl\ W. ~Vice"""*"' MlllMle L T¥f'Ntkl, AUltlont totcAtorY A .. lst•t IKrNry STATI 0, CA&.lf'ORNIAI I . l TRY THESE CLASSIFIED INFtATION FIGHTERS I Wow lVu Can"' Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines for 2 days only $1 .SO a day Advertise one or more items valued up to $100. Each additional line is only 66c for the two days. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card 8JoW...8JeW... More value for yo.ur DIMES in the famous Dally Pilot DIMES-A-LINE Aos· Adverllte Items up to $50 In velue In OlmH·A·Llne •d• every Seturc:tey In the Dally Pilot. Brin9 your ad with caah to any of our three convenient onlc•• or mall your copy with a check or money order fOf the correct 1mount. 20c per line, S1 .00 minimum. Sorry, no llvHtock, produce or plente and no commercial ads are aHowed. Each Item must be priced with no Item over $50. Dtme .. A·Llne ads may be pieced at the Co1t1 Me .. onlce until 3 p.m. Fridey. THE B IGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE . DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June.3. 1981 •• rnITffi~~~ ~~ ~ rn The fnfTketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 ... ·-um ltu ... t• Illa um •• , .. , ... I ... IOIO ... 111111 ... .. ,. Im IOlt , .. ·-·-IHll IU llUJ •• HOO ·~ , .. 11111 llOO lllUO -JI• -ZJllO -~ --Jllll -- 1100 -JUI --~ l.12$ -llOO :noo --IOOO -... 11.lQ UOll UlO Ult .. - RMI ht• HMtet for S. HMM• Por S. HMMt Por S. Ho.es Por Sek Houses for Sole ........................................................................................................................................... f5t•r.. I OOZ ., .. ,_, I OOZ ., .. ,_, I OOZ Go.....-al I 002 GeM.... I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY , ....... Mofle•: All real estate ad- v er ti 1 ed ln this newspaper is 1ubject to the Federal Fair Hous- ina Act ol 1968 wblcb OCIAHROMT ll Bdrm1, 2 ba, un.tum. New. taSOyrl,y. IAYROMT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfurn . Mint cood. a5(1yrly. CHA ..... FllOMT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unlum. '150 yrly. associate d t\R ... w. ~ ..... I~~ # , w\, h I ' I ' , f, I makes it Ulegal to ad----------1 vertlse "any preference, limitation, or d is- crimination based on race, color, religion, sex. or national origin, or an intention to make any s uch preference, limitation, or dis - crimination." This newspaper will not know inf ly accept any advert sing ror real DUPLEX 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. Fireplace, built.ins. Ex· cellent rmtal area. Near beach & bay. $285,000 . 642-2253 eves. associated H~ i to i ~ , K f ", T l-' •1 ol I , ...... ti I f / ' , ~ ' estate which is in vlola·1---------1 lion or the law. ERRORS: Adnrtl1en thotlld check their adt daily and report .,... rors l1W1n1clatety. The DAILY PILOT assumff liabllty f« the first Incorrect Insertion only. MEWPOU HGHTS Deluxe townh ou s e duplex, 3 bdrm ramily, 2'-" bath each unit. Frplcs, all built-ins. decks & patios Park· l ike landscaping. SELLER WlLl.. HELP FINANCE. $295,000! lolboa lay Prop. Realtors •675-7060• THIMKIMG Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTA"(E EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COMI WITH US ••• TO WESTCLIFF. I MPRESSlVE FOUR BEDROOM , DINING AND FAMILY ROOM HOME. GENEROUS CUSTOM CABINETS .. BEAMED CEILINGS IN LIVING AND DINING ROOMS DEEP PANELED CA B I N ET S A N D BOOKCASES .. FOUR SECLUDED PARKING S PACES IN BACK 't' ARD .OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE. PRICE REDUCED TO $525,000. 1617 WISTCUff. N.I . Ul·7l00 LllCETO EMTBtT A.IN7 It would be our pleasure to show you this 4 br, Mesa Verde be auty. New crpt ia high lighted by lvly tile flooring 1n spacious F.R .. D.R. & kitchen arewi. 5'15·9491 lrfffmy Woods 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, lrg 2·Sty townhous e . S uper recreation rac1lit.Jes and excellent Easts1de loca lion. A sharp hom e, priced at $U4,950. lolboa lstc.Kf Rlty 673-8700 --------- LIMDA ISLE Wide channel view' from spectacular ~rchitectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, POOi home. Slip for 2 large boats. ~1 ,495.000. Summer occupancy. LIDO ISLE HOMES ' Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath hQm.e. newlv decorated. Priced to sell 9u1ckly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings . Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at • ~ wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, l 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. t ;:;.~:~~i:~~ifu~~~ ~· I BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR I J·ll kny~·d .. Q,,.,.,. NB 67) 6161 ~ ........ 1-----1 !!!!~~~~~~~~!!!!!! REAL FSTATE 59 UNITS I I CREATIVE FI NAN· cos CING . 131"2'1: Lease op-TA MESA lion possibility Very On 3.3 acres. Prime finest new CONDO buy m Harbor area. 2 & 3 area. Fmanclng avails· LOCATION .. Cocnt ttwy. Npt. lch. 1000 ft bldg and !1 h year lease. Prime window on Coast Hwy. Great park- ing. Owner will finance $160,000. •4'11 = ~!!.~~ ........ ! -GNeral I 0021 TOWHHOMI? Call the specialists at the condominium In · formation center ble. Prine. only. Ask for BDRM . 3 BA. 1650 sq. ft. Bell t1•c:gl6l Incomparable amenities y,.,...... ln area. We have Owner Investors who w1ll leas with option to purchase to well quaJiried Buyers. Don't miss chance for WATERFRONT HOMC.S REAL ESTATE 631-1400 LUXURY COMDO Tastefully decorated 3 Bdrm 212 Ba plus den. On e year old located 1n No Costa Mesa close lo shopping. Features In· f cude air cond . large wood decke d pal10 w,gas BBQ. micro.wave oven and much more. Assume lst loan and OW(' 2nd Full prtl'e $177,500 -!Vl) 1100 -... •u -----.... -----"11) ---· .., -~ ------ tolO --------..... ... 91311 ..... ... tltD 1111 ,.., - ••••••••••••••••••••••• Touchstone Realty 963-~ WATER AND SAND Luxurious Peninsula home, close to beach and bay Large 3 bdcm. 3 ba, 2 frplcs and much more. Only 4 yrs new. Assume large lst al le>'k interest. Owner will carry 2nd. : OPEN HOUSE REALTY /. r u t u re d i s co u n ti~~~~~~~~~ ownership WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380W. Wilson,C.M. Open 10-S 631-SOSS SUMDECKHAS CHANNEL VIEW Only $209,900! Charming Newport Beach 4 Bdrm. features wood burning fireplace. Huge over· sized lot with rear cov- ered patio. Owner Is motivated and willing to help finance! Just listed. Ca II now. 673-8550 Full price $350.000. Call ---------1 THE REAL ESTATERS DECORATOR COMDO SI 19,900 Windmg atreenbelt.s lead to bright single story condo. Exqulaltely de- corated with custom wallgaper and cabinetry thruout. Formal dining room too! Owner will cooperate with financ- ing. Won't last at this price, so call now. CI) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 NEWCOMDOS 13~%/SO'k SOLD NEW 1650SQ.FT. 2 & 3 Bdrm. CONDOS Cement drive, dbl garage w/openers. micros. trash corn's, air conditioning, walk Ins, pool & jacuzzl's, ~block all shopping & theaters. Next to park. WILSOM P ARIC CONDOMINIUMS 380 W. Wllson,C.M. Open 11>-5 631·505S today 979-S370 ALLSTATE REALTORS SUP'ER SHARP! If you're looking for a good buy. w/a great loan that Is in terrific shape -Look No Further! This is the one ror you. Call now!! 545-9491. ~ ........ REAL ESTATE 2TRIPLEXES Right in the heart of the Peninsula. Side by eac h-buy both ror $.530,000 or just one ror half Try $50,000 down & seller will carry. JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 Sell with EASE! It's a BREEZE Classified Ads 642·5678 MOW IS THITIME for job seekers to check the Daily Pilot Help Wanted classification. If the job you want is not there you might con- sider offerln1 your services with a.n ad in the J ob W anted cateaory. Phone 642·56'18 THE l<W> NUMBER TO SEE 11 ¥40/o -100/o LOAM * H.AllOR YIEW HOMES * Sensationally decorated Carmel Model in move in condition I Featuring 3 Bdrms immaculate yard & FEE land. Priced to sell at $262,000. For private showing call 795-1501 or752-7373. EXECUTIVE HOME Mesa Verde West. 4 Bdrm & pool Xlnt financing. S205.000. 675-1771 SECWDED EASTSIDE Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm plus pool. Waterfall and bonus room here too! 4 king sized bdrms, huge country kitchen. Financ- mg is great. Large as· sumable 1s t TD and owner will help with rest. Don't wait. Ca II 631-6990 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631·6990 GREAT BUY Assume t his 10.625% fixed loan, payments S736. PITI on S&S 9 yr old 4 Bdrm home in Garden Grove. 540·3666 Whelan RealEstate THllWFFS WHATS UMIQUE AIOUT UMIQUE SPARKLfNG CLEAN Citihome. 3 Bdrm. 2'<J ba, rplc. 2 car garage. end unit. some view! $240. 000 DELIGHTF U L DUPLEX-Two 2 Bdrm units with skylights and bay v iews . Walk to beach. $450,000, assume $290,000 at 137r-. WOODSY IN IRVINE 2 Bdrms. 2 ba. fantastic patio, beautifully de corated with earthtooes. $127,900. P~NTH OU SE LI VIN G -Newport's m ost fabulous view. 2 Bdrms, new carpets and drapes. mirrore d fireplace. a sensational unit. $275,000. COLON I AL WI T H GOOD F1NANCING-S Bdrms, 3 ba. dormers. great kitchen, earthtone decor. A va lue al $24 9. 000. BARGAIN OF THE WEEK-Fabulous view, secluded North Laguna 2 Bdrms. needs your de· corating ideas. $340,000. Finest original area. TH ... T'S WH ... T'S Superb greenbelt setting "' "' offer ing "Mass ive " UHIQUEAIOUT view. Spacious 3 bdrm u .... 1oos: t1()&..ll.S:C. e nd unH, totally re· ~ a.. ,..IL~ decorated lownhome at Reaitors, 675-6000 $265,ooo. Ail. 640.5560. ~~~~~~~I C!IE llDlll ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEAR S OF SERVICE LUXURY CONDO Convenient Lo cation . T w o Bedrooms, Two Baths. Plush Carpets. Plantation Shutters. Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up & Leave When You Wish. Large Assumable 10~% First Trust DeecJ , Only $269,000. HIWPOIT HO.SI COUNTRY Baycliff Manor. Where In Newport Beach Can One Find A Very Private Estate With Over 2 Acres Of Land, Ridin& Stables, A Huge Swimming Pool, And Breathtaking Views From Almost Every Room In The House? Thia Type of Residence Is Very Rare Indeed . It ls Beautifully Designed Wttb S BeClrooma Including A Double Master Suite With A Laree Indoor Spa, A Huge Family Room, And A Completely Built-lo Gourmet Kltcbeli With A Butler's Pantry. Thia h The Fonner Home Of A Famous Movie Star. Priced At '2,500,000. (i) =-~ SUPERDUPY Beautirul. immaculate. n icely landscape d 4 bdrm hous on nice cul· de-sac. Spacious rooms, Vi ew of golr course from property Owner will help on financtng. Only • SI 39 .SOO C a 11 no y, >, 979·5370. -------- ALLSTATE OCEAM VIEW ' This lovely 3 Bdrm home ! m original Harbor View ) Hill& ha:. been complete· i ly remodeled ror your ' most discriminating ; REALTORS taste With ocean view. To place your message before the reading publlc, phone Daily Pilol Classified. 642-5678 pool and profesblonally ! la ndscaped yard. this! will be a JOY for your 1 summe r enterlain1ng t plans Well priced at ' $345.000. : D.M. Marshall Rffr ! 644-9990 i --~----, Rf!>IOlNflA, HI Al I '>!Alf 'i£RV1rt <; COUNntY ELEGANCE In exclusive Cameo Shores. 3 BR. Pool home on 11 acre. French doors . Two fireplaces, includin g master BR. Newly customized & etched glass windows . Open bea m ceilings. Absolute l y sm ashing! Reduced to $675,000. Fee. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 OUTSTANDING OCEANFRONT Falnll_. arcMtechral ..........,..c• °" corMr. Mew wood & CJla•t. mth:Mn oClll cabMh&......_•tal&dlcor• thft 2..tory hoftle wltt. gos-I ldtchltt It •plHcld ............. Tffriflc vu of ... & Mrf from this 2 bed. 1-.ta t.o.. pin 2 bed. ........ -"· Yo. C.W .... tttls 111 t1RcJ1e-..., honte. St7S,OOO. CONDOS--CONDOS--CONDOS SZIS.000. 0. W.._ -M• 19r V& $270,000. Mewport V& OWllll'Fia. SZt0,000. V-. ..... Va. . $114,500.V..WIMNI-.._./. $94.100. ...._ Pll•c'-t .......... . $I 24,IOO. Pool c ...... •---04e ..... . $11,100. l!J .......... Hew.U. $79,000. Alim •h 1oa. -C.M. S 169,000. Hftall -VtlW $371,000 ......... v-. ...... I I ! I . .J a Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednet<Hi • June 3, 1981 N1•1HhrS. N1u1",_,_ M111H'9rS. "-"Pw5ele ....... ,..,.S. "-"hrS. .._..,_.S. .......... -...................................................................................... i··~················· •••••••••••............••••.••.•............••••.•.•..•.....•...•....•.........•••.••••.•.•• ....... ..... I 002 •wr.. I 002 CeroMt .. Mw I 022 Ceste MtM I 024 .':'. ........... • I 044 .,..... I 044 wport INdl IOH ... w,.rt IHdl I 06' MM1e H ... s . ......... ....................... ....................... ....................... . ······· ······················· ....................... ....................... Por,. 1100 2·1 IMM UMTS 2 8r condo (MonUceUo> * *BEST BUY w .... ,.~ ...... .. .................... . -.; I n Only 7 ye&l"I oJd with •1•500· Webb Rlty. Wuhln,im lldl 4 Br 2-. Cotta Meaa l Br trlr I ocun view, ••pa, 4 car 493-0761 In Collese Part. 3 Bdrm ba, 2200 IQ ft A.uume home Wtc•bana, UdO. 0 eWDOI' iaraie, open beart'I ctll· + den, Syracuae mdl. $115,000 lit. By ownu n Adulta, xlnt $8900, r -ln11. Bum br Warm· $5000 DOWN Lrs fai:nlly kitchen, $189,000 Ph: S»:m8 B. l 873-3826 lnston. Grea buy at 3 Bdrm condo. 1834/mo tleps to comm. pool ano tlWDOI'/ 11-~ ---------.. REALTORS '11-Hll !.MOUMT.AIN RITllAT: c ..... c..a •Ir ·"'••-. 11, ,._, a e..,.: we1 -... • 1: ........... wftll 6 .... ID. 9ld ~· Two finC::,H• 1HN1t.t.1 • kltca.. Two •t! Jld.... ... .. Iota .... ..., .... •:-0WMf' wll *"'-ce et ....... te..-. 1 .. $250,000 w wll Ml ltoMt .. ,.. .. ,~ ffw $200,000. i COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS i· J515 I.. Coo1t Hwy •• C.... .. Mw ~· 675-5511 .. • F.ASHION.Alll I.A YcalST ,. You will reel right at home in this 4 . b~droom beauty with the greatest ~ ,k1tchen-.family .room you have ever ·c· seen. Llght, bright, friendly. Perfect · for entertaining with lots of ~a ndscaped yard for su mmer :t>a rbeques. New. modern kitchen " :appliances. Private master bedroom · -su ite separate from other bedrooms. · ~ee today! $395,000. • WESLEY M. T.AYLOI CO .. U.ALTOllS : 2111 S. J~ Hill load .NEWPORT CE:HTH, N.I. 644-49 I 0 $375.000. Owner want• movff )'OU In. No qual. rark. Priced to •ell at PERFECT r --....... ,,..,..., 1400 quick ncrow. Call Jim Prine only. Al\1545-1081 ho u • • o d • u o d • r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Davie, '780-l?d market. Make u.s an or-PLAN 2 8)' Owner. Two 2 Bdrm fer. In Turtle Roell Broad· 0. W.ATBUlltONT R&IM~ Ill-\I I" IC"' houaea on 1 lot. $130,000. bdnru b <::'7 OHICllLOG Aa1umable 11% lat T.D. ~~~te 4SPA In 'a~rlu~'. Ctl4ft Jronl Prettlflous location ln 0 WC2nd.640-144M New carpet and tile. An Newport Beach. All UU. $I 0,000 DOWN absolutely lovely home. plu1 • 60' boat allp. Eaatalde CM Sl.2t,500 by tbe en lire ramlly will en· This 5000 Sq. Ft·, Home •i•· on Linda Owner will exchan1e. owner. 3brft.2644.6089 Joy. Great rtnanclna. .. "" Prin. only. Call Merrell . OWNB .AMXIOUS IMVISTOllS Dll.AM TWOLOVaY DRAMATIC3br,2\l't ba2 THMOM6 TOW*tOMl7 Call the 1peclall1t1 at the condominium In· rormaUon center. $197.500. Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Ht·lll11 I Io) l{t ·.1lt\· f' 1:: -;-·:( 111 Trade. CDM DUP\.IXIS Good locaUon and H · aty, Nt bch. Fee 10'1. dn. sumable '----. Need to Owner will rlnance. out111lt $179,000. 646-Um sell bolh propertJea now _ ___; __ ___:....;.::.; __ _ Touchstone Realty 983-*7 We are developers so submit land or other Rea.t Estate to owner Jim Thompson. co-•rdd as owner has purchaaed MIS.A ¥•DE another home out or HIW ON M.AllCIT 'roperty 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. Call Barbara A neat 4 Bdrm home Glau. C/21 Sandpiper with a 20x40' pool and Rlty. S4().4950or8Sl·&54l ramlly room addition. EXLCUSIVE COLONY L1'1 ramlly home reatur- in1 • Bdrm. 2i,., Ba In Jrvlne'a Colony Club. W•lk to comm. pool, ten rtlt couru. acbQola, 1hop. pln1. Priced to tell Call lot detaila. 17141121-1210 CZIJI lfl-IUJ ¥.AC.A.MT 62l.,X29'2.., woed for of. rice bulldlnc. Si!00.000. •oy McC..., Rltr. s .... n29 J.ASMtMICllH 3 Hdrm, 219 ba. PLAN 6. View property. StS0.000 ~~a .. REAL ESTATE 644-63~7 EASTBLUFF, just listed. Be first to see this 3 BR l ~ ba Lusk home. On fee land. Premium ca· nyon location. $315,000. owe. Devin & Co. 642-6368 Spectacular Lake Ar· rowhead No. Shore. 88' lakefront. Posh 4Br•3ba. fam rm. 1975,000 with $225,000 dn. L~<rHa-~ RUL ESTATE 644-6397 cul-de-sac at.. walk to schoola. $149 ,950. 751·3191 c:::. ' 11 I t l I ....,...,. ~.,It JI 'I I~; t •, * •125M! 11001 JIJ.1710 End unit 2 Br condo on ~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~ aecluded quiet 1t Owner ::! !-~~~~~~~~ wlll help finance W .. trfr.e °""8 HAY CRY.HT fU'.A UTY 5 IDEAL RETAIL SPACE $125.000 Wlttt .... Dod& Hr f'umlly Rm 1200.000 Plau Newport, 1000 H•Hntf•IMch 104 11 Could be Newport '• uHumuhlr lat ()wner Brlatol St N .. Ste. 20, al •••••••••••••••••••••• \\bodbrld9e lowett priced waterfront may curry fl00,000 2nd Jamboree 1078 sq rt Pll ...... •••• o -I home with lncom~ unit I yur Ma,).000 <.:1111 $1 20 sq ft . Beautifully -"'-rKI fU too ' Cal l for Info Utidda M11ru11 Aunt deco rated, w to w 3br. 2ba, frplc, 12·l34h 551 ·3000 Brolter,9638182 646 W« To..-••ell' carpet lmmed. oc -financln1. BEL 0 W VALUE ---------rnnca f>tiwy,lr¥lll• cupancy. 851 -51 88 , s116,000 1--------1 POOl HOMI 833 3998 Let's Deal. (213 >530-5159 *•MUST SELL! ~!'!':':~.~=•••••!?.~~ 11,v~C:,~1 ~';(IJ~.,!'':"~0·d~,:tt~t~ SERVICEST.ATION O C E A N v I E w Great financing on this 3 T A cozy 3 bdrm ho m t wet bar + fum rm. und Orange County $120,000 SACRIFICE Br 2 ~ Ba 1 r v I n e we 8 ~~e~~~ d a r with formal dining rm dollathtful kitchen over net net net cdocumenl· 1 \l't blks to bch, glorious town home w /attached shakes. that la. Custom a nd pool. Highly exp•n looltln~ po11l 1tnd Juc•u:u1 ed 1. G real location over view, new 2l00 sq Ct garage. Owner will as-deaigned 3 bdrm, fam dable view of harbor and Muter It teueiil or 20'taallon.s profit. Back home, all bltns, jacuzzi. sill with ftnanc:lng. Spot· rm. 2 baths. Extensive ocean. A freat listing at m oth er in li1w bdrm• room h 1 g h pr 0 (it A steal at $2.'lO.OOO. As-less! Must sell NOW' use of wood glass & only 1335.000. Owner will with own b111.la 3 car ma rain. Ask for Steve sum able loan. Must sell Call for details. ceramic tile. Beam ceil· carry 2nd TD f 0 r 1ar A&t 646 4311() 1714 1831-7540 by 6 1-81. 960-3211 or SI47.990 In g, frplc. Sl6S,ooo. SlOO.ooo. FISH MOM 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llDRM + IOATSUP lalboa llland I 006 CDM DUn.EX <2131592·2845 lg] Missaon Realty 644-7211 YOuttDOCK $9,000DOWM !!! ~I \\bodbrldge m•>49t-0731. MANY OPTIONS. Large Beaut. 3bdrm. 2ba fami- 1 Realty YOU CAN AFFORD 5 Br+ CanaJfront home ly home, close to ever-551 .3000 lhlS ocean view custom Comm pool . tennis. )'thine. Hurry, won't last 4tztBarrHn Pk•y,lrvlnf' in an executive area. across from beach En· HUR THE SAND lolboo Pen. hpMx Seconds to the water. Excellent 3 BR owner's "home-lake" unit & 2 BR. 2 ba, rental unil Idea I for home & in- come. Close to Newport pier and shops. $289,950. ac1ous condo. ex llenl location. with 'p for 40' boal. Assum J1ancing. As king .000 ••• •••••••••••••••••••• Excellent F\nancine For S• by 0wntf' Fine location. Pride or Charming 2 story Cape 0:4'nersh1p. No vacan- Cod 3 Bdrm, 2 ba + 1 ctes. 644--4026 or 780--0140, bdrm unit w/bath, Jautld · Agt. rm. 2 car gar. Lge fixed _C_d_M_l_N ___ ST-M-~--I assumable + owe. ..... _,, SS75,000. 673-0188 Duplex with great In- come. Askin1 S290.000. For S•by OWMr $45,000 down and !inanc- ISLANDCHARM ing at 133. Won't last. U pd a led 3 bdrm 2ba Call Jim Davis, 780-1743 $65,000 DOWN 5br pool home $389,500 long' Agl. 846-5271, Large view decks -~~~~~~~~~I JOytheaW\Set No quah· 631 2336 beautUuJ home. 3 Br 2Y:r -fyrng, low Ullert!$l, low . W 0 0 DIR ID G E b d 0n1 3 OCEAHFROMT payments S3400 moves p c F c a. en. Y lS,OO $45 O you an $269.000 Call NoA q~a~if:A!:.?~~~le • -LAHDIHG LOCJWtO Vlloge R.E This first 3~~:trerrng Barbara 675-7611 or I\· fixed loan. Owner will PETERS• PUH 5 497·1761 is an estate sale. One of mag al 780-7199 carry 2nd. 3Br. 212 Ba, Here it is · Loads of .ALMOST •EADY! Newport Beach's finest 1 ""1 blks to bch. new 2l00 charm. Delightfully de Beautiful new custom views. 3 bdrms home Wesley H. Taylor Co. Reoftora 644-4910 sq ft home w/view. All corated &1landscaped h wlthguestaptor2units. orrers consi'dered . $359,000. 12 .•"" assuma-ome in exclusive area. R.ealonom1cs 675-6700 bl 8 s o Quality trhoughout. Ex· Open ~veryday 1·5 Triplex I year old, dbl lot. 1300 Mai_::_~ Ln 642-6768 lrg owners unit. Two 960-3211 or (213) 592-2845 55~:1534. unnver wner cellent views. 3 Bdrm. VERSAILLES 2BR. ocn w /lort. frplc, 2 car gar. laund rm. View & steps 2 BR 2 Ba. adult, pool, ·--------• to the bay. Large as-jac, sec. Walk to beach. 21'l ba, 2 frplc:s. 5425.000. view. low dwn. no qua Ii· Laguna V1Mage R.E fying. Sl29K. 730·2270 SE.AWIHD IYOWHEA 1120.000 assumable loon at 12t\-• 'I<. 759-9550 eva 2bdrm. 2ba units. Prine. Only. 760-<1734. 631-4402" ln•fffor'sPrfn 497-1761 o!c. 642·2682 home. s um ab I e + 0 WC. Sl24,900. Ownr. 644·1094 5475,000. C1111673-0188 --------1 lrYlne I 044 t!el--------: Capistrano hoch I 018 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• •• • • • ••••••••••• ••••• •• VIEW VIEW VIEW OWNER WILL C.ARRY .AITD "ftdult occupied home (Jiaturing low main-.j~nance yard. hardwood Seldom available view Oran1e Tree Condo, Plan 2 Bdrm l 'r'l Ba Ash mdl. nu carpet, freshly paint· ed. A/C, high assumable loan. $118.SOO. L•~c:::: Whitewater vu. Seller will credit buyer on pay- ments Sl0.000 option. 54().3666 WHITEW.ATEA VIEW 90' lo beach, 103 assum loan. May take note on your prop. as down. 4 BR 2 Ba, recentty upgraded, w /possible \n·law qtrs. IE.ACH IARG.AIHS Owners will help finance these 3 bdrm beach homes under 2.SOK Only steps to sand. Hurry to call Delia, 631-1266. Joan a Friend & buy Duplex 1 house from Canal in Newport Beach. 1500 sq. ft. each. 1·3Br 3Ba 1·3Br 2Ba. Corner location. 8 years old Walk to Lido Village . 832-9110 or 639-0291. rs and large master rm. Clo6e to private mtly club For an ap- intment lo see. call ·1151 Beaut. 180 deeree sweep- ing ocean vu. added 2nd level & enjoy rare 360 deg. view. 3 BR 2 Ba. privacy, walk to beach. $209 ,000 . Ownr . 1·677-6533 Corot1a def Mer I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.ARn&SHIP property in Broadmoor 5. 2 br l ba $103.500. Call Harbor View Hills. 4 _55_2·_7_55_2_a_ft_er_7...:.p_m_. __ Bdrm. 2'-'J baths, ex- cellent condition in quiet area. Commwlity pool. Excellent assumable financing! 5'29.000. 642"5200 * *STEAL IT! Super price on this new- ly back on the market 2 Br + 'tlen attached home in Woodbridge Estates . Hurry! $166,000 Town & Country · Rnlton 552-1800 W~&tate Adams ptanfBdrm. 2''J Ba. attractive financing. Sell $194.900 or lease SHOO/mo. Ask for Lynn Noah. Towa & C...try - Realtors 552-1800 j PETE BARRETI ·.. REALTY mo~ ..it ( fJ j 1'1bodbrldge T h e p ~re e ct d u _a I Reaalty ownership ~rt)' with 551·3000 2 neartr equal 2 Bdrm, 2 C t A SMART START Ownine your own home still makes more sense than renting. Start with this well kept I bdrm. 1 ba. Plan A The Lakes In Northwood. Assumable loan. $103,900. ba units with master 01 O Mesa I 024 4ttt B1rr1nn nwy, lrvlff suites, st.ooe Ci replaces •••••••••••••••••••••• • ---------1 •• OION.A oa MAR DW'LO e of the few duplexes -:.L.1 a pool. Des irable )reel w/hi Income. omfort 3 Bdrm owners It. $320.000. and wood beamed ceil· ings on an ovusi.ze lot with private patios and decks. $320.000, 10'7c int. financlng. C.AU.NOW 644-7211 /Jn ~l(,(l nl\1t l v t. /\SSUll/\TE~ MES.A VBlDE .ASSUM.AILE Nice 3 Bdrm 2 bath home. New roof, near schools and.shops. Ask· Ina $129,900. For In- formation, call 540-1151 ~ :· HERITAGE REALTORS You don't need a gun to ~~~~~~~~~I OOPWEL I I 12 I I I .~ .. ,.__,,,K,__..O _T_,E,__.S..--11 ! 11 I I t . , "draw raat.. when you place an ad In the Daily Pilot Want Ads! Call now -642-5678. I ..... lt C R U C 0 _ The new banking 1y1tem1 "--.1-.. 1s,_..,1 ........ .,r~ have me worrl16. I have troublH enough bel•nclng my l."I.''--..___.___.__..__. bankbook. I don't know how I · 1 p E U B I would ball~ a -. ~ • J~ RI' IM j I U.....,lei. "'-cll..ctd• qllOled "_ _ _ • • by f•lllfto In lhe MlllinO' -4 .... __....._.._......___..__...__. 10"' ~ .,_ .. No. , ....... -::e n 1NT NUMIHEO r I' r 14 r r I' ,. I ~ lEnus IN SOVAtfS - -. --- -- . :• ~f!::t:l. Lmm1 I I I I I I I I ~l.AM-UTS A.Mwen IR Ca..HlcaffcNt IOIO I l&IC & RNlt LILY S R M A U P I S L A L P I l R T L H U C 0 Y A A L L J R E J R 8 K E £ R G T G S U K J S Q U H E W L H 0 D R t T ALL OFFERS HEARD: Sharp 2 bedroom condo. Decorated with rich panel i ng and wallpapers. Located cJose to shops a'nd freeways . $98.500. TARBELL. REAL TORS. 979-2390 $9000 will buy large raml· ly home in great area. Aaaume $113.0000WC dif. ference. 4 Br. l~ Ba. fam rm, Jrplc. ahake roor. Prin only. $103,000. Devin "Co. 642.QSS Condo for sale. ~.000. 2Br, 2Ba. Gd financing avail. 902 Hollowbrook, CM558·58. $1, 175 pr mo. moves you into U)l.s 3 Bd 2 Ba home near So. Cout Ptua. Owner carries. Ownr /.A1t. 631· 1* or 546-6T06 R&IM~ H ~ \I 1 • 111 • sas.ooo DOWN * *PARK PLACE Not Monofoly but a beautlru 3 Bdrm Northwood home with ~real available financ· mg. Call rordetalls. $1T7,900 RCTaylorCo 640-9000 AT HOME COWOIT 4 B.R. 2 Bath Turtlerock home w /~autiful screened-in atrium. Light & cheery -lush landscaping. ONLY $212,000 FEE. Call for details. RCTaylorCo ()40. C)l)QQ ·~ WOOOlltllHM ,.AU Lovely 3Brs Under $290,000 inclds Whelan ;;:Nw~; Real £state $25,000 DOWN IMOIM P,...ty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'W-Exclusive Eastblucr APPLIYA&.UY Near new 4-Plex. 2 bdrm. 2 bath each unit with fireplace. enclosed patio. double garage. $165,000. 8111 Grundy, Rltr. 675-6161. HAVE YOU DISCOVERED WOODS COVE7 If not. hurry and 'See this 2 bedroom, 2"2 bath con- temporary home in a wooded setting. With 2 bedrooms. 2'" baths. loft & sunken conversation pit, this home Just has it all. Seller will finance al 13% for 8 years with ~o.ooo down. 1325.000. 497-3381 1052 Fox glove model in Lake Park. 2 br, den, 2 ba. vaulted ceiling. French doort. A.saume al lOll-4 SU-4,900. Owner. 831-7634, 759--2465 Mls1lotl Vlefo 1067 •••••••••••••••••••••• Townhouse. 4 Br. 3 Ba --------- $275,000. Owner anxious i---------1 Make offer. Owner AW.AIDWIMNIHG Principals only HOME 978-0423. 2750 sq fl conlem NEWPORT CREST T •rrific ,._ I. 2 bedroom, 2 bath with assumable S79K 1st TD. Priced for quick sale. $165.000. porary Lido Isle home. 3 .._ _______ _ bdrms. 4 balh & study 2 I"' patios. 3 car garage 1695.000. Radiantly heat· ed floors. Red hdl~~Rl'.ilty 1;-;,; -;::(1(1 NEWPORT BEACH Prime Pronerties TRIPLEXE!ln CdM. Ocean side of hwy. Three lo choose from *Cote Realty & Investment Santo .Ano I 080 DUPLEXES on Balboa Penins ula. Two to choose from. 64().5777 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW,OllT ISL.AND Slls.ooo. owe $190,000 at I 00/o Fee simple. 3 bdr: den. 2 ba, patio deck. 30 x 95 lot. Single story. By appt 714-875·3971 2 Br 2 Ba condo. 2 car gar. low interest rate, as- sumable loan. Prin. on- ly . 714 /523-1391 eves, 714n00.3675 IYOWHER Brand new 2 bdrm. 21.-, By Owner. OWC at 13%. 3 Br. l~ ea .. frplc, dbl gar. New paint & carpet. 751-8045 DUPLEX on the water with boat dock. FOURPLEX in Foun" tain Valley. .ASSUMAILELO.AH All large assumable HO QUALIFYING loans. All ow ners Freshly painted. sharp 4 motivated. For detailed Bdrm 2 bath, large yard, info call new driveway Brick C /21 Me ri C..tr fireplace. 5 years new wpor • Owner anxious. Move in ~6~4~0-~5~3~5~7~7~6~0.~67~6~7~ condition . Ask1ng1 - Sl29.900. For an appoint· ment to see, call 540-1151 MAKE AH OFFER! . ~ .·· HERITAGE Tret VW.C.to. ba condo. Dbl gar .. 5br, 4ba in exclusive frplc, built-ins. $120,000' ~~~~~~~~~ neighborhood. 24 hr 13.75% ftnancing due in 41 - REALTORS 5 Income Properties Eat:~side Costa Mesa . 20t;; down. Owner wiU carry. Prieed to sell! g u arded 1ate, lake, 'f>'!n~~~ ... ~~·000· Otherledlstah MOO+ aq ft, a te, guest ----=•-'--·-----• h 1 e , I a n d ac: a p e d ·I•--------•• ••• • • ••••••••• • • • • • • • '479,900. Sky View Real· I t 4• I.A YROMT Mobffe HoMts ty, 831-3000. For S• I I 00 in Dover Shores. 5600 sq •• ••• •• • •••••••••••• •. • O'IHHOUSI Fabulous new 5 Bdrm on the lake. Muat see to ap- pre c I a le. $1 ,350,000. Owner will carry $80C),OOO. 27641 Chapala. Open Sat/Sun 1·5 ft of lop quality con· struction. This 5 bdrm IST .ATI SALi Medlt. style residence ls 1968 Majettic localed in lhe best of locations and Laguna beach Park. 714/641-0763 2925 College Ave. Costa Mesa. CA has the beat of financing near ocean. Week days --------- avaUable. $1,225,000 at 759-4175 o C E • N FI o N T only 9% int. Full price --------' "' including the land Dlx Universal 1560 aq ft. Dll'l.D $1,7$0,000. Owner will Irvine. All amenities, Beautiful 4 Br. 2 Ba . carry $1,000,000. Call upgraded. 28r. 2ba. 5 Upstairs: 3 Br. 2 Ba. Dan Blbbforappt. Star Park. Appta. only. down.stairs. Fireplaces, 10.B"S a1tu TY Sl85,500. 551-2738 aarage. laundry room. _.. Xlntloc. 675-Jll I MtWporl 1eoc11 TSL INVSTMT 642-1603 ~~~~~~~~~!•••••••••••••••••••• • • FOUl....U BY OWNER Xlnl F\nandnl! $310,000 875·0073,(714)3'5-4123 A H A T t Z P Q A A 0 A S P A A R U 0 P R H J U A A S T E R M M H C.AN IUY THIS EXQUISITE MESA VERDE Executive home. Lota ol oak. Lar1e mailer aul te and kitchen Solar heatln1. Pool • Jae. Auusnable loan. 4 Bdrm wilh all the extrH. Broker957·1568 f amity home t astefully decorated in earth tones. Living rm w /(pie, forma l dining rm , l g · kitchen/family rm & wet bar. Spacious mstr suite w /roman tub. $163,900 Lorraine Rennie 752·1414 (K72) MwpertlMdt '°'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Iii[ l.ALIO.A llLAHO Ju1t ll1ledl Prlme 2 1tory commeftlal bkla 1004:\ OcC\lpied with IUC· ce11tul reataurant te· nant oo lit floor and 3 apt.I upetalra. P\nit Ume oClered for aale and the price la ri&ht. -.ooo. Owner wtn carry tat L E 8 ( l E C E R D W S 0 A H L S L H G H J R Z S A L 0 0 H D E E 0 V • I H N H H T A G L M E A D 0 ~ t E•O J T J T 0 P R R £ U D E U ' H 0 G G 0 H E H H H I P E I Y S R A P N P C 0 M R l 0 A P A H L 0 L N A t ~ A E I H ~ C L Y 0 L J L 0 L R 0 L A l 0 A A I R 0 H S U U I Z 0 E A U L T U R L T H S E A T 0 R H S Y [ T S H E M A L H 0 T I G E T E 0 H I N R £ 1 I R 0 y H Beaut. cuttom lnterlor. 1800 •ca I\, 3 br, 2 ba, huib kit., lltyUta, bit· ln1. LI• uaum. SH81500. ~45e'J OWH• W 1"N.AMCI a BR a~ be twnhtt, 1o l1e patio, dbl •ar. pool. Sll&,000. Ruth Laurie, Btr . .,....., . ....... PrlMOl ......... p, a BR I aa1 rple, bJ.1D '1 i .......... -4b .., . .,,~.···· All!•- DISlllAILI DUIUN IH UMIVasm '.AllCI This lovely SBk, 2~ bath noor plan ls in move·in condition. Fresh paint, upgraded camel carpet. new flooring in the kitchen It entry, PLUS more l $142,900. Scott Alston 551·8700 (K73) !llAWAWl&Ui 2 ii& --o...--..om. ......... ow .. G11919..... .,... ....... ~ ...... al.... ....~...,,. 7U.1414 ... .., • ' l y .. r new Blutf1 coodo. End unit, "G" pln. Jbdrm. Fee land. l3'Xt VIR, JO year flnanctn1. Owner/A~: 780-al4. Duplexea, OC!eantronl, beautiful ocean vlew. Perfect loclllon. New condlUon. "-· rtl-1JOO 3 br, lam .• sais,ooo under mkt. Call ror !Mta. an.ooo. PP.tG-JAN NPMI NMINSUU. DWUXJ 3BR, 2 bath duplex 1 JAa blocks from the ocean . Fantastic investment for winter or summer rental. $259,000 ind. land. Low down and owner wtll carry on AJTD . Sharon Smith 644 ·6200 <K70) MNJJI T.O. . f , I att DAILY PILOT/Wedneeda June 3, 1981 • lailyPil . • Pr1ivate Parties only -no com~ercial businesses please. Any classification. Nearly new 10 Unit In· dustrial Bldg · in Costa Mesa. 15,000 sq ft 25•-; down. Owner wtll carry lst TD at 13'"k interest for 3 years. Phil Sullivan Realtor MS-2103. $500 mo. 2 br. 1 ba. lg ya rd . pets1kids ok . 631·22-46 3 BR. 2 ba, lg. backyd Frplc. CuJ·de-sac. Avl. now. $725 mo. 631-7089 LotsforS. 2200 2 Br .. W/stove & refrige, enclsd garage. Adults. ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. $475. 773 w. R· I Whihwatw Vu Wilson. 631-4889. Great terms. subord. 714/492-8320,645-2781 Eastside Townhouse 2 Br. 1'2 Ba. Garage. patio. RAMCHOS $465 mo. No pets l & 2 acres. zoned for 675-8133. horses. Paved streets with water. 540-5010 Npt Hgts. Gorgeous 3br. 212ba CONDO, frplc, Cam rm, lndry/gar. $725. 646·0329 INVESTORS! Del Mar duplex /condo lots w o· cean views. Ready to build NOW. From E. Side 2br. 11,,ba CON- Bluffs condo, 3 Br 2\1'! Ba, prime backbay view, lrg patio, upgraded. $1300. 644-0350 S-J11• Capbtn.o 3271 • •••••••••••••••••••••• u.523 C .. ..,, 1\... I 3 br, 2 ba, no pets, pool ,. A ... rv5w.~ RVIME priv. $600. Awail 7·1. 586-3734 aft. 5. LCICJUIMI hodl 3248 ------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br. 2Ba, Pool-Spa ac- Large wood & glass 3 br cess. New crpts, ac $700. 212 ba. family rm, 2 car 496-9268; 494-8208 garage, ocean canyon view. No pets. $1025/mo. Two bedrm. l bath condo. SI err a Mgm t . Co. $425 per month I 641·1324. eves & wknds C714) 640-1037 1 494·0417. ____ s-ta AINI 3210 $67,000 ea. Buy one or 00,frplc,sunkenlivrm. 2br. den, 2"'2ba, view.••••••••••••••••••••••• more w /super sub· patio. pool . priv gate 4 Bdrm. 2 bath, family o rdinated Cinancing. gar $600646-0329 S'900/Mo. <714) 955-1055 ~·fireplace, good loca· lion $650 mo pet or child Details 1·755 4667 : Eastside sharp 2 Br. 1:\" LOCJUftoHlll 3250 okay. lmmed . occup. 1·755-4556 Ba . Range, oven .••••••••••••••••••••••• 53C}.5900a.fter5S46-5967 Y~flUN: Social Activities Di· rector • Frff Sunday Brunch • BB0'1 • Parties • Plua more GREAT lllECREATIOH: Tennis• Free lesaona (pro & pro shop) • 2 HMlth Out>e •Sauna • Hydromauaga • Swimming • Goll Driving Range IEAUTif'\Jl. APTS: Stnglu, I & 2 Bad· room1 • Furnished & Unfumlahed • Adult living • No Peta • Modal1 Open Daily 9 to 8 Oakwood Oerden Apertmenta JMwport 8-ch N. 880 Irvine (at t&th) (714) 645--1104 Newport Beech 8. 1700 16th St (Dover at 18th) (71 4) 642-5113 Out of C~ dshwsr. frplc, vaulted Lease .~ Br conddo, all Cotldo...W..... Pro._... 2550 ceiling. Adults. $SOOJ.Mo. amenities. pvt yr . enc. U fw +™d 3425 •-rt-If r-••r 381 Hamilton. gar 551-00SSeves ft ~ ~..,..,...,.I • • • • ••• • ••••••• •••••• •• --• • •• • •• •••••••••••••••• u ............ 110+ ac,.._ Lar ge garage, tiny house. Logwta NlcJilal 3252 Beaut tri-level abr. 2ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• consisting or 31 lots. Adults. no pets. $400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, spa, dbl gar. xlnt GolMnll 3102 Prime Area · ready for 761-0433. Lge 4br home in new de· S.A. loc. nr. S.C. Plaza ••••••••••••••••••••••• development. S800.000. velopmen t. Modern $650 l slLlast + sec. A,TMTSFOlllEHT TermsavaJlable. 2br , l'~ba, 2 car gar, kitchen Including 551-2960eves HB NB "'-t M 2Br, crpt.s, drps, bltns, ear, adults only, no pets. Victoria/Canyon area $"30/mo. 631·6812 aft 5pm SEA FNVIAONMfNT 011/ttAM1, r11N •t !t ~ •• J•,r1•r 1 Br studio penthouse. ocean vu, lake occupan cy 6/15. P. Finnerty 752-7855 bet. 8:30-5.30 3 Br. 2 Ba 1 blk to bch 2 llt.2 IA. & 1 IR. I IA. $650/mo. 1 yr lease THIWNffLETltH avail. Sl<l6Neptune Ave. Luxury Adult units at af. 832·208-0. P ool , crpts, drps . Adulu. No pets. Agent 7 31-6829. 548--057 4 fordable living. l,2 & 3 -------- Br. Well decorated. Small I Bdrm beach apt Olympic sb:e pool, Ught-~0/mo on yrly lease. Very laue 2 Story. 3 Br. ed tennis court, Jacuzzi, Avail 7 Jl . 675-3148 2"!1 Ba. Mesa del Mar park like landscaping. area, enclsd garage. Most beautiful bid&. in S-Cle ...... ta $525 /mo. Call 751·9905. Iv H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3876 mesyge. From 1395. 846-0619 2 IR. $450 /MO ---------• 2 br. 2 sty, J\.'I ba condo. 586·0741or7ffs-4541 2 Br. 1 ba, adults, $425, lst clean, nr Hunt. Harbour. & last. $150 dep gar, ldry $575. 642-MOO W /CM. 5"8-5861 Unfurn. 2 Br. Apts. 2 BR. 2 BA. CONDO On golf course $500 492-6700 S.C Plza · 2Br 2ba. Patio, Adults only. No pets. pool, Jae, s.V.s. 833-2462, 960-2675. Apari'IMtlh ,.....shad 631· 7278 --------or U•fw11hh.d 3900 SPAC. 1 BR ADULT Ope n beam ceilings, servin1 bar, Iota of wood thruout, newly redec $345/mo. 2260 Maple St. 548-7Me, 673-8803 3br, 2&,;ba, walk-in closet, lndry rm, den, dishwshr, c p l /drapes . enc l patio/gar, 9llOOM2-8032 l br. 1 ba condo, adult comm unhy over 40. Golf. tennis, pool. Patio. Large 3 BR 2 Ba, upper, W /D. ~. ~l. nr So. Coast Plaza. no ----'----------• pets. $470. 641-86.57 Nice 2Br. J ~Ba. pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEAWIND VILLAGE Lux ury octHl KaanapaU Bch. Maui. sips 5, a."8 to 8 15. Days 10. Oldest & Larg in So. Cali!. s· Credi ls: ABC. Cosmo. Phil •1 2orr to a II who need Garden Gro've. Edlttl w. Heuick built-ins. no kids1pets. microwave & bar-b-WOODBRIDGE avail im· Somelti~ir~:erye::e Redtor S475640-5003or842-7261 q u e range . Re c Bach. to" Br. Unfurn. facilities avail. No pets. med. 2sty. 2br. l ~ba. Apts. Certain locations CIOSI 466-0500 DRAMATIC 3br, 212ba 2 S'900Jmo. Avail July Isl. fr pie. a /c, m irr ored 011 er: Poo I , 5 p a. Lovable 1 bdrm. encl gar., adlts. no pets. Refri1 "elec stove. S32S 2035 Fullerton CM. 642·5964 &ar, laundry, patio. $-495 /mo. 1·630·0350 or New 1&.2 bdrm luxury adult apt.s in 14 plans Crom $440, 2 bdrm from $500 + pools, tennis. waterfalls, ponds! Gas tor cookin1 & heating paid. From San Diego 1~~~~~~ Frwy drive North on 1 R•al Estate sly. Nr bch. xlnl loc. 540·8300 days, 836-9784 wardrobes. $625 /mo. fireplace, lau.n. room, bchcmgt 2100 S795. 646-l035 eves /wk.nd.s. 857 ·OlS5 b e a m e d c e i 11 n g s • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fo•taill V~ 3234 Newport leach 3269 2br. 2ba N.B. Penthouse garages, all built-ins. WILL TRADE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. AduJta only-sec Garden & Townhouse New coodo In Palm 4 br. 3 ba exec. lri·level. SPYGLASSLEASE g uard . pool, sauna, deai1n.NOFEE. Desert foraportrJSher or ram. rm, 2 frplcs. encl. 3 Bd. formal dining, ram eym, $750/mo. &&S-0230 TSL MGMT. 642-1603 trawler. patio. Gardener ~cl. 1 rm, lrg yard, 2 frplcs. lalboa f.a-d 3106 1-340·30361 ,340-7726 yr lease. No pets. $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie University Park condo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S925 mo. 963.3344 aft Koop. Agt 631·1266 3bdrm, 2~\>a. bonus 5 units al beach. Long 6.30; 962-7501dys • --room. Great lo<.'. All WATEl,.OMT "" Beach, to trad e for ---3 Br 21~ Ba. Condo. a menities. $900/mo. 2 Bdrm. unfurnished house. 892-8162 Bkr. Hwtffltgtoft leach 3240 Ocean view. $725/mo. 760-8816. wlt.h big pat.lo. Located ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ask for Ron 752-5111. on the Grand Canal lltUe Develope r has su b - d iv ision fo r Beach Home, T.O.'s or?. Some free & c le a r (213 )698--0181 • • • 4 Br. 2 Ba. frplc. Prime Newport Condo. i a I a n d . Ye a r I y blk fence, garage. No SANTIAGoODlL walking distance to lease ... avai.lableinJuly. pets. 19811 Bushard St Beautiful house -i1'.rail beach. Pool. spa, sauna, 1 or 2 penom; must be $725 mo + $725 S. D now in elegant area. 4 rec rm. Lg: 1 bdrm. ssso. reliable with references. 642·7743. Br. 3 Ba. Dining Rm. Todd <213> 240-9077 Call 673-9388. N•wpart Hah. 2 or 3 l>dnna, 1 ba, 1 story, owne r 's unit. fenced yd, Ope, SSOO 5"9·9279 2 Br. 1 Ba. $395. Pool. Adulta, no pets. Ava.ii. immed. Savage Wilde & Co. 6"2-4-470. Large 1 Br . Pool. Ratrlge. new decor. Adults, no pets. 1335. 646-7319, 673.(BM. ----Living Rm & Family $475/MOMTH 3br. 2ba, fenced. nice Rm New wallpaper, Spectacular ocean-bay -----''------1 Br. Stove, pool, carport, cond,clseschoolsshpg, cozy kitchen & many view , 2 br , 2 ba3Br. lba. l,o\gar,sun-laundry, gas paid . 75"·0439. 2Br. Condo. 2 car gar. 'covered pat.lo, ~ mile to Beach to Mc Fadden then West on McFadden lo Seawlnd Village. (714 )893-5198. beach. Access to pool & ------ courts . $575. H B . ll00tn1 4000 213 /925 --4 796 .••••••••••••••••••••••• 714/675·4.902. Laguna Beach Motor Inn, 985 No. Pacihc Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach Daily. Weekly, Kitchen available. Low winter rates. 494-5294. 2 BR, l\.!I ba Avail June 12. $-475 962-2575 Deluxe poolside xlr a -------- lar ge 2br. 2ba, bltns, dswbr. l~ miles beach. Adlta, no pets. USO mo. 538-8362. $.'500. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. Best area. Near beach. No pets. 833-3300 Room in lge house, CM. f' pref, l mi from OCC. $210 m o. 957-3955 Eastaide Costa Mesa. Nice lar1e room w /frplc and own entry. College gal pref. PX>1mo. Call after 5 pm. 64&-3375 4Br n ear Newport Backba y foT $200,000/300,000 So. County home or Condo. 831-0611 S675Jmo. ls t tlast /de p. many xlras. Children & Versailles penthouse, deck. Yrly $650/mo. Adults, ref's. $305/Mo. Nice 2 Br. 1Ba.in 4-Plex. 968-3495 pets OK. 759-8974. guarded adwt comm. 1st /last. sec. dep. 646-8727. Good neighborhood . Room for rent on Bluffs $850. 67S.4498or 833-75"1 67S.99SL garage. No pets . Brookhursl/Victor1a. Rntah ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. Condo. Pool. tennas, W & 0 , crpts, drps. No pets. S375. lsl. last & dep. 768-7633. BIG CANYON LEi\.SE ---------) b r a pt . Stove & $450 /mo. 760-1713. 851-1262 3 Bdr 3 Ba. formal din-Tow~ CoroH del Mer 3122 Refri1erator W. Side. in1. pool. bot tub, vu. U•fw 9'l1t.d 3525 ....................... Ref's. $250 Call Answer Mi to bch. Plush apts, Hotels, Mohk 41 00 very sharp. $2000/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Old CdM. 2 bib to bch, 2 Ad #501642-4300 2br, 2ba, sod.ks, pyt gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bob & Dovie Koop. Agt. S.A. Hits. 2 br +den, 3 br, 2 ba, din . rm . wshr /dryer roman '""'• 3144 See the ocean from the 631.1266 ba. wet bar. frplc, pool, fireplace, 1ara1e. Great 2br, 2ba, twnbae, E. Side. tubs. 8"6-4.152. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• front yd of this 3 br jac, 2 car gar. STOO mo. ocean view. Avail 6/24. 3 yrs old. S500 1·998-7300 SEA LARK MOTll Panoramic Turtlerock house. S7S01mo. $300sec. THE ILUFFS (213)615-341.S,823-5021 SOOO/mo.S7S-8370 days ask for Dick. I"•• 3144 view, 2 br + den, com · dep. Call Rita, M-F , 3 Bdrm ~-... -w/va·ew. 640-2426eves/wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• I t I f l..a 2 8 30 2 00 "~" 1476 ""'....., Attractive lrg Br, ba, Or B b Al •Weekly rentals now p eey u,m . rge,~ar : . : pm,....,. . Remodeled. like new Apatiwlallh,...d kitchen.U vrmw/frplc. E S'd d I angetree0n2 r.l a . r avall.•S98andup gar .. w opener, Pc. H.tin....._ with gourmet kitchen. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 e I eal oc. nr. 17th cond. stream. up· •Color TV. •Phones in Ughtedtenniscrts.pool, .,,_ yr . lease. $1000/mo .• -... __ P • .. _ 3707 paliodeck,upstain.&l St.2br,$41.S atairs.AduJtaonly.Sub-spas, W /consider short HarbOtr 3242 760 9678 ._.. 11-..U Br. ba , kitchenette ~ mil on pets. $595. Mary rooms. lse. $1 200 mo. Agt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --·--·------••••••••••••••••••••••• downstairs. Storage & 64-4-7211 2274NewportBlvd.C.M. 752-5668 Presta gious Wetherly Nwpt Shore 4 br, 3 ba, Bach. Full kit, conve-laund. $850 combined or STUNNING, lg. 2 & 3 BR. ---------___ 646-__ 1«.s ___ _ Bay Twnhs . Minute canalfront. nwly decor. nient loc. $325 yrly incl $650/$350 Avail 6/3, 2 ba garden apt. Pool. THE Lakes. 2 br, 2 ba BIG BEAR Lakefront from ocean. 4 Br. + pool.tennis.2 blksocean ulil . Quiet non-smkr 67~_6611 $4lS & $445. 710W.18lh twnhome. Upgrades, M 1 .., ...__ Den. 3 Ba Boat sUp, 6"13-5580 ---------• St. waler view, spa fac's. ote • Aatcu•c::u.~. 2 peo. Roommate w share 3 Br Hunt Bch beach. Fema $191 'Mo.964'172 Prof woman w house w/sam del Mar. S 4.94-7015 .. 7: Rmmate wan Newport ho beach Pool $350, 1st & I 760-702-4 . c;;;;;••••••••••lZOl frplc, patio, balcony, Sl.lOO. 962"6883· COl"Oft delM. 3722 Steps to Octan. Most ---------1 Avl. 7·1, $695 mo. Laura, pie. $30.1·886-4161 pool, tennis, dbl garage. oo.a T .. W"'T£A a charming ffdlon of old 1A._1DE 637-7333 dys .. 544.9904 s-••r •---.......... 4200 Seni·or lady w ••••••••••••••••••••••• s11so. 837-0666. " ,,. s;K ••••••••••••••••••••••• c 2 8 2 B o'll•""' -------M Arth v ·11 g t Great view of boats & Avail 1 Bdrm a.pt for orona. r. a .. CedmrWood eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• her CdM hm"' e~c ent~'an1c! ~· '~R: l"M 3244 bay Brick fplc, family summer sub-lease. frplc, ~vered garage, 2 Br . 1 Ba. Adulu, no La.-ahodl 3141 LIDO ISLE charming 3 Wik to bu~ pool /t ennis . 1435 _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• room.Avallable lmmed. 644-8:115 ocean view from deck. pets . $-450 /Mo. 329 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm.2bath,ptayroom 640_7390 646-4380 for 9months. Only S99S $750. Call Anthony University Dr. Mgrs. lBdrm w/gar. wlk to Just remodeled. Mon------~ ---------1WlLLOWS 4 Br 2 Ba. mo. CoataM... 3724 weekdays 842-5757, Eves548-0648. twn/bc:h$&50 lhly rental. BUI Grundy, lalboalsa..d 3206 PatioRm.,fencedyard, THEREALESTATERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• wknds &eves&U-8889. "9&-S022 _6"1_5-_6_16_1_. _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl garage. S650 /mo. 673-8550 c•s•DEOllO 9UllTUVINGo Charm ing Island Fam. 644·1480&830-5050ext81. ,,. ,,. 3br, 2ba, bright., cheerful, Laree Bach. tor 2 Br .... ~._....___.. 31'9 •NWPT OCEANFRONT hae. -4 bdrm. fpc, 3 ba. 40' IOAT SUP ALL UTll.JTIES PAID upper dplx, built-Ins. Apts. Cathedral cell· =..;.;.~=•••••••• & Lido Isle bayfront. sm Enclosed patio. No pets. Woodbridge lease. Built 3br. 2""1ba CONDO. Compare before you storaae, avail 7/1. $750. Ines. prv balcony or Oceanfront for Winter boats & dock. Wkly. $1000mo673-0686 by Peter s . Three beautifully decorated, rent. Custom design _fl40.. __ 6_1_10 ______ paUo,diahwuher,frpk. Rentals . Furnished & _8_7_3_-S_U_R_F ______ 1 bedrooms. two baths . $1200 /mo. Yearly. features : Pool. BBQ, Cott•MIM 182 .. pool. Lndry & bbq. uni m .. -'-er 67"'~9l2 COf'OIMI del M9-3222 Single story home ht 675·6775. cov 'rd /araie. s ur· .. Adwts over 25. No pet.a. u · °""' · .... · · OC EA ..... FRO..._.T ----~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbridge. $1000 ---------r ounde with· plus h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1375 & up. Mesa Pines, NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Furnish~ Br."\~a 4 Bdrm , bonus rm w /pool month. Owner can give 3 Br. 2"" Ba. Condo, frplc, landtcaping. Adwt Uv-Spaclout3BrDuplex 2650Harla.SG-24-47. rental.a. Villa Rental.a. with offl~ 2 car garage tble. lg bkyard w/pool three.year lease. !am rm .• prol. decor. in tne at.It.a best. No pets. $42$. PooUdaundry lac. 675-4912 Broker w I th auto opener . $1400 per mo. 631·48118. Includes refrigerator, 15 acre private park. Bach furnished l370 548-9656 Washer & Dryer lncld. MktorGreg was h er, dryer and $675. 831·1266. Mr. 2Bdumiahed$500 HIWLYDICOI. ,lfe8li.BJlll Avail.now.Weekly. SPYGL~CAPE COD recreation facililiea. Mar,ball 365W. Wtlson,64Z·lr71 1 Br'. lat pd, encl iar TSLMGMT. 642-1603 S Bdrms. 41,-\ ba, fam Joan Birdsall. Agent. LIDO ISLE SUS CASITAS d /wutier, pool. Adults rm, bonut nn, 2 frplca, 3 6'0-8927 or63M300. 3 BR. F.R .. D.R .. 4 BA. F l br pt -a. 642·5073. l d uro. . a . -... car ear, cu · e -sac. Mlwporf lettdt ,3269 But s lora1e avail. up. Encl. iar. Adultl, no MOVE RIGHT IN 2 br, 1 ~ ba,' no children, 1maU clot OK, $425. 110 Joann St. '4Z-7M4 $1r75/mo. ••••••······························ .$.17IOO•/IMioi. iYirlyiij. 67iJ.._9060 __ 1 _pe_u_._2_11_o_N_e_w_port __ B_L 541H968 btwn 8 4c 5PM 3 Br, 2~ ba, Jasmine Furn comft 2br apt ln lrl· 31 T ... Creek condo. Pla n 6. plu. Cple, non-stnkr, r •• 2 111 6'4·831n La Vera Burn• ~la.lie encl 1ar.. pool, dtwbr. 2BR. 18A. $485 2250 V anl\W'd. sco.tas $1600/mo. a ~ ref's. PllOM&.*3 Newly decor. IU pd., _, ,, • ..._ ltmt•tl• IMdl J74t _A_d_u_lta_._Mi-_WT_a. __ __. Lra JasmineCrk condo,.a REALTY ••••••••-••••••••••••• Wtlt1tde 2 Br. 1 Ba. Br, I~ Ba, qwet, on BeauUtuJ Townhouse. Duplex , kitche n • ---------- a-nablt. avail. 6/'JIJ. $1060. ,_____ ~pla!..8~~-~~ wf.:e dinette, retrit•. endld N4-2058 -1ara1•. Upl\alra ft ftCo.87~. qulet. No ptb. PIO. Wallr t.o beach. 3 Br. z Ba. FrpJc, &ar. avail now. lllO. 142.5290, 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. 1 Ba. Houle, new paint baa~ Ii o-4, oc .. n vlew 7ard. Multa ooly. -+ .U.. IG-IOOO. ..... ••utifw ltljc ..,_. or a. Cit P.lau, pool w Jjaftdd. ··• ,..lea, ........... 1 ... lnr' ...,._.mo-.im ............ LU .... OUS IAYPIOHT Fabulous view from Uvin1 and dining rms over 40' deck on the bay. 2BRS, 2 baths PLUS double garage. $2000/mo./yrly. Larry Dyer~(K71) ......, ~ 770.5629or&41-S442 -----.----1 2 Br. l Ba. AJlt. S..m * 2 B r . 2 Ba. N •a r A'J11 1'::·:00 ~0 So.C.Plau. &.A. '525. i.:t Mo . ..-......... Adult area. ~ma. TSL MGMT ...... l STORY 2 BR. a Ba llr s.c. Pl .... PooJ , Jae, MOWIS'IMITIMI ror J" ....., to clMek 1~..;;;.,;..;--:;.;..;;;;...;;;;::~;..__-~:.::~li!'.l:.,!:,91& &.aw. a Br, l Ba, "1• tM Job JOU ..... Dell ;ud, tl9d ....... """ , ... ,. 'o1 Mltbt COtl· pool. tHOl•o. No ld. f I.I ,o.r Idell/ha .....,_ In 1 r o er •pt ..... ~ n.......o.- 111 f~• .......... ft -----· t ' • ' 0.. • I .. u • C•U na,. .r.o . ...,,..,, ..;e.;.;.•........:'°'.....:.'-· n __ ...,. _ _,m_ ... , ~fmt. 111"111 • I I -·~-----~,-~ ....... ·~•~&"""'l'l••,........,...••••~• .... •~w_...•~•~,...~"~'~··~• ... ~• .. 0111110••~011111110 ... •••• ... u~c,..s .. 9'!1 .... 0~c""!JIC~a .. C!•C .... 11111~s ... s~s .. a ..... all'!'t'Zlllli!~S .. tl!ll .... lllil!•&ISlll~ , ' 1· Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednucsa·. June 3. 1981 "4r* I •4•HlrJ , ..... /P .. riwg s-6101.. SwlMRi_,...._.. ....................... ...................... •·•··•····•····•······· •........ , .....•.........•.........•.......... ··················•···· •.••..........••..•..•. •aWICl&SOH LlC'DDAYCARE MOW & EDGE-10% dis· HAULING-St~nt hat Wanted:SmaUJobt OLYMPICPAINTlNC LOCALSANDBL.ASTER Wiii ln1tnact chlktrtn to BullderaSl.nce UMT ~~·home. •14111-4, CO\IDt, ~ price winter larce truck. t.ow•ll Brick" bloek. Low brly Int/ext. ~eat. Uc, ins, reu No Job too •~Im your home Reas Addltlon1, remodellna. / • 804038 rates. 855-1.328 rate, prompt. 759·19'78 rate. ••1228att. e. Good quality work b11 11mall. fW0.7909 Rob &48 l042oft 7 _ fJ 11 ._ !! P1*1°'· ...,..Li •t3•10~.u2• ~31 9f>C,K CALIF. GARDEN Tba?k >'OU. John. . ._._,.._ Low rates $54·1.903 Sandblaslln1: Res, ~om· Tiie ' ,.._. ra 81. c. •• ' H t •h. M Cb •-""-i I .-.. _.,. 'l •-1-d trial 0 t ••••••••••••••••••••••• at'a~you Y 54i·2l'70 o unc · · tu· • .-ee tr m. c ean.ups, ce· Cle• .. y_. Act ....................... EXTERIOR PAINT m '"' '" us ua TIL1'; INSTALLED fora C t UHP~cbool.N&-5423 Qltnlwork.N&-4655 WecJeanOUt1ara~ea. l Movlna? The Starvin& 2 colle&e students. rree, aafe/fast Bert All kinds, 1uaronteed. '°~~d .. ~~·~ ............. CMtroctor LANDSCAPE MA.INT. ton truck. SZS. ~ 69 CoUese Students Movin& speclaDzin& ln M Verde 546·5745 refs John. 893·1667 D•1111y AU Around Carpenter. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Busl·apt.coodo-cburch Ho. ......_.__ Co. has IJ'Own, Insured area. John. 540--4328 Secrdwfal S-.lcH -Finl b •-.,_, b F Con1t ... ~-•-A1Jtvp•• •"hom•• Call"".2...... K---., aame good service. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CustomCeramic Tile -OT 1 • """"' · ree 20,;;31..•;...___-~t""' • ..... .._. -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• tT12~-•0• License. ~.1....&....-1~-N R mod IR i ~ ""-t John 77"' _.. ••..... ~ '""' .... w t R"''" •, c • uu .--.n _._-Skllled Stair for all See ew· e e · epa r •-1 ~ · .......,_ lJe . 6'5-""""3 Cleao·Upa, uaullna. an a ~v LEAN 6'1·8421' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'I p j T d Freeest.Chuck.8"~ -·-All "' tin •· -· T I l •M\ i HOUSE? Call Gln1bam Interior plant deslrn & tr /W obs. he Hea . DlltlCTOaY •YJ>a Remode g"' Carpentry.Additions& r mm n1. ow n1. Girl. Freeest.645-5123 ABC MOVING, Exper maintenance for home quarters Companiu Tutorht9 DO IT NOW! Repalra, top qUfllity, 17 S Uj-'--Ed &Ina. Sweepin1. RO . , prof, low r.atea, quick or of flee. Plan• It! 851·0681 -••••••••••••••••••••••• • -L .___ ir-...L..... vrs lo area. IJc'd. ma ""'°.""yrs exp.~ Chuc le 548-6530 BIN S CLEANING "areful s·~c·e. "'"'"·"·10 551.......... • J b d "'_,......_.. 'Mr. Palombo,982-l3U Lie. 309152 548-2'719 Servlce-et.hQJouahly '" ..... --~. Mae · s Sec re tar 1 a I All sub eels, ~ crt! YourDall)'PUot ---------•n-....e1 TRHS cleanbouse.540-0857 . "MOvtN-MAN" ,..ater/•--'-Service. Typ1ng, dictal· ~lementary & en.m!n& Servicel>lrectory Carpets.ntca _.,.. Top~/removed,clean lS carerul, courteous & •••••••• ::::::: ••••••••• 1n1. Pickup deliver y Yaonduirc appedom ~~mCl!llnhset Repre1entallve ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• SHIPTOSHORE .,.~ 8638 h " ' ... 2·5671. •xt 322 o us 1 lis ups, awn renov. '751·3476 cheap. Plscall642·1329 Neat patches & textures "'"". 640..6386 aft 4. "' • Shampoo & ateam clean. ryw~ a t Boat& House Cleaning I ~ •3 ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Color brttbteners, wbt Qua I. & ·New & re· Sam Fukumoto YARD Rellable-Exp.·Bonded , ........ ,. .. ..._ Free Ht. 9~ 1 .. 9 Sprlnklen Ty.J S-ice ~ . bl h mod # ~5549 MAINT •-Cl U -.t • '_... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..nq ... ' Aace•.... crpts 10 man. eac . · · · "' ean· pa. Est. 646-2342,545-9789 ....................... ED'S PLASTERING ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hall, llv.-din. rms $15; llectrk-' Tree trimming, small •STEVENS PAINTING All Types Int/Ext SPRINKLERS & SOD PROF. TYPING f'/CBKKPOSERVICES avarmf1.50;eouch.Sl0i_ •••••••••••••••••••••• landstaplng.645-3540 HOUSECLEANING· Int/ext. Free itemiied 6'5·825S FREEEST. Tree removal. DIG IT On IBM Seleclrk, die AU Taxea-Coeta Mesa cbr $5. Guar. elim. pee ELECTRICIAN-priced G rol ~-le L 0 W RAT ES• 0 w o est. Neat, quality work. Landscape, 646-7070 ta phone, statistical. re· C"'ll ..... ,...., ,.,." ...,.... odor. Crpt repair. l.5 yn ri•b• r-.... esti at lfte _......... " trans. call Maria art 832·32al. 546-4561 PLASTER PATCHlNG Sto k 1---L-po_rts, etc 979-4155 __ -• .,_..,,_,_,.._, exp Do work myself • " '""" m e on •••••••••••••••••••••• 5PM 6•• 7698 c ~ -AMwertltg Ser-flee Refi. 531-0101 · larae or amaU Jobs. H 0 M £ R E PA I R S · _. Fine pain Un& by fUchard Int/ext. :.>yrs exp. •••• • ••••••••••• ••• • ••· Window CleGnlnq ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. #396621 6'13-0359 Remodels, Building, Ex· General Houlecleanlna. Sinor. Uc. Ins. 13 yrs of Neat work Paul 545-2977 Stocks, money market. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Professional Staff. Com· NoSt.eam/NoShampoo lxco•..._ p'd, Reliable. 494·3781 We aim to pl~ase. Ref'•· happy ·N.B. customers. tax shelters . Steve "Let TheS\lnshme In" tuter Asailted System. Stain Specialist. Fa.at ••••••••••••••••••••••• RICH 9'79-108' Thank you. 631-4410 rtumblftcJ Johnsto~-2442. Call Sunsh111e Window neHeadquarters Com· dry.Freeest. 839-1.582 DUMP truck. skip H-.dyM• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------Cleaning.Ltd 548·8853 panlM.851-0681. J 'sSTEAMCLEAN loader, back-hoe •••••••••••••••••••••• yifouMrEHOME SWEEdT COLL.EGE STUDJEbNrT, PLUMBING-new con-People whoneedpeople 2rms$l2.50/5rms$29.95 aervlcea. Aft 5PM, HOME IMPROVEMENT -care you e· exp, mt/ex, any 0 or struction, remodeling, shouldalwayscheckthe ~'~~~~~ ...... Carpetdying. 974-6228 6'2·02.39 Remodellng--Oddjobs :;;_~~'7Ref8. Kathleen, 55Je2s·s02!31A lex 851 -9371, r~palrs , restaurant. ServiceDirectory inthe 28 979-2265 electronic leak detec-DAIL y PTLOT i:;;·:::.~~~f& CelltMJ,Acomtk ~~~~•••••••••• y~exper. ttonesfttfng PAPHHAHGIHG tioo. Top Hat Plumbing. Servl·ce. ""'"77"'• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• F . Coun Roof• n g ' PI um b Ing . ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 25 yrs exp. Free est. 636·2030 _.. ... AcousUcCeillngs + ormaca . ~rtOP6 carpentry, painting, DON'T BE EMPTY ....a,. custom hand texlurlna Custom bwlt & ansta.lled, floors, repair/remodel. • Fast, neat, reUable. Holleman Plumbing As;melt Llc 38......... "'"".cc'!9 latest colors & designs. F l ...,.. _,, ft ., THIRSTY OR LONELY S'1 /roll & up. 64.5·6490 Sales-Service-Repairs ••••••••••••••••••••••• · """'"' J>-......., Free est. N-~l ree es . ..._._..,.,a . ~. We sit your house, plants Free estimates 552. 7183 Drlvewaya, parking lot & pets. Security Plus. DAV E'S PAINTING repaiu, sulcoatin1. c ....... t/Cwnte AoorCo.... REPAIR/REMODEL 831-7587 Serv. satisfied cust. 9 PropertyM.apment SAS Asphalt. 631-4199 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types or repairs, free yrs. Qual.·inte1rlty. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ltc'd. Foundations, Retaining CRPT-LfN().WOOD est, work guar. 63l·ll37 Ex P 'd couple, non · Reas, ins, lie. 760-7301 Prof. Property Mgmt .... PHALT REPAIRING Walls, Hillside Restora· lnstalled/repalred. Lie. a/t 5. imokers, Reliable. Care Apts, houses, condos. of ""'Se . . tion , Slabs, Patios, #369260 Crei499-51'42 Jock of ••T~...t.... ~!2_267pet8s tplants. Refs. INT/EXTPAINTING fices. PMCo.951-6666 alcoatin1 &St.rlpana Block & Brick Lic'd -..--. ... Lo rates. Prompt, neat. Comm /resld. Free est. 6'2·3387 eva/960-0"9 GarGCJ• Door Openen Call Jack, 675·301'4 ---------Free est. 848·5684 bfinlshlng Llc. t:te7362 ~181 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H ood Iron._... ••••••••••••••••••••• ... • Pool Decks and Patios SPRINGS/HARDWARE ordw Roon ,.... AGAPE FORCE J D H R fi · hJ Arlo•otf-' A t 0 d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAINTING COMPANY . . om e 1015 ng -.... Masonry, Sport Courts. u o. peners·new oors Antiques, kit. cabinets. CALL JULJO'S For a II your house & v.1nd o v. cle11 n1n g ~5689 "•·~··•••••••••••••••• Tennis Courts. Lie. Lac. Bob sS46-3667 HARDWOOD FLOORS IRONING 3Generationsof Fine painting. 645·0664 A6•~ s ~uxr M<1f~ar 374067. 851-1966, ~7-7078 Gardening An<;~T~e~~.~~~A. Ironing in my home, Painti~~~llence. Rooflnq STARTING 1nt 1iomae/~: ~:151 g, ••••••• •••••••••••••••• reasonable rates ---------• ••• •• •• •••••••••••• •••, C NhAatworii CLEAN-UPS/LAWN Haulhtg I Cal646-9100 RENTALSPAJNTED MC Maintenance·Lndscp •••••••••••••••••••••••1 ---------• I t / P .. ysfttfRg Driveways, patios, ~J Free est. 642-9907 Haul. cleanup, concrete MolOllry n ext · r 0 m Pt · *•••••••••••••••••••••• decks servi'ce wa ks Seaside Painting, Greg, · · removal. Dump truck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mom will babysit 2 foundations in'lltalled. Gardenin&. landscaping, Quickserv.642-7638 BRICKWORK: Small _5_36_·_•_806 _____ _ QUALITY ROOFING All types, free est . Visa, MC. 541·5930 HARBOR ROOFING A NEW BUSINESS? • ~ -~ldren 3-4 yrs. In my Llc. #1800334. Free est. lree trimming & re· Jobs. Newport, Costa RAIHIOWPAIMTIHG 1· ~me. Big fncd. yd KC PodflcCorp. moval, major clean-up, DUMP JOBS Mesa, Irvine, Refs. Extslnts.custom. la 11 d proof house. <71-4)634-4741 free est. 752.1349 Small Moving Jobs 675·3175 Free Est. 6"2-9Sl'4 HORIZON ROORHGCO. A Fictitious Business Name Statement filed with the County Clerk la valld for five years after which time continuing businesse s must refile . Publlcetlon la neceaaary only If there are changes. Call the Legal Department at the DAILY P ILOT for Information and necessary forms. iD~a~y~n~a~, 642~·:!9264~·:__--~~~~~~!!!~~ Call MIKE646-1391 -----------------• -GARDEN MAINT. BRICK ARTISTRY ._..," c ..... 1c,. ~······················ ...................... . D. lrD.l•it.t1 Qe1 lgners. Custom homes. :rr yrs exp Fin. avail. Charles (714 ) LAMIBTTILE Kitchens, bathrooms, entries. Uc'd. 978-0320 ... 3141 Al (714 ) 963-8433 ~~~~~~~~~ Yd Clean-up. Tree trim-Haullng&DumpJobs Pool & spa copings, p:~::i~ERI. fi~~ roll min&. 543-8709, 4-8pm Ask for Randy. brick pavinp, block & 641-8427 brick walls. 960-7421 bun& free.1-1139-1429 EXPERT LAWN CARE Monthly service. Trees TREE/SHRUUTRIM Brick-Block-Stone RALPH'S PAJNTING & c I ea nu ps . Mike Garaee & yard clean· Very reas. Llc, bonded. Lic'd. Int/ext Neat. 548-2049 ups Free est. 557-8271 . Bob54.8-2753/536-9906 Prompt. 964-5566 For roof1ng al its best Lie. 1389425 548-3609 Orange Coast Roofing-All types of roof1ng. Repairs & additions. 646 Fast, re· liable, honest. Free est. Call Dave 548·1733 or Chris 646-2389 646-4321 Eat. w OftlC• R...tol 4400 Office Rental 4400 Industrial Rtfthlt 4500 lnYHhRetlt ~•IMfth 5100 Lott & Fow.d 5300 Penonalt 5350 Personals 5350 H.tp Wanted 7100 ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C)ppoellihlty 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11l'7 Weatclilf. N.B. Want REleYest. $675. Approx. 2265' In-••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSIMATES Lost: German short hair FIRST LADY SOOTHING MASSAGE ACCTG. CLERK rinancial inst. 7000s.f. dus 'l /Office. 18101 1.666 shares of Heritage AVAIL.AILE female. Answers to forDiscriminatingmen TRAIMCOMPUTEtt tst. tloor. Agent541-5032. Prof9sslonals Redondo Cr. "T". Hunt· Bank Stock·SlO per 18-so. alJ types. Share Kaya. Last seen Sat eve Escort. Models Call Peter 494-4871 Space avail in 8ch.842·2A14 share. Call Fran : yourspace&costa. $3C vic•OthSt,NBonBeach. -----Sl,000 All,OUAREA Furnished or un · furnl1bed Executive Suites in Irvine. walking d»tance to Ail'l>?rt. All atrvices avail. 2082 Michelson, Suite 212. 71•·752-0234 cooperative real estate 833-3622. fee. Cheaper than ad· 642-S&M PortyDancft'S, 1.25 Sq. Fl on NEWPORT HARBOR 1 . 3035 Sq. Ft. rw.OHCcn ICIJVlewS ,,.., ... ,atto. 'Loh of WIMows · ,~·-· Fortbel>Uainess man Wlw> wants to make a , 1ood impression. w.,1.oat. CelT«*yl C7 I 41675·8662 MIWPOU IEACH Convenient Peninsula leeaUon acrou from Ci· ty Hall. Executive style offices w /full services aull. From 215 sq.ft. .. d up. No lease re· quired. Call 6'13-3002. execu-ste. Prim~ MESA * 972 1345 * AFTER .. •oo ... Airport location. Many Mo...., __ Trust vertising with no hassle. • ,... ,... D"N"d~.,.-1 ""' 5035 Free2forldJnnerbook FOUND : 1/3./81 n r MC&VISAAccepled amenities. 752-5111 INDUSTRIAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• for June members. Bushard7Garfield tool *DELIGHTS* 22S sq rt+ storage use & PARK SattlerMtg. Co. Pac iric Reg is tr Y • box /tools963-972511344 COVER GIRL Home/OffkejHotel common area. NB Bus All types of real estate 558·8608 7 days, l2·Bpm. Found : Keys. Vicinity or * OUTCAU. * * 972-9773 * area. 752·5m 7 7th S inveslmentsslnce 1949. Lost & FOIM 5300 S p r i n g d a I e & 953-0778 MC/VISA 24 Hrs. Now II iring Beautiful new office space available in one of Newports fmest office buildings. Nr 0 .C . airport. 200-900' with or without secretarial services. Call for de- tails. 833-0MO I I W. I t. SPfdalzlngln ••••••••••••••••••••••• Meadowlark Lane. MC VISA Costa Mna. Calf. 2'ld TDt Hunt. Beach Call iden r-~'1:.~~~:-~·1 . .;.;;.. ____ ~~ 642-4463 6 ,,.2_2171 5,,.ir.061 I tify.846-4536 * FOXYLADY * .. ..r FOUND ADS 'ers0ttals 5350 VIS~UTCALLONLY MC •• Bai boa Island: custom Executive office space avail. Share computer. word processing capabilities & other ex- ecutive unerrltJes. Rent neg . 110 Agate St. 673-2943, 673' .... 1980 sq. ft . Unil avail. Want investor for Npt May 1st. Carpets, . drapes wet bar. •3J6..34t bayfront home. Give sq. ft. •Leasing office well secured 1st or 2nd hrs. Moo thru Fri 8-4. T.D. A&t. 675-6161. Sat. lO·Z. WE PAY THE MOST 8,700 sq. ft office+ ForyourT.D:s&Notes warehouse. Irvine In-at Dennison Assoc. dustrlal. 35' triple net. 673-7311 Call 6-46·1°'4 or inquire _W_l_D_O_W--has--mon--e-y_fo_r Marosi Co. 16'153 Noyes, o 9$7.9266. Brkl'. Coop in· T.D. '1 . $10,000 up! N CREDIT ~. No pnlty. vited. CaU aat. Eileen, 673-7311 1300 sq ft. M·l space with 'rofes•l•!Mr front office, large.rear DtcONhcl door. $395/mo. 1785 $13,500eams $4650 in 11 months with this Trust Deed. Bkr 768-0922 770 sq ft of pro-Whittier St. C.M. Daya fessloMI office spoc• 54()..9352, Eves646-0681. $3750 earns ~ In 6 In Costa Mtsa. lrkjllt Stor~ 4550 months with secu.red CllMlo,_.Reodywhen ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15% T .D . Patrick r• ere. Slora1e gara1e for rent. 631·1266 Agent. 631·2242 On Balboa Pen. next to run zone uo~rtx20~n.) ANto•cen.nh/ 673-294.3; 673-3980. ,.,...../ Lost & Foilld a.tab Wanted 4600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• •• • • ••••••••• ••• • ••• AMotmlc-'t SI 00 ARE FREE ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 972-1 I JI * Preventative & Stress •--------•I CalL Reducing Massage by ~--------•I r. Dons. "Intro" Special' SWEETHEARTS 642-5671 548-0407 •ESCORTS• ~~~~~~~~~i..---------1 24.HOURS -Visa/MC 972·9773 SPIRITUAL READINGS IOam·lOpm Fully Lac· d. 492-7296 or 492-9034 1815 S. Camino Real. San Clem To the Beautiful Brunette who said "hello" to me at Swensen's in CdM Sat . nite Ma y 23 WOW ! ! ! Love to meet LOST: Fem Doberman bl k /lan, vie . Beach/Adams H.B. 5/25, REWARD. 960-7195 REWARD Lost small male black dog, part lab. has cancer 6'G-53S7 (Gary) •FANTASY *STUDIO* E S SHE C 0 RT S MODELING 135-9199 & you again at Swensen's any Sat at 9pm. Mike <I 'm the blonde with glasses). The Beach area ·s closest Lost: Dog, male Husky, & most exotic reading gray & white. Blue eyes. studio. 8125 Bolsa Av., Reward. 531·7650 days; Midway City (2 blocks 8"6-7546 eves. E. of Beach behind Ji. quor store>. Open lOam· Lost : Gold Wedding lam daily except Sun. Band. Sunday, 5-31 . 543-9243 Laguna Beach. Ocean~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ restaurant. ladie'sr: THE Girlfriends •ESCORTS• HOIM /Offiu /Hohl * 972-9772 * 24.HTs. Now Hiring Male/Female Escort MC VISA Personal Senius 5360 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMWAY PRODUCTS Koth , 960..5646 l!lftplo~& Pn;aration ••••••••••••••••••••••• Schools & Instruction 7005 Psychic Reader Advisor Past, Present & Future. ~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~I • • • • • • •••••••••••• ••• •• ----------t$20 per hr for open space ••••••••••••••••••••••• PieltlgloUI ()(flee Space. ............... 4450 for big party with live I wt6dow offices avail•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba.Dd, big yards, drive- b&e in rull attvice Legal For st.ore & office space ways etc. Ally wk end THE ADVaTISIM(i room. approx. 6pm. Sen· timental value . REWARD! (714 )645·8748 eves. Love. Marriaie. Health.1-.--------• Swimming lessons, Red Character &I Business. 1• croas Cert. Beg to inter. ~. GNOt eo...p.y Pvt & group. Mommy & &Ute lo Newport Center. at reaaonable rates. Fri/Sat. ni&ht.a or sum- AY•ll. now! 640-5640 500 to 2700 ~Ft m e rt 1 m e 1 n n o n · VERDE • residential area, in H.B. DR'a ofc. in Dwntwn BB. MESAPLAZA R area or within 10 ml. 2,000 aq.ft. Sl.200 lse. Red l52.5 Mesa Verde E C M 538-6632 Brian. Please Carpet, 89.t-1351 545-4123 · · · Leave name & number. MIWrOU HACH run aervlce exec. of· fit" from $397 . "On C.U" nee. offices from 91«11. lncldl. eecretarial, .-ooe ana.. word pro- -lnl"-Telex. qwip. TRI! H~ADQUARTERS • COMPANIES 7H/15Hlllll PIME IOAIL UIATION 1750 Sq. Ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• COHSULTAMTS Now you can reap the benefits ol hi&b cost ad· vertiainl for )'Our com· pany ! Let The Advertia- lnl Consultant.a set up your own in-house ad· vertisl.ng agency. Please call Mr. Crouon for in· formation. 75t·0'52 Lost: lge turtle w. broken shell, vie. ol 400 Costa Mesa St. 548-1989 · Lost Cocker Spaniel pup- py. May31. ~ Shepherd, mixed, male, lan & blk. Blk lab, mixed, female, mlx, bm blk male. Irish setter. male, 3 tees. kltten, arey, male. Terrier. mix, blk & brn ll\Ale. Springer spaniel, Uver & white, male. 644·3656. Cater to Pan.aes, Ca.rd & Me. Beg July 6, Foun· Tea Leaf Readings. If Escorts tain Valley.-.home pool. can not so Ive Life ~4 Hrs. 641·0180 963·2810 aft. 6pm. Problems on your own, Collt/ChKb 7075 consult us for lnfor & ap-AM EXP fMC/Vlso Jobs W..e.d, Jpo~in~t.~(7!'.1~4!_) !~~40~13!_ __ ,~~~~~~~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIYl-IH Available July-Aug. Port time rest of year. Xlntrefs. 731·2648, 7AM besl. 2 Klndergarden teachers have summer program . Reading, swimming, field trips. Monday thru Frtday 548-4115 Exoo Afency ~4~'447 16483 S. Magnolia H.B ADMIHISTRA TIVE ASSIST AMT Ach1tectural firm local ed near 0 .C Airport needs intelligent, well organized individual to a ss is t the l o p e x ecuu ves Weareseekmg a n assertive, self moti vated person who has experience compos ing letters & rev1ewmg lega l documents Some co ll ege pre ferred Sa la ry commensurate with yo ur ad man 1strative exeenence 549·0644 for app t. ---Administrative 1uL~2~k~e?r Secretarial, marketing, warehouse & other posi· lions. We stress neat ap· pearance. Must have transpo. Call 10am-3pm wkda ys. <714 )847 _2422. ASSEMBLER/ ELECTRONICS Immediate openings with erowing company. Mechanical assembly, wiring. soldering. Small company atmosphere. good benefits. 6mos. ex· perience preferre d 645·3632. ASSEMILUS Loe Mission Viejo co. needs Assemblers w 12 yrs. exp. Candidates must have gd. manual dexterity, gd. eyesight, neat in appearance & de· pendable. Work is in life support medical elec· trooics. Gd. benefits. O n ly reseonsible persons seekin1 perm•· nent emplymL need ap- ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli. 581·3830 APPf'O•. 1100 ft, 4th nr, fiterftant bldt, NB. &G-4&U CCH'Mt"Loc.._ Otlh ..... Stnet .......... ,. Roo......,. Senlce LOWESTPRlCES! ! tree &lfl ll you have a place. Pacific Room· mates, CaU 558-8608, 7 day1, 12..Spm. SHAU A "-ACE PLENTY AVAILA.BLE For all types of people. Only $30 fee. Guaran· tud results. Paciflc Realatry, 5~·8608. 1 ~ays from 12-8pm. Found : female lynx point, declawed, 6 mo. '78().052'7' 557-7533 . HelpW.-.ct 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ·I'!!~!!~~!!!!~!!!!!!!! M1 .. tfM1T..,,... Call 675-8662 AILL Y .... OVID MCMNOl'fT Corp. avall. IGUOO Peter Dobeon It u .. (aanl· ly of ll•u.reen Kool• wt1h to thank au her aOod rn_. tort.be tov· inl, tlnd aupport we've received le for 1our 1en1ro11t coGtrlbutJOOI to the mlilDliital IUDd FOUND: Male Blk/Grey 1trtped cal. vie . Kat.he.rlne Way C.M. red collar N&-1088 Found female Af1han, vie:. Fountain Valley. ....,. . Loll: Fem German Shep mu, 50Jb. V'lc Dova • Mariners Dr, NB M5-4174 evet. round: r Terrier-Nod.le whltt. recently bad pupt. 8ettdJ &c Adam•. HB.-.GN. Acco ml ... a.rt& Experience required. 30 br a we e k . PCH Sportswear. CaH Tine 551.2995 ACCOUMTIH• 1'yplat~~: bkkp& m,¢hiile. Ptr24 hrs/wk . Wed, Fri, Sat. Country Club in C.M. 549 037'7 Mra. Myer Assembly ILUE JIAH JOIS ./W AltlHOUSI I FACTOllY I ASSB•LBS Looi & abort term n.s· alf:nmenta . AVA LABLENOWI Call or come by:' 2102 8uslness Center i--------•I Dr ., U08, lrvtne. ACCOUMTAHT F/C Newport Be.ch property m1mt, firm CateerQJ>I>' ty. for briiht tndlv. wtth prior r te! aper. Call · &40-0W 833-1441 CNr. MacArthur 81. & 405 Frwy) Of 2'957 Cabot Rd .• La1una Nlaue\, Ul-0542 <Crown Valley Pkwy. •JCit) or 16152 Beach Bl .. lf230E. Hur\Untton Beech tEL~~ ee ~v•C:E JCO.E. MIP'/H Trade your old lluft for n-.w 1oodla1 with a Clau\Med a4: 142 M7I tWltW...ttd 7100 ······················' ASSIMIL Y GIRL Plqtlr1 experti:nce pre· • # r.mcs. but wlll trarn Mull 1peak Enall1h 142·1026. ASSIMIUR Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesda • June 3, 1981 WonNd 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Het...Wantect 7t00 HtlpWcmhd 7t00 Help Wanhtd 7100 .W,W.W 7100 ~.~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... .,.. ••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• D PE •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••• •• UH SCA Bunk mg SEMIO. TB.Liil Dana Point omce seek• ('X p 'd tt>ll tir Some knowlod Re o r TRA Keogh preferred Call ~hureen at 496 6133 Provident Federal Suvlnp. EOEM F H loc*i&Hper CHIU> CARE COOK J'11r1. Ill lull time o•tva 61NIAAL OMCI Ou•n:l• IMSTAUY part time 10 to 15 houni LO\ ltl 1randrl'lotht>r ror Npl ltth tt'~luur.inl Mt'}'t'r~~-prlrnary trvloe firm h •• lm: HOWHlllMG Lookln1 ror cl J)l'nci per v.eek Hour11u1t ble type to t-ar• form) two t-;i..p prcl 11. but 11.111 1upplit~ fooct. to di 1 r Armed lUna'918d bard work Int: pt1111un loyourneed!J 8339252 bAb1e$, Djle!f 4 mos & 2 train f''or &ntl.'rV l!!W the Jrvfnei l'Orporatt• me ~Ile open DI Or Qnod ........ if'I W mln 1 y r fXl/l'r --yn P6rm full limu 4 call 61211t18t 1·o mmunlty nn d1 a l>rlabt, u lf-alarter ,,_. •w-ln1talUn1l llt'l~ •hrubi.. Bookkeie""'. t'itn'd A P. d")'S a wk responsible & n exlble peuon "° perrora Costa~ Irvine. ht der board " :iOt! ~ ,. .. d 'ood •-varltt{i ot offic• dl'Kles Ti P R. G I. partlam e. 67S ~.67S 0321 Cools peraon to o • prep..,.. I Oro. lawns Stllrt111a ~y oansmuhr Irvine -Pln••.Stwrt01dt!r b11«.'k-updellvcriee. l\fon· lnclud na xero•lnl. In· •M.OOPerhr"up· sa 1200 mo Pd hoh s 751·7020 CholrDl""tor M ui.t lx• m. Avply 1-'ri. 8 3pm Good drlvlng ttr•omce dellverA. m •UnUorm~leanln& tree & \ arallOO. ho.!Sp s. For small ch1.m:h 3• 31lPulmlialboa recordnl't·~~ary.Start.s tn1.etc.Oontact: ever-•M atur e perao n s &\all lntt·n 1rw ... > to work with ('t\aSSlt wir in&. P .c. 00..r<b. & pro totype¥ Must speak & read engll.!th 2 yrs ex pr minimum ~ :;o to S6 hr ~~~~-~~~~ South Shnta Ana. ~~~- IOOkKEEPEtl F/C Raftdly expanding re· lua company seekana F c Bookkeeper Ex ce llenl company benefits Stnrung ~al11r) Sl200 mo (.'all M6 0011. Laverne or Chris hrs wk 642 2740 111 $345. Call Sus1e at ly,Ml·8820 welcome dPPt only, ~Jll t>tf. o.141 , am !IG3·41!1Spm COOKS SS7·6232 •Semi.retired OK. Lloyds Nul'liery 3·11 roos 1!\t>t•r Al•PIY GI.MERA&. Offll~I s.49·0623 ________ , BabysiUer wantfii. Full Ume Summer job My home . St udent OK. e.&-1382. Evt'i. & Wknt'b. Babysitter full tam e, summer. perf. ror t·ol le&e 11tudt?nt N~ded im- m e d 644 8071 eves wkndi. Bab ys it ter nel!ded . Mature. resp woman needed for oceus.aonal babyslttmg 10 my Costa Mesa home. 979.7593 BABYSl'ITER For 2 yr old girl. F 1' 63i 1137 aft. 5 Babysitter Mother want- ed with otht>r l'haldren to care for my l yr. old, fuU lime Mon thru Fri. After 4 640·9006 BABYSITTER Mature person to care for 1 yr old. my home. Balboa 675 !\061 mom in gs. Banking Huntington S:l\ 1ngs 1s now accepting apphea lions for full & P T .teller positions Call 842 8600 BANKING SAYINGS REPS Part Tim~ BAN Kl NG *TELLERS Part Time Bxcell~nl pul1 t1m1.• op partunit1es arc a\.a1l11ble m the I r~anc office of 11 g rowing 1>d\ 1ng1o ..ind loan w c·re seekin g Tellers with pre\ 1ou:-. ex· per1enrl' al> a teller or in cashiering t'a!>h handl· me Saturdayi. will be required Thei.e an• pcrrn.inent pos1tioni. offering top salarie:.. paid career up parcl. frt!e parkin.: and a beautalul work l'n Hronmenl Pleast' apply d uring banking hour:. at FIDELITY FEDERAL Sav~and Lo Assn. 4482 Barr ca Parkway lrvanc 714~10ffl An 1':qual OpptS Employer BEAUTICIAN T o run small !'>hop The Hayr Barn 600 W l!>th St C M 646-8480646 1145 Beautician Balboa lay Club is now hfrincJ Hairs¥ist Preferably w follu" 1111? Xlnt working t•ontl look Pasteuo P,T1me Mon. l 36PM to 6PM. Tu~. 10 30AM to 6P M . No t>itpcr necei.sar) Appl) Pen- neySaver 1660 Plal·enlla Ave.C M BUS 0 RI\' EW:, tor ::.l'hvol bus po:.it1oni> a' ail Will tram 1r nt•c Fuuntam \'alll'}'. 962 l3L2 Carpet Installer Helper needed Will train M1i.s1on V1rJO area 18 \ ro; & older 1131 9070. lea\·e name & phone no "111 return dll c•alls Car riers Regai.ter Newi.papt>r ha:. 1mmed. opening1o for af· ternoon auto carriers in Laguna Beach & Laguna "'<1guel. Ml.bl be over 18 Hars old & have an ~t·onomicul t·ar Work 3 30 5 JOpm weekda)1o. S 7am "~kcndi. EJrn SSOO S600 monthly Call \11 Ensley951 7113 CARRIERS WANTED In 111e N1.•wport lkal'll <:trt'a Earh AM dt?hHry of L A Timi·-. St 25-;- St ufr t'r!> ri.ceded al ... u Call .Jes!>~ 023.'i CASHIER Part tame Apply . The Earl' Plumbm~. 1526 Newµort A\'l' Costa :\lei.a n1 641 1289 Please call Tues Sat l•--------•I 642 0092 Ask forJO}('l' CLERICAL Suundcrartsman Audio hnio. 1nter~ting V<>Sll1on a' a Ila blc with \a r1t1d of· fare duties· typing fll ing. phont"I. mail l'all <'7141556 tit!l3 CLERICAL Pt:ftSON FHll>,\ Y for l'Onstr11l't111n rumpany Bookkt-epull? & typing saso mo 5461moo l'lt•nt:.il <icn llflace \lu!>l b1: i.:OOt.1 " num her~ Pl11usant offict• t•n '1r111lrnent No l)t>llllt. Call ri14l771-i7so CLERICAL In int> distributor has l lll med Oµl!nln.: fo r l'lt•rk T\ ""' to ..in!>~er lell'pho1w & do i.wneral of l' work 10 kcy by touch&. '.>mm•,\ H ei..p a plu:. Gd l'O bl!nehts !>JI.an tu ~)0 mu Call 754 w:i1 Clerical T> pL<;l Opening \\1th }oung d) 1rnm1c l'n.:1neer1ng const rue t 1011 Ii rm ~1 u.-,l be !>harp. dependalilt• "1th Jl' rnratt' l) p1n1? ~kilb 160 wpm+ > Satar) torn · eni.ural t' \•Ith ex - µt>rienn• l'all l>ll\'C Pt•lt•r -Pt•lt•r &. \.,:-.11c I n l' . SJ It t' l i· 1111! 111 t• t92 3735 Cli•1k girt !>hop Mature 1-'ull time incl weekends Ap1>I)' F'ri. Sat or Sun 1 Luguna lit•ach 4!17 3155 I -_, CLERK IN OFFC I Wlll train &crow Unusual opporturut} an big Co lo learn~ b<' pro mnted bt\\n ~\\1 & Noon EacrowOfflcw p I N 1' ....._ BEKlNS t.EGAl. SECRl'f\HY CbJrlie 1 Tl h1h 3001 Immediate opening , It me oexp.9« .... ..-for Npl Bc:h law firm I P "'~"•""1 plfi btwn tAM a ,Noon. PAOTECTIO" 1 Redhill. lild.i. 112. Ste. oan exp~-=-""--C arlie '• C .. lll. 8001 Will tram rx-r~on " gt #226. CM " • SERVICES bai.1t· ~kills M.111 t ard EXEC. SECRETARY Redhlll. Bldg. •2• Ste. 2'01 'N, Ball~ l'XP helpful CJll J11}1.·e COUMTE:R HELP for busy N"pt. Bch ore. •22111 CM Anahltm. Ca., r 't """ ~ Wanted p 1 for food dell T} pmg. shorthand Reul t714) 761-4111 or app ·.....,. l'ull twtw1.>c11 gAM 11AM t'i<t11~ bkgmd helpful. LOE. M/F LEGAL SEC'Y 7!12 5401 St.:rno 1m o. +. com-Ge'heral • • • • •• • •• • • "llei·ded for purtnd or COUHTER HELP f'll•xablt• houn,. day or n1Kbl PT bt>lwe<'n 30·40 hr:. ix·• wt>t>k Ap Pl!-u·I Dt•r Ww11l•r:.d1111tLel. 250 S Bn:-.tol. CM . A!'>k for Hu·k t:UUNTl';H HI•:LP FT PT r.llr!o ·~ Qell . C'dM . 675 21!13 for llPPt Customer Service Gen I office skill!> a must. Pt:ll Sµort~weur <;all Tina 5S6 2995 DELIVERY DRIVER Local arou. ov.n :.mall cJr We ekd.iyi.. 4 30 8 30pm Weekends opt1on1JI raad per de liver) Real1~t1 t·ally earn ovc•r S6 hr . n<• tax t'~ Call 197 HllH "kdays aftt•r 2pm Dental Fmt Ofc. Pl•du 11on smukt•r FJ,hion t...l;md.1>4Hllill DENTAL ASSIST AMT \lodern jJrogrl'!>..,I\ e prlll'lH"l' 'l't'k\ l'X · pt•riencOO 1·ha1 r!'>ldt> as· :. 1 s t a n t \It· an 1 n i: f u I c arE>er opl'!1rtun1l) for an 1nd1\ 1d11al who 1s look mg for rx-rsonul re- t•111:111t ion ;ind l'lC<'ep- llonJI rina11~·1al n•"ard:. \\ t• are karn oriented and (•arin~. offl•rin~ mensurate to ex pe r. Loaklngfol' prestq;aous Ncv. pj>•t Call 6401633 ask for 5-rWortl7 GUARD$ aeal'h law office ~ Don Lightner ____ Varicty of~porarya.s· Full & part urn. All perienl't>frefl'rrt'<I M'.iA i-:xper'd person wunted slan~,o•.t.. ,vall. Work hiftaa. Un*ms Tl.lrn'd. ti helpfu Top !'!ala~ .... when ""' .,aht, 1-p pay, *Al ... "'l or over. retired beautiful surroundin~ ... v. ~ to 10 yr... exper. m f w _... ... .. ~ • -. no ee. eft....,..: welcome. Noex-r. nee Call 17141833-0730 «.'Pl weavmg & mend-St T 1st .-• ._ I & h S f enos YP s A p p I y : U n I v e r s a l , ing. sa es pure a e o Data E nt Opp Factory P ... tection SeMce, 1226 LEGAL handmade rugs.~ per File Clerb Asaembters w 5th Sl • Saota Ana SECRET ARY ,tt.A "k Call Pers aun Laboren WhseWkrs lnte"1aewhnl :~l2& 1·4. Probalt-exper1c1u-&.•' T re a s u r e R u g · M•n-Fn. t P ermanent part lUll.t>)l~ 714-673 6981 Newport Beach ;area..~ ----'Hair ..-StvU1t-Mamour1st 3 o . ., * FACTORY for Costa Mesa & Npt 61 712 :~:: TRAINEE * Bch area. ~93'4 Liquor C~rtc P ff .s day-40/hr week. I ~ROW'" ae1sALES 1s2S Mesa Verde l>i".-lcaA Call Mark· 979-7660 HA ~ ........ ~ ---Npt 4cb , 5'8-8S20 Jllna«ement patentaal. Ll~t:OR CLERK w,th i''l'LL Time. p1t1me. EquaJOpp EtftplyrM /F At>ply in pe~: Crown knowledge of w ~nt'S Mm t ypang req'd. Ans . dware, 310'1 E. Coast wanted Spigot Liquor. st>rv No exp. nee. Call .!'CdM 1802 S Coa:..t ll~~•A 631 0140 EOE Geoer,i HOUS!Cl.IMMG Laguna Seal·h. 4!M l~ff!...,. GEMERAL OFFICE IVICKI HESTOJf I• ~Ue Jaundl')". Wetkly. Liquo r Clerk.P T nigti(~&.• i-;x pe rient'e helpful. _ .. llhll residence. COM A1ok forSte\e • ·:~ good typing ab11Jty, pro-& Auoclatet rea Rer req . Day 548-8410 ...J..! flc1ency with figures, ~13 to key b' touch Op-Specializing in ---- portunity for advance· TemporaryClerical Housekt'eper RIB in ex· mt>nt Exc·ellent com· PersoMel change for 4 hrs day pan) benefits Informal 540.0400 cleaning & cooking 6 day office. C.M. Call Mallie ·---------I wk. Non smoking. non Jfll'r 9am at64S-S800 drinking, aft 4PM or General wknds 556-1737. GENERAL OFFC. SI 100 . Oil Co. wall train you on lhl' word processor as "l'll Exoo Aeency 8•2-(447 16483S. Magnolia H.B. ---- 6.0. Assistants Receptionists Fite Clerks HOUsa&PEI Moo-Fri, .!ull-time . t -3:10pm. muS\ speak English Newport Villa 642-5861 ---- Housekeepers wanled. Seacliff Motel. 1661 S Coast Hwy, Laguna Bch LVN M edaral hsj~~., Bilek oHit'I.'. foll tlrflt d a} i. SS 7 6:llll .f.: MAID ·Ll 642 :J030 d .,,.,. ~!AIDS v.ante . l.'\t) u A lmmed hare ~·t· AogfE'.\ San Clemente Inn ~ MAID WANTED Don Qwxote ~foll'~, • .,. 2100 Newport Bl. CM .. , -., !!Ir Masonry & l'oncrett-h1altli• w a n t e d L a bore r~lf finishers & supenlsi*,{ Mike 496 8.582 1 • .i·~ The Ne" port Bl!ach of fices of a leadang sav- 1 n gs and loan has permanent part time posit1oni. a\.allable I Previous Cl.t!>hlt'rang or c ash hJn<llrng l'X perience is required. and a Tellt•r baekground would be a ptu.... Satur· day hour.. Mii be re- quired. Weofrer IKKR/SCTRY E>.pent'nced Full t1ml', full c·harge pos1t1on lur t person offlte Ill nuwer shop Group hl!allh plan a\ a1lable Call for appt. 641 2990. a::.k for Kt•nt c •ark Keru1ed} Flon1:11 CASHIERS UTDTEM munv rr10.1te bcne£it~ in E A eluding medical 1n XDO ~eency 1ourant·e und pen·t?nta1ote ~42-!F447 or produrt1on -I day GENERAL OFRCE Sound t'raftsman Audio has mterc.-stang posit ion available with var ied of· fit•e duties. typing. fll. mA phones. mail CaU 17141556-6193. Looking for work. but you have no experience? Good opportunities available to help you. No experience required. Only one interview CaU today for appointment: No fee. 494·9717 ----- HSKKPR/C-.-IOft 6 days a week, live m. Attend elderly lady. SJ.000 mo + own room & MATURE PERS~ '1nterv1ewmi::. phon~•1•• •Excellent salari11::. •Paid career apparel •Free park mg •Outstandmg potential Plea se appl} on M.\ltKETS For 2nd & 3rd Sh1£ts We promott-10 manai:e menl & supernswn from "II han lt:M83 S Magnoha II B. v.cek Sl20U a month if -<1,ual1f1 ed i'·ounta1n Valll'y 963 li7U'l cwucs Sm ofr tn NH nd!> gd typ1,,l S8<10 S850" mc•rit increase Free' In Int' Pt!r"Sonnel Ai!} 488 E 17th Ca; ta Mesa DENT AL ASSIST AMT 3 days pt'r "eek 1TuC'~. \\ ,.,._ Thw-. Will I rJm Call ~41l 11u1alt1; pm 557-0045 CT\·Lff\:. TlMPOIWIY l'ERSONNU SllMCfS 37 2l llirdt Street ..... ~~ TH URSDAY. June ~.1---------•I from 9:30 am to 3 30 pm at· BOOICKEEPER f'ull l'harge. ~real 01,P lY w11h bus} Laguna Beal'h l'ontral'tor \I usl ha~ e roni.lnict1on e>. 1wr 494 6525 WA:'-iT A l't\R EEll ' Crn.LCJ Mesa Suite 22.s 642 1470 DENT AL ASSIST. GENERAL OFFICE Interior landscaping co nl'<'ds pe~ to do typ- 1 n i.! & Cln~wer bu!-y phones ft. mun·fri wathl~!!!~~~~~~~~I co bend1b 545-624~ AOEUTY FEOERAl Sa ... and Lo•Assn. 1515 Westcliff Dm 1• <at Doveri 'iewport Beaeh An Equal Oppt} Employer IOOICICEEPIMG Ill Dd :'liar 6..11 !J.t21 Laguna Be1td1 4!M !J23.l lluntmgton Be.i< h 962·!1116 Malur<' man or woman with ;.om(' e'pc·11t'ncl'•--------•I for 3 4 hn. Tu('S Thur' ---------•! & Sal morn1n1o:-1 S450hr + \at.it111n!' 548 3687 ask tor .\Jlct• Cashier OFFICE CASHIER Clertc-typist hour.. fll'\ pt 759 1021 1 h k for Stan Norm an I CLERK TYPIST /CRT £<:i..per1t•11«.'eo CR T Operator llequ1res good tYPIOI?. 10-key aildl'f. & knowlt-d.:1: o( offll·e pro l t•dure:-. ~1.:ellt>nt eom pan~ beneflli. <"<ill \t ii Ii e a f It• r !J a m al 645 ;)g()O I ---------1 B 0 0 K K 1-: E I' I " li Banking I': n J o } " o r k 1 n ~ 1 n Sla\'ll'k :-. .Jev.<·lcn. Oulles mdudl' Hr&fymf.! .. a le::. balJnces do11u: tla1h bankinJ: trJn,.J1· 11oni. dll;hur;m.ie rumti; & Mtwr relall'd duties fo:x c e 1 1 c " h 1· n t• r 1 1 l>o pat·kage Contact \I 1 :\I < D l' r m o l I • 71 t 641 ·I :1111 CLERK TYPIST Ent•r1H·t11 rit•r.nn walh l?•,.i<l l_\ p1ni: net-ded for bU!t\. m..in.i.:ml? general ,, • * SECRBARY II If you would enjoy work· ing tn plush surround lngs at our Nev. port Center office and ean meet our r1..oquirementi.. why not give us ac.'all" We are currently in terviewin~ candidates with a minimum of 6 mos . previous secretariaJ experience. excellent typing skills (60 to 65 wpm I and the ability to commumcate effectively. Knowledge o f IB M Memory Typewrit.er required Excellent st.irt1ng salary and benefits f'or more information . please ~all· KeYlnTerry 714-640-9 321 SoK<+ ,S.' WELLS FARGO BANK P ltmt• Appl\ JI Crown llurowarr· I02·l In me \\•1....,td1ff Pl.11n • 'IJB BOOK 1-. t:t-:1'1' I< Full chJrRe thru I-S '1 a t u rt e '< pl' 1 1 n dn idual to handh· :.ill phases of acctg for H F: SLAVICK'S Fashion lslund De' clop Firm R E ex per helpful. 2 person ore Salary based on ex ---------~ per Now located an Ccr Child Care CdM Summer n\os movmg to Dana Pt J u n e l 5th on 3 S o f e S e pl C a I I days wk SAM S 30P:\1 714 S2l·8542 or send re for I child need car wlk sume 13919 Stru1kmun to bch. good wage. Rd Cerntos. 90701 673 4565. 759 9570 ai:en c.\ N11 i!'P ni·1·1:~:.an hut ub1Llt) lo lt•arn a m1L..,l i\llr:it·th e ..... tan &. all c-u rnp..in) benC'fit!'. Call Lmda at S-1!1·8161 l'OCKTAll WAITRESS Part trmt:' Call Nl•wport IJ l' a <' h H l's t a u t u n t 675·2461 COMMERCIALS. fil ms. model!>. l'Xlras SCAS neerl!> ne"' faces 957 0282 ······~Daily Pilot ~~~~n~~!~k· • • 111J( live an . "knrls, • Advertising • perm. 541136811 • Product1'on Arti.st •• Companion for e lderly woman on Balboa Is . •Th A tO f h Fc•mal<' li ve 1n . • e r epartment o t e Oruly Pilot has ane 1mmed1ate opening for a f ull·time. ll ousckt:ep1 n g & • permanent art 1st poi.it ion One year ote peri;onal care:...675-183_1 _ •produc tion art preferred Good basace 1---------• knowledge an preparing Jdvert1sang shop and •spec.' layouts Some ability in lllustrution and• * ( ::JMPLJTER * • type spcc1ficataon Mu:o.t ha\•e the ability toe ot-JAT ..)I< • handle bas1r neat produt'taon inl'ludang maps. r ' and charts. Show potential in graphic.' and RotatincJ Shift • design fields. Portfolio nel'essury. Pleast• • • send resume to • ,,.ro Newport Center Dr • Orange Coast Oruly Pilot • """ 330 Bay Street Newport Beach : Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 • .Equal Opp Empt m tf th -----1 • Advertising Sales : Banking • Experienced newspaper display salesperson • JOB •to handle key accounts in major depanment e store or food and drug c.'ategories. Salary + • Op,ORTUNITIES e commission and ucellenl benefiu. Excellent •Utllty •Bank Reconciliation ., .... <Full&. rsrt Tlmel 'fUSTIM OllRCI *T•r We ofrer 1rowtb op· port11,.1ua. Dcellent worlll•I .oadltlona, aallrJ Ii bllliflftt.a Call Carof1'1Ul)'nt m.4204 .growth opportunities. Call for appointment.• •Call 642·4321. ext . 277 for appolntment for • • Interview. • : Part Time Even!!J!. · : • c ........ , '*" c • • Adult.a wtth outstanding attractive. pcrsonallUea who enjoy working with 10-15 e year old youths evenines &-9pm Call 642-43:ne • etl 343 bet~een 2pm to Spm, ask for Diana. • : . Secretary to _ I • Executive OffiC8 • • Immediate op~ninf for v~rsaUle lndtvtdu•I •. e Must bt-cnpable o( bandllria fast pat'td, • varied and lnt reauna duU for ritwlpa~re executtv~ Ir ptraon:ne! •dmintstrator; aoode e apemna fc typtna eaaenti••· C.JI. 4M2..CS2t, • Ext 'l77 for appt. e : o~;: : e 330 w7Bay Street • 8 Costa Mesa, CA e e F.qual Opportunity l:.'mploycr • •• • •••••••••••• v. .rntt>d for pn\atl! Npt lkh off1n 1-:xcd pa\ & 1---------• b1·n1·f""' b4fi 4&:iM DENT AL RECEPT. GENERAL O~ICE l-:leclron1cs firm in co~ta :.1 es.i seeks person "1th general office & lli.:ht bookkeeping ex- pt•r . mcludml! ac.'counts pa~·able & at'i·ounl.!> re· t'(•1vable P ermanent position requires relia· ble person Call: Valor Btct ronics 540.9264 F ull t1m1· pu-,111on a \ a 1 I .1 h I e 1 n \\('i.tm1n~1t·1 th•ntul or f I I {' I( I' lj U I f I! S I.nu" JedJ,:t u( front offu:c proct'durt>s !.OJllC dental expcr. p1deirod 4 dy "k GoO<l salar}, xlnt bendlls \pph Cnnlracl SI .1 ff1olo( OI \men( J lilllll I:: lith SI. ru,,lln I•--------• or<Jll711 ~!.101"1 EOE DEHT Al FRMT OFC HELP!! 6EM.OFfC. CLERK Local food Co. will train m acclg dept. Also learn computer and fantastic.' ben. board R efs . r eq 613-4743 aft.er6 pm ilousekeeper 1Companion Live In or out. --8Jl._p. HOU~lROOM ATT .. AHTS The Surf &. Sand Hotel m Lag Bch. lies lst ~ 2nd shift. full & p/time open ings Ca l l. M s M cCu lloug h . Housekl'eping. 497 44i'!_ lite typing 9 5. Sun ~~.!:.Ii ~ Thurs. Npt Bch loc-WJV,> tram 642 995.5 __.l. MATURE PERSON ..-J< needed lo help operate,.. lea gllrden an C'd . Sat Sun onl). 9 30A \1 ~::-. 3P \1 .\ ppl~ 1n pprt;t>g~ ... Sal & Sun IU.\ \I :!Pl\l, '< Sh<'rman (;ardtns 264T'1 E Coa~t 11"' . l d\I .•: .... ; McDONALD'$ of SCll'I Clemetite "' 1 L'nder 'lo e" I)" ne1'hJPl. \ I!> no" Jt·n·plllll! i\R1~ pl1t·at1on!> for 1fo~ 4··· na~hl posllwns l'lccu•., apply in per.on bc.•l"eE:rt} 9 lum & 25pm \\kd11:. 11 . M l'O on Jld ·,, 1;so A \l'OldJ 1'1rn ~Jn l lt·~- MEDICAL COURIER .M ust h ave• o wn lransporta111111 ,\ be famal1.1r \\Ith <. il1t frt•e"a\ '\\Siem \Ion Fri . \1·5pm 768 11~11111 MEDICAL TRAMSCRllER Work al home. top pa~ R eq uires minimum 51yrs .icute h<lbp1tJI ei..· peraence m all pha~t':-. or medical dictation Call 768-8500 for inter\' IE.'". • -~··-•• -y·---·.._.......,,_..._..._ .... _,,~~•~•r.111•~1~s:wrireM4::"""•~•~s .. o..,. .... !9lllt .... c~a•ellll90•s~s•~~;ll!'lo1111111 .. 1!111.-.Uac1111101s•a~S~U$1111& .. 911!'6111!111•&•! ..... S•&lll~S ... J.& .... S .. !ld .. &•tll£ .. Jl•£11611!111£~ II• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday. June 3, 1981 ' ~,.~~ ..... ?~!! ~~.,.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~-~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~"-~~ ..... ?~.~~ ~~.!!~ ..... ?!!! ~-~!:~ ....... ~~-~~~!~::~!~.~-~.~~!.~ MOTHER'S HELPER Production Rett•urant. C•terlnl SICllTAaY Shlpplnl, R«etvtn1. It WHkud Supervisor. Klttena: lrff to 1oodlsmaU dlnln1 tel, 1'15. Wanted ftm 18 yre or Full Um• peraon for firm hH Optnlo1 for 63.1·3006 WareboUNClerk needed 4AM·nocn. S.t/Sun. 18 bomt Arm chair, szs. Ht.a ot older llon.rrt. 2 ctr lat 41 prod. Dept. Packln1 " re1pon. adult to operate SICUT AIY ln Adheth• 1111. plant. total bra. Prin)u)' Job ii ~ di.abet. 81'7·2115e. 10 yn. Ck>ae to beach 41 b • o d ll n s hot le r y . Hob•rt auto. alicer a with telephone ablUty Exp. pref., not nee. US7 beln,.f ceNin lduJt auto Free to ad home 1 M. 1 J•w•lry 1070 rtcrutlon. Start 8/22 Cryatal CrHtlon• Ap-learn portion control. Goochalary toatart For Monrovia, N.B. car er pleb up paper• Fem Oachllhu.od Gentle ••••••••••••••••••••••• thru Aucwt. Must be r• pa rel. ~1·541'. Exp. p~I. but wlll train. Interview contact Mr. S.tl •M•· , .. ., on tJme & mon.ltoa fi de· Ir quiet 541-520.1 · Pl.AT s diamond wed· »-bJe. Ca.IJ tor details aft $4/SUO per hr. 9:309m D b 0 b H 8 2 2 7 1 liver complaint.a called . dinf . rina Jrade VVS2 epy (714*4-18'18 QC RECEIVING,}nape:· to Spm Mon. thru Thur. be~wee:a&sPM · , ,_.tw l n by customer a . Free to 1ood home, black $1250 appraltaJSacrillce tor Trainee . .,.ust e 8am to lpmSun. tn9-a747 · Houaekeeper.fia1tre11 $100/mo expe,nu check. remale kJtten. SM0759•1143 YOTHER 'S HelPer want- ed. RHp. hl11' school tlrl for summer Job 1tartln1 appro:it June 15th. 8 mOI old baby L. 8 aft 8P M Cindy 49'1 ·22111 Hlf·atarter " able lo for appt. Lorl'a Kitchen ~rtlary Serve break.fut 4r lunch s:uo hr to start. Must be 631-579'7 drlve fork lift. 540-8300 p JT SICRIT AIY to eUlerly resldenta. No 21 or over. Valid driver's Dtamood rina, 2.23 els, RC:PTIOMIST /LI RN, relief char~• nurse. l afrl omce. Approx. Ups. Mon-Fri, 7am-3pm. lie. " Insurance. Call K~~!~!!s~· ;;!! pretty. yellow lold Tiffany Ht· Type ~ WIK!\ exp pref. 11~·7arn, Fri & Sat., 3/hrs dalb' for furnlturt 494·94S8. 540-3007 11AM·2PM Ask borne. 8*-7586 lo ad. tin&. SBOOO. 751-4293 A.akforBIJJ,8Jtr/0wner N S.80bedECF,1d. rep.SS7-5ll88or~0628. STATIOMAaY for8oborLee. 2.81,iC St Rb I 979."'""'0 salary & frlnae benefita. Cdu FREE oem n.... •. Puppy l ar u y, on Y ""' Mes a Ve rd e Con v . Secretary /Receptlonlat Store In m needs r ""'•.. S300 ! Newspaper delivery person, 18 or over . Driver's license, In· 1urance, tCOllOmy car. Npt Bch Irv-Costa Mesa area. 7 dya pr wk. Mon· Fri, 2·5PM. Sat/Sun 4·7 : 30AM. Approx . SSOO/mo. Call 540-3007 bet. 11AM·5PM. Ask for Lee or Bob Hoap., 661 Center St.. for exec. search firm nr aalespert0n F /time. 5 Mwcll•cll• lfl·l 111 640-8688. RIClrnOMIST C.M. 548-5585. OC airport. Approx ~ay~ Xin{ ll;1fnin1 ~on· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. 1ray rnaJe cat, l~ Half carat diamond wed· Experienced recpt. for 30br /wk, flexible s1. ·~~~ .H !!. e,n·......... 1005 yr, shot.a. Neaut. Nds dine rln&MJ>nappralsal rapidlly exp~odingl•--------•I schedule. Must hawe ad tee; Phu..., ...... 7._ or ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.., Newport Bfla"h law Sal•s 1 1 app t lovln1 home631·5414 Tee val SJ,000831-5'789 .. .. typtna ski ts. x nt · WAMTEDTO IUY firm. Sometypina: lite AHEXC:mHG salary N. Danford STUOBfTS 1 buy old suns , SmallM&FBasenjl,3-4 clericaldut.ies.Frontof· SALESOPPTY. 7S2·832l Job OPl>Ottunlty In dlamonda,lvory,Jade& yrs, barkless. nonsbed· !ice appearance, &ood We are enterln1 a t •· dln1,to1et.her.548>4798 diction, mature tudge. tremendous new field of S.Cretarv SIJSO ap1ortsPtrpromotmo•nr ~ ~2lle~b}_es .... 9•110 (714) Diamond, rnd brilliant 1.Cl8 ct, WSl, H. xlnt cul, pvt party, Sl2.500. 997-0378 aft. 6. ment req··'red. tease h 1 "::'' M sa es. , sum "' .. •• .4,,_ .. u .. aor ane. ...-LL..-105 w entertainment l al s To Bual.n.eas ar. d ... c 11 """'.....,... s end res u m e t 0 : the U W year-roun wora. a ••••• •••••••• ••• •••••• NIGHT AUDITOR/ FRONT D~ CLERK For small La1una Beach hotel. Full or P /T . Experience with NCR 250 preferred. Hotel San Maarten , 494-9438. Cl.s.l. ft'ed AD .. 911, sweeping na on. e Sec...._, $1200 Mr. Adams: 541--017. Antique Show, St. Fran· Mecllt.&.-1071 " are lookin11 for a sales to .... ..,.utt've ,. is Ch ur" h Palos SOF..._ I "-··' Daliy Pilot, P.O. Box • "~~ " " • A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U60.Costa MeH92S26. orient~penonwho has Secret.-y $1100 SWIMTHllAPY Verde• Blvd 9ft.creaentsbapeanli·AJR COMPRESSOR. a des1 rt: Cor above Legal Trainee AIDI P.V.E.June 2..3.4. llam. que aold velvet. Ex· Portable 220 & 4 hp, twn Recepllonht Law office. OC Airport area. Higtuchool grad. Call 833-9124 RECEPTIONlSI' for new ---------•I corporate headquarters •HmC:HEF/ IROll.8MAH * FuJJ or p/time TOP WAGIS PAID Apply In peraon, The Villa&e IM, 127 Marine, Balboa Island. OFAC:E HELP Part-time, 2 days per week for crowing com· pany. Typini~wpm. fit. tog & phones. Newport Beach. 851·9222. Opportunity in BEE LINE FASHIONS. 3 peo. pie needed now. Flexible hours, sample fashions & personal wardrobe 832·0672 or 546-7489 ORGANIST For small church. 3.4 hrs /wk . 642 -2740 am /963-419Spm P.ilTTtME To deliver Daily Pilot auto route in Newport Beach. HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. approx 3 :30pm to 5:30pm HOURS : Sat & Sun 5am-7am. Earnings approx S350 per month. Call 642-4321 for Bryan Holland or Sheldon Harte. Equal Oppor Employer Part-time help, 3-4 hrs per day for typing & Cil· ing. Len-Mar Rentals. 540-3195. Part-time Ambitious couple want· ed to asswt In manage· ment & expansion of small business. Part· time. 848-69915. PART Time, ans. serv. No exp. nee. Call : 838-3333 btwn 8 & 4 EOE Full u!:-'s!ton. Full company benefits. Ex· per or w /train. Apply PENNEYSAVER 1660 Placentia Ave. C.M. Sta rtina Salary to: $1168/mo. In Irvine. Requires pleasant phone skills + typing. Send resume to Controller, 2698 While Rd. Irvine. Ca. 92'714. RECS'TIOHIST Phones. lite typing & clerical. Exper not req. Small congenJal Hunt· l11gton Bch law ofc. lk2-0023 RECEPT10HIST Needed . Newport Beach. Boal-type busi· ness. 4/days week, Sun· Wed , 8:30·5 :30pm . $4.SO/hr. Heavy phones & typina experience. Call 645-7100. RECEPT10HIST Growing S.A. Co. bas opening for receptionist with pleasant phone personalllty. Typing skills 55WPM . Responsibilities include typing of orders with some lite correspon- dence etc. Competitive entry level salary with periodic reviews. For personal interview con· tact Cy Simpson al 558-2603 •RECEPTIONIST SmalJ divbion of leading Architectural firm needs mature. depends· ble Gal Friday with sharp front office ap· pearance & pleasant phone personaltlty Cor varied duties. Fast, ac- curate lypi.st. Excellent benefits. No smoking. W•LP...-.. Auocllhs MacArthur Blvd & Ford Newport Beach 1714>644-0620 EOE REC EPT /TB.I OPR f /time temporary. If you have a good telephone voice and typ- ing skills ol SS wpm, we need you to handle our busy cordless s witchboard. greet customers and do misc. typing. Exper pref'd. Please caJI Mary Pat- terson Cor appt. SS6-7a75 Paul Dosler Assoc .. 3050 Redhill Ave .. CM RIC.-rlOMIST SICltl'f AlY Governmental agency is Fast growtn1 Npt. Bch. seeking sharp person to ad agy. seeks indlv. with process computerized top typing skllls . payroll & assist in busy Telephones plus a varie- personnel office. Payroll ty of reapansibililies & duUea tue about 70% of opportunities. Call Bob. your time. Requires typ. 6"·7644 Ina at 4Swpm & 1 year~~!!!!~~~~~~ payroll /book.keeping ex· r: perlence. Full-time posi· REC.-TIONIST lion with excellent Front ofc . exper . benefits which includes Friendly atmosphere, a 3 day weekend every lite typing & lG-key. Lots other week. Apply : of benefit.a here. Nr. O.C. Personne!Office! Airport. Call: Rusty 10844 Ellis Ave. Pelican. Corporate Ole. Fount. ValJey,Ca. 92708 549.9322, 2862 McGaw, (714)540-2910 Irv. E.0.E.M/F Receptionist /I'yplst front PA YIOU. C:LllllC ofc Sun-Thur. Pvt coun· Tbe Jolly Roger Inc .• an try club. 844-5404 established restaurant _:....:_ _ ___; ____ _ chain. bu an opening Rec~INllst for an experienced Our CCMSta Meca office payroll clerk to work in bas lmmedlate opening a ' peraon dept. Ability for a receptionist al eo- to handle extensive try level. Must be able to phone commwticaUoos handle bmy phones and end 10.ltey by touch • enjoy people contact. muat. Salary com· Uaht typin1. Xlnt com· meosurate with ex· pany benefit•. And a perlence. Apply In cooaenlal environment. peraon between 8am-37'-' hr week, Mon·Fri. 5J>m at: Call Aon Marthall. ..., THE JOLLY ROGER 541·2'41 INC. 170UGIUetteAve, lrv. (714)54f.OS31 Pboto1raphJc Printer: g a p e r-l e n c t d COLDWel.L BAN~eRO black/whJU Printer for -1.Nll!l--. Pboto1r1pby Studio. Equal Oppt.y EmplrCo. Full Ume. MS-aMO. __ 1 Restauram pel'IOll with PICTURl:)'llAMER Sood ycQTound. Din· GaJJU)' 1altl. FIT POii· ln1 room, continental tlon for eoer•etlc, food • wtna. WUllns to creetlve penon. Some work u llllistant to (ood n,.r. pnl. Art/desian operatlone mana .. r . 1*14 ~tpl\.11. Lat. Nft. Appl )' lo G t ne r a I lll·Ma: 7'1Q.87 tvn. M a n a I • r : W r I t e POST OMCI Clanified Ad .. lA, Dall)' I U 8 ST AT l 0 N . Pilot, P .O. Box UGO, Wukdaye. Jrvlnt. OottaMeaa,Ca.taa8. 511...., Rataurut ,.lllMAM M•Mrft•I• · aeo AIMSTAMf E:ap'cl tor AB Dle.k • · Trabiee ..._ offers ~----JOOd itart .. t Wal•• -...... ..... ........ ,... ~·-· ,.. ,.....,, ,aid ..... OffNIPI I i •:-d UO.. II• 1111 ll,119 • a:~~c:.. -.-....... =':'A .. ~' !t~-1'.~! WM&MI CIUIO-flTI &.O :nv:5~aC f:•n=~·b1~0: Sec~ SIZOO Swim Ther•p:r Aide for Admlaslon$.1. c •• ~~100en~ntdltldon~ cyl, 125PSI, like new. l• needed by Huntington 3 pc bdrm set, armo e, Conrldenl Your ablli'~ Supel'Vtae Clerks Sp e cl a l E c u c a ti o n Ir bUJro"w· n. wm· t't~uwbo vina ryl $395. 645'9182 to communicate wt Beach City School Dis· grandfather clock, chain. UK EW! 165 Mhcellwa.. 1010 others & have depend•· Ex~ ~ncy trict from 6/17/81 tbru cedar chest, hall tree. each. CaU (714 ) 971·73S2. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble transportation. We 711181. 5/bn. per day. 844-9400 GAME SHOW PRIZE. will tTain it neceasary. 42. 447 s4.73/hr. First Aide * * I BUY * * s I L v ER G I FT Excell. frinae benefits. 16483S.MaanollaH.B. Cert.&LiteSavinaCert. AHTlft)UISALE Good used Furniture & CERTIFICATE worth Apply at: Teleprompter required. Apply 735 l4lh Lesa than Swap Meet $1000. WUI sell at S7SO. of Newport Beach, 901•--------• S H .. ..., 00., prices. Tables, Chairs, Appliances-OR I will 546-9215 W. 16th St., Newport Secretary l. .B.--..l. Beds , Wardrobes, sellorSEU.forYou --------- Beach SALES SEC'Y TEACHIA Dressen, Wa.shatands. MASTRSAUC:TIOH Phone-Male Telephone Sales * llUDAL C:OHSULTAHT * Kindergarten. full time, Corner Cabinet. Ect, all 64'91616, ll).9625 Answering Machine G o o d t y pin g & slartin& Sept. Creden-refinished oak! We have with warranty $79. With shorthand, pleasant on ti a led. Benefits. Pvt a refinishing service I IUY FURHITUU remote Sl49. 750-3791. phones , neat ap -school, Harbor area. too!. Tuttlea AntiQues. Lea 957·8133 pearaoce. AJI company Send resume to Box 669 130 E. 17th St. Un1t T. _;_:...;_ _______ IAll year Bubble Pool paid benefilB & pleasant Costa Mesa92627 ' C.M. dak w/exec chr Sl.SOO: 2 Enclosure, 30 x SS. Xlnt. W i 11 train· fa r l to surroundinp. Call Lin· &st chrs $200 ea; file cab f7~/offer 642-9666. F /time. Pre retail da Beck at Christy Food Tll.8'HOHI Stripping & Refinishing MOO. clothingsaJesexp.C M. Service for appt , PIOPLI Antiques at reasonable 645-6923 Lo••l•ow 546·1821 556-9333 751·5743. prices. Helium Bouquets de· To set appointments. No Rick646-4041 Elegant modem din set. livered. Perfect for Sates D" Rep. s e 111 n I · 14 I hr· + ---------1 Wal tbl, 2 lves. 6 off whl every occasion. 673-4-419 Part lime. Sales exper SICRITARY S4/appl. + bonus . Applatteft IOI uphl chrs w/chrome . dealing with bustnesses. A front office secretary 5: 30·9: 30PM. We need ••••••••••••••••••••••• leis Lk new SS2·8530 6 ft redwood picnic table. Sal & comm. Position is for small Newport steady, mature people. HARBORAREA Brand new. 175. 646-9885 with Calif. la rgesl Beach manufacturing C.M. 545·4941 ask for APPLIANCE SERVICE 7' camel sofa & loveseat, anytime Management consult. firm. One person with Mike or Marshall. We buy uaedappliances hke new, $525 Alex _...;;_ _______ • firm. Send resume to 1 & t · 11 ··We sell recond, guar. SS2·0231, 851·93'71 100 yds clean used shag 23771 M . 0 12 207 typ n g sec re aria Telephone Sales office appliances. 549.3077 ___ .;.._ _____ 1 cpt areen S2 /yd. Twin anner r. · • skills to ~lso perform needs experienced sales Danish Bench Seat for velour swivel rockera Laguna Niguel 92677 bookkeeping, pos~lng. help. Easily earn up to I IUY APPUAMC:ES two. $75. Walnut buffet rust 175/ea. 675-2172 Call S48·9813forapp t. 1 -/hr. CalJ497-4198. ' -""7 8 33 Ph Sales. experienced, part -..... s ..., · 1 $.'50. : '94-3793 time. Ladies speciality s--RnAJtY.a.EGAL h ....:..;.--------tH.O. Train layout 5'x8' shop. Fashion Is land. -.. Telep one Electric ranae. Portable Rust sofa & 2 matching complete and ready to Flexible hrs. Call Mimi 2 career oriented J>OS•· GREATSUMMH dishwasher. Wuher & chairs si:;o. 5' Seascape demonstrate. loci. 759.9951. lions open ln Irvine. 2·5 JOIS dryer $12Seach. 646-5848 oil painting $75. 2 Tif· e n g I n e s , t w i n yrs. leaal experience. 5 immediate openings fany lamps $25 each. Of· transfor~er . bldgs, Salesf:MrbHt• Xlntbenefits&working talkln1onourtelephone. Refrla. ff'08tfree, works flee desk & chair f75 landscape. etc. must Must havee;i:;rtence in ~~ons. Call Fran deep voices preferred. fine. el(cellent, s25o. Drafting chair S25 see. setting up seminars. and ---------Mon-Fri, S.9pm. Come 5'8-8513, 548-44115 640-1968 tral'ning personnel in S.,.RfT•RY by 1180 North Coast MINI REFRIG '""'" "" L B h . Din. set, frwtwood fin ., 6' REDWOOD Picnic Ta· Seminar Pres•ntatlon. P tt' f ll Hwy, aauna eac ...... h' h aln t f' . h " ar 1me, or sma '-d ... 2 l t ..., ti • w u lnlS • drop If, 6 chrs, good to ble w/benches. brand Pay on shares, comm. machine shop. S.L. Mfa wee.. ays 111~er pm. s perfec.t Cor bar or sgl exc. *'>It/\, 545-8951 new expected 60M. Call for Co. 631·3600for appt. come, lat hired. room, like new, sacr, ......, $75646-9885 appt 675·9042 lOam·l2 & ---------TELEPHONE Surveyor $175. 494-8744 China Cabinet. maple, --------~l- 2·4 on Mon &Tues. & Girl Friday. Earn up -'---------1 S175. Sturdy lumber rack w/4 Sales SECRETAIYR.I. to 17.50 per hr. Call. Kenmore Duo power up-631·3796. tool box attachment. Secretarial position In 675 -6344 ri&ht vacuum · heavy S175 MS·57495PM-10PM JOIN active Newport Center duty, like new $75/ofr. Sofa, qn sz hide a bed, A WINNING TEAM Realtor's office. Front Travel Aaent for busy also Hoover compact white naug. Fine cond. University Athletic Club Total Care. a leader in office position requires Commercial Agency in vac w /attaclunents $10, SlSO, 536-1275 Membership~ Carpet Cleaning field is good telephone voice, h s b 960·l963 S48-3289 now seeking licensees. typioa & appearance. Irvine. Mus~ av2Ye a re New cotton Sofa & love --------- Vehicle /Equip+ train· SH & real estate ex· exper,&at eut rs ex-KENMORE Apt. Si Dis· seat. Earthtonea. "!Isl Cake surprise unique 1ng included . Net periencebelpful but not per with large com· hwasberS175 S300640.SQJ3;64.2-72161 navoredcakt;adelivered SJ· 5 . 000 mo Ca 11 essential. Prefer local merclal accts. Xlot 673-9'212 foranyoccu1on548-U64 resident. For interview salary & ben Call Tom· AJI wood 7 pc king bdrm 968·9659· call Mrs. Duhl, Wesley mie 833-2977 KEN MORE Portable set, antique beige, $500. 5' Deli Produce Case, new SALESPIOPLI N. TaylorCo.644-4910. -T-.-... v-a--·G-R.ll.l_C:_Y_ dishwuhers.'50 642·1034.645-5432 compressor $250, 6 H.P. H · t ~~~~~~~~~~I -"" llin 646-9076 shredder $200640-6705 ome improve men · r: Now's your chance lo KING SZ Waterbed Good SlK week draw possible h · I id 5 for right experience. get Into t e exctt ng Brand new Hotpolnl elec. Cond. new heater S200 Atari v eo game w. Call Chet494-4604. * SEC~tT A (..;* travel business. Buay dbl. hi/looveo, all xtras, ~ cartrid1ea& all paddles. Irvine afency needs en· "'00 firm. 32S Grand best over $100. 645-5432 Sales try leve document de· al KING SZ Boxspring, Qualified candidate livery trainee. Must be Canal, B .Is. Mattress & Frame. Xlnt Vacuum, pump On· Prof. Sail•lfMIOP'e should have proven 21 yrs. of age, have vaUd GE washer/gas dryer, Cond . $90/080675-2573 dustrlal type), vacuum ~ secretarial skills lnclud· Cali!. driver's licencse matching set, hvy duty, tab I e , be II jar. 251 Marketing Reps. to selling accurate typing, and aood driving re· Ivory, both xfot cond, PATIO Furniture . CamelUa Ln CM Eves ~-p~~uedctblhat iB wanted uo~lenass._a1n1,~ andco. mlhmeuanb!ilictay. cords. Excellent com· MSC>. 851.5073 aft. 6 Tro.pitooe t 1 odunvges Ii& _a_l_l_6 ______ _ .. n~ Y everyone. ,. "' pany benefits and op. chairs, 1 yr o . ery t· Earnmg potential. to handle all duties con· portunlties for advance· Gibson frostfree ref rig tle use must see to ap· Newport Beach Tennis $40,000.$.'50,000 sistenl with the p<>sltion meot. Call Tommie al w /icemak.er, gold, xlnt preclate, call 7Sjl-02S8 Club membership avail. •Co. Training of a secretary. 933.2977 cond, MSC>. 851·5073 aft. 6 Moved· mus l s e 11 . * Qualllied Leads Convert. Sofa $75. Twin (415 )728-548. "'Hlgblncome We ofCer an excellent TRAVEL AGENT for Seara Freezer Frostless bed'25.Tbl&4chraS20. --'--'------- Llqltl ... ~ salary a o d com· busy Irvine agency. 15.3 cu fU361ba *125. Or 8.lt0fr543-7642 KENMORE P«table dls· Sys.._. prehenslve benefits Minimum 2 yrs recent ~5054 hwasher $50. Dinette tbl Al : 754~.545•6793 package Including exper. Computer exper. ----------1 Dbl bed, compJ, 175. Twin & 6 cbra $35. Lge. doe Medical, Dental. paid pref. Qualified only. llcyclff IOZO bed, compJ. IOO. Antique house w/removeable Sales vacation. retirement 957-2700. ••••••••••••••••••••••• coffee table, $.'50. Stereo roof sao. 640-9076 '0 Posmo..as and more. NEW 23" Sentinel stand, $15. Dy 979·4680: " TUV&AGIMT lOspeedSlOO ev675·4598 Pool Table, Pinball Openformotivatedpeo· For immediate con· Lookin"forachangeof 875·4174 675-7346 Mach .. Regulation ple,eltherinsalesorde-sideratlon please call: pac~t Experienced Couches, vanity, dm. rm BowUn1 Game, Office livery. 95l·2642. Personnel Dept. (714) •-eeded USED Schwinn 5 spd $75. set, arandfather clock, Desks. 754-1383. I S d •• 16 •-760-6000. vacation a&ent "'0 W EBCO raclna bike, end tables. 644·9'00 Sa es· tu en.., .. up, for a lar1e muJU branch "like new" $180. 833-8309 ---------42" House bar, $25. Hi·fi need summer jobs or BANK aaency ln Irvine. Xlnl aft 4PM Sofa. floral beige back· stand, $20. 846-3388 eves. P /time year round salary & ben. ()pp. for ---------1 1 r n d . Q u 11 t e d , <Joel. k CalJ M J OF advancement. Call Tom-wor . r. ones. Schwinn outgrown red scotchguarded, almost _.:...._.:.__ _____ _ 541-4118. NEWPORT mie833-297'7 airl's3speed.XJntcond. new.548-5911 HANDMADEQUILTS SaJ E l F TYPIST '60. 760-9636. From OaJtlahoma. Lov· es Equal Opp mp Y MI Playpen, sola, burnt rust. er 's Knot $218(), Checked THE BUCK Newport Beach. Min. 45 Schwinn Traveler III Glau inlaid tables. 1ln1ham diamond $180. ST ,...RTSHE.RE 7w5p2m677.1Just Bikinis , brand new super Ute ruat/blue carpeting 673-3573 • "' • · $12.S call eves 64()..33117 673-4743 The Loe Angeles Times ---------One pair Diamond ear· Circulation Dept.ls look· •SICRETAllES• ·TYPIST Schwinn cruJMr Custom OINNE'M'E Table & six rings~ carat each. tn1 for welleroomed. en· Please see our ad in Xlnt position for xlnt paint, $250 or best oCfer. chain S3S. $3300 673-~ thuslaaUc people to earn today's clas$1fied under typist. Lota ot work In • Rarely Wied 833-0141 646-9076 up to S4~$50 per day for "Bankin1". busy ocrice-loveb' Irvine --~-------t Rad Jo con t·r o 11 e d a few hours work as ELDORADOIAMK surroundings. Call SCHWINNBeachCruiser Antq.brassbed,dbl,incl airplane, 4 channel part · t Im e s •I es E.O.E. Barbara857·1204 Red, w/chrome tube matl/sp $280, RCA 17" starter, more, $175 OBO representatives. Hours TV81ST forks. $120548-1067 cir TV w/stand 1125. 968·535e are from 4pm·9Pm, and1~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~1 sr-1 Julllette stereo & spkrs, __ ...:.__ _____ _ training wlll be pro-1~ Accurate. IBM Ex-WldlltCJt4•l•rlGhlOJ $80. 8 /Wc.beck loveaeat U'.S. stamp coll VF aup vlded. Your earnings as1---------ecuUve experience pref. •••••••••••••••••••••• sofabed w/match ot· hlngele1s. Serious a Times Sales Repreten· *SICRlf ARllS• Ll&bt oCflce work. Flex. Redwood 2 by 6"5, xlnt tom an. $175, call 673-3573 buyers only Ev 7431-8132 taUve will be based on CONSULTANT hours. Costa Mesa. decking. 8 to 20' long. 1uaran~ hourly wage Expandinl a1aln! Exp. 5'0-2522 New load juat arrived. Yard Sale: Must sell cac· SCDIU 1m of $3.~ +generous com-in profeulon. Also need S• ve at 55• per ft. t us, many kinda $1 up. llMl"'L mlsslons. C.11 now for Recer,tton'·t, tipe 50. TYPIST /UCEPT 843-9185 anytime. Po•· "lay pl••Uc lOt Ir NSW£IS lnl U bo t .. Advertitln~• 1 afeocy ... " ' -A more ormo on :ni u ouro flee. Fun! un! aeeltlna Ty t /Recep-C:•er• Ir up Misc items 378 E. this 1reat opport ty. Back0fc/Fl$10,200 li""''·t, en........, lite"'~... .._.~ IOJ 23rd C.M Plowed-Stote-(714 >957·2361. ext. 1204. Ua Reinders An. Inc. ....... .,.,_.,.,_. """" -.-r-Occur-Bumper- Sandwlcb Salesperson 4020BlrchElt'e4EOE keeplho1. FuDn at· N•·,~··•35••••••••••••••••; 7' couch, gold c hair, COMPUTER Mon-Fri. 7am-lpm. Newport/G-8190/Free mosp ere . aoa : .. on mmcameraw .. Seara console stereo, The new b a nklna 549·1757. lenna lncl. wide aoale" Zenith rem color TV •i•tema have me wor-Must have own trans. soom + more, all for · • SECURITY TYPISI' saso 5'0."72 bed comerunl.t. 962-3528 red. I have troubles RAC, c .M. 642-1900 PERSONNEL Mature Type invoices . • S-. 1051 e nouah balancltl\.nmy S.cret.YJr. F/TorP/I',nlteablfton· Ciaure ~ptftude. U>-key'. NIKON F2 w/50mm & .. 4!~.• ................ ~~.oultt~~ncto~ No shorthand Jr you like ly. Call or •Pf ly In' lii40iibiiraii.iicii.Miiiiii. 97N800iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SSmm macroa.5 Goodlet 1alore. Cub " COMPUTER. a v • r I et 'Y o I peraon, Hote S•ntci '500 8Sl-2l09 Carry. All Week lont. • ....... --------- r•ponslbWUea that in· Murten. Laguna TmST C• 1011 221 E. 19th. St. Cotta Mlec1l•1t• 'elude lypto1, runnlna Beach. 4N>Ml8. Accurat.41 t.¥Ptn• le ad. "•••••••~•• .. •••••••• MeH. 142.1353, W..t.4 IOI I blue prlnt.11 maintalnlnf reception aklll• for Hlmala)' fem. 11/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :,n:;:,•~:·r!~r~ns ro~~:!~P':'J; In pluunt Executive lkaut. CFA,ex· ~!r:t~~ ~%a~ C'o~i~ WAMllD ikJlll are 55 wpm, we E Salt•. Hn. l:IO~M to ctpt. for tnedln1. Mutt ..,5_ Kini bedaprtad, Blut ebort 1leeved -~ Newport Beacb •· 5 PM. 4 or 5 d a J•. ..o. S4T·21'75. •11•0 c:o ......... ~··•• ..,._ Hcurity .... rd ablrU. ,_,)'Ou. perlenc• neceuary. 714+75Z-GDt ----._...,. ....... •-medl Weolleranxlntbeneflt N00•1moktr, 9-Spm, 0-.. 1040 Mitchlnl record Slnlltol.5~ um. ptckate which tnclude• Mon· f'fl. Start Im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• cablnet, S150. l0Xl2 sold 646-9 I 00 OMdlCJl, dmtal and Ufe mediately. Call Colun: W..,./W..... K£UHOND Pupe. AKC. ru1 HS Pot• pana ln1urance, paid vaca· a1...... Apply blwn 9AM • Champ 1lre. M/f'. Pet• I ' llT N ' Rd1 t•lllll lion and an ecl~•lloaal ..-.---------• Noon. C"-rU•'• CbJU, 1 bo w • ., v t pt y . ~K~~ aaaau ' ..... IOIJ tnrlcbm•tc 1>ro1ram. S.C'vl1r1111111 IOOJ ll.shlD Bld1 12 • -• .__... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pluae calJ ror appt. Pff. 6-tA Meta arH ' · ' •111-··a.w•' pm. Ml•illll.-.... 1061 Forule:haderi..adll, 11•r1 P • tUr• on• Judah bkld nee 8'9. IDICll LAllOE Doc bl»ule wlt.b •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Bed IT&ln maple nttk .... 1075 •Ida Wt6w/W.... '°'"abitiroolllO. Wool blankm, 1 down w/bard aheU caH. 1 &1pen.-.d, for ln4AU ...,. •ullll uo ... ltlna 11 w.tk old MUil aac. mo , ..... , .... Btnl•I a..:....;. .. ' 1041 CUltOID"'"~ •PNM • Ml-1'1t4 n.., -w. P1tllk ......_ • 4Ultnataettao.Mt--•A---..,.-----1 eoa.t'RW)' N &•lJlll ....................... l\UTOHAllPtalD/080 • • • .wll old JNPPY, fDWlld omc. Refrile. 1.0 cu fl. '"'ma w....,... •1Nliidl!Md • .., s..r C s,.-1._ ..... • ....., Hwr. to ICwlq -··· HM sioo. I Coo· IUCKANIAOIB• BAIK rn .m Nwpcwt Bl•cL 1111 clledtup • 1hot1. r..,.chain11J111da. ·~--..a.1111 ,...._. .,., " .,..mo . .,..,., • .E ~ c j c ~ i \ , Musical loah. Pow•r 904 C~,.., Sdte/ Trvc:J&t · 9560 IMh-ll•1Rt1 IOIJ 000••••••0 ••• .... • IN 9120 •0 • ••••••••• ........ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• as· ow ENS ea1c s1F ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spec:lal BASE Amp. PVT• T 1()(), w /Newport SUp~ new '(IO Ford ~ T with full r.-chilMfl xlnl cond, $200 call aft Crutadtrt, lnnl PC0-1 eamper. lomJ. mt>O • • &PM 841-5140 _ Pl Radar, ptJot, ba l S7MMI .ow...._, ~~"' tank, Ha~fh-e 1y1tem, 19104~-.ll~ Offlc~ ha•• 1 & $31,500 640-7246 Cabover Camper, compl. D..._ fllCk Up's ... Equip•• 8015 · ----self conl Sips 4 loci. ....................... 260SearaySW\dancer '250 Jacki. Price com Trt•adous ADLER EJ«tric :tic Ta· With 1llp. "19, lo hrs, plete $500. 613 2593 arter Sav!'Z!!! ble model Excell. cond. auto pilot, alc~bol/elec pm. MJ.-_ Receni overhaul $200. atv. r4'fr,docks1depower -T----------"'" Pls. call : ~2842 & charier. Fatbometer torfatcl .... 9140 liM •fllllily poymeab · t\sh Hnder, Apelco radio ••••••••••••••••••••••• B M Mod e I · C ' tele. radio dir. llnder. '79 Motobecane MOPED Typerwriler $250 f!UI canvas. 64.1·8251 $400 956-1827 559-4769 -------29' Villa Vee Cruiser --------- CPA 's accountants & Flybridge, all inboard, Moped 1976 Bat.avus. 345 services. DEC 310 com· hke new. must sell. mi, turn signals, xlnt puter with LA180 printer (213)592-2859 cond ~. 675-4433 & cli.at acct'in& system software. In operat.IOn. '81 PENN YAN 33 · Motorcvdes/ Sl0.900. 75.2·5615. Sportrlsher show demo. Scoofen 9 I SO 8~017 twin diesel. $84,900. ••••••••••••••••••••••• P•h Call: 213-592-28.59 FentaaUc buy! ·11 750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda, les.s than 6K mi. Burmese Python $150 bst 23' CHRISCRAFT Classic lmmac.·extras. ONLY o fr . R ed t•il Boa Fishina Skiff. air in· 11495.Mustsee.673-4068 BARWI CK DATSUN o... Jll J~1..ir1 Cap1-.trano 831-3311 •CHIV.NU 'II I TOHSTAkE 12 rt.. model with Uft«ate. duals, air cond .. H.t>. 1prlnas. pwr\ steering, aux. tank & more! Workhorse complete! (3961). OMLY $12,491 $100/bst About 112 yrs board. A areal starter 642-6694 b o a l S 3 5 0 0 . C a 11 '89 Honda 750 Runs. HOWARDChenolet needs m inor re pair, Dove, Quall Sts. ------<213)592·28S9 FULLY Tame, yng. half some spare parts. $900 NEWPORT BEACH Cirm. 673-&133 days. only 83J..0555 Moon parrot w /cage $100 556-49!M ~ 28' IERTUM SF Loaded ror Cishmg & In excellent cond. $28,500 or best offer. 968-4547 or 213-592·4000 wknds , before 5pm --.-60-FORD :.~TON Pianos A OrcJant 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda ST·90 Trail bike, With full camper, low 550 miles. Xlnt cond. mileage,~ 675-4568 Sea r s Sllvertone Solid 891-2351 wkdys Slate Organ. upper & ---- lower keyboards Xln't OWENS XL19, Chevy 327. cond except needs tun full cover. bail tank. mg $300 646-4140 arter watet ski equip. trlr. $400. 760-9636. __ '76 Ford flatbed tl'uck 650 KAWASAKI lo m i, hydraulic liflJ!ate nu clean, make offer tires/transmission Must 642-9684 sell 964·5628 -!pm. --~645-~ '80 Harley "Wide Glide" '66 Ford Et'OOOlme P /U lo Grand Piano. bca~liful 16• classic bay bo at, 80 C.I. ex cond. 011 cool, miles. auto, good Cond tone. teacher sells reas needs refinishing, incl leath sad bags Must S16000B0548·1800 Also Kimball console. &HP Johnson . cover. see . aft 6.~:1:143. __ 70 GMC w camper, good $875. 96~-_ +extras $500 760-0807 Honda 350C, sa crifice. cond. Make orrer Organ Lowrey Citation aft ~ __ runs good. needs paint. 642·8223 New Condition. Be5t or-21 '-1942 Classic pwr boat $290. 64S-3406evs __ Autos Wanted 9590 ferSS9-7902 __ an xlnt cond . Fully MotorHOMe"t Sale/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SportiftCJGoock 8094 equipped. Res~oTed with Rtttt/Sfora9. fl60 WEPAYTOPDOLLAR ••••••••••••••••••••••• TLC. With sUp. $4900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for to p us ed c a r s 12131831 1631 alt 6pm foreign, domesl1c·s or ComplettselofLynx Golf --.:_ WE CAN SELL classics If you1 car 1~ Clubs. 3-PW Irons. 1·5 loat1, Rettt/ YOUR R.V extr a clean. :,.ce U!> Woods . Approx. $150 Chart... 9050 • FIRST' 55 1·929!~645-~92_. -••••••••••••••••••••••• 559-1304 ~ N EW K2 2'44 's wllh Samarang. 2 masted 70' Rent 23' Lux. mtr home, Solomon 626 bindings & s chooner. SIP s 6 . fully self cont, $55 /dy, pr of Lang NLl boots chi ldren welcome .. 2 SOOfreemj.548-0949 $280 11 75 9227 heads. full galley, mai.n ~ _i-__ ---Salon, aux. deisel. Avail TV, Radio. for Charter. < 714 I HiFI, Stereo 8098 642·4848 or PO Box 8381 Want to rent GM C Motorhome . •J un e 19-29t.h. Local. 759.0900, • • • • • • • ••••••••••• •• •• Nwpt Bch. 92660 ------------1 Rent: 22' motor home. Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr wrnty. Free delivery $148. 646-1786. •IMMAC211'·34' BOATS sips 6, self coot, avail. 6/12mo. plans prepaid 6 /20· 7 /3. $295 1 wk . from $189/mo. including 640.as& slip. lessoos 714/964-5994 ---------•Rent 20' motor home, self loats, Sal 9060 cont. ~/wk. 500 free #I 111 0r_,. C..ty 2925 Harbor Bl vd. COSTA MESA 979.2500 WANTED!! CI.an lmstorts Top War ,aid!! AutosWanhd 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'WIMllD YOUIOOT1C &llmSHCUS 3100W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach 642-9400 Premium prlct1 paid for any uaed car ttoreianordomeatic) in good condlllon. . See Us i1rs\' We buy CARS & TRUCKS TOP $SSSSS 559-5790 WAHTTOIUY '81· '66 T -Blrd Conv. (714) 548-26646lo8 PM Autos, ltnpcried ••••••••••••••••••••••• A.tfaRCHMO 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auel 100 $500 67J..17l2 '72 Audi 100 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 ' Alltot, IMported Alrtot, .... llfted 1 .... t..,orted Alltot, UHd nl '"' ::.::_~•••••••••••,••,•J•O• :;;:,••••••••••••••,••,-.:.4• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••A .. &• --.. ,....... 9170 a....... 9'2Q: .....•••.....••••....••.•••••.......•.•.••••...........••............ ······················- '77 B210 2-dr, low m i, nu paint, good mileage AM /FM. P.P . 7~0988 '77 MGB.oria owner ·u v w BUG rblt tn1, Sil US FtRST I .:. pert. cood. 21,000ml. cood cond. 11700/080 W bev a 1100(1-tlt'<'ll<tfl _S5000 _____ w. __ 5334_1 M2·4.769 ·; ~8'5932 o t N E W I.I US f:; J). Cllevrolf't.1' 1911 PEUGEOT TUUOs BEACH IMrORTS 848 Dove St.reel NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 914. BIJc, app. group, alloys, air, S8700 Denise 83S·4333 I JOto7 PM '76911 s 5 spd, A/C, stereo. al· loys, Clifford alarm erfect cond. 645·6508 '79 924 Porsche. Take over lse pymts 0 Dn, CaU Gary at 676·5736 9 to 5, 676-2912 aft. 6pm. ~-- '71 vw Fltbk. ttlOO rue I 1 • lnJ , $1600 /080 . 2l3/82H016, 714 /548·~ -· COHHf:ll C ~EYROl ET '\.,. 11 .r t• •I 111 I • I f'.! \ \1 ~ .... ' ~U-1200 C:-.... '77 Rabbit. 2 dr. 4 spd, -...~· 9U'J am,rm cass. Blaupunkt. ••••••••••••••••••••·•~ radials, ruel lnJ. perf 63 1 Convl. new l·ng, & t11J'I cond •o'lOC. 64().5234 22P.1 re. $1400 -: _,,., 496-SS2G '77YWCONV 18,000 mi. Uke new Ai..k S63000BO 964-5093 '72 Super BUG 1\1'!\\ radials. mags, cass, $2700 675-4174 '67 VW Square back Stereo cass, looks & runs gd. $7SO 675-9137 Gordon Vol•o 97n ······················~ # I VOLVO DEALElt IN ORANGE COUNTY! SALES, SERVICE AMDLEASIMG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS EARL.EIKE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd . COSTA MESA 646-9303 540.9467 --- ORANGE COUHTY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County ' BUY or LEASE DIRECT Exclusively Votvo I 0120 Garden Grove Bl Garden Grove 530-9190 '75 Volvo 245 Wagon. auto. air. amlfm, xlnt cond. 642 5161 . . Corntte 99 32 ······················> * II ~ " NEW 1981 CORVETTES THREE 4 SPEEDS· TO CHOOSE FRdM ! CORMIEJt.OeLILLO ·, CHEVROLET co. I 1714) 847-6087 . ..._:, * 68 T Top 4Z7 300 h~ • spd. I owner. $5800 • ! 673-3835 ' 7 \I s I I \ er 'r T ti w; pin:.trtpeb, dual exh•ftl1V.._ St o. 000 MS-5.528 Dodge 993$ ........•.•.•.......• ,. 1968 Dart, 6 cyl $6.'il> QC: offer Ask for !lick da.1 1!13· 1322 E\ e 661 9281 '1 73 Da rt Sport, fl c·yl. <1Ul•1{• a l', 'Int mcch t·u111l1 nt'\\ ta re s l o m 1., $1500 OBO 752 69'.12 P l·,~ SS-o url · Small V8, .c ul~ Runs great $595 645-757)1 '68 Dodge Coronet W~n: Good trans xlnl motor 1 S7 so 64 6 2:r.ft Ford 9940 ............... : .....• \ $500 6?3-1732 Honda 9727 Autos, Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 F1e-.ta. good <'11n11. 39.000 mi. S2500 552 1:;1.f 548-7136 :1 IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 45 watt Panasonic stereo receiver & amplifier. matching 2~" Phase linear spe akers! Almost new BIG quality ::.ou nd $450. Alex . 552-0231. 851·9371 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mi. 968 ... 3990 '75 CAT AUNA Sailboat. --Call Jim Hoc)Clft Mill•LCIM or ••••••••••••••••••••••• VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST Gen•r•I 990 I ll8 Fo1 d Galax) 500 c111; ••••••••••••••••••••••• "ert ltuns xlnt ShHP ------- 19"COLORTV Philco, $200. Alex SS2·0'l31, 851-9371 5' Panasonic TV. I yr old. remole control. $1600 cash. 645-2456 - ZENITH Chromacolor II. 21" screen oak cabina reLaiJ tuOO must sell $450 631-6233 RC A 25" color TV AM FM pbono. walnut console, nds a little work. SllOfirm. 751·3069 w /boat slip On Balboa Trailers, TraYet 9170 Island. F\llly equipped, ••••••••••••••••••••••• inboard gas eng. $31,000 Mini trailer · compact 675·4456. 760-8359 car. Kitch. awnlng, port --a PQlly. Sl.500.548-2497 ·ss Airstream 14' Hobie w trailer, best offer. 8111 Willis. 83S-:fi33days 21 ', good cond .. very clean. Air cond. awning, F OR SAIL-Sporty 12 ' TV rotators, sips 4. Sa ilboat w/trailer $SOO $3-,SOO. 661-1844. 857-UiOl evfS --T~UHlty 26' lslander'flll,$6500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 492-8804 498-190'7. 498-0813 Encl. trlr. 4' X 7' very clean , SZ75/0BO 960-5398 '81 Hable 14 -- with trailer & extras. A.to SffTke, P.ts $2600. Eves and Wkends & Acc....W. 9400 call 847-0646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---4 Porsche Alloys w. new Blaupunkl am/fm cass. Cal-20, good cond. Clean. lire\, must sell, $800 stereo. Model CR.2000. 2 Newport Beach. $3,200. 080. 64S-S374, 642-6189 spkrs, still in carton. P.P. (714)673-7966. $185. 960-6377 ---Set wire wheels w /locks, 11 1 Rated Tow e r S PEAKERS . Xlnt sound. Orig $900 sell sso 552·9047 Scott 14' HOllE $950 fit any cadillac $250. Good cond. 631-5424 SS7·7883 lreneSS9·5804 loats, Sips/ Tu rbo s.rs tem A Ir a Docks 9070 R o m e o com p I et e ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/waste gate sacrifice Boats & Marille Dock Meed Paint? $895 cost $1BOO. 893-0225 Eqlll~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas. rates 67S-9720evs Gneral 90 I 0 •• •lr beam. u t '}I\ in Alltos for 599 p 0 ~3 ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• In gt.h. $275 mo. 11 IMPORTANT Non-prom ol'g nds your Edgewater67:J.1943 NOTtCETO boat, plane, car. etc . READERSAND Liberal tax deduction ADVERTISERS advantage. 2131654-2341 TranJp.ot tatron The price of items Two 1"5' wooden dorys. ••••••••••••••••••••••• advertised by vehicle Xlnt cond. $300ea. Can1~n, Sde/ dealers In the vehicle 675-5208 leitt 9120 classl(ied advertising ---' ------••••••••••••••••••••••• columns does not in· Kayak, Tad, 4.2 meter, 1969 RV 10"7 ft camper e lude a ny applicable break.down paddle & for P .U. truck. Fully taxes. license. transfer enc l. s toraae. S375. elec " s elf cont. fees. finance charges, 673-1350 $1000 l bst 848-4815 aft rees for air pollution con· --4pm. trol device certifications Boats, Power 9040 or dealer documentary ••••••••••••••••••••••• ioa,, Camper Four Star preparation charges un- 260 SEARAY Sundancer w/reJrlgerator & stove. less otherwise specified w ts llp. '79 lo lfl'S' auto Port· a · pot t Y · A 11 by the advertiser. pilot. alcohol elec stove, Bu_tane, queen size bed. refrig, dock side pwr & ll is ln good c0t1dition & An~Ht/ charger,(alhometerfish s leeps 6. SlSOO call • Cluslcs 9520 finder, •pelco radio between lOam and 5pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• telephone, radio d1rec-631-7657 PRmlEST lion finder, full canvas. loats, Power 9040 '5 7 T ..alRD 641-8251 or964·3518 •••••••••••••• IM TOWHI IESTOFFER! <005UKZ) THEODORE ROBINS FO RD J' 1.11 ~1:.118011 f\lVD trJ~ll\Ml'A b ·ll OOlU -~----~- '29 Model A Town Sedan, 4 dr, restored. Ideal for student. SlO.SOO. ALSO '46 Ford Wood le, restored. $13.SOO. '61 C.ctjllac Convertible. Xlnt cond. NavJ. New white lop. Buutltut. r7a.2111. s:n.om. tMSOM ·sa~Ic BEST OFFER 64.5-1908 ANYTIME Crewier Moton Forlbe Best Buy Or Lease Deal In Orange County ... Saab 9760 •RADLEY GT II OBO Su!ian. HS7 1.i~; '80. show car. w tmany e xtras 7,000mi Must sell below f actor y cos t 835-3171 w ~·u Buy Or S ell Your Cle-on Import On C.oMiqnmeont' ! ' Call Our Uu•d Car Monoqeor TODAY!!! 83 I ·2040 4 9~.4949 Soddlt'boc~ BMW MiHion Vil'!jo WEIUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS COHHELL C HEVRO LET ,. '.'< 11 ,rt••r 111"1 • ir. I \ \H " \ 546-1200 Come See Us TC¥lay ! . HONDA HEADQUARTERS TODAY!!! ·UNIVERSITY SALES&SERVICE OLDSMOllLE HOHDA GMCTRUCKS 28SO Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540.9640 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE ·DIRECT! 1981 Sill TUR801 IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 Owner 497-1412 JEEP S. C ARS . P I CKUPS fro m $35 Av a il at local Gov't Auc tions . For Directory call Surplus Data Center (415)330-7800 lulck 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 luidlRecjCll 28402 MarJUt!rite Pkwy M isSlon Viejo Avery Plcwy. exit <ofl:I Ftttway) 131-2040 495-4949· ClosedSundays '79 ACCORD 4dr. auto. am/fm. xlnt t'Ond Best Subant 9762 38.000 mi. l owner. xlnt cond1tson. SJ.500. (714) 495 2547 CREVI E R $1 $f A HOo\OWAY SAMfA AMA 835·3171 T14E Ul.1llllATS Olltvl#O MAa.oNf offer. 9~·11001831·8105 '79 Sedan Accord. Uses reg gas. Very low miles Asking $7350. 661·0~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Subaru Brat. really 1970 Buick Skylark, ~ood sharp. Has camper sheU body & int.. needs minor a cam/fmcass 842-1743 work. $650 0 B0.536-4920 Toyota 9765 evs . ...................... --- ·75 CVC Station Wagon .79 Celka GT Uftback Cadillac 9915 $2795 BI k • c I ea n , Io ad e d ' •• • •• • • ••••••• • • • •• • • • • 646-0681 $6495 831 -7634, 759-2465. COHTEMPLATIMG •USED IMWt* ---CADILLAC? '76 2002 upd (0603) '79 Accord LX. lo m1. ful '77 SRS lift back a c. Sspd. We specialize Ill leases '19320i SIR jSB!M) ly equipped. xlnt cond. R & H luggage rack for the bus iness ex '79 5281 S /R (1(7761 S6000 642·5001 $3495 851-18S3 ecutive & professional '8l 320IA (OUSI '80 Cellca. s spd. am-fm L0arpf ~19ff8on1 HIGH IUYEtt CloMd S•dcrp Loftis 9737 stereo. 22.<n> ml, xlnt ._. .... Top dollars for Sports -.,---.,----·__.. __ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond, $5500. 642-5409 Cocllacs ~1~~: .. A:~1~· Campers. n;=.~ '7:ii1~.ie1Jo85':!· n3:~ Triumph · 9767 Mow .. Stodc! AskforU/CMGR IMW~Or sacrifice.SSSOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NAMR~ JIMMARIMO L.as.eo.ldh 855-1968af\6PM '80TR7Cmv.6500mi,all CADJ A. VOLKSWAGEN extras. Spec paint, fun ~ 18711 Beach Blvd. McLaren IMW!! Mencia 9731 car, $7750, 7~1336 l (J()() H.trllol Btv~c HUNTINGTON BEACll luy Or I.HM ~7~··~:~~··~~·w-;;:. Volls"tCIC)lft 9770 '!!C!<>'>I!'!' Me<..!!!•!S.i<>!!!!'>!IOO!!!..I 142-2000 ly o ... l'hone ,._, bad seals. 2!5,000 mi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...:: TOP DOLL.AR 17 I 4J 522·5333 Best offer. 960-3765. 79 v:IE~llT PAID FOR OR.AHGECOUMTY•s 74 Mazda. new eng. new s s peed, AC. AM /FM GOOD & CLEA.... OLDEST paint. stereo. Sl500 stereo cass .. steel "" & 759·9332 radials, Whitewalls, tint-USED CARS! '76 Mazda Rx4 amlfpl ed glass. low miles xlnl cond one owner. Black w /black velour m irac le m a zda Sales·Service·Leasing $2100 GB0848-8475 !544XJ R l Only $6695 Roy Carver.Inc. M•rc.-...... 974 Rolls ltoyce BMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1540 Jamboree 2150 H_._. llwcl. Newport Beach 64G-6444 Cotto MelCI 645-5700 1972 BMW Bavaria. xlnt ~~tt~ ~ u.M100 13731 H•rbor Garden Grove 79CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Dl£SB. Cruise, wire wheel cov· ers, leather int .. stereo. tilt. air cond. <OOSVBD > ' 1976 For!I Toi mo. SI ;!1~ or bl'sl olfer Cu II ·• 'l JP M. s 1i -sn1111 io;d. 73 Galax~ ::00. I .i'J high mil but $?ood t·11111I Radio. AC. good 11rt!.•1 Askmg si.ooo 893 41'1!t aft 6P l\l • '76 Ford Grarwda f.> ' ~ 't ps , 8·trk. 64.0011 m1 Or~"'~ owner S2ti!J!l Ulit) 559-4860 . '78 LTD Landeau \I~' cond, lo mi.$1300 ~ 645-6118 75!1-:175 .. Ptv d ec;lre iJ 74 T.Tti-1 xtra clean, lo mi, sm.Jl. eng. 302-351 Ant hon:(. 644 ·0904 Mercury 995<1 ....................... ORANGECOl'NT Y·s' RNEST ': LJ NCOLN-~1 EHCl: n Y· 0 EALEHSlll I' ~-?t.tie&u LJNCOC.N MERCUHY 16·18AutoCentcr Dr SO Fwy·Lk Forest exit IRVINE " 830-7000 '7 5 COUCJCll" $1200. 631·5656 ' 74~s Brougham, 4 dr. Ont) 66,000 m1. On1 ownct ~ .. 5~86 '76Caari • Xlnl cond (5, 700 n,t Sunroor. racer red . SZ'ilttt 0 B 0 o r i it o \\ n t• 1 675·3215 ~--MatSfClftCJ 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 196SFORD MUSTANG GT TOP $DOLLAR$ For Clean Used Cars &Trucks cond 4 spd, air, S3400 or best offer. 536-4822. In good condition Automalic lrans & Ql:u '60· '65 VW left & right brakes. Make offer. C~l door. '73 left door. sso ~ IMllllClllS3l{8X) 642-9924 , if no ans \\ct We pay cash on the spot! Contact buyer at Des.tit c .... , •• San Clemente IJ 1-0580 492-1500 "76 2002 lo mi. snrf, am/fm. phone ~1812 AUTHORIZED MERCEDES-BENZ DEALER 831·1740 495-1700 each. Western style whl • _!~EASE keeptryin{' ·! rims for Super Beetle '79 Sollie, Elegante. '72 MACH J S20ea. 548-lr744 s harp. lo ml. Snrf Beautifully Resto~~! '66 vw ~pt r-•-red Loaded. $11,900. Eves . $3000 080 962"682 t · ......... · "'""" · (710 642-M74. da (213) --~ "= Porsche en& & paint. 681•2613 '66 Mustang, aulJt , Everytbin& new. Mint ---------1 stylish, reliable lri09p cond. See to apprec. '81 Eldorado, 4000 ml, , Clean. New brak•~· 631-4786 leather, 2 tone brown. batt.. carb S2l<t& $17 ,000. 837..3744 494-2136 . • '70 Mustang T top con\ 1 lh ls car has ll ull' Am t 11'm stereo t ap~, a Jc, p /s, p/b, lo 'rfll' 641·8458 ........ ow. ...... . ..........••..... ,.~·· '78 Olds Sturflrc. p ~., pJb, Ult whl. am l fm c• , new Chl\th. Sapd V!J_~~.~7134 ' ~ '78 Ojds G ut ll\l Brvuaha~1 0111 owni:r wtll in, sa conc'I muAY xtr 11 Ui4!U OUO 80-7'31 -- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 Equipment includes economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission, left rem~te mirror, max. cooHng, bench seat. body side moldings, white sidewall glass belted radial tires and more! (145687). Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., bucket seats with fold down rear seat, tinted glass, elec. clock, body side moldings, max. cooling, glass belted radial tires and more! (108773). Equipment includes VB, automatic transmJssion, power steering, power brakes, bucket seats, body side & deck stripes. white sidewall glass belted radial tires and more! (136529). " Off M..t.ctwer'• S•111.Wl ... me. 1981 IMPERIAL DEMONSTRATOR loaded inc. auto trans .. air cond., pwr st.·brakes·windows-spht leath« se~ts. AM·FM stereo with tape, tilt. cru11e. custom wheels, wsw steel belted radial tires and much, much morel (111436). . THIS WEEK'S • USED CAR SPECIALS 197 4 PLYMOUTH CUSTOM SUBURBAN WAGON Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. steering & brakes. radio, 3 seats, wsw tires & morel (041KOB) 5 1795 COUGAR Xl7 CllJPE Loaded Inc. auto. trans., air cond., pwr. st.·brakes·wlndows, tilt, AM·FM 8 track, ...... ···s]tj ......... (-~·> 197& FORD PINTO WAGON Economical 4 cyl. engine, stand1rd tran• .. bucket seats, lugQage rack, radio & air cond. (284POT). s DIESEL SEDAN Equipment Includes air cond., AM·FM 8 track stereo, sunroof, rear defroster, bucket M8ts & moral (042lXI). s --.01 · FLllT ·sALIS & LI AS I IMPOIMATION, CALL .......... 0 546-1934 MEED CASH??? .•. ,., .................... .... c-s.. c:.. ........ ,__ ...... . ............ ,_ ......... s.. • ....,.it 1977 PLYMOUTH YOLARE WAGON Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. stee(lng & brakes, radio, luggage rack. wsw tires & morel (023TDH). · Jl~lol1ia loaded Inc. auto. trana., air cond., pwr. st.·brakea·aplit aeat·windows·dr. locks, AM·FM 8 track, vinyl top, tllt. cruise & morel (417UCT). s SERVlCE HOURS: Mc.day ..... Friclcry 7:30 a.ill. to 5:30 ,.... Sahm., 1:00 .... to 5:00 ,. .. SEE OUR SERVICE DlftARTMEHT AIOUT RENTING A '11 CHIYSUlt Ol PLYMOUTH • 1 HRYSLER LeBARON COUPE Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. steering & . brakes, AM·FM radio, vinyl top. wsw tires & morel (748TSU) 1980 JEEP CJ7 414 son TOP Loaded inc. Renegade pkg., special wheels & off·road tires, roll bar. pwr. steering, C.B. radio & morel (009924) . s • • • • • .. 111111 CUil Ylll HlllTlll llllY PIPIR WFONf SO AV JLJNF I 1 4.-11 OHAN GE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Onofre disaster plan draws criticisin · .. ISy JOHN NEEDHAM ..... o.Ny ........... The volunteer group charged with alerting state parks visitors near the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in the event of an accidental release of radia-tion says it cannot give "rea- sonable assurance" that people will be notified in time to escape. In a report submitted to of- ficials involved in evacuation planning around the nuclear fa~llity, the San Onofre State Parks Advisory Committee said It can't do the job with its pres- ent staffing. The report says that dun.ng a May 13 evacuation drill to test responses of emergency agen- cies. it took nearly an hour to simulate ~he notification of park visitors that there bad been an accident at San Onofre . Federal Emergency Management Aien· cy guidelines call for persons withln 10 mHes of the plant to be notified within 15 minutes. In addition, the report says that information on the spread of radiation, r elayed by Sou them California Edison Co .• operator and co-owner or the plant, wasn't received until long after major portions of San Onofre and San Cle m ente state parks would have been con- taminated. PUT 'EM UP -Robin, an English bulldog at the Monterey County SPCA in Salinas, doesn't intimidate Tiger, the kitten, who lays ............ a left hook on the dog, then rears up in a box- er's stance daring the mutt to try something. ·Federal court opens in county Civil rights, personal injury cases mark first for area By DAVID KUTZMANN ·or .. DellY"""Alft With the selection of two juries to hear a civil rights case and a personal injury case, federal court convened for the first time Tuesday in Orange County. With other court officials and 1uests looking on, U.S. District Court Judge William P . Gray in· auiurated court bearifgs in San· ta Ana's Orange Count>; Courthouse, a culmination of a lO-year effort of local attorneys and civic leaders who fell Orange County deserved its own federal tourt. On hand for Tuesday's openin& of court wer .. Chief Judie A. An· drew Hauk of the U.S. court'• Ceo· tral DtstrictofCalifornla; Pr•ld· 1n10ran1eCountySupertoreourt Judie Robert E. Rlckles, and U.S. Diatrict Court Jud1e Robert J . Kelleher. Who was chairman ol the Santa "1Ja court committee. Judie Gray, a 1Uver-halrld Jurlat who has 'erved on the lederal court bench In Loa ~1ele1 for 15 years, nid after Tuelday'• proceedJnp that it wu 1UU undedded bow many federal Judi• Wtiuld be needed ln s.ata AU. This will be done, offi cials said, until facilities in downtown Santa Ana can be leased. The long-term outlook is for permanent apace to be available in a new courtbouae building planned for Santa Ana in the nextlOto ts years. The holding of federal court proceedings in Oran1e County was made possible bv con· gressional approval of a blU des· lgnatlng Santa Ana as a place ol holding court in the U.S. District Court's central district. That district takes ln San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Loa Angeles, Oran1e, San Bernardino and Riverside COUD· ties. Cases heard In Santa Ana generally will cover Oran1e, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. ANGELS: DME FOR .A ClWVGEt Wha&'a t.be AD1ela' b!f ~ lem? ' AccordlDI to Dally Pilot •Porta cobamm1t Dltll llWer, moet ot the Alllell' .. bQm de· clMoiDl"cwertllef:::ha••belD tMfeultlf.,... A~tr;. la....,'111*1aNliitloDCD1); II Iller ,.,. wtaat die Aqelt reellylllld ....... ~ eb•11; tlllt• ~-tbernm& lilftH. In the past, federal court mat· ters in Orange County were heard in Los Angeles. Unlll permanent facilities are leased, cases will still have to beifiled with the clerk of the federal court in Los Angeles. "Wedon'tknow what we'll need until we do some business down here," Gray said. The federal courts only handle cases in areas where violations of federal statutes ve at issue. A1 opposed to "Orange County's Superior Court civil case backloe of three to four years, Gray said lt no,.. only taket five months for a ~ federalcuetocometotrial. RoadketA awaxjob The report also said radiation monitoring devices used in the drill were not adequate to • measure higher levels of con· lamination , and many were is· sued without batteries. It c riticized the lack of alternate evacuation routes for persons driving _out o~ the ace!· dent zone. Shiftmg wmd cond~­ tions carrying airborne conlamt· nents wouJd have made evacua- tlon impossible in some or the assigned areas, the rePort said. During the drill, lifeguards in open jeeps were assigned to notify people on the beaches of the simulated accident. During an actual emergency, the report said, the guards would have been unprotected from radiation. Frequent problems with lt;lephones were another com- ptamt. Emergency personnel taking part in the drUI at times simply gave up trying to reach the inf9rmation center Jlt San Onofre because lines were tied up. ·'The only reasonable recom- mendation based on the May 13 drill is to expend no more money ... until there is reasonable as- surance appropriate measures will be taken in the event of o re- al emergency," the rePort !laid. Mideast flares up Israel joins clash against Syria in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Heavy Syrian-Christian fighting erupted today in Zahle, 30 miles east of Beirut, and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said that Israeli warplanes were committed to help the Christians against the Syrian air force in Lebanon. Israeli gunboats shell ed a Palestinian base 48 miles north of Beirut, reportedly destroying a building used by guerrillas but causing no casualties, and pro- Soviet South Yemen decided to dispatch a token contingent of Education tax credit endorsed WASHINGTON <AP> -The Reagan administration enllorsed tax credlta to help offset the cost of pnvate education today but urged Congress to delay such legislation until the president'• tax-cut plan is enacted. John E. Chapoton, assistant treasury secretary for tax policy, told the Senate Finance subcommittee on taxation that such credits are preferable to other types or federal aid to education, which involve cum- bersome red tape for govern· ment and families alike. ·'Tuition tax credits offer a sim_pler means to fund private education by permitting families to keep the money they have earned and to spend that money for the e ducation they themselves select," be said. Although President Reagan's economic program must take priority, Chapoton said that ''tuition tax credits will be at the top of our agenda at the ap· propriate time." Tuition tax credits have been proposed in the past but always have run into trouble in Congress from those who fear they conflict with the Constitu· lion's requirement for separa· lion of church and state, and from those concerned that such aid would come only at the ex· pense or public schools. A bill sponsored by Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., chairman of the subcommittee, and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, O- N. Y.. eventually would allow a person to subtract up to $500 from his or her tax bill to help offset costs of education at a private elem entary or secon· dary school or at a private or public coUege. The tax credit would start at a maximum $250 during the 12 months beginning August, 1982, and rtse to a limit of $500 after that. Two victims from crash identified troops to Syria to bolster Syrian forces in the confrontation with Israel. A poli ce spokesman reported the renewed fighting in Zahle, and said the Syrians ringing the city and the Christian defenders each blamed the other for the fresh outbreak which shattered a nightlong cease-fire in the city or 200,000. The Ch ristian Voice ol Lebanon raClio said the Syriam hammered Zahle with field artillery, multiple rocket launchers and tank cannons at a rate of 15 shells per minute, and claimed there were 20 casualties among the inhabitants in the first half-hour or the bombard· ment In Jerusale m . Begin told critics in Parliament that Israel com milted its air force to help . Lebanon's Christians Aug . 22, 1978, and again in April when the Christians in Zahle came un- der Syrian siege, and Syria moved surface-to-air missiles in· to Lebanon . He said Is rael sent an <See MIDEAST, Page A2> Supervisors' aides end redistricting By GLENN SCOTT Of UM Delly ...... 5uff Aides to Or ange County supervisors have put th e finishing touches on their re- d lstricting plan by s hirting Midway City back into Roger Stanton's 1st District. Stanton, in return, parted with the western side of Garden Grove, which will go into Har· riett Wieder's 2nd District. Aides for each of the fi ve supervisors now will send the state-mandated modifications to the supervisors next Wednesday ror final ratification. The county is required to ad- JUSt the five supervisorial dis- trict boundaries after each census. Because or population growth In the southern part of the county, this year's proposal generally shifts the lines to give northern districts slightly larger PoPUlations. Stanton would get about 7,300 more residents in his district; Mrs. Wieder, 23,835, according to the proposal. Ralph Clark's 4th District, which includes Buena Parle, Anaheim and most of Orange, would gain about 10,000 people. Thomas Riley's 5th District would lose about 19 ,500 and Bruce Nestande's 3rd District would decrease by about 21,700, according to the proposal. Aides have managed to shift the borders so no major changes would take place, although both Riley and Nestande yield signifi· cant parts of Tustin to Stanton. The last-minute chan ges between Stanton and Mrs. Wieder bave the e ffect of switching the boundary from an east-west to a north-south line through Garden Grove. Mrs. Wieder would get all of Westminster under the new pro- posal. The west side of Garden Grove is considered to have s i m liar n eighborhoods as Westminster, said Stan OfteJie, a Clark aide who presided over <See AIDES, Page A2) Ripper moved after threats LONDON CAP )·-Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, has been moved Crom London's Wormwood Scrubs jail to the maximum security wing of Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight. off the coast of southern England, the Home Office sajd. Press reports said he was transferred after prisoners in the London jail thre1ttP.ned and t aunted him. Sutcliffe, 34, was convicted May 22 of the murder of 13 women a nd the a ttempted murder of seven others in Yorkshire and other counties or northern England. The judge said he shouJd serve at least 30 years of his life sentence behind bars. Britain has no death penalty. Stanton approves beefed-up tax plan Stanton voters have approved a tax override during city elec· lions to beef up police and fire protection for two yeats. or the 21 percent voter turnout, 1,431 -or 67.8 percent -voted in favor of the tax Tues· da y and 678 opposed the measure. The override needed a two-thirds vote to pass. In other local elections Tues· day, Anaheim voters elected to sell $92 million in bonds to buy an additional 1.5 percent ownership or twin reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Genftat- inf Station, and a Tustin annex1 atlon measure failed. In Anaheim, 4,477 people 'fot.ed for the bond sale and 1,781 voters opposed it. Anaheim alread.y owns 1.86 percent ln· tereat in the plant. Anaheim voters also passed a second meuw-e to allow tho city to reflnand alrody approved bond 1ale1. In Tustin, 118 ru1denta of a 55-•cre secUon of unincorporat- ed land voted •••ln•t aaaemc lnto the Cit.)' and SS vottd for •· ne.1JUClft. Tbe Uilliacorporaled IUd 11 south ol lrVtne Boulenrcl, DOrtb of Bryan ~veue and nans llGel both •Ides ol Red Hill A vt1u•. Under Stantoe'1 tu o•errtde, • reeldenta la ll..,,.f amiij' bOni• wUI 119>' ... a 7ear for *eel police and fire protection. Stan· ton is the first Orange County cl· ty to pass such a tax increase since passaJ{e of Proposition 13. DRllll ~UST lllDIR Sunny, .warmer Thurs· day. Lows tonight low 60s alon& the coast, upper 60s inland. Highs Thursday 72 to 78 at the beaches, 85 to 92 Inland. 111111 TIDIY · SmUh1 ' Jack' ha• loar •om• hair and w.ora gWHI, but Ml no comploi:nU about rctfremc"I. Th• ccarCoon ovioror fa recoiled bsl hf• creator, Zack Mo1ltJ1. See ato'l/, photo. Paoe All. 11111 • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wldnttday, June 3, 1981 3 o.lly ....... Map !hows recommended boundarie1 for Orange County'• five .Supen:ri.aorlal I>Utricts. Modificolion& are mandated by tM .tate after each cen.tW. Dismantling study sought for agency At the request of Orange Coun· ty Supervisor Bruce Nestande. the County Administrative Of· rice will study a partial dis· mantling of the massive County Human Services Agency. Nestande requested the study during Tuesday's meeting of the County Board of Supervisors. There was no opposition from other board members. His request follows a Grand Jury report recommending that the county's mental health pro· gram be separated from the HSA, an umbrella organization that administers county depart· ments responsible for health and social services programs. Since its formation in 1976, the HSA has been a continuing source of conflict. Some ob· serv~r.s have suggested that the size of the agency has made it unwieldy. Tlie HSA bas a bUd1et of about $200 million largely offset with state and federal funds. The agency employs about 2,000 peo- ple. County supervisors are in· terviewing candidates for the agency directorship. Larry Leaman. former direc· tor of the county Community Services Agency, has been serv- ing as interim HSA director since the retirement in March of Margaret Grier. The board is scheduled to in· terview five finalists for the job -Leaman; Robert Huntley, county employee relations direc· tor; Bert Scott, county personnel director; Sara Walker, HSA as· sistabt director for administra· lion, and Randall Jbcon, deputy admi nistrator for human services programs in San Diego County. A screening committee listed Scott, Ms. Walker and Bacon as the top three contenders, saying Leaman and Huntley could be interviewed if the board so de· cided. About 140 people applied for the position. It pays $56,680 per year . 'Ducsoh sect lifts eyes toward heaven TUCSON <AP ) -John Vickers sold his home. Dr. James McCullogh donated a Porsche. Former award-winninf · bodybuilder Bert Seelman cu his training. They are among SO members of a Tucson religious group who say they expect to be physically lifted to Heaven to be with God on June28. • 'Ooooo, glory, I get bliss just thinking about it," said Bill Maupin, spiritual leader of the fundamentalist Lighthouse Gospel Tract Foundation. Maupin and others said Bible study has convinced them that the second coming of Christ will take place in 1988. They, however, said they believe they already will be in Heaven. "We're not just going to some mountain hideaway; we're leav- ing the Earth," Maupin said. "This is known as rapture. And whPn rapture takes place, the people nol saved will be able to see us being saved. There's no such thing as a secret rapture," Maupin said. In preparation for the event, the SO members have quit their jobs and disposed of some of their property. Vickers, 32, quit his job aa .a commercial glass worker and is living off the money from the sale ol b1I home. He and other members ol the JrOup aaJd they have donated their remainiDg money to the group to spread its word. ''My main concern la for others, and I would like to be able to give that to them," Vickers uaJd. ·'I've never known •uch peace,· such joy," said McCu.lloucb. a Nof ales doctor wbo was bl"OUlbt into lhe IJ'OUP by Seelman, Who said be is cutting his training to save his strength for the lifting of spirits. Using biblical references to events expected to precede the rapture, Maupin predicts that, after a war in tbe Mideast, the world will be dominated by a multinational power bladed by an American "anU-Chlrlst " until Christ returns in May 1988. But before then, Maupin said, believers will be transported to Heaven. According to Maupin, those re· maining on Earth after June 28 will have to decide between go- ing into league with the devil - thereby assuring their eternal damnation -or professing faith in Jesus. But you don't have to believe in the June 28 dale to experience the rapture, Maupin said. True believers in Christ, including the dead, are all eligible, be said. And what if the group isn't lift. ed into Heaven on June 28? "I can't even answer a quea· lion like that," said Maupin. "Come back and see us on June 29 and we'll talk about It." ''We're ready for the rap· lure,'' said laborer Bub Bowman. "My little one sort of wants a three-wheeler before it happens, but we're ready to go.'' Not all of the so are so fully convinced. Jerry Walker, co.- owner or a Tucson want-ad newspaper, said he hopes the others are right and that b.ls UD· certainty probably stems from "my own inability to interpret the Bible." "I do believe ita goine to hap- pen sometime -I just don't know wb~," Walker adaed. "In tac\, I'm just about to eo lnto another b'8iDH1 deal. If it'e Ume to IO. we'll ,o. If It'• not, 1 aun have • Ule to lve." C1Hllled ........... 7141M2•M71 Alt-. • .,.,. ......... M2..a21 From Page A1 AIDES. • • the comnuttee. Mrs. Wieder's aide, Bob Love, asked at Tuesday's meeting to redraw the lines so Midway City would go to Stanton's district. The unincorporated area cur· rently is in his 1st District, but was proposed to go to Mrs. Wieder under earlier plans. The Wier-Stanton line would go through Garden Grove ed at Gilbert Street, Trask Avenue and Brookhurst Street, then sw· ing west at Beach Boulevard to include Midway City in the 1st District. Also included in the recom· mendation is a proposal to shift a comer of Huntington Beach bordered by Magnolia , Brookhurst and Atlanta Avenue from Riley's to Mrs. Wieder's district. From Page A1 MIDEAST. • • emissary to telJ the Christian · militiamen: "Stand fast. We will continue to aid you directly and indirectly . . . If the Christians are attacked by the Syrian air force, we will help you with our air force." In Aden. the government of Marxist South Yemen said a token military force will be sta- tioned permanently in Syria "to consolidate her steadfastness against the Israeli enemy." But the statement did not give the size of the force or the date of its departure. The Israeli gunboat raid was the northernmost Israeli attack in Lebanon in two years. The Tel Aviv command said the boats returned safely after hilling a building used by the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine at the Naber el Bard River, about eight miles north of Tripoli. A Palestine Liberation Organization communique is· sued in Beirut said a 90-minute shelling destroyed two houses in a refugee camp just after mid· night, but caused no casualties. The Israeli comma.nd said guerrillas had set out by boat fropi the building for .missions against Israel in the past. It was shelled by Israeli gunboats in April 1979, and the last time Israel struck that far north in Lebanon was in an air attack the fo1lowing month. Begin said Tuesday he would not halt Israeli raids on Pal· estinian bases in Lebanon despite Syria's demand for an end to Israeli military opera· lions on the territory of its northern neighbor. Fallbrook • voters nix city hood FALLBROOK (AP> -A move to incorporate Fallbrook, maJh ing it San Diego County's 17th ci· ty, bas been rejected by a 4·lo-1 margin. The defeat Tuesday matted the flrst time since the 1979 passage of PropoeiUon 13, the stat• tax-cutting lnltlatlve, that a San Dleeo County community voted acainat lncorporation. The final but unofficial resultl had 4,178, or 78.8, oppostna the proposal while 1,3$5, or 21. 7, favored lt. Jamse• Hont, 'Who led the ft&ht a,.mat Incorporation, 1aJd the defeat "repraented exactly bow \.be people ln thtl commutli· ty feel. Tbey do not want anotber layer of 1ovemment "blch was &Olna to cost them more la tu dollan.' • Tb• 4111qtaare mUe commuDi· "ot 11,a ta 1oC1ted u mU• ~ d downtown San Dl9'D· Tb• iaeolpwllUGG debat. ~· = cm wMtMr We •u ta.. Umt to becOID• a ettJ IDCI etMr tM new cttl Wciu1d Jaa" eDCNP mone1 to kMP ae~ ill ... bliiek. Democrats eye tax planl fnhey move r;eluctantly toward 2-year program \ WASH.INGTON (A'P) -Houu Democrat.a, pre11ured by the Rea1an admJnl11traUon and COD· eerv~tlves In their own party, are moving reluctantly toward a two· year tax-cut plan bot still insist on extra relief for lower· and middle· income Americans. "I hope we can fashion a pro· gram that can be enjoyed by all Democrats," Rep . Dan Rostenkowsld, D·Ill.. chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Tues· day after a two-hour meeting of panel Democrats. "We're talldng about the possibility of a multiyeartax bill.·· However, Rostenkowski said "There were no votes, no con'. clusions." Pope]olm leaves lwspital ROME (A P > Smiling and waving, Pope John Paul II left the Gemelli Policlinico Hospital to return to his Vatican apart- ments today, three weeks to the day after he was shot in an as· sassination attempt. The pope, in his traditional glistening white robes and skull cap, walked unaided to a black Me r cedes limousine for the 15-minute ride to the Vatican. The Vatican announced the pope's discharge shortly before the pontiff's departure. The 61 -year-old Polish-born pope has made rapid progress since he Underwent 5 ~2 hours ot emergency surgery for gunshot wounds in the intestines suffered in a May 13 attempt on his life at St. Peter's Square. Itali an authorities have charged 23-year-old convicted Turkish terrorist Mehmet Ali Agca with shooting the pope. Agca is also charged with shoot· i ng l w-0 American women wounded in the attack, Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N. Y .• who is to leave the hospital and return to the United States this weekend, and Rose Hall, a 21· year -old missionary who has re· turned to her home in West Germany where she lives with her husband. The doctors Monday gave John Paul permission to leave his hospital bed and walk around his 11th floor suite whenever he wanted. He 1ald Democrata "still are very concerned wlth working Americana and how we can tar1et doUan" from a lax cut on those earnln1 between $20,000 and $S0,000ayear. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes declined comment today on the Democratic search ror a com· promise. ''The president still thinks it should be a three-year proposal," Speakes said, but would be "will· ine to listen" to anything the Democrats might suggest. Apparently not enough , DemocTats are committed to any plan lo assure its paasal'(e ln the House. There are at leut three factlooa: -Roatenkowsti, the key ft,utt In the House on tax matten, is try, Ing to arrive at a compromise but not tne three-year, 25 percent versioo endorsed by the White House. -Most House Uber ala oppose a multlyear tax cut. Many tAllt privately against compromise. hoping that would force a vote on Reagan's original proposal. Such & vote, by most counta, would 10 against the president. -A group of 47 conservatives, mainly Southerners, who gave Reagan the margin of victory in a cr,ucial budget vote earlier this year, tried unsuccessfully Tues- day to reach a consensus. Charges uncertain in baby sale case A Louisiana man who was ar- rested alter patrons of a Mission Viejo restaurant said he offered to sell them his baby daughter was lo be arraigned today if the dis trict attorney can find a suitable section in the criminal code to cover the case, an Orange County sheriff's officer said. Randy Gordon Wil son, 29, was taken into custody about 3 a.m. Monday and the 6-week-old, blonde, blue-eyed baby which be said was his daughter, was taken to the Albert Sitton Home, a facility for the care of neglect- ed or abused children. A juvenile court hearing is scheduled to determine whether the baby will be placed with relatives of her parents or in a foster home in Orange County. The baby's 15-year-old mother Mistrial declared in killing case LOS ANGELES <AP) -A mistrial was declared in the seven-month murder trial of Salvatore Marino, son of reput· ed San Jose Mafia kingpin Angelo Marino, after the jury deliberated for more than six weeks without agreeing on a verdict. The mistrial ruling was made Tuesday by Superior Court Judge Kathleen Parker when the jury said it was deadlocked 9 to 3. was staying with a church group, said Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Hart. She told investigators that she and Wilson were married,• but Wilson told the deputies who arrested him that he was not married to the child's mother. Hart said the couple had been traveling back and forth from Winnsboro, La .. and Orange County since October. 1980. Hart sajd that in October, a 4-year-old and a 6-year-old boy who were Wilson's sons by a previous mar· riage were taken from him and placed into the custody of their natural mother, who Ii ves somewhere in the southwest. Wilson. a heavy equipmenL operator, is unemployed, Hart' said. , The couple's home town is: about 200 miles northwest or New Orleans and has a popula-. tion of about 7,000. : Wilson was booked for in· vestigation of willful cruelty to a• child, but there was no evidence! that the child had been abused, and there was a legal question: about whether an offer to sell the baby constituted an overt act of child-selling, Hart said. : Harl said the restaurant. patrons told deputies that Wilson. had "asked several persons ati the table if they would be in·: terested in buying a nice, healthy baby girl." Wilson did not set a price for the child, said Hart. but s aid he wanted· someone to take her because, "I don't want it anymore." Summer Sale Starts June 1 st Step in now for a wonderful selection of quality furniture all at sale prices! You will feel like a "BARON " using this Desk - Exquisitely crafted aoulynn, and dauabter, A11ty, Juat north of • Williamsport, about 75 mlles away. • 'l wasn 'l nervous until alter be left,t' aaJd Saundra Scbmkll of Co1an Station, a waitress. Alter a customer pointed out the former president, who was dressed In a nylon j acket and jeans, Carter cam., to the counter and s hook bands with the waitresses. she sa!d. Lavera Gehron of Wllllamsport, a customer, said the former president kissed her after she told hlm she voted twice for hlm. "I'm not going to wash my face for a week," Mrs. Gehron said with a lau1h. A former magazine dis- tributor has been awarded more than $82,000 in Houston for libel, slander and assault damages inflicted upon him by Hustler publisher LalT)' Flynt, his brother and his Ohio-based publishing com· pany. Caroline Kennedy, daughter of Late President John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Onassis, arrives at New Y ork theater for film premiere of ·' Superman R. Gary St. Marie con- tended that Flynt and his brother, Jimmy, defamed his character and bad two men knock him unconscious at a 1977 convention in Chicago. St. Marie, who flied the suit after his Gulf & Southern News Inc., distributorship fold ed , also accused the brothers of spreading word through the industry that he was unreliable in paying his de bts. II," starring Christopher Reeve and Gene Hackman. V.S. altitude on vet changes The Am er ican public is fi nally recognizing its obliga. lion to Vietnam veterans who were "ignored and neglect· ed" when they returned from battle, says retired Army Gen. William Westmoreland. ·'Thank God the old, worn, tired attitudes are now his· tory." Westmoreland, who co mma n ded A m e ri can troops in Vietnam. told a gathering at Winter Haven. Fla. in observance of Viet· nam Veterans Month. "The t ruth i s overs hadowing perception. facts are over- coming emotion:· Westmoreland s aid he a g r eed with Pres ide nt Ronald Reagan that the war was a "noble cause." And, he said. the war was not lost in the battlefields in Viel· na m, but In the 'streets at home. "America was not defeated militarily," he said. "It was defeated by propaganda in· volving Lies and exagger ation here at home." He said plans for construe· lion of a memorial to Viet- nam veterans in Washington ia evidence that public al· titudes are changing. "We have, in the last dee a d e . dest r oyed our tal towers: Du ty, honor, coun· try." he said. "The Vietnam memorial is the beginning ol the r e building of thost towers." Former President Jlmm) Carter took a break frorr trout fishing to sample thl d e li cacies of a fast-food restaurant and -ever the politician kiss a voter. Carter has visited this Huntingdon County, Pa. com· munity of Franklinville eight times in the past two years to relax and fish. On Monday m orning, he stopped at a restaurant with his wife. Secretary of State Alex- ander Haig has taken his first time off since taking office by paying a visit to his son, Army Capt. Brian Haig at Fort Carson near Colorado Springs, Colo. St. Marie contends the as- sault resulted from a $37 ,800 debt for which he was not responsible. But the Flynts argued that St. Marie llad a bad reputation and provoked the assault. A federal jury ruled this week F'lynt Distributing Co .. Inc., of Columbus, Ohio. was liable for $59,201 in libel and ass ault dam ages. Larry Flynt was held responsible for $18,001 in Ii be l a nd s la nder da mages and his brother $5,063 for assault. Glena Mowless and Mike Gollehon gave each other a lot of s tatic during their courtship, but say they were happy to get married only six months after meeting. Both are police dispatchers and say they became ac- quainted over the radio. Handling eme rgencies on the air each day did not Cully pr e par e h e r f o r the ceremonies. however . "I'm so nervous. I'm glad I don't do this every day," she said this week, dressed in a long pink gown waiting for the wedding party to arrive . Mrs. Gollehon, 33, works for the Clovis, N.M. Police Department. Gollehon, also in his 30s, mans a console for the New Mexico State Police. The Gollehons said they would live in Portales and expect to co ntinue their careers. ll\luch of nation stormy 'Rains develop flooding in three-state Plains area Coastal forecast L.•l• .._.. -N'l'r ,,_,."" low c '"4•. T umlnt _, TI!unde 'r wllll ............ lnnd. C:Mllal low loftiQflt mlCI .0. H ..... TllU"441Y n to 71. Weter.._ lftllnd low tonl9M ....... *· hlOf\l TIW"441'r 15 to 92. E ltewllere, wll'd• over o .. ter Wl left lO to JO knob tllf"9'4fl l0fll9M wltll 4 to 1 loot cembln4"1 HH. WHlerl., wlfldl ,._.., to to " "-· U.S. summary • C:lffr ,.....,.. wltll tows -u., 40L 01t1ty...__ .. ,....._. ._. ............. ,....,..Md_ "' ... .,., -....... ,., ~ clly. " .... ~, .... ,,_t2 .. ue. National, temps HI Le ""-Al.Nll'r 1S S7 .. AlbltqW • 61 Am41rlll0 " .. .61 AtMvll141 ,. ~ AU~ .. 1\ ,., Allllllte Cly " .. .. 141tthnoro ., u ... elrmlfllfWn .. 19 .w IC•nt City 11 '3 LH Vellft .. ,. U tlle ROc.11 .. .. ~ ..... 12 6S Lowltvllle ., " Mempflls .. n Mleml • IO Mllweuk" " 60 Mpl•St.P 7S $4 Hesllvllle 17 '1 Hew Or'--'° 15 Hew York 65 60 Norfolk .. 61 Oil•• C:lty as 6l Om•ll• 14 SJ Orlelldo '2 74 Ptl lltcltlflle 6l ff PhMftla 100 15 PltltOlll"Qll 7t ... Ptl•nd,MI 67 .. Pllaftd,Ore .. ff "-79 "' Slit Utile ,. sa SlnOI ... 10 .. s...,., .. ... S4 Seattle ... 5S St '-"11 • " ""·T-.e '2 n StsteMMte n ss so.-st • T1tlN .. 10 Welltllfllllft n " CN..l'°"NIA ... .,.,...., " u ll'tllle toa n '"'* " .. ,.,.... .. " l..tM•lllllr 15 61 .. ,..,,, ... .. SJ __..,.. 62 Sol ........ 102 0..141ftt .. J6 ,,_._ ..... ." R.Ollvff .... .-..... ~ n s1 s.cr.-. ~ SJ .24 .03 ·°' .It .10 ... .11 .21 • •• .20 .n .oa .aa .to ·" et11111rdl 70 ..... s.1111 .. ,. st . ..... n ., What do you Hb Moul Ute DaJJy PUot? What don 't you like? Call &be wmber below and your meua1• "111 be rffc:irded, transcribed •nd d•ll verild &o &M •wroprtat• editor. Th< ume 24-bour an1werin1 Hrvkt may be uied to r~ letters to tbt ediW on any topic. llaUlbox contributors must lnttuide Ul.tr nan.• and &elepbone number ror nrtfteatiGll. N~ clreul.aloli eaoa, -p ...... T•JI u wtaat•1 on your inind. 842.-S a ...... erewftwtll ........ c:NmtltK CMtMlllWV C""9- Olk ... Cfn<""'9tl CllWllftd Celll!Mlli OIH11Wlfl 0.-r °" ....... o..wt 0..-. ....... ...... ~ ....... ,,....... ---- .... . ., . ,. " • 7S .. .. 14 .. II .. a ., .... • '* .... u .. • S1 ,. u •• .,, .. u JI . ,. •n . .. " n IMte..,_a .. II S'9cll'9fl '2 . u Tillrt11•I ,. 1t ... Ulll41ll • SI .. "_ .. " .M ... ..., ~ 41 ••::r, .. 4t cat• 11e ,. .. ........... ,, .. :!:'Sun, moon, tidel •• ,..., ... ----4;12•-"'· u ... ......... ltlat .. 111. """....,.., u '"' ... ·~···"'· ., .. • "'""'"" n:••""'· u . .. ............ ''"· ..... """' ~ .. "" ••: • .......,r ... Tlwt>-.,.~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 3, 1981 H/F Relief fund bailed out Supervisors order program revamp to contain costs For the fourth time thla year, the Oranae County Board of Supervisors has dipped tnto re- aervea to ball out the financially troubled aeneral relief proiram. Supervisors Tuesday agreed to transfer an additional SlS0,000 to keep the program solvent throu1h June 30, the end of the fiscal year. ln approving the transfer, the boprd ordered a revampln1 of the general relief program -a move officials believe will help coJ>taln costs in the future. General relief ls cash as- sistance for persona who are not eligible for or are awaiting other types of welfare asslatance. For reasons that have yet to be fully explained, the demand for assistance skyrocketed in March. That situation, coupled with the fact the fund waa nearly exhausted, forced supervisors on three oc casions to approve bud1et transfer so payments could continue. About $2 milUon in general re- lief assistance wUl be paid by the end of the fiscal year, ac- cording to county officials. Unlike other types of welfare, the county receives no subeldy from the 1l4te or federal govern· ments for the general relief pro- gram. Under new guidelines ap- proved by the board. all efforts will be made lo avoid glvlng direct cash payments lo re· cipients. Instead, third party checks will be issued for such items as rent and food. Also, able·bodied recipients who refuse to report for work on county-sponsored projects will be required to forfeit benefits for 90 days. At the behest of Supervisor Bruce Nestande, the board of aupervtson declared that any peraoo who applies for &eoeral relief must have resided ln the county for at least 30 days. However, provblona wlll be made to provlde benefits to persona wbo don't meet the residency requirements, but on- ly in emeraency sltuattona. The board was told the coun· ty's Human Services A1ency, in conjunction with the county Auditor-Controller's Offlee, bu pUpared an "early warnln1 system" to monitor the outflow of aeneraJ relief funds to avold a repeat of what occurred in March. In a related action, the board also added $161,200 in eounty funds to the Aid to Famlllea with Dependent Children Pro1ram. It is funded largely with federal and state funds. -FREDERICK SCHOEMEHJ, Housing sales drop sharply April figures show annual adjusted rate of 441,000 WASHINGTON (AP> -Sales of new single-family houses plunged 13.5 percent ln April, the biggest drop in a year, as rising mortgage interest rates continued to plague the housing industry, government officials reported. A housing industry spokesman said sales may have fallen even more in May when interest rates "really took off." The new report by the depart· ments of Commerce and Haus· Ing and Urban Development put April's new-house sales at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 441,000. the lowest since the 353,000 of April 1980. That April 1980 figure, the housing-sales low point of last year's recession, waa a 25- percent drop from the previous month. Bob Sheehan, an economist with the National Association of Home Builders, said May sales figures, which won't be released until June 29, could show further declines. Typical mortgage interest on fixed-rate. fixed-term loans for new single-family houses averaged 15.53 percent in April, according to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Lenders have indicated that rates have con· tinued to rise since then. The new Commerce-HUD re- port said the median sales price for new single-family houses rose to a record $69,300 in April. But that figure is just $800 hi1her than the $68,500 median of seven months earlier in an in- dustry known not long a&o for rapidly rising prices. Sheehan aald it is bard to pre- dict what future government re- ports will show. since housing statistics tend to be highly volatile from month to month. Open house slated The public will have its first look at Orange County's new $1 million dollar criminal justice center at Golden West College, J une 5, during a n open house starling at 10 a .m. The fa c ility c ontains clas srooms, crime and photo labs , critical incident simula- tion, advanced officer labs, a phys ical training area, media center and administrative of- fices. The event will mark the of- ficial opening of the joint project of the county's 23 chiefs of police , state and federal agen· cies and the Coast Community College District. The Criminal Justice Training Center, which will serve u a central facility for the county, was joinUy funded by a *379,635 grant from the Law Enforce- ment Assistance Administration through the Orange County Justice Training Council. The Coast District contributed the campus site, $500,000 and a $120,000 loan to be repaid through feea. The keynote speaker will be Rodney Blonian, special uJis· tant to state Atty. Gen. George Deukemejian. .......... PROTEST -The Reagan administration's proposed cuts in health care were protested by the Community for Creative Non-violence, led by activist and "baby doctor" Benjamin Spock (center with beard). The group knelt on the White House driveway until removed by police and Secret Service agents. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cutifi~ Oemologi1t, A OS THEPERIDOT . a rrtJlltnJI l10ne According to Ie1end, the first p ea i d o l < p r o n o u n c e d perrydough) waa found by a pirate band on an island ln the Red Sea. Later, the Egyptians found the island, named it Serpent Isle, and mined the beautiful, pale green atones. It is said that1• ao jealously did they guard tne laland, anyooe who set an unauthorized foot on Serpent lale waa Immediately put to death. Pertdot became known aa a ma1ical aetn that would protect the wearer from evll. Tbe E1yptlua aent true stones to France to be cut. They were wom by Ute pharaohs and were uaed as deeoratlona In tbelr p&laca. Tbe1 attribu\ed rnedtctnal qualities to the perldot; bellevln1 that any medlclne drunk for a P«jdot challee would bave extra beallDI atreqtb. Specimens of perldot are 1tlll mlned on Serpent Ille, and In South Atrica, IUrma, South America and ttie 1outbwHlera U .I . Perldot la particQlarl7 ·beauUlul when Ht in Sold Jewelry. ' OMEGA CLASSICS FOR GRADUATION 0 OMEGA F01 the man and for m. woman who mote op· 'Predoc. chat rare combination ~ ohfl, JUpM WC>ttunonthlp onc:t 19morkoble d•ll9n· Thi womon'a Otneoo 'tl(hh 1 •K ~w CH wNW told· cexMed braciefet. lhe mon s with 1 'Ky.low or Whk• gotd. c.>mnd btocelet. • MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCll!TY 1823 NEWPORT 81.'A) COSTA MESA 31 YEAAS IN THE SAM! LOCATION ~-MMlef Ch... ftHONI....,,., , Orang9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdnesday, June 3, 1981 President trades quips with Brady WASHINGTON <AP) - Wounded White House press secretary James Brady, trading quips with President Rea1an in an emotional hospital reunion, says h1a boss has been doing pretty well without him. But Reagan insists Brady is mlsud. "We are waiting for you to get back," Reagan told Brady dur· Ing an impromptu hospital visit Tuesday. "We need you." "Right now, the medical pro· fesslon is standing in the way,•' Brady replied. "I have been watching you on· the ·tube 'and reading about you. You have been doing pretty well on your own.'' Ethics unit nixed LAS VEGAS (AP ) -ln an emotional response to the gov· ernment Indictment of interim Teamsters President Roy Lee Williams, convention dele1ates have rejected overwhelmingly a proposal that the union police lfself with an ethics committee. Resentment over the bribery· conspiracy charge and an earlier Senate Investigative re· port accusing Williams of being a tool of organized crime buist onto the convention floor Tues- day when union dissidents pushed for creation of an ethics committee. $300,lXJO taken NEW YORK (AP> -Police and FBI agents were searching today for four men who robbed a Brink's truck of up to $300,000, kilted one 1uard and wounded another.• The robbery occurred Tues· day in Tbe Bronx when the truck, carryins three guards, drove up to a shopplna mall and parked near a Chase Manhattan Bank where the guards were to make a delivery of cash. Buildw aeen WASHINGTON <AP) - Claims of a mllltary buildup In Nlcarasua and delivery of So· viet weaponry there is raising the possibility of heightened tensions between the Reagan ad- m inistration and Nicaragua's leftist government. Secretary of State Alexander Haig told a news conference Tuesday night that sophisticated Soviet weapons have been de· livered to Nicaragua and that additional armaments are believed to be on order. Reagan &on 'erred' NEW YORK CAP) The pres· ident 's elder son was wrong to have used his father's name In a letter he sent last March to .solicit business from U.S. military bases. according to Nancy Reagan. In an interview in Washington publis~ed in today's Daily News, the first lady said Michael Reagan, the president's son by a previous marriage, "made a mistake in writing the letter. I don't think he should have writ· ten it," she said. "I think he re· alizes that." Riot poliCe battle South Africa youtfu JOHANNESBURG, South Africa <AP) -Riot police l.Uled tear 1as, clubs and attack dogs on mixed-race high school stu- den ta mobllizlng for a dem- onstration today , and authorities said 40 youngste.rs were arrested. Witnesses reported widescale beatings by the riot squad. They said at leut two pupils were hospttaliied, while others were treated for minor injuries and released. Police also fired tear gas into a crowd at a funeral, thinking some of the fleeing students wer e among them. The gas caused young children at the funeral to scream and vomit from the fumes, witnesses said. DACCA, Bangladesh CAP> A military court will try 17 army ?fficers on charges of complicity in the aborted coup in which President Ziaur Rahman was assassinated, government of· ficials announced. Three other officers, including the ~oup leader, Maj. Gen. Abul Mansur, were killed by enraged village guards after their arrest the officials said. ' Convict. strike WARSAW (AP> -Nearly 500 convicts were reported In the seventh day of a hunser strike to- day to back demands for im- proved prison conditions. At least 26 people were reported on a separate hun1er strike in a spreading fast to back demands for the release of political prisoners. Proceaion tmtched PEKING CAP> -Nearly one million people crowded along Peking's main street as a hearse carried the ~emains of Soong Ching.ling, widow of revolu- tionary leader Sun Yal·sen, to a crematory Tuesday, China's of- ficial news agency Xinhua re- ported. Jf ekome sought TOKYO (AP) -Japan's rul· Ing party is calUng on sup· porters to join in. welcoming the USS Midway to its home port, hoping the gesture will counter protests from opposition groups who .contend the aircraft carrier may be carrying nuclear weapons, officials said today. Tra nsplant patient gains rele a se STANFORD (AP) -Mary D. Gohlke, the longest surviving re- ci pie n t of a heart-lung transplant, has left Stanford University Medical Center with a strong will to return to Arizona and to her advertising career. The recuperation of Mrs. Gohlke from the fourth heart- 1 u n g transplant ever to be performed heartened Charles Walker of Binghamton, N.Y., who underwent the same risky operation two month3 later. Come up to the top! ON YOUR FM RADIO DIAL ,. • •:, -f ~ u ......... SOME GRAPEFRUIT -Tom Anthony of Edmond, Okla., wasn't happy when he discovered what hail, described the size of grapefruit, did to window of his automobile. Hail ripped through suburb of Oklahoma City and surrounding areas Monday, punching holes in home roofs and smashing cars. Oamage was estimated at $7 million to $10 million. Few surpri_ses in U.S. votllig By TheAslOClated Pre11 New Jersey voters waded through puddles and a sea of cam- paign ads w pick two names from a 21 -candidate field in a gubernatorial primary, while in Jackson, Miss., a state senator waa defeated in an attempt to become the first black mayor of a large Mlssl.sslppi city. In Ohio. two state legislators won their parties' nominations Tuesday to face off in an election to fill the 4th Congressional Dis- trict seat left vacant by the death of Rep. Tennyson Guyer, a Republican. In New Jersey, former As- sembly Speaker Thomas Kean won the Republican nomination and Rep. Jam es Florio got the Democratic nod. They competed in the largest gubernatorial primary field in the state's history. Gov. Brendan Byrne. was forbidden by law to seek a third four-year term, leav- ing the race wide open. The election also marked the first time in the state that public matching money was available In a primary. Using the extra dollars, many candidates spent hea vlly on advertising. Most attention in the campaign was focused on the candidates' qualifications for office rather than their stands on the issues. With 98 percent of the votes counted, unofficial .totals gave Kean 119,528 votes, or 31 percent, to fin1sh atol)ft.he field of eight Republican candidates. Patenoh Mayor Lawrence Kramer re· eel ved 81,337 or 21 percent to finish second. Florio, a-southeastern New Jersey coneressman for six years , received 157,127 votes, or 26 percent, to defeat the 12 other Democrats. Rep. Robert Roe was second with 95,187or16 percent. Although the field hH been sharply reduced, another 11 in· dependents are expected to be on the gubernatorial ballot in November. A voter turnout of 28 percent of the eligible voters was reported as intermittent rain fell over the state. Byrne had endorsed former At- torney General John Degnan, who trailed badly in the Democratic race, but Byrne said the size of Florio's victory wu a · · JlOOd omen·· for the party. ·Mayor Dale Danks was re- turned to office in Jackson in a s w eepi ng victory over Republican Doug Shanks, a former city commissioner, and independent Henry Kirksey, a black Mississippi state senator. Presidential yacht hopes fruitkss Abandoned baby's mom breaks date Shanks and Kirksey had sought to break up the century.old grip that white Democrats have held on the mayor's job. A jubilant Danks said he was "looking forward lo the next four years with more enthusiasm than I've ever felt." With unofficial returns from all 97 precincts reported, Danks had 20,565 votes to 14,706 for Shanks and 12,309 for Kirksey. WASHINGTON <~P) -Presi- dent Reagan's hopes of spending muggy summer evenings float- ing down the Potomac in a new yacht are fading . The government doesn't seem to have a spare, and so far none of Reagan's 226 million constit· utents has volunteered to donate a yacht to the presidential cause. And Reagan won't buy one. '·What we are getting is a lot of people wanting to sell us one," Edward Hickey, bead of the White House military office, s aid in a recent interview. "We've bad hundreds of often by people to sell. But we are not going to buy." On that point, Hickey was ada· mant. "He doesn't want to buy a yacht. None of us do." Since the Reagans sought private donations to redecorate the White House, Hickey was asked whether they might try to finance a yacht the same way. ''That suggestion hasn't been made at all," he replied. "This is different. Our view is that to paint and refurbish the White House is one thing, because it's something that people see every day. But it's an entirely dlf· ferent thing to go out and buy a yacht." The last presidential yacht, named Sequoia, was sold by Jimmy Carter in May 1977 for $286,000. It has since been sold several more times, most re- cently for almost $1 million. · Hickey said the current own~r was willing to sell t.J\e Sequoia back to the president, but the asking price is about $1.2 million and Reagan isn't interested. The Navy bas been asked to "see if there exlsta within their inventory a suitable vessel for use as a presidential yacht. To date we haven't found anything," Hickey S"ai<h ''The Navy's really not in the yacht business as such. Sure, they could come up with a huge minesweeper, I suppose, but you couldn't use It. It's · a sood possibility they don't have anything for short cruises." The Customs Ser vice ia look· Ing over the boats it bas •eized but nothlng's turned up there, either. ~! ~UINCY, Mass. (AP) -The identity of an abandoned baby's moth~r remains a mystery after someone who tantalized police by claiming to be the mother failed to show up at a scheduled rendezvous. A crowd of about 100 residents and reporters waited in vain Tuesday night at a school where the woman promised to meet a Salvation Army officer who dis· covered the baby on bis doorstep. The author of the note, who said she was 17, wrote: "I want my baby. . . . Please contact the papers that I am still liv· Ing." She asked for the meeting and signed the note: "Lorie, a sorry mother." The Salvation · Army officer, Charles Waddington, waited with police for an hour before giving up. Quincy police ad· milted the note was a long shot, but said they had no choice but to follow it up. "We're here just in case," said Detective William Stenmoo. Police plan to return to the school Thursday evening because of a discrepancy in the note, which asked for a meeting Tuesday but gave the date .,. June 4. 1 Waddinston found the 2-hour- oJd infant boy in a paper bag on his doorstep the morning of May 28. He got the note in the mail Monday. Since then, the police depart· ment has received hundreds of telephone calls about the baby. Almost all of the callers have of· fered to care for the infant, which has been placed in a foster home somewhere in Massachusetts. Jack Hauck, director of the state Department of Social Services office in the Quincy area, would not say where the baby was, but said he is doing "very well" in bis new home. Authorities said they don't plan to prosecute the mother and are concerned about her well being. "It's been five days since de· livery," Hauck said. "We would expect some medical problems. We just hope she calls and we can get her to come to Quincy City Hospital." · If the real mother of the baby appears, she might be able to keep her child, he said. Anyone claiming to be the. mother would have to un- dergo a medical examination to verify parenthood and then would be granted a legal counsel, he said . A court- appointed investigator would de· termine whether the woman could care for the child. The general election was clouded by accusations of racial injustice. Ci vii rights forces had asked the J ust1ce Department to seek a court order delaying the election on grounds the city planned to count votes from a mainly white area annexed in 1976 without federal approval, as required under the Voting Rights Act. The government rejected the request. In Ohio, two veteran state legislators' will square off in a special congressional election June 25 after getting their parties' nods . State Rep. Michael Oxley of Findlay edged Robert Huffman, a former Miami County pros- ecutor, in the GOP primary and swept past four other Republican candidates. In the Democratic race, state Rep. Dale Locker of Anna swept past Bluffton housewife Barbara Foster. With all 606 precincts in the 12· county district reporting, unof· ficial results gave Locker 12,278 votes or 72 percent to Mrs. Foster's 4,834 or 28 percent. Ox- ley, backed by Guyer's widow, Mae, got 20,955 votes or 51 percent to Huffman's 18,512 or 45 percent. Four other candidates shared the rest of the vote. Guyer died in his sleep April 12 of heart problems. Super Special Prices r----~--~--1 I COUPON I 20 YEARS OF THE NATION'S MOST POPULAR MUSIC .•. I $5.00 off purcha1e of I 1 Timex Watches 1 I Selectttd model• I •.• ARRANGED FOR THE SELICTIVE LISTENER ·----------'¥ BAY.§¥'.M..~~!~~<g! 1714176Ml II Afrlllll ...... ., ~-...._.. ...... ,. Student loses bid for vulgar ~adge SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A state Court of Appeal has sided with a Marin County hl1h school which auspeoded a student for wearing a badge at school con· tainina a vulgar protest against the draft. The court on Tuesday ruled that the First Amendment did not protect the right of IS.year· old Spiros Hinze to wear the 1 ~-loch badge. T e 2·1 decision by Justi~e NoTman Elkington, joined in by Justice William Newsom, re· fused lo compel Redwood High School officials to allow Hinze to continue wearing the badge. MUd earthquake jolts 2 ooumies FONTANA CAP> A mild earthquake which jolted resi- dents of western San Bernardino and northern Riverside counties prompted a ras h of calls to authorities but reportedly caus· ed no damages or injuries. The quake, measuring 3.1 on the Richter scale, was centered 5 miles north of Cucamonga and struck at 10:29 p.m. Tuesday, said Dennis Meredith of the Cali f ornia Institu te of Technology Seismology Lab in Pasadena. Long Beachj~ daily jet flighu LONG BEACH CAP> -Three times ·as many commercial jet flights will be allowed at Long Beach Municipal Airport alter the city council, voting 6·3, passed an ordinance over the ob- j ections of two homeowners groups. Tuesday's action increases the average daily number of mghts from five to 16, but also requires that sound-monitoring stations be erected around the airport to gauge noise. Peop~'s Temple settlemenl w/J, SAN FRANCISCO CAP) A Superior Court judge has ap· proved a $1.4 million settlement between the United States and the defunct People's Tempi.: ... Judge Ira Brown's decision Tuesday allows the federal gov- ernment compensation for transporting some 900 bodies of the c ult 's members who perished in a mass suicide-and- m u rde r rite in Jonestown. Guyana. in November 1978 ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT-N/ednesday, June 3, 1981 H/F ""~ STUDENT TAKEOVER -Richard Atkinson (coal and, tie), chancellor of UC, San Diego, talks to students who took over his office Tuesday to protest the administration's refusal to grant tenure to a black professor. Campus Police arrested 35. charging them with trespassing. They are free on their own recognizance today. New LA attorney faces budget cuts ' LOS ANGELES (AP) Win- ning the runoCC election in a landslide, newly elected City Al· tQJ'ney Ira Reiner faces tough sledding as he steps into a de· partment that just suffered a lS percent budget. cut, noted his predecessor Burt Pines. Reiner, the fQrmer city con· lroller, "has his work cut out for him" because of the budget cuts. said Pines, who will return to private pracbce after Tuesday's bl tterly contested election in which Reiner outpolled City Councilman Bob Ronka 63 per- cent lo 37 percent Winning the seat left vacant b y Reiner was polit1cal newcomver James Kenneth Hahn, 30, son·of long-time coun· ly Supervisor Kenneth Hahn Hahn forged ahead with 54 percent of the vote, trouncing another political newcomer , Stephen Weeks. 32, who had con sistently classified himself as the person most qualified to be controller because of the name identification of his father Voters soundly re1ected Proposition A, a ballot measure that would hav~ raised property laxes to increase the police de- pa rlment's authorized strength to 8,500. A two-thirds vote was needed for passage of Proposition A, but 58 percent of the voters said no to the issue that would have raised property taxes $12.30 in the com ing fiscal year. rn 1984-85 the levy would have risen to $58.85. bring- ing in $72 million "We have to go back to the drawing board," said a dis· heartened Police Chief Darr.I Gates He noted there was still the possibility or a state sales tax that would earmark money specifically for the police. Of the three races for city council, only one involved an lo· cumbenl, Peggy Stevenson, 56. Stevenson beat back a challenge f.rom Mike Woo, 29, who had forced her into a ruo-off in the 13th District. Stevenson won with 61 percent of the vote. Jim Keysor, 54, a former Democratic stale assemblyman, took an early lead for 1st Dis· trict but lost to Howard Finn, a Sunland businessman who garnered 54 percent of the votes. The race for the 15th District seat wa~ y close, but Joan Flores inche er way to victory with 50 7 p cent to John Greenwood 's 3 percent. Flores was a long· ime aide to John S. Gibson Jr. who held the seat until his retirement In one of the quietest school boa rd races since the Los Angeles District "as ordered to institute mandatory integration programs. telephone company executive Alan Gershman bare· ly U('feated PTA activist Patricia MacNetl with 52 per- cent of the vote. Both had criticized the school board's conservative majority for allegedly damaging educa· lion in the long fight to end man· datorv busing Bank C(JIJ't /ind $7 millionfund CSUC officia/,s balk at fee hike proposa/,s The race for city attorney was probably the s hining light of this lackluster election that at- tracted onl~ 29.8 percent of the city's I 27 million registered voters. Ronka's primary campaign repeatedly tried to link Reiner with convicted murderer Charles Manson The r un -off election c:a mpaign was more subdued due to strong criticism to the mudslinging. However, Reiner reportedly spent $700,000. and Ronka St million in the most SAN JOSE (AP> -Crocker National Bank officials, fearing possible embezzlement, bas asked the FBI to help locate as much as $7 millio·n. The funds are missing from a Crocker Bank loan office ill San Jose, Crocker spokeswoman Betty Lallie said Tuesday. At stake is reportedly "real estate loans of no more than $7 million and the bank expects to recover a substantial portion of that," Ms. Lattie said. The Crocker Bank agency here lends money to large builders. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Legislative proposals to boost student fees have been blasted by trustees, ad ministrators, teachers and students of the California State University and Colleges. Proposals before Senate and Assembly committees would in- crease annual fees at CSUC cAmpuses from about $200·$210 per student to about $300, said Louis Messner, system assistant vice chancellor for budget plan- ning. The fees were discussed Tues· day at a meeting of the system's finance committee at San Fran· cisco State University, one of 19 CSUC campuses. "These fees don't cut waste. They don't increase efficiency. They don't cut back administra· lion." said student lobbyist Steve Glazer. "It's JUSt clearly an attempt to balance the budget on the backs of the stu- dents." The fees also represent ··a foot In the door to establish tuition" for the 314.000 students io the system. said Trustee Wallace Al bertson. CSUC charges no tui- tion for residents. Fees for the spring semester were about $130 ·fo r full-time students. Warren Kessie,!'. president of ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' the United Professors of California, complained the Legislature's definition of tuition was "narrow, arbitrary and artificial." "It is an absolutely Kafka· esque, Humpty Dumpty defini tion C1f tuition,·· he said. suggest· ing that the Legislature should tax candy, beer, wine and oil profits before passing budget deficits to students in the form of fees . ' "As far as the person paying the fee is ~oncerned, it really doesn't matter what you label it," said 0 . Dale Hanner, vice chancellor for business "It still. costs more money.·· The proposals are included 1n draft budgets b~fore the Senate Finance Committee and the As- sembly Ways and Means Sub cornmitte~ Both versions \\Ould provide expens1\C' race of its kind in city about S920 million for CSUC in history 1981-82, far s hort of the $971 "This has been a long road million originally sought by coming here," Ronka said in his trustees and $936 million pro-headquarters statement. · .. But I posed in the state budget pro-feel good about the campaign posed by Gov Edmund G we've waged ... We fought to Brown Jr. the very end and we fought a The senate version of the good fight." ... budget, which would boost stu· · After he was cnt1c1zed for the dent fees by about $9 million. Manson ad. Ronka w.as so sub· also Includes a $996.810 cut in dued. in his campa_1gnmg that he staffing. d1dn t ('\'en mention Remer. ·. STARTS TODAY AT BW NEWPORT BEACH ... Here's a sampling of the remarkabl~ values you'll find at BW Newport Beach . Many Items reduced from one-third to one-half . THE SALON WYNSHIRE SUITS. DAY AND COCKTAIL DRESSES. DAYTIME AND EVENING DRESSES EVENING GOWNS SAVE SAVE ONE·THIRD ONE·THIRD TD ONE·HALF Choose from a spr11lO and summer From our American collecllons. assortment of styles and colors names llke Adele Simpson , Helga, COAT AND DRESS COSTUMES, Oscar de la Renta, and Tn~ere Plus. gowns by Jill Richards. rom our Orig. $1Z5, SALE $83.20. European collections, suits by Chanel. STANLEY SHERMAN Chloe, and Louis Feraud THE SIGNATURE ROOM LINEN BLEND SEPARATES SAVE ONE· THIRD DESIGNER DRESSES ANB·EVENING A luxurious linen/rayon blend In SEPARATES SAVE jackets. skirts, tops, camlsOles. ONE·FOURTH TD ONE·iHIRD and pants In an array of coot, From designer collections of coordinatin~ colors. Ori83 $42·$155. Albert Nipoo , Kasper, Frank Massandrea SAL $27.90..S1 .20. and many more. MS. WILSHIRE SHOES FUR SALON NAME WALKING SHOES ANO SANDALS Assortment of coats and jackets by SAVE ONE· THIRD TO ONE·HALF designers who understand the glamour Names like Amaltl. Bernardo, Eclisse. of fine furs . Natural or drn mink, Michael. and Pelrzzio fashioned in Reg. $4650·$10,500, SALE 70ll-$8500. summer styles and colors. Contemporary styles In beaver, aw NOWI opossum, rabbit, Orii . $750·$3000, SALE $600-2400. LINEN BLAZERS SAVE ONE· THIRD Pure crisp linen unconstructed blazers TOWNLEIOH by Larry Levine Jn soft. summer pastels. Orig. $68, SAt£ $43.80. COAT ANO SUIT ASSORTMENT Linen-textured blends of SAVE ONE· THIRD TO ONE·HALF polyester/rayon are also available Reversible WOOi travel coats and at a savings In red , wh~e. Of navy all·~thet' coats In Ught. CaMtomla Orig $82, SALE Sl3.IO. we~ts and c:otors. Orig . CALVIN KLEIN TtE SHIRTS $39.90·$2 .00, SALE S1t.I04159.90. SAVE ONE·THIRD TVtl> and ttlree piece suit Pure cotton crew· neck, cap·steeve and costume assortment In tees In all your favorite warm·weather spring and summer fabrications pastels and brlr ts Orig. SH2·S215, SALE $11.to-$139.90. Orig. $20. SALE 12.90. Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/WednHday, June 3, 1081 TIMELINKS • Agent Ora~e bill backe d Book written in rage. by House Wambaugh's 'Glitter Dome' created at 'fUrious pace' ' i .. G PakUtan backed by Chinese ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -China will "firmly support" Pakistan's "struggle to oppose foreign aggression," Foreign Minister 2'.bao Zi-yang has said. He spoke at a banquet recent· ly after his first round of talks ·with Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq. W ~GTON (AP) -The House bas unanimously puaed a blll dlrecUn1 the Veterans Ad· mlnistr~Uon to provide he>1pltal care anCl medical attention to Vietnam veterans whose health problems may be due to the herbicide Agent Orange. The legialaUon representl the first formal finding by Congress that veterans' health may have been Impaired by contact with the herbicide, which contains dioxin, considered one of the world 's most dangerous chemicals. The VA has maintained that no sclenUfic evidence exist.a to show that contact with Aaent Orange damaged the health of G Is in Vietnam. But the VA says it provides medical care to any veteran needin& it, reiardless of the cause of their problems. The measure was approved 388·0 and sent to the Senate. In a.o accompanying report, the House Veterans Affairs Committee said the bill 'a purpose is to indicate clearly "that until the scientific com· munity has been able to make a determination as to the possible cause-and-errect relationship of the toxic herbicides utilized as defoliants in the Republic of Vietnam during the Vietnam conflict, the Veterans Ad· ministration should do every· thing possible" for veterans who may have been affected. 8 7 BOB'IROMAS HOU.YWOOD (AP) -Joteph Wambaulb1 who bu apent much of bil adwt life in pollce ala· tlona, beat.,.eller Uats and law of. flees, hu produced bi• 1lxth book. Jt wu written, be admits, ln pure ra1e. "I ftarted tbe ~ with only one qremise1.. be says o( "The Glitter Dome." "The bead ol a movie studio was 1otn1 to be murdered." Most noveU1t.s have a love· bate relatiQnship wltb Hollywood. With Wambaueh, It's aU bate. He detested what Columbia did to "The New Cen· turions." He sued Robert Aldrich over "The Choirboys." . Only the TV movie of "The Blue Knight" woo his arudJtng approval. Three years ago, Wambauah bought back the film rights to "The Onion Field" from Colum· bia. He embarked on a periloua course: producin1 Uae movie on bis own aevings and tbe inv.i· ment of friends. The venture aeemed successful and he tried the same thing with "The Black Marble." The result? "I'm suing Avco Embassy (the distributor) fpr $10 million," said Wambau1b grimly. When I last saw Joe, he was slntlng the praises for hta studio partner. What happened? "We fell out of love,'' be ex· plained. "They released the movie and it got great reviews. HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Mercury Savings Now Offers NEW 11Repo Plans. 11* ~~ We have several "i:...ds"* c••etllly ~~- .... ~ available for our c111tolften ~,, ~FOR CURRENT RATES ... Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. :~ MERCURY S~~!~~ H•tilltln Beach Lake Forest T1stil 7812 Edinger 23021 Lake Center Or 1095 Irvine Blvd Hnt Bch .. CA. 92647 . El Toro. CA. 92630 Tustin, CA. 92680 (714) 842·9333 (714) 770-2661 (71 4) 832-no1 l.J Habra/Fulertan Anaheim Hills Blena 1001 E. lmpenal Hwy 5677 E. La Palma 8955 Valley View La Habra. CA. 90631 Anaheim, CA. 92.807 Buena Park. CA. 90620 (714) 870oa700 (714) 779-7G47 (714) 821-6000 *This obligation 1s not a savings account or deposit and Is nof Insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor ration. Designer Jewelry on Sale! 50% to 55% Off Original Prices. · • Elegant. sparkling necklaces of al/ lengths; pendants, too ... ea"ings, pierced and clip. • 1'./1181< gold electroplate, some with rhinestones, some with simulated pearls, some with colored stones. By a famous Parisian couture name. Originally •20 to '360; now -9 to '179. Find signifiant values now, in Fashioh /t!Welry Collections-where we are all the- things you are. • Then they 1ave up. Thero were lar1e parta of the country where it was never seen. "With sucb a poor release record, 'Black Marble' can't even make a sale to the TV networks. They say, 'Why should we buy it wben lt bombed in tbeaten?'" Wambaugb aaid tbat "The . Onion Field" wlU be1ln to repay its iovestors when it appears on ABC Television tbJs tall. But he 'I felt I had t o get it finished, to get r .i d o f ' t h e poisons.' fear• the backers of the s:u mJlllon "Black Marble" may have to wait for the outcome of bla lawsuit, which he expects to take four years. He added: "Meanwhile I have to live with the gullt. These are my friends, people who had faith in me. 1 can't face them." The 14-year member of the Loa An1eles Police Department a1aln drew from his detective life for the new book . "Aaide from the premise, I started with no idea of where I was 1otn1," he recalled. "The rage just poured out of me. I worked at a furious pace. as if I were exorclaln& all ~ind• of devils. Perha1!5 it would be 1ood for my literary output to have a nervous breakdown every two years, or at least wander between sanity and madne11. That's how I felt writin1 "Glitter Dome." "It wu the futeat book J ever wrote -two months for the flrst draft. 1 felt 1 bad to 1et it finished, to get rid of the poisons." •'The Glitter Dome (the name of a bar baneout for cops) oilers raunchy portraits of three pairs of homicide detectives and Wambaueh expects the boot to be deplored by LAPD bureaucrat.a. "But then, they didn't like 'The Choirboys' either," he said. ''They don't realize that Jack Webb is gone." Despite all the ~uill Wam· baugh, a former resident of Lido Isle, is proud of his record as a movie producer. "We produced two big movies with important production values within 18 months for a total cost of t6 million. Everyone could do that, but the people who run the industry are more in- terested in perpetuating the system of spending more and more money." ANGRY AUTHOR Joseph Wambaugh "And I'll probably have tc sign an affidavit that I won't sue." Wambaugh, who says he has "glven more depositions than Mlcke.y Rooney and Elizabeth Taylor In all their divorces." said tbat he would sell "Glitter Dome" outright to a movie buyer. e Daily Pilot e classifieds e workfor • you. Call 642-5678 e forquick e cash sales. Now you can bank ,:ii most any time you want. VERSATELLER1M automated teller machines are open from 6 a.m. till midnight. Saturdays and Sundays, too. You can bank on your way to work. Bank on your way home. Bank at your convenience, not ours. OPEN 6 a.m. to midnight I everyda¥ , ~to lJSe. VERSATEL s banking is as easy as making a cal I on a pushbutton phone. Insert your VERSATEL card, enter your confidential ID Code and follow the instructions on the dis- play screen. In seconds you can withdraw cash, make a deposit, make Bank of America credit card or loan • payments, transfer funds between checking and Regular Savings, check your account balance. If you need help, each VERSATELLER machine has its own phone to put you in touch with the VERSATEL Center where a representative will assist you. Ea~ to by. There are pus~button VER~ATELLER macnines at 36 Bank of America branches in the San Fernando Valley and Orange County. Come to one near you and ask for a demonstration. In minutes, you'll be an expert. Want a card application or a list of locations? Call toll-free 1-800-362-7152 or stop by any Bank of America branch in that area. . Pushbutton Banking!M Another money convenience from Bank of America. · BANKOFAMERICA(fl . Zack Mosley, right, retired eight years ago along with Smilin' Jack the com- ic strip aviator. ' Corllic st~ip aviator 'Smilin' Jack' recalled STUART,Fla. (AP) -"Smilin' Jack" isn't dead. He's lost a good deal of his hair and weanl glasses now, but, other than tha~ be has no complaints about retirement In Florida. That's the latest word from Zack Mosley, who retired eight years ago along with the comic strip aviator he made famous. "The big public doesn't have a romantic interest in flying anymore," s aid Mosley. 74, to ex- plain why ''Smilin' Jack" last ap- peared in newspapers April l, 1973. "There's a thrill in flying , for sure, but it is s imply a means of transportation now." "Smilin' Jack" began in 1933 and was a highly popular. true-to-life The women in 'Smilin' Jack's' life tended to be well- e n dowed beauties who were obviously braless. aviation feature during an era Mosley calls "the golden age of com· ics." Also called "funnies" in those days, comics were so popular that former New York City Mayor Fiorello La Guardia read them on the radio during a newspaper strike in the mid-1940s. Those days are gone forever. said Mosley with a touch or nostalgia, and the culprit is television. ·'Television can use up an entire story in a 30-minute program, .. he explained. "But in those days, a single story script could last six weeks or so in a comic strip.'' However, Mosley does praise some or today's comics. "Fortunately, there are some weU established, day-to-day humor strips that keep us entertained in the morn- ing after reading the horrible news on Page 1." His favorites include "Peanuts,'' "Blondie, .. "Dick Tracy" a nd "Doonesbury." The latter, he said is not a true comic, "but is politically dynamic." "Smilin' Jack" flourished in the days when aviation Mosley's £irst love -was also in its golden years. "Smilin' Jack' doesn't fit into the space age. He's rrom the days when a pilot put on a helmet and goggles and flew into a storm and if he got in trouble he'd put the plane down in a pasture," s aid Mosle y, born in FISH FRY !i Hickory, Indian Territory, a year before it became Oklahoma. Mosley began taking flying lessons in 1935, two years after his strip was syndicated by the Chicago Tribune- New York News Syndicate, and re- ceived his license a year later. He's proud of his role in Mlpin1 found the Civil Air Patrol during the eve or World War II. As a ci\filian pilot with the volunteer organization, which later became an auxiliary to the U.S. Air Force, he received the Air Medal ror flying more than 300 hours of anti-submarine patrol off the Atlantic Coast during the first 18 months of the war. 11e's logged more than 3,000 hours as a pilot, but has flowp 1.5 million miles around the world 1atherine material for "Smilin' Jack," which once had a combined circulation of 25 million readers in the United States, Canada and Latin America. For the fans who followed his strip over the yea!"$, Mosley is now willing to answer tbe three most asked ques- tions about "Smilin' Jack." 1 . Why wasn't the face ·of "Downwind Jaxon" ever shown? .. Downwind" first appeared in Mosley's strip in 1938. He epitomized the colorful pilots or those days and, in real life, was Wally "Downwind" Jackson. the man who taught Mosley to rly. Jackson later became an airline pilot and crashed to his death during World War II while flying a U.S. Army plane. ·'I planned to think up a face for •Downwind,· but after a few weeks I still couldn't come up with one." By that time, hundreds or letters had been received from readers asking about the character's face. Because of the reader interest, Mosley de- cided never to draw one. 2. Who was "Fat Stuff" in real life? When Mosley nee<ted a South Sea island native in the late 1930s to help ··smilin' Jack" out of one of his ad· ventures, "I remembered when I was a kid there was one really fat Indian in Oklahoma named 'Richmond Bil- ly' whose belly was so fat the buttons would pop off his shirt. He became 'Fat Stuff."' 3. Where did you find so many sexy women to portray in your comic? Mosley was way before his time in drawing provocative females in a comic strip. The women in "Smilin" Jack's " life tended to be well· endowed beauties who were obvious- ly braless. Mosley calls them "de- icers," the name for devices used to melt ice forming on aircraft wings. His answer is simple. "It took a hell of a lot or personal research and a good memory •' P .S. "Smilin' Jack" and Mosley, who are working on their memoirs, both say they would love to bear from their old friends. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, June 3, 1981 We sell first quality and discontinued merchandise from Sears Retail and Catalog Distribution. "Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many Sears Retail stores around the country. PRINTING CALCULATOR was48.99 NOW 31.99 SMALL FRYER II was24.99 NOW 15.99 effective 1113111 15 FOOT EXTENSION CORD was 2.99 NOW . 1.49 8 GALLON WET·N-DRY VAC was 59.99 NOW 39.99 10 INCH TABLE SAW was 10.99 NOW 6.49 DELUXE 10-CUP COFFEE MAKER was 31 .99 NOW 19.99 (tall sizes) 48~~ NOW 329.88 BOYS SHIRTS Y'ere 8.99 (3 onl~) , .... ' ~j NOW 1·~J:::1!'ii.-· 3. 49 STORE HOURS · Ask about St·an. <'rt•dit plans. ..... f"l1. .. ,_ ... ...... , .. ,_, .. llu4o1 II: ... $: .. NOW MONEY MARKET RATES · . INSURED . ON YOURACHECKING DOLLARS Newport Balboa Money Savings COMPARE WHAT YOU GET: Market Money Market Fund PROFIT CHECK Account Interest Earnings tied to the money market YES YES Check writing ability YES YES ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FSLIC: up to $100,000 no YES Earn today's near record interest rates for six months no YES Long weekday business hours no YES Saturday business hours no YES Free safe deposit boxes no YES Free travelers cheques no YES Free use of Community Room no YES Free photo copying no YES Your money kept in the U.S.A. right here in California no YES The Money Market PROFIT CHECK Account is backed by an Overdraft Certificate rate. At lhe end of each six month period. the interest rate Account secured by a six month Money Market Certificate. When a check may change upon renewal of the Money Market Cen ificute. Is written in excess of the amount in the PROFIT CHECK Account, money Deposit• to the PROFIT CHECK Accou111 arc automatically used to is 1utom11ically advanced from an Overdraft Accoun1 to cover Ui.check. pay back any loanJ In force 11 the time of the deposit up to the deposit Advances are made in m11l1lplcs of S500.00. up" to 90% of.the Money Market amount: 510.000 mimmum deposit m 1uired to open the account. Federal Certificate. Interest 11 charged on the dilly outstanding ballnce of the RegulationJ prohibit tJ\c compounding of interest durina the tonn of the Overdraft Account 11 the daily periodic rite 1% over the Money Market Certificate. CA.LL FOR ADDrTIONAL INFORMATION. 8NEWOORT BALBOA . Savings Coming Soon To Corona del Mar hF#'T Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wedn.eday, June 3, 1881 ......... WL WEATHER - A mother hen provides otective covering for one of her offspring ring a rain shower at Knott's Berry Farm Buena Park. e w smugglers f coke jailed MIAMI (AP) -On a pitted, makeshift runway into ranchland deep in a Bolivian jungle, chie Fiano watched nervously as peasants ded $9 million worth of cocaine aboard bis plane. Fiano and three other Americans were sur· ded by dozens of Bolivians loyal to Roberto arez, reputed kingpin of Bolivia's biggest drug uggling gang. "I'll tell you what scared me ... They thought were legitimate drug dealers. So I was think· : 'What's to stop them from ripping us off or m holding us hostage?" • "What's gonna happen if all of a sudden they rt coming out of the fields and they say, 'You'd tter tell Miami to release the $9 million or you're dead?"' Fiano and fellow U.S. Drue Enforcement Ad· nistration agents, posing as lieutenants of an or· nized crime family, went on to pull off the big· st cocalne sting in U.S. history -a haul the A estimates at more than $107 million on the eel. But like many undercover asents trying to er,ck the spiraling cocaine import business, Fiano tisks his life and spends hundreds of hours on an ktvestigation only to be frustrated later. In the case that sent Fiano to the Bolivian )Wlgle, only one person was taken into custody -IUfiedo Guiterrez, owner of an air taxi service in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, and alleged "money man" for ~arez' organization. , Guiterrez was indicted ln lliami on multiple iltug conspiracy counts. But bis son soon arrived }lb cashier's checks and paid the $1 mUlion ball. iterrez fled to Bolivia, out of the grup of U.S. icials. •'What bothers me more than anything is here m with the biggest case in history -85' pounds hat bothers me more . an anything is here I am ith the biggest case in his- ry ~ 854 pounds of dope and ·no bodies to put on ial.' dope -and no bodies to put on trial," Fiano d. "Nobody is paying for it and these guys are k in business . . . " Few cocaine smugglers go to jail because ny never go to trial. Some, like Guiterrez and eged Colombian cocaine gang leader Martha Gaviria-Montoya, skip bond. There are an mated 2,700 drug fugitives -700 more than the ber of DEA agents. • Raising bail is no problem for those in the ratlve cocaine trade. The DEA's Con Dougherty s: "these guys come up with their bond money ht out of their pockets." When trials are possible, the judicial system ves slowly. Most arrests have been in the thea.stem United States, overloadin1 docketl re. U.S. Attorney Atlee Wampler said the klog in southern Florida is so severe that if bis lee stopped opening new cases today, it would e 9~ years to clear it. There have been some major drul aeburet, d some convictions: -A federal jury took just over 20 minutes to nvict ltaac Kattan-Kassin ol pc19seaion with ln· t to distribute some 20 kilolfama ol cocaine. -Two leaden of the Black Tuna sang re· ind long prison terms and heavy ftnet alter be· found guilly on various dru1 counts. The 1 '1 alleged Colombian rinpeader, Raul Davila· eno, also known u "Black Tuna," wu never rebended. -In February, DEA agents sei1ed 121S pound.I eocaine ~d arrested two men, lncludinl the ector ol a federally funded youth proaram in aml. Char&• later were dropped a1almt the ectot, wbo bas resl&ned, but are pendin1 alnlt the second mu. -AIJ. ..Umated 111 t*llldl ot coealne wen CID the )dp 1 .. 1 ID ()pll"atkm Grouper, the A-O>ut Guard effort that brouCbt 10CD• JIO ar· ta. -On May U, a1nta ID Hawali eoDftleated IO ·undi ol cocue that bad bela •muallecl lia fiom AiQeriea. -vC1 r m. aceoa. ID Mlaml eamftaeated m el eocalne ID two cna. that antnd • a -mm flllbt trOm Eeudol' tldl aialitb. No ........ •1&MA111t\a&MPNu America bat developed a tute tor wine. In bUel)' two moathl, wtlM ablpmeata ID UM Un.lted 8tatel have almoet tripled and per-capita coa1umptloo bu more than doubled. Marvin a. Sbanken, editor and publl1ber ot "Impact," a new•letter on wlne and dl1Ulled 1plrita, 1aid the futeat·arowinf 1e1ment ol the market la white wine. "There an more occuionl to drtJlk white wine because it's al10 u11d a1 a eocttatl beverqe," be said. "It '• rehelhina. It'• cold. It'• ll1ht. People like the ta1te. And It's certainly fashionable." Wine lblpmenta ln the United Stat.. lD 1980 totaled ies mllUon 1allona, the equivalent ol leu than one iallon per person. Last year, Sbanken Hld, ablpmena. totaled an ~mated •75.I mlllloo aallona, equal to Just over two 1allou per penon. Two dec:adel •t<>• 7' perctnt ol the table wine aold lD the Un.lted sttt" WU red; 17 P91'HDt WU white and t percent wu roll. 1D t•, wbite wl.De accowited tor ~ percent ol tbl m.n.t. eompared to 2e percent for red and 20 perc.t tor l"ON. In the last 10 years alone, white wilM aesmeata have in· creased lixfold. Table wlDea -1enerally drJ and relatively low lD calortet and alcohol -have f1'0W1l ln f.C?Pularity at the expeue ol 1wHt dessert wlnn. 'Jn 1970, deuert wine held • percent ot the market," Sbanken said. "Lut ye,ar, tt held only t .5 pettent. Thia aceaarlo reflect. the cban1tn1 American tute prefer~nce ... " Why the switch? .. A more aopb.laticated palate appreciates a drier wine," Sbanken said. He said a recent 1tud)' by National ramUy Opinloo lnc. of Toledo, Oblo, •aid the btpett wt.De coo1umer la a woman a1ed ao to •. llviDI lD the West with a hou.Hbold lneome ol SZS,000 or more. She drtnb wine moeUy at home, with dinner. Shanken said conaumen do not have to apend a lot ol mcoey on wine. "You can flDd much-more· than·aclequate everyday wtnes for t:Z to $5 a bot· tle," be said. The smile blJ1e1t 1ource ot wine aold ln the Unlted St.ates la California. alt.boutb the state's share ol the market bu Ouctuated sllibUy over the lut 10 years. 1n 1970, Callfomla produced 71 percent ol the table wine shipped ln the United States. In 1978, however, only fJ'1 percent o( the ta· ble wb)e j bipped in thla country wu Californian. It pays high interest: This new investment opportunity pays high interest. like a T-bill. The current annual rate is guaranteed tor the tull term when funds are held to maturity. The Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund is not a savings account. so it's not insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Instead. your investment is backed by U.S. Government or Federal Agency securities. Plus you pay no brokerage tee. No service charge. The tam is 30 days. The FidelUy Fed Saver's Fund allows you to invest tor as short a time as 30 days. As long as 89 days. Or any number ot days in between. It gives you high earnings with almost as much liquidity as money market funds. Plus the tlexiblltty to choose your own term. There's never been an investment opportunity quite like it before. The minjnu1m is SJ.,000 You can open a Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund with as little as $1,000. That's a far cry from the high $10.000 mini- mums on T-bills and makes high earnings possible tor many more people. lt,aets C flee 5~%·Ibest Cbecking ' The Fidelity Fed Saver's Fund automatically qual111es you for the Gtand Award, our complete package of banking serVices. including a service-charge tree sv .. % interest checking account. So stop tntb the Fidelity Federal omce nearest you. We think this new Saver's fUnd is a creative,· innovative opportunity that will allow many more peQple to earn high interest. We're looking forward ... to helping you save. Assets over $1.6 billion . .___ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 How does Ronald Reagan get, auxiy with , ENTERTA I NMENT 86 OBITUARIES 88 BUSINESS 89 lllTllGTll 1111:1 I f1111111 lllllY attacking Wall Street? ... B9 D 0 'They gave a hearing .but nobody came• By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .. o.tty ........... The Huntington Beach City Council held a special public hearing on the city's 1981·82 operating budget of $47 milllon this week. And nobody came. "This ls the first time that I can recall that no one has spoken on the budcet," Mayor Ruth Finley ~aid today, adding that the public apathy made her "uncomfortable." "Everybody was surprised," she said. "I know there's a lot of budget watchers out there. But I don't know where they are this year." Lavender lawsuit upheld DrusciUa Tysen's lavender· colored boutique in Laguna Beach is all right as far as Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert R . Fitzgerald is con· cerned. But because the color of Miss Tysen's establishment is unap- pealing to both her neighbors and the city's Design Review Board, Judge Fitzgerald has decided he will not dismiss a lawsuit against her. The boutique owner had sought to have the city's legal action thrown out of court last week and Fi t,zgeraJd said he would withhold his ruling until he drove by her establishment. Having done so, he said in bis ruling issued late last Friday that he found the purple color was"' at· tractive, eye-catching and not of- fensive to th.is court.'' However, he sald that lbe color of the Strawberry Shortcake boutique was an appropriate mat- ter to be considered by Laguna's Design Review Board, which had previo45ly denied ~r aJ>pllcatiod , to keep the boututue's lriender hue. About 30 neiehbors also had filed a petition with the board pro- testing the color of the building on Pacific Coast Highway. Miss Tysen could not be reached for comment this mom· ing. Bikes slate d for bridge ~ The Coast Highway bridge over the Santa Ana River on the Newport Beach-Huntington Beach border will be modified to permit bicycle traffic. Under the proposal approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, the county will pay $52,000 of the estimated $207 ,000 cost, with Caltrans funding the remainder. The bike lane on the bridge will link existing bike trails that now end on either side or the bridge. Driver dies afte r crash A 35-year-old Placentia man died from injuries he received Tuesday night in a two-vehicle traffic collision at the intersec- tion of B&1tanchury Road and Brea Boulevard in Fullerton, police said. A Fullerton Police spokesman said a pickup truck driven by Elsa Corillo, 27, of Brea, w&J beadint 11outbbound on Brea Boulevard when it collided with a car headina e11tbound on Bastancbury about 10:35 p.m. The driver ot the car died about an hour later at Anaheim Memorial ffolpital. His identity is bein~ withheld pendint notiflcaUon ol next of ltln. ln- vestiaation into the cause of the accident it contlnulna, police •ild. · ¥alley,: reetau~ant robbed b y. gunman A reataurant ln Jl'ouataln Valley wu robbed of S400.Tu8· day nlpt by afiman 1n Im 3111 armed wtUa a aDdcun, ~ r..,orud. 'The 1UIJ)eet entered the Man• Calleacler Ple.Sbop, oa Br~ 9tnet near Oufteld AYenue, at 1:40 p.m., dtqil.,.s a baiMllUa in bis walatbud ad • aaked tht caabler for tbe nllbt'• rfflipU In.,.,., ..... Tbe blDdlt td 1111..., ... drpve away la • ..._. •• ~k.~tald. The mayor said in past years special interest groups such as se nior citizens or library boosters have asked for larger allocations from the proposed budget. On Monday, the City Council scheduled a public bearing JO minutes before the normal meet· ing for discussion of the 2·inch thick budget proposal. But the hearing lasted less than one minute as the council members stared al a group of a bout 30 people who stared back in silence. Tbe 30 apparentJy arrived early for the regular meeting. "We 'r1! go\pg to hold another public bearing on the budget at the June 15 meeting to see if anyone wants to say anything," Mayor Finley said today. "We'd like the public to get involved." Accordlng to the city clerk's office, the preliminary budget isn't on the best seller list this year, either. "We've only had a couple of people come in and look at it," said Connie Brockway, deputy city clerk. "It's not like last TOP JUDGES -Connie Goldade, 17 (left), and Tina Dils, 11, both of Fountain Valley, won fll'St place in judeing contests at the 4>H Spring Fair. Fair mascot Orchico congratulates the girls, who are members of the Fountain Vafley CloverdaJes 4-H. Fish frY begim Friday in Mesa (;osta Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club officials expect more than 50,000 people to attend their 36th annual Fish Fry, a three· day carnival in Costa Mesa beginning Friday. This year's event at Lions Park will feature the usual $3.50 fish dinner, carnival rides and game booths. The fund-raiser will also feature a parade, bands and dancers, baby and beauty con- tests and drawings for a new Ford Escort, color television and other prizes. According to Jim Ferryman, publicity chairman for the event, the Lions Club expects to raise about $55,000 which it will donate to 25 local charities, in- cluding the UCI Lions Eye Bank, Boys Club and Girls Club. In the past 35 years, the Fish Fry bas raised more than $600,000 for locaJ charities, Fer- ryman said. The event, which started lo 1945, was the idea of two Lions Club members, according lo Ferryman. Bob Skiles, a ca~val man, got the idea and with the help of Heinz Kaiser's fish batter. the event became a reality. On Friday, the carnival rides and game booths open at 6 p.m. At 7: 30 p. m., Band X will enter- tain. The first drawing will be at 9p.m . On Saturday, the parade, with Lt. Gov. Mike Curb as grand marshal, begins at 10 :30 a.m. on Harbor Boulevard at Wilson Street. At noon, fish dinners go on sale. Also scheduled for Saturday are the parade awards at 2 p.m., a drawing at 3: 15 p.m. and the Arlee Higbee Dancers at f :lS p.m. Then at 6 p.m .. there will be another drawing and. at 7 p.m., the Plaza Rhythm Band w i II perform. The color television drawing will be at 9 p.m. On Sunday, the festival will conclude With the annual beauty contest at 2 p.m. and a baby c~­ test at 3:30 p.m. A drawing is set for 5:30 p.m .. the Dorothy Jo Dancers will perform at 6: 15 p.m. and ijle drawing for a 1981 Ford Escort will be at 8 p.m. )'ear when a lot of people wanted copies of the budget.'' City officials say the pre· liminary budget ls tightly woven and doesn't have much room to shift funds for special interests. But city authorities said they at least expected someone to ask. The largest portion of the $47 ,093,301 operating budget for the fiscal year belinning in July, 28 percent, goes to the police de- partment. Next is public works, 21 percent, the fire department, 16 percent, non-departmental items (utilities and operating overhead costs) 12 percent, com- munity services, (parks) 10 per· cent, administrative services, 5 percent, elected offices, 4 per- cent and development services, 4 percent. Anticipated income of $46,998,ll>O comes from property tax, 27 percent; sales tax, 22 percent; utility tax, 12 percent; licenses and permits, motor vehicle in-lieu tax, 7 percent each, revenue from use ot local money and property and other local taxes 6 percent each, ac· cording to city officials. The city has a general fund re- serve from last year ot $1.1 million to make up the dif- ference between revenue and planned expenditures, accordina to city officials. Besides the operating budget city officials plan to spend another $34 million of state and federal funds specifically earmarked for items such 81 housing and redevelopment., capital out.lays, park acquisition and development and water utilities, according to city ot- flcials. • Deputy said Samaritan,: Attorney says 'kidnaps' were only meant as favors An Orange County Superior Court jury was to begin de- liberations today in the kidnap- ping trial of sheriff's deputy George Loudermilk of Costa Mesa, who was portrayed Tues- day by his lawyer as a falsely accused "good Samaritan." Loudermilk, defense lawyer AJ Stokke said, was only trying to spare the four women he is accused of abducting the in· dignity or being thrown into Orange County Jail as suspected drunken drivers. CHP eyes $5 ,000 c lue aft e r cra sh The twisted remains ot a turbocharged Porache and $5,000 in $50 bills are the clues California Highway Patrol of- ficers were left with followinl a blgb·s~ crash this week on the border of Newport Beach. Officers clalm the 6:30 p.m. collision Monday at the Coast Highway bridge over the Santa Ana River bas them puzzled. The car 's driver and passenger, spotted by several witnesses, reportedly ran from the wreckage and took the keys with them. The money. says CHP in· vestlgator Howard Whitmore, was found in the car's glove compartment. One witness told investigators that one ol the men shouted, "It's bot." as be ran. He could have meant be thought the car. was about to burst into flames, but Whitmore says he believes the fleeing man meant the car was stolen. The Porsche was first spotted traveling at speeds estimated at 100 mph tbroueb Huntington Beach on Pacific Coast Highway. Whitmore claims the speeding car struck a guard rail on the bridge, angled across tour lanes or traffic and plowed into some rock near a trailer parlt alter cutting through some brush. One witness told officers that the passenger suffered what ap· peared to be facial laceratJona. Police believe be llltely has sought medical treatment but they'reun- sur~ wbe~e. "George Loudermilk was d<>- ing a favor for each and every one of these people," Stokke said in his closing statements to the jury in Superior Court Judge James K. Turner's courtroom. Loudermilk is charged with four counts of kidnapping and three counts of false imprison· ment in connection with four al- leged incidents bet ween July and October of 1980. In the most aggravated of the cases, according to the prosecu· lion, the defendant took a 33- year-old Mission Viejo woman to a secluded hilltop area near Irvine and threatened to rape her and kill her last October. "What type of conduct is this to engage in, especially for a police officer?" Deputy District Attorney Michael Jacobs asked the jury Tuesday. "Ladies and gentlemen, this is an aggravated kidnapping by a ' police officer. There Is no de- fense whatsoever," Jacobs said.' Loudermilk, a father of four, was suspended from duty pend- ing trial. He is free on his own recognizance. Bus fares hiked; passes sell fast Fares to ride Orange County's public buses went up this week -and so did the demand for monthly passes. Several of the 119 distributors who sell the passes for the Orange County Transit District reported that they have run out of them, a district spokesman said. "We've never bad this happen before," said Madeleine Dickert, community relations officer. who said OCTD has averaged about 11 ,000 pass sales per month. Bus riders began paying 75 cents rather than 50 cents Mon· day for a one-way local ride dur- ing commuting hours. The fare during middays, evenings and weekends increased to 60 cents. Regular monthly bus pas~ , also went up from $17 .50 to , $21.50, but that didn't seem to bother bus riders who reportedly had many of the distributo~ running out of the wallet-sized cards by last weekend. Buai.nesses such as J .C. Pen-· ney's, Albertson's, Gemco and Laguna Federal Savings & Loan Association sell the passes for OCTD as a public service. Ms. Bickert said OCTD of- ficials won't know the effects or increased fares on ridership un- til later this week. District officials say tbat 1 purchase of monthly passes is less expensive than paying daily .. fares. (:o~tests ·abound Valley Founder's Day plans progress . A 10 kilometer run, a youth photo contest and adult softball and tennis tournaments will be conducted during Fountain Valley's upcoming Founder's Day celebration at the Re<:rea· lion Center, 16400 Brookhurst St. The men's slow·pitch softball tournament will be held Satur- day and Sunday. Team entry fees must be paid at the city recreation department offices, 10200 Slater Ave. Adult singles and doubles ten- nis tournaments will be held June 13 and 14. More informa· lion is available by calling the Tennis Center, 839-5950. Distance runners can enter the second annual Fountain Valley 10-K run on June 13. A 5-K and a one-mile fun run also will be held, with proceeds to 1 benefit the West Orange County YMCA. Awards will be given in the lO·K race. The entry fee of.$7 in-I e ludes a Devaney running singlet shirt. Entries mu.st be received by May 30 to guarantee a singlet. For Information, call , race director Chris Rochelin, 842-2607. A photo contest, for age 18 and younger, is planned with lb~ theme, "Scenes in Fountah1 Valley.'' Black and white or col .. or entries are permitted in various age categories. Student aid panel open The West Orange County Consortium for Special Educa- tion is seeking applicants for the Community Advisory Commit· tee for that agency. Conclusions challenged Fee is $2 per entry, with no limit. All photos by be 5 X 1 or ·x 10 inches, and must be subr milted by Friday, May 29 at the Recreation Department, 10209 Slater A\'e. The consortium provides services for handicapped stu· dents up to 21 who live in the boundaries of the Fountain Valley, Huntineton Beach City, Runtinllon Beaah Union Hltb, Ocean View, Seal Beach or Weatmlnster Elementary school districts. The commiltee meets once ·a month to conduct bu1ineu aDd to advise the consortium on de- velopment and review of local olaqa foe 'Pfflaleducation. lb.,... L1Me Roela, dauatMr ol llr. W tilrl: Ch•a. T. ltoth of FouataiD Valle1, has been awarded a Pre1tdent11I Sebolarsblp to Valparalao Valftl"lb In llldiaaa. SM wW M ftialled la tbe C.Ollep of HUrstai. • Newport city manager calls FAA memo "self;serving" B)' STEVE MARBLE Ol•INlfrl .... Newpo Beach City Manager Robert ynn bu challenged the conclusions of a Federal Avia- tlon Administration document that states Wynn enc:ourated chant• in takeoff procedUNa at Jobn Wayne Airport. Wyrui wrote a rour-paae af. fldavlt followlni disclosure ol the Im FAA document duriq the ftul day of a nolle Mrluee hHiiDS l11t month In Cotta M111. Wnm aubmltted bis af· ndaYlt to pa. admlnlttratlve law Judie whio presided over the hearlnl. Th• db' mana,.r atai. lllat tM FAA m~ appqn to M "a Hlf-lervtia'-etatemeat" to bollter tit rM 1 deeWOft to' rai•• Jtt power outbaca from 500 to 1.000 feet at lobil WQM Airport. Thi cutback mo••· It It 1enerally ~lldled, '9Ult-td ha.._.... ... . ..,~ ..... oma ... •UorMJ repreMlltl•I Oraat• Cou•t1 rovenuneet iuria1 tM DOIM varianc' bearing, araued that the 1979 document shows Wyun telephoned FAA officials in W•shiniton D.C. the same day a deciaioq was made to order the cutback chance. FAA oftldala coatacted thls week "ere unahle to confirm precisely when the cutback de· citlon •u reached. Tbe docu· meat, ~ by Gatake under a Fnedom of baformat.ion ault, auPPoeedlY detall1 a phone con- verlaUan between Wynn, former Newpan Mayor Paul ltyckoff and WWlam KNipr, an FM chief. Wynn aald be recall• the telephone call and i1 "aur· .Pr1•ed" tbat tb• rA~ memo doe• nat ... tJon the rMMal for t.be call. SP'edflcall1. W1na nld tM caW WM PlaM after couatJ • ...,. ............. to allow .... •uaa"" tM ...,.....,,_ .,._ ·,.,mat u.. ~ atnort. '.th• m waa u.., uc1 ltW lat ballned from operattial oul Of Jobn Wayae AtfPort. W,. laid tbeN WU CWtro \ in the city that other jets, name- ly the m and DC-9, were to be ordered to cut back power at 1,000 feet while the 7%7. durlni the testint period, would be permitted to cut back power at ~feet. The city mua1er said that 1uc:b a disparity wo~d have l"'O" duced mialeading noise readinl reauJta. The 1t'19 tettl were conducted to determine how much nolle the 7%7 Jet produced. Wynn, tn hh 1tatement, clatma "a compariaon of tbe not•• foo.tprlnt of the re11pectiYe aircraft Would be meantftl) .. at be9t, and at wont we ._.. fHrfal that erroaeou i.t deta would be affd to Jutlfy 911· tndadiaill Of a DCUJ alreraft." TIM PAAdoC._lilt .. Ml m.ntWD ddli llDi el dlir111 '•· ''I CManlJ' .. .,....,,. ~ coat_.., •"tflat the .. = dum WM dleuMd : lta u .... .....,... At••• .. bo ..... .,ltA'•'-......... claa. to moclf1 .. .....--,... Nd .... It Joba •• ,.. Airport.') ' A wards will be announced June U . For information on the photo contest, call Bill Palmet, 983-8321, ext. 23'7. Speed read course slated . Grunion run a groan GREAT GOOSE CHA.Sa DEPT. -Hun1ry cttlHDI 1lon1 our best of all possible coasts can hardly wa1t now for tomor· row night when food considered a great delicacy begins to wash upon our shorelines. The Great Grunion Runs begJn ~ Thursday. \ In event you are among the uninitiated, grunion ere little ~ sil'jlr fish, about six inches long, that begin running up on our betWhes to spawn in March. That means they lay eggs in the sand. These eggs then get washed around and soon make new little grunions. . , The small fish are allowed (;;; to go about their business un-• molested for the firs~ couple of ~~ months of this spawnmg. TOM MURPH IN I -~-r, Btrr NOW, IT BECOMES '!""', -------·~ ...... ·~-'-open season and you can go out · after the new moon, wait for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for dinner. Isn't that simple? No, it isn't. Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum· mer camp and all the veteran campers ,from summers past dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They gave you a gunny sack and instructed you to go out after midnight with the bag and a fl ashlight and capture snipes from the treetops. ' Or maybe they simply sent you over to the next camp down the line to borrow a left.handed monkey wrench. It's like that with grunion hunts. You may go out on the "If you're a gnmwn. SIT, I'm really not interested . . " beach and wait patiently for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. DESPITE TRIS, marine biological savants seem to keep issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches • between 11:18 p.m. and 1:18 a.m. Friday. See how precise that • is? Trouble is, nobody ever tells the grunion about it. The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that are uncrowded at the darkened ends. This might include the · Huntington Beach city or state beaches, the Newport-Balboa · Peninsula, Big Corona, Laguna's Main Beach, Victoria in Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. Please note that this said might be. Not will be. Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would-be grunion ' hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in favor of the grunion going in. FIRST, IF YOU are more than 16 years of age, you must have a valid California sportsfisbing license to take grunion. Otherwise, you may be having an expensive chat with the fish and game warden who has also been known to be wandering around out in the surf wash in the dark. Fiirther, it1s a no·no to try grabbing grunion with anything but your bare hands. There will be no nets. There will be no buckets. There will be no hooks. This probably means there will also be no grunion. Grunion are slippery little devils that wiggle a lot. Captur· · ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ice cubes in running water. ALL THESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer the perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2:12 to4:12 a.m. Don't blame me if you don't catch anything but a cold . . - : alcons pose threat 'o city's pigeons :PHILADELPHIA CAP) -Pigeons ave been ruling the roost here for ears, but they will soon be raced lth unwelcome company. Peregrine cons, among the fastest birds on cities, including Philadelphia, but a decade ago they nearly disappeared from the United States because of pesticides, most notably DDT. Two years before the pesticide was outlawed in 1972, the Peregrine Fund was established at Cornell Universi- ty. Since then the non·profit or- ganization has raised and released 270 peregrines in the East. arth, are returning to town. (l'he falcons, which swoop down on ir prey at an estimated 180 mph, ton pigeons and small rodents. IThey used to roost in a number of • • lamingos end -year celibacy HIALEAH, Fla. (AP> -After nine years of eUbacy, the famous flamingos at Hialeah Race ursP. are back in the mood. •·we bad practically given up hope," Angelo ;esta, direct.or of operations at the track, said. Tbe big, pink birds that live ln a pond ln the enter or the track quJt fooling around after the reeding season of 1972. · But recently, the flamingos be1an sbapin1 lies oI mud left by track workers into nesta. morous males spread their wings and strutted r ound tb• pond in theJr ritual love dance. Do you read the P l,JBLIC NOTICES publis hed In t his newspaper dally? Public notices ·are published under court or· ders or legislative codes for the purpose of notify. log one or more In · dlvldua~ or so~e pro· posed action or past event which may ad· versely or favorably ar. feet their nghts, interest or duties, and also for the purpose or aivlng such persons the oppertumty to protect their rights. or to be heard in the matter. Many public notices have ereat value to taxpayer•. such as those notices published by muolclpalllies, public authority corporations, trtasuren and others who are required by lav. to publish financial l'e· ports, budset hearln& ' notlA!n, onllnancta or ad vertlaernel)ts or b1d1 oft pu bile work . Thoe not1u1 hep you In· form..t H to how and •ll1 )OUI' laa dollars are beln1 t•pended. They aho pru•ent or dh· tCMar.,,. fra&lds, raldt on publlc trH1ur1.. and favorklam ·UI tta. lettint ol ~l*c tGritr~\I SAN MARTIN PINOT CHARDONNAY -Reg. S6.'49 750ml fresh. Crisp & A Touch of O.k GILBEY GIN c.c. 80 Proor 1.75 Liter SUTTER HOME TE ZINFANDEL CHAMPAGNE J ..,._ ... , ....... 84 H /I' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednttday, June 3, 1981 • UED -Country lnger Georae Jones s the subject of a 10.1 million suit by • a mes and Stellle yan, owners of a outhem Ohio music ark. They contend he singer damaged heir reputations by ailing to 11ppe~r at a May 24 concert. PICTITlout •VM••• fflC1't110US •uaa•H• PICYITtout euaa••• Craekdow.n planned PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE P\IBUC NOTICE CHP units added to Interstate 210 ...,,.. ITAT ... llT NMW ITAffMl"1' ..,.,. ITA,...... .. T Tiie ,_._"'9 ,__ ar• •tat Tiie ......... ,_,_ ar• ...__ TIM ......... ,_,_ are •lfle ....... : ~ .. : ...,... .. : PASADENA <AP) -The California IUshway Patrol bu be8UD a crackdown Oft speedln1 alon& new Interstate !10 a 43·mlte atretcb or hlebw~ tbat ieadJ conveniently Into tb• San Fernando Valley and ap- parently bas been tempUn& motorlata lo lay a beavy foot on the ac- celerator. CL•lilC>«N•N l'ltOl'•IUIH, ut Cal N•Wl'ORT HOM• LOA .. , (aJ HllWll'OflT HOM• LOAN, .... "We've been monltorine the traffic , .. ,, ~_,.,. .... Corff• -.1 Mar. ••c ...... Ut; (., HIW"°"T HOM• Ul; ... H•Wll'OttT HOM• LOAN, on r_.___._,_ 210 dotna a-AA aur Cal...,.... LOAN, INC., .... l:lf; Ccl NaWll'OttT .... m : tel HIWll'OflT HOM• LOAN Ulll'ISWW...:o -~ • ffr• a.~ .. ..._ .. NOMI LOAN, N•. 1411 (411 LOAN, Na. IU; (411 NIWl'ORf veya ut.W.d.nt radar -and one thlna ... ff, .... °"'*Mft .. Pr_.. N•Wl'OltT ..oMa LOWN LOAN. .... NOMI LOAN, .... IM; (•) NIWll'OltT we can aay for aure is that there is c._., l'emltv TMI c .. _...._ 2At; C•> N•wl'CMIT MOMS 1.0A111, .... NOMI LOIUf, .... us: m Naw.-01n d rini I Ii .. .tth rtO.C ...... lfTf'llllt ...... Odlliar JO;CflN~THOMeLOAN.-. HOM• LOAN, N•. tU ; Ct l S: mi!: ~i!e'd°u~~.~ h:~~d.' "Yi:~ :-1 =~1.~~.:-;,-· c.r-::!'. ::t N~=~~: ~~Ni ~~~~~~~°t~~':( see, lt'a a very nice, very converu'ent 0•11~;::'.•nan, 250 ~.,,Y LOAN, No. i.s. 11 tet11W• ........ 17 c..-• ..._, ~ ....... A,,_, eor-*' MM, CalHoorN. H~ 9-dl, Cfilllillrllla.... c:.lltorllia .... freeway... f2US NE~T HOM• LOAN. INC.,. NEWllOltT HOM• LOAN, INC .•• Allen c1e11de11•11, uo ... ,,., Cot1Mrftla~...-a11M. C•lltotllla t.,.,.,•U•• The freeway now stret~he.s hom Aft ..... , eor-•• Mer, ClllllWlll• N•Wl'OltT HOM• l.OAN, . NIWl'OU HO•• LOAN, Laverne northeast almost to ~ .. 111n1,.. .. ,. caMuctM.., • INc. c.rtiu.u. INC. c.rt1t._, The CHP began add.int 10 more Newball. Prior to April 10 the ..,..,.,_...,..., ~ ~ u.ntts to t.boH already uatpecl to freeway had stopped in Sunland. Thi• :=!;.c=-:;:, with tflt ~'=. !:':.7:!. Patrol the llJ'U. Tbe project wtll use c 111 ......... .,°' .. _~ Padilla laid that the CHP bu re· °" y ..... ,. .... .._.., ... Mey Tltlt ....._ w .. lli.d with h Tiiis _........ -llW -U. additional patrol cars, motorcycles ~~':~ c. HADl'OllD Gounty C1M1o10r.,.. c:-icy ... Moy c_,., Claftl llfOr-. C11Y11tY ,._, and helicopters, aaid Officer Manny ceived a $250,000 federal grant for the A...,.., .. .._ "· ""· ,,,,.. 11. , .. 1. ,...... Padilla. six·montb project. ..... • l'111t1•.,.. 0r .... c.... o.11y "' ... • "'*'..,.. 0r .. CM1t o.11y ,...._ ~---------------~-..,;..;_.., _______________________________ ...;;,. ____ ,19<.nty.......... Mey IJ, •• 27.J-a. 1"1 ttSM1 IMy ta ... 27,J-), 1"1 ttSMI ,.....,...C....Dftw TODl'S SCORESBY VODKA SCOTCH 175-ML 1.75-UTER • 659 1009 CASE OF 6 39.54 CASE OF 6 60.54 BOTil..E CASE UQUE<JRS RETAIL I RETAIL· Southern Comfort. 750-ML .......... 5.74 63.72 Jagenneister. 750·ML ................... 11.45 127 .20 Frangelico. 1soML ................ .11.92 t 29.95 lris.h Velvet, 75().ML . .. ............. ... ..11.89 132.08 Yukon Jack, 7»ML ... ................... ... 6.46 71. 7 3 Kamora, 750-ML . . .. ........ . .......... 6.41 71.15 Drambuie, 750-ML ............................ 13.35148.24 Galllano, 750-ML . ...... ...... ..... .... . 14.08 156.46 Greensleeves, 75Q.lo\L. .................. 10.53 116.95 BOURBONS Ancient Age. 1 75-UTER .. 12.20 66.50 Cabin Still, 1.75-UTER ... ... ............ .10.35 57 .50 Earty Times. 1.1>UT'ER . . . . .... .. . 11 .62 64.56 Ten High, 1 ?>LITER .. .......... 10.91 60.50 l.W. Harper, LITER .......................... 7.80 86.60 Jatk Daniels. LITER . . ... . . 10.71 118.97 Jim Beam, us-LITER .. . . . . . ...... .1 1.92 66.15 Old Charter 7 Year. 1 ?>LITER ....... 15.03 83.48 Old Crow, us-LITER ...................... 12.42 69.00 CANADIANS B~k Velve~ 1.1s.UTER .................... 11 .43 63.49 Canada House, 1.1>UTER ............... 11.74 65.19 Canadian Club, U>LrTER ............ ~ 1 7 .41 96.90 Canadian Mis~ 1.1s-UTER . .. ...... .1 1.45 63.18 Seagram's V.O., 1.1s-UTER ............ .16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.75-UTER .12.05 66.95 Seagram's Crown RoyaL l.ITER .... 15.62 173.55 Windsor Canadian. 1 75-UTER ........ 12.59 69.90 RUMS Appleton, 1so.ML . . .. .. . .. ... . ... 8.29 92.07 Bacardi Gold Reserve, 750-ML ........ 9.61 106.58 Mt. Gay Eclipse, 750-ML . .. ...... S.31 92.22 Bacardi Lt. or Dk., UTER ............... 6.64 73.58 Bacardi 151 Pf., LITER .. .. . .......... .1 1.29 125.34 Castillo Lt. or Dk., 1.1s-UTER ........ 9.01 50.00 Mywers's Jamaican, 1.15-1.JTER ..... 17.14 95.21 Ro" Rico U. or Dk., 1.1>UTER ....... 11.32 62.89 TEQUILA CutrvoGold, 1.75-UTER ........... : .. v .... 14.72 S-1.76 Cuervo White, 1.1s-UTER .................. 1328 73.74 Cuervo Oold 1800, 7!50JtU. ............. 10.06 1 t 1. 75 Montezuma W. and G., 1.15-UTER .11.17 62.01 Montezuma w. and G., LITER ......... 6.2Q 68.85 Pepe Lopez Qold 1.75-UTER ........... 13.04 72.44' Puerto VaBarta W. and G .• 15().ML . .4.61 51.20 oo;, EmlUo W. and o .. 1.15-LJTER._ .. 9.73 54.06 Don Emllo W. and G •• UTER ........... 5.56 61.79 saµza White, UTER.. ........................... 7 .60 84.48 Sauza Gold, LITER ...... ....... • ........... :8.48 94.16 Two Fingers White, UTER ................ 8.29 92.07 Two Fingers Qold, UTER ................ 9.14 101.50 Herrandura Anejo, 750-ML .............. 14.40 160.00 BLACK VELVET CANADIAN 1.75-LfTER ·1035 CASEOF662.t0 CHAMPAGNES ANDRE 239 750-ML CASE 26.01 JACQUES BONET 247 750-ML CASE 26.92 LEDOMAJNE 333 75().ML CASE 36.30 -COOKS 296 750-ML CASE 32..29 CHAN DON 883 7»ML CASE 96.25 KORBEL NATURAL 816 750-ML CASE 89.00 CHRISTIAN BROS. 4s1 75Q.ML CASE 50.30 MOETWHITE ST 1513 2sa 7~ CAsE28.I' GILBEY'S DON GIN EMILIO 1 75-1.JTER WH. & GOLD. UTER 969 490 CASEOF6 58.14 CASE OF 12 58.80 BOTTLE CASE ST. MICHELLE RETAIL RETAIL Cabernet Sauvlgnon. 1so .. .... . 6.24 White RlesHng. 750 .................... 5.25 Gewurzttamlner. 150 .................. 4.23 Merlot. 7'° ................................... 4.65 Chenln Blanc, 750 ... .................. 3.49 ROtle of Cabernet. 750 ............. 3.30 Grenache Rose,-150 ..... ... .. .. .. .. ... 3.65 Johannisberg RJesUng, 150 ... 4.64 ESTRELLA WINES Chenin Blanc,"°.. .. . ......... ........ 3A3 Johannisberg RJesUng, 150 ... .. 4.44 ZinfandeJ, 750. . ...... . ...... 4.04 Chardonnay. 150 .... . .............. . 6.87 Zlnfandel Rose, 150 ................ 3.43 Muscat Canelll, 150 .................. 5.65 Cabernet Sauvignon, 150 ..... .... 7 .06 Fume Blanc. 150 ..... ......... 4.84 ANGELO PAPAGINI Allcante Boushet ?SO-ML ......... ..4.35 Chenin Blanc 750-ML. ........................ 3.54 Madera Rose 7SO-ML ... ...... ......... . . 3.12 Muscat Alexandria 750-MI.. ............... 3.54 Muscato D'Angelo 7»ML. ............... 4.15 BERINGER WINES Chablis 750-ML ................... ......... ..2.39 Chenin Blanc 7so.ML .................... 3.03 Cabernet Sauvignon 1so-ML. ........... 4.50 Gamay Beaujolais 750-ML . 3.34 Johannlsberg Riesling 750·ML .... 4.50 Grey Riesling 750-ML 2.67 Chardonnay 750-ML.. 5.41 Plnot Noir 1so.ML,...... ....... .4.50 Zlnfandel 750-ML.1 .... •• ...... .. • ... 3.34 JOSEF HAUPT WINES Zellar Schwartz Katz75()(o\L .... . . .2.79 PiesPorter Mlchelsberg 750-MI.. ..... .2. 79 Liebfraumilch 750-MI.. ................. . .2.07 Schatzl 750-ML. .................................... 1.69 BRISA 68.00 57.20 46.00 50.60 38.00 36.00 39.60 50.60 37.40 48.40 44.00 74.80 37.40 61.60 77.00 52.80 47.30 38.50 34.00 38.50 45.10 26.00 33.00 49.00 36.30 49.00 29.00 59.00 49.00 36.30 30.45 30.45 22.50 18.50 12-0l.-6 PACK 11s CASEOF24 WARM 7,60 CASEOF24 WARM 6.60 SIMI WINES Chenin Blanc 7»ML ......................... 4.84 Gewurztramlner 7:io.ML ...... , ............. 5.65 Johannlsberg Rleslng 75C>ML ....... 4 .84 Plnot Chardonn-.y1~ ................ 8.07 Burg&aftdy1~ ........... tt .................. 2 .82 ~ 75().ML. ..•.•••••••••..••••••••..•••••••. 5.64 Plnc:it r.tolr7'°"MI... ............................... 6.35 ~ Sauvlgnoni"O"'L ........... 7 26 o.n.y a.u~ 7'°"""-................ 3.83 Rose of Cabernet 1'°""-................. 3.93 _,._ .. ,..., ....... 53.24 61.53 52.88 87.95 30.69 61.55 69.25 79.15 41.75 42.85 .,..._.9llecll.CA'*I ,..,.,. flvOll ..... Or .... c-t o.lly ,.,lot, Moy 11.•.v .J ... 1, 1•1 JU.Mt PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE RHOLllTICMI NO. tt·D PUBLIC NOTICE ltHOLUTICMI CW TM• eoAaDCW Olaac:TIMIS Off TN. MOUL TOtMl..U•L WAT•a DllTalCT D•CLARINO 11'1INTaNTIOlll1'0ANNIX "llOf'tlaTY TO IMl'RCW•AYNT Dt1Ta1CT NO. aA Cl•Wla) NOTICIWl"\laucM•A•n•• WHERE.AS, It,, tN llHlr• .. Illa._.. .. onaan .... ......,._.....,.. Otl A ltltCH'OlaO zoee• C .. A,NO• Wow l>IWlct CMHWOI lo -· (.,,..,. ~ ••• dlM<rlllMI '" E ....... NOTICE IS HE1tE•Y GIVEN thel "A"tolltltRHOlullOft,wllkhtllltlllltl1llt1«hadhentund l1t1yth1Hett,_,. ,,.. Ortrioa County ,.lonnlng Com· her•ln lllCOQ!Orotlld, t. lmpro-t OtWkt No. M CS.WI 9f MNWO; W mlasloft wtlt hlMd a llUllflc; llMrlllt IO WHERIE.AS,U. lloerdof Olndonftlldttt..itflt-u4MllllfwMI~ c«111def' r__.. of a 2.1 acre -cet • •m....--.t Oltlrlct No. M tS.-1 of MNWOwlll~Wdl,,.....rty; of llllld loco-teNrtlty IMlwMn MCI lrlstot ertd Z.nltll Aftnu., .. 11 of WHEREAS, 11 Is the dtslre of IM 9-G of Olt'edtrl lo conduCt II puMk SprMU Aft-Ill .... Sent• All• 1tiNrl119ot""'k,hpenGr1l"'9Y.....,..,.,, ..... _ ..... 1 ...... ,,......_ He'9111S -NUl!oft o1tenltory1111 tmpro_,..,.t Olltrkt ..._ M (~I of MNWO; o ..... H9rlne: J-u. "'' HOW, THEREFORE. the aoerd Of Olrecton .. MNWO OOES HEltEIY Time of HHfille: 1 :• p.m .. or ot ltl!IOLVE, DETERMINE AHO ORDER oa fol-I: -1119r•f'9r.. .......... a.cu. 1. Tlwlt It la 1119 '"*"'°"Of IN~ of o~ ol MNWO .. -· Locllllon: Hell .. AAlmllllttretMrt <ef\alll larrttory to lmpr-1 Olwlct No. M IS.WWI of MNWO. MMtl119 ltOOfl\. to CIYk Qntaf PIUI .... L TllM o ...... •-1119 Illa H1Mlor -let of Ule t«rltorf .. Ila Orin, Santo Ano, C•llfornl• '2102. ...""""· Wltkh mop aNll oowrn lot all •1o11a ••to ti. en.nt of .,,. ., .. lo Pr..,..I: Cltonge of Z-ca.e Ila.,.,....._ It Oft flla wltll Iha Sacr.tory of MHWO ortd It evelt..._ lor llllpec· No. zc -.i. ~to chonee cM-tlontlyany--or""90flslnt-..... teln property trom ttM Rt CSR I IK1ielt J. TllM Iha l«TllOty to lie --t• lmprew_,. Olltrkt No. M "Slngle-Femlly Ruldence I Sign IS.Wtrl .t MNWO INlll IM-•..t without terma end conditions. Rttlrlctlon)" OIRrkt lo ... PA (SRI ,_, .. 4. TNt HtaMIMftl• for c•rrylng out MY Pllf'po99 of Mid ,...,._ "Pro1 ... 1ono1 -Admlnlatrotlve Of. rnent Olstrl<t Ho. :IA IS.-1. lnclwd ... PoYm9"( .t .,..11w;1po1 of -IM.-t"' flee CSlgn R"*'ktionl'' otstrlct. eny llorldlor worrenb outatancl'"9 llNll IM lrtlad e11elutlwly ""*' tlW I.,.. In Comp Ienco with the Celllornl• ·Mid lm....-.t Olltrkl, lncllldlftg the t9"1tery --'"""'°· Envl'°""'*'tal Quality ~t: lectlM J. Tllot o publlc h .. rlno lie -.,,. ..,... IW'"Y I• coltect on.,,. - It wes dltermlnecl tlltt •1"'°"911 lion of 1119 .,..Mllon of cel'Uln '9t'rlW'f to ,,,,..,.._, 011111<1 Ne. JA Ille pr---pteJkl CCMlld htYO O CS.WM) -... y .-mtltM r.1att119 loMVof tflttongol .. to lie Mid llt t:• "9flllk onl effe<I on U. .. ¥1-t, p.m .. or H -Ulereatt•r ••I• prect~l ot U. olflc• af MNWO, 27M Le , .. ,. wlH -.... algnlllc.,,. 9ff9ct In PH RO.O. l.AlgllN Hlilwt, Co. tZ677,.., J ... 11, 1"1, lfld thetet Mid time - thh COM HUUH Ill• mltlg•tlon Pl•<• pn>vldacl for Mid publk heorlno any ....-........... 111c1•11111 meoturet deacrlMd In Negetlv• ---*'ellfldwltllil\Ule•r.•10•-Mdtol._•-llOllltlctNo Oeclo ratlOft • 10/0.00S llove Men M CS.->, m.y...-or ond be heord. odclod lo 11'9 proJ.ct. h<U.. t.. Tllllt the Secretory of MNWO Ila-tlla..,... herelly It dll"Ktod lo All ,.,_.. -''"-f•Yortno or OClllOS· COMM • C09Y ....... lt-lutlon to .,. ~·ll'Wd -polled '" u. ,.,.._ ,.. Ing thlt ..._.i .,. lnvltael lo pre_.t qulrect tly Soc:U... JMH of Uta W•lM Code of Ule $111tO of Cellf«ftto. lhelr YI-llatono h Pl-Ing C-.-AOOPTEO, S"'"l!O AMO APPROVED thla 2111 <Soy of Moy, 1•1. ml•1IOt1. MOULTON·NIOUELWATER DISTRICT For IWU.r lnlonnotlon, Pt"-or• Don W. Smith, Vke P,..ldellt lnYltod to call Uta Zonl11t Section Ill Malente L. TwtMt'lcl, .UsJatant Secr.lory 1)4.1)47 or~ Into lite offke lcKeC..t ,STATE OFCAl.IFOltNIAI et G OYk Cllntor Drift West, R_,., • l u. llS, Sonto Ano, CA 9770J. Pl•as. refer COONTY 01' ORANGE I to zc No. •JA. I, MELANIE L TURTUltlCI, AssJ•i.nt Seer...,., ...... ...,,, .. Olncton PMlllllNd Or .. Coost Dolly Piiot, .t ttt. MOU~TOH NIGUEL WATER 015Tlt1CT. cto lterel>y c9'tlfy lttat the June 1, t•t Ull_.I lwf90lngl'ftOlutlonwHduty odoptedll? Ule lloerGof Olrecton.t ..id OIRllC1 PUBLIC NOTICE et• f99U!•• ,,,_tlflll of Miki Boord he141onthe1111 <Soy of Moy, 1•1. Md tltot II woe to .-...i 11v ,.,. 1o11-1119 ¥Ole: .AYES: Lorry It. u.zoci., H. Lot •-•. Don W. S...ltfl. ~A. Wllllomaon, Rkhord s . ....,.., NOTICJE Off TltU&Taa•s ULa lryen S. Hell, ond 0..eld E. 9..cll. T.l.No.J1... NOH: OIRECToa:S: ....... NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, tNt AltSTAIN; OIRECTOltS: Nene. Oft W.-Y. J,_ 14, t•1. •I t :OO AISENT: OlltECToa:S: ....... o'clock o.m. of Sllid day, ot u. .,.. Mal4tllie L. Tur1urkl, tr•nc:• to the off left of REAL ESTATE AsJlttonl Secr.U,., of llM SECUltlTIES SERVICE, 2010 NorUt MOULTOH NIGUEL WATElt DISTRICT Brooclwoy, s..lte-. In tll9 City of Son-of U. &oeN.t Olreden U.reof Lo An•, CounCy of Ortftte, Stote of Pullfl.-Or0fl9IJ Coatl Delly l'llot, Jww J, 10, 1"1 Colllornlo, NEWPORT EQUITY -----------1 FUNDS, INC., e Collfornlo corporati- on, H dlllly -'ntlld Trvt ... ~ PUBLIC NOTICE onct ,.,,_ 1111 -PoWer ol M .. con------------ PUBLIC NOTICE fwrod In that cM\oln Deed of Tr11st ••· a•IOLUTION NO. 11·M ocvtael Dy HARRY BROOMALL •lld RHOLUTION OP TM• eoAJID OP otR•CTORI IOA, M. 8ROOMALL, hu.Nlld •lld 1 Off TMa MOULTOIMll.UaL WATlla DtlTalCT wife, Md r--.t Moy 16, 1•• In Dac:&.ARIHO ITI INTUITION 1'0 ANN•X PltOf>aRTY ...... 1M0t .. Olflc:l•I Roc«'lls of .. Id TO IW•OY•M•NT DllTalCT NO. 1A t1••••1 CO<lftty,at Po09 .... WHEREAS, It Is"" dasln of Iha .... d .. Olreclon .. tN ......_ .. .,.. lllKor-• l...t.-i No. 17m . i,y Weter Olsltlct CMHWO) 1o -· certeln ~ ............... EllNlllt rffwn of • brMc" of defeu" In poy. "A" to .,It ltetONUon, wtlkh Hhllllt la •n.dtael---1• .,., tttla r...,_ ment or pertormonco .t Ule o1>11..,. le; "°"' MCIWed thereby, Including thol ........ lncorporollld.1o lmprowtMnt Obtr I No, IA C~) ol MNWO; Md certoln twMClt Or dafeult. Hotlu of WHEREAS,U.8oerdofOlrectonf'"*lttlllUle-utloll.tM141..,.,,..,. whklt wos r~ FtONory 14, ••t, te I__...,.. District No. IA CS.W-1 ol --.o wlll lllaMflt welt~; In BOOll ,,,,. of Olfklel R.corGt of Md Mid CO<lllty, ., ,... IJZS, Recorder's WHEREAS, It I• the dftlr• of tlle lowd of Oll'9dorl to conduct • ..-.11: IMlru,_ No. 21'GI, WILL SELL AT heMlflllol.mk1',..,_m.y-WMd•hNrd,.._tlwtotM~­ p U ILIC AU CT I 0 N T 0 THE -lion ol terrl1illty,. ,,,,..,.._. Dlwlct No. IA(~) ol MfllWO; HIGHEST llODER l'OR CASH, HOW, TI4Eltl!~E. Ule ... rd of Ol.-.S of MNWO ~I HEREeV lowful money of ltlo Unlled Stotn, •II It=~'. ~~.~~::~n!'!~'!.°= ::.':",;.-=ton of M.NWO 10 -• poyobl• et Ule time Of ..... •II rltM, c.rtolfl ..,.,.....,.., lo ,,,.,0 ......,.t Olstrkl No. IA IS.WI o1 MHWO. tllle -~ ,_ 11910 Dy II, H lectlm 1. Thllt a mop INwlnt u. -lor _...ol Ule wrt!Ory,. lie Tnnt•. In -to !Nt , .. , pr_..ty -""·"""'"mop .,,..I oowrn for a11 e1etot11 ••to the en.nt .t the.,.. ta ~~::..!~ ~~~~unty •nd Stote, Ila 011,,...._ la on 11 .. with tN SK1'9t.,., ot MNWO ond Is ewll_.. fCN' lftltle(· UCHlllT "A" UollllYatff __ Ot__.I-..... PAR'"'L I lectlm &. Tiwt -.... rttory to M -1*1 IO ...... ,.,,.,,, OlllCrlct Ne. IA ,... IS--1 of MNWO "'°"Ila_.., wltflollt --cOftClltloM. Unit 40t .. tllDwn on UMt celUln a.c._ 4. TI\of H-IS tor corrylflll out MY ,..,_ .t ..id ,,,...,.._ c-.n1n1 ..... "'"' -...-Auoodl ,,_. OIJtrlct No. IA CS.->. lncludlftl ,..,,_ .. pnnclpet .. eN IMMMI.,, 12. 197' 111 ac.. I t•1 Poge 1JW ef Of· afl'r iMlldt« WMTMll outsUftdlftg tl\all Ila~ elldullwety .... 1119 I ... Ill fl<lol Reconb. -H deflnMI lfl 11-Mid llNN-IC DI.Viet, ln<llldllle "'9 l9"1tory --IMrN. cenoln Oe<leratlons of Coveno111S, a.cu.as. TN1 • publk l\Mrlno 11oa lfld t.,. -......., la c,olled ... tM.,.. ConctltlcNta -Rfltrktlona recorded tJon o1 tN -Jllllloll If c..,,.111 titrrtt;wy to 1._ow•11•11t Olterkt Ne. 1A In lo«* It .. , Poge .. .t Olfklol CSewff)lllllleny04foarnwttar,....U..01oMY9f"'8 ........... to••W .. t:a Roconts. p.m., or a -hfeaftM .. 11 prectlelllllla, llt ttw oMc• .t MNWO, t79 Le PAltCEL 2: ,.., ROlld, ........ N...,.., Cll. t1671, Oft J-t .. ttl'I, Md tllat at Mid time W An UnCIMClod t/JIUI lnt-t In Lot piece prv'lldad for Mid 1111114k Merine atff ,.,_ ............... lllClulllne 2 of Trtct Ho. eon,•• "-ton a MaJ ,..._ _....,.. wltNn.,,. are• .... -..c11o 1...,0-•t otllrid Ne. rocor-In aooll 327, Paga• I Md tof IA CS.WWI, rnoy.,...arencllla119or'CI. MltcellanHus M•P•. record• Of hcU.6. Tlleltflts.cret.,.,ofMNWOlla-tM_ ... ..,1 ... ~,. Orenee Count'(. C.lltomlo. tllown -tallM •«PY of tttl• RatOlutlon 1o tie llUllfl..,.. Md ,... 111 aw -,.. dafllMCI H C-ArN on aw Move quired tly Soc1ioA JM14 af t11e Water Code of tll9 9Ute of CllllfCN'Nt. mentlo-CondOnllnlum !'Ion •114 AOOPTEO, 51GNEO ANO A,.l'ltOVEO INUlstdoy of Moy, 1"1. Oe<teratlon. MOULTOH~IGUEL WATElt DISTRICT Eueptl119 thar•from •II oll, oll Doll w. Smith. Vk• Pr"ldCNtt rights. mlM••••. mlMr•I right•. Ma!Mle L. TIWWrlcl, AHl•tanl Sacnrtorv n•IMrol gU rig hts, ono otller STATEOl'CALtl'ORHIAl 11voroc•rtions Illy .,..,_,.., n•m• l as. IUIOWn ... "'°'lie wtllllll or.....,, .. COUNTY OF ORANGE ) 1M1r<al al land-~ ctncrlbed, I, MELANIE L. TURTUltlCI, AMlllalll Secretory of Ula._,, .. Olf'Kton 1099thM wllfl tN ~ rltht of .. tlla MOUi.TOH NIGUEL WATE• DISTRICT, -...,..,. cwtlfy tMt .... drll llng, ml11l119, e11plorlng, ond ,.......,. ,....,.. .... w111 Giiiy ~II? tN llMrd ol Oll"klors .t Mid Ol..n<t -•11"1 tlWnfOr MCI t10l1no In Md at a,......., rNetlng of Mid Boord Mid Oft tlW 21'1 MY .t Moy, 1 .. 1, lfld tllat 11 ,.moving IN Mme from uld lond or w11110 ~by IN totlowl119 vote: from ony otl\9r lend, lnchicllft9 IN AYES:Lony It. LI.CW, .H. &..n It ............ Doll W. •le/ti to~ or dlrectlonalty drtU Smllft, OwltM A. Wll"-t..,, Rl<Nlnl S. Flore. end mlN Ir-tendS o4Mf' tMn tho• lrtan S. Hfil, and GM* •· luo. 1terelnet1o ... ascribed, oll or gos NOES: OIRECT<"tS: .._. Wtlll, t""""ls ond llloftt Into, tflrouglt AHTAtN: DIRECT~:,._, or •<r-tlle IUl>turf.ce ol ... lond AISENT: OIRECTOltS: ....... lla,..1...-.W O..Crt-Md to lloltom Malonle L Twturlcl, tMClt whlptlock•cl or ctlrecllOtlally AllllC.M!t Sacrttaryof Ula drlllM Miia. U-lt ond altofll Mlldtr MOUL TOH NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT .... baflNtlt ., llayond tN ... ..,... .. ...... d of Ol..aon tMfwl llmlb tharaol, MCI lo ..... Ill, rol\ftnel, ,.vblllMlll Or.,. Coost Delly l'lfot. r-J. IO, 1•t UIHI 9qMlp, mall!laln, ...... Ir, daepefl and -• --------·--- operal• eny tlKh we111 or m111t1, PU•LIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE wlthOUI, ,_,,.,, tlle rltM to drlll. D mlno, store, exploro allct operate 1----------- ttlrouoh .. wrlte• "" .,,. ..,..r 900 1 .. 1 of Ula wl>wrfec• of Iha land R•IOLUTION NO. t1•JI heralnHallo c1Mcr1bad, .. ,_._,... "' RUOLUTtON OP THI eoa.ocw Dt••CTCNtS Uta o.M er U.. ftw11 Ula ,,...,.. Of' nta MOULTO•MO.UB. WAT'la IMIT•ICT Compony, faconlecf s .... me.r .. tt76 NCLAJtU .. TN• INTINTIOM 1'0 OITACM PaoPaaTY ~ac'!: tt•. Paga m ef Ofllc:1e1 w..ua.:.":'f: :·:_-:~:" =~~':'.: :S.:":!.... ...... l'A•c11.a1 w ..... Olttnct <MHWC>t •--.Ch ctnlln ,,....,..,, ~"' IJdlMlll "A" NOll·l•c•ualv• tlHtment f•r lotltta ltoaoMMll, wtlktl •11111..., It...,_....,.....,.. rt Wt~ II lft. Ullllt'" Ac-, 1._... E.,.... Eft· c-..rMN ""91n, frem l"'llW-e Ot*kt '"-1A tlewl af MfllWO: Mii croac..-_ ........ ond fw ;.,_ WHlltlAI, Wll eoar•"' Olncton If MNWO ftMlt thM •.._..._.If -""*° ...... IMwll ... ..., ..... Ill .... '"""" ._ .,...._, o•rlct .... IA Clew) ., MlllWO wlll =.:, =._~':.'::..;:~ -=:=r= =.,. af t.11e ._d., Dif'kW't.t ~Nwo .. ceM1Kt • tordff In ... tMM, ..... * .t Of• ,...le hNrllll M 'Wllkll ...,_, m•'r _.., W .. "-"' ,.....,"° • ._ ,,-. 11c:1a1 R~--. llfld.., ~. PMN ........... .._,,....~°'*"1Ne.1AC1itw'I; t,_r.to NOW, TH•ltEF<>"a, tM ...,.. llf Olraclln el MHWO DOaS "a•aey TIM ftr..t ..._er «Mr c-••IOLVtl, ORTE RMI NE ANO OltOIR • llllMwl: Malgnetton, If any, .t the, ... ,,..._.. ...... 1. Tlllt It It tlle l"""'tlan ef ........ 9f ~Of MfllWO • ._ 1y ~-.ct..-It """""" "'" Cllt'8lll eamtwv '""" ',. .,.,.,,.... oi.tct .... •A cs....r1., llUIWO. "11e· m ._...c-w.tt. ...._,. ..-1,.,... •...., ...... 111e ....,..., ._.,._ .... ..,,...,., •.,. he(~ Cllllfernla. ~ .... wfllcll...., ...... ..-.. fOr 1111 .......................... .. TN·.........,...., c111e1e1ms .,.., °'"' •~I•°" Illa wlttt .. 1acr«..-y.t w..ow ".-._. .... ..._.. •II II......, lw tflt 1ncwroc.,.._ llf ''t:.a-r=':.~~__.._. ........ ..,._ -_... ..... ~...,....,...,.,<_ ,..,. .. ~llM. wl ....__ ... ~ T1\aC ... __ .,,.... .... urrytnf -.., ,..,,.... .. ,...,_. jieid.... II°' mMo wl,,_.. C.W-...._ Olllttd .... IA Cit-) Nie ......... ~.,.,._._. af .... ......_, _,or w.TllltJ, ._., "'-.... • ·--... ".--,...,.., .. tttta, ,._.... ---.., ..... -' .. .---.... .... .. ~ ........ .. ltUllUI t9 HllllY tlta' llJIA<l,.I _.._. ... 111 .. f'MMft,,...,...twlll•°'*'<t..,... .... Adal MflllKt llf tflt ,._er.._ ... ..., ... 1"5, ............... ....,...,..,............. • *"'" ~ NNI Deed ef Trwt. wfl111.,. e.c.... a. TNI • ..-C llMrlftl lie_. __ ....., ttc....., ••lleNlll ---~-......... .,~ t:•'·"'····-~··ll~lll-el'l'lc91fMMW0,1719 **'""" -. ----. II _, -Lii 1'111 .................... C.. tmn1•J-. "-ttlt, Mt ... lit MN t11M • t11a .WW. " .... o... .. +rwt _. ,._ 1w .-...,.k llW1ftt ..., ,.._ ... ' ' • ....._ ..,_ .... lll"'91 1111 lft\I -II llfta!IC ............ ._ wlWfl "'8.,.. W lte ..__ '""1 I•• $1UA Ollttftt .... IA _. .......... dWtM ........... llf C~l."'9)'._.,_. • ....,_, .. ,,.... ........ .,... cfWIN ..... " ,,. .. ltc.-.ry .............. _......, .. ..,.... .. lty HI~ 0... at Tr1t1t. Tiit letat c ... 11 ... II ... Al .. •• ID ................ Iii._..._.,. --....................... ., .... .,, .... .,, ........ c:.. .......... ~ ptlllCl,.1. ICC,_. 1....,.... ...., AOOPTIO,lfOM90ANOAPPlt0'90 ... lttl_llf_,, 1'1\, __.. ....... , .. ,.. • ., • ., MOULTOllMtteU9\. WATlll DetT•tcr ................... ..._. o.w.--.v..,....... ...... T,,..., ... fflM .. ....... ....L. nn.tc• ......... lllC~ ,11a11u11 ..... tlll• N•llH, It ITATaOPCM.JllOMflA~"" ltM,11t.Jt, C:OU•TYOftOMMea I , o.N~=..r-..,ITY 11 Mat.Mii &;;. T\lllTU•1c:1. ~--....... ...._.... """°'ltlC.· :.:..~.:A=: .... -.:=.:::.:.: .•C....••···· •• ,...., .......................................... .. ·--·-=Ji:~ ~n:::~a. AYU:...,,, ~ W. .............. W, eQ!llflllel I 11 .... A; :r~~ ..... ..... llOll101• ..... ~.....,, A_,.At•t Dt .. CfOM; ..... l\J .... .......,.Y A ... ,.,,04·~-. ....... • ....... L. Twtllrtd, .... .-..CAtlJltt ~.......,, .... Tfl: Intl.... llllOULT'OlllNteUfLWAt .. ~ICT ......... _c.-.......... .... ............... _... '-.. ,.. "' "" lMM' ........ OOWletClllll lillll--.,.. .. " .. DONOR -Actor Alan Alda bu contributed $11,000 to help purchase and pre- serve the Seneca Falls, N.Y. home of Elizabeth Cady Stan- ton , 19th century women's suffra1e pioneer. Openi111J of land vowed OKLAHOMA CITY (AP> -One billion acres of federal land will be opened for petroleum development during the next five years, U.S . Energy Secretary James B. Edwards bas said. He said that figure compared with only 40 million acres of federal land developed in the past 28 years. "It is somethmg of a miracle we have sur- vived our own energy problems this long, given what we've done to ourselves," Edwards said. He said 66 percent of the country's entire energy resources have been locked up in. about 34 percent of federal lands. •'This is like sta.rving to death in a kitchen with a pantry full of food that's locked up," be said this week. Edwards, speaking at dedication of the world's largest drilling rig, said some of the federal land to be opened would be offshore and 100 million acres would be on-shore in Alas~a for develop- ment of oil and natural gas exploration. He said the Reagan administration's goal is to let individuals keep more of their own funds and to eive business the capital and incentive to invest. · IBM case • neanng conclusion NEW YORK CAP) - After 12 years, lawyers finally have rested their case in the govern- ment's antitrust suit against International Business Machines Corp. Bbt both sides, aided by a rederal judge, still are workin1 behind the scenes tryina to reach a settlement. The law clerk to U.S. District Judge David Edelstein said a lawyer for IBM accepted an of· fer of help from Edel· stein to ~acb a settle- ment. If no settlement ls fortbcomln1 in the eov- ernment 's bid to have IBM broken up into separate companies on erounds It bas monopolized the com- puter industry, the Judge set Dec. 29 for a return court date. Employee tramfen 'frozen' AIPtltlM ...... ..... TAe&JfS MEWS & LADIES' NYLON WARM-UP SUITS Shiny aurfoce. brushed Ion· Ing Stripes on 19911 & sl-ves Sizea XS to XL I SAVE$2 I COLORFUL LADIES' ROMPERS REG. 6.99 499 I oo•.<. a pun pol yea ter. Many colors & styles S-M-l TERRY JACQUARD · 99 BEACH TOWELS. Flret quollty, 30"w60.. llG tow.la In mony colorf<il • pott•rnt ond bright col· S • f9 • ort. TM CllG JHERMDSi • Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wednetday, June 3, 1981 S.OZ. cone. While ttodu Iott. ~I SUHIPllCI ·Ulll'r6PllC. .... I SAVE 4.50 I 32-GALLON PLASTIC TRASH CAN LOCI-TIGHT LID REG. 12.49 J99 Au~ construction With lid & metol lodung hondles IOYAl lHIDAM CLEAi EUIOPEAN STEMWARE BOX OF 6 FOR 799 FOIMlllTW USIWlllll fOl 12.ff srr 20"x24" PUB MIRRORS 9'9 DRAKE'S BAY CALIF. WINES YINTAGI DA11D va11mu· :I!.! 78 Cob9rn•t 5ouvif1J1on, '80 Chenll'I alone, 79 ~lf'fonfff, '79 Johonl'll•'*t -.&ellne, •vin It-not11lnt099dof94 • ~DIR DEllGHT UL UN CAT FOOD MW.Tl•• lltnmW 13-o~. CON. Stodc up ot our prl<:el SUPll PllCE FIRESIDE SMCI& PAm CUClllS 1l·~. podc099. Whli. •todu ie.1. \ I _. b b ti -H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. June 3, 1981 "' ~FIRST -Los eles lawyer Sam. fliams bas been lected the first lack president of the tate Bar of alifomia. ~ollege • • ~ejects pavilion ~ !KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (~P) -University of ~nnessee officials have rtjected plans to use the ~2.3 million American p vilion for laboratories d offices after the 1982 orld's Fair closes. "Given the current oblems with state re· ~nues . especially c•pital outlay funds. we t•el that UT simply can- npt afford these con- ~rsion cos ts at this t me," said university !l'esident Ed Boling. ; Federal officials look· l6g for office space also tQtve turned down the ~e of the pavilion -a ci>mplex billed as ex- ~plifying energy effi- <lency, but ..,hi.ch con- ftl'essional investigators fear may become an &m barrass ing white fiephant. : The theme of the iorld's Fair. the first in e Southeast, is energy. is scheduled to run fom May to October xt year. A study by university ci'ficials estimated ren· ovations would cost llbout $5 million, sa.id ~niversity vice presi- 4ent Joe Johnson. ; However , the uni· v.e rsity, which borders tile world's Fair site, is interested in working with fair promoters . federal officials and other groups to find a use for the pavilion, Bol· Ttel said. '-Boling released a statemen t after a ·~tosed-door meeting ~here university of· ficials gave their de- cision to lair promoters •Knoxville International ·1Energy Exposition, Inc. The General Account· i'n g 0 ff I c e , a con · !gt"essional watchdog '"ency, estimated it couJd cost $8 million to sec lists grads Ancient bones eyed SALONICA, Greece <AP> Parts of two human s keleton s be lieved to be 800,000 years old have been found in a cave in the Halkidiki Peninsula near here, archeologists have reported. The bones were spotted in the same cave where human bones believed to be 700 ,000 years old were found 15 years ago. fOR 'THE RECORD CINCINNATI <AP > -A group of elementary school students ain't happy with the latest ad- vertising campaign of a fast-food restaurant chain. The Columbus-based Wendy's International recently began airing a series of commercials based on the slogan, "Wendy's -Ain't No Reason to Go Anyplace Else." It's the "ain't" that has upset fourth-and fifth. graders at Fairfax Elementary School here. The students have shipped letters to the hamburger chain aimed at persuading it to change the line. Wendy's officials say they researched the word before electlng to use it to Inject "humanity and humor" into the advertising. ~bey contend "ain't" is in Webster's Dictionary, but the com· pany already has printed a form letter to ship to unhappy grammarians. The students still say they are appalled at an advertisement using a word they are chastised for uttering. Among excerpts from their letters are: >Neptune Society -"I am writing l.his because I am mad at vi••UTI<* au•tAL.At HA Wendy's. I've been going to school six yeara trying ', 646-7431 not to use words like AIN'T . If school children iy.,., _ .. , _,,ntt _ wtw•• know enough not to use it, Wendy's should too." r'build offices in the six· 1,story pavilion, which will house energy technology exhibits. f!::,.,...,._._.lblNY._., -"Dear Wendy's ... I think you shouJd .,.,. _,-u ... wnotc.s. change your slogan. I hope your food is better than c:.11fwf,...,.,,..... ur I " 24 ""· cem.thr. yo anguage. ~:~::;=:::;;;;;;:=:;:;::;;;~~ -"Violets are blue . . ., Roses are red . . -..; go to school . . . but you should instead .... IOI LAWH-MT. OLIVE Mor1uarv • Ceme1erv Crema1orv 1625 Gosier Ave Costa Mesa 5'0-SSS4 rtUCI llOTHHS HUllOADW,U MOITUAIY \ 10 B roadwav Costa Mesa ~2-91 50 l.ALT%AIBOHOH SMfTH a TUTHtLL WISTCLIJf CHAPR 427 E 17ch Sc Costa Mesa 6'6-0371 - NICl..OTMMS tMl'ntl' MOITUMY 627 Main St • Hunt1nqton Beach 538-6539 PAC..C'8W t•oa&AA.PMK C-~t•'Y Mottuarv ~1.cr.metC>tY 3600 Paethc view Onve Newport Beach 644-2700 - Sudan project OK'd · JIDDA, Saudi Arabi• (AP) -West Germany and Saudi Arabia have agreed to finance the $300 million reconstruction of Sudan's Red Sea port of Sowakin, the Saudi newspaper Al-Medina Al· Munawara reported. IDTHS El.SEWllRE Bi:RCIN t AP > .1ol9u... KltlMldam, ,$, one or Germany's )'oun1eit Roman Catholic bl•hoPt. diedTu*ay PtJBLIC NOTICE Artist picky ab~ut time -------- P\JBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINIESS NAME STATEMENT TM lol l_."9 pe< '°" ll dol"9 Dull n..u•s. WOLF ENTERPRISES. ISU West MacArl""r 8oult••rd, S\lltt CoUa MH.t, C•lllornl• 93'2' John Chui Son11. 2U• E ltn• Avtnw, West Covi,,., C.lltwnoe tllti Tlll1 bullnftl 11 cew>du<lltd b., 4111 I"· NOTICE OF DEATH OF dh•IOU••· .i-CllUI Softll FOSTER M. FRYMAN Tlll1 1i.t-1 wu 111«1 wltll 1r. ANO OF PETITION TO '"""'" Cl••k of 0t-. '°""'" on ADMINISTER ESTATE June•."" Ftu1w NO. A109001. P\lbll"'*' Or-, ..... 0 •11., Piiot. T o a I I h e j r s , June l , 10, 11, 2•. "" 2w.1.a1. beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of PUBLIC NOTICE Foster M . Fryman and ------ persons who may be FICTtTtousau"Nus · · t • NAME STATEMENT otherwise in erested in the Th• 1011ow1n11 '""ons ••• 001n11 will and/or es1ate: 1>• .. 1neun A petition has been filed ABN ER'S COMPA NY. 21567 by Steven Fryman and :;-:.;•• RNI, Miu-v1e10. C•lltOfnl• Christine Schwable In the J•mei r 011on. 11w.1 Pu•••• Superior Court of Orange 11 .. 1, Mlulon v1110, c.111orn1• t:r.n C t t • th t 9.,,1' M Jemt• 11,.1 Pve<t• oun Y reques 1ng a Ru•.M1a1on v1e10.c.111or111••2''1 Steven Fry ma n a n d Mark J. LtQOtn•. 21541 Pu•rt• Christine Schwable be ap-111u1, MlllMon v1e10. u111om1• •2''7 pointed aS personal Tllll l>UllllHS II conductt<I b., • representative to ad -~ne••1 ~f::::":f J•me• minister the es tate Of Tlll1 •t.f..,_t wa1 filed •1111 Ille Foster M . Fryman (under '°""'" Cltr1l of Ot~ County on M•Y t he I n depend en t Ad -28' "'1 Flum ministration of E s tates Pu1>11si.o er.,. coast 0.111 Piiot, Act>. The petition is set for June J. 10, 11, 2•. "" 2542-11 hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Ana, California on July 1, 1981 at 9:30 a.m. I F YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, you shoUld either appeu at the ~arlng and state your objectfons or flle written objections with the court befont the hearln9. Your appearance may be In person or by your at- torney. PlJBLIC NOTICE ,.C'TITIOUS •ustNHS NAMa STATIMIEllT Tiie f•ll-ln9 _.'°"' ••• ootno ... llneUM: ~Altll COURT PllOPEATIES, 1I01 G P•rk'-' Pteu , Sent• AN, , ... for ..... 21111 Euoene H. Galen, 12• HOl'lh Maple Orlve, llewrty Hiits, C.lflonil• "'210 Suuiww e. G•len, 71• Horth Mlt- PI• 0r1..., eewnv Hiii&, CAiii~• t0210 Thll l>Ullnfts Is cencNcttd _,., .., In· dlvi.v.t. Sia-. I!. Galen 'Milt ~ ... filed •1111 .... couM., Clet'k ot OrM99 C.O..ntp on J-1,19'1. 1"1W1 .. IF YOU ARE A CREDITOR or a cont- ingent creditor of the de- worklng Jrandfather clock. ceaHd, you must flle your "I copied one from a picture and claim with thf colJrt or worked out all my own dimensions to present It to the personal reproduce lt with toothpicks," the representative appointed Pltblllfttd Ortn0e Co.at Dally ~119'. J~ J, 10, 114-u, 111e1 ~ .. 1 PtJBLIC NOTICE •-n -•a•-', He bef: with 20 boxes by the court within tour f'tCTITlovs ausi•us """ nu wu -mOflths from the date of MAMS ITATHWNT 61 pleb ancJ some I ln APril 1"1t. first Issuance of 1.tters as ~".:.!:~,,_. __ , .,. "',_. Hit ftnl ltltback cam•~ that provided In S.CUon 700 of ""1.1.ev HoMes, 1m M•t11 t.ammer. Tbe wann weather tM ac-the Probate Code of serwt,1,.....,c;.11..,..,"1• -r= ~·· foteid ldm oat Cellfornta. The time for ...,111, "· McH•-· rn• Ma111 ......... ........ ., ltf'Mt, ,,....,., ~· .,,,. of II , merit worubop wbea a flllng clelms will not e>c-:r111 •• ,,... 11 cet1~m-,., • panel w~ and hid to be ridoDe. plrt prior to four months .. ,.., ... --=:. """.._ ... ~ Cot tli'ed ol tt 8t U.et from the date of the hHr• :fllla ......_. ••• fllef wlUI ,,. lDt , .-....:..'"-=....::..:.-alll -. • .., 1 Ing noticed ebove. Ctllft•r c1er11 .,. o...,.. ~t., .,. po • ~.-rec • j TOV MAY EXAMINE ..11111e1.ue1. 1topp.d worklal OD \t for thrM th• fll• l(..,t by the c.ourt. ,,.,,.. U.. f t Ir t t I the ""*'..,..er.,. Coe•• oau, ,....._,, IDOD ' I r.~u .... n .,., '~ n --a.;.. . M, "'1 1'6Ml. "Then suddenly I wanted to ftnilh 1 :!tst'wf: t~lourt t! ~ It and became determined to prove to cttve SC>Klel notice 1>1 the "' !J rnyaeU tbatlt co~be done.'' t ln¥entory a1 ntate auets .-.mTHMeuMttut Z9\I~ hill frMedi And i end of 011 petltlQnS, K• .,._.:~.:..._. faml11~.....--eDC'OWaiin1.butbetfpt c.o'8nU 11'4 reports,... .. , tbt "n>._... :\:l'API dHCl'tC»ed In ltcUon 1200.S TWO ~ .. MO¥t"4tt W• ..... ~L.:. :.-• .[ • of the ~"°"''' ~· ...,.., .... c-.. ..... °""""". lUlS ....... th clCK* ..U tbi COdt. ~., • ._~.,....._ pead.._.,,--.w:,illlit paritl to:~ M•ll lelily.1. AttwMy •t ..... c.a ..... ~ ..... the madiMlerr and e c:oet Gl ·elear I LI••, H6 ••• M11 .. •• T111u1•-•u~•orM1111- '""-• --•Ill''• cllillioDP ~ .. --·-· --...... ~-J...... ... .'*•• .•••. Tiiie ......._._II ........ Ula "A• prGUd .. I WU Ol 1M tl«k ,, c:.Met °"' .. .,, ... c:..y .. ... liY•n:now HJ•~ ·•1 wa .,.-.t\yl Oi'mnot Coilt a""· , .... reUeved" it ""'U .;. •• • • Delly Pt toe. JUM 3, 4, to, ,....... Or._ c... .,..,., ,..., .,. ""' 1 .. 1 2.57$.11 J-.1, 1t. ., .... l'lt " Ult.,, } , .. , ...... ~WOMAN Wonder W0tnan Join• ._ with • ll't.ndly ..., toprwanltM~ "'the--.. ,,.,, 1) • T1C T/llJ "°'* • M"A•e•H . , .... ,.,.,... All ....... --....· ................. ~ t11111111 a T-WOINft -"O ............ ~ ....... 11idf1Sll .... a. T11 .... ..-.-.0r WMM _,1or.. "Tiii ,_....."°" ~-": Olllll9 ...., ..... "" .....,.,...,_,., • flllCMI ••• "-..V JemN" (ttn) ...... Vera .............. ~ ..... oflM1taOt.ll ...... ~°' NlwYotti aey. .THIONLY .... lf lOMe M111loologl1t Abtam Otiaaln1 ••etfttnM the --~ .... dW pllftO OOJI ........ Ullllt -.. ~ ''Tiie eo.~ ... Md ~ Hllwll.,e II .-ngao wheel and ... ...,, anyone fof • l-6ed ,_ pair°' boola. • eooor.-Jam.. 1u1pec11 that !Nr9'1 ,_. then ,,_., the t¥e "'*' an Old boy-hood fnand Pl)'I • llllit. •• B.ICTNC ~A#'t(9') KEEP ON -Deborah Raffin stars as a waitress who wants to be a truck driver in ''Willa'' tonight at 9 on Channel 2. · .. wftll ~ lnClllldlng .,...,41ectcw Joel OllM- lky, pleno OOlldl ....,, 8'ww and ...,.,, WOtld clMI ~ Unootn ~ and Oen6ll ~ llldl. Cl) '"' liAXfl!M ~== e::ao. JOICP'I MJ> • wa.oc;,.. MOK. ICOT1"a Gabe 11111 1111 llandl Pull ..... Jule ~ twWll. (Pert 2) • ....Vtal Benny " tM 1<1btect of • "Thia la Yovt Ul9" -0- ment.. • ICmT NIWlmAT G ITUDIO Ill! "Sampler" St. Loull kld1 operate • pizza per1or; Chj.. caoo 01r1 acoui. p1ay wtth an Eat1hbaL (R) Cl) NIM 9~...a..ER Fl1h 11 .. po1ed lo extramarital temptation ...,.. 8wM)' deell with • s»theltc holdup men. 7:001== I. *""'DAVI AGAIN I Fonzie -to Al'• ..... -..... -tlOOde tty to muacle In on 1111 DrNe- ln. ·= CHANNEL LISTINGS bottlae at eeotcll '°' --~and a tank lo ... off anlper'I. • ITMSTa.OI' IAH AU.NalOO The polloa ~to llOIW the le~ of an entlf'e jury babe wry °' the \llo- tlme -klled. (Part 2) • OV8'EAIY Oueet1: llnget Johnny Deamond, Dr. Abram Sedllf, handyman Al Cw· t'11. (R)Q • lllAiOtB. I LIHMR ""'°"" (I) T1C TAC DOUGH <IJMBWa..... "Top Allootdl11g AllW" OuHt1: Kai Rudman, Nlco6et1e l.Meon, Ruper1 HolmM, Al 8teww1. Shot In The Dertt. 7:IO 8 2 ON THE TOWN Holte: SteYe Edwarde, Melody Rogere. Vlell Atle- e.pa. ltMnd In Ille a.ma 8arbel'll cnann.t; a lo<* at Hollywood premier•• through ttle )'9WS: -Ina IM pllgllt Of the kldl on Skid Aow. I 'Na.Y P'EUD IHI.NANA °'*1: Lola FalenL • HOUYWOOD ~.,,. • 'ACfl TME Mt.: 8 KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV tABCJ Los Angeles CJ) i<FMB (CBSI San Diego D KHJ·TV (Ind J Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABCI San Diego • KTTV (Ind) LOS Angeles ., KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles • KCET· NI PBS) Los Angeles lri> KOCE· N IPBSI Huntington Beacn • AU. lfTHI ,Ma.Y Archie end ..... Ioctl home -tM eoon-to-be-bom beby StNlo'1 r9llglofl -or 1ec:1t of It .. • MA0Na I LIHMl'I ""'°"" • YAMa.a.. INT'BINATIONAL PtANO OOH LhilON The clmectlo momerttll of the worid'I moat ptellj.. glol'9 muelC ....,,. -,,,. Mntld from Fort Wortt\, T-. curnlnlttlng In the nemlnQ °' the wltlMf wtlo wlll receNe 112.000 and I ~ tour with -of the worid'I la.ding lym- phony or~ Cl) ,..._ MMAZINI An lnteMlw with _.....,,. Ing "°"9ll9t HarOld Aob- blne; e T-women wtlo found -through Mlllng Tuppei w• .. .. e THI WHfn IHADOW Colc:t1 AMvel teturM to N9W Yori! for 1111 high IChool reunion. (Part 1) (RJ 8MAL~ "-lured: I -wtlo ._ In I ....-: e tr1llnlng .-lof'I '°' -deM· • llilelmen; • ptoflM Of teen-aged, parapleglc ~Suzy OMllfllP. (RJ .MOYS • • • ''The Appeloou" ( t!MeJ Merton Brando, An~ Cotner. A ,_ pony " .tolen "°'" • -boy and hlddlrt In M9xlclo. ea CHANJFI ANGIL.a A dl9bollcal hlNd klller llndl • ...,, to program ~-andtum ltleln Imo~ .MOYS • • ... ''The Unlnhltltled" (1987) MalN Merooun. ....,_ ..__. MW an .,,.., with -~ -. &:IO. OMOL. ... .,.,. ,,., ...... au.: Jllll Nebora. Cl)~~ MO.Cl) MOYm ** "Wiiia" (1t7t) Debofell Raffln, CIOfie ~.A~­ an wfttl two 11111111 cMcnn to eupport qulta "" ...... ,... Job to beOome a INClc clrNer. (R) • DW'91T8"QCll w-. .... '" low '°' tM .. time. (R)Q eo,...xw. DMMt . .....,..,... "Top Aacordlng AtUltl" OUHll: Kai Rudman, Hlcol9t1e ~. Rupert ~ Al S1ewatt, Shot In The °""· CMlty Lalla, John O'Banlon, Randy ~d. ....... eenw. TONICIHT "Sweh In America" In • ()j,._ perior-. UM ,...,,_ tr.-Iha hlgllllgllt1 ol Sarah 8etnhardt'• numerou1 tour• acro11 America .,._ 1880 end 1918 . 9:IO • THI 'ACTI OP Liii Toot» ttlaa IO get -anent6on by IP _.,ICI the .tory that Mn. ~ " an a6cohollc. (R) 10:00. QUNCY A ttllaf end a Hui -crirnWlll arnuggle • tort... In "'*" geina ltWougtl Loe ~ AArilort In • rnurn-•. , ...... •@YmAI Den reh1ctanuy foln1 lor09 ...... ~to follow the ~ ,,... al• kidnapped ,..,...., -~A Vltl/SfY OP V... A lodl at the ~ _.,.,... Archie Bunker's best pan began series as hostile cop By JEllllY BUCK Al'T......._.,._ LOS ANGELES -Allan Melvin bas played Archie Bunker's best friend since 1972, but it didn't start off as a cb~y-relationship. The very first fiiiil Melvin appeared on "All lo the Family,'' it was not as Barney Hefner, beat friend, but as Sgt. Pete Pulaski of New York Clty'1 finest. "The fun of that episode was that Archie came down to the police station and was making re· marks about the Polish," be recalled. "Somebody says, 'Oh, yeah, tell that to Sgt. Pulaski' -and 1 throw Archie into the can." It was a few months after that that Melvin wu reincarnated as Barney Hefner. He remained with the CBS shOw when it was changed to "Archie Bunker's Place," and only Carroll O'Connor, as ExcLsive Sho.Ningl Fl''IN CITY OF V\OVCN '-· MARCEUO MASTROIA('INI .. ~, .......... , ........... ,.., "First rate ttvll'-r. hst new movie of the sprtng.sunvner season." -J-*f••Y l Y°'1t. cts llodlo the irrepressible Ard'•if', has been with the seriee longer. Melvin, who got bis start aa a stand-up comic and mimic and then played on Broadway in "Stalag 17," bas had a long and profitable career in television as the foil to the lead.ins man. A lot of that time was spent in uniform. Oa "The Phil Silvers Show" be was Cpl. Henshaw, who was Sgt. Bilko's partner in bis attempts to bilk the other soldiers. He was Dick Van Dyke's old Army buddy on bis show and Sgt. Hacker on "Gomer Pyle." He aJso had recurrine roles on ''The Joey Bishop Show" and on "The Andy Grif· fith Show." Melvin is also well known as Al the PlumMr, a character he has played for 14 years on the Liquid Plumber commercials. l"EAKE" MO"ANT 1,......,.. ATlAHTICCITY a:»MI FELLINI CITYOPWOlllEN .... ,.. .... AU am MO II Au• 11te«iv1 ~Cl' ™I MOTIOH ...cTUM COOi Of' Ill, MOUV.TION ' I Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wednetd•y, June 3, 1881 -. TUBE TOPPERS IM to Pf'OleOt Nr from an Wlknown ..., • ...... ... MCM9 ,,._ • •• ''TM ......... " (tM) lMty ,.,. - KOCE • 7:30 -"The Sixth Annual C Van Cliburn International Piano Com· petition." Decisive moment.I from the Texu compeUUon with prizes of $12,000 and a concert tour. KOCE • and a 9 :00 -"Sarah in America." Lilli Palmer stars aa the le1endary Sarah Bernhardt in her American tours. (See story and photos page 88.) KCET.910:00 -"Characters: A Varie- ty of Viiiona ... Special look at the deaf experience from the perspective of two deaf brothers. -~ 1fle peiapecttvil °' two deal brotMra: Aock WllHalM, a motOfC)'de medlenlc and Herry \W- 11am1, an ertl1t who ~ to lle\le llttle 1r111· lie: ...,, the wortd °' .. "-'"Cl· • CHAM.mlil' ICIHZ TO _,.I a-w M. 8chl.tU. cnesor of the f8lllOUI oomlc atlip '''-'uta.'' ~ 1111 -~anclt"* rwltltloi llNp to Illa wortr. (A) -1 .... ...... .,.,,. Nl'TWOMNIW8 . ""' Thec.rwat~ ..... Fourtt9n II .,.._. f'rOft'I ""rooll In ~ 10 1111 ~t ltatue •top lounat etnatlon of the ~Cfty.(R) 11••••<1>t11 NNa • 8TAATNK SC** .. d6e of~ ~ l(lrtl and McCoy can l*9lllllde anocher 10 NW'*". • .._VWID~ • M•A•e•H tle•llMI• a... Aobwta nMurna to u. 40nth to updMe K~ War oondj.. tlone. (Part 1) -~t&L Benny trtae to allow that Heellti 8eMoaa ,_ the rich. • D9CI< CAVETT au.t: Jell6oe Tandy. ., •• Cl) MOYm ..... ...... ()ell Con- aphoy'' (1t17) ,,_ Vlt!t, I<-. Carteon. A Holly- wood ltunl man t9tume to 1111 11ome1-to dlecoYW • • -Of com.tpUon and decatt. • TOMQHT Owat hoe!: Devtd Len•· "*'· OuMlll: Chef1al Gro- din, Tina Turner, Joe Or- don. •@ AIONIW8 ~ • Lin MAKI A DIAL • HOCWrl HIROD HooM and Illa "*' muat -..lnete a O«men S--uiwrr. "Under The City'' • G CAl'TIOHB> MC NIW8 -r..>NIGKT- 1HO. MOVll "The l-Of Herculel" ( 1814) Jayne Manafteld. Mick~ Hwg!Wy. • 9 L.OYI IOAT "1---Trlengle" Con- nie St-: "El Kid" Aob- wt Urlcll. Heether Mef).. Dea; ''The last Hunclt9d 9udl1" ~ Coleman, Rue MoC1enlNn. (R) • MAYMICK A .,._.lful widow llWM JOHN DARLING -...01111 I T'tlelWll.._. .... . ~......,, .. ....... .... ,.___, ...... . , .. ~ tl:IO e TOMOMOW au..e.: _.,.,. Of .,,. roclt group U·I ; Ill• WOttd'• 1a11et woman. • ~IT9'11YOND ''Tiie Open Window'' Corn. lfterclel 111111 Allthony Mardi Olla ljplllt ""'" 1111 model and practlcelly throw. her out Iha 'Mndow. 1:00e NYCHO "•ror•Mti.n. WON..D 11\'0ND "P9rcHc Aldleology In (gypt" Holla: Damien Slmpaon, Stacy Hunt. Oueet Stephen Swartz dlac1111.. th• u.. of Plydlicl In • clleologloll dlga. • MOYIE * * "The Lat 811tzlu1eg" (1811t) Van Johnaon, D1C11 Yor11. Outing Wortd Ww 11'1 8attla Of the Bulge. • ounv-llo HllZI and "" ~ of .. boteura lnlll1ra1e Aiied troope. • ...,BDEWT Nl'TWOMNIW8 1:10• MOYIE * * "War Italian Style" (1NT) 8ultw K•lon, Mar • Iha Hyer. Two Amerlc#I POW• eecepe with plana fof an lnYM!on, but can't COtMnce anyone of Iha!< authenticity . 1:ao• MOYIE ..... "The Bladt Orchid" ( 18118) Sophia Loren. ~Quinn. A._.. abiding ~ end the lowly widow at • geng- ... , .. In IOYI. 1:41. NIW8 1:111 Niwa HO Niwa MOYm * * "Lolll T-.e Of The Aztecl" (1858) Alan SI_,, Mario Petri. A men - help fl'om a loyel friend lo exonwete lllmealt of mw- det end tWlont harmony ~lhelnc:M. 2: ti • IDITONAl. 2:208 MOYIE ...... "SandCllllH" ( 1t72J Bonnie Bedell•. JM-MlcNal Vincent. A man'• glloet tetwna to make MWld9 tor a prlM- -8Ct at tllllwty and I• In love with I~ ~ ~-'" ... fNOa, .... of .......... ... llr'ld ..... rOf'MnOe ~ ... by the llttlw ... rlvelf... ~ In.If ......... .. , ...... ....... .. MCM9 * "White f'onoc>" (1948) Richard Fr ... r, Matla • Wtti.I. Hufllen ~ on • Jungle ~ lhrougll tM Conto In ~Of.,..,. wMe ~ ... MOYm I ...... "Hlddal\ ~· ( 1Ht) Otlfflth Jon••· : "-Kennedy. A_.lnO . In a ..,.,. room wlttl a gun '" 1111 hand and "" • OOlllllrl ~ --,... • 111m. a M11at ~lie II amurderar. 4:80. MOYIE •• "Jungle Bride" (1931) : Ctierlel Starrett, An"• I Page, .. 1, Thursda11'• ;~ Da11••~ Mo"i~ -MORflNG-. ~ •, t1:00e •~"TrlpleTrouble" :' (1950) Leo ~. Hul'O~ H ... The 8-y ~ W' theif good lntanttone trip them up. 11:IO D * * * "A Time To Low And A Time To Die" (Pert 1) (1868) John OaWI. Ulo Pufver The ~ and devllt•tlotl of -encourage• romance becauee of I need fot companlonllllp. ~AFTERNOON- 12:00 ........ ''The Big I Country" (Plf1 1) (IHI) Gregory Peele, Chattlon HHton. An Eaelerner becomM embtolled In I blll•..., ~two Tex.u rencner1 ~..tar rlgllta. • * * * "Oe1ec:thle Sto-ry" (11151) Kltl! Dougjee, a.not Parker A N9W y °"' City detective attac:b hil wor1I wltll I maniecef ~NI until Ille .tfec:ta begin ~Ing In hi• pet110nal. off-duty Ute and .--yday , ... ,lonahlpl 1:30 I> ••• ~ "Mr Bland- lngs Ek.ildl Hll 0.- .._ .. (11143) Cwy Grant. Myrna Loy. A men from Mannanan ,,,_ hie flml·' • ly to Iha country where lie • lrlM lo build I holJM by Armstrong & Batiuk :~ .. NOW THIS 15 AN UNUSUAL DOG' f WHAi ~IND 15 'THl5! .· . . . Sarah Bernhardt (From Pace Bl> r ole of Sarah was Lilli Palmer, who performs toni1ht. "It's hard to find someone to accept such a challenge," Mrs. Wolff admitted, "but I wanted someone continental like Lilli. Also, she paints and writes as well as actiag, and Sarah was a writer and sculptor, too." Muy of Mrs. Wolff's plays have been about E SA ION! "A WONDiRf'ULLY FUNNY COMEDY 8bout ponyous f•ther9 and youthful ~uctlon. -Nancy1oott.•OM11Na A m,;m-UVA ~-·~ONI WILD MOMENT _ .. ._ ......... c:) . ,.. .. -~. ~ . • .,.t ""' ' ~-~ women In history, such as "Eleanor of Aquitaine~·': ''Empress of China'' and "George and Frederic, about George Sand and Frederic Chopin. Her play "The Abdication," about Christina tif Sweden, was given its premjere by the Bristol Obi Vic and made into a movie starring Liv UUmai and Peter Finch. ~ "I'm writing ideas and stories. I love the vii· ual and can say things without words." Wehandcut our fish fillets even!dav ... dip them in batter made fresh every hour and serve them with plenty of golden &yes. Ftsh·& .Fwes •2.49 ••tut ~'jdin~. SEAFOOO StQftS JOtlH.tNrllM..C:.•Mne Juet South of &in Otego Fw/. ACtoea from f'9dco + J \ 4 I I e .. •• e e I • •fl f iti.-•-'_, it n E s l.t b ti tt t.< l · N ti gi le .w w a1 he ti ~ I • N. 81 h\ lo ., .... - NYSE COMPO ITE l'RAN ACTIONS IUOUtlONl INCL.UDa fUOU Olf Tit• NIW YO ... IC, MIOWUT, flACl"C, ,.. IOIYON, HU&lf AU Ct•tt•llATI ITllC• JICltAlftllAND U"°IUO~Y fltl O•OAllOllfffllflf . I . H 1'' • John J . McDonald ls a ''born·aaaln'' bu1J· nessman -thank.a to the remarkable Japanese com· oany, Casio. 1 Alter he graduated Crom Brooklyn Colleae ln 1954, McOonaJd Joined Reminatton R&M. an oldllne company that combined with another oldlloe com· paoy, Sperry, to form the company we now know •• Sperry Corp. one of the natJon's 100 largHt com· paoles wUb 19eo sales in excess of $5 billion. Sperry, which hired the late Gen. Douglas MacArthur as chairman after he was brought home from the Paci'1c, was never regarded in anyone's book as an exciting company. ll was the company that reluctantly brought in the people who developed • the first working computer. Eniac, forerunner of Remington Rand's Univac, and then watcbtd JBlf run away with the market. But that was home to John McDonald for 21 years. He rose through the saJes ranks -not a pro- pitious place to rise from in a company dominated by engineers who ~ thought sales l'- and advertising :'\~ e. people were ) ~, some kind of 4, ~ 1 ow life. The ~· -=-t.-•-.-i-------~~~ e~:11\ ~re~! lllTBI lllUllU was three years in London, 1969 to 1972, when he was general saJer m anager of Remington Rand's British company. • Transferred back to Blue Bell, Pa., where Univac headquarters had been placed, McDonald re· alized one day that he might be in the wrong com· pany when a colleague gazed out a window at a blacktop that bad once been a farm field and com· mented, "Beats London, doesn't it, John?" McDona ld was ready then when one of the Kashio brothers approached him about opening an of· fice for their company. Casio, in Europe. McDonald jumped at the offer, returning to Lon- don in 1975 as head of Casio-Europe. In 1978, he was · asked to come home to become president of Casio's ' U.S. company , which is 40 percent-owned by a Japanese trading company, Toyomenka. Casio Inc. is headquartered in Fairfield, N.J., not far from N~w . York City. Jt's strictly a sales office, selling the products (calculators. watches, musical keyboard In· struments) made in four Japanese factories. Casio is a shooting star in the electronics in· dustry. It was the company that in 1972 broke the $100 price barrier on calculators, turning it into a mass market. Today, the worldwide market for calculators is 70 million units -and Casio sells 30 million of those. Is John McDonald happy working for a Japanese company? You bet he is. He'll cite you any number ~f·• reasons: Casio is a tiger about quality control; Casio thinks in worldwide terms, not just one country. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ~ NEW YORKIAPI F'IMI Dow..-.,.,.: NEW YORK (AP) -S.lfl. T-. prke ~°Toc~r-»Y· J11n L ~ MM! Ml , ....... of IN flllMn ~I eel.I,_. 09e11 ... Law C.... New y-Sloctl f!u,,.,. Is~ JO Ind tts.64 1cxD.1HM.10t11.a-lr•dlt19 netloNlly at more u..n 11. 10 lrn 430.n ULU 41'.87 GJ.U-Ke11MCott l,OfoUOO 61 \.'> _:1.-1.S Ull llJ1.l1 1WM 10SM 1-.12- llM 141',MO 5'1' _,:: ., SUI •u -· ao.04 111.11-Atlltkllfld 101,j/10 41_. Indus ..... , . . . . .• . . .• , 4,.it lnlMlnOI M.AOO .0\11> -t"' Tr'-n 1,704 !t_,,•R-?'IO,a'f'°oo 61! .:.,:·~ Ultll ...... ......... .... .~,t .. aaOfl • , • 65 Stk . • . . . . . • . . .•...... , . "' I. TV COt'll 411,100 241'> =·~ ~;:~ ::: ;;"' -1~ WHAT STOCKS DID .lltntr T&T 40,"10 56 -I'> Mol>ll 414AOO S41111 -1'• NEW YORK (APl J11n. t UnOllC.1 41S,700 21"° -1-GtnTtl&EI 411,iOO JOi. Flrelt-1'11.300 12"° -14 Softy Cot'!> •.11111 Ullo -~ WHAIAMUOIO Tode~ 11J:I m 1tq .. ,. NEW YOAK (AP) Jl#I. 2 Adv•nctd T"°r/, Oecllntcl .... Uncti.119fd 111 Totel 1-"' New ll!p 24 New lowt 1l METALS ·: C...-~ Ctftll a pound, U.S. dftllniit. GOLD COINS Nil'# YC>ltl( (Al") -Prices lele 1•.a Fri· day of 991f <ollll. ~Witt! TIN"4111y's llfk• • ............. I tr'O\' .._, u..a. elf. 00. ( .......... , ....., .... ..., ......... ... I MUICell .. '"°' U t,.., N., Moa.JO, oft UA~IM * c-. tlOt t,..y ec .. WJ.JS. eff •• , .. leutq; Offll·PtfW• !Ion~ L.-,, .. Cll"b. -.ct. Zhte 4'\lo ctftt• • "°"""' dtllwrtd. Tl• ... s:J36 MtlAlls WHll composite Ill. Al_I_ ,._ cenb •pound. H. Y. ,..rc.wY MJS,QO par fi.tll. l'lati-$Qt.00 tro'( OL, N. Y. .. •;,( .. SILVER ·~ ... NEW YOAK (APl -Handy & H~ Sll¥tf' 1--, $10.410, up SO.°'°. , Engelllerd sliver tl0.400, 11p $010~ 1aorlc•tt11 '""'' s11.on, 111> so.ou. Read the Or.an~ Coast newspaper that keeps you In --the I nformatlve 84H321 • '- • • 0 Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT /Wednelday. June 3, 1981 SALMON PROTEST -Fishermen surround freighter under Golden Gate Bridge in pro- test of federal order cutting short their ............. salmon seuon. Coast Guard vessels cleared a path as about 100 small boats joined in the Tuesday protest. Air Force officer confined Espionage suspec~ once 'scornful' of U.S . military RICHMOND, Va. lAP) -As an under- graduate at Old Dominion University, Christopher M. Cooke frequently made jokes and scornful com· men ts about the U.S. military, Criendt recall. As a graduate student at the CoJlege of William & Mary, he seemed happy to be going into military service and proposed that tbe United States be the first to use tactical nuclear weapons in the event of a conflict with the Soviet Union, ac- cording to his academic adviser. Now the Air Force second lieutenant is con· fined at McConnell Air Force Base near Wichita, Kan., accused of making unauthorized visits to the Soviet Embassy in Washington and under in· vestigation for espionage. Cooke is accused of violating an Air Force regulation against unauthorized contact with representatives of a communist country. The Justice Department opened an espionage in· vestigation Monday. Family members and former teachers said they were shocked that the 2.5-year-old Cooke, a Titan missile control launching officer 1 could have been charged with such a breach 01 Air Force regulations. At William & Mary, his master's thesis ad- viser remembers Cooke as a person "who was very happy to be going into the military to do the kind of thing he had been promised he could do - work in strategic thinking and in weapons. "I know of nothing to suggest that he would engace in any aberrant behavior," said Dr. Alan J.~. But he recalled that Cooke "could be doing thJnQ aad not contemp~ate the consequences. • Chris was the type or person who could have walked into the Soviet Embassy and not recognize that the Air Force has regulations against it." Cooke completed bis muter's program in less than a year, writing a 74-pap thesis tilled "United States Tactical Nuclear Doctrine: Developing a CapabLUt.y." It recommended the United States adopt the doctrine of using tactical weapons before the Sov· iet Union 1n the event of a confllct. But the "notion of winning seem• obsolete when measured acainst the losses which would be incurred in a nuclear ex- change," Cooke wrote. "You got the definite impression Chris was one or the less military persons you'd ever meet on the face of the earth," said Dr. Martin Sheffer, as- sistant professor or political science at Old Dominion. He said Cooke bad frequently joked with other students, some of them service veterans, that the military was made up of "regimental, unthinking people." Cooke's parents say it ls unbelievable be would have visited the Soviet Embassy openly bad he been a spy. Cooke's father, Richard C. Cooke, an elec- trical ene:ineer in Henrico County, also said bis son had t~ked of making the military a career. Drought threatem PEKING (AP) -Raldentl ol Pek1D1 Mt ing urged to conserve water because of a two-year droudlt that imperils farm irrlcation. ----~~~ a :z - Call our new CONSUMER LOAN DIVISION under Llovcl Ovt• in our homeoffis:e. telephone (714) 494-7541. for informatio~ abo 0 U! secured and/or unsecured installment loans for PERSONAL~ FAMILY. and HOUSEHOLD PURPOSES · including loans for a AUTOMOBILES, MOBILE HOMES. SWIMMING POOLS. SOLAR WAT ER HEATING SYSTEMS, and OTHER HOM E IMPROVEMENTS. Now. the place to go for ALL your financial requirements is YOUR COMMUNITY F I NANCIAL CENTER ho/t//IN ,7'-~g~.J ANO LCJA~~ ASSOCIATIO N BALBOA BRANCH 800 Eaat Balboa Boulevard, Balboa, CA 92661 (714) 673-3701 Additional offices in Lagwia e .. c;h ... 4~7541 • Laguna Hiiie .... 586-5100 • Belmont Shore . (213) 438-9421 Sal' Clement• ••• 492· 1195 • Lake Elafnorw , .. 67 4-2191 • Murrieta ............... 677-5632 Laguna NlgueL.. 49&-1201 • OllvetOrahQe, •. 998-8400 • Balboa Island .......... 675-3212 Glen Avon ••..•. 681-0111 Cambridge a~ \ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 The Fat Man; Baron, resume an old feud CLASSIFIED 04 at Belmont . . . See D2 DICK MILLER .Angels' pr.ohlelll: Autry Wearing an impeccably tailored western s uit with alligator skin boots, the one-time cowboy movie star strode toward the podium In the Anaheim Stadium press lounge the night or Sept. 28, 1968. Gene Autry had made a fortune singing, "l ' m Back in the Saddle Again." The owner or the Angels had learned a n(\W lWle and he didn't like it: "I'm Back in the Cellar Again." A man who owned a horse named, if you can stand the irony, "Champion," didn't like what was happen· ing to his team. So he began what was to become an all too familiar habit: he fired Fred Haney as general manager and hired Dick Walsh. And 39 games into the '69 season Walsh fired Bill Rigney as the field manager. But barely two years lnlo his rive·year contract Autry fired Walsh and Harry Perry's • mag1c • continues LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Los Angeles Dodgers, who have not defeated Gaylord Perry in -three years, probably wish the wjly veteran or the Atlanta Braves would finally call it quits . But there's no telling when that's going to happen. The Dodgers suffered their second loss to Perry this season Tuesday night, bowing to the Braves 3-1 in 10 innings. Dalton became the third general manager In three years, a record t:bat was to make Charlie Finley envious. In hiring Walsh, Autry had said, "Dick is 45 years old. We wanted someone we could build with for the future." The future turned out to be 333 games and see you later. In all the finger pointing and accusations over the pratfall by the Millionaire's Club and the firing or J im Fregosi, Autry again has escaped the blame. After all, the Chairman of the Board is an authentic American folk hero. He is a decent man. Gene Autry is as clean as his image. And maybe it's about time for someone to tell the truth : Gene Autry is the Angels' problem. Through five winning (but barely ) and now 16 losing seasons there has been only one constant: Autry maJdne the final de- cision on hirin1s or firings. It bas been denied, but it was Autry's de· cision in the first place to hire Fregosi and not General Mana1er 8U%zle Bavasl's. And it was Autry's decision to can Fregosi only one season and 49 games after he led the Angels to the only division title in their hlstory. Autry has a history ol bum decisions. Seventy-four games into the 1974 season he decided to get rki of another field leader, Bobby Winkles, and Whiley Herzog was named the interim manager while Autry was trying to hire Dick Williams. "I would have signed Whitey," Autry said later, "but I needed a name on the marque.·· What Autry didn't know was that (See MILLER, Page D2> Frost gets another big Toronlo memory TORONTO <AP> -Dave 80 was as far as he had gone in Frost has bad a few memorable Salt Lake at any time. e xperiences at Exhibition "WE' SENT HIM down to Sall Stadium and Tuesday night was Lake to get him physically no exception. sound. He had already proved he The first time he faced the was a big-league pitcher." Blue Jays in Toronto was Aug. Nobody , including Frost 25, 1979, when he had a 22·run himself, expected such a spec- lead for the first time in his tacular performance. pitching career in an Angel 24-2 "It just doesn't make any slaughter. Last year on June 2,.t sense to me, but I'll take it any he beat Louis Leal and the Jays day," said the 28-year-old right· 6-3 for. bis final victory or the hander. "I just wanted to go out Am era ~an League baseball and pitch better here than I did season before undergoing sur-in Triple A where I was hideous. gery on his right elbow. "I just don't understand it. I /"GAYLORD GETS you mad," said Bob Welch, who battled Perry for eight innings. "I want· ed to beat him and I'm sure he wanted to beat me. Mike Sodders FROST COMPLETED his comeback Tuesday night by downing Leal again as the Angels blanked the Jays 3-0 for the second night in a row. On Monday, Ken Forsch pitched a three-bit, 3-0 shutout. was down there with Chris Knapp and Fred Martinez and all of us had two or lhree starts and looked bad." "He knows how to pitch, that's for sure. Most guys would be glad to be knocking on 200 wins and here he's knocking Olb300." Perry's last victory, his fifth in eight decisions this year. was No. 294 of his 20-year big league career. Perry gave up only fiv, hits in nine innin~s and the only run he allowed came in the sixth in-n in g . The Dodgers scored des pite getting the ball out or the infield. Sodders' hoDle run helps ASU OMAHA, (AP > -Arizona Slate called on r elief pitcher Kevin Dukes to hold off Mis- sissippi State 4·3 in a College World Series winner's bracket contest Tuesday night. f r01t, recalled from Salt LaQ City of the Pacific Coast League on May 24, limited the Jays to four singles over 6'AI innings. He was relieved by Andy Hassler who no-hit Toronto the re- mainder or the ga me. He was lifted with one out in the seventh inning after Barry Bonnell collected an infield single. Hassler held the Jays hit- less the rest or the game to pick up his fourth save. In Triple A, Frost was 1·2 with an 8.60 earned-run average. Before the Angels get too high over consecutive shutouts, they should consider the opposition. THE JA VS HA VE not scored a run in 22 innings and have been blanked seven times in their last 21 games and nine times over the season. For the second night in a row they wasted a fine pitching performance. Dave Stieb gave up just seven hits against Forsch Monday and Leal llrajled the Angels to five hits while log· ging seven strikeouts. ''They expect me to keep them in the game for seven, eight in- nings," s aid the 42-year-old Perry. "Any starting pitcher should do that. With the bullpens teams have today, that should be enough to get the job done. Dukes, who threw 3"3 innings of no-hit ball in Tuesday's firsl· round 11·2 win over Texas, re- lieved Sun Devils starter Randy Newman in the third with Mis· sissippi State leading 3-1. "There wasn't any reason why I pulled him,·· said Manager Gene Mauch. "He had thrown right around 80 pitches . 79 and Tonight, Georr Zahn (5·6> faces Toronto right-hander Jim Clancy (3·3). EddieCareykeysUCl'srelayhopeaatNCAAfmau. ·'Against the Dodgers. you know before the game you're go- ing to be in for a big job. You have to be extra sharp and, fortunately. tonight I bad pretty good control." PERRY WALKED only one batte r, and that one inten· tionally. The Braves scored twice in the top or the 10th inning to break a 1·1 lie, with pinch hitter Bill N aharodny doubling home the lie-breaking run. "Gaylord pitched a great game and I was glad I was able to help out," said Nabarodny. "I . was trying to hit a home run. I went up there swinging as bard as I could." Bruce Benedict, who doubled home Atlanta's first run in the fifth inning, led off the loth with an infield single off reliever Dave Stewart, 3-1. the eventual loser. Rafael Ramires sacrificed and Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda brought in Steve Howe to face Naharodny, who was bat- ting for pinch hitter Biff Pocoroba. Naharodny then cracked his double down the left field line that scored Benedict. Jerry Royster followed with an.other run-scoring double. "PINCH HITTING," said . Nabarodny, "is pretty touah. But I am hitlin1 .333 as a pinch hitter so maybe it's not that tou1h." The Dod1era got their run when Welch reached fin( on an infield aln1le to lead off the ahrth. Derrel Thomas aacrifi* but Perry'a th.row to second wu wild, allowlnt Welch to take third, from where be acored on Rlck Monday's crounder to HCOnd. When Welcb 1ot bi• tnltetd atn1le, the play at fint bue wu utremely cl0te, and Atlanta llana1er Bobbf Cox arauect the !Y and wCMIDd up bein1 'Jec:ted umpire Prank PulU. An in· 1 before, Pulll revened a call Glt balk. First, be ruled I.bat Welch bad ballted, but cbuctd Illa decision when Welcb •P· ;.taled that be ••• not oa tbe flteblal nibber. ID tbe tcmehadlq IAIM fl Ute ... ........ ftil :tO.~ wUI mrt lat All•• ~ RooWa, '7·1. The senior left-bander shut the door on the 46-16 Bulldogs the rest or the way. He set down 11 straight Wltil giving up a walk to Steve D'Ercole in the bottom or the seventh. A walk to Mark Gillaspie in the eighth repre~ent­ ed the only other Mississippi Stale baserunner against Dukes in 6"3 innings of relief. He's carrying the load for UCI track tea 400-meter star shelves event in order to be fresh for. a team effort in relay Arizona State rallied for three runs in the bottom or the fourth. Ricky Nelson led off with a single and stole second. After Al Davis walked, Stan Holmes singled in Nelson. Kevin Romine followed with a ' tielder's choice to load the bases with one out. Then Bert Martinez laced a single to score two runs. No. 1-ranked Arizona State had scored first in the game when All-American Mlke Sod- ders, a product of Westminster High and Orange Coast College, drilled bis 22nd home run of the year in the second inning. The loss matches Mississippi State against Texas Thursday night. Arizona State, now 52-12, moves to Friday's winner's bracket final against the winner of tonight's Oklahoma State· M laml contest. In a Tuesday afternoon elimination .eame, South Carolina rallied to oust Maine, 12-7. . By JOHN SEVANO Ot .... DMly,.... ,..., There are varying degrees or decision. Some, obviously, are easier to make than others. Eddie Carey, one of UC Irvine's pre- miere sprinters, had a decision to make. His wasn't an easy one. thou"h. Carey bad to decide which event be was going to participate in during Thursday's opening heats or the NCAA Track and Field Championships in Baton Rouge, La. Having qualllied in both the 400-meter and mile relay events, Carey originally thought he would run in both. THE CHOICE seemed lofical. Carey's 45.35 last month in the Pepsi meet at UCLA not Oilly qualified him for the na- tionals, but gave the junior the f1tth best 400-meter clocking in the world this aeason -fourth best among collegians. And, as the anchor to UCl's mile relay squad, Carey helped the quartet to a con- ference record in the PCAA cham- pionships by running a 45.5 let, &ivlng the team a 3:01U8 finish. So, u raaas Carey was concerned, there was no det'lsion to make. He'd partJcipate in both events and let his efforts dictate the outcome. Un!ortunately, Carey's coach -Kevin McNair -had other plans; plana which affected Carey's original decision and would force him to make another one. McNAIR, A VETERAN of NCAA com- petition, felt his ace sprinter would ex- haust himself if he competed in both events. Of course, McNair's reasonine bad logic, too. First, there was the balmy, sweltering heat or Baton Rouge to consider .... and UCIREPOKI' forecasts for the end of the week predicted nothing but the same humid conditions. That meant that if Carey were to reach the finals in both evenu, he'd have to run a total of six quarters. McNair's C?ODcern was that bis aprlnter just wouldn't have what lt takes on the final day to be effective; not only to himself but to the mile relay squad1 too. Finally, McNair told Carey he'd nave to choose one event. "There were hearts and minds to con- sider aa well as bodies," explained McNalr. "It. waa a humanitarian decision, if that's QOt too heavy a word." The final verdict? Carey would run in the mile relay. · "I ASKED WM to sacrifice that (tht! 400) to eo with the team concept," aald McNair. "I thought it would be better t come back with four medals instead o one. "This way they can all come back All Americans and he (Carey) still ha another year left. Plus, he'll still get th glory. I thought this was better for overall program." McNair's decision wasn't a hasty one The fact Carey and Bill Dorvall (wh forfeited running in the 400 intermed.iat hurdles) could participate in a later TA meet in Sacramento, the Baton Rout beat, plus the fact two seniors compile h tM mile quartet, cushioned the wei1ht the coach's choice. ••It was the only way to go becau • that's ll world cla11 meet," analyz McNair. "When you have a group lha works that lont and that hard . . . "If I wasn't completely sold on the fa they were sold on the idea . . . " McNAIR DIDN'T complete eithe thought, addin1 the final declalon wa made lut Friday, after spendinJr mor than a month wrestling with the cleci.si or which way to go. "The five of us decided totetber," n plained McNair, "and Carey's openinc re mark at the meeting wu, 'I'm dropp the quarter for the mile relay."' · Carey admitted he made the itatemen (See CAREY, Pace DJ) • 11.anika staggen IVavr.atilmitj,; Connors upset PARIS (AP) -Sylvia Hanilca, a 21· year-old West German, sta1ed • m~ upset today and drummed Martina NavraWova out of the French Open ten- D.la tournament, 6-2, l-4. That completed the Uneupe for the women'• semifinal•, pltllftJ Hanlka a1atnat Andrea Jaecer ot the Unit.M Stata iiDd Amerteu Cbril EYert LloJd, detendlnc c:hamp_toa and favorite, a1aln1t Haaa llaadllkova of Czec:baalnalda. MeaawbUe. Amert.di• .1lann1 CouOrl wu..-bJArl .. '•IOMLUllawe in die--··~· today, w, w. .... f.S.M. :N.W.WO.. WM 1111=.=.1 ~ Of ..... ,.ltlcm • • .., .... rankings, bu\ it-WU ber ftnt toUrfta. ment on European clay in ::,i..un and her play here wu not lmp ••· The match be1an Tuetday Dllbt lD tbe rain, and Hanika'·twlff 1M'oke 11rvlct for a 4-1 lead biefon tM wl11Mr and ll•ht 1ot worH aad pla1 waa halted. Hanlka i«wd wltb coalldlDee today and quictlJ rouDded olf tM ftrit Mt. Tbea lbil bn*e MrviCe to kWe It tbl IWtOltM~Mt. N awaUIOva laad dlfftnlb MUlal atralcbttorward 1laot1, 'm 8Mlb cli'ri• deep ud kept ... 6dlweb awvfNmU..Mt. .. ~ .... ·~ .... ....... .. ............ , .. l Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, June 3. 1981 11!"'~---...-------------------- Brett takes it out · ·· with attack on toilets KANSAS CITY, Mo. -George a Brett may soon be ge\ting a bill from the MiMesota Twins tor repairs to a restroom be damaged with his bat last Friday night. Arter grounding out with runners on base. Kansas City's all-star third baseman went Into a restroom behind the visitors dugou\ end uaed " his bat to break two toilets and a sink. Before Monday nlaht 'a game against Seattle, Brett was angered to learn the restroom incident had been reported. "I don't think it 's anybody's business," he said. "It's already written. so why should l discuss it'!" Tom Mee, Minnesota's director of public relations. Brett said William S. Robertson, the team's vice president for stadium opera lions. would examine the restroom and forward a bill to the Royals, who can either pay the charges or ask Brett to do so. "It would be up to them who paid for it,·· Mee said. "I'm sure we'd go for co:,l to hav~ 1t fixed. It was in the Royals' bathroom. s o they're responsible." Quote of the day "I always thought that's why hotels are built with a back set of StdtrS. I figure what I don't know won't hurt me" San Diego Padres Manager Frank Howard, ex· plaining why ht' decsn'l believe in curfews for his players T ho mas ups homer mark to 14 Gormaa TlloDH• knocked In four • runs with two bomera. 1ivtnf him an American Le11ue0leadin• 1 for tbe seaaon, and Jilk• Cald••U ud aome FJ•cen combined on a rive·hltter to give Milwaukee a 5 2 victory over Detroit Tuesday . . . Dwip& Eva•• hit his 13th homer and doubled ln a run to pace Boston to 1 4·0 win over Cleveland. Deanls Eckenlev spun a four-hitter . • Dave Reverln1•1 first homer In a Yankee uniform In the bottom of the 11th ln· nlna led New York to a S-3 wln over Baltimore ... Sbooty 81bltt'1 two-run trl· pie capped a five-run first in- rilna to lead Oakland to a 6-2 trlumph over the Chicago White Sox . . Seattle stopped Kansas City. 4·3, ThomC8 behind Jim Anderson•• dou- ble ond two singles AJ Oliver and Budd)· Bell dellvered run-s<'orina singles tn tbe eighth Inning lo lilt Texas to a S-2 win over Minnesota ... ~n 01Uvle was eJected from Milwaukee's game at Detroit when be ~herged Detroit pitcher George Cappuuello after a third-Inning beaning U1at cleRred both benches ... Boston's Dwight Evens und Mark Clear were named the American Lea~ue Plnyer and Pitcher of the month Four Kings on NHL All-stars l\10NTREAL Goalie Mike Liut of ti ... St. Louis Blues and center W. ne Gretzky of the Edmonton . &ii Oi It ~., were the top vote-getters on the 1980·81 National Hockey League All-star team. an· nounced by the league today. Liut. who sparked the Blues to the NHL's second·best re gular-season record, edged Gretzky, the league's top scorer with a record 164 paints. Joining them on the first team were two m e mbers of the Stanley Cup-champion New York Islanders, defenseman Denis Potvin with 194 points and Mght wing Mike Bossy with 299; left wing Charlie Simmer of the Los A,ngeles Kings, 284. and defenseman Randy Carlyle of the Pittsburgh Penguins, 168. Simmers' mates on the Kings' "Triple Crown" line, center Marcel Dionne, 157, and right wing Dave Taylor, 85, were named to the second-team All-star s quad, along with Los Angeles goalie Mario Lessard. 114. Rose within nine of Musial's mark Pete Rose banced out two trlples • and a 1in1le and drove In three runs as PhUadelphla defeated the New York Met.a. 9-7, Tuesday The three hits by Rose raised his career total to 3,621, nlne behind S&an Mu.slat's all-time National f:eaeue record ... Rookie Tim &elnet bases-loaded tri· pie capped a six-run Mont~al third lnnjna as St. Louis fell, 8·1 ... Steve Nicosia drove in a career-high four runs and Dave Parker, BUI Medlock and Mike Ea ler added three RBI each to leod a 19-bit as-• sault that gave P ittsburgh a 16·3 victory over the hapless Chicago Cubs. While six Chicago pitchers were taking a pounding, Eddie Solomon. 4-3, earned th~ victory with a six-hitter in a contest played Roae despite a strike by ushers. ticket takers and maintenance workers at Three Rivers Stadium. It was the 34U) defeat in 44 games for the Cubs ... Craig Reynolds lined a two-out, run-scoring triple to cap a two.run ninth inning to give Houston a 2-1 victory over San Diego ... Jerry Martin hit a grand slam homer in a rune-run fourth inning which led San Francisco to a 15-7 rout or Cincinnati. Baseball strike talks grind on RO C HESTER , N.Y . - Baseball 's lingering labor mess moved into U.S. District Court today, with Judge Henry Werker scheduled to begin hearings on the National Labor Relations Board's request for a preliminary injunction against the sport. If granted in the language requested, the in- juncti.on would force ma nagement Lo rescind its controversial free-agent compensation plarr for one year, an action that would delay any player strike at least that long. Should Werker deny the NLRB petition. the playen would be free to waJk out within 48 hours of the decision. So, by arguing against the NLRB in court, the owners are in effect forcing the issue and In· viting ao immediate strike over the compensa- tion question. That would be the result if at- torneys for management win the case. If they lose, then the matter is placed on hold and baseball faces another re-entry draft U\Js Nov ember without compensation for ranking free a~ents signing with new teams. Baseball today On thls datf' lo bauball ln 1978: Dave Johnson of the Philadelphia Phlllit>S bee me Utt far1t mao in baseball hhtory to hit two ploch hit grand slam , home runs In one season, as hil ninth· \nnang blast gave the Phlls a S·l victory over the Dodgers. · On this date in 1932. Lou Gehrig belted four home runs as the New York Ya nk ees r o uted the Philadelphia A's. 20·13 at Shibe Park. ~eanwhile, John McGraw retired after 28 years as New York Giant manager, hand· ing the reins over to first baseman Bill Terry. Murphy takes Fullerton reins Cal State Fullerton has named II football coach Gene Murphy as in- terim athletic director pending a search by a 10-member committee for a perma- nent re placement for Mike Mullally, who re· s igned lo accept a similar post at Boise State University . . Bob Berry, who resigned as head coach of Lbe Los Angeles Kings last month, 1s expected to be named to the same oosition with the Montreal Canadiens of the Na· tional Hockey Leag~ today ... Brien Oldfield tossed the shot put 70· 10 Tuesday st an interna- tional track and fi eld meet in Yugoslavia ... lleisman Trophy winner George Rogers of South Carolina was in Montreal Tuesday to check out the site of the Montreal Alouettes training camp Rogers has been involved in con· tract talks with the New Orleans Saints for the past month but no agreement has been reached a fter Rogers reportedly reJected two offers ... The National Basketball Association has adopt ed a rule prohibiting teams from contacting un· dergraduates before they declare their intention to turn pro ... Mark Anderson of UCLA has taken the early lead on the first day's competi· lion in the NCAA decathlon championship at Baton Rouge. Television, radio TV: No event~ srh<'duled RADIO: Baseball Angels at Toronto. 4 JO p m . KM PC (71U I. Atlanta at Dodger'>. 7 30 pm . KABC (7901 J;rom Page 01 MILLERS'S COLUMN. Fat Man, Baron on collisiOn course • • Williams was a g reat man- ager with veteran teams and an impatient martinet with young players. such as filled the California roster at the time. Under Will iams. the Angels finished the season in sixth <and 'last place), were sixth again in tl975 and Williams was let go after th& Angels got off to a 39-57 start in 1976. ,'.And what happened to Whitey )ierzog? • He became the Kansas City jtoyals' manager in 1976 and won three consecutive division '1U.les. 1r, It was Autry's decision. with a kl of help from Bavasi. to can Dave Garcia and rt>Jll iit:'e him witth 1''regos 1. Garcia now manages Cleveland an · lhe In· d\ans areonly 311\a games out in the ~merican League E ci,;t stand- ings. "-:The Rams' front office is a model of stability compared to the way Autry runs hts fiefdom. E'xcept for Fregosi. not a single skipper has lasted more than otle full season since 1971. The State or California could save taxpayers money by open· . a a branch office of its m ployment Development • partment at the Big A. ::Maybe what the Angels really !leed is a shakeup in the front of- fice. Autry is 73, the same age as. his assistant, Red Patterson. vasi is 66 and so is another ice president, Frank Leary. · Their collective aJ;(es make the Politburo look llke Whiz Kids. ~ A few hours after Fregosi's dismissal Bavasi tried, like any good executive would, to take the heat oft his boss. "I should t ake the responsibility and I will g ladly," said the general manager. "Eventually, this team will have to play up to its potential. Maybe Gene Mauch won't be any better than Jim Fregost, but maybe he will be luckier:" Maybe. From Page 01 CAREY • • • But he also added his first choice was to run in the quarter-not the mile. A little pesuasin by McNair changed Carey's thinking. "It was an extremely dffficuJt decision," Carey emphasized. "I was primarily concentrating on the 400 and not the mile relay. Coa ch told me it was too much of a risk to run both, so I decided I'd like to run the quarter. ··He told me he wanted to stay with the team concept, though, and he wanted me to stick with that." WHAT THE DECISION has obviously done is left the door wide open ror a lot of second guessing. U the mile relay team doesn't pan out, like McNair hopes. Carey admits the thought of what could have been will be there. aseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dtvlslen W L Pct. GB 32 20 .615 - 26 18 .591 2 27 19 .587 2 25 Z7 .481 7 16 26 .381 11 18 31 .367 12~ nesota 14 33 .298 15~ East Division eltirnore 28 17 .622 - ilwaukee 28 20 .583 lYl ew York 27 20 .574 2 baton 26 21 .553 3 teveland 23 19 .548 3Yl etroil 24 25 .490 6 oronto 16 34 .320 14~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Wes& Division W L Pd. GB Dot\gen 34 16 .680 - CinciMati 28 21 .571 Stn Housto1l 25 24 .510 8'h San Francisco 26 26 .500 9 Atlanta 23 24 .489 9Yl San Diego 19 30 .388 141h- Eu& Division Philadelphia 29 19 .604 - Montreal 27 20 .574 1~ St. Louis 24 18 .571 2 Pittsburgh 21 20 .512 4\<!i New York 15 29 .341 12 Chicago 10 34 .227 17 ~·tc.. Allen'81, ~I I IOIMMlllU Mn f'r811CIKO 11, ClftCINMtl 7 l"tlll ... llNet,HewYwl!7 PittMwlll ... Olkeeo J Mol'llrHI I, St. I.Gula I ....... 2, Sell DI..-I ,.. ..... ._ i\lleMe (~. Nltlll'f U) el .,......._ ( ........ 7.11.111 N•• Yorll ltf•rrh 1-11 •• ..,.11 ... 1"'4• ,._..._,4),ft Cllluet !Metta NI 111 ,.......,.... llM¥ ~. Ill ...... I...,.._~) Ill a Lwtl (,._II t-2), .. .......... IMllfl Ml II S. Ot"'9 1Wt91 t ... I. II Cln<liwwtl t~ Ml Ill l9ll ,,_._. , .... ...,. Belmont Stakes features some wild characters -and they've been around By WILL GRIMSLEY A~ s.-ca.c.11111an•1•t NEW YORK -The "Fat Man" is puffed up like a balloon so confident that he'll be saddling horse racing's 12th Triple Crown winner in the Belmont Stakes Saturday. but he better beware of the "Baron.'' "Johnny Campo -he brags too much, .. warned Horatio Duro in his Spanish ac- cent. "I don't think he is Superman. I don't think he can make miracles. "You can tell the Fat Man we will be coming after him Saturday." The brassy , lo · quacious C ampo is trainer of Pleas ant Co l ony, the pock · skinned speedster who Grimsley won both the Kentucky Derby and Preak- ness and is favored to complete the magic sweep in the testing l 1h-n1ile ftnal classic. Luro , an 80-yea r -old Argentine aristocrat whose father was a cattle baron, is readying Tap Shoes, a strong, handsome bay, for a possible upset. You can't discount Horatio. Horses have been in his blood since he was a tyke grow- Ongais in Laguna ing up among the gauchos . of the family's fi ve sprawling ranches and a 5,000 -acre private island outs ide Buenos Aires. "Mv father he wanted me to be a cat· lleman as he was, go to Paris and sell meat to all of Europe but that life bored me," Luro said "I a lways wanted only to be near horses " Campo and Luro try their trade 1 week a few barns apart in the stable area at Belmont Park. They are a study in con tr a st. For a man of four-score years . Luro 1s a phenomenon a robust , active six-footer who drives to the s table m a foreign sports car, wears a rakish cap and cashmere jacket and can't remember when he didn't get up before dayli ght. Reared on a South American version of Scarlett O'Hara's Ta ra, he reeks of the landed gentry, poised and polished, who is equally at home with hot walkers and sta - ble boys as with dukes and earls. He came to the United States more than 40 years ago, became a friend of Bing Crosby, did the Hollywood scene with such stars as Loretta Young. Wendy Barrie and Madeline Carrol I, finally starting a Lhoroughbred s table of his own with. a $3,500 stake and a couple of bargain base· ment horses Clearing Sl00,000 the first year, he never looked back. He once sold a horse to actor Joe E Brown for S25.500. He has trained with the best He won the Kentucky Derby with Decidedly in 1962 and Northern Dancer m 1965. lie even once won a duel, which has become a legend around the tracks. "It wasn't over a woman," Luro ex· plained, a twinkle in his eye. "It was an argument with u Frenchman over the price of some polo ponies He grabbed me by the lapels. This was an insult. I slapped him across the face. .. Fourteen hours later. a representative of the Frenchman he was a Marquis - came to m y offi ce and handed me a card. saying the Marquis wanted satisfaction. "It was never decided whb provoked the ancidenl, so we fli pped a coin for choice of weapons. I won . I chose swords, although I never handled a sword in my life. •·Desperate, I went to an instructor at the J ockey Club and told him I had this an· gry. hot Frenchman who had challenged me. He asked, 'Is he tall?' I replied, 'No. he is small.' ·You have long arms.' the in· structor said. 'Take a foil and just keep it stuck out in front of vou. · -------- INDIANAPOLIS (AP> -Dan- ny Ongais, injured when his ln- terscope racer hit the third-turn wall in the Indianapolis 500, was flown Tuesday to Laguna Beach, where he will be treated by bis private physician. Ongais, s urrounded by medical personnel, was taken to the lndfanapolis International Airport by ambulance lFYOUDON'T .CALLUS, WE'LL CALL YOU! SEVEN Of' OUR FULL TIME STAFF MAKE AN AVERAGE OF 500 OUTGOING CALLS every day inviting our members to play In tennis matches. This ls In addition to Oiiing members· Incoming requests . Finding the right match takes more than just hard work. It's tough. Here at the John Wayne Tennis Club. our staff or seven does It from the 10 classlflca- tlons In our Player Compatlblllty (P.C.) Call tbC "I Ranked Club In catlforaJa or come bJ rot ... bentilp · laNrmatlon ••• system (Instead of the normal A. B. C, and D). We will get you better matches from a wealth of players at every level, whether you've been playing a few months or a lifetime. And for your con· venlence, there are free phones, refrigerated drinking fountains, and T.V. monitors with every court. If your club doesn't offer this, why not choose the one that does?! • ADLJo~R Etectri~ 21C Ta ble model. Excell cond. Recenl overhaul. $200 Pis. call. 645-2842 ----- I Bl\1 Model Ty perwriter ~ 956-1827 -------29' Villa Vee Cruiser BARWICK DATSUN \Jn Juon C..ip1\traf\.O 83 1-3311 CPA ·a accountants & Flybridge. all inboard. Moped 1976 Batavus. 345 services. DEC 310 com like new, must sell mi, turn signals, xlnt •CHEV ........ 'I I puter with LAl80 printer (213)592-2859 cond $350 615-4433 .._ & client acct'in& system I TOM STAKE software. In operation '81 PENN YAN 33 · Moton:¥CIH/ 12ft modelw1thllftg11te, $10,900 752-561.S. Sportfisher show demo, Scoot.rs 9150 duals, ale cond., H.D. - ---twin d iesel. $84.900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sprinas. pwr. steering. Peh 8087 Call: 213-592 28.59 Fantastic buy! '77 750 aux tank & more 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -- ---Honda. less than GK m1. Workhorse complete! BurmesePython$lSO,bst 23'CllRISCRAFT Class1c l mmac.extras. ONLY (3961> ~:~ bs~.et~bo~T11112 BYC:.S~ boF1shdlngASk1rr.t •:I ~n $1495. M~ee.673-4068 ONLYSl2,498 s.t2 -6694 ar . grea s a er '69 Honda 750. Runs. HOW ARD Che•rolet boat . $3500 . Call needs minor repair, DoveQuallSts. FULLY Tame. yng. hall 1213>592·~ some $Pare parts. $900 NEWPOllTBEACll Moon parrot w cage. 28' IERTRAM SF firm 673-8133 days, only 83J..0555 $100 556-4994 Loaded for fishing & in before 5pm __ ~FORD• TON- 9590 WIMllD YOUl.UOTtC &llmlltCAIS 3U)()W, Coast Hwy. Newport Beach &GtM(l) Premium pricn paid for any used car <Co,..aan or domeatjc) in good cond!Uoa • See Us Fir,t We buy CARS & TROCkS TOP$$$$$$ 559-5790 Plonos Ii OrcJant 8090 excellent cond $28.500 Honda ST-90 Trail bike With full camper, low ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~:-~8J2°~~~0 ~·~Js~~ 550 miles. Xlnt cond: mileage~.; s;~-4568 _ Sears Sllvertone Sohd 891-2351 wkdys $400 760-963i. _ '76 Ford flatbed truck ---------State OTgan, upper & ---- -d r ur WAHTTOIUY lower keyboards Xln't OWENS XL19 Chevy 327 650 KAWASAKI lo mi. h.Y rau ic tgate nu '61·'66 T ·Blrd Conv. cond except needs tun r 11 'b 1 t k. clean.makeoffer llres/transtnlsslon Must (71-4)548-26646to8PM u cove~. a l an . ., • ., ,,.,0 • sell 964·5628 mg S300 646-4140 alter water ski equip. trlr. .,_.""""" -------- 4pm $4500 645 <1748 ·so Harley "Wid;-Ghde" '66 Ford Econohne P 1l lo Autos, IMportecl G d P be r I 80 C I "X C'"'d. oil cool. miles, auto. good Cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• ran lano. 1 aull u 16' "lassie bay boat " .,.. .1.u ' · l•ath s ad bags. Must $1600080548-1800 "'na llCNMO 9705 tone, teacher sells reas. needs refmlshm". UlCI .., Al K. bll I "' seeaft6"""'""'3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• so 1m a con:io e. GHP Johnson. cover. _ ~~ .. _ _ 70 GMC w/camper, good ~75_~0 _ +extras $500 760 0807 llonda 3SOC. sacrifice. cond. Make offer Organ Lowrey Citation art fl runs good. needs paint. 642-8223 New Condition Best of 21 1942 Clru;s1c pwr boat ~ 645-~evs_:_ __ Autos WQl'ftd 9590 ~rSS9-7902_ _ _ 1n xlnt cond F'ully MotorH01neS,Sale/ •••••••••••••u•••••••• Sportin9Goods 8094 equlPped Res~ored Wllh Rent/Storog. 9160 WEPAYTo:ooLLAR ~•••••••••••••••••••••• TLC' With slip. S:l900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for tpp ust'd c ars· C I l t rL ,. If 12131831 16:11aft Gpm WE CA._. SELL foreign. domestics or omp e e se o ynx u o -" classics H vuur ear is Clubs . 3-PW Irons. I 5 Boats, Rettt/ YOUR R.V. extra clca·n i.t•e us Woods. Approx Sl50 Charter 9050 559_1304 FIRST! 551 9295 or 645·079'.! ••••• ••• •••••••••. ••• •• _ _ _ ~. NEW K2 2-44 s with Samarang, 2 masted 70' Rent 23' Lux. mtr home. Solomon 626 blodmgs & schooner Sips 6 , fully self cont. ~ dy. pr or Lang NLl boots children welcome .. 2 SOOCreemi 548-0949 S280 all 751-!Y.!2'7 heads, full galley. main --·-----Salon, aux. deisel. Avail Want to rent GMC ifl 1t10r-.e~ TV.Radio. fo r C h arter. C7 14 ) Motorhome . June 292SHarborBlvd LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove St reel NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 1 '78 Alfa Spider 20K mi. I mml cond. on g owner $7500 546-2352 Audi r-- -9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesda , June 3 1981 H /F '280Z '78 2+2 5epd 1St1Ck, allver, blk Int. xlnl cond 96995 54().6244 :73 240Z. $4000 Auto, a /c, new shocks & Ures.~7-~ '11 B210 2-dr. low ml, nu paint. aood mileaae AM /FM, P.P. 759·0988 LEASE DIRECT ! 198 I PEUGEOT TUUOs BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 ·77 Rabbit. 2 dr, 4 spd, am /fm ca.ss. Blaupunkt, radials, fuel lnj, perf. cond. $3295. 64(}.5234 '77VWCOMV 18,000 ml. Uke new Ask Conette $6300080 964-5093 '72 Super BUG new radials . ma,s. casi.. $2700 675-.U74 * I I 9750 ---- '67 VW Squareback . Stereo cass. looks & runs _gd..:...!750 675·9137 Gordo~ MEW 1981 CORVETTES ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 1114. Blk, app. aroup. alloys. air. $8700. Denise 835-4333. l ::.Jto7 PM . '76911 s 5 spd. A/C, stereo. al· loys, Clifford alarm. Perfect cond. 645-6508 Vol•o 977 ..... , ....•.......••... #I VOLVO DEALY IN ORANGE COUNTY' ,THREE ~ 4 SPEEDS .1 TO CHOOSEFllOM·: CORMllER..O.UUO.t CHEVROUT CO. 17 141847-6087 '79 92-4 Porsche Take SALES. SERVICE over lse pymts. o on. AMO LEASING Call Gary al 676·5736 9 to OVERSEAS DEUVERV 5. 676-2912 aft 6pm EXPERTS * '77 924 PORSCHE snrf. a /c, alloys, blauplunkt stereo. all xtras' Sl0.000 498-9579 '66 912 Porsche Totally restored inside, out Asking $7500 964.5093 '73 914 2.0 Good Cond. EARi.EiKE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 646-9303 540-9467 '68 T-Top 427-390 hp, spd. I owner. S5800 673-363.5 '79 S liver T -Tov pinstripes, dual exhaust. $10,000 645-~. • ORANGE COUNTY Dodge 9tJt ~ VOi.VO ••••••••••••••••••••••1 •" Largest Volvo Dealer '1968 Dart. 6 cyl. $650 oli ' m Orange County! offer Ask for Rick daj) BUVorLEASE 493 1322~ve66~_.1 DIRECT __ _ _ _ _ _ bclusivety Vol•o ·73 Dart Sport. 6 cyl. aut()j •'73 914. new eng.-tires-8 t . xlnl mech con6' S4800 Ph 541-5215 or 545-7604 wknd1ev ne" tires. lo mN ~~~~~c~1~~~s. Ice ~· •(4· ~~Q,f.JllQ $1500 OBO. 752-6992 PP; Rolls Royce 9756 l,,' J.... • J ~ 1._ • j '68 Dart· Small VS. aulo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Runs great. ~95. •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. 10 120Garden Grove 01 __ 645-7578 j ROY Garden Grove 530·9190 .68 Dodge Coronet Wg~ HIFI, Stereo 8098 642·41148 or PO Box 8381 19-29lh. Local. 759-0900. COSfA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nwpt Bch. 92660 979-2500 -----...---Rent· 22· mot.or home. Beautirut Color TV. 2 yr •IMMAC28'·34' BOATS sips 6. self cont. avail. -.-- CARVER ---Goodtrans.xlnlmotor.• Auel 100 ROLLS-ROYCE '75 Volvo 245 Wagon. S7SO. 64~2394 $500 673-1732 IS40J•mbo ... e auto. air. am/fm. xlnt Ford ----9940 wrnly Free delivery 6 l2mo. plans prepaid 6 20· 7 3. $295 wk . WANTED' .• ' $148 646-1786 _ _ _ _ _ _ -Crom S189 /mo. Including 640-8585 Clean 1:rs 45 watt Panasoruc stereo shp. lessons7141964 5994 ---------receiver & nmplifier. ---- - -Rent20'motorhome.self TopD or m a l c h i n g 2 6 • Boats, Sail 9060 cont S22S wk 500 free Paid!! .... "'1 ~~"" cond 642 5161. ••••• •• • ••••••••••••.._ '7 2 Audi I 00 \'---..-~......... ·7s F1es~a. good cooS. .-cNl 67"1732 ClOSEO SUNO"YS .1.utos U-~ 39.000 ml, $2500 552· tSl~ _.,., ..,. Hondo 9727 :. ••• : •• =............ 548·7136 ~ IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1961 Silver Cloud. while, G-•rol 990 1 --- Ph I. k 1 •• ••••••••••••••••••••• mi. 968·3990 Call Jim H-n ase mear spea ers •75 CATALINA Sailboat, -----------:ir-or ••••••••••••••••••••••• good Cond $21 500 ""'"' 68 Ford Galaxy 500, eo~ YISIT YOUR Owner 640-4999. · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• vert Runs xlnl. $800 Almost new BIG quality w /boat slip on Balboa Trail..-s, Trani 9170 Mike Lake so und $450. Alex . Island. Fully equipped,••••••••••••••••••••••• Cre•ift-Mofon 552·2,2_3_1._85_1·_937~ _ inboard gas eng $31 ,000 Mini trailer · compact 8 35-3171 19" COLOR TV 675-4456, 760-8359 car. Kltch, awning. port Philco. $200. Alex. 552·0231. 851-9371 5· Panasonic TV. 1 yr old. remote control, $1600 cash. 645-2456 ZENITH Chromacolor 11, 21 · · screen oak cabinet retail S900 m\.15t tell $45-0 631 6233 14 Hobie w tr&Jler. best a potty. $1500. 548-2497 offer 8111 Willis. '65 Airstream 835-:1133days 21'. good cond., ve r1 -------• clean. Air cond, awning, FOR SAIL-Sporty 12 ' TV rotators, sips -4. Sailboat w,trailer SSOO 13,SOO. 66l-1844. 8S7-Ui01 eves -----1TN1lers, utllty 26'1slander'69,$6500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 492·8604 Eoc(. lrlr. 4· X 7' very 498-1907.498 0813 clean, $275/0BO ~5398 We'll Buy Or '.>f'll Your C 1t<an Import O n Con<.iqnm~nt 11 Call O ur u,.,.d c .. r Ma n o<J'" fOOA Y'" 8 3 1-2040 49~-4Y49 RCA 25 " color TV · '81Hobie14 --------- AM FM • phono, walnut with trailer at extras. uto Se"ice, Pcwts 1111111 console. nds a little E and Wk d Ii Accessories 9400 ~or~ S_l_lOf!!:n:._?51·3069 ~847.~ en • ••••••••••••••••••••••• C -.i.11-.... --L MW jo --4 Porsche Alloys w. new Blaupunkt am,rm cass. Cal-20, good cond. Clean. tires. must sell , $8-00 stereo. Model CR2000. 2 Newport Beach. S3.200 OBO 645·!>3'74. 642-6189 spkrs. still in carton, p P . <714>673-7966. S185. 960-6.117 -----Set wire wheels w /locks, ----14' HOllE $950 . m any cadillac $250. 11 I Ra led T 0 w e r Good cond 631·5424 SS7-7883 lrene559·5804 SPEAKERS Xlnt -.:.. --- sound.OrigS900 sellS450 Boats.Slips/ Turbo system Alfa 552 9047 Scott Docks 9070 R o m e o co m-p I e t e ------- -• •• • ••• • ••••••• •••••••• w waste gate sacrifice Boats Ii Marine Dock Meed Paint? $895 cost $1800. 893-022S Equlptnlld 20 --------i • •• •• ••••••••••• ••••••• Reas rates 67$-97 evs G-·r-• 90 I O ~ -11 • .. _ t 30 Autos for Sale .... ~ lllt • --ucam. up 0 m ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lngth . $275 mo. 311 IMPORTANT Non·profit org nds your Ed_!ewater673-1943 NO'I1CETO boat. plane. car. etc READERSAND Liberal lax deduction ADVERTISERS ~vantage. 213/65-1·23H_ Transportation The price or items Two 15' wooden dory11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• advertised by vehicle Xlnl cond. $3()0ea. Com~rs. Seth/ dealers in the vehicle 61s.szci1 Rent 9120 classtfied advertising ••••••••••••••••••••••• columns does not in· Kayak, Tad, 4.2 meter. 1969 RV 1012 ft camper elude any applicable bre ak-down paddle & for P U. truck. Fully taxes. license, transrer encl. s torage. S375 elec & self cont. fees. finance charges. 673 135-0 $1000 bsl 848-4815 aH fees for air pollution con· -,.--4pm. trol device certifications Boats, Power 9040 or dealer documentary ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1012 Camper Four Star preparation charges un· 260 SEARAY Sundancer w refrigerator & stove. less otherwise specified WEIUY CLEAN CARS AHDTRUCKS C OM HELL CHEVROL ET ,'.1'...,. lbrl•or lll\d 11 t-..l\\1~ ..... , S~l>-1 200 HIGH BUYER Top dollars for Sports Cars. Bu~. Campers, 914 's, AudJ s AskforU1CMGR JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACll 842-2000 TOPDOLI.AR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAH USED CARS! For The Best Buy Or Lease Deal In OranaeCounty ... Come See Us Today'- SADllEBACK BMW 28402 Marprite Pkwy. &flsswn Vie.Jo Avery Pkwy. exit to ft S Freeway> 83 I ·2040 495-4949 Closed Sundays CREVIER 0 I ST & H OADWAY SANTA AMA 835·3171 ntl ULTNu.Tl OlllVINO MACHINE •USEDBMWs• '76 2002 4.spd (0603) '793201 S/fi <5894 > ·79 528i S/~<176> '81 320iA (~) Closed s-cla s The Most bcitilt9 Peri Of Yow IMW Pwchaw Or Lease Could le Mclaren BMW!! luyOra..cn. ly Our Phone Plan! 1714) 522-5333 _________ , ORANGE COUHTY'S OLDEST . & Sales-Service-Leasing ~NGE COAST ---BRADLEY GT II OBO. Susan, 857·1447 '\ • Saob 9760 '80. show car. w/many -HONDA ••••••••••••••••••••••• exlras.7.000mjMuslsell 1976 Ford Torino. s1,00(S • • HEADnllARTERS LEASE . below factory cost. or best offer Call all T-Owner. 497·1412 3PM . 642-8680 . TODAY!!! DIRECT! JEEPs:C ARS . Ford.73Galaxy500,4d°?, UNIVERSITY PICKUPS fro m $35. high mil but good concH SALES&SERVICE 1981 SAAB Avail. at local Gov'l Radio, AC. good tir~ OLDSMOllLE 'Auctions. For Directory Asking Sl.000. 893.481' HONDA TURBOS call Surplus Data Center art6PM •' (415 1330·7800 GMC TRUCkS BEACH IMPORTS '76 Ford Granada 6 cyra 2850 Harbor Blvd. 848 Dove Str~t Buick 9910 ps. 8-trk. 64.000 mL Orii. COSTAMESA NEWPORTBEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner. $2695 /0BO. 540-9640 752.0900 '77 luldl Recial 559-4860. •• --------------38,000 mi, 1 owner, xlnt '7-8 LTD Landeau x1'..!t '79 ACCORD 4dr. auto. Subaru 9762 condition. $3,500. Uf amJfm , xlnl cond Best ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714) 495.2547 cond. lo mi. $4300 offer. 955-11001831·8105 ·so Subaru Brat. really ---645·6118 759-5751 --------h 11 1970 Buick Skylark. good '79 Sedan Accord. U5es sharp. Has camper s e body & int .. needs minor Ply desire 73-74 LT • reg gas. Very low miles. a /cam/Cm cass. 842'1743 work. $650 080 536-4920 xlra clean. lo mi. smal\ Asking S7l"JO. 661 ·027~ _ Toyota 9765 evs eng. 302·351. Anthony, ••••••••••••••••••••••• adill 9-91 -5 ~4--0904----1 '76 CVC Station Wagon. '7S Celica GT Uftback C ac 9950 $2795 B I k I I d d I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • M~rcury , c ean. oa e • ••• .1'. 646 0681. S6495. 8317634,759-2465 CONTEMPLATING ••••••• •••••••• : ·• -------CADIUAC? ORANGECOUNTVS,, ·79 Accord LX. lo mi. ful· ·77 SRS liflback a c. 5spd, we specialize in leases AHEST ly equipped, xlnl rond. R & H luggage rack for the business ex-LINCOLN-MERCURY $6000. 642-5004 $3495851·1853 ecut1ve & professional DEALERSHIP ·so Celica. 5 spd. am.rm L0arp~w 19ti8'on1 § __ _,,.UI.• Lotvs 9737 stereo. 22,000 mi. xlnt If....., ~ T~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $5500. 642-5409 CacMac:s LINCOi.N-MERCURY '74 Europa special, 35M , --How ht Stock! 16-18 Auto Center Dr. miles. yellow, like new. Tnwnph 9767 NABER~ SDFwy-LkForestexit• sacrifice, S6500. • • • • • • ••• •••• ••• •• ••• •• IRVINE 855·1968alt6 PM ·so TR7 Conv. 6500 ma, all CADILL A . 830-7000 -· ---------extras. Spec paint, fun ~ Mencia 9738 car. S77SO, 759-1336 ll.00 H."1>01 Blv1t '75 c-:: •••• • •• • ••••••••• • • ••• c t>'>c.i v..: .... 1 540 n100 s 200 ~ " '74 Maida RX-4 Wag90, VollSWCICJl'I 9770 ~~~~!!!!!!!~I --.;...l __ . __ l· __ _ bad seals, 25,000 m i. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• _; 7 4 Mell qM!ls •· Best offer. 96().3765. 79 VW RAlllT 79 CADILLAC Brougham, 4 dr. Only DtESa COUPE DEVILLE 66,ooo mi. Orig own~ 7-4 Ma:.tda. new eog. new 5 speed. AC. AM /FM DIESa $1995. 545-6786 • paint. stereo. Sl500. 1 759-9332 stereo cass .. stee Cruise, wire wheel cov· _ _ __ __ _ radials. whitewalls, tlnl· ers. leather int .. slereo . ed glass. low miles lilt, air cood. (008YBD> ·75 Mazda RX4 am rm xlnt cond one owner. $2100 0 BO &ia-8475 Black w1black velour (544XJR> •7 6 CCIDl'i • Xln~ cond. fs.700 mi. Sunroof. racer red. $2700 OBO orig owner 675-3215 w s lip, '79 lo hrs auto Po r l • IA · Poll Y · A II by the advertiser. I t I ohol 1 l Butane. queen size bed. pi 0 ' It c e e<' 5 ove, ll lS in aood condition & &-61-us/ m i r acle mazda Roy CarYer,lnc. Merceda lens 97 40 Rolls 'Royce BMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only $6695 ---" HtcWl Uowcwi &J':.. VOU(SWAGlN. INC MustClftC) 9952 refrig, dock side pwr & • -...C!..~I I 9520 charger. ratbometer r1s h sleeps 6. $1500 call • ass cs finder, apelco radio between lOam and 5pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• telephone, radio dlrec-:_631·7~ PROTIEST lion Cinder. full canvas. 9040 '5 7 T -BIRD 641 -8251 or964·3518 Boats, Power IN TOWN! IESTOFFER! <~UKZl TH EODORE ROBINS FORD !1.1>1) HAllBOR 81\10 (()~IA ME "ll Cl•l'l UU10 ---- 1540Jamboree 2150 H.t.or lt.d. Newport Beach 640-6444 Costa Meta 645·5700 1972 BMW Bavaria. xlnt TOP $DOLLARS For Cl~an Used Cars&Trucks We pa,y cash on the spot! Contact buyer at Des.tls Chtuwt Sao Clemente 831-0580 492-8500 WANTED! Late model Toyotas and Volvo•. Call us TODAY!!' cond. 4 spd, air. $3400 or best oHer. S36·4822. '76 2002Jo mi. snrf, am/fm, phone ~un.2 •72 2002 4spd, a/c, am/fm cass, radials. xlnt thru· out $4200673-2750 AL'THORIZEO ~1ERCEDES·BENZ DEAi.ER 831·1740 495-1700 '68 1600. good body /In· '72 250C lerior, good mech. needs 2 dr. sport coupe. lm- llltle minor work. $2200. m aculale. $8200 Tom -494-1475 675·979'7, 673-62\0 ~ 534--4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove ....................... Equipment includes economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission. left remote mirror, max. cooling, bench seat, body side moldings. white sidewall glass belted radial tires and morel (145687). 1981 IMPERIAL DEMONSTRATOR Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 epeed trans., bucket seats with fold down rear teat, tinted glass, elec. clock. body side moldings, max. cooling, glass belted radial tlree and morel (1oan3). Loaded inc. auto. trans .. 11r cond .. pwr. st.-brakes-windowa-spllt leather seats, AM·FM stereo with tape, tilt, cruise, custom wheels. wsw steel belted radial tires and much, much morel (111436). THIS WEEK'S USED CAR SPECIALS 1974 PlYMOOTH CUSTOM SUBURBAN WAGON Automatic trana., air cond., pwr. steering & brakes, radio, 3 seats, wsw ttr .. & morel (041 KQB). COUGAR XR7 CWPE Lo.ded Inc. auto. Irena., air cond., pwr. st.·brakH·wlndows. tllt, AM-FM 8 track, pedded top, ma a • much morel (426RXP). $ 197& FOID POOi WMDN , Economical 4 cyl. 9"Qlne, standard trans .. bucket aeats, iugg11ge rack, redio & air cond. (284PQT). s Equ i pment Includes V8, automatic transmission, power steering. power brakes, bucket seats, body side & deck stripes, white sidewall glass belted radial tires arid morel (136529). SERVICE HOURS: ...... ., ..... ,,..., 7:30 .... to 5:30 ..... s. .. .., 1:06 .... to 5:00,... Sii OUI SERVICE DIPAITMIMT AIOUT llNTIHG A 'I I CHIYSLll 01 PLYMOUTH. H YSLER LeBARON COUPE Automatic trans .. air cond., pwr. 11Mrfng & brakes. AM-FM radio, vinyl top. wsw tlree & morel (748TSU). E NTERTAI NMENT 86 OBITUARI ES 88 BUSI N ESS 89 How does Ronald Reagan get, atJXly with attacking Wall Street? ... B9 Cable TV ~ate hike rejected for notw .· By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. OMtr .......... Laguna Beach City Coundl members rejected a request by Storer Cable TV for a rate ln· cr'ease Tuesday night. but left the door open for future con- sideration should the firm pro- vide evidence to support its re- quest. "There is room for a rate in- crease," said Mayor Wayne Baglln al the end of the nearly two-hourhearing. "Butldon'tsee the materials provide.<! to back it up. I'm receptive to more in· formation from Storer (lo the future) but not based on f al th or ir- relevant statistics." The Laguna Niguel based firm is seeking a rate increase from $7 .50 to $8.50 per month for its 5,300 cable subscribers in Laguna Beach. It also seeks a bike for additional hookups from $2 to $2.50. Councilman Howard Dawson cast the lone dlssentlng vote. A parade of speakers gave council members a variety of rea- .sons why they thought a rate increase is -jnapproprlate, and one cable customer suggested that a rate decrease be con- sidered instead. A major concern expressed by some hilltop residents was the unavailability of cable service to homes in Temple Hilla, Top of the World and Arch Beach Heights. Detty ...... IWI "'9'9 Two-year-ol.d viewing platform at Oak Street Beach seen cu appropriate for the blufftop Location in LogurJa Beach,. Lagunmu oppose view deck The city has funds for the proj· eel, but now some Laguna Beach residents say they don't want a view platform erected at the base of Thalia Street. Council members Tuesday re- ceived a petition containing the signatures of 200 Lagunans - most of whom listed addresses near Thalia Street beach -op- posing construction or a wooden view platform similar to one erected two years ago at the base or Oak Street. Bruce Hopping, who said be spent two days collecting the signatures, said the platform, "while fine for Oak Street," would be out of scale for Thalia Street. He proposes terraced landscaping, a few benches at the blufftop site, and ceramic tile on retaining walls as an alternative to what be considers 1'an overwhelming structure." The city received a $47,850 grant from the state Coastal Conservancy for constructi.on of a view platform similar to the Oak Street structure. Last month the council ap· proved hiring Lang and Wood, the architects who drew up the Oak Street plans, to provide the Thalia Street drawings for about $3,000. Hopping said the plans could be altered to "conform with the environmental character of the area right now," without risk of losing the state grant money. But Terry Brandt, tbe city's director of municipal services, says substantial changes to the plan couJd endanger tbe project. "We have been told tbat if the project ls substantially revbed, we'd have to 10 through a re- hearinl <by the state Coastal Conservancy)," Brandt said. He said the bearta11 are held only twice a year and the next Some Lagunans who li~ near Thalia Street sa11 Oak Street-ti/Pe structure at that location would be out-of-scale. They t.ront terraceq landacaping and benchea inatead. one would not be until Sep- tember. A major change would "probably requlre that we go through that process again,'• be said. Councilwoman Sally Bellerue said the idea of a viewing plat- form is valid, bul said it should be scaled down. She suggested the Arts Com- mission take a Jook at the proj- eel, and Mayor Wayne Baelin said the city's Design Review Board also should offer a recom- mendation on either a scaled- down plallorm, or tnbandn1 the terr•ced landacaping as Hop- plna suggested. The council wants recommen- dationa from both panels before desisn work 1ets too far alon1. t/ury debates fate of deputy All Oran1e Couaty Superior Court JUl'J •a• to becin de- llberatiom todQ ID U.. ,ttdnap- tla1 triil OI 1btl1fr1 deputy Oeor1• Loudermilk of Cotta ...... wbO .. pcll1nyed 'NII· .., .,, .... .,. ... ,....., HCUMd "ICiod S.maritan." LoUdennUk, defense laW)W' Al ltDkke Mid, WU oalJ tr'Jllll to spare tbe four women ,_ II aecuMd ot abduetlac the l•· , .... ., ot Nial ~ 18'0 ~ Of an1e County JaJl u auapecled dnnt• drlYeft: "Georae Loudermlllf w11 d0- ln1 a faYOr for each and ...,. OH of tblie "°"9• '' Stokke Mid &a bit ~ mtementa lo tlM Jury tn ~1 lor Court Judp Jamn K. Timer'• courtroom. Loudlhnill 11 cllar1ed Wltb foar eounta al kldllapp&a1 and thfff eoan.. of falH laapriloa· mnt ID cdDMetlOD wttb (oUI' aa. l•lid lnddenll betWffa..JaJJ and October of 1980. In the molt AAr"• v atecl ~ UM! cases, acc:ordln& to tbe proeecu- tion, the defenclant tOot a ». year.old MllliaiD VteJO woman IO . • HCIUded hllltop area .. ., lrilne uiid u.reataec1 IO rape her and kill ber lut October. Cable manager Renee Collins said it would take about 15 miles or .cabJe to provide service to the entire town. She said the cost of undergrounding cable is about $40,000 a mile. She then offered a com - promise that would see cable in· stalled throughout the city in ex- change for a partial rate in- crease now, with the remainder due when the cable is in. But council members said they'd like to see results before approving any rate increase, and Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick said be favors new customers picking up the tab for cable in· stallation. instead of all sub· scribers "subsidliing•• new wire. Other complaints lodged by customers ranged from alleged- ly rude employees at the Storer offices, to a comment by ooe customer who says he hasn't been billed for service since the cable was installed in January. "l'm getting free TV 1ervtc folks, and they're (Stortr) ask ing you for more money to su sidize me." The council milJority also sal lt would Hke to see an e satellite -which was schedul to be installed two years ago operating before they consider rate bike. That satellite would bring ia an additional 30 channels to su6; • scribers, as well as a selection Of movie channels. ·, Condo plan restudied .l Developers eye 'possible revision' of South Laguna project_ Plans for development of a 10-story time -share con- dominium project on the site of the existing Treasure Island mobile home park in South Laguna were officially sent back to the drawing board today. Al the request of developers Bernard Syfan and Merrill Johnson, the board referred the matter to the county Environ- mental Management Agency for further study and ''possible re- vision.'' The developers last week an- nounced their intention to withdraw the plan to build up to 500 units on the seaside property after Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose district includes South Laguna, warned that he might seek a decrease ln the number of permitted units. The developer said that even at 500 units, the project would not be economically feasible. The supervisors' action -in the words of one county official Capo district schools OK busing fee Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustees have approved a 55 -cent-a-day charge for bus transportation provided by the district for next year. In a unanimous vote Monday night, the trustees adopted the plan which is expected to save the school district $500,000 in the 1981-82 school year. A provision in the l'ay-as-you- go plan makes it possible for low income families to pay a re- duced charge based on their in- come. Adoption of the transportation fee is part of a cost-cutting effort in the district, which faces a $5. 7 million budget deficit because of reductions lo state and federal funding. Trustees said the fee could be reduced if government financial assistance to school districts is lncre"BSed over levels currently proposed. LB sUmmer • r e cre ation • • signup t une Signups for summer recrea- tion classes through the Laguna Beach recreation department begin at 9 a.m. Saturday, and ci- ty officials expect a line to start forming hours earlier. "We're going to hand out num- bers, sort of 31 flavors style," joked one city recreation of· ficial. The popularity of tennis, dance and other classes makes for a lona line the first day of res· tstration. Saturday's signups will run from 9a.m.to1 p.m. Thereafter, re1istratlon ls during rel\llar office hours Mon- day thr:ougb Friday at the recreation department, 515 Forest Ave. For information, call the de- partment at 497-3311, ext. 201. -gives the developers "an out" because the proposal was not de- nied outright. By sending the matter to the EMA for further study, a new proposal could be prepared and later submitted to the county Planning Commission and Board of Supervisors for con- sideration, he explained. The proposed development drew strong criticism from resi- dents of the trailer park and South Laguna civic leaders. They warned that removal t>f the trailer park would reduce the stock of affordable housing in the area, and that such a large development would destroy the community's "village like" at- mosphere. Riley himself warned of the project setting a precedent for a "Miami Beach syndrome." The supervisor said be had In- terjected bis office Into the plan- ning of the project more than he would usually because of the numerous confHcts the developt ment plans posed. ·• He said it was a ''textbook case" of the competing desiret of the local community and thf staff of the state Coastal Com- m I ssion. which has favored tourist·recreational use or the property. In a s tatement after the s upervisors' action, Treasurl! Island residents claimed victor)' ... '' <The) stability of the are• has been preserved, at least temporarily. ·'With the protection of th Orange County supervisor~ hopefully, this type of unsuitabll project will not emerge again, . the statement said. The current proposal was s1 stantially scaled down from th developers' original plan. Ad tionally, the developers offer to include apartment uni~ where Treasure Island tenan~ could relocate. 'h -FREDERICK SCHOEMElfl, Lavender boutique laivsuit upheld DrusciUa Tysen 's lavender- colored boutique in Laguna Beach is all right as far as Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald is con- cerned. But because the color of Miss Tysen's establishment is unap- pealing to both her neighbors and the city's Design Review Board, Judge Fitzgerald has decided he will not dismiss a lawsuit against her. The boutique owner had sought to have the city's legaJ action thrown out or court last week and Fitzgerald said he would withhold his ruling until he drove by her establishment. Having done so, be said in his ruling issued late last Friday~ he found the purple color was "at- tractive, eye-catching and not o f~nsivetothis court." However, he said that the col or the Strawberry Shortcak boutique was an appropriate ma ter to be considered by Laguna' Design Review Board, which ha previously denied her applicati to keep the boutique's lavend hue. About 30 neighbors also h filed a petition with the boardp testing the color of the building Pacific Coast Highway. Miss Tysen could not ~eached for comment this n;i~: mg. & Bus fares hiked; passes sell fast Fares to ride Orange County's public buses went up this week -and so did the demand for' monthly passes. Several of the 119 distributors who sell the passes for the Orange County Tran.sit District reported that they have run out of them, a district spokesman said. "We've never bad this happen before,•' said Madeleine Dickert, community relations officer, who ~aid OCTD bu avera1ed about 11,000 pass sales per month. Bus riders began paytn1 75 cents rather than SO cents Mon- day for a one-way local ride dur- ~g commuting hours. The far~ during middays, evenings adil weekends increased to 60 centst Regular monthly bus pas also went up from $17 .50 $21.50, but that didn't seem bother bus riders who report~ had many of the distribu:; runnine out of the wallet- cards by last weekend. Businesses such as J .C. 3 ney's , Albertson's, Gemco Laguna Federal Savin1s & Association sell the .passes "* OCTD as a public service. --.: Ms. Dickert said OCTD l ficlals won't know the eflecta Increased fares oo ridersblp tH later this week. 1 District officials say th pur~base of monthly passes less expensive than paybll fares. Aliso studellts due new school homes . GREAT GOOSE C~ES DEPr. -Hun1ry cltlatnt aton1 our best of all possible coasts can hardly walt now for tomor· row niaht when food considered a ereat delicacy begins to • wash uPon our shorelines. The Great Grunion Runs beeln t Thursday. In event you are among the uninitiated, grunion are little silver fish, about six inches lone, that begln runnlna up oo our beaches to spawn in March. That means they lay egaa In the sand. These eggs then get washed around and soon make new little gnmions. ~ The small fish are allowed to go about their business un· • (& molested for the first couple of r..\ months.of this spawning. TOM MURPHINI ~I/ BUT NOW, IT BECOMES ,L__ open season and you can go out · · after the new moon, wait for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for dinner. Isn't that simple? No, it isn't . Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum- mer camp and all the veteran campers from summers past dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They g.a ve,y<?u a gunny sack and instructed you to go out after m1dmgbt Wlth the bag and a flashlight and capture snipes from the treetops. Or maybe they simply sent you over to the next camp down the line to borrow a left-banded monkey wrench. It's lik~ that with grunion hunts. You may go out on the .. . -- ··11 you're a gnmum. sir, I'm really not intere1ted ... " beach and wait patienUy for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. DESPITE TWS, marine biological savants seem to keep issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches between 11 :18 p.m. and 1:18 a.m. Friday. See how precise that is? Trouble is, nobody ever tells th~ grunion about it. The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that are uncrowded at the darkened ends. This might include the Huntington Beach city or state beaches, the Newport-Balboa Peninsula, Big Corona, Laguna's Main Beach, Victoria in Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. Please note that this said might be. Not will be. Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would-be grunion hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in favor of the grunion going in. FIRST, IF YOU are more than 16 years of age, you must • have a valid California sportsfishing license to take grunion. Otherwise, you may be having an expensive chat with the fish and game warden wbo has also been known to be wandering around out in the s urf wash in the dark. Further, it's a no-no to try grabbing grunion with anything but your bare hands. There will be no nets. There will be no buckets. There will be no hooks. This vrobably means there will also be no grunion. Gruruon are slippery little devils that wiggle a Jot. Captur· ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ice cubes in running water. ALL THESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer the perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2: 12to4:12 a .m. Don't blame me if you don't catch anything but a cold. ''- aguna realigns 1cket pay system • It used to be that when you got apped with a parking ticket in aguna Beach, you had up to 11 onths to pay it before the lice caught up with you. No longer. Pa rking ticket pro· astinators can be found -and ned -within 45 days with the 'ty's new $22,000 computer tern. '1ut there's a bit or good news r tardy ticket payers, and city l'payers, as a result or the new gram. 1'For one thing," says police t. Gregg Bartz. "the new pro- am decriminalizes parking tations." In other words, you can't go to ii for a S5 parking ticket. Jnstead of a marshal showing at your front door with a war· ot for your arrest. the State epartment of Motor Vehicles erely places a hold on your bicle registration when you n't pay a ticket on lime. The good '1ews for Laguna heh taxpayer s is the city ould realize approximately ,000 in new revenues this year d perhape as much as $150,000 future yean, as a result ol the ogram. Here's hoW the program used work before the city set up op May 18: ThlrtJ days after a parltin1 cket became delinquent the th CGuDt1 court would retum e citation to the Lquoa Beech lce~enL PoUH Offtclala would proceat tlebt Uatoup the DMV and bmit a C!Omplahlt to the court. e court would tbeD ~ a tke Of aon-complianee ad ie· 1••r• b' the arrest ol ........ ~. •M ~Iii .. tM 111tem ... one •uually. we fouai r:Ml"9 }I m~ beldail," uu..w. Uader tb• unwieldy c~tJ :stem. 1..,,ma BUcb fiPtNd ~uect on only abOut eo to '10 percent or the tickets issued. And the court took 15 percent of the profit. "We anticipate collecting on 85 to 90 percer)t of the tickets is, sued." Bartz laid, adding the ci· ty also saves the 15 percent court cost. When you consider the city is· sued 61,000 parking tickets last year and expects to write 70,000 lo 75,000 in 1981, the savings add up. The convenience of paying a parking ticket at the pollce de- partment is also a favorable Cac· tor , police say, saving a trip to the courthouse on Crown Valley Parkway. And ticket r eciptents who want to contest thelr parking violation can set th,at up at the Laguna police station. Of course they'll stm have to appear at the South Orange County court to fight the thing. ManyU>ater classes set /or. summer Summer offertn11 throu1b the Lacuna Beach reereetlc.a de· putment promlu to be wet and wild, With cl ..... in 1wlaun1nc, aurflna, dlvtna, 1cuba and even • aHm and 1Wlm for wom•. And tbat doein't evet1 count the noa·aqatJc 1port1, Ada u teaal1, volle1ball, do1 Obe· dlence, karate, taA ctil cbua, coanti)'·Wtitirll daftclN, om· •dtla lllld ~·· -.... ................ ,~ .. 'laat t ..... , ... I ..-nm-....... lllWltr . ..,,.. .. .................... rcw ellll:li 1111 ...., tn· '---0 •• -,...... ttoe m e&•au. ~ Free atter·•chool aportlnt acUvll)ea may be the next casualty In the Irvine Unified School District's budget cutUn1 game. Minutes after passing a fee for buaine Monday night, school truatees aereed to consider a plan to charge Cor ex· tracurricular activities. They'll take up the mat- ter al their June 15 meeting. "It Is clear cut that there will be charges for those actlvllies next year ," said board presi· dent Frank Hurd. Irvine High School Principal Dean Waldfoyel presented the board with three possi· ble 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 the thlrd. A second plan charges students in accordance with the sport they play. Under the preliminary plan football, basket· ball , softb a ll and baseball would run $75. Sports such as golf, volleyball, wreslllng, field hockey and gym- nastics would cost $65. Soccer , swimming and water polo would cost $50. Because most students participate in more than one sport, a plan charg- ing one flat fee would be pref er r ed, sai d Waldloyel. The principal suggested a $140 fee. By using any of the three plans hlgh schools could expect to collect $65,000 in sporting fees, he said. The board directed starr to prepare a fee schedule for review by the June 15 meeting. • Turnyour • · unu~bles into e usable e cash. can e Daily Pilot e classified -642-5678. o.n, ""',.....,.__.It......, Booster Club President John Hoefler sets fire to la&t JOU for Fountain Valley High School band's trip to Wcuhington, D.C. Principal David Hagen and band director Frank Barnes watch. Band plays IOU requiem Fountain Valley High School has paid orr the last of $81,000 in debts for the marching band's trip to Washington, D.C. last January to play in President Reagan's inauguration parade Many members of the 134· member band cheered and ap- plauded this week as Booster Club President John Hoefler set the last of the IOUs ablaze in front of the campus. The school had been notified of its selection as one of the 20 high school bands to march in the parade on Dec. 5, and had raised all but $21.000 of the night and room costs by the Jan. 19 de· parture date. They borrowed the rest from the school's associated student body treasury. "It's been very heartwarming that so many people continued to s upport the band after the in· auguration," said Evie Belgen, school information orncer . "We're all just sort or breathing a sigh or relier ... Principal Hagen said the money was raised through 1,025 ind ividual donations ranging from $1 to $5,000. Th e rour-da y trip to Washington, D.C. included tours of the White House, the Smithso- n i an Ins titution, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monu- ment, Mount Vernon, and Ari· ington Cemetery. he said. He said the hlgh point of the journey was marching in the parade just moments arter it had been announced that the American hostages held in Iran had been released. Schqol offi cials say the band received a rousing, emotional reception from thousands of spectators when it played the Civil War tune. "When Johnny Co m~s Marching Home." "W?. not only toured American history, but we participated in history," Hagen said. The band was chosen by the inauguration committee out of 400 high school applications. Irvine OKs pupil bus fare Trustees for the Irvine Unified School District have unanimous· ly adopted a plan lo charge parents up to $100 a year per child for school busing. The board deadlocked with members Fred Gahm and T . John Nakaoka opposing the fee schedule until the board agreed to provide free busing for families with incomes of more than $12,000 and with les's 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 more than $18,000 to pay $100 annually for the first and second child, $50 for the third and nothing for the fourth. Families with incomes more than $16,000 and less than $18,000 will be asked to pay $100 Cor the first child, $50 for the second, $25 ror the third and nothing for the rourlh. Those earning more than $14,000 and less than $16,000 will pay $75 for lhe 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 fee-for-ride program wiU cost the district on· ly $254,000 next year, compared to $678,000 for the Tree 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 eliminat ing unnecessary buses. Many of the children an bused for safety and conven ience reasons. said Upton. JUNE IS GRADUATION & WINE CELLAR FATHER'S DAY AND FINE SPIRITS JUN·E·"21 t PRICES EFFECTIVE THROU~H SUHDA Y, JUHE 14 s SAii MAITIN PINOT CllAllOtltAY Reg. tB.49 750ml c.c. CHAMPAGNE . ,, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1911 L The Fat Man, Baron, resume an old feud CLASS I Fl ED 04 at Belmont . . . See D2 DICK MILLER Angels' prohlelll: Autry Wearing an impeccably tailored western suit with alligator skin boots, the one-time cowboy movie star strode toward the podium in the Anaheim Stadium press lounge the night of Sept. 28, 1968. Gene Autry bad made a fortune singing, "I'm Back in the Saddle Again." The owner of the Angels had learned a new tune and he didn't like it: ''I'm Back lo the Cellar Again." A man who owned a horse named, if you can stand the irony, "Champion," dido 't like what was happen· ing to his team. So he began what was to become an all too familiar habit: he fired Fred Haney as general manager and hired Dick Walsh. And 39 games into the '69 season Walsh fired Bill Rigney as the field manager. But barely two years into his five-year contract Autry fired Walsh· and Harry Perry's • ·magic • continues LOS ANGELES CAP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers, who have not defeated Gaylord Pefry in three years, probably wish tbe wily veteran of the Atlanta Braves would finally call it 'quits. But there's no telling when that's going to happen. The Dodgers suffered their second loss lo Perry this season Tuesday night. bowing to the Braves 3-1 in 10 innings. Dalton became the third general manager in three years, a record that was to make Charlie Finley envious. In hiring Walsh, Autry had said, "Dick Is 45 years old. We wanted someone we could build with tor the future." The future turned out to be 333 games and see you later. In all the finger pointing and accusations over the pratfaJI by the Millionaire's Club artd the firing or Jim Fregosi, Autry again has escaped the blame. After all, the Chairman of the Board is an authentic American folk hero. He Ls a decent man. Gene Autry is as clean as his image. And maybe it's about time for someone to tell the truth: Gene Autry is the Angels' problem. Through five winning <but barely) and now 16 losing seasons there has been only one constant: Autry maklng the final de- cision on hirings or firings. It has been denied, but it was Autry's de- cision in the first place to hire Fregosi and not General Manager Buzzle Bavasi'a, And it was Autry's decision to can Fregosi only one season and 49 games after he led the Angels to the only division title in their history. Autry has a history of bum decialons. Seventy-four games into the 1974 season he decided to ~et rid of another field leader, Bobby Winkles, and Whitey Herzog was named the interim manager while Autry was trying to hire Dick Williams. "I would have signed Whitey," Autry said later, "but I needed a name on the marque." What Autry didn't know was that (See ¥1LLER, Page DZ> Frost gets arwtlrer big Toronto memnry TORONTO CAP) -Dave Frost has had a few memorable experiences at Exhibition Stadium and Tuesday night was no exception. The first time he faced tbe Blue Jays in Toronto wts Aug. 25, 1979, when he bad a 22-run lead for the first time in his pitching career in an Angel 24·2 slaughter. Last year on Jun~ 2, he beat Louis Leal and the Jays 6·3 for his final victory of the American League baseball season before undergoing sur- gery on his right elbow. 80 was as far as he had gone in Salt Lake at any time. "WE" SENT JUM down to Salt Lake to get him physically sound. He had already proved he was a big-league pitcher." Nobody, including Frost himself, expected such a spec· tacular performance. "It just doesn't make any sense to me, but I'll take it any day.'' said the 28-year-old right· bander. "I just wanted lo go out and pitch better here than l did in Triple A where I was hideous. "GAYWRD GETS you mad," &aid Bob Welch, who battled 1>erry for eight Innings. ·'I want· ed to beat him and I'm sure be wanted lo beat me. Mike Sodders FROST COMPLETED his comeback Tuesday night by downing Leal again as ~he Angels blanked the Jays 3-0 for the second night in a rQw. On Monday, Ken Forsch pitched a three-hit, 3-0 shutout. "I just don't understand it. I was down there with Chris Knapp and Fred Martinez and au or us bad two or three starts and looked bad." "He knows how to pitch, that's for sure. Most guys would be glad to be knocking on 200 wins ~ here he's knocking QJl 300," I J>erry's last victory, his ... fJ.fth in eight decisions this year. was No. 294 of his 20-year big league career. Perry gave up only five bits in nine innings and the only run be allowed came in the sixth ln- n in g . The Dodgers scored despite getting the ball out ol the Infield. Sodders' hoine run h e lps ASU OMAHA, (AP> -Arizona State cal~ on relief pitcher Kevin Dukes to hold off ~r sissippi State 4-3 in a College World Series winner's bracket contest Tuesday oight. ffil!l• recalledJrom Salt Late C[ty Of the Pacific Coast League on May 24, limited the Jays to four singles over 6th innings. He was relieved by Andy Hassler who no-bit Toronto the re- mainder of the game. He was lifted with one out in the s.evenUl. il}Jling after Barry Sonne\! collected an infield single. Hassler held the Jays hit· less the rest of the game lo pick up his fourth save. In Triple A, Frost was 1·2 with an 8.60 earned-run average. Before the Angels get too high over consecutive shutouts, they sheuld consider the opposition. THE JAYS HAVE not scored a run in 22 innings and have been blanked seven times in their Jut 21 games and nine times over the season. For the second night in a row they wasted a rine pitching performance. Dave Stieb gave up just seven hits against Forsch Monday and Leal limited lhe Angels to five hits while log- ging seven strikeouts. "They expect me to keep them i~the game for seven, eight in· nings,'' said the 42-year-old Perry. "Any s tarting pitcher should do that. With the bullpens teams have today, that should be enough to get the job done. Dukes, who threw 3~ innings of no-hit ball in Tuesday's first· round 11·2 win over Texas, re- lieved Sun Devils starter Randy Newman in the third with Mis· sissippl State leading 3-1. "There wasn't any reason why I pulled him," said Manager Gene Mauch. "He had thrown right around 80 pitches. 79 and Tonight, Geoff Zahn (5-6) faces Toronto right-hander Jim Clancy (3·3). EddieCareykeysUCI'srelayhopesatNCAAfmau. '·Against the Dodgers, you know before the game you're go- ing to be in for a big job. You have to be extra sharp and, fortunately, tonight I had pretty good control." P ERRY WALKED only one batter, and that one inten- tionally. The Braves scored twice in the top of the 10th inning to break a 1-1 tie, with pinch bitter Bill Naharodny doubling borne the tie-breaking run. ''Gaylord pitched a great game and l was glad I was able to help out," said Naharodny. "I was trying to hit a home run. I went up there swinging as bard as I could." Bruce Benedict, who doubled home AUanta's first run in the fifth inning, led off the 10th with an infield single off reliever Dave Stewart, 3-1, the eventual loser. Rafael Ramirez sacrificed and Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda brought in Steve Howe to face Naharodny, who was bat· ling for pinch hitter Biff Pocoroba. Naharodny then cracked hJs double down the left field line that scored Benedict. Jerry Royster followed with another run-scoring double. "PINCH HITTING," said Naharodny, ''is pretty tough. But I am hitti.Qg .333 as a pinch hitter so maybe it's not that tough." The Dod1era got tfieir run when Welch reached first on an infield single to lead off the sixth. DerreJ 'thomaa aacrlflced but Perry's throw to ncond wu wild, allowing Welch to take third, from where he scored on Rick Monday's grounder to second. When Welch aot hla infield 1tn1le, the play at fint bue wu extremely close, and AUanta Man.,er Bobby Cox ar1ued the play and wound up betn1 eJeded br umpire Frank Pulli. An ln· iln1 Won, PulU reversed a call on balk. ll'lnt, be ruled that w.adl b8d balked, bUJ ebanpd .a1 dect.lon wben WeJeb ·~ pealed that he WU not OD the pl&cblal nabber. 1,}• tbe ecmcl~ 1ame ol 1119 ..,...PIM Mrl• toniebt, Pb1I NllikrO. N. wW IUl1 for Atllala IP'~ Im ROMoa. 'M. ' The senior left-hander shut the door on the 46-16 Bulldogs the rest of the way. He set down 11 straight until giving up a walk to Steve D'Ercole in the bottom of the seventh. A walk to Mark Gillaspie in the eighth represent- ed the only other Mississippi State baserunner against Dukes in 611.i innings of relief. He's can-yii)g the load for UCI track tea 400-meter star shelves· event in or der to be fresh for a t eam effort jv r elay Arizona State rallied for three runs in the bottom of the fourth . Ricky Nelson led off with a single and stole second. After Al Dav~ walked, Stan Holmes singled in Nelson. Kevin Romine followed with a fielder's choice to load the bases with one out. Then Bert Martinez laced a single to score two runs. No. 1-ranked Arizona State bad scored first in the game when All-American Mike Sod· ders, a product of Westminster High and Orange Coast College, drilled his 22nd home run of the year in the second inning. The loss matches Mississippi State against Texas Thursday night. Ariiona Stale, now 52·12, moves to Friday's winner's bracket final against the winner of tonight's Oklahoma State· Miami contest. In a Tuesday afternoon elimination game, South Carolina raJlied to ouat Maine, 12·'· By JOHN SEV ANO Of, .. o.lly l'lllC 1'8fl There are varying degrees of decision. Some, obviously, are easier to make than others. Eddie Carey, one of UC Irvine's pre- miere sprinters, had a decision lo make. His wasn't an easy one. thoURh. Carey bad lo decide which event be was going to participate in during Thursday's opening heats of the NCAA Track and Field Championships ln Baton Rouge, La. Having qualified in both the 400-meter and mile relay events, Carey originally thought he would run in both. THE CHOICE seemed logical. Carey's 45.35 last mqnth ln the Pepsi meet at UCLA not oqly qualified him for the na· tionals, but gave the junlor the fill~ best 400-meter clocking in the world this season -fourth best among collestana. And, as the anchqr to UCl's mile relay squad, Carey helped the quartet to a con· ference record in the PCAA cbam- pionsbJps by running a 45.S leg, givin1 the team a 3:08.'8 finish. So, as far as carey was concerned, there was no decision to make. He'd participate in both events and let bis efforts dictate the outcome: Unfortunately, Carey's coach -Kevin McNalr -bad other plans; plans wbich affected Carey's original decision and would force bim to make another one. · McNAIR, A VETERAN of NCAA com- petition, felt bis ace sprinter would ex- haust himself if be competed in ·both events. Of course, McNair's reasoning bad logic, too. First, there was the balmy, sweltering heat of Baton Rouge to consider .... and UCIREPOKI' forecasts for the end of the week predicted qotbing but the same humid conditiona. That meant that if Carey were to reach the finals in both events, he'd have to run a total of six quarte~. , McNair's concern was that bis sprinter just wouldn't have what it takes on the final day (o be effective; not only to himaeU but to the ·mue relay squad1 too. Finally, McNair told Carey he'd nave to choose one event. · 1 "There were hearts and mlnds lo con· 1 alder as well as bodies," explained McNair. "It waa a humanitarian decision, 1 lf that's not too heavy a word." The final verdict? Carey would run ln the mile relay. • ''I ASKED HIM to aacrlflce that (the 400) to JO with the team concept," sald McNair. "I thought it would be better· come back with four medals instead one. ·'This way they can all come back A Americans and he CCarey) still h another year left. Plus, he'll still get glory. I thought this was better for overall program.'' McNair's decision wasn't a hasty on The fact Carey and Bill Dorvall cw forfeited running in the. 400 intermedia hurdles) could participate in a later TA meet in Sacramento, the Baton Rou heat, plus the fact twp seniors compile b the mile quartet, cushioned the weign( the coach's choice. "It was the only way to. go beca that's a world class meet," analy1 McNalr. "When you have a group ut works that long~ that hard . . . ' "If I wasn't completely told on the fa they were sold on the idea . . . " · McNAIR DIDN'T complete eltb thought. adding the final decialon w made last , Friday, after spending m than a month. wrestling with the declei of which way tb go. "The five of us decided together," e plained McNair. "and Car~y·s opening mark at the meeting was, 'I'm drol>p the quarter for the mile relay."' Carey admitted he made-the 1tatemen (See CAREY, P a1e Dl> Connors upset by C/,erc; Navratilova ~footed PARIS (AP) -Jose LW. Clerc, the 22-year·old Argentlnlan, upeet Jlmmy Connors, 4-t, f ·2, 4·1, 7-5, f-0 today for a place ln the aemillnala or the French Open tennis cbamplonsblps. Connon, the No. 2 seed bebind BJom Borg, batUed from the buellne on the slow clay ofUae center court at Roland Garrot Stadium and at one •lal• led 2·1 ln aeta ad 2.0 1D aw fourth. Clere came back Co tle It at two Ht. aU aliald apl'Oll'. He won lbe lut two point.a of tbe"Ml aft.er tbe umpire bald overnaled • Uiielmu and ordeNd • point"°.,. Dlueda· n. ...... :: .. WblitW,tar .... , .. = ...., u.Dllll Connors had been polnt. Connon' same dlslntell'at.d Iii the fi nal Ht, played in inereallal ram. It WIS the aecond UpHt of the dQ. 1-, tM quarter-llnall of the wom•'• .-,.., Sylvia Hanlka of Wut o..DaQ, beat U•• No. 2 IMd, Martinat 'NaYl'liWcwa. , 8·2,H. CoDDan and NavraWon wwe both Medel ...... beCaUH of their .... tiOM Iii tbe ..-Id «»mputer rankil9. 91& ..... are 11rv•·•nd0 voll11 ;rann alld aetlbW bai 8"f woa WI Pl ...... ~. ntcll 1' 1ta,_. • _..., tb• llowelt court.a ba tbe ;i Ninn _. ·~---4~ ... 1dt from llli ...iillll1. 'r ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedne~. June 3, 1981 ...,...._ ____________________ ...... ~~-im--~----------~----------------------------------------------!'9""""!"'"--------------------------~----~~----..., Brett takes it o ut .t with attack on toilets KANSAS CITY, Mo. -Geol'ge Ill Bretl may soon be getting a bill from the Minnesota Twim ror repairs to a nstroom he damaged with bis bat last Friday night. Alter grounding out with runners on base, Kansas City's all·star third baseman went into a restroom behind the visitors dugout and used his bat to break two toUets and a sink. Before Monday night's game against Seattle, Brett was angered to learn the restroom incident had been repo..rted. "I don 't think it's any,body's business," be said. "It's already written. so why should I discuss it?" Tom Mee, Minnesota's director of public relations, Brdt said William S. Robertson. the team's vice president for stadium opera- tions, would examine the restroom and forward a bill to the Royals, who can either pay the charges or ask Brett lo do .so. "It would be up to them who paid tor it," '> • Mee said. 'Tm sure we'd go for cost to have it h fixed. It was in the Royals' bathroom, so they're responsible." ,. . '. ~· "" I •' I•' , .. ,., 'J' j • •• Quote of the day .. I always thought that's why hotels are built with a back M~t of stairs. I figure what J don 't know won't hurt me ." -San Diego Padres Man ager Frank Howard, ex· plaining why he doesn't believe in curfews for his players . ThOmaa ups homer mark to 14 \ Gslaaa ........ knocked 1n four Ill runs wtth two bOmen, atvlna him an American Li.,ue·le•cllnc 14 for the season, Md --. caNwell and KolUe ' Fl•1er1 combined oa a live·hitter to slve JdllwaUk" a $-2 victory over Detroit Tue•d•Y ... hi,W Ewau tilt bll 13th homer and doubled in a run to pace Boston to a 4-0 wtn over Cleveland. Deub Eclketsley BOUJ\ .a four•hitter ... Dave Reverla1'1 first homer in a Yankee uniform in the bottom of tbe 11th in· niog led New York to a S.3 wio over Baltimore ... Sbooty BabUt'• two-run lri· pie capped a five·run ftrst in· ning to lead Oakland to a 6-2 triumph over the Chicago W h He Sox . . . Seattle stopped Kansas City, 4·3, Thomtit behind Jim Aodersoa's dou· ble and two singles . . . Al OUver and Budd) Bell delivered run.scoring singles ln the eighth inning to lift Texas to a 5·2 win over Minnesota ... Ben Ogilvie was ejected from Milwaukee's game at Detroit when he charged Detroit pitcher George Cappunello after a third·inning beaning that clt:ared both benches ... Boston's Dwight Evans and Mark Clear were named the American League Player and Pitcher of the month. " Four Kings on NHL All-stars MONTREAL -Goalie Mike Liut of th~ St. Louis Blues and center Wt 1t1e Gretzky or the Edmonton Oilers were the top vote.getters on the 1980-81 National Hockey League A1l·slar team, an· nounced by the league today. Liut, who sparked the Blues to the NHL's second·best regular·season record, edged Gretzky, the league's top scorer with a record 164 Points. Joining them on the first team were two members of the Stanley Cup-champion New York Islanders, defenseman Denis Potvin with 194 points and right wing Mike Bossy with 299; left wing Charlie Simmer of the Los Angeles Kings. 284, arid defenseman Randy Carlyle of the Pittsburgh Penguins, 168. Simmers' mates on the Kings' "Triple Crown" line, center Marcel Dionne, 157, and right wing Dave Taylor, 85, were named to the second·team All·star squad, along with Los Angeles goalie Mario Lessard, 114. • Rosewithinnine of Musial's mark Pete a.. banaed out two triplet 111 and a abltle and drove in three MUlS as PhU•delpbia defeated the Ne"Y York Mets, 9-7, 'l'uesday. The three bits by Rose raised bls cateer total to 3,821, nine ~bind Stao Musial'• all·Ume National Lea1ue record . . . Rookie Tim RalMs baset·loaded tri· pie capped a slx-run Montreal third lnnln, as St. Louis feU , 8·1 ... Steve Nicosia drove n a care«:r·high four runs and Due Parker, Biil M1dJoclt and 1'1lke EHier added thre.? RBI each to lead a 19·hil as· ' sault that gave Pittsburgh a 16·3 victory over the hapless Chicago Cubs. While six Chicago pitchers were laking a pounding, EddJe Solomon. 4·3, earned the vi~tory with a six·hitter in a contest played Roae despite a strike by ushers, ticket takers and maintenance workers at Three Rivers Stadium. It was the 34th defeat In 44 games for the Cubs ... CraJg Reynold• lined a two-out, run·scorin1 triple to cap a two-run ninth i.nn1ng to eive Houston a 2·1 victory over San Diego . . . Jerry Martin hit a grand slam homer in a nine·run fourth lllJling which led San Francisco to a 15·7 rout of Cincinnati. Baseball strike talks grind on ROCHESTER , N .Y . -111 Baseball's lingering labor mess mov~ into U.S. District Court today, with Judge Henry Werker scheduled to begin hearings on the National Labor Relations Board's request for a preliminary injunction against the sport. If granted in the language requested, the in· junction would force management to rescind its controversial free·agent compensation plan for one year, an action that would delay any player strike at least that long. Should Werker deny.the NLRB petition, the players would be free fo walk out within 48 hours of the decision. So, by arguing against the NLRB in court, the owners are in effect forcing the issue and in· viting an immediate strike over the cotnpensa· lion question. That would be the result IC al· torneys for management win the case. If they lose, then the matter is placed on hold and baseball faces another re·entry draft this Nov- ember without compensation for ranking free agents signing with new teams. .. Baseball today On this dat.e in baseball in 1978: Dave Johnson of the Phlladelphla Phillies became the tint man In ba•eball hlstory to hit two pinch-bit arand •lam home runs In one seuon, as h1I nlntb· inning blast gave the Pblls a S.1 victory over the Dodgers. On this date in 1932 : Lou Gehrig belted four home runs as the New York Yankees routed tbe Philadelphia A's, 20·13 at Shibe Park. Meanwhile, John McGraw retired after 28 years as New York Giant manager, band· ing the reins over to first baseman Bill Terry. Murphy takes Fullerton reins _ Cal Stale Fullerton bas named • football coach Gene Murphy as in· terim athletic director pending a search by a 10-member committee for a perma- nent replacement for Mt.ke Mallally, who re· signed to accept a similar post at Boise State University ... Bob Berry, who resigned as head coach of the Los Angeles Kings last month, is expected to ~ named to the same oosition with the Montreal Canadiens of the Na· tional Hockey Leag~e today . . . Brian Oldneld tossed the shot put 70.10 Tuesday at an intema· lional track and field meet in Yugoslavia . . . Helsman Trophy winner George Rogers of South Carolina was in Montreal Tuesday to check out the site of the Montreal Alouettes trainin~ camp. Rogers has been involved in con· tract talks with the New Orleans Saints for the past month but no agreement has been reached after Rogers reportedly rejected two offers ... The National Basketball Association bas adopt. ed a rule prohibiting teams from contacting un· dergraduates before they declare their intention to tum pro ... Mark Anderson of UCLA has taken the early lead on the first day's competi· lion in the NCAA decathlon championship at Baton Rouge. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball Angels at Toronto. 4 30 p.m .. KMPC (7101 , Atlanta at Dodgers. 7.30 p.m .. KABC (790 > Ftom Page 01 MI LLER'S COLUMN. • • Fat Man, Baron o n collision cou~se Williams was a great man· ager with veteran teams · and an impatient martinet with young players, such as filled the California roster at the time. Under Williams, the Angels finished the season in sixth (and last place), were sixth again In 1975 and Williams was let go after the Angels got off to a 39-57 start in 1976. l'.'.And what happened to Whitey fll!rzog? .,He became the Kansas City Jtoyals' manager in 1976 and ~on three consecutive division tj.Lles. t Jt was Autry's decision, with a lot of help from Bavasi, lo can QJve Garcia and replace hlm "'!~th 1''regos1. Garcia now m,nages Cleveland an~ the In· ~ns are only 31,; gamesuut in the American League E<:5t stand- 1-.gs. '•1'he Rams' front office is a model of stability compared to ttte way Autry runs his fiefdom. Jjitcept for Fregosi, not a single ftipper has lasted more than one full season since 1971. The State or California could s;.ve ~payers money by open- a branch office of its tn ployment Development partment at the Big A. Maybe what the Angels really need is a s hakeup in the front of· fice. Autry is 73. the same age ~ his assistant, Red Patterson. !1Pvasi is 66 and so is another vil:e president, Frank Uary. Their collective ans make the rqlitburo look like Whiz Kids. A few hours after Fregosi's dismissal Bavasi tried, like any good executive would, to take the heat off his boss. ··I should take the responsibiUty .and J will gladly,'' said the gene ral manager. .. Eventually, this team will have to play up to its potential. Maybe Gene Mauch won't be any better than Jim Fregosr. but maybe he will be luckier." Maybe. From Page 01 CAREY • • • But he also added his first choice was to run In the quarter-aot the mile. A little persuasion by McNair changed Carey's think· ing. ··tt was an extremely dtrficult decision," Carey emphasized. ·•1 was primarily concentrating on the 400 and not the mile relay. Coach told me it was too much or a risk lo run both. so I decided I'd Uke to run the quarter. "He told me he wanted to stay with the team concept, though, and he wanted me to stick with that." WHAT THE DECISION has obviously done is left the door wide open for a lot of second guessing. If the mile relay team doesn't pan out, like McNair hopes, Carey admits the thought of what could have been will be there. ase b a ll standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pd. GB 32 20 .615 - 26 18 .591 2 27 19 .587 2 25 27 .481 7 16 26 .381 11 18 31 .367 12-~ nesota 14 33 .298 15~ East Division Jtimore 28 17 .622 - )waukee 28 20 .583 l~ York 27 20 .574 2 ston 26 21 .553 3 eveland 23 19 .548 S'h troit 24 25 .490 6 ronto 16 34 .32.0 14~ NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division . W L Pct. GB Dodgers 34 16 .680 - Clncinnati 28 21 .571 5~ Houston 25 24 .510 8Y.i San Francisco 26 26 .500 9 Atlanta 23 24 .489 9~ San Diego 19 30 .388 14Y.i EutDh1.SJoD Philadelphia 29 19 .604 - Montreal 27 20 .574 l~ St. Louis 24 18 .571 2 Pittsburgh 21 20 .512 4~ New York 15 29 .341 12 Chicago 10 34 .227 17 T .... f'llc.w Atl*lt.l, OMlliHI 1 C lthWl ..... I S... l'rMCltco IS,Cift<IM!ltl7 Pflll ... ptlla t, NM Yorll 7 Pltt*"'lf! 1'. Clliallo l ._,... .. SC. I.Auls 1 H-tll\2,Sen~1 ,....,. . ._ Atia. IP, Hlell,_ M> e4 ....... (~ l·U,11 New Yat'lt CH•rrh l•ll at Pflll.-1,._la C9'utll....,7·21,ll Cl\k ... lMerU I~) at PfttlM'lfl C.._ NI, II ~C~Hl.t .. ,.._.,,_.. >-t>.11 ..__ Clwt• HI .. SM .,_ c-.. 1 .. 1. II Cltl(l,....1 l......,_ 2-21 at S.11 l'r1Ml9Ca c .... s.a1. Belmont Stakes features some wild characters -and they've been around By WILL GRIMSLEY Aft~CWr9"11Ae1Rt NEW YORK -The "Fat Man" is puffed up like a balloon so confident that he'll be saddling horse racing's 12th Triple Crown winner in the Belmont Stakes Saturday, but he better beware of the "Baron.!' "Johnny Campo -be brags too much," warned Horatio Duro in hls Spanish ac· cent. "I don't think he is Superman. I don't think he can make miracles. "You can tell the Fat Man we will be coming after him Saturday." The brassy, l o · quacious Campo is trainer of Pleasan~ Colon y . the pock • skinned speedster who Grimsley won both the Kentucky Derby and Preak· ness and is favored to complete the magic sweep in the testing l'h·mile final classic. Luro, an 180-yea r -old Argentine a ristocrat whose father was a cattle baron, is readying Tap Shoes, a strong. handsome bay. for a possible upset. You can't discount Horatio. Horses have been in his blood since he was a tyke grow· Ongais in Laguna ing up among the gauchos . or the family 's five sprawling ranches and a 5,000-acre private island outside Buenos Aires. "My rather he wanted me to be a cat· Ueman as he was, go lo Paris and sell meat to all of Europe but that life bored me," Luro said. "l always wanted only to be near horses." Campo and Luro try their trade th o; week a few barns apart in the stable area at Belmont Park. They are a study in con· trasl. For a man or four-score years. Luro is a phenomenon a robust, active six·footer who drives to the stable in a foreign sports car, wears a rakish cap and cashmere jacket and can't re member when he didn't get up before daylight. Reared on a South American version of Scarlett O'Hara's Tara, he reeks of the landed gentry, poised and polished. who is equally at home with hot walkers and sta· ble boys as with dukes and earls. He came to the United States more than 40 years ago. became a friend of Bing Crosby, did the Hollywood scene with such stars as Loretta Young, Wendy Barrie and Madeline Carroll . finally starting a thoroughbred stable or his own with a $3,500 stake and a couple of bargain base· ment horses. Clearing $100:000 "the first year, he ne ver looked back . He once sold a horse to actor Joe E Brown for $25,500. He has trained with the best. He won the Kentucky Derby with Decidedly in 1962 and Northern Dancer in 1965. He even once won a duel. which bas become a legend around the tracks. "It wasn't over a woman," Luro ex· plained, a twinkle in his eye. "It was an argument with a Frenchman over the price or some polo ponies. He grabbed me by the lapels. This was an insult. I slapped him across the face .. Fourteen hours later, a representative or the Frenchman he was a Marquis - came to my office and handed me a card. saying the Marquis wanted satisfaction. "It was never decided who provoked the incident, so we flipped a coin for choice of weapons. J won. I chose s words, although I never handled a sword in my life. "Desperate. I went to an instructor at the Jockey Club and told him J had this an· gry, hot Frenchman who had challenged me. He asked, 'Is he tall?' I replied, 'No, he is small.· 'You have long arms,' the in· structor said. 'Take a foil and just keep it stuck out in front or vou. · INDIANAPOLIS <AP) -Dan· ny Ongais, injured when his In· terscope racer bit the third·turn wall in the Indianapolis 500, was flown Tuesday to Laguna Beach, where he will be treated by hls private physician. Ongais, surrounded by medical personnel, was taken to the Indianapolis International Airport by ambulance IF YOU DON'T CALLUS, WE'LL CALL YOU! SEVEN OF OUR fULL TIME STAFF MAKE AN AVERAGE Of 500 OUTGOING CALLS every day Inviting our members to play in tennis matches. This is in addition ~ to nntng members' Incoming requests . Finding the right match Qlkes more than just hard work. It's tough. Here at the John Wayne Tennis Club, our staff or seven does It from the 10 classlflca· tlons in our Player Compatibility (P.C.) C.11 tbe "1 Ranked Cluti la callfo111la o r come .,, tor .....atenlllp lalOrmalloa ••• system (instead of the normal A, 6, C, and D). We will get you better matches from a wealth of players at e~ery level, whether you've been playing a few months or a lifetime. And for your con- venience, there are free phones, refrigerated drinking fountains, and T.V. monitors with every court. If your club doesn't offer this. why not choose the one that does?I rte.port lleacli 11 71 Jamboree Road (7t•)8•4·HOO ' I ... , ..... ••• Ylll 1110111 llllY PIPll OHA N Cif COlJN IV < At If OHN IA ~~ CENT S Onofre disaster ·plan draws criticislll ' pta1ot. Emergency personnel 8y JOHN NEEDHAM of .. INMY,_ ..... The volunteer group charged With alerting state parks visitors oear the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in the event er an accidental r4flease of radia- tion says it cannot give "rea- sonable assurance" that people will be notified in time to eacape. In a report submitted to of- licials involved in evacuation planning uound the nuclear facility, the San Onofre State Parks Advisory Committee said it can't do the job with its pres- ent staffing. The report says that dunog a May 13 evacuation drill to test responses of emergency agen- cies, it took nearly an hour to simulate the notification of park visitors that there bad ~ an accident at San Onofre. Federal· Emergency Management AJten- cy guidelines call for persons within 10 miles of the plant to be notified within IS minutes. lo addition, the report says that information on the spread o f r adiation , relayed by Southern ·callfornla Edison Co., operator and co-owner of the plant, wasn't received until long after major portions of Sao Onofre and San Clemente state parks would have been con- taminated. PUT -UP -Robin, an English bulldog at the Monterey County SPCA in Salinas, ..doesn't intimidate Tiger, the kitten, who lays ........... a left hook on the dog, then rears up in a box- er's stance daring the mutt to try something. ·Federal court opens in county Civil rights, personaltinjury ·cases mark first for areal Bf DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. O.., .......... With the selection of two juries to hear a civil rights case and a »eraonal injury case, federal tourt convened for the finl time Tuesday in Orange County. With other court officials and sues ts looking on, u .s. District Court Jqe William P. Gray in- au,-urated court bearings in San· ta Ana'• Oraoae CounlJI' Coun.boule, a F,ulminaUon of a 10-year effort ittl local attorneys and civic leaden who felt Oranae County deserved its own federal court. On band for Tuesday's openinc of court were Chief Judae A. An· drew lfliult of the U.S. coort'a Cen-tral °'9tricto1Californla; Presid· lDI Orallle c.qunty Superlot Court Jud1e Robert 11:. IUcklel, and u .s. DUtrlct Court '*"')tobert 'J. Kelleher, wbowMclMIJmanof thti Sllllta .Ma court eommlttee. Juda'e Gray, a 1llfer-bU1'9d luri~ rbo bu Hrved Oii die tedera court tienu In LOt ......... u , ..... , &aid aftAit ,.....,~lli'Oceedlap that it WM iUll ~ boW mUJ ,....., Judi• .... be DMded 111 llMa ba. ''A 11111 ...... cm lieed,'' Gl'aJ Uld.'~lMt·nanMnlUJ ---~ftled." P.-tMllmit~.&Mf...-.S eomtylllw• ... •ot._, .__, ca:C..~ t..=.,; .. .. ...... tt.111- This will be done, officials said, until racillties in downtown Santa Ana.can be leased. The long-term outlook is for permanent space to be available ln a new court.house building planned for Santa Ana in the n extlOto 15 years. The boldioa of federal court proc.eedings in Orange County was made possible bv coo-f resslooal approval of a bill des- ignating Santa Ana as a place of holding court in the U.S. District Court's central district. Thal district takes in San Luis Oblspo, Santa Barbara, Ventura, Los Angeles, Oran1e. San Bernardino and ruvenide coun- ties. Cases heard in Santa Ana generally wllJ cover Ora:aae, Rivenide and San BemardiDo counties. In the past, federal court mat· ters in Orange County were beard in Los Angeles. Until permanent facilities are leased. cases Will still have to be filed with the clerk of the federal court lo Los Angeles. "Wedoo'tknowwhatwe'lloeed unijl we do some business down here," Gray said. The federal courts only handle cases in areas where violations of federal statutes are atissue. As opposed to Oranae County's Superior Court civU case backlo1 of three to four years, Gf ay said lt now onl)' takes five months for a federal cuetocometotrial. Road gets a~job The report also said radiation monitoring devices used in the drill were not adequate to measure higher levels of c~­ tamination, and many were is- sued wtthout batteries. . It criticized the lack of alternate evacuation routes for persons driving out of the acc~­ dent zone. Shifting wind condi- tions carrying airborne contami- oeots would have made evacua- lion impossible in some of lbe assigned areas, the report said. During lbe drill, lifeeuards in open jeeps were assigned to notify people on the beaches of the simulated accld.ent. Dunng an actual emergency, the report said, the guards would have been unprotected from radiation. Frequent problems with t~le.phones were another com- taltina part in the drill at times simply gave up trying to reach the information center at San Onofre because lines were tied up. •'The only reasonable recom- mendation based on the May 13 drill is to expend no more money . . . un~il ther~ ts reasonable as- surance appropriate measures will be taken in the event of a re- al emergency," the report ~aid. Quiet jets upped ·Revised access plan OK'd for county airport By FREDERleK SCHOEMEHL Of .. Delly ...... IWI A revised air carrier access plan -one that will speed up the introduction of quieter jets at John Wayne Airport -was approved today by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Under the plan, commercial carriers serving the airport will be required to use quieter jets - such as the McDonnell Douglas DC-9 Super 80 -on at least 50 percent of their Orange County flights by Oct. 1, 1982. Education tax credit endorsed WASHINGTON (AP> -The Reagan administration endorsed tax credits to help offset the cost of private education. today but u:r1ed Concreu to delay such lqialatio_q llllll1 the president's ta~ pl•1s e:nacu.d. John E. Chapoton, assistant trea s ury 11cretary for tax policy, told the Senate Finance subcommittee on taxation that such credits are lrable to other types of f aid to education, whicb ve cum- bersome red ta•'ll govern- ment and famillet fitite. · 'Tuitioo tax credits offer a simpler means to fund private education by permitting families to keep the money they have earned and to spend that money for the ed u ca tion they themselves select," be said. Although President Reagan's economic program must take priority, Chapoton said that "tuition tax credits will be at the top of our agenda al .the ap- propriate time." Tuition tax credits have been proposed in the past but always have run into trouble in Congress from those who-fear they conflict with the Constitu- tioo 's requirement for separa- tion of ehurch and state, and from those concerned that such aid would come only at the ex· pense of public schools. A bill sponsored by Se.ii. Bob Packwood, R·Ore., chairman of the subcommittee, and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, O- N. Y., eventually would allow ~ person to subtract up to ~l from his or her taJC bill to help offset costs of education at a private elementary or secon- dary school or at a private or public college. The tax credit would start at a maxlmum $250 durioc the 12 months beglnnl.ne Au1ust, 1982, and rise to a limit of $500 after that. Two victims from crash identified AVALON (AP) -Two people who died in a small 1lrplane cu ab off of Santa , Catalina Island have been identlfied after tbelr bodies were retrieved from the water. Identified tu11day were 9'ePMll Chari• 8toneroad; 30, the POOti 'Ind OU'J Lourmeo, ,., of Tl.alft, a .,........, , •aid Loe AatUil COual.J atrUr• .,.,.. ty Jlm ··p1atu1. A aecoad pat .... WU ldftUftecl Mcm- day • a.a.. blllatt • • .aao of1'111M. Tbe~plaHeraiW lut ,,......., .,._ tdtill elf from 'AHIOD, tM a.a. toWa • t!ualilMdloollted•&M-neerJA~·· WltllHIH IMil Ute pl ... , operited bJ ,.-. AJr,_.,.._ • taa Mntee baiild a. v....., bad laioU eolblll.,._. Mi~ ... Wilri tlli-..a·· ....... .... ij Under a plan given tentative approval by the board in May, a 25 percent heat conversion fac- tor was proposed during the first year. Supervisors made no changes in the flight allocations among the five airlines now authorized to serve Orange County. They are AirCal, Republic Airlines, Frontier Airlines. Pacific Southwest Airlines and Western Airlines. PSA, which h as been authorized to begin service Oct. 1 with two departures, claimed earlier this week that it was be· ing treated unfairly. PSA, which demanded it be granted eight or the 41 de- partures now permitted dally, claimed the access plan favored AirCal, which will be permitted lo keep 23.5 flights per day over a three-year period. Orricials of the San Diego· based carrier have promised to utilize only DC-9 Super 80s when <See JETS, Page AZ> Supervisors' aides end redistricting By GLENN SCO'M' Of ... Deity ........... Aides to Orange County s upervisors have put the finishing touches on their re- d is trictiog plan b y shifting Midway City back into Roger Stanton's lst District. Stanton, in return, parted with the western side of Garden Grove, which will go into Har- riett Wieder's 2nd District. Aides for each of the rive supervisors now will send the slate-mandated modiflcatioos to the supervisors next Wednesday for final ratification. The county Is required to ad· just the five aupervisorial dia- tri ct boundaries after each census. Because of population growth in the southern part of the county, this year's propoeal genera.Uy shifts the lin~ live northern districts slightly Tar1er populations. Stanton would get about 7,300 more residents in bis district; Mrs. Wieder, 23,835, according to the proposal. Ralph Clark's 4th District, which includes Buena Park, Anaheim and most of Orange, would gain about 10,000 people. Thomas Riley's 5th District would lose about 19,500 and Bruce Nestande's 3rd District would decrease by about 21,700, according to the proposal. Aides have mana~ed, to shift the borders so no maJor changes would take place, although both Riley and Nestande yield signifi· cant parts of Tustin to Stanton. The last· mi nute changes between Stanton and Mrs . Wieder have the effect or switching the boundary from an east-west to a north-south line through Garden Grove. Mrs. Wieder would get all of Westminster under the new pro· posal. The west side of Garden Grove is considered to have similar neighborhoods as Westminster, said Stan Oftelie, a Clark aide who presided over (See AIDES, Page AZ) Ripper moved after threats LOND0°N (AP) -Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, bas been moved from London's Wormwood Scrubs jail to the maximum security wing of Parkhurst prison on the Isle of Wight, off the coast of southern England, the Home Office said. Press reports said he was transferred after prisoners in the London jail threl'tP.ned and taunted him. Sutcliffe, 34, was convicted May 22 of the murder of 13 women and the attempted murder of seven others in Yorkshire and 4'ber counties of northern England. The judge said he should serve at least 30 years of his life sentence behind bars. Britain has no d eath penalty. Stanton approves beefed-up tax plan Stanton voters have approved a tax override durina city elec- tions to beef up police and fire protection ror two years. Of the 21 percent voter turnout, 1,431 -or 67 .8 percent police and fare protection. Stan- ton ls the first Oran1e County ci- ty to pass such a tax increase since pa.ssa"e of Proposition 13. -voted in favor of the tax Tuel· llll~f •IAIJ llAJHll day and 678 opposed the • • mea1ure. The override needed a two-thirds vote to pall. Sunny, 0warmel' Thurs- day. LoW8 tooigbt low eos along the coast, upper IOI inland. Highs Thursday 72 to 78 at the beaches, 8S to 92 inland. In other local elections Tues- 4ay, Anaheim voters elected to sell $92 million in bonds to buy an additional LS percent owoenhlp of twin reacton at the Sao Onofre Nuclear General· 1 ... 111 J•• . ing StaUon, and a Tustin adex· 118 11 ation measure failed. In Anabeim, 4,4T7 people vOUd for the bond sale and 1,'181 voters oppo•ed it. ~nabelm already owna l .M percent lil· tereat in tbe plant. ___ _. 1 Anaheim votert allO P-a eeeoad measure to allow tbe dtJ to nnunee alnldJ appro99(1 •Sm Uh•' Jack' ha• loaf aome hair CllM1 weora glauc•, but ~ "° ~· about r•Hre,..Ht. f'-• corCoon ot1'c1Cor .. rtcol~ ~ hi• creaCor, Zack Mo.lq. $ee ''°'I• ""'*JPotlf All. bODdUlii. ol ID Tultln, 1• Nlldfttl a · 11111 U!aen liidioa it 1ialDcoqMJl'al· id ..................... .. .. ""• • • "'*' ,. •· ~l:T*' ~~~ated •• II 1111 ... ., ..................... . ~"'l:lei'C = r.--~ u.w~•·aaao .. 1111. ,. •••• t!*i'? .......... .ua~···~~ ...... u . ' • • , Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wtdnffday. June 3, 1981 Dlllly ........ Map shows recommended boundarie1 for Ot'ange County'•~ Supervtaorlal Di.ttricts. Modification$ are mandated by tM atate af1er each cenau.s. Dismantling study sought {or agency At the request or Orange Coun- ty Supervisor Bruce Nestande, the County Administrative or- fice will study a partial dia- mantllng of the massive County Human Services Agency. Nestande requested the study during Tuesday's meeting of the County Board of Supervisors. Ther'e was no opposition from other board members. His request follows a Grand Jury report recommending that the county's mental health pro- gram be separated from the HSA, an umbrella organizaUon that administers county depart- menUI responsible for health and social services programs. Since its formaQ,n in 1976, the HSA has been a continuing source of conflict. Some ob- servers have suggested that the size of the agency has made it unwieldy. The HAA has a budget of about $200 mill1on largely offset With state Md federal funds. 'l'he agency employs about 2,000 peo- ple. County supervisors are in- terviewing candidates for the agency directorshlp. Larry Leaman, former direc- tor of the county Community Services Agency, has been serv- ing as interim HSA director since the retirement in March of Margaret Grier. The board is scheduled to in- terview five finalists for the job -Leaman; Robert Huntley, county employee·relations direc- tor; Bert Scott, county persoMel director; Sara Walker, HSA as- sistant director for administra- tion. and Randall Bacon, deputy administrator for human services programs in San Diego County. A screening committee listed Scott, Ms. Walker and Bacon as the top three contenders, saying Leaman and Huntley could be interviewed if the board so de· cided. About 140 people applied for the position. It pays $56.~ per year. T.ucsoJt sect Wits eyes toward heave~ 1'UCSON (AP > -John Vickers sold bis home. Dr. James M'cCullogh donated a Ponche. Former award-wiQ\Ung bodybuilder Bert Seelman cut his training. They are among 50 members of a Tucaon religious group who say they expect t.o be physically lifted t.o Beaven to be with God on June28. "Ooooo, glory, I get bliss just thinking about it," said Bill Maupin, spiritual leader of the rundamentalis t LlghthoUae Gospel Tract Foundation. Maupin and others said Bible study has convillced them that the second coming of Christ will take place in 1988. They, however, said they believe they already Will be in Heaven. "We're not juilt going to some mountain hideaway; we're leav- ing the Earth," Maupin said. "This is known as rapture. And whPn rapture 'takes place, the people hOt saved will be able to see us being saved. There's no such thing as a secret rapture," Maupin said. In preparation for the event, the 50 members have quit their jobs and distSosed of some of their property. Vlcke.rs, 32, quit bis Job u a commercial glass worker 8lld is llvin1 oft the money from the sale of his home. He and other members of the group said they bave donaled their remain1n1 money to the group to spread its word. "My main concern ia for others: 8nd I would like to be able to 11-.e that to them," Vickers uaid. "I've never known such peace, such JOy," said llcCulloup, a No1alea doctor wbo wu b.,,..irt into the P'OUP by Sftlman, who sald be is cutting his training to save his streng\h for the lift.~ of spirits. Using biblical references to events expected to precede the rapt11re, Maupin predicts that, afteP a war in the Mideast, the world will be dqminated by a multinational po'ft'er headed by an American "anti-Chlrist" until Christ returns in May 1988. But before then, Maupin said, believers will be transported to Heaven. According to Maupin, those re- maining on Earth after June 28 wlll have to decide between go- ing into league with the devil - thereby assuring their eternal damnation -or professing faith in J esus. But ypu don't have to believe in the June 28 date to experience the rapture, Maupin said. True believers in Christ, including the dead, are all eligible, be said. And what if the group isn't lift. ed iQto Heaven on June 28? "I can't even answer a ques- tion like that," said Maupin. ·'Come back and see us on June 29 and we'll talk about it." "We're ready for the rap· tu re ,•· said laborer Bub Bowman. ''My Utile one sort of wants a three-wheeler before It happens, but we're ready to go." Not all of the 50 are so fully convinced. Jerry Walker, co· owner of a Tucson want-ad newspaper, said he hopes the others are right and that hls un- certainty probably stems from "my own inability to interpret the Bible." ·'I do believe lts goin1 t.o bap- P9' sometime -I just don't kDQW wh~/' Walker adcled. "In fact, I'm JUSt about to go Into another business deal. If it'• tlme t.o 10. we'll go. If it's not, I still have a Wet.olive." Cl11tftled •ett1e1nt 71'/IU>N1' Alt other.,,_,..,_.. .. Ml..Qlt From Page A1 AID ES. • • the committee. Mrs. Wieder's aide, Bob Love, asked at Tuesday's meeting to redraw the lines so Midway City would go to Stanton's district. The unincorporat~d a rea cur- rently is in Ms 1st District, but was proposed to go to Mrs. Wieder under earlier plans. The Wier-Stanton line would gp through Garden Grove ed at Gilbert Street, Trask Avenue and Brookhurst Street, then sw- . ing west at Beach Boulevard to include Midway City in the 1st fJistrict. Also included in the recom- mendation is a proposal to shill a comer of Huntington Beach bordered by Magnolia, Brookhurst and Atlanta Avenue from Riley's to Mrs. Wieder's district. From Page A1 J ETS ... service to Orange County begms in October. AirCa1 officials say Super 80s will be used on a~ot 68 percent of their flights by'October. The access plan ia centered on ·a so-called "noise budget'' under which the air carriers will be re- quired. over a three-year periqd, to reduce the amount of nofse their jet ~rations ptoduce. It ls the goal of the county. through a separate plan, to re· duce over..il jet noise levels by 7.5 deci~ dn the Community Noise Equivalent Level scale. As noise levels drop, the number of permitted daily de- partures would increase to a maximum of 55. New flights. un- der the access plan, would be awarded to all qualified air car· riers, regardless of whether they have been serving Orange Coun- ty in the past. That is a substantial change from the previous plan, which proposed that new fllghts be awarded only to carriers with the lowest number of flight al· locations -PSA, Frontier and Western. Like PSA, Frontier and Western ar' permitted only two departures daily. In a concession to Western, the board also approved language in the revised plan that will permit the airlines to iden- tify a ny "s p ecia l circumstances" that would in· terfere with their ability to com- ply with the plan's provisions, namely the requirement for con- version to quieter alrcraft. Western, unlike the other four carriers, has no plans to purchase the DC-9 Super 80, but has lndlcated it will modify its existing fleet of Boeing 737s to meet the required noise reduc- tion goals. Presumably , under the language approved by the board, Western would not be evicted from the airport solely because it did not purchase the Superll>s. The plan wUI remain in effect for three years. AU carriers would be required to make 100 percent fleet conversions to quieter aircraft (or achieved equivalent noise reductions) by Oct. 1, 1983, the end of the plan's second year. As part of its actlon, the boatd dlrectep Airport Mana1er Murry Cable to initiale actlon to persuade the FederaJ A\'latioo Admlnistratlon to change a takeoff power cutback rule that officials fear will stymie the county's eftona to reduce noiM. re1ardleu of bow man7 al tbe qaiet alttraft an lntroduc~ at the atnion. tl'he PAA~~ that jlla&a WtQ tMlr ~ to an altitude of i.ooo feet t.efOre la1tltul1Df a aolH·r•dael .. ~nr eatlleek. TM .......... Md ... ...,Waat,.... .... to IMUhila n11-.. at IOO le« At tlaatllUt•lll.Ule ... ....... .. , ...... ..., ......... . T•:;::r..:• flaae wotald •Ht .... __... 00..tlll~lftttadi ... lftencr They move reluctant~ Joward 2-year program WASHINGTON (AP > -Houle Dem~rata, pressured by the Rea1an admtnlltra~ and ~ servatives in their own party, are movine reluctantly toward a two- year tax-cut plan but still tnslat on extra relief for lower-and middle· income Americans. ''l hope we can fashion a pro- gram that can be enjoyed by all Democrats," Rep . Dan Rostenkowski, D-lll., chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Tues· <lay after a two-hour meeting or panel Democrats. "We're talkin& about the possibility of a mulUyeartax bill." However, Rosten.kowski said. "There were no votes, no con- clusions." Pope John kaves lwspital ROME (AP> -Smiling and waving, Pope John Paul II left the Gemelli Policlinico Hospital to r~turn to his Vatican apart- ments today. three weeks to the day after he was shot in an as- sassination attempt. The pope, in his traditional glistening white robes and skull cap, walked unaided to a black Mer cedes limousine for the 15-minute ride to the Vatican. The Vatican announced the pope's discharge shortly before the pontiff's departure. The 61-year-old Polish-born pope has made rapid progress since he Underwent sin hours or eme rgency surgery for gunshot wounds in the intestines suffered in a May 13 attempt on bis llfe at St. Peter's Square. Italian authorities have charged 23·year-old convicted Turkish terrorist Mehmet Ali Agca with shooting the pope. Agca is also charged with shoot- ing two American women wounded in the attack, Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N.Y., who is lo leave the hospital and return to the United States this weekend, and Rose Hall, a 21- year-old missionary who b8$ re- turned to her home in West Germany where she lives with her husband. The doctors Monday gave John Paul permission to leave his hospital bed and walk a.round his 11th floor suite whenever he wanted. He aakl Democrau "sUll are very CQaeerned with workili& AmtrlfW and bow we can tar1et dollars" from a tax cut on those earntn1 between S20,000 and $50,000ayear. Deputy White House press sec retary Larry Speakes declined comment today on the Democratic search for a com- promise. •'The president stlll thinks, it should be a three-year proposal," Speakes said, but would be "will- ing to listen" to anything the Democrats might suggest. Apparently not enough, Democrats are committed to any plan to assure its passa~e in the House. There are at least three factions: -Roltenkowskl. the tey ttaure In the House on tax matters, ts try- ing to arrive at a compromi.ae btt\ not tile three-year, 25 percent version endorsed by the White House. ~ Most Hous liberal.a oppoge • multiyear tax cut. Many talk privately against compromjse, hoping that would force a vote on Reagan's original proposal. Such & vote, by most couota, would go against the president. · A group or 47 conservatives, mainly Southerners, who gave Reagan the margin of victory in a crucial budget vote earlier this year, tried ururnccessfully Tues· day to reach a com ens us. Charges unce rtain in baby s ale c ase A Louisiana man who was ar- rested after patrons of a Mission Viejo restaurant said he offered to sell them hls baby daughter was to be arraigned today if the district attorney can find a suitable section in the criminal code to cover the case, an Orange County sheriff's officer said. , Randy Gordon Wilson, 29, was taken into custody about 3 a.m. Monday and the 6-week-old, blonde, blue-eyed baby which he said was bis daughter. was taken to the Albert Sitton Home, a facility for the care of neglect- ed or abused children . A juvenile court hearing is scheduled to determine whether the baby will be placed with relatives of her parents or in a foster home in Orange County. The baby's 15-year-old mother Mistrial d eclared in killing case LOS ANGELES (AP > -A mistrial was declared in the seven-month murder trial of Salvatore Marino, son of reput- ed San Jose Mafia kingpin Angelo Marino, after the jury deliberated for more than six weeks without agreeing on a verdict. The mistrial ruling was made Tuesday by Superior Court Judge Kathleen Parker when the jury said it was deadlocked 9 lo 3. was staying with a church group, said Sheriff's Lt. Wyat€ Hart. She told investigators that she and Wilson were married, but Wilson told the deputies whd arrested him that he was not married to the child's mother. Hart said the couple had been; traveling back and-forth from. Winns boro. La .. and Orange! County since October. 1980. Hart said that in October, a 4-year-old: and a 6-year-old boy who were. Wilson's sons by a previous mar.- riage were taken from him and placed into the custody of their natural mother, who lives. somewhere in the southwest. Wilson, a heavy equipmen~ operator. is unemployed, Hart said. · The couple's home town ii about 200 miles northwest o( New Orleans and has a popula, lion of about 7,000. Wilson was booked for in·• vestigation of willful cruelty to a child, but there was no evidence! that the child had been abused, and there was a legal questiona about whether an offer to sell, the baby constituted an overt act of child-selling, Hart said. Hart said the restaurant patrons told deputies that Wilson• bad "asked several persons at the table if they would be in- terested in buying a nice .• healthy baby 'girl." Wilson did· not set a price for the child, said: H art . but s aid he wanted: someone to take her because, "I • don't want it anymore." : Summer Sale Starts June 1 st Step in now for a wonderful selection of quality furniture all at sale prices! You will fee1 like a "BARON" using this Desk- Exquisitely crafted llllJPtlat .WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1981 ENTERTAINMENT OBITUARIES BUSINESS 86 88 89 How does Ronald Reagan get, aUXLy with 'attacking Wall Street? .. 89 ~pecial unit drOps· h·vine :murder case By RICHARD GREEN OfllleO.ity,. ........ A tour-man police team in- ves tlgatlng the mysterious murder or Manuela E. Witthuhn will be disbanded Friday, exact- )y four months after the 28-year- old Irvine woman was found bludgeoned in the bedroom of her home. Irvine police 1,t. Bob Lennert sald today the case wiU become the primary responsibility or in· vestigatol'$ Ron Veach and Scott Cade. He added, however, that they eventually will get other as- signments and won't be able to work full-time on the unsolved murder. Lt. Lennert said police have conducted thousands of in- terviews and studied thousands - of arrest reports from other police departments. Police officials say that despite the extensive ipvesUga- tlon, they just don't have a lot to go on -a ract that bas been clear since the eullest phases of the invesUgatiop Into the slaying of the attractive blonde-haired employee of California First Bank in Irvine. The woman, whose body wu found by h er mother, Ruth Rohrbeck, at 11:30 a.m . Feb. &; bad no known enemies and police say they still aren't sure of the motive for the bludgeon- ing. Lt. Lennert said that police have asked various law enforce- BARES SOUL -UCI student editor Barnabas Sokol admits at press conference that a nude photo of himself as well as some jokes in a humor supplement to the New University Dlllty ................ ...,.. newspaper were not in good taste. The sup- plement was seized by fellow editors befo.re distribution. Sokol was urged to remove shirt at press conference. Lavender boutique ilaivsuit upheld • Druscilla Tysen's lavender-soueht to have tbe city's legal colored boutique in Laguna action thrown out of court last Beach is all right as rar as week and Fitigerald said he Orange County Superior Court would withhold his ruling until Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald is he drove by her establishment. concerned. Having done so, he said in bls But because the color of Miss ruling issued late last Friday Tysen's establishment is unap-that he found the purple color pealing to both her neighbors was "attractive, eye-catching and the city's Design Review and not offensive to this court." Board, Judge Fitzgerald has de-However, he said that the col· cided he will not dismiss a or of the Strawberry Shortcake lawsuit against her. boutique was an appropriate The boutique owner had matter to be considered by Laguna's Design Review Board, R ecycling set which had previously denied her . application to keep the bou- OrangeCoastCollege's Recycl-Uque'slavender hue. ing Center droporf station will be · About 30 neighbors also bad open 24 hours a day during the filed a petition with the board summer months. The center, protesting the color of the build· located next to the baseball ing on Pacific Coast Highway. diamond, recycles most anything Miss Ty sen could not be. that is not rubber or plastic. reached for comment this morn- Proceeds gotoscholar_s_h_,ip,_s_. ___ ....;i;.;;;;n""g"-. ----------- ...... -... , IAIY MID -Jobilny l>uDcan. 12, recelv .. a ~­from 1118 ICboolmate, Gres Role, 12, u be~ bll ~ban to a praetlee 111n. with tbe &Id~ Role'• ~;kateboilnl 8otb )'OUtbl an llxtb ll'lden at UaiVWlit1 Yark .. _...., Scbool ID IntDe. 1t Bus p asses requests so ar as do fares Fares to ride Orange County's public buses went up this week -and so did the demand for monthly passes. Several or the 119 distributors who sell the passes for the Orange County Transit District reported that they have run out or them, a district spokesman said. "We've never bad this happen before," said Madeleine Bickert, community relations officer, who said OCTD bas averaged about 11,000 pass sales per month. Bus riders began paying 75 cents rather than SO cents Mon· day ror a one-way local ride dur- ing commuting hours. The fare during middays, evenings and weekends increased to 60 cents. Regular monthly bus passes also went up from $17 .SO to $21.SO, but that didn't seem to bother bus riders who reportedly bad many or the distributors running out or the wallet-sized cards by last weekend. Businesses -such as J.C. Pen- ney's, Albertson's, Gemco and Laguna Federal Savings & Loan Association sell the passes for ·oCTD as a public service. Ms. Bickert said OCTD of- ficials won't know the effects of increased fares on ridership un- til later this week. District oHicials say that purchase or monthly passes is less expensive then paying daily fares. Irvine gaim f ederal /untb Beine labeled a "metropolitan clty" by Uncle Sam will mean $300,000 in arant funds for Irvine next year. Since 1974 the population hu in· creased from 28,100 to 62,JM, ac- cordln8 to 1980 U.S. Department of Census ficures releued in April. Tbe latest population fiprel wlll entitle the city to a btger slice of Hou1ln1 and Urban Development Fundl. Since lt"74 lrvl.ne bu. bad t.o compete with otber county cttiel of leu thu 50,000 for Urban County Prosram fUndl that are 1tven by HUD to the county f~ distribution . ment officials if they knew of any violent sex offenders living in the area who might have com· milted the crime. He refused to say, however. whether or not the woman was sexually assaulted. And Lt. Lennert said that police still haven't determined a motive for the killing. Police have theorized that Mrs. Witthuhn was bit over the head with a blunt object late Feb. 5 at her borne al 3~ Colum- bus . Her husband was hospitalhed in We1tem Medical Center in Tustin at the time. No murder weapon was found . The assailant entered throu&b a sliding glass door that wasn't equipped with a bur1larTproof locking mechanism , in- vestigators said. Her mother found her the next morning after the dead woman's husband, David M. Witthuhn, asked her to check on bls wife, who didn't answer his telephone. The Witthuhn murder ii second unsolved bomklde Irvine in the last two years. In the other case, Saviuµlah Anderson , a 22-year-ol secretary, was found stran&l in her Irvine apartment ln M of 1979. Police say there ls no a1>4 parent link between the t"o murders and the Witthuhn ca-. apparently isn't tied in to ant other sJayings police know of. FAA papers challenged City official calls memorandum' self-serving' By STEVE MARBLE OftMDltty,. ... ,..., Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn has challenged the conclusions or a Federal ·Avia· lion Administration document that states Wynn encouraged changes in takeoff procedures at John Wayne Airport. Wynn wrote a four-page af. ridavit following disclosure of the 1979 FAA document during the final day of a noise variance bearing last month in Costa Mesa. Wynn submitted his af. fidavit to the administrative law judge who presided over the hearing. The city manager states that the FAA memorandum appears to be "a self-serving statement" to bolster the FAA's decision to raise jet power cutbacks from 500 to l ,000 feet at John Wayne Airport. Tbe cutback move , it is generally acknowledged, result- ed in increased noise. Michael Gatzke, the attorney representing Orange County government during the noise variance hearing, argued that the 1979 document shows Wynn telephoned FAA officials in Washington O.C. the same day a decision was made to order the cutback change. FAA officials contacted this week were unable to confirm precisely when the cutback de- cision was reached. The docu- ment, obtained by Gatzke under a Freedom of Information suit, supposedly details a phone con- versation between Wynn, former Newport Mayor Paul Ryckort and William Kreiger, an FAA chier. Wynn said he recalls the telephone call and is "sur- prised" that the FAA memo does not mention the reasons ror the call. SpecificaJly, Wynn said the call was placed after county supervisors agreed to allow the testing or the three-engine Boe· ing 727 at the county airport. The 727 was then, and still ls, banned from operating out of John Wayne Airport. Wynn said there was concern in the city that other jets, name- ly the 737 and DC-9, were to be ordered to cut back power at 1,000 reet while the 727, during the testlngjperiod, would be pe rmitted t6' cut back power at 500 reel. The city manager said that such a disparity would have pro· duced misleading noise reading reeults. The 1979 tests were conducted to determine how much noise the 727 jet produced. Wynn, in his statement, claims ''a comparison of the noise footprint of the respecti'v• aircraft would be meanlnglda at best, and at worst. we were fearful that erroneous test da~ would be used to justify i troduction of a noisy aircraft." The FAA document does n mention this line or discussion. "I can only surmise," Wyllll contends, "that the memoran· dum was dictated by its authO( as a self-serving statement to bolster the FAA's impending de· cision to modify the takeoff prQ- cedures at John Wayne Airpo~rt.'\ Finally, Wynn said Ne Beach did not support an changes in operating proced~ that would lead to increase4 noise. He\ added, though, that tbe city is concerned about airpo safetl. Irvine weighs fee hike for facilities The Irvine City Council will consider a proposal by the Com· munity Services Commission to increase fees ror the use or city facilities at its June 16 meeting. At a special May 27 mee~, the commission voted to in· crease rees with the exception ol non-profit organizations wbictl under the plan would continue have free use of the facilities. Grunion run~a groan GREAT GOOSE CHASES OEP.T. -Hungry citizen& alona our best or all possible coasts can hardly wait now for tomor· row night when food considered a great delicacy begins to wasb upon our shorelines. The Great Grunion Runs begin Thursday. In event )'OU are among the uninitiated, erunlon are little silver fish, about six inches long, that begin running up on our beaches to spawn in March. That means they lay eggs in the sand. These eggs then get washed around and soon make new little grunions. The small fish are allowed (=A · to go about their business un· . _. ,,. molested for the first couple of /"9\ months of this spawning __ M_U_R_P_H_l_N_f ,~I/ BUT NOW, IT BECOMES _TO_M _______ _ open season and you can go out after the new moon, wail for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for dinner. Isn't that simple? No, it isn't. Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum- mer camp and all the veteran campers from summers past dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They gave you a gunny sack and instructed you to go out after midnight with the bag and a flashlight and capture snipes from the treetops. Or maybe they simply sent you over to the next camp down the line to borrow a left ·handed monker wrench. It's like that wlth grunion hunts. You may go out on the "If you're a grunion. sir, I 'm really not mterested beach and wait patiently for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. DESPITE THIS, marine biological savants seem to keep issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches between 11 :18 p.m. and 1:18 a.m. Friday. See how precise that is? Trouble is, nobody ever tells the grunion about it. The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that * are uncrowded at the darkened ends. This might include the • Huntington Beach cit y or state beaches, the Newport-Balboa • Peninsula, Big Corona, Laguna's Main Beach, Victoria in • Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. Please note that this said might be. Not will be. Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would·be grunion hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in favor of the grunion going 10. FIRST, IF YOU are more than 16 years of age, you must • have a valid California spcrtsfishing license to take grunion. • Otherwise, you may be having an expensive chat with the fi sh and game warden who has also been known to be wandering around out in the surf wash in the dark. Further, it's a no-no. to try grabbing grunion with anything but your bare hands. There will be no nets . There will be no • buckets. Tbere will be no hooks. This ptobably means there will .also be no grunion. Grunion are slippery little devils that wiggle a lot. Captur- • . ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ice cubes in running water. ALL THESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer the perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2: 12to4:12 a.m. · Don't blame me if you don 't catch anything but a cold. ec details told Saddleback College recrea- onal facilities. in Mission Viejo eluding racquetball, volleyball d tennis courts will be open r community use this summer Four Indoor racquetball courts Ill be available at a cost of $3 r hour Monday through Fri- ay from 6 lo 9 p.m. and on aturday and Sunday from 8 m. to9 p.m. Six lighted tennis courts w1U open Monday through Thurs ay from 6 to 9 p.m . and on f'riday from 1 lo 9 p.m . Weekend hours are from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. The charge is S2 per hour. Three indoor voUeyball courts a r e available from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday and Sunday. Six in- door half·court basketball courts a re open weekends from 1 to 4 p.m. The fee for both is Sl per hour. For more information ca 11 the co Hege at 831·4646 weekdays, or 831-4895 evenings and weekends. Because your indicted in fraud SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Four were in· dieted by a federal grand jury for allegedly bilking manufacturers by frauduJently redeem- ing grocery coupons. U.S. Attorney William Hunt er cou ld not estimate the loss from the alleged schemes operated by those indict- ed, but s aid si milar operations in the San Francisco Bay a r ea have r esulted in an estimated $6 million in losses. . . ' Separate mail fraud indictments were re- turned against Dennis P . Kearns. 35, and his wife. Velma A. Kearns, 33 of Glen Ellen, Calif.; Joseph T. Leva, 64 . of San Francisco, and Oscar Colin, 43, San Bruno. Each faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and $1 ,000 fine on eac h Detty ...... ~'9 RkMl'il It...,._ Booster Club President John Roefter sets fire to la.st IOU for Fountain Valley High School band's trip to Washington, D.C. Principal David Jlagen and band director Frank Barnes watch. Band p lays JOU f e quiem count. Hunter said alleged fraud schemes operated by the Kearns. Leva and Colin were not con- nected. The Kearns w ere charged with 14 counts each involving transac· lions in which they al- legedly posed as grocery store owners and sub- mitted food coupons for ca sh redemption. Colin was charged with 19 similar counts and Leva with 16 counts. Fow1tain Valley High School has paid off the last of $81,000 in debts for the marching bantl's trip to Washington, O C last January to play in Pres1dt•nl Reagan's inauguration parade Many members of the 1:14 ruember band cheered and aµ plauded this week as Booster Club President John Hoefler '>et the last of the IOUs ablaze in rr;ont or the campus. The school had been notified of its s election as one of the 20 high school bands to march in the parade on Dec. 5, and had raised all but $21.000 of the Clight and room costs by the Jan 19 de- parture date They borrowed the rc!>l from thl' scttool 's associated s tudent bod} treasury. .. It s been very heartwarming that so many people continued to support the band after the in- auguration. said Evie Belgen, Sl'.hool information o fficer Wt· re all JUSl sort of breathing a sigh of relief " Principal Hagen said t he moncy was raised through 1,025 indi vidual donations ranging from SI 10 SS,000. The ~four -day trip to \\ ashmgton, O.C. included tours of the White House, the $mithso- n 1 a n I n st 1 tut ion . Li n oo I n Memorial, Was hington Monu- ment, Mount Vernon, and Ari- ington Cemetery. he said . He said the high point of the Journey was marching rn the parade JUSt moments after it had been announred that the American hostagei. held in Iran had been released School offtc1als sa" the band r eceived a rousing: emotional reception from thousands of spectators when it played the Civil War tune. "When Johnn~ Com es Marching llome ... ··we. not only toured Amencan history, but we parti<.•1pated in history.'' Hagen said The band was chosen by the inauguration committee out of 100 high :>chool applications. Hunter said the FBI and the U.S . Postal -Service began an in- vestigation in January 1979 after receiving complaints from some or the nation's largest m a nufacturers, includ- Inmates' escap e bid fails _,, ing General Mill s. Three inmates including Procter and Gamble, two men convicted of kidnap· Quaker Oats. Ralston ping a Huntington Beach <.'Otn Purina . Co I gale · de11 ler's family have made an P a 1 mo I i v e . R . J . unsuccessful attempt to escape Reynolds, Scott Paper from Orange County Jail, C1n of· and Coca-Cola. Cicial said. He said a searcb war-Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart !>aid rant obtained in May today his d epartm ent would 1980 resulted in seizure seek complaints of attempted from various locations escape and destruction of county of 2.4 million product property against inmalt•., coupons with a value in We'sley E. Tucker, 30. Lawrence excess of $600.000 He B. Bennetlo, 33 and Anth1ln~ said the source of the Carl Marek. 19. coupons has not been de-Both Tucker a nd BennNlo termined. were convicted by a n Orangt> County Superior Court Jury tn m1d ·May of kidnapping and other felon) charges in the at- te m pled robbery of a H unlington Beach ·coin dealer whose family was held hosta~e 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 Al)a Jail facility early Sunday ll is alleged they destroyed a grated light fixture m their cell and crawled into a plumbing tunnel lhat runs between cells. Hart said a deputy heard sus picious noises and alerted other jail security personnel, ~ho cor doncd off the fourth·fl oor. high securit~ an•a and opened the t unnel where th<' inmates were hiding. The attempted escape was the second in recent m onths i.(I which inmates crawled into tht!' plumbing tunnel seeking a wny out of the Jail In tht• first incident. three in- mates al!-.o were found to be m the tunnel. ·,---~--------------------.... ---------------------------...Iii~ • l JUNE IS GRADUATION & . WINE CEL LAR FATHER'S DAY AND FIN E SPIRITS PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SUND Av. JUNE 14 JUNE 21st SUTTER HOME llTE ZINFANDEL ENTER'fAINMENT 86 , OBITUARIES 88 BUSINESS 89 87 IEBaY CLAUSEN Of ............. June may be the most impor- tant month in Costa Mesa's history at least u far as the next 10 to 20 years are concerned, some city officials believe. Decisiooa to be made by the City Council in a -aeries of fou.r special sessions durin& tbe month, the fJrst at fl.;JO p.m. Thursday, will form policy that wUl affect the llvea of JUlt about every citUen, they believe. Those sesalona, opea to tbe public, will consider upd.un. of the city General Plan. Tie p1an la a skeleton around wblcb futUl'e city law• will be a · veloped to either promote tut, moderate or slow growth and the environment that would be produced by either. The declslona come at -. crucial point in city history. Almoet unnoticed, Costa Mesa two years qo became a COii)· munlty with more apartment and condominium units than ain&le-famlly homes. During the past year, multiple-unit development became the rule rat.her than the ·exception. Larae tracts of agricultural land zoned for 1ln1le-f amily residences were filling up and developers be1an conaideriDI . ...., .................... WILL V AND FRIENDS Kim Diamond (second from left) and Melissa Meld4Uor (seco8<1 from riallt) »lay Je@ds 1' alterQate castd of "Willyt' Worika an'cl ,the Cboeotaa Factory" at Mariners School in Newoort Beach. ·With them are (from left) Skylar Put- man, Chr.istina Abbott and Kathie Nutt. Perforllances will be at 9:06 and 10:30 a .m. and 7 :~ p.m. ThW'Sday. Jury debates fate of deputy Officer accused of kidnap portrayed as 'Samaritan' An Orange. County Super\of' Court jury was to begin de- liberations today in the kidnap- ping trial of sheriff's deputy George Loudermilk of Costa Mesa, who was portrayed Tues- day by bis lawyer as a falaely accused "good Samaritan." Loudermilk, defense lawyer Al Stokke said, was only tryi1IC to spare the four women be la accused of abducting the in· dignity of being thrown into Or~nge County Jail as suspected drunken drivers. "George Loudermilk was do- int a favor for each and everx • one of these people,'' Stoltte said In bis closing statements to the jury in Superior Court Judge James K. Turner's courtroom. Loudermilk is charged with four counts of kidnappin.1 and three counts of false imprison· ment in connection with four al· leged incidents between July and October of 1980. In the most aggravated of the cases, according to the prosecu- tion, the defendant took a 33- year-old Mission Viejo woman to a secluded hilltop area near Irvine and threatened to rape her and kill her last October. "What type or conduct is this to engage in, especially for a police officer?" Deputy Disbict Attorney Michael Jacobs asked the jury Tuesday. "Ladies and gentlemen, this is an aggravated kidnapping by a police officer. There is no de- fense whatsoever," Jacobs said. Loudermilk, a father of four, was suspended from duty pend- ing trial. He is free on his own recognizance. Fish fry begins Friday in Mesa l Mesa grants $10,000 to SCR theater Costa Mesa-Ne\vp0rt Harbor Lions Club officials expect more than 50,000 people to attend their 36th annual Fish Fry, a tb.ree- day carnival in Costa Mesa begln.n.iJll Friday. This year's event at Lions Park will feature the usual '3.50 fish dinner, carnival rides and came booths. The fund-raiser wlll also feature ~ 'tarade, bands and dancen, btlW and beauty coo· teata and ""1'awtn11 for a new Ford Ea~ort. color television and othe~<Yrises. Accordbic to Jim Ferryman. publicity chairman for tbe event, the Uom Club expects to raise about '5$,000 wblcb lt will donate to 25 local cbarl&les, in- cludlnc tbe UCl Lloaa EJ• Bank. 8oya Club ancl Glrla Club. marshal, begins at 10:30 a.m. on Harbor Boulevard at Wilson Street. At nooo, fish dinners go on sale. Also scheduled for Saturday are the parade awards at 2 p.m., a drawing at 3:15 p.m. and the Arlee Htgb8 'Dancers at 4:15 p.~. Then at 6 p.m., there will be another drawine and, at '7 p.m., the Plua Rhythm Band will perform. The color televlsioo drawi.n& will be at 9 p.m. Qn Sunday, the festival will conclude with the annual beauty contest at 2 p.m. and a baby con- test at 3:30 p.m . A dr•wtna ls set for 5:30 p.m., the Dorothy Jo Dancers will perform at I : U p.rn . and the drawing for a 1•1 Ford F.aeort will be at I p.m. , r South Coast Repertory Theater baa been granted $10,000 by the Ci- ty of Costa Mesa -no stringa at- tached. Councilwoman Norma Hert&01'1 suggestion at the City Council meeting earlier this week that the theater stage a produc- tion for officials of Oran1e County governmentl u a Costa Kesa promotion fail., to receive sup- port from the other four council members. But Donald Smallwood, theater board president, indicat- ed his organization would "coo-· tlnue" to cooperate ''to lta fullest" with the city in the com-m• year. He uked that the condition not be levied but lndJcated 1utb a promotional activity mllbt be 1ta1ed. Councllwomaa Pert101, who a,lao is pr11ident al the Oraqe Cowaty Leape ol Cities wu ln· atrameatal I• locatiaa tbe tbeater la Costa lfeaa. SmallwoOd Hid. Smallwood told tlle eoundl tbi\ tbe tMeter lfOUp, a.ouMd in Costa ..... , Town Center com· Pl ii tD it• tbird 1uee:e.ful ...... TIM tbMter ~·1 INdcM deftelt. ........ JI; .... ,... tint ............ .... .......................... to 40 PlftWt. J a •••kiaa ti•• fuad1, Smahood ..... -~ ... tbeaw, a aoe:Dioft& ortalllla· Ula =· , .. ., for ..... ta ' 1a1··•' ittlucate about 11.000 elaildna uauau,. decisions older parts of the city zoned for medium and bith density COD· atructioo. Tboae zones, for the moat part, are underdeveloped with older and often substandard homes stttin1 on lots that could bold more wlits. The city baa moved in the put 20 years, officials note, from a small-business, rural and sinale- family bousln& community to one bisected by freeways and dotted with large commercial and Industrial cent.en. · Jn revising Its General Plan, the City Councll mu1t decide what the community is to become and what controls are requlred to forge that enyiron· ment. Costa Mesa currently has more than 81,700 residents, about 34,000 housing unij.s and a commercial and industrial base that offers about 45,450 Jobe and •• • draws employees -from throu&b<>ut Oran1e County. To be determined ,is whether the community s hould bo. planned for continued raplcl growth, moderate 1rowth or slow growth. Slow irowtb policies would re- sult in about 91,000 re1identa, 37 ,500 housing units and an employment base of 63,800 joba by ~he year 2000. · : FAA papers challenged:j City official calls memorandum 'se l /-serving' By STEVE MARBLE Of*DMIY"•._,. Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn bas challenged the conclusions of a Federal Avia- tion Administration document that states Wynn encouraged changes in takeoff procedures at John Wayne Airport. Wynn wrote a four-page af. fidavit following disclosure or the 1979 FAA document during the final day of a noise variance bearing last month in Costa Mesa. Wynn1 submitted his af. fidavit to the administrative law judge who presided over the bearlrlg. The city manager states that the FAA memorandum appears to be "a self-serving statement" to bolster the FAA's decision to raise jet power cutbacks from 500 to 1,000 feet at John Wayne Airport. The cutback move, it is generally acknowledged, result- ed in increased noise. cision , was reached. The docu- ment, obtained by Gatzke under a Freedom of Information suit, supposedly details a phone con- versation between Wynn, former Newport Mayor Paul Ryckoff and William Kreiger, an FAA chief. Wynn said he recalls the telephone call and is "sur- prised" that the FAA memo does not mention the reuons for the call. Specifically, Wynn said the call was placed after county supervisors agreed to allow the testing or the three-engine Boe· ing 727 at the county airPOrt. The 727 was then, and still is, banned from operating out of John Wayne Airport. Wynn said there was concern in the city that other jets, name- ly the 737 and DC-9, were to be ordered to cut back power at 1,000 feet while the 727, during the testing period, would be permitted to cut back power at 500 feet. . The city manager said that such a disparity would have proJ duced misleading noise reading) The 1979 tests were conducted to determine bow much noise the 727 jet produced. Wynn, in his statement, claims "a comparison of the noise footprint of the respeetive. aircraft wouJd be meaningless at best, and at worst we were fearful that erroneous test data would be used to justify in-; troduction or a noisy aircraft... : The FAA document does no~ mention this line of discussion. • "I can only surmise," wyruj contends, "that the memoran~ dum was dictated by its author\ Finally, Wynn said Newpor1 Beach did not support an~ changes in operating procedures that would lead to increase$! noise. 'I Michael Gatzke, the attorney representing Orange County government during the noise variance beating, argued that the 1919 document shows Wynn telephoned FAA officials in Washington D.C. the same day a decision was made to order the cutback change. Parent,.chiM irorkslwps set FAA officials contacted this week were unable to confirm precisely when the cutback de· Along with a regular summer curriculum this .year, Orange Coast College will offer four parent-child workshops. The workshops · wi<tl cover 'Jn aterial on parent-child rela- tions from childbirth to age 4. The ......................... SHOWS DUE -The antics and songs that made "Oliver" a Broadway bit will be reproduced tonight end Thunday night in Costa Mesa when Bear Street School sixth iraders perform at 7:30 p.m. in the Full Goepel Bullnesamen'a Fellowship International buildiq, 3150 Bear st., north of the school. Performers include (clockwise from front center) Silke Schwarz u Oliver, Gary Cutaneda; Darren Norris, George Wood, Nate Marvoeh and Laurie Benner. summer session runs June 1S through Aug. 7. District residents may register by appointment at the admissions office beginining 3une 8. For ap- poi n tmen t information calJ. 556-5772. CHP studies $5,000 clue after crash I t I The twisted remains of J turbocharged Porsche and $5,ood' in $50 bills a re the clues' California Highway Patrol of- ficers were left with following 1,. h11b-speed craah this week Oli the border of Newport Beach. Officers claim the 6:30 p.m• collision Monday at the Coas Highway bridge over the Santa Ana River has them puzzled. J Tbe car 's driver an passenger, spotted by several' witnesses, reportedly ran from the wreckage and took the keyi with them. The money, says CHP in·' vestigator Howard Whitmore was found in the car's glov compartment. One witness told investigatorsl that one of the men shouted,1 "lt.'s hot" as be ran. He could have meant b~ thought the car was about to burst into names, but Whitmore says he believes the fleeing man• meant the car was stolen. The Porsche was first spotted traveling at speeds estimated at 100 mph through Huntlngtod: Beach on Pacific Co•&\ lliahw . • , w t.more c ma "ibe speedlnc car st.nick a pard rail on the brtd1e. anl)t!d acrQf8 four la.neSt of traffic al;HI plowed into some rock near a trailer park aft.er cuttin1 throu&h some bru.ah. One wttneu told officers that the puaencer suffered what ap. peared to be fadal laceratioaa,J Police ~lleve be Ukel.Y bu aoulbti medlc'1 treatment bu\ they're Ull• ·~where. Whitmore clalD.\I Jala off~~ bas hem unable to coatact ~ owner of tbe ear, but bH learned that tM ear appannUt bad bem lomed to a Mend. • Re aays Ute car could bav• been ltalm. Grunion run a groan BUT NOW, IT BECOMES-----------open season and you can go out · · after the new moon, wait for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for diruter. Isn't that simple? No, it isn't. Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum- mer camp and all the veteran campers from summers past dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They gave you a gunny sack and instructed you to go out after midnight with the bag and a fla$hlight and capture snipes from the treetops .. Or maybe they simply sent you over to the next camp down the line to borrow a left-handed monkey wrench. It's like that with grunion hunts. You may go out on the "If you're a grunion, air, I'm really not intne1ted ... " beach and wait patiently for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. . DESPITE TW S, marine biological savants seem to keep • issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches • between 11:18 p.m . and 1: 18 ~.m. Friday: See how precise that is? Trouble is, nobody ever tells the grunion about it. The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that • are uncrowded at the darkened ends. This might include the ~ Huntington Beach city or state beaches, the Newport-Balboa e Peninsula, Big Corona, Laguna's Main Beach, Victoria in !;,, ·Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. Please note that this said might be. Not will be. Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would-be grunion ,. hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in ~ favor of the grunion going in. @ FIBST, IF YOU are more thart 16 years of age, you must have a valid California sportsfishing license to take grunion. Otherwise, you may b1rliaving an expensive chat with the fish and game warden wbCi bas also been known to be wandering around out in the surf wash in the dark. Further, it's a no-no to try grabbing grunion with anything but your bare bands. There will be no nets. There will be no buckets. There will be no hooks. This probably means there will also be no grunion. Grunion are slippery little devils that wiggle a lot. Captur- ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ic~ cubes in running water . ALL THESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer the perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2:12 to4:12 a.m. Don 't blame me if you don't catch anything but a cold. ec details told Saddleback College recrea- . nal facilities in Mission Viejo eluding racquetball, volleyball d tennis courts will be open r community use this summer. Four indoor racquetball courts ill be available at a cost of $3 r hour Monday tftrough Fri- Y from 6 to 9 p.m. and on turday and Sunday from 8 m. to9 p.m. Six lighted tennis courts will open Monday through Thurs· y from 6 to 9 p.m. and on Friday from l to 9 p.m . Weekend hours are from 8 a .m . to 9 p.m. 1be charge is $2 per hour. Three indoor volleyball courts are avaflable from 6 lo 9 p.m. Friday and Sunday. Six in· door half·court basketball courts are open weekends from 1 to 4 p.m. The Cee for both Ls $1 per hour. For more information call the college at 831·4646 weekdays, or 831-4895 nenings and weekends. indicted in fraud SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Four were in- d lcted by a Cederal grand jury for alle&edly bilking manufacturers by rraudulently redeem· Ina grocery coupons . U.S. Attorney William Hunter co uld not estimate the loss from the alleged schemes operated by those tndict· ed, but I Said Similar operations in the San Francisco Bay area have resulted lo an estimated $6 million in losses. Separate mail fraud indictments were re- turned against Dennis P . Kearns. 35, and bis wife. Velma A. Keams, 33 of Glen Ellen, Calif.; Joseph T. Leva, 64, of San Francisco, and Oscar Colin, 43, San Bruno. Each faces a maximum sentence of Cive years in prison and $1 ,000 fine on each count.• ' Hunter said alleged fraud schemes operated by the Keems, Leva and Colin were not con- nected. The Kearns were charged with 14 counts each involving transac· lions in which they al· legedly posed as grocery store owners and sub· milted food coupons for cash redemption. Colin was charged with 19 similar counts and Leva with 16 counts. Hunter said the FBI and the U.S. Postal Service began an in- vestigation in January 1979 after r eceiving complaints from some of the nation's largest manufacturers, includ· ing General Mills, Procter and Gamble, Quaker Oats, Ralston Purina, Colgate · Palmolive , R .J . Reynolds, Scott Paper and Coca-Cola. He said a search war- rant obtained in .May 1980 resulted in seizure from various locations of 2.4 million product coupons' with a value in excess of $600,000. He said the source of the coupons has not been de· termined. _.., ........................ 8001ttr Club Pre~t John Hoefln' aeta fire to laat IOU fur Fountain V.alley High School band'• trip to Wa.!hington, D.C. Principal David H~and band director Frank Barnea watch. . Band plays IOU requiem Fountain Valley High School has paid off the last of $81 ,000 in debts for the marching band's trip to Washington, D.C. last January to play in President Reagan's inauguration parade. Many members of the 134· member band cheered and ap- plauded this week as Booster Club President John Hoefler set the last of the IOUs ablaze in front oCthe campus. The sphool bad been notified of its selection as one of the 20 high school bands to march in the parade on Dec. S, and had..1"aised all but $21,000 of the flight and room costs by the Jan. 19 de- parture date. They borrowed the rest Crom the school's associated student body treasury. "It's been very heartwarming that so many people continued to support the band after the in· at.lguration," said Evie Belgen, school information orticer. "We're all just sort of breathing a sigb of relief.'' Principal Hagen sa id the money was raised through 1,025 individual donations ranging from $1 to $5,000. The !our·day trip to Washington, D.C. included tours of the White House, the Smithso- n i an Institution, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monu· ment, Mowit Vernon, and Ari· ington Cemetery, he said. He said the high polnl of the journey was marching in the parade just moments arter 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 o! speclaton when it played the Cjvil War tune, "When Jobjmy Comes Marching Home." "We not only toured American history, but we participated in history," Hagen said. The band was chosen by the inauguration committee out of 400 high school applications . Inmates' escap~ hid fails Three inmates -including two men coovicted of kidnap- ping a Huntington Beach coin dealer's family -have made an unsuccessful attempt to escape from Orange County Jail, an of- ficial said. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said today bis department would seek complaints of attempted escape and destruction of county property against inmates Wesley E. Tucker, 30, Lawrence B. Bennetto, 33 and Anthony Carl Marek, 19. Both Tucker and Bennetto were convicted by an Orange County Superior Court jury m mid-May oC kidnapping and other felony charges in the at- tempted robbery of a Huntington Beach coin dealer whose familY was held hostage at gunpoibt last September. They face sentencing proceed- ings on June IS. 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 Se<:urity personnel, who cor· doned off the fourth-floor, high security area and opened the tunnel w.here the inmates were hiding. The attempted escape was the second in recent months in which inmates crawled into the plumbing twuiel seeking a way out of the jail. In the first incident. three in· mates also were found to be in the tunnel. WEl»IESDAV, JUNE 3, 1981 How does Ronald Reagan ENTERTAINMENT OBITUARIES BUSINESS get. auxiy with attacking Wall Street? .. B9 Mesa ponders long-ranging decisions By JERKY CLAUSEN Of ............ June may be the most impor- tant month in Costa Mesa's history at least as tar as the next 10 to 20 yea.rs are concerned, • some city officials believe. Decisions to be made by the City Council in a series of four special aeuioos during the month, the first at 6 :30 p.m. Thursday, wut form poUcy that wlll affect the lives of just about every citizen, they believe. Those sessions, open to the pubUc, will consider updatina of the city General Plan. The plan is a skeleton around which future city laws will be de· veloped to either promote fast, moderate or slow erowtb and the environment that would be produced by either. The decl'Sions come at a crucial point in city history. . Almoet unnoticed, Costa Mesa two years aco became a com· munity with more apartment and condominium units than single-family homes. During the past year, multlple·unit development became the rule rather than the exception. Large tracts of aericultural land zoned for single-family residences were filllne UJ> and developers began considerine WILLY AND FRIENDS -Kim Diamond (second from leJ;t ) and Melissa Melchior (secon<\ from ri&M> play leads in alternate casts of "WUly Worika and the Chocolate Factory" at Mariners School in Newoort ............................ Beach:With them are (from left) Skylar Put- man, Christina Abbott and Kathie Nutt. Performances will be at 9:05 and 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Jury debates fate of deputy Officer accused of kidnap portrayed as 'Samaritan' An Orange County Superior Court jury was to begin de· liberations today in the kidnap- ping trial of sheriff's deputy George Loudermilk of Costa Mesa, who was portrayed Tues· day by his lawyer as a falsely accused "good Samaritan." Loudermilk, defense lawyer Al Stokke said, was only tcying to spare the four women be is accused of abducting the in· dignity of being thrown into Orange County JaU as suspected drunken drivers. "George Loudermilk was do· ing a favor for each and every one of these people," Stokke said in his closing statements to the jury in Superior Court Judge James K. Turner's courtroom. Loudermilk is charged with four counts of kidnapping and three counts of false imprison- ment in connection with four al· leged incidents between July and October of 1980. In the most aggravated of the cases, according to the prosecu- tion, the defendant took a 33· year-old Mission Viejo woman to Fish fry begins Friday in Mesa Costa Mesa-Newp0rt Harbor marshal, beetns at 10:30 a .m. on Lions Club officials expect more Harbor Boulevard at Wilson than 50,000 people to attend their Street. At noon, fish dinners go 36th annual Fish Fry, a three· on sale. day carnival in Costa Mesa Also scheduled for Saturday beginning Friday. are the parade awards at 2 p.m., This year's event at Lions a drawing at 3: 15 p.m. and the Park will feature the usual $3.50 Arlee Rig~ Dancers at 4:15 fish dinner, carnival rides and p.m. Then at 6 p.m., there will be another drawing and, at 7 1a1J1e boot.ha. p.m., the Plaza Rhythm Band The fund-raiser wlll also will perform. The color feature a parade, bands and television drawlng will be at· 9 dancers, baby and beauty coo· p.m. teats and drawings for a new Ford Eacort, color television On Sunday, the festival will and other prizes. conclude with the annual beauty AccordlDg to Jim Ferryman, contest at 2 p.m. and a baby COD· pu bllcity ch airman for tbe t~t at 3:30 p.m. A drawina la set event, the tJons Club expects to for 5:30 p.m., the Dorothy Jo ralH about $55,000 which lt will Dancers wJll perform at 8: 15 donate to 25 local eharttie1, in·· p.m. and the drawin1 for a 1881 cludln& tbe UCl lJou Eye Bank, Ford Escort will be at 8 p.m. Boya Club and Girls Club. lft the put SI yean, the Fi.ah Fry baa ralsed more tban '800.000 for loCaf ebariti•, rer- rymaalald. The event, wblcb 1taned ln lMS, wu tbe idea Gt two Lkmt Club member•, accordl•• to h~•.·a ;a9na1Yat1D11B1 la&'tM .................. . IWal~•lllbb*U.,&M eftat ll •1-a l'lialllr. OD Frld&J, Ille canl•al rtclll W .... tiooCllll ~ at t p.m. '1 T:• J.m., a.d X will__.. f91a. 1'I ftnt irnbae WW bl at ••••• Oa....., ............. .. '1: °""· ..... ~·-,,.- Bikes slated for bri.e The Cout Hlpway bridl~ o•er ttie Santa Ana River on tbe Newport lleael9·Huatln1toa loch ....... Will tie modlW-~ biclele tramc, u.-. ..................... .. ltJ tM ~. QMlt.1 ..... ~ ............. ~ ... .., -~-°' *' .............. . eoet .... ~,.... ... ,. ...... . TM MM 1 .. oa tM ....... wtlJ DU mAlni blU tr.U. tlMI& aow _. •·elihet .W. GI.._ ..,...... a ' secluded hilltop area near Irvine and threatened to rape her and Jdll her last October. "What type of conduct is this to engage in, especially for a police officer?" Deputy District Attorney Michael Jacobs asked the jury Tuesday. "Ladies and gentlemen, this is an aggravated kidnapping by a police officer. There is no de· tense whatsoever," Jacobs said. Loudermilk, a father of four, was suspended from duty pend- ing triaJ. He is free on his own recognizance. Mesa grants $10,000 to SCR theater South Coast Repertory Theater has been granted $10,000 by the Ci· ty of Costa Mesa -no strings at· tached. Councilwoman Norma Hert10e's suggestion at the City Council meeUn1 earlier this week that the theater staee a produc- tion for officials of Orance County governmentt as a Coata Mesa promotion failed to receive sup- port from the other lour -council members. But Don!ld Smallwood, theater board president, indicat- ed his orcanization would ''con- tinue" to cooperate "to lts fullest" with tbe city in the com- tng year. He asked that tbe condition not be levied but indicated •ucb a promotional activity mlibt be ataaect. Councilwoman Heruoa. who also la president of tbe Orllll• County Leque of Cltlea, wu ln· strumental • loc atl•I tbt theater In Coata Mesa, SmallwciOd said. SmUlwoOd tbld tbe couaell tbat the tbnter sroup, bouHcl ln Cotta 11 .. ·1 Town Center com· . :!:ia&i ID ltl Ullrd auceelllUI Me tbeater •roup'1 ~ deftdt, ............. ,... eent .._ ot.bft' .Smllar \~ ... ............ ~~­'° • Plft9Dt, la 1eekl~C ~be f•ada, Sm~,....aouttM&IM u..aW.•-: ........ · tloa ha for .... I• ·~ ucate abo1it ··-... .....,, . t) older parts of the city zoned for medium and blah density coo- atruction. Those zones, for the most part, are underdeveloped with older and often 1ubstandard boaaes sitting on lots that could bold m ore units. The city has moved in the past 20 yean, officials note, from a small-business, rural and slngle- family housing community to one bisected by freeways and dotted with large commercial and industrial centers. In revising ita Peneral Plan, the City Council must decide what the community ls to become and what controls are required to forge that environ· ment. Costa Mesa currently baa more than 81. 700 residents, about 34,000 bousin1 units and a commercial and industrial baae that offers about 45,450 jobs and draws employees fro throughout Orance County. To be determined ia whetb the community should b planned for continued rap growth, moderate growth sJow growth. ,. Slow growth policies would re. suit in about 91,000 residents, 37 ,500 housing unit.a and aQ employment base of 63,800 jobt by the year 2000. · . F'AA papers challenged· City official calls memorandum 'se l /-serving' :! By STEVE MARBLE Of ................... Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn has challenged the conclusions of a Federal Avia- tion Administration document that states Wynn encquraged changes in takeoff procedures at John Wayne Nrport. Wynn wrote a lour-paee af. fidavit following disclosure of the 1979 FAA document during the fioaJ day or a noise variance hearing last month in Costa Mesa. Wynn submitted bis af· fidavit to the administrative law judge who presided over the hea"'rine. The city manager slates that the FAA memorandum appears to be "a self-serving statement" to bolster the FAA's decision to raise jet power cutbacks from 500 to 1,000 feet at John Wayne Airport. The cutback move. it is generally acknowledged, result· ed in increased noise. cision was reached. The docu- ment, obtained by Gatzke under a Freedom of Information suit. supposedly details a phone con· versation between Wynn. former Newport Mayor Paul Ryckoff and William Kreiger, an FAA chief. Wynn s aid be recalls the telephone call and is "sur· prised" that the FAA memo does not mention the reasons for the call. Specifically, Wynn said the call was placed after county supervisors agreed to allow the testing of the three-engine Boe· ing 727 at the county airPort. The 727 was then, and still is. banned from operating out of John Wayne Airport. Wynn said there was concern in the city that other jets, name· ly the 737 and DC·9, were to be ordered to cut back power at 1,000 feet while the 727 , during the testing period, would be permitted to cut back power 500 feet. • The city manager said lha~ such a disparity would have pro- duced misleading noise readin The 1979 tests were conducted to determine bow much noise lhe 727 jet produced. ' Wynn. in his state ment claims .. a comparison of thd noise footprint of the respectiv~ aircraft would be meaningless at best. and at worst we were fearful that erroneous test dat11 would be used to justify inf' troduction of a noisy aircraft.•· ,j. The FAA document does n"t mention this line of djscussion. • ' "I can only surmise," Wynn contends. ..that the memoran dum was dictated by its autho&! Finally, Wynn said Newport Beach did not support an)r changes in operating proceduret that would lead to increased1 noise. Michael Gatzke. the attorney representing Orange C9unty government during the noise variance hearing, argued that the 1979 document shows Wynn telephoned FAA officials in Waslµngton D.C. the same day a decision was made to order the cutback change. Parent,.chil,d u:vrkshops set FAA officials contacted this week were unable to .confirm precisely when the cutbac~ de· Along with a regular summer curriculum this year, Orange Coast College will offer four parent·child workshops. The workshops will cover m ateriaJ on parent-child rela- tions from childbirth to age 4. The ................ llllMN ........ SHOWS DUE -The antics and songs that made "Oliver" a Broadway bit will be reproduced tonight and Thursday night in Costa Mesa when Bear Street School sixth graders perform a\ 7:30 p.m. in the Full Goepel Businessmen's Fellowship International buildin&, 3150 Bear St., north ol the school. Performers include (clockwise from front center) §like Schwarz as Oliver, Gary Castaneda, Darren Norris, Geor1e Wood, Nate Marvosb and Laurie Benner. lhavender bbat~ laimuit up,lield DruaeWa Tnn•1 lavelidtr· colored ltoulfque lD La1ua Beaeb •• an ~u far u Of aqe CoUatj Coult llldl• Robert R. erald la ~ ht--· ...... ol ..... ~'I lll?l Ir• Ii .... =~'-W7'= .... ........... , elded :'t dlamlu • .. ....... t.allir. Tb• bout14ae owaer laad ~ .......... ., ....... 1 summer session runs June 15 through Aug. 7. District residents may registetl by appointment at the admission9 office beginining June 8. For al>'. pointment inform ation calf' 556·5772. CHP studies $5,000 clue after crash The twisted remains of • turbocharged Porsche and $5,oob in $50 bills are the clod• California Highway Patrol of ficers were left with following high-speed crash this week oe the border of Newt>ort Beach. r Officers claim the 6:30 P·IDA collision Monday at the Coal&i Highway bridge over the Sanlf. Ana River bas them puzzled. The car 's driver an4 passenger, spotted by several witnesses, reportedly ran from the wreckage and took the ke)"I with them. The money. says CHP in- vestigator Howard Wbitmor was found in ttie car's glov compartment. One witness told investigato that one or the men shouted "It's bot" as he ran. • He could have meant *' thought the car was about q. bursl into flames, but Whltmo" says be believes the fleeing m~ meant the car was stolen. The Porsche was first ~pot traveling at speeds esUmated 100 mph tbrouch Hunting Beac h on Pacific Coa Higbw~. _ . . Wbltmore claims the s~!diDI~ car struck a guard rail on brldge, ancled acrou four Ian of traffic and plowed into so rock near a trailer park aJ'tel;j cuttin1 tb.roulh some brush. • One witnesa told officers the puaeoier suffered w~at peared to be facla\ lac::eratl°"' Police believe be likely bu sou .. medical treatrpent but they're~ aur~where. · Whitmore claims bis offi haa been unable to contact .._ owner of tbe ear, but b._ learned that the ear apparenUJ bad been kNaned to a friend. He ·~ the car could ha been ltolen. -··-· •••••••••••••••••••••••••casscsuacescucca £ 525 2£233 35 .......... Grunion run a groan ~ GllEAT GOOSE CRASES DEn. -Hunan' cltiHDI alonl our beet or aJl possible coasts can hardly wait now for tomor· row night when food considered a 1re•t dellcac)' begins to . wash up0n our shorelines. The Great Grunion Runs begin Thursday. In event you are among the uninitiated, grunion are UtUe silver fish, about six inches long, that begin running up on our beaches to spawn in March. That means they lay eags in the sand. These eggs then get washed around...and soon make new tittle grunions. The small fish are allowed fu.) · to go about their business un-· · · · molested for the first couple of -:.,.~ · months of this spawning. 1-1-1-1-0-R-PH_l_N_f ,~It BUT NOW. IT BECOMES ______ ......., ____ _ open season and you can go out · · · after the new moon, wait for the grunion to sweep ashore, and scoop them up for dinner. Isn't that simple? No, it isn't. Don't you remember back when you were a rookie at sum- mer camp and all the veteran campers from summers past dispatched you out on a Snipe Hunt? They gave you a gunny sack and instructed you to go out after midnight with the bag • and a flashlight and capture snipes from the treetops. Or maybe they simply sent you over~ to the next camp down the line to borrow a left-handed monkey wrench. It's like that with grunion hunts. You may go out on the "If you're a grunion, sir, I'm reolly not mtereat~ ... " beach and wait patiently for the grunion to show up. But the little devils may never keep the appointment. . DESPITE TWS, marine biological savants seem to keep issuing these timetables for capturing grunion. On Thursday night, the grunion runs are scheduled along our sandy beaches between 11:18 p.m. and 1:18 a.m. Friday. See how precise that is? '. Trouble is, nobody ever tells the grunion about it. ~ The best beaches are said to be the long, sandy ones that ,. are uncrowded at the darkened ends. This might include the ~ Huntington Beach city or state beaches. the Newport-Balboa -Peninsula, Big Corona, Laguna's Main Beach, Victoria in Laguna, Salt Creek or San Onofre. Please note that this said might be. Not will be. Also, in order to avoid disappointment, would-be grunion hunters should understand that all the rules are stacked in favor of the grunion going in. FIRST, IF YOU are more than 16 years of age, you must have a valid California sportsfishing license to take grunion. Otherwise, you may be having an expensive chat with the fish and game warden who has also been known to be wandering around out in the surf wash in the dark. Further, it's a no-no to try grabbing grunion with anything but your bare hands. There will be no nets. There will be no buckets. There will be no books. This probably means there will also be no grunion. Grunion are slippery litUe devils that wiggle a lot. Captur- ing them with the bare hands is like trying to grab a fistful of long, thin ice cubes in running water. ALL THESE RULES ASIDE, grunion runs offer. the perfect excuse to hold an all-night beach party. You might take June 7 for a possibility when the run is expected from 2: 12 to 4:12 a.m. Don't blame me if you don't catch anything but a cold. ec details told addleback College recrea- nal facilities in Mission Viejo luding racquetball, volleyball d tennis courts will be open community use this summer. Four indoor racquetball courts ll be available al a cost of $3 r hour Monday through Fri· y from 6 to 9 p.m. and on turday and Sunday from 8 m . to9p.m. ix lighted tennis courts will open Monday through Thurs· y from 6 to 9 p.m . and on Friday from 1 to 9 p.m . Weekend hours are from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. The charge is $2 per hour. · Three indoor volleyball courts are available from 6 to 9 p.m. Friday and Sunday. Six in- door half-court basketbaJJ courts are open weekends from 1 lo 4 p.m. The fee (or both is $1 per hour. For more information call the colleee at 831-4646 weekdays, or 831""895 evenines and weekends. Because your home la as unique in fraud SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Four were in· dlcted by a federal grand J\U'Y for allegedly bllktne maquf~cturera by fraudulently redeem- ing grocery coupons, U.S. Attorney William Hunt er could not estimate the loss from the alleged schemes operated by those indict- ed . but said similar operations in the San Francisco Bay area have resulted in an estimated $6 million in losses. Separate mail fraud indictments were re- turned against Dennis P . Kearns, 35, and bis wife, Velma A. Kearns. 33 of Glen Ellen, Cali!.; Joseph T. Leva, 64. or San Francisco, and Oscar Colin, 43, San Bruno. Each faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and $1,000 fine on each count. Hunter said alleged fraud schemes operated by the Kearns, Leva and Colin were not con- nected. The Kearns were charged with 14 counts each involving transac· lions in which they al- legedly posed as grocery store owners and sub- mitted food coupons for cash redemption. Colin was charged with 19 similar counts and Leva with 16 counts. Hunter said the FBI and the U.S. Postal Service began an in- vestigation in January 1979 after receiving complaints from some of the naUon 's largest manufacturers, includ- ing General Mills, Procter and Gamble, Quaker Oats, Ralston Purina , Colgale · Palmolive, R .J . Reynolds, Scott Paper and Coca-Cola. He said a search war- rant obtained in May 1980 resulted in seizure from various locations of 2.4 milllon product coupons with a value in excess of $600,000. He said the source of the coupons has not been de· termlned. . ......, .... "--................ Booster Club Prel1dent John Hoefler let• fire to lalt IOU for Fountain Valley High School band'• trip to Wcuhington, D.C. Principal David H.,a.and band director Frank Bame1 watch. Band plays IOU requiem Fountain Valley High School has paid off the last of $81,000 in debts for the marching band's trip to Washington, D.C. last January to play in President Reagan's inauguration parade. Many members of the 134· member band cheered and ap- plauded this week as Booster Club President John Hoefler set the last or the IOUs ablaze in front of the campus. The sphool had been notified of its selection as one of the 20 high school bands to march in the para'de on Dec. 5, and bad raised all bul $21,000 of the flight and room costs by the Jan. 19 de- parture date. They borrowed the rest from the school's associated student body treasury. "It's been very heartwarming that so many people continued to support the band alter the in- auguration," said Evie Belgen, school information officer. "We 're all ju.st sort or breathing a sigh or relief." Principal Hagen said the money was raised through 1,025 individual donations ranging from $1 to SS,000. The four -day trip to Washington, D.C. included tours of the White House, the Smithso- n i an Institution, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monu- ment, Mount Vernon, and Ari- inglon Cemetery, he said. He said the high point of the journey was marching in the parade just moments after it had been announced that the American hostages held in Iran had been reJeased. School officials say the band received a rousing, emotionaJ reception from thousands or spectators when it played the Civil War tune, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home." "We not only toured American history, but we participated in history," Hagen said. The band was chosen by the Inauguration committee out or 400 high school applications . Inmates' escape hid fails • • Three inmates -including two men convicted of kidnap· ping a Huntington Beach coin dealer's family -have made an unsuccessful attempt to escape from Orange County Jail, an of- ficial said. Sherifrs Lt. Wyatt Hart said today his department would seek complaints of attempted ~scape and destruction of county property against inmates Wesley E. Tucker, 30, Lawrence B. Bennetlo, 33 and Anthony Carl Marek, 19. Both •Tucker and Bennetto were convicted by an Orange • l County Superior Court jury m 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 be 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 attempted escape was the second In recent mooths in which inmates crawled lnto the plumbing tunnel seeking a way out of the jail. ln the first incid.ent, three in- mates also were (ound lo be in the tunnel. JUNE IS .GRADUATION & WINE CELLAR FATHER'S DAY AND FINE SPIRITS · ,.,CES EfffCTIVE THROUGH SUND• y. JUNE • • . JUNE 21st c.c. CHAMPAGNE • ·-· us a as a cs us a cc us ca ca a; a ace ass a as szzse I Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/w.dnMday, June 3, 1111 ~~..-...-....----~"!'-...---~~~------"'!"'"-------------~~--~--~ N NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS IV.TAT .... llfC~Ull THHl•lll T•ll •I W ftH ,¥1tWltt, '4Cl,IC, , ......... , llT .. IT H t CllllCl•lllATI "9P ......................... , •• Iii•••• .. ·······"· DoW J6nel Flnal UP 2.22 \ • ID John J . McDonald is a "bor n-again" busl· nessman -thanks to the remarkable Japanese com· pany, Casio. . . . . After be graduated from Brooklyn College In'· 1954, McDonald Joined Remineton Rane!. an oldllne company that combined with another oldllne com· paay, Sperry, to form the company we no.w know as Sperry Corp., one of the nation's 100 largest com - panies wtt.b 1980 sales in excess of $5 billion. Sperry, which hired the late Gen. Douglas MacArthur as chairman after he was brought homtl from the Pacific. was never regarded in anyone's book as an exciting company. It was the company that reluctantly brought in the people who developed the first working computer, Eniac, forerunner of · Remington Rand's Univac, and then watched IBM run away with the market. But that was home to John McDonald for 21~ years. He rose through the sales ranks -not a pro- pitious place to rise from in a company dominated by engineers who ~ thought sales \r. and advertising ~~ ~ p e o p 1 e w e r e ~ L')J} some kind or .,.:%,, low life. The r.:1 --~_,,.... _ _, _____ _ ~~~re;n\~'e~! llllll llllRITZ was three years in London, 1969 to 1972, wb.en he was general sales manager of Remington Rand's British company. Transferred back to Blue Bell, Pa., where Univac headquarters had been placed, McDonald re; alized one day that he might be in the wrong com- pany when a colleague gazed out a window at a blacktop that had once been a farm field and com· mented, "Beats London, doesn't it, John?" McDonald was ready then when one of the 1 Kasbio brothers approached him about opening an of- fice for their company. Casio, in Eur ope. McDonald jumped at the offer, returning to Lon· don in 1975 as l;lead or Casio-Europe. In 1978, be was asked to come home to become president of Casio's U.S. company. which is 40 percent-owned by a Japanese trading company, Toyomenka. Casio Inc. is headquartered in Fairfield, N.J., not far from New York City. It's strictly a sales office, 11ellina the products (calculators, watches, musical keyboard in· struments) made in four Japanese factories. Casio ts a sfiootlng star in the electronics In- dustry. It was the company that in 1972 broke the SlOO pri~e barrier on calculators, turning it into a mass market. Today, the worldwide market for calculators is 70 million units -and Casio sells 30 million ol those. Is John McDonald happy working for a Japanese company? You bet he ls. He'll cite you any number of reasons: Casio is a tiger about quality control; Casio thinks in worldwide terms, not just one country. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS METALS c....,, ~cents• pound, U.S. ctesU• ICMIS. IAM JMl canu • l*#'d. l l9c 4'111 caMS a l*#'d .... __ T .. 14.JD ,.,...., w..-composite Ill. Awmi-7 ... CtftlU pound, N.Y. Marcwy tQS.00 per 11$. l>latl-IOt.00 ln>y OL. N Y. . . .,. --------------· ' SILVER N&W YOIUC tAP) -H--, & H-1llver lad9y $10.t.o, w S0.090. Enoelhard sllver $10.400, 1111 $O.o•, fabtke1echll,..utun, 111t IO.GSa. . . .... ,....... SALMON PROTEST -Fishermen s~rround freighter under Golden Gate Bridge in pro- test of federal order cutting short their ' 'salmon season. Coast Guard vessels cleared a path as about 100 small boats joined in the Tuesday protest. .Air Force officer coDfined Espionage suspect ~e 'scornful' of U.S. military I.: - RICHMOND, Va. CAP> ~ A•• under-Chris was the t)tpe of person who could have graduate at Old Dominion Univ.-ait,y, Cllristopber walked into the Soviet EnU>assy and not recognize M . Cooke frequently made joke~ ....-ruu1 com· that the Air For'ce ltaa re(QlatiOOI acainst it.'' ments about the U.S. military, trtAds recall. Cooke CQmpletW his mNter'• program in leas As a graduate student at the College or than a year, writilllt a 74-J>Jte tbelit UUed "United William & Mary, he seemed happy to be toing into States TactietitcNUelear Dottrine: Developlnl a military service and proposed that the United Capabi.f4ty." States be the first to use tactical nuclear weapons It J'eCC)lftme~ the · 'Qftited States adopt the in the event of a conflict with the Soviet Union, ac· doctrine ot usint·tatlical weapoa1 before the Sov- cording to his academic adviser. iel Union in the e'teOt of a coeftict. But the "notion Now the Air Force second Ueutenant is con· or winning ~eemt obeolet~ when measured ~1alnst fined at McConnell Air Force Base near Wichita, the losses wt)ich would.~ incurred ln a nuclear ex· Kan., accused or making unauthorized visits to lbe change," Cooke WTOt~. Soviet Embassy in Washington and under in-"You 1ot· l.b, d6fi!Ute 1mpression ,Chris was vestigation for espionage. one of UM l• bsilltsry persons you'd ever meet on Cooke is accused or violatln1 an Air Force the face ot ~earth," said Dr. Martin Sheffer, u - regulation against unauthorized contact with sistant professor of politieal science et Old representatives or a communist couqtry. The Dominion. Justice Department opened an espiooa1e in· He said Cooke bad frequent!)' joked with other · vestigaUon Monday. students, some of ~m semce nterans, that the Family members and former teachers said military was made uP or "rectmental, unthinking they were shocked that the 25-year-old Cooke, a people." 1 Titan missile control launching officer1 could have Cooke's parent say lt is unbelievable be been charged with such a breacll or Air Fqrce would have visited the Soviet Embassy openly bad regulations. 4 • he been a spy. At William & Mary, his m•ter's theais cl• Cooke's father, Richard C'. Cooke, an elec· viser remembers Cooke as a person "wbo JHi trical engineer in Henrico County. also said his son very happy to be going into the military to clothe had talbd.of making the military a career. kind ol. thing he had been promised he could do - work in strategic thinking and in weapons. Call our new CONSUMER LOAN DIVISION under Lloyd Dye in our home office, telephone (714) 494-7541. for information about secured and/or unsecured installment loans for PERSONAL. FAMILY. and HOUSEHOLD PURPOSES including loans for AUTOMOBILES. MOBILE HOMES, SWIMMING POOLS. SOLAR WATER HEATING SYSTEMS. and OTHER HOME IMPROVEMENTS. Now, the place to go for ALL your financial requir ements is YOUR COMMUNITY FINANCIAL CENTER fo~,//tl'1 ,7<<k~godl/19J 11.r...iu l' 1ArJ 1\':>~0C..IAT10N IAL.80A B"ANCH IOO Ent B•lboa louteverd, Blllboa, CA 92H1 (714) 873-3701 Additional offices In "t know or nothing to suggest that he 1'!!:'~; j~.:ltt!° any aberrant behavior," said Dri ~ Laguna hach ... 494-7541 • Laguna Hill• ..... 586-5100 • Belmont Shore .. (213) 438-9421 •llll~r..m;~:·-Gll"': &en Clemente .. ,492~111& • LH•lllirM>f•• .. 874-2191 • Murrieta ............... sn-5632 Laguna Niguel. .. 496-1201 • Oflve/Ora•.,, 998-8400 • Balboa Island ........ .,. 675-3212 Glen Avon ...... 881--011 1 But he recalled that Cooke "could be doing tblp and conte late the co-nsequencea.