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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-07 - Orange Coast Pilot.· • • • • • • YOUR IDllllll llllY PAPll TUE SDAY . JUI Y 7 . 1q01 OH ANGE COUN 1 Y (ALI~ OflNIA 25 C ENTS 0 oman •• • ust1ceno • nee ISLAND FANTASY -The original of Paul Gauguin's "Sacred Spring" hangs in The Hermitage in Leningrad. Roberta Cortez of South Laguna and Beth Koehler of Irvine DMty Nit ....... "....,....,_ pose in this version from the 1981 Pageant of the Masters in Laguna Beach July 14 .. Aug. 30. Special lighting camouflages live models re-creating 40 artworks. Autopsy: County boy strangled 2 sets of quads born An autopsy revealed Monday that a 7·year-old Anaheim boy abducted l~ week while on a bicycle jJif> to a nei1hborboocl fire works stand died from strangulation. Although a 10-year-old Foun- tain Valley girl who survived a kidnapping just days earlier also was choked, investi1ators say they have no evidence to link her case with that of Jeffrey David Vargo. "So far there are a lot of dis- si milarities," said Pomona police Lt. Kurt Longfellow. "However, we aren't going to overlook anything." Longfellow said the autopsy performed by the Los Angeles County Coroner's Orflce indicat· ed that the boy was strangled by an unknown suspect's hands. The girl, whose name has been withheld, was stran1led with a cloth object such as a T-shirt or a towel, be said. The girl also was molested, althouJh she wasn't raped, and Longfellow said investigators have no evidence yet that the boy was molested. He said they are wait1q for reaulta on the matter from the Los Angeles County Sherllrs Crime Lab. Tbe Vario boy disappeared Tbunda.y evening; h1a body was found the next momiQs at a con· struction 1ite in Pomona. Pomoqa and Ana.beim police in· vestigaton are worlrln1 together on the cue. Tbe Fountain Valley lh'l WU kidDUPed from in front of the Freel -llolola School on Finch Aveaue and wu taken by car to a dirt 1'09d near where Gypsum Canyeft lnteraectl with Santa Ana Cayun Road. lnv..U.at.on believe abe wu left for clead at tbe acene, but maDaeed to re1aln conaetous- ne11 and ftnd help. A 1i11iiW: eartbquake ftlllAnd near ran.t.c.i wu recorded bJ, 1clentl1t1 at the C1llfornJa lnttltute of Teebaolo11 la Paaedena Monday Jult Were 1 p.m. A lpok•man at CaJ Teeb laid ' UM quake ~ l.J OD tlM Rlcbt.er .Raa.. hllert.OD · DOliff Hid tMJ nCeiftd DO nlll ·of alarm from ....adeeta folloWtij UM lnmor. No tim•1• •• ,... por1ed. Families in San Diego, Goleta welcome foursomes SAN DIEGO <AP) -"I went into a terrible shock and praised the Lord " was Laurence Wagner's response when his wife delivered quadruplets. They had been warned to an- ticipate triplets, but the fourth, he said, caught him off guard. "We have enough to start our own band and that's plenty," said Wagner, 28, who with his wife, Janna. operates a music . school for small children. The birth of the four unusually healthy boys Monday "shocked" the couple and their obstetri· cian. Dr. Dale Lapp, said a spokesman at Mercy Hospital. By an unusual coincidence, quadruplets had also been born only two days earlier, on the Fourth of July. in Goleta in San· ta Barbara County. The three boys and one girl were born 12 weeks premature to David and Marsha Hill . The babies, each weighing slightly more than two pounds, were list· ed in guarded condition today at Long Beach Memorial Hospital, to which they had been airlifted. While the Hm babies were fighting for their lives, the Wa1ners were able to begin looking forward to life with their quartet. "We got all the clothes and other things in triplicate. Now we need another set of thinp which probably will have to be matched. I guess he'll just have to share for a while," Wagner said. Mrs. Wagner. who look lhe fertility pill clomaphene, which Lapp said gives a .3 percentage chan£e of quadruple births, de· livered the four within three minutes by Caesarean section beginning at 9:44 a.m. Monday. Lapp said Mrs. Wagner was in good condition as were the still unnamed newborns. He said the babies weighed 4 pounds, 12 ounces; 3 pounds, 11 ounces; 5 pounds. 2 ounces and 3 pounds, 2 ounces. The quadruplets, reportedly the second set ever born in San D1eao County, are the couple's only children. Hospital authorities say odds against quadruple births are from 500,000·1 to 800,000·1. Odds are even higher against all four being boys. Lapp said the babies, de· livered at 36 weeks, are unusual· ly healthy and do not have respiratory problems common in such births. ··Even with triplets, it is com· mon for at least one baby to be in trouble," Lapp said. "In this case, we have four near-term and very healthy babies. I'm not worried about any of them." <See QUADS, Page A%) Reagan fulfills • promise WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi· dent Reagan today c hose Arizona Judge Sandra D. O'Con· nor to become the first woman justice in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court, calling her "tru· ly a person for all seasons," and fulfilling a promise he made on the way to the White House. Reagan said he did not name a woman successor to retiring Justice Potter Stewart "merely to do so," but because Mrs. O'Connor has the qualities needed on the high court. "She is truly a person for all seasons, possessing those unique qualities of temperament, fair· ness, intellectual capacity and devotion lo the public good which had characterized the 101 brethren who have preceded her." the president said in his nationally broadcast and televised announcement. "I commend you to her, and I urge the Senate's s wift bipartisan confirmation, so that as soon as possible she may take her seat on the court and her place in history," Reaga.n said. He said her nomination will be sent to the Senate as soon as FBJ background Investigations have been completed. The court is in recess \DlOl autumn. "We're satisfied that she will have no problem as far as con· firmation is concerned," said Attorney General William French Smith. There remained the prospect that ardent conservatives would challenge her for past support of a constitutional amendment on the rights of women, and OA abortion. Smith said be was con· fident that no single issue would dominate the confirmation pro· ceedings. As majority leader of the Arizona Senate. Mrs. O'CoMor backed the Equal Rights Amendment resolution in· troduced in 1972. But she backed away from the resolution after learning that Arizona's two Republican senators at that time, Barry Goldwater and Paul Fannin, were among eight U.S. senators who voted against it. ln 1974, she sponsored a con· servative alternative to ERA, an <See SUPREME, Page AZ> Reagan cuts lauded by McCloskey By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. 0.., Nml ..... Con1ressman Paul N. "Pete" Mccloskey, an early opponent of the Vietnam war and one of the first Republicans to become a thorn In Richard Nixon's side during Watergate, displayed his conservative side in Newport Beach Monday. Terming President Reagan's bud1et victory in Washington 11 days ago a "reversal of the con· cept that the U.S. government can solve all problems by throw· ing money at them," the Palo Alto congressman said the vote means an end to unchecked spend.ins for 90Cial pro1rama. M cCloakey addressed a luncheon meetln1 of about !Go members of the Greater Irvine Industrial Learue at the Mar· riott Hotel Monday. And while the 14-year con· greaaman aaid he has "not always a1reed with Ronald Reaian," be said the President "cannot be liven enoush credit for what he did,•' In pullins tosether the votes for a im federal budpt that shows • billion ln cull --m0ttly trom aoclal procrama ran1ln1 from Mecllcare to food atamP1. llcCl0tke1, a canctdate for Uie Mnatorial ae.t held by S.I. Hayakawa, save hia bllllneu· oriented audience wbat be termed "a short blatorJ 1e1tce•• Oii U.S. et!mlOIDlct. ·•Look at the U.S. bud1et1 between lMI aad 1•." be Mlcl. "We Mid defttlta ol St or • bHUon eaeb year, followed b1 budlel.IUl'llihlHI ... But in 1111.'.be aald, Pneidml JobDIOft l&U1ed 1 war oa pcwtr· i1 ••and 1hH•e tllen, betb (Iii GOP, P11e Al) NOMINATED Judge O'Qmnor No safety checks on copter? LAWNDALE (AP) -A Federal Aviation Administration inspector bas found no evidence that five mandatory safety checks were made on hellcop. ters of a charter service that had its license revoked after several people were kllled in a crash. Testifying before an ad· ministrative law judge Monday, inspector Delmar Ott wu the first witness to testify ln the probe of Catalina Air Lines and its sister company. Briles Wine and Helicopter Inc., wbicb are both subsidia riea of the Gardena-based Paul R . Brilel Inc. On April 10 the FAA revoke<I the company's permit to operate due to 18 crash deaths in the lut 10 years and at least 21 injuries involving the company's aircraft, which make ru08 bet ween San Pedro and Catalina Island. A helicopter cruh Feb. 22 left two people dead and six injured off Avalon. The FAA license revocation was temporar,. and the current hearings o the National Transportation and Safety Board are to review whether the license should be activated again. The board bu the power to revoke FAA decisions. Ott said be found notbin1 to in· dicate that five required safety checks were done on the helicop- ters. In 1979. the FAA tined Catalina $200,000 for nearly 6,000 safety violations involvtn& the old seaplanes the company wu then using to transport people to the island. The company never paid the fine. and is now being sued by the U.S. Attorney's office for $275,000 in civil penalties and damages. In its April 10 revocation, the FAA accused the Brilea flnps of "unsafe practices which dem· onstrated a pattern of reckless disregard of sifety standards." Bush backed W ASlilNGTON (AP) -PreU· dent Reagan stands behind Vice PrP-sident George Buab's warm endorsement of the reslme ol Philippines President Ferdlnud Ma rc'os. DUICl.~UIT llATil- Fair tbroush Wednes- day. Low elouch late nltbt and early mornint boura alon1 the coast from Santa Monica aoutbwarcl. ll1lha at tbt bMebe9 12 to Tl and inland.,.... IO to M. Lowa I ee to 10. 1111111 TlllY · Can o power cnmch •· wlop tn btlwna Coltfondo I ,,.., """"7Wr7 s..,,. Cf. illll . Co11t DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, July 7, 1981 Apartment ·1ans 'routine' First bciby , now cat'falls from Michigan building MAY RUN -Cynthia "Cts· •y" Baker, 26, daughter of Senate Majority Leader }loward Baker, may run for .Congress from the Fourth cpistrict of Tennessee. ' SOUTHFIELD, Micb. <AP) -People Mid It WU a miracle wbea a J.7M1'-old Mby f.U DIM atorles from the North Park Plue ANrtmenta thl'ff yean aco and lived. Now they're aay· lnl Jt'1 "Juat incredible" that a 8·monlb-old llltten survived a 15·1tory phaqe out of the aame buUdlq. In both cues, tbe landacapeq around the bulldin1 1et1 the credit for ••vin• tbe little CllMll from seri<M.ll injury. ''It's juat a charmed bulldln1 and I hope it conUnuea to be," Patricia Powell, mana1er of Lbe apartment hish·rise, said Moo· day. In September 1978, Danielle Searcy fell out of a window on the north end of tbe buildiDc. landing In a 5-foot-tall bulb, Mrs. Powell said. The child bad been bounciJll up and down on a bed about level with the ledae of an open window, apparently Iott her balance and weot out tbe window. Sbe •peat ae•eraJ dQa under boepital oblervaUon, aod doctors found abe had au.tf ered no aerloua lrtjurlea. Last week Anna, an oranae aod white domestic lont·bair cat, plun1ed from a 4-foot balcony at tbe south end ot Lbe buUdil\I into the 1hrubbery 180 fHl below. The cat was treated by a veterinarian for minor l~uriea and shock -no broken bones - and she's nmninl around a1ai.n, but not out.side any more. Her owners , Stewart and Iris FiDlilver, bav' made the balcony off·limlta. ''Anna wu Just 1Jttin1 oa the balcony and lookln1 up at the sky," aaid Mrs. Flnailvtr. "When I called her, she jumped. I think 1 startled her. I tboulht au.r~ s~d died." ittental patient stlµ98 ·Hospital drama unfolds during power outage l' FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) ,i-It was about 10: lS p.m. when 'urging floodwaters from a t hund erstorm knocked out power at John Peter Smith Hospital and damaged the hospital 's e m e rgency generators. In the ensuing darkness and confusion, a young mental pa- tient stepped to the fore and ··took matters into his own -hands," directing the staff, gjv- lng orders, and generally copinf ~ith the emergency. t "Only al John Peter Smith," 1ighed hospital spokes woman Jane Woolf on Monday. "It is 11ever dull. Never ever." . Masquerading as a medical of. ?icial, the patient spent part of j he holiday weekend issuing ~i rectives to employeea and y olunteers. With no outside ;power and temperatures soar· mg. the hospital suddenly bad no ~ights, no air conditioning and no ventilation. : At one point, the young man ~ispatched his temporar y ·!.harges on a midnight foray for ice. ''So we wound up with 2,000 fi unds of ice in the lobby," said rs. Woolf dryly. "He was quite folk hero." , "He did a superb job," COD· ceded hospital administrator Tim Philpot. "He was dressed ln a scrubsuit, which made him look authoritative. U you had seen him standing by our ln· terns, you would have tbouaht he was one of them." Security euards put an end to the pretense at about 2 a.m. Sun· day after an "extensive" telephone conversation between Philpot and the patient, iden· tified only as a man in bis mid-205. The patient also succeeded ln conferring with a county com· missioner who helps control the budget for the county-owned facility. ·'The patient gave him basically a report on what hap· pened," said Mn. Woolf. Mrs. Woolf sai~ no one ques· tioned the patient because be was doing "a great job." It wasn 't clear how the patient's activities escaped the attention of administrators for so long. Hospital spokeswoman Sally Blaydes explained Monday that the patient, who was being treat· ed in the hospital's unlocked psychiatric ward, bad received a pass fror Saturday and Sunday when the power failed Friday night. Instead of leavini. be Witnesses so/ ten b,libi by Robbins SACRAMENTO (~P> -Two iprosecutioo witnesses may have :east some doubt on state Seo. Alan Robbins' alibi for one of j\he times he is accused of hav- i ng sex with a 16-year-old pl. o;. Robbins says be was at a ~o cktail party and dinner ..sponsored by the California Trial Lawyers Association the <flighl of March 14, 1979, and be ;has testimony from two as- -11ociates to back him. That is ooe of the night.a Lori Terwilliger, now 18, says she bad sex with Robbins at hia ~acramento apartment when ~be was 16. i But on Monday, the office iinanager for the Trial Lawye.n .tAssociation, Roberta Frayne, ;t;aid Robbins was not on at leaat a partial list of guuts who at· tended the cocktail party and dinner. And former Asaemblyman Robert Cline, R·Nortbridge, aaid he had no recollection of beiDI ~·th Robbins at the two func- ons . Robbins and Eugene Bambie, trial lawyers vice president and one of Robbins' polltidaf upporters, testified that Cline was with lbem that nl&bt. Bambie and Robbtm aay they parted company after 10 p.m. Ms. TerwUllter aald Robbinl picked bet up at her home early that eveoinl and took her to bb iapartment. Former Aasemblymab Bob Hayea, a San Fernando Republican •ho workl for a tomm!Uee Robblal cbalr9, tald be aaw Robblm at tbe coettaU party but did not atay for tbe dinner. 1111. Fra,yne, called u a pros- eculioo witness to counter de· rense testimony, said Robbins promised to attend the coctta11 party and dinner but was not oo the list of persons who attended. AssoclaUon officials who re- viewed the list to see lf any guests bad been left off did not add Robbins' name, she added. But under cross-examination by d efense attorney Michael Sands, Ms. Frayne said the guest list was not necessarily complete. And she a,.-eed that Robbins' name could bave been left off if be bad failed to it.op at the re- ception desk to pick up a name tag, or had not been seen by aa- sociatioo offlcials who reviewed the list . Robbins, a 38-year-old Van Nuys Democrat, ls charged with nine felony count.a alletlng that be had sex with two young women, Ma . Terwilllee'r and Regina CuJlim~e. when they were 16. He faces up to six years ln prison and loss of his Senate seat if convicted. Senate Republican leader William Campbell, R-Haclenda Hetebta, said Jn an interview Monday that the Senate would "seriously have to discuss" ex- pe1Un1 Robblm, ~convicted. "It woyld be a painful ex· perience but we would have to face lt . . • Obviously there la t.be appeal proeeu and we would bave to llt opiaiom from the at. torney 1eaerai and le,ulative counsel on bow to proceed,'· Campbell Mid. LeiaJ u:perta HY It would probably talte a two-third.a vote ol tbe s.ate to npel Robblnl. donned a scrubsuit and went to wort. She said tbe man posed no daneer to h!alaell or othen. The Joa of power from Texaa Electric Services Co. abo ren- dered laboratories inoperable when the floodwaters 1horted out eJectrieaJ equipment in a basement control room. Surgeons operaUng on a gunshot victim Friday night noticed a flickerin1 of Ueht.1 but were able to finish the operation. During the long, siullng weekend, volunteers scurried up and down 11 filgbts of darkened stairs, delivering catered food to more than 200 patients. Five babies were delivered during the weekend. By Monday , 52 or the hospital's 250 patient.a bad been discharged early or transferred to nearby bospitab. TESCO bad restored the hospital's lighting and air ventilation systems by late Stmday. Four patients, grumbling about beat that exceeded 100 degrees in some rooms, fled the hospital "AMA" -against medical advice. "We've bad some staff people pass out," Mn. Woolf said. "It's just mainly horribly bot and humid." From Page Al QUADS ••• He said resuits from blood tests next week should de· termine if two or four of the quads are identical -an even rarer occWTence. Mrs. Wagner would be able to leave the hospital in "four or five days," Lapp said, which ia normal after a Caesarian opera· lion. He added that chances are excellent abe will be able to leave with two of the quads. "When they are 5 pounds and gaining weight, we consider It safe to send them home," Lapp said. The Wagners, who are from families with a history of twin births, said they plan to expand thejr two-bedroom home in La Mes~. east of San Diego. "The room for the kids is real small," Wagner said. "We're going to be fmancially strapped. But we have strong faith in God ·and we are convinced that somehow it ia &11 eoine to work out. "We only wanted one child. Then we thought we could have another a couple of years down the line. But we never thoupt ~ having more than two ... U.S. to claim remains o/3 CLA RK AIR BASE . PhillePlmt (AP) -An Air Force C-130 carto plane Dew to Hanoi today to nc:cWer the remalna ol tbree unidentified U.S . 1e~lcemen killed ln the Viet· nam War, a military 1poke1man Hid. The C-UO waa to return the re- ma!n1 to Clark Air Bue tonlpt. Tbey wt.µ be put aboard a C-141 Wedne941)' and ftown to 'Hickam Air Foree Baae ln Hawal.!1 wbere an Army laboratory ww try to JdentJf)t them. Vietnam .-ouneed aft.er two da11 ottalb wttb a U.S. million IHt moDtll Uaat tbe remalnl would be returned. ~ "It'• lnc~ble," Hid the vet, Dr. Jl'Vtnc FeJd. "Cata are snt· ty durable, but I never b-.rd ol a cat fallln1 that far In t.h~ area. My friend.a ln New York uy lt'a common to see cats fall out of windows of tall bulldinp, but they usually dle." From Page Al GOP ••• Republican and Democrat ad· minlstratlona have been enga1ed ln the proce11 of in· creasln1 benefit.a paid to &>ee>P.le. We created 200 new '•pendlnC proerarm and threw money at them." Al a result, the percen· tage of the federal bud1et destined for 1ucl\ aoclal pro- 1rams rote from 20 percent two decades aao, to 48 percent ol tbe bud1et today, he said. And that, KcCloakey said, has resulted in lnfJatlon taJdnt more out of people'• Income than any cuttint of social pro1ram1 could do. M cCloste)' credited Reagan for curtailing Democratic ef. forts to split the budget into six amendment.a "which would have seen one-t hird to one-ball as much ln cuts." And he bad praise for Coogrea1 for supporting the en· tire pactqe. ''It was the first time in lbe history of this de· mocracy -or any democracy - when the Le1islators bad the courage to cut what people bad grown accustomed to receiv· ing." Could cuts have been made in areas other than programs for the poor and dlsadva.nta1ed? KcCloskey t.blnk.s oot. He said defense spending <25 percent of the federal pie) cannot be cut ''in view of what the Soviet.a have been doing the past five years.'' Interest payments on the na- tional debt (about 10 percent) cannot be cut, he says, and only m ipor cutbacks might be made in the cost of running govern- ment (9 percent) and grants to local countiu, cities and educa· tion (8 percent.) ''That leaves the (8 percent for ~o cial programs ," McCloskey said, adding "If we're going to reduce the federal budget, local groups and organizations will have to pick up the responsibility for funding these programs." Sailor hospitalized in gun accident SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 22· year-old sailor narrowly escaped death when he was pinned to the deck of a ship by a 3-incb, .SO-caliber gun Wlth an alleged history of malfunctions. The Navy, which did not re· lease information about the June 8 incident until Monday, said Jeffrey Conners of the Mohawk Indian reservation in New York was in the trauma unit recover· ing from injuries sustained on the dock landing s hip Mount Vernon. Falwell .rapped MOSCOW <AP) -The official Soviet news agency Tass criticized the Rev. Jerry Falwell, leader of the Moral Ma· Jority movement, for praisinl the Israeli raid on Iraq's nuclear reactor. ............ Im and Stewart Finsilver hug Anna, their cat who fell from their 15th story apartment balcony in Southfield, Mich. and otwiously, lived. 20American linguists expelled PANAMA CITY . Panama (AP ) -The government said Monday it has expelled 20 American .members of the Sum- mer Institute of Linguistics who were working with re mote jungle tribes to transcribe their dialects. The institute is arf'iliated with Wycliffe Bible Translators Inc. of Huntington Beach. The visas of all 20 had expired long ago, the government said, and they left Panama by air. There was no indication of their destination. None of the group, which translates the New Testament into primitive languages. bad made a public statement since the expulsion order was issued last week. The U.S. Embassy declined comment. A government source who re· quested anonymity said a con· tract between the government and the U.S.-based institute ex- pired in June 1979. The workers, despite their ex- pired visas, stayed on with. gov- ernment permission but were turned down when they tried to renew the visas this year, the sour<'e said. The pro -g o vernment newspaper Aludio said the Americans were "agents of the CIA.'' From Page A1 SUPREME • • advisory resolutloo rererrina the issue to voters. She also atronlly supported Ariiona'11 rtrat spend· log Umit resolution. Reagan described the selec· lion ol a juaUce as ·'the moat awesome appolntmeQt" that pres ide nts make because justices leave "footprints on the sands of time.'' Justice Stewart's decision to leave the hi&h court opened the first vacancy there in alx years. Reagan's predecessor, Jimmy Carter , never was able to nominate a Justice. Rea~an·s choice of a woman justice fulfilled a campaign promise made Oct. 14, when candidate Reagan said "one of the first Supreme Court vacan· cies ln my admlnistralion will be filled by the most qualified woman I can fmd." He said lo have made the choice on the basis of her sex would h ave been unfair to women, to the nation, and to the future generations that will be affected by high court Cieclslona. Mrs. O'Connor, 51, waa graduated from Stanford University law school in 1952, with the Order of the Coif. Among her law sc hool classmates was U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Rehn· quist. She was a member of the board of editors or the Stan!ord Law Review. Chief Justice Warren Burger did not comment on the appoint· ment, but his administrative aa· sistanl, Mark Cannon, described Mrs. O'Connor as "an excellent, fine woman." Cannon made the remark to Justice Byron R. Wh ite as they, and several Court employees, watched the televised announce· me nt in the police squad room. White smiled, but said nothing. Mr s . O 'Connor rates superlatives from colleagues. "She's exceptionally well qualified with a tre mendous background in politics,'' said Arizona Supreme Court Justice Frank X. Gordon. Mrs . O'Connor married another classmate, John Jay O'Connor III, now a Phoenix lawyer. They have three sons. She was a politician before her appointment to the Arizona b e n c h. becoming majority leader of the senate in 1973 - the first and only woman to hold the job in either house of the state legislature. .. She was a super floor leader for lots of r e a sons," said Re publican William J acquin, oresid e nt of the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and pres· idenl of the senate wh~~ ~!"!· O'Connor was majority leader. Tee,.,'s goal: a good skate LOS ANGELES <AP> -One' brush with the law was enough for skateboard s pee ds ter Mi chael Coyer, who says the next time he skateboards on the interstate at 70 mph-plus he wants to have the blessing of the authorities. A furious California Highway Patrol officer, writing a ticket on Interstate 15, saw Coyer zip· oin~ down the 5-mile, 6-percent (rade in the Cajon Pass at what turned out to be 72 mph, according t o the officer's speedometer. "I don't want to get thrown in the clink," said the 19-year-old Coyer, who is convinced be can hit 75 mph on bis homemade skateboard. lS FASHION ISlANO • NEWPOltT ICACH. CAlltOltNIA 92660 J ' --.._,;;:±! .... . Former Prelident Gnald Ford point• to founh green cu come· dian Bob Hope drive• cart during opening round o/ JerTJJ Ford Invitational Golf Tournament in Vail, Colo. Bee Gees plan return home The Bee Geea, one of England's most popular pop groups, are going home. Barry Gibb, one of the three brothers who form the group, said the Bee Gees plan to return to England because of relaxed tax laws under Prime Mini s ter Mar1uet Tllakber'1 govern· ment. The group is based in Miami. "I have been house-bunting and my brothers have already bought homes over here," Gibb said. Gibb and his brothers, Robin and Maurice, are British but were raised in Australia. They settled in Britain in 1966 and later moved to the United States. Mrs. Norman B. Cbancller is returning to her role as c hief fundraiser for Los Angeles premier theater complex after 16 years as chairman of the Music Cen· ler's board of governors. Mrs. Chandler, 80, retired chief executive officer of the Times-Mirror Co., turned over the theater · chairmanship to Barry Wetzel, 61. He is former vice chairman of the center's board, the Performing Arta Council, and chief executive officer of .the Garrett Corp., an aerospace manufacturing firm. Actress Jue Wllkiaaoa, the wile of Oakland Raiders quarterback Dan Pu&ortU. was robbed of $50,000 in jewelry by a gunman who broke into her Las Vegas apartment. Ms. Wllkinson is appearing at the Union Plaza Hotel in the play "90-Day Mistress." An Illinois man who pro- pelled his pit more than 80 feet is the new International Cherry Pit Spitting cham- pion. Jim Barkbart'1 winning spit of 80 feet, 11 o/• inches was rar short or a record. but was good enough to out· distance more than 100 other contestants at Eau Claire, Mich. BllJy Carter, the ouupoken brother of former President Jimmy Carter, says he baa a lot in common with mobile homes. "Five or six years ago, a mobile home bad as bad a reputation as Billy Carter," said the 44-year-old Carter, who now works u a public relations consultant for Tidwell Industries of Haleyville, Ala., a mobile home manufacturer. "Now, mobile homes are an up-and-coming thing," be said. Carter said be was glad to leave Plains, Ga. He plans to move bis family lo Haleyville. Wben tHD·•I• aotrtH lretlle 1•111•1 t11Ufl1d btfort 1 Houle 1\lboommlt· tH on ber anti._moklnl fl· f ON OODll'tllional 1talftn provlded btr wttb tbt OM ltem abe moat certainly didn't want: an asblray. It wu butily removed u 1he beaan her testimooy. Veteran news photo&· rapber Joe a.e.&bl, who rece~tl)' retired after 35 years wttb the San Francltco Chronicle, received the .losepla A. 8pra'11fJ Award ror news pbotosrapby. The award ls the Natlooal Preas Photographers As- 1ociation'1 most pretJgious honor. Hl1 most famous photo· araph i.a a picture of U.S. Marines plantins the American flag on Mount Suribacbl, lwo Jima, in February 1945. Country music singer Merle Ha11ard says bis soon-to-be-released autobiog- raphy is, "no whitewash." •'It deals with all kinds o( things," Haggard told a re· porter. Tilled ''Sing Me Back Home," the book should be released this fall , Haggard said. He wrote It with free- lance writer Pein Ra11eU. The singer spent two years and nine months in California's San Quentin Prison for burglarizing a cafe In 1957. He was paroled in 1960 and in 1972, then California Gov . Ronald Rea1a.n pardoned him. 'NO WHITE WASH' Merle Jlaggard Kentuckians flee floods New England, Northwest also feel scattered showers lJ.S. summary . , .......... ,.,.. 1'19041"1 ferC9d eve< ... tlM• 111 pert• of ....,.,, ~, -.UV. .... .._. ................. c.ev- .... mlldl ef .. ~ flWTI Tea· .. .._. ... C91'1eral Gulf C..t .. ... 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I t = : I .. ·r------------·---------------------___ .... ______ , I I I I I I ' 1 $,1,004 Is whot you con IOV• on vocotlon lod91ng I over the n•xt 20 y•ori If you or• now spendlnQ I S1 ,000 t0< o two w~ vocotlon (0$1Umlng o 10% lrllolJOn rote>. · : HO'tfl Wit.._ Tlme-Shot1ng, o dromotlC Idec <hot enable$ It's elm. you easMd In tO< o llt•tlm• d guoronteed low·cost tuxuty vocollons. Coll lnt•motlonol Resort Shoflng, C~t•rp<>lrq 1, lrvtne. (7~4)Jl2-ff2i Coll now . you to own o sliee d ~ vocouon time ~bi. : ot tM'ldredl d luxury resorts In Collfomkl ond oround I lhowOlld. ~ 1 Tim.Shot1ng combines oll the odvont.09.s d owning -Including tox t>.neftts-wlth tatol lo<'k of ~ - : bllily-01•--wN>tyWdexpeacopoyloto -~'--~ ml'dlum-pnced cor. L-------------~------------------~-----~- I _.,,. Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, July 7, 1881 * s County wins noise rulin Monetary damages nixed; emotional distress. puShed lb FaEDEaJCK 8CHOEMEHL o1 • ...., ........ An .attorney repreaenllnJ 315 people sutn1 Oranse Count)' cov· ernment over John Wayne Airport jet noise H)'• he la not overly coocemed about a court ruUnc that dealt a setback to bia clients' case. Oranae County Superior Court Judse Raymond Vincent said Monday that the county wu not obllgated to pay monetary damaaea against the residents' clalms that jet overflights have slowed the rate by which their properties have increased In value. The county, however, sWJ re· mains liable for damages on the residents' claims that they have ·suffered emotional distress due to the noise generated by opera· lions ol commercial and private jet aircraft. ''A victory on emotional dla· tress ta what we're after. And that haa yet to be dealt with," commented Jerrold Fadem, the residenu' attorney, after Judge Vincent issued the ruling. Fadem, and the two attorneys representing the county, Michael Gatzke and Louis Goebel, were scheduled to pre· sent final arguments today to the jury that will decide ( 1) whether the county or the resi- dents' faction is right, and (2) whether to award monetary damages on the emotional dls- tress issue. Fadem conceded that It wu dimcutt to p:rove the theory o( 1011 ol appreclatloo in property values because or the "cruy in· flatlonary spiral" of recent years. Durtni the trial, a real Mt.ate appraiser bad testified property valuea were between 5 and 14 percent lower than what they might have been. 1t wu im· poHibie, however, to escape the fact that "those houses have ln· 'A victory on emotional dis- tress is what we're after. And that has yet to be dealt with.' creased in value by three times while the noise has been there," Fadem explained. He said emotional dlstress la a concept that can be better un· derstood by the jury than loss of appreciation. Vincent's ruling followed ex- haustive arguments by both Fadem and Gatzke. Fadem argued that common s ense dictated that property values in the noise-impacted I area would be lower than iii arH• not impacted by Jn no6MJ To think otberwiH, he ~ .. defiee human experien~ 101lc." He malat.al.ned that ~ esposure bad caused rest to 1tve up some of the .UO ment and UN ot their property. l Gahke rejected wbat b~ termed Fadem'a "You know lt'I! right in your heart" ar1umentti claiming the law waa clear ~ the laaue or inverse coodemna·' tion. ' Gaulle, employed by the~ ty strictl to handle alrpo relat~ U~1ation, said there w no adequate 1bowin1 during trial of "direct, substantial or peculiar" noise exposure. . "Noise levels at this airport are ... relatively low," Gatzke said. · In ruling ln the county's favor, Vincent observed, "Anyone wbO says there Is no noise problem at Orange County's John Wayne Airport is foolish ... There is a problem, a very severe one." But Vincent held that the inter· ference on property risht.a did not meet the standards of law th such matters. "I find no liability for th~ county on the lnverse condemne· lion action. The plaintiffs have not shown by a preponderance of the evidence, that they should recover for such loss," Vincedt said. • .! Countian appeal.s deportation • J Move by Surfside resident, 81 , blocks ouster order Orders that accused Na%i war criminal Andrija Artukovic, an elderly Surfside t,esident, be de· ported to Yugoslavia have been appealed to the 9tb Circuit Court of Appeals in Los Angeles. Ronald Bonaparte, the Newport Beach attorney representing 81 -year-old Artukovic, estimates it will be six months to two years before his client has a hearing. The Justice Department's of· rice of special investigations had ordered Artukovic to report to Los Angeles immigration offices this Wednesday for deportation. The appeal move, government officials said, ertectively blocks the deportation order. Bonaparte, who contends bis client is in poor health and suf· fers from heart problems, claims the government does not Assembly hacks hill for prison bonds SACRAMENTO <AP ) - Without debate, the state Aa· sem bly haa voted to put a $495 million bond iss~e for new state prisons on the ballot, and the Senate In a separate vote ap- proved a $280 million local jalh bond meaapre. The Assembly sent the prison · bond measure, SB1S3 by Sen. Robert Presley, D-Riverside, to the Senate on a 55-18 vote Mon· day. The jails measure, 58910 by Presley was sent to the As· sem bly on a 29-0 vote. The prison bond bill requires a final Senate vote on Assembly amendments to qualify for a final decision by voters at the next general statewide election. The jail bond issue also must pass both houses before it can go on the ballot. "The need is quite clear. We can't go on forever and ever without improving our pri&ons," said Assemblyman Alister McAlister, D-San Jose, the chief Assembly sponsor of the plan. McAHster did not mention Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 plan to call a special statewide elec· ti on Nov. 3 if the bond meuure is approved by the Legislature, We left the gem-rich country of Au1tralia and went to neighboring Naw Zeal1nd. Th1t bMutlful llttla ltlend country makH up In magnificent 10an9fY for what It lack1 In gema and mln«als. Th• only gematone of any conaeque~ found In good 1upply In New Za6end i. nephrite Jade ... popularly called llmply "green ltone" by the Inhabitant.. There .,. large quame. of nephrlta and the material can be found In huge boulde,., Gigantic cranea and hOl9b are needed to •xtrlc1 tr-mammouttl rock.a. Some of them with walght me .. ured In tON. It waa quit• a contrut to the mlnee we had Juet vl11tad In Awtralla wtiare carat w .. the unft of mee.ure. Before departing South ~ we ,took time to enjoy lt'9 fabuloua scenery of the 9outhtm Alpe and a Mtl plaM rldt lendtne on Franz JOMPh giecter wti9'9 we threw 1 raw enowtlillla and tootl a lot d plctUrea. Movtne on to North lelancf, ... Vllltad the tMrmaJ er•• of Aotorua and the , g:' worm oevta tt Waltomo but he referred to it indirectly. ''It would be placed before the voters of the next statewide elec· tion , whenever that mi1ht be," McAlistersatd. Brown's intention to call a statewide election Is politically controversial, because such an election would automatically place a referendum on the Peripheral Canal on the ballot as well. Brown wants to get that emo- tional and divisive issue, which he once strongly supported, out of the way before next June, when he is expected to seek the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate . Unless there is a special elec· tion, the canal referendum and other ballot propositions, lnclud· ing the prison and jail bond is· sues, would all go on the June 1982 ballot . Presley has indicated bis jail bill, part of a legislative anti- crime package, Is an effort to raise money to bring county jails up to minimum standards. According to the Department of Corrections, between $200 million and $600 million is re· quired to make a minimal over- haul o( county jails. @ 6EMWISE • have evidence to sustain itj charges against Artukovic. Artukovic was first orderec'! deported in 1953 when the Board of Immigration AppealJ fouo~ that be bad been interior minister in charge of public or· d~r aod safety In Croatia durinl World War II. The board said this "pup~ government" was respomib for a genocidal policy that Jed the killing of Serbs, Jews Moslems. It branded Artukovic a collaborator. The postwar Communist go\1- .emment In Yugoslavia accusecj Artukovic with overseeing ~ killing of 7!i0,000 Serbs and 20,oob Jews. ' But Bonaparte said the gov- ernment does not have enough evidence to sustain ''one courit of murder let alone 750,ooO counts." Bonaparte claims this Jackd •vidence Ulted 81 the 1ove ment's l;J:!t.ay or deportation. But government officials s the 1959 stay resulted from evidence that Artukovic woul~ suffer persecution and perbapt death ti returned to Yugoslavia. In titling that stay order last week, government officials not· ed that Congress passed the Refugee Act of 1980 which forbids granting a stay of de- portation or any alien who as l member of the Nazi govemmei:A assisted or participated In the persecution of any persotl because of race, religion, nlf- tional origin or political opinion. Bonparte claims this statute appears to be aimed at bis client. He also asserta that the government now ia trying to de· port Artukovic without provid· ing him a bearing. Although Artukovk does odt grant interviews and bu rarely been seen in public in recent years, Bonaparte claims be still lives in the same beacbfront Surfside home near seal Beach that he did in the 19508. It wu a little 1urprlslng to find that daeplta the lack of native gems and mln«al1, 10 many Naw Zealander1 were avid "rocit hound•" and collectors of gem and ml09f'al 1pec1,,,.na. We attended a meeting of a ftadgllng gemologlcal 10clety In Aucltland. Twanty men had f0tmed a group wh lch theJ hop9d would 10me day grow Into an organization almllar to our Amarlcan Garn. Soclaty wttara educated and athlcal gemologl1ta frffly uchange lnformttlon, dlecuu probleml and 10lutlon1 ,.1atlve to "'-" ~. When thla group he#d we would be vlalllng their country (they are dedicated ,..._. of the Ametlcan JJWetry trade joumait) ••• tMy ulced ta to meet Wllti them. W• vfehed In the home of OM Of the !Mn and heel lunch too-ther. I admired the tHack lade .,.ndant ttlat our hoeC w. weerlne and he "let ma buy It." It la a algned piece by Don Salt and It en lntrlcn =n In 30 bHed on the ot the membefa ot our ,..,., ... geC>iogt9t •ltd lidded a.-dMt to the •~nt d ow trip "Y polnttne out u. ...,. of~ tnd c"'4tntM In .. ...,, • etuial Ill ...... ...... , "' cu~ ..• tu.t the type of thing that an •nglnear. ~ or •tronomer Wou4d appteCta.. and •nJoy Meri,.. co.,,. by ~ ttofe and .. It 8M W JOU went It bedty ~ I ""'..,..,''let you buy lf'ftomme. - s Orange Coatt_OAILY PILOT/Tuesda~, July 7, 1981 ~ffiTI~rn·m I "' • Special session due? Solons not eager to work on budget, tci.x in August WASHINGTON (AP) -Get· ting Congress to accept a White House-d\ctated packa1e of federal budiet cuts ls one lhinl· Getti.q it to for10 a summer re· cess may be quite another. Key members of Con1reaa, especially House Democratic leaders, aren't too enthusiastic about the prospect of staying around in August to finish work on President Reagan's budget and tax bills. Reagan never said flaUy that he would try to keep Congres.s in town, but some of bis lieu- tenants, including Treasury Secretary Donald Regan and Senate Finance Co~mittee Chairman Bob Dole, have made the suggestibn publicly. And the president himself. in his June 16 news conference, mentioned the Aug. 1 target for congressional completion of tOS ANALYSIS work on his economic pacli:a1e and added: "Only then can we say as elected representatives that we truly1deserve a rest." While the budget-cutting le1islation baa been approved in both chambers and now la beaded for a House-Senate con· ference, neither chamber baa taken up the tax-cut bill. The last president who sum· moned Congress to work during a summer break was Harry S. Truman. Truman called the Republic an. controlled 80tb Congress back to town in bis ac· ceptance speech at the UM8 Democratic National Conven· ti on. Fees for adopting wild horses rising? WASHINGTON (AP> -Rais- ing federal fees for adopting un· wanted wild horses and bWTOS will cause the slaughter of in· creasing numbers of the 70,000 animals still roaming public rangelands, an Interior Depart- ment spokesman says. Charles Most of the Bureau of Land Management said the higher fees pr9posed by his agency wou Id red l\ce the number of participants in the 10-year-old program that has found homes for 29,000 wild horses and burros. Saying it can no longer afford M~i OLL~ • LI.I ::c .... Lt. 0 "' Q z ::::> 0 "' 0 LI.I a: LI.I .... "' the $4.4 million needed each year to subsidize the "adopt-a· horse" program, the bureau wants to raise adoption fees to $200 for a horse and $75 for a burro. Current fees range from nothing to $25. Most said the government hopes to offset the expected ef· feet of higher fees by publicizing the program more. He also said adoption should be spurred by two law changes, one allowing adoption of more than one a nimal, the other granting purchasers full ownership within a year. Previously c.c. Steakhouse Now Bart's II with Exciting new dinner menu NOW OPEN Monday-Saturday for Lunch 11 A.M. Join Us Sundays for Champagne Brunch 10-3 Free Champagne His partisan timinl didn't 10 over so well with Republican leaden on Capitol lllll. They la· nored hla laundry Uat of bouain&, civil ripta, education and anU- inflatioo bill.a, stayed around a few weeu and then went home. Truman branded it a "do- notbin1 Congress" and the "worst Congress in history" and went on to win a full four-year term in November. Can a presi· dent make Congress work when It doesn't want to? . Congressional parllamen· ta.rians say the answer is "partly yes and partly no. Strictly speaking, the presi· dent doesn't have the power to prolong a congressional session. But the Constitution gives him the authority to call a special session on "extraordinary OC· casions." This was the device used by Truman. MERCENARY CAMP -Mercenary training students take a break at camp in Desoto State Park near Fort Payne, Ala. The camp ,.,...._.. run by Frank Camper trains the men without asking their political persuasion. However, there's no require· ment that Congress, once sum- moned into special session by a president, bas to hang around or even consider the president 's legislation. U·S · to seek whale killing ban Tbe Constitution also provides that neither the House nor the Senate can adjourn for more than thi-ee days without consent or the other chamber. Whaling nations said to have votes to defeat measure Thus, if the GOP-controlled Senate wanted to help Reagan keep Congress in session, it could refuse to allow the Democratic-controlled House to adjourn. Now, however, there's another, more controlling fac· tor : the 1970 Legislative Organization Act. It makes a 30-day August recess each non- election year a matter or law. This law would have to be waived by Congress before either chamber could be forced to work this August. WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States will appeal to an international commission this month to ban the commercial killing of whales, but It is virtually conceding defeat even before the meeting begins. The U.S. delegation will offer the proposal to the 33rd meeting of the International Whaling Commission, which begins July 20 in Brighton, England. The commission sets quotas and COD· ditions on the killing of the giant sea mammals, whose protection has become a rallying point for conservationists around the world. But despite the apparent CAPY'S SOON TOBE JOSE MURPHY'S NOW APPEARING popular support for whale pro· tection, the U.S. representatives say the world's whaling nations have more than enough votes on the commission to defeat the proposal. ln recent testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee, they said a more realistic goal is a limited moratorium on killing certain species in certain areas, ex tending protections pushed through earlier. Their position infuriates some conservation organizations, who s ay a full moratorium might be within reach if the United States truly committed to the ..~~ Conservationists also contend that the United States is not will· in g to orrend Japan, the staunchest supporter of com· mercial whaling and the world's largest consumer of whale meat. Japanese representatives have said publicly that a strong U.S. position against whaling could hurt the already strained ttla· lions between the two countries. Conservationists say whale protection's low priority is reflected in President Reagan's failure to appoint a whaling commissioner , although the IWC meeting is less than three weeks away. .~- l1JJJ$*"1t .. Dancing In Dana Point To "808 GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun. 9:00P.M.·1:30 A.M. Rock, Reggae, Pop, Blues "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons 3:30-8:00 P.M. Mon. & Tues. Evenings 9:00 P .M. -1 :30 A.M. CAPV'S B AR and G RILL ----......... 114 McFadden Place Newport Beech 675-1094 and Country Western ·~······-············~··············· Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday "REGGAE With The REBEL ROCKETS" Friday & Saturday "BOCO · MARU'' Sunday & Monday "GEORGE BU'M'S And The HOT CROSS BUNS" 34130 Coast Hi hway, Dana Point ·661-6688 New partner ,-Holiday Magazine's Award Winner formerly of Blackbeards & Bob Bums. 'llOll Fash ion Island Newport Beach 18926 Magnolia Fountain Valley . No other newspaper brings you more of your city council, planning commission, school and college districts and county government than the Pilat W e have an exciting new restaurant to show youl It's our dream come true and you're Invited to join us. Still not fancy, but so much more beautiful. ' We've saved the intimltC}'. ~·ve just added more. We've saved the friendly atmosphere. Now there· s more room for friends. • Come to the new Le Blanitz. Ample covered free parking, exceptional atmosphere, superb provlnelal cuisine, careful sel'\lice. Join us for awnrd-winnll'lQ dining for lunch or dinner. Now it's even more Uke cominghome ... to France. IJE BJ.ARRIT!™ FRENCH RESTAURANT Open 11 am to t t pm Dally Set. end sun Dinner rrom ~ SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRONCH 10.m to 3pm 414 N. Newport BMi .. Newport Beech• ReseNatlons Phooe 64~700 •Cocktails !\ .. 'Navy i:ecruit camp tougher SAN DIEGO (AP) -Times are 1ettin1 toueher for new saUon in boot camp. The idea, Capt. Byron A. Wiley declared, Is to "make recruit trainin& more challens· int and rewarding." In the seven weeks or boot traininl in San Dte10. the home of three recruit train.Inc centers, mar'chinl drills have been in- creased lrom 19 periods to a . Company commanders will spend 2'l periods of 40 minutes each with their men instead or 15 as in the past. And there are two more perioch of physical training, spread out more evenly from day to day. The cbances were worked out to cornply with recent "shape up," orders issued by Adm. Thomas Hayward, chief ol naval operations, and in some way al- fectlng all the nation's Navy men and women. Hayward bas told all bis commands to return sailors to "a hieb state of miUtary professionalism." San Diego recruits are getting longer to care for their unUorma and to be sure they wear proper- ly the bell-bottom suit which Hayward restored to use. A final sea-bag inspection bas been ordered to make sure they leave camp with all the required items of clothing and to make sure it is worn correctly. Orange Coalt DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, July 7, 1981 ; 34%return for nursing homes? SACRAMENTO (AP) -A draft state report says nurainc homes in California yield an avera1e 34 percent return on this owners' investment, the Sacramento Bee bu reported. The ftnt-ot-its-ldnd report by the Calllomia Health Facilities Com mlaaioo is being hotly con- tested by the nursing home in- dustry. The report also said that doc· tors, occupational therapists, pharmacists, social workers and speech pathologists spend an averap ot less than one minute per day tor each nursing patient, the newspaper said. ASSAJU GOVERNMENT Dorothea Morefield "The changes aren't drastic," said Wiley, commander of the San Diego Recruit Training Command, "but the objective is to toughen the regimen." The additional drilling was praised by Chief Petty Officer Jimmy Estes, who has spent the last three of his 23 years in uni· form as a company com- mander. Petty Officer lat Clan R.R. Bonoan barka commandl to new l<Ulor1 who are learning to march at boot camp in San Diego. But Paul Goss, director of fis. cal affairs for the California As· sociatloo or Health Facilities, the nursing homes, industry as· sociatioo, said the report "will convey a raise perception to readers." Goss said the study's "effectiveness standard" for nursing homes was open to dis- pute. Hostage kin raps state department Napa residents pick up pieces There are about 1,200 nursiag homes in California. The document, compiled by a task force or volunteers at the commission's behest, said there "did not appear to be any dif. rerence in the distribution of the rates of return between the for- p r of it and the non -profit facilities." LOS ANGELES <AP) - Dorothea Morefield, the unof. ficial spokeswoman for the families of the S2 American hostages in Iran, is still in the limelight, but this time she ia raking the government over the coals. NAPA (AP) -Even before the last names had died, the vic- tims of Napa Valley's devastat- ing fire were picking up the pieces, planning to rebuild their homes and their lives. For many, however, the fast. moving blaze th at blistered 23,000 acres late last month will remain etched in their memories forever. "Stopping a fire, I could see, but not a holocallSt. If the whole world is oo fire, what do you do?" asked Al Achilles, whose Atlas Peak house was on'e of 52 omes destroyed by the giant onnagration. Miraculously, no one was lied as the flames roared rough the tree-dotted bills just northeast or town, leaving S36 January's Nail Worlt<i - S,.CI• Offw ,4_ R90 t !>O V . H-Set ot 8cutp1..,90 ..... .. Non-ao tho-f-o .. .. 2400 W. C-.t H~ s.Me A. tU. 645-1411 ~ ... '""" 5,.,, ., • .,, Ooot 1C ... Stor"• NMrftt "'°""' ., •• , COl'TA-l41•12n , . ..._.-. -~ --~ ................. ...,.......,, million in damage in their wake. "I made some bargains with God," said Maureen Grinnell, who ned her burning home with her five children. "I told him we wouldn't complain about the s mall things il we were spared." For the homeless, immediate needs or food, c lothing and shelter were met by the local chapter of the Red Cross. It set up a receiving area at the town's high school, where Boy Scouts and students from the nearby junior college helped bring ./amities and friends together in the first few terrilying hours. In the days that followed, the Red Cross was besieged with donations , said chapter manager Lynn Sherrie. "The response has been fan- tastic. We've bad to ask people to quit bringing in clothing. We can't handle any more." The Red Cross put several families up in a motel. Other vi c tims were taken in by friends . Local businesses also helped. ''This is a tragedy and every body should pitch in and pull together," said auto dealer Den- nis Dorsey, who offered to sell any victim who lost a car a new one at dealer cost. Mrs. Anne Green, whose daughter last her home, off~ the services of her laundry for free. By the end ot the week, Gov. Edmund G. 'Brown Jr. had ia· sued a declaration of a state ot eme rgency, paving the way for A Summer Tradition .. 1981 CARS I andTRUCKS • The Palm Springs area's newest luxury resort at only $32.00 per day.• Much lower than our normal summer rates. ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Ask For Ray, lWE SPlCIAUST at HOWARD Chevrolet c-04 0ow. enc1 a..11 aia NEY*ORT BEA"CH A1ocor•••1 It c.,..,.,...._..Md ,,... ...... C...(lec. 11111 lt 11~.:l...~ ==-===--....... ~ ..... 1111 c.u..fy et.ftl ......... ,........., , •• , 11111 •• '" • .... T:' ...... Hea 11 wlllell 11'9 ................. Tiie 1ttte1111111 la ............... n1111wy Ill lllfllllll a ,.., .......... -. •.... """' ,., ... ,. ,,... ....... .,... ..... ...... -Tiit •AIU ... LOT ................. =· ......... .. . .. ...... ,, ............... .... , .. ,.,... .. . ... o, ..... c •••• , o .......... .., ., ....... , ................. , .. ,11_11t e_ IJI• LIGAL ~..-. . •••• Ill ,., .... ................... Spend a day in the sun. Relax. unwind and enjoy the resort's sparkling pools, 25 championship tennis courts, 27 holes of golf, bicycles, game room, gift shop and much more. Uncomplicated? You betl Rancho Las Palmas Resort Is the place for Your Day In the Sun. Advance Reservations Required Space Avallable Basis Call 714/56&-2727 or Toll Free 800/228-9290 •ptua tax and gratuities, nol applicable to groups. ·~~·Ho LASPALMAS RESORT™ Yes,~ Please help Smo~ II tv•ll'1'4 rtu. l'eoll•J'll"'' 61. Th<· l\.h,·rt1"nllC~oUn.:1I lllllf Piil ' low-cost loans from the Small Business Administration. The County chipe_ed in with a declaration ot ib own, waiving fees and permits for temporary dwellings. '· 1 expect most people will re- b u 11 d," said co unty Ad· ministrator Al Haberger . "I think the benefits of the view and living in the hills overcome a lot~ obstacles. We're just try- ing to make it as easy as we can for people to get restarted." The hills were sWI smoldering when Pacific Gas and Electric and Pacific Telephone began restoring service. Telephone Company spokeswoman Diane Phillips said that within five days, all 250 destroyed polls bad been replaced. Medi-Cal, a mammoth SS billion-a-year proeram which uses state and federal money to provide health services to the poor in California, accounts for a large propc)rtion of the nursing homes' income. The nursing home industry has long complained that it could not survive with the cur- rent Medi-Cal reimb\lrsement rates which it says are well below the cost of care. The study also said that staff turnover at 973 nursing homes surveyed for 1978 averaged 238 percent -a turnover of almost 2~ times in 12 months. As her family is picking up stakes to move from San Diego to Washington, D.C .. this week where her husband Richard will begin a 10-month State Depart- ment executive training pro· gram, Mrs. Morefield has been critical of the government's treatment of hostages' families. She believes the State Depart· ment gave preferential treat· m ent to hostage families living in and around Washington. In excerpts from her diary published in the July issue of McCall 's, she said the State Department "didn't give a damn" about the hos tages ' families. Savory savings. -------"°" 1s199GIEAT I 9 DINNER n g Good for lhrM plecea of Juicy, 00fd911 blown Kentucky ~ Fried Chk:Mn, plu1 11ng11 MNinga of cote 1l1w. ma1htd O potaton and grevy, and 1 rou. Limit two offer• per Z PUl'Cl'llM. Coupon good only for combtnallon whlleld•rtl I oroer.. Cu11omer peya all applicable 111111 In. 020 Ollerexplra1July to, 1081 --------· UOUT $5 ftft SUPERI e77DINNERI z 0 Cl. :::> 0 u Good fO< nine plecu of lulcy, golden t><Own Ktnluclly Fried Chlckan, with four roll1, 1 lerga cola 1l1w, 1 large muhtd pot1IOff 1nd a medium gravy Limit two ofltfl Pl' purchtff Coupon good only IOf comb4nallon white/ dart! Ofdtra Cuatomet pays 111 applicable 111111 lu. Offer ••Pires July 10, 1081 PrlcH m1y very 11 par· tlclpetlng locallons Good only In Southern C111101n11 where you lff the Chicken S1ndw1ch Window Benner An11ual Rall' T~yi in•~rest rat~ ~teed for t~term by Amencan Sam111 Unlike more ~ invntments. American~ Secured Money Fund interest rate is ~ on the day of your in\lestment for the full term. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARCE . SAVINGS . • I .. ... r ' ... ... ,. ,. .. ., Ortn0t Collt DAILY lttLOTIT'Ulld6y, July 7, 1111 TRI F-'111Lt' c1ac111 "Ooohl Kittycat's tongue is mode of son~rl" ' •t&GEOROE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) -~ ,, .,_.., .. I , "(p .. ~ARMADt:IU~: by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENt\CE i 8 J I I ~ ? i PMNIJTI by Charle• M. Schulz TIN 'llAIS FROM HOW! TUMBLEWEED8 by Tom K. Ryan \'OO'RE OUR FRONileR I:)(~ ,.... _______ ..., rrs E:11'H~R iHUNPE~ A S1AM~VE, MOJ.£-l:YE7 CAN '(OU IVENilFY OR SOME:ONE w:FT 1Hf A'.l?R OPEN iHAT C11SiAN1 RUM,L.E:? A11lie ~OWN f'OWL.IN& AU.EV. SHOE NANCl' WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN, NANCY? ~ Y- I FELT DOPEY SO I TOOK A BRISK W'AU< OUT IN THE COUNTRY I DON1T THINK ITWAS BRISK-- ~ by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushmiller A TURTLE FOLLOWED YOU HOME 0 .,.'? ,c:-~7 -7 J GORDO by Gus Arriola "I see ONE tennis player didn't bother to phone me about hla comptalntl" Jl'DGE PARKER HEY 5tW ... IT MAKE~ ME 6AO TO H~INK THAT A OOR6f OU5 MAN \.IKE THAT WA!) KILi.ED IN AN Alll'O ACCIDENT! WHEN r---_ ___. DID IT HAPPEN ? "Why did you have to call me a 'naughty boy' in front of Joey? He thinks I'm PERFECT!" ! by Harold Le Doux Fl'NK l' "INKERBEt\N 1 "JHOU6HT 'rnE NOCL..EAR PROTE.Si AAU..<..> AT WHllE MIN5, ~ <.x>RK 1.WMERE .1~ ~ ANO JPlf'f.!J ~ APPEA1'ED J c.oA6 REAL.le..> ~™ING ! DR A BB LE by Tom Battuk ~ , 8UT I'VE GOT 'lfiE AL.BUM I by Kevin Fagan MOM .Unfl 1\4Rows A~f1UtU. lWA'f. -:I MOON Ml'LLINS by Ferd & Tom Johnson l /)/f>N'T FINISH "TH~ SSNT~NC.E1 'f(AYo .. • I/ • I . ' ® ..,,.,..y~-1-I_<5_0T_O_N_E_ UICE IT ON MY I~~ BIRTHDAY IN NIN~TffN HLINl>RS'D ftJ4D ·· wooPS! So I1M NOT 97 f! FOB 8ETTEa Oa FOa WO all I'M LOOt<IHG RftAM) "?> 1H\S VACATION ..,...--+-+-....,..~ · ANO Hf\YIHG-\iME. 1b6~,eu.y Pti weLL AS 8e.IN9- ~.1 WFWr1tE ~10SEEO&AS ReAL,~HlM'N ~N96l by George Lemont Orange Coa1t DAILY PtL.OT/TUHday. July 7, 1981 IWllllulM w ..,,. '* fNllrlloM ...... ,... I =~-:?r-TUBE TOPPERS ........ !Uli.'A' ,,... NIWI (Jl)MCMI . ......... mMwy .... •Ml~.·N' ... Cll "...,. MllrtOM ... •. ,,.,., ""'~. .... i...-,.,. .... !loft, I.,.. ol lliltl MMol lf1efldt ...,.,..,_ tlW ..... ... of..,...,... In N IOolll ~ of IN ttlOl.'N ' -EVBM- ~1••--KUNG "-' Cline IMOMI for~ IO en olcl llWI Ind 1111 daughter. 111 TIO TAO DOUGH G) M•A•a•H Frink demand• lhll Hlfteye tie oourt.mar- tt.led tor hitting lllrn In Ille O.A. WATERJIRONT ITM -Marlon Brando stars with Eva Marie Saint in the movie classic "Ontbe Waterfront" toni&btat8on Cbannel5. ., GOOO,..- Mk:tllel'1 ~ IOf e ~lenni.I repor1 IMC!• to 1tranoe lllppenlnol for the Ellllll family. •aD EUOTNO [[S "A CMl!enge For Robin Hood" (19417) larrle lnO- llam. T"' iegendetY llero of SllltwOO<I forMI and 1111 rnetry men outwit Ille ....U Sllltlfl of Nottingham to rob lrom IM rlorl and i,,. to 1111 poor. ·o· l:IO JOKIWI WILD AU IN THI 'NAY Mike lnvltM I young OOU- ple 10 epend 1111 nlgllt et 11141 Bunker llOull, tlu1 rune Into ot1Jecllon1 when Arcllle flnd1 out 11111 the vi1ttor1 are not 1111rrled. Cit BINNY HILL Benny goee on llferi. • KCET NIWlllAT ID 8TUDIOI& "Frlendl" Explor9 undet· water ce-: vlllt • New Hampehlre town wll9te kid• In trouble -oetllne help end • aaeond c:fllnOe. (R) '(l)QJNEWI 9 8AAHIV MIUM A llt1t-1tage emog elert CIU-mUCll dlecomlort to tllOM In the ell)', Aell In partlcular, (l)IUU8HOT CAUMMOHD Tiie eaga ot the wor1d' I moel Incompetent euper aleulll II perfotmed tty the, orlglnll London Cllt at 1111 Co<onel Tlllllll' In LOI Angeiel. .MOW! ··UttJmat• Thrlll" 1:111 mTONAL 1.00 C8I NIWI HeCNIWI 8 HAPP"t' DAYI MAIN Al Chn.tm•. 1 merdllnt lllllllfl trom the Ol'llnt detlverl • gift to Fonzie trom hit long-IOll lltller. 8 MIONIWI • IUU.MYa • M•t.•t•H Sudden tymptome of Ill- ,,_ In Hot Upe end In Col. Potter'• l1votlte mere ceuM c:oncern In 1111 40n111. llt ITAUTI OI' IAN ~ When • pt90tlenl glr1 .. trlclled lnto llgnlng _., her batty, tile po11oe unoov· .. • bleclt matllet r1ng dllllng In llleOlil adop- tion•. tD DWl'IMY Gu1t11: 1ctor Oeoro• O'lrlen. !Mrttlonllt Or. Mitton NMtle, CNI Nlrlll o.vtd.(A)Q -~ILBNI' ...aRT Cl) no TAC OOUCIH OMllW..,.. au.ta: Durll "--· Dr. Atnold Klein. (D)NIWC>O VA&.llm•A Get • per1IOflll look II 1111 OoclOlf pltoNng MnUtlon from Muloo In thll ~ "'*" -ftlm ollpe end lnlll"Mwl to tltlng Fernan· do the man Into tooue. CZ)MOYll "TM Godfllll«, Piii II" (1874) Al PIClno, Aober1 Ouvllt. Mlotllll Corleone -"* "" .... tether'• tlv'OM and .,_ .. lie MCOmee tlll ,_ heed ot Ille Miili. finding ptob- lerile wtlh ...., .. lactione and 1111 .... tllfougllOut 1111 ,.ign. 'A' 7:IO. 2 ON TMI TOWN HOlll: Steve Edward•. Melody Roger• Vl11t 81nd1tone. • Hllu•I rettMI In 1111 8111 F11n111- do Vllley; ''lteape'' to DMtll ... .,,.., lor I look II world·l•m•u• Scotty'• CMtle. I 8 'AMILY NUD IHANANA Ou.I: Jolln Seblltlln. • IYa ON L.A. Hoete: lnerr Peesrou. Paul Moyer. A IOok II tlll world of LA'• QloolOI: find out wf"I tlle tutl moon e111 ~mlk•--of otherwtee •-• people: ~ of thumbing • ride on ttle ltreetl of LOI~ ... I 'AC9THI~ AU IN THI ,A.Mil Y When .,, lllrMdy uowdecl IUbw9y II llMlded tty In Otlnolll-dNnk, Mike llk• .....,. of hM -- ll'ICI Ylolel.a -of '"' ltrongeet pt1nolplee. • MAOml I L.IH .... ...aRT I~~ A llOrM mldwl'9'1 nlgnl'I wor11; dMng IOf gold In e deadly Yucatan OClfW ...... (C)MOYll "Kiii Or le l<Hled" IINO) Joeeptl Ryen, Ct\lrlottl Mlcllllle. 'PO' (D)MllUU. Houeton Altroe et LOI ,.,.... Oodger'I 10- mey tie~-due to playen' 1trlll1.) l:OO. Cl) WAL TM ~IUNMMI D8LOeO '9rtllnl .. purllled tty • "'°"'Gift ~ bllleVlt Ille hit contllnl Ille eecret to • CHANNEL LISTINGS 8 KNXT iCBSI Los Angeles D KNBC tNBC) Los Angeles I KTLA 1lnd I LOI Angeles KABC· TV I ABC) Los Angeles (I) ><FMB 1CBS1 San Diego G l<HJ· TV (Ind I Los Angeles tit KCST iABCl San Diego G) KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles ., KCOP· TV (Ind I Los Angeles • l<CET· TV 1PBS1 Los Angeies G l<OCE·TV 1PBS1 Hunt1ng1on Beach hi.IOI bank rip-off. (Al • MOYll **** "On TM Weier-front" I 1'1M) Mltion Bran- do, Ew Marte lllnt. Only on• men mu1t1re up enough oourage to ohllr ler1gl 1 pow«ful mob IMCler wtlO hold• 1111 dooll WOtk.ert of • big oily In en Iron Qrip. •D~DAYI Tiii Cunnlngh1m1' plMned lamlly Chrietmu reunion 11 Jeoperdlaed when • enow 1torm ltrlndl end _.,.,. 1111 lernlty rnemtlllt. (A) • MOYll • • ·~ "It lt'I T-o.y, Thia Muet le lelglum" I tMtl 8uunne Pleellett•. Ian Mc:Sll-. A woman- 011-lead• • group of ~ on • ca'** trip tllrougll _., European countrlll. • ~.M. MAG.AZINI A llot'll mldwff9'1 nlgnt' I wortt; diving for gold In • cMldly Yucatan oorll reel; s1-eaney mlk• •wind dllrM trom old nllll; 1111 8heOdl on greatlng your apouM wttll good -; Undl Henle IOUrl Mealoo City. .... HAW Oueate: Porter WllQOllll'. Lacy J. D11ton, Joe Maphll. • HOYA "Tiie Milady Of Health Care" An namlnltlon of llOw Orelt 8"11111 end the U.8 . 111W organlad health ~ dll!Yery IOf tllelt peo. pie ll'ICI how ,._ eylterN .,.. ~ .. preeented. ;QMY8TMY ''Albeocl'' ,.,. ~ of Mlftdlrtey, ttle MCOnd M,.. de Wln1er' I oonf'- dlrioe II COMClntty ehlllen tty Mrl-o.n--(Anni MllMY). Rebeca'• de¥0t• ed l'IOUMllMper. ( P111 2) ~~ "Oolng In ltyte" ( 187') 0-ge ~.Alt~· 81fely Ible lo make end• meet on tllllt meeoer loc:lll Security ..,._ •• tlw'M eid«1Y gentlernln Clllfully plan • blnll llelet. 'PG' (J)91ZAAM• JOfln 9yl'4W lflowl you tlllngl ltrenger thin tnrth. llrOll than .... Ind unW thin enythlng you've -'"" In lhffe 1peol1I 1f100f9 pr.-,tatlone from th• Sllowtlm• 8l11rr1 llbfety. .MOVll "The Oraet Alvletl 8lnll Aobllery" (1979) Ian MclMne, Wenen Ctlrb. FMCiet rldlell9 Ind Pf4> teeeionll ortmlnel1 join lorcet lO P'lll off Ille "per· f9ct" CfllM. l:IO • Cl) l'l.0 Ro Ilk• an lmliglnlry trip back In time to IN Old Weet.(A) eO LAYMNI& IHIM.IY ~ telle In iov. with 8onny and trllt to oon- vtnoe him lO ohlnge hll mind about their fut\IN t~.(AIQ • THI 000 COUll'l..I Oeclr beoon!ee • - -~c:w ca.....-jollll llolll DIGll ...,., • Ille L.A. ..... ......... '°""' ....... .,. ..,,,..... In .... OOfM. '.l'tll0tdoa11. .... (1) MCMI ••• MlolM IQnd Of Mir• ...... (1t1t) Oevtd Duk ... Andree M1roov1001. A )'CMl9 --.._,. IO lie ,,..,.,... UlidlertO ..... ol tMlt' lolllt .... -"' "*"It~ In • IUl't· • l!!f ........ ,,., •8HUm.T .... c.plaln l'litllo oomlrNl9 ,.,....,.u.u-.. rt¥9I ~ ll'ICI JoltNff L.1""9 11 trlokecl Into IOOlptln8 • ~ frMt • orooMd oop. l"l .. ,...... OOM1'Nf't Janet .... lier WlltlnO Pl'· .,,.. tMt .... end Jeok .,. ,_., ..... ,..,Q . ~ ...... CIMIMa: Dur\ "-'-'· Or. AmolCI IOlln, Or. Manin u-ta. • wm4 ~ °" LOYI Thie dooYmln\lty repor1 •• •looll llttM~ ll'ICI wor11 of Wortd COft- oern I CAllTA ln14WllMlon- el. • MY81WIY- "llletteool" AA mi.tr .. of Manderley, the MOOlld M,.. de Wint.et'• con*" --.. oonltltitly "*'"' tty Mn. Dlnver9 (Anni M aMeY). l'letleocl' • deYOI· ed ~Mper. (Piii 2) (AJQ • NOYA "The Miiady Of Hllltll Care" An IUlllll'lltion of 11aw o....i Mt.in ll'ICI the U.S. haw Ofganind Nllth car• delMry for thell peo- ple ll'ICI llOw .,_ ~ .,. llnanoed II pt-1led. I t:IO ~ ~ TOO OLOM "°" ~ Jldlle enllett IN aid of two fl1endt 10 help ,,., end Sir• c:onw-Henly 11111 they need their own "*1- ment. (A) (C)MOYll • * ,_.. "TM Wreck Of Thi Mwy 0-." (11151) Gety Cooper, Ctllflton Helton. A lhlp'I offlotir II llded tty tlll tklpper ot • llllYage tloet In clMr1ng hie - I "';i;r:.:1oe chlrgee. 10:00. NM() wot.A Neto~ IN mlMlng llelrlle ... ~~ tor 1e the prime ....,... 1n 1 bnltll mYrder. (A) I ••• HIWI 0 HMTTOHMT A oano ot 1ore1gn ...,., 1ttempt to retrieve • Pf ... ent Jonathan gew to Jln.. nltlt Wllldl ,,.,....,,. lllelr 1M1re operltlon. (A) Q . ..,...,,. "Eqyai Jultlol "°'All" Art uamlMtlon of the -of ~ A9y Mencloa. • Mllw1ukee Clllo1no • _..., "' mlKder In the ...,,. of two pclCFleil In 197"4, .. ,,,....,. •. ®MCMI ''ffoll!M" (1N0) Roger Moore, "-M-. A dapper. wom1n·h•tlng frogman II C...S In to .._, the plane of 91110l'- tl0nllltl wflo 111¥9 hljedled • 9lipply ...., end -ttw•••io to o.troy two Norttl ... oll r1gl. 'PO' (ll)MOYll "~"(1N0)1111 Mwf!IY. ~ Oenoer· lleld. The demented ~Mperot•­ ky oountty ctub WIQll - IQllnlt IN gopMr9 lnl'll· biting Ille turl. 'A' (J)MOYll "Hot Stuff'' (1'7t) Dom DeLulH . Suunne ,....,,.._, Tiw'M Miami cope oet In -"*' held• Wit/I 1111 mob "'*' their under00\'11 llllOlng operation bloorNI -;-.:= IUOOMlfUI. 'PQ' . *.. ''Tiie Qodhlttler" (11172) Merton &t9ndo, Al Pecino. Directed tty fran- olt fOfd Copc>oll. ..... on tlll novel tly Mlllo Puzo. An ... Mdolo ... Ille blrrilrs ~ hie ldylllc ,.,,,..., ... Ind Ille l\lrth ,....._ of hie ~ ttreell dOWn • hie eone tteoorne enor.... lngly lnvOlv'9d In the vlOlent worlllng1 of orgenllld ctlfftl CZ)MOYll "Coll MIMr'I l>lugtlMr" KHJ e 8:00 -·•u It'• Tuelday Tb.ti M'.Ult Be -.111um." SuHnne Pl•~. Ian McShane and Mild.red Natwick 1tar tn th1I movie about a whirlwind tour of Europe. KCET. 8:00 and KOCE 8 9:00 - "Nova: 'lbe Malady of Health-Ce.re." A pro1ram examtntn1 bow America and En1land have ortanized and financed health care. C~ e 9:00 -''Some Klnd of Mlra- c 1 e." David Duke• and Andrea Marcovtccl star ln a drama about an en1a1ed couple testin1 their love wben be 11 paralyzed ln a surtt.ni accident. (1N0) .. ..,._, TOfft-.,_ ol Ille ,,.,,_.,, my L8I Jonee. 9Mecl on w.t. In ...wi d the - Lotettl ... ~·· lllt~ "' wonder-. .. narrated tly pkf'I. ,. youllG glr1 "°"' • ,,.. .,._ poor fMily In Mii K.-• 0 MOYll tudly marri. • muoto old-' • .,. "Men 'rtdlY' (19711 • 1oo11 boy~.,._,. • Peter D'Tooll. Alcl\lrd hit rtM 10 ..,dom In the ~ IMed on 1 m11t6o tndullry. 'PG' novel tty ~ Dlloe. Tiii 10:IO I NIWI 1111pwreokld Aollln1on ..... :IOINT CN101 trtee lo IMlltl "olvto NSTW0M NIWI llllCt" b1NvtOr to • Mtlv9 • ,,., """1#/tl!O bled! "*'· (A) "P9r9oflll Computing" A • ~ loOll .. hOme oompu1... KJtty -tlle ..,. of ... wHdl form IN 111111 fOt I low ~ trl!WW wtlo6e -IMdllllll of 1nd becomH deep1., lntormatlon. II ~led. lnYOlv9d In Ille panonll • THI OHMTIAHI life. "Tiie QodlHI 811te" • ~ Blmtlll 011001DM e111t11-.-OllllLI !nee the alli.not of the TM IMF'e plan to llft I Chrietlln 111111 In -!Nndly monardly fl'Ofll • n1et Au1e11. Poland Ind dlotltor II Imperiled wt... Italy. llmey II blinded. (Piii 2) 11l00. 8. Cl) 0 8 • aANTTA NIWI Tony 11 pumled tty 1 • STAR TMK man'1 Ind~ to hll TM EntetpflM _..,. ..,.,, dlllppewenoe. an lnoredlble magnetic: I CD> MOYll lofce emantlll'IO from 1 "P-Tell!" (1t78) An ... Wfedled ~. I .,,.,,... eplr1t IOdOll ltMlf I Nl'#l'tWID ~ In I young WOl'lllll enO MAHNDC . fcwo. lier Into oompromll- ""-lum To The Summer Ing lltuatlone. OtOft'' 1l:OICZ)LOMTTA • -..v HIU. I 1a:ao •a TOMOMOW ,.,. ti<* of • quiz lhow, , Aoben PrHton; llnget 9lnny trtee lo ~I I Nanoy Wiiton: part two Of be9lltlllll blonde wttll • hol-Ille ..-on tlll Vletnem ldey for two. War. • DICK CAVITT 1i00 e NYCHC Guell: IUttlor Mety Sin-ll'l•tat•6'.. THI croft. (P111 I of 2) W0N.0 llYOND 11:t0• Cl) COl.UMeO "You Wiit Live AOaln" A pllyeloll tit,_ eaoert Hoei.: Demien Slmpeon, nMdlt9 hie ~ per!-It.Ide HUnl. ou.t: ..0 net. Steiger. D 8 THI ..-r °" CAMON Oullte: Mlc:llMI Lindon. Olnlfl 8'\or9. (A) •O A8CHIWI MCIHTUNI I Ln'9 MAKIA DMl aTAM.IY~ • cwnc>NIDMC NIWI • (C)MOYll "Hoplootall" (1llt0) Wllr t• Matthau, Qlendl JIOk· eon. A former Int~ ..,.,.. la aided tty en olcl 1WM In dodging IN 1<08 Ind the CIA, wtlO ere trying to iw-t him trom put>- ..... hie mamoln. 'A' (J)MCMI ""°°"Y II" (1171) 8~ llllonl, T• 8Hrl. AfMr loelr'9 11111 bout wtltl IN WOflcl ~I, ... lfllbl- ttoul bo.-tnllnl for • ---~ .. tN !Ille. 'll'O' tt:AO•MCMI ''Tiie ~ llletnl'' 1b .. ®MCMI """'*1oln 0!9*" (1 N0) Alohlrd 0.., ~ Hut- ton. A 9ewl'ty Hlltl glgo6o .,..,,,_ the ottnie - pec1 In • nMder ~io. tlon. 'R' 11:.47(Dl~N:TOfll • MOYll *** "Pendulum" (1M8) Oeorge P91>9etd, J.an Seberg. A pollol captain decldlt to defend hllftlllf •ft• "" lawyer .. unable 10 Pf-lie dldl'l 't klll "" wife end lier IOVW. ...... w Nl'TWOM NIWI t: 11 CZ) MOYll ''The Ooclfltlllr, Piii II" (1874) Al ,ldno, Aoblr1 Duvall. MlcNll Corteone ..,,,_ Ille .... tethlr'• thr-end ~ M he .,__ ttle -held of IN Melll. finding prob. lame with rlvll tactlonl end IN lew tftrouOhOut 1111 ,.ign .• ,.. ••• MOYll • • '"TM o-i &ong" (1NS) ~ Or~. Qordon MIGAl9. A proMl- aor laede • doubtl life .._ "' lnlpli'et • ~ to 911po111 .,, 9111 Arltl ........ (C)MOYll "OMne Hym9"" ~· Antonlll. T.-ioe 811mP. Contllot Ind ci-lorl """ In 1920l ltlly. (l)MCMI ''Oolftl 111 ....... 111n1 0....9wM.M~, lltwty ..... to ~ "* ,,.... Oii ....., ,,....., ...... ~ ........ •• ""--elderty ........ .., OlrlM1 pllfi • .... ..... • 'N ' • ........ ........ MOMQ.'!:Wlw.I ...., OINf Alalwd ,... ltlo end .,. In .,,.., ttlb- "" to IN 1140t ~ oetfff•tlng the .,.,,, .. '°'°"' 1:t0l NIWI 1111 IDrTONAL l:IO. MOYll ***"TM low'' (1 .... ) , .. ~. Joen .... . nett, A k.., OloeelV ,_. Ming • .,,elrl dootof ...,,_. to lllde llefllnd the l>ood doo10f'1 ~. ..... l:IO. MOMC.4!:Wl W. Elio pll!yl • oello wltll • mind of 119 own: am. ll'ICI ltto ll'lllce lllndllne wood out of I -V elql I i1tfve lttldlvar'llll. 1:11.MOYll ''The car.at Nlller• ..,. Robbery" ( 1971) ll n Moltllne, w.,,..,. Ctlrtl•. , .... redlMll Ind Pf4> t..ional Cfifnlnlil join two. to pull off IN "per• feet" ortme. 1:11• NIW9 aioo• MOYll *** "Hofllont Welt" (11152) Aoblr1 Ryen, Acal ~ Two tlrotllerl find ,,,.,,__ on oppoelt• eidee of Ille lew It Ille clOM of IN CMI W11. • MOYll ** * "Ufa At The Too" (1 ... ) ~ Harwy, ~ llmmone. ~ ttllt Ille .... II doing Ille eame, • men deoidee to lllveenllflll . • NIW9 (C)MOYll "Roll« 8oogle'' Linda llllr. The Clllfotnll ... -11 epotllghted. 'PG' 1:10 (I) THI U>I AHIM' • llGUlll'Oflfl Qalleghlr jolne "°" Ololc Mlrlln M IN L.A. ., ... , tltlghteat young oomeoi. -oompet• In Ihle oome- 14:11 Cb=· I I I W•d11•sda11'• Daytl•• Mo.,I•• -MOR1•t0- NO CC) "lnlnlmlr'•l8 Ugllll" ..... lndgee. Uo'fd lltldO- ... A youllG man dfope out of Ille tither'. bullrteM wortd. •11 CZ) ''Coll ...... ~ .., .. (1tt0) .. "**· T~l.MJonlt.IMed on Ulritla L)'M'I 11114> b6ogirlplly. A )'OUn8 Olf' from 1 poor ternlty In rwel Kentuelly "*'111 e llUlf'I older local ~ Wtlo ... ,_. IW r1el IO ICWdom In the m1.wo lnduetry. 'PO' uo CC> .. Aeat111" 118n1 Ouet1tn Hollman, V•n••H Aldgt'lve. In London In 1'2t, In Amet1oln ,_.. ~ rlC)Ofter lilMt8 ll'ICI beoomlt lnVOlv9d wtt1I famed myMery wrtter Aoa-- thl Chrletle. wtlO Ille left lier unlelthful hull>lnd. 'PO' -Ml>tlOtfT- , ... MCMI • • ''Sewn Wondll'9 Of The Well" (111411) Jldl am1111. An ec:h1enturoue -ch of Ille uneJl$)IOred "Cldiifylflldl" (1N0) .. Mvrtey. lllodn.y Denger> 11110. The dement•d or_......,. of• -1 lly oounlty olub Wlgll W9r I IO'lntt the gopfilrl lnfll. ~ CJ) "The OrMt llntlnl" (1971) Robert Duvall, llythe o.ncw. ,. ,~ lnd-tMdy Mlfw. Corllt oftloer tlOlll dolnlltlc: bet· tllt when he ,,.. to .. (C) ''Tim ......... lllMlt'IMINl19" ,red Keller, J6Hpll ~ A )'CMl9 Olf' ......Ill\~~ known • VII TllC!b. UM. * * "HIN f'lllll Hypo notlet" ( tH?) lowery 8oy9. Hwltl Hell. Whell OMdlN~.--­ (ll#et IOI •••••on..,..,. "'*"'· ...,... to be f!W-notlllM. lie ~ lie led ......... In .. 1eoo. • • lfttlMI tu oollea*. Cll•••• .. , .... Of TM ltlde'' (1MO) ~ Treoy, Plal:lefl T.,,iot, A ,....~ .... IN~ 111\d ~ lnvoMd wttll the ~ .. llont tor 11111 deugl!W'• ••• r.re~Of 1'W Yor11" (1161) Otto KNf9', ...... ,_., A rOllOt oontainlt'll IN ~ plentecl bfelft of • -· geon'1 ion lleoomH UNlOMJ~ .,,..,,, -AFTERNOON- 1'l00 •••• ''Tiie nw. Wortde Of~· (1 NO) ~ MatMM, Jo Mor· row. A men le wMtlecl Mhot• on Ill\ llWld of tiny peoclle. • ••• "llttllng ~ .. (1NI) 8ette Dev• 11. Edwwd 0. ~ Two rtvel boUlg meneeer- -tually haw e lflOOtOUI •"--double<f- tl:IO ~· .. ~Ill" ( 11171) Duetln Hollman. V1nH11 Aedgrtw. In London In 1t2t, In AtnlrtCM -- paper ~ ..... 111\d becomM Inv~ wHll famed myttery ..,..., .. die CMetle, ~ Ille left II« unlelttlful hultland. 'PG' tlOO (I) "Tiie Oreet Santini" ( 1878) Aottert Duvall, llytN Dinner. A rCAl(J/t- lndofMdy Merine Corpa Oflloer llOlll domMtlc bat- ,.. _,.,, lie 111.. lO impo. 1111 mllltety ldelll on NI family. 'PG' a.. "In Qod WI Tru.t" (1NO) Many Fek!men, AzKtt KautmM. A nllYe monll II Niii OUI lnlo IN wotld to ,.... money fOt 1111 ~ rnonllt· ~-·~.~"I WentToKeep My Batty" ( 1878) Metlel Hemingway. 8uH n Anepecll. A pregnant 15- YMf-Old •blnOOned tty ,,., boyfriend Oeddll 10 ,..,.. lhl baby Ind ... It lier-..... l:IO ••• ~ ''Then Came Ironton" (1 ... ) Mtc:Noll Pett!a. Bonnie ledella. A runewey bride meell -tller _.._cher •I 8lg l4K wtllrl lie em-on 1111 motofqlele . (1)"~"(11111) Jodie Foewr. De"'° N'- A \omtlcly hft'I IN 1t1Mt9 "' Loe AngalM lnMrttt • 11...0 ltltllll-.t•. ·o· 4lOO. "MlhogMy'' (1875) ~ Rola. AllltMlny ...,_ klnL A young tl6loll -· Ill\ r1-from tlle defthl of IN gMtto to lntltMllonll ..,,,. -• IMHon .... llld model. 'PG' ._CC) "TUOk Evwllltlng" Fred Keller, JoHph ~ A young glr1 l'llMC• Ill\ lmmertal fttnlly k,_,•tMTudl1. NO CJ) '"TM Gt.-. llntlnl" ( 1971) Aottett Duvall, lllytN Dinner. A r~ ll'ICI~ Mlflne Corpe oflloer flOlll domettlc bll· ti. "'*' lie tnae to lnlPC* hll mlllary Idelle on hie tamlly. 'PO' JOHN DARLING by Armstrong It Batluk FACE l'T "TM& STUPI05 HA'ila "TO CAVE IN TO OUR c:>EMANC>S! _.._r the tube heard all over • voice Joel Cory's 81 8.BA&ON COHEN ._ ..... ,,_...., CIUCAGO -Joel COC')' LI • muter of d111wa•. Some daya be'• 1 wbtte-balred mancbkin cavort· lnl around a cereal bowl. Other d111, be'• an amoroua lee cube or an eater ldtcbtn helper bid· lnl on a cabinet •btlf. Cory hu no trouble cbanlinl ldenUUt1 - aometlmea be makea tbe awtteb u often u Hven tlmea a day -becaUH it'• part ot b1I Job u a televlllon and radio voice, 1 man who'• beard but HldomlMll. Hll voice la 1andwlcbed betWffD Saturday mornlnl cartoon ~ama, afterDooD aoap operu ud evealal radio 1bowl. For tefevtaloa vtewen Corr La tbe voice of Pop for Rlct Xrllpt•, tbe ~ band for Ham· burier Htl99r1 ~· aun for Ralaln Bran, and ertcttt for cnca1, ct•antt. JlllMn. 1• tbe p11t decade, be baa worked on tbou .... °' 1 ....... commerclall, dlllUiliDI MmMlf u a warbllDa apaoe crutme, • 'fnmai CapcM-IOUndlDI .a.plaut, a dnwlial C01rPMe, a blp polar bear, ~ mllb' paoapeetar, a 1"0 Med of lettuee Ind a claaU., IPGt • .,._., o ... Cll•f•• "''* ........ -.-«·Wr •· ,., .... , be Rid. .. It'• 1118 It•• C I Ill' m wueldll( JOUrM1f ..• Yea U.. to ---"'8t II ~ ... eor,, ... &lap ... ·-·-· too. cu.au .. olud• f'UDtatw VltamlDI. Kral!,, McO.lldl, Kl ..... , Olear -::er~!. ~bM DUbba Ba-Me Chm, Oldlmollli. uw lallcl AMl·Pwlp&rat· TM1 a.p ldm bua1-UCI ..U off. e.11~9'i.twtiieauUdlall ......, ............................. .... •t4!0' a,.,. l'tat W hr a former dee ltoult ,..,.., I calculator 1ale1man and computer proarammer who never found 1uccea1 ln tbOle careen . When be worked with computers, be said, t.be pro1rama he dealped were lnefftclent u "walk· lnl around the block to 1et to the bouae next door .. . . . About 10 )'Hrt a10, bl decided to make a full· Ume career u a volce-over announcer. "I quit all of my atratibt Jobi,•• be aald, '' ... actuall1 I wu asked to leave." Now "He'• realty ln demand," aald Oeor1• ...... ualatant creattn director for tbt Leo Burn.ct advtrtlllnl a,.aey. "Hla tnatlnct aDCl bll Umtn1 and bll dell very an top.notch." Cory "LI one ot the belt ti Dot the belt " added LarryCoben,1~writeratNMClbam,Harper• St"n, Inc. "Ht 1 relenU-lD bll Harcb f« perfeetion and f« tb• rllbt ..... ,, Md, Cobia aald, Cory's ftl'UUll\1 La almOlt wit.bout boundl. "I've never quite met anyone Uk~ him ln that recard . He'• amulq." DelJ;Jtte the pralle, Cory .. pant.d about bl.a akllla. "l don't like to H)' I can do anyUilnl." be aald. "Bu\ I tb1nk of lt Ct.be work) u at1l• and in term• ot atylee I can do a11DCJ9\ everythlnc. • • 1 Ad .,encl• often don't have a clear ldta Of t.be votce tbey want, be aald. "You'll co ln an4 nobody will have a clue," be aaJd. "I &et • lot of tbot• 'Save me11. • " "U you can't be aomet.blna otbel' tban what'• tn t.be a.cript, 1ou're not dolnc 1our Job/' car, aald. "You've tot to briD1 IOIDet.blna to tbe aerlpt . . . tbat'a tomebow anaw tban the awn of • puu." TblN an required lldlll, too, be aaW. "You bave to bl a Sood..._ ... he aaAd. "llon l~~ ii to baH a food Mt ot 1an. It'• mon llDPartu* ~·~ bear than ~ 11H. Aed um1a1•~·1' Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 Grand Jury openness example to emulate No one, it seems. shows particular fondness for the Orange County Grand Jury -ex- cept, perhaps, its former mem· bers. The 1980--81 jury, which left office last week following one ye11r in office, was no exception. It took on many touchy issues expansion of John Wayne Airport, conditions at Orange County Jail, efficacy of the coun· ty Environmental Management Agency, bilingual teaching in the Garden Grove Unified School District to name just a few - that brought verbal broadsides from many officials. The criticism, of course, is predictable. The grand jury is the watchdog of government. Watchdogs bark and bite. thus generating anger. The grand jury is not paid, nor directed to sit idly by because of the negative response it may receive from of· ficialdom. The point-counterpoint that chara'cterized the last jury's term aside, it did make one ex- tremely valuable contribution. The jury made a conc.,rted - and successful -attempt to lift the veil of secrecy that tradi- tionally has surrounded jury ac- tivities. For example, the Jury, in ad vance, announced when it would release reports. And it disclosed the nature of those reports - none of the usual surprises that previous juries sprung. Beyond that, this jury held press conlerences following each report's re lease so news re· porters could probe, if only slightly, the jury's reasoning behind its recommendations. (The jury did not, nor can it legally, disclose any information surrounding criminal proceed· ings in cases involving potential indictments.> The jury's attempt to open itself up to public scrutnity, however little, is a step that we hope the newly sworn panel, and those in the future. will follow. Plan unacceptable And, on the subject of the grand jury, the final report of its term cannot be overlooked. The 19-member panel con- cluded there's not enough long. range planning being done by the county Environmental Manage- ment Agency. In strong language, the jury declared the EMA 's planning de- partment "is preoccupied with processing development plans. en· vironmental documents, amend· ments to the General Plan, and Boa rd (of Supervisors) -approved projects. At best only short-term. fragmented planning is involved. Any long-term, comprehensive, countywide planning is purely in· cidentaJ." It was a pretty heavy state· ment, and one that probably hurt EMA Director Murray Storm, who has been trying for the past several months to reorganize the agency to make it more effective in both short-term and long. range planning. Storm has been carrying out his mission at the board's re- quest ; its position is clear. It wants processing of all residential development speeded up as part of an overall effort to reduce the cost of housing. The type of planning the jury outlined may be desirable. Un· fortunately, if it were to be achieved county government es- sentially would be forced to stop all development for years until plans for s uch things as transportation. housing, water, energy, air quality and open space were completed. That's simply not acceptable. Growth demands placed on the county must be met. And given the increasing pressure for truly affordable housing, further de· lays to the development process can't be tolerated. K~ep appointed rounds Keeping the mailman from his appointed rounds doesn't re· quire much coping with sleet and s now -at least not in sum- mertime -but he (or she) is ha ving a share of trouble. The dog problem, of course, is a part of the daily life of the men and women in blue who tote the mail to our houses. And while few can claim they've never been bitten, the U.S. Postal Service this summer has issued several warnings that delivery may be withheld if a nipping dog is roam- ing the premises. Now some cities are trying to tell the mailman his appointed rounds have to be made with square corners. These communities have passed ordinances forbidding the carriers from cutting across lawns to reach the mailbox. They should stay on the sidewalks and off the grass, goes the content.ion. Nonsense, retorts the Postal Service. The carrier gains as • much as 51 minutes by taking the shortest route and saves up to $100 million a year in reduced ef- ficiency. The Postal Service has gone to f ederaJ court to fight the or· dinances. The service slyly sug- gests that it isn't the homeowner who's pushing the issue, but let- ter carriers who fear cutting de· livery time could reduce total employment. So what looks like a simple case of fretting over bent blades of grass may be more or a labor· management issue than a grumbler from some gr een· thumbers here and there. We say the carriers should ~lk where they please and feel free to kick hell out of any dogs that snap in their direction. Maybe that will save enough money to keep the 20-cent stamp we're about to get from going to a quarter before this time next year. Opintons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authOf"S and artists. Reader comment rs invit- ed Address The Daily Piiot. P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. L.M. Boyd / Tobacco export That Paraguay is the largest im· i;orter of cigarettes made in the Unit· ed States was recently reported. Wby has now been explained. Paraguay has taken the first-place apot away from Hong Kong as the d1arette- 1mu11lin1 capital of the world. The Paraguayan 1ov~mment coUecta a sma11 import tax to brln1 the cost there to about 27 centa a pack. The importers then feed the c11arettes to bl a ck· market merchandlsera worldwide. That word "frump" in brld•e 11 short for "trh1mph." Teddy ~elt'• Rouch Riden all wor~ tallormade Brooa Brot.ben auita. Should 11y uniforms. Teddy ORANl'7E COAST Datly Pilat paid for them out of bis own pocket. Q. What town does TV and film star Angie Dickinson call home? A. Can only report she originally came from KuJm, N.O., population 625. The suiclde rate amon1 compubive 1amblers is 1.2.5 percent hi.&her than it Is for the general population. It's dllticuJt to believe the cont.en· Uon that too.era don'\ take drugs, but auch is the claim or a priest who made a atucJy ol tbe milter In the Btdlord Stuyveaant 1rea of New York. No drut uaer lkereabouU, uid be, ls without lrienda who Ukewilt use drup. Thomas P. Hatey Publl5Mr Thomas k .. vu Editor B•rNra Krelblcll EdJtorlal Pag• Editor 0 0 a 1 3 .. - I ,,...-. ''DO ~00 ~~~ ~ SiUD'l' Tut~ SOH1MG mr Nlt-i: M Of TEN SOCJAL s:l~NTISTS m. DISPENSABL~? Inflation decline on Few things in this world come in on schedule, but the dropping off or infla· tion turns out to be one or them. Professor Milton Friedman and his fellow monetarists have always told us that it you start cutting the growth in the money supply, 18 to 24 months later it wiU show up in a slackening rise in prices. That's what's happening. In October 1979, the Federal Reserve Board did a U·turn on its money print· ing policies and here we are, 20 months later, experiencing a definite slacking off in the rate or price rises. President Reagan will get the credit although it was under President Carter that the policy was begun. however reluctantly. Money is less likely to get the credit ror tlus happy 1urn or events than the now famous oil glut. But inflation is lhe average level of all prices. not just or one commodity like 011. Where there is no meas urable inflation, prices still aren't static. The price or carrots may go up, but then the price or something else will drop so that the price level of everything remains flat IN THE PAST FEW YEARS we've talked ourselves into a form or oil hysteria. All news concerned with money, good or bad, has been attributed to some upsy·downsy in the oil business. It was not that long ago that the schools taught that the demand for oil was. in the economists· lingo, "inelastic," that is, we couldn't get by with using less or it or substituting other fuels. Now we know that is so much bun· combe. Usage has dropped, putting downward pressure on the price The unbeatable . implacable, mtractable OPEC 011 cartel has turned out to be like many a c artel before 1t, a mechanism that works well enoul(h in a rising market but which 1s apt to rail to ,.....,_ VON HOHMAN pieces in a declining one as the mt•m bers of the pr ice ring start r1ght1nl<( about who is to ~t>l what share. of a s hrinkmg pie Even if we can come to accept that the price of oil has more to do w1lh sup ply and demand than with 1nrlat1on there are other obsessions to be dis posed o r The m ost persistent a nd broadly held is that inrtat1on 1s the cause of all economic and most -.octal maladl"S A HAPPY IF ERRONEOllS cxpecta lion e xists everywhere that as infl ation abates interest rates will drop. un employment will vaporize, pror1ts ~•II grow and a big lusc1ou$ness will en velop us in a new prospN1I) lJon l bank on it Our own economic history s hould teach us lhal lack of inrlation and1or schedul low interest rates doesn't ne<·essnnl> betoken happy days Bet ween 19'~1 :u1c1 1934 prices dropped by a third or r~on Interest rntes wen: under 1 perc1·11t .1MI the country was flat broke and 1111\ 11f work Throughout much or America11 h1 tory mrl<tl1on h<ts been assodatc11 w11t. prosperity and rlat prices or dPd111t11~ Qnes with hard times WerP our grandparents wrong or are we? Neither Good limes can occur durmp, a period of ris ing. falling or rtat 1>• 11·1 It dept>nds on wh<tt else is gomp 11 -.i the same time. for inflation or d• rt.it 111t are the consequences or RU\• 11111 •• 11l policies CONTROL THE MONEY sup11l v, :h th<' I ast admimst1 Jt1on begar1 t11 1 • 111 t too late. alas. and as this on1• h a-. c• 11 linued to do. and )'OU "ill see 11' •• 'J increasingly abate More than th··t "11 can't count on There are some things prudPnt pP11p1 Can do in the ra('(' or a flallelltnl I 1,t , inflation Get out of collectiblt-c; 1 tho~e other hedge~ people \\Cr' r ., 1 rng lo to save the value of theu 111on•·\ Sell the Oriental rugs. the , nt1\i'1• Coca C'ola tray)', und the gold 1 111~ G l't out nf thE.' habit of thmk 11 • s mart to borrow money and bu\ o • and, above all take all those 11< J " how lo protect yourself against 11 (I •' ;md µut them in the attic until th r ,.,..l time, two years from now or to. \>tw, the government will weaken anti w1•'ll have mflat1on again Time to stop fooling nature's clock They're talkin g about extending daylight saving time again. Sen. George Mitchell of Maine has proposed that 1t• should nm from the first Sunday in March to the first Sunday in November. In other words, we'd only have standard time for about four months of the year The people who want more daylight saving time talk about how many bar· rels or oil it would save. "Barrels of oil saved" is the new cliche in measure· ment. It's become as familiar as com· paring the size or something to a fool· ball field. I'm a football fan but that never means much to me and neither does "127 million barrels of oil." I can't vis· ualiie eithe r. I do know, though, that I have a big objection to extending daylight saving time. My objection is the size of three fool· ballfields I LIKE DAYTIME better than ni1ht· time and light better than dark, but I also like the natural and relentless rhythm of night and day. When it begins to gel dark I'm usually ready for it to get dark and ready to do the things I do at night. There are many pleasures to be enjoyed in darkness; not everything dark need be associated with terror and evil. . In many parts of the country, the longest day Of the year in June, IS already twice as long as the shortest day. Maine gets the short end or the stick as far as daylight goes in winter. but Mame has its own virtues and it's never going to be Florida no matter what Sen. Mitchell does Lo the clock Do you th.ink that at some tJme m the -AND-Y -ROO-Nl-Y -~ future someone will propose a system for lighting the whole earth 24 hours a day so that there wilJ never be any night? I s uppose they will. They'll fix mirrors m orbit that reflect the hght or the sun to the dark side or the earth There'll be no hiding place WE'VE DEflED and triumphed over 8 lot of the laws or nature : we fly though we weren't meant to fly: we move on the ground 20 times as fast as we could ever have moved on our two legs because we invented the wheel, and we have light when the sun is on the other side of the earth because Thomas Edison invented the electric bght bulb And yet. in s pite or all these tech nolog1c.iltnumphl> \\e l>t1lhet} 11111• h1 •· JO) things the ~av the~ "er e t>Pr .. ri· w1 started rooting Jround "'1th them \, • lik1 naturC' I li ved on a lake in s ummerc; wl11·11 ' was a child and I loved to l "\k~' Liu canoe o ut at night and paddle siknU~ and alone in the pitch darkness hc;t •ni 1~ to the sounds or night that I n ultfo · always identify. I liked looking n1 t A the darkness toward the spots of light and li!l! in the cottages along the shon~ 1 thought about things in that darkness that I didn't think about any other time I can step out on the back lawn of m house now and recall a little or that fci! ing, but it isn't the same because tht glow from a nearby s treetlight ca~l~ my shadow on lhe ground behind mt ar rl I'm not qwte alone WE DIDN'T GET electricity in that cottage until 1930 when I was 10 It n1-; a great day when the cottage was "1ri>d. but I'm glad I understand what 1t w"\s like not lo have it. When I nip a switch now and get light, 1t gives me just 3 lit· tie more pleasure than it wouJd 1f t hud never lived in a house that was ht by candle and kerosene lamps It's hard to know where to stop with inventions designed to frustrate the natural laws of light and dark. hul I think we've gone far enough fr.ohng around with the clock Who can scale Jnusical instnnnent test? Musical instruments are u old u any recorded civilization, though they have changed their names, shapes and sometimes their tones over the cen· turies. Here is a quiz to teat your knowledae of these melodious artifacts. One-third right quallfiea you as a con· certmeister, iC not a conduct.or. 1. What instrument bas a (allboard, a IYDNIY HARRIS name-board. a pin block, and a "cro~ belly''? 2. Wb1t populu lnatrumeot waa namtd aft• ita lnventor, and patented by blmT a. Since the .win dld not develop., UI the MSddle Aces, Nero could oot have been flddl1na wtlll• Rome bumed; what tmtnammt wa1 be playln1 to accom· paD,J the Oamt11? 4. UnU.l u late u the llaGI, wbat ID· ltnlmenl wu wt.del)' known u a "atr1w llddJe." beume Ill'•• WU wed lD lta comsattlon1 5. Wbat illltnament bu .._ made ol bone. bu:lboo, dr19d fruit abella, wood, ......... .-. clay. ivory and crystal. in different times and cuJtures? 6. Whal instrument is named after a noted conductor and composer? 7. Because of its many high in· harmonic overtones, which instrument can be heard above a full orchestra? 8. What instrument was devised by a famous American, '4'as co~posed for by Mosart, and could not be ~layed without water? 9. What. ln.strument bas "bellows," • "boot," a "flute," and a "beard"?. 10. What lnstrumeot is mll'named around the world, both as to its orilin and its type? 11. Whal instrument lncludea tM followtn. lfl)e$: Apollo, b-.io de uni, bltHX, ffa•allan, and charanto? 12. In former t.lmes, whit were "clap· pera" UMd COi' In Euro-pe, out.Ide QI keeptna tempo iJt orche1tru? 13. What instrument bu a belly, rtbe, a badl, a waist, and a lailpiece? l4. What folk lnltnlmtnt wu fint known u an ''or1anb trum" a_nd or11ln11ly bad to be played b)' two perf orm«t pl1cln1 It on their lapt, ~elute It wu u 1001 u lb6 averace penonf 15. What ta lbe onli ift1tn1ment that waa a.lkntNd to be1D1a,ed bJ females In the Near and Mid.di• !!ut? . .. ANSWERS: 1. The piano; 2. The saxophone: 3. The lyre: 4. The xylophone; 5. Tbe fJute ; 6 . The Sousaphone: 7. Tbt! triangle; 8. The glass harmonica, by Benjamin Franklin ; 9. The oraan; 10. The English horn, which is neither EneUsh nor a born, -but a lower-pitched oboe of probable French or ltolian origin; 11. The guJtar; 12. Lepers were obliged to strike these slicks together to warn others of lhelr approach: 13. The violin family; 14. The hurd)'gurdy; lS. The tambourine 1t111Y.cn Do we owe tba.nlLI for ea mosquito bite to the super envlronm•tallsts who uved tbe mosqu.ho bl"Mell.ng swamps by cal.l.lng them ttllandl' O.J . . oi-,o.~....,....-.....,.,_-.~ ...... ,. llttUUfilytefl«IUll ......... -.-......... ,....,_ ... ...... ,. 0119111, 0., 0.11, .. ..... ·- ··~ ... ..... I, :~ \ .. . . . . I' . l . -... .. .. .. -..:: . - DEAR PAT DUNN: My soo ii workina for me this summer. Do I have to withhold taxes from his wages the same as any other employee? K.W., Colta Mesa Tbe latenlal Reveaae Service 11ya Utat 11 a aoa or da•lhter uder Z1 la employed bJ' a pareat, lllt' or Iler ••let are Hbject to federal taco.me tu wlt1llaoldla1 Ute 1ame aa otbv employen. However, Im or Iler wasea are e:semp& from Social Setari&y and federal uemploymeat tu. Credit, depreciation OK DEAR PAT DUNN: I have a small busi· ness and just bought a new piece of machinery which I plan to depreciate. I was told 1 also could take investment credit. Can I take advantage of both of these ln the same tax year? H.R .• Costa Mesa Yes. The Internal lleveaue Service HY• depredatloa ls a dedadloa, while laves&mea& credJ& la a credit directly agalut you tu llabWty. Both are allowed for Ute fin& tax year yoa pJace q•allfled property la service ln your trade or baalaeaa. Groupa,' tax statw _told DEAR PAT DUNN : I am planning to make a contribution to a charitable organiza- tion in Orange County. I've been told that my donation will be tax deductible, but I'd like to check on this to be sure. How can I do this? L.P .. Huntington Beach The laternal Reveaae Service Pabllca· tlon 78, .. Oama.Jative List of Orgallhatlona," contains tbe names of all groups whlcb have applied for and received tu exempt statue. Ti.e book is publlsbed anaually, and clhnulatlve quarterly supplement. keep It currea&. Pbc>M any IRS office &o verify the status ol the orgaalzatlon ln question. Food loses texture DEAR PAT DUNN: Many frozen food packages carry a warning such as "If thawed. cook immediately!" Or. there are large letters stating, "Do Not Refreeze ... Do you know the reason for these warnings? J .s .. Costa Mesa Tbe Cooperative Estension's home ad· viser's office says packaged, frosen food loses lu "tenure" and just isn't as tasty ti It's cooked several hours after belnl defrost· ed. Refreesiag doHJt't restore IMt quality. This ls parUca.Jarly true of vegetables whlcb tend &o get soggy once tbey're defroeted. • "Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat ""l Dunn Pat Will cul red Jape. getting "' IM onS"Wer.'l and action you need to • .'lolve 1nequd~s in gove~ment and butmeu. Mail your q~stioru to Pat Dunn, At Your Sn-vice. Orange Coast Daily Pilot . P.O Bor 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As many Letters as pou1b/.e will be answered. but phoned inquiriea or /.etten not including IM reader's JuU name. address and bu.rine.t1 hours· ~ number cannot be considered Th&i column o~ars daily ez. cep! Sunday.'!." 9hlth.i- .PLUMBING .• HEATING SERVICE & REPAIR MODERNIZATION ~T:!',,~:;g:.. NEW CONSTRUCTION RESIDENTIAL-COMMERCIAL Complete iine of American Kohler Standard Fixtures. M oen & Price Phister Kitchen & Lavatory Faucets. Water Heaters. Disposals. Oo-lt-Yourse~f Supplies. -State Contractors Uoenae #241927 - ~ ~ OPIM SA1UIDAYS e 646-6154 ~ ..._646_~_225 __ . - CVieM On ®' (~. <ZIJental Healtl{~~\ ;·~ Br Ol!llALD WINKLER, D.D.8. ~J PORCELAIN COATED GOLD JROWN. If you bave a ~blpptd, dJlcolered, broken, poor'lf lbaped or badly decayed WOtb -.. lone u tbe root remam -u.n la aUU lilope b ..-ortn1 iu aatural appear~ and function. AD artUlclal crown._ U.. job. Tit• weneer crown aduall1 comprises a Jaekel of porcelain fUMd to IDld. cemented In potltlon &o Nplact lb• eftlmtl of tbe tooth. It ,... °"" tM ....... tooth aurface which la 1 prtp1red In •uch a way at to provide a stroo1 bue fo.-die crown. Tht coemetic rHull of this procedure la • beauUfW. Tooth eta• l• carefuJl7 anel71 .. and tbe 1laade deternllMCI by taldlll l•lo account 1uci con1ld1ratton1 aa ataw. 1roon1, enamel lhlckneu, complexion and •••· C.rdully m1tched Vtnftf' crowna meny UmM ~mble lbe adjolnlnJ natural teeth ~IGMly that It la pc19alble to root even • dental h>'lltnllt who i. cleaalna tbe teeth. Laboratory t.ebnlqum now enable us to do marveloua thln11 with porcelain tbat were unthinkable not too IUGJ,..... qo. Further, _porcelain 11 color stable. It will not cb1n1• oo&or wtt.h Umt. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuead1y, July 7, 1981 ' u - Autry'• 'Sunshine'' selected NEW ORLEANS CAP> -Aaaembltn1 the Smitbaonlan Inatltu· t.100'1 eiibt·record coun· try mutic collection poted Biil Malone a prob- lem -wboae version of "You Are My Sunshine" to lnclude. "I did a lot of t.b.inkinl about that ,'' said Malone. ''Jimmie Davis rode that sonc to the 1overnor's mansion, but ~ it was Gene Autry'a '---.11111t.-----..--J version that popularized it throughout the na-V~RSION CHOSEN tion." Sanger Aut'll In the end, Malone de· Report stirs nostalgia Agency's 40-year-old document covered farm details WASHINGTON (AP} -A dua· rates have resulted in a aubetan· the United States," the report ty copy ol a 1overnment report ll1l rise In consumer buyln1 said. ilsued .c> years a10 may oiler power," the report sald. A.a the United State•' defenM some feellnp of nostallia for Industries rolled lnto 1ear, the those who remember what lt "This increue will likely be hlaher waees pulled tbouaancla was like prior to America's en· manifested moet in purchase ol and later milllona of workers try lnto World War II. non-durable looda such as food from far1111 and smaU t.owm. The report wu Lssued by the and clot.bing, since the produc· The effect wu beJin.nin1 to be 8 u r e au o t A g r i c u l tu r a 1 lion of durable consumer loodl felt ln the summer of 1941 but Economics. an agency of the is belne limited by tbe needs for bad not yet reached a critical A1riculture Department. It wu national defeme." staae. a 2.f.page leaflet of sorta. printed One example, it noted: The The department's Aaricultural on blue paper. automobile industry aireed to Marketing Service, the report Much of the world had been at produce 20 percent fewer 19'2 said, noted that ''in the put, ... _ of ·-od •· ... __ 1....,1 od I farmers have found it posaible, war since Mm autumn ~. m e'° ....., '" m e a. in the face of reductions in the and tbe United States was send· lng aid to Britain, including "The department bas been supply of farm labor and in· mountains of food commodities. buying large quantities of rood creasing wage rates, to cut pro-producta of the kind needed by duclioo costs by working lc:r:r cided against tbe former governor, who won his theme song a place as one of Louisiana's two state songs, and picked Autry. "Increased employment aria· Great Britain, presumably for hours and by calling upon · in cultural bi st or Y in1 largely from the d.renae and export to that country as well as ti on a 1 members of tbel r classes. said that since ald·to·Britain efforts and for distribution under varloua families" to take over work pre- h e moved lo New widespread increases i.n wage relief and nutrition programs ln viously done by hired labor. Orleans In 1973 he's pret-1----------r------::;:::s::~:;;;;;;;;i-ii;;;:~----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m' Io all, he picked 14.3 songs and tunes by 135 different musicians or groups for ''Claasic Country Music," and wrote a 56-page large- for mat booklet to go along with the record set. The Smithsonian ty much had to rely on his record collection to hear country music. "In the city, you won't really bear too much of any kind of country music. The further you get out of the city, the better the country music becomes." chose Malone, a 46·year-On dean' 8 list old history professor at Tulane Univesrslty, because of bis books about country music. Malone , who sometimes brings in his guitar to illustrate a point Ruth C. Slocum of Costa Mesa bas been placed on the dean's list for the spring semester at Bates College In Lewiston, Maine. '' NO PURCHASE NECESSARY l. Hand-prtnt your name. address. zip code and phone number on the ottidal entry blank or on a plain 3" x 5" piece ot paper. and check one of the five prizes you wish to win. IJ:§' No mechanically reproduced entries are eligible to wln. · 2 . .Enb18I must be depocited in • the entry box at a FOdtlc18Jephone PhoneC.enter Store. or mailed to: "'lbe F.asy Ufe~ P.O. Box58. New\t>rk. NY 10046. Malled enll'1esmust haYe the l'Almber Of the delired pdze prtnled dearty on the OUllkie a the e11Y'81ope. • 3. Enter fOl' arr{ of lhe ave prtzes as often as you wtsh. Only one entry P9f' .tore vtslt or mailed envelope II allowed.All en&rtes must be reeeNed by "1Jy 26. 198 l. 4. WINNERS OF P.ACH OF raE FIVE PRI7.ES Wlil BE DRAWN AT RANDOM IN SEPARATE DRAWINGS 11f AN INDEPENDENT JUDGING ORGANlZATION WHOSE OEClSlONSAAE FINAL.. ODDS OF WINNING ANAllllM NIL.La Anal'l9Un Kiili :=~=,_ ~ tttaWICIQ9 ICMlt~Hwy IUINAMIK ~~Madi ... en 111e Ma111 ~ ~"-'MS ...... , ,, THE VOYAGERS CLUB AND CARNIVAL CRUISE LJNES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NI GHT THURSDAY JULY 9, 1981 ·' 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. I AIR PORTER INN, IRVINE Admission Free-Seating Limited Drawing /or FREE CRUISE on "TSS CARNIV ALE" RSVP HARBOR TRAVEL -176-1311 Nl!WPORTER TRAVl!L '44-03IO TRAVEL HORIZONS 712-IOH TRAVEL COUNTRY Of IRYINI 111·2121 Your PhoneCenter Store helps make life easier with one of these great prizes~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • r------------1 "The Easy Life" 1 SWeepsfakes O\oose one of these prizes and deposit at your PhoneCenter Store. OlECX ONE ONil'. 0 1 Professional lawn and garden • care tor 3 months. 0 2 Protesstonal house cleaninQ tor • lyear 0 3 A professionally catered party • lor 20 people. 0 4 Sl.ca>worthofdinnersatyour • tavortte restaurant. 0 5 AnAppte•tJplus • personal computer. cx.mA fllllA llYM O:lllcl .....,Wlag!it -'CW"*I MIOrV\llaglt la&...,~ 2S) OQllli ,.,... ~YllJO IAlrANAIDI ~Plalo S.Anatlllm =ngC... ~--AllC:la l'tlWV mMU ---~ bwn•Qounry I lmebl:lll\~ ~c.. .,,.. m~Mclln._. 8'HDN.I '211,.,....~ re! ""'"'"······. ··'" 1111111111. ••••••••• 111 ltlllllllf ••••••.•.• 111 ARE DEPENDENT UPON THE NUMBER OF ENTRIES RECEIVED FOR EACH PRIZE. ONIY ONE PRIZE PER HOUSEHOLD. CASH VALUES MAY BE SUBSITIUI'ED AT THE DISCRETION OF PACI.AC TELEPHONE.ALL PRIZES (VALUED AT APPROXIMATELY St.ca> EACH) Wiil. BE AWARDED. AND MUST BE TAKEN OR ARRANGEMENTS MADE wmIIN 12 MONTIIS OF NOT1F1CATION ALL TAXES ARE WINNER'S RESPONSlBIUJY s. Sweepstelkes open only to Callfomla and Nevada telidenb. Employeel (and thett famWel) 0( the Bell 9yllem. lts odY9rttltng and promoUon agendelandjudgtng organl.Zatk)nlare not eUgfble. This otter sut>tect to federal. state and local laws. VoJd where prohlbtted by law. 6. FOR A UST Of WINNERS, SEND A STAMPED. SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE 1'0: "£aly We'' Winners. P.O. Box 176. ~'tt>rk. NY 10046. @ ~•t•pfQ• • Pr1-~u.dat appiozimately $lj000 eadl. ...... ...... AM ConrOn CNill 1biwnC.. ~Att:Jlqucn 121S t. 1111•,... 62:11~0. Df ....rMWlllM 0. ~ Oou111Y.llal0 710) Umonll9AYltNll 618 i .8lrOOllhl.irll =~-.. ~ ~ ..... -Qdede ltd.1IMCa . . ' .. > • f .. "·· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/fUHday, July 7, 1981 I I. ¥our f a~orite rr.cipe could J f you like to cook and have a "favorite" recipe, it could be worth a shopping spree at Irvine Ranch Farmer's Market, or you could win one of eight $100 gift certificates at participating merchants. It can all happen in the 1981 Daily Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest, and it could happen to you! Even if you don't win a top prize, your recipe could be published in our "Eater's Digest" special section in the Daily Pilot Aug. 20. Daily Pilot food editor Sandie Joy will supervise a panel of food judges who wi II name the best recipe on the Orange Coast. Winning recipes will be judged on originality, ease of preparation, and of course, taste. So get cooking. Read the rules carefully and send us your recipes as soon as possible. Entries must be postmarked no later than Friday, July 17. Mail your entries to: Daily Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Remember: Entry Deadline i• Friday, July 17. -sponsored by - oroneo/8 $1 00 gift certificates! -BUT HURRY, DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, JULY 17- ENTRY CATEGOBIES= I. Desserts Let's see what you can do with chocolates, getatin, butter, flour, whipped cream and other favorite goodies. 2. Fruits, Vegetables & Salads Including vegetarian dishes. And don't forget the out-of-season treasures in cans and in the frozen food section. 3. Soup8 & Appetizers Meal spreads, zesty Ctips, munchies and any kind of soup, be It the main course or the entree. Take your pick. 4. Main Dishes Whether it be hamburgers or coq au vin, the best chicken salad or roast · duckling, everyone has a favorite recipe for the mainstay of the meal. 5. Chee8e, Emm & Pa&ta Enter yourfa'Vorite cheese dish, snack or salad; or maybe your homemade linguine Is outasight. Or should you enter your seafood quiche? 6. Ethnic Dishe8 From chow mein to enchiladas to baklava maybe your family has a recipe from the old country? 7. Bream & Grains Californians have discovered the fun of making their own wholesome breads and cereals. Or how about that homeblend granola? 8. Microwave Cooking Like to cook but hate to wait? On-the-go Orange Coaters know It' 1 not the time spent In the kitchen, but the taste on the palate. Hurry, pleuel CONTIST BIJLES: 1. List all ingredients in order of use, followed by clear. concise directions and the number of servings. Remember, originality counts. Submit your entry on 8V2 x 11 ·· paper and print clearly. 2. Only one entry per person per category will be ac· cepted. If more than one entry is received for any single category, all entries for that category will be disqualified. Judges reserve the right to properly categorize entries. 3. Recipes must be complete, and may not be changed after submission. Incomplete recipes will be dt. qualified. 4. In the event identical recipes are submitted by two or more contestants, the first received will be the one considered for judging. 5. The contest is open to all residents of Ora~e County, except employees and their immediate families of Orange Coast Publishing Co. 6. Indicate on each recipe in the top left-hand comer. your name. address, telephone, and category en- tered using separate sheets for each recipe. Mail to "Daily Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest," P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626, or bring it to 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN MIDNIGHT. FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1981 . or received at the Pilot office no later than 5 p.m. July 17, 1981 . 7. Entry of a recipe constitutes agreement that it becomes the property of the Dally Pilot. and may be published with acknowledgements (no street ad- dresses or phone numbers will be published) in the Daily Pilot and Coast Life newspapers. 8. Entries will be disqualified if they fail to comply with the contest rules. All judges' decisions are final. All prizes will be awarded. CONTEST ENDS JULY 17, 1981 . 0 ... ... Daily Pilat TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1911 FEATURES 83 MOVIES 84 STOCKS 87 s a J c t a -.. - The wiring of America: Cable television explodes . across the country. . . 85 s a s a 0 Honda fonda new ideas Car company employees offer creative suggestions One worker's bright idea is this prototype car that can park almost anywhere with aid of a fifth wheel lowered from r~ar compartment TOKYO (AP) -The idea wu to stimulate ideas. And it seemed to succeed, even tbouch no one built a better mouse trap. Entries in t.be Honda Motor Co. 's seventh idea contest since 1970 ranged from high tech to high camp. The brainstorm competition with its carnival overtones is aimed at encourag· Ing employee creativity. Moel of the ideas seemed to work. Employee committees screen out ''t.be duds," and approved ideas win company funding and a chance to compete in the Japanese automaker's contest finals. Ideas have to be worka· ble, but not necessarily prac· tical. Some were loony. A motorcyclist improved his bike's raucous horn by adding the rest of the band -including power drums, trumpet and tuba. Another inventor offered a pen· size inflatable umbrella. A gas cartridge in the handle inflates the umbrella and a telescoping stem extends to complete the de- vice. Inventor shows battery-powered hookah, a device that supplies air to diveTS Honda employee shows his gas-inflatable umbrella wUh teleacoping handle Family lives in fear Former playground near home an old chemical dump NITRO, W. Va. P) -The simple joy of watching her garden grow and her four children run carefree through the field behind their home has turned to fear for Joan Loring. She lives on the edge of an old chemical dump, and during a re· cent period of heavy rain, atr~ge llquida began seeping in· to the garden. Now, children no longer romp on the former city landfill behind Mrs. Loring's house. Town workers have removed nrin11 and basketball hoops from the plallJ'OUDd that lits over buried 1arbate and rusted druma of chemical waste1. "They came with a bulldoler, ded a cbalD and jerked It and pulled tt out," said Mn. Lor· lnl'• •1ear~d son, Tracy, ln desert..., bow the •winl Hta were remowed. , Fean by realdentl irew when cren from tbe Enviftlllmeatal ProtedAoa .\pncJ tmd the Welt VlrliDlll Department ol Natural Reeourees arrtved lut montb la maaa ad white rubber eov· tral .. to take aamJ>'es ol U. IClil. 1M Nlultl of the laboratorJ \elta ... ·t be known for MWral weeb. But IOIDe tb1np alread1 .,.. lmown ~ IM ebemlcall oa • Ute ...... al Old Biie, ·= to ...... ...,.,. ............ for ............ il .. fertM 1•••rl•••t of Nataral ··--.... --..,. tM •• • .. probably include aryl phosphate, which can cause chemical burns if the skin is ex· posed directly, and heptane, which can explode lf there is enough of it. But, she says, mes indicate the amount of heptane is minimal. Just the same, there is alarm among residents of this com· munity which derived its name and its beginnings from a plant bullt by the U.S. government to manufacture nitroglycerin for bombs durin1 World War I. Other chemical plants were later built in the area and the aetUement that 1rew up around the orl1lbal exploslvea plant evolved into tbe toWD. "It would make me UMUJ, too, 11 t saw people ln self· contained breathln1 apparatus and white eoveralla in my front yard," 1.W lb. Haye1. But Art Aabley, who b• been mQor ol tbll town of 8,000 peo- ple for lea tbaD a year. think.I tbe wbole tblq bu been blown out of pioportiOD. He a1IO lap there la DO cover.up. R•"'"''' IDcludlal lln. Lor- ina thlnt tbere ii. • 'l wu 1cared becauae tbe c:bUdrm p&a,..S rtabt la It," laid Mn. Lonas, •· Miiie ....... &Maui....., -&di9'I tD lln. a.._' ... otMn ... ~,._,GI~ tiOM .. MID .... rr··~ ......... ... ... ..... , .......... . ..... .. .... .. ~ ~ ....... '° ....... . said Ashley. "I don't want to panic t.be people. The seepage is not new. The elevation of COD· cern is new. It's a Catch 22 situation." "Would you eat those vegetables in there?" Mrs. Lor· Ing asked. "No, I wouldn't," replied the mayor. Mrs. Loring says she became sick while working in her garden. At first she thoupt it ml&bt have been from the fertlli&er, or maybe jUJt the beat. Now she's not so sure. Ms. Hayes says ber depart· ment started work on tbe site more than a year a10 and tut January recommended that it be included in a federal clean·up pro1ram. She HJI nothinl bad been done ln previoua years because tbere bad been no complaints. FllC Chemical Corp., one of several lar1e cbemlcaJ com- 'C>anles ln the area, bad a state permit to dispose of solid cbemlcal wut.ea at tbe alte from llle throuP. 1m. Tbe comp8Q1 HJI Its dlapoeal WU monitored, but that otben allo Uled tbe ..... ,.... neldeatl ·~ lt ii dlfftcult , .... to ........... all al tbe •rWlf'i ....... ....., ...... c~=· lira. Loma .. ,. .... tMJ 1et aome UIWWI IOOll. ........ alli' ..... liiri 18 lliif . , ...... ., ...... ..,.. ~ One offered a prototype car that can be parked just about anywhere. Hla solution to tight squeezes was a fifth wheel lowered from the rear tuuage compartment. The wheel is raised and lowered by a small electric motor and turned on command from the driver's seat. Finally, one man said he had improved the battery-powered hookah, a device t.bat suppll~ air to divers. He said bia noalil).& device had been tested to depthl of more than 45 feet and operat· ed efficiently for three hours before recharging was necessary. According to a Honda spokesman, some ideas end up on the market. Inventors retain patent rights and get royalties JI Honda uses the idea. Motorcycu.t devised "band" of horn, power drums, trumpet, tuba Interstate system nears end (finally) WASHINGTON CAP> -A quarter-century after its crea· lion as the world's largest public works project, the Interstate highway system is inching toward completion, even though it's years behind schedule and billions of dollars above cost. Meanwhile, there are clouda of uncertainty about the govern· meot's ability to maintain t.be system with the money availa· ble. Some of the older sectiooa of the highway grid already need major repairs or reconstruction. Of the 42,500 miles of asphalt and concrete planned to c risscross every state but Alaska, 40,253 -or 94.7 percent -were open to traffic at the start of this year at a cost of $79 billion. Ninety percent of the money came from the federal Highway Trust Fund, t.be rest from the states. The Reagan administration bas set the goal of completing the system by 1990 u one of its top transportation priorltles, and says it will be able to do t.b~ job for $31.5 billion, more t.bao 40 ' percent cheaper than the $53.8 bUllon the <.;arter administraUon bad estimated. Transportation Secretary Drew Lewia says these cuts can be accomplished by cancellna the gape still in the planniq state that are found to be UD· neceuary, limiUn1 the number of traffic lanes conatructed to four ln rural areu and a1x ln urban centen and providiftl OD· ly tboae items '•e11eot1al to emu.re a minimum level of ac· ceptable Mn'ice." Even with the economlea1 completlnl tbe last portiom Cll tbe im..tate 119tem wW em& more than tbe S27·blllloo price ta1 a presidential commillloo placed on a 41,000.mlle system ln 1955. Coat e1tJmat• 1rew to Ml billion ln llGI, tM.5 bilUoll ID .. and • blWoa la ma, ... tbe compl.U.. date lllpped ftnt to 1'71 and neatual11 to lllO. The Pederal Bla.bwaJ Ad· llllDJMradon, wblela °'"'-tbe 1y1tem, sap lb.re are IDU1 reaeam for tbe delQI ad cnw- ' ruaa, wltb lnflatloa a elllef culJHit. ... &be billa•aJ ~ .... ........ tbe eoltl .... bem ....... lt '° tbe tt'OMIDJ • .,..... l•I tile mo•••••l of raw ••tirlall ... ftm.Hd ..... •r· ........ ad ..... ·' 11ecvlaeMeorrtdon....,...... ...... ..................... Socially, the agency concedes that the effects have been more of a mixe d blessing. The superhighways have aided the movement to suburbia at the ex· pense of central cities, caused disruptions to some established urban neighborhoods and taken some scarce open land away from densely populated areas. On the other hand, officiala sa y , Interstat es are de· monstrably safer for motorists than older, narrower roads. It was 25 years ago on Monda,y -June 29, 1956 -that President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Federal Aid Highway Act that brought the Interstate system into being, but the in· spiration for the road network had occurred many yeara before, and Ike had a role in it. After World War I, General of the Armies John J . PershinJ sketched out a proposed network of advanced highways that would be useful for transport.a· lion of military troops and materiel. To test the existing highway system, Pershing assigned then· Lt. Col. Eisenhower to accom· pany an ~-vehicle, 297-man COO· voy on a coast-to-coast journey as bis official observer. But Pershing's plans for a network of inter·clty highways faded in the 19208 as empbuia was placed on building bard· surface farm-to-market roads throughout rural America. But Eisenhower eave new lkil- petut to the lntentate syatemlla 1954. 1111 oriCinaJ Idea ton...- tbe hilbwaya throu1b lonc·tenn boDda fell fiat In Coal,.. M nut ,ear, but by 1• *ti mlalltratton had relJ"OUped • P• ·U·JOU·IO acbem• f ouni stron1 acceptance Capitol HW. Tllat Idea created t Jlltb•ay Trust Fwld, into wb1lb mo ... than $100 billlon ha .,.. fuaaeled from federal ta.. 1aaoline, diesel fuel and tlnl, •· dae levt• Oil new buael, tr= and trueb · and aanual fees on veblele1 witb a ,... wel1ht o1-.ooo pounda or mont .. .. • • I • ' . ' : I • • • t I : I I • . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. July 7, 1981 nationftl Pastime? FIA1TENED ROUNDBAU DEPI'. -Things are really on the toueh these days for those reportorial savants who chronicle the sporting life. The trouble ia -no baseball. The prof essiooals ol the diamonds of America have quit. They're . . ,.... .. 1'!._~J r..\ .TUM MURPHHH ,~~ on strike. No Angels. No Dodgers. No not.bing. Thus the problem for the sporting writers is to find something to write about here in the dead heat of summer. Here on our sterling journal, Los Alamitos racetrack and the Transpac yacht racers have abruptly found themselves drawing heavy amounts of ink. In the desperation of it all, we even ran a fantasy World Series between the Angels and the Dodgers. IF YOU TIDNK that's dipping down into it, the Long Beach paper only yesterday gave its screaming sports bannerline to the fishing person who pulled in the first marlin of the year. If the Transpac yacht racers should join the Angels and the Dodgers on walkout, we may have to start running fantasy yacht races. Maybe we could come up with a match boat race between John Paul Jones and Admiral "Bull" Halsey. On the other hand, we could revert to Great Moments in Sports. Maybe something like this: "HERE WE ARE, ladies and gentlemen, at the 1964 Nassau Speed Week where we're lined up ready for the Grand Prix for Volkswagens. "Look over there folks , right together are racer Dan Gurney, sometimes of Corona del Mar, and famed A. J. Foyt, always of Texas. Gurney is hanging on Foyt's bumper like they're two Bugs in a pod! "But wait! Gurney is pulling out now! He's passing Foyt with just the quarter-mile to go! Gurney takes the checkered flag for victory! ..BE'ITER BOLD everything, folks . Somebody has filed a formal protest against Dan Gurney. They're inspecting bis V-Dub even now. "We've just gotten the word. Gurney is disqualified for entering a Calif omia hot rod instead of a regulation "With ba.seball on &trike, Mabel, maybe our nrf- lng conte&t will make the !pOrling poge1 ... " Volkswagen. "And so the official winner is -A. J . Foyt!" You are left to wonder how Gurney and Foyt eventuaJly split the $1,000 -if they did. This sporting re-creation, whether you believe it or not, is brought to you directly from the pages of a tome called ''The People's Almanac," by David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace. Surely its accuracy could never be ques· tioned. WHY, THIS recreation is so marvelous that I think I'll clip it and try to peddle it to our sporting editor. Who knows? If the baseball strike keeps going, he might actually beg me for it. • Designed, Finished lr'stalled e c a a a a a a a a 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE I . ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841or548-1717 .· HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 "Something must be up folks, because Gurney and Foyt have been whispering to each other all week now. f; . "Everybody's ready. The starting line has gone Buggy. They're off! "Wait a minute folks . . . what's this? Gurney is tailgating Foyt's Bug. Why, he's actually PUSJUNG it! "JUST LOOK AT THAT -Gurney pushed Foyt for seven laps now in this 100-mile speed contest and they've passed every Bug in the field . It's amaz· ing! . "They've only got a quarter-mile to go now, folks and Corona del Mar's ~ew faces join Nalley panels . I Many new faces are joining a handful of reap- pointed participants on Fountain Valley's advisory •-<:ommissions and committees. • The City Council recently made its advisory .. appointments for 2-year-terms that began J'!\f 1. The council appointed Glenn Collins, Rod .Hosilyk and Philip Mignanelli to three Planning ·Commission vacancies. ' Collins, 40, is an 11-year Fountain Valley resi· dent employed by Southern California Edi50n. A 6-year Fountain Valley resident, Hosilyk, 41, .is president of the Rosso Corp. of Irvine. Mignanelli, 52, a 10-year resident, ls an elec· lronics distributor. He just concluded one year as , a Planning Commission alternate. His wife, Betty Mignanelli, is president of the Fountain Valley • School District board of trustees. The three new commissioners will replace Frank Bryant, Ed Ruzak and Ernie Vasquez. Only Bryant did not seek reappointment. Appointed alternate planning commissioner ·~was Leonard Santoro, 38, a salesman who current· ly is president of the Greenbrook Homeowners' As· socialion. He will vote on planning decisions whenever a regular commissioner is absent. Three people were named to the Parks and Recreation Commission. Martha Proffitt, 38, was reappointed to the ad· vlsory bocly. She is vice president of Association Administrator$ and Consultants, Inc., of Irvine. Also named u a new parks commissioner was • George Paul Olsen, 37, a financial planner with Creative Financial Solutlon4, bued in Irvine. The third parks commission appointment was Ruth A. Rosewit.z, 46, an instructor at Lona • Beach Community College. Appointed to the city's Traffic Committee ere John W. Briscoe 111, Donald Chaney and Car· roll H . ''Bud" Lancaster. Three people were reappointed to the city's Housinl and Community Development Advisory Board: James Dick, Sophie Young and Kasel Courrqes. ' New appointment.a to thls board were Karlt Gardner, Karen Holliday, James HugheU, Dennb elly, and Karen Polak. ~Thief back at CM .scene of crime The su.n's rising, and as it rise so doe ~ the demand for electricity. A s the da y gro\vs h otter, air conditioners and other appliances click on in homes, stores and factories. The electric load soars ... far beyond normal demand. You can help lighten this load-and delay building expensive n.e \v generating facilitie ~ -by clicking off appliances during ~fternoons, \vhen demand peaks . Please. Give y:our appliances the afternoon off~·cuck'.' {'{ . '\ tftJ 1~ .. Makes you want to bite Q: la there an.y 1c1eotlftc theory to explaiD wby the summer beat It called "dol day1''! - LES HAIUSON, TRENTON, N.J . A: TIM ac~ ....... fer Rt1a a lllellel 1oee back &o dM ucleet ao .... Tiley referred • U.e MUeR ...,.... flll U.. , .. mer (J.ay I &e A•I· 11) H "Cuk111AN9 Blea" -Day1 el &a.. Def. O.rt.q &a.la perled &.llley Mlleftd U.at Slrtu Ma· 'GLAD YOU ASKED THAT ' Jor <Ute brtlM Doi Star) added IU Ilea& &o &lie aeore...., am•a maJW11 peGf!Ae, •• well u do11, lrrttable ~ &o bite OM uollller. I& n&. la&o U.e aame cate1ory H U.e aeu.able espreuloll "bl&lal eoid ... Q: What would be a literary aaent'a dream of a book he'd like to agent, almost iuarantee· ing a best seller, a movie and a publicity bonanza? -MRS. M. FRIEDMAN, CORAL GABLES, FLA. A: Oar eWce wolllda't be • dream. It •Mid be • alllltman evea for • wb like 111pef·a1nt, Swlfty Luar. I& woeld llan Baal·Sadr, clepoeed prealdmt ol lraa (II Jte•a atW alln) aM Ma bearded bou, Ayatolla IUiometaJ (U Ile la adll alive) eollaboraU.1 • U.. IMlde story of U.at blood·ud-oU·aodee coutry from tile day U.e 1laab llad &o nee to tlae day U.e Amertcu lao1ta1ea wen released. ::Summer at home perilous (()pm ldter to child of parent• who 1001k outlide the hcrme.) Dear Child-Person : Just because your mother and father are not with you this summer to nag you to death, take away privileges and threat.en you with violence, you are probably lb.inking they do not love you. This is simply not true. They worry about you all the time during the day when they are gone because you are in an ~ 1111111111:•!~-- u.nfamillar world with decisions you may be ma.kin& for the flnt time by yourself. Being a child at home alone in the summer is a high-risk profession. This is not meant to frighten you, but these are just some of the daneers that may threaten you. Freezer burns: These are white patches of frost that appear on the skin due to standing in front of an open refrigerator au day while you check the content! to make sure it containa the sam e food as when you checked it 15 minutes earlier. Drowning by over-sudsing: A child fed in- travenously by television soaps for nine hours wlU eventually fall into a coma. In the final stages, you '#ill not hear the phone ring, feel water from the 1arden hose around your feet, or realize you are •till in your pajamas from the first of June. The Cain and Abel syndrome: Becomes more of a reality as the summer goes on. A siblin& who - BANI-SADR ... a be1t-1eller? ladcleetally oar aomlaa&ioa utile lloet Op· tlmlstlc Mu of tlae Year la u luarute a1e•t wbo believes be caa sell • Ufe policy &o Balll- S ad r . Be coald If IUaomel•I •H aamed beneflclary! The wtdding of Prince Char~• and Lad11 Diana Spencer will~ a quiet, private affmr, remtnilcent of 7.Y ASHLEIGH •BRILLIANT IS IT MY TURN YET :0.-tl ,, TO HAVE VOUA ATTENTION? started out lhe summer being "okay" now gel! on your nerves every time he loob at you. You want to plug up lhe openings in his face. Sometimes he looks at you when he isn't even in the house. Strangers in the house: Never open your door to strangers. It's chancy. They know too much and usually talk. That's why it's smart to talk throu&b the door. especially to well-meanin& neighbors who want to know why the dog is yipping and why someone just threw a pan in the front yard with burnt popcorn in it. Creative playmates : Beware of friend.a with ideas of what to do. They will gel you a SWAT team of baby sitters faster than you can say, "We can build the raft, float it down the Oh.lo river and be home before your Mom &eta here." But mostly, look out for mothers . . . especial· ly the one you have called 13 times in one hour to tell her there's nothing to do and when she comes home finds the milk is still out, there's a crack in the sliding door and her pantyhose are flying from the TV antenna. She can hurt you. How to attend a funeral DEAR ANN LANDERS: I recently lost a member of my family in a traffic accident. Until then I never had to attend a funeral of someone ao close, and young, who had died in such a terrible way. I found out that very few people know bow to act at a funeral. After one hour of beinl "comfort· ed," I was more depressed than ever by the thoughtless remarks of so-called friends. Ex- amples. "How many bones were broken? I beard he was crushed." "I don't think be looks like himself at all. I wish they had kept the casket closed." I have written down some dos and don'ta. ----------(~:IJ~-------_lll_lll_l_El_S_. ·------ Please print them in your column. There are so many people who have a lot to learn. DO send • sympathy card. DO 10 to the funeral home if it is poeslble. DO sign the register. It ia the only way the family members will know for certain you were there. When tragedy strikes, their mind.a are a blur. DO ext"8nd your sympathy lo each family member. Simply say\. "I'm so sorry." There ii nothint more to be saia at such • time. DON'T write 1001 letten and slip them in rour sympathy carcl. Wait • few week.I ll you fee the need to say more. DON'T uk pel"IOnal quesUom about the acci- dent or lllnesa. If they feel you should know more, tbey will tell you. DON'T bunt down memben of the family at the funeral home. If they are not in the malD room, tbe7 Pl'Obebly would prefer not to see U)'OM. 1hw you for lettiq me txpr.. myaelf. Somehow JUlt writl.nf Ulla letter bu made me feel better. -GREENSBURG, PA. Deu Frt.d: Y• Uft pelf .... a ...,.. 1enlee tildaJ. ftaab fer......, la •1 dalr. D&AR ANN LANDSBS: J bcipe ,o. can IM1p me. I am in a bad way. J lban • room wttb m1 10..1ear-okl list«. SM bra&bll IO lolld I can't 1et • Dllbt'••Mep. 11, modMr' layl'l •bauld •• Ul.cl to lt. J ..... tried, but I can't; 1Wben lt 1et1 ao bed I can't 1tud tt aQ11DON, I roll ber over. Tbla la DO lood becaMe •laer::atme,aMlletlldo...i.ae. ca I pt .....S to dM ... , Or ca JW Hllelt IOmethiDI m)' alat« HD clo to IW, breatblal IO loudf (P.S. I Ml wrt .... dill letter In the middle ~ tbe allbt oe tbe coutll wtMre I net Sorry, "'roft6 llUlflber/ ... to gel some sleep.) -MILWAUKEE RED EYES Dear Red: People wllo breatlle MrmaUy do not make 10 macta nolae tltat tlley keep otlten awake. Your mother 1lloald take ala &o • doc&or ud find oat wbat la caaala1 Ute racket. If slae refuel, J bope alae wW COlllJder p41Ula1 ap a cot in tile Uvlag room. Yoa ud you elater sllould take turns sleepla1 tllere. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is no big deal, but since a lot of people dump their petty an· noyances on you, I'd like to share mine. When people ask me where I'm from and I tell them "Northern California," they always say, "Oh, San Francisco," or, "Ob, the Bay Area." If these oats would look at a map they would see just above San Francisco is another big chunk of beautiful land that includes Chico, Red Bluff, Red- ding, Lassen Park, Mt. Shasta and Eureka. If you'd print this, my day would be made. - OVERLOOKED A LOT Dear 0: It'• made! Here'• you leUer. DEAR ANN LANDERS: When I look at my grown children I wonder bow my husband and I could have raised such a selfish bunch. Over the years we have our aona and daughters and thelr spouses and children to dinners any number of limes. At holiday time everybody came over here. But why bu it never occurred to them to Invite us to their homes once in a while? We wouldn't care about the menu or the cooking -just the idea of being uked would be a rreat treat. Our daughter often phones and ult.I if abe can brlng the children over and leave them while 1be and her husband go out. I always HY yea. It'• the only time we get to see them. I'm so raentful that 1 seldom ask them to stay for a meal. Thia makes me Hd because we don 'l have very many happy times tocet.ber anymore. Is there• aoluUon? -POJ\EVER THE COOK, NEVER THE GUEST Dear Col*: fte ....... II fer ,.., dalldrea &o 1-' wlda It. I tee WMel' ..._. ......... &lie• 11Mre'1 a leUel' la Aaa L ...... ' ......... 1 Uae1 oqtat •nad. 'ftere'• M ......._ fW ,. ... Wk. Coathknt.lal to Warm-Bloo&MS Jane Goln1 With An Jceber1: Loostellow aald tt belt: "Ev•ry man baa bla tecret '°"'°" whlcb tM world kno'wl mot. Oflentlmes we call • maa cold, wbea be la really tad.'' 0 s s a 6 3 6 3 6 s s a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT ff uesda • July 7, 1981 •• DAVID HARTMAN ... Royal wedding coverage tM Groce KeU11-Prince Romer ha.ah to wlUch onl11 the world um invited! Stars and staffers of the ABC-TV network will bring us all to London via "Good Morning, America" for the Main Event on Wednesday, July 29 under the able hosting of David Hartman with John Lunden on location, Barbara Walters and Peter Jennings, etc. TM 10-Second Movie Rievlew ~UM Year: "Superman II 11 memorable movie ma,ic . creat fun for everyon•!" Q: When and where did Bo Derek ••1. "I'm a si&e 1' oo top. but J take • 1.lM 3 in put.a aDd s.klrt.a"? A: la •cCalla, Ma1 t•. First time we ever beard of our Stealth aircraft, which defies ra4.ar detecUon, wH when Ted Kennedy commented on It durln• bb 1980 eampaip for the presidency. He Hld, ·'That was the airplane that llmmy Carter 1ave to me durin1 the first foW' months ~ t.be cam-paign!" ' News Item: "Skb•• S&rtlu aenla1 • We aeateace for muderlal BobbJ ~-..edy. wW be ell1lble for parole la 119'.,. II Ht be tlae 1borta1e of prltoa cell•! When the 1rand MGM Grand Hotel reopena in Vegas on July 30, ita "Jubilee" epectacular will exhibit snatches of everytbtnt but World War III. It will include the slnklnl of the Titanic; an aerial battle ("foul.ht" over the au- dience) and Samson (of the "Samson and Delilah" classic) tumbling down the Phlllltine temple and ita 35-foot idol. Producer and director Don Arden addl • Touch of Nostalgia with a tribute to the rreatett entertainers of all time. This includes Jimmy Durante, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, AJ J olaon, Maurice Chevalier , Eddie Cantor, Judy Garland, Elvis Presley and Rudy Vallee. Send your q1U!ltioftl to H11 Gcmllwr, "Glad You A1k~d That," care of thil ~. P.O. 80% JN20, Irvine, Calif. 92114. Marlll/fl and H11 GardMT wtll an1wer cu many q1U!ltioM aa thetl con m their col- umn, but the volume of m<Ul rnalu• ,,.rtonal replie1 impo11'ible. Virgo: Gift on silver platter Wednesday.July 8. 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARJES (March 2l·Apri! 19): Older associate does have your best interests at heart. Key ls restraint, con servation. familiarity wilh established legal procedures Cancer, Capricorn persons play important roles. You can begin building reservoir of goodwill. TAURUS !April 20-May 20>: Go slow. take ring roads, avoid direct confrontalions. Accent on domestic adJustments. home repairs, settling difrerences with ramily member. Employment picture comes into sharp, clear focus. Watch Libra! Iv Accent on liminR. jud~ment, initiative and originall· ty Gemini. V1rgo.Sag1ttarius persons play key roles. SCORPIO <Oct 23-Nov. 211' Famlly secrets surge to forefront. Don't cast first stone. Be understanding, mature and discreet One close to you receives special honor Participate by displaying joy, enthusiasm. You gain access to "backstage" view SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22·Dec. 21 ): Terms are dertned in business and personal relationships. You team HOROSCOPE GEMINI < May 21-June 201 Emotional responses are heightened. change or scenery occurs and your populari where you stand as clouds of self-deception dissipale ty increases Focus on variety, travel, special rela Pisces. Cancer, Scor pio natives figure in-unusual tionship. speculation and dealings with young people scenario. A major wish is fulflJled. You make important new contact CAPRICORN C Dec. 22·J an L9). Emphasis on career. CANCER <June 21.J uly 221 Emphasis on secunty, authority, responsibility, intensified relationship and de· home. long-range transaction and ways to get most for cis1on which has long-range implications. Don't trifle your mooey. Older Individual becomes valuable ally. with facts: perceive places. people as they are. not mere· shares benefit of experience Puule is resolved as you ly as you wtSh they might exist "wake up" Wlth answers. AQUAR.I US !Jan 20-Feb 18). Exciting new trend is LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) · Accent on long-distance com on horizon. You first, however. must let go of past - munlcallons, possible journey, ability to transcend emotional security blanke.t Is becoming an anchor. You language barriers. Social Ufe "picks up" -business need no longer be weighed down -key is to break combines Wllh pleasure and you feel more vital. alert. shackles which tie you to burden not rightfully your own. alive. Gemini. Libra, Sagittarius persons play prominent P ISCES <Feb. 19 March 201: You pierce mystery; roles. money and emotions dominate scenario. Individual who VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): What you need Is prac· is "part of your life" confides dilemma regarding rel&· tic ally handed you on proverbial sliver platter SpoUlght llonship and finances. Leo, Aries, Sagittarius persons on localing lost objects, increasin1 income potential, ,......._fi __ g_u_re .... p'""ro_nu_·n_e_o_ll_y_. _St_a_rt_!~---------­ paylng off debts and receiving ravors from persons who feel they do "owe you something." LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22> Open lines of communica· lions -information can be pieced t.o&ether for "com· plele story." Member of opposite sex figures prominent· RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY S.••fr_ ........... lfJJ HAHOI ILVO. COSTA MISA -541-1156 For Classified Ad ACTION Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642·5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i"WHAT'S A POPCORN PARTY?": e 11le ............. HCttllit ... ,.,....,...,,... .. c.lff. e : °"' fer ...... S..11 Ill ............. t.prie, - : • ._ c..___., ~ ~..-• ,.... .,... •• ....,... ..._ • :,. ... 11 : • • •••• ,.., w a.c-. ,._ L-, • : POPCORN PARTIES UMUMITID : ·: CALL C7 I 4t 556-2330 : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HERl'S GOOD MEWS! NO MORE FLEAS! OH YOUR PET ott IH YOUR HOME PROVEN EFFICTIVI AGAINST: FLEAS ROACHES RATS MICE FLIES SPIDERS MOSQUITOES CARPENTER ANTS BEES. WASPS CRICKETS MOTHS WATER BUGS • Economical Maintenance Free Operation • Proven More Effective Than Poisons •Uses Only,. Watts of Power • Pests Eliminated In 2 to 6 Weeks •No Special lnstallatlon Required M-'ectwwd by P••_,. Dl1tri1Md1d ly P ...... S.. 17141 ,,,_,,,, (714t 760.7251 i------------ PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE -.. Orange Coast DAILY PIL.OT/Tunday, July 7, 1981 Mystery . to. o~n at Moulton By T0• 11Tl18 ............. Sometb1nc oJd, aometbhll oew and IOIDet.bl.q "borrowed from," but notb1ni blue -that'• tbe 1ltuat.ion aloq the Oran1e Cout aa tbe MCoad ball of the 1111 theater aeuon •eta under way. Tbe oe"comer. openiq W~y nlabt, la the Ont of three tummer world premlera at the Latuna Moulton Playhouse, John Fersaeea'• ''After the Fact.'' Sharlne an openini ntpt Prfday are "Green Grow the Ulac•" (from wblch t.be musical "Oklahoma" was derived) at tbe Westminster Community Theater and a melodrama, "Pure aa the Driven Snow," at the Saddleback Valley Community Theater. "After the Fact" la the third orifinaJ play by Ferzacca, an Orange Coaat College drama inltruc· tor, to premiere on the local boards and the tecond at the Moulton. Alex Golson la dlrectln1 the mystery drama about a youne man lnve1U1ating ~~:be~~ath or his actor INTERMISSION Douglas Rowe, managing director of the Laeuna theater, wiU enact the murdered actor with G«>rge Woods and Jane Nigh also cut ln leadin8 roles. Ot.bera in the cast are Marc Gordon, Jack Jtein, Catherine Rowe, Kimberly Weine,r, Kirk Brown, Paige Gould, Darin Grebel, Scottie Kenyon, Mary Mather and Terri Tanner. The play runs Wednesdays through Saturdays al 8 p.m. through July 2S at the Moulton, 806 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reserva· lions 49'-0743 or 494-8021. At Westminster, Michael Aquila and Kathleen Dowell are playing the leading roles in ·'Green Grow the Lilacs" under the direction ol Jan Angelino. Other principals are Louise Tonti, Jane Young, Clark Burson and RonaJ Grigsby. Completing the large cast are Debbie Newton, Heath Beckett, William Carmignani, Ceanne and Chuck Casey, Kirk Gross, Tim Hunt, Peggy Harl· ing, Johanna Marie Lepley, Deburah Koning-Ball, Charles and Joy Lolcoma, Charles Taylor, Linda Tenorio and J eanne Yandell. Performances will be given Fridays and Saturdays al 8:30 through Aug. 8 at the playhouse, 7272 Maple St.. Westminster-. Reservations 995-4113. They'll be cheering the hero and hissing the villain at the Saddleback Valley Community Theater as Vince Cordio's production or the melodrama "Pure as the Driven Snow" launches a four-weekend run. ' Tom McKee, Marti Louise Smets and Ellis Estes head the cast with Ruth Comfort Davis, Fred Linway, Lujuana Blanco, Ron Sorensen, Marjorie McCauley, Lisa Sage, Mark Drumm and Linda Lewis completing the company. Performances are planned for Fridays and Saturdays at 8 o'clock through Aug. 1 al the Sad- dleback Valley theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. Reservations 830-9252 or 830-4698. Two other community theater productions draw their curtains this weekend with final performances of "The Heiress" at the Huntington Be a c h Playhouse and "Our Town" by Westminster's Showcase Productions. · Both play Friday and Saturday at 8:30, "The Heiress'' in the Seacliff ViUage Center, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue, Huntington Beach JULY 8-25 AFTER THE FACT AMYST!RY BY JOHN FERZACCA 8 p.m. Wed . .Sal Tickets: $8 OPENING JULY 29 Award Winning Comedy MATCH POINT by Miry Jene Aober11 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE Au.. Q Ill NllO • '"-Ml MCll'il 1'!1 llAL Cl Tift lllOlO. fl!CTUl'll C01J5 fl' •V l'llOUl.AlQj SZ.50 'tll S ~ Unlns Noted In 70mm/Dolbyl ............. u.tAl'll (PO) 11 :JO 2 :00 4 :JO 1:00 9:30 No Economy SUtlnt MEL 8ROOKS IN ~--.... flWt_ I (R) 12:30 Z:JO 4 :JO l :lO 1:30 10:30 I Presented In DOLllV D9'A8C>f1Sl.AYE• (l"O) 1 :00J:15 5:30 7:45 Ii 10:00 11 :15 1155 4t2~ 7 :l5 1:50 • , No Economy Sating I ~~:~o,r·~~ c======m'-tn Dolby Stereo f"OR YOUR lf:Yl!S ONLY (PC) 11 :00 l :IS 4:15 ):00 l :JO 81LL MURRAY In STRINS (R) Shows at 1 :00 3:20 5:40 1:00 ~ 10:15 * CM7-4485) ucl "Ou.r row.i" 1a die WeetmJ.Dtter AtadJtortum, 1m W•tmlDlter Ave. (11M718). A mat.lnee ol "OW Town'' ll ecbedui.ct Sunday at 2:30. Cofttlntalq t.Mlr retpeetlve rum a.AoDa tbe coa•t an: -.. ,,ower Drum Soat" at Sebutlan't Weal Dinner Playboule, 140 Ave. Plco, San Clemente (492·9'00). -• 'Tbe Wla" at the Harlequ1nn Dinner PlaybouH, S503 S. Harbor Blvd .• Santa Ana (9'79-S511), ~• nlabtly except MODdaya at vary~ curtal.n tlmet unW further notice. -'Tbe SWllhlne Bo11" at the San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Ave. CabrUlo, San Clemente ('812..(MQ), on state Thunday1 throu1b Satunt.ya at 8:30 unUI July 25. • WHEN °11AGIC Theater'' opens Wednesday as a project ol the Saddleback Company Theater at Saddleback Colle1e, some ol the maatc will be mil1ina. Saundra Matthews-Deacon, who created the cblldreo'a theater pro1ram aeveraJ yean a10 for South Coast Repertory and wu aupervlllne t.be Saddleback production, died recently of poet· operative complicatlou. A protesslooal actress and director, Saundra probably is best remembered for her starring role in the original SCR musical "Mother Earth" at the company's Third Step Theater in 1971. Sbe and her husband, Warren Deacon, collaborated to create a women's revue, "You Remind Me of a Friend." A Costa Mesa resident, she was an educator at Saddleback College and was active ln the women's movement. Memorial contributions may be made in her name to the N aUooal Organization for Women, P.O. Box 7813, Washington D.C. 20044. Her "Magic Theater" will be presented in Sad- dle back College's 100-aeat Stud.lo Theater at 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays with matinees Saturdays at 2 and Sundays at 3. Tickets may be ordered by callin18314656 or 495-2790. ROGER MOORE as JAM ES QOND 007'; FOR YOLfR E\'ES ~ 0 N LY United Artists ...... A/lolllttm Of 1¥1 In 8799850 NU UA MO\llH 990 4022 NOW PLAYING COSTA MllA HMllOI 631 J50t fl TOM SaoolebK-~1 saao •coau.aa llnslOI 540 , .... OMllll Crneoome 63-4 Z!>~ WUTM•TlJI HllJftway 39 Otrw·Jn 891·369J WllTMlllSTU CtntmaWHt 891 393~ r• ..... tUll'N .. ,~ -----1 ·CD ma....., r I M•tl-Dally et Moet Theatree I -....... ....,llACI (.I, .. Slt·SllO --·-ta c..u ..... ~7~4 llACITT CmJU ChOQt 634 3911 11Make way for the greatest dragon yet." -Kevin Thomes, LOS ANGELES TIMES NOW PLAYING ... _,. P\AZA .-TWGMIT -U ...... .,.... lrN !146-2111 Calll lillu S*-1711 LI..._ t2t-110'5 ·~ ..... ST _ _,... Or ... '634·HS3 WIMIW IUl8 OrWlgl ..,._.170 • QIHW H•llAC' ._... .... MMl:9 -- (I Tn Sii SllO eiiip t .......... • , .... ICICllPT9 .. 1-=·· • , Siii .-'-"-49.)-4~~ llOWPUYI• ...... ,uu SIN 629 ~39 ............ MQI ·~ [I Toro Sit seeo t Ortntt 6:1NS!ll • ._._.,._..war ·--....,.... etl•l9)5 ... _ ........ ,, t ....... ,..., .... f ....,.,_.,, ·~'**9 ~ht•ll»tt ·Doin tw·•· • filJl/J(l /WMSI NSllfSMMlllfS /lilfl#r1tfOOllCl/Olt·A#M 111/l/fMIFllll ..,,,,,.. 1v.1..- " ...... lllAllllMT/11/ • IAlllll, ...... -~~ ·.W.,,,.. ,,,.,,.,.._."' 11.lJI • .W.~· ~ - 1-"--~ OtfJll1· "--"'"Ii" I l#llJ/1r • ._ trlll«I rms °""".,"" ll((flllMI • ,,.. '-W trlfl ""' • "-..._., Siii/fi """'" (ii). •BARGAIN MATINEES* Monday thru Saturday All Perlormanc.1 before 5:00 PM (Eactpt Sptdll Engtttllllflts and Hohdays) ____ ... ,,,... __ _ "FOA YOUR EYES ONLY" IPO) , ......... ,. ..._.._, . ...._~. "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" tPO) ....... _,,, ... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALIC·IN ---"SUPERMAN II" IPO) ....... 11:.,, .. .......... ,. . STRIPES" tRI , ........ ,.itictl LAKEWOOD CENTER SO UTH WALK IN ...-..,_ • ..--MA.81• "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" IPO) , .......... ,.. LllGUNA ..... ~. ft..&.Mm-.-. ··s.o.B." IA\ ...... _.~ .. ___ _,_ "SUPERMAN II" JPO) , ............. ,,,, .--··--·-. "THE CANNONBALL AUN" I ·--!.~-.. ~ "THE FOUR SEASONS" (PO) , .............. _.._ ............... "RAIDERS OF THE LOST MK" IPO) ..... 1!'14,,.\ii:lli 1-------··DRAQONSLAYER" (PO) ' , .............. . I so. COAST WALK·IN SO<Jlll Cootl HJwoy ot ltoodwoy 494-1514 a1u. MUllMY IN "STRIPES" IR) ............. ...... ~·~M&m• "'RAIDERS Of THE LOST ARK" IPO) 1:11 .. ,. .... ... -.. -.., 0 .. 11 7:.JO , .. '"" 7:U \.._, lr.t• .. •• IMPORTANT NOTICl' CMllORI N UNOUI 12 FREE! ""'" w • .,.., •111 "''"'"•:JO · s11 s.1 """ •:oo ,,. OIMl-•'IOUllAMCM-•'IOUllSlfMOI Ill llO NII CNI MOIO MIM -ACUUOllY- __. Alll flOll'fllU J•llU.~.._ .... M MOIO A."tA~I·~ ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN lf•"'O'l•to•l•....,..11 .,. .... 0 a Jf "-A r>.t,'1l BUENA PARK 0111vf 1N 121..-070 ~ 'JV"'4 I A1t4 FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORIVE ·IN CHUCH & CMONG'I Mtea DAIAMI" (Ill -...-0 CAlll" (POI CHI( I•- ---·-•&..-.• ' lftL ~· HllTOllY OI' TMI WOftt.11 PAtn r· 1111 -""lltE l"INAL CONfl.ICT' 1111 ---. .,.."= .... (l'GJ so~ 0<900 ,...,. ol .,_lltttl (lo;.'AH't' wt4lat WAY YOU c.ur· (PG) f62·2411 CIM 11- . '1.0.8."(111 'THI PO~N ALWAYI lllNQI T'#IC ... 1111 COit Jr $OU110 e.oc-.... $0 OI ) Ool_G<_Fr_ 191·3693 .... .............. .. "~ YOUll Im ONLY" (l"G) "'1HAL COUNTDOWN" (POI CNlflltoulC> -~~-;:~. ---· .._.. "THI CAHHO:U llUN" (NI 'WAM.OROS M ATLAN11.I " (N HAllOU WOfllUNO" (NI Cltll " -CHI( R SOllllO " •4 .. 81r,. I I.A HABRA 011 1~1 ,,. ------· 'A>ll YOUft •m OM. r' (flQJ -·-·-.,.. t -.,.. fl1NM. COUW11>0WN" <NI '7Mlt2 ~ I •• • • A "'' LINCOLN 0111VE IN l-0"' ••• W•tl Of•-tJl ... 010 ·--.,.., O~ANGE Pll•VI 11'4 ... ._. ... __ _ t.O~'C"t THI ""'1llM ALWAft -TWIC:r'ltl .· . MIS$10N Ill.' VI IN . .. .......... www™• •" I .. f • .. u s a a a s s as Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 rn·rn~~m~~~ Wiring of America:. cable's fast growth EDITOR'S NOTE: A MCOltM ap>, cable t~ '°°' tMd bq;aaea:; to find a~ m AnMrlca'• cftln. WUhin 01tOUwr decaM more Ulaft holf of U.S. hou.Nhol4t arc apcded to be wired. In tlw fint of a /foe· port Nrie•, AP Writn Tom JMJI U · amine• tlw ""°'"h 01ld protped• for coble TV. ByTOllJO&Y NEW YORK CAP> -First the telecrapb wired America, then the telephone. Now America la getting wired again. Thia time for television -cable television. Introduced after World War II lo improve TV reception in the valleys of eastern Pennsylvania and the mountains of Oreeoo, cable television today is IJ"Owinl fast in cities and suburbs. Ita lure is no longer simply clear pictures, but uncut movies and an array of programs and services, from high-brow culture to soft-core pomolJ'aphy, from burglar alarms to home banking and video newspapers. There are now more than two dozen national cU>le networks, including one offering round-tbe- clock news and one devoted sole- ly to s ports. The three commercial networks, once considered vulnerable to cable, are entering cable programming, and the Public Broadcasting Service bu proposed its own Public Subscriber Network for lWtJ. Corporations are beginning to test cables' potential for ena- bling marketers to pick special· interest audiences instead ol re· lying on the mass audience ol commercial TV. Advertisers will spend $50 million on cable TV this year, ten times as much as 1978, says the CabJetelevision Advertisine Bureau. There were 2.8 million homes wired for cable ln 1968 -before satellites made it possible to Attaches to Any TV -No\ Included • Vivid Color Graphic• • Action Sound l!ffeeta • Battle Invader• from Outer Space · Cable Ownership 4 .225• C.1t11t · \l·s;;-···· " L)w111 ·1 t t 1v l N• ·w-.11.11" ·1 . 11·-······ "1 j 1.111 O w111 ·1I Wl111l1 •111 I '. 11 I I •\ rr ~ 1: .... 11 " .•. 1. ,. l •. ...J1.~ I ':.'.,. ........... !.~: • 1 ~~ M1ll11 •II : •Ill •··· 11111 ., ' .· . Chart shows breakdown of. cable TV ownership. show movies coast-to-coast at a reasonable price in competition with the oetworu. Today, there are 18 million ca· ble homes -of 79.1 million households -and analysts forecast 46 million homes will be wired by 1980. Basie service now cos~ $10 to $1S a month. About 8 million subscribers to- day also take one or more "pay" services, like Sbowtime or Home Box Office, which offer movies and other entertainment unln· terrupted by commercials for GAMES • Pollah Up Your Ch••• Game • MakH Math Drtlla Fun • Even Help• with The Family Budget • Learn Programming • All Game• Ju at 'Plug-In and Are Sold Separately CHARGE IT(MOS1S10RESJ • $599 Model Available for More Advanced Graphic• • Can Alao Bring You the LatHt Nevn-See Your Radio Shack for Detail• SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST RADIO SHACK COMPUTER CENTER, STORE , OR PARTICIPATING DEALER .r- about $9 to •12 more each month. Analyst Paul Katan of Carmel calla cable "the latest frontier," and predicta eeble revenues - less than 980C> million in 1975 - will bit ~.4 billion by the end ol the decade. .• If you want to crow in American comml.\Dlcations, the only way to rtow la through ca-· ble, because tt ta IO bard to fmd newspapers, television and radio stations for ..... '' be says. There are now more than 5,000 cable companies -up almost 800 from a year a10 7 • but 25 gianta control two-thirds of the nation's cable fUbscriben. The cos Uy, com.,.UU.e consolidation is frenzied. Dow Jooes & Co.. and Knleht· Ridder Newspapers Inc., offered $247.5 million for UA-Columbia Cablevisioo Inc., only to lose in a bidding war with a joint ven- ture ol United Artists Theater Circu it Inc . and Rogers Cablesystems Jnc. Final value: $297 million. W estingbo•• Electric Co. paid $646 million for Teleprompter Corp., the nation's largest cable company. The New York nmes spent $83 million lo buy 55 cable franchises in New Jersey. Meanwhile, companies are pouring miWOBI into bidding for monopoly urban franchises. Plums yet to be awarded include Chicago, Boston , Detroit. Denver, Wubington and parts of New York City and Los Angeles. Six compa,tea spent an estimated $500,• each trying to win the lucratift Dallas market, only to have a loeing company engineer a referendum on the City Council's decision to give the package to Warner Amex Communications Inc. Warner Amex kept tbe prhe, after spending a.notMr 983,000. AP ........ Mark and Sonja Sheriff. home owners in the Columbul suburb of Upper Arlington, were photo- graphed in 1918 communicating with their city planning board from their home. . Columbus leads the way COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP> You almost don't have lo leave the house to enjoy Colum· bus. You can pay your bills and do your banking, summon the police or call the fire department, read the news and express your opinions all at the push of a button. And if you're bored, there is entertain· ment and movies and sports aplenty, on one of four cable television systems, including KBLE, the only operating black·owned system in the United States. Columbus, a predominantly white-collar city of 1.1 million, is the capital of Ohio and home of Ohio State University It is a major research cent.er and has been the subject of much research as a test market It is also America ·s premiere cable TV city. It was here that Warner Amex Cable Communications Inc. introduced QUBE, the first ''interactive," or two-way. system that let viewers talk back to their television, open· ing the door to at·home banking and buying. And Columbus-based Banc One Corp. and the Ohio College Library Center were among the first lo test banking and marketing services, with an experiment in 200 homes that let people pay bills and transfer money bet ween bank accounts. The Columbus Dispatch is among 11 newspapers and The Associated Press now providing news to some 10,000 computer sub- scribers of CompuServ. a subsidiary of H&R Block. It bas also tested news delivery via QUBE. Basic service is $1 1.95 a month on that system, which includes 10 pay.per-view chan- nels and the extra charge QUBE option. # OIBUSllESS CIECKllG FUIDS PUBLIC NOTICE • PUBUC NOTICE 1 PUBLIC NOTICE New·from Gibraltar~ ~ Gibraltar's Rock Solid™ ~ Cash Management Fund. ~ High earnings. Earn a guaranteed 13% ~ on balances of $5000 or more. (Interest compounded daily. Effective annual yield 14.086%.) Balances under S5000 earn 5•..Ai%. ~ Instant liquidity. Easy transfer of funds IMll!!I by telephone between your business checking account and Gibraltar's Cash Management Fund. 24 hours a day. 7 days a week. ~ Guaranteed rate. New rate set on the 16th ~ of each month and effective for 30 days. ~ Fully secured. Funds backed by U.S. ~ Government Secµrities. The fund is not a savings account or deposit and therefore is not insured by the F.S.L.l.C. For more information, contact your local Gibraltar branch or call toll-free 800-232-2020 and ask fo r our Cash Management Fund counselor. j ______ _..._.__._...._... ............. -....-. ...... -----.----. . . -------~- Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfTuHday, July 7, 1981 GOLD SLUMP -Gold traders do business on the floor of the Chicago MercanWe Ex· change Monday as gold prices fell sharply in Europe, dipping to a 19 month low. Buy- ........... ing interest in bullion has been in a severe slump for the past 10 days and is now worth less than half its all-time high of $875 an ounce set on Jan. 21, lStk>. CompCare in new site Comprehensive Care Corp., Newport Beach, bas purchased the St. George facility of St. Fran· cis-St. George Hospital Inc. ln Cincinnati. St. Francis-St. George Hospital officials agreed to sell the facility for $4 million under contracts signed last fall , according to CompCare President B. Lee BUSINESS BRIEFS Karns. CompCare is the nation's largest private provider of alcoholis m treatment servies, treating more than 35,000 patients annually. • Arthur E Svendsen, chairman of the board of Costa Mesa-based Staadard-Paclllc Corp. bas ,n. nounced the mailing of proxy materials for a special meeting of s hareholders to be held July 23 -EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or., Suite 14 N ewPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • Int••••• only sa-v-ent • lnco•• • Co••erd•I • Re•identl•I • w-ltlv co•••--··· • Monda.Iv t.IMll .. • • 6 -~u to J year• • So•thera c.tiforaw c , int ,,, n u1 loan Information eervlce '"' ""ur ltn<111<'1ng "''"d' . (714) 759-1515 AMIEIUCAN HOME MORTGAGE 230 Newport Center Ortve Oes1gn Plaza Newool'I Buen Ca11torn1a 92660 OPPORTUNITY LOANS --~ Sec.-H .., 1Mir i.111 ".,...., Let Our Expert Loan Specialists' Helo You Obtain Needed Fund!ll Charter Mortgge Compan1 Lice~ Reel Elt8le Oorpcntlon CALL 855-2037 2301 O Lake Forest Dr. Laguna Hills for the purpose of ratifying the Delaware reln· corporation of the company previously approved. by shareholders al the 1980 annual meeting. Stan· dard Paclfic Corp. Is a geographically diversified builder of s ingle-family homes. • A new consulting firm, Fuscoe, Williams, Lindgren & Short Inc. has been formed in Santa Ana. The company specializes in civil engineering and land surveying. • Commerce Ban.It said it will expand operations and move its headquarters office to 1201 Dove St., Newport Beach (former site of Manufacturers Bank) which will now be identified as the Com· merceBank Building. The bank bas signed a lease with Prudential Life Insurance Co. for the first and second floors (20,000 square feet) of the six-story structure. USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT .. SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Ser vice Call 642-5678 1Ed. l22 COLLECTORS CORNEA Rare Coln• & Stampe GOLD & SILVER 7+3:00 ._c.._.._. lltwwCL ..... .., ... K:rr--.... MtUI ~~ === .,.... .... ,, ...... ~Sii-.... t1L• .... ... _.....,.__ ... c.1 ............... (714) 5M tllO South Coeet flllua Vltl•g• --.. -... (M--8-C--.01 MEED A CO.SIGNER? ~llMJ ProbletM wfth red ..W. Almcmg7 CALL 17141 155-20 I J Co Signers Inc 2524 I Paseo • AlclG · Nls.CAt265 Fountain V ._, Four Plex S 199,500 hi Prtc•, $40,000 DoWll Ho 2..ct 12>/4 ....... Electric range & ovens, dish· washers. wall to wall cpts.,. drps.. air cond., pool, spa. covered parking & fully occupied. Open 12 to 8 daily 17140 San Mateo, F.V. Topic 1. Tax Shelters. ~11 discuss some of the more popular kinds -including real estate, oil, gas and 8rt. ~11 also cover the concept of M!venige and accelerated methods of depredation. Topic 2. lax Plannlng In Oenn. ~11 focus on generating capital gains, def erring Income until later years and accelerating deductions. ~1J also explore year-end tax•savlng opportunities. And more. Jul117 or 9, 6:30·9:30 pm. At Ua• South Cout Pf.ala HolM. Phone (714) 8'1-2269 for "°"'' ,..,,,.tlon and motW ln/orrn.tlon. ack Anderson ll.1111 Plllt reveals in the •J 0 • .... ...,.... ..... ...... Segerstrom elected to board deary T. Se1entrom, manaetn1 partner of C.J . Se1erstrom It Sons, a Coeta Mesa-based land development nrm, bu been elected to lbe board of directors of Loe An1eJes-based Union Bank. Seterstrom owns South Cout Plaza and South Coast Villa1e 1hoppin1 center and the adjacent South Cout Plaza Town Center. • Mark Brown has Joined Jansen Associates Joe. as accoun~ executive. He will be ON THE JOB responsible for accounta that Include Fluor Corp. and Century Data Syatema for the Irvine-baaed public relations firm. • David M. Scott bas been elected president of Irvine-based Transmark Corp., an im· porter of iron and steel products from India and Canada. • James L . Fllapatrlck has been named vice president marketing and sales of the American Educational Television Network, Irvine. A resident of Irvine, Fitzpatrick pre- viously served as a representative for Pacific Consulting Corp., Newport Beach . • Grace Zerger bas been appointed manager of the Irvine Town Center branch of Bank or America. She was previously assistant vice president/administration officer of the Fullerton Main office. • Jola.n Workmu has been promoted to in· ternational manager for Irvine-based Sii Dyna-Drill. Recently mana1er of the com- pany 'a Mexico operat10111, Workman will handle the sales manatement effort for all of SU Dyna-Drill's lntematlonal marketa. The company is a divt.ion of Smith IntemaUonal Inc. • Lealeoe Opple has been promoted to uais· tant a ccount executive, advertising, at Jansen Associated Inc. of Irvine . Oppie wu formerly administrative assistant to the director or public relations. In her new capacity, she will aulst in all areas of ad- vertising account service and mana&ement, from research and development of marketint plans through implementation of approved marketing/advertising programs. She lives in Corona del Mar. • Thomu M. Joaea bas joined Dominion Equities Corp., Newport Beach, u senior vice president in charge of acquisitions. Prior to join· ing Dominion, Jones was with the Charles Dunn Co., a commercial brokerage firm specializing in com- mercial, industrial and in· vestment properties . • Syed A. Hasan has been appointe d international marketing s pecialist at JOHI Santa Ana-based EECO Inc. Hasan is responsible for supporting the marketing and sales efforts of EECO's European operation which manufactures switch and peripheral products for sale l.n Western and Eastern Europe, the Near and Middle East and Mediterranean countries. .°'\. • > + ~ .... + l"t + " +7·1' + -+ JV. + ,~ + .. + .. + 2 + 1 + l"t + ~ + \It + ... ... + .. + .. + "" .. ~ + 1 . " • 1 Pc\. Up 17.4 Up 1U Up 11.0 Up U..O Up lt.t Up U Up t..2 Up t.1 Up LO Up 7.S Up 7.A Up 7.1 Up 7.1 Up 7.0 u. ... Up '-1 Up '-7 Up .., Up U Up S.t Up U Up s.t Up U Up U Up S.4 Up S.A Pel Off JU Off ... Off IS.I Off aJ Off 16.7 Off u.o Off 1U Off 1S.4 Off 1U Off 1U Off 14.AI Off 1U Off 1U Off 11.J Off 1U Off lt.t Off 1U Off IU Off lt.1 Off IU Off 12.S Off 1U Off 1U Off 1U on tu I . . Orange Coast OAIL!.,PILOTfTuesday. July 7, 1981 s ·•" ~~~ .. -..• U.S. banks losing control? fThll ii tM fir.a o/ot1.UO-'parl MNt.J One by one, wit.b a peralltence that muat compel even the most lndilfereot to worry about the po11ibly grave threat to economic tteedom, America ·a 1reat banks are falling under foreip control. Thia lnvotves much more than purchases of selected U.S. corporation aecuritles by rorel10 in· veators, huge though this buying hu been. All thote widel y publicized stock 0 purcha ses m e an is that ---------=-----.J,. foreign capital _ ls seek:lng sale-fl ~- ty and profit in SYlVll PORT , 7 U .S . com - panies. The on· ly basic implication can be that excessive totals of U.S. dollars circulating abroad are beini recycled back to us via buying of our stocks. Flne. For m any years, American investors have been pouring dollars into overseas markets, an~ whit~ some of the investors have been "ugly Amencans, in general our money bas been enthusiastically welcomed. Now, foreign owners of dollars are return- ing the compliment, and informed sources echo the welcome -be the source of the capital European, Arabian, Japanese, English. But OUTRIGHT CONTROL of our multibilllon dollar banks? This could telegraph much more than a healthy increase in competition ln the arena of in- ternational banking. This could be a signal or "danger ahead" which it would be abysmal folly for us to ignore as we have been. These are foreign banks (backed with money we cannot possibly trace and identify satisfactorily> tak- ing over U.S. banks. J ust con.sider the scope of foreign bank ownership right now: As of the start of 1981, foreign banks owned 11 or the 100 largest banks in the United States. The foreign-0wned U.S. banks ranked in order of assets (according to American Banker, Ma r. 20, 1981 ) are: Marine Midland Bank, NA., Buffalo, New York (Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp.) with assets of Sl 7 .4 billion, ranked 13th; Union Bank, Los Angeles <Standard Chartered Bank, Ltd., London ) with assets or $7 billion, ranked 24th ; Republic National Bank, New York !Trade Devel Bank Holding, Luxembourg) with assets of $6.2 billion, ranked 28th; National Bank of North America, New York (owned by. six banks> with assets or $4.4 billion, ranked 43rd ; Bank of Tokyo Trust Co., New York <Bank of Tokyo, Ltd.) with assets of $3.9 billion, ranked 47th : California .First Bank, San Francisco (Bank of Tokyo, Ltd.) with assets of $.1.6 billion. ranked 53rd; Lloyds Bank of California, Los Angeles (Lloyds Bank, Ltd., Lon- don) with assets of $2.7 billion, ranked 72nd; Bank Leumi Trust Co., New York <Bank Leumi le-Israel, Tel Aviv) with assets of $2.l billion. ranked 93rd ; J . Henry Schroder Bank & Trust Co., New York (Schroders, Ltd., London) with assets of $2 billion, r anked 96t.h ; and Sumitomo Barut, San Francisco (Sumitomo Ba nk . Ltd .. Osaka> with assets of $1.9 billion, raruted looth. The sale of a controlling interest in Crocker Na- tional Bank in California to Midland Bank, third largest bank in England, Is pending. If that acquisition is consummated (almost cer- tain) Crocker. the 12th largest barut in the United States with year-end 1980 assets of $18.9 billion, would become the largest foreign-Owned bank in the United Stales. In California alone, 31 or the 281 commercial banks were controlled by foreign interests as 1981 began. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW VOAl(IAPI l'lnel Dow-.J-.. 9S.. '°' Monday. Jul .. ITOCIC.I 0-"• L.9• a.. Olli JO 1n0 Uu1 951.tt '41.'7 '4t.l0-t.lt JO Tm <IOI •• Cit 74 199.11 400.11-f,.., IS VII 10..AI 107.12 lOS.lt 1CIS.n -o.a " S1• no.JO m.Jt au.~ l61.1._ us lnOus s..302,JOO Tra" 1,114,600 Utllt 'l».700 '5 SUI 7,423,IOO WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VORI( (AP) Jul 6 TOO.J, 11'4 JU 1176 ' SI NEW VORI( tAP) Jul 6 T~L ., 111 IQS s li p,...,, .s:r. ,. Jl1 l tU ' ,, """'· ~z. 419 1'1 m 1 .. METALS NEW YORK CAP) -5-_,..,,_ metal cwk• ...,.Y C...-OIMIS <eftll a..,._, U.S.~ ....... UM JJ ,_, •--. 1Mc 461" CMC1 a........,, <1911-M, T• ... m l MNll1 '#9" <~lte I._ _......_., ... , ... ts ........ " ". ~tom.•-''-· f't•"-MllS.OOt~ea .• N.'I'. • SILVER NEW VOllllC. CAPI -H_,., & H-ellvert...,•».ott•.11. ll,...t-... _ ... Ult .... I0.12, lallrlal> .. •lt-p!.ftl, ... 90.111. GOLD OU OTA TIONS ----~ ~ .................... , .................. ~~--~ .... ..-. ·-------_ __..._ __ ---------... ----.. . -----Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT(Tueaday, July 7, 1981 TWENTY ClASSA OCARETTES More ., -. • ---~ ··~-~-.. TUESDAY,JULY7, 1981 McEnroe isn't a 'bad guy, at least according CLASSIFIED CS to these two people. C2 Quarterhorses at_ Los Alamitos have the undivided attention of Frank Filek (with binoculars) on a recent night of racing. That's Luckiest Jet with the Lead. Horse racing's answer to the I 00-yard dash It takes a quarterhorse just a fe w seconds to reach a speed of 50 miles per hour -from a standing start in the gate. "Amazing animals," comments one of- ficial at Los Ala mitos Race Track where each night (but Sunday) race fans are treated to plenty of racing, complete with exactas and Pick Six betting. The races range from 350-yard dashes to 870-yard marathons. And while they don't last long, they'll still keep everyone on the edge of their seats for what seems like agonizing hours . Currently, Los Alamitos is in the midst of its biggest program of the year -a 91-day quarterhorse meeting. How exciting is quarterhorse racing? "It's not uncommon to have a photo finish. In fact, it's not unusual to have the entire field within a length at the finish," comments one Los Alamitos oCficial. Some people will tell yo u they like thoroughbr e d ra c ing more than quarterhorse dashes. Others say they're impressed with the sheer power and speed of a qua rterhorse. If you wanted to make an analogy to track, the thoroughbred race would be like the mile, while the quarterhorse race would be closer to the 100-yard dash. There is still plenty of action left in the curre nt quarterhorse meeting. The $150,000-added Skoal Dash for Cash Derby is set for Saturday, while the $1 million Dash for Cash Futurity for two year olds Is set for Saturday, July 18. On Monday, Los Alamitos will feature the 870-yard, $25,000-added Table Tennis Stakes, followed by the popular $100,000 Go Man Go Stakes July 17. Still to come are the $50,000-added Las Ninas Stakes (July 31), $100,000 Aone Burnett Stakes <Aug. l >. and the $150,000 Los Alamitos Championship (Aug. 15). Horse race fans are treated to nine races each night < 10 on Friday and Saturday nights), and exactas are offered on the first, fourth, sixth, seventh and final two races. Los Alamitos seats 17 ,000 comfortably and averages about 8.000 fans each racing night. In t his Saturday's Skoal dash, all eyes will be on the overpowering gelding Sgt. Pepper, the prohibitive favorite. Racing fan Kathy Mundt (left ) awaits official results 011 the board. while, from left . Debbie Desmond,' Tammy Owens and Barbara George celebrate a win. Potter steals show ~n opening night ( . By EDZINTEL 0( .. Delly" ......... For Martina Navratilova, it was a case of too many hours In the air and not enough on the ground. It's more commonly known as j~l lag and for the fiery .N'avratilova, what was 8 p.m. 1 f everyone else gathered at t Los Caballeros Racquet and t4 S orta Club for the debut of 1 am Tennis Monday night, was r alJy like 5 a.m. the next mom - i for her. Navratilova touched down In IPe' Angeles around 12:30 p.m, Monday after a 14-hour fight ~ ftom England where she had s~nl the la.st two we~ks playing at Wlmbledon. · ,By 8 p.m .. she was I.ft Fountain V.lley, pracUclnJ. with her Los aeles StJinCs teammates Qt newJy.formed Team Tennis a1ue. By 8 p.m .. she was •ln8 the tint ofber three set.a alnlt the Callf omla Orantes 1 aln/c!:• match against rbara er. Wbat resulted was a 31-28 vie· t ry for the Oranges as avraUlova wu upset by Pol· t_tr, 7·5, before teamln1 with TerrJ Holladay In women's dtuba. and Vljay Amrttraj tn ed doubles to narrowb'; wtn Midtwoletl. 'I felt like I wu ln tbe matcll '9il1&111 but I wu tlrid Ud slut· b .'' N1Vratno••, eurrent•1 ed No. 3 In tbe world, ad· milted afterward "My timing was off and l couldn't get ac- climated. Plus, it fe lt very warm and the balls were very different in bounce compared to Wim bledon." An enthusiastic crowd of 1,724 watched as Potter. 19, staved off Navratilova's powerful game noted for a rocket-like serve, with a s uperb return-volley game. ' Poller, ranked as high as 16th in the world recently after turn- ing pro in 1979, won the hearts of the crowd winning the final two games alter the set was tied at 5-5. She earlier had teamed wiUl S h a ron Wals h to gtve the t Oranges critical point.a ln a 7-8 loss to Navratilova and Holla· day. Later, s he would play a key role in the final set as she and Sherwood Stewart won the third game in overtime to take the match. Tonipt the same two teams will m~iet at the Strings• home court at the Forum. In the Other major surprise of the even.Ing, Stewart defeated Amrltraj, 71J. Amrltraj wu a semlfinalttJ t ln alntlea At Wimbledon last -net. ~!fJ.•.~ Potter, on the other hand, wu anythln& but slutelah. 1'bouah she hu combated the nu durtn1 the pa.st two w~. abe matched Navtalilova'a quickneu and came up •lth some nicely placed abOU. Yachts dropping like flies Four knocked out of Transpac race in early goings Martina Navratilova By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Dell, ............ .,,_ The attrition rate in the bien· nial 2,225-mile Los Angeles to Honolulu race is starting early this year -even before the yachts get into the blustery and squally northeast trades. Four o! the 74 scheduled starters are already knocked out of the race with no severe weather conditions reported. Weather reports from the fleet Monday indica ted n ortherly winds ranging from 14 to 20 knots -depending on the posl· lion of those reporting. Sea con- ditions have been in the three to /our foot range. Most gear failure or dlsmast- ings usually occur when the yachts are knocked down by squa lls and rough seas during the middle and latter stages of the race. There has been no word from the three yachts which have abandoned the race and headed back toward the mainland. The yacht Rodeo Drive, which was dismasted Sunday night, report- ed that she did not have enough fuel to power back to port and was requesting a fuel drop from the Coast guard. The yacht Regardless, which abandoned the race because of a rigging failure, is apparently j ury-rilling a shroud and at- tempting to sail home. Strike talks get entertainiiig Belanier. the Orioles' shortstop, who wu called to Drifter was reported sailing home under reduced sail with a damaged steering gear. Gr yphon, the first boat out of the race, had no problem other than disappointment for the crew. She was dismasted at the start of the race. As for those still left in the race. the battle for first lo finish between Merlin and Cbrlatlne was s till a tossup Monday. Merlin had apparently talten over the ell!psed time lead as her pos1Uon report placed her about seven miles closer to Honolulu. Class leaders on corrected time: CLASS A -Native Son, Robert McBaln, San Francisco; 2. Zamazaan, Zamazaan Syn. dicate, San Francisco; a. Macobi, Harold AJsley, Marina del Rey. NEW YORK CAP> -The National Labor Relations Board resumed Ill cue a1aiut major leaaue bueball today before an admlniltraUve law JUdge who asked Mark Belanger and Bob Boone for their auto1rapha after the ftnt day of bearlnp. testify for the union. CL~ B -1. Siatet Dl!fpe. "It wu lntere1tin1 to have Belaqtr," Welles Mike Oayner·Tony Delfino, said. "He tak• so many bita away from Yankee Newport Beach ; 2. Uln Na batters. I like tbe fact that be ball about .IOO Mara, Jim Barnhart, Hawaii; 3. ..ainst ua, Uaou1h." Bravura·87, Irvine Laube, Me lvin Welles , tbe NLRB'• cblef ad· minlatraUve law Judae, liltenecl with a bemuaed s mile to the t.eatimony offered lload•l u the tabor board sought to force manqemeat to open ill boob to the union. "I am a baMHIJ fan," U. J•• iaid. "llMt of ua are. I root for the v.u ... Wbea Wublattoa had a tum I uw JO ••met a,..,, NoW 1 ... 10 or 11, aJmoat all OI them la Baltimore." Tllat'a why the Jud11 muat ban bHD particularly lmpre111d by tbe-prHenee of Welles, l1 ln char1e of a11l1ninf ad· Richmond. · mlnlatraUve law Judi•• f« ca1e1 Un tbe oae tbe NLRB la punuiq a1aiDlt tbe owners. "I w~ CLASSC -1. Tomahawk, Jobn Uall OM to mYMU, McaUH lt IOUDded ~. Arena, Newp_ort Beach; a. Jt will be more f\aD f« me." Searamouehe, Rolfe Ctoker, San Actlq OD behalf of tbe union, the NLRB .. rtandlco; s.: llOODl ... W, ,.__ aeeldnt to Pf'Oft .. ..., ....... bu Nrlitied ln •• W•lialld. Haftil. bad faith bY ,.,_.,to oPIB tta ftaaetaf bOM.I bi CLA88 I> -1. Jlacy: a. Swelt netotlatlom wllile, at tile tame time, •irtoU club Otote, DMD Treadway, llawall: ownen and CGmmllaloner BoWte Kw bave be· a. Sbmllldoab, wunam Nmer. < .. naraa, ~a> NeWport a.acb. . ~ ------~·--~ -·~-------- GoUers aren't behind players on stn&e hem AP clllpatelael OAK BROOK, Ill. -Profesalonal !I 1olf era are ahowing no sympathy for . baseball's striking players. "I'll bet If you polled every 1olfer at the Western ·open, you wouldn't find one wbo didn't side with the baseball owners," aaid Howard Twitty, a member of Ule PGA Tour's Tournament Players Policy Board. Such disdain for the bueball strike ia un· 1 deratandable. In golf, every man is for himself. In effect, ~he's an Independent buai- 1 nessman. He must pay bia 1 own expenses and must de· cide when and where he wants to perform next. Ba11ball today . 01:datelabu1ball~•: J Calllaoa Im a tlu'M·nm, nlntll·lnnlq bom1 nm ott Dick aadaq to 1tv1 the National Lta1u1 a t-4 ~ct.or)" In tb1 All·ltar 1am1 at ~1w York'• brand new Shea Stadium. The victory enabled the Nat.looall to tie the AU-star aerie.a for lbe flnt time. u each Jea1ue bad now won 17 1ames. On thi.sdateinl937: Lou Gehrig's two-nm homer 1ave the American League ao S.3 All·•tar 1ame vic- tory at Washineton'a Grlttlth Stadium before 31,391 fans, lncludlne Preeldent Franklin D. Rootevelt. Charlie Gehringer had three bit.a for the winners, while Joe Medwlckhadfourtortbe N atlonala. Winning pitcher Lefty Gomes of the Yankees hurled three innln&s of one-bit ball. The game's most memorable moment came in the third inning, when Earl Averill's line drive broke the right bi& toe of Dluy Dean, shortenine the St. Louis ace's brilliant career. Today's birthdays: Hall of Fame second baseman Billy Herman is 72. Cleveland pitcher Len Barker is 26. Boston infielder Glenn Hoffman is 23. ... Mulligan tape Cro•a.v for LC UC lnlDe bukMball ooecb all m Mwll•u tapped a famWar NHrYCl&r . of taltnt Wble be anNND ... MCIDdaJ •*~ that ht bu remalted CUrt1a cro..1e1 from -· dl1baekCoUe11. MuW1an la the former Saddleback eoacb who brou1ht All-American Kevin Ma11e, amone otber1, to UCI with blm lut year. Crossley, a 8-7 forward who helped the Gaucboe to a 3>-9 record and a berth ln the state playoffs, will be a sophomore when be dona an Anteater uniform next seuoo. An all-state elecUon while at Eutnd&e Hlgb in Kankakee, Ill., Croaaley avera1ed 15.f points per same and 7 .t rebound.I for the Gauchol lut aeuon. Mulll&an a1ao announced t.bar Rlck Ciaccio, a graduate of Newport Harbor Hll.b, hu a1ao received a scholarship to play at UCI. Tbe 8-9 cenlA>r avera1ed 1 than II polnb per tame this seuon. He w also named to the All· Sunset Leaiue fin m. "I think Cross can step in and help us Immediately," said Mulligan. Duran to return to the ring &oberto Ouraa will return to the • ring after nearly a year's layolf aince losing the WBC welterweight cbam· "Baseball players ought to try 'playing golf for a Uv· ing ," said former PGA champion Al Geiberger, part Gd~pn-of the PGA Tour since 1960. "No guarantees, all expeoaea paid -by yourself. I'd lite to bear them complain then," said Geiberger, whose best year of $175,893 came five years ago. Twitty, the winner of an average of $170,000 in his last two years, boils over the big con- tracts down-the-line baseball players command. Keep this one under your hat HARTFORD, Conn. -Psast. Keep this under your bat: There are some fans who are using their heads to stage a protest over the baseball strike. Jerry Kritz, a 27-year-old native of Providence, R.I., wants every disenchanted baseball fan to wear the cap of bis or her favorite team on July 14. That's the scheduled date of the All-star game, which bas been put in jeopardy by the 25-day walkout. ~....­ DOWN ON THE FARM -Atlanta pitcher Gaylord Perry rests on a hoe while tak- ing a break from bis farm chores at bis home in Williamston, North Carolina. ·Perry began work on bis farm the day after the baseball strike started. pionshlp to Sa1ar &ay i.e-ard last Nov. 25 when he fights Nbao Goaaales Aug. 9 at a site to he determined . . . Cliff Abel, track and c~ country coach at Long Beach State for the past three years, said that he is leavine the school to devote more time to his real estate interest.a ... Weekend performances at the Western Open Golf tournament earned Jack Nlcklau, BW Roten and Howard Twitty spots on the 12- m ember U.S. Ryder Cup team beaded for England in September . . . To• Welsbpf fued a five-under-par 66 to share the first-round lead in the J erry Ford Invitational Golf tournament with three other pros ... Elroy "Craay Lees" Hiracb, athletic director at the Univenily of Wisconsin and Ed "Moote" llraue, retired athletic direct.or al Notre Dame, will receive the Distinguished American Awards at the Chicago Chapter of the N atiooal Football Foun· dation Hall of Fame annual luncheon next week "Look at what they make," he said. "They have one good year and they get a contract for $400,000 a year for the next six years. And they get it no matter what they do." "It may be kind of hokey," said Kritz, who is a clerk with a Hartford law firm this summer as he prepares for his third year in law school at DePaul University. "But I want to show both sides what fan loyalty is all about. Walker may challenge NFL rule ATLANTA -University of Georgia All America running back Herschel Walker says the National [i] Football League regulation against aiping un· derclassmen is u.nfair and he may challenae it. Quote of the day . "Neither the players .nor the owners would be in the financial position they are today if it were not for the fans plunking down their dollars at the ballpark," he said. A similar rule was recently adopted by the Canadian Football League after Its Montreal team made an attempt to draft the super freshman off the national champion Bulldogs' squad this s~ring. Television, radio Baseball Hall of Famer Joluaay Mbe: ·'The only spirit you see today in buebaU is the kind you drink." Krilz's plan is for fans to wear the caps to work as an expression of solidarity. TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -Salt Lake City at Phoenix, 7 p.m ., KMPC (710). From Page C1 STRIKE. • • moaned the game's financial condition. Kuhn and three club owners, Jerry Reinsdorf of the Chicago White Sox, Calvin Griffith of the Minnesota Twins and Ruly Carpenter of the Philadelphia Phillies, were scheduled to testily today. Also scheduled for tonl&ht la a meeting of the ex· ecutive board of the Major League Players Association. The 26 player representatives will be briefed on negotiatiooa in their strike, which entered it.a 28th day today witb 13 more games canceled for a total of 324 lost since the walkout be&an June 12. On Thunday, the 216 club owners will meet in New York for a briermg from chief neeotiator Ray Grebey and the Player Relations Committee. The owners' meeting came a bout after eight teams re· portedly asked league presi· dents Lee MacPhail of the American League and Chub Feeney ol the National by tele· gram to set it up. The New York Times said that the New York Yankees and Meta, Houston Astros, Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, San Dieeo Padres, Texas Rantersi and Baltimore Orioles bad re- quested the meeting, the ftr1t by the owners since the strike be&ao. The Times also said that two of the owners of those teams identified Edward Bennett Williama, owner of the Orioles, aa the main force behind the re· quest. Most of the opening day of the NLRB hearing was devoted to testimony from Marvin Miller, executive director of the union, who traced relations between the players and management which led to the st.rilte. Miller spent more than two hours oo the stand, lestilyine un· der questioning from Mary Schuette, the NLRB attorney, and David Silberman, represent- in& the union. When they were through, management counsel Louis Boynes asked only that Miller confirm two bits of testimony he bad offered last month In Rochester, N.Y., before federal jud1e Henry Werker. Both in· volved quotes attributed to Miller reearding poverty report.a of manaaement. Boynes quoted Miller u hav· in& said. "Why should I believe Bowie's annual poormoutb speech?" and, "All I bear la more and more losses and all I see la more and more capital 1aln1." · Miller conllrmed both quotes, JUJt u be bad In the Rochester case, when tbe NLRB soutbt an lnjunetiaa a1almt mana1ement, delaJIDI for one year lta tree a1ent compeuatioo plan Dybtra sign• contract with Meta • No new strategy for All-star game All systems although time is short r • CLEVELAND (AP)-Asthe strike by baseball players nears its one-month anniversary, the chore of preparing for an All· star Game that may never hap- pen baa become increasingly frustrating. "Extremely frustrating," said Cleveland Indians spokesman Bob DiBiasio Monday as baseball Commissioner Bowie Kubo declined to cancel tbe game, scheduled for Municipal Stadium next Tuesday. "THERE'S NO CHANGE in plans," said Gabe Paulr presi- dent of the host Indiana. "We're going full steam ahead and will until the last possible minute." Thousands of souvenir T · shirts, mugs and pennant.a are locked away, 5,000 pounds ot bot dogs are stored in the Stadium's freezers, 50,000 programs are printed and 1,600 hotel rooms are reserved for incoming media and baseball officials. 'Tm still proceasioe creden- tials. We're still 1ettin1 re· quests," DiBiaaio said. More than 500 media representatives planned to cover the event. JUST IN CASE -Cleveland Indians official Bob DiBiaso unpacks a Most Valuable Player trophy for this year's All-star u..._.. baseball game. Whether the game will be played is still in doubt. BUT NO ONE seems op· limiatic that the players' strike will be settled in time to aave the game, at least for its scheduled date. McEnroe receives kind words He gets them from the two people who know him best -mom and dad By WllL G&IMSLEY ......... ew. a 2 John McEnroe, Sr., and his wife, Kay, knew they bad something special on their hands back on Feb. 16, 1959 when an Air Force doctor in Wiesbaden, Germany, lift· ed the newly born baby boy by his feet and brought forth the breath of Ufe with a few bard thumps on the bottom. "He waa pretty lively then," says the elder McEnroe, a successful attomey from the suburban-like Dou1laaton area of New York City. "He seems always to have bad a natural affinity for sport.I. He could bit a thrown ball with a bat when he was two." KAY McENaOE, the attractive, ebullient mother, reealls that ber No. 1 son was the "firatest" ln almOlt everythlne be tried. "He talked sooner and walked sooner than most children. He made the top grades in b1a clua. Al loog u I can re· member, be bad tbU fierce desire to wta." Jobn Patrick McEnroe, Jr., la tbe talk of the temdl world -the younpt.er with the unruly curia, famillar red headband and low temper fuse wbo11 left.banded briWanee baited Bjorn Bora'• 1treak of five men'• cbampionsblpt and u eon· 1ecuUq match vtctorl• at Wimbledon. In produdftl tb1I MUatloaal upnt, the 22·Ytar-old lhot·makln1 wbard enlatSed upoa Ida NPUUtiOll q Ua. same'• bad boy -.. ..., lrat," "Mac tbe 8trif1;• "Mac· la-llow,'' ''Prtnee °' ........ p&cl J'Gal' owe clleMI -wbile pWlil up a Nrt• of nn.. fer .. eovt tantname. •• llAI ta ..... lpaftl ..... . m1: WM&..._ MeDlroe .... ? Did llie UH• •t11*M M a kid? WM M pam· ,. .... bl .. ,. ... , ............. IOll •u a ran 1•• . ., .... tbe ..., JobD •-•-...-. rr and Kay McEnroe derelict in their obliga- tions to apply a tight rein? "Absolutely not," insists Kay McEhroe. "We have three boys, John the oldest. They were taught to be considerate and polite. When they weren't, they were punished. John has had b1a abare of pad- dling. "WE NEVE& PUSHED any ol them. We wanted them to grow up to be normal, 'He is basically very, very shy, a private person.' healthy kids but at the same time ln· dividuala. There was never ao attempt to put them in a mold." The mother said youn1 John bu ~ misrepresented by tome ot the media and misuodel'ltood by the pubUc. "He la basically very, very 1by, a private person," •be said. "He la dote to a eentua. He la a perfectionist. lie can't abide sloth and indifference. 1111 acbool1 be WOO a medal for bJp e · lie playea basketball, soccer aiad . ball, bealdes tennis, and sot mad when be tboucbt bit leammatel weren't •olat au out. "WllKN U GOT bll ftnt l'Aftet at ace ot ti#, be wq beatiq the U· and IJ. year-Gldl. Once be fell oa a Mqde ad broke Ida left wrtat. He didlD't tall ..,W.,. ffe kept pla1iDI ..... .W OM daJ a bump CUM op oa bla arm m X-rQI 1 1bowed a tnetuN. "Tbal'• Jolla." J ohn Sr., who was serving the Air Force in Germany when John was born, said hla precepts to his boys have always been "try hard, do your best and give it your all." "That may sound corny," be added, "but we've always lmpreaed upon the klds to stand up for their right.a. "I am not in total agreement with every- thln1 that happens in public and I've often told John that be iomettmes over· react.a on line calla, altbouib be'• eeneral· ly right. Yet I think it absurd the way the All·Enlland Club escalates to the level ll does In the treatment or such instances.'' llU. McENROE SAYS, wbile abe Jets uncomfortable when John launcbes into one ot bia tantrums, she doetn't think the puniabment llta the crime. "I am outraged by the actlonl of the All· En&land Club," abe 1ald. "I 1et the teeliq that the powen are trylq to break tbe back of tbla 'Utile upetart from the States.' "John bu received tons of letter., mucb ol It trom Britiab fans. They ur1• him to please not five in to the ollldall who are out to iet bf m." McEnroe's parents accuse tbe All· En1land Club and a aeament ot t.bt Brttlab press ot en1alinl ln a penoaal venct.lta a1aln1t the talented new Wimbledon champion. "I am outraaed by It,'' the IDOtbll' Mid. SM rUWd \Ml last year ............. 1llpped lDto John'• room aad'imlped oat ot tho doletl at bim. 1111 the wild . ._.. at Loadoa'• Heatllrow Airport ...,, -- Mc&IU"Ot WM pnpartDs to a.." wtt.l Ida Daria Olp taammetea, a. latd ......_. rapb1n cbued lalm tllroqb a dlalal area and n.a lmocked MM' aa old ladJ oe the airplane ramp. "The game hun't been can· celed," said Chuck Adams, a spokesman for Kuhn. "We're continuing to re-evaluate it day by day. But obviously a decision has to be made soon. We're rapidly running out of time ... If it i.s not played next Tues· day , the game could be rescheduled, with July 30, the second rain date, the most logical choice. July 15 is the primary rain date. "THE TIDNG THEY obvious· ly don't want to do is cancel the game," DlBiasio said. "A postponement would be OK." Cancellation of the contest would cost the Cleveland economy $4-118 million, according to Frank Carrell, vice president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau. Also, the baseball players' pension fund would lose about S2 million. The decision rests with baseball's executive committee, comprising Kuhn and' team owners from Detroit, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Kansas City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Bost.on and Pittsburgh. IF THE GAME IS saved, Municipal Stadium will be pre- pared. A month without baseball bas left its natural turf in ex- cellent s hape, and Al Friedlander, Stadium Corp. vice president, said there would be no problem rounding up salespeople to staff concessions and souvenir booths. "If they say, 'No AU-star Game this year,· we'll run a sale for about two weeks and sell the souvenirs at half price," be said. Contingency plans have not yet been made for the 78,000 peo- ple who bought tickets for the soldout contest. "Obviously if the game ia played July 30, the July 14 ticket would be good," OlBiaaio said. "As far a refunds, that'll prob- ably be the last thing they de- cide on." The All-star Game bu been canceled only once since the first one wu played in Chicqo'1 Comiskey Park in 1933. That was in 1945. Pier awim elated at Balboa Satunlay · The Sbtb Annual Pier to Pier ocean swim will be beld ~ dayl .start1na at 10 a .m. at t1ae Balboa Pier llfesuant tower M. Contestant. wW swim to a buoy located IOO feet from lbare, swim DOltb to a buo1 located r juat south. of tlM Newport Pier. It la adviled that eacb ntm- mer be accompanied by a~ dltr and wnr a brtabtl7 eolond swim~. Six clvllkm will be awarded la boUa men's aad womeo'1 • d .... ,,..,_...to~ ~-la time nn 4-1 II t :ll a.m.at~....., •. Katrtll ........ _.. al .. Ntwpart Bleclll OeMa LlfeiuiN AaaoclaUaa omee, lecaled at moN...,..-tBl\id. . SldrJ ,.. ii ••• Uae.., Of tberaee. · NA8l WHT••• DIYlllOM , w 1. ., ea,. 'l.•A....... u ' 1t ,. •• I Safi 0.... 11 10 » D • W IMn I UD ,,177S $.aft J-• u 27 .. • 14 I N<MITMWllT DIVlllOlll v~ou-'' • • u 41 m I s .. 111e u 10 to 41 c 11 .. Cal941ry 10 11 D J2 • • ; Portland to 10 JO 1t • • 1 l!drnot1WI I 12 • • D • : IAITl•M DIVISION , COtl'flH 17 S to J2 • I• l WeMllftt'On 10 10 U :M a • _,,..., t 10 32 JO a a 1 Two"'" S u 2' 41 Jt 5' I IOUTMI •N OIVlllC* Fort. L ...... le IJ I JI Z2 U t1 Allal\la II t _, :M D t1 Tam.,. ky t U U 47 JI 11 J.c!Uofwllle 10 11 J1 1t D n I CIMT•AI. DIYlllON , .. ,c... 1J 7 4J • u 111 I Mlnnuota 12 • • :M » • • Tutu 11 10 • JO » t1 I Oallea 1 It 14 .. I) D Sia poll'llt are aw ... -10r a ,.__, ..... or overtime Ylelot'V Four polntt for a .,_.. •lctory. OM Dorlu~ point lw • .,.,y -J ""'" wm. a mulmum ol tftrw ,,.r .. -. I No boflvt POlfll It •••-IOr OWl'tlme w .-1ou•-··· .......,..o- No ea,,_ sc-lecl T-r'••-S.attte a1 JKIUDfl•llle," NASL acortng ·~J-Jf) a-e A~ Clllft .. tla. New YoriL 11 U 12 a kldd,AllarU U 1' 4 » c-...._ New Yori< II 11 ' • Gr ... nu . CN<aeo 1• 10 1 t1 cwui., Ft.~. 10 10 1 11 C..rbe r, c.M9wY 11 11 4 2' StoJ-lc. S.. OteQD It 11 ' U l.D'lme r • ..,_.,... It 1 11 ts Hiii, M--... 11 7 11 2$ GooM"' E-1• I I 2A Mc llt ftllt, TUIM II I I 14 klrK,._, E...._WI 17 t 4 22 '"lld, Ali.ru 11 ' 4 22 y .., !>« Ellt, -Y-11 S 12 22 Gr-. JKklonYllle U I S 21 Sltflen....,..., Clllc-U t J 21 Ni-It...,., Ml,.,...,g 11 1 1 JI --,.n.s.t " • 4 • Sano, T-17 1 • JO BH I, S... JoM It 7 • JO Vettl\llM, Vencou..., It • 1 JO Lo• Al1mtto1 MOllOA Y' I • llWl.TS 1u. ....... ,_ ......... ~ Flr.i race -ic....., Te IMlk,..11, 6.JI. 4.00, >.•;Se•-... ,.,_.,, .... 7.00; My s.lt1 Ollcll OIW-J, 4 .... U •-IM l ...,_ 11._ .. S.C.,.. rec:e -ia.ct• ,.,. (AoMlr>. ..-. 4.00. >•: C--. Ctwell (0.wl), 1-•. 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T,,. 8oml> I llr-t), l 40 $1 eU<ta I 'MI ,_Id SJ06 20 n PIO Sia (1 ,,_).l+tl paid S41J.illlwlt11t2 wlnnlftO lle-et1 lflw honnt U PIO Sia con111l•llO<\ peld $1l.60 with t24 wlMll\Q llO•h Clour l'IOrtHI Hll\111 rK• -w11 ... 1,.. c.., IAOelrl. 11.40. 10 to. • 40, Miu Triple Ola f ICardoHI. 11 40, "'°· Town Polley ( Har11. J . .., U ••· •Cl• .... , peld $162.00 Alie-. -7 ... 1 Cerdoae Hert TrHture ,,._, Mltclttll Clerlue Adair ~r:.:.2i.. llr-• ScllveNWldl Cascio lloc>mqul~I Welc.11 •"Harris Colet to Aol~Uftl w-,_, Stelnmlll« T•AINIH -lat._." •1• 7S Ill J1 4'1 .. US4 m •1 " • .. 47 • " 3H M4J• -Jl • ,. 144 •• JS 12'16172' llS 21 11 IJ ,_, 10 IA » Sta tat._." -S4 ,, Ill .. 24 IO II 14' " Z2 1' .. " u • 11• " " n " " . . 1S4 " 1 • • u 10 u ISi II i. 11 " 12 • 1 Teem tennl• 1eu.-c• s ... ..-~1 ~n ........... . ........... Sllerweo• Siewe rt CCI ••'· Vll•Y •mrttrel,1-4. ..... ca.-.. ~ Many·~ Mlwelt CCI eot, VIJey •IN'ttrel•T,.Y Wittke, •I, .............. , 8 er lll•r• Peller I Cl 41et. 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IANTA IA•eAllA -t4 a ... lera: 2'D call<e ...._ J llfle cod. I "6llbu1, JIJ rock Cod, US "*"-1. YINTUU -1S ....-n: JJll celk o ..... 111\etllllul,11"'9<114 OllNAaD -12' ....-n· l,OU rect. cod, J.JO cetlc:o ....._ 10 tint cod, 611 mackerel . PO•T MUIN•MI IAMerlcHI -41 •"llen . 7S cetko -·· 1 "811-. 11' rct. cod, 1 cow uoL MAl.IMI -7S _....,.., ill -beu. 11 cellce Ilona, • boflUo, s "8111111\, '2 rock <od, U m•cllM'wl. 'A•Aot .. COY• -no anvi.rs. •reek c .. , •cowcocl, 10cellco ... a , I l\el!M. SANTA MONICA -n .,...,.., 40 - b4aa, t celko-., 2' mecker•I, » lloflllo. MA•IN.A OCI. •IT-to.,...,..: 47-... u. u cellco Mu, "Dorlllo. l hetlbu1. ••IM*DO -11' ...... ,... 2 lllueflft -· 11' u tlc:o beU, ill -I•. 11 -r.cude, 11s meclr.erel, US rock clld. ,., .. -207 •"91er~: 1IO bofllto, 2.010 tneekentl. 100 rock Cod. • SAN ND .. IDlll st. UMI .. ) -" •"91ert: 122 cellco beU, in Mltll _, S4 -llo, I berrKude, J yellowtell, 2 l\ellllul, 12 elba<.ore. , ....... O' c.MI -110 ...... ,... 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F-11'1 Velley Hor1fl.-mlMIW Amer1C.M wlNWr, S·• ICl\e,..-lp -WI S.h1ni9y el I p.m .1 MalCH Le1gue leader• AMl."ICAN l.EAOUI. RUNS HeftOtrlOfl. OOlend, 46; Evant, BOllOI\, 44, C.-, A .... s. JI; L..eftll-. 80ttOl\. l7. Mun>11y, OeklellCI. >t HITS ~d. Boll.,,,, 7S. Oliver, Tu· u . IS, Event, BoslG'\, 17. ·-· A ..... a. 11; C•r-. ~. 11; H-rlOfl, 0.-leltd, n DOU Bl.ES Olla. K.,. .. 1 Clly, ''·Arma'- Oe-l•ftCI, ... Ollw r. Teaea, U; L..eftalord, 801111<\, "· P•lorek, Se•IU•, 14. TRIPI.ES ~lino. Ml...,.MIU. •: Grllflfl, Torol\IO, s, BalMI, Clllc-. S; '-•"""'· Chlce911, S, S Tlod '11111" • STOl.EN BASES. Hef>de•lllfl, OOlend, :J3, Crw , Seat11e, 21; OlloM, Ctevelencl, 17; LeFlor•. Clll'-• IS Bumbry, llalllmor.. 1J STR IKEOUTS. Berktr, Clenleftd, 10, Blyleven. Cleveland. 0 , FleftaQ•n, Be lllmore, U . Devi'· Hew Yllfk, to. LeDMrd, ke,....Clly,.O. NATIONAL 1.IAOUI AUNS Cottlns, CltKlft,..11, 44, S<llmklt, P"lladelphle. 40. AeiMt, MonlrM I, H ; .._ ClrlO , St. L.oul~. J1, Oe'#tllfl, MofllrMI, 2'; Foster. Clflc"-11, » HITS ROM, Phll-ljlllle, 1J; CorKepclon, CltKl""•ll, '7; COlllt!s, CIMlnnell, '1; Orlf. , ..... ClflClft ... 11, '7; ·-· De41een. u . DOUBLES-&uctiner. CNc-. It, C- cepclo" Clnclftftell, It. Her11e11dt1, SI LOUii, 14, Chemtlll•l. Allarita. 14, ._.,.,,, DNeen,14. TRIPI.ES Reyl\Oldt. Ho111loft, t ; Rlc ... rcb, S... DI-. 1, RalMt. MllfttrMI. •. Htrr, St. 1.ouls, '· T~. SI. Lwli, • . STOLEN BASH: Relnn, MorltrMI, Ill; Nortl>, Sen "'•Mite•, 26; Scott, Mol\trMI, U; ~. Pl~. 11. Cotllfl .. ClllClfl· ... u. 1'; Pl.IN, Hout1on, 1', Smllll, s.. 01 ... ,1'. STRIKEOUTS: v-...., Dod9t ... ltl; Cerllon, ""lledetc>Net 14; Soto, d 11el-I, ": R~en. Holnloft, 16, Oullk l<tofl. ~ tr••I, '° Misc. Strike angers Ashburn PHILADELPHIA <AP> - Former Philadelphia Pblllle Riehle Ashburn has urged all sldea lo the major league baseball strike to end their dis- pute and get back into action. "I'm mad as bell and I'm not going to sit around and take this crap a ny longer," Ashburn fumed ln his column today in The Bulletin. "BASEBALL IS my game and I have a right. to speak out," As hburn wrote. "As a former player and a broadcaster (for the World Champion Phillies), I've been part of baseball for 3S years and I've gloried in every minute of it. "I haven't always loved the players or the owners, but I've always loved the game and I will not sit idly by while the players and the owners deslroy it," he said of the walkout, now in its 25th day. Ashburn refused lo assess blame for the strike, but !Wd all sides were guilty for its con· tlnuaUon. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn "did absolutely nothing lo prevent the strike and has done a bsolutely nothing lo prevent it," said Ashburn. The former player s aid he was disappointed with Marvin Miller, the executive director of the Major League Players As· sociation. "Miller is a bri ILiant n e ~oliator and is partly responsible fo r the s uccess and strength of the association. "BlJT HE made a disastrous mistake when he allowed his un· ion to be manipulated into a position whe re he was com · milted to a strike during the season," Ashburn asserted. "You have to wo nde r how players and owners alike ar · rived at a situation where the fate of baseball is determined by Marvin Miller and Ray Grebey. t he owners' negotiator, both of whom are non -baseball men." Ashburn asked . ··I get mad when I see the players sitting i n on s trike negotiations,·· he said. Of various individuals , As hburn noted: -.. Bob Boone is a classy man, but he is not a labor ex· pert. "RUSTY STAUB bas always been a good hitter and he makes a mean bowl of chili, but his expertise in labor negotia· tions is questionable. -"Steve Roge r s , Doug DiCinces and Mark Belanger are all fine ballplayers a nd that's exactly what they should be doing-playing ball." Ash bum acknowledged: ·'This column won 't a c complis h anythjng except to make a lot of people mad, but I refuse to a pologize for it." Catamarans sailing well in Transpac Barring an accident, at least one of the catamarans in the MultihuJI Transpacific r ace may beat all of the monohulls in the m on ohull Tr anspac race to Honolulu. A report from the multihull fl eet Monday placed Bob Hanel's 65·foot catamaran Dou· b le Bullet near the half-way mark after three days of sailing. Double Bullet's coordina t es placed her 1,000 miles from Los Angeles. . The race started last Friday at 1 p.m . a few miles from the start of the Transpacific Yacht Club's race for·74 monohulls. The 53.f oot trim aran , Crusader , owned by Mike Kane of Newport Beach and sailed by Bill Maudru, reported that she sighted and passed the monohull Me rlin, leader ln the regular Transpac during the day. Merlin ls the elapsed time record holder for the Los Angeles to Honolulu race. Six multihulls -catamarans and trimarans -started the race. The 40•foot catamaran Chat 'd Eau capalzed and broke up in heavy seas the first nlgbt out. Her six man crew was rescued by the yacht Westward, a competitor in the monobull race. Lifeguards battle Former llf e1uard Ronald Reagan bu been extended an ln· vltatlon to attend the annual La1una Niguel 1Jle1uard Team Competltlon. Tb• popular event bu been expanded to two d1y1 and wW lnclude the U.S. Wenvinl M · 1oclat100'1 National Lltepar,d Cbamploubl111. Spomcwed by Avco Commun.\· ty Devt.k>pen, th• competltlon ia bead a Salt Creek Beach LD Laf\IU Nttuel And la Ml for · Aq. IJ.14. . . ,. . . --. .. . . . . . . .. . .. . . .. . .. ' ... . _; Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTue1day, July 7, 1981 ca STRIKE TALK Ph1ladelph1a Phillies slug· ger Mike Schmidt comments on the baseball strike while hosting a 15 minute AP ...... sports show in Phil adelphia. Station of · f1r 1a ls said Schmidt would be back for more TV time whenever possible. Whittinghill tournament nears Annual event lures Orange Coast area residents By HOWARD L. HA NDY . Of -OMIT~ ltaolf It's still almost a month away but amatt'ur golfers are already signing up for the Wh1ttinghill Fan Club 1nv1tat1onal t ournament at Los Alamitos Country Club Aug. 1. Among Orange Coast area entries are Walter Cervantes of Newport Beach. Ray f"ladeboe of lrvine and Da le Johnson of Huntington Beach Also from Orange County a re Don Tatro of Anaheim and Frank Wa ll of M1 ss1on V1eJO Proceeds from the tourna ment go to the Long Beach Community Hospital cancer detection and treatment programs The tournament chairman is R. E. "J eff" Kas ler with Millie Vessels. president of Los Alamitos r ace course. as honora r ) cha irman "We've added two fl vesome'> this year c;o that more amateur golfers can play in the tournament and there is no handicap hmit," Kas ler says The entry fee not only covers green fe<'s but the pairing party, recognition dmner. adm1ss1on to the quarterhorse races that night lei· gift~ and othe r prizes For more mformat1on. call the hospital at 597 ·6655. extension 2265. Scott eyes Coe and a record STOCKHOLM. Sweden <AP> -StPve Scott. a former UC Irvine s tandout and the United States' top miler, continues his quest toward the J4 )ear old American t.500·meter record tonight. But he wants a victor v over Sebastian Coe as much as Jim Ryan's old. mark. Coe, the Ol y mpic l.500·meter champion. edged Scott both previous times they raced 1n lhe mile and the 1,500. Each time the amazin~ Briton set a world record while Scott had lo settle with a personal best. "Sebastian is a great runner, but he's not un beatable." Scott said on the eve of a two-day 1n vitational meet "I know 1 can beat him and tomorrow could be my day. A win would thrill me as much as beating the Amen can record ·· Ryun set tus 1,500 record, one of the oldes t Ame rican track llnd field st andards. of 3 minutes, 33.1 seconds in Los Angeles July 8, 1967. Scott, whose best lime is 3 33.33, won the mile the past two years he re for the coveted Dickson Trophy, firs t contested In 1895. With no mill' race scheduled this time. the trophy will lltO to the win ner of the metric equivalent. Coe, who broke his own 800·meter record with an 1:41 .72 clocking in Ita ly last month. will run the 1,500 for the first ti me of the season here Tuesday. .. J lost nine days practice because of stomach trouble last month, but I'm in very good s hape now and I feel confident ... Coe said. "We'll have a very competitive race tomor· row, but I don't like to talk in terms of setting a world record. Steve Scott is no easy pushout. He's a very talented athlete and has raced very well this season.·' An unprecedented 66 world records have been broken at Stockholm's Olympic Stadium -site of the 1912 Summer Games -and an impressive field in the 1.500 could produce another one Si\N Jt'i\N Hll.1.S professional Ame Kodda ,rnn the Southern California PGA match play title at ~esa Verde Country Club recently Dokka won 11\.er noh Irving of La Jolla on the second hole of a sudd<>n death playoff aftn both fired 147 for the regulation '.16 hole-. llosl professional Art Schilling <11d another outstandmg Job in running the to urna· rnent L"pcommg event:.. on the SCPGA calendar in· tludt· ,1 tv.o day eH•nt at Santa Man a Thursday and Friday the annual Sierra Nevada Open at • Gf)[F f:rtg t•v.ood 'I ahoc and Incline Village, J uly 21-23; a ncJ thP Eaglt' llills ·Crane Creek-Purple Sage Treasure \'alll'y l'\'(•nt Aug 6·9 • • • TllE 82ND Southern California Golf Associa· t ion amateur champ1ons h1p and handicap tourna· ment will be pl ayed at Stardust Country Club in '-\an Diego Jul~ 17 1q Qua l>Cy1n g rounds v.111 take place a t 10 Southern Califor nia courses next Monday and Tuesday. including Mesa Verde Country Club. Jon \rdell of Bakersf1l'ld is thP defending champion ~nd will IX' on hand at the Stardust to try for a ~t'l'Ond :.lraight t it It• John Rich ardson of E l Niguel Country Club and champwn in 1973. 1s c:>xpected to enter along with -.eH•ral oth(•r former champions Handicap flights v.111 111cludt· the c ha mpionship, 0·4. presi· dent's, 5·K, v1c·e prC's ident !-., 9·12 , and secretary's. 13· lH • • • FORMER LOS ANG F.LES RAMS marketing d1rl'dor Do ug F1nlc:>y who lives in Hunti.qgton Reach. ha:. IX'en named to assist in conducting the Southern CaliCornw Open golf tournament at Los Coyotes Country Club. Nov 1-8 Finley will be director of ma rketing relations for Los Coyotes CC and will include among his duties the c1X>rdination or golf and tennis events along w1th handling relations with local com· munit1es and area residents • • • OPENINGS ARE STILL available for the Titan Golf Classic Monday at Los Coyotes Country Club The event wi ll be a scramble tournament with a noon s hotgun start for mixed foursomes. But then• 1s a h m1ted number or playing spots open. The entry fee 11> $125 For more information call the Titan Athlellc Foundation office at 773 3480. Bove new SAC coach Kt·vin Bove. who coached Estancia High School lo the Cl F soccer playoffs fo r the first time in the school's history last season, has been na med s occer coach at Santa An a College Bove repl aces Rudy Campos, who resigned afte r two seasons. Bove played s occer at Bowling Green University He also played for Athletes in Action and for a professional team in South America. Former California Sunshine Coach Derek Lawther will ser ve as a technical advisor to Bove. Santa Ana Collf>ge was 2·15·1 last season. The Dons captured three st raight South Coast Con· ference championships from 1976·1978. Owners to meet Thursday POCKET PAGER COVERS FOUR COUNTIES NEW YORK (AP) -A meetin1 of representatives of a ll 26 major league teams has been called ror Thursday by American League President Lee MacPhail a nd Na· Uonal League President Chub Fee ney -in their capacities H members of the Board of Oirecton of the Player Relations Committee - after eieht club owners r eportedly re· quested the meetinl. The announcement waa made Jolntly Monday by the two teaaue betd.I. '!be mtetb\I will tllt place at S p.m. EDT ln New York. The New York Ttmel said that the eicbt clubt ukinC for tbe .. tMI'· lnl -tbe New York Yankees and Mtt•i Houston Aalto1; Baltimore Oriole; Teua Ran1en; Cleveland tncUam. Cbtc&10 White SOx and San Ditto PadNI -bad asked Ma~PhaU and Peeol.Y by tel11ram to Mt up lhe meetlng. The Times added that. at· cording to two of the owners, Orioles' owner Edward Bennett Williama was the leader or the eroup which sought the meeting. The statement from the l ague pres· !dents said: •'The meeUne la being called by the Board of Oirectons of the Player RelatJons Committee 1n order to od· vise all clubs on the atatu.s of collec· tive bargaining neaotiatlons and tho current NLRB proceed1n1s. ''Attendance wtU be limited to two reprei1entatives of each mljor leasue club pJuit metpbers ol the Board of OircclOl'J or the PRC " The owncra, who han not met 11 a aroup ti.nee the alrlk• be1aa J\tne u. will 1at.her two days after the H · e~ullve board or the MajOf Leaiue Playens AlsoclaUon me t ti ro. ~·co .. LA. co. SAH -HAllHMO CO. llYMSIOI CO. '2000 • Orange Cout t?AIL Y PILOT/Tue1day, July 7, 1811 ......... 'IATHIR!D f'Rll!NDI -Woman swings baa Park, while blrds fioclt around her for mid· of seed to feed p.l1eona in Ch1ca10'1 Grant. day meal. · Birch founder plans college COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo CAP) -The founder of the John Birch Soctet)' say1 be lJ work· ing on plana t.o create a univenity bued OD bll-ul- tra-conaervaUve or1anluU00'1 "unalterable, Wl· compromillng'' bellef1. Robert Welch, speuinc at the aociety'1 annual Rocky Mountain Rally, 11ld a John Birch Univenlty would expand further the aoclety'1 p~ 1ram1 for youth, wbJcb already include youth chapters and 1ummer campe. The school probably would be ln New En•land, Welch 11ld, and would be founded on "the un· altered, unalterable, u.nchan1e•ble, u.ncompromlJ- lnt doctrines and belief• we bold lo the John Birch Society." Welch, 81, who founded the aociety lo 1958 and remains ita preaident, aald the liberal artl uni· versity would be similar in principle to the camps, which are deaiped t.o "immunin the younc person acainat radical victhn111Uon." The campu.a, attended by more than 1,500 youths each year, are located in Colorado, Waah1n1ton, Kentucky. California, Wl1con1ln Montana, Maaaachuaetta, Texu and Geortta. ' ·Mass transit used SACRAMENTO CAP) -Californians u1ed mua tranalt a lot more lut year than ln 1919, and drove their can a little more but boucbt leaa 1a1ollne and fewer can, aaya the annual atate travel report. The report by the Calllornla Department of Tran.port.aUon al10 said CaJ.lfomiana new leu on the airlines, and suffered •llahtly fewer arave tral· fie accidents. DEA TH NOTICES MYEll8 · Hl1h School. He owned and MELISSA <MIS SY > operated Al 's Sportln8 MYER. bom February 11, Goods Store, Santa Ana, Ca. 1972. Paned away on July 4, from 1933 to 1964. He waa a 1981. She la 1urvtved by her char ter member ot the parent' Davlct and Joy Santa Ana Chamber of Myers of Dana Polnt, C1 .. Commerce, a member of the brothen Scott and Mike of Western Sport1n1 Goods D a n a P o I n t , C a . , AuoclaUon and attended the 1randparent1 Evelyn and National Sportin1 Goods Fred Watklna of San Juan A11ocl1Uon. A member of Caplatrano, Ca. and Aubrey the Locksmith Aaaoclatioo, a Myera of Ohio. Servlcea wtll Ute member of the Santa be held on TuHday, July 7, Ana Elka Lod1e 1794, a 1911 at lo : O O AM at member of lbe Val Verde Commun 1 ty Ch r I at I 1 n Sportaman Club. Survived Ch u r ch . Sa n J u an by t\11 wife Lorepe Juper, Caplltrano , Ca . with dau•bt.er Mn. Bob <Janice> entombment In Pomona. Ca. Wilhelm, 3 1randchildren M c Corm I ck M I 11 I o n Krl1, Kell.en and Wende~ Mortuary. San J u an Wllhelna. Se'rvlcea wtll be Capistrano, directors. held on 'J'Ueaday, July 7, 1881 JASPE& at 2:030PM ln Paci.tic Vlew ALFRED M. JASPER, Chafel. Entombment at born on September 3, 11105 ln Pac fie View Memoria l Santa Ana Ca. He attended P ark · P ~c If I c · VI e w Or1n1e Cou nty 1chool1, Mortuary, Newport Beach, •raduat.d from Santa Ana directors. ,. FD~ THE RECORD • ....... DEATHS RSEWHERE MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. <AP) -S.rtle &ae Hleroaymu Bdwam, •. cnother of U.S. Sec~ary Jamea B. Edward•, died Thuraday. Mra. Edward• tau8bt acbool tor 50 yean, lnclud.lnc 85 In Charleaton County, 10 ln Florida and tlve In Kentucky. McCQaMfQ( MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 JOllN801·~ . EVA B. JO'. ~SON , resident ot La ~·Beach, WE~ER, N.C. <AP) - C P • ...-~ Lacy Callata Mor8aa, 92, a. aa!ICQ aw117 July '· founder ot the Penland Laguna Hilla 768·0933 Sin Juan Cap111rano 495·1776 1981 . She wu born In School of Handicraft• ln Kineaa on September 4• Mitchell Coubty1 died at 1898. She wu a recepUODJat her home Frlaay. The· for 10 years at a law office. achool became one of the She waa preceded In death by her husband Charles H. nation'• beat·known ln1tltu- Spanish remnants hunted BEAUFORT, S .C . CAP) -Arcbaeololllll are back on the e11hth bole of the Parria llland Golf COUfle, dt11in1 throuah sartta · Elena - one of the oldeat pre· colonial aetUemenll ln the United States. Unlveralty of South Carolina 1rcbaeoto1i1t Stan South and b1t crew of live are enlarlin1 the area of their search for remnant• of the 18th century Spanish aettle· ment which had a populatioo of about 400 before it waa aban· doned. Worker• found evidence o f a small Spanlab but in d111 two yeara 110 . Now , archaeolot1Jta are bop· ln1 to find other bull and 1tructur• from the town. Hhtorlc document• 1bow t he town waa founded in uee -one )'ear after St. Au1U1tine in Florida. HAllOI UWl4-t11T. OLITI Mortuary • C.lretary Crama1ory Jolla,ton. She la iurvived by t ton 1 for t e a c h I n • a dauabter Jeanette M. handlcran.. M t Hulaebua ot Laf\Ul& Beach, CH I c AGO ( A p ) _ es an ge 8 1625 G11ter Ave Costa Meu S40-5554 NIClllOTHlll l&L •OADWAT MOITUAIT 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 8"2·9150 IAl.ft••••o" SMn'H I """"'L WllTCU.. CMAPll ~27 e 17th St Co1teMe .. 8'8-9371 Ca .. a brother Huth Blevlnl L ,.. I •-a..-1. -U S t .. t S tt K • .er . --· '"'• .. d o or co • anu1. ambauador to Iceland ea.ee Private aervlcea Wert held from 19 to lftJ, dJed Fri· e- tt ~~~=•:,.r:·::.l~ day. Donald G. Pala• of to take plac. at Ula Fort c H 1cA0 0 <A p ) Cotta K•a bu received Leavenwortb National llel•t• '· artek, sa , a h11 doctor o1 medicine Cememy, Kanau. S.rvlo.t ~blither and founder of d • I r • • t r o m under the dlredloo ot Balta uadrutl• Boob, died Habnemaan Medical 8Wer111~~·Cb8mllh1 t Tuthill uflda1. Colle .. and Hoepltal of ettc "' ape .ortuary Phlladelpb.la. otCoetalltta.•eru. HENDERSONVILLE, Patae will completa. &.UID N.C. <AP) -1•-r. Kai· fami1 .. ceU--1~-Dll. CHDTD "CARL" '11 ti, fonn.r act.int cban· y .... ·--· JtAJ80, ....-t ot Salem, celJor ot the State Untverai· cy at Bernardino Ore1on. Palled away on ty of New York, dJed. Jl'n. County Medical Ceater, July 2, im. Ht ii auntffcl day. He iJ • V.~uate of by 1 brat.blr Cbarltl Xliltr ~----'-=-----..... 1 Cotta 11.. Scbool of Co.ta lltK, Ca., IDd I "1BUC NOTIC& and UC lntnt. •lit.en, l'Qe Trautwein ot ---------- Palo ctdro, C.:.i. .... XalNr '"'"' r 1111111 IH ' No 8Uftl of Orep aed alAb Pa1• ol ""',.: ~ .... 1Ua1man. Arllooa. 1\aMrll ... 11, Hrvlee1 wlll be beld 09 CUAMll\Y NWI• ... ,,.~ IACBAMSNTO (AP} Tu.1d11, July 1, ltll at :Jl ,,_,, ..._ .,.._, 1'1111 CalllGnda l :OOPll at Harbor Lawa • ....,._c. .... "'" ,,_.., '";' • ......._ ._J~ Cbaptl wttb a.v. •ruot .... ....._CA... "U~·v ean a...--aw Kurrie ortlelati•I · ,_..._._....., ... ,.,. aa-'8 to~ ,~ YllW Sntombmen~ 1t KarbOr &..:• ..,._ Court .-.OllAL'All Lawn llemotlal = Ml nlell. ladle =Mortuwy Pritecta ma7 call It .......... a C ematofy lrotb1r1 .. u aroadw11 HmlUO'Jr•mt nl· llCIO tc1fio V1ew0t1"' :-::r,::.",1 ::1:J~ la1 ••llold\:1 CY~ NfWpon 8:r" • t :toPll. PatrH lroUaen Dlr..W PMrl Welt'• '-----6"'4-·2_1 __ ~ ltll ..... ., MortHrJI .._._....... ... •• ftb ......... U. dlrtctora. .,..,,. ~...... ......."...... ... Summer power crisis ahead? PUllUC NOTICE 87 TBOll.U D. SUM Ca.UforDla utWU• warn every 1u.mmtr that tom.um. IOClll, nothtna will bappe wben aome eJectrtc 1witcbtt an thrown. Tlaat protpect appean cloetr Ulan ever Wa 11ar u tbt •tate beads into UM pelk·UH bot •Ht.Mr monlhl of AufU,lt and September witb a populaUoa that lncrtued about • percent dlll'lq a decade wbtn almoet no new eleetrtc power planll .,.... built. Evm without a beat wave, tbe four blJ111t CalUornla power companl• npect tbeir com61Ded r111rve marlin to droP u low u 1.2 percent next moatb. No utlllt.y fHll comfortable with l•• than a 10 percent marlin, in CIM a beat wave brlqa vaat &Jr cond1Uoriln1 demandl or a power plant 1uddenly break• down. Wbat bappem 11 a crunch develops 1 Ftnt, the four uUUUea would belp eacb other. A Loa An",el• area bHt wave t.uJ.q the capacity of both Southern Callfomla l:dlaon Co. and UM Loe CAUFORtlA FOCUS Ansel• Department of Water • Power would automatlcall)' caun Paclftc Gu • Electric Co. t.o route aome of ill exceaa capaclt)' aouth. Unuaually heavy demand in the San Francllco Bay Area would produce a reverse now. That •&rMment waa worked out dwin1 the droulht ol tbt mld·'TOI, at tbt aarae time 1tate of. nctalJ prevailed on Southtrn Califonliam t.o leave their atate Water Project enUUemenll in northern reaervotn. So tbt only way a fenuine emer1ency could ariae la U all the atate 1 bit cit.let were bit by almultaneoua beat wavea. That kind of crial• would flnt apur requeall for voluntary conurvaUon -1etUD1 &Jr condi· tlonera at hi1ber temperaturea, leavtn1 •P· pllance1 and televialona off dw1q the hotteat mSd· day houn and other reducUona. Al a lut reaort uUUtie1 are ready t.o 1t11e rollln1 blackoull and cutoff1 ol all "interruptible" cu1t.omen, uaually bu1in.._ which eiUoy cut· rate pricea in exchan1e for tbe nail ol a abut.off in a criail. The diluter plan.a have never been uted, but the utillttn warn that their aummertime 1upplles are more,precarlout than ever. They say conaervaUon ll the key t.o avoidlnt the crlalJ they fear. And that doesn't neeesaarily mean leaviq machinn turned off -Juat leavtn1 them off at the peak houri. For the electric companiea • 1eneratln1 networkl are only rarely uaed at clOH t.o their capacity and then only for abort Umes. U1in1 home appliancn dwint eventni or early mornin1 houra en.auret plenty of power for every uae that'a a 1enulne need dwinl the m1dd17 crunch when virtually all buaineaH1 operate at full blut. CriJea come dw1n1 beat wavea becaute tem· peraturea are h11be1t at tha same timea that lo· duatri• are uain1 all their equipment. That'• the reaaon for the "load man11ement" pro1rama apurred by the atate the Jut three yean. 'Ibeir reuonlnc la that U more butlne11e1 can be convinced to operate at nl•bt, the aame power company capacity can be made to aerve many more cuatomen. Tbe at.ate Public UUUtie1 Commilaloo reporta that thoH pro&ram1 aaved three bWlon k.llowatt houn ol PGW9' lMt har, equal t.o '180 mWlon worth otoU. Tb.. effort.a put Calllornla lo a better 1pot than many Eutern 1tete1 u it beads into the bot· teat aeuon. But the uUUtie1 atW have llttle room to maneuver. Since electric uae increuea by 400 me11watll for every add1Uonal de1ree ol aver11e 1tatewide temperature, the only real auarantee of adequate power 1uppllea ii a cool aummer. And no one can 1uarantee that. CONIULTANT - Erneat Lefever, who withdrew from con- aid eration for the State Department's top human rights post, will advise Secretary of State Alexander Hai& on terrorism and other i11ues. Skating controls appr9ved fllCTtTlOUI aUJI NIU 9IAM9 IT ATllllllMT 'rllf i.11-1111 .. , ...... ,. d ..... 1-. ... At.CA OIVll.O~MINT COM· ANY, 177•11' .-1.,er1lda A••n"•· ,,.,. ...... c;.llf-1•""' 0 . W. I H. l11C11111f ... , lr>e., a ........ 1. ,.,,.,."."· 111·" .-1ver9141t A-. N•w-t e .. cll. .. .... .., Tllll """-t 11 C..W..'9CI _,a cv •II~. 0 , W. & N. l-1111<11, Int Jll ... 1,A"•'*· ~ Tlllt .._, w .. Ill• wftll 1119 e.Mily (*'<.,,Or ... Cellftt'r' _,JUI'( •• 1"1 .,_ ~I.,_ Or .. C..11 0.lly PINH, JUiy 7, "· 21, •• '"' ~I PUBLIC NOTICE "n1nou1 aua11tiu lllAM9 ITATIMINT Tiit Nllewt11t --11 dol119 1>1al ....... : '"Ol'IX, IOOI "-Ill Avenw , aull411nt '· Sulla '°'· Coll• -.WM CA ttitat. . JOSll"H H. JACKMAN, ll07 N ,.__, llrwt, *t. AN, CA '2 ...... Tllll MoWMll 11 Uftduc:l<t<I Oy an 111 dlv...,.1. .,...,. Jtc .ftWlll Tllll ... _. wn lllld With the c;..,111y Clerll tf Oran119 CDllnty on 0SACRAMENTO CAP) J-it.1t11. -Cltiea and countlea ""*""'" 0r-. c..11 0.11~'~ will be able t.o restrict J-ao.Ju1y1, 14,21. '"' ,.,.,, roller 1katin1 on 1treell • 1 PUBLIC NOTICE and aldewalb next year under a law tillled by fl1CT1noua aua1;111 Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. ..,.,... ITATIMlllfT Brown'• oftlce said be ,.!,"-.. ~....,,.,.... 11,..,..11vi1- al1ned AB585 by Aa· ADAMI ,.u,.1:1. LTo .. "''· o aemblyman Larry SUr-c.,,.,.,. ,., ... or1v•. s .. 11. 100. 1 ,..._, a..cfl,CA ftt60. in1 . R ·San Dleeo , A1e11 L. Mem•. , .. Lind•'''"· autborbine local 1ov· ~=.~•~uc,.., 11,. ernment1 to re1ulate 11m1._..,__.,_, ilt&tin& Within their. Tiiie ~~ lllld with 1119 borders. c-ty 0ertt • ar.,.. c:oun1v on J111, City and county eov· '· '"'· ,.,_, e r n m e n t a , w h I c h l'Wt1.,.. ar-. eo.s1 oa11y P11o1 lponlOred the bill, said Juty 7• 1•. 2'· •· 1•1 .,,, 1i they can retulate other PUBLIC NOTICE kinda of traffic, like care . and bicyclea, but have ,.CTITIOUI •uMNIU no authority t.o restrict •AM11TATa11111NT skaten. ....!i':.:9!~'"' 11t•eon1 ••• do·ng The bW would allow a co1.-A au P~L v coMP•N ", ban OD 1katln1, but SUrl· =: ... ~=:~'·· Hvntlnoton iDI and local 1overn-lltva11 Oen• Knoa , ,.,.. ment offtcia.la 11id they ~:== .. · Hun un91on B•AC~, bad no intention to pro-,_,,...,.. Ai.,. ~. ".,, 1.10 blblt lkltinl ln any City, :;i:,te11 1tr .. 1, Ctrrltot, Calllorn1a JUI\ t.o restrict It t.o cer• Tiiie -.a111e11 11 cond11cta<1 t>y a lain placa, llke parka, .-r•1::=.•-. or certain timea. T1111 .....,_,. •• 111.0 .,.,, 1 ... Or1an11ed r.roup1 of C-ly CIMI "0r.,.. C-ty on July .. t --..1 led ...... . 1 .. a en auu re. a buai· "'"4* ne11ea did not oppose ~~,.,,.. ar-. eo.11 oe11y Piiot, the meuure. .J~uiy 7• 14• 2'· •· '"..'.._ 1001 .. 1 ( PUBLIC NOTICE Chief quit8 ll'ICT1T10UI IWMNIU NAMl ITAT•MINT SACRAMENTO (AP) Tiit 1e11..i,. ,.,._ 11 dOlno ..... 1. -Tom Au1Un , ex-u•~:1no TICHNICAL svsreM eCUtiVe Officer Of the IUll'~ORT, lntlM•r lno and Pro state Air Reaources eremm1111 ee11111111no Ftrm 4000 Board, confirmed he ls :::C~~.,!,.~.::O JOOO, N .... POrt re1l1ntn1 to atart a u 1111 M<M"'"· uo eu1 0-10 S t I "'"-· ~tl,,...lt, c.a111om1a tlJJO acramen o conau tin1 T1111....._11cendllctecr11r •n '" firm. •MdlY1. lttltll l*Molyft Tllla -......-1 w• lllaCI with ,,,_ Guide to other degrees Ce1111ty CIHtl Of 0r.,.. County on July 1.1•1. Ffn.J ~1111111NC1 ar.,.. c.o.11 Dallr Piiot, July 7, 14, 21, JI, 1"1 l't1H1 Career changers get advice in books PVBLIC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUI aU llNIU NAMa ITATUAl!NT 87 IOYCE L KENNEDY Dear ~9¥ce: I wtu &o c .... 1 •1 career. WMn cu I tet a .._ of eel· le1ea tlaat do ao& req.ue replar elauroom •tte-damcet -lt.M.M., DnellPtft. Iowa A comprehensive and rel\llarly up- dated boot ll "B•ar'1 GuJdt t.o Noo· trad1Uonal De1reea," available lo bookalonl or by mall for ., from Bear'• Guld ... Box 8", Kmdodno 85'80. Alao, at a COit ot '10.50 ii "Gulde t.o Under1raduate External Detrtt Pro1rama in the U.S., publJJbed by the Office on Education Credit, American Council on Educatioo, One Dupont Circle, Waabtn1ton, D.C. JOOM. Stlll another dlr•ctory ta "Gulde t.o Independent Study throu1b Cor· re1pondence lnatructJon," publlabed by the National Unlvenlty Continu· int Education Auoc:iaUon; order tbJ.a one f« ... 80 from Petenen•1 Ouidea Box 1'71, Princeton, N.J . 08817. ' • • • Dear leJee: I ...a• lib • bow abnt ...... ua.._.&Jaalll lt.IO lcMel ulu" .... .,......._ -T.A., tit• ...... Oflle Wltbln your work llle. prtTat. or· santaationl u well u IO\W1UIMDtl m11 bin apace worten, ran11D1 Interferon in.new role W ASHlNOTON CAP) -Tbt Pli• ~ ldmUat wbo btlped dntlop boat marrow traa1p_laat1 for leukemia Dau.ta II lrMUDI 1C111M ol . :them wtti ilUrftrGD, a promlllq anUclDClr...._ · Dr. a. Donall nomu ot u.. Bute..._ Caneer ._. c.m.- ID le.W. Mid ta. &M trial....._. ~. --to aplalt tie .... DOl'ted ..... ..,......, aetiTb ~la-~ wllMla Ul nM._. .._. ,........ ....... ._. ..... . • ~. n.'W!"' ..... '& ..... .... ff H a vwDeral Motorl Cutt-r aHearela h•ad1Un 1wu• of noo.-, tu.fnl, ... a,.... ........ CAREERS Tiie fell-Int pertont are dolno ...., ....... : ITIWA,_T AUTOWHOLESA~ES, UH Oer .. 11 Orove a1vd., Gar<Mn or..,., e.llfwN• ""44 wuu.,,. 1. s .... n. 1m1 A•nver from welders who build orbitint ........ """'1....., lff<h, ce11rorni. atructurea to apeci1H1t1 in elec· '*t111~ L s. s-.n. "m Aa,.r tronlca and pbarmaceutlcala. .... .... """11,... .. lff<h, ca111orn1a A revt.ed booklet, 14 PllH, iJ ~II "91 ..... II con•lllCl9d llY • available free from the American ..,., .. ...,_,,.. Inatitute of Aeronautica and . .,111, ~·=~911 wit" - Altronautica. For a copy of "Careen. c.-.11 ci.r• of 0r._ county °" lD Aeroapace," you mutt encloee a "-"· 1"'· ,.,.._. summed, larae, Hlf·addretled mail-l"lllllllllld Orenet C..11 0.lly Piiot int label wit6 your request t.o me at ~lllW u. •. J1110. 14. 1•1 21au1 Box 1580, Colta Mna 928218. * • • DeuJ07ce: Ma&qH.UO..-.dl adl la ajoblatentewt -P.M.1Madllca1 Wl1. "Intredienll for a SucceufUl In· terview,'' et1bt pain, la a booklet prepared by Man11ement Recrulten, a cont1Qlency aearcb and recruitment or•anlnUon with 400 of. ncea nationwide. PUBLIC NOTICE ll'ICT1noua au11H•u MAMI ITATIM9NT Tiie lttlewlftt ,_,.,. It dOl119 ""II -II: COUl.TI,_ Al,_ COMPRESSOR COM~ANY, I ltOI Wulmln1lar AWflllt, I fl, W..lml,..ler, CA '2~. ANO.-IW H. McCl.URE, •110 llm A .. -. 11, LOftt Beech, CA .. ,. Tllll lllllMll 11 t.-...Clff l>y e11 11'1· •M4"'el, "'1*N H, McClwe Tiii• ~ .. tll..S wltll 11• c-1y c1er11 tf Ottfttl Cou111v 011 J-at. •ttt. .. , .... ll'Wll ... Or.,_ C..11 0.lly PllO\, ,,_ .. Jlly1, 1',11, 1"1 ,.,.., PUBUC NOTICE The interview overview capeull1ea advice oo PHP&rtna for and deViJln• •tratellc: acUona durtq the m..un1, 11 well •• anaw1riD1 and ukln1 quut.lcml. To Neelve a copy, enclou a •tamped. Hlf ·•ddre111d, lon1 white ••elope (10.S by 4 inch11) fllCT1TIOUl 1WtlMH6 with )'QUI' 1'9Clutlt. UIM ITUIMHT A DIW book. "111 Tecbniquee and : .. ~ ,.,_ It ~ ...... Strateli• far ~ tM Job ID· t.AouNA COM Mu N 1 r v tervtew" b1 Burd«te &. Boltwtct ~~~::;~':..~.ca. .. ""''" (JobD WU., • Sona, IOI Tb1rd Ave., ••cHAlt. "· 1vANt ... ,. 1• New Yon. N.Y. 101111_ '1.1.tl) often C.:::."=-.!.:' .. ":.:~~·.~: •uas..Uou ran11D1 rrom blrtq a 41v1-.... public nlaUau ftnD to promote you -..... "· ._. to 1upportlq a poUUcal candidate u ~ '=-: :-.,.:..,... C::.~ ':: • way ~ ,.eun, J'OW' foot Jn UM lD· ._ .._ ""· ttnl .... 'I door. I -. ..... O' .. C.. Oelt:;e ,, ....... ,...,,, 14.11, ,.. \ 1 PtJBUC NOTICE I ; • 0 0 0 z •a 1J --.. . . _ ............... . . . .. . .._ . " ... 'Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 ca PllBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PCT1neut ....... •ICTtnout..,...... w0••nCOMl'911MTtCIM .,..aw MU NS-7~ TM =::.=~... ...... Tiie =:':W'=":,.. ...... n.:=::"'CAU .. .:.':.tA O:::::V::"~ NOT•c• Ofl D•ATM o .. ...__ ......_.. CM11-.•auW"Ht _,._ HAaOLDM. PltODSHAM A• A....,, ... itOUIUM.... cOAn' cvnoo1AN 1u1t1u •• r ... WN•._CllU..,..,,,.. AND Of' ~l!TITION TO •INC., -........... c.... ...... LTD., ........... ~ .... MH•. ...... ... ,...._ tTAftWCAU....... ADMINllTl!R l!STATE c.1..,..-. c.....,_.,, TOM oL1\leR. """"111, "'· ,..,.. H -A a A ....... Ra9UILOINO, • ,..., ,,..... ~Me_.._ WAVNI McMl•IMlkT, 11 .... llY ~............... 0 . A•1.._,1, INC., • ~ <tf991'..,_, ., '4twt.,,., c-......, C.M""""9 ".....,... .. ~ • ......,.,.. 111.,......., • • ...... " oo.. T o a I I h e I r s • :rr ...-.. o.w...., c:.M"'"'8 ...,, ' •i;:.::=.•..!.. ............... "-:,;r~T:S\~·.~ .. ...,. beneficiaries, creditors T1t.11..,_1a~-.--. H• .. ~•~' C:.-~' ~·.:u::.~.w= ._..,•A--MIU., <>n1w, .. u 1111 ·.,,,, • ..... .,.......,.. and contingent creditors Of ,.,.,... ...,, · · ..,.. ..-. .. ......_ ••U. ...i ...., • ....... ..-r . .-.. Harold M. Frodsham and MA..,._ ,..,, ...._.. 1a c~-., • _. ................ .,~c:.-...._..,_...... ........... -persons who may be --~····-· 81 -.._ ~Dtll .._....,.,.._. .. ~IW r .. Mceiiwe ...-=--"-*...... TOM°"'"•"·._,. JVl'f a., t"2. .,. ... _. ... ,..,C'aw\••enw• othtrwl .. lnteresttd n the ,,,.....,.,. T'"-...,..... _ 11 ... wt1t1 .. 111111e .........,. wtt11111 .. ...-. .. ,. .. ..., •.My, ""· .... ~ • wlll and/or estate: ONl~Olfkw c:-ey~e10r...,Ctw11Y•J""' Cellfer•le •••Mi~ 111 el! ...... ~ ... --~ A~tltlOn has been flltd Tiiie ...._ -11 ...... .,. ., 1.., ~ " ""· .., ......,...,_ ,..,...,.., OlolollY "' w. b nd l. E .. d cw11ty 09f1I .. 0r-.. Cewlll' • • ,..,.. 1M11C .._ '*,... ,..._ ..._..u .-..,.-. .._ .. c:.llfwNe. .. 1 .. y rew . rse.. an J_._,.. ,.......,.0r.,.c-etoe11yP11e«. ~r1er _ 11.....,v _._..,., -''-"'· t•.., ,...,. .. ..,. .. George A. Phllllps In the ~ JV1y1,1 .. t1,a.1t11 ~.e1 ta1,_. "'6WY.,.....,.., .. 111 .. ~ 81 • tllM" --8M •" SUperlor Court of Or•nge ,........, 0r ... c:-.. 0et1y ,..., -<•1o1n• ., •,.....Y-111• •ett ,,.... r1tM. , ..... .._... ._ • ••1111• County requestlni that Jvly 7, 14,'1 ... "" ....... ......,. .. ... , fK ..... ---~·,.. •Y PUBUC NOTICE Ti. ""'"c...-__ , ... ...,., .. "._ • .._... .. ,..., Andrew L . Erse end e1M111.,.,..,,.._..,.., ..... ......_ .. ._ • 111 ...... •NI.,...,•· George R. Phillips be ap-PtenTI_..,..... t'f ll,.~ .. .,. _ _..,..._,,. ~ .... , .... .,..._ .. .., .. pointed es personal ..._STATUMl9" ,.,.._,..., lft .. -el...... ell Ille ow'8111~ ........ Ill .. f'tenn0111 eut1••• Tiie ,......... ,..,_ 11..,,. ~ cl'Mlt ,_ Wffl ......--1w11y c-1y., 0r..., .._., Cellfenll•. rep resentatl ves to ad- llAMll 11'AHMmNT -"' ,.,..., ,.,.1e111.-.y ..,..., .. ,..._.: minister the estate of TIM ... ,_,.,. M"-• .,.. ... ,,.. OAVll •1tac1t10N, lH w. An ,,...,_. r•ll,"' '-IMefl ,.. l'ARCllL1: Aftllllfl~\o'tl-..e H•rold M Frodsham El .... el-.. : c;,_.., A-., ............ c;.t"9nN .,.....,,, ...... ... 1M W.. ~el ... ...,._... 14 If • • 0 ,.,, CONSTRUCTION COM·._,.. TW.llt1 .. ce1.,...,._•cw. .,.~.,.·-~~•'--'Toro, Callfornla (under l'ANV,,..., ~ u., H-· Pely ,..,-. '"'·· • c:el...,.... e... er re11ew ,,_ .. ~ e1 Mic! .... 4, 111 •1<K1t " .. Tr.ct ... c; .. ,, the Independent Ad· 1ne'-le..dl.CAbMt. 111•r•t1M, Ht w. Cr•wt11er A•• .. Jw,o. ..-.1evt1H ,.,_,In IN cawMy., ministration of Estates eOWAlllD DeMUTll. 1Wl1 o-"1"..,'" c:.i...,.... tM1' MM~ • .,.... ., • .,.y.,... o. ...... MMe ., c:.ei........_ .. .., A ) The pet I ti I t f .,1 •• '--· H-'••efl .. ecll, u T1111 ....._. i. ~..,. c ... .., ...,.,.... • ,..._..: 0r. H-._ u.w _.., 111 .._ It, ., ct • on s se or .-. -••...._ ..-.ATYc.rt1emcet1us. ••tt• u.,.. •· e1 ~··-hearing In Dept. No. 3 at PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PU8UC NOTICE ,..,..,. tt0TIC11 °" Taun•••t uu TRUS1'0ttt: 04.clHH Llc:MTU -It I LYNN LICMTllll T.I. Ne. ., .... _,47111 Oii Jl/Ay IT, 1"1, .e 1:• •·"'" HOMll UDOllT L.oAH MltVl(.C, INC, ee tfly ...... lit .. T,,,.. .. ""*" ..., .. 0..0 -' T,_. r-fM ,..,_., 22. ''"· ........... ...,, ... aHli IJIO, ..... 77t, ef Offlclel ltK-In IM llffle• llf IN c-tY .._., .. 0r-.. '*"""· ........ CM!wlll• WILL sau. AT N•LIC UCTION TO ~IOHHT llDDlllt ~O. CAIH IMYellM •ti-...... In 1.-f\ll ~ el lie VIII ... 5t-i et tM Melll .,,.,_ .. Ille~. 7W Cl•k OllMt Orlw Wlftll, ..... AM, C•IHllnl'li ell rltM1 tltle w In. west ,_,.... te IN -MN 1W It IH'fer Nlf Oeetl el Tr ... In IM ,._r. ly "'.,.,.. "' ul4I c:-ty ... ,.... flserllled•: l.•1 M tf Trecl Ho. M10, •• ......., ......... ~---·11 ..... lJA, ...... s ...... .,.._,._ ~. re<erfl .C u6f Or .... c...woty . Tiie ''""' ..,..., Md ...... c ..... "'°" ............. II •ny, of U. rMI ,,._.,.Y "9ul--la--'" IO .. J09j .. ltlMH'el l'IKe, Cltt. ...-. ... Cetltornl• TM -.loMCI Tr...U. Oltctelma eny llMl!llty for e11y lncorreclfttu f1f °"' ................... Ol"9r ,_ ............. " .. y. ·-" .. rein • Sokl Ml• wlll ,_ ,,_, boA wlu-t DANtlL it. f'oxx. * 20111 ,_..,,..,.,,"'· ~ICM',....,_.,,......_ .. .._..,,_...,...,0renttc-ty; 700 Civic Center Drive swMt,HINl,....9Nc11,c:A nt.ft. DrMW.MtAltllw, ps.•.••c~tremteteMof ..,.._ wtttt.,• -••1111 .., '""West Santa Ana CA 92701 t------------T1111 ~-· I• <OfWll>C:tM •Y • ........... ••• ,... lllW,.... ... , ... .,. ....... ......,._ • • PUBLIC NOTICE cove,..... er warranty, ••PAM°' Im· plllel, ,....,.. .. 1111•, _ ......... ., encurn11r-..., to pay !fie•-'"'"' prl,.ClllJ81 tum Of tM llMOCll MC"'ed ~ .. ICI Deed of TrllSt, Wltll Int-I !hereon, •• ,...,,,_ In NICI no•h>. edV•nc ... If tl'IY, ...-lf'e Mrma llf .. 1e1 D...ci CJf Trlltl, fMI, <...,._. 411111 ..,..,. ... CJf .,. r, .. ,.. eflll ef °"' lr11au crMllO by •Al.S o...ci Of TrllM ~ .. ,.,.._.,.. Tlli. ....._. -11te0 wttfl -~...---.: """"'"'"""'_ ... _..._on July 29, 1981 at 9:30 1-..~,.~ c:-MYCMf11.,0r.,.c-ity.,.Jllly Cl) l'eyme111 •I eulale11fl111 1.,..t111111CU17,tl,1t.,.•111 .... A .M . T"I• ..,....,... -llleul wltll IN '· "11· -keltuma. TrKt 11 .. _, ,......lllalen .,.,_ IF YOU OBJECT to the c-ty Clef'k of Or ..... C-ty Oft ...... , Or. Al ........... "· o .... '1l, ..,......,. ~ .... -........ 1 J-i..1t11. ,,_..._.0t.,..'°"10e1tyfli1et. oe'*nGAw,CM...,._taMZ .., .. ll9NfttefMN...,,t1,.......,. granting of the petition, ,.._ Jiiiy 1, M, 21. a. 1t11 m1.., weatrnlMter ""ye1ce1 ni.r-.y, -.r111e& you should either appear ,.,,..,...., 0r-. c:.est 0.11., ,..._ 14uo •Hell 81"'·· "'"• iu. l'AitelL J: ""'llNI.,.._ \o't 1,,. at the hearing and state J-•.Jwiv1.u,21.1t11 ~~ PUBLIC NOTICE w .. tml-,CMltoml•PUo. tereat In UM Nort1'4••• w. •f tlM I bj ctlo s r fll• ,.. --w..........,~tyHo•u.1, SouU1 .... w.., .. ..,...111.,,L.8'•1n your o .e n o "' PUBUC NOTICE •~ 2• H•-.lte• c•r<••. w .. 1'"'"''"'· •11<• "., Trect 11, CMM ...,_.,... written objections w ith the l'ICTITHIUS evtt•llM NAllM ITAffMmNT Tiie tellewlflt ..,_ er• Ml"-.....ineae •: NEWPOltT TILi & CA81N£T, )12 N. Ne....,. 81 .... , "-t .. Kii, Celllorflll'*2 G111M A. fte!U, UM ll. VAii 81 ... It«, Or .... , c:ellfwnll .... Joret leul CHAw, 1SM I . Vefl .. ~.Or .... tellt.nM ..... Menu•I Gerortlo l"•lco, Old Velten• lteeel . Sutler C•••fl. Cell ...... Tllll _,,. .. le conctucteCI .-, • .....,..,...,....,... ~A..,•k• Tll19 ............ -Ille$ wltll -C-ly C.lertl el Or ..... c-ty M J-lt.1"1. -.. ... TOc•• .... -caiifenlietU1M ,,_., 111 .. ~.,, 0r.,... ..... 'court befo-the -·rlrV'I _,,_ -·-• UI • ...._ Woyne Mc:MIMI ot c.llhlnlle, .. -....,. .__.re-'" ,.., ... ..,. °"MIU.,..,..,... ,...., -.. ....,,., .,,.._ .. 81 ,.., 1n .._ 10 et,. .... ».,. ... Your appearance may be ce.a. ,,.._.,. u.c.c.1 t11M., '"1utY. Mite-"-----,_ • ., ..w In person or by your at· "•tin 11 IMn•v ,,,,.,. •• tlM m 1~ NII.,. _ _..,, .,..c:.N'f . ......-wttti•ll-torney CrNI ..... fll TUMMY STVPl'llt, INC. aen941wt1f1 ............. e11f.-11M IMftta ,_ ,.-...,_.. _. ,_ 1..,. ' Tr_,.,_..__.....,., ·•u"111wflldl•..._.,._. .....,.,.,.,.81""'9.._.1.,..1"'_ I F Y 0 U ARE A 11142 c..... Clrc1t, City ef 'ill C•I WCAaw111 wtttMMthe••• ..,ec,_...,..__.., • ._ .. 17,tt, CREDITOR or a cont· Peril, ~y et Orentt, S .. le et 1llfttll ptOtll .C _,,IC• Ml -lllecl IU"f 1t -• lfl Nlf Tred •. • .,y ....-lngent creditor of the de-Cellf..-... e, !Mt • lllW• lrMlfer I U.l .F. ,..,,.,.., .-... ---·· <....... . •hut •• ... m•f• •• JOSI PH o.19111. o.c:.mo.rS 1• ..,. _ _,..,,.·._ .. ..,.fnt1Mi4 ceased, you must flle your cHA1tL11 IMCAl.uso, Tr..,_, TC»\OL1vE,. ..... , .... ..._..,...,, claim with the court or •ll•H '""'""' ec1e1reu •• tuu .-...1cen1 l'AitCllL J: 1u1 Iii •f 111. present It to the personal O•lllMte. City Of ,_....... ...._., s. s. ~.en. ,,....,.... 14 fll .. Seu1M1e1t w. fll.. I I ceu111y •f LOI A,...•••· S•••• ., 1.., .. ,_ M.,...1 s..1t11 111 ., Lat • 111 at«1u "., Treci representat ve appo nted CllllfwNI. CiieeM9M.CA 11, c ... .......,llH ,,.,.,,., .. -by the court within four TM ..,....,iy • • ,,...,_,.. 11 ._ s. "-811• ..-... recored 111 ... If. p._ » ..-months from the date of flrttrl.., 111 ....,., .. , At•'*" 1 Mtw,.ytwAftllliuM .. e1 ..., ... ._ Mlfi&. ,.__. .. first Issuance of letters as tr-. ti...,,_, .. 1'"*" -1 .. N .,...... uH C:..... .... .., wlttl ell -w111 e111Wt ,,. ,,_ ....._ ... -.. · Y Y. provided In Section 700 of •-._.., ....... y STUPfl••" C.UMne,c:A -b '9r .,,_ ---,_ lay· _.,..._., .. ,,.,._ mo.. ,"""'St,_ 1.,. .... IMlllUlftllll,...•IMl1n -r the Probate Code of .., -.....m,_. an ..... ~ 9Mcll CA "" ...,....,., •• .. i1 11 C llf I Th · f PICTITtout 9U .. NllU ...... ITATU .. NT Tiie lef-ll'f ,.,_, or• ...... ._..._ .. : JMT ,.Alt'l'"lltS, 11• Mt. CIN· lw••• Clrcle, P'ounteln V•ll•Y. c.llfwlll•t!M PUBLIC NOTICE Je,_ ll . ...,.,, 11-Mt. Cl... PICTITIOUS Mllf•llll fweed Ctrcle, P'eun1 e111 Vell•Y. .aAMmlTAT•Mm•T catlfef"'8...,. Tiie ,.. ......... rMll• ore OMl'f TIM Ml<IMI• ••rt.fl ..,, Tine llllitlMIAM: .. rtM ,...,...... T,_ el 1"1, e JOHN'S TOOL SHllO, to S. lrvlC;l7•Mt.C:l'"-fClrcle,"-E11<lld MrMt, Alllfletm, C:.111•"'• Ylft Vel...,, c:.I ........ t219 fJI02 Tllh lllUll-• le <OflW<IM lty • He11ry It. Perel•Y. IHU llml .. ~ Lec-i., ...,_.k, c;.llfenlile _. J-a.r.n., ••••rly J. Peraler, IHJS Tiiie ....,._ -tlleel wlttl 0. Loe_... --.itl, CAI........_ .. 0twMy Oeo1t el Dr-. e.e-ty on Jiiiy Tllla ........ la ~ rt .. I, 1•1. dlvlWole C""""'8nel ... Wlfel. ltMOD•t, tea•DALL & MA•· Henrylt.l'onMy RIM • .,. eewny J ........... .,,..........,......_, Tiiie ........... -fllOf wllfl ........ C-lytletll_,Dr .... ~.,Jllf ............. ~.... 1.1•1. Pl .... '9081tll & AMOCIATllS, INC . ""4HI-Dr ... CMal Oolly ~lee. 4111 C...... Ort.,., ..... t, JlllyJ,14,tl,.,ltl1 JD34.tl ............. ~ .... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE "'*''"'*' O'Mgt Coeat Oolly Pl Tiie tolel emounl of tlle unpaid N lenu CJf U. obOtellofl NCunel lly l .. pr-1'f lo .. told -... ._... esllm•tH '°'"· eape11ae1 enel ICI ventH el Ill• lllM of Ill• 111111•1 publlcetlon of Ir.. -k• ef Sole It W ,400.00 . Tiie __,klery under told O...S CJf Tru•t llerelOfor• .. eculeCI •llcl Cle llvereCI to llU -·•oneci • wrm .. O.cleretlOll CJf Defeull -~ tor Sele, oftd • wrl119ft Nelke o1 o.teul1 -Etec119' lo Sell. Tiie ...,. deralt "•CI ceuHd u ld Nolle• of O.leull -Elocllon lo Sell lo be re· coreloel In lie ,_,.., '#llefe Ille r M D pr-1'1y 11 uocettd 0•1•. J-ll, 1•1 HOMEIUOGET lOAH SERVICE, IMC eaaelCITru.i• IDO So So<'lftt St .• U. AftllitlH. C• •1• UU>•»-JtM lly Staolley M. Zlnwner,,,,.,,, Presldw\I ,.._. •m. c;ity fll c. .. ...,.., C-y °' = .. 1:,,,P...,.r "..:~..ioTrecu~or°!ny~uei'. flail ornl al. eillt1mnote or Pvbll""40r .... Cout0olly PO ... 0r ..... ~•c:.1WwML Ufll-.OE ......... ""-CIMllM u.... _flt., ... " .. .., ng ca ms w ex-----------J ..... u .•. July7,14,ltl1 JMM1 TIM..,... tr....,'""•~ ay:,.,,,..,.,...,_ °"' .... .,., ...... 1or .. ...,.11te1w1e1 plre prior to four months JWly 7, 14, 21, a, ltl1 JOD4 PllOllttod Or .... C.eell Oolly PllOt, J...,.. n. JO, July 1. 1t11 2112 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE -1,.t.a1 •1 ,• •.• ~ .. M.DNt w•as•T~~'N· 101S.•,.....,•Y. 1...ci11r1t-.-dll9Cntaee1. 1trom the date of the hear· • • ~. • mo.. 11~_, re .... 1et .... ~1111.wN1 -y I ti---" bo MUTUALllSCltOW COltl'.ATTN: U.""9elftCA efU.U""81115Ut••< ... lrm8' ...... 1ngno .._,ave. MAltlLYNWESTMC>ttl!LAHO.--W1J • .. •••• , ,.,, CHll Ollf ••••110 ' YOU MAY EXAMINE l'ICTITIOUSIMlllNllll ...,_" ... s.. v..-St.. Wt. ,,..... .. A ........ y • .,..._..,_ .. .,,......, ... .,the file kept by the court. T11e ,:,:':.',=".! ... ,,.. ::t=f:'~,:.:'t..'"::r': -~.=:""· :;'::, ... .:':.::r.::-::·..!-=~=•lf you are Interested In the ..,.1,.u•: ,...,,.. .. _. .. J111yn.1•1. AWA1to1s MAoE1n 1-e1 TOM .1 .. Mc1.ai.orClffwtt••111-11 .... estate, you may flle a re· SUN GC>t.O. l""2 H-A-. Se fer• .. .._ .... Tr ......... OLIVElt oeeJMt WAYNE McMIN· eflll wlll .. ,_..._. .... ...,_.,quest with the court to re· '"''~? ..::~ .. T "· WAit Mi NO TOH : ~ ':: ::r= = NIMINT, -TOUltlN"GSHOPef: •lllce •t any llm• •lt•r Ille llrst celve special notice of the co .. • tailfllnN <lf1*"•llof\ 1""2 .,..,._: -· ec~:'..:."!..:::'!:::'~~=· 1" :':.k .. ton ,__. -i.tore .... of Inventory of estate assets H•1·:~0';'':91~~rl\is . • 0•1M:J-n,it11. ,..,._ ClllMlllt'f 1'*'""41v 111 oATEO:J1o11yJ.1t11 and of the petitions. ac- te11.., 1 m 1 s. ~ °"'* ~-eccor'8ftce....,, _..,_ 1 ........ '" o.-J . !Mt.Cl, c o u n t s a n d r e po r t s 1-111 =--=~~CA ftm.-~ • ...::; CMlt Oolly ......... ~~-= '!! ... -"":....':... A,_ .... Aelnllnl1lrllrl• wllll Wiii· described In Section 1200 Tiii• _, .... ,la <onducleCI by• ht1y ~,1t11 .,.., ••lueel~lcosr...,ee1. ot Oon Herry Tll•ICller,Of the California Probate ........ ....,_..... I n. ~ P. wenn1..., ea. L-,...,. '"Kc~•"' "0'• 0e<e....e Code. WIHIMI J. Pi-. PUBUC NOTICE tr~ --;:;_c.t 1,..."'*'1 tn ec· :=::,•&.aw • ASTOR 1• PH I LL I PS & s.r.urv ,..,-.,...,,..,..,.., • ....,. .., •. ,.......,..,.... SAVOIAN c:!:~Y "::':~""; ::,:•c!!.'rv ': '==::=:ru ltelm--111 lor "'"'c••-1 ... 1 ,.........,CA_.. By: JoM F. Nofan T"9 191.....,. i. *"" ~ .. .,.,. ... In •c.Clooftc• •'"' "••• <•> "°'"" ttorn.y at uw J ..... i.. ""· ,~ ,... os: --.,..,. s -· "'*''.,.. 0r .... e.ees1 o.tty """'· 3l SO H St S , .. Pullll ..... Or" ... C-.1 Delly Plloe, ltAY'S UNION, 1"'72 ~. 0•-: Mey ... 1"1 July 7,1, 1•, ltl'I ~ . ope reet, u J""••.Jlllyl, 14,21, lts1 2'41.el 12', H-1""°" llMc.lt. CA'21M7. ...._,, E. Murrey 710 ,. 1cA1too M01tA. 1020 =.r,.~ PUBLIC NOTICE 01 Angeles, CA 90071 PUBLIC NOTICE 1(1 ......... , ...__.,CA.... 'WM'• 9-tl (213) 6I0-9212 Tllla ......,_,la c-.ctM • ., M.... c:-_...,°"ell .. ._ 111•... NS-7'409 Published Orange Coast 1'1CTtn0111au11MHt t11vi-..i11c••-• Olfkl•~MlhMit-. NOTICE OF DEATH OF Dally Pilot, July 7, 8, 14, llWMITATllM9NT Tiii• ----,..., .... -Oo ... =~~':'..... JOHN c. MCANNALLY 1981 3032-i1 ...,!,":... ..... ~,,,. --,,. ...,,,. ~ya....,0r ... c-itv.,.Ju1, AN ... l'.ITllvAM*, AND OF PETITION TO . PUBLIC NOTICE-- HUAHi"E NO. J, "MJ Srnlt.y ..................... ='--· ... ,.,. ADMINISTER ESTATE 0r1w,0r..,.,CA'266f. 4111C....-Drtw, ..... t MfL........, 1 ' NO. A·10M02. ------f'ltAHtc °"' SHA1t1 L c1on1, ......,....,CA.., .__ · T 0 a 1 1 he 1 r s T11e °""',..,., ""' HOT1c1 •• tfOS2Sn111eyOrhe,0r ..... CA.,.. .• .,..., •• ......._ LM~CA'91J beneficiaries creditors m.a , .. ,_.sonJ-u, it11, In t11e 11081lltT "· ... ltATHLaEN A. ~-T•· tn•u•,-' Offk••-Or ... c-ty RKor-. WATSON, u SMrkle11, •r••ne. CA ,,_,..., 0r.,.. c:-t Detty,.,..., ,.;,..1.,... 0r ... C-St o.tiy l'ltot and contingent creditors of ......._ •m•. JW1y 7,i4.2i.-.1t11 ..., J-D •J-7 1• "'1 ....; JOHN C. MCANNALLY NOT1ca OI' Da,AULT AND -•tc o. -TEltltY M. OltlN· • . • • and per~s ~ may be. llLllCTION TO .. LL UND•• o••o Nl1t,m_...,.....,0r.,...,c:A PU _., ""'"' o~nvn t2M6. BLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE otherwise Interested In the sP" Ne.01N T111a -.. ..... •• <_,.,. by • --. will and/or est.te: t.oe.,...., ..,.._re1...-n111,. PICTITIOUSauta•.. A .-ltl .. _ --.. filed IMPOltTAHTHOTICE l'ltANICCIOTTI ""*ITATWM9NT 'ICTITHIUSMlllNllU -· on ·-s ........... '" YOU• PltOPl!ltTY IS IN Tllla ............ -llleel wlttl -Tiie ,......,.,,. .,.,_, ere a.1,,. ~STAT~'!!._ """"' b Y AME L I A lt/t CAN · FOR ECLOSUllE BECAUSE YOU COWllY ci.... of 0r..,.. c-tv ... ~-•: TIM·~· --• -.. NALLY In the Superior A 1t 1 a 1H1 No 1 N You it JuneJt, ,.,,, ,.1 .... woitt~H~ :.;_v~ ';;>,:_sc;~1E -·r NT E,. NAT • o NA L Court of Orange County l'AVMENTS, •T MA Y •11 soLo ...,...1_0r ... c.•o.1•y1'11oe. ,,..,,.,(A.,w. · · ncHNoLooY nAitcH, ou requestl09 that AMELIA :,T:::i~~~...:r:~·~.;:::: J-JO.Jutv7, u :2f. 1t11 ~1 SHAltON .IOANN "--'-L.. 111 ••,_,, M• .,, ...,.......,... a..c11. M cANNALL Y be appoint-,...,, ec-"'.,.... 1,_,..,. by,. ... PUBLIC NOTl,..E ~:~~ .,,...,, ~ a..oi. ,_L•e11ere1 Lowen111a1 , usi edtlas personal1 re1 tpresethn. ~',':C.~.:'.!.ci*':,::::":,=: " JOHN DAVID P'lltENCI IU aurelw•lk, No. Jl7. Hu11t11111on ta ve to adm n s er e ....... -'"""THI DATE THIS JllCTITIOlll MISIN ... ....... STATll ... IJfT TM fellowffle _..... It CiMfte bull· MMH! THE ILEGAHT OPTION, JJ WIN Goo.. c-1, N•w ... n .. 1<11, CA .,..,, JUOITH A. JENSEN, U Wllf o .... c;ou,,, New""1 h•Cll, CA '2'6J. Tllla ,..._. 11~•Y1111 Ill· dMCllNI. Juelllfl A. Jeft- !!~ ..... I. .. ..... ....,.,, ~11. ~·~'::--by ........ estate of JOHN c. McAN· NOT I CE Oft OEP'A ULT WAS "'"·-NALL y lrvlne CA (un· 1tEco1toeo. Tiii• -i. 11.mv Tiii• .....,_ I• <OftdlletecJ by • CIMOllll. der the' lndepe'ndent Ad-.. of J-25, ,., ...ci wlll Iner-.. -·•=.,~ Tiii• ~LA.!'':::. wltll IM ministration of Estates~~·=..:=-~~':" ... ""~ n-11 .........t -111• w1u..,. COW1tyC1er11o10r.,,..~ ... J"'' Act). The petition Is set for ,., .. ponton .. ..-Kc-1, • ...., '-"' 0er1i of 0r..,.. eowity °" •. '"'· ,.1 ..... hearing In Dept No 3 at ,,_.,, "'11 "ymefll ... -eM.a. J-lt, lt11. ,,.... l'Wll-Or ... CMsl Diiiy ........ 700 Civic Center Drive :::!~must pey ... -I ....... ,.,,..,.,.. °'""" C.eHt Oo11y l"liec, JWly 7· ,._ 11• a. 1., ,....., West Santa Ana CA 92701 AH•r 11w .. ,,_,.,,. '""" .,. cJole e1 July7,14,Jl,a,1t11 a1w1 J' 1 29 199'1 t 9·30 recor......, CJf tNs cloc_,,. Cwll~ PUBLIC NOTICE on u Y ' a • cJol• of ,__ion....-".,.,_,, a.m . ...,, ... u. .... ._.ton .. ,,.'-'"" PUBLIC NOTICE Tlll• ...._.,. -lllOf wltll I .. t---------Counly Cl-of Or ..... c-ty ..., f'ICTITIOUS aVSINaU 'ICT1TIOUS 8UllNell NAMa 11'ATll ... IJfT IF YOU OBJECT to the -...,..,.... • lolletr .-t1ec1 • .,.., -.,.. granting Of the petition Ollly Ille 1•111 rlt llt te $IOp 11\e JUM 2', 1'91. NAM9 nATeMaNT ...... T"9 lollowlftl --....... ~ PIHlll ..... Or .... ~ Oolly Piie(. -H: J->0,JulYl,14,Jl,1"1 1*-41 AMEltlCAH SUltVIVAL CO.,~ PUBLIC NOTICE PtCTtTIOlll MISl•ell w .•• , ........... Sul• 2", .._.. IHCll, Cellfonlie 9*J lfwtft 9e11Cller '*"'-"· 4411 w. C••1I Hltll••Y. Newpert •••ell, CetlfwMI..., llAM9 ITATaMmlfT Tlllt ........ i. CWllllocted •Y 911 111-Tlle fellewl119 ,_...,. ere dolnt fl•lforll. ~-.. , llcllll>lfl. Oelr1lenl , It I M It: S 0 U It C I Tiiie .........;, -llleel wltll .. OISTltlaUTINO, IUIO ... ,.,,r, .. c-ly Clertl of Or .... c:-nty "' '--· ............. ~II. tA. J-,, 1tl1 AUTOMATl!O EQUIPMENT, ' ' ,, .... INC., e COINerllle C"'11Wellof\ llOO ~llllMI Or .. e.eest Delly l'lle«. ::: Slr•t. l'-teln Velley, CA J-D, a . Jt/ly 7, 14, ltl1 1-..1 Tiii• ""'-le ~tee! 1W e e•· ............ PUBLIC NOTICE AUTOMATIO EQUll'MllNT, Tl•• .......... Pff_,, are 4"1nt -.i_ .. : LOCAL IMA()IS, tlllt WeM«ly l'leu, S..11• 202, NnrJOn ••ecll, c ............... Teri Merit 1(-. 117" Sll"9r LM!enl. 0... "'9IM, Cellfomle fM2t Tree Lao ec..Nft, M LAU Street. ... ma, ........... N.Y. 117» Tllll -.i-a II <...-.Cted lty o ......... ~ . Tra.y TerllMrtetc.,,,_ Tlli..........,._ntOfWIVl-C_.., Oer11 tf Or .... c;eur.ty.., July should lthe ' lortclOlllrt by peyln9 1111 e11llre you e r appear -ICllulnlendMb'fv-cr.ciuor. at the hearing and state TO FINO OUT THE AMOUNT YOU your objections or file MUST PAY, Olt TO AltltANGE l"Olt PAY MEN T T O STOP wrlttenobjectlons wlth the l"OltECLOSUltE, OR IF YOUlt court before the hearing. l'ltOl'EltTV IS IN P'OltECLOSUltE Your appearance may be FOlt ANY OTHER REASON. COH· In person or by your at· T~i~,.. J. Aloneo, • c • ....,_, torney. •r•IM, c.i11wn10 m14 Tet~: I F Y 0 U A R E A cn.1 "141Dt . CREDITOR or a cont· 11 Y°" ll•n eny quetll.,,, • 6,1"1 lf!Oukl CGl'ltllCt • lr#ytr « lf'e 90Wm lngent creditor of the de-"'"" OtilftCY"""" ""• iwve 1111.w ceased, you must flle your Y-•--PttM11 clalm with the court or lt•m•mb•r. You MAY Los ,,_....., 0r-. c-t Delly Pilllt, present It to the personal ~:~:i.,.~ ~.c!..~ 00 HOT J""7•14•21• .. '"' a.M1 representative appointed NOTICI Of' OEftAULT AN PVBUC NOTICE by the court within four 1LacT10H To HLL uNou DEE INC . ..,.,....o..e, Qwtiwltltll Sec,...,., months from the date of 0"N~~~cS: 11 .,.,.by ,1.,.11 1111 PICTI'nOUHUll•&U PICTIT14"11 twSt•l.U fl rst Issuance of letters as c A v A L c A 0 • I s c It 0 ...,.. ITAH ... NT ..... ITATWMllNT provided In Section 700 of co1tP01tAT10H, • e.e111orn1. cerpor Tllll .._,.....,. •• Ill• wltll Ille Counly Clet1t of 0r.,... C:.Ull4y .... J-lt,1'91. Pl ... ............. Or ... CMst Delly l'llet, J-•,JlllY7,14,Jt,1"1 mHi PUBUC NOTICE T11e ••'-'"I,.,._ 1• ..,.,. ..,.,. TM'°''-'"'--'•.,.....,.,. the Probate Code of ll9' 1• Clltly -.iPOlnteCI TitusTH ...... ~ ..... 01: .. , .,,. .......... -.Ulbed OetCI ., ADOLT MANUFAcTu1t1No " ccH sc•1t:NT1f'1 c . uu C•llfornla. The time for TNlt: OHION c:t>##AHY, 1112 ,._..le, WHlll"-lefl A••lllle, c .... Meu, filing claims wlll not ex· TltUSTOlt : JAMES OAYI050N, c.Ns.!'::~~:::'s-.~ c.i~-~ ......... ,,..... plre prior to four m onths Jitia•N=:'::Y: c.ATHU•N• J . LAM, """"''....., a..11, Celltwfll• A-. c--... te11WNe ._ from the date of the hear· ALONto • ., --'*' -..., TMt .....,_ i. ~ w .,_ .... Ing noticed above. 1t&co1toao Merdl u . ,,.,, .. nit.....,_ 11 c.9flfllc_..., ., """ ,..,._.., YOU MAY EXAMINE 1n•tr1o1IMlll .... mtt, 1" .... 1.,..· Cll•lfN4. tM1 R. KllMCll rt ..... n1 .. Offklel ... .,.., In.,,. ... ...,_. ll. Miit Tiffs ..-...,.. w .. fllef wl .. IN the flle kept by the COU • fttl of Ille ltKertler •f OllANOI 'tCT'"outlMllf•.. ni......,,.... -,...,. w111 111e c:-ty t*' .. 0r ..... c-ty .. If you are Interested In the «=-••: T ... ~!!:·~ ... C-ty Clenl .. °"""" C-y "' J-a . ""· est•tewr: may file • ,.._ s A I D 0 11 0 0 " "' u I T _..,. ,.... J-II, 1'11. fllt491 t ' t .. t.._ rt t OllC1t18U: ...._ •: ,,.., "*...,.. 0r ... a-t Deity PlteC, ques " ,.., cou o re-Lot , ., r,.. ..., ...., .. .,._ DINOOAINOUITltlAL.MOfVt-. .._ ..... Or .... C'MetOellyPI'"-J-U.a.J .... 7 14,1"1 ....., celve speclal notice of the ... ,,..,,,...,.."' .... ,.... f'tc:TITIOUS Mllf•eU NAMaSTATa .. NT PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie tel-I ... ,.,_, ere "4"'t l-----PUBLIC NOTICE lull-•: "~"Ut SIA$104E l'ltOPEltTllS, 111 S. l'ICTITIOUI 8VllNllll l'ICTITtout MIM••ll An lie Orl"9, Sull• IOJ, Oren... NAM9 ITATlllilaNT NAMa ITAT .... lfT C•lllornllftMll Tiie foll-1119 person• er• dol11 Tiie lelleWI,,. pe,_,, ore delne J ..... W. ~. Inc: .. • Celllotftl• ~-Ill: _, __ : -.-ettM. 171 S. Aftlto Drive, 1111'9 OIVEltSIFIED PltOPEltTIE THI Dl'ON COMl'ANY, 1"4ll IOI, Of .... CAlllwN•.... COM I' ANY, m s. •nttot, s..1 .. JOI, Si«r• ....... ,,,.,,., CA m u. Tlllt....,,... lacOftducled by •,... le Mele,Clll ..... ata» P'ltANtc Y. H. YEH, 1"'51 54errt perelleft. Jolln O'-...e. IJU Hlll....,._ LAee, 1,..IM,CAfl71J. ....... W. 0-, Inc:. .. ..... H-' .. eel\, Celllorftle HMO SALLY S. YIH, 1"'51 SM<' re L..et!t. JtflllW.a-, 11_., I . 0.-. VOS. Br!Ael, 1,..l,,.,CAft7U. ,.,......... S..1• 101, C1s1e -· Cellfwflle na.M FltAHIC VEH, Jlt., 1.UI 54err• Tllla ............ -lllOf wltll Vie Me11uel J. Armellclerlr, J70 S. Leee, lrvlfte, CA mu. C:-ty tletll f/IOr .... c;...nty., July arlllol, Suite 101, Coale Mui, AOILllNE J. YEH, "4SI Slerre '· ""· ,..,nl•nta Leee. lrvlM.CAmu . JAM•••*"'""""· Tllla bolMfleu I• COfWNclM by • Tiii• _,,... •• c...-1ec1 by. A__., Al'-rot ~. ..,.rel ,..._,..,., 111 J, MIU.,,,..,., ~ J. ~II Selly S. Y ... .... Ml Tllla ~I •• tlled wlUI lf'e Tlllt ----flleul wlUI \l'9 0r .... ~,... c ... 111y ci.... e1 0r..,.. c_, ... c-1y c1on e1 0r.,.. ~v ... 0141 ,,...., J-•• ltl1. J-It. ltl1. ,,1..... ""'"' ,1 .... Pllbll..., O'onee c.MI Delly l'llOC PIHlll.,,.. O' .... toht Ollly Pllet, l'llbll""4 O' .... Coeal Oolly l'llot, July 1, 14, JI, •• ltl1 JOtt.el .J-lJ, JO, JIAy 7, U, 1411 ms.81 Jiiiy 7, I•, fl, .. ltl1 •1w1 PUBLIC NOTICE StUdy Resulb Available Pubtlc Hearing Proposed lmprovetMf'lb Hd RNligftment of Moulton Parkway/Irvin• Center Drive WHAT'S BEING PLANNED WHY THIS AD U81111Co Alll t TATIOll The cities of Irvine and Tustin would like to improve and realign Moulton Parkway/Irvine center Drive. The project Includes construction of four travel lanes of pavement throughout the realigned section of Moulton Parkway/lrvlne Center Drive and two lanes of pavement widening adjacent to the existing two lane alignment. The roadway will ultimately be six lanes. The project also Includes provisions for a future raised median, construction of Myford Road from the AT&SF railroad track to proposed Moulton Parkway/Irvine Center Drive, and construction of two bridges and Improved flood control facllltles . The City of lrvlne, In cooperation with the City of Tustin and CalTrans (California Dep•rtment of Transportation}, has studied the effects this project may have on the environment. An Environment.I Assessment prepared by the City Indicates that the project wlll not adversely effect the quality of the en· vlronment. This notice Is to tell you of the prepara· tlon of the Environmental Assessment, Its •vallablll· ty to the public, and of a public hearing that wlll be held on the project • c:-1.......,....,.~~ '-rt.•.Jfllly 7.i 4,tt11 ~ ------·------Inventory of estate assets »•t1o11Mfll....,_•....,111h J--.n••· 14 -·-· e.-t. --· •nd of the ,..tltlons ac-etfl<• °' , ... CWMr Rtcer•r ., l ~ ..... ~ ~~ ......... • ~. PUBUC NOTIC... PUBUC NOTICE .. -, Or•,... c-y. c;ei1ten11e. llM "' - --·· ---· -r. counts •nd reports ~MC>ttEP'UL.Lvan•oitTH ~~:-......... ,Clrdt • .,_ -1'1C'nTfOWWlf•.. ~..::.."'.:..... described In Section t ... TH• 0910 Oft TltVIT AIOVI WHAT'S AVAILABLE The Environmental Assessment Is avall•bte for r• view et t.he City of lrvlne, Public Works Department, 17200 Jamboree Boulevard, lrvlne. CA 92714. c:.e--.CA... ...-nAT8*1fT ..... ".,_'" of the QlllfOrnla Probat M:,,.'fo':f'., T'rwt ,._ CM181n ™• ~ I• ~-"" • n........,.. ..-11..,,. ._.. Tiit.......,. ,..,_ 11.....,. ~ Code. .. ... t._ lt1<hllllne , .. ,...,,, .., .,.._ .. _......,., -••: -•1 NaUlfltiM&Meunclt At-•-••1t•.a ,,_Olfde I) J & a WWLOtNO CJ> J a e OP'1HOtla PROPl"Tlll. ... t L !. . .' THAT ...... lcl• .,.,_. ~ "* .......... -.......... RINTAU, 1.117 Cet1o1.ie ~ ......... __. Qllttr Dflwe, ..... tu, terneys • aw, •Y: M1410.Wf/ITnietllM ........... c.-.. c--.. 0r .... ee-ty COM--.~... ....,......_CA...., a1cun1 A. Mllefte~ ISD1 IKw.,....., ... ,,_..., .. .,_, ::.:-.. '80 t . 9eMr, UP Cel_... CHARLU e. HAYWARD, 11e Pa ... cit AJlda, S4iltl 1•, ttle 1o1.-..... ; TMAT • M80I 8', ...._. • .._ °'1we.c..-...CettfWll68,_ ~ ............. CA,.... LatMM HUii CA "'5a· •llf ,.,...,, 111• tlM ............ f9f ---.. ---Tiiie ......_le.,..._~ M..... TMI ...... le~.., 1111 • ..... (J,C) _ .:.,_ ' Wiiie.ii Mt! o.f tf Trwt lit MwtlY ................ -......... ........ .... -·--~·11 --.. 'fll*ll-.... --.u-"* ::.....--:. , .......... '"'' ==-= """ .. 0 ~rbltff:d J<>r•i;e: ~:-51 -:::-.".inALLMINT 01' ~ ..... ..... C-ty c...-.. Orlllltl CMltt c-Mf Cterk .. °""'9 c:e.y 1111 8 y ' U y ' ' 1 INTllltUT, WHICH HCAMI DUI J-t•"" .-.11,MI tte1 30J1-t1 MAV U lflt AND ALL ,,__Go-. c:... °""...... . . ~ -------------1uaueuilNT INt TALLMINTI M'll,M.tt.•*' _... ,_..ar .... c....o..ty,.. .......,.0'9llllCIMlo.tty,.._ PUBUC NOTICE WMHDUL ,,_.,.,,..,7.t~ttll '191At J~1,M.I!·•~ _ 191Mt THa tVM Or: .t,4M.1t, AD· VANCID av ••NlftlCIARV , .. PtJ9UC NOTICE Puat.IC NO'l'ICB l'CT'ITICIUt..,..... •AYMINT cw DILIN9UtNCIH U.. ITATaMelfT ova OM A"''°" INCU ... Met • .. -TIM .......... ~ .,. Mllll TICAT !Ir ,..., ...... IN ... ,...., _,....., ,,_. ~IWr .... I 1'1--rC'l'IWn•!!.'!'!'.!!" .... ;-:.~:Cll C ... Alll MAN, .... Mlf °'9efll Tr-. llllalCWll ... ... _, ---~~ ,. ............. , ..,., ~·,..., T"8 ..................... ......__. _.., ........ -.... ''"""· • -'""' Dtcltrflll .. .. --1 (.el....... ---... ........... .._ en .au.o DOMOO· m "°""° '•• ... ..._ '"" ....,.... ~. __. ... ....,._-:,.Y ..-... HOM._,~_._._.. ... =~':,... T,..__.,Dtle , .,_. ... ... ..,......__ ....................... ......... ·~ fW'IO, .. y ..... Lw, ......,, ..... .._~ <:et ....... _____ ,_.._ ...... ... ............. CA._. we ... ...,....,. .. ,..,..__... ,... .._ ......... "' -... T'llt• ......... c..-. ..... lft. --lltl ?ztttl -.......... .......... ........,.,............... -----------.._....... -_ .... .,... . -~ ................... . ,,... ........ -.... .. .. TIMa ..... -fW ..... HttlfJ I .......... _ HO,_f ~' 091! ...... ~ • c-it1 °"' .. °" .. CM!tY ...... . ........ JllMl,ttlt. DATi.;amtt."" ,_ IP-~.I,,._ PIJ1U.IC NOTlC& WHER&YOU COMI! IN Oo you have •ny commef\ts abOut the findings of our study as s.t forth In the Environment.I Asassment? If so, pfeese submit your comments In writing no later then August 51 1991 to: City of lrvlne, Public Works 0.0.rtmtnt, 17200 Jamborff Boul•v•rd, Irvine, CA ~714 . A pubtlc Mering wlll be l*d on tM Environment.I A.•Mssment on July 29, ,,., at 7:JO p.m . In tht City Council Ch•mbtrs, 17200 Jamborff Boulevard, lrvlnt, C.llfomfa. A public hNr1ng wlll alto be twfd on AUQUSt ~tat at 7:JO p.m . In tM City COUftcfl Chambers, 1UU Ctntennlal Way. Tustin, Cellfomia. The purpoee Of tN hHrlng ft tD provide e forum tor 'public pertklpmtlon Mil to • llPOl'ld to tKhnkal cau-- tlons on the Envlronmental Assessmtnt and Efttlneerlng Dnlgn. For more Information about u.11 proJ~ call ttw Cl· ty of lrv'lnt Public~ Plpertmtnt. (1tC) 15'-Jlll. Oeted~ JVtWt n, ,.., NANCY C. ROW\.AND City Caertt City of INN PUBLISHllO: ORANG• a>MT DAILY Pe LOT I June•, JulfD. '"1 ~-~ ................. 00-. .... ...,... .._....,.._..-,,,..... ~'· ...... ,.. ...... "· '!' .... ,."" . "~' .,.. -.~·· ~...... ..... .. _ .... _______ ..,..,......, ... ~~~~----111111111 .... ----~--------- ~·"~~~~~~~;~.:.~;.....:.:.;:~~:..:~~~----. .. . . ' . . ' • .... 'J -lit • • •• • • • • • 0 Orange Cout DAILY PILQTffueed1y1 July 7, 1981 The marketplace on the Orange Coa-St ... 642 ·5678 Among people looking for a rental. 70% read real estate classified ads. INDEX Teftar•M,Cll 142·5171 .SOFllW E...... = e-==::t~ = ..... .. it = r:.:~"'"' !!! lnW .... ~ - EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY =~ !E !.oi!IM IC-4 1• ,.....,,, Mlflce: E:a~~-=~ :: All real estate ad· ~~~_c.....,.... ::: v er t I ae d I n t h i. ; .. ";;'. 1• newspaper II subject t.o ._""_ :: the Federal Fair Hous- ::.,-::,..... :: Ina Act d 19111 wblcb M•• EST•J( makes It illegal to ad-""-.:1e. 11 1• vertise "any pttlerence, ~"''* .-llmltatlon. or di1· =:::~,, :!: criminalion bued on ~ .. '.r : race. color, reliaion. 0..... u;t.s..i. 1• sex. or national orilin. _ ... 11 .. -:: or an Intention lo make ,_,._ -any aucb preference. l:':::"w.~' = limitation, or dis· =~~!:.' : crimlnalloo." ~c:..~.. = 0..11 .... n-. -This newspa~r will not :::=-!:i:!~" : knowin1ly accept any _,..... .... " -· advertl1in1 for real mw estate wbkh Is In viola· :=:: ~ : tioo of I.be law. ==.-: f..":. = --------~-1191 Mii r .. -,.,. -T-11•1 ml .,,...,. .. ,.,., -~H l/OI -""'"""' -A,&>Cofwe -""'"'"'•l•f --· -._, ... ,d -Molob,111111. ... Gw.c-· tilt S."'11111tr llltMab tall Vw••• .... 1• -............. .. ow-r.r a... <lilt Oln.tRtotal -..... _,, ... ., - MIOIS: Mt....,. .a-wcllecktWrllds Mt•=~ ron l•mr . n.t DAILY Pl.OT-. hbllty for .... first l1corrtct "9aertlo1 °"'Y· 1-...tfltotol -·-------::::...... = ........... - llSll$S. IWESl· ••••••••••••••••••••••• llOT, AllAllCE 1002 REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 ASSUMAlll LOAM: L-.. C4M .... . ........ ~ ......... J ... 21e. COMI WITH US ••• TO THI COIOHA DIL MAI WAY OF LIFI ... BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITE ... WITH 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE INCLUDED ... LOCATED IN F I RST BLO C K ABOVE OCEAN BLVD ... WITH VIEW FROM UVING ROOM AND DECKS ... SEE JIM MEUION OR LUCY CASEY. 222 MARIGOLD A VE. nJES. THRU f_,f, r• + •tlllty ,.... Clo•• to •••Jiti• 1J. A ..... $42',IOO. ~ FRI. 1·5. . .. S375,000 COLI OF NIWPOIT llALTOIS 2515 l. Coest Hwy .. C... .. Mw 671-1511 1617 WISTCLIFf DI, M.I. Ul·7300 FAMTASTIC ASSUMA&I LOAM Assume •,In' loan at 10% Interest. Large 4 bdrm home with family room and frplc. No qualifying. Sl6S.OOO. Call today 979-5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS YNC•'tlMtn.t Super duplex located in Old CdM. The property has a 3 Bdrm ~ottage with new paint and carpets and a modem 2 Bdrm apt w/blt·ins. The owner says seU and he'll PURCHASE OPT10t4 i--------i New Fantasllc 3 Br. 3 LIT'S IE Ba. Condo, S2500 moves CllATIYE you in , $1000 per month. Super Starter! Invest-(Why pay renl). Next to ment! 2 bdrm Iba. all shopping, theaters & Priced ri&ht aU69.500 park, JUSt minutes to Ul-2242 beaches. ~Sun ho\\ lkalt' Ward Management Co. 714/631·~ Harbor va.w Ho.et --------1 Lovel y S bdrm . SIOOO to Mon In Very Ire 3 Br condo in Ftn Vly. Has Ire IS· sumable loan. Call Ann McCasland 631-12166. Somerset Model with large family rm .. nice location and a most at- tractive price. Owner is motivated! 1329,750. MOVEIHMOW This taree s Bdrm 3 Ba home LS 111 immaculate condition with new carpets. drapes & paant Walk to ahopptflg & schools Assume larl(e loan and owner will help finance. Only sns.ooo. TR\DIT IO\,\I. RL\I TY bJt.7370 IEAUTIFUUY REFUUISHED ::::==: :: ....•........•......... ==:.l = 4 II HOME listen to all offers. --------$325,000. 4 bdrm home m a good location with a com plelely remodeled kitchen. new patnt. new carpets & drapes Owner financrng av:11lable Sl32.400 Call now 979-5370 _, .. .._ -_, .. _ -....._m. -.._UIOIJS, $I 05,000 19boe w.d llty Just moved Ullo rown? Comfortable Costa Mesa 67).1700 Then eet acquainted family home on quiet with the Cllwufaed Ads A Dlv1s1on or llJrbor lmestment Co ~ POSllAlS & LIST & Flllll a t r e e t . Lo v e I y SELL id.le items with a They 're the easiest way wallpaper. Ont bath re-Dally Pilot Classified to find just the ttems and l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!! ,,. modeled, tiled. Roof. I Ad. IC2~. services you need 1 = b~i~ek B~Q~r.~'. , __ ....::...;-'------I = carden w/bearing rrwt -trees . Isl time ad· r.t v•,. &tat. Est 1890 restored 4 Bd 4 frpl + guest,_,. acre SS9S,OOO Unique homes Sharon /tc.tby 675-6000 ALLSTATE REALTORS llVIHl AT IT'S IEST This 4 bedroom Peter's Townhome has 2 ~; baths. family room , exceptional location. community pool , s pa , tennis. built·in bookcases. spacious and terrific $22.5,000. U~l()Uf tiVMfS REALTORS, 675-6000 2'43 EMt Cou a Hlthw•w. (OfoM 11«.1 11111 WE HAVE 0 Of THE BEST USTll'IGS IN TOWN HARIOI RIDGE Award w 1nn1ng "Jodellt" estate home Isl resule orrering on this exquisitely uppomt ed lownhome with mau1ve view of bay. ocean, coastllnl' & night lights orrered at $885,000 i!i.1•111111.\!i .\: 1£ 11 .. i!~ r .1lt11 rn H11"1t..40·5560 Anytime fJ'>tblulf Prof Bldg UPPEI IACKBAY! Execullve pa~ad15e• 4 BJ rm. 2•, balh~. g1gan tac family room thnmi: room, huge rear \ard Close to golf l'uur~e Owner wants out• Trv AlTD. contract or tradr Onl> S249,500 Call S46 2313 THE REAL ESTATERS $129,500 REPUIUC HOME! Very popular 2 ~tor}' Republic home Cl~e to So Coast Plaza. 4 Bdrm 2 baths. huge family room. fireplace. C'ountry kitchen Owner bqwdal 111g, C'all now. ~2313 THE REAL ESTATERS COMMSlCIAL +LIVING Spacious 3 bdrm. 2 bath apt Blllns . .,.et bar. f1repla<'t>. atrium Over $00 sq n of bustne5S space + 4 <'ar garage Pmed at S350.000. associated 8AOl<EAS-llEAL TC:::: lOH W lotboo o7' J66l SOYICES verlised! HWTY to see! -8*7171 HORSE PROPERTY Lots of wood. stained glass a nd rountry1--------1 charm describe the at· STEP'S TO IUCH NEWPORT SHORES Land included ! Room> 3 bdrm. 2 bath home so close to the beach Bltns. including dshwshr + firepla ce & nice t·arpet mg Only $194,$00 Tr) about 15'1 dwn & owner -1911 , .. -· ... THE REAL ESTATERS PENINSULA ::: Fixer : Only steps to the surf. is : lhts bargain fixer. Bring -paint brushes & shovels : and cash in on SSS. CaU ---lfl) "" ----------- now· SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 14·631·6990 4 IR IACK IA Y ... s 137,500! -Roomy, 4 Bdrm, 2 sty, : w/cozy fll'eplace. Very : clean, Ugbt and airy. -New: dishwasher. water : heater. paint, paper. skylight ! Beautifully "" landscaped patio. A ::: muatsee ! 646-7171 ,,. ti• ... '"' ti• -THE REAL ESTATERS ... : ~OROMADB. : MAR Dll'LEX : South of the highway sits -this elegant home plus -income. Huge owners ,,.1 unit , brick courtyard t1o1 leads lo French doon .,., that open onto Italian :; tiled floors Beautiful ~ wood peued rtoora ~~ enhance den and «ZI apacioua famll,y kitchen. =: 2:nd story bolts aecluded ::: muter suite with open ;: balcony and bubbling mi •pa too! 3 more queen :;: siud bdnns for your llk· ,,.. ln1. Huie 4 car garafe ~!; + 2 Bdrm income urut. :;: Price reduced and :: owner ti lnlliow. Call '71'1 = ,,. -"" mil rm -•1 -... •11 .. , --., -------... -., ---= •• SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114·631-6990 If•••..., .. .... , ... ,, THE RAMCH/llvt,_ sz 15,000 Charming and spacious 4 BR 3 Ba , on private, wooded lot w /pool and s pa. Several skylights and stained glass windows. Assume loan at 13%. WOODIRIDGl/511 Roomy, comfortable Cloor plan for the growing family. Near the lake and pool. Pvt courtyard and 3 car garage. Plus. fantastic financing make this a buyers choice. $299,500. 9.96o/o ASSUMAILE LOAN Lovely private 2 + den condo with cathedral clgs, and lots of decking. Security gated Arbor Lake/Woodbridge . $175,<XX>. 759-1616 C U E L T C I N Q 0 E C S D U H A E P S N N M U N 0 W U X D Y L l I T S A N D H T M S I D N E N A 0 T G H I R 8 H D D H A D A I S Y A Y~ I U H J 0 S L I L R U L R S 0 X D V 0 P R R 0 N T A T H V R L F C E A S E T M C E I H A L S S I E I I 0 T E R E 0 S F P A I 0 • EASHTHNMNRTNllRHTNI C 1 I 8 S N T I M A C S 0 E A L S P T R S 0 X D I I I R L T D S L I Q A C T H L K 0 N S N V U T S T T £ N U I E G 0 N A t A A U 0 S I I P E R S I Z H S M T A V T F E V J H I R 8 E 0 T 0 A H M l U E S I G A H 8 T S 0 T E A S I 0 I N T S A N I T N E U S E T 8 A R N I DOING BUSINESS UNDER A FICTITIOUS NAME? ' If you heve ju1t flied your new Flcttttout lu~ne11 Name end heve not yet 1ubfftltted ft for pgbllcdon, ....... don't forget ttlat ttle Imitation 11 30 cMJI ffofft date of flllng. The DAILY PILOT wlll publl1h your 1tatement for Sll.50 . Ou r ctrculdoft Include• die entire Ortnll Co11t 1re1 Ind lepl notlc11 eppe1r In 1H eclllon1. In order to eubmlt rour ICltement for pulllcellon Mnd IPPNPftlt. copJ Ind 1 cfleoll to TH! DAILY PILOT, P.O. lo• 1llO, Co ... ..... CA. ......... .. ,. ... ,. .................... . .................. MMn1 llt.llL CAPO BEACH D UPLEX · AS · SU MABLE '179.950 675-1771 mosphere ol thts Santa 2 bdrm each unit + Ana Hgts 3 Bdrm 2 Sa room & bath ofr 2 ca r home. The owner will garage. Good w s r~nlal carry large 2nd and you area. S2SOIOOO. will carry balan<'I.' · SS0,000 DW1t MoMt can assume the lst Full price $163,900. YMllllos.walna Make an olfer"they can't 1--------1 refuse. This exquu1te 3 bedroom home needs absolutely nothing but a new owner. It has been professionally decorat· ed . l a n dsca p ed meticulously. has sparkling pool and spa. and assumable loans. All lhls in Spyglass Hill for $475,000. SELL idle items with a Daily PIJot Classiried Ad. OCEAMVIEW 3 Bedroom. Den. 2 12 Ba Condo 180 degree ocean view Walk to beach. pool & tenrus. $250.000 FRONT ROW--Gl1 Pram• 1treet w/nt.te lilt,,._., 75 ft. fro .. te9t, Z lttel loh Hd p•ar•c VU of oc .. Ir fttty. Esty He_,.,. realdeact w /Hit ci.. Ir qHlhy of bygoH d•ys -wood ,...1119, •oldl191 & IW9f room . SI ,350,000. U I· 1400 . PANORAMIC vu-aWtD flNAN. ltHtlhl decor & coordluttd • D , .. IO y• c• _,,. ricJllt a "-9t ,..._ IKlldect .. tlllt VU ..._ ... l btcl.. ............ ,. + ....,. ,.. ..,. ... a...; ,n ....... 4*b' belcHy. OWMEl WILL CARRY. $975,000. 611-1400. ON WATER-FRONT ROW Mtwty dtc:ONhd 2 ,.,. 2INI co-op. ........ c .......... ...... ............... s..... ......... . ••clrMJ. IMt tip ••ell. $215,000. WATERFRONT HOMES.INC REAL ESTATE ~ !Wnt.is l'ropott~ Monqnwm 2436 W COMI H~ ll~ M.rtnl' A"" """""°'' &.ch 8albol k!.nd 631°1400 67Ut00 associated 81101< EllS-llEAl TORS 10/' W 8olboo 611 JUI JACOBS REALTY 67S-6670 Make )our shopping easier by u.smg the Daily Call 6-4.2-5§78 Pilot qassll}ed Ads_ CE IEDBIE ELllRS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE SAN CLEMENTE DurLEX Super Bu). Upstairs Unit With Three Bedrooms. Peek· A· Boo Ocean View Wet Bar. Living Room With Fireplace. Cathedral Ceilings Wrap·Around Patio Spacious Downs t airs Unit With Two Bedrooms & Livmg Room With Firepla('e. Laundry Facilities. Good Income. Owners Will Help Finance Priced At S195.000 75g.9100 #2 Corp«ot. flfcna Newport c...t.r RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES SHOIECLIFF CHARMER Split·level 3 BR hom e in desirable location . Master suite on upper leve l w /deck. Family room looks out to used brick patio. Could be great remodel. $585,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 \ I ltG CAMYOM GOLP COURS1-$1H,OOO THI FAIULOUS ''VllSAJWS'' Inviting gated front courtyard with fountain makes an impressive entrance to this exelusi ve listing. Spectacular 2·story foyer and living rm looking out on the golf course. Formal dining room , paneled den with pa rquet floors, gourmet kitchen. magnificent master suite plus 3 other bedrms. with private baths, guest bath and large ya rd with beaut. pool. spa & gazebo. Really exciting. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., HALTOIS 2111 S• JooqMM ttlls Rood NEWPORT CEHTH, HI 644-4910 OCEAN VIEW $50,000DM In Cameo Highlands' Mina mansion ~ prll'ed to sell at $349,IXXI Large a~sumable Isl. plu~ owner will carry SI00,000 2nd TD Spectacular ocean views from hving, d1n1ng and ma!>ter bdrm. Huge lot with beauurul growidl! Don't hesitate, call 673 SS.SO THE REAL ESTATERS CHAMMB. VIEW FROM SUMDECK Only $209.900' Charming Newpon Beach 4 Bdrm. features '4ood bumm(! fireplace Huge r?H~r sa:r.ed lot with rew cm ered palto Owner 1s moll\ ated and '41lhng to help Ctnance' Just bstl'd Ca II now. 673-&SSO THE REAL ESTATERS If you're not reading the little aas in Classified. you 're massmg a lot of newsy information as well as some_&,reat b!!}'S $10,000 DOWN! Fantastic lemlS. Owner wants out Eastside Costa Mesa 2 Bdrm 2 bath. 2 story townhome. 2 car garage, pool, spa. Only $129,500 A bargatn down payment. Call for more information. $46-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS THIHIONG TOW~OMV Call the spec1ahsts at the condominium 1n formation center Touchstone Reali> 96J.(@67 VA $90,900 3 Bdrm 2 bath. k1tt•hen fam1l> area. sparkbng pool Onl) $9.900 VA term& Call for more de· tails 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS llaH' you read toda:y '5 Class1f1ed Ads~ If not. you're mlsstnK the best ba rg a ans an town! For an Ad In WOllffHl's Wortd Easy 1n' Quick! Quick Culottes! f11,.119S .~z • • • u o a • c 0 0 • 0 ..,.. ... • .... ~ . " .. . . . .. .. . ~.~~•••••••• ~.~.~•••••••• ltcMKts For Sdt Ho.wt For Wt Howtet For Wt t-=' For Wt Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, July 7. 1881 0 'ti 4 ooi ra ........................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ·····················• -•• !';;!. ........... ! ...................... ~!!. ~.~~ ... !!.~ C..MtM 1014 '"91 104• ........... iOl2 tt.Nt'-rWt ....... ~U.fwlll•d . U•zf1M4 Walt.,. ·s. _J(WJ & .Attdoc. lAll W •TllllOHT "JfWa" ""IAMt-50' .... Prestigious Npt Bch offers the finest unequalled charm of "French Coun· try'' decor ln this truly beautiful home w/4BR or 3 + maid's. Cobblestone courtyard, expensive Calif. stone ex · terior. French brick flooring & peg/ groove floors w/plush custom area r ugs. Ro ugh.sawn, white-washed cedar walls & beams. Soft green kitchen cabinets w/artistlc hand· painted "Trompe o'ile '' depicts fruit, vegetables and pottery. Den w/rich stai ned oak beams. panelling. bookcases. French doors and shutters. Xtra lg HIS/HERS walk-ins. Com- fo rtable MBR & bath exudes the artistic warmth of "Chinoiserie" hand painted delicate flowers on walls & • cabinets. Offered at $1,795,000.00. Ca ll /write P.O. Box 572. Corona del Mar. CA. 92625 WAI.Ta S. KING & ASSOC. 1714) 541-7716/ 644-5917 LINDA ISLE Exciting Oppty ! Wide channel view from s pect ac ular architectural designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1 .495.000. Summer Occupancy. LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newly redecorated Priced to sell quickly 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. 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. rt. f eatur· ing marine room $1.385.000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. HD mac ulate. Low priced at S215.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.:1 Bc1 f~·d•· Dr•v" NB 67S 6161 •.......••••........••...•........•••••••..... ~···········~····: ,t••··················· •••••••.... ,........... • ••...................•.••...........•....... lnv.,tora Duplex on belt LIASIOPT10H COLOMY ! Me.,.,+.... INt C111rr,., .. Mir 3121 nlN 3244 •otrfftb. pooj,Sbl Income. L"''urlo"• --•om ""'" Lrr. 48r, 2."'Ba famllv •••••••••-•• .... •••• ..... .,..., 1•-C..... ••• ·• ••••••••••••••••••••••• w • r 320 000 ..... -"~ ~"" ' rt" "' -••••••••••u•u•••• NCM999 • do. ~ 1q fl. 2 (tplca, 4 bom•, l.o Cololty Club JO s..,. Teleed ...... ••••••••••••••••• 2 br dpl,I teOO/mo • bdrm, 2\'t baths. $USO :•Ill 1~o 'it. tennla. Water view inclu~• RAR E C·l·H Newport Clean, new~. atrium •1;.e1oussw..a•..a mo.Jl95,000.1142·4623_. -C eJir n:t,ni av1il WH IT EWAT ! R ar land. 10'.\ ~•umable Beach Proputy. 50' Avail lmmrd w.ms IBfl'ALS 3br I~. bl S8SO 4br 2i.,ba llOO furn 6 .-,, '"""" 1 ord · OCEANVl"EWLOT loan 4 bdrm Z ba rront11t In prime k>c•· c t.Meta lU4 GOIMGM.UICIT ,AlKLOCATIOH Walk to the beach rrom wt p'oulble '1uut ~.,ownttl wUPJlttnrncr· •• 4:: .................. , Anaheim Kllla 3br. 3bu SflllS this prime atreet to i artert. Call now for ... xc u• ve. r nc pa t CDMCOTIAGI 4 br, pool. Mcsa'Model alrHl Coast Royale lot M 7M1 only Aak for Jrue lldralk PLUS INCOME llomt. Alawnc Sll0,000 surrounded b" homes b Loudon. Ail. 531-4247 or F/P, D/W. Yd. Bit In•. or 3 bdrm 2 ba home first at W".-, with 40 K ri _.. ,~ l~f'Elll s:n.7300. AdllS, No pets. SCOW. dn OWC v•"'ODd . P Ccu up ID 1,000,000. ----rmo CoolJI M~u Cbr 2b.i w1U1 an ill<lbted mutt s149.500 Davld°~4087 Thia 11 a terrific op I 000 59 FT · bdrm/parent retreat o COOLPOOI. portunily to build your RellU buUd!ni to~ sale EASTSIDF: New.very tn·law quarters bedroo Lar&t-family home ln dream home 4118-45.51 D Newport Blvd, C.M. Oc· P' 1 v a le · 2 bdrm cottage . any way y beaullfulCollegeParlt.4 $l~.OOO cupy or leue. lllOO mo. townhouse. Laundry describe 1t it's charm· Br pool home, spa + • ,.., Income ~000 hook-up, frplc. yard in&. up to date an huge bonus rm, great 10 WO (.?f Co~olr ReatooOmi~ ·67~00 sszs mo ut /lul 83~·8600 beautifully decorated. home for entertaininc ll"ngO o••t 1 Deeoslt. &S7·20t0 Priced at S28>,000 wit Assumable Cinanclng ~ CoedoMlma.../Tow• DLX CONDO 2 B;:-; lrg """t.1111':1&/t'lL vtryspeclalfmanctni;. available. CaU for de-•.t&w• • OCIAMVllW hoanfw .. 1700 loft Br. 2\.i Ba. f11>lc. us23"• .. 11111 11..,1.,., CALL FOi DIT AILS EASTSJDE Coodo, Open talh1 Presli&lou1 trl ·level ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar . a /c, new $775 T """rv5~ ""'"E. 644-7211 dally 1-4 413Gloucester Mtwportled 106' beauty. 3 or 4 bdrm 'ALMDESaT 673-5489or953-8377 OrangetreelBr Dr . U n 1 q u e a re a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Condo. Formal Deep Canyon Tennis Condo 2 BR + den. 2 ua. S400 Mo Sl2S,OOO. ~.675·52:00 Duplexes, oceanfront. dining rm. wet bar, Club. Lovely 3br. 2ba pool, rec. patio. Quiel. ~201ll s • • Dma Point I 026 beautiful ocean view. f r p I c . $ 2 1 4 . S O 0 ·•A" Plan. Great Grttn· close to Westcliff. ad Its ~ ....................... Perfect local.ion New wiauumableloanl. bell Loe SSOOO down. $650. A t IW&-3255 LCICJIMO ltodt 3248 ..,. ________ _. Sprit ~li ng 4 Bdrm condllJon. .673-7300 552-llOO OWC $105,000 at 123 --••••••••••••••••••••••• -C ... MEOSHOR;;-RANCH. Large pnvale FAMTASTIC BAY CREST BEAtrrY. 5 BKR. 1153-~. N;~enccedleay:J ~;w Pl a~~· Spaeious newerf3 UR. 3 "' ~ y ard , minutes t o "' · · Ba , dinemn. am rm, HAUTY Marina Owner will FIMAMCIMG Br. Family Rm. S200,000 POOL+ TENNIS IKo.-P,...ty 2000 enclosed garage 2029 fpk Big Yard. Ocean assumable lst. Owner 542,000DOW .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wallace. House "B" Side of H .. , ,No Estate sw1mn11ni: pool, finance at 1good rilte Jncred1ble s bdrm. 3 ba. $ 000 2nd " ft • dramatic ocean view $165.000. + fam rm, Devonshire r·:e;:.ri~~ Cali No quall fyin& in MAKE AN OFFER! :Sti~~usl200S«urity $Laguna Ava~7~.ow lge bdrm suite!>, 41'1 LagwtaVlla..-R.E. Model in Turtle Rock Hedda Marosl Agent Newport Beach ! T_..:_h · Id 3 1400mo.AB1·4'" ...,i baths Exqu1s1l 497--1461 Glen Patio HomesClose 6'6-10l4Tosee&sell' Spanishllleentryleads 5 Income Properties ownouse.lyearo . TopoftheWorldC.:om landscaping $850,000 to pool and tennis. Ex Lo spacious living room Eaststde Costa Mesa. Br 2 Ba skylights, munit) 3 Br 2 Ba Let me show you• Fowttoill Val.y I 034 cellent greenbelt loca OCEANFRONT Duplex with soaring ceilings. 20% down. Owner will fq~lc. master bdrm Gorgeou~ ocean vie~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion Call today for more & Trl·Plex. Xlnt tor. Gourmet kitchen plus carry. Priced LoselJ! suite, rommty pool Main Beach. Catahna. STRATFORD Park, S br, information. 1399,500 P.P. 673-76T7167'-7813· formal dining. Enjoy 5690. 642-2134 Sa n Clemente On the spa. 3.too sq ft. 3 car PAm IN yourownsparklingpool, 1 EASTSIDE Cute 2 Br + hill a bove Laguna La,~.~ REAL ESTATE 644·6397 i:arage. alarm. 1" aepel'ale spa & paddle ~ ~~ sunroom. frplr. stove. Beach Freshly painted CostaMna I02 terro m. darkroom . HARBOR VIEW tennis court ! Only NJ:il.&Cl)t) refrig. W/O, lrg yard in & out S950 ~fo J0.19 •••••••••••••••••••••• workshop, RV gall'+ S289,000Callm8SSO VULl\. PetsOK S650moJoyce Zell Or 497 1;330 many extras Ownr. 'illll Smashmg family room .ClJtft.tn1j? TJX: Wallie 63J.l.266 Aft 5. tmmed oc.·c~n<') ftn Mak~ofr 964 7S85 with wet bar Un· 646-0329 VA H in believably beautiful en· 1141641 0763 -·--- -LOCJYl'a MlcJYtl 3252 POOlLHOME •• ~.~~~~.!~~~ tertainer'spatio.58dnn ~~1~0~~~~.A2·: LUSEOPTIOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely 3 Bdrm home Ocean view 4 Br 2 Ba Sommerset on ftt land. Why pay rent ?HH •~ 4br home in n1·'il dcHlnp featuring master bdrm l n dry rm. hot 1 u b Absolutely immaculate New. fant.asllc. Wl'll loca ment. 1111.o<km k1td1t.'11, with Ol)('n beamed ce1l s1511 .000 846_4080, 't~23CAMPU5Dl:/RVlp(E move· In condition. ted3Br .. 3Ba new Con rec fac uva1l. Ou l*h ings and Ben Franklin 964.54L2 Creat ive fina ncing LIDOISll .d..l. do.S800permo,nextlo 5408300 days. ll:J6!1711-1 l1replare. den. and -----available. Buy or lease 4 bdrm. 3 PrickofOwMn.-,. all shopping 631 ~ ~!nJ!s l'H'S £-·"" "'---OUTST ... ,._l._.G a ..-r b th a .,, fl loL 20 units, £side C.M 7 hhrary study off maste ~.aec""•• v-WJWJ" .,_" RED CAR'""=:J a . car . .., · Quiet pvt area. great 4Br. MisslOll Viejo 3267 bdrm Elegant formal A11xiOU1SI18,500 VA.LUE Sunny so. patio. New yrs old. 3o'I< down. 2Ba, $775 mo 645·9161, •••••••••••••••••••••" d k 7 4 1202 kit h ba... R d f Overall fmancing 107. ming room overtoo ing The right offer & you can Lovely 3 Bdrm Cam __ _. • c en, "'· ea Y or Hurry! CaU Kevin. 979·1942 3 BR TOW:>.'HOM )" pool and palm Assuma· be •2 m1 from beach in bridge model in des1ra I OO/oDown 2nd story add. Just list· Lovely 3 br family home. Luxur>. 21 z ba pool . ble f1nanc1ng als thlS 1mmac . beaut & ble Greentree location ec1.0nly$475.000. mature people onl). $7~ mo 811 Ul7J available Asking highly upgraded 2 br. Large master suJtew1th Sl375 will buy this vu ~/ 646-8707 3269 Sl6S,OOO for an appoint· I"• ba t•ondo Ideal for study. sec:luded yard, <'Ondo in Villa Balboa. -mo,___ Hewpori IHch ment to !>et>, call 54().1151 co u p I e Wet b a r . beautifully landscaped, I Assume loans. Sl37,500. MESA DB. MAR ••••••• • •••••••••••• • •• firepla<'e. comm pools. featuring large shade 1 Rae Rodgers. 631-1266 Beautiful 3 bdrm. 2 ba SANTIAGO DR. •"!>• HERITAGE • • REALTORS MESA VERDE Executive home. 3 hr. 2 ba. I ~Lory home on quiet <'Ul·de ~.ir ~L l l~e lidrm n>uld be converted to make 4th bdnn Hoom for R \' ar('esS or pool Bkr:,_963 ~182- J.icuzzi . tennis & arbor St:ll,500 Heated pool and spa Beautiful how.c• j\iJll cl ubhouse for letSu re bv· Walking d1stan<'e to now in elegant arl'a 4 m~ RV prkg Open 1·5, sc h ools & sto res Rr 3 Ba Dmms: Hm Fn & Sat 9766 Verde s--.w. HodNda 714 Beautiful carpets, m1r Living Rm &. Fam1l) Mar Dr. Bkr :-Jon·Coop 7~tto.. rored closet~. mini Rm . r.ew 'il allpapc•r. 536 1600,~834_!_ 17Tll AT PROSPECT LUSEDL.AGUHA blinds. sunny kitchen c·ozv kitchen &. man' T.!JSTIN, 731·3lll THEIUIFf 2800 sq. ft . 3 car. 4 ICHUMTS With oak cabinets No man) dra:. Ch1l1ln·n &. BY OWNER bdrms. large family Xlnt terms .... 75.000. ,,..ts S875Mo ~7650_ pets OK $17511 n111 P f $1400 I"-· • ....... __ PLAN "'X" room Micro plus much, ..., -"= B k (' )mts o mo. .._, d " TheWiedmans<BI 3 Br Condo s600 ro er HUPl'IJ\1011 S8000dn 2br.2barondo BeauufullBrcondoon· 3 bdrm. in rm .. uv mu<'h more . Terms. 751-4293 r· I dbl 7598974 in Villa Pac1f1c. Custom ly S8000 to assume loan. rm .. ram. nn., F/P. 2\12 A.l.T.D or new loan. irep are. iiaral(e. SllJ.900 No qualifying ba, xtra large porc:elain Won't last long, call U._.ITS atrium. pool. s pa OMTHEWATER frplc 1 mi to beach 3 83! 6238 ADI tub w/ceramk tile walls now! " 64.S 9494 Great 'l<''il or boat~ A pools. tennis. iac, sauna. =-· & noor 4 covered patio 16 Anaheim M V d Lo I JB ba\ Brick fplc. f.11111h 1--------• clubhouse !15.S·339S WOODBRIDGE 26San Clement.e-0cnvu esa ere 'ey r · -OW MER RMAHCED 1 ... i..... 104-4 areas Price ml.000. 5% Covington Bros -4-plexes 2ba family home S61S, room A \'a1lablt· 1rnm••cl , • "'" C<YM'AG E down. assume $40,000 l!t 1 Yi yrs old. Ontario 848-1!60 _ for 9mont~ Onl' $'.:l'J.> Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br. 2ba. family rm. l'Or trust deed at 71-,r; Xlnl Eastsid e 2 Br 1 Ra mo ho m e . be a u t 1 r u I THINKING ner lot, assumable 1st land lease S853.00 per Whelan Yards. carport Will c:on THE ll EAI. ~:ST·\ rt-J!!'> 'ilallp.lpersthruout Cul OW will consider 2nd year.Can'tchangeuntil li73·8.'i511 desarstrC\.>t.Ownerw1ll T .,..OME7 ~153,900 ~·ll83 -. J Real Estate sider 1 pet or I child \ITD r 7 C:all the specialists at year 2003. 14'k int on Y S..to A-I 010 SS25 Mo S475 securil\ I Bdrm I Ra d1•ta1·h1'\I un c:arr} 1 or years L--1~a. 1048 2nd trust deed due .... at 13 5 interest For an the condomtnium tn -~-·-~ 1986-87 Call owner for ••••••::-.,:.•Dou::,-•••••• 22 Un its. E Bluffs , ~1t 631-0318 -it . Pan ' J I 1' I urn appomtment lo see. <'all formation rent.er •••• ••••••••••••••••••• -&;VU -" s II 2 Br House. Adults onl) endost'fl i:ar On 4.tnl SI 540-llSl TouchsLOOe Realty Ollt of Siqht appt. daily aft.er 11 am. ClassyCoudo 1,540,000. nel to se er at 814 W 16th St C M ~mo until O<:t I. S&<~i 96J..al67_ Ollt of MMd (7!41 J46-5llOO Spacious 3 bedroom un· 752·2534 Pleas~ caU 714 ~~1 mo + secunt~ SSI lf;'1<1 RanrhoSanJoaqwn\'1lla Prime Dana Point it Nearly new carpets LotsforSdt 2200 Easts1de 2 Br I Ba EXEC 41drm+fam Portola &1ode1. must hee duplex on corner lot IA YFIOMT throughout JtlSt pal.Ill· ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, lrg fenced yard home v..uh ~J ~net ~P·• -:J. HERITAGE • • REALTORS mny upgrades. pnn only near Dana Marina 2 ll••ed $300,000 td. Air conditioned. Unique lot in Nwpt Bch. No pets SSOO Mo 2297 3 car garal(l' 4lN•I "I II VIEWFtXER r----·-·-·-~--· s 169 .500 For a ppt bdrm. 1 ba up. I bdrm S600 sq ft or quality COD· Located close to pool. w/Back fa y view 20.000 _Qranse Ave. 646-3704__ Gardener uirludecl Im Reduced to S335.000 SS l ~ down beamed clng. struct1 on on 114 · or 192,000 Call97'9-2390 sq It 275.500. Agl maculJl~ \\ail 11 11, 120/o INTEREST ONLY 5B r . 3Ba. fam rm , $165,000 $30.000 dwn. balance to 9 yrs. NO POINTS The Wiedmans tB> -__lli:4293 JUST MAGHIFtCEHT Call for a look at lh1s gorgeous home w1every luxu rious appointment 4 blfl bdrms. new earthtone crptS. lush ule noors -entertainer's de light! Call now! 545-9491 l '.'Fi l:NtJ !ff> REAL ESTATE Camro H1ghlan<b oo fee frpl c. dining area. encl water. Owner wtll carry TARBELL, REALTORS ChrtSllna,851·5117 2br CONDO pool, Jar. 21, ~... l 5 land Agt 673 7761. 5%DOWM ! ... EWWOOOIRIDGE S 000 S it"~.--.. ba, w asher dr)er . ~00 ea~e Agt li405:\!i Room 3 Bd m 2 ba " patio 144· financing. 1.45o.OOO Mowtta • .,..._.,.,, "'-1 ll13S d L S J n"-21 1.1 -760· 1397 Y r M d I ft /P I M issioo Realty Agent. Dan Bibb Ott..r RMI Estah Re·--' 2400 .... " rs. an 1 ane • pacl()U~ uui m ' 3 home on an R2 lot w1lb ~a ow ar op ar _.,.... 675·4912 BKR Townhou.-.e \'en , ll·J11 plans for 2nd unit Great Mel _1S4·07ll 57>2311 MG-7~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, 1oginn~. l'.lc SiOI• JASMIHE CREEK OCUM VIEW F. d l d Great location. Avail for New Modular T y pe EC, C-..-0-MableH-. PAL M SPRINGS FEE Easts1de 2BR dollhouse g·::.!:1 f~na~~~~onOan~y ol'cupancy beg1nn1ng Homes. leased land. EX "'"D ForS• 1100 3br.2ba,guest &pool Aug lst,nopets Mo.A_gcntS<Wt44o $152.SOO Aug. 1. Call rei:arding 0<'eanfronl Pk. 3 pvt 4 bdrm, 2 ba, 2600 sq ft. ....................... 673-1241/(213)464·2270 S47s -64l·3937 Westciff Gro.,es financing Sl61,990 Call bchs. 24 secuntyJ1Shing 45 7 V 11 ta Tr u ch a · Adults S5+. 2 Br. micro o.t f S -Easts1de duplex. 2 Bdrm. Br.ind ne'il neH•r hH'O 644-72 11 as721ooform~ pie r from S29,900 S275,ooo.B1tr,77l~. wave, AIC. S3500 rash 0 .. Iba, yd, gar~ in 3BRe1Cecut1,ehome 499 3816 l640 Newport Blvd 119. ProtM"fy 2600 673-2U77 "' "'<'llJar ~1!>511 mu IRVIHECOHDO ----OCEAHAtOMT CaU646-~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -975·1262 s • • By Owner Northwood New wood/glass. spa , Huge 6 yr old triplex. DI VORCE f'ORCES BToro 323 t;C !Bdrm. frplc . full) up-solar. 6 dks. 2 frple11 Prime location Xlnt ESTATISA1.E SALE ...................... ~EWPORTCIUS'I FREEDOM HOUSE 3 Br I Ba large yard $95.000 641 0763. graded & decorated No 3+ 3+ close unobstruc ownerfinancing. 1966 Majestic localed 10 Ka u 11 condo, furn.. HOME FOR R El'ff 4 Bdrm. 21)~ ,q rt I mdn Agts s1101000 494_0269 table panor •v11lg vws Playa R.E673-l900 Laguna Beach Park. S130,000orofr. 642-5290 3 Bdrm $615 Fenced Close to txlOI and tc•nn" ~99M P_:~ 494 7631 Ntar Ocean. Week days RMI htat. yard & garage Kids & $925 leaw \~.'1 1>111 ; .. * *GOLFERS! . Lower 3 Arch Ba} Great WHY .. ~ 759-4175 Exc"-91 2100 A~tts' n"'oefl~ 54>2000 or 642 0313 ocean view, pvt area 4 IU:l"l t 11 •COOL lllEIES• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · -~-"· __ 3 Br. 21, Ra <'nn1lu. frpk 0~ Sat/SWt 12·4 ~ancbo Sa~. Joaquin BR bearh hse499-3144 Nothing down. partner '78 H'1llc"""'t dbl ~·1de 7 full leased Laguna Bch H_........._ •~h 324 fam rm. Ill 15 ;,c 1111\.tlP San Mateo mdl on -------I' down t ,..., -.... ....,. _ _,... 3 B rm . 1'1ba. dbl sided "reenbelt near pool. spa, L-lt«JI I 048 sWuopnp'1teslast. ~paalyl mneo':'.,· fully upgraded. has as'· Units for Hawaii home. •••••••••••••••••••••• park W D & rt fr1J! r I lo" int " -~·-~ -Co d ot New 4Br. 2''18a. 3 blks to $725 mo John :\IM"lhJ ll rp c. 'un rm. Jnd golfrourse' 2 patios. ••••••••••••••••••••••• John Marsball631·1266. sumable loan. (SM49241 n oor c HEWPORTHGHTS assumable. low down end unit St>llcr will pa} ~ Q.P.R. ofoaly 12.69'k The Wiedmans <Bl bch, 2 car gar, $695 mo 631 1266 De luxe l 0 w n house owe Sl27.000. 336 Prm p(Unts and or curry bark Htritagt 751-4293 .!48·6378 __ _ duplex. 3 bdnn. family. r el 0 n D r C a I I large note By uppt. MobleHo.ts 8 67 acres nr Villa Park. 2 story, 3 Br 1', Ba Con· 2•, bath each unit. 2t~l7J.4787_ only 997-1610 Orange. ready for sub-do. Pool & rec SSW frplcs. all buill·ins. i--------•I d1V1slon Will exchange 846·4080,846-4~ d"k' & potW. ""' .-1"-I 1006 EASTSIDE (~i]\\\><>dbrldge . 1 Br Trailer Home for oceanfront. home or Condo. Adults only 11 k e I a nds ca p in g ••••••••••••••••••••••• S O C E A N f R O N T w/cabana C.M. Adults. income units. 1·937·13n Below market price for SELL~R WILL HELP 2 HOME Reallg PEN"IltOUSE Xlnt S6800 or lradt for ----GOOD renters 4 Br 112 601 LIDO FINANCE.1295.000' DUPLEX ~~t~.rg; 'rpl:s~ ~~~o~ 551·3000 ~~i~ehwa~:ruvti~ws~~ha.;~ motorhome.673-~. l..tak ba. includes blllns. 2 Br z•, ba. hi rne l ..&.--a-.Prop. Ow11-~~ Pk 1 1 f Ill BY OWNER Nice dbl.••••••••••••••••••••••• micro oven, refrlg. W1D watArfront A\allabln __ , ,.. ,.._ Pl.US 2 Bdrm rnttage, 1920flarrano '°)· n "~ bedroom ocean ron t • • Realtors Spacious 2 story 4 rm Sl65.000 financing by penthouse is a sight to wide 2 br, 2 ba in nice HCM1M1 Fwuclshtd hkup, immac SS75 'mo ~ept S~. i52 5710 •675-7060• home, plus t bdrm apt WQOOBRID6£1 see' Just an ele\·ators Cadl~ park ..... ~a!,_J28ula3n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs r .~72 PENIN PT 5br 3•,ba Isl ti me on market o;;;r ~:Car.. Rltr. * * • ride to the ~ecluded RE._ l T 0 RS a llitrano . .,..,......,. LoCJ-a ltodl 3141 HOME FOR RENT sunroom. dm rm lrg Su per lorat1on on 54 .. 7729 Twolevel.2 Brattached while sand beach.Don't Chat•slllrffl CeMt .. ryl.oh/ ....................... 3 Bdrms. S700. Fenced patio. Sl400 mo Betty WHAT A VALUE Marine Ave. Easy stepsl•!!!!!!!!!'l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!il homl' Vacant and ready miss this mcredible op-7 C--"" IS Spac. l Br mobile home, yard & garage Kids & Am 673 9000 If you've waited for an LoSo.Bay.ft"".000 to go' "-··--r anx1'0 .. ~ s o De l ighlful Bluffs 2 •rr• pa r tially furn P vt ts l ... 2000 ~~ ~ vw1n:: ..., portun1ty 369,00 bedroom plan "H" wt'tb •••••••••••••••••••••• · pe we come ....,,. b 1 exceptional buy-th1S is -"•\Tl Kl KCl'T ...... _.. H.., •--and great financing 99 ••"t beaches pool pier & Agent, noree. 2 r. Iba, enc gar. CUlt' & • A h · ... ""' ,...... .,. IVTW 4 "'W'I view on the Caudal REDUCED clubhous'e. n.'ean si'de -· su""r dean. ,.., blk to it c anmng, com· Brand new! f'anu t available Call now "" WALKTOBEACH y • fortable 3 Bdnn home R"E'!"L'E"s1~",~· qua11·tycoodo'.3 bdrms. Sl27.950. • greenbeltnearpooland 2 cemet er y lo t.s . w/fullview.6to12mos. E lb ...... f b~h_,,S§OOMo.6451111!1 I d i Id " " "' puttlno green. Partial Westminster Memonal , __ • .,tA/mo • .,.,. "'""° xec r ,.,., am nn, BLUFFS COHDO ocate on a qu et cu . e. _... -2•~ ba fantastic f•Manc· [Vj) L" " """ __,., ...,.,._,_ di f t t I S 00 000 , .. _ .. _ • u• 1ngo back bay view and a de-Park. Good Shepherd . . n1ng rm. an as IC sac sl At ony 1 · · v•-1ng.Callnowfordetatls. ~i ui,.~·1brld9" · h s ._. _ _....___.. 316f home•-area """"5191 Jbr 21 ba park vie thUI is the best priced 1~!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~•1 52 ......... "''"u " •alb·-lightful deck. Flexible section · wort 760 rww,..... •--.. _ ~~--· i · w. · I": 1 . .....,., R I -· financing. Price reduced each. asking $879 for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 br + den. frplc. nr lease. S975 Mo Avml 7hom3e91in this area . 13 ,,,.,MID ca IU toS220,000. bolh.714/642-91l6eves. IHllf.MoMco Beach & Talbert. $635, n ow 1213 1331 6946 51· 1 PIER .. .__SUP •Mil •'W _ 551·3000 Ls t de 892 e'•es wknds ,._,._ · ------ -·-~ l"it• I 044 D.M. Mslt.l IJtr Clusified Ads M2-S67I Prof. decorated ~ Bd 11 1st t p. ·9539 - - - 35 · on waterfront. PARKllUSTOL lt!t81rranra "'""lnh1I' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-tftO home. Fully furrusbed 1"111• 3244 Quiet 2 Br Unit. 1•, Ba backed by cozy 2 Bdrm 2 Bdrm condo. So. Coast ....... 760-0tl5 Mtwport le9dl 1069 w/aardener. mont hly ••••••••••••••••••••••• Con.do. frplc. pool. spa. c: o l tag e · 2 Bdrm Plaza. $84,000. Rt ta • ••••••••••••••••••••••• cleaning services and wo-•'DGE patio. 2 car gar.~ Mo guest/lncomeunllover 2 w ·1 A 1 7525710 J••·········· auociation fees in· ~ 1st. last + S200 deposit. car garage On quiet -..!'er en · eluded. J ae., comm. A detached Sycamore Call Pat 675-s:nl M .... °" TW Hll side of Island. Seller MOVE..tH COHD. a MACNAB pool and delightlul fa mi-Model. 4 Br. 2 ..... Ba .. Cozy 2Brl'ba"° cottage This elegant Colonial s financing' available! Entertain on lge. COV· lrlUll.IC a ••A,..,IAD ly llvin&. Lease ror fenced yard. cul·de-sac, Redwood decks briek Br family room home Call forappoinlment. e re d patio New nw•,,iii;; ~~ Sl.SOO/mo.M4-7000 commly pool, attached walks gar A 18·15650 has il all Stately charm 642-5200 drapes 'cpl/ paint/ REALTY RVWE e ca r age . $850 M 0 5456625 . v I po u rs fr o m i ls range. Nr schools, park. REALTY 7S2·12.82or 1/492·0646 -·--- magnificently decorated p 0 0 I 'I zed ya rd . ·-.... __ ' L1"ng'o Calli. Homes. 5192 Yearl· •• YAtOMT r ooms. No expense Pleasant Sutl'OWldings. Dlt~M COTI4GE WITH PICICIT ·-·---ing. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Fam. Greil view ol boats & spared on the imported E s t 1 b I i s h e d FEHCl. Large lot and lovely · •.a&-Rm. AIC. new paint. bay. Brick frplc. ram1ly tile work . brass otl&hborhood. Sbr. 3ba, private location is the setting for TUlTLllOCK Outstanding • · · · Water" Grdnr incld. room New rarpeu, t hroughout and un· St62.ooo. Assume tsl t his u na tt ac h ed home in Broadmoor Plan 1 with smashing Beaullfully uperaded 3 m 5.A&enl541·5032-rresh paint. Avail im· believable pool complex. '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! OWC Bob & Dovie Koop Br. Home 111 Harbor s BR 2 Ba. immac. in & mtd. for 9 months Only The top or the world ..... , ..... 1001 ..;:;:63-.l -=·1266::;::.::.. ____ , Wood bridge. P r ofessionally deoor of lime greens and yellow . View Homn . fmmed. out W/D, mris. stove. S'19 5 mo. Broker , vlt• Is breatbtaklo1. ••••••••• .............. a BR. frplc, 18. yard 9<l> landscaped. Custom draped, Features 3 BR and Fam. Rm. occupancy. Private Spa, avail. Joly is. S72S mo. _87_3-_SMO ___ _ Creative .eller will help -------•t assum. loan. $115,000. parquet and plush carpet, cozy Very private low maintenance Commly PQol.t or 12 mo Call Pea Dameron. s.t. AH 3210 llnanct. ll won't lul DUPLD·t.fAff t:'42=·5=1=N=P=rin=.on=t=·=~ wallpaper. 3 Br. Fam. Rm. 2~ yardwithbeautifuJpoolandspa. lease.cau em wedmore SS2·2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lonJatsuoo.ooo. BALBOA P'-"JN. Baths, double garage. $172,500. Fee $195 ,000 Sharon Smith MH020 WOODlllDGE €XECUT1V£HOME bl u-~ u..a • .......... nr So. Coast Plaia 2 Two 2 bdrm, wuma C! D. Lewis 752·1414 (P44) 644-6200 (P42) ,_. Wt '!.... 3 Bdrm condo, fenced story 4 bdnn 2ba, all totn 11~~. Good rtnter Ym WRCOMI •11•••••••• .. •11•• patio, no pets 1125/mo Top location.S350,000. StZ.tOO l111Nl J10Z a1.oalS new cpt, draptt. paint. MEL FUCHS YA MONO* DAtlflUlY PLUS. Central air , &llAMT COMDOMIMIUM Quality ....................... appliances. GTdnr &- PAVll.lONRF.ALTOR •No down and nocoeta redwood terrace, Vao Luit surroundings In a secure 2 at1 3Br, d~ 11r•1•. ~'~0~dist7l~ar.'!:C '71-1120 to VA. Don't inW this wallpapers, Microwave merge to environment. Lovely antique paUo, pool, Condo • c r are opportunity. s make a roost desirable 3 BR, 2~ touches enhanced with cllltOm mo.51tm:lt&t, dep. 111 AC\, Sandy apaciou.lbdnns,2bathJ, BA trome situated in popular mirron reflecting 1 peek-a·boo .......... JIM ..... a .......... =1--·2242--...'---- famlly rm. frplc, and tuoodbri..f"'" VIII l the H rt · d 2 • ..ia--~ UH formal dining rm 0n "' uae age n ea water view an mast.er 1.....-. • ........ " .......... .. quiet tree-llfttd street. o f I r v i n e . D a r J en e $169,SOO Coby Ward M2·8235. ASAP: Pleue tall bltT Peintinger/Glnl McGbee $164,900. (P43) fordet&llt S51·8700 (P45) Hl·Z246 WM~ RE ALTORS IOU '°"'_,...MAl.1jNU••111nn• I . .] • • • +' • 0 0 • • • • a s s c 0 a o; • • •• .. ,---------1..,.. ~ c..... Cb SllB .................................................... IC••• ...... ~ ..... I . . "-tc....... ...."--... .. il mJllKll ASftU LT R O 111! CAK!SURPRl$E! C •••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ... , ... 9;;;;;:••••••••• ... ,,,.,,,, .. ,,,,, .. ,,, .;;;.;;';', •• T,;-,;~-. •• ,,, •••••••••• ....... ,, .. ,, ., fmntll rnA EPAllUN Uaiq flavored U.to.m concnte, e_oaipl. Wtcutit-youdtyltl OARDENllA1NT. R08JN'SCLt:ANTNG llOltTOAOEMOHEV The PaperHIQler, Prof. ROOFINOSINC!lm «u.IN. SeakoatiuHtriplna dtll ~ /Dow c~ Nrvlce. Remove old, In· lM'• Trw Service lw yd eleall . Tree trim· Servi~ u.o hly AVAILAILI lnataU. Dtantor qual AJI typa lncJ repaln It $117 .. !'J Comm/nelid.Plft..C. v • .,.. taUnew Uc. eu ,...... ttl"IWIOOd et• a la c~anMM 1 szo,oooao•.ooo rreent 54741 snowcoalinl State Ile • Uc. •»1• MHltl aailla. tll.00. ~ !WI o.cu and ht.bl, cord Pkll npert ttH · · -Mo, .... ,.,_.. FIAe palnUnl by RJcbard 2822.IU. tsCJi disc on yd ThafaAU.you Y ASPHALTREPAJRS C.,11t1r Masoa.~Sport6Teonil trimminl.M).TREE. H•lti•• ~~11a·t~~I UltoU/t;toref.:{ Sltlor.Uc.lna.lJyrs" atockmatettal fora .. s ...... l'V\ATING n........ rr-Bob •••• ;:................ RC .._ ....... ~ .... -p ...... . t.. b NB ....... ........ • .... u-. day I ... ~""""" ....................... """'.... • -·· • Fanalca/11t •!ASONABLE Own trans. lg:Q510 , ... Q ANC . •PP.Y . cwtomers. --,._._., 301nU:d Sincelt37 Uc.ams AU Tyr: RH\odellAc' ISHllll,14M071 ....................... PROMPT, FREE EST. 04i.JHOUS1X:L.EANING SERVICES Thank ou.13 ...... o S.w .. /Aler ..... DAILY $46..5800 •5187 ~:~ ~f~= 17 GUARANTEED FormletCounWtolll ALM<iiTEVERY SpeclaUM!dServicea 527-3477 Ext /Int paintinc, cab. rt· ..................... .. --~......._ Mr P•~ ........ 1• Block wlll.a, brickwork. Cuatom bulJt/ln.ltaOed R!PAJRNEEDt:D to meet your Individual tln /ataln. Prof. RJnbl. Catm Oreu Ma kine ,...,v, _._, .... ..., · -~-·-" 1lab1 dri~*""' Rf Lat • ,.....__,n.....1..... M1u1r,. F t "'•-ILl7 •"'1 Alt ti /R I SllVICI ....................... • -·· t: •· ea • .__...,_..... CHETMS-4757 n~. Reas. . ....... :............... re ea ,....,ve~ ._ era 001 epa ta DlllCTOIY WUJ babyaltlnCoronadel M8twC:nift1•11 Rua. rat9.15H255 Fl'Heat. ttMl'71 Carpentry, muonry, HOUSECL.EANJNG BRICKWORK . Small DB'aPAJNTING Conaultatloo in your OOITNOWI Mar Sat Day, Sut1. Speclallut lo f\niah' c.r-kTlt fllMrC•.... roofin&, ceramlr tile, Reliable, lood work . Jobs. Newport, Coata Int/ext. Neat, reliable. home.7~~0 --- ...... --11:--....1.,_ Day, Sun·Thunday NmodeUn1,Xlntrd. .. ..... , ............... , ..................... drywallflmore ~ ueady Job. Roh Meu. lrvlne. Refs refa Dave845-0389evs SWf•tt~ _,....._.. cveninaa. Aft.er$ 30, .. 3lle Ceramic tJle, int/ext. CRPT·LINO.WOOD Ra twe-7228 875-3175 PAINTING, custom "1••••0 •••••••••••••• Your Oaity Pilot Susan 7st-OZ'fl r~ ~ Comm/rea1d. rates. All lutaJled/repalred. Lie. ea-nt.ry. M•.,.,..rv E 1• u---k In Frp work , 2S yrs exp Many Cool rour homf, add ServlceDitectory BABYSITTING my :;:",r."; ................ American'roe~8806 "** Crec•5142 ROOrln&·Piu;bi;;ft1 •'7f:::,.eodable.~fap I ks, paU<:., planters. local refs. Lie 400941 , aecunty, save$$, U II\· Repreisentatlve ho infA•.. OK N Sh ,._ ... I ,.-•" For a Job done r11ht Bonded, In• fr'""" ""'t. at II I I F r e e e s t •42.,,7 ... _. JZZ me, ..... . r. ampoo • 1.dm c ean. he........_ ~-•••1 Drywall ·Stucco· T e Supplies rum. 641-497_0 • ·rry 7"" .,._eves u.., ~ "0 0 Viet I CM ...... '"""' Col brl"i..~ ht ...... ,..., --...., --Hutc .. '·on.~""!'11_. '2131324-6624_ or 1 · · ....... !"" or .,._...ra, w ............................................. &more. J.8,646-99llO QualltyHowecleaning CUSTOM MASONRY .... -~ -~ ._...1 Senkt crpts 10 mln. bleach. •WATllPAU.S• CLEAN·UPS/LAWN Hercfwoodfloon with PenonalTouch. Brick, blockat.one, lOO's. Olympic Palnling -SM!r ,,. : a. !I: .,, Mc-"'9 ....................... Hall, Uv.-d.in. rms 115: Cralt•d from volcan'1c MalnteDlllOe·Lnd.scp F t n ..... u• '"u. Local r•fa Call NOW •-Int/Ed Ftee ettamates. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• ava rm ... 50·. couch s10·, .. ,-... .... t. .. ... -....................... ree es . ~J oAlfrVWO .. • ood H • .................. nPIHCi=ICS h ~ G u boulders, ae_lf.c:ontaJ.ned. • .... -........... HARDWOOD n..c>oRS U...-... &6M... save! Lge or small jobs. G qua I work. low ot water + pool heating Acctc for sm bus. PR c r . uar. em. pet StoneA-"-a•·--· Gardeninc. IA..,,,•-apln&. Cl ed'-W ed • ._ .... ..., o-... 1 .... et .. ,, .... 12 rates~·l903 saverasmcenergycosts qtrUes. Jales tax, FIS. TIAM OH odor Crpt rtpalr. 15 yrs .~ ... ·~ ...,... .. ......-ean • u "••••••••••••••••••••• '"'~ ""· ~ ...,...., gain tax credits. f'rtt ;!< Complete aet up & t6Ul71 exp. Do work my1ell 6'U.331/eves873-l226 tree trimming 4' re· AnrtUpe.GalS.A. OON'T BE EMPTY. Custom brick, stone, RENTALSour speeiahty, aervice. Reu Fran •..n..L..-Refl. 531·0101 Dr.,.rit• moval, ~ clean·up, H..... THIRSTY OR LONELY block. coocl't't.e, stucco Int /ext Seaside Paint eat S48·l61! ---- 54().5834 -~ NoSteam/NoShampoo ....................... freent. 752-13411 ....................... Refs Freee1t S49·9492 l!!J. Prom .536-4806 SprWi&.n •••••••••••••••••u•••• Sam Fu .. umoto YARD H I I ""-it Pl " 'II i ---INT EXT PAINTING •••••••••••11•••••••••• BOOKKEEPING Stain Specialist. Fast 1;, O" IH JUL y • au • c eanUJ), concrete .,.,cur y us w1 a t Mo•iHJ For small buslneu. GBEult1·1Wde~S~m&c~1~7 dry. Freeest. 839-1582 DraperieabyGlovannl frAeleNTtr.1m"minc1,ea. n~mUpa'11· removal. Dumptruck your house, planb & ••••••••••••••••••••••• GENERALREPAJRS, ,.SPRINK1.ERS&SOU R•u rellab'-631 auo "' .. .,. Also ml I bli d •-.. Qukiaerv &G7638 pets. Bondable. refs. Mov 'nc' The Starvina LARGEORSMALL ree Removal DIG IT r' .. • ..,, ........, Additions, remodeling, n · 0 8 .. landsc4pln& ~~ · 631 7587 1 · " REAS. PROMPT _bandsca~~7070 .,_,Alllf..,... planJ. Freeest Reas. ~~· levoloura.5GZ215. Dan'aLa~Serv1ce DUMPJOBS . CollegeStudentaMov1J1g JERRY00-4757 TKe ; ...... :;:;............. Lie. 310942. ...a 2170 n...w.. p . 1 1 Small Movin& Jobi Resp., mature lady will Co bas grown. Insured ----... ,... rec11 on awn malnt Call M"'"'"~ "'"I houaeait Auo? Sept• d .. -1'--/l-..l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ma1nesite. paint, clean, •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• • AAL....,.Mll> .. same &OO service .-... .-....-......, d .. CONSTRUCTION CARPETCLEANERS D US . . pro1ram1oralllawna Oct?Nwpt,(IJQ5)967M90 1Tl24·436 License ....................... TILEINSTALLED ecas, cemeldnt, crpls. Add/remodel. concrete rywa pec1ahst Expert labor, low rates. HauUn1 fl Dump Jobi 641·MZ'I Neat patches & uxtures All Kanda Guaranteed cBarraped ntr~, ~'e • plumb Free est. S8l·8360aft.5 Evx1.vt~~t0ionrc:l~0!!se_-Qual. & prod. New & re· frtt est. &G50l7 Ask for Randy Reltable New Zealand cpl Refs _John. 893-1667 .• ,642~3462 __ ROOM ADDITIONS & .... ,~~i057hn.... mod 113899'4.532·5549 &tl-8427 wlllcareforbse&grdn ABC MOVING , Exper fftet!_t. lt}l09 -..a.....a...c• •--a. REMODELING Quality Tape, Texture, Aoousllc Prof. Japaneee.Gardener HAULING-student has for approx 1 mo. from prof. low rates. quick PLASTER PATCHING TrH St"kt ..,........ ......... Aeilinga -.. -t K In Lawn cutUng, tree trim· I 1 t k Lo t mid July. 645·Ml2 careful service. 552-04_JO_ Int/ext :.>yrs exp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~·· construction from de· " · r ""'"" · ev ar e rue · wes -GUAR . USEDREFRs sign to completion C•ll19CJ.ACAMllHc 675-9088/87}oo.1 mln&.weedlng.5'8-8375 rate, prompt. 7.5!M976 L.dacoplilcJ •A·I MOVING• Neat work Paul~·2977 JAYETIHCAll SALES&SERVICE Family contractors ro~ ···~··•••.•••·~~··•••••• Btctrical Mowing$10.$t.S.S2S Thank John. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Top quality Special .flillllllitg Topping, pruning, re Good cond. &t2-77.54 :.> yrs. Reas rates. Fr cus%':u~~~s ~ •••••••••••u•o••••••• Hauling/Moving S25 cia-.-y_. Act COLORSCAPE DESIGN care an handling 25 yrs •••••o•••••••••••••••• moval & sprayuig 10 )rs ..a. • ..a.-ests. Allen E Johnson a LlA --... x.~~ .. ELECTRICIAN-priced 7.54·9904/SM-0095 Mark ... --r Instant color & clean-up exp. Competitive rates J .0 Horn Refmish1J1g exp Local refs Fret ::-:;::'•••••••••••••••• :.>1007. Call ~5656 or ... ~ o>.>V..N'W right. free estimate on YARD CLEANUPS, trff We clean out 1arages Futservice. 979-9196 No oven1me '7»1~ Antiques Kit cabinets est Li e ~ 64().~ ;; Driveways, parklJlg lot 840-4727 eves. C....t/Co.cnte larceor small jobs. work, irrigat.ioo & re· ton truck. 125· 6.1l·t!l&3 LHffMr S..W. Suruhine Movers Put a f'me amlln 64S-0664 TREES SHRUBS TRIM ~ repairs. sealcoating. J1t.UCOC ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lac.1396621 673-0359 p11r , areen belt ~a...g ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• smileinyoormove no &•--'-' Remove,haul,rlean-up, ., S&S Asphalt. 631·4199 '"." OMST~ Driveways, patios, room Whether you're buying or landscape. BSl-0129 ....................... Custom Leather Sandals job too small. 642· 1329 .......... :::?:":...... c!•~tc J1m6.11-4530 Lk'd. Additions . Remodel1J1g additions Cement & selling, Classified ad· Garden Maintenance Want a REALL y CLEAN The Sandalman makes Placing a Classified ad is General Services, no job Wifldow CltmMJ Trade your old stuff for &CuslomHomes. Lie. brickworlt.SM-0753 vertlsing will cet your Resid/compi/indus. H~USE? Call Gingham the best for yourapecial as euy aa dialing your too small Free est ••••••••••••••••••••••• new goodies with a 1299374· 67.5-6044 SELL idle items with a me11a1e to the richt Cln ups & tree trim Girl. Free est. ~5123 needs Call&G8456 phone. Give us a call Reas Call Answer Ad "Let TheSW\Bhllle In' Clusifiedad.642-56'18 Sellthingsfa.stwithDaily Daily Pilot Classified people. Call Today ! ming. Clauilied Ads. your one· Find what you want Ul We 'll do the rest J4S3.642-4.U,or6311137 CallSuruluneWandov.· Pilot Want Ads. Ad. 642-5678. 840-1818; eva846-4947 stop shoppm,c center. Daily Pilot ClUllfieds. 642-5678 art 5 __51ean1Jl Ltd-~~ ~= ........... ~ .... ~!~~!:.~ .... ~~: ............ !~~~!~~.~.~ .. !?~~~:.~~ ..... ~~~ ~:.~~ ..... !~.~~ ~ Trwt 5035 ,Loatlfomd 5300 ••••••••••••••··~··•••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Costa Mesa Jl24 ~•-a. 31~0 Room with full house I Moving? Avoid denncits CORONA DEL MAR Beautiful New oHire ••••••••••••••••••••••• BE lat tenant linusual G t llOZ • -·-..·-__., " . ,....u D I Offi · · ••••••••••••••••11 ••••• Lost Stn""" rem rat new 1 b i ded d eiwra .......... ••••••••••••• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• privileges in Newport & cut living expenses! e uxe ices space avail Ill one of PRl .... T SHOP I St h S ~ ·CM . r se_cu en ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 buce bedrooms. super M•RI ERSW Beach.642--611U Professionally since Sl8S&.S30Cl.A/C Newport's flllest office " l area. unit. Sm., adlts only A"MTS FOi llNT location Fully carpeted. "' N A.LI( 2500• CONDO 00 love I 1971. RealonoDUcs 67~6700 bu i Id 1 n gs N r 0 C Thrmng ~Ill~. C M · 1 J!!~ard 67-~-025=..:7--- romplu w gate. pool, I H B .. NB .• Costa Mesa built-ins, beam ceiling. 2 & 3 Br, Townho~se Greenbelt w/s aciou~ HOUSIMATES EXECUTIVE Alrpon <m-900 sq rt low overhead Call for Lost 5 mo old white rem gardener Nr S C Something for Everyone ::>ver 50 adult, no pets. Apll from s.95. Patios. allos & sund:cu nr 832'4134 WI l h o r w 1th out dela1ls 165,000 Craig. Poodle Temer mix . red Plaza. Cntrl aar. patio, Bach to 4 Br Unfum S3SO Mo Apply Apt. J single & double car P 1 557.7118Jor~ SUITES Secreteria!Service Call 6.11-12116 collar. Mesa del Mar upgrades, k 95 + uuls Apts. Certam locations 568 W Walson 646-4477 garages• near Hunt ~ . . Spectacular view, secu.n lo for details 833-0440 area reward 557·96.54 S35 No pets 775·2580 orrer · Pool s pa --_!(arbol!.!.~8807-Pvthome,pvtbath.m1d· ty gate, pool. spa. HEllTAGE L--• F G eves. . · · · Stunnanglarge2Br 2Ba die-aged working man Prestigious Harbor MEWPOITIUCH osl e m erm EASTllUFf Three Bdrm. 2"1 ba. end unat, cooc:I condition and location S900 per mo Week days 759-417S Two Bdrm, 2 bath. deluxe Mcclair condo at Big Canyon. Pool. tennis, security, ava1I tmmed hreplace, lalll!. room. Garden Apt. Pool & Rec SPACIOUS C M $200/mo 548-0813 · Ridge. S550 per mo.. PLA1A Share office space with I Shorthair Pointer beamed c e 1I1 n ~ s. area. S4l5. 3 Br 2 Ba. Apt. with 2 · . · · 760·9307. New luxury omce space broker. 300-450 rt avail Leath collar. no tag carages, all built-ans. now !8th St car attached garage. XJn l nr Hoac. P~ ent.,& Shr new 2 br CM home w 1 n Irvi ne's bus 1 est including 2 pnv oHices 960-8725, 1016 Delaware. Garden & Townhouse . . : W /D hook-up, patio. ba, no smok/drink/k1l b Q center! Easy frwy ac + reception Very reas. Several Resuurants for HB REWARD design. NO FEE 3 Br. 2 Ba. T19 Shall mar r.rplc. Small pel/ch.ild Male. 12.65. 646-1035 a sentee owner wet, ress Avail now ' Call terms. 752-6550 salr Prime locataons Lost J uly-2 =n-d-M-ale TSLMGMT 642-1603 New carpet. upstairs. ok. Forapptcall Lacuna Beach room. pvt S400lmo.642-083S for details from s..5.<n>to ~.ooo. Chor Labrador 2 yrs lolbool.a.d ll06 :o ,!t~~.~l~ll2;1erra TSLMGMT 642-1603 man, pvt entrance, pool. Male FemSbr.2bahseS S51·11ll 851·5111 "Dickens". Npt Hts ....................... Duplex·3Br, 2Ba, newly cookin&,l220.494-4459 Co Plua Frwy Spa CdM Deluxe Swtea, AC. Small orr.ce. ample ICECREAMNEWPORT Children grae\'tng 2 Br, 1 Ba w/ garage. 1 2br._ fenced yard, gar, decorated, dbl gar, W/D 5--rl.... 4200 SZ25+shareutil 6414913 ampl pkg, util pd. 28S5 parking, easy arrrss, Xlnl beach loc Must Reward 675 1304 or blk from bch S63S mo children/pets OK hook·UP Avatlnow.S6SO •••••••••••••••••••••••Fem . resp non·smoker. E.CstH .675-6900 112Smo.Act S48·7729 sell Only Sl9,500 -~8SS6 on 1 yr lse No pet~ S500/Mo 2223 'A' mo.536-0921 LIDO ISLE charming 3 neededtoshare3Br2ba l-S33·4242 --Lost· Beaglefem Tricol- The Spring.s, 1 bdrm. 1 7.59·0685 r:s-~a Way 64S-.5480. bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. Irvine patio home with NEW~ORTCIMTll ._..,, • ....., 4450 MoMy tolocM 5025 or "Lady". Moved from ba. upgr»ded $440. 2 Br, l ba w/garage. I blk 1+~:J,= Just remodeled Mon· pool & gar with mother Prestigious. full service ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Des ca nso to 13962 644-9584 752.1983, 832.2831 Crom bch S83S mo on 1 Apts 2br S400, tBdrm 2131.,,.,7202 thly rental Bill Grundy, & 10 yr old son. Woman EX EC offices Inc Ids For store &<office space .._.EED MO .... EY Yockey. G G 897.0700 3br. 2ba. air, newly pot-yr lse. No pets Ask ror S3SO Rerng, Stove. .-r 675·6161. with child ol s1m1lar age recpt, sec, xerox, under at reasonable rates f"ll f"ll Reward ed, very clean sharp. Tom ca 11 ast er d a 648 0341 aft2PM 2 Br. I Ba. Dishwasher, NEW p 0 RT OCEAN ideal. $400/mo. M7·949& ground pk'g, tdex & an 500 to 4000 S. Ft. Up to 90'1 AppraLSed -966-1818,Eve7S&-068.5. 2Br , 2Ba twnhome. patio, garage I child FRONTLux.~Br.Wk· Sm1leFemParentlook tJque decor ronf rm MESAVERDEbR Valuelst2nd3rdTD Lost WhtPilBullmale upper unit Woodside ....:;.=c~:::::.o. . .=.:..!.:::...::::=-:._1 b tr II I d d OK . no pets $425 , t h /( 644-7189. PLAZA LoansdeaJd1rect 7 5 Nr 20th & Npt. Bl. Village, no pets, avail Copistn.o leoell ll I uu I u Y n scp . ly. 673--SURF, 67).7677. mg o' r w em rmmte l52S Mesa Verdt' E. C M With Lender Bkr RE CM Reward. 642-4869 7 15. S575. 5.59-6221 or ...................... frplc, gar, lndry. etc. 5'5-2000. Agent, noree. Avail now new l Bdrm ' only, C.M (213)558--_8601 Custom. ex.ecuuve office, 1714)494-1741 Lost Fem Gldn Rtvr --=.54.5-=-·6445=..:..::=-------•Splil level twnhse, yd, k90 mo. Adlts-no pets. AVAIL.NOW.2Br.2Ba. furnished condo tn Male or Female share 400sq.ft.Pvtbathwith 54M123 Max 7 '3. Nr Vi r Lo••lwMtlfCOftdo Beautiful Ocean and Bay View. 2 Bdrm. 2 ba Penthouse Private 1arden, adult commum· ty. S8.50mo 83J. 7.54J Weekdays REMT A1.S I 2 br, l story adult condo HB $450 mo I br. Galed condo. 17th & Fairview SA 1395 mo. SG9823 custom bit. 2Br, 2....,Ba. 546-4016 downstairs.Dshwr. gar, Corona del Mar. Frplc, plush home with shower. Balboa Penin IETAl.SPACE Homeowner Loans toria Pl acentia CM wshr /dryr $600 mo. Lite, brite. airy, I Br apt lndry. Waler & trash prv patio. pool, spa Newpon Beach Exec 2 $285 mo. 642-4623. 710 sq rt on Harbor Reward. 964. 174 1, 661·2871. with balcony or patio, paid I child OK, no pets. Walk to beach k .50 blocks rrom beach with Orrice/Store /Bus iness. Blvd. in C M RIOO Great For Any Purpose 640-9029 Bar~a_ra __ _ cathedral ceiling, pool &< $475 . .545-3>00. Agent, no wttk. pool & tennis courts. $3.50 14~'1X40. :.>~A Harbor f ast courteous service Coro.a dtlMcr 312 spa, lush land!caping fee. TSL MGMT 642-1603 + lsl. & last Call Paul Blvd, Costa Mesa Avail ~i.::~1cs 67H7~ GibrolhrHOMt Liii Found Cat Westminster •••••••••••••••••••••• Adult.a. no pets S460 & New Hunt. Beach Coo .. do 3 Bdrm 2 .. _ ... "'-·~e near 760-7024 Aug 1, $425. lJl .549-1366 BKR t714l 642·271.S area Young, lo,·able Enjoy summer llvuig all S49 2447 B .,.u,...,..., Retail om~ Space 700 H Red go Id Angora year. Walk to CdM up. · 3sr 2 a +amenities the bay . '400/wk . M/Ftosharespac.2BR2 sq rt Westcl1ffarea 24 ours Ne utered531-4018 be h 2 B fi I 2 Br Easu1de. 1 child S800 Mo 714 848-5867 or 673-4743 Ba apt, NB Pool & pvt NEWPOITCIHTB N B h ~T t ac . r .. irepace. 'OK.Nopeta.2563Elden 213/.592·4162. beach. $400 Dottie e wp ort eac '""!."'r.'r"",,. Lost blue Persian Cal. large deck, enclosed "B" 1450 831_8065 1 '--Non -smoker, bayfronl J ohnson 760_1966 . Excrllenl Newport Ml-8300. Dffds 50l5 vic Eastbluff area parking. S780 Mo. Avail · ".,.. 1144 pvt. suite Adults. July 675.6000 Center <Fashion Island> •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Please call 640-0967 August 1. Call675-8S89 821 ·1793 ....................... IS-Oct 15. $1200/mo. omce spa~ with great Offke Ww Saftt.rMtCJ Co. Reward, no questions 2br. lba. gar. apt Adlts. IMMED OrL~~ce.trdee ~:..1 .~!;., 673-0560. Womdan, cluld OK Big ex ~osu~! .. _and Sp re-Small ~rec~~vc: omce. All types or real estate uked no pet.a •u" mo. y-lse. OCCUP•...,.yi ... es1 e, air'-"""· """ p C . bllt con o, pool, teruus. etc st1g1oua ........ ess pace vestmen•· ln"e 1n.9 -- """" u .--. • yrly. 675-.ooo or 673-8821 vt ommunrty 1 S2SO. 645-Sl23. ~Sl~ m 7.50 to 5000 sq rt xlnt address. 1696 Mo II\ .., 5 ' "'" LOST Small blk Fem ..l.~fftslwd 612..., Jasm111t 642-8.167 2 Br l Ba Apt Beam ev RodMwm from bch Comp&. furn accommodate Terri(7lfil~·ll94 __ Spec~M Corkapoo. 1 4th Vtc ...,... • ......--. Opendaily2-4 ceilings, laundry rm , 4Br 3ba, playrm Roommatewanled Must phi" des ign , bdTI>s H unt1nglon St • • •••• ••••••••• •• •••••• ....__ ....,. •--1... 3169 be t ._,. I I " lrT •1. 11 • ... CE loltooP..-.... 3707 28drml8a:frplc.~. pool. Adults only, no rwWmr .... --S2200/mo Avail July nea ._...mo +uu architecture,arcountan uA _.,,. 642·2171 545-0611 "SADIE" Reward yrly, 00 peta/chlld. 433 pets ....................... 12·Sept 30.S~ie644·7211 block from beach Fem cy, law or other busltless SOOOsq rt onNwpt Blvd .!69 97~ • cite•::r~i·;b~:·2b; .. d;j; Iris. avail Aue 1. See Sal TSL MG MT 642· 1603 Oceanfront for. Wanter Newpon Beach. 1 block pref. over 2S. S48-9816 re I ate d us es Ca 11 Ha traffic. Great ex-Want investor for Npt LOST _M_1_x_e_d_B_r_e-ed r . B h Se 7111.10AM·l2. lBr.GardenApt.Stov"'· Rentals Furnished & lOocean.Avail.byweek. Spyclass4br,pool,spa. William ,..~-.Exclus1ve posure. $3500 mo bayfront hom e. Give Sh h d S t~J~~e ~~ ~.c Adul~ So. or Highway. Upstairs refrige. Adults, no~; unrum. Broker. 675-4912· 7·11 to HS. 675-2656 & fem. pref.(2J, refs req. Broker. """" km~ed. ~cupy well secured I.st or 2nd tage: ;!em. a:i~~s:~~~ ' no pet.a. 673-6846 2 Br 1 ha, laundry rm. no S33.S . .548-137'1. NO FEE! Apt. & Condo 11737-5131. 1275/mo. Doug. T6CH232 . ' ea onom cs 675·6700 T.D. Act, 67~161. An a Ave REWARD garage. No children or Spacious 2 Br dshwsbr, rentals. Villi Rentals. Completely furnished. aft 7pm, wlmds. t Cote Realty Newport Modem Store M"4 A 2Rd T .0.7 "OSA .. 646-fAilB , :~:~~~~ .••...• ??!.~ pets 1500 per mo f:tio, enclad garace 615·4912 Broker HB beach cotuae. Resp female to ahr home & Investment or ore nr poet ore k50 COMPETITJVE RATES LOST Shepherd Blk 673-1181 00 Mo. No pe•·. no PAii NEWPORT ·-1·.. Ul Irvine, $170 mo Avail .548 s r 213 477 7001 M I ...... H bo Sus ~ _. ...., LAl\5777 J Delta Panfic M""'0 a0 e a e, var """' ar r CASIT AS Coato M"° 112 children. 548-90W. Newport Beach ocean· immed. 1st & last & sec ll1'fV" erry 1714)8Sl·~..., " 7 3. REW ARD. 548-6493 FuE 11 br. a~d ~ & ••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Upstairs 2 Bdrm, all bit-COUMTIY CWI rront S'7llO week up. .5.59·~ OC AIRPOIT /C.M. Licensed R. E Broker LOST . Reward Shepherd ~ts. ~ci i!~ew~~·~f NEWLYDlCOI. ins. 765 Hamilton 1490 UVIHG Bayvlew2brl600week. Dana Point share house Offtc•/W....._. 1840' prime 2 sty of· vic.C.M.DMV. s.a.4!168btwn 8&5PM 1 Br. gu pd, encl gar mo.Call631-4402daysor Singles, 1&2 bedroom A&enl,675-1170. chlldOK,Bill For lease. New carpets rices/warehouse. air, AMowtclftlMflll/ 63l·~ d/wuher, pool. Adults 760-0734 Eves apta&townhouaea. Hunt. Bch Ire 3bdrm 83l-1257/4Jl6.2969 &paint. Nr. Airport& all cpl, O.H. door, elc:. '•"°'*'/ Lost· Parrot, Costa Mesa New decor. I Br. DplJC. ,, ... .,.,,3 .... ,. b 1 . From'510 6441900 Fem wanted ID sbr 2br Freeways. Avail now Sublease. 966 1337 Lost• ir__.._...a Seperaled by gar Quiet. """'""'' . _..,mo. I r. poo . patio. · w/apa. Near beach. Aug anytime • ..-says "Groucho" Ron or E Adults. No pets. 325 J E. Bluffs 2 Br. 2t;t Ba. only. geo.,71.5. apt. All amen. $215/Mo <;all 644-6SOOor760-l377 _ __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Julie 557.4.565/.54().QSl e:s~l~~~~{3S,no Ne!:'J!o~~=·pd .. 17th Pl 646-5137.Afterll Pool Enclcar 1675 Mo .NEWPORTBEACH C M.557·43116/963-280l OFffCESPACE COf'OMdltM• AllllO•c ....... 5100 LOST Sib.Husky.bill& I BR. comfortable, pvt, encl gar .. pool, dawhr. N~CE' 2 b b 640-.52Mor~7559. IOO'"-s.d Offktlt..... 4400 KOLL FINANCIAL 4200sq fl Ground floor ..... H ... A.•P•••p••y•••••••• wht • blue eyes, 1 yr ' cpta, drps, water/gu. Adulll. 642-5073. . r 11,.; a . I Br. July $275/Auc $300 •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• CENTER Coast H •I h w a Y aRfet':'ard Mtke 631-0tOS • p .&46-M29 private petlo, enclosed ADULTUVING 2Br.Julyl375/Auck00 1617Weatclm N.B.Want O.C.AJRPORT Realonomica Corp .., 1 Ir. I..... aar,. No pets. k50. Ask 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba. No pet.I. Newly dec:'d. & abarp flnanclal Inst. 7ooof.f. 675·6700 RTH y Lost. vie Magnolia " ,HtwportlMCll l76t Newly decor. C:as pd, forBlll631·1266 1540 Mo . lat, last 714 ·875 ·8127 or lit.floor. enU4l-5032. Jdealsmallworkareas COllllllffdat Bl DA Tustln,C.M .. greenpar ........ ••••••••••••••• encl gar., pool. <bhwr. • 2 Br. 1 81. Maa Verde +ucurlty. 831·2093 714·99'1·°'32 Preatlglo111 Office Space. by the month for Real l..toh 4475 rot wt blue head. tame & ;iDT~~h~~.~nis hed Adulta.642-5073. upper. Child OK. k50. 1606Wntclilf0r!ve, La1una beachlront t br 3windowolficeaavalla· Eatate related pro·••••••••••• .. •••••••••• TO loved.Reward.642-3298 76G-9117 INST AMT IH! No pets.1133-8874. Newport Beach. home on secluded point, ble ln full service i.ecal reaslonals includes n!· m to 12l60 IQ fl. Sink. Bill IDS Lost ShelUe (miniature I 2 Br. 1~ 81 Townhouse SPAPClOUS •tept to pvt beach, $100 Suite in NewportC«lter. cept .. conference, cor frontage. Under5& sq fl. collie. remale. Brown. : lalboalavCllb Eutaide. l child OK. 1 & 2BDRM Aduh open Y~~~.fA$Sso day,2wkmin.f.99..Sll5 Avail now!~~ f;~4 ::.~=· etc. Gil. E/Slde,CM.548-7249 From allolyoudnends bllt wht Npt Penn Bachelor a~t. fully Yard, lndry rm Great beamed ctillna. lots of Like new, ~·...1 unit. Yac.tloa._.. •zso PECTACULA .._.__ • ....&a.... ..._trial...., 4500 atlheDaUYPllol! 673-2791 . 675 ·0182 , furnished. Amenities loc. '5SOMo. wood, servinJ bar & lee .. """... .,_.... _,. ............... •••••••• & 11!--...1 SJO 642·1603 I ........ TSL MGMT. .... ...... "ltchen ... a •-... 10 DO fireplace, buiJt.ioJ, near ....................... H •uoR ... .. H tin I --t ,._ -="-"'=------.. •val . Lease • .._,/mo. _ _..."' ......,. ... 50th.St.1blocktoorean. Bl1Beart.akecabtnaand A 1 ..... aq ... at uri roo 1575. Approx. 2265' In·..,. REWAID! .,142-1802 Spacious 1 Br. Garden pets. 2258 Maple. No parklna. no patio. M~mmotb Lakes con· VIEWS :c:fu~~~=t~~HU:. ~~~~~~g:.c.~T".1 ~1!~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Lost : Black cockapoo Winter· Lce2bdrm. Apt. Pool & rec. AU ullls 548-7356/873-8803 Avail. M0.2l3/3ll·9904. do a 2da mill. 96f.5ru. 440te 4000c.. flt. Call &40-87UorS47~ Bch. 842 . .....u ( rem a I e ) Name lbometobch. paid.Adult.nope.ta. us-·-BJGBearC.bin.ldealfor .__.._,.~. -~ FO ... anADS "Kldney "548-ao2 PlayaR.E.87).1900 El Puerta Mesa H.........__I -,__.,. fi blof .. ,..._, ........ ,-,..,..,.. -DLX21MSTI. 8,700 sq. ft. office + unu -1959 lhple Ave. ApU. __. I 11 3 bdrm 3 " ' ......, • 111&IDI or Loe...._ Pvt. ou•-' ..... -•-nc• •-warehouse. Irvine In· Found : Hi.ky Shepperd -1-.r... mmacu te • Just 1etUas away. .....,., .... u .... • A1£ fl([ puppy tMaJe)3or4mos THE "GOOD LIFE" YIAR•MUIO l'Ulll: SOcltl ActMllet Ol- 'feetor. Ft .. Sunmy Brunch • 880'1 • Ptftiet • Plue mor1 OMAT MCMATICHC: TeMla • f'ree t.-one !pro & PtO ahOp) • 2 Hclelfl Outle. Stunt • Hy,tOl'l'IHUllt • Sw•MMfno • Golt DrivitlO ,..,.. llA&ll"N. WTI: $1119111. 1 & 2 SH· room• • Furn~ &~•IOIA Uvlng • No Pttt • Modt!I Ori-o Dally t lo. 2 Br l ba, cpt/drpa~ 2 br. l'n ba.1ar.1 yur ba. end unit , pool Wknd. tr wtl)'. rates. ~---pq. + ampleclientpkg. duslrlal. !it triple net. old Balboa Area bulltlns. adults. $395, lease. llt/lut plt.11 aec privlle1es.1 bJll to tennis 54.Mfl! Very,...... T'".,.._ Brand new deco. olc In Call 646·1°'4 or inquire Cai 640-!5 0 2272 lhple, 631·292'7 dep. $$10 mo. David club. Cblldmi and pets Oceufront Newport !J Affal t '~, small, well malnt'nd., Maroci Co. l67S3 Noyes. ..;;..;.;;..;:;;::..:.l.;._ ____ _ 1 Bdrm apt. f.180. lri7·'740 540-a? ~5 'Ji:~J::.8u~.'m Beach. z • 3Bdrma. (7 f 41675-8662 ~::.t:v~.Pt ~~~r!!~t ~~~· Mr Coop in· '4J..5'7I Lo!!~. 1::11~1.e <~~f~~ alt 8pm. uk for Quan1. 400ll1"~. RIAU Cancha 758-98 avail. weekly. Call COMMERCE utll Incl.A/Cpd, l mo • ._.. WmtM 4600 LOST: 8/27 Ma.le Alrdale neutered.' reward 21164Laaalle.C.M. CJ. MW Non·am~ker, bay tont 544·08lw4'= p~A"!~ free rent. S280/mo ........................ blk /brwn/l"Ult, vk. 18th -4.-94""·"'"7.:;.;1~~-----HIWPOIT "·. ... pvt. suite. Gar, 1br. _..,_ ~ 842·9347. Santi Ana Prof.coul)le desirelor2 PCH HB Reward Found small while and AP~ • 1 : .... kitcb. tm/mo.m.-0580. Newport on Ocun ren· MAKES Prof. Bide. 1'70 Sant.a br apt, tum. or untum, 98().•3 tan Uiaaa A.plo Pound 2·2Bdrm . l·lBdrm. .'-•••• c ............... ~ •••• 11 ••• 1.•.t bdrmal w.a!.tedSt. toCJ!!~ Sta ~E'6180RT AnaAye .• C.M. can OCC"t>Y now:.. Au1. A.._Cadtlll1I or oc Fairsrouoda £v P' '270 utlli ..,... -... " : n-r-CA""8Y VIUAM Sept or Ort. ah• t-5• Small blld on Tuea 11230 75l.eoo3, dalSHZZI N~~bll~ ~~.no .,..,.... ~:: ~-=: :~: BEACH 450aqrt1J)9etavalJAu1. 7st·Ol.55 (alr Wiley) Harborvlew Homes. Loll; Larsedeltrtturtle. waterbedl d -'ll H _ ..... A_ k •ff ORD •ILE 1. '47$. lde&Hor am bl.Ill· M 3S Heb 1 br apt on New p 0 rt Rew., d . Easlblurr Area. Reward USON~Blvd. an "' ve~.4 • 1 " " neu or retail 1bop. beach, Nwpt/Balboa, 644-4514 ... M4 ...... ·1.S41-.-..__ ___ _ ,...,..~ .... a or mo. July 'U . <1 '"I-"''"" 11 ~-9424 FOUND MI \,;U9WI • HYeral r.an), Will de-<!! w r., xr· ' ' Loltfem•le black l•b. vie : I Im 11 le z Br. 181. 571 W. JoAnn. potit1 w "°"· ~ble. 471ta JMtS\"· M•IW•leedl W111ted : To rent !uulde lrvlnundDeUCar.&.b-Shep. mix, male, vie Mat 1 child. 1'o pets. r75-U14 • J_.aWSemcel OCEAN '1EW Awnia C.K. 2br apt. Call after Ject to M:ltw'a. Pltue :!:d ' Oru1e, C.M. U75. Sierra Msmt. .... JUO S I A W I N D umillBEI t • 100 •'I f\. UUI pd. 'Rm.HS:• c.UUl·m ~....;:;;em~---- Ml·Jau. ....................... VILLAGE 111e-.c•1a•r 1 * :t1::.~ mo.•™2 lll'a111/aimtt/ UWAID P::::~,~J~~.'::::~ z 81. 1 Ba. u'?:. la tHIW ...... Tm ..a.-...:.....;.;. .. J PLUSH OFrlC!S, ....... t..01t 111an ·1 5 1pd bland m 4Plex. Lal.Wlr7 ac. No t.u1111AclLllt111ita ataf· New llr.2 bdnn lunry • .. or.wtOellt • -llltlf SOO•IOOO •Cl ft. 1101 ....................... t..ancknaaw blke <rid> rouad· . .., •--ard , pelt. Adu.Its prtfemd. fordable Mvln1. 1.2 fl 3 ad.at apll la 14 plana l ft.A 11v all #'W ~ ~ Blvd c M Pb v ~ uau %71 18lb. Pl. l1tS Mo. Br, Wtll decoreted. 8dnrl tr.•,2bdrm ...._., l':"IWI 3Wll .... ,. · · · 11111111 .»f!f.Ne\HA.5*@8 ~ewf~ mil fem . 144·°'52. ~l1t:!f. ~la!'.':1: = !"',,;.,~= CL..USIF.llD MIWPOIT•CM N~t ~ sultea .. ~.~'.~ .... !~ SCUIU'fS ..:~fl Baker, CM rk UM laDdat aMI· ••llrfllll, poadll Gu ADS 08 "'-floor, Unloi DMmSPACI AllSWO$ FOUIMt! Gr11 malt ca .' ! . r:c:t btaliit\il W:,. ~ ror ~-. 'i.dlf '•'-Iii'"-'"' ~~ '1::!.~,:;r· .. ~ ~ ~OC::~ Tbe World'• Oreatfft DI la wht rhut • fut. PAMl.YAPft. H.B. ~; ~. ';'~°":: T,..•••w.tM cau··-.aec.. tniill .., eq, a. ·i;.. aq fl F•• • ntnat ''''I ,,;:"---;,,.,.~: aa....._AfttN"M. Braid..,.~ lrl rr.•WW l11c• to McTa4dt1 M . lK.._ wnurla1. 111.-.1o 111116 or up lo Ptl!l1 TOOU.rr" I apt. lot fllllllll wllll l Dtlaa• ""'9i• 1tra .._Wllt•lkl'..._ ,._ •·•...a PfO" 6/Jft. '1.lS,. "-·ft. awchtt1 ~au.a. Tlao cll,a;lrHne r..-14: Otnu1 a.; orJcM.klr& ....,. ~,.. art .., !ala. t• llatriet1 Vill•I•· ~-·....., NI-*' ...... W1t· .,.._ .. ma railt.l•1 "44I '° 0.. ••le. K.W • Vk-Hut•*• .... ," ... .._.. rAlftll ,.,,._..., C.T!a'"·'l'llllW.Vi ..,..A d• ... ~Cll. Tl• 11~ •• 111.1a • A6.••·•• a .. , ,..,,.... n..nntdlle..s~ ~ ntAM rtnclllRJllll' .... All•• --·------· ...... ~,. ------------· ...........----. . ·-· ·~·~ -~-·-·----~--·-· .-.. .... ··~ . . . . :~ ...._.,....... .....-------... -------·-- ., ~.~.~ Wmai 71 W_... 71 IWIW...W 71 W..... 71M.,..W.W 7tM POUN ftlll ••••••• .. •••• .. • ••• ................... 9;;r, ........... , ........ , ................... , ~~-.T .................. . wt . .:;=~~=~":.~~ .... , ....;::: •-a.. I .:i:.::t:~AHT·I"-lf~t:"U:~U ~~?~ .... ,?!.~ •u .~~ ..... ?!.~ ~!!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ .... ?!! • lfrDJ'W'IW: .... ,. , .. m... MMalnUIT , ., ... : crm 11~u . ... FOUNL Di 111Je e!i1111att r .. t1ttlemt1t la· Wt art ,,_-ii.., u •Ul.Ceut cm..1_...,. -·~ •tc.ALllC9'T N•MOOM lalet/M•u-., ~t • b. v It. c ••• t .... Cll:in.t l&rt,,., ..... .,...., .. , ~~ ~ ..... rlliablt. ' V1r1 blll_l ~ ...... •"'!_!!IOI llrM r.~~·.-: tttu:.'!r ' Orange Cout DAfl Y PfLOT/TUMday, July 1, 1981 ~l•lbM l lvd . Tt1Hiam llnlce. (714> Npt. lok. Miii 11 ll"OW· '-"'.._..*true. Uot la rMllloe Jallld, Pot. =-min. lO PutU.cltrb. wetakt coatro l Co. ~ ftl.JIU~ IDI llt&I. a«nui: IOp .. ilt· gdljj: WW Ktavr pbaw fOOd t1~ Jn. Dril ..,, lttoDJ STOP WM» ltlilll POUND: Vic. Beker/ Auto P•1 -u tlu 11Di1t -LIADOOOI llCIOW If 1 011 lo tbt !°'~ttmtCs. Clndy, mechenJca Wttebnlcal ~ ..-~LM..' ---- Harbor kale Dlehlad P R 0 NT ! N D mva~adit,~1 ... ~_d•,n!!~ Top wac•. Mid.~ HUtl•• Newport·llleaarta art ~~ bkff'lld. ID tb otfNt. ,. 111 ,..---£::.-z.. S.lel Ptodt naled for 11• f:.1CLUJSr &x .. """' -"''""" tn \'Ula ·-·-bttwtt11 .,. u.22 'and 1 . Ora. Cty. eo. APolY: 1'eO " -part or ti.ill time ...... • • P• oo. mort Coeapare our total PfrlClll, llt !xp'd. NMtaty, l"fft~ art lookla• for part· MHlc .. •••ht• PlasenUa Ave.; cir Me.,.t Potalblt earnimt!: =~"."'.'"'.'"~=~--• ..t_~•I toola. 60~ ... -i..:.1• ............ ...u .. !!.!Jhrlnt, l1lbo1 .1...;.•~· ... i.-1 ....... -r. E 1 d fro t •. _ _.. ,.. POU .... .. ........ Some Ilk b -nuu ..-... ••m ........ WUWIH .. __.. uuu.... time, f1.1U·timt, or tem· aper ence n • PrinUn1 Cr •-...... ND: ••le hten JIM r I • ~ee other •••• lncrUM . fut,~co.Salary g:rary wort, we CID back. Non·1moker. OffHf,,._ rdwOftinl~wtJI vie. 22nd I . et. P • , .. arry uot )'Ollr fo" .......... -1 ' eam-Cleao Up Perton, fuJI base oo exper. Need I fi'-"' job Salary OPfn ~e aid nee ra Iv Call MMl =A11)0 Cuter, 182~ In•• pot:ti:i. Applu in time. Ag::menta, bri1ht, easer faces. e pyou UJUI •• • Exper'd. lit Prt11man. IH•LVM VI ,. rot.IND: .... lllrrl ••le hnyoo Rd, L.B. peraoo: v Newport A:I, Cotta Ca II : Toni Street, MDCAL Goss Community hnit. 3 to 11:30PM. County Mn. Elp,5»511.Z. Blk Poodt;:"v1c . -Gr'e"7·2030. J.C. PENNEY Mna aiu. Ellpertence 141-1255.E.0.E. Job~llna Eicp'd front office for Apply : 1660 Placentia ClubConv.HolpC.,20ll2 Sales Weattltff t.tlJ Uh. AUTOMOTIVE z4FaahlootaJlad,NB reqllired. TSL ll1mt. ~·--Jnter~~~ues G.P. in Fountain Valley. Ave., CM. Santa Ana Ave., S .A. P /tlme·rltlme key m.uooeat UNUIOTED E.0 .E. 11/F Nz.tl03. wOiD.""' No charae to you or to 979•91ll Prtnline H1ta. 549-81 ~:~h:.t::~.:!,p~ Ma lam ute food.' Vic. OPPO&:r"UMTIES CLERICAL DUTIES Include servino over 1,000 employers we MIDICAL OffHf ""-Salad prep chef needed in new health It nutrlUoo 19th /Pomona c M Auto '8uag company *81KESTORE• LOAHsmtYICI 11 ••-1 .. have on file. It works llCB'TIOMIST Exp'd. 2nd ~man. Exper neceuary. comiany. Call Mr. ,67S-7dS12~ ' · · = ~ ~~R!~~ AN't. Mar. 6 mtthanJc ~ :a,;:i:,.=11~::~ throu,b the United Way Busy ortlce exp'd only, Goss Commwuty 4 un~t. Mlnlmun 18 yra ol age. Davia tor latervlew oun 1 .,_lllll Otaert ... Qor~ for Schwinn dlr. 811. Immediate opening In to kitchen. F /time. and volunteert who p h 0 n u & a pp ts. Apply: 1660 Pl1cent1a ~Ul{0 ~ J!M'°'1run0fll!ti.n! •PR't at(TW)IN.8?98. Tortoise. Vic. llden Stlt Sl0,400. M• have prior Lou Brobrqe Co. for C1p.iatrano by the Sea ~:,.re~ j!:i,,~~'\~fo~ New Port Center· Ave., C.M. Sat. 140 AVE PICO, San Sale• 22nd. NS-1510. • MftOSAUS bite mecb. exp. "1 a entry level Iola service Hoep. 498-57~ ao answer. Call 111 to-6'4·0f70. PRODUCTION Clemente p .. JH.dw•t FOUND: 0.alal re· 4*&.MS•I store.544-~ clerk. Acc.un&e t)'IJinf, a/T dav,orai-bvourofflce MIOICALUC.-J. ASSMLY Sales Exp preleft.ecs. Mutt be t&inera, tOUi a. beach, ~y IM'Wth requires Boolleeper/Reeep(. for attention to detall ' r COOIC I ""I' I Pea board l"COl.lntino' Wire ' cable usemblv. able lo wort Sat. It Sun. N 0 r lea at •H Mission ViejoOb-Gynor. abWly to cope wiU. pre-Home style cooking tor at 542 W. lJth St., SuUe • , • 1 $36,000 + be eweort.ag..p u ,!!~~. ~~-Cice"'-p--57~1 Ill.Ire eauntlal . amaUretirementfacili· B,inCoetaMesa. some insurance, re· Progreuiveahopwanu BEVERLY HILLS Other bra. to ... __ ....... •r· , 0 u,. D . s . pw...., . .-. _.. •OI' UJe . LA ....... -·· ., • w.•,. port.a. Four day week. someone to grow with rao1ed. w..-uucu OQ . r· fro maulfiunt '8211' Neat IOOtOCma 1850/llo. Call Katie ty. Flea. bn. Salary North Costa Mesa. company. Please call Health&Nl.triUooCorp. eaper. APPb' ID penoo. •btpberd, / 5 . Vic Chevy store in e~citing Heap640-mc> buedooap.41N-9'S8. JESI. 557-1980. (714'754·1S33. setlln& up opera.uom lo Kerm Rfma Hardware, llla1noUa •Adams, HB, Joba Wayne (Orange For Lacuna Beach CUUJCASH•/ FULL•PARTTIME · -0.C. Need key people for borBL CM 11S- 7 3'lhlf. County) Airport com· Public Accouatin1 ~~ AnawerlqSen.Noup. ...twt'Nfrte! MISS8«ia P/TClalCAL. Supervision It trainln1. JMfHar ' Found: fetnale black p&ex wlO add3~bina· Firm. Client ~te-b~~.: r b N Bcb nee. Min. typing req'd. Youth Employment For busy O.C. Agency. Clerical vacancy, 4 hrs Full or part time. Wlll SAUSW~ Poodle -~ppy, remale t:ioa rlespersoos DOW computer payro ..... "' usy:Jftj .st.ore. Call833-lmEO£ Service Mustbeorgllliud/reUa· daily in loan broterage train. Xlnt career or P/Tmaturewomaowitb b!'lck El&nound, female for E ltrai&lt sell and recooc!lia~ ~·· ~~~c~~ ~c!if; General ofthelhrborArea ble, full time, valid company in Fashion supplement. Call t.5pm, some k=ol AllU· r::~l~al•lll~d le .... G~payand of:)~~~-es. Balboa Mar i ne •lxcft9tCa.c.,.. 642-4474 falifor.niaoodd rdiriv~rs ls.lt'~·d~Ji~1Usg·e:eo~-!3~~ •• z3_ucberbrod It qbr8toto':71M5reputa- •-n-w._ emo p_.. Auto. ez. Hardwar•, 5•9.9•11. Lrg. auc" .. ful co. o ..... • n.....n lOa m 3"'"p m ucense, "" g vmg P 1 ~o • J r •• ..... ea re. Malam•te, female perltnce not required, •I~ .. • v "' ~.... v~ •• • '""d; ' rtcord . Start im · details Call Katie --------cream color Af&hen, IMrt pruicmts sefllno 10 ... v bv 'A"cb. Ac· i,:OEM/f/H btfl camp1rounds. MondaythnlFri ay medlateJv Call Susie 640-93.50 SA&.ISCIBI SEAMS1115S I • •"'1 J ...., Needs phone reps no Yes ·•ebelpemploytrs, J Ex 'd f u rt tJ mult ·COknd PigflOft ' he~tul. Se.Sales Mgr. curate typing. Excellent elm sellina. PluSh a/c offlce. too! 556-0460 QUALITY CONTROL P u or pa me, lmmediatupenin& with ~°.'~. ~!~a~h· H DoW .. ve1n.~1s~. opport1.1nily with fut-for Bookbepioa Dept. Work w/nice people. l .... ST•••-s MMGMNTPOSm OH Fore~an. Must have ex-S.C. Plau. 751-7500 lu1e11illolt.S.3466 Animal ""'' NEWPO~RTBEA"'CH growing company. Mon-Fri., hrs. 9 to 5. CalrMn. Reed, 9am·l2 " -F b . ha' CM & per. 1n hand layup, s.u-SICltlfAIT 64,S.-2444. Exp. not nee. Will train. 0000 838-ll.32 TIMPOIAIY a ric c Ill, · · ·• fiberglass techniques _. Found: 2 ~ Pvrou, Bab,sltterfor2 chJldren BOOKKEEPER Full Apply at l8llO Placentia · · N~ extra money! No Ana.helm. XJnt oppt y. 3401 Fordham, Santa COMtiBCIA&. Occldtntal Life of vie. Bushard• Adams, ll dava ... __.., --e eves'. ch". P/U-, i-.. term Ave., C.M. GIHllA.L OFACE ex rience necessary. Gen 646-'°40. Ana, 979-9361 Tired or selling houses 7 Newport Bch has an ff B i ..... ""'" .. ..... ...... -i C A I ~ OR S d ~,_., W eed openln& ror a secretary . . . 9'2478 Must l>e 18 or over. emplymt. Fin hrs. CLlllC..._-. Telephone, typ ng & a I must. PP Y: MODB. C T RECEPT/SEC'Y ays a w.,_, e n Wt are looking for so-F~·-.. · ara kl"-bi•· 640-8471 MustbaveCPAfirmex-,,..._........, light bookkeeping. Call TeleprompterCableTV, TopDo rs5Z77186 X 1 b . f oneUcenseetoleamthe ........ • !'Y ....,.,, w "" · Perm., part time, Tues, Newport Fleor Covering 901 W lath St N rt · ·ray a trauung or skills to manage, broker meone wlt.h • pleasant markln1a. t5aycreat Babyaltter needed. Mon. eer.963-56:5 Wed., Thurs.8to5.Call: torlnterview,'7~1M6. Beach, 642-32SI 0~~r>or MOTEL Desk clerk. Day right person. Clerical· commercial real estate. personality, who ls well area,N.B.Nl-ll&a. Frl ... LZboys:lage9,I llEAIFASTCOOI( Ba l boa Marin e · 69 shift. P/time, F/llme. Utebkkpgsldllsamust. Income from mgmt or1anlzed to perform Found:Cl"OWlfV1Ueyvk:, tmoe.~anyt.ime. Full time permanent. Hardware, 549·9871., GIHllALOFACI Nr . Orange fair· X -ray exp . not while you learn. Super clerlcaltypedutles.We 7/4, older ~I ••le, ~;; Must have experience EOE M/F/H Bright enthusiastic peo. IMSUlANCE grounds. 64,S..'nOO, Jean· nectssary. ~ benefits; life irunirance, orrer nice aurroundinp tan body, 'Wblle race. --_ Apply in ptnon: Jolly ~e wanted for expand· Accountin& Clerk. Agen-..!!i.L RECEPTJeSECY health iniurante "den· & as a branch office, we 861·9004. . IT Roger,400S.CoastHwy, c·-~ c Ume share resort. cy experience Ntwsp1per delivery Reslaur· ... es1'•nf1'rm lal plan. Coouct Ken. p1rtlclapateinourcom· Found: blact miniature Laguna Beach. ~ Desll:exp.notnec.Com· necessary. Salary com· person, 18 or over h ... ed "';' f · 675-6700. pany's atrumat.ive ac· Collie m• 4 white VElfl(I/ Wanted forl1Jioa, phone, ~r or time share mensurate with ex Driver's license. an· das immd b. 0 1 perunhg or lion pro1ram. E.O.E . ' , CAI WASH • tounttt sa.lel. Full or led helpful. Con . "'-ta J t e Pen a e s a r P Call Brenda 7S2·2lll. feet. Vic He. shoppi.ni t t . A 1 &e · penence . ....., ct ane surance, t00n0my car. person w/good typlng SA.LIS oeoter. fll&.JSI. LnAM ISBUISEI Full & p/time help, also pMa r JBmle. rinpp !.,; tact: Craig or Louisa Mendoza at Jay & Ren· Npt Bch·lrv·Cost& Mesa sk1'lls. Able .A handle s~m·•y V. Assistant Manacer aster uep l, ~ -n03 rro N-Dt 0 -" •••9000 area 7 d.,., pr w" Mon "' Catch tblll opporturuty SoW -Found: male neutered Fl.seller, CM. un. 1373 ~• • w "'"'• _,.. ~· ,... • correspondence. riling, LEGAL PoaW0111•allable in OUP Trainee. Apply at 2950 .,.., Fri, 2·SPM. Sat/Sun ~Sl001day Youne am· D1lmatien. brown & Conna erLoanDept. io Harbor Blvd, Costa 4.7 .lOAM. Approx. addin1 machine, er· bilious crew bat room Xlnt skills required, white. Vic Irvine & Costa Mae. Related ex-Mesa. CLlllTYPIST SENEIAL Off'IC( I INSUIAMCE S500 mo Call S40-3007 rands. busy phones & for more Tramm1 & salary neeotiable -1 Orchard, S.A. Hts. 2261 per preferred, lyptng Typlat/Recepdoo.ist poa. . Lge. insurance agency bet llAM·SPM. Ask for front office. Congenial trans po provided man omce. 67~9201 Orchard Dr. 40·50wprn required. CASH& h Re1itter toda>: for local bu the following open-' --Bob small office iocated Ill 540-7652 art HAM s~m••y ,.,..... f /T & P/T. Newpe>rt wit homeown.er's U · temporaryUSlgnments. Ines· ~ Irvine industrial com-SoW - 5HC Call. Du B' 1 Beach & Irvine arn soc. Limited secretanal 557-IMS Ren.ewals quote & NUISBAIDES plex. Xlnt med1calldtn· Saa.sj&tl ... , PASTOR'S EXEC. •••F•l•R••S••T•••;-;;D···,·••• :=as~ge Leticia: 644-4460. dutlelad. Some/ bkpBgll. follow-up on renewals Con v hospt. Beach tat package Orange Exp'd sales person I Commty Presbyterianl """ know e ce pre 'd. · r-r\.•L'n--peMusr.t havewuranceex area. Free ntjr. medical County Restaurant est1mater wanted by as Church profeuion1 Escort. U11bls --------1 ing1&1l desirable. Salary U \ fl & dental Free CRT Services. 2601 Daimler yr old O.C budding firm qualifications attractive ell ..... I ClftllflS based ulpooexper. Vaca· -·-.. -~."'"l"...= . File Cl.trk-need fut training Top salary S t . San 'i a An a tosohcat new work. Send compensatioo pacbge. ,m ,.....,.,. lhllll tion, s cit pay, bealU. ·~,........,..... ............ 1 7 ~· 5732 al lr 494·7555forintttview. . tt'ftnll 3723 11.1-....1.. n---& ~nergeuc person for f1 6'2·80« I 14)..,1· . resumt s ary requ e· .!! d~~;.. n.UUUV.. ins.6'4·l'1M.Sto5.Mon• .._.....,....... 111g ments to PO BOX LW> SECRETARY Airport "'":: ~~~ ~&Lo. U TIJTE M Fri. .._...,..... IECB'T/SIC'Y CM CA 921626 CIO Daily law firm. Top skills, 2700MarborBlvd. COMMERCIAI.S, stunts, t .O.E. Paid co. benefits. Salary Nursing Experienced Ty pe Pilot Newspaper Ad II bright, organized, self· COVER GIRL films, models, extras. commtnsurate with ex-P/TIMEOIDal.Y 60wpm, shorthand. Gd 1154 sta rter. Non·1moker OUTCM.I. lqecr"=Mesa SCAS needs eew races. G per. Call· PauLine, Tues. & Sat., llAM to benefits. Start Sl.050. Josaea5l·!I025. ""'' * * :,_, unity For2ndMA.f!:K3rdETSSblfts 957-0282. UAIOS 963-0941 3PM for gentleman in P.C.M. 833-3313. Sales S t . I 't' _,.0779 MC/V1SA 'P'" yer "' Full fl part time.· All CdM home. Call for in· ec re ar11 pos1 1ona StartingS4uptoS4.50. COMPAM~AJOE areas. Unl/orms furn'd. formation: Visiting llCEPTIOMST avail In San Clemente We promote to manage-for total care of male. s Agts ZI or over, retired Interior Health Services. 966-098S For p/time po6ition in Qffl:E for Individual with ex· •FOXYUDY • OUTCAU.. ONLY VISA MC • '7J.l IJI. BanklnBllW. ment & supervision from days . Permanent. welcome. Noexper. nee. ,......... Chiropractor's office. cellent skills. Hn. 9-5. within. 646-00hft.erSpm. Ap ply : Universal Full timt position Mustbedependablt.ef. PRnNll'JS Call t or appt WANT A CAREER? ProtecUon Servkt, 1226 available. Co. vehicle Otrice-aales, gift store. ficient & have good of. UIMI 7141496-~. ES C ft·r $ MODELfttG 135·91'9 n.10 C t.aM C~JM-6.-Lido Village. Exp. req. r k'lls N ok fll rt' os esa _,.~ W. 5tb SL. Santa Ana. health insurance, start S 1 67, ·-· ice s 1 . on-sm er ~ SIC~AIY S17W.WUaonSt Experiencepre!,butnot lnterviewbrs:S.12&1-4. immed. Ask ror Wendy a 0 n._ ............ preferred.Call631-S690. REPRESENTATIVES -· Position will be based ID 631·91D necessary. Part time. Mon-Fri. will train. 7»6460 ORDER Desk & Count.er l~EPT1-....ST LEGAL eur Costa Mesa orfice, & Ref Required.. salrs. General hardware SoW "'"" for prestigious Newport & ff ill wcid lo various Laguna Beach 7ao.aoTl aft2 PM HAIRDR~ER Follow-ht•..e.y Cltrti cutting tools. pwr tooh. OIDEI HSI( Beach firm. 35 br work ~r l't'Ortbeni Orange •.u........, COUNTER HELP Ing prd'd. Cricket's Needed for electronic c u J' ..,..3230 Small pleasant office an Join the progrea11ve and week S 150 0 I M o _._,.,, Hair Design, Villaae exeer. • am,....... s di 1s· f fastest gr o 1 Be ti H •-•----ount t branches as ""·II Ume. Garv's n...u. distributor located at ORTIIO • .,..,..._ anta Ana v ion o w 1 n n ey. ayes ar ""°""' n d.....a '-"--r.. -1 .,.., Fair Mall, Lag. Deb. 31 op II C u En ~~ l E Co wholesaler tn the office """ _..... ee .,. ie...,.-exper. Hw1t.ingtai8eacb CdM,'7S.%JIUcr1ppt_ .-..llOO 7 u man. ... . RDA WIJI tram. 7.3()..12 arge astern rp A d --~-=--.-..=--'------SOO'JlllNG MASAGE ~.own transporta-962-9U6 --_.. try levtl poe1hon With ... Th N manu/acturerofpicture pro ucts industry Secrttanal for Discrim.ioat.il&nttll 'ftpn"""= ... c.oat.a~ct: cmrr HAMOllSSBASS't oppty for advancement :.:~~ urs. ewport frames Typing, good Several account ex· Call P •-Gd= •-Pl 11 H It '"'........, · b r· I t ecutive positions are XEIOXIOOOfla e...... PerS«1DelDept. . IDlllMr..,11-Coamet5t':C· Lie re· east ca 1m1 on wit 1gures cus omer Top notch."* .. time a. COEDS-WOQ&d lo•e to 537-411«) Jilt · )(sr. with col· quired. · 5. Ast for E I t c t r o S a I e s PAIT.fUU. TIMI relations. Xlnt benefits. now available ID lht vacation. i-• partywiU!you.CallSoe led.ions. Acclrat.e typ-JudyfU0.6M3 {714 )641·1850 for 1n-Pan-t1memwinter.Full CallJackieBrown (714) California area In· 641>-5''10 or ~•thy ai.ytlnae 'Artrwra inc,gen.olc.dlllies.Ex· terview. _limenowina4-cirlof. 836-6623 dustry knowled1t and 5.27-7116 1'RllJVIUWll ..,_ _______ ,cell. co. bmeftl. Esper HAllSTYUST ~nee at small friendly Recept1oni.st sales ability essential SICltETAIY FfJflAl pref'd. bulwlll train. For busy shop: U · JANITOllAL Mr1.ConrSouthCout S1ll1nc pretty as Send resume'" con· M•trapaltwUfe ATUMTIS ~·--ForCJassifiedAd Gd. atartin1 salary. pertencepreerrtd.Call Full time. Work an Plaza. Phone, typ111g, RECEPTIONlSTtn. our rldenceto M tt r o polit10 '1 M•:!l•a.a -ACTION Call K U ..._....... r ot 9G3357 beautiful Dana Point "' -': t Y. _.._ or 1 P · H bo ... h A filing, figures, etc. Gd design center_ Duties in· G Corporatt Investment 2112 H Bl d. C. 2TtO BAJvd. Call a S ES ar r. -~ ptr r. p-..... fi ""91 ........... ar ' C.UMesa Daily Pilot CREW LEADER-tor HARDWARE AL ply Tues. thru Sat., .,.,ne 1ts.545-7101 elude greeting people. DfrillO. -office in Irvine is cur· 7/daysZ4hrs.64,S..34J3 EqualQJ>portunity AO.VISOR tlectrical auembly Perm., fuU or p/t.ime. Dana Point Marina Co .. Part time office girl. 2 answering phones, typ. rtntly seeking a Room, board, salary. E-..,. operation. Inventory " Appl)r in persoo: Crown 24701 Dina Drive. Dana days a weet Flexible & inc SOwpm. Caradco S•th ljtr Secretary to assist the Companionship and "'l'""Yer 642-56'18 production resp. Somt Hardware,3107E.Coast Point dependable. 646·7417 Pacific. 2Zll So. Stan. AdminlatraUve Asais· light housekttpln1. exper may be req. Call Hwy.,CdM Mon/FriS..S dard,S.A.957..m22. Uifltl tant in performing Ideal tor collegt or Barpbi sboppers read t========I 645-9552torlntuview. Hotel UMDSCAPIMAJN. Part Time IK~t various clerical dutiei. career woman. La&ltla t 'e 11 t t I e 1 d s I n -......... N11a.HT AUDfTOlt F011MAM ~-s·~rs Must be able to type SO Beach a rtist-author. ClaeaWed regularly. Make your shopping DELI Cvvrnllll .. Exp. in all phases or UP TO for publishing Co. in usu.• WPM, NO Shorthand rt· Phone Edm und at And "-1 find what easierbyusingU.eDaily FulltlmelncludesSat.6: Full tlme.Computerex-landscape maint. incl Irvine. General ortlce S~O. quired, will be trained 494 04Z9 ~ loatJn i Pilot Classified Ads. Sun. shift. Will train. r.,r.,,ef'd.Salaryopen. good knowledge or Ir· $8 PEI ffOIJR duties. organize event.s on word processlne · ,....._ 'r. cor. S4 .50/br . Frln1e ur le Sand Hotel, rigat.ion.Xlntopp'tyfor column Good detail 3007 ll tquipment. Exctllent l(IM'SESCuu• I •1 ,., "" benefits.&ofHarold,495 La1unaBeach,497-5313 advanctment. EO.E. ~~e~~~~·.~~~; skills ueedtd. Call M.-Dtf ty, opportunityforqualified 9AM·3AM ~ •••• II J , • E.l7tbSt.,C.M. (714)546-7843. 1920 S. 957·8522 CA.902'1 lndividualwhowisbesto E x p t r I e a e e d •• .,. DENTAL ~IST. PIT 3 HOUSECLEANERS Yale S.A. AT HOME! r-------• 1 2 p •22-1724 rejoin wort force. We of. Acupres.u•• """"-a gt • • d Sat RDA r To SS/hr cat. tM,S...SLZ3 Ideal tor housewives or R -r d t · '"' ·-ya, 00 · pre · ' · LRA••slC"Y ._.. h ... estaurant er a goo star 1ne Therapeutic Relaxation • • Carman861·22IO ~-reti.~ persons or au· COOIC Equal Opportunity salary a.nd excellent Techniquu Sunny • Dent.I Houaell:etpet"/Compao.lon N.B. Law Finn. Good dicapped. National or-DISHWASHll. Emp&oyerM/F Compan,Y benefits. Ca.II 631·637W7ANrED : 1 ...... M.knt Tl •• ~ ror elderly coupje, live-skills, word procesaing gamz1tlon lle(!(1s several Mrs. Ellis 75.2-e& ror an ~UI I i UlllllU in. Must speak En1Ush experience helpful, representatives 111 your WAITIESS ~!!!;!!!;!;!;~;! interview. EOE Chair aide RDA, Ex· 'bave valid driver's lie. salary commtnsurate area Nothing to buy. no full & part time poei· I 1 .==.;=..;"-'--=='----280ve"b!f~r:'le e Credit Manp e panded duties. l year Refsreq.548-0T94. with exp. Good benefits, obligation. All contacts t1ons avail. Ideal USE THI SICl!TAIY 833-?&30 .m • Will pr~pare ban.k deposits and • min up.• day week. HOUSEKEEPER/ callNilliorArt95S-Z411 bypbone.Nopnorexpr schedule. Excell. co. DAILY ftlLOT Permanent 9 am-12 Dt.ora hr:W • raelve credit a.11d billing ........._n, • Top pay It bmefil.s tor NANNY •.RA •L ~---·•y nee Stnd name, ad· benefits which includt "F"'ST noon, Moo-Fri. Law or-f u..(71•) _, ... ~ _ ... II NB.,,..."•H• L' I N d d f ~"' -•-dress, phone number to discount privile1es. "' fice Good t)'Jling stills. rom...., .. .,...., 2 Y••rs credit exper with t.oeaai · ..........., r ivell n;. ... eboe e or Typing IOwpm-MAG II, lndtpeodaot Rep Pro. medicaJ/de.otaJ,Ufeins.. RESULT" Newport Beach area. Massage Therapy by • commercial accounts. Good • DIMTALASSIST. am Y •1U12 'YS (7 mo corporate. Real Estate cram Encore Produc-profit shaJin& & pension 675-m2. Mar1aret. Appt only. • account.ins skills. includins type 40 • ORTIIO: RDA with ex· and 3 yrs). Deaitt kind. exp. deairable. Jean lions, Inc 1Z71 Simpson plan. Apply in person· SRVICE :_oa~, m·Tpm=J4ta• J7 e di':m~c1~!JYl~:cf=1ti ~~ e per. pref. Excellent ~:~:r ~~f° E~~li~h Nl·Ll31. :~~·u ;~=it Calif 24 /~~NB DIRECTORY .-. ,. • • wfl.b the public and sales IWf. e wa1e.SSZ-7D seeatln&.842-2880 LMALSICllTAIY -151"""14lf111U· For Result ,._ -• ~tlve salary and employee • * DIUYll$ * Haltpr Attendant/Aidt to 2 associate Faahlon Part time kitchen help E.O.E. M/F Service Call :=w··~•n••, .. ,::.: I ~itsliflnec~uAddingenctaom1 ~d. • Peraon wltll llOd drtv· live-In tor lady in Island corporate at-wanted -wiUtrain • ......,. --·--... d w_......,.. in1 record, must be wheelchair. Some exp. torneya seeking U · f1S.1094 SELL idle items wiUI • 642·5671 ••••••••--•••••••• .., C.11642·4321 , ext Z77 tor • 18/yraofaie,todrive Ref'a.Spanishspeaking perlenced (2/yrs ) 'ITIMl~S Daily PilotClasalfled bt.UZ APc/colJ'llDm~OIPla....wJJ""--· ~ent. 1 company car making olt.~li. aed 1 cretary: gd typin 1 c &t CQH±s Ad. .. ,,.._ ... ..,, .. _ deliveries. Start al INS.AGENCY elation sltllla YoellltC;;t:,.. loauranc• a1eno. S3.S5/hr. No s1.1mmer Person w/aome co. or neces11ry; salary com· RESTAURANT Salary eolMte..,..te ""'--. ,............ 1 help accepted. Call T mensurate wltb u -Adulu with outatandlng with ea~e. Call .... _,,.. -ll aaency exp. ype so perlence,· health & den· attncllve petsonallUes, RESJAUDIUT Un. d -· _ •• Dtllfy ,.._... ark at 751-8', Sam· wpm •food on tele. Will 1 .... d ho Jo rk' wiUI Ml'U •--. • 330 W. Bay"Street •· Spm; llon·))i. train. Xlnt future & ~!,t::Srn:.~:':~ &!~ki ~-15e~e!rW:1d m:outha Co taM CA DllY9 btneflh. Jim Toby, Word processln• evenln1s S.tPM. Call MANAGDINJ ACCOUMrAMTP/C ' s esa, • 1 .... 11u • Eq I 0 Par ty eqal pment 6 on·. helpful.N>-'l'035Patty. 842-021, ut. 343, Poe. w/ Npt. Bch. lnvest-ua pportunity Employer ; • ... __ t -" "'-t --..... 2P.. "PM mentrirm. Resp. fordal· • ' • I ha~·.;!'.~~~~ F\nd what you want la LlllAllAM =t'f:Lon. .. to " • • _ ........... ••• . p ta.Ull. Dally PllotClusltieds. DOCUllENl'CONTROL ------i Full Ume poa, with civil ,.,.--......_._ enaineeriQI' land plan. • -~ DIDI firm . Some To deliver Dally Pilot Ll)rarlan all.Ills de.Ired. auto route in the Lqwta Apply in )ISIOn, to Mr. Beach aru T da)'I per Fuente. at Robert Bein, week. William Froet • At· Hot.In: Won thru Fri ap- aoclatet, WOl Quall St.. proa. ll:lllto5:JO PM. Net. lkb Houn: Sat • Sun ap- 1 _ ... ,..._ proa.5Allto7All. __ ,.. l!at8lal• a_pprox. S.00 ""°"11 per mo. Call Bryan Trainee Pnicram Holland at HM.321 llaa11er, oltlce worll1 I q u • I 0 pp or t • couater help for fOOG ..,._. uni c e. Su•ona b le f!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I <tlmo). H.B. arta. Cd PATICU.e&.m ! S o a I r l t b , Illa 'cf hU {T14)5*6111or ... u. . ..... ,...a. ~ ....... f'l'l..lto MASOMWOB 5. Appl)': -Plactnua Britt 6 bled muoo ....... A...,.v .... e1 .... C._,11""'"-. ---- M•t M YI f 1'fllll tl-PITATTNAMr ,..ct. ~ •P. 81111 Laa-a Beub s=-..:=: hwl.s..ta.n11iour. ..... hmNt, A1·ta1 1~;.;,.;·~·:lllll!!u::!l.!·::!·=1 ·=-.. 1 •. , ... ASSIST AMT MAMAaBS s' J,000 .. s 11.000,.. , ... Full company bendita 6 ~Y for ad\'ancement Hiett SCHOOL •ADVATIS We hue a lralalat procram for lJlott bilh tchoc» arad1.1at.1 wbo would '*• to -.11 a career In teltaoraot maa .. 1n911t. llartlat aa.1.,, IU.000 per year. hr P 16'c Crrll• 112 ' ......... TWSIAY, AY Ja. tMie WM 11101.Q' ••-.a... ............. • SICltlTAn• Exctllent oppty. for sharp 1aJ to wort in fut· paced Newport Beach comm'I. real estate olc. Excellent typing ' die· taphone skills reqwred . Ch11len1in, posit.ion tor right 111. Call: Lalla, m.aoo SICltll'AIY Pl...__,._ Hourly pay + boG1.1t. boadable. Nal.ional or· 1anl11tlon. Nothina &o bu,y, no oblsaU.. Send ne me. address, pliont number, Job aperieact to Jftdependlnt Rep P~ varn · ~ f>rochM. Uou. l8C. 1171 Sim ... w •r.. Eaeoodido. ;;¥. Calif. orctl1J4/74"1 SICllfMYU. :· s,c,..arial ~ actl•t N Reeltor·a':. ottlct,..... food \t~ VOi I y p lnt . SH • •d· pearaao . R.I •tl lt U ptrl .. C't bllpflll ~ not ttHntlal. Pref tocaJ,.......,.. -. ... on•n.NJ ·~"'' ---...---__,..,.-.-.,--~ --- -~·---- Or Cout DAILY PILOT/TUllday, July 7. 1981 IMh. Sf/f!j/ w.. w.w tlft ~. a.,1 ..... :~ .... ._., ... -e..~~ ........ ... · · ..... •011 •-'170 ········-········ ......................................... ., c........._-:: "'' NlllllW-.... 1100 ... h+ I t ,._.&or-l"O ....................... t1J7'T....... t7'7 ...... ~T•••••H-••••••••• •••••••••• .. •••••• .... '•••••••••••••••••• ..... •••••••••~•••••.• .................. 4::_••H• lt79¥WIUS s>remlumprk• ~ ................ , ............... •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·· llCllfAIY 1.-LllO ViMtam •bl! At"'1t4 CUltom made IWJ>WlH ,._oar-•· Mw~: .. ~-T PMND,., model wttll ~idtDr-.,\INclea.r YlllTYOUI 'Tt Tit wblY. coavtrt, T7 11dokl ~. = hu1td. OJtnln1 for ~.mo....,., d r ·~· ... v I l y .... l~C"..u h~ rtH ,,.. utom1tlc tru1., (fol"ttlJlor......Uc) Aa.&~1.so··T Alp)at IOUlld '!lttm. 11larp.d i.r.:· l ob ~tcretary tor the !!!:!!!!!UI lllAIOWUU ._, " _.,, AMIPll 1ttreo jlJ!i jJI 011114Mlm,. ~ 1ui ~llfl.F·WTl!'tl'D' load• . • an.,.rciOlubtUi , Lauaee.dllll,IUOOIO. ... ttHJa .-11w1 hln two-toae Plllt • ONLT A •ea TICA totally rt· flHHlorZ7H11 llllaite DtvtlofmJ.t f dwr m~Nr, ..... 1 ................. lf,OOOtnUillljU.). HIADQU~I \lpholettrid, new top, 'TO 8ed. aa : Xlot. :~tt!:~:~:! a";.'!.';'.--: eo10 ~~ ...... !~~ i~fa1~~:, ~~!11: cgn. .. / 9120 M~:~·m:. TODAY!!! i@~.f.~~isr~7 t1r••· ~:.iU/.~1~. new . {ion lkilla. T/Plnt ' :!:: .................. \ppro.,:_.u:,::.:i;:: ~·~::.'l:ua.u: io~ .. c~;;;;·;;;·5:;; 2150HarborBlvd. UMIVllSR'Y ........ 9770 '77 StVlllt. Xlnt cond. ~ndreq .Gd.op. llUYAPft.IAMCIS W1hr/dryr~t1.Luy tiniabld laamacAyvery w/refrt1er1tort1tove COSTAMeiA SALES•SERVlCE ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• BIU 1t•1Mli -~uoty for• carter· Le! 1&1.a1g ::l~louncechrl50. rart.t14.oaoftnn.K1m· Port ·a ·potty. Ali 645-1700 OLOSMOll.I MUSTSEUI !1_:11.u,, ,O'.l.ia.dtd Individual. Ex· Stove, quality, O'Keefe 6 mood Or1u • Piano 8\ltaDC, Queen size bed. ,_,_. ...,, l!888 llarbor Rlvd. HONDA • . Cllt•,.. '9%0 ~•II. WOrtina coodJUons Merritt Sl50. Mj.8513, Center, Cdlll...... Sleep• 8. In excellent 70 Chny. Step. window (OMil ~kn m !Q30 •MC TIUC•S lte7 vw BIU• BU,·ln ex· ..................... .. ~e~~,~~on~o:c~: ~ £SJAJE•11r condition. Sl.600. Call van. 17-18 mpt. Freah VAN WANTED Ford.~ 2850HarborBlvd. ~~'J!tnd ~lf:b •C ........ o 11areartt Holm ea'. G.E. Uprl.0-P'rmt Free ~ s,,,.. .... 1"4 be~ween lOam·&pm. ~1o~. un:iuc Rln~~ too. Cd cond. Auto vs. COSTA M~A w~k·! c·au ae M ... ,..Ow Emkay Development Freeurll&S. J1'!'1~~ ....................... 8317857 CM Y ~ dut.y A=/FM WUI pay reas. price. 2 540-9640 54L26 I 9 Sedan Auto. trana .. alr ~o., Newport Beach ~ 32' Winch. 210. w/acope. Camper for eina.11 Plclt arpe e · windows In back. •76 Honda Wgn 64K mi, v-cond .. AM/FM. pwr. ?n ,133-Ml EOE ' Gatten • Stettler Obi AMAHmM $al0. JO p . dbl barrel Up. All wood, 1lldlne stereo cuaette. New 548-11816 or 66$-3716 Will Sl150/080aaia. ltnVW windowa, looka, & 1teer· CelJElec.Bullt·lnOven· Vlc:BalUiEucUd Span. Matador $270. window•. back door, ~°fiye~!t':lt~l~e~ payreu.price. 8S7-8000 SCllOCCO In& .. A lovely, "~""'••S•IC-llT_AaJIS __ *_*~ /Broiler a •teal at '15 f AM .. S PM uo.am ::~,!~~offer. tlrea/chal.na. New bat, Trade 71 Buick wa& 1 on for '79 Accord, 4 dr, 1ilver, Limited Edition! s apeed ~~'::'::t'~ car. (Ul3l ·~ LeaallhlCatdSU OOO · SU·'JUS Victorian furniture, TY a.-._ · manifold! murtler. older Chevy Bazer. lightly I.lied, 204, tu.Uy trans., AM/FM stereo. • ONLY.16ttS :Recpt/TM/Anahlt4 400 Refrlg, frost free, H · china cabinet, lamps, ...... ,..,.. lotl Primo c~mper ah ell l>eeendabLe. 758-0271 (714) 8'0-4702 garaaed, orig. owner, air cond., alloy wheel&, .Prta/Sh90/Exct&$Jf' 400 cellent, works aood. vlota1e clotbu, Br. ••n••••••••un••••••• w/boot/milli truck. ~ '79 Ford lSO: 6 cyl. over-auto.1._alc, like new In & factory black with black HOW AD~roltt : Pre•RE/Shl90Slijz00 ~. 548-8513,5'8-448S fumlturt, cut and anti· Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr orbett.~. dr ive, air, pwr str, Alltot,•parttd out, "'900.M0-5143 interior. (491Y0U ) A N~1~RTBEACH ~.~:~~~£~£· o:~: Jr:·~!::: cl~~~~ ~i::c.:.i:::~. i::en:' a~~ u~~~rr: delivery. ~~ ... !!~~ ~~ Cass, 27,000 m. ;;:;:.; .......... ;;;i ·~r.r:~1&i ~=: ~'M: stec>'NLY $6995 3M555 .Newport/8.13-8190/Free works good. US. prim. VisaliMCcarda lS"SONYTrtnitron '79 Pe~&eotSP103,green, '72 Ford~: Original ....................... S7500.9~Dhlt.6pm. MllACLIMAZOA 1910CHIVIOl.IT MB-8Sl.3,54M485 accepted. SZO lo mt, $3:50, Aft 4PM. Owner. $1000/offer. BEACH ..... 9730 2tSO HarborBlvd. CITATIOM2D .. secretary, experiencect Waaher ' Elec. Dryer HIUMNOLAMD M>-Tml 00..9~ 496·3739. IMPORTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA Hatchback . v 6 ' in eacrow ror financial like new $350/Both. Gold IMfl I MerW Motorcwdet/ ' 7 6 D 0 D G E V a n I t70 JAGUAR 645-5700 automatic trans., pwr. firm near airport. SS955l OVING SAL&50% Of(' .... ,... Scooftn 9150 customized , mag NOW ON XICl 2 2 '60-'6S vw left & ngbt steerina. air cond. & Benefita. Salary neg. SEARS Gas Range, 4 ~ 2ND HANDER uO •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ·~··•••••••·~•••••••••• wheels, am/Cm stereo, HARIOl ILVD. Britiah racing+green, 4.2 door, ,73 left door. \SO ON Ly 17,000 miles! ·Ask for Barbara Bassett burner, Broiler/oven E 23rd St CM M~·Sat Gt•rel 9010 79Kawa.salt:lLTD1000 new brakes & sunroor. COST~MISA litre enetne. new tires, each. Western style whl (30887). ·'85l·099l. µke1 new,Un3Y'"!.~1~~150 ll·5PM · ••1·~•;;uyn•••, ........ ~~~acn~.4~7~Ji o~f::: $27llS/OB07SH850 brakes & engine over-rims for Super Beetle OMLYLISJ~!~. ·~~curity Officers, me . gas e ........ .....,..or ESTATE SALE: Tues ~ _. ~ 960•2874 AlltotWCllled 9590 I~ haul. Air cond., custom $20ea.~9744 MllAC fl"UIUM• 8omeowners Assoc.. 645-9750 th Fri 4a>Abb'e Way Non· profit orgaruution ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.""' stereo, 1beepsltins, very ·74 Convt. Xlnt Cond ! 2150Harbor Blvd. Npt Bch. 14.50 pr hr. Refrie/Freeur, auto ice, c M F~m appliance's nda your boat, plane, H~~LEY Dt VIDS?N 45 WE PAY TOP DOU.AR SPECIALISTS clean, excellent rWUling New radiala. asltmg COSTA MESA l>refer retired. 675-6101 xlnt cond. S300 Crown etc · " car, etc. Uberal tu de-·~ mia see 0 ap-for top used cars· --condition. $8,000. Call $4800.~4000 645-5700 .LouKaa. molding25'/fl.760-~ F ·t ti B i 1 duction advantage. precaateiw&.Jl98 foreign, domestics or . IEA.CHIMPORTS ~7-171MJ alter 6 p.m & 072 vw Bus,fullwindows, S US FIRST' ·~ SEC.Y/IKKPR 191-'l '' Side by side an as c ar~nks . 213/654·2341 classics. U your car is 1969HarborBlvd. ukforEd. clean,am/rm,gdshape. EE • ror N.B. interior design Frigidaire Mrig~rator ~::in . c~l~~s eve~'. Rlverchaaer Kayak by 'IO SUJll(l 450l i~~S;., clean, see us COS'I'.A MESA ....._ 9732 $2200. Lee: mm. Wf hNvi tj~ 5(15~00 firm.9M·n13 ~.SS&-1936 ythU:cioes!9-Ssat/Sun HoUowform, new never Wllh fairing, like new · 631·7170 •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• .79 vw RABBIT6ZK mi. ~h 1 , ·; Stc'v-S~ lfl' free. $400 Coronado.Balboa Penin a.fl•f .. h c..-•-...a. WANTED. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• air cond, elec windows . S4C).l00 · Refrig. 8 mos old. Frost J u I y 11 , 1 2 , 3 1 8 used. St95. 65-1.287 SJ.275. SSM468 ·-~ IMW 9712 '76 Jensen GT Lotus eng. very good oond, $3900 evro eta. \>IT. tosta Mesa area. · .. ~!-!Tr '170 38000 · 'Jud a i c bk g d n e c. 64l·l3'7S,8SH15S ones 1060 Avon S400 lriodel. 18HP. Honda M';,42 ai le For The Best ~;c~ in Uke :w~~:;~~~ '64 Cal Bug. am/rm, new :iisa.3652 1969 Ward's Signature, •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Evlnrude motohr, hcomls· 00.. . . Buy Or Lease Deal 19100 by priv pty. radials, lowered, full avocado. 16 S cu ft HORSETRAILER pletewllhlaunc wee '78 Honda 7SOF. 7300 mi. InOrangeCounty... bra,blue,S21S0.960-2874 CONNELL I ·~~1~,;~~~1~T1 I I !'> l \ \1 ~ ' \ .• SHVICIETICH. refri&.$100.Ml-1698 '78 Imperial, 2 horse, and li1hts. Ideal for xln't cond .. tuned, , #1 •~c_., ComeSeeUsToday' 642-<XrlO ,74 SEDAN S2l95 -Photo & electrical exp. llcyclH 1020 tEalen .. debmra~/tDaa~11"y Pr1.mlot. ocBaeyantoor~~a ~ Bcti~! $1400/0HBO. 67~~~ ~~~~d I\ ~~.~ ...... !?.~~ '67 SQBK S895 (2) '79 Malibu Sedall 6 • required. Field installa· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. .._. . • ed Motor _., _ \,/fl 642-632'l cyl, 4dr, (2) '79 Malibu tion&repair.898-0290. WAMTED Credit Union .r epo. boat .and~ be us l..t/Storegt 160 979-ZSOO .. '73 Lamborghini Espada .79 vw RABBIT 4spd, Wag~ns B cyl, 4dr, SERVICE Station U edU . I 8478377 Sealedbidsarebemgac· f~r nver raftine. Sl,995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l9K ml, flawless! N.B 4dr,a /c,am/fm,reggas w/cruise cootrol, vary· 546-1200 ~~l~~~~esi'\f!~ H~k M:n's s~c:; :pd ~cine ~::e~ u:!!~ ~~1ba~fy =. 9::· act/ WE CAM SBJ. SADll.EBACK = 9731 kSOO firmM.S-2133 {~~/~~;f~ ::d~~. ~~;, 213-592-1571 Bike. xlnt cood. Bright Pilot Auto Shop, 330 W. $.,.Ice f020 YOURR.V. BMW ....................... 'IORCllWMt ptb.Call83>53!lext263 Sewer & drain cleaner Red. Dave$lll67S.3103 Bay St., C.M. or call ....................... SS8-1304 M . Pk .76 MAZDA 808 Mizer 2 dr, snrf, AI M Fl~ ,77 Chevette, A/C, stereo wanted. Lile plumbing WldiitcJ Uaten. 1025 642·4321,. ext. 296, Mon. B 0 AT CI ea n in g For Sale: '71 Winn. Claas 2840'l M~~~~=jo wy. good cond. Contact cassette. 4 spd 10,000 m1 cass. Ntw tires. Xlnt. :zeq. 964-4822. ....................... thru Fri. 8am·S m Inside/Out Reasonable A 3 B K mi . 4 KW Avery Pkwy. exit Steve 6'6-2903eves $5775 OB0645-0923 cond. $2650. 962-2314 !fllPPING/RECEIVING llEDWOOD 2 X 6'5 MMlialdGoodl 10'5 prices! Wkly/Monthly generator, root air SSOOO (off s Freeway) '79 RX7 GS 5 spd. alloys, '72 VW Beetle. Good '60 Belair: Runs xlnt. ·It General Maint Clerk. 2· to 20' long. Fresh ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S.3l03 6'6-4693 131·2040 495-4949 A/C, AM /FM cass, S7650 cond. Call after 6P 1 m. small VB. Needs some immed opening, full· truck load arrivingPlushcrpt,woodflr,cer. IMfs,Powtr 9040Trollen,Travtl ClosedSundal best.PPSS8-5769 wkdys, all da y SS. body work $225 time. Familiar w/US weekly. Save at 55'/Ct. tile' ~no. Guar. lnslall ............................................... i 11!!1 Mtrcect.s._ 9740 ~2-0446 --1·496-4283 PD~~!r~'ifcced:si~~: PP call Jim 646·98BS u'!~~~a::~~Sl~~m or Nc:b~.' ~4if'11nv:a~~d:~ l~~~r.T;:.~u:lp~a~.at1~oc~ (ilt:J;l'jl jl ....................... ·~!:i&t:Y !~~ic ~~it Ford 9940 anytime I •-•••-•• lBOOCC S2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4fl6.5922Ext56. Cab IOl5 spotted, 100 yds nylon outdrive prob ems, bunk bds, new cond, SELLJNGYOURMB! eng. . .71 LTD:2door.hardtop. Shipping & receiving ••••••••••••••••••••••• crptg, asstd colors. $22900. 2136SZ·28:i9 15000.842-8429 &'s' &UOADWAY WEPAV 494·983Sev Runs good, body fair. trainee needed in PURR·FECTLY beau\. Sl/ d.CdM 675-2258 40' OWENS Tri-cabin '77 1nvader "Bunkhouse" SANTA ANA TOPDOLiAISS $4295.BlkVW convert.nu $350.1-496-4283 adhesive manufacturing pure·bred. Lilac Point J.wtlry I070 Tahitian in Npt. slip. 28'. '4800. Perf. for lrg 835·3171 CallJackBacoo 964en~35 .• 2241~~.~g mi, l.iftcola 9945 plant. 1537 Monrovia. Siamese kittens. Mary ....................... 642-4644 family. ~l-IMJ37 1HtulT1MATt:ORMHaM•cw111£ JIM Sl.BleOMS . ~.. .. ................... .. N.B.548·5125. 640 -6550 wkdays S800 wort~ Genuine 29' Villa Vee Cruiser Troiltn Utllty 9110 WE PAY •USEDIMWs• IMPOal'S Sacrifice? 2 mo old ,Bl ·72 coNTCNENTAL SHH1PINCi DEPT. 8"S/493·9886eves/wknds Colombian Emeralds, Flybridge, all inboard, •••••••:••••••••••••••• TOP DOLLAR .77 320i SIR (11)64) 1970 Harbor Blvd. Van a g on-Westra 11 a Xlnt cond , SJSOOrirm DolJs I040 '20 er stone. 640-88118 like new. Creative fin. 4' X 4' Closed Utility Trlr. ·77 320iA S/R (0474) COSTA MESA camper .4 spd. cass. 4 546-9339 wkdys .. ..................... Mochlury 1071 avail. (213)583·28.W Good tires. good cond, FOR USS> CA.RS '7B320iSt RWl67 > 631-1276833-9300 ~:o67~~· 515·300· Mtn:-9950 TIWMH Excell. co. benefits. Steady work. She must be good with numbers. CM. Deltrooic, ~0'13 KEESHOND Pu ..... AKC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 35• "llCJo..l.f!!. S.f asklnr $370848-0243 •L • .......... ,,..__....,... ·19 320·1 SIR(.-.., -' .... .,. """ • • •" -W""vn ~ '68 VW BUG. Gd cond. .. ................. ~ .. . Champsire.M/F.Pet& Shering Machines & '80, Tw, Cats., 7~KW, AllfoS.,.a,P.... POMTIAC/SUIAIU '79S28iS/R(l076l '76Mercedes8enz~E. suoo. ORANGECOUNTYS 5 h 0 w · Pvt Pt Y Various metal equip. too ld'd w/elec .. slip, 30% & AcceNOrits 9400 2480 Harbor Blvd. 'Bt 320i S/R (eall) Air cond .. sunroof. 673.2367 or 545-346!! FtHEST 213/697·13'Safl6pm numeroustolist. For in· dwn. O.W.C. balance........................ COSTAMESA CloMds.days stereo, silver /blue LINCOLN-MERC URY Free to good home, 10 foli46-1234 Sl29K. Bkr. 675·9007 , SSAY!SAVIES 549·000 549-1457 Tt.-M--AL..-&a&.... Original owner, like '74 Super BeeUe. ~.000 DEALERSHIP mo. old female, part Lab Mhctl-om IOIO 960-172.5 eve. WITH USS> PAITS , _. _..,. ... ,-JI new . Best offer over mi, like new cond Must " h~H~f!IAI & P it bull. Likes •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• New2l'PennYan Cuddy WEIUY PartOfYow S14 .200 . 645-4226, see?S2700497-1597 . il"J~-JJ .~as ier . prepa.ra-children.646-82118 p-1..a-..1&~ Cabin, au inboard, no lmpolrtMedPOcarRTparts CL~"' ..... C"'RS IMWrwct.MOr 683-2171 '76 vw 7 :iass. b~ Im-~ TUJNWEfl tion. Opening & closing .,...._.,,.__, ~ "' L ,................ · shirts. Mature. Seucliff Fne to Y• 1045 w .... Serrkt outdrive problems. AUTOSUPPLY AND TRUCKS .... ~ '79 300D. silver. stereo. mac. in & out. Lo ml., LINCOLN-MERCURY Country Club. 536-8866 .......... ~ ............ All you want, S2.SO wkly. $22,900. (213)592·28:i9 101 N. Manchester McLaren IMW!! snrf, new tires. 23,000 auto, stereo. top cond. 16·1B Auto Center Dr. 3/yr old lri·color female Sample bottle deliv. PAITNaWAMTID Anaheim 776-9900 lltyOrLHM mi. Sl9.BOO. 642·2643 8'7·SS16eves. SD Fwy-LkForestex1t SwitcWaosdODr. Shelly with papers. free.Dispat.ch731·272'1 1979 PennYan2J6'Sport 110.,.....,,._1 eves. 1970VW RunsgoodS1800 IRVINE Fltime, graveyard' shift. Needs big yard to run. Fi.sher, N.B. slip, 210 hp AAltot for s. 1714, 52z,.5333 '79 Mercedes D>D. silver. Firm 130.7000 Will train. Mature adult Loving dog. 644-1660. llEDWOOD 2 X 6'5 turbo-diesel. Great for ....................... stereo, sunrf. new tires, 63l·SSQI !Robin > Mmtw 9952 preferred.6G:.>l3. Free S Beautiful Kitttens. 2' to 20' loog. Xlnt deck· cruising or fishing, Im· IMPORTANT OUHCiECOUMTY'S 23, 000 mi , S 19.BOO Volvo 9772 ..... -;-;: ............. .. TEACHERS Supplement 9 weeks old. 2 Calicos. ing. F.r"8Sh~ ~d ar. mac. &c loaded w/elec· NOTICE TO OlDEST 642·2643 PM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •61 MUSTANG VI ·your income on pt/time ~1290. ~~c~f w;:,tc~·a1r~i~ tronics. 25% equity, READERSAND HIGHIUYll $ M.B. B0·300 T.D Wgn , #I VOLVO DEALER (2B9l Auto. Air co nd :)as is with mlrtg. mgmt. 3 .kittens, 6 weeks ol~. 646-9885 anytime S3500 dn + $1SS mo. ADVERTISERS Top dollars for Sports s n r r, Euro h d Ii ts . IN ORANGE COUNTY ' Radio, Heat.er, 80,000 ml business. Call for appt. Siamese, etc. Long hair 1-belted d' ,_ 7JG.6620· evesM7·9327 The price of items c Ivory I tan. 642-7407 . $1 557-5675 548:2980 ~~si~~~ & Ill {:1~~;5: 16' _QIB Frbg1a w/7Shp ~!:i:rt;s~ ~ :~~~~l: ~1~~:: A~~· ampers, 568·684B SALES, SBVICIE Very cle~07~ Ttocher/Dndor Registered Lhasa Apso $10 /ea. Lawnmower, Ev1nrude. Tr!r. cover, classified advertising Ask forU/C MGR Sales·Servtce-Leasing '79 JOOSD. Turbo-diesel. AHD ~~ MUSTANG Coovt 's. IS> E•per .. ECE & Elem adult female, free to SlO. Colored TV, $lS. 16th l ~Z,,,enide3199Place, columns does not in· JIM MAIJMO Roy C_..,~r,lnc. Colo. beige, sunroor, OVERSEEXASPEDRTSV RY ·65. $3900 & up. N.B units req'd. Managerial goodhome.556-7271 646-0376. CM.67S-.....,, 631· elude any applicable VOLKSWAGEM Rolls'koyce BMW am/fm, perr. cond 759.0097 .ability a must. Immed Cute 2 yr ?Id Aus tr. Standard sz airline cage Britith Rowing Dory 14' t.axes, license, transfer 18711 Beach Blvd. lS40Jamboree S2ti,250. 494-6901. 64().SMO -',B-=1 ~M:!u:.st:...a-ng_G_hi-.a-, -cr-e-am- opening. 642-0Ul Shephecd max, spayed, needed for medium si xlnt cond-$650/0 BO fees. finance charges. HUNTINGTON BEACH Newport Beach 640..6«4 Kerry. EARLi HCE ext. blk int, air. PS . T ... Coor611or allsbot.s.MS-491i9 dog.Cheap.00..!IO'Zl 673-1763 reesforairpollution con-142-2000 '75 2002, snrf, body xlnt. '72 250 Sdn, Auto, VOLVO AM FM cass. clock. 3 o / h rs . week J y . Shepherd/Lab loves kids, Must sell!! King Siied 'Bl 33' Penn Yan sport (is-trol device certifications SS250. AM IFM. wht w/lt bm 1966 Harbor Blvd. spoke wh.l&. Must sell $4.75-15/hr. 9/mo school med sz. housebroken Waterbed &c Rerrige. her. twin diesel $79,000 or dealer documentary TOP DOI.UR 752-Sl.20. int .. xlnt cond. $6750 COSTA MESA 730.5944 eves. year position. Back-Fem , 11 mos. good home Both in good cond. Best 213 592·21l:i8 preparation charges un-PA.ID FOR '6S BMW 1600 4 dr, runs P.P. Dys 646-7093, eves 646-9l03 540.9467 ·as Mustang Classic VB. ground in education. 759·9Sl6eves ff 9 Ex-fishino boat w/moor-less otherwise specUied GOOD .. c• £"' M perrect, needs body 73l-8023 auto. restored $2350 recreation or physical Free kittens. 2 female . 1 ° er.54 ·9ll0l ing. Days $47-6561. eves bytheadvertlaer. ~ work. $500548-4636. '7B 300D. Swiroof. PP ORAHCilECOUMTY 1.533-4242 ~· preferred. Send re-male to good home. HOT1UI 631-1086. Ci .. trol 951( 'USED CARS! '70 BMW lro2. Good run· 70K mi. irnmac! 116,000 VOLVO .79 Mustang GHIA VB, sume to: Girl's Club or 6/wk; old. CalJ545-7860. Sx4 redwood w/all op-.__.._ 1__.1 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• nlno cond. S2SOO/orr. ~·.1802 days. 496-4344 Largest Volvo Dealer / 0 T 1 Id ,.... ~.,""" __...., -Aair.&... "ii• . ,,,.. 72 1 eves in OrDnoeCounty ! 11.SOO Mi, a/c, auto. p s, .Laguna, 147 emp e 1050 UC)GI, 1 yro ' .... ....,.,.,. C"'-"--9050 'II D&-.-n Ca Jeannie.."· l . BUY-o ... rLEASE ptb. snrf, loaded wtex-Terrace Dr .. Laguna Fwaitwt asking $2600. 857-2298 -_...-)731 .,.34 n.-a 9746 $S oo Beach' 9"""' ....................... -....................... Stick (714 ..... '79 320i, air. sunrf, stereo, -r-· DIRECT tras, like new 4 · .,.,.,.. UY Lo••l•aa111 '73 HONDA CB350 w/roll ._,,,,__,/ Rae. seats. 3SK mi. ....................... .a.. Vofv ~832=-·864=.:...1 ____ _ T ... ,...~--* * I B * * Helium Bouquets de-bar &·carrier. 2(1( mi, c~1c. 9520 54B-4136 days, 646-6127 '73 GT Opel. Orig owne~-bc.W. ... , 0 OlcbMOb• 9955 rns. se-"ce. Daytime Good. used Furnitur. e ' 1· d Perfect ror good cond, clean $400 21 ... _.._ ..._..... eves. Runa great 54.000 m1. ··~'=W'I...,,..,...,,..,,...,..,.,,... ~hift, ltii' 3rd St., 11C, Appliances-OR I wlll sell e1v~~;~culoo. . cash. 642-4321 e•t 204, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._._. ..,....., '72 BMW Bavaria, 4spd. S2A50, ~ys 714t896-3330, ·~1 ·~~ ~[~-,pl~!i~ ;;OL~S.CvrL~.·F~i; Laguna Beach orSELLforYou 673-4419 547-1.MSeves PRETTIEST eo.t.MeN '4S-S700 air, moving. must sell. evesS46642!1 ' • T • Equipped. Beautiful MASTRSAUCTIOM Nothin&tolo6ebutlbs. SH .&.BKS!! '57T-llRD WIEHllD Sacrifice S3000 firm. Ponclw 9750 cond Sale or lease TB.B'ttOME 646-1616, 13J.t625 10 to:.> lbs in:.> days "" IH Tow.4! y OUI EXOTIC 536-4822. ....................... 6«-6309 PEOPU Call BobS. 548-7582 38' Pacemaker Yacht, IEST OFFER! SH CAIS C--' 9715 •73 9UT, Targa, blk /blk. 10120 Garden Grove Bl ..!!rl:::::O:..=OL::.:DS:.___Cut.J--V-B-2 Tosetappoiqtments.No llUYMMTUU Genuineleatherluggage. sleeps 6, for Charter! ((l(l)UKZ) &llm •• :r.:••••••••••••••••• mint! Orig pnt, new GardenGrove530.9190 ldr Coupe ~~i fli\ f e I ling. 14 /hr. + Les 957-8133 3 pc matching set. S'7S. ~~d:ff~:T:.~~: 1·~11 '73 Capri, am/Cm cass, tires. $13,SOO 645·0315 ste~eo cass. ·Daily Pilot $4 /app't. +bonus . ZOSOFAS,new,Mea. ,,.,,_,...tu1.aft7pm. da 0ood cond.St:i00.Wkdys evea,752·Tll'tdays •74 Volvo 164E. AIC, Credit Uni on repo. ~IO·t:30pm. We need lSLoveseata,S'7Sea. .....,._.., _ 213 37M19'Z.Week s. · • . 9 T R I I $teady. mature people. 957-S7~orSS4...fl80 Original Dali Lllho. 11Yl~Kl.:) I 963-9711 Linda 73 11 ea ,c ean.: Leather. 73,200mi, new Sealedbidsarebeingal'· C.M. 545·4941 Ask for Danish Modem walnut ~·:~~il~~·~fi~7~0 W8j,~t~~~~D •~---~ --·~~~~:.c~'m!i~~& ~lti':~~·K!i\~t,sw~~~. fti'.~is sharp. $2795, ~:;e~ u~ !~lba1fy M.lkeor Marshall. table w/leaf, 6 chairs, 1 53S-S59S BURN'SCJIARTER 3100w. Coast Hwy. out. l900/0BO. 964-6436 18K on eng. Best offer Pilot Auto Shop, :mW. TYPIST 4S wpm /Recep-w/arms. xlnt cond. Sl50. 875-2867 Newport Beach overS9SOOtakes. Alltos, Used Bay St .. C.M. or call Uonlst. lnt'l. trading Waaher & dryer, gas 19" TV Portable BIW S3S. •-~ S.. 9060 ,29 Model A Town Sedan. 642-94«> 0..... 9720 957.aim ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642.4321, ext. 296, Mon. co /I r vine. Perm .. 1150. 642-9246 Can later Vacuum, com· -.. 4 dr. restored. Ideal for $ ••••• •••••••••••••••••• '66 912 S·spd, Por. mags. •....t-L 99 I 0 thru Fri .• 8am-Spm P I I 2 d t 1 t •f)I\ w k good •• • • • •• • •••••••• ••••• • • TO• S o-• "'I --~ ~ -t me, ay w ·· Newbrownsolabed,$300 pee ~v. or · SALi student. Sl0,500. ALSO r-VloloA nu seats/tires, B-trk ••••••••••••••••••••••• .760ldsStarfire.gold·tan 0..4 :30PM, 15. per hr. orbestoffer.2dressers, 646-lS2S ESTATE '46 Ford Woodie, ForCleanUsed AM /FM. P .P. Dys '74 LE SABRE Convt. int . sspd, stereo, tape ~allNorma,833-8970 SIS & StO. Cash. 972-2Jlllll Swimming Pool 3' X 12'. 1978 Catalina 27' Good restored . $1 3.500. Cars&Trucks M6·7093,eves73l·ll023 a/c, stereo. pis. p/b, declt.11950.644-4594. TYPIST aft. 6 New liner + all access. cond. Week days please 675-6Ull We pay cash on the spot! '61 3S6 Porsche. clean. xlnt cond. $250080-7315 •77 Olds Omega OFFICE ...,_ ""' 0310eves call Contact buyer at •. . G EN&RAL NEVa USID: ..,., . ....,. 75i-4175or67~ '61 ~ IMtra snrf, new tires ... pa mt 'IO llVlllA Good Condition Accurate 35WPM n. .. ~nbdrm$S40,bun.ks Unique polished braas hull llbo Grand Sport. Limited S6000.s92•7925. Xlnt cond. All opt1·ons SSM2'1'7. ~G.3142 ""'"'" bed S "Noodle cart" from 16' Open sa at d 0 . • PORSCHE c .:ft ·~ *2'00. sofa 170, mat· d *'"" """ 7027 w/trlr. Nda aome minor edition. Good con · ng. S4 onuuen· 631-7629 DIESEL '78 Olds Roya le Ibo ...ift t · Tbailan . ...,.,. _,. Ow -.,,., t 1 E dl f W.,,..,./W"""9 tress lt s.,. .... p , WID repair. 1325/obo. Scuba ner67:J.-a uropean m . pro . c-..IUI--9'15 4·dr, loaded·Racor ""•p'd .. 0 .. time eves. S'75, full-.queeoll25 65 Gal. Aquariwn compl. tank, corooette inltru-T-"'-9560 restored.833-1710 -filter. AM/FM cass .• all .:... .. ...,.. MORE' 77~<»01 w I cab lnet ·pumps· ....,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "· hr. No tips. Pvt. . ment. 848-91 ....................... '79 Poncbe 911.SC co.no-...-A TIMG power options, reclining oountry club. 644·5404, Queen Si Waterbed planta·flah-f225.646-223l Catalina 30, diesel, l9IOTOYOTA SanC!emen.te Xlnt cood, fu.11 leather. "'_...._ seats. tilt wbl, beaut. Wed.thruSun. frameS2S Mmlcll refril, uo gen, 7 bag S SPICIUP Ul-0510 4tM500 '702401 sunrooC, every opt. CADIU.AC? darkCarmine,wirehub· :w..JA-,JVl....U.......... 642-7137 twit_ .. , IOIJ ulls, etc. $33,SOO . 1 W MTEDI l6300 768-5837 · s21,ooo. Owner. We specialize in leases caps $4450.P.P.SSZ.4887 ~ __.., ....,_...... B h •· .. _ ~ • u..7u... Lonabed model wlth A • l-661·11373 for the business u -'71 Cullan Wgn. m111l ~ .. pply btwn ....... •· attan couc •C•u•'"""• ••••••••• .. ••••••• .. •• .,..,.; -Au /FM a•--buc"et t' ,,,,_, I I ... -n "",.. • SI ,.. I RD112 1--.. -"' .......... , " Late model Toyotas and etu ive .,..,.eu ona · 11 I t d f Noon. Charlie's Chili, White cab for stereo 00 mUI cman . ......... W" PACIFICA. Sail, lrlr. seat.a ldhia ooe'a really "13Dauuncpe1.D>, SllOO. 1.-'755 L?:..';lldsa se • Jt n con , per _,1 RtdbiU, Bid&. 12, UH338 amp, dnt condition, Xlnt. $350/otr. Xlnt. l6th h ! <'73t71J_ Vo I v o a . Ca 11 us Good conditlon ....................... "" .. -camlly car, ~. Days St.e.t226,CM 8'8eigeSola,'55.2over $400 /080. Bill at Riverside, CM. • •0MLYH495 TODAYlll 213 aa.14 71R·l7Ger61 Of lfll 7SH522;861·3175evet Wlodow Wulwr, p/llme. stuffed awivel rockers, 845-7Ml/f12.ll'i> 175-8I07.G·M MIUCllMAZDA '7I D"-2101 PS AC, AIM P'M tapea, C ... 1 POlltfec t9'5 Jluatbaverelieb&ecar& p?ea.66l=it1'7 Offlc.tlll••W'll 14' Starcraft w/trlr, zuol;larbol'Blvd. Fully loaded. Radio. elec sunroof. Clean! N~Mo~wa.Sledll • ~:9•••c•0•::·.·~ ... CL••A•s•s••1c·~~ 1 min. 1/yr Hpetl~qce. =tchen table w /4 .... ,... IOll nbera.1111, twin hi.Ill de. COSTAMESA ' atereo c111ette. 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L .. * • *· •• YDll llllTlll llllY PIPll TU E SD A Y ,J UL Y I 1 ~18 1 1)H AN t.~ COUNTY 1..: ALIFORN I A l~ CENTS Iii ... iii; .. • oman ·ustice ·no nee ISLAND FANTASY -The original of Paul Gauguin's "Sacred Spring" hangs in The Hermitage in Leningrad. Roberta Cortez of South Laguna and Beth Koehler of Irvine Dmlt'I ........... ..,..., ...... pose 'in this version from the 1981 Pageant of the Masters in Laguna Beach July 14-Aug. 30. Special lighting camouflages live models re-creating 40 artworks. 4 naheirn boy w as strangled McCloskey shq ws conservative side No safety ii' checks on copter? An autopsy revealed Monday that a 7·year-old Anaheim boy abducted last week while on a bicycle trip to a peigbborhood fireworks stand died from strangulation. Allhough a 10-ye&r·old Foun· lain Valley girl who survived a kidnapping just days earlier also was choked, investigators say they have no evidence to link her case with that of Jeffrey David Vargo. "So far there are a lot of dis· similarities," said Pomona police Lt. Kurt Longfellow. "However, we aren't going to overlook anything." Longfellow said the autopsy performed by the Los Aneeles County Coroner's Office indicat· ed that the boy was strangled by an unknown suspect's hands. The girl, whose name has been withheld, was strangled with a cloth object such as a T·shirt or a towel, be said. The girl also was molested, althoup she wasn't raped, and LongfeJlow said investigators have no evidence yet that the boy was molested. He said they are waiting for results on the matter from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Crime Lab. The Vargo boy disappeared Thurscky evening; his body wu found the next morning at a con· Uruction site in Pomona. Pomona and Anaheim police in- veati1aton are wornna together ontbec~. By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. ...., .......... Congressman Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey, an early opponent ol the Vietnam war and one of the first Republicans to become a thorn in Richard Nixon's side during Watergate, displayed his conservative side in Newport Beach Monday. Terming President Reaaan's budget victory in Washington 11 days ago a "reversal of the con· cept that the U.S. government can solve all problems by throw· Ing money at them," the Palo Alto congressman said the vote means an end to unchecked spending for social programs. McCloskey addressed a luncheon meeting of about 300 members of the Greater Irvine Industrial League at the Mar· riott Hotel Monday. And while the 14-year con- gressman said he has "not always agreed with Ronald Reaean," he said the President "cannot be given enouah credit for what he did,'' in pulllne to1ether the votes for a 1982 federal budget that shows S38 billion in cuts -mostly from social programs ranalne from Medicare to food stamps. McCloskey, a candidate !or the senatorial seat held by S.I. Hayakawa, gave his buainess- o r l eo ted audience what he termed "a short history leuoo" on U.S. economics. "Look at the U.S. bud1eta between 1N5 and 1985," be aald. "We had deficits of Sl or $2 SHOWS CONSERVATISM Candidate McClolkey billion each year. followed by budget surpluses." But in 1965, he said, President Johnson started a war on pover- ty "and since then, both Republlcah and Democrat ad· ministration s have been engaeed in the process of in- creasing beneftta paid to people. We created 200 new spendini pro1rams and threw money at (See GOP, Pa1e AJ> LAWNDALE (AP> -A Federal Aviation Administration inspector bas found no evidence that five mandatory safety check.a were made on helicop- ters of a charter service that bad Its license revoked after several people were killed in a crash. Testifyinc before an ad· ministrative law judge Monday, inspector Delmar Ott was the first witness to testily ln the probe of Catalina Air Lines and its sister company, Briles Wing and Helicopter Inc., which are both subsidiaries of the Gardena·based Paul R. Briles Inc. On April 10 the FAA revoked the company's permit to operate due to 18 crash dealha in the laat 10 years and at least 21 LnJwies involvint the company's aircraft, which make run11 between San Pedro and Catalina Island. A helicopter era.sh Feb. 22 left two people dead and six injured off Avalon. The FAA license revocation was temporary, and the current bearin1s of the .National Transportation and Safety Board are to review whether the license should be activated again. The board has the power to revoke FAA decisions. Ott said he found not.hint to in· dicate that five required aalety check.a were done on the bell~ ter1. Reagan fulfills • promise WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Reagan today chose Arizona Judge Sandra D. O'Con· nor to become the first woman justice in the history of the U.S. Supreme Court, calling her "lru· ly a person for all seasons," and fulfilling a promise he made on the way to the White Hollse. Reagan said he did not name a woman successor to retiring Justice Potter Stewart "merely to do so," but because Mrs. O 'Connor has the qualities needed on the high court. "She is truly a person for all seasons, possessing those unique qualities of temperament, fair· ness, intellectual capacity and devotion to the public good which had characterized the 101 brethren who have preceded her,'' the president said in his nationally broadcast and televised announcement. "I commend you to her, and I urge tlle Senale ·s swift bipartisan confirmation, so that as soon as possible she may take her seat on the court and her place in history." Reagan said. He said her nomination will be sent to the Senate as soon as FBI background investigations have been completed. The court is in receas tmlil autumn. "We're satisfied that she will have no problem as far as con· firmation is concerned," said Attorney General William French Smith. There remained the prospect that ardent conservatives would eballenp her for past 1upport of a comtJtutional amendment on the rights of women, and on abortion. Smith said he was con· fident that np single issue would dominate the confirmation pro. . ceeclings. Opposltioo came immediately from the National Right to Ufe Committee, the nation's largest anli·abortion noup. "We feel t..tiis is directly con· trary to the Republican platlorm and to Mr. Reagan's previously stated position," said Dr. J .C. Wilkie, president of the or· ganization. At her own news conference in Phoenix, Mrs. O'Connor pledged to ''simply try to do as good a job as I think I can." She said Reagan had in· tervtewed her last week for 15 minutes and called her at 4 p.m . Monday to tell her of her selec· tion. "This is a momentous day in my life, in the life of my fami· ly," the beaming nominee declared. As majority leader of the Arizona Senate, Mrs. O'Connor backed the Equal Rights Amendment resolution in- troduced in 1172. But she backed away from the resolution alter learning that Arizona's two Republican senators at that Ume, Barry Goldwater and Paul Fannin, were amone eight U.S. senators who voted against it. In 1974, she sponsored a con· ser\taUve alternative to ERA, an advisory resolution referrlng the i111ue to.voters. She also stronely supported Arizona'1t first spend- ing Um.it resolution. Bro~ joins lJC, county fl&p snapped when questloDed Hout county -and tbe ublvtrtlt.y on the apparent aeereey that ._.. provlakln al can fflf' IDdlleat.a rounded lldditlaa al tbe ,....... mven at the UC ll"llM lledieal cutoff d•-....., tbe ...._ Center in Oranse. ... .,.. complMed ... Jabil Jmtrumental in ~ tlae lelillatiw:e com......... 1pealler'a llS'MaMat to mae 'l'be 81HmbJy lpeaker'I N· ' tbe trip WU AIHmbl1maa maru _. made iftil' tbl NI• Nolu f'rtallle I.cc.ta 11 .. ular moatbl1 meeUn1 of wbo ~ dlie__. &lie .. : Oraa19 OomlJ'• 1~'9 de&--t~ wltla Bron e1auoa Mkl at a.e aclUllYeuae .....,. Prta.ue 1utW Clllb. 11NwD arltftd ilftii aald • • at Willie bat ~ tbeBbreakft .. _ ~ ... b_!:dt .S1ed. n-Jlven ii Juet one aide ol the U aw -m II v~ance ltory '' Cout1 Admlailtratlve omc. · Robert Tllema1 Dor D•••I• Tbe 81Mmbly speaker aald be Carpenter , a former 1tate 1"0Uld P"OMbly ...U. tM tl'tp to Hnatot wbo ii DOW tbe _., Or .... CamlJ IOIMU .. durtq l•1lllatlve ·••hoeate ID tJM I S'rl,._.., moau..-.,.. S.erammto. cw 1ela10i 'Id to bltbi toDIOit no.iM tOld Bron tlali • n...., ..... al...atf lroa1d •eame U. Yt.tt eo IMt an Ill .......... .W. about• tbe ,,_...ea ,_ tlM tan Ilk· •Wkm tillWI IM c.m, u.,.. tan • tlal dlapua. bltw .. tlal '-*' to PA7 • the frOGDdl It NOMINATED Judge O'CO'm'WT Couple slwc ked by q u ads a 0 I r ).. i SAN DIEGO <AP) -"I went t into a terrible shock and praised t the Lord" was Laurence 1 Wagner's response when his I wife delivered quadruplets. They had been warned to an· ticipate triplets, but the fourth, he said, caught him off guard. "We have enoueh to start our 1 own band and that's plenty," l · said Wagner, 28, who with bis wife, Janna, operates a music school for small children. ~ The birth of the four unusually healthy boys Monda)' "shocked" the couple and their obstetri· cian, Dr. Dale Lapp, said a ~ spokesman at Mercy Hospital. ~ By an unusual coincidence, quadruplets had also been born only two days earlier, on the Fourth of July, in Goleta in San· ta Barbara County. The three boys and one girl were born 12 weeks premature to David and Marsha Hill. The babies, each weighing sliptly more than two pounds, were list- ed in guarded condition today at Long Beach Memorial Hospital, to which they had been airlifted. While the Hill babies were fighting for their lives, the Wagners were able to begin looking forward to life with their quartet. "We got all the clothes and other things in triplicate. Now we need another set of things which probably will have to be matched. I guess he'll just have to share for a while," Waaner s aid. <See QUADS, Page· A2) Quake recorded near Fullerton A minor earthquake centered near Fullerton was recorded by scientists at the California Institute of Technology lo Pasadena Monday just before 1 p.m . A spokesman at Cal Tech aald the quake registered 3.2 on the Richter scale. Fullerton police said they received no callt ~ alarm from residents followiq the tremor. No dama1e wu re- ported. llllGl.~1111 111111- Fatr throu1h WedDH· day. Low clouds late nl1bt and early mornln1 hours alon1 the cout from Santa Monica southward. Hllba at the beaebel 72 to 1S ud inland areal 80 to ... Lowa M to '10. 111111 TllAY Con o powr CnMC~ ck· vtlop M Southmt CoMlontlta tMi ~?a.. PQfe c•. 11111 • t --~--------~---,.--------------------------------·----·----~---------~-. AP ....... Iris and Steioort Finlilwr hug Anna, their cat who /ell from their 15th story apartment balcony in Southfield, Mich. and obviously, lived. i~Tee11r's goal: t . . a good skate -· LOS ANGELES <AP) -One .. brush with the law was enough ~or s kateboard speedster ',Michael Coyer, who says the ~.next time he skateboards on the .,Interstate at 70 mph.plus he ' wants to have the blessing of the authorities. ,,' A furioua CaUfomia Highway .,,Patrol officer, writing a ticket , / on Interstate 15, saw Coyer zip. Ping down the S.mile, 6-percent s rade in the Cajon Paaa at .·.what turned out to be 72 mph, :,~ccordlng to the officer's • .s peedomeWr. 1 ·' "I don't want to get thrown in ·,,.the clink," said the 19-year-old ,Xoyer, who is convinced be can bit 75 m~ on tu.. homemade 0~'kateboard. "I'm toin& to tr)' to ,1,eet hohf' of CaJtrana and do it t-i!!gally," he told The Associated :,rress Monday. . · .. from Page A 1 I . ._ SOUTHFIELD, Mleb. (AP) -People Mid lt waa a mlrade •ben a 2-yev-old baby (ell nme atories troa:i tbe Nortb Park Place Aputm•ta three yun aco and lived. Now they•,.. la)'· lq lt'a "Jult lneredible" t.bat a t -naoatll-old klttea aunl\'M a lf.at.ory plaae out of tM aame bulld.iftl. In both cues, tbe landlcaptq around the buildln1 1eta tbe credit for aavinc the little onea from serious injury. "It's JUlt a charmed bulldla1 and I bepe lt eontlnuea to be," Patricia Powell, maaa1er ol the apartment bi&b·ri.ae, said Mon- day. • Jn Septemhr lt'1t, Dulelle , Searcy fell out ol. a wlndow on the north end of the bulldi.QI, landing in a 5-foot·tall ~b1 Mrs. Powell laid. be chlld MG been bounclq up and down on a bed about level with the ledle ol an open window, apparently loat bet balance and went out the window. She spent severai days under hospital observaUoo, and doctOra found she bad suffered no sertous injuries. Last week, Anna, an oranee and white domestic lon1·bair cat, plunged from a 4-foot balcony at the south end of the building ipto the shrubbery 180 feet below. The cat was treated by a veterinarian for minor l!Uuries and shock -no broken boaea - and she's rwminl areund qain, but not outside any more. Her owners, St•wart and Iris Finsilver, \1ve made the balcony off-limits. ··Anna was Just sittin1 on the balcony and lookio1 up at the sky," said Mrs. Fiosllver. "When I celled her, she jumped. I think I startled her. I thought sure sbe bad died." "It's incredible," nid the vet, Dr. Irving Feld. "Cata are prel· ty durable, but I never beard of a cat faW.nf that far ln thia area . My friends in New York say it's common to aee cata fall out of windows of tall buildings, but they usually die." Santa Ana wo~ killed in crash BAKERSFIELD (AP) -~ Kem County !nan and a Santa Ana resident were killed instantly when their motorcycle ran bead i. l.bto a vu •bout 40 miles northeast ot here. Gregory Blake, 28, of Mount Mesa and ll•~ton. 20, of Santa Ana, died ay 1'ben their ctcle e the center line and struck the van 1~ mllea. north ol tbe community of Wofford Hei&bts. ·~·~CENTER DISPUTE • • • J• ... about seoo.ooo each month for in- 1' -digent care. ... The $100,000 to $150,000 the :1 ~ounty is disallowin1 each .. month is only a small portion of the money owed the univenity, ')•he pointed out. ~. Thomas strongly su11ested ,.,that many of the financial prob- '·'>lems facine the medical center t are due to its apparent inability to bill for services in a timely 'rmanner. .,, As an e. 'mple, he pointed out J~hat the c<.unty ia just now re· •l1ceiving bills for last November 1:-and Decembe'r. "· Carpenter, at the conclusion ol the meeting, said that be will -work with county officials to de-. velop recomendations as to bow the legislative delecations could be of assistance in mediating the jlispute. ·; Senator John Brl&&s, R · '' Fullerton, has introduced an amendment to a blll that would cancel the threatened cut otf ot state health funda for the coun- ty. The amendment ls attached to a Medi-Cal reform bill now racing senate action. \ViUie Brown: "I don't 1icave a requirement to tell anNOfte ataytlag .•. ,, Pension fund plan rejec.ted- SACRAMENTO (AP) -A propoeal to allow public pension and retirement funds to expand their investment pf01ram1 bu gone down lo defeat in the state Senate. veat up to ball tbelr uaeta -~­ stead ol tbe current » percent -in appl'Wed common ttoc:a. Tb• pl'OpOled couttt.aUon~ ameaclment would allo ~av• permMlid lueh tuada te place .. muclt • •percent ol dial 50 per- Tb e meaaure would have cent in ld-·Jield, relaUvely authorized peoalon funda lo lo· hith·"* llb!b. . Clark re-elected transit chairman If Ralph Clark wasn't born with a gavel lo bis hand, it must bave p-afted on by now. The silver-haired Anaheim resident was re-elected Monday to serve bis ninth strai1bt term as chairman of the Oran1e County Transit District's Board of Directors. Clark, 63, represents the county Board of Supervison on the district board, to . wbic.b he first was named a member in 1971. He currently ts serving hls second consecutive term as c hairman of the board of supervisors. He also was chairman in 1974. The five members of the transit district's board also re-elected William Farria, a Tustin lawyer, to serve bis sixth term as viee cbairman1 Santa Ana City Councilman Daniel Grisel wu sworn in at the meetm1 to r!J>lace departed Al KolliDMD oL r·ouai.tD V.Uey and county Supervisor Roger Stanton offidally be1an a new one-year term. In other action Monday, the board of directors gave routine approval to a federal grant for $7 .4 million to finance acquisition of 45 new larce buses and 95 small buses and vans. District officials said the erant completes funclin& for a neet of buses sought last year, when the first S> of a total 105 large buses were funded. The fede·ral government REMAINS AT HELM Ralph Clark traditionally bu paid 80 percent of the capital coets for buses and other equipment. Also Monday , the board selected the R .J . Go11elln Construction Co. of Tustin to construct the Proposed Lal'Ull8 Beach Transportation Cent.er for $211,7M. The project ls expected to be completed by February 1982 . From Page A1 QUADS ••• Mrs. Wagner, who took the fertility pill clomaphene, which Lapp said gives a .3 percentaae chanse of quadruple births, de- livered the four within three minutes by Caesarean section beginning at 9:44 a .m. Monday. Lapp said Mrs. Wagner was in good condition u were the still unnamed newborns. He said the babies wei(bed 4 pounds , 12 ounces; 3 pounds, 11 ounces; 5 poun~ z-otmces and 3 pounds, 2 ounces. The quadruplets, reportedly the se<:ond set ever born in San Diego County, are the couple's only children. Hospital authorities say odds against quadruple births are from S00,000-1 to 800,000-1. Odds are even higher against all four being boys. Lapp said "the babies, de- livered at 36 weeks, are unusual· ly healthy and do not have · respiratory problems common in such births . "Even with tnplets, it is com- mon for at least one baby to be in t~," Lapp said. "Io t.hiA tase, we have four near-term and very healthy babies. I'm not worried about any or them." He said resuits from blood tesls next week should de- termine if two or four of the quads are identical -an even rarer occurrence. Robbi~' ·alibi in doubt SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two prosecution witnesses may have cast some doubt on state .Sen. Alan Robbins' alibi for one ol the times he is accused of bav- inl sex with a lS.year.old pl. Robbins says be was at a cocktail party and dinner sponsored by the California Trial Lawyers Association the night of March 14, 1979, and be has testimony from two as· sociates lo back him. · That is one or the nights Lori Terwllllger, now 18, says she bad sex with Robbins at his Sacramento apartment when she wu.16. But on Monday. the office manager for the Trial Lawyers Association, Roberta Frayne, said Robbins was not on at least a partial list of ruests who at· tended the cocktail party and dinner. And former Assemblyman Robert Cline. R·Northridge, said he bad no recollection of bein& with Robbins at the two func - tions. Robbins and Eugene Bambie, a trial lawyers vice president and one of Robbins· politicial supporters. testified that Cline was with them that night. Ba mbie and Robbins say they parted company after 10 p.m. Ms . Terwilliger said Robbins picked her up at her home early that evening and took her to bis apartment. Former Assemblyman Bob Hayes , a San Fernando Republican who works for a com mittee Robbins chairs, said he saw Robbins at the coclctail party but did not stay for the dinner Ms. Frayne. called as a pros· ecution witness to counter de· fense testimony, said Robbins promised to attend the cocktail party and dinner but was not on the list of persons who attended. Association officials who re- viewed the list to see if any guests had been left off did not add Robbins' name, she added. But under cross-examination by defense attorney Michael Sands, Ms . Frayne said the guest list was not necessarily complete. And she agreed that Robbins' name couJd have been left off if he had failed to stop at the re- ception desk to pick up a name tag. or had not been seen by as - sociation officials who reviewed the list. Robbins, a 38-year-old V.an Nuys Democrat, is charged wtth nine felony counts alleging that he had sex with two young women. Ms. Terwilliger and Regina Cullimore. when they were 16. He faces up to six years in prison and loss of his Senate seat if convicted. Senate Republican leader Mrs. Wagner would be able to William Campbell, R-Hacienda leave the hospital in "four or Heights, said in an interview five days," Lapp said, which is Monday that the Senate would normal after a Caesarian opera-. "seriously have to discuss" ex- tion. He added that chances are pelling Robbins, if convicted. excellent she will be able to leave with two of the quads. •'It would be a painful ex- per ience but we would have to "When they are S pounds and face it ... Obviously there is Strike goes on gaining weight, we consider it the appeal process and we wouJd safe to send them home," Lapp have to get opinions from the at- From Page A1 GOP ••• SAN JOSE <AP) -Demand-said. torney general and legislative ing equal pay for women, counsel on how to proceed." municipal work=rn •esaed their The Wagners, who are from C bell ·d them." As a result, the perceo· ., families with a history of twin amp 581 · d strike into its · day amid a ta1e of the federal bu get dispute over bow eflect1ve it bu births, said they plan to expand Legal experts say it would deatined for such social pro-been lo disruptina-servtce lo the their two-bedroom home in La probably take a two-thirds vote 1ram1 rose from 20 percent two nation's 17th lariest ctty. Mesa, east of San Diel{o. or the Senate to expel Robbins. decacjes a10. to 48 percent of the , ______ _:: __ ...:_ _____________________________ _ bud1et today, he said. And that, McCloskey said, has resulted in inflation taking more out of people'i income than any cuttlna ot social proerams could do. McCl~key credited Reagan for curtaillng Democratic ef· forta to split the budget lolo six amendments ·'which would have seen one·third to one·balf as much In cuts." And be had praise for Con1ress for supporting the en· · tire pactace. "It was the flrat time in the hi.story of tbia de- mocracy -or any democracy -. when the legblatora bad tbe coura1e to cut what people bad arown accustomed to receiv- ln1." Could cuts have been made lo areas other than pto1ram1 for the poor and disadvanta1ed? llcaoakey t.blnb not. He •aid defense apendtq (25 percent ol tbe federal pie) cannot be cul "In view of wbat the Sorieta bave been dolnl the peat ftve yean." later.t paymenta on tbe na· 'Uoaal debt (about 10 pereent) cauat be cut, be 1ay1. and only minor Mttacu au1bt M made ln u.e CGet ol. l'\IDOiDc ..,...,.. meat (I l*'ceDl) and ll'antl to local counu.a, clU. and echaea· tlon (I percent.) "Tbllt ...... tbe .. per~ for •~chi pro1ram1 ,• llFClodd .. id, addln• "It wt',. r:J:£ to rtduet tae federal , loeal ......,. lild .. Hl·W'-wU1 Uft to' Jk* _,CM rt1;1mlWlti fW ,_.. ... ~.··. ·' , Former Preaident Gerald Ford point• to fourth green aa come- dian ~b Hope drivel cart during opening round of Jerry Ford Invitational Golf Tournament in Vail, Colo. Bee Gees plan return home The Bee Gees, one of England's most popular pop groups, are going home. Barry Gibb, one of the three brothers who form the group, said the Bee Gees plan to return to England because of relaxed tax laws under Prime Minister Margaret Tbat~her's govern- ment. The group Is based in Miami. "I have been house-hunting and m y brothers have already bought homes over here," Gibb said. Gibb and bis brothe rs, Robin and Maurice, are British but were raised in Australia. They settled in Britain in 1966 and later moved to the United States. Mrs. Norman 8 . ChandJer is returning lo her role as chief fundraiser for Los Angeles premier theater complex alter 16 years as chairman of the Music Cen- ter's board of governors. Mrs. Chandler, 80, retired chief executive officer of the Times-Mirror Co., turned over the theater chairmanship to Barry Wetzel, 61. He is former vice chairman of the center's board, the Performing Arts Council, and chief executive officer of the Garrett Corp., an aerospace manufacturing firm. An Illinois man who pro- pelled his pit more than 60 feet is the new International Cherry Pit Spitting cbam· pion. Jim Burkhart'• winning s pit of 60 feet. 11 ~ inches was far short of a record, but was good enough to out- distance more than 100 other contestants at Eau Claire, Mich. When tttB•llt tctrtll 8rttke 1•t•l•1 t11Ufled Mfote a HOUH 1ubcommtt· tee on bet anU·-mollinl el· font ~lollal 1talfen proYlded ber with the OM Item ahe mo1t certainly didn't want: an ashtray. It wu huWy removed u abe be1an her teltimony. Veteran news pboto1· rapber Jee ......... wbo recentl;y retired aftet 35 year• with the San Francllco Chronicle. recelvtd the Jeee" A.. Sprape Award for news photocrapby. The award ls the National Preas Pbotoarapbere A•· soclatlon's most pretl1ioua honor. His most famous photo· graph is a picture of U.S. .Marines planting the American flag on Mount Surlbacbi, lwo Jima, in February 1.945. BUJy Cutes', the outspoken brother of former President Jimmy Caner. says h~bas a lot in common with mobile homes. "Five or six years ago1 a mobile home bad u baa a reputation u Billy Carter." said the 44-year-old Carter. who now works as a publlc relations consultant for Tidwell Industries of Haleyville, Ala., a mobile borne manufacturer. "Now, mobile homes are an up-and-coming thing," he said. Carter said he was glad to leave Plains, Ga. He plana to move his family to Haleyville. Actress Jane Wllklasoa, the wife of Oakland Raiders quarterback Dan Pastorhd, was robbed of $50,000 in jewelry by a gunman who broke into her Las Veres apartment. Ms. Wilkinson is appearing at the Union Plaza Hotel in the play "90-Day Mistress." Flooding hits Kentucky Seven inches of rain damages homes and crops U.S. summary ....,_ --•rstortn. Wltll ......... llltfl ........................ , allead of a cold front onr Ill• nortllern "°'ktu, •• coot..-a ir ,.,,....., .... ,.,. .......... tem· .............. Seffral i-is -. 1t9'M• In ·---~--... -.. ..... , '-¥Y relN Kr-_,.,,.,.. Taut -y ..-lne ~to­day ov..-muc:11 of t,_ _.,.,n Gulf Coast. Wl4ely ICMtend .,._" --dersllower1 llngered over tll• Ce rollna1 e nd u11tllern Hew Efttlalld. I ....... .,._,.. -lllun· clltnflo--s conlllllleCI _, trw Cefto tral "ooi., lfle GtNI a.tn...., IN PKlfk --. A -.,,.,_,.. _, ..... ~. A d a mage a1H11me11t Wal sc.....,led •......,today In Maooffln, Morgan ..,. 81111\ c-tlM tn Kefto lllCkY eftw ~ relN CMIMCI f .... l"I -........... Ill ftKllM'-and M.,,Y ~ to 11o..,.1 Md ,,..,.. More llwl -lnellet of rein Ill parts of Ma911ff111 c-w s..nclay nlgllt .... MlftMy triggered tnYCll of Ille lloodlfte tlwt "CMN off IN 111111," •ccordl119 to ••tll co1111ty Cl•ll o.1e11 .. OlnK1Dr v ... _, • .,...,. TM Lkll.Jllt "'--Seit Lick Creek left tlletr ba11ks, lor<ln1 •'HC ... tlonl In s.1.,.,.,,11 ... SAit Lick Md Ma-. ac'°"""I to tM 1tate Otwl1loll of OI--l!mereency Servk.es. Sc altered 111owert and 1111111-.,.. _ _.. . .._,'" .... ., . ...., Ille~. Tam...,....,.._,,.,..,..., at mldnlefll POT rafl9ed ,,..... a In ICl-tll ,.,II, Ori., .. •Ill 81r111e, C•tll. California ..... lklH .,. •••dlcted ,., W ....... tlW'Mlllll $11twnlay KntU SowtMnl c.MlfOtftla •ac..pt '°' ... clOlldl dllrlllt t• 111o11t -Mf'IY "'°"'"" ........... .,.. ~t. 0.Mrt -Ufl .... -1 dry, ... en..-.... •-'"' wlflft. Hltllt an ....... , ere e-..cl.ed 19 lie • In U. Afta91ft, '2 '° • In CMIWI .... lfllllnNdlala val .. yl, 0 ... "'_........ __ .... "' ti. ~ Valtey -,.,,,.,., dH-Hts, lftd 19 .. llf 111 IOlll"9nl llH-erta. Tiie HM!llwl wutllef Service It ••.• too ~~ ...... -S"i•••'' \•••••"'•'• Occlvth4 tO mmm --· === hwe< .. , .... -..... '".,.. ....... 60a In L•,.,...... .. lo 71 lft •aileJt, 56 lo .. lft lfle _. ... ,, '2 le 71 111 tile 0.-vaii.y, 1• to a In 111111 ... ,ts -,. lo• •n -.... rts. Coastal forecast ,. ., , """""' W...•lclay. O....rnllM tows .a ..... H..,,. Ill tM 60ll ..... tlle coatt. "*"" -cio..11 Md foll forecast for ~Y tfW'olllll s.tll<· .. ,. EINwllere, ltfllt .......... •llMb ,., ... t -......,..... ,_.. lllacamllll west to ....,_.. 10 to " IUlob ..,... '"' ett-......,.,, ,,...... "9lflt CCWKetlClon le U. Me1tlurl ...... ,. Solltll...i -i11 1 to > teet, AffM· ,_., ...... _,, •• teat. Te mperature3 "' I.a ""' Alllefl'f a .. Al ....... .. .. .a Amari Ito "4 u ,..,,..,11 .. ., ., Atleftla ... 1 .. AttantcOy .. ,, ••tU-. f1 7t ................ .. " .71 81111'1arck .. ,. ..... .. f.2 ,,,, .... .,. ·-·""" .. 7t .71 ........ .. " Cllartstn SC ti 7S .lt Cllartttn WV It .. CM~ ti • ~ • S1 . ., c...,.._. . .. OllWlllM r. ~ Oef.~WWI ~ .. ., °" ........ ., .. 10.. .... . .. Ovlvttl . .. ~ . ., HeteM •• ·" ~ .. " .......... . ,. , .... ·=· .. ,. , ........ . .,, Ill-City . ,. LaV ... -· Llttte ltedl . ,, .et LolA,..i. l.Olllt¥111• -y-Horlotk ()rt- "'9111 ...... ~1. .. It~ Sett L.ak• s.noi._. SMFra1t s.ante s.ea-Tlll .. W•Alll"llttl FORECAST .. 11 .. 74 . ,. M ,, .n •• 7S t 7 71 101 • .. 6J .. , •• CM a n 6J SS .... ·°' 6J .. ·°' " ,, .10 .. 7• CAU "CMIMIA ............. • .. 12 112 • llytlle E11r•ll.a ,,,.. .... °"'-..... "_ " ......... ff '° 1m"' .. S7 .. ,. "4 " Aupwtca ......... llen'nlNle CW«• ,,,._, "'AN AM -...... ~llafl Merld• MexlceClty Monter,..., SeolJYaf\P It. TrlfltdM V«•CNI ,. ,. ·• J7 J: !! ., ,.. a • SI •• IOI 61 .... ..... " ,, 11• .. 92 .. .. .., ,. .. .... ,. . ,, . .. ,, .. ,, ., ,. • 7t " 74 • 7S • 1S ., n 12 ... • n '2 • ti 7S ti ,, Sun, moon, tide& TODAY Sec-""" I:• p.m. 4.f ftO..HNY flm -t :2A •·"'· 1.0 l'lrttll'9fl 2:.Ua.m. u Sec:Ofld -10:57 P·"'· 2.1 5-t at l :f1 '·"'· ... .,_ Surwtw at5:fta.i...Wldl......, . MMftr1M111111:,. ............ oat 12:25 •·"'- •--=-¥: liiiiili.Dsu ....... R_f R_IP_DR_T A ..... T--. .. .. ., ., ~ t: .. .. .. .. .. r--------------... ---------------------------... -, ' · 5-5. i, Off· ' ! ~~1.004 Is whot you con sove on vocotlOn lodglng ov•r the nut 20 yeors If Y°" ore now &pending ~1 .000 fcx o rwo..wfflol vocotlon Couumlng a 10% WtotlOn roc.e >. HOV? lt'ltl'\ Tlme-Shottng. o dfomo~ ldeo ~c enoblfl you co own o tiic. Of pMw vocotlon tlme redHmoble at ~reds of luxury (etOfU 11'1 CollfomlO ond around chew0t1d. TlrM-Sho11ng c~ oN d"9 odvoncog•s ot owning l(s tlm. you oosn.d In fO< o IWetlme d ~Md low-cost luxvry vocotlonJ. Coll lnternotlonol Resort Shortng, Cent.,polnc• 1. ltvtn., (7 i'> 712-i i2i Coll now... I . . ... ...... . ·- H/F Al County ~s noise ruling M•tary damages nixed; emotUmal distress pushed ·~ P&BDEBJC& 8CHOEllEJIL °' ............. A• attomey repreNDtinl as SMOpl• 1uin1 Orance County 1ov· ernmeot over John Wayne Airport jet ooi.le say1 be ls not overly concerned about a cowt rullnc that dealt a aetback to b1I client.a' cue. Oranae County Superior Court Judie Raymond Vincent aaid Monday that the county wu not obltgated to pay monetary damages a1linlt the re1Jdenta' clalroa that jet overfliahta have •lowed the rate by which their properties have increased in value. The county. however, sWI re· mains liable for damages on the residents' claims that they have ·suffered emotional distress due to the noise generated by opera- tions of commercial and private jet aircraft. •·A victory on emotional dis· tress is what we're after. And that bas yet to be dealt with," commented Jerrold Fadem, the resident.a' attorney, after Judie Vincent lasued the ruling. Fadem, and the two attorneys representing the county, M icbael Gatzke and Louis Goebel, were scheduled to pre· sent final arguments today to the jury that will decide (1) whether the county or the resi· dents' faction is right, and (2) whether to award monetary damages on the emotional dis· tress issue. Fadem conceded tbal lt wu diffleuh k> prove the lbeOry ol Ion or appreciation ln property values because of the "cruy in· flaUonary spiral" of recent years. Durina the trial, a retl estate appraiser had testified property values were between s and t• percent lower than what they might have been. It wu lm· possible, however, to escape the fact that "those houses have in· 'A victory on emotional dis· tress is what we're after. And that has yet to be dealt with.' creased in value by three times while the noise has been there," Fadem explained. He said emotional distress is a concept that can be better un· derstood by the jury than loss or appreciation. Vincent's ruling followed ex- haustive arguments by both Fadem and Gatzke. Fadem argued that common sense dictated that property values in the noise·impacted arta would be lower than lo areaa not lmpacted by jet noise. To think otherwise, he a11erted, "deftes human experience and 101lc." He maintained that the noiae exposure had caused resident.a to 1tve up some of the enjoy· ment and u.ae ol their property. Gaulle rejected what he termed Fadem'a "You know it1s ri1bt ln your heart" ar1ument, clalmina the law waa clear On the issue of inverse condemna· tion. Gatzke, employed by the coun- ,ty strict11 to handle airpo(t related litigation, said there was no adequate showing durin1 the trial ol "direct, substantial or peculiar" noise exposure. "Noise levels at tbia airport are ... relatively low," Gatske said. In rulint in the county's favqt, Vincent observed, "Anyone wDo says there is no noise problem Jt Orange County's Job.n WaYQe Airport is foolish ... There is a problem, a very severe one." But Vincent held that the inter· ference on property rigbta dld not meet the standards of law th such matters. "I find no liability for the county on the inverse condem.Q.ll· lion action. The plaintiffs have not s hown by a preponderancet>( the evidence, that they should recover for such loss." Vincent said. Countian appeals deportation Move by Surfside resident, 81, blocks ouster order Orders that accused Nazi war criminal Andrija Artukovic, an elderly Surfside resident, be de· ported to Yugoslavia have been appealed to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in Los Angeles. Ronald Bonaparte, the Newport Beach attorney representing 81 -year-old Artukovic, estimates it will be six months to two years before bis client has a bearing. The Justice Department's of- fice of special investigations had ordered Artu.kovic to report to Los Angeles immigration offices this Wednesday for deportation. The appeal move, government officials said, effectively blocks the deportation order. Bonaparte, who contends bis client is in poor health and suf· fers rrom heart problems, claims the government does not Assembly backs bill for prison bonds ' SACRAMENTO t AP> - Without debate, the state Ar.· sembly haa yotlld i<> yut a '495 m1Utan ~ istue for ntw ltate prisons on the ballot, and the Senate in a separate vote ap. proved a $280 million local jails bond measure. The Assembly sent the prison ·bond measure, SB153 by Sen. Robert Presley, D·Rlveraide, to the Senate on a ~18 vote Mon· day. The jails measure, SB910 by Presley was sent to the Ar.· sem bly on a 29-0 vote. The prison tJs>nd bill requires a final Senate vote on Assembly amendments to qualify for a final decision by voters at the next general statewide election. The jail bond issue also must pass both houses before it can go on the ballot. "The need is quite clear. We can't go on forever and ever without improving our prisons," said Assemblyman Alister McAlister. D·San J'ose, the chief Assembly sponaor of the plan. M cAlister did not mention Gov. F.dmund Brown Jr.'s plan to call a special statewide elec· ti on Nov. 3 if the bond measure is approved by the Legislature, We left the gem·rlch country of Auatrella and went to neighboring New Zeeland. That bMUtiful little l1lend country makee up In megn lficant tcenery for what It lecke In Qef1W and mlner1l1. The onty Q«1Wtone of any conaequence found In good euppty In New Zeelend le nephrite jede . . . popJIWly called 1lmply ··,~ ttone" by the lnhabltents. here era ltrQe quertiet of nephrite end the materfal can be found In huae be>Ylde1'9. Olgentlc ere'* end hoieta era needed to extract th9ee mammouth rock.a. Some of them with weight ma .. ul'9d In tona. It ... quite a contra1t to lhe mlnee w. Md Jutt vlelted In Aultnllle whwe carat w• 'he "'!!_t Of "'"9U,., Before departing South lttend we took time to enjoy the febuloue ecenery of ttle SOuthefn Atpe and e atcl plane ride landlnt on ,rani JoNPf't gt8der wh9'9 we thrww • ,._ snowbelll end toott a lot of ~. McMno on to NOttt'I '-'ct. ft vleltH ttie therm.I ar•• of Aotorve and the ~ 'WOfm cw at Wettomo. of the "*"'*-of 04/I( P8'1J Wll e geotoolet Ind edded •.-deal to the enjoyment of our trtp 1J¥ '°'"""' out ttw -. ot ~and ct1ano-In the Mrtt\ • °""" but he Peferred to it lndirectlY . "It would be placed before the vpters of.the ntxl statewide elec· taon.I w•eneter that aJl1ht be," Mc>Jiatersaid. Brown's intention to call a statewide election ia politically controversial, because such an election would automatically place a referendum on the Peripheral Canal on the ballot as well. Brown wants to get that emo- tional and divisive issue, which he once strongly supported, out of the way before next June, when be js expected to seek the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate. Unless there is a special elec· lion, the canal referendum and other ballot propositions, includ- ing the prison and jail bond is· sues, would all go on the June 1982 ballot. Presley has indicated hia jail bill, part of a legislativ anti· crime package, is an effort to raise money to bring county jails up to minlmum standards. According to the Department of Corrections, between $200 dlillicn ~d $800 million ls re· quired to make a minimal over- haul of eotmty jails . @ &EM Wl5iE have evidence to sustain its charges against Artukovic. Artukovic was first ordered deported in 1953 when the Board of Immigration Appeals found that he h ad been interior minister in charge of public dr· der and safety in Croatia during World War 11. The board said this "pupRet government" was responsible for a genocidal policy that led to the !rilling of Serbs, Jews and · Moslems. It branded Artu.kovic a collaborator. The postwar Communist gov· .ernment in Yugosl.avia accus~ Artukovic with overseeing the killing or 750,000 Serbs and 20,000 Jews. But Bonaparte said the gov- ernment ~ not have enou(b evidence to sustain • 1one eotmt of murder let alone 750,000 counts." Bonaparte claims t.bia lack of evidence resulted In the govern· ment's 195$ stay of deportation. But government officials sald the 1959 stay resulted from evidence that Art.ukovic would suffer persecution and perhaps death if returned lo Yugoslavia. In lifting that stay order last week, government officials not· ed that Congress passed the Refugee Act of 1980 which forbids granting a stay or de- portation of any alien who as a member of the Nazi government assisted or participated in the persecution of any person because of race, religion, na- tional origin or political opinion. Bonparte claims this statute appears to be aimed at his client. He also asserts that the government now is trying to de· port Artu.kovic without provid· ing him a hearing. Although Artu.kovic does not grant interviews and has rarely been seen in public in recent years, Bonaparte claims he st.ill lives in the same beachlroot Surfside home near Seal Beach that be did in the 1950s. n waa e little surprising to find thet despite the lack of netlve gema end mlnarelt, 10 many New Zealender1 were evld "rock hounds.. end collectort of gem and mlneral specimens. W. etWnded • meeting of a fledallng gemological aoclety In Auclcland. Twenty men had f°'"'8d a group wh ich they hOped would some dey grow Into en orgenlrellon almll., to our A~rlcen Gem. Society Where educ1ted 1nd ethical oetnologlats frHly exchef\99 Information, dlacuat prob .. me and tolutlona relative to their wont. When thla group heard we would be vltltlng their country (they ere d•dlc•ted l'Mdere ot tl'le American '"•lry , trade Journal•) ... they aelced ue to meet With them. We vlalted 1n: the home of one ot the rn.n and" heel lunch t•ther. I admired the btack Jade pendant that ow ho9t ... WMllng •nd he ....... me buy IL" It la • elgned pleee by Don Seit and la 1n Intricate =r In 30 blled on the ua euive ... juat the type ct thing that an engineer,, melhemtdcien or .. tronom« would appreolat• and enjoy, , ..,,no. Come by ttie 1to,. aoct ~ -It end If ~ went It ~ ~I may ewn "let you~ lf'ff'Oif!tme. • I H / F Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 Iranian execution toll reaches 140 BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iran's Islamic regime has put to death nine more "counterrevolu· tlonariee" on charges they or- ga nhed r•ots to protest tbe ouster of President Abolba11an Bani-Sadr, Tehran radio said to-day. The latest executions raised to l~O the number put to death , since the leaders or the Islamic Republican Party engineered Bani·Sadr's dismissal on June 22. Authorities say 1,500 leftist.I h.ave been jailed. A Kurdish-language radio sta- tion confirmed that Bani-Sadr, not seen publicly since June 12, is hiding 1n Kurdistan with Ivari tri besmen ne ar the Turkish border. "Bani·Sadr deserves ex· ec ution ," Tehran Revolutionary Court Chairman Hojatoleslam Mohammad Gilani said in a T ehran television broadcast. Syrians down Israeli plane DAMASCUS, Syria (AP> - Syria said today ill Lebanon· based forces shot down a pilot· less Is raeli reconnaiss ance plane, rekindling tensions with Israel that threatened to ignite a new Middle East war last spring. There was no immediate com· ment from Israel. Net() car sales continue slump DETROIT (AP) -Analysts say consumer resistance to high prices and high interest r-ates-is behind the continuing slump that last month sent sales by U.S. automakers to their lowest June levels in at least 17 years. New car sales by the five ma· Jor domestic automakers fell 2.5 percent from the depressed levels of a year ago, and foreign manufacturers claimed a June record 28.2 percent share or the U.S. market. Violence eases in Liverpool LIVERPOOL, England (AP) -Liverpool police got the upper hand on youths rioting and loot· ing for the third night in the port city's Toxteth slum district and reported much less violence than on the two previous nights. At daybreak today, police said only one of their men had been injured sligbUy and 62 youths had been arrested, oompared with 259 officers injured and 69 rioters arrested Saturday and Sunday nights. Carter, Castro talks 'failed' WASHlNGTUN (A.t"J -In a bid to normalize diplomatic rela· lions, the Carter administration held a series of secret and sometimes stormy meetings with Cuban President Fidel Cas tro, starting in December 1978, informed SC?urces say. The two sides were unable to resolve their differences over Cuba's military involvement in Africa, however, and the talks did net prosper, the sources said Monday night. Previously c.c. Steakhouse Now Bart's II with Exciting new dinner menu NOW OPEN Monday 11Saturday for Lunch 11 A.M. Join Us Sundays· for Champagne Brunch 10-3 Free Champagne Food prices on way up Wholesale cost pushing inflation ahead at 6.9 percent rate WASHINGTON <AP> - Wholesale f6od prlcea, unchan1ed for most of the aprlna, beaan rlatn1 ln June, pushina the netton •a lnnatton ahead at an annual rate ol 8.9 percent at the wboleaale level, the aovemment reported today. The · Labor Departm•nt's Producer Price Index for flniabed 1ood.s baa now risen at an annual rate of 9.5 percent for the first hall of the year -well under last year'• 11.8 percent. And analysta see little likelihood that the rate for au or 1981 will edge over 10 percent. The wholesale price index rose a seasonally adjusted 0.6 percent ln June -slightly above May's 0.4 percent but atiU the second-best month t.hia year .• Economists are forecaaUo1 that the rate wilJ remain relatively low for at leut the next few months, particularly In light of the current ready availability of oil worldwide. Food prices, however , probably will continue rlalna during the summer, keepin1 overall lnfiation from dropping further than it has ln the last few months, analyst.I aay. Food prices had shown almost no net change since November, although they nuctuated durilll the winter months. A wide variety of food prices rose in June, but meat was the bl11eat factor. Prices for beef and veal, tor eJU11DpJe, roee z.• percent alter elimblq only 0.3 percent ln May. Wholesale pricea for fin1abed enerl)' loodl ro.e 0.2 perceat in June after decllnin1 0.5 percent In May, but analyst.I say no bil new ener11 Jumpa are expected soon. Overall, pricea of flnlahed consumer 1ood.s roae 0.5 percent in June alter risinJ 0.2 percent in May, the report aald. Capital equipment pricea roee 0.7 percent, led by increaaea tor aircraft, heavy trucks and various machinery. All the naurea are adjmted for seasonal variation. FREE AT LAST -Former Argentine President Isabel Peron, 50, wife of former three-time President Juan D. Peron, was freed Monday after more than five years under house arrest. She is returning to Spain where she and Peron lived in exile for 13 years. Air-fare war declared Eastern brings back discount coupons; others follow APPOINTED -Bishop Jozef Glemp, 52, was named new archbishop of Warsaw and Gniezno, .Poland~ by_-Pope John Paul II today. M JAMI (AP) -Eastern Airlines bas started a new air· fare war, bringing back dlacount coupons on the busy New York· California route in hopes of over- coming a summer travel slump. Soon after Eastern's ann· ouncement Monday that the lowest one·way price between Ne w York and Loa Angeles would drop to $134, competing American Airlines and Pan American World Airways said they would match the new rare. Trans World Airlines said it would match the rare only on runs that leave about the same times as East.em flights. "We have and we always will remain competitive,'' said Pan Am spokesman Harvey Berman in New. York. "Anything we can do to remain competitive, we will do." Added American Airlines spokesman AJ Becker: "It's fair to say -that we're going to be there with a program or our CAPY'S SOON TOBE JOSE MURPHY'S NOW APPEARING own. We simply must and will be competitive." Sally McElwreath of TWA sa1d the carrier would accept coupons "on the flights that are essentially at the same time as Eastem's.'' Eastern plans to give $50 dis· count coupons for flights between New York and Los Angeles or San Francisco to each passenger flying the popular Boston·New York- W ashington Air Shuttle or non- stop flights between Newark and Boston or Washington. The coupons, to be distributed Wednesday through July 31, also are worth a $25 ttiscount on pro· motional fares in the market. The reductions also will be available for Philadelphia- California passengers us ing Eastem's non-stop service from New York. In January, Eastern used a s imilv plan-in-an-attempt to in· crease traHic between New .. i ~ . .. •I York and California. The plan had mixed results -fares dropped, but traffic did not in· crease dramatically. Eastern said it gave away ap- proximately 2.50,000 coupons to shuttle passengers that were good for 50 percent discount.I on New York-California routes but could not be used against promo- tional fares. Currently, Eastern's lowest coach fare between New York and California ls $159 one-way during the evening. The airline's lowest one-way daytime fare or $179 wiU drop to $154. These fares have no roundtrip or length-of.stay requirements, but reservations must be made and tickets purchased seven days in advance. With the coupon, Eastem's lowest unrestricted coach fare will be $279 one· way, while tbe first class one·way fare will be cut to $309. The promotionil fares expire on Aug. 31. .,,.~,l' ... ,1"!111.... ' Dancing In Dana Point To "BOB GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun. 9:00 P.M. -1:30 A.M. Rock, Reggae, Pop, Blues "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons 3:30-8:00 P.M. Mon. & Tues. Evenings 9:00P.M.·1:30 A.M. CAPY'S BAR and GRILL -·· -...... 114 McFedden Piece Newport Beech fi75-l094 and Country Western ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Tuesday, Wednesday le Tbanclay "REGGAE With The REBEL ROCKETS" Friday le Saturday "BOCO -MARU" Sunday le Monday "GEORGE BUTrSAndTbeHOTCROSSBUNS" 34130 Coast Hi hwa , Dana Point 661-6688 New partner -· Holiday Magazine's Award Winner formerly of Blackbeards & Bob Burns. 18926 Magnolia Fountain Valle~ W e have an exciting new restaurant to showyc>u! It's our dream come true and you're Invited to join us. Still not fancy, but so much mcxe beautiful. We've saved the intimacy. We've just added more. We've saved the friendty atmosphere. Now there's more room for frfends. Come to the new Le Biarrltz. Ample covered free parldng, exceptional atmosphere, superb provincial cuisin·e, careful service. Join us for award·wlnnlng dining > for lunch or dinner. Now It's even more like coming home ... to France. bB Bl-RRRITZ rM FRENCH RESTAURANT Open ll am to 11 pm Delly Set. end Sun. Dinner from "'"' SUNDAY CHAMPAONE BAOM01 10.m to 3pm • I a • I ._. ,..... . -... . Airline seeks control of Weste rn MLUIJ (AP) -Foi lbe third Ume in a year, a11re11ive Air Florida ls trytnc to take over another carrier. Thia Ume, lbe Mlaml·based company baa its eye on Western Airlines. Air Florida Chairman C. Edward Acker announced Mon- day that Air Florida had ac- quired a 9.9 pereent interest in Loa Angeles-baaed Western. He aald Air Florida ls determined either to buy enough additional stock to take control of Western or to reach an operatlnc aeree- ment with its board of directors. "We're not lookioc for a fight," be said. "We are looking for a friendly situation." Landalide coven coaatal h ighway SANTA MONICA (AP) -A landslide that initially buried five of six lanes on the Pacific Coast Hlchway in eicht feet of rock and dirt was nearly cleared by state highway crews wtthln two hours, authorities said. One person who was driving on the highway when the slide occurred Monday night received minor injuries, but was not hospitalized, said Santa Monica Officer Bruce Cline. Of /shore drilling curbs def eated SACRAMENTO CAP> -AD attempt to give the California Coastal Commission more authority to curb offshore oil drilling in federal waters has January~" Work." - S,..CW Offw ,4ftll Ill u o v New s.t o4 ?cutc>lu...O Noilo Hof>«:rtltC>-nO loft 2400 W. c...t Hapw., Wte .. H.I. 645-J411 been overwhelmingly defeated by the state Senate. Critics of the Coastal Com- mission and advocates of oil de- velopment combined Monday to defeat SB909 by Seo. Barry Keene, D-Mendocloo. The vote for the bill was 6-23. Striking deputi.ea fired in SD SAN DIEGO CAP> -County officials say about 800 striking deputie s have b ee n "automatically" fired, but San Diego County Sheriff John Duffy says he's canceled the termina· lions. In the wake of the disputed ac- tion, Paul Eckert, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, said Monday the deputies "terminated themselves" when they walked out last Wednesday and stayed away from work three consecutive working days. Bill would require tests SACRAMENTO (AP ) Teachers, classroom aides and administrators would have to pass basic reading, writin, and arithmetic tests, under a bill approved by lbe state Assembly. The vote Monday was 66-7 to send AB757 by Assemblyman Gary Hart, D-Santa Barbara, to the Senate. The bill would set up a statewide proficiency test and require school districts, after March 1982, to hire only those who pass it. -.,,--,,..--,,----,----------• 0 0 4 • • • 0 ••• ---------·------·-'-~·-' Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrrueectay, July 7, 1981 H/F Al ' - · HiJlside case thrown in shambles J Prosecutor says charges against Angelo Buono may be dropped LOS ANGELES (AP> -With the Hlllalde Stran1ter caae thrown lnto a abambles, an ex· aaperated proeecutor denounced hla own star witness u "dis· honest'' aPCl conceded he may be LISTENING Angelo Buono forced to drop char1ea a1&.lnat An1elo Buono. The biaarre twist ~the cue of Buono, an upholsterer jailed nearly two yean while awalt.lnc trial, came Monday lo an emo- tion-packed court seaalon fealur· tog the fint public testimony by Kenneth Bianchi, the confeued Hlllalde Stranller. Blancbl, who baa Implicated bla coualn, Buono, ln 10 grlaly alaylnp ~ )'OUDI women, 1ave two confualnsJy different atortea in a full day on the witness stand at a pre-trial bearing. Fint, be aald neither be nor Buono wu involved ln the kill- io ga. Then, be said be bad changed bis mind and, lo a passionless monotone, described lbe gory tortures and straoeula· lions, lnaiatlng Buono wu his partner in murder. · "I would regard Mr. Bianchi as dishonest and unable to come to terms with h1s own guilt," said Deputy District Attorney Roger Kelly, who bas baaed his prosecution of Buono almost en- tirely on Bianchl's account of the killings. . "He simply does not want Lo believe be ls guilty," Kelly said of Bianchi. explaining why he bu repeatedly recanted bla con· feaslon only to later turn around and insist be bu told lbe truth. Kelly said be would meet with District Attomey John Van de Kamp later thls week to dlscuaa dismissing the case a1ainat Buono because of Blanchi'a lack of credibility. •'I would say that the m~r portion of bis value as a witness, if not all value, bas been lost," Kelly said. "The ability to call him and vouch for him aa a wit- ne ss would be greatly diminished on my part." However, he noted, a dis- missaJ would not end Buono's problems. He still faces trial on prostitution-related charges, and Kelly said the investigation of Buono in the Hillside Stranglings would not end. Tbe pale, mustachioed Buono, 46, who faced trial Sept. 15 with prosecutors seeking the death penalty, stared grimly across the courtroom at his cousin on the witness stand. Bianchi, 30, whose dark good looks reportedJy lured the young girls he kllled, was carefully groomed for his court ap- pearance. His voice was soft and he apoke with almost trancellke calm as he explained, "I want to testify lo the truth as best I possibly can. I can't explain lbe changes that take place, what happens in my mind.'· TESTIFYING Kenneth Bianchi ill ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,~ Solons pass two gas nozzle measure s ' . Assembly bill asks standards; Senate measure stops siphoning SACRAMENTO <AP> -The state Assembly and Senate have approved separate measures that would on the one band re- quire the state to set standards for performance of gasoline sta- tion vapor recovery nozzles, and the other band stop requiring stations to use, gasoline Aipbon - ing noules. AB1Z7 by Assemblyman David Kelley, R-Hemet, was passed A Summer Tradition Monday by a 73-1 vote and sent to the Senate. It would require the Air Resources Board lo write stand- ards to make sure that the de- vices, which keep vapors from adding to air pollution, do not spill gasoline on the customers. Some of the devices have also sucked gasoline back out or the customers' tanks. The bilJ would require local air pollution control districts to set up toll-free telephone num- bers for consumer complaints about the nozzles. Meanwhile, the Senate ap- proved a measure to stop requir· ing service stations to use gasoline-siphoning vapor re· c<rvery M?'zles. Despite criticis'm that the measure was an attack on smog Savory control regulations, Sen. Dan • O'Keefe's SBl.208 was approved Monday on a 22-6 vote and sent to the Assembly. f The board ignored warnings that the cumbersome twin-hose r•" vapor recovery systems didn't reduce p,oUuUon and often-- malfunctioned Lo siphon gasoline out of motorists' gas tanks, - O'Keere said. e ngs. -------AIOll -------AIOUT '1981 CARS I andTRUCKS • The Palm Springs area's newest luxury resort at only $32.00 per day.• Much lower than our normal summer rates. 1$1 "GREAT I 9 DINNER ' (') s5 ftAsur11I e77DINNERI z 0 Cl. :::> 0 u ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Ask for Ray, WSE SPlCW.IST at HOWARD Chevrolet C-.ol ~Ind Quell ... NEWPORT BEA'CH Starting ..... ......... Spend a day In the sun. Relax, unwind and enjoy the resort's sparkling pools, 25 championship tennis courts, 27 holes of golf, bicycles, game room, gift shop and much more. Uncompllcafed? You bet! Rancho Las Palmas Resort is the place for Your Day In th' Sun. Advance Reservations Required Space Available Basis . Call 714/568-2727 or Toll Free 800/228-9290 •Ptu1 tax and gratulllM, not applicable to oroupa. ·~~ho LASPALMAS RESORT™ 0 Good tor thrM piece• or juicy, golden brown Kentuclly 5ij Fried ChlcMt\, ptu111ngre Mrvlng1 or col• 11aw. maahed O potatOff and gravy. and a roll. Limit two offer• per I z purchaM. Coupon good only tor combination while/d1r1I ~ I Ofdert. Cu1tomer pay• all 1pplicabt1 nlH tu. I 020 Oller uplr11July 19. t981 1 Prtce1 may vaty at I pat11clpallng loc• Ilona. Good only In Soutr.arn Callfomla lll'larayou -1 the Chicken Sandwich ~.:;.:,;~::::::::;r"'lii• ,;.~nn~. I GOOd ror nine piecH of juicy. golden brown Kentucky Fried Chicken, wllh lour roll1, a 111ge col• 1l1w. • large mHlled potatoH and 1 medium gravy. Limit two oHera per purchaM. Coupon good only lor comt>lnaUon wf\llal dark Ofd•rs Customer paye all applicable Niel tax. Oller expires July 19, 1981 PrlcH may vary II par· tlclpatlng loc1tlona GOO<I only In Southern Calllornla where you He the Chicken Sandwich Window Banner. An111UJI Hatt Tucbyk interest rate guanant~ for tht tenn by American Savings American Savings 'JXLYS high i~ with safety. ..... £ .......... . I I ·-----.... r,# • • • •• •• • •• TD . P.tlllLt' Cl•CIJI "Ooohl Kittycot's tongue is mode of son~rl" MARMADl.:KE t by Brad Anderson i 8 . I I I 0 81GGUaGI py 1 vtr;ll Partch (VIP) I 1 'i DENNIS THE MENACt: Hank Ketchum I PMNIJTI by Chari•• M. Schulz TINWARS FROM NOW! TVM•LE•EEDI by Tom K. Ryan '«>U'Rf OUR FRON"rlfR EXPeR'Ti .._. ______ _, 11'5 El'THER -niUNPSR, A S"TAM~VE, MOL.f!~E:YE1 CAN YOU IVE:NTJFY OR SOMEONE &-EFT 1Hf A'.X)f( OPEN 1HA1 t715'fAN1" RLJMJL.E? A11HE: ~OWN IJOWl.IN6'AU.EV. ~ Y- SHOE NANCl' a--------..1. I FELT DOPEY SO WHERE ~VE YOU BEEN, NANCY? I TOOK A BRISK WALK OUT IN THE COUNTRY I DONT THINK ITWAS BRISK-- ~¥ by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushm1ller A TURTLE FOLC~WED YOU HOME ., . ., ~~7 -7 1 GORDO by Gus Amola • ~ I "I see ONE tennis player didn't bother to phone me about hie complalntl" "Why did you have to call me a ·naughty boy' in front of JOff{/ He thinks I'm PERFECT!" ' • JtDGE PARKER HEY. 5AM ... JT MAKE5 ME f)AD TO Tl-lfNK THAT A OORGfOU5 MAN LIKE THA1 WA5 KIL.L..EO IN AN AUTO ACCIDENT ' WHEN DID lT HAPPEN ?--,,.. .... GARt'IELD WMAT 00£& GrARFIELP THE CA1' C)() WHeN HE'~ STOCK OP A TREE? MOON Mt:LLIN8 DOWN 1c.no.,... .... ~ 2UIMl'W , ...... .. Dleeer1: 2 ... IOlapllnlt ~WHATAH'/ MONORABLE CAT WOOLP PO, OF C.OUf\'M: by Harold Le Ooux bv Jim Davis by F~rd & Tom Johnson l f>ll>N'T FINIS~ iH6 SeNTfNC~, KAYO-· So 1MNOT97!! ·~ 27....... 48Curtaln --•ll•n nv ................. loollty ._.~~~~-+-_,. 7Y ..... It"""°' ... ...,.,,.. ........ ,,....v •. 470INMe IV.. ......... ...111 10"--aut .Do .... FtNlll' ttlNKERBt:"N 11H()()6UT IHE NOCLEAR PROTI:.ST RAJ • .J.9 AT WHliE PLAIN5, N8J.l ~ 1 ~MERE ~ ~E ANO JPlfeJ TfM,JJft. APPEAAED I WA6 REAL.le.) ~~INC:! ! FOB •ETTEa oa FOa •OalE f\S l.Ue\.L AS SEINQ. ~.1~ toQ~ W SEE OS RS RIJAL., BAe>IC t-tl.M"N BEtNeel by Tom Batiuk NO I BUT I'VE ~ -rnE Al&JM ! by Kevin Fagan MOM MEV~R ~Ol&>S A~1\4ttM. lla>A~. I/ . - • HUITllGTll llACH I f DUITAll VllllY . ' Dally Pilat TUESDAY,JULY 7, 1981 FEATU RES 83 MOVIES 84 STOCKS 87 The wiring of America: Cable television explodes across the country. . .B5 D 0 'Blood ey' safety cry raised 'EYES ON BALL -Four Fountain Valley youngsters hone their soccer skills in preparation ror a trip later this month or their team to Engla nd and Scotland, where they will com· pete against overse as teams as pa rt or a cultural exchange Deity ---"'•tc ........... progr am or the American Youth Soccer Oq~aniza~ion (AYSO). From left are Mike Smiley, Gary Kn bs, Alison Ohler and Marty Bradley. HB n ixes Onofre support Huntington kids refreshed at park Council t o study ordinance The Huntington Beach City Council has declined to support expansion of t he San Onofre nuclear power plant. O n a 6·0 vote, council me mbers decided to "receive and f ile " a request from Southern Califor nia Edison officials that the city officials support licensing or newly built reactors 2 and 3. Presently . the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board is holding hearings in San Diego on the earthquake safety of the $3.3 million nuclear power plant, located three miles south of San Clemente. "I don't think this council will go on record favoring nuclear power, although I would," said CounciJman Ron P attinson, "so I move we receive and file this request." E arlier in the meeting. Huntington Beach resident Ti m Carpenter told the council that the nuclear quest ion is "an important enough issue to set a p u blic h e aring ," before supporting expansion of San Onofre. T he city councils of Fountain Valley, Fulle rton and Buena Pa rk support expansion of the nu c lear plant, according to Edison officials. F ollowing the ear t hquake safety hearings in San Diego, the atomic safety board will co nduc t proceed in g s to d e te rmine tbe a dequacy of e m er g e n cy evac u ation ]>rocedures for communities surrounding tbe nuclear facility. FV co uncil mulls budget proposals Fountain Valley City Council tonlsht will bear new staff proposals on bow to balance the city's 1181-82 bud1et. The council meets at 8 p.m. in City Hall, 10200 Slat.er Ave . Altbou1b the city baa not adopted a bud1et for the fiacal ye ar that be1an July 1, the council has puaed an interim finance meuure to aasure that the city cari continue to pay its dally bill&. Clty offici als recently estimated that Fountain Valley remalnl about '750,000 abort ln meelln1 ill projected 1111·12 .. ,.... ln add.it.Jon to heartn1 ataff 1UffHlloo1, J'ountaln VaUey counell memben tbemnl•n are acbtduled to make== OD bow to reduce tbe uU .t.ftek. • . The ~u l• eapeetad to bold ~ publl~ beartna OD lbe new ~et laly 14, with -adOptioa •* •lated July 31 . • Peering out from his tattered· H arley -Davidson motor cycle cap, J ustin Christie aimed the white cue ball at the 14 ball near tne com er pocket of the pool ta·· ble , shot and missed. "It stinks," Justi n said. "It's unbearable.·· But it was n't pool shooting that the boy was talking about. He was describing the air quali· t y in his Huntington Beach neighborhood, which is adjacent to a chemical dump excavation now in its 10th week. Holding a pool cue at least a foot a nd a half t alle r tha n himself, t he 11 -year-old ex- plained that his parents decided be s hould spend the summer days away from the foul air near his home on Dunbar Street. They sen t h im to Murdy Park's free "Fun Days" pro- gram that started Monday. The program was established by city officials to provide supervised a ctivities in the fresh air for children 5 and older who live near the excavation on Bolsa Chica Street. southe as t of Wa rner Avenue. On Monday. 15 youngsters wer e brought to the park by their parents. The boys and girls spent the day playing kickball, outdoor games. and pool and ping pong in the park's recrea· lion room . "It's a lot better being here than near that chemical dump s mell, .. J ustin said. "I get sick from the odor. I vomited once." he explained. Other youngsters at the park gam e room agr ee d that the odors made them queasy. And they aren't alone. The ci· ty has received more than 200 Ill· ness complaints because of the odors in the past two weeks. P eople have complained of heada ches, na usea, vomiting, sore throats and burning eyes, according to city officials. State and county he alth of· ficials say recent air tests show the odors aren't to"Xic and pose no long-term health hazards, although they admit the smell can c ause h e adach es and nausea. •'The a m e l h giv e m e headaches and makes me diuy," said Juqn Kittred&e, 9, who lives on 9reenatone Street and a lso waa 1hootlna pool with Ju.attn and other youtb1. •'At home you have to alt In the house because of the ameU and when you do 10 outllde there'• nothiq to do because all the othe r kids 10 somewhere else." Recrt atJon tupervlaor Tessa Vanderloo, 30, 1ald lt'a euy for her and two Ulll\antl to keep the ehlldren occupl.cl dun., U.. 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. houn. SM tald the expects lar1er &rOUPt of younpten u word OD the pro- sram spreads. Planned actlvtt.1.. lh1I nelt In clude Laurel and Hardy films, baseball, wa termelon breaks. hiking in Central Par k and a vis· it to the Adventure Playground in Cent r al Park. Youngsters should bring their own lunches. she s aid. The $3 million chemical dump e xcavation by Mola Develop· m ent Co .. to make way for coo· dominiums, is being supervised by state health officials and could last between three and six more weeks. The three-acre dump was used for oil refinery wastes in the 1940s and an estimated 72,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil is being t rucked to a hazardous waste landfill in West Covina. City officials say the odors from the digging have been re· ported as far away as four miles, but that residents living close to the s ite and in the ge neral onshore wind pattern s uffer the most from the noxious fu mes. ----- The Huntington Beach City Council has formed a committee to recommend changes in the municipal election campaign or· dinance that has been branded unenforceable by City Attorney Gail Hutton. Mrs. Hutton s aid the present ordinance. which seeks to li mit in di vidu a l contribut ions to municipal candidates to $200, is une nfo r cea ble because or technical loopholes. Council members Ruth Bailey. Bo b M an d ie a nd Do n M acAllister will serve on the committee to devise a new or- dinance. Among recommendations sub· milted by Mrs. Hutton to the council Monday was a require· m ent for reporting all campaien contr ibutions before t he elee· ti on. Presently. contr ibutions made in the fi nal weeks of a campaign aren't r eported unW a fter election day. PCHstrip mishaps cited A Huntington Bea ch traffi c collision that took the lives of a Santa Ana woman and her 8- year -0ld daughter last week bu prompted fresh calla for safety improvements along a local sec· lion of Pacific Coas t Highway dubbed "Blood Alley." According to Karl Huy ol the city's traffic engineering depart· ment, tbe Santa Ana woman and her daughter were the 14th and 15th people to die since 1978 u t. result of traffic accidents atone the coastal highway between Beach Boulevard and the Santa Ana River. Huy said that in 1978·80, there we re 97 injury accidents along this stretch. During the period 1976·80, 713 traffic accidents OC· curred along this section. he said. Huntington Beach Police Chief E arle Robitaille, who bas lon1 called for safet y improvements a l one t-his--s tre t e h, •ai-0 h azardous dri ving conditions ha ve been caused by narrow painted median lines, poor light· ing and free bea c h p a rking a long both sides of the highway. ··How many more people are we going to slaughte r down there?" the chief asked. 1 The highway is scheduled for widening and major improve· me nts, but Caltrans officials h ave said the construction is not scheduled.until 1986. The Huntington Bea ch City Council voiced concern about the "Blood Alley" section Mon· day night and created a special committee to press Caltrans for at least temporary safety Im· provements until the construe· lion begins. "Caltrans could take another six years," s aid Councilman Ron Pattinson, who was appoint· ed to the committee with coun· cilmen John Thomas and Don MacAllister. "We can't put a price on people 's lives." Pattinson s uggested that a temporary center divider might reduce the number of accidents caused by motorists s werving over the painted center lines. In an interview prior to the council meeting, Chief Robitaille said he might recommend, if the problems continue and no action Is taken by Caltrans, that the ci- ty "unilaterally" ban parking along Pacific Coast Highway - without the required Caltran.s authorisation. Gary Bork, senior Caltrans traffic engineer who oversees Orange County, sa id the so· called ''Blood Alley" stretch la currently under study by his staff. But he contested some of the city's initial observations. Bork said the Caltrana com · puter that keeps track of acci· dents reported to police hu de- termined that the "Blood Alley" stretch actually bas a lower than average accident rate for com· pa rable highways statewide. ··But that doesn't mean we're not concerned about the accl· dents there," he said. Some city officials noted that the Caltrans figures con.sider an entire year, while HunUnaton Beach may have an eapeclally high concentration or accidents during the summer beacb·s<>ln& months. Bork said Caltrana now Is analyzinl the type of accidents that have occurred alon1 the HunUqtoo Beach stretch, such as median crossovers, strtkinl parked can or pedestrian mil· haps . He said the department would take the steps likely to reduce the most common type ot Hcl- dentl. •'If ellmlnatinl the ParklnC would not eliminate the accl· dents, then we'd be dolq IOIDe people ao injmtice," be said. If median croHOVen an tlae moat common cauae ot aed· Clent•t aapbalt dike medlam could De plaffd alone tbe center of tbe bl1bw~y 1 tb• traffic enatneer ,...,..wa. Bork denied tbat Caltrua baa draHM lta feet OD tbe matter. He aald tbe study ot tbe Hmt· lastoa Beach 1tnteb llbould be com~ ill a few ...a. 111 tldDlt" malt• u aU-outflf· fort to ndute aeeidnu," be aaid. "'n..t'a probabl7 _tbe maet Import.Mt part ol mJ Job." ' DellyNlll .... INFAMOUS 'BLOOD ALLEY' City wanta action Linguists ousted in Panama ~ s pokesma111 for Wycliffe Bible Tran s lator s 'I n c . of Huntington Beach confirmed today that 20 members of i\S s ister organization have been expelled from Panama by the. gove rnment. Do n Lindho lm , associat e director of Wycliffe , s aid the American citizens worked for th e Summ e r Institut e o f Linguis tics, bas ed in North Carolina. He said none was from Southern California. The institute personnel had been involved in researching the languages of primitive tribes in Panama a nd translating tbe N e w Testam e nt into tho,&e lang uages. Lindholm said tb e group's visas had officially expired in 1979, but the institute members had been a llowed to stay in Pana ma while negotiations with the governmen t continued. He s aid the expulsion order was handed down last week. "We 'll be holding meetings within the next few days to d iscuss a ltern ati ve p lans to complete our work in Panama," Lindholm said. He added that one institute mem ber, a citizen of Panama. was still in the country. "We really weren't surprised by tbe order to leave ," Lindholm s aid. "It had appeared for some t ime that the agreements we we re hoping to get were not going to materialize.·· Last March a member of the Summer institute of Linguistici working in Co l ombia wa, k i dnap ped a nd k i lle d by m embers of the urban guerrilla group M-19. Chester A. Bitterman's body was found in.side a hijacked bus on a Bogota street. He had bee.n shot through the heart. Bitterma n was accused by the terrorist group of Qelng a CIA a gen t . The g ue rrillas also accused the institute of being a CIA front. H o w ever , Wycli ffe and S ummer Institute s pokesm en have r epeate d ly d enied the contention , saying their only motive in South and Central America is to spread literacy. But cont roversy see ms to follow the group's presence. In May the government of Ecuado~ ordered the institute to leave the country within a year. Medical unit chief named Jack W . W e lbl e n of Huntington Be ach, executive 'vice president and chief operattns officer of Memorial Hoapltal Medical Center of Lone Beach since 1978, baa been na m ed prealdeDt and cMef execu!Uve olftcer of the medical center. Welblen aueceedl Don.W C. Caraer, who i'eUret from tile po1t after H years •tt• Memorial and lta pf'edee•1ar 8-ltde Holplta1. BB gun ueed in OC holdup? l' A man uel•I wba~ believed to be a BB IUD u.. Plaa nut11.«m Gotdea w• St., ot -•oad•J atternooe\ ac~rclDI to w .. tm.Luter pol\ct oftldala. 1nv.-,eton1aldtbe•::e about-..,..,.. old, made 1etwa)' after t.e Ued up t Phu Hat employeH w h tape. .· II • -1 • • ... ., ., ..... -.. • 112 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, July 7, 1981 i~ . 1 >-''' What national pastime? • • ' , • • • FLA1TENED ROUNDBALL DEPT. -Things are really on the tough these days for those reportorial savants who chronicle the sporting life. The trouble is no baseball. The professionals of the diamonds of America have quit. They're ~ T-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 ®'' on strike. No Angels. No Dodgers. No nothing. Thus the problem for the sporting writers is to find something to write about here in the dead heat of summer. Here on our sterling journal, Los Alamitos racetrack and the Transpac yacht racers have abruptly found themselves drawing heavy amounts of ink. In the desperation of it all, we even ran a fantasy Wor1d Series between the Angels and the Dodgers IF YOU TIUNK that's dipping down into it, the Long Beach paper only yesterday gave its screaming sports banne rline to the fis hing person who pulled in the first marlin of the year. If the Transpac yacht rClcers should join the Angels and the Dodgers on walkout, we may have to start running fantasy yacht races . Maybe we could come up with a match boat race between John Paul Jones and Admiral " Bull" Halsey. On the other hand, we could revert to Great Moments in Sports. Maybe something like this: "HERE WE ARE, ladies and gentlemen, at the 1964 Nassau Speed Week where we're lined up ready for the ~rand Prix-foF Volkswagens. "Look over there folks, right together are racer Dan Gurney , sometimes of Corona del Mar, and famed A. J. Foyt, always of Texas. "Something must be up folks , because Gurney and Foyt have been whispering to each other all week now. "Everybody's ready. The starting line has gone Buggy. They're om "Wait a minute folks ... what's this? Gurney is tailgating Foyt's Bug. Why, he's actually PUSHING it! "JUST LOOK AT THAT -Gurney pushed Foyt for seven laps now in this 100-mile speed contest and they've passed every Bug in the field. It's a maz- ing! "They've only got a quarter-mile to go now. folks and Corona deJ Mar's ~ New faces join Valle y panel s Many new faces are joining a handful of reap- pointed participants on Fountain Valley's advisory commissions and committees . . , The City Council recenUy made its advisory · appointments for 2-year-terms that began July 1. ' The council appointed Glenn Collins, Rod Hos ilyk and Philip Mignanelli to three Planning • Commission vacancies. • Collins, 40, is an 11-year Fountain VaUey resi- dent employed by Southern California Edison. A 6-year Fountain Valley resident, Hosilyk, 41, 1s president of the Rosso Corp. of Irvine. : Mignanelli. 52, a 10-year resident, is an elec- •tronics distributor. He just concluded one year as ··e PlaMing Commission alternate. His wile, Betty ~-Mignanelli, is president of the Fountain Valley ~school District board of trustees. The three new commissioners will replace Frank Bryant, Ed Ruzak and Ernie Vasquez. Only Bryant did not seek reappointment. Appointed a lternate planning commissioner ·was Leonard Santoro, 38. a salesman who current· ly is president of the Greenbrook Homeowners' As- sociation. He will vote on planning decisions whenever a regular commissioner is absent. Three people were named to the Parks and Recreation Commission. 0 Martha Proffitt. 38, was reappointed to the ad- .visory body. She is vice president of Association Administrators and Consultants. Inc., of Irvine. ' Also named as a new parks commissioner was George Paul Olsen, 37. a financial planner with CreaUve Financial Solul.Jons, based tn lrvme. The third parks commission appointment was Ruth A. Rosewitz, 46, an instructor at Long Beach Community College. .., Appointed to the city's Trame Committee ... were John W. Briscoe Ill, Donald Chaney and Car· .: roll H. "Bud" Lancaster. •• Three people were reappointed to the city's Hou.sln& and Community Development Advisory Board: James Dick, Sophie Young and Hazel Courreges. • New appointmenta to this board were Mark Gardner, Karen Holliday, James HugheU, Dennis JCelly, and Karen Polak. Thief back at CM ·scene of crime The thief or thieves who reportedly took about '14,000 worth or d.Jewelry from an east C0tta lleH townhouse .;,,..ldmt cie June 22 ap pariDtb retumed to the IHMoltllecrime. RHldeat Stephanie Au l'Nula &okl pollce • tbat an ICNltloUJ fl 000 ·• ln Jew1Jr1 was taken rrom her Jewelry boll 1omeUme last week. Police wbo lnvesll&•t- ed the June 22 incident said 1 bursJar may have sneaked throuah an open 1tldhia Cl•t1 door leadlnt to tJie townhouse kttehen. The latt1t theft, or- tlcera aaJcJ, apparently was not lbe rHuJt of forced entry. Gurney is hanging on Foyt's bumper like they're two Bugs ma pod! ''But wait! Gurney is pulling out now! He's passing Foyt with just the quarter-mile to go! Gurney takes the checkered flag for victory! "BETTER HOLD everything, folks. Somebody has filed a formal protest against Dan Gurney. They're inspecting his V ·Dub even now. "We've just gotten the word. Gurney is disqualified for entering a California hot rod ins tead of a regulation \. ··With baseball on strike, Mabel, maybe our surf- ing conlest Will make the sporting page:1 Volkswagen. "And so the official winner is -A. J . Foyt!'' • You are left to wonder how Gurney and Foyt eventually split the $1 ,000 -if they did. Thfa sporting re-creation. whether you believe it or not, is brought to you directly from the pages or a tome called "The People's Almanac," by David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace. Surely its accuracy could never be ques- tioned. WHV, THIS r ecreation is so marvelous t.haL I think I'll .clip it and try to peddle it to our sporting editor. Who knows? If the baseball strike keeps going, he might actually beg me for it. Designed, Finished l~stalled 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAI LABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 19n Place ntia Avenue • Costa Mesa CA 92627 The sun's rising, and as it rises so doc" the den1and for clcctrici ty. A" the day gro\\'S hottL'f.. air conditioners and other appliance~ click on i 11 l1on1cs , store s and factories. The electri c loC:1d ~t )~l r~ ... far bcyonq norn1al dcn1and. You can help lightL'll this load -and delay building expensi vc nc\\' generating fi1cil i tic~ -hv clicking off appli ances dt~ring aften1oons, \\'hen dcn1and peak s. Please. Give your appliances the afternoon off ~·oick'.' Southern California Edison . .. ....... . ~ .1' l ;; id " in <" '" 111 ol :U 11 ·' • • 1J ,, 111 i. J_ I . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday. July 7, 1981 H /F NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS QUO"lATtON,IN(l.Ul;>I TllAOUON TMI NIW YOltit.MtDWUT, l>llCl,1( lltC.CANOI' 4.NO ltlf'OllTIO e Y TNI No&IO ANO INntNIT ,. ••• •onoN, OITllOlf ANO CIN(tNN4TI JTO(K ~~\. ..,.~..., ~ .. ~ ' ... ~ U.S. banks losing control? f ThU ia t~ f1rst of c hoo·porf •~•· J One by one, with a persistence that muat compel even the most indiffttrent to worry about the possibly grave threat to economic frt'edom, America's great banks are falling under foreign control. This Involves much· more than purchases or selected U.S. corporation isecurlties by foreign in· vestors. huge though this buying has been. All those w i d e I y publicized stock ~ purc h ase s mean is that foreign capital ----------~~_: is seeking sale· SJ(VIA PORJfR r ly and profit in Z U S . com · _ panies. The on· ly basic implication can be that excessive toials of U.S. dollars circulating abroad are beini! recycled back to us via buying of our stocks. Fine. For many years. American investors have been pouring dollars into overseas markets. an~ whil.~ some of the investors have been "ugly Amencans, in general our money has been enthusiastically welcomed. Now, foreign owners of dollars are return· ing the compliment, and informed sources echo the welcome -be the source of lhe capital European, Arabian, Japanese. English. But OUTRIGHT CONTROL of our multibillion dollar banks? This could telegraph much more than a healthy increase in competition in the arena of in· ternational banking. This could be a signal ot "danger ahead" which it would be abysmal folly for us to ignore as we have been. These are foreign banks (backed with money we cannot possibly trace and identify satisfactorily) tak· ing over U.S. banks. Just consider the scope of foreign bank ownership right now: As of the start of 1981, foreign banks owned 11 of the 100 largest banks in the United Slates. The foreign-owned U.S. banks ranked in order of assets <according to American Banker, Mar. 20, 1981 ) are~ Marine Midland Bank, N.A., Buffalo. New York <Hong Kong & Shanghai Banking Corp.) with assets of $17 .4 billion, ranked 13th; Union Bank, Los Angeles (Standard Chartered Bank. Ltd., London ) with assets of $7 billion, ranked 24th; Republic National Bank. Ne:.v York <Trade Devel Bank Holding, Luxembourg) with assets of $6.2 billion, ranked 28th ; National Bank of North America. New York (owned by six banks) with assets of $4.4 billion. ranked 43rd; Bank of Tokyo Trust Co., New York (Bank of Tokyo, Ltd ) with assets of $3.9 billion, ranked 47th: California First Bank, San Francisco !Bank of Tokyo, Ltd.) with assets of $3.6 billion. ranked 53rd; Lloyds Bank of California, Los Angeles <Lloyds Bank, Ltd .. Lon· don l with assets of $2.7 billion, ranked 72nd : Bank Leumi Trust Co .. New York C Bank Leumi le-Israel. Tel Aviv 1 with assets of $2.1 billion, ranked 93rd. J Henry Schroder Bank & Trust Co .• New York (Schroders. Lld .. London) with assets of $2 billion, ranked 96th ; and Sumitomo Bank. Sao Francisco <Sumitomo Bank, Ltd , Osaka ) with assets of $1.9 billion. ranked lOOth . The sale of a controlling interest in Crocker Na tional Rank in California lo Midland Bank. third largest bank in England , is JM?nding. H that acquisition is consummated <al most cer· lain) Crocker, the 12th largest bank in the United States with year -e nd 1980 assets of $18.9 billion, would become the largest foreign-owned bank in the United States. In California alone, 31 or the 281 commercial banks were controlled by foreign interests as 1981 began On Thursday When foreigners control US. ban~ - what tJ might mean STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORKfAPI F1,..1 0o ... Jone• •·o~ ':loc~•v. Jul • o,._ Hltill l.ow Clow C ... JO Ind •s1.67 ffTts 94191 ,.., JO • ~ 20 Tm 40831 40'17t >99 11 4001t 9 ·~ •' • IS Uu 106.41 107 12 10S 2t 105.91 0 82 • ,.,. u Stk J70 JO m l9 l6s o. 361 11, s n UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORI( tAP) -TPle loll-Ing Ital ""°"'' Ill• -York SCO<~ E.•cll•ll99 '10Cki. end w1rr*'1• tllel MVt -UP tt\41 most end 00-ti. most WIMd on perc..,1 of <"-'Of r"tOercll•U 01 volurM IOI' Moflc,.1y. No securltlti trllllng bllOw S2 are Incl· 14td. Net •n<I percenC119e c11enoes ue t"9 dllf1,.nce !>et-lllt previ.x.s ctosln9 prlce end to6av's ~if'· ort~. .... ,,,. I.Ml Cno P<1. 1 c-01nc n + 1'-Up 10.• 2 Ml(llEnRes 1~ • tit. VD tO 0 J g:11..svce S1 • 4" Vo •·• ; M.'1V1r..;;l J~ ! 1~ 8~ t: 6 ,tlPa MIO 1 "" Up 6 1 7 tJnlvar ~ 7011'1 t\lt Up U t Cero Fr C Hiio • ¥. Vo S.• t PaPL I . Mli'I + ' Up S,l 10 .. hE! 4,61111 )t\lt ,.,, Up 5.4 II 0.nAmOll r.1/t t!'t Up 4.t 12 Pvrllll FHll ~ ... U!> •.t 11 WHn Unit s-. • 141 Up 4.t 4 .. tl,,_ftNY 'lo\ t 14 Up •·: IS lv4iwSllot 11 • • YI UP 4 16 ~lf$U 4,._, oo#,..1\ + IV> UP 4 7 L<Jll Cl)Q Pa 44 ' Off 10.2 2~ IQ OH 10.0 S~ ~OffU ·~ -·~ §:: ... --4... 1·S ~ -n. .4 SV> \.'t Off .a m .. -, ... ~ .) ,r~ :. 1 14 °" u ==~~I ?:? l_.1 ,;:: I p:f ., ... -f~\ , .. 11 ff 7.J --111'1 9U 1.4 GOLD COINS N a'tl/ VCMllC I.Al"') -..._, ..... ....._ flf t11N ~ ,....,.. '""' T~• ~. lndu• S.>02,SOO Tr•n 1,11•,600 Utits 'I06,70Q ltS St~ 7 .•13,80!1 WHAT STOCKS· DID NEW YORIC IAPI Jut 6 P~v Alh•nce<I O.Cllne<I TOd~ d:Io 11•• I~ Un<henQotd J2S Tol•I In.,.• 181• ,.., Ne,. lllQllS • I' "'•"' lowi. Sl WHAT "MHOIO NEW YORK ,AP\ JUI 6 . '~L Prevc 01u Adllen<ecl 0.cllned 480 '" Un<t>.n~o 181 191 TolAI IUUfl eos 1n ...... highs s ,... .. low• 16 METALS N EW YORI< IAPI nonlerrovs ...eUll ortca c-~ cel'IU • POund, u S dnll tlOI'"· ...... ,., ... ".pound ll..c .. 14 cenh • pound, <Mllver.oer. T111 ... m1 -tels w .. k c-lt• 11>. 4'1¥Pt1'-1..-<...,Is e pound, N y Me"wy 5-tll.OO per lletk. ,.,."_ u:is.oo trov 01 .. N v SILVER NEW VORIC IAPI -H-ft He,.,..., 1llver todev Sl.30, off u . E.~therd .11 ......... uo. oft t0.12. ·-M lllver $1.tll off$0U7 . GOLD QUOTATIONS .,,..._....,...,...., Sele< llMI -kl OOld pr i(H today ~: rnornlntthilnt ~.oo. ueai.u. LH .... : •tt•r._n llMI~ .-OJ.JS, Jtl.U. ,.•rlt: lf9-flalneW~•1 • .,.u.a.. ,., • .._,MOS.II. \IP 11.12. l•rlcll: late flal~ .... 00, "' $1. ... ,.00 ...... MaHJ & Mar-11. elllJ ct•ll't •vet MOS.00, "II •1.u . ........... , Oftly Mlly ...,... MOUi, $1.U , ......... , Oftly clally ...... IMric. Mtl.20, ue Jt.IO. 'svMBOLS Read all todays news I everyday in the -Orange COa1t DAILY PILOT/Tue1day, July 7, 1981 ' ' ts new. ts TWENTY CLASS A OGARETIES More --·--------.-- . . . ' • .f • ---_...,._ . -----~ ~ ---~--....... -.. ........ . . ~ ._,. . \ Daily Pilat TUESOAY,JULY7,1981 ·H/F #i~·~ -:i~ "-.'-. ~ 'J --.. _ . CLASSI Fl ED CS .. McEnroe isn't a bad guy, at least according to these two people . C2 Quarterhorses at_ Los Alamitos have the undivided attention of Frank Filek (with binoculars ) on a recent night of racing. That's Luckiest Jet with the lead . Horse racing's answer to the 100-yard dash It takes a quarterhorse just a rew seconds to reach a speed or 50 miles per hour -from a standing start in the gate. "Amazing animals," comments one of- fi cial at Los Alamitos Race Track where each night (but Sunday) race fans are treated to plenty of racing. complete with exactas and Pick Six betting. The races range from 350-yard dashes to 870.yard marathons. And while they don't last long, they'll stiU keep everyone on the edge of their seats for what seems like agonizing hours. ' Currently, Los Alamitos is in the midst of its biggest program of the year -a 91-day quarterhorse meeting. How exciting is quarterhorse racing? "It's not uncommon to have a photo finish. In fact. it's not unusual to have the entire field within a length at the finish," comments one Los Alamitos offi cial. Some people will tell you they like thoroughbred racing more t han quarterhorse dashes. Others say they're impressed with the sheer power and speed of a quarterhorse. If you wanted to make an analogy to track, the thoroughbred race would be like the mil e, while the quarterhorse race would be closer to the 100-yard dash. There is still plenty of action left in the current quarterho rse meeting. The $150,000-added Skoal Dash for Cash Derby is set for Saturday, while the Sl million . Dash for Cash Futurity for two year olds is set for Saturday, July 18. On Monday. Los Alamitos will feature the 870-yard, $25,000-added Table Tennis Slakes. followed by the popular $100,000 Go Man Go Stakes July 17. Still to come are the $50,000-added Las Nin as Stakes (July 31). $100,000 Anne Burnett Stakes (Aug. 1). and the $150 000 Los Alamitos Championship (Aug. 15 ). ' Horse race fans are treated to nine races each night ( 10 on Friday and Saturday nights). and exactas are offered on the first, fourth, sixth, seventh and fin al two races. Los Alamitos seats 17,000 comfortably and averages about 8,000 fans each racing night. In this Saturday's Skoal dash, all eyes will be on the overpowering gelding Sgt. Pepper, the prohibitive favorite. Racing fan Kathy Mundt fleft J awaits official results on the board. while. from left, Debbie Desmond, Tammy Owens and Barbara George celebrate a win. Potter steals show on opening night By EDZINTEL Of tlle Deify ...... S'8ff For Martina Navratilova, it was a case of too many hours ln the air and not enough on the ground. It's more commonly known as jet lag and for the fier y Navratilova, what was 8 p.m. for everyone else gathered at the Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club for the debut of Team Tennis Monday night. was really like 5 a.m. the next mom· ing for her. Navratilova touched down in Los Angeles around 12:30 p.m. Monday after a 14·hour flight from England where she bad spent the last two weeks playing at Wimbledon. 8)' 6 p.m .• she was in Fountain Valley. practicing with her Los An1eles Strings teammates of the newly.formed Team Tennis Lea1ue. By 8 p.m., she was pla)'IDC the ftnt of her three sets .,alnst tM CalifomJa Oranges in a 1in1le1 match a1ainst Barbara Potter. Wbat reaulted was a 31·28 vie· tory for the Oran1es ae .Nnratilova was upset by Pot· ter. 1~5. before teamln1 with Terry Holladay in women's doubl• and VUay Amrttr-1 ln mixed doubles to narrowly win ber nm two set.I. "I felt like J waa ln the match tcml•llll but I was Ured and alut· li•ll," NanatUova, c:utrntly ranted No. 3 in t.be world. ad- mitted afterward. "My timing was off and I couldn't get ac- climated. Plus, It felt very warm and the balls were very different in bounce compared to Wimbledon." An enthusiastic crowd of 1,724 watched as Potter. 19, staved off Navratilova's powerful game noted for a rocket-like serve, with a superb return-volley game. Potter, ranked as high as 16th in the world recently after tum· ing pro in 1979. won the hearts of the crowd winning the final two games after the set was tied at 5-5. She earlier had teamed with Sharo n Wa ls h to give the Oranges critical points in a 7-6 loss to Navratilova and Holla· day. Later, she would play a lte)' role in the final set as she and Sherwood Stewart won the third game lo overtime to take the match. Tonight the same two teams will meet at the Strings' home court at the Forum. · · In the other major surprise c:A the evening, Stewart defeated Amritrtj1 7·6. Amritraj was a aemifinaliat in aingld at Wimbledon last week. Potter. on the other hand. wu anything but slu11J1h. ThOulb she bu combated the Jiu durlq lhe past two week1, 1he matched Navratilova's qulckne11 and c:a me up with aome nicely placed ahota. Yachts dropping like flies Four knocked out of Transpac race in early going Martina Navratilova By ALMON LOCKABEY Delly "9l ....... W11tw The attrition rate in the bien· nial 2,225-mile Los Angeles to Honolulu race is starting early this year -even before ·the yachts get into the blustery and squally northeast trades . Four of the 74 scheduled starters are already knocked out of the race with no severe weather conditions reported. Weather reports from the neet Monday indicated northerly winds ranging from 14 to 20 knots -,depending on the posi· tion of those reporting. Sea con- ditions have been in the three to four foot range. Most gear failure or dismast- ings usually occur when the yachts are knocked down by squalls and rough seas during the middle and latter stages of the race. There has been no word from the three yachts which have abandoned the race and headed back toward the mainland. The yacht Rodeo Drive, which was dismasted Sunday night, report· ed that she did not have enough fuel to power back to port and was requesting a fuel drop from the Coast guard. The yacht Regardless, which abandoned the race because of a rigging failure, is apparently jury-rigglng a shroud and at· tempting to sail home. Strike talks get entertainillg NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe National Labor Relations Board refumed ita cue a1almt major league baseball today before an admlniatrative law judge who asked Mark Belanger and Bob Boone for their autographs after the flnt day of beartnp. Melvln Wellea, the NLRB'• cblef ad· ministrative law jud1e, lllteaed with a bemuaed amUe to the testimony offend llODdaf u t.be labor board aoutbt to force manapment to open lta boob to the unloa. ''Jam a baseball fan," tbe Judp Hid. "lloet of Q ~ I .root for the v-.... WMD WMldnOOD bad • team I HW 30 ••m• a,..... Now I ... 10 or 11, almost all of them In Baltimore." Tbat'a wby tbe Judie mutt baH been particularly lmprHaed by the preHnce of Belanger, the Orioles' ahortatop, who wu tailed to testify for tbe union. "It was intereatlna to have Belan1er," Welles said. "He takea eo many bita away trom Yantee batters. I like the fact that be bata about .JOO against ua. tbou1h.' · Welles, is In char•e of a11i1nin1 ad· mlniltratlve law Jud1es for c-.. Ullt tbe OM the NLRB la punuiu qalnlt tbe ownen. "I umped tills one to mJMll, beeaUM It IOUftded ......,...... It will be more tun for me." Actlnc on behalf of tbe union, tbe NLRI 11 aeekinl to Pf0¥9 mau......-bu bu..._.. ta · bad faftb bf .,.,..._ to.,_ lta ftnaMlaf.baolla ID ne1odat.1oae wldle. at tM AIM time, •uto.i dub ownen Md co.Dmt....._. BliWte Kubn bne a. C8eeST81&S,~CI) Drifter was reported sailing home under reduced sail with a damaged steering gear. Gryphon, the first boat out of the race, had no problem other than disappointment for the crew. She was dis masted at the start of the race. As for those still left in the race, the battle for first to finish bet w.een Merlin and Christine was still a tossup Monday. Merlin had apparently taken over the elapsed time lead as her position· report placed her about seven miles closer to Honolulu. corrected , -·····---~----·-----------.,. .. -.. • -,. - - -... -.-• --~ ---___,,,. -~ -.. ~ W' -------. r-T . .., -~ -------------~ _,_,.. ... ------·-----~~·--~--~~-----~------------------------;........:~--------------____. H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 ~--------------------~· Pro golfers spurn striking players Prqm 4P •patclltea OAK BROOK, Ill. -ProfeulonaJ !I golfers are ahowin• no sympetby for . · baseball's striklng players. "I 'll bet if you polled every eolfer at the Western Open, you wouldn't find one who didn't side with ~ baseball owners," said Howard Twitty, a member of tbe PGA Tour's Tournament Players Polley Board. Such disdain for tbe baseball strike is un- derstandable. In golf, every man is for himself. In effect. he's an independent busi- nessman. He must p~y his own expenses and must de· cide when and where he wants to perform next. Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1984: Johnny Callison smashed a three·run, Dint.h·lnninl home ru.o off Dick Radatz to live the NaUonal Lea1ue a 7-4 victory in fhe AU.star same at New York'• brand new Shea Stadium. The victory enabled the Natlonala to Ue t.he All-star aeries for the first lime. aa each league had now won 17 games. On this date in 1937: Lou Gehrig's two-run homer eave the American League an 8-3 All·•tar game vie· tory at Washington's Griffith Stadium before 31,391 fans. includinc President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Charlie Gebrlncer had three hits for the winners. while Joe Medwick had four for the Natiooals. Winning pitcher Lefty Gomes of the Yankees burled three innings of one-bit baU . The Jame's most memorable moment came in the third inning, when Earl Averill's line drive broke the right bit toe of Diuy Dean, shortening the St. Louia ace's brillianecareer. Today's birthdays: Hall of Fame second baseman Billy Herman is 72. Cleveland pitcher Len Barker is 26. Boston infielder Glenn Hoffman is 23. Fans plan All-star protest HARTFORD, Conn. -Pssst . Keep this under your hat: There are some fans who are using· their •• aP ......... Mulligan taps Crossley for tJef UC Irvine baaketbaJI coeeb BW m Mulll1an tapped a famJUar r....-votr . of talent when be announced Mooday that be bas recruited Curtil er.aley from Sad· dleback CoUe1e. Mulll&an la the former Saddleback coach who broueht All-American Kevin Ma1ee, amona others, to UCI with him lut year. Crossley, a 6·7 forward who helped the Gauchos to a 3>-9 record and a berth ln the 1tate playoffs, will be a aopbomore when be dODI an Anteater uniform next teuon. An all·atate election wblle at Eaatridl• High ln Kankakee, Ill., Cl'Olllley averaaed 15.f points per 1ame and 7 .9 rebounds for the Gauchos laat season. "I think Crossley can step in and help us immediately," said Mulligan. Mulli1an also announced thar Rick Ciaccio, a graduate of Newport Harbor Hilb, ha1 also received a scholarship to play at UCI. The 6-9 center ave.raged more than 16 points per 1ame this season. He was also named to the AU· Sunset League second team. Duran to return to the ring Roberto Duran will return to the • ring after nearly a year's layoff since losing the WBC welterweilbt cham· .. Baseball players ought to try ·playing golf for a llv· 1 ing," said former PGA champion Al Geiberger, part Geiberoer of the PGA Tour since 1960. "No guarantees, all expenses paid -by yourself. I'd like to hear them compJain then ," said Geiberger, whose best year of $175,693 came five years ago. Twitty, the winner of an average of $170,000 in his last two years, boils over the big con· tracts down-the-line baseball players command. heads to stage a protest over the baseball strike. Jerry K ritz, a 27 -year-old native of Providence. R.I., wants every disenchanted baseball fan to wear the cap of his or her favorite team on July 14. That's the scheduled date of the All-star game, which has been put in jeopardy by the 25-day walkout. DOWN ON THE FARM -Atlanta pitcher Gaylord Perry rests on a hoe while tak- ing a break from his farm chores at his home in Williamston, North Carolina. ·Perry began work on his farm the day after the baseball strike started. pionsbip to Sagar Ray U..rcl last Nov. 25 when he fights NIDo Gomaln Aue. 9 at a site to be determined . . . cwt Abel, track and cross country coach ,at Long Beach State for the past three years, said that he is leaving the school to devote more time to his real estate lnterests ... Weekend performances at the Western Open GoU tournament earned Jack Nlcklau, BUI Rogen and Howard Twitty spots on the 12· member U.S. Ryder Cup team beaded for England in September ... Tom Weiskopf fired a five-under-par 66 to share the first-round lead in the Jerry Ford lnvilational Golf tournament with three other pros . . . Elroy "Craay Le1s" Hlracb, athletic director at the University of Wisconsin and Ed "Moose" Krause, retired athletic director al Notre Dame, will receive the Distinguished American Awards at the Chicago Chapter of the National Football Foun· dation Hall of Fame annual luncheon next week. "Look at what they make," be said. "They have one good year and they get a contract for $400,000 a year for the next six years. And they get it no matter what they do." Quote of the day . Baseball Hall of Famer Johnny Mhe: k "The only spirit you see today in baseball is the kind you drink." "It may be kind of hokey," said Kritz, who is a clerk with a Hartford law firm this summer as be prepares for his third year in law school at De Paul University. '·But I want to show both sides what ran loyalty is all about. "Neither the players nor the owners would be in the financial position they a re today if it we re not for the fans plunking down their dollars at the ballpark," be said. Kritz's plan is for fans to wear the caps to work as an expression of solidarity. Walker may challenge NFL rule ATLANTA -University of [i] Georgia All America running back 4 • Herschel Walker says the National Football League regulation against signing UD· derclassmen is unfair and he may challenge it. A similar rule was recently adopted by the Canadian Football League after its Montreal team made an attempt to draft the sup-er freshman off the national champion Bulldogs' squad this s~ring. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -Salt Lake City at Phoenix, 7 p.m., KMPC (710). From Page C1 STRIKE. • • moaned the game's financial condition. Kuhn and three club owners, Jerry Reinsdorf of the Chicago White Sox, Calvin Griffith of the Minnesota Twins and Ruly Carpenter of the Philadelphia Phillies, were scheduled to testify today. Also scheduled for tonight is a meeting of the ex· ecutive board of the Major League Players Association. The 26 player representatives will be briefed on negotiations in their strike, which entered its 26th day today with 13 more games canceled for a total of 324 lost since the walkout began June 12. On Thursday, the 26 club owners will meet in New York for a briermg from chief negotiator Ray Grebey and the Player Relations Committee. No new strategy for All-star game The owners' meeting came a bout after eight teams re- portedly asked league presi- dents Lee MacPhail or the American League and Chub Feeney of the National by tele· gram to set it up. The New York Times said that the New York Yankees and Mets, Houston Astros, Cleveland Indians, Chicago White Sox, San Diego, Padres, Texas Rang_e.rs1 and Baltimore Orioles had re- quested the meeting, the first by the owners since the strike began. The Times also said that two of the owners of those teams identified Edward Bennett Williams, owner of the Orioles, as the main force behind the re· quest. Most of the opening day of the NLRB hearing was devoted to testimony from Marvin Miller, executive director of the union, who traced relations between the players and management which led to the strike. Miller spent more than two hours on the stand, testifying un· d er questioning from Mary Schuette, the NLRB attorney. and David Silberman, represent· ing the union. When they were through, management counsel Louis Hoynes asked only that Miller confirm two bits of testimony he had offered last month in Rochester, N. Y., before federal judge Henry Werker. Both in· volved quotes attributed to Miller regarding poverty reports of management. Hoynes quoted Miller as hav· ing said, "Why should I believe Bowie's annual roormoutb speech?" and, "Al I ,hear i~ more and more losses and all 1 see is more and more capital 1aina." Miller confirmed both quot.es, just u be had in the Rochester case, when the NLJ~B aoupt an lnJuncdon aaainst m•na1ement, dela)'inc for one year ita free a1ent compenHliOll plan All systems go although time is short CLEVELAND<AP) -As the strike by baseball players nears its one-me.nth anniversary. the chore of preparing for an All· star Game that may never hap- pen has become increasingly frustrating. ''Extremely frustrating,'' said Cleveland Indians spokesman Bob DiBiasio Monday a s baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn declined to cancel the game, .scheduled for Municipal Stadium next Tuesday. "THERE'S NO CHANGE in plans," said Gabe Paul, presi· dent of the host Indians. "We're going full steam ahead and will until the last possible minute." Thousands of souvenir T· shirts, mugs and pennants are locked away, 5,000 pounds of bot dogs are stored in the Stadium's freezers, 50,000 programs are printed and 1,800 hotel rooms are reserved for incoming media and baseball officials. "I'm still processing creden- tials. We're still getting re- quests," DiBiasio said. More than 500 media representatives planned to cover the event. JUST IN CA.SE -Cleveland Indians official Bob DiBiaso unpacks a Most Valuable Player trophy for this year's AU-star ., ......... baseball game. Whether the game will be played is still in doubt. BUT NO ONE seems op- timistic that the players' strike will be settled in time to save the game. at least for its scheduled date. McEnroe receives kind words He gets them from the two people who knoip him best-mom and dad By WILL GRIMSLEY ·~ ...... cw· a a • John McEnroe. Sr., and his wife, Kay, knew they bad something special on their hands back on Feb. 16, 1959 when an Alr Force doctor in Wiesbaden, Germany, lift. ed the newly bom baby boy by his feet and brought forth the breath of life with a few hard thumps on the bottom. . "He was pretty lively then," says the elder McEnroe, a successful attorney from the auburban·like Douglast.oo area of New York City. "He seems always to have bad a natural affinity for sports. He could hit a thrown ball with a bat when he was two.'' KAY McENROE, the attractive, ebullient mother, recalls that her No. 1 son was the ''tint.est" in almost everything be tried. "He talked sooner and walked sooner than most children. He made the top grades in hia class. As lone u I can re· member, be bad this fierce desire to win." John Patrick McEnroe, Jr., it the talk of the lemla world -the younpter with the unruly curia, familiar red headband and low temper fuse whose left-banded brilliance baked Bjorn Bora'• streak of five !Dell'• ebampion•biPI and 41 con· aec:utlve mateb vletorl• at Wimbledon. In Pl'uduetn1 WI MllHUonal upset, tbe 22·year-old tbot·makint wlurd enlarpd upon bia reutauon u the 1ame'1 bad tioy -·•&uper 8rat," "llac t.M Slrtfe," "Mae· ln·Row," ''Prince ol Walll," pick your own ell._ -wbUe plllq up a eert• of nn .. for bit court tantruma. .... ,.. ...... •ParU World Mk· ~: Wlall ..._ Mel:Dl'oe .._.?Diel be laan••..,...• •kkt? W•be.-m· ..... bJ .... ,.,..., 8ttH ... tMlr WI ... a .................... elder: JObn and Kay McEnroe derelict in their obUJa· tions to apply a tight rein? "Absolutely not," insists Kay McEnroe. "We have three boys, John the oldest. They were taught to be COOJiderate and polite. When they weren't, they were punished. John has had his share of pad· dling. "WE NEVE& PUSBl!D any of them. We wanted them to grow up to be normal, . 'He is 'basically very, very shy, a private person.' healthy kids but at the same time ln· dividuals. There was never an attempt to put them in a mold." The mother said youna John bu been misrepresented by aome of the media and misunderstood by the public. "He is basically very, very 1hy, a private person," she aa1d. "He la clou to a .ceniua. He ii a perfec:UOnllt. He can't abide alotb and indJtterence. In 1cbool1 he won a medal for hip 1radel. He playea baatetbell. 1oecer and bueball, besldes tenn1a, and 80l mad wbee be tboqbt bla teammai.weren't 1otn1 all out. "WHEN RS GOT bll ftnt racket at aae of ellbt, he wu be.UBI U.. U. and lJ. year-oldl. Once be fell OD 'a lalcJCa. and broke bit left wrtn. Re dldll't t.tlll aaJbod,J. He kept ..._,.. tmnla 1llldl oae daJ a bump came up • Ml um and X-ra)'S tJtowed a fracture. "That'• Jobn ... John Sr., who was serving the Air Force in Germany when John was bom, said his precepts to his boys have always been "tey hard, do your best and give it your all." "That may sound corny,'' he added, "but we've always impressed upon the klds to stand up for their rilbts. ''I am not in total agreement with every· thing that happens in public and I've oftea told John that be lometimes over· reacts on line calla, although he's general· ly right. Yet I think It absurd the way the All·England Club escalates to the level it does in the treatment of such lnltances." MRS. McEN&OE SAYS, wblJe abe eets uncomfortable when John laundles iDto one of hi.s tantrums, she doesn't think the punishment fits the crime. "I am outraged by the actiom of the AJl· England Club," she said. "I let the feellnc tbat the powers are trylnl to break the back of tb1a 'Utt.le upetart from the States.' "John bu received ton1 of letters, much of it from Britlah fans. They w-1e him to . please not aive in to the olftclala wbo are out to iet blm." McEnroe'a parents accuse the All· En1land Club and a se1ment ol the BriUlb preu of etlfaliq ln a penonal vendetta a1aln1t the talented new Wimbledon cbamplen. "I am outra•ed bJ It," tbe modaer' 1ald. She related that lat year llbotOll'QIMn allpped into Jobn'a room aDCl Jumped out ol U.. cl<Mta at blm. ID tbe wild lftM at London'• Reatlarow Airport SundQ, wlMD llel:aroe wu pnpar1ai to lean w1tla Ida Da¥tl CU., tummatel, lbe Mid....._. r•"9n ebuecl blm tbroup • dbalq ..... ...... kDoUed emir -Old •• -tlMt airplane ramp. "The game hasn't been can· celed," said Chuck Adams, a spokesman for Kuhn. "We 're continuing to re-evaluate it day by day. But obviously a decision has to be made soon. We 're rapidly running out of lime." If it is not played next Tues· day , the game could be rescheduled. with July 30, the second rain date, the most logical choice. July 15 is the p'rimary rain date. "THE THING TREV obvious- ly don't want to do is cancel the game," DiBiasio said. ''A postponement would be OK." Cancellation of the contest would cost the Cleveland economy $4·$6 million, according & to Frank Carrell, vice president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau. Also, the baseball players' pension fund would lose about $2 million. The decision rests with baseball's executive committee, comprising Kuhn and team owners from Detroit , Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Kamas City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston and Pittsburgh. IF THE GAME IS saved, Municipal Stadium will be pre- pared. A month without baseball has left its natural turf in ex· cellent s hap e, and Al Friedlander, Stadium Corp. vice president, said there would be no problem rounding up salespeople to staff concessions and souvenir booths. "If they say, 'No AU -star Game this year,' we'll run a sale for about two weeks and sell the souvenirs at half price," he said. Contingency plans have not yet been made for the 78,000 peo- ple who bought tickets for the soldout contest. "Obviously if the game is played July 30, the July 14 ticket would be good," DiBiasio said. "As far a refunds, that'll prob- ably be the last thing they de· clde on." The All-star Game has been canceled only once since the first one was played in Chica1o's Comiskey Park in 1933. That was io 1945. Pier swim slated at Balboa Saturday The Sixth Annual Pier to Pier ocean swim will be held Satur- day, startln• at 10 a.m. at the Ball>oa Pier llfeauard tower II. Cqnteatants wlll swim to a buoy located JOO feet from lbore, swtm north to a buoy located ju.st south ot the Newport Pier. It is adviled that each swim· mer be accompa.n.led by a ,.cl· dler and wear a bJilhUy coknd. swim cap. Slx divt.lom wU1 be awarded tn botb men'• aad women'a' claa .... fl'Om junlor to muua. Cheek·ln Ume raee day ii t : 1J a.m. at Ulepard tow• II. Eatrtea are anllable at tM Newport Buda Oceaa ~ A11oclaUoa offlee, located at _.Newport 81¥.t. btry. fM·la $1 or 15 UM M1 ol. the raee. ' • NASl ' wan•• .. OIYlllC* If L •P eA ,_ L.o6A....... 12 t It M M • S... 0199D II 10 a JI JO tO ..,. • u » ,. 17 7S S.n J-I U 17 4t M 74 NCMITNWHT DIYIMC* VMCO<i-U • e U 41 UJ S.ettle IJ 10 50 41 fa 1\0. C•te•,., 10 11 ,, a a a Portl•lld 10 10 • " • • E*-... I II a e 12 • •AST••• DIYlllON 11 5to»•HO 10 10 lS ,. •• • 10 n •a• SUl641MJ6 IOUTMe ... DIYlllCMl Fon.~ 1> • >1 n ts"' Atlante II t 40 Joi » ff1 Tampe ._., t IJ >S a JI 11 Jack_,,,llle IO II 27 2t 13 17 CUfTaAL. DIYlllCNt Clll<aeo 12 1 4S a lS 111 Ml....,.. 12 • • ,. » • T111w 11 10 a a » ff1 Oalla1 2 It 14 .. u 13 SI• points a,. -•ded for a raguletlefl w OV9r11me vktory. F ... r polnb .. , a .......... victory. OM -.01 point for ewry goal tc:ored wltll •"'"'""""of t"'9e,.. ..-. No -· polftt Is •-did for o~lme or SlloolOlll goell: -.....rse- No....-sc-.1ec1 T ... .,.,._ S.attlt • Jac~lll•. 11 NASL scortna (~Jmelf) 8-e A Ptl.. Cllln-.Jle, ,._ Y-21 U 12 91 Kldd,Allanla u .. 4 • c:abeftat, ...... y-,, 12 • • Granltza, ~ It 10 1 11 CUllOIH, Ft u..I. 10 10 1 21 Gerber. Celgary 12 11 4 » s101-k, s.. OletlD It t 1 a 2S L.orhner, v-wr It 1 11 » HUI,,,._.... 11 7 11 U ~n1,E-1' I I ,. M<Keftlle, Tlllaa ti I I M KI rschfler, E*'-WI 11 t 4 22 Chllel, Al-ti t 4 22 van Oet Elst, .._ v-21 s 12 22 Grfffl, Jac"-ivllle U I 5 21 Steff41f1Motfl, Chkaeo u t > 21 NU.le,,..,Ml,_.. IO 7 7 21 _,_,.. 1t • 4 • Sono, Toronto 17 1 I ID Bftl, Safi -It 7 • :llO velefltlna. vwrc.-tt • 1 :ID L09 Alemft09 MOllOAY'l8•1ULTI , ...................... ~ l"lrSI race -KMrt Te 1Mltc11911l, 6.JI, 4 .•• J.•;~8'1111 ...... 1,aJI, 7.•; My Satlft Dectl IW .... }, 'Al. $1 eucta ,..,,...,, ... Sec ... ,... -aMtle IM IAMlr), U1. 4.•. a•;~ OWis 10.wz>. ,. .. , 1.AI; 8rlglll Polky CP.,11,.1. Tlllrd reu -J-Jet CTr-el, 11.20, ... 4.Jll; Olfty•'• l>t'MM (9erd), 10.20, UO; C-"9tky (MllcMll), S .•. Feuf111 r--Off My ltW IClwltm), S..411. I.to. UO; Ulle To Ge CCT....,.I. SA. UO; Jet·s~a.1ear.u1.•.a.Ueuc1a Ur41 peldQ2M, Ftttll race -,_....... R-Ot...U, 4..0, 1.10, 2.40; e.n 1M1tdlall>. s.•. 2•; ...,._ CP..,llnal,2.<IO. Sl•tll race -Polly ... IMlldWll), ...... l.20, 2.•; Viva VIiia 1Hal11, J.IO, 2•; a.it Cllarrner IBroobl, •··· '2 ..... CH) peld u1.•. S..,.nlt\ race -J9tt 0 U.:k (~), 1 . .0, •.:llO, UO; TOOlln H R11llfl 114af1.1, s.JI, 4.•; EpkMlfar IFryelai'l. JM. U eucta (~l peldUf.40. Eighth race -Priem B119 (Fry.S.yl, M.40, Jt.IO. 14 . .0; Sound V4lfll11rt CHar11, 4.IO, J.00; T"" Bomb (Br...-s), 2.40. l2 tucta (f-j) pakl'*-20· '2 PIO Six 11·» 1+') peld MU.to wltll f2 wlM l"9 ll<k .. s lllw "°"81. U Pl<k Six conaotatlon peld $13.60 wllll f2• wlml"ll tickets (low llor,.,,I. Nlnlhrac.-WlnnlflllCOpy CAdalrl, 11..tO. 10.IO. •.40; Miu Tripi• Olel ICercloul. 11.40, •.60; T_,, Polley IH•rtl, 2.40. '2 ea· ecta C._.I Pllld $1'2.00. Atte..-e -7, .. 1. Los Al•mltos atendln9• ,,..,.,...... J.,., •> Carelou Harl Trea111re Creager Mite hell Cterl1M Adair ~:!~ 8roollt Sch••-ldl Cuc lo 8 lo0rfl4Ylll Welch Harri• Colello RolllbllH'll Wooelholm ,_, Stelnmlller" JOCaeYS Ta.-111eas .......... 414 7S 90 S1 .., .. .,S4 m •1 ,. • -0.,. J2AS4Ua -l1 21 ,. , .... lS 22'161124 115 21 ti " 240 20 24 2' , .. , ...... -S4 ., • 9'2•1011 14t " 22 " " 11 u • "' .. 11 12 ,. ,. t • 154 " 7 • Ill I• 10 1S m ia " ._ ""'' ::V'==& ................ 1.Ttlf'fl..,._ .... 2.All....,,. t.141 a......... ..,... 4.Mllle~ l,Mt J. J.. ...... t,IJt .,._., ... n.tt1ng •eW....-r CAlt'a ~ -11 .....,.., 110 ..... ...., m c.10 ...._ 1 -...... 4 rock <Od. '°'""'' ...._) -HS ....-n: I Mna<Ud9, IS t.Nto, 1,Jllll ..... -., W callee M•. J4 '9<1l cM, t llelllMlt, M1 mackere4. 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"llOflllo, 1 llal*'l. ••oo.oo -m .,.... .. , 2 111wtlft u.. 126 callal llleM. SO ..,.Ito, II barracude, IU mackerel, W rock coel .•• , .. -207 .... , .... , ,. llOnlkl, 1,010 MKllM91, 1• rocll <Del. SAlf NDllO C2im St. ~I -" .... lera: ID <alko besa, l7J .. ne1 Naa, 54 lloflllo, • Mn'Kude, s yellowtall, 2 llelllM, J2 albacore. ,...,. O' c.111 -110 .,.i.n: Joi ••bac-. 6» --.. 1 yeltewUll, 12 barrac-. 2 wlllte -bau, I -llD, 22 <allco NM, Mmacllarel. LDlf9 aeACM , ......... l"lerl -121 a1191en: tJ7 MKQrel, 1 -•to. uo _... bau. IOllilrt ...,.I -112 .,,...,.., • elN<ore, S Wrkllda, 1,1• land Ilea, 1 .... t._ ..... l•AL MACH -tM ..,.1en: 111 _... bau, JJO rock cDd. oceAMStM -1111 .,.... .. , • -*· 2 .. callee .... 7S MflCI -.. • yel!owtall, S1 roc:k cod, 714 ..ui c.OCI. IAlll 01eeo CM&M UHi ... Pl .... MH'S, ....... ~I -.Wt aftlllen: 411 a111acore, • .,.i~1. 241 <alko best, Jt aalld ..._, " wracllda, tu '*"•· "' me<kent, 1 b!Wfln •-. J wlllte IH bas6, • roc:k Cod. ~ ' I ,, ~ Uttle L••au• TOUaMAMlllllT °' (MAMf'tOMI 1•11rtcu1T..,, 1 • •• Cet we.Naca.t,M ... £911 .... ) ..... .,..~ ... lure RoCll ....... 6, Hlll'ltll'lflon Vellay 2 T ....... ,._ O<e•n•,... NattoNtl n. BOlaa, s:• ...... .,. . ._ FOllfllelfl Valley H«tll vs. Westmlfl- Amerkafl, S:JO ,........,. ............ ._ Oc eanvlew ~-llon•l·8olw wlflflar v1. Robin-, S:JO ...... .,. ............. ._ O<ean v,... Amerl<., vs. F-leln Valley Nor1 ... Wlntm!Mler Amerl<an wl-r. 5:a !Cha...,_. -... Satwrday M 1 p.m.I M•)or LHQU• l•eders AMl.alCAlc LeAOUI. RUNS: ._.._, Oekl•ncl, ... ; Evens, Boston, .w; C-, ....... a ; L.a1111-. Botton. 37; Mowpllr. Oeklall<I, 31. HI TS: Lansford, lloston, 75; Olivar. Tex· aa, 75; Evans, Bost..,, 72; ._.._, ,...,..., 72; C•,.._, ....... 1l; Henelet-, Oekland, 12. DOUBLES· Olll, Kanwo1 City, 1'; Armaa, Oeklend, 16, Ollwr. hus, IS; L.antforcl. Botton, u : P.clorelt, Se.tile, I•. TRIPLES: Cnllno, Ml-Mlle. 6; Griffin, Toronto, s: Belrws. Chicago, S; Lemon, Chl<•eo. s; s Tied wtth •· STOLEN BASES. H4lflder-.. Daltlaflel, »; Crul, Suttle. tt; 0 1-, CleYeland, 17; LeFlore, Chlceoo, U; BIH'flbr1. Balll,,..,,.., 12 STRIKEOUTS: llerl<er, Cle¥411and, 70; Blylevtn, Cleveland, '7 ; Flenagan, B•lllmore, 61; Oevls, New York, .0, l.aonard, K.-Clty, 60. NATIONAL LeAOUe RUNS: Colllfll, Cln<t,....U, .W; Scllmlell, Phlledelpf\la, 40; Raines, llMntrMI, tt; ...... drlck, SI. l.olll1, 11; 0.-, MontrMI, 3'; Fos.ter, Clndnrwrll. ». HITS: R-. Pllll-lplll•, 72; COftCeiKIOll, ClnclnnMI, 67; GoCllflC, Cln<lflNll, '7; Grll· lay, Cln<lllMll,'7; ....... DOdeM'&. 67. OOU8LES : 8ucllnar, Ollwgo, It; Cof>. cepclon, ClnclMatl, 19; Hernendea, St. LOllll , 14; Cllamblls4, Au ...... 14; ...... DMeeft,14 .. TR I Pl. ES: Reynolds, Ho11 ston, t ; Rlcllardl, San Otevo. 7; RalMI, MofltrMI, •: Htrr, St. L.ollll, 6; T......-, St. Loula, •· STOL.EN BASES: Relna1, MontrHI, JO; Nortll, S.. F..-lsco, 26; Scott. Molltrwl, 23; Mor-, PtltSllllrVfl, 11; com11s, Clnclft· natl, 16; P\1111, Howston, 16; Smllll, S.. 01990, , .. STRIKEOUTS: Y....._.., ~Ma; Carlton, Ptlll,eelalpllla, "4; Soto, Cln<lflNtl, .. ; Ryan, Houslon, 16; GUlll<kton, Moft. ......... Misc. . --....... ,,._ Strike angers , Ashburn PHILADELPHIA <AP) - Former Philadelphia Phillie Richie Ashburn bu urfed all sides in the major ea1ue baseball strike to end their dis· pule and get back into action. "I'm mad u bell and I'm not going to sit around and take thia crap any longer," Ashburn fumed in his column today in Tbe Bulletin. "BASEBALL IS my game and I have a right to speak out," Ashburn wrote. "As a former player and a broadcaster (for the World Champion Phillies), I've been part of baseball for 35 years and I've gloried in every minute of it. "I haven't always loved the players or the owners, but I've always loved the game and I will not sit idly by while the players and the owners destroy it," be said of the walkout, now in its 25th day. Ashburn refused to assess blame for the strike, but said all sides were guilty for its con· tinuation. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn "did absolutely nothing to prevent the strike and has done absolutely nothing to prevent it," said Ashburn. The former player said be was dis appointed with Marvin Miller, the executive director of the Major League Players AB· sociation. "Miller is 'at-brilliant negotiator and is partly responsible for the success and strength of the association. ''BUT HE made a disastrous mistake when he allowed bis un- ion to be manipulated into a position where he was com- mitted lo a strike during the season,'' Ashburn asserted. "You have to wonder how players and owners alike ar- rived al a ·situation where the fate of baseball is determined by Marvin Miller and Ray Grebey, the owners' negotiator, both of whom are non-baseball men," Ashburn asked. "I get mad when I see the players sitting in on strike negotiations ." he said. Of various individuals. Ashburn noted: -· "Bob Boone is a classy man. but he is not a labor ex- pert. "RUSTY STAUB bas always been a good hitter and he makes a mean bowl of chili, but his expertise in labor negotia· lions is questionable. -"Steve Rogers. Doug DiCinces and Mark Belanger are all fine ballplayers and that's exacUy what they should be doing -playing ball." Ashburn acknowledged: "This column won't accomplish anything except to make a Jot of people mad. but I refuse to apologize for it.'' Catamarans sailing well in Transpac Barring an accident, at lea.st one of the catamarans in the Mullihull Transpacific race may beat all of the monohulls in the monohull Transpac race to Honolulu. A report from the multihull fleet Monday placed Bob Hanel's 65-foot catamaran Dou· ·ble Bullet near the half-way mark after three days of sailini. Double Bullet's coordinates placed her 1,000 miles from Los Angeles. The race started last Friday at 1 p.m. a few miJes from the start of the Transpacific Yacht Club's race for 74 monohulla. The 53 -foot trimaran. Crusader. owned by Mike Kane of Newport Beach and sailed by Bill Maudru, reported that she sighted and passed the monobull Merlin, leader in the regular Transpac during the day. Merlin is the elapsed time record holder for the Los Angeles to Honolulu race. Six multihulls -catamarans and trimarans -started the race. The 40-#<><>t catamaran Chat 'd Eau capeiled and broke up ln heavy seas the first tlilht out. Her six man crew wu rescued by the yacht Westward, a compeUtor in tbe monohull race. Li.feguard8 battle former llfesuard Ronald RHIM bu beeft extended an in· vltaUon to atlend tbe annual La1una Ni,uel lJlepard Team Competition. Tbe popular event bu blell expanded to two days ad wlU include tbl U.S .. Ufeea•lnc Aa~ soelatioa'• NaUoa.al Ufecuard Cbamp6amhlpt. Sr:=:' Avoo Coauil•I· \J re, the oomPldtioa la beld at Sah Creek Bucb in LiCUDa Nlpel ud l1 Ht for ·A~. lJ.14. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday, July 7, 1981 STRIKE TALK -Philadelphia Phillies slug- ger Mike Schmidt comments on the baseball strike while hosting a 15-minute ..,, ....... sports show in Philadelphia. Station of· Cicials said Schmidt would be back for more TV time whenever possible. ·Whittinghill tournament nears Annual event lures Orange Coast area residents By HOWARD L. BANDY Of .... .....,"" .... It's still almost a month away but amateur golfers are already signing up for the Whittinghill Fan Club invitational tournament at Los Alamitos Country Club Aug. 1. Among Orange Coast area entries are Walter Cervantes of Newport Beacb, Ray Fladeboe of Irvine and Dale Johnson of Huntington Beach. Also from Orange County are Don Tatro of Anaheim and Frank Wall of Mission Viejo. Proceeds from the tournament go to the Long Beach Community Hospital cancer detection and · treatment programs. The tournament chairman is R. E ... Jeff'' Kasler with Millie Vessels, president of Los Alamitos· race course, as honorary chairman. "We've added two fivesomes this year so that more amateur golfers can play in the tournament and there is no handicap limit," Kaaler says. The entry fee not only covers green fees but the pairing party. recognition dinner, admission to the quarterhorse races that night, tee gifts and other prizes. For more information, call the hospital at 59':' -6655, extension 2265. Scott eyes Coe and a record STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -Steve Scott. a former UC Irvine standout and the United States' top miler. continues bis quest toward the 14·year· old American l ,500·meter record tonight. But be wants a victory over Sebastian Coe as much as Jim Ryan's old mark. Coe, the Olympic 1,500-meter champion, edged Scott both previous times they raced -in the mile and the 1,500. Each lime the amazing Briton set a world record while Scott bad to settle with a personal best. "Sebastian is a great runner, but he's not un· beatable," Scott said on the eve of a twe>+day in- vitational meet. "I know I can beat him and tomorrow could be my day. A win would thrill me as much as beating the American record." Ryun set his 1,500 record, one of the oldest American track and field standards, of 3 minutes, 33.l seconds in Los Angeles July 8, 1967. Scott, whose best time is 3:33.33, won the mile the past two years here for the coveted Dickson Trophy, fll'St contested in 1885. With no mile race scheduled this time, the trophy will go to the win· ner of the metric equivalent. Coe, who broke bis own 800-meter record with an 1: 41.72 clocking in Italy last month. wlll run the 1,500 for the first time of the season here Tuesday. "I lost nine days practice because of stomach trouble last month, but I'm in very good shape now and I feel confident," Coe said. "We'U have a very competitive race tomor· row, but I don't like to talk in terms ol settin1 a world record. Steve Scott is no easy pusbout. He'• a very talented llthlete and bu raced very well this season." An unprecedented 66 world record.I have been broken at Stockholm's Olympic Stadium -site of the 1912 Summer Games -and an impressive field in the 1,500 could produce another one. SAN JUAN RILLS professional Ame KoJda won the Southern California PGA match play title at Mesa Verde Country Club recently. Dokka won over Bob Irving of La Jolla on the second bole of a sudden-death playoff after both fired 147 for the regulation 36 holes. Host professional Art Schilling did another outstanding job in running the tourna- ment. Upcoming events on lbe SCPGA calendar in- clude a two-day event at Santa Maria Thursday and Friday; the annual Sierra Nevada Open at . GOLF Edgewood·Taboe and Incline Village, July 21-23; and the Eagle Hills·Crane Creek-Purple Sage Treasure Valley event Aug. 6-9. * * • THE 8ZND Southern California Golf Associa· lion amateur championship and handicap tourna· ment will be played at Stardust Country Club in San Diego July 17-19. Qualifying rounds will take place at 10 Southern California courses next Monday and Tuesday, including Mesa Verde Country Club. Jon Ardell of Bakersfield is the defending champion and will be on hand at the Stardust to try for a second straight title. John Richardson of El Niguel Country Club and champion in 1973. is expected to enter along with several other former champions. Handicap flights will include the championship, 0-4; presi· dent's. S.8; vice president's, 9-12; and secretary's, 13·18. • • • FORMER LOS ANGELF.s RAMS marketing director Doug Finley who lives in Huntington Beach, has been named to assist in conducting the Southern California Open golf tournament at Los Coyotes Country Club, Nov. 1-8. Finley will be director of marketing relations for Los Coyotes CC and will include among his duties the coordination of golf and tennis events along with handling relations with local com· munities and area residents. * • • OPENINGS ARE STILL available for the Titan Golf Classic Monday at Los Coyotes Country Club . The event will be a scramble tournament with a noon shotgun start for mixed foursomes. But there is a limited number of playing spots open. The entry fee is $125. For more information call the Titan Athletic Foundation office at' 773·3480. Bove new SAC coach Kevin Bove, who coached Estancia High School to the CIF soccer playoffs for the first time in the school's history last season, has been named soccer coach at Santa Ana College. Bove replaces Rudy Campos, who resigned after two seasons. Bove played soccer at Bowling Green University. He also played for Athletes in Action and for a professional team in South America. Former California Sunshine Coach Derek Lawther will serve as a technical advisor to Bove. Santa Ana Coll~ge was 2·15-1 last season. The Dons captured three straight South Coast Con- ference championships from 197fH978. Owners to 01eet Thursday_ POCKET PAGER-coVERs FOUR COUNTIES NEW YORK (AP) -A meeU.nt of representatives of all 2S major leaaue teams bu bffn called for Thursday by American Leasue President Lee MacPhall and Na· tlonal League President Chub Feeney -in their ea a llle1 as members of the Board of ot the Player Relatlom Co mittee - after elcbt club ownen re y re· quested the meetina. The an.,ouneement w made Jointly Monday by th• two ape heads. 1be m..u.n, wUl take place at I p.m. EDT ln New York. ~ New Yon Tim.• ..w that t.be etebt clubs uklu tot the ,.~ inc -the New Y~ Y.U.. and llet1; Houltoe Altroe; Balthlon Oriol•; TnM R.anaen: a...aud IDcUU!z ~··White Sa ...... Dlt~ narea -bad ..... llMPlaall and r..., .,, ~-to Mt .. the meeting. The Times added that, ac· cording to two of the owners, Orioles' owner Edward Bennett Williama waa the lead.er of the grouJ> wblch souabt the meetiq. • The atatem•t from the league pret· tdentl Nid: ·'The meetina ll belns called by tbe Board of Direct.on of the Player Relaticma Committee in order to ad· vlse all clubl on the 1tatua ot collte· Uve·bar1a•nina neaotlationl and the current NLRB proceediDp. ''Atteodanee will be limited loJ.wo repnMDtatlne ol each m.,._. leap club sit• memben of tbe Board ol Dlreeton ol the PRC." Tb• owners, who bave not m.t u a pwp .me. the 1Ui.k.e belan lune 11. will pU. two days after the U· eeutl .. board ol tb9 •• Le .... Playen AAoct.U. meet bere. OIAMel co .. LA. co. UM mMAllMMO CO. ...... co. '2000 ;.::. AUOCAI '"°.. I ···-······ .. ··-··-·· Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTu.aday, July 7. 1981 ·FEATHERED FRIENDS -Woman swings bag , of seed to feed pigeons in Chicago's Grant ::Birch founder "plans college COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo (AP) -The founder ot the John Birch Society says be ls work- ing on plans to create a university based on his ul· tra-conservative organization's "unalterable," un- compromising" beliefs. Robert Welch, speaking at the society's annual Rocky Mountain Rally, said a John Birch University would expand further tbe society's pro- grams for youth, which already include youth • chapters and summer camps. The school probably would be in New EneJand, Welch said, and would be founded oo "the un- . altered, unalterable, unchangeable, uncompromis- ing doctrines and beliefs we bold in tbe John Birch Society." Welch, 81, who founded tbe society in 1958 and remains its president, said the liberal arU uni- . veralty would be similar io principle to the camps, which are designed to ''immunize tbe · young person against radical victimization.'· The campus, attended by more than 1,500 ,youths each year, are located in Colorado, Washington, Kentucky, California, Wisconsin, 'Montana, Massachusetts, Texas and Georgia. DEATH NOTICES MEEHAN Funeral services will be held HELEN I. MEEHAN. resi· on Wednesday. July 8, 1981 dent of Balboa Island, Ca. al ll:OOAM at Pacific View Passed away on July 5, 1981 Mort~~fY ct:iapel. Interm~nl Survived bv her sisters and P ac1C1c View Memorial brothers-in-la w J Wesley Park, Newport Beach, Ca. and Nanette Fletcher a nd Pa c 1f1c View Mortuary William and Dorothy Levy, directors. nephews Robert Becker and Jose ph Fletc her , nieces Marthe, Victoria. Susan and Mar1aret Fletcher , Patricia Murray and Carolyn and Cynthia Levy. also survived by many loving friends Rosary will be held at 7:00PM today at the Cabot & Sons Chapel, Pasadena, Ca. Mass of Christian Burial will be on Wednesday, July 8. 1981 al 9:30AM at the Holy Family Church , S outh Pasadena, Ca. Interment Resurrection Cem e t ery. Donations may be made to the American Cancer Socie- ty. Cabot & Sons Mortuary. Pasadena. directors. ERICKSON WALE ERICKSON, resl· dent or Costa Mesa, Ca Passed away July 2, 1981. Born on November 1. 1903 in Helsinlcl, Finland. Survived b y h is wire Gle nn1ce . dauahter Waleen G. Antista of Kansas Ci ty, Missouri, 3 grandchildren, Eric, Melody and Cindy, brothers William Erickson, Sr. or Wentworth. Wisconsin and Ole Erickson of Duluth. Minnesota . sister Irene Goar of Connectic ut DEATHS ELSEWHERE MOUNT PLEASANT. S.C <AP> -Bertie Rae Hleronymu Edwarch, 88, mother of U.S. Secretary James B. Edwards , died Thursday. Mrs. Edwards taught school for SO years. including 35 in Charleston County. 10 in Florida and fiv e In Kentucky. WEBSrER. N.C. <AP> - Lucy Callata Mor1aa, 92. founder or the Penland School or Hanrucralts in Mitchell County, died al her home Friday . The school became one of the nation's best-known institu- t i o n 1 f o r t eaching handicraf\.s. C HIC AGO <AP ) - Luther L lle9lolle, 79, U.S. a mbassador to Ic eland from 1969 to 1972, died Fri- ~~~~~~~~~~-.. day McCOllMtac MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·94 t5 Laguna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 H.UIOtl L.AWK-Mf. OLIYI Monuary • Ceme1ery Cremalory 1625 Gisler A11e Costa Mesa 540.5554 "8ClllOTH6H laL •OADWAY MOtlTUAIY 110 Broaldway Costa Mesa 642-9150 :,..Cl '90.,._I .......ntl' MOITUAIY WMa1nSt Hunt~'l(h C HIC AGO <AP > - Melvla J . Brllll, 58, a publisher and founder or Quadrangle Books, died Thursday. HENDERSONVILLE , N.C. <AP> -.Jamea i'. Kel· ly, 65, former acting cban· cellor of the State UnJversi· ty or New York, died Fri· day. GLOUCESTER. Maas. (AP) -laae Dua.., 49, wbo wrote and publllbed two boob lo t.be two-year period abe suffered from cancer, died Saturday. Park, while birda flock around her for mid· day meal. FD~ THE RECllD ••re .. IMCt.aMaWT• ••N•llM.NOIPITAL .. _ .. Mr. •nd Mn. ~ l>ltt,_, SM o-........ Mr. •nd Mn. ltl<•r41• G.,<I•. C:.l•tr-............ Mr. •ftd Mn. Wllli.m lttN, Sen Cltmeftte,lloy. .... ,. Mr. •ftd Mn. UM!tllno ClfWftlff, OolWI ......... ""· Mr. Ond Mn. E-.-.. S... JIMll C.l•I•-. ""· ..... Mr. •nd Mr•. lt•IPll Jonea. C.latr-e.ch,-. '-D Mr. •lld Mra. Geor .. Menctore. C.1•11-...... ""· Mr. tlld Mn. FrMCla .......-,, SM Cleffte11•·•"· -· Mr. •lld Mn.. JoNI Thl .... 1111, $M1 J ..... c:.ittr-. ""· ,_,. Mr. •n• "'"· LUii• Jo11H. S.n Cltmeftllt.ll0¥._,_11 Polfklo JeM Wl\lte, Safi c .. -to. tlrl. Mr. •lld Mn. Dino DI eor.o. SM c...,,.., ... ""· ,_II Mr. ond Mn. O.WI 8rl-. Safi Cleffttnlo.lloy. ...... Mr. •nd Mn. ~"'" Oerdo, OMo "°'"'· gl,,, Mr. ollll ..... ATIM, Safi Cltmento. . .,. Mr. •nd Mn. Ml<l\MI FIMUO, Son Cltmtftllt, 11"· Mr. olld Mn. Albwto G«d o, Soft Clemtn•.lloV. ,_" Mr. and MrL Mk'-C--11, Safi Clomofltt, l!Oy. Mr. -Mn. Mk'-! Sollort .. OMo ........ ....,. Mr.°"" Mn. I-.U-. Della P01111,-.. ,_,. Jt11ll9r It-. .,.. ltkl\ord l'Wlle, OollO ,..."" ....,. '-" Mr. ond Mra. Jerry Mor•, S•11 Cl-,llOy. IOUTMCOAIT MaOtCA&. caNT•• ~u Mr . •nd Mrs lt•y M•ltlnMn, Copt1tr-11Mc11. ....,. Mr . •nd Mra. Sttven W•l~r•, L.o9 ..... llMdl • ....,. ,_ .. Mr. ond Mra. L••rtnce ltenl•, ~oe.tdl.llo¥. ,_It /IN. t lld Mn. 8rlM a.cker, DMe POl11t,boy. ,_tt /IN. Ond Mn. JoM lttd9. Lt9WN 8oocl'I, .,,. WaSTaltN Ma~ CaNTaa '-" Mr. •nd Mr1. Mlc hotl Cromer, lrvl11e. boy, ,_,, /IN, tlld /IArL Ml< .... 1 LAng, lrv1nt, tloy_ Sign ups begin Registration is under way for summer recrea- tion classes that include art. dance and fitness sessions sponsored by the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department. Classes will be held at city and school facilities in Newport Beach, Corona del Mar and Balboa. For more in- formation, call 640-2271. MlllHNt COMMUNITY ltOll'tTA&. .. _, Mr. Oftd Mn. It.._, Soni, Safi J ... n C.lstr_,....,_ Mr. ondMn. MylftMMrs, S...JIMn c.iatr-. ""· ,_, K•l"tfl Sue Vllllft& 1..,,lne, lloy. Mr. -Mn. s.e-,...,_, South L.oeuM.llO¥. ..... •• •1111 Mn. ltell9t1 --.... •• Sell JI*! c.uu-. girt. .._. Mr, •nd Mrt.. ltl<Mrd Hou-r. eo.>•w-...... •'"· '-' Mr. -Mn. c:.-C:OCllO. L....-w NI .... ..,, . /IN, tlld Mn.. Alofi Hol't, Son J ..... ~ISIJ'-, tli". I .._, •. ol'ld Mn.,,... Wint. """11"11M hocl\,...., ,_,. lk. •l'ld Mn. De.,. ~r, Irv .... , llOy. ,_ .. Mr. • ... Mn. l..o•retK• C••I--. lrvlM, "'1· Mr. ond Mrs. Ke1111tll\ C•lltor11, lrvlM, .. ,,, IT. '°'41Ptt MOSPITAl. '-" Mr. -Mrs.• ~ C-. Hum· 1,.1 ... 8Mdl,elrl. IOUTMCOAST Ma~CaWTa• ,_D Mr. •nll Mra. Ml<hM I II• Witt CloyM, S. J-~-. tlrt. lk. ttlCI Mrs. Torn 0..-, ~ hod1,110¥. ,_ .. IW. -Mn. J-E. Allell, Jr .• UeliNN .... ,llOy. ...." Mr. •1141 Mn. C.I Kl-~ 9-<h.91" . IT. '°'41Ptt MOWITA&. ,_ .. Mr oi.-Mn. II..-9-, trvlM, ....,. Spanish re01Dants hunted BEAUFORT, S .C . (AP> -Archaeologists are back on the eiahth hole of the Parris Island Golf Course, digging through Santa Elena - one of the oldest pre- colonial settlements in the United States. University of South Carolina archaeologist Stan South and his crew of five are enlarging the area of their search for remnants of the 16th century Spanish setUe- m en t which bad a population of about 400 before It was aban- doned. Workers found evidence of a small Spanish but in digs two years ago . Now , arcbaeololisU are bop- in1 to find other but.a and structures from the town. Historic documents show the town was founded in ~ -one year after St. Ausuatine in Florida. Mesangets degree Donald G. Pa11e of Coata Mesa baa received his doctor of medicine de1ree from Habnemann lledlcal Cotte1e and Holpk.al of PbUadelpbla. Pait• will complete a family practice reslclen· cy at San Bernardioo County Medical Center. He ll a sraduate of Cotta .... Hltb School and UC lrvtne. jSummer power crisis ahead? 8,J TllOJIAS D. ELIAS CalllomJa utllltJ11 Ward every summer that, sometime IOOll, nothl!l1 will happen when some electric switches are thrown. That pro1pect appean cloeer tban ever this year u the atate heads l!lto t.be peak-use bot weather months of Au1uat and September wltb a popuJatloc that Jncreued about 20 percent durtn1 a decade. when almott no new electric power planta were built. Even without a beat wave, the four bi&1eat CalUomla power companlN expect tbelr combined reserve marlin to drop as low u 8.2 percent next month. No uUUty feela comfort.able witb less than a 10 percent marlin, In cue a beat wave brin11 vast alr coodltionln1 demands or a power plant suddenly breaks down. What happens if a crunch develops? Flrat, the four utilities would help each other. A LOI AnJelea area beat wave t.ax.1n1 tbe capacity of both Southern California Edison Co. and tbe Los CAUFORtlA FOCUS Angeles Department of Water & Power would automatically cause Pacific Gas & Electric Co. to rout~ some of its excess capacity south. Unusually heavy demand in the San Francisco Bay Area would produce a reverse now. That agreement was worked out during tbe drought of the mid-'70s, at the same time state of- ficials prevailed on Southern Callfom.lans to leave their state Water Projecl enUtlementa ln northern reservoirs. So the only way a aenuine emer1ency could arise la if all the state's bil cities were hit by simultaneou.s beat waves. CONSUL TANT - Ernest Lefever, who withdrew from con- sideration for the State Department's top human rights post, will advise Secretary of State Alexander Haig on terrorism and other issues. Skating controls appr9ved PUBLIC NOTICE PICTtnow eu1t•a11 llMlllllTAHM8Nf ; TM lel-1 ... ,_,_, •rt 4lOln9 .... DN·ITAl'P. l'U e1rcl\ ~llffl, 9-cll. Colltwmo t-.o ON4TAI',. INCOA~•ATRO, • c .... .._.,... ,.,,.,e1i.i.. ,,,, '""' 11r .. 1, .._.,.., -..Cl\, Colll•rnl• ..... Tlllt ......_It <Ollduftfd 11v • cor ,. ....... a.tuft Inc. tUulM<i Secy/Trws Tl\ls ..._ wa llltd Wllll ,,.. c-•v Cltrli "'Or..-oe c-tv"' Juty ,,,, .. 1 ' ,,,_J l"*IJlllM Or_,... CMll Oallr Piiot. J111'7. IC. tl.111, I'!!__ ~71 It PUBLIC NOTICF. PICTITIOUI MlllN•U NAMa ITATaMaNT ~The lollowlno person1 ••• dolnv ........ : ALCA DEVELOPMENT COM· ANY, 177.,. ltlvtrtldt Avenue, ...,....., IMch, C..llfornl• ta4J D. W. & H. llldu1trlff, Inc., a a llfor11I• corpor e llon, 11'· F veraldt A-. Newoort •••<". ttlrorni. '*3 Tlll1 .....,,_, It condl<cted llr • cor-~•llOfl. D W. AN. 1-.11rlt1, tn< J tlme I AIUlldt, ""-ldlnl This 11.111-1 wa llltd wltn tile eovm., Cltr1' fll Ortnoe C:-ty on J111r ,,1911 ""~ P111>1I.-0rtft91t c ... st Delly PitOI, J111y '· 14, 21, •• 1•1 ~· PUBLIC NOTICE "C'TITIOUS aUSIN•U NAM• ITATUUNT TIW lollowlftl _..., 11 dDlng .,._., ntMH PltO,-EX, .IOOI R-111 A•t llU., lulldl119 1, Sullt 11», Collo Mes., CA m• J OSEPH H. JACKMAN, 1607 N ''°'"r SCrwt, Soni• A,... CA '2~"" Tiiis llwllness h <Ollduetecl br •n 111 OM-I. ~Jeck,,_ Thal kind of crisis would lint spur requests for voluntary conservation -setting a~r condi-tioners at higher lemper•tures, lea¥in1 ap- pliances and televisiona off during the hottest mid- day hours and other reductions. Tlll1 st.C-1 •et llled wllll llM Co.inly Clerll ot Orenoe Co...n1y on SACRAMENTO (AP) J unet•· 1"1· Fl~ -Cities and counties P11b11-0r-eo.s1 o1111r P1101 • will be able to restrict J-JO.Ju1r1. 10 1, 1•1 2ee1.a1 As a last resort, utilities are ready to stage rolling blackouts and cutoffs of all "interruptible" customers, usually businesses which enjoy cut- rate prices in exchange for the risk of a shutoff in a crisis. roller skating on streets and sidewalks next year PUBLJC NOTICE under a law signed by "CTmou11u11Nu1 Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. NAM• ITATaMaNT Brown's office said he -!.~~._."II ..,...., 1' ... "" ""•1· signed AB565 by As ADAMS FUND, LTD . , .. 1. "' • Cerpert lt Pltlt Or l•t. S..ltt 100, The disaster plans have never been used, but the utilities warn that their summertime supplies are more precarious than ever. sem blyman Larry Stir· ,.......,, '-"·CA.,_ I in g, R -San Die g o . Alen L. A .. m•. 1CM Llnci• "'•· th . . 1 1 Htwl*11Mch, CA n"°. au onzang oca gov-Th11 IMlslneu 11 cond11ctt<1 br • They say conservation la the key to avoiding the crisis they fear. And that doesn't necessarily mean leaving machines turned off -ju.st leaving them off at the peak hours. ernments to regulate 11mn .. _._tfllp k · · h " AIOll L ~ S allng Wlt ID their Tlll1 ..__ -111911 wltll t.,. borders. C-ly 0er1i ofOr-Coutrtyon Juir City and county gov· •. '"' ,.u..57 For the electric companies' generating networlts are only rarely used al close to their capacity and then only for short times. Using home appliances during evening or early morning hours ensures plenty of power for every use that's a genuine need during the midday crunch when virtuaJJy all businesses operate at full blast. Crises come during heat waves because tem- peratures are highest at the same times that in· dustries are using all their equipment. e r n m e n t s . w b i c h ""*'-Or-Coe•• 0e11r P11o1. sponsored the bill, said July 1• "· 21·•· 1"1 3027"'' they can regulate other kinds of traffic, like cars PUBLIC NOTICE and bicycles, but have Pl('TITIOUS •UllHU no authority to restrict Tll• .:=~..!T:!:!N.~ • .,01n11 skaters. ._,,..., .. - The bUJ would allow a COlltA SUPPLY COMP ANY, b k •: b t Sti l lutl Wettrwty Clrc te. Hun11nQIO<> an on s a .. ng, u r · ••oc11. c.111om1e nMt That's the reason for the "load management" programs spurred by the state the last three years. Their reasoning is that if more businesses can be convinced to operate at night, the same power company capacity can be made to sen:e many more customers. Ing and local govern-Steven D•ne Kno•. uu1 ment officials said they ~:,::;;-,::~ ... H .... i1n;1on 81...:". bad no intention to pro-R1c11orc1 A1.n 8-n, 11~ l.lo· bi bit skating in any city, :.:~:11on Str .. 1, Cerrito•. Celllorn1a just to restrict it to cer-Thi• 11ua111tu 1s conc111c11c1 Dr a lain places, like parks, ttntrel =~p8o.M., Or Certain limes. Tiiis at.1-l WM llled wlll'I I~ Organized groups of Counlr Cler11 of Oronoe Couftty on July The state Public Utilities Commission reports that those programs saved three billion kilowatt hours of power last year, equal to $160 million worth of oil. • •• 1'tl skaters and related bus1 -'1u4w nesses did not oppose Pv1>11.-0r .. Cot•• D•llr P1101. the measure. Juty 1. 14, 21, •. 1•1 l001-11 Chief quits ( PUBLIC NOTICE These efforts put Callfomia in a better spot than many Eastern states as it beads into the hot- test season. But the utilities still have little room to maneuver. l'IC'TITIOUS aUSINIU NAMll ITATllMllNT SACRAMENTO (AP> TM lol-na __..Is clolr>G .,..,, Since electric use increases by 400 megawatts for every additional de1ree of average statewide temperature, tbe only real guarantee of adequate power supplies is a cool summer. -Tom Aus tin . e x -""'u'~inD TECHNICAL svsrEM ecutive officer of the SUPPORT. E"9lnter1n8 encs Pro state Air Resource s oremm1119 c""su111no "''"' 4000 B d ~-'j d h . Mo<Arltlur llwd., No JOOO, NH•port oar , \.Vlu rme e 1s aeoc:h. CollfOrftl• nMO And no one can guarantee that. resigning to start a Ke1t11 M<Muy11. uo E .. 1 0.10 • Aw...,., l'tlmdtte. Ctll,.,..nlt t JSSO f Etial ii a columnut txum tn Santa Momca.J Sacramento consul tang This M1Mss 1s c0ftdue1eo br e11 1n firm. dlvldll•I. Guide to other degrees Career changers get advice in books By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: I wtall to cllaa&e my career. Wllere can I set a llat al col· le&ea tllat do not require re&alar clauroom atteadance! -E.M.M., Davenport, Iowa A comprehensive and recuiarly up· dated book is "Bear's Gulde to Non· traditional Degrees," available in bookstores or by mail for $20 from Bear's Guides, Box 646, Mendocino 9~. Also, al a coet of $10.50 la "G&.Ude to Undergraduate External De1ree Programs in the U.S., published by the Office on Education Credit, American Council on Education, One Dupont Circle, Waabinston, D.C. 20036. Still another directory 11 "Guide to Independent Study tbrou1h Cor- respondence Instruction," published by the National University Continu- ing Education A1aociaUon; order lb.la one for $UO from Petenen '1 Guides, Boz '78, Princeton, N.J . 08817. * * * Dear Jo7r:e: I •Otlld Wre .. t... abo•t becom1D1 .. 8.ltnaalll ....... '111t aeMol ud llne Sood e,.._, -T . .A., Cle•ela.M. OlaJ9 Wlt.hln your work life, private or- 1aniaationa as well u 1ovemmenta may hire space worken, ranstn1 lnt,erf eron in new role WASRING'J'ON (AP) -1be pri1• wlnnlna 1cienllat who helped develop bone JQarrow ~ranaplant1 for leukemia patlenta ll tnatlftl aome ol t.bem wtt.b lnterferon, a promlaiftl anUcancer .,ent. Dr. E. Donn all Tbomaa of the Hutcbl.mon Cancer Reeearcb Center in Seattle aald tbat the trt~1 belun iD December, bopea to uplGlt t.iMt ,.... port..s utl·Jeuk•mlc actlftty al ln· terfeion, wbicb b8I ,..."" mlsed rnMwl ta bumM cueer e.ta. 'l'bomM Wll la ........... IO ,... ceh• • Oeaeral Moton Cueer Bttearcll FowadaUon award of 1100.000, tu·hw, Ud ............ CAREERS from welders who build orbiting structures to specialists in elec- tronics and pharmaceuticals. A revised bookJet, 14 pages. is available free from the American Institute or Aeronautics and Astronautics. For a copy of "Careers in Aerospace," you must enclose a gummed, large, self.addressed mail- ing label with your request to me at Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. * * * Dear Joyr:e: Wlaat qaeatlou aboald I ask la a job lDtervJew? -P.M.,Madboa,Wb. ·'Ingredients for a Successful In- terview," eight pages, is a booklet prepared by Management Recruiters, a contingency search and recruitment organization with 400 of- fices nationwide. The interview overview capsulizes advice on preparing for and devisln• strategic actions during the' meeting, as well as answering and asking questions. To receive a copy, enclose a stamped, self-addressed, Jong white envelope (10.5 by • inches) with your request. A new book, "111 Techniques and Stratqies for Gettin.1 tbe Job In- terview" by Burdette E. Bostwick (John Wiley & Sona, 805 Th1rd Ave., New York, N.Y. 101!18; $12.95) otters SUHeatiOOI ranetn1 from hirins a public relatlona firm to promote you to 1uppartine a political candidate u a way ol ceWnt your foot iD the in- terviewer'• door. Dispute 8etlled WASID.NQTON <AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court bu settled a three. year dllput.e bet""'1 Callfomla and Arllou eGDceraln1 Jwild.lcUoft over vanoa nve.rbeda and cbaDIMll OGff occGpled by tbe meaadertnc C.Olorado River. AdopUDc tbe recom- mead.U... ol Ill appointed fact· ftncl•r, tbe court lltued a l'f .. ,... deer .. --. out ID deU&1 nla ttate bu Jarildldtoa onr wblcb laDdl !liaDI UI U.).mlle 1tr«dl. ---- Keith ~Muytt Thia --1 wet rll9d ••IP, II"* Covnty Cltrli "'Orenoe c ..... 1r on JUiy •,ttll F1•.s.J Pu1111.-0r..,.. c ... ri D•llr p1101 July'· 14, Jl. lt, '"' ?'13-11 PUBLIC NOTICE Pl('TITIOUS aUSINliH NAMli ITAT•MINT Tl\t lollowl119 ""ons ••• do1nQ l><ltlneuu. STEWART AUTOWHOLESA~ ES 12n Gtrdtn Grove Bl•cl .• Geroen Grtw, Colllomtt '26.U Wlllltm E. S..wtl1, 1"2J ll11199r Ltnt. Hunllnvton Beo<ll. Ct lll0<1111 ..,~ Liiiy E. S. 5-el1, ltt'H Re1199r Lone. Huntl"lflon Beech. Ct lllorn1.t ..,~ Thi• ""'1neu h cOMu,ted by • gene rel p0r1nen.lllp LlllyE 5 5-ar1 Tlllt .._,,_, wet llttcl ••In tlW COUlll'f Clerk ol Ore"90 Cou"lr on J-tt, 1"1 ,.IMJ06 Publl-Or-Coe.JI Delly Pilot. J -u ••• J "'y '· 14. 1•1 11~1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'l('TITIOUS aUSINllU NAM• ITATaMllN~ TM lftllowtng -tan II dol"9 bull· ntMtS: COULTER AIR COMPRESSOR COMPANY, 11'01 Wutml111ler Av.nw. • F. Wfftmlr~I..-, CA '2Ma. ANDREW H. MeCLURE, •110 •1m Ave-1 .,, Lono leO<:I\. CA ttll07. Thia llullnfts It <Oflduc.ltd bV •n ln- dlvldu•I. ,.,,.. .. H.McCI...-. Thia IUll-1 -flied wllll tile c-1-, Cltrlt ol ~eft99 Covnly on J ..... i..1•1. 1'16)191 PlllllllN4l Orllntlt COHt O.lly Pllo!, J-IO,J"'y7,1 .. Jl,1•t ,...., PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllN•U NAM91TAT9Ma•T TIM ,..._.,. .,..._. It ...... bull· MMH: LAGUNA COMMUH I TY TliLllVISIOH, 1'1t S. CMtt HWY .. ~ liMcJI, CA '9'51. MICHA•L It. llVANS. tt70 S C:-al Hwy.,~ IMKI\, CA tBSI. Tl\lt ........ It~ •Y 911 Ill· . .., .... . Mk ......... - Thlt ............ -II .. wltll tfle c-1, 0-.. Or .... C:-ty "' J_ .. ""· •1 ..... "'*""" Qr .. c... Dolly •1i.t. J-le.Jllty7,'4,tl,1"1 -..1 PUBLIC NOTICE -- I Daily Pilat TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1981 FEATURES 83 The wiring of America: D n lAIUll lllCH/IDUIH COAST MOVIES 84 STOCKS 87 Cable television explodes across the country. . . 85 1 ..... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------. ...L--------------------------------------------------------------------- Panel to study Lag~a school sites . Laguna Beach Unified School District lrultees have appointed a seven-member advisory committee lo study possible revenue producing uses or district-owned propertv. Bill Barnes. director of educational services, said the committee would be charged with looking into possible lease agreements and sale or surplus property to raise money for the CinanclaJJy-pressed public school ustem. The seven members of the advisory committee are James Baldwin, president of the Baldwin Co. of Irvine; James F. HB says no to Onofre The Huntington Beach City Council bas declined to support expansion of the San Onofre nuclear power plant. On a S-0 vote , council members decided to "receive and file" a request from Southern California Edison officials that the city officials support licensing of newly built reactors 2 and 3. Presently, the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board is holding hearings in San Diego on the earth9uate safety of the $3.3 million nuclear power plant, located three miles south of San Clemente. "I don't think this council wiU go on record favoring nuel~ar power, althouah I would," said Councilman Ron Pattinson, "so I move we receive and file this request." E artier in the meeting, Huntington Beach resident Tim Carpenter told the council that the nuclear question is "an important enough issue to set a public hearing ," before supporting expansion of San Onofre. The city councils of Fountain Valley, Fullerton and Buena Park support expansion of the nuclear plant. according to Edison offtc:ials. Following the ·earthquake safety hearings in San Diego, the atomic safety board will conduct proceedings t o determine the adequacy or e mergency evacuation procedures for communities surrounding the nuclear facility. Lagunan head8 unit Dr. Helen Diamond of Laguna Beach, a business administra- tion instructor at Citrus College in Azusa, has been elected presi- dent of Pi Lambda Theta, a na- tional honor and professional or· ganization in the field of educa- tion. The organization , with approximately 16,000 members In 100 chapters across the United States, will hold installation ceremonies Aug. 10 in Boston. Dr. Diamond has been on the Citrus College faculty since 1964. Crout, a real estate developer; Dana Empringham, chief executive officer pf the Rancho Mission Viejo Co.; and William Phillips, an Irvine attorney. The remaining members are Robert Braun, an associate attorney with Rutan & Tucker of Santa Ana; William Watt, president o f Baywood Development Group, Inc.; and Bruce Tester, an attorney. The committee members have been gi\'en a tentative Oct. ts deadli~ to tum in a report of their findings to school district trustees. Formation of the advisory committee comes on the heels of the trustees' deciaion in May to close Aliso Elementary School in South Laguna to save money. Comparing estimated income and expenditures for the 1981·82 school year , district administrators say the budget could come up $540,000 short next year. The closure of Aliso was one In a series or austerity moves on the part of the district to balance its budget. The school district is considering leasing the Aliso property to provide additional income. But trustees say they don't want to sell the school ln the event enrollments increase and the building is needed again. The advisory committee will also look at alternative uses for an 11-acre parcel in the Top of the World neighborhood owned by the district. Other property includes a s m all park site near the elementary school at Top of the World and a house adjacent to the high school that formerly served as the continuation school. The Laguna Beach Unified School District has had to cut $1 million from its budget over the past three yeats, the result of Proposition 13 , the Serrano-Priest state Supreme Court decision, and a continuing decline in student enrollment. As a result of cuts, the district says it has been unable to offer employees adequate salary increases. In June, eight district teachers and five c las si fied <non-teaching) employees were given layoff notices. In addition, buses, furniture and equipment have n't been replaced, school property improvements have been set aside, some school programs have been eliminated and class Deify ""'9 ...... ..,..., A-- young B~ board rider slides through frothy section on nnall trove at Main Beach Park in Laguna Beach. With water temperature a down t o a nippy 65 in the Art Colony, the grimace on thia rider'& face might be from the cold, not the impending bone-jarring end to hU ride. Laguna appea& to U.S. City again asks help to repair landslide damage By STEVE MITCHELL OftlleDeltJ ........... Laguna Beach is once again app e aling to the federal government for disaster funds to pay for stabilization of Del Mar A venue following the landslide of Feb. 19, 1980 at Arch Beach Heights. Only this time, City Manger Ken Frank says he believes the city has a better chance of recouping some of the $900,000 in city money appropriated over two fiscal years to stabilize the steep hillside. The landslide, which the city contends was caused by heavy winter rains, took 40 feel of Del Mar Avenue and 30,000 cubic yards of dirt down the steep hillside. along with sewer lines, portions of two homes and utility equipment. A half year after the slide, the City Council voted unanimously to exhaust the city's general fund reserve to repair the scarred hill before winter rains again posed a threat. In depleting the city's reserve account, the council said it couJd not wait for federal disaster officiaJs to decide whether the city was eligible for funds . Days later. the city received word that the Federal Emergency Management Agency had denied funding - except for perhaps $50,000 to $75,000. The city appealed the federaJ decision in October, 1980, and was turned down again on the first annive r sar y of thf landslide. Marines set for auction Items ranging from office furniture to Marine Corps boots will be auctioned off next Tues- day at Camp Pendleton, and the public is invited to make bids. Among the nearly 200 Items to go on the auction block wilJ be an ambulance, trailer cargo, tires, a pastry cabinet, engines, scales, filing cabinet, dental chairs , wheelchairs, typewriters, steam cleaners, electroni c equipment and calculators. The items are on diaplay from 8 a .m. to 3 p.m. daily except weekends at Building No. 2241 on the Marine facility. sizes have been increased District officials also say there are laws restricting what money made from the sale of district-owned property can be used for. For example, proceeds from the sale of district property cannot be used directly for employee salaries. Another obstacle facing tbe district is a provision that public agencies have the first right bf refusal when school property ls put up for sale. And those public entities CIUl obtain that property at one-quarter the fair market value. Panama ousts linguists A spokesman for Wycliffe Bi ble Translators Inc. of Huntington Beach confirmed tqday that 20 members of its slster organiiatlon have been expelled from Panama by tile government. 1 Don Lindholm, associate director of Wycliffe, said the American citizens worked for the Summer Institute of Linguistics. based in North Carolina. He said none was from Southern California. The institute personnel had been involved in researching tM • languages or primitive tribes ln Panama and translating the New Testament into thoae languages. Lindholm said the group's visas had officially expired ln 1979, but the institute members had been allowed to stay in Panama while negotiations with the government continued. He said the expulsion order was handed down last week. "We'll be holding meetiogs within the next few days to discuss alternative p lans to complete our work in Panama," Lindholm said. He added that one institute member . a citizen of Panama. was still in the country. "We really weren't surprised by thel>rder to leave." Lindholm said. "It had appeared for some time that the agreements we were hoping to get were not going to materialize." Last March a member of the ~ummer Institute of Linguistics work ing in Colombia was kidnapped and kill ed by members of the urban guerrilla group M-19. Chester A. Bitterman's body was found inside a hijacked bus on a Bogota street. He bad been shot through the heart. Niguel residents 'pool it' at park Laguna Niguel residents. Crom 6 years old to aduJts, can "pool it" this summer at Crown Valley Community Park. An extensive aquatics pro· gram is under way at the park pool, with 2-week sessions cost- ing $1S per person. Also offered this summer is an aqua-exercise program for adults. For information, call the park office at 831-7254 or 831-7275. Now the city is appealin@ again and City Manager Frank says Laguna has two pluse& going into the effort. "For one thing, there is a new nalionaJ director of FEMA <the disaster agency)," Frank said. "And we now have a President who has always had a lot of support from California, as opposed to a president (Carter) who largely ignored California at best." Ex-Laguna mayor to head chamber In his letter of appeal, Frank disputes a federal contention that the landslide was caused lar1ely by water deposited oo the slope by a city storm drain. Frank said geolo1lcal studies show the slide was caused b)' steepness or the hillside, weak clay seams and presence of old slide debris. And, be said, the allde wu tri11ered by heavy rainl -so heavy, ln fact, that President Carter declared 1ever1l Southern California counties as federal dlaut.er areu. The letter also ar1ues that work completed by the city to stabtuze the hUl wu emer1ency In nature -not reatoraUve. Frank 1ay1 be la opt.imlJtlc UM city can recoup 1'ln tbe nel1bbarbood cl tl00,000," .. • r•ultott.be appeal. ''I thlnk we bave a •troaa c ... for at leMt partial fwwtln1 lf tbll la bandied on a non·poUtJcal baala." Former Laauna Beach Mayor Jack McDowell bu been elected president or the Laauna Beach Chamber of Commerce for 1981-82. McDowell, a retired businessman succeed.I attorney Richard Packard, who bffomes an ex-officio ml\,lftber of the chamber's top olftcen. Other offlcen to be lnatal.led 5:45 p.m . Wednesday at ua. annual dlnner-pa1eaat OD tbl Festival ot Arts ll'OUDdl mctullt Joe Jabraus, flrat vice president; Geor1• Slmlnston, second vtce prealdent; a.or,. Nelson, aecretaty·treaau.rer; Tim Howell, member at larse and Jim Lyon , 1eneral mana«er. Dlredon for 1•1.a lnchm Harry Lawrence. Mlke 0'8Mln, Gen. rrtaelle, Fran Haller, DoG Cameron, Jam• Knder, Fran Boyd, JamH Decker, Vern Spltalerl, Cat Orcutt, Earl Shelley, Bill Hoff, Jr., and Roy Marcom. J ---------... -------- 1112 L * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday. July 7, 1981 I~ .. ! ~\~ ~ What national pastime? • . • • .. • • • • • • • • • , • I I ' • • 1 • I ' • FLA'ITENED ROUNDBALL DEPT . -Things are really on the tough these days for those reportorial savants who chronicle the s porting life. The trouble is no baseball. The professionals of the diamonds of America have quit. They're . . ~- I""-\ .TOM MORPHINE .t:i4( on strike. No Angels. No Dodgers. No nothing . Thus the problem for the sporting writers is to find something to write about here in the dead heat of summer . H ere on our sterling journal, Los Alamitos racetrack and the Transpac yacht racers have abruptly found themselves drawing heavy amounts of ink. In the desperation of it all, we even ran a fantasy World Series between the Angels and the Dodgers. IF YOU TIDNK that's dipping down into it, the Long Beach paper only yesterday gave its screaming sports bannerline to the fis hing person who pulled in the first marlin of the year. If the Transpac yacht racers should join the Angels and the Dodgers on walkout, we may have to start running fantasy yacht races. Maybe we could come up with a match boat race between John Paul Jones and Admiral ··Bull" Halsey. On the other hand, we could revert to Great Moments in Sports. Maybe something like this: "HERE W E ARE, ladies and gentlemen, at the 1964 Nassau Speed Week where we're lined up ready for the Grand Prix for Volks wagens. "Look over there folks , right togethe r are race r Dan Gurney, sometimes of Corona de l Mar. and famed A. J . Foyt, always of Texas. "Something must be up folks, because Gurney and Foyt have been whispering to each other all week now. "Everybody's ready. The starting line has gone Buggy. They're off! "Wait a minute folks ... what's this? Gurney is ta ilgating Foyt's Bug. Why, he's actually PUSHING it! "JUST LOOK AT THAT -Gurney pushed Foyt for seven laps now in this 100-mile speed contest a nd they've passed every Bug in the field. It's a maz· ing! "They've only got a quarter-mile to go now, folks. and Corona del Mar's ;New faces join Valley panels Many new faces are joining a handful of reap- pointed participants on Fountein Valley's advisory , commissions and committees. The City Council recently made its advisory appointments for 2-year-terms lhat began JuJy 1. The council appointed Glenn Collins, Rod Hosilyk and Philip Mignanelh to three Planning Commission vacancies. Collins , 40, is an 11-year Fountain Valley resi- dent employed by Southern California Edison. A 6-year Fountain Valley resident, Hosilyk, 41. is president of the Rosso Corp. of Irvine. Mignanelli , 52. a 10-year resident. is an elec· lronics distributor. He just concluded one year as a Planning Commission alternate. His wife, Betty Mi gnanelli, Is president of the Fountain Valley . School District board of trustees. The three new commissioners will replace Frank Bryant. Ed Ruzak and Ernie Vasquez. Only Bryant did not seek reappointment. Appointed alternate planning commissioner . was Leonard Santoro, 38. a salesman who current· ""ly is president of the Greenbrook Homeowners' As- sociation. He will vote on planning decisions whenever a regular commissioner Is absent. Three people were named to the Parks and Recreation Commission. Martha Proffitt, 38, was reappointed to the ad- , visory body. She is vice president of Association Ad ministrators and Consultants, Inc., of Irvine. Also named as a new parks commissioner was George Paul Olsen, 37, a financial planner with Creative Financial Solutions, based in Irvine. The third parks commission appointment was Ruth A. Rosewltz, 46, an instructor at Long Beach Community College. Appointed to the city's Traffic Committee ._were John W. Briscoe III, Donald Chaney and Car-:-roll H. "Bud" Lancaster. Three people were reappointed lo' the city's Housing and Community Development Advisory Board: James Dick, Sophie Young and Hazel Courreges. .. New appointments to this board were Mark Gardner, Karen Holllday, James HugbeU, Dennla ~.Kelly, and Karen Polak. :.Thief·back at CM :.scene. pf. crime ,, The thief or lbJeves •ho reportedly t ook about $14,000 worth of jewell'J from an ea1t CO.ta MtH townboue Niddent on June aa ap- panatly returMd to the lefteflltbecrtme. llHldent Stepbanle A.ea houla t.old polite • tllit -8ddltlOnaJ $1,000 la Jewelry ••• taken from her Jewelry box ~ . . -~ ... sometime lut week. PoUce who lnvesti1•l· ed the June 22 incident aald a burilar may have sneaked throu1h an e>pen 1Ucttn. alus door le..Siq to t6e townhouae kitchen. The lateat lbefl, of- licera aald, apparenU1 was not lb• result of forced entry. Gurney is hanging on Foyt's bumper like they're two Hugs in a pod! ''But wait! Gurney is pulling out now! He's passing Foyt with just the quarter-mile to go! Gurney takes the checkered flag for victory! .. BETTE R HOLD everything, folks. Somebody has filed a formal protest against Dan Gurney. T hey're inspecting his V ·Dub even now. "We've just gotten the word. Gurney is disqualified for entering a California h ot rod instead of a r egulation "With baseball on strike. Mabel, maybe our surf· mg contest Will make the sporting pages. . " Volkswagen. "And so the official winner is A. J . Foyt!" You are left to wonder how Gurney and Foyt eventually s plit the $1 ,000 -if they did. This s porting re-creation. whether you believe it or not, is brought to you directly from the pages of a tome called "The People's Almanac," by David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace. Sure ly its accuracy could never be ques- tioned. WHY, THIS re -c r eation is so marvelous that I think I'll clip it and try to peddle it to our s porting editor. Who knows? If the baseball s trike keeps going, he might actua lly beg me for it. pesigned, ~~ Finished Installed 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Qual ity Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841or548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 The sun's rising, and as it ri ~~s so docs thL' demand for electricity. A s the day grO\\'S hot tc r, air conditioners and other aprlianccs click on in h orne , stores and fa ctories. The electric lt1ad "t )(lr'-' far beyqnd norn1al dc111and. 'rt)ll ca n help lighten this load -and delay building expensive ne\v generating facilitic"'-by clicking off appliances during afternoons, \vhcn de mand rcaks. Please. Give your appliances the afternoon off ~·cii ck:' Southern California Edison .. ... ,, fl " ,t n1 ,,, ,. ,n ,h 11 :1J 1J ~ • •• ... "' ~t 16 ,, Jj 11 ,, " Jf I •• . . . IRVlll Irvine 's . bonds begging When Irvine voters authorized the sale of $50 million in school construction bonds, nobody at the time believed the 7-percent tax-exempt bonds would be dogs on the market. But that's ju.st what happened. Nobody wants to buy them because they are about 3 percent below the going interest rate. That's why the Irvine Unified School District Trustees decided Monday night to ask the voters permission to raise the interest rate on the bonds. The trustees approved a $10,000 expenditure lo hire the bonding firm of Rutan and Tucker, Santa Ana, to prepare such a ballot measure for an election. School district financial ad- ministrator Ron Upton said the district baa $5 million remaining from the $50 million 1972 bond Is- sue, the largest in California his- tory. The Irvine Company came to the rescue of the school district recently, buying $1 million worth of bonds that nobody else wanted to purchase. That bond sale allowed for the completion or Woodbridge High School, among other things, Up- ton said. The sale or the remaining $5 million in bonds possibly would finance the construction or a central kitchen for the school district, warebou.se facilities and a headquarters building, Upton said. Upton said that California state officials decide each year the maximum allowable interest rate on tax-exempt bonds. That interest rate now stands at 10 percent. Under the proposed ballot measure, the rate on the bonds would equal the maximum rate allowable. The Irvine school trustees also: -Endorsed an effort by the District Advisory Forum, a group of parents, to form a non- profit corporation to collect charitable contributions for the school district. Officials say the district is facing a $3 million shortfall in funding for the next school year as the result of cut- backs in federal and s tate aid to education. -Directed the district staff to look into possible school district participation in the financing and use of a new Civic Center proposed to be built in Irvine. Panama ousts Wycliffe translators A spokesman for Wycliffe Bible Translators Inc . of Huntington Beach confirmed today that 20 members or its sister organization have been expelled from Panama by the government. Don Lindholm , associate director of Wy cliffe , said the American cltlzens worked for the Summer Institute of Linguistics, based In North Carolina. He said none was from Southern California. The institute personnel had been involved in researching the languages of primitive tribes in Panama and translating the Ne w Testament into those languages. Lindholm s aid the group's visas bad officially expired in 1979, but the institute members bad been allowed to stay in Panama while negotiations with the government continued. He aaid the expulsion order was banded down last week. "We'll be holding meetings within the next few days to discuss alternative plans to complete our work in Panama," Lindholm said. He added that one institute member, a cltiJen of Panama, w u 1tlll ln the country. "We really weren't 1urprtaed by the ordet' to leave," Lindholm aald. "It bad appeared for some tlme t.llat the a1reementa we were hopln1 to set were not 1oln1 to matertallae.'' Lall March a member ol the Summer Imtltute of Llnl\llltJca workln1 In Colombia was k ldnapped and killed by members ol the urban auerrtlla IJ'OUP M-19. Cbester A. Bittenn&n'I bOcly wu low.ad lllllde a bljacked but ~~:;.,: from 11 fll belq a CIA ... • .... ,111 .. 1110 , ....... "' ..... _ _.._...... ______ . __ _ Dally Pilat TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1981 FEATURES 83 MOVIES 84 STOCKS 87 Delly~ ........ .., aii..w. .... L_EARN~NG TO SNORKEL -Pilar Oyague, 13, (above) prac· uces. with he~ mask and snorkel during an Irvine City Com- m umty Servtces class over the wee kend in the Heritage Park Pool. Instructor Bill Sellin (right) dem onstrates some of t he finer points of us ing fins as the class members ob- s~rve from pools ide. Shaun K.ieran, 10, (below) puts on his fms before heading for the pool. The wiring of America: D a Cable television explodes across the country. . . 85 Newport oil wells readied By STEVE MABBLE Of .. o.ltr .......... Newport Beach city officials beean preparations this week for putting 16 oil wells, shut down tut January during an ownership dispute, back in mo- tion with petroleum revenues • flowing into the city budget. City Manager Robert Wynn said he hopes to have the wells back pumping by July 15. The wells, located on unin· corporated county land inland or Coast Highwa y i n West Newport, are rooted off the coast in city-controlled tidelands. The ownership dispute has pitted the city against oilman R o be rt Arms trong whose Newport firm had operated the wells for 12 years. Last week in what city of· ficials are calling a "major vie- tory,'' Orange County Supenor Court Judge Edward Wallin ruled that Newport has the right to take possession or the disput- ed oil rigs as well as subsurface equipment. Unless Armstrong takes new legal steps lo challenge the ruJ. Ing, the frequently-bitter oil well spat could be over for the time being. ~ R obe rt Bu cha nan , ' Ar mstrong's Los Angeles at-, lorney, says he agrees with the r city's analysis or the situation. But, he adds, his client is not about to give up his fight. Armstrong has never disputed that the oil belongs to the city. But he does assert that he has interest in the equipment and the a~tual operation. Buchanan says Armstrong bas a lawsuit pending thatr asks the court to settle this queayon. • • Amphitheater dates told HB council declines to back Onofre bid The Huntington Beach City Council has declined to s upport expansion of the San Onofre nuclear power plant. On a 6 -0 vote, council members decided to ''receive and file" a request from Southern California Edison official.I that the city officlala support Ucensint of newly built reactors 2 and 3. Preaently, the Atom le Safety and Llcenainl Board la boldin1 hearlnp ln San Diefo on the earthquake 1afety o the SS.a million nuclear power plant, located three miles aouth of San Clemente. "I don't think thl1 councU will 10 on record favoriJaa nuclear eower, altbouab I would," lalcl COUDCUman IOa PattlntOD, "IO I moft we Ntelve and ft1e tblt requa" · 1Earller la the mHtlDt. H•UliltGD Beach retldeat nm c..,,.._ told tbe couneU that the nuclear question la ·•an Important enou1b issue to set a public b ea ring ," before s upporting expansion of San Onofre. The city councils of Fountain Valley, Fullerton a nd Buena Park support expansion of the nuc lear plant, accordin1 to Edison omclals. Followlnl the earthquake safety hearin1s in San Die10, the atomic safety board will conduct. proceedlnas to de termine the adequacy of e mer1ency ev acuation procedurea for communities surrounding the nuclear facility. QUake recorded 'A ID1nor eartbquake ceatered near Fullerton wu reCorded by 1cient11t1 al tbe California lnalltute of Teebnolo11 'in Pa11ckma MODdQ Jult befon 1 p.m . Completion of 10 ,000-seat facility due by August By RICHARD GREEN Of .. .,.., ........... Although on l y three performers have announced con· certs at the Irvine Meadows Am· phi theater, which is embroiled in a lawsuit, amphitheater of- ficials say they are looking forward to a "blockbuster sum- mer season." Construction on the 10,000-seal amphitheater being built at Uon Country Safari in lrvlne is to be completed by Aug. 1 and 30 con- certs are to be held there throughout the summer, accord· ing to amphitheater spokesman Larry Hoffman. To date, however, only five dates have been announced: -Kenny Rogers on Sept. 11-13. -Anne Murray on Sept. 6. Court in Los Angeles on Aug. 3 against Ne d erlander's en· against the Ne<1er1anaer·s en· forcement or the radius clauses. Hennigan contends that en· forcement or the radius clau.ses bas preve nted the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater from signiq concert agreements with Jefferson Starship, Tom Jones, Emmy Lou Harris, Melissa Manchester and Santana. The legal battle is not the only controversy in which the am· phitheater has been involved. The amphitheater on Irvine Center Drive near the San Diego Freeway is in the flight path or El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· lion and Marine Corps officials say an amphitheater on the site * * * is incompatible with air station flight operations. After several weeks or de- bate th.is spring among orriciall of the City of Irvine, the am- phitheater and the Marine Corps an agreement was finally de· veloped in an attempt to insure military jets won't disturb con- cert performances. The agreement features a pro- vision that concerts will be can· celled on short notice tf the Marines decide they will have to fl y over the amphitheater during a scheduled performance. However, amphitheater of- ficials contend that the record shows few jets ny over the am· phit heater site on weekend nights when most concerts will be held. * * * -The Charley Daniels band on Aug. 21. Amphitheater administrator Mark Kogan claimed today that seven other acts have been signed but declined lo announce Gov. Brown ready the dates or performers. He contended that some of the performers, although already signed, have asked that their names not be released yet. for groundbreak Meantime , the Ir vine Meadows Amphitheater Partnership, of which Investors from the Koll Company and Uon Country Safari hold shares, ls in· volved in a $1.S million lawsuit against the Nederlander or· ganization, which own1 the Greek 'lbeater in Loi An1eles. The suit alle1e1 that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is scheduled to break ground Saturday at the Oran1e County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa for the SlO million Nederlander West amphitheater. Fair board president Howard Newport man arrested in performer contracts enforced by 1_ ..... Nederlander is 1tymieina efforts stOCIU!t case by Irvine Meadows Am· phltheater officials to book Jferbert I. Joaa ol Newport performen. -Blach wu arreeted D .. r lllaml At issue is so-called "radius International Airport Monday clauses" in Nederlander con· alter an undercover FBI ..-t tracts which prevent. artl1t1 alle1ed Jou tried to Mil 1llm from appearlna at any am-co'1nterfelt securities, federal pl\itheater within 100 mUea ot ottlclala reported today. the Greek and within 90 days Jo11, 55, of 14 Plne Valley before and 60 day1 after a Lane\ Newport Beach, ta vie. performance there. pr ea dent of Thom eon and The lrvlne Meadow• lawsuit. McKinnon, a Cblca10 tlffk alle1ea that the radius clauaet brokera1e bouH. He waa amount to a ratrainl of trade. releaMCl on a •.ooo penonal Tbe Nedeflander or1anlu1Uoa reco1nlaance bo<d lfter a pl1D1 to open ill owa am-beartDI blfon U.S. M8'1Mrlltt ebltbeater neat )'Hf at tbe Peter Palermo. Oran,. Count:r Fairpwadl ID loa 11 ebarpd 'Witb ~ Cotta 11... traD1portatloe of eouDterfelt Mtcbael Hftnltan. attorneJ Hc•rltl•, accor4l•I lo Joe for lrvtM' MHdoWI, Hid be Corl-. .-dal .... t bl e-.. hopes to appear ln U.S. Diltriet ol t.be Rf olftce ID lli..U. Dickerson announced Brown'• participation this morning, not- i n 1 the governor ls also scheduled to make a "quick" tour of the annual fair and the state facilities on the sprawline 182-acre fairgrounds. Illusive earth movinc opera· Uoos al the amphitheater ait.e, j ust 1outh of the Memorial Gardens buildinl and weal ol the admlniltraUn bulldin1, la to belln July 22, faJr officlala said. Tar1et date for tbe flrat performance ln the 7,000..aeat theater ta about next June 1, ac- cordlnC to Rick Witter. project mana1er for Nederlander West. Saturday '• symbollc rrounclbrealdn& wlll culmlD~t4 nearly four years of effort tq 1aln a falr1round1 am- phitheater. Plane for a smaller facility onalnallY were approved ln 1"7 with comtruction planned "'9 followl.DI year. A lawnlt ftled by the City fl Cotta .... da&a)'ed tUt nnrLllilllllll and~ ..... ron-.111a of ...... _....... ......... .. c:ontna ......... ttate t.be .............. ~ ....... . opera._. '11 tM ID LOI Aa1elH t.beat .. lttOM tbe • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Tuesday, July 7, 1981 FLATl'ENED ROUNDBALL DEPI'. -Things are r eally on the tough these days for those reportorial savants who chronicle the sporting life. The trouble is -no baseball. The proressionals of the diamonds of America have quit. They're ~· !"-\ .T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 .~~ on s trike. No Angels . No Dodgers . No nothing. Thus the problem for the sporting writers is to find something to write about here in the dead heat or summer. Here on our sterling journa l, Los Alamitos racetrack and the Transpac yacht r acer s have abruptly found themselves dra wing heavy a mounts or ink. In the desperation of it all, we even ran a fantasy World Series between the Angels and the Dodgers. IF YOU TJONK that's dipping down into it, the Long Beach paper only yesterday gave its screaming sports bannerline to the fishing person who pulled in the firs t ma rlin of the year. If the Transpac yacht racers should join the Angels a nd the Dodgers on walkout, we may have to start running fantasy yacht races. Maybe we could come up with a match boat race between John Paul Jones and Admiral "Bull" Halsey. On the other hand, we could revert to Great Moments in Sports. Maybe something like this : "HERE WE ARE, ladies and gentlemen, at the 1964 Nassau Speed Week where we 're lined up ready for the Grand Prix for Volkswagens. "Look over the r e folks , r ight toge the r a r e racer Da n Gurney, sometimes of Corona del Mar , and famed A. J . Foyt, always of Texas. "Some thing mus t be up folks , because Gurney and Foyt have been whis pering to each other all week now. "Everybody's ready. 'The starting line has gone Buggy. They're off! "Wait a minute folks ... what's this? Gurney is tailgating Foyt's Bug. Why, he's actually PUSHING it! "J UST LOOK AT THAT -Gurney pushed Foyt for seven laps now in this 100-mile s peed contest and they've passed ever y Bug in the field. It's a maz- ing! "They've only got a quarter-mile to go now, folk s, and Corona del Mar's New faces join Valley panels . , Many new faces are joining a handful of reap· pointed participants on F'ountain Valley's advisory commissions and committees. The City Council recently made its advisory appointments for 2-year-terms lhat began July l. The council appointed Glenn Collins, Rod Hosilyk and Philip Mi gnanelli to three Planning Commission vacancies Collins. 40, is an 11 -year Fountain Valley resi· dent employed by Southern California Edison. A 6·year Fountain Valley resident, Hosilyk, 41. is president of the Rosso Corp. or Irvine. Mignanelli, 52, a 10-year resident. is an elec- tronics distributor. He just concluded one year as a Planning Commission alternate. His wife, Betty Mignanelli, is president of the Fountain Va lley School District board or trustees. The three new commissioners will replace Frank Bryant, Ed Ruzak and Ernie Vasquez. Only Bryant did not seek reappointment. Appointed alternate planning commissioner was Leonard Santoro, 38, a salesman who current- ly is president of the Greenbrook Homeowners' As- sociation. He will vo te on planning decisions whenever a regular commissioner is absent. Three people were named to the Parks and Recreation Commission. Martha Proffitt, 38, was reappointed to the ad- visory body. She is vice president of Association Administrators and Consultants, Inc., of Irvine. Also named as a new parks commissioner was George Pa ul Olsen, 37, a financial planner with Creative Financial Solutions, based in Irvine. The third pa rks commission appointment was Ruth A. Rosewitz, 46, an instructor at Long Beach Community College. Appointed to the city's Traffic Committee were John W. Briscoe Ill, Donald Chaney and Car- roll H. "Bud" Lancaster. Three people were reappointed to the city's Housing and Community Development Advisory Board: James Dick, Sophie Young and Huel Courreges. New appointments to this board were Martt Gardner. Karen Holliday, James HugheU, Dennis Kelly, and Karen Polak . ~Thief back at CM . scene of crime • The thief or thieves who r~portedly took about $1•,ooo worth of Jewelry from an east Costa Meaa townbouae resident on JWM 22 •P· parenUy returned to the 'ceneoft.becrtme. Resident Stephanie ADD Froula told police , that an ldcUtlOoal Sl,000 lo jewelry waa liken rroro bet Jewelry box sometime last week. Police who i.nvesUaat· ed the June 22 incident said a buralar may have s ne aked tbrouth an open alidlQI 1la«t door leadJnc to UM towttbouse kitchen. The lateat tbel\, of· llcera said, app1rentl1 waa not the result of forced entry. ' Gurney is hanging on Foyt's bumper like they're two Bugs in a pod! ••But wait! Gurney is pulling out now! He's passing Foyt with just the quarter-mile to go! Gurney takes the checkered nag for victory! . "BE'ITER HOLD everything, folks. Somebody has filed a formal protest against Dan Gurney. They're inspecting his V-Dub even now. "We've just gotten the word. Gurney is disqualified ror entering a California h o t rod instead o f a r egulatio n - "With baseball on strike, Mabel. maybe our turf- ing contest will make the :rporting pages " Volkswagen "And so the official winner is -A. J . Foyt!" You are left to wonder how Gurney and Foyt eventuall y split the $1,000 -if they did . This spor ting re -creation. whether you believe it or not, is brought to you directly from the pages of a tome called "The P eople's Almanac." by David Wa llechinsky and Irving Wall ace Surely its accura cy could never be ques- tioned. WHY , THIS re -creation is s o marvelous that I thmk I'll clip it and try to peddl e it to our sporting editor. Who knows? If the baseball strike keeps going, he might actually beg me for it. Designed, ,~~ Finished Installed 28 Years Experi ence Manufact uri ng Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841or548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 1977 Placentia Av enue • Costa Mesa CA 92627 The su n1s ri ""in g, and as it ri se ~ so d()e~ thL· demand for elcrtri ci ty. As the day grO\\·s ho tter. air conditi oners an d o th er appli ~nces cli ck on in , homes, stores <1 nd fac tori es. The electri c load ~oar~ ... far beyond norn1al den1and. Yc )u can help li ght~n this load -and delay building expensive ne\v generating t1 cili ti cs by cli cking off appliances during afternoo ns, \vhcn dernand peak s. Please. Give your appliances the afternoon off ~·c1ick :· • Southern California Edison E ' • , , 11 I Daily Pilat TUESOAY,JULY7, 1981 FEATURES 83 MOVIES 84 STOCKS 87 DRllGI ClllT The wiring of America: Cable television explodes across the country . . . B5 0 0 Mesa planning to cut 'sign pollution' Costa Mesa ofticials are COD· sidering cbanees in the city's 7-year-old sign ordinance aimed at moving the city closer to the law's original goal of reducing visual pollution. The first possible change will be considered by the City Coun· cil Aug. 10, when the board will discuss allowing non-conforming signs erected before the or · dinance was enacted to remain standing. When the law was passed in 1974 , standing signs that did not conform were to be phased out on a schedule based on their value when the ordinance came into effect. AJI non-conforming signs were to have been re- moved by 1984. In preparation for the Aug. 10 meetlne. the council Monday or- dered the city's Development Services Department to compile information on the ordinance's impact on the city and the possi- ble impact of "grandfathering," or allowing all pre-1974 signs that do not conform to the or- dinance to stand. The issue is important to many local merchants because elaborate business signs can cost tens of thouaand.!I of dotlan. Councilwoman Norma Hertzog, sponsor of the motion to restudy the ordinance, said she took action because the or- dinance has not worked. "I don't think the sien or· dinance has done what it wu supposed to do -eliminate the clutter," Ms . Hertzog said. .. There hasn't been a dramatic improvement.'' Newport • WIDS, oil to flow City to reactivate 16 inland wells shut down in January ..., ............ NevJpOrt Beach city offidaU ore claiming a "major vidMJI" in court batt~ over oumerlhip of 16 oil ~u.. inland of Coon HighLOCJy in Welt Newport. Motorists face Inore detours Motorists who ply Newport Boulevard through Costa Mesa and Newport Beach were warned today they face lane closures and "Inconvenience" into 1982. Heinz Heckerolh, district Caltran.s director, said the Paul Gardner Corp. of Ontario will immediately begin the task of replacing traffic signals along the busy thoroughfare at every street intersection between Finley Avenue in Newport and Mesa Drive in Costa Mesa. The $1 million Caltrans con- tract calls for new light signals, standards and signal actuaton at each intersection along the 4.7-mile stretch, a Caltrans spokesman said, and work will continue into the spring of next year. ''Pe ak hour closures , Heckeroth said, will be ''avoided whenever possible." Tbe new system, said Caltrans engineer Harvey Hopkins, will offer better signal syncroniza- tion for traffic flowing north and south atop& tbe busy thoroughfare when completed. 'Christine' leads in Transpac The yacht Christine moved back lnto the lead ln the 2.225- mlle Loi An1eJe1 to Honolulu Tranapaclflc race today 1nd wu 1bowln1 a position about 10 milea ahead of Merlin. Cbrl.ltlne'a poeltlon i.Ddlc1ted 1be waa 1,312 mllu from Honolulu and Merlin waa 1,m. lltrlla ta aallln1 about 10 mllea toUtb ot Cbriallne and wu ~ w1ndl ol 15 knoU from ........ OU.er 1acbll reportlnt "eatller Indicated tbat t~• 1•e~ta ..,., la tbe aor'theut trelli .... wttb wtadl r ..... rro..ueo•.-.. lee tllrtNI' It.Or)', Pact C-1. Bandits hit Mesa bank for 2nd day Bandits hit a Crocker National Bank in Costa Mesa for the second day in a row today when a man who passed a note de· manding money at the South Coa st Plaza branch escaped with $500 in cash, police said. In a holdup the day before, a light-skinned man with red hair and mustache escaped from the Crocker National branch at 1845 Newport Blvd. with $1 ,000 in a similar robbery. investigators said. That bandit in Monday's holdup, officers said, indicated he carried a gun but did not dis· play it to clerks. He is believed to be the same bandit who re· cently held up a bank in Cypress, investigators added. Bank employees described him as having red hair, about 35 years of age, 5 feet, 10 inches tall and about 170 pounds Police. working with sketchy information l\:>llowing the South Coast Plaza robbery at 11 a.m. today said witnesses indicated their assailant was not the red- haired bandit. Officers said todav's robber displayed no gun either. Council to allow condo development The Costa Mesa City Council Monday approved a change in the city's general plan that will allow development of con- dominiums on a lot at 340 E. 20th St., after expected opposition to the plan failed to materialize. Four persons who either re· side near the planned develop- ment or own property near it spoke at the meeting, all in favor of the change. It was a marked reversal from a r«ent Planninl Commiasioo meetlq, where owners of sin1le-family homes in the area compla.lned that condominium development will decreue the value ol tbeir homes and cause traffic prob- lems. The councll'a action Monday altered the ceneral plan, wbicb deslcnatea only low-density houslnc development In the area, to also allow medium· den1lty development. The action rectlfted an •pparent coatradlc· lion between t.be 1eneraJ plan ud IOOlna ln tbe area, which already aOowa medJum·demlty development ln spoca. RHldenta and landowaera apeUIRI tn favor ol tbe ~ aaJd tbey all bed PIUI for''' de- velopment ol their own Pf'OI*'· ty, rr:;rom major reno.1· UODI to ~to UM ,..... UoD and resUN· meet ol tome ol the 1trurtunt. All said they want the op- portunity to upgrade the area while preserving Ila residential character. Just one area of the tract was exempted from the new medium-density allowance, a section of Robin Hood Lane east of Santa Ana A venue. Thal area wUI remain designated for low- denslty housing development only. · Tbe affected area ls rou&bly bordered by 20th and 22nd street.a, Santa Ana and Tustin avenues between 22nd and 23rd streets east of Santa Ana A venue, the city boundary. and the area between 211t Street and Rose Lane and Oran1e and San· ta Ana avenues. Mesa track meet slated Coat.a MeHna of all a1es are invited by the clty'1 Department of L•l•ure Servlcea to partldpate tn a 1ummert1me All·Comer Track ud f'leld Meet IJl'OIJ'UIL Sebedulecl for Tti1lrid•11 at • : ao p.m. at co.ta ..... mo SCbOol U1irWcb dM mGDt.111 ol T• .,. tlM ........ oP9D to...,. OM 9t a M of • naU, 8ceord· in• t.o eoai'cliDM« Jalim c.n..,. • By STEVE MARBLE Of -Deity ,..... ..., Newport Beach city officials began preparations this week for putting 16 oil wells, shut down last J anua ry during an ownership dispute, back in mo- tion with petroleum revenues flowing into the city budget. City Manager Robe rt Wynn said he hopes to have the welts back pumping by July 15. The wells, located on unin· corporated county land inland of Coast Highway in West Newport, are r ooted off the coast in city -controlled tidelands. The ownership dispute has pitted the city against oilman Robert Armstrong whose Newport firm had operated the wells for 12 years. Last week in what city of· ficials are calling a "major vic- tory." Orange County Superior Court Judge Edward Wallin ruled that Newport has the right to take possession of the disput· ed oil rigs as well as subsurface equipment. Unless Armstrong takes new legal steps to challenge the rul- ing, the frequently-bitter oil well spat could be over for the time being. Robert Buchanan , Armstrong's Los Angeles at- torney, says he agrees with the city's analysis of the situation. But, he adds, his client is not about to give up bis fight. Armstrong bas never disputed that the oil belongs to the city. But he does assert that he bas interest in the equipment and the actuaJ operation. . Buchanan says Armstrong has a lawsuit pending that asks the court to settle this question. This suit, he says, could eventually put Armstrong back in the oil picture. "This whole thing is far from over," Buchanan adds. But for the moment, the city sees itself as being in the win· ner's circle. Wynn said the city is preparing to go out to bid to find an oil operator for the wells. Whal the city actually is look· ing for is an operator who will return a large percentage of the oil profits to the city. Wynn believes the city could earn up to $1 million a year if thin&s go right. Armstrong was giving the city a 12 percent cut or roughly $120,000 a year. Before the wells were shut down, Armstrone of· fered to up the city's share to 25 percent. But Wynn contends the only fair way to determine what the city's cul should be is to go out to bid. Newport man arrested in stocks case Herbert I. Joss of Newport Beach wu arrested near Miami International Airport Monday after an undercover FBI a1ent alJe1ed Jou tried to aell him counterfeit securities, federal officials reported today. Joss, 55, of 14 Ptne Valley Lane, Newport Beach, la vice president of Tbomaon and McKinnon, a Chlca10 stock brokera1e bouae. He was released on a *50,000 penooal reco1olzaoce bond after a hearina before U.S. lh1i9trate Peter Palermo. Joas ia charced with lntentate • tranaportatlon of counterfeit aecurltiea, accordlnt to Joe Corleea, 1peclal a1ent tn char1e of the FBJ office In lllamJ. AlenU alJe&e Jou WU ~ to sell rro,ooo Worth ol munld bon~h haued by wbat • ldentlfled at tbe ·'State of CattfonS1 Loi Aqel• Water and ...,..... Co1Dpen1," Corlllli sald. Tbef'BJ..-wd&aeddb'- to Ill• Newport hacb bome, Jo11 allO llu a r .. tdnce ID Cblc--. Ms . Hertzog said that a "grandfathering" rule, if enact· ed, may make the ordinance more enforceable because It might bring merchants with non-conforming pre-1974 signs into a group backing enforce· ment of the ordinance. If tbe "grandfathering" action is approved and proves effec- tive, Ms. Hertzo1 said she will up a tree Pancho, a 4-year-old macaw, had been known as flighty. But his latest break for freedom . was "his greatest escape yet," says owner Jim Langston of Huntington Beach. His 24 hours on the wing ended at 4:45 p.m. Monday in the 8400 block of Heron Circle, about a mile from home. But his hiding out in five neighborhood trees had raised quite a flutter of rescue activity during which Langston: -Climbed a 24-foot extension ladder. -Called in Ski, the Bird Man of Newport Pier, whose macaws and other feathered friends ut- tered mating calls. -Was assisted by wife Helen and son Jimmy, 11, in trying to talk their pet down from lofty perches. -Put another macaw in Pancho's cage in hopes be would then propose a study of the or- dinance provisions which allow certain types of signs in certain areas, depending on the size and location of the sign and local traffic patterns. That study could bring changes in the so-called ··rus- trl ct" provisions of the or- dinance that would result In further compliance with the law, After a day of taunting humans, Pancho t.OOS captured and held by Jim Langston as Ski, Bird Man of Newport Pier, clipped his wings . fly in to reclaim his territory and shoo the visitor. For his fi11al appeal. Langston climbed on to a. neighbor's roof and offered a banana. Pancho came down a few branches, Langston grabbed him and Ski immediately clipped his wings. Gqv. Brown ready for groundbreak Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr.<ia 1cbeduled to break 1round Saturday at the Oran1e County FalrCJ'OUDdl ln Ooata 11 .. for the $10 million Nederlander Weat ampbithHter. Fair board president Howard Dlckenoa announced Brown's partldpatlon lh1I mornln1. not· ln1 the 1overnor h 1lao tcbed\alecl to make a "quick" tour ot tbe annual falr aod the atate f aclllUet on the apra,rUna lta·ac" falrll'OWldl. llUllft earth IDOYlDI opera. tiou at UM amplaltbeater lite JHt 1oatb of lbe Memorial Gudw llulldln1 ud w.t o1 the a4mlldltraUYe bulldlq, II to belia ,.., II, fair otftdah IWd. Tar1et date tor tbe flrat performance lo the 7 ,000-seat theater ia about next June 1, &c· cordlnl to Rick Witter. project ma_n11er foT Nederlander Wat. ~aturday '1 1ymbollc 1roundbreaklq will culmln ... nearly four }'eart of effort to 1aln a faf r•round1 am· pbltheater. Plana for a smaller f~lllt.y ori1lnally were approved ln 1'77 with conatrucUoo planned tbe foltowins year. A lawsuit ft.led b7 the Clty ol Cotta .... ct.l•J9CI that project and eventually I.cl to formatloa of a new.,,... amphitheater contract betWMG lllii •tale aDd the NederlUder or1w1aUGa, operat.orl OI the Grwk 'J'beaW ln Lot An1elet aad otber t.heaten aero11 tM aauaa. ' •. • • ·-·----. --------. --...,. __ . -. .,._ -------------i------__ _,_. ----- f.a L * Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuesday, July 7, 1981 I ~ ! ),\~ What national pastime? • • ' FIATl'ENED ROUNDBALL DEPT. -Things are really on the tough these days for those reportorial savants who chronicle the sporting life. The trouble is -no baseball. The professionals of the diamonds of America have quit. They:re ~- .,-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-f -~r, on strike. No Angels. No Dodgers. No nothing. Thus the problem for the sporting writers is to find something to write about here in the dead heat of summer. Here on our sterling journal, Los Alamitos racetrack and the Transpac yacht racers have abruptly found thelllSelves drawing heavy -amounts of ink. In the desperation of it all, we even ran a fantasy World Series between the Angels and the Dodgers. IF YOU TIDNK that.'s dipping down into it, the Long Beach paper only yesterday gave its screaming sports bannerline to the fi shing person who pulled in the first marlin of the year. If the Transpac yacht racers should join the Angels and the Dodgers on walkout, we may have to start running fantasy yacht races. Maybe we could come up with a match boat race between John Paul Jones and Admiral "Bull" Halsey. On the other hand, we could revert to Great Moments in Sports. Maybe somethlng like this: "HERE WE ARE, ladies and gentlemen, at the 1964 Nassau Speed Week where we're lined up ready for the Grand Prix for Volkswagens. "Look over there folk s, right together are racer Dan Gurney . sometimes of Corona del Mar, and famed A. J. Foyt, always of Texas. "Something must be up folks, because Gurney and Foyt have been whispering to each other all week now. '·Everybody's ready. The starting line has ~one Buggy. They're off! "Wa1t a minute folks . . . what's this? Gurney is tailgating Foyt's Bug. Why, he's actua lly PUSHING it ! "JUST LOOK AT THAT -Gurney pushed Foyt for seven laps now in this 100-mile speed contest and they've passed every Bug in the field . It's amaz· ing! "They've only got a quarter.mile to go now, folks. and Corona del Mar's . New faces join Valley panels Many new faces are joining a handful of reap· pointed participants on Fountain Valley's advisory commissions and committees. The City Council recently made Its advisory appointments for 2-year-terms that began J uly 1. The council appointed Glenn Collins, Rod Hosilyk and Philip Mignanelli to three Planning Commission vacancies. Collins, 40, is an 11-year Fountain Valley resi- dent employed by Southern California Edison. A 6·year Fountain Valley resident. Hosilyk, 41, is president of the Rosso Corp. of Irvi ne. Mlgnanelli, 52, a to.year resident, is an elec· tronics distributor. He just concluded one year as a Planning Commission alternate. His wife. Betty Mignanelli. is president of the Fountain Valley School District board of trustees. The three new commissioners will replace Frank Bryant, Ed Ruzak and Ernie Vasquez. Only Bryant did not seek reappointment. Appointed alternate planning commissioner was Leonard Santoro, 38, a salesman who current- ly is president of the Greenbroolt Homeowners' As· sociation. He will vote on planning decisions whenever a regular commissioner is absent. Three people were named to the Parks and Recreation Commission. Martha Proffitt, 38, was reappointed to the ad- visory body. She is vice president of Association Administrators and Consultants, lnc., of lrvipe. Also named as a new parks commissioner waJ George Paul Olsen, 37, a financial planner with Creative Financial Solutions, based in Irvine. The third parks commission appointment was Ruth A. Rosewitz, 46, an instructor at Long Beach Community College. Appointed to the city's Traffic Committee were John W. Briscoe Ill, Donald Cbaney and Car- roll ff. "Bud" Lancaster. 'l'hree people were reappointed to the city's Housing and Community Development Advisory Board: James Dick, Sophie Youns and Hazel Courrege&, New appointments to this board were Mark Gardner, Karen Holliday, James Hughell, Dennis : Kelly, and Karen Polak . . Thief back at CM . scene of crime The thief or thieves who reportedly took , about $14,000 worth of Jewelr)' rrom an east Cotta II•• townbo'-'H •t realdml OD June 22 ap. • · parea'1.J MUl'Md to the ~althlen ... RHlMlit Stephanie ADD rr.ta told police v Ut8l -edclltiaeal $1,000 la Jewelry •11 taken from ber Je•elry bOa l sometime tut week. Police who lnvesU••~ ed the June 22 incident Hid a bur1lar may tiave , s neaked throueh ao o"n •ldi8c aiua door leactlnc to the toWnhoale kite ha The latest theft, of· flcera aald, appareQU, •H not the result of forced ent.r)r Gurney is hanging on Foyt's bumper like they're two Bugs in a pod! "But wait! Gurney Is pulling out now ! He's passing Foyt with just the quarter·mile to go! Gurney takes the checkered fl ag for victory! "BE'M'ER HOLD everything, folks. Somebody has filed a formal protest against Dan Gurney. They're inspecting his V ·Dub even now. "We've just gotten the word. Gurney is disqualified for entering a California hot rod instead of a regulation ~-- ··with baseball on .strike. Mabel. maybe our $Urf· mg contest wtLI make the spor1mg poge1 " Volkswagen . "And so the official winner is -A. J . Foyt!" You are left to wonder how Gurney and Foyt eventually split the $1,000 -if t hey did. This sporting re-cr eation. whether you believe it or not, is brought to you directly from the pages of a tome called "The People's Almanac," by David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace. Surely its ·accuracy could never be ques- tioned. WHY, THIS re ·Cr eation is so marvelous that I think I'll clip it and try to peddle it to our sporting editor. Who knows? If the baseball strike keeps going, he might actually beg me for it. Designed, Finished Installed 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! can (714) 548-6841 or548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUFACT8RY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa CA 92627 The sun's rising, and a~ it rise s "() doL·~ the den1and for electricity. As the day grO\\''i hotter. air conditioners and other tlpp lian cc~ click on in h ome , stores and fa ctories. The electric load sn0r"i ... far beyond norn1al den1and. You can help li ghtLn · this load -and delay building expensive new generating frtci li tics -hy cli cking off appliances during afternoon , \vhen demand pcak'i. \ Please. Give your appliances the afternoon off ~·ctick :' Southern California Edison , '• -• •J 11 •' ,, ... u· • --_..~_,,~~----~..,..-~~:--~------------_,.~--,...-..--....-............ ~----::"'!"' ... _.,..~•""11!4 ... .,..,.~,...,.,,...,..,.,,...,,..,~,~·..,,.,..., ............ ,...11111101110o-.e .. ~s .. -.c ... ~~S ..... O~U~09llllS ...... £ ... Clllllllll!l!ICll!l~Sll!i Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Tuesday, July 7, 1981 N 117 NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION OUOTl•TIO'f$ IN<l.UOI TUOCIO• '"' .... TO••· MIOWIU ..... (1 .. 1(, ..... 9GIT'ON, 01 T•OIT ••D CtlfCINlfAfl noo taCMlilllOH AMO II .-0.WIO OV TMI M&aO ANO lllllTINIT • DOw Jones Final UP 4.85 CLOSING 954.15 ~~' ~\~ .. .._. U.S. hanks losing control? fThf.aitthe /1r1t o/a two-porl ttnts.J One by one. with a persistence that must compel even the most indifferent to worry about the possibly grave threat to economic freedom, America's great banks are falling under foreign control. This involves much more than purchases of selected U.S. corporation securities by foreign in- vestors, huge though this buying has been. All those widely publicized stock ~ pur c h ases m ean is that foreign capital ----------~~~ is seeking sale-, ty and profit in SYlVIA PORTER , U .S co m _ panies. The on ly basic implication can be that excessive totals of U.S. dollars circul ating abroad are beini recycled back lo us via buying of our stocks. Fine. For many years, Ameri can investors have been pouring dollars into overseas markets, and while some of the investors have been "ugly Americans," in general our money has been enthusiastically welcomed. Now. foreign owners of dollars are return· ing the compliment. and informed sources echo the welcome -be the source of the capital European, Arabian. Japanese, English But OUTRIGHT CONTROL of our multibilllon dollar banks? This could telegraph much more than a healthy increase in competition in the arena of in- ternational banking. This could be a signal of "danger ahead" which it would be abysmal folly for us to ignore as we have been. These are foreign banks <backed with money we cannot possibly trace and identify satisfa ctorily ) tak· ing over U.S. banks. Just consider the scope of foreiJ?n bank ownership right now: The sale of a controlhng interest in Crocker Na- tional Bank in California to MidJand Bank, third largest bank in England, 1s pending If that acquisition is consummated (almost cer- tain> Crocker, the 12th largest bank in the United States with year·end 1980 assets of $18 9 billion , would become the largest foreign-owned bank in the United Slates. . In California alone. 31 or the 281 commercial banks were controlled by foreign interests as 1981 began Ot1 Thursday When /oreignen control U S bank$ what 11 might mean STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORKIAPl f'IMI Oow...J-• avos GOLD COINS " '"' ... . , .. . ,.~ ..... , .. .. '• . '· N .. W yq411K lAPI -l'fat IN ......, ef .... ClllM, ~ ... Tl111n414f'• ..-k• . • ,.....,..... '"'° M., $GUS, ... 111.a ........... 1.,.., -., .. IUS, tiff llUS ......... ·-· 1J'"" ... ~,,,,.,, ..... ---•t-. ·-.,.., .... ...., ... .... .,_ .. tor Mof\Clay, Jul. • ITOCKS 0-Hi.II Law CIMa ells 30 1no •s1.u tt1 9S ,.., •1 tff :ic>-.... 10 Trn Q .:11 «1'1.7• 1" 11 400 11-9.49 15 VII 106.41 107. U 10S :II IOS '2 O.G U Stlt 310.30 ln,. l6J 0.. 367 ,._ S.lS 1no1" U02.JOO Tran 1,11•,.aa Vllll Q ,100 -5 s1-1,01.- WHAT STOC KS DID NEW YORK tAPI Jul l AOVanoo Oe<.lln.O VnchangaO TOlal IHIH> llM!w nlgl'IJ New Iowa WH/ll AMl V 000 NEW YORI<. t API Jul • p,..y Aelvancl<I OKllneO Vncl\a11gad Tot•I luu .. lffw lllOf\' New IOw' r~z. ., o~z. Ill IOS s li ... lt'J 111 1 " METALS HEW YORI( IAl'l -Soot -"°"' mel.AIPf'kM-Y' ~~c...U a~. V.S.<IHti- Horn . ...... Jt ..... 1a apound. IllOC .. \lo~•• pound, o.llvw...O. Tlro M • .U.. ~1 W.....<°"'"'lle lb. Ai.M'-1"40 ....,be pound, H V Mertwy $.CU.GO per ,. ...... l'lat--..SolGS.OOtroyaa., H.V. SILVER H'W YOi.I( (AP) -HWWy a. Han'Nfl lll'fff 1--.. 11.Sl, '-' t0.23 t:noetlWnl allver •-· .... n . I~ M sliver S1.0C2, "9to.t 11 GOLD QUOTATIONS a,n.~...,..,.._, S.IKtiod -gold prl<et 'IOCMy ~1 ,..-111!!0 ll•lno ...s.oo. 1.911 u. La•••: atter110011 11.1,,. ~.rs, off 111.u . rer1t1_.._11a1no .. 1u1. 11111 u.a.. ,.,.,...., t.405.01, up 11.11'2. l11rltll: late 11111,,. '404.00, up U .00; M07.00asbd. N•••Y a Mer111••: e111y ctally quote ~: •• ~.2S, I ' ..,., ct.Illy .,.._ MM.• ... $1,U , ........ , °""' dlelly ..... lawk• .. t.cJl.10, .. It.JD. I I IRfWI O.. ...... 1 ~ •••••• ~-'T'"~ .. -.... I I • I I I 1' - . - -------- Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tunday, July 7, 1981 TWENTY ClASSA CIGARETTES More -.:...~-.:.-...oil.-!.----------