HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-02 - Orange Coast PilotII~I eagers prep
for to1•rli&ment
(STORY , 1>AG£111)
Newp<;>rt t~en rescued
By STEVE MARBLE
OI .. DellJ ~llet It.If
A 13·yeu-old Newport Beach
boy, burled for at least 10
minutes Sunday when a bank or
dirt along the Santa Ana River
gave way, was saved when five
fast·moving bystanders dug him
out.
The boy's· companion started
calling for help, officials said,
when he was unable to locate the
13·year·old. Five people who
happene d to be in area
responded to the cries for help.
noticed a fragment. of a
Styrofoam board be bad been
playing with and started dtginl
Into the sand. The youth wu dis·
covered near the broken piece ol
board and pulled to safety.
RESCUERS LOAD 13-YEAR-Ol.D TODD STEMPER ON NEWPORT LIFEGUARD UNIT
,..wport lleKh boy buffed 10 minute• when raln-eo8ked ••nd collepMd
Todd Stemper, Newport
authorities said, was playing
near the river jetty with a young
friend when the rain·soaked
sand slid, completely covering
the boy.
At first, authorities report, the
group of helpers was unable to
determine where the youth was
buried and started digging into
the mound of sand at several dif·
rerent points.
Finally, one or the rescuers
Newport authorities ldentifted
the rescuers as Chuck Cum·
mings, 22. or Newport Beach;
Roy PauJ, 31, of Bell Gardena;
Melinda Kay, 22 of Van Nuya;
Paul Heussenstamm, of
Newport Beach and Greg Batel,
24, of Fountain Valley.
e
•
~onomie goals -Reagan attacks
'selfish'. _groups ~
WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi·
dent Reagan told u.rban officials
today that his economic program
is running "a political gauntlet of
interest groups" whose selfish
• concerns threaten the nation's
economic recovery.
He appealed for the backing of
local officials, who support bis
goals but worry about how he
wants to achieve them.
In a speech prepared for the Na·,
lional League of Cities, Regan
condemned the "federal Goliath
that brought us to the economic
brink now confronting this nation.
"For a time, it appeared that
Congress had more solutions than
the country had problems,"
Reagan said. "Ol', put another
way, cures were invented for
which there are no known dis·
eases. Just conceiving or a pro-
gram that might help someone,
somewhere, was Itself reason
enough to pass a law and ap..
propriate money.''
Working together and exercis·
ing "will power," the new ad·
ministration and its aJlies can
bring the economic crisis under
control by implementing hls pro-
posed budget and tax cuts, re·
gulatory o9erls and monetary
controls, Reagan said.
"However, thls program now
races a political gaUf!Uet of ln·
terest groups; and I'm finding it
increasingly difficult not to call
some Of them •semsh interest
1roups'," the president said.
''Unless sometbin1 is done to turn
tbe economy around, local cov·
emments will suffer rt1bt along
with many other respected
Ame.ricaninstitutions."
IUlll CUii IUTlll
C._ance of abowers
decreuinl to 30 percent
tonitbt to near aero Tues·
day. Lowa ton11bt u at
beacbea to 55 inland.·
Hl8b• Tunday a alon1
cout to• lnland.
Reagan noted there bu been
some congressional oppoaition to
bis call for a three-year, 30·
percent tax cut.
"Nevertheless," be said, "tbe
real threat to recovery comes
from those wbo will oppose only a
small partoltbeoverall program.
Needless to say, the small portion
these parochial groups oppose
always deals with cuts that affect
them directly. Those cuts they op-
pose.
"They favor cutting everybody
else's subsidy as an important
step in ending inflation and get·
ting the country moving again.
The accumulative effect of this
shortsightedness can be damag.
ing.
"We are all in the same boat,
and we have to get the engines
started before the ship goes over
the falls.''
The urban leaders, at the an·
nual Congressional·City Con·
ference. iave qualified support to
(See REAGAN, Page AZ)
Hazardous
test device
recovered
A soil testing device contain·
ing hazardous nuclear material,
stolen Friday together ,,-ith a
pickup truck from a La1una
Ni1uel parking lot, bas been re· ·
covered.
T.be device was found early
Sunday mornin1 at the emer1en·
cy room entrance to Ml11ioD
Community Hospit.al in Mlaakm
Viejo foUowinc appeala from the
Oran1e County SMrilf'a Depart-
ment for ill return. .
Lt. Wyatt Hart aald nuclear isotopes CODtained iD tbe device
could bave been barmfdJ to
bum am. r
Tbe device, a nuclear sauce
baebeatter, wu atttlal iD tbe
bed of a late-model plct-up
truck tbat WM ltolem IMltweea
1:• md 1 p.m. J'ridaJ 'fnMD a
PArklnc lot aear Forbel ROMI a111 Cron valf., Puna,.
A bolpttal ••n• wbo ""· OIDiled tbe dnlee from MWI
reporta dbeoYered the maebJM
1ttt1n1 Dim' the em8'1eaeJ room •vuoe at. t :10 a.m. Sulldiy, .......
TM IMrUl'a baaardoul de·
......... , .......... the.· .. ., ... ,... .. uatt ...
llUet; am Mid:
•• ::: •.... tnck .... DOt .... ........
T .. IMft WU,.,...... .. =-TL~t::.".::·
Am1Jtr,H Ille., II J:a·H• .
es -ue
DelfJ "'9t ...... .,..., .....
RUSH HOUR TRAFFIC Al.ONG SAN Diido FRllWAY
0
UCKID u,.IJUMPIR TO au ...... TODAY
"9oto gbft Hout I e.m. on nortlllNMlftd tene looldng tro... the cUlvet Dtlv• lrtdge In trvtne
EI Sal¥ador battle ~ages
to replace WI Central America
nation's ctvillan·mlUlafl Junta
wltb a Manilt 1cwemmeat Md
bMa rumored fortbe put,,... to
be p1..ana a new otteaal". But
their leaden luued no commmd·
q ... CID tbe fllbtlq in tbe eutern
provlnce.
A ....... ecale nbeJ drive In
Juua17, bWed u a 1'ftna1 of • , ... s·::.::r.ftnUDIDt· ... br~ ..... . .
Aa ......... w.• ..... .... ~ ................ ...
...... U.0ett•1r tMJ.-
tlaat _.... Pl'lll•• «:tlllt ............. ,...... ...
.... ... ...... • ••1'1ar '¥. naa•UA~94Jmdl.
Flooding
closes
highway
By JORN NEEDHAM
CM t11e o.lly l'llet SlllH
The rain that baa been falllna
on Orange County for tbe last
three days is expected to end
sometime tonight, acco~ to
the National Weather SerVice,
A spokesman for the weather
service said the chance of
showers would be decreasing to
30 percent tonight and to nearly
zero chances on Tuesday.
Warmer temperatures also
are predicted Tuesday, with tbe
high expected to be 64 degrees
and the low 58 degrees.
Temperatures tonight are ex·
pected to be in the 45 degree to
55 degree range.
The Orange County Flood Con·
trot District measured nearly
two inches or rainfall in Santa
~na from 8 a.m. Saturday to 8
a .m. today.
Huntington Beach and
Capistrano Beach reportedly re·
celved 1.96 inches of rain over
the weekend, according to resi·
dents in the area who took rain
measurements.
Newport Beach police said a
section or Pacific Coast
Highway at Newport Boulevard
was closed for about an hour
Sunday morning when a cloud·
burst temporarily flooded the
roadway.
A police spokesman said a
cloudburst at about 6 a.m. left
all six lanes of the highway UD·
der about three feet of water un·
til 7 a.m. No damage was re-
ported.
No major incidents cauaed by
the rain were reported in ,
Orange County, a fiood control
district spokesman said.
Judge bacla
!mud match·
GREAT F~. Moat.
(AP) -Tbe aituation
seemed u clear u mud,
but after WHS\llDI wltla
atate law, attorney• for
the atate, county and a
tavern owner finally
atreed that the abow -
women'• mud wnltlblC -
coaJd90cm.
The 1Uppery problem
dtnloped ..._ the aecl
Barn tavtl'il ad••rtlled.
tolll~lbow u ''•ek· lnl mud wnl·
Wn•·" adl eaupt tile •1• ot u~ oftlelall ID Rel••• wbo DOled tUt 1rat1 iaw reflulrH a
apeelal lieeme . lw apert-
lna ....,.. tm ,#.~ ..... -" a n11at,'' a aid D
lar••· •la•• fa• l . ................. . / R•"tfiW •'•• wttla .. ............ TMft'•" • . ,.. .... , ....
8 Orange Cout DA.IL Y PILOT/Monday, March 2, 1981
OW YOU <AP> -la a ftt of U&MtJ over whether bl1 nat.ICl9 wu ao6lll to be invaded cluri.q
.._ • CUbu millUe crilla, Pldel Cutro peraoully abot
down an American U-2 apy plane
OYer Cuba, ldWna Uae pilot, says a former Cutro aide.
Carlos Franqui said the Cuban ·
president took command of a
Soviet ground-to-air miaaUe con·
tole and "preued the button" to
1hool down the pJane, astound·
inl Soviet 1enerals who were ex·
plainlni tl_le ~~rkin,s.of the mis~
World's frigged •
1U. Nit iD .t'lnu-del IUol WeR
of Havana.
Tbe body of the U-2 pilot, U.S .
Air f'orce Maj. Rudolf An·
deraon, was returned to the
United States shortly after the
inc ideal.
Franqui, wbo edited the of.
flclal Castro movement
newspaper Revoluclon from 11167
to lta, describes the incident in
a boot, "Retralo de Familia':
(Family Portrait), scheduled lo
be published next month.
Franqui sided wilb Castro's
guerrillas in the Sierra Maestre
A 675,000-ton conc ... te structure is towed from Stavaniet,
Norway, for the Statfjord B offshore oil pJaUorm. When
fully completed, the platform will be about 895 feet tall
and will weigh 816,000 tons, the biggest of its kind in the
world.
He takes it •• m
-~~~Nlft
vlet lnvM&oa of Cuebollovakla.
The farmer ed1tol' d11ckleed tbe
e9iaod9 in a telepboee eonvena-
Uon frotn Rome. The boot la to
be publlabed ta mid·llareb by
the Spanish Selx Barral
publiahlnC company, he aald.
White Houle press aide Robin
Gary said be bad no comment oa
the report. ,.
Accordina to Franqui, on Oct.
27, 1962, during the six-day
crisis, Castro bad "a fit of arude·
ty caused by the unresolved
crisll, dUJ'ini which he wu ig-
nored as the two superpowers
negotiated the fate of the
island."
The crisis occurred when
President Kennedy demanded
that the Soviet Union withdraw
missiles stationed in Cuba. The
Soviets complied after tense,
high-level negotiations.
Franqui said Castro "went to
one of the hllses. with intent to
create the incident in order lo ..
know if they were going to in·
vade or ool . . . if there was go-
ing to be a war or not."
Franqui says-that when Castro
reached the Soviet base, he
asked the technicians about tbe
operation of the equipment, in-
cluding the radar for the detec·
lion of enemy planes.
Shortly after, "The U·2 spy
plane appeared in the radar
screen. Fidel asked to know
what had lo be done in order to
shoot down those planes in case
of an attack," Franqui said.
"The Russians replied that it
was enough to push a button and
the enemy plane would be hit
and shot down and showed him
the button. Fidel then pressed
the button and the plane came
down amidst the consternation
of the generals. The American
pilot died, the only victim of the
crisis," Franqui said.
* * • Cuba's Castro
thanks Moscow
MOSCOW <AP> -Cuban Presi·
dent Fidel Castro says only Soviet.
support enables his country to'
"withstand the attacks of im·
perlallam," the official Soviet
news agency Tua reported today.
Castro. speaking Sunday in the
Black Sea reso1't city of Odeua,
told a Soviet-Cuban friendship
rally that Caba is eternally
grateful to the Soviet Union for its
support, Tass said.
stride
. r
More/ield Mck·led, prai1ed at •peech
Ex-hostage Richard Morefield
look both praise and ridicule in
stride during a speech in Santa
Ana, saying the diverse reaction
to his appearance indicated "the
strength of the American
system."
Morefield, one of 52 U.S.
bostaces held 444 days in Iran,
bad just been introduced to 2SO
people al Santa Ana College SUD·
day when one of two young men
who had walked up to the
speaker's platform yelled, "We
.apil on you." The other held up a
yellow poster.
Both were whisk~ out of the
college gymnasium by police so
quickly that it was Wlclear whal
they were protesting. They were
not arrested, police said.
Morefield, of San Diego, ig-
nored the outbunt until be con·
eluded his 45-minute speech and
answered questions from the au-
dience.
Only in the United States, he
said, are people free to express
opposing political views. "It is
an indication of the strength ol
the American system," be said.
The St-rear -old former Consul -General of the
American embassy in Iran also
wa1 cfiticiled by oUler audience
memben for being paid a $.1,000
1peabr'1 fee and for speaking
a1aimt his capton dupite the
late lhab Mohammad Reza Pabla~'s r~cord of politically
mollv•ted torture and execu-
tiona.
· Morefield replied lbat he was
giving many free lectures and
the fees were being charged only
lo defray expenses, including ex·
tra expenses bis family bad
faced while he was a captive.
Most of the audience reacted
warmly lo Morefield and his
wife Dorothea, who was a lead·
ing s pokeswoman for the
hostage families during the im·
prisonment.
· Tbe Morefields mel with re·
porters before the speech and
said their lives since the siege
have been filled with "doing
mundane things like getting new
glasses, a driver's license and
clothes."
"The return was much easier
than I expected," said
Morefi e ld . •'I think the
psychiatrists are a liltle sur·
prised. We really -I don't think
-have the difficulties they ex-
pected.'' .
In his speech, Morefield said
the hostage crisis has proved
lbat diplomacy "can solve the
most difficult disagreements
between nations. I really do
believe the ~greement for the
hostage release should be car·
rled out by the United States."
Bul bis wife said she "wu ex·
tremely angry a great deal of
the Ume."
''I would have loved, at
various times, to a1ree with tbe
people who wanted action -any
kind of action," she said. "I
MAIN OPPICI D Wett 19'a., CMU MtM, CA. \ Mell....._: ... , ... , CM .. MeM, CA. t»»
kc~ Clau ........ ,.id .. c .... ,__, Cell!onll•.
(U" ,..._., S..Cf ....... !tr tMflet M • INIMI\';
• ., lllefl ... ~., "'"ltef• .... ~ ..... ~.
personally hope il will be a long
lime before we have diplmatic
relations with Iran. My husband
doesn't share this view," Mrs.
Morefield said.
Morefield, on leave from his
job with the U .S . State
Department for 60 days, plans
four more paid s peeches in
Massachu setts, Oregon ,
W ashlngton stale and Kentucky.
Students ask
mass march
ATLANTA (AP) -Student
leaders from Atlanta's colleges
are calling for a mass march here
by people from throughout the na-
tion lo express outrage over the
slayinp or di5appearances of 21
black children.
Several hundred people
marched through Atlanta on SUD·
day in a demonstration thal the
Association of Christian Student
Leaden said wu a prelude to the
••national save-the-youth
walkatbon" March 15.
"We have marched heretosend
out a national call lo come to
Atlanta oa March 15 for a mus
march to show tbia world we are
united u one in our efforts to atop
tbe ki.llin& of children,'' said Ken·
netb Flowers, a Morehouse
Collete student who is vice presi-
dentoftbe 1tudentauociatioa.
Party en~a
in slaying
VISALIA (AP) -A man who
wa1 llvlnl a weddln1 party was
1tabbed to death in a fliht out·
aide h1a residence here, police
1atd.
Nlcolu Gomes Jr., 21, wu
ru11led to Kaweab Delta
Hospital by ,,.... Sund., but
••• dfad on arrival. He bad beft ltabbed lD tbe cheat, baek
aad U'IDI with a lart• tnife, ·
police aakt. n.... .......... arNltied la&er
lud.,,_but tlMlr .._tltlel"" .......... .
t ...
,.,WI ......
Statues deposed
Face down on the floor of a museum in Bulawayo, Zim·
babwe, is a statue of Cecil Rhodes, founder of Rhodesia
-now known as Zimbabwe. Beside it is a statue of Sir
Charles Coghlan, first prime minister of Southern
Rhodesia. They were taken down after a half-century on
orders of the new city government.
High court hacks
use of sale sign
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court lert intact
today a ruling that struck the ci·
ty of Baltimore's attempt to ban
the display or•• For Sale'· signs on
private homes.
Haiti.more amended its zoning
ordinance in 1974 in a way which
prohibited such signs . Three
years later, real estate agent
James Crockett and his wife,
Mary, put a house they owned
up for sale a nd deliberately
challenged the city ordinance by
erectinJ( a sale sign.
The city filed a complaint
against them in court, and the
Crocketts argued in replay that
the ordioance violated their
speech.
The city, however, said th.~
ban on such signs was justified
lo prevent .. panic selling" and
.. block-busting:• which might
disrupt the sta bility of
neighborhoods. •
A Municipal Court ruled in
favor o( the Crocketts in 1979,
and a state appeals court upheld
that ruling in 1980.
4 die in accident
BRAWLEY, Calif. <AP)
Four unidentified people were
killed and four others injured -
two seriously -in a traffic acci·
dent near here, the California,
Highway Patrol said. The head-
on collision occurred Sunday
four miJes north of Brawley and
closed down Highway 111 for
In seeking Supreme Court re·
view. the city attacked the fact
that the court which first de·
cided the case made a "sum-
mary judgment" without ex·
tended hearings.
Baltimore "was never af·
forded the opportunity to present
evidence bearin~ on the issue
whether there existed a compel·
ling or significant governmental
interest in the enactment of its
1974 zonjng amendment,·· its ap-
peal said.
Crime debate
one sided
LOS ANGELES CAP >
Cr iminal d e f e n se lawyer
Leonard I. Weinglass stood op-
posite an empty church seat in
what was to have been a debate
with Los Angeles City Controller
Ira Reiner on controllinll crime.
The Rev. Philip Zwerling told
about 240 people at the First
Unitaria n Church on Sunday
that Reiner had canceled Fri·
day, .. thus breaking a commit-
ment he had made six weeks
ago ...
An empty cha ir with a sign
"Reiner" was placed opposite
Weinglass while he delivered a
speech in the building. Zwerling
said the congregation would re·
member the absence when it
com es time to vote. Reiner is
running against City Coun·
cilman Bob Ronka for city at·
torney.
Burglar
fires at
guard .
A security auard narrowl1 ,
escaped beinl kllled or wounded
Sunday when ope of two
bur1lan be wu cbuiDC from an
unoccupied buildlq turned and
took a lhot at him.
Mark D. Parrott, 21, told
police the pair fl.Dally 1crambled
over a c&aln lin.k fence 1ur·
rounding the new Automobile
Club of Southern CaUfornia
beadquarten at Sunflower
A venue and Fairview Road.
Parrott told inve1ti1aton he .
was lalld.nl to his &lrlfriend on
the telephone at tbe AAA facWty
when be beard voices.
He · surpriaed the intruders -
the urumbbed buildinl was ap-
parently not locked at the time
-and began chasing them and
shouting for them to ball.
Parrott said as one intruder
scaled the chain link fence, the
other spUD around and fired one
shot that missed. •
The gunman then scrambled
over the fence and he and his
partner sprinted away into the
Calvary Chapel complex acrou
the city limit in Santa Ana, dis·
appearing Into the crowd of Sun-
day morning worshippers.
E',.... Pflfle AJ
REAGAN •••
Re~gan's \rogram Sunday, en·
dorsing "enthusiastically" the
president's objectives bul issuing
a list of reservations.
They said they could go along
with eliminating a third of the
300,000 public service jobs
Reagan wants to terminate, but
urged him lo reconsider proposed
cuts in urban redevelopment aid.
The city officials' views were
much the same as those voiced
last week by the National Gov-
ernors' Association -fear that
reduced federal grants will pass
a long a burden which stale and
local lax bases cannot absorb, a
demand for plenty of time to
make adjustments, and a call for
close consultation as exact cuts
are determined.
Percy lands
in S. Korea
SEOUL, South Korea CAP> -
Sen. Charles Percy arrived today
lo bead the U.S. delegation lo the
inauguration of President CbWl
Ooo-hwan and said it was '•an im-
portant milestone in a new, bright
and hopeful beginning."
"The American people, lbe
Congress and our government
welcome the accelerating effort
by President Chun to restore
Korea lo institutional civilian
government,'' the Jllinois
Republican wh.o beach the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
told rePOrten.
Other members of the U.S. dei-
eg_ation lo the inauguration Tues-
day are Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, R·
Calif., and Anna Chennault, ooe of
W asbingtoo 's leading Republican
hostesses and one of the foremost
Chinese-American supporters of
the Nationalist Chinese govem-
menton Taiwan.
Strike concludes
MILWA U KEE <AP)
Firefighters ended a one-day
strike and returned to work to-
day after union leaders said a
contract proposal bad been
worked out in a judge's cham·
bers. sev~ral hours. -..:.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
It you want Levi Cord Flares. we ve got 'em
Our ftvo b.1slC cClltYNre It bluu tan chocolate navy
dnd olt Wl'll"I 1n 84'-cottonlt6~ DOlyesler lor
shnnk~ control
Pvt them IQgC1tlet with ()ur gttAI Sh•ns
Lev rs
U l\N~.\,'VI 1\11
r ALSGARAGE
56 FASHlbN ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
>
•
Traruition could ruin W eli1ter re/amu
WASHING1'0N (AP> -
WWlam ff. Webl&ar bu tUea
Uie FBI from a demoralised,
1eaadal·pla1ued a1ent1 to a
1uceeutul aod 1opbi1tlcated
opera~t with a new ad·
mllllatr and eonareu. he
enten bl.I fourth year u dlrec·
tor f adnl a delicate tranaltion
,tbat cou1cl turn back the clock or
reinforce tbe cbaqea.
On Ml tblrd anniversary tut
week, Wet>.ter acknowledled
that be II aettinl precedenta ln
an uebarted relloo. Oaly UM
tblrd dtrector of UM Ol'IHl•,&n
domluted for 41 yean by J .
Ed1ar Hoover, Weblter ii the
ftnt penon aervtn1 a 10-year
term ln the poet to deal with a
cban1e in adminiatraUona from
one political party to another.
"I t.bink the principle bu been
ettablilbed and reinforced both
by the old and new admlnlltra·
ttou that the FBI i1 outlide ol
poUUca," Web8ter aald In an In-
terview. But that doea not mean
1 •
Bow· slwuld moon's .
riChes be· divided?
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Now
that we know beyond a shadow
of a doubt that the moon la made
of titanium, magnesium, silicon
and aluminum , not green
cheese, there's got to be some
law and order up there to pro-
tect such celestial '.'gold" mines,
warns an expert in international
law.
But a free enterprise lobbying
group cautions that an intema·
tlonal space treaty currently un-
der consideration is too protec-
tive and could discourage future
heavenly exploration and de·
velopment by the private sector.
"Space law is an idea whose
time has come . . . says Carl Q.
Christol, a University or
Southern California professor of
international law and an expert
on the United N atlons • 1979
space treatv.
Known officially as the ~gree·
ment Governing the Activities
on the Moon and Other Celestial
Bodies, the treaty calls for an in·
ternational organization . to ad·
minister space·envirQnment ac·
tivities on the lunar surface,
other planets and asteroids.
To date, a half-dozen smaller
countries have signed the pact.
But the two superpowers that
have actually reached the! moon
-the United States and Russia
-have Jet to initial the docu-
NASA IN•traliea
TREASURE TROVE
Moon: who rulea?
1s also an expert in int~atiooal
law or the sea.
The treaty, which Christo! has
studied extensively, prohibits in-
d iv id u a 1 or governmental
ownership or lunar land but does
allow for the use of its natural
resources.
Also, under what is called the
"common heritage of manltlnd"
clause, the treaty calls for op.
portioning the profits from outer
space resources to developing
countries according tol their
needs and interests. It alsv calls
for sharing by countries "which
have contributed directly or in-
directly to the exploration of the
moon.,"
ment an Christo! feels that this
country, ar least, should serious-
ly consider doing so for the sake
' of interstellar tranquility.
But, Christol said, the dis-
tribution would be "fair and
jwst. not equal." Developing
countries "won't be entitled to a
heck of a lot." he added.
'
"Star wars may be avoided if
we can extend internation~ law
iotq outer space," said the
pro(essor. "There is a fteed in
space, just as there is a -need on
the Earth. to have a set of laws,
so ~le know their rights and
their limits," said Cbristol, who
Apportionment figures for
lunar resources have not yet
been established, but Cbrlatol
believes that when final figures
· are set, mining companies will
be able to make a profit from
moon operations.
Stuffed surrogate ~
This baby la.niur'a real mother wun't tatini 1ood care
of her, so offtclala of the Brookfteld, Ill .. zoo save the
, 14-ounce younaater a stuffed monkey as a aubltltute
mom. 1be "mother's" eye1 were cbanled to resemble an
ac1u1.t •anaur· •·
We're LlstenllJfl •••
then won't' be chan1•• ln
reapome to tbe prioriU" ol tbe
new adml.nl1tratloa and aew
CODIJ9UIMD, and tbf c.hareeter
of thOle cbaqea la uppermo1t In
b1a mind DOW.
The new attorney aeneral,
Wllllam French Smith, baa
1lven top priority to providinl
federal leaderablp a1aln1t
violent crime, which soared 11
percent 1D 1979.
Smith sees violent crime u
more than just street crime, like
rape, murder, robbery and U ·
aault, over which the FBI bu
little jurt.adlction. But that dll·
Unction ls not always made by
con1reamen who share the rla·
ing public concern over crime .
Webster's favorite statement
durina the past year is that
"we've eat.ten the FBI up off the
streets and into the upper
echeloru of sophisticated
criminal enterprises." Durins
his tenure, the FBI baa arrested
terrorists on the verse of
violence and helped convict
dozens or racketeers wbo used
violence and intimidation on the
nation's docks, but it has re·
duced its efforts to pursue every
bank robber or f~eral fugitive.
IT'S BEEN 1 YEAR SINCE STEVEN ITAYNIR RETURNED AFTER 1·YUR ORD1AL ,.,. ............
THn po ... with .,., ..... KllJ •nd Del •• ,ner of M•rc4Ht
Teen adjmts 1quickly • I , ,
' t Building on predecessor
Clarence Kelley's work in the
Ford administration, Webster
has written guidelines ror all
FBI operations and~'>U ht a charter for the burea from SAN ~:~!1s~oO<~~aJ .~!~ ~ !~,~~ s~~~~~m ~!~~~ut of our I
Congre~-· But s con-serva\jv Senate Republicans believ~ bese rules tie the
bureau's hands and leave the
country vulnerable to sub·
version, and they have called for
their repeal.
Steve Stayner, the quiet boy who and from Sean Poorman, now lives.··
spent half his life as a kidnap 16, convicted in Juvenile Court Stayner provided new detaila
victim, is now just another teen· or taking part in White's abduc· about the time his son was
ager with grade problems, a lion. He was sent to a school for known as Dennis Parnell.
steady girl and dreams of play· youths with behavioral dlf· "The first three years I guess
ing high school b'8eball. fi culties. it was very bad on him. He cried
It was a year ago -March l, • In the Stayner case, scheduled quite a lot when he was little,"
But Webster sees the rules as
a way to prevent past abuses of
civil liberties and to protect his
agents from the kind of prosecu·
lion that convicted two former
top FBI executives last year of
illegal break·ins against rel·
ati ves or leftists during the
1960s.
1980 -that Steve and 5-year-old to go to trial November 17, he said. "Then he got where I
Timmy White hitc hhiked 40 Parnell will be joined by CO· guess he got along pretty eood.
miles to escape the man now defendent Ervin Murphy, now After a while, it go~ to where he
charged with kidnapping them. 39, a Yosemite National Park kind or accepted what was going
T.b.eit surfaced out.side a police janitor who prosecutors say on about him. So, he just toot it
Glation in Ukiah, about 120 miles helped Parnell and then re· in stride." ·
Wella Fargo executive Homer
Boynton, a top Webster a1de
before retiring after 28 yean in
the FBI, said, "People forget the
bureau was shattered· when
Webster took over" by the rev·
elatlona ot the break·ln.s, the ef-
forts to disrupt civil ri&bta and
anti·war groups and a corrup-
tion case.
"Webster's major accompliab·
ment baa been to restore tbe
credibility ot the bureau with
Coneresa, the news media. the
Justice Department, local poll~
forces, ex-aaentl, and most lm·
portant, be restored the faith of
the bureau's own employees in
themselves to do their jobs,"
BQynton said.
Pollution
before
so Ions
north of here. turned to a quiet existence in the Stayner said he gave up four
Timmy, kidnapped two weeks park, 40 miles east of Merced. years after Steve disappeared,
earlier in Ukiah on Valentine's Complicated legal Issues -in· but bis wife never gave up. They
Day, now lives with his family in eluding one that will set a state both talked to Steve's picture
San Jose. His mother, Angie, precedent -still need to be re· while he was gone. .
says the kidnapping "was a solved by the state Court or Ap-Now, Delbert Stayner haa am·
small moment in his life" that peal before the second trial can blvalent feelings about Parnell.
apparently left no emotional start. "The deal la, I hate the guy for
scars. Steve and his family are eager what he did to us, for what we
Steve had been gone more to leave the past behind. . went through for seven years
than seven years. He waa a 7· "I would like to forget about and what Stevie went throulh
year·old in the San Joaquin it," says Steve's father, Delbert. himself. But the man kept him
Valley community of Merced "I wish all this stuff was over so alive and we're very thankful
when two men enticed him into we could get back to normal and for that. "
a car u he was walking home
from school. He was 14 the ni&ht
be led nmmy away from a 48·
year·old ex·coovict and drifter
named Kenneth Parnell, who
prosecutors say tried to build a
family by stealing children.
"I didn't want Timmy to have
to go through the changes I went
through, because it takes quite a
Quebec separatists .
'may face ouster
while to get over," Steve ex· MONTREAL CAP > -The neighborhoods or this metropolii plai~ed ~ a recent telephone in· French separatists or Quebec, to the heavily French coun·
tetrv1ew, looking back at tbe who toot command of the prov· tryside of eastern Quebec.
final hours of his ordeal. inclal government in a stun· The PQ now bolds 68 seats in
"I just didn't think it was right rung election victory four years the 110-seat Legislature; the op.
for him to have to go through the ago, may be nearing the end or position Quebec Liberal Party
same thing that I did. He really their turn at the top. baa 34; the mlnor·party Union
didn't have to. There was The political tide has been NaUonale has five, and indepen·
someone there who could stop running against Premier Rene dents hold three.
it." Levesque and his Parti Veteran political observers
Steve returned home amid Quebecois government since they here say they detect a con·
f
television Cloodlights and con· lost a provincial referendum last s e r v at i v e trend a mo n g 1
SACRAMENTO (A p ) -cern he would find it difficult to May on the question or whether Quebecers, paralleling the ·
Problems as big as the smog adjust to his real family. As it to take the first steps toward rightward shift in the United '
covering Los Angeles and as turned out. the adjustment came seceding from the rest or States .and working &tgainst the I
tiny as a colorful fly that loves easily. · Engllsh·speaking Canada. mildly socialist PQ. :
oranges face the state "It sort of happened right a· The Levesque government, Unpublfahed opinion polls T
Legislature this week. way," said Steve.· "The hard whose maximum five-year rn.an· show the Liberals, led by form~r
The lawmakers also seek solu-part was getting to know rel· date expires in November, is ex-newspaper editor Claude Ryan, ,
tionsthisweektootherseeming· atives who are out of state. peeled soon to call an election are ahead of Levesque's 1
ly insurmountable dilemmas Like, I still haven't met a lot or for sometime in April. separatists by 10 percentage I
such as violent crimes and the my r:elatives." Besides the referendum de· points or more, knowledaea· •
proliferation or government ree·' Though his ''grades are kind feat, the PQ is reeling from a ble sources say.
ulationa. of low," Steve said his fellow string of 11 losses in by·elections But not one here is yet count· ·
The two houses' fiscal com-students "treat me pretty much to rm vacancies in the Quebec ing out the tough little PQ chief
miltees also continue their pre· like anybody else." Legislature. This losing streak and his enthuaiaatic .followers,
liminary work on the state Parnell faces a hearing on stretches back to 1977 and In· who believe that only some form
budget for the fiscal year that March 16 to set a trial date in volves districts ranging from of Independence will save
begins Ju 1 y 1. The Sen ate . _th.:..;..;..;;e_W ___ hi_·t_e...;.c_a_se_._K_e_,y'--te_s_U_m_on--'y'--is __ w_e_l l_·_o_r_r _Eng l:..;.i:..;.s.;;.;;h_· ;:..;s pL.:..;.e..;;..a..;..;k..;;..i _n.:..;i _..;..;Q::...u_e_b_ec_'_s_Fr_e_n_ch_c_u_lt_u_re_. __ _
Finance Committee was
scheduled to hear the annual
presentation today by Mary Ann
Graves, who is Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr.'s finance director. •
The chairman of the Asseiµbly
W aya and Means Committee,
Assemblyman John Vascon·
cellos , D-San Jose, last week
asked policy committees not to
consider bills until April. He
wanta them this month to study
the proposed ·budget in their
areas. But the committee eaten·
dara remain full of bills this
week.
A 1hnpll.ned vehicle smog in·
apection proaram bill COQ\es •
before the Senate Tranaporta·
tlon Committee for a vote Tues·
day. 1be committee held a bear·
in1 lut month on SB33, but
didn't like It.I complicated tbree-
way lnlpection prosram ..
The author, Seri. Robert
PrealQ, t:,•:-ide, 1aid lnat
week file be bad eooucb.
vote• cm tbe eommlttee to ap-
prove baa new prosram for an·
naal Wlldcle tnlpeeticmit lD five
amoay areu ol the 1tate.
The federal Environmental
Protection Aie:.~rubu 1rosen .. JDUCh U .1 oa In federal
hl1bway and aewer aid beca ..
tbe state bu not appro..cl a
plan for llllpedioaa lD ateu that
won't meet federal cl1u air
law• bJ im. 'l'IMIM .,.... arr
Lo1 u,.ae., Saa rrueUei
lacra ... to, SU DI•,. a.id
l'n•a · 811•1 IMriiiM .. fW ltire-.......................
•oaor oa &llolr ea-:~ Uo .............. , ... __
,..,. .• IPllfM• I Pl•·
our yzar 'round ble.2.er ...
-
-
..............
SISTER MAQll,.EINE ROSE EXPERT ON ODDS
Nun ~ gemblen advantage•
Ga1nbling ·nun
Sister can beat odds
OAKLAND <AP> It takes more than Godspeed and a few
Hail Marys to beat an odds-wise pit boss, and Sister Madeleine
Rose Ashton has what it takes.
Sister Madeleine Rose -or "Mad Rose" as her math stu-
dents call her -is well-acquainted with casino odds, and is well
known here for her lecture entitled: "How To Gamble ... If
You Must." The prim Holy Names College instructor, who last year
celebrated a Golden Jubilee to mark 50 years among the Sisters
of the Holy Names, said Friday that odds maklng grew out of
her work in probability.
"THIS LECTURING is just something I do, because part of
the phil0&0phy or the college is that we should go out and share
our resources with the community," said Sister Ashton a
former president of the co-educational liberal arts school in 'the
hills above San Francisco Bay.
She said her lecture got its start when she sat beside a
police chief at a service club luncheon and the subject of gam·
bling c~me up.
"About three weeks later, the chief called ~d asked. ii I'd speak to his Kiwanis club because they were golng to Reno,"
she recalled in a telephone interview. "I spoke to them and then
they offered to pay my way ii I'd go with them."
SHE TURNED the offer down. Though her order and the
college take her interest in gambling lightly, she'd rather spend
wnat money she nas by going to an UaIJand A's baseball game.
However. she has no moral objection to gambling, as long as the
stake isn't the grocery money.
Her lecture includes expert tips on how to play, and how not
to:
"Keno is the worst game because the house bas 28 percent
advantage. That's the difference between your chance of win·
ning and the house's chance.
"In craps, the house has only a 1.41 percent advantage. But
there are only six good bets in craps. And if you make any other
bets you're going to be paying a lot of vigorish (the difference
between mathematical odds and the payoff odds). For example,
if you bet any seven the house vigorisb is about 16 percent.
"People who know six or eight comes up more often than
any other point numbers think tbe big six or eight is a good bet.
But it really isn't, because it only pays 1·1 and it should pay
more than that. Now, if you take full odds, that's the best bet in
the house." Does praying help?
"No," she says, thoughtfully. "I don't think so."
Tom Murphinl! is o proud graitdpappfl. Hu Jun Coa.ttmg column will re·
11.1me ~ he retum1 /rom Cloud Niftt, ofter IM bfrUa of o grondlon.
"
G1tJP faces tall Ord~r • baum and RJe1le, al.lo Hpect toutb cam.,..,_. WAllllNOTON (AP) -W1dle tbe DWDben
work ...a.t Demoerall' ...._ ol recalalaC eon·
trol"Clf die llMte la ua, a_. .. at tbe poliU· ctw wt. wW be up fGr re ll1cUoe may bumble ~J!e-trJial to parlQ tbe lut eleeUoD lnto ~•-°'"""'••ce. Democrau, after a quarter-century o1 Senate
rule, wen aw.pt tnt.o tbe SllDortty by tbe landallde
tbat broulbt Pn.ldeot Reapn to power. There
wu a •wlnt o1 U aeata Into tbe Republican col·
umn, Slvinl tbe GOP a SS;4T mljorlty.
"U we repeat ln 1112, we wW •ld tbe Senate
for the reel of the decade and maybe tbe ,..t ot the
century, abHnt an avalanche," aaya Sen. Robert
Packwood, R-Ore., chairman of the National
Republlcu Senat'orial Coinmittee.
But winnlDI anywhere near 12 seat.a ln 1982 la
a tall order. Tbe Democrat.a up for re-election next
year don 't seem to have the poll ti cal
vulnerabWtiea tbat m~rked ~ Claaa ol lllO.
THE ... GaOUP featured a corps ot leadin1
liberal incumbent.a -Georae McGovem, Frank
Church, John Culver, Gaylord Nelaon, Birch Ba)'b
and Warren Mapuson -wbo faced voters in a
conservative year.
MOil members of the Democratic Cius of
1982. at leut on the surface, seem much leu out of alep wltb the elector a tea• conaervative mood.
The Democrats whose tenDI expire are Lloyd
Bentsen of Texas, Quentin Burdick of North
Dakota, Robert C. Byrd of West Virlinia, Howard
Cannon ol Nevada, Lawton Cbilea of Florida, Den-
nis DeCoocloi of Arizona, Henry Jackson of
Wash1D8ton, Edward Ke.nnedy of Mauacbusetts,
Spark Matsunaga of Hawaii, John Melcher of Mon·
tana, Howard ~tzenbaum of Ohio, Georae
Mitchell ot Maine, Daniel Moynihan of New York,
William Proxmire of Wisconsin, Donald Riegle of
Michigan, Paul Sarbanes of Maryland, James
Sasser of Tennessee, John Stennis of Mississippi,
Harrison Williams of New Jersey and Edward
Zorinaky of Nebraska.
WiJliams, implicated ln the FBl's Abscam
bribery investigation, may be the most vulnerable
of this group. Staunch liberals, such as Metzen·
Geese said
poisoned
by pellets
MONTELLO, Wis . (AP) -
The discovery that some 2,500
Canadian geese apparently died
of lead poisoning ha,s provided
conservationists with ammuni·
lion in their fight to ban lea<l
shot.
"You get sick first, then you
get mad," said Daniel T .
Flaherty of La Crosse, former
chairman of the state Natural
Resources Board.
The board banned the use
of lead shot by . waterfowl
bunters because the birds
swallow the shot and contract
lead poisoning. But the ban wu
overturned last year by the
Legislature and Gov. Lee S.
Dreyfus after lobbying by bun·
ters, who say they prefer the
traditional lead to nontoxic steel
shot because it is cheaper and
more effective.
Mltcbell, appointed to tbe Senaw after 10liAi a
pbenu1torial race, can expect a •tiff c:baUeqe.
But tbe moet vutnerabfe lDewna,,nt probably
ll a Republic~: S.I. Hayakawa, wbo alreadJ ll
drawlnl Callloi'nia opponent.a too numerous to
mention. Moreover, liberal Republlcu Lowell
Weicker probably will face tocl8b opposition in
Connecticut.
OTBEa aEPVBLICANS whose seats are up
next year are John Cbafee of Rhode bland, John
Danforth ot Miuourl, David Durenber1er of Min·
neeota, Orrtn Hatch of Utah, John Helm of Pen·
naylvania, RJchard .i.u1ar of Indiana, William
Roth ol Delaware, Harrison Schmidt of New Mex·
ico, Robert stafford of Vfrmont and MalcolD)
Wallop ol Wyomine. ·
The main reason Democrats have little hopes
of a turnaround is numerical, not political. There
are simply too many Democratic seats at stake -
20 -compared with Republicans -only 12.
"I think we will be doing well if we keep the
aame numerical difference that we have," aays
Sen. Wendell Ford, D-Ky., chairman of the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
Packwood's committee, which funneled $5.9
million in direct aid to GOP Senate candidates lut
year, haa raised about $1 million for the 1982 cam·
paign and expects $9 milllon, 'enough to 1ive each
candidate the maximum allowed per voter by
federal campaign laws.
THIS WOULD range from $800,000 for use
agalnat Moynihan in populous New York to $89,000
against Cannon and Matsunaga in their smaller
states.
The Democratic committee was outspent 6-lo·l
by the Republicans last year, but fund-raisin• by
individual candidates, many of them well·
entrenched incumbents, put the Democrats ahead
in total spending on Senate races. They spent $38.8
million to the Republicans' $36.5 million, accord·
ing to Federal Election Q>mmissioo figures ..
"Money really wasn't the problem, but we
need to do better and we lntend to," says Tom
Baker, dir~ctor of the Democratic campaign
panel.
,.,..,,.,.....
One state legislator who sup-
ported the uae of lead shot now
says the deaths or the geese
have made him change bis
mind, but Dreyfus says there's
not enough information to war-
rant taking action.
Convict's foster parents
' Reporta that geese were dying
by the hundred.a of lead poison·
lng at their ·gautering spots in
southern Green Lake County
surfaced this month. Tbe eeese
at.ore pebbles and spent shot in
their gizzards as an aid to diges-
tion.
Robert and Mary Carr, foster parents of c.(nvicted
murderer Steven Judy, say they will not fight the March
9 execution date for the 24-year-old Indianapolis man,
who IB on death row at the Indiana State Prison in
Michigan City. Judy was convicted of murdering a
woman and .her three youhg children in April 1979.
Much of country wet
Wild plants risky snacks
ATLANTA (AP> -People risk poisoning tbemsyves when
they nibble on wild plants, the national Center for DTSease Control
warns, ciUne the cases of 27 New Jersey residents sickened by
eatin1 pokeweed salad and loco weed seeds.
Rain tunu to •now /lurrie• in •pot•
c:. .. , •• ., •• , .... ,...--::1r----:-----------............. ~ ,........,
l'roDHllll, o1 .,_.,, fft •u01119
to JO perc~ 181111~ •• ""•' t••• TwMJ•y ,.,,.,,,,.,,. '•Ir f~Maf
(oa1tal -ft, ,,,,_ 0 "'•ti•I
111911 M, llllatld .. Wet•f M
ltOCll\On TMrrnal
Ulllall ••nto• 11, ... ,
ll1M11
C•lallM
S7 .. S7 .. u ,.
S7 •2
J2 21 0,.
There were no fatalities In the two separate New Jersey
incident.a Jut year. One cue involved 21 summer campers and
counselors fed pokeweed salad. The other involved six teen•agers
who mixed Jimsonweed seeds with alcohol and suffered
hallu'cinaUons, dry mouth, thirst, blurred vision, flushed skin,
Inability to urinate and slurred speech within 30 to 90 minutes, the
CDC sald. The symptoms lasted 18 hours to nine days.
..... ,.......
TERM TO l!XPIRE
Sen. Robert Byrd
Enlist01ent
of women
checked
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Army says that although most
women soldiers are doing fine
jobs, there are indications the
service's combat readiness
could be hampered by enlisting
more women.
·'So we are trying to hold the
line on the number of women" in
the Army, said William D.
Clark, acting assistant secretary
for man power.
Clark told a Senate Armed
Services manpower subcommit·
tee Thursday that the Army has
more than 61 ,000 women in
uniform but is "reluctant" to try
to reach the Defense Depart-
ment goal of 87,500 , or 13 percent
of the overall force. by 1986.
Defense Department figures
show that as of Dec. 31, the
Arm y had 772,351 men and
women in uniform , meaning
women accounted for about 7.9
percent.
CLARK SAID the department
is reluctant to continue increas-
ing the number of women in the
Army until it better unders tands
their effect on the Army's pre-
paredness to fight.
"We have got a lot of women
in the Army and most of them are doing really d --fine
jobs," Clark said.
"I don't think it is a question
of whether we shou ld have
women in the Army or not. I
think it is a question of the
degree of reliance that we place
upon women," he said.
Lt. Gen. Robert G. Yerks, de·
puty chief of staff for personnel,
told the Senate panel the Army
should "idJe our motors a bit"
and not increase the number of
female soldiers until completion
of "a very extensive s tudy going
on now" to measure their im·
pact on combat readiness.
"We have seen indications in
readiness reports and so forth
that there may be some real ad-
verse impact on readiness . . .
by just simply the large num-
' bers," Yerks said.
Yerks said about 40 percent of the soldiers in some medical
units, for example, are female
and they encounter ''just simple
physical problems of lifting lit-
ters and so forth.
"IS 4t PERCENT too high? I
don't know, but I have a gut feel-·
iog It is,'' he said.
"We are starting to get some
real bard data on the impact of
females on our force and I think
we owe it to our country to idle
our motors a bit and find out
what we have and rep0rt it out before we proceed any further,"
Yerks said.
"We intend to stay at about
the 65,000 level . . . and take a
look at the pregnancy issue" and
other problems associated with
r"male soldJers, he added.
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I I
l
Scopes trial .
rerun here?
SACRAHNTO (AP) -The Bible vs. Charles
Darwin. "ScleoUflc crealioollll" vs. sclent.lall like
Nobel laureate Arthur Kornber1 and astronomer'
Carl S.,an. Fundamentalist parent.I vs. the state.
Thole were to be the adveramea today when a
court battle besan over whether the biblical
version ol creation· is to be tau1ht on a par with
evolutJon in California public school science
claaa•.
At luue ls a suit by a San Die10 IJ'OUP called
tbe Creation-Science Researcb t;enter, wbicb baa
been tr)'tna for 18 years to restrict tbe teachin1 of
ty9Jutlon in science cluses.
THE SUIT CONTENDS presenting evolution
theory -without an equal, scientifically· baaed
presentation of the biblical account of creation -
violates religious freedom and tbe state's duty to
remain neutral in matters of opinion.
"It imposes a particular belief system on
every child in the state at the expense of all other
belief systems," Neil Segraves, a founder of the
Creation Science Center, sal,d in an interview.
Deputy Attorney Gen"'°al Robert Tyler,
defending the textbook guidefines, called the suit
"an intrusion of religion into science."
He said the suit is the first of its kind in
California, where purchase of textbooks for 4
million pubAc school students is a big-money
issue.
IT'S UNCLEAR WHETHER this will be a
rerun of the 1925 Scopes "monkey" trial, in
which attorne)I< Clarence Darrow, defending a
Tennessee teacher accused of illegally t~acbing
e•olution, engaged in a celebrated duel over
human origins with William Jennings Bryan.
The Creation-Science group says it doesn't
want to argue the $cientific validity of evolution,
just the constitutional issue.
.. We're not asking the court to ruie. on
science," said Kelly Segraves, N'ell's son, the
center's director and father of three San Diego
schoolchildren who are plaintiffs in the suit.
The issue, be maintained, ts that "the state
. . . makes evolutidn sacred, by saying that this is
the only scientific theory that can be presented."
"It's a constitvtional violation of neutrality in
regard to the faith of Christian children in the
public schools .... If it's unconstitutional for God
to be taught, it's equally unconstitutional for the
absence of God to be taught.
CREAT'IONISTS HAVE their own
explanations of the fossil records that most
scientists cite in support of theories that Ule on
earth is billions of years old. Seg11aves said he
doesn't need to prove a counter-theory to assert
that evolution isn't probable either. "No one was there to see evolution taking
place. It is conjecture," be llaid.
Tyler said Kornberg, Sagan and other
prominent scientists are prepared to testify both
as to the evidence for evolution and as to its
acceptance in the scientilic community.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) r
Claimi.DC the rewarda of drUllnc
are DOt wol1b the ritk of apWa,
olfletala fJ'Om etpt counU• and.
the 1ta~ have banded tosetber
to ft&bt the openlnC of Northern
Callfomla coutal waters to oU
exploration.
In a meetlna at state Couta1
Commlulon beadquartera, tbe coalition callecr-on Interior.
Secretary James Watt to
abandon bis decision to illue oU
exploratloo leases in four areas
-the Eel River Basin off
Eureka, Point Arena Basin near
Mendocino, Bodega Baaln off
Sonoma and Marin counties and
the Santa Crus Buin off Santa
Cruz and San Mateo counties.
Edmund G. Brown Jr. earlier
tbl1 month, Watt reportedly
said, "The pre1lde1't bH
Instructed me to take tbe
neceuary steps to increue the
production of oU and 1u, and I
firmly Intend to take those
steps." •
But state and local omcial•
contend the econ9mlc and
environmental risk• aren't
worth the estlma~ IN million
barrels of oil in the offshore
fields -enouab to 1upply the
nation's needs for 11 days.
"We are truly speakin1 for the
people., We should be U1tened to
in W aabi.nlton," said Barbara
Sbipnuck, chairwoman of the
Monterey County Board of
Supervisors.
.-
tbe areal . bopina It would
convinCfl mm to abandon tbe
leue plans be announced two
weeb a10. Tbe officlall said
they fear oU and 1u explor~
could lead to oU apUls that would
threaten tourism, flshin1 and
1hippln&.
Mendocino County Supervisor
Norman deVall aald oil rip olf
the Mendocino shore could bave
a diautroua impact on marine
life in the event of a major
eJrthquake, noting that the
Point Arena Buln sits on the
San Andreu fault.
Tbe leases would violate
states ri&hta because they are
inconsistent with California's
coastal protection plan,
according lo state Coastal
Commiuion Executive Director
Mike Fisher.
.. , .........
Watt's tentative deci~ion
reversed a directive made by
former lnterior Secretary Cecil
Andrus days before the Carter
administration left office. The
final decision will be made on
May 1.
In a letter to California Gov.
Citing the contrast between
the actions of Andrm and Watt,
she said, "We are lookint at a
credibility gap in the federal
government."
Tbe group of olflcials also said
they would invite Watt to tour
He said the protection plan -
endorsed by th e federal
government -is "binding on Old bone fowad federal agencies."
Priest silenced on gay Sex
Ralph Danklefsen, fossil expert, examines
an upper leg bone of a mammoth
excavated near Borrego Springs. Scientists
say the bone could be from 500,000 to 2
million years old .
LOS ANGELES CAP) -An Oakland priest
who suggested homosexual activity may help
overcome "severe psychological conflict" of gay
Therapy aids
pregnancy
LA JOLLA <AP) -After experimenting for
eight years, University of California doctors say
they can induce pregnancy in a small claaa of
oreviously infertile women by injecting a brain
hormone that the women's bodies lack.
Five women are now pregnant in the United
States, Australia and Germany as a result of the
procedure, which is sWl experimental, said Dr.
Samuel S.C. Yen.
"This time we got the right combination .... "
said Yen, chairman of reproductive medicine at
UC's San Diego School of Medicine. "Everyone is
~xcited."
He said the procedure is "perfecUy safe" and
should someday open the possibility of motherhood
to about 2 to 3 percent of infertile women. ,
The brain hormone is known u LRF, or
luteiajliog release factor. Its deficiency, say
researchers, can be camed by a brain Utjury,
stress, depression or inherited conditions -even
long-diatance running.
'
priests bu been ordered by bis Roman Catholic
· superiors to say no more on the subjecf.
The dispute arose over an article written by
31-year-0ld Father Richard Wagner in the Nov. 21
issue of the National Catholic Weekly, an
independent weekly.
In a letter of reprimand from the Most. Rev.
Ferdinand Jette, superior general of the
Rome-based Missionary Oblates of Mary
Immaculate, Wagner was told to make no more
public comments and to reconsider bis views on
prieaUy celibacy.
Wagner's provincial superior, the ~ev. Paul
Wal die of Oakland, told the Los Angeles Times:
"When we say a priest is celibate, the bottom line
is not only 'do not marry' but also 'do not enter
into intimate genital relationship with another
person."'
IN HJS ARTICLE, drawn from res earch
among 50 homosexual priests for his doctoral
dissertation. Wagner wrote: '·I suggest that for
many priests . . . the lack of physical intimacy.
wblcb is supposed to assure their availability Clo
the church) for loving service, is in fact an
exhamting, debilitating privation whkb makes
them less healthy, less creative and less giving."
He added': "One should not underestimate the
severe psychological conflict and
self-preoccupation which total self-denial can
engender in some people."
1108T OF THE priests Wagner studied have a
liberal interpretation of celibacy, contending the
church's current teaching on celibacy is wroni.
Donors adopting
ani01als at zoo
FRESNO (AP) -For Sl5, people can adopt a
red-eared turtle, a California tiger salamander or a desert iguana .
Those with more discriminating tastes might
prefer a ring dove,· a silver-throated tanager or a
fairy blue bird.
And people with m'ore money can adopt all
sorts or animals at Fresno's Roeding Park Zoo up
to and incfuding Nosey the elephant.
The tab to adopt Nosey is $9,000, but the
donor doesn·t have to figure out bow to house or
fe-:d the great gray beast. The zoo will keep doing
that.
Her price is high because Nosey bas grown out
of. her quarters ~ver the years and needs more
room to roam wh1cb will cost $1 mlllion or more to .achieve.
Tbe zoo is beginning an "adopt an animal"
olan to ~ais~ money for its capital improvement
fund, which 1s short because t'roposition 13 lopped
off property tax funds available to the city-owned facility.
"It's the k10d ot th10g people can get a
personal identity from and get a little sign at the
zoo s aying they adopted an animal," Zoo Director ,
Paul Chaffee said in an interview.
KOCM FM STEREO 103.1
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Over the last eighteen months we have been developing
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about the music a.nd hope you are, too.
We have also spent the last year improving the air
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It's an extremely lightweight polyester·worsted
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KOCM will appreciate your comments or suggestions.
Sincerely,
I
• lt'a pretty rtdiculom WbeD tupayWI ba•• to finance •• ftled by OM lfOYel'nmeDt aj~)' aplnlt lnadier,
IN& ID tb1i caH o1 tbe San Juan ~ dndllnl debate t.Mrt ...... to be no alternatlve. Tbe mouth of the creek at Doheny State Beacb 11 IO.
clo11ed wttb 1and, tilt and ulorted debrll left by winter
storma the. channel now can bold only 50 percent of lta
normal water c•&r:tty. LMt winter caused aeyere floodln1 that d1ma1ed
an ~..m aewqe treatment plant and reaulted ln a S1
mi Ulan 1ult qalnlt the counts by the 1ewaae a1ency. That
suit la still peDdinc. · Tbe county, undentandably, wants to 4et rid of the
estima&ed •,ooo cubic yards ol 1ancl block.inc the creek
channel before m.ore flnncHna occun. By 1eWn1the1and it
could complete the job for about M0,000.
The South Coast Re1lonal Coastal Commlaaion
autborbed the project last year. But the ~late Coastal
Oommiaaion overturned that ru.lln.B· Instating the sand
could not be sold but mu.at be placed on Doheny Beach to
prevent shoreline erosion.
The estimated cost to the county for this procedure is
$560,000, or 14 times the onginal estimate.
Since the county is in no position to shell out half a
million dollars for the project, the Orange County Flood
Control District now bas been obliged to file suit against
the state Coastal Commission in an effort to ret4lin the
right to sell the dred&ed sand.
This procedure in past dredging projects has saved
county taxpayers an estimated S6 million while providin&
essential flood protection.
It's unfortunate the state commissioners seem unable
to grasp the significance of their arbitrary ruling without
dragging the issue into co1'ft'. But apparently that's what
it will t.ake.
Hold that p e riJDeter
. A keystone of Orange County government's effort to
maintain John Wayne Airport as a sbort·haul facility is
the so-called perimeter rule prohibiting jet air carriers
from flying to destinations more than 500 miles distaQt.
There's only one exception, Salt Lake City, Utah, 526
miles away.
The reasoning ~hind the rule is simple. Limit the dis·
tanceS to which air 'carriers may fly and, effectively. the
airport operator has leverage to control the activity at
the airport, and, thus, the noise jet traffic produces.
It now appears the perimeter rule is in jeopardy.
Both the Federal Aviation Administration and the Civil
Aeronautics Board say it violates regulations on in·
terstate commerce and the tenets of tbe Airline Deregula·
tion Act of 1978.
It's odd the FAA would take such a position consider·
ing that one of its own airports -National, outside
Washington D.C. -h~ a 750-mile perimeter rule. The
agency has no convenient answer for why the rule is ac-
ceptable in the East, but not in the West.
Thus far, county airport officials and the Board of
Supervisors have resisted suggestions that the perimeter
rule be eased or abolished. Doubtless, at some point in
the future, the federal government will get heavy banded
apout the situation and sue the county. '
Regardless, this is one issue the county should be pre·
pared to go to the mat on. The airport's short haul status
must be preserved.
They're at it again
Let's hope the U.S. Postal Service hJS a good supply
of 3-cent stamps (remember when they used to carry a
letter right across the country?) .
They'll be needed by everyone who loaded up on 15-
cent stamps right before the Postal Rate Commission ap·
proved an increase in the first class mail rate to 18 cents.
The new rate could be in effect in about 10 days. But
don't invest too heavily in the 18-centers. The Postal
Service says it still needs to charge 3> cents for first class
letters and will be back next year seeking another in~t
crease.
The commission's rate compromise will give the
Postal Service about $1 billion less per year than the $3. 75
billion it claims is needed to offset lnfiation and meet
operating exP.4?nses.
Meanwhile President Reagan, in his economic ad·
dress, proposed reducing the postal subsidy by $632
million next year to encourage the service to become
"more effective."
And if that cut takes place, you know who will be
picking up the tab via still higher postage rates.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Sox 1560, Costa Mesa , CA 92828. Phone (71•) &42·-4321 .
Boy d /Popcorn
8 (.. BOYD Houston shoot J.S Umet u
The 1/~eis in ancient many people aa do the
graves HY they've ·found lawmen in other ciUes. How
popcorn samples at least do you explain the wb1 ol se,ooo yeara old. If you've that?
eaten popcorn at some
· theaters, you mi1bt have
gueued that, I suppose.
Anyhow, popcorn aoea way
back.
One James Fyfe, a comul·
tant to tbe Police Fqunda·
tlon, clalma police offt~n lD
Q. What do tbe old folb
mean when they refer to
••Tinker· to-E vera-to·
Chance"?
A. 'Ibey were inflelden m
major leque baseball early
ln thla cmtury. And a re-
aow aed bumorlat named
Frankltn P . Aclama lm·
mortalbed tbem ID 1a11 ID a
b r I e f v er 1 e 1911 e d
"Baeeball'• Sad Lexl~oa."
Wrote be: "'l'bne are the
aaddnt of PM•lble worda
. . . Tinker to IC.era to
Chance • . . Trio of Bear
Cubl fleetel' tban blrdl ..•
Ttnlt... to Sven to Cbanee ... R-= prtctial our 1onfalcm • ... llaklDf
a Glu& bit ID&o a double . . .
Worell tbM an nllhty with
notbln1 bat trouf>l• , . •
'ftak# to S... to O&DH11•
/
Thomu P. Haley /Publisher
WA&IUNGTON -''SNn UM
rod Md epoll &.be cbild" la •
old·ftMloMd muim tbat baa aou liDee fa11m out ol f aYClf' -
wltll tbe federal 1overnmeat.
Wh• Uncle Sam'• bardwort·
lnl audlton find evldeAct of
fraud and ·
waate ln the
·•pendlDI of
federal hmda,
the 1overn-
meat la 1up-
po 1 e d to
crack down
OD the olfeo·
den and at
least force
them to ove
back tbe money they ripped off
from the taxpayers. In many
caaea, interest and peaaltiea
abould be levied u well.
IDcredlbily, tbou&b. the mid·
dle·level bureaucrats who
should be chum, down these
wayward bllliom just can't be
bothered. In some cases, they
actually reward the ripoff
artist.a with even more govern·
-..
Richard Reeves
meDt IOOdl•· Spared tbe rod ol
f•deral •DIOl'e•ment, lt'a ao
woader tbe •DOiled reclpieau ol 1o~•nuneat l\IDdl Uuunb tbelr ao.ee at the relUlatiom -and
laup all the way to the baU ..
. &Sas ilE some' examples
that show why 1overnmeat
audit.on are probably the moet
frustrated civil servant.I ot all:
-In May 117t, audlton at the
NaUoul ~eronautica and Space
Adminlatraticlft repo~ that tbe
llacNeal -Sehweodler Corp.
waa markMtnl a computer pro.
aram that bad been developed
by Uacle Sam -but WU not
payiq the required lease feel to
the 1overnment. Th• audit.on
estimated that NASA could re-
cover aQ)'Wbere from $300,000 to
$2 mlllion. But the apace bureaucrats
evidently .had their eyes on the
atara instead of on mundane
money matters. A recent UD·
released review by the Geoeral
Account1ag Office reported that
"altbouab 15 months have
~. -
elaPMd alnce the audit report
wu luued, DO 1ubltant1ve AC·
Uou bave pccurred" to 1et the
money owed:
-IN JANVA8Y ttTt,
All'iculture Department
audlton discovered ' that both
A1riculture and the Health and
Human Services Department
had been reimbur1in1
Pblladelpbia'a Get-Set Day Can
Program for food service labor.
The procram bad received
_.TB,000 it wun't·~Ued to. But
becaa1e the two department.a'
bureaucrats couldn't decide
which ••ency should go after the overpayment, "the funds have
not been recovered and the day
care operator ia atill beln1-
funded by both programs," GAO
reporta.
-Housing and Urban
Development auditors recom·
mended diaallowin1 reimbune-
ment of $50,500 in claima for perlODDel costs by the city of
South Bend, Ind. But HUD
poobbabs allowed the improper·
................................ L,;4..,,,l-,J.. .;..:::::-;·;.;., ·~ ................... "'-' __,. __
L f uffhUfiiiifihihiJhfhiiilJ I
._11,.tlNlll.llllllllllllNlhll•tJ•llUIUllUIUUltlUlll •• ••••••••ea• o • • .. • c: • ........................... _____ __::::::::551ii1
,
• ... __ _,,,,,_ --·
ly doewDeDtM clalm after die
city r .. ubmltted tl11ie1ueta
wblcb bid be.a "NCOD9trueted"
from memory.
-Duri.q a tbree·year period, ta.. Fulton County (Ill.) Houslq
Autbottb' received exc ... HUD
payment.a of nearly $100,000, but
fatled to live UM money back.
Not only bu no proaret• been
made lD colledine ~· overpay· ment, but the county baa aince
been pven AA additicmal $250,000
in government 1ublidles.
-Commu.oit7 Services Ad·
mlnlatraUon f)lftclala uted the
Florida Department of Com·
munity Alfain to reapoad to
question.a railed in a 1978 federal
audit retard.inc $2118,411 in gov·
emment grant money. The st.ate
a1ency i1nored the request.
Tboup CSA warned the Florida
department it faced a cutoff of
federal funda if it failed to
respond, the state still made no
reply. Yet it was awarded
another SS00,000 by CSA -and a
subsequent audit raised quea· ·
tiona about $70,924 of that grant.
THE GA() IN 1978 found that
34 federal agencies iwere owed a
total of $4.3 billion according to
government audits. A recent,
broader survey done al the re-
quest of Rep. Jack Broob, D·
Texaa, chairman of the Govern·
ment Operations Committee,
showed 73 agencies with a total
o' $14.3 billion in ''unresolved
audit findings." Brooks plans to
bold hearings on the GAO's sur-vey.
One big problem, veteran gov·
ernment auditors told my as-
sociate Tony Capaccio, is that
there is little incentive for
management bureaucrats lo
follow up on audit findings .
That's because few government
officials are graded on their
performance i n retrieving
money owed. In fact, there is
some incentive not to do
anything, because the audits
often involve programs the mid-
Jevel bureaucrats are managing
themselves. Any enthusiastic
pursuit of the misspent money
would simply call the embar·
rassing mistake to their bosses.'
attention.
The economic debate involves all of us
WASHING TON -"Can we
who man the sblp of state deny
that it is somewhat out of con·
trol?"
That was our captain speakip,g.
Ronald Reagan grabbed the
wheel of state
and gave it a
hard spin to
starboard. I
think that was
starboard, but
I'm.not sure I
know right
from left
anymore. I'm
not sure .
anyone else
does either. And I'm not sure that
we're not a little more out of coo·
trot than we were a month a10 or
so.
Sbiftin1 metaphors , there
seems to be ])anic in the streets
of the capital. Not just the
political panic of senators,
bureaucrats and lobbyists wor·
rted about buqet cuts, but an
intellectual panic. There la a
aomewhat scary rush to
economic judcment 1oing on
amont people who should know
better. ·
Suddenly, conservatives and
liberala, Republicans and
(
Art H oppe ...
Democrats, the president and
his critics, aU seem to agree that
"supply-side" economics will
work, that tax cuts and budget
cuts wiU get aU of us out of this
inflationary mess. Democratic
senators, like Minority Leader
Rebert Byrd, and liberal
economists, like Otto Eckstein of
Harvard, were lined up in front
of television cameras that
night queslionint s pecifics
of the Reagan program but not
the theory behind it. The next
morning, The New York Times
was saying, "The economic
strate1y that underlies the
Reagan budget plan is sound."
Is it? I remember George
Bu.b lauahing at it last year and
calling the whole thlnt "voodoo
economics." More Important., I
remember sitting three years
aao with the man who sort of in·
vented aupply-aide ecoaomlc1,
Arthur Laffer of the University
of Southern California, when be
aaid be bad no idea whet.her bis
theories· would actually work in
practice.
IT'S P&OBABLY wortbwblle
riaht about now to 10 back to beaics for a moment. What la the
theory? What the hell la supply·
aide economics?
Basically, it's the idea lhal
people produce priJnarily to get
money for themselves -after·
tax profit and income. So, the
lower the taxes, particularly in
higher-income brackets, the
more the American economy will produce and the more pres·
perity there will be for au of t.:S.
That idea -which used to be
called "trickle'"4own" theory -
is different from what mitht be
called "demand" economics, the
notion that production and pro·
ducUvity are linked directly to
demand and that government
should stimulate demand with
spending programs and smaller
lax cuts.
WILL THE new idea work?
Let's hope so, because we're ob-
viously going to try it. President
Reagan, who seems convinced
that be knows what he's doing,
bas brilliantly constructed a
political context in which the
question is not what to do but
how to do things his way.
More power to blm, but there
are real dang'9rs in this. It
really ls an experiment -and it
may be nothlni more than an at·
tack on the psycbolOIY of lDfla.
tJon. Reagan would like to break
the inflationary cycle : If people
believe things will gel better,
they may stop asking, demand·
ing, screaming for and paying
more, more and more.
THE PRESIDENT, if all bis
spending cuts are accepted -
they're not really "cuts" but re-
ductions in rates of growth -
w.ould slow lhe~ear·to-year in· creases in Ceder I spending from
the current 16 rcent lo 7 per·
cent . .B'4 lb~re wi,11 be tax cuts al
the same lime as lhe spending
rate reductions, an1! those cuts,
reducing federal revenues, at
least for a time, Will increase lbe
federal debt and could trigger
even more inflation. Then, we
could all be screaming and paying
even more than we are now.
This ls an adventure, a gam-
ble. "A new element hu been
injected into the ongoing
economics debate," said
Lawrence ~ein. a Nobel PrUe· winning economist from the
Wharton School of Finance. For
economists, it's a debate. For
govemment, it's an experiment.
For us, it's our futures. Each ol
ua la one of those new elements
in that ongoing economic de-
7
Off to Never-Never Land with Ronnie Pa~
inflation will only 1et wone.
Won't it?"
Ronnie acowled and scuffed
the toe of bls boot on the carpet.
"I Mt• details," be aald.
"Where is that TlnkerbeU
Stockman, m-y voodoo
ecoaoml.at, wben I need blm1''
Al ''l"llOVGB in answer to a
prayer; a UWe 1lowhli fl.pre
wltb a m haircut and • bone ID
lta DOM ftltted in the window,
darted atio.t the room and Ht·
Ued on the bedpost.
"Explain my ptan ,
TinkerbeU," commanded RM·
nle, ntirtnl to a coner, folcllnm '
bit ..... , llUdlq OD bll 1111.a
and ~ lala eyea. "But DOt toolaildl,--:1'
"Ob, ll'a ....Uy qWW ........
"Ola bow woaderful. aoam.," clallV.," •aid TlDllerbell. "tou
1ald WllldJ, elapptq ber baadl. won't IPIDd &M m41MJ ._.. ••
"But ~ wW ftttlal our tall lolna to,. .. JOU, You'll pUt It ID do all tlaatf" tbe NI* ... ··a ..,...,_ mon mC1M7to ''N w = .,_ _.
• -.,eilne," .......... ~·""•' ...... , ... ·~e• .. tut." \-~~ ... ._. ... ,.....,.
• MMMll fl& ••· ''I.& ... e4 to ..., wap Mf9" &M ............. .,, .. u .. -.. ~-... ,it ...... ..... ~---. .... .,... at11 •• - --' ....................... '(,,........ ..... ......
10 up. But now that you know
ROD.Dle Pa la 1olnc to lick lnfla·
tJoa and prices won •t 10 up. you
won't 'buy tblnp. You'll put your
money lo ta..-bank imtead."
"We will?" said Wendy
dubloualy.
"CertalnJy," aaid Tlnterbell
flrml1. "And tbe baa.ken will
thn ha" Iota more moaey to lend to tbe bUll.DeUmen. And ta..
bulD-.nen wW tben be abl9 to
build b&aw f actioriea and mate le>Q mon tblnp ...
"That's aood 1' • asked
lllcbael.
"Qbvioully," aafd Tinlutrbell.
"hf tile IDON W.,S tlaey male
tbe c..,.. tbe prtcea wW be.
So. ~ .... lt JOU JUlt Milne
tbat ....._ Pan will lick ~· •
, lion and put your money lD tbe
bank, Ronnie Pan will lick infla·
lion."
TBB TB&EE children
scratched tbeir headl. "But with
more tbi.DO to buy," uted Wen·
dy, "won't we buy more Wnea
and cause inflation?"
"Or not buy more t.blnp and
cauae a depre11loa?" uked
Mlcbael.
"TeU ua about CaptaiD Hook
and the pirates," demanded lit. u • .Jobo. '
Bvt, b7 DOW, Tlnkerbell'•
vol~ bad INWD falnt aad tall llow elm. Raa8ie 1oaa•naulted
to bla lelit. "Doa't JOU know," lie
•a.ld telUb'. "&bat ewrr Ume a ctdkt 1111. 'I dae't beUne la
• voodoo HODOmln,' a Yoodoo
eeoaomie tla"rJ 10mewlaere , ............ , ..
Tiiie ............. c:.att.e. .. ........... ~,·· ....... ...,. uu i ........... ..... ·=? illit 'tlw ..... , .. • ~.. .... .. Mi. jll =·= 1J la I I~ f'IUI& ••• 2 ..
• .
I
I
ARSENAL FO.A DIFENR
Bob Pierre, Phoenix, clept~• hi• gun•
Resea.rch projeet
Monkeys use
sign language
VARIOUSLY NAMED
retreatism, survivalism or
futurism by its adherents, the
phtlpSOP.bY was found in a dozen
states visited by this correspond·
ent.
"It is a retreat to medieval
times," said Brian Jenkins, an
expert on terrorism and in·
surgency who works for the
»:an~ Corp. in Santa Monica.
There are inner perimete.rs in
America today, places people
are reluctant to leave for fear of
their safety. The national
perimeter no longer seems
secure."
No official figures exist on the
number of people involved but
NEW YORK (AP) -African vervet monkeys survivalists who agreed to be in-
ground of the believers, they
seem to share an attitude about
people not similarly prepared:
Stay away from me and what
I've got.
·'What would J do if my
neighbor came for help in a ma-
jor catastrophe?" asked Ron
·Burns, a freeze-dried food
manufacturer wbo bas a
hideaway in Utah's mountaioous
Heber Valley. "I might help
him, but some of my customers
say they would rather kill him."
The accumulation pf guns is
on e c haracteris tic of sur-
vivalism . Those seriously con-m ay be using a primitive txi>e of language to warn terviewed insisted they knew of thousands of others. each other of the presence of such predators as William Pier, a California sur-EDITOR'S NOTE -Some
leopards, eagles and pythons, three Rockefeller · vival supply distributor, claims Amerioona are ao worried about the
University researchers say. to have 200,000 names on bis na-econom11. crime and /orftgr& policy
lo captivity, chimpamees and gorillas. have tionwide mailing list and says he they are preparing lo take the law
HUSBAND TODD, a heavy
equipment operator. carries a
~rsonal .45-callber automatic
oistol the family affectionately ~alls "Bnmo." •
"It's a sien of the troubled
times," said Mrs. Pierre, who
sleeps with a loaded rifle beside
her bed when her husband
travela.
Some who have crossed the threshold from recreation to
defense gathered in the northern
Georgia woods t his winter,
women and c h ildren self·
consciously pecking at freeze·
dried meats and fruits while the
men{olk checked out rifles and
pistols arrayed on wooden tres-
tle tables.
This was the tlrst session of
Harold's American Survival
School, sec in a forest glade near
Dalton. This quiet place was
previously frequented by shy
lovers and partying young peo·
pie. Today, if the big warning
sign fails to keep trespassers off,
the roar of gunfire should con-
vince them. been taught to use sign language for ob1ects, made a $1 million profit last into their hattlU, if neceuary, to
altbou@ there is a controversy over whether thev year by selling freeze dried food nirvn~. An Aaaocialed Presa writer "I SORT OF wonder if I
can string these words into meaningful sentences. and other items . Pier said majted aecret hideotda in remote should realJy be doing this, but I
But the Rockefeller scientists said they believed scores of s imilar businesses area• where weapon& and food are guess my husband is right," said
theirs was the first clear demonstrali~ of ~ across the nation sell items stockpihd. Dorothy Priest, a transplanted
animal's use of sounds to represent obJects m ranging from portable potties to Californian cradling a 12-gauge
nature. radiatioo suits and $8,000 night cerned are buying as many as a shotgun in her arms. .
vision glasses. dozen firearms per family and She blasted a distant target
THE KEY TO THEIR STUDY is the finding hiring martial arts professionals and explained s he and her
that the monkeys use different alarm calls to warn "SURVJVALISM WILL be one to teach them to use them husband bad come to Georgia to
each other of predators. or the great growth industries or against attackers. escape "too many drugs, too
Naturalists have thought for years that many the l9El>s," said Peter Weyland, much crime."
bl.rds and mammals give specific alarms for a W ashington computer IN STA T ES WHER E Husband Des Priest. an or-s pecialist whos e firm is machineguns are allo~ed , o nic bemist a'd the had ditterent predators. But. some have disputed din th l!ta c · s 1 Y
whether the calls themselves have meaning, or ~!~as~~~~ a survivalism refer. ~i~~~~rgr::'s':o!be =~d sgee.Jn': spent S800 of their vacation
Whether other animals simply look up, see the money to take four days of The emphasis is on self· tactical instruction from courses on armed and unarmed predator and nee. reliance. Survivalists are stock-sophisticated training schools self-defense, advanced first aid
But the three researchers, behavioral piling food and building shelters featuring Vietnam veterans. and radiation detection. The
biologists at Rockefeller University's Field as primitive as dirt foxholes or ··The Treasury Department Priesta' next step will be to
Research Center at Millbrook, N.Y., 70 miles north as sophisticated as concrete says private cltb:ens in this land stockpile food, buy half a doten
of New York City, say they have overcome that bunke,rs. Some are learning how of 226.5 million own at least 140 guns and maybe build a bomb
objection in 14 months of studying the monkeys at to de rend these res ources million rifles, shotguns and shelter in tbeir rural home.
Amboseli National Park in Kenya. against all comers. handguns. That is SO million "We are not just concerned
U d Going beyond the bmnb more weapons in private bands about nuclear war," Mrs . Priest They recorded the monkeys' alarm ca s an shelter craze of the 1950s and than 10 years ago, when the said. "What if we have a serious
played them back later when no predators were '60s, many advocate extreme ac-population was 203.2 million, for tornado? We wiU still need to
around. When the leopard alarm was sounded, the tion in time or emergency. a 36 percent increase in weapons I f h " monkeys Would Scamper ID. to the trees 1'ust as if a . 1 . . protect ourse ves rom ot ers. "If there is nuclear war, I ownership over a popu atioo tn· real leopard were present. Eagle alarms caused hope everyone in the cities is crease of about 11 percent. , The emphasis on armaments
them to look up, while snake alarms made them killed. 1 don't want them coming The hard-core adherents seek worries some prominent sur-
look down. out afterwards expecting me lo refuge in mist-shrouded moun· vivalists.
feed them or to ta.Ice what I've lain \<alleys and rock-rimmed "They are learning how to kill
THE VERVETS, BLACK -FACED, got," J . Allan Croft, 30 , a desert redoubts, reluctant to and nothing else," said Kurt
ground-dwelling monkeys about the size or large foreman from northern Georgia, travel far for fear doomsday will Saxon of Harrison , Ark., a
house cats also have distinct alarm calls for said at a weapons training camp swallow them up away from writer who encourages the sim·
baboons and unfamiliar humans, the scieotiSla where his 10-year-old SOD, John, home. pie lifestyle.
said. But there were too few d these calls to study was learning to fire a rifle. They differ markedly from the
• them methodically. more publi c paramilitary "THEY, TOO, WILL become
"It's not that vervets are different from other HIS VIEW WAS echoed by groups such as the Wisconsin· predators after the catastrophe.
animals. It's just that this is the first experimental many who believe crisis will based Posse Comitatus, which preying oo the local population,"
demonstration that the alarm calls in and of come not fro~uclear devasta-advocates tax revolt and states he warned. ~
themselves convey a different meaning," said lion but from economic collapse, rights, and the Minutemen, a Writer and weapons s cialist
.J f b h which will panic city populations group of law-and -order ad· Edward Ezell of Houst n sees Robert Se,.artb, one o t e researc ers. b ed in M' . d paramili'tary train1'ng an even-into running wild, or from earth· vocates as 1ssoun an "The same thing Is almost certainly going on quakes which will shatter the Kansas. tual threat.
among other mammals and birds," he said, noting countr y and isolate com-, "People believe th ere is
that ground squirrels in the western United States munities. THE SVRVIVALISTS ARE something wrpng with our socie·
are believed to have different alarm calls for But whatever the cause of the part of an evolving social pat· ty, and their Oasbpoinl is low ,"
..
Call 142-5678. Put a tew word• to work for ou.
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danger on the ground and from the sky. The same expected chaos or the back-tern where gun owners look at he said. is true of many forest-dwelling American birds, he __::,.'.:!::,:.:~~~=::.....:::.:_..::::_.:.:.:::..._-=:..::....:..::::.:.....:~:...:==.:._:=::....::..:_ ___ .,_---:---~-----·'-----=::=~:----------.---:;;;;;--
said.
THE SCIENTISTS' WOU WAS published in
the journal Science.
They warned of a possible problem in their
work: "We can't tell whether the leopard alarm
means 'Run into tbe trees,' 'leopard,' or just 'big
cat on the ground'," Seyfarth said.
I. H+llQt LA~MT. oun
Monuarv • Cemetery CrerMtorv i 1625 Gisler Ave
' Costa Mesa ! 54().~
PIMCIMOnBS
l&&..-OADWAT
wo.TUMT ·
t10 Broadway
Costa Mesa 642-9150 --,
1All2&-.. C*
NIM • tvnaL WISTCUff CHA ...
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
~9371
DEA TH NOTICES
LANDIS
M ERlBAll E. LANDIS,
resident of Huntin gton
Beach. ca. Passed away on
February 27. 1981. Bom May
19. l9L8 in Long Beach. Ca.
Survived by son John W.
Landis III of Huntlnftotl
B e a c h , Ca .. daughter
Pamela Ann Landl1 of
LaVerne, Ca. and a brother
Bob Upright ol Alaska.
Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, March 3, 1111 al
ll:OOAM cryptside at Paclflc
View Memorial Park wlth
Rev . Bruce A. Kurrie ol·
llclat101. Pacific View
Mortuary directors.
llATHS
.B.SlWID£ I
THROUGHMARCH 15TH
AT SPIRES
Tender Top Slrtolft
Sttllc Ind two llrll
1111· Served wtth \ hilllld brlwn potatoes
Ind cltllcl Of todf.
SERVED
ANYTIME
• •
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i
DEAR PAT DUNN: Do the comb-in hair
dyes actually change a peraoo's hair color
back to its natural shade?
G.M., Huntineton Beach
No. n.e Foed ud Dna AdllllaWraU.
aaya &.Ital u &lall dye la combed Ulr'Mp tM
llalr, me&a.l.llc Nit (a .. tly lead aeetale) re· acta cltemJcally lo prod.a metaJ a.utde
pt1me11ts ~t coat tM blr. FDA addl tllat
.._ ree.Jtla& ee&.r la oftea ... tuaJ l11kbta.
It's lmpeftallt SO ~ or taper elf
HI•& Ute prod.ct for periods of U•e,
•enrlae die metal balld·llP cu caue ltalr
breakaceud .....
•etaWc dyes cauot be removed aad are
lacompaUble wttla otlter balr co1orta1 prod·
acts.
Dlreet dqod• •"'e
DEAR PAT DUNN: I live in a large
apartment complex and I worry that my
monthly Veterans Administration pension
check wilJ be lost or stolen. What can I do?
L.T., Hunti.nlton Beach
You cu ltave yoar mcmt1111 ce•;e..a.
tlo• or peuloa paymeats dell.ered dlredly
to yoar ftaudal luUt.U. fw ...._.. so
'"' penoaaJ elleeklag or NYlap aeewaL To apply, take you aellt cltec:k SO yOU' ftau.
claJ laltl--. aad leU tile• JW wut .. lip
•P for die Direct Depoeit program .
• Serl'lee• l•rlaa~ ·
DEAK aEADERS: U you've woederecl
H• muy ud wllat kJDds of services are
prnlcled for lite ltaadlcapped by die federaJ
1ovename11t ud private natlGaaJ service or·
aaabaU.., Y• may •••l lo~ a NPY • of tlte "Dlrectory of Nadoaal bfonaatloa
So.rces oa RaadJcapplag Coadttteaa Hd
Belated Servlcn." ·
Tile directory lists lite services alld pro-
1ra ma ottered by ab CablMl·level depart·
meats of die federal govenunetat, by ab:
teparate eseca&tve braacla ageaetea, aad by
Uie Library of Co111resa. la aJJ, It describes
Uie aenlcea of 45 a1eacles, ud Bats lite
tenlcea ud actlvltlea of ZZS •adoaal or·
1aataat1... tbat provide lalor•atha aad
ltne raoiarces lo aaalat tile llalldlcapped.
Tile dlredory abo provldn u lades wldcll
;;~:;:;;~;.~;.= ~•ld•ah , Departmeat of BBS,
Was ........ , D.C. zitztt. Alk for.._ directory
by aame alld ldeattncaU. code: DREW
hbUcaU. No. OBD77·Zltl3 . . ,,...., .............. ..,..
DEAR PAT DUNN: Someone told me it 's
very dangerous to take a tranquilizer pill and
then eat cheese. Any truth to this? T.N., Costa Mesa
Ab10l•tely. T .. e Plaarmaee•Ucal
•aa.tactmen Auoclatloll aaya Ulla .. OM of
&lie •• da.qenia fMd ud ctr.a combllla·
tloaa beeaue u la&redlellt la cllene called
try,topllaa eallHcea t .. e effect of tr••·
•allberl ud ••Y rea•lt la.....,._, coaa
er eeenllleM. PMA alao wana aaalalt tak·
laa &etracycllae •Illa HJ dairy prod•ct
aieea .. tM caldtl• la dairy pnM'blets .._. ..... ,.,.....,._ ... .
Ner II It a , ... Idea to take dnp .,._.
Mft ...._ or fnllt alld Yetetalale j91cft.
Tltete bneraan, aa1• &a.e F_. ... Dna M•taklr..._, cu renJ& la nceu adlltJ tllet .., ca ..... mp te ll1111ft ... .
lyla ........ dllMteadeflatlte ...... kH ....,. ...Y na M •en r11:m; a•nrW la· ............ ..,.. ..
Ml .. H eemlllllaue. ........ AJS PDA.
ll •AO IMIMW tna1 (ee••_.1 •C.C· lerlW ..... , .................. ,,.... ... , ........................... . f.••••re•I er •••• •lcllled llerrl•I. TJn ..... a .................... cu re-
act wtlla IUO ..... c .... a ...,.._
rlle la .._. ,.. .. , .. , _.... M•ell11,
llwatll ....................... Al -......... rM..,. ............. aU ww.,'l••.,.·llle11• ,......_
•I OONIUMEA :r
RoadU10y R'omeo seeks wife
J4Clrl0~~. <AP>
-Dtlllidl ~ .... --IOU of ltaNI, a ;.:llat, ol ........................
Dlelllwne -Denali eo -1tnee be bciilt8d a 11111 proelalm·
iD1 "I N.SO A WIFS" • UM back ~1111...., trll&
Tbe M·rUr-old ~ plant
teebnldan, wbo dffided It WU
time to Ht& down bitcMd up
&be tip when be 1ot tlNd of UM
mat1n1 1ame but ttlU wanted
Iota of wom• to c.._., from.
So ..... LaRoeb• HY•. he'•
datln112 women wbo anawered
bl• ad. Tb• tllD U1t1 lllt
1peclfleaUoa1: "Al• lt·•· ... , ... "' IOOd·lookt••· ~. hall·UIDI job, rtcli or poor Wttl ot wUbout kid1, 1la1le or
divorced or Mpatated. llUlt Ila to"°' food. ............. malle laU el d1a .. tte loH. Ha" fm llMloon or oat;
"No tramp•. I'm Hr: ladiN. Nor .. 1oaab&tofttrt .
dowll.'' ""
Hll namt and pboat aum•
are Uated next, anclttbt ~
hH kept him putt~ u11 .
LaROC!be 1ay1.
''"-1 call me DmD.11 Romeo •
down at &be'°"' p&ut becaUle tbe llrtl a.., ........ up at tbe
1atetotalktome,''MHld.
"Wbe._ l· 10 aloq-, tbe ex-
preaaway and .. stria I mieht
like, I pull in tnill& GI tb•m and
let them read tM alp. If tbey
don't like It, Uh if tbey're mar·
rled or aomeWna .. tbey fall way
bebtnd.
'"If they do like it. I can tell
becaU1e they pull up cloter to
read lt all. Some of them want to
•top me at the next red li1ht," he
Hid.
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ff
. MONOAV,MARCH2, 1911
STOCKS
MOVIES
TELEVISION
86
87
88
Corona del Mar High .
is favored again to win
Sea View baseball title. 8-2
,.
Beave~ ,eild 23 years of frustration
Despite lOss to unbeaten Oregon Staie, UCLA's showing pkases Brown
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Coach Ralph Muter of
Orecoo State said bis team's outlook ls "one by
one" after his unbeaten, No. 1 Beavers ended 2!J
yean of frustration in games at UCLA.
win. I like the future here very much, b~t as for
me personally, I' U be on a year to year bas ls."
After Brown broucht up the question of
whether he will return to UCLA next year, be
declined to answer further question• on that mat·
ter. There have been several med.la reports that
Brown will become coach of the New Jersey Nets
of tbe National Basketball Association next
season.
pair ot tree throws by forward Lester Conner, a
Junior college transfer who scored 17 points. -Freshman Ralph Jack-son of UCLA sank
two foul shots.
But for Coach Larry Brown of UCLA, the cur·
rent saying is "year by year."
"We will try and forget this came as quickly
aa possible and concentrate on next weekend and
an NCAA bid," said »rown. UCLA is 18-6 for the
season and 11·5 for undisputed third place in the
Pac-10.
-UCLA reserve Tony Anderson made a
basket and.a foul shot to close the aap to 80-76;
-and UCLA's frantic defense forced OSU into
a violation trying to gel the baU in-bound&. Brown's Bruins led by as much as eigbt points
and kept up the pressure on Oregon Slate U(llil the
final seconds before the. Beavers scored an 82-76
victory Sunday to clinch at least a tie for the
Pacific 10 Conference basketball championship.
"One by one we're accomplishing all the coals
we set for ourselves," Miller; said after tbe
Beavers brought their season record to 25-0 and
lea,ue mark to 16·0. They have home games re-
m atning against Artzona and Pac-10 runnerup
Atizona State 14·2 before the NCAA playoffs.
"Naturally I'm pleased," MIJler said of the
first Oregon State victory at UCLA's PauJey
Pavilion, which opened in l9616. "And it's the first
time we've swept UCLA and USC since 1958,"
Miller added.
Top scorer for UCLA was 6-6 junior center
Mike Sanders with 18 points before be fouled out
with 5:5S to play. Guard Rod Foster bad 12.
"Even when we were 10 down with 50 seconds
to go I thought we couJd come back," Brown said
of the Bruins. They nearly did.
While the clock moved from 50 seconds to 18
seconds:
"When we were down by four with 18 seconds
(and had the ball> I thought sometbinJ. cood was going to happen," Brown added. But 1t didn't as
Oregon Slate's defense finally stiffened.
~U~ed. .
Brown noted that at the end, UCLA was ham-
pered in shooting because Sanders and center·
forward Cliff Pruitt were out with five fouls each.
and the Bruins' ft'oster was playing despite a
twisted ankle.
"I liked what 1 saw today," Brown said of No.
13 UCLA.
Center Steve Johnson scored 26 points to lead
Oregon State. When Johnson fouJed out with 3'1'1
minutes to play Oregon State led 76-64, OSU had to
withstand a late UCLA burst that cut the margin
to four.
-UCLA 's Darren Daye hit a 14-foot jump
shot;
UCLA won the battle of rebounds against the
taller Beavers 35·26. ,.."And I still believe on any given night we can OreRon State finally sealed its victory with a
-Mark Radford of OSU added a free throw to
make it 80-71 :
Nice change Has the
LA magic
vanished?
UCI Aggies:
a crowd pleaser
vs.
INGLEWOOD CAP> -Magic
is wizardry -dazzling illusioP
a wondrous art that mystifies
the be bolder.
A,WI ........
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of Ille DailJ l'lt.c Sc.ti'
I( nothing else, UC a Irvine's
PCAA tournament game with
Utah State Thursday night is
s ure to be a crowd pleaser . In
two prior meetings -both won
by lbe Anteaters -one was de·
termined in double overtime,
while the other was a narrow
two-point decision.
In each case. both teams
scored ... and scored a lot: a
combined 4Z1 points to be exact.
Actually. these two schools
represent the mavericks of the
conference. Both sides enjoy the
run-and-gun style, while their
opponents basically enjoy the
sit·and-walt-00-it approach.
·' 1 think it will be nice for the
crowd and refreshing for them
to see two teams who like to
play as opposed to the other six
who like to sit on it," says UCJ
Coach Bill MuJligan.
The Anteaters drew the
gies by virtue of their fourth·
place seeding in the playoffs.
UCI (9·5, in conference, 17·9
overaU l actually finished in a
third-place tie with Long Beach
State (9-5) in the standings. but
the 49ers we re awarded the
higher position by virtue or beat·
Ing the Anteaters twice during
the regular season.
BOUNCING BALL -UCLA's Mark Eaton
(left) and Rod Foster < 10 I surround
Oregon State's Steve Johnson as the ball
bounces off his shoulder during action Sun·
day at UCLA. The Beavers remained un·
beaten with an 82-76 victory.
~he Aggies (5·9, 11 ·15), despite
en<\ing in the No. 5 spot, were
nothing close to the team that cap-
tured the PCAA Conference in
1980 . All offense (they were
second in the conference to UCI at
82.3) and no defense (next to last
at 79.1), the Aggies had trouble
o'ut-scoring the better teams in
The road keeps getting tought;r
Area CIF p·layoff teams won't find round two any ea1ier
By ROGER CARLSON
01 Ille D•flr ,11.-isutt
Champions and giant killers are on the
road Tuesday, while surprising Laguna
Beach and Sea View League runner-up
Estancia draw home assignments in the
second round o f the CIF basketball
playoffs.
Fountain Valley puts its 20-game win·
nJng streak on the line at Palos Verdes,
where 6·10 Mark Acres awaits: Ocean
View t.a.klS its No . 1 Orange County rank·
ing and 6-8 Wayne Carlander on the road
again, this Ume to Lakewood; Sea View
League champ Corona del Mar ventures· to
Riverside Poly; and Edison's conquest of
Compton entitles the Chargers to tr-et to
~otre Dame (Sherman Oaks). '
Slles in each instance bavl' not been
firmed up and are not expected to be
finall&ed unW today. Tipoff in each in·
stance ta at '7:30.
Here ii a brief look at what each of the
Oran1e Coast area representatives art.
faced with u they enter the second round
followtq Friday's victories:
Feataba Valley a& Pa... Verftt -
Acres, the e-10, 20s;pouncs· senfor, baa
been a mainltay in Coach Jobn 'Mihal·
jevicJt'• outllt for three years and bouta a •.o HOl'iDC averaae and baula 1D 16 re·
bouDdl • pme.
He U. llelp, too, wltb 1-1 JobD Arndt, 5-t.
Bob Dlaeta and •·• 1opbomore Woody Jon• U,S to tbe attaet.
...... Hf ov def ........ ~ ...
HJ• ,._,. ... ValleJ Coeeb l>eft Browia. •
Ael9 ._a.I Palol V.,.. to a IM Nt·
ord ad &M sea Kta11 an ... ••1
i....-t1tr .........
Ocean View at Lakewood -Coach Tim
Sweeney's Lancers, No. 3 in the tou1h
Moore League, have fashioned a 16·9 over·
all record, capped by Friday's one-point
victory at long-time power Pasadena.
Dwayne Corbitt, a 6·3 junior, leads the
Lancers' fast brealc attack, and be gets
help from 6·6 Tod Murphy, 6·4 Dave
Powers, 6-1 Tony Dalton and 6-2 Mark
Nielsen.
Ocean View, with Carlander at 6-8, Jim
Usevitch at 6-9 and Eric Fuchser at 6·7,
enters with an obvious height advantage.
Edlloa at Notre Dame -Flushed with
their first CIF playoff victory in the
school's history, Edlaon's Char1en are
IUSKETBALL
faced with a Knlabta crew which bouta
AU·ClF atar Nl1el Mi1uel, a W oee-man
act tbat bu been die bll aUraedoa for tbe
Sherman Ow acbool for two yean.
Glen Man's Notre Dame ,qtet l• 1$-8
for the teuan ud la a very eal outfit,
with M , DO-pound Harper Lebe , 8..C Steve
Kordalt, 8·4 Tad Tambera, e-7 Mike
Moatelotto and 1-2 Ken Jaeltton amon1~ squad. c ..... t1111arata1.,.,....,._
Bean of RlYenidl poa, Coffb Ado Ga
are ID-5 ad pt molt el.., tUeeelf from
the HClftil ol 1-1 ...._, lllldll•J Go•w
oa wbet .. o&MrwlM a •erJ 1CMtl 4Mllftl, ao.-......... ao.2 po1ata _. • dolen ,. .......... -,,.,..=··••an'prw• ••* ..... _ ....... ~ ......... .,. ..
•
Myers and 6·9 Dan Bennett, in addition to
6·0 junior Racheed Tapscott. •
Myers averages 14.S points a game and
White has clicked at a 10.2 rate.
Lynwood at Estancia -The· Knights of
Lynwood Coach Bill Notley are ac-
customed to CIF action -It's an annual
event, something that is becoming a
similar thing at Estancia.
Notley's crew boasts a 21·5 record and
the No. 4 seed ln the 3-A playoffs and
Lynwood will enjoy a distinct heicht ad·
vantaae. ,
Among the Lynwood talent are 6·7
seniors Al Marquetli and Robert Gustavis,
aloni with 6-5 John McDaniela.
Marquetti averages 14.7 points and 8.2
rebounds a game; Guatavis avera1e. 13.4
points and 7 .8 rebounds and Mc Daniela
av~aJ(ea 8.1 points and 6.5 rebounda.
Eatincla, with lts tallest tbreateninl the
6-3 level, also must contend wltb tbe quick
6·0 guards of Lynwood (John Tait and
James Wella>.
Estancia bas been ll\f the playaft1 the
p11t ftve years and on each occuton ba1
Jost in the second round.
8••1 llWa at i..1ua Beadl -The
Lancera •tarted 1lowl)' bffauae Jim
KarHtoa wu busy .. • quarterback for
the•~ football team.
Hi• NWnl to the bukttball lineup bu
helped .pan ~ HUii to • ID-I overall record IDd tbe f'reeway Leapt ebam·
pionabip .
A1ld• from &Ii• C-t &ana&OI, wi.o ... ,.,...._,,...,....._.. .. ,., •• aadr • same. ..... , ·ama. lleClllUM uu
polata ..... , .......... , .... 1 ..... .......... .
BILL MULLIGAN
the PCAA, having lost twice to
Fresno State, San J ose Stele and
UC I while splitting with the49ers.
Thal dQesn't make them any
less dangerous, however. and
MulJigan is fuJly aware of what
happened during the first two
meetinJCs.
··Actually, the scores are de·
ceiving because they were really
two different games." explains
Mullisan or the 117-109 double overtime win at UCI and the
101·99 victory at Utah.
"In the first game (at UCJ),
they were ahead the whole
game. When we were up there,
we had a 10 or 12·point lead for
most of the second half. We just
couldn't hit our frff throws at
the end and that's what hurt
us ."
What may hurt Mulligan the
most is having to play a run·
and-gun team like the Aggies so
early in the tournament. Any
time you move up and down the
court as quickly as these two
teams will, it's bound to take
something out or the winner.
And Mulligan is fully aware the
road doean 't get any easier after
the first night.
Still, though, Mulligan sees
olaying Utah State as being no
different from playing the
University of Pacific or Cal
Slate Fullerton.
"Playing Utah State, UOP or
Fullerton first is all im·
material," he says. "All three of
them could rise up and . beat
anybody -and we've beaten all
three oftbem twice.
Magic is also a 6·9 athlete who
has displayed all of the above in
the past two years -leading
Michigan Slate to the national
collegiate title before stunning
the National Basketball Associa·
lion last season.
But Earvin "Magic" J ohnson
hasn't been able to do much
above the ordinary in the first
two games of his return lo play
after knee surgery. The Phoenix
Suns outscrambled Johnson's
Los Ange les Lakers Sunday,
101·96 as the 1·2 teams in the
NBA Pacific Division met.
In 33 minutes of play Johnson
was held to a sub-par nine points
and four assists -although be
did atone for bis 4-for-11 shoot·
ing day by leading the Laker re·
bounders with 10.
"HE IS certainJy not the
Magic we saw las t year,"
Phoenix Coach John MacLeod
said. "There's obviously a ques-
tion in Magic's mind what he
can do with his leg."
"We just need to get used to
each other," said Johnson, who
admitted he never felt quite in
the flow of the game, but said be
felt "fine" on the court.
· He didn't look · "fine ." The
patented "Magic" grin was
replaced by something more like
the face of someone ip bodily
and-or mental pain.
Phoenix guard Walter Davis,
who sped around Johnson for
severaJ uncontested jump shots,
scored 19 points and said of the
Lakers: "This is a new season for them. They JUSl have to
prove themselves again. It will
take Magic six to eight games to
come back."
SUNS CENTER Alvan Adams
a lso was not the player the
Lakers had seen before. Making
14 of 22 shots and hll uling down a
team-high 10 rebounds, Adams
scored 30 points as he out·
maneuve r e d the Lakers'
Kareem AbduJ-Jabbar, who bad
28 points and six rebounds.
Phoenix increased its lead
over the Lakers to 41h 1ames by
winning for the first time in a
regular season game at the
Forum since Oct. 23, 1977 -encf.
ing a Laker eight-game home
winning streak over the Suns. ·•we couJd have 10.t today and
still gone qn to win the Pa~lflc
Division," Adams said.
"We won't be tryint to win OH S' ""S ~o with muscle. We won't even be 'l'A i 1 .l ~
trylnc to win with emotion. We'll ,.,.n Dff OFFER be tryini to win with finesse." i 'l.>'
VERO BEACH (AP) ...-"'l'be
idea of Sadaharu Ob, baHball's
all·Ume home run kJn1, comlat
out of retirement to appear u a
The contest, besides pitting
the two highest •~ring teama ln
tbe conference, will also match
the two blgbeat scorln1 tn-
diYiduala in UCl's Kevin Ma1ee (28.0) and Utah State's Brian designated bitter when tlae
Jacklon ( (25.1). Tokyo Giant. meet tllie Lot
Jackson, a 8-8 forward, Ancel• ~n 1D • 1prlq •· abowed Just bow lood be 11 lut hlbltlon ••m• next moatb wu
Satqrday n11ht wben he 1coredJ •bot down by Ob SUnday.
St potnta qalmt Fresno State, Ob, wbo 1lqwed • bome
the naUon's No. 1 team on de·. rum, wu Ulred ll IM would •· fen.e 1ume a OH role wbft tbe Glau
A1 ·for Macee hi• numben play tbe Oods•n, wbleb would
tpeall for tbetnHlves .. be luda match oe. aaam.t baMball'• .....
the COlll..-.nee In seorij:f ,. time ptaclill·llll leader, 11...,. • Mota bouada. (11.t), aad nel IOa.I "If. I plQ _.., 1 woa14 .._... ~ <•·• perffBt).. to , • ., .. Jlljlll;" .......
-Utala Mata oilJ 1'== Jfar-oN~ .... ...._. Uilll jaat_...,...,.. .......,... ..... , ... cc..-&:: :="'i£ .. :-~·= ........ :;. .. ,.., .. , .. .... ...., • ., IOotl8' .......... .,.~;·
.............. --~~~---"!'!'"!!"---------
I I
...
.. 111111!"! .... ~~-.~~· .. o,.,,. ..... .,.eout_ DAIL y PICOT/Monday, March 2. 1881
A; n~w Murphy's Law
eetabliehed by Calvin (78)
' ""•AP ..... adet
SAN ANTONIO, Texas -Calvin Murphy m·
clenched both h1I flats in front of hJm, bowed from
the middle and abu~ hb ey,s UpU)' Sunday alter·
nOOD after watcbln1 hi• free throw bounce off to
tbe rtlbt -endin1 the longest free-throw streak In pro
baaketball hlstory at 78.
. It WU the ftnt free throw tbe 5·10 Houston Rockets auard
had miued alnce Dec. 2'1. He bad paned Rick Barry's pre·
vioua National BulfettiaJr AlaoclaUon rec.
ord of 80•t.rai1htf ree throws Feb. 19.
While Murphy · turned away and
winced at the top of the key, 11,2'5 San An·
tonlo fans gave the feisty guard a standing
ovation for the remarkable free·tbro~
1t.rin1.
"I'm not heartbroken," Murphy said
later. "What goes/up must come down."
The 32-year-<bd, 10-year veteran from
Nigeria was the oldest and shortest man
on the court in Sunday's 102-86 win by San
Antonio, but be showed his stamina late in the game when he
sailed into lbe second-row seats aft.er Spurs' rookie Reggie
Johnson fouled Murphy on a driving layup.
Alter a hush fell over the crowd when it took the spunky
guard several minutes to rise f~om the concrete floor,
Murphy limped to the free-throw hne and canned his first
shot. But be missed his second free throw of the game on the
next shot.
"( irtjured my knee. I use my knees in my free throws "
he said of the second miss. "When I went down my knee
locked."
Murphy said he was taking the miss in strioe.
"I set goals for myself and I wanted to see how close I
could get to 100," he said. "It was fun while it lasted."
-----q..te •I tlle fl•• -----
Joe Torre, New York Mets manager, on wby tbe
club signed 36-year·old Rusty Staub to a three-year con-
tract: "He still says, 'Hey, I want to play.' instead of
'Aw . I got to play."'
•••en ,,et tier,,_,,..., e•te•u •treM
New York's Mike AIUson, standing with his ~
back to the Montreal net, still managed to '
deflect home a Roa Greschaer slapshot to give
the Rangers a 4.4 tie with the Canadiens to
highlight NHL action Sunday. The tie extended Montreal's
unbeaten streak t-0 13 gam es ... Elsewhere, Dwl1bt Foa&er's
three goals kept Boston in the game, and Rick MlddJetoa'a
36th goal of the season put them ahead midway through the
third period on the way lo a 6·4 win over Buffalo ... Center
Tom Lysiak circled the net with the puck, then jammed home
his 20th goal of the season midway through the sec:QPd period
to lift Chicago into a 4·4 tie with St. Louis . . . Mike F0Upo'1
26th1 goal of the season with five minutes remaining pulled
Dettoit into a 4·f tie with Winnipeg . . . Glen Haaloa re·
corded Vancouve?>s first shutout of the season by kicking out
28 shots as the Canucks skated past Hartford. 3-0.
, ............. ~···••.U.C•
llUwaukee.::.:ked by • .,. ... ,.., • ._,, 111 21 po6m,t and ' ... ,..,.. 11, opened ' ao.poLDt IMd late LD tbe leeond quarter and
rolled to aa •HJ 117·107 victory ovel'. ·w~ to bl--t NBA acUoa 5Wlda7. TIM Bucks' 1J1
PGlata ._.. two more tban tblir prevloua •1Dt .... ame bllb
taia MMOn ..• ZlMwben, exp1D1IOG DaUu avotc;led tbe em-
M.rrwmmt ot be1nC tbe wont NBA team ln hlatory by cl•·
teaunc Su Dle10. •tt, for lta lOtb victory of tbe Huoo
bebind IUanl OUM •ad'a M polnta ..• a.rt PartM
acored 25 points, i.DcJuclina t"° tree t.browa to b,..ak a tie with
2:" to JO, u Bolton auJVived a rub of technlc&ll to defeat
PhlladelDbla, lH·lOT ... -... Jrh .. acored a. polnta and
rookie W• ••UM .. eoatrtbuted 18 aulatl, leadln1 AUanta to a •1oa triumph over S.aWe . . . Geer1e ~ aeored
2t polatl u San Antonio out-muacl~ Houtoo, 102.ee
On WI n..,... and Alea EaaMM exploded for 41 points·~
the aecond half and Denver raWed for a 13'1·127 wln over
Cleveland . . . &elm &auey and .llm p.._... combined for
S4 polnta to lead Portland to a 108-97 tbumpln1 over Utah . , .
Terry 1')1e1' scored 2'1 polnta to lead Detroit to a 117·
whltewuh of New Jeney . ...... .,.. , .. ,..,,, ....... ...
With 1tru11Ung Tom Wat... unable to l!I aenerate ~ reaemblln& a threat, AHy
Beaa ambled to an uncballen&ed, overwhelm·
lng, s~ven-atroke victory Sunday in the Bay HJll
Classic at Orlando, Florida. Bean won by a whoppine seven
str.okes over Watson. Laguna Ni1uel's Mark O'lleau
finis hed fourth, 10 strokes off the pace ... Heavy rain ~ashed out the scheduled third and fmal round of the Olym·
p1a Gold Classic at Industry Hills. Weather permittin1 the
last 18 boles will have been played today. Sally LJUle i~ the
tournament leader at 142 followed by Katlay W~ltwortla and
Lori Garbae1, both a stroke behind.
llldta•• AW'0'4 8Cel••N•w wi•I••
Geor1e Stelabreaaer, irate that Renie •
Jacksoe failed to report to the New York
Yankees' spring training camp in Florida on
time, hinted Sunday that bis $3 -million
superstar may have a long wait to renegotiate his contract.
Jackson, in Califomia;-'was AWOL for tbe second conaecuUve
year, failing to meet the traditional March 1 deadJine after
all other Yankee regulars had been working two days. He bad
called Manager Gene Mlehael to advise bim be would be late
in reporting. Steinbrenner said tbe truancy could coat
J ackson as much as $2,500 a day .... Steinbrenner also
named Lou Sabaa, a longtime football coach, president of the
New York Yankees ... The Milwaukee Brewers, still
searching for more pitching, acquired left-hander aaady
Lercb from the Philadelphia Phillies ifl excbanee for reserve
outfielder Dick Davis . . . The AUanta Braves started wear-
ing a symbolic green swatch of tape on tbelr battin& helmets
and will do so until the case of the 21 slain or missing children
in Atlantaissolved.
a..••• l•"•rell dte O,.•••k •••ee•i
Prealdent Rea1an says h~ agreed with last Ill
year's Olympic boycott, adding that lbe Soviet
Union should not have been allowed to host the ·
Summer Games in tbe first place. Reagan ex·
presse(l his opinion in the new issue of Inside Sports
magazine, Re said be hoped for worldwide participation in
the 1984 Summer Olympics at Loa An1eles . . . Danell
Waltrip, who took the lead with just three laps to go, risked
running out of fuel and sputtered across tbe finish line to cap·
lure the Carolina 500 Grand National stock car race Sunday.
Waltrip crossed the finish line 5.3 seconds ahead of Cale
Varborou1b . . . A 24-year-old Ohio boxer was still in
critical condition In a New Jersey hospital after being
knocked out in a brutal six-round slugfest. Fred Bowmaa·
was in intensive care after under.zntn1 a four-hour surgery
for a blood clot in his brain. Bowman collapsed shortly after
he was knocked out in the sixth round of his bout with Gino
Perez, the New Jersey Lightweight champion.
Jf.Ff PRIES JIM McCAHILL
Sea View baseball
CdM will have
its hands full
By ED ZINTEL some players back," said Of u.e o.ity ~11et s .. 11 T Corona deJ Mar H igh 's rager. "Wedon'thaveawhole
baseball team , with a solid lot of depth so I hope we don't
nucleus of returnees from last run into Injuries."
year's Sea View League cbam· · Eat•ncla pionship club, is a slight favorite Good things are once again in
to repeat in 1981 with Estancia store for Coach Ken Millard's
once again challenging the Sea Eagles.
Kings. A solid nucleus returns from
Here's a look at each of the last year's team which finished
Sea View teams: 12·3 in league, a game behind Coron• del Mu Corona del Mar.
Sea Kings Coach Tom Tr ager "We should be hard to beat ,"
says be lost some decent players says Millard ... But this is a well·
last year to graduation and he's balanced league and besides
right, be did. Corona del Mar and us, El Toro
But he's got more decent will be very good and the rest l lb th will be improved." P ayers an at returning thls Millard's biggest shoes to fill
year , making CdM the favorite a re the graduated Rich Amaral
to repeat. at third base and catcher Bob Three starter,s return in the LarTmer.
outfield with Mario Ybarra, the The strength for the Eagles Sea Kings ' top hitter with a .425 average ast year , in left field. appears to be pitching and in the
In center field is Bob Shollin. outfield. who played .as a utility player Returning to pitch are Jim
d b h. d · McCatlill who. when not pitching an e 18 s tarting center will play in the outfield and Don fielder Carl Ehmann l ast season. Ehmann is now playing Mitroff. The other pitching spot
at Orange Coast ColJege. in the rotation will be divided
Returning in right field is Clay between Greg Forge and Mike
Tucker, a &olid a ll-around Markel, up fro m last year's player. league champion JV team.
"Defensively, it's a very good "They're all good high school
Baseball without Mauch: no way
out.field and offensively, it isn't pitchers." says Millard. "All are
bad either," says Trager. within a pitch of each other. I
The other strength is pitching think any one of them could be recruited." · · · and how. Jeff Pries. an All· In the infield, John Robertson. ~IF performer last year. re· a solid hitter, returns to first and turns to try to match an M·O rec· ord and an ERA under 2.00 in Jeff Gardner is at shortstop.
1980. Pries is currently playing Ken Curtis and Willie Nieman
on tbe CdM basketball team. . . will vie at second base with With help from Bavasi, the ex-1kipper stayed in the game Ke nny Santoro, the other third base up for grabs between
starter last year, is a lso back. Mike Deutsch and J ohn Cornuke.
By EDZINTEL oJ .. o.11• ~lie. SIAtf
PALM SPRINGS -The only
balls Gene Mauch should be
keeping an eye on these days are
the ones that come off bis golf
club.
But here be is again, 38 years
after landing his first Job in pro·
feuional baseball, back for
another season of double plays,
double-headers a nd double-
decked stadiums.
AS LONG AS they ha ve
baaeball they have a home for
Gene Mauch.
Last Aug. 24, after 21 years
as a major league mana1er ,
Mauch resigned as skipper of
the Minnesota Twins.
He wu in tbe second year of a
three-year contract in Min ·
nesota. but Mauch s uddenly
quit, saytn1 that he wanted to
take aome time off.
Mauch wu really saying that
after all those seasons of
headache and frustration -he
never won a pennant with three
different clutie -he wanted a.
year to relax and maybe work
on hia aolt 1ame at hi• home
here ln Palm Sprtnga.
Nice try, Gene. But who were
yqu tl')'iq to llld?
B aaeball without Gene
Maucb! Unheard of. Why don't
you JUlt take away hot dogs and
beer wb.lle you're at it.
llAVCR'8 n.wr mistake was
lettlq tbe H<:l'et out to hla ol'
golfing buddy. Buzzie Ba v asi.
When Bavasi caught word of
it, h~ immediately went to work,
lookang for a job for his friend.
''Hell, I'm 65 and I'm still at
it, who does that young whip·
persnapper Mauch (55) think he
is, retiring to the country club
when he's just gotten his feet
wet in the business?" Bavasl reasoned.
So Bavasi found Gene a job.
And to make sure be wouldn't
sneak out on him in the middle
<?f the night, Bavasi got Mauch a
Job that was close by. His office
was 1o be down the corridor
from Bavasi's.
TO DO THIS, Bavasi cleverly
reaui1ned director of player
personnel Mike Port to vice·
prealdent of player personnel.
Mauch was given Port's old Job.
So here he was apib. Mauch
at rpring training, studying
ever y m otion -tbe r elay
throwa, the cutoff plays, the bat·
ting stance.
He no longer bas to wear the
stretch pajama pants, with the
pullover top and the funny·
lookJng shoes that say Rawlings
on the heel.
Mauch now comes to work in
loafen and cardigan sweaters.
•vT THE job is the same. sun the advice for the coaches,
the taking aside of a wide-eyed
rookie for some words of as·
surance that the ball be just
threw away into the dugout was
not his fault.
That's Mauch. If you've got
the time, he's got the plan.
After just one week of observ·
Ing, here's a sample of what
Mauch has perceived of the 1981
Angels:
''There is probably more of·
fensive power and e·xceptional
talent on this team than any I've
ever seen. I wouldn't be sur·
prised if eve.ry one of the starters
in the field were voted to the
all·starteam."
On first-year pitcher Mike
Witt, age 20: "He has tremen-
dous action on lbe ball. A good
curve and slider. There are no
obvious flaws in his form.
There's no reason why be can't
make t he majors and win
games."
He's a control pitcher, according the Angels now have four ex· to Trager, with a 5-2 record as a Several of those players could
managers working with the club junior last season. interchange in the infield as the
-third base coach Preston Others who will pitch include season progresses, according to
Gomez and special assignment C hris White, th e second Millard. H F Bob Urmson returns to the scouts erman rf nks and Bill baseman and Larry Lagano, up outfield along with Tony Ablett
Rigneyare theothers. from the JV squad. ' and McCahill.
The Angels actually tried to If there is a question ma rk , It ''The way I always look at it,"
t M b h · i is the infield. ge auc as t eir manager n says Millard, "the only team 1977 but Twins' owner Calvin White is the only returnee that can beat us is us."
Griffith wouldn't let him out of along with Pries, who plays lrvl-
h. tr t shortstop when he's not pitching. ,..., is con ac · All-Sea v1·ew League th1'rd Third base is still up in the air "I never had an intention nor between senior Paul Barth and baseman Bob Perry and all·
do I anticipate getting out of junior Dave Rohde. And Brent league s hortstop Ed Heinsius
baseball completely." Mauch Melbon, the brother of former lead the Irvine attack, along
said Swiday following a brief CdM standout John Melbon, will with lettermen Charlie Fehren·
pitchers workout. be the first baseman. Catching bach (catcher ), Al Brownlee
"I just thought ~e opportunity is Rob Murar. (outfielder), Jim Gasho (out-
here wu fantastic for me. The "I think we're the favorites to fielder> and Manny Gaudier.
proximity to m y home and the win league only in that we have Coach Bob Flint's m ajor em·
ch ance of being associated with phasis has been to bolster the
baseball without having to pitching staff, but with returning
manage appealed to me." s tart er Steve Westbrook.
And in answer to the question Dail pi) 10 l rans f er Pat Sims and of managing? would Mauch con-Y Ol top sophomore Rod Poissant availa·
'd do' th · hint bh, there appears to be the st er mg at again · · · • Oraa1e Cooaty potential available to stay above
blot? prep basketball ratings water.
''You just never know about Poa. Selllool Record The Per• H in · b' a "I THINK the acquisition of ·Y· e s1us com lD . <outfielder ) Juan Beninuez is things like that," he said. 1. Ocean View 22-3 lion at third and short gives the ., 2. Fountain Valley 21·3 Vaqs a tron I to k more important than people are * * * Quin s g nuc eus wor giving it credit for. 1 know he ANGaL NoTas -Th• tum cenu11ee1 !.· CLyap-•sta 2231·~ around. Perry was the team's
WONUIVll $undoey due to M41yw rein. ""'""dub -•1 .. • ...., ... M v p as a junior and Heins1'us can play. He hits the ball with scMch11ect1of\-... mp1ct11; .. ,.it~i.,...ye1-:.r. 5. Coronadel Mar 18·5 a uthority. Depending 00 what •ne "' ,..,1., ,.,,...._, -110..1. e11t "''"' •••· 6. Servile l°'5 batted .381 in addition to hls fine Incl\ PIOCldlel &tenCll-ell cwer the 1•-1c1 1~e •·-<r defense they want to do with (Don'> e1ey,p1ew•-•~t ... torwer'd10 .. _;,,;;: 7. Tustin 22-4 · Baylor, II they want to m-1.e wor111"'...., toe1er ... s.c-.,._ ._... Gaud.fer batted .400 as tbe des-hi -Ott(ll '* ,.,,..,.., h•• 9091 r~ thi. ... ~ .. ,.m 8. San Clemente 20-7 i&nated bitter a year ago and is m a DH (desipated·hltter), to1ntto11etr.Amer1un1.......,.•1Mottv•1-· 9. Sunny Hills 20·5 in a batUe with Mike Tierney for Beniquez can also be a benefit Pioer:· Grief\ MHi ,.,.,.,1-1ecee1. w.11. ""'" 10. Santa Ana Valley 16-8 b
al a fielder. He Can Play ev...., "°'·A• 0r1c11 ...,., "Y°" m•9"• .. '"" "-t 1or t e starting berth at second ~·~ u.e1ten.11yoo1re1uc11y, Y«M1'11111t111e-.·· (a-sE•vtEW p •r day... • ._., ,. , a1e -.)
With lbe addition of Mauch, .1--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiii•-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilill__;,._ -------------------r-------------------1
Zillg1tt and Wri8flt
fmur.mct agents and broken
Manutacturere:
lnaurance roata rtalni?
Contact 1.11 for ~petlUve quotes on Proper·
ty. Llablmr. Dltttcutt Products Llablllty.
Commerda Auto. Group LUe and Medlc:al
II welf u Worker'1 Compensation Jn,urance.
lob Guffin .
"" Mac Arttlut ~ .... ........ Cl9l660
(1'4t~
I
1'18 CADILLAC SEVULE
Leather covered 1eaun1 are~. ull'c>l'od at AM/FM ,
. stereo -1th tape pl1f 995).
U '116 'Jt ..... feC..... "'-M..., .... AAIOIPt ..... hNw,. Alli,....,.. r.t4 ...... .
.... __ ..., ..... I
111111 ••--rut'· l
FOR THE RECORD/ FOOTIALL
NBA
WHTl•N CONl'•••NC•
l'ticlftc DM•I• w L ""'· °' Pti~nla so 20 .7U
L•ll•n u 2) ·~' 4'h
Porll•n<S " n .SU I•
Golden Si..11 )J u ,,, Ullt
S•n 01190 JO J7 ... 11Yt
S.•111• 29 ,, 42• 20
Ml ...... tJ>lvlt ...
S•n Antonio 0 ,. •U
110\ltlon l3 u M.s "" IYlnHsCllY " u .as """ O.nv•r 21 ,. 42• u ....
Vt•n 2S '' »2 10 o .... , 10 51 '" J4\I>
E•UTERN CON"E RENCE
Alllhllt< Olvt.,_.
PP\tl•OttPf°'1• s. " ,.,
Bo\1on u u ,,. ltt
N•tllf York 41 2' •12 •1»
W••n1n111on JI )I d• u
N•w Jcr\41 10 ., 2'° :M''>
Ceftttal 0 1 ... 1 ...
Mllw•u"" ... II n1
1nct1•n• 31 JO H2 Ill'>
C•11<•Qo l• JS . ., IS\'t
All•nta H " _,,, 23
Clr~•l•nd JS ,, .Jll 230,,
Ot>trott II S2 '" 120,,
Sul>Cllly'•So•••
Pt\Otn•• IOI, Uken 9•
'11 lldnla IOI. Se•llle 102
&0>1on 114, Pn•l•O•IPhll IOI M•'"'''"" Ill. Wit\lllnQIOn IOI
D•llas 'i'I, $.Jn DieQO 91
Porll,.nd 108, Ul•ll q_;
!>•~ ""'on•o 102. Houston 80 Otnvfr Ill. C,.vtland 111 r." ltO•I 111, N•w Jerwy 104
TCIN''' G.tme>
"'" .,.,,...., Kllt'OUlld
Suns 101, Lekers IHI
PHOENIX Coo• •• ROC11ns0tt 11, Acurm
JO D•v1\ "· O JOhn•on 10, S<ott 1, Hlgl'I s, Ktllty J. Kr"""'' I Macy. TolelSU I) 21101
LOS ANGELES Br1twer 2. Cl>onitS 11, Ab-
out HOiiar 11. NI.elf\ II. WtlkH 2'. E J-~ Joroanl LanoUlerQuO Tot•lsltl .. 179'
~-•yO...rt•" Pnu•n•• ' Jl 2t iJ 11 101
LO\ An9<'1•\ 11 11 21 10 9'
Foul•O OUI N-Tot•l loul\ P1Wlen'"
1• L.O\A~l•\ll T.cnn1u1\ Lo.A~~
ion• d•1tnwi A II, SOS
How the top 20 fered
lhe A•.oc••ltcl Preu coll•~ oouui.11
ootl f•rt-d n11\ ••"-I OrfQOf\ S•••• (l~OI .... , WA\lltf\91on. nu but so..111ern C•I, ,, .... 1>u1 UCLA.
111•
1 L.o ..... .,... Sl•I• (21.ZI .... , M1ulu1ppr, I•., 10\t lo Kentucky, 11 It
.J V1to1n1• 114 ll lo" to Walle Forni.
ll·M>. OT bHI ~ryt-. 1._.3
• O•P•ul 11S II OHi Buller, 8'•M , l>e.C
Loyo ... 111 . !OS 9S
S "l'ltona Sl .. t 117 31 OHi Slenlord,
/q S4 !Hat C<1ilforn1.o, 11 68
6 Notre Oa,,..171 4) but SI Franc!\, Pe ..
ii /I. Dt•I D•vton. J(MI
1 Uran U • ll be•I COlor•OO Stale, 1J·SO,
10•1 lo Wyom1no, IJ.50
• tow• (11 " OHi MIChlQan, ..... ; ....
ilf•sconstn t•~1S
~ Kenluc:ky 122..t) Oe•I Mlululppl Si.ta,
17 I•, bH• 1.outsi.n. State, 1).11. 10. f..,nH ... 110-61 lost 10 G<iore••. , .. 15,
OT, OHIA..oun>, 1~.
11 Norlll (;M011n.t 1%1·11 ONI 0.0-9141
hell. l•·SI. IMl IO OuU, ... u. OT. u . wau F....sl ll2°S) DUI vtretnl•, ,,...,
0 T lost IO North CMofrM Si.ta ..... .s.
IJ UCLA 11-61 be.ii Orevon. '9 IS. lolol 10
o,.90n St••• 11 I•
14 J1t1ncus, t 1• O' lo't to M1nnc•ot~, , ... st.
Dt"dl Purdue. l l 10
1) 9,.~m VounQ 111 •I 10\I lo Wyo-
m•t\Q, .... l OT. llUI Colorado Si.•• ....
I• 1nc1 .. 1n• 19 91 be•• Of\10 Stalt. 14-SI.
otdl M1C,,1Qan, ~ t3
l I MMYlan<I 111.fl out North c .. olina
'>1al• 16 11 IO'ol to V•r<I"""· l •..i
18 Ara •MO 111 •I ll<t•I Sovll\ern
M•lnOCll\l ., J3 OHi T ... , Teclt ..... ,
• W1c1>1I• St•le 111 SI IM•I Br..iley,
IO)/ lo\l to India"" St•le, 1S 11 11i LOU1S.1ll~ 119 II but Ctn< inn.ti!, 11.,,
b~at SI Lou1•. 91 IS, l>Nl W lttnluclly,
90 1)
College scores
SUNDAY'S SCORES
ureQon ~I 87, UCL" I•
K•!Hu<'-Y IJ. Lou .. 1aM St II
f loroela St II, M.,quene II
TOUA,.AMENTS
s11n .... ( .. 1 ... 111 v a Commonw••llll U. Al• 8 trmlnQl\4im
bl 11111
SATUAOAY'S LATIE SCORIES
W•Oer SI 18 10a'10 SI bl I• oll
J>u11rt >""nd IS, A IA 11
TfMO\>f'e St 116 MotthUd SI. 19
, l•vPldnd S• ~q. voungslo•n St 5'
HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULE
CIF playons second round
TU8JOAY (':•> ... ,.
>an MMCO. (1) 01 •I lnQlt-11 I 10)'
Edison 11s 9) et Notre D•m• 1 IS-I >' 0CHI\ View Ill.JI Al L.41U..,00d 11'••)'
N..,•l>ury P•rk lll-01 vs' $.ffv1te I \"SI •I
(ypr•U Coll-
Serr• 1n •I •• Tllous...a O.ks (IS-IOI' Fount••n V•ll•y 111 ll •I P•los Vercln
1n •1 Cypre" 111 •> v• Mvrphy 121·SI •I lllV.00
Mot\IQO-ry Hteh
LB Poly 12 JI •S Cresci> t IS 91 •I Pi«<e
COlle9e J·A
SI Ber ... rd .,. )I "'' ErMnl>Ower ( IS-101
a I Font •rw HtQh Tu\\ln 171 •I •S er .. Ollnd• 110 11 411 C.I
Slalf f ulltrton
GltnOOr• llq •I •• MorMO V•ll•y 111·31'
LynwOOd IJI Sl •t E\t•nc141 111·11'
S1n Gorgon10 114 JI at Hemet t 12 IOI'
Coron• Ott M•r I It S) •I Rlvel\ide Poly
120 SI· S."" Ana V•ll«r 11•·11 •I Ooml11911tt
(II II"
L• Ou1t1t• 113 21 vs WHI Covlne CZO..I 411
E ooewooa HIQll l ·A
v 1t1or Valley 113·01 vs Burroue11s
IRldOe<rMll al Tron.
Sul\tly Htll\ l?O·SI ., L•QUn.t Be•cn 111 .. 1 • GlenCUle ( 19 SI el Stn Luis OCllSpO I U·f)'
Pomon.t (11·21 .i Nor111v1ew ( IJ,.10) •
LI S1tnt (It.SI •I Ollno CIJ.71'
AtQllelU t20-Sl ""· 81elr 11"1) •I Nlulr Troy 11._Sl at &artlow cn-o •
NOQ•IU UHi •I S.11 Cttrnente 00· I I.
l·A
S.nt• CtM• 11 .. SI •I Bi~ t t•S>'
Aviation (17.al el 81t!IOP OleQO ("121'
S.11 N1¥1no I 1 .. SJ •t l!ltlnote 111·71'
C.rplnter•• 11._.l •I Sal>t• Y11e1 t 12 .. 1'
Dv•rlt 114_,I at RIO Moe•
C.l1b4isa (IHI .. Mlral.ste (1 .. 41' Tempt• CJty !If.SI n Wlllltlaf' 01tl•ll.,
(JO.JI et LA HaDf'e
8•nnltl(I 121·21 et Aoyal 0.ll 11 .. 11'
IMMllC .....
8'°111-IJIMI et O.kwvo4 1 IMI •
Pllt rim tl .. 21 at NII,.. (1 .. 11'
Merk-I tJ,.SJ .i 0.-V•llt'f t1•ll' ~lodrt-( IS.01 M MawN 120.J)'
Cep111~no Veller Cltrl•ll•n I 19.0 •I
Inland Olrlstl .. llMI'
H"cllft 112-7) .. Of-. Lu\Mf'an llS.t> • Aeumond (14·11 I t Mt'fllpot( CltrlttlM
(lt.41• Moflt~l .. r ..,_ Of.II et Hllltletlf Hfll ,,..,,. .
'ti IK IO .. d1141Hmin.«I
I
ntlWllK'SICMmDUU c-.. T_...., -UC, ...... Vf.. u• IL, t •·""--' ~ r-...-~~ c-_._
c...-..1; U(4.A .. '""" ... "'·Al--•• 0r..-St., Al''-... -~; ,._
II P•M et IM illM9' ... ; Ntw MelUc• at
""''"· Prldclr -UC lrW. .. PCM T--
fMft\, '
S.t11r4ey -UC ,..., .... ell ~A T--
mt11t; UCLA •t W••lll111ton, U$C et
..... I~ St.; Atlllefte St. •• °""" k ;
Arli-at Ofte1111 c.n'°""• •' $WoMOtd; l tH .. 11 Puo 411 H-1111; ..... tflrw It
LoyOI•; Wyornlfll •t ........ II.et 1/99«1');
Mtw Mellko It Sin 0 .... 11.
S.tur4'~•~NO, 1:llO
(first rounctoUtattpl•rofl•I.
Hlghechool
Tuateley -Cll,. pla)'Ofl., ~di.oft 11 H04n
OeMe; OC..... Vltw et Lekewood; ,._...,.
Vallay at Pe1<16 VarGH; l..yflwood •I ~l\M
ct.; CCN'-dal lor\M&I RIV9tllda l'oly; SW..
ny HUI• 11 ~ e..11, •11•t1. ao o.m. Frld•y -Cll' D441yoff1.
Women
WeCln .. O.t -Cl" Pt•'t'Oft•: Al ... ~
Pely el MWlne; Ecll!Mlfl \OS. Sllftl Vallty;
Ftuni.ln Valle't "'-Cut..., Cltyl e1..-le
v1. G•rdan Gro ...
.. ., ..... et...ac
let~., ... )
AllOY BMrl, Ul,000 M-6l-41..,-M6
Tom W•Uon, UZ,400 ,._...70·7>-tn
<;1irlls Str9'1Qit, '20,400 .._..,72-47-t7S
Mark O'MNr•.S14,400 .,_....._12-21•
ered 8ry41111. JIO,tSO 10.n ... 1•1-2n
MIU Donald, '10,00 72 ....... 11-211
Mick Soll, \)0,tSO •H0-41·71-tn
Tom PurlHr, O .lOO .... .,.,,_.,_27'
Pllll Hancoc:ll, Sl,100 11••·7,..._J,, A•Y Floyd, Sl.100 ,, ........ ,0-21'
·Oon Poot<ty,Sl,100 7:Ml-7J·Tt-V'I Bot>O, w-111s. M,900 .._11.11-10-no
Steve Melnyk. U ,W 70.n .11..a-111
J arry Pala, \S,•U 10 .... 11.11-211
Ed Sneed, U,W ll-4t·10·7 I -211
BOC> EHi-, U.42S T).•l• .. n -211
BOOl>t Clemc>Mt. M.100 11 .... 7M.S-211
Oreg P-., $4.JOO ••·1•·72-61-2'2
Joe Inman. M.200 n .. t-1)41-m
Cll1p &-.11. ~.JOO 12 .. 1.12-11-2'2
HuO.rl c;,.._,, "4,100 ll·IJ-4t-14-ll2
c11ar1u cooay, u.ns .,_.,.1s-10.-m
Tom W••JllOPI. U,las 10·11 1J 10-lll
LH Trevino. U,llS 11·'9·11·11-lll
Grl MorQen, U,71S bt·ll 69·12 -113
F\lUY Zoelle.. ~UIS 7Ht .. 7·72-Jtl
Bob MUroltY, UJIS 6'·1"10·1•-113
Gery Koc:h, U, llS 11-1). ... 11-114
Dave EICNlllefQr. '2.llS 69-11·11 l l -214
Al<hard Mast, Sl,"1S 1).11·1 I 10 21S
V•nce HHtner, ll,9'S 10••·12·1' llS
P•I McGow.n. SI.US 11·1,...t-n ..
Tom Jenllift\, S1,71S 11·10-10·1'-..
O.A W•ltirrno. S1,11S 12·13-.1-14-..
Jonn FouolWI. s1.•16 10 .. •-10.11-211
Bruce F1t1sller. $1,416 11-14·6"1)-211
Ben Cren5hew. ll,41• .,.,..1 .... -111
L•M•lt Clements. Sl,416 11·7J.IW9-Jl7
MtCl\Hl l(lng. Sl,•14 I H2·7).11-211 Merk ROllOe. Sl,416 11·12 7Hl-217
J lrn Tllortw, Sl,41' INJ.IHl-Jtl
JumbO Oukl, sm 7J.1"1Ht-2tl
Jim c nencty, sm 13·61·1•·1J-2tl
Craig SI.Oler, S"'1 .,.11.1 ... 1•-211
Brvce Ooutll•ll, sm 11°11-72·7'-2'1
Tom Storey. sm 11·71·11·7S-•
Au CaldM ll,S"1 11·11·10·1'-•
Jim co111er1. sm 7~_. .. ,._.
Jecll R-. '1SI 72-12-74-71-M
JI"' HellorO. v• 7'-41-14-71-., Mlkt Holl-. V51 ... 7).71·77-..
Al•n r...-, "" 1.-1 ... 12-ttO L•n<e TM 8roeck. "" 11·11·71·7S-.2'0 t.Mry NelM>M. ""3 7).1J., .. Jt-ttt
S<att 11oc:11,..., 10.n.n -n -tt1
Cal P..-. 1'12 11·7HS-7a-!ft w_, ei.c-...,, 10-n., .. ,.._,,.
Fl'ed ~Mn 11-72-74-75-!ft
Roel Huckotls. Mn ... n .1 .. 16-1'1
Buu BOUllh. Mn ... 14·14-16-2'1
Well, AN'nStronQ. $6SI 1J.7J.7 ... 7l-20
Barry H..-1. $651 7•10-7).76-1'l
!Un FrlccUy, ~ 1J..IH4-1..._1'f
Arnold Pel~. l6l9 1).1J.7).7..._1'f
B..O Allln, "11 14-11·7J,.7S-1'S
Morris .._$1<,, SUI 1).10-1 .. 1._m
J.C. S-, 5'Jl 6.,.7'., ... 1._2'1
Tim Slmpt0n. Moll IS-10·1).71-2'$
Molle P-.ll. WOi n-6._l .. I 1'6
Fr•nk c-. $600 11·74-7 .. 1•-1'1
Edd•• Pe'°"•· U'4 74·1\.1....,-llll Boo Ford, '511 1).12-IHl-JIM
eo. ..... ,. ......
&.MWUe&ACMM•M
(84S-J-. ......... Ci9,
Low Net Tour,..mant: A """'' -1. Wllllern 909<1Wft, •1.5-4S; II Flltfll -1.
Byron Kl.-, ... I._..; C FlltM -I.
WIYM Smith, .... 21~; 0 fllQllt -I. 0.ie
Wl•M .... 2.....S; E Fl'911f -1. 5'otl Myers,
'4·29-•5.
M•WPOllT ••ACM WOM•M l•t~ -•Gett C:-) I.ow M.t T__.: A Fl19"t -1. Fr.,
Mllltt, !4; 8 FllQM -I. l(ey Tlt .. t, J7; C
Fllolll -1. Sylvie Heltdtnon, u.
Low GtvSS fou,_t: FtlQhl A -I,
Ju•,.11• St&lfofd, 73; B FllQM -I. Ettie
Nulle, t>; C FllQN -1 . .,._rt Henten, '5.
811M -81rel5 T.,...,._l: A Flltfll -I. VeMle Slurg<s, IJ; • FllQfll -1. Rlltll
FHOH. 1; C Fllghl -I. Adr-R .. I, I.
Bl51 9 of II Tourn-1· A Fll!lftt -I.
Juenil• Stellord, """' B Ftltlftl -l<•Y Tn ... 1. Ull>. c Fllefol -I. Lwc, Tllrcr> .....
IS
U.S. Indoor ctlamplonshlp•
t•t IM"""''' Tet!A.I S1 .... 1fl""I Gen• Meyer Ott. ROKoe hnn•r, •·t, •·•
0...-...1'1""1
G•n• M•yer·S•ndy M•ytr del MIU
Cen111 Tom GullllllOll, 1·6, ._,, 1·•
Capletrano Cup
1•1 IM•ke Cllyl Sl ........ 1 ... 1
Jeimt Flllol O.I. O•vld C•rl•r. •·2,•·3.
0 ......... 1 ... 1
M•rly Dots Chris Ounk Oel. ROH , ...
Jolln Alu.,,0.r, 6·3, •~.
Women'• tournament lttSHtllal
5antUlowl 11"'4" B•rb41r• Potter dltl. Kallly JorO.,., M ,
1·6, Sylvl• HenlU Otl. Bellin• 8unQe, •·I,
•l Sllltlet "IMI
Syflll• Hanlh Clef. B.,btr• Poller, .. ,, ....
GnrNoft Nl'I•
Mclr<ll t -11\M •"'-·lt:W •.m.' Merell t -11:•..,...-1:••-•
"'-'"' lf-12:2tLlft.'·''"*·"'·· Me1c11 11 -1:••.m.'·>:••.m.•
Mitt.II 11.,.-11:'7 .. -.11:11 ••"'-'
Mclfdl It -10:• .. M. .. 111• ··"'·. M ... c11...-11.•••"'-'''01 •.M. • _.I'd! as-":"'·""''''"·'"· ..
J-•-tt!l••·"'··l ;ll•.111 ••
.,_' -11:• ··"'· •.t:• ··"'·' J-•-t:•e.M.'~:tll,lft•'
J-7-l (t2• .. lft •• '4tlt•.m.'
...... 1t-11:•_, ..... 11:•h.nt .• J-. -11111 ..... ·1!11 •.Ill .• ~ t1 -,,, ••. 111.'dh••·"'·· J-ll-lt!P8.lft•'•l:S'I•."'·'
.llllYl-lll·~·t:•Mllo' .1"'1•-m•..,...·•:••·m.• Jlll1'S-tt:•a.fll,' ti•a.111.• 1••-11••""-'~M-·
Cl••--..... ........... ~ ..
1 ..... 1 ....... IC), 11:•, t ~ (01,
111•1 •· ., .. cCJ, •vu. ,._I, Wli.t IC), 1U$; J. W.llCll IC:I. n.a;a.~(01.tt• *-'· Wll-IC), •.t, 2. Sutt IOI, &tS, ...... (0), su.
..._,, u.tl'WUI COi, llSl'.A: t. \,.a!IM9rl
10 1. l;P.4; J. T,....ty CC:I, l;Sf.4, 1,--1. 0.-fl COi, 4!01.t; 2. l!v-
10), •:11.•: ............ (0), ., •••.
S,oot-1. Ille) Ler• 101, Mtrrot 101 a
"'~!NII IOI, IS1SJ.,, llOHH-L Oltlleno11 ICI, U .4J t .
M<Otr!Ntl (Cl, IS.7; t. H.,rls COi, 16,11.
4001M-t. O\llvl IOI. llJ,J; 2, Herrl1 101,
Jt.4; J. Ole, ... ,_ IC), l:OU.
400 rt1ey-1. OtrrllD' a . t.
1,.00 rai..,-1. Orenee CNat, 1:1u.
HJ-I, C-CCI, M ; t. ltlel !IMOarrnott
(Cl IMCO-ICJ.W,
LJ-1. McDlrmou <Cl. 22·01'1; t. 1..1~
'""""' IOl, 21-71'1: a ........... IOI. 20-L TJ-1. C:O-CCI, '>I; t, p.,-1 ...
10 1, U•tVt; l. McDttrmott IC>, 41-IV..
PV-1. kkKll ICI, IW; t. Ula) 1<110. 101 4IM Mtn11(Cl,11.0.
SP-I, H«llleT IOI. 41·11; t. Gllc•en 101, U-0; 1. s....... (0), 4J.1.
OT-I. Net-(Cl. 12'-IO; l . H•lle't' IOI. l»-1\'t; 1. 1(-(0), 129-10.
JT-1. tWiey (0), 1•2; 1, O'Sllee ICI.
ltM; a. Frlnll <O>. tn..i. Co..........., co1teffe .omen
Or-CMttn. CMri ... SJ
100-1. DttMb'°" IOl, IU; 100-1. Delt-
ftlllOll 10>, U .t ; .... I. Snllth (Cl. S14;
IOO-t , TIWI ICI, t:U.1; t,SI00-1. Go&alff
tOJ. 4:Jl.4; J,OC»-1. GINales 101, 10:40.•;
IOOH11-I. Delcttclo 10). Ii. I; 400JH-I.
8r1Kot IC), l;O.,.l ; 400 reley-1. CerrllDI,
4'.•; 1,MIO rel•'t'-1. C.tntos, 4:04.J, HJ-1.
VIila ICI, S.S l,,,..l ratcwOI, U -1 MorrllOll
IOI, 17·4\l.o; Sfl-1. Hu"IM 101. 31·•; OT -I. m11t1n !Cl. 110·0\lt; JT-1.
Htr11.,1de1 ICI. 10f.S.
Hklhechoot
" ................. l'allk•,.
100 -I. Stalt1ebar (Pl, 10.4; 2. Brim
0 481, 10.•; a. Perrell I Pl, 10.7.
UO -' I. Brim (Hiii, U .I : J. VenD•m IP l,
U.I; J. ll!DlnOer (Pl, 24.3.
440 -•1. N...,mtrll 111Bl, U.•; 2. Ven·
O•m CPI, )<1.2; J, G...O.u IPI, SU. llO -I, Marll1tt1 CHiii, J:OS.•; l . Stem
IP>, 1:05.1; 3. Sllve tPl, 1:'4.0.
Mite -I. Kl119 CP I. 4·~.I; 1. Martinet
(HBl, s·ou; l Bol>ltt IHBI, s. U.1.
2·mlle -1. Oulnonu IHBI, t :U .O; 1.
Klno 1P1, 10.n .o. 3. Holl.O.yl HBt, 10: .... 0.
IJO Hl1 -t o .. ci• IHB), "s. 2. V4111
Oor\elear IHBI, " •• 3. Toy IH&l. •• i..
J)Q Ll1 1 van Dotwlear (HBI. 41';1
flw:her (Pl, 01, 3 HO CPI. 0 .1 •~ rt1•y 1 P«ihc•. Os, l Hun11noton
8 H Cll,4'.0,
Mlle rel•y -I Hunll,.oton BH<h. ) 42.I,
l P•cillu , 3 &l.I LJ I Mllterme.r lH&I, 11·~. l Brom
(l1B1, 109,J E1noi.-rl PI. t9-0
HJ ' C.ll•••Y 'P), s 10 l M•ltermerr
IHBl,S.f.l Grtenit (P),S-6
T J I S.lltf'fttld (H81, 41·1. 2 1l1tl Mil· l11rne" tHB>. C•lleway IP1, )q •.
PV I Mllcllell IPI. II·•. l Mee .....
IH81, 10.0, l unclN IHBI, 10~
SP I Be.oulord IHBJ. •111, l Mocil't
(HBI, •M11<, J Nun CHBI, •)-4
OT I K-rlcll IHBI, 10~. l Smith
IHBJ, 117~.) Welll>encwr tPl, 124-0
~IM ts, 0•,_ G,.ve 41
100 I Groll IM). 10 l . l Moreno (Ml,
10.6; l Ctsm4'1 IGGI. 11 t
no I Dubois IM), ll I, l. MOrt'IO IMI.
24.0. J. Cnmtl CGGJ, 2U.
4~ I. Groll tMl. SJ. I. 2. Wym•r CCC>,
SU. J. LOPln (Ml. ~.2,
MO -\, C""'lltlri-IGGl, 1:06.j , 2. Plat!
IMI 1:06 ... 3 I.VII• (Ml. 2:10.0.
Mlle -I. CumO.rlltftd IGGI, 4.41.S; 2..
p.,ur CM>. •:4t.I; 3. Smltn (QGI, 4:5.S.O. 2·mll• -1. Cum0.•1-cGO>. no time, 1.
Plall IMl, t0:4U; l. Stt>llll IGGI, I0:4J.4.
110 HH -I, O.vll IMl, 1•.0; 1. Lui (Ml.
t•.I; l . 9"r1oll (MJ, 11.2.
llO LH -I. OullOll !Ml, 60.6; t. Walelt
CGGI, '1.I, a . ._..all (Ml, 4J.t .
•4IO ,...., -I. MMIM, .U.•; 2. ~
or-.11etlma.
Mlt• rat.., -I. IMrlNI, I : ... •; 2. Ger ...
°'8nge Cout DAIL V PLOT/MondlY', M81Ch 2, 1981
HIGH ICHOOL ICHIOUL!
CIF pl•.,oft• MCOnd round TUHDAY
4·A
ThOuundO..• at Rolllno Hiii•
OcHn V .... al Oa"'ltn
Simi Valley"' W"lm)Mlet
Oo~ """"°'at Mir• Cot\t
Cl ... -al H1.t11tlf1910ft lle41<1'
S.ni. NM •I HawthOtne
Weu TJllr-.• •• 0r4111QI
Edlsotl' .i Mlrll.SI• WIOMHDAY
).A
Mor walk •I ServHt
Loyola •t Serlt• AMl1•
Baldwin Pm •I Bol<O TaCll
St. Ber Mid el Cr~
Pelm SprltlQs ti C.ret
Monlttllllo al u Mirao.
Cantr•I •t NOQaln
CCN'OM at c.t41ollc.o 2·A
Temple Clly at Be"'''' HlllS
C•l•t>Ma et 0-111111
F uller!Oft 411 CNOwlO
Glen4elU I "410U'a
Temple M St 8ollevenlur•
V•t•ncl'a •t lr.,I,,.
C41pllcr..., V•llty el ~l•IMck
Mer5"•11 •I Estencl•
Women'• hlatl ectlool eoccer
Clfl l'L.AYOFfll (HCOHO ROUNDI
T-clly
Mlr•le5le •I Torrence
University .. C.lilornl•
S•n Cl-le el El Dorado
SI. L.u<:v'• ti RtdOftdO
Soutn Twr41ftee •• El Toro
Mira Cost. •1 UIN-
Sonor• •I Oen• Hill•
Petos vero.s at CaP"tr4111o V•ll•Y
Women'• soccer
A&.L·SEA VIEW LEAGUE
"lntTMm Keren eor-11, Velerlt RoOlnson. Bonni•
Smltll IE•tancl•I; hrrl llry.on, Luci Lento
IEI Toro), -r-c-.olly, M41ty C-.. Su• ICalujla,., C1'rlllln• Mhen, J t m•e
NovrH. LJbOy Z•rUer (Unt••rlilYI
SK .... T .. M
L•uren ""'9Qr_,, hrna Noy .. , Fntr ...
Shelton, 0o<vwo Somlll>. T •Y VI• I Uni Ye< II·
lyl, &•l•Y GHO., Katt• 0 Rielly, Chrt\
Tl'IOmplOll IEslan<l•I. LYM CallMl•n fem
Focftl, Tino PftllllPI (El Toro)
MVP-<'.!ttl\111\41 Ml..., IUnlvaf\1111
~ . . • •
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
College
fuHdl Y 2:l0
~ OoeQO SI al UC lr••nt,
Ft1d•Y UC lrvlfle •I USIV, 1 JO.
Sundey Pueet Souno •I UC
tdouble·N•CMrl, I
Community college
lrVtnt
Tut1C1•y Sou1n_st.,n •I O<ange Co.u,
Httfltchool h4•Y -~ IHc.11 JOIWlt fl 1 .. ..,.
1~1~, 4 elltlt 1 p.m.), L_, IHCll
WllMft M F-.ln V•li.-t.
Tva .. •r 04M Hllll at Tutti!\ T_.
lft•nt , U11lwe t1lty •I "•r•M•unt;
• 1S.ni.. Alle-N••IPO" fout'll<t-1 <••.IMIC.le. ""
Coran• Cltl '°"'', .... PCN't H••W, C•te Meu, Mal# 0.1>
wearieacto -Dana Hiii• at Tu•ll"
T..,rnamen1. uQUt1a 8•41<11 •I e1 Toro, a;
St. John llOlco "' NWit ln,e at ll•lr Flald,
Lono •-11. 7, Troy TOllr,,......nt 111!e1IF , fl'ounteln V•llay, Ocean VI ••· en
Clemt1tlt l
Tllur&Ny -$41nla AN·Mtwport four-rne1tl; Tustln Tournament; C~t41 llMM f l
8olH Or•ntlt, ~rlM •I fle,.moun1, 1
Frldty Troy Tourneme,... Letun.t
Betcn •• UrtlYtrtlty; Sen M•rcos .. HUrll• lnglon 8HCll, Dos Pueblot " Fountelrt
V411te,.
S••u•d•Y S•I\ Mercos •I Founl•ln
V•llev, II, Oos Putlllos •I H11111tn11ton
Beech, 11, Oen.t Hiiis •I Irvin• ldoul>lt
11.,d•rl, 11, u Oul,.t.a •• L•ll""" Be.en
ldoulll•·,..'1M•J, II; Sant• An•·Ntwport
Tourn•menl, u•··-YI. Mat1n• •I Bl•ir Fleta tOouOl•·Maderi, 4 •1td f p.m. All , • ...,.. •I l . IS p.m .. unless otlltrWIM
llldl<tl•d
HIGH SCHOOL ICHEOULH
Merine
Wacl., M .. ~,, 4-St. J-Bow:o llll•lr
Fleldl, I p.M.
Tllun .. Matcio ~' p.,.,,_,, 1 p.m.
S.I,. Mate.II 1-U..-(lllelr t'"lalaJ,
Clolllll~ •1 • -, W•d., AMrcll 11-Lono •••cit W lllOn
IBl•lr Fletal,l'IS Fri., MM'<ll 13-F-ln V•llty' INllte
Sq ... r.1, 1 o.m. Tues., Mtrcll 11-Hunttneton 11eec11•
(8,.lr Fleldl, 3
Fri., Marcll ._I Ne--11141rtior•, J: IS
wee .. Marecn 2s-wutrnl11ttar• 11111 1r
Flelcll. 1 o.m. S.t .. Maren -EdlS011 (Btelr Fleldl. 1
o.m.
Wed., April 1-Fount.ln V•lley' 181elr
Flalcll. 1 p.m. Tuei., Al><ll I-Newport 11•rtior• (81•lr
Flelcl). 3 Fri., Aprll 10-at Wntmlnstel'', l : IS
Mon., April 20-P•lo• Verdu IBtelr
Fleldl, 7 p.m.
Tuet., Aprll 21-Edhon• (Mlle Squ41re
Perk I, 7 o.m
Fri.. April 2•-Fount•ln Velloy' IMlle
Sclu•r• Park), 1 p.m.
Tues., Aprll ~unUnoton Beech' (Bl•lr
Field). 3
Fri., May 1-1 Newpon Heroor', 3 IS
WelJ., May .-wntmin5ter I Bl•lr Flt ldl 7
p.m.
S•• • M41v 'I-Edison' 181•1r Fl•IOI, 'pm.
• "-"" Sunwl LeaQ.,. eern•
Fountain Valley
Mon , March J-Lono B••<n WllS4n
lllC>tn•I
Marc II ...,, I 1-l~ Troy lOUl'Nmtnl
F r1., AMr"'-°"' ~ lltome>
Set • Marci! 1-S.n Mer~os llW>rn.l, 11
Fri, March 13 I Marin•' IMlle ~
P.,tl, 1
Tun . Marcn 17_.I Newport Herbor'
Ftl., -rch 10-Wellminster• IMll•
Scauere Pertil, 1
Tuas. March 24-EdlS011' !Mlle Sclwrit
P•rl<l, 7
Fri , March ll-Huntln9ton Buen·
'"°"''' Wed., AP<ll 1--Marln•· IBl•I• Fleldl. I
Fri., Aprll l-Newport Herbor' llW>me)
Tu .. ., Aprll 7-WHlmlnst•r•
Fri., A$1rll 10-Edl'4n' (Miia SQuart
P.,kl, I
T111• .. "Pt'll t•-• 11un11ng1or1 ee .. n· Fri., Aprll 24-Merln•' !Mlle Squ•ro
P•rll), 1 T .,.,., AP<il :is-.1Newporl11uoor•
S.t., May 2-W"'mlt15141' (Mlle Sq.,.,..
Park), 1 ·
Wed .. Mey •-Edllon• IMll• Sauere Park), 7
f hurl., Mey 1-Hunllnglon Beach' ,_,
• -cHnotes s--1 LffllU9 ve,,,.
All ll'ITW5 •I): IS unleM ot"9rwlM noi.d
•• •••• --=-.... •• -· I
C......llO , ......... 1t.c:.1
Tltt rnulh at t.uM•'f'• Gc1rell11• • Or•rlCI M•t-M«.11 Ut ,_, wltlt 1,,. •
car. ,._. , .............. wl-r'• ·-· SPffOllll'l\lll.
1, O.rrell W•ttr~, eulclt lt ... I. "2,
IUS'4. i. C•te v~. •ukk A ... 1. m.
• Ak:Nrd ,.,...,, e111t11 ,. ... 1. m .
•· Hall ....,.11, F0td TlllllWtrOlra, ,.,, ; ..... , .....,., Old\l'loOll• C11ll•t1, 4tl.
t. 8oeoby Alllton, Pontl.C Lt.11\41111, •ti
1. Jot MIUlll .. , C""'"olal Monw CMIO. ....
I. Kylt ,..Uy, llulcll Ree-I, ....
9. LIU sc-ea. •lllck .... ,, 4'2.
10 i'.lllott For-RocNnton, 81110 Aee-1, .,,
11. Aonnia Tllomel, Ponllec Gr•f\41 Prl•, •I•. 12 Johnny Rulh4rford, Ponti•< G••t>CI
Prl1, 41J •I~~ Mika Ale•-~ Ollbmobll• CuUni,
••· e-v W•••ll. 11110 At9411, .... IS O•va Mere.I>, DtClvnoOll• Cull•u , "1.
I• Tim Ak ""'6nd, 8uk ll R ... I. 4SO.
II J04y AIOltY. Olchniobl .. Cull•A.1. 44. II Herty Gani, 811ocll A ... I. '27
1' Tommy G•te, F0td TllUndetllird. Of,
10 L•m•e P-, Pontiac Gr•nd Prl•, 421.
11 Tttrv ~boflte. Bukll Revet, 412.
Jl AlcherCI Children, Ponti•< Gr-
Pria, 4ot
J) Ct<tl Goroon. B111<k R ... I, J'lj
24 Benny P•tlOllS. Ford Tl\undtrtMrd, 31t
U Sl1<il JOIVllOll, C11tvro1el Monte Carlo, m 1• D••• E•r.,,..relt, Ponti« Grena Pr••.
llS
11 Gl•M J.,.••11. Chevrolet Mont• Cerio,
111
11 Moreen Shephtro, Ponll..: Gr•nd Prl•,
1 ..
lt Jimmy Me"''• Ponuoc Gr•nCI Prla,
2S4
JO O•••d PHrlOll. Cllellrolet Monte Cerio. ns
Misc.
W .. kend tranHCtlOns
IASE8ALL Arn.rtun Lett.,.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS A,qut'°d
R•ndy Lt rcn. P11tner. lrorn 1ne Pn1l•<M•o1tr•
Pnifl1fl\ 1n •"<"•nCH for 01clr. O•\tls. out·
t•eldtt
NEW YORK YANKEES N•mfd Lou
S•O•nc1u11pru1denl
N•lleftalLe .. ,..
CI N(INNATI REOS S1Qntd P41ul
Hou\tl\Older. outt11l~r to • one 't'e•r con-.
tr•CI MONTRE"L E APOS S19neo Tim
W•lll tl'\. 1nhtldtr ovt•1•I O~r D•w~
Ho\lttltr flr\t bot\.f'M•n. •nd S•e'¥t R•\1-91'
•no K.1v1nMlf""10f\, p1tc.Mr\ NEW YORK METS Traded SteYe Hen·
Off\on, outf1e•oer., •net c•in to th• Chic.go
Cut>s tor D•v• ft1n9m•n. outf1efCMr
FOOT SALL
Not1aft411 "eetlllll LHI'"
HO\JSTOH OILERS N•mtd Rocn.,d
Stl<.er tineo.ack•rc.o•cn
HOCK IY
NellaMI HO<llctY La•t ... COLORADO ROCIC IES N•med Art
BirQIUnodtrec tor ot ot•y•r re(.rv1tmen1
LOS ANGELES ICINC:.S Lo•ned GltM
C:.oldup, 1e11 w1n9, lo Ne"' H•ven of Ille
Ame11c.,.HooovLuque WINHIPEG JETS Au•11ned ROU Cory,
dtten .. m•"· to Tutw 01 lhe Ce nlr•• Ho<"•Y
LU(lut COLLEGE COLORADO!> I A I t:. "nnounuo Iller-
len•llon of Brad Seely, aul~""' toolball
CN Ch DAVIDSON Ftr•<I EOO•• B1tdenO.cl\,
n .. dbesulO.llCN CI\ MElAO "THL.ETI( CONFERENCE
N•mtdC OontlCIC-pru1dent
Grew, M ti-.
w -I. 0. .. 1. IMI. , .. 7111o; L a ... rae .--------------------------------------------------------' IGGI, 1,_1, I.~ (M), IM\li.
•
HJ -I. SmlUI (Ml, .. I; l. O.vis tMl. 6-4;
1. 119411 ...... IGGl, W:
T J -I Devil CM). 42·10; 2 K411o INIJ, ... , . a. o.r .. n IOGI, 40-0. PV -I. L.uatlf INU, IU ; t. Lui !Ml, 11~;
'· ..... ,,.(Ml, lk. SP -I. ,.._, IMI, 0-l'h; 1. __ ...,...
(GG), U-0¥>. l. Cat'*'laf IW , ,._I,
OT -1. Weft&lftlllt" IGGI. U2~; 2 S.•slrr
tGGI, 11'-6; J. H-y IMl, 11H\li.
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
College
Satur~y UC San" BarO.r• et UC
lr•l"t
Community college
Frod•Y Or.,.Qe CNll el Ml S.n ..,,..
lon10. Cllrv1, 1moe11•i V•lltV •I S•d
dleOecll, Goidlen Well •I Soulnern C•lllornl•
Conl•rence Rtl•y• (CyprenJ.
S•lurd<ty SaCldlelMO •l LOr>tl Be .. 11
Aeleu.
High school
Tuesd•y L•oun• &Hen•• Los Aml90•.
Meter Del •• Pomon•. s.
WtClneMl<ly D•n• Hill• at Ell•n«• Thur,d;ty Founleln Veller 11 El Toro.
Newport Herbor el VIII• Peril. Edllon •I
S•nl• -'"" Velley, M•rln• •I Pterllc,
Coron• O•I Mar at Mfls•on V1e,o,
Wnlmlmler al Irvine, Cepl•trano v•llty •I
Untvet\llY; L• Qulnte , Ketell• at COile
M .. •. 8olw Gr•nde •I Hunt1n111on Buch
Frld•Y San Clemente M•ltt Oei •I San
I• An• R•"Y'
S4ltur0.1 San" Ana Rtlo'
NHL
WALES COfill'ERENCIE
Monlrtt•I
1(1 ....
PltliburQll
"•rlford
O.trolt
Htn'lt Ol.,11 ....
W L TC .. GA Pb
:s6 II 10 27' 1 .. ll
l4 2\ 9 26S l3S 11
14 30 t 2~ 111 SI
11 JI 16 Jll 299 SO
.. ll 13 '" U6 " AMmt OIYltl.,
8ullato 30 u '' U2 IU ,,
Ml11no ote n l1 u 212 2111 11 801tot1 J9 1• 10 2S I 227 ..
QuebtC 11 21 U 260 260 S1
Toro,.10 21 JO 10 160 291 S6
CAMl'8t:LL CON,.ERENCE
Pellk ll Divis!.,.
HY l>lanclttn a 17 10 2'9 211 16
Phlt•detpNe 3' 19 10 2~ 100 12
C•lgary ll 21 n 2S6 22t 7•
NY Ra,,..n 24 31 10 "' 267 SI
Wetlllnetolt 19 29 16 US lSl ~
Mt'l'IM DMaleo!
SI. Louil
ClllUIOO vancouv.,
Etlmonton
Colortdo
Wl1111I-
ll ,, u ?16 122 '°
2• 21 u in uo .. 1l u 11 2l6 21' .,
JI a2 10 141 JtO st
II JS 10 209 271 ...
74SU700 J06>1>
S ..... Y'•SlwH
Detroit 4, W1Mill99 •
St. L.oult 4, Cllk ... 4
l ollOft t, 8utl•IO 4
Mont...i 4, Hew Yorll Rtnotl'I 4
Vt ncll\NW'J,Herttorao
l ........ •0.-ICl .... IT-tcl
.. lttitM'lh et~
Area stars set
-to be lwnored
The 12th annual South 1 r v i n e St e v e
Coast Plaza/CIF foot· Schwichlenberg, Art
ball Pl ayer·of·lhe·Year Moore.
dinner is on tap Wednes· Laguna Beach -Eric
day evening and among Clark, Lance Stewart.
th e 56 at hl e t es Mar i n a Bob
representing 26 Orange G r a n d s t a r f , T i m
County schools ar e 28 Benson.
from tbe Orange Coast ·Maler Dei
area. U r a o i c h .
Dave
Larry
The guest speaker for Williams.
the event will be Arizona Newport Harbor -
State University Coach Clarke Smith, Mike Gid·
Darryl Rogers, who en· dings.
tered tbe stormy regions Ocean View -Doug
or the Sun Devils this Irvine, Rick Moser.
past season arter University -Rob
several successful years Hobart, Dan Gense.
at Michigan State. Westminster -Mike
LEASI NG ?
-1981 MODELS
HOW
HERE!
MANY MODELS ON DISPLAY
FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY.
WE LEASE ALL MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS.
"WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR ."
THEODORE ROBINS
LEASING CO.
2096 Hart.or II.
Costa MeMI
642-00 I 0
540-8211 The awards banquet, Lewellyn. Eric Will·
which begins at 7, will ingham. beatSouthCoa~Plaza;~~~------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hotel and reservationsl •4fi1t:tC~~~~~~~~Cl~~~~tC~;tC~EteEt4!EU~~lt~~~t«lt4(~ are available. at $15 per ~
per son, by contacting' Bobbi Bennett at
546·6682 or 546-4826.
Following a r e the
athletes fro m th e
Orange Coast area to be
honored:
, Corona del Mar -
Clay Tuc k e r ,
Shollin.
Costa Mesa -
Teregi s,
Werner. Ediso n Troy
Seurer, Duaine Jackson.
E s tancia Jlm
Mc Cabill , Terry
Thompson.
Fountain Valley -
Emile Harry, Duval
Love.
..
Huntington Beach -
Bob Thompson, Greg
Knapp.
Gaucho signs
with Georgia
S•ddlebHk Collete
linebacker &.ft A.~atn
bu tltDed a letter ~ ln· a.nt to play football at
No. l ·ru)ed Geor,Sa
DHlNMClll • Abram, a•e.a, 110·
pound mlddl•
llD•becks ....... ftrlt.· te•• AIJ.ii..... Coll· f ereaee lloaon laat ........ ,,.... ...
tor eo.cti &• .....,.. ............
-'Atlinimn1allO•U·
Cl P P•Tfermer for ...... , ........ ,, .....
-
°'819 CoMt DAILY PILOT/Mo~. March 2, 1881
Cll b• 1:.~ tbat ·no.u -from rul•fla&a .... to bou•boatl and eccnallen,-... boatl udr.aa,
•1 er.a .... .W be cm diaD&Q at tbe '<'~ ................ ltoit Sllow
l w-. turmWea wt111tart c1lck· . tac W......., at a p.m . and COD·
.tlaue=Sundn . · · Tbe lbow, produced b)' .
H . Werner Buck l:Dte~riles, will
• be bel4 at tbe Anaheim Conven·
b Uon. Center, IOO W. Katella Ave. n <•cl"ON from Dbneyland). ~
11b.o9n are from J to 10:30 p.m. W edwday and Tbunday; J to 11
p.m. l"riday; noon to 11 p.m.
•· Satunlay1 andnoonto7 p.m. Sun·
Mday. Admluion prices are $3.50
·C(or adultl; $1.50 for cblldren & to bu. Cbtldren under e are admitted tlfree.
; IN ADDmON to the wealth ol
boatl on dlaplay the Anaheim·
·JSbow will a.llo feature penooal
·::Ensenada race
9 >I • ~is scheduled
~for April 25
. •.
appearances by aome f amoua
penonaliti• in water aportl.
Betty Cook, Newport Beach'•
twiee world aad national cbam·
pion 1n tbe n&Cled sport ol olf.
1bore powerboat racln1 will dla·
play ber famous Kaama, which
1be bu campalped au over the
world.
Cook', a ~1 -year -old
1randmotber, lJ the only woman
to achieve such wlnninl status
in offlbore racln1. She started
raclnc at a1e 50.
Bob La Polnt, Water Sid
Ma1azine's "Skier of the Year"
for 1980 and world slalom record
bolder since 1977 will be on band
daJly at ~ tbow. The ~year
old Castro Valley man bas been
a meQ\ber of the U.S. world
team since 1973.
TSE SPORT OF ''power cbut· •
inc" popular in moat Mexican
resorts from Mazatlan to
Acapulco will be explained and
demonstrated by Rick
SUverla.ke of S40burst recrea·
lion.
One of the most unique dia·
pl•ys will be All in One
Houseboat/RV which can be
used as a mobile home ashore
and can be towed to the water
for a vacation afloat.
BOATING
The American Power Boat Al·
aoclation'• offahore raelD1 Muon
wlll end with a bane thll year on
the WestCout.
Bob Nordlkot, president ol the
crowU., PacUlc Offlbore Power
Boat Racine ANoclaUoo (PO}>.
BRA) aaid that the or1anlzaUon
baa been awarded the preatllloua
Brlti1b Harmsworth Trophy
raceaforl981.
THESE WIDELY souaht after
events will be the final races in the
regular APBA offshore circuit
and are tentatively S(beduled for
Oct. 3 in San Francisco and Oct. 17
in Long Beach.
The Lona Beach race is man·
datory. AJl-driYers must cross the
starting line to be eligible for the
trophy.
Under the rules governing the
four Harmswortb Trophy races, a
contendermustalsocompeteinat
least one race on each side of the
Atlantic. The two outings in
England will be held the last two
weekends in August.
The Harmswortb Trophy has a
long and illustrious history under
the guidance of England's Royal
Motor Yacht Club. This year's
competition figures to be the most
extensive in its 78·year history,
N ordskog said.
The 34th edition of the
Newport to En.senada yacht race
-ooe,ol the world's most spec.
tacular sailing extravaganzas -
ls scheduled for April 2S.
Small sailboats, including the
popular Wind.surfer sailboard,
will be on display and Bruce
Matlack of Newport Beach, a
champioh sailboarder, will be on
hand to discuss the growing
sport.
BETTY COOK AND HER BOAT, KAAMA, WILL BE AT THE ANAHEIM BOAT SHOW.
T H E TROPHY was donated by
Iri sh journalis t · English
newspaper publisher, Sir Alfred
Harmswortb, to the RMYC in 1903
and was presented to the winners
of a series of challenge races,
mostly between English and
American drivers.
., And aU indications point to
another record entry Hat of well
iiover 600 boats on the starina line
i for the 12S·mile dash to the
itJ>Opular Baja California resort,
c.l according to Don Moss, presi·
,dent ol the sponsoring Newport
1 Ocean Salling Association.
NHYC series weathers storm After being retired in 1961 it was
taken off the RMYC trophy shelf
in 1977. The year 1980 was the first
time since 1961 that the award
was open to international com-
petition. There were three races
-two in England and the
Benihana Grand Prix off Point
Pleasant, N.J . The American
race had the largest entry field in
offshore racing history.
Invitations and entry forms
·~were mailed last week and the ~deadline for filing paid entries is
J March 30 at 4 p.m.
1 The Ensenada ras:e has
,aomething for everyone -2S
1 perpetual trophies, including
hardware for the last boat to
finish.
The JDammotb fleet will be
divided into five divisions with
as many as eight classes in such
divisions as the Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet
(PHRF >.
CUSTOM Sia & IACE IOATS
Nordskog to enter
seven -hour e nduro
Veteran powerboat racer Bob
Nordskog of Tarzana will take
bis 17th shot in the Parker
Seven·hour Enduro SatuPday.
Nordskog ran his first Parter
race in 1964, driving a 1942 Man·
della. Since then he has driven
each year in various classes and
was the overall Parller Enduro
winner in 1965. Al that lime it
was a nine ·hour race and
Nordskog drove the entire race
without a relief driver. ·
Yacht racers competing in
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's
Ahmanson Series for Intema·
tional Offshore Rule, and Dickson
Series for Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet were served up a
conglomeration of weather,Satur·.
day and Sunday.
The first race Saturday was
from Newport Beach to Indian
Rock, Catalina Island, and had
the fl eet startine in a brisk
southeasterly with spinnakers
popping before some had cleled the starting line.
After a cold, drizzly ni l's
layover at Moonstone Cove, the
yachts played tai with the
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weather front on the race home.
In the race to Catalina on Satur·
day the IOR overall winner was
Scorpion, skippered by Staetter
Jung, San Dieio Yacht Club.
CLASS A-1. Free EnlffPrlM. Dick Ettinger.
NHYC. 2. Jel Strum, Gerry Slmon11, LBYC; J
Gholl, Jcfln Reynolds. NHYC.
CLASS 8 -1. SMNncloMI, 8111 Pa lmer. NHYC.
2 Audacious, Mika KeNWdy, LAYC, J. Blgwl9,
RonMelvllle.BYC.
CLA$$C -1. Scorpion, S1 .. 11er·J un9, SDYC, 1
Fa.I Break, Biii si-1ey00.Ylcl WebSler. 8CYC. l
Seclu<llon,OonAshbtooll, NHYC
Indian Roc k to Newport
(Ahmanson Series No. 2).
CLA!iSA -1. FrH Enterprise. 1 J el Stru m. 3.
Ohos I.
CLASS 8 -1. A.-c1ous, 2 809w19; J. 009
PelCh,OonAyresJr.,NHYC.
CLASS C 1. FHI Bruk, Sla nlty•Websltr. ecvc. 2 s.Guctoon. DonAshb<ook. NHYC
Newport to India n Rock
<Dickson Series No. 1).
CLASS A 1. Malan91. Ed Carpenter. eve, 1
Rawhide, Ktll Kuhn. Ca PO BYC, J. Joyride. Jtrry
Bum. BYC
CLASS B -1 Sha<\non, OonMcK•bbln, NHYC, 1
Runaway II, John Wlt bel. VYC. 3 Porpy, Roy
s111<1a1r. eve
CLASS C 1. S<olch Mou . Don Ancltrion, BYC,
2 Dark Siar V, Jtlf and Sieve Far•tll, NHYC l Wltdllrt,JlmGnm~lu,VYC
Indi an Rock to Ne wport
(Dickson No. 2).
CLASS A 1 Ma1.an9I, 1 Ml\trtu. William
Ostermiller, BCYC; J. Rawhide
CLASS8 1 Shannon;? Punyca1.JoMStal•Y
l Sparr-Ha°"', Bua O.wnber9. B YC
CLASSC 1 Wolclfirt, 1 ScotchM•\I l Se•blrd.
Don Ren.ua,C•POBYC
"POPBRA is gr ateful for the
opportunity a fforde d us by
England 's RMY C , th e
Harmsworth Committee and AP-
BA to stage these races," said
Nordskog. "With the resurgence
of offshore racing,lwe are looking
forwa rd lo a pair 01 the best races
in the history of offshore compeli· lion."
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l'CJOT'IM!L/IOAT1NG/IA811ALL
.... .,.......
~es, it's baselJall •eason
Jerry Reuss (left) flies over Jay Johnstone
while Steve Garvey (right) leaps over Don
Stanhouse as the Dodgers take time out
from spring training at Vero Beach to play
a game of leap frog .
Reagan sat there cryihg
President recalls his football' experiences
By WILL GRIMSLEY ·White House and hit golf balls in .. ,.,_,.,c..r..._..... privacy hours at a time. Warren President Ronald Reagan, the H d 1 · k d · I d "G. .. . th ar ing t e to entert.atn egen ary tpl>t'.r tn · e mov-baseball heroes.
ie that memorialized Notre Dwight Eisenhower was an
Dame Coach Knute Rockne , avid golfer who had,.a second
sees football as a game that White House at Augusta Ga ~ngenders "cJea~ hatred" and home bf the Masters. J~bn F'.
mutual respect. Kenneily was a sailor golfer and
"I knowofnootherga.methat -touch football b~ff . Both
gave me .th~. same f~li?g that Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
He approached a producer of
his films, Brynie Foy, who
thought Reagan was seeking
some payment for the Idea.
REAGAN RECALLED the
subsequent details:
"I said. ·weu. I don't want
anything for it. I just want to
play the Gipper .' He said,
'They've tested half a dozen
guys already.' I rushed to see
~ ....... .
SEAt VIEW LEAGUE ROUNDUP • • •
bu•, wbUe Oalbo &Dd Brownlee
ban tbl."'9 tbelr way lD tbe oat· ffeld. Maril Bondi and Jamle
Jordan are tbe rt•ht fleld eu·
dJdat.. Lettermu Jay Scott, a Junior,
wlU be at ftnt or thll'd <Wbllt
Fehrenbach appeara 1olld at
catcher.
SJma lJ a 1-1, 180-pounder with
1ood apeed, Whlle Wettbrook, a
left.y, lJ 1-1, no pouada.
Other top candidates include
ouUielder TOil)' DlGre1orio, In·
fielder Shannon Eichner and
flrst buemen Dou1 Hellman
and Tim Seott.
CoetaMeN
Kirk Bauermebter takes over
the Mustanp' procram and says
bis team will be sound de·
fenalvely up the middle, will
field above AYera1e hitUnc and
show pretty Sood team speed.
The question mark: pltchlne.
Third baseman Joe Cruz and
catcher Jeff Field are two ol the
more prominent players on the
Meaa roat.er. Cruz wields the
beat bat and Field lJ considered one of the best catching proe·
peels in the Sea View League.
Tom Sullivan and Steve An·
derson, a pair of junion at the
keystone, work well together,
and Ribby Si.nt is at first after
moving from catcher.
Greg ·Teregis will be In left
field while Max Marold and
Dennis Jones are the leading
candidates for center field.
Marold ls expected to be ready
for league play after undergoing
knee surgery.
Jones was the most valuable
player on the junior varsity a
year ago aa a junior.
Steve Williamson and Mike
Dawe figure to share right field..J
Williamson is also a relief
pitcher and Dawe could move in
at designated hitter.
In the pitching department
there are two sophomores who
hold the key to the Mustangs'
potential. Jeff Goettsch and
Austin Smith are the two
Bauermeister is counting on to
puJl the staff together and pro-
vide quality depth ...
Also available is senior John
..... wbo polttU• • fOOd
1Uder and ~•bell.
Scott Yuea completH tbt J"09te U tbe lluataap I utWt)'
pl1yv.
Ufttver.,.. .
New Coaeb BW Mr from
Tbou~ Oab Kllh 1.U~. oyer
at Um wbere a major cbau.m,e
awaita.
"I know lt IOUDda like a clldae,
but our No. 1 priorttf lJ avelop.
lnt a sood attitude," Fiaber
aay1. "CommunlcaUoa bu been
the polttlve key tllua far.,::
T&e Trojam won only three
camea ln 19>, but with a few re·
turnees and a bettet atUtude,
Flaber la eonfldent that Uni
won't be a pushover.
Fbber admita that bb squad
appears to be abort on plteb.lq.
He'll be looklna for Brad Oueu
. to be a a~r. At 1-T, Fiaber
aay1 tba'f"'Gue11 la a bard·
thrower.
Roundin1 out the pitchina
corp• are Gree Eberhardt, a
ri1ht-handed Junior and Pat
Backon who will work out of the ~yypen and u a 1bort s~.
At catcher, Mike Miller and
Jeff Frye will both aee act!on.
The st.renitb ln the infield ii at
third baae where Gret Buckler, a 10Ud hitter, returns and at
first bue where Dave Orlilt, a
transfer from Irvine, la expected
!<>have a Jood year.
The sbortatop wlll be Mike
Sbnff, wbo Ni out wtt.la u ...
JUl'f lMt,.... ... MCODd ... ta •b.tw .. KeYID ..... aDd CU'l
WaW...,~M81or9.
ID Wt fteW la Cb.rte P1ut, a
outa blU.. C•&er tramf• from Tnu wlw»~ will~ llarviek or
V.alt aDd rlcbt fleld wW bt
patrolled bJ arue. Buelrlnpam.
"It'I taUrh conrlDI Into a prO!
1ram ,;r.--;r. .. ,. n.aa.r ... Bat ~
·believe we'll be a wbmer .. '.
eventually."
111 ..
Three return1DC 1tarten
outfielders Sri~ Bryant aDcl
John GUna and ftnt buemu
Jim Corvarnablu -al•• Coaell
Tom MeCaffre1 a IOlld Duelwl.
Other NDlcn eouated OD an
lnflelden Mark Gower and Jot
Hamlin, pltcben Dave H.W,-.
tbal, Coarad Glacomaul, and
Ward Merdea, catcher 8,.t1
Tokanki and uWlty player M1kt
Cervoni. '
Sbawn Sincb, tile A.SB P~1
dent. returns at t.hlrd.
Juniors, in addition to CovaJ'o
rublas at flrat base, are in·
fielders Bret Dama• a.ad Illa
Lomeli , catcher Mart
M1tr1n1a. ouUleldera . Damon
Sweazy and Mlke Burcbard, and
sophomores Dou1 M aber and
Blake Fennel, eacb outflelc(·
pitchin1 comblnatiODI .
l
Sea Dremn sails to will ·
LitUe boats and big weather
was the format of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's five-race
series for M.idget Ocean Racina
Class CMORC> Friday, Saturday
and Sunday.
The Cork~· Trophy was
oriBinally awar d e d to
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet yachts in a nine moot.bl
ser ies sailed lo conjunction witb
NHYC's Ahmanson and Dicbon
Ser les. It wu rededicated ctbia
year to MOR C for a slnele
weekend series.
The winner was Sea Dream, a
Merit·25 co-skippered by lllke.
George and Paul Yates,
California Yacht Club. Second
was Snojob, a Santa Crua-21
aalled by Mark Gaudio and Jim
De Wolfe, Bahia Corlntb.lu
•Yacht Club, and third WU UD·
broken Chain, a J ·2' sailed bf
Jordon MWJ>h.Y . Balboa YC.
The aeries started mlldlJ. ~
eoou1b Friday with two r•cet
sailed in moderate 1·10 knot
breezes, but as the weather frcmt
descended Saturday the fieet
took off oo a 15-mlle r ace around
the oil islands in 20·25 knot
wind1. football did, the !lation s cbJ~ got their relaxation on the golf exe~utive . told lns1d.e Sports in course. Jimmy Carter played the producer and bis first words ,--------------------~----===========:---
an 1nterv1ew recalling his ex-tennis.
perl~nces as a 135-pound guard Reagan, a left-handed gun-i!1 high s~bool, later a 175-pound slinger in a score of Western.
lineman m college and a radio movies, got his greatest movie!
sports ai_inouncer. fame perhaps in the role of tbe: Interv1~wed by Mark Shields, dying George Gipp in the film!
a columrust for the Washington "Knute Rockne: Ail·American"1 Post, Reagan was asked if be in which Pat O'Brien pl•yecl tile.
feJt that his experiences in legendary coach of the Figbtlnc' sports bad given h im a lriab.
particular sense or accomplish· · · meot. IN TIOS WEEK'S issue of the
"WELL, I THINK they have,"
the president replied. "And I
think football particularly. A
Navy football player once
described it as the nearest thing
to war without being lethal.
"It is the last thing left in
civilization where two men can
literally fling themselves bodily
at each other in combat and not
be at war. You hate the color of
his jersey, but there's a mutual
respect that develops while
you're playing on the field.
sports magazine, Shields, a
former Notre Damer himself,
elicits from the president the in·
formation that be, Reagan, was
partly responsible for the mak·
ing of the picture.
"I told tbe Gipp story on the
air once when I was a sports an-
nouncer," the president re-
called, "with no idea that one
day in Hollywood I would be
saying those s ame lines,
because they were right out of
Rockne's diary.''
Reagan said he always felt
that the Rockne story should be
made into a movie. When he got
to Hollywood, he started putting
together the framework of a
script and passing it among the
studios. Then he learned that
Warner Brothers was doing the
picture.
to me were, ·Well, wait a
minute. This is the greatest foot-
ball player who ever lived.· He
didn't think I was big enough."
Reagan rushed home and got
a picture of himself ln a football
uniform, pads and all. Pat
O'Brien personally helped him
with the screen test. He 1ot the
part.
In the movie, O 'Brien, as
Rockne, says to Reagan, the
Gipper: "1 want you to run with
the ball."
''How far?" asks the Gipper.
Reagan was a 135-pound guard
at North Side High School in
Dixon, Ill., captain of the 135-
and-under team. He later was
elevated to the varsity and was
close to six feet and 175 pounds
when he entered Eureka College
in Illinois In the LitUe 19 Con-
ference.
It wasn't the Big Ten or the
Ivy League.
··Let me say one thing in de-
fense of that Little 19 Con-
ference,·• Reagan said. "The
Liltlf 19, at that time, sent more
players to pro ball than any con-
ference in the country."
And, he might have added, a
man to the White House.
"And. also, there is a kind of
inner confidence because you've
met your feUow man in that kind
of combat. I played other games, too. Football went
deeper. That's why you can look
at the bench when the TV
camera comes over and see
fellows sitting there crying.
''I've sat there crying." Davidson fires baske tball coach
REAGAN FOLLOWS in the tradition of other presidents who
bad a close affinity with and a
love for sports.
William Howard Taft, fearful
\ of disapproval of bis constiluen·
cy, would sneak away from tbe
IOA T TIAISIT llC
DAVIDSON, N.C. <AP> -Say.
ing "we want to be winners,"
Davidson College fired head
basketbaJJ coach Eddie Bieden-
bach Sunday just hours after the
Wildcats were eliminated in the
first round of the Southern Con-
ference championship tourna-
ment.
Biedenbacb, who played at
North Carolina State, had
coached the Wildcats for three
seasons, failing to produce a win-
ner.
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ENTEAT~NMENT/MOVIES 0r..,.eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Monday. March 2, 1981 -'
How'd you like to own both 8eiitles movies?
J .
~ ~· ~ • ~-..
A ..........
A MAN samNG ON TOP OF A GOLD MINE
WMter Shenaon with Bedee moYle ad•
'Rainy Night' still
most play~d disc
By Tbe Associated Prea
The following are Billboard's bot record bits
for this week as they appear ·in Billboard
magazine:
HOT SINGLES
1. "I Love a Rainy Night" Eddie Rabbitt (Elektra)
2. "9 To 5" Dolly Parton (RCA>
3. "Woman" John Lennon <Warner Bros.)
4. "Keep on Loving You" REO Speedwago
<Epic)
5. ''The Best of Times" Styx <A&M>
6. "Celebration" Kool & The Gang (De-Lite)
7. "Crying" Don McLean (Millennium>
8. "Giving It Up for Your Love" Delber
Mcclinton CCapitol-MSS>
9. "The Winner Takes It AU" Abba <Atlantic )
10. "Hello Again" Neil Diamond (Capitol)
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC• Of' T•un•a·s IALR
T.S.-S1m•t
T.O. SE .. VICE COMPANY M 4'1111
at>P0111ted Tnnt .. l#IClllr uw 1o1._1n9
dltscrll1ed dlted f/I lnftt WILL SELL
AT PUILIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST llDDER FOR CASH (~y•lll• at tim. of .-!• 111 lawful
money of IN United StatnJ all rlt11t.
1111• and 1nc ..... 1 c-•yecl IO -"°"'
held by II -Mkl OMcl of Trust Ill the pr~y NrelM!ler e1 .. crlbed:
TRUSTOR; HUTCH HUTCHINSON. ••11191• ..... IENEFICl,\ .. Y: CANYON II,
LTD., a Git.,_.... llml-pertMrllllp It..,.._ Jiiiy U , 1'79 as 111•"· No.
,,.., "' -1J20, -"" of Of.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
·~,,,Or .... c-t'(;........... . .• '""" _,..,.,
ol trust Cletcrilles the toltowlllO pr• ,,, certo."' ...... 1
'.,.,...., • .u
HOLLY1fOOD <AP) -Pwtrait ol
1 mn II.._ cm top ol a sold .-.:
Walter SIMDloa, wbo DOW OWM botb
pf tbe Butlel' feature movl•.
On Dec. 11, lMO. owsenldp of
"Help" puaed from United Artlltl to
Sbeuon, wbo PtOCSuc.ct tbe movie In
1915. Exactly a year before, the pro-
ducer toot po&Htaion of world rttbta
to "A Hard Day's Ni1bt.'' .!l'beae
were the only features in wbfch tbe
BeaUes aPi>eared; their 90Qll alone
were UMd in the cartoon "Yellow
Submarine."
W ALTES SBENSON ia a plea.sant,
low-Irey penon -which ia why tbe
Beatlee took to him . He is attll
amased at hia fortune in acqubinc
rt1bta to tbe two mms 15 years after
eacb was produced.
"At tbe time, the people at United
Artists didn't really know what they
bad,'' be remarked. "The main rea-
son they wanted to do a movie wu
that United Artists Records would
make money on the Soundtrack
album. Tbey figured they couldn't
lose much on the deal.
"They told me, 'Don't spend too
much money. Make ·Whale¥« )'OU
want -)'ou're the producer. JU1t ,.t
the BeaU. to a_.ree to make the plc·
tu.re and make aure they lbow u,p
every mornln1. • They tbou1bt lt
would be Juat uother ea'*'tative
picture, and they didn't obfeet When
my lawyer aua'Qted that I own the
picture att.r 15 years."
DE8Prn:. TB& enormout publicity
•urroundlGi tbe murder of Jobn
Lennon, Sbenaon ia not rushln1 to
capltaliae on hls bonania. He la
Ustenlnl• to off en from three mljor
dlstributon and a bOlt of mipor onea.
He plans to •trike new printa and
convert the soo1s to Dolby stereo;
they were monaural in the orilinal
movl.ee, but the record albQms will
provide true stereo, and Dolby can be
added from there.
"l expect to release ·A Har4
Day's Ni1ht' about Easter time,"
said Sbensoo. "I'll do nothing about
'Help' for another year."
Born in San Francisco and educat·
ed at Stanford University, Sbemon
was a press agent at Columbia Pic-
tures unW the 1980s, when he decided
·NINE
,_. . .._., .. ..,.,... -·-·Ml-......_.,,.
UA••----·-t• UA.._0-C....•_.... ""'-··-
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO FIVE (POI
I "THE JAZZ
_ SINGER" (~)
I "FORT APACHE
THE BRONX" Ill)
I co-ri."~oN"
lPGI
$ Uiiil • R• 'I "FANTASIA"
"l~IDl•LE
. SHRINKING WOMAN''
"THE NUDE llOM8"
I "THSDEVIL
• MAX DhUM''
"HEit() AT LNtCIC" CNt flclal ltKorClt 111 .... ofll<• of tM @ NOOlffUHOfA 17 A0'9ntO
perly: .._,,,..
All 11\at urtal11 real property ""...,... PICTITIOUI llUlfN•ll I "RAGING BUU." 1t11
"A>fff ~ACHE" 1ltualecl Ill .... ~y of 0r .. ve. Stat• AU ..,'°" AHO !iil '1LMS AECEl\IE MAMa ITAT•~ .. T
Of Calllonlla, dltscri-.. 1o11o ... : THE s~ °" n<E MOT~ "'CTI.JAE Tiie lollewl119 --· .,. 4'0111
Pal'UI I: C00E OF SELF AEG~AT~ tlllMtM:
lol 12'-IN Sou111-.lerly '7 .2< i'-----------..__. A ME It I C AN T R A V E l"I, ol LOI 130, Tr.ct No. •». In ltle PLANNRltS, 120I H. Tutllll Ave ..
c-1., of Dr-. Slat• "' Callforlll•. OrallQlt, Olll!orlQ 9*7
••"" ~ r..:ordltd 111 ._ "· Pao-PUBLIC .iOTICE FANTASY Tou .. s. a ea11ton\1e 42, Ml~·-""--Ill IN offl<.e ol \, c~•tloll. ,. N. Tustin A .........
the C°""'Y Rec:...-of tald C-y. Or ...... Qlltomla ... 7 E•cepll119 th.,orom Ille NOTICIEOirT•USTIEIE'SSALI Tlllt IMnlMH It conelwcled by
Sovthwnlerty » 1 .. t of Lot 12', (all AMa.m c~allofl.
ClltlM'ICft -urllCI al r19hl 1H19le1 SPirNe.tlUI FW!lay T-t from u. ~erly lines of said "•: »-21l/210nlt ""'°"'° F A_...,_1 lots) SOUTHERN PACIFIC TITlE COM· ,....,_· ' Parc~I 2: PAN y •• Calllorllla corporal*' .. CIU· Tiii• .......... , was lllllCI wllll
A11 oHunenl lor lngreu a11CI ly appolnla! Trutl .. Utleler Ille follow· Covnly Clffll ol 0r.,,.. Cov11ty
... ,
I I "TRIBUTE"
"OROINIMY PEOPLE''
I'll
to try lib luck at produciq in
Sa1laad. Hit luck was aood.
npeclaJly witb the Peter Sellers
comedy, 1'The Mouae Tbat Roared."
Ria 1uccea1 with low.budget com·
edlea prompted United Artista to pro-
poee a Beatles rum.
8HEN80N'8 FaBT challen1e was
to convince Lennon , Paul
McCartney, Geor1e Harriaon and
Rlnao Stan to make a movie with
blm. He enlJated Amerlcan·born
Richard Leiter, who had directed
"The Mouse on the Moon" for
Shenaon and was known to the
Beatle1 for bis work on the madcap
"Goon Show." Next came Alun
Owen, a TV playwright and
Liverpudlian.
"Aiun lived wttb the Beatles during
an en1a1ement in Dublin," Shenson
recalled. "He dlacovered that they
were literally prisoners of their own
success, that they went from plane to
hotel to concert to plane surrounded
by a cocoon of Liverpool; everyone
around them came from there.
·•What would happen if they broke
out? Alun started writing on that
prem~. and the pages were pure
-l'D-... ~-···NINf TO Ffft"' ll'O) t·U.)'_4t.Hl.ll•,,t-:_ ..
··n. 09'1.AT 9ANTINI" (fl'Q) -. ....... -. ..... -
··uQtNO llUU" (IU -.r.Mf, __ ...
"llOAD GA•S" (l'O) -..-.-.. ,.-. ....... •~•8J_lt8 ___ ..... -
11ren -Iha! portlOll of Mid I-ln9 Clu<rlbed Cited ol tr.nt Will p:~ 11, l"1.
clellCrlbllClastollows: SELL AT PVBllC AUCTION TO THE Pt ll9ll4fl •:tt. -""" ................ ,,,..
l
A Parcel of 1-lyl119 wllllln Loi HIG!iEST BIDDER FOR CASH Pvllll~Or .... Coul Dally Piiot
121, 12', and 1JO of Trect No. Ul, ., lpaytbl• at lime ol we 111 lawful ireo. u. ""6/r. 2, t, 1', ltll t1W
P()BLIC NOTICE
per map rw<ordllel 111 Book lt, P ... O . m-y of IN U111ted Sttlnl all rl9ht,
MIK•ll--""9S. 111 IM onlu ol 1111• and 1nc.-n1 c1111vey11C1 to -,,.,.
lhe c:o..tly Recordltf of MICI ~ •• held by II ...,., •aid Deed ol Trusl Ill
more partic ula rly dHcrlbeCI •• the pr-rty hef'el11Alter CleK•lbllCI. ·-----,N"'1""1= .. ,,,.--follows: Tru1lor. Willi AM R. ORVIS tnCI s
IM'°"THT NOTICE! CMllORHI UMDUI IZ f"H! ... -·~-i----•M.U
· (1]•1••.l'1.~m1~· 11~1.-!.~~r~;'~.~1:..r· 11 .. ;:::!!::.7:0,
letlllllllll al a point 111 the FRANCES ~ ORVIS, huMltncl and l'ICTITIOU~aUSINIESS
Sovt-1 11,. of w!d LOI 121 Mid •lie, lenellcl•y: ORANGE COUN· NAME STATIEMIENT 1----=======--=-=-=-=-=-=-==illu No AM Clllf ltlldlo Witt• '""''°" Acc•-Y ....... y-°""AM _Ull .. ;.I
po1111 1Je4llO South s 'Cletr-Ji-00" TY TEACHER CRE DIT UNION, a Tiie followl119 per50111 are dol119 PUBLIC NOTICE EHi a Mid SouUlwefl 11,. 1< oo 1 .. 1 Ca lllor11la cor11<1rallo11; RecordeCI t>u1ln111 H :
from' the motl Wftlerly c..,;..,"of tald De< ember 12, tt17as Instrument Nb. I NS TANT HOME, I 109 Do\'11 Slrffl, NOTIC• Oft HUltl .. 0 01'
Loi 121· -. Nor'lh 44 •tren 27' 301111 In -11SOJ PA9I '4S of ,,... Of· Sult• 120. Newport Beach, CallfOf'nl• TMR eoAltD OP Dt••cro•s
00" E~ ......... wltll U. N°""'"9t lie I al Records In ,.,. olllce of IN '2660. OP THIE MaSA CONIOLIDATRD
llM of LAl(t 121, 12', '"·2' t•t to a Aecorcltr of OranQe County; said~ JOllMlown Fl11A11tlal CorporatlOft, WAT•• DIST•ICT 11<1lhl 111 the Northea•I llM ol lht ol trust dn<rlbff the foll-Int pr• I• Ge0f9la CorporatlOft, Suite 300, To retktlfllt. cua-rs, -_,,
Soultlwnt 61.U feet f11Lot1• Of Mid perty: S7U·A ~eclllr" OV11w-y Road, ol multlple unit•, commerclal, 111·
Tract; 9l9llClt Souttl u ,,.._ »' 00" LOI I of Trect No. IS01 ••• -Map Allan11,Geor9leJOlO. CIU•lrlel, -INtltull-1 COfnt>IHH
EHi, •IOfll MICI Nor'lhMlt 11 .. ~.oc ••<Oro.cl Ill -SI, PA99 IS of Mii· Thi• bulllln• •• C-.Clltel by. COf" •IU.111 .,. Mela COllsollelelllCI Wat ... , .. ,. ,_ Soutll Ma.er-It' sr· cellan._ 1'AAPl. In ,,... ottk o of the p0ra11on. District:
We;t, .... 1 .. 1 lo a p0l11t In 1 ... COUlllY Rec:...-of Or1H199 Cou11ly, • Johnstown FIMllClal, PIHM 1-.. notice 11\tl Oft March ti,
SoulhwHI 11,. ol Mid Lot 1l0 dl•l.,1 C•llfornla. Corporetlon 1911, at 7:10p.m .. 111 Ille ..,_,Cl rocHn of
.,..,_ 5out)t u .,..._ Jr 00" E••t. MA y BE ALSO ~NOWN AS· 201S1 ~ H. L-111. • .... MeM Corltolldlted Water Olatrlct.
12'.001•11.-i IN W..t corNr of Uld Bay VI-A-. S.11ta All• Htlgllls, Preslelel'll ... 5 Plecemla Ave,_, Costa /OMM,
lOI 1•· llwQ Soul1' '4 •tr-,,. CalllOf'llla. Tiiis It.II-I WH llltcl wtth Ille C•llloml, ... tloerel of 011'9CIOf'I Wiii
00" w.it ..,. .. ,.. wit!> tt. Northwest The befleflcl¥Y .,,_, s.wd DMCI of County Clerk of Ora1199 Goullty °" hotel 1 public hffrlllO for tN p;irpo111
tine of .. w Lott t2t -121, IJ2.00 1 .. 1 trull, by reaso11 of• breach Of' default Feb. 2, 1'181. of COlltldltflllt tnd adoptl119 a polky
to a Polm In II• Soutm.est II,. of w ld In IM obUgetl011s secured Iller.Or, P1stail pertal11l119 lo: Al pre¥ellllon of
Lot 121; .,.._ North u *9ren J7 heretofore uec.rtecl -CltllverllCI • Publl-0r.,,.. Coast D•llY Piiot, baOllow and crou-con11ectlo11 for llre
00" West. •lonl uld 5oulllwffl ll11t, the u11clertltned •written De<laratlOll !'•!!·'· 1',U,AMr.2, 1911 __ •'?:ti i.prlnkler 11,. sys-. and Bl rtc1ulr·
SJ.00 1"4 to .. Poln4 of t1e9IMlllQ. of Default -Demand lor S.le, and lllO the lntlall.Clon of bec1111ow Pt•.,..,·
Eacet>I 111a1 POrllon l11c1ue1ed written llOl!ct of l>rM<ll -of t lt<llOll PUBLIC NOTICE tlon d•vltt• Oii
wltlllll Ptretl '....... lo CAUH ,,.. unCltnltMCI lo Mii Hid 111 all new llre -llllller llllt COfl.'
Ptrcel J: pr-rty to 1atl1ly w ld o4111getlons. N·11m nt<llOllS, afld
All H•ernent tor ln9ren a11d -,,.,_,,,._ ltle unclt•lllMCI t auMCI l'ICTITIOUI aUSINRU 121 all .. lttlllO llrt 1prl11kler llN egreu -Ille Easterly 12.00 , ... Of HICI notice of llrff<ll .. Cl of •IKI*' to NAMIE STAT•M•NT lytteftlt --no dltvlc• of .,y klllCI
Lot UO of Trect No. W , H per map r• be recorded November u, lteO •• '"" TIMI lollowlftt penot1 11 C1o1f19 butl· allll, tnd corCleCI 111 ._ It, P ... 0 , Ml•· slrument lfO. 11102 ill -l.iJ Pll99 nau as: Ul a lone-term pl\awel P'Olll'..., In
ttll-""-' l .. fol MlcfOllltl•IRe<orCls. CALlf<ORNIA AUTO AECON· wl>lcll ul1ll119 fire 1prl11kler llM EICetll that 11<1rllo11 llltludeCI SalCI Ult wlll llt -·but wlllloul OITIONIHG,'17 A UlltVlew, Place11-1y1t .... s wtlll ,..,...,_rd beckll ..
wlllllfl h Sout-.terty l7.JA ,_ of cove11anc or .... ,.....,,., .. press or Im· ua, Calltontl.il n.10. prevent!., dltYlcH such H a tl11t1I•
Lot t•. plleCI, regerolne lllle, po-111o11. or Stl Young Of1. llOt $41yrldtit, H• cllec• valve (cemmonly "'-11 es ...
224' C:.Y'Ofl, C.la-. Cellfonllf encumbunt n . IO pey IM remal11lnt cl•ncN 14tb-, CallfONll• t17U. tee I.-cr.c•1 wlll lie r9111eced with .. "(lht!Teet--or~•n· ,,.1rw:1pa1 sum of ttle llOC•IU ta<urllCI Thlt bull,.,. 11 concluelecl by at1 pronCllllKkll_.,,_.,..,11011dltvlc"et
1911et1on i. --· llO warranty by MICI DellCI Of tnnl, with l11t.retl •• lndlvle1 ... 1. a future ca.tt. It It Pf-" lllat tlle lft..
I• t1Wfl ... Its ( ....... ._ or tor• 111 H ICI nottprovfelecl. ..,,,allCH, If a11y, Sol Young Oii llalfatlon of .,,. ..,,,, ..... llecllll-
rect-).'' T1w llllleflelary ......,,.,, _, the llnM of MICI Oeect of Trvst, Thlt ttat-t was llltcl with tM prevetttlOll -•ce -Id occur al • °'"of TnllC.11¥-of. WNc:fl. fMI, <ll•rve• e11CI HptMtt Of Ille' Covllty Cieri! of Or-c-ty on Jan. <II ..... ol -~ • CMftee ,,, •· •••1tll 111 IN ._., .. llOflt tKwrM Trwu .. 9"d IJf Ille trulb cretted by 12. 1911. c-cy, or other •lmllar ..,em,
....,...,, ........ _... -... said 0.0 IJf Truat. Said Ule wlll be PISMM ACIOptlon IJf ... MW palky wlll r•
11-.-.... .,, • .,.,_a wrlttell .,.Id Oft ~Y. M¥ch U, lflt, •I Publllllllel 0r.,.. Coast Dally Pllo1, ctulre some cuttomtrt with llrt
o.c1 ........ ., Dtfwlt 9MI ~ 11:00 •·"" .c ... f,..... ettlra11Ce It.,. '"·'· ... U.Mllr.2, 1911 ..,..1, t9flllllef 1yR9mt to rwtrofll with-,.. S.1-. ft W\1 .... MCiee tf .,_._ tffkH f/I Soutflwll "9<111< Tiiie C-• bacllfltw "'"'9fttlon ... k" .. _.,.
e114 tf tltclleft to cawH tflt u11· Pt!IY. SIS North c:Hrlllo ,.,k Orlw, PUBUC NOTICE •et0fl41al0* .. ._C.,.._., ""•lfl'M ta ... , lt+4 IW'"''' 10 Suitt lot, S..... Ma. Ctllfwftla. A copy of 11tt proptMd jlJOlky 11 :::-:=::-::::.:. ":.": btr:!.'0:,al1:=:..:. 1:-c;:•~ . Nc:~~T~=~~:s :~:.:.~• 111 .. oi•ict flltka fw ,..
"9Kll -fl tl«Ulll .. M •tctf'.. Mid """"1Y .. lilt ..._, .....,_ with lltCI. 6fl'l•1.., U.C.C.l fll IN .-"°" MW .,y .,.nlllll OC~ 14.. ,_a....,, .... •fl Ill l11terHt, t•e UWreR. 81111 tt1I~ Hello 11 llereby 91011 to Ille r. llHd furhr lllfWl'Mtlon, ,.._
.... 1-.,... "'· .. Mid Offlelal tMtl, .......... tM --·· .. of rt dl1ort of •tCHA•O CHUltCM tllYcl ac..i I(_, -llUftl __ .. ~ Ille Nit,.,_, Is 11',JSUll. Tre11•f-• ..._ tutlllOtt adllr"• 11 ma11..-r, .C U M lllO. ..._ ..... , .. lllMe, M WltMlll D•te1irtlll'Wlfy20,1•1 1 c.-Drift, City of LeauM AllY ...,_ lit wMm 11111 lletkt It ceweMlll tr -l'Mtf, .,.__or Im• av: SOUTHl•H PACTll'IC Miiia, COUlllY ol 0r-.., Sttte ef .........., wlll .. .,........ t fair ..
,...... ,...,... uttt, ,,_.1111, er TITLaCOMl'AHY • lfOrnla u.t a bulll IT•11tt' It Hovi 1)«1111\lty lit pr.-M vltwt UllCtnll .. ~--. ft ,.,. ilie ~ AC«Petat*', Nm .. to CHUH HIEN ICING AHO 1.N ,,.,,... po!k" et IM ti-of ... ~ -fl ...... (I) _.,. atfM... SWAU MAI KING Tr_,_ WNM publk Me<lfle. ao, .... 0... .. Tnllt, ..... .,.._... JIJ N. C:..lllt l'atll Of., Me. 1t1ul11eu eddrtll h 1U2 Nortll OATID: "*-YD, ttet
fll MN._,,.....~, If My, 1• O"Mefl· City .. MeMlm, Cellncy ef ad k.INllll ~ .. ..,_.,...,0-.etT,,.., C1t•ltn·1• °'"'" .... OfClllNtftl._ o-.i ......... &Secf'Wlry1
f ... , C-... W •--ef Ille ey:Pr-IMl*k ll Tiie ;,..._.., 19 N tr-MM I• MHA COHIOLIOATIO
T ............. tl\llla <,_... ll'r .. ~l~t Or .... QNtt Dally!!..~• •tcrlMtl Ill tentrtl tt: All IMcll Ill WATa• 01$Tlt1CT .... °"' .. ,.,... ~''11lt!6 ... "" ~· ., ... flllbftt, ... ,...... .... ... ,,..,.....,,.\It,
........... lltN t11 .........,, Wiii Of ttwl ltHTAU•AHT ......_, c.t.IMtM.C.ftW
Merctl .!r ""' • "\:'!11-::n-, • ..... • PtJllLIC NOTICE II 11•w11 • 1 • • o 1 ck c Mu It c M C1MJ llt•t* fkt at T.D.1W1'1Ce , e.111.. ltl$TAU"1oln" tM ~ et ... ,_.._.or.,. CMtC Dally ~ ....
"-lea T-. Mtt 111' °"' C"¥ ..,_ Me..,.rt 91WIL, City ef Cllltl .,_., -~ 1, I, ttll !01141 etw .... Or9!tlt. ~. flltTITIOUS ._....... C-ty t10r._ ..... tf c.HfWIN.
At ... lllN ti .. llttt ... _.k.MIM NW ITATUISllT Tiit MA .,...,., wilt .. ~· Pl18UC NOTICE ................... _. .... Tiit.......,...,_ .. ...,..,.._ !Miff ... .,.,.., 1M 1HI .. , of
....-1• lle4-• ef Ille tltll .. 11..i -•t11 M•rtll IHI ti 1t1H A.M. •tl---.iiillff'liEDDlill1•:--_._, .. ....,....,.. ..... l'AVOflllr.l'LAYOUtC•UIMI' Wt1Ti1t1t MVTUA~ llCltOW
.,_ ... -...... U111, ...-, 6 CANDY, Jtilf1•0 Alkll "911nMY, CO. II' .1 A TT M: MA It I i. Y N
......... tta.m.11. UlllMHI ... ~-1•1 I. y.,.. ... Mte ttt, Tt1allll
Te .............. -""' ~ C.""""' -.. 111_,fl, ,. .. , ... y ... a. 1111• 1•1, T'lftillll .., ... awi .,.._ ,._.,, IMttl.C............ -.c.a--.
0..t ,__, .. "" .,._....._la~'¥ 911 lfl. TMt ............ flllflt,..,_ Ill T.O. .. WIC8 C»M•AllY ....... .. .. ,..,.....,._ ,._....,. e. Merdl .... ,.,...., .. .,....c....... "·""· 8y T.D. •••v•c• COM· Tiiie ....................... ,., ............ ,,.....,.., ,fl'MIY, c-tY Ctlftt ef Or ..... C...., 911 ... ....__ ... .._.._.
... ...._ S, tw. ., ... ,,....,_ ._ .. ,_. ,_...
• -~ Dl"*9, ---•~c:er.. ....... : --~ .. -OIMf -.._.......,. 111'.0.a.ln -............ ~ --.. °"........ ' ,....,ca._ ~'7:"'0-........ ~ . ... ~ ~-.,,,... .......... ~-Clltll~ ,_, ~ar...c.... Dll ..,_ ,,..... • ._....,.._..cm ci:.. ..r ~............. ..... ....... ~ ...... 1.tte!" .. = .::r:."'-Clte4o.llY.:.':; ..... -. ........... " .....
-----·-·------·-..
~ ti'=~· !··~~(::,_ l 2 ~---~ 879-9850 . "8Ull COUM'" (II)
f NoAMClllf ltadloWlth 1.,.,111111 Acca-y ... , ... Y-DwllAM -..... -.a ..... ____ ,..
IM ~:.=::~·;:
RI .. ~~. ''COAST TO COAIT .. (fl'G)
f He AM Clllf ltedllt WftlllaNl ... Ac~y ... 1111 y., Dwll AM --M.1.-·'MO.IAOO f'OWEll"
"NOflA LA llOflOI"
aold. Everyone t.bi.DU we Just potnj I ed a camera at t.be Beatles; l c
1bow you from the 1cript tbM all
ad Uba were written."
Shortly before 1h00Un1 beami. th
Beatles came to the U.S. for the Ed
Sullivan Show. United Artl1ta
awakened to the potentiality and told Shen~ he could apend more money.
"J DIDN'T TKIN& that would help
the picture,'' he said ... We decided to rum in bJack and white to 1Jve a f~l·
lng of actuality, and it was shot ins
weeks at exactly $500,000."
"Help!" was made In color i~
Caribbean and alpine locations an
cost $1.25 million. Oddly. film rental
for both films. lncludlng televi.!lion~ amounted to $13.5 million.
·'I tried to put together a thir
film , but l could ne~r com~ up wi I
a script," the producer said. "Wh /
could you do besides something a
obvious and corny as 'The Fo~ Musketeers.' I realized by that tim j
tbey aJJ wanted to move oo to oth l
things. They didn't want to still
singing 'I Want to Hold Your Han • .
at age 40.''
-EVSING~
.:001e• NIWI ITAMKYAND
HUTCH
dtQCM: en Off.._ T-,......,,
1:11• TMIMIATMDO Oat.mlMtl o-" ~ .... Orecle
Alleft. JD ~ "'° .... ,.........,._,..
.... tM OOic*I .. °' ,... 90lllMy ~ the ..... ..,., w a (I) TMIWHrT'I itwlC*I
,.,..,,. .. Mot by • pob. ,..,..
• Llm.a*"-ON
Ttmfl'Mlm
~· encl C.OllM bottl IMtn ttwt tNy .,. l)r'eO-
~.
• MOYll ••• "CMtlY •. (1M8) Ctlft
Robertaon, Clalte Bloonl.
A 1uro1ca1 Hpetllftent
QNee • mentally ,..._ded "*' "" Intellect of • oen-M . but prO\IM to have
on1y temoorr; eft9ct1.
8 0 ntAT'I ~
TUBE TOPPERS
• NBC e 9:00 -''The Acorn Peopl•."
Ted Besae11 and Cloris Le•chman star in
tbia new TV movie about relationships
between a counselor and hla bandi-
cappedcharaes.
CBS 9 10:00 -"Diana." A muaical
variety hour with Diana Ron and 1uests
Larry Hagman, Quincy Jones, Michael
Jackson and the Joffrey Ballet. (P hoto at
(eft.)
'
St8'Uy end Hutch atrMI
two hoodlum• tor the rape
of e retarded tl·)'MT·old
Mend. G NHLHOa<IY
Lot Ano-IN Klngl YI
T O<onto MllC)le Lealt
Diana me~ts .J!tR.
FMtinct; e .,..,_ -
•nd motorcycle 1tun1
lawn; • ,_ method to
keep food treeh; • rnedlcal
brMl!Uvough; lhr .. pred-"°" etunt pilol1.
oonfront• lhe per901'1 'Wtlo.
wrec:ted 1111 oll rig and , ....
ton'• ett9"19t to Mduot
MidlMI IMOl IO a dtmac>-
• ITM TMI<
The Enterpt'IM la ettaclced
by • etrenge force that
lak• CGnltOI of the lhlp.
• M0 A08°H
The Junk man mak" •
much-need•d aurglc•I
~ '°' lhe 4077111 •nd
Klinger ttvOWI out HOI
"Dallas" star Larry Hagman sings a
duet with Diana Ross on her special,
"Diana," tonight at 10 on CBS, Channel
2.
• P.M.MAGAZINI
A ,_ *1Nlty dNO whletl
.. edrnlnlat-.d .. -~ope; In olf·bMI TellU
minister: Chef Tell mall• a
bean pot•lo llOUP: Dr.
Waaco on the eftec:11 ol
clgat'1ta wnok• on non-
~"•: Uncle Htnle on
lravellnO wltll Children.
i r"'911tlon.
.IC*Bl'I WILD ~ °"""'* a.-ta1 Loni Anderton,
I NIWl~GA.-M•A•t•H
The 4077th turne up e alca
helicopter pllol who
"-t't Wint to quit and a
twice-wound.ct GI who
doea.
~·wedding ring
• OOOOTIMES
J J., Theim• and Mlc!IMt
get Involved In Mlllng wt\•I
people think 11 "llol"
~
-~ELECTRIC
COMPAHV (ft)
CJ) C88NEW8 a:I MCNEW& f:JO . MLOOME eACK.
KOTTP
Get>e dlecOYer• • titn118fl1y
betWMn ~teln'• tetm
P•I>" •nd one he lllmMll
tubmllled 10 ~·· .. ,.let
• eENHYHM.L
Benny Ille mugger QillS •
tut• ol h1a own medicine
when he tries 10 rob • cler-
gym•n
fD Pft0f'ILE8 ~
POW£R
GUMI Jolln Meck. presl·
dent or 11\e Los Angeles
Url>•n Lugue
'1') ST\JOIO SEE
"Honor Dance" An Al8·
1>ama de1>u11n1e 1n Oki•·
h<>m• Indian and Dllltu· s
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Youtll On The Move Cl\oi<
111e highligllted. IA)
CJ) w ·A·s·H
Hot Lipa' myatenous dis-
tppearanoa IO dillurbs
Frenlt tlllt he Shoots 8.J
while preperlng to _,ell t"-jungle tor the miHlng
0 BARNEY MIUEA
ln9')eetor luger w1n11
ec11on tut wtoen • 1nlpet
1111 .. • pot snot al Wojo.
l>ul II'• a different ti.II
game 'Wiien the Inspector
la the target.
8:116 IJ EDfT~IAl
1:00 II C88 NEWS D NeCNEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fonz. .. lllrea a rllCel'llly dis-
abled mec:111nic who bit·
terly reject• any otte< of
froendalllp.
U AIJCHEWS ID M•A•S•H
Col Polle< and Charles
beeome strange bedfel·
lows when they come
down with the mumps
II II.I'll'< T CBSt l "Anll"'' .,
0 l\NBC NBC1 Lo-. An 1e'"" U i\TLA ln<J 1 Lo.>'> A11q1 t'" G AABC rv 1ABC1 L J., A,,.,,., ... .,
T -.rMB 1CA'>1 c, .,, 01t•q1•
0 i\HJ TV tlnd t l <•'> A11 I""
10 t<.C~ T I AliC I 'i.H1 0 •'ti ID "nv 1 Ind 1 Lt., A11q .. 1 ..
II> KCOP TV r 1n.1 1 l <>'A'"'"'''" m 11.ct i !\ •"B~• l•J" ,,,, 1• .. ., m l<.OCE. 1\/ ,p9.;,, rjunl '"I'"" H1• II t
nder pressure
• .,.....,.. 0# 8AH
M+JOICO
After r-"rlng ttvNta on
lhe air and being blllcil·
malled, • dlec jockey find•
hlmMll acx:wNld of '""°
murders.
• OWREMY
"Pre-Retirement Plen-
n1ng" Guella. Peter
Schwed, M.Win Sw1rtt. (R)
Ci) MACNEIL I LEHAEA
REP<>f'T
CJ) TIC TAO DOUQH
®) MERV OAIFFlH
Gu"ta· Loni Anderton,
Je<ry F atwell
7:30 II 2 ON THE TOWN
Ho111 Sieve Edwards,
Melody Rogara Maet
some "power brokett,"
people who mike the town
move w11h clout and cash.
a lollow-up on • recent
C8f-·IWllCh ctndldate 1J FIOHT BACK WITH
DAVID~
L1ht-.. Ylng Up• on Dentel
Anesthffl•. D•Yld chal·
tenges • pentyllose com-
metC•at U SHA HANA
Guest z .. Zaa Gabor
U HOl.L YWOOO
80UAAE8 ID ALL IN THE FAMILY
Archll 11 bedridden with a
painful backache •nd Mlha
1s sure It 1s psychoaomaoc
Oil MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'1') PLEDOE BREAK
Regul8fly acheduled pro-
gr•mm1ng may be delayed
due 10 pledge br .. ka
(() P.M. MAGAZINE
A new lertlllty drug which
Is 1dmln11tered as nose
• MOVIE * ** "Pock'1 Money"
(1972) Paul~. Lee
Mervin. An lllnettnt cow-
boy end hi• alconollc
lldelc lck ere h"9d by •
r~ promotet to pictl up
a herd ol ctttl• In Mexico.
fill MACH FOA THE IUN
A family special 1 .. 1urlng
Pam Dewbet and Avary
Schreiber UMI wKky SCI·
anc:.llctlon, humor, and
apecl1leffac1110 1each111e
WIN UM of energy.
t=*>. CAAOL llUAHETT
AHOFNEN08
Gunt: Roddy McDowell.
fD LIVE FAOM THE MET
"l 'Elitlr D'Amore" Judith
Blegen •nd Luciano
P1v111otll .,. fNlured In
GMlooo Oonzettl'a comic
IWO-Kt opera pr_..ted
from th• Metropolllan
()pet8HOUM
t:OO 9 CJ) M0 A0 S•H
Hawtteya' 1 prllcitcal Joi!•
on Clllrlea get out o4 hand
and lhe '"I of lhe lllff
gell annoyed
D MOVIE
"The Acorn People"
(Premiere) Jed 8'saell.
CIOrla Leechman A coun-ttf°' al • summer camp
tor ~ handbpped
people~.,., unuao-
al end strong reletlonthlp
with hla ch111gae. D (!)) OYNAITV
Blake di.covets thll Krys.
lie It on the pill, Mat!Nw
Jerry Falwell. MICllHI
Ctlcttton. t:IO . Cl) HOUll CAUi
A man dalmlno to be from
• government agency
lnlllll on Melf'G e ..tou•
~petlenl. .:;~~ ,,,...
ll.ldlle Ball. David J-.
MlchMI Landon, MlfY
Mar11n, Dinah Shore and
Red Sltelton take a looil at
the •lCPl'lfnenlll de)'I ol
TV'• youth fNturlng cllpa
from dozens of 1"-early
progrema.
10:00 9 CJ) DIANA
Michael Jllcilaon. the Jof-
frey Ballet, Quincy JonN
and Larry Hegmtn join
I Dian• Roat lor an hour of
rnutk: and dance.
I I •• NRW8
10:80 NEWS
-~ NETWOMNEWI
11:00eae(J)O NEW&
JOHN DARLING
• MMTTA
"Gunl And Brother•"
• Dea<CAWTT
~I: record producer
JOfln Hammond. !Piii I ol
11:30 ~CJ) QUINCY, M.E.
Quincy lnv•tlgal.. the
lllaylng °' • blllionalr• and flnda evidence contrary to
police llndlnge. 8 TOHIGHT
O.-t ho9t: Miiiin Mull.
o.-ta: Mac Davia, Bob
Uecker .
•@ MONEWS HIQHTUHI
l ~N>
CAPTIONED ABC
NRW8
-Ml>flGHT....-
12:00. 9PAC:e: 1 ...
MoonbaM Alpha llnd1
llMlf caught UO In a ,...,
Radio gets 'Star Wars'
A long time ago, io a galaxy
far. far away there came a time
of revolution, when rebels united
to challen ge a tyrannical
Empire. But citizens on the
desert planet Tatooine, as on
countless other worlds, took
little notice of this tremendous
conflict . . . at least at first.
loving aunt and uncle and a
group ol teen-age friends racing
around in their Skyboppers. But,
even then, Sltywalker yearns for
bigger things.
Starfigbter, returns home fro:
the Imperial Space Academy
enticing Luke with the big
.,icture : The planet is bet a
backwater of the Universe.
So begins the 13-part radio
adaptation of "Star Wars," the
biggest box office hit in movie
history. A production of National
Public Radio in association with
KUSC-FM, Los Angeles, and
with the cooperation of
Lucasfllm, Ltd., "Star Wars"
can be heard on NPR member
s tation KSBR 88.5 FM on
Thursdays at 11:30 p.m. and
repeated Saturdays at 8:30 a.m.,
premiering this Thursday.
Re-creating '£he1r movie roles
for the radio series are Mark
Hamill as "Luke Skywalker"
an d Anthony Daniels as
"C3PO."
His ambitions become
vivid when bis friend,
Australian
saga slated
more B a c k w a t e r o r n o . t b e
Biegs ever-imaginative Luke reports
seeing battling ships out beyond
the atmOC!lphere. His pals scoff,
but the s tage is set for lhe
remarkable adventures to come
-adventures in which the fate
of a captive princes~and the key
to the Empire's most awesome
HOLLYWOOD <AP) _ "The weapon will hinge on the actions
T h orn Birds," Co l lee n ofayOWlgfarmboy.
McC ullough's sprawling best-T he saga contin ues with
s e 11 er a b 0 u t lire in t he episode two, "Points or Origin,"
Australian Outback, will be ·as Princess Leia co mes
turned into an eight -hour mini dangerously clOC!le to revealing
series by ABC. • her collaboration with rebel
The series will be telecast dur-forces. Should s he be discovered
ing the 1982-83 television neither her high birth nor her
season .the team who made t tatUJ as an imperial senator
"Roots," David L. Wolper and will protect her.
Stan Margulies, will produce. "Star Wars" was adapted for
~ twO .,..,.... -
encl "'-..... °' • "-itlful women.
•• '""~*MD A~ INtttld --
r ..... 10 llllr~-,. =·=·=-..: .w::::
' • I llllCllr
'WIOllS I
The .., ""' e ~· In~ agent to IOCate
I *1orilt ring.
• 0..-ITll' NYONO
"The AYengl(I" A GtrMtn
General In occupied
J'ranoe decldtMI to dul*-
cate 1 hhltotlc '*1Y ~ In
f723.
· 12:30 D TOMOMOW
Gueet: afflOel' Leo Sey.r D DONl.Ntl
o.-1e: frantde Laine. Lii·
, .. River 8tna.
• ONE~ .VONO
"Tonight Al t2'17" A Clli·
fornl• women hat a pr•
monition ol an llf~
craehlng Into h« bedroom
12-AO 8 CJ) THE NEW
AV!NOf.M
A Ruttl•n ambuaador
lnlorme the Avenga<a that
the world la on the brlnl< ol
World Wer Ill bectuM of
tn etror. (Part 2) IRI
t:009 MOVIE • * * "Melody Ranc:ll" I UMO) 0-Autry, Jimmy
Durante. a-tlnd• trou-
ble In Torpedo when 1141
tnO hit r9dlo lhOw bud·
diN go their tor Gene
Autry Day 1 .. uv111et ID aNAl<OVT ., INOUEHOEHT
NETWON< HEWS
1:10 8 MOVIE
• • '"1 "Rolling Man"
I 19721 Dennis Weaver. Don
Stroud. A man begins to
aearcn tor Illa two ton•
afte< being r••Md lrom a
lour ·)'MT prlaon tetm
®) AOAM-12
Officer Reed watka Into a
b•nk during a rol>b«y and
" llken hostage
1:30 0 THE LOME "-'HOER
"Mllkon Oollat Wllllpaper"
T IU!•da11'•
Da11i I•., Mo.,1.,.
11:00. *'"' "Sagebnall Trait"
(1933) JOhn ~ayne. Nancy
Shubert. A CO'*boy unjutt·
ly knpriaoned for murder
~ to hunt down the
rMI killet Ind prove hie
own11 .. -ice.
-AFTERNOON-
12:00. * * "Only T"-Viii·
ant" 119511 Or'OOf)' Peck,
8&rbeta Payton. A ctvalry
unit regain• raapect tor
their leader ""*' he .. _
them lrom 1n Indian
111ec1c
II)*** "Crohc'a
Choice" ('1963) Bol> Hope,
LUCiiie Bell A har9h dram•
critic renagea on hla
promlae not to review the
pi•y hit wife hu wrlllen
3:00 9 • * •;, "Linda" I 1973)
Stella St8Ylltlt, Ed Nelton
811Md on • novel by John
MacDonald A wom•n
plant 10 frame her hus-
band for the ~der of her
lovet'a wile.
3:30 a ••• "Donovan'•
Raef" ( 111631 JOhn Wayne.
LN Marvin An ex-Navy
man living in the ~th
PllClflc with hit MW family
ftn<11 Illa p.,adlM dlllupt-
ed by the arrival o4 hit
daught• from a praviout
marriage.
by Armstrong & Batluk
RE-cAEATING HIS MOVIE ROLE ON RADIO
Mllrtl H•mHI h••d• 'St8r W•r•' c.lt
c Linda Evans as Krystal Carrington encoun-
ters anxiety and unhaepiness on toni2bt's episode of ··Dynasty,'' airing at 9 tonight on.
ABC, Channel 7.
In Episode one, "A Wind to
Shake the Stars." Luke is found
leading the life of a typical
adolescent -with a stern but
"The Thor n Birds" spans radio by Brian Daley from
three generations and ranges characters and s ituations
from New Zealand to Australia created by George Lucas. The
to the Vatican to London's staJ(e radio series was directed by
and high society,..-=======J=ob=n=M=a=d=d=en=·=======~-=================:;-
Marcello Mastroianni Video riddled with greed?
0 I LOS ANGELES (AP> One
[if Hollywood's most successful
ndepend~nt producers fears
hat greed ma y kill the
television industry and warn&
bat a posaible strike by writers
r directors could be disastrous .
Lee Ric h , preside nt of
orimar Productions, told a
meeting of TV executives at the
cademy of Televitlon Arts and
iences that the industry is rid· ed witb greed.
Talent coat.a alone at Lorimar,
maker of such serle1 as
"Dallas," ·•Knot.a Landing" and
"Ei1bt is Ebough," have risen
300 percent between 1975 and
1978, Rich pointed out.
··Does last year 's $2,500
performance really d eserve
$35,000 an episode this season?"
he asked. "In an era of ensem-
ble casts, just how many fiv e-
digit stars can we afford?''
'' Finaers point at everyone -
production compaples ,
networks, actors, directors,
writers, theatrical agencies,
labor unions, among others,"
Rich said.
He conceded that product.Ion
companies are usually tbe first
blamed.
But he added, " ... The
networks tell WI where to shoot
and who to hire; agents tell us
what we must pay their acton,
writers and directors; labor un-
ions tell us the rates we must
pay if we're lucky enough to find
anyone who works for scale any
more. and inflation makes ua pay
rnoreonevervthimr."
The Lortmar chief satd be wu
troubled about the impact ol a
po11lble strike by tbe Writers
Guild of America and the Direc-
tors Guild or America when
their cootracts expire tblJ year.
8 K:.ADE.MY
AWARD
NO\\INATIONS
including
BEST PICTURE
~~~~
NOW Pl /\YING
OWUlll' llUITOl .......... .,_ ... MU PUZA
Slnll An.1 !>40·1444 Gl<den GIM ~4401 Iha 529·5339
............. _ ........... l&ta • , .... .,..,..
IM"' 551~5 ll TOfo ~1-S .. 0 M ~ =p I
Ann
* BARGAIN SPECIAL *
All S.•t• S2.00 ALL DAY
every Mond•Y a Tuesd•yl
Laura Antonelli
CWJfoulistress
..
'I never wap.ted
to be a
glamour girl.'
'I never wanted
to be
a star.'
..
Several health workshops
are in the.works ... C4
\
..
• 'I wanted to
represeqt old girls
as welias
young girls.'
-Lillian Bronson
She.'s enj.oying rok as .elderly person
By JOELC. DON OtttieDeltr,.....s .. tt
' One loot at Lillian Bronson and
you'd have to agree that she bas
the mien of the typical, all-
American grandqiother, an in-
spiring tribute to taking advanc-
ine years with grace and style.
Her shimmering while hair is
neatly groomed, the lines in her
face sculpted by time and her
frail-looting 5-foot-1 frame seems
no less agile than a woman's half
ber78years.
And she has a feisty personality
and a quick wit that'll slice
through a light-hearted conversa-
tion like a knife through butter.
But then she's bad plenty of
practice at playing her current
stately role.
FOR NEARLY 41 YEAas,
you've no doubt seen her
matriarchal face and clusic
character roles in 82 feature ftlms
and hundreds of television shows.
Y9unger audiences. may re -
member the Laguna Beach resi-
dent as the motorcycle-riding
grandmother of the "Fonz" in
TV's "Happy Days." Andshewas
the sweet. innocent old woman
known as the Bird Lady from a
Dragnet TV segment, where the
kindly old character got crime
tips from her feathered friends.
Motorists speeding northbound
on the HoUywood Freeway near
the Glendale Boulevard off.ramp
can get a glimpse or Miss Bronson
without tuning in a movie or TV
rerun.
In 1974, ·artist Kent TwitcheU
painted a giant mural tilled "Old
Woman of the Freeway" as part
or a civic project. The model for
the stunning 00-foot character
was Lillian Bronson, whom the
artUlt thought wouJd best portray
the spirit and vitality of oJd age.
But her more challenging work
occurred on Hollywood movie
sets where she played character
roles with such movie giants as
Clark Gable, Henry Fonda,
Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman,
Humphrey Bogart, Jason
Robards, Belly Grable, Barry
Fitzgerald. Bing Crosby, Fred
MacMurray, Claudette Colbert
and many more.
SHE PL.A YEO COUNTLESS
secretaries, best friends, sisters,
mothe~. aunts, grandmothers -
character parts just inches away
from stardom's silvery spoWgbt.
While others aspired to the
fame and lucrative rewards ac-
corded to stardom, Miss Bronson
found her acting niche in her
specialty character roles. She
convinced directors and au-
diences she could be women twice
her age.
''I never wanted to be a
glamour girl,'' said Mila Bronaoa
Lillian Bronson with Humphrey Bogart in 'Dead Reckoning'
"I never wanted lo be a star. I
wanted to represent old girls as
. well as young girls.
''Other girls wouldn ·t do it so it
was a challenge for me to do
so mething that other girls
weren'tdoing."
Her name may not have made
the hit parade of stars cataloged
in the legions of paperback movie
and TV encyclopedias, but her
character roles have become
synonymou s with what
Hollywood expected of the typical
middle-aged to elderly woman.
"THE IDEA or the big time and
exploitation never appealed to
me," she said. "I wanted to build and explore a character.··
Born and reared in a well·
establi:shed family from
Lockport, N.Y .. Miss Bronson
prepared for an acting career at
the University of Michigan. Her
summers were spent in sum-
mer stock and drama festivals.
Because some plays demanded
older c haracters. the coed
learned to shed her youthful
vitality for'roles of more elderly
stature.
"I began to realize that there's
nothing wrong about playing old
women," she explained. "Even
as a young woman I found I was a
very effective old woman on
stage."
She pursued her acting career
in New York at the American
Laboratory Theatre under the
direction of Richard Boleslawsky
a nd ~ad am Mar ia
Ouspenskaya.
HE-ll PROFESSIONAL
break came with the Broadway
show "Camille" with Lillian
Gish.
"It never occurred to me to be in films," he said. "I was prej-
udiced about Hollywood. I had
heard about lhe scandals, licen-
tiousness and the disgrace of~
pie working in films -the ve9
worst of film comes out in ~
publicity."
The Depression , thouglt,
quashed her burgeoning career ..
a Broadway actress. To support
her family, Miss Bronson opened
a cottage industry toy business,
designing custom-made stuffed
animals.
S h e married , had two
da ughters and for more than a
decade never set foot on a stage
floor.
While living on a Connecticut
farm with her husband and ap.
proaahlng the age of 40, Mil&
Bronson felt a twinge. then a jolt
from her former stage career.
"I KNEW THAT I would tje
more valuable as I grew oldfr
'because in playing charact•
Miss Bronson with Clark Gable in 'The Hucksters'
Miss PigeOn ru"les roost from the dogh~use
BJ MA&Y IANE SCARCELLO °' .. .,..,,,. .... , ....
She may be a pigeon, but she's
no cuckoo.
The racinc bird, a red checked
hen, was brought to the Neyvport
Center Animal Hospital last
December in sad shape.
"She was exhausted and in
shock," says Dr. Gary Johnlon,
the veterinarian wbo treated the
bird. "She wu stunned and bad
probably ·crubed into a window
somewhere."
The boepital treats i~ure4
wild bUdl free of charp, ul·
tlmately Httla1 tbem free
again.
The doctor Umlnilter.cl ~·
tiODI ol •tcrolda for ~ ..
well u Ouida ud antlbiotiC9 to comht lnfedloa. Stace racln1 pt1eo•1 a~e
valuable animals. the atalf tiiecl
to locate her owner tbfQUJh the
band nwnbef attaelMd to ber
delicate ankJe.
Tbe Oran1e Count1 P11.-
Cl•b wu unable.: • b'aee W V. t Jd', IO J-k ...... N tolmllL
nm
l'AlllLl' aac111
"Don't WOfry, Mommy. wt won't catch cold. w.·,. toting Iott of cough dropa."
by Brad Anderson
"So that's why I have to keep filling
the goldfish bowl!"
IUDGE P t\BKER
GIVIN{, Hl~L.F UP r=-~---,
WHEM HE KNOW~ 9£111~
EOC.APE Fl«>M THE
PARKINC, LOT I~
FUl lLE. TIM '5
Fll~!;T QVEellON lb
DIRECTE:D AT
t MM DRIVER .'
MJ88 PEACH
AflT .. uAft
E>'PLAJN~
.5A '2.To ~IA L
~ft.e,..Do~
'.tt ~
MOON MULLINS
A~THlA~1 I'S IT
T~V1E THAT
"CL.~rrHe~ MAlt::E
Tj,.jE' MAN 11 f'
'
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
"I hat• Mondayt."
DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
"He's at the awkward age ... just tall enou9h to
keep bumpin' his head on doorknobs.'
by Harold Le Ooux
by Mell Lazarius
'1&~1 1.ANL..e~~ ONI! HAPPEN~
TO N A TAIL°", IN W._.,CH
CA~ IT~ n.41i or.-.R WAV
ArOIANO.
.... ~,, ... . -.... .. ..... C,,,
. '
c:n:J ~ ~E\,\, "'~w.
·2..
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
You ~er Ye~
Boors, PoDNE~ ...
... /F )bu l>oN1T
HAVE TH'
RIGHT
STITCHIN7 oN V'_....._
YER HIP
?OCKETS,
YotJ1~E'
P.Ass€.
TIJ1118UWU81
GOBBO
FIJNKl' W'INKEa•UN
GIRL..5 I ! ~ IT'S A
HA55lE 10 HAVE.. i) PRACTIC.E
r~15 l.A'TE Al ~6m" ...
KA••LE
Q ..... .,.......... .... ,.
by Jett MacNelly
by Tom Batiuk
Kevin Fagan
WMAf'' OOR. ~II~~,~
MA\O!M NAME'? ,.___.....,
l-
rot• I coaW INW old sr..rua.ty aad not ... trwbled 8llaat It. ......
1a14.
"I .W m,..U, 'How ....,.
Jobi .. av&Uable to womee ol
40?" lbe recalled. "I reallied ID
theat.. U.-.'1 a .. clua dlaU.De·
tion and lff1 preJudlee than
almonanyotber/roleuloa." Sbe divorce and left for
Hollywood b) 19'3 for what wu to
be a two-day 1topover. 11111
Bron10D1t.ayedforllyears.
A dlreetor friend found ber a
small ~in a movie leadiDC to
her numerou1 character ·
portrayal• in doaen1 more to
come.
Her secret ln attainln1
numerous character roles wu to
look, act and feel the part24 hours
a day.
WREN THE STUDIO aflot
wardrobe pbotocrapba to screen
teat various act.on, 11111 Bromon
learned to tum herself into the
character for the black-and-white
stills.
· Her flnt movie wu "Happy
Land," starri.nl Don Ameche,
Harry Carey and Frances Dee,.ln
one scene she played a 35-year~ld
woman aJi<1 in another in the same
movie a woman twice as old.
Later,herflJmcredltawouJdin·
elude "Gaslight" with Incrid
Bergman and Charles Boyer, "A•
Tree Grows ln Brooklyn" with
PUBLIC NOTICE
N712~
STATUllENT 0 .. WITHD•AWAL
"ltOM l'A•TNa•SNll' Ol'e•ATINO UNDe•
"ICTITIOIJS aUSINeSS NAMe The follow ing peraons heve
• wllhdr•-•s oene••• pertner1 rrCN'l'I IM P•rtnenhlp operellng u,_r the
llC1111ous business neme ol J&J Com·
Piiier S~tems, et 1611l IMecll lllvd.,
Huntington BeeGh, CA t1M7
Tiie rlctl"-buslMU neme stel•· ment ror the pertnenlllp we1 fllecl on
Hovemlle< 2', ltlO In lhe County or
Or•"9f
The lull --rHldence ol u. oerlOf\1 wtthdr-lng H _,,..,.
J ertm'y Myer , l•HI Ave "••onlce, Minion Viejo, Cellrornle n•tt. J emM c Riiey, 15137 Del Pr-
Orlvt, Hec1..-ttelohts. Cellfomle
lt74S. J-sc. Riiey
This stel""""t wei fllecl with U. :ounly Clerk or On1>9t CO<lnty on
Jenue ry lO, 1"1 ..,,...
Put>lilhed Orenoe Coesl Delly Piiot,
Feb. 9, 16, ll, Mer.1, 1'11 ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
N°11m l'ICTITIOUS aUSINalS
NAME STATeM•NT Tiie rollowlno persons ••• doln buslnusu.
TOTAL LOOK CONCEPTS, H>I
Kinoltt Court, L•oune Hlo11t1, Celilornle n.17.
Dru Engle, m is r<r,,...t Court.
Legune H'-', Callfomlat»n .
M. K•thrvft Collins, 2657' G oleM, Mluloft VlelO, Calltorme .,.,,,
This l>uslneu Is conducted t>y oener el pertner11119.
Oru EnQM
Tiils iletenMnt was flied with
Counly Cieri< of Orenoe County
Fifi. 2. 1'11
"' Publllhed Or-. eo.\I Dally PllCIC, Feb.'· 16, n . Merell 1. ltll • .._.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTIT10UI IWM•U.S
MAMll ITATSMm'" Tiit fOll-lftg ,.,_s ••• tlOlftl
llUSlllKS•: ACTION Ol'l'ICE MACHINES,
ltl11 Ma ... olla StrHt, S111tt 11,
"""' ....... 9Mclt, Callfenlla ..... J-Ml~ ..... 12'41 ......
Drlvt, Cerr111Dt, CollfwAia 90711 Vtrn i.-rd ...... 16Dt J...,
Wey, Cwrt• CAllltomle to1'01 This buSIMSS Is cCMMluctecl by •
........ pWtnenlllp.
J-Ml<llMI llMd
This stM-t WH llltd wlltl the
County Cltrtl of Or.,,.. County on
Ftbn>ary It, ltll.
P116m
P11bllllltd ar-. Coast Dally Piiot,
Feb. U , MM. 2, t , 1', 1"1 --~
PUBLIC NO.TICE
NOTIC8 CM' T•UST9&'1 IA&.a u.-.o~ , ............ ~
SERVICE DIMENSIONS IN·
co•POllATED H e.1y •-IAttd
Tnnt" uMer -fellowlfte tlOKrlllM deed ef tr'\llt WILL HLL AT l'UaLIC
AUCTIOH TO THE HIGHUT •10-
DEll l'Oll CASt4 (pay .... M time ef
sale Ill 1.wM _., Of -United St.elftl ell rllllt, tltle arid lfttorftl c., • ... .,... ....... _ ..... ...,, ........... d
Ottd el Tr11st In th• property .. ,. ............ ~:
TllUSTDI': ~ a . KllllGll -ltOMllt l(lllklft,. llwMrlll ...O .....
aENEl'ICIAllV: ANM!m S.vlnel
aflll~-........ a~MI ...
•t<__, J-r U , 1• • IMtr.
No. JOUO Ill.._. 1Ml1 ..... Sii ef Of.
lie lel •ecor• '" IM off k t of lht ltt<ordar tJtl Or-C-y; Mid deed
Of lnlJt -.Cr*-tht lol10W"'9 pro-
Pet'ty:
Loi 2' Of Tr.ct No 11'5, Ill 1M Clly
of Cost• MeM, • P« ~~In 80011 ,., ,... 4 .. MIKtll•Mous
Meps, In tht offlct of IM County
ltt<Ordtr tJtl Mid c.unty.
ttl LA ,..... UM, Cott.a Mesa,
Call,.,.,.,
''llfastr.tMdr-•<-• ltlfMttl•n Is.,_ Mowo1 no • .,.,.,...,.
Is 9IOl9ft • to lb cemp1e-.. or <.,.· rt<lM•I ." TllO lleNflclary Uftdltr I0141 Ooot ef TNlt, Illy,_ ef e IWMC:h
dofHlt IA tht MllNllMI N(llrff ,..,...,, ........... ..c ........... ...
llftf'M .. -....,. ...... wrlttltft Do( ......... ., Oef8111t .... OefftefMI
1or S.IO, ... wrlltiM ...-. tf kMcf\
afl4 of olt<tlOll to <•u•• lh• 1111· .. ,. ................ ,..~rty t MtllfY .................... .._.....,
... II ......... C.-. .... "'4k9 .........................
Oc.., "·,... "'*· .... ~ .... Offtdll ......
y
i r •
Dorodlr lleOalN Dd Jou 8111i·
dell, ....... ·~ :-er =c!':f:retd, "Tile
Bae~·· wttll Qan Gable,
Deborah Jterr ••d Sydaey
Greeaatreet ••d "Speacer'• lloun&aba" wttla Remy ..._.,
llaur ... O'Hara and Jamff
MacArtbur.
The latter waa ber more
memorable movt_~:t lar1ely becauae of the quauty of the
cbaracten portrayinC American
family life. The movie allotuned
Henry Fonda into her favorite H ·
tor.
"I don't think aoytbln1 be bu
done 11 leccmd rate," she Hid ol
Fonda. "And that la indeed a rare
achievement."
SHE ALSO &EMBMBB&S
other actors and actreuea with
creatatrectioa.
As Clark Gable's secretary ln
"The Hucklten," a portraltoltbe
ruthless adverti1in1 bualness,
Mias Broman wu enthralled.
••When I went on the 1et all ol a
sudden this gorceoua bu.n.k ol a
man comes down these 1tep1,
takes my band and 1ays, 'I'm IO
happy that you're goin1 to be with
us'," she recalled. "I practically
melted."
She admired Humphrey
Bogart's stress of pro-
fessional i am
on the set of•• Dead Reckon1q, •• a
1947 murder-mystery feature.
OrMge Coat DAILY PtLOT/MOnday, March 2, 1111
uaas as•amNTSD u
A.merieu mothel'Uuat wu klDd ol
tbe Ideal of tbe Amerlean
mother," Mill 8l'OlllCID 1ald. "I
think abe felt it wa1a 't very
1lamoroua pla)'lnl the prepant
motb• all tbetl••· ..
"Tbe Sbocld"fa Mila Pilarim" with Betty Gr~ e abowed 11111
Brouon another llde of the World
War II pinup prl.
..Sbe wu not a HJt object in
tho.e days. Sbe wu a love object
-you wanted to put your arms
aroundber."
Worklnl lboulder-to-1boulder
with 1tan eventually rubbed olf
on the mlddle-a1ed character ac-
treu. ~n:°' • utt1e ilausbtY while for one role and wu
lnatead liven a bit part in tbe
movie. ·
The part called for a woman
with an adeootd problem. A. sue·
ce11ful 11.iaa BroGIOD strutted into
the wardrobe pbotoseaaion.
"I WAL&l!D AS IF. I were
aometbinl special instead of
keepinc the adenoid.a in mind,"
she 1ald. "The producer and
director decided I was new to tbe
business and weren't 1oln1 to tell
me what happened.
"It wu months after that I
learned wbat=ed. Idedded Ulwu.U.to fpvtalbaidto
pla1 tbtm "flrf. mbaate I wu ID the ltudio ••• even wbea J WU
made_up and ~C09tume I learned
the JMl8'Ji ol dolDa the .,.. thlna."
And • allo learned Uuat a veraatlle character actreaa
ltocked ber OWD Wardrobe to WI·
lock manydoon to variou movie
roles.
Only a few remnants h'om ber
once eJtteallve wardrobe remain
in ber 1mall Treuure Island
trailer home.
Since leavinl Hollywood.a few
yean qo to :te to the cleaner envtn.ia ot be coutal home,
Ml11 Bromon u led a quiet,
mote private life.
ALSO PACKED AWAY in her
home are the scrapbooks,
mementos and studio aUlla ol her
1lory day1 workin1 with
Hollywood'• 1reate1t .film
talents. The tbou&bt of continuinc
acUne in local theater. thouch,
doean 't appeal to the enercetic •c·
treas.
"I've done my share of com·
muntty work," she uaerted. "I
did it in collece. I want to move on
to other things."
Amonc those thincs include
community service work and
possibly writing a book about her
years in Hollywood.
In the meantime, she especially
I
/·: .. :·~ . ·.-.-. .. ~·
,
..
j
!
i ./ . ' f I I
Lillian Bronson as Bird Lady of .'Dragnet'
enjoys strolling down to the beach
each evening to watch brilliant
sunsets.
Now that she's the age of many
of the characters she once
portrayed on the silver screen,
Mias Bronson has a first-band
compassion of what it means to be
an elderly person.
"I realize now," she said, !'at
the age of 65 one does not have
to have a cane to walk with."
• . '
Above all, she takes pride in not
having to sell out; to take a part
she'd later regret. In the same
breath abe decries Hollywood's
current lbruat in violence and sex
and depictions of old peraooa as
macabreorbisarre.
"I knew I could always earn a
living," she snapped. "I always
made my bread and butter but I
never had to worry a bout sleeping
at night with a cood conscience."
' Qrang.Co ... DM.Y f'tLOT/Monday, March 2, 1981 FEATURES
Few folb 'dear.' to him
' ANN LANDSU: I'll bel nery a.a. you rUd today, U ·
e.pt tbll OD9, lt.arted out ''Dear
Au LaDden.'' I dropped t.be word "dear"
when wrlliDC &et1en many 1•ara
a10, uni .. that penon WU real-
ly dear to me. You may be a
tood columnilt, but you aren't
dear to me and I am no
bypocrtt.e. So you will Just have
to settle for Ann Landen1 No
"dear" in front.
~ft dlu .........
111• bOllerl at •• aad tbe
cblldriila e...alMt; Uld .. a
J0t Of ,~ -Wldd IM
nenr tlW befcft. Our Ml Ille
WM cmee ¥el'J food, but DOW llM
reMGta '*DI touebed, n• ae-ctdeataltY. A eolleaiue bu bad
th• tame nperienee with bla
wife, who alao bad a radical
ma1teetomy ..
adoptive parents, took tbelr
bablet, we wer. not tDte"'-1 a loaa·term f~ter-care pro,ram.
Thae .,.,..U ,.llnquiibtd all
rlahta to tbelr children IO tbey
could have better llvea and P'OW
up in a 1table and lovin1 family.
Now they are aeek1Qc to destroy
the very WSW they once thou&ht
waaaoim~t.
I am not a dally reader, but I
do 1lance at your column ln the
San Dle10 Tribune every once in
a whiJe to see wbat aome people
consider proble10t. I a10 12
years old and have never bad to
write to anybody foe belp. I bave
been able to ftaure out what to
do au by myself.
I wu born to poor but boaesl
parents in 1108, llnlsbed hi1h
school at 18 and have been oo
my own ever since. Just call me
-SELF-MADE MAN
J hope you will run tb.ia letter ln every newspaper ln the world,·
Ann. Tbele people have got to
atop bl'eaking hearts for their
own ~I.flab reeson1. -BEEN
THROUGH IT AND MY
FAMILY WILL NEVER BE
I would o-eaUy appreciate a
re1pome to tlda Jetter. l'm bop-
inl you wtll point me in tome
dlrecUon,'.IO life may be a UtUe
easier for me and the cblldnln.
-THE "OLD PROF" IN
EUGENE, ORE.
Dt:Aa P&OP: Veo fewl •••e• ea• uU tllr••lll a.
ma1tecto•1 wttll ••·
paycltolopeal preble••· M•t
areMtlOfOl'tlulate. I llepe ,_ ..W talk &o you
wlfe'a doeW aa...t &M tlWMe
yoa are llaYlat at lllieme. Be W
lleard till• 1tor1 befere aa•
alleald be able c. reeo••• a
competellt daeraplst. Tlae AC·
1eet&e. &llat • leek ceute"-1
••Id come from llJm -..
yH. Good lack to tile wlilole
famlly.
THE SAME
DEA& 8.T.I.: Yw'n said lt
all.lcaa•tacldat.lalq.
DEA& MAN: NoUce, tllere IS
a "dear" la freet. Tllb doeu't
.... I am HU aboat YOL It
meau I ci.oo.e &o boaor a very
old cu&om.
I'm lied you llavea•t llad a pro.
blem y•co.lda'tn1areMtallby
Jot1,.ell. Aad apeaklal ol all' by
JOtlne!f, l'U bet yoa are tllat way
a lot. Now 10 aJt ID a qalet eoner aad see II yoa cu fipre THAT •e oat, Buter.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
a univenity professor. My wife
bu a aood executive poeiUoo
with a large !\rm. We have two
teen-agers. Our combined ln·
come makes it possible to estjoy
all the necessities of life and
some of the luxuries.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: What
do the biological parents th.ink
they are doinl(? When we. the
Tbe problem, is this: Six years
ago, my wife underwent radical
surgery for the removal of a
breast. Since the operation she
bas had a complete personality
cbaoge. She used to be very
warm and affectionate, but now
she is belligerent, hostile and
Ann Landn• di1C1UNf te~
drinking -it• m11tha, U• realitwa.
Learn tM focta bJ1 reading :· 8ooee
and You -For Teen-Age11 Onl11,"
bJ1 Ann Lander•. Send 50 cent• and a
'long, aelf-oddreHed, ftamped en-
~lope to Ann Landffa, P.O. 8oz
11995, CIUcago, lll. 60611 .
HOROSCOPE
Capricorn:
Think business
TUESDAY, MAACB 3
By SIDNEY OMAa&
ARIF.s (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): You get involved
wishes, desires and performance mingle.
You· JI get support from one in position of
authority. Focus on fulfillment -and an in-
tensified relationship. Capricorn, Taurus and
Cancer natives figure prominently.
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20>: Accolade re·
ceived from one who previously took your-ef·
forts for granted. Accent on achievement, abili·
ty to bring objectives into c lear focus .
Cooperate with Aries. You will be rid of a long·
standing burden.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Direct contact
bridges distance. language barriers_,, Exercise
independence, present original concepts. mail
manuscripts accent communication, ability
to get to heart of matters. Leo is in picture.
You 'll get call which aids in eliminating red
tape.
CANCER (June 21.July 22): Emphasis on
desire. direction, loyalty and a huncb that is
on target. Older family member does care and
you'll be aware of it.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22 » Contract or agree·
m e nt is not In final form. Know it, have
alternatives at hand. Keep options open.
Highlight keen observation, versatility -and
be willing to laugh at your own foibles. Gemini,
Sagittarius persons are involved.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): One who shares
work interests becomes valuable ally. Focus on
necessary details, including license and special
taxes. Emphasize basic issues, unique pro·
cedures and pedonal services. Aquarius, Leo,
Virgo natives play significant roles.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Dig deep for in·
formation ; perceive motives, reject superficial
explanations. Focus on emotional responses and
affairs of heart. Member of opposite sex ex-
presses feelings in frank manner. Morale will
soar!
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): K~p resolu-
tions concerning safety measures, crime pre-
vention. Focus on home, basic security and will-
ingnes§. to rebuild on a solid structure. Gemini,
Virgo, Sagittarius persons play important roles.
Make the change!
SAGITl'AlllUS <Nov . 22·Dec. 21 ): Agree-
ments subject to change -forces tend to be
scattered as social activity accelerates.
Relative may impose on your time, good will,
key is to know when Une should be drawn.
Define terms, avoid self-deception.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphasis
on production, increased income potential, un·
usual business opportunity and speCial dealings
with another Capricorn. You locale missing
material, you also perceive financial potential.
You recoup loss.
AQVA&IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll be at
right place at crucial moment. Timlng, lntui·
lion, judgment and luck blend to make thb a
banner cycle day. Aries, Leo, Sagittarius
persons figure prominently. Focus on person all·
ty, color and showmanship.
PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Numerous
fears, doubts are eradicated. You 1a.ln chance
tor greater independence of thou1bt, action.
Emphasis also on clubs, inatltutiool, boepltals
-be conaider~te of youn1 person who is at-
tempt.iq to improve attitude.
HEALTH
A workshop on
loving seH
A SERIES OF WORKSHOPS oo "The Art of
Loving Your ·self" will be offered by the
Mariposa Women's Center beein.nlng Tuesday,
in the city of Orange. Psychologist Susan
Christopher will teacb participants methods of
self-acceptance and refocusing as a means of
positive change. For information, call 547·6494.
WALTER CLARK, corporate director fot
sciences and nutrition for Hunt Wesson Foods,
will speak on "Diet, Dieting and Health" at 7
p.m. Tuesday, in Hashinger Hall of Chapman
College. For information, call 997·6838.
PROJECT PACE in conjunction with the
Orange County Human Services Agency will
present a workshop on "Understanding the
Mental Health System for the Elderly" al 9
a .m . Thursday, in Garden Grove. Project
PACE is sponsored by the li'eedback Foundation
in Sant.a Ana. For information, call 831-9860.
PIZZA, FRENCH FRIES and peanut butter
can be part of a nutritional diet -when eaten in
moderation. St. J oseph Hospital of Orange will
offer a nutrition seminar Saturday, based on the
"New American Eating Guide" published by
the Center for Science io the Public Interest.
Seminar topics include "Face the fats,"
"Sugar. starch and tbe incredible hulk,"
"Shake the salt habit" and J Maintalning ideal
weight." For information, call 633-9111, ext.
7475.
Good night kiss may
have saved his life
PITTSFIELD, Pa. (AP) -Roderick Long
remembered to give his wile a good night kiss
and the few extra seconds be paused to say
good-bye probably saved his life.
Long, 46, kissed his wile and began walking
across a bridge over L1ttle Broken Straw Creek
near this Warren County community. He bad
taken only a few steps wben the rushing waters
of the rain-swollen creek tore away the center
section of the span.
"I just stopped dead and started hoofing it
back across the bridge. I'll never forget it,"
Long said Friday.
Lor)g and bis wife, Geri, drove to the foot of
the bridge Thursday night. He was to cross the
bridge on foot, meet a friend on the other aide
and together they would travel to work at the
National Forge Co.
The bridge bad been damaged by an ice floe
eilrlier in the day and authorities bad closed it
to all but pedestrian trarflc.
Cent~r dedication •et
The City of Costa Mesa will dedicate a new
community center at 10 a .m. Saturday at 1845
Park Ave.
Toun ofJ.be facllll)' wlll belin at 12:30 p.m.,
and tbe pu_,llc la invited to attend.
For more lnformaUon, call 754-5300.
CAREERWO~N
• • ._ .... ...:a .... ......... u
......... c.111 .....
c.ttMI• .... ,. ...... .. ..,..,...
Don't leave your Image
tochance ...
Leave It to
POWERS
Orange ecu.ty
5'7-8221
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!QUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
, 'I .. ,.,. Melle«
Slt. ... DOWM
.,. P.l.T.A per mo. a ar
I~ tlla ecmdo. Great lD·
ve1tment. Realty
World/
Call a.atty World Capletnno AAoclaUoo
'6l·IOIO
AIMOaMAL
How can yoq ftDd a pro-
perty rour doon from
the So.. Bayfn>nt with a
45-15 lot on Balboa
SI 12,000
COii Ml PAIK
A11ume lar1e loaa. tuuoo. a Bdrm 2 bath.
Hpmded family room wetber, flrepJace and
pool. tdl,000. Call for
mon details. S.ZSJJ
THE REAL
ESTATE R S All real eatate ad -
v ertla ed lo thl•
newspeper ta 1ub)ec:t to
lbe Federal Fair Hout·
ins Act ol 1Ja which
mabl it UJe1al to ad·
vertlN "any preference, llmitatlon, or dis ·
crlminatlon baaed on race, color, rellslon.
1u:, or nationaJ origin,
or an bltmUoa to make
laland where the owner 1--------• wlU comider anythln1 ol
ii-rurllilMCI HouMo Unlllmi•i...I -.. f'urn 0t Uni c::...domlaluma Yuro Olwldomonlum• Vol
T°'".-..l'llrn Town"°"6H Uni
O..lu. '""" Ouplun Uni Aptt f\,rn
AllU V1tllU'n Apia Yurn or t..nl Roonu • Room 6 Board llolel>. M oteb C~>t Honwa S..mrner Renlal• V'M'ahOft Renu la
RtM•I• lo St.art:• Can 1H for Rtn< orneo. Renlol &tsl11tt> Rontal lnd,..lrltl Rtnlal
:=:'Aanle<I Jllt.K Renul.1
BUSINESS, INYEST-
MDn, ANANCE
value-1toekl, cHh,
land. units-you name it
abd tbl owner will trade.
lncludel plans ror a new
duplex. Alkinl *'95,000. ............ "' 67J.1700
any auch prererence, r---------
ll m ltatlon, or dh· •-••••••-I crimlnaUon."
Thia newspaper will not
knowin1ly .ccept 1ny advertising for re1l
estate wblcb ia in viola· Uon of the law.
COSTA MESA -••••••-•I Twin townhouse type
duplex. Two bedrooms alOllS: AdYet11Mn upatain. Full bath up
...... ct.cir ....... and balr bath down . .W, .... report .,.. Private,. fenced patlo. ron I ,.....,. n.. Four cir carport,
DAa.Y PILOT•_.. storage. $141,500.
1111-, for tlle flnt ~63~1~-7~3~00!!!~!!!M~.l!.I
lacorrect l•Hrtlo11 r:
Ollly. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 7S.1111
••••••••••••••••••••••• HCAHYOM
::::::::~· = Whelan Real Estlle is OHL Y $435,000
Dramatic entryway
leads to thia lovely lge 3
br, rorm. din rm. Willa
of glass lead to brick p1tios. Priced under the
market w/xlnt financ·
lft•Kl,,..n1 ~,·, )OIS now offering 90% com -~::'Y":~:•• : mission to licensed =:i-i.:~~~: : · aaents.
ANNOUNCEMENTS, •Nodest fees
'9SONALS & *No phone fees
LOST UOUND •Notdvertising fe~s ing.
759-1616 Al\ftOUftC'ttnentt Car Pool IA1ol Nolltn IAal 6 Yound
Perton.al•• Sot1al C'luba• Tf1vtl•
)100 I~~~~~~!!~~ ~ We belong to five multi· I~ = pie boards. Call for an i---------$5,500 SERVICES
o.-al
ftoeU M 1lftt Servtt~ 8oau .M1rin• t:iuup lloa14,Po•ur llot14 Rtnt Charter eo .... s.11
lloau.51opa Ooch lloa14 .. Speed 6 Ilk I
Botu.slor aee
TIANSPOHATION
A"trall Campen.Sale Roftl Eltrtn< Cn • MobtM,._.. lllolor <:)lei.a.~·
Note .. Hm• Sale llenl Ttltlen.Tra•el r.::.~~li • .u
AUTOMOBILE
0.•ral · ~Clauott ll«rH .-Vthlti.t s.-ta 11..... llo•h 4'WAiM1on .. •• Tr..cu
Vana
AW> t.Moonc A..-Wanled
AUTOS, IMPOITED
'400 1ppointment. Ask for
S4jj) John. 540-38166
ll.BffTIL YOURS
Only Sl .185 per mo.
~~n Very , very very lo down
1100 p•)'O'lent. Beaut. 3 Bdrm
pool home. Terrific loca·
tion. CaJJ 536-9311
1110
llJO llJO :t: "'° tlTO "'° ..
'°" -----•10 --
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
CdM
COTTAGE
$175,000
2 Bdrm charmer! Wood burning fireplace. step-
saver kitchen. High as-1um1ble lat TD. Owner will help fianance.
ST~
THE REAL ESTATE RS
Advertisers m•y place their •els by telephone
I001m to530p.m.
Monday lhru f'rld•y
I lo noon Saturday
COSTA MESA Off'ICE
330W Bay
842·SC'71
HUNTINGTON BEACH
1717S Be.ch Blvd
:.40-1.220
LAGUNA BEACH
1021 N Coul Hwy a.qun. 8ucb 4»4·9'86
CHMraJ tTOI
NOR11f COUNTY
dial rrff $40-1.220
AltaRo-o ~ Altdo 11'1111 A,.IJa Heale1 tTQI BMW • • tTU
a.u,...
Capn tTI.\
puts you into your own 4 Bdrm, A/C home. 12
7 /8"k ftnancing. Call for
detail s on our "TICKET" program.
•
RED CARPET
. 754-1202
CHEAPY
BARGAIN!
Condo 2 Bdrm overlooks greenbelt, near South
Coast Plua in Costa Mesa. Owner will carry
large 2nd TD. $79.900
~2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
llAUTY + TllMS
MOLOAMFllS!
Owner says he wtll carry
fin•ndng on thi s
beautiful 3 BR /2\'J BA execu!Jve townhome In BACK BAY AREA with ONLY 10~ DOWN . Sunken living room
cre1tes cozy •t· moepbere for f1mily or
entertaining. Must see to appreci•te this beauty.
$~.«XI FULL PRICE
~
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631·6990
IJO/oDOWM
OCWROMT
2 Bdrm, 2 ba, untyn.
New. -)'f'!Y·
IAYROHT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum. .1
Mint eond. '850. Yrly .
~FtlOMT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.
S'750yrty.
associated
Iii"'" E II'. llf Al TOP S
' , ""' b 1Jt, I & , ' ! 6 b I
21DRM
PUCTICALL Y REE •.900. If you have Utile c11h Ind are looking for a golden opportunity to
own your own home, don 'l wait, this is it ! This lovely coodomlnium is a
2 Bdrm. very clean and neat. Ind located in a q ulet area. Approx·
lmately $2,950 down and
owner will carry 2nd with small payments
CaU now for all the de·
taJls. 752-1700
*** "'-cit w. Seiler
l.SSl Jeffrey Rd Sp 343
Irvine
YOU tre the winner of
4 frft tickets
($14 value >. lo ........
loatShow
Mu. 4thru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention
Center
Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to claim your tickets
***
MAMA'S
GONE TO
CHICAGO Giant 4 Bdnn beauty.
located near Orange
County's most J>Opular shopping center Th is
lovely home is located
on a quiet cul de sac The home Is a former model
and shows like one Huge rooms thruout. b1J!
living room. ankle deep plush pi.le carpets. Space
•1e kitchen . big bdrms.
puit-Uke grounds with entertainers delight
back yud. Decorative
rocks. rolling hills and a solar heated pool. This unique home is priced w1y below market.
SelJer must sell. Take adv1ntage. call now!
752·1700
THE REAL
ESTATE:RS
PLEASE DOM"T
SQU'UE tlle llDS
Give them room to run In tbls beautifu.lspacious
3 Bdrm home. Fabulous family rm. 2 frplcs.
jacuai. derorator wall paper. 1184 .900 Call
979-537Gtoday.
·ALLSTATE
REALTORS
~ .m• Ooll . t'lll Dau,.. f'1JO
........s Deadline for l'09Y ., kills
ls s ao p.m. the d•Y
before publlcation. uupt for Sunday .,
Mo11d1y Edillon1 when de1dllne Is Saturday. 12 noon
Buys tbls 2 + den home. IACI IA Y YIEW
8 months new, double ll(IT
'""" '7'D r11t . • tT» ·~:. :: J-n . .. .. fTIZ Kar"'""" Ohta • • .'1» ~ ......... 1'111 M11da .• .tTa llllot'H<kt IMM , . . tTtO 11110 •••.•• "42 11110 8 . .. .......... 1"44 Optl . .t'I .. ,....... • .t'141
Ptlllt'Ol •• .. •. • . • '741
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RO\tt m1 ~~ ........ mo
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AUTIS. MEW
C-.1 -AITOS. ISO
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PUllW.Ma.
ToPIHeJOUr
"f'alta.lllk"
s.niNDlredCWJ
lid .... c.llNOW
641-1671
Min I
Cl.A ..... llM4&AftOMI
ERRORS; Advertisers
1hould check their ad1
dally 6 report errors Immediately. THE
DAIL V PILOT usumes Ill blllty ror the first Ill correct llllttllon Ol'll)'.
CANCELLATIONS:
When '""111 an 1d be ture lo make a ..-'II of the KILL NUMBER
alven you ,by your 14
laker 11 rftelpt of '°"' unnll1tlOt1 Thia 11111
number mutt be
pr11e&led b7 tll•
ld\lttt.IMr IJI c-°' • dlaP\lle.
CANCELLATION Ol
CORRllC'nON or HEW A D B g P 0 R I
RUNNING: Inf)' .non la made Lo
klU « correct • -ad l111t ..... .,.., orWed.
but WI CIMO( f\llf ....
lO do IO mllJ IJle Id llM •a.eared Ill tlll Pl~.
DUI £.Aol.l.NI AM: P•M 141 are 1trltllf tdll bl MYIMI 111 •Iii or at 1111 Oft• or nr ""'"9. NO .,._. oHerl. Dllclllllt:. ,. ... ~,.
c.l• 11 .. °"'" • .. aeo11 at all bretell .,...
TRI DAILY PILO
"""''' tile rlalit to .....i~ .........
r o f • • • • • r 9'•enl ..... t, 11M1 ti =.:.:·· ...... Wttllllllflilr
GOii & ........_
.P~"f.:'" -
Iron 1•ted entry. laOW MA calbedr•I ceilings, brick Thia beautiful view pro-
fireplace. gourmet perty in Newport is
ltltcben, French doors to priced below market
f atio. Owner will ·value and below ap·
inance. $179,000. pralsal. Spice age 17~ kitchen with breakfast
THE REAL ESTATE:RS
LAGUNA HILLS
J'aataltlc view lot •Ith 4
Bdrm home. Prtced at oaly $125,500. Call
511-llU
ALLSTATE
REALTORS-i
trea. Huge living room,
lanai with view .
fireplace and open
beamed cathedral cell·
lllta. ffide.a·way muter
lldt.e, aepante cblld.nft1
wlna. Dub to lbe pool. Calf today tor details.
Ownel' blchlY motlvat~ and will work with very
creati" ftaancln1. CAii
1U.1100
THE ~EAL
ESTATERS
l•IJPllt
l't Family Want Ads
3,Unea. Z day1, SI.IS
MZ·Sl78
"
r
OCIAM .... IAY'llWS
French doors open to omdoal-llviDI area, open noor plan w /cathedral
ceillnp and akyllgtu make this 3
bedroom. 2 bath home on an ovenlsed
lot a must see I Offered for ~.ooo.
U~IVUI: liUtl:S
• REALTORS. 675-6000
1443 f.Mt c-t H .... ey. eor-clel Mew
WE HAVE a OP THE BEST USTINGS IN TOWN
'REALTORS
675-5511
==:·at '.,~.' ... ~ ~ MF?• ............ ftltw. _.,,IC:!,.... tr 11M
.. ft I
•11 ....... c..':% 1•11
COU OF MIWPOIT llALTORS
Jllll.C...tHwy .. C._ ......
TUln\BOCk
HIGHLANDS
675-5511
4 Bdrm w /view. Lots or paneUnt, profes1 decor
• lndacpn1. Everything
you've lon1ed for + a larle usum. 9%% loan.
$8,000.
Unparalleled Jot sile
with one of the most
commandinl vh!ws of
the Newport Bay. A dis· Unctive home on your
own private beach with
boat dock and volleyball
court. can for appoihnt·
ment::.,·----. ...
macnab I trvlne
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE LAVINE COMPANY
lliDFOID P\.ACI!
Highly upgraded 3BR end-unit in
Bradford Place near park and all
the amenities. $94,900. Dan .lohnson
551 ·8700. ( D· 71)
752-1414
Cc:imt)U\ Vo/ltey Cent«
642-IZH
551-1700
Woocbidqe Cemtw
644-6200
Hotbor Voew Center
. tlWPORT OCEAN-UY YU
....., decorehd zw. z ..... c...,. 1••11-c......• .... ...... ..... A.ti ......... s.111-...... .. • c-.. .... .., •• ......_ sza5.ooo.
QllET BEACHFRONT Lll:ATION
llDUCID TO SHl,000. '-'-c. l ...
.._ -.,... of owwlli". ..... ._
po11lbllltlesl OWHll LL HILP
RMAHCll ,
NEWPORT AXER
... AMl'IC LOT WITH ,._to el9md
................. .,..to .... ..
... 4 .................... -.............. wtA.Ac•••• ..-'"' ...., for,..... UH,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
s.lt•. RMtAlt PrOIJt'tl~ MMW94''""'"''
631 -1400
flllSICIAH
CT t PRY .RT F 0 £I HHS D T 0 S S R E M I T i A R I Z T Y Y I A E l I
1.0iTl ALIR TS I NOOSSA8
P 0 H I U l M E U G U C E T L £ T L Y
l l T Q W 0 T I ~ G 0 ) R E D V I R
HLtSTSELSPL~HRSANRM
AO•T &Y YUA T TEUOT10AJ
lURNEEDTQRtMa S MCICC
M S I N R P 0 E E l M I I T 0 1 I C PWLAPlMTOEAtN.MNSONO
S L M C T L S-U R T A T R 0 t U 0 I R
E • k S I t A U l 1 a I S 0 M W W P
T I l A N I 0 Y J T S T L T I R L S f
0 A L U U L ll U E N I 0 L L l l A C A
llTAJlllMllllSTYS~MT
UDO ISi.i ,
Newly remodeled traditiMal style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation l'90IQ & 2 ·patios. Living
room has afttractive beam ceilings,.
fireplace & Crench doors leading onto
brick patio. New kitchen bit-in
.8.PPUances~ Close to tennis courts. sandy beacnes & .clubhouse. $420,000
IAYROHT
We have several fine homes
with pier" allp, 1tartln1 at $1.500,000
IAHCHO MIRAGE
Springs Condo, 9th fairway, 3000 sq.ft.
3 Bdrm. 3 bath. furn. Golf clb.
mbrshp. Will trade for invest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
11 1 "''},<I·· l>• .. "< fl ol', t:ilbl
CclMDUPLIX
IBMICID St 0,000
ScQh ol PCH duplex in
Corona del Mar. 2 years
new. 4 Bdrms with
muter hide-away (in·
eluding fireplace, spa>
owners unit. PLUS. 2
Bdrm. 2 bath unit. Oversized garage for
autos and toys + + + very high assumable
loan and creative owner
ready to bargain. Call
NOW for appointment
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714~.31-6990
FIXER
COSTA MESA
2UMITS
$94,900
Super inve.tment ! 'Two 2·Bdrm units. one with
fireplace! Current ln-
com&-$'740 mo. Hurry,
this wont't laat. 646-7171
tlMtJ
llACHHOUSI
Large roomy family
home w/cozy blt·ln en-
t ertainment center.
Owner's pride is ob·
vlous. Highly upgraded I
bit-in kitc he n and1
carpeting etc. Huge
playroom, upstairs for
kids or adults! Asking
$174 ,900. Owner will
carry for S years at low
interest.
JACOBS REAL TY
Needs TLC. Covered en· ___ 6_7_5-_6 _'7_0 __ _
try way, leads to vaulted ........ ,, y.,,.,
ceilinged living room. Owner anxious. he sell Wood burning fireplace. Huge country kitchen., and he will carry an
f amily room area. A.l.T.D. with only 15'* down. 3 luxurious units Overlooks covered In excellent location.
patio, pool and spa. A With these terms It
bargain at $128,500. Call won't last! Call now for
now! 5*-23U complete d et a 11 s .
THE REAL ESTATE:RS
55&-3680
C::SELECT
T"PROPERTIES
PllCI llDUCTIOM This 2 br home has one of the best
locations in Bayshores. It is a lovely
cottage, just steps from the private
beach. Now only $380,000 leasehold.
644·9990 760-0835
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SEAVICES
POPULAR "1RS' TOwtl IOMI
nus lovely 4 bedroom + family
room "D'' plan is located on the
community park i-n University
Park. Spacious & cheery rooms .
Indoor garden. Skylights. Top
quality construction & right price.
$210,000. Great financing available.
IN NEWPORTCIENTER
w:~-:' sa:~cll1A.:4i,~s· =
-----..... io, GAY L 1'0Wlll -----
•................ 9' the ..., ................. ......... ._.,...._.
HAJtlOa YllW taU •411,0IO
A ltAltl "HIUYOICUMr MODIL
Impressive front elevation to this
estate-like 5-bedroom, 2-atory Lusk-built home. Dramatic entrance
hall with vaulted celline, large living
rm, formal d ining rm, spacious family
rm, & lovely master suite with private
dressing rm & bath pb• 4eck for sun bathing off ma tr BR. Two fireplaces, a
separate utility rm & 3-car garage.
SUrprise: a gorgeous large pool in a
woodsy rear yard. A real family
home.
WISLIY M. TAYl.Oa CO.. IM&.TOU
2111 S..Ja .... ._.
M~.,WM"W011'llllfl9 ~kl. 644-49 I 0
WILSON PARK ctlDltltlUMS
CHECK & COMPARE T1ISE FEATURES
90% ANAteltli 123A% INTER,
I HARBOR AREA LOCATION
I SlZE-1650 SQ. FT. I MICRO OVEN
I ALL SHOPPING '>".! BLOCK I COMPACTOR
I AIR CONDITIONING I DISHWASHER
I CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAGE
I WALJ< IN CLOSETS W/OPENER
WAID INVESTMENT IMC.
SALIS OfftCI C714t 611-Mll
JMW. WllM9 St. MJ.2111 c.. ...... c:..
•
ASSUM I
•:..Ill 000 V _. Co .. lortallllle I Bdrm .... , A lllloae, l'ar1e lt08e _;_~------
Tllllat's rt1111ltt ....... ft,._, .-a1 p•UO .. , *I 4 ~ • • ,.,. VA loeo. Total ,..· _. room for 2 .,. Ull-r ,..... .... a Bdrm. __ _.... ... • 4 l.Mfl 14 ltdi'1D ) ba,
llMll, eonwr lol for -.. -... • · :.=rded wttllll sbah
I 0 .., .... c. •. .... u.. tub ___ ..____..
pr ••e1. waer ma1 •..a•n-· ._ · -.;.._
ca.ny som• ftaaneln1.~!!!!!!-!!!!!!!!•!!!..,!!!!!I patio. Lonly area.
--total price. Actr: SIJI-. 0.-$Uft 1·5,
DOWI Ml-ZllJ ()pm 8&1day, Z.5pm, 1141 p~I.
THE :R F.AL
ESTA TE RS
~ .!n~io..-:!i HJ.... MUltl
beauty. Family room,
Hpante dlalnt room,
frplc, new roof. Priced •-------•I at $190,000. for quick COSTA MESA sale. Xlnt flnancln1.
THE WI EDEM ANS
O/AGT. 494-00H or
751-4213.
Cbarmlaa' • Bdrm. a ba
home with famll1~room• Corner lot. VERY ---------•
private yard 1. Im. PIXER·I Br Z ba. pool•
maculMe and ready to ape. ONLY $1Z7,JOO. Va-
mowta. $17UGO cant.111e Real Estaten,
This J Bdrm charmer
uk f°' ELSA. 751-1S1 •
~2SU wucmce •model home. --------
Locllted on a hu&e cul-3BR, 2~ba condo. Nr. So.
de-aae lot and ftlled with Cat. Plaza. Sky lites.
extras. FINISHED patio. dec:k. 2 car gar,
1arace. Cloee to acboola. many upgrades. Paint •
Offend at $144,500. cpt. to 1uit. Sl32,000.
OWC2. 540-4083.
IRVINE 102'
Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba •••••••••• .. •••••••••••
1in1k family home with ROMANTIC CONTEM -
very PRIVATE yard. PORARVROME
Xlnt location, 'close to Professionally designed
schools, shopping and home with 3 Bdrms. 2
freeway. $1&4.500 and Baths, 2 fireplaces and ownerwillcarry2od. is cloee to the Marina.
'*Cote Realty
& Investment
• 64()..5777
vm-HODOWH!
Good usumable financ-
ing. ~71,500. 498-4950
Lingo
A...tht•tt
No down payment re-Faa t• V•y I 014
quired for vets on this ••••••••••••• •••• • • ••• •
very attractive 3 Bdrm, fRrt.lll"ff CHAJEAU 2 bath home. Only ""-
$95,000 and owner will GUIST COnAGE !
help fmance a cooven· 4 lcr.eu w -leach
tional loan. Take advan-OHLY $109,500
tt • st• Hst1m I04Z • •••••••••••••••••••••• ...... w ..........
BeauWuJ. SM E:a.e~. 4
bdrm home. Ele&ant wet
bar, bit-lo bbq imlde •
many other aatenltlea
Incl. a buce )'rd that
backs to a beautiful
park. Just 2 yn old !
Broker', -.112
1044 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
**$15M! Try $15,000 down and I.I·
au.me lbil brand new 2
Bdrm attached home lo
super Woodbridge. Ask· log only $117 ,soo · and
available ritht :lOW.
~bridge
. Realty
551·3000
, 4t~B1rrHu Plr.wy,lrvlaf
1 WALNUT SqtJAIE
• IESTIUY *
Nice 2 story "C" plan 2
bdrm condo. Freshly
painted. central air.
Priced below compara·
ble sales for immedlate
action. M .500.
CAUHOW
644-7211
tage.Ca.ll979-"5370now. 2 stry French Chateau
AWAUWIHHB A -towohome in a lush
This home truly de· LLSTATE green setting by thesea.
serves its name . -Dbl door e ntry to
WES TC LIFF
$129,500
,...
Newport Beach highly
upgraded 2 Bdrm condo
with private patio,
custom draperies, large
pool! Walk to Westcliff
shopping. Shows Ulte a
model. Hurry-this
won't last! Call &46-7171
Ele1antly decorated 4 -REAL TORS cathedral ceilinged IJv. * * $25M1. Bdrm home features ing rm. Dramatic open
dramatic cathedral cell-C~ .. M• I 022 staircase to pvt ms tr That's right·• huge 4
inp, accented by plush ••••••••••••••••••••••• suite. Sep children's Bdrm, free standing
carpeting, decorated wing and 3 baths! All Irvine home that can be
wallcoverings, drapes & CDMCOTTA61 this+priv detatched purchased with as little
mirrors. Lovely garden --~ .. , mom·in-law apt. or rec. as S2S,OOO down pay·
features cus tom de ,..._ ----rm. Compl. w/wet bar. ment. Call for details on
alped ape and covered llDto $272,500 4th ba +more! Motlvat· this super buy. Total
THE REAL ESTATERS
patio. To top it all OR 3 Bdrm 2ba home ed seller, here ls poten· priceonly$155,000.
c reative financing Is with Isolated maste r tial. Take advantage. •
available. 'J'hla home is bdrm (can be parent W"~~IN RREYA2L1TY ( '11]\lbodbrldge truly a Select Property. retreat or lo·law qrtrs) n&.n
CallTSl-3111 and a 2 Bdrm cottage. '64-lll 1 1 • Realty
ANY !VAY you. describe H ... k:jlK leect. I 040 551-3000 W/S.. 1-4 .SELECT it . It I cbannm1 up to ••••••••••••••••••••••• 41Z9Barnau .. ,nwy.lrvi.~
2044 Oce. llwd . e ROPERTI E~ date · beaut If u 11 y 1-11111!1~1111!1~!111111~-1 2 Bdrm, 1 bath cotta1e. located. POOL & llACH --tr-~--1-Tl--H--
Beam ceiling. frplc. 3 ,--------• CAU. FOR DIT AILS Model perfect Seawinds ~
car pe~1. Priced at 644-7211 4 Bdrm, 2...., bath pool 2 br, 2 ba condo w/det.
9Zl5.000. home. $172,000 dbl gar. By owner. Sll5.000. Open Sun. 12·5.
8 Greenwood. 552-3123. associated
B'-' i ,. 'IJ •. ~ E r. ... t1 '_,
i . ... ~ • • "
110111T.11s co ...
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MISA VHDE -llST IUY No Question But What This Is One Of The Finest Buys In The Area! Lovely Four
Bedroom Home On A Large Comer Lot.
Completely Remodeled. Large Assumable
Loan. Submit Offers. Only $145,000.
HEWPOIT HElfiHTS 4.ft.IX Located· On Quiel Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income.
Minimum Vacancy Factor. Four Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans.
Inspect With Offer. Priced At $365,500.
·--........ ,.
759-9100
#2COffOiilh,._.
HewpcriC..-
INllYIDUALITY & CHARM Tenfflc loc..._ ....... Mm. Street.
a-.lllg 2-t'°'J, J ....... .......
....... ........ M ...... Wraw/.._.
Mewtr , ... ''" C\.,.w & • .,., 1 .. ......._ LMdt itf w...._ ws• ..a ...... a... $440,000. 67Wt00.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
S.tlH R•nt.i, P1opn•v ~nt
315 Marine /we
Balboa 111and
eB.· • • •
COM CONDOS
329 Dahlia Pl.
$247 ,500 fee.
315 Canyon Crest
1231,500 fee.
COM DUPLEX
518 Poinsettia
SZl!l.500 fee.
Call Nancy Simmons,
Agt
873-9208, 644-9060
AS&JM.ABLE LOAN
$250,000. 3 br + den, 2~
ba. ()pm Sun. 1-5. 1436
Serenade Terrace.
&44-972A, (213)790-6774
DUTCHHAVEH
Sharp 3 Bdrm home
near Beach & Warner
Aves. $114,900
SI0,000 .t I 00/o
4 Bdrm. 2v. bat.h.s. pool
and spa. Only Sl.25.000
llProfelsloMh
"J-1377
Landmark. South Hunt-
ingtcm Beach. 2 story. 4
bedroom. 3 car garage.
$159,900 with built In
financing. Bkr. 963-83'17
IHYISTOIS
SNCIAL!
E•ecutive Duplex for
discriminating taste.
3br, 3ba. each. central
air. woodbumlng frplcs.
c~ drapes/ carpets,
heavy shake roof. 11 "4 ~
loan ia uaumable. no
qualifying necessary
TIIE TERRACE of Univ.
Pa r k. 3bdrm , 2ba
townhome, separate din·
Ing room, wetbar & up-
grades . Offered by
owner at $152.000 with nex. owner financing.
552-5312.
WOODlllDGE GLEH
t Jf.-Dfo As-.
2br, 2ba. study. frplc .
comm'ty pool/jac/lake
$128,000. By Owner
SSMm.
HEREITIS! Large4 BR.
JUSTUSTID
Obanninl Duplex with
French doors on f root
Wlil. lhake roof. Walk to
all shoppin1. $191,000.
Call for appt. to see.
Bernita Eiler tseo.
Broker, 875-2373 or
77Mfll. s 1 •Dow. Or ..... FR . boous •room .
mas s ive stone
flreplace ... HURRV ·On·
ly $181,900. Cott.Mesa 1024 MOVISYOUIH
•••••••••••••••••••••••No qualif ying
Eaatalde C.M. 2Br.
Completely remodeled
R-2 lot. Lota of charm.
Open dally, 11 ·4.
M2-Z101, 321 Rochester,
C.11.
necessary. Your mon·
tbly payment can be ad-RedhillAoA~ltu justed to meet your mon· V A.v..AMA.J thly budget. We have 552 _7500 many3ft4bdrm home in
beat Orange County
locations w/tbese term11. PICTURE -------1 Call our specialist for
9.5 morelnformation. PERFECT
Spadoua 3 bdrm, 2-atory
~ Patio Home ht the heart ::~~;!!t :t~og1~T a=.:~
17 room ftreDlace, open tlonal counter and beamed cetlln&s. new 841-1118 stora1e space lo the •
CGPI*' plum..,, lar1e kltchep. Beautlf1ally
1•J'd. double 1ara1e, '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ panelled walls. PatJo lk7'lllL ODb $114,500. and ....... • 1netou1
Call16tlll I patio cover. Owner ol·
~ •ftt.H•1I'!
... , .".1 '
/
don osr~n
lerinl ,_.,,... t.enu to
help,.,.. purdaue.
oc~eena,.
~ ..... , ..........
, I pwt bcll9, PoOI • ........ .-. T...,. or
trMI. -... hold land. ...
THIM>ODUA
Newport Crest. Owner
will carry for 5/yn wttb
20'1. down. Purcbaae
hl1,500. a Bdrm, 2~ Ba,
tftmia, pool, Huna.
YICToaJAM
BEACHHOllE
New J BR a~ Ba. Qu•ll·
ty handcrafted oak
thruout. Stained ...... apa.
,
Owner will ca_r_ry 'lwi' w/~ .wn
auumable K FHA loao. 3 Bdrm cozy
home in excellent area near acboQla
and Jbopping. Only •.500, 752.1920
j PETE
BARRETI
REALTY
~AIL IUci
PIOPllT•
71~1tl0
macnab I lrvtne
raalty
I
-
«
f\I + ' i 'f _/ ,.\I r I '\
\,
I , 1 1 I I
• ......,.,Jmae
·~ta.. all ...... in·
el. ... /mo.l40-190
1 Br. Carpets, drapes,
atove. nrrt1e. uua. pd.
Utentll• for 4 . Sl75.
1'75-0935
lpe dr I l 8r W"-1..,...• .. ..., '8dl. Uk .. ...,.. ......
. . ........... . .. __. ........ ~~ 1pftlall1t /1tlJ·~HJ , ________ , prielt.•elelll9 ..... u
···--··· ············---------... .-a-. • ... ,._. -II~ OUI' 1-iatty. --·· ...... ..... QUAl.n'YftOOPINn -"'-------Prof. IDlll DOW bl_.. ff, ...--Lall OW 1pedalt1. Ae· ftee "'
w /11.eDDDalcl Dou•lu Our ~Jae ejobb•••• cOUIUe ........-. Pnapt. vi..~llCan-. -~1 ·-OorP. ..... to houMtit. 10UI'-· ,..o too ....... Palatill1. o.... -. . I -•
••fl 'IHI _...;..,.'1Mhv1. 1mall.y...::blc·· ..... RAABOaROOnNG '
•-----------•••••••• .. ••••••••••••• EX SC UT IV I: wl 11 •---------c 1---------1C ... C.. •VDYLOWPRICl:S• H•••• 'I ~. ablt ...ta, es· Briek6Bloekwork Palatlq lat/ext. 6 ,.. C• 11 fM .......... ~........... ,,........_,. mmt;-e111u.. • .......... .,........... p'CI. Nf.MO'J .,.._J.MI llarty ,.irtac. Call O.CW1e fol
••••• .. •••'-••••••••••• UC.CHILDCARE Georte .... 1111 WaataaEAU..YCLEAN ' .... 11 tree-. Aar:•· <714>
RDIODEL-ltSPAIRS lb~delllu • --"-.;::t·;---: HG~ Call Gmlham .__,_ ..... _...... • ... (DJ --AlloCultomCablaeta bome ITl-1165 ._. ..... _ ~ • .--est.MS-SUI ....................... ....... ter/Z.W/Raftat.hln1. ,__ __ .;.._. ____ _
2Dd lD Tr9t ·RA I Sbort b'ma • renter'• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ~.L~ Jl'I C .. sdllt lltW•eMe. rreee1t. bpertile ..,._..eepblf, credit oaly ... ta 'tll llovin1? Tbe Starvln1 eelllap/wellpaper. Lie . ..-. Lle'd. avp qual. •••••••••••••••••h•••• Ande,-...i. equip • 1upplle1 llu. Int. Brtn1 W-2'1, ~9tudeaUlloria1 C&1D•Son1.-.s105 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t..!ll!!r.:_!Pa~~-~bo!·~-~"'14~~· -1 Collltnadion·All typa f\lftdlbed, bwtwol'Uly 6 ftD ID free tu or1anber. Co. 6u 1rown··1ame PAINTING ~G CUITOlllNTJ:RfOR JDJnap.Pree..t. Total tarden 6 lawn depMt-41'70 Noapptreq'd.MS--aood MniC:e. Ina, He'd. l5YeenExperience
6TAX8EllVJCE CARPENTRY IJc . ...-. 16-5171 c.,.. ltimeorcoattnual ci--a.u-.-~ le·-'-· IM ITUMll.Ml.aa7 ~lG a...,.... -..11 ByJay Ml..,. Dr .. I La Mrllca..... _v...._, -~• · -• -SpedaeWar lleeu.ltl ••••••••••••••••••••••• StuMll will move JOU et .. _. .. •·±• C....tS.•lce ....................... H•lx m.aJOt/M2"'41t P'or lb. purpo1e1, we reu. rates. 752·1413, ••r.-••••••••••••••••• •• ;-~;.;•••••••-••••••• S.S. DESIGNS •••••: .. -.••••••••••••• videotape prop. A: coa· ~orlC'f.,_
Drbewap parlda1 lot WeCanCatpeiCleanen Cutmn Drapery Win· Carpentry, roofla1. PenoealbedHouae tent. CaUNM>lOO Video, ...... IP ... reealn, '1ealcoatin1. SMam clean • upbola. dows, 1000'1 ot fabrtes, me1oar1J plumbln1, ......,.•1bJICUlll. Ver. --It ¥• SM Alpbalt . ..a-4871 Work 1uar. Truck ....._."" lOdaJdel. itucco, arywaU, etc. CallEYeAl-5172 •••••••••••••••••••••••ll'l•lllllll
Lk'd. mountwdt.16-1711 ,.,_._ Jninarea. ..._, Annie, ~ day/wll:: or AUk>lna.Cancelled DAVl:'SPAINTING .............. A....... Clll .. ,
1111,Jll 1 Shampoo • 1team clean. '41-6614 ROllE DI PROV Ell ENT every 2 wb. Call aft. All Riak SR·Z2 Lo Ratea ~~..:!fb.a:" DIAlitS CLIAllD ...................... .
•••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Color briCbtenenin bl• wbth ..__. Jlemodellq~Joba 7:JDpm,M2-0N7 .. ~.Ina. 144'r3"5 lnaured.llc'd. 7~7301 $10.15. Daa'tJetrobbed. "LelTbeSunahineln" ..... YSJTTING crpg 10 m · eac · .... ,..._ .,.....,. m.ms • ~ ... Call B•B lumbin1. Call&w.hlDeWlnclOw m.D Hall U -din '15· ....................... General cleanln1-of. .._,_ .... , Fine at/mt paint.inf by ~~c.V' S:~ nr av1 ~ '1.so:· c:1:h $10; n..f!r':~:,:S~,.. H• l1tJ11d....,.. Iles, vacantapg.. ....................... Rldwd Sinor. Lie, ma. ~:.~ Rooter PlaCIMniftlc'-•
9
',..~5:.,. ~1,_ ---=------• cbr •· Guar. ellm. pet .,..-. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• bomel.•1.ms For lb. purpo1e1, we Tr)'me.IS1-4410(2'hn) -...__ -.. SELL 'idJe item.a with a odor. Crpt repair. 15 yn mod .• -.... Sl2•s.s.I HARDWOOD FLOORS videotape prop. Ir con-SELL idle lteau wltb a u eUJ • diallDI Joot
Dally Pilot Cla11lfled exp. Do work myself. Have eometbiu to 1tllf C1eaaed 6 Waxed WANT AcrtONT tent. Call ~0100 Video Cludfted Adi, your one-DallJ Pilot Cla11lfled phone. Give UI t call.
: Ad. Refa.sn..0101 Cl-'fted'adacloltwell. A.Qtlme,812-41118.A. a-ifedAdlta.5171 VerlftcaUon atoplboppintcenter. Ad.IG-5171. We'llclotlle...._MJ.5171
~·•••ithu.tw.. I · u.tw.. . .,.he:ic.t1.,.,.., ·· · Afut:aci.tiu.twa. · .P.,tsioc•h~ · l .... toSll.re 4300 Offlcel..,... 4400 Offlm....., 4400 ... t ._.._... 4100 •••·•••···············•······················• ..................•........ , .................................................................................................................................... .
COlhiMeM 3114 C .... MIM JIJ41ft • ........ 3140 lwll Jl6t MewpartlHdl JIM ovinl! Avoid depoelts ~_.,..-...,._. PRIMEC.M. loc. l.500to
••••••••••••••••••••••• ·····-·········~······ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • cut livtng expeolel I 1 8 0 0 I q . f t . 0 f c .
2 ... I .. ~ Fum. or Unfum. Bach. TMIW'l•fUftll p•• NEWPORT lJdo ble. on water, bay Profe11lonally ilnce 17th ST. -...1 BRISTOL warehouse. $450 plus Apg. $300, 1 BR $350 + LUXlll'J Adult wdtl at af. MR . ...1-bdrm lr ll 6 lt'71. unu A t · f Newly decor. aa pd. $200.ecurity depoeit re-fordable llvtq. 1,2 • 3 COUMTaY CLUI di:"~ , v rm HOUS84ATIS mo. v . Imme .
e D c 1 I a r • Po 0 I • quired. Avail. immed. Br. Well decorated . · · 875-?1.55. 832"'4134 ,_54CM1525 _______ _
d / w aa her. Adu Its. 541-0l30 • Vlc:toria St. Otympi~ abe pool, lttht· ~ S.. ..._ Prime ground floor office from 65· 75c 5..,... 4110
14.2-5073 • ed tmnia court. Jacuui. Sla1l•, 162 bedroom
1
C • h 3171 For F w/chlld to ahr big pr sq. ft. From 200-3000 sq. ft.· North ...... ~ .............. ..
l .. To..,..•• Mesa Verde 2 Br. l Ba. part like landaupbl~ ~~1900 .... !! ... '.~ .......... condow/same, pool.Jae. Santa Ana near college. All utilities Si11tlut.or~,r1ara1e,
Newly decor. 1u pd., Dlninlrated RmAd:.~"noly ....'!: ::c: beautiful bld1. 0 --• r W'-CO~lbdrm, balcony' tennis $200. M.S-5Ul.S paid. East~ .. ..,.alOa $50/mo
1 1 co · "'""· ...--· ·Fr., S3IO. Ml-Ola ce .... ront or auter end 1ar. frplc, water 6 Room.mate wanted, M /F, '"""._ dj~ .. ~:::·AS:i~.: S.00.llt.luUrsecurity. Rentala. Fuml1hed • ~paid, pool• jac. 25-S'S,toabrbeautbouse 142-~ 842-0135. unfum. Broter.175-ttl2. • 1:15-%114. in Lac Bch. 414.5144 or 540-.3666 lwh •/taftSt/
.-wl.YDICOL Neat 1 Br. Bach. crpt, NO FEE! Apt. Ir Condo S-.... 3110 _4VJ_.a:J __ . -----nz•a• • •••••••••••••••••••••• friie, nr abop. UUJ pd. rftltala. Villa Rentals. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ u ..._. 1Br.1u pd, encl 1ar. $250/mo. 875·5810; 175-4912Broter 3Br.2Ba.Coado. Across ec!.etorstope.~ally d/waher. pool. Adults. ·~· _ & 2 io pes f s c Pl "'--uri M2.so73 .._._ • DisllWIShlfs & 980 s 2 br, l\; ba + gar, Hoag rom · · ua. ~ · select your compatible
~ ......
Op; ladJ SOOS
Spacious 3 Br Duplex
$410. Pool fr lauodry fac.
541-95.'ilfroqi 12·7Pll.
Newer 2 Br. 2 Ba. $425.
Sundeck , d1hw1hr.
1-.1411 Eves·wknct. or
~days.
•Pool & R-Room d ~1 6: swimming pool. rmmte to suit your 250-500 ..... It. &md nr, IASTSIDI ~~ Rotp area, nu ecor, ~-845-2482. ....
Ca I. 'I W... ~ G11c1en Lanc1scap11111 open hie Sat • Sun 11-.3, lifestyle. ShDr•redsui·Ll3vtngB. uWa pd. From $200. m
-w • J DA 11 & S"'· 2 B 1 ba So ct 833Dover le 1 Nl W. Ulth. St. C.M. Tom 2Br.6Study,tri·level, • o010 ... 1t ,..,ps 4218 Rllarla Way, r, ,near . • Ul·llOl 15'7-llOO.
fireplace. akyllfht, S« Git 9500/mo. 830-5175 Plaaa. Security gate, •---------
deck. No children or 1 Br. 2 Ba. ~ block to =· 1 child ok. No pet.a. Reep. F to ahr 1Je 2 br f.50 aq. ft. $450 per mo.
pets. S535. 180 E.21at. St. beadl. Yeuly. mo.152-7474. Nwpt Bcb bse w/apa • 4001 B1tth St. Newport
Days 141·42'2, Eves 541-a3 IBT, 2Ba nr So. Coast BBQ, 1275. 173·1155 . Beach. Agent541·503Z.
14.S-ll&U. ---------• Plua, pool, jac, play· W1·315'75
............. 4450 ..................... .. .•••••••••••••••••••••. • • *
Newport Beach, St.25 Mm. Colli
sq. ft. New dlx of flee or 1'J> Lexmtt.on Ln.
retail w/pvt bath. eo.taMeaa
security. a/ c, IOC). 2400 You are the winner of
IQ. ft. 508 Slit St. (next 4 fne tldletl
to Bank of Newport, <S14 value), to
Lido Cannery area). ._ ... , ...
~ear new 2bdrm, 2ba, 2 8411 Ba, $3'75. Garate,
frplc latmdry fae new Jard, no ltldia/petl, Call C,.., clrpl Ir peint~ Encl Cra.11519-MOO
1ar. $475. Adults, no
pets. 87S.2113. 494-5'758
eve.
WOODI •-...... Attractive Beacbfront _ __. L-1..a... OK -----------
-"1lr •,.. •·-· ,,._ • -Fem wanted to 1br borne 146-6191 Apt. a Bdrm1, 2 be. mo.(ZLS)-.-eves. w /iame nr occ .
Adult ha 1 6 2 6 3 Sta. Sava1t Wikle 6 Bdra.~lalt•lr eo. m.-or •em s.al J 1 3116 ™o. Refl req.
1tream1. Complete -*· ••••-•••••••••••••••••, ____ ·------•
BEST RATE
in
NEWPORT BEACH
875-SZll, (213)141·9'700 ... ....
PRIME
WATERFRONT
RETAIL
SPACE
llar. 4 tbru Mar. 8
Anahetm Ccnvenilon
Center
ameaiUes. No pet1. S •----....._ d Oceaalront i tudlo apt Fem non .. moter 11-25 to --pac-wm eon o wldl ,.itio. O'Nl'lookinl rn.u--2Miba.Qu6etloc. pwt ....... '550/mo uW abr SBr, 2Ba ~ecorat·
600to 4200 Sq. Ft. Call IC-51'71, est. 272 to
clalm your Ucketa. •••
REALTORS New upc:raded 2200 aq. ft. ---------
Euc. Townhouse. Baell 2Br. married cpla. 1 child
Bay Newport Beach oil. No pets. Refs. •
wtth view. %1 unit com· credit. Ganie in yard.
pies with tennis court, $425/mo. (Wl11oa-
pool, spa. $1000 per mo. Fairview.) 54.S-7SCll.
C!IJDdo. Refri frpl *750/ lad. .. maor-.~. eel hie nr bch.$200 mo. *':-11ns:.=• ~lo, carporf' is2:: G1·1'19,:.:..,44 We , , tu JHI H.B.53S-l140 •AdjacenUoA.irport Small llff, Commercial
I
~--Near new 1 br, centrally ....................... Cosy Ille to ahr w/fem or Ir Restaurant Row ca. 2 Bdrm w/nu located. encl. iaraie. New two bedroom, one male, C.11. SZ50 mo. + •Access to 3 Major
Sea We Diaplay Unit.a. " '
Bua. est. '11. 'IO Salet
approx. tl0.000. Price
cpt. paint, drpa. Klct. '500. m.nu betll mil with 1ara1e. ~ ~ Mull be resp. Fwys.
. *-llaldl.~. -i·-Inc equip 6 lavea.
S31.ICI013M'711· Olt. No pets. 712'1 HoJt. ..-...... -.... N rt --------833-88 I 3 $425. 147·4801 btwn """' ..-, .. .,_. ewpo .. Ill l'w ft d ·~
S.7pm. Hsta.-~ Ai;iCCitt1•'"00 ...... 4350 . I
Call Sheila Ml-9022.
---------•••-••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llD 1 fac 1. 2,DOO IQ.It. 12ll12dl: 329 Univenlty. Reduced to $1200 mo.
---------LG. 211r, Zba, enc. gar,
2Br Studio l\;Ba. Patio quietlleu Verde 1t .. no
M7S. B.I .. D/W, 1ara1e. peta.$4Z5.531-G513 D&AWAalfltMIS Seawind·Npt Crest 2 Br
1st TIME
AVAILABLE
SOQ.2600 Sq. Ft.
COPY SHOP: $37 ,000
Profit. $15 ,000 dwn.
WC/Bal. or Excbaqe.
E1tabhd 5 ~ yrs .
a1~;M24l57 =.~pet.a. 845-185'1, Lfe l.b&1n. pool, adults, SPACIOUS 1 BDRll 1~ Ba eandopool ,Aoced··~ ~· no pets $125/mo. Ml-7319 iauna, • ...... o
Super Back Bay 3bdrm 87a..4. Fireplace, walk -in _petl __ ._*°_·_87_5-8854_.,....... __
Condo. New crpt.a, drps, _Bedroom ____ Condo ____ closet, diahwuher, YEARLY. 3 Br. 2 Ba.
paint, enclosed garage. 1 near garage. Pool, laundry Ste1ll to oeean. -per
-00 .......... 00 Brookh, unt I Adams. fac. mo -... ....... -· •• . _...,.. . Poolfl'ennia, Etc. $450 . ..._.. _.._
3 Bdrm, 2 ba apt. Gara1e. mo. MS-4477 11221 Delaware St. Quiet 2 Br. 1 Ba. with
.. a11 Mar ist. Savage. . <So.ofGarfteld) 11ra1e. patio, pool.
WUde&Co. 87~ lmmac. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. M2..-n Adults, no pets. ll01 H.
2 car garage. $100. 15th. St. Newport
2Br. l~Ba. w/1ar. Adlts, 842-11215. Berit/Agent lwbdrm condo• Vll 11 a Hellbta. $450. M2-7MO. c.,U, drpl, bltnl, ftled a rn er comp ex .,
yd water pd QS.4120 2 HUGE Bedroom a in Refrte. MOO. After 5pm: NWJlt bland waterfront, Irr Victorla St S4J.5 au per location. Fully (21J>511Z·H01. db upper dph, 3 br, 2
JGJ "E"Orani~ $4lO urpeted/bullt·ina, Ma-• W•Apts. ba, frplc, 11.mdeck, 1Up 31lJ "J"SantaAn~Ave. tround floor. Adults, no Xtra lrt 2 Br. apt. avail. llatl.lre epl pref. $4lO pets. Sl50 mo. Apply Fireplaee, wuber dryer No pets. $150. yrly.
Apt. B 59 W. Wiboa. book up. Patio, dbl car -~ __ '1"72 ______ _
Lifte 1 Bdrm/bacbelor. sm including refril •
all util •1-%175.
14$.C18'7. 1ara1e. Cllildren OK. lbr, A50. 2br, ta50 • 91125. EASTSIDI $515. Nr R . Harbour Adults, no peti. 1409
840e07. Superior.~
S....YllW
La.'91 2 Br. 2 Ba. over·
looiint Back Bay. Loads of cloaeh.
ftreplace, 2 carporta, 2
bUciaaMI. 7'5 Oomi.a(o
Dr. Call before 5Pll. f1'5,.,...... or 16-lJIO.
SE AW IM D Co1ta lleu. Avail. lle.RedCarpet.SN.1351 VILLA&E llarch 2nd.* per mo. •D&UXIOMCIS•
New W bdrm luxury Dap~ From 1roomupto2300
adult apg m 14 plans Offtcie....., 4400 1q. fl. Low rates. No
fro111 SUO. 2 bdrm from •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• lease required. 2112 Du·
$505 + pools, tennis, Ele1ant prof bld1. 85' per Pont Dr. Adj. Alrporter
waterfalls, ponds! Gas sq.ft. lie. Red Carpet, Hotel. m-1223. t-12
for eoot1n1 & heatl.nc aa.1151 HIWPo.T CINTH Deid. From San Diego •---------• )°nry drive North on 2300 S/f. Low COit. Newly Jl'ull Service Suites
Beach t o McFadden decorated. Bathroom • SCUTCOSTS$
then West on McFadden wet bar. Quiet Coat a All you need for one
to Seawind Village. Mesaarea. moatblyfee! (114)aS.5198. .....,..., 840--5470
1.-4000 ''t-1133 Now available. Ideal •••••••••••••••••••••••
Nf.WPORT BEACH
SPECIALTY
CENTER
Broiler wants partners,
Arnie Quevedo. The
Prqaty llart. NO<JOlt ...........
Opp11hadl' 5111 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOAN '500 or more. Dbl.' your money. Loan l• aecund by unprecedftt-
ed lit In rum fl.naneta1
hlatory. 714-1157 .....
Ml!tJ "Trwt SOJI
• •••••••••••••••••••••• lou.c--location for Attorney, s,.dlla... ...
Laguna Beach Motor Inn, _.., -Re l E1tat En ... M Mow ...., .. o. Pacific Coast ~ t a .._ e ~rutif•··· W:lffi ~ Mft. Ce. -... , utl ult reprmeur w uo::a .... C7t4N7M662 All tn-ot real estate H:Tj Laguna Beach. Elepntexec vea es ly maintained full 1----------1 l.nveltmentlaince IMI. D • Weekly, Kitchen lntJ:reaU1e location. I e bua"ldlng W ..i~-rt aerv c . Ca ra'=' ._ .... A , .. available. Low winter oocn.,...,... auppo <Comer W tcllff Dr A: M -...,.. •-• • rata.414-52M. servlca. es · ..... 4471 WTDI
•---------• '714/851-0881 Irvine. Newport Beach). ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64•Zl71 1.4R~ ... 11 500 sq. ft.. Call llell11a --Corona ._debal Mallar aunndryy Rent: 3 IOOI to 3 yn. 190 M5-l!01. tore Spf\act !~ leaaft.e. Wlclo h • room • . w un 1500 sq. . • ,,_ aq. . w .. moDeJ ~or
fadl. SZ'75. Ask for Faye. to 8315 a/f. Flex. terms. Newport Center Lawyer in Huatlntton Beach. JND T .D. '• any 1l1t
M0-9Cll> Furnonn.fW"D. or other profe11lonal P' le :1lb1 e t et m •. aa.o.. $10.000. No credit lllJlit a_., •lnlle otc i.a exec. 1u.ite. Jll/91-'lJOZ. (. no palty. For actioa Dehll~Sulte. ~· ~ th-lllJ Lew library, recep't, i---CO_R_ON_A_D_EL __ M_A_R--1 call AGT 811·TU1
• cvuo, no1muae. _... •---------• t 1 h 1 1 an ... 1-•40.1514 eve. Jovce IOU.CIMTR e1ep one anawer n Prime retail loc. Hwy .JWOUV , avail. Lease avail. AV· f 145-5429 ---------.
5t0-m2day. HIWPOltT CO Financial Tower l'Olllqe. · . th .. nelMI Mft..
Room with kltchen Elepataecutive11lftea ~Jtll TOO 1q ft deluxe SINCEllll
uded ln pre1tl1e location. lbowawm A: warehouse. 11Ur:ald'l'Dl, 91GK·'111+ prtYUecea. util mcl . Wltb oocnp&ete iupport 2301:. l?thSt Seetoappree.Ul-4402. _ Owa8e,,!.L"•o,.~a•r •moN.B.sa.tlll 1ervtees. Co1ta llna 1ultea uw ~
Female, ate ••• non· .,_ __ 7_14_111>_1..oea __ l __ 1 850-IOOaq ft from 75'. All IMlllllPW...... 4100 ColDIDSdal•IDdUltdal
1moter, wttb kitcb priv. amenltle1. Call Terry •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ETERDOl!I=-..•
u. block to bcb NB Lusurioul,f\IUHl'Viceof· Cnmmaa.SM-IOOCt ·-. 1MO' lndua1/0f· •----------
TII • • • nee apace, 1-1 rma, COD• --------ftce.-11101 RedoDdo er. w--·--....._ ,_m._l7GI_. _____ ference room, 1ee'I ss• SiFT "P" HWlllBeb.IUllM ___ ..,.·-I'
•---------unlcn. Newport · ' OnYoarT.D.'I,= ,
Beaeb, Cell for info: l5118Q OF MES.& ••m·la•_. ornca. ,.. CdDa te..Atloc.
Wll1'CUflP AMA
SsecatlTe ••ttH,
1ro••• floor lo~. l.enitartal/booklMP· ........ e..0. Call tor
aore dttall1 .
(TM)m-lm.
tteUSTllAL
PAii
711 w. IJA. St.
C.-..... c.lf. '42-446J
171-711' •
I
r.
I
FO\md : white male Cat. l-• ... -----C• ... •1•--•S-1 Newtered. Abandoned. ~ .,.
F r ee, to gd home . W'l.AlrAC-..y 81~'111'1. will be intervtewin1 pro-
spective student.a in your P' o u n d : M a n · s area. If you are 18 yrs.
Wri&lwatcb approx . or older & a high school
2-2\t.81, Vic. Newport grad., you may qualify
Heilbt.a area. Call to for airline/travel career
ldentjfy64f;7339 training. Call tolllree:
1-100.426-1655
Vancouver, Wash.
AUTOIEMTAL AGT
No exper. necessary.
Call 979-8826 or 772-6550
BABYSITTER/NANNY
Competent woman lo
care for newborn .
Mon/Wed & Fri. Approx
6 hrs day. Xlnt salary.
67»423
Banking
I OORHPet F/C
SICIETAI Y
Costa Mesa location.
Good w/phones Full
lime. Typing, ~eneral
o Ulce procedures
~~
looW&eepilMJ ca.rt1
Full time. exper. helpful
but not nee. Many com-pany benefits. Apply at:
1660 Placentia Ave ..
Costa Mesa ----
•CAI DRIVetS•
Checker Cab
770-0222
CUSTOOIAMS
Night custodians needed
by Huntington Beach Cl-
t y School Dis trict.
$990-$1233 per month, de-
pendinf on experience. Apply 3S 14th St. Hunt·
ington Beach 536-8851.
Clllb:Mr l elatto.1
Growing rinancial co. in
F.V. needs person with
gd. phone manner. office
ex per .. typing. 10-key.
Will train on computer.
$900+. Call : Bobbe ,
839-8045
Rewud $100. Sml black
cat.-; Fem. Requires
me4kation. 5'8-6539 TELLERS ••• C.dllClnw.thr
8221 Pennington
Huntington Beach
-Data Ent r y
P .. 9*s• 5350 Joa.W..e.ct 7075
···~~~················· •..............••.•.•.. PRE LAW student needs BODYGUARD 125.~. Will do anything Xlnt driver , Courier,
LeVI. Confidential non-smoker. clependa-
DV . P .O. Box 3242, ble. Resp. 64$-6039 N.~.....,.
II HelpW.e.d 71 00
FULL TIME
Positioo available in our
South Coast Plaza office
Experience pref'd. Call· • Kathy Amburgey
540-4066
COVER GIRL ••••••••••••••••••••••• • OUTCALL * cc CALIFORNIA
_1Uat11 ___ M_c 1_v1_sA_. A . :'J:!'"G FEDERAL
You are the winner of
4fr.-ffckeh
($14 value). to ........
IWShow
Mar 4 thru Mar. 8
Anaheim Convention
Center FIRST LAD y IOOICKllPIMCi Scr¥t.gs & Lo. fi'.Cort. M--..I-ls To asslst in develo'Ping 695 Town Center Or
Call 642-S678. ext 272 to I claim your tickets._
UUC the P 4c L. Work under Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 ••• ~D90Cen. mlrumum supervision. · EqualOpportunity
'
Required to use indepen· Employer Cashier cir To Go position * 72-1 J45 * dent judgement. May ~~~~~~~~~I avail. PM shift. Exper.
MC• VISA Accepted assign work to tower-pre re r red Skinny llllllN:lll~MY-MAIL level clerks. Xlnt. com-Banking Haven Restaurant 9901
J • t , Ac c ur ale. pMalntfl ebeanfetfits.9ACMall 1-...a/s~cllbo«d Ya·nope~,:O Ave.HD Apply
C(T m)r:t
7
e
030
SIS Action MS-SIOO. er : ~personable ap-'""''·
~~~~----1~~~~~~~~1 pUcant with gd . phone CASHIER e tiquette . Exper Fulltlm e for lar ge l•--------1 helpful. T yping r e -marine hardware store AcCOWltln1 quir.ed . Call : Sylvia Xlnt benefits & working A/P CLal Wat.era, 552-6100 conditions. 64$-1711
Excell. career oppty. IAMC Of llVIME
&llper. nee. for Fashion Equal Oppty Emplyr
h landlnvestmentflrm.1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Medical/dental benefits I'
fully paid. Computer ex---------• per. Call: 840-0123 Banking
CASHIER
Cle rk /T e rminal
Operator, must be self-
starter. accurate. gd
with figures, ability to
work independently.
faml.llarity with general
c omputer conce pts
helpful. Salary open &
commensurate with exp.
Gd opportunity to ad·
vance with a fast grow-
ing Co. in C.M. 549-2221.
DB.I. F/T & '/T.
Eslary's, 3444 E. Coast
Hwy, CdM, 675-1354
Delivery Driver to work
al auto parts store. Must
be 18 or over. have valid
Californi a Driver's
license. good driving re-
cord, & know Cost a
Mesa. Apply a l : Hub
Auto Supply, 2120
Harbor Blvd, Costa
Mesa. 646-2464. ask for
Claud. ·· ·
Delivery man for L.A.
Times t.o homes in C.M.
& H.B. 3-6AM , $375-$450
mo. + bonus. Dependa-
b I e car S46-4481 or
HOUSEWARE SALES
Apply In person: Crown
Hardware, 1024 Irvine.
CW~tcliff Pinal NB -964-49112.
ACcr.CLBK
Ellp'd, mature person
for 1eneral offl-:e &
payroll. Accuracy a
must. C .M. are a . *"2231.
TELLER \ ,_...TIIM
The beautiful Laguna Beach office of a leading
savinp & loan has an
immediate opportunity
for a Teller. Experience
in S&L is pref erred. We
offe r an excellent
salary, free parking and
paid career apparel. For
more information,
pleue contact Gene
Friielle at C7W 494-7506
FtDBJTY
-------CASHIERS
UTUTEM
MARKETS
For 2nd cir 3rd Shifts
We promote to manage-
ment & supervision from
within. WANT A CAREE R?
Costa Mesa
111 Del Mar
631 -9421
FIDBAL Laguna Beach
Savings and Loan 494.9233 AuociaUon
An Equal Opportunity Huntington Beach t:~m l!!!!!!!!!!!!E!!!!m!!!!plb!!!!y!!!!er!!!!!!!!! ~~~ga.~9~us~~
I...~ Barteodenwanted for: Christian Mom needs
Y\q ~1' lcla • '• Pw9'HH. babysitter Must be nu-
j tAuc ,. IJ"""' Openln1 IOOll, 0 . Co.'s 1b1 e . l)la y s , so m e ~ "IW"I newest nltbt/ spot. 8 oJfhta/wkends. CMl-8860. h,.,u L-..J.. atorie!Jfnthesky. Pining --"--------JLl::S....e&._...iQ...~-11..· v~ 1 ~ • 6: dandng to rock 6: pop. CtaCUS VARGAS Cg{ M>? Apply in person at~l Coftl Meaa, Mar. 17-19.
1 • • El TOro Rd, Clop noor of omce • delivery help·
Home S.vinp 6: Loan P'/T,Call~JMI.
Bid&.> El Toro. Thurs, •----------Fri, Sat. Mon • Tues H•Je ~. to Mil 7
betweeftl-tpm. 951-2100 Cl..tned Ilda do It well.
DBJVetY..P IT
18 .ti over. Good driving
record. N.B. 751-4705.
DtwtalAuht.t
Chair side, RDA & X-ray
Uc. req .. 4~ day wk,
benefits. salar y open
642...,, 673-3403 wknda
Dental • °' Ilsa doRHC •••• La1Uft8 Beach. Dental
exper. req. Good wages,
benefits. 494-855S-
,
FectotyWOf'Un
Permanent position.
Costa Mesa. 631-0700.
Fi le Clerks . want a
change" Use your skills
for bonuses. 641 ·3907
Flexible hours. car.
phone.nee.
642·3169, 4-8PM.
FULL TIM E days/nites.
Ans. serv. No exp. nee.
Call : ~3333 EOE
G•dHtr Helper
Work includes operating
He1111on mower. Ex-
ce I l e n t b e n e fits .
S46-6682.
Kelly Services can otrer
you immediate. exciting
temporary positions
when & where you want.
•TYPISTS
•CLRIS
•SICllT ARllS
•WOID
PllOCHSOIS
Apply at: 2102 Business
Center Dr., Suite 208,
Irvine. ~l«l or 27957
Cabot Rd., Laguna
Niguel 831-0542
INSURANCE
CLERK
TYPIST
This is an excellent op-
pommity for a sharp,
detail minded individual
in insurance claims.
Good typing and office
skills are required.
We offer a competitive
salary, full benefits
package, plus advance-
ment opportunities. For
more infonnation please
contact Debbie Fowler
at 714-558-1414.
HOUI
•PM Housekeeper
MTllM/1¥"
We are aeek1M reliable people oriented persons.
Enjoy excellent co.
benefita lncludini a free
meal per shift. Apply In
pel'llOll 9AM-Noon, Mon·
Fri. Penoonet.
MAUIOTI HOTB.
900NewportCenler Dr.
Newport Beach
EquatOppEmplyr M /F
Part time help in olfice 4
day week 5PM -7PM
$3.35/hr. lo start.
Newp>rt Harbor Animal
Hoepital. Ul-1030
c~!~~ ( c..n.n Adult.a with outstanding
attractive pent00allUes
to spend 15 hrs per week
counseling youth ages
10-15. E venings 4c
Weekends Available. $75
per wit . Ca ll 2:30-5:30pm. Mon thru
Fri. 642-4321 e xt. :W3.
Ask for Lori.
HOUSBllPR ~Coast ;~~e-~o!~~~a;,u~:~~ :m':."la~eet
English, mual ha.,ve local Costa Mesa. Ca. hsltpng refs. Lir\aa Isle. E q u a I 0 P P o r t .
A n s we r Ad . # 3 5 6 ___ E_m--'-p_lo_;_y_er __ _
642-0JO. 24 hrs. Phone Sales/ Adv.Spec.
Houaekee_per for elderly SI ,000 IOMUS
lady. Live-in. Mature for eitperienced phone
woman to drive, cook & pros. Highest comm. in
keep house. Attractive industry. For confiden-
a rea. Refs. r eq'd . tial interview call Mr.
644-2120. 673-2991 Taylor. 7141498-2953 San
Housekeepers wanted.
Seacliff Motel. 1661 So.
Coast Hwy, Laguna
Beach. 494-<t892.
Housekeeper/Companion
for elderly person. Live·
in or out. 833-2009.
H~/Go•.,,..11
5 mo. mlant, live in or
out, N.B. waterfront
home. Pvt rm & bath.
Must dri ve. Speak Englis h, Ref's req.
642-5001.
Clemente area.
PUSsaOOM
SWBVISOI
Pos. requires min. 10
yrs. printing e•p. Strong
m echankal, technical
bkgrnd. in Web offset.
Org. Cty. co. Send .re -
sume: Box 1673. Daily
Pilot , P .O. Box 1560.
Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626
PRINT SHOP TRAINEE
Must type 40 W11m
333 3rd St. Laguna
Beach
Legat Secretary, exp in P iT -Frr help needed in
litigation. gd skills. H.B. mail room. Piece work
Non·smoker. 848-1400. +incentive. 641-3907.
General Office IMA
Legal Secretary for sole
practitioner. airport loc.
Congenial almosphere.
flex hrs. Prefer back·
ground in civil Ht./busi·
ness planning, word pro-
cessing exp helpful Con·
tact J im at 171-4 )
PUILIC
ILATIOHS Consulting firm needs Insurance Company of
mature , ener getic NorthAmerica PIT for resort condos.
GOOD phone voice.
AM /AFT. Santa Ana
ofc. AM/Aft. $4.00 hr.
aft. training. 543-7957
person with positive at-SOOSouth Main
tltude to do gen eral of-400Central Tower
fi ce work, greet oUents. Orange, CA
answer phones, type etc. Equal Oppty
Ca II Bobbi : 644 ·9174 ; 1~~!Em!!p!lo!y!e!r!M!/!F!!!!!!
~ves: SSl·Sl84 1:
~S-0363. , ...... -.. -.... r.clt Prfts o,tr .
GBBAL OfftCE
Typing cir gen. ofc. skills
req'd. Work varied & in·'
teresting. Costa Mesa
area.~7172
GBBA.L-OfffCE
H1mtington Beach area.
Sm. ofrlce. Invoicing,
typing, heavy phone
contact with customers.
847·3563
GBBALOfftCE
Need good typing, 10-key
skills & phone manner.
Order Deslt ·ar Ute bkkpg.
Part Ume now. possible
full time. 1S37 Monrovia
Ave. N.B. 548-512.S.
General Office
Pel"llOO with good skills
lo wort in N.B. office.
Gd benefits. Please call
Mn. Kelley at 752-8931.
GENERAL
Register today (or local
temporary assignments.
557-0045
Cf\-Llr\:
Tf~AllY PUISONNfl SllMCfS
3723 lirdo StrHt
Mew1MM'f leoclo
E.O.E.
UCJGIS.C' P /T evenings . Over
3yrs. exper. necessary.
Costa Mesa. 631-0700 Litigation exp. lor sole
prac titione r O .C
Airpc?rt Loe. Xlnt salary !~~~~~~!!!~~ position to start am med l'WI""" ..v 851·9339 TVAW I I
Live·in lady mature for
companions hip. lite
hs kpg/cooklng. free
room /boa rd Isa I a r y
Call Mrs . Dunlop
49'-807S ~
Live-in. young disabled
C~OL
I~~!!!!!!~!!!!~ female business student needs English speaking
Final inspection. hose &
filling. must pass co.
physical including back
x-ray. Taking applica-
tions btwn 8 & lOAM on-
ly. Stratoflex. 17671
Armstrong Ave., Irv ..
EOE. A Kendavis Ind ..
Co.
GUARDS-Irvine & S.A.
tocatlona, $4.00 & up.
978-7243 or 638-8191
attendant. Ask for Ann. REAL ESTA TL
898-9671. Opening for ca reer
minded person. Top
Live-in housekeeper com · Newport location. Serv-
'"'AllDS panion for elderly lady. Ing Westcliff. Newport F\Jll le part time. All 642-0!Xi6 Hts, E. Costa Mesa.
areas. Uniforms fum'd. ---------1 Liberal incentive com -
Ages 21 or over, retired Loan Officer Lie. nee. mission split to 80"k. Call
welcome. Nouper. nee. I M 'I E S T , Dan64$-7221
A pp I y : Un I v e r s a I COUMSaOI Century 21 Westcliff
Protection Service, 1226 W Sth St Santa A a Exp ln 2nd cir lrd TD loan Real Estate Lie. Nee. · ·• n · p1 I a c e m e n t . lnterviewhrs:9-12&1-4. c 7 14 >832 _6311 , IM VE S T .·
GENERALOFFICE _M_on_-_Fri_. -----C2l3)4ll-4a50. COUHSB.OI
Newport Beach Stock H . Colorist Exp in 2nd & 3rd TD loan
Marttet Advisory Firm. :ir hf .1 b ir lo · MACHIMIST p t a c e m e n t . If yoo can .... type, han-renc . ~ a co nst. Part Ume for short run ( 7 1 4 ) 8 3 2 · 6 3 1 l .
die telephones, do lite lyr. training cir 2>'"· ex· production lathe l(Ork-(213>413-4050.
bookkeeping .ti you want per. in freoch f?ll color-lite, clean "'b. &M-3215 ---------1 n g. Duties include -----""'-----1R t Estate to learn .... about the normal hatrdreeslng ea SUCCESS 01
stock market 4' data en-service; S7.SO/hr. Taite try,all~t237 ad lo the St.ate Employ-MACHINE F4IWlllM '117
,,_.hlllC .....
7AM-5PM
PIX0.-1 .. or
Exp'd. 2PM-lOPM
Codlttlll w .... w ........
Experienced.
4days5PM-1ZPM
1 day llAM-SPM
MWlthlllC"" Fri, sit. &m 11PM·7AM ••"* ..... Ledte'•SIM TAM·2:aou~»• .
Men'a8Da8atl8un
5:10PlM2Pll
PleaH eell ror appt.
US·7SH, Moa·!'rl., l :INPll
merrt Service office tn SHOP 1. Have YoU considered
Orange County. DOT the pitfalls of com·
9111 A.1 ... EES merdal & residential re-3S2.2'7lOlO I l\A " al estate? For example:
lmmed. open1ngs for l7"k INT. rates, tong
mach. operatora. Will escrows, farm ing for
train for C.M. plant. Ell-listings, competition,
cell. co. benef lts. etc.I
HAllDllSSaS
W /Clientel, be your own
boss . call Oladya
7S1·5221
HAii STYLIST
NEED NEW IMAGE?
Colleen O'Hara haa ·a
spaciom salon ln perfect
iocatlon. If covld be ~x
•ctlY what you are k>ok-
ln1 tor. Ml-1JU.
Dettronlc·MS-003 ,..0,.111191111 L.cl c:.,-.....
M A M t C U I I S T S Hu the answer for your W AMf9 succeu in 1•1.
W /Cliental 1reat rental, 2. Learn to marttet low
kl d colt lots and acrea1e in lllnt wor DI con . So. Calif. We have 104Jf.
1'7().21&5 INT. rat.es. Eam $SOK to
MATlllAL $150JC, nrst year, un-~ limltedleada6more!
Parta clertt, rubber bo9e Uc•ll Nmlntl producta, mUlt pau co. For' •utteA•ln Wl, ult
ph11kal iMlucUftl batlt few •r. Telles
1·ra1. Tak.lat appllca-, __ -._aa_•_m_-1551_---'
tJoni btwn I• lOAll OD· ty . Slratoflu, 11111 llC.noMllT
Armttton~•·· Irv., Pert Ume. Good a p-
EOS A v'-led, pe....ee. Uh W'Oftlnl
_eo_. -------• ::'~· Ut• typlna.
•-.CAL c~
llua t ha •• 0•11
lrantportatlon Ii be
familia r with C•llf.
I
,
--..
_ .. _._ ........ 11111••11:m• AlrC ....,,.... ..... , .... •--••••~• ......... •-• • -.~ ..... ..itt.-··-~ ..... ,. .... ··-,, . .. .,...:......... ....,._.._...,.,_°' ...................... : .. •,,_ .. A ..
AAA ... DOG . IMl ....... totallt~ * * • --.-aa , attreu/ Waller, ftAlllDIQ . -• wu....-bodJ wit.. .....1, •
Outtefh ..... ..._. Co•~ JN BOii& ••••••HHH••••H•u• ...... IMO HM. tlOt. lmDlilnrUtll.: rr--. .. st' tis ..U,~ ..,• a: l • ,..,.... o.c. Tralalaa. o ........ n.y Dft'DlllAft<*AL .... a Pl Ilk•~ trtr, ~; IM !If~
Au.tlDC.a.p, .... 'H/Pn-.lea tol•lat ..... A.a ...... OflllllV• el v .......... ot -.tn... ,,, da"9 •. Call Carol JI li 1tlw l»'lllS w. ... -..... alp. I • -• .. ... ...... "'" •• u .. for latenlew umn :··=••r•d Cuhal .... IJ .. :.:.......... { ....... ).to Por 8alj: ...... • -
1'ew,alt.._.liMdlu lp').;.l,S~· 11 .p _,_8Alltlfn • ea, er•H1-CCIPl•-..aa · • ¢1•1 ~ ... -!!~~~ Jo ..... Mtllal fu0 (7W • ...,...r,....A&C, HJ of 11 eoutrlH. ·-~ ....... ..... .. __
m.:--............ ti•• SmploJH well -.-.1111.• mr BWl71 Good .Ul Feb. ar._,,__,..._ •anatJ. Ortl~~• · - -_....._.-.a-·---WAJTllESS a.... llar.4tlarvllar.I Alldmlta.,_ ,._ ._.,. ..._ ·-.......... J;ap. preferred, for ...... Y• WI Aan'dmOoa..UO. ••,U. 6 •artetJ of ==~.:.=,~ llCllf Aa!/ cocktalh • food ...... -........ i;.~. LMel•w " ~ a.a. II. .... • M• t:~oftl.!!,.d•U•,· •• , •. CaUIJl.llM. llCWllOMlt ....-.CaUKaN8. ...._to ,_.10 mo. old B•U•m lo .. uet• d•· Ill Smeraoa siaao, Call1G1911, nt. m to uaa. ... trarR tt•. -_._ -tnlD Ssper. p .. o•H.i tJP• l'em. PuppJ, 1ood UYlred. Perfect for 1quar• Bab-r raad1 clalm,...uenta. ...a.11a&...a.:
,Mlll.O..., ... liil. · aa.. 45+wpm, Ute Dtkps. WOIDPIOCISIOI w/1ddl. ...-,Oft'Mioe.17M411 l¥0f7ke1t,budearvea • • • OfPOlnUMl1':Y mite. clerical. lnlne NI °' .-rt Um•. lm· . ta.111J 1• --... a..i.. ,._ k ROMWOOd. alat eoad. ~-/
C---_ ... Call•R ~-• medla&e--'-• lJl our• .--... -.pwrpae•, Collocton Item. tllOO ...._..,.. ••las!'!!
:\t exeeUcat :11;1oa _..,_ mu .. a . ·™ • lnlmofll~ledl• rn •ma IOIO dollwr, Mt up snoo. Trade or belt offer. 'VS r• · ttll ....................... _~, TO IMOCI Seen&ar1 of err ~ pt'OCellOr ....................... m.-it. -.1111 1...,. .... -................. MIW'POIT M":!'. ~i
... ~.. o(. flee.C.11. k r::" J:,.~ t°fm~: e..c.Sec'f.P~ htlll\ll, bUt wtU train. ** 1 IUY * * * * • GULBRANSEN Spinet. ~~.!!.IE.!!!. WIMC'!_EI. 111,.A..u. ftih;,1:1 ... -• .. --~ ~ c.om.mz .... _.. -t1 -. ..-•. 11 • •· ~ ll'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f CtreulallGB dept. u a ._ _.._. ••· -' Good med runutun Ir LeflP.T~ •'"·-. •·-· MZ· 71 St••1ee.1a.aa. Pvtlloait~aa1'ew=t · .;;; flelda.,.a ... tUvebla womaD CS maD) . ADllll•e•. · ORlwlllaeU ~ .... ft-~ aftlPlll ... _,__.., ..,_ s1 aoeeptloal1t/T7pi1t pa.rtUmualelPl'O(l'am .......,ofc.laColta Marr'r•rt oilll:LLbYou ... ~ .......,.,.n,,..,ay· ... _ mu.-' ....... b-bmw ... bHe _........,. ._ ....... _ al-'-.• 11 .... Excell. 1alary. •••••-...... •••••••••• ._.,_ •• ..,.,aA:IOI lrvlae LOWRY ORGAN Z RowtnsT ...... DORraJYll, II'~· ... .,. or lfl.tm,ed)J 1 ...-.. ..-•-·-...-. P'--e ea11 11 u.ru -·--~ Youa.Ntbewianerot --......... ' -cap • in.-. .... · <""' relatiou olflee. Rud up new 1Ublcriben bl Prl., aft: 4 ~16P II , Aatlflll 1001 64616H,IJJ.t621 4._....,.. ::u;;-~•·.::· Complete with, Utbt· · ~m / __..._Uwa.Ml·.r. tie e011unUDitJ. llany •·s--•• T .. -mpto ••••-••••••••••••••• < .. ••al·-),•-_...__:;;::: . • wetOtout.MZ-2131. INh. SI•• : .:> now la tllll prosr•m • ·-·· '"' D * * * llUYllUIMIT'Ull ... -.., or-.... -.-.-. •••••• .. •••••••••••• t ~I ean mon'Uwl SIOO per Pkwtade Co. ZOE ,,_. D • .,._... Les 111.a1ss • •I ks WURUTZD Plano wtth IDllaUble 1t:t 12'8" wtll •Lido PnU,Hla ... ~tAJ
N Lia.AL llAI• ~..,.._~~yj.uat a •W.uthSt.Sp.18 ll--a.-s~-s --~~II I beneh. Zboey Spinet. ~31> .p. O/B -Storawe. Storat~o't1 •wport' Beaeb. Good •' _. -SECIETARY N rt Be h --·-,,.... -.......... ar. Prt---P·•· --lauaeUas • era 8 te..,._. manner Im· We'n loddnl for sharp You~.U:.,.of doub&e,$100. ' Anahef~~veaUoa w:.--v· ..... 11 •or Sale· Brand new Hnlee for Uae 4 Mlf ~ Type to wpm. lodMduala no have • · 5 • ~ .&. .&. IJ _... free...._ ecz,-~ -v.n-vu .. • erlmlnatlnt boat• . · _s.._·-·------1 Deal appearance a.ad • "'"I A A"A 4 Call IQ.5111, ext. m to ~ IMJ C'brysler 1.5hp outboard 1'-ID' . .,...., ~t·•
tnaek lot ta1k1n& with 1 ....... J ,._.. ... (114 value), to KJNG..SJZE BED elalm J'OUl'tictet.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• enstne. ln tbe box. 1 yr (Steft) ., ti1'1 ~ST ..... We pay hourly ..,._. .. r..y of. ....... Complete,extraftlm. * * * Re=. TU'Ja l?Ocm, warranty. Orl1. INO. ?f.!:J:> :.-=-~~ :~.=== ... ..., .. .,,. ...... tm.m.cs SPLIT•SEASONED cond., Look bind· Aakinat750.75l.-? ,, ,....... ~cr'l_.I
da19,da19of,....llex. experienee helpful, but 61 ... & ,........ ~~~=u:.i Sewtnc11acb.lloatWard •MIWOOD• ,., .. /OBO.ITa.mc> J'/:a .. HOMDA C ........ ,.•,••••••7?,c/·11 C.11 . loc . lluat be DOtnecwary. 75 .,.. Ml•I••• C4later W/lledit atyle cab Uled *** .... lll••• Sp••t._. .1094 Lons 1tiaft, alnt for ...... 91~,;# • eheerf\11 •..--eatable. Call llonday-Friday tlwl'i ...._SI I It Call "2-5818, eat. 272 to u '1.S250/0BOs..5409 ....................... aallbo9b.$3Z5.17S.51N. llilt ·'/'I '5/hour Teri. wr.SS'78 IAJl-5PM. 157·2381 eat. _, - r John Wayne Tennla Club II -UP . SRAP •••••••••••••••••••• ""~., · ' · tlJIN ,.,. ....... .....,,.. clalmYoW"Ucketa. ape. apt. 1z peean dlninl f b hi LI B.a:.n · E ............ 9040 1110 I foot Cab.II'\" llC.noMIST •lew .. 6 ....... IJl.. * * * rm, peean deak walnut am. mem en p , UP Wl'l1I A SLIM GYll ••••••••••••••••••••••• C 9llO . ,.,, Irvine area, lam-5pm, Saleaperson. Paint _..a-a.._ -.__....... lt tbl I RCA $1100. Incl. transfer. Eaercber. Perf. cond. •'CHRISTri-cabln. T/S. amper m-4TM ., '"',!1 ,_._Som --•m•--lladame Alexander un • amp, 144-ls.t. All ln1truction1. New Gd cond $l" 000 " 1 , Ute tYJlinl 6 fllina req. eo ... _.. eexper. re· atereocombo531-1251 ,, '800/mo. (71,)"11-72f3, q 'd. Laguna Beach ... frwpwklMj. Do1Ja,tbe 8 11tladlesof N.B.TennllClubP'amlly $200.aell fort75.980-5844 ITS.Soeo · ' · Mstabltl .... tlW(t
IJl.llll. lumber Co. 494-8538 or the US, mint-In box, W l c k e r R a t t • n llemberablp evea/wlmda. ••••••••••••••••••••<li~• ·-
540-8387. • APPLY $ll00Mt.N&-4380 P'urnisblnes BIG NCMUO s . T lit 15' Owem Brig, '83, Tw. i /";t:
Rec. ... nl1t BLUE CROSS Gateleg end table, tm. DISCOUNTS! 139·7239 Cc,8.!n~ c~':nJn~a tenf. ya·a. ~· N.B. moor-MIWPUCHMOf .. , ,A. ·
Putl Pull'nme Recep-Salespersons, canvass -·---... Chlldren'1 icbool desk, 11785F.dingerlblkwest Orl,1 Oil Palntln1 10 10 U ed 1 tng avail. $17 ,950. AQyllodel -W'°l•H .. ,.1o , tloDilt. Typin1. llsbt trainees, pd dally. No _....,.._,,~ $200.541-"102 of Harbor ''Fruier'"'9 Uon" 4• x tl~e .' ;~;80.s5944 ~1&;&w-1s1eeves. Save"l!tohl'J. ;u.7;/f
bootkeepln1 6 other exp., start lmme4. CALlfOIMIA 4• Old Avon Bottles U1250t ~1-clerieal .oR. Huson Ir 417..f«IO 344 lrnMI ala w A•plmc" IOI 0 Double Bed & Mattress 7tc)..a3 ev /wknda. 13 ~ • W ha I er· 2 5 b _, • • ,f"
Auoe.151·11151. SALES PERSON , Drift ••••••••••••••••••••••• 125. Kins twins S50 ea. For Sale: Brand new Johnson , console, ,,,.. ir--•-HARBORAREA Full Ii.le desk Ir chair CH&JPAITllS Chr)'ller 1Sh bo d telefla steering, 1wlvel PE'UGroJ'llOPSD.,:J1/> llC9'TIOMIST mature. for 1peciallty C-.tl.9:;-705 APPl.JANCESERVICE I -5. a drawer dresser Yea! "Chili Man" ls Pout ar seats. cover Ir trailer. Nearnew.-/080 ... , ! bop Ex helpf 1 b t a "' ensine, in the box. 1 yr Xln _.. ii d ~ 175-4115 f Full Ume. Sun.·Tbun. • · p. u u Webuy~':cfllancea $35. New Tnmdel bed back in bual neu ! warranty. Ori•. ,950_ taJDU. $2950. W I e· · • &ih~
Litetniilll610..keyex· not nee. P\tllltP/time. 714-641-IJOI ··weaell .suar. I $100.:W0.'7W7 842-5837. Al ... " .. -50.751.'-7 duct$t00iltra.ilernotln· eerlence needed. Pvt. CaU:MS-S.forappt. equalopportunity appliances. 50-3077 -.•• cl. Call Howard at P ..... 121-$J71 •.i1
CountryClub.144-54CM. Sales-i.-cathy Jean, employerll/F Ele&antsofa w/k>ve seat, LAWN MOWER-Seara Medium women's wet ~01. CaI'JDebl,51rrlm ..-.--I IUY APPLIANCES pecan coffee &: end Reel type, self pro· ........ ·--~ ... ...., di · M t J::I llC8'T10MIST Fuhion Island's finest Lea 957"8133 tables, $250, 19" color pelled, Z..5 HP en1lne, 5 Sun • .......,.._, vmg 22' 1H7 Chris Cra ft 4'1:: ·•
With or wttbout typln1 clotbint/shoe st.ore bu •Secretarial---.----• New 15 cu ft. Froetfree TV. $145. Sofa. bed, blade, buket included. equipment. 75l-898'7 Cutlua-Classic, xlnt h flllJ·~
needed. Top pay. Tem· immed. openln11 tor -•rt•.•~"". Micro-av• •molted class dtnette. Good condition. $75. Sfore,htf-ml, cond,ZlOhpChev,cuddy 7 ................... ..,.,.,,
porary6fulJUme.Call ea1er, attractive * * * "" .. -.. "' lntcond&U2998 5473112 ... 1095 cabin. Otrshore or alci. 78 YZ Yamaha 250c>•
Tod Services at 97t-l900 aalespeople to work in Aman• Radar Ran1e x · · · . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Buying bitser boat-Barely ridden. "500. lir."·' ~
our P'ublon Isl•nd s c1n..11y; $15084().7"5 Dresel party table, hex· Irvine Coast Country Comm. flattop IU stove. must ucr. $4000 or Ul-IIM. .• ;,
RestaunntRelp store. We will train the , E '-"' Washen. Dryen: GE. agon, 4 chairs, $250. Club Membersh i p 3'.fuU-alzeoven.$325. makeoffer.83'1·7918 'llHondaATCllO,Bru4· l :.=.:e~~i;li~ ~f~a~:l·JC:t-:~ CLERICAL Whirlpool, Kenmore, LaDe wrlt1n1 desk , available.965-21111118.' 642·1900 LIVE Aboard boat In New, Used once . ., .•.•. ~
In Be b ff Maytat Reconditioned walnut, 'll:Z4x29, S75. Port·a ·Crib, $35. Hi•h b LI bo d II • 770-UMor548-31M .. ·~ penon. ac ouae 75t-tr700. Opportunity exlau for reftnls~ iuaranteedi . Sofa. 8', 10ld/0Uve leaf, .. Ice mac lne, flaker. ve a ar a p. 40 .
Restaurant. m Sleepy ---------1 qualified typist ln actl.ve tusdeliv~red 7~3103 '75. 84().-chair. $30. Stroller, $15. needs repair, $200. Dys Owens re.ady to move '78 Kawaaaki KX %50, ~.,ff_
Rollow Lane. Laguna SALISPllSON ofc. Shorthand at die· . Llkenew.17~7752 6'$-01'5; evea9M-et12 onto. NB.M2·4844 Fad«)' Dirt Race Blal;~,.
_Be_•_ch_. ______ 1 P'ulltime, ambitious tapbone helpful. Enjoy Gaffers• Sattler 30" gas Cou~_Sl50. Dining Tbl 't. complete Beauty salon TV ...... 30• Pacemaker •63. xlnt xlnt cond .. very fa~ll.I :~
aaleapenon wanted to excellent co. benefits ln· ranie pUot-free wndw S "'llQ $180, 4 sport 14 -uipment le misc. furn. ' $500 OBO 541-94, flr'J~'' .... _ _.~ work l n marin e cludina a free meal per dr ~8moa Ute new Wheels $10, Wood -lm5 tM, Shncit 1091 cond, 400 ml. range , 770-&D4 Del Taco in Newport hardware store. Bo•tinl abift. Apply in penoa sz7s.175-T15Z • · (cban.tinl baby) $20. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cn11ader diesel enc. lo 1-----------:){
Beach is now hlrlnl full exper. preferred. Xlnt IAM-Noon. Mon-Fri. 751·SZZ1 day1, 541-1581 RCA Brown Wuber like Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr ml, all canvas, freab '71Rll125Suauki. Alao"7f t •
• part time help. Both benellta A workint con-Personnel Whirlpool fro1t-free eve1. new 11$, Seara Lady wmty. Free delivery paint topside • bottom. XR75 Honda. Allo a ra•-:;r'1
day • nltbt a blfll dWalll.845-lnl. MA.lllOrTHOTa refril, near new, $175 . .,.,_ .._ Bdrm Set -.. ICmmon Witt Port. Dia· $141.MS-17•. Dana Pt. $17,000 firm. moto«7cle trlr. 11..n_,..~ ava!IUle. Pleue apply ---------• -• ._ --Da-(213)4'S-3269 u ~T.J in _person. Zll.2 South IOONewportCfttt.erDr. MZ-43el,~ Full BdrmSettl ' b..atrS75.17cu'PhUco ADVENTVIDEOBEAM ,. · lie .7SM4'10 • __ ,,..
Sut Bristol. Newport SalespesllOG NewportBeaeb ~Tbl h5 End.::·· N o · F r o • t lOOM. 7' acreen, wuha· 14' Motorboat without lllNl·BIKI! ! ~~~
Beach. COSMITICS EqualOppEmplyrll/F W~~er1_.•~;,. •la.e -~a -;.._~ ... l P' rid I e I F re e 1 e r ble. llke new, ce»t S4400. motor w/1 yr ~h tJe-up Honda MR 50 soo'"' ~ 1 •·-,.,...... w _....war· -· ~, _., _ _, _, Avocado w/lcemaker u-_.. · ' ·~' Restaurant Hltb fuhlon 1tore. rant.)''tllApriU300/0BO 5411Mt eves, 751·5221 SM>.• Vlct.orta St. lie _. ....... -7911 atBackbayS200M2·1174 cond.t300.541-Z5tlev ,J
Newpo. rt Beach a rea. ... .. -da-Co ~-.... SHER s .,. Show dancer wanted Eacellmt benef'rts. Call: Secntary --,_ tA-1 Cll 541-0130 See m~ r • tereo 32' Pace, FB sed, V8 'a, c Ebdoro motottJcJe:-l . ·
for: 144-noo Jr. SICllTARY Beauty Salon Equip: Like new contemp. blue llanqer. 536-1104 xlnt buy, 2705 W. Cat 193 mllea SJOO. C'1.l..,.
Id t 111"aPcalt ••• wanted for Newport ff •draulle c h~ $75, aola w/matchins chair, Bwy,NB. Bkr,842-8200 tG.a75 J -' o--. O c • ' Redwood, 2 x 8'1, xlnt Car Stereo like new 2 · """ .--I 800D, . o. a HC'Ul'ities ft.rm. Hrs. 7 to Shampoo Chr 125. Styl· ..,caall, ...-Z d= 11 ooo• h d kn bi al IMI/ = newest ni1bt spot. I Sa'-3:30Pll. Contact: Ma. 1n1BartlOO,HalrDryer .......... 1 .... :......·u· on an 1'Pt .. • tsrap clequ . CL---. 9050 '111T~.'!'!! -~. ltclrimlntheaky.Dlnlng ---... liW-tlll $75 751.5•21 daya , Redwvuu bu.r table&: _.. -~ v ra ape P ayer --.--1000 u:u. _,.,, wr.s1 "'
llcbnc:lnstorock6pop. llMTAL ··-~eve1&. klDt1he wood bead· S200/0B09-3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~52'1'1 Upto$7.A~. yinpenon COMSUl.TAMTS · board. .. c.157-3311. McM._! .. •1 I C 0 mp 1 ... t . quad *11111AC21'·M'BOATS l-0-.-~-----...1.~ ... at --n.1 (to Se rit ffi P /T -55315 '" '" 8/12mo . ..i ...... pre""''d nave · J'WW-1 no:;';; ibne s.";ing1 I ~!! r~ Re~~~ w~:.-1,t! ~e!Pt. coo'. Fr 11 1 d a I re Ref r 1 I Glau top 31 in table set Panwnlc stereo '75. from $ll0/;;;;: lncl:d'in1 to ..U~ ••
Loan Bids>. El Toro. oriented penoo for en· plex in N.B. $3.50/hr. ~~~ ~:!.,::;,~: w/2 ant frealeb cbn $195 S!';~r!~~~llio~ta~:T! 142-~ slip, lesions 714/IJM.!elN It well. eo.tlfl. Cl
Tinn. Fri, Sat, Mon -tr try level POI· in home For info contact Jim 151 .. 5221 days 541 .. 1519 CTS-1&9. $1J5/0B090-88'74 -· -· · i
Tuesbetween•tpm. fumiabinp. Breuner's is Luplaat&M-1.IOO. eves Roll Top Sec'y, many • • ')~/. California's largest 3 Metal Cat Carriera, 1
llSTAUIAMT furn. 1'9llal co. le needs SIC'YfRICB'T. Freezer· Ill c u . ft . draw/supply spaces. $20/ea, other misc cat r----""'!_..,,,,.,,,.7-........ .....,.r---I
Caterina Co. baa open· qualified aalea & mgmt. Sales olfice for national Upright. G. E.. ireen, very ICJOd M50981-'12lllO accea. IMZ--0529 " ., :
lnta for full time, part 1tatrforexpandlng mkt. co~pany ... Variety of see it runnin1. $125. Antique din.Ina room set. • 1w ·") t I m e , 5 A M t o R_.._,. f'd. Will dutia Excillent com R ble' John W ·1 I 9 : 3 o AM / 1 P II r o r CWU.I exp. pre · CY ~.--. Ne~ of·. Balboa. l75-0558. 8 chairs. Needlepoint euona · ayne l. J. I
nd ..... h d train. S4. hr., dependln• ucuc•..... .. •-Good dltl Tennis Club Family H w•C • aala H · of esp. Full or p/tlme~ in Fountain Valley. Sear'• Almond Refria. e sea... . con on. I
aembly. Also need full E.O.®. M/F. Mon-Sat., The Standard Register moa full warr, 11 cu fl. $250.CallM2·35'78a.ll.4. r=~y.f4·1113or
time slicer to train on t-5:30 Ir Sun. 12Noon· Co. IG-9361. Orts price '741, wlll 1ell 9' acla fl love.seat, green --------
portion control. Lori's 5PM. Contact: Jeff EqualOppty Employer forM. 714/....._ with walnut trim, gd ENCYLOPEDIA Kiteben, m.o747 Tboanaa at845-t772 AMERICANA SERVICE STATION AllANA Refriterator I copd, $150.144-19'74. Compkte aet. excellent RE'!'~~~•CH ., ... ..., ......... .,.. .. -.. Attendant. P /tlme. l"r'eaer. Side by Side. DESIGNERS F URN. coodition.'15.at.fell
__ _ ~.r..o> .. nn.u-...,..,..-, Eves/wknda. Neat •P-15.1 cu. ft. Harveat Gold. SALE
Hardware.~. full 6 Full or pt/Ume, exceU. ~arAan~ • baNndwrit· Xlnt condition $200. Henredon/2 match p/~ MO Broadway, opsity. for collese •tu· ang. ..,...y 2590 ewport m.e111 ~ 1 doon .-i._ dent.a Ir mooali1bten Blvd. but"'..,. 2/1 us · ---------t . llartin ol London/I din· RN 11·7Cbarlenune-80 Eul_lY earn $10..b.5/br. 'Service Station Atten· IC en m 0 re d r Yer • int cbain/2 arm/4 aide.
bed Eel". Pull&: part Call. Jack at 9Sl·21M2, dant. Fulltime.Applyln Wtd.rlpool 11 1al cap Cal-llode /Country
time, Id 1alary. Mesa l.fl>ll person , La1una wuber. Xlnt cond. French din.int table 2
Verde Can•. Hoept .. 181 Sales Chemin, tlOf So. Coast '350/tocether. M2·0112. leava.
Nwpt Bch Tenn.la Club
fam. memberablp avail,
hOO. Call AnawerAd
1'51. aa.aoo. 24 bn.
Karaatan Rua lO 'Xll '
Blue/Wlne main colon
_.,/OB0-.1113 Cen&erSt., Cll 541-5515 WOB AT HOMI Hwy, Lal\m• Beach. M2-Zll2 NM1ZZ
Route clrlvera wanted for PARTTlllE EVES. ~ -sT Refri1. GI!, IOld. 7 yn .... ~ ....... ._Lo bla .. Su,.. S.vlnp on Amwa1 PR wort for .relOl't COO· ~•&"'IV' •n o Id 3 O ~ s 8 7 ~ ~-ve seat Ca Produc\s ~ otf 6: X defoodli~ ol new snlocae~ doa. GOOD pbone voice. Self-starter with ad. typ-S300/0BO ~Ila ' naus. $100. Wuber &: Dl•tributon Inventory
.,. .... uet.s to a Weekly, paycbech lng • abortband •kills · Dryer $125. Ph.w otber clearance 151·7051, .upermarhta. Some +boa._! u ready to for position with lob of Ref'• clean wort IOOd teo items: Call 17J.4179 Ir 131·1731
exp, Id drlvlnt record. wort. call: 54S-715'1 variety; some personnel • $100. Retri1 FP', clean l75-GIO.' ---------•
Perm. position. 14&-ltOO. • insurance work. Will xlnt aoo. Fm, uprtsbt, · · · · · ·· ·· · · · U lntenlted ID Amway
SAILBOAT RIGGER. consider part time (3 clean, worb lood $100. Wanted: 2twin beda, res. Producta, please call
Eapertenced in elec· SICBr AaY ·d a Y I week ) . Ca I l : Wahr, clean, worb 1ooct or ~ aiae, complete. ..._ A* for Mary
trcmk inllallatioll. Call For mf1. co. in Calta 540·75H for appt. $15. Dryr, 181 clean, llUlt be In lood cond. anytime.
• lleu. Good tJplnt Stratona, A Kendavla worbtoocUT5. 541-1511, ReMOaable.S3f.3MS ---------•
aft. '7Pll: ztM».m'T. ikllll. Sell·ltarter. Sal. Ind., Co. EOE 54l-4m ... _ I060 8kUa bead lto $125. Sew· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif eommemurate w/ablli· ..--lat meb $150. Vickl IA' B tJ • aper. XJDt. wort· •STIUC1'uaAL ltenmore waaber $75, ....................... 17>.0 Da11. 552-IUM
Cul 1rl1W1111 lqcand.1114700 •••1 llaJtas washer $125, ,a~ag:'::Rflftect aft4pm. TBAJNSD '7MI tO Holpolnt dl1bwuber ~MlM."55'1.-0 V-ld_eo_s_a_m_e _m_a_eh_l_n_e-.1
,,. tc a parm. POI· tor ·sac-• •y ""1111._11111111_111111 ... illlllWlll. • 15 · Q u a r a "teed 10 Will aell trade buy e ...... ortcat.d, .,,,..,,_ _,_ .. ~ Jew•J 71 G teed' A t •
maelntecl bMU•td;i:. Xlnt opportunltJ for S!YJ!U ••••••••••••••••••••••• uaran . e now Our eo•E• .. •Hln llwppencmforpoeWoa Nondcl retrts llSAC u WW tnde eomplete *' _m_~ _______ 1 .... b" I ... pneram with wr• paekcaln• • s D c f r 0 m 0 II c ROllCn n.tware (I let-, ...
_.11 •-_ ._ .._ Co. • eUntin ce1 molmtlme Ute In RV. u.. + ......,.., 1a e... ... ,_.IT ·-""I .... 1 --.,... lla.N B Ooa4 Mel'e&artal , .. ..__.... ~ --wctber $150 Uke ____,, --• w'M• • ... aeetl. u illli. ·needed, typlas • -..-. -· for __ , 14 et 1old •Earn llOMJ
...-........... ft· ...... ..,..,. dldatbts llU9TBEllOROVl!R .......... c--.w·or-..r.Call m.au
._.. e•ta._ MN la madlM np a mmt, CALLlMJITOIPll I Al itt1111rW.ltll fotiallGrlnatiaD. ..... ....._ =
tll• o.c. aru. ID · •'rrt=d _ _,_but • 4 ···--·············· .. ,.... -w1 -... dl.-t ........... to won ~ beotfttl '8f'd Is~ dlrectloe ...... _.. ·~~~~~~~~~llteel bulldlDta. JOU· llae't lCl.. ,.U0W-phi •••-•H•••••• .. ••• wlll.._..,MOIJ,... "9tmo+.CaOLo61atr-....................... ln11l1Uu...,.,to•· w...-: Veta •able, u,.-. ....... •kill• _rrw __ -._m_•·----™ctm ................ land est> w.. 1e11 •t ... .,4 •ood r. .... ,
•l•ll•lte4 lHO•• Pn.eWol. hll time. ~~· AIC •••••. ..~ of appula~d eaM. ¥or ...... ,..
Mt Md J'w tnfH· N.-e:s., ~ lleta ••IH.141·14'1 or •at '"1e.llMMI ~..:::. r%' .=· UW. IOGOL • 1 taocd, I a t'1, allllt 1_ .. _.,_._ ________ _
.._....., M.t · TIACl•AM = ........... lCl. ... rflll.PIDOcull lnnlMnmlllllt !Alt.' eet: S.C.S. ... Nqldnd. CUI ......... JcwetrJ+ Calf. ....._ Cotta lleu. Gardea C. •n ..._._ .. ••
ma lntae. 0""9.,_,, ea.out. .. ... -···········-AaU. ~ -..a...n-_. old ............. --......-..... -r.
PIT J,.'!:!!.... Y' ........ ••tt••· ce.n:~ • lta."r.'""-eare ..... -.Je.tlTI ~~-------<I t:=: .... ·~~: ''OW&"........... .... Dia. l ... di.• .... lnl•• ......... n ... -., ... 1.f~et1 •••••••.
• _,,...._ iltUll ~ II ) 11 r.•· 111• --· WU'---------.... •·•••: ~·:. ... oan tor late • ... ---· ... --------...--m•t• ...-i~..;;.;;;--~;...;...;;;;;,;-..~
••a
•tr .,°' '• ·•"1•y· ..... ==:: --= .... .........
• •
i. • ~1 7 or tl tasll \I\ U eounW ad~ertisers\ il
\\ere' s a sure· th\ng tor orange
'~
ZIOZ l+I, ••••· M•re.del, 'Tt. IOeSD. Alll/,. ...... air. H lllaple Y.UO./a.mboo. tires, Xia ecmcl. SD-00 Sari, 1tereo caa1 .,
dys, .......... alM>wNOm coed. Sl'J.500. 557 ...... ._. "It alll!Z, .uv.r, a /e, 1na1 1---------1 ______ .;.___-1
whlll, dlll CCIDCI, .-. 'Tl 480 IL: ctaulc white, f .,.e. f761 ••••-•• .... ••••••••••• ~ &Ill& eand .. ··-mu .......................... ..,. Eledra 2 dr, Jo.dH, 1--;;..;..----"-,-, •••••••••••••••••••••• WI IUY ---"-------1 Call Mt·lHJ eve1 • ,. --Cell• Lft .. _.. •hit .--.... eletm ... .,. ' '11 240Z Cla11lc: Rblt wlmdlorl3MMSld'aya. ..,,...... ..a u.:a -' --· ......... ••••••••••••••
'IODa*-ca•••Mc II tftl· Ute .... tllro~. low imllet, •lat eo11d. ..... r11 C...ar xa.1, stat Pk:k·Ut ~ A , Call tor detal.lt. S.00. '11 uo &L Maple a/e, arkd auto. tAtoo C..... fftl cwt. 1'• ml •• 'e-~-•,C!.-..•). rm ... ftUCll Ul-l!N. Yelao./Bamboo 15,IOO ~1-•ay•. 911-41" ••••••••••••••••••••••• I .,...U71. m..i. . _... _____ ___. -.=11·-m 1, a 11 ext ta 1 , _ ... _-.-_ _,"'-'"-----1
-· aluminum wbeell . "12 To7ota Corona, auto, YOU.ti r TO Co us• r X R 7 , ~lmportl hard/loft topa, lmmac. dean cu. usu. CAl&LAC I Dlamoad Blue eolor, IJt.JJf I $3t,250 ull or lee (855GQV).UMl21. _., ..... .,. a/e, lood coad. Oril
-. 1-.. -11 180·1133. 5tl·t0t4 , w .. t770 Ol.._ICOUMTYI owa, uader SOK ml,
&v7. W -• anny 91~1'70 Tl-Wdjd ~ xtrat. loob abarp, aak· 'IO Like oew ._ SlOGX, 41pd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES, SE.RVICE.._,._ --------H-J-I
lntMIOO..U·mG 1--------500GB, '1000 m l, fully am/Im CUI, C\lltom int. MBZ t5I&. CPE Z7K·ml, '75BUI AND LEASING _......,..
'T7 .. __ ......._ _.... .... TOP DCX.LA« :-wr· lthr. sunrf, pinatripe. PriCed to Hll. bell• $28,500 144.5133 Sunroof, EXCELLENT ..................... .. ~. wone Wn.a , ... mAa •• 1_. ~l. call ai·1Z11or17ir ...... ...._ ... _ M. u.. CONDITION! ( ) NABE~ ....... 1·-c--blue int., lo mllea191 like ...., rv9' ·~ ,,......... w._..., ev~ ~ 4....., ! OS11'11 --· _.,, •·
.OOD ~ c• .... --97 u _Alk_.__fi_or_Dous--=-· ---daily s-· Clean. one. flt50, P'or· new , 1 owner, • ~ ---------• • ..,._ C O · ,.. ... _.
1u/propaoe, bed cover, ...... c••st •••••••••••••••••••••••':JI 2IOZ, air, am/fm, •a llercedea 2808, Id Buwlctlmports A ILL . -----·----
custom "bla & ma11. •~ AA Por the beat deal I'll Upd, M.000 mi, broaae cmd,SMIOorbestoffer. ·11t.lJll ZUOOH.1r1x>181V<1 '710Ytlllqer.5spd,alnt
Xlnt
'1'7 l.H. SCOUT. Auto. •
cyl, tat $600 ta~ea.
588-XJl
... l+-_...:...;.....;..;.,:..;._ __ -l'TT Chevy 30. hi&b cube PORSCHES
Poal·&rac u..-" van, Grauman alum.
<>nmse Coun~r··· Come mett. Gd cond. '5200. ssr .... 7.2915 Bill c~1.1.Yr.1 s40'Q100 • cond. am/Im, other ex· SeeU.Today.. 4M-ll25. 7'YWVAM tru.S.18.N.B.
$ . "12 Mereedel 2IOSE, t dr 7 pa11en1er, looks fr • 'TT BZlO~hback, 51,000 sedan, lo ml-onty 49,000 runs peat. All orisinal. 'T'1 Seville, fully loaded, '7t A..pea Wp, I cyl,
ml, nu ti.rel, lood cond, actual ml, U1bt belie <mo> Im mac. cond. ln/out, =~ pb, $5000 or
u.DD1 BACI *2I00.1'7S-0'181 flnilh-ori1. 4 1pd, stick. CllVIB IMW $'7500. PP. 5'6-lmdys
v •• • _ ·~-s .80 _ -GL. T-top, caaa, 1unrf, stereo tape, new lit fr,Bn>adway ..,,. n...i ..... 11 Int ,,_... _._, b -Mich radials tereo tape, 5antaAna 835-3111 '19 Eldo, sliver fr blk, blk "' ...._..., oaaco, x
2MQ:t)larperite Pkwy. rown, MOO ml, xlnt fuel Injection, 1._995. lthr Int, moon rf, leas cond. -.nrm.
MlulonVlejo cood.581-4Xm t9t-STC 791U. than lt,000 ml, mint ~1350 .
131·2040 49S.4949 Plat 9725•-.--------• COMYaTIILI cood.tu.900.&St·SW. "74 Dod19'Polara. Rum
CloleclSund ••••••••••••••••••••••• 79 MB 45<WiLC. Silver. 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AM· '73 Cad Eldorado $800. 1ood. New tires and
1 _______ aY'-•--MUSTSILLlll anrf, mint cond. Low FM , radial steel Urea b k •t 200/0BO mileage. 7H·!Ja.1730 with wire rlma, red with Full power• MUST SELL ra ea • • 1976RAT 121 , lowmllea. (827XDN) 541-t744or~ _84_1_·_1153_·_. ____ _
...... 1 body. overhead door,
' u.uY9na ' 5 lu1. alr, am/fm stereo, 18,000 WANJED ...,..._ Tio.uMor mi. 01'11 owner. Mint
cood. t-Spm: 173-1401. Allow UI the opportunJty ,_... to conalder the purchase
'SS Chev 1~ tAll1 Flatbed or trade-in ol your clean Dall• z wltl) UAgate $'700. Porsche. Check with Ua 845-1100 Today! ..,... '"---~~~~~
+ :.-::r-•• '18 Courier w/sbell, -·_IJD~
7 J7 nalra, cwtom seata, etc. ~
· · $1800. Aak for Dave --•ro
ted: V'e1a ea1lDe, .__-.._15lll __ . ------'
'14, leod runDIDI '71 ~MC 1 too, dual cmpr ..!!::.=======!.-l
• buy or trade ror apeciat. , wh1 dr. fully Top Dollar ~e.e•. tN-tM5 loaded. $7000. 548-11164
: VWTypell Cbevy Luv, tx4, 8SOO Paid ~cue. mi, air, shell. xlnt cond, For Your Car ! \
two. m.99u JOHMSOM & SOM
_. 114 west.em style 'et Chevy Truck new eng, U.C• Ult"C.WJ
.... wheel•. $20 ea. needs clutch. $300. Call 211i211Harbor Blvd. ....,..,Jtl Ntl Jimet5-47S7 Costa Mesa S40.S630 !----~~-~~~• ~!::'.~ .......... ~ ............. !~?.! wo.v'ER.,
TMPoRTANT "78 DODGE 8200. auto. e · NOflCl!TO air. catm Int. map, xint. -loola °t READERSAND $:WOO.OBO, PP.644·7670 ForYourGood
• · ADVERTISERS IMMACULA n VW,. Pone.be or Aud1
1 Tbe price of 1~1 '11 Dodge Trades 200.
lib'ertlaed by velfcle 20K ml P /S P/B A/C dni.n m the vehicle . • • · • •
.
~ . . ·-. ~~ ' • t • ,
ct.um. eel advertbln1 Cruise, cstm. int/ext. VW-P<>RSCHE-AUDJ
eOlumu does not In . M a n Y JC t r a s · 445 E. Cout Hi way ~l•de HJ applicable $? ,000/0BO. 962·5900. at Bayside Drive
tu., Uame, traufer se.an. Brad Newport Beach 1'7J.-0900
feel, ftnuce ·cllar1es. 'TT Chev y.... Jee box n---•um pri-,._ for air pollutioa COD· • .... • ..-.~ .. _ tnl dnke certiftcatiooa A/C, runs well. $1800. Pb paid for any used car
.. _..,. documentuv ,_55_1_·1983_______ (fOftipordomestk>
:=!r8tion cbar
1
_...leslfi;;ed. '74 Dodge Van 8200, Jspd, in IOOd conditioo. ·
--~ abarpesL S2595. (stock i-..-•SeeUs Finl!
1112). 63Mll21
.... II/ ~~': ........ !~.~~ ~!!~ .... !?!!
~Woodle, restored ..... IUY& r.r-.:: ALSO '9 Model Top dol1an for Sports
• ..... TbWlltand.. Sedan, • dr, Can, Bup, Campers, Ideal for stu· t14¥.Audi's
'10,000. ITUlll . Aakfor U IC MGR
'IG MGA Xlnt Cond.
.1>e1tored, personal ~read •eo MGA
~/OBOM5-75Jl
JIMMA,alMO
YOLISWA•Bt
1.W111 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
"•"DCorvairCouvert •---------
blue, compl. reblt, WANTED!
wbl coven, all Late model Toyotu and ~ .......... ·..;.;·..;..·--· •.;.;;...:....;..H:....;.111..:.._ __ , v 01v0 I . c. 11 us
~8 llarbor lllvd
Costa :\ll'!'a ~O OO:IO
~,,. •• rtecl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Atfw--.0 9705 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 ALFA
SPIDHS
llACH IMPOITS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
CREVIER sro.TCOUPI MB 75 450SEL, mint $6995 .78 Cadillac Sedan de Ford 9940 __. cood. fully equ.ipped, "a --
$I Sf 6 HOADWAY
SAHfA AHA
835·3171
!~ tr~1·.,& .~~ beauty". 115,0001080. ·~-1n~ .. L 110UIQIU:( Ville. Immaculate condt •••••••••••••••••••••••
""" ..... ~ ....... u~ ... ..,~ r~ R $14115 ~ 200Ford8cylrebuittlong radiodhcuaettetape Call (114 )673-0110 aft ~~I VOUCSWAGEN.INC • . blocUIOO.
Michelin tires tr morei 7pm. wkdays &c all day . 534-4100 C_.. 9917 842-1311alter5pm .
$}700/best offer. Call wkends. 13731 Harbor ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9$1-95506 PM to 9 PM . If M• 9742 Garden Grove "11S::amaro '78 Granada Ghia 2dr, •U$1D IMWt• ~eepo atryinns~er1, PLEASE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Air, automaUc, power xlnt coad, p/s , full P"T
THI UUIMAn OfllVUIO MACMHI
..,.,•.30-1 .. a..__ ("" ... 7) ..g • at--'-1 27 -1 mil--am/fm stereo, lthr v .... • ~ ..,_ 79 ~ M--IT ·so. 'SS vw left &c right <..:::.::.>· ..... ~ ... '752002a (0035) I -...,., .,....,,.,.. aeata. tinted windows "1932Cl ('7580) 1 '78Fiatl24Spider 4 cylinder, 4 speed, door, '73 left door. S50 $4911 982.-.
'17 l.30cal auto (0040) Couverlible radial .at.eel tires with each. Western style wbJ B . k 1 ---------
'IOS31iA aunrf. (l62S ) Only 29 ,882 miles!! mags. Extra clean, rima for Super Beetle arwtc mports '78 Raocbero, lo mi, air, .,. ........ _~ S d Mate monthly pay. brown with low miles. D>u.541-9744 111-lll 1 radio, btr, $4250. Aft .
-• 11Y1 m en ts and d o w n . C908WQZ) '78 Camaro, good condi· 6pm, M4-0IS1
O• "'~11t COU..--e <072UJS) 14"5 '86 for $1600. '61 for $2600. Uon. • t
_...... "' 1 ., Barwi·'-l OrBestolferp.p. MUST ,nupam • 1977 LTDD wa1on. air. ,...,.._T "" mports ~u~ ... L u! .. _:..~. ~2297 --IJl·lll I r~ OWWU( SELLS48-1C»5 PB. PS, 9 passenger,
& . VOUCSWAGIN. INC ?O c .a. ...... .a.10 clean. 982.Ql58 2 For 1 1977 VW 7 Pass. Af9tA Red Fiat Xl9 like new, lo ~100 Bus with Removable 79-lUOaft.lpm Mercay 9950
miles, a /c, am/(m , 13731 Harbor Camping Furniture . ______ ;.._ __ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Salea-Servlce-Leaaing map & more $4250/0BO Garden Grove Converts in minutes. "11 Camaro $2,100/080. ORANGE COUNTY'S low C ... er Ille 96&-m05 A M I F M c a s a . Call 9l2-<m2 a(ter Spm AHIST
.Rollsftoyce 'BM•W '79 Spyder 2000 convert, M•I 9744 SB/Radials, Awning, orweekends. LINCOLN·M!!RCURY
LS40Jamboree 14,000 mi, te815. Orig ........................ many extras, Must See. Ce..•ialet 9920 DEALERSIDP
Newport Beach 84().8444 owner. 760-1970 4 apeed?~.~~les, new -~-'°"-11156_· _l ___ 646-__ 966_9 .. :·;:=.::;;.:;:.·;; .. : ~ ";llfthle•
S1M1la1c• IMW "79 3lOO Spider Roadster. UNS,mreotape. <t38G l -·r OnJ -lies A to "71 Su.-r Beetle. new rblt 2 + 2 Hatchba c k ! L1Ncoi..N-MERCUR0Y. ~5.a.1 •t Y ,_.,, m · u · ClllVIRIMW ...-E l 1 d VWllV ,_.. •--u •-t ~.a AU ex eng. xlnt cond. $2200. conom ca S apee 16-18Auto CenterDr.
l 20l 5 ___. :-_-:,-:"'000 .... ~ off · lit fr Broadway 111·1900 dys: 6-4S·4799 manual trans. Clean SD Fwy· Lake Forest ......-u-. .,, or ...,.t er. Santa Ana 835-3171 car! (052.X.JU). exit ~ ~Jt-W. 1'7Ml17orl'7s.4115. eves. OMLY $45'5 IRVINE
Al ·••ha1U4195) ...... 9727 'H llGB·GT. AM /FM '79 Convertible Bug ; How··-c ..... __.__.. llA7000 n. I ___. radlo/ca11ette, wire w ...... n:rn., M' d -.. ..._... -......-••••••••••••••••••••••• wheels, good mileage. au ..... , ...... te. mt con · DovefrQuallSts. 9952 C ........ Nd/tllec• VISITYOUI S2495. (114) 536-0'7SS or 3,800 miles. $8500/0BO. NEWPORTBEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• W.Al .... 1 n!C4211t Oll.+.MCilCOAST (213) '192·2952. Ask for 4s..zus. 133-0555 5211A Lani '65 IUS ttwamgar••• C....., '94/t. lilt. HONDA o,... '746 Runs&d·$1000.498-44S7 ~~~ WWh~'!P
Al ...... 11 C41291 HIADqUAltTllS ...................... . 7l31A TOD•Ylll '1l Opel. Manta. 41pd, VW 1970 Convert. HATC .. ACK ._._.! I resit tlrow•/ ••• A ••• nice, will acept trade, Sbowrm cond. Rblt eng 4 cylinder. auto .. factory ....., T..-. C.-!!
......_. W. Al .,.._. UMIYaSITY U 099 . < 3 2 1 J R K l . ~~~:i~s:!h~ci::: :!~oor>ct~l~~~~~~:: ...... hi!! ,..-.! 143421 SALES~SERVICE 131M11Zt. everything. Mechanic tinted &lua. extra clean, Che4 •••H
6.llal OLDSMOllLI ,.... '741 owner must sell. $5000, 1,~~Hi>les. silver . $1200 st'. W../1 ... ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 492·ll80llor45-2S05 ~
• • •~ GMC ftUCIS SHH .__ ua11J7 pe ct ,., W. Al• LEASE Sharp "79 VW Rabbit L, --·--·-~ ~--tto.! 14l50t 211iOHarborBlvd. ~1.u~ .. L 11~ COSTA MESA DIRECTI blu, auto, A.IC, AM /FM. r~ R ·e.~ llUIL •auto air 6.lJctlA 540.9640 • nu t.lrea. Ken Donahue. VO~K:::,..,.G1100N.IHC !!'!t;~IOBO. P.P'.
A .... ....._/'-W. '7M200e"f.S2. -_,.._ All...._ plllt MON! '77 Honda ACCORD Sspd. I fl I PIUGIOT '72 Super Beetle. 1 owner. 13731 Harbor 1426tl xlnt coad, am/fm stereo TURIO. Llke new. Reblt. engine. Garden Grove "14 lluatant, 4 cyl, tapd, HUGE SAVINGS! =s:;~udaya, llACH IMPOITS ~~pholstery. SU90. _S_B_U_S_Fl_l_S_T_! -•-~-ice_. _ .... _._'_'Ol)[_B_R_>.
F b 28 '78 ACCORD LX Sspd. 848DoveStreet Webaveasoodaelectlon 01' 1bl1 Hll 8 . snrf, $4895 NEWPORT BEACH '69 VW Bua: Camperized, of NEW fr USED •••••••••••••••••••••••
857·2264 752·0900 rebuilt engine, am/fm Cbevroleta! '780lda. C-..UU. March 2-stereo. new tires, new Su)lftme Broa&bam
'77 Accord,Sspd,am/(m Ponct.. 9750 cl'1tcb. Mu s t s~e! T-topoihillpower,air,ex· ONLY!!!!! s tereo, air. 13995. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2100/080.114/492·3023 tremely sharp! Make
S •••1laadc IMW 642-3850. 77112 924 VW Convertible :C,~sJ:~en) ta and
J 9710 Automatic, allver/biack •73 1 .. l 28402 Marquerlt~ Pkwy. .,.. · oo..s n ce. run' Banrick Imports MlasionViejo ••••••••••••••••••••••• alloptions!!(4t4TJH) g~Rad.ials.$3900. ' lll·llll
111·2040 '87 Jaguar 3.8 MK IIS all S al•1hc• IMW 494-2407 76 MONZA
CloledSunda 1 orig. very well main· 21MO'lMarguerite Pltwy. 2 + 2, 4 cyl.. 1ood •ao Cutlua Brougham Y tained MU5t Sacrifice Ml.Ilion Viejo "11 VW Bua, gd cood. xlnt milea1e. a /c, radio, "'ooo mi ..__ ...... w· .. _d.
l4&-8570 111-2040 lnt, needs no work. lite transferable warranty. ..... ' ..,..,_,_ IUI
IOIMcLAUM't
&'·
ll!ON. BeachBlvd.
LA HABRA
C5 Mi. No. of SA Fwy)
C7 t 41522-Slll
&mday by Appt.
c .. f711 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"71 Capri Xlnt coed. nu
tlre1, am /fm caaa
11500/0110 145.5314
MU1ll
'11 Capri Obla, auto
.,._ extremel1 lo ml,
b .. ;l. car In perfect
cend. llluataee. 551.m1
CloledSundaya blue. P.P. 87~1020. suoo 557·3527or79-00IO _o_r_aft_.9_._uz_.224_7_. __ _
'16~ Ja1 XJ12L, mint i-------~--l nrm. --------,.... 9957
cond.;33,000 mi, loaded, lt7'POISCHI --------
$7800. 84C)..5l30 .., •• COW'I '78 BUI eenverlible, low = lr coed ml. any Is black. "71 JAGUAR XJ8. Xlnt v•. 5 • • a ., MZ-4110 ecmcl. Well maintained. stwJ'. W's, crube, $5ZSO/ofr.979-2l12 AM/P'lll CUI. ft under WANTED: VWTypeD
11,000milell (~). 1'100ce411enlinecue.
9714 $27,911 .... •••••••••••••••••••••••I
'18 IUS, 51pd, ma1s,
atereo caaa, 1nrf, 1Uter,
lmmac. $12,HO. PP.
NO-lltlev•/wkeada.
'78 Par. l:M, lo ml, must
..U. Come aee Make of· , ......
'MCPoncbe
m»IOBO. New lnt ._
chlldl.-.slll
'75 VW Bue, nu t.lrea,
AM/FM 1t ereo, runs sreat. s:aim. 88().3'10
Veho 9772 •••••••••••••••••••••••
· VOLVO
SALIS, Slfflel
AM»LIA•te OVERSEAS DELIVERY
EXPDTS IA&I•• YOLYO
*** ,..,. ..... H
907t Cockatoo Ave.
Fountain Valley
You are tbe winner of ...........
<SH value), to ....... ...,.,.
Mar.• tbru Mar. 8
Anaheim CouvenUon
Center
Call IG-5811, at. 272 to
claim your Utteta. •••
'11 Caprice Clautc.
Loaded. Le11 tban
lOM/J'I'. -· 5e15GI.
Por lale '71 CheY lmpela,
f cir, dllt coad, bit olr
111-191
'IO CllMtcm •••• air, low
ml, wlllte.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•.SALE*
1979-1980
PINTOS
·• 30 •
tochooH
972•t--------~..;.._-
U.llartJar ll•d. ~Alla.A
....... , Me-f4'7 MMllO
OCTD studies 10-cent • increase·
A not-~publlo heartn1 to COil·
aider fare increues for OrU1e
County Transit District bUlel was
continued today for two weeks
while oftlclala study a propoled
increase from 50 to 80 cent.a for
local routes.
The proposal came from Al
Hollindenol Fountain Valley, ooe
of ftye members of the district
board ol ~tors who met today
in Garden Grove.
Holllnden won the postpone·
ment alter be pieced to1ether •
evidence provided by OCTD staff
members to show that an im·
mediate rate increase is too late
this fiscal year to help the diatrlet
raise a state-mandated 20 pereent
of it.a operatinl revenue from
fares. .
''I see no urgency in aetti.na this
fare increase. Idoo'taee any need
until June," be said. "Thia year la
down the tubes as far as the 3>per·
cent anyway."
Instead. be suggested that bll
proposal for a lower fare than
recommended by Finance Direc·
tor John Beatty should be ex·
amined to see if it will cure the dis·
trict'srevenueheadaches.
His proposal also included
adding a 10 cent charge for the
lint transfer and to do away with
~xpresa and commuter bua run.a.
Beatty recommended today
that a fare increase to 75 cent.a
durlnt peak travel perioda and 80
cent.a at slack Umes appeared to
be the safest for the district.
He •uaeested raisine express
runs from $1.25 to $1. 75 per ride.
But be was against cbJrgi.ng for
transfers.
The 75-80 fare rate, be ex·
plained, would increase the dis·
trict's fare box revenue to 21.1 '
percent during the next fiscal
year.
Raps opponents ·. El SalvadOr
Reagan makes plea skirmislws
for economic plan'
W ASHlNGTON CAP) -Presi·
dent Reagan told urban officials
today that bis economic program
is running "a political gauntlet of
interest groups" whose selfish
concerns threaten the nation's
economic recovery.
He appealed for the backing of
local officials, who support his
goals but worry about bow he
wants to achieve them.
In a speech prepared for the Na·
lional League of Cities, Regan
condemned the "federal Goliath
that brought us to the economic
brink now confront.ing this nation.
••For a time, it appeared that
Congress bad more solutJons than
· the country bad problems,"
RttalUl uld. "Or, put another
way, cures were Invented for
which there are no known dis·
eases. Just conceiving of a pro-
gram that mlgh\ help someone,
somewhere, was it.self reason
enou1b to pass a law and ap·
propriate money.''
Working together and exercis-
ing "will power," the new ad·
ministration and its allies can
bring the econo{Dic crisis under
control by implementing his pro-
posed budget and tax cuts, re·
gulatory overls and ' monetary
controls, Reagansald.
"However, this pro1ram now
faces a political gauntlet of In·
terest groups; and I'm finding it
increasingly difficult not to call
some t>f them 'selfish interest
groups'." the president said.
••Unless something is done to tum
the economy around, local gov·
ernments will suffer right along
with many other respected
American institutions.·'
Reagan noted there has been
some congressional opposition to
bis call for a three-year, 30·
percent tax cut.
"Nevertheless," be said, "the
real threat to recovery comes
from those who will oppose only a
smallpartoftheoverallprogram.
Needles.a to say, the small portion
these parochial groups oppose
' always deals with cuts that affect
them directly. Those cuts they op-
pose.
"They favor cutting everybody
else's subsidy as an important
step in ending inflation and set·
ting the country moving again.
The -'ccumuJative effect of this
shortsightedness can be aamag·
ing.
"We are all in the same boat,
and we have to get the -engines
started before the ship goes over
the falls."
The urban leaders, at the-an·
nual Congressional-City Con·
ference, gave qualified support to
Reagan's program Sunday, en·
dorsing "enthusiastically" the
president's objectives but issuing
a list of reservations.
They said they could go...tong
with eliminating a third of the
300,000 public service jobs
Reagan wants to terminate.
Bolaa Chica
marshplaru
top agenda
The H.untington Beach City
Council will consider making a
reconunendation to county of.
ficials for a development plan for
\lli!JJols~Cbi~a marsh l!>nigbt.
The council also will consider
establishing two transportation
centers, including bus stops and
park -and· ride stations.
The centers tentatively are
earmarked for the northeast cor·
ner of Gothard Street and Center
Drive, and downtown on Pacific
Coast Highway near Lake Street.
The City Council meets at 7: 30
p . m . in the Civic Center at 2000
Main St.
The Orange County Planning
Commission currently is con·
s ide ring seven different pro·
posals for the Bolsa Chica marsh,
with extremes ranging from
pre.servation in a natural state of
1,105 acres to a development of
morethan6,800bomes.
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors ultimately will draft
· a plan and submit it to the
California Coastal Commission
for approval.
The Bolsa Chica includes 1,«>9
acres south of Warner Avenue
a long the eastern side of Pacific
Coast Highway. It is in county ter·
ritory but bordered on three sides
by Huntington Beach and on the
fourth side by the Pacific Ocean.
• • increasing
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
CAP) -Heavy fighting was re·
ported at two towns in eastern El
Salvador as an international
socialist organization asked
Nobel Peace Prize winner Willy
Brandt to mediate between the
guerrillas and the government.
Meanwhile, the United States
suspended aid to Nicaragua for
allegedly funneling communist
arms to the rebels.
Government troops and jet
fighters repelled weekend al·
tacks by leftist guerrillas on the
towns of San Lorenzo and Santo
Domingo, according to peasants
atreamtna into this capital city to
escape the fighting in the eastern
provinceolSan Vicente. ·
WitnelMI said •JN>radic and
hea.y ,.are c!cmtlAU.-llmll'~
around the two towns. A militaey
•pokesmall said ''an anD¥ cleu-
upoperaUon" wuunderway.
"Webavesomewounded,;'aaid
the spokesman but relu.aed to give
casualty figures. There were no
reports of rebel losses.
The leftist guerrillas who want
to replace this Central American
nation's civilian-military junta
3th a Marxist government bad
en rumored for the past week to
planning a new offensive. But
their leaders issued no communi·
q9es on the fighting in the ea.stem
ptovlnce.
fA large-scale rebel drive in
January, billed as a "final of·
tensive'' against the government,
was quickJy crushed by govern·
ment troops.
An esUmated 14,000 have been
killed in EJ Salvador's political
strife since the October 1979 coup
that ousted President Carl6s
Humberto Romero's rightist re-
gime and paved the way for the
current U.S. -backed junta.
Iraqi demand told
BEIRUT CAP) -Iraqi Presi·
dent Saddam Hussein met today
with an Islamic peace com-
mission and repeated bis de·
mand for sovereignty over the.
disputed Shatt al ·Arab
waterway as a condition for end·
Ing the five-month war with
Iran, the Iraqi state radio re·
ported.
Dellf ~119',.... i.r Gary,.,..._
•W HouR TRAmC ALONG IAJfDll!GO FRl!WAY BACKED UP IN DOWNllOUR TODAY•
Pho taken about I a.m. on northbound lane looking from the Cutver Drtve Bridge In lr1ln•
-Rain will run out
(finally) tonight_,,
By JOHN NEEDHAM
OI U. Oellf ~I ... Steff
The rain that has been falling
on Orange County for the la.st
three days is expected to end
sometime tonight, according to
the National Weather Service.
A spokesman for the weather
service said the chance of
showers would be decreasing to
30 pereent tonight and to nearly
zero chances on Tuesday.
Warmer temperatures also
are -predicted Tuesday, with the
high expected to be 64 degrees
and the low S8 degrees.
Temperatures tonight are ex·
peeled to be in the 45 degree to
S5 degree range.
The Orange County Flood Coo·
trot District measured nearly
two inches or rainfall in Santa
Ana from 8 a.m. Saturday to 8
a.m. today.
Huntington Beach and
Capistrano Beach reportedly re·
ceived 1.96 inches of rain over
the weekend, according to resi·
* * *
dents in the area who took rain
measurements.
Newport Beach police said a
section of Pacific Coast
Highway at Newport Boulevard
was closed for about an hour
Sunday morning when a cloud·
burst temporarily flooded the
roadway.
A police spokesman said a
cloudburst at about 6 a.m. left
all six lanes of the highway un-
der about three feet of water un·
til 7 a.m. No damage was re·
ported.
No major incidents caused by
the rain were reported in
Orange County, a flood control
district spokesman s aid.
However, work crews are re-
portedly being kept busy clear·
Ing plugged storm drains.
The National Weather Service
was to maintain a flash flood
watch until 1 p.m . today in
foothill and mountain areas in
Orange County, but no serious
flooding or mudslides were re-
1>0rted.
* * * Barled I 0 1nln•tes
NewpQrt boy, 13
saved from slide
B78UVSllA&BLE .. ...,"" ..... A J.3..year-old Newport Beach
boy. burled foe at leut 10 m1DutAlll
Sunda.Yevenial wbeD. SaDtaAu River bulk eollapHd, wu palled
to aafety wbea ftve qulck·tblnldq
peopledq him out.
Toddfltem=tbarltl•aild;
Wal plAJlal • hlcb ..... .. .,. tbl ....... JeUr ...... ,.....
trtend-. UM nba·IO&ked lad
.... ..., eoverlaltbe '°'. CbuckCUm•• ........ ,. ....
!fewpstmu wbowu llttlnion a 111arbJrlver wan a& &be um~ wu
tbeftn&toaalleetM ..... blt.
"I'd ... tM ~ ....... IDd .........................
WaJ," Hid C .. •la1t. "1 ................ " ... ..
... J ............. 11N1-......
Coast power
OK despite
heavy storm .
Southern California Edison
Company officials report no ma·
jor power shortages locally dur·
ing the latest downpour. although
about 6,500 homes were wit.bout
power for 30 seconds early today.
''Compared to the intensity or
the storm, we're in great shape,"
commented Bill Compton, Edison
spokesman.
He said the 30·second power
o utage affected homes In
northeastern Fountain Valley,
northern Costa Mesa and western
Santa Ana
He sald power returned on its
own. F.dison officials s uspect that
li1htening temporarily in·
terferred with e lectrical
transmission.
Compton said a bout 45
customers in the cities of Hunt·
ington Beach, Newport, Costa
Mesa, Seal Beach, Westminster
and Fountain Valley were without
power for more than two hours
this morning due to transformer
failures.
Strike conclude8
MILWAUKEE CAP )
Firefighters ended a one-cl_,
strike and return~ to work to-
day after union leaden said a
contract proposal bad been
worked out . ·
llAllE cm IUTIEI
Chance of showers
decreutac to 30 percent
ton11bt to near aero Tues·
day. Lowa toldpt 'I at
beaclaea to 55 lnl•nd. ·
Hilb• Tuelday a ~oa· eoaat to• lnland. , .• ,., ""°" .... ,, ......... " A•trtee111 ore •r•••t ......................
ti ..U MlllH IMt ....... ·==:.=-..::=. tMtutJ ... to ..,.., ,., .,.,,._,,..,.Af.
11111
-" ............ .,IUUMll(.-.
REICUDI LOAD 1S.YEAR-OU> TODD ITEllNR ON NIWPORT URQUARD UNIT
• Ne!llJOft .. ech boJ butted 10 Minute• wMlt ratn-eoeUd aand collapMd
How should moon's
riches be divided?
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Now
that we know beyond a shadow
of a doubt that the moon is made
of titanium, magnesium, silicon
a nd aluminum, not green
cheese, there's got to be some
law and order up there to pro-
tect such celestial "gold" mines,
warns an expert in international
law.
But a free enterprise lobbying
group cautions that an interna-
tional space treaty currently un-
der consideration is too protec-
tive and could discourage future
heavenly exploration and de-
velopment by the private sector.
"Space law is an idea whose
time has come . . . says Carl Q.
Christo!, a University of
Southern California professor of
international law and an expert
on the United Nations' 1979
spcace treatv.
Known officially as the Agree-
ment Governing the Activities
on the Moon and Other Celestial
Bodies, the treaty calls for an in·
ternational organization to ad-
mlnister space.environment ac-
tivities on the lunar surface,
other pJanets and asteroids.
To date, a half-dozen s maller
countries have signed the pact.
But the two superpowers that
have actually reached the moon
-the United States and Russia
-have yet to initial the docu-
NAU.llMW-
TREASURE TROVE
Moon: who rule1?
ly consider doing so for the sake
of interstellar tranquility.
"Star wars may be avoided if
we can extend international law
into outer s pace," said the
professor. "There is a need in
space, just as there is a need on
the Earth, to have a set of laws,
so ~ple know their rights and
their limits," said Cbristol, who
is also an expert in international
law of the sea.
The trea\y, which Cbristol has
studied extensively, prohibits in-
dividual or govern mental
ownership of lunar land but does
allow for the use of its natural
resources.
,,....P-... AJ
BURIED •••
in wbile the boy was being ex-
tracted.
Three others -Melinda Kay,
22, of Van Nuys; Paul
Heussenstamm, of Newport
Beach and Greg Bates, 24, of
Fountain Valley -helped pull
_young Stemper to safety.
, "It was just a miracle," ex-
plained Paul. "U we hadn't found
that little piece of board, I'm not
sure we ever would have located
hl .. m .
Cummings said it wasn't until
he apoUed the youngster's finger
stlcilng in the air that be was con-
vinced the boy had even been
buried.
"I just wasn 'Uure," said CUm-
mlngs. "I just figured I should
keep digging. Even if I dug all the
way to China I figured I wouldn't
be doing anr harm ...
Young Stemper was ad-
ministered first aid at the scene
by Newport paramedics and
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Hospital officials pronounced the
boy in good condition and said
be' ll likely be released today.
Woman slain
OAKLAND <AP>._ A woman's
bullet-riddled body bas been dis·
covered inside the bathtub d her
home after a 17-year-old youth
stumbled and collapsed on tbe
front lawn, bleeding from stab
wounds, police said. Neighbors
called police Sunday evening
after seeing the youth.
ment and Christo! feels that this
country, at least, should serious-
BB, county
will share
road costs
Teen kidnap victim
'adjusts quickly'
The County of Orange and
Huntington Beach have agreed
to split costs in a $560,000 projed
to widen Edinger Avenue from
Bolsa Chica Street to the city's
western boundary.
Jack Miller, associate civ'il
englneer for the city, said that
two lanes and left hand turn
pockets will be added from
Bolsa Chica to Saybrook Lane.
This section of the highway
would then have two lanes in
each direction, be said.
From Saybrook to Countess
Drive, a left hand tum lane will
be added. This section currenUy
bas one lane in each direction,
Miller said.
Construction on the project is
scheduled to begin in two
months and will take about three
months to complete, Miller said.
Edinger is Included in the
county's master plan of arterial
bi&bways and qualifies for coun-
ty funding, said a representative
of Orange County Supervisor
Harriett Wieder.
Mlller noted that Edinger is
heavily tmed by studenta wbo
ride bicycles to Marina High
School.
He allo said that recent res-
idential development in west
Hunlin1ton Harbour bas in-
createdtrattlcQD the avenue.
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -
Steve Stayner, the quiet boy who
spent half bis life as a kidnap
victim, is now just another teen-
ager with grade problems, a
steady girl and dreams of play·
ing high school baseball.
It was a year ago -March 1,
1980 -that Steve and 5-year-old
Timmy White hitchhiked 40
miles to escape the man now
charged with kidnapping them.
They surfaced outside a ;>olice
station in Ukiah, about 120 miles
north of here.
Timmy, kidnapped two weeks
earlier in Ukiah on Valentine's
Day, now lives with bis family in
San Jose. His mother, .<ngte,
says the kidnapping "was a
small moment in his life" that
apparently left no emotional
scar!!.
Steve bad been gone more
than seven years. He was a 7-
year·old in the San Joaquin
Valley community of Merced
when two men enticed him into
a car as be was walking home
from school. He was 14 tbe nipt
he led Timmy away from a •
year-old ex-convict and drifter
named Kenneth Parnell, who
prosecutors say tried to bu1Jd a
family by steallng children.
"I didn't want Timmy to have
to go throuch the chances I went
through, because it takes quite a
while to get over," Steve ex·
plained .in a recent telephone In-
<>f'ANGI COAST llllJPllat Clffelhd .......... 7141142-1171 Alt other departmenta 141-4»1
1"°"* P. Haley ,......
9'Dbatt N. WMd ,,......
L Thomae KHYll
~Mutphtn.'
~·
~ldtutman _,..,
~Jt.
MAINOl'Fa .. W ... 9e¥ II., C-. Meu, CA. Malt...,_: ... 1111,C .... Mffe, CA.~
terview, looking back at the
final hours of his ordeal.
''I just didn't think it was right
for him to have to go through the
same thing that I did. He really
dido 't have to. There was
someone there who could stop
it ...
Steve returned home amid
television floodlights and con·
cern he would find it difficult to
adjust to his real family. As it
turned out, the adjushnent came
easily.
"It sort of happe ned right
away," said Steve. "The hard
part was getting to know rel-
atives who are out of state.
Like, I still haven't met a lot of
my relatives."
Though hls "grades are kind
of low," Steve said hls fellow
students "treat me pretty much
like anybody else."
Pam~ll faces a hearing on
Karch 16 to set a trial date in
the White case. Key testimony is
expected to come from Stayner
and from Sean Poorman, now
18, convicted ln Juvenile Court
of tatiq part 1n White's abduc·
tion. He wu sent to a school for
youths with behavioral dif-
ficulties.
Rape attelQPl
smpect he.Id
A Zl·year-old Costa lies• man
baa been arretted oli .. upldoD ol
attemptbas to rape a 11-year-old
Huntinltan Bneb ctrl aa 1be wu walkiai bome from acbool.
Police •aid James Matthew
.Cutaldo WM arrated Saturday
·near llaAn 9trMt and Onqe
Avenue lD ffllDUnltoa Beach in
connedion wltb tbe tnclcleat.
The tlrl WU aCCOlted reb. •ID
the downtown area. pollee Mid,
but leNalMd ........... tlO
,._.......,frolDber at&ackw.
A ,...._Clftleei' wllo...._ a
· '6cnptnic:kdiimbed iatMIDd-ct.t..,.... Cutaldo -..... .. ,......... J .
..
NSW YOU <AP) -la a ftiaf -~O¥•wbetMl'-...uUoa
WU ..... to be invaded duriq
the l.a Cuban mla1ile crilll,
Fidel Castro personally 1hot
dowwa aQ American U-21py plane
over Cuba, ld1Un1 tbe pilot, IQ'I
a former Cutro aide.
Carlol l'ranqul Hid the Cuban
president took command of a
Soviet around-to-air mluUe con·
10le and "pressed the button" to
shoot down the plane, astound·
lnl Soviet 1enera1a who were ex·
plaintna the worklnl• of the mil·
aUe bue ln Pinar del Rlo, west of Havana.
The body of the U-2 pllot, U.S.
Air Force MaJ. Rudolf An-
derson, was returned to the
United States shortly after the incident. · ·
Franqui, who edited the of.
ficial Castro movement
newspaper Revoluck>n from 1957
to 1963, describes the incident In
a book, "Retrato de Familia"
< FMnily Portraif), stbeduled to
be published next month.
Franqui sided with Castro's
guerrillas in the Sierra Maestra
mountains during the revolution but left Cuba affer the 1968 So-
viet invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The former editor disclosed the
episo4e In a telephone conversa-
tion from Rome.· The book is to
be published in mid-March by
the Spanish Seix Barral
publishing company, he said.
White House press aide Robin
Gary said he had no comment on
the report.
According to Franqui, on Oct.
27 , 1962, during the six-day
crisis, Castro bad "a fit of anxie-
ty caused by the unresolved
crisis, during which he was ig-
nored as the two s uperpowers
negotiated the fate of the island."
The crisis occurred when
President Kennedy demanded
that the Soviet Union withdraw
missiles stationed in Cuba. The
Soviets complied after tense,
high-level negotiations.
Franqui saiH Castro "went to
one of the bases with intent to
FV trustees
eye closing
of schools
Fountain Valley School Dis·
trict trustees will publicly de·
bate various proposals to close
district schools, in anticipation of
aformal vote later in the week. week.
The study session begins at
7: 30 tonight in the district head-
quarters, 1 Lighthouse Lane.
District spokeswoman Trish
Torgerson said the Brown Act
has prohibited the board mem·
bers from discussing closure
plans behind closed doors.
The public will be permitted to
observe the session but no. or&
comments from the audience
will be allowed unless lime re-
mains at the end of the session,
the trustees said.
The trustees are expected to
make a formal decision on
school closures recommended
by the school closure advisory
committee. Closure. of Wardlow
and Bushard schools at the end
of the current term has been
suggested because of declining
enrollment and decreased fund-
ing.
At two public hearings in
February, the trustees heard
protests from parents at both
schools who wish to keep the
sites open.
cnat. the iDeldeal '8 order to ~ aow ii u..,. wen ,ca, to &a-
vade or not . • • if there wu ao-
lnl to be a war or not."
F.ranqul says that when Cutro.
reached Jhe Soviet base, be
uked the techniclam about U..
operation of the equipment, ln·
cludlnc the~radar for the detec·
tion of enemy planes.
Shortly after, "The U·2 spy
plane appeared ~n the radar
World's biggest
1
aeren. nc&e1 uked to tnow
wla&W•beclllDelaorderto lboot down tboM plaaet la cue
of'an attack," l'ra.nqLd Jald.
''The Ruailam repW tbat it
WH enouth to push a button and
the enemy plane woulcl be bit
and lbot down and 1bowed blm
tbe button. Fidel then preued
the button and the plane came
dow• amidst the consternation 1
of the ienerala.
A 675,000-ton concrete structure is towed Crom Stavanger,
Norway, for the Statfjord B offshore oil platform. When
fully completed, the platform will be about 895 feet tall
and will weigh 816,000 tons, the biggest of its kind in the
world.
High court backs .
use of sale sign
• WASfllNGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court left intact
today a ruling that struck the ci·
ty of Baltimore's attempt to ban
the display of "For Sale" signs on
private homes.
Baltimore amended its zoning
ordinance in 1974 in a way which
prohibited such signs. Three
years later, real estate agent
James Crockett and his wife,
Mary, put a house they owned
up for sale and deliberately
challenged the city ordinance by
erectin~ a sale sign.
The city filed a complaint
against them in court, and the
Crocketts argued in replay that
the ordinance violated their
soeech.
The city, however, said the
ban on such signs was justified
to prevent "panic selling" and
·'block-busting," which might
di s rupt the stability of
neighborhoods.
A Municipql Court ruled in
favor of the Crocketts in 1979
· and a state appeals court upheld that ruling in 1980.
In seeking Supreme Court re·
view, the city attacked the fact
that the court which first de-
cided the case made a "sum·
mary judgment" without ex-
tended hearings.
Baltimore "was never af-
forded the opportunity to present
evidence bearin' on tbe issue whether there existed a compel·
ling or significant governmental
interest in the enactment of its
1974 zoning amendment," its ap-
peal said.
I
Levfs
If ,,,..,. •• \o ... I •II
Newlyweds Clifford and Christine Tweedale ·
didn't get to t'he church on time, but their
wedding came off as planned anyway. Judge
Frank W. Barbaro, hospitalized for hip surgery,
toasts them dfter the ceremony, performed in a
Chicago hospital since he was confined longer
than anticipated.
Royal couple ,
get pragers
PriDce Cltarle11 and Lady
DlaH ~cer attended their
first c6urcb service as an
engaged couple, Joining in a
prayer for those a bout to
marry.
But the Anglican minister,
the Rev. Peter Roberts, said
the choice of the prayer was
a coincidence.
Charles, 32-year -old heir to
the British throne, and Lady
Diana, 19, joined with the
25-member congreg~tion in
praying for engaged couples:
"Drive them ever close to
one·another and to thee."
The service was in a
chapel on the Cheshire
co ~n ty estate o t t he
Marquess of<.:halmondeley.
where the couple were
weekend guests.
BeraadeUe DevlJ•
McAllakey, recovered from
.• iln assassination attempt,
left the hospit.al unannounced
and went to a secret location
with her hu sband and
c h i ldre n , a ho s pit a l
spokesman said .
Henry Fonda the artist
is being featured at a
fine ,arts fair in New
York's Co liseum. The
actor passed up painting
in favor of the stage and
screen 50 years ago, but
has continued to dabble
in art.
. .
W aater Cr;.:~:·· who ~='t-~ 1ot aa iatroductlon from
anotMr fa..,_ TV newtman at u awardl cll.Diaer ol tbit
Grea~ Lot Aqel~ Prea
Club. .
•• A1aer, who Pl"1• Deftpapes: editor Lou Grant
oa tb• CBS lbow ol tbe aame name, tntroduced Cronkite to
tbe 500 people •ttendina tbe
dbuaer.
Cronkite wu present.eel the
Joaepb Qulnn Memorial
Award, named alter the late
Ci»{ News Service chief.
rat Lady Nw1 teaiu
aaya the pre111 baa treated
ber unfairly, pre-Judgin1 her
before a be arrived ln
Wasbin1ton and prlntln1
f alae reports about her.
Jn an interview· i n
Newsweek ma1as1ne, Mn.
Rea1an cites one rport that
she planned to take down a
wall in the Lincoln Bedroom
in her zest for interior
decoration.
"They knew none of those
things were true, but they
went ahead and printed them
anyway," said Mrs. Reagan,
declining to identify the
source of the report. "They
made me sound so terrible,
an<t it started before I even
got here. I never got half a
chance."
Mr s . Reagan
acknowledged s h e has
plunged Into the task of
redecorating the White House
with such a zeal she has lost
five pounds.
Odlloe Loa1, the oldest, cur-
rently active Peace Corps
volunteer, hopes to celebrate
bis 79tb birthday this month
working in West Africa. It will
be his sixth term.
"I can't stand vegetating,"
Long says. "It's not good for
the mind.·.~
A short, stocky man with
broad shoulders and a gravel-
ly voice, Long has made the
Peace Corps his life. After 40
years with the telephone com·
pany, the fi rst half of that in
Chicago, Long retired in 1967
and signed up for the govern-
ment's volunteer program,
which celebrated its 20th an-
niversary Sunday.
Marine Sgt. Rodaey
Sld1mUU1, one of nearly two
dozen former bostaaes in New
Orleans for the Mardi Gras,
decided to add to the
festivities by announcin1 bis
en1agement.
"I neverloethope. I lmewbe
would be back," •aid 1111
Dtkll, 19, a.s she and Sick mum
announced their engagement
at a dinner for nine ex-hostage
Marines by the carnival or-
ganization which invited them
to Mardi Gras.
Miss Ditch, of Augusta, Mo.,
said she and Sickmann, of
Krakow, Mo., had known each
other about a year before Ira-
nian militants took over the
American Embassy where
Sickmann was stationed.
Ha~ardow
test device
recovered
Ex-water official,
McColloch, 80, dies
A soil testing device contain-
ing hazardous nuclear material,
stolen Friday together with a
pickup truck from a Laguna
Niguel parkin" lot, has been re-
covered.
Tbe device was found early
Sunday morning at the e mergen-
cy room entrance lo Mission
Community Hospital in Mission
Viejo following appeals from the
Orange County Sheriff'~ Depart-
ment for its return.
Lt. Wyatt Hart said nuclear i.aoto~ contained in the device
could have been harmful to
humans.
Clem M. McColloch, who was
honored last month for three
decades of service to the
Municipal Water District of
Orange County, died Saturday of
a heart attack in his Leisure
Word-Laguna Hills home. He was
80.
One water district official
described McColloch as "part of
the history of Orange County.''
McColloch was honored Feb.
12 at a banquet, during which
district officials announced they
would Qame a 27-mUe pipeline in
honor of McColloch and Glenn
Allen, another long-time board
member.
McColloch joined the water
The device, a npclear gauge board when the district was
backscatter, was sitting in the founded in 1951 and served
bed of a late -model pick-up through Jan. umf, including 13
truck that was stolen between years as board president.
5:30 and 7 p.m. Friday from a The Municipal Water District
partine lot near Forbes Road purchases water from the
and Crown Valley Parkway:d Colorado River and the State
A hospital nurse who rec-Water Project and serves aa a
01nized the device from news wholesale acency to the county's
reportl discovered the machine cities and water aiencies.
sitting near the emergency room McCollocb represented the
entrance at 8:10 a.m. Sunday, dl1trict'1 division 5, which in·
Hart said. eludes portions of Irvine, Santa
, The sheriff's haaardous de-Ana , El Tore and La1una
~ice• squad responded to the dis-Ni1uel.
covery and found the unit waa He waa born in Placentia and
lntaet, Hut said. mana1ed a fruit ranch fomwted
i The 1tolen truck has not been by bis f _.tber in t88o. Jn 1151, t!\e
foad, be added. ranch land wu acquired by .the
The theft was reported by • 1tate for conatructlon Of Cal
William, Toy. State Fullerton. I w.w , .
1 Listening •••
l ·The Dally Pilot wanll to hear from lta readers, what you Uke
I about \he paper ancl ~bat you don't like. We also WCMald like to
• publilb )"OW' viewa oa aa1 •uided in ow letters to the eclltor col·
•mn. Call Ute number below and four meua1e wUl 1'e morded . ........ ...Ube....._. MVeral ttm•d91ly ud d.uvered to
the de* al the a~ editor. Mailbox COlptrtbu&iou will
be delivered 10 lJiit: ...... ,.,_ edJtor. Maln.ot&
contrlbulon llHllt Jn~.-.a.tr name ·~.~1eplaoae
number for_.. ..... ; "'elrnlatkla caua, pit .... Tell m wtu1t•1 tin ,_.... ..... Tbe IMllllbti' ll tn
aervtee 24 hOiri a dar • ...-·.tap a week.
McColloch is survived by h1a
widow Elta; bis son, Robert, of'
Riverside , and ei1bt
1randch1Jdren.
No funeral services are
planned. The family bu uked
that sJmpatby donatioa1 N
made to tbe American Heart Al·
soclatlon.
\
Cuba's Castro
thank• Moecow
. Ora•1• CoHt Dally Pilot
pbotocr ....... captured ballot
all ftnt piaee pbo&o awardl to
lead U.. newtpaper'• wlnnen
SaturdQ nlebt at the 21th an-
nual Oraqe County Presa Club
awards banqu.t. _i
Jn all, !>ally Pilot pboto1·
rapben, writers and editors won nine first place awarda. five
ucond places and two honorable
mentiom for tbelr work du.rlftl
1980.
Richard Koehler and Gary
AmbroN were
for -the Daily
.Pilot. Koehler
won first
places for the
beat photo
iserles and for
bi a photo
portf ollo. Aol·
brose bad the
best sports
photo of 1980,
c apturing K~Mu•
Ram1t football action. He also
won first place for his inside
Ex-hostage
heckled
• In county
Ex-hostage Richard Morefield
took both praise and ridicule in
stride during a speech in Santa
Ana, saying the diverse reaction
to his appearance indicated "the
strength of the American
system."
Mor efield, one or 52 U.S.
hostages held 444 days in Iran,
had just been introduced to 250
people at Santa Ana College Sun-
day when one of two young men
who had walked up to the
speaker's platform yelled, "We
spit on you." The other held up a
yellow J)Ofter.
Both were whisked out of the
colleee umoa.sium by police so
quickly that it was unclear what
they were protesting. They were
not arreeted, police said.
·Morefield, of San Diego, ig-
nored the outburst until be con-
cluded bl.a 45-mlnute apeeeh and
auwered questions from the au-
dience. '
Only ln the United States. he
said, are people free to express
opposiJ1c political views. "Jl is
an lndication of the strength of
the American system," be said.
The SI-year-old forme r
Co nsul -General of th e
American embusy in Iran also
was criticized by other audience
members for being pa1d a $3,000
speaker's fee and for speaking
against bis captors despite the
late Sbab Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi's record of politically
motivated torture and execu-
tions.
Morefield replied that be was
giving many free lectures and
the fees were being charged onJy
to defray expenses, including ex-
tra expenses his fa mily had
faced while be was a captive.
Most of the audience reacted
warmly to Morefield and his
wife Dorothea, who was a lead-
i ng spokeswo man for the
hostage families during the im-
prisonment.
The Morefields met with re-
porters before the speech and
said their lives since the siege
havd been filled with "<loing
mundane things like getting new
1lasses, a driver's license and
clothes."
pa1elayoutportfoUo.
Dally~ PUot pboto1rapber
"Patrick 0'Donne41 woo flrtt
place in the feature pboto
cate1ory for a humorous Mot al a bone tied to an outbouse at the
Oran1e.C.OUOty PalrJrounda.
Carol Moore, Dally Pilot SUD·
day editor, won flnt place for
beat ~e one makeup for her
Sunday front paces f eaturlna the Satum moon shot, the pyramid
club crue and the Blu\An1eJaJet
1erobatics team.
David Kullmann of the PU~ Oran1e County bureau took t
prise for be.t 1tory written £·
der deadllne pressure. It wu bil ·
account ot a Jury's death penal"'
verdict that came in moments •
before his deadline.
Other Daily Pilot first prizes
went to Arthur R. Vinsel for a
bumorou.. column on a bridie
ceremony and Steve Mitchell,
whose story a bout a Florida
fugitive was judged best in the
feature or sidebar approach to
the news.
Daily Pilot staffers also won
five second place awards; two
for photographer Koehler and
one each for photographers
O'DoMell, Lee Payne and staff
writer Steve Marble. Writers
Vinsel and Michael Dougan won
honorable mentions.
There were 707 entries in the
Press Clubs 26th contest , with
117 awards given at the banquet
held at the Newport Beach
Sheraton Hotel. Prize money
amounted to $4,075.
In special awards, the Sky
Dunlap Award for distinguished
service t o Orange County
journalism went to Jim Dean.
former editor and now editorial
page director of the Register.
The Watchdog Award went to
Molly Garnett and J.J . Maloney
a nd the SDX investigative
a ward to Maloney and Tim
Alger, all of the Register.
Life memberships in the Press
Club were awarded to Dave
Reid of the Los Ankeles Times
and Doug Coleman, public rela-
tions consultant.
Here is the complete list of
1980 Orange County Press Club
winners:
1-'t "'"9: First. c;.ry AmbrCIM, o.lly
PllOt; ~.Ille_,. It-"'•'• D•Hy PllOI. ~ ......,., F\ra, "l<hard Koel>ler. Delly
Pllet; _.,.,., '-" P•'l'M• O.lly Pliet. P~..,, --: f'lrs1, Hllwy lt•ye, UCI
Public lntormation Oflk •. second, C.•19 MK·
Ooneld, P11<lllc Tel~ne Preu A•l•hon•.
hOnor•bl• menllot1, JIKlt R. Ch<lppell, Couuo,.
C0<nmunltyCoU909. -...tllllllle' Attlcl•: Flrll. Fr..,ltlln O'Donnell,
N•w Worldl of ~-County. second. a.rt»<• l}I•-· Deily Ster.f'TogrHS. -Hie ,,_.
!•on1J•<ltR.CNppell,ForumFllty.
a .. t ~-..UI: Flrsl, ~ Angel. LH A"09IH
TlmH: MC-. AIW\ w. Boo .. The ,. ... _:
"-•Able .,...,lion, Oevid H 8h/lotl. ~
Beach To~ end Tl,.,,.t.
MM .. IM .._...lei Finl, Jim NHI. O•HY Ne1"S
Tri-; l«Ond, Elaine lleftO. The R ... tt..;
llOftOrablt"*'U""• Vem Perry. Tiie R99ltter.
, .. , .. p ... ~i.: Flrtt, Gary Amlln>M.
D•llv Piiot; second. Bambi Nlcltlen. Tiie
Register._..,.. ,.,,.ntlon. H•IOM Gold$i.ln.
Tiie R'91•1H. P .... OM ~ .. : Flnt, CMol M_... Delly
Piiot; MCOnd, Jim NHI. D•lly N•-Trlta..w, llonOr•IM• mention, P ... 1 z1 ..... Th• R.gllt ....
aHI S_.., UMtr O. .. llle PY'ftwrt: First.
DaVld K..U,_,,,. 0.lly PllOI; H~. TlmAl99f'.
Tiit ll99l5ter. a .. t w ..... y ,.._ Stwy: Finl. Jofln ~-"·
Irvine Today; second, Buel umbll•, Dana Point &H eon; _..,.. ,,,..,lion, Oa11td H. Bllhol>.
1.A911na 8Heh Tkln encl Ti..._.. '-19 9'wy: First. ScOCI Herrl1, 1.0I ~
Tl,,,.s; ~. S.ndl lmormlno Grimley. Delly
Star Progr .. s; -•ble mention, Ken B""'lno.
Lot Angeln Tlmet. C•_.... PerWelt: Finl. Ron SI-. SUiton lff..n Gro..p; M<on.f. O.ry Aml>f'OM. 0911y Pilot.
F••'-..... : Flrll, Petrkk 0-Dof!Mll, Delly
Piiot; sec-. Ste11• Ric•. I.Os Angel•• Tlme9. s.et .._ ,...., Flnt. H. Lorren ""· Jr .• Tr•• R911bter. --·Mark Boster. Tiie Register
Ar11CI• °" H-.lo.t: first, John L--"·
I rvln• Tode y; second. Oe11ld fe,,ell, Tll•
R•tlster; -•bit mention. Molly Ger111tt, Tiie
R99lsler.
C••H-r Afl•ln Ar11<1e : Flr•t, Mlcll .. I
Runl lff, TIW Retltlfr, second. Rod Spwr. TIW
Register; -•bl• mention. i..eslle Maslel<ov.
Tiie Retl$1er.
"•"'-' ~: First. Scott Harris. ~
Anoeles Times; --· Fren<ll v-. Delly Hews Trl11<1ne; 11<>noreol• mention. Mlclleel
Ru1111tr, T"9 R99lsler.
Article 0. Otlt-aKr .. tlM: First. ROCI
~r. 7lle Retlster ·
VINHI. MITCH.LL
Arttcle Olt llMI...,.: f l"t, °'"''"" Dey. n. ,..
Register, --· Slle•rlean Ouke, I.OS A,.in '' TlmH. -•• mention. Dor•• avron. LOS .,
Anvel•• Times. • E11lert •IA-I Ar11Cle: Fir••. S11"" P.ck, J
Lono Bueti Independent Prus· Tele9ram. j
second, J.J Maloney, Tiie Reolsttr; llonoret>le
mention. Denni• M<Lell•n, I.OJ A11991n Times. •I
A11lmel Stery: ""''· Oevid Fetrell. Ille R•ohl•r. 1~ •• Kirn Murplty, Tiie Aeel-. 1 nonor•Ole,,_liofl. Elaine Osborn, The Rlll'lter. , •••I-•_. Fl-•: Finl. Doris Byron. I.Os Antelft TimH;sec-,Lynn0•0.11. TlleR99l-
F lre f'rnefttle11: first. Tim AIQer. Tiie J
Registe r, second, Michu l R11nr1er. The I
R•11lsltr. llon«M>le mention, R•rw• QWrll·HNS,
Tiie Re9lsler. I aut ,....... ..... , Finl. Mark 8o\lff. TIM I
Register.--· P•lrlek 0-0o<wMll. Delly Pi'9t 1 Ednetl• Ar11Clt: F l,.I, C•tlli Flror, Tiie
R•olst•r; second, Oen BWKk•. Tll• R91isler, I
hOftOr•ble mention. Marilyn lt11rrl, Tiie ReQlslef.
aest Ntk .. 0. am-t: FlrJI, l.eo C
Wollnslty. Los ""991es Times. MC-. I.Allie""" I
Berltmen, Los AngelH Times, -•l>te ,.,,..,. •
llon. O••ld Ferrell. Tiie Register. ; .... A1111c .. 0. HI--, Of Tiie AMericaa .... , •
Finl, L-.tlt ANI llH1<tnen, I.Os A-In TI-.. f
second, ~ A"'"'""'· Or•-County -· llOftOr•bl• mention, Pett MorrllOll. I.OS ~ ll Times. · .,
• .... _.._ ll••i.w: First, ....,..,. '
Glu on•, Delly Ster Pr01treu; M COnd. 'D•11 l~k•, TN Re91Jter; -eot• fftetlllol\. 0..141 c·=~ ..=;::; First. Rlellenl K-. ,,
De lly l'li.t; ~. Mer1l ... tef, TN 11...-; O ';f',.::DI• --· 0-ltelMft, 1.M ,.,.._. 't
Article 0. UW AM ll•lk•: Tim ot.~.1TM 11
R•el•••r; ~. J.J. 1111e1-y. TM ,. ... -•• ,
nonor•bl• mention. ~ Peck, l.ong 8e1Kll In·
a-ndenl PTelJ.felf9'.,,, l Artie!• o.. ~,,.,.., Scietlu, Tee--..,:
tlr\I, Molly GerMll, Tiie Rego"er, second.
Merclde Ooclton. Los ""991•• Tlrntt, --mention, Coar• Germani •nd Cynlhl• HI-cl.
Tiie Register.
• ... A111< .. 0. Ak ..... ._ Or Onll .._., '
First, Tim Alo-r. TN A99IJl•r; MCOlld. it.rl z
Granville, TM R .. lst•r; llOnoreble ,......tlOfl, <4 Ormen Dey, TIW Register. . -
8HI M'tlcle Offl ... WIUI M-......... ,
First, D•vid R•Wl. Los AngelH Tlmn; -· Leslie Matlel<ov. TIW Retl•ltr; -.c>i• ITWf\•
lion. Elelne Rltlnger, Hllfttlnofon Beech,.........,. "1
dent. .,
8HI .....,., I r s.rlM< First, Clleryl "-·
Th• Re9lsler; 1econd, Cll•rley RoberU end
Jemes &. Carroll, Tiie R9Qlster. .... C.-: First, PeVlck Motl, Tiie ,...._ •
end Ar1""r R. Vlnsel. Delly Piiot. s.cono. Cllarley Roberts. Tiie lletisler; -RI• ,.,,.,,. •
lion, McllHI Oou9fn, pally f'IJol .
a .. 1 ......, ""'4 Pllele ar Se-Pe.-; First,
Mark 90tt..-. Tiie R119l1ter; ~. lllellerd f ICHlllH. Delly Pllel; -Mlle .....,uon. Or.-
Dey. Tiie R'91ster. a .. 1 ,._..._.,...,Or Sl ... r Te A "'""
5tw.,: Flnt. Ste ... Mllclletl, Delly Piiot; NO>nd.
Sten Mertlle, Delly Piiot. 11onore1>1e -ion. /
Pett Morrlton, Los At19etos Times. 1
ant S_., OR A ~ Meftl .. : Fini. John
l.onowell. lrvlne TOdty; SOCOlld, Francn YounQ.
D•fl y N...,. Trl!M#le; -*• mention, Tim I
AIO-r, TIW 11 ... Sler
ant Perwttalftr Slletcll: First, Leo C I
wo11ns1ty, Los Aneet~ Tlm.s; sKOnd, O.Vld •I
Ferrell, Tl* R119i1ter; ._•bl• menllon. Artllllr 1 R. Vinsel. Delly Piiot ...0 J..-nes Cerrotl, Tll•
Reo•st•r .,
•"' ,.._.., Finl, Sus.an Pet!.. Lono 9Hcll lnde~ndent Pres• Teletrem; HCand. Eve Gum· Pit, Delly News Trl!M#le; _ ..... -Ion. ..
IA~llt AM Berllmen. Los A .... IU Tl"'"' t •ost o.-.. ...._ Mery: First. O«is B'l'l'M,
LH Angeles Tl,.,,.s; --· Kerl Gre11vllle, TIM t · Aeglsttr; l'IOMrebl• ,.,,.ntlon, Frencn Yount. l
Delly Hews Tri-.
Mly 0..Awenl: J im o. .... Tr.e Regl-.
wat.c ..... A-.il: J.J. Maloney. Molly o.n-tt. 1 Tlte Re9r11 ... . SOJt 1a ... st19atlvt Awar41: Tim Alger, J.J . 1
Maloney. TIW Regllter.
our ~r 'round ble.:zar ...
1
H/F Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Monday, Match 2, 1981 . Dela~ push~ for anti-poll~tio
WASHINGTON CAP) -A major repoa1 o.rdeNd by C:O..rtli
neom"*Mla that deadllnee for acblevlq ..U·~lhatkm etaadardl be dropped from tbe natioe'6elean alr law and tbat rettdcUou OD
lnduatrial chvelopcnent lD pollution.free area• be lOOMDed eon· •Ider..,.,. .
Tbe NaUoaal Commiuioa oo Air Quality formally 1ubmitted lta report to Coqreu today, openiaa wba\ promises to be 1 Iona, bard-~ batUe over amendin& tbe Clean Air Act.
Tbe eommlulon reeommended ~teln.ln1 tmoat air-quality
•tandank but r,emovtnc t• anct JJ81 deadlJnet for meetin1 them. Tbe dead!tnet were lnetfedlve and lo some cues unreallaUcally
banb, the report saJd.
Cb.airmen of key contreulonal committees that will deal with
tbe revisions -Sen. Robert Stafford, R·Vt., and Reps. John
Dlnaell, D-M)cb., and Henry Waxman, D·C&lif. -have said they
bope the process wUI not be u "difficult u that over the 1977 clean
air amendments.
Ice c old r e s cue
John FroemaJ went to great lengths in the Ottawa River
to reach a stranded puppy named Spike, later claimed by
a 10-year-old girl. FroemaJ of Ottawa waded more than
150 feet into the river (top) then crawled and stretched
his way across the icy Sunday before reaching the animal.
The smiling hero returned with the 9-month-old pup in arms
(bottom).
Tom Murphine u a proud grandpoppy. His J1Ut Coo.ting column IOIU re-
sume uJien he returns from Cloud Nine, after the l>irlh of a grandaon.
But indUltry bu made dear tt wW .ot back ott lta demand
tbat the law be rel•xed to loiter development, partlcularlJ ot enera reeoutte1 in the Welt, wblle envlroemental lobbytatl have
1tre11ed tbey will ftercely ntltt dropplq the deacllla" ud pro-
tecUona for clean·alr areu.
"If the other aide attemP'WO rut the Clean Air Ad, there wW
be a bloody ft1ht," aald Davldlla•kiDa, a lawyer with t.be Natural Reaourcee Defeme Council.
Dlvisiom over the act are evident even witb.ln tbe commiaaloe,
wblcb l.Mludea representaUves ol lDduatry, labor and envtronmen·
tal 1rou1». Several members report.edly plan to me d1uenUaa opinions. ·
The mandated review ot the law comee amid national concern \.,..
over rili.na enero prlces and PoQible abortates, which will play
an important part In Conareu' dellberaUou.
The recommendationa Included:
-SipUicanUy reduclq sulfur_ dioxide emiaslona in the Eut
Con taJn • t ode wa.te
·Court order asked
to close lagoon
EPPING, N.H. (AP ) -M environmental cleanup crewa
worked to lower the level of a rain-swollen lagoon filled with toxic
chemical wastes, state lawyers prepared to ask for a court order
closing down the waste atoraie site, the only legal treatment
facility iJ\.northem New England.
The Blue Goose, an enormous, mobile water treatment
machine, pumped away throulbout the day, and by late Sunday ·
had brought down the level of the contaminated liquid to 7 inches
below the rim of the man-made lagoon.
"They're going to stop at midni&ht to get a little sleep, but
everyone will be back on the job by sunrise," said Paul Keefe,
owner of Keefe Environmental Services.
An analysis or the lagoon'• contents showed it contained a
variety of acids, solvents and heavy metals, but officials of the
federal Environmental Protection A•ency losisted that after the
chemically-saturated liquid was passed through the 40,000 pounds
of charcoal and sand in the treatment unit "it will be clean enough
to drink."
Nevertheless, state water quality engineers monitored the
water being pumped into a nearby swamp.
Record-breaking rains last week raised the level of the 8·foot
deep, plastic-lined lagoon to it.s ed1es. Keefe and bis crew spent
several nights mopping up small spills, but on Friday Keefe gave up
and told the EPA b.e was" helpless" to control any overflow.
Diet doctor slayer
says foe real target
NEW YORK (AP) -Convicted
murderer Jean Harris says that if
she bad meant to kill anyone, it
would have been Lynne Tryforos,
her rival for the affections ol Dr.
Herman Tarnower.
Mrs. Harris, in jail awaitina
sentencln& for killinl the diet de-
veloper, told People maguine,
"Christ, if I were going to kill
somebody, I'dhavekilledber."
The jury that convicted her last
month concluded that she fu-ed
the fatal shots intentionally,
rather than accidentally. as she
bad claimed.
"I certainly didn't want to kill
Hi," she insisted. "I have been
throuo two years of hell strug-
glin1 with my integrity over that woman."
•·Hi called me wacky for
years " Mrs. Harris added. "He
'said, 'You'd
have to be
wacky to love
me.' But I'm
getting tired
of this 'cruy'
busi ness. I
wa sn 't , and
am not, craiy.
"I don'lfeel
sorry for
MAitatS Lynne or me. I
~arade shooting toll 3
think we both were just stupid
. . . I loved him in spite of all the
warts -and could make fun of
him. And here's a woman who told
him be was God every day for 20
years, and I guess he began to
believe it."
NEWORLEANS<AP)-Ahigh
school band drum major and two
spectators were wounded when
gunfire erupted at a crowded
Mardi Gras parade honoring nine
Marines held hostage in Iran,
authorities said.
The shooting Sunday occurred
well after the floats carrying
Marine Sgt. John D. McKee) and
eight other Marines who had been
held hostage in Iran for 44-4 days
went by.
Two of the victims who were
shot were hospitalized.
Much of country wet
Pr-billty of -5 oec:r .. 11119
10 30 perceftt tonlQflt to ne•r tH'O
Tut\d•v mornlnv. Fair Tuesday.
Coaltol low 4S, lnt....i H. Co.stal
hl9h '4. lnl-... Water S8.
Elsew,..,e, """" cr•lt aO•ltory. l.lghl vorlabl• wine!\ be<OrTllng
•oterly 10 to IS •no11 Tuetday ofter-~ FolrT-v
v.s. ........
While ti.. rHt 01 the n•llon U ·
perlenced 1011-snow •ncl rain,
Catltornla, IOUUWrn Utell and llOf'•
llons of _,tern ArlrON -r• M l'd f\t\ by rein ..-.CS 'now 'how1r1 and 'i;;;;;;;:;;;... _____ -. ___ ..-. _ _.__o_,.-._._•._•.c-.•._••-.•;,.•.-••.,,
wind 1<1..alls !iun«UY
thins 'PtHd Kron t"4 Teus
Panhondle -eastern Golor..io lo
Kanlal •nel nort"4rn OtUahorTla, while HQIM 1~1 tell eiono the,..,.
trot and oes•n Gull CNst and Into
IM soutll Allentk IUHH. Rain turMd
to 1now fl"" let In ti.. Gr HI Lelle\ ravton ond ot hlQllOr elevallons. Sii-•,.. Mre •-11<1 to tOflllnue tOOey l/\r'OUQllOul 1119 Wl'St.
EIHwlMre, scattered snow was
forecast f°' Ille Ore.ti Lok•• r911lon
and UPP9r Ofllo v olley. ••leftell119 to
tM lnloM -1lotll of tflil nlltUWrn
Allantk 1i.t"-Ttin-etures .,_ Ule n.tllon ot
pOwer ~In the LOI A"991•• ., ..
end forclel uw Mrvlce to cell o llnh
11-•olcll In IN foot/\1111.
TIM rain didn't -Sii -n many hlllllcle1. Bui G9M Calm.r, 11, of
Vallnde. wes•MIMd ellovl f..,r mlln
clown a swm ,,_.,.,, almott Into "'9
$anJor.ellll11W,b9fonM.,..•r•11<1Md
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She continued to defend
Tarnower, saying, "I don't want
Hi s meared. Hi Isn't the reason it
(the shooting) happened. He kept
me alive for 14 years.''
Bw strik e h its
Ala bama city
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. jAP) -
A makeshift fleet of church
buses, vans and taxis helped
take up the slack today as ~i·
dents faced their first workday
without city buses, which were
parked because there Is no
money to run them.
.. 'Tblog~ seem to be running as
planned," said Len Gedgoudas,
a coordinator, "but it may be too
early to tell." Gedgoudu, said
be bad received "a lot of calls
tbls morning" at City Hall from
people interested in catching the
church buses and vans.
-............
SISTER MADELEINE ROSE EXPERT ON ODDS
· Nun •how• g•mblen •dv•ntege•
G&1nbling 0110
Sister can beat odds
OAKLAND (AP> -It takes more than Godspeed and a few
Hall Marya to beat an odds-wise pit boss, and Sister Madeleine
Rose Mhton has what it takes.
Sister Madeleine Rose -or "Mad Rose" as her math stu·
dents call her -is well -acquainted with casino odds, and is well
known here for her lecture entitled: "How To Gamble ... If
Y(\u Must." The prim Holy Names College instructor, who last year
celebrated a.Golden Jubilee to mark SO years among the Sisters
of the Holy Names, said Friday that odds making grew out of
her work in probability.
"THIS LECTURING ls just something I do, because part of
the philosophy of the college is that we should go out and share
our resources with tbe community, .. said Sister Ashton, a
former president of the co-educational liberal arts school in the
hills above San Francisco Bay.
She said her lecture got it.s start when she sat beside a
pollce chief at a service club luncheon and the subject of gam-
bling came up. .. AbOut three weeks later, the chief called and asked if I'd
speak to bis Kiwanis club because they were going to Reno,"
she recalled in a telephone interview. "I spoke to them and then
they offered to pay my way if I'd go with them."
SHE TURNED the offer down. Though her order and the
college take her interest in gambling lightly, she'd rather spend
wnat money sne has by going to an Oakland A 's baseball game.
However, she bas no moral objection to gambling, as long as the
stake isn't the grocery money.
Her lecture includes expert tips on how to play. and bow not
to:
"Keno is the worst game because the house has 28 percent
advantage. That's the difference between your chance of win-
ning and the house's chance.
"In craps, the house bas only a 1.41 percent advantage. But
there are only six good bets in craps. And if you make any other
bets you're 1oing to be paying a lot of vigorisb (the difference
between mathematical odds and the payoff odds>. For example,
if you bet any seven the house vigorish is about 16 percent .
"People who know six or eight comes up more often than
any oth• point numbers· think the big six or ei&ht is a good bet.
But it really isn't, because it only pays l·l and it should pay
more than that. Now, if you take full ocJds. that's the best bet in
the house." Does praying help?
"No," she says, thoughtfully. "I don't think so."
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Orqe Co•t DAILY PtLOf/Monday, March 21 1981 H/F AA .
TeSts 'Neslioned
l Police probe--
robbery try
I
ll:igh •chool 1tUdent1 •1"'116ling
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Alt.~
yean ol acbool, the avera1e atuden(
1bould be able to read a newse:;'i balaAce a checkbook and -ac
to the 1tate ol Callfornla -not muc
more.
In an effort to batUe the state'• poor
academic performance amont bllb
aebool student.a, the Departm-.t ol
Tbe ~ problem a etty like Saa
J'randleo fee., .. ,. LeoDard, ii tbat
"I don't tb1nk all ~arenta r.ally understand tbe 1 ca.nee of tbia
teat" -that It ta wW DOt be
awardeddlplomu lftbey fall.
Dell)'lq diplomat la one way of
1ettin11tudenta' attention, aeeordlnc
to Dave Gordon, testing director for
the state Department orEaucatloil.
AUIAllBRA (AP) -Police were llninl up
wttaeues and 10rtlnl out information in an at·
teblpt to ftnd at leut one remalnlns 1unman in a
bdt9bed weekend 1upermarket robbery that ended
with an excban1e of 1un1tre and tbe capture of
another iunman.
No one wu injured ln the atY,mpted holdup
Saturday, and one man -Oscar Duran, 43, of
Montebello -was arrested after be en1a1ed
police and a liquor 1bop owner ln a IWlfllht at th~
entrance of the Alpha Beta market in tbia
northeutem suburb of Loi Aftieles.
....... •••e••J1 .... •••*-..
Bli•p goes u_,,
• Education baa decreed that 1tartln1
tbi1 year younssters must show
"minimum proflcien~" in re~g.
writing and mathema'Ucs in order to
1raduate.
But many questions on proficiency tests measure accomplishments u
low as those usually taught in the flflb
pd stxtbpades.
..EILEEN WO&KED from 10:30
a .m . until 4 p.m . with 30 minutes for
lunch. How· many hours did she
work?" asks a umpfe question.
Another asks how much cbanse 1
Mount Baldy
avalanche
kills skier
PA.SADENA (AP> -A local chapter of the
NAACP hopes to make red ribbons symbolic of
concern over the alayln1s and disappearances of
21 black children ln AUanta the way yellow ~b-
bons did during the cap·
tivity of 52 Americans in NEWS eRIEFS lran;'This is our Iran,"
said Ruby Williams, pre·
sident of the Pasadena
chapter of the National Association for the Ad·
vancemenl of Colored People, at a gathering Sun·
day afternoon.
Sagging Goodyear airship Columbia lays on around at Canon dock·
ing facility after suffering dama1e from a "freak wind" Sunday that
caused the blimp to twiat on its moortn1 lines. A tall fin shattered and
punctured the blimp's airbag. Goodyear says the blimp will be out of
commission for about two months during repairs.
person should get if be paid for a $3. 75 .A!'!ic le with a $5 bill.
Students need pass the test only once
and can take it several times each year
during their four-year high school
educations. The tests ha ve been given
in some areas for the last three years to
prepare students.
MOUNT BALDY CAP> -Skiers
were warned that four major snow
paths near Mount Baldy could "go any
m inute" after an avalanche buried a
San Pedro man who later died in a
hospital.
Bozidar Govorcin, 31 , was skiing
with bis brother in an off· ll mi ta '1't'• of
Mount Baldy when an avalancbeolwet
snow buried him Sunday, authorities
said. He died about 2~ hours after be
was rescued and brought to San An·
tonio Community Hospital in nearby
Upland.
. . Yet a study shows that more than 500
seniors both in San Francisco and
Oakland may not pass by this June.
---~·••"r•..;..,_,,.,...,. Gene firm Wall Street Wilson Riles, state superintendent of
public instruction, agrees that "no
matter bow you cut it, the high school
youngsters are not doing as well as
they should.·'
BELL <AP> -Police were looking for·several
patrons involved in a bar fight with a man who
drowned after he apparentlaa left unconacious in a
puddle outside the tavern.
Gonzalo Rodriguez, 36, of Bell, was arguing
with a few patrons at the Irish Village Bar when
be allegedly was beaten and dragged from the
establishment, witnesses told police.
action 'unjustified' LAST YEAR, California 'seniors
rank e d i n the botto m third
academically in the nation. Ac cording
to Riles, causes include too many
one -parent families , too much
telev1s1on, poor teacher attitucfes,
drugs, alco hol ism a nd o ther
poverty-related problems that plague
inner -city schools.
Govorcin was suffering from
hypothermia and a cardiac arrest
when he was brourht lo the facility,
sa id hospital spokeswoman Marilyn
J ohannes. She said be died while doc·
tors were treating him.
er....t .. ••••n• re...,•
SAN FRANCI SCO CAP> -Sen. Alan
Cranston's drive to raise a national campaign
warc best without party ap·
proval bas angered Democratic
leaders who fear he is compel·
ing with them for funds, the San
Francisco Chronicle reported
today.
A s h o wd o wn o v e r
Cranston 's $6 million fund·
raising plan, aimed at helping
elect more Democrats to the
Senate, is set for Tuesday.
Cranston, the Senate minority-cuNSTOM
leader, will meet with House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill and Rep. Tony Coelho, chairman of the
Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
tJ•UU.•llre..w ......
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A fire wblcb swept
thrqueJi one noor of a commercial buiJdini left $1
mUJJon in damaee, and investigators say they sus·
pect arson in the blaze.
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -While
long-range medical and commercial
impact• of genetic engineer ing
almost boggle the mind, several top
scientists say frenzied Wall Street
trading in new gene-splicing firms
bas passed the boundary of reason.
Although several companies have
used genetic engineering to make
bacteria produce a number of poten·
tiaUy valuable substances, few real
benefits are close enough to justify
the volume of trading, said Leroy
Hood of the California Institute of
Technology.
BE SA.ID NONE of the substances
have reached the market -or even
proven their value.
"Wall Street is just mad about re·
combinant DNA. They've suspended
reason," Hood said. "It isn't going to
last a lot longer."
Testa on the substances are under
way, but the process of provinl the
safety and efficacy of a new drug -
the.n wiDn1Dg government approval to
market it -la lengthy and without
guarantees. ·
Our washable tropicals,
exclusive at Brooks Brothers
This hot-weather suit is cine of our most popu-
lar, especially with men who commute or travel.
It's an extremely lightweight polyester-worsted
tropical, it actually is washable, and it sturdily
resis ts wrinkles. We feel iris an exceptional
value, with the appearance of a tropical 'at a
higher price. Striees, plaids and solids in a good
.color choice. Coat and trousers, $175
U11 yqur Broolu Bro1,,1rs char11 account or American Exprds~
llTAIU'""t.1111
"The potential is everything that's
been written about it and more that
you haven't even imagined," Hood
said Friday in an interview during a
recombinant DNA conference. "But
it's an illusion to think that it's just
around the comer. It's more of a
10-year time scale.
"I THINK MOST of these com·
panies are going to go bankrupt
before that· happens,'' Hood predicts,
although the best of the companies
will survive to become giants of a
new industry.
Charles Weissmann of the
University of Zurich also said the
stock market fever for genetic _en.sineerlng" has been overdone."
Weiasmann is, along with Walter
GilbeJ1, ol Harvard University, the
scientific base of a Swi~s firm called
Biogen, which apparently wu the
flrat to use genetic en1lneerln1 to
prqduce interferon, a bllbly touted
potenttal treatment for cltaeues in·
eluding cancer.
)'
Now, say officials, they will no
longer "socially promote" students.
"In the past we've been accused of
graduating students who couldn't read
-functional illiterates ," said a San
Francisco Unified School District
official. •'That day has passed. We are
absolutely not going to graduate a
youngster who can't read or write
EneUsh."
The tests admittedly demand "rock
bottom" skills, say officials , but
district Associate Superintendent
Fred Leonard says they will steadily
be upgraded over the next few years.
"I DON 'T THINK we c an
overempbuize the fact that it ls really
a very minimum proficiency test and
certainly any district that isn•t
planning to upgrade it is planning itself
for doom and disaster," said Leonard.
HIS BllOTBER, Dragojo, also was
trapped when the avalanche fell from
Bentley's Slope to the Sugarpine run,
about 40 miles northeast of Los
Angeles, said U.S. Forest Service dis·
patcher Bob Underwood.
But the brother, who was only
partially buried, was able to walk out
with assistance and was treated and
released at the same hospital.
·"The other guy was buried in six to
eight feet for some time, and when they
dug him out he wasn't breathing. But a
doctor found a heartbeat,'' Underwood
said.
SHE SAID THERE were four major
avalanche paths that could "go any
minute."
Searchers from the Forest Service,
the San Bernardino Sheriff's Depart·
ment and local fire departments
probed the snow near the lodge and
lift parking area Sunday alt.emoon in
case others bad been overtaken by
the cascading snow.
Tbe Mount Baldy ski area bad just
reopened Friday after being closed for
three weeks due to lack of snow.
KOCM FM . STEREO 103.1
Dea.r KOCM Listeners :
Saturday, February 28, 1981 was your da.y to think
Ora.nge-ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC-on Stereo 103.1, KOCM.
If you missed us, tune in a.nd listen to bright,
beautiful, contemporary ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC. If
you a.re listening to us, tha.nk y ou. Thin k Or ange
:-ORANGE COUNTY MUSIC-every day.
Over the last eighteen months we have been developing
a. new a.nd improved contemporary, easy listening m usic
format especially for you. We are extremely excited
a.bout the music a.nd hope you a.re, toq.
We ha.ve a.lso spent the last yea.r improving the air
sound of KOCM with new state-of-the-a.rt audio equipment
tha.t was installed to deliver to you the best
ftdel1ty possible.
We ha.ve been proud to be a part of this exciting a.nd
well planned growing community for 17 yea.rs a.nd look
forward to the yea.rs'ahea.d. Our ma.ny thanks to you
a.nd our advertisers for your continuing support.
KOCM wtll appreciate your comments or suggestions.
. Sincerely,
I'
•
It's pretty ridiculoua when tupayen have to ftnuee
law1\dta ft1ed by one 1ov.-nmeot qeney &1ainlt anotber.
bUt In the cue of the San Juan Creek dred1m1 debate
there seems to be no alternative.
Tbe mouth of the creek at Doheny State Beach ii so
cto11ect with sand. 1Ut and uaorted debris left by winter
storms the channel now can bold only SO per~ent of its
normal water capacity.
Last winter this caused severe nooct1n1 that dama1ed
an adjacent Mwa1e treatment plant and resulted in a 11
mlllloO suit against the county by the sewage aaency. That
suitiasWJ pending.
The county' understandably. wants to aet rid of the
esUmated 280,000 cubic yards of sand blocking the creek
channel before more fJooding occurs. By selling the sand it
could complete the job for about $40,000. .
The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission
authorized the project last year. But the state Coastal
Commission overturned that rulinJC, insisting the sand
could not be sold but must be placed on Doheny Beach to
prevent shoreline erosion.
The estimated cost to the county for this procedure is
$560,000, or 14 times the original estimate . "'
Since the county is in no position to shell out half a
million dollars for the project, the Orange County Flood
Control District now has been obliged to file suit against
the state Coastal Commission in an effort to retain the
right to sell the dredged sand.
This procedure in past dredgin~ projects has saved
county taxpayers an estimated $6 million while providing
essential flood protection.
It's unfortunate the state commissioners seem unable
to grasp the significance of their arbitrary ruling without
dragging the issue into court. But apparently that's wh"t
it will take.
Hold that peri01eter
A keystone of Orange County government's effort to
maintain John Wayne Airport as a short·haul facility is
the so-called perimeter rwe prohibiting jet air carriers
from flying to destinations more than 500 miles distant.
There's only one exception, Salt Lake City, Utah, 526
miles away. ·
The reasoning behind the rule is simple. Limit the dis-
tances to which air carriers may fly and1, effectively, the
airport operator has leverage to control the activity at
the airport, and, thus, the noise jet traffic produces.
It now appears the perimeter ruJe is in jeopardy.
Both the Federal Aviation Administration and the Civil
Aeronautics Board say it violates regulations on in-
terstate commerce and the tenets of the Airline Deregula-
tion Act of 1978.
It's odd the FAA would take such a position consider-
ing that one of its own airports -National, outside
Washington D.C. -has a 750·mile perimeter rule. The
agency has no convenient answer for why the rule is ac·
ceptable in the East, but not in the West.
Thus far, county airport officials and t.he Board of
Supervisors have resisted suggestions that the perimeter
rule be eased or abolished. Doubtless, at some point in
the future, the federal government will get heavy handed
about the situation and sue the county.
Regardless, this is one issue the county sh6uld be pre-
pared to go to the mat on. The airport's short haul status
must be preserved. r
~~h!~ ~~ s~~t!~r~~~~l supply
of 3-cent stamps (remember when they used to carry a
le tter right across the country?)
They'll be needed by everyone who loaded up on 15-
cent stamps right before the Postal Rate Commissior· ap·
proved an increase in the first class mail rate to 18 cents.
The new rate could be in effect in about 10 days. But
don't invest too heavily in the 18·centers. The Postal
Service says it still needs to charge 20 cents for first class
letters and will be back next year seeking another in·
crease.
The commission's rate compromise will give the
Postal Service about $1 billion less per yeai;. than the $3. 75
billion it claims is needed to off s,tt inflation and meet
operating expenses.
Meanwhile President Reagan, in his economic ad-
dress, proposed reducing the postal subsidy by $632
million next year to encourage the service to become
"more effective."
And if that cut takes place, you know who will be
picking up the tab via still higher postage rates.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is i9vited. Address Tht Dally Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92026. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boy d/Popcorn
ByLM. BOYD
The diggers in ancient
graves say they've found
popcorn samples· at least
56,000 yeap old. If you've
eaten popcorn at some
theaters, you might have
guessed that. I suppose.
Anyhow, popcorn goes way
back.
One James Fyfe, a consul·
tant to the Police Founda·
tlon, claims police offlcen in
•
Postase ..., from u
ceatl to i8 ciMa to •
cents. JIGaale .-.. •• tbat bit a1aln bow It
t.n't .-. to be ball· neea uUIU&I.
NEVADA NELL
Houston shoot 15 times u
m any people as do the
lawmen in other cities. How
do you explain the why ol
that?
Q. What do the old folks
mean when they refer to
••Tl n k er· to • Ever a -lo·
Chance"?
A. They were lnfielden in
major &easue baseball early
in lh1a century. And a re-
now n ed bumorlat named
rranklln P . Ad ams lm·
mortallJed them in 1908 ln a
b r 1 e f v·e r a e c a J 1 e d
''Baseball'• Sad Le1lcon." Wrot~ IM: "Tbeae are tbe
'saddest of possible word.a
. . . Tlnker to E•era to
Cbance ... Trio of Bear
Cube n.tm-\ban blrda ...
Tlnk ... to Even to Cbane. ... Rutbl.,: pridiDI Our 1ontalan ... llaklq
a Giant blt into a double ...
Worell that an wellbtr with
notblas but trouble . . .
TlDker to..Jv_.. to Cltaaee".
Q. How 1D9D1 of tbe PU·
111 .. ..._came owr • tM llarfloW•r weat bacll to Sa.....,
A. Nella. ...
,
•
(
Tnome1 P. Heley/Publllher Thomet ICMYll /Edrtor
Monday, March 2, 1981
Jack Andenon •
Goven1ment foilS its auditoES
WASHINGTON -"S the
rod and 1poil u.t cbll~ an
old·fubloaed mulm that bu
toaa ainc:e fallen out ot faYOI' -
wlth the federal aovenament. WbeD Uncle Sam's har4woft·
iDI audit.ors flnd ev{dence ol
fraud and
waate lD the
apendlna.. of
federal tunda,
the 1overn·
meat is aup-
p o a e d to
crack down
on the otf en·
ders and at
least force
them to give
back the money they ripped off
· from the taxpayen. In many
caaea, interest and penalties
should be levied as weU.
Incredibly, though, the mid·
die-level bureaucrats who
should be chasing down these
wayward billions just can't be
bothered. In some cases, they
actually reward the ripoff
artists with even more govern-
~ J'
-..
~ ~ "
\-tj
~ --
PlJIXltT p~~ -.-. .
I I
Richard R eeves
meat JOOdi•. Spared the rod ot
rederal enforcement, It'• no
wonder the apoUed reclplentl ot
1ov6nunent funds thumb tbeir
no.ea at the reauJaUcm -and
lau1b alt the way to the bank.
Blt&B A&E aome examples
that •bow wby 1overnment
audltan are probably t.be moat
frultr.aed civil aervanta of all:
-In May lt'19, auditors at the
National Aeronautics aQd Space
AdminLltratloo reported that the
MacNeaJ -Scbwendler Corp.
waa marketine a computer pro-
1ram that bad been developed
by Uncle Sam -but wu DOt
payin1 the required leue fees to
the government. The auditors
estimated that NASA could re-
cover anywhere from $300,000 to
$2 million.
But the space bureaucrats
evidently bad their eyes on the
stars Instead of on mundane
money matters. A recent UD·
released review by the General
Accounting Office reported that
"a lthouib 15 months have
elapMd since the audit report
••• IJ&ued, no substantive ac· Uou have occurred" to set the
money owed.
-JN .IANUA&Y 1979 ,
A1rlculture Department
audit.on discovered that botb
Asrlculture and the Health and
Human Services Department
had been relmburain&
PbUadelpbla'a Get-Set Day Care
Pro1ram for, food service labor<
The program had recelvea
$478,000 It wa.an'l entitled to. But
because the two departments'
bureaucra.ts couldn't decide
wbicb aaency should go ~r the
overpayment. "the funda have
not been recovered and the day
care operator is sllJI being
funded by both programs," GAO
reporta.
~ Housing and Urban
Development auditors recom·
mended disallowing reimburse·
ment ol $50,500 in claims for
personne~ costs by the city of
South Bend, Ind. But HUD
poobbahs allowed the improper-
ly docu.meat.ed claim after tbe
~:rcb~=~!:.c=~:s~ ;
'rom memoey.
-DuriDc a three.year period,
tbe Fulton County (Ul.) Houalftt
Authority received excess HUD
payment.I ol nearly $100,000, but
failed to give the money· back.
Nol only bu no progreaa been
made in collecUn1 the overpay-
ment, but the county bu since t
been elven an additional $250,000
ln government subsidies.
-Community Services Ad·
ministration officials asked the
Florida Department of Com·
munity Affairs lo re&J.>ODd to' ' ""
questions raised in a 1978 federal
audit regarding $298,416 in gov·
ernmenl grant money. The state
agency Ignored the request.
Though CSA warned the Florida
department it faced a cutoff of
federal funds tr lt failed to
respond, the slSte stiJI made no
reply. Yet il was awarded
another $500,000 by CSA -and a
subsequent audit raised ques·
lions about $70,924 of that grant.
THE GAO IN 1978 found that
34 federal agencies were owed a
total of $4.3 billion according to
government audits. A recent,
broader survey done at the re·
quest of Rep. Jack Brooks, D·
Texas, chairman or the Govern·
menl Operations Committee,
showed 73 agencies with a total
of $14.3 billion in "unresolved
a udit findings ." Brooks plans to
hold hearings on the GAO's sur-
vey.
One big problem, v!Keran gov·
ernmenl auditors told my as-
sociate Tony Capaccio, is that
there is little incentive for
management bureaucrats to
follow up on audit findings.
That's because few government
officials a re graded on their
performance in retrieving
money owed. Jn fact, there is
so me i ncenli ve not to do
a nything, because the audits
often involve programs the mid·
level bureaucrats are managing
themselves. Any enthusiastic
pursuit or the misspent money
would simply call the embar·
rassing mistake to their bosses'
attention.
The • econonnc debate involves all of us
WASHINGTON -''Can we
who man the ship of state deny
that it is somewhat out of con·
trol?"
That was our captain s peaking.
Ronald Reagan grabbed the
wheel of slate
and gave it a
hard spin to
starboard. I
think that was
starboard, but
I'm not sure 1
know r ight
fr o m left
anymore. I'm
not sure
a nyone else
does either. And I'm not sure that
we're not a little more out of con·
trol than we were a month ago or
so.
Shifting metaphors, there
aeema to be panic in the streets
of the capital. Not j ust the
polltlcal panic of senators.
bureaucra~ and lobbyists wor-
ried about budget cuts, but an
inl~llectual panic. There ls a
somewhat scary rush to
economic judgment going on
among people who should know
better.
Suddenly, conservatives and
liberals, R e public ans and
Art Hoppe
Democrats, the president ~d
his critics, all seem to agree that
"supply-side" economics will
work, that tax cuts and budget
cuts will get ail of us out of Uris
inflationary mess. Democratic
senators, like Minority Leader
Robert Byrd, and . Ii beral
economists. like Otto Eckstein of
Harvard, were lined up in front
of televis ion cameras that
night ques tioning specifics
of the Reagan program but not
the theory behind it. The next
morning, The New York Times
was saying, "The economic
strategy that underlies the
Reagan budget plan is sound."
Is it? I remember George
Bush laughing al it last year and
calling the whole thing "voodoo
economics... More important, I
remember sitting three years
ago with the man who sort of in-
vented supply·side economics,
Arthur Laffer of the University
of Soulbem California, when be
said be bad no idea whether bis
theories would actually work in
practice.
IT'S P&OBABLY worthwhile
right about now to go back to
basics for a moment. What is the
theory? What the bell is supply·
side economics?
Basically, it's the idea that
people produce primarily to get
money for themselves -after-
tax profit and income. So, the
lower the taxes, particularly in
higher·income brackets, the
more the American economy will produce and the more pres·
perily there will be for all of l.!S·.
That Idea -which used to be
called "trickle-down" theory -
is different from what might be
called "demand" economics, the
notion that production and pro-
ductivity are linked directly to .
demand and that government
shoulL stimulate demand with
spending programs and smaller
lax cuts.
WILL THE new idea work?
Let's hope so, because we're ob-
viously going to try it. President
Reagan, who seems convinced
that be knows what he's doing,
has brilliantly constructed a
political context in which the
question is not what lo do but
how to do things his way.
More power to hitn, but there
are real danger s in this. It
really ls an experiment -and it
may be nothing more than an a~
tack on the psychology of infla-
tion. Reagan would like lo break
the inflationary cycle: If people
believe things will get better,
they may stop asking, demand-
ing, screaming for and paying
more, more and more.
THE P RESIDENT, if all bis
spending cuts are accepted -
the~'re not really "cuts" but re·
ductioos in rates of growth -
would slow the year·lo·year in-
creases in federal spending from
the current 16 percent lo 7 per·
cent. But there will be tax cuts al
the same time as the spending
rate reductions, and those cuts.
reducing federal revenues, at
least for a time, will increase the
federal debt and could trigger
even more inflation. Then. we
could all be screaming and paying
even more than we are now.
This is an adventure. a gam-
ble. "A new element has been
injected into the ongoing
economics d ebate,·· said
Lawrence Klein, a Nobel Prize·
winning economist from the
Whartoo School of Finance. For
economists, it's a debate. For
government, it's an experiment.
For us, it's our futures. Each of
us is one of those new elements
In that ongoing economic de·
bale.
Off to Never-Never Land with ~ Ronnie Pan .
Michael, John and Wendy
Darlln1 were Just setWng down
to sleep when the window blew
open and in new a handsome
figure in pea-green tunic,
matcblna U,bta and boot.I.
"ID, I'm RonnJe Pan," be
aald, •trtkina a po1e. "Come'lly
away with me
to Never ·
Never Landi where I wtl
·cut JOUI" tu-ee 11 percent
and t hereby
defeat Cap·
taiD Hook, ..
Inflation will only get worse.
Won't it?"
Ronnie scowle1 and sculled
the toe ol bis hoof on the carpet.
"I hate details," be said.
"Where is that Tinkerbell
&tockman , m·y voodoo
economist, wben I need lUmT"
AS TllOVGB ln amwer to a
pra1er, a little 1lowln1 fllw'e
wlth a '25 balrcut and a booe ln
lta DOM rutted lD the wlDdow.
darted about the room I.ad set-
Ued on tbe bedpoet.
evll\/lrate
ban and
d ouble·dlftt
l.Dllatlan."
"Explain my plan ,
TinkerbeU," commuded Roll·
nle, NUriDI to a corner, foldlal '
bia anm, 1ta.1M"aa on bil M.a
· ' and eklllq bl.I ey11. "But aot
too loudlJ .''
"Ob, It'• reall7 quite llmple, "Ob, bow waaderf\a.I Romde " cbU..," said TIMerbell ... Yo.
1ald WtDdy, cJapplq ber bands. WOD 't tpend tM IDOMJ ....... •
"But '°" wW euttlDt our tu• ..... 16 lift 10Q. Yoa'U P.11& I ID do all iJMI?'' . tM '**· .. -... , ...... ,.. ... ID°'*1 to -...... ~ l ........ .,... .. ...... " ...... Mid...... 1MM7,'.' ....... liW.J~ "A.Qw--uaat." ·~ ........ ,.. ..... ,lllillln' Ilsa •II .... a. 94 tO bQ Wap Mien UM
lile," .. llM."tfwlaaft_.. trteea --'' ... •'' • .,....._.
m09Q .......... -... 1'11111 ............. --Udall•..._ wUl 10 up--· JOU ....,.... t6bip ma4e ~
go up. But now that you know
Ronnle Pan is going to lick lnfla.
tion and prices won't go up, you
won't buy tbinp. You'U put your
money in the bank instead."
"We wlll?" aald Wendy
dubiously.
"Certainly " sald Tinkerbell
firmly. "And tbe bankers will
tbell have iota more money to
lend to tbe bualneumen. And the
buaintNmen will tben be able to
build tituer factories and make
Iota more thinp. • • ·
"That's 1ood?" a1ked
Michael.
"Obviously," 1ald TID.kerbell.
.. Por UM more tbAAct t.MJ make
tbe cbMper the price• wW be.
8o, you '"· 1l 10'I Jut belleft Lbat RGmde Pan wtfl lick lnlla· ·
lion and P'Jl you.r mon.,y in the
bank, Ronnie Pan wilt lick lnlla·
lion."
T H E TR&EE children
scratched their heada. "But with
more tblDp to buy," asked Wen-
dy, "won't we buy more tbinp
and cause lnflatioo1"
''Or not1 buy m°" tbinl• alld
cause a depreaaton?" asked·
MicbMl.
"Tell UI about CapttlD ffoM
and the plratea," demanded lit·
UeJohn.
But, by now, Tlnkerbell'• voice had pvwn f alnt ud ·Ml •
flow dim. Jlonnle aomenauhild to bilfwt. ''Don't you tnow,'' be
1ald lelUly, "tbat •Yel'Y time. chlld ..,., '1 don't belieft in
• •oodoo ec!ODOIDlc:a,' a voodoo I economic tbeor1 aomewbere
ra111 dDwn delMlr
TIM eMldr'a looked ~.
"How _. 1" aawe Tbak•blUT" .. .........
• 'If ,.. bell••• •• • .... 1naam·• • .._,.. u.1111"
eiieil •• nti ~Paa ... ~ • , ........ ~ .....
, .... Dl •• el •• ,.
I I
j
\ '
~--~~c..-...-------~--~f-' _____ _
~es, it'• flasefJall season
Jerry Reuss (left.> flies over Jay Johnstone
while Steve Garvey Crlght) leaps over Don
Stanhouse as the Dodgers take time out
fr m spring tra g at Vero Beach to play
a ame of leap f , g.
· J{eagftn sa! tlier • crymg
Pre1ident recall• hi• football experiences
By WILL G&IMSLEY
·~ S.-lel c--· . "' President Ronald Reagan, the
legendary "Gipper" in the mov-
ie that memorialized Notre
Dame Coach Knute Rockne,
sees football as a game-that
engenders "clean hatred" and
"mutual respect."
White House and hit golf balls in
privacy hours at a time. Warren
Harding liked to entertain
baseball heroes.
~
He approached a producer of
bis films, Brynie Foy, who
thought Reagan was seeking
some payment for the idea.
REAGAN RECALLED the
subsequent details :
"I said, 'Well, J don't want
anything for it. I just want to
play the Gipper.' He said,
'They've tested half a dozen
guys already.' J rushed to see
SEA VIE-W IEAGUE ROUNDUP • • •
bue, wtlUe GuM ud Bl'OW'DIM
ban ......, tbe&r wa1 ln t.M out·
field. Mark llolidl aDd Jamie
Jordu are \bl ailllt fteld cu·
dldatel. Lettennaa J'f Heott, a Junior.
wut be at ftnt or third wb.Ue
Febrabacb appear• tolld at
catebef.
Sim• ll a ••i ~pounder with lood .,..S, WAUe We1tbrook, a
lefttl! •1. 210 pounds.
O top eandldatet lnclude
outtlelder TOD)' DlGre1orio. ln·
fielder Shannon Eichner and
lirtt buemen Dou1 Hellman
and Tim Scott.
eo.telle•• Kirk Bauerm..-ter takes over
tbe Mutanp• proaram and IQI
bll team wUl be 1ound de-
fenalvely up the middle. will
field above avera1e hittiq and
show pretty lood team speed.
Tbe queation mark: pitcblnt.
Third buem..-Joe Crua and
catcher Jefl Field are two of the
more prominent playen OD the
Mesa roster. Cru1 wields the
beat bat and Field ii considered
one of the best catcbln1 pros-
pects in the Sea View League.
Tom Sulllvan and Steve An·
denoo, a pair of junion at the
keystone, work well to1ether,
and Rlbby Sink ii at first after
moving from catcher.
Greg Tereg,ll will be in left
field while Max Marold and
Dennis Jones are the leading
candJdatea for center field .
Marold ii expected to be ready
for league play after undergoine
knee surgery.
Jones was the most valuable
player oo the junior vanity a
year ago as a Junior.
Steve Wiiliamson and Mike
Dawe figure to.share right field.
Williamson is afso a relief
pitcher and Dawe could move in
at designated hitter.
Io the pitching department
there are two sophomores who
hold the key to the Mustangs'
potential. Jeff Goettsch and
Austin Smith are. the two
Bauermeister is counting on to
pull the staff toeether and pro-
vide quality depth. . . ·
Also available la senior John
atevw. wbo po11eu" • .,ad 1Uder Md carveball.
Scott Yuen complet• th•
roeter • tbe Mmtanp' Ullllty
player. )
New Coa~r h'om
Thousand Ow Hip tak .. over
at Uni wbere a major cballeftle
awaltl.
"I know lt aounda like a ellcbl,
but our No. 1 priority ii develop-
tn1 a ~m attitude." P'ilber 11y1. " · unicaUoa hat been
tbe poelUve key thu1 far."
The TroJana won ooly three
1amet In .-o. but wlth a few re-
turnees and a better atUtude,
Fltber la confident that Uni
won't be a pushover.
Fitber admitl that h1a tquad
appean to be abort on pltchlne.
He'll be lookin1 for Brad Gueu
to be a atop~r. At 6-7, Fiaber
says that Gueu la a bard-thrower.
Rounding qut the pltchln1
corp• are Greg Eberhardt, a
rieht-banded Junior and Pat
Backon who will work out ol tbe
'™llpen and aa a short starter.
At catcher, Mike Mliler and
Jeff Frye will both see action.
The atrenath In the infield la at
third base where Gres Buckler, a solicl bitter, returns and at
first bue where Dave Orlill, a
transfer from Irvine, ls expected !9 have a good year.
The shortstOp will be Mike
Sbavce, wbo iai oat wtUa •la· JUI')' 1Mt JUI' .... Ncoed .....
betw .. Knba ~ and ~1
Wat.k.IM. botlt .......
Jn a.ft fteJd 11 Clutl Plam, a
ttaul• bom Tuu wbo II u
outat&DdiM hitter. enter fteld
wtJI so to lob Mamek or Adam
Venlt ud rt1bt fteld will be
patrolled by Bruce Buektnpam:'
"It'• ~ eomlDt lnto • ..,,.
1ram niWT' HY• rtaber. "But I
believe we'll be a winner . . '.1
eventuaU1." !
II Toro 1;
Three returnln• 1tarten .£:
outlieldera Erle Bryant aaa
Jobn Glina and flnt buemq
Jim Corvarrublu -live eoaea:
Tom McCaffrey a tolld nucleu1. · l
Other aenlon counted OD are
lnfielden Mark Gower and Joe
amlin, pltcben Dave Hem,..
Conrad Glacomaui. and
War erdet, catcher Brett
Tokan and utillty player Mlke
Cervoni.
Shawn Slneb. the ASB preal-
dent. retuma at third.
Juniors, in addition to Covar:
rubias at first base, are lQ:
flelden Bret Dumas and Mike
Lomeli, catcher Mark
Matran1a. outfielders Damon
Sweazy and Mike B~c ard, and sophomores Doug M t.er and
Blake Fennel, each ulfield-
pitching combinatl
Sea Dream sails to win
Little boata and big weather
was the format· of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's five-race
aeries for Midget Ocean Racing
Class <MORC> Friday, Saturday
and Sunday.
The Ccirkett Trophy was
originally awarded to
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet yachts in a nine months
series sailed in conjunction with
NHYC's Ahmanson and Dickson
Series. It was rededicated this
year to MORC for a single
weekend series..
The winner was Sea Dream, a
Merlt-25 co-skippered by lllke
George and· Paul Yatea ,
California Yacht Club. Second
was Snojob, a Santa Crus-25
sailed by Mark Gaudio and Jim
De Wolfe, Bahia Corlnlhia~
·Yacht Club, and third wu Un-
broken Chain, a J -24 sailed by
Jordon Murphy. Balboa YC.
The series started mildly'
enough Friday with two races·
sailed in moderate 8-10 knot
breeies, but as the weather front
descended Saturday the fleet·
took off on a ts.,mile race around
the oil islands in 20-25 knot
winds.
"I know of no other game that
gave me the same feeling that
football did," the nation's chief
executive told Inside Sports in
an interview recalllng his ex-
periences as a 135-pound guard
in high school, later a 175-pound
lineman in college and a radio
sports announcer.
Dwight Eisenhower was an
avid golfer who had a second
White House at Augusta, Ga.,
home of the Masters. John F.
Kennedy was a sailor, golfer and
\ouch football buff. Both
lUcbard Nixon and Gerald Ford
got their relaxation on the goll
course. Jimmy Carter piaye4
tennis.
the producer and his first words ..:-----------------------------------=====::---
Interviewed by Mark Shields,
a columnist for the Washington
Post, Reagan was asked if he
felt that his experiences in
sports had given him a
particular sense of accomplish-
ment.
"WELL, I THINK they have,"
the president replied. "And J
think football particularly. A
Navy football player once
described it as the nearest thine
to war without being lethal.
"It is the last thing left in
civilization where two men can
literally fling themselves bodily
at each other in combat and not
be at war. You hate the color ol
his jersey, but there's a mW.ual
respect that develops while
you're playing on the field .
Reagan, a left-handed l\mt·
slinger in a score of Westefl.
movies, got his greatest movie,
fame perhaps in the role of th~
dying George Gipp in the rum.
"Knute Rockne: All-American·~
in which Pat O'Brien play_ed thet
legendary coach of the Fiebtinc
J_rjsb.
IN TRIS WEE&•s issue of the
sports magazine, Shields, a
former Notre Damer himself,
elicita from the president the in-
formation that be, Reagan, was
parUy responsible for the mak-
ing of the picture.
'' J told the Gipp story oo the
air once when I was a sports an-
nouncer,'' the president re-
called, "with no idea that one
day in Hollywood I would be
saying those same lines,
because they were right out of
Rockne's diary."
Reagan said he always felt
that the Rockne story should be
made into a movta.... When he eot
to Hollywood, he started putting
together the framework of a
script and passing it among the
studios. Then he learned that
Warner Brothers was doing the
picture.
to me were, 'Well, wait a
mlnut~. This is the greatest foot-
ball player who ever lived.' He
dido 't tb1nk I was big enough."
Reatan rushed home and got
a picture of himself in a football
· uniform, pads and all. Pat
O'Brien personally helped film
\ with the screen test. He got the
part.
Jn the movie, O'Brien, as ~Rockne, says to Reagan, the
Gipper: "I want you to run wit.b
the ball."
"How far?" aaka the Gipper.
Reagan waa a 135-pound guard
at North Side ffigb School in
Dixon, Ill., captain of the 135-
llnd-under team. He later was
elevated to the varsity and was
l:lose to six feet and 175 pounds
~hen be entered Eureka College
·m Illinois in the Little 19 Coo-
rerence.
It wasn't the Big Ten or the
Jvy League.
··Let me say one thing in de·
tense of that Little 19 Con-
rerence," Reagan said. "The
Little 19, at that time, sent more
?layers to pro ball than any con-
ference in the country.'·
And, he might have added, a
~an to the White House.
·'And, also, there is a kind of
inner confidence because you've
met your fellow man in that kind
of combat. I played other games, too. Football went
deeper. That's why you can look
at the bench whe n the TV
camera comes over and see
fellows sitting U!.ere crying.
"I've sat there crying." Davidson fires basketball coach
a EAGAN FOLLOWS in the
tradition or other presldenta who
bad a close affinity with and a
love for sporta.
William Howard Taft, fearful
of disapproval of his constituen-
cy, would sneak away from the
IOAT DAISIT •
DAVIDSON, N.C. CAP> -Say-
ing "we want to be winners,"
Davidson Colleee fired head
basketball coach Eddie Bieden-
bach Sunday jU5t hours after the
Wildcata were eliminated in the
first round of the Southem Con-
"FRCllllCCl:AST .....
TO COAST'
CALIFOMIA OR NATIONWIDE
"POR IN.J10RMATION CALL"
IOAT TIUSIT
1343 Loean Av CM .......... 546 7172
. I
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Jerence championship lourna-
pent.
Biedenbach, who played at
Worth Carolina State, had
•oached the Wildcats for three
•eaaons, failing to produce a win-
•er.
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i wheeler dealers
When Crrua Van ce retltned last )'H r as
1ecretar)' o •Ute becauH he object~ to th~
abortive =1slloo to rescue the hoelqes ln lrtn, it
, ~n't lake h.im Jons to find a Job. He wu Immediate·
(y welcomed back to his old New York law firm, and
tae was promptly invited to rejoin the board of dlrec·
tors of \be New York Times Co., wblch he did.
Late in January Vance was elected to the board
of anotber New York·baaed company, Manufw:turers
Hanover Trust, the nation's fourth largesi com.
mercial bank .
This easy movement from the corridors of power
In government to the top echelons or business has
become a typical pattern or our times. Just as typical
is the m ove · -•
m e nt in the
other direction
-business ex
ecutives laking
top government
positions.
These move·
m ent s do not
\~
have much lo do with the party 1n power . Although
Ron ald Reagan is strongly identified wi th the bus1 ·
ness community, the Carter administration had plen·
ty of corporate types on deck When he took office.
bis ca binet included three formc>r directors of IBM
DONALD REGAN L EFT the top position at Mer-
rill Lynch, the nation's No. I stockbroker, to become
our new secretary or treasury .His predecessor in
that post was G William Miller, who, before coming
to Washington, headed a major industrial con
glomerate , Textron !Talon zippers: Bostich staplers,
HomeHne chainsaws. Fafnir beanngsJ
As treasury secretary, Miller was rntimately rn
volved in ,l.he fi nal negotiations ov1:r the release of the
hostages from Iran. Iran had also played a big part
in Miller's ear lier life at Textron The late shah
bought so many Rell he li copter~ from Textron that
Iran emerged as th(' largest customer the company
had in the world
Now that Miller 1s a pnvatt-c•1t1zen again, he's
beginning to take on corporate ass1!!nments He has
just been named lo lht· board of directors of Federal
ed Department Stores, the nat10n'i. largest depart
ment store chain I Bl uomingdale 's, Rullock's, l
Magnin. Lazarus. Ri ch 's Burdine i.. F1l ene 's.
Foley's. Sanger Harns1
MILLER'S PRF.D E('ESSOR as treasuq
secretary was W Michael Blumt>nlhal. who left the
chairmanship of Bendix to coml.' to Washrngton To·
day Blumenthal 1s busy running anc1ther Detroit area
com pany, Burroughs, lht· big office machine
manufacturer.
A former Bendix director Vl alcolm Baldnge, is
the new secre.tary of C'ommcrn• Aaldnge's full-time
job, before comrng to Wash1ngtun. was chairman of
Scovill (Hamilton Bca('h appliances, Nu -Tone door
chimes, Oritz sewing notions , Schrader lire valves>
Harold Brown, who was dt•fcnse secretary in the
Carter cabinet, has JUSt bel'n t•le(·ted to the board of
Hoover Universal. a M 1rh1gan 1•ompany that supplies
many of the scats in new automohtles His s uccessor
as head of the Pentagon 1s Caspar Wernberger, who
comes from the San F rancisco based construction
gi ant, Bechtel. In movrn~ to Washington. Weinberger
al.so gave up his seat on tht• Pepsico board (he was
replaced by Thomas Murph). former chairman of
General Motors 1
State beer drinkers
favor Budweiser
SAN FRANCISCO <AP 1 Anheuser· Bu sch, the na-
tion's largest brewer, sold almost half the beer purchased
in California last year. as it increased its lead over Coors.
Miller and Olym pia, its closest compclltors.
The St. Louis company's saks of Budweiser. Michelob
and Natural Light added up to 8 7 million 31 gallon barrels.
45 percent of all the bef•r sold rn California last year. ac·
cording to a report released last week in Sauamento by
the United States Bre wers Association
COOR'S, THE STATE'S number two best-seller , in·
creased its sales s lightly. but sold less than half as much
beer as Anheuser-Busch, getting a 23 percent share of the
market.
The daring advcrt1s1ng campaign by the Joseph
Schlitz Brewing Co. featunng live taste comparisons
broadcast during the halftim~s of televised footba ll games
-d id not begin until Dec 28. so its effect on sales won't be
known until J anuary figures are releast'd
SCHLITZ'S SHAR E OF the state 's beer market
dropped to 4.8 percent in 1980, making it fifth in s ales.
The only brewer besides Anheuser·Busch to grab a
larger share of the market rn 1980 was the Mi ller Brewing
Co .. a Phllip Morris subsidiary, which climbed slightly to
an 11 percent market share on a 7 percent rise in sales
Gold metals quotations
(iifJld
Londoa: morning fi xing $474.50, off $14 .50.
London: afternoon fi xing $465.50, off $23.50.
Paris: afternoon fi xi ng $525.87. off $8.46.
Frankfurt: fi xing $495.96, off $20.96.
Zurich: late afternoon fixing $466.00, off $21.00; $469.00
asked.
Hancly 6 Harman: only daily quote S465.50, off $23.:K>.
E111eU.ard : only daily quote $465.:iO, off $23.50
Engelhard: only daily quote fabricated $484.12, oft
$24.44.
tl~fob
Spot nonferrous meta1 prices to· NEW YORK <AP)
day:
Copper 86~·87 \4 cents a pound, U.S. destinations ..
Lead 32 cents a pound.
Zl8C 411.4 cents a pound, delivered.
Tll 18.9588 Metals Week composite lb.
Al ... laun 76 cents a pound, N. Y.
Mern11 $393.00 per Oask.
PJaU.am $485.00troy oz., N.V .
. SHa..-er
~ By ~e Auodated PreN
Kandy It Harman, $11.580 per troy ounce.
GeWrot11•
NEW YORK (AP ) Prices late Friday of •old coins compared wttb Thursday's price. '
&nlernM. l '1'0>' oa •• 9511.00, on $1.00 . • .,.....,, 1 troy oa •• $907.oo, onrr.oo.
llateu 50 pno, 1.2 ttoy OI., "21.00. on •. CIO. I
A......_ JOO crown, .Mm troy oa., 1484.00, otttJ.00.
Source: Dealt Perera
..
\
I
RUSH HOUR TRAFFIC ALONG MN DIEGO AtHWAV BACKED UP IN DOWNPOUR TODAY
P9toto teu. eboul I•·••• w9~ 1u9d lene 111Mn1 .._ ... eue.r.DdW• ..._ ... .,....
Transit fee
• mcrease
meet tabled
A not-too-public bearing to COD·
sider fare increases for Orange
County Transit District buses was
continued today for two weeks
while officials study a proposed
increase from 50 to 60 cents for
local routes.
The proposal came from AJ
Hollinden of Fountain Valley, one
of five members of the district
board of directors who met today
in Garden Grove.
Hollinden won the postpone·
ment after he pieced together
evidence provided by OCTD staff
members to show that an Im·
mediate rate increase is too late
this fiscal year to belp·the dbtrict
raise a state-mandated 20 perce.nt
or its operating revenue from
fares.
"I see no urgency in setting this
fare increase. I don't see any need
until June,•• he said. ''Thia year is
down the tubes as far as the 20 per·
cent anyway.''
Instead, he suggested that bis
proposal for a lower fare than
recommended by Finance Direc·
tor John Beatty should be ex-
aminedtoseeiHt willcure thedis·
trict' a revenue headaches.
His proposal also included
adding a 10 cent charge for the
first transfer and to do away with
fxpreu and commuter bus rum.
<See RIKE, Pale Al)
llllCI UAIT 1111111
Chance of 1bowera
decreutna to 30 percent
toal1bt to near aero Tues·
~ay. Lows ton11ht 45 at
beaches to 55 Inland.
Hl1b1 Tuesday 62 alons
coast to• inland.
lllll'flUY
Rain will ru-ii o.Ut
(finlllly) tonight
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of U. DMly "-Sutt
The raln that bas been falling
on Orange County for the last
three days is expected to end
sometime tonight, according to
the National Weather Service.
A spokesman for the weather
service said the chance of
showers would be decreasing to
30 percent tonight and to nearly
zero chances on Tuesday.
Warmer temperatures also
are predicted Tuesday, with the
high expected to be 64 degrees
and the low 58 degrees.
Temperatures• tonight are ex-
pected to be in the 45 degree to
Court rejects
ban 'of home
sale signs
W ASIUNGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court left intact
today a rulln1 that struck tbe cl·
ty of Baltimore'• attempt to ba1l
the display of'• For Sale'' 1lpa on
prlvatebomee.
Baltimore amended its zoning
ordinance in 19'7' in a way which
prohibited such alsns. Three
years later, reaJ estate asent
James Crockett and his wife,
Kary, put a bcMlae they ~
up for sale and dellber,tely
challeqed the city ordinance by
erectinfl a sale also.
The city flied a complaint
a1alut them in court, and the
Crocketta ..-aued in repfay that
the orcllnance violated their
tpeeeb.
Tbe dtf, however, said the
ban OD IUCb alps WU Juatlfted to preveot "panic aelllna" ud
"block·buaUq," wb!cb mlpt
dil rupt lbe Ila bll ltJ Of
Deiabbafboodl.
A llunlclpal Court rUMd ta
,favor of tbe Crockltta m..,1::d udalta .. appealaeourt
tlaat rullq la u..
SS degree range.
The Orange County Flood Con·
trol District measured nearly
two inches of rainfall lo Santa
Ana from 8 a .m. Saturday to 8
a.m . today.
Huntington Beach and
Capistrano Beach reportedly re·
ceived 1.96 inches of rain over
the weekend, according to resi·
dents in the area who look rain
measurements.
Newport Beach police said a
section of Pacific Coast
Highway at Newport Boulevard
)Vas closed for about an hour
Sunday morning when a cloud·
burst temporarily flooded the
roadway. .
A police spokeainan said a
cloudburst at about 6 a.m. left
all six lanes of the highway un·
der about three feet of water UD·
til 7 a .m. No damage was re·
ported.
No major incidents caused by
the rain were reported in
Orange County, a flood control
district spokesman said.
However, work crews are re-
portedly being kept busy clear-
ing pluued storm dl'alna.
The National Weather Service
waa to maintain a naab flood
watch until 1 p.m. today in
foothill and mountain areas in
Oranse County, but no serious
lloodinl or mudslides were re·
DOrted.
I
Laguna mulls $5.4 million deal
•1 nsvs IOTCllELL °' .. ....,,..... .....
Clty llana1er Ken Frank will
recommend that the Laguna
Beach City Council reject a $5.4
mUliOD land buy agreement for
Sycamore Hilb Tuesday, saying
former ownen of the property
have qu.uhed the deal.
The city coWicU meets at 6
p.m . in council chamben, 505
Forest Ave.
Last month the council ap·
proved a preliminary agreement
with Baywood Development Co.
to sell 62 acres of Sycamore
Hilla to the Newport Beach de·
velopment firm for $5.4 million.
$1Dce that time, the city bu
met with officials from Rancho
Palos Verdes Corp., Ure nrm
that sold Sycamore Hills to the
city in· April, 1978, in an effort to
resolve the one remaining anaa
in the negotiations.
Laemia Beach ow er nearly S7
million to Rancho for the 522·
acre parcel between Laguna
Canyon and El To.ro roads.
By selling 62 of those acres
(near Leisure World) to the
Bay wood company, the city
would receive $5 .4 million,
which would go a long way
toward paying off the debt to
,Rancho.
But Rancho attorneys now say
they won't take back a sub-
ordinated note, which means the
firm won't accept the rlak
should the Baywood venture IO
bankrupt. ·
Baywood proposes to build
nearly 300 townhouses on the
parcel, but cannot get a con·
structlon loan unless Rancho
Palos Verdes or the city accepts
the rbk should Baywood default
on its,note to the city.
City Manager Frank says
Rancho's refusal "is a marked
departure from that company's
position in discussions which
<See SNAG. Paie AZ>
·Peace plan Raps opponents .
pushed in Reagan makes plea
El Salvador for economic plan
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP> -Heavy fighting was re-
ported at two towns in eastern El
Salvador as an international
socialist organization asked
Nobel Peace Prize winner Willy
Brandt to mediate between the
guerrillas and the government.
Meanwhile, the United States
suspended aid to Nicaragua for
allegedly funneling communist
arms to the rebels.
Government troops and jet
fiShtera repelled weekend at·
tacks by left.ht IUerrillas OD the
town.a ot San Lorenzo and Saote
DomJ.nco, according to peasants
atreaminl into this capital city tel
escape UM ftlhlinl in the eaatel"ll
provlnceotSan Vicente.
Wltneaaa said sporadic and
bea.y.....,.. con~ued ~Y around the two towns. A mllltary
~aman aaid ••an army clean· 'up~''wuunderwar..
"Webaveeomewouncted, 'said
the apoke1man but refued to live
cuualty fllures. There were no
report.a ot rebel louea.
The leftist perrillu who want
to replace tbls Central American
Qation'a clvillan-military junta
with a Marxist government had
been rumored for the past week to
be planning a new offensive. But
their leaden ia&ued no communi·
ques on the fighting in the eastern
province.
A large-scale rebel drive in
January, billed as a "final of·
fensive" against the government,
was quickly crushed by govern·
ment troops.
An estimated 14,000 have been
killed in El Salvador's political
strlfe since the October 1979 coup
that ousted President Carlos
Humberto Romero's rightist re·
glme and paved the way for the
current U.S.-backedjunta.
Secret service
rifle misfires
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The
Secret Service says an "lo-house
inquiry" wlJI be conducted to de·
termine why a rtne used to guard
President Reagan malfunctioned
and harmlessly discharged a
bullet shortly after the president
left church.
Reagan, lo an armored
limousine, wu about 100 yards
away from tbe N.atlonal
Presbyterian Church, when the sun, used by a Secret Service of.
fleer stationed OD a nearby roof.
top, mlaflred Sunday. ·
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Presl·
dent Reagan told urban officials
today that bis economic program
is running "a political gauntlet of
interest groups" whose selfish
concerns threaten the nation's
economic recovery.
He appealed for the backing of
local officials, who support his
goals but worry about how he
wants to achieve them.
In a speech prepared for the Na·
tional League of Cities, Regan
condemned the "federal Goliath
that brought us to the economic
brink now confronting tbb nation.
"For a time, lt appeared that
Congress bad more solutions than·
the country had problems,"
Reasan said. "Or, put another
way, c~ were invented for
wbldl tMn are no known dll·
eases. Just conceiving of a .Pro-
aram that might help someone,
aomewbere, waa itself reason
enouah to pua a law and ap-
propriate money."
Wortina t.oeether and exercis-
in« "will power," the new ad·
ministration and its allies can
brin& the economic crisis under
control by implementing bis pro-
Laguna cable
rate increase
rnixing urged
Laguna Beach City Council
members will be asked Tuesday
to tum down a cable television
rate increase on the basis the
company's rate of return would
be nearly 20 percent.
City officials are recommend·
ins the council not approve a sub-
scrl ber increase from $7.50 to
SS.50 per month, and they also
suggest tbe council not bike add!·
tionaJ outlet fees from $2 to $2".50
per mon'tb. .
The council will review the
Laguna Niguel-based firm's rate
requesta when the panel meets at
6 p.m. in council chambers, 505
Forest Ave.
Other items under consldera·
tion by the council Tuesday in·
elude:
-A proposal that would see a
bicycle motocross facWty on the
Act V parklns lot in Laguna
Canyon;
-A propoeed ordinance that
would ban the uae of 1la1a con·
tainers on city beaches.
posed budget and tax cuts, re·
.gulatory overls and monetary
controls, Reagan said.
"However, this program now
faces a political gauntlet of in·
terest groups; and I'm finding it
increasingly difficult not to caJ!
some of them 'selfish interest
groups'." the president sald.
'•Unless something is done to tum
the economy around, local gov·
ernments will suffer right along
with many other respected
American institutions.·'
Reagan noted there bas been
some congressional opposition to
bis call for a three-year, 30·
percent tax eut.
"Nevertheless," be said, "the
real threat to recovery comes
from those who will oppose oo1y a
small partoftheoveraU prosram.
Needless to say, the small portion
these parochial groups oppose
always deals with cuta that affect
them directly. Those cu ta they op-
pose. ·
"They favor cutting everybody
else's subsidy as an important
step in ending inflation and get-
ting the country moving aaain.
The accumulative effect of this
shortsightedness can be damaa· ing.
"We are all in the same boat,
and we have to get the engines
started before the ship goes over
the falls."
The urban leaders, at the an-
nual Congressional-City Con-
ference, gave qu&lified support to
Reagan's program Sunday, en-
dorsing "enthusiastically" Uie
president's objectives but issuing
a list of reservations.
Chamber mixer
slated,in Laguna
Members of the Laguna Beach
Chamber or Commerce are invlt·
ed to attend a spring mixer at tbe
Boys Club beginning at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday. ..,,.
Boys Club members will con-
duct tours of the facility, at 1085
Laguna Canyon Road. Adml.aaion
b$2.
IRA chief strikes
BELFAST <AP) -An im·
prisoned leader of the lrlab
Republican Army, Bobby Sanda,
la in tbe second day ot a buqer
strike today demandlna political
prisoner 1tatua for IRA gue.nUlaa
behind bars.
. I
HEROES TELL bf R!SCUE -Rescuers tell
Newport Beach Fire Captain Tom Arnold
Con right) how they saved young 'J'.odd
Stemper. From left, Greg Bates of Foun·
a.lfy~...,..., •1c ............
t&n VaUey ; Melinda Kay of Van Nuys;
Roy Paul of Bell Gardens, Paul
H&Ussenstamm and Chuck Cummings,
both of Newport.
Newport boy, 13
saved from · slide
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ll• O•llf ~llet SU.If
A 13-year-old Newport Beach
boy, buried for at least 10 minutes
Sunday evening when a Santa Ana
River bank collapsed, was pulled
to safety when five quick-thinking
people dug him out.
Todd Stemper, authorities said,
was playing below a high bank
near the river jetty wita !\ young
friend when the rain-soiked sand
gave way. covering the boy.
Chuck Cummings, a 22·year-old
Newport man who was sitting on a
nearby river bluff at th}! time, was
the first to notice the trouble.
"I'd seen the kid digging and
noticed the sand had been giving
way," said Cummings . "I
glanced out to.ward the ocean and
when I looked back fhe kid was
gone." .
Cummings, a drvmmer for a
Newport Beach surfmusiiroup,
said the 13-year-old's you com· panionstart~yellingtor. 'lp:' r'
·'I ran down there,'' recalls
Cummings, "ands\arteddigging. Iwasj~diHinglikechlzy."
The youngster ·~ c ries also
brought Roy Paul, a 31 -year-old
attorney and Bell Gardens city
. councilman, to the scene.
___ "Weweren't~ven really sure he
was down there." Paul said. "We
saw a bike up on the river bank
and finally saw a piece of
Styrofoam board in the sand. I
guess he was using the board to
dig with when he was playing.'·
Paul and Cummings said they
started digging and after several
minutes spotted the youngster's
finger sticking ou\of the sand.
''His finger was blue," Paul
said. "We dug a bit further and
saw his head. His mouth ·w.as
open. I reached in and pulled
some sand out of his mouth. I
could tell be was still breathing.''
C ummings said be braced
h'imself against the sand bank to
keep any more dirt from tumbling
in while the boy was being ex·
tr acted.
Three others -. Melinqa Kay,
22 , of Van Nuys ; Paul
Heussens tamm, of Newport
Beach and Greg Bates, 24, of
Fountain Valley -helped pull
!'oung Stemper to safety.
"It was just a miracle," ex·
plained Paul. "If we hadn't found
that little piece of board, I'm not
sure we ever would have located
him."
Cummings said it wasn't until
he spotted the youngster 's finger
sticking in the air that he was coo·
vinced the boy bad even been
buried.
"I just wasn't sure "said Cum·
mings. ·~ jtist figu;ed J should
keep digging. Even if I dug all the
way to China I figured I wouldn't
be doing any harm.··
Young Stemper wa s ad·
ministered first aid at lbe scene
by Newport paramedics and
taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital. ·
Hospital officials pronounced the
boy in good condition and s aid
he'll likely be (eleased tQday.
How should moon's
riches be divided?
LOS ANGELES (API -Now
that we know beyond a shadow
of a doubt that the moon is made
of titanium, magnesium, silicon
and aluminum, not green
cheese, there's got to be some
law and order up there to pro-
tect such celesUal "gold" mines,
warns an expert in international
law·.
But a free enterprise lobbying
group cautions that an interna·
tional space treaty currently un·
der consideration is too protec·
tive and could discourage future
heavenly exploration and de· ,
velopment by the private sector. /
· •'Space law Is an idea whose
· time-bas come . . . says Carl Q.
NASAlll_..._
TREASURE TROVE
Moon: who rule•?
Cbristol, a Univer sity of
Southe"m California professor of
international law and an expert
on the United Nations' 1979
spcace tr~aty.
ly consider doing so for the sake
of intenteU1r tranquility.
Known officially as the Agree·
ment Governing the Activities
on the Moon and Other Celestial
Bodies, the treaty calls for an in·
ternational orqnizatlon to ad·
minister apace·eovironment ac·
Uvitles on the lunar surface,
other planet.a and asteroids.
To date, a ball-dozen smaller
countries have alped the pact.
But lbe two auperpowen. that
have actually reached the moon
-. tbe United Statet and 'Ruaala
-ba:jet to io1Uai lite docu·
ment Cbrlltol feel• that tbll
country, at leut, ahould serioua·
"Star war5 may be avoided ii
we can extend internptional law
into outer space," said the
professor. "There is a need in
space, just as there is a need on
the Earth, to have a set of laws,
so people know their rt1bta and
their limits," said Christol, who
is also an expert in intem-ational
law Qf lbe sea.·
The treatt, which Cbrlatoi bu
studied extensively, prob.iblta lo·
dividual or 1overnmental
ownenldp of lunar land but does
· allow few the use of Lt.a natural
resources.
liiyliat eta•.._...., ...... 114/MNt11
AH otMr d1p1.-.n1e ~
ThomM P. Haley ........
~N .. Weed
r..~KM¥11
~~MurphlM
~'"°Lr I::" lohutrNn
~
~"'·
MAIN OflP1Ca •Wtll9efll.,C..-.a,CA. ~11...-: ... , .. ,ca .. NleM, CA. t»a
l'~P-AJ
mKE~ .•
Beatty recommended today
that a · fare increase to 75 cents
during ~ak travel periods and 60
cents at slack times appeareato
be the safest for the district.
He 1Juggested raising express
runs from $1.25 to $1.75 per ride.
But he was against charging for
transfe~.
The 75·60 fare rate, he ex·
plained, would increase the dis·
trict's fare box revenue to 21.l
percent during the next fiscal year.
Figures for Hollin den's 60·50
fare weren't available, which
was one reason for the postpone·
ment.
But a nother reason was
because not one member of the
public attended today's 9 a.m.
meeting to comment on the
much publicized consideration
of a fare increase.
Conditions were not con·
ducive. It was raining. It was a
Monday morning, and bus riders
suffering the aftershocks df the
recently resolved 22·day strike
by bus drivers ana mechanics
may not have been inclined to
gamble on finding a bus to
Garden Grove. "l 'm a litUe concerned that
the public hasn't had a full op·
port unity to comment,·' said
board member William Farris,
the only member of the board
who was not an elected official.
Hollinden pushed for no im·
mediate fare increase after bis
questions revealed that the di.s-
trict doesn't have enough buses
to haul enough passengers to
raise 20 percent of the operating
revenues through fares this
year.
Beatty said after the meeting
that he doubts Hollinden's 60-50
proposal would raise enough
revenue to meet state standards.
Hut he added a 60-cent nat
fare might be sufficient.
Man killed
in frvine by
speeding car
A South Pasadena man was
killed early today when be was
hit by a car while walking
beside the San Diego Freeway at
the Santa Ana Freeway in·
terchange in Irvine.
A s poke sma n f or tbe
California Highway Patrol said
Ernest Brooks, 47, was struck
and killed by a vehicle driven by
Dennis Pavalonis, 37 , ot
Lakewood, at about 1 a .m . as be
was walking near his parked
car.
The CHP spokesman sald
Brooks had pulled onto the
northbound shoulder to rest and
wattrolling beside the roadway
wh be was struck.
he spokesman aaid
Pavalonla' car was traveling at"
about 70 miles per hour when it
slammed into Brooks, killing
him lnatanUy.
lnvest11at1ng officers sald
Pavaloni.I apparenUy did not see
Broob ID time to avoid bltttnc
btm. Reportedly there were, no
witnesses to the accident.
Poland gi,.
.1or exerciae
WARSAW "Poland (AP)-Wlth
the Polllb 1overnment 1eartnc up
tor na•wtde meat ratklDlnl lo
lope• of qui.Uni public clla· HUlf~ We1tem oftlclalt lD
Vlena about 11,000 Soviet
Blot troop& ltatiCJDed in Poland
..... pnpartq to •tart tea..cluled
maneuvers.
We1tern dlplomau aaid all
W anaw Pact eomltl'MI, lDclud·
lnl tbeScmet Unkm, wen expect-
ed to take .-rt lD UM exadle,
1'1alcb la liblJ &o tut up to tOdaJI
and ta called ''Shield '81."
-~-----:---.;....------~·"'---•--..--..---
...
U.S. llpY plane _shpt · by Cuban?
NEW YORK (AP) -Ul a ftt ol
· anxiety fl!ler wM&bar bla utioD
wa1 ICJ6al to M Invaded chll'lnC
the 1112 Cuban ml91Ue crlall,
Fidel Caatro peraoJiaUy 1bot
do1'a an American U·2 •PY plane
over Cuba, k.llliDC the pllot, ,HY•
a forU)er Cutro aide.
Carloa Franqui said tbe Cuban
president took command of a
Soviet crouncf.to-alr mlaaUe con·
sole and "pressed the button" to ·
sboot down the plane, astound·
lo1 Soviet general• ,who were ex·
plalntna the workin11 of the mis·
slle bue in Pinar del Rio, west
·of Havana.
The body of the U·2 pilot, U.S.
Air Force Maj. Rudolf An·
derson, was returned to tbe
United States shortly after the
incident.
Franqui, who edited ' the of·
ficial Caatro movement
newspaper Revolucion from 1957
to 1963, describes the incident in
a book, "Retrato de Familia"
(Family Portrait), scheduled to
be publiabed next month. '
Fr~ sided with Castro's
guerrillas in the Sierra Maestra
mountains during the revolution but left ·Cuba after the 1968 So·
viet invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The former editor disclosed the
episode in a telephone conversa·
lion from Rome. The book is to
be published in mid-March by
the Spanish Seix Barral
publishing company, he said.
White House press aide Robin
Gary said be bad no comment on
tbe report.
According to Franqui, ol}.j)ct.
27 , 1962, during the six-day
crisis, Castro had "a fit of anXie·
ty caused . by the unresolved
crisis, during which he was ig·
;iored as the two superpowers
negotiated the fate of the
island." ..
The crisis occurre d when
Presidetlt Kennedy de manded
that the Soviet Union withdraw
missiles stationed in Cuba. The
Soviets complied after tense.
high-level negotiations.
Franqui said Castro "went to
Suspect held
on S~ Laguna
burglary rap
A Laguna Beach patrolman de·
tained a burglary suspect for
sheriff's deputies, a half hour
after the victim of the crime
described the suspect to the of.
ficer.
Patrick M. Juszczak, 28, a
transient whom deputies said
lives in his white van, was pulled
over at Broadway and Coast
"tiighway at about 2:30 p.m. Sun·
day by Officer Bob August.
August o;dered the driver of the
van to the side of the road after he
received a description or the vehi·
cle from Jun Chino, whose house
on Scenic Drive in South L"aguna
was burglarized earlier in the af·
ternoon.
Chino and another man ap.
parenUy surprise<! the suspect
during the burglary, and when the
man fled the home, they followed
him in another vehicle.
The pair flagged down August
in Laguna Beach, and the officer
later spotted the suspect's vehicle
and madethestop.
Recovered in the burglary were
camera equipment, jewelry and a
back pack, Sheriff's deputies
said.
Juszczak was being held in
Orange County Jail on suspicion
of burglary.
• ODe of t.be buea wtth Intent to . 1creen. Fidel Hked to know
~re•te U. 1.Dcljeat lo order to wbat bad to be done la order to
kaow ll t.be1 were 1otni to ln· · aboot down lho9e planet lD cue
vade or not . . • lf lbere was 10-of an attack," Franqui said.
inl to be a war or not~·-''The Ruaiua replied t.bat it
Fra.nq_ui says tbat when Cutro was enough to pu1b a buU.00 and
reached the· Soviet base, be the enemy plane would be btt
aiked the technicians about the and •hot down and showed blm
0 ration Of the equipment, lo· tbe buttcn. Fidel then preued
cf:dlnc the radar for the detec· the button and the plane came
tlon of enemy planes. down amidst the con1temaUon
· of the 1eneral1. Tbe American Shortly after, ''The U·2 spy pilot died, the ooJy victim of the
pla.oe appe~red In the radar crisis," Franqui aald.
Not a downstream beer
This isn't really an ad for a well-known beer. It stands for
somethin~ else alto2ether -School Improvement
Program Coordinator at El Morro School in Laguna Beach.
E're• r_,,. Al
SNAG EMERGES. • •
had taken place previously both
with city and Baywood represen·
tatives.
As a result of Rancho's refusaJ
to accept a subordinated note,
Frank says he'll recommend the
city council reject the land
purchase bid by Baywood.
The city manager will offer
council members four possible
reasons for Rancho's position:
-There was an honest
breakdown in communications
-a possibility that Frank says
he doubts.
-Rancho wants Laguna
Beach to take the risk should
Baywood default, rather than
itself.
-The firm wants to reacquire
title to its 522·ac re parcel,
perhaps to develop the land
itself.
-Another. de ve lope r may
have approached Rancho with a
cash offer for the 60·acre parcel
eyed by Baywood.
Rancho attorneys could not be
reached for comment today.
,Frank said the onlv reasona·
ble alternative left to the city is
to reject the proposal, and hope
Baywood can work· out a means
or obtaining construction loans
withou"t involving the city in a
subordinated note.
4 die in accident
BRAWLEY, Calif. (AP)
Four. unidentified people were
killed and four others injured -
two seriously -in a traffic acci·
dent near here, the California
Highway Patrol said. The head·
on collision occurred Sunday
four miles north of Brawley and
closed down Highway 111 for
several hours. ·
Lev rs
lf"-N'V't.~f\tt
It y0u went Levi Cord Flares we've got 'em
Our five basic coos art tt blue Ian chocOlate MVV
and Oft wht'8 1n 84% cottonlt6~ polyester lo<
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORl BEACH
(714) 644·7030 shrlnllage corttrbl
Pul them togelhef With our oree1 Sh111s
. • ort noise fees
By PaED SCRO EM ERL oe .. DMt,,.....llllH
The toa1 ol any noiae fee pro-
aram placed on commerelal jet
air carriers at John Wayne
Airport should be to reduce DOi.ae .
levell, not 1enerate income for ·
OranseCounty 1overnment.
That was the thrust of
testimony ctven today by airport
consultant Walter Glllllllan, dur-
in& the aixtb day of hearlnp on
the ,county's application · to de-
VIM'e from state airport nolle
1tandarda.
Glllflllan, employed by
Newport Beach .=frovide advice
on airport-rel ialues, ftnt
recommended lmpoeitlon ol none
fees durinc testlmoey Tbu.nday.
... Today, be elaborated oa h1I
recommendationa under craa
examination by attorneys
represmtlq the county and tbe
lhriDen Community Auocia·
lion, a Newport Beach
bomeownen ll'OUP·
Under a "doUan for decibell"
pro1ram -ooe ol which la under
study by county airport offtclala
-jet air carriers would be re-
quiredtoPQfeesforjetnoiaetbat
la hi&bertban the aver ace lev~ .
GUlftllan 1ald be bu seen pre-
liminary fllUftl -the source ol
RESCUERS LOAD 13-YENM>LD TODD STEMPER ON NEWPORT LIFEGUARD UNIT
Newport Beech boJ burled 10 llllnutH when rMHo8Ucl Nnd ~
~ewport ho~ nesCued
Youth, 13, pulled to 1afety from· 1lide
By STEVE ~BLE
°'*~""' ..... A 13-year-old Newport Beach
boy, buried for at leut 10 minutes
~.~~ay evening wben a San~ Ana ·Rl\'er-bank collapsed, wu pulled
to safety when five qulck-thinlring
people dug him out. .
Todd Stemper, authorities sald,
was playing below a high bank
near the river jetty with a young
friend when the rain-soaked sand
gav~ way, covering the boy.
Neorl,..,ine
Chuck Cummings, a Z2-year-old
Newport mlm who wu 1lttinc on a
nearby river bluff at the time, was
the first to notice the trouble.
"C'd seen the kid diglinl and
noticed the sand bad been livinl
way." said Cummings. "I
glanced out toward the ocean and
when I looked back fbe kid wu
gone."
Cummings, a drummer for a
Newport Beach surf music lfOUP,
said the 13-year-old's young com-
Freeway walker
hit,. kille4 by auto ·
A South Pasadena man was
killed early today when be wu
hit by a car while ..,alking
beside the San Diego Freeway at
the Santa Ana Freeway in-
terchange in Irvine.
A spokesman for the
Calilornia Highgy Patrol said
Ernest Brooks,,.,, was s'""k
and killed by a vef\icle driven 6y
D e n n is P a v a 1 on i s , 3'7 , of
Lakewood, at a,bout 1 a.m, as be
was walking near his parked
car.
The CHP spokesman said
Brooks bad pulled onto the
nort.hbo\md shoulder to rest and
was strolling beside tbe roadway
when be was struck.
The spokesman said
Pavalooi.s' car was traveling at
about 70 miles per hour when it
slammed into Brooks, killing
him instanUy. '
Investigating officers said
Pavalooi.s apparently did not~
Brooks in time ~ avoid blttinl
'blm. Reportedly there were no
witnesses tpthe accident.
pa Dion started yel.lln1 for help.
"I ran down there." recalls
Cum minis, ••and started digging.
I waajuatdiaingllkecruy."
The youngster's cries also
brought Roy Paul, a 31-year-old
attorney and Bell Gardens city
councilman, to the scene.
"Weweren'tevenreallysurebe
was down there," Paul said. "We
saw a bike up on the river bank
and finally saw a piece of
Styrofoaln board in the sand. I
guess he was using the board to
dig with when he was playing."
Paul and Cummings said they
started digging and after several
minutes spotted the youngster's
finger sticking out of the sand.
"His finger was blue," Paul
said. "We dug a bit further and
saw his head. His mouth was
open. I reached in and pulled
some sand out of his mouth. I
could tell he was still breathing."
Cummings said he braced
himself against the sand bank to
keep any more dirt from tumbling
in while the boy was being ex-
tracted.
Three others -Melinda Kay,
22 , of Van Nuys ; Paul
Heusaenstamm, of Newport
Beach and Greg Bates, 24, of
Fountain Valley -helped pull
young Stemper to safety.
"It wu just a miracle," ex-
plained Paul. "llwe hadn'tfound
that UWe piece of board, I'm not
(SeeBtralED, Pa1eAZ>
1 , f I\ N 1 , t r 1 l \ J r ~ f Y I\ I 11 l l I• N I /\ .' 'i '. f N l <;
I
'not for revenue'
which was not -dl'lclosed -
lridJcatinC.. tbat the most active
air carrier at John Wayne, Air
Callfonda, could face a blll ol
about.,,OOOper month.
Tbe olber dominant carrier at
the airport, Republic Airlines,
Glllfillan said, would face a
slmllarblll.
Questiooedabouttheamountol
income such a noise fee prosram
would 1enerate, GUlflllan said,
"The end product you want ia to
achieve reduction of nolle ex-
DOIV!'e to the community.
''Don't look at this u another
neat revenue producinl device,''
be added.
Citing the Air California exam-
ple, Gillfillan said, "$20,000 per
month ia a number that would
catch attention.l'
Under the noise fee prograll)
described. as_ peak. JLoise levels
dropped so would the aver .. e
nolae level, ultimately meanm,
leas and leu revenue would be re-
celved by the county.
He 1u11eated that revenue
cenerated by tmpoeltion of the
f ee1, wblch be said should not be
called ftnel, should be used, in
parl, to defray the county's
•$500,000 annual coal of operatiq
its airport noise monltoriq and
<See NOISE, Pa1e AZ>
Fare, hike ·eyed
OCTD studies iO-cent increase,
A not-too-public hearing to con·
sldet' fare increases for Orange
County Transit District buses was
continued today for two weeks
while officials study a proposed
increase from SO to 60 cents for
local routes.
The proposal came from Al
Hollinden or Fountain Valley, one
of five members or the district
board of directors who met today
in Garden Grove.
Hollinden won the postpone-
ment after he pieced together
evidence provided by OCTD staff
members to show that an im·
mediate rate increase is too late
this fiscal year to help the district
raise a state-mandated 20 percent
of its operating revenue from
fares.
•'I see no urgency in setting this
fare increase. I don't see any need
until June," he said. "This year is
down the tubes as far as the:.> per·
cent anyway.'•
Instead, he suggested tha~ his
propoaal for a lo*er fare than
recommended by Flnance~rec
tor Jobn Beatty should oe ex-
amiDed to aee lf it will "1'e tbedil-
trlct' s revenue beadacbes.
His proposal also included
addiq '-lO~cent charge for the
flnt t.raJ91er and to do away with
expreu and commuter bus runs.
• Beatty recommended today
that a fare increase to 7S cents
d~I peak travel periods and 60
cents at slack times appeared to
be the safest for the district.
He suggested raising express
runs from $1.2S to $1.7S per ride.
But be was against charging for
transfers.
The 75·60 fare rate, he ex·
plained, would increase the dis·
trict's fare box revenue to 21.1
Dollar rises,
gold tumbles . .
percent during the next fiscal year.
Figures for Hollinden's 60-50
rare weren't available, which
was one reason for the postpone·
ment.
But another reason was
because not one member of the
,public attended today's 9 a.m .
meeting to comment on the
much publicized consideration
of a fare increase.
Conditions were not con·
ducive. It was raining. It was a
Monday morning, and bus riders suffering the aftershocks of the
recently resolved 22-day strife
by bus drivers and mechanics
may not have been inclined to
gamble on finding a bus to
Garden Grove.
"I'm a little concerned that th~~ hasn't had a full op-
portunity to comment," said
board member William Farris,
<See HIKE. Pa1e AZ>
to 846$.75
LONOOf'l (AP) -The dollar pj•--i.n Oft -,~-au soared on world foreign exchange &e"Hr • ~9'1 u
markets in late trading today,
whlle the price of gold plummeted
$18 in Zurich and $2•.!S an ounce
in London to its lowest level for
months.
Gold tumbled in London to
$465. 75 an ounce, its lowest clos·
ing ratesince$t64 March27,/rom
$490 Friday. Traders said con-
tinued blgb interest rates and a
lack of stronc political news were
beblnd the sell-off. Gold traded in
... ew Yorkat$464.
In Zurich, sold fell to $470.50 an
ounce from $488.50. Brokers saJd
the precious metal ls being over·
·sold and noted thalmarket condi-
tions remain generally bearish.
Tanker truck carrying 7 ,500 gallons of oil overturned on
the rain-slick Santa Ana Freeway near Culver Drive in
Irvine shortly after 11 a.m. today. The accident caused a
huge traffic tieup, but only a minor oil spill on tbe
shoulder of the freeway, according to the CHP.
Rain will Tun out'
(finally) tonight
By IOHN NEEDHAM
Of ... DllH., ...... "'" "We have to live with those blah interest rates." one trader com-Tbe rain that bu been falllnc
mented. on Orange County for the last
cloudburst at about 6 a .m. left
all slx lanes of the highway un-
der about three feet of water un-
<See &AIN, Pa1e AZ>
·suver hit a Dine-month low in three days is expected to end
London, cloein1 at $11.80 an ounce sometime tonig.bt, accordinc to
compared with Friday's $12.45. the NatiCJDal Weather Service. 1111~1 •aan wun111
Silver traded ln New York at A spokesman for the weather • -• 11• SU.SO. service said the cbance of
The normally stroac British •bowen would be deereulq to
poUnd slumped to lll loweat level 30 percent tonllht and to nearly
11.Dee April a1a.lmt tbe dollar, aero chances on Tuesday.
wllleb wa boOlted by hieber U.S. Warmer tempera,urea all'o
money supply ft.pres ~ are predicted Tueeday, wttb the
Friday and tbe anticlpation ol hilh expected to be M de....-
Chance of 1hower1
deereutnc to 30 pettmt
ton11bt to near aero Tues·
da1. Lowa tontabt 45 at
beacbea to 55 inland.'
Hl1b1 Tuesday a atoaa
coast to II in.lanct
ftrmertnt..tratel. and tbelow51de..,.....
PraaldartdlaJenalloattrtbut· · TemperatUt'el ioaisbt are ex-I•••• edtbeclollar'1performanntotbe peeled to be la the 45 depee to 11
contlnuiq effect of Weal II depee raqe.
Germaa1'1 mountJn1 foreip Tbe Oruce County Flood Ccln-tndedlftdt. trot Dlatriet meuured Dearly
Tbe clollar •ataed mon than two lDdMe ol rainfall la Saata
two e-. aplmt tbe Brttilb cur· Ana from I a.m. Satwday to I
re;io Tb• pound waa worth a.m. today. tt. . ; Huntln1ton Beacb and
ADGtMr fMtGI' In tbe pound'• Capfatrano Beecla npoNdlJ .... ,...._bop -it lost a total ol 1'7 · eel.eel 1.• lnclMI ol rain OHr
ceat1 a1atn1t tbe dollar In UM weektad, aceordlnl to ...t· Pebraar1 -11 latreHl•I deata la U. .,.. wllo took rm ~alathin U.at ~· •• ol •"4&• m . _................ .. ....... ~ pollee ..... N I ... aat. ,.._ M v~::; Of Paelfle Coa1t "''h •••part ....... . .. V.1. e•aws ....... fer ... ei. .... , • ....,... ,. tM I •dQ ......... L ........ I
... .W.Dlll.,l.f ..... ·-pl'.l'.Ullj ...... r .. ... ,.. .... -...... . A Jlllllee·..-.mu..Wa ..
RUSH HOUR TRAFFIC ALONG SAN DIEGO FREEWAY BACKED UP IN DOWNPOUR TODAY
Photo t•ken •bout a •.m. on northbound l•n• ,Jooklng from the Culver Drtve Brtd9e In lrvlne
f'roaaPa9eAI
RAIN •••
til 7 a.m. No damage was re-
ported.
No major incidents caused by
the rain were reported in
Orange County, a flood control
district spokesman said.
However, work crews are re-
portedly being kept busy clear·
ing plu11ed storm drains.
Sprillting suspect
arrested in Mesa
Costa Mesa Police Officer Burt
Santee bad bis bands full for a
time Sunday when he drove into
the midst of a liquor store robbery
while giving a drowsy drunk a
ride to jail.
James R. Wilde, 24, of 8301 Tyler
Ave., Huntington Beach, were ar-
rested on suspicion of armed rob-
bery. Bail wauet aU2S,OOOeacb .
Police said they recovered the
money.
raps foes
'&lfoh interests' peril economy plGri
WASHDIGTON CAP) -Prest-Tb• ................ at tbe U • cuwlDurbu,..:..iopaMat81d.
dent a.a.an told urban offtdala nual Coaar .. aloaal-Clty Con· Tb• dty oftldala' ritwt wtre
toda1 that b1J economic pl'Olf•lll ferenee. acave Qualifled support to much t.be same u thole vo&eed
La runnlq "•political 1auntlet ot R•a1u•a Pro&ram Sunday. en· laat week by tbe NaUonaJ Gov·
inter• IJ'OUPI" whose 181bab donlq '.'tntbualaatJcally" the emon' Anoclatloa -fear tbat
conceru t,breaten the naUon'• preeklent • obJectlves but 1Mu1n1 reduced federaJ 1ranta wW pua
eeonomlcreQOvery. aliitotneervatiom. alon1 a bunlen whlcb state and
He appeaJed for the backinl ot Tbey laid tbey couJd go alone local tu bases cannot ablot'b a
local oftlclala, who support b.11 with elimlnaU.Og a third ot the demand for plenty of time 'to
1oals but worry about bow be 300,000 publlc service Joba make ..Uuatmenta and a call for
wantatoachlevethem. Reagan wants to terminate. DUt close conauJtation 'as exact cuts
In aapeecb prepared for the Na· ur1ed blm to recomider proposed are determined.
tlonaJ Leacue of Cities, Resan
condemned the "federal Goliath
that brouabt ua to the economic
brink now confronU.01 tbil natlon. Brandt to hate~ede?
.I
••For a time, it appeared that
Congress bad more solutions than
the country bad problems,"
Reagan said. "Or, put another
way, cures were invented for
which there are no known dis·
eases. Juat concelvin1 of a pro-
gram that might help someone,
somewhere, was itself reason
enough to pass a law and ap-
propriate money.''
Fighting increases
in El Salvador war
Working together and exerciB·
inll "will power," the new ad·
ministration and Its allies can
bring the economic crisis under
control by implementing bis pro-
posed budget and tax cuts, re·
gulatory overls and monetary
controls, Reagan said.
"However, this program now
faces a political gauntlet of in·
teresl groups ; and I'm finding it
increasingly difficult not to call
some of them 'selfish interest
groups'," the president said.
"Unless something is done to turn
the economy around, local gov·
ernments will suffer right along
with many other respected
American institutions.''
Reagan noted there has been
some congressional opposition to
bis call for a three-year, 30·
percent tax cut.
"Nevertheless," be said, "the
real threat to recovery comes
from those who will oppose only a
small part of the overall program.
Needless tosay, thesmall portion
these parochial groups oppose
always deals with cuts that affect
tbem directly. Those cuts they op·
pose.
"They favor cutting everybody
else's subsidy as an important
step in ending infiation and gel·
ting the country moving again.
The accumulative effect of this
shortsightedness can be damag·
ing.
"We are all in the same boat,
and we have to get the engines
started before the ship goes over
the falls.''
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) -Heavy fighting was re·
ported at two towns in eastern El
Salvador as an international
socialist organization asked
Nobel Peace Prize winner Willy
Brandt ~ mediate between the
guerrillas and the government.
Meanwhile, the United Stat.es
suspended aid to Nicaragua for
allegedly funneling communist
arms to the rebels.
Government troops and jet
fighters repelled weekend at·
tacks by leftist guerrillas on the
towns of San Lorenzo and Santci
Domingo, according to peasants
streaming into thi$ capital city to
escape the fighting in the eastern
province of San Vicente.
Witnesses said sporadic and
heavy gunfire continued SWiday
around the two towns. A military
spokesman said "an army clean·
up operation" was underwav.
"We have some wounded,;, said
tpe spokesman but refuaed to give
casualty figures. There were no
reports of rebel losses.
The leftist guerrillas who want
to replace this Central American
nation's civilian-military junta
with a Marxist government bad
been rumored for the past week to
be planning a new offensive. But
their leaders issued no communi·
ques on the fighting in the eastern
province.
A large-scale rebel drive in
January. billed as a "final of-
fensive" agajnst the government,
was quickly crushed by govern·
ment troops.
An estimated 14,000 have been
killed in El Salvador's political
strife since the October 1979 coup
that ousted President Carlos
Humberto Romero's rightist re-
gime and paved the way for the
current U.S. ·backed junta.
Ballo~ists ready
to cross Pacific
TOKYO ..CAP> -Four adven·
turers -three Americans and a
Japanese -are waiting today
for favorable wind conditions to launch the first manned balloon
voyace acrou the Pacific.
The balloon, the Double Eagle
V , is being readied at N agashima,
a bot springs resort 180 miles west
of Tokyo.
It was scheduled Sunday but de-
1 a y e d due to unfavorable
weather.
The Double Eagle V is 223 feet
high, about the same height as a
20-story building, weigba eight
tons and will rise 400 feet per
minute on takeoff until it bits the
Pacific jet stream at an altitude
or 21 ,500 to 30,000 feel. The National Weather Service
was to maintain a flash flood
watch until 1 p.m. today in
foothiU and mountain areas in
Orange County, but no serious
flooding or mudslides were re·
p0rted.
f',....PflffeAI
Patrolman Santee said be was
driving by Powers Liquor, 1885
Placentia Ave., at the comer of
West 19th St., when be saw a man
in his early 20s, sprinting out of
the store to a car with the motor
running. Santee said the car was driven by another man m his
early 20s.
· Santee radioed police head-
quarters to call the liquor store to
see if it had just been robbed.
Explanation calms
ticket recipient
Ben Abruzzo of Albuquerque,
N.M .. will command the craft.
Riding with hJm will be Larry
Newman of Los Angeles, Ron
Clark of Albuquerque and
Japanese businessman Rocky
Aoltj, who bas Orange County
business interests.
~·our objective simply is to
cross the Pacific and be the first
to do it. Being first is the only
thing that counts," Abruzzo told
The Associated Press in a
teleph one inteview from
Nagashima.
The crew bas enough oxygen
for s ix days. lf the flight is cut
short, a special explosives.
charged system will separate
the balloon from the gondola,
which is designed to float in 25·
foot seas.
mKE ...
the only member of the board
who w~ not an elected official.
Holllnden pushed for no im·
mediate fare increase after his
questions revealed that the dis-
trict' doesn't have enough buses
to haul enough passengers to
. raise 20 percent of the operating
revenues through fares this
year. ·
Beatty said after the meeting
that he doubts Hollinden's 60-SO
proposal would raise enough
reveouetomeetstatestandards.
But he added a 60-cent flat
fare might be sufficient.
Rape attempt
suspect held
A 21-year-old Costa Mesa man
bas been arrested on suspicion of
attempting to rape a 17-year-old
Huntington Beach girl as she was
walking home from school.
Pplice said James Matthew
Castaldo was arrested Saturday
near Main Street and Oranie
A venue in Huntineton Beach in
coDnection with the incident.
The girl was accosted Feb. 20 in
the de>Wntown area, KK>llce aald,
but screamed and mana1ed to
free bendf from her attacker.
A police officer who observed a
pickup truck described ln tbe inci·
dent arrested Castaldo on Satur·
day, policesald.
ORANGE COAIT
Tbe' dispatcher radioed back
that the line was busy.
The unidentified liquor store
clerk was frantically trying to call
the police to report he had just
been robbed.
Santee then went into a pursuit
of the armed robbery suspects,
with the handcuffed drunk in the
backseat.
Investigators who joined the
pursuit forced the alleged
getaway car to the curb a few
blocks from the scene of the
holdup in wbicb $147 was taken.
Roderick J . Campbell, 23, of Ml
W. Wilson Sf.., Costa Mesa, and
f',....PflffeAJ
·BURIED •••
sure we ever would have located
him."
Cummings said it wasn't until
be spotted the youngster's finger
slicking in the air that he was con-
vinced the boy had even been
buried.·
I
"I just wasn't Slµ'e," said Cum·
mings. ;·1 just figured I sbo~d
keep digging. Even if I dug all the
way to China I figured I wouldn't
be doing any harm.••
Young Stemper waa ad·
ministered first aid at the acene
by Newport paramedic• and
taken to Boal Memorial Hospital.
Hospital officials pronounced Ute
boy ln good CODdltion and sltid
be' U likely be released today.
D~lly Piiat. MAINC>ffa
Thome9 P. Haley ,.....,
Aobett N. We9d ,.,...,. ' L,~KMVll
~Murph In•
~~ ~-.Ulman"'\
·~
Ill WHI 8ay ll., C.i. M9M, CA. Mall.-..: a. U .. , C..U ..-. .. , CA. '2636
Attorney Chuck Daly s aid 'this
morning be is "satisfied" with
Irvine polj<:e Chief Leo Peart's
explanation on why an Irvine
traffic officer gave him a ticket
Jan. 30 in Newport Beach.
Responding to Daly's com·
plaints filed with Irvine City
Council members David Sills
and Mary Ano Gaido, Peart ex-
plained in a letter to the man
that hJs allegedly iUegal left turn
took place on MacArthur
Boulevard and Campus Drive,
an area just outside of Irvine's
boundaries.
Peart went on to say that this
is sort of "cross-jurisdictional
area" In which police officers
will roam slightly outside of
their city boundary in order to
nab violators.
Newport man
arrested in
LA rioting
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
man was one of two people ar·
rested in Los Angeles Sunday
when a rock and bottle throwinc
epl1ode interrupted ·a dem·
on.atratlon in memory of the Shah
of Iran.
WaUl Kills, of 3010 Park
Newport. wu booked o~ charges
of calTYinl a danaeroua weapon,
Loa Anaeles i1 aald. Police aald Kllla, w ey described
aa a pro-Sbab emonst~~~!.:
WH arrested after beinl lpogea
awlngiDI a tock filled with pen-
nies over b1a belld.
Tbe de~atloo, wblcb at-
tracted more than 1,000 pel'IOnl,
broke into violence when two
other 1roupa -deacrlbed as
pro-K.bomeiol forces and Iranian
Communists -showed 'UI·
Altboulh DO aerioua lnjurlet
were reported, 200 offlcen, In· cludbal · eq..utu unlfa, were
calleCI 1n to qalet tldap down.
A lffODd penoa, Abolf 811
Ahw of IA Aqe'•, ,,_ •· re1ted~ _... ba&terl d1ar1H.
Pollft UM .. It I Pm.I M 11 .... mm. Qi-: , t.
He explained that this is done
to prevent accidents in the
heavily traveled area.
In a separate letter to the City
Council. Peart said tha.t Irvine
officers technically have the
legal right to write tickets
anywhere in California.
Irvine officers aren't en·
couraged to do this, but oc-
casionally will write a traffic
ticket outside the city's boun·
daries when they see a
hazardous moving violation talte
place, Peart said.
For bis part, Daly said he ac·
cepts Pearl's statement, and bas
paid the traffic ticket.
Initially, Daly said that, as an
Irvine taxpayer, be was a little
confused as to why an Irvine of·
fleer would be wandering into
Newport Beach to write a ticket.
He said the crew was in ''high
spirits" after a series of suc·
cessful tests of the equipment in
the past week.
"It's all coming together very
nicely. Everything is function-
ing."
Tbe crew hopes to reach San
Francisco or Los Angeles, 6,000
miles from Japan, in three days
and, if possible, float 3,000 miles
more to the East Coast in
another three days.
Aoki said be expects up to
50,000 people at the launch site,
where Japanese priests will
bless the craft before the liftoff.
If ~u want Levi Cord Flares. we've got ·em
<»-11119 b8SIC .;.olors are It ~ue. Ian chocolate navy
Ind pff ~ lf'I BA" ceftOn/16" POIYellet tor aN1nkage contrtll
P.\11 ltiem ldgethet' Wllh our or• shins
f',.._PflffeAI
NOISE ••.
abatementprogram.
The money also could be used,
he sajd, to provide sound attenua-
tion to residences located beneath
departure paths and purchase of
noise easements from property
owners.
Gill£tllan, responding to a ques·
lion posed by Tom Edwards, an
attorney ror the Mariners as-
sociation, said r~nue might
also be used to offset liability in-.
curred by the county over jet
noise and for damage payments
to persons whose health bas suf-
fered due to noiae exposure.
Lev r s
If I\ "'Iii~.""' t \ I I
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644 7030
/
..
'f
11
l
t
v ,,
I,
t:
J
!
r
~es, it's fJasefJall season
Jerry Reuss (left) flies over Jay Johnstone
while Steve Garvey (right) leaps over Don
Stanhouse as the Dodgers take time out
from spring training at Vero Beach to play
a game of leap frog. , ·
Reagan sat there crying
Pre1ident recall• hi1 /ootba!l experience•
By WILL GRIMSLEY
A~ 5"<&.1 Cer..._...,t
President Ronald Reagan, the
legendary "Gipper" in t.he mov-
ie that memorialized Notre
Dame Coach Knute Rockne,
sees football as a game that
engenders "clean hatred" and
"mutuaJ respect."
White House and IUt golf balls in
privacy hours at a lime. Warren
Harding liked to entertain
baseball heroes.
He approached a producer of
his films , Brynie Foy , who
thought Reagan was seeking
some payment for the idea.
REAGAN RECALLED the
subsequent details:
"I ,said, 'Well, I don't want
anything for It. I just want to
play the Gipper. · He said ,
'They've tested half a dozen
guys already.• I rushed to see
bue, wbUe OUbo ad Brownlee
ban tldap tbelr way lD ta. out-
field. Mark loDclJ •nd Jam.le
Jordan an the rllbt field cu·
dldatel.
Letterman Jay ~ott, a Junior,
will be at ftnt or third wbUe
Febrenbacb ap,.,ara 1olld at
catcher.
Sima t. a 6-1, 180-pounder witb
I~ speed, wbUe Weatbroot, •
Lefty, ii 6-1, 210 pounch.
Otber top candldatea include
outfielder Tony DlGre1orto, in-
fielder Shannon Eichner and
flrat basemen Doug Hellman
and Tim Scott.
COafll Me•• Kirk Bauerinellter takes over
the Mustangs' proaram and aaya
bis team wlll be eound de-
fenai vely up the middle, will
field above averaae bitti.na and
show pretty good team epeed.
The question mark: pitcblnJ.
Third baseman Joe Crus and
catcher Jeff Field are two of the
more prominent players on the
Mesa roster. Cruz wields the
beat bat and Field la considered one of the best c'atcbiltg pros·
pectJ in the Sea View League.
Tom Sullivan and Steve An·
derson, a pair of juniors at the
keystone, work well together,
and Ribby Sink Is at first after
moving from catcher.
Greg Teregls will be in left
field while Max Marold and
Dennis Jones are the leading
candidates for center field.
Marold is expected to be ready
for ·league play after undergoing
knee surgery.
Jones was the most valuable
player on the junior varsity a
year ago as a junior.
Steve Williamson and Mike
Dawe figure to share right field.
Williamson is also a relief
pitcher and Dawe could move in
at designated hitter.
Jn the pitching department
there are two sophomores who
hold the key to the Mustangs'
potential. J eff Goettsch and
Austin Smi'h are the two
Bauermeister is counting on to
pull the staff together and pro-
vide quality depth. . .
Also available ls senior John
at.vw, wbo POii ..... a IOOd
allder aad euneball.
Scott YueD eompletH th•
........ • U. Mutttnp• adllty
player. UIQer..,.
New Coada Bill lher from
Tbouund OW Hip t.Uet over
at Uni where a major cballeqe
await.a.
"I know it aoundl like a cllcbe,
but our No. 1 priority i• develop-
ln1 a tood •ttltude," Fiaber
aaya. "Communication baa been
the J)Olltive key thus far."
T&e Trojans won only three
11mea ln lllO, but with a few re·
turneea and a better attitude,
Flaber ts confident that Uni
won't be a puabover.
Filber admit.a that hi• aquad ap~an to be abort on pitchlD,I.
He u be look1n1 for Brad Guea
to be a stopper. At 6-7, Fiaber
says tbat Guess la a bard· thrower.
Rounding out the pf tcbint
corps are Greg Eberhardt, a
right-banded Junior and Pat
Backon who will work out of the
l!YYpen and as a short sl!Jter.
At catcher, Mike Miller and
Jeff Frye will both see actlon .
The strength in the infield ii at
third base where Gree Buckler,
a solid b.ltter. returns and at
firat base where Dave Orem. a
transfer from Irvine, is expected
!o have a good year.
The shortstop will be Mike
llaavee, _, aai oat ,,... • lll-JUJ 1Ml 191W ._. _,_. ._. ...
................. C.t
Wa&kim, ~ , ......
la left ..... JI C1uU Pt• a
trauf• from Tau wtt. II • "ta•• .... u•· c. ......... •Ill r to llamek or ....
Veal ·ud ri1-_t ft•N• wW IN
paltOIJed b1 .._ 8ueklap1mi
"It'• t.awrh COtllllQa lato a ...
1ram new/'aa1a l'laber. "Ml
believe we'll be 1 .mu.er . . "
eventually." .,.,. (I
Three returaia1 1tarten
outfleJdera Erle Bry ant .U
JobD GUU and flnt buem19
Jim porvamablu -live Coadl
Tom McCaffrey a eolld nueleul.
Other Mftion counte41 on a.w
lnllelden Mm Gower ad ~
Hamlln, pttehen Dave Heil11 .
tlial, Cclprad, Giaeomaui,
W ud Merdea, catcher Brett
Tokarski and utility 'layer Mite
Cervoni.
Shawn Sln&h, the ASB presi.
dent. return.a at third. ·
J union in addition to Covar·
rubiaa at first baae, are in ·
flelden Bret Dumaa aad ~e
Lomeli, catc her Mark
Matran1a, outfielders Damon
Swe~sy and Mike Burchard, lllCI
sophomores Doug Maher aad
Blake Fennel, each outfield·
pitching combinations.
Sea Dremn saila to win
Little boats and big weather
was the format of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's five-race
series for Midget Ocean Racing
Class < MORC> Friday, Saturday
and Sunday.
The Corkett Trophy was
originally awar"ed to
Performance Handicap Racina
Fleet yachts in a nine months
series sailed in conjunction with
NHYC's Ahmanson and Dickson
Series. It was rededicated this
year to MORC for a single
weekend series.
The wiMer was Sea Dream, a
Merit·2S co-skippered by Mike
George a nd Paul Yatea,
California Yacht Club. Secoqd
was Snojob, a Santa Cruz-t5
sailed by ~ark Gaudio aad Jim
De Wolfe, Bahia Corlnthiaa
·Yacht Club, and third wu ua.
broken Chain, a J .24 sailed "1
Jordon Murphy. Balboa YC.
The series started mildly
enouah Friday with two races
sailed in moderate 1·10 knot
breezes, but as the weather frollt
descended Saturday the neet
took off on a lS·mlle race aJ'OUM
the oil islands in 20.zs knet
winds.
"J know of no other game that
gave me the same feeling that
football did," the nation's c!Uef
executive told Inside Sports in
an interview recaUing his ex·
periences as a 135·pound guard
in high school, later a 175·pound
lineman in college and a radio
sports announcer.
Dwight Eisenhower was an
avid golfer who had a second
Wh ite House al Augusta, Ga ..
home of the Masters. John F.
Kennedy was a sailor , golfer and
touch football buff. Both
Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
got their relaxation on the golf
course. Jimmy Carter played
tennis.
the producer and his first words ,--------------------~----============z-
Interviewed by Mark Shields,
a columnist for the Washington
Post, Reagan was asked if he
felt that his experiences in
s p o rt s h a d g i v e n hl m a
particular sense of accomplish·
menl.
"WEU.., I THINK they have,"
the president replied. "And I
think football particularly. A
Navy football player once
described it as the nearest thing
to war without being lethal.
"It is the last thing left in
civilization where two men can
literally fling themselves bodiJy
at each other in combat and not
be at.war. You hate the color of
his jersey, but there's a mutual
respect that develops while
you're playing on the Cleld.
"And, also, there is a kind of
inner confidence because you've
met your fellow man in that kind
of combat. I p layed other
games, too. Football w~n deeper. That's why you can I
at the bench when the V
camera comes over and see
fellows sitting there crying.
"I've sat there crying."
REAGAN FOLLOWS in the
tradition of other presidents who
had a close affinity with and a
love for sports.
William Howard Taft, fearful
of disapproval of his consUtuen·
· cy, would sneak away from the
IOAT Tl-ISIT llC
Reagan, a left-handed gun-.
slinger in a score of Western.
movies, got bis greatest movie1
fame perhaps in the role of the:
dying George Gipp in the film!
"Knute Rockne: A11·Americanl'i
in w!Uch Pat O'Brien played the.
legendary coach of the Fighting
l_rish.
IN THIS WEEK'S issue of the
sports magazine, Shields , a
former Notre Damer himself,
elicits from the president the in·
formation that he, Reagan, was
partly r~ponsible for the mak·
ing of the picture.
"I told the Gipp story on the
air once when J was a sports an·
nouncer," the president re·
called, "with no idea that one
day in Hollywood I would be
saying those same lines,
because they were right out of
Rockne's diary."
Reagan sai\1 be always felt
that the Rockne story should be
made into a movie. When he got
to Hollywood, he started putting
together _the framework of a
script and passing it among the
studios. Then be learned that
Warner Brothers was doing the
picture.
to me were, 'Well, wait a
minute. This is the greatest foot·
ball player who ever lived.• He
didn't th.ink I was big enough."
Reagan rushed home and got
a picture of himself in a football
uniform, pads and all. Pat
O'Brien personally helped him
with the screen test. He got the
part.
ln the movie, O'Brien, as
Rockne, says to Reagan, the
Gipper: "I want you to run with
the baU."
"How far?" asks the Gipper.
Reagan wu a 135-pound guard
at North Side High School in
Dixon, Ill.. captain of the 135·
and·under team. He later was
elevated to the varsity and was
close to six feet and 175 pounds
when he entered Eureka College
In Illinois in the Little 19 Con·
ference.
It wasn't the Big Ten or the
Ivy League.
··Let me SJ1Y one thing in de·
fense of W<at Little 19 Con·
ference," Reagan said. "The
Little 19, at that time, sent more
players to pro ball than any con·
ferer\ce in the country."
And, he might have added, a
man to the White House.
Davidson fires basketball coach.
DAVIDSON, N.C. (AP> -Say·
ing "we want to be winners,"
Davidson College fired head
basketball coach Eddie Bieden·
bach Sunday just hours after the
Wildcats were eliminated in the
first round of the Southern Con·
ference championship tourna·
ment.
Bledenbach, who played at
North Carolina State, bad
coached the Wildcats for three
seasons. failing to produce a win·
ner.
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UP 3.41
CLOSINQ tn.99
wheeler dealers
When Cyrus Vance resigned las t year as
secr etary of state because fle objected to t he
a bortive mission to rescue the hos tages in Iran, il
didn't take him long lo find a job. He was Immediate·
ly welcomed back to his old New York law fi r m , and
he was promptly invited to rejoin ihe board•of direc
tors of the New York Times Co .. wt)ich he did.
Late in January Vance was efected to the board
of another New York ·based company. Manufacturers
Hanover Trust. the natfon's fourth largest com-
mercial bank.
T his easy movement from the corridors of power
in government to the lop echelons of business has
becom e a typical patte rn of our timE's. Just as typical
is t h e move ·
m ent i n th e ~ other direction
-business ex-\1~ ~
ecutives taking
top government ~ 3,
positions. MILTON MOSKOWITZ .• These m ove-~
ments do not
have much to do with the party in power Although
Ronald Reagan is strongly identified with the busi
ness com munity, the Carter administration had plen
ty of corporate types on deck Whf'n he took off in,
his cabinet included three formN cllft'Ctors or IBM
DONALD REGAN LEPT tht• top position at Mt·r
r ill Lynch. the nation's No I stot.'kbroker. lo become
our new secretary of treasury His predecessor in
that post was G. William M11ler, who. before coming
to Washington, headed a major industrial' con
glomerate, Textron <Talon zippers, Hoc;t1ch staplers.
Homeline chainsa'>l.s, Fafnir beanngs1
As treas ury set.'rctary, Millc>r wai. intimately in -
volved in the fi nal negol1at1on:-. over thf' release of the
hostages from Iran Iran had alsu played a big part
in Miller's ·earlier life al Textron The late shah
bought so many Rtc•ll ht·lirupler.., from Textron that
Iran emerged as the l&rgest customN the company
had in the world.
Now that Miller 1s a prt\ ate c1t11.cn ugo10, h<''s
beginning to take on t.'Qf!H>ratt> a:.s1gnm(•nts lft• has
just been· named 'to lhl· board of di rectors of ft'<lN <it
ed Department St\Jrei.. lhl· nation s largt-sl 1frpart
ment store chain\! Blo11n1111gdalt"s BulloC'k's, I
Magn in. Lazarus . Hit•h'._, Hurd1nc"s. Filene s
Foley's. Sanger-Harns 1
M ILLE R'S P R E 0 EC' 1-. !'IS 0 R ;1 '> t r e a s u r y
secretary was W ~ 1d1a1·l H111rn1•n thal. "ho left the
chairmanship of ffrndtx to 1·111111• lo Wash111gt11n To
day Blumenthal 1s lith\ n 111111ng .111otl1(•1 Uf'tru1t area
company , BurrouJ,!hs tht btJ.t •1rf1t·t· machine
manufacturer
A former Bendix <l1rN•tr1r Malcolm l~aldrige . Is
the new sccretan or <·11rn111l'r1•1• Haldngt'" full ·tlm(•
job, before com1;1g to \\ ;1 h111g111n \\as rha1rman of
Scovill (Hamilton Bt•ad1 ;ippha n 1·t·~. :\u Tone door
chimes. Oritz sewing notions. S!'h rader t1rt-valves>
Harold Brown, wh11 wa~ defenst· s ecretary in the
Carter cabinet, ha~ Just h1•1·n 1·IPC'INI to fhf> board of
Hoover Universal, :J Ml<'IHJ?an t·ompan~ that supplies
m a ny of the seuts in ne"' ttutomob11t-s lits s uccessor
as head of the Pentagon 1s C'<ii;par Wi>1nber~t·r. who
comes from the San f'..ranr1sc·o hast'<J 1·onstruc•tion
giant. Bechtel
.. 'tluf"k11111 Thf>
.tiipu11igh1
NEW VORt< f A.Pt c;.,1 ... 1. nw1f\ ,,,,,,.
•no ntt ,nanQP ot tht f1th, ,. tf'fht •• ~ 1 .,.
Nf.w Vo'" Stoc "'-E "'" tioJ''V' , ... u-• fttiKl!rw.l nttbondll'J flt "'°',t lt'IM'I )1
AalstnPIK 657.900 11h• . •i Wtrn<Com 57•,400 l6'": •I LTV Cot1> "'3,700 71'1t . " East K-415,000 1 .... " ::;-i;; JI0,900 25 .. ._,...,
361,900 , ....
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!li!ldSouVt 2'1,700 '''J· • v.
ir~~&. 275.'00 '8.W. ., ..
275,000 11 , ....
~-~'' ''°·~ J4~ '• •llttlnt ' 2S7, 4711
I p11 a11d """""" NEW YORK IAPI Thol lolluwong h\I t.ihOW'\ trw Nitw vortii SIO< "-( .. nM() ttO<kt. •no w~tranh th,., h•ve Qtlrw up
1rw mcJ\I M><I aown lhll mo>I oa-•o "" P!'rctnt ot ct\anQP rec).d'd'*\' nr voh1tTW•
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90141 col,., COl!ltfl".O wun Tnund•Y'• pdt11
tt~.' troy 01.., 111a.oo. o/I "·oo •• ...,, 11rov 0t,. ~.oo, 01151.00.
f MHlc.tll JO puo, l.t lrOf Oll, S4t1.oo, olt ..... oo.
A•lri• 100 er-. $"°2 lr'O'I' or.,•* 00, 10ffU.OO.
1 m t»ri.-011 l ,1>ader11
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Mtt<tJ"V S"NJ 00~·• ""'' Pt•Unum S'bS .)') lrC'lV ()I N y
SUt·••r
NEW YOA>t 1AP1 Handy ' H.rm""
"'•••lodr;ill d 0,olti08?
l ll<t~lhMO qJvor \11 SJO ott 10 87.
f•br 11,.•h<I \tlvflot \'11/S, OU '0 Mq
Lond0t0 mom1n11 ll ""11 JAi• W. oft '" so.
London Attttrnoon '111unQ ~46S ~O otf
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Part• ••tr.noon lt••r>O H1S 87. oil u •• Fr<1n~lurt. 11.1nci "'8~ %, otl '20.%
Zurltll. !al• oll•rnoon ftatnQ Mbb 0() Oii
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