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1981-02-26 - Orange Coast Pilot
I ' I I I I • I I f, ~ • I I I ' 11 I :\ t < ' ' 1 ' j ri I ,, •• ' . • o . ... ' ,. ' ' • . .._., . , '~,. , ....... DoulJle your pleasure This double wedding in Johannesburg, South Africa, was just that when two sets of identical twins -Lyn and Gail Rabinowitz and Brian and Jason Jacobson -decided to tie the knots togther. From left are Brian, Lyn, Gail and Jason. OCTD-hits streets Friday 22- .. It jolts jet LA-to-London plane 0 K LONDON (AP) -A thunderboltsmasbed a two-foot bole in the nosecone of a London-bound British Airways jumbo jet car!'Y~g 202 passengers after it took off from Los Angeles today the airline reported. . The bolt destroyed the Boeing '147's weather rada~ sysu:m when it struck five minutes after takeoff, a spokesmansatd Notn· juries were reported. . Despite the gaping bole, the airliner flew 10 hours to London s Heathrow airport where it landed safely. . Passengers on the flight said there was a loud bang. which sounded like a shell exploding when the thunderbolt bit. One traveler said: "There was a flash and a bang. There was no panic and thepilotcalmlyexplainedwbatbadbappened." The pilot, Capt. Ray Dodwell, said there was no danger. "Luckily the lightning struck on a non-pr~surized a~a. We dido •t know there was a bole in the nosecone until we landed m Lon-_ don." Exelusive IA area • Woman, 62, slain despite security LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -A Q . year-old woman was sbot to death at the door of her exclusive Westwood security apartment in an apparent robbery attempt, policesaid~y. · Anotberreaiclentof the complex said she saw a man in a ebauf· feur's cap running from tbe aeene moments after bearinc a linCle 11011 ClllT WllDll Increasing cloudiness overnllbt. Chance of rain less than 10 percent tonlcht and 20 percent Fri· day. Lowa tonllbt in tbe .eo.. llllba Friday eo to•· ...... , LHX.,_,,Cllt~· t•f 1 eapnvt.or for 'Tuo1 ,.,,,..,...,, " • rears old Giid f ,.,,, J Wit fall. ,,,, -...,.,,,._ .. -~ Preu .....,, lw cMmbed ado o o,.,,,.. • a ,,.,_. '°°"' lo .... ..., "°" ....... --.., ,.. ,._.....,_,to _,. 6a a·_.,_.. tor ,,.,_ ,., ......... ,. AlJ. •••• ··====· ·= ~ .:: ===~ llfi, • • shot at about 6:30 p.m. Wednes· day. The victim was identified as Helen Bucky, who lived with ber sister in the exclusive three-story complex on Beverly Glen Boulevard, West Los Angeles Divisioadetectivesaaid. "It was a common street rob- bery that went wronar," said Lt. Mike Keegan. "We think tbe 1111- pect followed her into the apart· ment eomples, but apparenUy never 1CJt inside her apartment. Herpune, tbou1h, wu mluU.,." A tenant who uked not to be identified said 1be beard tbe sound ol the sbot. Then, she aald, ''A neilbbor yelled, 'There be con!' and I saw a youac man nm· Dini .... the seeood·floor COi'· rldor wttb a belc• duffle baC in bla band and weartq a blue daauf · feur'• cap and or ..... Jacket. He disappeared down u.e emercency stalrwell.'' Sbe laid the man bad been lolterial around tbe complex earlier mu.day. 111. BacQ WU WOUDded ID tbe temple and died before paramedlaarrl•e4,palieelldd. Tbe mmder oeeurnd abcNt 1~ (lee YICl'IJI. .... Al) Fire help• area BISHOP (AP) -U.S. r.- Seniee oftklall qy a 1.-.,aen fire tbat waa 1tarte4 bt an U'IOllllt -........ ..... .., &M0-1l.-•'fst11e.-· putU..._, ......... area. It demM ., a Ill fll ._. . fMI," ...... ol tbe ••llda7 blue. 't Jet roar topic of hearing By STEVE MARBLE Of tt1e o.11, l"llel S'-ff State noise hearings for John Wayne Airport took a humorous turn when attorneys inquired why some pilots veer over homes after departure instead of charting a course down the mid· die of the Newport Bay. Ray llrtola, an attorney representing the City of Newport Beach, asked airport noise specialist Bill Martin Tuesday "why can't pilots just line themselves up with their eyes?" Martin, the eighth witness called in the hearings that began Monday to determine if the airport should be granted a noise variance, laughed and responded: ·'That sort of stuff went out with scarfs, leather helmets and goggles, you know.·' Martin and pilots rely on in- struments and communications with the airport tower to provide that information. He said a small error on the part of a· pilot could cause such off-course de- partures. "You don't fly a plane like a train going down a railroad track -you can't make square turns," Martin said. Much of the afternoon's ques- tionin& by lkola and attorney Tbomu F.dwards, representing Newport Beach's Mariners Com- munity A.uociation, was com- plex and technical in nature. Martin wu asked at one point why Frontier Airlines, the newest carrier at the airport, waa able to achieve lower noise reacllnp than the other three airllnesftyiqoutof John Wayne. "WeU," becan Martin, "when FronUer learna to do tbelr (sic) arithmetic eorrectly you'll find they're not so quiet. But they are sUU tbe quietett." Martin said bll office provided Denver·bued Frontier with the <See Al&POllT, Pa1e A.I) Panel bean blut detaila LONG 'EACH (AP) -a.i· dent. ol a netP.bol'bood wlMn ltYtn bomes were dHtroyed and fOID' ,. ........ lajund b1 a plpelille explHlon laat December told federal la· n:r~ton tbey reeelHcl DO •• --...,... tbe Med· dentt.ookJllMe. Tlal'le 0.... A•--Nit• 11 t.tlfted -.... ftnt .., ,,, a tllreedaJN..._..Tr_p~ tloa ..,., loerd ........ lDto tbe eMM ~ tlae aeetdeat · ~--,,,...---- , OH AN G f COUN TY ( ALlr OH N IA . ·,Ct NT ~~ Reagan-Tlaateller U.S., Britain affirm bonds W ASHJNGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Reagan, saying the United States and Britain will stand "side by side" to protect world peace, today welcomed British Prime Minis ter Margaret Thatcher to the United States in an elaborate White House ceremony reflecting the two na- tions' close ties. For her part, Mrs. Thatcher, the first leader of a major U.S. ally to visit Reagan since his in· au._ uration. told the president that the United States can count on Great Britain as "an ally, s taunch and true." "Your warm and deeply mov- ing ceremony will strike a chord in the hearts of British people everywhere." she said. Reagan greet e d Mrs . Thatcher on the south lawn of the White House in a ceremony made more impressive by the bright sunshine or an unusually mild Washington February. . ~ They stood at attention as. the U.S. Air Force Band played Ruf- fles and Flourishes, followed by the national anthems of both na· lions. Next came a 19-gun salute that echoed over the White House grounds. A crowd of several thousand looked on . After reviewing a U.S . military honor guard, Reagan welcomed the prime minister, whom he bad once met in Lon- don. The leaders have similar views regarding world economic and security problems. and this was reflected in their remarks. Reagan said theirs are "kin- dred nations" sharing the com· mon bond of language. laws and beliefs. "The responsi bility for freedom is ours to share." he said . He said those who threaten world security should be aware AP..,.... 'SIDE BY llDE' Thetcher and Re-n of ''one element without ques- tion -Britain and America will stand side by side." Rea«an praised Mrs. Tbateber <See THATCHER, Pate AZ) strike en s Farewell prayer Pope John Paul II kneels to pray at Nagasaki monument to Catholic martyrs shortly before leaving Japan today and flying to Alaska. A brief stopover there will be the last one on the pope's final leg home from bis Asian tour. 49 feared injured in SF bus crash SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Up to 49 were injured today, four seriously, when a packed Munidpal Railway bua colllded wltb a ftatbed tractor-trailer truck haullna cravel near downtown San Francisco, authorities said. A paramedic on the scene aai" m ambulances were med to talre the most 1erloualy in· Jured to tbe llCllpltaJ. "We have about four or ftve crlUcal bdmiel, three or four people wtda brotea lep and a couple of baet l9'juri••· TM rnt taaH aebel aad pallll, '' ............... ~. p ...... .,. wltll ...... . Jarl•• wen •l•e ..... ard ................... w.. .. ..... ... •. lAIU'• ~· ...... Tbe WNebd bua, aftCll I I .... >· to truck driver Jeff Hayes, slammed into the tractor-trailer ril at a ~ rate ol speed u the truck attempted a left tm'A. Tbe front of the bus WU de-- moliabed, crumbled back into the first rows of pa11en1er seats . • • J was at a 1re•D ll1bt, slowed down and maklila tbe turn ..._ for tome n.-I looked ..., and saw a bul. He was eombaS just like a tl'ala ud plowed bltO ... He ... to be eomlml fut,'' ~ ...... Ftrt Departmeat Battdte ClaW o..aW Qdlea .... ..., of_.... ..,.r1 ....... .,. ... ..._ .... eall1P1lll. tree•• ............ -•'Titer were tY••... u• .......................... .................... ~. Increase in fare likely BJ GLENN SC01T OI -DMty """ ..... About 15,000 riders are expect- ed to resume riding Orance County transit buses when the fleet returns to the streets Fri· day following a 22:day strike by bus drivers and mechanics. . And it probably won't be Joas before riders will face a fare in· crease on top of the inconven· iences caused by the strike. Orange County Transit Dis· trict directors are scheduled to bold a public hearing next Mon- day morning to consider an in· crease. The big question will be whether the fare will go from 50 cents to 75 cents or to St for a one-way local ride. Transit directors ratified a three-year contract Wednesday oCfering drivers an immediate a percent annual increase and mechanics a 14 percent annual raise. The driven wiU get 4 percent increases in each of the seeand and third years. The mechanics will get 6 percent next year and s percent in 1982. A mwmum 7 percent annual coet-of-livinl in- crease was included in both coa- tracts. The drivers and mechanics also convened on Wedntllday with negotiaton of the United Transportation Union to approye the contracts. Mechanics were to report to work today, driven on Friday. However. board members gave the stritlnc worken a seven-day grace period to nt1ll'a to wort. District General Manacer Jam• Reichert ..W some ol tbe workers may haft started new ·joba, but "we'd like to 1et tbe Sood ones baek." He said about 10 percent~ tM wort fon:e usually cloeu't re- turn after a three-week 1trtke. District oftletall ftpre to Uft some ol tbe NDM problema ..... the estimated 40,000 dailJ com- muten wbo formerlJ ...t tM bu. Tbe board of dlreetora poetpcmad CCP''deradae fll .... ln1 a •• ,,_ fare" W to ....,... riders. But tMJ 61 dee6tl '9 mate tM u.• ,......., .. ( .......... Al) . 2 bQ)'8 mlMinl I • ATLA!ft'A <AP> -'111111~ ........ of ..... '"'* ...,. .................... ,11111 ••• •• "'•••t• ·····"' .... . • ••••••• , .•• ,, .. ,..i • ............. ;-:~.111• I=;'........... a.· .... _ ..... I• · r ,.._. 111n1-. WoRian's . lo ~•aJ• 1'• ••• , .... ................... t::. .. ... , ....... .,~ "· wu IMli ...... WU. OI _. ........ ~ ..... "" ••t•n•••• ,,., Hid tlaa& '°'Dltal oftldala made tMlr ol· ferlMt__. uameauof...S· ln1 l .. al ccmt.ro .. ny over wbat would be doM wU.b UM al.Uni woman. Ho.. olftclab would neiUler ronfircn nor deu lhat an offer Long-di.tance· jets backed Fluor CorporaUoa Vice Pr.!· dent Jay lhed told an ad· min.iatrative law Judie ln Coela Mesa that hi• firm '·would love" to see New York. Cbicqo· and Seattl•bound jets depart from Jobn Wayne Airport. · Reed. one of flve bualneumen called to the witness stand Wed· nesday to-testify in favor ol re· Porno film at school? M JAMI I A P l -An elementary school prin· cipal is under investiga. tion by Dade County school officials for s howing a •·pornographic" film to school staff members in his office, officials say. Frank DeLaurier, prin· cipal of Devon Aire Elementary, s aid one of his aides found the un- labeled video tape on the grounds of the school. ··Five minutes of it were viewed" in his off ice be f or e the tape was d estroyed, DeLaurier said. In an inter view with The Miami Herald, DeLaurier denied that he recruited teachers and staff mem- bers for a lunchtime show· ing in his office last fall. But one staff member said she was asked to view it. Fro• P.,,. Al AIRPORT. • correct noise readings from the airport's ni ne monitoring sta· tions. but that "they went out and proceeded to do it wrong." Changing subjects, attorney Edwards challenged the effec· tiveness of providing a 24·hour telephone complaint line to resi- dents irritated by jet noise. Martin s uggested the com- plaints served several uses, in· eluding being "a relier valve" to angry homeowners. Martin said if complainers are able to pin· point the time of a passing "noisy" jet, his office could write letters to the owner of the aircraft. Edwards also questioned the' "quietness" of the new OC-9 Super 80, the jet advertised as the quietest commercial jet ever built. "Are )'OU familiar with any of the noise measurement data from Burbank on the Super 80?" asked Edwards, referring to an airport now served by the Super 80s . Martin said he hadn't seen any monitoring figures and suggest- ed the information might not yet be available. He said he had read literature on the new craft. "Well, tell us then," said Edwards, "who advised the county supervisors on the 80s.' • Martin said Airport Manager Murry Cable discussed the features of the Super 80s with s upervisors. Cable testified Tuesday that his understandinc of the new craft also was baaed on literature and a teat of the ·super 80 at John Wayne last year. The variance hearinc. originally scheduled for one week, now is projected to last at least another week. newin& the airport's noise variance, said Fluor e mployees, customers and suppliers are h'e· quent airport users. Under questionina from al· torneya representln1 anti· airport expanaion 1roupa, Reed said it wasn't bis firm's job "to study the socio·economic ef· feels" of jet noise from the airpo.rt. The business leaders were called to testify by the Com· munity Airport Council, a IJ'OUP supporting airport expansion. Dale Boyer, vice president ol Smith Tool International, • Newport Beach firm apecializ· ing in producing oil drilling tools, said bis firm rues its own jet out ol the airport. He said if the noise variance is not granted, it would undermine one of his firm's major reasons for locating in Orange County - namely, to be close to an airport that permits jet traffic. Boyer said Smith employees often utilize the company jet to travel to Wyoming, Ohio, Texas and New Mexico. He added that if commercial nights from John Wayne were available to these destinations. it would benefit hi!s company. . • Lucien Truhill, president of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, said that 28 percent of the 1,000 firms with chamber memberships have cited the airport as a reason for locating in the county. During questioning, Jerrold Fadem, an attorney represent· ing a group of anli·airport ex- pansion residents, asked if busi· nesses endorsed a policy of "not considering the noise impact on a community." Without exception, the wit· nesses agreed there are "conse· quences" fro m jet noise but stressed that the demand for air travel in Orange County is great. Other witnesses called in· eluded Larry Sierk, president of the Anaheim Chamber of Com- merce; Todd Nicholson, diredor of the Greater Irvine Industrial League and Robert Roth, a Dis· neyland representative. Police grab ferry buff SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) -A naked man was placed under psychiatric observation after he untied the Harbor Princess ferry, ran up and down a pier and then meekly laid down when poUce handcuffed him, remarking, "It's a nice day." The man , unidentified by authorities, allowed himself to be handcuffed Wednesday, accord· ing to port Officer Allan Byard. The ferry drilled 15 feel, drifted back again and bumped into Pier \.'l and a building, apparently without damage to anything Byard said. The vessel was relied and noh\juries were reported. Crashes kill 5 LAFAYETTE, La. CAP) Dense fog and smoke that roUed over a 20-mile stretch of In· tersiate 10 wu blamed for a series ol traffic accidents that killed flve people and injured 10 "'Seriously just before midnlabt, state police said today. The names of the victims were withheld until relatives could be notified. ORANGE COAST D1llyPilat a ......... ..,,.,.... .. 1141142-1111 AH otNr departMe'* Mt.4121 ThofTW P. Haley ~ ~N.WNd MAIN Ofll'ICa ...... .., ... C ... MeM,CA. Mell..,_: ... ti .. , c ... Mele, CA. mlil ··~··' .,.....,. for Hoaa bad ..... Hd.bll Mn. Brobeei'• remoYal from tWr faclllty becaUH tbey cl al m tbe woman, tbou1h aerlOUlly ill, la DO tonier 1D need of acute care bolp6tallsatlon. Superior Court Judie Reinald Prenner appointed llra. Brobeck'• physician u ber tem- PGl'U'J e 11.-vatar tWo ...a .. 0 .. .,,..... for ...... ....., .. fromlloq. ID mUiq bis nalla1, Judie PrtDHr bad •u11Hted UC lrvlae lledlcal C.tei u an ac· ceptable alternaUve. However, at the time, the family ex· preued concern that llra. Brobeck could be left ln a part. lnl lot if rejected by UCI. UCJ attorney• quickly ob· tained a temporary stay of Pren· .... •• ~ io tbey could ., .... qaiml llri. &Gbeck'• trwrer, to tWr fadJ.111, wltJcb &bey laid wu allo an acute care Oosp6ta1 "''"-· It wu ckuiJll a aeeoad Hv1aa last week that ffoa1 officials made tbelr offer to the family u a means of endin1 the le1aJ aquabble t.bat bad developed. Van Nuya lawyer Charles Smith, who represents Mrs. Brobeck' a dau.«hter. said the of. "fer ol four molatbl nunial care at a caavaleaeeat hotpllal wu belther accepted nor rejected bf hlm. Ttae falllil7 bad prenoaatJ told Prenoer that after exhauatl.q '800,000 la lnauraoce benefttl for tbe woman'• can, &bey could no loqer afford tbe tc.• per month private nuraia1 care would coet in a convaleseeat hospital. ,.,...p ... .4J BUSES ••• · passes valid for the rest of tbi.s month and all or March. Riders who choose not to use the passes can get 80 percent of their value back if the passes are turned in to the OCTD's Garden Grove headquarters by March&. ~ · Officials predicted it will be about a month before ridership returns to normal levels. Even before the strike began, officials were considering fare increases to keep up with costs and to meet stringent state re- quirements for recovering at least 20 percent of the district's ope rating co.ts through fares. Rolling out the Red rarpet District board Chairman Ralph Clark said the as yet UD· determined loss of farebox rev- enue and federal aid from the strike coudJd cause new fares to reach $1 a ride. Cuban Premier Fidel Castro (center) is re- ceived by Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev (right) and Communist Party Secretary Konstantin Cherenko on his visit to Moscow at which the Cuban leader re- ceived ··ru11 support'' by the Kremlin. Clark continued his hard line against the strike al Wed· nesday's meeting. He said the settlement was fair, but claimed the district was willing to make the same concessions before workers ever left their jobs. Jury holds fate of Cle01ente man THATCHER for helping rally world opinion against the "brutal invasion" of Afghanistan by Soviet troops. He ·'I personally have a lingering belief that this entire bus strike was unnecessary. It was not needed," he said. A jury returns to Orange County Superior Court next week to decide whether 23·year- old John Alan Keith of San Clemente, convicted of the 1978 slaying or a Corona del Mar real estate salesman, should be sen· tenced to death. The six·man, six-woman jury deliberated only 10 hours over a two·d ay pe riod Wednesday before finding Keith guilty of first degree murder in the bludgeoning and attempted mitre saw decapitation of Ruben Martinez. 40. Keith, one of two men charged In the murder, also was convict- ed by the jury of robbery and burglary , two s pe.ci al circumstances that qualily him for the death penalty. Westminster High closed by power cut Electrical power was to be restored at Westminster High School today with classes resum· ing Friday, school officials re· ported. The school was closed Wednes· day morning after underground electrical cables shorted out, cut· ting electrical power to the Hunt· ington Beach Union High School District campus. Theschool's2,600studentswere sent home Wednesday after first period, school officials said. Judge Donald Mccartin who also said they share a conviction 1 that Poland's problems must be presided over Keith's tria , or-solved by the people of Poland. dered jurors to return Wednes-He said "outside intervention day for the start or the penalty there would affect profoundly ph:~~iowing presentation of East·West relations:· referring evidence, the panel will be asked to a possible Soviet move on its to decide whether Keith. who ad· East European satellite. th I · Reagan also said the two milted his role in e s aymg, leaders share a conviction that should die in the slate's gas the solutions to thei r nations ' chamber or be imprisoned for life without possibility of parole. economic problems "lie within d A the people and not the state. The second defen ant, n· "We believe that people will t hony David Bies .. 20, of D~a slay free when enterprise re· Point was con victed of first . r .. h .d · · mams ree, e sa1 . degree murder in the ~artinez Mrs. Thatcher said the visit slaying in December. Bies cur-d bl · .. b rently is undergoing 90 days of gave her a · · ou e JOY ecause she was in the United States and diagnostic testing at Chino State be"ause it was Reagan who wa s Prison. He does not fac~ the ... death penalty be~ause of bis age greeting her as president. She at the time the cnme occurred. referred to Reagan as "a trusted Keith and Bies were linked to friend." the crime throulith the testimony "We in Britain stand with you. of Walter OaLie. a police inform· America's successes will be our ant who lured the two defend· successes .. , when you look for dants to an El Toro motel where friends. we will be there," she they discussed the slaying as said. . police investigators secr.eUy re· Following the 15·m1nute ceremony, Reagan and Mrs. corded the conversations on Thatcher went into the presi· videotape. dent's Oval Office and posed for Reichert said the mechanics received much higher wages than the drivers because the dis- trict was losing its trained diesel mechanics to private businesses that paid better. Rather than calling the im· mediate raise a 14 percent an- nual increase, district officials termed the new offer a 9 percent raise with a 5 percent .. adjust· ment." Under the n ew contracts. drivers wi ll earn top pay or $10.03 an hour ins tead or the former $9.46. Mechanics will get top pay of SI 1.19 rather than their former $9.82 The contracts will cost the dis· trict an estimated SlJ.2 million over the three years. Annual operating costs this year are $54 million. of which 75 percent, or $40.5 million. go for worker salaries and benefits. said Reichert. VICTIM ••. Keith testified during his trial pictures in wingback chairs in miles from the West Los Angeles that anger and rear Or homosex· front of a roaring fire. · hbo h d h l · d b ne1g r oo w ere gunmen uals -brought on by encounters Reagan exp aane to er killed four persons in a 15·minute he witnessed while in Orange several pieces of art, including a sidewalkshootingspreelastyear. County Jail in 1977 -caused Frederic Remington sculpture It was also the second time in 12 him to attack MarUQ~z ,in the of a cowboy on a horse rearing days that there had been violence bedroom or the victim s res· in fear from a snake. at the complex, said another idence. He was overheard pointing out . hb 56 Id p to Mrs. Thatcher the disadvan-neig or. ·year·o eggy Martinez , was repeatedly tages of the months-long U.S. Hallfeld. struck in the head with a 30· presidential campaign, as com· In the previous incident, a pound, star shaped candle. pared with the British election police officer had shot an escap- Later, Keith testified, he took a campaign of only several weeks. ing burglary suspect in the leg, mitre box saw from a closet and "I think it is one of the reasons she said. A 300 foot-long main cable and an auxiliary cable were replaced by district workmen Wednesday, according to Charles Hess, assis· tant superintendent of the school district. drew it across the victim's neck why more and more of our peo-"I sure hope we can get more four times. Investigators said pie are not voting," he told her. protection around here," sbe the head was nearly severed "We simply wear them out. said. "('01 petrified of living in from the torso at the time the They get bored with the whole ~~~e~~~!"g now. l'm just scared .~~bod..:.:~y~w_as~f~oun~_d_·~~~~~~~~t~h_in .... s." ~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ He said the underground cables, installed when the school was built in 1959, had de· teriorated. Rita takes surprise call on TV show CHICAGO CAP) -The caller's voice was certainly familiar to Rita Jenrette, and sbe was "in· credulous" that her estranced husband, former Rep. John W. Jenrette, would telephone to speak wilh her on the "Donahue" talk show. Jenrette, convicted of accept- ing a bribe in the Abacam in· veatiaauon. was watcbina the live ahow from bis Myrtle Beach, S.C. 1 home as bis wife discuned anuaJ exploitation with host Pbll Donahue. Viewers had been encour119d , to call in and join the dlacusaloa. Jenrette called in tbe final minutes to say be wu embar· raaaed bf hia wife barln1 henelf and teWna her story u a CCIII· 1re11loaal wife ln tbe Aprll lalue of Playboy, which b.lta the atandl llarcb3. Amterity eougbt j NICOSIA, Cypru (AP) -Ira-· Dian ,...,_. Ayatollah Rull'nllab I Kbomel~i toClay called on weaJU., lraalana to eel•lll'* wttll....., Dal....._ ..... tbef alll1l"N 1lte lraalu MW year, IM olftGial nen ..-1 ~· Ulen-thin~ An J8k ~libbed aee with black en~.~-, On a band10me lizard strap. _Hand-crafted In Switzerland.! __ ; 'BAii/ CWt,/J,4 9/1wfloJI. llrte ~ry .. JS F,,SHION ISLAND • NIWPOln HACH. ~UFOltNIA 92660 TEUPHONI (7141 644-24'4 -----~---...--_...--•J . ...... ~ ... _..·-· ..... . .. .. ____..,,....,..... I ,,. ......... Senators John Heinz, R-Pa., left, and Arlen Specter try on Oakland Raiders football helmets, while Sen. S.l. Hayakawa, R-Cali/., looks on , outside the Capitol Hill office of Heinz. Oakland beat Philadelphia in the Super Bowl this year. Reek star fined f 2,500 Rock star Dee ae.ley of the EaaJea bas been fined $2,• and put on two-year probation alter pleading no contest to a char1e alle1in1 be eave drugs to a 16-year- old girl found nude in his home last fall. Judae Edward aafeedle of Santa Monica sentenced Henley on the misdemeanor charge ol contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The judge also granted the musician's request to enter a two-year drug education pro- gr am which, if completed successfully, would lead to the dismissal of three drug possession charges also stemming from his arrest Nov. 21. Henley, 33, was arrested after he summoned Fire Department paramedics to bis Sherman Oaks home. Lady Dlaaa Speacer, who will mar ry Prmce Cllarles after her 20th birthday this summer, got her first lesson i n royal etiquette over breakfast with Qwleea Motller Elhabetb, the prince's grandmother. A~WI ........ Actress Faye Dunaway is taking instruction in Catholicism so she can convert before marrying photographer Terry O'Neill, the father of her child. O'Neill's divorce has just become final. U.S . Labor Secretary aay Doaona has been fined $250 for falling to keep the yard ol his waterfront rental proper· ty neat in Boca Ralon, Fla. The code-enforcement board of the south Florida ci- ty voted 3-2 to fine Donovan for letting boats and trailen stay in view on the property, in violation of city zoning Ol"· dinances. Donovan wasn 't at tbe hearing. His attorney, Arthur Koski, blamed the problem on tenants. Lt. Gov. Mike Curb set a fund-raising record in Fresno County by collecting more than $150,000 at a dinner in his honor. More than 600 San J oaquin Valley Republicans paid $250 a plate for the din· n er with a po ssi ble gubernatorial candidate. Warren Cbrls&opber, the fo rmer deputy secretary of state who helped negotiate the release of the American hostages in Iran, has re- joined Stanford University's board or trustees. Christopher . a graduate of Stanford law school, served a s a Stanford trustee from 1972 until 1979, when be toolt the government post. They're not all bad Carpenter polishes lobbyists' image By GLENN SC01T Ol_DMfY ........... Rathel' t han fitting t he tarnis hed public image of crooked , arm -twisting manipulators, modern lobbyists are the good guys who make the s tale Legislature work, says Dennis Carpenter. Carpenter, recently appointed as an "advocate" in Sacramento for Orange County, put up a lighl·hearted defense of lob- byists Wedn esday during a Town Hall speech at the Balboa Bay Club. He called lobbying "probably the very essence of the dem - ocutic process," and said its biggest fauJt is that not enough groups are involved. Carpenter should know a lot about what he calls "personal politics." He saw his share of advocates during his e.ight years as a Republican state senator for Orange County. The silver-haired r ancher - businesspian left Sacramento in 1978, but wound up returning a year later to promote passage of a bill creating the Peripheral Canal. He said be like<! the work and struck up an a"ssociation with partner Stuart Spencer. 0.11, ...... '""' -· 'MORE INFLUENCE TODAY' ~at C•rpenter kind of moral issues -abortion or the death penalty which re- quire Ultle background. As for the rest of the inlorma- lion, Carpenter remembered: "I got it from the third house -the lobbyists. They were the logical place t.o go.·· As Orange County's represen- tative, Carpenter attends bi· monthly meetings with the coun- t y Legislative Affai.rs Commit- tee at the Hall of Administration in Santa Ana. He said he is stressing that the county will have more political muscle if it restricts itself to a few important legislative cam- paigns each year. One of those is likely to be ef· forts to raise more state money for improvements for congested free ways. Carpenter said the county will have trouble con- vincing lawmakers to raise the gasoline sales tax, which is con-side red the most likely method for increasin~ revenues. Carpenter said he still has a good rapport with Gov. Edmund . G. Brown Jr. He predicted Brown will seek a seat in the U.S. Senate in 1982. But, he added: "l don't see Brown terribly comfortable in a legislative body where there are 99 other fellows to share the same stage." Besi des the county, h e represents Jnduatrial lndemnity Insurance Co. and the National Coalition for Marine Conserva- tion. Loeations studied "I personally feel I have enormously more influence to- day than when I was part of the Senate," he told the crowd ol about 50 Town Hall members. As a lobbyist, be explained, he wields the influence of the voting bloc be representa. And as a former lefJaJator, be said be hu accea to the lawmakers who eventually set state policies. Wieder given post on dump site unit Carpenter said lobbyista are needed because lefJalaton can't be expected to stay abreast of tbe eatlmated l,000 buts on wbleb tMJ .. eacb MNiOD. He lpeeUlated that elected ol· ficiala c• t• up with about •10 pen.at of_the bills, and anotbs I percent represent tbe A resional committee, includ- inl Orange County Supervisor Harriett Wieder, has been formed to study creation of new dump sites in Southern California. I The 11-member committee met last week and is scheduJed to convene •Sain March 5 to ct. velop criteria for new dump sltea. Mn. Wieder waa ap~lnted to We're Listening ••• The Dall)' Ptlot want.a to hear from It.a readers. what you Uke about the paper and what you don't Uke . We also ~ould Uke to publid your views on any aub~t in our letten to the editor col· umn. Call the number below and your meuace will be rtt0rded. MHaa ... wUl be transcribed several times dally and delivered to tbe delk of the appropriate editor. Mailbox contributions will be delivered to the editorial pace ed1tor .. Mailbox contri....._. mutt lnclude thelr name and telephone number f« vmnealion. Ml cimalation cail1, please. Tell • wh•l'I Oil your mind. Tbe number l• in ·Mrvt~ i• bcMarl a day, seven daya a week. the panel by the county Board of Supervlllors. Her 2nd District ln· cJ udes the controversial Boucher LandflU in Hunlinlton Beach. · One of the committee'• Coals will be to create guidelines r0t a new class 1 dump s ite for hazardous materials. The only such cfump in Southern Callfomia is ln West Covina, but nelchbon there are campaip- ina to cloee the 11te for health reasons. The 1roup plans to use a $582,000 bud1et to accumulate the technical data needed before new alt.I are eltltbU11tecl Moat ol tbe money wu 11...ud the committee by \be fecllnl It n v lronmental Protection A1enc:y. The committee la eompdMd ot NPI 11 entativ• tJl 8outblrD Callfornla eounUu, rel*all 10.ernaa..tal acaet• iM a few clU. IUdl u Wtet eo.tM. Carol,. ...... aa UM '°I lln ....... ,M6d"..._ .......... meet ..........., mdl lta 1'Gft 111 com,,_... --· ... - Ora. Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, February 26, 19'1 * ~· Traffic plans rejected CM nUdls Newport Boulevard optiom· 11J BUY CLAlJl&N __ ...,,.... ..... Three propo9ala for bandHn1 lncreuma traffic on Newport Boulevard ban been abaadaDed by tbe ca.ta 11 .. City Council. Council memben have recom- mended that Caltrana delete studies caWni for wideninl the thoroucbfare by oae lane ln each direction between Bristol Street and lndmtrlal Way. They also called for scratchin& a plan to uae over- crosslnp to eue traffic at Fair Drive, Fairview Road, 19th Street, Harbor Boulevard and 17th Street. And they said tbe state should forget the moel expe.nalve traffic plan, exteodini the Coata M~a Freeway, whlch ends now at Bristol Street, to PacUlc Coast Highway in Newport Beach. The council indicated it favors a traffic plan proposed by city staff members. That plan, formulated loo late for public hearin1s on nine traf- fic proposals, calls for carvin& a freeway-like highway between Bay and 17th Street, just east ol Newport Boulevard. Thal route would eliminate fewer homes and businesses. ci- ty officials believe, than the ap- proved freeway route proposed to sweep throu1h west Costa Mesa from Bay Street to either Newport man gets 3 years for pimping A Newport Beach .man who ran an oulcall escort service that authorities claimed was a front for prostitution has been sentenced to three years In state prison on charges of pimping a nd pandering. Tommy Liotta, 38, operator of Tommy's of Newport, was given the prison term Monday by Superior Court Judge Frank Domenichini. who allowed Liotta to remain free on Sl0,000 bail pending appeal. Jud~e Domenichini had pre· viously denied requests by Liot- ta 's attorney for probation for his client. Liotta was convicted Jan. S of two counts each or pimping and pandering. Before the defendant's sen- tencing Monday, prosecutor Manu e l Ramir ez bad characterlz~ Li~tt~·s · behavi~r· as "very oase cunuu1:1.. Liotta was first arrested i.n September 1979 whe n be at- tempted to set up a prostitution operation featuring house calls through a legitimate county con- struction company. The Newport man was still facing those charges when be was re-arrested on s imilar counts in 1980. Peripheral CanaJ has voters split SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Support and opposition for the proposed Peripheral Canal are matched, but the differences are overwhelming when geography is considered, according to a California PoU. Northern Californians over- whelmingly oppose the project, while those in the southern part of the state are strong sup-porters. Pollster Mervin Field said support and opposition matched at 32 percent. lndustrtal Way or Paeitlc Cout Hisbway. Tbe dty at.o want.a continUed con1ideration ol street separa- tions at IJey intenectiom and tbe wldenina of Newport Boulevard in CJhe project. It also auagesta continued studies for a "ditch " thoroughfare through downtown Costa Mesa alon1 Newport Boulevard or a viaduct system alon1 the same route. All ol the plans su11ested by the city have been proposed by CaJtrans' Route 55 Technical Ad - visory Committee for continued study. But eouncU memben added to their llat a plan deleted by cbe committee. City olfieiall want Caltram to conllaue ~I the full·blown freeway roUtinl plan lbroulb west Costa Mesa in order to compare its e~omic impact with the ali1bment east of Newport Boulevard. The proposed routing deletiom and plana for continued study are to be conaldered by the Route M Policy Advisory Com- mittee March 5 for recommen- dation to Caltrans officials in Sacramento. Looldag for help When you've got all swingers and no pushers, you've got a problem. Twins Nicholu and Monique Alvino (from left) and Megan Talbert, all of Huntington Beach, found that out during recent outing at the city's Lake Park. AU of these little swingers are just a year and a half old. Heat spell blallled for Irvine smell Irvine Ranch Water District General Manager Arthur Bru- ington said a smelly condition that exialed earlier this week in the University Park section ol town can't be blamed on the Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant. Bruington, called before the lrvine City Council to explain the smell, said it was due to a freakish inversion layer that set- tled over the city during the re- cent bot spell. The bot air, he claimed, forced a variety of the city's odors to settle close to the ground. Councilman Larry Agran, who lives in University Park, said a number of hi~ neighbors called him to complai n about the sickening odor. During Tuesday's city council m eeting, Agran urged greater communications when smells are released from the Michelson plant. MARKET Bruington countered that the water district felt no immediate obligation to get the word out about the odor . because the stink wasn 't being caused by the sew a1ee treatment plant. He did say that equipment breakdowns at the plant had caused smelly situations in the past. The Michelson Sewage Treat- ment Plant, located south of the Fluor Corp. headquarter s. handles 8 million gallons of Irvine sewage per day. It can handle 15 million gallons daily. Bruington contends that the plant is often blamed for smelly situations that it doesn't really cause . He admitted, however. that odors are sometimes released from the plant during "sudden weather changes" and changes in the plant's sewage-eating bac· teria . DELANEY BRos:·sEAFOOD Freall Frotell Swordfish ............ 5.tl lb. n.11 &aW. ...................... 2.51 ea. Fl'ffla ,...... lloMleu Center c.ta NortMra llalllMlt S&eab ............ 4.tl lb. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and Top Choice Beer, aaed not less than 30 days lo lhe pealt ol perfection. Leaa Grc mat Beef PaHIN lt lb. Bn, • PaUS. .............. tt.• ea. enter a.& '1·-a..ek a.am ... · ......................... t.•Ht. 0-a..ean.ek..._ .............. 1.•._ Free Home DeU•erJ Senlee CUO minimum) delivered In our completely refrigerated trucb. Your order la under refri1eraUon from our store lo your door. 1'bb ed eftedlve Wed., 11• tbnl 1\Me,, I/I MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Flnt Of Tiie Seuoa Lar•e Sw• Loeal Strawberrtea 7tc.baaket DELANEY'S OWN S'l'llAWBEaaY seoaTCA&E ,Made Daily ................•.. lie!~·· LIQUOR DEPARTMENT all prices plus tu Deluey'a Cl&aapape ('150mil) ................ l.7Sn. oral.• per cue ..... ....._ Le Blue De ... r• <1• m10 ..•.••..........•...•..• a.a lea~'• VO <liter> .............. tt.• CliU! 8utl Seek• <lltu-> .............. UM Old 8 ' .. lrlll& Wl&llby <Uter) .••. It.• Penis Water (DOI.) •.••••••••••• ...a.nw,a11111._.., 219Ne"llld8hd..Ne ....... elt 673-5520 4 s PAaDON •Y •OKt;: T'hei communique wUl be abort and ~WI)' ••Ht thla UmC! btca\&ae 1\ Isn't e very day \hi\ ,..,. ae\ lo wflC'OntC! • new member lnto our famUy t'lan H1 n,.me 11 Stoth Matthew Mu.rphine and he wei&hed in 111 el~ht pound11, lhrt'l' ounf~ll iand 20~ lnthes \all His re- porllna In for s1l11n1t tri&u\lnl may ~ delay~cl for just a ,hol-t "htlc I havl:' ;,Jr~llld)' JHU•i.~ out c11ars h~re around the ne.>" •room µolog1t'!> to lh.: smoat control people rbt• ~WIPll'IOn hlab abruptly Struck thlLt perhaps ll hti uld ~ f'xplamcd 111 l'Ontt·ict with this blessed event that tn truth I ttfll 1101 th.- f .itht•r •'ATHE&S UON'T <·ount fur much at a tam«: hk.-this anyway What do fathers d o'! Sothmg They just gel ~ ,~~7 TIM llRPHINl .~I', an the way ol nurses, pace a lot and look funny. I am the gramdfather. Grandfathers are obviously more key at a time like thl!. They do not get overly excited; they do not boast a lol fir ,bust buttons And everthing they have to s ay makes a lot of sance. sunc·e. saps that is. sense. Where was I? Clearly, when sons are born to the clan, grandfathers ThJS one seems JU3t aboul right /or the kid are far more important than fathers. After all , without the grandfather. there wouldn't be a father. Now really, that makes sense. does n't it? Of course. IN ANY EVENT, I have in recent weeks consuJted several male pe rsons who are veteran and expert .it grandfathering and have explained to me that it has numf'fous advantages over that lesser level of involve- ment. know as parentin~. F'or one thing, they note that if the child threatens to do something that might ruin your shirt front. it is perfect· l y proper for you to hand the little darling quickly back lo the parents This sounds like 1\ may be a ver y enjoyable ex 1w ra enc· e Additionally. veteran granddads tell me that when the kid does something rott en. you can always blame it on vour son with some re mark like. "He's obviously picked iJp all the bad trails you had when you were his age." But when the child does something outstanding, then vou can turn to the father and remark, "He wouldn't have bl.'cn able to do that if I hadn't brought you up right." THIS GRANDFATHERING dodge sounds like the greatest condition lo be in. You 're a winner no matter what lhl.' little di<.•kens does. Oh vc•s. somewhere in here I suppose 1t should be men taoned that the child does have a mother. She is the former Francei; Jean Cotterell of Laguna Beach While being a mother may not be as high a calling as being a grandfather, well, you have to give the young lady a little credit along the line. So I'm off to Santa Barbara to see the newes t mem ber of our clan. after a quick stop al the store I net'CI to pick up a football and a couple of Little League bats. ( WORLD I N~TION Food priee dip Inflation rate eases slightly WAS HINGTON !AP ) Declining food prices at grocery stores last month helped ease the nation's inflation rate. but consumers still faced sharply rising gasoline and home heat· ing costs, the government re· ported. The Labor Department sajd consumer prices on the whole Harris on 'hunger strike' WlllTE PLAINS, N. V. <APJ With her lawyer warning she might not survive an appeal. convicted murderer Jean Harris was under a "suicide watch" in jail. refusing to cat prison food or see her family. Her lawyer s aid she was on a "hunger strike." The 57-vear-old former head mistress was round guilty Tues day or fatally shooting her lover of 14 vears. Scarsdale Diet doc· tor Herman Ta rnower. On her first full day behind bars. she had a psychiatric ex· amination. Dr. Edwa rd Allan, the prison psychiatrist. declined to discuss his observations but s aid "she's not eating enough." He said the s lende r socialite ate no breakfast and for lunch had tea. milk and chocolate candies brought by her attorney. lier lawyer. Joel Aurnou, said she refused to set• relatives and rejt'cted prison m t'als. ··She 1s on a hunger strike ," Aurnou said, "a nd is laking nothing but medication for sleep and only a!:> murh w<.tlt.'r as it take!:> to.wash it down." She: will lw scnlenccd March 20. HER ONLY vis ible reaction when the verdict was read was that her righl foot stopped wag- gling al the word ··guilty." Two defense lawyers burst into tears . .. I can't sit in Jail. .. she said softly to her lawyer "I hope Mrs. llarris will have lht• strength to survive a s uc· cessful appeal." Aurnou said later. S h e faces a mandatory minimum of 15 years to life in prison an<I a maximum of 25 years to li fe. with no parole possible before the 15 or 25 years is s erved. Refugees married EXETF.R, England <APl - Two Vietnamese "boat people" wh o s ur vive d war and separation were married at a county regis try office in southwest England. Dau Liu, 24, and his bride Anh Mau. 21, were en~aged before they rted the communists. rose 0. 7 percent in January , after four straight monthly in- creases or at least 1 percent January's jump translates into a 9.1 percent annuaJ inflation rate. In detail, the government re ported that in January: Grocery food prices fell 0.4 percent, the firs t monthly drop since early last year. Meats. poultry. fis h and eggs together declined 2 4 percent. ending a s tead y upward trend evident over the previous six months. Prices for cereal. dairv oro- ducts and baked goods, however, continued to climb and eating al restaurants cost consumers 0.9 percent more than last month. Gasoline priccl'I jumped 3.8 pt'rcent. the largest monthly in· crease iJinct' tht• first quarter of 1980. Prices of fu t•I oil accelcrul- cd by 7 5 percent and churgeli for natural gas and electricity we re up 1 perc<·nl I.AST l't:AR, consumer pric ... s advanC'ed 12.4 percent, marking the first time since World War J that inflation topped IO percent for two rull years. While January's improved performance provided some rt! li e f to Am e ri ca n s , mos t economists expect prices to ac- celerate faster in the coming months due to increased pres· sureson energy and food prices. Indeed. Murray L. Weiden- baum. chairman of President Reagan's Council of Economic Ad visers , commented that January':. eased inflation rate. "although welcome, provides lit- tle basis for optimis m with re- gard to the underlying rate of in- flation." ••A SLIGHT decline in food prices was counterbalanced by a sharp rise in energy costs. particularly gasoline," he said. adding in a written s tate ment: .. Food is an especially volatile component of the price index. and cannot be counted on to offset further likely increases in energy costs. as U.S. oil prices ri s<' to market levels . ··With January's reading 11.7 P<'rcent above a year ago, the C nited States is still in a double- digil inflationary environl')'lent." Weidenbaum added. ftefleef ive 1nood Pope John Paul II is reflected in a shimmer ing pool as he prays betore tne atomic· oonio memot1a1 m H1roshlma, wh ere tens of thousands died in 1945 after the first use of nucle ar weapons in war. The pope called on world leaders to join him in working "untiringly" for disarma· ment. --------- New status for aliens? WASHfNGTON IAP l -A presidential commission on im- migration plans to r ecommend that illegal aliens already in the Un ited States, including up to 3 million Mexicans, be permitted to become permanent residents of the country . The Select Commission on Immigration and Refugee Policy, in its final report to be released next week, also will recomme nd a crackdown on tralfickers in illegal aliens and employers who hire them in violation of U.S. immigration laws, ac- cording to Rep. Robert M cClory, R·Ill. But he said the commission will propose that temporary farm workers be permitted to enter the country to help with fruit and vegetable harvesti n~ if e mployers assume the responsibility for travel. accommodations and payment into medical assista~ce and compensation programs. Smithsonian loses bid for antique cup NEW YORK 1AP1 A 346-year-old silver wane cup made for the governor of the Plymouth. Mass .. colony has been purchased for $56,000 by an English group that out-bid the Smithsonian lnstitu· lion and other Americans. The seven·inch cup was purchased by an agent for the Society of Mayflower Descendants in Lon· don. accordin~ to Elizabeth Shaw, spokeswoman for Christie's auction house, where the sale took place The cup. sold b y Be rnard Wiest of New Orleans . was made in 1634 in London. It bears the initials "W.B... William Bradford. governor of the Plymouth colon y. which was established by settlers who crossed the ocean in the Ma yflower. You're well on your way to the most exciting desti- nation in the West. Lake Tahoe. In real Tahoe style. Forty-four weekly flights-28 non-stop-from Los Angeles, Orange Snow blankets Vermont County and San Diego. For as little as $69. Fly non-stop to Lake Tahoe often. We do. For reservations call your travel agent or Golden West Airline's . Nearly 24,000 lose JJO'lOOT in storm W•s1 10 \O\Ah~I Wtncl\ I 10 t~ i-nOI\ 4 10 ~ tool """~ttrly \Wf'lf\ oulrr wdtt-rs· ano \ lo 1 too• •nne' WllPr\ Wind WtlVl"\ 1 10 1 l('f l Cn•ntf' ot 1wtate<1 ttumOtr~wer-\ ,,ortr'"'" wtft '' othforw1s.e mo,tly Cloudy wu h !t<.•ttered '•"1 ""°wtr\ C.lt•r1nQ dfternoon •nd partly <fOudv ton19ht 11.S •....... ,,, Huvv '"°,. fell weone..:i•v 011er tne mount••'" ot N•w Enql•nd, ~d •••n ana slMI loll •lon<J '"° norti..r11 Ea'li,I (.O•\I \lb ro ''Int.hi\ of wet, tllt•¥Y snow ftlt on Vermont. IN Ylnq r>ear1v 1•,000 OtOPlt w1t"°"'t PoWlltf': tOYf'fl~ tNdS w tU\ • \tu\f\ ~ '"4k•nq F'tt>ru1rv ,,.,. ••llHI on re<O<d t l'le \now tolto~ed • two wee II: perloo of re<or'd hl!lf> ttm1>er•turu •nd r •In tt\a' NloCS bf!Ot1t1ttd '"' •f"t• ex>er•IOr\ Aw ... , ... SeNIC• SllO'ftmaf\ U \d th• \now combl11ed 10tilh previous r1lnfall to make thl\ monlll t"° -I· IOI Ftbr.,.ry on record. Farl"°r \OUlh, sir-no<Wlw .. ter- ly winds ••tPI the mld·Allentlc stain . Tht WHlern si.t .. atso had hl91't winds and r•n Sides _,. wnny .cross mo\! ol Ille South.and Ille un1rat part DI ttie n•llon lernperaturn climlleO Into ,,.,. 701 In Mluou•f Mod K.•M••. wll1' • readl,. o1 n Mt<-~ City, Mo.,• record 10< "'9 dllte. Temper•lurft et mldllley WOld- dev ren .. d from n •I Warroed, Minn., 10 l't M JeOMWI -Merldl.,., MIH. For todrt', rein wes IO<t<est - the WHI COllSI, lurntne to_.., In tfle <.aH•dU, Ill• Slerru and Ill• norlllern RoOIH. SftOw sllowers -·· ~,,., .. ...,,_,_ Miid t..,..,etwn _....,_edict ... , wllll reacllf'lll In tll9 .0. In tfle ctnCret Pteln•..,.. 1't -llOt tn '"' ...,...,.. 11e1t ot ,,. ,_,,,., H..,_ In •• JOI were prefl<l•d o nly lor lllt ,,.,tMrfW!'Olt S!Mft CaHfartda T ne \torm tront tMt DrouQl'll "''" to Southern C.•l•lornl• Wtclf\•~•Y .n...,ld I» °" Its w•y oul ol IM eru 1n1is •Htrnoon, wrten v•ri•~• OoucU• 11os I• tor.cut. 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I : ~mua Deputies seek TV producer APPLE VALi..&\' fAP) 8Mritf'1 depuU .. &DVHUIA\U\I a raid by lk1 muktd deprocram· """ on • ,.llliCM11 eoem-. aaid tMJ wut lO talk to OharlN Webller, ~r ol AIC·TV11 "Fan\u> l•lanct·· aerie1. about lbe kklaap ol hi• IOft and two 1randlKNu Nore than e11"t people broke lato Lb• ftactd ranch commune of the truda 5"t.ioa, a sect ~t C'launs the motherhood lnallnet ia UM cauae ol the world'i problems. 1tl 5 a .m. Saturday, San Bernardino County j heriff'a deputies said. •• A ..... •aftlf# ..., ... , SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The 1overnment, after a~ trial in which the jury failed to reach verdicts a,ainst Hells An1els members, has given up a nd will not retry the racketeerin&·dru1 con· s piracy case, says U.S. Attorney G. William Hunter. ·'Two efforts are sufficient,'· Hunter said Tues· day after a jury of nine men and three women told the jud1e it was unable to reach a verdict a1alnst 11 mem bers of the motorcy- cle c lub and auoclates. "I lllEFS think justice bas been done." The jury refused to buy the ~overnment'J at· tempt to prove the defendants used violence to pro· tect a busmess <1ea1mg m <Jrugs including heroin, cocaine and rnethamphetamines. or speed. N•"fl pile• dt.s I• ft'Gda SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Navy pilot died after his A -7 E fighter air<.'raft crashed at sea off the Southern California coast, Navy offi cials said. E.T. Laich, of the Naval Air Station in Lemoore wh ere the aircraft was based, said the pilot died of his injuries sustained in the crash Tuesday after be· ing picked up by a Navy helkopter. The pilot's name was being withheld pending notification of relatives. Brmett ••• ... 1c S...t• ••fit WASHINGTON (AP ) lf Gov . Edmund G . Brown Jr. of California decides to run for the Senate in two years, he says he w111 rule out another presidential campaign in 1984. Now in his second four-year term as governor . Brown has said repeatedly he is considering running for the Democratic nomination for the Senate seat now held by Republican S. I. Ha yakawa. Hayakawa, 74, is regarded as the most vulnera· ble of the Reoublican incumbents facing re-election in 1982. Mari11e DI gtdl•• I• •lwtt SAN DIEGO {AP> -A U.S. Marine Corps sergeant has been <.'onvicted in a special court. martial of stealing more than Sl,000 from recruits last November. A military judge on Tuesday sentenced Start Sgt. Jose Herrera. 25, of Los Angeles, lo be fined S2.000. reduced in rank to private, three months' confine- ment and a bad conduct discharge. Herrera pleaded guilty to taking $1,097 from 74 recruits last Nov. 25 ori the pretexl'of having their uniform items polished and buying them permanent em bl ems for their uniforms. Makes You Feel Good, Not Guilty' LUNCH• DINNER• BAKERY• TAKE-OUT DIETER'S HAPPY HOUR It's Discount Time On All Our Delicious Sundaes Req. 85' <a 60" • lt9CJ. Sl.25 @II• Aftd So 0.. •.• Mon., Sat. 2 to 5 P.M. 7132 ....... (Gemco Shopping Center) ' HUNTING TO~ llACH 142·4' 11 MERCURY SAVINGS a11d loan assorwtion Executive Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 926-47 Southern C11/1lornle R-rJional 011/ces: 5677 E. La PaltN Ave .. Anaheim, CA 92807 8955 V•lley View SI., Buena P.,k, CA 90620 1656 Arnell! Rd .. Camatlllo, CA 93010 20715 S. Avalon Blvd .. CatSon CA 907'6 23021 Lake Cenw Dr .. (Lake Forest). El Toro, CA 92630 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra, CA 90631 G:r '140 Long Beach Blvd., long Beach. CA 90807 • 2293a Hawth01ne Blvd .. Tou ance, CA 90505 1095 Irvine Blvd., Tuatln. CA 92980 235 N. Clt1us Ave., WHI Covina, CA 91793 "Mercury Room" eve//eb/e on a reterved ln11ls CALL TOM MARSTON FOR l FULLY llSUMABLE LOAN - \ -U~TEREIT ON~YI • 'Newport Equity 1=unds ·Inc UCIMed "'°"" ..,_ ''" 't (7••>76N060 • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thut9day, February 28, 1981 s Promoter v.:ows expOse I Fugitive li"1a ']apans1e M a/ia' to· 1candal, Death penalty ~ LONG BEACH (AP> -Boxin1 promoter Harold J . Smidt bu .,alD prom1Md to come out of bidinC later tlm Weff witll documenta that be says will blow tbe Wells P'ar10 embeaalement case "sky hl1h." ID addltioa. a 1pokesman for Smlt.b claimed that tbe Yakuaa or "Japanese Mafia" may be linked to tbe embeulement scandal. Hilton S. Nlcbolaon, a self-proclaimed "de· tense eomultant" working with Smith's attorneys, told tbe Loq Beach Independent, Press-Telegram on llODday that Smith witneued bank mana1er Gene Kawakami making $300,000 in unauthorized withdrawals from Muhammad Ali Professional Sports Inc. accounu last August. NO CHAaGES BA VE BEEN filed a1ainst Kawakami, who baa not spoken to reporters since the alleged embesslement was reported. On Feb. 11 , Kawakami was relieved of his duties at Wells Fargo. Bank officials said the ac· lion was taken in connection with the bank's in· vestigalion of the alleged embeulement. Lawrence Bittaker, 40, is shown after hear· ing the jury's recommendation that be be sentenced to death for the grisly torture murders of five teen-age girls in 1979. He was convicted of 26 charges in which the girls were lured into a van, repeatedly raped. tortured with pliers and ice pick. then strangled. He will be sentenced March 24 . The newspaper reported that Ni cholson said Smith wu told the withdrawals were made to pay a gambling debt and that Kawakami's son had been kidnapped by tbe "Japanese Mafia," which threatened to cut off the boy's fingers if the debt was not paid. SMITH HAS SAID THAT his own son was also kidnapped ~ Creed, and that his family has left the United States for their own safety. Eminent domain lalV haunting committee CARSON CITY, Nev. CAP) -An 1872 law giving eminent domain rights to miners came back to haunt state lawmakers when residents of the fabled Comstock district com· plained mining is threatening the lega<.'y of Nevada's 19th century silver bonanza. "This eminent domain law stinks," Comstock resident Merton Crouch told member s o f the Assembly Judiciary Committee. Crouch said the law, which allows private com· panies to condemn and purchase land needed for mineral development, leaves the mining industry "holding all the a<.'es." Crouch and others testified in behalf of AB112, which would require historical commission approval or em inent domain claims brou1bt by mining companies in historic dis· ~ricts. The Comstock is currently the state's only historic district. The measure was drafted lar1ely in response to recent open pit mininl activities of Houston Oil and Mineral Corp. near Virginia City. The company used the eminent do- main law to gain access to property needed for the project, and in the process earned the undying enmity of many local residents. Residents said they'd like lo see legislators take the power of eminent domain away fl'om mining com · panies aJto1elher. They noted that the 1872 law gave condemnation authority to miners because they represented • 'tbe paramount interest of this at.ate," a distinction they said now belongs to tourism. Crouch argued that the law originally applied to tunnel mining, not the open pit method used today. And he said the bill to require his· torlc commission review of eminent domain claims would give the state an added safe1uard. Bob Warren, executive secretary of the Nevada Minin1 Association - representing the state's lar1eat min- ing companies -said sufficient safeguards already exist. He said AB112 was conceived "duriq the peak ol emotional controversy" over mining in the historic Greiner'• Bend area -a project Warren said even Houston Oil and Mineral wu "em· barrasaed" over. .,. .. ,.... A~a .. Patricia Hearst Shaw has asked the Supreme Court to overturn her 1979 bank robbery convic· lion, contending that her attorney, F. Lee Bailey, provided her with "insufficient" legal assistance. de· nying her right to a fair trial. Smith, in previoua meuacea and tel=' calls to reporters, promiled to eome out ol 1 and claimed without explanation tbat tba ''Japanese Mafia" wa1 involved ln a fraud at the San Frttnciaco-based bank, but Wells Far10 Prest, dent Richard Cooley termed such alle1atiou "pre· posterous." Wells Fargo Bank bas filed suit seetin1 $C6.3 million in actual and puniUve dam-es and lists Muhammad Ali Professional Sports, Smith and L. Ben Lewis, an operations officer at the bank's Beverly Kills branch, amon1 defendanu in the case. Lewis has also disappeared. AU PROFESSIONAL sports paid Muhammad Ali a fee for the use of his name, but the. three-lime heavyweight champion was not direeUy Involved in its promotions. Los An1eles police intelli1ence officers con· tirmed the Yakuza is involved in 1amblln1. pros· tit1Jtion and money launderin1. Police spokesman Willie Wilson said the organlutlon ls apparently based in Japan. with operations in tbe United States and elsewhere . Nicholson contended the scheme in which Kawakami allegedly was involved was similar lo "check-kiting," except that it all took place within one bank. In check -kiting, a fict.itious balance is built up in one or more bank accounts by a deposit of bad checks from other banks . To work, the scheme requires careful timing. Sear,chers find • • copter victim I LOS ANGELES <AP> -The body of a 5-year- old boy who died in a helicopter crash off Santa Catalina Island Sunday has been found in the ocean, a sheriff's department spokesman said. Wreckage of the Catalina Airlines Sikorsky S-62 helicopter also was located in about 300 feet of 1water. The body of Lior Levy. one of five members of •the Levy family aboard the tourist flight from San P edro to Avalon, was found near the wr-:-ckage, said Deputy Tony Grace. Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Administra- tio n announced it will undertake a special in- vestigation of Briles Wing and Helicopter Inc., of Santa Monica, operator of Catalina Airlines. J ohn D. Mattson, FAA Western region direc- tor, said the investigation will determine whether Briles has complied with all federal aviation regulations. Searchers for the third straight day Tuesday looked for the remaans or Miguel Ortega, 24, of Maywood. Sheriff's divers said the wreckage was too deep for them to try lo recover tbe hull of the craft, so search efforts were continued by a two- mao mini-submarine that had been hired by Air Claims Inc .. an insurance adjusting firm in Irvine. Invest in otir qu • 1t~- .. ••• and save 75.10 O ur exciting new Spring Collections of suits, sport· ~ats and slacks have arrived. In one convenient trip to Silverwoods. you can select a~all·occasion wardrobe from among our most prestigious labels including Hart Schaffner& Marx, Hickey-Freeman, Pierre Cardin, Bill Blass. Christian Dior, Austin Reed of Regent Street and many more. Regular priced items only. H ere's an example of how it works: Any suit at 175.00ormore Plusanysportcoatat 125.00ormore Andanypairofslacksat 35.00ormore For a total of 335.00ormor~ S uverwoods then deducts 75. tO ott the total. • W. hope you ca~ benefit from these worthwhile sc:vings. For personal attention and service, please call on our professional staff. I silverwoods .. ·-,;. . 48 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH .. d • Warning: The Stqeon Generll Has 0.1hined That Cigarette SftlOlling ts Dangerous to Y• Hnlth . ... --= _.E: --~ ---:;_ ... - , = --= H I Thom• P. H.,ey/Publlther 'ThofMt lleevHl•dMor 11/P \~ ... 4 .....a ..-1 .... ~.. Thur9day, F-bruary 29, 1981 a.tbar• k,.lbtchlEdltorl.t P ... lelttar OfaooeCo• 1Da1lyP1lo1 ~ .. ~ ~=z., ... ~~----..--~-~~~-----~ Compromise ends access dilemmft From all 8#9U'aA~•. a 1auatactory IOluUoa hu been re•dlld U. • dllltmma cauled by .U.pd over·buildina at Pet.'1 ........... a commercial and marina development In HwaUnltm Haitaar. TM ,__, compromiM by Uae state Coutal Com· miuloa foaaow.d all•11Uona lha\ the development ex· t'..._.pennill by morelhanJO,OOOaquarefeet. • ~ wre 1q1nUom that thedevelopen mJ&ht have to tear dowa 1trueture1 or. u an alternative, pay f lnea. When tile wa~rfront development eaat <>f Pacific Coast Hi1hway wu approved in 1976\ one ol the conditions called for devek>oment ol a 7S-room tourist hotel to provide public at' CHI to the rout But because of 1ub5equent questions about over · bualdinc. lbere wereobviOU1 problem1. M a consequence, the commi11ion allowed the de· ,•elopers to delete the hotel and in its place put in free public parluna for persons usin& the nearby beach. While it let the developer off a hook that he may ha~e ~e· erved. the decision does preserve the intent of provadmg public access to the beach Fiscal advice needed Though the fiscal year doesn't end until June 30, Fountain Valley officials are getting an early jump on a budget crisis expected to affect the city next year. City officials anticipate a deficit of $1.S million if cur· r e nt service levels are maintained. To keep the books in the black, city officials say they must cut back on loca l services or find new sources of reve nue . . One proposal under consid~ration by the City C~uncil is the creation of a local streetb~ht assessment distnct. Fountain Valley officials anticipate a $500,000 electric bill next year to keep 3, 706 streetlights lit. The assess· m e nt district would allow the city to tax property owners to pay all or part of this lighting bill. According to one estimate. the average homeowner might pay $34 for one year's lighting tax. While such a sum is unlikely to drive any property owner to bankruptcy. a lighting assessment would be just one more bite out of incomes that already are subject to heavy ~late and federal _taxes. . . Still, the city must fmd a way to pay 1~s balls. Mayor Al Hollinde n soon will be sending letters to a ll r esidents. asking what services could be c ut back and where fees might be imposed or raised. · Councilman Eugene Van Dask also .has called for creation of a committee of local leade rs which will look outs ide City Hall for solutions to the budget squeeze. . · Fountain Valley property owners who want to avoid a streetlighting tax might wish to contact the City Council or its ne w budget committee with other s uggestions to meet the anticipated financial shortfall. Fence controversy There's a case in Huntington Harbour where a fence h asn 't made for good neighbors. The issue has turned resident against resident in the wate rfront neighborhood and has bounced back and forth to City Hall for more than six months. The fence in question was installed by resident Webb Morrow on the side and front yard of his new S2 million ho m e on Trinidad Is la nd. City officials claim that the white plaster wall in· trudes a m atte r of 3 feet , 8 inches into Morrow's front yard and is therefore a violation of c ity standards. Officials also say t hat Morrow has permits to put the wall up to 42 inc hes. but not 6 feet , its present height. Following a stormy hear ing, the City Council ruled that the fence is illegal and must be re moved or lowered. It seems that the issue should be easy to figure out: Did Morrow or did he not have a dequate permits? But the controver sy has been allowed to mushroom beyond ~easonable dimensions. It m ay escalate further now that Morrow has indicated he ' II fight the decision in court. A certain amount of principle is no doubt involved but to those who may not have experience in building 6 feet fences at $2 million homes. the fuss on the fence may seem a lot like a tempest in a teapot. • Opinions expressed an the space above are those of the Daily Pi lot Other views eKpressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/Airborne pot By L.M. BOYD Q . What happe n s to somebody who smokes mari- juana on a commercial airline flight? A. The night attendant tells the captain and the caµtain radios the poli ce at the next airport. Our Chier Prognosticator says you can expect three· dimensional television shows on cable within a year or so. There's something in your skin that works a little l::lit like starch. A tough protein ca lled Tar and feat.hen mlyht warm up that cod· blooded woman with the airport hearin1 1l1n. "A cruh 1 day keeps the nobe away.'' PASSENGER ON FL1GHT338 collagen. Women's skin con- tains lessofitthan men's. And both women and men produce less of it as they age. The medicos say this is why older women have thinner skin than older men_ And why they seem to s how their years more readily. Their skin has less support than men's. Every pound a big jet airplane moves costs the alrlineS349 a year in fu el. That includes the plane itself. An e mpty 747 weighs 359.000 Pounds. Q. Settle a bet. I've got a small sum wagered on my claim that Perer Pan, Tinker Bell and associates lived in a place called Never Never Land. A. You lose. That place is j us t calle d Never Land. Regrets. A New York photog . rapher r ecently was H · signed by Working Mother magazine to shoot pictures in Central Park . To ii- , lustrate a story about how safe it la to let children play there. He was beaten up, stabbed and robbed. If you 1tand on ·the lowat polnt ln Coaorado -at 1,• feet -you're 1tlll bllber tlaaa U.. ldlbelt potata ln 11 otllerltat.. Jack Andenon war sparks agency fight WASHlNGTON -For more than a decade, the federal 1ov- ern ment haa been 101in1 its mulllmllUon·dollar war a1ainsl the International dope traf- fickers. But one 1overnment a1ency t.b1nka it know• bow to reverse the tide of battle. Th e U.S. Customs Service wants to get back the responsibility for narcotics policing , whi c h was t aken away from it and given to the Drug E n · f o r cem e n t Ad ministr a· t Ion during the 1970s. It's a s uggestion that is not surpris· ing in Was hington . whe r e Mailbox bureaucratic infl1btln1 over "turf" can be as inleue u the stru11le a1ainst the problems involved. Cus toms officials saw the Republicans' return to power - and their determination lo cut government spending -as a golden opportunity to recapture so.me of DEA 's functions and, of course, its budget. The Reagan administration will have to referee the long-simmering in- teragency feud that has again bubbled to the surface. BUDGET OFFICIALS told my associates Indy Badhwar and J ack MitcheU that no firm plans for the narcotics budget have/ been formulated yet. But one of. ficial acknowledged that DEA 's functions "duplicate a variety or agenci~, not just Customs ." Tbe drug a1ency naturally will not sit quietly by while it la dlsmembere~ like baloney through a meJl slicer. But it has severe image problems to ex· plain, as weU as the inescapable fact that. it has failed lo stop lbe flood of narcolics pouring into the United States each year. Despite so m e hi g hly publicized drug busts, DEA's critics contend that the agency is an expensive washout and is lorn with internal dissension and low morale. The charges are partially corroborated by some of its own agents. THERE HAVE been embar· rassing incidents that lend credence to the criticism. Federal investigators have been looking into charges of preferen· lial baggage-ins pection treat· ment ordered by the bead of DEA 's fiew Yor' office. And aJ. le1aliooa of perjury and barus- menl in the Weatern Relional Office (orcect a recent shake-up there. Ln the past 18 months, federaJ investigators have told Coner .. that "lbe Drug Enforcement Ad· ministration and the law en· fo r cem e nt community in general have moved alowl)' in ef· fecllvely using conspiracy laws to Immobilize major drug tral- rickers." They a lso faulleE DEA's p arent agency, the Justice Departme!'!., which they s aid "h as not adequately planned or directed prosecutive efforts against major traf· fickers." DEA Administrator Peter Bensinger disputes bis agency's critics. He claims that DEA was "way out in front" in spotting the t hre at or ~eroin from Southwest Asia, insists that its intelligence work has improved, and says that DEA was in- strumental in the passage of laws that put tougher penalties on drug-related crimes. MEANWHILE, despite a large-scale effort, the dope traf. fie flourishes . Intelligence re· ports warn that LSD. the dangerously unpredictable hallucinogen of the 1960s , is becoming popular again. Equal- ly disturbing in terms of long. range health problems is the rampant use of PCP, or ''angel dust." Aside from the physical and mental damage to actual users. the narcotics trade makes in- direct victims of us all. Street crimes and burglaries provide the money that addicts must have to support their habit. One res pected study, for example, showed that during an 11-year period. 243 addicts accounted for an astonishing 473,000 crimes . 'Public hearing' opens a citizen's eyes To the Editor: I am writing this letter out of frustration and sadness that go deep to the bone. For the first time in my life. I spent the day with my county representatives. the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The s ubject or dis- cussion was the master plan for the J ohn Wayne Airp()rl. Naive· ly, I thought people, the voters and taxpaying residents. could make a difference in this de· cision-D"laking process. Instead, I was stunned with the truth: The dec ision to accept the master plan had been made by our "representatives" (and I use the term loosely) weeks and perhaps months before this public hearing. I went to this hearing representing myself, not an or- ganization. I possess no dis· lingwshed titles. Simply, I am a wife and mother whose family lives under the flight pattern. We are subjected daily lo severe disruptions caused by tbe jets flying over our home. This ls very annoying, but trutbfully, not my greatest concern. Since last year's disastrous San Diego air crash, I have had a monumental rear that sooner or later a similar accident could ~ ha ppen in our neighborhood. Within walking distance of our home is an elementary school containing 600 children. What would be their fate if a jet dropped out of the s ky and crashed on them? The prospect of additional flights as advocat· ed by the master plan with dis· regard for additional safety pre· cautions only increases the percentage chances of such a tragedy occurring. WITH THESE fears in mind, emphasized by Air California's near disastrous crash the night before, I went to the "Public Hearing" assured that my r epresentatives would want to hear from me: What I witnessed was the most demoralizing ex· perience of my tile. I saw and heard the chairrnu Of the board, Ralph Clark, tell a speaker "to go to hell." Is this proper decorum for an elected ofticiaJ prealdin1 over a public m eelin1, I wondered'! Repeated- ly, be insuJted airport opponents with sneers and sarcasm. His appearance was one of totaJ dis- interest . . . that is untU the gentlemen represent1n1 tbe business interests of the county made t.helr preaentationa. Mr. Clark actually apolo1lled to them for bavin1 to Uaten to the teatlmony of thoee of us moet ad· versely affected by the· airp.rt and ill propoeed expanilon. I am emotionally drained. My lntroducUGn into the .arid ot &be polltlcal maeblne wu 1wlft Md 1barp. I bave alway• beUeYed, lndeed laoped1 tbat we, H cltlaen1, coula make a cltf • ferenn. •peeially bl local II· 111H. llow"'7 fooDlllol me. ' . R.WIWAllB Nol la~ •onf11 To the Editor: Recently the city of Newport Beach ran advertisements in va riou s O r ange Count y newspapers suggesting the pro- posed improvements in the John Wayne Airport master plan may be a "waste of ta xpayers money." The public should be told that all monies for airport improvements would come from ai rport users and not from general tax funds. The Federal Airport Develop· ment Aid Program maintains a trust fund of more than S4 billion, all contributed by a head tax on airline passengers and a portion of the funds need ed would come from that source. The balance would be derived from revenues such as leases. parking and landing fees. Any revenue bonds that m ight be is- sued would also be serviced by this income. To suacest this project would be a "waste of taxpayers funds" is not accurate. The plan can provide badly needed improve· ments that will benefit all the citizens of Oran1e County who need air transportation. JOSEPH E. IRVINE Executive Director Community Airport Council B•PP• lwr~ To the Editor: I am really happy that I live here. In a town where there are such huwanitarians a s the one who heTped the 53-year-o ld woman in need of convalescent hospital care. And in a town with a hometown news paper which prints, on the front page <Feb. 3>>. human interest true life stories about the thoughtful consideration of the people in its community. Instead of being like those other papers which blast you with sensationalism of crime and devastation. Thank you David Kutzmann for your article, and thank you Daily Pilot for recognizing its newsworthiness. ELIZABETH LAUFORD s,.,. 1• l•r• To the Editor: To thoee of ua who live in the 36th State Senate District , Jobn Schmitz, state Senator, has lont been an embarrassment. His re· cent attacks on Martin Luther Kint were only the latest in a aeries ol u1ly, nqaUve, preJ· udlced atat.ementa made by him on a varletyohubJecta. Now the Senate Rules Com· mlttee, headed by Sen. David Roberti, tiu' named this same Schmill to the 1tate Status of Women Commi11lon. a com· ml11lon whole very exl1tence Sehmlta bu always oppoHd, a commtulan whoee purpoee II to promata tM nltare, ri1bta and latenlll of women. Tb• ~t ol kbmita II • slap bl ta.. face to .U women, a ._. __ ._......~_,,,.._ -·· --·-_...,_,,,._ disgraceful act It seems that the Senate Rules Committee has de liberatelv chosen the most destructive -individual it could fi nd . Is the Senate Rules Com- mittee trying lo obliterate the Status of Women Commission? Are our legislators so arrogant. indifferent. and ignorant that they feel no responsibility to the women or this state'? VIVIAN HALL Sltorl·•lglll rd To the Editor; We have now had a major disaster at the airpo rt Does Supervisor Ralph Clark think by incr eas ing the number or commercial passenger jetliner flights we can decrease the odds of losing many li ves in the future? The short-sighted mentality of the board members on true economic impact is appalling. Note the increased medical and m aterial costs due lo a ir and noise pollution (London study confirmed latter l ; n ote the increased time losses a nd anxiety due to vehicle a nd people congestion ; and note the phony lip-service to "quality of life" while the continuing development syndrome causes the opposite effect and can result in property value loss. IT IS OBVIOUS that the supervisor from my area, Tom Riley , is i nc ompetent in judgment to represent me. I've lived here ·ror 43 years and my family has been in this area sin ce near t he turn of the century. Gone are the days of appreciative use of our beaches (serving the whole county> free or aircraft noise and hearing the s urf (let alone other natural sounds). Will the a rea as a whole go the way of the Upper and now Lower Bays? Unable to sustain varied life at quality levels? We need city councils. county s upervisors, and newspapers which care about a berita1e for tbe future. Unfortunately this takes lmowled1e and cour.,e to be able to exercise the simple common sense to resist much ot what the business people thinJt Is best for our place to live. No on airport expansion. Better yet a contraction of the present airport -and get on with a different location. Ontario wants the planes -many ol ua do not. DONALD B. BEA'M'Y fiJlaff••·~· To the Editor: Your editorial of Feb. 21. "Hifh c.oet of Mo.tnc.'' In . .,. 1ard to the redecoraUn1 of the White Houle II a amaaher. UatU It came out I did not know tbat priYate caatrtbutlona la tlae amount of ..... tu ..,. duelllM r.o dM W-. llame .... torteal Alloci•U., wen .... aa an.u.e R1qa-dectdid• Gs were not enough We have an old house under redecorating process and the work I do myself. If Uncle Sam cares to chip in a mere $500 I'd be delighted to accept. WARREN G. ALTHOFF B•pr~ar•d To the Editor· T he other night l pulled a young woman out from her over- turn ed s oft t opped car on Laguna Canyon Road. By the grace or God she had only a scratch, but the car looked like it had been in a trash compac· tor On my way home I wondered whatever had happened to the warning signs on this road. sign_s warning of the number of ,acct· dents and fatalities and advising e xtreme caution. Another point: Of five or so carloads or people who stopped to help. only my husband and I had emergency flares in our vehicle. The other people had fla s hli ght s but they are dangerous to the people holding them to slow down traffic. If you don't carry fl ares in your car. get some. If you drive any road you should be prepared not just in driving skills, but in first aid and traffic control VICKI BORTHWICK Fl~IMpl•t1 To the Editor: Your editorial on the airport in the Feb. 17 issue or the Daily Pi lot was very good . Your analysis of it as being inade· qu)lte, out of date, unsalisfac· toty and by Inference, beyond redemption is certainly apropos. Your advice that action should be taken now is likewise right to the point. However your con- clusion is in error. THE AIRPORT should be given over entirely lo activities other than commercial carriers. There is not enough space adja- cent to it to ever make it into a real airport, the idea of spendin1 any more dollars on it to try and m a ke it into a major air terminal is futile. A new location must be found now and de· veloped properly. It ia impossi· ble to tum what started u a barnstorminlC enterprise into anything resemblint a major terminus just the same as a sow'a ear into a silk pune and etc. The master plan is juat a plan; let it aather dust alonf. with tbe many others and let 1 aet aa with lbe reaJ an1wer -• .., and different site. ALANL. BLUll MORE OPINION Art Ho ~ How the Arabs ruined sex Moat •xpert bl a m e the d~rlU.. al M• ln Ameri ca on ltw e•ual revohaUoa wbkh bv.ct 1t1 allwiq my•ter let and pro duud the U~raled wom11n 11 crtoature , thf' "•>. who l ran rnrms s trong 014:!0 into pale. QW\'e'rin& 1ihadol411 of thto1r formt'r mat·ho 4'1ve~ But lc-t UI' g1vt-blume wh~re blam~ 1s du.-It was not the l 1 b t' r a \ ,. d v.ont~n v.h11 lJUt S t•)I lfl .\ m erll'a on lhe kid!> at "'h th~ "''~ Ar ab !>he1k!> c tuall\ the dt-chne ·ur !>ex c an be dated to the fi rst gas line 1n 1973. For 11 was then that :\mer icans by the millions fell out of love with their big . fuel· gulping <·ar s WHILIE S MALL cars have done wonders for energy con· servation, they have all but destroyed sex There are two r easons for this . The more ob· vious is the physical: Small c:ars are s imply not as big as bi~ t•ars. For g e n e ratio n s. t h e a utomobile has provided t he 3 DAYS ONLY Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 1dul try11llnM 1>l11ce for loven. It •• 1ofl. w&rm, eoay . intimate and heartlhn>bbingly illicit A young aJentleman wouJd drive a young h&d y out to Moo nli&ht Lane Aftt'r 1.h1e.·~ ln& tlegel for an hour or liO. he might. Ir he w~re lucky, 1>en uadt' her t.o climb in· to th.-hack seat where t hey m11eht more ro rnr o rtabl y unalyiti Schopenhauer. Not uny more. A young man I koow who r~cenlly attempted to anal) ze Schopenha uer in the back seat of u J apanese import had to be driven by his young lach to the hospital where he '>µcnt the next l wo weeks in t rac- twn But a far more insidious de· lel'l of small cars 1s that they are simµly not a s powerful as big t·ars. For generations. we men have C'lut<:hed the st eering wheels of our Hornets. our Javelins or our Matadors and raced their roar· 1 n g e·n g 1 n es VA R 0 0 M ! VA ROOM ! T H E PO WE R would flow through us, C'harging our hearts. squaring our jaws and s ending the man I y blood t·ou rsing through our veins. No sweet young thing was safe from our masculine magnetism. Rut have you ever raced the Garden Center t'ngine or a Honda Civic? Whir. Whir. Very ruel-efflcient. And the names! Whe;e are the Rogues , the Stin grays, the Cobras. the Valiants and the Matadors or yesteryear ? How can a man reel manly in a Courier. an Accord. a Corona or an Escort? The truth 1s that for gener a- tions we men have identified with our cars. And I say show me a man who identifies with a Ra bbit and I'll show you a man who definitely lacks machismo. SO T HE CASE of Stratford lloe should be no s urprise. When Stratford's wife. Heidi, became liberated. he turned into a pale. quivering shadow of his former macho self. "Go see a sex therapist, Stral· ford!" Heidi ordered . Instead, i"n a rare moment of rebellion , Stratford bought a 1981 eight-cylinder. four-door. two-ton Chrysler Imperial with a 318 cubic-inch engine. It saved Stratford; it saved his mar· riage; and it endangered onl} the typing pool at his office. Let us hope. however . that word of this cure does not leak out. The world alre ady has too man~· people and too little fossil fuel. FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Starts Fri., Feb. 27th, 10 A.M. Indoor Plants Special 3. 99 6" pot Pothos, Co rd a tum Philodendro n, Creeping Charlie pot Special 6.99 a" pot Boston Fern Outdoor ~ Special 9.99 5 Gallon Meyer lemon Outdoor Pienta Special 1.99 1 Gellon Candy Turf 1 Gallon . Scc;»tch Broom Potting Soil 5.98 a ·cu. ft. Ot COUfN 'fOll can chllrge 11 -~~ ~~ -rsi~CPe11ney IJr»JP.~ Indoor Special 49.99 Specimen Plants Dracenas, Pothos & Diffenbachla Special 29.99 Specimen Plants in Decorator pots. STOAI HOUR': Mon • .frl. 10 a.m. to IP·!"-.__, 10 •·""IOI P·"'· ..... , ' 12 Noantolp.m. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, February 26, 1981 U .1 e cearance starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available in each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach stor·e women 's sportswear Now 52 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 98c 40 LONG SLEEVE TEE SHIRTS 1.98 310 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 1.98 142JUNIORTEESHIRTS 1.98 41 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 3.98 98 MISSES'COWLS 3.98 26 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 3.98 28 MISSES'PANTTOPS 3.98 1 S FULL FIGURE TOPS 3.98 31 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 4.98 63 LONG SLEEVE TEE SHIRTS 4.98 52 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 4.98 23 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 6.98 22 JUNIOR PANTS 6.98 32 JUNIOR~WEATERS 6.98 28 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 6.98 :i~ MISSES' PANTS 6.98 ~ 1 .;UNIOR PANT TOPS 9.98 22 MISSES' COWLS 9.98 81 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS 11 .98 62 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS 17.98 dresses and coats Now 23 MISSES' ANO JUNIOR JUMPSUITS 9.98 23 NYLON QUILTED PANTCOATS 10.98 13VINYLJACKETS 12.98 41 JUNIOR DRESSES 14.98 19VINYLPANTCOATS 15.98 81 SWEATER COATS 19.98 11 MISSES' PLUSH PANTCOATS 45.98 13 MISSES' PLUSH PANTCOATS 48.98 27 ALL·WEATHER LINEDCOATS 52.98 lingerie, loungewearNow 116 HALF SLIPS 1.98 28 CONTOUR BRAS 1.98 55 BABY DOLLS 2.98 26 FULL SLIPS 2.98 25 DUSTERS 5.98 27 SHORT FLEECE ROBES t 1.98 32 LONG ROBES 12.98 '25 SOFTCUPBRAS 3.98 women 's accessories buys for boys 37 FOOTBALL SHIRTS 35 BOYS'L. SLV. SHIRTS 59 LITTLE BOYS' SWEATER SETS 35 LITTLE BOYS' SWEA TEAS 19 BOYS' SWEATERS 10 FAMOUS MAKER VESTS 57 PRINT TEES • 47 STAR WARS POSTERS buys for men 19MEN'SHATS 47 S.SLV. TEESHIRTS 108S. SLV. SPORTSHIRTS 101 SHORTS 43 DRESS BEL TS 59LSLV. PLAIDSHIRTS 37 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS 27 S. SL V. STRIPE SHIRTS 21 WINTERWEIGHT SHIRTS 73 L SLV. SHIRTS n MEN'S SLACKS 59 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 81 S.SLV. POLY/TERRY SHIRTS 69 L SLV. SPORT SHIRTS 197 MENS JEANS 47 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS shoes for the· family 23 GIRLS', SANDALS 26 WOMEN'S HEELS 36 BOYS' SOCCER SHOES 44 WOMEN'S CASUALS 38 GIRLS' SANDALS 39 MEN'S SLIPPERS 51 WOMEN'S SPORT SHOES 53 MEN'S SPORT SHOES 39 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS 36 CHILDREN'S BOOTS 14 WOMEN'S SUEDE JOGGERS 122 CHILDREN'S CASUALS 31 MEN'S CASUALS 47 BOYS' LEATHER CASUALS 43 MEN'S CASUALS NOW 2.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 10.98 48c 98c NOW 98c 1.98 1.98 2.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 5.98 6.98 6.98 8.98 9.98 15.98 7.98 8.98 NOW 2.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 8.98 8.98 10.98 10.98 12.98 12.98 14.98 15.98 41 SOCKS 61 TURTLENECK OICKIES 41 SCARVES NOW 1.48 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.48 2.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 yardage and notions Now 56BELTS 57SANDALS 98 BELTS 68 CHINA DOLL SHOES 31 CANVAS BAGS 29SHAWLS 29SCARVES 36 HATS 47 SWE ATERS 32 KNITTED SLIPPERS 39 WEDGE SHOES ·infants and toddlers 19 RUBBER PANTS 27 LAYETTE SACOUES 26 TOOOLER TEE SHIRTS 13 RECORD ALBUMS 47 TODOLER ROBES . 28 TODDLER DRESSES 7 NURSERY LAMPS . buys for girls NOW 48c 98c 98c 1.98 4.98 4.98 7.98 NOW 155KNEE·HISOCKS 48c 31 TUN BRAS 91c 71 IELTS . . . 1 .• 57 Tll SHIRTS . . . . . . 1 .• ~7·14TURT'LINECKTOPS 1 .• •. • 4-tX DRUID. . . . . . . .. 1 .• M HANDIAGS .. . . .. .. . .. .. . 2.• 47PAJAMAS .. . .. .. .. . . . . . . .. .. • . • 3.• 314 .. X PANTllTI. .. . .. .. .. .. . • • • • .. .. .. 4.M 111PANTl7•14 ...................•.••... 4.• 11JACKITl7·14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . • . • . . . ... 8 PANTllTl7·14 ............•.••.•.•..... 1.M llPANTl1·14 ......................... ... ZI VILOURTOPl4-IX . . . . . • • . • • . • . . . .. •... 4.11 ' 189SPOOLSOF 100"/oCOTTONTHREAO 218RUGYARN 21 CHRISTMAS CUT OUTS 58 HOLLY HOBBIE CUT OUTS 48 VOS COTTON BROADCLOTH 149 VOS COTTON BROADCLOTH 64 VOS POL V /COTTON BROADCLOTH 188 ~EEDLEPOINT STITCHERY 23 POLY /COTTON VELOUR KITS for your hom.e 12 SHOWER CURTAINS 141 HAND TOWELS 47 WASH CLOTHS 9 BED PILLOWS • 23 POTTED SILK FLOWERS 29PANELS 26BATHTOWELS 24 BEAN BAG CHAIRS 1 jewelry buys 43 INDtAN BEADED JEWELRY 51COLOREDBEAOEDNECKLACES 23 GOLD COLORED BRACELETS . 21 COLOR BEADED BRACELETS •COLOR BEADED NECKLACES •GOLD FIUED BOXED SETS J4 JEWELRY BOXES . 23 ZODIAC CHAMIS . . . . . toys, toys, toys 7PLIONGAMU. • .. ... -. IKRUIHl"....a"MONIT!AS IOOU.ITIIOLLIM ..... I • 11 AU.PROPAlllM ..... . 13HOROICONCOllPUTERI . . . Sc 13c 48c- 68c 68c 98c 1.48 1.58 5.98 NOW 28c 98c 98c 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 19.98 NOW - 48c 48c . 48c -lie 2.98 ••• 11.51 NOY(" s.• ••• ... 10.• , ... 1•TONILICTIDICG1 lllll 21 ILICTRGICGAMIS .IUI • 4 •• ..•. 1 ... Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave. at Brookh~rat St. • 963-9731 A Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/Thursday, February 26. 1981 'That'll complate th Inga a bit -the French sending In tt..w advisers." .. tff ~r 37 year5 F aDled 01adarn given big fine PARIS <AP> Madame Billy, who ran one of the most cele brated brothels in Paris for almost 40 years. has been convicted by a French court of running a house of prostitution. Madame Billy, whose real na m e is Aline Roblot Soccodato. was given a 10-month suspended sentence and fined $50,000 plus $10,000 in court costs. Her civil rights also were s uspended for three vears. Madame Billy, 79. closed her swank ''Kleber Star" establishment two years ago. The charges against her were filed s hortly a fter one or her for mer "barmaids'" implicated her in a telephone "service" operation. "WHY THIS CONVICTION NOW?" Madame Billy asked. "During the 37 years I ran m y establishment. the police always knew I was there and I worked with them ... She said she plans to appeal "How can the rourt compare me lo a common pimp?" she said in an inte rview with The As· sociated Press. ··There were no pimps in my house. My girls were well cared for Soroe or them were married and some m et their future husbands in m y establishment. They were very well paid and none of the m lived at the house:· The house a t ·1 Rue Paul Valery is now a restaurant "I DON'T LIKF. THE KLEBER Star being re· rerred to as a brothel," s he s aid in the interview. ·• 1t was when• the very hest of :.oc1ety came." Inside the 11 room house the best champagne rtowed. gilded mirrors and luxurious velvets gra ced the walls and the upstairs rooms were decorated with authentic Louis XV and Louis XVI furniture. During the war yc<A rs. the great French singer Edith Piaf lived but did not work -at Madame Billy's for three years Maurice Chevalier a lso would s top an to sang to thl' guests downstairs . It was also during the war that Madame Billy helped member~ of thl' fo'rcnch resistance and hid Jews tn her cstabhshmcnl durin~ the Nazis' four· year occupation1>f Pan~.!-.he sa id Des Moines aids hick town image DES MOINES, Iowa I AP> -Des Moines is having trouble with its "hick town" image. and the situation wasn't helped when t wo tractors broke the ribbon at the opening of a shiny hotel and a cow and a pig ate the key When the 33-story Mar riott Hotel opened downtown. politicians spoke. businessmen beamed and, in keeping with a Marriott tradition of doing something special with keys to new hotels. a cow and a pig ate a ceremonial key made or corn. THE EVENT RECEIVED WIDE publicity, but some accounts noted that a study com· m issioned by the local Cham ber of Commerce found that Des Moines should shed its image as a "hick town." "Way to go boys, you've done it again," said one letter to a local news paper "NEXT TIME YOU BRISTLE BECAUSE of som e disparagi n g remark made about we Midwesterners. close your eyes. count to 10 and visualize two tractors breaking a ribbon, and a cow and a pig ceremoniously eat ing a key in t he lobby of Des Moines' newest . most prestigious hotel." said another letter -writer. But then came the reactjon. "C'mon, Des Moines. ~Y are you ashamed of two tractors wltich cost thousands of dollars? And wha t 's wrong with a champion steer and a prize. winning hog?" asked one reader . Spud wrestling event scheduled MANTUA. Ohio <AP) -O h io's self- proclaimed potato capital is preparing a spud wr estling exhibition for the Ma nt u a Potato Festival in September. The Portage County town, population 1,020, gained notoriety last year by dumping 10,023 pounds of mashed pot atos from a cement mixer onto Jackson Street, then adding 55 gallons of gravy to hl1hllght its festival. This year, the potato mix will be dumped onto an elevated 1ta1e on Main St.reel, and female and celebrity WTestlera will grapple Ln the 100, sald Kathy !lmmons, festival publicity chairman. The festival. begins Sept. 11 and runs throu1b Sept. 13. Gambler• IUTf1•ted Sl!lOUL South Korea <AP> -Polle. rounded up 1• ;;;pie lD I crackdown cm mallJaq pla)'la1 lD u~ ,1mblln1 bCNMe end pl.e.cf aa under formal .,,...t Ott babttual 1ambUq, tM '""1 pro. HCUUoa clftlu annouaeed. WEEKDAYS 9 lo 9 SAT.-SUN. 9 lo 6 AD GOOD THRU MAR. 4 BLACK I DECKER STRING TRIMMER I 13.!~ For genera l use. Cuts a 7" pat h of light growth in hard to reach p laces. If you need to know more you 're on your own . RUST-OLEUM 2 17 13 oz. SPRAY 257 PT. 4 57 QT. Good stuff to fight rust and corrosion on metal. masonry or wood. U se for outdoor furn iture. ba rbe<:ues. lawn mowers. .. ·'. -~· ~, f \ '\. ,· ... ,,1. . ~~~~ '~ 0 ! -~.. 'r ~· ' . , . ( ·1."'-:t" ~·I . ~;_ ARMSTRONG NO-WAX HARVEST HOME SOLARIAN FLOORTILE- 7 4 ~2"xl2" TILE My wife loves a ll the things that take ca re of themselves . like no -wax. self cleaning. no press. Assorted colors. lxl2 #4 PINE SHELVING 23~N.IT. Does anyone h a ve any e xciting news about pine s helving? If so. please c all me. Other wise. buy. paint. and put up. (And s hut u p.?) I JUSTAS FENCING R\,JF~ · 6 FOOT lx6 J J I 11 ROUGH REDWOOD I --~ 1 f'·r 97!. I 6 FOOT lx6 RIDGE I VALLEY REDWOOD I ~A7 Thes e redwood fences will add lots to your property (yeah . a lot of work.). give a feeling of security. TORO 1£ you're fighting with the weeds and they're winning. pick one of these and fight back. HONE DUTY 8 TRIMNEl/WEEDEI 1 88 Cuts 9" psth. 2.5 &mp •900 SUPER HOME DUTT TRIMMER/WEEDER Cuu 10" p~th. 2.75 amp PIOFESSIOIAJ. TIHHRl/WEEDEI Cuu 12·· path 4 f"'P BLACK I DECKER HEAVY DUTY EDGER-TRENCHER Cuts ''•" trench along walks or driveway. Swing open bla d e ouard. mak es cleanin g or c h anging 5 s•.m4• the blade easy. ~._...v 9 arnpe. ·BLACK I DECKER 8'' WORKMATE WORK CENTER & VISE CLOSE -OUT! ALL FIREPLACE ACCESSORIES 1f3 OFF REGULAR RETAIL About time to h a ng up the fireplace stuff for the s eason. but don't forget next s eason. Firescreens. logsets. etc. ASHFLASH HOME 'N AUTO COMBO PAK '~~ .J The batteries alone som ewhere else would be more than we're asking for the whole deal. Beheve it. -- VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL HD SUPER SAE 30 wr. ALL CLIMATE HD SAE l OW/40 WT. 71~ 79~. E ither 30 wt. or a ll .. ason, whichever you d ecide it's a good deal. Yo u k n ow the old sayin g, t h e good stuff at the r ight price. c ALLISON EMERGENCY LIGHT E ver try to c h ange a tire at nigh t withou t light? I did. W ish I'd had one of theM. Works off 12 volt cigarette ligh ter. 12 ft. retractab le cord. STARLIT£ SLIP· ON RANCH PLAID SEAT COVERS 2 DOOR, 4 DOOR. BUCKET SEAT, HIGH BUCKET SEAT #79-025 For lightwei ght project s , will a tta ch to a ny work s urface up to 2114" thick. Its vise grips open t o 3", s wive l qrips hold odd s h a pes , (does tha t include rny brothe r-in- la w?), up to SV•" a nd work s u r face tilts 0 • 4 5 d egrees forwa rd. BEDFORD BRASS BY PRICE PFISTER 4" CENTERSET SINGLE HANDLE BATH FAUCET WITH POP-UP. •841-366 OR 8" CENTER SINGLE HANDLE KITCHEN FAUCET. •833-066 YOUR 24aa CHOICE EA. If you need a new fixture these are good ones. W ould I tell you if they were bad ones? Yes. I would. Chrome finish. CHILD'S FOLDING DESK 1497 Assemble and finish and your kiddy is ready for the new semester. Folds to 10" for easy storage when he goes off t o the beach. FIVE INCH CUSTOM INSTALLED SEAMLESS RAIN GUTTER ONE OR TWO STORY I 5 7 100 FT. MIN. LIN. FT. LESS TRAN 100 FEET 17 0 50 FT. MIN. LIN. FT. OlllTUMlll Orange Coast DAIL V PILOTfThur9day, February 28, 1981 LB1eela Pot harvest booming 'Secret' 'crop bureaucratic dilemma Saperleal'ed llfe1u.,. mual be 18 yean al ... for an H · pwted ...... job OfeD• 1np at •.u per hour. Tla~rlae Safety 0.pa t la also seek an• rookie llfe1uard1, wlao muat be 11 by June l , 1111. Rookid are paid Sl.10 per bou.r Application forms are available at the Maio Beach Park lifeauard headquarters or the personnel office at City Hall, 505 Forest Ave. For information. call M ilte Dwinell at 41M·6S72. Fowl play WASHINGTON (AP> -It's America's secret crop, an a&ricultural emban-uament al riches.· For harvesters, It's an economic bonanaa. For state 1ovemmenta, it's a bureaucratic dilemma. In three years, the Ule1al harvest of marijuana baa become bit bualnell in the Unit· ed States; replacU., wine erapea as the bi11eat cash crop in California's Mendocino County, runniq close behind pineapples in Hawaii. It is Oklahoma's second-largest crop -right alter wheat. FEDE&AL INVESTIGATOU say marijuana growing is re- ported on the increase in Springfield, Mass., Kansas City, Mo., and Louisville. From southeast Oklahoma comes the message to govern· ment drug enforcers: "Traf- fic It er s are armed and dangerous.•· hard• for law enforcement of. ficiab to detect .. · AND IU.&UtJANA 18 c.rowinc in national foreata in ArilOlla, Florida, Ore1on, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee, officials aay. Ernie Andersen, law enforce- ment di.rector for the National Forest Service, explains the hilh stakes: ''One plant of the right kind of marOuana can be worth more than $1 ,000. You can erow 400 to 500 planta per acre. There may be billions ol dollars of mari· juana growing on public lands." The "right kind" is sensimilla, a stronc. potent, seedless strain that sells for $150 lo $200 an ounce on the West Coast and up to $250 an ounce in the East. Colombian marijuana sells for about $40 an ounce. ANDE&SEN SAYS growing marijuana is not onJy illegal but also could be dangerous for those who wander into an illicit harvest. DEATHS. ELSEWHERE ··Bird Brain,·· a pet chicken that plays electronic tic-tac-toe with people and "never loses," is returned to bis arcade cage in Mon- terey by owner Dick O'Kane. Bird, valued at $1,500, was stolen, but later found on street. Homegrown marijuana ac- counts ror an estimated 7 per- cent to 10 percent or the 14,000 to 15,000 tons smoked each year, the government says. In some states, it's grown in greenhouses with sophisticated . c limate controls, making it ··our pervading fear is that someone who accidentally stumbles on one of these crOPs m the national forests wHI get hurt or killed ," Andersen said. "There may be assaults . Some STANFORD (AP) Tom Slreltllorat, 49, 1:1 San Francisco-based NBC News correspon· dent who had a heart transplant two year~ ago, died Thursday. He served a-; a correspon· dent in Latin America, the Middle East and Vietnam for the network. SAN FRANC I SCO (AP ) -Hedwig Glagold. 79, an Austrian- born oper atic lyricist and founder or the San Francisco Children's Opera, died Wednesday. •. ,., ... IANTAANA·TIISTtN COMMUNITY NOSP'ITAL ~· Mr •nd Mr~. Yong tiyun IC.Im , lr•ln~. bof Mr . •nd M,. Chuo C••roflo. Cool• Mew.. boy _,. Mr. •ncl *>. -.U.1 A<e•es. '1unl· ln9ton e..c11. boy . ..__.,, Mr •ncl _._ .Jooeph Sulhnn. Hunt· 1"91on 8ffch. boy. ST.~P'M NOSP'tTAL ~·· M r •nd Mr>. A-Id <An!!ler. FOWi· l•ln V•ll"f. boy ~IS Mr •nd M rs. J •tt N i es~n , WHlml~ltr. 91rl. SAN Cl.llMllNTE GllNll•AL NOSP'ITAL .._.., 11 SAN FR A ~CI SC 0 M r. •nd M,. John Senec;at, S•n (AP) -Ella HUI Hatch, ~~:,:;•::-D•ni.i Erskin.. oan• 57, the first black elect· Point, 111•1. ed to the San Francisco ~r, u Mr. and Mr•. Steve<> Am~llM. Dana Board of Supervisors Point, bor. without having firs t Mr •nd M••. Ronald Ke .. y, S•n Ju•n C•Pl•lr-. boy been appointed, Wa S G wtndl yn Bucher and J•ime De found dead at her home OumPO. S.. Clemente. 91tL Wednesday. • Mr •nd Mr~ ~~mirez. S•n LAKE VILLA , Ill. (AP> -Doa A . .Koehler, 55, who at 8 feet, 2 inches was listed as the world's tallest man, died Wednesday at his home. DEATH NOTICES Ju•n Cepl•lr-. boy. -....is T•mel• Lancl1 •nd Go<-. Powell. U19u11• 8e«h. 9irl. ,,__.,, ,, Helen Pr.m:. ~ l=r..-Kisco Merc•do. D•n• Pol,.. boy Mr •nd Mr\ kennitfh IV and•. Son Cl9mtntt.boy. Mr . •M Mf~ J•mes J•qua. S.n Cl9m.nlt, 91•1. MOAG Mll..,.IAL HOSP'tTAL P'•llHYTElllAN __.,, M r •ncl M rs O.vid Hiatt. Irvin.. 9lrl. Mr. •ncl Mn. A-rt Wet>O. Irvine, GOULD bo' VAYE IRENE STEWART Mr •"" Mr>.~~it11 1..911,.. GOULD. age 61. a member of Nlvue1.bo,. · the David 0 . Stewart family Mr •ncl *'·Thom .. e•no. 1rv1ne. who were one of the principal ::'· 11 M 11 11 founde rs of Huntington c:;on~".-1;.~:111r~dney Ho m•n. Beat'h, Ca. Passed away on .,__,. • Tuesday, February24. 1981 in Mr.·~~·· St•._, c...11ne. coo•• Costa Mesa. Ca. A daughter M• ... 9 r ,, __ ,,. of C lare nce and Maude Mr. •ncl Mn . Benno N1e1s~. Foun· Stewart Shermer. Vaye was t•ln V•""'· bo,. born on April 28, 1919 in Long Mr. •ncl -·· Lawrence Mc~m•r•. B h C S . . lr•lne, 9lrl. eac , 8 . UrVIVtn g a re 3 M r . •nO M t\. Oonald Brolhwell, daughters J ean Long of Co•t•Mtw,boy Westminster. Ca .,. Vi c ki ~:st."~.:;~;1 Alan M cCausland, Flory of Dayton. Ohio and M r. •nel *'-St••en NtY••s. Irvine. Marle ne Vaye Maye r of bo' Coronado, Ca. and a son John Demnicki of Kissimmee. Florida, 5 grandchildren and I great-grandda ughter . Funeral services will be con· ducted on Friday, Fe bruary ~11 M r •nel _._ Tllomo1s Holmes. Hunt 1"9ton Buch. boy. Mr and Mn.. CJydit H•rkins. Irvine. boy. F--,.12 Mr . •ncl -·-B<i•n C.rlPr, Cool• Mt ... 91rt. Mr . •ncl -·· JQl!n Mtr<ltt. Fount.in V•lltrf. olrl. M r. •nd Mrs. Aon•ld M•llh•••· Cost•-..,boy Mr •nd Mri K•sslrn MutMnn• .. Coot• Mtu.. 91r1 Mr. •ncl Mn f>el"' All•d, Cost• Mew.boy 27. 1981at10:30A M al Pierce Brothers .Smiths" Mortuary with t h e Rev . Do nald Thurman officiating. Inter· m e nt will be in Good She pherd Cemetery. Hunl · tngton Beach . Ca. Pierce Smiths" Mortuary directors. 536•6539· Politics McCOllMK:ll MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 • topic at UCI KELL06G'S 6ROMULCH PLANTING MEDIUM Enriches soil !or lush, green plant growth. Combats the high sal! content in Calilornla soil 2 cu. tt. Q Turf Builder SHAMROCK WHEELBARROW Holds 3 cubic leet. Green color Model #KS-3. Reg. 23.99 VILLAGE BLACKSMITH of these crops are ·wortb tl million. People ban been nm off at tunPQlnt. '' By aJt reports, Amerleau started barvestiq marijuana iD quantity several yean a.,. ~ day, the U.S. Dnat Enforcement Agency e11Umates that domestic marijuana production ia IJ'OW· ing at a rate of better than 20 percent a ye~. while marijuana imports are up only 13 percent. The agency estimates tbat Americans smoked between SIS.5 billion and $21.9 billion worth of marijuana in 1979. Of that, about $2 billion to $3 billion was grown ln the United States. George L. Farnum of the Na- tion al Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws estimates the 1981 domestic crop will top $5 billion. THE MA&J.IUANA HA&V~ has grown so quickly in California that the DEA has launched a program aimed· at wiping out the industry before it expands. ··You can get 3 lh pounds of marijuana from a plant 12 feet high. One pound will make 1,500 marijuana cigarettes," said David Schickedanz, who heads DEA 's "OperationSensimilla." ";l , n HAllOll LAW.._MT. OL.1¥1 Mortuary • Cemetery Crenwlory Author and political analyst Ronald Steel will give two lectures Cree to the public at UC Irvine next month. SCOTTS TURF BUILDER ©1 DELUXE TREE , . 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mesa 54().5554 ,..c••onms -.L•0.4DWAY MOltTUAaY 110 Bro.dWay Costa~ 642-9150 . IA&.TZ ..... OM SMTM&TVTMU. WISTCUfip CHAP& •27 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 848-9371 ' Steel, serving as a temporary lecturer on campus, bas authored numerous articles on American foreign policy for Tbe New York Times, Washin1ton Poat, Atlantic Monthly and Harper's. His talb will be given ,at 4 p.m. in room 128 of UCl'a Humanities Office Bulldi.q. The schedule ii: March 4 : "Journa11.ata and Politl- ciana: The Temptations ol Walter Lippmann." -llarcb ll: "Europe and American : The Unravellqa Alliance.•• Covers 2,000 sq. ft. Reg. 8.95 6.88 ' t PllUIEIVSAW CAMELLIA'S f Model IG7087 -11. Assorted colors. Reg. 29.99 5 gallon. 19.98 Reg 10.99 ea. ~a.-... .5.88aa. flt~ --.. ..................... ,.;ee-:a !! ~ =£r SALE DATES: Feb. 27 thru Mar. 5 ••• OringlCoMt DA&LY PtLOTIThurtday. February 21, 1811 'World built Joo b~' Sun rays to 'fry' potatoes Uttle people learn to eope with problem DAU Al <AP> -.......... , ....,., Clay ~ .... wlf• '**....., , ............ .. .. Mtanum'a Mayo CU.Uc la am. tMy apeded ...... '° ,....u tM boy'• d41ft ........ 'l'M1 •• ,.. :.r-a MW dt11DOlla: YOUAI Lee WU• •• ,.... ._... tiome and lrttat blll\ Uk• you woWd ... , o&IMr clUJd," ht.ors .ctvlMd the l'ort Wortla ...... "That't the beat advice yo"' co\lld 1ive anybody, for anybody wbo l1 handicapped," KltebeGI. now 50, sald. "Don't ua1o1me be can't do tometbinc until be'a tried lt aeveraJ Umea." UIUIEN8. ENGIN&E&ING •ANAGB& fw T•aaa lmuument.s' home computer divlaioo at Lubbock, is 4-fool-l. He climbed into a cbalr in a motel room to talk about bow be and other little people have learned lo cope in a world b\lilt for oiuer people. Kitchens served as president of LitUe People of America from 1964 lo 1968. His wife, Mary, who as 3-foot-11, was LPA treasurer from 1970 to 1974. But there was no Little People of America when be was a child, Kitchens said. ·•My mother said she would have given her right arm to have had sometbina like that when I was growing up, to help her," be said. The world of little people is made up of dwarfs, who have normal chests and trunks, but short legs and feel, and mid1ets, who are smaU, but physically well-proportioned. "THE MEDICAL P&OFESSION SAYS any person under 5 feet is technically a dwarf, but moat little people will lop out at•~ feet," Kitchens said. "We've got some that are qwte a bit smaller tban that. There are some who are only about 33 inches tall, and the smallest, l believe, is 29 inches." Most little people are sensitive about the terms used to describe them. "There are certain terms that blacks don't want to be called. And you don't refer to people with bearing impairments any more as deaf and dumb," Kitcher said. "So ... little people. That's just what wear · '' Kitchens s d bis biggest problem was buying clothing -his chest is as big as an average man's but bis arms and legs are short. "I have my own tailor," be said. "I see him once a year, and he's developed enough business that now he comes to all our LPA conventions." KITCHENS ALSO CITED "ARTIFICIAL bar- riers" that still exist in American society, such as school regulations requiring all children to attain certain standards of sports prowess. "There are some stales, Lowsiana for exam- ple, that have height requirements for teachers," he added, noting that Louisiana has lost many teachers of short stature to Texas, which has no such rule .. Some litUe people furnish their homes with children's furniture. but that's impractical for big guests. "A lot of them do what we di(!. We got contem- porary furniture, which was kind of low ... I'm two feet shorter than you. but I can live with this," Kitchens told a reporter. As for annoying remarks or slights, Kitchens said: "I don't get upset when somebody does something stupid or does it because of a lack of awareness. It's an opportunity lo educate that person . . . and sometimes you make a good friend that way." HE AND HIS WIFE MET ON a blind date while he was an electrical engineering student at Southern Methodist University and she an art stu· dent at Texas Woman's University. Last summer they celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary. Many little people marry and have chUdren. "Whether their children will also be little de- pends," Kitchens said. "Som~ are short by heredi- ty and some are not. The first time' il happens, it's genetic, and it can be hereditary after that. The chances can be anywhere from nil to 100 percent that they'll belittle." Little people sometimes adopt small children who are diagnosed as dwarfs or midgets. Kitchens and his wife did this. "SOMETIMES A HANDICAP AT Bl&TH is more than parents can handle. and the children are put up for adoption. In the past, they were con- . sidered Ufladoptable and were made wards of the stale. Now, officials have come to realize that these children can grow up in an environment where the parents understand what they're going to go through,·· Kitchens said. The Kilchenses' children are Sandy, 21, and Alan, 25. Sandy is 4-foot-2, an inch taller than her father and three inches taller than her mother. But Alan was a surprise. He kept growing and is now S- foot-7. "We had made the bathroom counters super low in the children's room, and finally we had him use the guest bathroom, which was of normal size. But still, he'd bump his head on the kitchen cabinet when he'd bend over to use the sink," Kitchens said. LITl'LE PEOPLE OF AMERICA had 400 members when Kitchens was president but has arown as it has gained exposure, be said. LPA now bas 3,500 members. The annual convention attracted 640 little peo- ple last year in Los Angeles. The next convention ii scheduled for St. Paul, Minn., in July. "At the first, when we had national conven- Uons, the main attraction was a dance. It was quite a lift to walk up to somebody smaller than 10u and ask them for a dance,'' Kitchens said with a laugh. • "But we've graduated beyond just dances now. We have a lot of workshops where little peo- ple can find out bow lo handle some of the problems they come up agaln.st in a world made for bl1people." University bans co-ed bathrooms. -· PORTLAND, Ore. <AP) -In a month, Ore-Ida Inc. will be makin& trench fried potatoes with sun power . At it. plant in Ontario, ln eutern Oreaon, the large food processor will nae solar power to pro- du c~ 2,000 pounds of steam per hour, or 2 million British thermal units of energy, to beat cooltine oil to fry more than 4 million pounds of potatoes per day, a com- pany spokesman said. Solar energy to cook french fries is the latest in a series of alternate energy projects which t Ore-Ida says it is using ' to reduce its energy costs. Golllfltd(AjfeeSJtoppa 15 Convenient Locations ,.. Huntington Beach Newport Beach Pacific Cout Hwy So. of Pier 1400 Padfk COMt Hwy --~---~ CONVERT YOUR CLUTTER TO CASH -~ 1N A cLAssJf 1Eo Ao . cALL 642-5678 Daily Pilm A FRIENDLY AD-VISER WILL HELP. PROBLE• Of LITTLE PEOPLE RIALL Y 110 L•• Kitchen•, 50, of T•H•, •xpl•ln• why Robert Roll, vice pres-I idenl for the firm's technical services, said the company has used alternate energy to cut YOU CAN COUNT ON THE its energy bill by 16 per-i----------------------------...1 cent since 1972. ~ ANNOUNCING ... ·,..,t THE NURSERY WIT.HIN THE GARDEN! ~ t. , To be sure. a visit to Roger's Gardens is a beautiful and pleasant experience. It's also the best place to find all the ingredients for successful gardening. We do our best to provide unique displays. creations and services. but. we think our best con be better So. we're making new and exciting changes. all designed to provide you even more variety, quality and value. Our nursery section has been expanded dramatically to include a greater variety of. tree and shrub cont - oiner stock w~·repuying 1n greater volume to provide you w1th bigger selection and better values. We've also installed o new parking lot with easy access to the nursery section Service has b een improved with o new checkout stand to save you time Come join us in celebrating these new add1t1ons. We 're providing fresh-squeezed orange juice. balloons for the kids and special values throughout the store. ----·-------------------~--~···• ... .----------------------~-~ ..-----. GOOD TASTE You can't eat a juniper. but. a citrus plant ls a treat fa the eye and the polote. Come get acquainted with the w.hole family. We hove quite a variety °' Oranges. lemons. Tangelos. Grapefruit. Limes and Kumquats. There will be a juice machine handy f0< sampling fresh ~ squeezed orange Julee. · ~ ,...., .... __.... We also have a terrific collect0<s book on Citrus. WeH written and tuN of color photos, it's an A-to-Z book. full of history. ideas and practical information 5 gal. citrus trees .............. , ......... reg. S13'.50 Sale $9.ff Citrus book ............. , ........... , ... reg. S 7.95 Sale $6.91 GOOD 1START Give your plants a break In life. Supercharge your soil with these two ac- tivators for strong and vibrant plant growth #30 Roger's Soll Activator Reg. $16.98 Sale $12.91 Redwood Soil Prep Conditioner. 4 cu. ft. Reg. S 7.25 Sale $S.ff GOOD BUY Eucalyptus trees ore a naturally beauti- ful solution fOf oll kinds of landscaping needs. The price Is beautiful too ....... . 5 gal. Sale $1.99 GOOD HEAVENS . _ such colors! Plant these gorgeous tlowe<s now tor a wonderful season of garden fireworks. REG. SALi Azoteos l gal. $3.25 $1.99 Indian Hawthorne 2 gal. $9.75 $6.99 Marguerite Daisy l gal. $3.50 $1.99 Star Jasmine 1 gal. $2.98 $1.99 While you're at Roger's. don't miss this excep- tional value on 6 • houseplants . . . . ...... . Reg. 510.95 'Sale $6.91 SURPRISE We have a treat for ~ou when you visit our new poM<lng lot. Don't miss itt ' AMERICA'S MOST BltAlJTtFUL GARDEN CSNTBR 640-5800 Open 9 to 6 tJr:Jlv • San Joaquin Hll Road at MacAtttu 8Mj. • ACtOll from Faltm tmnd In Newport leach NURSERY •>INDOOR PLANTS• FLORIST• Lt~OSCAPING • ~ATIORJRNITURE • ~ - l I THURSDAY, , ••• 2', 1tl1 BUSINESS 85 STOCKS 87 FEATURES 88 COMICS 811 DMly ............. .-, ~trtcll f¥0-ll Potential home buyers shy away from new flexible mortgages . . . 86 0 0 LakerS get Bucked . Lani,er turns his torment on LA MILWAUKEE <AP) -Bob Lanier, tormented aU seuon by pain and personal trJuma, showed Wednesday nisht he's primiq for the playoffs. Mllwau.kee's veteran center poured in 29 points, grabbed 11 rebounds, blocked two shots and added six assists and four steals to lead the Bucks to a 126-108 Na- tional Basketball Association victory over the Los Angeles La ken. Lanier neutralized Laker superstar Kareem Abdul- Jabbar, who had 29 points and 13 rebounds. Lanier's outlet pass- ing also set up his teammates for numerous fast break op· port unities before the 7 -2 AbduJ-Jabbar could get back on defense. THE 18-POINT margin represented the Lakers' worst defeat of the season. Their pre· vious worst loss was a 110-94 de- feat by the Bucks in Los Angeles on Nov. 23. "We feel we can play better than this," Abdul-Jabbar said. "They beat us twice. We'd like to change that. but that's water over the bridge. Bob played very well for them.", "Bob was ready to play." Bucks' Coach Don Nelson said. "He's going to have to play more and score more in the playoffs , but the scoring will come with his minutes." Lanier's 29 p<>ints matched his single game high for the season. '·I took 16 shots," Lanier said. "That makes a tieck of a dif. ference. Some nights I may only take 10 shots. Coach Nelson said to go inside, and my teammates got me the ball. It's that simple. Ume of year. We're anUcipatiq While be took a three-minute playoffs, but in the meantime break on tbe bench late ln tbe we're jockeyiq for nothins." \ ball, the Laken made their only No one ii anticipating playoffs real run of the mabt cloeiq to more anxiously than Lal)ler, wiUIJn N -58 at halftime. who wants a championship rill& However Lanier scored six before bis fracile knees give out. points in the third quarter and Marques Jobnaon added seven as the Bucks opened a ll0-77 spread at the end of the period. Two jumpers and a pair of free throws by Lanier made it 100-83 with 8:25 lo play. A RING WOULD have special meaning to him this year, for this has been his most frustrat- ing season of his 11 in the NBA. His father was killed in a hit- and-run accident in October; knee and neck injuries have hampered his performance, and his wife recently filed for divorce. "It's been a difficult year for me," be said. "I've never really gotten myself in playing shape, with all the conflicts I've had. I can't enjoy this year because I can't contribute like I'd like." Lanier·s importance to the Bucks was reflected during the second quarter after they had stormed to a 46-31 lead. THE LAKERS aETUaN lo action at home Friday night against New Jersey. Earvin "Magic" Johnson, sidelined since suffering a knee injury on Nov. 18, is scheduled to return to action against the Nets. The game has already been sold out. Johnaon bas played 20 games thi. •eason -the Lakers won 15 of them. During the ~ games in which Johnson was sidelined, Los Angeles compiled a 28-17 rec- ord. Battle li11es drawn Players' strike • • appears 1mm1nent TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Major league baseball players insist they don't want a s trike, but they're ready tO challenge the c I u b owners ' reported $70 million war chest and walk out six weeks into the 1981 season. teams in the re-entry draft and meets performance c riteria based on appearances. GOLDEN WEST'S ART McGEE (34) FIGHTS FOR REBOUND WITH EAST LA'S GREG 8EWERNICK. "There was playoff intensi· ty toniRht." he ·added. "That was good because this is a blah The players, their freedom to auction their services to the highest bidders restricted when the owners implemented their compensation plan for re-entry free agents last week, came out swinging. ·'The battle lines are more or less drawn." said the associa- tion 's Am e rican League representative, Doug DeCinces o f the Baltimore Orioles. "Hopefully we will have some legitimate negotiations . Today was a procedural step to keep our options open. ~ ·Heroes galore GWC makes it at the right time By CURT SEEDt:N OI .. Deity "'91 s-Randy Heidemeicb may have turned in his best performance a ll year, and Dave Atkins' 21>-1 footers from the corner were deadly, but it was lanky freshman forward Art King who sparked Golden West lo an 81-71 Southern Cal Conference playoff victory over East Los Angeles Wednes· day night. King, who became a starter midway through the season, finished with 14 points and 15 re· bounds, but it was the timing of his heroics that paced GWC's wild card victory over the tough Huskies in the Rustlers' gym. While Heidenreich, who said the only thing on his mind was getting to the state playoffs, went to the basket aggressively ~ ........ rp .... (Seep••e•~) all night, and Atkins barely ruf- fled the net with bis shots. it was a basket by Kini with 1:38 re- maining in the contest that deflated the upset-minded hopes of East Los Angeles. KING'S SHOT, a UtUe lbree- footer, gave owe a 59-54 lead at the time, and be was fouled in the process. While be miued the free throw, tbe RusUers Cot the rebound, a diabeartening tum of eyenta for the Huskies wbo bad led Utrouahout much of the even- ing behind the bot sbootiq ol Robin Ewin& and Dantie Miller. set the lack of scoring from bU No. 1 man, Jim EldridJ(e. Eldridge, who carried a 14.5 average into the game, wasn't missing -he just didn't get the ball. On the ni1bt, the sophomore from Huntington Beach High had just seven shots, making four of them. He collected several free throws in the finaJ minutes to finish the night with 16 points. The victory sends the RuaUers up against Cypress Friday nightr after the Chargers downed Rie> Hondo, 54""3 in the other playoff game. And the thought of meet- ing Cypress is what spurred Heidenreich oo. The rematch begins at 7:30 Friday night at GWC. ''WE BAD TO win this one. The rest dido 'l seem to inspire us as much because not aa much was al stake, Heidenreich ex- plained. "But we want to 10 to state, and we want to play Cypress. It sbouJd be the best game of the year.'' A highly animated player, Heidenreich keeps a running conversation with the referees, although be says he's only com- p la i'n ing when they miss somet.bi.nl. "I'm not always complalninc. But a team like East Loa Angeles pressures you a lot and I lost the ball a few Umea. I was getlina bit in the arm, too. They <East LA> try to set you mad and try to set the refs Into soiq their way," he says. THE PLAYER Association's Executive Board, comprised of representatives of each m_,or league c lub, voted durin' a three-ho ur closed meeting Wednesday lo strike May 29 if the controversial free agency is- sue cannot be resolved. Guided by Executive Director Marvin Miller, who led the ma- jor leaguers' only other regular season strike at the start of the 1972 cam.n~ign, the players re· acted as expected. The owners' plan requires that teams signing "ranking free agents" surrender unprotected · roster players as compensation to the teams losing the free agents. A ranking free agent is described by the owners as one who is selected by al least eiiht * * * Angel report "WE'RE TRYING to avoid a strike, but we have no other alternative. We do not want lo strike, but we're being forced to." ·'I think everybody in the end is going to be hurt by this," said Philadelphia catcher Bob Boone, the association's National League representative. ·'The main issue in this is freedom, freedom granted by the U.S. Constitution, freedom to select employment rights," Boone said. ''You don't give up your freedom to take a step backward. The players don't want to strike, but it's something we're being forced into. "We're willing not to play baseball, that's how strongly we feel about it." * * * Witt gets approval By EDZINTEL oi .. DMly Pt• IWt Mike W itt, a lanky right-handed pitcher who prepped at Servile High, got the nod of approval from manager Jim Fregosi Wednesday after the Angels• second full day of spring training in Palm Sprift&s. Witt and 19 other pitchers in camp each threw eight minutes of batting practice for the second consecutive day. Pitching coach Tom Morgan will maintain that schedule through Friday, alter which pitchers will throw 15 minutes every other day. · Witt, 20, was an All-County performer al Servile and bad a combined record of 12-8 with El Paso and Salinas last seaaon. He was 7-3 with a 2.10.ERA durlna the second half of the aeaaon at Salinas. • himself the best chance of doing so, Witt worked hard durins the off-season, throwing and lifting wei1hts. "You've got to tire the arm out in order to build up its strength,•' said Morgan W e d n e :ai a y . ' ' The y ( t be pitchers) have got litUe aches and pains, nothing really unusual." It's a Sood bet that the hard-throwing Witt bas sot bis share ol aches and pa.ins toniebt. But Witt's not the only one with pains. Dave Frost continues lo be bothered by a chronically sore back and botb Dave LaRoche and Freddie Martinez have complained of sore knees. And one only baa .iinlt back lo last aeaaoa to recaJI the dally An1el1' version of General Hospital comin1 out of Anaheim StadJum. Jim Barr, OD ti.. dlaabled list Three minutes later, King came throup a1ain, grabblq an offensive rebound and mak- ing the bucket to alJow the Ruatlen to maintain a five-pomt martin. His playa aimply "I JUST told everyone to calm down at U.. ball," added Green- field. "I told them, It's my Job to talk to to the refs." ART KING (41) llAKRI" LOOK IAIY WITM '"'8 LAYW. "I think I'm ready lo pitch ID thla teacue," the likeable Witt said recently. And to aaaure (See ANGELS, l'ase llZ> · fnulJ'ated tbe Huskies into de· feat. "Kini played well," GWC Coach Jim Greenfield underatat~ ed, althouP be WUn't llilbtbll the 1-'7 forward'• performuace. Greeflfteld wu simply relieved. ••1r ft DON'T lOH oar com- poaure and keep cool beadl, we ean win. It WM a real battle oat tb•r• beeaUle tbeJ're _ l\leb a 1cra~tMm." Gneafteld Mid. n. 1mt1... c1owa an Ill tM ball,= la tM ......... .,... =from ... alltl ..... B~e~wl-._ .... _, ...... ,_~._ ..... Md Oraldeld -...a ..... _ ... ..., ... ...... ftom ... ,_. ....... -.. •· Anteat~rs start their big playoff push tonight ........... .,. ... SANTA BARBARA -S... ti1ou1b neltber 8dlt baa m~ to pla, fw la re- sard to U.. PCAA ttancltap, ane eu't mtnt••• tbe lmportaaee ol e.IO&'• elatb blltw ... UC lnlDe a.I UC SUta BarbaralMre. For die AIUaWI <H m ccmf.-ee 11-1 owrall) tM ~man. ta. iaAi pusll toward a poet·HUOll r::vo1r butla. AM. • far u tM O• r are eGllnnM. ............ ..., ,__ H ... ....,... . ~.., UCI c.ea. Biii ........ U. tt ....... -.. Alltem ... ·-wta tlaelr eat fov Jam• 111 a row ta n• lie e•t•• fw •NCAA~ H ... llN. • 'TbOle four wiDI include two durtn1 tbe . PCAA Tournament, wlddl ...W put us in the ftnalt," HJI llallltan. Plus, it would P" the Allteaten ., wins which, alonl with tbllr No. 1 of. feul•e rankiDI ID tbe utiaa, wwld make a • .., attractive addltioD to 01 plaJotf puty. "Tbe aum• GI wim ll ~ lmpor- tat," .W. llallipD, wllo U.'t rUd out M NIT off• eltbn, "tUt'1 "'1 tbele ...-an r,all7 lmparteat to .... u••·•~ • ._. • ua, •·• lmpoftlllt to Oa•'-<..a. .. U), too, 11111•• tile ---:;r• not u.. .a, ,..,.... ol ..U, U ..all Mft --of tiai aellool't II l ..... MJ fGr any PCJ9l··Mataa actlvtt1. "It'• like a World Series net for them," aa,a lluW1an, wbo adllld tbe Gaucba9 will ecmel• tMlr ..._ wUb Loaf .Beaell ltale SaturdaJ. • . .,,_..., .... ..,. ........ Ktn'S(J.,., •• , ... State oa Tba.rtd•J. aad tbn turn around to eshlbit a PoOr lllowtDa ln beatlaa tbe Ual"'91t.7 ol PMlftc cm SatunlaJ. ''l Na11J WM wttla all tM MW P18 we baft W'ft ._. ,.._, ..aa,•f de- f..U ·= ''OM ...... ,,_ •r;:, Barbara .. Uae ... .., If neenl ..................... .. tal9Dt W9 Mft. Well, I tlillM »I ii • ..... "......._.. . . TH01u•• ..... .,.. ..... ...-; w~.._.Aatrnm<aum . ,... .......... (IU)-.. .... ...... IHlfdlef ....... tll eee:z:-....... ._..., • ... ~. 1111-...... ., ....... -•; o.a..r. .. . .. . Brown reimtate• Field• ••tbw he over·reaeted ·~ ....... £11 .. I -.. ANO&LD UCLA 'II lllltlblll Coae~ m Lany ...... la1ial ... 0¥9•.....W ........ H!'•MH kH•Y Flelda, rela1laled tile rt.M--..................... ,. ...... •• • 1111 t h'om IM ..... • Feb. lt becaUH of •lull ........ diMeftW buleallJ u aa &Wtude problem. "I M99 ,rtMltl• tw o...-be vtolat.d," 8l"OWD ..Wiaa ....... "1 fMl I wu JlllUfted ID .... I JHd ... ~.'ht Wq tbat I'm moel ....a allout la tbat becauae I think ao -~~ ol WI team. ud t.be imponuee ol a &um. I over·reaeted. • · Beeauae ol my own hurt, I aave Kenny • alternatives." Brown made tbe deeiaion lo allow neldl back Oil the team after 1peakln1 with Father James of lbe player's former biP lclMM>I, VerlMlm Dei, and Rev. 0... Moomaw, a former UCLA foolball 1tar. lkown met with Father James and Fieldl Wedae.day morniq, then with the team later in the day. Fields joined the Bruins for the afternoon practice • session. "We are a team and we realize t.bal be'• a 11-year-okl and we feel be deserv• a new cbance," Brown said. "We are aU 100 percent behind blm and bope that everybody will 1ive him all the 1upport needed. "Kenny indlcated thal he i1 ready to f\llfill the com· mitment be made lo the team .prior to the came aaaimt USC." ,,_, .. , , ...... ----- Loe Angeles Rama quarterback Pat Badea on his status as a second-strin1er: "I have two yean left on my contract, and if the Rama choose lo hold me hostage, J can't tum to the AIJeriana lo help ne1otiate my freedom." 1 .. "' ·-............ C.Ukt• Larry Bini scored 30 points and 1rabbed 18 m rebounds, and a.ben Partall added Ji& points as Boston whipped Cleveland, 12'·103 to bilhlicbt NBA action Wednesday. Tbe victory wu the 23rd straight in Boston Garden (or the Celtics . . . Elsewhere, Elm BaJH anclGret Balla.rd combined for 57 points to lead Washington lo a 120-105 decision over New York. The win was Washington's first over New York in five tries this season and pulled the Bullets to within one-half 1ame of Chicago -which was idle -for the final NBA Eastern Conference playoff spot. Hayes scored 31, including 12 in the fourth quarter ... Houston's Robert &ekl hit two free throws with five seconds left in the game and In- diana's George McGlnals missed a shot at the buzzer as the Rockets edged the Pacers, 101-100 to win their fourth •~H straight game. Houston, now 32-33, m~ved in~ ~e~ond place ~ead ~f Kansas City in the Midwest D1v1s1on and kept its playoff hopes alive ... Forward Adrlaa Outley scored 40 points and rookie Dar- relJ Grttntla added 25 as Utah crushed New Jersey, 132-106. Dantley, who had 17 points in the fint quarter, helped the Jazz snap a five.game losing streak ... Forward .Id• Ervla~ scored seven of bis 1ame·higlr"3t points in the ftnaJ two m1nutes of the first half, helping Philadelphia break open a close game and the 76ers went on to an easy 107·95 victory over San Diego. Flfle• • e••'C ••• £•1 11 •-'• &recs,,. sists as the Edmonton Oilers charged back from , Way• Greuky had two goals and two as· ~ a two.goal deficit with five third-period goals to beat Philadelphia, 6-2 Wednesday night in Na· tional Hockey League action. It was the second straight loss on the road for the Flyers who were downed, 6-4 by Van- couver T\iesday night . . . In other games in a . night of NHL upsets, Gay CIMHtleard set up a club record six 1oals and Keat NU.... had three tallies and two assists as Cal1ary routed the Stanley Cup Champion New York Islanders, 11-4 llobble Ftorell fired a slapshot put Boston netminder Marco aa .... late in the third period to live the Nordiques a 5·3 triumph over Boston . . . A.Ju Buplebetl punched in a rebound from just outside the crease midway through the final period to lift Washington lnlo a 2-2 tie with Cbica10 . . . . Bla.lae S&o.1ll&oe scored bis 30tb goal of the season with less than four minutes remainin1 in the second period lo give Hartford a 3-2 win over Minnesota . . . Tem 11...U. and ~ SellMHr scored two 1oals apiece to lead Toronto to a ~·5 win over Colorado . . . Mae z.le scored his 20th 1oal midway throu1h the second period to snap a scoreleu tie aod give St. Louis a 3-2 triumph over Detroit . . . Marte l'Hbert'a sixth goal of the season with 1:05 remainin1 save Pittsburlh a 4·3 win over Wi.nnipe1 . . . Aaden Bedller1'1 second-period 1oal stymied a Buffalo comeback and pro- pelled the New York RUllen lo a S..3 triwnpb. , JlmCllee• flee•• t...re ••,..... Outfielder Gar1 MattM•• cban&ed bis II mind Wednesday and agreed lo accept a trade to the Cincinnati Reds, cleartna the way for the Atlanta ~raves to acquire Dave c.maa of the Reds ... Baaeball CommlAloller Bowle K••• met with Preaktent lleasu and delivered a traditional pass lo all ma- jor league baseball games. He then told reporters be saw no reason for players to strike tbla year. "I would say I am so supportive of the compensation proposal put into place I'd be nard-preased to think there ia anytbln1 I should do lo chan1e it," the commissioner said ... The Toronto Blue Jays have adjusted their contract offer lo free a1ent catcher Ca...._ n.•. "We don't know where we stand in ne1otiationa lo the other horses (teams) in the race," said p.resldent of the club, Peter Ba•ul. Ollfdfll • ........ " ... Jttmd coacb ._ OweM teaUfled ID court Wed:neada.y Former Ariaona State ualatbl football • tbat a university admln.ilttator-told blm be bad seen ex-Sun Deril bead coecb rnM &_. pu.neb ,..._.Knill •• ..... ID a tm same. Ru~1• ta au· inl Kuala, tM uni .. nltJ and otben for fl.I mllUoD in dam..-... 'nUe IX reeelYed tu ftnt major HtbHk Uail wed wbeD a U.S. Dlltrict Judie nled tbal collepl and public IC!boolt do not ba .. to lll'Oride equl aw.tie PfOll'•IDI for m• and JIOID• U tbeJ dan't UM federal fUDlll for U.. apeclfle lport8 . . . While GM 0.Yer aewspeper nporta tbat uae .... of tbe Den .. r 8roDeol to iDdubtalllt .... l'. Ka ... Ir. Ml U1'eadJ bMa doMd, U. ehab't mtJorttJ owner, a._. B. PM1i111, Mid be npeeta tlM tltutkm to be reaolftd ...... , or uaew wttblD tbe ..... • . . lfllJ ........... ltoeocl'Oll ,.... from ...... VMjo, eruW durbal • praellce wlklD wt will be out ol eompeUtlae for ab .......... r. ........... .. naNo............. . UlllO~-UClntDeatUCleMa ...... t :• ,..; (Ill I'll). lldebJ -VMHDfW at S1191, 1:• •.•.• &000 <•>· ... . - F ... P .... J ANGE~S ••• for six weeks tut year because of tendonitla in bis shoulder. wu one of three of the 40 roster playen miaainl on openiq day of workouts Tuesday. Barr wu in Loe Anceles where be wu lo get a doctor's check-up. The others included Don Baylor, wbo was in Tampa for Wednesday's meeting of team player representatlva conceminl the strike and pitcher Luis Sanehea, who was bavln1 problems with his visa in bia native Veneauela. That problem was cleared up Wednesday. * AN•aL NOTal -Fr990ll •n~9d ,_would llOICI llw .. lnlre . ...-...,,._ Pf* le 1119 INm'I M•r<ll 1J C.lia L .... _ wltll Sen o.._. .. • An .. I Ill•~ FMCl9CI <elmly lo 1M ,..,_ ret1r•Mni.t1-· ,,... w....,._, .. ,. .,. ..,,_. Mey 2' II Ille -rs <Oftl'-lftelr -llM ll•ncl Oft fr .. -· <_ ................ .. Pleyer1 wlll heft lo 1111111< 110W IN lltuet ... will •fl•<I I Mm," .. 1c1 outfielder 0.. ,._., "1'11 Mw to tlllnk Mw I WOUid pe,_lly tie eflec'9d II 1 · WH pul In tM -lllool of lrM ....-CY w ....,._ of the pnte(-pf..,..... No-CIMc>--to air Ille" .......... L,_ wlll -IHMlorm NO. t 11111 teelOft es,_ CliCI INc:ll In IN1 Cleyt et U5C. He lled tried kw 1M --•I 8ell0ft M 11 ••• •Ir•...., ............ -Cert v..... :1111 . -. Shorlalop akll ...._ Is -Of elgM pleyen wl!O remeln ..,.......,, HI• egent, J.U ._.._ tlM Anee11.,. ,,...u.1i.e but • ..,.._., _,no '°" ••••rv M'1Mlrell0ft _,•t t•ll• piece .... 111 "-tll. a .. r1.-. 9dmlls, -ttt', lhel lle'1 •nytlllftO bul •n•loln lo 90 lo• hff•l"9. . One of the -..,.. signed pl•yer1 11 lnlletder D•ryl le......., Ille former 0r.,.. Coesl COii~ lier wllo 1111 •nifty .J70 •I El PHO IHI ... _.. Demon hex keeps Cavs nllserable WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) -Senior Frank Job.moo acond six points in overtime, includinl four in the last lS aeconds, to lead 12lh·ranked Wake Forest to a 73-86 victory over third-ranked Virginia in an AUantic Coast Conference basketball game Wednesday night. Johnson gave the Deacons a 65-63 lead with 1:37 left in the ex- tra period by sinkin1 two free th~ows. The free throws came after Cavalier center Ralph Sam peon fouled out. After Jeff Lamp tied the game on a jumper, Wake Forest center Jim Johnstone sank two more free throws lo give Wake Forest the lead for 1oocl at 87-65. Two more free throws by Mike Helms extended the lead lo four. Otbell Wilson bll the front end of a one-and-one to bring Virginia to within three at ... Following a mias~d free throw, Vlr1inia bad an op· portunity to cut the lead to one. But Jobmon stole an errant pass and broke away for a slam dunk to put tbe 1ame oo ice. EdisonSonsetfav.erite Seven 1tarten retuming /o~ Claaiwen •1 ZIOG&a CAa•*'N ........... _ J .... HlO'a...,..... ......... appear to bold tbe fa..-fte's role • tbe Jiil ......._..-..... ~for membenoftbes....t.....,_. a.. la a look al eaeb ol tbe Oraqe Cout area'• entri•: ••11n . They WOD tbe SuDHt Lupe ebam~1blp with a juaklr-domlaated lineup, tlaua the ~en are tbe obYtoul team to beat. Coach Roa. LaRuffa baa seven returnU.1 1tarten and each bouta all-leque eredeDUala. Plteber Rieb Soreuon WU tbe ......... •VP. while catdler Steve Morello, aecond baseman Ron Morello, abortatop Tom Duuan, outftelder JobD Bellea and pltcber Rob Mumm were flnt team choices. Mike De Benon wu a second team ebolce at le" ft9'd and la a junior tbl.a aeuon. 1 -rbe only thin&• I'm worried about are the in· tanstbl• tbat afteet Hlllor team.,•• says LaRuff a. "We're not 1olnl to fool anyone Ulil year, every- oneknowlwe'retbeteamtobeat. "JI tbe kids are enthUliutic and bUJlll')' we'U be toueh." Other major uaets in the Edlaoa lineup in- clude Joe Kwolek at third, John Emma al tint, Todd llabe in the outfield and Mike Powell at DH. Abo in the Edison picture are outfielders Mark Walker, Tim Leavey, Dwayne Bush, Mike Caroua and Dave Geroux, infielden Pete Ur- quiza, Tom Hill and Jim Whitesell, catcher Tony Llnsuard and pltcbera Gree Cloney and Jeff Stepbem. "We're stron1 up and down tbe lineup and our JV1 won the league champiOD1bip, too," adds LaRutfa. M•rtna Three solid pitchers, batlln• stren&tb throu1h •ix spots i n the lineup and effective speed hiahllpts the Vikin&•' outJoOk. . Coach John Seeley lakes over tbe reins follow· inc the raipation of Paul Frey and included in the leftoven from the 1980 seuon are aucb pros· peels u three-year starter Chris N~baumer, All·Sumet .Lea1ue infielder Bobby Grandstaff, all· PREP BASEBALL leaaue pitcher Brian Olson and four other let- termen. They are catcher Bill Nelsm, power bitter Ken Bodle, left-handed bitter Jim Lane and shortstop Ken Laszlo, who may not be available because of a neck 'injury. Grandstaff figures at third and first base and Bodle figures to fill the gap at the cleanup slot. Seeley has plenty of punch in the pitcbin& de· partment with the potential of Nussbaumer Olson's experience and the speed of junior Treff Bennett, along with possibilities from Dave Lustig (relief help) and John Berry. . "We've J(ot three quality pitchers and Chris Ventura, Mark Baird, Greg Stephens Bob Critchfield and Grandstaff are good baserwmers," says Seeley. · "A lot is going lo depend on tbe effectiveness of our pitching staff and the development of our younger players." Nelson bu shown an adequate arm at catcher and Ventura's speed and arm mali:e him solid at center field. Others who could make some rumbles for the Vikinp include infielders Kevin Hunt and Jim Kilpatrick, and outfielder John Simonsen. FOUftlaln v-, Joe Miller takes over tbe Fountain Valley pro- gram and be be&ins with a team virtually intact from a year qo with returniq at.arten in nearly every cat.eaory. Infielders Rocer Muacente, Ed Clark and Steve Jon1ewart are in the picture, as are catchers Brian Bua and Jim Choate, outfielders Mike Brown. Mike Waper, Randy Wood and Howard Noaek, the latter also a third bueman. Brian Ayen retuma at pitcher for the Barons, in adctiUon to Rick LaMarabe and 6-5 left-bander Jeff Cohen. Allo, three-year letterman Dave Sbaw is in the infield, probably returntn1 lo third bue. "Pitcbin1 la very much improved and we've got an outatandina group," says Killer. "Thirteen have a B averqe or better." Rick Jensen is also back at the pitcher·~ mound after missin& action as a Junior because of a sore aboulder. Muacente, Waaner, Clark and Bau bold tbe keys to tbe battin& department and Clark and Wood lend speed lo the Bal'GDI' attack. ... ..,.,. ........ There la a lot of. exp.rtence on tbe Sallon' squad -the kind which maka for CIF plaJoff berths -and beadin1 the list are three·year let- termen John Altobelli al abort and Clark Smttb in the outfield, alon1 wllb first baaeman Dan Sauerbrey and catcher Vince Cook. T~year lettermen include second baseman Dave Sauerbrey, infielder Kevin Sebers, tbird baaeman Jerry Bridgeman and pltcber-ouUlelder Ron Nu1ent. AJao in the Sailors' picture are left-banded pitcher Tom LaGrandeur, third bueman Mark Chlavencla, pitcher-outfielder Huth Slier, out- fielder Andrew Noakes, Junior Tony Swin, senior Devin Carr and Jerry Piatkowski, a freshman who i• conaklered a potential f0ur-year letterman u a pitcher and 1hortatop by Coach Ed Votaw. The Sailors P••d for their inexperience a year a10 now wllh an almost entire senior lineup, tbe Sailors are considered amonc the coatenclen with Dan Sauerbrey. Cook AltobeUi and Smitb the Hunlllr ..... Pitching is the b I question mark for new coach Gree Henry. Scott Marsh returns as a left-banded lellior with good speed and control, but alter Manb, tbe best bets to start are sophomores Gary Buckeb and Bill Barker, a couple of rigbt·banders. "We bit the ball pretty 1ood and have pretty good defense," says Henry. AU-league ·catcher Grei Shirley, retumin& starter Johnny Gonsalves at abort.atop and third baseman Tony Phillipa, who was three-for-four in Saturday's scrimmage, lead the Oilers. Others with starting potential include fint baseman Brian Patrick. second baseman Richie Carrillo and center fielder Vince Cooney . Ray Kelly and Mark Van Donelaer are pla- tooning in right field, Steve Stultz and Bobby Ea~on are solid candidates for the DH spot and Brian Beard and Frank Gomez combine with Stultz and Eaton as candidates for right field. ~andy McAllister (second base) and desianat- ed hitter 8Qbby Thompson are late arrivals after the basketball season. Cal 500 to Riverside , LOS ANGELES <AP > -California's version of the Indianapolis 500, having lost its oval course of 11 years, is being moved 30 miles east to a road course. The California 500 had been held at Ontario Motor Speedway, a virtual replica of the famed In- dianapolis course. But Standard Oil Co. of California's Chevron unit recently bought the financially ailing track and has said it probably will be demolished. ' The Los Angeles Times announced Wednesday it will sponsor the race, sanctioned by Cham- pionship Auto Racing Teams (CART), at Riverside International Raceway on Au1. 30. It will be~ kilometers or about 310 miles. The Riverside race also will replace the Times· sponsorship of the NASCAR stock car race also previously held in Ontario: ' UCI dinks 'elll for 12 runs. Johnson added two free throws with one second left to UC Irvine pouJJded out 15 bits Dave Gilles then singled to left Dave Woodstock, a left-bander decide the final margin ol vie· -14 of them slngles -u the to score tbe first run of the 1ame out of Saddleba ck Colle1e, tory. Anteaters rolled to an easy noo-and Mark Morrison followed followed with three perfect conference 12·1 decision over with another lo center lo score frama ol relief before Larry The Demon Deacon triumph ·visiting Amsa-Pacific Wednes-the second. Hicks, an Oranse Cout Colleae came despite a firat·half droupt day product, Sot the final three outs which saw Wake Forest 10 •ix The victory boosted UCl'a Azusa.Pacific (1·8) scored a in the nintb. minutes without a poinl and nine d t 9 3 h minutes without a field goal. In re,cor o -on t e youn1 run in the top of, the third to that span, Virginia rose from a base b a 11 cam Pai In a 1 close the gap to 2-1, but Dave Granier, who opened the 14_12 deficit to a 28-l8 lead with ri&bt-hander Dirk Wietstocll Glkk's solo homer in the bottom game with a hit, had four for tbe four minutes left before npoicdkeedfeupa.ts.bia second win against of the frame provided all the in· day in sh trips lo the plate, witb surance the Anteaters would teammates Mark Morri1on halftime. The Anteaten actually aot all need. · contrlbutinl three in four trips Vir&inia's lead eventually the runs they needed ln the first and Glick two in three trips. grew to H at 3'·20 before four lnnin& as a 1in1le by Lee Wietatock pitched five innint•. Mike NacJe drove in thl'ff nma points by Anthony Teachey nar-Granier and a pair of walks surrendering but three hits and with a pair of 1iqlea in ftve at rowed the lead at lntermlaaion to .-lo_a_d_ed_tbe __ baael __ . _______ a_run __ to_aec __ ure __ tbe_wtn __ . _____ ba_ts_. ---------- 34-24. Jobmon led Wake Forest with 22 points while Alvia Rosen added u and Mike Helm1 bad 10. Wake Forest i1 now 21-4 over- all and M in the ACC. Ainge honored ST. LOUIS (AP) -Danny Aln1•. Brl1bam Youns Unl•enit1'1 bllb ~I pard, baa been Hleeted u tbe out· atandln1. eoll•I• baaketbaJI player frdlm tbe NCAA'• Dist. 'I by the U.S. Baaetball Wrtten A"llOelatlon. Utab'a Jerry Plmm waa picked u tbe Dbt. '1 Coacb of tbe rear la lb• auoela••a Hlfftkm ..-.eed 'l'IMldu: Lewll UoJd of Drake •• tr. •&a•••• =!i,...... Dllt ... wlaleblMI Ir .......... =· v:... ·.:-.:.:-;:& Rem• WM plfted u °"'" a. C-elaaftbe,..,.. 1 • ' I '\ Oran1e Coast performs\ rare hat trick against Cerritos, 62-5 -~ .... .. NC>aWALa -~ ... ._ &911 ....._. MU --~ Or .... Coeil O.U.. W ........ C.rriMI mb Ive O.• .._ 1111 Md Md loll ll .................. ,. 1"61 ,._, T .... J OWll' n• beat Cenitoe br , .. aa .._. c•n> uc1 u. cM tM Mar ••P011f· We ... z' ''II at c.nttol (IMI). *•tmln1 "'Pt u.. P\rat. •acll lt &MM la ..... = _,_. a ,,.._ crowd It Cwritoe, OCCM U. FaJcw, a.• ... t1M ftn& road el t'8 South Cout Collference'• Sbau11uteuy playoffs. ,,.. Plt1t.M •lll DOW play al Mt Su ADtomo, u U 'JO wt... over Saat1 Au, wltb a state playoff btrUa at 1take . ·ratsa .. ....,,.,. , ... l••••n led tbe ••1•occ.-n,.... ... a ...... ~11 rebcn1tl, II la tM NeGM Ult. Pwward Tim , ............... in double,..._ (10) wt bad t.br .. llhmM-.... . ''laudera D&a1•d a 1reet a a me for u1 tolllPt." NMI OW... "He amnd imlde wt did a super Job• &M -...•• BUil .,..,_.of .tbe·1•me bowl ~Q. to 1-5 frffbllUID fanrerd lliela Kindalf. leored oaly E ...... but def..Uveb beld 'ftm Kun-, who eame llato tbe 1•me averaciAI over lt poUa&a • 11me, to only MYee points. ·'We knew comlq into t.be 1ame that oee ol tbe keys would be to •toP Kuyper," explained Gillis. "He'• such• IOOd lbooler. But ltindorf did a super job OD him.'' But it WUD'l just Kindorf. Tbe entire occ LEASE DIRECT AND SA VE!!! '0.00 DOWN! '96~! ~· ,., .,. J Dr ...................... ..... Ire•., ._ .W. IMNf ... , n.rm ... aN ,.. ............ aWIMrcNt. COMPUTER CONCEPTS ~ A DIVISION O~Ar.F~R~R!r~~ROOUCTS INC. q' HAS THE ANSWER ... NEW ... World's first self -teaching computer /word processor for small bus iness and professions. 'The CAOO C.A.T .'" (Computer Aided Tutor) teaches you the second you plug it in ... and gently quizzes you as it goes. Step by step on the video screen you lea rn to r un your payroll or pay suppliers ... print out forms or reports . . even print custom letters with typewriter·type type. (1le CADO C.A.\E· CADO includes free interuct1ve finanrial packages proven in thousands of installations ready- to-go software lo automate payroll, accounts payable . accounll:! receiva- ble, and general ledger: an inven· tory package that makes manual re· cord·keeping a bad memory . word -d.-~~..J processing software for purrfect letters and long re ports ; and Jus t Ask 11 -a do·it- yourseU method ror creating special reports . All these free CADO-only features would cost thousands more if othe r systems had them! Sample business forms. operator's guides and data diskettes are in c luded. Choice o( pnnlers? Of course. c.m.,ee th~::;~~;R CONCEPTS & PRODUCTS tf> 17741 Mitchell Ave., I rvlne, CA 92714 -Or call 979-2337 -----------~-----~--~-----~-~~--~--• would •k• more lnformetlon on the Cedo C.A.T. -wortd'• nm Mlf.teechlng bualn•M computer/word proceaaor fOf alftllll IH.leln•H end profealloneta. NAME _____________ TITLE _____ _ COMPANY------------------~ ADDAESS ___________ PHONE _____ ~ CITY ZIP _____ _ COAST GENERAL TIRE 2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-5710 0.. of eo.e. ............. ••-r;IMl•.t ............ ........ d" 1 WHITI WAL~ WHITI WALU 1.F.G. MADE •EMS ....... ....,... acelleat clll~J doWD OD offwe md .-... .. ...U ..0. But tMa to tlae Win wbea the Pirat. oaly oae point mllaed 80IDe tey fne tlarow aDd tbe1 wen durinl • ellbt minute ltntcb that turned t.be back bl it." •am• around. Al*' t.be Pirates m••Md a eouDlt of Trailiq U-41 witb t :IS remaiaiq, OCC'1 oae opportunill•. Cerritoe cut tM lead &o two Brian llaravicb aeored a tlane-polnt play and tbeD bad the ball witb D 1econd9 remablfllll · · · · · cbanc. to at leat Ue tbe aeon. B.4SKETBALL But Kuyper mlued a free·tbrow llDe Ja:ape11 and foUowtq a Jump bail, Wayne Romar'• 11- footer wtnt tn-anil~t. Saa.den arabbed the bound wttb seven aeeGDda Wt aDd wu fGlled, two more on a drtVlDI layup to live tbe t'lratel a 53·52 lead. Three free throws made it elpt un· anawered points end belon t.be Falcom could re· cover it wu f1·55 witb oo1J 1:11 left to play. "It seems like all tbe ,...... bl &Ida COlll'eND9 a.re cloee like Ulil on~ ... cGDtlDued Gtllll. "Tbe 1 time we were here we bad a 12-polnt lead iD . second half but mlsled our free tbrowl aacl I them rlPt back in it." On t.be Diabt t.be Pirates wete only 12 of from tbe line but •hot 51 pereeol from tbe nocw. "I tbink we played 1ood def_. at tbat poiDt, ·~ said Glllil. "But we, a1lo ... mucb more patient AI .I. PmCES YOU CAN CARQUEST MOTOR OIL . . 80 wtlgltt. .m 111 ::'!.!':.:: • Quart ro:::~ 79¢ AFFORD! t.npKt SDlllll mter 'IN-DASHER" :=t: =iia AM-FM STEREO fast...-aid ejst WITH 8 TRACK OR_CASSETTE Ion~ 12 watts IWS $69 99 sllrlo. .,., -:b • COAXIAL 5" SPEAKER SYSTEM 8-1115 .. Cl91ftld ..... ........ 1'/•" Mnll ..,..., .... _.,...., Only ..................... Hla.ICOIC5 $26.95 PAIR >,Mm ~ SPEED-0-STAT WIPER BLADE ·~: ELECTRONIC . t ' . t : i : i • REFILLS mo.1a SPEED CONTROL $~J2P..r.;fl .Jt. $79.95 ' clar. Willi· 11-11: 11 .11 Alllmtlnlll ti pn-• ... ...... 1.... ..... Clnltlnt .... 1"111111 t• _. e1n 11¥11 fuel and rlduca ~--------~war• •II ..vingp1111s. 12'TA8.ENllF : HALOGEN HEADUGHTS BOOSTER CABLES c...-.. Su .. r ...... 11111 ........ . .. .., $499. 'f Sb& • .... ""'' I .....,_ ... , .... , ..... ,,.... ...,c-. Sii• '175Jal3 (br71x13) 1115/75114 jC171K14) Pi95/7511 (8171x14) P'l05/75114 (fR71x14) '205/75115 (fR71x15) '215/751115 (G171x15) '225/75115 (11171x15) P'm/75115 l111x15) UNIROYAL•~ Pl95/75114 (ER71x14) 151.9 '205/75115 (FR71x15) 145.9 15/75115 (GR71x15) 156.9 HEAVYDUTY <e> HANDCLEANER '-' auM:i' WITH mlPElllEI "THE COCO LOOK" • CAI MATS C FUt>cr CA1cen Cl,,.... rACt Slyll ... IMPORT CAI SPICIAI: SALi • SALi • SM.I Metric Ftlltrtc .... Ill· 12 $29.tl Ill • IJ $JI.ti IH • I J $JI.ti 161 • 14 $39.fl. ... FREE! btifill willl lllllill ...... , .. ,,,,.:: .. • $2 49 = • • • 11212 is oz. 11111.Dnllftldtl $1589 fltl••lflll.at • PR. ,,... ...... rift ................ Clr'I. Frmt #1211; .. 9'.77 .... BEACOM AUTOP.ARTS ......... , ••rf llN. LAGUNA BEACH S-4tlttt . O,.ttl..W AUTO PARTS au••= L15 11 4944114 ' Dt!lr .......... . ' ColNMllliltJ ..... , • L 0CC II, CentlM II CSMA ....... e•Y "-AYOl'PSI oaa ... CIOAIT -~., •· ~· 11, J..._, IO, ICIMwf 6, Kreflfl .. ldt •. :.1 Mern ldl s. 1-s, ICrnkfl t, Riiey J. 1·~ ceaanoa -s........ t4, 1C11B9r 1, ..-..._., ...... I. ........ 6, ~N I, '"'99b Ii. IC~ 2, ICol .. r 2. ' Haltllme: Or .. Cant. U.12. , Tot•I fouls: Or .... CMM 14, ~rltos 23; l;oulect out: SINoU 1c.rrt1osl ; Tecl\nl<•ls: 1f'"tMt 10r ... ea.so . Golden Wfft t1, E .. t LA 71 CIMAHMHSY "-AYOl'l'll •AST LOS ...... Lei -Miii., 21, Ewing _ ~o. Sl\anu 0, Jol\nNfl •. Wiiiiams 4, Bewernlcll 11. ~Ice o. °""le 2. eoLDUI .. IT -AllllM U, T"--4, McGee I, IC'"' 14, Eldfld99 16, Ho....,.tcll U, Dev Is 0, c;.,ton 0. H•lftlme: EMI L.oa ""911M, »-JI. Tot•I loull: Eest Los .-,. .. , 21, Golden West II; Foollecl out: a.wornlcll, ~ ( C!H I Los ""9flMI. HIOHICHOOL Sen Cleme"'8 •· M~noll• 52 IJ.A WILD CAaD "-A 01'"1 MA9NOUA -... ,... 21, hnce 2, 0 ..... I, Klein II, Wellace 2, aMtroft I. Wei• 0, Oorllo 0, ~ 0, k w.,..... 0, Wrltlflt o. SAN a.eMe•n• -9erlln 7, Col9r-'· Conatser I. C-2, Edllo a. H-7. Hiii 17, ~ I, Mel-. 6, ... _,_ 10, TH I o. J-o. HMftro o, Morw o. Sc-..., ........ .... • " 14 '~ ....... " 14 " ti_.. ate• 1ou1s: ,_..,,.. .. 20. s.n ci.-. 12; ,. leclOUI:-. ·.,, """ ecttoot ranldnge Cll'-..... Sc11991,,... ~ 1. s.n Marcos 122.01 " 2. LOft9 8Mcl\ Poly 121-21 t1 I. Oc-YIN 111..JI 11 •. Sorr• m-41 ro S. Newtiury Peril 122.01 S4 •· Mur..., 121·51 41 1.1' ....... V...,CIHI • •.c-,..,1-1 u '· P .... VenlnUl-41 a . °1'· Vortlum Del 111 .. 1 1' .:,.. ) OtMrs: Senll .. 11 .. SI, P_..,..,. 111-SI , " Cll'M 1. SI. 9«Nrd (~JI ft 2.L.•~122·21 " >. s.11~ c22.11 " -4. L'f,...... 11 .. SI 62 s.c-•Mwn1.f1 .. 6. ~Val..., CJO.JI 44 1. Tustlll 121-41 13 I. -.Co Tectl C»S> 2' t . Rlftf'sN9 Poly (,._SI 15 IO. Wost GwN C 19-4) 12 OtMn: SA va11.., n s-t>: ~M-OC.._ ... 1); OMMiw• CIM); 0-.... 1 l ,._n ; O.ml.., 11~7). , Cl" l·A I. Vk lerVel..., ltt.O) " 2. N ... lft C ... ) "I I. Ceplstr-Valley 112-41 71 4. p-121-2) 70 S. Olelldele 11 .. SI 56 •. ••ratllw(lt-41 S4 1. e lelr (1 .. 7) ,. I. S-., Hllh 11 .. S) 12 •. Sell c---11 .. 7) " ,.,..., ..... ,,...., ' i:;::::: R ....... (.1 .. SI: Le SOme I 1 .. JI; r 8Mdl 0 M ). etl' '"' \ t.S.UClarallMl;2.8-llleCIWl;I. .. fl.Jeff C,._71; 4. c:.r.t11•1e CIWI ; S. \Jem,ia Clt'f 112·21; •· O!Mwklll Clt-21; 7. '911 MerlM CIJ.S); I. Wlllttlor Olrllt.., <l._.J); t. Mir ..... 11M I; 11. C .. ) 0-.. CIS-t) _. ...._ C!M I. WO..N Ca uf1'1V ..... ~ ......... c.11 .. CYN .. -HerrWe •• MMlter 4. IC ... • '· 0--. 7, ~ 1. ltlce 14. ....... CIOMf -I(,.,., "· "-'' .. De.,... u • ...., a. DeAr8'el 11, Get,... 2. H..,.._: Or .... CMM.lt-12. T ....... I:~ 11. Or .. CMst 11; ,...., .... ,_. T9 --.... -. CM ..... ...... -..... .., ..... ,,... .. ......... ---':t...8:': •. ...... -........ .. Ill!!!...... ...... -~ .......... ; ......... _"·· ,, .. ... ............. ....., ............. . ............ ---IMM,..._.. .... " " u ,,_.. _,,_ .. c... .... -. .~ •. .... ~\;1 = ..... . ----..... . ................. .............. 1 .......... ...... ·-= ...... &._..... ... .._..... :IMt ......... . u ............ ,, .... i,. "' ........... I ............... 8-_,.._,,._,.,It..._, .. I, W ; .... ll'WQll ... Owl ....... ...,.v ........ 6-•, U , allel Tellle_, ... ~ Ta"91\ ..... 6-1; T-lfllle ... HeM Pll_,, '"I. •1; Peter ,. .......... JI"' DoleMy, 1 ... .. 4, .... ll'rill llulllillt .... 9'11CO ....,_., .,4, •·4: Torry Meer .... ltl<•r• Ac-. M ,' 71; Trey Weltlla llef, Jimmy .,.,.., H , .. ,. •.J. lllM<• T-t .... Tony or-e1v•, "'· ~7. 1 .. ; 8rlen Te«llor def, ~-~ M ft,M ,M,•I. ......... tounNllMftt Cal ..... I ................ Pem $1vl..., def. Ket-Cumml,.., .. 4. •·t, ---· Potter clel. SellCty COlllM. ...... , lee ........ ~ Rosie c..11 . ....,., T11r.-11 del. Sllrl¥or· lllr9l111eWecle, .. 4, .. 4. ~~':\..~. ....... T111111e11 <II al. Tammo11, 1-s. 1•; lcrl.,_ CS! *'· ....-,, 7 ... •·1; ~ IS) *'· ar-.,, "'· 6-1; Ol-e ... Ill .. . Hor119Ml1, .. ,, •I; WC"4111Mrt (I) ... . ...... ..._ .. t; 9eclll Cll llef • ......-. 1-S, M. ....... l crl"'8r·01-1.-Ill Hf. Tammo~ HoniaMN, .. I. W : O....y·is.tt ... 111 *'· HMr'f·Mltw, 6-1, M ; TlllllC•ll·llkk Ill .... •r.eio,.-..,..a, • .a. I ..... "r. ':""' ...... ....... RHellr-Ill at. K••llo, •·I, .... ...,_,~I, ... Al..._ H , llef, ...-. M ; _,_r (I)-· H , H , ....... I; ICnltM 111 -· "'· W. M , H ; Miiier Ill-· ~I. M , .. , ..... ....... Cflewez·Krlll (I) .... .._._In, 6-4, 7-S, def. H~K-. .. 1, .. I; v ... R•s•YOlll -· .. ,. M. w. 64. MontrH I Kl ... Plllsburgl\ H•rtford O.troll St. L.ouls Clllceeo vane-• Edmonton Caloredo WIMI- .. 211 21' a 2 .. ltS 71 2SI 227 n 2SO 2.57 S1 "' 21' S4 Loe Al•lllltoe nMeSDAY .. aH41LTS c,,.. .................... , Flrsl race -..... Soll CT ... I, •••• l.IO, 2.61; T °"9fl Golnt N I GrMlor), 1 .00, J.111; ~ ... (0-1, uo. u •UC:le (7-t) peldUJ ... 5o<.,,. race -Holwlr ...._. IGrUlldy), I .•. 1.00. 2.•; Sandy A IAle ...... r), >.•. t .•; Artier 9eCtl CC>Mlernl, 2 ... . Tfllrd race -Slltflt Of H_,,. IWllll-), •·•· •·•· s.•; Poll« Girt IAclllorme11>, S.40, 1.00; T-·1 L..edy CGrund'f), 1 ..... U Hecla IM I paid ta.JO. l'ourll\reca-Hllerl-1Retc111erd ), 7 .... S.41, J.00; Gr-11 IL'9Mflllll, 6.41, U O; FrM-(~l,l.lO . Flfltl race -AdlO& Arelec (-->. 4.2', UO, UO; 1(-ou Geld (Gr\llldyl, t.40, UO; Klllt"s Douelle I~). J.00. U uac:t• IM I '9ld U4.•. Slattl ,_ -Sliver's SU.let (Val .... l111llem), 1.20, 4.10, J.IO; Holy Cord ISlemermenl, 7.•. 4.40; Mlttlt'f L.oe N IRlcllmOnd), uo. S.wellltl rec• -Tiit Up (RetCllford), 1M , 4.00, >.OO; IN-•'f IAloxMderl, 6.20, 1.111; Snow o-. A ccr...->. 1.•. u eucu I~ II paid MUO. U Pick Six 11·"7.J.H I '9ld $1,SIUO wt&. lour wlllflllll Ucllets Isl• flonot). U Plc.ll Sia C•Ml•tten .,.... us.• to 14 w'-1111 tkllets lllwe--1. Elltlltl race -Tr\lly S-t'f (Gr.....,>, U .U , 11.IO, •.20; Lynn '• Exp ress CWlll'-1, T.40, UO; M, Ellze•ltl ,...,. IOSl),UO. Nlnltl rece -Recount H (l(wttlor), •·•· UO,.IS.M; Tllllll "-CAcllor-), 4.JO, U I ; Wor111y ...., .. N (Rltclllo), IU O. SZH • Kie ( ... ) ...... TOflttl reca -"'-.. , IElllett), 21.•, 7.4t, UO; Our Jeff IKuetll«), UI, 4.JO; ...,,... ... ,~,. 4.to. • It ..... ,...,, ..... , .... _ Alt---1,JIO. ............ ........ Y'S••IULTS ,\~~= cll:=!,:.f. •. •••• .... ; .._._.. Aty9 (Mc...,..), 11 ••• 6.•; .....-1l'•CY ........ ), lt.4'. lecoH raco -Ha.-t1111., Certe111 CCsd I J ), 16.AI, Ml, UI;, Keffll ""*-(,,_.,I, UI. IM;,,_.. a. CMc ...... I, .... • DIMr Olitl8'9 CMI ,,_.. ttte .•• T~ ,_ -(~ °*YI ...,_,.. t 11"0 CHewl••>. e11• l••llHWOMet1 I..._.), 7 .... 7 ... L•; A Otft "-' <8'CH ... l,MAI. ,_. ,_ -...... CM COl'--1, .... UI, ·-~C~ls .... l.t ... W ; """'' Miit ,,..., ..... ,.,.,.._c:..I..,.... • ......,,, .... ........ L_,_...,,,, ... .,.: ._.,... -. CMcMel .. I, L• ti wta c•m .... ....... .... ,.._ ................ , ...... ...... fWtc.alilrY ·~ ........ : ..,..._.Clll' ...... 1,L• ..._..,__ ........ , ........ .... ..._ .. ......,nwc....,,, r ... , t .tl; Meuer CenMe•t•s CDIU. Ull,4all .... CM .... --:-t. .. , ................ .. ........ -. ...., ...... .. .------------· -. ... -A ... C\11 Jiii, ... .... ... ._.,.........,, ... IA; ....... ~._ ... , ._,,._ .. ---I 4 .J UC 1""'9 .. ... •-tt 11 I Olec__.,...,...,61, MWllM (II_. Mell; ........_ ....... Ct), HkD Ctl .......... W -W"""9Cl Cl .. ), L -.,oc_. Cl•l l . ta -Wlclll, ltoc'-c..,....CtAc>; ... -Giie• CUC lrvlM), OIMI..,.. Cel k ,...._ U, UC RlweniW I .Wl-M. 11, LeV-4 1'1"111 ..... 2, C.. St. NWllWI-I DMlllllllH HOit 11, Lalll 8Hcll 51. I CS L .. A119tMt, UCLA 1 ~n=r, .. ,.~ -........... u 2 ........ 111 lie --7 te I T--, .....,_ CJI, C"-Ill ... ea-; ICIMey, ..._.. CD, tc.ml (I) IM ltwlll, MellHMll (II. W-Lonell.. L-M'"""-.__ Crl.... 18-ll'ltlet, Trllt!Mreor, Newort• IMlr e Ceale) Ha-Re'f, C•1111ot1 IMlrac.MI, ., ..... C~I. HIGH ICHOOL ICHEDULEI Ne.,.aort ... ,., Fri., ,... 27-« Allte4ope va11 • .,, ~ ....... 1 Merell •7-4e!U "-'HowPort·-se Ells ....,_. T-.• Merell ~.-,,,... (llOme) Fri, Merctl t>-« Edi-·' T1101 .. M•rcll 17-F ount•ln V•lley• , ....... , Fri., Mwcl\»-MorlN• C-) Twos., MaKtl U-t H..,,11,,....,, 8ffc11• Fri., Mercl\2'-.1 WntmlMlt r' S.I., Merci\ a-t Unlven lly, doubl• llOador,12 Tues .. Merell Jl-EdlllOll• lllomel l'rl., Ajll'U > I F-t•lft V•lley• Tues .. Ajlrll 7-Marin•• l'rl , AIWM l._..11111.,..... a..c11· 1-1 'rl., AIWll 17 ,_,,Te-.. P•rti. 6 TUot,t "'.!11 21-w.eemlllteor' 1-) l'rl., _,. H-.-Edi-· T ...... ~._.._.1nve1 .. y• c....,..> Fri .. Me., 1-Merllle' (Mme) MOii., May ...... """'""'°" 9Ncll' Tllun .. *" 7--411 w. ..... ,,,. .. r• • ..,....s-tL ...... me "" .. -•lltlt~....,.. ... -.., lld condltlone IOUTHeaM CAU~NIA .......... -2•» lftc .... CNlr I -le mld·•t•ll•. .. ....., --.. ,. """" packed powdior ...i flerd tNCliled. Owlr J -· ....... ... -IJ-14 lncllos, 2 cl\elrs -· .......... _ .. IJ...,. ..... -..... -· ..... --1J-2t lftctl -· • <he!" ..... ..... llltlM s1111119. .... ~ -2.J fee( 2 cllelra -for t1o9IM l119 end lntormectlet• Mil ...... ceNTaAL CAl.ll'OtUllA J-----Hool -wllll trace of IWW-.4cl\eln -. .............. -"lnclln wllll I lnctl ofMw-.14dleln-. ~ .._. -2-J -wltll 2 ctleln-n. ....,_ ,_ -22 lncllft wllll llw In<,_. of now lllOWdtr. CN .. l'Mll -32-42 lncllOs wllll I ln<llH of ,, . .,._. Mt. Ill ... -JO.II lncllOS, I loot of ,_ snow. NCMITH••N CALI ..O•MIA ....._ ......... -tel ... Inc,.., 1• lncllos --· M•ew ... ., Yetley -SO lnclles packed ~ will\ 16 lnclln of now snow, 1' llf'ts rUftnl119. k ........ -tO·n lncl\es wllll 11 ln<llH of --· N......, -)44S lncllos wllll ._, lnclln ol MW-. I•••• Veit" -»·12 lncfws pecked powder wlll\ 1~22 lncllft of ,...,., snow, 22 lllt•otMrel""- Probowlnt PUTOUa let--~o.t.) ... __ .... t. S.m Zwlcll 2. Jim "'9nc• l . TN ......... 4. GllSllllor NA money leedef9 I. M•r-.1 Holmen 2. Eerl """'°"J J.Merll.Rtlll 4. St-Martin S.T_.._ •.Oeerwt ...... '···~~· •. J•'f ..... -.. 10. R•'f 811tlllrt Misc. '·"' t,Jte '·-1..-. '56.7'0 n.- s1,590 a .a 20,.dl .. ... 17,1'0 17,DM tt ... 16.0IS ·--·-=:: treftMCttoft• UL.L '"-km..._ N•W YORIC YANICEH -Sltrled Allltf Mc0.ff'91ft, lllitttlw, .. e -·'fffr CMtrect. UMaTUU. .......... .._ ...... GOLO•N STATE WARRIORS -St.-Wllll-.......... .......... Plec .. LloYd ll'rM, ....... -lftJ-llM.Wal .... l'MI CM11lor ...... . MOCKU' ........ .....,~ COLORADO ltOCICIU -~ l'flll Myre, ..., ... ,... • 1,.,. tM l"tlll ... _.• l'll'Orl lwM--.C .... _. ef C-. MONTlllEAL CAHAOIENS -A-ed -IN ... ,,_ ........... Olrll NllM, ....... w1119, lw two ..,_ es • fflllll of e11 Incl· 9111 111 • .... M l'a 14. IOCC•a ............,.. ........... TORONTO eUUARO -Sl9fted Jw .... Selle, ttrtllor. c:oU.eH H08ART COLLEGE -A-ad t- WllllMI TWMr, .... fleck.., C.Ctl, tied,. ........ M•81tASICA -M...-Meo Ille, ..._, Mtaet ... I COKll, ....... .,..,. UllttKt. WHTIRN MARYL.ANO -NelllM Jack Mel•wwtll...,,_...lceecll • CotMlu:lllJ oolw .... 71 -O' ... COCCI; 1' -"'"ile COCCI; 11 -ow.tu COCCI; 71 -HOf'...,..a tOCCI; 1t-L..eees COCCI ;•-McCrlltltM (OCCI. T--= Or-.. CMa1 -I I C-IRO JIS. Ullf 9Ncfl CC .... Sellle AM •• .......... ,, ....... CDI n• e..L_. .._ ......... "" ......... Velltl -1. 111NeW COWC>, e.t; Ulttwell wa -t. c..., COWCI, U i ..._ ._ -1 • ...-.w cowa, P.J; ,.._ •• enlN -t. """'9W CO.Cl, .... ; All ..... -1 • .__ COWIC>, a.JI. -···~ : "'" .. 0r-.. c;.ae ..................... . , .. , .. ,., ... ,..... . .....~ ••• .RI j!:l-. • UillN ___ ............. Bola tlgflt ski falis Tiu. cou/,d be UJeeltBnd il,,at ~ or ireala it ........ ....... ,.. ... lolDIUIDw, ,_ ... ,Dow ....... '° Cl7 OI' smile. I w bow caa ,_ eomplw Oollt blue *Ml and ......... ..._.ta tMmlddleGI ~! 1'bm ., .... U ,_•n a llder, It ..... , quite cut it. How IDaD1 .-.... can you spend ......... lemonade on tbe back patio wb.Ue tbumftlDi \hrou1b back i11ue1 of 1ldtn1 ma1aalae1, clreaminl ol bow it could have been? UR ISN'T ALWAYS IO eaay hen iD tbe land of1uubtae. But take heart. Wltb a little luck and some help from tbe weather 1odl. tbiDp lbould 1tart ahaplq up on tbe Southland a1opes Uort1y. A storm frGDt from tbe north WU due to bit by today ahbnucb u of late afterDooD Wednaday, tbat seemed a bit bard to swallow. Had it been true, bowevfl', tbe IDOW level wu Boating NHYC • series set to launcJi By ALMON LOCKA.BEY Deft, ............... Racing activity for Southern California off. shore yachtsmen will come full circle thla weekend witb tbe start of Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean Racina Series for International Off. s hore Rule <IOR) and Performance Handicap Racina '1eet (PHRF> yachta. The IOR ratin1s compete for the prestllfoua Ahmanson Trophy and the PHRF will be lookiq for the Dickson Trophy over the lone nine-month series. NHYC has announced a new format in tbe competition for the Corkett Trophy, formerly raced for by PHRF·C Y•chts throucbout the season. The trophy bas now been rededicated t.o the Mlqet Ocean Racine Class <MORC) for a four or five race regatta starting Friday and continuing through Sunday. In other local racing activity this weekend, Balboa Yacht Club will hold a regatta Sunday for Metcalf dinghy sailors seeking tbe Saint Cicero Trophy, and South Sbore Y acbt Club will bold tbe third race of its Winter Hibachi Series for all classes on Saturday. In other Southern California Yachting Associa· lion areas: Loe Aa&eles!a..s lleacll Ala mitos Bay Yacht Club -Turnbuckle Tightener (one-design, PHRF) Saturday, Sunday. Cabrillo Beach Y acbt Club -Spring Series No. 1. (all classes) Sunday. Suta Mtlmka Bay South Coast Corinthian Yacht Club -Les Storrs Series No. 4 Saturday. Santa Monica Yacht Club -Intra.:lub regatta, Saturday, Sunday. Saa Diego Oceanside Yacht Club -San Onofre race (Coastal Series) Saturday. Sant a Clara Racing Association -Leser Circuit, Saturday. San Diego Yac ht Club -Men's Mayhem · (Sabol) Saturday. Coronado Yacht Club -Wellincton Series <handicap) Sunday. Silver Gate Yacht Club -Privateer Series, Sunday. Southwestern Yacht Club -Spring Series, Sunday. Basketball scores l:att s ,rac:.-to, Baston Coll.,. Lelllgfl ~ Buc-1 •2 L•l•Y9fle '5, Oe4•Were 64 L• Selle 63, 0nt .. 1 SJ D1111ue-.,, R11t .. n .. FordllemlJ, ~ 111-u. n Georee-71, Pl'owlclence •·> Holy Cr-73, Hofstre 6l Temple SJ, MelM SI ROClerl -rls "· ,,..,,. SI. SI Seton Hall 70, St. John's 6l s1. a-lure n. Hletor• •t ~ VOii~ St. 71, A•ron .. Bell Sl, I), Ol\lo U. U Tolectot.t, ..... lflt G,_, S4 Kent S . 71, Gell!. Mlcllleen U Clove I-SI."· X•vler, 01110 IJ N, llllnols 7•. E. Mlcllleen S7 KenseaSI. '7, 1-• SI. 60 ICansH TS, Htflr•lll• .. LOlllsvllle tl, St. Louis IS w. Mlct•l-71, Miami, Ohio 70 $elllllWeSt Pan A,,,.rlc., •, Nlc.ll041s St. I• Rec II lei M1uo11fl Tl, COlor-•1 SMlll Alebeme 54, A11llum S4 Ttnnes-St. T3, AusUn i>.ay 60 ~=~::::.1 r;:e .. ~~~~, ... , G1or9le "· TeN•H H• 7S (04) Nor111 Caroline T•, "-111• TllCll SI New C>fio-"· Jec1oon St •' Clemson 54, °""'SJ Kentucky 71, Mlu lu lppi SI. H LSU H . Mlu lsslCltll '1 M•ryl-7•, N. Caroline SI. 11 Mlddll TeNI ts. Ofel R-rts 1' (OI) lllr91nla Tocll 9', T11le1W 7S Wekt Foretl 7l, Virginie M toll w. Vlrtlnl• 12, Morefloed St. '' L.1111• Roell t2, Conlen.,.., to loO Community coa.ae IMAueMNl:llY PL.A Ycl .. l'S --c-t~· Or..,.. Coetl•2. CorrllOSJt Ml.S...AllW>iol2,Sent•AM70 ~Ceil~• Goldonw.stll,EMIL.OIA-IH 71 Cyprn&S4, Rlo-U Mc ........ ~ L.A ll•lley7t, P• ....... 70(011 EI Cemlfto5', Plorce so .-. .... ~. c ............ , Comptonll,LA Tr-TKl\•2 01n•rd7t,H-ocll 7I Moor_.M, Tofl4S S.nte8er11er•77.v .. 1ure» ..... ecttoot Cll'WlLDCAaDPLAYO,.ftl _OI....._ Oo1P-IS,OaNnl .. J.ADI,,..._ Sent•,,.,.., 60, Werre11 SI l·ADI....,_ L.8Mlr .. ff,"'-rSO Vuc•lpe'4, Palo Verde .S4 C•O<lllo60, Her1S1 Sen C........,.., ••. MeencMoe S2 1-ADI,.._ T el\K....., ... Fllfltrld99 PrepSl RloMew7S,LA .. lsttO Cllerter Oelt "·Notre Dame I Riv.) SJ SINll ldleal• Hesper l• Cllr lttle11 ••. Boyl' Repuollc Jt Women CMltle uci.11111. use a ~"~ Or•-C.O.Si.2, C'fPBU St Mttflk ... Cll'..._.,.,._.,.... •ADI ....... Cor-del,.,.., .. ,CkN llVlew44 l·AOIY!Uea 8•.HetlSO, Scllllrr • SfMlllclltels CSDR47, Tr-0 Cypress nips OCC, 55-54 Cyp..elb,llege staged a second ball comeback to dispose of Orange Coast, 55-5' in community col· Iese women's basketball action Wednesday. Cypreu (8-2), trailln1b114 potatl at tbe baU, out.scored the Buc1, 33·11 ln tbe second ball to pull out the vtetory. The Buca (3-3) were led ln acorlq by Kril Kroyer wbo tallied 11 potatl. OOC bolta Seddleback (4 p.m.) Frida)'. .. ............... .... COWLD Wl'ftl OYD-..r .._el ... ~ta tM mrrte•M, tM •Fa alk fw ••••d ...prom ...... " lt tldl wa1," Tim a.., ...... GI \ operatiaill et &Dow lilammlt Mid W1tl1~·taeb GI relD equala out to a._. Jl.U GI 1now. We're prepared for a very load weebad. •• Up ...W tbb point, bow•••, UU., et loeaJ area ~·t been bad, earw"llltaa tM leek ol natural mow. "Aa for ....... ,.. done all riCllt. .. leJI Colllee. SKI.ING "There have been just a few icy 1pots tbla week and'tbe mow maklq bu worked oat .e17 ...U. •• Wednesday's report lbowed Seow Su.mmit with tbe most IDOW (12·• iDdl bue) with Snow Valley reportina 12·20 feet oltbe Jfbite stuff. • • • It's called "Mountain Madneu," and for lood reason. Vail's annual Rocky Mountain 1prlq party 1eta a liWe out of control at times, but it's all in 1ood fun. "You may have aeen it on TV's Real People," says Vall'• manacer Jon Goldman. "For the lut three weeb ol our season, up unW April lt, we have what ii basically a bil party here. 'J'bere•s softball on llds, relay races and juat a whole lot of fun and sames." Sid CODditiom at Vail, wblcb 1uppoeedly bu tbe belt IDOW en earth, bun't euctly been IUD and 1ames up unW now. But Goldman reports that tbe Back Bowel part of tbe mountain wu scheduled to open tbia weekend. "Tbe Back Bowel bu been sort ol an iDdlcator of what conditions here are like." Goldman says. "They're world famous and wben people call t.o set the aid report, the first thin& tbey'h ult i.a if the Back Bowel is open. If it la, then they know the sklin1 i.a 1ood." WHEREAS VAIL and surroundin1 resorts in Colorado and Utah will normally avera1e about 100 inches of snow this time ol ,ear, the current · state ol affairs is bleak -about 30 inches on tbe middle level and 40 on the top . ''The extended forecast calla for a Sood spring season but we'll just have to wait and see," says Goldman. "We've been able to survive on snow maJdna and with the Back Bowel openlq, there's still good skiing here. The tbint tbat we're looldn1 forward to is the expansion this summer." Vall will more than double ita current acrea1e from 133 to 279 this summer . Incidentally, if you're interested in gettin1 in on the Mountain Madness fun, there's one more incentive. Gaucho hurlers having troubles Saddleback College dropped its second straight one-run decision in community college non·con!erence baseball action Wednesday, a tough 8-7 defeat at the hands of visiting MitraCosta. . The Gauchos , 3·4 on the youn1 season, pounded out 10 hits and received eicbt walks, but by tbe seventh inninl they found themselves in a bole, trailiq 7-4. Mike Breslin solved that problem, tboup, with a three-run homer in the bottom ol the seventh to notch the score at seven. MiraCosta pulled it out with a sincJe tally in the eighth, as once again the Saddleback pitchers bad their problems. "When we get all our pitchers back, we're going to get better," said a d.i.uappointed Gaucho Coach Dick Stuetz. Conspicuously miulq from the Saddleback lineup is returner Benny Amaya. the Gauchos' No. 1 pitcher, who injured bia le& last week aaainst Oraqe Coast. MiraCosta knocked three Gaucho pltcbers around for LS bits, and six ~their elpt n&n1 came after two outs bad been made. "We're a young team and we're I06DI t.o be up and down until the p itcbiq 1eta solid," Stuetz added. Tbe Gauchos return t.o action Friday when t.bey travel to Fullerton Collete (2:30). Tritons advance, 69-~2 Guard James Hill scored 17 polnta and team- mate Jack Steven.son added 10 u San Clemente Hi&b toppled vialtiq llapolia. •52 to capture the CIF 2·A wild card boys basketball spot Wednes· day night. By winning, the Trltona (lt-1) advance to tbe fll'st round ol tbe playoffs where tbev will meet Schurr Hilb at Schurr Friday nilbt. The Tritons jumped out to a quick 11-1 adnn· ta1e after the first elcbt·minute quarter and never. trailed after tbat. . TOnlGITI . 11111UE1snv a. c. OP C8LIF. us. SlaTa lllVllE 1111118 7:20p.11. ( SponsONd by: Republic ....... Broken, Denny'aAMt8urmtl8nd Mc,..ac c~ Plymouth Ex8CUtlve ProdUC8f': Aor Intl....,.. AS A DIRECT LENDER WE CAN LEND YOU CASH FAST .. )\'9Clll~ 0 soot 11De ...... 011 liltOtCALflOllM tMIO &.-111.• .. -• O..Mmrt•tl ........... _ ...... ~hr . Or,ange Coaet performs•rare hat trick against Cerritos, 62-5 ....a lllRed ...u.t ..,~, doWD oa ottwe wt-.,... .. bell ..U. Bat ta.. to tile ............... Plralel oalJ .. paAnt ....... IOIDe t., ,.... .......... tlleJ ..... durial • _.,..t miaute atreteb tbat turned tbe baek In It." 1••• .......... ""-' tbe Plralel mlHed a __.. o1 ........ Trallial 11-41 witla t:JS rematA1D1. OCC'1 oae opportunltit1, CeniU. cut tM Jud lo t1"t Briaa llararidl aeored a ....,.. ..... , pla1 aad tbeD bad tbe ball witb 31 leeoadl nm•We1 · · ·· cbaaee to at leut tie the 1can. -a-a ... ' .... ~:~ ....... ----... NII 1111•, C.-Olllw W ..,_.. c............,.,. .............. " ... ~ ........... .,. rrua •• ..... '4M •••tan w &M •Qllir0CCwtua1' .............. ~ • rtlilD Ir, II ia tM ..... Mii. ~-Tlm JM•._ ......... ta ....... ftlwel (II> wl laad ~-···· .. --· "la••ra Dla1ed a 1reat •••• for '" &oat11M." NW OW.. "He ....t lDlide and did a ,,_ ,._, TaMJ Ollla' ._ Ma& CerrttGI bJ t .. al .... <•II> ud ...._ .. U....., ........ We ... at I I •CWl'Hol ( .. ). ...... .,. .... , UMt ..,.... ... ll uu.. la ..... But ...,_..,.u..,ame ...._. W to~ to 1-1 1uperJob•ta.. ....... •· m· ,..., ......... ant IUdl ltlDdarf. K1 tuf ICGl'ed OllJ'I lb ,..... but cWIUi..ay bekl 1\m a.,,_, who tame taeo U.. 1••• • ._..,... ov• 11 polDta &4SKETBALL But Kuyper m1.ued a free-throw line jmaper and followtq a Jump ball, wa,.. Romar'• 11- footer nat ln-and..t. Saunden ,rabMd tlM • bound wttb MYeD leeGDdl Wt ud wu IGaled. = ............. t ..... at Cent&ol, OCC'ld U.. P*-....... U.. ftnt l'ouM ot UM ...... Cout Coef ..... te'I ........... , • 1ame, to oaly HveD poUata. .......,_o more on a dnvmt layup to live t.IMI a-irau:s a ''We knew eominl lato tbe came that oae ol tbl 53.52 lead. Three free tbrowl made it eilbt un- k•Y• would be to atop ltUJPW,'' espJalned GUU.. auwered polnta and before U.. Paleom could re- ''He't IUCb • IOOCI lbooter. But KiDdorf did a auper cover it wu 11-55 wltb only 1:11 left to play. "It aeema like aJl tbe .... la WI eGDf-aa. tre dOM like tJUa oae," ~ GWll. i•Tbe l time we were here we bad a lJ·J*.at lead in aecoad baJf but mWed our tree tbrowl and l them rilbt back in It." ptayolh The Piraa. wW DOW play at Mt. 8u Aatomo, u U -10 ....,. oHr Sula AAa, wiU. a atate pla)'olf btrtla at a&Mt. job oe hlm. '' ••I tblDt we played tood def .... at that pciUat, •' But it wun't Just Kindorf. The entire OCC aaid Glllla. "But we aJao were much more patient On tbe mcbt tbe Pirates weft only 12 of from tbe line but •hot 51 percent from tbe noor. LEASE DIRECT AND SA VE!!! '0.00 DOWN! '96~! ~ 1111 ltt I Or. 1.,1,me•t l11et•H ~ ,....-tr••·· ..._ aNe IMNI ... , TMrm .. 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We CADO C.A.\E· CADO includes free inter active financial packages 1>roven in ~Z gz / thousands of installations ready - to-go softwa re to automate payroll. ;Y' accounts payable. accounts receiva-/ ble, and general ledger: an inven · "' tory package that makes ma nual re · ___ .,. cord-keeping a bad memory; word --- processing software for purrfecl letters a nd long reports ; and Just As k ll -a do·it-yourself method for creating special repQrls . All these free CADO·only features would cost thousands m ore if other systems had them! Sample business forms. operator·s guides and da ta diskettes a r e inc luded. Choice of pnnters? Of course. Com<mth~:;~;;R CONCEPTS & PRODUCTS <§> 17741 Mitchell Ave., I rvlne, CA 927U -Or call 979-2337 ----------~~-----~--------~-----~~~ I woukl Ike mcHe lnfo""•tlOn on the C.cto C.A.T. -wand'• nraf ...... ecttln9 bualnaaa computer/word proc••~ f0t am.ell bualneaa end profeaafonela. NAME _____________ TITlE _____ _ COMPANY------------------~ AODAESS ___________ PHONZE\_ CITY "------ COAST GENERAL TIRE 2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-5710 0.. of c..e. Mele'• oWnt llldt• ................ latlllllMdlf 1 '11s;a13 (br71x13) '115/7511• (CR71x1 .. ) . . Pf95;7511 (911x1.t) '9m5/75R14 (f171x1 .. ) '205/75115 (f171x15) FREE! MOIT U.S. CAii 4 POINT SAlllTY Cl•CK I. nus 3. $HOCKS; 2.llMCISt-4..W . . . .......,.. AI .I. PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD' CAROUEST MOTOR OIL .............. 11 ... car IPICI. Q Cl.a •r .... ... . uart re:::_. 79¢ fanpact ... mm IN-DASHER" =~~ AM-FM STEREO tm fonm 31111 eiKt. WITH 8 TRACK OR CASSETIE =-~-=--:i $69. 99 OOAXIAL 5" SPEAKER SYSTEM s,.clal 5 .. CllllliMd wiltl ......... 1 '/4' IVll'lll ........ , ...... , .... Only ................... . lllll.•COSC5 $26.95 PAIR >.oM' '11 ~ SPEEIJ.O..STAT WIPER BLADE ~ : ELECTRONIC REFILLS ~•• SPEED CONTROL ~;..72r.,~; ... ,i: $79.95 clar. Wind· 11 -16: 11 -11 Adilllllnlll II pn ... ... ....... ,. . .... C.ltlnt ..... rlfllls t• _.can sna fuel and nduca \ l I i ' l """"'--------.....:: ........ 11 ..,, .... ,ar11. 12' TAIR.E ..-: • HALOGEN HEADUGHTS ·a FM ml Ri itl"" 6.E. lllWlr ,tua $8 59 ........ hlvtl ....... llrtghtlr. • hlghba• ...... EA. ,._, fer nctl ... r .............. q11 r$9.99 ..... .......... ............. $15.9J BOOSTER CABLES c....-. Super ::..-::. Diii ::-=' $4.99 .... ""'' ...... ........ , ........... .....CllMll $11 .• HEAVYOUTY ce HANDCLEANER "THE COCO LOOK" '-11:Mi a WITH DllPEllER btifillwillllmll ..... ,, "~s:-.. • $2.49 ~••• m18oz. II CAR MATS -CRttlberOueen Clrpmd Cece Style llJW ............... $1589 tit 111,..-tl Ind.... • PR. 11'1111"""' *Ive ..__._ ..,.., Cira. Frint . ... "·" .... ;1?•11.J BEACON AUTO PARTS ................. LAGUNA BEACH AADELAMTO AUTO SUPPLY 5=8rtt . 0.-.......... AUTO PARTS Zl6lr1= Lis 494'114 , hlr • $lillllii..... . .... ~:=. ...... Tiie ...... --.,, ...... ....,. ..... ~· fWll't' 6 === I• ---ti ..... ,, ..... fl -......... Olt 1..,.jeMHt ..... tiiO..ll ... . ..... ............. 0 ...................... , ........... 0 • ................... ~ ..... ._ .. , ... -.. .. .... . ( ........ ~--... ...... 0..... ....... .._., .... ,_,.MA .._.,...._'-;Ill~ H•• ~·•••••I•, •• , .... _,., O'iMIA.. llW• ....... ,, ~~· .. ., • ,, , ............. ..,_ ... --·=----.......... .......-...... '--"..... ~ ........ Qwt .. 111•a.•,, --..~..-• ...,., .... ..-..c-~-.. T1lle --... ... 0..r'-C I .. NI (IWIC C:.. ... c-1, c....., 0r .... c...., 0rr ... ._.. ..-. °' ... ClllMY. ~ ta, "91 (el-· ...... -If MY, • -· ............. dl9lll9 .. -.......... ~-(.-.4 Dell• ............ ., ...... ~I .. ...._. u .... .,,. If 1• e"•nt1a O.Oea10 tllet a . . c.., .............. ~ .. .,..11, .... la 1i.. Oelly ellet, e NOTICE ""91W .... •M ....... ~.,. .... _____ 1 .......... ., -~ .. •••• •A1.&• IA J A -·~·""'° ... o ••Wklffl•, "' Ce•let ...... c .... •••e, , .. _ .... ...., .. _ Oloilil ~. ,,, "·-· .._,,c_.....,~,........,, , .... _ .. ,_ .... , ...... .......... ..._ __ f'll•• --rn• w1111 •• ,..,,.,,. C.n 01 o...,.. Cw1111' Of\ ........... .... ._.... ef .,_., .. c1tc,.1eu .. .. ._ -.0r .. c.-iev. c.lltenlie, -·. -.. ,_ _,..., ...... ...................... ... ,'*' • .... ~,,..1•1 .......... ~ '1111111" .. ._ .. c;.wi ...... 1 .... a.-.. C-1 o.lly l"lle4 F• a.. Mw ), II, It, "91 -.e1 PU8LIC NOTICE •KT1nou1 au"••M ..... ITATIMeNT '1UMI T"• 1011owlne ,.,_.,., ere do•"• ...... _Or .... C.-1 O.lly 1"1194 .... si ...... ..... U. It, a._...,c11 S, t•I 1-1 JEllWEl ENTIEllPIUSES. 11'1 PUBLIC NOTIC t: 'ICTITIOUI MIMMIU ~ITAT ... ltT T ... IOI-... --1$ dol119 .... 1. neua$ 111 llOCltWELI. AE llO·SAl'E Ti:CHNOlOGV. (1) ROCKWELL eEllO.SAFE DESIGNS. 1142 MC:f<ed· Ge11, u .. 11 ·o . 11.,,.11,.eton 8eec11, Ce llfonlle,_ Ceftler Ofi .... HwMll\lllon le«", c;A .,.., Ger-K..V., JJIJI Velle Ito ... S.n Jv.,. c.lttr-, CA Earl -lk, Ml Skyline Ori••. 1A11""• IMCll, CA Thi• 0..SIM U I• conducted by e ..... r .. .-1111p. 51...,.C.,,_ T"I• •IM-1 ... flled wltll , ... '°""tY Clerk ol Or-County on Feb H, ltll It•"' N llock-11. Po. &o• lCM. ,_,......_,a Ir.,.. Coit• MIH. Cetllorftle '1'21, ~2 An_,. .. ..... M< F.-, Unll'O'. H .... u...-on ....... Awe• ... ._ ... T- CA. '1... U111...-rt c:.t. Of., s.IW • Tllh buM,_. la CCll\Oueted by.,. In· Ne--'e..cll,CAtlMI dlvlO..el P11llll!llwd Or-Coest Delly Piiot, It-N llOCll-11 Feb. u . llM<'cll S, 12, "· "'' Tiii• ~-· WIS 111eo wltll .... Co1111ty Clerk of Or-COlll\ty on Fob to.'"'· ... , ..... PUBLIC NOTICE ....., This .wide parking space, designed to aid handic~pped motorists, apparently was too beckorung to pass up. The handy location is PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUI IUSINESS NAMI STATEMENT P UBLIC NOTICE PICTITtOUI IUllNIH NAMtl STATEMellT ·in front of Albertson's Market Brookhurst at Adams, Huntington Beach.' The auto in violation carries the license 1ABR928. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cl"l"·ltM NOTICE OF T•USTEE'S SALE .,,, .. -.CMJY a. ,,.,...... lnm., la aecamt a.euttft DHid ....... AdYeltiliq, A ....... CcmtnlctklD ol tbe ........,.foot, ~ ltorJ ............................ . ~:._~ Sauth Cout Plua Ton ~C.., ....... W. Wllll••• bu bem .tee pr .. ldmt ol tbe le1al dlvtaioa ol tbe H 8eHbCo. llielan •. 8Cw•U, Irvine, Ma been D~ a director of Phillips, Brandt, Reddick, •::nt~ Newport Beaeb-bued pl and environmental reaear firm. • 8WMJ DeMla S,-eer .. l been named vice president": Reid Adverti1ln1 and ltubUf: Relations, Newport Beu~ • ~ I Dalllel W. O..U.., ~ dent ol John S. Griffith fJ Co:, .,..... Costa Mesa, has been nodainat- ed for the presidency of lntemational Ce>wg!il rf Shopping Centers. u J • A quarterly 12.6 centa per share cub dividend has been declared by the board of direct.Ors ol Mercuy Samia ud Lou Association, :11unt- i n g ton Beach. The dividend la payalJle to stockholders of record April 1. . ~ O'DoaneU, Brtgllam & Panaera, an ind~riaf development firm, has moved its headquarters to Manufacturers Bank building, 1301 Dovel St., Newport Beach. P11bll-0r""99 Coe•I Delly Piiot. F•~· U ,h ,Mercl\5, t•t U~l_I , FICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATEMENT T lie lollowl119 per'°" " do1n11 1>11•1 neu •1· Tl\e followlft9 persofts a re doing buslneu •s, OESIGH MANAGEMENT, HOO I rvfne Aven\1•1 S\ute 20s, Newoort Buch, Qlllornla 9l!MO Tlte IOllo.1"9 _ _. 11 doln9 0..SI· ne11 a1: PICTITIOUI IUllNEIS llAME ITATEMINT Tiie foflowt119 persons e re doiftll 0..llMH .. : NOTICE is he"'bY 9lvel\ lllet First Charter Flnencla l Corporation. a Corpor•tion, ., Tru''" under the DHd of T""t recorded.,. ln>trumenl Number 47°'1 on O<t-r Jt, ltlt In Book IJllS. Pa .. llS. ol Oll•clal Records 1n ow office of trw Covnty Recorder o f Or•nQe County, Ca lllornie, of which Deed ol Trull AmerlcMI S.•l119s -L.,.,. Assocla· tlon Is the beMflclerv. by reason of de· t.tult 1n tht p.tyment or perform.nee of obllQ•tlOn\ s.ecured "'•reby, •nd Notice ol O.faull end beneliclery'\ eiec lion to,..,,,. to be \<lid trw prooer- ty below dtw:rilled l\evlng -n rt · Air CaWonala, based in Newport Beach, bas an· nounced tentative plans to begin commercial flight service from Los Angeles International Airport to Manzanlllo. San Jose del Cabo and Ixtaba, Mexico. Officials hope to win approval for the flights from the Civil Aeronautics Board by early summer,. and begin the service in the fall. PUBLIC NOTICE "'tCTtTtOUS llUllNllS l'IAMa ITATIMllNT TM 10llowl"9 _ _. I• dol119 O..>I· ftHSH: BOOKKEEPING Pl.VS, tOtO Moody StrHt. CyprHs, Cetllornl• *'°· We-8rl.,. '""-o, tot0 -y StrM t, c.,..._, <Alltorftle tDUO. Merk --· MO Yorlle St;•t, Or•"9•. c:.llfwl\I• , .... Thi• -IMU II COl\d .. cted by e llmlled--tfllp. We-8. Melito Thi• •te•-t wn 111eo with tile C°"nty Clerk DI ()(., .. C°"nty on Feb. II, 1 .. 1. " ... " P111111.-Or-Coe•I 0.lty Piiot, Feb. It, 2', -ell S. 11, t .. I .W..1 PUBLIC NOTICE N·7Ult FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STe TEMENT T l'I@ tollowlnQ per-sons .tr• dolnQ busin•ss •s CA TAR ACT CO . 19100 Faor<luld, Su•tt J70, I Nine. C••••orn1a9211S CATARACT ENGINEERING & CONST AUCTION, • Calolornla cor- poration. 19100 Faorcllild, Suitt no, trvjne, C1llforn1• 'n71S This bus.lne-ss. 1s conducted by a cor Pot•l1on C•lara<I E"11ir>ee,,n11 •nd Conuruclton The>n'W, Teichmann, Presloen1 This \lattrnenl w•s Ill~ will> the Counly Clerk ol Orange County on F •bru•ry l, IM1 FIHUZ Pubhshe<I °'""9l' Coast Daoly Piiot. Feb. S, U, It, U. 1911 .~ .. 1 P UBLIC NOTICE STAYHdNTOtr AiMIDOMMENT- 0"' UIE O• Ft(TITIOUI IUMNEIS NAMI TM IOI_.,.. --... ,,. ebel\· CIOMd IN -of Ille Fictitious 8u•I· ness H•n.. ElGIN PARTNERSHIP. U.1 Notre Dam• AMII, C.te Mew. CA n~. TM Fictitious au.i .... s N•m. r .. !erred to -"'" lllect In Or.,. .. Counly Oft ~lier 4, 1977. FILE NO. FM9$, Rlcllerd v-vto. U.1 Notre Dam. Aoed, , .... Mew, CA 9162'. Merl"" l lUel, 21052 !itratllmoor LeM, Hun!..,._ 8o«h, CA.,,_, ThlJ llulll\oss was COl\ducled by a limited -1Mrsl\lp. MerlMI\ LIUel T"ls ,,,.......,, ••• flied wllfl IN Co11nly Clerk ol Orange Covftty on Feb,•. 1911. Publls.lled Or ..... c ... st D•lly Piiot, Fob. 11, It, H , Merell ), Itel 1 ... 11 THE CHOPPING BlOCll M EAT CO . UOO Ad41m\, • 104, <.osta Mew, C•lolornl•92alt OOMld Fraftll HICNroson. IOO Del Amo, •A, T"'""· California t2.eo Thi• O..•lneu Is cDftdwctecl by en In· div1du•I. OoNld F. Richardson Thi• •t•tement wu filed with lhe County Clerk ol Oren .. Co11nty on C,,.rlH A Beck, 211) Monlorey Avon .... Costa Mew. C11i10tnia t2Ua A11th Merl• Beck. 291) Montorey Av•n .... Coste Mew, Calltornla 92'U This b111lness Is conduct•d bY • 11•ner•I partMr.,,1p Cherles • Btck This Sl411tmenl was 111~ with the County Clerk ol Orange Countv on February 3. !tit Februery J, t~t FUSIU Pubh\htd 0r•"9t Coast Da11~1!~.~·.~ Published Or-, ..... Delly Piiot, Feb ), 12, 19, u . IWI S.1·11 Feb. S, 12, It, 3', IMI )6).,11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE C.C. SYSTEMS, USJ Rl•erslci. Or Ive. Sel\te ANI. <Alllomte tvo.. Kevil\ P..,1 Rl ... lsllerger, 1353 Rlver>ld9 Or1ve, Senle Alie, C.lllornle 9270.. Tiii• .,.,..,_,Is COftOIK•d by en In dl•ldllel. Kevin P. 111 ... 1-.. r This stet-I wn llled with tile Couftly Clerk 01 °'"' .. Covnty on Feb. 11, 1 .. 1. ....... Pullll-Or ..... Coe•I Delly Pllol, Feb. It, 1'. -Cfl 5, U, 1tel IU-11 PUBLIC NOTICE .,..--- FICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATEMENT "'ICTITIOUI •UllNEIS PICTITtOUI IUllNEIS ......._ ITATEMUIT NAMI ITATEMINT The lotl-lr>Q perion is doln9 b11sl. nes.s •s TM lollowl"9 --Is dolne O..sl· The IOllOWifte P9'IOfl 11 dolnq llusl· MUH: .. HH: MEDIA IMAGE, ••113 Buch Boulevard. Huntington Beech. Ca1llorn1• '12MI Premco Sufwlte I• ..... , GREAT CENTURY )I HORIZON REALTY, PACIFIC REAi.TY • ..,., E. u Pelm• I Ul Westmll\lter, Gerden Grove. ... ........ Wt• E, A1u11 .. 1m. C•lll0tnl• Celllornla ~. Tuts A. Slnclelr, IU4 E1d1 Av•nu•, le Jolla, Cafllornl• 92037 t2t07 A-rt s. Z.mel, 7230 st-crfflt WHtey 8. H-"· 2TS Vie Mon·j lloed, A-m. Callfornle t•7. This INsl,..H Is cDftducted b'i •n on dividu•I ,_,., A...,..lm. C•llforftla ,.,, , dl:l~~e~""s 11 condllctect by en In· d1Ji'::.:.':"'.,. .. Is (Ol\dllCled by .., In· R~ s. z-· Tori> A. Sinclair T hos •l•ttn'Wnt wes tiled with the Co .. nty Clerk ol OrenQt County or F•bruary l, 1911 w. .. y 8 -r T"ll stel-WM flied wit.II IM Tiii• ··-i ... llted Wltll .... CDllnly "'"' ol Or-County on Feb. c-ty Clert Of 0r .... County on '·Itel. Feb. 11. 1"1. FISSI• Pubh>IWd OranQe c ... s1 Diiiy Piiot. ,.,.... Feb.)' 12. 19, 26, 1911 601·11 Pvbll.-0r""99 Coest Delly Piiot, Fell. 1t,2t,Merc11S, 12, 1•1 ..S.11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "'1CT1nous1u11•1u "'1CT•nouiausn•au MAME ITATIMENT 111AM1 ITATHYMT Tiie fOllo.lftl _... I• dol119 IMl>I· TM IOll ..... --11 clelft9 O..>I· NU••: neuaa· WESCO CONSULTING CO .. UJ4S GNEISS PRODUCTS COMPANY Overleke, El Toro, Cell!Oflll•t... 111 w I l7tll 1 ' Eue•n• l . Col omblftl, JOO C•lllor:,'•m2'1. • "1 ' Cost• Mue, Overllke, El Toto, CAlllOfftle .... Nolet1 E J -790 H 111 I Tllll --11 conducted by .. In· •H,Cost•-Cellh.mi ••• ~ °"· d vlclu•I. Tiiis .....i.-s I• ~tood by., II\· EUlllM L. ~I dlvl ... 1 Tiiis "9--llted wllfl Ille ;.OI., E J - Covl\ty Cl-•f Or-County on Tiiis _.....;. ... filed wltll ,,. Feb. 11. 1"1. l"I .... C-ty Cl-ol Or., .. County Of\ PullllWd 0.11\911 CO.ti Dally l"llot, f<IMI. 11• lMI. f ... , ... ,J eb. It, 2', -ell S, IJ, '"' .. , .. I P'*fl-Or ..... Coe•I 0.lly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The IOllOW1119 per-Is dolnQ !NII· M \' ., GAMES PLUS, , .. , HamlllOfl Avenu~. Huntlnoton ~•ch, C•lltornl• 92Mt G•orv• T K•U•mpe~, JOllt B••t hwood L_.ne, HuntinQton B•k,,, California 92- Trus buslnes~ h tonduct.o by •n in~ d1vlctu•I. Geor .. T K•lsaml>@S Thos \latement ..,., filed wllfl tlle Counly Clerk ol OraftQe County on F•bruary ], 1911. FISS11t PubhsfWd 0rMl9f Coast Daily Pilot, Feb S, 11. It, 26. ttet .... 11 Fel>. It, 2'. Merell s. 11, ttll 114·11 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTIYIOUS IUSINEH NAME STATEMENT The fOllowlnQ person is doln; Du•I· ne's •s. BARTERING COOPERATIVE "BAATEAC().0P'', 1921Harbor Blvd .. Cost• M.w. C•lllorn1atl1U7 R1cn•rd D•te Center , 136ttl P•lom•r, Weilm1n~l•r, Callforru• 921t13 Thi\ °"""' .. I\ CDftdlKIOd by an In· di.idual • ~IChard D. Center Thi• stalemenl "'"' tiled with the County Clerk ol Or•nll" County on February l, 1911 ir1s11n Pubil>IWd 0.11199 Coast Dally Polo!, PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITICIUI IUllNUS NAMI STATEMENT Tiie IOll-"9 .,.,_ Is clolnq bull· nenas: DETAILIHO UHLIMITED. 21' Ametllyst, &el-l•t-. C.llforftle ., .. 2. Weller 8 . H•uekorst 111, 11t Am•tllyst, &el-1st-. C.lllorftle 92..i. This -11 ,_,..,by"' In· dlvlcluel. Weller 8 . H-lloru Tiii• stei-t ... Jlled wit" tile Co111\ty Cl•rt< of Or-CDlll\ty on Feb. 10. 1•1. ... 1 .... P11t111.-0r.,... Coest Delly l"llot, Feb. 12. 1t. 2', Merell 5. ltll 1-1 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI IUllNllS MAME STATEMENT Tlte IClll-.. --I• doll\O 0..M· neu as: TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC PllOOUCTIONS, 1'56 Fl.,.I_ Ot'lve. Coot• Mete, c:.llferllle t•». ltofteld IC. McConftell••, ltU Flemll\90 Drive, Cost e Me .. , Celllornl• m•. Tiiis ~ .... II COl\dueled by .,. lft• dlvlG11el. R.IC.McC_,,.e T"ls stet-I ... filed will\ t• CollfllY Ct-of Or-COllftly on Feb, 11, 1"1. l EERVE'S FLORIST. 110U Evclld Ave,..,e, Gerden Gron, C.llforftl• t'2'CI. Slleron lrvlft, m So Oek, 0r ...... Calllornle 92660. Slluon Mitchell. 11' So. Oek. Orlft9e. CAlllornle t:IWO. SflMol\ lrvll\ SherOI\ MHct>ell Tiiis •tat...,...t w .. filed with the C0\11\IY Clerk DI Oren .. COllntv on Feb. 13, '"' l'IHl7J corded as l>'OYI-by lew, and more P .. 1111-Orel\90 co .. 1 Daily, Feb tll•n three month\ llevlnQ elapsed It, 2', -ch), 11. 1•1 112·11 ""0 swell rt<ordahon, will be M•rcl\ PUBLIC NOTICE a, Itel (Friday), et t Ua.m , ttw main entraftce to ttw '°""Iv c .... rt,,.,.,se, 100 Cl•lt C..,ttr 0.-1..,. We••. Santa Ane, Calilornl• . ..ti at Public auction to the FICTIYIOUI IVSINESS hiQN\I b-r lor ca•"· 1M11ablt •t IN NAME STATEMENT lime of 'Wle In 141.-iul money of the Tf\e followln9 P•rions •r• doin9 United St•tH4 without cov~n•nt or buslrtes.s •.s. w•rr•ntv. ••P"'SS or implied. •s to ti· A MAH FOR All SEASONS, l60 lie, PoSSHsion, or --•r><H. ell Cleo St., L-&e«h, CA. nut rlQ111. 1111• -interHt ton••Y•d to Mlc'-1 c. Jou....,,et, l60 Cleo SI., •nd now twld by It 11ndtr said Deed of L•eune Be.ch, CA. '12UI Tr.,st In ...., to IM l>'DOerty In IM Oevid c . J011venot. 211• Ruby Pl .. COllnh of Or-. State of ca111ornl1, U.uM Beec:ll, CA. 91.SI described es follows· Gail B. Sneed, senior vice presideQl of Mercury Savings and Loan Association, Hunt- ington Beach, has been appointed to the ,1981 secondary market committee of the United States League of Savings Association. ' Benud E. Scllaelder has been elected president of the Newport Center Association board of direc· tors. He is a partner in the law firm of Viture & Scheck, Inc. VTN Corp., lrvlae, has been awarded a"S6.9· million contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Middle East division. The pact ls for completion of arcbitectural·engineering design and prepar ation of plans and con struction schedules for Academic Campus of the new ltoyal Saudi Naval Academy in Jubail, Saudi Arabia. Tl\h l>usl,..u is conducted by • All INI certeln lend •11.,.te<I in IN 1--------------------------- -rll _,_.,,Ip. Sl•I• of catllorftle, County of 0 • .,, ... ,,..----------.:1,... Mic'-I C. Jouvenat City ol ...._, Beec:ll. ct.scribed H This stetement we\ llled with Ille lollows: C°"nty Clerk ot Or.,99 Co.,nly on PARCEL I: February 14, 1911. For sl...,ie 1111• to Condomlniwn ,.,,.... Unit No. 131 ltlle "Unll"l. es shown P11blls.lled Or-c ... st Dally Piiot, "Poll Ille c.or-m1niwn Pten ltnllllecl Feb. u . -Merell S, 12. It, 1911 "Condominl...,., Piii\ for Lot t ol TrKI 921·11 No. 10517"), Coul\ty of Orll\99, Stet• ol -------------C•lltorftie (tlle "Plet1"I, r«orcMo on PUBLIC NOTICE J111Y 12, "''· .. 0oc-No. u6to, In -k 1~. P99ff 1UllrOU9" llS, lft· l'ICTITtOUS llUllNEIS MAMEITATIMENT Tfle fell-.. pertOI\ Is dol119 buM· nessas: ALL150N DESIGN SERVICE, 2120 N. Greftd, •34. Sel\la A"•· Celllorftl• '1701 CNrles AllllOft Wit-., Jl'IO N Greftd, • )4, S...t• AN, C•ilforftle 92701 This -1\Ht IJ C-lltd by et1 II\• dlvlclv•I. CNtrles A w1m.e..s Tl\I• Sia-w .. flied wltfl Ille Covft ty Clerk of o..,.. C-y °" Fff><.,.ry 24. 1•1. ,,,...,, P"llll-Or-C-11 o.lly PlloC, Clu•l•e of Offlcl•I Record• of u ld Or•-Couroty, wt\lcll Pf.,. pertelftl to t ... I pr--1Y clffcrlbecl In Tr«I No. 10)17, recorded In -"'· -· S thrOll911 • of MlscelleMOUs Me!K, r•· «><d• of seld0r"'911 Covnty. PARCEL 1: An und••lo.d .00372 SMrctnt tn· terut in •nd lo ttw Conwnon Arees H sl\own and-IMd on IM pl-. PARCEL ] An exclusJ .... rlQlll Ind ., .. .,._..,, to u~ ,.,. patio•••• mslen•ted p.137 on the Al.., •s bltl"9 1ppurt•nM1I to lhe Unll. PAACEl4. An exclusive rlQfll and easement CALL LINDA BLUE q to .... tlw periling W>Ke ct.SIO'Wlled on the Pten es Per1tlnq 5'>ece No PS.'" fQ R A tor 11\t --of wtolfylnq tlw 1- ---------1 :~::::l>Qsec:c:.:.~:-;i::..,Tr::.· FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN pensesoftlwTrustM. NTERESJ QNLYJ Feb. 2'. -· S, 12, It, 1•1 .... 1 From lnfDrl'ftellon wfllcll 11\t Trust• I -------------1 dffms relllf>le, but lor wl\ich Tr11Jlff • •ICTITtOUllUllMEIS rNlkH,.. r..,,....,1.11on or war>renty, ....._. ITATEMllltT Ille •lrHI ~•IHI or o4"9r com· ..,.,_ /. Yf £ '/ 'T d 1 ... ~~;: ... -... ,..._Is doi119 0...f· ::c~,:.:,·~~·~;n,, o,~·~· .... ~.b~·1~ .J ... ewpo, 'L•cen~::zByro .. rer s1U1nnce ,s97· 1,1nC "'•' 8AY CITY ARTS, 34 Sl•rlls" Pier•, N•wPor1 8eacl\, Callfornle """' " ,., CDllrt,"9WpOrt8H<ll,CA.~ t1'63 (714) 760 .Ll'\.LI'\ 8erbwe H. llo\urJlfly, • Sterlls Tht tolal •mo.,nl ol IM ""P•ld -VUVU Court, ~ .... 11. CA. 92'6.J belence of Ille obll .. tlon wcurecl by J!===============::::::::::::::::::::::::========" Tiii• ~NH Is cOl\Clveted by ... II\· H fd Deed of Trull eftd , ........... y dlvi-1. estimated costs. upense -.ov.,.cH ..,_1 N. Mllrpfly at the tlnw of Ille lnlllet publlcelion ol Tl\ls •tel-I wes lltetl wltll t the Holice of Sale IS$1l,•n. II PUBLIC NOTICE c°""'Y Clert of Orel\99 Co<H>ty Curr.ntly dated cashier's clle<U or P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS iUiiiii1J NAMR ITATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE Feb. s. n , It, u. 1911 s.s.11 F ........ ,., 24. t•I. ortilie<I CIW<k• will be ecc09tabte to PfW•t l't Ille TruS1 .. provlde<I INY ere dr•wft In Pvllll-Or ..... CO.II o.i1y PllOI, Pllllll-Or ... Coest O.lly Piiot le.or ol First Ch1rter Fin•nclel Tht lotlo.G1,.. p•roons •r• dolne bu•lneuM: J & 8 COHSTAUCTl()lll, tW Wllll· .lier "'"'""•· F·I. Coste Meu, Celllornle '1621. J . Ehlen Eftterprlses, lft <., • C•lllorftl• corpwellon. 1115 W"lltler Ave-. F·7, C.te Mes.e, Celllorl\le t2U7. This buslne&l 11 conducted by • cor- Poret..,,. J . !EL.STEN ENTERPRISES, IN(. s1e ..... L.J-s. Praldent Tllh __ , wes filed wllll Ille C°""'Y C"rtl of Or-c-ty on Feb 10, Itel. "'n•• Pullll-Or-Coest Oelly Pilot, Fall. u. lt,U,MercllS, t911 12M1 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE Of' IALE .,,.., PUBLIC NOTICE "'ICTITIOUI IUllNEIS ---- MAMa STATIMeNT l'ICTITIOUI IUllNEll Tiie loll-lftl PetSOl\I ere dolft9 MAME ITATIMtENT 0..Sll\ns •: Tll• lotl-1"9 Pit'°"' er• dolne GU A•ANTV FINANCIAL llllSIMU•: SERVICES. JUO r-CMltre ....... TWO lllOTMEIU l"IZZA, 1"44 S..lte 104 • ..._...., C.llorrll• t... 8rOOlll\unt SCrwl. '-l•ln Vellrt. o._111 Electric Credit Cor-e· Celll-• ftJW, tloft, • New Yortl cotporelloft, JUO SollyOI\ Kel\9, U'7 Somllnro Towne Centre Piece, Suite 104, Av•-. c.,.,_. c:.lllornletOt30, Aftaltelm, c:.lllornl• ,_,., Mlft Je 1Ce119, U'7 Sombrero Tflll .....,_, II COl\ducted by e C0f" A¥e-. C.,,.,._, c.llfotnle t0t30. ......11.... Tiiis .......... , Is (Ol\0..Cle<I by • Gellerll ElectrlC Crtdll ..... r•l -"nlllp· '--..... ~1(-11.0. f<-k. Mii\ Je K .... DlslrlCI ~ Tiiis .... ...-wa tiled wltll Ille Tl\ls , .. ,_ WM llted with ,.,. COllflty Cl-of Or., .. County on c"'"'' c 1 ... k ot o,., .. County °" Feb. 11. 1t11 F ... U.t"1. ,,...., ,, ... , PVllllllWCI Or ..... Coest O.lly l'llot, Pullll-0. ..... Coest Dally Piiot. f<IMI. 19, M. llo\ef'cll S, 12. t"1 .... , F ... 1'. M, Mercfl S, 12, 1"1 11°'411 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Notke IJ 11ere41¥ elll9fl __ , to -N71m •ICTtTIOUI llUllNIH WCllOft 1"7 ol .. Civil COde ol the St•l• ol c:.lllornle tlW llftde<M ...... JOEL L. NUTTING will Mii et 111tllllc •ucllon, • t"1A M9111• Str•t, Colle Mew, c:.lllor ... .c 10:00 e.m. oft Ille 111 ,., ol Mwcll, 1•1. ,,. fellowl119 dHC.rllllMI ..,.....ny, IO wit: Mllulle11eeu1 •"d complet• ...., .. 11a1• f\H'llltlll--Item• ef __ .( ....... Se ........ lor ... ~of ...... lyl119 lltftef t,_ t11t9tM ..... for <•II of Slotl"I I .. efo<Held ·~ pr_.,,., 111 tlle emou11t •• saos.oo 10991Mr with ~ ef Mvllrtlsll\t Miii .. _._ ................. D•led tfllol l• ..., ef ,_,....,.y, 1•1. JWltfl ........ ....... , .. J.i L. Htlttlng 1"111111 .... Or .... OoHt Delly l"llat, ,..,...,., .. ,.. .., .. , PVBuC NOTICE "CTITIOUllUll•lll ...,,.. ITATIMINT NAMll ITAT••MT Tiie IOI-,. --II clel119 IMl>I· Tiie fofllWlnt perSOftl ere d•i111 NU •s: llllSIMU•: CHILI TIME SHOWS, ltUt' PROFESSIONAL IOOKKEEl"ING -II•, •A-1, HUl\tl""°" .. ec:ll" SE•VICI! COM ..... Y. 1091 ........ CA ftt46 --..... n Mitre, lttJI H-• ......... --.ulte9ra,CA_,,, ........... llA-1. -lftlllell .. ec:ll, IOW•. Ill<., e Ce! ........ c_,.,etlOll, CA..._ t•7 W• Le MMra ...,.._. Le TlllS lllo9IMu II <--by M Ill· HW•,CA*lt. ' dlw._I. Tiiis ............ C-ted ..... CW· .__,. •. Mitre per•tlet1. Tiiis ......_,, •• flied wllll ,,. KWR, lllC. c -ty Clorll .. o. .... Coullty •e111tt W. Kr8b P'H. 6, 1'81. ,.,........ Tiiis ......_. -flied wltfl IN C-''l'C-..efOr ... c-yOllJM, lt,t•t. ,...,.. .......... Or .. c:.... ... ,, ....... ll:H. ti, tt, .. Merd!S, t"1 PUBUC NOTICE " ' Feb. It,~. Menn S, 12, 1911 ll2·11 Fell. 2', -Merell s. 12, tt. 1•1 Corporation end Htlsfactory IO.n· -----.-.11 tlllc•llon Is evellallle. PUBLIC NOTICE •MU PICTlnOUI llUllllEIS .... ITATIMENT Tiie 1011-"9 1MtrSOft1 ere dolft9 .,...,,.. .... , SOUTHLAND TILE CO., U• So. Coest HWlf., L ...... llNcll, CA 92.SI. ChetlK G. llellly, 21• So. Coe1t Hwy.,..._,. llH<h, CA 92'l1. S..111\ I(. ·-2,.. So. Coe•t Hwy.,.._.. llH<ll. CA 92651. This ~II <--""'led llY II\ lft· dlvldu.i. ~los G. llellly Tiiis -w11 flied wllll Ille '"""'Y Cieri! of Or-Couftty 011 Fetl.10,t•t. PfHl7t P111111-Or-Coesl D•lly l"llot, Feb. 12, It, 2', Merell S. 1•1 llM I PUBLIC NOTICE .... ' PUBLIC NOTICE ••kt .JOur 1lloppta1 ---=tMDaU7 Pllltla11~ D•led Freb<'.,."Y 4. IMI FIRST CHARTER FINANCIAL CORPORA To._"'· uTrvst .. By_ W. H. HARDIN It's Atlor"'Y In F•ct •150 N. Pelm Str .. t, Fulltrton, CA 916l5 Tel: 1114) 111·3221 Published Orll\99 Co.ul Dilly Pilot, Feb.12. lt,2', 1 .. 1 72._., P UBLIC NOTICE ORDI• TOSMOWCAUll ...ott CMA11910f'MAME CAM WMee• A·"'111 '" .... ,.. ....... ••tcetlol\ Ill HENAO ICOST IC, •Ii• NISHA MICHAEL l'ATTEMON, for a..,... ofN•me. HENAO KOSTIC, ell• NISHA MICHAEi. l'ATTl!MON lies ti. • eec111 .. "' 11111 c~ 1w .,. .,.r •I· lewl11t petlf-to c-._. lllt/ller -frem HENAO KOSTIC to N ISMA MICHAEi. l'ATTElllOH, II It _.,, w•roct 1N1t •II --lft!Wftted "' .. _..,. .... _If .... -..,.,.. tllls c-e Ill 0..-trl\elll No. J at 1aO OVI< C-ter Ori ... W.11, Seal•""' c.llfwnl•. "'.-..11 •• 1•1. et 11:• o'clOcll •.m .. -IMft -,_.. ..... c-. If ... y ...., -e. wfly ..... 119tltlell fer cMolee "' ,.._ ........ _.,......_ 11 Is fwtllw ....... "9t e c-.r 11 tllls Wdff to --~ lie llUlll1"'"9 II\ Oraftte CHtl O•llY l"llel, • llt•••-r Df .._., clrc,.l•tlOll, ..... IMed lllWsc-ty•ie.tOllUe --....... c-....... ---""* .... ..., .......... . o. ... ~fll.1"1 ......H."'- J ..... elllle ~c-t AL&.AMMOOM ... c...., ............. W. ....... CA_, hl:Cttam.-. ~ .... or-. ce..e Oe11y ....... ...... tt, M. llMr. S. tL "9t •Mt Get an Answer Page beeper-you'll never miss an Important phone calJ again I • WOf1d's la~ computerized paging agent. • Widest selectlon of pagers: single-tone," dual-tone, silent (vibfattng)/audfble combination, memory storage and more . • Wide-area CXMQg&-15.000 ~ mMes. • Otrect dial access, I • A location near you, pk.a field repreeenta· tiYes at your beck and call. :, • 2.._hour MMoe. We never sleep. ., • Oalty rental or month·to-month. u • Free unffmited beeping, free detiY9fy an6 he fuH rNintenance. • • Ouanttty dilcounla. • Cal today for 11tera1ure and a tN dMloMIT•tJonl With Attawer Page, you may be out of r'NCft. but you'ff never be cu ol eouc:til q j ' R~S&\IER . '1iBE 845-1342• 731·T.f11•&11·2411 ~ .. .--... -........ -... 0 _, .. I Flexible mortgages aren't attracting buyers u_p Uk• aa old aank The rt .. on '' lnflation end hllh lftWHlt r&\.eS, and it worb llke thil; WUh U.e cott of II vine out· pac•n1 wace lnc:reaaea. many people are unable to 11ve as much aa &.bey once clid. What m004ty they do save oftH I'*' to lar1e corn merclal banka that can offer hilh- internt cerUfkates natber than small. local stvincs institutions, such 1t.8 savings and loan as- aicx:hations or mutual banks. -Commercial bank• aren't as dedicated to makin1 rnort1•aea u are thrift lnstltu- Uon.a. Seek.in& a 1reater return for their doffar, they invest in more profitable and lHa reeulat- ed venlw'el than boustnc. -Thrift instilu\iona have been ainkin1 deep into the bole, one reason beinc that they hold on their books old home mortgage loans on which they collect onJy 7 percent or even less. They lose money on them. -TraditionaJ home mortgace How come l'Jll have so WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD little to show for your $20,000+ Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds, gemstones. gold and tltve< ffom private lndM- wats and estates Careful examin8llon and evaluatlOfl by OYr eJCperts, Highest pnc• paid. 10-9 dally, Sat. 1~ Closed Sunday. Phone today Ask IOI' Betty Grace or Eric Zalaskus. • A IMOIJl()H O' IRUSI IOI OVCA (JI) VU.M Jf:W[LS by JOS[PH Soult\ Cont Ptaa, Costa Meu • 54~ inconte? Maybe it 's because you don't have a financial plan . To get some ideas on how you can start one, come to a free IDS Financial Planning Seminar. You'll take the first step towards a financial plan. And have more to show for your income. It's free but please call for seating reservation. $50.000 to $500.000 INCOME PROPERrv SECONDS FREE SEMINAR Call 833-9453 • lnleresl only PAY"'•nl. •lnco- • Co••-ci•I • ReelclenU•I Thursday, Murch 5, 191!1 7:30 PM. Thursday. March 12. 1981 7:30 P.M . 23150 Lake Center Drive El Toro Travel Lodge HoUday Inn -Costa Mesa Bristol and San Diego Freeway El Toro. CA e~" ..,, .,. @~TRS so·· «u. d-ii ,M.z >coMP~TERS 1st in Features, Performance, Price! TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER • Spectacular Color Graphics and Exciting Sound • Plug-In Program Paks for Entertainment, Personal Use • Write Your Own Programs And Save Them on Cassettes FromS398 • Easy for Beginners to Use, Expandable for Experts t JY vou' own oint TV ant1 c.a~sett,.. rccorde' 0' t>uv o~,,~ RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000. AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS. •' . ' •, . ·:.•. . .,,, .... · ·. . ··· ....... ·. .. Succeed in Business without the Expense Answer Network has a solution to high overhead that kills profit. With Answer Network's shared-overhead concept. you will have available every office service you need. including your own phone number and answering service ... all at a fraction of the cost of permanent facilities and staff. These Services Now Available r ' Answering service 1 Secretarial service 24 hour dictation I , Letters and typing Word processing Scheduling ~ ..... Reminder service Conference rooms Mail lists 'Telex Facsimile Paging For More Information Call 953·1234 J • Weekly co••lt•enh • Non1Wv f•IMlbte• • 6 •-•ll• lo 3 yeara • So•lhern C.llfona" (, •nt.H.I 11lu loan inform•llon ••nolce t •f -..• llt ltrhHh llht lh.'•~' (714) 759-1515 AliolfAICAN HOME MORTGAGE 130 Ne ... Po•I Ce nter 011ve Oes•gn Pia£a New1.>0 '1 Beach, Callto•n•a 9:1660 S•t•IC't' T1tnt 5,.,,, _.,Your Ooof (Call St~fl H4!•feM "fOU4' A.tea) COSTA 11Ru641-1289 Ila..._._ 1111111ot1 vi«.io495-C>401 JWnea_ea...., .... lh• OloeoFrwy o4 A•_.,~...., I COLLECTORS CORNER Rer• Coln• a Stampe GOU> & SILVER Prices tor 2·zs.t1 G•I• C-Mtl.M M'-C. lllM 1Ct"9'1rr-M•ple LHf IOOCor-~ SO PeMK 'IO'll. S1l1te< 8- .... s.tt ""'· sm.• ...... .,, ... .. ,. ....... ........... ,~ ""~ '·-----· c.11 ... .-.... (714) 556-MSO South eo.at Plaz. Vlll•I• ---·· IA•-----· IF YOU HAVE ACNE 00 SOMETHING NOW By Twry Grant, R. Ph. ~ P1 mples, blackheads. blemishes and boils can make life miserable . They often can be <>on- lrolled or eliminated by proper care lf neglected. permanent scars may de- \"elop We have some helpful products any one can use safely But 1f acne constantly recurs. 1t is wiser to consult a physician Acne 1s caused by poor adjustment or the skin to the secretions or matur· Ing glands . It is not caused by dirt. but fre· quent washing dears the plugged oil glands to pre· vent blackhead forma - tion. A blackhead Is not dirt. The black color is from a chemical change in the secretion YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when yuu need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shop ping nearby, or w~ will deliver promptly without extra charge . A great many people entrust us with th<'ir prescrlpUons. M a y we compoun d yours? PJ.11 UDO PMAIMACY ""~ ···~~ Ne, .... .... ' ..... . Cell 141-5171. P11t • tew word• •o work tor u. lenden are resolved not to be caught in such a bind acaln. They are wary of cranttnc lon1· term rixed-term mort1a1ea. Instead, they want fiexibility. wbicb 1enerally means they seek t.o give mort1a1es whole terms vary with changin& condi· tions. -Such mortgages now exist. but alter 50 years of eJ1peclin1 and 1ettin1 the traditional mortaaee, some younc homebuyers are reluctant to test the new mortcages. Some critics say they are wise to resist. -The argument of the critics is that fiexible rates mean either of two things: that the monthly payments might rise beyond the earning power of the homeowner; that , as an alternative. the homebuyer would need more years than he or she bas remaining to retire the mortgage. More loans due -The criUcs ot the critiCI concede the new mort1a1ea aren't u desirable as the old ones. But, they arcue. we m"5t be realistic. If you want a house, this is the only way you or your family will get it. There are other elements aJso. The typical single-family house now requires u much down as the median-income family earns before taxes in an entire year. That's bard to come up with when infiaUon exceeds wage in- creases, when taxes are rising. and when saved money erodes in value. Moreover. housing really doesn't have top priority, as you might think it would. No matter that some 40 million people will reach age JO. or homebuying age, in this decade. The goal of thos e who would rebuild America is to channel funds into manufacturing plant and equip· ment, and ln that way reduce in· nauon by lowerinc tbe coat "' making 1ooc1a. Somehow, thou1b, lt would seem the houalna altuatiaa bu to be worked out berore that can happen. The situation ian't beiftl ignored, as the many lnnova· tions in housing desien and financing attest. But progress comes slowly oo all fronts: In slowine the rise in prices and brin1in1 down in· terest rates. in rebuildin1 aav· ings accounts. In oblainin1 re1· ulatory approval for new·style mortgages, and in gaining ac· ceptance for them. It takes time. but lime is re- lentless. All those babies born in t he boom of the late 1950s and early 1960s, and who are relied upon to get the economy mov· Ing, are getting older by the second. They want houses. Chrysler deal wrapped up DETROIT (AP> -All lenders approved a compromise with Chrysler Corp.. thus removing the remaining major obstacle between the struggl- ing automaker and $400 million in federally guaranteed loans. a company spokesman said. Chrysler spokesman Wendell Larsen said the automaker's headquarters at Higb,land Park. Mich. was notified Wednesday all of· the agree· ments needed had been reached. "We still have to put a lot of paper work together . but the pieces are there,'' Larsen said. Chrysler had reached a compromise agree· ment with all its lenders in the United States. a spokesman for the No. 3 automaker reported. Chrysler had been awaiting word from undisclose~ OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS banks overseas on whether the agreement would be accepted. the spokesman said. The federal Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board m eets Friday in Washington to consider the automaker's request for the $400 million. Approval of the new loan guarantees was de· layed when Citibank and several other New York banks insisted on getting immediate cash payment after the approval of the new loan guarantees to cover part of the loans already given to Chrysler. The compromise calls for Chrysler to make the payment in 30 days, a company spokesman said . Chrysler already had borrowed $800 million with the help of government loan guarantees. NASDAQ SUMMARY N•""' Enerdn un FrtmfEn SldLC>QI< wl SldLOQI( ~~",,~~on"" f .wnrPt un LSM Cp Syncor wt Elc810 z:::.5&. ... '"•11'1 s h•Gnl "'' AlloyMel APacln Oolt.DI• 11 8H<O Tlmll<Mn CP ll-\U\ GeosCo F r..,Clr 1nlN1tr !>oltd'i>I T Syncor un UP$ '-"~'~. .c"?, .. . , .... ·~ 1.. ,. 1 • f' .. \14~. • 1\. 14 ' )Sl I ._ J I '1 1~. '11 2 • '• 11 2\-7 IH• 1:0.. ,, J t t. ,.... 71., 11 ' • J 1v. • 11. 1''• v.. ,,,. .,. •"'-.,, 2~ ., •1. "''"' + ,,.., J... . ... s 1 J.. "' ,,., . \,. 10 I Po. 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I. ·~ L hK Hiii II.It L ~11(11 .... ~ ~ta t., , " Mj t.t U1 " "1' '· '· ll Tr~ =t F;; sit= I~ li·~fi: 1·::. i ti ~i:. it1i'il(l ... { . . rnJ. . ::t: .,.,.~;a.~ 1~ u},fi~ ~ =t 1110· ~1.. l/i ;fJ ~ tfJi~ :f I' m-y !ll-...t.'!",.J:J llM 'S ~ NL I . fi5 ttl1 1K • ;I,.JI "'1C..,....: till i;t lif~ ~1 NL C-• .\I =t I W t.':' tl1 ... v• 1 • • ~= 1' "="= '-. L -* Medicare . . Pleaae find tDelosed Item la •lalcla II edlcare paid IO percent ol tu.30, wMrtl U.. doctor'• bi11 wu $78. Uledicare paid not • percent, but GDly '8 per~ent.) Tbe dllfereace betweea IO pereeat and._ percent could wipe me out . . . " ". . . J bad to bave some miDor sur1ery oa my eye. The doctor did the 1ur1ery in hla otrlce la l., t h a n 3 o m i nutes. Hia bill was $200. Medicare paid $80 ; our plan paid $.15 and I still had to pay $85. As we 1row older and ---~ IYllll PllTll ~ ~ weaker our probleme are 1oing to increase . THESE AllE TYPICAL of letters that America's older citizens are sending in increasin& number to congressmen, their own organizations, columnist.a - all telling of growing dismay about unexpected health care out-of-pocket costs. The reuon: the op· lion that doctors have to biJl Medicare patients directly. A doctor who uses the optional billing melhod un- der MedJcare has no obligo1ttion to accept Medicare· set "reasonable charges," says DanieJ Sigelman of the Washington-based HeaJth Research Group. Medicare, though, wiU reimburse the patient for onJy 80 percent of the ''reasonable charge." The pa. tient is responsible for paying not just the remaining 20 percent but also the entire excess charge. UNDER THE REAGAN administration -and with full approval of the American public -all social welfare programs will be re-exami.ned. The horrendously costly Medicare part of Social Security will not (and should not) escape the scrutiny. But Medicare's beneficiaries include a huge and rapidly growing segment of our population; a group highly vo<:al about its expenses and benefits. When a do<:tor uses the assignment method of billing under Medicare, he sends the bill to Medicare and also agrees that his full charge will be no higher than the amount Med icare determines is the reasona· ble charges. But doctors have been reducing assign- ment bill s. THE PERCENTAGE OF Medicare bills paid by t he assignment method has fallen from 61.5 percent in 1969 to about 50 percent, according to figures ob· lained by the Health Research Group. The real problem lies in Medicare underpay. ments. not doctor over ch arges. dec la res the American Medical Association. And congressional committees have in fact weighed possible changes in the law to require Medicare to use more current charge data in setting ··reasonable charges .. or to provide tax incentives for physicians to take assignments. This sort of legislative reform would surely take a long time. ln the meantime, there are ways Medicare beneficiaries mi~ht be helped to avoid ex- cessively high do<:tor bills. For example, Medicare beneficiaries could get valuable guidance from directories disclosing physi- cian charges in various specialties. Beyond dispute, directories would help con- sumers in comparative shopping for reasonable as well as satisfactory physician services. If as a group or individual, you want a copy of "Your Money or Your Health, .. either for your own information or as a basis for issuing a directory. send S4 to Department S. Health Research Group, 2000 P St., Washington. o.c. 20036. Sto~I.:• In Tier .'tpotllgllt Mhaf Stork• Did NEW YORI( (AP) Feb 15 TOclay 1SI no 407 !Ill) ., 11 WHAT AM[JI O•O NEW VOAIC IAPI Ft'b 75 Prttv day ... WI 410 l116S 44 17 0.Cllrwd Vnchefl9ed ! .. .,,,~., _ 11, Total Issues •.tt Hew~ • 3'!0 Htw lows '9 roe1:;. 171 U• 711 11 ,, fff•UdN -1 Te~lnt,. Pel. Wfdn•t.O•V C•1t'•' ts", .. '• ''"" ' oound dolfn•ll- 1.•MJOconh•- l lM 41'1• c'"'b • pound, del ovor..S. Tl• s1.1115 Mel•I• w .. ~ comC>CKlle 111 Alllml-1' <Mh • pound, N V M•rc..., "'5.00 JN• lla•k l"l•tl-s.17'.00 troy 01 .. N. y, --s,,,.;;:-- u .s NEW VOAIC !AP) -Handy & Harm.,. """" weo. S11.1JO, oll so Jt. En9elll•rd '""•r SU.HO, oll S0.3', labrlt•19d $11,..r SIJ.4'4, off SO,lll 2 Ci-ttn:o WI lOKC~.OC 4 MorwtEng n 1 ""-'It• •Pl., Rtv<I\ 1 C wE I.Of 8 I PPGlncl 9St-. Vp J7 0 VP U.9 r----------------- 10 CNF19reo II P\#1tn FMll 12 FslMlu Cp s ll 81_,,,, 1' I.FE Ce1t11 ! s Vtdl Uum llf 1'F~ ,, OU-.• s Up 117 UP 17 4 Vp "I UP 0 .0 Vp 11 9 Vp 119 Vp 11 9 Up IU Up 10.J Up 9.7 Vp U Vp M Vp I.I Up I,• Vp U NEW 'l'OA!t CAPI -Price• l•I• T-y 01 9010 col111, compar.o wllll Monct.y'• prlu . ICr~ 1 lroy oi., SW.Oii, WI SS.00, ............ I lf'OYOI., Utj,Oll, ~ t),Oll • ... "-...... t.J ,..., ............ .. ».OO . ......... ,.., ,_, ·-1,..., ......... . .. u.•. Gold q.,., at loM• W-y I. ..... : ITI0"1i"911•1"9 IJOS.15, WP '2.IS. 1. ..... : afler,_ ll•l ... IJOD.50, oil U.50, l"MI•: af"'-11•1"9 \S41l.60. oft SI . .-. ~ ........ , ,, .... U07 Jn, """·"· Z.rklll: let• • ......_. 11.i,.. uo..oo, up U.00; "°'·00-M- Hatuly & M••-•: only d•llv ouote uocu o. otl 12.50. ......... , .,. ... <l"Ot• S.J00.50, ..,, suo. • ...,.....,., only clelly quole fabrlcalecl UJO. 52, otl Sl.60. 1 .. i o.u, ................ Mrs. Mildred Mathews shows off award 'There's no disgrace in honest labor ..• ' She kept buses rolling By TRUDY FULLER ot , .. o.lly Pl ... SUft "Nobody had ever heard of a woman bus driver at.that time. heavens to Betsy!" said the first woman bus driver in Orange County. When Mrs. Mildred Mathews started in 1942, there were onl y three buses. When she retired 24 years later the district had merged into the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and had a fl eet of 64 buses. And the ratio or male versus female bus driver s was almost l-to-1. For a long time she was the "odd ball," as she put it, because she was the only woman at the transportation meetings. "But I was well liked and respected. When you are in a man's field, you have to remember that you're a lady ... All ladies are women, but all women aren't ladies. That's what I used to tell the women busdrivers-tobe a lady." Mrs. Mathews. now 72, started driving a bus after she jokingly told Everett Rea that when be decided lo hire women as bus drivers he should give her a call. "ll was kind of like the Mae West line, 'come up and see me some lime,' '' she quipped. At the time, Rea, the superintendent of scboofs for t~e Costa Mesa Union school Uastnct, was havmg to anve Liie buses himself. His main driver was ill and he had no one e lse. Two weeks later he did call. Although Rea bad to obtain permission from the school board, it was no problem getting Mrs. Mathews ap- proved -woman or not. ''There were no young men because they were going away to war," she explained. "l was even doing custodial work in between bus runs for two years ... There's no disgrace in honest labor. I waJi just an old janitor, but they don't call them that now. Now they call them custodians," she joked in her warm, good-natured way. She drove the bus for 10 years and then became the district's first transportation supervisor in 1952. In her years of being behind the wheel of buses th.at could carry up to 79 children, Mrs. Mathews had few mis- haps . Her only accident occurred on Victoria Street during a thick fog. "A fella plowed onto the back ol the bus, but no one was hurt," she said. Only once did she have a bus break down on ber, and that, she said, was due to an •'under powered motor. not tbe actual condition of the bus . While I was driving," she said, "things were always checked out. Maintenance, as a general rule, just wasn't let go." Although most people would have been going out of their minds with a busload of 79 elementary school children every day, Mrs. Mathews bad few problems. ' "I was a strict disciplinarian, but the kids liked me," she said, adding, "You have to let them know who's boas, but do it In a way that they like you." Mrs. Mathews' fame· ts Only itue in part to her bus driving days. She recenUy received a 40-year pin from the Girl Seoul Council of Orange County in recopition of the years in which she bas sustained ber membenblp. A.'lthoutb she &as been ·moaUy inactive for the lut 15 years, sbe tau1bt Keel croaa F'lrlt Aid courses to any troop that wished to earn the flnt aid badce. Sbe also wu a member ol the Girl Scout Board, which is the •tallnl area for everyt.blnc the Girl Scouts do. Her service to the Costa Mesa community bu not been reatrlcted to girl scoullia1 ancf tramportatioa, tbouch. Before decldinl she .. WOQld rath9r carry klda," abe de· livered mall oa a substitute buts when the nsutar carrier was ill or vacationln1. Sbe also helped durln1 tbe Christmas aeuon because ol the extra wort involved. Mn. Mathews may be retired, but abe bu no plua to waste a mlnute ol ber time. Sbe plam to write a book, "Rey, Bui Driver!" in honor ol all the cbUdren who used to call that out to her. And after all tbls time, tboee aame cblldren turned adult still recopise her ar'ound Costa Meaa ln at.ores or at tbe POil Office. .. ,,,_....,snow on top," abe said.of ber hair, "but tbe face baln't cban1ed." · \ 'I The old facade of the Frances Cit- rus Association (above right) i s now the west wall of the Irvine Savings and Loan Association. The packing house (right) was named for the first wife of James Irvine II. The building was slated for demolition. but the facade (Lower right) was carefully removed and saved. Loan company saves a bit of old Irvine By JOEL C. DON 01 t• Deily l'i ... ltatt Whal should be on the outside is on the inside. And what's on the inside of the Irvine Savings and Loan As- sociation branch on Culver Drive is an interior furbished in Ame ricana re productions - save the facade hanging on 'the west wall. Standing some 18 feet high and 27 feet long, the facade from the Frances Packing House is a vestige of old Irvine ; once perched over the entrance to a 25.000-square-foot citrus process- ing plant. It's cr ack ed and peeling, showing all its 65 years. Dust from the deteriorating paint set· ties in neat piles on the floor. BUT THE ALTERNATIVE might have been loss of every last piece of the aging structure, which was tom down more than five years ago. The Irvine Historical Society and other groups wanted to save the packing house as a meeting hall and stor age facility. accord· ing to society pres ident Ann Johnson. The decaying building would have required renovation of the roof and interior. But the build· ing was structurally sound, Mrs. Johnson said. Although pressed to preserve t h e pla nt as a n historical landmark, the Irvine City Coun- cil voted in Septe m ber 1976 to have the building demolished. It would make way for a housing development in what now is the vi llage of Northwood. The coun- cil had cited the prohibitive cost or renovation. The packing house was tom down in Decem ber of that year. the facade carefully removed and stored in a city public works yard. IRONICALLY, the packing house, built by the Irvine Co. in 1916, was a mong 14 sites in California recommended by the State Historical Resources Com· mission for inclusion on the Na- tion a l Regist er of His toric <See Facade, Pa&e Bit) • Low experience deficient By JEFF PAllllEa OI .. .,..,, ...... ._ Wish you were smarter than you are·!' 11 the answer is yes, you're not alone, and psychologist Beverly Galyean has de· veloped a system she believes will help you be iust that. "I always wanted lo be bright," she ex- plained. "And I alwayir wanted to be smarter than I a'm . Along with that goes creativity, love, p eace of mind and humanity. And I believe we can ac- complish those thil)gs if we learn to utilize other processes than simple ti.near think· ing." Galyean outlined those proceues in her recent two-day program at UC Irvine, "We are Smarter Than we Think." Althou1b that program was a.lmed at educators and counselors, Galyean seys that her principles may be applied by •nyone. · "Finl of all, we should diatin1ui1h between bavinC information and bavln1 knowleqe. I can describe poverty to you, describe the 1betto, the clothes people wear there, what tbe children look like. But not until you allow yourself to ex- perience it, will It become knowled1e. KnoWledl• needa an experiential compo- nent " she aald. "Tbe escltinl part about ex,e'rtenee la that you doa't neceaarUy have to be there to 1ain it. Take a l"Olle for example. You can aay lt'•.P~i~ws OD a bu1b ucl eoetl $2 ln a nolist anup. "But lf you el.ole your eya and picture it, smell it and try to mer1e your m~ J'}~ it, you'll aee It .,a1a, but from the 1DB1CH1 out. What doe• tbe roH do wben tbe breele blta It? You'll-.. becauae you've been there," ,.......... . . . SUeb YllUaliaaUoa metbodl for ex~- ing verbal-linear knowledge aren't new - artists have been using them for centuries -but Galyean believes that people in au walks or life can increase their experien- tial range by using them regularly. "People who test .out with ~o~ IQ.'~ are us ually just experience defl~ae~l. ~he said. "They haven't had the nch, var_ied environment to grow in. Increase the nch· ness of your environment, and you in- crease your intelligence.·· Here are seven steps that Galyean says will enrich your experience: "First, take two to five minutes a day to relax. Take deep breaths, c~ose your eyes and imagine yourself noatiJll. Let your brain reach an alpha-heavy atate."Tbat's the one you enter as you drill off to sleep or when you lint wake up. •·When you feel relaxed, loot at the things you are concerned about -what is interestinl to you at the time. Don't use your reuoninl proceaaea to approach tbe topic, let your mind find another an&1e. When sometblne different comes into your mind. IO with It, explore It. _ ~ .. ''Third, ll you're worried al>oUt a prob- lem viaualil• \hat problem u beinC in a box' with you. Alk the problem to live you an anawer. Make it communicate with you. There'• a wealth of information and idea• in your miDd tbat will come to tbe surface ll you uk It to. Be open," abe said. Galyean'• lntelll1enee-increaaln1 metbodl to beyond the medltatlve, alpba- rteb atai. ol nluation, and lll•Y be •P· plied to neryday contact wttb people and altuatlona. •'The fourtb tblDI to rem4'1Dber la to put younelf lido tbe-poslUoll ol u. ..... around JOU. Wba ;. project J(Mll'ielf ln- \ to their shoes ; fear. love: joy, etc. will come into your head. Those are the feel· ings of the moment. "People tend to limit. themselves to their own reactions and positions. even though they know that any situation is made up of many reactions, many emottons. Open yourself up to those and you'll understand a lot more of what is going on around you. ••Fifth, when you interact with people, picture them at their best. Respond to them at their highest level, and you will be operating at your highest level. This ln· tensifies every encounter -it magnifies it." she said. Galyean's lut two steps to increased in- telll1ence deal with sell-ima1e and over- coming depress ion. "ConatanUy aee yourself u bript. Go into any situation picturinc yourself u havin1 all the anawers . Be • visionary, project your own capabilities to deal wltla what la Oft band. ••Finally, when you find yourself depre11ed and dl1coura1ed, focus oa poslUve ima1ea to cban1e your frame ol mind. Think about thlnc• that make JOU happy. Fresh imaaea clear the mind aad Ult depression -use them,'' sbe aald. Galyean aaya that aueb imAlial draws on mental raoun:es that most ol ua don't even know we have. By enrlcblnl oar daily Uvee, we're collectlq laterest ill oar memorJ bank. Wbea •• Med a p6ece ol lll· formaUOD later, k eomea baek to ui u f\lll, rleb and rounded. Wben .:ombmed with beta ••ff-IMavy "ratlcmal" ·~ we nt tM beat re-salta, lbe U71· W tb PfGPll' trUllal _. m•tel •uelM, we eaa _.. ..__ ( ... ..., ....... , -l Forbes se"'es u cold-har.d dess~rt of fin~nce 91m_91.e.w ,... ................. j ... ... 1•11rt ... ..,...,, ........... , ..... .......... l ...... .,-......... .... =• leaela W.&ed 1wl1t llalcol• Ir. et • l~Moll la UM lrvl8e C.Ut c.....,a.. ............. ··~ -., 111 ,. ...... ........ • e. Mell ol Fort.' t-* at ldwudl c ...... Ne..,..n ~ ... at wMda ............ ....... ol --u.u ··-penom 1,.Uboud wllU. Ille raWed olf "'' ...,... ..... t ol tM na· Uoo •• 9C'ClftOID)'. Tia• H ·year-old rort..1, a Princeton tJalveralty 1rad.aate, writH editorJala for Forbel mqume, OIHI ol the natioD'1 oldelt ud mMt ....u.-. ftnaaelal pubticationa. FoUo•lai in ti•• loot1tep1 of both bl• cranclfaUaer ud father. be ,. ... Uy waa named tbe m .. utne·s president. 8ftLL ITOIVIATED by bi.a earlier talk, wllicb had beeG preaeoted u tbe second lecture in Uae Town Hall aeries 1pon1ored by tbe IHl&MS, other luncheon cueata aebed the op, portwaity to pin additional lml1ht into his economic forecast durin1 an after·luocb ques· lion and answer period. Durtq the Edwards Cinema talk, lbe younc economist had predicted interest rates ol 50 to eo percent within four to five yean if the nation continues its pattern or recurring inflation follo~ed by recession. He also voiced stronc support for President Reacan 's economic policies and encouraged the audience to do likewise. ~ I I ;..,-- I . ' " ... . ::,.,'j/fff/i . '/o"i.•/.~'f.f:: IMllJ "' ........ "'-- Laauu. at their IDOGtbly dinner meeUnt Peb. 11. Dr. NortJl. who deeertbed ber approach to medidne a preventatiH rather Usu "WDeu oriented," earned a baebelor'• de1reea In blolo17 at stanford UnJHnlty, a doetarate ln bloloa at UCI and an doctorate ln medicine at tbe Univeralty of Miami. Sbe baa written 1everal boob ca atreaa and women'• health . AJDOD& suesta at. the WIB meet1n& at tbe South Cout Plua Hotel wwe Barbara Grady, development director for South Cout Repertoey Theater; Joan La Rose of tbe nuor Corp.; Lea Marshall, who is resident manacer ol the South Coast Plua Hotel; and Jennlfer Monroe, who's advertislnc director for the new Orance County Home and Garden magadne. Plans are under way for the second annual Viennese Ball to be held May 8 at the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach. After last year's suc· cessful preview, Orange Coast folks are eagerly anticipating this year's event which again will be emceed by that perennial teen-ager Dick Clark of "American Bandstand" fame. Mn. Edward Schumacher of Corona del Mar bas been named chairman of the ball. Assisting Mrs. Schumacher will be Mrs. J ames Naiamatsu of Anaheim as secretary, Mrs . Eugene Moriarty of Santa Ana as treasurer and Mrs. Vernon Hunt of Fullerton on publicity. If Reagan's economic procram is followed 1 I Forbes predicted interest rates could return to "the single digit level" by spring or summer of 1982. Malcolm Forbes Jr. with Lois Kemble fleft J, president o/ the Assistance League of Newport Beach, and Kay Rudy. president of the Assistance League of Laguna Beach Also assisting will be Mrs. Edward Nance Jr. of Fullerton and Mrs. Robert Schulze of Orangt on hospitality ; Mrs. Leslie Cotton of Newport Beach on menu, and Mrs . Daniel Primac of Orange, Mrs . Richard Fixa of Fullerton and Mrs. Walter1 Berger Jr. of Santa Ana on invitatiQns. Responding to an after-lunch question, the economist said Ford Motor Company's financial condition is "very bad" and that the Reagan ad- ministration should come up with an agreement with the Japanese to ease pressure on U.S. auto makers. He aJso declared, "Chrysler is finished as a full line producer. At best, it's creditors will get 15 cents on the dollar.·• He added, "It's one thing to let a Chrysler go . . . but quite another to see a whole industry go down." -AS FOR HIS prediction on 50 to 60 percent interest rates, Forbes responded to another luncheon question by explaining the trend in rates is upward but that he's optimistic" about econ omic r ecovery in 1982. Meanwhile, however. he said, "there will be anguish." Seated with Forbes at lunch were Lois Kemble, president of the Newport Beach As· sistance League, a nd Kay Rudy, her coun- terpart in Laguna Beach. as well as Dorothy Reichle, who is in charge· of Town HaJI for Newport Beach, and Muriel Bradway, her Laguna Beach counterpart. Other luncheon guests included Jan Rodgers, Betsy Ripley, Jane Montgomery, Barbara Reiniers, Kathy Hudson, Helen Han· non, Louise Oatway. Trudy Pessin and Diane Olanders, all from Laguna Beach. Also attending were Lois Ryker of Newport Beach, Marian Gardner of Lakewood, Ruth " 0nmr.a CUSTOM FRAMING Specl•ll1lng'1n H•nd Finished Fr•m•• 1803 Newport Blvd. Costa Mes;:t 548-4511 Baldwin Pianos and Organs ltt;,<;(IN< •NSIRUMENl"- r .APE<; RE CORO<., RUFFEll'S UPHOLSTHY W'-iY•W..t ....... 1'22Hertlerlt•ll CosleMete-S .... 115' ~o~ ~'>G"~~ ,f .... ,~ ./ c ...... ~-· c.,.... ...... _ ......... . ,.,...._ . ,,.._.. .,...., . "'" .......... • c I I ,, .... c ........... let IE--~ Kttc,_ -llleltl -..--~-......, 1741W......,Dr~ ~:n" Tubbs of Stanton and Nancy Will of Pasadena. The latter three women all are subscribers to the Laguna-Newport Beach series. In addition to the roast beef au jus, lunch consisted of a chef's salad, which several guests complained was far too vinegary: scalloped potatoes, broccoli, soft rolls and lemon sherbet with a chocolate chip cookie. The Town Hall lecture series. which began 13 years ago at the old South Coast Theater in Laguna Beach. is a major project of the Laguna and Newport Assistance Leagues. Through the years, it has grown steadily in popularity and s upport to the point where now the series is sold out months in advance. THE NEX'T scheduled speaker in this year's series is Dorothy De Bolt who, together with her husband Robert, adopted 13 children with a variety of handicaps. The De Bolls were the subject of an award-winning television mov- ie, "Who Are the De Bolts and Where Did They Get 19 Kids?" The De Bolts already had six natural children. Mrs. De Bolt will address Town Hall on March 23. I. ~ Ten "Pink Ladies" have been named by The Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial Hospital. Jacquie Miller, auxiliary president. ex· plained the ''Ladies," auxiliary members. were awarded service pins in recognition of their volunteer work at the hospital. Sally McBride headed the list with her award for completion of 9,000 hours of volunteer work. Others honored were Elva Cohee, Helen Domagalski. Toni Farrow and Magna Schley with 100 hours each. Ruth Finley and Ruth Poole each contribut· ed 500 hours wh.ile Lillian Bradford received a 1,500-hour pin, Ginny Wells completed 2,000 hours and Marion Tilton volunteered for 3,500 hours . Oops! We're sorry! Photos of the couples at the Bahia Corin· thian Yacht Club's Commodore's Ball printed with Tuesday's Happenings column were inad· vertently mixed. The couple identified as Jean and Roy StJJder wete Commodore Lew Spruance and his wife Kim. and the Studers were identified as the Spruances. Women in Business hosted Dr. Barbara Best North, co-founder of HeaJthworks in South Barbara North talks to Women in Business The Daily Pilot regrets the error. ~-C4L Sandal Dressier and sophisticated is the fashion forecast Black Patent also B<?ne or Navy Kid -~ t~~ SHOES .~~;~ 99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551 for sprin~ hikaj; booting, walk.ing ... I I ' , " Yllll ~~:~~R •., ,, .. ,. "'' •• I \l 11 Fnhlon l•l•nd H0·9020 DAil 'f 104 SUN t> \ -ON TH\lllS "" 10 9 mcidine's )~ / th<i sport1f' camp sh::>rt in kak 1 or whlti'Z.. with rt,, our shorts~ lrodi· t.lOnal ploid shirt arrl lcz.atm.r belt mak ci it at·ll.85Ct ... s pring and summttr S• DOINO ... BUSINESS '":··: UNDER A : . , : FICTITIOUS tit NAME? " yeu .._,,. tuet ftled your new Pletlllo11a l11alnoaa N••• ond 1111" Ml yet •u•lllllftN It f9f ,.u11111a1n, ,..._ de11°t ,., .. , , ... , tlte ""'"•''" .. .. .. , . .._ ........ TM DAILY "LOT wlll ........ ~ .. ..._... tor IJl,10 . Ou ................. .... ,. o..... c ... , ... oM ..... ...... ..................... ., .. , .......... ,._ ......... ,., 'Yllltlltelloll seatl .,.,. ................. :.:: .. \'M DAIL. Y MOT. ,,0. ... ,., c... .... ca-. ............... ..... RlllF .......... .-.1111illlC..._ ... ...... _ .. A PRIVATE HEALTH CLUB FOR WOMEN PMIOMALll8 PIONlllONAL PITNlll Be the thin Ind fit petlOn You've always ~anted to be! IWWAUINE'S IN FEBRUARY Atl> GET E MONTH FRE l i Fuaeral U rlo place /or jeam ·; .. ~m:~~ : .. $'5:-· -=.:.;~ -==-- D ..... ·.-.-• .-.-•••· _... ..._ lld .. •• _ .. •...__IT.. L Tiie ~na-.,....... ..,. I ,.,,...ftY ---. --· •---•----' nA~AHAN aka .._....,~..., .......-......----......... . =v :., ........... ..... .... ., .... ., ... AL. E .. T p LANT MAlllUAOaOf': ••o•IMCG.-•r,.,. ... .,., ..... eca .... .-.v ...... ~ .. ~ ...... ........ ._. STRANAHAN ANO OF ~1T1TJOND1 t1AACO.~u ._., •• ,f"8111.~•w. ., Y-. ·- .................... W •· Wa•IJEl .... ,... ... :s PETITION TO AD · llU.0..~T•=NALOPU .,,.,:•••~-~~= =:....:r:-~:: rt ... W +rlPc' eWa.e..... ................. MINISTER ESTATE NO. CPMML.YLAWI '•i.., 111 •II . 111111, llT ~-....._ .. .. ... ...... ... I .... ,. ..... -•AJ..,.... CAMIMllM••--~ .......... --.Clef .., .......... ~=-· MJ M ·Ml·laW ••la..... llliUlllil M -GI!~ ..... , TO a 11 tie Ir 1 1 , • ._:.::'nuwt-r ..-.a:-..:. 'ft., .. _. ........ .....,...., I wltn 1M H• au l ·JW..W da...-•wed._,_.._ 18 •••r 111' ..,._ • ............ :::~~·l=~·c:.1.:C:::~ ....:.:=-..:-..:'W:.:':Z n.i. ......... _ "' .. .,.. .. =:-... 't";...•:,.:i,:i..~ .. .,.._ .. ..., ...... Jew •1W1111'...allaeb. _.._II b.1 .. Me•••,.. Albert p StrwMn •k• ._ .. .., ..,,...... ~;lf:"e10r..,c.-i, ... Vuhr• ., •••••u D•llt•r Ult • ~~ • I •• '-"'~ bJ wMl ... ,_l hnst ... ,......w Albert PSMt StrwMn of ..::r=:-:::~,:.:.=:: . P, .. , m_._--.cw......., ... --~-..a II I .. _ ---.. 1 -... __..__ I ....... ....._ w..... L ~--car.., c...e Detty Pt .... ~ --:.= •ert• ':=."''"' --• -• .,,,., -..-----. • agune S..Ct'I, Callfornta .. ........, ... ,_,........, , ...... -.Merdts.11,"" 11W1 .. ~.._= ......... :; ............ l ..W. .. -*WI.. wW ..... to .......... nw c 0 N, IDs NT I AL T 0 and pet"'tonS who may be .............. ~:::z:· ... ---. . Ave!MI '· ............ v ....... ..... ... ...,. .. HMol .... •••••. WIU JOU .. , ..... YoW' N··DING so•· L· MDD•G ott'ltrwf• lnterffted In th• UHM ... .... ........... •• PUBUC NOTICE .__...., ............. .... ~·· r:':' 91 view l.ll6I llole 't.{ •• • , ...... s.aa wllland/orestate: .,.....,.... • ..,__.. IH. • • .._..,__..., u1.e1_._..... • .., .. _ la l ... .._.... • • WISDOll: '1'1111 Iller &e ••-U. A pethton ties been ......_ .. • -... u.. ,.,,.... P1CTtft.,.11UM••• 1•1....,.. ...... , ..... ...._ -'1 • 1: •n-r· · •• ..... -• l • • • t ? -AN I 0 ... .._ eN .,._... -•r' _ .. 1, 11 f 1 1 e d b R e L ,....,. • • ,..., LM,. 1....,_,... 111AMa nanMaNT ,,,.,.._ " '-• _...~, .. •1 a..· 1 (a llalf -., Wore DAUOJrrD·IH·LAW ----...--· Y v • . _..._, Ttw f....,...,... i.""" -..i. w111c11 DMt• m .. _, ..... ,., Utt fuenl) t*tat we alMM&Acl Dlld IOWA: la •f i Jll I ' alwa71 a ....... &o •alTJ fer Stranehan Ir\ the Superior 11u ........ ._ ... .,,_ .... _ .. : =-=:~.::"::':: laun'J ............ , I.... . .. ,.. .................. M ·~et.:'·~. frea a Mak. It'• ~:qu:!s~~gat;~~e R~~n~ :!c~....::..:=.· :-:.:: AHDc~;~~~~~~,"=~~~:::. ...... _._ .............. JtlM .._ ..a .-. _ .. __ ..... =-( _.._ .._ ••e• llJ8t. s --·· .. ....,..... • •teeec ..... -t1 17411 A~•.·-H·--i--.... _.. veo11w•Aef-"'· -08r wl ...... IO -._ Wt ,._ .. ·--tranaf'llln be •ppolnted •S uy eie-, _.. .., ,.....,._ • CflllfWftj;""7~· ..., .,._.. -"· s.t• "*k ... IMll c-• M 90l • .-.. .. "tM famil1 " llJ •• ) te a '-ral. Alla. personal represent•tlve '*""· c..,. J. DetNn, m11 A•el• 1t:• •·"" • Tueear ... ,... ..., ., ..... .._....,.... wiU. IUa mot.lier. &M .., ._.. laa•• ... llMb Do 1101t f.el otolc10ard, a.If· to •dmlnlster the estate oi 1· +~. r;:.~11':!,!~~~~.!, e .,.11,klft LeAe, .. _.1,... .. 11Nc11. c•11er"'• ~~:· ~~~,~~~.::~~i IO •• ~ OU\ I.Del boulbt a -· ....... ., Jew. u ... .. coiudou -IDIWl11? Welcome to Uw Albert P. Stranahen (Un· conurnl119 your ....... 1 .... II yoo; 1•11 ~: ... ._._. •• ceMllCllN "' ...... s. ,._ st .• Cltr of LM ~ ...... To -*I luult to la.Jury J•'n ........ ~ &Ms.,..... cl•b. Tlwtt'• lwlp for II°" in Ana der the Independent Ad· 10111ur•-•wttllln>Odeyuf-dlvllhoat. cn111y 01 Lo• A" .. '"· Stet• ol my mot.t.erln·law handM my tl4 ...... laa"..,.1 *--Land•r•' booklet, "TM Kq to mlnlstretlon of Est•tes~~;:=~:,~~r;:::':.'!..:~:oe~~ Tt1••~~ .. wt1t1t1w ~·:.n;:..~~:~:r°:.9='J: a.ubaod llQIDe moo.y y •• r ...... ,. ••• •• • • a• P"'*"""1/ ... Selld 50 cnl• '°"" ...,._ Act). The petition Is set for u ... court INY ent ... )lldgfnenl con· c-·· Cletti of Or ..... c-... Veo1tw• .-...... ~· 1, --heerlng In Dept. No. 3 at ••Int,. lnfll'Kll,. or o..,., order• c.on· F9" " ltll ' I tlO, llletw"" Lu1111 ProducllN Our U ·year old SOD wa1 wl&la&a W ~ te ea,,_ lier requ• Giid a loftg, damped, Mf· 100 Civic Center Drive urnlA11 div1110n ol ..,_ny, •pouwt . • ,.1._. Sor¥k•. t11t.,.,. Tr~ e .. ,., clreaaed oka.y in b1a jeau and diaa,.....al, ............ fu addreaed envelope to Ann Lalttkr•, . West In the City of Senta WPPO•I. Cl'llld cu .. ooy, cl'lllcl "'-'· Plll>ll ..... Or .... C.0.11 Oel11' ~I... CorporetlOfl .................. ,., sweater Abo, our 5· year-old wlllea • ..... Mr ._ te &Me P.O. Bor 11"5, Clncago, IU. •n. Ana,' C•llfornla on March ~!11°~~~':'ii!°:~~= ::~.:.''::~~:· '"·"·._Merell 5· '2· iwt ,,..,i :*'..': =..:'.~!':'::.9 ~~ She's carrier of stress Some people have the weirdest ideaa for re- Ueviq stress. The newe1t one is ealled a Oota· tioa tanlt. Por $25, you climb into a wooden box with eilbt incba ol 91-dep-ee water to which 800 pounds ol aalt bas been added and for the next hour float in complete dartneea and set in touch witb your feellqs. Doean 't that sound' lille run? Sorta like beinl sucked up in your sweeper b•t to get your mind off your split ends. Frankly, the flotation tank sounds like just anotber way to set tbe phone to liq. It's nntbint new. Back in t.be '40a every 1lick mquine on tbe newutand was pusblnc for the mid-afternoon bot tub soak. It was to be tbe housewife's answer to boredom, depreuion, neurosis, unfulfiUment, lower tw.c-tr n11lna. a short pay week and unrequitedl~e' It always showed tbe woman immenina herself into three feet of suds, leanlnt back with her eyes closed and • sensuous smile on her Ups . . . lost lo space. It never worked for me. Even with my eyes closed. I smelled the mildew on the shower cur- tain and realized if I cut off any more on the HOROSCOPE Taurus: Look for pay dirt FRIDA\', FEB. rt By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Green light flashes -transaction can be cons ummated with 1111111•1:1 ~--. --- bottom, I'd end up withe rtqa. I'd pretend my legs were only as big as what surfaced on the water and became very depressed when the rest noated to the top. And I would strain to bear the muted voices outside the bathroom door. "I'm telling." "What kind of animal is it?" "You got that all over mom's fur collar." "You're bleeding all over that bedspread." "A lot of people live without a car." Sometimes, a note would come under the door and as I stru11led to beach myself, shiver· ing from the cold, yet consumed with curiosity, I would open it to read, "Can we split a Pepsi?" The worst part of the hot bubble b•th was the dreaminc. How do you get spaghetti stains out or a plastic tablecloth? What does it mean when the lawn around the septic tank turns to quicksand? If a kid toes in and you don't do anything about it, will she still be invited to the prom? Aft.er awhile, I stopped trying to relax by artificial means. I made up ·my mind a hot bath couldn't solve all my problems. 1 just stopped sweating the small stuff. Some say I'm too practical. l oversimplify things. Like when my friend said her dog was getting too fat and s he paid 57 cents a can for dietary dog food, I said , "Why don't you just feed him less?" She looked at me like I should have known the answer, but I honestly didn't. I don't have s tress. but I think I'm a car- rier. Facade. • • overseas company or agent. Be aware of (C-U.aed from Page BS) n ecessity for r evisions, recons truction, Places nine months after being destroyed. rewrites. You'll understand! The building was named the Frances Citrus TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Dig beneath Association for the first wife of James Irvine II surface -you could be mining for pay dirt! Ac· Frances Anita Plum. It was built to clean and cent oo finances as they affect one close to you, h including partner, associate or mate. Scorpio is crate t e new Valencia oranges grown and involved so is Gemini. harvested when the county once was paved in citrus groves rather than aspbaJt. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Focus on basic The Irvine Historical Society searched for a needs. diplomacy· partnership possibilities -locatioo for the facade, including sites at Sad· do not attempt to force your way. Win through dleback College and Turtle Rock Park. The slruc· an understanding or what has been lacking in lure needed a spot where it would not be exposed life or one close to you. lo the destructive effects or sun and rain. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Define terms, Last spring, the society accepted an offer by 11, 1911 at 9; 3C) e .m. Tiie Q•rnlwnenl ol •-•· IMIA9 o1 lie for Cl<lfl or ceelllor'I cllecll .,ly. If IF You OBJECT t money or pr-riv. or olller court PUBLIC NOTICE Ille Nie !Wice lrt lllcl ._Ml HCeed 0 the •ulllorl zeO procff<llnQ• m•Y •lso •• 11'9 """of 1111 M<urocl·l-llt.-.Sr., granting Of the petition, lUll. ..,,. Petroml,.,lfl C.por•kNI Wiii Crecllt you should either appeer D•t•d J.,,...ry 22. '"' PICTITlout MMN•M 1t1c1 11t _.. _ 1or 1t1e '94tat.,.,, at the hearing end state ~!~~A BRANCH. Tll• •=::.=~• ,.1,.. :,:. of,:c:,.a.:_t11~1w:.=•~:, ~ your objections or file e1 ~rll•nn ,..,,,n, Wtl-•: 1•. •--tf'7J1,•.21 1 ...... 1nc..,.1 written objections with the Deputy OHM VIHTU"lf· LIMITED, 1$41 -tll,"'1.'5 In ,,_terffl """ lnterffl court before the hearing JAMISAAllDHP,LASTIEll s...telllte Clrele,~.CA...... eccrulnteftlllr.t•ofPIUI .......... · Utt • .....,,.. llff.. 0.111e1..,, IM., e C.llf...W. cer· Al tf Mere.ti J, Itel, Ulero wtll lie ... Your eppearance may be s.tte ,., -••!ell. 1wt 1oe101e 111te Cir<•, tt..· -_,,..,. .. -•• .-....... '· in person or by your at· L .. •....-..CA•M ..... cA.... 1w,1 .. ._oftw..5'1.aslflpr11Kljlot torney Tet: um w .JU1 Htr..n 1.. ...,.,..., ns cor..--... .-.211 .. 1111 ..... T11e .. ,......, IF. y 0 U ARE A Publl•hecl0r""911CCN•I Dolly Piiot, Drt••.~,.,,......CAttotA ln<tYdlnt ,__.... e11or,.,1· , ... Feb S.12, 1',1 •. 1'191 •SJll lfdW•"' D. Mltellelf. )10f WI..,,.•• •"' l•••I ••••nt e1 , wll lc ll ':REOITOR or a con· ...................... ca,... p .. ,.,,. _ _..._,nc .. r••MWlfl tlngent creditor of the de· J•n•ll 11111ctw11, UM w11.111r• .,...,.,. ...., pr_.,. ,,. ceti.t•••• ed t fl' PUBLIC NOTICE ..., .................. CA.... ,.,.,._.. • ..,...,..,..,.r.,..,..fortM ceas , you mus e your Tll•• Wt!-11 ,_f ... 11y • .. •• of.._...,,_., er• 1 .. ttw-. clalm with the court Dr PICTITlout•Wf••H 11m11 ... --...... tf tis.•.•· 0n ,. • .,.,.,., 1, 1M1, present It to the personel _& ..... IT&T•M9•T DeMe11ey, 1M. ,,.,.,w ... 14 E...,,, c ... ...,.11.,. ••· -~ 11....., L ~ -• -ke ef .... dlHolOlllofl Of Ille represent•tlve appointed T,,. fo1-... --••,..... """ ..._ J94111v-.... by the court within four ""1 -.. Tl'lt• ,.._..,. ... 111 ... w.., '"" o • ..., tfllt ,,.,, c1ay of Fet>r...,r, months from the dete of GAS u, "•1 1ieec11 ..,..,••0••. c ... ,,f., c1er11 o1 0r-c.-, ... "'' HuRll .... etl llNdll C•ltlor....... .., first Issuance Df letters as An.,_,., s.t ..... 10"1 H-•-. "" '· 1 ,.1....,. provided in Section 700 of G•'*" o...w, c..i11w..ie ._,., ,..,..,_ 0r.,.. c-o.11, Ptt.1, '"'"'-••• c.or_.•tlon C.l~,DIJNN~ t ltUT(Hlfll the Probate Code of d,!,":.':'*-•'u--•Y .. 1" "" 11.••.M.-•11s.1w1 ,,,,.., California. The time for _,,..., s.t•rn AJ\•,.Y•81 IAW Sn ~ .,._, Str•t filing claims will not ex· T1111 ••-w .. 111 ... w1111 '"" plre prior to four months ~:-:: f1ff• °' °'-C-.ty on from the date of the hear-.. · .., ,.,,... Ing noticed above. Pul>ll.,.. Or ..... CM .. Delly Pllol, YOU MAY EXAMINE 'eb 1t,,.,Me"11s,11,1Mt .... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,,., '°ICTITIOUI MM•llH NAMS ITAHMS•T Th• foll-'"' pe<JOftJ •r• dolnQ .... JIMH• the file kept by the court. If you are interested In the estate, you may file • re· PUBLIC NOTICE OLANDlll'S WIELDING \HOP, INC • Celllorftle cor-OllWI, 2111 _ Eut L• C•Hle AvellYO, Meltolrn. quest with the court to re· ,.1n1nou1iau1uH11 . I I t' f th .. .,_.. ITATl-MT ~e1ve spec a no ice o e T,,. ,.,.._.... .,._,,, •• ,,.."11 ...,.i. inventory of estate assets ,.. .... and Df the petitions, ac-MS MANAGEMENT SIEllVICES. c o u n ts and rep o r t s ms1 Pfwtpa i.ene, H..,,111191on Beech, described in Section 1200 C•ll~;:~,_..,,,., co11re11, 1us1 of the California Probate Phelp• L•ne. HunllnQton BHch, Code. C•lltornl• m4' JOHN W. DOWNER, 01!1~~.':'6',.,.u '' tonoucteo by •n In· C•lllornle .... lenner Sll••I Melot l"c , • c.i11 ....... c.._e11on, 2111 EHi u C•Hl• A-. -Im, C.lllornl• na. TM• .,.,.,,,... 11 conducted lly • cor pou t Ion. ...... 51..et M8tel, Int ,__L ............ -Tiii• .._._ wM fl1.0 wotll t,,. Count, Clonl of Or-County on J.,. U,1tll. I.Qt~·"' 90071 17111 ... ,_ Put>lt.i.e Or-Coo\t Delly Pll~ Fet>t.,.rtJ6, 1911 "1·11 PUBLIC NOTICE "°ICTITIOUI llUSIMIH _. ITATllMSNT Tl'le fOll-1119 Pff..,,, ••• doing l>uJln"' • AV OCADO CONDO LTD . PAllTNl~IP NO I & 1, Mii Voo Lido, \vile 211, ~••port ll••<h C•lllornla t'MJ. ' The ••••II• Corporellon, • c.tllornl• corpoutloft, 1•71 VI• LldO, S..11• 111, N-1 IMKh, C.IHornl• n..,. Tl'll\ buSlllH\ II ~OnOUCl•O lly • llrnlled -1,.rllllp, 401 Glenneyre Street, Suite 0eoore11 Me111er cot1re11 H • L • g u n a a e a c h • Thi• st•-• ..,n •ilec1 wuh ,,,. ,.,,_ Ca llfornia 92651 ( 714) County Cl•rt. 01 Or•noe County on P..c.11.-0r.,.. con t D•llY Piiot, 497 _2443• ' Fell. J, 1•1 ,.1""7 Feo. 12. 1t, h . -ch s. 1'91 no~n n... a.1.111 Corporellon. P ... IL .. lell1 PrHidenl Tlllt •lel-1 •M 111.0 with Ille Count~ Cler• of Or.,ge Count1' on Feb. II, Utt. Published Orange Publl1hecl er-co .. 1 Delly Pilot Coast Daily Pilot. Feb. 26. Feb. 26, ~rch s. n. n. '"' 27. March 5, 1981 793·81 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMIEHT PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSIMllSS NAME ST&TIMINT T l'lt foll-illQ person Is C)olnQ llu•I· The fo110..,1ng person> .,., dolnq ntH ••· l>Uslnen u . VA NLEY'S GIFTS, ... 2 Uno.,., .. INVESTOIJS, L ro . 10101 Sleltr Avt .. WtttmiMter. CA. n.a Av e , Sulle 211, Founl•ln Veller. CorMIUI L V•n cler Lff, _.., C•lllor111•'270I Un lvers.e Ave . WHtmlnsttr, CA PUBLIC TAX CORPORATIO N, 92.U INC., • CellfOfnl• corpor•llon, 10101 Tiii• ~Inns Is <Ondu<leO by .,. In· Sloter Ave , Sult• 21 I. Fount•ln divlelu•I V•ll•r. c.111om1e 9770I Cornet.n L. v ... c1er Le• Thi• llu•lneu h ton011ctta by • Thi• ,.......,.t w•• lllecl •111'1 ti. llmlled pertnersl'llp. county Clerk ol OrMge Count1 on Public Tu CorP .. Inc. Ftb. 23, 1•1 TerekSMnet, "°1-p, .. 1.,...,1 PublllNO Or-C~•I O•llY Pilot, Tl'llS stelemenl ••• loltcl with IN Fob. 1', ,...,.Cl'I S, 11, 19, 1"91 Count• C•erk of Or., .. Cou11t1 on Febru.,y 1•. 1"91. "-Pullll•NO Or-C.,..sl O•llY Pilot, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUS IUSINlfH MAMIE STATIMll•T Tiie fol lowiftll .,..._, h doinQ buSI· PUBLIC NOTICE MU e 1· B c OOE~I NG co .. 1SJ9 ,.C,.1T'1ciisauiiiiau -Monrovt• Ave., No II, Newporl MAMIE ITATIEMIENT Beech, CA 9MJ The follo•lng pe,,on• •r• esolnv B••uforO c Doe""'· 1 Ut buSllle\S ... Monro•I• Ave., No 12, Ne..,port PART¥ TIME'-S. 11592 Mou Fo•d a.;~,~·~='' conclueled by ., In· Or ., Huntlnvton Buch, Cellfor,.lo tl-. divlctuel. Jellrey T•ytor Hulllne, lstJ Moss 8eoulcrdC. Ooor"'G Ford Orlvt , Huntington Bee c,., Tl'lls Itel-I .., .. lllecl •llh IN Celllornl• n... County Cler• of ~-County on Wllllem Owl9"1 Cresa-11, Jr.. 1.01 Foll. 24, 1"1. lilo<A11flw -. Apl. JOE, S...t• A"•• '°1S616t C•lltOfnl•. Pullll.,_, Or-Coost 0.111' Piiot, This buslNH 11 conduct.a by • F•t>. 26. llMr<ll 5, 12, It, 1't1 g-r•I _.,,.,.,..,,,p, PUBLIC NOTICE tlt·l l Jelfr•1' T. HuHlne Tflil llet..._I "" filed Wilfl IN County Clerk ol ~en .. Count, on Fell. 10, 1•1 ,.CTITIOUS MlllNEH l'IHS79 •AMII STATl-•T Pullll....., Or-C~ll Dolly Pilot, Tiie loll-1114! .,..._, I• clol119 ..... ,. Feb. 11, It, 2'. Men:h 1, 1tt1 7•9 .. 1 neu es --------Feb. 2', -· S, 12, 19, 1•1 9s.41 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI •UstMllU CALIFORNIA MIRROR DESIGN, •AMII ITATIMIMT t Reilly O.. Huntington Boech, CA. PUBLIC NOTICE The fotl-lftll penon Is ClolnQ busl· t2•'4 ,.,. .... : 01...,... tit. Lln0M1'·Pler<t, IM1 "C'TITIOUS 9USIN•ll ascertain perimeters of task, assignment. the Irvine loan association to move the facade into You're asked to "correct" what has been an in· its n ew branch. N111u tolera ble work situation. In keeping with the period of the facade, the '~~'::!:::-i::T" FASHION GAL, 7SU EOln9er Reilly Dr., Hvnllnvton Be•ch, CA ~ITAT•M••T Ave., Hunll,..on BMch, CA. ,,_ .,... Tiie followl"I ...,... 11 dol"9 l>uM· 5-1'9 8-, 2071 .._ Piece, Oft. TM• ...,..,,.., Is conducted by .,. In· neu es: LEO (July 23-Aue. 22): Opportunity exists loan association designed and furnished the Th• fo110 ... 1n11 ~,.on•.,. oo1ng to ca~ilaJize on past efforts and present creative branch to reflect a tum-of-the-century ambiance. bu••~;~~cT MANAGEMENT co .. l•rlo,CA.t17•1 Olvldu•I. AEllO·TECH PR ECISION Tl'll•bullnn•l•<ondu<9clb,enln· Ol ..... R.LlndMY·Plerc• MACHINE, 2714 Hiiitop Drive, OivldUel. This ... i-t .,._. lllecl with Ille N .. port 8Ncll, CA - abilities. Emphasize style, power, potential 102 Furllon une. Tu111n, ce111ornr• S-...,,.. 8-CouRly Cler• of 0r....,. C-11' .,. Normon Cll••IH Sl'I•"•· 171• Tiii• scec....-,. .. llled with ti. Fol>rua'1' 14, 19'1. Hiii ... Or.,..._, .. ec:JI. CA.,_ Older individual. very likely born under n":i-n w. w1 .. ,.,. 17402 v.1..., ... Capricorn, helps in "opening doors." /Q M1u1on vlefo, c..tllornle t»t1. Count' Clerk of ~ ..... Covnty on ,.I_, Tiii• ~NU I• c--by °" In· Feoruery 23, ..... P111>1I-Or-CMll 0.11, Piiot. dM-1. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasi1e • • • Ronetd E. Clerk, 2l2t Port I d al Zer•lc• Pt•ce, Ne..,port Beech, Pl .... Feb U , end MMch S. 12, 1', lttl Norm~ Pu1111.-0r.,.. C.O.sl Delly Piiot, m .. 1 Tllll .__. wn llled wllll Ille Feb. u. -_,,,., s. n. It, 1w1 c-•• Cl«tl of 0r.,.. C-tr on quality, st.ructure, design -a an or re c.111or .. 1em.o. estate transaction could grab spotlight. Family (C•llMled from Page 88) Thi• bull ....... conOUCl•d by • m .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE F ... i.. 1411· member wants to talk about long range pro-oeno••• =r:.·~1 ... ., ..__ gram. Protect your head! those momentary flashes of brilliance that seems Tl'll• , .. ......,,. -• mec1 wlll'I ,,,. PUBLIC NOTICE IOUTMCOAIT ..1...., Pullll"'9CI Or-C.0.11 Delly Pilot, Feb. Jt, Morell S, 11. It, f .. 1 L·--.. (Se 23 0 t 22) G t d f ingenious. County Clffk ol Or•noe County on Al. QUALITY MAM&91MllNT auan pt. · c · : e rea Y or "In this moment-or insight, you'll see the Fecu, lt11. ,.n1nou1•u11Hu N•AIM••n ... •~&110 ---------- PUBLIC NOTICE Ul .. I new start, chance for added inde~ence and h 1 · · . h 'd d oAvts AND K•LLtAN M&~• ITAT•M•NT --........... w 0 e picture in an instant," e Sal . "You on't JtOIMetArlflUrlllVO 2 -NOTIC•CWPU9UCN•Allllf0 opportunity totest"pettheories."Sborttripcould see the grain of sand, you see the whole beach. N•w-111Nc11,ee1iiorn1••11MO ,,.!:~::"'-119 ...,_, 1• dolnv ...,.,. TocONMoe•M001,.1CAT1oet ,.1nmout•u11••11 be on agenda. You receive mesaase which COD· You feel it, touch it, taste it, smell it. You know it "IMV PAC•F•c•HVESTMENTGt1touP. o,.APIMALCOMPUAttC•0&T1 _...ITATllMS•T veys regard, affection. PUl>ll"'9CI Or-C.0.•I o.lly PllOI, nu Ouparil Ori .... Sull•O. lrvlne, CA. ANO llXT9NMO.CWA V&lllA•Cll Tiie IOll-1"9 --••• 001"9 from tbe inside out. It works like a dre•m." Feb."· a.. 111erc11 s.12, 1"1 11w1 ttm CAM 110.111•1 -• .... us: SCOaPIO (Oct. 23-NOV. 21): Consolidate U · oougl .. A. Lora, 2212 Dupont NOTI CE IS HEREBY GIVEN .,,., SUNSET FllAMlltS COHS'TltUC. Sets· check bank book sav1'ngs protram PUBLIC NOTICE Drive. SU11oo, 1rv1ne. CA. n11s 111e s....111 c.oes1 Air o..utv -...... T•~. ma u Llllde c-•· N--1 • ' ' G d This ...,.,""• 11 conctucl.O by • _,,, Dlstrkt _.,,. lleMd will llOlcl Boecll, Cell-• '1WO. budget and bring money potential into focus. ~oup to .; Qcuss '°ICTITIOUl•USl•lll llrnltM~. •public ,,..,,,. •t 10:00 •.m. °" llo,ert W. McC.,ler , IU1 Cancer. Pisces and another Scorpio play impor· • i ~ •AIM ITAT•,,..HT Dau91• A. Lord nurs•••· April >. '"' •t su N. P-IM, _,......, llN<l'I, ce111orn1• c;o..ret p.n,... Sycemort A-. Sth Fl_. ... ,d ttMI. tant roles. You "wake up" with vital answers. Th• lollo•lnv ......... ••0 doing Thi• ... _ ..... 111.0 •Ith ...... _..., SMt• -· Collfornl•, to Con· Joftll Luno, utl LA u ..... CCMirl, SAGITl'ABIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): What bad l b h ""'1~.:~ ~IL STOP, ,. .. , CoHf cou11fy Clerk o1 0r.,.. co~"''" .,. •Ider moclllkett°" of • flnot com· .,. .. port 9oocll, Cellloml• t2MO. bound •-t •rt Februorv 11 1•1 pllence 41•1• •nd ••l•111lon ol • Tllh WtlMSI h conducted i,y • been a confusing Situation will re lll your na ura W HW1'., 0-Pelm, CA. •2'2t ' PIMlll ••rlenco lor • ecryllc resin ......... ec. -rel __..,.ip, f f I/ Cere'I' D. T. Werd, 1711 P-Cir., I I ..... end ..it -..... ._...., W. McCer1er av or. Cycle is high -circumstances avor your Hun11,,.ian 11Meh, CA,,,_ F•~~':: !!.~s c:,-•:, C::r Pt1ot, .;..:,r.: ,,....., .: sw~DLow, 1,.'t.: Tiii• ,_1 w .. meo wtth ,..,. efforts. Take initiative, exercise independence Scotti wens, 1111 P ... cir., Hunt· · · · · • ..,.., mu w....,.. •-.Gorden oro .... c~"'' c .. n. of 0ro1199 c...,11,, 0,. or thou .... t. acti'on. FolJow hunch'. Two natural methods for planning or pre-l119I ... 8Neh,.CA. tt'4t C•llforRle, cu,, ... 11., •110•elln1 '" Flitl. 10, 1•1. &1• Tllh _.,. .. ts conducted by ., ,,.. vlal•UOfl of llllle met ,,,. Seutll c .. 1 '1um CA.PRICOaN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis venting pregnancy will be d.iacussed in meetings 01v1ctuo1. PUBLIC NOTICE . Air oue111, 1111 ... 0 .. m ... 1 Dim itt PUl>ll.,.. er-c.oest o.uy Piiot, on temporary seclusion, feeling of confinement, at the Natural F•mily Plannin& Department at ~~ ~~ woro 11u1n .,.. ,_.... ....... 11u1e 211 ro· Feb. n, 1t, "· Mercl'l s, 1w1 122 .. 1 ability to bring cheer to t.boee who are in· St. Joseph Hospital of Orange on Mondays, T1111 .... -wn 111.0 .. 1111 111e "''CTITIOUS 1u11H111 qui••• • ~· 10 operete •NI , .. M•rch 9 and 23. c~"IY Clffll ol Or-County on NAMll STATEMENT qulrH -retlOll In ecconteec• "1"' PUBUC NOTICE capacitated. You're complimented on "heallnc Feoruervn.1•1 Th• •ot•owtnv pe.....,. 11 dolnQ ...,,,. ~~=!,-:!1:=1:,,•._1c1.:;=-,.,1 ___________ _ hands." Don't fear the unknown! The techniques -the Ovulation-Billings .. 1 ..... neH(~~M.L TAYLOR &COMPAN'I' ,_, .......... olflceet-He....... lfOT'ICSTOC••OtTOb AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11): Unu1ual Method aod the Sympto-Tbermal Method -Pu•11-0r-eoos1 o.11y Pl1ot, m PAc1F1c coNTA•NE~ 2•i ... ,, cien, "r E. "'•'' o..1 ... E• ,.,....., ... chance exist.I. to uticulate feellnts, spiritual "are very effective for couples who are well· Feb.J•.Mlf1Nrcll s.1t,1t.i•• , .. ,, :,~~;d••Y. com Me.e, c•1tf;,rn1e =::·:=:,'~"';~ ... ~"~~..:'!:.!:'. : _ _:-.:.;:, values. People are wiUing to lilten, e .. er to instructed and motivated," said a departme.nt M1c 11 .. 1 Lou•• rev•o•. HI c.111er"'•· A""1111r...-.. ....,. ............ become allies. Popularity increases, wlsbel are spokesman. PUBLIC NOTICE B•oed••Y. com Me••· c.111orn•• ...=ir.9: ~-~U=,~ r11e ,,_.,. ...._ ...., .. _ transformed into realities. Teachers at St. Joseph were trained at the PICYITIOUS ausi••M ,,~,~'' oos1 ..... ,, con0uc1eC1 by •n In· .... ..,.....,.. " I•,....... "* "'"· °' ";!-:::::S~·~ s.mwt Mel· PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Major domestic Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Loe An1eles and MAMSITAHMS•T 01 1oue1 1.i1 , ... .,._, • ...,,m.. 10 ,,. , .. 011• .. u, -.11 .. ut '""' ad.ju1tment indicated·, on.nu--ol communica· belon1 to the Natural Family Plannin1 r11o,......... .--•• .... """ v MkMelLoui•T•Y'°' H"''"'...,., live .. ,....., ..... A••-· LAllllM 9Mci., C•tttent•• r -u.uc:lt NH .. , Thll stet-I *H lllod •Ith U... lle..-f!ll-. "'51 lion, plan ahead for travel or vacatiOD. Unique Teachers Aa9ociation. .JOAN 01t1:EH & ASSOCIATES. co11nty Cl•• .. of 0r .... eoun1y DATED:,..,_.,., 1•1 T._ -.,.. _....... ..._ "bonor or civic aaal1nment could dominate For information and a free brochure, call mu K"-LaM, L..-... 1.,.1, F•b•u••Y '· ,.,, !:""cai:• ... .,..._, .. ttie .,......__: al --' ., .. ,. a111 _. 7881 Jlond ... ~ ... t. Tbunday CA. '261t '°111 Ol*llttMNr.._ llMrd .... ~ ~-.... ca-~~ ...:~~r_•_on_. __ •_c_~_~_•o_. ______________ ~~~--~-~·-e_~_. ___ , ___ a_y_~ __ ~~~-·-----·--~ h~~~"~ mu K"~· ~~1.-0r.,..c~~0o•~~~ -~~·· ~~--~ -L •--N'--1 .ra -n F b S 12 It -1'11 443-tl ... , .... ......,., C..1M,CllltllnNtt11l -·--._,...,...... •.' ' .~. °"""''*" AU....__.._ --.. FREE hlca...J ..... ~ ... Wiiia .., ,. •••• G~AMD OP8'1MG w ..... 2 ........... 1 .... ,_ . 494 .. 6 Laguna Beach Museum of Art ANTIQUE SHOW Preaented by the Alflliatel Frtdaf, February 2'1 mad Saturday' Pebnw')'• Noma to 9:00 p.m. Tllh _.,.. i. , __ ltr _, 111 ,._, .... Or.._ Qeetl o.tfr PllM, .._ _....., .. tr..-rwt _..... dlvl-.e1,;_M.or-1 PUBUC NOTICE "~-."" ...., .,..,... ......... ._ .. _._,. Tiiis ....._. -Ill• wllll -~------------• ._.,....,.__: .... . c-•' CIW1l of Or-c-e, ptJ••..,. N........,.mo Tiie .............. .._, ...... PICTITIOUS eutt•• DMR-V • •'-• .... ,,...... .... tr~-: F......,., U. "'1. ltl ..... STAT ... "' ell ll•t-, "91 ....... t. llNll I" Putll ...... Or .... C...t Delly Pltec Tiie letleWl119 ,.,_ trl dol... ll'tCT1W WllN.. tr.a, ..... wtlt .... tr.--fll tllet ...... -... &&--. s 1• ,, 1-._._., ..._ nATWM911T ctrte111 ......_ • ._ .. OW'• ' ' --"" ' "• ' .,.I ITllATA IX"-OtlATIOlt, INC;, -TM ......... ..,_ II ............ Cali. .._. .. m ....... A-. .... lflt·ll ~r•trtlft ; IT•ATA -•: Le911M9llLCll,~._1. ••"-OAATION, IMC. -......, ..... 0 1 ... L ....... M•v•c• • Tiii ............ --... trelft; STltATA IEX~L.OltMTIOM, •EPAt• CO.. 1191 S. ~. Ulllt L. Wllkll, .. _..,,....,ta .. llt c-. PtJBUC NOTICE P-ICTITIOUI llUM• ...._ITATaMmllT Tllo ........................ •: ACCUltATIE IClt.W MACMINa PltOOUCTI, llU le. Her•er IM!ewwrtl, leflte AM, C•llfMINe INC. -1-.a ll'Pepelf\; ITltAT• lelltJ•--~~ lldl HI'--_.....,_, ..... ~., .. •XPLOMTIC*, INC. -1-.at ~ .... -~-•· - -IA.lttOl.-a-....... llMdl, trHI; ITltATA •XPL.OltATIOM, Clr,.1111• • ... ,CA._. ~::::· INC. -, '98 Pl<'ler-. "91 .... TMt ....... _... .... •""'" aatllll llt ... Wiiii UfilM ~ ......... "' ............. ~ ... ....., ... ., ... .,._... .. ~ c.ei~r.xfll\.OltATION, uec., '"" ......_.. -,...,. ... L::, ~oc:.•• .. "-"- • Giiie _,.,..._, "'1 .... ~ C-'r 09f* II Ot ... OlltllltT fte tllt --....... ,._ II ................... ~-" .. ,.. ............ .... .... "',.., • • .,_ •• ~rettrt11•11, tltl ~-I ftll .. ,....., ............. elle .. AWlllH, CHte MHe, TMI ........ h ee .. cC'IM .., e -·---~-~ c.etffwllle.... """............ . ; ....... ,__,, _ .,... ....... ~......... .... ..... 4t1C. _ ...... ........ ,...,,,.~ ---...,_ .. , .... , . ,.,_ ..... ........ _ .......... "*................ ' .. =-.. -~ =:..c:-.:. ~ -• rt~~-.... ,.......Clre&pC:.-Oilllt= ,....._c.11.......... "--4 ----= , .. _________ .., ________ ..... ,. ____________ ....,,_,,_, ____ .. ..,.. .. _........ ...... .. ., ........ ,.. ..... ....... .. • • I (I lr , rr' ~ n 1 l nl W.ullLY ClllCIJI 11He always lodts the QOSOtine in, but it keeps getting out of there some way." ....... by Virgil Partch (VIP) "S.. what I dug up? Garden fresh c1rrot1!" MARM4'DlJ"£ by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MEN4'CE Hank Ketchum "That's not the pipe I sent you tori" MISS PEACH 0 " KELLY S'CHOCL iCL..A'2\61J """"' EOl'ft~IAL ~°'~'El-+., MOON MULLINS Alr"rHlAlr, DID YOLA. GE'T" Tl-4£! MEL.P WAN'T'ED PA6E lr~.ADY L..AS'T" N16H'r ?' "Look at his feet go! I bet he's dreamin' about SUMMER!" by Mell Lazarius "41-41 NO, CMl&S:: .... IT ~!M~ YN6t MN WIT"l-4 NO AM9l'T"10N l='OUNO lCL.N'r OPr?iV it) (30 ro 'T'Ms NOVI~.· .. PMNIJTS TtJll•UWUM GOL~ ••• 1'HINK OV AU.. "JW6 AMINAL.S UVIN' LJNPftfGfOJNP. MAK!S YA ~Pf:R, roN"il"f? SHOE NANCY ··· 1 D ON'T CARE IF YOU . DO NEED A CURTAIN ~OR 'Y'OUR PLAY ftJNKt' •INKEa8E4'N i,)Ol) KNOW AARRQ I t,lOl) HA\JE>.l'T HAD~ Klt.W OF RM>·RAl51Nu [)(llJE FOf'. ~ ™"EE ~ OO<A> ~ DR4'88LE DR.8MOC" c:>o -r.-.e t>es-r YOU CAN, pOCT'O~ .... •Err•• •• F•• ••••E ···YOU'LL. HAV E TO REHEARSE SOMEPLACE ELSE --- r KNOW 1 by Jeff MacNelly by Tom Batiuk AND I'M s-rnRTIN& ro G€T THE ~AK£~ ! by Kevin Fagan 1lK~ 1'14~M our AMO -SMOll) 'Efll\ 1'o ~e:R, OAO ! by Lynn Johntton 1 ,, . . Er strike that 'b) thfi by' .make 11, 'where's lht-fifty \oo owe mt:. dHdbea1~·" DEAR PAT DUNN : I recall readin1 that there were going to be new safety re,Wations in effect for power mowers. I am planninl to buy " new one and would like to know when the new regulations take effect! M .N .. Costa Mesa Tiie CoaHmer Prod•d Safe&J Cea· ml••._ llas ISAed a •aada._, safety s&ud· ard fw walk·beldad power mewen, Mt l&s efledl•e dale ls eot a&ll Dee. 31, 1•1. CPSC say• tile aafe&y sta .. ard ...._... red9Ce Ute •• • ber of l•.Jmrlea asaocla&ed wltll tlle mowen bat It allO will lacreue Utelr cest. DEAR PAT DUNN : Which kind of household carving knives last longest. ls it safe to wash these knives in the dishwasher? T .J ., Newport Beach The hardDess of tl1e me&al uecl for &lie blade ls probably the most lmportaat eom· slderatkm wllen It comea lo cllooelal a laal· lasting bile. Steel bladea wltlt a Mp cu• content retain a sbarp ed1e best, bet Miii· carbon a&eel corrodes qalckly a.. easily from aaytlllag coatalala1 waler -w~ll Is just aboat everyWag. To keep these blades at thelr best, tlley sllwld be waalled aad · dried tmmedialely after aae. Blades of stalaless steel, comtalalag at least 11.5 perceat clnoml•m aad a illcll percentage of carboll, resist eGl'l'09._ eve• in an a•tomattc dlallwaslle.r, ... retala •• edge fairly well, tla••lll aet aa well as carboa·s&eel blades wltla .. t elu'o•i••· Tiiie best lulhe. lane llaadles made of moistare·reslstaat materials, ••ell as hardwoods, hard nabber, me&als ... plaa&lc· and·wood lamiaales. Altlloap It's safest lo wash catJery by hud, some kalves staad •P to dlshwaslter cleaalag aad llley aaaally are labeled lo ladlcate tltb. If year dblawasher doea't laave a c•tlery sectloa, place lualvea laorl-tally • UM! tGp rack of tile dluwaaller, p•Ml•ed 10 Uley wilJnotbejcMltled. Placm1&11emla&lleftatwue basket pol.Dt doWll cwld c•t &lie pla.Uc eoat1a1 of tile lluke&, ... placla1 &Ma,...,., emd · caaae ,_to be ctlt wllea &lie dltlawaalter ls be· l•I loadedoc uloaded. DEAR PAT DUNN: Is there any limit on the a mount that airlines can raise their fares? Also how soon before a scheduled charter flight does the charter pusen1er have to be informed of change in the trip plan'!" ' E.H., Fountain Valley The ClvU Aeroaaattc:a Beard allows atru.e. to raise fares wl&MM CAB .,.,..al by 3' pereeat plus $15 abeve cunt1t fares. Thia repla&tom wemt la&e effeet J.ae 1, 1•. A chrter operaa. m..a Mdf)' &lie ..,Uel· pant of uy major claaa1e wit.Ida ae•n da7s la 1 aay eveat befett departare, ace• .... a. a Im CAB replaU.. Tiie partlclpaat .... MYell days lo cucel, ud mast 1et a hill refllad ae.,n day a after tllat. n.e.,.. rl••ftl • .,.., DEAR PAT: What's behind the theory that glasses used for wine or cocktails should be rinsed with cle ar water rather than washed in disbwashing detergent and water? It doesn't make any sense to me, but a lot of friends just rinse glasses used for these drinks. E .K., Corona del Mar TW. belief ls a tllrowltad lo &lie da7a t:•'"~ c1e&er1e11u wllell ..., wu .... a. waall cffsllet. H'• praetlcalb l• .... We a. qaJckly re .. ve au ... , ftl• Ire• llllard Hr· faces, ... a ... , ftl• .... ...._:. Mer'• foa•, ... cu nmtrtlMde u elf tu8e a. ... e. blab. Deteqnu do rtaae away, le•*• • r .... ...,.a...., nl•, • all at-ware ..., caa ... ._..bewa.WID~ ... water. .. , ' Auto ten equipment shown faulty O&l'llOIT (AP)-o.b • per11M ol *'auportatlaa divillOD of tbe manaae· meat wltb eltber manufacturer au&e t.a ~-t la U. UU.'1 m•t ccmulU..C firm ol Boos, Allen It 1peclfteaUom or ~uat17 pld111 .. ..,.....,,._ ........... ,.... Hamlltmlac. eatabU.bed by tbe Equipmeat Tool lall. •e• q io a aaU.wtdo ......, Eckler, interviewed by telephone lmtltule. Overall, mOl'e tbaa • Pll'eeal I• eM U.I. Dlpertaa•t of 'l'ramporta· from Betbeada, Md.. co·autborecl a of the equlpmeat wu ln wOltiaC ..-. U.. paper pr111Dted at tbe annual conven· The wont ltema were eml11loa Ou~ al • '*-, O! ,!Q..a...-t• t.tedt -1 tlon ot tbe Society of Automotive analysen, of which 15 percat failed to oa11 .wo are npt a. -.UC• pwHD °' 1tn1lneen in Detroit. wort. UM time, it found. TltoH .,.. Ure tr.ad Eckler refUMd to speeulate on the . deptb llldieat.on, alway• accurate, UMl aerlouaneu ol lnatrument lnaccuracy 111 Previous studies bave tbown tire auto air ecmdtt&oDlnc teat puces, ac· an i.nduatry that toot in S3S tNJJion in pressure l•UC• to be notorioualy ·inae· curate• pereeot ol tbe time. 1'71. curate, UM1 tbe atudy found oaly 51 per. Tbe survey tndicatea that "the tbinl• Tbe study teated 8,079 pieces of equip· cent ol the 1au1ea tested 1ave ueurate that an beUel' are tbe oaes tbat are meat in 274 dealenbipa, service st.I· readtnp. · uaed Clften, lite air condlUoalaa test lions, chain 'Store shoi>s and independ· The survey alao found that not one ol equlpllMOl, and tbe almple tld.ap -a ent earqea in 27 cities in late ml and the 38 dynamic wheel balancers tested tread cleptb indicator ls ).'* a piece ol earl_y ~· was accurate. And only 8 percent ol metal to meuure witb, said ooe re·, V1s1tcin to the shopa used laboratory wheel alignment machines were ac· searcher, H. James Eckler of the teat imtnunenta to compare shop equip· curate. We Pricn GoM .,...._.. •rch 4, 1tl1 All Sale ttema are Subtec:t to Stoett on Heno. All l'hot0gr9'>hlc, Typooraphlcal, C•lcal and Printing Error• are Subj.ct to Corr~lol'I to stay In hot water 30·g-allori hot waler heater w111'1 energy· saving deslgri. High· temperature shut·Olf al'ld glass-lined tank Reg. 119.95 10995 40-fal. ......... 119.95 SO-val. .......•. 159.95 ls it all going down the drain? IOOTO ... ., "'' ... :::: ... "t!... 7. II not, pour some Rooto into problem drains and clean out even grease and hair. 1-Qt bottle Reg 4 49 299 zap the weed and have some feed Vlgoro Weed & Feed controls pesky weeds at the same time that It fer· t1hzes your lawri 25·1b. bag. Reg. 12.45 911 D D I \ ~---===~-.., choose this mat mix & match specials Choice of Vlgoro's Evergreen. Vegetable. Rose. Tomato. or All· Purpose fertilizers. #5 bOM. Reg. 1.99 1!! spred It on the house Glldderi Spred House Palrit goes on easny. dries quickly. Durable !lat tlnlah. realsts blisters and peeling. Reg. 16.59 SANTA ANA ) or that mat Unique selection of rope door mats 10 give your home a touch ol Cahforn1a diS· tll'lction. Choose trom Haitian Sisal. Ph1hppme Yacht, Lover's Knot. Slsal Loop All natural matertals. ' fantastically spreadable Exterior spred lateJt gloss House & Trim paint from Glidden. Goes Ol'I with ease. Chalk resistant finish. qulck·drying. Reg. 18.59 13~ murder the mildew X·14 Mildewclde Paint Additive to protect your new paint against mildew. Use with latex or Oil·base for- mulas. 1 oz. Reg. 1.99 111 shade your peepers Sport a cap with a famous le.t>el or emblem such as International Harvester. etc Assorted colors 119 each stash the trash and save cash Heavy duty Loma plastic trash can. Won't warp, rust or clatter! Tight· htt1ng hd 32-gallon size #5207 Reg tO 99 111 Stanley 24" magnesium level has 3 replaceable vials that read 360° around. Oust proof vial covers. #42· 224V Reg. 9 49 511 boring? try this! Black & Decker's ''i" variable speed reversing drill. Double Insulated and burnout protected. #7127. Reg. 25.99 roll on the color Especially made to Kerm'a rigid apec'a. Deep well plastic tr•y with l•d· der hootcs. Reg. 1.89 111 ~~u~mum~rn[U]~rnu Comedy time/-on Cotist a,. TO• ftTt.11 ............... omedy on three level• modem, f arclcal ud tlau1ul comH to t.be Oran•• Coaat thl• •-'end u two "ommunlty t.be•\ert and a colleae drama 1roup unvtU the•r la\Hl offerinas. all on Frida.> The new arr1vat. are "Caleb Me If You Can " at 1M Saddlf'back Valley t;omm\UUty 'theater, "A Bad Year fOl' Tomatoe1" at the Hu.ntlnaton Beach P layhowte and "Tartuffe" al UC Irvine. "Catch Me " is the more contemporary of- INTERUISSIQN fering, a lighter ap- ... proach to the murde r mystery, and is being directed by Vince Cordio. Ha r vey Dabling, Cr istine Nichols and Paul Goedhart head the cast with Rick Bosworth, David Hyde, Ellis Estes and Betsy Southworth taking supporting roles Performances will be given for four weekends on Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. with special performances March 8 at 2:30 and March 12 at 8 in the theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. Reservations 830·9252 or 771>-0381. ORANGE COUNTY'S FIRST look at John Patrick's "A Bad Year for Tomatoes" comes up at the Huntington Beach Playhouse where Jack Secord is directing the zany comedy. Norma Bin· more t.altes the centra l role of an old·time actress who's a mistress of many voices. Others in the cast are Bill Malkin, Richard Drake, Sandy Chipman, Barbara Good, Thelma Drake and Marty Eckman. The show will be s taged Fridays and Saturdays at 8: 30 through March 28 al the playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue in Huntington Beach. Reserva- tion s 847 ·4465. UCI graduate student Kevin Carr is directing Moliere's "Tartuffe" for a two-evening engage- ment, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m ., in the Fine Arts Little Theater on the university campus . Fellow grad students J ohn Barry, Mela Hoyt. Hayden and Michael Hans provide technical sup- SUNDAY LOVERS 121~2-• 71M• 6 12•r•-· ,. , ._.., ~j ,,. -~= !ml K.ADf..MY NARD NOWNATIONS .~ DEST PtCTlME DIST OMECT°" DIST ACTlt.ESS .,\1~.,~~"''' _ .. _,_r~l ~~ . .,.....,.., ........ , ...... . ....... ~.~ ..... _ ..... ,.._._ ..-·1.urt.UA 81u ~19-!>JJ9 ....... •-Tawtaun Foun""' v111ey 139 1 'IOO ................ '"""' ~~1 06)~ ....... u .. ~•wporl k K• 6'J IJ~ rAClflC'I .. ,. c:Mlf \IQl<!\l llH<• •9• l~IO ,, __ .. 011"00 U9 1110 "'llV"""' ............. S.•J-c-1••"" •9l ·~~ MOVIE RATINGS FOR PMEllTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,. ........ ,,, ,,. ,.""'" • 10 - _.. -"1e _.-,. OI ,,.,.._,.,,......,ov,,..,•- NO Olll UflOll' 17 -TTIO .. -... ,..., .. -...... _ .. _, ...... .-_. __ ..,_ ..--~ ~--~ UAWttl I ttlf r.-·-1-UA--c.-•-..,.. UA-4·...,. NINE TO FIVE !PG> c::--· I "THE JAZZ . SINGER" f~> . I "FORT APACHE THE BRONX" ,.., I THE COMPETITION" .1• .. \ta111rrfi lftfll•INO 'OM"f n "ALTERED STATES" <Al port. Reservations 833-8617. . Two local productions complete their scheduled eneaiements witb fioaJ performances thl1 weekend -"Impolite Comedy" at the Irvine Community Theater and "The Great Sebastiana" at the Newport Harbor Acton Theater. "Impolite Comedy" winds up with st.cine• Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p .m . in the Turtle Rock Community Park auditorium, on Sunnyhill Road off Turtle Rock Drive in Irvine (754-3643). "Great Sebutians" closes out Friday and Saturday at 8 in the Back Bay High School auditorium, 390 Monte Vista St., Costa Mesa (673·5115). Also on the boards this week along the coast are: -"Same Time Next Year .. at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-SSlll, playing nightly except Mondays at varying times through March 22. -"HERE LJES JEREMY Troy" at Sebas· lian 's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Cle mente (492-9950), playing Tuesdays through Saturdays at varying times through March 1. -"Screwball" al Soulh Coast Repertory's Second Stage, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa 1957-4033>. playing nightly except Mondays at 8:30 with weekend matinees at 3 p.m. -"South Pacific" at Saddleback College's main theater in Mi ssion Viejo (831·4747), playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8, Sundays at 3, through March 1. "Rope" by Showcase Productions at the Westminster Auditorium, 7571 Westminster Ave., Westminster (894-6786), playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through March 14 with a matinee at 2 p.m. March 15. * CALLBOARD Auditions for "The Paisley Convertible" will be held Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 at the Huntington Beach Playhouse in the Seacliff Village Center, Main at Yorktown in Hunt· ington Beach . . . director Randy Keene will be casting two men and three women for the comedy, which opens April 17 ... '-~ I I ' ''GREAT!'' ---NOW •HOWINCI --- •COSTA MESA ·:-)~:.:· ••DH_llCE Edwards Cinema l ~O:'o Cinedome 979·4141 i:; .. -~:::.~ .. -1634-2553 YOUR TICKET TO GREAT FOOD AND ENTEATAI NM ENT Starring the world famous <evoun~ &\11\_eric&l\..S Song and Dance Company • Bri ng the whole family for a delightful evening of entertainment and delicious food at reasonable prices • DINNDSHOWS 7 pm Sun., Tues. and Wed. 6 pm and 8:45 pm Thurs., Fri. and Sat. COMPLETE DINNERS from 10.95 to 12.95 chlldren under 12, 4.95 • Reservations Suggested Group Rates Available I • •, TIBlllE'S MUSIC HALL at P.t4N'a L.,cung below Dunt.'• Aeataurant 18380 PllClflc Coast Highway Huntington Belch PHONE (213) 5Q2..4072 • (714) MO-eeef P.S. BIO 8lnCi Jazz Ewry Mondlly ~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, February 26, 19.81 °"••age Dorothy Malone has started rehearsals for '•Butterflies Are Free" in Winnipeg, Canada. It's her first stage play in ~ years . Tammy \f ynette~s story set for TV · HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Sissy Spacek was widely acclaimed. earlier thia year for her portrayal of country muic au,....,. Loretta Lynn in the autobioiraphic movie, "Coal Miner's Dauabter." Actress Annelle O'Toole is hopini for the same reception when she plays another popular country sincer, Tammy Wynette, la tbet CBS telemion movie, "Stand by Your Man," 'to be broadcast the eveninc of March 31, 9·11 p.m. <See photo, Page C2) BASED ON MISS Wynette's recent aut<>biography, the mm' chronicles the singer's life from age 17 to stardom in her early aos, and focuses on her stormy relationship with third husband Geor1e Jones, also a top country performer. Like Miss Spacek, Miss O'Toole did all her own singing in the two-hour movie. To prepare for the part, she spent several weeks with Miss Wynette on tour. Stephanie Austin, an associate producer of the movie, says the result of that effort was an incredible likeness of Miss Wynette, both vocaJly and visua ll y . "First of all, Annette resembles her very much," Ms. Austin says. "And secondly. her mannerism and everything are just like Tammy's. TO MAKE SURE THE rest of the film was as realistic, the producers asked Miss Wynette to serve as technical adviser. She spent several days on the set during production in December and January. ''Stand By Your Man," originally the title of Miss Wynette's 1968 anthem to marital fidelity, contains 17 musical performances· and was filmed primarily at locations around Los Angeles. Jon Peters was executive producer and Jerry Jameson ..Airport '77" and .. Raise lhe Titanic" -was director. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~T-""~~~-::= ,. ....... .,~ JIJ/Wl·flell S.C Hl-y ., ......... 49'·1S14 Cll1 ___ ... _ .. THE DOGS CW WA,. .. 11•1 11...a•w .. ••••• _____ .._..__ .. THE COWITtflOH" (~) , .......... ,.. .... __ .,._ "NINE TO FIYE"JPG> ,..., ......... om Of~....,....,,.._., "ALTERED STATES" (R) ............... u.,,._ ........ c...., '"THE INC,.EOl8LE SHRINKING WOMAN" 1"1 , ......... , .. . ~ ........... , .............. .. °'919 ea.. DM.;Y PtLOT/ThurM•Y1 F9btuaiy 28. 1N1 --------------------------------------------------------------------~-----------------------------------.""-o.-....._ ....... > Iii l\·.i\\\ ,. -·ofuj c.a11 gort ~ ...... ·~--· ... -•-PW•-• I TIC TAC DOUGt4 ....... " Aler,_ •I I ... poot l>f\ya< ~ oon4lllO'I ol hit Ul\11 Col PC>lter 09't6M 10 IWiO •W'A"S'H Otv~s • GOOOT ... TNlltna b«:O,.,... 1nv01v..O .nth a llandM>me Alric;811 lludenl (P811 11 •• (UCTM: --lea.ii: ~MCK. "°""' Th• newest gtfl at ~ wants to be a s-tttoQ • ...,.,HU a.nnv 111a hla hand as a -an-• L.08 ANGel P · THE DMMot DllTUMED HOel: CIM• RotMlrts. • ITUOIOI& "Cop Show" Explo.r•• Scoull USl•I the Gi.nd .... Arizona Polic. Oepl • N- Y«ll Clly klO. make A's In d!Ko Oeoclng (R) (I) M~A•S•H Hawkey•'• elttr•m• edt9uahon manitesla ilaelf In the lorm ol noc1urnal bnkelball games and l11ght11nlng nightmares 9 8A..-v MIU.EA TN day starts brlllkly even thOUgll woio oversleeps al hit girt'• aparl.._,t. 1:118 B>ITONAL 7:00 8 C8S NEWS D N8CNEW8 CHANNEL LISTINGS 111.iraslon Armed thieves i nvade a baby shower and confront 1 from left) Michele Lee. Do nna Mills. Constance McCashin and <front) Kim Lankford on ''Knots Land- ing" tonight at 10 on CBS. Channel 2. • HAWY DAYS AGAIN • IY9Wl'TNU8 L08 Howaro 11 llnally J*tuad· ANClal.11 e0 to ellow Joanltt 10 go on Hoe•• P.ul Moy« end Ina a dal._ P9dfOU e•plofe Cloning I A8C NEWS and the poulbilUy ol Oupl1- JOt<M'8 WILD eating l\uman Ute; ••loe an M"A"l•H Wf-901 lo<* al lhe lnstl- The oltlc:¥s .,. dratteO tutiOn ol ahelllng into running the salOOn I 'N:Jll THE MUIC wNl9 ROiie le "' the hoapt-AU .. THE 'IUlllt. Y tel.. Eo1111 lind1 old lottery tlek- 1 MMTTA et• IN hu totally lorgot- OYWlllMY ten aboul G~t. Pet O'&len (R) • MACHEll. I LEHAEA ~/l.84AEA ;":. (I) TlC TAC DOUGH (I) P.M. MAGAlJNE (!I) MEW ONfflN W•'Oht-tou aurg«y: Jeck "A \/lilt To The H~ Of LaMotte tlllka abOut "Rag- Eva And Zse Zse Gabor" Ing 8ull," • movie baaed GU9Sta Eve Gaw Jami-on his Ille. •on, Zu z .. Gabor t:008Cll THEWM.TOH8 O'Hare RoM'• ex-llence, Stanley 7;30 8 2 OH THE TOWN Petk111a. COtNS to Wel- Ho•ta · Stev• EOwards, ton'• Mounleon In ...,ch M.iocty Roger• M91od)' ot a ,_ Ml• end st.,,. v1a11 the radio D NNOUNB favorites. Lohman end 8AOTltlM / 8AANUM Barkley and Ken, Sob and AHO Mil.EV CIRCUS Companl(, who start theW Dick \Ian Dyke. host day before Oawn; a look Hlghlighl9 ol the Ringling blM:k et 19•7. the year &oth«s I Barnum and wl\90 more lnlants _,e Bali.y Circus will be pre- bOrn then any 019-year. Mnled D FAMll v FEUD 9 MOVIE 9 SHA NA NA * * • "The War lord" Guests· The Crystals. (1965) Ch81tlon Heston. Rlchatd Boooe. A knight moves 10 th9 North Se• shore and n tabllstt.s a town 11 9 MON<AHO ....,,. I) 1(11.!Xl 1CBS1 L<.•'> Anq1•1t· Mork 11911 a v11111ng Orkan e409f to clone Mindy. " D "'-NBC "lB\'1l11• "" 11''"' O '"-ILA 1ld•l" ·\·11· ... 0 l\ABC TV A!Jt l ,, 1\11 11 °1 ... e '\fMB 1CB-.1-..1q,'"t1•• 0 l(HJ TVt llHl l ••' t\11 It'". I~ i'\CSl I Al!C ~.111 D1""' m "rrv 1 ln11 I L h A111to' ,. Cl> -.coP rv 1•111 L .... A1111·· .. ED l(,C[ I l ,, P!;<.,1 l ... •\11 l"'"' c:!) l\OC[ IV PO._, H,.111 • 11 '" 0 1•.11 11 tJ WHAnvEA HAPP!NED TO LON ' JEAN LLOYO? The search lor • run-ay girt retses many questions abOut why teen.agers run away. what lhey ere IOOll- '!!9 tor. end what they find 1U P.M. MAGAZIHE · WetghHOSS surgery; Jaci< ~t.119--·· .... .............. ....., •lllelle:CNITllmea.. ·----~~ ............... ,_ .. ....... .., ....... ;~ ~Oft..,. Mlety ....... • ta.OP TNI HU w_........,._.._,.._, lll1e 8-.r, loftfty ..... MrtllWW ........ .... ,.,.... .w Gery l-*-M ..., "' .... pr-t•llOfl of trwlft .._ •• -.Y ... lftlfle -~ ........ . ---~--LM&e .._.., C"9tt 1) •• TNIMNR OMMm "K"'41etleld'1 OMIGh1«" An omlllltor-4 young -flnde-1 "' ~ law etudenl .--Hot1, wlto II .ttrect- oll to llot. .... _,.. MIDD8 Kip lmpuleNoly quill hie ..,., '" 1hO .,.... that H9nry ... lollow """ out lhe doof. • CAROL IUflNETT MIO ..... au.ts: Tim C-ey. Bor- nedolt• Poter• . t:OO. Cll MAGNUM, ~.I. TC la ertMl9d by tn. Coul Gu1td encl thrown Into the brig, but myst«I· ouaty r.tu-MllGf\Um's otter of ltolp. D THll • YC>Uf' I.JFE IOTM ANNIYEWAln' INCW. Ralph Edwerds and DellMI Froel host lhlt IP9Cial , .. ,Ullng • selu1• 10 two 111rprlae g11esta and hlghltghls from pt.-.loua llllOwl ttonorlng Jeck e.n- ny, Busler K .. ton, Ronald ~enclolhefs. •a MMEY MIU.ER Batnoy'1 daughtor Rechel melt.. a del• with Wojo, wno hU a playboy roput.a- llon that melt.. Betney very norYOUI. .WIN ...... Gue•t•: Orson Wellos, Robert W8Q!'Ot. Stefan,. p__,., •• INEAK PMVllW8 Roger Ebert encl Ger>9 Siak.i r•vlow "Sunday LOY9'S.'' "Cherlt. Chan And The Curse 01 The Oregon a-" and three Olh41r rnovi41s. t:3011 (!Jl TAXI Elel09 run• Into a very suc- c.ulul ec:ho04mate ano wtnda up In a com1>911tlon wtth her to -whO hes made the most ol '-Ille SI TMI OlD HOUSE Bob Vile shows an efficient Europ98n Yefllon of a radiator, Norm Abrem lnslllls new windows and a lfghllng expert makes som9 recommendations. m> CHINQE. AMENCAHS: THE SECOND CE.NTUAY A conlresllng portrait ol the oto.t Q9f'l4lf auon tabor Immigrants end the new errlvell with different Skills TUBE TOPPERS NBC e 8:00 -Ringling Brothers. Barnum and Bailey Circua. Hi&hllgbts of the latest Greatest Show on Earth with Dick Van Dyke hosting the fun . KTLA. 8:00 -"The War Lord." Charlton Heston and Richard Boone head the cast of this medieval movie drama. NBC e 9:00 -This is Your Life 30th Anniversary Special. A salute to two sur· prise guests and highlights from past shows with Ralph Edwards and David Frost as hosts . ~ hlgllOt ••poct•flon6 1• Pf-1..S. to.GO 8 (I) KNOTS I.ANDING AtfMd t'"--rob th9 EwinQ homtl and lake \/al, l<at9", Ging« encl Laure lhoe::r. GI) NEWS n·ao120 ~ THU TM "Danger UXB" &ten is hwll&Md by his -'lor olfl· C« end dlSCOY... the mejot h .. a very pe<sonar ax to gt1ncl. (Pen 81 10:30·~ NITWOMNEWS • MY8TERY "Rumc>ole Of Ti... Bailey Rumpol9 And The Cue 01 ld9nlily" Rumpole takes on ti... C8M of • man who stands accused ol all&ck· Ing the m811eget of a liquor 1tor•. (PW1 2) 11*>8G•Cll@ HEWS • ITAATNK l<lflc, Spock end McCoy er• lf9j>p9d In lhe past lfom which ratllfn to 1he pt._..t -· O..th I NEWLYWB> GAME M•A•a•H Hewlulye 1811i!los witn a tough Army colonel and B.J. helpa a GI Who's receiveO a "De81 John" lotter. ., MOVIE * • •n "Denver And The Rio Grande" ( 19521 EOmond 0'8tlorl, Storllng Hay<Mn. In lhe lat• 1800a, two rail ..,_ compete to build IM llral reilroaO through the Royal Gorge. • DC<CAVETT Guos1: playwoght Simon Grey 11:30 8 (I) THf JEffER80HS Geoto-Is gretelul when Tom's qutck thinking uves hl1 Nie until he rullzes he will be 1n hl1 O.bl forever (R) D TONIGHT Hoit Johnny Car son Guosll: Miekey Rooney. Dlan•Rou 119 MCHEWS NGfTUHf Cl GUNIUOkE Mell haa • long. hard ride blM:k to Doog41 with a p11s- on., .nose gang pursues lh9m Ooggedly G> HOGAN'S HEAOE8 Hogan must hlOe h11 radio from Nazis u11ng 01rec·11on- t1nder's S> Ql!) CAPTIONED A8C NEWS -MllNIGHT-. 12:00 II Cl) MCMIUAN a. WW'E Sally opens a ba11et In search ol her packed china ano finds a dead body 1nlleed D MOVIE • • •1"' "Death Takes A HOUOay ( 19341 FredflC Marci\, Evelyn Venable JOHN DARLING Grounding of 'Ange/,s' a blow to feminists? By PETER J . BOYER LOS ANGELES (AP) -"How did 1'ony ThomopouJos cancel 'Charlie's Angels'?" the joke begins. have been nagg ing occasional · viewers of the show that patented jig- gle. defatigable in the matter of bikini· clad chases. Ladd, Kate J ackson, Jaclyn Smith and Shelley Hack toiled ceaseless· ly in their roles as the pioneers of sort-core television. ......_ ....... .. *"'..., ........ ..... -~~!• •• ~:;!~111. ""' ~ ltlet .. bolrt.o pleguocl by • --ol ecddonla. (A) -~ WCl•L' Jim Pll8lpe ~ .. • moetor ~ cNmplon to lrec>. ctlmlnel wtth • ,__ ~mentelily. 1t:a0 8 TOMOMOW Gu .. 11 eclontlll Durk Po.,1on; martial .,II OXl)9tt Chuck Not•I• D DOHL.AHE G~t1: H\lgtl HefMr end tl\9 e .. 1 from the Au•tr•- uan prOOUc;tlon of "Evita ... 1:00.=UFE ~NaWI 1:10• MOYtl *. 'h "Museer• Al Fort Holmen" (19H) Telly Seveles, J-Coburn During the C1v1I War, a COionei d9v!MS 8 0HP9f · ••• plan lo recapture • Conl9dora1e fort (!Jl CAAOL IUAHEfT AHO~ Skill. "The Family," "Tl\e Wishing Well." 1:30 tJ THE LOHE AAHOEA "The ReMgaOes" • MOVIE • • • •.-; "Mar10<M1 Mor- n1ngsllr" ( 19581 Gene Kel- ly. Natalie w ood An 1mpresS1onebi9 young girt falls 1n love w•lll a mtddle- llQ90 songwr11., only to disco.,., that he 1s a 1a;1 • ure • MOYlf • • "Tiit Amerlcano" ( t95S) Glenn ForO, Franlc Lovejcy A TexH cowbOy ll"ds romance and adven- ture when he attempt~ 1 deUV9( pma Br ah ma bulls 10 Brazil 1:408 NEWS U6IJ NEWS 8 MOYIE • • •,. "The Dark Angel' I 1935) rred11c March. Merle Obe<on When IWO lo11e rivals marcti ott 10 wer. one ol them 1s bhnOed •nd given up tor deao 2:000 NlW8 2:16 IJ EDfTOAIAL 2:20 1J MOVIE • • • "Guest Wiie" t 19451 Don Ameche. Claudette Cdllort. 4 -.... ................. -~-·t• .. .... ,....,....,. .. .. hie beet lrloftd'• .... . MIOlft NI lnleduooll • 1111 -· ....... t:OO MCMI **It "Th• HOlllO•" (1917) Oen O'Keety. OMfl Stanton. A llJ1·lfOW-old boy hldol out In • lftOWtg van -· lhM -drlv· er 11 • tclllor on hill wey to plell UC> Ille c;OtlJte of hll 1e1 .. 1 rnutdor victim $:41. MOVll "* • * "Th9 Meo Room" ( 1989) St•lla Sta¥•n1, Shelley Wlntor•. A wlOow 11 murdered by ~wo d•m.nt9d cfllldron j;ftlO ere ulllng ._ lat• hu•- bend'• 11udy lor tMjr i-· S:66 NlW8 4.-00 MOVIE • • "Mutllel-S Of The S.." (19e01 Pier A.ng911, Rot>ett AIOe. A -lenng crew of gold-aeeklng Span1er01 bound lor Mareulbo get1 efd•- treckeO by • lernelo buc- canMr who 090da help tn deposing a governor. uom NEW8 f'rfda11•• Da11t ,,,.,. .Jf o .,,,.. -MORfN- 11:00., • • "BllJe SIMI" (193•) John Weyne. Elea- nor Hunt A dtsgulaed U S. mersnel convlnc;ea a town not 10 y1elO thet1 gold-nch land to a prenuting bend -AFTERNOON- 12:00 G> • • • ·~ "Johnny O'Cloclc" (19471 Dick Pow- ell, Lee J Cobb. A soph•s· t1ca1ed gambler becomes preca11ous1y involved with outlaws ano • woman ti) ***''t"AndThen There Were None" ( 19•5) Louis HaywarO. Ba11y F11zgerald 3:00@) • • 1, · A llery MISSlng Person" 119721 Eve Arden. Skye Aubrey 3:30 U • * ,• .. ,The Red Badge Of Courage" ( 1974) Rich· ard Ttiomas. Michael Brandon. by Armstrong & Batiuk "(don't know. How?" "He put on a bikini and hollered, ·Freeze. Turkey'!" ·No, no. insists ABC, t hat's not the way it happened. Progra mming chief Thomopoulos didn't really cancel "Charlie's Angels" at all. He j ust put t he show on "telecast hiatus." You might have wondered, as I have, just how the heard-but-not-seen Charlie (admirably voiced by John Forsythe) came by his wealth. He certainly didn"l pay for his yacht- board caviar-and-champagne soirees with the fees collected from the capers he sent the Angels on. I mean, how much can you collect for break· ing up a massage-parlor protection racket? While that never bothered me, I was s urprised to discover that it ap- parently didn't bother many women, either. Indeed, a friend of mine -a woman of unyielding feminist prin- ciples -once told me she didn't m ind the fact that "Charlie's Ange l s" wa s he r 10-year-old daughter's favorite show. She thought wom en were positively portrayed. They dressed up as nurses. roller queens. m e n 's -m ag m od els.~ prisoners -anything (within limits> lo fulfill a fantasy. reveal a thigh. ' And now, or very soon , they'll be gone. struck down by that affliction • that comes or viewer disinterest . Hmm. Som e exotic condition caused by sun-spots? No, it's ex- p lained. "teleca s t hiatus" means t hat "Charlie's Angels" will leave t he ABC prime lineup, but it may re- appear for a while -say. this spring, when ABC will want to "burn off" those episodes already made but not air ed. Anyway. one or modem TV's true marvels is a bout to expire, which brings forth some questions that might I suppose that was just part of the mystique, an ele m ent that never bothered dedicated fans or the show. Which brings us to the next question: Why did so many women watch "Charlie"s Angels?" The essence or the series, as far as I could determine. was the display of the feminine form in various aspects of motion the Angels were in· Huh? "You'll have to admit, it's the only place on television where the women always get the upper hand." Hmm. I hadn't noticed. Whatever "Charlie's Angels" ap. peal to women was. it's pretty safe lo say that the men who watched the show did so for obvious reasons. Charlie's various Angels -Farrah F awcett, Tanya Roberts , Cheryl ·'telecast hiatus .·· I I can't be s ure of their legacy (the Farrah coif being long-since passe). and I s uppose that "C harlie's Angels" won't be missed with the same warm thoughts that strike the hearts of. say, "Mary Tyler Moor e" rans. But it left its impression. I know d at leas t one JO-year-old girl who thinks that women always get the up- per hand ... and sever al little boys who never noticed. Marcello Mastroianni 8 K:..ADEMY AWARD NC»\INATIONS Hot Air Balloon Adventures Laura Antonelli WJfelllisttess IUtmnt C1ntn1• Wnl Ill&) 891 391~ ·~ BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTOR IDWAllDS' lllllTOI 11wa111·1 WllTlllODll SAl'l\11 ~"·' '110 }U4 w~oen GfO'Wt ~30 0 01 llWAIUll' WOOllllllDGl OWAllD'S IAIDUIACll "''"" ~)I Ob~) It 10<0 ~ftl )a.'l-0 .. raSRI '"""' , .. Tllll-Mllf ••1.to• AMAMUM OIUY•·UI A11ehelm .. 7'-"5D ,.., ,...4/JI'. , ' I I # ........ ., .. ·--~ -......... ..-,,...,.. ,.,, S pend an hour drift Ina oY•r Perri• V•lley In a balloon W• <t•n •khn a lake or ftoa.\ m 11• .. abo•e the 11arth a I ru1y •p•c• acular ea:periencr 11111\1 l or two Ol!'>O 4·•260. 6 t !\00 Qift U!rtificat~ Avaj/ab/e fl; CHAMPAG,t!~ P sst-6033 ·~-....-SHE'S TAMMY -Annette O'Toole (left) talks with country singer Tammy Wynette, whom she'll play in a TV movie for CBS. See story on Page CL A< 'Al>t-::\1\' A\\:\Rl>S BEST PICT\JRf. BEST A(TRES!I SL~ SAICEX 1UMMY ID: .DIES ~ MINF.R'S IWA<Htl:K .i...u.m1111 ~'EIU.Y l'YAl'IGG.O l.t.~ HF.l,M ~l!ylUf RICKMAN ......... ~ .. "" .. 8-dm t1w ~" IDllm'A l.YNN wllh CltXW'.t: VIX.'8EY Eaw!M-~ 8Cm LARSa'i ~ ~IEUWUlstllWAJm 0.~ ~ MJCHAEI. APT1lD A 111.KIUllittlO'li\\~llft ,.,. ... ,,., .• .,...,......,. .• , •• , ..... ._.. .._.~-... "'"n-...,, • .,.._. -.1"'1\•111M-i.•1f\"'t\, .... _..._ W-M-Mho ...... n 1 F!J!-.,t.m ' J I ••••••••••••••••••••••• The marketplace on the orange coast . 642-5678 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT!Thursday, February 26, 1981 HoelH$ Fors. ....... ,.,. s. ·····•·········•·•···•· ~······················ Hoeln1ForS.' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• INDEX It Pim Y11t M. tall G..er.. 1002 GeMrel IOOJ G..,... 1002 GeMral IOOJ Ci....-el 1002 Ci._rel 1002 ~-1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·5&71 MMSIS f H SAl £ REAL £SUH RENTALS ,,,,~,. •u1n1 .. f1HI t4HU't\· ',\l~•'H"'h,•\1 ltw \• t-u1011r t ut t 1o1-.i..J11111\u.1n•,, t u1n • •H"ld•lnlil;IWll1"' I 11f ) "'•.,\hl'U'• .. l-UI I 1n·.-,11t111~, •• , I 111 llUfJh \"\ t>\1rl1 hhph•\f t ,., \jil ,, • ., " \11t \I 11•u1 I \1•• t ur1. 111 I 111 11••111• ft t11h+ 6-· ll1o,1u•I ,, ..... , \l .. 11h I ,1u ·I )f111f,~ .. '1111111,; lco·ol .. I• \ II •lltl1lt l••'fll 11, i( .. ul.th '" "' .11•• •-.o 1ict ,,,, lh•n! 11ft11 • t<l"n\111 Hu'-tll• "lt••fll.JI l11,h1'''' ,, H'•u\,1\ 1tof,H « H•·o,111 .. ~ii oh·•\ \h\1 lh•llfol' BUSINESS. INYEST- MfNT. FINANCE l\U\11101\, (Jlf1M1(1 • l•o"tff•"""· y, _.,.l•''f f;1\1•,1nw111 tlf,(.1111 \ lf1\l '<\lt1Wf1! ~.tt111 1j \j111u•\ I" j H1t li \l•1n1•\ \.\ 11h1i of• \furh,~14a:1•, l II"' ANNOUNCEMENTS, PERSONALS & LOST & FOUND \111t11uh•\·nw11t-. ' .•• 1•001 ..... ~;I '••II!'" 1,.,., A h,on1i •• ,., ••• , .. tth• ........ i11 1"• .... • fh•\•'I• SERVICES u.,, .... '°"" EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY .~ ' u W '• MotiH: ::z.: All r .. 111 uhte ad '"'• v t! r t 1 s t! d 1 n t h i is llt'Wllpi&pt'r 111 iiubJeCt to the Federal Fair Hou11- 111g A1•t ol 1988 which maktti 1t illegal t-0 ad· vertlSt' "any preference. , . .,. '.., .... .... ..... ... "' I 1 m it a t 1 o n , o r d 1 s · ;sL~ en mi nation bast'd vn ~:: ra<·e . color. religion. , .. ., sex. or national origin. :u. or an intention to make any such preferen<'e. limitation . or dis crimination." ' .. I W ThlS newspaper will not knowingly a1·cept any advertising for real estate wh.ich is in viola- tion olthe law. !~~ ----------"''' ,J\U! m .. tl1Uill J:~ t)!i't .... , t/1(1 ...... f:••· ltrJll u1:!'t1 llllJ ll!ill ·~I) 12'111' 1:··•1 I t'4t ElltottS: Ad,,.rtfsen dcMlld cMctt tlteir ads .., .... ~ .... ron ..._.....,. TIM DAILY rtLOT cn._.. liabilty fw the first h1corr•cf insertio11 Ollly. :~:: ----------1 :~~I ~.ors ' ,~1a1 .... ):!,\ jf(ell ;1,;1!1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Whelan Real Estate is now offering 90o/r com - mission to lice n sed agents. •No desk fees • No phone fees •No advertising fees We belong to rive multi- ple boards. Call for an appointment. Ask for John. 54G-3666 """' f \ IP I HI H hol to IJ:• •I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION "t)1o11t lrl\lr111 111111 .#11h\\ .1fH01•t• fh lt1 \\.1nt.·•l \I A .. MERCHANDISE \11t111v•'"' A11~ho1oc ,., "ud'"'• Uu \t l•1\ ft1.ol1t1m! \1_,I• thtf~ • •• nw1.-. ... 1. t1,,1111\1i11,•111 •HI' t ... ~ ... ~q•1• lu \ 11u l-Urh\\Uft• '•1Ar~w· '111•' U11r,,~, lh.JU"'•'hph.I f,O'Jtf'l! J, \\ ,.,. ~ l.1\ ''"'""' ~ \\.11 htru•r \11\1t•lt,HWhU"' \h ••l1.11u•1114 , Vl<1nh•1I \11,...,11 Jl l111o11ur111•rit Ufho t ) 'fll i\ h tjUljl l•d .. t'lttll!I ~ '"i!·••• ....,,~HU \111• h111•'" ""4•11tllf111:'4,1o1o11 .. ...., rJ• It• '-l.1u1111tl H11r '°'"'•II''° I\ ft.,11to tll"'' -..h•r1••• BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT 1.1·rwril ~l>)t \\.1uh1 '4•t \I! I' l~•Jl \}.oflfl~ t ljUll' H ... .1, t'11••·t 1~1.t.! H1 m I h,1rt••i llliJ(t\ ,,ill 1\1.,.t. "'-1111~ Uo+"', 1-..,, ...... ,, •. ,,~'"'Ill l\i1.tf•"il••l1ti.,t• TRANSPORTATION \111 r"" 1 m.,.,., ~.11+ H1•111 ~I••• t1 ,, I "' ~ \111tt1l1 llffl"fll .. \ittifV ('yrlu ~'"''''''' \l11C11t 11(11 'iah• Ht tll tr.il1•r• lr •• ·.11 f I 111l• '" I tlh\' \t1tf1 "¥•1 \!I I• l',trh AUTOMOBILE '"'"''··· \U(HfUt.'" l 'I.; •~I• • 1\1 1 •• .. tu1n \ 11hi. ,,., ~M·;.~ .. 1 '.',;'1: •• ~''''' 11 II ii.~ '.,,, \1Jh• I ('l•'H11' \~HH<t '\\ .. 111(•+1 AUTOS, IMPORTED lof'tllf I •If/I.I ·•711j \jl,1 fttflho It \ u~l1 _, •+,tfj \ '"'''" 11, ·'"'' 11\t\\ l illl <',tr~n l oil lt.t\ .. u I~ ... ,,,,, t 1ttl ,,,,. .. ,. J,, 0.11 11•11\l'll t\,1111Mlll\lotn.t l...1mborah1n1 \l .. 1+t.1 \I I t'!h "' l\1•111 lh. \l(,H u r1i1'I t'111l•'t"4 t'11u11•111 t•or-...\lu• IC1•11.,1.1H H1111 .. Ho)11• H t)\ I'' S..11oth Stull "ktt.111ru l\;;11\,1 1 r1t11nvti ,,,u'"""'..,"n \ul\o (1-..HM •I 11!\ll' AUTOS, NEW AUTOS. USED llU!1 k l4d1H11c C,.(f'H1r11 (*h¥\tok' • hrn1c•. l0•JtnV' n."'1"'h·n1"1 \.:of'\'~\\lf t Uu~·· ~':'if· •mJ>t'n•t llffWUhl Ml\flr'•" )(or~"'' ~:~~te Vlntu 1'1;-tnuulh Voo1Uo1 fhund•rtunt •flf) tt•l.! ,dJ 911~ ,.-.. ,; ..... ,, '11.!.I •t'j:.:._, 11;,1-; •1,.to 1,(.! ....... 9736 1f-;,~ •tW ••tl ••f·ll ,,,., ··11; ~·~~ ·n,,., •1;» !175'..t '•:Si llHitl l'llrt 'n"' ~Hf~ ~';111 )fiill '•i1!! lMll Adv~rhhl'r"i ntay plul'e their 11ds hy tt'l .. phont' II 00 a m to!> :lO p m Mcmday lhru f'nday 8 IO noon Saturday COSTA MESA OFF'ICt: l30 W Bay 642 ~i8 lll'NTIN1:Tt1N REACH till7~> 0.,ach RI vd ~12211 t./\Gl'NA REACH lfl27 'I; (°IJl!SI llwy Laguna l~arh 4~ 94ti6 "1(111Tll CO! ':\'TY <!ml rr., •. ~>40. 12211 CU.SSIFMO DUIMJMH l}t'.lllllne for l'•>(J,I & kill• '" s JO I' m t ht• duy 11 .. rnr1• p u \)ltt':t\111n , t''<«'•'PI ft•r "und:iy & Morutav t:c11t1nn' wh~n d'•actlm.l• •~ Saturday. \2 IHHIU CU.SSIFllO RlfGUUTI°"S F:llUOllS A<h £•rtos"" •huuld <"ht'l'k th .. 1r a•h tt 1• 1 I' & rt>purt 4•rror~ 1 m m 1· 111 a 1 1· I ,1 T II E IM 11. ,. l'I I.( l1' ;1>,Um£·~ h ah1l1t,1 for t ht! flr•I lnt•urrt·c·• lfl!'-t·rlHHl uni) CA :\I' ~;I.I ./\ 'f'lll!'l;S Wh~n k1ll11'~ •In ad he ... un· I<' mte kt• '' rt1<.'ord or tht• t\11.1 'l;l \IHF:R ~'' t\n V(•\.I h' ''"Ur ad t;tk(•r as rt•c·111fJf of your 1·un1•1"1i:il11•J> T~" kill n u1nhl1 r mu s t h e p r •·~~r•l ~cl h y lhr :.1cJvvrt1st.•r m f'a~e of a dl~pUtl• ('A .,1'~:1.1.AT I O'I: on ('ORH~ltl'ION CW 'lt:W A IJ H F: f 0 H t: lll'N'(l:O.<; ~:\1l'rv ,.ffort '~ m udt.-to k1l1 or l'lffrt."d ~ fl("W ad 1h:i1 h," heen ordt•rt•d. hul W•· ,~unnN ftU:JrnntC'f' to do ~o un11I the ad hns t1ppN1r"I in th" pu1wr or ~n; /\ 1.111n: M>S l:hr '\c• 1111' arr •I rii·lly Nl:;:h ln :JdVl.tr'('t' b.v muif or ut :1ny cJn~ pf our l)ffi••l'~ ~(\ pl\unt• otdHS Oewtlhtu• 3 1> m Fr1du,v l'o~I:• Mt'SU nrr ..... & 12 11110 11 at all h n 1nr h ufftCt'S TH ~: l>All.Y Pit.OT rl!scrvl's \hi' n11h1 lo claM 1fy ••tl11 . 1•1·nsnr nr rt'fu s " an y adv~rUscmcnl, f\nCI to ~h 11ng1• 11 ~ rale~ &t r ... ~ulalhins "''•lhout prior notice CLASW. MA~ADIMllH P 0 BoK IMiO. CO!ltR M~sa 92826 !l~~~~~ly tor a ~day ad inlhe DAILY PILOT SERVICE Vf~a ............ A41 What a Wonderlul World. 111£CTOIY LOWDOWN Owner will rtnance this almost ntiw 3 bedroom 2~ bath Brittany Woods condo. :t car garage. wet bar,' greenhouse win dow. and mlcrow•ve oven ar e among the •menilies ofrered. Full pri<'t! Sl~.000. TR,\OI T 10\,\l. ~L\Ln >1tiMh t, INVf':>fM fN'S 6 3 1-7370 IACK IA Y VIEW IB.OW MARKET This beautiful view pro- perty tn Newport is priced below market va lue a nd be low ap· pra isal. S pa c:e age kitchen with breakfast area. Huge living roum. l a n a i with v ie·"'" firepla1•e un(! ope n beamed cathedral ce•I· ings. Hide a-way master suite, separate childrens wing. Dash to the pool Call today for cletails. Owner highly motivated and will work with very creative financing. Call 752· 1700 E.sia Dolltouse This 3 Br 2 Ba homt> tru- ly has loads of charm with its large bri<'k and pine fireplace. and ex- posed wood beamed ceil ings. Features include sprinklers. detached 2 car garage <ind golf course view to boot. The owner will financ:e the sale or carry a la rge 2nd. Full price $162.500 TRADITIONAL REALTY HOMES & INVEST~ENTS 631-7370 2WOH'TDO Seller owns 2 homes. Must sacrifice one! One of Irvine 's most establis h ed com munities . Exc·ellent location. 3 big bdrms plus den. plus family room . Crac klin g fireplace. back yard is an entertainers delight with a sparkling pool and a huge patio. One must sell! Take advan· tage, call now. 752-1700 $5,500 puts you into your own 4 Bdrm. A IC home 12 7 /8'?'r fmancing. Call for detail s o n our "TICKF.'T " pro~ram f'J• RED CARPET ... 754-1202 CdM COTIAGE $175,000 2 Bdrm charmer• Wood burning fireplace. step- saver kitchen. HiS?h as· sumable 1st TD. Owner wl ll help fiana nce. 673-8550 NEWPORT IEACH 3 bdrm. 2 ba. yearly. un- fum. $6'75. associated B ROKE RS R fll l T011S 10~' l/'!I 8olh0J ,_71 1 ~h1 12°/oDOWH Buys this 2 + den home. 6 months new. double iron gated e ntry , cathedral ceilings, brick fireplace . gourmet kitchen. Fren<'h doors to ratio. Own e r will i n ance . 1179.000. 873-8550 THE ~EAL ESTATE RS OPIMDAK.Y2·4 20440cemltvd 2 Bdrm. 1 bllth cottage. Beam ceilin1. frplc. 3 car Pllr'ldnt· Priced at sm.ooo. asso ci ated , •• , j • •). of Sbopplna. rl1ht at DOITNOW r you.r llncertlp1 .,.,_.I•*• What a WoGderful World ewe1'7dayl Dally Pilot YourDaUJPlJot of Shopping, righ\, a . ••ntAdffelp? ClaNUled Adi. Toia.ee ~ rour fhtterttps evel'}'. fOU7acr.ciJIM1-M11tod .. -...... edJll 'day ! D• llY Pilo ·-~~·~Cl~•=l=Oad=-=Ad=·~V=ilOl'=-l~~-~~··~ .. ~~~~I Claultled Ada. To plac _help,_ )!OW' ad, ~•ll 842-5878 and ....... wturt ,.,. .. , m let I Claaalfied Ad·Vlao Ml·M'11 Daib Pllat Cl ... lfledl. help )'OU. WILSON PAii CONDOMINIUMS CHECK & COMPARE THESE FEATURES ./LOCATION ./CEMENT OBLGARAG E DRIVES W /OPENER I MICRO-OVEN ./SIZE · 1650 SQ. .; DISHWASHER "TRASH COMP. / AIR COND. I HUGE WALK-IN I POOL & CLOSETS J ACUZZI WARD IMVESTMENT IMC. SALES OFFICE C7 141 U 1-5055 HO W. Wllsolt St. CostoMesa,C•. Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 EASTBLUFF Cape Cod charmer with elegant ap- peal on a cuJ -de-sac street. Three spacious bedrooms. Fireplace in cozy family room. Freshly decorated, both inside and out. New copper plumbing. A II rooms overlooking luxuriant garden. $Z79,500. 16 I 7 WESTCUff DI.. N.L 63 I 07JOO CdMDU,LEX REDUCED $10,000 South of PCH duplex in Corona del Mar. 2 years new. 4 Bdrms with master hide-away <in- c:luding fireplace. spa I owners unit. PLUS, 2 Bdrm. 2 bath un it. Oversized garage for autos and toys + + + very high assumable loan and c•reative owner ready to bargain (';ill NOW for appointment Cl) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment! Two 2-fklrm units . one with fireplace! Current· in- come $740 mo. Hurry. ' this wont't last 646-7171 MESAVEIDE fl/4°/o At..wt. Ra. 4 Bdrm executive home with a pool. large Jot in good location. Strong as· sumable financin . CIE BIDBIB ILllRS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF'-SERVICE NIW USTIN& Tas tefull y Decorated "Q" Plan With Cozy Conversation P11 & Spacious Living/Vinin~ HQOm Area Ideal Location With Large Eric losed Patio On Grf'enbell Near Pool & T\•nnis Cluh. PerfeC't Home F'or Entertain-. ing I $239,900. MIWPOllT TBUCI Smart Three Bedroom Conclo. Localed Away From The (;rowd In (Juiet .'olewport Beach Commun1tv. Decorator Walls. Window & C':irpet Coverings_ Wvnrlerful Tranqull Area. $135.SOCJ Available F'or Lease. $750/Monlh, 759-9100 J2c_,.. ... .._ N..,.,.c..... RESIOE"ITIAl REAl ESTATE SERVICES STOP -LOOIC -USTIM Great curb appeaL Immaculate. Quiel Irvine streeL 3 BR. 2 bath plus family room. Beamed ceilings. Fresh paint. A perfect choice tor the discriminate. $162,500. IN NEWPORT CENTER tut"'"' ,.,.u. 644-9060 \\' I· ~ I . I : 'r' ~ TAYLOR CO. H EAl.TOl\S o..,JJI( I' l!J.lfj HOMI & 2 IMCOMI UMITS ALL FOtt $271,000 A pe rfect combination of charm, personality, warmth & income. Live in the lovely separate 2-Bdrm home & enjoy the income from the two 2-bdrm units directly behind. In addition. a cozy spa & barbeque area to complete the picture. and in the finest Costa Mesa location. WESUY M. TAYLOR CO., llALTOIS Ziii S.Juq I ........ MEW"'""rt'OaT _ _.. CB'1'B, M.I. 644-49 I 0 REALfORS 675-5511 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 251 S L C09lf Hwy., C--.. Mw 675-5511 TERMS! Assume a 91111 : loan, I yr old home 4 bdrm. 2 full baths Und er Sl00,000 Call for more details-This one won't last! Broker. 963·8182 NEW UNITS-FLEXIBLE TERMS Con•enient N•wport locatlot1 oftd nrsatHe property con be prchosecl 01 two units or separately. Each IMit is 2· story with a 2 b.d •dt and a 3 ~ Lin in one and rent HM other. Aonlnitlet includ• wood burning fireplocH, ftlicrowa••· clerestory wiftclowt Ir 111ini lay VU't. $360,000 for both. Cal for filMmtcing details. YOU CCIII buy OM .... , 631·1400. NEWPORT CUSTOM WITH POOL Outshmc:lincJ 3 ~d. 2 bcL with ,..., ""' coYend lorQe patio. Spotless mid priced to .... s 197.500. 631-1400. . TRADITIONAL & BEAUTIFUL Eattent chann & ~ Hwouqhout. Spacious 2·sfory ] tc."ge llYilMj, fnly & dinillCJ room. VU from ~ floor. Mo• .. in now. $380,000. • WATERFRONT HOMES. IN< HI Al I'-T ;\rt 2436 W Coas1 Hwy Newoon Beach 631-1400 WORDS FROM OTHER. LANGUAGES c s.e N A RAM s r A F H T s A H c K R A C R N K R I A W 0 R D S S R G K E 0 w r A r A 0 L A G K 0 H E 0 s A M R C I L N R T V A D M S I G S V S R A T 0 X B G P U B 0 M U A U A H L E N T I E G A A E A K R K U U U U U E R A T G R M B R B 0 G C N M N Q G 0 G T R R R H I £ 0 W 0 E N U P A 0 N Y 0 T T E E C E K 0 L N L U K H U A A A 0 A T B A T E H A I X M E S L C A L B P M A H T N C S N R I E S A N P 0 M I V A J J C N H I A G A A S H D A B 0 J R K C A 0 A U H N R S H A N K T C L 0 W P 1 P S Q £ S I W N A R A M A T A C W W T L R R A £ N H C T E N S 0 T S R E 0 8 lnttructlont: Hidden words bllow 8PPlef fotwilrd, bed!· Mrd, up, d°"" ~ dl8f0"\llly, Find Hdl 8'td boll It In, ~ Sltunk Her.-Kirl Goullllfl : Poncho c..11111,.,.. Quinine o1 Cenoe Sfliltl ICtbtb T .,ioca ~ Btyou Woodchuck Ment.. S.Una ,..uum1111 K..,oo Tomorrow: Colltctiom TAR GAZE~~ .. 0 •eot10"11• I•"•" ol ,.,. tou• K<ombl9d wo•d> b.-low •o to1ni lov• ~ ... pi. worda ~~~..:..,..---Br ClAY ll POLLAN ALETAP I I I I I I' H A E L T I 12 I I J ) W H A R T I i Recently I ettended • ._..,,,.....,,-..,('..--r(--t ! veo•terlan wedding. The bride -• • • -threw the llouqu•t anCI __ H_O __ R_M,.....,l,....·..,,A-....., 1 whoe¥9r ClllOht It, ---. I I I: I' I e ~ ........ ch"'k•• .-.. • • _ by lilWllf ffl the fll•tll"t -· --~-......... ____ 19;1r_ .... i. ~ tl!la,NQ..3 ....__ M Y-OellTNllWt1 Ollldt ~ V Auoull•t lo I~• Slon, To devt lop mtuogt for Frldoy, •tOd words corrttp0ndl1"19 IO numbe•I of your Zodloc birth sign. nMMSULA 'OIMT llAC ... OMT Panoramic view al wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom , home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. entry. living room. dining room. built-ins. etc. $1,385,000. LIDO ISLI Newly remodeled traditional style 3 bdrm. 2 bath home featuring large recreation room & 2 patios. Living room has attractive beam ceilings. fireplace & french doors leading onto brick. patio. New kitchen blt-in uppliances. Close to tennis courts_ sandy beaches & clubhouse. $420,000 IAYAONT We have several fine homes with pier & slip, starting at $1,500,000; RANCHO MIRAGE Sprin.l:!s Condo. 9th fairway_ 3000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm. 3 hath . ft1rn . Golf clb. mbrshp. Will trade for invest.. prop. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy~•df' Dri11" N B 67'> 6161 COSTA M[:A I Charming 4 Bdrm. 3 ba home with family room. Corner lot VERY private yards -Im- maculate and ready to move in_ $174.500 This 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home. Located on a huge cul de.sac lot and filled with e xtras . FINISHED ~a rage. Close to schools- Offered at $144 .500. IRVINE Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single family home with very PRIVATE yard, Xlnt location. close lo schools . shopping and freeway. $164 .500 and <Jwner will carry 2nd. *'Cote Realty & lrwestment 640-S777 . IAYSHOIES CAPE COD 5 Br. 3 Ba. home featur- ing wood floors. french doors & windows. A gourmet country kitchen with used brick island & indoor bbq. Ma..:nificent ma s ter s uite with fireplace. For sale by Owner. S675.000 F'ee . 548-7145. LET'S MAKE A DEAL! for this best priced con- do in area. I Bdrm. JQ-20"7, down. Owner will help finance. S78 _500. Call today 979-5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS *** Mn. Cert SDitur 582 Knowell l>lace Costa Mesa You are the winner of 4fnetlc .. h ($14 value>. to AnaheMt loatShow Mar. 4 thru Mar_ 8 Anaheim Convention CenteT Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to claim your tickets_ *** 1-lt?i I I NEW.J BUSINESSMEN Cont•ct the DAIL V PILOT IOf lnfOfmatlon regardl"9 the county requ i rement• for usrng • Flctlllou• Buelneu N•me. 642-4321 EXT. 332 THI •OOD LIFE UNIV. PAltK Townhome living at its most prestigious. You'll enjoy cozy fires in the mstr. Bdrm, balconies off 3 Bdrrns. plus the fun of minor redecorating with paint and new carpet. The price of $140.000 is the best in the area. For information on this SELECT PROPERTY ra ll 751-3191 C:::SELECT I PROPERTIES 100/o ASSUMAILE LOAN Sharp 3 Bdrm. corner lot in El Toro. New carpets and paint. New central air conditioning. Large s haded yard. Asking 198,850. VA and FHA terms available. For an appointment lo see. call ~1151 ~!-~ HERITAGE REALTORS WESTCLIFF $129,500 Newport Beach highly upgraded 2 Bdrm condo with private patio. custom draperies. large pool! Walk to Westclirf' shopping. Shows like ~ modeL Hurry -this won'tlast! Call646·7171 llAUT'Y + TEltMS MOLOANFHS! Owner says he will carry financing on this beautiful 3 BR 12"'2 BA executive townhome in BACK BAY AREA with ONLY lOo/. DOWN Sunken Ii v in g r oom c reate s cozy at - mosphere for family or entertaining. Must see to appreciate this beauty 1155.000 FULL PRICE Cl) . SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990-- 48R +POOL . MESA VERDE. Location. large 1 storY. • formal entertaini~ country kitchen, sp.rk ing pool. Only Sl~. Owner anxious. CaU f all details. 963-7881 l])ID@fi~--- . !•":~~IP l• ••• ' ......... °"" .. l .. 1 ... ,.., duplu I Hl RITACl H I I\ I 1 1 1 Ii•, ..._. Ml OW Cdll 'Jltw ...........,.)' hi.a a > Bdrm .....,,_ W1l" iw-w pa nl 1•111111•••·~~!!!1 aad t'a r pe u a n d a m odt-t n 1 8dr m a pl • blt Ina Th~ nwn~r U J11 Mii and lw'll IU.tton to all otf~n A1ll 1n 11 ...,_ f!u'8ld• C Ill 2Br C" oma>'4'tt1I )' re moclel•d R ! lot I.OU oJ charm O pe n d all t . l l • M2·2l01 321 Rudll'»t~r. •• l • a... wUl car171 'heal '"" la •• T• owr peJ· ..... fll _J ... Lo Lo llowa. WW lllOt a..t call .... ,._ flOl 9U1CI IALI D4ALING DEl:RP'IELD AIPD MODEL witb a bdrm, decorated ln ........ ~.Only muod. . Redhill 0Really 552 -7500 HhtnllwW. ·r.111nllwS. · Oller..,... ,, f ·' • ••••••••••••-••••••••• I ............. eeeeeeee ••••••••••••••••..!,!!!.!!' ......................................... ii1li .............. ,, ..... ,.., .. , • ., ........... 1 ' c.-... .... ....................... •••• .................. ....................... ., r 11 .... IOWM ••·-·-.. ••••••• ••••-·-••••••••••,•• ... -..-. ,,,._..._ . .., ...... " ·= .. --0... •C1&1 --Secluded WHtcllff/ -"9w 1112 ar i ICl lewel .WU. ar. a., Dowr' 4 bdrm, fam rm. Ba. wlUa ........ M,. Hd Hit oa 1nblt courvant. a fpln. ()pee 16 UHITI 6-'Q elOil .,. -. Cell AlllMeJ tnt,MO Owner/Alt. Sat/Sun 1·5 at 1514 _...,. I0-"97 gy• • 111-11u. 7H-74U, Hlllllnd Dr. Ast. Good rental area, fanta1Uc W111111111• 1111 ' "'4m m.-investment opporl\.mlty, bread. fr · ..... • ..... CHERRY LAJCE butter, $300,000. . i ....... I 8d, I Ba, bJp 3DOO aq ft, 1-5 br. Gd as- balmae loa, eaa11ftol u -awn. loan. 121'1 ,500 nrm. 1Ume, no qua Uy DI. ---.Mt.- lmmac. 2 1tr1 5 Br. ata i sed 1la 1 1 . a&ne'tw. Nr beb. Xlnt a,._ See to appreciate. ~/mo.sa.1w 'Ml 11 ITI ••••-·•••••••••••••••• ~~! Gree Astle . s.."'a--.. ... .... ,,. ...... -------I07' ~2br•*'1.l1e yard. llmJ Y~W. $1100. Alalt.113.53.W . ...... 0... will a..ip n.uce •Ilia ..... ff•tbaltoe S.adl Beauty, llT/l"IL inte,.t rate nallable too! ...., ""w ........ AtSIH,tOO Here la a bome with CLASSIC CALIFORNIA HOME =clous com for\ and 2 bdrm, 1 bath home 2 Br home w /frplc 6 al room for the with I I h E 11 b t 2 BR u n It I , 1a 1e ·an Old CdM I family. Located --.·"'--•°°'•-w•,..•-• aome v ew o t e IMVISTOltS ra . e . ocean. Good potential SU4.500, OWC. fast w ... _ Leue •tmo. 751 -100 nur .,.r1l. 4 bdrm, 2"' for add-0na. or R-2 lot. escrow. Ast. 714-Ml-0290 e ... ve several multi· or Elli Wechrloft M4 7020 ba fam. nn. plus a tri· ....... , S,.cW Great starter home.. e:e unita in Dallu, P't. ' pit 1ara1e. Call today lK clown buYI um 2 with 1ood fina nc ing APPLIVALLIY ortharea. None1atlve Sub-lease 3 Br 2 Ba 'UI aboutfinancin1. bdrm beach house. aullable. $119.500. Near new 4·Plex , 2 cash flow here In a 11 /15/11. llll50/mo. Aat. Prime rental ~atlon. 4-...o bdrm. 2 bath each unit rapidly 1rowln1 com-11~33155 712-1920 ........... ..., '1M7M (' M ~60LIDWEST 1-lllml!l!!~~~·I 1~ REALTORS 1!1!11!1~.-j .eA ._. "~•" ~ASSOCIATES Owner will finance. with ftreplaee, enckleed munlty. Call now for --------- h75.000. patio, double 1ara1e. 1r~a.!.Jf ves~mlent op-2Bdrm, ftreplac~. family. ..... ~...... l" SUS5,000. BUI Grundy, po es. rn. only kitchen. wlk to Big '7J.1to0 1ngo 1utr,9'1U111. P!eue·•-corona.-ic>~5M6 O n ly U OOO o pt io n money, ll.500 P< mo moo to ape>ly on purrhase Beautiful upgra ded ho me 1n prest1g1ou1> Pheasant Run 3 Bdrm 212 Ba. formal dtnlng ~.ODO S 19 tt.rbor 1.-.cl Dr. 0.... Home Fri. 1-5 70' bayfront with pier 3 Bdrms. d en . ho bb y room, patio and p0<1I. Warm r ontempor ar y home $715,000 L IH S1 .350.000 FF.F: 642-5200 j PETE ' BARRETI ··· REALTY 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SO'l Acacia : $337 .000 2 200 Waterfro nt . $580.000 Drive by, lhen call Sara Marvin Unique Homes 67S.S688; 675-6000 ------- CDM DUPLEX With a pool ! Super Street. Hi in come. $295.000. Sharp 3 Bdrm on com er l4Mlll I O I F e a tu ri n g 2 rareplaces , new roof. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! cup~r plumbing a'!d Villa Pacific Condo. much more O~er ~Lil ... soo. 3 Br. owe large asstst w1tb lhe f1n~nctn1 2nd. T.D. Agt. 968-2297. and will also consider a -- lease opt.ion Priced at 3 Bdrm 1~ Ba, ram rm .. 2 Sl30,000. For more de-r r p I c . b I o c k w a I I tails caU. St0-1151 1129,900. 846-1756 · -, _ HERITAGE . . REALTORS 10% 8 UNITS Owner will carry at 10'7c interest for 2"2 years. with normal down . Good rental area in lovely Cos t a Me s a . O nl y $420,000. Call 645-9161 L OPEN HOUSE REALTY /' 644-7211 /Jn NIGEL [}AILEY Ii. ASSUCIAl ES * •DEERAELD! La r ges t m o d e l i n Deerfield. The Plan 5 done as ne ver before! Pool. spa. magnificent decor and landscaping. All this a.nd assume a high loan balance. Call 't523 CAM"'5Da~IRVINE L.,_..._. 1041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1HISHAllS Weathere d cedar shakes. that is. Custom designed 3 bdrm. fam rm, 2 baths. Extensive use or wood glass & ceramic tile. Beam ceil- ing, frplc. $165,000. Mission Realty 17H)4lM·073l. L ..... HNJ-1 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOMAICHIAY Sweepina Ocean View. 4Bdrm 3'r'.!Ba . Cust-0m 8 yrs on large lot. Pri Sec Gate. Tennis Courts, Beach. Clubhouse. By Owner . princ only. Only 1595.000 (714 ) 540-9S50or 499-3695 8~ down, owner will carry with no payments. 3bdrm, condo. s p a. model unit. Jason . Agt. 536-9374. SI 0,000 DOWH now• --------- Utea $1,000,000 2 miles from beach. 3Br 2ba. low int. Prine. only. Bkr 631-9170 or 546-1344 Lowest p r iced Mesa Verde custom home in most desirable area. 4 Rrm. pc:>ol. + 9"'• as- s umable loan. Sell er anxious. S269.900 Call 551·53311. A~. llr + P'ool/VA Brand new listing in Mesa del Mar. Lite and airy noorplan. Owner will consider VA offers and may consider 2nd. Greg Astle. 559-9400. F1mcl• Y.-.Y. I 014 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREICH CHATEAU •UHT COTTA4H ! 4 lclls w • INclt OMLY SIOt,SOO M.wport INclt 1069 \\OOdbrldtjC ••••;:;•;;;.;;;:;•••• Realtlj Lease option or equity 551·3000 share the best buy on ltztRarranra Pk•).lrvlnt Bal. Penin. Charming 2-sty Span. home on the Attn: Investors : Wood- bridge condo. 3 Br. 1'1• ba. Assume 1st & 2nd TD. Agt. 552-3339 Univ. Park. Popular Ox- ford Plan. 3bdrm. 2~ba . formal din rm & bonus rm. Pvt putting green in back yrd, overlooking comm. p_ool. Prof. landscaped & decor . $179.900. Owne r /Agt 7~16. WOOMlllDGE ~LIN 9 >,'4•/oA• .... 2br. 2ba. study, frplc, comm"ty pool/jac/lake . $1 28,000 By Owne r S5M9'Zl * •UNIV. PAIK park! Call Joyce Waltze. 631-1.298 REALTORS ........... Ocean vu. 3 Bdrm 2lr2 Ba. 3 c ar garage . *325,000. ~ 75'-9221 YICTOllAM BEACH HOME New 3 BR 3~ Ba. Quali· ty handcrafted oak lhruout. Stained glass. spa. ~~~~~ •a1hw• -----• C:SELECT = _:_ _______ 1 POUIPLIX T"PROPERTIES 3Br.Den,2Ba.SUIOO/mo. P9'1MOUSI S-. Aat9 1 OIO Westside Costa Mesa. ~::31Arb)27g.s:;" 875·2140 or Needs some work . · · C... ... Doell ................ '\!••••• · .. j I W/ 2 Bdrm, 2ba. 280 deg * 120,000 DOWM • ~!°~~~-~I: rr.,.rfv 2100 Avail March Isl. 2 Br 1 ba ocean, bay, mln, city T R 1 L E V E L wiU carry l0'3 interest ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/rrplc. Nice. No pets, view. Poos, sec. Lge H · MA STER p IE C E 2 w/.,,OOOdn. Two improved industrial no children. Isl /last + sumable loan. Balboa bldl 2 Id S200 sec. l&OO/mo. Call Penin. Fee land. C/21 door. Pool -Spa 3 Bed PR€HIG€ Westminister. Agt. Lindaat875-23ll patios -elec garage ~ s, y ears o . ~~Cntr 760-6767 l~~ ba. 5 yrs new _:_ _ I HOM€~ 714·l4l-0290 2 Blocks from ocean, 2 br. private master bdrm. -C.M. Indus . bldg on 2 ba. den, dbl frplc. sun· Newport Hgts by Owner 2br w/2dbl gar! 675-3063 orffl.98S7 B a I an c e d po w e r . R.E. lnvestments fenced tot. will trade. by DY patio, avail. March SlOS.000. Low interest. 3311W. Coast Hwy, NB owner. 142-.atO lst. S750. Agt. 675-2373. a... nu: 730-5352 now! 645-6646 1WIMITY PIOP. LohfwW. 2200 c .... Mesa 1224 **POOL! ---------1 IMCO.. Pl.ottaTIIS • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• ••••••• This lovely one level Newport home wraps around its own secluded pool. $222,000 and nexi- ble tmancing too. Call for details .. e J·:/\NUl Hfl\LfY 1J~ 1 2000 *OPEN HOUSE* Wed 1-5 & Fri. I ~2 Z71SUglaM •••La. 10~ LOAN: Nice duplex OD large lot. Great in- vestment. Assume 10"!. loan. Owner will help finan ce . $89 ,900 . TARB EL L . BKR . 540.1720 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPACIOUS 5 IDIM Gracious 5 Bdrm ex· e cutive home in ex- c lusive North T ustin a rea. Sparkling pool and soothing spa wilh lovely decking and beautifully landsc ape d yard . Beautifully decora ted with custom draperies, shutters. & plush carpel. 3 car garage, RV access. 3 ~ baths a nd much more. 1345.000. don osen rt•.t ltcir"" H.t.rv ..... c .. LARGE HARBOR VIEW CORNER LOT. Wonderful e xecutive home for entert.aining. Privacy, prestige and impre ssive 5 Bdrm home with formal dining lmt AT P ROSPECT room. Lge patio s ur-TUSTIN. 731-3111 rounded by mature greenery. S375.000. Ott.r Ital Estate ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 - \\•\11 HI HO:\I llOMI ..., Inc. REAL ESTATE 173-1900 ~·-·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.· UDO,..NSULA Deluxe 2 Br in Lido ....._ Y• Hw Park. Pvt beach, securi· Portnmo mdl 4 Bd + ty gate. $41.950 Pvt spa. Close lo school S h arp double wide . bonus nn w/loft & Ba. I & comm. p!)OI. Asking Rustic 1 br. Excellent $342,900. Tom Baron terms. $39.SOO. 559-9400 Agt. WATLRFRONT Looking for income un· Its ?! We have 5 pro· perues in C.M. Priced right at less than l lXGross. No bank financinf required. In· tereslA!d . iben call us. J~ WW& 714 /64 I ·0763 2787 Bristol St. Cosla Mesa. CA DWUXOHWATR a-twlO'llo.t 2 • 3 Bdrms. decks cir patio. 2 frplcs. Prime location. Lge a ssum. loans. C fl I M.wport C.tr 64~5157 760-67'7 ~OSTAMISA 7 Units. Bread & Butter. That's what these units a re referred too. AP· prox. ~ acre. conve- nient to all stores. 3 2Br. & 4 lBr. $250,000. Good terms. Possible trade . McNas h Realt y . 642· 1334, 642-6578 eves. SACllFICE FOICIDSALE Two 4 Plex Apartments by owner. 2 Bdrms ea. Assuma ble loan a t WATa .. OMT Nice clean 2 Br. I Ba. LOTS Fenced yard, new paint, A few CABO DEL ESTE gar. $425. 1st . last + $15-0 waterfront home sites sec. 2546 Orange "D". remain on Lake Miuon _548-__ 2778 __ . _____ _ Viejo. Thill is the final llDS,IPITS 01 opportunity to build E -Side, fenced yard. your dream home. From 2 $~85,000. Call Henry garaae. Br. s495. Durant at 714855·1081. 642·2:5lO, 646-4&48 . ---------2 BR. encl gar, adlts. no M ..... D.....t, pets. $450. 713 W. Wilson. ...... 2400 631-48119 ....................... --------- • lbr Duplex off street BY OWNER prkg, quiet no pets Lease brand new 2Br 1325/mo. MB-2474 days condo in prestigious ln-d i an Wells Rac q uet * 2brHouse w/gar,quiet. C I u b . E I e g a n t no pets $450/mo 848·2474 furni s hin gs. rr p l c . days S'!ll50/mo. Option to buy. 10$ down. 13.2-N assum. 2 BR I Ba. 252 Knox St loan . Call c ollec t E /Side. 1520 util incl 213·343·2630. Eve or Drive by. call645-7009 _be_f_ore_BA_M_. _____ 2 Br 2 full bath condo. 2 o.t of Shih car gar. Pool. jacuzzi. P'roperty 2600 Gas pd. S700/mo. Days ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213 /861-8207 . h ome .O A scenic Oregon Coast. Electricity, fenced. out· standing view. accessi· ble. owner •92·2499 2131923-2860 Mesa Verde, •bdrm. 2ba. 2 car ga r. nu paint. crpts. drps. $700/mo. &46-2821. 2700 -------- Dix E. Side twnhse. 3 br. 2"'1 ba. patio. frplc. bit ins . auto gar . opener. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fallbl"ldc 16A. a vocado land, 150 trees. 40x80 bldg. 1275,000. owe or trade ror home 673-9473 · wash/dry Jlook-up. S690 75~m.s8 eves. 10.7"h · S128.000 each. Mesa Verde lrg exec. 4br. S.15.000 down. See at 6555 I•-------• &65e5DumbartoninSan ZI Ac..fnlt&ro•• 3ba. 2 sty. 3 car gar. Bernardino. Call Carol Junction Hwy s & 99. 30 G r d n r S 9 5 0 Tucker at 714/494-'549 or m i I e 11 s o u t h o f 714m O. t804. 494-2M6 Bakersfield. 137 acres or 121/..-lo Mew Rc..c ... Open Sat/Sun 1-5 at 2522 23rd St, Prim e loc. • HOMES , ________ _ na vel ora nges . also 1 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. ramily r.m. plums. tangelos. lemons frplc. 2 car ~ar Nice and grapefruit. Early back ya rd $750/mo . producer district Fullv Wa te rrront H o m es e quip ped tu r n-k e y Realtorslnc 673·6900 REAL ESTATE 631·1400 3000 + s /f . S up e r~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' kitchen. Sep breakfast . rm. Mstr suite w /3 Trailer at bch $8500. closets & vu deck. Oak Terms, OWC or trade nrs " plush cpts thru· _•_99-_38_1_6 _____ _ out. Fr"?I dining rm, New Modular type home ~=~ ~~~~-c~~~~ El Moro Beach Park. sp terms. Orfe r e d at 70. 2Br. space rent S175 $269.900. 581-1000. Mis· mo. 20 yrs lse. 159.900. slon Viejo Realty. _4_99-_39_1_6 _____ _ _______ ........ ,,,..,., 1400 DOYm SHOl:IS • • • ••• • •• •• • • • • • • •• • •• • 3 Bdrm home on over 'h sq ft olfice bldgs nr. a cre. Ha 1 a 11 t b e S.A. Courthouse. Xlnt amenities necessary for for atrnys. $375.000. gracious enterta 1 n in g 'e63;lii-4580iiiii;bk:;-ir~ . .,,-- and comfortable living. Camic: f Loh/ '475.000 leasehold. Call C,.,,.. I 500 for details. • • •••••••• ••• ••••• • • • • • 642 .. 5200 COSTAMISA s•x;I ~c ...... I Jus t fiste on 19th Street. Excellent income history with terrific up- side potential. $488.000 leasehold. o peration in clud irlg labor. Net operating in- come projected 1981 before taxes in excess or $300,000. Offered a t New 2 sty. 2 br hse. frpk DW. wa s h /dry . y et , ba lcony. ga r , $525 Adults, no pets. 642· 772.5 A Division of Harbor Investment Co. . . ·--.. ....: DupieK,2bdrm.lba,each side, nr. C.M. Bluffs. 2 car gar, separate fncd y rd, great cond . S129.SOO. 988-3505. Sl.750,000. - WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 Cosy2..,.Cottop Pvt front & back yrd East C.M. 1525/mo. Call for appt. 673-8855 or 631-9252 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Townhouse, 4bdrm, 2ba. .... ...... 2 pools. new crpts. drps . lb t 1111 2100 2 car gar. $685/m o. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549--719. ---------Mob 11 e Homes·Lakeside •bdrm. 2ba. fam rm. din Big Bear Lake o r Ocnfront Laguna Bch. rm, wet bar. $750. Nr. terms or trade. 499-3916 S.C. Plau. 545-7645. . .... 5 Br. 3 Ba. 2 Sty. SllOO mo. lse. arbor La wn -Mo unt Olive Two cemet e r y l>lota~ether S700 both ••••••••••••••••••••••• ta-3-Wast f tht Dpb Hws Fwwf.a.4 494-0066 Lrg 2 Bdrm units ••••••••••••••••••••••• Npt Riviera 3 BR. 1 le\·el a sew w/frplcs and each has ............ 1106 w/ownjac. +club facil. ~COltMB HAllOIY11W Wonderrut exec utive borne for entert.aining. Privacy. prestiae and impressive 5 bdrm home with formal dining rm. Large patio surrounded by mature greenery. &358,000. 2 stry French Chateau townhome in a lus h green setting by the sea. Dbl doo r entry t o cathed.ral ceilinged liv· ing rm. Dramatic open staircase to pvt mstr suite. Sep c hildren's wing and 3 baths ! All this+priv de Utche d mom·in-law apt. or rec. rm. Comp!. w/wet bar, 4th ba + more! Motivat· ed seller, here Is poten· tial. Take advantage. One al Irvine's large at- tached homes. Superbly located in the heart of University Park. Call for details regarding rr.,.rty 1600 lrg :.ar~ Enb:o~ed . ....................... No pets. S700 mo. Agent. Plan lll ReallY' ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ;~·;;;;.-;Y••;;:;·;~::·; ~!f! l~an. ctt~r:d 0:i Winter rate . cheer~ul . -~--------- . -::;: avail in Laguna Beach's Sll9,IOO. ~--rum. 1 Br w/beautiful Eastside sharp 3 Br. 1 Ba. 752·6499 UDOLMNG flnestmall.Owneroffer-s undeck 212"" Opal house . Bric k frplc. A PETE BARRETI .. REALTY - W1\ll HI Hll:'ll I llOMI .. Inc. REAL ESTATE 11MIOO 1 HAilCi YllW ~COIMm Wonderful executive lltome for entertainin1. Privacy, pre1t11e and lmanuive 5 bdrm home "1tll formal dining rm. tLarp .,.tio SWTOUnded •1 mature areenery. .,S..000. \'1'\ll l<I HO"ll tlOMI .. I~. REAL ESTATE l7MIOO . CENTIJRY 21 WALK-IN REALTY "4-1311 ............... 1040 .................... , .. llCi .. OarOls Split Ownership Pro- gram allows you to buy a home without negative c a s h flow w ithout manaiement problem1, u1ln1 minimum down payment! Start your nest ea today. CaU for more information. TAD OYIR 11112"9 mT0.1WIMS Wawl .... I Clear alMI aeller will 4 mm. 119W! 2br, zt.a; nc..cre, try In. I Caa condo, completely .. ,. trade up for small com· 1radecl with custom CMl'dal in Oran1e Coun-drape• 6 carpeUa1. 1~Naat I bdrm cotta1e. cat.t.adral cetUnp, pro. nptaee, ._, a near feuloltall7 landauped Udrm,lbadaunlt, with prlv. 'atlo, .,...,.... -.000. pool/spal Wont last, ~~---;;~· fihElllW. I fNK~ ~~' ' 1 lllilBIES'f "le ' REALTORI V• 6'/3~ ~ ,.ASSOCIATH ~ 0.... ""'·· '-. •• •• - . andfi . I.OFFS SMOICITIH 3 Bdrm, 2 ba townhome. Patio, 2car1ar., pool. A real bar1aln. $155,500. CallAgt. 2 br, 2 ba condo w/det. dbl gar. By owner. 64Ml46 '75-HJO $11.5.000. Open Sun. 12-5. NEWPORT HEIGHTS 8Greenwood. 552-3123. CHARMER! . WOOD. _ 1 3Bdrm.2Ba. Fam. Rm. -Formal Din. Rm . 2 Bdrm Warmington Gourmet k ltchen . ''8 " end unit . Great Fenced. 12% interest! location. Open house Best terms! John Va· Sat /Sun 12-4 a t 10 J Co Windwood. Agt. 552-0lllO n an · at-OIOO. ant Ad Relulll 642-se'J l"ke I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE'COMflANY CAIU F 11 U.... M ant• You can't find a better comhlnattcm ol comfort. Melmlan aad loeata at Uala very affordable ertce ol "1.IOO. A lBR condo la tbe Sprtap. You'll be 1111d t you aet.d cm fldl cme I Jobn IUcllard 511-8700. (C-10-) 711-1414 COl'Pll Vdltey C--\ Ma.Gii ~I Do-Oliwe t Lovely family home on Ing attractive t erms .• v•....-illn 67~ dshwsr. garage. Quiet prestigious Lido Isle. 5 Callast4'7·5800. -!!l'!i!::._. ...... ,, I 11111• 1107 street. ~ mo. Wayne Br 3 ba, 2 patios, sun-,:-;.-;.-.'-.-.-.-.-.-;.-;.-;.-.-.• 1 _ . ~ ............ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent646-8816. deck, gourmet kitch. r• Channin15 bdrm. 3 bath _;::.__.:..;.....:....:...:..::.__ __ _ New cpt cir paint. Call for 111()119 I H bayfront with 39• boat HOME FOR RENT priceandterms. ..._.,,..,..._ MY f'OllS-float. $1800 mo. Bill 2 Bdrm. $475. Fenced REAL ESTATE STORE )Q I ....,.tte 12 great 1 bdrm units in Gnnly.l15-tll81. yard & gara1e. Kids & 875-1771 r~osta eaa Hospital. Ed1emont. Best loca· peU welcome. 984·2566 $275,000. tJon. Only $.130,000. L..,... .._. 3141 or ~2171. Agt .• no fff. LOWDOWN loy McC_., lltr. ~ V-... I.I. ........ ••••••••••••••• 5 .... 7729 497-IUI OCEAN VIEW COT· 4mlM.llATH Sl71MONTH Versailles 1Br /studio. TAG!: Lower 3 Arch penthae conc1o. w 11g 8!1· 1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 sumable loans, only 1: DWI.IX Bay, 2 BR l ift ba, huge lmmac. Two2bdrm 1ba, r.»lc, 4 mo lie. Now thru S ol PCH, comer lot, lune. 90. -.9'111 ast. No lease required End al cu-de-sac-hot tub . ...-Mllle $105,SOO. Owner/agt. 845-3M7, 979-5370 ask for Jim HB shopping 1trip-375K ·Comm. bld1 +, SA·315K am. ast.131-1257 C•••••••-•IT••• .............. 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S21 ~Carnation Ave. Al · 1um low Int loan . azs.ooo. Call owner for Info or appt. Days SoQ.1111 ;eve115-5142 •CANYOH Prime view building site oa d eoune. Plana ln- c I u de d . Red u c e d -LOVEL ... ~Y-HllOUS-•E•LIK-•!:•I JO low clwn mUta 1310.000 :~=--h~c::,o::rm1 CONDOINORANG!: Riwnkle Ownet'/A1ent Call Dan Bibb l sty, end unk, II 3Br. l'JJ411D,5"-0ID ~Zlllor~'*&ev dbl prap, community OMCI ILH --.. poo1 n•.ooo. ... __.. DUPLIX Terra Del Sol Rily JO Unltl. l°"' ftnucin1. Stepi to oeean. Auum. m•>•-n44 owe no.ooo •/no In. a Br, 2 t.. each unit p1mt1. 9415,000. Agt + dedt . .,,000. ...l.M4. lloUll Wood Realtor D .,,,,.,11// ---------m.-rt iWh°S. 1100 5-lKDOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• OD. reotal hom... all •CANYON Dupla for aale, noo sq. e ...... IUC!e.S.aT4. 21C•,........,Dr. ft .. c/ac, f t p, patio. ._ I ... JO carpetlnf. lmmac, 1tr --: . RivenidtllG-7251 Off Rolld, Green- brlcr Modal Towahome o c n.-a... --wltla _ .. _t _.... . . .,.._ .. n•.ooo _.,., ...... •ml.::S 1otr dn, 11~ finncln1. ..-,.mpuUd,...ID E "!:urttJ ;:r.. poaUIYe t•ah flow .. eotlduJ flaaacta1 . down. Aacume 111.W ~·--Call MW! lW .tr. lat. 0ww will ....... If I., 1111 '~ . ;:m._ww.. Mk'la• ;·;;·;:·;:;:: rLLSTATE •WALi• Ute ..... owe. Put • idLiW ....-........ fM.eU ... --• 4 ... .,.... .... JI H L1e a Br 2 ba, lte fncd •••••••••u•••••••••••• yard. encl aar . Nl!AA NRYC. l Bdrm. den. Complete harbor riew. Mo to mo. f150. Kiclc tpeta <*. tl50+ S300 sec.dep. '4MJ69 . b ,fam nn. frplc, clae to 1choola/park. lmO/trmCarol 55Z-84 all 1 Br. Bil fenced LIDO ISLE: 2 Br. 1~ ba Jard 6 prap. P.-OK. home. Y•ar•yhOTS/mo. ,_mo. TIO W. Wllaon. l'Jl.Cm. VERSAILLES: 2 Br, 2ba, laury fum condo. Shorttenn. WaUrfront Hom• Inc 3 Bclrm. 21., Ba. 2·•t y . Redan 111-1400 PoQ.l/apa. trplc. dbl car. l>iana. 155-lUI or Newport CNlt condo, ai . .-Ast. walk to llMell. clehaH ,.W J22' 411dnn. ram rm , ... bar. ·~··· .. •••••••••••••••• trple, ..,, "°" '"81a aaltl. ..,/mo. bt 6 courta. partlaltJ turn. IM&, • aee. ""*· Ilk· rm med oee•paae1. Im. -.-r. t.tmJmD. ClM>Gl·ml. Saee,al •al~ aie9 oce ................ b ............... . "8ra ....... °"""'I ,,.,.., MW c,111, .. Ti ... -la .. C• ••Plft ... t testla .,.. .................................. .. Call am W••••re ,_._,~..! "111 • • . ---~-- I .. e .. Af s lw•h ~ 0rmnge CoMt DAILY Ptl01'/Thu'8d91. February 21, 1911 ~ ! ---_ _. :~~ ........ ;: ......... ~ ........ ,t!~!~"~·~·!'~~ -.,_ ...... .._ ....................... ,.. .. "' .. ... ~ ............. llllUl11'91 llllllMHHH ............ -... -,•HIHHHIH• ... HeHe c........ ..a. I' ..... 11,_, ··-1••••11111 I~ 'fWllll•I a. .,.,.., .... ar .......... UW.. ,.W. N.;"Z:. •;:•,ct .......................... !fl!!,...__ .. =~ ..... ;;:..~= ~--=--=-:=:.:.::'~: ··.c c•r :. , •• 1: lbdrm, 1'hb•. db· ~--wlJl-·'dlr llr I llr,, .. -. ----di••• 1r. A •lta ........ _ pt d dii!Mra/111111. wJ I:; • -...,.. WW 11w Mee ~ .._, a -r, er 1 , rpe. _._ _.. ....-... 5 --U Cir, H5·Ull. t470. --· --· ' .. ----:=r •~';.:_•hred It t &f .... 1741 · MIWLYllCGa. -..1, ::.!~•=_!!~· Oery ........ In••· I 1~ ""'1J ... ___ ...... l Ir ... I -- •tlll ., ~=-J!~: r:: ....... -ICI Kl.'lfllmT d/':J:. pool~d:!: Tentftc Z Br. ta. Best lbdrm ~ utU h1cl. ,...;;;;....._,~...,,..--,0:---1 • .---~ , .. ,. ..... ...._Uriat! ..._, OK~Mka..· No pell. clilld pool/Jac/uu1u uc • e • -· _,_, • aar ... c.do, •IJ I ......,... P9ftlb..,.. .AvalJ.aow,&U41.S5 ............ MO._ c.• ••... ••••••11·1.i• .. ••· •Ir . aveU ~,. old. hcl11d1ct roud=. Terncecl Spe-. 2 ..... Pool ., .. l. ... fW Ullo. n •I Ill la or II o o ct "°'· • ,_ bbq. • a...dr7 fac 541--Neat 1 Br. Bach, crpt, lbdrm undo, VIII• r~-: nl--wJ......ulul meadow • 1parltUn1 fountaina. fromlJ.TPll. . rri,., ar abop. UtU pd, W•rner compleJt. Y•• .. .....,.ol TWtll.._.....,.,oedo, put~ • .-.. PooJ. lpacloua room a . Newer 2 Br 2 Ba $425 :::~mo . 875-5110 : a.t.ril. teoo. After5pm: 17• ST • .-111110&. ~ " Prirne oound floor office from -.TSe • pr sq. ft. From 200-3000 ~· ft. Nortll # Santa Ana near college~ All utillU.1 paid. I c 540..3666 ·-............. 1 w. 1 a.. 1/c, vliew, JM ... ..., eilO-rno. No .. ,., ... ctUUa1 ., ... 8 d .. • d b · h · (21J)9.1801. ·--rrao ....,_ Ul·ltOl: llD cbUdren. f114 ) ..... cloaeta, home-un ec., 1 wa r . IASTSIDI L-.L..... 31,. 4 , ... ...... .. UJ.Tll .. IUPll. lib kikban .. c•b6net.I. .,..1411 Ev•·Wli:ndl or ......._ • 0 ¢ > n••-Welk' to Hunt1n1ton ~days. Cia1k tW... • ...................... Afa IW•I• .WW.. ........... 4Jll .... •lldr•, 1'hba, Wood Yea.1) ,...,., S Bd, 2 Ba. c-.. 2 Br. • Stlidy, tri-level, $4251 Br!Lllft. Overlook• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ._ • ...,. • .,,, i.r1.t1e lloma, urou Incl. stove, •notmo. 1 Bedroom·unlum. N••r new Zbdrm, Zb•. fireplace. 11kyll1ht, it.ream. Wuher, dryer. ................ 1169 Retired Nuneto•hr 2bf, ,•a , hO...t&oe "-' •wiln dQb • P11rk. PONlbkl IHH option. rromSieOO f~. ~-~~ct, :ewl declt. No children stor ,..,._. Adult. No .,eU. ....................... 2ba w/privile1e1 C.lf. C.... A "~ 1 Bednlom·fum, e • ..-.... ..., • _... · c.nc pet.a. -· 180 E.2l•t. · m.an, ___,_ Sunny upper w 1..-uo. 2 U1-<N12 ' c.11 .. -. a.Im l.o •O ••U UU /mo . · homNaO gu, $f75. Adults, no Da11 848-4212, Eveat---..:.------Br 2 ba, S51S /mo. ,.....,.,.~ 111 ma. -I ....... c .. w 28edroom.rurn.*'90 pets. 873-2113. 494.5751 •se~. NEW WOODB)lJDGE Dabwsbr, no peta. 719 * * * I ~r. 2 b9 Woodbr'id1e anRfPLACES Adulb,no.,eU. eves 2 8d l 88, $375. Gar•1e. 1Br.ZB8,den,frplc,_.,5 AmJIOsW•y.IU·0815or Lo¥IO 8-* oe•• 10 Qr .. •t..l\ ~u•ll·iu . c oado, lake view , Jbr,2ta.,fam.rm.P11tlo UlltitlesFree! Stunnint luge l le 2 Y•nl. noltids/pets. Call mo.551·11551 131·2ml Roommate wanted. II /Ill. 2$.35, to ah.r beaut ~ ln I.Al Bch. 414·15164 or •m.utJ.. 1171. I Brook .ti yd, cul·de·uc st . Bdrm. 2 Ba. garden apt. Cr•'•-.9400 • -.... 3141 ---. ------1 Pine. ..... ff).a:llit ~fria. wHher·dtyer. LA QUINTA HERMOSA Pool Ir rec. •re•. 710 W. -::'fu:':•••••••••••••••• VerHallln lBr /atudio --------- .., .... -/m0.111-lltO NOME roll Rt:NT 4 Bdrm Pool. NJS ,.__. Y•rd It 1ar•1e K* Ir pell welcome .. _ortn21f7l A&t .. eofee. Like new S Br Wltb stove. Cbild • 1mall pet ok. $550 mo. S31·208 or 5'1-1'Jt z Br. w t&ar•ae $425. Crpu, fncd yard. Water paid : 2710 ··F '' Del•ware. 838·4 l 20 1·5PM. Nice 2 Br l ba, lae kitch. laund rm. Cpts /drps, stove, refrtg, fncd patio w /lg 2 car gar. Quiet are•. Mi to bch . Kids/pet.a ok. 9800/mo. ""317 --'!---' 2 Br, compl. redecorated, fenc. yrd, $550/mo. Refs. 542-0832 bet. 5-7PM Plush 4br, fam rm, S750 nr bch, m•ny extras 675-54&t ttmlW• Mna• 3242 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRAND NEW lbr dlx twnhse, plush crpts. frplc, lndry rm, patio, r•r .. pool, spa, s.una. rree heat, $.'585. 962·4914 Se•g•te W•terfront Con- do. 40' boat dock in front. 3 Br, 3 bll. New cpt, new· ly painted thru·out . GREAT VIEW. Vacant. Asking $1450. fW0.3341 or ~ HOME FOR RENT 4 Bdrm. l800. Fenced yard le garage. Kids & pets welcome. 984·2566 or 973-21'11. Art., no fee. '"'... 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODla .. E Rich eartht.one colors, 2Br, 288 twnhle. comer unit. landlcaped p•tlo. stove, Nfrig, "nhr /dryr. •uto dr opnr, lse, adlts 9875 mo. Owner/agent 631..SW Woodbridge condo. 3 Br, iv. 88. 9800/mo. (213) 49'r«8)eves Is wknds Woodbrid1e lease. 2 Br. J 'h 0., patio, pvt loc .. boating, tennis. pool. '800/mo. Agt. 640-9900 DEERFIELD Twnhse Jbr, 3ba w/f•m rm, new cpt, clean. $700 /m o . S5&-8508 mid day 4 br, 3 ba, det. home. Encl. balclt yd, comm. pool, tennis, $795. 551·lll80 2 br, 2 bll, den, Uv. rm. 2 c•r encl. g•r. det. home in Northwoods. encl. b•clt yd, comm. pool & tennis. •/mo. S.SJ.1890 Kida/pets OK mo mo 18211 Pubide Ln. 1 bllt penthle condo •dlta no .-..-u ..... °' For IHH hllhly up· Yrly le.ae. Shown by W. ol Beach, 3 blks S. of 11th. St. O~:~!r::! ~ 'h':!~ pets. $t50 mo. + llt·l~at COUlllelon to penon .. ly 1radld uecutlve 211.ory appt wlldys. Owner. Edlncer. New upended 2200sq. ft. cove. 2 br. 2 ba. •dulta. + aec. dep. e.6·3447, aeled YoW' com..-tiblt 4bclrm. 3b• home on 875-41275 M'7·5441 Exec. Townhouse. Bad: R ..... TORS no-·. K•UUeffardesty m..s370Jlm rmm\e to s\it yotK W. uJ-* In Wood iwu. .-----------• Jlrestyle. Sbared·Livinc, : ..... ~ .• ;:..clanscap: WESTCLIFF . Lrg 1375/up 1·2 bdrm, pool, Bay Newport Buch Realtor79M244. S.,,._ 833DoverDrSuite31NI ·-4bdrm nice home 11100 J•c. lkl.lt, 18118:2 Florida, with view. 21 unit com· C .... &At 3171 631-1801 I ml atrium sunken liv ' · · H.B.SG2B34orM2·3172 plex with tennis court, 2 BR Eaataide twnhae, North End spacious 2 Br. rm: rormal din rm, f•m Rer·s. 1514 Dover Dr. pool fenced patio, no pets. S550. Oceu view, w•lk ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• . i rm,cloeetolake,pools, Agt. L-.._. 3741 Cal.l~·a!~~mo. $400mo.5a49'71 to beach. No pets. C()Nl>().lbd.rm. balcony, M/Ftoshr2 br.2 ta.a1K b _.._._ """ocu '" ~ .. _ • .,_ -cl ••r frplc w•ter •-in N.B. Pool, jac. tenrUA: sc ools • shopping. Lease Executive home in ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,....,....,_, "'" -· ' • etc. $340 utils incl. 1950/mo. Renewable Big Canyon. 4bdrm, 3ba. Mobile Home. lBr. lBa. 2Br Studio 1'1'!Ba. Patio 3152 =· ~~iir.°1 • jac. l/yr lse. 731-631115. ......i, J'•c. wet bar, ..... "". Steps to be.ch. Laun· $175. B.l .. D/W, ga,.ge, 2Br. married cpls. l child a..,......... 846-!r1'95 • .....,. .......,., d •"" .... _ d··l6.. ....... .,. ,_.,7 oil. No pets. Rets. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME FOR RENT 541-8970or988-~. ry.etc. _,.,_ 499--..... a w..,, not"-""·.,..........,.. Condo 88 Ir 5-MA. 3110 Rtsp, mature. empl. 4 Bdrm -Fenced 8 2'"' B N Studio, TV, util incl. 548-4291. cSr4edi25.t/.mGoa.rag( eWi1.nlsyoanr~ co u ~ :~ _2 I~ ~1.'3 s ••••••••••••••••••••••• woman to shr 2 bt Park · -· 4 r. rz •· ewport h r 3Br.2Ba.Condo.Acroes Nwpt apt w /sa m e . yard• g•rage. Kids & Crest Condo. Some Professional business Large I Bdrm. Upper. Fairview.)~7506. ;;;.~.~~~~.;;:e. rromS.C. PIHa. Securi· ~91S9 peta welcome. 964-2566 ocean view. $900 mo. person. Non-smoker. From $300. Quiet build· ty ., swimming pool. ---------.,... orff:J.2971.Agt.,noree. Agent642·941l. $300: also room $200. ing with beautiful 3bdrmapt,2'4ba_,l800sq H•--'leoclt 3169 64S-24l52. Femrmmatetoshrne'1 L•lteside condo, pool . teMis, jac, 2 br, 1 a,., ba. 9850/mo. 857-0211 Fully upgraded 3 Br. 2 Ba . Townhouse . Gargage, frplc, dshwsr, washer & dryer room. built-in kitchen. Near Hoag Hosp. Adults, no pets. '650 mo. 548·0230. 494-0451. landscaping. ADULTS rt. upstairs/downstairs .••• ;.::;.:•••••••••••••• condo by bch in Nwpt, OVER 35. No pets. $525/mo . 631 ·1169, Condo nr S.C. Plau. S225mo.Cheryl548-2149 ......... .... 376' LEEWARD APTS. 2020 545·~. pa• NEWPORT 2bdrm, Iba, comm. pool . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fullerton Ave. 1 bllc E. Mft & rec. room. Avail Im· Rmmte to shr 2bd apt Spectacular Oceanfront. ~ A & Blk l Br. Refrig. & stove. COUMT'IY CLUI Ba Ibo a P n S2 5~ "111E LAKES" L•ree l Br. loft, l Ba. Condo with P•lio on L•lte. Frpcl. a /c, & B of ....... ...,.• ve. l Crpt.s & drapes. No kids med. Adults onh S.90. e . dAvail. nowSU .F2·4 r. Con-So.ofB•y.631-0397. ....,.., ....,. "'""' 4382 UVIMG 968·9833 or 842·5279 1....mo+S50 sec yrly re.nt o. 673-R . or ..... ~.-.. mo . .,_. · Singles, 1•2 bedroom eves/wkends. nv .. 13/1875-7546 Luxury Ocean fro n t 2 Br. yard, gar, E.Side, 1 Br. l Ba. ca rpets. •p&s.lst.ownbouses. more. Asking ~ mo. No. Newpart 28d IBa. 138-33112orS38-1752 Gardener, Adults no Weekly.2or3Br.Comp. cbild/petok.$175 drapes. 1375. 283 From$129 644·1900 furn. in cld linens . &U·0763 Avocado. Hayloft Apts. L.,_. .._. 324 pets, 14.W, Appt. 642·2267 640-4784. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba apt. Garage. _MS-__ 748S _____ _ I a~ail Mar 1st. Savage. Hwtlqloa heclt 3140 ...••.•.•.•......•.•.. ..... STEPS TO BCH .. 28r. C ...... www 3271 288, frplc, ~o. RMP ••••••••••••••••••••••• 499-3918 2 Br t ba, $175 /mo. Kids 3 Bdrm. 2th bath, 2 frplcs, OK. Comm. pool. New clubhouse & pool , drps.-Contact Norm Medlterr•nean style Phillips. Agt~l5. aft g•te gurllded condo with _4_-._2192 __ . ------ view. near beach ,,_. 3290 Monattb 88y area. $995. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent Larry. 494· 7554. 2 Br 1 a,., ba, Tustin Acres condo. Cpt/drps, ~00. Oceanfront lbr, trlr Aft5pm,S52·9359 +cab•n• $650 /mo. --------- adultsonly499-3Bl6 Wes1a•11ter 32'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $900. Newer Jbdrm. 2ba. Like new 3 Bi". home in wa s her I d r Y e-r . xlnt cond. Lovely back p.,1oramic white water yard. 9825. 982·'1940 67vi:~ch67,._Be..!,.c}' Hts. Cotldoi iL I•• _,.,or .,........... U..fa wl1lwd 3425 L.,...... 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••FREE RENT till 3/31/81 HOMEFORRENT Htg. Landmark 3br. 4 Bdrm. $595. Fenced Coodobrlllld new, adults yard • garage. Kids Ir only over 4 O yrs . pet.I welcome. 954-2566 '100/mo. 75&-9341 or ~2971. Art., no fee. ------'----1orangetree Condo 2br ~...... 3252 lb•·palio-on lake $495 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo Jim 957-1100 ext 301 NIGUEL SHORES: Im· d•ys mac. 3 Br. 2 Ba. New 1--'-------- crpt.a. drapes, guard OCEAN VIEW Elegant g•te. paoi Ir tennis. SBOO new condo 2br, 2ba, 2 mo. ~3444 or 544 .. 5403 frplcs, bonus rm w /wet bar $1Cl00/mo 6 mo& lse NO LEASE REQUIRED YEAA·ROUND FUN: Soc.al Ac11v111es 01 rec1n1 •Free Sunoay Brunch• BBQ s •Par 11es •Plus much more GREAl RECREATION: Tennis • Free Lessons 1pro & pro shoPl •2 Health Clubs •S3una • Hyoromassage•Sw1m ming • Dr 1v1ng Range BEAUTIFUL APART· MENTS: Single~ 1 & '2 BeJrooms • Fur n•sheo & Unfurn1~tiea • ti.oun L1v1ng •No Pei~ • Models Open aa11y 910 6 Oakwood Gerden Apertment• Newport a .. ch/So. 1700 16tti St 1Do•er di 161hl 17141 642·5113 Newport a .. ch/No. 880 1r111ne ldl •61n• t7141 64!>-110' Mls.-Vlefo 3267 ok 492·2259, 996·7542 ••••••••••••_••P•••••••• Broiler •'---------' •Be•utlful Vtew home 31--------- Br. 2 B•. Fam. rm. lbdrm lux club & sp• frplc . .-. fM0..9646. facil. ocn view, Newpart H.wpart IHdl JJ6' $ 4 7 S f m o . T o d d ••••••••••••••••••••••• (213)24().9C777 BALBOA BAY CLUB Bachelor unit. Xlnt co nd . lmmed . possession. SIOO /mo. 831-1400, ~.5000 ext 1216 Newpart Shores Canal 38R Condo newly dee. ThruJune. 1 Br. furn. util front 4bdrm, Jba, newly Irvine Groves 9650 mo. pd, no pets. 7 doors to dec:orated, 2 blocks tcr rio pets 549-3918 b h ocean. 982-81183. c · '390. 675-6039 Towuhame ---------Uwf\Wwl.r..d 3525 A'-!"ICCWC:ta 5 _,.. MAMSION ....................... U..fa al '-cl Spectacular home on 5 E L E G A N T L a k e s • • • •••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • ures with pool & Twnhme 2br 2ba a /c ............ 3106 separate guest at m•id's f'rplc. rec fac: avaii. 3/1: •••••••••.•••••••••••••• quU'lers. Facilities for 1595/mo. 558-1898 d•ys, 1125. 2 Br. modem. patio 14 bors~s. Bea~tiful 55J-4854eves Ir ur•ge. 227 Coral. stalls with exerctSe & 2!3/311&-3511 s how arenas. I year Dt•h'" ,_,. 3550 ---------Jew. • ........................... h•l •• 3107 --2 m..ter bdrm. 2~ba. all •••••••••••••••••• ••••• amen. Npt Hgt.a. l800/lse Pluab 3 Br. J Ba. deck. (213)l121).1030days. ('110 frplc. view. S750 yearly. Wiide & Co. 675-6606 •••••••••••••••••••• ••• 1 Br. East.side . small but THI WHlffll TltH cozy w /lots of neat Luxury Adu.It units at af· wood. $320. 642·9450 an font.ble living. 1.2 & 3 SPM. Br. Well decorated. ---------i Olympic siie pool, light. Quiet l Br. l Ba. New crpts & drps. Good Eastside loc. Mature AduJts only. S32S. 147 E. 18th. St. #4, C.M. ed ~court, J1cuzzi. part like landsc•ping. Moel beautiful bldg. in H.B. From 1311(). 846-0619 2Br. It;;Ba. w/gar. Adlts. 3 BR, 2'h Ba twnhse, fplc, cpts. drps, bltns. fncd gar .. children & pets OK. yd. water pd. 636-4120. ~ mo. AND, 2 BR 2 61;1 Victoria St. 1415 Ba, gar, children OK. I 2437 "E" Orange. $410 mile to POI. $175 mo. 2619 "J" Santa Ana Ave. 9M--28!7 from 9AM-5PM, $410 Large l Bdrm/bachelor. $325 including refrig & all util. 851-2175. ---·~ -- \~•) AOUL T ~~ LIVING Ocunfront for Winter Rentals. Furnished & unfum. Broker. 675-4912. NO FEE! Apt. & Condo rentals. Villa Rentals. 675-4912 Broker 2 br, l l;'z ba + gar. Hoa.: Hosp area. nu decor . open hse Sat & Sun 11·3. 4238 Hilaria Way . SSOOtmo. &»5875 ~WPORT HEIGHTS 2 Br. 1 Ba. No kitchen. l400m o , incl. util. 644-6780, 646-3189 3 Br. 2 Ba. Vi block to beach. Yearly. ~8083 SoellltLa9J-e 3116 Cueer Fem w /17 yr ••••••••••••••••••••••• d•ugbter to shr 3br. 2b~ Oceanfront studio apt San Juan furn. S300 + ~ with patip, overlooking util. ~198 pvt buch. $550/mo util ---------incl. -.2253or 499-5021. M shr 2 br. 2 ba apt, $212.50, nonsmoker. nr A,_ kuwf1 Fa ••d bea c h . H . 8 . C a I t- or U..fw wl•d 3'00 A n s we r A d # 4 2 7 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642~~. 24 hrs. S E A W I M D Prof. Fem. looking fol: VII I •GE same to shr 2br. 2ba COr\l ~ do in Westcliff. N.8 , New 1&2 bdrm luxury 64S.--4608 adult apt.s in 14 plans ----· ------.- from $14(), 2 bdrm from Exec fem to shr w /sam91 '505 + pools. tennis. 38r Twnh.se. tennis, rac- waterfalls, ponds! Gas quetball. health club for cooking & heating fac. 1290 mo. Cathy paid. From San Diego 75l-627l dys. 760·8847 Frwy drive North on Beach to Mc Fadden eves then West on McF•dden G~ to Seawind Village. for..... 4350 _<_7_14_>~ __ 5_198_. -----1 •• •••••••••••• ••••••••• •~ 4000 SSO. Storage only. 325 J', ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17th Pl. offS.A. ave. CM>. Laguna Beach Motor Inn, 646-5137aft11 am. · 985 No. Pacific Coast t2xl2x28: 329 UniversitY\ H~y, L•1un• B_each. Costa Mesa. Avail. Daily, Weekly, K•t.chen March 1.nd. ~ per mo. •v•il•ble. Low winter Days~ rates. 4!N-52!M. Room with kitchen priv. Near bus Ir shopping center. Adults only. Eves ~9:30 or wtnds. 9Q.'1S20. Coron• del Mar sunny room • ba. w /l.undry facil. S2'7S. Ask for Faye. 640-9900 1 Bdrm+ Bath. Pool. Jacum 1225 +deposit Coronadel Mar~8234 With or without kitch priv. In C.M Non· ~ •••• ~ ••••• ~~4· Eleamt pro( bld1. 85t ICJ.lt. lie. Red Ca SD.13151 Rent: 3 mos to 3 yrs. 1• to 8Z s/f. Flex. terms... Fumorunlum. -:n= 1817 Westclifr. N.B. Want finucial inst. 7000s.f. lst. floor. Agent 541·5032. 2300 S/r. Low cost. Newly decorated. Bathroom & wetbar. Quiet Cost a Mesa area. IJdltlHlty 9't.a5n IOU.CIMTB MIWPOlrT .. Elegant executive suit~ in. prestige locatio~ With complete suppa~ services. • 7141851·0681 : smoker. '42-5765. 250-500 sq. ft. gmd Qf. ...... Mot9h .. 00 utils pd. From cm. 779 llMTALS 2br+den2~ ba 3Br1v.a.. 38r2~bll Rl'( ih 1 I I~ Re.ilty • ; ~.: ~. ;1 I\ I '150 ~751~~~~~~~ SllSO 13\.7076 eves Mike Refs req. 675-5if0 $295 nice lbdrm. resp. adult. util pd. no pets 106 E. 0.y Ave. '9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• W. 19th. St. C.M .. Tom Balboa Inn oceanfront. 957-1900. ~---------.. Low winter rates. D•ilY 650 sq ft $4.50 per mo or weekly. Kitchenette. 4001 Bard. St. Newpotf l>ftAleld 2 Br to.nbome. den, 2 Bl. crpt/drapes, rrpac, aara1e . ..-uo, Im· med. occup. '825. m,w.an bef 2 PM. Harbor Ridte L•utre· mont Model. Full OCHn view. $2500mo. 760-1977. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t90 6 up. 875-8740. Beach. Agent 541-5032. OOYOUUllE MOTaS7 Weekly rentals from_. le up. 848·7445. 2274 Newport Blvd. C. M. v ............ 4250 Luxurious. full service of. fitt apece. 1·8 rms. cotl· rerence room . secll services . Newport Boch. Call for info: 752-41181 ~ ORANGE CO. AJRPORT Leme av~I. •t 85t IOOO' build to suit, per( 14' arch. encnr. computerl eledronic firm. ' CUrtil Ir Auoc. 5lliM5'70 ..•••••••......•....... llrh <""'l"'3 1> .. rkmac l(•l rrp1t lr' "''·•h 1u1llr'lit '&: "'ltll11lt b16 4K71 l..1t•\i ··~ ....................... 8 \ll't ~I TT IN CI \\) HOM fo' Mno thru fo'rt x to :i 642 1~ ....••••...•..•.•.....• <:fo~N ('ONSTRt'CTION Additions. Remoclt'I~ Ln· ms Mark \179 <t4 1 I c-...MakincJ •..•.•••••...••.......• HOME RF.PAlllS I nl ext Cu.~t t'a h1 nl'ts 411 l,,_ ~won 6 K 9 HU l c I u . 11111•11 drtm"•· Hwlaa. ,.. q.aalllled ao Job too ,.Un llM!e,IN-MIS. •malt ... ne bandle .._ .. I ..__,;:-~"'· ., .... ruu.llinl. _,,. --· C'o tnp hnme eontr. Pie ' I Mu)' rel'• m.au aft ... •••••••••••••••••••• iUtMOUlr~ u :t-AIR IPM WOOD .-.c ... .\IW> t•l.lllhN'll t'ab~I :.i.tJ CC'f)4'Ut1Jlft l1 t l'9 Ul 11rr~ 1 \ 'd 1'-op qu•I Mr 1•111011100. 112 '314 c ... c... ,,.... ...... ······1················ ... I -·~····~ . ' "°' 1uoch t M Chris· • •• •••••••0 ••• • • ••• ••• uan~.IM-5'13 •V!RYLOWPRJC~• - -Landtc:ape maint-ctnups AV I.UN t'ONS'f c·.1m •dd1t 1on11 nu 1tr twru rl'model / l'tukka~. lovin1 home. Georp. 54t-201~ t •'JM'll\f\ '"''ef I.It• "47 h<1t lunch. fmt't!d yrd. <'O mp a n lon s h l p . M4 30lll < 1 -.ruM INT~KIOR Ne.r o.c <'. eves or a ll n 1 a ht. o r for \h ose <' fH•t:NTtt V "Special getting away lh Ju) 642 ~ rrom 11 all" wttkends. ...... Ser•ic• ~~Anytime ••••••••••••••••••••••• c: tor Wi.: \'""" c:~rl)('t Clean~"' ••~••••••••••••••• Stl'tm1 deon &r uphols WcJt k 11u u r T r u r k lllVW\l W\ll &45 3716 Construcllon-All types ~yrs exp Free ~I . Ltt'. 1'33'589. 645 5973 Sbumpou & steam d ean Dr .... Color bnghteners. wht •••••••••••••••••• •• ••• (·rpt.s 10 min blcu<'h S.S. DESIGNS Hall hv din r ms $15 . Custom Drapery Win· av11 rm S7 50 , couch $10, dows. IOOO's or rabn t's, ('hr SS Guar ehm. pet S3.95-4.95 yd 10 day del. odor Crpt repair. IS yrs Free est. 30 yrs in area exp Do work myself. -645-6654 'Ref:. 531 0101 e.ctrical Cetfteftt/Concrete ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LandKapin1·Cleanupg Ttte trimmlng-Haullns Maintenance. Ftte est. Amie, S.8414 H .... • • •••••••••••••••••••••• Carpentry /Handyman Drywall, painting, m ist'. repairs. Your speciric•- tlom. 754·0899 Carpe ntry , roo fin1c masonry, plumbing. stut't'O. drywall. ett'. 646-9980 ------Hw.twoocl Roon ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARDWOOD FLOORS Cleaned &c Waxed Anyt.ime. 832-4881 S.A. HGllllMJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Haul, cleanup. t'oncrete removal. Dump truck. C....,•TreeTrim Oomt. wort. pal11Un1 or '??Ray.~ IS~o;d•r-dumptruek 1r -demoUUon-baul tree• yd won 831· 125'1' DUllPJOBS Small Mcwln1 Jobi Call MIKE Ml-UIH .. ~!~ ............ ~~···-··········· !!!:!!e .. !'!t.. ••• r====~~':' Short form1 6 ren&er'• MoviDC? n. Stan .. , l•Wel-•m• PUite.. credit. oaly •.ts 'Ul ~lludeatallloviftC Interior Palntla1. Mar. lrd. Brint W-1'1, Co. 6u 1rown .. 1a~• Alwayt s.&Janed. R•u. n111n fne tu orpnlaer. load Mnire. Ju. u~ d. Bob ..... No •1111& req'd. 945-IGS ITUMll.141-142'7 • Quality Work-honeat. IMc II Student will move you at dependable, loweat •••• .. •••••••••••••••••v e r y r eaa. ratea . pricea.R•/Comrn'l.Lle For int. purpoaes. we 752·1413,..,3777 " 1 n 1 u r . K e n ~~~.'IT t:lioo"vfd!, Mwt'-ls.mc.. <714>al-5405 .. .... .,.,_ Call 161 Ph Ou. Walt'r 6 s.mc..su.-. ..... ................ ~····· New • recoYera, Repair • peciall1l /1la1·b•1 pritW. Retial* . .._.12 Ver. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lowest rate1, prompt H•••d•• • I Male Practical Nurse neat l(!f"Vlt't! In area 10 ............... •••••••• a.vs••~ Pvt duty, exp'd, rerr.. yrs Freeeeti48.541M QUALITY ROOfJNO A.II t1s-. rree elt . Wanta REALLYCLEAN .._,_ .... , Full/pt-time. "Let me ------ HOUSE! Call Oin1bam ••••••••••••••••••••••• care(oryou."491-7118 Painting , pro m pt Vlla. M.C. 54l·D HARBOR ROOFtHO Girt. Freeest.M.5-5123 For ins. purpoaea. we , ....... JP .. e.. Service. videotape prop. & con-••••••••••••••••••••••• Top Quality I.it' 334950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expertlte hou1ekffpin1. equ i p " s upplies rumished, trustworthy" dep64l-49'70 ___ _ Superb Housecleaning Spectat'ular Results 6'7 3-<l509 /642. 4439 -----MRS. CLEAN MAKES IT GLEAM. Homes. apt11 . offi~. Carpet. 646·2240 H o u se k eepin g e x perienced dependable a rticulat e Deborah :MS-2713 Persoouli~ed House cleaning by KUMI. Ca ll Eve 531-5172 Annie . "'2 day/wk o r every 2 wks. Call aft. 7 : 30 pm. 642-0647 tent. Call 64().0100 Video IS ye•l'll Oranl(t' County. VerificaUon DAVE'S PAINTING 839-llM ~·0399 Profesalonal•lns\all•r available for your Serving Area 9 yeani _ _ M__., Most Reasonable PAINTINO tUltom jobs. ai.<1131 • •• ••••••••••• ••••• • ••• 1~~~c 'd. 780-7301 ReBIOflable Rates Custom brick . stone. Tile iftitalled. all kinds. l(uaranteed. refs. John 893-11187 bloclt. concrete, stut'co. Fine exl/lnt paintinir by 846-744$ ext. Z7 Refs. ~est. S.9·9492 Ri<'hard Sinor. l.ie, Ins ----Tryme.631·44l0124hr111 BRICKWOR K · Small Jobs. Newport, Costa Me sa, Irvine . Rers . 675-3175 EXPERT Brick & Masonry Small jol>ll & repairs. Frplr facinRS Rers. 5.51·45.SS. 760-7CT74 Masonry our :1pee1alty. Our wo rk u n ('hange your outlook. No job too small. No job too biR. 631·2004 ------C all Mr Maso nr y . 1•aintin1C & Pol)('rmJt Cabinet Rl'rini11hin1e Prof. work F'ref' e11t Rsnbl. Steve S.7 4231 Painting Comm'I, In dustrial. R~111dt>nt11il fo'ree est . low rn t1•11 673-0737. Painting & PaJ)l'rml( Wallpaper R1•moval Paul Cutler . 962·JOOfl RALPH'S PAINTIN<i Lil-. lnt/J.:xt Low Ruh•i. SPF.C..'"fRUM PAINTERS Spef.'ialh1t11 In all pha11e11 or the trade Ca hinet re- finillhinl(. ('at\I flM·482M <Stcvel PaintmlC mtJ1•xt. II n· polrmic C'llll CiC'OrlCt' for """' 1"!4t Anytiml' 17141 1191 · 4!I08 ' 213) D2lt 0229 T~~lc; ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!:xpert TrttTrlmmer Ten years experience 545-l&M. 751-2128 Trt-t!/shrub trim. remov~ d nup11. haul. Conrrete. dirt. d t'. Jim 63i-4S30 Ty .... S..-.lu Inter 11-:xtc•r /llt-f1nu1hin.:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·clllnf(11/w11ll1JaJ)t'r f.11· TYPING SF.RVICE <'ain & Son11. llUll ~IV,, Wlcdy11 12131593-iMM '80thr /W•polr Y.vl!l4 f7141'446·6237 ••••••••••••••••••••.•• wa...wc..--. Nl•at p11t<'h<'1i & l••11tur1·11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fnent. 19l·14lt "IA-tTilf'Sum;hine ln" Foundations. Retaining Walls, Hillside Hestora· t 1on . Slabs. Patios . Bltl<"k & Art<'k Lil:'d ELECTRICIAN prit'ed righc. free estimate on large or small jobs. Quick ser v. 642-7638 ------H .......... T ree/shrub t r im. con-••••••••••••••••••••••• t'rete removal, t'lean· Prol. man now in 25th yr, ups. Ftee est. 5.57·8Z71 w /MacDonald Douglas c ustom brick & tile wo rk . Compe titi ve prices. 6'75-4394 "'"ht. 964-5566 Pl.A~1'Y.ltl:'llC; C'!1ll StJn11h1nl' Window <'l•·aninR. Ltci 5"" 8853 Lit• •:ai62i 673-0359 PalntlnK lnt.1 f':xt rnn I\ 11 lYIJI"-mt '•' lC t 642·1l38'7 eves. f" n-.· •'flt rA:1 lf2.",JJ t'HAR HF.NOVATING 645.3749 Want Ad Help'.' Top Quality, Dependable Servke Reas. Rates . 18 642 5678 yrs experience. S31·5(Y.)S Want Ads Corp. wiabea t.o bouaealt. Ca11642-5878 896-5524; 873-7MJevs. Brick & 810t'k work Marty ~18 -tals our spe<·1alty /\r coustit• painted Prom1>t Seaside Paintmit. <: n·K SJ6.4fll6 fla Vt' ~om•1tllnR '" 11•·11 ' C:IH'llfll~ ad'I #to 1t Wf-11 W1n1t11w W a i.h l n~ 'fJ!·•·mh11n~ 1n rf•:4ltfen 'fltl 11>1:! :;1111 f,il~ 7972 ltt·f·, Offic• R...taf 4400 Industrial Retttal 4500 Mortga pt, Tnnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DMcli SOJS • D&UXE OFFICES• M 1 I rv1nt• so sq rt fconr t'd • ••••••••••••••• ••••••• From I room up to 2300 gas d1esel.~~nks. m1xkrn I Widow has money for sq. ft. Low ratei. No shop offm s. ~1 3000 2ND T D.'s any s ize lease requin:d ~172 1>11 1300 Sq. f't Industrial above sio.ooo. No t're.dit Pont Dr AdJ. Airportcr Front Offtt'E'. lar~e rear I . no pnlty. For action Hotel R.13·322.l !l 12 , badt door s:n5 mo. 1793 t' a I~ AG T 67 3 · 7 31 1 i:.1 F: 17th SI · Wh1tt1er St Costa Me~a anytime (' os ta 1\1 l', a s 1111 t' ~I 540-93.52 days. 646 0681 Madierel Rah MhJ. :JS() !l(tl~Q rt rrnm 75' \U ('V('S SINCE 1981 11 nwni11c., Call Tt•r n ls t&2ndTDs. SSOK·SlM + Cressman 5.S.l ~IOllO · Busin.ss/lnvest/ Owner/Non O wne r ()((i('(• Dt.•i.k "PUC'P HI ;11· t1ve Rl'al Eslalt• l 1H t"~t ml·nt Tlrnk1·ra~l· ,.rr ll't' i\!lk for Pi\111 nr D1•uJ.! 752,t,Jl1 Finanee SFRs & Condos ••••••••••••••••••••••• Commcrdal & Industrial Busifte.ss PF.TER DOBBS Opportunity 5005 64<HiOi6 673-9043 lh1\ F rn111 1 lffi1·1· lilKI' rw rkllll! FtntJnn ,tl 1•t1· Clwni>r fi73 Hll•:l <:r!'al tK'<'an \ '''"' from th•~ 2 ~t11rv 111f1n• "1111• m (' M I'\ t 1·111 r<•m·•· & hath SSOll '\n lt•as1• ll31mO 4450 ....•.................. • • * Edna Kurihara 76.11 Onn Drive llunt1111?ton lh •ach You arc• lhl' wi nne r of 4 fre.e ticbh <Sl4 \'al11c'I. to An~im Boat Show \lar -1 thru Mar H •\natw1m Con\l'nll<m \c•nter C<tll 642·S678. ext 272 to d ci1 m your llckd~. • • • ··············~········ nnat repmr hus iness in F'or store & nHin · ~IJa<'I' Dana P1 Partner wa nts ;1t reasonal>IC' r;1tes 1, ·nll 1 "'nt .-.c """ 500 to 2700 S ft. 1 ~' 1111 "' I 0"'""1'1"'" , rH' r ,\' t• ;i r $ n 0 0 \H'.S \ \'~:1un: rn 1;i;1 1:11:> · Pl ,,\if,i\ Wflft 20.22% YI.tel? On Your T.O.'S. Notes URaisers-lnvestorsSS Call Dennison Assoc 673-73i4 TD. F'orsale. 2nd. $6S.OOO a t \R1·:. 3 vr s . need sso.ooo net · S44·0333. 1173-6720 30.8°/o YIELD 2nd TD. Orange Cty of· fit'e bldR. John Gordin. pvt party. 953-7525. ----- AOIOMMtCeOMllh I PenoellGl1/ Lost& FoiMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1525 \k~a Vc•rih' ~;. ! · ,\1 545-41 23 'Small 'VlrJ! Commercial Sl•a l.1fr lhsplay t:nits. II us t•sl '77 ·1111 Sales SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Newport llc'arh SI :!5 1 appr11x SHU,000 Prit'f' "I fl 1':1•\\ tlh off11·1• 11r 1 n " l''I u 1 p & 1 n \ (' n 1e t a 11 ~ '"' h ;11 h , S.311.!~00 R~!i7RI Palate Lathe Wrath Mohair - '('C'Urtt~ ;1 !' 600 2-100 ~fl rt 5'""1 :l Isl St ( nt''l I IO Bank of Nt•wrort l,1clo Cannt'r' .ire a 1 675 ;mi. (21:Jlf;.l 1-!)71HI Prime Location 1270 Sq rt on husv A<•ci<·h Roulevard· llunt •n (!ton Reat'h lde:il for ri•ul Fal'>n t , thrl'<id &. µall1•rn s hop in xlnt L a g 11n<1 fl et1t•h lo<· J.:c;tablis hed •t vr!:> 700 t'Us tomt•r::. na.mes c:d in ventory &. ATE IT Ret'ently 1 attended a vegetarian weddinR. The hride threw the bou· q ue t and whoever t'UURhl it. ATE JT c;a les Slll.000 d own ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owrwr rt't1rin1? Bkr lllii_•,.--------12131591 578.1 Lost&Fa.d 5300 1•state orrir t'. ston• or ln•estmeftt • FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: othl'r !'.Uttahlc busmt'.ss Opportunity 5015 2 rnvate baths . av;uf:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• hie immed1at t'ly 10 LOAN S500or morr Dbl. Y~ar lease Atlratll,Ph your money Loa n is pr1t'ed s('('ured by unpret'edent · 642-4321, ext 286 ed Isl in rilm rinant'in~ W~kdays hiswry 714·957 4<W36 642-5'71 P rime Of'f1<'l' reta il C' 1 2600SQ fl ~ c . f P S 220.0ll0 12'. a~i.m 759-14:11 WarehollSt' S fllll'I.'. ROO o;q ft Costa Mes;i F11r info t'all · 752-9449 Con•111rcial k...tals 4475 ...••.••.......•......• Sto re Space for leai.e 1500 sq. ft & 1260 SQ ft 1n HuntmRlon Reach FJexibl l' t e rm s 213/596-7202. ./H.B. 600·1300 sq ft . avail. now Plt>:tse call Bill. agt. 831 t257 .t -----9....wR...tal 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S500 up. 1640' lndus'l /Qf. flee. 1810i Redondo Cr "P". Hunt Bt'h. 842-2834 MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 711w.17th. St. c .... Mno.C.eH. 642-4463 •20IM> sq re warehouse avail for lmmed oc· cupancy. •2780 sq ft warehouse avail late Feb. •2·1800 sq. ft. units avail early March. •33' 1q. ft. •t..eaain« office fin . Mon. thru Fri. 8-4. Sat.1~2. COSTA MESA Industrial S,000 9CI ft, new Ult up. llW ~!ear eellJn I . 450 ICI ft offices. avall tn IO /da 71 1 ·5 /yr I•••· .asr net . Owner (114,......,t. Mo~s.Tnnt DHdi 5035 Lost : Newfoundland. lrg. ••••••••••••••••••••••• iso lbs. black w/white Sattler Mfc). Co. chest. missing since Oct. All types of real estate 31. Answers to "Fred". invt'Stmcnts since 1949 Big Reward. 971-9385. S~ialhieMJ in 2ndT1h Lost. Small poodle. Wh ile 1>42•2111 545-061 1 & Apricot. Male. Pierre. Reward. 96().9121. Use Anlwe' A' service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messaoes 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service Is only $7 .50 week. For more informa- , tlon and to ptace your ad call 642-5678. ~~:!.~.~ ..... ??.~~ 1~.~-~ ..... ~?~ !~~~~ ......... !?.~! ~-~~~ ..... !!~~~.~~~ ..... ?!~~ l ~~~~ ..... !!.~~ Lost: Black Lab Female. I Found : G 0 I d e n •PACI....,... Answering Ser vice tak . f$ f'. A lJ T I C I A NS I< 4/yrs old , lllino~s Dog 1 Retriever. 2124. Laguna "' rn.. * ing appllt'ationi. for Ranlrmf( M/\:"'M'llRJ~"T'S. follow tags, needs medication. Niguel. 495-0416 •HCOITS• 11PM-7AM shirt Sun & TELLERS 1nf( pr1:r to work In ":'ic Victoria le Placen· 54f-1519ExT. 79l5 Mon only. 362 3rd St . wa rm. atm"sph ~re . t1a, C.M. Call 631-2876. FOUND: Fem She pherd Just Opened . Uhrs. !IC. Laguna Beach F\JLL TIM f. f ricn'11y hrs. flex 1bl1• M ix vie. C rest v iew NOW HIRING ---ThcHa1rI>epnt 557 Z234 F'ound : Dana Pt Marina School 848-9632 yellow prkg lot. Feb. 14. small collar stone pendant. 494·9383 ARE YOU NEW ACCOUNTS F\JLL& PARTTIM F: ,.,....,.~. 5150 Lost· Photo Album rell ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOGA C la sse s r or home /clbhse. New form bas ed o n scientific studies. Aquarius Yoga 675·T194 a self motivated a,I! gressive people person willing to work ha rd. burk the tide and stand alone. Let me show you how to make S3 to S7K per mo. Mr Dowdell. 835-~ Position available m our South Coast Plaza office f.JCperience prer'd Call from ear Harbor Rlvd & Victoria. C.M. Please ca ll646-66i4. Found. M Do be. un cropped ears. Graham & McFadden. HB. 893·0561 work: 846-2039 eves PRE LAW student needs $25.000. Will do anything Legal. Confid e n tial DVM. P .O. Box 3242. N.B.~. COVER GIRL • OUTCALL • Kathy AmburRey 54().4066 CALIFORNIA AITIST FEDERAL Lost Fem Australian 953-0778 MC/VISA Desperate for S. W. 2S yr Male will serious lv con· sider selling a kidney or any other liody part. Med. purposes only Reply Daily Pilot Ad 1t829 PO BOX 1560 CM 926216 Life ('ast Sculptor needs SoYings & LoClft a ssis tant for a nC'W 695Town Center Dr Shep mix. tantblk/gry. - l rg ears . c urly tail. 18th/Palm. HB. 536-.8744 FIRST LADY Escort. Models Party Dancen. •TOMMY'S s tudio. must be am-Costa Melia.Ca 92626 bilious. t'reative. ex per Equal Opportunity Lost. White toy poodle. Sant a A na HeiRhts /Costa Me s a area. 548· iBifl. l o s t med iu m s iz e d sh aggy haire d white male Cot'kapoo. Pink n ose . V ic . Brookhurs t /Adam s . 962·6135. -------- * 972-1345 * MC & VISA Art'e pted --- TOUCH A CLASS ESCORTS 752-<.i17 GreatCa ••Y ltcorh Uffrs. 641-0i80 C•/Ch.cks Am Exp/MC/YIM OF NEWPORT 752-9368• A TLAMTIS MASSAGE SPA Be pampered by 16 Beaut. Girls Open l0AM-4PM 7 days. Phone~3433 Anyone for tennis '! LookinR fo r mixed doubles partne r. lady 45·50. interm edia te player. Call AnswerAd 114216. &42·4300. 24 hrs. in working in the human Employer form. work well w 'Pl'O· 1-~~~~~~!!!!~~ pie 499-i968an.vtime 1- ASSEMRLF.RS. We \\ 111 t r ain Appl y 7AM Mat'Gregor Yachts. 1631 Placentia . Costa Mesa ASSIST MAM.AGER Auto rental. No exper. net'essary Call 979·8826 or 772·6550. Ranking .( VAULT TELL ER Wells Fargo Bank has immediate opening for indjvidual with t yt>ar min b ankini;? ex 1 perient'e to fill the posi lion as a Vault Teller in El Toro Lost: 14K gold men 's ID br acelet. nightclub. Lag. Bch, SlOO rewa rd. Dys 956-2960. 956-4520 Lost· F' black Poodle. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ••D¥W•" "Debbie". Del Mar A v.. DIVOltCMY·MAIL AUTO RB4T AL AG T No exper . necessary I Call 979-8826 or 772-6550 ----- BABYSITTER NA NNY Competent woman to t'are for ne wbo rn Mon/Wed & Fri. Approx 6 hrs day. Xlnt salary Alon~ with an excell t'nl s alary and ben e fit s pat'kage. you will find a friendly wo rking at mosphere For more in rormation please t'all: C.M.Reward.645-4626 Fast . A ccu r ate. Complete $85 Ac tion ••••••••••••••••••••••• Scllooh& .......... Found: Golden Rel. pup, (714)842·7030 M. vie. Irvi ne & San-i-------7005 673-M.23 CAREERS IN RADIO! tiago. Nwpt. S.24i3 Singles. Men 30+. Girls 21 ·65. Regis ter: SlO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elalew 714-830-9100 Found: cassettes or in· 835·0489. John Millard Advertising Sales. BABVSITTF.R wanted Instruction by radJo vet. from 8AM-l2 noon Mon.-vestme nt lec tures . Intros. CaU 7141964-9115 Fri. 642-7366 My home or Spyglass Hill area. Call 955-2700. ----- Found: Maltese<? l. salt &c pepper. nr Talbert & Magnolia. FV. 962-1433 FOU~D: Overnile bag c o n tai nin g m a n 's t oiletries ide ntify 54S.~ Found : Ladies watch . 34th St nr Npt Blvd. Ruth. 6'75·4249 Lost: Blk & wht M. Cat. red collar w /name tag. Vic CdM. 640.4-019 L ost : bla ck & white Collie. "Lady". SlOO re· ward. Call 499-5577 or 499-4551. Found . lge adult Himalayan cat. vie . Hamilton & Bay, C.M. 646-9794 Found: ski boot. st . 8~. Caber. Snow Summil Express. 831·3383 Found : M /Tiger kitten abolll 6mo on Sandcastle Cd M. &U-2301. &U· l <187 Found: Wiemaraner F . S hepherd. blk /tan F . Gold. Retriever M. Blk puppy F . NB Animal Shelter &U-3654 Found: Blk Fem. puppy apx 3 mos. wht mark· inp. HB area. 994>6998 f AHT ASJ Jolla W.e.d, 7o75 iiiiiyoiiiiiursiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii- ltWMMte, ETC. ••••·;;~~~~·;;;••••• Banking •S: 0.C. NEWEST & MOST Xlnt drive r. Courier . TaLH LIBERAL STUDIO IS non-smoker . dependa · Xlnt. oppty for person N OW THE BEACH ble. Resp.645-6039 with math aptitude & AREA'S CLOSEST AC-•----'-------minimum of 9mo.• pre- TION. 8125 Bolsa . Mature reliable woman v ious T eller eJCper. Midway City.m Just 2 avail. to drive you Outstanding working blocks east or Beach anyplc, Fri. Xlnt ref cond. Fringe benefits & WELLS FARGO BANK Eqwtl Opp Em ply m 1r lh Blvd. behind liquor 832·<XM3 pleasant surroundings. i----------store. 543-9243. 1--------7-1-0-0-1 Qualified person m ay ---------H.tp W..ted obtain an application at --•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrvineoffice For Classified Ad ACTION Call a •FOXYLADY • OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC • 972-1 IJI. lboltc Escorts 558-1946 24 Hr. Service Serving Or. Cty --- *** Ccniloyuford 3034 Femheath t.n Costa Mesa You are the winner or 4frftffcbh <SH value). lo All ........ ICMltSllow Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642·5678. e"t. Z72 to claim your tickets. *** INTRO SPECIAL I MYmC MASSAGE MASSAGE$10W/AD Santa Ana 556-4656 Accounting Af'CLBK Excell. career opply. Exper. nee. for Fashion Island investment rlrm. Medical/dental benefits fully paid. Computer ex· per. Call: 640-0123 Accaael .. Clerir Small C.M. oft. A/P, A/R. light payroll. Irvine Personnel Agy. 488 E. 17th. Costa Mesa Suite 22A 642-1470 5325 University Dr 552.5325 POMONA lST FEDERAL SAVINGS E .O.E. M /F /H Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Have something to sell? Want Ad Results 642·5678 Classified ads do it well. .•••••• Daily Pillit I Accounts Payable : e looldteepw e e A full-time position is available • e for acC!lrate person with a t least e •-------•te two years expe rie n ce in e Accounting • processing . accounts payable for • F/C Accoml•t comp~ter input , cash reporting Position w /Npt. Bch. • and dis bursement sch eduJing and • prop. mgmt. firm . e foreca_sting. Will pre pare bank• Out.standing career o pp-d ts M • ty.-G /L. A/P . A IR e epos1 . u st pos s essgoodoffice w/emphaals in financial e s kills . P e rmanent position with e a nalysis. If you 're ·~ g ood .salary. Compa ny paid IHe, e brightw/priorF/Cexp .. f hosp1_tal, m edical a nd dental • we'll train Y<>U" provide I benefits. Company c redit union. ren•• SlSO ~!nt~c~~~~:~nce · • Apply at O r ange C9ast Da ily Pilot ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sellidleitem5 l42·58'7ll ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ a· ~ 8am-5pm or call 642-4321, ext : ACcr.CL•K · Eap'd , mature penon cameraman • for 1eneral office " e Experienced at least 5 years. •• payroll. Accuracy • e Must be able to use news~per mu1t . C .M . area . • 54t-Jf!. e ca me r a a n d p l a t em a i n g e s ystems. Excellent waJ(es and e • benefits. A_pply l o person e e ;a;:ume to Oran1e O>ut Daily e a1enc1 exper'd . • . OFf.C...t •1 coordlHtor wtth fd. • D PW ma•11en111~ e 330 W. af St.fee\ :-.,...-:--. _.. • Costa Maa, CA • J..~ ""••-'· Call • • F.qual Opportunity Employer •• ant-,.._ ·.•••••••••••••••• ~ llCKPR/SCTIY f:xper. mature person for real estate office In Sunset Beat'h P IT ·~ day . Salary SSOO t mo 714 1846-66'08 or e vl's 213/592·S743 IOOt<KHPEll Flex. PT/FT 631-5031 IOOt<KHPH Full or parttime. with strong AIR & AIP ex· perience Computer en· t ry knowledge helpful. Ra<'Quelball World, F.V. 962-1374 1 ask for Ronda Dunt'an). loollkeeper·FC or ir accountant Thru finandal state· ments for in vestment t'O Good salary+ pension & profit shr plan & Major Med. Fashion Isle loc. Call S<fG.6234 ror appt. ------- •CAI DlllVHS• Checker Cab no.0222 CASHIER Fullt1me ro r la rl!e marine hardware storl' Xlnt benefits & workinR conditions. 64S·l71 I Cl\SHIF.R HOUSEWARF.SALES Apply in person: Crown Hardwa~. 1024 Irvine. <Westclm Plaza l NB CASHIERS UTDTIM ' MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts We promote to manage· ment &c supervision rrom within. WANT A CAREF.R? Costa Mesa 111 Del Mar 63i-9421 LagW\a Beach 494.9233 Huntington Beach 982·9il6 CHTRO. ASSI' for Wholislit' Clinit' nr O.C. Airport. JG-40 h rs wk. Ins. &c typing exper. prri. ~4953. Clerical SBIOR CLEll Plessey Semiconductors is seeking a Senior Clerk ror our Sales/Customer Servi~ otrice. Sharp. penonable. self-starter. ability to think on feet It good communicaUon skills a must. Typing 40-45 •pm. Prevloua c ustomer service •x· perience a definite plus. Apply if'I person: . PLISSIY S•h t1dlf1 1141 Kaiser Av. Jmne,CA USITHI DAl.YPILOT ...,, USULr. Sla'9CI DlllCTOIY ForR~, ServkeCu Mi::111 i " J I . ~ .... !!.~ ~.?~:.~ ..... ?!~ 1 ... ,.. MAM IC U I• ITS Orange Coa t DAILY ~LOT/Thursday, Feb ruary 26, 1981 ... ' I' 1 1 lililaJ lw lonl .. .. ., ......... 111.- {2 )-J;_~ an .......... ... ti' .... OE CLOntllTIMI Now Mrlaa part tim e •a le• • A s1 ~t 11nt 111 111\•ler Tr •tnee~ M lnlmu m llmo .. ~ l"'nfft(!t! Call 6-42 l2~1 C'o tkt lltl W a1 l t!r Wa.11resa high ~ulumn b~s at prim~ 0 C Airport lot-Exp, depen da~e only Call C11rol S mith for 1 n1ervlt'~ 2 p m S pm M t• t 7lOs.t9-ii2S COMPITIMT Career opportunity for matw-e individual who commwucates erre1•t1ve- ly, thinks on their ft't't, learns qui<'kly, works well w11h o thers or alone. types 60 wpm. shows initiative Busi neas Computl'r Rt•tailer 646-0221 Computer ... "'''"· Etlar)''a, .... I Cout Hwy, Cd.M.175-1 ... 0.UMfY Dn•v W work ., .. PllN Matt ........ be II or over, ltav• valid C'1 llto rn1a Drlv•r '1 11\W*I, l'IOd drlvlna re c ord, 6 know C:ott11 MMa Apply at flub A wt o S upply , t 120 H1rbor Rl vd , Co•t• M•a 141 a.e.. 11sk for r1111aCt -.aY•Y-P/T lft & OVt'r 00ood drtvlnl( rt·rol'd N 8 751·41~ l>l':NTAl. A i.t ~l Npt Bl'h Restor11tive pr&l' lit·e• nd s t·xp 'd t'n e rgt'lt <' leu m m t1mbc r . gd s a la r y many benefits 631 2491 OENTAI. ASSISTANT Chr:.ldt' for busy C.M $Ceflt'rul pra r llct' ~·, rly wk 541).2410 D e nt al A ss 1s t:int c·ha1rs11le w11 h X Rav 111· Part time Sea.I Beaeh offirc. <131 2929 Oeural Office Good typl11 Sm all otrlo II aturtty OK f rr. S. A s.aeo ruu u .. a poeltlou WAMT9 ......... Day • eve. W /Clie!UI CN•l rt>ntal. II.a be al* to worli xln t wor lt ln f cond. wkndl. APPb-In pence. 77o.ZMS lPll to sPM. TM Jolly -------- Roter, 400 So. Coast MATUll ,.SOM ffWJ, Lquna ••ch. No l nt«viewin1. phones f& pi-.ealll. lite tniu. 9-5. Mon-Fri. Npt BCb Joe. Will train. 642·.S HoWi Front o.Jt Aaillants Seekina people willing to MEDICAL F ront office e xper /1 pers on office. C a ll Renee: 972-21188 llC8'TIONllT Lag. Bdl hotel. F lex. hrs. Neat, dependable. Will train. m -2446 Gerwral Ottice Ac<'urate perform multiple hotel typlat. 10 key by touch maintMAnC'e It de,sk aa- hvy pflonea, fiUn1, Mon sistance duties. Apply in Thune.a. CallMJ·llM3 .,.1)1(111 to Mr. Roberts. MOYIRS MllDID R EC E P T I 0 N I ST I Dr ivers & H e lpers. SECRETARY, Sat only, ~/hr. to start.. Increase I Mus t type 50W PM. -----M-1'', 9am·llam Hotel •••A1 °"'Cl San Mu rten, 696 So. 1 iirl oftlce. Llah t £._o~Hwy, L.B. ra)TOll, i11volclng, t yp Hotel --- n g , p h ones F I P Systems, 1611 Monrovia fo~ront Desk Clerk. Exp, CM. ~9640. seeking people to people •98ALOfflCI 2 openings. Part lime Shrs . C M b ook publisher Hardworkers non,s mokers T y ping phone rnmmunicalion s k ills Call for in lerview 540-0520. General Office Consulting firm needs mature. tn e r~eti<' persoo with positive at titude to do .ceneral of f1ee work. greet clients answer phones. type et<· Call Bobbi: 644-9174 eves: 551 SUM GENERAL OFACE Typing & gen. ore. skills req'd. Work varied & in teresting. Costa Mesa area. 546-7172 communicators. Wkend work schedule. Gd with math. Apply in person to Mr Roberts, M-f'. 9am- l tam . H o t e l San M aarten. 696 So. Coast Hwy.L B. Hotel Head Housekeeper. 1mmed openinl'! for exp hot e l su p erviso r y housekeeper. F rr posi· lion Apply in person to Mr Roberts, M-F. 9am- 1 I am H o tel Sa n Maarten. 696 So Coast Hwy. L.B. w /exp. Call 9-1 848·~ 499-S381 N eed extra mon ey'? Demonstrate liquid em- broidery. Call 536-3613 Nu rses Aide /H o use- keeper , wkends or live- in Ftr. N.B.642-3481. Nursing Nurse Aides . 3:30·7 ·JOPM Cl ub Co n v S4S.3061. 7-3 30 & Country H os p Par t-time work fro m home. set own hrs & m· come level. Mus t be or- ganiz:ed & people orient ed. For appt call 557·5675 Part time help m office 4 day week 5PM -7PM SJ .35/hr. l o s t art. Newport Harbor Animal Hospital. 631-10:.J Phone Sales/ Adv.SpeC'. SlOOIONUS ------------------ llC.,,IONIST Excit ing position in our d esifn s tudio! Good telephone personality. TYPING & filing 556-1601 . -------- RECB'TIOHIST I LEGAL TRAINEE Newport Beach. Good te lephone manner im - portant. Type 60 wpm 543-2283. RECEl'TIOHIST lrvltle area, 8am 5pm, lite typing & filin g req S800/mo. 17141978 7243. 638-8191. RICEPTIONIST f'ull time. Sun. Thurs Lite typing & JO-key ex per1ence needed P vt. Cnuntry Club 644 5404. Dress manufa1·t urcr needs part lime rlatu entry person for m1n1 computer installation. Must know 10-kl'y. Good pay & workinjl cond Di s hwa s h er s , buspersons, full & part time. Immediate open- ings. Apply in person Howa rd John son 's Rt'Staurant , 2550 So. El Ca mino Real . Sa n Clemente. General Office H o usekeepc-r. Ii ve-o ut Mu s t h ave o wn tr<t nsportation Win dow s . laundr y , housckeepin.c. Prepara - tion or evening meals . Wages open. Mon-Fri I 12·5 nexible. 642·6392 for experienced phone pros. HJghest comm. in industry. For t'onfiden· ti a l inter vie w cu II Mr Taylor. 714/498-2953 San Clemente area. Restaurant Help Buspersons & Cocktail Waitress/Waitt'r. Apply in person. Beach !louse Restaurant. lil9 Sleepy Hollow Lane Laguna Beat'l1. Person with J(ood skills to work in N B. office. Gd benefits. Please C'all Mrs. Kelley at 752·8931. Genera l rl.ANTS ------- SALES -Secretary. F IT , need --llll!l!!!!'!!!!!!!!l~.1!11!111!!1!!! person lo run offi~c. or ganize & use phone lo promote sales Ltk lyp ing. full benefits inl·en live. Hrs from 9-6pm SA IC M area t'all I Home Stereo Systems will train hustling. yng men. Transp provided . $200 to SllOO w kly 714/~7652 aft 10. Sales HOMEMAKERS O pen ing a vailable in this area with Beeline Fashions. Unlimited earnings No invest menL For appt ('all 646-o:ll2 SALES lmmed. openings. full time & pa rt time r<>a<ler ad representatives for inside s ales positions Gd 1•ompany hcnef1ts Apply rn person: Pen nysaw r . 1660 PlaC'enl ra Ave , C.M. Mo nda y Friday. r to 5 Sales Lady, PT. 3 t>n•s per week Sundays 11 5 17141962·8910 SALES be.tween 9 llam 54!1-7343 SECRETARY STUDENTS &OTHERS Peri Time Jobs \1l'ST Bf: 18 OR OVEJl <.:ALJ. IOAM TO J PM 714-847-2422 Your cxpcrienc•l skills ~----------.:.;r are very important to our company You'll h•' runmnl( a '" '' p1• r~on private oHire rn South La~una Real'h Sal:ir\ open Ph one• ~am Hooper. 9S7·274ti ••SECRETARIES•* Trainee Word Pmc$9.600 Sh701 Xcrox850 )S14.41KJ Rc1•pt ffS.5 F un$1U,11()(1 ShlOO•nmhrs , Fltl~.!llKI Sh~1"0o 1t All "~,J.200 l.17. R<'indt>rs Agcn<'v 4020 Rm•h Est 'fl4 f:OE Newport R.33 Hl !IO t'n•« TEACHER I' F: Ari l';:rt t1mt· 12 ti f'r1• ... 1·huol nl'l'd~ 1-:('F' 1·e11 C11r1kn (;roVC' 1111•a !nl S5:J.'I TEACHER I' fi•-;1·hool fo'u II I 1 m l' N •'l'lb f-:('f: ('ns t:i Ml•s a :trt-il i;..1~-04 1 1 TEACHER AIDE I"(' E 11n11~ rcq111n·.t ('11:.la ~1 .... 1. <::1rdl•11 <: rovo• ;in•a!' f~I:! 114 1 I Apply in person· Domestic Help wa nted . l.ive in position. TI. Wboa ltrf Club is now hiriftc): HOUSSCEEPEI Live-in. 2 in family sim- p I e cooking , so me English, must have lol·al hskpng refs. Linda Isle. A n s w e r A d19 ·It 3 5 6 642·4D>. 24.hrs. Need person to m aintain indoor plants. Ex per not necess. Must have good driving rerord. F !Time Retail Mana9entent Pier I ml:lna,::ement trainee wanted Retail exp. or 2 yrs of 1·11llege req'd. Ext·ellent i::rowth oppt 'y Apply in perscin Pie r I Imports. 2710 II arbor Rl vd. CM Maturl' Individual !\111~1 f bl' erric1t>nt & h a' I' Sf:Cftl-:'fARI t-:. TEC HNIC IAN 1"11•111 !'1•n 11•1• T1•1•h lo '-l 'r\ ll' • II 1111 ' 11m IHll •• r .,\~t1·ms ~1 11,1 h ,1\f' 111111 :!\ p ., '"'""'I Ill f1 l'ld ._.,., \ tt ,. u r '' l•''' l1•1·h1111·1.1 n ,. 111 111•11 ,. 10 (,. 1·11111.11 I '\;11t'f :ti ·,;,7 >il>lll ST.JOHN PIX Operator Exp'd. 2PM-IOPM ' Ho useke{'per/Naany. I ple asant phone v1111·1· 11~-- Call forappt 833 !IMI I ({,J£K.!_JUS TO~ 545-6252 PRESSROOM SUPERVISOR & Associates 17422 Derian l\v{' Irvine !Corner K e l v in Derian) 714·540·7171 A Christian oouple or I perscn needed to take & c are of 3 children + 1 cooking. Must be able to 1 drive. Car & self con- tained apt. prov ided on Construction Yard Man. F IT, must have valid driver's lie. 1971 Placen tia.C.M. COOtc Preschool P a rt /Full time ~xE:..!._rv 55!_:4533 s ame grounds as main house in So. Laguna. Fo r details c all Judy at 586--4400. Mon. thru Fri. 9AM to5PM. Drapery installer trainee & shop person. Drapery mfr needs non-smkr. very neat. cle an ap- pearance. Clean Calif. driver 's l.ic. Mon-Thurs 7-5:30. Wages D ,O.E Call 642-1843 Cocktail Waiht-Waitrfts Exper ienced. 4 days 5PM· 12PM I day llAM -5PM NiCJht Dnla Clml Fri. Sat. Sun 11 PM-7AM Ii ve-in or out . needed for ' workinl'! parents & darl- inji! 1 1~ yr old girl in Irvine. Mus t dri ve. s peak F.njlhsh & have ref. Call days 75~·9199; wkend<i/eves· 857-4730 Housekeeper /Companion for elderly person Li \'e- in nr out. 833-2009. Pos. requires m in Ill yrs printing exp_ Strong mechanical. technic·a l bk(!rnd. in Web offset Org. Cty ro Send re- s ume · Box #673. Daily Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca 9262" RETAIL CLERIC l\l C M. Stationers to 270 F: 17th St CM full time a pply 1n person Hl-12 RETAIL SALES LAGUNA HACH llardwar(' Perm full & p lime. 240 Broadway, Sall'Sperson. full ltrnl' 1 1\ pply 111 pt'r~11n \1 on rn 10 12. Per-;ammun TrC<' 229 ~arin1• ,\\,. Ralboa Island I Salespers on Pa1n1 I C'ounte r Some ex per re q 'd Laguna ReaC'h lumber Co. 494-6S38 or 540·8267 I\ Temp llelp ~n 11•1· 540-0400 I~ Sky11ark Hf\lt I Suite· 235 In 1111' SECRETARY/ RECEPTIONI ST 1-:xper ph11nl•>i t \ Jll' '15 +wpm. l1t1· hl.k p j! misc l'l••r11·al I r \""' mfr Call K II ~n llx'M TOPLESS MODELS $7.'i IJ\' I ' \II> D.\11 .\ '"I':\ fl n1•1 l(:'ti :!,SH;} TRA VEl AGENT \1 II' I h a\ •• -; o1 IJ II' \1w11ln 11r l'ar-. i tl;n " l' l' k ' " I l' II Ill rn1·1"111,1l1• " "'ii :-.ipl llo h In 1111• ,.1 n·;1 v, t•('1tt1\t• ·rr.1\•·I ~,., \ h 'P lh-ltv t'.1r \1•r )(:l:1 !l-101; Spa AH11ttdants Ladie's Spa 7AM-2:30or 2 :Jl).9 Men's Spa Sat/Sun 5:30PM-12PM W(> have an immediate o pening f or 2 housekeepers . Full time pos itions , IOPM·6A M s hiftR. Xlnt. fringe benefits package Apply in person at Advanced Health Center. 1300 Bristol St North. Ste. #JOO, Newport Beach f:.O. E. M /F. PRINTSHOPTRAINEE ~ Musttype40wpm l•--------• 333 3rd S t. 1.agun a RF:TAIL 497.4403 Sa les person~. canva s~ traint'<'S. pd dally N•1 e xp. start i mmed 497.4450 COOIC'S HRPER With driwr's lit'ens<' C.M. area. Call bet 9 & 3. 646-1004 (Marvin 1. COUNTER HEL' Ambitious. bright and energetic people wanted for full and p /time help for bu_,y de li & sandwil'h s hop, Good starting posi- tion with xlnt chance for advancement in g row- ing rompany. To set u p a ppt. for inte rview call Stan at 673-9000 ---- COUNTER HELP -------- Drapery Coordinator. exp. person needed for drapery department in our d esign studio. 5.56-1601. DRAPERY SHOP GaiePft'SOfl Sat/Sun JPM-IOPM Please call for appt. 645-7358. Mon-F r i .. Ho usewor ke r n {'eded 8:»5PM Part time. Hours open. 642·2846 IMSACroR lnprocess. floor & re- ceivin" Top benefits in- cluding health. denlal. Beach Ptr Driver 2-6p m r,dSulver . 645-7055 P /time. 7days, 2hrs1da1 ly, AM delivery , LA Times. $100 per week, + gas allowance. Laguna Beach. 494-8496. p rr person for s mall of- fice . various duties. ac- tive s por ts wear Co 536-9333. No experience nee. AM shift. Full time. Apply In pel'SCln: Dippity Donuts. 1854 Newporl B lvd .. C.M. In Nwpt Bch need s mech a nical pe rs on . Good driving record . Fast advancement for sha l'1> trainee. 673-0760. Driver to pick up de- ceased pets & some yard work. 191542 Beach Blvd. H.B. 51NBAL. OFFICE Good typist, 10 key by touch. telephones. Grow- ing publishing company. Non smoke r pref. S832/mo. For appt call &IS-8830. Mrs. Northrup. life & s avings plan. I DELTRONIC, Costa Mesa 545-0413 1 P-.dl Prns Optr. P /T evenings . Ove r 3yrs. exper. necessary Costa Mesa. 631·0700 *** COUMTHHELP Sal/Sun IOPM·6AM . Mon -Fri 7AM -IP M Winchell's Donuts 253 E. 17th ST CM DllYBS Dial-A-RJde, located in Laguna Hills has p/time & (/time positions . Gd. driving rec. over 21 (in- surance requirement). EOE. 830·6191 Bi II Downing Gordol.Hal 16021st . St. Apt#H Costa Mesa I N T E R I 0 R ~~~~~~~~ LANDSCAPING CO. based in Orange Cty now hiring for full /time m a intenance route. must hav; own car. call for interview wkdays C oun ter h elp wante d f'I T . Mi r h e ll c's Cleaners. 496-5124 C.'-rSenlce Drycleaner s /Counte r . F tr. Will train. 642-5466. Ask for Yvonne. l~S&L·T&L Dry C leaner n eed s Newpor t -based com -mature. resp. person to puter service burea u. work 4 ttrs. evenings & s e r vi n g f i n a n c i a I Gd customers state.wide. Sat. · pay + gas r equires custome r money Mr. Bes t service representatives Cleaners, CdM. 675-3306 with extensive bank or Exec. Secretary ex. savings & loan opera-perienced in law, real lions or thrift & loan ex-es late. resumes . etc. perience. Excellent fr. will do extra typing at inge benefits. great op-p0rtunity for g rowth. h ome. <714 )837 -8349 Call Norm dePlanque. _e_v_erun_· _gs_.-----ON-LINE COMPUTER _ 1111111 _____ _ S YSTE MS. 644-1801. Fechw r Worbr-s Permanent posi tion. Costa Mesa. 631-0700. fM' Ad Actilft FACTORY TRAIMHS Mature , r eliable in -Cal I divid uals. Pressure "uage manufacturer. n.il. .._t 4~day wortt week. _, r-• 1S542Chemlcal l;ane ABV1S91 <Mc Fad den & Bolsa ,.. Chica) 642 .. 5171 Huntington Beach .~--------iSell things fast with Daily Pilot Want Ads. GRAVEYARD CUSTODIAL You are the winner of 4freettckets <SH value ). to ........... loatS.Ow Mar. 4thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to claim your tickets. ••• GoYWMSs/HMllpr 5 mo. infant. live in or out, N.B. waterfront home. Pvt rm & bath. Must drive. 642·5001 GUARDS-Irvine & S.A. locations. $4.00 & up 978-7243 or 638"8191 GUARDS Full & part time All areas. Uniforms furn 'd . Ages 21 or over, retired welcome. No ex per nee Appl y : U n ive r s a l Protection Service. 1226 W. 5tb St .. Santa Ana. Interview hrs: 9-12& 1-4. Mon-Fri. HAllDRESSEIS Costa Mesa. Ren t or commission. Call Mgr. 548-1311, 8'2-1812 HAllDUSSEIS W /Clientel. be your own boss. call Gladys 751-SZ!l ff airstylist I M a nicu ris t Full Time. 17th St. C.M. Nwprt area 548-9344 HARDWARE SALES LASUMA HACH R etail. -~rm f ull It p/t.lme. _, Broadway. .... HARDWARE SALES Full Ume/Part tim e. Ap- ply in person: Crown HUdware, 1024 lrvl.ne <Weatcliff P lau) N.B. 54()..4242 JEWELRY SALES WILL TRA I N. We ll grommed . inte lligent. s elf motivated person. Please call 759· 1722 Legal Secretary for sole practitioner. airport loc Congenial atmosphere. flex hrs. Prefer b:ll·k· ground m civil lit /busi- ness plannini. wo rd pro· cessing exp helpful. Con- tac t J i m at 17 14 1 975-0363 lAcJal Sec: 'y Litigation exp for sole p r acti ti o ne r 0 C Airport Loe Xlnt salary position to start 1mmed 851-9339 Live-in lady mature for c ompanionship. lite hs kpg /cooking. f ree room /boa rd /sa I a r y. Call Mr s Dunlo p 494-8<175 . -----Loving person to care for I /yr old boy. Tues & Thurs. S3/hr. 644·9873. LYN'S J.11 A.a..AISMfts 99 bed SNF xlnl. reputa· t ion . Beac h a rest. Outstanding benefits. 642-8044 MACHINE SHOP TIWNEES l mmed. openfn1s for m ach. operators. Will train fot' C.M. plut. Ex- cell. co. be nefits. Deltroak-st5-0t1a Immediate seasonal openings exist or lndlvlduala to work 30 to 40 hours perweetc In the Grave- yard Custodial shift during our Eaafer and Summer seasons. Starting rate of pay It s.t.73 per hour, which Includes shift dlffer- entlal. No experience required. R 0 If E C L E A N I N G !!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!! SERViCE help needed MANA .. TIAIMll lmmed. Call btwn Iron-To IMm ftlm proceul.QI '111ur5-TPM. 141-•l b.U-. No exp. n~. ' Poaalble permanent poeltlona IVlla,bl• at the end of Summer. PJMH apply In P919f" to: HOlteu • dininJ room WWtratn.ffl-llOl sufltl'ViMJr for PY' toun-Mana~ . J try club. ...--.how A SI I ST A M T to type. All'°' Frank MANA .. 54f.Cf. Xln&. opportHlt)' In R-.. lrowtilil •~It)' •tore IOIWS c.._ ror .._,. ... , mTAURANT 1»4rtoe wttlt MaU•a l "" ........, .-rt lime :Ci -. or •= .................. Co.=.~. lo4Pll. ,...,.,...,,. ft ..... -= ...... !:..!!.!• ....... Newpott tall •r. I• --· Qp't.(fW REAL EST A TE.. O pening for c areer m inded per son . Top Newport location. Serv. ing WestcliH, Newport Hts, E. Costa Mesa. Liberal incentive com- mission splitto 80"". Call Dan645-7221 Century 21 Westcliff ----- Real Estate SUCCESSOR FAILURE IN '8 I ? I. Have you conside re d the pitfa lls or c(fm m ercial & residential re· al estate? For example 11r;. INT. rates. lonJ! escrows. farmin f! for lis tings. com pet ition. etc! ~sioftal Land COi pot ation Has the answer for your s uccess in 1981. 2. Learn to market low <'Ost lots and acreage in So. Cal.if. We have 10"{ INT. rates. Ear n SSOK to S150K. firs t year. un Ii mited leads & more ! LIUMe ,....1.-.c1. For success in 1981, ask for Mr. Telles 95.5-3402 & 831 ·8557 REC EIVING Cle r k P /time t ruck d r iver. Day s hirt, Mon-Fri. 497-1741 llC.,..ONIST Part time . Gbod ap. pearance. Like working with people. Lite typing. 631-5884. R~,,~~?m . has lm med. openin~ for d ependa b le sharp pef'SOft w /good typing i.kllla. Able to handle corre1pondence. f iling. addlnf machine. er- rands, busy phones & rront omce. Con1enial s m all office located in Irvine lnduatrlal com- plex. Xbtt, medical/den· tal paokaJ~· Or a n1e County R eatau ran t Services, •1 Daimler St ~ San t a An a . 11 .... 1 ••• HELP! Salesperson for tennis s hop in Corona d el Mar . full or part time F:xper. only. 640-4172. Sl'1'relarv TYPIST B U ILD E R S E M PORIUM. 11 divis ion of the Wickes Companie~ and California's largest chain of Home Improve. ment Centers. 1s j!row· ing again' SALES,ERSON Fulltimc. a mbitious s a I es person wanted to w o rk in mar ine hardwa re store. Boatinf! exper, preferred Xlnt benefits & workin~ con ditions 645-1711. ExK. Sec'y. P /T 211.25 hr,; Jl('r wk for 11m· " o m a n r 3 m .1 n 1 en gineen nl! 11flo 1n <:osla Mesa. F:xrcll ~al.try Please 1•all Vlt>n thru F'r1 . aft 1 Jo r ~1 645 2842 Th•>m p~··n rloatatton Co F.t IF: Secretary (; I' n t) ((I I' I' II 11 I k II 1~h,rh<111f l!ra!lua k• (id lic•nefil s no l'XP Ol'l' C'ro~ta .Vl t·~a .1r1•;1 Will tw m '" 1 n I! I 11 I r Y 1 n t- i-·• r rn" r .;, I n.; u r :111 1'<· <; r•u1p ~Ill 111~1 Jo.t IF T YPIST l'.•rl l'1m1· Wr:.11 hrf 311;1\ "k firs fl<-'IC l\hH :JI hllnl" ""fk \1 1 ll1 x1111 1>12 llf.17 SECRETARY I 1 , 11"1 I mm•'tl I' T o rit•rtrn,t!s Salesperson Our new store in Santa Ana will have its Grand Opemnf! soon We are seekm,:: qualified and expe r ienced in · cl ividuals to work as CASHIF.RS. in SALES a nd 1n the WAREHOUSF:. Roth full and part time posil wns coSMmcs High fa s h ion sto r e . Newport Bear h area F.xcellent benefits. Call 644·7100 I t••mporar~ \µpl~ in Flexible per ... on net>di·lf IX'~ to Mr Hobl·rt~. tu '4nrk rn thl' Fin:.tnct• \1 F. 9am I lam 111111'1 Dl!pt of our llnme Ahli: I ~an ~:wn1•n li:lfi ~o Di\'. Rt"s p()ns1biltt1c ... 1111 < 11;1 ... 1 ""' I.. A l' I u cl e c 0 n <; t r II ('I In II this nr" posit ion "'"'" I TYPIST are avai lable I n terviews will be held at the store located at · 2120 S. IRISTOL llRISTOL ATWARHER) SANT A ANA, CA. Ware house appli<'ants arc requested to apply on Monday morning . Ma rC'h 2. 1981 as only a limited number or these positions are available. Interviewing hours are 9 AM-NOON & I 30 lo 4 PM. bel(in ning Mon .. March 2nd and rontinu· 1ni Tues & Wed or possibly longer 1( the need still exists APPLY EARLY! Successful applicants c an e xpect to bci;tin working nnd tralninl? on Mar<'h 9. 1981 We offer a good starting rate with an automatic increase arter the 1st 6 months. This is an ex· rellent opportunity for an individual to grow with a new !'ltore a nd with our expand inf( com - pany which offe rs op. portunitles for advance· ment. COMl!·JOIH OUR TEAM! IEA. WIMMB! At Builders Emporium. with all we've 1ot. yoo've icot it made. BUILDERS EMPORIUM Equal ODDortunlt )' Eari..,...tt/f /R/V P; -• Sales RENTAL CONSULT ANTS Breuner·s R e nt s Furniture s l'cks career oriented person for l'n- try level pos in home furnishings Breuner's is California '!: larges t furn. rental C'O. & needs qualified sales & mf!ml staff for expanding mkt Re tail exp. pref'd Will train. $4_ hr .. d ependinJ? of exp. Full or p1time E.O E M F Mon-Sat . 9·5 :30 & Sun 12Noon 5PM Contact: .Jeff Thomas at 645-4772 SALF.STRAINEES f'ull or pt itime. ex cell o pp(y for colle(!e stu dents & moonli~hters F.asily earn SI0-$15 thr C111l J a ck at 951 ·2642. 1-4PM SECRETARY Fash. Isla nd. lnternat'I mktg. ofc. w/mjr. corp in the engineering mfRr & con.'lt. business Req 's. x lnt. typing & shorthand skills. 76().1~ SECRETARY For stock brokerage lirm in Newport Center. Ma tu re person .• Good typin g essential l900/mo. Call Marjorie: 644-2'42. pa yallll'" I\ ptnl! of l'.ir1 111111· :! 1 ''"\' p1•r mt•m•1s m1•t•t1ni.: "ri11· \\ k \ ;11 .11111n rl'lt .. f \1 ups & <lai ly t-rr:1nt1... 1~1\ .11 1~1 P l.u .. 1111;1 ( ,, ... , .. :l1t· .... 1 r am1hanl\ with \l'l't' Payahl(• & tht' 111 kt·' prt•f'<I Must b1• rarmt hut aceuratt' f\·111._t W1\IT I 'FllS< '' C real opp11rtun1l\' f,,rl Sl'C'retarv "11 '1 I :! 1 '' rclatrd r.x fl(•r " '.or f,11· \I wk,•r l.,p.k1•1 I 11 n 1 h ' ,. r ' 1 1· " !l·:J11 I :lOf'\f \t1111 f•'ri l".1rn ~,.!~•SI:>" IAk l\ \J 1 ... 1 IH· 111 .. 11 Jlf'I "'n:t hl1• ,~ 1'111 n•1•111 •17•1 Iii ti .1r1 Ill·\ M to,. ·•Pr' \omplet<' \p11h1 .111on Ms Par ... ori1' a 1HE IRVINE a::MPfWo( ~ :"t>" µon l 'entl•r l>r Suit~· .l.._.l Nl'" pnrt Heach !l:!hli:I 714-644· 3.J>l!I 1-;qual Opp Emph 1 ~ECURITY Maturt' peN<on nt'ed(•d p art time to takt• :1rl m1ssinn~ & prnv1de 1n formation to Vl!:tlors .11 publlr J?arden in Corona del Mar Call Mon F ri only 673-22f.s HAM·41'!\1 SEHIOR ADMINtSTRA TIVE ASSISTANT F'or international con sultinJ? Orri<'c. Npt Bch Outstanding career np port Substantiul ex perience & s upe r ior set'retarial sk 1 lls re quired. Ability to work with de tailed data & flnancial rct'nrds. Tnp no tc h Assistant type p:-eferred Xlnt snlarv to be negotiated. Cail Mr Slater (71 41752-081<1 fora~. __ SERVICE STATION ATl'ENDANT Days, 6-3. Apply Shrll Station. 17th It Irvine , N B.842,t~. WAITRESSES \pph hl\\n 'l'\\1 & l;>l'\I t'h;irl:1·' <'h1l1 ~11101 Ht>tih1ll Hldg =:! St1• :r;?'_I!; I' \1 11'.!li:!li ...,l'~·\l.;1"; n·'-ulo·nt 111 I onon.< 111•1 \l.1r 1111.·r1·'t l'fi Ill IH,'1.',l"lllllJI t r.111'1,, 111111 of ll'lt1•1.., (111 "ontilfl hu .... 1111....,, lt7~ :!l:lli WORD PROCESSOR ~ ull or pnn l ttnl' flu mr<:halt• n1>1·n1nc 1n our In nw 11fftt'I' I\ no" ft'<h!t' of ('PT "nrrl 11r•H'1·~~nr helpful hut will train ('a II R:i:t-:1622 M•rchandise .••....•....•......•..• AntiquH 8005 ··•··•···•············· * * • Darl.-r 2700 Peterson 1120 Costa Mesa Ynu art' the winner of 4frftHcllets C$14 value). to .......... loatSMw Mar 4 thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 842·S678. ext 272 to cl aim your ticket.s ••• En•Ollh oak a nt lquta. several Items . rc8S. ..._.,.,,.4pm SECRETARY Court re· la ted victim-w itness Protr•m. Clerical & Ad- m In. duties: ty pin g. sh rthd. rec. keeping. m . ing. corresp0ndence , sc!hedullng. press re- leases, de. 2 yrs. exp. St .000 per m o .• xlnt. benefits. Apply via re- sume by 3-9-81 to : YSP. Inc. 2I03 Royal P a lm Dr .. Costa Mesa. Ca. ... -=-rAIY Ser vice Station AttC'n· dant. Full time Apply In per s on , L1gun1 Chevron. ICM So. Coasl Medamtt Alexa n d e r Dolli , the 6 tst ladles of the us. mint -In bo•. tllOO IM!l. ll4M390 (}eneral ~ontractor In I r •lne need s ex -~ penon. Muat lype .• 5 wpm. c.11 TSHlll . To Pla~e your .. , ......... .. Sefvlct Dire&tOl'J ad .... CW Now . ..... ,. M iii ftw)', Laiuna Beach. • - -I w..-., Dryere OE, .... ,...... " .... , .. •a•, llec tNoned. ..................... 1 IUIM"'9dSJl• '"'-" .. t'U " 11 ... , ... , ..,,...,auo ... -.--· •••Uaahoun r_,f "''. ~roq, ' yr old. 9500 lltPW, R ll.., Pl Ol5S M \aal w U lop ol lloe Sur • uht-r d.r er b\')' dt z~., )ri l»O Aft ~. 5.S2 - G•""1t 6 lattlu ~)" IH r-..., pakJt free, l!indW dr uwd 6 moa. lake nev. . St7S 17S T1S2 • Vt'h1 rlpoo l fros t fre e refria. near new. Sl75 "42-048. 6754335 ~'astw-r Dryer apt. s ize great l'OOd w stand wa r rant 'til April $300/0 80 642·81216 B~auty Salon Equi p Hy draulic c hr S7S. Shampoo Chr 125. Sty(. ang Bar SUIO. Haar Dryer $75 751·5221 d a ys . 548-8569 ('VCS. fo'r1g i d a ire R e fr1 g Frostfree xlnt cond SI~. Brown Washer $75. 75 I ·5221 days 548·8569 eves F'reez e r ·l 6 cu . r t Upright. G.E . g reen . see it running . $125 . Balboa. 675·1X>S9. -------••lllRCJ Materials 102 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Medwood. 2 x 6's, 8 to 20' long. Xlnt decking. SS< per ft. Trucked from mill. arriving Tues 2/24. , S a ve b y c alling . 1 714/645-9137, ext 116, CM St eel buildings. you· build it·.kit. 20'x25' S2280. 20'x40' S3120. Fret> de- 1 i very ABC' Bld gs 542·4485 ·c...,..& Equi ........ 8030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sfwinc Marh Moot Wud W Mtdit l&yle u b used •••• ml/080561·~ llpc lilpt 111 pecan dlnird rnl , p.ocan desk walnlrt unit. tbl lamp, RCA litt'rw1 combo 536.8251 W1 c k"r Rattan F urn I s hi n g s 8° I G DISCOUNTS! 839-7239 1l76S Edinger 1 blk west of Harbor Kina size bdrm set. Sim· mons Beauty Rest. must sell, 8JO 541-5196. after 6pm. Fo r Sale King s ized B e d r oo m se t . wa s h e r t dr ye r . Refrigerator. Coffee ta ble. l':nd table. 951·2755. Double Bed & Mattress $25. King twins SSO ea. Full size desk & chair $75. 8 drawer dresser S35. New Trundel bed $100. 540-7987 U.eful unu11ual Ite ms . 1»'7 Baker in alley Fri· Sat IH caah only Sff Dimes a lines. ----..... .., Scollt We l :JD-S Sat. 10.2 Sun. Lido Cfubhoule. 701 Via Lido Soud. NB. Tax deduct. donalkln1. 8'13-1610 Movina Sale Spy Glass. Sat. Feb 28th. IOAM · 4PM. Everything from d esigne r furniture , drapery . bedspreads . appliances to garage junk 32 Drakes Bay Dr CdM GARA<-;t~ SAl.F. Thur Sun ' G arage re fril!, Antq dinng set. <.:ass plyrs. S pkrs. Whip, Plants. Pots . Ki t Cry s t a l. Clothes. Booki:. Bed and more Sl·S250645·71 IO Sat 9· I 2865 Monte rey Ave CM Mi sc ite m s. pots pans . toys. Bar-A· Elegant sofa w /love seat. Que. pecan coffee .~ en d Quality f(oods. no junk. tables. S250. 19 color riRht prize Sat Sun 9 5 TV. Sl45. Sofa b ed , SJC 32602 Deadwood s moked glass dinette. xlnt rond. 641·29911. Hones 8060 Drexel party table, hex· al!On, 4 r h a irs . $250. Lane writinR des k , walnut. 48x24x29. $75. Sofa. 8'. gold /oli ve leaf. $75 64(). 9888 Bargain! l''r Prov. Reds Dra wers. shelves un. demeath 552 6783 aftt>r 5pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• HORSFS BOARDED Back Ray. N.8 . Lighted arena. 641-9191. 557-66.SO Buckskin Quarter Horse Gildiniz . double rel! 7 iyrs. 15.2 hands. stocky build . 4 whitt' socks . beaut. coloring Xlnt dis· pos 111on Must s e ll. Make offer 631·1900 dys ; 673·6454 or fi73·3711 eves. ....................... n. Y Dft'EltHATIOlllAL on PMI Am wtda airline twe>lor._. Udet allp. Sin1epore. Central Ameriu. Germany- any of 11 t o11ntrlea . Hurry! Good until P'eb. ....... ••• ............ 4451 W. Coast Hwy Newport Beach You are the winner of 4fneffcbts IS14 value>. to ......... ao.tS...w Mar. 4 lhru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to claim your tickets. * * * S PLIT & SEASONF.D * FllEWOOO * •••848·9111 **. John Waynl' Te nnis Club reg. membership, $1200 incl. transfer. 675·5455 John Wayne Tennis Club ra m. m e mbe rs hip. $1100. in<'I transfe r. 644·1549 Port·a·Crib, 135. Hl1h t'heit. •· ltroHer, 115. Ll.bnew.~nu nrrANY'S private club Dlmbnhlp card MUST SELL King Sz Waterbed Heater & Wooden frame S80. Lge • or unusual paint- ings. 7S8 Manzanita L.B. 494-7167 Saturdays IOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED: World Globe & traditional stand. 534·1505 Musical .............. IOU Power mowtt. $100. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Power edger. SSO. CONN Director trombone 546-0945 with case. E xcellent __ -E ,_ ..... __ .._ condition. SlOO. 675·80S2 Alvs:V~ ~n 1 arter6PM. Buy facials. juice. cos-J • --- metics at who le s ale 1 Looktng for Sna re Drum prices. ALSO. Supe r andZildjian Cymba ls. Savin gs on AMWAY 557-8393 Products 60'7. OFF' X ---- Di stributor 's Inventory Quiller AMP W /15" J BL. C leara n ce 631·1726. 10" Celestian. Rebuilt 851 ·7ffi8 S250t080 Rob 631·7231 W F.D G F.WOO D Rone China Silve r Ermine 12pc. settinR 631 1726. 851-7ffi8 LOSCABALl.EROS Family Memllt'rs hip g)(J or offer 9f>8·R341 P e a ve y r e verb amp. mikes & s tands. near nu. $300. 642·4348. 675.4335 G U ITAR . Y a m a h a FG340. Like new. Must sell. $175. 548·064.5 Or gan-loaded Yamaha. 400mm Canon lens. xlnt l>OUfU,F. RF.D GOOD CONDITION 54S·Sfl87 J~welry 8070 N.B. Tennis Club Family 2 keyboards . drums $950. S45· 7506 I t•o nd. S400 Minolta F.xcr conferenr e ta ble & 35mm F'2.ll & 135mm c' hai~. Reaut. finished F'2.8 le nses S8 5 e a 1 975.:1171 til 4. h a rd wo od . 6 · i n Cats diameter. circ ular table. 8035 5 h1Rh Rrade leather con. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rerence chairs Together 6 month old white. blue e yed Pe rsian k itten . PediRrei!, 548-0471 .. Gucci" Beaut. Balinese Male !lon g h a ire d Si am ese ) 16 m os neutered Idec la wed no papers $10076().9393 DOCJS 8040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• K F.F.:SHOND Pups. AKC Champ sire M tF'. Pet & s h o w . P v t pt y 2131697 1345 art 6 pm AKC Cairn Te rrier Pup· PY Male. all s hots S75 1 or sep. 700-607 1 • 675-6240 Couch $150. Dining Tbl + 6 r hr.I $160. 4 sport 14 .. Wheels $80 . Wood (changing baby) $20. 751 ·5221 days . 548-8569 CVl'S. King Sz Bdrm Set S255. Pull Sz Bdrm Set SlOO. Coffee Tbl $15. F.nd Thi S20. Sofa 125. Stereo S40 548·8569 eves. 75 1-5221 days 494.9590 -----,..~ A fg han F e m Puppy B ea ut Markin gs w /papers hseb roke n $.100 956.9444 ---- AAA HOM EDOG TRAINING Comple t e IN HOME Trainin1t. Obedien· Ce /Pro blem solving, protection. s:D-7615 Beagle male . Needs good home. 64().2061 e ·Siberian Hus ky male. Good disPo11ition. Must s ell. 64().2061. BARKU~ BASENJI Red/white F pups, AKC. S200.964-2119,962·4657 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Membership Will trade complt'le llW7 640-6110 ---Offiu Furnitun & Rogers Oatware IR set- tings + servers l in case for sturdy 14 r t gold chain. 16" or longer. Call for information 960-5844 ev wknds 2 fin e la d ies ' rou nd diamond rings. t 11 3.31 els $12.000. 121 2 77 c•ts. $10.000. Mttt at YOUR jewe l e r :1 . P .P (213lll"m·6.T76 Man's 14Kt yellow gold bracelet in a nugget. tex· lured curb link. Sell at s o •;; o r appra i s ed v a lue 548 6 4 46 or 543-9744 Used carpet. rust shag color. approx 120 1yds. $150. S4S·2781. 645·0792. CHILI PARTIES Yes' "Chili Ma n" 1s b a c k· i n h us i n e s s ' 642-5937 ......... 8085 • •••••••••••••••••••••• COPY MACHINE Must sell. $375 or best of- fer. 552-5255 2 Desks. 5 chrs. 11Hice couch w/3 tbls lstJ35() takes. 631-2454 ' N Y. Art Directors An· f'olding tables. wa lnut nuals. 1932, 1937. 1939. ven et>r , 8'. S30 t'a 1944. 1951. Call 979·2839 • ~~9888 I ---LAWN MOWF.H Se a r s I c-1ER $ .. 00 Reel type. !'elf p ro-_,... ,. pelled, 2-5 fl P engine. 5 1 1 or offer. ~9·5978 eves blade. bask~t included. Pi~ & Orgmts 1090 Good cond1t1on S75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 547-3182 1886 Eme rson p iano. square Baby G ra nd. ivory keys, hand carved Rosewood. xlnt cond. Collectors item. $2800 Trade o r best offer . 760-6799 GULBRANS EN Spinet. gd. cond. 1750. 642·9178 art6PM Sportiftg Gooch 1094 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIMBER UP • SHAPE U&WTTH A SLIM GYM Exerciser . Perr. cond. A II instructions . New S200. sell for $75. 96(>.5844 eves/wknds. St>ar 't> Top qual i t y Coleman camping tent. 10 xlO. approx. Used I time . $75 960 -5844 ev/wknds. -·-- Fr.. to Y• 8045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free to good home. 9mo. , a sure thing tor orange \\ere s For Sale: Brand new Chrysler 15hp outboard engine. in the box. I yr warranty. Orig. $950 Asking $750. 75t.8967 Dobie mix . Lovable. 642·8106. Free puppy to good fami- ly . Go lden Ret rie,ver /B l a c k L a b mix . 54tM471. ·Free. s payed female Dalmatian &. male Collie/Shepherd mix. 891-3118. ._.Black Female Cat. 8 mo. • old. Free lo good home. I Aft. 5. 848-6423. 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ** llUY ** Pood med Furniture 6 ~ppU~-OR I will sell or Sa.L ror You MASTaSAUCTIOM 64' 1616,IJJ.t6ZI •sofa-bed . mint cond ; daybed. yellow chair. C uUque mahot. blrc:ue. DU kjq custom bedaprd, • 4 antique din .. cbaln. mlac. pkturw, •s•tt Beautiful MAHOGANY I !f~ETARY. '700. ....... .co111plet• Wall Ualt. • a.Ma. DIM. Cabifteta. ........ *' l\\ete ate Medium wom e n 's wet s.uit &. assorted diving equipment. 751·896r Store,lnt....t, .... 1095 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comm. n attop gas stove. 3'. full-size oven. S325. 642-1900 '°'' • •••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr wrnty. Free delivery Slt8. 846-17111. State of the Arla speakers, oiled walnut cabinets. Phillipe com· ponents. (213>438-8844 Mark. <714l71M>-8259. Looking for Stereo P.A. with cabineta. 557-8»3 25"COLORT.V. Sl51 1 Year Warranty ea.ss.o ADVENT VIDEO BEAM lOOOA. 7' acree.ri. wa1ha· ble. like new, cost "400. aell aooo. m.1111 Comlllete P'ISHER !ft~ 136-1114 \ Car Stereo Hite MW 2 1pkn. itaplatc: equal. llrlt Upe player -/080-1111 Daal IZl·SI Turntable -Two Bpi~ 10'• .-.can....., Pvt boot dock on Newport lnnatable Boat 12'6" will Island. 30• max. $160 mo. handle 30 h.p. 0 18 S.S95 752·2584 dys or 675-7267 642·3622 e ves. S lip for powe r boat w /waler. elec. no over· nighters. N. B. 673-3881 ft ENT: 22' lux . rn,tr home. Sipe 11. aelf-cont. S275/wk . + 8•/m l. 640-8585. WICANSILL YOUll.V. 559-130f Metal 6x8 utility trailer. r e movable 4 • wood sides. &li-4610 B.W. 71C lrans $400. 3h.p~ 12 v 63 amp gen $150; Heath /kit gas s niffe r S25: S.S. ga lley stove S35: bronze struttshart log for 1" SlOO: Mech lach and cable S.SO: 3 props 14xl0-12. S20 ea : new Jabsco 12 v pump S35: 15 gal. fuel S20. Call 5J6·13i5 loah, StOI age 9090 A..to Senlce, P..ts ••••••••••••••••••• •••• & Accessories 9400 •Lido Peninsula Boal S torage. Storage . launc h ing & c r a n e s e rvice for the d is· c ra min ating boat e r 14·30'. 673-9330. 675-5901 !Steve) For Sale: Bra nd ne w Chrysler 15hp outboard engine. in the box. I yr warranty . Ora~ S950. TrGMporiatioft ••••••••••••••••••••••• AskingS750. 751 -8967 C~. Sak/ loah. Power 9040 leilt 9 120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . SACRIFICE 731AYLINER 27 ft. twill I 30 Vol•o's. hi C...._ Great loot ..clTrailer. Ry lriclge!W.y &tras. SI 5,000 c• 675-26'5 Eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1980 8 f oot C ab·Hi Camper S350 . '63H794 -----MolorilM l•es 9140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEWl'UCH MOPEDS Any Model . Wholesale Save up to 1187 . 631-2504 673-1455 PEUG ECYJ' MOPED Near new, 12851080 . 642·4348. 675.4335 ················~······ SS.AVE SAVES wmt USED PARTS Imported car parts IMPORT At.rrOSUPPLY 101 N. Manchester Anaheim 776-9900 For Sale CHEAP!! Slightly used turbo kit ·.7(). '74 Datsun Z cars 768-5837. Four Posi-trac tires & mags, Universal. 5 lug. like new $300. 770-8334 or 548·:1!64 Forsale DatsunZ motor +ott..rparts 761-5137 36' CHRIS Tri·cab"in. T tS. Gd. c o nd. Sl9 .000 673-9000 M~~/ 9150 .. ~!!':'.?~ ....... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT ·79 111' RanRer I 0 Lake new. $6500 Must sell ~2-067 1 35" Owens Brig. '63. T~ V8's. loaded. N. 8 . moor 1n g a vail . Sl7.950 540.3855: 644·1616 eves 6 DIRT BIKE'S and a 5 BIKETRAILER $1000 645·6468 HONDA CB 650. 1979 less t ha n 500 mi . SISOO 955 032.5 NOTICE TO RF.ADERS AND ADVF.RTISF.RS The price or itt>ms ad\•ertised by ve hicle dealers m the vehicle clas!;ified ad vertisin~ columns does not in - '78 YAMAHA Y7.ROF. elude any applicable 24 · To llyc ra ft C'ahin Runs good. extras. $450. 1 taxes. _license, transfer Cruiser. low hrs . l.ik(• 556·6045 ft'es. fin ance c~a rges. new thru-out. Loaded I , -foes for ~ar poll':'twn ~on- w /everything. Ta ndem 75 HONDA 1175. t rol dt>v1ce ct>rt1r1cat1ons l ·1 7141564.4343 SJOO. 556 6045 or deale~ documentary rat er. preparation charRes un- W est s a i I 42 r e nt er '75 2SOMX Can-Am. race less otherwise speciried cockpit. hull & deck prepped. completely rblt hy the advertiser. Ready to co mple te 3 s pare wheels tir es -"---/ 5.57·9509. $.'>35540-7023 •"c;Jc, 9520 '76 YZ Yamaha 250 Barely ridden. S500 631 ·6194. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "46 Ford Woodie. restored $13.000. ALSO '29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr . restored. Ideal for stu· dent. 110,000. 675·6161 . MIWll'9CI ............ ,, ....... baeket Hitt, fHat ........... ..... ..... mo,., Yo•n for Im· medlat• d•lher1. (tmN) .,. COSTA,_... AMCl9 MMIJI '74 JEEP W ..... Hr, lo ml, A/C. power. aU atr•. a-. UM-. '71 BLAZER nu enc. CB. am/fm cua. eq. 94000 . &M-22221-·lO Jeff '711 Ram Charier. am /fm 8-trk. pe, a.ir. otr-road 11u1p. lo mi. Call aft 2: 30pm 964-6131. TnlCb f HO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'IODatsun Pick-Up 5 s peed . Am -Fm cassette. (1547234) $4911 Barwick Imports 131-Jll I 'IO C'HIVIOLET 1/2 PICKUP V-8. auto. trans .. fact.ory air cond .. power steer· Ing, stereo cassette. A pretty polar white um with only 8000 miles . coordinated while !!poke wheels &. white lettered tires. dual tanks. s liding rear window & beautiful red Cheye nne interior which is spotless. !31421 On sale for only $72'9 IOIWITHAM VOIJ(SWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave. in Westminster 893-7551 638· 7880 '78 Toy. w/shell. many xtras. looks sharp. ask- ing $4000. 642·9300 '7'TOYOTA PICKUP 4 cylinder. 4 s peed, rac· tory air cond .. stereo. A very pretty pickup with low miles and excellent condition. (3116 ) This is a sturdy truck that will not be here very long a t the sale price of only $4199 IOIW1THAM VOIJ(SWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave in Westminster 893-7551 638-7880 '77 Ranchero, white with blue int. lo mileage, like n e w . I o wner . Ras/propane. bed co ver . r ustom whls & mags 1714 1323-8722 '66 C MC 1 ~T PL' Xlnl Cond 498·S916 '67 I H SCOUT Auto. 4 cy l. Is l $600 t a kes 536 3471 Cleanest 1 ~ ton 6 cyl DodRe pickup. yellow. $2450 642·4610 '77 Chevy 30. high culw van. Grauman a l um . body overhead door. air. am1rm stereo. 18.000 m i. orig owner . Mint cond 9-5pm 673-1401 '55 Chev 11'!! ton Flat bed with lingate $700. 645-1700 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13 1,,· Wh aler-25 hp J o hnson . con s ole. teleflex steering, swivel seats. cover & trailer .X Int cond. $2950. Will de- duct $400 if trailer not In· c l. Call Ho ward at 645-6101. '80 KAWASAKI 250 LTD Low miles x Int cond Must see. 642-8106 "76 OODGE B200. auto, lecrMltOftal 9530 air. cstm int. mags . xlnt '77 Honda 175 Elsinort>. VeMdH $3400. OBO. PP. 644-7670 SALE OI TRADE Power boat. 28' F.ddy Cr aft Ca bin Oruiser . Sips 4. reblt eng. new paint. very nice shape. Will pay cash difference for car of highe r value. S LIP AVAI L . NEWPO RT . "'S6 .900 . 631-1900 or 673-3711. Al Biscotti. 17' Deep V, 100 HP Mer e. $1500 tra il e r int•ld. 631-6194. 22 ' 1967 Chris Cr a ft Cutlass-Classic. xlnt cond. 210 hp Chev. cuddy cabin. Offshore or :o1ki Buying bigger boat must s acr $4000 or make offer. 637·7918 SALE. S EALED BID As is , where is . ·57.35· Chris Craft Sea Skiff . CF6364EC. See vessel a~ Advanc e M a rin e Transport, 1672 Placen· tia Ave. C.M. Ca. Feb. 25 thru Ma.rch 4 between Sam-Spin. Sealed bid opening 2pm. March 4 at office al South Coast Marine Surveyers. 57312 E. znd St. Long Beach. 90803. Bid must be ac- companied with money order or cashiers check mad e payable to Charles Beal In amount of I~ Qf bid. Balance of bid due 10 days. En· velope must slate "Sealed Bid'', Owner re· """' rtgbt to refuse any or aU bldl. LIVE Aboard boat In Live aboa rd slip . 40' Owens ready to mMe \Pato. NB. M2-4Mt JO' Pacemaker '83. xtnt eond. 490 ml. ranc•. Cnuder dieMI •81, lo ml. ell cenvH; frn ll pailll ...,. • boUGM. 0... Pl. tn,CIOO ftrm. D•,. CIU,_,_. dirt bike. xlnt cond .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• must sell. $550/0 8 0 '78 Dodge RV Van. Self· 552-5461. contained. Xtras . low m Hes. 842·5241 ·73 Dodge. runs good. 11800 or best. 898-0300 dys : S37-0759 eves. SELL idle \terns with a 4 Seater Dune Buggy. '72 Ford Van. Custom 200. Classified clean. llOhp Cor vair Js pd. Mags. Cle a n. $1800. 631·2239 $1800. 968-803.1. ,.. 50 • • i D ,. 'Y II le ' ~ II ' ed Co ,.. da bu ( in Sc m lo ~ b: Ill I .i T • e ti \. I • t c • !~ ............. !~. ~.~!.'.~ ............. ~~!!.~ ....... ~.~':f.'.~ ...... ~ ~.:.'."!r~.~....... <prange c oast OAILY'PILOT!Thursday. February 26. 1ea1 '1• Ford~ T , hunt..r W t111..._ '111 ..._.. t7JI........ '716 ....., .. ,,,w ....._UM4 ~....._UM4 UtH ' rllft .. _. MU A•lnn1 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• •••--•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••·••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. ••-••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••<!•••••••••••• .. -•uathv• Por ll•• l»4t•l dul I" 'THlOW .. oo 7tMAJDAU7 #JD£Al£RIN0.S.A:· •1Du I I t71IC .. v11W ttlt Caollb HJI Merw~ nH 0r_,. <"aua•7 Come -Auto. tnn1 .. factory air ~ -•••--••••••••••••••• •••••-••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••'••••••••••••••• "-~IACTr~~-S..Ua1'1d&G yt Pl·&nt cond., •t•reo . A c"""aa"v11 '7t Convertible Bua: ·~..._..,, SHOWIOOMCOMO. ltlOMaCUIY ,. Dlillm n o .-00 onl~· beaut.Hui "'1orm•nce Vr'hlte/Whtte. Mint roftd. 2 + a Hatch b act ! "15T-TOP MAaG1111 W..aM • ... ie, A~. •partaeerlftauptrb~-•US·ROYC[ UOO mil•. 98000/0BO. Economical 5 s peed Power braltea, power • J>tUftClifaYA IJOltO <:,,.., -. •tt••• ll•Dll. --. O..U.a •car like , .. ,,......,... 494-ZJJI. m.nu•I trans . Cleao windows, P""•rsteerin1 ll!ll!ClmVE. Jtow of. II • Id' • I r • • 1M-79'4 th II m • k e • 11 fe ........,. ... "' ur! (OIWUV>. with tjll /tele1c:opln1 lered to JOU! Lun.ry P .•1 ao Ml HOO. IAll •ACI '1& Daliun noz. ale. wonhwtdle. fUSYCY> __ __,_ '61 IUS -.T 14191 •l•erln1 wheel, air. eq•lpp•d with~ ~Ir.ct VMUYWOltl amlf"'*'90. ... 2IO. !1')of drMn11 and tM ClOHOSUNDAYI. ' Runasd·ll000.4tl-4457 HOWAIDCMYNlet AM/FM stereo. rear power.UllwheeJ.c tltl -.Mar1uerite "wy 1t0-•I •alepric:eoton Y s.... t760 Dcwe6Qual1Sb. w lndow dero~aer . eoa&IQI, AM·Fll t l ck-Alll9 Wat ~ llillalon Vt.jo ------S7Jtf ••••••••••••••••••••••• V W 117 o Co nvert . NEWPORT BEACH automatic trans. Snow et.ereo, wt~ wheel c!ov· •••-••••••••••••••••• M t7JI IOI WITHAM Showrm cond. Rblt eng white with Buraundy in· era. (cztz761 N'ow dftlY •• PAY TOP om.1.A• ···~ 4tl-4f4t ....................... v---.... LEASE Ir tram. New paint, top. IJJ.Olll terior. 77.000 miles. Im· SMll for l op iu•d r are ~"-daya -·-intr. radials, shocks, maculue thruout ! ---.-.. a .. ,.... '=• dc1mt'1t•H or ---llllllT Sii.Liii 111»WetlllninaterAve DIRECT•. 7t CHIYY S8 , 100. 7S4-6190 o r ..__.~ ._...... '-._ _ ins ever yU1ina. Mechanic _ 1 ...___._ e::!7. " If uiu• nr u lt16fllATIU ..... eatm Ur --owner mmt sell. l5000. CHIVs••s AnswerAd#208,642·4300 .._ •••ra ...... n H•t! ,,. -c--19J.7551 631HllO '''' s· .... u ... TC .. ACll ·24hrs. -HarborBlv • CBf V I Er~ n.,., ~• _... ,,._ I 492·9808or499-2~ ~ ___ Co&ta Mesa 4 •PMCI trans . alr «Midi· MWNll•• ._. tno 4 cylinder. auto .. factory c-9933 540..5630 ll .......... AM IFM stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• TUllO. Convt. '74. xlnt cond. New air cond., disc brakes. -~ ,,,. .... ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• radio with rassette tape. '132IOC. It. blue. well pre· --radials, auto. S4 .500. radial steel tires, radio, Mnt.g ft$2 Michelin tires & 1'nore! se r ved c I 8 s sic llACH IMPOtrTS 963-4<*.I. tinted glass. extra rlean, 75 MBCUIY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ • f '9 0....., C -...ty -H11rbur Kh<I C"Oh'T-\ M ESA t7t-2100 WllUY CllAMCAIS AteTWUCIS COMHf:lL , HfVROLET • 'I 11111 rt\ '°''\\1~·\ )46-1200 ... HIUYllt Top dollars for Sports Cars. Bugs. C'amp\'rs 914's. Audi's Asltfor •C Mt;R JIMMAllHO YOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd HUNTINGTON BEAC'H 142-2000 TOP DOLLAR ftAIDFOR CiOOD & CLEAN USIDCARS! •UlmlMWt• '1'16.30 ~· .. ~ (()247 l 'TUOOb <<Mm) '79 !2IOI (75'01 '7'16 30 CSl ltl.llO (004() I '80 S28iA aunrf 0625 J CloM4 s-dca" $1700/best ofrer Call t8500/080.7S2·2404dys; M8Do¥eStree.t low miles . s ilver. COU.AIXl7 951-91550 6 PM to 9 PM If 552.5477 eves NEWPORT BEACH Sharp '79 VW Rabbit L. <SOOCDH> Under 55.000 miles fully no answer, PLF.ASE 75z.otOO blu.aut.o,A/C.AM /FM. S3995 equipped with cruise keeptry\ng ' '15 240D. Air. snrf. new nu tires. Ken Donahue. <flpl..u~kL 11 .... --:..J • control.airconditioning, tires. AM/FM /C ass. O...,_.COUtn'Y 979-4200ext. 52. rnWW\. R~ vlnyltop. AM·FM stereo '1lH'ial l2.4 Sp1der Good cond. Auto. trans. vO\.l(SWAGl ... INC tape. (202MSZ) Yours Convertible 752.6905 Eves /wknds : Sill '72 Super Beetle I owner. .::-s.a ... 100 for justS2989 Only 29,882 miles!! 831.7921 BUYorLEASE Likenew.Reblt.engine. .,.__ JC>MitSOM&SOM Make m onthly pay-DIRECT Vinyl upholstery $2490 13731 Harbor u..collt ~wy m en ts a nd d o wn Mer cedes 300C D. '19. OVERSEAS 96().:lf'19 Garden Grove 26218 Harbor Blvd". c012UJS> ivory. only 13.000 mi. DELIVERIES ·11SUPER BEETLE ------CC>fita Mesa OUMM COUNTY'S Ba ...... ick lmPorts xtra tank (714)'"2·........ I' .. ,i,~,,u. sa us FllST.1 5 .. "5630 &' IJ1.J_3_1_1 -'73 MB~2*l.4:oo~'· : • ':.' -.=~67';1~·,/ c lutch~ ::~v~~gT sV~c~o~ .. .,.. Xlnt cond. 17000 Ch vrol , ·79 Couscar XR-7. xlnt '10 FIAT I 79 Bus. snrf. am 1rm e ets. cond. 17.000 mi. $.5.500 SUPH IRA VA 7~9278 to 120 Gamen Grove 8 1 rass. bra. Z·bed. 23.000 979·5173. 536-0273 Sales St!rvu·e.r.easin~ lovC.-.er,hac. _. c·yhnder, 5 s peed. fac· Me rcedes. '79. 300SD. ud•0 1>r1 Gr >111> 530·9190 mi. S6900. 675·4876 tory air cond . stereo Maple Yellow/Bamboo. nts!lelle. wire wheel S nrf. s tereo cass .. rovers. sun roof This ho d ...,,., soo car is immaculate and s wroom con · -· · · has less than 7000 actual 557·9044 or 7~0689. Rolls koyce BMW t540Jamb0ree Newport Beach 640.6444 miles. She handles like a sports car and rides like IOI Mcl.AllM't the luxury car s he is rtASU632) 450SL. '76. Lite Blue, 50.000 ma. orig owner See to apprec. $19.900. P .P . 759-1909. l!50N Beach Blvd LA HABRA (5 Mi. No. of SA Fwy) f7 I 4t5Z2·5l33 Sunday by Appt. $5499 IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave in Westminster '73 45() SL: Classic white. xlnt cond .. 88.000 miles. Call 644·1533 eves & wknds or 833-0433 days R93 75Sl 638·7~ 450SLtmaint. in xlnt. Red l''iat X 19 like new. lo cond. F. equip. Poss. m iles. a /c . am /fm . neg price . Dan : mags & more $4250 10 BO 64&2128. 966·ooai ·77 BMW 630CSI, burgun I Honda 9727 dy, 4 spd. stereo. St8.500. PP . 897 1044 d ys . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 95t-9642evcs VISIT YOUR '78 450SL. blk on blk . f polished r im s. mint 1 cond. 14.000 mi. SJ0.000. 631·515.5 Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71TOYOTA CBJCAGT UFT'IACI Auto. trans .. factory air cond .. power steering. stereo. What will you do with all the money yo u ·save? This is a true diamond in emera ld gr een and less t han 24.000mlles. <651YAT> A veritable bargain for only $54tf IOIWITHAM VOUSWACHH 7600Westm inster Ave . in Westminster 893-7551 638-7880 '69 VW Bus: Cam perized. rebuilt engine. am tfm stereo. new tires. new clu tch . Mus t see ! $2100/0BO 714/492-3023 '70 VW Bug. Mag wheels. bucket seat.a. must sell. St .850 769AQS. 646-9246 For Sale VW Convertible '73. looks nice. runs great. Radials. $3900. 494.Zt07 Vot.o 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COHHRL CHEVROLET '..'\_'); 11.trl~.r llh d I \ IS"I \ \1 ~ :-, \ S46-I 200 '76MOHU 2 + 2. 4 cyl . good mileage. a lc. radio, transferable warranty. 557·352'7 or 759·0060 •• * D.McCardle 29T1 Ceylon Or Costa Mesa You are the winner of 4 free tickets ($14 valueJ. to ....... loatst.ow Mar.4thruM ar ff Anaheim Convention Center '71MHCURY COUGARXR7 See it now ! Previous owner demanded loads of luxury featurinl>( air cone:! . power windows. power seats. (633TZW 1 Yours for only $5489 JOHHSOH & SOM u..colR Mercury 21626 Harbor Blvcf Costa Mesa 540.5630 D~ 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64 DART COHVT. Clean & orig. S1950 For· rest 493-3091 9940 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '71FORDLTD 2150Hftor ll•d. :BMW ~· '74 Am tf'm ORANGE COAST C.... W... 645_5700 sterffi. a ir. must sell HONDA miracle mazda '76 450 SEL. met. bm. s unroof. alloys. new tires. 33.000 m i. mint. S17 .SOO. 645·077 '79 Celica GT. gold with beige int. 5spd. snrf. mags. S62<Hl /OBO 54$-2781. 645·0792. VOLVO SALES, SERVICE AHDLEASIMG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS Call 642-5678. ext 272 lo claim your tickets *** The J ohnson & Son golden touch makes this beautiful car a m us l fpatunng rac:'tory air cond .. Landau roor. power stet>rin~ & more, I 484WQT) Now just $3779 WAM'TED! $4800.673-~1 HEADCi)UARTIRS Capn 9715 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• TODAY!!! Lale model Toyotas and '73 Capri xlnt cond. nu UNIVIRSITY Vo1vos Ca ll us tires . a m 1fm cass TODAY!!! s150o 080 645.5374 SALES&SERVICE 642-6189 OLDSMOllLE Earle Ike TOY Of A · VOLVO ltUH...._lh& Ce1leM11• '°' U6.f l0l., S40.f07 '19 Capri Ghia. a uto trans. extre mely lo mi. beaut. car in per fect cond. Must sl'C. 551 -3771 HONDA GMCTIUCICS 2850Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540.9640 -o ...... 9720 '79 Wgn lo m I. a l e. radials. re~ ~as. war· ranty837-8403 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opportunity lo consider the purchase or trade-in or your <:lean Porsche Check with tis Today! 13631 H•• t)CJf Blwtt Ga·~ GttJ~ .. H t &36·2131 We Pay OVER ..... look For Your Good VW. Porsche or Audi VW·PORSCHE-AUDI "'5 E. Coast ffiway ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75DATSUH 1210COUPE 4 cylinder. S speed. air cond .. stereo. Have you ever wante d a true economy ca r in ex cellent condition at a very reasonable price? 1104MYUI Of course you have and its here and on sa le for only $2499 IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGEH 7600 Westminster Ave. m Westminster '77 Honda ACCORD 5s pd, xlnt cond. am /fm stereo cass S3750. 966·051 l days. 834·1m7 eves ·79 Ac cord S li ver Hatchback. xlnt cond. must sac. SS200. 675-7766. '79 Honda, like brand n e w, new radials . brakes. air. Lape deck. $5500/080. Before 8am or after4pm 497·4362. R93-75.5 l 638-7880 JCICJIMr 97 30 For Sale CHEAP!! Slightly used turbo kit '7(). ·74 Datsun Z cars 768-5837 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '761'2 Jag XJt2L. mint cond. 33.000 mi. loaded. $7800. 64().5930 '71 JAGUAR XJ6. Xlnt cond. Well maintained. ~250/ofr. 9'79·2112 '79 450 S L Maple Yellow/Bamboo 15.600 mi , a ll extras . aluminum wheels . hard/soft tops. immac. $34 .250 sell or lse 760·1933. S48·9094 , 675-1570 '70 Me r cedes Sedan 280SE. loaded. dark brown w/tan lthr int Call 67J.5741. MBZ ~L CPE Z7K mi. beige S28.500 644·5833 wkknds. eves 546·4506 daily '68 Mercedes 2805. gd cond. S3400 or best offer 557·2.1699, 759-2915 Bill ----MG 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77'h Toyota Corona lux Ed. 4dr Sed. pwr. steer. am/fm /ster./cass. auto. air. bm melt. Gd cond. 33.000mi. $4475. 536-6941. v~__,... 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Bug Sunroof. EXCELLENT CONDITION!! (0311791 $3911 Barwick Im Ports 131-1311 74YWIUS 7PASSEHGEI 4 c:'ylinder. 4 speed. stereo. This van is truly in excellent condition mechanically and in ap. pearance. (664KLH > Her s pacious interior and economy makes her a bargain for only 7t MG MIDGET S319' 4 cylinder. 4 speed. IOIWITHAM radial steel tires with I VOUCSWAGIH mags . Extra clean . 7600Weslminster Ave. brown with low miles in Westminster (909WQZ> 893-7551 638·7880 $4995 11 ~.J 76 VW VAH »fa!Jt. ffOWClUC 7 passenger. looks & VOLKSWAGEN INC runs great. All original. 534-4100 (7270) 13731 Harbor CIEVIH IMW G d G tst & Broadway ar en rove Santa Ana 83&-3171 MCH 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7fl&le COMYaTlaU 79 MGI 4 cylinder. 4 speed. AM· 4 speed. 24.00 miles. ne w FM. radial steel tires tires. stereo tape. C936G) with wire rims, red with Cima IMW low miles. <827XDN ) L'lt & Broadway $6ff5 Santa Ana 835·3171 • ~ Uowcwf P"')llOt 9741 f)>T 'J VOtKSWAGfN. IHC ....................... ~.,, EAIUlll VOLVO 1966Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 646-9303 540.9467 ~ECOUMTY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT [ft:Jft~, I 0120 Garden Grove Bl Garden Grove 530·9190 ·n 264 GL a /r . snrf. lthr . cass. S5200 630·7737. 640-7762 '80 242DL. sunroof. air. amtrm cus. 4 spd. OD . mint cond. 548-9018 A ..... UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltlldl 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 "72Coupe DeVille. xlnt cond in & out. Asking SlSOO. 645-SW . C..-..C ttl5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUl#I CAINUAC DIALBSH•IM ~COUNTY! SALES. SERVlCE AND LEASING at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 6,7 J.Cl900 '72 Datsun 240Z. x Int cond. new tires. am/fm cass. everythin~ works. 534-4100 '734 LEASE · 13731 Harbor •••••••·.;·;;:,;.•••••••• DIRECT! Garden Grove ........ GMa /1,()() It.HI• 11 1111.11• ( '"'·' 1\1\t· ... '>40 1\1()1) Premium prices paid forany used car ( roreittn or domestic) in good condition ~Us First! SOUTH COAST Dodge :.'888 11 1111~11 Hhd Ct1:.I a :\h·'tt .'> h> 11:1:10 Wanted truck l nterna· tional Van Metro. small '61, 4 cyl 894· 1834 A ..... ...,artf'CI ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1911 ALFA SPIDBS llACH IMPOITS •Dove Stteel NEWPORT BEACH 11Z·ot00 A .. '707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S4500 Mu s i See 675-7938 Forsale DahWIZ motor +ott.erparts 761-5137 '77 280Z 2+2. mags. AM/FM 8·lrk. air. nu tires. xlnt cond. 552-4242 d ys, 760-8386 eves. '14 2160Z. silver. a /c. ma~ whls. itlnl cond. S3995. 759-0498 '72 240Z Classic : Rblt eng. Like new thru-out. Ca ll for de tails. S4800. 831-8194. kAIMAMH ~GHIA 4 <'ylinder. 4 speed. This 1s a n absolute diamond with only 43,000 actual miles. She will ha ve a new home this weekend. Please come m and see it. make a reasonable of· fer and drive it home (3148) . IOIWITHAM VOUCSWAGIH 7600Westminster Ave. in Westminster 893-7551 638·7880 '69 convert, auto. am.rm tape. lo mi, itlnt running cond , all orig . $.1500/0 80. 494·5361 ----Mad. 9731 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71MAZDACiLC 1977 810 Wagon. air, sun· A· .. -•-I d rl. AM/FM. 8Ut0, it Int U\U, y-AJ\S,' a r COft •• radio, heater. 11\hl ls the cond. 14 .400 OBO. economy special of 8'2·M.'56 week! <846WCJ I A very -L-ik_e_ne_w_'80_3-\0G-X-. 4a-pd-,1 clean car In excellent am/fm cua. custom int, condition and on sale at pinstripe. Prieed to sell. the Incredible pri~ of call '31·12T& or 875-8651. SJHt IOIWITHAM Ask for Dou1. YOUCIWA ... '78 280Z. •Ir. am 1rm, 7tlOOW•tminatu Ave. 4apd. M,000 ml, bronze In Westadnater mett. Gd eond . 15200. 893-1Sll Ul-'79> ....... ......... '7,1 2441Z. 1rut cond. .._ ........ radials. air, cusette. M.. ...,,. m Ult se l I. 13800. NOW OPEN M8-DI OraqeCounb''s · YolumeMuda Dealer tN-1120 MW•M ...... toll. An.-...m 81vd AalWm TrMe~ ...... ........ •ttlt • ar rrwei1 .... 1911 PEUGEOT TUllOs IEACH IMftOITS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 9750 '60· '65 VW parts. '68 left & right door. ·73 left door SS() each. 548-9744 ·--- '66 for $1600. '67 for $2600. Or Best offer p.p. MUST SEU.548-1095 76CADILLAC SIDAH SIVILl.E Factory air cond .. Powe r windows. Power seats. stereo tape. Landau lop. lilt wheel. cruise con· trot. One of America's C bl most J>Opular and lux· •72 amper. re l eng , nu urious automobiles ever brks-pnt-radials -stereo. bu i It. A beaut i r u I $2800. 557-4280 c h o co I ate brown . ...................... ---------'78CAMPMOBILE metallic with tan leather I t7t POISCHI '"t21 .. COUPI V8. 5 s peed. air cond .. pwr. windows, cruise. AM /FM cass. & under 16.000 miles! (9200368). $27.fll THEODORE RO BIN S FORD , •l/\~f11 It./ I• ("I ( < ' .., r fl ·.~ I , fl · l 11 • Auto trans. $7995. interior. (816URAI You SSS-1304 will certainly enjoy own· ----ing this gem for only '68 VW Bug, orig owner. $7Z9f 85.000 ml. radio et c IOI WITHAM Sl700/bst orr. 633·9451 YOUSWA•EH dys. or eves 673-4108 7800Westmlnater Ave . 2 For t 1977 vw 7 Pass. In Westminster Bus with Removable ~7551 638-7880 Camping Furniture . 'Tl Seville . fully loaded. Converts In minutes. immec. cond. in/out. A M I F M c a s a • '7500. PP. 546-3893 dys SB/R1d lal1, Awnln1. many extras, Must See. "19 Eldo, silver & blk. blk IMl5C). lthr int, moon rf. less 760-81 846·9989 than 19.000 ml. mint Porache Carrera T••I•· 1975. C1uaic. Xlnt cond . AM /FM. A/C, sao.ooo. 7Hta1·72'70 cond. llJ.900. 111-5155. '76 VW Bug. two·lone. ----------• s n rf. am/ Im. ma 1 "N Seville. xlnl cond. rul· -:,r,wce::·.: ':r'ak'::~ wheel&, Id cond. Must y load ed . suso. fer.90S74 see to apptcec. UIOO. 1_96_l_·tl00 __ .-.. __ 1'1_45_. __ _ ~mt. '71 Cad Eldorado .-00. 1114 Model C, red/bll, Tt Vf1 Convert. "lklc'' 4 hllpower, llUSTSELL HC. eond. SHOO or~ apd. NHr4COI'._... olf.f7S.Tm OM.YI.HI Mii.ii "18~ Pol'adle IM. 14,000 Wllt• on white. •l_r.J '71 Camaro. IOOd condl· ml. Nd, loecled, hnmac. All/nl wttape. ':::,pa Uolt. nu~zin tto.-. ,,,.,... • ..,... to t/IZ .... aso. m. •n tllT. 7" allo ys. VW ''10 Bua. Movln1. loftnd. auper co.cl. ln must Mii. R11111 1ood. 6out,110.IOO. ,..__ SI.•. -.TClll7. No need to tra .. i all o .. r 'Tl....,..,...., MW rblt town to lol* 1~ iar••• en1. tint eolld. moo. ...... "*'U lllld US.a UMM dp: Ml·tnt ttl7 • ••••••••••••••••••••• ltlM ...... a..tW. _ .... _______ • ,_ ,. ... · '"" ............... e = .. ....,._.:._...;;;;.;;..;...~~--, ....... tall...... .,..., ..... a.1--. '72 Kingswood Estate Wgn. AM 8trk s tereo. elec windows /seat. a te. lu~gage rack +many xtras. Xlnt cond $1200 962.5355 '78 Monte. all pwr. llll. cruise. 33M. S3800 OBO 642·43'8. 675-4335 JOHHSOH & SOH Uttcolft Mercury 262'6 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 540.5610 '67 Chevy Camaro. reblt ·73 Gran Torino. 60.000 engine. trans $2,000 Call mi. oriR owner. reR gas. Keith 842·9092 St200/ofr. 968-9110 '73 Caprice Cla ssic. Loa de d . Less t han IOM /yr. '$950. 545· 7506. '721MftALA Runs ~ood. 59001080 631·22117 lttOFOltD GllAHADA • DRIVEN BY A FORD EXECUT IV E . This beautiful 4 door features loads of options includ- ing power windows. rar- C"'-'-9925 tory air cond .. vinyl top. ... ,_. cruise ('()fltrol 1927ZZD I ••••••••••••••• • ••• •••• Specially pri~ed SS689 '71 CHRYSLH JOHNSON & SOH CORPOIA I ._ _ _.__ ..... ~ Auto. trans .. fac~ory air ;ffa'rw'!'l cond .. power windows. Costa Mesa split power seats. ster~o 540.56]0 cassette. Landau top. tall wheel .. c ruise cont rot.. A 1200 Ford 6 cvl rfbuilt lonR stunning dove R_rey ~1th block g)() · grey leathe~ •~tenor 642·7:Jll after 5pm !523U0Vl_ T~1s fme r_id· I - ing car IS m superior I '76 Granada Ghia 2dr. condition and has all th<> xlnl cond. p s. full pwr re~turesforlhecomrort am rm s tereo. t1hr minded buyer for only seats. tinted windows $4499 962·~ IOIWl'tHAM VOUCSWAGEH 7600Westminster Ave. in Westminster 893-755 I 638· 7880 '16 Cordoba Blk w/Burg. int. AM/FM 8 Trk-Cass· Nu Tires-Lo Mi· Reg Gas $2900. 751·9819 9930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77LIMCOLM MAllCV It won't last Ion~' This beautiful Mark features fu ll power includlnlo? power windows, cruise <'Ontrol. alloy wheels. tilt wheel. <815293) Now just 16499 Btrl '73 Cntry Squire wgn. mint c:'ond . AC'. lst $1250. 64&7274 lincolR 9945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77UMCOLH VERSAILLES Styled for today! Lux· ury equipped with moon roof. Lill wheel. leather seats. cruise control, p owe r window s . C247ZEP) Yours today for only 18289 J~SON&SOH LiitcolllMercwy 262'6 Harbor Blvd" Costa Mesa 540.5610 JOHHSOM & SOM '7S Lincoln. new tires. U..Colll Mercwy brakes. itlnt cond. S3000 262'6 Harbor Blvd 497..slllM. Costa Mesa M~ 9950 ___ 5_4_0._5_6_l_O ___ • ••••••••••••••• ••. •••• ,77 LIMCOLH ORANGE COUNTY'S MAUV FtHEST You simply must see it! LI NCOLN·MERCURY This mos t des irable DEALERSHIP M ark features full ~--"'J~, J-~ Power group. cruise con-~ Tc41,..... trol. tilt wheel. quad LINcoLN·MERCURY . stereo. (072ZXE) Yours t6-l8AutoCenterDr for only tl6479 SD Fwy-Lake Forest JON4SOM & SOH exit u.c.llt Mercwy IRVINE 21128 Harbor Blvd'. I l0.. 7000 Costa Mesa 540..HJO 79 MIKUlY t932 • •••••••••••••••••••••• • ... .t.d u..ctc ... u 7t c .... ,.". uz 4.-LI0,000 ..... 11•11 T t•,. ~••r t.cb, 1hre, pewer wfa.t•w•. sport ..... (UOYllY> $13 900 MAlqulS Elegan~ Ir luxury ire yours! This one has what YoU want includl.n1 factory alr c:ond .. cloth inteior. power ateertn1. stereo •nd m ore. (827Y BO> Now only ta'it JOHMSOM a SOM ~= c.tall .. , ..... ·10 Mustang 302 eng, good condition. 960-1874 eves. ----'67 Mustang, 63M odg. mi. int xlnt, needs body work, 289, auto, all orig. S1600. 642·2995 ---Oldunolal1 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "18 Olds. Cutlass Supreme Brougbam T top. full power.a ir. ex· tre mely sharp ! Make monUlly payments and down (54JVOY) Barwick Imports 831-llll '800LDSMOllLE CUTI.ASS SUPREME IROUGHAM Auto. trans .. air cond .. power stcerin~. Power brakes. power windows . split power scats. stereo c assette. wire wht"el covers. Landau top, till wheel. cruise control This beautiful 2 door is tn truly superh condition with very low miles. Ont' of America's finest lux ury <'ars is available ror you at far below market value c2 10ZCT1 Sale price only $7999 IOIWITHAM VOUSWAGEN 7600 West minster Ave. in Westminster 893. 7551 63fJ· 7880 '72 Cutlass good cond. a m · fm. a/c, SllOO/OBO 851·1807 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *SALE* 1979-1980 Pl MT OS • 30. to choose from $2895 C817XKS> ALL Low Mileage A LL-Automal ic:' Trans. ALL-Power Stcerin~ ALL-Runabouts. 3dr. SOME-Air Conditioning SOME·Stallon Wagons Al.L-Guaranleed OU.MGl COAST TllAHSPORT A TION C'L~ETO FREEWAYS 2167 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa Call 1714 I 631-6441 ·74 Pinto. nt•w paint & tires . runs goo Sl550. 751 4.1!9 ('\'(':. ·72 Pinto. 46K mi. or1,:: owner. auto. S950. P. P ft45·3264 '7fi Pinto WaJ?on. 6 c·yl auto . power . air . AM FM . Sl700 847 230:! art6PM '73 Wai.?on. itood cond. ne w Goocfr1 ch TA '!<. SI 100/0RO fi42-434A. 67$-433.5 9960 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. OPLYMOUTH ARIOW 4 cylinder. 4 speed. air cond .. AM-FM radio An extremely sharp rar with only 5800 mil~. Sh<' h as a s hade kit a b e autHul i nte r ior c386ZSSl Give her a new home this weekend for only $5499 IOIW1THAM YOUCSWAGIH 7600Westminster Avf. in Westminster 893-755 I 631J.788J) '77 Volare, 6 cyl, lo mt. lake over paym ents 645-4616 an lpm. -~------~~ ........... !r!.~ '77 Trans Am. Almost new e n gine. Powe{ steering. brakes, wtn- do~. AM !FM 8 i.rack 588-84.lS '78 Bonne vi lie. 4 d r sedan. good cond. S2IOO. Wkdys 984~; eves' wkndl 964-SSSS. '77 ASTRE. AM /FM I tr. A/C, 50.000 ml. SZ200/IMJt orr.55'7 ... 5 ... k:os: a m fiitW t/N W OI&; md 5700 5500 · 5700 REI TE REI TE REI TE ALL ALL , All _ 1981 GRAND PRIX'S 1981 PHOENIX 1981 FIREBIRDS GM's X BODY INCLUDING TURBO INCLUDING DIESELS 66GET AMERICA ROI.I.ING'' CASH SAYINGS DIRECT FROM GM INCLUDES: •AM radio •Heater • 4 speed trans • Tinted glass • Whitewall tires •Power steering • Power disc brakes • 18.5 gal. fuel capacity •Tilt wheel 1971 CHEVY COl¥tnl 31)0 VI ~gina, IACIOf\I air, a~lm ilereo 1ap11 IUIQlflillG J>PW•r i lNftng ' briilUli heat .. t ' muc;h Ol£)(-(.40 I HIG) MUSI SEE ~ r 1976 PONTIAC 61ANDUMAMI Autom11111c AM/FM 11ereo tape, power steering 1pt11 ~r seal, A/C. r'llV wtlaelt. & more · 138tPAQJ SM95 llEW 1980 PONTIAC SUllBIRD OR s995 AND DOWN Cash or Trade Plus Tax, LicHse & Cocumentary Fee S..-.._Plue la.II. he & doc:umerOry '" SIKl5 down Plue 1300,80 ••'" taa. plus 1101 l•c:enM ..... 120 documentary ... tor a k>tal ot === CMh °' ,,_ Sllel>5 -mont~ lor eo monlhl Fon-cl\arvH 11ff7 00, APR 17 21' oei.rreo payment once 17413 90 on 1979 PONTIAC TIAMSAM Automatic. am/Im atereo llli>&. air oondlllonlng, pwr window. c u111o m wheel&. custom lntortor & more (832)(/fl) 57395 1978 CHEVY CANICI CLASSIC A111oma11c. la to1y air, power llHftng & brakes. pow111 w1nf1nw 1 am/Im ata1eo tape, custom 1Nheel11 & mucih more ('' t 138) 54795 1979 DODGE COLT 4 cyhnder engine. good gaa car. (419XHA). 53795 1979 OLDS CUTLASS MOOMIOOF Automatic. am/fm stereo. pwr. windows. air con- ditioning, custom wheels. custom interiOf' & more. (~2). 4 Cyt. 4 Speed Use theM numbefs tot come>•t1•C>t\ Your m1teega mar "&IV cMP9nd•ng ::.::"':.=. ·~~~J.: mete999 •• ~ oe l«'l.J 1978 SUBARU · IRAT 4 IPMd tranamlaaion, 4 cylinder engine. am/fm t•pe, power steering, a/c, 4 wheel drive .• (158\'0F). 53995 1978 CHRYSLER COllDolA Automatic transmission. A/C. AM/FM stereo tape, power steering. vlnvl top. c ruise. (IA0Vt2n. 53895 . ---llllllml 1111111111 OHAN< ,f 0U"41 Y 1 f\1 II OH NIA ,•·, L ~ NI S " County buses will roll; fare hike eyed . -Gl.SNN "'°"' ........... A..._ II.• riders an e.,.et· M lo r•••e rtdiDI Oru1e eo.ty u-lt ...... • ..... the ftMl ,......_ t.o U.. at....u Jl'ri. da~ fGMaiwiac a II-day strike by a.a driv.a Md IDftlaaaics. Aacl it probably won't be loaa before rtdera will face a fare in· creue oa top ol the inconvea· ieac• caused by tbe at.rike. Oraqe County Transit Dis· trict directors are acbeduW to laold a public bearilll nut llGD· day monainc t.o coaaider u in· creue. Tbe bll question will be wbet.ber the fare will 10 from 50 centa t.o 75 cents or to $1 for a one-way local ride. Transit directors ratified a three-year contract -Wednesday offeriq driven an immedJate 6 percent annual increase and mechanics a 14 percent annual raise. Other cutbacks seen Tbe driven will 1et 4 pernnt incre .... in eacb of the aeeoad and t.blnl years. Tbe mecbaalca will 1et I percent next year and 5 percent in i.m. A maximum 7 percent annual coet-of-llviq in· crease wu included in both con- tracts. The driven and mechanics also convened on Wednesday with nelOtiat.on of the United Tra.naportation Union t.o approve the contracts. Two I I B district principals get ax Two principals in the Hunt· ington Beach City (elementary> School District and two other members of management will lose their positions next year because ol financial cutbacks. The retrenchment, approved by district trustees at a special meeting Wednesday, will go aJong with previous cuts that in· elude the closure of three elementary schools and the layoffs of 41 teachers. The two principals singled out by trustees Wednesday were Bernie Rodgers of Dwyer School and Helen Blair of Moffett School. Peace emphasized ·Reagan welcomes Britain's Thatcher WASIDNGTON (AP> -Presi· dent Reapn, aayiq tbe United States and Britain will stand "side by side" to protect world peace, today welcomed British ·Prime llinlster Mar1aret Thatcher to the United States in an "elaborate White House ceremony reflecting the two na· lions' cloee ties. For her part, Mn. Thatcher, the first leader of a major U.S. ally to vtait Reacan since bis in· auguration, told the president that the United States can count on Great Britain as "an ally, staunch and true." "Your warm and deeply mov- ing ceremoQy will strike a c~ in the hearts of British people everywhere," she said. Reagan greeted Mrs . Thatcher on the south lawn of the White House in a ceremony made more impressive by the bright sunshine of an unusually mild Wubington February. They stood at attention as the U.S. Air Force Band played Ruf· fies arid ,,ourisbes, followed by the national anthems of both na- tions. Next came a 19-gun salute that ectioed over the White House gr'ounda. A crowd of several thousand lookedoa. After review in& a U .S. military honor 1Uard, Reaaan welcomed the prime mlnista', whom be bad once met In Lon- don. Tbe 1eadera have similar views resardin& world eeonomlc and MCUrlty problems, and this was refleeted in their remarks. Reapn said t.bein are "kin- dred natlom" sharinl the com- mon a.c.d of lanpaae, tawa and beliefs. "The reapc.nsibility for freedom la oun t.o share," he aald. Be said tboH who threaten world MC:Urtq lbou.ld be aware of .... ......... without q.-. tlOD -BrttalD and America will ........... 'SIDE BY SIDE' T"8tlcher •nd ...... " stand side by •ide." Rea1an praised Mra. Thatcher for helpina rally world oplnion a1aimt the "brutal invasion" ol Aflhanistall by Soviet troope. He also said the)' share a conviction that Poland's problems must be solved by the people of Poland. He said "outaide intervention there would affect profoundly East-West relationa," referriq to a pouible Soviet move on ita East European satellite. Rea1an also said the two leaden share a conviction that the aoluticJm to their natiam' economic problems "Ue wit.bin (See TllA'IUd&, Pase ,\!) • Bolt Jolts Jet . U-to-Lontlon plane 0 K LONDON <AP>-A tll_..baltam ....... atwo-foot ..... lat.M WH-of a LaedoD·bouDd Brltilll Anaya Jumbo Jet carrJlal -'1111111 I aftel' lt took olf tram Loi Maelea toda7 the alrliM ,........ fte belt dlatroJed the .,... 141'• weather radar 119tem ..._ • ...,... ftft mllndee .,..taieolf, a IPC*•maaaald. Nola· . Jm*............ . D 5"1tM ....... Mle~~O.WlObMantoLaedoD'a ••••• .,.. ....... __ 9&1· • •"' .................... w• ...... .,... wtdeb JI ' I llil a -.U ...... I .-.... t~•derbolt lldt. OM ....... : • .,,_,..,.an.-..taNlll. 'l'IMrewuao,.-_. ~:......,..,a1tE1dwlllltW~lf, .... .. --La.c-.aa,Dodwll.NldtMn••• ..... • •• -_.... ... 9 hi ...... -.... ,.._.... ..... . 6111't..,..U..wuallolela .. ••re .. aatllweludedblLm·, ...... Rodgers bas· been a principal since urro aud Mrs. Blair since 1972. District coordinator Fran Ben· nie and district psychologist Barney Fleishman also will have their jobs terminated. Superintendent Lawrence Kemper said today the cutbacks are made necessary by rising 'deficits and decreasing enroll· men ts. He said that Rodgers will be . reassigned as a vice principal at one of the middle schools. The other management mem· bers reportedly have "bumping rigbta" and may be in line t.o replace teachers who have less seniority, it was indicated. Trustees, meeting Wednesday in order to meet the March 1 deadline for layoff notices, last· Friday cut $1.4 million from next year's budset. . That action includes the closure of Peterson, Clapp and LeBard elementary schools. OtheJ' penoanel facill1 layoffs in addition t.o the 41 teachers in· elude two nurses, two secretaries, three head custo- dians and tbree 'clerks and library aides. Programs that will be scrapped include psycboloeical and nursing services, remedial reading and remedial arithmetic classes and elective classes for middle school students. * * * Non-teacher staff at BB seeking r~ses Non-teaching workers in the Huntinlton Beach City (elemen· tary) School District are seeking pay raises of 10 percent for each of the next two years in addition to pay increases equal to the· rate of infiation. The package presented to school trustees is a beginnning step in the negotiation proceaa, according to BUJ Verhae1en, president of the bargainin1 unit that represents about 220 workers. Employees covered in the pro- posed contract include bus cJrivera, custodians and clerical workers. The same employees received an eilht percent pay bike two months a10 for the current school year. We•tmin•ter High clo•ed by power cut llecbanica were to report t.o work today, driven on Friday. However, board members gave the strildn1 workers a seven-clay srace period to return to wort. District General Manaser James Reichert said some ol the workers may have started new joM, but "we'd like to set the 1ood ones back." He said about 10 percent of the work force usually doesn't re· turn after a three-week strike. District officials fl1ure to have some ol the same problems with the estimated 40,000 daily com· muten who formerly used tbe bus. The board of directors postponed consideration of stag- ing a "free fare" day to attract riders. But they did decide to mate the 12,480 February bus passes valid for the rest of this month and all of March. Riden who choose not to use tbe puses can 1et 80 percent ol their value back if the ~-"' are turned in to tfie OCl'D'a Garden Grove headquarters bJ March&. -· · Offidals predicted it will be about a month before ridership returns to normal levels. Even before the strike betaa. officials were conaideriq fare increases to keep up with cost8 and to meet strinaent state re- <See BUSES, Pase AJ) ........... MANGLED INTERIOR OF MUNICIPAL RAILWAY BUS AFTER SAN FRANCISCO CRASH At le•at 41 people Injured, Mver•I Mftouely, when bua, ..... truck c:ollde 49 riders injured in SF bus crash More rain possible SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -At least 49 were injured today, several seriously, when a packed Municipal Railway bus collided with a tractor-trailer truck hauling peat gravel in San Francisco's China Basin, authorities said. •'They were trapped and wedged in. Limbs were caught under tbe seats," said Fire Department Battalion Chief Gerald Cullen. Six ambulances were used to late the most seriously iltjured to the hospital. Other victims were transported on a second Muni bus following the 7 a.m. crash, officials said. "We have about four or five critical injuries, three or four people with broken legs and a couple of back injuries. The rest have aches and pains,·• said a paramedic on the scene. Passengers with minor in· juries were placed aboard anotbe Muni bus and taken to Mission, St. Luke's and Mount Zion hospitals. Joseph Zem, administrator of St. Luke's Hospital, said one of the 30 passengers taken there 'l'ouths IJenelit bad suffered a ruptured spleen and another bad a possible frac- tured skull. Most of t.he others bad back and shoulder injuries, he said. Another 17 victims were taken to Mission Emergency, accord· ing to hospital spokeswoman Miles Flores. Dr. Donald Trunkey said one of the victims appeared to be having circulatory problems and was paralyzed. Two passengers with minor in· juries were taken to Mount Zion Hospital", a spokeswoman said. Muni spokesman Robert Rockwell said the number of in· jured might have been as high as 55, but hospitals reported only 49 injured. - The bus driver, John McGee, 45, who suffered multiple in· juries when be was pinned in the wreckage, joined Muni a month ago and bad been driving a bus for three weeks, Rockwell said. The bus, according to truck driver Jeff Hayes, 25, slammed into the tract.or-trailer rig at a high rate of speed as the truck attempted a left tum. The front <See CllASB, Page A2> .... on Friday Button up your overcoat and keep an umbrella by the door since the National Weather Service is predicting a 20 per· cent chance of showers Friday morning. No ·rain is expected tonllbt, despite a low of 49 predicted along the coast, according t.o the W eatber Service. Tbe showers that began Wednesday around 6 p.m. were barely enough t.o wash down the dust from the hot winds that whipped through the Oran1e Coast earlier this week. In Huntington Beach, resident weather expert J. Sherman Den- ny recorded .38 inches of rainfall Wednesday with 6.25 for the en- tire season and 17.23 recorded by this time last year. "It doesn't look good," said the Huntington Beach resident, who baa been measuring rainfall for nearly 50 years. "Let'• bope we get some more." He said tbe city's rainfall average is 11.15 inches. Rainfall measurement Wednesday In other Oran1e Coast areas, this season's total and last year's fl1Ures t.o dat. include: Valley councilman gives away salary -Costa Mesa: .28 inches, 3. '11 inches, 17.08 inches, recorded bJ <See llAIN, Pase AJ> 1111111:1111 1111111 lncreasin1 cloudineaa overnilbt. Cba.nce of rain leas than 10 percent tonilbt and JD percent Fri· day. Lows tonilbt iD the 40s. Hlaba Friday ., '° •. Two Fountain Valley youth 1roupe wll1 share the mODtbly stipend paid to newly appointed CouncUman EuJene Van Duk. Van Duk bu lmtructed that bis $252.50 monthly council salary be apllt equally between the Fountain Valley Glrla Club Md tM Fountain Valle1 Rilh leboolB.ad. I Tiie doaa- IUoDI wWemt·, ,,.. .... UD~• ... ,...... .. ... Va OMll .Mld. Bli a term n:plrmlaAprll, . "I eauttlr 1DJ IPGI • Ute eoaadltD ............ -~·· be ..... ''l'mllat•aldt7 11111&1 ................. .. ..... 1 ............ ............ Yaa Daill 11 8°'*W11Wnlt' ........ he said he also baa declined to partidpate in a city insurance pro1ram, which coeta S80 per month. The Fountain Valley Hip 1•11 Jmf School Band donation will belp muaidana retire a lar1e debt they r• up t.o ~clpate in the lnau1uratlon of President Reas•. tt'he band still mast repay tl,000 nmatntn1 in a Jou tram the Auoclated Studut BodJ, achool IPlk•woman Brie ...... . aald t.odiJ. ·~thebadal8011111ap-... '° pardaaM .......... ,aest~,.aacamtof--11•1 . N IMIV•o.M"I .... Uoa ......... .,. ...... ' ====· .... ...... ~ ......... I t.9:::'~ • .J.::.-:C I u............... . ...:;1:.19 • .;:.·:.-t ....... 1 • .., ............ .:r:i= -=· It.._.., •• te r .... tM& • . ...... .,. ... .,. •• hr .. Bl woman's donor named --.:.au~..--..... _....,.., ... ... ........ .., ..., .... ol Hrl... HN lei' a N ........ .. ~--""" , .............. .............................. uaMe .. ..., llNr ..-eal '6Ull No•• ot .. er Oa•=Oa ........... ,,......... row••t"". l8 ~ .. ol r fwadl .... ~ 1lftR ,_ tM boepl&aa. So claim U•• lawyers wbo reprtMM ...a U.. dauataLtr and ,..., ....... BUSES ••• quirementa for recoverint at least 20 percent of lbe diatrict's operatinc eo1ta lbroueb fare9. District board Cbalrman Ralpb Clark said lbe aa yet un- determined Ion of (arebox rev- enue and federal aid rrom the strike coudld cause new rares tO reach $1 a ride. Clark continued his bard line against lbe strike at Wednesday's meeting. He said the settlement was fair but claimed the district was w'illing to make the same conceuions before workers ever left their jobs. "l penonally have a lin&erlng belier that this entire bus strike was unnecesaa"t-y. It was not needed," be said. Reichert said the mechanics received much bi-her wages than the drivers because the dis· trict was losing its trained diesel mechanics to private businesses that paid better . Rather than calling the im· mediate raise a 14 percent an.' nual increase, district officials termed the new offer a 9 percent raise with a 5 percent "adjust· ment." Under the new contracts, drivers will earn top pay o( $10.03 an hour instead o( the former $9.46. Mechanics will gel top pay of $11.19 rather than their former $9.82. The contracts will cost the dis· trict an estimated $13.2 million over the three years. Annual operating costs this year are $54 million, or which 75 percent, or $40.S million, go for worker salaries and benefits, said Reichert. l',....P.,,eAI CRASH ••. • or the bus was demolished, crumpled back into the first rows of passenger seats. ''I was at a green light, slowed down and making the turn when for some reason I looked up and saw a bus. He was coming just Like a train and plowed into me. He had to be coming fast," said Hayes , a driver for Valley Ex· cavaling of Pleasanton. Warren Williams. 24. of San Francisco, was in the back of the bus and said he didn't think the bus wa.a going very faat. "The bwl driver put on the brakes and after that there wu the lmp:.c:t ," said Williams. ··People we:re on top of me screamln(C f waft a l•o on t.op o( peopl~ ... He u ld J>••ffnlt:rft koocked wlnduw• itttd dtHJrll o ut to es ca~ "I Willi trylnlC \J> calm people down," thfl 11hlpvln1 C'lerk aald. "A lot c,f people: wf!re .cre.m· ing. A lot of &*•Pit! were bleed· ing and dldn'l lcnt>w It " Panel heartt blut detail1 LONG BEACH tAP> ~I· ea• lmlfl I d ol AnfrtM Bl"Obed, •Ito ... _.ad ...... ol _. Ula ••at lloq. la ..,ate l•tenl••• t••1 Hld t .. at .... ..... aMcl• •• tWr-ol· ,., lalt ...... a ..... ol 9d· 181 lepl tCIDVov .. Y over wbat would be ._,. wltll t.be IUiaC woman. Hoq olftciall wou.ld Dt6tber coollrm IMll' ~ &bat ao otler wa1 made tbrOUlb Ulelr llosp6ta1 foundation, l.allttiq UM donor wanted to remaln '•anonymous.•' Attorne1• for Hoaa bad been seelliu lln. Brobeck'• relDO'lal from tWr facility beeauae they claim the woman. tbou1h seriously ill, i.a no looaer in need of acute care boepitaliaaUoa. Superior Court Judee Ronald Prenner appointed Jlrs. Brobeck's physician u ber tem· porary conservator two weeks aeo to arranie for ber transfer from Hoag. In makinl bis nilln&. Judie Prenner bad sueceated UC Irvine Medical Center aa an ac- ceptable alternative. However. at the time. the family ex- pressed concern that Mra. Brobeck could be left ln a park· ing lot ii rejected by UCI. UCI attorneys quickly ob- tained a lelJlpora.ry stay of Pren· ner's ruling so they could araue against Mrs. Brobeck's transfer, to lbeir facility, which lbey said waa also an acute care hospital like Hoag. It was during a second hearinc last week tbat Hoag officials made their offer to tbe ramUy as a means or ending the leaal squabble tbat bad developed. Van Nuys lawyer Charles Smith, who represents Mrs. Brobeck's dau.l(bter. said the of· fer of four months nursinl care at a convalescent hospital was neither accepted nor rejected by him. The family had previously told Prenner that after exbaustini $600,000 in insurance benefits for the woman's care, they could no longer afford the $4,400 per month private nursing care would cost in a convalescent hospital. Huntington's Mrs. Gould rites Friday Funeral services will be held Friday for Vaye Irene Stewart Gould, a granddaughter of one or the founders or the City of Huntington Beach. Mrs. Gould died Tuesday in Costa Mesa at age 61. Mrs. Gould's grandfather, David 0 . Stewart, settled in Huntington Beach at about the lime the city was founded in 1904, according to city historian Delbert '"Bud" Higgins. Stewart was president of the First National Bank of Hunt- ington Beach and a successful (armer on property near Beach Boulevard, Higgins said. Surviving Mrs . Gould are daughters Jean Long of Westminster, Vicki Flory of Dayton, Ohio; Marlene Vaye Mayer ol Coronado, and a son, John Demnickl of Florida. Services are scheduled at Pierce Brother 's Smiths ' Mortuary, 6r1 Main St., al 10:30 a.m . Interment will follow at Good Shepherd Cemetery. ,.,...p._..41 RAIN ••• the Oranae County Flood Con· trol Olttrict. -Lacuna Ntauel : .4&. 4.0I and 24.3 lnchea, recorded by Moulton Nt1uel Treatment plant. -Newport Beach: .... 4.12. ............ Farewell prager . Pope Jo~ Paul II kneels to pray at Nagasaki monument to Ca~bc 91artyrs shortly before leaving Japan today and fiymg· tlf Alaska. A brief stopover there will be the last one on the pope's final leg home from his Asian tour. Brown names ,..,.... P•P Al 3 from county THATCHER • the people and not the state. to judgeships "We believe that peop_le will stay rree when enlerpnse re· Three Orange County at· mains free," be said. torneys. all or whom served al one Mrs. Thatcher said Uie visit lime or another as deputy district gave her a "double joy" because attorneys, have been appointed to she was ~n the United Slates and judicialseats by Gov. Edmund G. because 1t was Reagan who was BrownJr. greeting her as president. She Ronald Eugene Owen was referred to Reagan as "a trusted na med to a new post on the fri.~nd. ''. . . Orange County Superior Court. W~ m, Bntam stand with you. NamedtotheNorthOrangeCoun· Amenca s successes will be our t y Municipal Court were Jean successes ... when you look for Rh e inheimer a nd John w.· fri~nds, we will be there," she McOwen. said. Owen, 43, who has been in Following th~ 15-minute private practice for the past 11 ceremony, Reagin and Mrs. years, fills one of four. new Thatcher went into the presi· judgeships on the 46 member d~nt's Oval Office and posed for Orange County Superior Court pictures in wingback chairs in bench. front of a roaring fire. The Orange residentleaves tbe Reaga_n explain47d to her law firm of Cohen, Stokky, Owen several. pleces ~ art, mclading a and Davis in Santa Ana. Previous· Fredenc Remington sculpture ly he served as an Orange County ?' a cowboy on a horse rearinl deputydisl.rictattomey. tn fear from a snake. . . Owen received his bachelor He was overheard poanting out degree from Ohio Stale and his to Mrs. Thatcher t.he disadvan· law degree from Hastings College tages of the months-long U.S. of the Law. presidential campaign, as com- Rheinheimer 52 was named to pared with the British election a vacancy on the 'North Orange campaign of only several weeks. ~ounty Municipal Court, replac-"I think it is one of the reasons mg James Wright Cook who was why more and more of our peo- electedtolheSuperiorCourt. ple are not voting," he told her. ) ru.,._1cer Baley .recalls t J 'Roots' birth BJ JOllNNBKDBA• ... ....,,... ..... It bu beeD five yean since Alex Haley'• book, "Roots," first documented tbe cultural berttace and blltoryofblack Americana. But lDtere.t in &be autbor'• U · year search for bla famll '• oriew.~cb led bim to a v ll l aae ln Weat Africa where the now le1endary Kunta Kinte was bound in chains and placed aboard a slave ship sill genera-MALav Uona a1<>. baa not waned. Speakingtaacrowdof about400 people at UC Irvine Wednesday nicht, Haley said be felt the most effective thine be could do now la to share the behind tbe scena in- siebts that led to bis writing "Roots." Haley said words heard as a boy on a front porch in Hennin1. Tenn .. becameartforhim. ''A ritual developed at just about supper lime when my grandmother and her sisters would filler out to the front porch where they would talk about their family,'' Haley said. "I beard stories about the old master and an old bull on tbeplan· tation named Bob. and a scan- dalous character named Chicken George and his mother Kiuy.' • Haley said the conversations would eventually tum lo Kizzy's father, a man referred to in hushed tones as the African, who said bis name was Kun ta Kinte. ''I beard those stories night after night throughout several summers," Haley said. "I became imprinted with the stories. By thetime I was 121 had to stop and think which were Bible characters and which were my ancestors." The celebrated author said be was in Washington, D.C. justafter the publication o( his biography of Malcolm X, the assasinated leaderoftheBlack Muslims. ''I bad worked with him on the book for two years," Haley said , ··and he had been killed just as he had predicted he would." He said he suddenly fell empty 2 fatalities after comptet•n1 a project lba\ bad oceupied ao much of Ilia life for to Iona. For some reUCJll ltill unclear to him, be 1aicl be w• in· · to &be National Archives buJldiq · and aaked for tbe census reeorda • of the North Carolina county where bis 1randmother had been • born. On the mlcrolllm he found bis 1reat-srandfatber'1 name, a1ona · with the names of several other : relatives. : "I besan from lbat point not to ; search, but to become encrosaed : in the subject of the history ol my family," Haley said. ·'It wu an eerie type of mission. I didn 'l know what to think ol it," he said. Finally Haley's search led him to the villaee of Juffurein Gambia, West Africa, where he _wastoldoftheKinteclan. The storyteller related bow · Haley's great-great-ireat-sreat-· great-grandfather had been ab-1 ducted by slave traders while out , in the forest chopping wood to · makeadrumin1767. ''I can't begin to explain the power and emotional push " Haley said. "I came back fro~ Africa overwhelmed with the idea of what il would mean to write a book. "Before my search the most I knew about Africa -ridiculous as it sounds -was Tarzan and Jane that we have all seen on movies and television." Haley said he had never in· tended to become a writer and that a string or accidents led him to his occupation. "I had no idea I would ever be successful " he said . ''If I did I would have typed faster." Crashes kill 5 LAFAYETTE, La. (AP> Dense fog and smoke that rolled over a 20-mile stretch or In- terstate 10 was blamed for a series o( traffic accidents that killed five people and injured 10 ·seriously just before midnight, stale police said today. The names of the victims were withheld until relatives could be notified. Charges expected in auto accidents Andrea Castalano, 17, o( Garden Grove, a passenger in Cowan's car, was fatally injured in the accident. She was formerly a deputy al· ''We simply wear them out. t~rney in charge or the special as-T~ey ,,et bored with the whole signment section and the career thang. Two motorists involved in separate fatal auto accidents in Huntington Beach earlier this month will race misdemeanor manslaughter charges, police traffic investigators said. The Oranee County District Attorney's office bas agreed to press the manslaughter cbar1es against Barry Lynn Cowan, 111, of Long Beach, and Debol"alt Ann Lamkin, 25, of Westminster, a Huntingtoo Beach poUce tral· fie spotesman said. In tbe second incident, Mrs. Lamkin collided head-oQ Feb. 10 with an auto driven by Dennia. Ryan Hulsey, 36, o( Newport Beach. Hulaey died instantly in the crash, which occurred on Pacific Coast Hieb way near· Magnolia Street in Huntiqton. Beach. criminal prosecution unit. She previously worked in the major fraud section and was in private Dollar on rise practice before that. She received her law degree from Pepperdine University. McOwen, a 48-year-old at- torney in private practice, was alsonamedtothenorlhmunicipal co urt , replacing Robert Fitzgerald, who is now Superior Courtjudt(e. McOwen, a Newport Beach resident, served as a deputy dis- trict attorney before going into private practice and sat as judge pro tem in several Orance County municipal courts. He received bis bachelorofarta and law degrees from Georgetown University. Owen will earn $59,686 as a superior court judge and Rbeinheimer and McOwen will each earn $54,506 in their municipal court posts. LONDON (AP) -The value o( the U.S. dollar rose against key currencies today in early trading in Europe on projections that U.S. interest rates will re- main al hip levels. Gold prices slipped below the $500-an-ounce mark. Cowan wu driving' an auto that collided witb a camper- plckup Feb. 4 alone a Got.bard Street curve near Main Street in Huntiqgton Beach. Court dates to permit tbe motorists to answer tbe cbar1a· now must be scheduled, a dis· trict attorney's spokesman said. r' denU ot a net•hbothood where seven home. were dt1troyed and four penona were Injured by a p•pellne Hploalon IHt December told federal In· vestlcatora they received no warnlne nolHI before tht accl· dent toe* place. Three Oale Avenue r .. ldttltll testlfted on the flrat d1y ol a tbree-day NaUonal Truaport.I· Uon Safety Board beartnl blto tbe caUM ol the accident H .91 lnc&ea. reported by the Orance County Harbor Depart· ment. -Lquna Beach: .35 and 4.ZS incbet lor the aeuoa, accordlnc to weather expert. Joe Jahraus. • -Santa Ana: .31, 4.71 and 11.U lne~1 reported by tbe Flood CooU'OI Dlatrict. Valley police nab teens on burglary rap Two juveniles were UT9ted early today after alle1edJy breakiq lato a P'ountain Valley I•• station about I 1.m., poUee reported. • iiifiill 1=9P.H9'ey =:N.WMd ~Thomae KMVll ~~Murpt\IM ~ ~ldM,jlmeft ~="' l -----=--- The youtbl, 15 and 11, and botb from Anaheim alto are auapected of buratarialn,_ a sandwich lbop in Oraqe, police 1ald. Pountal.n Valley poUee oftlcen arrffted tbe pair u tbey wen drlria away from tbe au ata· Uoa at Harbor Boulevard and· Edina-A.aae. Tb• 1a• 1taUon alarm ap. p•r=and tbe buqlan off• before Md ltoleD ~. police . ,...,. ,,_ ......... Hea .... ., are uder 11, ~ ..... \ Ulen-thin ~ An !Bit~ dbbed cae with bllick enmnel dlml. On a handlon1e llzard aaap. Hind-crafted in Switzerland. ' ~ '\$4111 ~""' ~- ,,,,. ~ry H FASHION ISLAND • NlWPOIT lfACH, CM.llOINIA 92'60 TILU'ttOftl (714> 644-2494 ., ...... Snaoton John Hftf&z, R-Pa .. left, and Ar~ Specter tTJ1 on Oakland Raiden football heltMta, while Sen. S.I . Hayakawa. R-Calif., Zooka on, outside the Capitol Hill office of Heinz. Oakland beat Philadelphia in the Super Bowl this year. Rock star fined 82,500 Rock star 0. lleale7 of the EqJes bu been fined SZ,500 and put oo two·year probation aft.er pleadin1 no contest to a cbar1e alleainl be 1ave dru&• to a 18·year· old lirl found nude in his home tut fall. Judie Mwanl aateeclle of Santa Monica sentenced Henley Oil the misdemeanor cbar1e of cootribuUn1 to the delinquency of a minor. The judge also 1ranted the musician's request to enter a two-year drug education pro- gram which, if completed successfully, would lead to the dismissal of three drug posaeasion charges also stemming from his arrest Nov. 21. Henley, 33, was arrested after be summoned Fire Department paramedics to bia Sherman Oata home. Lady Dlaaa Spneer, who will marry Prbi~e Cllarles after her 20tb birthday this summer, got her first lesson in royal etiquette over breakfast with QHell Mo&a.er Ellaabe&ll, the prince's grandmother. ............ Actress Faye Dunaway is taking instruction in Catholicism so she can convert before marrying photographer Terry O'Neill, the father of her child. O'Neill's divorce has just become final. U.S. Labor Secretary aay 0.0•• bas been fmed $250 for ram.a, to keep the yard of bia waterfront rental proper- ty neat in Boca Raton, Fla. The code-enforcement board of the south norida ci· ty voted 3-2 to fine Donovan for letting boats and trailers stay in view on the property, in violation of city sonin1 or- dinances. Donovan wasn't at tbe bearing. His attorney, Arthur Koski, blamed the problem on tenants. Lt. Gov. Mike Cub set a fund-raising record in Fresno County by collecting more than $150,000 at a dinner in his honor. More than 600 San Joaquin Valley Republicans paid $250 a plate for the din- ner with a possible gubernatorial candidate. W arrea Cllrlstopller, the former deputy secretary of stale who helped negotiate the release of the American hostages in Iran, bas re- joined Stanford University's board of trustees. Christopher, a graduate of Stanford law school, served as a Stanford trustee from 1972 until 1979, when be took the government post. They're not all bad Carpenter polishes lobbyists' image BJ GLENN SCOTI' • °'_.....,"99t ..... Rather than fitting the tarnished public lmage of crooke,d •• arm -twisting manipQJaun, modem lobbyists are tbe 1ood IUYS who make the state Legislature work, says Dennia Carpenter. Carpenter, recently appointed as an "advocate" in Sacramento for Orange County, put up a light-hearted defense of lob- byists Wednesday during a Town Hall speech at the Balboa Bay Club. He called lobbying "probably the very essence of the dem· ocratic process," and said its biggest fault is that not enough groups are involved. Carpenter should know a lot about what he c&lls "penonaJ politics.'' He saw his share of advocates during his eight years u a Republican state senator for Orange County. The silver-haired rancher· buainesapian left Sacramento in 1978, but wound up retum.ine a year later to promote passaie of a bill creatin& the Peripheral Canal. He said he liked the work and struck up an association with partner Stuart Spencer. Delly ...... ,...,,_. 'MONE INFLUENCE TODAY' L.ollbrtet ce,.,-nter kind oi moral issu~ abortion or the death penalty -which re- quire little background. As few tbe rest of the inlorma· tion, Carpenter remembered: "I gol it from the third house -the lobbyists. They were the logical place to go." As Orange Cou.nty's represen· tative, Carpenter attends bi· monthly meetings with the coun- ty Legislative Affairs Commit· tee at the Hall of Administration in Santa Ana. He said be is stressing that tbe county will have more political muscle if it restricts itself to a few important legislative cam- paigns each year. One of those is likely to be ef- forts to raise more state money for improvements for congested freeways. Carpenter said the county will have trouble con· vincing lawmakers to raise the gasoline sales tax, which is con· sidered the most likely met.bod for increasing revenues. Carpenter said he still has a good rapport with Gov. Edmund . G . Brown Jr. He predicted Brown will seek a seat in the U.S. Senate in 1982. But, be added: "I don't see Brown terribly comfortable in a legislative body where there are 99• other fellows to share the same stage." Bealdea the county, be represents l~dmtrial Indemnity Insurance Co. and the National CoaliUon few Marine Comerva· lion. IAteations studied ''I personally feel I have enormously more influence to- day lUD wben I WU part ol the Senate:• be told the crowd of about ID Town Hall members. Wieder given post A1 a lobbyiat, be explained, be wields the influence of tbe votiftC bloc be represents. And as a former lelillator, be said be bu acc... to tbe l•wmaken W'bo eveatulb Mt state policlee. on dump site unit c.,..... uid lobbyllta are needed beea ... lellalaton can't be apeet.-1 to stay abnut ol tlle •Umated 1,000 bills on wbilb t1111J-. ucll Mlllhm. Be ........... that elected ol· ftctm -U., up wttb about ·10 .-e•t of tile bills, ad ....... I percmt npr11mt the A reOonaJ committee, includ- lnl Oraaae County Supe.rvtaor Harriett Wleder, baa been formed to atudy creation ol new dump 11te1 in Southern Callfonia. Tbe 11-member committee met lut week and la acbeduled to convene aaai.Q. llarcb 5 to de- velop criteria for new dump 1ltet. Mn. Wieder wu appointed to Mo'te Listening ••• t'ht De11J PUo& wanta to War from 1'8 readen, wllat you Uke = tllil a-per and wbat you don't Ulre. We a1ao ~ like to Milla ,.... YMwl oa an1 subject ID our letten to \be edjtor col-... c.n the number below mcl your ...... .,. will be reeorded. ...... will be transcrlbed MVWal u ... dally an4 delivered to Ulil ._. ol the approprlne editor. Mailbox coatrlbutiona will be dellvend to \be editorial pqe tdttor. llallbox ND&rlbutan must Include tbllr name and telephone . ......, lfw ftl'tftcauoa. Ml dmllaUaa 'c.O.. plea1e. . T.u • .wta.t'1 an rour ..w.d. 1'e num• la in ..... It houn • dat, .... ..,. • "*· the panel by tbe county Board ol Superviaora. Her 2nd Dlatrict in· eludes the controversial Boucber Landfill in Hunt.iqtoo Beach. One of the committee'• ioaJa will be to create guldelin• fCll' a new claaa 1 dump aite for haaardoua materials. Tbe oaly 1ucb dump in Soutllern California la la West CoviDa, but nel1bbon there are eamMiO· inl to cloM the site for health rea1oa1. Tbe 1roup plan1 to uae a $511,0GO buqet to aeema...._ tbe tecbnlcal data needed before new •Itel are •tailllllW. 1109& ol tbe mc.tJ WU plillltiMI tile commlU.. bJ tbe f.....a En•lroamental Pro&ectlon AleDCJ- ft• eammlttee la ...... o1 ...,.. •• .u ... o1 aa.-.. CaUfanlla eouUn, ,._..., ............ ............ . r .. ett111.-.. w.-omu. c.,..,. .............. Kn. WW., ..ita111 .,_. wtl1 ...................... _,.... . er.,. Cout DAILY PILOr/Thur8day, February 2', 1911 * Traffic plans rejected CM mul,l,a Newport Boulemrd optiom a, ID&Y CLAVS•N __ ..., ........ Tbne ,.......... for bandh1 increuiaa &rafftc on Newport Boulevard baH been aba....,. by tbe c.ta 11 .. ettr Coulldl. Couadl memben have recom· mended that Caltran1 delete tlucll• calllaf fGr' widenlq the tbonucbfan by one lane ID each d1reetian between Bristol Street and lndmtrlal Way. They also called for acratebinl a plan to Ute over· croe1lnp to ease traffic at Fair Drive. Fairview Road, lttb Street, Harbor Boulevard and 17th Street. And tbey aaid the state abould for1et tbe mos& expemive traffic plan. exteodinc the Costa lleaa Freeway. which ends now at Bristol Street, to Pacific Coast Hi1bway in Newport Beach. The council indicated it favon a traffic plan propoaed by city staff members. That plan, formulated too late for public bearing• on nine traf- fic proposals, calla for carving a freeway-like highway between Bay and 17th Street, just east of Newport Boulevard. That route would eliminate fewer homes and businesses, ci- ty officials believe, than the ap- proved freeway route proposed to sweep through west Costa Mesa from Bay Street to either Newport man gets 3 years for pimping A Newport Beach man who ran an outcall escort service that authorities claimed was a front for prostitution bas been sentenced to three years in state prison oo charges of pimping and pandering. Tommy Liotta, 38, operator of Tommy's of Newport, was given the prison term Monday by Superior Court Judge Frank Domenicbini, who allowed Liotta to remain tree on $10,000 bail pending appeal. J ud~e Domenichini had pre- viously denied requests by Liot- ta 'a attorney for probation for bis client. Liotta was convicted Jan. 5 of two counts each of pimping and paodennc. Before the defendant's sen· tencing Monday, prosecutor Manuel Ramirez had cbaraciertzed i.i~ti~·~-behavi~r· aa "very oase cuouuc~. Liotta was first arrested in September 1979 when be at- tempted to set up a prostitution operation featuring house caJJs through a legitimate county con· struclion company. The Newport man was still facing those charges when be was re-arrested on similar counts in 1980. Peripheral Canal has voters split SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Support and opposition for the proposed Peripheral Canal are matched, but the differences are overwhelming when geography is considered, according to a California Poll. Northern Californians over· whehningly oppose the project, while those in the southern part or the state are strong sup- porters. Pollster Mervin Field said support and opposition matched at 32 percent. lndutrial Way or Paclllc eo.t Hlpway. Tbe dty allo waota continued con1lcleratloa ol street aepara- tioa.a 8l key IDtenediom and tbe widenln& of Newport Boulevard in one project. It alao au11eata continued atudiea for a "ditcb" tboroulbfare tbn>usb downtown Costa Mesa along Newport Boulevard or a viaduct system alonif the same route. A ol tbe plans au11ested by the city have been propoMd by Caltrana' Route 55 Technical Ad· viaory Committee for continued atudy. But eomd1 memben addM to tllelr lllt a plan delet.d bJ cbe committee. CU1 a111dall want Caltraaa to contlnue ~ tile f\lll·blown free••Y rout1D1 plan tbroulh weat Costa lleea ID orw to compare its economic impact wltb tbe aU1nment eaat of Newport Boulevard. The propoMd routins deleUoaa and plans for continued atudy are to be considered by the Route 55 Policy Advisory Com· mittee March 5 for recommen· daUon to Caltrana officials in Sacramento. Deify "99t -.., Lee f'•Y• ~ooldag tor laelp When you've got all swtnaen and oo pushers, you've got a problem. Twins Nicholas aJld Monique Alvino (from left) and Megan Talbert, all of Huntington Beach, found that out during recent outing at the city's Lake Park. All of these little swingers are just a year and a half old. Heat spell blamed for Irvine slllell Irvine Ranch Water District General Manager Arthur Bru- ington said a smelJy coodJUon that existed earlier this week in the University Park section of t-0wn can't be blamed on the Michelson Sewage Treatment Plant. Bruington. called before the Irvine City Council to explain the smell, said it was due to a freakish inversion layer that set· Ued over the city during the re- cent bot spell. The bot air, he claimed, forced a variety of the city's odon to settle close to the ground. Councilman Larry Agran, who lives in Univenity Park, said a number of bis neighbors called him to complain about the slekening odor. During Tuesday's city council meeting, Agran urged greater communications when smells are released from the Michelson plant. Bruington countered that the water district felt no immediate obligation to get tbe word out about the odor, because the stink wasn't being caused by the sewage treatment plant. He did say that equipment breakdowns al the plant had caused smelly situations in the past. The Michelson Sewage Treat- ment Plant, located south of the Fluor Corp. headquarters, handles 8 million gallons of Irvine sewage per day. It can handle lS million gallons daily. Bruington contends that the plant is often blamed for smelly situations that it doesn't really cause . He admitted, however, that odors are sometimes released from the plant during •'sudden weather changes" and changes in the plant's sewage-eating bac- teria. DELANEY BRos:·sEAFOOD Frea Faoae11 Swordfbla ............ 5.te lb. Flall ••h•• ...................... 2.11 ea. Frea Fa 11e• ••eleu CeMer c.&a Nortllen ...... Steab ............ 4.18 lb. MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and T~ Choice Beef, ated not leu than 30 days to the peak of perfection. Leu Ora t Beef Paut. ...................................... C.WC.&7·-Di•k .. ................................... . 0.-a.cta ................... 1••· Free ..... o.u.., Senlee (no mlnlmom) delivered la our completal7 refritarated truclta. Your order It UDdet refrtctratlon from our si.e to your door . MORNING FRESH PRODUCE nn& ot ne Se ... Lar1e Sweet Leeal 8Uawlteniel Tie baabt DEIANE'rl OWN naAWBEaaY saoaTCME ,!'fade Daily •.....••.••........ lie 4!_•· UQUOR DEPARTMENT au prlees plua tu De)a1197'• aaa.,. ... (TIO 111111) ••••••••••••••. .2.71• ...... per cue .......... a.. .... 0..•ETH (TIO mil) •.••... : ........•.••••.• I.. ..~ .. VO (.,> .............. 11.• CtiUJ' ._.-lelta (liter> ••••••.•••• " •• lLfl ON ....... ~ ......,<Uter> .... lUI ~,. ....... )~ ......... ... I WORLD I NATION Grander fathering M .. jor ·pension overhaul pushed PUDON •Y lllOllS: TIM coaamua'4ut wUI be ahorl nd hopefully awM t lM• t.lme .._ .... ll 1-n'l every d-.y lhal w Set lO •eh-om• a MW ft\tmbu lnt.o OW' f&lllll)' c lan Hu ume t• lb MalU... Murpla.lae and he w•ltbed ln Jt e11Cht pounda. Ulr• ouac• ud *°'°' U.cb.a \all. Ria re· pc>rtlq ln for epnnc "•lninl may be delayed for juat a hon w1UI I have ali.ady pUHd uut C'i&an htire around lhe n"'' room jMMoti~ to th• •mot rontrol l>"(>PI". Ttw uapk1oo hu abNplly 1\nad. lbat perb•P5 lt 1huuld bl' uplalMd lo context ••1th lhls blessed event that l l'I truth, I •m nol the ~ r .llh c.>r f'ATHt:a~ OON'T 4 .._ ,,,,unl for mut'h .it • ~ umc-Il k«' thts any \U) Jll IURPHJllf -~'/ \\ h.&l do rath"r11 do" " -~ 'uuung Th~y Ju t &cl 1n lht' "'a) (lf nunie11. p•r it lot and look funny I 1rnl the gl'andfalht>r WASHJ.NOTON (AP> -A p&"tlaidential eommlu6oa, aaJiq tbe naUon bM become too dependent on pay-aa-you.,o rttiremeat pro. 1ram•. la eaJUng for mandatory peulon plans or all worken in priute lndutlr)' and aweeplq cbaqes lo Social Sffurtty. .. Nure pension pronme. will be broten" ualeu tbe netioa overhauls lhe buic policies that determine bow tbe elderly Uve a fter lhry r eUre," the com mwlon said today in a report t0Con1ress. The commlssiCJo 's centerpiece recommendation ia for Con1ress to pass a Jaw creat:in1 "a national minimum funded pension system 'whlch would be required of all employen." Al the same time, lhe panel is urtinl Con1ren to raise the Social Security retirement age from 65 to 88. This would be done gradually. startinc in 1990, so the normal retirement age by 2002 wouJd be 68. Early retirement would be sbifled from 62 to 65 over the same period. Once ttie increase start- ed in 1990, the retirement age would go up thrff months a year. The change would affect all workers now 53 or younger. The report fr•m the President's Commission on Pension Policy culminat es a two-year study. The commission chairman, C. Peter McColough, chairman or Xerox Corp .. was unveiling the proposals today at a bearing before the tlouse Select Committee on Aging. The report recommends phas ing in a tax on Social Security beneflta, but allowinl worten t.o take a tu deduction foe the amount they pay lo Social Security taxes. The "Minimum Universal Pension System" would be flnuced by a new 3 percent ·payroll tax paid only by employen. All employees over a1e 25 w<Mlld start buildlnl peuioa crediU after one year at at least part-time wort. They could transfer the credits from Job to job. The 3 percent tax would be a minimum. Workers and employeni would be offered tax breaks to encoura1e them to con· tribute more to the pension plans. To make the 3 percent payroll tax palatable to buainesaes, the commission ur1ed that employers be given a tax credit of 4& per· cent of their contributiona. The commission said large firms already get an equivalent tax break on private pension contributions, but small firms -where most employees without pensions work -may get a tax break as small as 17 percent. It recommended that the 6.65 percent Social Security tax, which is due to increase to 6.7 percent J an. l , 1982, be boosted in· stead lo 7.05 percent. That would cost workers and employers an additional $9.9 billion in 1982. But the commission said individuals would sne -i2s.6 billion in income taxes if the Social Security tax were made de· ductible. Social Security tax·es areootnowdeductible. G randf .llhc>r.. are ob,•iou:.I) Ct)()ler at a time like 1 h\' Th<'' ~' "''t al<'l oHrl) t'xc1led. the~ do not boast a lot 1ll h~t t>Otl•M~ f\nd t'' c•rthing tticy ha ve ltl say makes a lot ''' i-. nC'\'. 11nC't'. i-lil~ lhal ti;, st•nst' Wh''"" ._as I ~ R e agan a sks more budget cutback s Clearl\ . ._~bt'n :i.ons are born lo lht clan. arandfathers WASHINGTON (AP) -Just one week arter proposmg the deepest budget cuts in U.S. history, President Reagan is lookin11 for an additional $3 billion to $6 billion in savings . He has dis- covered that j?Overnment_spendinj! is risini faster than he thOUJlht. budget director, David A. Stockman, that new estimates 01 'pro· jected spending for 1982 were running $3 billion to $6 billion higher than the Office of Management and Budget bad expected when it completed last week's package of program cutbacks. "I just don't know where they're going to find more (sav- ings )." an administration spokesman s a id Wednesday after Reagan ordered his economic aides to do better than the $41.4 billion in 1982 budget cuts he proposed in a Feb. 18 address to Congress. REAGAN "EXPRESSED CONCERN. but not s urprise" when infor med of the miscalculation, said the president's chief domestic dffairs adviser, Martin Anderson. A spokesman for Stockman blamed the faulty spending estimate on the projected cost of such social programs as Medicare. which provide automatically higher benefits as the in- flation rate goes up. The budget office was relying on figures pre· pared nearly three months ago by the Carter adminjstration. said the spokesman, who asked not t.o be identified. "IS IT GOING TO BE hard to find them~" declared the s pokesman, who asked not to be identified. Reugau called for the additional cuts after learning from his Plane in near mis s o ver NYC building -- This one uems just about right /or the ldd . are far more important than fathers . Arter all. without the grandfather, there wouldn't be a father. Now reaJly, that makes sense, doesn't it? Of course. IN ANY EVENT, I have in recent weeks consulted several male persons who a re veteran and expert at grandfathering and have explained to me that it has numerous advantages over that lesser level of involve- ment. know as parenting. For one thing, t hey note that if the child threatens to do s omething t hat might ruin your shirt front, it is perfect· ly proper for you to hand the 4ltle darling quickly back to \he parents. This sounds like it may be a very enjoyable ex· 1wnence. Additionally, veteran granddads tell me that when the kid does something rotten, you can always blame it on your son with some remark like, "He's obviously picked up all the bad traits you had when you were his age." But when the child does something outstanding, then you can turn to the father and remark, "He wouldn't have bee n able to do that if I hadn't brought you up right." THJS GRANDFATHERING dodge sounds like the greatest condition to be in. You're a winner no matter what the little dickens does. NEW YORK t AP ) An Argentine Airli nes jet t h at strayed too low over Manhattan during a foggy, night·time des· cent was on a collision course with the TV tower atop the World Trade Center before it was ordered to climb. An air traffic controller or· dered. "Argentine 342, climb - climb immediately,·• and the a irline r carryins: 58 people turned. avoiding a n almost cer· t ain collision. The 707 jetliner was descend· ing in heavy fog last Friday night when at 1,500 feet. an automatic alarm buzzed at the tracking center in He mpstead, according to Irving Moss . Federal Aviation Administration spokesman. The lowest altitude permitted over Manhattan is 3.000 feet. Al the same time. a controller saw on his r adar screen that the jet •was n ying loo low. the FAA said. A tape recording of the in· cident revealed the following ex· ch ange: "Argentine 342, what's your altitude?" asked the air traffic controll er . whose na me was not released. "Fifteen·hundred feet." the pilot replied. "Tum right!'· the controller ins tructed. "Immediate right turn!" and then, "Climb climb immediately!" Cape Canaveral workers strike CJ\ P E CANAVE RAL, Fla . (AP ) Temporary workers and supervisory personnel were handling space shuttle support ser vices and other maintenance activities today as 1,000 strikers Quake r1tbble continued to stay a way from AP'Wi ......... their jobs . An e lde rly woman trudges past rubble of apartment The National Aeronautics and buildings in Corinth. Greece. where 15 h ave been killed Space' Administration has been a nd rive are missing afte r two days of earthquakes . Of assured the strike will not affect 652 tre mors registered since Tuesday. eight were its shuttle support operations or be tween 4.S a nd 6.3 on the Richter scale. Thousands of Oh yes. somewhere in here I s uppose it should be men· t1oned that the child does have a mother. She is the former Frances Jean Cot terell of Laguna Beach . cause a delay in the reusable · be d ' Israel aid asked shuttle's maiden voyage, now frighteneq Cor inthians and AlQenians h ave e n spen mg WASHJNGTON (AP) The .-.:s~e~t~f~or~e~a~r~ly~A~p~ri~l.~~~~~~~~t=h~e~n~i~g~h~ts:....:..ou~t~d~oo_:_r~s-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ While being a mother may not be as high a calling as being a grandfather, well, you have to give the young lady a little credit along the line. Re a~an administration proposed So I'm off to Santa Barbara to see the newest member of our clan. after a quick stop at the store. today a $2.18 billion aid package for Isr ael in fiscal 1982, ca lling it an essentia l investment that will help that country take s teps to achie ve a laslin~ peace with its I need to pick up a football and a couple of Little League bats neighbors. Winter tightens grip 3 kille d ; wet snow sna ps pow er lines , 6 0\tOn •1 )4 1.11 , 8ro .. n\v1llP ,. •• Cocufal teea tllfte 1 8uH•IO ,. l7 01 (.norl'1n!>C. 10 so Ch4rl\tnWV H 11 C.tidn(.P ot rain le \.-\ th•n 10 ~r<tnt 1on1vn1, 20 ~rctn1 F•IO~Y Mo.,ty cloutJy Ft1dav Co~~lal !Ow 47, onl•nd •1 CoHl•I ""lllo<l,lnl...064 · C.nf!°'tnne ., 1• E1owMn •tnch hOM a nd ve rt• ble ton1Qh\ and f:rld•Y m Orr\•nQ becom.n9 !.Outf't11wt\lf'rly 10 10 ti 11:no'' '" Ul\trf\OOI'\\ We~terly ~••It 1 to l ft •I inner w•tttn •nd • to • 1001 f\i)f'\t\WfH~\f1'1'f \W1'4\ QVttr ••ttf\ 11.s ........ ... Wini tr OQtlteneo Its, QriO on .-.ew i '•.,•• " EnQlano •no 1><1rts ol tlMI rar West (!]!I) once tnOf'e. as snow •net r•initorm• moot dri••nq h•u rOO..• and ltt~Oed OVIPO .. trlOll'tOUwndsol-te. Two """'-,. kllled In"" •l•"4•M er ••II. and a motor111 died In • heH · on coUl\lon •~ • wlnte' ~tofm onvnd•O Ma•S«llUWtt.s Wednoo.,, d\H'np,nquc>to•tootot\now. Febtu•ry Oft re<.Ofd ff'M!r• h•• bef'l'I S In Ne• Hampsll l re , IS,010 IMM\Ofpre<lpjtallOrHOl••.lleMld, cu•lomen ol P\>bllc Servi<• Co. of' brealll"' '"" re<otd of ' • lnctw• .. , New Hampshire romalned •llllovl in ttot. Po••• Wedne>day nlor.t, Ille ullllty Tiie rec.,..d-brHlltno preclp1tallon reported H.avy, --~ 11111 montti IOllOW\ the drlffl J•nuary Power line• o.-t-tr" llmM lo In ~ed!K. filer• w•• l•U •-• bt••• ov .. ,,..m Otllar •rMs !Mt llalf.llKll ol pre<fpltalk>n Ourln9 the -· ,....., slliclellnv car•~ tirttm-ol1'" 1111t1tv Pole• In llall. Snow e110 tell ov., t'1e Sl•rr• Tl" rn ... non -s m\Kll ,,,. -H•••dat •nd pert\ of Vt•'1 •nd 111 Vetmont, -·• up to two tMt Of N•vede, -1119" winds .,.d bl-· lleevy w•t .,_ ""'° lallen I" the 0 ,.. lftll -c.oml,..,... to ,.,. .... drt.ine trOl PG<tion ol Ille stale. VtlHt, CtW*J llaiartleul. wor•.O to rostot• -r to.,.,,.... S<•ttered raift a nd 1no• •U t114111 14,000 c.,,tra1 v-rft ..... lt ._ .. t ....., for ,,,. Patllit Coett, wlloM 1tectr1<1ty w• lu!O<ll.,. Olll the ~, ... _, •eolOft -the llO<lllern rvesda, ntoM and w.o. .. ...,. dW to "4Kll,. ....... -"--' wer• ... IM storm. "''" .. c.Cll!IJMM If\ Ille ICottllett\t. Tll• storm, #1\ltll ...,. r ...... ., T~eturff ... -tlle """°" •t "'-"' alld had "',.,. ""° rain 1,. Jo.111.1nr9119Mt,..,.. lld09r'OMll\ tom• part\ o1 Hew £ ......... ity _.., Dllllltll, MlM., It .. d99ree• In IOCI•'· madtdrlvlnt~. H-I.er .... T-. cir.ch ol ,,,,_ «cktlnts. -•• , .. 90r1•d lil'f IUlllorltle\ Ir. V-t Mid IH•H ...... re. ' A N•tlo11•I Wtatlltr Str vlct ...... ,.,... ... v-.... Ille-· cemblMd #ltfl IR~ , .. llf•il to ft\olle this mtlltll lllt wetttU Ctdtl• ..... A ..... <"'-' .. _........,. !MY "'llt .,. ........ ,_ ....... ...... ,. ........ ,, .... tllat u ... . ........ ,. ........... ........... ........... , ._ __________ • N• _,_ ,._.. ... ,.._._ or ,.........._,..,,.. ....... . ................ , ........ ...... ..,,...._..,...,. ........ "....., -_..,... ...., ..,.. .................. eo..my. ~-...,. ........ llat"Y rolll ..,. fK., ... lll,•ll9Mlfl NOA• U l De ' •' (•••••u •l•Y In '"" ~. the tervlo s•IO, with lllOll• Ftldey »lo 0 f h• \lotm fr11nt ,..., -'1•11•d ofl lhe co.ti for 74 "°"'' by • ll•tn pru•u•• '''t""' ,,.., llMll•red ,,.. reolon wllll lllQt! teMIM••hH'H •nd o., ..... -. But tlM lllOll·prtuuu lYJlem latt•red Wt-td•y, •11-1"9 llW storm to proeffd on • .-11e•stert1 t ourM, Mfldlne t-falll•H -n l"to Ill• 40t In many area. this morn· ..... Hl911t Frtdlly .,_Id ,.,... trom t .......... ,. lo,.,...... T,.. ""'k• Mid IM storm !lad dr...-. OAO ol ., lfttll ol rain In do#lltOWft Loi A"'"" lty Htly lo- d•Y. llri ...... IN --total to 4.tS lnc:,..t . M It •1111 -"'" • plltance tOfftH ted wlUI l..C Y•M'• 1t.7S !ft. t he• Of relfl ill tl>ls time, or t,.. IO ,. Inches "°""91ty--by now. Tei • .,.., • .._ AlllOllV ANlu'I.,. Amarillt AllMvlllt Atl- Atlalltk Cl.., ... "-" al rm lfltlMl'I •ttmerc;ll ..... "' Lt "cit. " ,. .12 .... II •7 •7 • " " .. 4t .. . 74 411 .. u .. JO Cf'ut •QO .. lO C•nt1nnatt H JO Clt'Vt1An0 31 29 ColumOu.\ 4S ,, Oal FIWlh .. S9 Otnvtf 66 JS Oe\Molrw\ 49 l3 o .. tro't 4) ,. Oututn 11 1) MarUoro H l6 91 Hel•n• •S 11 Honoh.•lu 81 10 H OU\IOn •• SI 3i> 1nanapU' S6 )1 J•<11:~nvllP ,, ., 1Con\Clly ,. •• L .. Vo~• ., •> L1111eRotk ,. SS LO\Anoeltl'\ H •8 Ml LOU1tviU,. ., JS MemPht~ 19 SS Mlom• ,. Ml Mllw•u•ft )1 JI Mpi.-St P ,, 7J H•\llYlllt ,, l9 NtwOrlUn\ ,. .. N••'l'Orll 41 l9 .01 O•ta Clty " ,, Om all• St JS Orlando ,, 50 Pl'lllaO.lpflla u 40 20 Plloenla 80 S7 OJ PlttsDvrQll ,. ,, Piiand, Me l• l6 t.O Ptland,Orw H l3 ll•no 41 14 .OJ $all Lah •> 41 10 $anDl•llD •4 u •• $anFra" sa .. Se•ttt• SJ ,. St~ouls IJ •t s-.11 .... n.- TOOAY 4•>t1t.m J.• 7:01t.m. 1.5 ltfttDAY First l\ltl\ 1:06 a.m . 4.1 First,_ tt: IS•·'"· 1.0 Se<Oflll llltfl •:U p'"'· 1.t s.toMIN t :UP·"'· 2.1 Sun tOtt S 41 It·'"·• r l .. 1 Friday •:2••·"'· ~ rltM F'r~y t:OO •.M .• wit 11:21 a.m . ....... ~ ...... .. •trafftc _____ ..._.._' ···••••C.Ml•tlll•.., ........ .................. --.... ..,. • t ............ _.......... ... ............... _ .... , ... I................... ... --'" ... E ......., ..................... ,... z-I I 19 I I _. ..... ..._.............. ......... I I 19 •I t --.. ............ , ...... === I I tt f\ I -«Mt .. , .... ". 0-.. I 9 ti t I W L-----~~-~~-l.ewl.................... llllwll'f'WY1U... ...... . ·r Y~'re well on your way to the most exciting desti- nation in the W est. Lake Tahoe. In real Tahoe style. Forty-four weekly flights-28 non-stop-from Los Angeles, Orange .. County and San Diego. For as little as $69. )[:;tt Fly non-~top to Lake Tahoe often. We do. For reservations call your travel agent or Golden West A irlines. - I .. • ' . ,.. 'I , I 11 • Body found near wreckage ~ ...... .,,er1 ......... SACRAMENTO (AP> -Lt. Gov. Mike Curb re· jffted a proposal that be convene a special session of the Lelialature to consider anU·crime bills while Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is outside California. lllEFS Attorney General George Deukmejian, a Curb rival for the Republican nomination for governor next year, urged Brown to caU the ~cial session to speed up the effective dates on a series of an\i·crime bills now pendin& in the Leeislature·s•egular session. SC G .. Ce. ettfl• 8..e lnl• LOS ANGELES (AP> ~ Southern California Gas Co. officials have batted tests to loot for concen· lrations of toxic PCB alter traces of the substance were found in five of 27 locaUons checked ln the com· pany 's 3't,OOO-mile pipeline system. The gas company said Wednesday it bad in· formed the state Public Utilities Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency of the discovery. But company officials announced in a prepared statement that the concentrations of the substance ca used no threat to consumer health. a.e..w ... le•lc ......... SAN DIEGO <AP) -Nearly 33,000 gaUons of a · sewage treatment chemical have leaked into the ocean near Point Loma, and health officials were closely watching the area to monitor any threat to marine life. Coast Guard officials said Wednesday's spill has discolored about200squareyardsoftheocean. They were not immediately sure how much danger the highly corrosive ferric chloride solution poses to marine plants and animals. -CAMP PENDLETON <AP> -A U.S. Marine Corps spokesman says a 21-year-old Marine was be- ing held today for questioning in connection with a shooting al the base barracks, The spokesman said Lance Cpl. Darren Lee Conley was apprehended four boun alter the shoot- ing Wednesday morning. Reported in stable condition at Camp Pendleton Naval regional Medical Center was Lance Cpl. Ken· neth E . Steele, 20, with a wound from a .25-caliber handgun. Makes You Feel Good, Not Guiltyl WNOf • DINNER • llMERY • TME-OUT DIETER'S HAPPY HOUR It's Discount Time On All Our Delicious Sundaes Reg.15•@60• • .... Sl.25@11• Aild So 0. .. . Mon., Sat. 2 to S P.M. 7132 ....... CGemoo Shopping Center) ' HUMn.-ToJt llACH 142-4611 MERCURY SAVINGS and loan aaaociation tecurTViTJ'ffTces: ?812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beech, CA 92647 SouthfHn Celllomle Rtglon•I Oft/a.a: 5en E. La Palma AV9., Anaheim, CA 92807 8955 Valley View St .• Buena Padt. CA 90820 • 1e&e Arnem Ra., Camarillo, CA ~10 20715 S. Avalon 81\'d., Carson CA 907'8 23021 Lake Center Dr., (Lake Fore11), El Toro, CA 92630 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habfa, CA 90831 Gt 4140 Long BMcll BWd., Long Beach, CA 90807 • 22938 Hawthorne 81\'d., Torrance, CA 80!505 1085 lrvlne Bllld., Tu1t1n, CA 92980 lQUAl 23& N. Cltrua Ave., Wfft Co¥1na, CA 91'793 'mW: "Al~ury Room" eve//etn. on• ,.••rwd be•I• CAll TOM MAllTDll . , FOii A FULLY AllUMAILE LOAI- . llTERllT ·01LY1 • Newport Equity 'Funds· Inc UolMld'"*4'*"-1111 (7f4)7..a60 ' Orange Coat DAILY PILOT!Thuredey. F*'*Y 2t, 1181 H/f •18' ... VOCAL K__,Ll .. M Cross' Grammy sweep 'dream come true' NEW YORK (AP> -Sin1er- songwriter Christopher Crou, whose pop.rock mu.sic won four of the most important Grammy Award.a his fll'St timeout,aayssweepinathetopaward.a was "deftnltely a dream come true." Crou' debut album, "Cbriatopher Cross," was named best album of the year Wednesday night at Radio City Music Hall. And the big bit from the album, "Sailine," was named recOrd of the year and sonc or tbe year -and since Croes wrote the song u well u sang it, both awards went to him. In addition, Cross was named best new artist. As be made bis tbJrd of four tripe to the stage, to accept the award for best album, the chubby 29-year-old who leads a six·man pop·rock band also called Christopher Cross, said, "l should say this is getting old but I can't. It's wonderful" IN 'nlE Z3 YEASS the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences bas been bestowing its gramophone-shaped statuettes such artists as .,'rank Sinatra and Stevie- Wonder have won more Grammys in one year. But it's unprecedented for an artist to sweep the three top Grammys in his debut year. Last May, in an interview with the Associated Press, Cross said he knew be was loo plump to be a sex symbol and he'd have to make bis way on his music. KeMy Loggins won the Grammy for best pop male vocal performance, the one category in which Croes was nominated but didn't win. Louins raised his Grammy when be accepted it for "This Is It" from his album "Alive," and said, "This one's for my Dad." Laterhesaid, "Tbeaon1wuwritten for my father. He wu loin& into sur- gery. a life and death situation. He seemed to have made the choice be wasn't going to make it. The song said that you'vegotthe choice how iteoes." Did his father pull through? Loclina laughed and said, "Hesuredid." Bette Midler won ·the Grammy for the best pop female vocal performance, for "Tbe Rose," tiUe song of the movie in which she played a rock singer fitbttng addiction. Barbra Streisand and Barry Gibb were awarded the Grammy for the beat pop vocal performance by a duo or lfOUp, for"Guilty." In country music, the winnen were George Jones, Willie Nelson, Anne Murray, Roy Orbison and Emmy Lou Harris, Jones won the Grammy for best country male vocal performance for his tearjerker, ••He Stopped Loving Her Today." IN THE BEST COUNTRY song category, Willie Nelson, wholostoutto Jones on performance, took the Gram· myfor'.'OntheRoadAgain." Canadian Anne Murray woo the Grammy for the best country female vocal performance wiUr her single "Could l Have This Dance?" Sbe said afterward: "I really was surprised. J thought Barbara Mandrell would win." Orbison and Miss Harris won the award for the best country performance by a vocal duo or group for their sinele "That Lovin' You Feelin' Again." In rock music, the Grammy for best female rock vocal performance went to PatBenatar, forber album "Crimes or Passion." Billy Joel won the best rock male vocal performance award for "Gius Houses." Phil Ramone, who produced that album and Joel's two previous ones, was named pro- duceroftheyear. Bob Seeer and tbe Silver Bullet Band, wbo paid their dues around Detroit for years before 1a.inine na- tional recoemtioo, won their fint Grammy, for best rock eroup performance. Special Trustees Awards were given to composer Aaron Copland, 80, and jazz bandleaderCount Buie, 78. Audit scam. told 1 man bilked banlc, chief 1ay1 LOS· ANGELES <AP> -Former operatlolll om~ L . Bea Lewta .._. earned out a "briWaatly 1lmDle .. 1cbeme tbat bilked Wella Fuao Bank out ol '21.3 million, bank chairman and cblef executive officer RJchanl P . Cooley told the Loa Aneeles Times. Lewis, who worked at WelJa Fargo's Beverly Hilla branch until be disap- peared in late January, cracked the bank'• auditing system. uatni a simple mechanical manJpulation of account.I, Cooley said in an interview in today's editions. Lewis was one of several people named along with Muhammad Ali Professional Sports Inc. in a civil suit by Wells Fargo that seeks $48.3 million in actual and punitive damages over the alleged embeule· ment. · BE &l:Pr THE SCAM going for more than two years until a trivial error caught the attention or an of· ficer al another branch, Cooley said. Cooley said the scheme was so sim· pie that Lewis needed only 10 minutes each week to carry it out. Neither Lewis, a director of MAPS, nor Harold J . Smith, its chairman, have been seen publicly since the suit was filed. Virgil Roberts, a lawyer represent- ing Lewis, said be would not com· ment on the Wells Fargo allegations. Cooley said Lewis was able to tap into Wells Fargo's vast "stream" of funds that flow each day among its 383 branches and siphon money into accounts belonging to MAPS, Smith and other MAPS officials. No criminal charges have been filed in the case, however Cooley said he expects .indictments to be handed down by a federal grand jury within the next couple of weeks. FOaME& HEAVYWEIGtrr box- ing champion Muhammad Ali, whose name was used by the firm for a fee, has not been linked to the scandal. Cooley said the key to the alleged fraud was Lewis's purported manipulation of the bank's "branch settlement account'.' and of a stand- ard bank procedure in which "tickets" are filled out for crediting and debiting fun&. The branch settlements account is a "river of funds" that carries rec- Ql.'.~~ of all transactions the bank makes during a business day, Cooley said. The total daily volume of transactions reaches as much as $300 million, carried on about three million pieces of paper that affect the pool of f\lnda. It was tbia pool supplied from the bank's capital -not customers' personal accounts -that alleeedly was tapped by Lewis and later withdrawn in seemingly normal trauaetiam from tbe 1port1 ~ tton or1anlaatloa'1 13 1ccouat1, Cooley said. LEWIS .\LLEGSDLY would "charse a del* qalmt the bank'• branch settlement account" but not submit records of the offaettin( credit, Cooley said. For instance, be •ald, Lewis mltbt. sign a Ucket for several tbouland dbllara and submit only the debit aide. Tbis act would free that amoun~ for transfer to one or more ol tbef MAPS accounts. The activity was finally discovered when the operations officer at ~ bank's Miracle Mile branch noticed an irregularity. California aids drought-struck New Jersey SACRAMENTO (AP) California-developed water-saving kits are to be distributed in drought· struck New Jersey, says California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Brown's office issued a statement Wednesday quoting him u saying, "We ate pleased to share the lessons California learned from the 1976-TT drought." Brown himself was attending con· ferences in Washington, D.C. THE STATEMENT said a stalf member of the California Depart- ment of Water Resources, Don Heath, flew to New Jersey this week to help set up a proiram to distribute the kits to six million New Jersey residences. · A kit consists of a plastic bag which when filled with water and placed in a toilet tank reduces the amount of water used in flushing; a shower head flow restricter; dye tablets to detect leaks in toilet flush valves, and a water conservation brochure. BEATH WILL also help set up an advertising campaign. During lhe 1976·1'1 drought, California distributed kits to more than S00,000 residences, and will dis- tribute another 1.3 million in 11181. The city of Los Angeles itself is dis- tributing 1,2 million kits, and by 1983, every home in California should have one. California had two wet winters after the two-year drought. Precipit.ation is below normal again this yeari but reservo.irs are full and no crisis s expected this summer. Invest. in ou1· qu • it~ ••• and save 75.10 O ur exciting new Spring Collections of suits. sport· coats and slacks have arrived. In one convenient trip to Silverwoods, you can select an all·OCCC\Sion wardrobe from among our most prestigious labels including Hart Schaffner & Mar)(, Hickey· Freeman. Pierre Cardin, Bill Blass. Christian Dior, Austin Reed -E>f Regent Street and many more. Regular priced items only. H ere's an e)(ample of how it works; Anysuitat . . . . ... 175.00ormore Plusanysportcoatat .... 125.00ormore Andanypairofslacksat . : . . . . .. 35.00ormore Fora total of ............ 335.00ormore S uverwoods then deducts 75.10 off the total. W. hope you can benefit from these worthwhile savings. For personal atten11on and service, please call on our professional staff. silY81WOOdS 45 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH , =-=- 0r8"11 Co•t DAILY PtLOT /Thu,.-Y, Febrvary al, 1811 = = = Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. r -~_ _____... .. . _,__., -. ------· -----·~ ----· ~--------------------------------~ ~ -: = : r _ -~ ~ = :-: r : ~ _ ~ :::: T ~ ...... ..:=-=: -=.~.....::... --: :.. : ---=-~~ . , t i SHa.-rr Due to late transmission· .today's listing will not } appearlntheDally Piiot. ~ ,..,,, ,,_, .. .... ~ La..... ..... : -... ...... MtS.lS, off u.u. : .,._ lllllflt ............. .. Pwtl: ....,_ llalfltt.SO,tl, ell t.s.•. p,......,., ................... " .... . lwkll: i-. ....,_ ll•lftt ...... . llUt;MM.• ..... M•••r a M••-•: ... ,, ••11., ..,ot ·""2 .......... .......... _., .... , ........... 11.50 . ......... ... , .... , ... lewtce• Ull ... ,efltl.k s,, ..... DeMyNltlllll ..... Mrs. Mildred Mathews shows off award 'There'' no ditgrace in hone8t labor ..• ' She kept buses rolling By T&UDY FULLE& °' ... ....., ........... "Nobody had ever heard of a woman bus driver at that time, heavens to Betsy!" said tbe first woman bus driver in Orange County. . . When Mn. Mildred Mathews started an UM2, tbere were only three buses. When she retired M years later tbe district had merged into tbe Newport-Mesa Unified School District and bad a fleet of 64 bmes. . And tbe ratio of male versus female bus drivers wu almost 1-to-1. For a long time she wu tbe "odd ball," u she put it, because she was tbe only woman at tbe transport.ation meetings. "But I was well liked and respected. When you are in a man's field, you have to remember that you're a lady ... All ladies are women, but all women aren't ladles. That's what I used to tell the women bus driven-to be a lady.'' Mrs. Matbews, now 72, started driving a bus after she jokingly told Everett Rea that when be decided to hire women u bus drivers he abcMald &ive her a call. "It wu kind of like tbe Mae West line, 'come up and see me some time,' " abe quipped. At tbe time, Rea, tbe iuperintendent ol ichoofs for l.lie Costa Mesa Union School UUltnct, wu bavmg 10 anvc= we buses himself. His main driver wu ·ilJ and be bad no one else. Two weeks later be dld call. Altboulh Rea had to obtain permission from the school board, it wu no prol>lem CettiDC lln. Mathews ap- proved -woman 8r not. "'lbere were no younc men because they were gotnc away to war," she explained. ••I wu even doinC custodial work in between bus runs for two years ... There's no diaarace in honest labor. I wa1 just an old janitor, but they don't call tbem tbat now. Now they call them cwitodians," she jolted in her warm, good-natured way. She drove tbe bus for 10 yean and then became tbe dist.rict's first transportation supervisor in 1952. lo her years of beinC behind tbe wheel of buses tbat could carry up to 79 children, lln. Mathews bad few mis- haps. . Her only accident occWTed on Victoria Street during a thick fog. ••A fella plowed onto tbe back ol tbe bus, but no one was hurt," she said. Only once did she have a bus break down on her, and that, she aald, was due to an "under powered motor, not the actual condition of the bus. While I was drivinc." she said, "things were always checked out. Maintenance, as a ceneral rule, just wasn't let 10." Altboulb most people would have been 1oln1 out of their minds with a buaload of 79 elementary school children every day, Mn. llatbewa bad few problems. "I was a strict dlsclplinarian, but the kids liked me," she said, addiq, "You have to let tbem·know who'• boa, but do it in a way tbat tbey lite you." liln. lfatbewa' fame ti cinlJ itue in· part to ber bu. driviq days. Sbe rec:enUJ reeelftd a 40-1t1ar pin from tbe Girl Scout Council of Oranp Coant)' in reeoplUon of tbe yean in which abe bu 1uatained ber membenblp., Aliboub abe bu been ·IDOIU7 lDadive fw tbe lut 15 yean, ..,-taQlbt Keel Crou Plnt Aid COUl'HI to 8111 troop that wiabld to earn tbe ftnt aid bedle. Sbe allo wu a member of tbe Glrl Scout Board, wblch la tbe atalina area for HerJtldnl tbe Girl SeouU do. ff• aenlce to• Costa 11 .. eommUDlty bu llClt been restrietecUo lirt. IC!OUUial and-trwportatloD, t.boqh. Befan cl8eidiq lbe "would rlltW CUl'J ki41," lbe de· UHred mall OD • aubstltut.e ......... tbe ........ canter was lU or vaeatlonlq. 819• alao laelped dutn1 tbe Cllrlltmlli ..... becauae of tbe atra wwk laftlftd. lln. llatbewl maJ be ntlnd, bat• U. • plu9 to wute a admate of her um.. • ...._ to Witte a boolt ••a.1 ._ Drt ... 1·• ill llcmal' of all tbe elalldna no ;Md to c~ u..t .t to lier. And .,._. all Wa time, .._ ..... dUlln8 turDed,, adult ltW ......,.,. Iler al'OUDd Colta 11 .. la ltonl or at u...-omee. ~ '.,,...,, 1110W OD top," Ille laht ol W laalr, "bat tbe face lammtt ell•lld." ' The old facade of the Frances Cit- rus Association (above right) is now the west wall of the Irvine Savings and Loan Association. The packing house (right) was nam~ for the first wife of James Irvine II. The building was slated for demolition, but the facade (lower right) was carefully removed and saved. Loan company saves a bit of old Irvine By JOEL C. DON Of Ult Dllll't " ... SUff Wh.al should be on the outside is on the inside. And what's on tbe inside of the Irvine Savings and Loan As- sociation branch on Culver Drive ia an interior furbished in Americana reproductions - save the facade hanging on tbe west wall. • Sta.ndinC some 18 feet bilh and 27 feet lone, the facade from tbe Frances Packing House is a vestige of old Irvine; once perched over tbe entrance to a 25,000-square-foot citrus process- ing plant. It's cracked and peeling, showing all its 65 years. Dust from tbe deteriorating paint set- tles in neat piles on the floor. BUT THE ALTE&NATIVE mt1ht have been loss of every last piece of the aging structure, which was tom down more than five years ago. The Irvine HiatoriCal Society and other groups wanted to save the packinc house as a meeting hall and storage facility, accord- ing to society president Ann Johnson. The decaying building would have required renovation of the roof and interior. But the build- in,g was structurally sound, Mrs. Johnson said. Although pressed to preserve the plant as an historical landmark, the Irvine City Coun- cil voted in September 1976 to have the buildinJ demolished. It would make way for a housing development in what now is the village of Northwood. The coun- cil had cited tbe prohibitive cost of renovation. The packing house was tom down in December of that year, the facade carefully removed and stored in a city public works yard. l&ONICALLY, the packing house, built by the Irvine Co. in 1916, was among 14 sites in California recommended by the State Historical Resources Com- mission for inclusion on the Na- ti on al Regis ter of Historic <See Facade, Pace Bii) l I ' I J I ' t ' I ' _, > ~ Ww experience deficient l By JEFF PA&&E& Of .. DMl't ""' ..... Wish you were smarter Ulan you are? If the anawer is yea, you're not alone, and psycholo1ist Beverly Galyean has de- veloped a system she believes will help you be 1ust tbat. "I always wanted to be bright," she ex- plained. "And I alway& wanted to be smarter tban I am. AJon1 with tbat, coea creativity, love, peace of mind and humanity. And I believe we can ac- compllab those thine• if we learn to utllbe other proceuea tban simple linear t.bink- illc." Galyean outlined those proeeuea ln ber recent two-day procram at UC Irvine, "We are Smarter Than we Think." Altboucb that pro1ram wu aimed at educators and coumelon, Gab'ean says tbat her prlndples may be a'PPlied by UlJCJDe. I "l"lnt of au, we alaouhl dlatlllluiab betwem laavinl lnformatlaD and laaYlal knowledp. I cut delcrtbe = to JOU, de1crtbe tbe lbetto, tbe • ....,.... wear U.., What tile cbU*m look lite. But not UDW ~ ~-oa:'..at to a-perleaee it, wlJl It bee JmowJedle. ltDow ..... needl an U"81...._, eompo- neat," lbe laid: "Tbe ueltllll a-rt Moat expen.c. II &Mt rou dca..ti-aeew1ut1J baH to be tber'8 to pin it. TUe a l'GH for example. Yau can 1a1 it'• lllD?sioww.:11• IMIU ... eoetl • ill a ftarl9t I . •• ,. ,,.. ,.,. .,.. ... ,..... ...Ult ... tl7 ...... ,.... -r £.tt. ,.·u· .... , ........ from.... aat.Wllat dole ........ do ..... .... 3lllta ., Y•'U a.. .._ ... ,_ . .,.,..._ tMn," ...... ·--:1 • .. .............. _ ........... . ing verbal-linear knowledce aren't new - artiata have been ualng them~ 1 · . nturies -but Galyean belie\tea tbat le in all walki "(A liie can increase their perlen- tial ranee by uainc tbem recularl . "People who teat out wltb low1 I Q's are uau·ally just experience deficitP.t," ~be said. "They haven't bad tbe rlc~-. vaned environment to arow ln. lncre~the rich· neaa of your environment, and you ln· ereaae your intelllcence." · Here are Hvea 1tepe that Galyean says will enrich your experience: "First, take two to five minuU..a day to relax. Take deep breaths, cloee eyes and imqlne younelf floatlq. your brain reach ua alpba-beavy ata Tbat'a the one you eater u JOU drift sleep or wbm you ftnt wake up. • • Wblll you feel reined, tbiDp you are coneented about lntel'eltbll to JOU at tbe tlme-your ,._. .. , procw• to ap(~llela tbe topic, let ,_,. mlDd find . aaal•· WlaeD ............. dlftenat COllMll! JGUI' mlDd, ID wttb it. aplore it. . ) !. .. "Tlalrd. ii J'OU'N worried ~ •••• •""• tbat probl9m • ta a boa .. JOU. ~ tM prolllmD .. ft JOU a W1NI'. llalie It aowmwte wttll , •. ,,_..., ...... ol ~ -, tdeu la ,_. mi8d tUt wW to tile .ur1 ... 11,.. Mil It to. .. ...... lldcl. Gair•••'• l•t•llll•&••·I •••• ............. ...,....... ..... . rtcll................... ... . ........ 1111,..,.-..wD .... ~,...;..... ...... ..,.j, .... ,. ,....., ...... , ....... ~-- .... • ,... .... ,_ ..... It .... f ., to their shoes; fear, love, joy, etc. will come into your head. Those are the feel- in1s of the moment. "People tend to limit tbemaelves to their own reacUom and positions, even tboulb they know tbat any sltuaUon la made up of many reactions, many emoUona. ()pea yourself up to tboH and you'll understand a lot more ol what is coins on around yoil. ·•Fifth, when you interact wltb pelople, picture them at their bat. Res'poDd to them at tbelr hicbest level, and you ~ be operatlq at your blcbest level. Tb& ID· tenalft• every encounter -it maplflea it,•• abe said. Gal1eut'• lut two atepe to increaaed ill- teWpnee deal wltb aelf-imae9 and Oft!'· comiDI depnalon. . "Ccmtmtly ... younelf .. bricbt. Go into any altuaUoD plcturlnl ,........, .. baYlal all tbe UllWen. Be • ......,, project ,._. own capabllltiee to daal0 wtda wbat ia cm laud. • • rtnally, wben you fl•d 1nraelf depr....a ud dl1courapd, focu Oil poaltlft Im ... to elaaal• ,_.. frame of mlad. 'l1llM llbaut Wall tlaat .... ,.. ~~~ rr... im• ... elMr tM .... ... Uftdeplwkm--tbtm.''llleAlll a..,_..,.._. .......... .._ Oii ..... , ................... " .... a.. ~ ~ ... Br 1PP I_. daUJ 11 ... w re .Uw'hrc 'll•Nll •--~...-. .._ .. _.. • ...,ti .. .............................. NI. n..w1 111 • .... 1116'31114 wlll•llllta ~~~!9.~ . .,... :·.:'"'; ·= .._ .... = I ileh W -~ .... '°ir-"l•WP. ••"'!'-,-· I -----., 111'11 I I 11 · I ~ ' , ( I ,'\ • t t I I l l ,\ ' · , ' 1 'f II 1 (J~<AN C f (OU N I'( ( f.t II ()l\N I,\ ,1 I ( l N J'-, ' . r County buses will roll; far~ hike eyed 9' GL&NN 8COTT .. ..., .......... ANut u.• riders are expect· eel to r .. ume ridln1 Oran1e Couaty tr&Mit buses when the n..t NturM lo the streets Fri· day fclUowial a 22-day slrille by bu drivwa and mechanics. And it probably won't be long before riders will face a fare in· crease OD top ol the inconven· ieaces caused by the strike. Oraqe County Transit Dis· trlct directors are scheduled to bold a public bearina next Mon· day momina to coosider an in· creaae. The bj& question will be whether the fare will 10 from 50 cents to 75 cents or to $1 for a ope·way local ride. Transit directors ratified a three·year contract Wednesday offering drivers an immediate 6 percent annual increase and mechanics a 14 percent annual raise. The drivers will get 4 percent Increases ln each of the second and third years. The mechanics will 1et 8 percent next year and 5 percent in 1982. A maximum 7 percent annual cost-of-livinl in· crease wu included in both con· tracts. The drivers and mechanics also convened on Wednesday with negotiators of the United Transportation Union to approve the contracts. MANGLED INTERIOR OF MUNICIPAL RAILWAY BUS AFTER SAN FRANCISCO CRASH At le•et 41 people Injured, Hver•l •erlouely, when bue, gr•v•I truck collide 49 riders injured in SF bus crash ~naOKs four duplexes on highway SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -At least 49 were injured today, several seriously, when a packed Municipal Railway bus colHded with a tractor·lrailer. truck hauling peat gravel in San Francisco's China Basin, authorities said. •'They were trapped and wedged ln. Limbs were caught under the seats ," said Fire Department Battalion Chief Gerald Cullen. Six ambulances were used to take the most seriously injured to the hospital. Other victims were transported on a second Muni bus following the 7 a.m. crash, officials said. "We have about four or five critical injuries, three or four people with broken legs and a couple of back injuries. The rest have aches and pains," said a paramedic on the scene. Passengers with minor in· juries were placed aboard anothe Muni bus and taken to Mi11i0n, St. Luke's and Mount Zion hospita.ls. Joseph Zem, administrator of S!.._Luke's Hospital, said one of the 30 pa.uengers taken there had suffered a ruptured spleen and another had a possible frac· lured skull. Most of the others bad back and shoulder injuries, be said. Another 17 victims were taken to M~on Emer1ency, accord· in1 to hospital spokeswoman Miles Flores. Dr. Donald Trunkey said one of the victims appeared to be havin1 circulatory problems and waa paralysed. Two PMMftCera with minor ln· juries were taken to Mount Zion Hospital, a spokeswoman said. Muni spokesman Robert Rockwell aald tbe number ol ln· jured mllbt have been as hip Laguna bluff houee backed A ..... Beaelt couple baft woa • two·rear battle with aelpbore to build a 1,IOO· ................ OD a blullklp lot ..,.,,. A1ate and Pearl ......... a... ... P'aled to build bla ..._at Oliiill W§ ID.• ......... 10 ... ,. ,......, tlaat aa.o , ~m•r•U~ U1e owner four If ••• eom IUaed u.. .,. ... , , .. T ..... r: 11 tM YMMl lot II too .... .. ..... bloek ..... ,.... ........... . as 55, but hospitals reported only 49 injured. The bus driver, John McGee. 45, who suffered multiple in· juries when be was pinned in the wreckage, joined Muru a moot.ti ago and had been driving a bus for three weeks, Rockwell said. The bus, according to truck driver Jeff Hayes, 25, slammed into the tractor-trailer rig at a high rate of speed as the truck attempted a left turn. The front of the bus was demolished, crumpled back into the first rows of passenger seats. "I was at a green light, slowed down and making the turn when for some reason I looked up and saw a bus. He was coming just like a train and plowed into me. He had to be coming fast," said Hayes, a driver for Valley Ex- cavating of Pleasanton. Warren Williams, 24, of San Francisco, was in the back of the bus and said he mdn 't think the bus was going very fast. "The bus driver put on the brakes and after that there was the impact," said Williams. Laguna Beach City Council members have approved the de· sign for four duplexes on North Coast ffighway, despite argu· ments that the st.ructures would be out of character with the area. Council members voted 3 to 2, with Sally Bellerue and Neil Fitzpatrick opposed, to approve design of the four proposed duplexes at 538 lo 556 N. Coast Highway. The council vote upholds a Design Review Board approval of the eight·unit complex, follow· ing rejection last September by the council of a previously en· doraed design plan. The council majority said Tuesday it found improvements to the design to be adequate, despite arguments from the other two council members that the design is not in scale with the "village" atmosphere. Those two council members complained the two·story struc· lures would not be compatible with other buildings in the area and might set a precedent. .Lagta1are....,,re .. d11p llOWUd coftoYI from tbl lnlDe Rwla ride b1k> El llano B1emmtair •llODI la La1una Beacb to declan ......... ii Fun'' 4ay at tbe Hboal. Clallf Wl'aaidlr Bob Bider led u., lnlat cowt.oJ• llda Mechanics were lo report to work today, driven on Friday. However, board members gave the strikin1 workers a seven-day &race period to return to work. District General Manager James Reichert said some ol the workers may have started new jobs, but "we'd like to get the good ones back." He said about 10 percent of the work force usually doesn't re· turn after a tbree·week strike. District officials fipre to have some ol the same problems with tbe eatimated 40,000 daily com- muten who formerly used the bus. Tbe board of directors postponed coosideration of stag. in1 a "free fare" day to attract riders. But they md decide to make the 12,480 February bus passes valid for the rest of this month and all of March. Riders who choose not to use DC Briton • in tbe pUH9. can 1et 80 percent o1 their value back ii tbe pauea are turned ln to tbe OCl'D's Garden Grove headquarten by Manb~ · Officials predicted it will be about a month before ridenbip returns lo normal levels. Even before the strike be1an, officials were considering fare increases lo keep up with costs and to meet strin1ent state re· <See BUSF.S, Pase A!) Reagan, Thatcher 'allies for peace' WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Reagan, saying the United Stales and Britain will stand "side by side". to protect world peace, today welcomed British Prime Minis ter Margaret Thatcher to the United States ln an elaborate White House ceremony reflecting the two na· lions' close ties. For her part, Mrs. Thatcher. the first leader of a major U.S. ally to visit Reagan since his in· auguration, told the president that the United States can count on Great Britain as "an ally, staunch and true." "Your warm and deeply mov- ing ceremony will strike a chord in the hearts of British people everywhere," she said. Reagan greeted Mrs . Thatcher on the south lawn of the White House in a ceremony made more impressive by the bright sunshine of an unusually mild Washington February. They stood at attention· u the U.S. Air Force Band played Ruf· fles and Flourishes, followed by the national anthems of both na· lions. Next came a 19·gun salute that echoed over the White House grounds. Cool tonight A crowd of several thousand looked on. . After reviewing a U .S . military honor guard, Reagan welcomed the prime minister, whom be bad once met in Lon· don. The leaders have similar views regarding world economic and security problems, and this was reflected in their remarks. Reagan said theirs are "kin· dred nations" sharing the com· mon bond of language, laws and beliefs. "The responsibility for freedom is ours to share," he said. . He said those who threaten world security should be aware of ··one element without ques· lion -Britain and America will stand side by side." · Reagan praised Mrs. Thatcher for helping rally world opinion against the "brutal invasion" of Afghanistan by Soviet troops. He also said they share a conviction that Poland's problems must be solved by the people of Poland. He said "outside intervention there would affect profoundly East· West relations," referring to a possible Soviet move on its East European satellite. ..~ ........ 'SIDE BY SIDE' TtNltdter •nd Re•pn Showers due Friday? Button up your overcoat and keep an umbrella by the door since the National Weather Service is predicting a 20 per· cent chance of showers Friday morning. · No ·rain is expected tonight, despite a low of 49 predicted along the coast, accord1ng to the Weather Service. The showers that began Wednesday around 6 p.m. were barely enough to wash down the dust from the hot winds that whippe.d through the Orange Coast earlier this week. In Huntington Beach, resident weather expert J. Sherman Den· ny recorded .38 inches of rainfall Wednesday with 6.25 for the en· tire season and 17.23 recorded by this time last year. "It doesn't look good," said the Huntington Beach resident, who bas been measuring rainfall for nearly 50 years. "Let's hope we get some more." He said the city's rainfall average is 11.95 inches. Teen nabbed in holdup try Sheriff's deputies said 18·year· old Jon Wisdom of El Toro tried to hold up a South Lacuna Fotomat store with a toy pistol W~nesday afternoon. But the robbery attempt failed, deputies said, when a patrolling .aeputy happened by and Wisdom allegedly tried to flae. The deputy collared Wisdom and arrested the youth on suspi- cion ol attempted robbery. The incident toot place about 4:30 p.m. at the-Alpha Beta 1bopptnc plua, 30822 S. Coast Hi1bway. Panel hears W-t details LONG BEACH <AP> -a.1· deDta ol a neilbborbood wMn Hven homes w,ere deatroyed and four penom ..,.. IQjund by a plpellne expl•loa Jut December told federal la-ve~~ton tber reHIHd ao wa ...... Wan tM aied· deateo.lk .... . Tlant Gale A..aue rwld111&1 teeUftld .. ... llnf da7 ol • ~·.., N..._.. TrlW,1"9-tloD..,., ................. tM e-oltlleMdll t More cover .. OtMr .... Or-.. c -.. , ...... , ... ...., ..... All. •• Rainfall measurement . Wednesday in other Orange Coast areas. this season's total and last year's figures to date include: -Costa Mesa: .28 inches, 3. 78 inches, 17.08 inches, recorded by the Orange County Flood Con· trol District. -Laguna Niguel: .46, 4.06 and 24.3 inches, recorded by Moulton Niguel Treatment plant. -Newport Beach: .44, 4.12, 18.98 inches, reported by the Orange County Harbor Depart· ment. -Laauna Beach: .35 and 4.23 Inches for the season, accordinl to weather expert, Joe Jabraua. ' ·-Santa Ana : .38, 4.78 and 17. 48 inches, reported by the Flood Control District. llllGI ClllT 1111111 lncreasin1 cloudiness overnicbt. Chance of rain less than 10 percent toni1bt and 2D percent Fri· day. Lows toailht in the 40s. Hips Friday., to •. llllllTIUY • Readted tor shipmen• One o( the two engines from Air California Boeing 737 that crashed last week at Orange County's John Wayne Airport, is loaded aboard forklift. The 4,000-pound Pratt and Whitney jet ~ngine was put aboard a truck Wednesday afternoon for trip to Dallas, where it will undergo further examination by federal authorities looking into why the comme rcial jet crashed. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fre•P.,,.Af BUSES ••• UCI crowd shares quireme nts for recovering at '><:'least 20 percent of the district's operating costs through fares. 'Roots' insights Distri ct board C hairman Ralph Clark said the as yet un· determined loss of farebox rev· enue and feder al aid from the strike coudld cause new fares to reach $1 a ride. Clark continued his hard line agai n st th e s trik e at Wednesday's meeting. He said the settlement was fair. but claimed the district was willing to make the same concessions before workers ever left their iobs. "I personally have a lingering belief that this entire bus strike was unnecessary. It was not needed,·· he said. Reichert said the mechanics received much h igher wages than the drivers because the dis· trict was losing its trained d1esel mechanics to private businesses that paid better . Rather than calling the im· mediate raise a 14 percent an- nual increase. district officials termed the new offer a 9 percent raise with a 5 percent "adjust· ment." Under the n ew contracts, d rivers will earn top pay of Sl0.03 an hour instead of the former $9.46. Mechanics will get top pay of $11.19 r ather than their former $9.82. The contracts will cost the dis· trict an estimated $13.2 million over the three years . Jets' roar, air routes discussed By STEVE MARBLE 0t Ille D•lly Pl ... St.ff State noise hearings for John Wayne Airport took a humorous turn when attorneys inquired why some pilot s veer over homes after departure instead of charting a course down the mid· die of the Newport Bay. R ay lkola , an atto rney representing the City of Newport Beach . asked airport noise specialist Bill Martin Tuesday "why can't pilots just line themselves up with their eyes?" Mar lin, the eighth witness called in the hearings that began Monday lo determine if the airport s hould be granted a noise variance, laughed and responded: ''That sort of stuff went out with scarfs, leather helmets and goggles, you know." Martin and pilots rely on in· struments and commt1nications with the airport tower to provide that information. He said a s mall error on the part of a pilot could cause such off-course de· partures. "You don 't fly a plane like a train going down a railroad track -you can't make square turns." Martin said. Much of the afternoon's ques· Uoning by Ikola and attorney Thomas Edwards, representing Newport Beach's Mariners Com· munity Association, was com· plex and technical in nature. By JOHN NEEDHAM OIU.o.lly ~lletl&eff It bas been five years since Alex Haley's book, "Roots," rirst documented the cultural heritage and history of black Americans. But interest in the author's 12· year search for his family's origins, which led him to a village in West Africa where the now l e gendar y Kunta Kinte was bound in c h ains and placed aboard a s lave ship s i x genera · HALEY lions ago, has not waned. Speaking to a crowd of a bout 400 people at UC Irvine Wednesday night, Haley said he felt the most effective thing he could do now is to share the behind the scenes in· ·sights that led to his writing "Roots." Haley said words heard as a boy on a front porch in Henning, Tenn., becameartforhim. ··A ritual d~veloped al just about supper time when my grandmother a nd her sisters would filter out to the front porch whe re they would talk about their family." HaJey said. · · 1 beard stories about the old master and an old bull on the plan· talion named Bob, and a scan· dalous character named Chicken George and his mother Kizzy ... Haley said the conversations would eventually turn to Kizzy's father, a man referred to in hus hed tones as the African, who said his name was Kunta Kinte. "I heard those stories night after night throughout several s ummers," Haley said. "I became imprinte d with the Niguel skull from 1968 : mystery case A skull found a week ago in hil ls near Laguna Nigue l belonged to a man who was re· ported missing in 1968, accord· ing to Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators. Gordon Eugene Brown, who also used the las t name of Hamilton, was 23 years old when he was reported missing from South Laguna by his parents. The lower portion of his skeleton was found1 in 1970 a mile from where the skull was discovered, said Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. The skull, identified through d ental records, showed signs that Brown was killed by a gunshot wound, Hart said, add· ing that the victim was known to have Deen despondent and suicide is suspected. A hiker found the skull on Feb. 18 in a brushy area about a half· mile from Niguel Road near Highlands· Avenue. lnve.stigators think a dog or coyote could have moved the skull, he said. ORANGE COAST . Diiiy Piiat CIHelhd *9¥etUelng 114/M2•M71 AN otMr clepeftmenta 142-4321 Thoma P. Haley .......... Aob9r1 N. WHd ,.,....,. M. Ttiom•• KHvll ... Thomel A. Murphlne _.,.._ CharlM H. '-oo• ,.....,.. ......... ._ lematd Schulman ~ C.I C."'9f\MR ,.,....,....... KenMttl H. Goddard Jr. o......~ MAINOFPICe 1111 WHI ..,, St,. C.... MMe, CA. .,..II.._: ... tMO, C•le Mew, CA.,_. s tories. By the lime I was 121 had to stop and think which were Bible characters and whlch were my ancestors." The celebrated author said he was in Wasl).ington, D.C. just after the publication or his biography of Malcolm X, the assasinated leaderofthe Black Muslims. ··1 had worked with him on the book for two years." Haley said, ··and he had been killed just as he had predicted he would.'' He said he suddenly felt empty after completing a project that had occupied so much of his life for so long. For some reason still unclear to him, he said he went in· to the National Archives building and asked for the census records of the North Carolina county where his grandmother had been born. On the microfilm he found his great-grandfather·s name, along with the names of several other relatives. · · 1 began from that point not to search, but·to become engrossed in the subject of the history or my fa mily," Haley said. ·' l twas an eerie type of mission. I didn •t know what to think of it,·· he said . Finally Haley's search led him to the village of Juffure in Gambia. West Africa , where h~ was told of the Kinle clan. The storyteller related bow Haley's great.great-great-great· great-grandfather had been ab· ducted by slave traders while out in the forest chopping wood to make a drum in 1767. "I can't begin to explain the power and emotional push," Haley said. "I came back from Africa overwhelmed with the idea of what it would mean lo write a book. "Before my search the most I knew about Africa -ridiculous as it sounds -was Tarzan and Jane that we have all seen on movies and television." Haley said he had never in· tended to become a writer, and that a string of accidents led him to his occupation. "I had no idea I would ever be successful," he said. "If 1 did l would have typed faster." Six arrested in Santa Ana gang slaying Santa Ana police are holding six men and seelting a seventh in connection with the stabbing death last month of a rival gang me mber. Jesse Galvez, who police say was a member of the F-Troop gang in Santa Ana, died at the Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital Jan. J7 after suffering multiple stab wounds at a party earlier in the evening. Police said members of the rival Cedar Street 1an1 crashed a party being held on Eversreen Street. Galvez reportedly wu held on the lfOUJld by two ol the gan1 memben whUe the otben took turns 1tabbln1 the victim. Daniel .cutro, n . bu been held oa S250 000 ball 1lnce the daf of the klllln1 and hu been bound over for trial ln Oranp County SUperior Court. Othen 1ublequently arrest.cl on murder char1ea are Steven Gallep, 11, John R'7•, 21, Ronald Sara1on1 20, Oaear Sallnu. lt, ana Raymond Gardea, 19. TbOH ~ are a1lo belDI b•ld la Or~ CouDtJ J all wttfa ball Mt·-··· . Poliee Mid ..._, an 11 H"' l:dw .. 19nra. II, la eGMeC· Uoll wttb die murder. • m A Jury returns to Oran1e Count)' Superior Court next week to deelde wbetber 23-year· old John Alan Keith of San Clemente, convicted of the 1'71 1layin1 (>I a Corona del Mar real estate salesman, should be sen· tenced to death. The •ix-man, six-woman jury deliberated only 10 hours over a two-day period Wednesday before flndin1 Keith guilty of first degree murder in the bludgeoning and attempted mitre saw decapitation of Ruben Martinez, 40. Keith, one or two men char1ed in the murder, also was convict· ed by the jury of robbery and burglary , two special circumstances that qualify him for the death penalty. Judge Donald Mccartin who presided over Keith 's trial, or· dered jurors to return Wednes· day for the start of the penalty phase. Following presentation of evidence, the panel will be asked to decide whether Keith, who ad· milled his role in the slaying, should die in the state's gas chamber or be imprisoned for life without possibility of parole. The second defendant, An· lhony David Bies, 20, of Dana Point, was convicted of first degree murder in the Martinez slaying in December. Bies cur· rently is undergoi.ng 90 days or diagnostic testing at Chino State Prison. He does 1,not face the death penalty because of his age at the time the crime occurred. Farewell prayer Pope John Paul II kneels to pray at Nagasaki monument to Catholic martyrs shortly before leaving Japan today and Dying to Alaska. A brief stopover there will be the last one on the pope's final leg home from his Asian tour. Keith and Bies we re linked to the crime throuih the testimony of Walter DaLle, a police inform· ant who lured the two defend· dants to an El Toro motel where they discussed the slaying as police investigators !:ecretly re· corded the conversations on videotape. Three OC lawyers appointed judges Keith testified during his trial that anger and fear of homosex· uals -brought on by encounters he witnessed while in Orange County Jail in 1977 caused him to attack Martinez in the bedroom of the victim's res· idence. Martinez was repeatedly struck in the head with a 30· pound, star s haped candle. Later, Keith testified. he took a mitre box saw from a closet and drew it across the victim's ne<:k four times. Three Orange County at· torneys, all of whom served at one lime or another as deputy district attorneys, have been appointed to judicial seats by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Ronald Eugene Owen was named to a new post on the Orange County Superior Court. Na med to the North Orange Coun· ty Municipal Court were Jean Rhei nheimer and J o hn W. McOwen . Owen. 43, who has been in private practice for the past 11 years. fills one of four new judgeships on the 46 member Bolt jolts jet LA-to-London plane 0 K LONDON (AP)-A thunderbolts mas hed a two·footholein the nosecone of a London-bound British Airways jumbo jet carrying 202 passengers after it took off from Los Angeles today the airline reported. The bolt destroyed the Boeing 747's weather radar system when it struck five minutes after takeoff, a spokesman said. No in· juries were reported. Despite the gaping hole, the airliner flew 10 hours to London's Heathrow airport where it landed safely. Passengers on the night said there was a loud bang which sounded like a shell exploding when the thunderbolt hit. One traveler said: "There was a flash and a bang. There was no panic and the pilot calmly explained what had happened." The pilot, Capt. Ray Dodwell,saidtherewasnodanger. "Luckily the lightning struck on a non-pressurized area. We didn't know there was a hole in the nosecone until we landed in Lon· don." Orange County Superior Court bench. The Orange resident leaves the law fi rm of Cohen. Stokky, Owen and Davis in Santa Ana. Previous· ly he served as an Orange County deputy district attorney. Owen received his bachelor degree from Ohio State and his la w degree from Hastings College of the Law. Rheinheimer. 52. was named to a vacancy on the North Orange County Municipal Court, replac· ing J ames Wright Cook. who was electedtotheSuperiorCourt. She was formerly a deputy at· torney in charge of the special as· signment section and the career criminal prosecution unit. She previously worked in the major fraud section and was in private practice before that. She received her law degree from Pepperdine University. McOwen. a 48-yea r -old at· torney in private practice. was also named to the north municipal co urt . r e pl aci ng R o bert Fitzgerald. who is now Superior Courtjud~e. McOwen. a Newport Beach resident, served as a deputy dis· trict attorney before going into private practice and s at as judge pro tern in several Orange County municipal courts. He received his bachelor or arts a nd l a w d eg r ees from Georgetown University. Owen will earn $59,686 as a s upe r ior court j udge and Rheinheimer and Mcowen will each earn $54.506 in their municipal court posts. Ultra-thin ~ An 18k ~ribbed cue with bl8ck enunel dial. ' On a handeome lizard sttap Hand-crafted ln Switzerland. ,,,.. Jewelry ........... __ .,, .. lJ FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT IEACH. CAUFOANIA 92660 TELP'HONI (714) 644-2"4 "! . Mge Cout DAIL y Pilat !Th~, February 2e , 1811 "' Warning: The Su Tha . rgeon Ge I t Cigarette Smoking I D nera Hes Determined s angerous to Your Heahh . • ·~····. •. D~: • ... • 'W • • ULTRA 1oos Time to wrap up Sycamore debate Lailuna Beada cu1 CounriJ memben an llold.IDa out cauU.. opllmlam tbat a lud •al• deal witb Baywood Devetapment Co. can beeome a reaUty 1n tbe next few moaU.. TM city wuta to ..U about • acre• ol city land for approximately 11.4 m1Woa to Ba)'Yfood, but lint tbe former OWMrS ol Syuman HUii muat a1ree to accept th• rlM lbou.kl the Baywood project fail. In order for Baywood to obtain conttrucUon loan1 for au pl'OllOM'(l 211 townhwaee. the bank lnsl1ta it have flrst claam for money or land lhould tbe firm 10 bankrupt. That tneana the bank would be first ln line for restitu- tion over tbe caty, a condiUoa that La1una Beach officials find unacceptable. Cit)' M~1er Ken Frank said Rancho Palos Verdes Corp .. former owners of Sycamore Hills, agreed several months aao to accept that risk, enabling negotiations with Baywood to move alone. Now the land firm apparently sa ys it won't fake a subordinated note, an apparent switch in thinking that could threaten the entire deal. The city stiU owes Rancho about $7 million, and the interest on the mortgage is mounting at about Sl,500 per day City officials and Rancho attorneys will be meeting soon to has h out the latest complication. If the problem. as Frank suspects, is just a "tactical ploy" by Rancho, it should be ironed out with dispatch. With negotiations nearing completion in the years- long controversy over Sycamore Hills, it would be dis- heartening to see the package dumped. City guards win out On its surface, the offer from a private lifeguard company to guard Laguna's beaches was tempting. Operators of Lifeguard International Beach Services, Inc. said they could save t he city more than $40.000 a year -money desper ately needed by the budget- conscious municipality. But council members last week voted to keep their current Marine Safety Department, saying they value safety and lives over what some viewed as minimal sav- ings . . A report prepared for the council by City Manager Ken Frank claimed the saving to the city would really amount to only about $16,000 when revenues generated by the city department are added in. And , he said , the city lifeguard budget and the private firm's contract offer would "be about the same" if the city paid the same low salaries as proposed by Lifeguard Inte rnational. While several speakers lauded the quality of service provided on nearby county beaches by the private firm. more residents a nd council members said they were pleased with the longtime service provided beachgoers by the cit y's own guard force. And while the private firm lost its bid for a city con- tr act, the issue gave council members, and the public, a chance to review the city's own service . The result of that inspection shows most in Laguna Beach are happy with what they've got. Access law clear After seven years of bickering between the county and a South Laguna homeowners' association, both in and out of court, the long-disputed question of public ac- cess to Thousand Steps Beach seems no nearer a solution. Members of the South Laguna Coves Association, who live on the bluff above the Ninth Street beach. say al- lowing the public in would result in vandalism, litter, noise and lowered property values. The county maintains the public's right of access is guaranteed to all beach areas above the high tide lir:~ un- der state law. The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has made public access a condition on a permit granted to the county to r epair the crumbling cement stairway leading to the long-time-private strip of sand. The Coves association is appealing that ruling and keeping the fire warm on a 1978 lawsuit against the coun- ty over repairing the sole pathway to the beach. Meanwhile, an injunction prohibiting the public from us- ing the access .remains in effect. The issue is a complicated mess. And while the two sides slug it out. replacement costs have soared from $40,000 to an estimated $150,000. Residents near the pathway have understandable concerns. Still, the larger issue of providing access to a public beach area must be pursued. The county can't build a new stairway and permit on- ly residents to use it. Nor can it retain such a dangerous piece of property in its present condition. Members of the Coves association should back off from their stand and realize they are forcing an un- realistic burden on th~ county and d enying the public an obvious right. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views e><p ressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comme nt 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, ~osta Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Airborne pot By L.M. BOYD Q . What h ap p e ns to somebody who smokes mari· juana on a commercial airline Oight? Tar and featben ml1ht · warm up that cold· blooded woman with tbe akport bearin1 1lp, •'A ttaih a day kHPI &be nalle away.'' PASSENGER ON FLIOtnm r.1oomv ""' t•"'"''""h "'"' .~b ""' '"" O• rtaildf'''-fl'rtd no not ,...., ~\\•Jr1tv tf'f lHt ,,... ••• ''"' ,,. tPWI> .... , .. Of, ~JIO ..... ""' IW'OP IO r.-~ ~ 0..tly PtlOI A. The flight attendant tells the captain and the captain radios the police at the next airport. Q. Settle a bet. I've got a small sum wagered on my claim that Peter Pan, Tinker Bell and associates lived in a place called Never Never Land. A. You lose. That place Is jus t called Never Land. Regrets. A New York photo1· rapber recently was aa- sl1ned by Worlclna Mother ma•asine to shoot p\cturea ln Central Park. To u. lustra&e a story about how 1afe lt la to let children play there. He was beaten up, ltabbed and robbed. If you stand on the lowtlt point tn Colorado -at aa feet -you're still bilber tbaD tbl billMst points ID II other ltMel. Thom• P. Haley/Publliher • ThorNt Keevll/S__.• Thureday, February 21, 1811 Jaek Andenon :J I • Dr11g war sparks agency fight W ASHlNGTON -For more than a decade. the federal aov· ernment ha• been lo1tn1 its multlrnUUon·doUar war agalnlt &be International dope traf- fickers. But one 1overnment a1ency thinb it knows bow to revene the Ude of battle. The U.S. Cuatoma Ser-vice wants to get back the responsibility ror narcotics poli c ing , wh ich was taken away rrom it and given to the Drug En · r o r ce m e nt Administra- tion during the 19708. It's a suggestion that is not surpris- ing in Was hingto n , where Mailbox bureaucratic infi1bUn1 over "turf" can be u inteue u the struggJe againlt the probJem1 involved. C u1tom1 officials aaw the Republicans' return to power - and their determination to cut 1ovemment spending -u a golden opportunity to recapture some of DEA's functions and, of course, ita budget. The Reagan administration will have to referee the long-simmering in- teragency feud that has again bubbled tothesurface. BUDGET OFFICIALS told my associates lndy Badhwar and Jack Mitchell that no firm plans for the narcotics budget have be~n formulated yet. But one of- ficial acknowledged that DEA 's functions "duplicate a variety of agencies, not just Customs." Tbe dru1 a1ency naturally will not lit quietly by while it la dismembered like baloney tbrougb a meat 1Ucer. But it bu severe w.-1e problems to ex· plain, as well as lbe inescapable fact that it has failed to stop the flood of narcotics pouring into the United States each year. Despite some h ighly publicized drug busts. DEA 's critics contend that the agency is an expensive washout and is lorn with internal dissension and low morale. The charges are partially corroborated by some or its own agents. THERE HAVE been embar- rassing incidents that lend c r edence to the criticism. Federal investigators have been looking into charges of preferen- tial baggage-inspection treat- ment ordered by lbe bead. ol DEA's New York office. And a1- le8aUona ol perjury and barMI· ment in the Western Reeiooal Office forced a recent shake-up there. In the past 18 months, federal inveati8aton have told Conereu that "the Drug Enforcement Ad· ministration and the law en- for cement community in general have moved slowly in ef. fectively using conspiracy laws lo immobilbe major drug traf- fickers." They also faulted DEA 's parent agency, the Justice Department, which lbey saia "has not-adequately planned or directed prosecutive efforts against major traf- ficken." DEA Administrator Pete r Bensinger disputes his agency's critics. He claims that DEA was "way out in front" in spotting the threat of heroin from Southwest Asia, inaists that its intelligence work hu improved, a nd says that DEA was in- strumental in-the passage or laws that put tougher penalties on drug-related crimes. MEANWHILE, des pite a la rge-scale effort, the dope traf- fic flourishes. Intelligence re- ports warn that LSD , the dangerous ly unpredictable ha llucinogen or the 1960s, is becoming popular again. Equal- ly d isturbi ng in terms of long. range health problems is t he rampant use or PCP, or "angel dust." Aside from the. physical and m ental damage to actua l users. the narcotics trade makes in- direct victims of us all. Street crim es and burglaries provide the money t hat addicts must have to support their habit. One respected study, for example. showed that during an 11-year period, 243 addicts accounted for an astonishing 473'>00 crimes. 'Public hearing' opens a citizen's eyes To the Editor: I a m writing this letter •out of frustration a nd sadness that go deep to lhe bone. For the fi rst time in my life, I spent the day with my county representatives. the Orange County Board of Supervisors . The subject of dis- cussion was lhe master plan for the John Wayne Airport. Naive- ly, I thought people. the voters and taxpaying residents, could make a difference in this de- cision-making process. Instead, I was stunned with the truth: The decision to accept the m aster plan had been made by our "representatives" (and I use the term loosely) weeks and perhaps months be fore this public hearing. I went to this hearing representing myself. not an or- ganization. I possess no d is- tinguished titles. Simply. I am a wife and mother whose family lives under the flight pattern. We are subjected daily to severe disruptions caused by the jets flying over our home. This is very annoying. but truthfully, not my greatest concern. Since last year's disastrous San Diego air crash. I have had a monumental fear that sooner or la ter a similar accident could happen in our neighborhood. W4thin walking distance of our home is an elementary school containing 600 children. Whal would be their fate if a jet dropped out of the s ky and crashed on them? The prospect of additional flights as advocat- ed by the master plan with dis· r egard for additional safety pre- c autions o nly i nc reases the percentage chAnces of such a tragedy occurring. WITH THESE fears in mind, emphasized by Air California's near disastrous crash tbe ni1ht before, I went to the "Public Hear ing" assured that my representatives would want to hear from tne. Wbat I witnessed was the most demorall1lng ex- perience of my Ule. I saw and heard the chairman of ttie board. Ralph Clark, leU a speaker "to go to helJ." Is this proper decorum for an elected official presiding over a public meettnc, I wondered? Repeated· ly, he insulted airport opponents with aneen and sarcasm. His appearance was one of total dis· interest . . . that Is untu the 1entlemen repreaentin1 the business lntereata of the county made their preaentaUon1. Mr. Clari actually apq.lo•laed to them tor bavln1 to ll)ten lo tbe testimony of tbo9e of ut mott ad· venely afteeted by the airpart and ltl prapoHd expansion. I am emotionally drained. lly l'nlrodudloa IDto tbe wortcl of tM poUt.leal macblae wu 1wift md lharp. I Uft alwa19 belifted, • indeed lloptd tbat wt, H -c1u11a1. co.Id make a dtl· fere.ee. ..,...u, la loeal .... ...... 11Dw"'1foolllbolme. a.wu.u•• } \ Nol taz ••"'fl To the Editor: Recently the city of Newport Beach ran advertiseme nts in va ri o u s O r ange Co unt y news papers suggesting the pro- posed improvements in the John Wayne Airport master plan may be a "waste of taxpaye rs money." The public should be told that all monies for airport improvements would come from airport users and not from general tax funds. The Federal Airport Develop- ment Aid Pr~gram maintains a trus t fund of mor e tha n $4 billion, aJI contributed by a head tax on airline passengers and a portion of the fonds needed would come from that source. The balance would be de rived from revenues such as leases, parking and landing fees. Any revenue bonds that might be is- sued would also be ser viced by this income. To suggest this project would be a "waste of taxpayen funds'' is not accurate. The plan can provide badly needed improve- ments that will benefit all the citizens of Orange County who need air transportation. JOSEPH E. IRVINE Executive Director Community Airport Council Happwlwrr To the Editor: I a m reall y happy that I live here. In a town where there are such humanitarians as the one who helped the 53.year -old woman in need of convalescent hospital care. And in a town with a hometown news paper which prints, on the front page (Feb. 20), human interest true life stories a bout the thoughtful consideration or the people in its community. Instead of being like those other papers which blast you with sensationalism of crime and devastation. Thank you David Kut1mann for your article, and· thank you Daily Pilot for recognizing Its newsworthiness. ELlZAPETH LAUFORD ... ,, •• I•~ To the Editor: To those of us who llve in the 36th Slate Senate Dtstrtot, John Schmitz, state Senator. bu lone been an embarruament. His re- cent attacks on Martin Luther Kini were onl1 the latest ln a aeries ol u1ty, negaUve, pnj· udiced statement. made by him on a variety of subjects. Now the Senate Rules Com· mlttee, headed by Sen. David Robert!, ha oamed this same Schmits to the state Status ol Womu Commi11ion, a com· ml11loa wboH very exlltnee ldamlla bu •••• ,. oppoMd, a ~ ........... ~ .. lo == .... ...,.,., l1llda ... ....... TIN .,,_.. mt ol letlmlta '9 ...................... ~ I -----........... ~] disgraceful act. It seems that the Senate Rules Committee has deliberately chosen the most destructive individual it could rind. Is the Senate Rules Com - mittee trying to obi.iterate the Status of Women Commission? Are our legislators so arrogant. indifferent. and ignorant that they feel no responsibility to the women or this state? VIVIAN HALL Br pr..,,arrd To the Editor: The other ni ght I pulled a young woman out from her over· turn ed soft -l o pped ca r on Laguna Canyon Road. By the grace or God she had only a scratch. but the car looked like it had been in a trash compac- tor. On my way home I wondered whatever had happened tQ the warning signs on this road , signs warning or the number of acci· dents and fatalities and advising extreme caution. Another point: Of fi ve or so carloads of people who stopped to help, only my husband and I had emergency flares in our vehicle. The other people had flashlights but they are dangerous to the people holding them to slow down traffic. If you don't carty flares in your car , get some. If you drjve any road you should be prepared not just in driving skills. but in first aid and traffic control. VICKI BORTHWICK Siii• .. Ilda• To the Editor: The annual ski holiday for the Laguna Beach schools has just ended. This is probably the most ludicrous reason ever invented by small minds to justify school closures. , The total number of families arrluent enough to take off with the kids for mid-winter Cun and ~port is apparently somewhere ~.n the neighborhood of 60 to 70. Allowing the maximum and a round figure of 5 ebildren pe.r family, we have 350 students off to the slo~a. Obviously lbe number is somewhat lnflated. I would suspect that the humber of youn'-people who are mem- bers of single parent households, families with two working parents or don't sk1, outnumber the ski families 20 to 1. IT IS Gll088LY unfair to put an added financial burden of cblld care on the mU>rfty. It la ID lnJualice lo tum aU lbeae llida loose to bat around th• school district tryin1 to alleviate boredom with dumb pranks. Neat year there should be no ski week. I would reeom...- lbat t.be aebool board examine their obUpUon lo all e~ 18 our 1eboola. Let &be l..W• wllD ..... to• lbe&r elll'*-!jti tbe ADA moalu for ebiklrm.Ullllala= ee._ DClt • •~•. Ill the m contribute a li ke sum to some other progr am . I really don't care to hear that this asinine "vacation " period was m ade necessary by Proposi- tion 13. Be creative! MARY LOli RIPLEY Glad lo arrrpl To the Editor: Your editor ial of Feb. 21 , .. High Cost of Moving ... in re- gard to the redecorating of the White House is a smasher. Until it came out I did not know that private contributions in the amount or $200,000. tax de· ductible to the White House His- torical Asso~iation . were going on after the Reagans decided SO Gs were not enough. We have an old house under redecorating process and the work I do myself, If Uncle Sam cares to chip in a mere SSOO I'd be delighted to accept. WARREN G. ALTHOFF Nol•r tartar To the Editor: I have had discussions with qualified cons ultants on the . Ame r ican Legion building's "noise factor ... It is their opinion that the 75·year-old building has numerous unique construction problem s that may never be so l ved . The best possible estimate to control the "noise factor" to acceptable levels may require a nothe r budget that could easily cost a nother $50,000 to $100,000 or more. The record or the Baglin Ad· minis tration's was te of tax- payers' money (including sub- sidized funding) is second to none. The sad racts follow: 1. The $12.500,000 loss of sub- s idized funding for s enior citizens' housing on the Glenn· eyre site . 2. By not improving Thurston Park , Laguna Beach is in jeopardy of losing anywhere from $2SO,OOO to $450,000. 3. The American Le1ion build- in1's budget of $218,000 for con- struction work is only the begin· ning. The total amount could. possibly cost the citizens of La1una Beach almost twice the original estimate. This is definitely a "noise" that won't go away. The Baalin Administration is stuck with it and the cltlaens of La1una Beach are the victims who are payin1 the piper's price. A LAN I!. ADAMS • Lerttra from reoMrl art wlc:onw. Tht r41hl 10 condnle l.tlcrt lo lit space or t llminale libel ii r'fwrwd. IArttr• o/ JOO words or leH uiiU be gfwn prt/trnet. AU lfttna MlllC llltllldt ~MN Clftd,,...,.... •• drtH tJul nG,,.I fl'Mlf flit ......... on ~ '1 JMJ/6t:tnl ,.... '8 • ,.,,. •. PHtrw IOUI .... " 1t••H•"•d. L•rf•r• ••• bf ...., ... d ....... ,. ... ... ........... ., ........... , .... be ..... ,., .,., ...... ....... r I MORE OPINION How the Arabs ruined sex Mo t opert blamtt the d..-Uae ol ua In Amt rlc• on th• 1Hual r.\lolution whlrh bared its 1tlunn1 m>' t('rlc-11 1tnd vro du<'t'd t.he hberatt'd worn un • c r~aturtt , th t'Y itM}. who transforms. trona m t-n into pat.. qw .. uina •h•do.... or their formt'r macho st'lves Out lt't WI j(ive bl•mt' whe:-r\l blaml' 1i. dut> It wa11 not the l l b l'fit\l'd .... o m a.n 'Aho p u t sex 111 Am t'rt<'U on \hf' 'k ldi . 11 ""a:. the 011\ A rnb sheiks At·t u all\ the tt~hne or ex c an b"' d ated lo lht> flr:.t gas li ne m \ 973. f''or 1t was then that Americans b\ t he millions fell out of love \\0 1th their big , luel gulping rars WHILE S MALL cars have done wonders for energy con· servation. they h ave all but des troyed sex. There are two reasons for t his The m ore ob vious is the physical: Small rars arl' simµI~ not as b ig as big cars For g e n e rati o n s, t h e autom o bile has prov ide d the 3 DAYS ONLY Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 1dt•1tl trysting place for lovers. It 111 aon. warm, coay. lnUmate and huruhrobblnfCIY llltr it A youna Me ntleman would drive 11 young lud) out lo Moonlillhl Lane. Arter d1i;cusismw flt Kel for an hour or i..o, he rplght, IC he were lu<'ll), ~nwade her lo climb In to thl· huc·k l!ea1 w here they mi g ht m o r e t·omCortabl y unulyzc Sc•hope nhauer Nol any more A young man I knu"' \\ho recentl~ a ttempted to un ul ~ 1.e Sc·hopenha uer in the ha<>k :.eat of a Ja pa nese import had to be d n t'll by his young lad~ lo the hospital whe re he l>l>en t tht:• rll'xl I wo wl'eks in trac tio11 But u far more insidious de ll·t·t uf -.mall r an. 1s that they clre sunµI) not a~ powerful as big t•ars For generation:-. we rr.en have l'lutchl-'<l the steering wheels of ou r llorncts. our .Javelins or our ~1 a t adors and rat·cd their roar 1n g e n g t nt'~ AROO M ' VA HOOM ! TllE POWER would flow through us. c h:.irging our hearts. squaring our jaws and sendmg t h e m a nl ~ blood c·ou r s1 n g th rough our veins . :--Jo sweet ~·oung thing was sa fe from our masculine m agnetism Bul ha ve ynu ever raced the Garden Center engine or a Honda Civic? Whir. Whir. Very fue l-efficient . And the names! Where are the Rogues. lhe Stin grays, the Cobras, the Valia nts and the Matadors of yeste ryear ? How can a man fee l manly in a Courie r, an Accord, a Corona or an Escort? The truth is that for genera· lions we men have ide ntified with our cars. And I sa y s how me a man who identifies with a Rabbit and I'll s how you a man who de finitely lacks machismo. SO THE CASE of Stratford I loe should be no s urprise. When St ra tford's wife, Heidi, b ecame liberated. he turned into a pale, q uivering s hadow or his former m acho self. "Go see a sex therapist, Strat· ford !·· Heidi ordered. Instead. in a ra re moment or rebe llion. Stratford bought a 1981 eigbt-cylinder. four-door. two-ton Chrysler Imperial with a 318 cubic·inch engine. It saved Stra tford : it saved his mar· riage: and it endange red only the t yping pool at his office. Let us hope, however . that word or this cure does not leak out. The world already has too many peopl(' and too little fossil fuel. FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Starts Fri., Feb. 27th, 10 A.M. I I · y ' , ,~·_, ' ·~·,.1;"' -..... ,...~·. Y\~\~, ~C5 Indoor Plants Special 3.99 6" pot Pothos, Cordatum Philodendron, Creeping Charlie Special 15.99 10" pot Palms, Ficus and Dracenas Special 6.99 ... pot Boston Fern Outdoor Special 9.99 5 Gallon Meyer Lemon Outdoor Pienta Special 1.99 1 Gellon Cendy Turf 1 Gellon Scotch Broom Potting Soil 5.98 a cu. ft. irclCPenney m MSNON 1SL:AND m;I NEWPORT C&4T8' Indoor Special' 49.99 ' Specimen Plants Dracenas, Pothos & Diffenbachla Special 29.99 Specimen Plants In Decorator . .. pots. STORE HOURS: Mon.-Ffi. 10 a.m. to I p.m •. ...... , 10 •·"'-to I p.m. ..... , 11 Noon to I p.M. Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thureday, February 28, 1981 ~·- • I cearance starts Friday, 9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be-available in each grouping ... colors and styles limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store women's sportswear Now 52 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 98c 40 LONG SLEEVE TEE SHIRTS 1.98 310MISSES'TEESHIRTS 1.98 142JUNIORTEE SHIRTS 1.98 41 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 3.98 98 MISSES' COWLS 3.98 26 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 3.98 28 MISSES' PANT TOPS 3.98 15 FULL FIGURE TOPS 3.98 • 31 JUNIOR PANT TOPS 4.98 63 LONG SLEEVE TEE SHIRTS 4.98 52 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 4.98 23JUNIOR PANT TOPS 6.98 22.JUNIOR PANTS 6.98 32 JUNIOR SWEATERS 6.98 28 MISSES' TEE SHIRTS 6.98 '!~MISSES' PANTS 6.98 .. 1.:UNIOR PANTTOPS 9.98 22 MISSES' COWLS 9.98 81 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS 11 .98 62 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS 17 .98 dresses and coats NOW 23 MISSES' AND JUNIOR JUMPSUITS 9.98 23 NYLON QUILTED PANTCOATS 10.98 13 VINVLJACKETS 12.98 41 JUNIOR DRESSES 14.98 19VINVLPANTCOATS 15.98 81 SWEATER COATS 19.98 11 MISSES' PLUSH PANTCOATS 45.98 13 MISSES' PLUSH PANTCOATS 48.98 27 ALL·WEATHERLINEDCOATS 52.98 lingerie, loungewearNow 116HALFSUPS 1.98 28 CONTOUR BRAS 1.98 55 BABY DOLLS 2.98 26FULLSLIPS 2.98 25DUSTERS 5.98 27 SHORT FLEECE ROBES 11 .98 32 LONG ROBES 12.98 25SOFTCUPBRAS 3.98 women's accessories buys for boys 37 FOOTBALL SHIRTS 35 BOYS'L. SL V. SHIRTS 59 LITTLE BOYS' SWEATER SETS 35 LITTLE BOYS' SWEATERS 19 BOYS' SWEATERS 10 FAMOUS MAKER VESTS 57 PRINT TEES . 47STAAWARS POSTERS buys for men 19 MEN'SHATS 47 S. SLY. TEE SHIRTS 108 S. SLY. SPORTSHIRTS 101 SHORTS 43 DRESS BEL TS 59 L SLY. PLAID SHIRTS 37 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS 27 S. SLY. STRIPE SHIRTS 21 WINTERWEIGHT SHIRTS 73 L SLY. SHIRTS n MEN'S SLACKS 59 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS 81 S.SLV. POLY/TERAYSHIRTS 69 L. SLY. SPORT SHIRTS 197MENSJEANS 47 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS shoes for the family 23 GIRLS'.SANDALS 26 WOMEN'S HEELS 36 BOYS' SOCCER SHOES 44 WOMEN'S CASUALS 38 GIRLS' SANDALS 39 MEN'S SLIPPERS 51 WOMEN'SSPORTSHOES 53 MEN'S SPORT SHOES 39 WOMEN'S SLIPPERS 36 CHILDREN'S BOOTS 14 WOMEN'S SUEDE JOGGERS 122 CHILDREN'S CASUALS 31 MEN"S CASUALS 47 BOYS' LEATHER CASUALS 43 MEN'S CASUALS NOW 2.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 10.98 48c 98c NOW 98c 1.98 1.98 2.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 5.98 6.98 6.98 8.98 9.98 15.98 7.98 8.98 NOW 2.98 2.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 8.98 8.98 10.98 10.98 12.98 12.98 14J8 15.98 41 SOCKS 61 TURTLENECK DICKIES 41SCARVES NOW 1.48 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.48 2.98 3.98 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 yardage and notions Now 56BELTS 57SANDALS 98BELTS 68 CHINA DOLL SHOES 31 CANVAS BAGS 29SHAWLS 29SCARVES 36HATS 47SWEATERS 32 KNITTED SLIPPERS 39 WEDGE SHOES ·infants and toddlers 19RUBBERPANTS 27 LAYETTE SACQUES . 29 'f'.OOOLER TEE SHIRTS 13 RECORD ALBUMS 47 TOOOlER ROBES . . 21 TOOOLER DRESSES 7 NURSERY UMPS ... buys for girls NOW 48c 98c 98c J .98 r 4,91 .4.91 7.98 NOW 155KNEE·HllOCKS . 48c 31 TEEN BRAS . . . . . 9lc 71 BELTS . . . .. .. . 1.91 57 TEE SHIRTS .. . . . . . .. . .. , 1.91 ~7·14TURnENECKTOPS 1.91 •. • 4:-tX DREIRS.. . . . . 1.91 24 HAHDeAGI . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.91 47 PA.JAMAi . . .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . . . .' 3.• 3'4« ~ANTllTI ...... ' ................ ' ... . 121PAN197·14........................... 4 •• 11MCUTl1·14 ........... .' .......... ' .... . 21PANTllTl7·14 ............... : ...... , . I.• llPANTl7·14 ............ , ......... , •. , .. ... DVILOURTOPIWX ....................... . 189SPOOLSOF 100%COTTON THREAD 218RUGYARN • 21 CHRISTMAS CUT OUTS 58 HOLLY HOBBIE-CUT OUTS 48 VOS COTTON BROADCLOTH 149 VOS COTTON BROADCLOTH 64 VOS POLY /COTTON BROADCLOTH 188 ~EEDLEPOINT STITCHERY 23 POLY /COTTON VELOUR KITS for your home 12 SHOWER CURTAINS 141 HAND TOWELS 47WASHCLOTHS 9 BED PILLOWS 23 POTTED SILK FLOWERS 29PANELS . 298ATHTOWELS 24 BEAN BAG CHAIRS jewelry buys 43 INDIAN BEADED JEWELRY 51 COLORED BEADED NECKLACES 23 GOLD COLORED BRACELETS 21 COLOR8EAOED BRACELETS •COLOR BEADED NECKLACES •GOLD FILLED BOXED SETS 24 JIWELRY BOXES ...... . 2J zootAC CHAMll . . .. toys, toys, toys 8c 13c 48c 68c 68c 98c 1.48 1.58 5.98 NOW 28c 98c 98c 1.98 1.98 1.98 2.98 19.98 NOW 48c 48c 4lc 4lc lie 2.• ..... 11.11 NOW ,.. I .• I . ...... ...•. 1 ... ••••• t • 11.11 . ......... ... ., •....• 14.11 Huntington Beach • 9811 Adams Ave . at Brookhµrst St. • 963-97!31 .. Sex crinies incFease alarms ffB police_ .,'ftt!:,"&e"M ............ __ .. • ......_ 1e.-4vlqlM ftrlll '119 a 'fg ., 1111 UM .... a'rt ... .._....._.., .... ._ ..... ._r ..... ,.ue. •••<• 2 ........ , .... , . .,... hr " ........... al· .... ,..,~....., .... .... ... 11 ...... r ..... . ... lllfa~.W Jean l 'Ye ~ ... a " .... lavtlt1s•· daaa," MM .. "I"-leada General l}!an set for study A second r ound of study seaaiona to discuss the future direcUoo ol the city's 1eoeraJ plan will be&in next week in Lacuna Beach. Plannini commissioners and council members conducted study sesaions tut month to con- sider city coals, and decided a nother series of public meet- in11 should be held to further lllEFS e valuate contents of a citizens pa rticipation progr am docu- ment. Tbat document is a compila- tion ol study results from five citisens committees and con- tains their recommendations. The pJann.ing commission will review the publication March 4 at 7 p.m. in council chambers, and the city council will con· sider the document March 17 at 6p.m. ll~n•••llt High school age girls interest- ed in wotking as ushers at the Pageant of the Masters and other performances at the Irvine Bowl in Laguna Beach may pick up applications at the Festival of Arts office. The pageant will run from J u. Iv 14 to Au~ust 30, Other events will be gin i n Ma r c h . The deadline for returning applica- tions is March 31. Applicants are required to have social security cards. The Festival of Arts offi ce is located at 650 Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna Beach. Office hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . weekdays. T~lcelbdr Registration is under way for a boys and girls track clinic scheduled for weekday after- noons from March 3 to March 19 at Laguna Beach High School. The clinic is open to youths in the first through eighth grades and will include physical condi- tioni ng and ins tructio n i n various track and field events. There is a SS c harge. The sessions will last from 4.30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Applications are avail able in the Laguna Beach Recreation Department office at City Hall. 515 Forest Ave. For more in- for m ation call 497-3311 , ex· tension 201. Free trolley service will be availab)e for Laguna Beach Museum of Art patrons during the three-day antique show and sale to benefit the museum beginning Friday. The trolley will travel between the parking lot at 1945 Laguna Canyoo Road and the museum at 307 Cliff Drive. Service hours will be from noon unUl 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and from noon until 6 p.m . Sunday. Admission to the show is $4, good for all three days. . ilJl•••-r The Sister City Association of San Juan Capistrano is sponsor- inc a tour ol Spain and Portu1a1 tbat will include a stop in Petr. llaJorca, 1l1ter city of San Ju.,; ud birthplace of city founder Father Junlpero Serra. Space on the trip from June 14 to a la limited to ao people. The price, lndudinc air fare from Los An1eles International Airport, all breakluta, tipe and ann dbmen, la $1,950. AnJODe wllblq additional la-f orm atloa should call Janet Bouclaer at 413·1477, Wilson BuaU. at m. '1272, or Lou.taa Cooper at 1412-0IU. .. eert1i ... ea.. An •IJ decorat1n1 dua 1~ bJ UM 1ntM Qom, anaaltJ Senlc• D~t wU1 ........ Aalrll 1J .. at UllA._...&J Comaumltf • t ...... '"' JAll9, ca.. .... ..w ... from 10 a.m. to I p.m. ••1laUaUoa ....... ..... .. tllie C..••· ., ....... ~ ... . . ,.., ............... .... ..,....,.. ...... 1. WU Qi •lltt bf 8 ma 8fts ._ nr .,. ,... at Paelfte c.-............ ..... taHnct ..... .._.. • PollH NW tile mu ftnt ol· lered to Wp, tMa .,.. a DU• .ad lore.cf bl• ••1 lato UM womM'• cu. He fODd.l.ct UM woman aDd took Iler purse before....,, police aahl. Detectln Dro• aald police bave no aplaDatioa far Ule ear- r•t QPIUl'I• lD Ms a&taeb and Birthday for Joe Hid tile IBc:H•tt ••t .... to be ....... HelMdtlaeJanMttM...t of ..... ~-TMJ laaft oecurncf ba all parta of tbe etty, "' d&Jlilbt .. well ......... bouu aDd la realde.auaY nel~ u well u buU-n•• dlltrletl . I "But .. have been barinc a bl1ber number of bur1lary rapes tbu la tbe put," Dra. • served. la tbeM incldenta, a man bu Joe Carolan, crossing guard for Mariners School in NeWpOrt Beach, shows off special T-shirt students gave him Monday in honor of h is 78th birthday. Youngsters also showed up at Joe's station at Dover and Mariners drives to sing "Happy Birthday." The England-born Carolan has been seeing children safely to and from Mariners School for 14 years. Harbor area school lunches to go up Trustees of the Newport-Mesa School District have balked at plans for increasing school lunch and breakfast prices by a nickel beginning next month. Instead. they asked district administrators this week to pJan for an even hi gher price. R ay Schni er er , dis trict finance officer, suggested the fi ve-cent increase because the feder al government reduced its support for each lunch by 4.5 cents beginning Jan . 1. "INSTEAD OF MEETING our costs by the end of the school year. we will now have a deficit of $34,250,'' he projected. A m a j ority of trust ees, foreseeing additiona l price hikes, indicated they'd rather have one increase than two. Water service lo addition to the projected defi cit expected from federal· fund cuts, trustees expressed con- cern that annual lunch fees are running about $34,000 behind ex- penditures. THE SITUATION was explained as a bookkeepia1 carryover from one school year to another while the cafeteria op er ations wait for funding allocations. T he district serves about 10 ,000 lunc hes and 3 ,000 breakfasts daily. Schnierer said, in addition to food served on an a la carte basis. Breakfasts currenUy cost 40 cents in elementary schools, 50 cents in middle schools and 80 cents at high schools. Lunches are 70, 75 and 85 cents. Sycamore Hills in Laguna district Sycamore Hills is now within the Laguna Beach County Water District's s phere of infiuence following approval this month by the Local Agency Formation Commission. The wedge-shaped, 522-acre parcel located between Laguna Canyon arid El Toro roads was fo rme rly included in the Police nab Newport gem theft suspect A suspected gem thief who al- legedly snatched a diamond rin& a Corona del Mar man wu of- ferina for sale when they met in a coffee shop nine week• aso la in jail today after bis capture la Long Beach. Michael A. Miaigerode, 23, was booked lnto Newport Beach ·City Jail llonday nlpt after be· ln1 banded over by Loni Beach deteetlv• who bad arrested blm there lD an marelat.d armed rol>- Der7 cue, polke aaid. PoUee Capt. Wayne Comnolly said en all-points bulletin deacrlbla< IODii•rod• · u Ole illlU ........ tblft ol U. .. ,. 'liDI WU e.ned up bJ Loal Beae._n ftr1al tlNlr la· ........... Tbe ..,_, Capt. ~ ..w. w ..... .,... .. l'f••Poltera..adw....S• .. , ..... ol ............. . ...... , ... tc ... It ... rM wlill• ... OWMI' ... ......,... ltnwoaftee. (; Moulton·Niguel Water District. The recent LAFCO decision means the Laguna Beach water district would have the first right of annexine the city prop- erty and providing any required water service. That would include water hookup for the proposed 300-unit townhouse development planned on about 60 acres near Leisure World. lo addition to Sycamore Hilla, the water district was also al- lowed to include a 2,000-foot-wide strip of Irvine company land runninc alon1 the north aide ol Laguna Canyon Road in ill sphere map. ' THAT ft'alp ends about JOO feet north ol the El Toro Ra.d Junction. Tbe .,ency decilloa allO ln- cludea land at \be north end ol the clty to Muddy C~yon, ln· cludinl El Morro Elementary school and a partjon ol tbe ne. Crystal Cove State Park. Tboee propertl• were former· ly wltblD tbe Irvine Rancb Wat.er Dlatrict'a apbere ol lD· nuence. Gates apologizes LOS ANOSLSI <AP> PoUee 01691 l>u71 f'. OatM Im ~ ......... fl. nlllll ... II of .... .... data lalt ......... -· plalat ... Nelli• .. tut .. prarera ••r• too low41 . ~ .......... . ,_ .................. 11 '&IM lllllllN," Oatea , ... .. .... Art festival sellers must apply early If you're thinking of selling anything from balloons to bagels outside any of the three art festivals in Laguna Beach this s ummer, you need to seek city per mission early. Each year the city receives many requests from con- ce11iooaires foe temporary use permits to operate stands near the festival sites. Unfortunately many requests a re often too late. Information about the con- cession stand must be submitted to the city by April 10, in order to get on the mid-April agenda ol the planning commission. For information about costs, requirements and time of the commission hearings, call Jack Connors, zoning director at City Hall between 8 a.m. and noon at 497-3311. Chamber names chief The Irvine Chamber of Com · merce Board of Directors bu elected Larry Hoffman to serve a one-year term as chamber president beginning March 1. Hoffman is an 11-year resident of Irvine where he recently opened his own consulting firm known as California Business Consultants. Hoffman will be installed as president at a banquet at the Registry Hotel in Irvine on Fri- day. Tickets are available at the chamber office, 2801 McGraw Ave.,atacostof$25perperson. broil• bl&o .... Mm• ol ..... la1 wo•.,U· Uallke most ......... ... .... , .... --., ta ::;:t••bl•. U... lD-truden ID for tbe n...- purpoH ol 1 ommltUa1 rape, Drosuid. • Jn manyf.r recent iacl· deata, tbe eouldn't have prevented e auault, Droa aald. · But lD =tbe c .... , extra s afety prec mlpt bave deten.l . ttacb, be added. SomeoftM .... ,..,......_ be=.:=·· ......... -UDJoe or op.a wt.Ddow. AJtlloulb wiDdon afte9 an IJef't opal CID wum ..... °'9 Hid apeelal loSa CU be la· •tailed to ............... from bliDc op-.d wide _.. to admit • latnader. · Tbe .w.etiYe a&ao Hid womm abould follow tbe f••Ular e .. tioDI aplDat •alklal .a.. ... at nllbt or acceptinc rldel with 1traa1en. SprtJg program§ R1ecreation I /,e~ders eyed The Sani Clemente recreation departm~ is seetinc instructors for •Prine proerams, which beein in mid· April and continue t.hroucb early June. Residents with special talents, or skilla ln fine arts, atbletica, cultural or leisure time bobbies or sports, s hould call the rec reation depar tment by March l. Those wishing to instruct classes lfK>uld phone 492·5101, ext. 265. s.e.,. .-ee• •e• A sw., meet to benefit the Laguna 1Beach Boys Club and the Lapna Beach Free Clinic will be Peld March 22 from 9 a .m . to j p.m. at the Boys Club, 1085 Laana Canyon Road. · Donations of salable items are wel~e. Local groups are invited ;~to participate in the fund-rUJing effort by renting space. For dlnationa, space rental or other illformation call Suzanne Surks at .,.-61.23. Nmu.••ltere4 Dana Hills High School's child de velopment class will conduct a nursery school for children begirumg Tuesday from 10:40 a.m. until noon. Chil~eo must be toilet-trained and transportation must be pro- vided ~Y the pa.rent. The school will me e t Tues days and Thur94!ays at Dana Hills, 33333 Go ldem Lantern St .• Dana Point. Ev&ll will include games, crafts. stories, nature walb and puppet shows. Tbe nursery school will be under the direc- tion d class instructor Laurie Gill. Those interested can call 496-6&i6, extension 51. T~...Uta11ee Free income tax assistance is available to Laguna Beach senior citizens through mid- April in the council chambers, and seniors don't need an ap- pointment time. Tfte income tax help is sponsored by the Senior Citiaens Club ol Laguna Beach and the Tax Counseling for the Elderly prolt'am. Ta: service is available each Monday and Thursday from 9 Country music fest set in Mesa Singer and songwriter Tony Tarvin ol Texu will be featured Saturday at an ice cream social and c ount r y music fest sponsored by the Harbor Cbris- U.,i Fellowship church in Costa Mesa. ~lso scheduled for the 6:45 p.m. event is the Blessed As- surance Band, a spoke.swoman said. The church is a t 740 W. WUsooSt. a . m. until noon. Seniors are asked to brine tut year's tax form. 'Set.., ...... ·'The Sting," starrinc PauJ Newman and Robert Redford, will be shown free of cbarce to Laguna Beach senior citl1en.s March20. The 2 p.m . 1creenin1 is sponsored by the Senior Citbena Club and Laguna Federal Sav- ings and Loan, a nd will be s hown at the South Coast Theater. For free tickets, call 497-2"1. 'Dleatertrffl The South Coast Communities Jewish Center in Laguna Beach is sponsoring a trip to Los Angeles March 2 to see a pro- duction of Sholem Aleichem, with veteran actor Nehemiah Persoff. Tickets are $15 and include transportation and refreshments on the bus. Buses will leave at 1 p.m., with the matinee performance at the Coronet Theater be&in- ning at 2:30 p.m. For information, call 497-2070. Stolen birds could call for rescue Nobody oo the Irvine Police Department is named Toby, but patrolmen cruislnc the city will be certain to bit their brakes if they hear someone cry out: "Hello, Toby!" That is the sole vocabulary ol two pet cockatiels stolen along with their cage in a th41ft from the home ol Don and 'Carolyn Baggett Tuesday, the victima re- ported. Investigators said the gray birds have yellow beads with orange spats and were in a iray, homemade cage wben pillered from the Baggetts' garage on Waverly Lane. The garage door bad only been left open momentarily, the cou- ple said in reportinc the $105 theft. They added that a cqed parakeet was left behind by tbe intruders. ZIP CODE LISTS AT POST OFFICE National ZIP Code and Poet Office Directories for 1981 are available at the Newport Beach Post Office for ta each. Discounts of one dollar per copy are available by bu.Jinc eight copies or tradln1 in the front cover of any previous directory. ......... 11.Dwlll~----· 4feat1 Ir•• lrYI••'• fa1t-1rewta1 Noatllw1Dd--. . -- I tHIH'.11·\ I I I llHti.'\H' ' 1'1/l! CPU\N<,f .OlJNIY (AlJl(JH~~IA . ·ft-..·~, I CoUnty buses will roll; ·fare hi~e eyed . 9r OL&NN ICOTT ...... ,,.. .... ANal 11.• riden are expect· e4 to r•ume rldln1 Orant• CMa&J t.r-at bulea wbea the n..t Nblr'm to the streeu Fri· day faUowinl a ZZ-day strike by bu drtven and mechanics. And it probably won't be 1001 'before riders will face a rare in· c.reue on top ol the incooven· inc•caused by the strike. Oranae County Transit Dis· trict direct.ors are scbeduJed to bold a public heartnt next Mon- day momint to consider an in· creaae. The bil queaUoa will be whether the fare will •o from 50 cenu to 75 cents or to St for • one-way local ride. Trauit directors ratified • three-year contract Wednesday offering drivers an lmll)ediate 6 pe rcent annual incre11e and mechanics a 14 percent annual raise. Firings sudden The driven will 1et 4 perceat increuea in each of the HCODd and third yean. The mechanics will 1et 6 percent next year and 5 percent in 1112. A maximum 7 percent annual cost·of-livint in· crease wu included in both con- tracts. The drivers and mechanics also convened on Wedoesd1y with negotiators of the United Transportation Union to approve the contracts. 4 on coast panels duniped by Senate 1 SACRAMENTO <AP> - Without advance notice, the new leadership or the state Senate has replaced one State Coastal Commission member and fired all three of its appointees to the Central Coast Regional Com· mission. Among those removed from office is Mary Henderson, chairwoman of the Central Coast Regional Commission and a chief target of pro· development interests in the Monterey Bay area. The actions were all taken without advance public notice Wednesday in a closed-door session of the Senate Rules Com- mittee. Word of the firings came from the commissioners who had been fired, and was con- firmed today by a committee spokesman. Hearing question Why not fly 'em over Neuport Bay? By STEVE MA&BLE Of .... o.u, rtlet ..... State noise hearings for John Wayne Airport took a humorous turn when attorneys inquired why some pilots veer over homes after departure instead of charting a course down the mid· die of the Newport Bay. Ray lltola. an attorney representing the City of Newport Beach, asked airport noise specialist Bill Martin Tuesday "why can't pilots just line themselves up with their eyes?" Martin, the eighth witness called in the bearings that began Monday to determine if the airport should be granted a noise variance, laughed and responded: "That sort or stuff went out with scarfs, leather helmets and goggles, you know." Martin and pilots rely on in· struments and communications with the airport tower to provide that information. He said a small error on the part of a pilot could cause such off-course de- partures: "You don't fly a plane liJte a train going down a railroad track -you can't make square turns," Martin said. Much of the afternoon's ques· tioniq by Ikola and attorney Thomu Edwards, repres-entins Newport Beach's Mariners Com- munity Association, was com· plex and technical ln nature. . Martin was asked al oQe polnt why Frontier Airlines, the newest carrier at the airport, was able to achieve lower noise readings than the other three airlines flying out or John Wayne. "Well," began r.tartin, "when Frontier learns to do their (sic) arithmetic correctly you'll fmd they're not so quiet. But they are still the quietest.'' Martin said his office provided Denver-based Frontier with the correct noise readings from the airport's nine monitoring sta- tions, but that "they went out and proceeded to do it wrong." Changing subjects, attorney Edwards challenged the effec· Liveness of providing a 24-bour telephone complaint line to resi· -dents irritated by jet noise. Martin suggested the com· plaints served several uses, in· eluding being "a relief valve" to angry homeowners. Martin said if complainers are able to pin- point the time of a passing "noisy'' jet, his office could write letters to the owner of the aircraft. Edwards also questioned the "quietness" of the new DC·9 Super 80, the jet advertised as the quietest commercial jet ever built. "Are.you familiar with any of the noise me11urement data from Burbank on the Super 80?" asked F.dwards, referring to an (See AmPO&T, Pate A.2) •••edfer~t OM fl l9i two • .,._ from Mr CaUlornia ••«• tl7 Uaat crubed lat wMk at = Cllllb'1 .lallla W~ ~ II ......... tenllft ........... ...... PraU a8ll WllltD,r Jet •llM wa pat Asked why the firings were done in secrecy, Rules Commit· tee spokesman Mel Assagi said the committee felt it was "a persoMel matter" similar to the replacement of other employees. ''With that evaluation, they are allowed to do it in closed session uunder a ruling provided by the Legislative Counsel," As· sagi said. At the state commission level. the Rules Committee replaced John Rush of Camarillo with George Shipp, a San Diego travel arent and president of the Clairemont·Mesa Chamber of Commerce. Assagi offered no explantation of that change except that "the Rules Committee just wanted to make a cbanie." On tM Central Coalt Reel d Commission, which covers San Mateo, Santa Cruz and ~on terey counties, the committee removed Ms. Henderson and commissioners Robert Gamberg and Norman Walters and replaced them with Larry Parent of Monterey, Jack Bullard of Santa Cruz and Stanley Doten of Foster Ci'y. Ms. Henderson's ouster also removed her as the central coast representative on the statewide com mission. In a statement issued through Assagi, Rules Committee ad- ministrative officer Nancy Burt said Gamberg and Walters - both regarded as allies of pro- development interests -were removed along with Ms. Hen- derson to get a fresh start. The Senate Rules Committee has authority to appoint three of the regional commiSBion's 16 mem· hers. Doten, a corporate law at· torney who also provides free legal aid to the poor as a member of San Francisco Neigb'borbood Lega.I Assistance Foundation, is regarded as an ally of environmentalists. Parent, a put president of the Monterey Peninsula Board of Realtors, and Bullard, tbe assis- tant district repreaent1tive of the 46-county Local 3 of the Operating En1ineers, are re· garded as allies of developers. llecbanics were to report to work today, driven on Friday. However, board members gave the atrikln• workers a . seven~)' lface period to return to work. District General Mana1er James Reichert said some ol the workers may have started new jobs, but "we'd like t-0getthe1ood ones back." He said about 10 percent of the work force usuaJly doesn't re· turn after a three·weelt strike. District officials fi8ure to have some ol the same problems with the estimated 40,000 daUy com· muten who formerly used the bus. The board of directors postpone(I' cooaideration of sll•· ing a "free fare" day to attr1ct riders. But they did decide to make the 12,480 February bua passes valid for the rest of this month and all of March. Riden who choose not to use the pauee. can 1et 80 percent ol their value back if the ,...... are turned In to the OCI'D'a Garden Grove he1dquarten by Mar~6. ·· Officials predicted it wW be about a month before ridenblp returns to normal levels. Even before the strike be,an, offlclala were conslderin8 fare increases to keep up with costs and to meet strtncent state re- (See BUSES, Pase AJ) APW ......... MANGLED INTERIOR OF MUNICIPAL RAILWAY BUS AnEA SAN FRANCISCO CRASH At leaat 41 people Injured, Mveral Hriouely, when bua, gravel truck collide Grier mulls • retirement date delay Margaret Grier says she'll consider staying on as director of Orange County's Human Services Agency after her an- nounced March 31 retirement date. Her comment to the Board of Supervisors Wednesday seemed to relieve the five members, who so far haven't agreed on a plan to rm her $62,000-a-yur position. Supervisors want Mlss Grier to remain with the county through budget sessions. which start in July, because she un· derstands the complicated finan· cial status of the HSA. which is the largest of the county's branches with about 2,800 employees. This summer's budget hear· ings appear to be particularly important for the HSA because it is predicted to be running about S3 million in the red. The HSA is an umbrella agen· cy that includes social services and public health programs. 49 riders injured in SF bus crash SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -At least 49 were injured today. several seriously, when a packed Municipal Railway bus collided with a tractor-trailer· truck hauling peat gravel in San Francisco's C hina Bas in , authorities said. ''They were trapped and wedged in. Limbs were caught under the seats,'· said Fire Department Battalion Chief Gerald Cullen. Six ambulances were used to take the most seriously injured to the hospital. Other victims were transported on a second Muni bus following the 7 a.m. crash, officials said. "We have about four or live critical injuries, three or four people with broken legs and a couple of back injuries. The rest have aches and pains." said a paramedic on the scene. Passengers with minor in- juries were placed aboard anothe Muni bus and taken to Mission, St. Luke's and Mount Zion bospitah. Joseph Zem, administrator of St. Luke's Hospital, said one of the 30 passengers taken there had suffered a ruptured spleen and another had a possible fr1c- tured skull. Most of the others had back and shoulder injuries. he said. Another 17 victims were taken to Mission Emergency, accord· ing to hospital s pokeswoman Miles Flores. Dr . Donald Trunkey said one of the victims appeared to be having circulatory problems and was paralyzed. Two passengers with minor in- juries were taken to Mount Zion Hospital, a spokeswoman said. Muni spokesman Robert Rockwell said the number of in- jured might have been as hilh as 55, but hospitals reported only 49 injured. Fund unit excites school officials The bus driver, John McGee, 45, who suffered multiple in· juries when he was pinned in the wreckage, joined Muni a month ago and bad been drivins a bus for three weeks, Rockwell said. The b\ii, according to truck driver Jeff Hayes, 2S, slammed into the tractor-trailer ril at a high rate of speed as the truck attempted a left turn. The front of the bus was demolished, crumpled back into the flnt rows of pauen1er seats. School officials have recon- firmed that they are anxious to re-establish 1n elementary schools reading pro•ram cut from Newport-Kesa District's bud1et thla year. Tbe 1l1nal came from the seven trustees foUowtn1 the re- quest ol Ellu6eth Paliner, pres- ident ol NewPOrt-Mesa Scbooll Foundation, for an update on where privately donated f\mds mi&bt be mo1t wiMl)' spent. 11.._. Palmer's non-prcftt or- caniution wu formed last fall to aid tbe onee-ricb puWie aehool district that bu suffered income, declinel due to decreutna ma- . dent .arollmeat, the reaultl ol Proposlticm 11 and court rulblp that all• 1.. at.ate mODeJ to wealtbJ dlltrieta and more to poo .......... Dr. .Jobn Nicoll, Newport· Mfta Dlatrict auperta...._t, told u ..... tbat abotlt -·• would be reqalr9d ••ola ~ to mataWDtbenaaedialNE#na procrem -from ... .., lelaoollLMt,..... Re Mid a,...... .. for 11tia• not ""af ................. ~::::r.:: -........... ....... Ill rnt1=:1a ... dlltrlft I 11111 Ill • Trustees indicated Tuesday that their second choice for privately donated funds would be maintenance of fine arts pro- grams. such as Instrumental music. Trustees g:aay have to cut such program--. from elementary schools next year in an effort to aave between S2 mJIUon and S5 million, Mrs. Palmer said Wednnday her orcani.Jation doesn't expect to launch-a.districtwide drive for fund• uaW a eomultant fhUlbel atudi• next month deslped to direct fund-raltinc efforts. -,Sbe aald tbe school board's wiab for a relldina prosram that could eolt up to ..,,000 come1 aa no .urprlae and don not repNMDt an unobtalllable .vr· •11oal. Sbe aald ber oraanlaaUOD probably wW -* dcmatl«m la the farm ol ....... npeNd to be r•ewed aanaa,IJ OHf a period~ yean. Tb• Newpor\·MHa faa4· ,......,.,.,.. .......... .... Clle"1N9. .... AI) IRAlll CUii IUllll Increasin1 cloudlne11 overnight. Chance of rain less than 10 percent toniabt and 20 pe~t Fri· day. Lowa tonlpt in the 40a. Hipa Frid1y IO to •· - Haley recalls 'Root8' birth llJJ09fNSSDllA• .............. It .._..._ftve1ean11MeAle• Hilo'• booll, "aoou," rtrst doc.amteted U. cultural herl~ andhi.aoryolblat>k Amtrteaaa. BYt tnt~•t lo U.. autbor'a lJ. year search for baa famUy's oriains. wlllt h I.ct hlm to a vlllaae i n West Afnca wber•UWnow l eaendary K1.anta Kiote "'as bound in c ha1n1 and placed aboard a slave ship s ix genera· KALn lions aao. bas not waned. Speaking to a crowd of about 400 people at UC Irvine Wednesday night. Haley said be felt the most effective thing he could do now is to share the behind the scenes in- sights that led to his writing ··Roots.'' Haley said words heard as a boy on a front porch in Henning, Tenn .. became art for him. ··A ritual developed at juat about supper time when my grandmother and her sisters would filler out to the front porch where they would talk about their family.·· Haley said. · · 1 heard stories about the old master and an old bull on the plan- tation named Bob, and a scan- dalous character named Chicken George and his mother Kizzy.'' Haley said the conversations would eventually turn to Kizzy's father, a man referred to in hushed. tones as the African, who said his name was Kun ta Kinte. · • 1 heard those stories night after night throughout several s ummer s.·· Haley said. "I became i mprinted with the stories. By the time I was 12 I bad to stop and think which were Bible characters and which were my ancestors." . The celebrated author said he was in Washington, D.C. just after lbe p.abUeaUoo ol b!a blo1rapful ol al aleolln X. the a11aalnattd leaderaltbe Black lluaUma. "I a..d worked with blm on lbe book f« two yean," Haley said, ··and M hid been killed Just u he h•d pr.dieted he wCMald. ·' He said he suddenly fell empty •fter compJeUna a project that bad otcupied so much of hl• We for 10 lone. For some reason 1UU unclear to him, be said he went in- to tbe NaUonaJ Archives bu.iJdina and asked for the census records of the North Carolina county where hia grandmother bad been born. On the microfilm be found bis 1reat-g:randlather's name, atone with the names of several other relatives. ··I began from lhal point not to search, but to become engrossed in the subject of the history of my family," Haley said. "ltwasaneerietypeofmission. J didn't know what to think of it,'· he said. Finally Haley's search led him to the village of J uffure in Gambia, West Africa, where he1 was told of the Kinte clan. The storyteller related how Haley's g:reat-great-great-great- great-g:randfather had been ab- ducted by slave traders while out in the forest chopping wood to makeadruminl767. "I can't begin to explain the power and emotional pus h " Haley said. "I came back fro~ Africa overwhelmed with the idea of what it would mean to write a book. "Before my search the most I knew about Africa -ridiculous as it sounds-was Tarzan and Jane that we have all seen on movies and television." Haley said he bad never in- tended to become a writer, and that a string of accidents led him to his occupation. "I had no ideal would ever be successful,'' he said. "It I did I would have typed faster." Suspect in Newport sex assaults held A Yorba Linda man who wears a golden · eagle charm around his neck is suspected of sex assaults against at least two women he allegedly victimized in public powder rooms at two Newport Beach hotels . Steven Robert Olea, 28, who police said is married and the father of several children, was captured Wednesday night following an attack on a woman in the ladies room at a bayside hotel. The woman began screaming and tryi.ng to fight off her at- tacker and he was caught by hotel security personnel as he tried to flee, police said. Using information obtained from the Wednesday night episode, Newport Beach Detec- tive Sue Race said she contacted the victim of a similar incident that occurred two weeks ago. ··The details in both were almost identical.·• Detective Race said. adding that the woman r;tped early in February viewed mug shots of the suspect booked in Wednesday's case and allegedly identified him. Detective Race said that in each case, the attacker warned his victim he had a weapon, bul never showed one, nor did he beat or maim his victims. But he left them with the inevitable trauma associated with a sexual assault. She described Olea as a sharp fashionable dresser and a rathe; handsome man and said he told her he is president or his own company. Detective Race said Olea is being held in lieu or $25,000 bail. She urged any other women who might contribute information about similar attacks to call her at 6«-3784. Hairdresser 'talked out' of her car Ir vine hairdresser Patricia Kim Letter has told police that her car -with a license plate reading "KIM CUTS" -has fallen into the hands of a smooth talker she met in a local restaurant. Miss Letter, 23, who works at Saks of Irvine. reported to police that she met the man at the eatery and agreed to drive him around to find his car. which he said was parked somewhere in · the area of the restaurant. When they couldn't find it, they drove to her house and she agreed to let him borrow her car so that he could find his own. That's the last she saw of her two -door Mazda with the personalized license plate. ............ 'SIDEBY SIDE' Thatcher •nd A••e•n Reagan, Thatcher eye Russ WASIUNGTON <AP> -Presi- dent Reagan said today be and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher agree that a Soviet proposal for a U.S. -Soviet summit conference "needs to be carefully studied." ··For our part, we certainly have an interest in pursuing a serious, constructive dialogue with the Soviets on the issues which divide us," Reagan said following a two-hour Oval Office meeting with Mrs. Thatcher. Reagan's remarks were his most positive response to the proposal for a summit made Monday by Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev. The next day. Reagan called the proposal "very interesting" but said So· viet involvement in El Salvador would need to be "straightened out·· before he would agree to a summit. Indeed, Reagan sounded a cautionar y note in welcoming Mrs. Thatcher to the White House, saying: "Our challenge today is to ensure that belligerence is not attempted again by the false perceptions or weakness. "So long as our adversaries continue lo arm themselves at a pace far beyond the needs or de- fense. so the free world must do whatever is n ecessar y to safel'(uard its own security." He said "a stronger . more vigilant NATO must be the back- ground of that security and of our effort for equitable arms control." Fro• Page Al AIRPORT. • airport now served by the Super 80s. Martin said he hadn't seen any monitoring figures and suggest- ed the information might not yet be available. He said he had read literature on the new craft. "Well, tell us then ." said Edwards, "who advised the county supervisors on the 80s." · Martin said Airport Manager Murry Cable discussed the features of the Super 80s with s upervisors . Cable testified Tuesday that his understanding of the new craft also was based on literature and a test or the Super 80 at John Wayne last year. The variance h earing , or iginally scheduled for one week, now is projected to last at least anothe1· week. Detective Race said the at- tack er apparently would wait until he saw an attractive woman entering the ladies room he had under surveillance. l' .... r-.AI Relatively certain she was alone inside, he would qulcltly slip inside and confront his vic- tim as she stepped out of a stall. BUSES ROLL FRIDAY •... qulrements for recovering at least 20 percent of the district's operating costs through fares. s trike coudld cause new fares to reach $1 a ride. A jury return• to Oraa1e County Superior Court next week to decide whether 23-year- old John Alan Keltb of San Clemente, convicted of the lt7I 1layln1 ol a Corona del Mar real estate salesman, should be sen- tenced to death. The 1ix-man, six-woman jury deliberated only 10 hours over a two-day period Wednesday before findinl Keith 1uilty of first de&ree murder ln the blud1eonln1 and attempted mitre saw decapitation of Ruben Martinez, 40. Keith, one of two men char1ed in the murder, also was convict- ed by the jury of robbery and burglary , two s pecial circumstances that' qualify him for the deaUI penalty. Judge Donald Mcc artin who presided over Keith's trial, or· dered jurors to return Wednes· day for the start of the penally phase. Following presenta tion of evidence, the panel will be asked to decide whether Keith, who ad- mitted his role in the slaying, should die in the state's gas chamber or be imprisoned for life without possibility or parole. The second defendant, An· thony David Bies, 20, of Dana Point, was convicted or first degree murder in the Martinez slaying in December. Bies cur- rently is undergoing 90 days of diagnostic testing at Chino State Prison. He does not face the death penalty because of his age at the time the crime occurred. Farewell prayer Pope John Paul II kneels to pray at Nagasaki monument to Cath~lic martyrs shortl~ before leaving Japan today and flying to Alaska. A bnef stopover there will be the last one on the pope's final leg home from his Asian tour. Keith and Bits were linked to the crime throuih the testimony of Walter DaLie. a police inform· ant who lured the two defend- dants to an El Toro motel where they discussed the slaying as police investigators secretly re- corded the con versations on videotape. Three OC lawyers appointed judges Keith testified during his trial that anger and fear of homosex· uals -brought on by encounters he witnessed while in Orange County Jail in 1977 -caused him to attack Martinez in the bedroom of the victim 's res· idence. Martinez was r epeatedly struck in the head with a 30. pound, star s haped candle. Later, Keith testified. he took a 1 mitre box saw from a closet and drew it across the victim's neck four times. Three Orange County at· torneys, all of whom served at one time or another a s deputy district attorneys. have been a ppointed to judicial seats by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Ronald Eugene Owen was na m ed to a new post on the Orange County Superior Court. Named to the North Orange Coun· ty Municipal Court were Jean Rh einhe ime r and J ohn W. McOwen. Owen, 43, who has been in private practice for the past 11 years. fills one of four new judgeships on t he 46 m ember Bolt jolts jet .. LA-to-London plane 0 K LON DON (AP) A thunderbolt smashed a two-foot hole in the nosecone of a London-bound British Airways jumbo jet carrying 202 passengers after it took off from Los Angeles today the airline reported. The bolt destroyed the Boeing 747's weather radar system when it struck five minutes after takeoff, a spokesman said. No in· juries were reported . Despite the gaping hole. the airliner flew 10 hours to London's Heathrow airport where it landed safely. Passengers on the flight said there was a loud bang which sounded like a shell exploding when the thunderbolt hit. One traveler said: ·'There was a flash and a bang. There was no panic and the pilot calmly explained what had happened.·• The pilot.Capt. Ray Dodwell, said therewasnodanger. "Luckily the lightning struck on a non-pressurized area. We didn't know there was a hole in the nosecone until we landed in Lon· don." Orange County Superior Court bench. The Orange resident leaves the law firm of Cohen. Stokky. Owen and Davis in Santa Ana. Previous- ly he served as an Orange County de puty district attorney. Owen received hi s bachelor degree from Ohio State and his law degree from Hastings Coll ege of the Law. Rheinheimer. 52, was named to a vacancy on the North Orange County Municipal Court. replac- ing James Wright Cook. who was elected to the Superior Court. She was formerly a deputy at- torney in charge of the special as· signment section and the career criminal prosecution unit. She previously worked in the major fraud section and was in private practice before that. She received her law degree from Pepperdine University. Mcowe n. a 48-yea r -old at· torney in private practice. was also named to the north municipal co urt. r e pl aci n g R o b ert FitzgeraJd. who is now Superior Courtjudge. f'ro• Page Al FUND ••. an organization offering aid to the previously wealthy Beverly Hills School District. The Beverly Hills c itizens group raised about $500,000 this year. '• .. .. Detective Race considered it strange that the suspect would wear such a striking piece of men's jewelry on a 1olden chain around his neck. It ls a 1 ~ inch golden eagle that any victim could recognize easily. the de· tective said. Clark continued bis hard line against the s tr ike at Wednesday's meeting. He said the settlement was fair, but claimed the district was willing to make the same concessions before workers ever left their jobs. 1"':' ORANGE COAST Diiiy Piiat ThomM P. Hiiey ,__., =.:N.W..ct L Thoma1 KMYll ~Murphlne Ctwtll H. Loos ._. .............. ~lctlulman ~.s:='" ~OoddWf. District board Chairman Ralph Clark said the as yet un- determined loss of fareboll rev- enue and federal aid from the Cl .. lllled ed¥9rtl91nt 7141M2·M71 AM otMr •p11.....,.. 142-4121 MAINOfftea m wett ..,M., c. .. -... CA. · .... ...._, ... ,teo,c-Mne,CA . .,.. "I personally bave a llqttiq beUef that this enUre bu strike was unnece11ary. It was not needed," he said. Reichert said the mechanics received much bl1ber waces than the driven because the dis- trict wu lolllll Its trained dieeel mechanics to private buaineuea that paid better. R1ther than caJUnc the lm· mediate raise 1 14 percent an- nu1J lncnue, district olftciall termed the new offer a I pereent 1 ratae with a 5 percent "adjust- ment." Under lb• new contr•cts, drlHtl wUI earn top par of Ill.• aD bour 1Mte.. of tbe ,... •·• lleellula _!°!Ill • ,., of 111.11 r•u.T tbm ................ I\ lntra-thin ~ An 18k aold stbbed Cale wtch bl8clt enamel dial On I handlome l1W'd amp Hand-crafted ln Swttzerland. . ... ----. \f3Jlll <llJa/Ji4 CJ/NjllJ/ ,,,.. /evr.lry 35 FASHION ISLAND • N~ IEACH, CALIFORNIA t2MO TEUf'HONl (714) 644-2494 , Theater Project need8 more help am. u~ 1c1aoo1 D6ttrict .,... .... may mill • .,..._ ~ty II lMY ~-to •••me a ncmeom· lalUal llttltude towanl U.. ~led clnelopmmt al a ............_ arta U..•• by Iii 1 ol lrvia• Ud the Sad· aleMc* Oiinm.at1 Coll••• D61&rtet. Jntm dty alftclall an klaklal for odMr 1overnmee- tal ......_ to part6clpate la U.. development Of a tbeat.r fOf' wlliela l.M city hu 11.a muuon in unapent bond rev-.. .=i•ealativ• al s.ddleback Community Col1e1e Oil ha\le aboMi lnl.,...t m tM project and have ten- lati\leJy commJued to belsaa ftnance lt. Wtlh that encour11ement from the c0Jle1e diltriet, city offiriab bave been movtna ahead with plans for a the· ater. but there is •llll a Morta1e of ready cash for the pro- ject So far however, Irvine school district trustees say onJy that they're interested. but not enouah so to spell out any financial commitment. . The school district, like mc»t aovemmental agencies, faces an uncertain financial future and has many de· manda on its budeet. It may be tbat the district can't al· ford any financial participation in the theater project, though it could be of ereat benefit to Irvine stud~nts . If this is the case, school district officials should say as much and entirely withdraw fr~m the theater plann~g effort being undertaken by the city and the college dis- trict. If on the other hand, the school district can find enoug0h money to help finance a. mutually beneficial facility, that too should be made plam. Constructive efforts It's hard to believe that the Greater Irvine Industrial League is already celebrating its loth anniversary. . The league is an organization with 510 member firms ranging in size from the giant Fluor Corp. to small pro- prietorships. . League members all operate businesses within 10 miles of Orange County's John Wayne Airport. The _league pr~ vides a vehicle within the industrial community for bus1· nessmen to address a number or issues of common concern such as traffic, housing and land use matters. . And the Greater Irvine Industrial League's letter writ· · ing campaign inf av or of a separate state transportation dis· trict for Orange County played a role in the eventual de· cision to establish it. More than 80,000 employees are employed by fi rms belonging to the league, and those people, if marshaled behind a common cause. can be a powerful force for the bet- terment of Orange County. · On the league's loth birthday it is in order to commend the organization for its efforts to meet county problems and to improve both the business climate and the lives of work· ing people. Honor 01erited The average police investigator solves about 35 per- cent of the cases he bandies. · Irvine police Detective Paul Jessup solved 85 percent or the cases assigned to him in 1980. And for this accomplishment, among others, Jessup has been named the city's 1980 Police Officer of the Year by the Exchange Club. . . In addition to his excellent cnme-solution record, Jessup in 1980: . . . -Arrested a man in connection with a maJor em- bezzlement and recovered $250,000 in the case. -Broke up a $1 million pyrami~ scbe~e. . -Solved a $3 million theft case mvolvmg propnet.ary information taken from a computer firm. -Recovered 98 percent of the property lost in crime cases he investigated. -Won the release of a cockatoo being held for ransom. . Such work by J essup and other Irvine police officers of ten goes unappreciated by the public. It is an OPJ><?rtu,ne ti me to thank a police force that by all accounts does it.I Jot very professionally. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their aut~ors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P .O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/Airborne pot ByL.M. BOYD Q . Wh at happe n s t o somebody who smokes mari- juana on a commercial airline flight? A. The mght attendant tells the captain and the captain radios the police at the next airport. Our Chier Prognosticator says you can expect three- dimensional television shows on cable within a year or so. There's something in your skin that works a little bit like starch. A tough protein called collagen. Women's skin COil· ta Ins less of it than men's, And Tar and featben mllbt warm up tbat cold· blooded woman wllb the airport bearlDI sip, "A a'Mb a day lleePI u.JMl6ie awQ. ,. PASSENGER ON FLIGHTm both women and men produce less of it as they age. The medicos say this is why older women have thinner skin thatl older men. And why they seem to show their years more readily. Their skin has less support than men's. Composers of music have been lifting me lodies from previous works just about as far back as music goes. evidently. Even that elderly tune "Good Night , Sweetheart" was taken from ··Les Preludes" by Uitz. Q. Settle a bet. I've got a s mall sum watered on my claim that Peter Pan, Tinker Bell and anoclates lived in a place called Never Never Land. _ A. You io.e. Thal place ia Just called Never Land. Regrets. A New York pboto1· rapber recently waa H · iltned by Worldn1 Mother maaulne to aboot ptctu ... ln Central Park. To II· lustrate a atory about bow Hie It is to let eblldno plaJ 'there. He was beaten up, ltabbed .... robbed. If JOU stand OD the lowelt point la Colorado -at .._, fMt -JW'N IUll bl ..... ... u. ~ pablta .. 11 ............ Jack Andenon ~g war sparks . agency fight WASHING TON -For more tbu a decade. the federal 1ov- ernment hat been lo1ln1 its mulUmUlloD-dollar war a1ainst the lnternatlonal dope lraf· ficller1. But one · 1overnment a1ency thinks it knows bow to revene tbe Ude of battle. The U.S,. Customs Service wants to 1et back the responaibllilY. for narcotics policing , which was taken away from it and 1iven to the Drug En · lo t-ce men t Admlnistra· lion during the 19708. It's a suggestion that is not surpris· Ing in Washington , where Mailbox bureaucratic infl1btin1 over "turf" can be u intense u the atru11le acainat the problems involved. Customs officials saw the Republicans' return to power - and tbelr determination to cut government spending -as a golden opportunity to recapture some of o~·s functions and, of course, Its budfet. The Reagan administration will have to referee the long-simmering in· leragency feud that has again bubbled totbesurface. BUDGET OFFICIALS told my associates Indy Badhwar and Jack Mitchell that no firm plans for the narcotics budget have been formulated yet. But one of. fi cial acknowledged that DEA's functions "duplicate a variety of agencies, not just Cus toms." / The dru1 a1ency naturally will not sit quietJy by while it is diamembered like baloney throuth a meat s licer. But it bas severe ima1e problems to ex· plain, u well as the inescapable fad that it has failed lo stop the nood of narcotics pouring into the United States each year. Despi te some highly publicized drug busts, DEA's critics contend that Ute agency is an expensive washout and is torn with internal dissension and low morale. The charges are partially corroborated by some of its own agents. THERE HAVE been embar· rassing Incidents that lend credence to the criticism . Federal investigators have been looking into charges of preferen- tial baggage-inspection treat- ment ordered by the bead of DEA's New York offlee. And al· le1atiom of perjury and har .... ment in lhe Western Reslaaal Office forced a recent shak•up there. In the past 18 monlld, federal invesU1aton have ~d ConJNU that "the Drut Enforcement Ad· ministration and the law en· forcement comm un lty in general have moved slowly in ef- fectively using conspiracy laws to immobilize major drug traf- fickers." They also faulted DE A's parent agency. the Justice Department, which they said "has not adequately planned or directed 'pros~cuti~ e fforts against major traf. tickers." DEA Administrator Peter Bensinger disputes hi• agency's critics. He claims that DEA was ·:way out in front" in spotting the threat of heroin from Southwest Asia, insistS that its intelligence work has improved, and says t hat DEA was in· strumental in the passaae of laws that put tougher penalties on drug.related crimes. MEANWHILE, des p ite a large.scale effort, the dope traf- fic flourishes. Intelligence re- ports warn that LSD, the da "\gerously unpredict.able hallucinogen of the 1960s, is becoming popular again. Equal· ly disturbing in terms of long- . range health problems is the rampant use of PCP, or "angel dust.•• Aside from the physical and mental damage lo actual users, the narcotics trade makes in· direct victims of us all. Street crimes and burglaries provide the money that addicts must have lo support their habit. One res pected study. for example, showed that during an ll·year per iod . 243 addicts accounted for an astonishing 473,000 crimes. 'Public hearing' opens a citizen's eyes To the Editor : I am writing this letter out of frustration and sadness that go deep to the bone. For the first time in my life, I spent the day with my county representatives, the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The subject of dis - cussion was the master plan for the John Wayne Airport. Naive- ly, I thought people. the voters and taxpaying residents, could make a difference in · this de· cision-making process. Instead, I was stunned with the truth: The decision to accept the master plan had been made by our "representatives" (and I use the term loosely) weeks and pe rhaps months before this public hearing. J went to this h e aring representing mysetr, not an or· ganization. I possess no dis- tinguished titles. Simply, I am a wife and mother whose family lives under the flight pattern. We are subjected daily to severe disruptions caused by the jets flying over our home. Thia is very annoying, but truthfully. not my greatest concern. Since last year's disastrous San Diego air crash, I have had a monumental fear that sooner or later a similar accident could happen in o.ur neighborhood. Within walking distance or our bome is an elementary school containing 600 children. What would be their fate if a jet dropped out of the s ky and crashed on them? The prospect of additional flights as advocat· ed by the master plan with dis · regard for additional safety pre· cautions only increases the percentage chances of such a tragedy occurring. WITH THESE fears in mind, emphasized by Air Calirornia's near disastrous crash the night before, I went to the ·'Public Hearing" assured that my representatives would want to hear from me. Wbat I wltnMMd was the most demo.raliainl ex· perience ol my life. J saw and beard the chairman of the board, Ralph Clark, tell a speaker "to 10 to hell." Is this proper decorum for an elected oUlclal presiding over a public meetlnl, J wondered? Repealed· ly, be lnlulted, airport opponents with 1aeen and aarcum. Ills appearance wu one of total dla· lntereat , . . that ls until the 1entlemin representln1 the bualneu interests of the county made their preaentaUona. Mr. Clark aotually apolo1iled to them for bavln1 to listen to tbe tetJlrnoa.y of ~ of ua most ed· venely affected by tbe alrpart and Ill propoll8d expaaaton. J am emotJoaaUy drained. My lntroductlaa into tbe world of tM poUUcal macb!De wu swlft ad 1barp. I MY• alway1 lllle""9d, lndHd llop•d.1. lbal we, aa eUlseu, eoula malle a dlf · , ....... --·· ........ ..... 11ow.-,faalillaot••· · R. WJl.l,IAMS Nol la~ ••ftf11 To the Editor: Recently the city of Newport Beach ran advertisements in various O range County newspapers suggesting the pro- posed improvements in the John Wayne Airport master plan may be a .. waste of taxpayers money." The public should be told that all monies for airport improvements would come from airport users a nd not from general tax funds. The Federal Airport Develop· ment Aid Program maintains a trust fund of more than S4 billion, all contributed by a head tax on airline passengers and a portion of the funds needed would come from that source. The balance would be derived from revenues such as leases. parking and landing fees. Any revenue bonds that might be is· sued would also be serviced by this income. To suggest this project would be a "waste of taxpaye rs funds" is not accurate. The plan can provide badly needed improve· ments that will benefit all the citizens of Orange County who need air transportation. JOSEPH E . IRVINE Executive Director Community Airport Council H•PJll lwr' To the Editor: I am really happy that I live here. In a town where there are such humanitarians as the one who helped the 53.year ·old woman in need of convalescent hospital care. And in a town with a hometown newspaper which prints, on the front page <Feb. 20), human interest true life stories about the thoughtful consideration of the people in Its community. Instead of being like those other papers which blast you with sensationalism of crime and devastation. Thank you David Kutamann for your article, and thank you Dally Pilot for recognidng ita newsworthiness. ELIZABETH LAUFORD s,.,, I• t•e• To the Editor: To tboee of us who Uve in the 36th State Senate District, 1~ Schmits, state Senator, bas lOftl been an embarrusment. H1I re· cent attaclu on Marlin Luther King were only the latest in a seriea of UllJ, ne1at1ve, prej- udiced statemmta made by blm on a varletyd1ubjects. Now the Senate Ruin Com· mlttee, beaded by Sen. David Roberti, ~u named Wt ume Schmits tq tbe state Status of Women qomml11l0Jl, a com· mi11lon whoH Hl'Y ulatmee Sebmlta baa alwa,s OptOMd. 8 comm...._ wboH purpoH • to r.:rom• Uie welfare. rtabta and tenetaofWOllM9. Tbe 11111 .... Of le"8lU .. a 1lap ta die fen to all wt-. a disgraceful act. It seems that the Senate Rules Committee has deliber ately chosen the most destructive individual it could find. Is the Senate Rules Com· miltee trying to obliterate the Status of Women Commission? Are our legislators so arrogant, indifferent, and ignorant that they feel no responsibility to the women of this stale? VIVIA N HALL Sherl·•l<t'd To the Editor: We have now had a major disaster at the airport. Does Supervisor Ralph Clark think by increasing the number of commercial passenger jetliner flights we can decrease the odds o f losing many Ii ves in the future? The short·s ighted mentality of the board members on true economic impact is appalling. Note the increased medical and material costs due to air and noise pollution (London study confirmed latter >: note the increased time losses and a nxiety due to veh i~l e and people congestion; and note the phony lip.service to "quality of life" while the continuing development syndrome causes the opposite effect and can result in property value loss . IT IS OBVIOUS that the supervisor from my area, Toin Ril ey. is incompetent in judgment lo represenJ. me. I've lived here for 43 years and my family has been In this area since near the turn of the century. Gone are the days of appreciative use of our beaches (serving the whole county) free of aircraft noise and hearing \he surf (let alone other natural sounds). Wlll the area as a whole ao the way of the Upper and now Lo"\ver Bays? Unable to sustain varied lire at quality levels? We need city councils. county supervisors, and newspapers which care about a heritage for the future. Unfortunately th.is takes lmowleqe and courap to be able to exercise tbe simple , common aeoae to resilt mudl ti what the business people think It best for our place to Uve. No on airport expansion. Better yet a contraction ol the present airport -and get on with a different location. Ontario · wanta the planes -many of ua do not. DONALD B. BEA1TY filMl•twHfJI To the EditDr: · Your edJtorlai of Feb. 21, "Hl&b Cclll ot Movlq," In re· ••rd to .... ,......tin. ot tbe Wblte Houleis a smaaber. UnW It eame out I 61 nat know tbat Dd•au ""'"batiw lD UM ....mt 'ol ID.000. la de-dudllH to .. W1alta ,._. .... torieal Alladatkm, ·::.=i .............. _ . • Gs were not enough. We have an old house under red ecorating process a nd the work I do myself. If Uncle Sam cares to chip in a mere SSOO I'd be delighted to accept. WARREN G. ALTHOFF a, pr.,,•r'd To the Editor: The other night I pulled a young woman out from her over- tu rne d s oft-t oppe d car on Laguna Canyon Road. By the grace of God she had only a scratch. but the car looked like it had been in a trash compac- tor. On my way home I wondered whatever had happened to the warning signs on this road. si~s wa rning of the number of acc1· dents and fatalities and advising extreme caution. Another point : Of fi ve or so carloads of people who stopped to help, only my husband and I had emergency flares in our vehicle. The other people had f l as hlights but t h ey are dangerous to the people holding them to slow down traffic. If you don 't carry flares in your car. get some. If you drive any road you should be prepared not just in driving skills, but in first aid and traffic control. VICK I BORTHWICK Fl~ dw plaft To the Editor: Your editorial on the airport in the Feb.· 17 issue of the Dally Pilot was very good . Your analysis of it as being inade· quate, out of date. unsatisfac· tory and by inference, beyond redemption is certainly apropos. Your advice that action should be taken now is likewise right to the point. However your con· clusion is in error. THE AIRPORT should be given over entirely lo activities other than commercial carriers. There is not enough space adja- cent to it to ever make ll into a real airport, the idea of spend.int any more dollan on it to try and make it into a major air terminal is futile. A new location must be found now and de· veloped properly. It i1 impoul· ble to tum what started u a barnstormin1 enterprlH Into anything reaembUn1 a major terminus just the same u el sow 'a ear into a 1Uk purse and etc. The muter plan is jat a Illa; let it 1atber dust alonf. wttla 1M many a&ban. •ad let 1 ,_ • wllb the real' ... wer -• ... and cWfennt lit.. · ...... ALAN'L . ...u• ,_,___t_.~__;_~--~~~~~~~~----: • Feds' requirement overloob reality It'• Ume for u.. federaJ 1ovenunent to UM 10me lftH ID IP I #DI lH dallan Colla M•a Clty Council rnem._. cleelared lut ..U bi balllla1 at • federal re· q1alre • for air fCmdltioe'"' la low·Mleom• apartmepu. Cwll memben trimed the propoMd eapenditure. required 111J Ute HouainC ud Urban Development Depart- ment. fJ'Ollft plan1 for lbe Wallace Redevelopment area pro Jed It turned out that none ot the councU membeH needed or bad alr-rooditioned homes. And why indeed 1boWd they" Not an a city tbat once proc:lalmed itself "TbeCityol Air condJUonedSunlb.ine." The WaJla~e proJeCt, 50 apartments lo be built for (ederaUy subsidi~ed renter•, 11 a city Redevelopment Agency pn>ject featurin1 land purchased in the heart of Costa Mna with federally aUoc:ated dollars. As such, the project must be designed under HUD :iitandards requiring air conditioning Slashing the ~ir <-o nditioning, a probable savings of $60,000, could Jeopardize the whole low-income rental project , officials believe. Uthe feds won't accept the city's plan for trimming what is believed to be a superfluous expenditure, "We don't build the project," said Vice Mayor Donn Hall. With President Reagan making a nti-government spending noises in Washington, HUD should authorize the project anyway. The amount of saving isn't monumental. but it's cer· tainly a move in the right direction. Trip views differ While Costa Mesa's City Council is quick to save the f ederaJ government a few dollars by challenging the need for air conditioning in homes for federally subsidized renters. it's a bit more lenient with local tax dollars. The entire five· member council. the city manager and the city attorney will be orr t o Washington, D.C., this weekend to attead the annual National League of Cit ies convention. The journey will cost local taxpayers something like $6.000 or more. Mayor Arlene Schafer points out that the trip is taken only every two years a nd offers the local officials one-on· on e meetings with national bureaucrats and represen· tatives in a position to help with local programs. The plan for an en masse exodus to the nation's capital raised a few smothered guffaws in nearby Newport Beach. Apparently Mayor Jackie Heather will bind the City of Newport Beach's ties in Washington s ingle handedly. She'll attend the five-day conference alone, al her own expense . . . Deillocratic approach A Newport Beach res ident who described herself as a teacher and a counselor recently took Costa Mesa's City Council to task for holding lengthy public hearings. She lashed the council twice -once during a pro- longed hearing regarding proposed recaU o( the Cuckoo's Nest punk rock bar's entertainment permit and again during public comment regarding proposed razing of a privately owned hou se considered a nuisance by neighbors . . 1 ·'This public nuisance . . . has been going on for years." she commented. "What does it take to get the authority in the city to prevent aJl these citizens from having to take a night off to sit here and take our time to come and give testimony a nd evidence when obviously som e or you must know what's going on." She declared. "There's too much leniency," and recommended a "slap on the hand." "I wish you'd ch a nge;your procedures or do som ething to ... eliminate all of this unnecessary trou· ble that the people go through.'· Mayor Arlene Schaf er reminded her that the hearing process is what "a public nuisance is all about -people who are willing to not only sit here but go to court to testify in front or a judge. "Lots of times. we s ay. ·1 won't go that far.' and so we (the council) can't get anywhere:· the mayor con· tinued. She might have added that the hearing a nd due· process procedure marks the big difference between a dictatorship and a democracy -painful as the process may seem at times. • • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo)( 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 1 Boyd/Airb~rne pot By L.M. BOVO Q. Whal h appe n s l.o somebody who smokes mati· juanaonacommercial airline flight? A. The nighl attendant lells the captain and the captain radios the police at the next airport. There's somethin~ in your skin that works a little bit like star ch. A tough protein called collagen. Women's skin con· ta ins less of it than men's. And Tar and reatben mi,ht warm up tbat cod· blooded woman ~lth the airport hearln1 alcn. "A crash a day tee~ the noise away.'' PASSENGER ON t'LJGHT 331 C,toomy (JU\ t0"'"'' "'' ,.,, \ub M lllPd .,. , ... d~•· M•d ,,~ no• n•c. ., ... ,.,. rfttlt"(t UWI' '""w' o• tr\r llfW\f)AIW'' "'"° •Oii• Ol'I ""'we ·~ 01~,.,, 011• O"tlf l"IOI both women and men produce less of it as they age. The medicos say this is why older women have thinner skin than older men . And why they seem lo s how their years more readily. Their skin has less support. than men's. Our Chief Prognosticator says you can expect three- dimensional television shows on cable within d year or so. Q. Settle a bet. I've got a small sum wagered on my claim that Peter Pan. Tinker Bell and associates lived in a place called Never Never Land. A. You lose. That place is jus t called Never Land. Regrets. A New York photos· rapher recently "H H · ilgned by Working Mother matHine to alHN>t ·pictures in Central Park. To H· lustrat.e a story about how ufe lt la to l« children play there. He waa beaten up, llabbed and robbed. U yoo •tancl on the loweet point in Colorado -at 3,J!O feet -you're •till hilher tban tbe hl8helt polnta In 18 other atates. Thurlday. February J. 1981 'Thomes P. Heley/PubU1her Berber• tc.relbt<h 'Edltoriet Pege Rdttof . . war sparks agency fight W ASH!NGTON -For more tban • decade. the federal cov· ernment has been losin1 ita multlmillion·dollar war a1alut tbe international dope traf· tickers. But one 1overnment agency thinks it knows how to reverse t.he Ude of battle. The U.S. Customs Service wants to get back th e responsibility for narcotics p o Ii c Ing , whi c h was taken away from it and given to the Drug En · for ce m ent Administra· lion during the 1970s. It's a sug~estion that is not surpris· ing in Was hington . where Mailbox bureaucratic lnli1bUn1 over "turf" can be u intense u the 1tru1&1e againlt the problems- involved. Customs orficiala saw the Republicans' return to power - and U.elr determination to cut government spending -as a golden opportunity to recapture some of DEA 's functions and, of coune, its budget. The Reagan administration will have to referee the long-simmering in· teragency reud that has again bubbledtolbesurface. BUDGET OFFICIALS told my associates Indy Badhwar and Jack Mitchell that no firm plans for the narcotics budget have been formulated yet. But one of· ficial a~knowledged that DEA's functions "duplicate a variety of agencies, not just Customs." I The drug a1ency naturally wUJ not sit quietly by whUe it ii dismembered like baloney throuah a meat slicer. But It hu severe imqe problems to ex· plain, u well as the inescapable fact that it bas failed to atop the flood ol narcotics pouring into the United States each year. Des pite some highly publicized drug busts, DEA's critics contend that the agency is an expensive washout and is torn with internal dissension and low morale. The charges are partially corroborated by some of its own agents. . THERE HAVE been embar· rassing incidents that lend credence to the criticism. Federal investigators have been looking into charges of preferen- tial baggage-inspection treat· ment Ofdered by the bead ol DEA'1 New York office. And aJ. letaliona ol perjury and barua· ment ln the Western Re1lonal Otrice forced a recent shake-up there. In the past 18 months, rederal invesU1ators have told Contress that "the Drug Enforcement Ad· ministration and the law en· forcement comm unity in general have moved slowly in ef· fectively using conspiracy laws to immobilize major drug traf· tickers." They also faulted OEA's parent agency, the Justice Department, which they said "has not adequately planned or directed proaecutive efforts against major traf· fickers." DEA Administrator Peter Bensinger disputes hla agency's critics. He claims that DEA was "way out in front" in spotting the threat of heroin from Southwest Asia, insist.a that its intelligence work has improved. and says that DEA was in· strumental in the passage of laws that put tougher penalties on drug-related crimes. MEANWHILE, despite a large-scale effort, the dope traf· fie flourishes. Intelligence re· ports warn that LSD. the dangerous ly unpre d ictable h allucinogen of the 1960s, is becoming popular again. Equal· ly disturbing in terms of long· range health problems is the rampant use of PCP. or "angel dust.·• Aside from the physical and mental damage to actual users. the narcotics trade makes in· direct victims of us all. Street crimes and burglaries provide the money that addicts must have to support. their habit. One respected study, for example, showed that during an 11-year period. 243 addicts accounted for an astonishing 473.000 crimes. 'Public hearing' opens a citizen's eyes To the Editor : I am writing this teller out of frustration and sadnes:. thal go deep to the bone. For the first ti~e in my life, I s pent the day wilh my county representatives, the Or ange County Board of Super visors. The subject of dis· cussion was the master plan for the John Wayne Airport. Naive- ly. I thought people. the voters and taxpaying residents. could make a difference in this de· cision·making process. Instead. I was stunned with the truth: The decision lo accept the master plan had been made by our "representatives" (and I use the term loosely) weeks and perhaps months before this public hearing. I went t o thi s h earing representing myself, not an or· ganizalion. I possess no dis · ti ngUJshed titks Simply. I am a wife anc:I mother whose family lives under the flight pattern. We are subjected daily to severe- disruplions caused by the jets fly ing over our home. This is very annoying, but truthfuJly, not my greatest concern. Si nce last year's disastrous San Diego air crash. I have had a monumental fear that sooner or later a similar accident could happen in our neighborhood. Within walking distance of our home is an elementary school containing 600 children What would be their fate 1f a jet dropped out of the s ky and crashed on them? The pros pect of additional flights as advocat- ed by the master plan with dis· regard for additional safely pre· cautions only in creases the percentage chances or such a tragedy occurring. WITH THESE fears in mind. emphasized by Air California's near disastrous crash the ni&bl before. I went to the "Public Hearing" assured that my representativ~ would want to hear from me. What J witnessed was the most demoralizing ex· perlence or my We. I saw and heard lhe chairman of the bOard, Ralph Clark, tell a speaker "to 10 to hell." ls this proper decorum for an elected orrtcial presiding over a public meetlnt, I wondered? Repealed· ly, be insulted airport opponents with sneers and skrcasm. His appearance was one of total dis· interest . • . that is until the gentlemen representtng the buslneu interests or the county made their presentations. Mr. Clark actually apolotlaed lo them for bavtn1 to liaten to the testimony of lbo9e of ua moet ad· versely affected by the airport and ita propc»ed expanaion. I am emotionally drained. lly lntroducUon lnto the world of tM poUUcaJ machine waa twill and tbNp. I ... ve alwa~1 believed, indeed 19oped, tbat we, H cltlHDI, could make a dH· fereae.. e1.,edally ln local la- 1ue1. ffowv91"1fooU1bolme. R, Wll.LLUIS Not fa.r •onry To the Editor: Recently the cily of Newport Reach ran advertisements in various O rang e Cou nty newspapers suggesting the pro· posed improvements in the John Wayne Airport master plan may be a "wast e ur taxpayers money " The public should be told that all monies for airport improvements would come from airport users and not from gener al tax funds. The Federal Airport Develop· ment Aid Program maintains a trus t fund of more than $4 billion. all contributed by a head lax on airline passengers and a portion of the funds needed would come from that source. The balance would be derived from revenues s uch as leases. parking and landing fees. Any revenue bonds that might be is· sued would also be serviced by this income. To s uggest this project would be a "waste or taxpayers funds" is not accurate. The plan can provide badly needed improve· ments that will benefit all the citizens of Orange County who need air transportation. JOSEPH E. IRVINE Executive Director Community Airport Council ff appfl lwrr To the Editor: 1 a m really happy that I live \ here. In a town where there are such humanitarians as the one who he lped the 53 ·year-old woman in need of convalescent hospjtal care. And in a town with a hometown newspaper which prints. on the front page (Feb. 20), human interest true life stories about the thoughtful consideration of the people in its community. Instead of being like those other papets wblch blast you with sensationalism of crim~ and devastaµon. Thank you David Kut1mann for your article, and thank you Daily Pilot for recognlllng it.s newsworthiness. ELIZABETH LAUFORD 8..,. ... ,.~, To the F.ditor: To those of ua who Uve in tbe 36th State Senate District, John Schmitz, state Senator, has lont been an emburaumeht. His r~· cent attacks on Martin Luther King were only the latest in a series of ugly, neaatlve, prej· udiced statements made by him on a variety of subjects. Now the Senate Rules Com· mittee, headed by Sen. David Roberti, bu named tbla same Schmit& to the state Status ol Women Commi11ion, a com· mlaalon whoM very eidatenee Schmits has alway• oppoeed. a commlukln whole ~ t. to r.remote UM weJlan, rllllta ud ntereu ol '"""9ft. The appointment ol Sehmlll la a •lap lD tlNJ faee to all wom111, a disgraceful act. It seems that the Senate Rules Committee has deliberatelv chosen the most destructive -individual it could find. ls the Senate Rules Com· mittee trying i lo obliterate the Status of Women Commission? Are our legislators so arrogant. indifferent. and ignorant that they feel no responsibility to the women of this stale'! VIVIAN HALL Sltorl·•lgllf rd To the Editor: We have now had a major disaster at the airport. Does Supervisor Ralph Clark think by in c r easin g lhe number or commercial passenger jetliner flights we can decrease the odds of losing many lives in the future? The short-s ighted mentality of the board m e mbers on true economic impact is appalling. Note the increased medical and material costs due to air and noise pollution <London study confirmed latte r l: not e the increased time loss es and anxiety due Lo vehicle a nd people congestion; and note the phony lip-service to "quality of l ife" while the continuing development syndrome causes the opposite e ffect and can result in property value loss. IT IS OBVIOUS that the supervisor from my, area, Tom Riley, is incompetent in judgment lo represent me. I've lived here for 43 year s and my family has been in this area s ince near the turn or the century. Gone are the days or appreciative use of our beaches <serving the whole county) free of aircraft noise and hearing the s urf (Jet alone other natural sounds). Will the area as a whole go the way of the Upper and now Lo~er Bays? Unable to sustain varied life at quality levels? W.e need city councils. county supervisors, and newspapers wblch care about a heritage ror the future. Unfortunately tbla takes knowledge and courate to be able to exercise the 1imple common sense to resist mucJI ol what the business people think is best for our place to live. No on airport expansion. Better yet a contraction J)f the preaent airport -and set on with a different location. Ontario wants the planes -many ol u do not. DONALD B. BEATTY ,., ........... To the F.d.itor: Your editorial of Feb. 21, "Rlth Colt ol llovln1," in re· 1ard to the redecoraUnt ol lhe Wblt.e HoUle la a 1maaber. UntU It came out I did DGl know tbat private contribllllaM 1n tile ...-at-.•·~ dadlble to tlae ..... .._ ... tortcal AllocHtkle, ._.. .... Oil aftlr the ............. o ......... -. We have an old house under redecorating process and the work I do myself. If Un<'ie Sam cares to chip m a mere $500 I'd be delighted to accept. . WARREN G. ALTHOFF CopC•n tllllrr To the Editor: I work out al the airport as a mechanic and I'd like to com · ment o n t h e ques tion of helicopter landing pads. Those who claim that helicop· ters flying over their homes rat· tie their wanciows anci shake dishes can·t be referring to civi lian helicopters. Military hel.icopters from El Toro. with shorte r blades do that. They're the ones that de· viate from the flight patterns. The civilian helicopters follow the freeways religiously. I think those businesses should be al· lowed helipads AL NOY TELEPHONE YOUR LETTER TO THE EDITOR See instructions below Fir. dae plaM To the Editor. Your editorial on the airport in the Feb. 17 issue of the Daily Pilot was ver y good. Your analysis of it as being inade· quate. out of date. unsat.isfac· tory and by inference. beyond redemption is certainly apropos. Your advice that action should .be taken now is likewise right to the point. However your con· clusion is in error. THE AIRPORT should be given over. entirely lo activities other than commercial carriers. There is not enough space adja· cent to it to ever make it into a real airport.. the Idea or spending any more dollars on it to try and make it into a major air terminal is rutile. A new location must be found now and de· veloped properly. It is impossi· ble lo turn what started as a barnstorming enterprise into anything resembling a major terminus just the same as a sow's ear into a silk pune and etc. The master plan is just a pl•; let it gather dust alont with the • many others and let's 1et en with the real answer -a new and different site. ALAN L. BLUM ! utter• /rom readers are -lcmM. The rlg#tl to ~ I.Ctn• to IM spou or 1Ummot• ••it~.....-. L•U•rl O/ IOO aool'dl or ....... gfvtn ,,..,~. AU l«t~a ,.- 6nchm ....,_ad....,_ dreu '*' ..,.. maw 6e ......., °" Nqllnl u ..,,,".., ,....... ... pornt. Po.tr11 •UI HI lie , ........ d •... ,,.,, ... .. ........... -:. ,.,_ -'lilr ., ... .... ,, ... .... ,., .. ,. ,..,_. Back Bay sewer delay wu costly . . Aftm' .... r•an ol bkkslM. Pi ... to eoutruet tbe IO·C ..... lack Ba)' MW• UM lia Newpart leKb bave fmallY ... .,..,, ..... 1he ~t. approved wltb coocliUou by 1tate Coastal Com••.....,., a. a near earbaD copy ol tbe ••er MM project rejected lw eom•••ioMn la 1m. Beck .._-.,...u.·.a~•tl ~HllfWlf arped that the sewer am.. wlalcla ii to lklrt aa euterD. ecll• o1 the Up- .,... N•'POft aa;. WCM&ld clim&pt wildlife and plaatllfe. But the aanltatioo diatrict, which wllJ 1pend .-0.000 constnactinl tbe line. won over the environmentalllta by pronUllna to clean up an old pile of dred1in1 material in the mouth ol Bi• Canyon, wbicb opena into the bay. Tbil bit ol 1lve-and·take aeem1 fair enough. The en- \•iroamentalilts earn a 1hare of the victory and the anatatian officials earn the right to construct the sewer line. But What doesn't seem quite fair is that it took three years to reacb this compromise. According to past documents. the sewer line along the bay could have been constructed in 1977 for $600,000 - roughly 25 percent less than the current construction pricetag. If there is a lesson in aJI or this it is simply that com- promise is possible. It's only too bad that couldn't have been figured out three years ago. Light on the >scene Certainly it is a fine public service that Teleprompter, the cable television firm, currently pipes proceedings of the Newport Beach City Council into living rooms throughout the community. In the comfort of homes, the citizenry may now view first-hand all of the pointings with pride and warnings of the dire that are voiced by Newport's councilmanic lawmakers as they ponder weighty civic issues from the dais. True. some wags in the community might suggest that certain council sessions filling the video tube in homes will serve as the greatest sleep-inducer since in· vention of insomniac pills. That aside, it is a solid public service having council proceedings available to more people than the usual handfuls who are able to show up at city hall sessions. While televised meetings do provide comfortable viewing for the citizenry. unfortunately. the recording procedure hasn't been all that comfortable for City Coun- cil members and city officials so far. Glaring, hot lights are necessar y to provide illumination to televise the pro- ceedings. This sometim es causes discomfort lo our local lawmakers. who find themselves perspiring profusely un- de r the hot lamps even when the issues aren't that del- icateordifficuJt. Now. if the television people can just figure out a way to turn off the heat and keep the light out of everyone's eyes. our City Council members will need only to squint and perspire over controversies on the agenda . _ 1 Trip views differ While Costa Mesa's City Council is quick to save the federal government a few dollars by challenging the need for air conditioning in homes for federally subsidized renters. it's a bit more lenient with local tax dollars. The entire five-member council. the city manager and the city attorney will be off to Washington. D.C .. this weekend to attend the annual National League of Ci ties convention. The journey will cost local taxpayers something like $6,000 or more. Mayor Arlene Schaf er points out that the trip is taken only every two years and offers the local officials one-on- one meetings with national bureaucrats and represen- tatives in a position to help with local programs. The plan for an en masse exodus to the nation's capital raised a fe w smothe red guffaws in ne arby Newport Beach. Apparently Mayor J ackie Heather will bind the City of Newport Beach's ties in Washington single handedly. She'll attend the five-day conference alone, at her ow n expense . . . • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed o n this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714)-642·4321. Boyd/Airborne pot By L.M. BOYD Q . What h a ppen s to somebody who s mokes mari· juana on a com m ercial a irline (light? A. The fli ght attendant tells the captain and the captain radios the police ut the next both women and men produce less of it as they age. The medicos say this is why older wom en have thinner s kin than older men. And why they seem to show their years more readily. Their skjn has less support than men's. • airport. •• Our Chief Prognosticator says you can expect three- dimensional television s hows on cablewi,thin a year or so. There's something in your skin that works a little bit like starch. A tough protein called collagen. Women's skin con- tains less of it than men's. And Tar and reatben mlfht warm up that cod· blooded woman with &be airport bearlDI 1l1n, "A aub a day lteepe &be DOiie away." PASS8NOSR ON PLIOHTJM Composers of music have been lifting melodies from previous works just about as far back as music goes, evidently, Even that elderly tune "Good Night , Sweetheart." was taken from "Les Preludes" by Listz. Q. Settle a bet. I've got a small sum wagered on my claim that Peter Pen, Tinker Bell and associates lived In a place called Never Neve r Land. A. You lose. That place is just calle~Neve r Land . Regrets. A New York photo1 - rapher recently was ••· 1l1ned by Workin1 Mother ma1aalne to shoot pictures in Central Park. To ll· luatrate a story about bow Hie tt ts to let children play there. He WH beaten up, stabbed and robbed. II you ataDd on the low•t point tn Colorado -at a.- feet -~~n. 1tUI bt1her tUa .... ~ ......... In • ............ t- Thuradav. Febr~ 26. 1981 Thorna1 P. Heley/Publl1her T'*"-IK~IUedltoii' I a.rlMf• Kreibichl &dltor'-..... ...._ Dr11g war sp~r~ agency fight ' W ASHJNGTON -For more than a decade, the federal iov· ernment baa been 101ln1 ita mutumiWon-doUar war aaainlt the international dope traf · ficken. But one 1overnment agency lhinkl. it knows bow to. reverse the tide of battle. Tbe U.S. Customs Service want s to g e t back the respon.slbility for narcotics p o l i c i ng , which was taken away from it and gi\ten to the Drug En · for cement Ad ministra- tion during the 1970s. It's a s uggestion that is not surpris- 1 n g in Was hington, where Mailbox bureaucratic infi1htin1 over "turf" can be u intense u the stru11le a1alnst the problems involved. Cuatoqll officials saw the Republicans' return to power - 'and I.heir determination to cul government spending -as a golden opportunity to recapture some of DEA's functions and. of course, its budget. The Reagan administration wiJl have to referee the long-simmering in· teragency feud that has again bubbledtothesurface. BUDGET OFFICIA~ told my a ssociates Indy Badhwar and Jack Mitchell that no firm plans for the narcotics budget have been formulated yet. But one of- ficial acknowledged that OEA's functions "duplicate a variety of agencies. not just Customs." The dru1 •&ency naturally will not alt quietly by while it is dismembered like baloney through a meat slicer. But it bu severe image problems to ex- plain, u well as the inescapable fact that It baa failed to stop the flood of narcotics pouring· i.nto the United States e ach year. Despite some highl y publicized drug busts, DEA 's ~ritics conte~d that the agency 1s an expens ive washout and is torn with internal dissension and low morale. The charges are partially corroborated by some or its own agents. THERE HAVE been embar- r assing incidents that lend c redence to the criticism. Federal investigators have been looking into charges of preferen- tial baggage-inlpection treat- ment ordered by the bead of DEA'a New York office. And al· legations or perjury and barus· ment ln the Western Relional Office forced a recent abak•up there. In the put 18 months, federal investigators have told COftlNU that "the Drug Enforcement Ad· ministration and the law en· forcement c ommunity' in general have moved slowly in ef- fectively using conspiracy laws to immobilize major drug traf- fickers.·• They also faulted DEA 's parent agency . the Justice Department, which tMy said "has not adequately planned or directed pro.ecutive efforts against major traf- fickers." DEA Administrator Petel' Bensinger disputes his agency's critics. He claims that DEA was "way out in front" in spotting the threat of heroin from Southwest Asia, insists that its intelligence work bas improved, and says that DEA was in- strumental in the passage or laws that put tougher penalties on drug-related crimes. MEANWHILE. despite a large-scale effort, the dope traf- fic flourishes. Intelligence re- ports walf'n that LSD, the d anger ous l y unpredicta ble hallucinogen of the 1960s, is becoming popular again. Equal· ly disturbing in terms of long. range health problems is the rampant use of PCP, or "angel dust." · Aside from the physical and mentaJ da mage to actual users. the narcotics trade makes in- direct victims of us all. Street crimes and burgla ries provide the money that addicts mus t have to support their habit. One respected study. for example, showed that during an 11-yea r period, 243 addicts accounted for an astonis hing 473.000 crimes. 'Public hearing' opens a citizen's eyes To the Editor: I am writing this letter out ot frustration and sadness that .,., deep to the bone. For the rant time in my life, ! spent tbe day with my county representatives, the Orange County Board of' Supervisors. The subject or dis- cussion was the master plan for the John Wayne Airport. Naive- ly. I thought people, the voters and taxpaying residents. could make a difference in this de- cision-making process. Instead. I was stunned with the truth: The decision to accept the master plan had been made by our "representatives" (and I use the term loosely) weeks and perhaps mon ths be fore this public hearing. I we nt l o thi s hearing representing myself, not an or- ganization. I possess no dis- tinguished titles. Simply, I am a wife and mother whose family Ii ves under the flight pattem. We are s ubjected daily to severe disruptions caused by the jets fl ying over our home. This is ver y annoying, but truthfully. not m y greatest concern. Since last year's disastrous San Diego air crash. I have had a monumental fear that sooner or later a similar accident could happen in our neighborhood. Within walking distance or our home is an elementary school containing 600 children. What wo~ld be their fate if a jet dropped out or the sky and c rashed on them? The prospect o r additional flights as a dvocat- ed by the master plan with djs. r egard for additiona l safety pre· cautions only increases the percentage chances or such a tragedy occurring. WITH THESE fears in mind, e mphasized by Air California's near disastrous crash the nipt. before, I went lo the "PubUc Heari ng" auured that my representatives would wut to hear from me. What I wttwHd was the most demoraUaing ex- perience ol my Ute. ' saw and beard the chairman of the board. Ralph Clark. teU a speaker "to go to hell." Is this proper decorum tor an elected offklal presidina over a public meelinl. I wondered? Repealed· ly. he inlulted airport opponents with sneers and sarcasm. HJs appearance was one of total db· interest ... that ia unUJ tbe 1e,11Uemen repreaentln1 tbe bualneu lnteresu ol the county made their preaentaUona. 111'. Clark actuall7 apolo1lled to them for bavlnt to U.tea to die t11timOQJ of tbole of ua moat ad· venet1 afteci.d by UM airpart and lta pnpoled npaatoa. I am emotlonall)' drUned. lly lntraduetian Into die world ot &bl poUUeaJ maeblne WU lwlft -IUrp, I ......... .,. .......... ladH4 Mpe41 tbal we, H eltl1ftl. eoala mall• a dU· ,. •••.•• ** ... .... How.-, allH. a. WI•·•·••• N•• iaz •••rw To the Editor: Recently the city of Newport Beach ran advertisements in vari o u s O rang e Count y newspapers s uggesting the pro- posed improvements in the J ohn Wayne Airport master plan may be a "wa s t e of taxpayer s money." The public should be told that all monies for airport improvements would come from airport users and not fro m general tax funds . The Fede ral Airport Develop- ment A.id Program maintains a trus t fund or more t han S4 billion. all contributed by a head tax on airline passengers and a portion of the funds needed would come from that source. The balance would be derived from revenues such as leases. parking and landing fees. Any revenue bonds that mi~ht be is- sued would also be serviced by this income. To suggest this project would be a "waste of taxpayers tunds" is not accurate. The plan can provide badly needed improve· ments that will benefit all the citizens or Orange County who need air transportation. J OSEPH E. IRVINE Executive Director Community Ajrport Council Happ• lwrr To the Editor: I a m really happy ~at I li ve he re . In a town where there are s uch huma nitarians as the one who he lpe d the SJ-year -old woman in need of convalescent hos pital care. And in a town with a hometown news pa per which prints, on the front page (Feb. 20), human interest true life stories a bout t he thoughtful consideratioQ of the people in its community. Instead or being like those other papers which blast you witb sensationalism of crime and devasb,JJoa. Thant yo\a David J{utamann for your article, and thank, you Daily Pilot for recognillq its newsworthiness. ELIZABETH LAUFORD s,.,, I• l•r• To the Editor: To thole of ua who live In the 38th State Senate District, Jobn Scbmlu, state Senator, baa Jons been an embarraument. HJa re- cent attackl oa II~ LutbeT Kini were onlJ the latest la a seriea ol usJy. ne1atlve, pnJ- udiced statemeata made by bim on a varletyofaubjecta. Now the' Senate Ruin Com- mittee, beaded by Sen. 'David Roberti, bu named Ulla nme Sebmlta to the ~late Slatua ol Women Comml11lon, a com· ml11lon whoae very exlateace Sebmtta UI altr•1• oppoeed. a eomm""°8 wbaH purpo1e II to r.:ro...-&be welfare, rtabta ad ------· TIM ....-.••t of Sclumta 11 a.•l•P la~ Jw. aU womm. a disgr aceful act. It seems that the Senate Rules Committee has de liberate ly chosen the most destructive individual it could find. Is the Senate Rules Com - mittee trying to oblite rate the Status or Women Commission? . Ar e our legislators so arrogant. indiffer ent. and ignor ant that they feel no responsibility to the wo men of this slate? VIVIA N HALL Slaorl ·•lglli rd To the Editor: We have now had a major disaster at the airport. Does Supervisor Ralph Clark think by in c reasing t h e numbe r of commercial passenger jetliner fli ghts we can decrease the odds of losing many lives in the future? T he short-sighted mentality of the board m e mbe rs on true economic impact is appalling. Note the increased medical and materia l costs due to air and noise pollution (London study confirmed la tte r'>: not e the in creased time losses a n d an)(iety due to vehicle and peopl~ congestion; and note the phony lip-service to "quality of life " w hile the continuing developme nt syndrome causes the opposite effec·t a nd can res ult in property value loss. IT IS OBVIO US that the supervisor from my area. Tom Riley , is incompete n t in judgme nt to represent me. I've lived here for 43 years and my family has been in t his area since near the turn or the century. Gone are the days of appreciative use of our beaches (serving the whole county) tree . or aircraft noise and hearing the surf (let alone othe r natural sounds). Will the· area as a whole go the way of the Upper and now Lower Bays? Unable to sustain varied life at quality levels? We need city councils, county supervisors, and newspapers which can about a berita1e for the future. Unfortunately tbJa takes lmowled1e and couraae to be able to exercise the simple common sense to resist much of what the busi~ess p'eopte think is best for our place to live.\ No on airport expansion. Better yet a contraction of the preaent airport -and 1et on with a dlf(erent location. Ootar1o wants the aftanes -many ol ua do not. ' DONALD 8 . BEA'M'Y ,.,. ..... ..,,, To the r.dltor: Your e•Htorlal of Feb. »1. "ff.lab a.t of M09lq," lD n- 1ard to tbe ndecorataq al tbe Wblte Home ii a •mulMr. Until It came eat I did Ml know tbat private eoatrtllelU• lntbe•w•ef-.-ta' ... daetlllle .................. &oneaa •nltll•, -::Sall ............ Gs were not enough. We have an old house under redecorating process and the work I do myself. If Uncle Sam cares to chip in a mere SSOO I'd be de lighted to accept. WARREN G. ALTHOFF Br prrparrd To the Editor : The other night I pulled a young woman out from her over- turned soft -toppe d car on Laguna Canyon Road. By the grace of God she had only a scratch. but the car looked like it had -been in a trash compac· tor On m y way home J wondered whatever had happened to the warning s igns on this road. signs warning of the number of acci- dents and fatalities a nd advising extre me caution. Another point: Of five or so carloads of people who stopped to help. only my hus band and l had e mergency fl a res in our vehicle. The other people had fl a s h l i g h t s but they a r e dangerous to the people holding them to slow down traffic . lf you don't carry flares in your car, get some . If you drive any road you should be pre pa red not just in driving skills. but in first aid and traffic control. VICKI BORTHWICK f'lt. ,, .. ,, .... To the Editor: Your editorial on the airport. in the Feb. 17 issue of the Daily P ilot was ver y good. Your analysis or it as being inade- quate . out of date. unsatisfac- tory and by inference. beyond rede mption is certainly apropos . Your advice that action should be taken now is likewise right to the point. However your con- clusion is in error. THE AIRPORT should be given over entirely to activities other than commercial carriers. There is not enough space ad.I•· ~ent t.O it to ever make it into a real airport, the idea or spendlna any more dollars on it to try and make it into a major alr terminal is futile. A new location must be found now and de· veloped properly. It la impaal- ble to turn what started aa a barnstormln1 enterpriH iato an1thinc reaembUna a major terminus just the same u a sow'• ear into a sllk pune ad etc. The muter plan ts juat a oa..: let It 1ather cfuat aloq wlda ... many othen ad let'I ,_ • wtth &be real U1wer -a MW and dUfenDt lite. ALANL. 8UDI . ~; .. .. :. :> .. :-. :- MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS rr ... ,.,...=.mr.'·•AClfllC. ·-· ..,.., .. , ... , ... CHIC ......... Medicare . . . Please find eacloted item la wlllcb Medicare paid •percent ol "5.30, wbere tM doctor'• bill WU $71. Clledlc.,-e paid not. pereecst, but oaly 46 percent.> The dltterence between • percent and 41 percent could wipe me out . . . " ''. . . I bad to have some minor 1ur1ery on my eye. The doctor did the 1ur1ery in bl• otflce ln leu t b a n 3 o minutes. His bill was $200. Medicare paid $80; our plan paid "15 and . I still bad to pay $85. M we srow older and IY-lllA_Pl_m_I-~ weaker our problems are &olng to increue . . . •' THESE AKE TYPICAL ol lettera that America's older citizens are sendin1 in increuin1 number to congressmen, their own or1aniutiom, columnists - all telling of growing dismay about unexpected health care out-of-pocket costs. The reason: the op- tion that doctors bave to bill Medicare patients directly. A doctor who uses t.be optional billlnl method un- der Medicare bas no obli1atioo to accept Medicare- sel "reasonable charges," says Daniel Si1elman of the Washington-based Health Research Group. Medicare, though, will reimburse the patient for only 80 percent ol the "reasonable char1e." The pa- tient is responsible for paying not just the remaining 20 percent but also the entire excess charge. UNDER THE REAGAN administration -and with full approval of tbe American public -all social welfare programs will be re-examined. The horrendously costly Medicare part of Social Security will not (and should not) escape the scrutiny. But Medicare's beneficiaries include a huge and rapidly growing segment ol our population; a group highly vocal about its expenses and benefits. When a doctor uses the assignment method of billing under Medicare, he sends the bill to Medicare and also agrees that his lull char1e will be no hi1her than the amount Medicare determines is the reasona- ble charges. But doctors have been reducin1 assign- ment bills. THE PEaCENTAGE OF Medicare bills paid by the assignment method bas fallen from 81.5 percent in 1• to about 50 percent, accord.in& to ft1ure1 ob- tained by the Health Research Group. The real problem lies in Medicare underpay- ments, not doctor overcharges, declares the American Medical Association. Beyond dispute, clirectories would help con- sumers in comparative shopping for reasonable as well as satisfactory physician services. U as a 1roup or individual, you want a copy of "Your Money or Your Health," either for your own information or as a basis for issuing a directory, send S4 to Department S. Health Research Group, 2000 P St., Washington, D.C. 20036. ..l.wrlran ~radrr• H«•fab C•e,.r I S'-·""' cenh • pound, US dHlinaliOM. L...i J1 CenU • -'41. ZllK 41\lo c..,tl • ....-. Clelivertcl. Tiii 17 1121 Metals w"-CO"'PCKll• lb Al-'-7•c..,tl• pound, H Y Mar-<.,., SJIS.00 per flui.. "1•11-...s.oo troy 01 •• H Y' SU1·.-r HEW YORK IAPI -H•n<lr .. Harm... lllver today $12.110. oll $0.1'. Engelllerd Jllnr $12.J20, off 10.lt. l•brlcated !Ill...,. 1u.112. off w.m . u.,._: .....,,,..11.1,.. ... s.u.o11 ss.u L..-.: ....,_ ll•lllf Mft.00, off ti.SO • .. .na: ...,_fl ..... ISU.12. elf U .& Pr.-...: ll1lllf ,..._.,,off 110.". zwtcti: -....,_ 1111111 Mtl.00, off 11>.00; ..... 00 .. .-. MPHJ a Mer-•: only dally ,..,.t• ""2.00,fllffll.JO • ....... , .... , dlllly _.. ""2.00, oft SI.SO . ....... , .... , .... , ............. , ... IJ11, ... offtl.M. .. .. ' :~ i .. i ! • . ' .. . . ' • • • • • ' I ' c , -, i f i Deltr~ .......... Mrs. Mildred Mathews shows off award 'There's no disgrace in honest labor ..• ' She kept buses rolling By TRUDY FULLER OlltleDllly .......... ''Nobody had ever heard of a woman bus driver at that time, heavens to Betsy!" said the Orst woman bus driver in Orange County. When Mrs. Mildred Mathews started in 1M2, there were only three buses. When she retired 24 years later the district bad merged into the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and had a fleet of 64 buses. And the ratio of maJe versus female bus drivers was almost 1-to-l. For a long time she was tbe "odd ball," as she put it, because she was the only woman at the transporUition meetings. "But I was well liked and respected. When you are in a man's field, you have to remember that you're a lady ... All ladies are women, but all women aren't ladies. That's what I used to tell the womenbu.sdrivers-to be a lady." Mrs. Mathews, now 72, started driving a bus after she jokingly told Everett Rea that when be decided to hire women as bus drivers he should give her a call. "It was kind of Uke the Mae West line, 'come up and see me some time,' " she quipped. · At the Ume, Rea, the superintendent ot ic&oola for l~e Costa Mesa Union School VJstnct, was havmg to anvt! u.1e buses himself. His main driver was ill and be bad DO one else. Two weeks later he did call. Although Rea bad to obtain permission from the school board, it was no problem gettinc Mrs. Mathews ap- proved -woman or not. •'There were no young men because they were coing away to war," she explained. "I was even doing custodial work in between bus runs for two years . . . There's no disgrace in honest labor. I wa1i just an old janitor, but they don't call them that DOW. Now they call them custodians," she joked in her warm, good-natured way. She drove the bus for 10 yean and then became the district's first transportation supervisor in 1152. In her years of being behind the wheel of buses that could carry up lo 79 children, Mn. Mathews bad few mis· haps. Her only accident occurred on Victoria Street durina a thick fog. ''A felJa plowed onto the back ol tbe bus, but no one was hurt," she said. OnJy once did she have a bus break down on her, and that, she said, was due to an "under powered motor, not the actual condiUonofthe bu1. While J wu drivtna," she said, "thine• were always checked out. Maintenance, u a ceneraJ rule, Just wun't let go." AJtboQeb moet people would have been 1oin1 out ol their mlnct. with a bualoacl of 79 elementary acbool children every day, Mn. llatben bad few problem•. "I wu a strict dlaclpllnutan, but the kids llted me," sbe said, addina, "You lane to let them bow wbo'a bou, but do it in a way that tbe:r lib you." · Mn. llatileW1' faille aa cim)' 41ue iD part to ber liul driviq Qyi. Sbe receetJ7 rec:eiYed a «>-Jear pin from tbe Girl Scout Council ol Oraqe Comat.Y .in reeopltiaa of tbe yean in wblcb lbe bu·~ ber membenblp. Al~ abe &u Mea iDaMb' .inactiYe for tile lut u yean, IM taqllt KM Cram Pint AAd ecMll'NI to 8117 troop tbat wllbed to earn tbe ftnt aW blldp. Siie al8o wu a member of tbe Girl Seoul Boud, wbldl ii tile na,lq area for ever,tblq tbe Glrl Seoata do. a. Mnke to tbe Costa -. eoaaau1ait1 bu DOt been rettrided to llrl aeoutlia1 aml°b'wpwtalkm, ~ . 8elore dieidlq lbe ".....W ......... CUl'f kids," lbe de· livered IDaU on a 1ub1Utute .._.. wlMa tM ,....a. carrt.r WH U1 or HHU0Dla1. Siie alao Mlped dulq tbe Cluiltmll ..... beeaUH Gf IMmn wen llmllftd. lln. Matblwa ma, be Nllnd. IRlt • b8 • plam to wute a ..._. of ber U... a. .... to write a boak ··a., a. 0rt .... r •• 111 ..._ ".u a. eldldna no Uiid tocaDUIMautto._. · · Md ......... tlda time, -.... eldldNa .... Mabllll~•·w.,....CaltaM .. 111...__.. tM Plllll ome.. ......... -·-top, ......... "' .... hair, ........ faee..._.,.,.... ... The old facade of the Frances Cit- rus Association (above right) is now the west wall of the Irvine Savings and Loan Association. The packing house fright) was named /or the first wife of James Irvine//. The building t00a slated /or demolition, but the facade r lower right) was carefully removed and saved . Loan Compan~ saves a bit of old Irvine lly JOEL C. DON °' ... Delly ...... ,..,. What should be on the outside is on the inside. And what's on the inside of the Irvine Savings and Loan As· sociation branch on Culver Drive ls an interior furbished in Americana . reproductions - save the facade banging on the west wall. Standinc some 18 feet hi&h and 27 feet long, the facade from the Frances Packing House is a vestige of old Irvine ; once perched over the entranc;e to a 25,000.aquare-foot citrus process- ing plant. It• s cracked and peeling, showing all its 6S years. Du,,t from the deteriorating paint set- tles in neat piles on the floor. BlJT THE ALTERNATIVE might have been loss of every last piece of the aging structure, which wu tom down more than five years ago. The Irvine HistoriCa1 Society and other groups wanted to save the packing house as a meeting hall and storage facility, accord- ing to society president An Johnson. The decaying building wdd have required renovation of te roof and interior. But the btd· ing 'f\'.&S structurally sound~. Johnson said. Although pressed to pr e the plant as an histori I landmark, the Irvine City - cil voted in September 197 have the buiJding demoli~t would make way for a . g development in what now is e village of Northwood. The c cil had cited the prohibitive of renovation. · The packing house was down in December of that y , the facade carefully remo and stored in a city public yard. IRONICALLY, the pack house, built by the Irvine Co 1916, was among 14 sites California recommended by e Slate Historical Resources mission for inclusion on the tional Register of Hist <See Faeade, Pa1e 1111) . ~-... r;?,,,,, ~--~-.-.,,.. -... -... Low ex erience deficient By .JEFF PA&Ua °' ...... ., .......... Wish you were smarter than you are? If • the answer ls yes, you're not alone, and p1ycholo1t1t Beverly Galyean bas de- veloped a system abe beUevea will help . you be h•t that. "I alwa71 wanted to be briebt," she ex- plained. "And ~ alway• wanted to be smarter than I am. AJoa1 witb that 1oea creativity, love, peace of mind and bumanlty. And I believe we can ac- complilb those th.in11 lf we learn to utllbe other Pl'OCe9HS than simple linear tblnk-in1." . • Galyean ouWned tboae pl"OCelMI in Iler rffent two-day prosram at UC Irvine, "We are Smarter Tban we Tblnk." Altbou1b tltat pro1ram waa aimed at educatan and eoumelon, GalJean ..,. tbat IMll' priadplet may be applied by anyoae. "nnt of all, we should clllt.inpilb betw .. bavlq lnlormaticm ud bavt.q now..._.. I ea deecrlbe pcnstJ to ,.., dncrtbe ... o.uo. tbe dalMI ...... ..... tbln, What tbe elalldr9 look Jae. 8Jlt -anW ~ allow ,......, to •· pertew Jt, wW n Neom. .......... . bowledle ...... -........ .... ..,. ... t. ......... "Tbe ...... pllt .. ......... II that JOU b't Dlllllaib ba••tobetllll'etoplalt.'rmanM ... aample. Y• eu 1811t•1 .. , • a ............... afllllllli ''8"'11 ,. ... ,...,.. ............ . ... *" ...... ,.... ........ ,.. .•. ...I& ...... ,.._ ......... ... ... ............... .._ .... , Y•'ll lllllw •1•1 ,_._ ._ IMN." ......... . ... , .. r ~ ••••111 imirw .. •• in1 verbal.linear artists have -bu~,O~y~an waits ot life c I t I I • j l I t j